Evening Star Newspaper, November 25, 1935, Page 9

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SPORTS LIABILITY and all forms of Insurance . Blaise de Sibour & Co. INSURANCE BROKERS 1700 Eve 8t N.W. NAL 4673 MAYTA el rust, ifetime, oll- l‘-’e ed, n- [ its and “spare buttens, JCHARRING Sales ELECTRIC Service 517 10th N.W. NA. 2160 If Your Dentist Hurts You Try DR. FIELD Plate Expert Double - B4 Suction I Guarantee a Perfect Tight Fit in Any Mouth I Give Violet Ray Treatments for Pyorrhea Extraction 31 and 32 Also Gas Ext. Plates $15t0 $35 = R Gold Crowns Plates 31.50 36 up Repaired up | Fillings, $1 wp DR. FIELD 406 7th St. N.W. Met. 9256 HELP FIGHT COLDS ©1iris by uaing USED OVER 80 YEARS TREATING COLDS AND COUGHSDUETOCOLDS LEWIS DEPARTURE THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, DEMOCRATIC WOMEN* TO HEAR GOV. M’NUTT LADTOEONFLETS e« e Differences With Council of A. F. L. Declared Irre- concilable. By the Associated Press. John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, told reporters today he had resigned as vice presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, “because of irreconcilable dif- ferences with s majority of the Ex- ecutive Council en the question of or- ganization of our large industry.” Surrounded by upward of 30 report- ers, he gave no specific reason, how- ever, as to why he left the council when he did. Decided Before Re-election. He implied he had decided on this move before he was re-elected a vice president at the federation's Atlantic ity Convention last month. Asked why he stood for re-election, Lewis said: “I wanted to see if they'd have enough stamina to defeat me. They didn't.” Lewis resigned Saturday in & one- sentence letter to Willlam Green, A. P. of L. president, without giving any reason for the action and immediately left town for the week end. He gave & long talk this morning on plans of the recently-organized com- mittee for industrial unions—a com- mittee of seven prominent union presi- dents working for organization of mass production workers by industry rather than by craft—and recited the story of the many rebuffs the council had handed him in the last year. Next Meeting January 15. Lewis also noted the council would have its next meeting January 15 in Miami. The members who decided on that date and place well knew, he said, that the United Mine Workers’ Convention would be held in Wash- ington at about the same time. | “I have attended all the Washington | conferences of the council, but I haven't been able to follow their sea- sonal perigrinations from the Jersey beaches to the golden sands of Florida. “It's reasonable to assume that they didn’'t want me to be present.” COUPLE GOING TO INDIA Mr. and Mrs. Voorhees Represent Seventh-Day Adventists. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Edward Voor- hees of the Seventh-day Adventist Church at Takoma Park will sail from | San Francisco December 6 for Bom- | bay, India, where Voorhees will be | connected with the Southern Asia | Division Conference of the denomina- tion as a leader of the publishing in- terests operated by the church. Voorhees was graduated in the senior theological course at the Wash- | ington Missionary College in 1934. | He and his wife are natives of New | Jersey. Sun-cun'ng Turkish leaf tobacco. The tobacco is strung leaf by leaf and hung on long racks like you see below. at Dinner Friday at 7:30. Gov. Paul V. McNutt of Indiana will make his debut in Wi n as a speaker when he addresses the " ’ ‘Women's Yation- al Democratic month, Gov. McNutt is the second of ‘the Democratic Governors on the list. The dinner in his honor will be given at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Gov. Mc- Nutt is & former service man with & fine record in the World War. Club Friday night. 1 Admirersof Gov. McNutt in- sist that if for any reason Vice President Garner should not be President Roose- velt’s ru nning mate in 1936, McNutt may be the selection of the Democrats for Vice President. In vy any event, they predict that he will be a formidable candidate for the Demoeratic presi- dential nomination in 1940. ‘The Woman's National Democratic Club is giving & series of “Governors’ dinners” at its club house, 1526 New Hampshire avenue. Gov. Earle of Dennsylvania opened the series last Egg . 1040. Nut __ These coals are unsurpassed in " qual ve Coke (2,000) _ Fairmont Egg .. Md. Smokeless Egg. . Virginia Anth. Stove _ It carried in. 50c tom extra Full Weight Guaranteed B. J. WERNER 1937 5th St. N.E. NOrth 8813 ICE CREAM TURKEY Beautitui to look at . . . delightful to eat ... for this proud turkey gobbler is made of six Serves 8 10 10 PERSONS delicious flavors of Breyers Ice Cream. His $125 generous proportions serve 8 to 10 persons, and he's yours for only $1.25. THANKSGIVING ICE CREAM PUMPKIN ... $1.25 {Serves 8 1o 10 persons). INDIVIDUAL FANCY FORMS — footballs, turkeys, Ppumpkins, etc.—$2.40the doz. or $1.68 for eight. Order 48 hours in advance from your Breyer decler or telephone the nearest Breyer office. D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1935. S Pennsylvania Ave. at 26th Street Telephone: Decatur 1011 EVERY woman naturally demands that her Thanksgiving dinner be a glorious example of how varied, how rich, how delicious a meal she ean serve. That’s why, in thousands of Washe ington homes, holiday dinners are planned on this rule: Good things are better when made of Chestnut Farms-Chevy Chase quality products, “SEALTEST" GRADE-A MILK* — Fresh creamy milk to add authentic richness in eooking. Delicious to drink. Its quality and purity are assured by “Sealtest Protection.” “SEALTEST” TABLE and WHIPPING CREAMS*— Rich, thick and golden. Luxury at low cost for coffee, desserts, and special eooking. CREAM CREST BUTTER—A brand-new top-quality batter, slightly salt, made of the finest sweet cream. Good breads and vegetables are better with it. Marvelous for eooking, of course — and amazingly low priced to make this use possible. ARLINGTON BUTTIR—A -pl;ndid high-grade butter, dis- tinguished by a Certificate of Quality from the U, §. Government. CREAMED COTTAGE CHEESE— Delicious, healthful, and really nourishing. Comes fresh and ready to serve — as a salad, a spread, or a dish in itself. FANCY CHEESES— Famous, zestful cheeses celebrated all over the country, Favorites are OLp EncLism, Smire New York Creppar, ROQUEFORT and Swiss. Unequaled for salads, desserts, spreads. CERTIFIED 24-HOUR E6GS—Selected hennery eggs from White Leghorn farms. Highest quality — all white- shelled — individually candled. K“SEALTEST" products produced under the SEALTEST SYSTEM OF LABORATORY PROTECTION, PRODUCTS he aromatic Turkish tobaccos used in Chesterfield give / them a more pleasing aroma and taste . . . Every year we impott thousands of pounds from Turkey and Greece THE IMPORT DUTY alone is 35 cents a pound —but Turkish tobacco is necessary to a good cigarette, The right amount of Turkish tobacco, blended with our mild, ripe home-grown tobaccos helps to give Chesterfields more aroma, helps to give them a more pleasing taste. CHESTERFIELD —A BLEND OF - MILD RIPE HQME-GROWN AND AROMATIC TURKISH TOBACCOS a . ‘ ~ A : N Gy » )

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