Evening Star Newspaper, May 23, 1935, Page 36

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ot CARBONA SHOE WHITENER Radiator Covers 3 SMUDGE. PROVIDE PROP- UMIDITY, BEAUTIFY HOMI Convenient Ter: KBURN ler Bl 1427 Eye St. N eY:nlmnfl 5778 STREET EPICURES. HE inventiveness of humanity passeth understanding. Housewives who burn the toast. and scrape it in the kitchen sink should take les- sons from workers on the city streets. These workers, most of them at least, carry their lunches to work with thers . . . mostly sandwiches, Several of them working at paving along Pennsylvania avenue were' ob- served the other day with their sand- wiches toasting atop a huge blow fur- nace used to melt asphalt. 35 ROUND TRIP from Chicage In Coaches and Chair Cars $68.80 In Tourist Sleepers $86.00 In Standard Sleepers Low Pullman Fares Famous GOLDEN STATE LIMITED Every Car Air-Canditioned. | Lv. La Salle St. Sta.8:45p.m. or APACHE Lv. La Salle St. Sta. 10:30 a.m. sk for literature and full particulars LINCOLN BURGHER D.F. & P. A [alifomia Reck Iiland Lines 1204 Fidelity- | dg. | | street.” Cook book note: The sandwiches came off a golden brown and looking tasty. * o X x X STREET. ELIEVING in the appropriateness B of things, ex-Senator David A. Reed wants to change the name of the street on which he lives. The Pennsylvanian’s home at 2222 S street is in one of Washington's most fashionable and exclusive neigh- | borhoods and he has no objection to| raise on that point. H But with a wide sweep of his arm| he can point out that nearby on the| same S street are the homes of the| widow of ex-President Woodrow Wil- | son, ex-President Herbert Hoover, ex- Senator Frederic C. Walcott and Wil- | liam R. Castle, jr., ex-Undersecretary | of State. “They ought to change the name,” Reed said, “It ought to be called X * Xk x $11,000 FOR FOLDING. UNNING your Government has | many attendant expenditures | that probably escape your notice. | For instance, Joseph J. Sinnott, i THE Washington Wayside Random Observations of Interesting Events and Things. in the most private conference, or may be holding the most open sort of hearing, for instance, on the clos- ing of some alley. In walks a smiling United States deputy marshal bearing that notice of damage suit. i Commissioner Hazen smiles, takes the summons and immediately hands it over to a secretary to take it to Prettyman. It’s the same way with Commissioners Allen or Sultan. “I'm not the District’s lawyer; what is the use of my worrying about it,” said Allen. “Mr. Corporation Coun- sel will do all the worrying that is necessary.” * k% % SAMSON OF THE ALLEYS. HE church bowling league of Arl- l lington County, Va., has just finished its season and Astor | Clarke, manager of the Clarendon Bowling Alleys, where the teams rolled, had been waiting for months to tell a story. The opportunity came the other night when Ashton C. Jones, owner of the alleys, gave an informal dinner in honor of the 10 teams that rolled in the league. In substance, here is what Clarke revealed: The captain of a team representing the Arlington Presbyterian Church was Rev. Walter F. Wolf, pastor of EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C: that church. Unlike most ministers, Mr. Wolf is athletic in 3 size he is comparable with Jack Demp- sey. He seems to have the strength of Samson. In fact, all the pin boys feared him. Some of them called him “cannon ball,” because Wolf's ball either did one of two things. It went through the center, taking two pins, or what a bowler calls & deuce, or else he made a strike. And when he took all 10 pins at one time the pin boys séram- bled to cover, as the pins flew in all So, as Clarke disclosed, the pin boys, early in the season, got together and decided to gamble a little on Mr. Wolf. The agreement was that every night he bowled, coins would be tossed and the “odd man” would have to work on the alley on which the minister bowled. The plan worked out successfully. The unfortunate pin boy each week very diligently ducked both pins and balls, and the season passed without a casualty. * o ok X WAYSIDES. EADERS of Washington Wayside might be interested in knowing what the definition of a “way- side” is, viewed from the National Park Service angle, The park folk say that a “wayside” Here’s NEWS . . .and ) Welcome, Mr. Coal Consumer! is & new term that has come into use In | recently, being stimulated by the New Deal and the State parks projects. A “wayside” is a tiny park, where motorists may stop and rest awhile beside the main highways. It is equipped with tables and rustic furni- ture and most probably has a small stream running through the wooded ares. One of the first waysides in the country has been about finished, with the aid of Civilian Conservation Corps labor, on the main road between Washington and Fredericksburg, Va. It is a stopping-off place for the traveler, just as Washington Wayside is a way station on the main line of the News Limited. * % ¥ x - LARGEST LIBRARY. \HE Library of Congress is now the largest in the world, comprising nearly 5,000,000 printed books and pamphlets and approximately 3,- 000,000 maps, views and other volumes. So Representative Louis Ludlow of Indiana, former veteran and ubig- uitous Washington correspondent, who made his first big hit in news- paper work by interviewing “Bob” Ingersoll, has called the attention of his colleagues to the imperative need for the earliest possible completion of the new Library annex. THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1935. CONFEDERATE VETERAN HITS G. A. R. ATTITUDE Lee Resents “Messing” in Or- ganization’s Affairs About Convention. By the Associated Press. NASHVILLE, Tenn., May 23— Adjt. Gen, Harry Rene Lee, chief of staff of the United Confederate Vet- erans, doesn’t want the Grand Army of the Republic “messing” with his organization’s affairs. The 89-year-old Southern veteran stormed yesterday because Alfred Stacey, the G. A. R. commander, had said in an address at Bl 3 I, that the Confederates had been unable to find a suitable reunion city W 92! ONE-STOP SE BETTER HOLIDAY PICTURES HE outdoors is calling . . . so pack up and go. There’s a big holiday . . . Memorial Day e —— South and had suggested they ited to some Northern city as & “gesture of friendship.” Lee pointed out that Amarillo, Tex., had been chosen several weeks ago for the U. C. V. reunion in Septem- ber, and said: “I am absolutely competent to run | our own affairs without havi the | @. A. R. messing with them.” e 50,000 See Games. Fifty thousand attended the opening of the 1935 Jewish olympic Tel Aviv, Jerusalem. tihai Did you hear the Coty announce- ment on the radio last night? 63¢ bottle of A SUMA perfume GIVEN AWAY A half-dram bottle of ASume perfume (usually 65¢) will be given to anyone sending to the Coty Company the Coty seal from the top of a box of Coty Face Powder. COTY FACE POWDER A T0ONT GeT STARTED TLIC 4 “I Suffered 10 Years With Itching Eczema” | ioeives: sk the Rowe Avprope- " | ations Committee to allocate $11,000 | < - and after spending hundreds of | 70" "0 00 g6 1o kbl dollars to clear it up. I tried Zemo | of folding speeches sent out by mem- | end got relief.” writes G. C. G. of | bers to their constituents. For 1937, Texas. Soothing and cooling, Zemo | which will take in the campaign| relieves itching quickly because of its | months of 1936, he will need $17,000, rare ingredients. Also wonderful for | he said. Rash, Pimples, Ringworm and other | trritations. Zemo is worth the price | because you get relief. Tested and | approved by Good Housekeeping Bureau, No. 4874, All druggists, 35¢, would stagger the average per- 60¢, §1. ._ | son, but they never even gasp. That Are you one of those fellows who really don’t get “down to work” until 11 o’clock? If you feel sluggish and run down .. . the cause is CONSTIPATION . . . and the remedy is HEXASOL. A safe, saline, laxa= tive recommended by doctors for 25 years. ‘You take as little or as much as you need: not habit forming. At your drug store. « .. ahead. But be sure you take a camera along, for pictures keep good times alive . « . won't let you forget. Come in today. Choose from our large assort- ment of cameras.. . . stocks of Kodak Film. Ask our photographically trained salesmen for pic- ture-making information . . . we're always glad to help you get better snapshots. Bring us your films for careful finishing. You'll like eur prompt service. Sensational reductions— thrilling savings on highest quality coal. Fill your bin now — and save dollars while doing it. Pay in 8§ MONTHS—NO INTEREST CHARGES. Guaranteed cleanest, highest quality Spring mined coal. Full 2,240 lbs. to the ton. - Reduced Prices on ANTHRACITE COAL ..$11.15 1 .$11.45 .$11.15 . $9.40 $8.70 Egg Stove . Nut . . P ea .- - Buckwheat. * X X ¥ D. C. WORRY MAN. DAMAGE suits are flung at them | “ACTS NATURAL” in amounts and frequency that 2=_= = Co-operate with the B fe e e ,M:Bt to do the Job auickly “on ] nnOYlnq Rn“h@‘ CRACK-SHOT 8225t Here’s an Event! Our Anniversary! Sensational Store-Wide VALUES! Thousands will attend this money saving Sale! Now is the Time to 8tock Op! Shalimar is part of the job of being District Commissioners. There is some one else who has to worry about the | suits—Corporation Counsel Pretty- man. To witness the reception given a court summons in & suit against the | Commissioners one might get a false | idea of the matter, it all is so casual. | The Commssioners may be closeted | A.P. Woodson Co. Coal—Fuel 0il 1202 Monroe St. CUT RATE RFU 914 F St. Purse She Flacons My 8in Djer-Kiss Blue Hour 10c LACO Castile Soap, 2 for 9¢ 80c Woodbury Face Pow- der 25c_Colgate Baby Talc. (DiS) .oovernnsen «eae $1.10 Quelques Fleurs Sachet ..... ceeess.88c 35¢ Omega Oll 25c Griffin’s All-White Shoe Cleaner 25¢ Cappi Talc (Dis.) 15¢ $1 Larvex 6%c 1 Pound Moth Balls or Flakes suevvvececessie SEGAL BLADES Pit all double edge .razors. o] e Squibb’s Mineral 0il Ivory Shaving Cream—3 Probak Blades Free! ...............21¢ 50c Barbasol Shaving Cream..35¢ 50c Prophylactic Tooth Brush .32¢ 50c Aqua Velva .......... 25¢ Mennen’s Talc . Pint Witch Hazel .. Cheramy Cologne 4-ounce size =45 N.E. No.0176 1307 F St. RECORD-LOW DERFUME PRICE Purse Size Flacons .79 | Lilas . April Showers . Quelques Fleurs. $1.10 Lady Esther Face Powder (Dis) o 35¢c X-Bazin Depilatory . 25c Blondex Shampoo . 35c Mum B $1 Helena Rubinstein Lipstick 88¢ 50c Stillman’s Freckle Cream..3%7¢ NEW MASCARY Requires no water— Apply direct from Tube EASTMAN“KOM STORES = -14TH STREET N. W, Not a coupe, but a big roomy Brougham for 5 passengers. 120-inch Wheelbase. Hydraulic Brakes. Lycoming Six-Cylin- der Engine with great reserve power. IR Five-Passenger Brougham with 127-inch Wheelbase. Unusually wide doors and wide seats. Powered by a 115 Horse Power Straight Eight Lycoming Engine. '1085 at the factory AUBURN-WASHINGTON CO. Smartly designed, practical coupe; for either business or professional use. Roomy luggage compartment. 127-inch Wheelbase. Powered with a 115 H.P. Lycoming Engine. 1 i i i i { H A5 £ ‘This large Auburn 4-door Sedan comforte ably seats Six Adults. Has All-Steel Bodys Controlled Ventilation; 120-inch Wheel- base; Six-Cylinder Lycoming Engine. 1725 @t the factory Super-Charged New Super-Charged Convertible ! Phaeton-Sedan. § or completely clgsed car. 150 H.P, A completelyopen ! Lycoming Engine. ) Are you thinking of buying a low-priced car? You can own a FINE car for only a few dollars more. Auburn cars have Long Wheelbase; All-Steel Bodies; Extra Long, Metal-Covered Springs; Twist-Proof Frames; Hydraulic Brakes; Ride Stabilizer. Auburn provides Greater Comfort; Easier Handling; Bet- ter Roadability; Finer Performance. Inspect; Com. pare; Drive. Dual-Ratio is obtainable on all Models. AUBURN AUTOMOBILE COMPANY; AUBURN; INDIANA A\IB\IKN You are cordially invited to see and listen to Herb Cook and the “THREE LITTLE WORDS” in their personal appearance broadcast over station WISV from the AUBURN SALON SHOWROOM, Wardman Park Hotel Lobby, this evening at 7 p.m. and also on Saturday, May 25, at 7:30 p.m. Division of Diamond Service Co. SALON-SHOWROOM EAST WING WARDMAN PARK HOTEL LOBBY . 2 ’@I‘I-ld--m?uflll ’ Service, First Floor, Calvert Street Entrance WARDMAN PARK.GARAGE 27th and Calvert lh..lll: Service—OOlumbis v

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