Evening Star Newspaper, April 5, 1935, Page 32

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B-12- NEW DEAL SCORED BY JAMES . EED Missourian Says System " Toppling and Common Sense Will Prevail. LOUISVILLE, Ky, April 5 (A.— Asserting the “present policies of the | Governmert are all taken from Bol- | shevik Russia,” former United States | Senator james A. Reed told the Ken- tucky Bar Association last night New Deal acts “are nearly all unconstitu- | tional and have been so declared by the courts.” The fiery Missouri Democrat, plead- ing for a return to what he termed “common sense” in Government and preservation of the Constitution, charged the Department of Justice with “disgraceful pusillanimity.” He declared it has “refused to bring these acts and laws to the bar.” | “But some trials had to be met, | and court after court has declared the New Deal acts unconsmutlonal,"i Reed said. | Earlier in the day the members heard their president, Robert T. Cald- well of Ashland, advise that they re- sist “legislative encroachments on constitutional procedure.” | Reed charged that the child labor amendment, “backed by Mrs. Roose- | velt, the President, Miss Perkins and the entire board of New Dealers,” was part of a “deadly scheme” to na- tionalize children. | “The people of the United States | are beginning to understand the be- trayals at the Capitol,” said Reed. “The whole colossal machinery which has been set up is tottering to its fall. The Nation has been plunged in debt to an extent almost incon- ceivable, but we will emerge in the | end. Common sense will again | govern.” BIRTH RATE SURVEY BY F. E.R. A. DENIED Figures on Children on Relief | B Obtained in 1933 to | &3 Guide Work. By the Associated Press. Widespread discussion of the birth | rate among families on relief rolls | has led the Federal Emergency Ree lief Administration to clarify further 1ts 1933 census of infants. | Use of the figures in an Associated | Press story, which also carried the | results of birth surveys by private | agencies, was interpreted by some as | leaving the impression that F.E.R. A. had conducted a survey of births | among families on relief. | F. E. R. A. officials say they have gathered no birth statistics among relief families and have made no public comment on that subject. It is explained that what F. E. R. A. did was to make a survey in October, 1933, showing the ages of those de- | pendent on relief funds. The figures showed in that month 236,880 infants under 1 year of age | in families on relief rolls. They also | showed 1,612,891 such children be- | tween 1 and 5 years old. | WO0D MUST HIT 30-FOOT | GAP IN SPEEDBOAT DASH Ready to Assault Record of 124 Miles Per Hour With | Miss America X. By the Associated Press. MIAMI BEACH, Fla., April 5.—A 30-foot bridge gap he must thread at more than 120 miles an hour in Miss America X fails to worry Gar Wood. | “We'll make it,” he said, after sur- | veying the narrow opening through which he must shoot safely the speed- boat or crash into concrete and steel. Miss America X will gather speed for a half mile upstream before reach- ing the bridge and the measured mile. | Wood will assault his world speedboat | record of 124.86 miles an hour prob- | ably tomorrow. He pronounced his | speedster ready for the official test | after two trial runs Tuesday in Bis- cayne Bay. | Social Registerite Publishes Magazine In Interest of G.O.P. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 5.—Mrs. A. Holland Forbes, social registerite, began publication yesterday of a monthly magazine, Tomorrow, and said it would be issued “in the interests of the Republican party.” Hammond J. Mitchell is | listed as editor. | The first issue carried on the inside cover page a photograph of former President Herbert Hoo- ver with the caption “After Him Came Chaos.” WoobwARD N9 TheEgsterStore g, 4, IF the Eternal Wrangle Has Taken the Joy Out of Bridge Playing for You Learn to Play | TOWIE ‘A New Contract Bridge Game . . . No Systems . . . May be Played by 3, 4, or 5 Persons Mr. R. H. Bennett, a Towie expert, will be here next Tuesday to explain and demonstrate this new development in Bridge. to attend this complim Tea Room (Seventh Floor) at 4 o’clock. Towie, the books, $1 each Towie Score Pads, 25¢ each Towie Gift Sets, $2 StaTIONERY, AIsLE 3, FiRsT FLOOR. | standardized advice on other Uncle Sam Is Ready to Give Parents Advice on Care of Babies and Children. BY BLAIR BOLLES. l | ET Uncle Sam raise your child. He is ready to give mothers and fathers and prospective mothers and fathers sound ad- vice on caring for babies and children frem the day of birth to the end of adolescence. | He will inform you expertly on what to do until the doctor comes, how to| bethe a baby, how to correct your | child’s posture, how to guide a high school boy to a proper use of his | | leisure He knows all about the emotions, sicknesses, conflicts and habits of the | babe in arms and the 15-year-old | man of the world. Ten million children during the last 20 years have been brought through the first three years of their life in strict accord with the principles laid down in the Nation’s best-selling book, | “Infant Care,” written, published and distributed by the Government of the United States of America. Wants Up-to-Date Copy. | Now the second generation of chil- dren are being raised by the pamphlet, put out by the Department of Labor’s | Children’s Bureau. A few days ago an Arkansas woman wrote the burcau: | “I recently found an ‘Infant Care’ | book, from which I was raised. I am| writing to see if I can get an up-to- date copy to guide me in rearing my own baby.” Although this yellow-bound booklet | is by far the most popular of its publications, the Children's Bureau is ready with a full set of printed, child problems. | Here's the list: | “Pre-Natal Care,” 3,541,780 copies | since 1913. | IT TAKES LESS MORE \\ RESULTS \- e push \/ 20 élades It's so simple, you'll wonder why it | hadn’t been done before. You're shaving. You need a new blade —quick. You in- | sert Injector in razor head. Pull-Push— | ANEW BLADE INSTANTLY. That's all there is to it. Ask to see the Schick | INJECTOR Razor — The price, $1.50. Thisincludes INJECTOR with 20 blades. Injector RAZOR & LotHroP You are invited entary lecture, in the v ING - STAR, WASHINGTON Child Expert “The Child From 1 to 6,” 2,874,622 copies since 1918, \ “Child Management,” 1,027,745 copies since 19 | “Are You Training Your Child to| Be Happy?" 211,685 copies during the last four vears. “Guiding the Adolescent,” 48,557 | copies since November. | First Appeared in 1914. The “Infant Care” pamphlet first appeared in 1914, written by Mrs. Max West and sponsored by Julia Lathrop, first chief of the Children's Bureau. | It has gone through seven revisions, until today it is a paper-bound item of 127 pages, with a distribution record |{. of 7.946,756 copies since it first ap peared. | The informative volume is fetchingly illustrated on the cover with a charcoal | sketch of a young kind-eyed mother | tenderly regarding the blanket- | wrapped babe she holds in her arms, | Requests for the booklet come from MANNATTAN 1S AN ISLAND SURROUNDING |\ THE TAFT 2000 ROOMS WITH BATH FROM $2.50 Aurmap Liws HOTEL 7th Ave. 4% NEW YORK Our Washington Representative Jerry Martin, District 4800 expatriated families in far-off Sumatra and the African jungle. An American family living in coldest Alaska asked the bureau to rearrange the feeding schedule outlined in the book to fit & baby for the rigors of the Arctic. The book, written in its present form by Dr. Martha M. Eliot of the Boston Eliots, assistant chief of the Children’s Bureau, tells in simple language the essentials of child-rear- ing, with explicit directions on the baby’s health, clothes, sleep, outdoor life, play, diet, etc. Every Congressman is allowed 75 copies a month to distribute to his constituents. Physicians advise their patients to follow its precepts. Dis- pensaries and medical centers give them away to poor families. It is a widely accepted work and generally considered a direct presentation of the best modern medical thought on infant care. _ 257,000 Seeds in Pound. It takes 257,000 carrot seeds to weigh a pound, says an English ex- Fashion Says “BLUES” ok ol are the shoes for you! JESSICA—One of our most popular “blues” mumbers. An open - throated oxford, enhanced with a stitched- and-punched design. Also in black or white......$5 VIRGINIA — “Streamline” perforations and stitchings dress up this oxford. Blue, Brown, Dull Black, White. $5 1036 87 New Spring Styles 180 Sizes and Widths 10 12, AAAAA to EEE GoldondergGo America’s Smartest Walking Shoes go places comfortably A}z 9.3 The Easter Store 101 Fand G Streets AR 28 Seconds to The Men's Store on'ti Electric Stairwoy Spring Song in The Men’s Store Middishade Suits *35 It is Spring . . . and high time you were getting in the mood . . . with a suit that will set youup . .. up to the top. Middishade Suits . . . tailored to rigid specifications . . . in new season models for men and young men . . . new colors and new patterns. Single and double breasted . . . worsteds, unfinished wor- steds and cheviots . . . suits as only Middi- shade specialization can make them. Tux MEN'S ST0AE, Sxconp Frook. D. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1935. WooDWARD & LOTHROP DOWN STAIRS STORE The Cayest of Spring Gestures in Easter Accessories It Is Spring— and You Should Have New Hats, $3.95 Whether you choose that hat for what it has or what it achieves. . .a daring slanting brim _— or a sublime flattery...you will do well to choose it from this exacting collection. In black, brown, navy, gray, green, blue, purple, beige and red. Saucy Breton sailors, trig smaller sailors, ef- fective off-the-face models and wide flattering brims. DoOWN STAIRS STORE. . Chic Begins with the Feet Shoes, $3.95 A. Brisk interpretation of the perforated kid step-in pump, sleekly trimmed with pat- ent leather. Kid in brown, black and navy. B. An elaborately cut-out design and intri- cate pattern in braided leather on a smart four-eyelet tie, with modified heel. In navy and black. DowN STAIRS STORE. There is No N\agié Like a New Blouse - ...to make a precisely tailored suit devastating with frills and froth... or a dressmaker suit swanky with flippant buttons and tie. Crepes and taffetas in silk (slightly weighted) and celanese in navy, pink, brown, mellon, maise, blue, ecru and white. Sizes 34 to 40. DowN Stams Store, SPORTSWEAR.

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