Evening Star Newspaper, October 11, 1935, Page 26

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CONGIESTION relieved by simple 2 MOTOR OIL |, Pens il D ‘BAYERSON OIL VIORKS COLUMBIA tion Sedical etrates breathing Testores easy bresthing. At all druggist Drink your favor- ite coffee while listening to your favorite radio star. TUNE IN Stayman Bushel 7 5 c WISV at 7% P, M, “COFFEE TIME® Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays Basket____ s A & P Coffee Trio 8 O'Clock ™ 17¢ Red Circle » 19¢ Bokar - - - » 23¢ Tokay Grapes .- -3 ®« 17¢c Idaho Potatoes - -4 - 9¢ Sweet Potatoes - - 4 = 10c Broccoli - - _ 3 ms. 19¢ Brussels Sprouts _ qt. 20c Lettuce /o 2 nas. 19¢ -4»=15¢ = 25c 37¢ Spurkle Gelatin Desserts - - Tomato Juice camsbers _ _ Cocomalt - - - - > 19¢; Comet Rice Lipton’s Tea - - 39¢ Rajah Extracts wie 15¢€ Ralston Wheat Cereal - - - == 21¢ Sultana Plain Olives - 3 *i.* 25¢ Scot Towels - - - - - - - . 2"'“' 17¢ 11b. can % 1b. pkg. '3 b, pkg. 2l¢; ! Tende: L A MB Fancy Legof Lamb - 23¢ Shoulder Roast * 19¢ Breast Roast - - - - - » 10c¢ Loin Chops - - - - - » 35¢ Rib Chops - - - - - - ™ 33¢ Shoulder Chops - - - - ™ 25¢ —T asty Fresh Frying or Small Roasting CHICKENS _ . __n 31¢ Sunnyfield Sliced BACON .. 20c Ib. 39¢ BEEF ROASTS Sultana Pineapple Broken Sliced Ige. can I 5c Calumet Baking Powder - 2 & 17¢ Baker's Premium Chocolate %! % v 13¢ Post Toasties__2 prgs. 13¢ Jello 3 pies. 17¢ Post's rranes -2 pkes. 19¢ Instant Postum_ %35 39¢ Peaches Halves in Syrup 2.5 25¢ Orange c..:‘.;',..;. Juice - .=t 10¢ Orange c..uf... Slices - - 2 ot 25¢ Super Suds - - -2 ;5. 17¢; E 'I7c; Octagon Soap - 452817 Palmolive Soap - - - - - 4 == 17¢ | Royal Gelatin Buy 3 packages of Royal Gelatin for 17¢ and for Ic extra you get 1 pkg. of Royal Baking Powder Chocolate Pudding, making effective in D. C. and Suburbs until the close of business Sat., Oct. 12th, 1935. Ann Page TREATMENT igarettes (no tobacco) for auick re Hef. Warm medical smoke pen- passages, loosen- ing phlexm. soothes bronchial irritations, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, LACK OF TRAFFIC JUDGES ATTACKED Yaden Tells Northeast Con- ference of Difficulties Ob- taining Penalties. “Traffic violators in the District are going unpunished because there are not enough judges to try the cases,” James G. Yaden, president of the Federation of Citizens’ Associations, told the Northeast Conference last night at a meeting in the twelfth police precinct. ‘Yaden said there is an “impossible situation” at Police Court. There are not enough judges or policemen to handle the cases, he sald, nor is there enough money to pay juries and, as a result, many offenders ask for jury trials. This results in cases being dragged out and eventually being nolle prossed. He also said the people of the Dis- trict were facing an increase in taxes and it would be futile to talk about opposing the increase. Huge Increase Possible. “If certain projects are authorized by Congress the increase in expendi- | tures in the District will be enor- mous,” he added. Yaden conciuded by saying Wash- | ington was comparatively free from graft. A need for more schools for the | Northeast section was expressed by the entire body. Overcrowding of EasternHigh School, which was orig- inally built to accommodate 1,800 stu- dents and now has 3,000, and a dearth of school buildings throughout the area were discussed by representatives from Lincoln Park, Brookland and Trinidad. A letter from the District Commis- | sioners to the conference told of plans ‘mr improvements in the area. | Eastern Avenue Proposal. | Eastern avenue will be improved from Bladensburg road to Rhode | Island avenue with permanent paving: | South Dakota avenue will be improved as far west as Eighteenth street; plans for the new Franklin street bridge are | in progress, as are also plans for the | new fire house at Fourteenth street and Rhode Isiand avenue, and the B. | | & O. and P. B. & W. Railroads are | to construct an underpass connecting | the intersection of New York and West | Virginia avenues with Eighteenth | street northeast. | Associations represented at the meeting were Dahlgren Terrace, Bur- roughs, Lincoln Park, Brookland, Stanton Park and Trinidad. Officers for the coming year will be elected at the next meeting. Corpora- tion Counsel E. Barrett Prettyman has | been invited to address the group. e Rockefeller in Florida. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, October 11| | #P).—John D. Rockefeller, sr., and his | | party, en route from his Northern | home in New Jersey to his Florida | |estate at Ormond Beach, pmsed' |through here shortly after 8 am. Eastern standard time today. District of Columbia—Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; not much change in temperature; gentle to mod- erate southwest and west winds. Maryland and Virginia — Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; not much change in temperature. West Virginia—Partly cloudy to- night and tomorrow; not much change | in temperature. River Report. Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers clear today. ! Report for Last 21 Hours. Yes'day. Temp. Baro. Today. Temp. Bato (Prom noon yesterday to noon roday.) Highest, 77. &t noon yesterdsy. Year ago. 81 Lowest, 52. at 5:45 a.m. yesterday. Year ago. 55. Record Temperatures This Year. Highest, 98, on July 20. wer. —2_ on January 2. Humidity for Last 24 Hours. (Prom noon yesterday to noon today.) Highest. 90 per cent. at 8 a.m. todsy, Lowest. 48 per cent, at noon today. Tide Tables. (Purnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) Today. Tomorrow. am. am! | 14 am. 7i14 pml 1:30 p.m. The Sun and Moon. 395 b | Automobile lights must be turned on one-half hour after sunset. Precipitation. nthly precipitation 4o inches in the Capital (Curren month to'd t] ]fi'is AV!YHI( Rec l’d Asuary 527 | 3.85 s .‘""fi & #3 S33eBRILE (s SeSESSSemen AN December Weather in Various Cities. g'rmn:eumn.g FOREIGN. ich time. today.) Jam. O iperature. %Ql!hfl. 49 ‘Cloudy HOTEL SALE NEAR Miami “White Elephant,” Begun in 1025, May Be Finished. MIAMI, Fla., October 11 (#).—The Dally News says it has learned Miami’s most cunlplmlmu real estate “white elephant” — unfinished Roosevelt Hnul—-mly be ‘sold within 90 days. A boom-time project, the proposed $2,750,000 hotel, with 559 rooms, was begun in 1925. Work stopped after $1,100,000 had been spent. Today the massive steel and brick , framework D. C, towers specterlike over Miami's up- town skyline. The News says negotiations more promising than any during the last six years are being handled by Marion E. Sibley, attorney for L. A. Parris, who succeeded the late John B. Wheat as bondholders’ trustee. Zoo Wolves Kill Lion. SAN FRANCISCO, October 11 (#). —The mountain lion triplets at San Francisco’s zoo are now twins. One of them stuck his paw through the wire netting to find out what was in the next cage. It turned out to be a pair of hungry adult wolves. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1935, BOY STAR IS CENTER OF CUSTODY DISPUTE Aunt Who Reared Bartholomew Lad to Fight Parents’ Claims. By the Assoclated Press. HOLLYWOOD, October 11.—Freddie Bartholomew, 1i-year-old English boy who became a movie sensation by his work in the picture “David Copper- field” and saw his weekly salary jump | from $100 to $1,250, soon may find himself the center of a custody fight. Miss Millicent Bartholomew, aunt and guardian of the handsome young- ster, said yesterday, through her at- torney, Felix Cunningham, she would take steps to gain permanent custody LAXATIVE FACTS Espotabs relieve with- outgriping, embarrass- ment or inconvenience. AT AL DRUGGISTS of Freddie, who has been in her care since he was 3 years old. Cunningham said there had been considerable correspondence between Freddie’s parents, in Engiand, and Miss Bartholomew. “Preddie iz sotisfied he belongs to his aunt,” Cunningham said, “and he wishes to remain in her custody. However, he is willing to provide from | hic salary for the care and education of his two small sisters in England. WooDWARD & LoTHROP I0™ ]]THF AND G STREETS FOR JUNIORS alert to what -is newest The fashions found in ‘our Junior Misses’ Section are a series of exciting discoveries. Lower left—Braid and Brass Buttons, march brayely down the front of a black synthetic crepe frock . ____ $|6.§s From a group in sizes 11 to 17, $7.95 up. Center—a Three-piece Suit that adds a scarf for fur- In gray, with black and white checked ther dash. swagger Other three-piece stvles. Lower right—a Brown Wool Coat with wide, flatteringly rippled collar of Kolinsky . ._ .. . From a group in black, brown or bruhx mlors, 939 75 to $125. Junion MIsszs' APPAREZL, FOURTH FLOOR, o ORI 4 ’9 75 10 $59.75; hvo-pwra 329.%5 $29.75. 359 75 TAPEEES R e “EVERYTHING GOES” to make the new Hats particularly yours In iration gleaned from the Tyrol—from a dashing comic opera uniform—or a braw Scot’s bonnet—"everything goes™ to make the new hats excitingly individual. And the price range is versa- tile, too. We show two widely divergent ideas, at $10—Tyrolean and toque-plus-coque. Others, %5, Muovery, Tamp FLoox. 3630, 5750, S|O0 PHone District 5300 This Week—Last Opportunity to Select Personal Greeting Cards At Special Low Prices ENGRAVING, FIRST FLOOR Another Helen Hicks Triumph SWEATERS “Twins” and Slip-ons styled—like the popular Helen Hicks frocks —with real understanding of the active sportswoman’s needs. The “twins” have crew necks, meticulously hand-finished— hand-done buttonholes and the much-desired narrow purling at the bottom. In Cashmere, $16.95; Camelshair, $13.95 The slip-ons in Zephyr wool are the im- $10-95 portant type worn with a belt (see sketch. The belt is $2 additional.) Brown, navy or natural, in sizes 34 to 44. SPORTSWEAR, THIRD FLO®R. MISSES’ FROCKS In Silks and Synthetics 51695 Your mood is practically all you need :onsider—so varied are these silk and synthetic frocks. Parade in gay braid (upper right) or feel Grecian in draped lines and shirring (left above) — go richly caparisoned with “jeweled” but- tons—or rival the “gay 90’s” with much narrow braid—to mention but a few of their fashion inspirations. Sizes 12 to 20. Missss’ Dresses, THmD FLOOR

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