Evening Star Newspaper, October 24, 1935, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

JUSTICE MURAL - DUTLINES SHOWN Mrs. Morgenthau and Jus- tice Stone View Biddle’s Work. Pull-scale drawings in outline of | murals proposed for decoration of the | south side of the fifth floor of the new | Justice Department Building by George Biddle famous American artist, weie | viewed today by Justice Harlan F.| Stone of the Supreme Court, Mrs. | Henry Morgenthau, wife of the Secre- tary of the Treasury, and Edward Bruce, crelwr of the public works of art project Biddle expmned the motif of the paintings, “Justice in So- clety,” and exhibited a set of the pre- liminary studies based on a 3-inch scale. Exhibit Especially Arranged. The exhibit was arranged especially | for Justice Stone and Mrs. Morgenthau | because of their intense interest in the art to decorate the new public build- ings. | Last week an advisory committee of distinguished American artists met at the Corcoran Gallery of Art to judge a striking array of paintings and sculp- ture submitted by 200 artists in the Government's national competition for murals and statuary in the new Post Office and Justice Buildings. Twelve Statues Required. Ten paintings and 12 statues will be Belected from the large collection to eugment the major works being done by more than a dozen outstanding painters and sculptors commissioned to execute murals and statuary with- | out preliminary competition. Seven of the paintings and all of the statues | in the competition will go into the Post Office Building. Biddle is one of the famous paint- ers not in the contest who was ap- pointed to execute leading murals in | the two buildings. The others in-| cluded Leon Kroll, Thomas Benton, | Eugene Savage, Rockwell Kent, Regi- nald Marsh, Boardman Robinson, Maurice Sterne, Henry Varnum Poor and John Steuart Curry. Announcement of the awards of the | paintings and sculpture in competition | will be made Sunday. MRS. ROOSEVELT SUPPORTS DRIVE _ ! o . i Goodwill Industries Program and | Objectives Upheld by Letter Read at Meeting. Indorsement of Goodwill Industries of Washington, Inc., by Mrs. Franklin | D. Roosevelt was contained in a letter | read at the final report luncheon of the group yesterday at the Natmnal Press Club. Writing to Mrs. Cabot Stevens, a Vice chairman of the Women's Division | in the campaign conducted to raise funds for the organization, Mrs. | Roosevelt said she was “very much in- terested to learn of the splendid work | which the Goodwill Industries has | been doing and glad to know that you are organizing hu'e in Washington.” | “I am 80 sorry,” she wrote “that I | eould not be with you today and send | my greetings t,o you.all and wish you | every success.” i Ernest H. Daniel, chairman of the campaign, expressed thanks for Mrs. | Roosevelt's letter on behalf of his co- | workers. } The letter was read after the pres- | entation of two baskets of flowers, | contributed by Z. D. Blackistone, to Mrs. Karl Fenning, vice president of Good Will Industries, and Mrs. Stan- | ley C. Sears, chairman of the women's | division. Mrs. Fenning and Mrs. Sears were honored for their cam- paign work. | It was announced at the meeting that a letter and contribution had been received from Attorney General Cummings, who wrote: 3 “I sincerely hope that the effort & secure equipment and to provide for other needs of Good Will Indus- tries will be .succe.ssYul WOMAN ROBBED Brs. Clara E. Burrier Loses Dia- | | mond and Wedding Ring. | Mrs. Clara E. Burrier, 42, resident | fmanager of an apartment building at | 1115 Ninth street, was robbed of a diamond ring and a wedding ring early today by two colored men who gamned @ entrance to her first-floor apartment through a rear door. On leaving, the robbers dropped a wrist watch, which they had also taken, and left it in the alley in their | hurry to get away. GOWNS TO BE DISPLAYED Bridal Dresses Since 1857 to Be| Exhibited in Pageant. A pageant of bridal gowns dating from 1857 to the present time will be on display at an exhibit tomorrow st 8 o'clock, at the First Congrega- tion Church, 161 Kentucky avenue southeast, under the sponsorship of | | the Women's Bible Class. Music during the program will be furnished by Paul De Long, organist, accompanied by Ruby Smith Stahl, Dorothy Wilson Halbach ahd Dale Hamilton, -soloists. Tickets will be | available at the church. Using Moore’s Caulking Compound Costs only $2 a gallon—but saves lots of expense for | - coal, gas or oil that now goes | to heat outdoors. Sold at all Winslow neighborhood stores. 55,000 TO ENGAGE IN NEW FOREST WORK Lands of South and Puerto Rico in Projects Taken Up This Month. By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, October 24.—Approxi- mately 55,000 workers in 274 C. C. C. camps will be engaged in improving forest lands in the South and Puerto THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1035. aageney tforester, amnounced yestr-| C(RAGH IN AIR KILLS Bo'.h national and State forest lands are included in the project which is to last for the duration of the en- rollment period ending March 31, 1936. Kircher declared Southern forest work has “advanced 20 years” because of the C. C. C. activities and forest fires have been cut to a minimum. —— e Grid Player Dies. TWO NAVAL FLYERS Lieutenants Jammed in Cockpits by Impact During War Maneuvers. By the Associated Press. PENSACOLA, Fla., October Sixteen-year-old Aubrey Kill has|Jammed in their battered eockpm air broke a gine-ship student forma- tion, sending one of the planes into » tail spin. They were Lieut. R. F. Coates of the Navy and Lieut. N. J. Pusel of the Marine Corps, both Naval Acad- emy graduates in the class of 1930. Their plane and one piloted by Lieut. C. 8. Willard, fying at close tange on the extreme right of the formation, crashed. The fuselage mashed in around them, and they were unable to bale out as the ship went into a tail In spite of a crumbled left wing, with Willard, took to his parachute ininjured. and was u The collision occurred just as 26 Army planes from New Orleans landed at the Naval Afr Station nearby as a part of their mimic warfare maneu- vers. Coates’ home was at Wausau, Wis, and Pmel" at Carlton, Minn, 34 Mexican Rebels Killed. MEXICO CITY, October 24 (F)— Dispatches to the newspaper Excel- sior last night said 34 rebels were killed and several wounced in a bat- CAPT. RUDOLF STANGER, AUSTRIAN ACE, DIES World War Pilot Landed Plane Within Walls of Be- sieged Fort. By the Associated Press. VIENNA, October 24 —Capt. Rudolf Stanger, the ace Austrian World War pilot, died of pneumonia today. During the World War his greatest * A-13 | ing his plane within the walls of the | fort ana presenting the commander of '.he bmned forces with new defense —————, Dumping Duties Canceled. OTTAWA, October 24 (#)—The department of national revenue an- nounced = cancellation last night of dumping duties on the following com- modities entering Canada: Plums and prunes, effective Octo- ber 23; radishes, effective October 25; Rico during the enroliment period opened this month, Joseph C. Kircher, injuries received in a foot ball game. Fruits & Vegetables Fresh Kale or Spinach .. .. 2 a 9C Fresh 1 Broccoli Yellow Onions Iceberg Lettuce - - Grimes Golden or Stayman Winesap APPLES 5~ 14 ORANGES =« 29 Florida Grapefruit 4.25:..6-25: § 0 MnBludBeerjincans oot oo dta o0 s 12 oz can 10c New Yorker Beer 4 bots. contents ZSC,' case contents $] .49 Sunshade Beer 4 botk. contents 29¢C; case contents $1.59 Weisbrod Beer 4 bots. contents 29C; case contents $1.59 Arrow Beer 3 bots. contents 25C Beer in most D. C. stores. Prices slightly higher in Va. stores. Campbell’s Tomato Juice Florida Gold Grapefruit Juice Sealdsweet Grapefruit Juice Sealdsweet Grapefruit Sections Eveready Fruit Cocktail Valley Grape Juice Rock Creek Ginger Ale Suburban Club Ginger Ale 3 ige. bots. contents 25¢C Pep5| Cola 6 12 o. bots. contents 25¢ Walker BlilIMilK e s o b e o sl o pt. 7¢; at. 12¢ COFFEE CEREALS T Sunshade —_____ . 17¢ { Quaker Oats 2 pkes. 19¢ Gold Bag-———___ w. 23c | Corn Flakes -2 pkgs. 15¢ Wilkins _______ . 27¢c { Rice Krispies 2 pkes. 23c Orienta - _______ 1. 30c { Wheaties ___2 pkes. 25¢ Del Monte___.__1.30c | Ralston Boscad . 30c | Wheatena ____pks. 23¢ Sankai--—=o - w.30c { Shredded Wheat pks. 13¢ 50 oz. can 23¢ 2 934 oz. cans 15¢ 2 No. 2 eans 19¢ ———-2 No. 2 cans 25¢C 2 No. 1 tall cans 29¢ pt. bot. 17¢; qt. bot. 29¢ —-3 Ige. bots. contents 25¢ BAKER’S COCOA INSTANT POSTUM._ _ sm.can 25¢; 1se. can 43¢ POSTUM CEREAL oo --- ke 23C LIPTON’S TEA _ ___ % m.pks. 23¢; % ™. ok 45¢ BENNETT'S MAYONNAISE _ 8 oz jar I4c Pt jar ZSC " KRAFT'S MAYONNAISE 8 ox. jar l7c pt. jar 29c Kraft's Borden’s Velveeta Cheese Chateau Cheese % Ib. pkg. ISC % Ib. pkg. sc Brandywine Mushrooms (sliced) Paramount Chili Con Carne Underwood’s Deviled Ham Heinz Soups Iu&i Colu--e cll- M')l‘r ‘Consom: Consomme, Clam Chowder or Consomme Mdvilonc ':vumbl Rumford Baking Powder Heinz Pard Cooked Spaghetti 3 nie25¢ 2 .= 25¢ Heinz_Fresh Cucumber Pickles Lux Keeps clothes new far longer 19 2% 4. died in Tueffontien, South Africa, from |two young lleutenants fell to death yesterday as a crash 1,000 feet in the * Star Specials *x Maxwell House COFFEE TEA Campbell’s Pork and Beans Pillsbury’s “Best” FLOUR GRAPE-NUTS 'DOG FOOD FREE! 60-inch Moth Bag with 3 FLIT & Wl o A A i RINSO Soaks Clothes Whi LUX Toilet Soap For smooth skin 25 Willard brought his plane to a safe tle with federal troops near landing. Lieut. F. T. Corbin, fiying Jalisco, HAMS Lagos, | feat was preventing the fall of the im- | spinach, effective October 29, and portant fortress of Przemysl by land- | peaches, effective October 29. Quality Meats Fresh Fancy Fresh Pork Roast Ib. c Whole or Half Loin D. G. S. SUGAR-CURED | Shepherd Park Market | L. R. FIELDS, Prop. | 7802 Alaska Ave. N.W. | Phone GEorgia 8000 Friday Evening, Oct. 25 | 8 to 10 P.M. This District Grocery Store, now under new manage- ment, has been completely remodeled and is now better able to serve your food needs. You, your family and friends are cordially invited to attend this gala event. A complete program has been ar- ranged, including @ Food Show, Free Groceries, Souvenirs for young and old and music to enliven the occasion. Be sure . IT'S ALL FREE! Sofnlk Cake Flour Dromedary Ginger Bread Mix Ask for an Entry Blank at your nearest District Grocery Store and enter the Crosse & Blackwell Contest ASSORTED SOUPS (except clam chowder) 2 18 or. 25¢ 4 13! oz. cans 29¢ ___ large bottle 19¢ __13; oz. bottle 23¢ __16 oz jar 25¢ - 8oz glass 18¢ _16 oz. jar 23¢ Fresh Roll Butter ORANGE MARMALADE . DATE AND NUT BREAD BEEF, LAMB, IRISH or KIDNEY STEW____can 19¢- D.G.S. COLLEGE INN Butter Bean Sprouts, Your Choice Chop Suey Sauce or 3 or 2 5 ¢ Chow Mein Noodles O O e RS Butter “Good to the Last Drop” 529 21 39- No Bitter Aftertaste 4-23 “Scientifically Balanced” Boys! Girls! Get Dizzsy Dean’s Free Prizes! Details on Every Package 69- %lb pkg. % Ib. pkg. 51b. bag 12 Ib. bag both . Quart Can *or Moth Bag Smoked Hams COMBINATION DG Both for FILLET OF HADDOCK Standard OYSTERS SRR R | Ayrshire U mmmmmmumm|mmumm@mmmmmnmmmmmmuummmmmmmmumnn| Ige. pkg. .31 =] GOOD LUCK MARGARINE FLOUR aiies 1o phe 2] 390 s, 21€ PURE LARD Decker’s Sliced Bocon — e m. 39¢ Brandywine Sliced Bacon_ Mixed Eggs Auth’s Green Link Sausage Auth'’s Pork Pudding Scrapple Brewer-Snyder Cooked Hominy N. Y. State Sauerkraut Whole or Half BREAKFAST 1 Ib. package Sausage Meat and 1 package PANCAKE (Not Frozen) Ib. ZIC in 25¢ wn 49¢ R U. S. Government Graded and Dated Sunshade EGGS 47- 33 35¢ 1b. 37c D.G.S. Pancake Flour Premier Pancake Syrup Vermont Maid Syrup____ ——_12 oz bot. 19¢ Lake Shore Honey 16 oz. jar 19¢ Schindler’s Peanut Butter_____________ 1. jar 23¢ old Vlrgmla Apple Butter 1ge. sar 15¢ LIBBY’S U. S. Standards L Retail Grade B 90Z- Choice Apricots DEL MONTE Early Garden Asparagus..No. 2 can 23¢ Calif. Spinach Peeled Apricots PHILLIP'S DELICIOUS Cooked Spaghetti Vegetable Soup b romr compeng hore rom Nevember e of Ladis Mome Juarnal. 2 23¢ 26 o pkgs. 25¢ am. 10¢; 1. 18¢ “Krispy Crackers m-lu soups and chuu taste better” AMOCO MOTOR OIL enn ZI c $I 59 Incinded Camay Soap---3 cakes 14c Star Soap Fels Naptha 500 WONDERFUL PIRATE PRIZES FOR BOYS BOOKS AND GIRLS with ,,,,d 3 cakes e Lifebuoy Health Soap 4 - 25¢ Bab-O Handi-Rolls___2 pm 15¢ Amox Liquid Spray, pt. can 39¢ qt. can 67c iter 19¢

Other pages from this issue: