Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1935, Page 7

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)

SAEIC AUTOCRAT3pe MOTOR OIL BAYERSON CIL WORKS COLUMBIA WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER at .° cents st.Joseph| GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN If Your Dentist Hurts You Try DR. FIELD Plate Expert Double Suction I Guarantee a Perfect Tight Fit in Any Mouth 1 Give Violet Ray Treatments for Pyorrhea Extraction | | sl and 52 |} Also Gas Ext. | Plates $1.50 Repaired 1 up DR. FIELD 406 7th St. N.W. Plates $15t0 $35 Gold 56 Crowns up Fillings, $1 up Met. 9256 Sleepy-time Pal You associate with your mattress more hours out of the 24 than with any other furniture. Why not make sleep hours more comfortable—less rest- fess? For §5 and up, we will trans- form old flattened-out mattresses into downy, new ones. Phone us. SPRINGS MATTRESSES ZABAN %26 11th St. N.W. NAt1 9410 Povemg é wosg B 0R0P ‘y S~ Stops Colds Where They Start ® Most colds start in the head. Nature warns with a sniffle or sneeze. At the first sign, use Penetro Drops. Containing ephedrine and other scientific “balanced medication,” Penetro Drops fight off colds effectively.25c, 50c, $1 bottles. All druggists. AND THE SOUTH via SEABOARD the ¢ost is only One extra passenger ticket —at 3.6¢c per mile, when two or more persons travel on tickets good in Pullman cars. Fou travel in comfortable, tuxurious Seaboard. air-con- ditioned trains. Your car travels by Seaboard expedited freight service. No crating— 1o trouble at all to enjoy the use of your car in Florida, without the necessity of driv- Ing thousands of miles over dangerous, congested roads. SEABOARD TRAINS ARE AIR-CONDITIONED THE ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL begins service December 12th. For information, reservations, auto shipments by rail. consult your local ticket agent...or EDWARD PLACK, A. G. P. A, 714 14th t. N.W.. Washington. D. O. Tel, National 0633-38 . GEABOAR AIR LINE RAILWy The only completely . mie-eonditioned trains to Florida FLETCHER HAILS HOOVER'S SPEECH Democrats Caustic—Borah and Knox Fail to Comment. By the Associ=ied Press. Democratic spokesmen joined today in criticizing Herbert Hoover's New | York speech demanding a new Federal |. fiscal policy, but Chairman Henry P.| Fletcher of the Republican National | | Committee praised it. | “I agree perfectly with everything he said,” Fletcher told reporters. “It was & splendid speech.” | Speaking in New York Saturday | night, Mr. Hoover advanced an 11-| point program which included a call for a balanced budget, re-establish- | ment of the gold standard and the | stopping of silver purchases. | Sees Candidacy. | Senator O'Mahoney, Democrat, of Wyoming, said the speech showed Mr. | Hoover “‘unquestionably” was seeking | the Republican nomination for Presi- | dent again. | “Mr. Hoover,"” Senator Black, Demo- | | crat, of Alabama. said, “proposes now, | since we are recovering from the malady (depression), to turn the | patient over to the very crowd that brought about its near fatal illness The people are not going to stand for | that.” Fletcher linked his indorsement of the former President's financial pro- gram with a fresh assault on the re- covery claims of New Deal chieftains. | Asserting there had been three -dis- | tinet economic periods since President Roosevelt took office, the committee chairman said the first was “one of | speedy business and industrial re- | covery” extending from April, 1933. | to August, 1933, and that New Deal | policies had *“absolutely nothing” to do with it. Claims Relapse Followed. ‘The second lasted from September, 1933, to June, 1935, Fletcher said, and | “was a period of relapse in many | fields of private enterprise and stag- nation in others. * * * | “During that period the Govern- ment entered into every conceivable field of private enterprise. It aban- doned all pretense of attempting to reduce public expenditures or even | keep them within reasonable bounds.” The Supreme Couart’s ruling that the N. R. A was unconstitutional marked the start of the third and present economic period, Fletcher said, adding it had been attended by busi- ness improvement. There was no comment on the Hoover speech from the man imme- diately in charge of New Deal finances, Secretary Morgenthau, nor did two | Republicans mentioned for next year's standard bearing—Senator Borah of Idaho and Col Frank Knox of Chi- cago—offer any expression. Senator Guffey, chairman of the| Democratic Senatorial Campaign Com- mittee, turned during the day on a Republican congressional pamphlet called “Roosevelt, the Master.” He said nepublican censure of New Deal expenditures “leads to the inev- | itable conclusion that nothing which | provides care for the sick. comforts for the aged, facilities for schools, | libraries and playgrounds or institu- tions, finds any favor in the sight of these old deal detractions.” THE WEATHER District of Columbia—Fair tonight jand tomorrow; not much change in | temperature, lowest tonight about 36 | degrees; probably light frost in the suburbs tonight; diminishing north- west winds, becoming light variable tomorrow. | Maryland—Fair tonight and tomor- row, probably iight frost in exposed | places tonight: slowly rising tempera- ture in north portion. West Virginia—Fair tonight, to- morrow increasing cloudiness with slowly rising temperature, followed by occasional light rain tomorrow night or Wednesday. River Report. Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers muddy today. Report for Last 18 Hours. Temperature, Barometer. Saturday— Inche: D. = 48 for Last 24 Hours. (From noon yesterday to ngon today.) Record THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1935. Washington Wayside Random Observations of Interesting Events and Things. END OF A CYCLE. HAT chorus girl who spent a much-quoted week along Washington ~ Wayside has moved on; quite like any other chorus girl. The junior member of the dramatic department who squired her around didn't quite make expenses, although virtually every time she opened her mouth it was worth a dollar in this “bright - sayings - of-the-chorus-gir]l” department. There were other times, of course, when she opened her mouth to con- sume food and drink—at which she was even better than talking. Next time, maybe, she’ll be just as| dumb and on a diet. * ok k% PERMANENT EMERGENCY. Residents of Tenth street be- tween New York avenue and K must have learned by this time to take emergencies in their stride. The “No Parking” sign which proclaimed the emergency of the Shrine Convention last June still utters its faded warning from its place in a tree bor there, * Xk ¥ X P'S and Q'S AGAIN. JE'VE got to watch our p's and q's when we start explaining the origin of the expression, “Watch your p's and q's.” The mail has made that evident ever since we said the other day that the phrase had its origin in the warn- ing by waiters in English pubs that customers should keep track of their pints and quarts to avold disputes | when the pay-off came. That explanation did not satisfy another group of p and q enthusiasts; quite a large group, too, if the vol- ume of mail is a criterion. They in- sist the expression derives from the warning to printers’ apprentices to watch the letters closely Since they look just alike. It is obvious they do. Turn a lower case p around and it makes a perfect q—and vice versa. * ok Kk % TIME TO LEAVE. 'HERE are business barometers and business barometers, all the way from carloadings to the run-over con- dition of humanity's heels. It remained, however, for the re- turn of a colored man to his native Washington to create a brand-new one. Explaining his sudden reappear- ance to a bus driver, after an absence of 14 years, he said: “Ah went out West 'bout fo'teen years ago, but reliet’s so po’ out theah I had to come back. “Why, man, you know those folks is so po' Ah saw a man walking down the street one day with one black and one brown shoe. Ah just decided it was time to leave town.” * % % ¥ NOT SO SILLY. JUS’I‘ off-hand, it may seem kind of silly to put & “no trespassing” sign on a jail. They have one on the jail out in Bladensburg, Md., and they insist there’s nothing silly about it. The sign was placed there to keep friends, relatives and casual passersby from bringing food, drinks and some- times files and saws to prisoners. It got to be quite & nuisance and it was decided since there already was a law forbidding the practice, there ought to be a sign. * x ok x CUPID'S HOLIDAY. It costs three times as much money to get married on Sunday these days as it does on the more prosaic week day. At least this is true at Elkton, Md., where a Sun- day license to marry costs $7 and the fee for the minister is $5. Ordinary week day rates are $2 for license and $2 for the mine ister's fee. ik YOUTH'S FOUNTAIN. l.iE IS 40—and not elated over it. He was taking a walk before going to bed the other evening. Some neighborhood rapscallions of high- school age had been creating a dis- turbance in the alley and an indig- nant householder was in pursuit of | them. Suddenly a heavy hand on his 40- year-old shoulder interrupted the pro- | found meditations of the solitary MEDICATED WITH pedestrian, “I don't know whose boy you are,| | | INGREDIENTS OF but I've seen you around here and | I'm going to point you out to the Dalice - Hs il (i e i i it tueie Vicks VApoRuB “It's no use pretending to be inno- cent. I saw you.” “He's prouder ahout it” says his wife, “than of anything that's hap- pened to him in years.” Boy Shoots Big Eagle. KANSAS CITY, Kans, November | 18 (#).—Earl Hatfield, 11, trained his | ® newly acquired rifle on what he| : thought was & hawk. Proudly yesterday | : he displayed his trophy, an American | eagle with & wing spread of 7 feet 8" inches. old-fashioned cough Syrups...more con- venient . . . less ex- pensive...lingers fonger in the throat. Record Crowds Everywhere See New 1936 Plymouth! Highest. 48, noon today. Year a Lowest. 36, 6 pm. yesterday, Record Temperatures This Year. Highest. 88, on July 20, Lowest. —2., on January 28. Humidity for Last 24 Hours. (From noon yesterday to noon todav.) Highest. 93 per cent. at 3 p.m. yesterday. Lowest. 46 per cent. at noon today. Tide Tables. (Furnished by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) Toda: ‘Tomorrow. 2:25 a.m. Sun ,today __. . tomorrow . today _ Automobile Iights must be turned on one-half hour after sunset. Precipitation. Monthly precipitation in inches in the Capital (current month to date): Month, Ayerage. Record. Janusry 7.08 R February 684 March April May June July August onimi 2D ASLBRIS 3 e Cleveland, Columbia, §. Denver. Colo. 2 Sminn. FEXSRER2 S tacn uron. Dak_ 20 .81 Indianapolis.Ind 30.26 Jacksonville. P! i Kansas City_ Angeles _ Louisville. Ky. New Orleans_ New York N.¥. 20 Miami, Fla__ Minneapolis Oklahoma Cit Omaha. Nebr Philadelphia Pa. Phoenix, Ariz Pittsburgh, | Portiand. Me. Portiand, Orex_ Raleizh 'N. C Salt Lake Cit: San Antonie San Diego. Cal San Francisco. St. Louis_ Mo NEW 6% TIME PAYMENT PLAN Ask for the new Official Chrysler Motors Commercial Credit Company 6% Time Payment Plan. Figure it for yourself. 1 Start withryour unpaid balance. 2 *Then add insurance cost.,,at cons ference rates. 3 Then multiply by 6%—for a 12« month plan. One-half of one per cent per month for period more or less than 12 months. NO OTHER CHARGES *In:some states a small legal documentary fos is-required. 3510 AND UP, LIST AT FACTORY, DETROIT SPECIAL EQUIPMENT EXTRA PLYMOUTH. It’s the Biggest, Most Beautiful Plymouth ever built ROM THE DAY the 1936 Plymouth went on Fdisplay it has been a record crowd-puller. And everywhere they say it’s the biggest low- priced car...the best-looking...ever presented. More than 40 added improvements are attract- ing attention...things that people want today. The 1936 Plymouth frame is 100% more rigid. The Safety-Steel body is newly reinforced at five main points...insulated against noise. Plymouth’s 100% hydraulic brakes always stop you smoothly and safely. With a new steering design, there justisn’t any road-shock at the wheel the new Plymouth always handles beautifully...anywhere. Eleven new comfort features are added to Plymouth’s famed Floating Ride...inches more leg room...more elbow and shoulder room...a new sway-eliminator, and the twice-as-rigid frame, give the luxurious riding smoothness you'd expect in this big car. And again Plymouth is America’s most eco- nomical full-size car. .. all evidence indicates it will do 18 to 24 miles per gallon of gasoline. It costs less to run! See this big 1936 Plymouth—at your Chrysler, Dodge or De Soto dealer. Ridein it...driveit... before you buy any car today! PLYMOUTH DIVISION OF CHRYSLER CORPORATION BUILDS REAT CARS

Other pages from this issue: