Evening Star Newspaper, July 7, 1935, Page 8

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., HARE IN THESE SAVING Keep Cool This' Summer With One of These Westinghouse Electric Fans CARDINAL CARDINAL Eight-Inch Te!l-lm_:h Non-Oscillating Oscillating Fully enclosed, smooth op- ‘This powerful Westinghouse erating mechanism—no oil motor is efficient and eco- or grease to drip on furnish- nomical...uses no more ings. Permanent rubber current than a 30-watt bulb. base pads. Black crinkle Requires oiling only once a JULY 7, 1935—PART ONE. CREDIT CONTROL BY U.S. PROPOSED Goldsborough for Reserve| Board Outlawing Banker Influences. By the Associated Press. Centralization of credit control ex- clusively in the Federal Reserve Board as a means of outlawing banker in- fluences was urged last night by Rep- resentative Goldsborough, Democrat, of Maryland. The House Banking Committee member appealed over the radio for public pressure on Senators to sup- port credit-control provisions of the House banking bill as opposed to the compromise plan drafted by the Sen- | ate Banking Committee. Goldsborough spoke as the formal Engineer Retires 1. C. C. EMPLOYE ENDS LONG SERVICE. Excellent Quality Wash Cloths gh to use 4 HEAC luxumnuly mcl- na Assorted colors. SIX FOR Phone POtomac 5678 “ALL OVER TOWN” —the better to Teport on the redrafted bill was filed y serve you! in the Senate by Senator Glass, Demo- crat, of Virginia. The revised measure, finish that doesn't mar easily. Runs 5 hours for one giving authority to a seven-member Reserve board and five representatives | of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks to prevent dangercus inflations and de- flations, will not come before the Senate until late this week. Glass Report Scope. ‘The Glass report merely digrs(ed the changes made in the House bill | and gave few reasons for them. It did say the House credit control sec- tions had been “altered consider- ably.” Goldsborough said both Senate and House bills were improvements over existing law, but neither “entirely divorces the currency from the bank- ing system.” Referring to the Senate changes requiring two members of the Reserve board to be persons experienced in| banking end placing five reserve bank officers on the Open Market Com- mittee, he said: “It will be seen that the concep- tion of the Senate bill is that the banking class, as a matter of legal right, should have a considerable voice in determining the amount of the people’s medium of exchange, and that no other class has that legal right. Senate Bill Provisions. “The provisions of the Senate bill | I have just discussed is & vivid com- mentary upon the conception of | meney with which the banking class has been able to permeate the pub- lic mind—the conception that there | is @ necessary relationship between banking and the currency of the| people, and that the banking class, ‘whose interest it is to make muney‘ as scarce and as high as possible, | Frank B. Scheciz, structural eagi- neer with the 3ureau of Valuation, Interstate Commerce Commission, retired recently after more than 20 years’ service. He is 68 vears old and resides at the Northumber- land Apartments, New Hampshire avenue and V street. —Star Staff Photo. (DETS SEES CUBAN ANDU.S.COLLUSION Shipped Out of Havana, He Thinks Something Is Hidden. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 6.—Fifteen zeal- | ous young American liberals, fresh from a Cuban detention camp, landed | | at the foot of Wall street from the ‘Ward liner Oriente today to gaze upon banners proclaiming “American capi- tal is destroying Cuban liberty.” Hard on their heels, as they strode down the gang plank in the role of deportees from the island republic, was a Cuban industrial magnate, Frank Steinhart, one of the objects of | their spleen. He was all smiles, no conversation. The group made a round trip from pier 13, East River, to pier 13, East River by way of Havana in just a week. should control its supply. The Glass report merely described | but made no comments on the clause | to permit banks of deposit to returni to the security business under strict | limitations. This provision has di- | vided bankers and caused Presiden Roosevelt to express concern lest for- | mer evils or dual commercial and in- vestment banking return. GOVERNOR IGNORES CIRCULAR ATTACKS Talmadge Accused in Papers Dis- tributed Anonymously Be- fore Address. By the Associated Press. WALLBURG, N. C., July 6.—Ignor- ing an attack upon him in unsigned circulars distributed before the meet- ing, Gov. Eugene Talmadge of Georgia today denounced the policies of the national administration in an ad« dress to a farmers’ rally. The circulars were handed out by a man who declined to give his name, but who asserted he was acting for union labor. They referred to the Georgia Gov- | ernor as a “boll weevil” and a “de- structive pest,” who should be thrust back into the “hog wallow stockade like the one he used to imprison Georgia textile workers.” The audience was asked in the cir- eulars to “boo” the speaker, but the suggestion was not followed by the erowd of about 1,000 farmers. Sponsored by the North Carolina Non-Tax Association, composed of planters opposed to surplus product taxation, the address was delivered in s community that voted overwhelm- ingly a few days ago for continuation of the Federal program of tobacco production control. Gov. Talmadge, picturing the ad- ministration as a “horde of tax- eaters,” declared industry and agri- culture would surmount their obstacles much quicker if it were not for the Government'’s interference. “Roosevelt is putting into erfect most of the policies of Hoover, *vhich Democrats had repudiated before the election,” the New Deal foe declared. —— JOSEPH E. CHAMBERLIN, NEWSPAPER MAN, DIES Bpent 48 Years as Member of Staff of Boston Evening Transcript. By the Assoclated Press. SOUTH HANSON, Mass., July 6.— ‘Joseph Edgar Chamberlin, 83, for 48 years a member of the staff of the Boston Evening Transcript and for the other 15 years of his news- paper life connected with numerous other publications, died here today. Chamberlin, a native of Newbury, Vt., became connected with the Chi- cago Evening Post in 1868, when only 17 years old, and was managing editor of the Chicago Times at the age of 29. In 1881 his health failed and he came East where successively he was editor of the Newport, R. I, Daily News; the Fall River Herald, and, in 1884, editor of both the Bos- ton Advertiser and the newly founded Boston Evening Record. He joined the Transcript as an edi- torial writer in 1887 and in 1898 he was the Spanish War correspondent for both the Transcript and the New York Evening Post. He was married three times. His first wife, Ida E. Atwood of Chicago died in 1914; his second, Leonilda Farnese of Lyme, Conn, died in 1923, and his third wife, Jenny Le Rover, survives him as do three daugh- ters and an adopted son, Philip D. Chamberlin of- Los Angeles, Calif. - Bridegroom, 88, Rebuked. RUSHVILLE, I11, July 6 (&).—Wil- fiam Peacock, the 88-year-old Civil ‘War veteran, arrested a few days ago for abandoning his bride of one year, was freed today and ordered to go home, after being told by the They sailed last Saturday with the an- nounced purpose of investigating po litical and social conditions in Cub: Cuba found them “undesirable aliei and reshipped them north after 17 hours of grilling. Heading the group, wiich disavowed any intention of fostering sedition in Cuba, was Clifford Odets, the play- wright who veers to the left in his Broadway productions. Odets charged: “It appears to me Department and the Cuban govern- ment about our reception before we even arrived. We were treated like dangerous criminals and deprived of all civil rights. At least 50 of the Welcoming Committee were arrested and are languishing in Havana fort- resses. The crude actions of the Cuban government and the American Em- bassy * * * have shown the blackest partiality in favor of concealing the horrible conditions under which the majority of the Cuban people exist.” TWO NAMED TO POSTS IN CIVIL SERVICE BODY | Bennett Heads Editing and Re- cruiting Section—Mrs. Harra- don Is His Assistant. Appointment of Edward L. Ben- nett as chief of the editing and re- cruiting section and of Mrs. Amy A. Harradon as assistant chief was an- nounced yesterday by the Civil Service Commission. The changes followed retirement of Dr. Thomas A. Griffin, head of the branch. Both Bennett and Mrs. Harradon have had long service in the commis- sion. The former entered in 1917. He has been a contributor to a number of publications. Mrs. Harradon was chief of a correspondence section be- fore her assignment to editing and recruiting work. IMBA| MERICAD FINEST VALUE STANDS UNSURPASSED The Make Which Has Outsold Any of the Nation’s Leading Pianos ONE PRICE CASH or CREDIT court that he was “old enough to known better than to run around like that.” A World's Largest Plano mmhc!um: there was collusion between the State | NOW OPEN . . . . A New PEOPLES DRUG STORE in TAKOMA PARK At Fourth and Butternut Streets Dr. Lyons Tooth Powder 42¢ 50¢ Pebeco Tooth Paste 39¢ 75¢ Anacin Tablets Bottle of 50 69c¢ 40¢ Squibb Tooth Paste 33c $1.00 Lucky Tiger Hair Tonic 75¢ 55¢ Pond’s Face Powder 39¢ Shave Cream PIKE'S' Tablet Folios Good quality, linen fin- uh station- c Pave HOME EMEDIES $2.25 Kelpamalt, bottle of 200. . 50c Tyrees Antiseptic Powder. ....... $1.50 Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. . 30c Fleets Phospho Soda 60c Caldwells Syrup Pepsin 75¢ Bayer Aspirin Tablets, bottle of 100 75¢ Squibb Mineral Oil, pint 60c Abbotts Saline Laxative $1.00 Marmola Tablets, box of 36 60c Condensed Jad Salts $1.50 Anusol Suppositories 60c Gastrogen Tablets, bottle of 60 50c Phillips Milk of Magnesia 40c Fletchers Castoria 75c¢ Alophen Pills, bottle of 100. .. 50c Unguentine Ointment, tube 60c Wyeth Effervescent Sodium Phosphate. . 60c Papes Diapepsin Tablets 40c Pluto Water, large 60c California Syrup of Figs. 75¢ Doans Pills, vial of 40. ... 60c Murine Eye Wash $1.00 Nujol Oil, pint. .. = 60c Resinol Ointment....................40€ 30c Wyeth Glycerin Suppositories. . .........25¢ 35c¢ Lapactic Pills, bottle of 100............28¢c 65c Mike Martins Liniment...............49¢ 60c Bromo Seltzer 3 for 10c CIGARS Marsh Wheeling -_)8 for 25¢ "; Cremo Box § § Lord g 49 Baltimore --5 of 50 l Tiona Manila Cigars Londres Shape Handmade, long-filler eigars—m; X‘::und flth ppine tobacco. Good w“v.flo f'r:)rr; J %" 25¢ % $1.05 2 for 5c CIGARS Canadian Club 7 for lsc King Edward. . D Geo. W. Childs.( Box §$ 9 .05 50c Golden Peacock Bleach Cream. 50c Kolynos Tooth Paste ......... 40c Bost Tooth Powder 30c Spiro Deodorant Powder-. .. ... $1.00 Evans Depilatory Cream 75¢ Maybelline Mascara, cake 60c Djer-Kiss Face Powder. ... 50c Marchand Golden Hair Wash 75¢ Jeris Hair Tonic $1.10 Angelus Lipstick 4 35¢ Cutex Nail Polish or Remover, each. . .. .. 55¢ Princess Pat Rouge .. .. 3 50c Mennen Shaving Cream...............34¢C $1.10 Pinaud Lilac Vegetal. ...............97¢C 15¢ Colgate Perfumed Taleum.............13¢ 55c Ponds Skin Freshener.........ccc.v...42€ 50c Ingrams Milkweed Cream. 50c Stillmans Freckle Cream.......... 50c lodent Tooth Paste 35¢ Corega Dental Plate Powder 60c Nonspi Deodorant s Jorenisteise 55¢ Luxor Face Powder with Perfume 50c Mulsified Cocoanut Qil Shampoo. 60c Wildroot Wave Set.. 50c Hinds Honey and Almond Cream. 35¢ Ingrams Shaving Cream. . 30c Resinol Soap 21¢; 3 !or 60c 25¢ Mercks Zinc Stearate l’owder..........l’C 1 o 4 3!0 year. Quiet, smooth-running. ‘Underwriters’ Approved cord. cent. For alternating current. . J Tent. Only s '49 Pure, Fresh CAN DIES Homestead Milk Chocolate Blocks, pound......19¢ || Tender-Hearted Jelly Strings, pound. . ........15¢ Spiced Jelly Drops, pound Chocolate Covered Brazil Nuts, pound. Kentucky Kernals, pound Eskimo Rolls, pound Assorted Caramel Rolls, pound Kool Mints, pound Spearmint Leaves, pound Assorted Cocoanut Cubes, pound Imported Rum and Butter Toffee, pound. . ... COMBINATION VALUE! Regular 40c Tube La Lasine Tooth Paste e La Lasine |} Tooth Brush or 49- / Al A tooth paste that helps AN counteract tooth-destroy- [e = = _=_=) ing mouth acids, cleans teeth and makes them white. A acien- tifically designed tooth brush with steri- lized bristles and attractive transparent or colored handle. Polishes Shu-Milk Glace Blanc ... Color. Shine ... Pee Chee Griffin All-White Shinola, cake .. 8¢ Carbona, cream or liquid__23c Rubber Gloves Slight - Irregularities. . € pair Get a pair for around the house and for working in the garden. The irreg- ularities will not impair their wearing qualities. For Your Picnics & Outings American Jugs Gallon Size Cleaners Renuzit Dry Cleaner, gallon. 59¢ Mafti Dry . mm-m Cleaner, small 25¢ b 4 = 40c Putnam . :rlnnll':ez‘l. g - Dr, ae“'r N z’c 35c Energine, Fireproof . ® Green Finish ® Koons Lianias $1.00 Carbona Dry Cleaner. $1.25 Renuzit Dry Cleaner, For the Modern Host TWENTY-ONE-PIECE quuor Sets Consists of— © Cocktail Shaker © Martini Mixer © Wine Bottle 6 Whi Gllllellu * & Wine Glasses Agfa Cameras Cadet Model "aki Picture m" Ca $l-49 ‘Take pic- tures of your vacation . . . your next long drive « . . that lovely spot where you're going to picnic. These fine cameras take clear, clean-cut pictures. Mickey Mouse Sand Pail and Shovel Mickey and Minnie, and all set . . . for little girls and boys to take to the layground. ack yard Preventives 60c Dethspray Insecticide, pint. 49¢ A Cool, Refreshing Cologne For Summer i Apex Moth Cakes, tin of 6 Moth Gas Vaporizer Moth Balls or Flakes, pound 35c Dethspray Sprayers. Merck Dichloricide, pound Week-End Bags Of Heavy e Canvas . . 49c fragrance for the 2 They n-‘nnuen'u_ 1 and a soothing face Sand eolor, massage. L'Origan, 3 L'Aimant, Bmere sude, or Chypre. . For alternating cur- { “Hain (8 m $1.35 s l .24 Size. Up-to-date women are touching up graying hair with no thought of deception. Farr's 1s a modern ptrfecled preparation. easily and economically ap- plied in the privacy of your home. ~ Cleansiline Dry Cleaning Fluid Does Not Leave Removes _stubborn _ spots from even the most deli- cate fabrics. quickly and BLADES LeavesYour Foce Smooth ond Refreshed PACKAGE ¢ OF FIVE 5, PACKAGE oFTEN lac Tonic o Always Tired? e No Appetite? o Nervous? @ Can’t Sleep? Then You Need Tanlac $1.25 84° Size. ... YO FABRILS Buyc Gan Taday DR. SCHOLL’S ZINO PADS Flesh color . . . water- De Luxe proof . . . will not ad- here to the stockings. (J Quickly eases pain. GLOVERS DOG REMEDIES MANGE MEDICINE An effective remedy for quickly clearing 4 up sarcoptic mange - indogs. Kills mange mites. chiggers and and helps nbrm-l hflr growth. Try thi mous trespment. o your pet. Get a boti today.

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