Evening Star Newspaper, July 12, 1936, Page 7

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RECORD CROWD T0 HEAR LANDON Many to Be Housed in Kan- sas City for Notifica- tion Exercises. B} the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO. July 11.—Republican national headquarters said today that “the largest crowd ever assembled at & political meeting in the Middle West” will attend Gov. Alf M. Lan- don’s notification in Topeka July 23. An announcement by Robert M. Owthwaite, president of the Topeka Chamber of Commerce, said the Kan- sas capital expected an overflow crowd which would partially have to be housed in Kansas City, with four rail- roads running special trains between the two points. HAMILTON PLANS TOUR. To Speak Nine Times in New England | in Four Days. BOSTON, July 11.—Chairman John Hamilton of the Republican National Committee will tour the six New Eng- land States next week to confer with party workers. His schedule calls for nine addresses in seven cities during four days. Accompanying him will be Repre- sentative Joseph Martin of Massachu- setts, national committeeman, and | Eastern divisional director of the Re- | publican presidential campaign. Hamilton will open his conference with party workers in Maine. He will g0 to Augusta Tuesday to discuss the State organization. That evening he will speak at Bangor. | The next day Hamilton will meet party leaders at the home of National Committeewoman Esther Toland of | Concord, N. H, and then will address | State leaders and party workers at | the Concord Auditorium. ! Wednesday Hamilton will motor to | Montpelier, Vt, for a dinner with Granite State party officials, followed | by a public meeting at City Hall. Connecticut and Rhode Island are on the schedule Thursday. Hamil- ton’s plans call for an address to 600 or 10 Connecticut party leaders meet- ing at the estate of State Chairman J. Henry Roraback near Hartford, Conn., Thursday noon. Thursday night Hamilton will ad- dress a gathering of party workers at THE SUNDAY STAR, Everett Sandervsr Weds Coolidge Secretary Met Miss ‘ Sims, Nurse, When Patient. : Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sanders are shown as they left the WASHINGTON, in advance, was no surprise to friends of the couple, as close associates had known for some time of the romance. Ssunders is 54 years old and the| former Miss Sims is 40. The romance began when Sanders was a patient in Georgetown Hospital. | Mrs. Sanders, a native of Michigan. | was ‘& graduate of the Georgetown | Nurses School. ' She made her home | here with her family in Falkstone Apartments. Sanders, who was born near Terre Haute, Ind., was a member of the House for eight years before becoming | President Coolidge’s secretary. From 1932 to 1934 he served as chairman of the Republiacn National Committee, being the immediate predecessor of Henry P. Fletcher. ‘The marriage is the second for San- ders, his first wife having died about five years ago. There were no chil- dren. | The ceremony was extremely sim- ple and even the closest friends of the couple were uninvited. Sanders’ broth- | er, Ernest, and Miss Sims' sister, Miss Grace Sims of Detroit, were the at- | tendants. | After the ceremony the couple left | for New York on their honeymoon. | Their plans were undecided, Sanders | said. ‘The former political leader has been | practicing law here for several years | with offices in the Shoreham Building. He has made his home at the May- flower Hotel. Noises Bother Worshipers. Churchgoers of Garth and Trevor, North Wales, are protesting that mo- | tor cycles and automobiles make so much noise on Sunday that prayers cannot be heard in the churches. D. C, JULY 12, Michigan Youths Visiting East Most Impressed by *Cycle Escort| 1936—PART ONE. Wonders of Capijtal Pale Beside Dash Through Red Lights in Pittsburgh, . Auto Workers’ Sons Say. The Gettysburg battlefield, the Lin- coln Memorial, even the target range of the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion—all take a back seat to that police motor cycle escort in Pittsburgh, in the minds of 88 sons of automobile plant workers from Michigan, here to- day on an educational tour. To each of these youngsters, in their early teens, it was well worth the $15 | they had to earn to make the trip to whisk past red lights in the Pennsyl- venia metropoiis behind the screaming sirens of police motor cycles. “Boy, oh boy!” they chorused, telling of it on their way to the Capitol to see the light dome last night and take snapshotS with their box cameras. The Capitol was pretty imposing, yes; and the Lincoln Memorial im- pressed even the most non-historically minded. Next best was the machine gunning in the “G-men’s” range at the Justice Department. But that po- [ tice escort— Each Boy Pays $15. ‘The group is the second that has come here this Summer under auspices of the Chrysler Motor Corp. Each boy pays $15 he has earned at odd jobs and the company pays the rest. Start Your Child’s Musical Edu “It’s a real piano” and only . .. .. 857.50 40-Note 3-Octave Size Only at Jordan’s Features— ® Copper Wound Tss Strings * Bushed Tuning Pins ® Full Iron Plate ® Two Foot Pedals ® Sounding Board ® Donble Repeating Action ® Felted Hammers cation on They are in charge of several adult counselors. There will be three more contingents here within the next month. The itinerary is Dstroit to Pittsburgh, Gettysburg, Washington, Mount Vernon, Annapolis, Phlhdel-} phia, New York and return. Local | headquarters is the Washington Tour- | ; ist Camp. For virtually all the boys, such a long trip is an entirely new and ex- citing experience. Few have been East before. Many had not seen so much | as a hill before they crossed the Alle- | ghanies. L] ‘ “Swell scenery,” said James Orton, | 14, of the mountain country. James | makes Bs in school and wants to be | a surgeon. Finds Cars Interesting. John Fuller, 13, who wants to be a | | violinist, found the “old-time cars and | | fire engines” in the Smithsonian In- | stitution the most interesting exhibit there, but he's not interested in the Taking the (GIVIL SERVICE EXAM? | we deliver at McKinley High Tabies' and Typewriters s $1.25 | *Regulation. individual. new tables, not merely a place at a bench! United Typewriter Co. | Phone NA. 6063 | for Reservation | = | 813 14th St. Open UNTIL 10 P.N. Our Room Is the Coolest in the Building automobiles his father makes or any | otherz. “I'm just interested in music from the commercial standpoint,” he de- clared. Richard Maday. 14, of Detroit. | earned the necessary $15 for the trip | by running errands for a tailor. It's| an all-Summer job, he explained. Just as Tom Sawyer persuaded his pals to whitewash a fence for him while he ““directed” the operation from a com- fortable seat in the shade, so Richard has a substitute to hold down his job while he is vacationing. It took two or three months caddy- ing at a Detroit golf club to raise the | A—7 $15 for Billy (Fats) Ebaugh, 14, a mechanic’s son. But the trip is.worth that and more, he said emphatically last night. Those hamburgers they had for supper made him forget hours of trudging under a blazing sun with some dub’s 30-club bag on his back and a dime tip at the eighteenth hole. 00F LEAK NA. 4370 GICHNER ! IT IS A WISE INVESTMENT NVEST IN A NEW NORGE 5895 up ...and you'll agree with this if you ask any one of the countless Norge owners! 10-Year Warranty on Rollator Compression Unit Only 3 Moving Parts in Every Norge 15¢ A DAY F.S.HARRIS C 2900 14th St. N.W. "OPEN NITES - €OL. 0100 Open All Day Saturdays in Juiy and August Note to Party-ites the Victory Theater, Providence. rectory of St. Paul's Catholic Church, 1425 V street, after their This Piano—Get a Larger One Later! He will complete his New England | marriage yesterday ajternoon. In the background are Mrs. | you want to buy another Piano within tw tour with two addresses at Boston | Sanders’ sister. Miss Grace Sims of Detroit, and the bridegroom’s | f.‘e:“ from the nmy, you bu‘;. l;flao\)nh we “,fl | Friday. i THE WEATHER District of Columbia — Generally fair and continued warm today and tomorrow, except local thundershowers: gentle veriable winds. Maryland, Virginia and West Vir- | ginia—Generally fair and continued warm today, except widely scattered afternoon thundershowers. Lo Saturday. ©9ggoDy EEEEEF] Record Until 10 . Satarday. | Hlthest. 09. 3 pm. vesterday. Year ! ago. 97 Lowest 74. 5:30 a.m. yesterday. Year Highest. 105 an July Lowest. 0 on January 23. Tide Tables. (Furnished ;l:'v United States Coast and | Record Temperatures This Year. | 0 eodetic Survey.) ‘ Todav Tomorrow. 2:4% a.m. Bun todav Sun_tomorrow 1 Moon_ today Tom ‘Automobile lights must be turned on ®ne-half hour after sunset. Precinitation. Monthly precipitation in_inches in the | €epital (current month to date) v Weather In Various Cities. Preeipl- —Temperature~ tation. Max. B p.m. Sar- Fri St o urday.nieht.8pm. 8p.m. Asheville, N. C.___ 92" @6 & o Atlanta. Ga 2 ag 0.18 Atlantic City. N. J. 80 apazraaas Paso. Tex. Galveston. T Dulvth’ Minn El Jacksonville. a0 Kansas City. Mo.__104 k.2 96 R Tenn g AN Minneavolis, Minn._ Ala._ 04 ampa. Vicksburz. ‘WASH GTON, 'WITH THIS COUPON . WATCH REPAIRING Guaranteed One Year The Upstairs Jewelry Store Carefully Tak Apart b 4@ Cleaned Thoroushly No Machlnes Used. CLIF THIS COUPON. | VERETT SANDERS. i E secretary to President Coolidge | vesterday in St. Paul's rectory, at Fif- afternoon | hursed him through a serious illness brother, Ernest Sanders. give you full credit, $57.50, on this —Star Staff Photo. i trade-in. former | three vears ago, Were married late and one-time chairman of the teenth and V streets. Republican National Commit- The ceremony was porformed by tee, and Mi¢s Hilda Ann Sims. who Rev. G. M. Rankin. The wedding, while not announced Here's a Plano you can wheel away in- to a closet wheel outwhenthe “ganz" comes in for an evening’s entertain- piano as a ment. Lots of fun for crooners, guar- tettes or = Sweet Adeliners Discontinued Patterns of the Famous . GULISTAN RUGS . Greatly Reduced for Clearance '9x12 Ft. (Regularly $138)'_.'______ 510750 81,x10Y;-ft. (Regularly $128.50........... These splendid American-Oriental type Rugs (discontinued pat- terns) are offered, starting tomorrow at special low clearance prices. If you have been wanting one of these luxurious, deep- piled rugs with lustrous sheen, tomorrow is the day for you to select it at Mayer & Co. at a specially reduced price. 6x9 ft. Gulistan (Reg. $80)_.$62.25 4Y2x7 Y2-ft. Gulistan (Reg. $50) _$39 3x5V4-ft. Gulistan (Reg. $23.75) _$18 27x54-in. Gulistan (Reg. $15) _$11.50 . Open All Day Saturdays During July and 'MAYER & CO. Seventh Street $29.75) 2V4x12-ft. $39.75, .$100 2V/4x9-ft. Gulistan (Reg. Gulistan (Reg. e T -----831 August : _BetWeen Dand E RATTAN FURNITURE TO HELP YOU KEEP COOL AND COMFORTABLE Lawn Chair $1.95 Folding Chair with com- fortable,” new curv-seat « « « Plaid covering. Steamer Chair $1.59 Four-position adjustable Plaid covering Rattan Furniture is so light and airy! No wonder it makes you (=2l so cool and comfortable! The Ratian Groups shown at Mayer & Co. are unusually distinctive and suitable for indoor liv- ing room or solarium or for the porch. A few are quoted below. Natural Rattan Settee and Armchair . separate spring back cushions and spring seat cushions . . . smart texture weave up- $89 holstery, two pieces Ll New white finished Rattan Group with settee and matching armchair decoratively done in a floral design on brown background, 2 $75 pieces b Two Piece Natural Rattan Suite with three spring filled back cushions and 3 seat cush- ions in settee and with matching arm- $68 chair . . . smartly covered Comfortable Wing Type Rattan Group of two pieces . . . settee and armchair with separate seat and back cushions, - texture $|05 weave Luxurious Rattan Group with seat cushions in a plain green Permatex and back cushions in a harmonious plaid Permatex fabric; $'04 two pieces Natural Rattan Suite with green arms and done in a delightful rust, natural, black and green texture weave upholstery; two $'25 pieces Many Other Summer Items - MAYER & CO. Seventh Street Between D and E

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