Evening Star Newspaper, June 13, 1935, Page 26

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1935. B—6 TRI A[S []F SUBI AI_ [ Frog P SOUND MONEY URGED ACTRESS__G_EE_ DIVORCE ::‘3:&:}?2.:&;:5 g ‘ R TR R S TR cauvrs pien ron swoss | |BY FRANK GANNETT |chure mammen s s on 5o (208 o WORK STRESSED Publisher Hits ~Administration for Fluctnations That Harass , | when she refused to accompany him | birth of their daughter Prances, now to s audist camp, Mrs. Adele Thomas | 5 month old. fusal to Go to Nudist Camp. Mrs. Farnum said her husband fre- Miss Katharine F. Lenroot LOS ANGELES, June 13 (#).—Tes- | quently introduced her to friends as tifying that her husband struck her| “Miss Thomas” and concealed thé Speaks at Montreal Conference. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. MONTREAL, Quebec, June 13.— Social work as a profession was called “far more difficult and complicated than the profession of teaching” by Miss Katharine F. Lenroot, chief of the Children's Bureau of the United States Department of Labor and president of the National Conference | of Social Work, when she addressed | the National Committee on Volunteers and Injure Public. By the Associated Press. ROCHESTER, N. Y, June 13.— Frank E. Gannett, publisher of the Gannett newspapers, last night urged s nation-wide radio sudience to seek understanding of the money question. “If this question were genenny understood, we would refuse duped and misled by those who lnr years have preyed upon our ignorance and profited by it” he said. “We have been cheated out of untold mil- Hons of dollars; we have suffered im- measurable grief and misery by fluc- | tuation in the value of gold, wide | fluctuations in prices, fluctuations in AUCTION SALE Friday and Saturday, June 14th and 15th’ At 1 P.M. Each Day FURNITURE, ART OBJECTS CHINA and SILVERWARE Fine collection of antique guns and pistols, including a rare Wheelock Rifie and collection of extraordinary bronzes, including a bronze by Kauber and an original “Bust of Lincoln” by Augustus Saint Gaudens Dunean Phyfe 10-pe. Mahogany Dining Room Suite, Sterling Silver Tea and Coffee Set by Gorham & Co., Service Plates, Bed Room Suite with Twin Beds, Occasional Chairs, Tables, in Social Work meeting here yesterday | in connection with the National Con- ference of Social Work. Miss Lenroot said England had set | the example in the development of | public service, The success of the | social work program in the future largely rests, she said, on the shoul- ders of private soclal work because of its service in maintaining public | support. She suggested that private groups and voiunteers could do important work in educating the public to support efficient methods for selecting | workers to carry on a social service | program. | In Washington, she explained, there had been a cry from “those who have | little appreciation for social work” of | “bureaucracy” when professional social | workers furthered the program of so- cial service. EXCESS PROFITS TAX URGED. MONTREAL, June 13 (#).—To over- | come compulsions which he said now afflict business in the United States, | O. R. Strackbein, executive secretary of the Allied Tobacco Trades Council | of Wsshmglcn D. C.. today proposed | hlxh taxes in new fields. “Whenever higher surtaxes on cor- porate income have been proposed.” he sald in an address to the National Conference of Social Work, “business hes protested that such taxes discour- #ge capital outlay and expansion, “High surtaxes on incomes are not in themselves enough. A tax which | puts a definite ceiling over profits is needed. Excessive profits taxes of 100 | per cent on all returns in excess of a falr return on invested capital is the | answer.” | Strackbein urged higher wages Andw shorter hours to redistribute the prod- | ucts of industry, and heavy gift and | inheritance taxes. BIG CALIFORNIA PLAN | URGED BY SINCLAIR| Letter Tells President Central Valley Project Would Take | Unemployed of State. BY the Associated Press. PASADENA, June 13 —President Roosevelt was urged in a letter from Upton Sinclair made public yesterday to have the Government take over the $170,000.000 Central Valley water and power project of California and create a giant co-operative agricultural and industrial enterprise. Sinclair said the | project could make California’s unem- ployed self-supporting “and take them off the backs of the taxpayers forever.” | The undertaking, he estimated, would pay off its debt in 20 years. Binclair, Democratic nominee for Governor last year, told the President California has “some half million abl bodied men and women out of work. Sinclair proposed the Government buy land already surrendered or sold for taxes and condemn and take all land which would be made fertile by the new irrigation system. The Gov- ernment would set up on this land large-scale farm co-operatives with | modern machinery, provide spinhing mills and factories to handle ume[ and other farm products. | NEW PRICE 25¢ FORMER 40¢ SIZE The same high-quality Squibb Shaving Cream, at a new economy price. It softens the beard at the whisker base . ..and a remarkable ingredient restores to the skin the natural oil lost in ordi- nary soap action. THE SOOTHING SHAVE MISS LOUISE McDANIELS, Holding a Neufound Giant, one of the recently developed breed of frogs used for breéeding purposes on large frog farms in Louisiana. Frog skin shoes and chopped frog meat for use in salads are some of the uses to which the large bull- frogs will be put. At present the investment in this unique industry is sald to approximate $250,000. »--A P Phuto CHICAGO, June 13 (#).—A modern | Carrie Nation, who used paving bricks | instead of a hatchet, was under arrest last night. 1 Policeman Joseph Wieklinski sald he arrested Mrs. Pauline Victor, 47, after she had thrown bricks through the windows of two West Side tav- erns. At headquarters police quoted her as saying she hated saloons be- cause her husband spent all her money in them. NORMAND FARM> POTOMAC, MD. DISTINCTIVE FOOD Lu: nehun—#l‘el—mnner OPEN NOON TO 9 P.M. Phone Rockville 352 the purchasing power of the dollar.” The publisher spoke over an N. B. C. network, using the facilities of Station WHAM. His topic was “After N. R. A, What?” His answer to that query was that with N. R. A. dead and A. A. A slipping, the President should return to the task of providing a sound, safe and honest monetary | system Scoffing 4t the idea of crop control under A A. A, Mr. Gannett said he never had belief that we could pro- | @uce less and less and divide more | and more. | Wa AND Iflll' an lM te Polomae Mé Turn right Non-habit-forming % PROMOTES REGULARITY NATURALLY Faulty elimination, as an habitual condition, can- not be corrected by ca- thartics and purgatives. On the contrary, if taken frequently, they aggra- vate the trouble and may create a habit that is dangerous to health. Mineral oil is neither a cathartic nor a laxative. It does not irritate the intestinal wail. It is a natural regulator. For these reasons, it is found beneficial in many cases of faulty elimination. None of it is absorbed in passing through the body, and it therefore increases neither body weight nor body heat. Squibb Mineral Oilisa heavy, tasteless, odor- less, crystal-clear oil. 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