Evening Star Newspaper, August 1, 1935, Page 8

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DEPORTEES START " WEST TONGHT Tréin From New York to Stop Many Times to Add Prisoners. LONG'S AIDES AGAIN CUT INTO. WALMSLEY POWER | New Orleans Couneil Prepares to strip Mayor of More Authority, By the Associated Pross, NEW ORLEANS, August 1.—Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley today was without authority even over the clerk of the City Commission Counell, and Coun- cil members, & Majority of whom have THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ‘C., THURSDAY, AUGUST I, 1935. gone over to the banner of Senator Huey P. Long, were busy preparing to strip the mayor of a few remaining powers. Several heated exchanges marked a meeting yesterday at which the Long majority -introduced ordinances pro- viding for the following: Transfer of the city beverage de- partment to supervision of the Com- mission of Finance instead of the mayor; removing control of the city cherity fund from the mayor to the council; transferring from the mayor to the Commission Council the au- thority to name a personnel director. WALKOUT DEADLOCK BROKEN BY M’GRADY Peace Agreement Is Signed by Firm Officials and Cleveland Labor Representatives. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, August 1.—A peace agreement drawn up by Edward P. McGrady, Assistant Secretary of Labor, broke a two-month deadlock between striking unlonists and officials of the Industrial Rayon Corp. late yesterday. McG) had allotted himself 36 hours fo settle the strike, which began May 20 and affected 1,200 workers. Thirty hours after he arrived officials of the company and representatives of the Cleveland Federation of Labor. signed the agreement. Then the Government mediator an- nounced he would return here next week to establish a board for averting strikes, such a board in Toledo. Before he left for Washington by to call a general truce in Cleveland strikes for at least 30 days. COURT BALKS A. A. A. TAX SPRINGFIELD, IIl, August 1 (#).— ‘The Chapman Doake Co. of Decatur, of corn annually, was granted in United States District Court a tem- porary injunction restraining the Government from collecting proccess- McGrady recently set up|ing taxes. ‘The suit claims the company has paid about $19,000 annually to the plane McGrady urged labor leaders Government in processing taxes. GLORIA WITH AUNT Vanderbilt Heiress Ends Month's| Stay With Mothey. spends five days 8 week with her aunf) and two days with her mother. ' The mother, Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbiit, who has been occupying & rented estate at Nissequogue, N. Y., with the little girl, will sail for Paris NEW YORK, August 1 (® —After | Friday. Gloria will go to Deerlands, Mrs, which handles about 400,000 bushels; a whole month with her mother,| Whitney's camp in the Adirondacks. 11-year-old Gloria Laura Vanderbiit went back today to her aunt, Mrs. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, in ac- cordance with the order of Justice | John P. Carew. During all of August the young heiress will not see her mother. Dur- ing other months of the year she * Freighter Is Floated. SUVA, Fiji Islands, August 1 @), — The Norwegian freighter Hoegh Trader, which ran aground on Horse- shoe Shoals last Sunday, was refioated yesterday. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 31.—The first batch of alien convicts whose sen- tences were commuted by President Roosevelt as an economy move 80 they could be deported at once, will Jeave for their home lands tonight, it was disclosed at Ellis Island. ! They will be put on a deportation train leaving the Lehigh Valley Rail-| road Station in Jersey City at 7 p.m. | William J. Becker, inspector in| charge of the Chinese Division of the | Immigration Service here, said only | one Chinese and three Mexicans would | be put on the train here. | The train, however, will stop at numerous places on the way to the West Coast to take om more de- portees, and at a few to let them off. Buffalo, Cleveland, Fort Wayne, | Ind.; Chicago, Tuscon, :Ariz.; Dallas | and San Antonia, Tex., and Los An- | geles and San Francisco, Calif., were named by Becker as among the stops. ‘The prisoners finally will total 100. Edwin M. Kline of the Labor De- partment will have charge of the train. | President Roosevelt commuted the | sentences of 151 alien convicts a few | days ago to reduce prison expenses and congestion. By deporting this| one group of prisoners, the Govern-| ment expects to save more than $150 a day. | The deportees included 64 con- victad of narcotics charges and 50 Jailed as counterfeiters. APPRECIATION SALE Sanitary ¢ Piggly ANNE Probably the best way to show our appreciation for your splen- ARU NDEL These prices Prevail in Washington & Vicimty [ i did response and patronage during our 26th Birthday Party is to “say it with values,” so this week end we've lined up another long list of spectacular savings in every department. Won't.you come in and let us serve you? RECORD-BREAKING VALUES IN EVE This IS a hargain! Eight of those famously good cantaloupes for only 5%c. Buy a basket and save 17c. 2«19 59: Swift’s Brookfield BUTTER Per 3oc pound From America’s choice dairy regions and churned in modern, spotless creameries. A high qual- ity 92.score butter famed for its RTMENT! RY DE PA "OUR MEAT DEPARTMENTS OFFER Chuck Roast SN R S COUPLE PLANS TRIP | IN BYRD’S AIRPLANE | Stars and Stripes of Polar Fame Basket of eight ’loupes Here's a new low price on Chuck Roast. In fact, it compares favorably Savor with those of jast Fall. At least, it May Make Journey Around the World. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 1.—After be- | Fresh is one of the most economical buys for the week end, and you'll find it to be the same fine quality U. S. Gov- ernment Western Steer Beef that you are accustomed to buying in our Prime Rib Roast . . ™ 27c Leg O’ Lamb . . . . »2lc Breast of Lamb . k. 9¢ Shoulder Lamb Roast -, ® 15¢ Shoulder Lamb Chops . ® Zlc Loin Lamb Chops . . ™ 35c¢ Rib Lamb Chops . . ™ 29c Sanitary's U. S. Graded Franks Ib. 30c Sanico EGGS Per dozen 3oc A dependable egg; guaranteed to give complete satisfaction in every respect. They're candled and inspected in our own ware- house before shipping to your Sheffield Sealect ing buried in the snow and ice of the Antarctic for five years, the ‘Stars and Stripes,’ airplane used by Admiral | Richard E. Byrd on both his first and sgecond Antarctic expeditions, will carry Mr. and Mrs. Alton H. Walker of Kansas City around the world on a “second honeymoon,” Whlker an- nounced today. A fair-haired young man of 29 who has been selling airplanes and flying in the West for some years, Walker said he and his wife would make “a leisurely tour of a couple of years” in the plane. | To pay their way, they will take passengers up for night flights in cities along their route, starting from Kansas City September 1. Mrs. Walker, a native of Flemings- burg, Ky., is the daughter of Rev. Harry C. Rogers, now minister of the | Linwood Boulevard Presbyterian | Church of Kansas City. She does not | pilot a plane, her husband said, but likes to fly. They have been married 10 years. | A second plane with Busch Voigts as pilot and a mechanic will be taken along for the passenger flights, Walker | said. 1 | \ Our Annual Canning Sale of PEACHE Golden Bantam Corn 4 10 Bartlett Pears . . . . . »10c Iceberg Lettuce . . . 2t 21c Large Cucumbers . .. 3«10 3 s 17¢ 3 bunches 10¢ 3 ms. 10c 3 s 10c Dependable SEA FOOD Sliced Fine Elberta Freestones Original Croakers Fresh Boston Mackerel ____" 10c Fresh Fillet of Haddock____™ 19¢c Briggs U. S. Graded Bologna . 30c Sanico Frying Chickens While they do sell for a few cents higher per pound, vou'll say that they're well worth the small difference when you taste their wonder- ful flavor and tenderness. Remember, they're Frying Compound freshly killed in Washington. White Freshly 2. 25 Leghorn Fryers “id . . ™ 27c Briggs Pep Luncheon Algeady cooked for sandwiches. b. 43¢ Tall 14, oz. can Briggs Pep Pork Uncooked for frying. . 43¢ One of Washington's laggest sell~ ing brands for vears and here it is a new low price for the week end. Standard Tomatoes 3 = 20 Another saving passed on to you. Keystone FIRM OFFERS TO BUY AL_L POWER OF DAM R | Bohn Aluminum Corporation | Seeks Entire Production From Bonneville Project. By the Associated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg, August 1.—| Charles B. Bohn of Detroit, president ‘of the Bohn Aluminum & Brass Corp., said today his firm had made an offer to the Government to buy the entire power output of the $40,- | 000.000 Bonneville Dam project, now under construction on the Columbia River. or Bohn, who said the first of the 10 . units which his company proposes to Miss California erect at Bonneville would cost $10.- | “has our offer in black and white. They can take it or leave it. But we are getting tired of the delay.”| He prophesied the output something like 200,000,000 pounds of aluminum & year if the Government would sell cans Both are good quality fruit, packed by reputable packers. We believe you'll like this value. Carrots White Squash Yellow Squash Fresh Broccoli HOME-GROWN Stringless Beans Bunch Beets New Cabbage June Apples No. 2 cans 000,000, declared the United States Smoked Shoulders ‘X’ . - 19¢ Puritan Sliced Bacon . . ™ 39c Sanico Hams ™ . . . ®28c Briggs’ i BakedHam % 18c Q}. & Golden Nip Orange Juice.___2 =~ 25¢ Blended Pomorang Silver Nip Grapefruit Juice ¥ = 10c |l A whole basket of fine, large tomatoes from near- by farms and offered -at an amazing low price. Advantage Of This Opportunity. DO YOUR CANNING NOW! him power cheap enough. | Bohn said his company had located | vast resources of alunite ore, rich in | aluminum and potash, somewhere in Utah and proposed to ship it to Bonneville for manufacture. Virginia Style 1 “Quick and Easy” CAN OPENER with any two cans of QUITS COTTON BbARD E. G. Parker of Atlanta Will Join Agriculture Department. ATLANTA, August 1 (#).—An- nouncement was made last night that E. Gordon Parker of Atlanta, who nas been chairman of the Cotton States Arbitration Board, had resigned, effec- tive immediately, to accept a position with the Cotton Division of the United States Department of Agri- culture. Parker has been chairman of the Cotton States Arbitration Board since its establishment in 1929 by the American Cotton Manufacturers’ As- | sociation and the American Cotton | Bhippers’ Association. | Previous to that he was in the cot- ton business and at one time con- nected with the Agriculture Depart- ment. He is a native of Alabama. WHAT! CASTOR OIL| FOR CORNS? Yes ma'am! Painful corns respond like magic to NOXACORN the mixture of castor oil, iodine and corn-aspirin. Pain stops in 2 seconds. Ina. few days the corn hasshrunk 50 the 'hfil: dlé:‘um- right out. cazor Periectly Fresh—Smooth—Economical “SALAD BOWL” Salad Dressing And just look at these prices! Try a jgr and enjoy its fine flavor and creamy smoothness while you save. 17c Del Monte Peaches - -+ 'a» 19¢ Libby's Deviled Ham - . = 10c Post Toasties . . . ... 2 pkes. 15¢ Hershey's Cocoa - +++++ ‘e 9¢ N.B.C. Premium Flakes & 10c ’Wesson O|| The Food That Gives quart SMALLER QUANTITIES ew Pofatoe. . Until Saturday’s Closing Argo Red Salmon . . . . = 19c Van Camp's Sardines . . 3 «= 23c Kellogg's Corn Flakes . . . »« 7c Kellogg's et Biscuit . . . . #s 10¢ Safe Home Matches . . 6 bexs 25¢ Protecto ssev Matches . 2 iitia 15¢ land 0’ Lakes So S’;:;"&";:fl:yfor ‘BUTTER America’s Finest |}, 3 3c SANICO Truly the world's fastest can opener. Just catch it over the edge of the can, raise it, and you have a triangular hole in the top. Ideal for juices. Full C pintjer Salmon Except Peter Pan o 11b. First Prize Margarine . ... 15c The New Jell-O . ... 3 pkes. 19¢ Lipton's Tea......... % 23c Johnson's Floor Wax . . G 59¢ Bread & Butter Pickles - . jar 19¢ Sanico Mayonnaise . .. 5w 23c. Iarge me Food Thas Gttt 4] ¢ » N Greater Body ClicquotClub | - SANICO Ginger Ale | COFFEE e Full One-Pound 54 Jumbo Butter Prices for Contents Only Rich- and Vigorous . Economy Loaf i C In the Con- - . 29¢ Extra Savings on So Delicious HUNT’S Supreme Fancy Fruit COCKTAIL T ] ; Packed b 27c Sanico Pan Rolls dor. 10c 3 650 2 | Sanico Bread.__toat 9c ;:;f:.i:il"‘ % Holds Its Flavor Large, Tender, Sweet No. 2 cans 6.l 29¢ And Get One C.u FREE "

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