Evening Star Newspaper, August 27, 1935, Page 6

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- INTHMAZI KGTON BEFOREZONSTS %Heil, Hitler!” Cry Creates Tumult in Session at Lucerne. « By the Associated Press. LUCERNE, Switzerland, August 27. ¢ e~Delegates to the World Zionist Con- ~gress prepared today to consider the whole question of anti-Nasz action after receiving a report on the mat- ter from a special committee headed by Rabbi Stephen S. Wise of New | York, The action was decided on, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency said, as a result of an outbreak at last night's session following a cry of “Heil, Hit- ler!” made after the congress defeated a Jewish State party proposal that the transfer agreement between Ger- many and Palestine be discussed openly. According to the Palcor Agency, delegates of the Jewish State group threw the congress into a tumuit by uttering the Nazi cry when their mo- tion was opposed. , | The Jewish Telegraphic Agency re- ported that Morris Rothenberg, presi- | dent of the Zionist Organization of | America, demanded in the name ot | the American General Zionist delega- | tion: Strict impartiality in the distribu- | tion of immigration certificates tor Palestine; | Revision of the present reguiations | governing the election of Zionist Con- | gress delegates in the various coun- tries; i Placing Palestine upbuilding work | above party or class; That the Histadruth, Palestine Gen- | eral Federation of Labor, be consid- ered only as a labor federation and should include with equal rights ail! sections of Palestine labor regardiess | of political, economic or religious views. TREE DIES WITH OWNER Fig Follows Man Who Tended It | to Valhalla. MOBERLY, Mo, (#)—The fig tree from his native Italy which Frank Ardizzone tended 41 years is dead. Dead also are the parsley bed, the grape vines and shrubs he allowed no one else to tend. Neighbors reported they withered after Ardizzone died on the eve ol; his 74th birthday anniversary. effort to revive them failed, although the surrounding garden flourished. BOY, 14, NO “SISSY” Proves It by Climbing Pole, Even to Falling. CHICAGO (#).— “Dared” by the neighborhood boys, who called him “Sissy” because he refused to climb a telegraph pole. William White, 14, told police he decided to prove he wasn't afraid. Halfway up the pole he lost his | grip and plunged to the ground, His | companions fled. A motorist took him to a hospital, where attendants said he suffered internal injuries. Two of the leading characters who will take part in the Community Players’ presentation of Bernard Shaw's “Androcles and the Lion” to- night, 8 o'clock, at the Sylvan Theater. the role of Ferrovius, and Adele Whiteside, who will portray Lavinia. They are John Sikken, cast in ~—Star Staff Photo. :‘NEW LAWS AID G-MEN | IN BATTLE ON CRIME | Extortionists May Be Prosecuted{ | Where Note Was Mailed or Re- ‘ | ceived—Escapes Punishable. | | By the Associated Press. I | The "G-men” won new weapons for | | their war on crime from the Congress | which has just adjourned. Here they are: | A law that extortion note senders | | may be prosecuted either in the dis- | | trict where the letter is sent or in the | district where the letter is received. | | Previously, a Texas man who went to Oklahoma and sent a threatening let- | ter to & man in his home town, for instance, could be prosecuted only in Oklahoma. A law that a man who escapes or attempts to escape from a Federal officer may be punished for the escape. Previously, it was not unlawful to escape from an officer. Joyride Without Joy. JOLIET, Ill. (#)—James Haley, jir., invited four friends for a pleasure |} spin in an ambulance yesterday. They ended up where most ambulance riders do—in a hospital, ment. Open All Day Saturdays in August fle -fiaiafl Sale oj ,fijetime 7a'mitate STORE-WIDE REDUCTIONS CHIPPENDALLE with Chinese Influence A new Dining Suite! And, couldn’t you achieve ‘a charming room with it? Ten mahogany pieces. In the Jeft cupboard section of the buffet is a sliding tray for silverware and there is a shelf in the lower section of the China Cabinet. Four side, two 'arm chairs, the server, included but complete the and the many other attractive Dining Suites on display now not illustrated, and table group at $198. See this 198 Other Attractive Dining Suites, $149 to $800 MAYER & CO. Between D and E Seventh Street | | after the || | vehicle collided with an automoblle and rolled down a 25-foot embank- | i NAZI STERILE LAW HELD TEMPORARY Frick Says Program De- signed to Avoid Acute Emergzncy. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, August 27.—Interior Min- ister Wilhelm Frick opened a popula- tion congress today with a speech in which he declared Germany's steriliza- ticn law was only an emergency meas- ure benish an acute, immediate dai A What Germany is really driving at, Frick said, is a social policy favoring marriages which may be expected to produce fiseful members of German society. He declared it was up to the state to shoulder the economic burden of healthy children when parents were unable to do so. “Measures already adopted,” Prick said, “have resulted in increasing our 1934 birth rate by 23.4 per cent. But we also know this has been due to exceptionally favorable circumstances. The increase is not.sufficient to main- tain our population. “There can be no lasting solution to our unemployment problem with- out a solution to our population prob- lem; there can be no solution to the problem of woman without leading ‘woman back into the family as house- wife and mother. “It must be emphasized again and again that the income of the heredi- tarily sound family must be safe- guarded, Compensation must be found for added economic burdens as- sumed by that family. “The foundation of German care for heredity will henceforth lie in careful marital advice.” — MADAME LUPESCU USES GOLD PLATES AT DINNER Service Was Bought for Her After Bavarian Family Sold to Get Cash. By the Associated Press. VIENNA, August 27.— Guests of | Mme. Lupescu, friend of Rumania's King Carol, eat off gold plates when they come to dinner at her luxurious Bucharest villa now, say Vienna jew- elexs who keep track of such things. ‘The Lupescu dinner service of solid gold was recently purchased for her, the jewelers say, from a connoisseur into whose hands it came after an aristocratic Bavarian family sold it to raise money. Four million Rumanian lel, or about | $40,000 at the official rate, is cited as | the price paid in Bucharest, G-MEN LACK FUND 10 AID ALL BANKS Small Institutions Likely to Go Unprotected Despite New Law. By the Associated Press. Lack of funds probably will pre- vent the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation, Department of Justice, from protecting small-town banks against robbers, despite provisions for ex- tension of G-man jurisdiction to small banks. ‘The Justice Department said to- day the bureau is so swamped with work it may be unable to take over the duty of hunting gangsters who rob country banks. A new law extends to all banks insured by the Federal Deposit In- surance Corp. the® “protection” al- ready given national and State bank members of the Federal Reserve Sys- tem. Personnel Insufficient. While some Justice Department officials promised to “do the best we can” for the 7784 State banks now placed in their guardianship, persons close to the Bureau of In- vestigation threw up their hands. Failure of the Budget Bureau to approve appropriations for expand- ing the “G-man” force was given as the reason for the bureau'’s plight. J. Edgar Hoover, its director, said recently that 9,000 of the 15,000 cases which have come to the bureau this year have been “untouched because of insufficient personnel due to in- adequate appropriations.” Asked for 500 More Men. ‘The Justice Department asked for nearly 500 more Federal agents this year, but the Budget Bureau refused to iners the appropriation. With the 125 agents added since ‘the na- | tional banks were given “G-man” protection a year ago, the bureau's force of trained agents now totals | over 600. Of these 200 are account- ants. Robberies of national banks de- ¢reased 50 per cent during the first half of the year since “G-men” took up the chase and have continued to decrease rapidly. In 126 bank robberies investigated up to June, the Federal agents had | obtained the conviction of 68 persons, slain seven and still had 63 awaiting prosecution. Only one had been ac- | quitted. Sentences totaling 1,589 | years had been imposed. Model Plane Up 3,000 Feet. Released by A. E. Morrod of Coven- a height of nesrly 3,000 feet after ! flying 21 minutes, Store hours, 9 to 6, every day Making the Mode a Better Store During Its Remodeling There’ll Be No Interruption to Business. Reductions At the Acute Stage Drop in this afternoon or tomorrow while stocks are still fairly complete and select fine mer- chandise at bargain prices. Every remaining Richard Prince Suit.__....._..%2175 Regular price $29.50 and $34.50. Every remaining Fashion Park Suit_____________%2675 Regular price $40 and $45. Every remaining Fashion Park Suit. Regular price $50 and $55. Every remaining Glenbrook Tropical Pure worsted. Regular price $20 and $22.50. Get in on these Haberdashery and Shoe Specials $2 and $2.50 Fancy Shirts Collar attached. $3 and $3.50 Fancy Shirts Collar attached and separate collar. Glenbrook Broadcloth Shirts Plain shades and white, collar attached. Neck- band style in white only. All 75¢ and $1 Mode Neckwear All $1.50 Neckwear All $2 and $3 Neckwear________._. —— $1.75 and $2 Pajamas $2.50 to $4 Pajamas 35¢ and 50c Fancy Hose Suit try, England, a model airplane reached | SOCIALIST SPEAKER FREE ON THREAT OF REARREST Public Address Will Result in New Charges, Guard Offl. cers Declare. By the Associated Press. TERRE HAUTE, Ind, August 37.— Military authorities released Powers Hapgood, Indianapolis Socialist lead- er, from jail today with a warning that any attempt to make a public address would resuli in %iis rearrest. Powers was first arrested Sunday for making alleged derogatory re- marks against National Guard officers still maintaining military rule here following the general strike of July 22. Maj. E. E-Weimer, commanding the National Guard detachment, said he Urge other members CENTRAL SECTION Annapolis Pharmacy 11th St. at H st. | 8. Kann’s Sons Co. Tth and Market Place N.W. | Liggett's Drug Stores 801 14th St. N'W. 1301 P St. NW. 1345 P St. NW. 1701 Penn. Ave. NW. 433 Tth 8t. NW. 14th & K Sts. NW, 1807 Conn. Ave. NORTHWEST SECTION. l| | Alaska Ave. Pharmacy 7808 Alaska Ave. Alban Towers Pharmacy Wisconsin & Mass. Aves. Argyle Pharmacy Cor. 17th St. & Park Road | | Walter Armstrong, Pharmacist Road 11th St. & Park | | Baker's Prescription Pharmacy 701 Kennedy Street | | Berinstein’s Drug Store. 18th and Florida Ave. Board’s Pharmacy 19124 14th St. ‘Wm. A. Boyd’s Pharmacy 3201 Georgia Ave. I BrI’ngood Drug Store | 5916 Georgia Ave. | | Eirleith Pharmacy 3 for $4.50 — for $1.75 3 for $2.28 3 for $3.50 3 for $4.00 3 for $5.50 75¢ French-back Shorts, also Shirts. Each 50c B. V. D. Shorts and Undershirts. Each__ Sports and regular black or tan oxfords. All Sizes in One Style or Another $10 Foot Saver Shoes. Charge Accounts Opened— Monthly Settlemenis—or Our Convenient 12-Payment Plan. Free Parking While Shopping Here—Washington Garage, 12th and E Streets The Mode—F at Eieventh ? Fa 1834 Wisconsin Ave. Campbell’s Drug Store 14th & Decatur Sts. Clifton Terrace Del. 2420 13th St. Columbia Pharmacy 2nd & Florida Ave. || The Commodore Pharmacy North Cap. & F Sts. L. Hi Day & Co. 14th & P Bts, Donahue’s Pharmacy 1344 Wisconsin Ave. | | C=gle Pharmacy Cor. 14th & W Sts. C orgiz-Kennedy Pharmacy 5433 Georgia Ave. Higger’s Drug Store 5017 Conn. Ave. B. H. Hunton, Pharmacist 900 You St. Judd’s Pharmacy 2750 14th St. | | Eenesaw Pharmacy Mt. Pleasant & Irving Bts. | | Kinner & Membert 3rd & Kennedy Sts. Kirson’s Pharmac; 4819 Georgia Ave. The Koss Pharma. NE. Oor. Tth & l.lf lorida Ave. ett’s Drug Store 7 Conn. Ave. DIX their purity and flavor intact. AT THESE FOUNTAINS: extracted no promise from Hapgood against speech 3 Hapgood last night refused an offer of release because he said the condi- tions attached wculd interfere with his freedom of speech. TEMPLE RIOTER FINED $25 or 10 Days Is Sentence for| Evangelist’s Assailant. LOS ANCELES, August 27 (P).— ‘Walter MacDirmid, 28, a pipefitter, yesterday was sentenced to pay a fine of $25 or spend five days in jall on a | charge of drunkenness, The man created & mear-riot in Angelus Temple when he swung his | fist at Rheba Crawford, assoclate | pastor of Aimee Semple McPherson’s | Angelus Temple, as she was leading hymn singing at the temple. | WHEN your children go to the soda foun- tain, tell them to buy their drinks where Dixies are used. For the very name DIXIE implies health-protection. No germs can be spread by the use of these clean, white individual cups. They are safe, and free from the bacteria found on carelessly washed glassware. Children especially need this safeguard. See that they get it. Look in the list below for the names of the soda fountains in your neighborhood that display the famous Dixie Seal and serve from Dixie Cups. of your family, and your friends, to patronize those dealers | who display the “‘seal of safe fountain ser- | vice.” Tell them, too, that at many foun- tains “carry-out” orders are put in Dixie containers so that they will reach their destination with SERVICE > CLEAN Maxwell & Tennyson, Pharmacists 1801 Eye 8t. G. Paul Monck, Pharmacist 221 Upshur St Morgan Bros. 30th & P Sts. Morgan Bros. 4231 Wisconsin Ave. O’Donnell’s Pharmacy 14th & Colorado Ave. Petworth Del. 700 Upshur St. Roscoe D. Pinkett, Druggist N 8t. at New Jersey Ave. Potomac Drug Co. 1564 Wisconsin Ave. Quality Pharmacy 1311 Georgia Ave. Quigley’s Prescription Pharmacy Cor. 21st & G Sts. R. A. Ridgway Pharmacy 5522 Conn. Ave. Sabatini & Battaglini 1782 Fiorida Ave. Simmons’ Pharmacy Cor. 21st & L Sts. Shoemaker’s Pharmacy 5301 Georgia Ave. Simpson’s Modern Pharmacy 7th & Rhode Island Ave. Velline’s Pharmacy 121 Mass. Ave. Van Sant’s Pharmacy 4940 Wisconsin Ave. R. A. Veitch, Pharmacist Wisconsin Ave. & Ingomar St. Walter Reed Hospital Post Exchange Georgia Ave. & Dahlia St, NORTHEAST SECTION Dahilgren Pharmacy 936 R. 1. Ave. Home Pharmacy 4th & H Sts. Lincoln Park Pharmacy 1301 E. Capitol St. Market Drug Co. 5th & Florida Ave. Monastery Soda Fountain 1340 Quincy St. Plaza Drug Co. 200 E St. IN cu EAS T O N CALLS HALT IN DIVORCE TO RUN TO WIFE’S ARMS- Husband Breaks Testimony, Weeps and Leaves Stand, Say- ing “I Love Her.” By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, August 27—Mar- ried 35 years, Virgil F. Winslow was on the witness stand, testifying in an attempt to obtain a divorce from Sarah C. Winslow. “She was domineering—" Hig voice halted and tears came to his” eyes. “I love my wife! I can’t go through with this!” He suddenly shouted, and, walking from the witness stand, he went to his wife and embraced her, The case was dismissed. Individual Service GUARANTEED CLEAN INDIVIDUAL GUARANTEED Charles C. Read, Pharmacist. 1100 B St. Robin's Pharmacy 8th & F Sts. J. A. Simpson & Co. 61st & Dix Sts. SOUTHWEST SECTION Columbia Pharmacy Cor. 14th & L Sts. T. A. T. Judd, Druggist Cor, 7th & F Sts. Mathews Pharmacy 1257 South Capitol St. Paul’s Drug Store 901 Fourth St. SOUTHEAST SECTION Fealy’s Pharmacy 11th & Penn. Ave. Garfield Park Drug Store 311 15th St. Healy’s Pharmacy 1932 Nichols Ave. Whitley’s Drug Store Virginia Ave., 8th & K Bts. BROOKLAND, D. C. Catholic University Fountain Room TAKOMA PARK, D. C. Mattingly Brothers COLLEGE PARK, MD. University of Maryland Dairy Fountain SILVER SPRING, MD. Fred L. Lutes Seco Theater Bldg. ALEXANDRIA, VA. Nicklin's George Mason Hotel Pharmacy Temple Pharmacy 1642 King St. Albert Weil Drug Store N.W. Cor. Peyton & King Sts. FAIRFAX, VA. Everly’s Drug Store LYON PARK, VA. Kavanaugh’s Drug Store Cor, N. Pershing & Washington Blvd. i§ Lyon Park Community Store 2626 N. Pershing Drive DRINKING INC., PA. DIVIDUAL P COMPANY,

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