Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1935, Page 6

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Most comfortable shave TELEPHONE DIRECTORY CLOSES To order a telephone or arrange for additional listings call MEtropolitan 9900 " AT 1400 " CARPET CLEANING || That Saves and Beautifies | THE MODERN WAY | | Carpet-cle2ning need no longer be a dreaded task. The modern | way to have this laborious work | done is to delegate the job to us. Then all your worries will be over. All carpets and even your most precious rugs will be scrupulou cleaned by our up - to - date Il | methods and returned to you prompt- . Let us call for your floor cover- ings today. CALL MR. PYLE NA. 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaniag Co., Ine, 166 Indiana Ave. N.W.- SPECIALS THURSDAY, APRIL 11TH PURE ¢ANDIES Tutti Frasti Cocoanat ('Ium, Kisses 40¢ Valwe—full pownd 1 Milk Chocolate Cashew Nut Clusters 60¢ Valoe—smll powmed Chatelaioe Assorted Choc- olates 70¢ Valoe—fudl pomnd Old Fashion Raisia Cinnamon Bun 40¢ Valse 24¢ AT THE FOUNTAINS Deviled Ham and Swise Cheese 1107 F St. N.W. 3102 14th St. NW. 3115 M St. N.W, 800 7th St. N.W, 1103 H St. N V APPLICANTS— NO“CE Editorial Clerk In response to numerous requests of Civil Service applicants - who were too late in registering for one of the recent Editorial Classes, this school has ready for immedi- ate distribution an outline of re- view ' studies, which was espe- cially prepared for Civil Service applicants by the head of the Editorial Department, - who was formerly employed in the Exami- nation Division of the Civil Serv- ice Commission. There are about sixty neatly ‘mimeographed pages of practice material on Manuscript. Preparation, Editing, Proofreading, Copy Reading, Rewriting and Re- vising, Abstracting and Indexing. This is not a correspondence or home-study course. It is recom- mended only as & review or prag- tice study. Price, $3.00. Statistical Clerk We also have ready for imme- diate distribution an outline of review studies which was prepared especially for Civil Service appli- cants. There are 32 pages of neatly mimeographed material on Elementary Computations, Recip- rocals, Weighted Averages, Index Numbefs, - Tabulations, ‘Graphing, and a sample examination includ- ing an excellent list of intelligence questions. This is not a corre- spondence or home-study course. 1t is recommended only as a re- view of practice study. Ptice, $2.00. MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL FOR SECRETARIES ter Building 14th ‘Stzeet and Park Road '...'i'f:;.‘.éi’.....:' s QYO 004 GROUP INDORSES DAYLIGHT SAVING Burleith Citizens Ask R Street Sidewalk for One Block. After an open discussion, the Burlieth Citizens’ Association, which met last night in the Gordon Junior THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, High School, voted in favor of day- light-saving time in the District. Stanley Pearson, member of the Junior Board of Commerce, told the | group that the change would give \ | Government workers and others more | | daylight hours for recreation. The association indorsed the nm‘ | before House and Senate to eliminate | the smoke nuisance, claiming that it was a serious menace to public health. The secretary was authorized to | communicate with Capt. H. C. White- | | hurst, director of highways, in refer. | ence to the construction of a sidewalk | on the south side of R street from [ Thirty-six street to Thirty-seventh | | street. It was recalled that a letter | urging this was sent to Whitehurst | some time ago. but no action had been taken. The plan for the reorganization of | | the District government as presented | by the Executive Committee of the | Federation of Citizens’ Association was tabled until the next meeting in May. A motion was made to dispose of | the Gordon Junior High School Com- | munity Center at the end of this |month with a recommendation that $20 be donated by the association, if needed to defray expenses of the| enter for the remainder of the month. . S. Gorrell, president, announced | | that an effort is being made to restore an appropriation from the District of | {832,565 for the maintenance of the | various community centers for the | coming year. | The association elected to join the | Georgetown Recreation Council and appointed Miss Emma Hance, mem- ber of the executive board, as dele- gate. No action was taken in regard to l| motion made by the Conduit Road | Citizens' Association favoring the in- nugurauon of a night school in West- | | ern High School. | Seventy-four members were added to the associaton as a result of a house-to-house canvass _started in February, it was reported. PATRIOTIC SOCIETY " T0 HEAR OF COLONY _, Restoration of Williamsburg to Be Topic at Banquet Tonight. Restofation of Colonial Williams- burg, Va. will be discussed by Ken- neth Chorley of New York. vice presi- dent of the Williamsburg Restoration, || in an address before the annual ban- | | | quet of the National Society of Daugh- | ters of Founders and Patriots of | | America, tonight at the Washington | | | Hotel. M Mr. Chorley. who has been associ- | | ated with the Rockefeller interests for | ] a number of years, made his home in | | Williamsburg from 1930 to 1933, dur- | ing the busiest stage of the rebuild- | |ing program there, and still retains }’ active charge of the work from New | York. A musical program will be pre-| | sented by Anne Yago McGuffey, con- | tralto. who will be accompanied by - | Mrs. Constance Snow. Mrs. Thaddeus Milton Jones, na- tional president of the society, will be hostess at the banquet. The hour is 7:30 p.m. | CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. | TODAY. Concert, Women's Overseas Service | League, Mayflower Hotel, 8:30 p.m. Meeting, Geological Society | Washington, Cosmos Club, 8 p.m. | | Banquet, National Sojourners, La | | Fayette Hotel, 6 pm. | Meeting, Washington Philatelic So- | | clety, Carlton Hotel, 8 p.m. Supper dance, South Carolina State | Society, Shoreham Hotel, Lecture by Manly P. Hall, “Cele- | brated Prophecies Concerning the Fu- | ture of the United States,” Masonic | Temple, 801 Thirteenth street, 8:15 pm. Dinmer, Delta “Theta Phi Praternity, | Oniversity Club, 7:30 p.m. Card party, St. t. John's Lodge Chap- | | ter, O. E. S, Alban Towers, 8 p.m. | Minstrel show Columbia Heights | Christian Church, 8 pm. TOMORROW. Chicken dinner, Acacia Chapter, No. 28, O. E. 8, Almas Temple, 1315 | K street, 5 pm. Bingo party, True True Blue Council of the Sons and Daughters of Liberty, | Pheonix Hall, 7 Fourth street north- | east, 8:30 p.m. Lecture by wmur La Roe, jr, Y. W. C. A, 12:30 pm. Lecture by Manly P. Hall, *“The | Mystery of the Great Pyramid,” | Masonic Temple, 801 Thirteenth street, 8:15 pm. Card party, Mathias Club, Shore- ham Hotel, 8 pm. Card party, Mizpah Chapter, No. 8, | O. E. 8, Southern Dairies, 8 p.m. Lenten services, Rev. Henry W. A. Hanson, D. D, All Saints’ Episcopal Church, 8 pm. Lecture by Dr. Mordecai Ezekiel be- fore the Chemical Society of Wash- ington, Cosmos Club, 8:15 p.m, Bingo party, Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Lambskin Club, Northeast Ma- sonic Temple, 8 p.m. | Bingo party, Lincoln - Campbell Camp, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, 9 Q street northeast, 8 p.m. Luncheon, Kiwanis Club, Mayflower | Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Dinner, Reciprocity Club, Mayflower Hotel, 6:30 pm. Luncheon, Cosmopolitan Club, Carl- ton Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Bingo party, Pride of Washington Council, No. 26, Daughters of America, Northeast Masonic Temple, 8:30 p.m. Luncheon, Phi Gamms Delta Fra- ternity, University Club, 12:30 p.m. Luncheon, Phi Delta Theta Frater- nity, University Club, 12:30 p.m, Luncheon, Round Table, University Club, 12:30 p.m. Dinner, Medical Arts Sgciety, Uni- versity Club, 7:30 pm. Dinner, Temple Noyes ‘du Uni- versity Club, 6:30 pm. = O FANNY Y. CORY (MRS. FRED COONEY), Creator of “Sonnysayings.” N A ranch 27 miles from Hel- ena, Mont., and “3 miles' from anything.” lives Mrs. Fred Cooney. To readers of The Evening Star she is P‘anm Y. Cory, illustrator and writer | “‘Sonnysayings.” Just now she is in Washington, &/ guest, with her son Ted, at the home | of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Thompson, 1334 | Farragut street. She is on her way to New York. but the reason for her stop-over visit is | Joan Thompson, the 16-year-old ! daughter of that household. Five years ago, when Joan was still | in the seventh grade at Macfarland | Junior High School, she had the! same visitor at her house. “Sonnysayings,” even then a two- year-old feature syndicated in half a hundred papers over the country, came regularly into Joan's home. In February, 1928, she wrote to Mrs. Cooney, in care of The Star, and the letter was forwarded to the Montana ranch. Mrs. Cooney was caught by the enthusiasm of her then 11-year- old correspondent, and promised thut she would visit Joan on her next !.rlpl East. Six months later that prom‘.se was fulfilled ‘The feature is now almost 10 years old, and appears in S0 many news- papers that Mrs. Cooney has lost track of the number. Mrs. Cooney was well known as a | magazine and book illustrator—for St. Nicholas, Youth’s Companion, Scrib- ner’s, Harper's and others. Back in | Montana, after several moves here | and there from her original home in Illinois, she became Mrs. Fred Cooney | and, in time, the mother of three children. A brother. J. Campbell Cory, politi- cal cartoonist, first suggested the fea- ture idea fto her, a cartoon in which | & different infant was featured every ot | 987, “It did not take at all,” says Mrs. Cooney. “I decided that people ha rather see the same child, from day | to day—one they could identify with ROBBERY IS COSTLY i | Kansas City Woman Taken off Relief When Thieves Get $300. | KANSAS CITY. April 10 (#).—The Toss of $300 to robbers Sunday night has cost Mrs. Adeline Kinzle her place | | on the Jackson County relief rolls yes-f terday. The Kinzie home was ram-| sacked by burglars who escaped with | $300, but who overlooked an additional | $402 Mrs. Kinzie has secreted in the | house. L. W. Harper, county administrator of relief, ordered Mrs. Kinzie's name stricken from the relief list. She had been receiving aid. since 1932. Illustrafi)i Visits Admirer Creator of “Sonnysayings” In Capital on Way to New York. | number of D. C, CATHOLIC CHARITY GROUP TO MEET Rev. B. J. McEntegart of New York Will Address Session Tonight. WEDNESDAY, Rev. Bryan J. McEntegart, director of the division of children of the Catholic Charities of New York, will be guest speaker at the fifteenth anni- versary meeting of the Oatholic Charities of Washington at the Wil- lard Hotel tonight at 8 o’clock. Rev. Dr. John O'Grady, who with the help of a few staunch supporters founded the organization in 1920, and Rev, Lawrence J. Shehan, assisiant director, will take part in the meet- ing. Dr. O'Grady still remains direc- tor of the organization. Charity ‘work in Washington under Catholic auspices was carried on by parish groups and so- cletles along with varlous independent Catholic institutions prior to the blishment of what is now the holic Charities. ‘The organization Wwas not started with the idea of sup- | planting any of these long-established activities, but rather because Dr. need of a central agency staffed with tain problems which the existing societies were not equipped to meet. ‘The most important problems con- fronting Catholic Charities are those in connection with family case work, the dependent child. the delinquent, boys' activities and legislative action, it was said. Most Rev. Amleto Giovanni Cicog- nani, apostolic delegate to the United States, will preside at tonight's mee: ing. “Social Work and Social Actio: |will be the subject of Father Mc- Entegart’s address. If Your Dentist Hurts You Try DR. FIELD Plate Expert Double their own. born.” Mrs. Cooney is at a loss to exphm altogether the success of her feature. “The little fellow l draw is not grotesque in any way.” she says. Per- | | haps that's part of the reason for his | success. I suppose my own children | were the inspiration for the feature. | Neighbors' children helped some, | but I have never gone out of my way | to visit homes of people with children | or tried to take notes on what they | were saying. I guess it's mostly just | my own good Scotch imagination that | counts, after all. & Easter Carps of (GREETING An appropriate yet inexpen- sive way of conveying a joy- ful greeting to your friends and relatives near and far at this eventful season. No- where can you find a finer selection of Easter Cards suitable for Mother Husband Father Sister Brother Other Relatives So—'Sonnysayings’ was Sweetheart Special Friends Lngravers & Fine Printers 61l TweLFTH STREET For quick reliefl from the fiery tor- ment and %o control the incessant Iubl wuse soothing Rn Monogrammed JAYSON Shirt = ’-'— // A~ f 2] JAYSON SHIRT Features . No Wit No Shrink ™ No Shrivel No Crush . No,Starch Ne Curl No Blister No Stays © —any 133 Fvent $1 95 A truly distinetive mono- gram embroidered on_every one of these fine Jayson Shirts at ne extra cost. quality and smart style in whites, solid colors and British stripes. Choose your monogram style and color three initials - em- broidered Free. As Designs Shown Abeve.. . MENS SHOP E | F STREET a4 Suction I Guarantee a Perfect Tight Fit in Any Mouth or I Refund Your Money 1 Give Vi Treatments he: Extraction $] ana 52 Alse Gas Ext. Plates $10 to $35 up DR. SHIELD Fillings. $1 up 406 7th St. N.W. MEt. 9256 O'Grady and his assoclates felt the | trained social workers to handle cer- | APRIL 10, 1935. GIDEONSE TO ADDRESS ALUMNI OF CHICAGO U. Harold G. Moulton, Head of Brookings Institution, to Offi- ciate at Dinner Monday. University of Chicago alumni living in Washington will hold their annual dinner Monday evening at the Ken- nedy-Warren. Prof. Harry D. Gideonse will be the principal speaker and Harold G. Moulton, president of Brookings Institution, will act as toastmaster. Prominent among the university's alumni here are Donald Richberg, chairman of the National Emergency Council, and Secretary of Interior Ickes. They have been invited to at- tend. Others to whom invitations have been sent include Senator Pope of Idaho, Representative Kvale of Minnesota, Jerome Frank, Reconstruc- tion Finance Corp. attorney; L. D. White, civil service commissioner; Paul A. Walker, chairman of the tele- phone division of the Federal Com- munications Commission; Representa- tive E. C. Eicher of Towa, Wesley Mitchell, chairman of the Natural Re- sources Board: Leon C. Marshall, executive secretary of the National Industrial Recovery Board; Herman Olijhant, general counsel for the | Stirnralale 134-Ton Stake 136" Wheelbase $670° I%- CHASSIS—6-cylinder, 131° 136" wheelbase, with 18 bigh-priced, features that s rice=with 18 high ed save you money every mile it Fast,dependable sturdy. Compare it! 8ce 7o Treasury; Judge Fay Bentley, Presi- dent Mordecal Johnson of Howard University, David : Allen Robertson, president of Goucher College, and Prof. L. Lyon, vice president of Brook- ings Institution. to To see LINDBERGH /27. 4 No Wonder Thousands Who'Have Tried All Three Lowest-Priced Trucks Are:3witching To Dodge HIS Dodge truck with all its 18 high-priced, money-saving features just doesn’t belong in the low- est-priced field, but it igt” YolveSeat .+ +“We never dresmed we '™*"™ could get a long-life truck like this, priced with the very lowest” . Everywhere, buyers who check the three lowest-priced 1935 trucks are expressing amazement. Dodge leads 5 the other two by a tremen- pgnized, high-priced truck your truck last years longer, run dous margin, they find, in known, acknowledged, rec- Hydraulic features . Brakes features, p farther on less gas and oil. You don't need to be an engineer to know why the: eatures save you money. You know a Se=0 Full-Floating Rear Axle truck with an oil filter is better. Yet only Dodge of the three lowest-priced trucks gives you an oil filter. You know that 4 piston rings or 4 main bearings must be Q better than only 3—yet Dodge alone gives you 4 of each, the others 3. b Everyone knows that hy- ¢raulic brakes work better, safer and smoother. Dodge perfected hydraulic brakes stay equalized, save tires, brake linings and adjustment expense ++.are worth many dollars extra to _Get Your Free Copy of the Dodge “Show-Down” ‘Washington 8:10 am. Douglas Luxury Airliners All the Way 808 15th St. N.W. SEE GRAND CANYON FROM THE AIR .BUT NEVER 4-H Council to Meet. BELTSVILLE, Md., April 10 (Spe- cial).—A meeting of the Prince Georges County Senfor 4-H Council will be held Thursday night at 8 o'clock in the Beltsville Elementary School. Setting Air Standards for the World CALIFORNIA Overnight or IN A DAY New daylight flight—Leave Washington 9:10 am, arrive Los Angeles 11:50 same evening. Overnight—Leave Washington 6:00 pm., arrive Los Angeles 8: am. Grand Canyon from the air, leave 10:40 pm., arrive Los Angeles Tel. Nat. 1451 IRRITATING TRUCKS.. 2t Lt Yfuars Longe %o PRIGED WITH THE LOWEST! you on your truck. Yet only Dodge ol the three lowest-priced trucks gives them to you. priced truck field. Dodge pan neither of the ik of them. Remem- ;.0 1, lowest-priced trucks that is built in Before you buy any truck, get a your Dodge dealer . . . TODAY! to change without notice. Special equip- Motors Commercial Credit Plan. Dodge pioneered v: seat inserts and full-floating rear axle in the low- gives you 18 of these fine, high-quality features . .. and others gives you poic. anywhere near all Bearing 4 Piston ber, too, Dodge is Rings the only one of the three an exclusive truck plant by trained truck craftsmen. ‘“show-down” of these money-saving facts about the 1935 Dodge. Go to DODGE DIVISION—CHRYSLER MOTORS *All prices f. 0. b, factory, Detroit, subject ment, including dual wheels on 13§-ton models, extra. Ask for the official Chrysier Donndeié DODGE TRUCKS Score Card at Any of the Dealers Listed Below — The Trew Mo!or Comllny, 1526 14th St. NW. Company. Duke & Otey Motor Y. N1 Fred 1t Y, Meteor L Kinsas Ave. NW, Pt ':fi?fi"m""m-m. 8t. NW. Riehard & n-,u 2 628 Penn. Ave. 8B, Torvor Moter Bompant. o oot ., MARYLAND P.dun Motor Company thesda uom Heights, Roon, 5‘.".. h Bervice 's cmpel Bervice Btation Ho! Wlfl Plats, Mitchel . tor Compa! B.lnl l‘m‘!l llolor Cumnny v st SR B g Basion Aunlm. s:‘lll Ihs Leo Rocea, Inc., 5-7-9. Mt. Rainier, Bdwards Motor Oo. Prince Frederiek. Lusby Moter Company Rockville, Reed Brothers Siiver Spring. Jack Pry Takoma Park, Ekstrom's Gerage WA A s Thotor "Sompany VIRGINIA Alexandris, Jack Pry. Ine. Bluement. Beatty's Garage 11 New York Ave. N.E. Clarendon, Kirby's Service Cl Falle Charel. s Ghureh Moters. tne. Hume, Prank Goode Motor Company Kilmtarnock, City Motors, Ine: Manassas, Peoples Garage Middieburg, Central Motor Sales Quastico, Moncure Magor Company The Plains, C. K. Mofitt & Oe. ‘Warrenton, Lee Street Garage Woedridge, Davis Garage

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