Evening Star Newspaper, April 4, 1935, Page 9

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’ oTHIS 15 THE HOTEL which everybody praises @ The modern, smart, hunll\l;;::::\ with 800 outside rooms, 3 s bath, shower, sunshine & L ‘dn:fi Convenient to everything. % ;0 gle from $2.50, double from $ «HOTEL MONTCLAIR Lington Ave. 49t 10 s0th St N.Y.C [t -3 e SPECIALS FRIDAY, APRIL 5TH PLIRE ¢ANDIES Assorted Cream Mint Wafers 40¢ Valoe—yall pound 11¢ Black Walaut Brittle 50¢ Value—sull pound 28¢ Assorted Gloss Hard Candy 40¢ Value—full pound LT¢ Old Dutch Style Assorted Chocolates 40¢ Value—full pound 19¢ Home Made Cocoanut Marshmallow Cake 40¢ Value 24¢ AT THE FOUNTAINS Cream Cheese and Jelly Sandwich and Coffee regular 235¢ Maple Walnut Sundae regular 20¢ 10¢ Hot Fudge Dundee Cake regular 20¢ 10¢ Coffee Ice Cream Soda regular 15¢ 1°¢ 185 B 15¢ STORES-0One near you 1107 F St. NW. 3102 14th St. N.W. 3115 M St. N.W. 800 7th St. N.W, 1103 H St. N.E. .* !,, f , ,F,%.F +,f,,_!. mitted to this country in absolute vio- .?m*k * | Iation of the law. : 1 4 Expresses Daily to BALTIMORE Take the short smooth route whether it’s to be a business trip, 8 Lenten vacation or a weeli-end back home. Fre- quent schedules everywhere. Big roomy buses, reclining chairs, experlenced drivers, free porter service. DISTRICT Washington Terminal for the Short Line and Associate Carriers WE SELL U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATS - 311 7th St. N.W. LARGE FAT 5e Mackerel AMERICAN CHEESE PURE LARD SHOULDERS FRESH IN CARTONS Corn Bee ROAST it Coffee CHUCK choice ROAST cuT Tomatoes T 19- MORRELL’S HAMS rrioe . 1 §Y3e Preserves:: m 25“ pots? . 1 §¥3e doz. 25e| Steaks 22%5¢| MAXWELL HOUSE GILL'S HOTEL SPECIAL 171/2“ l ::::?ders Ib. l7° Milk-Fed POULTRY WITNESS EIECTED AT ALIEN HEARING Refuses to Say Whether He Is a Communist at Dies Bill Session. By the Associated Press. Forcible ejection from the hearing room of a witness who refused to say | whether he was a Communist dis- turbed a congressional hearing yester- | day at which Secretary of Labor Per- | kins was both criticized and defended for her administration of alien de- portation laws. The witness was Dwight C. Morgan of New York, who was called to the | witness stand to tell the House Immi- gratxon Committee what he thought | about the Dies bill, which would per- mit the exclusion or expulsion of alien Fascists or Communists. | He said he was appearing for the | Committee for the Protection of For- eign Born. Then he launched into an | argument which committeemen called ‘n “stump” speech. They tried to get | him to discuss the bill, and then | asked whether he was a Communist. | Ejected by Clerk. The witness declined to answer, | continuing his speech. The chairman | Vsummoned F. P. Randolph, committee | clerk, and Morgan was ushered out ‘o! the room. ; Something of that sort had been | foreseen, for in the back of the com- mittee room, ready to lend asistance | if it were needed, was a husky member o( the District of Columbia police “red” squad. He took no part in the ‘ ushering out of Morgan, leaving it up to the clerk. | The rest of the hearing centered iabout. whether Secretary Perkins was administering the law properly. ! Miss Perkins Defended. | Chairman Dickstein contended the | trouble was not with Miss Perkins, but | with the law, since it said an alien | could not be deported until he had committed two felonies. But Representative Dirksen, Repub- lican, of Illinois retorted: “The law isn't being administered properly now. Tom Mann, Mr. (John) Strachey (the writer) and Emma Goldman were ad- 1 say ‘less law and | better administration.’” s N Births Reported. Emmett L. and Cora M. Fletcher, boy. { Wilson R. and Levenia A Howard. boy. Landres D. and Hanna E. Chilton, girl. and Margaret M. Babcock, 2irl Earl H. and Mary A. Francis. girl Michael D. and Margaret McCoy. boy. William B. and Leah Bass. girl Einer C. and Mildred Nelson. girl. r. Birl Davis. boy. Benjamin H. | F5enidy D e Pnuyre Morris and Elaine Smith. girl. Afaham and ENiza Neal. gl Theodore and Flossie G. Caeser. boy. Roy and Regsie Earl. boy. Richard and Lucille Gardener, boy. James B. and Mary N. Joy. boy. Withers and Lucy Giles, girl. Mack and Hattie Dawkin Gaines E. and chmnue Walker, boy. Deaths Reporled Abraham_Jacobs. 78, Emergency Hospital 76. Soldiers’ Hom s Fock Creek Crurch Downey, 68, 2112 Leroy pl. Frederick Matthews, 67, Emergency Hos- al. Jogn H. Kaiser, 65. Sibley Hoamtll Chlrlfl!le Bell, 801 Evart st. Walter Reed Hawnn] Jones. 19, Wiilie Mackake, 14 Louise EIlis. Fruedmen s Hospital Milton R. Jones. 2. 619 10th st. n'e. 3146 M St. N.W. .23 1% | 0-3 Cottage CHEESE 2 Pound Jar Chicago-Nut MARGARINE b. 1§ Ib. l 81/23 SLICED | BACON KOSHER Ib. lz% ¢ VEAL SHOULDER b, Ib. 320 BOSCUL ORIENTA 3 vz 2B THE EVENING STAR, CURE FOR CROWING ‘WOMAN wise has come to town. You question “wise?” Then gather round. She gained this reputation great In Knoxville, Tennessee, of late, A feud began upon her street; Friends scoffed at friends whom they did meet. For half the folks owned perky roosters; The other half were late-sleep boosters. The roosters flapped their wings and crowed. The sound through open windows flowed. Each dawn the sleepers woke and | vowed | Revenge on men with roosters loud. The city elders heard the case— The owners’ pleas, the charges base. “Since roosters always have to crow One elder said, “They’ll have to go.’ The woman wise then rose and said— “I'll tell you how to stay abed, } Frying, 1. 27%c Stewing, Ib. 25%/¢ Washington Wayside Random Observations of Interesting Events and Things. ‘title from being mentioned only inci- » | Slowly it creeps along the floor, gath- RECULAR PRICE ALLOWANCE for your old stove . YOU PAY ONLY Easy Payments Arranged—Small Carrying Charge REGLLAR PRICE . . . . . ALLOWANCE for your old stove YOU PAY ONLY Easy Payments Arranped.—svuzll Carrying Charge Open Friday and Satur&ay Nights Until 9:30 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. FREE PARKING at 911 Bladensburg Road, N.E. Also Sold at 714 thl; St. N\W. and 3140 M St. N.W. WASHINGTO! D. C, upon it. There is a calmness, a gen- tleness, a sadness. Every roughness of the stone by day melts into the smooth contour of the broad forehead, high cheeks, firm chin and kindly mouth. The ruggedness of lines is mellowed. Now the soft light focuses squarely on the lips. Our fingers follow the moonbeam unconsciously. Our fin- gertips rest upon the lips. They seem so soft, as though they are about to move, to speak. One strains to feel them tremble. There is the quiet, the great room, the aloneness. Sud- denly, the stone lips grow cold. The patch of moonlight crawls up- ward on the wall. * X X ok FACT AND FANCY HE whys and wherefores of read- ing taste sometimes are puzzling. For example, at the general accounting office, temple of cold fact, the lobby newsstand does a brisk busi- ness in a publication on astrology. And the best sellers there deal with stars also—but of the Hollywood va- riety, according to Willlam Phillips, concessionaire. * K K % IF IT PLEASE THE COURT. THERE in a provision of the law which assumes a person to be “And let the owners keep their birds, “With peace for all and no more words. “Strap down the roosters’ wings at night. “When dawn breaks forth with rosy light, “The roosters then will have no show-— “They have to flap their wings to crow.” * * ¥ X COURTESY TITLE. HE name, “District Building,” as I applied to the structure just * " across the street from the Com- merce Building, is merely a courtesy title. It has never been formally designated as such. It received this dentally in the congressional appro- priation bill of May 26, 1908, when¢ certain money was set aside “for care of the District Building.” Subsequent appropriation bills have carried on the same terminology. x X X % A GREAT, STONE FACE. VEN by day there is sublimity and grandeur enough in Gutzon Borglum’s stone head of Abra- ham Lincoln, in the Capitol rotunda, to hush the buzz of excited tourists. By night, however, it assumes an even greater magic. Darkness and quiet enter after the crowds have gone and the great build- ing has been closed to the public. As the moon mounts in the sky a sheer beam of light materializes silently in the center space beneath the dome. been seen nor heard from for seven be used as grounds for divorce. With technicalities of this nature ering intensity and lessening in length as it approaches the pedestal where- on rests the great, stone face. Suddenly, the moonbeam falls full Al(l)fl\Y(ANEE Oid Stove For A Lsmlted Time! whirling through his mind, a deter- mined-looking colored man New Prosperity GAS RANGE The newest, most practical type of Gas Range you ever saw! Featuring the new Multi-Flame Burners that save fuel and cook- ing utensils. Fully insulated and complete with oven heat control. Handsome ivory and buft, frost or white porcelain enamel finish . .. And remem- ber you get a $20.00 allowance for your old stove regardless of its age or condition. 8095 $20.00 $§9-95 VERY MODERN GAS RANGE A beautiful modern, fully insu- lated Gas Range with automatic flash lighter and oven heat con- trol. Porcelain interior oven and broiler. Convenient, large utensil storage space. Green or ivory all-porcelain finish. De- livered and installed. A special $20.00 allowance for your old stove regardless of its age or condition. A Gas Range you will be proud to have in your home. $59.95 $20.00 $3995 Police Court recently and threw a marriage license on the desk. “I haven't seen my wife for seven years and I ain't going to wait any longer.” “Well?” inquired the assistant dis- trict attorney. “I want this here marriage nolle orossed.” Treasury Department. ROBABLY the Another man, now unidentified, put a $5 bill with the coins, dead when they have neither | years—a fact which, if proven, can | stalked | in the District Attorney’'s office at THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1935. * ok % WHAT'S IN A NAME? ILLIAM K. LAWS is chief of | - the legal section of the Pro- curement division of the * ok % % LOFTY TREASURE. loftiest buried treasure in the world was con- | cealed here in Washington. On December 6, 1884, Supt. Patrick | McLaughlin, construction of the Washington Mon- ument, put three 3-cent pieces direct- ly under the aluminum cap that was | placed on the tip of the monolith. while overseeing the | Rose Bushes 2-Year-0ld Field-Grown Bushes Briarcliff Eiollle de France ushki | & X 10 Maek K. A. Vietoria Etoille de Holland Joanna l.-ln President Hoover Climbing Roses Pale Pink Brilliant Red. Paul’s Scarlets Innocent White Silver Moons Lovely Cerise American Beauties Shell Pink Dorothy Perkins Golden Yellow Gardenias Society to Serve Dinner. ARLINGTON, Va., April 4 (Spe- cial).—The Ladies’ Aid Society of the Arlington Presbyterian Church will serve dinner tonight from 5 to 7 o'clock in the church at Columbia Pike and Spring Hill road. At 8 o'clock the annual congregational meeting will take place, with the election of offi- cers. TRICO Radiator Covers PREVENT SMUDGE, PROVIDE PROP: ER UMIDITY, BEAUTIFY Hi Rea nlll'Brlche. Cenvenient LACKBURN 1427 Eye St Ask {orandG_E.[ | MARTINI | VERMOUTH There is no substitute Imported by W. A, TAYLOR & CO., N.Y. SEITZELL & CO. Distributers Fresh Stocks from the Nursery, Lower Priced “Ever-Blooming”’ Herbert Hoover ith Helen Bt = JIt CLIMBING ROSE BUSHES 31- Dr. Van Fleets Flowering Shrubs 25¢Ea. Althea Red, Redleaf Bar- berry, Buddlea, Gold-Bark Dogwood, Red-Bark Dog- wood, Honeysuckle Bush, Hydrangea A. G., Hydran- gea P. G. Lilac Purple, Wei- gelia Pink, Forsythia. “EEZEE" Planted ROSE BUSHES 57c Each Assorted Phlox. A fine assortmen Pink Peonies, Peonies, White Peonies, Magical Talisman Roses Each Perennial Plants 13c Ea. Chrysanthemum, Colum- bine, Delphinium Hybrids, Hollyhocks, Poppy Oriental, Sweet William, Shasta Daisy, Tritoma (Red-Hot Poker), Double English Violet. Red Hardy Vines, 23c Choice of the Famous Boston Ivy Vine, or the Wide Spreading Wisteria. Grape Vines, 15c t of Grape Vines including the Champagne, Concord, Niagara and Moores Early. ‘Tops of plants treated by the new waxing method to retard evaporation and shriveling. Hardy Toots, wrapped in moss and waterproof paper to keep them in good shape for planting. Briarcliff, Radiance, Miss Rowena Thom, Talisman, Dame Edith Helen, E. G. Hill, Pink Baby Rambler, Roslyn, Double White Kilar- ney, President Herbert Hoover. Etoille Red Radiance, Joanna Hill, Etoille de France, Mrs. E. P. Thom, Mrs, Aaron Ward, Margaret McGredy, Frau Karl de Holland, Drushki. “EEZEE” Planted CLIMBING ROSES 57 ¢ Each Your choice of the lovely Cerise Climbing American Beauty, very Pale Brilliant Red Paul's Scarlet Roses. "Vigorooted" Shrubs Included in this assortment are Red Bar- berry, Butterfly Bush, Golden Bell For- sythia and Weigelia Red. Choice, Dr. Van Fleet or the 57c¢ Lawn Mowers Four Self-Sharpening Blades! Garden Hoe “Merit” quality hoe with standard 7-in. size head, made of one-piece solid tool steel. Polished and sharpened blade, northern ash handle. The “Kwik-Kut” Lawn Mower has been acclaimed by thou- sands of Sears customers as one of the finest low priced Lawn Mowers on the market today! 4> This easy running “Kwik-Kut” will give you years of satisfactory, efficient service. It has four self-sharpen- ing steel blades; 8-inch saw steel bed knife. Full wheels and a highly efficient 12-inch cut; chrome steel ball bearings; husky shrub bar. Garden Rake I i Famous “Merit” brand forged steel 14-tooth garden rake with good qual- ity northern ash handle. An ex- cellent tool for the home gar- dener. Spading Fork 89c¢ Standard sise 4 tine “Merit” spading fork made of sturdy forged steel Northern ash “D"” type handle. Light weight, easy to use. EARS, ROEBUCK CO. FREE Parking at- 911 Bladensburg Road, N.E.

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