Evening Star Newspaper, April 11, 1935, Page 8

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ROUTE QUTLINED FOR HOMES TOUR Morris House Suggested for Start of Visits to Old Georgetown. Explaining a convenient route for the visit to old Georgetown houses, to be open tomorrow afterncon from 2 to 8 o'clock, the committee in charge today suggested a good starting point would be the Morris house, at 3508 Prospect avenue, one block north of M street. A few doors to the east is the house of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Wooley, at 3401 Prospect avenue, and two blocks north is Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chil- lingworth's home, 1406 Thirty-fourth street, St. John's Episcopal Church, for whose benefit the tour is given, is the second oldest in the District of Co- lumbia, and is near the Chillingworth home. In this vicinity also are the Little, Coolidge, Stone and Thoron houses. Going a few blocks north the visitors reach the homes of Assistant Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Hen- +v L. Roosevelt, at 3023 Q street; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Phelps Dodge, at 1645 Thirty-first street, and at 3238 R street, the little red house, where Gen. Grant once lived, now the home of Mrs. H. H. Rousseau. Ten houses in all will be open to- morrow, One admission ticket, cost- ing $1, provides admission to all 10, with the list of houses on the ticket. They may be bought in advance at the American Automobile Association, or the Willard, Mayflower and Dodge | Hotels, or at any house visited. Other homes will be open Saturday. MEDAL IS AWARDED DR. SAMUEL HILTON | Remington Homor Recognizes | Outstanding Work of Pharmacist. Dr. Samuel Louis Hilton, retail pharmacist at 1033 Twenty-second street, has been awarded the Reming- ton Honor Medal for 1935 in recog- | many years of service in profession, according to an an-| nouncement made yesterday by Dr. Hugo H. Schaefer, secretary of the Committee on Awards, after a meeting of the New York branch of the Ameri- can Pharmaceutical Association. This medal, the highest honor con- ferred by the profession in this coun- try, is awarded annually by the New York branch to the man or woman | who had done the most for American pharmacy during the preceding year | or whose efforts during a number of | years have culminated during the year | in results considered most important and advantageous to the profession. Dr. Hilton, who lives in Chevy Chase, Md., has been in the profession here since 1884. During his service he pre- pared all of the medicine administered to the late President William Howard | Taft and other prominent persons. He 1s a former president of the Ameri- \ can Pharmaceutical Association. ! CETEE = | ECONOMIST TO BE FETED | Dinner Will Be Given Saturday | for Dr. L. L. Lorwin. | Dr. Lewis L. Lorwin, economist, will be honored at a dinner to be given by | his present and former associates Sat- | urday at 6:30 p.m. in the Hamilton | Hotel, Dr. Lorwin, who has been connected | with the Brookings Institution for the | past 10 years, will leave April 27 far‘ Geneva to take a position as economic | adviser to the International Labor | Office. He is chairman of the Na- | tional Economic and Social Planning ! Association. | £ | Dr. Isador Lubin, commissioner of | labor statistics, will be toastmaster. | X ;{‘ Libby’s Sauerkraut X Ritter Tomato Catsup IDEAL FAMILY FLOUR 5 Ib. bag 27C 12 . bag §5C | they are lean or fat. countless other dishes. All Gold Fancy Tuna Fish. . Uncle Sam THE EVENING Turns Chef Commerce Department Tests Fish # Recipes on BY BLAIR BOLLES. VERY day is Friday in the base- ment of the Department of Commerce Building. Complacent fish are exhib- ited, unlucky fish are cooked and succulent fish are eaten day in and day out in this piscatorial haven. Now the Bureau of Fisheries, which runs an aquarium, experiments on canning fish and feeds fish daily to Department of Commerce employes at reduced price in the cafeteria to find their reactions to certain fish dishes, has prepared what it considers the most complete fish cook book ever published. 1 It tells the housewife how to broil, bake, steam, boil or make into chowder 80 varieties of fish. It reveals whether It discloses a method of making the despised carp as tasty as pompano. It gives the recipe for barbecued oysters, shrimp | wiggle, fish pie, clam fritters and Saucy Sauces. | If you want to know what sauce to | put on what fish, see the book. Let Uncle Sam be your chef. This brochure was eight months in preparation by Agnes I. Webster, home economist, and Wallace Thompson Conn, technologist, at the Bureau of Fisheries. | Every dish discussed was cooked on a special gas stove in the basement of | the Department of Commerce and sampled by a Fisheries employe. The cook book is the supreme effort of the department to make America fish-conscious. The fish campaign is waged quietly on a dozen fronts. The bureau helps | fishermen, fish dealers and fish eaters. It makes many discoveries beyond its own realm of endeavor. One of them is: If you want your shirt to last long, don't let the laundry dry it in the | sun. GENERAL MOTORS SPRING SHOWING Employes. ‘This interesting fact was stumbled on in an investigation on the preserva- tion of fish nets. It was found the actinic rays of the sun quickly rot cotton. Nets dried in the shade last indefinitely. Save Chicken Costs. The Fisheries Bureau has saved chicken raisers millions in feed costs. Experimentation showed California sardine oil and Atlantic swordfish oil was just as good food for fine chicks as the expensive cod liver ofl, 80 per cent of which was imported at high cost from Norway. Today Norman D. Jarvis and two colored helpers are shelling hundreds of weirdly shaped clams from Cape Cod to test possibility of canning them and increasing the income of Cape clam diggers. These shellfish are shaped like the handle of the old straight razor grand- pa used and are known, in fact, as “razor clams.” ‘They have long been economically useless. But if Jarvis’ experiments in the basement of the Department of Commerce prove successful their worth will boom and a country-wide market develop. Conn, who was chief of the net- preservation experiments, is a chemist, cook, restaurant manager. He grew up with fish at Woburn, Mass,, near Massachusetts Bay. He and his brothers ate codfish cakes by the dozen every Sunday in their youth. His mother estimated that in 38 years she cooked 50,000 codfish cakes. A BARKER Promise of prompt delivery is always fulfilled, whether the order be for one board or a truck-load. There’s no differ- ence in Barker service! The Barker word is the Barker bond; it's been that way for 70 years, Free and easy park- ing always, Gzo M Barxer * GOMPANY * LUMBER and MILLWORK +*SINCE 1865 - 649 N. Y. Ave. N.W. NA. 1348 J STYLE SHOWS By the Hecht Co. and Raleish Haberdasher VINCENT LOPEZ AND HIS ORCHESTRA APRIL 6-13 'WASHINGTON AUDITORIUM Daily—10:30 A.M.-10:30 P.M. ADMISSION FREE All Gold Fancy Sockeye Red Salmon. . . .can 19¢ +v..2 lge.cans 19¢ .2 med.cans 29c Quick or Quaker Oats 2 med. pigs. 19C Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour Green Valley Coffee . 25C RAMONA COFFEE n. 21C Orienta or Maxwell House Coffee. . CAMPFIRE Marshmallows 1 . pke. 19C 2 cans Peter Pan Pink Salmon BEE BRAND Black Pepper and Nutmeg GORTON’S Ready to Fry 17¢ 2 cans 27C Gibbs Famous Pork and Beans Spaghetti Vegetable Soup 3 = 29¢ All Gold California Sardines. . CAMAY SOAP 3 cakes l4c CHIPSO et 17c¢ EAL FOOD STORE Super Suds |, Longer Life * to Clothes 3 % 21 22 Rock Creek Ginger Ale VISIT YOUR NEAREST | 1D} 4 Contents Only 3 taree vote 25¢ SEASONABLE FRUITS VECETABLES AT LOW® PRICES NEW 1935 today at any Bailey store. dy J B k PHILCO AUTO RADIO Music wherever you go! Newest design with many worthwhile improvements. Fits on steering wheel or on instrument panel. Stop in and hear one [.5.ROYAL Triple TEMPERED RUB. BER is an exclusive fes. f U. 8. Ti us Safety J/ NO MONEY DOWN STAR, WASHINGTO BROWNSON ESTATE EXCEEDS $500,000 Daughters to Share Bulk of Es- tate—Fifth of Total Left to Wife of Son. An estate valued at more than $500,- 000 was left by the late Rear Admiral Willard H. Brownson, it was disclosed yesterday when his will was filed for probate in District Supreme Court. Principal beneficiaries are Mrs. Ha: riet B. Hussey and @aroline B. Hart, daughters, who will %lzive four-fifths 2 payment of of the estate after several specific bequests. ‘The remaining one-fifth will go to Mrs. Ada Meade Browmgson, wife of the admiral's son, Roswell Roberts Brownson, who receives nbthing under the will. He left his personal effects and & loving cup given him by the crew of the U. 8. S. Yankee to his widow, THURSDAY, Mrs. Isabella K. Brownson, but made | $26,000 in Year “in Gratitude.” |and in taking charge of our home.” no other provisions for her, “at her request, because she has an ample estate of her own.” APRIL 11, 1935. was $2,305,700. It applied to his bee “To express my gratitude to my This was & clause in the will of | quest to his sister of $13,000 on Jane ter, Annie Gordon, for all the care | George Willlam Gordon, J. P., of juary 31 and July 31 in each year He also provided for household |she bestowed in tending our mother | Hildenborough, England, whose estate | (both free of income tax). servants and several other relatives. The Children’s Hospital and the Home for Incurables will receive $5,000 each. The will and petition for probate were filed through Frank B. Stetson of the National Savings & Trust Co. The trust company and the two daughters were named executors. MISS PERKINS EXPLAINS Becretary, on 53rd Birthday, Chides Photographer. It's Madam Secretary—but Miss Perkins. ‘The Labor Department chief let a group of photographers know this yesterday when one of them asked “Madam Perkins” to turn slightly while she was posing for birthday pictures. In private life Miss Perkins is Mrs. Paul Wilson. Miss Perkins was 53 years old yes- terday. 7 .. ENKA JETTICK owE or VIRGINIA—a dressy oxford with decorative stitching and perforations put on to streame line toward the back. Your "*You need no longer be told that you have an expensive foot™ S e < o gt choice of Dull Black, Brown, White or Blue Kid at Six dollars. ’5 and Other smart styics in 180 Sizes and Widths 1to12 . AAAAA 1o EEE L Expert Fitters to Serve You \ ENNA JETTICK SHOES 1337 F STREET, N.W. BAILEY TERMS are MUSIC 7o your ears Philco Batteries You start every time with these sturdy, guaranteed electric lants. No Money own! o Bonded insure the strueti t non-skid trac. nd in any tire. Also Famous REVERE Big Stores @ 14th & P Streets N.W. ® 14th & Columbia Rd. N.W. ® 9th & H Streets N.E. @ 7th & Penn. Ave. S.E. A @ 2250 Sherman Ave. N.W. UY ON BAILEY'S BUDGET BASIS Here is the sale you have been waiting for! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIAL 5,000 Extra Large Size EVERGREENS Look at This Selection White Spruce, 30" to 48" Norway Spruce, 30" to 46" Pyramidal Arbor Vitae (American), 30" to 42" Douglass Fir, 30" to 36" Concolor Fir, 24" to 30’ Balsam Spruce, 24" to 30" Veitchi Fir, 24" to 30" Each tree individually wrapped in burlap and peat moss. BARBERRY Six Packs to Bundle, 18” FANCY HARDY IMPORTED LILY BULBS Packed in peat moss— 39c Tube Roses Double White Extra Fancy 23 dozen Beautiful Azaleas 23c Blooms Three rare species of imported lilies, 3 dif- ferent bulbs in a sealed tube. Sc and 10c Store F and G Sts. between 12th and 13th Sts. NW. | The Bacterial Count of your Get it back quickly, and safely, with LA LASINE....the DOUBLE-ACTION Antiseptic Afterasession of excessive smoking you notice two things: An unpleasant taste in the mouth : . . evidence of blackish- prown stained mucus. Both are warnings. For the result of over-indulgence in smoking is that the mucous glands are clogged with tiny particles of carbon and deposits of *tobacco tar.” Irritation follows—may weaken tissue so that germs breed rapidly : : : too rapidly for Nature to kill them with her own antiseptics. Thea the bacterial count of the entire mouth is thrown oxz of balance. Sore-throat cold, perhaps bronchitis may follow: Do this . . . Insure Protection and Throat Ease Gargle with La Lasine, mixed 50-50 with water. Or, if you prefer, use it full strength. Double-action results. The anti- septic foam of La Lasine surrounds the irritating particles: Your mouth feels clean as you expel them. At the same time, special La Lasine membrane-restoratives bring back to par the salivary glands. They release their antiseptic enzymes and ferments—increase mouth cleanliness. The bacterial count of your mouth returns to balance. La Lasine is safe—even if swallowed. It is used full strength in open wounds. Economical, the $1 size makes 2% pints. La Lasine International, Inc., New York: Gargle with La Lasine every day. . . Keep sore throat, bad breath and smoker’s throat away! LA LASINE THE DOUBLE-ACTION ANTISEPTIC 1 Its antiseptic foam flushes germs out of the mouth. # 2 Its membrane-restoratives stimulate the salivary glandsy

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