Evening Star Newspaper, December 6, 1935, Page 9

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R. M. Kauffmann, Mrs. R. C. Owers, Mrs. Evan Wilson, Miss Lois Jameson, DRAMA SPONSORED e BY SMITH ALUMNAE | yemivesSeie™ By e Miss Helen Atwater, ~ Mrs. DYNAMITE ON TRACKS HILL WILL SEEK | Couple in Basement, 70 and 69, ez o i e i M s chicken fat and some macaroni we had | had several nervous breakdowns and Depend on Lord in Relief Cut | one, vuen v s nigry. we | tneers ot o sisamie oy g ones Ex-Representative Plans to Enter Race in Both Mary could have a little cocoa and crackers | were and for eyes less sharp. land Primaries. e w);v:x. Tim'mo, Calif,, December § ~—Twelve sticks of dynamite were Fenning, Mrs. G. D, McKinney, Mrs. | tound yesterday on the Soume:*n Pa- Mrs. Matthe : ews was fingering her g1, Hayes' Performance to Aid| 7: Leake, Mrs. W. L. Corbin, Mrs.| cifc Railroad tracks, partially crushed $100 to Anyone Who Can Find Water in Fairfax Paints BUTLER-FLYNN Since 1845 609 C St. N.W. Phone ME. 0150 & before going to bed, but we haven't been able to buy cocoa, only now | neat but unstarched blouse, remarking H. G. Nichols : 3 o . -G and Mrs. Willlam - Chicken Fat Stretched Into Soup @n | there's » bargain sale—we didn't use | on the number of times it had been| Fund for Scholarship for | Chspin Huntington, former president | “ghoit momers B, T ch8er train to have to watch for sales. patched, when the reporter asked Capital Girl of the Smith College Alumnae Asso- | pected 1 sl i A tit C b d to M. k E d The fire was almost out now and | her what they were going to do if apl irl, clation pected to make an arrest shortly. ppetite Curbe 0 Make Ends a knifing wind was rattling the window | they got very hungry. Two meals & | o raise funds for & scholarship at The train pulverized a few of the < > panes. One wondered how the old |day are all they can manage now | smith College for a Capital l,mpum sticks without exploding them. Meet Without W orry. couple weuld keep warm when thelr (and there's to be one less check this | mith College Club of Washingten io Swords From Japan. relief allowance was cut and there | month. sponsoring the opening performance At ‘the request of Ethiop'a, 1,200 BY PILL BELL, JR. | looked at her shoes. The leather was | Was 8o much less money for coal | “Drink some water,” she sald gayly. | o “Victorla Regins,” starring Helen | 5WOrds, “which were blooded in the BY WILL P. KENNEDY. RED MATTHEWS is 70 and his | oid and thin. | The landlady was kind, Mrs. Matthews | “Haven't you ever taken a drink of | Hayes which has its premiere ip this | Sino-Japanese and Fusso-Japanese | Attaiking ‘New' Dl = wife, Bertha, is ‘nearly 69.”| “I used to have several pairs, but |had said. Maybe she'd give a few | water when you were hungry? Makes | country the evening of Monday, De- | WAIS/ but which have been lying idle | & sttt e attine ool done | Their home is two rooms in a | now I've only got one, for week days— | lumps. Maybe they'll have to go to | you forget it for a while.” cember 16, at the National Theater, |\l & Osaka, Japan, warehouse for | Philip Hill of Washington and 2 i basement, or rather. one room | and Sundays,” she said. She chuckled | bed to keep warm. That would keep Pt SR O after a successful London run. * | long time, have been sent to Ethiopia. | p Il of washington and Balti- | yng a kitchen. They are “on relief” | when she said “for week days and | Mr. Matthews from going out in search ¢ z tre. Bbbatd Chides, peesident of Tment to The Star. that he wil be a | 200 are supposed (0 get $6 & weck to| Sundays.” She laughed When she Of vacuum cleancrs to mend. Jews in Salonika. the Smith Club, is chairman of ar- candidate for Congress from the thira | K2P them alive. but often & check | talked about “window sobbing"—that | Back Not So Strong. A large portion cf the population of | rangements for the benefit. She will e e e o e Txd | goes astray and the couple goes with- | was her phrase for “window shopping, | 1f Mr. Matthews were 20 or 30 years | Salonika, Greece, consists of Jews of | be assisted by Mrs. Clayton Haskell. publican and Democratic primaries in out supper. “just going and looking when we can’t | younger he might get a W. P. A. job. ‘Bpnnun origin who speak an ar:haic Members of the various committees This month, even if the checks come | by | But, as he says, “My brain's all right | sort of Castilian Spanish as weil as| for the performance are Mrs. S. W. || G, W.King,Jr. 511 11thSt.N.W. May. He represented the third district —or Baltimore— as a Republican from 1921 until * 1927. He gave up the seat when he rYan unsuccess- fully for the Sen- ate. his district, now represented by Vincent L. Palmisano, rank- ing member of the House Dis- A trict Committee, is one that the Republican congressional group is especially anxious to reclaim for its party. In announcing his candidacy, Col. Hill pointed out he is attorne; State of Maryland in the Baltimore port differential case now before the Interstate Commerce Commisison, and that this work may take up a great deal of his time. This, he indicated, is the only thing that might stand in John Philip Hill. regularly, Mr. and Mrs. Matthews wil} receive only $18. Relief allowances | are being cut 25 per cent But Mrs. Matthews is uncomplain- |ing. Although she believes ‘“some- | thing will turn up,” she’s not waiting for the something. She’ll take sew- |ing, and her husband—when he has | carfare—goes out looking for broken | | vacuum cleaners to repair. | | Mrs, Matthews was sitting in a rock- ing chair near a smoldering grate fire when a reporter called tc ask her how they would make out when three in- stead of four checks a month were |sent. She laughed. | Depends on Lor | “Well,” she said, cheerily, “the Bible says the Lord will provide and none of his children shall suffer.” | Wasn't she afraid? No, it's only | things you don’'t know about that| frighten you, and she knew what their | condition had been and what it was | | going to be, she said. Was she angry? | | Not angry, either, “’cause what's the use in being angry and complaining. | | 1t won't get you anything, and sup- | | pose there was no relief at all.” ‘ Mrs. Matthews rocked slowly and | There was a time when the old | but my back's not sc strong any more. couple went to a show every week. | That's history now, of course. They haven't been to the movies in nve‘ years. Movies are elaborate luxuries, like bacon and eggs. It used to be bacon and eggs for the Matthews | every morning. Now its coffee, black, | and bread, brown. Supplies Are Stretched. “Now the other night we didn’t have any money for supper,” Mrs. Matthews 1 SHOP | Wisely this Xmas Buy your gifts for CASH AT .. ... CASH JEWELERS 615 15¢th St. N. W. UPEN EVENINGS~SEE DUR WINDOWS ' Hebrew, Steinmetz, Miss Ruth McClellan, Mrs. ' TheYoungens Yoqp 1319-21 F Street N.W. ‘Manhattan Shirts Stetson Hats Bostonian Shoes his way. His statement said, in part: “If the Seventy-fourth Congress had not supinely submitted to the dic- tation of the New Dealers, if the House of Representatives in the Sev- enty-fourth Congress had not given up its rights and obligations under the Constitution. the constitutional atro- cies ordered by the New Dealers| Two Days Only sauraay and Monday 295 of our $t. Albans Suits have been taken from regular stock and reduced . . . your choice Make no mistake about it, this is a clothes-buying opportunity—the kind you expect after the holidays. Every Suit taken from our regular stock of splendidly tailored St. Albans Suits, including one and two pairs of trousers, in regular, long and short models. The same fine, all-wool fabrics—plenty of blue and oxford grey. The same service you expect and always receive at The Young Men's Shop. During this sale—to make the savings all the more apparent—there will be could not have been perpetrated. The | New Dealers are not Democrats. any | more | If I do become a | candidate for the | House of Repre- ' For the best DRY MARTINI than they are Republicans. sentatives, I shall submit my candi- dacy to the peo- ple of the third district in both the Democratic and Republican primaries in ac- cordance with the privilege ac- corded by the laws of Mary- land.” ‘While no other Republican can- didate for Congress has, yet menticned, Representative Palmisano is expected to have still another op- ponent in the Democratic primaries in the person of John M. Pohlhaus, a For the best REGULAR MARTINI Rep. Palmisano. grocer, who ran against him in the last election. sano point out that he has twice de- {eated Hilly each time with increased other hand, point out that when he | ran in 1926, President Hoover lost the | lost by only 330. (#)—Sheriff E. F. Prater said last | | county jail have increased noticeably | since incarceration there of handsome. | One woman assured Van Vlack she was “praying night and day” for him. Van Vlack allegedly kidnaped nis pretty divorced wife, Mildred Hook. taine Cooper when the officer attempt- ed to halt their car, then beat and shot | Friends and supporters of Palmi- majorities.. Supporters of Hill, on the district by 12,000 votes, while Hill TWIN FALLS, Idaho, December 6 | | Douglas Van Vlack, accused of two brutal killings. | Imported by W. A. TAYLOR & COMPANY, N. Y. A 14-year-old girl brought him candy. | shot and killed State Patrolman Fon- to death Miss Hook. Farmer Makes Two Sales as Shot Kills Turkey and Porker By the Associated Press, BLACKVILLE, S. C., December 6—Dr. 0. D. Hammond bought a turkey “on the hoof” at a farm near here and decided to shoot it to avoid the trouble of running it down. He fired at the gobbler 40 feet away. The bullet drilled the turkey through the head, then ricocheted at right angles and killed a 75-pound pig—a prize one at that. Hammond had to buy the pig, too. Did Gray Hair Rob Them of $95 a Week? Ao LY Wa% r e ) V'% amdae No Charge for Alterations Hundreds of other fine $t. Albans Suits selected from higher-priced groups . . . have been reduced to 26).50 29.50 Pav in thirty davs or =catter theé payments Cash, if vou prefer. D 23 Now Comb Away Gray This Easy Way RAY hair is risky. It screams: “You are getting old!” To end gray hair hendicaps all you now have fo do i gomb it once a day for several days with Four ‘comb. ang. afterwards repularis once twice a_week to . * Kol e . Gr 5 o . Sl el The Best Gift _ s so gradual and riect thi thei tnnanglo Torset they, Ser Tiad o gra hair you can give him...a Box of these 4 9,) Make This famous Interwoven Socks. Every man » 3250 knows them. You have hundreds of CHARGE IT est D tore, bottle . Test it gerantee ihat It mus wake you 0 years vounger and {ar more attractive or we will pay back vour money I_"u.;E Buy . bottle of Kolor-Bak e outstanding patterns and attractive B colorings to choose from. Wonderfully &% good-looking Socks at prices you can afford to pay. 2 pairs $1.00 - $1.00 the pair Some excellent ones 3 pairs $1.00 today and send top flap of arton to United Remedies. Dept. 441. 4. t. Chicago—and re- POSTPAID a 50¢ bc'll of KUBAK Shampoo $1.50 Bottle . koLorsak_ S 1-°? Eor Sale by over several months v

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