Evening Star Newspaper, November 3, 1936, Page 24

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Furnace, Range and Stove Parts for more than 6,000 brands. Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. NA. 1964 NOSE DROPS AT ALL GOOD DRUG STORES YES, THIS FOOD ENDS YOUR CONSTIPATION Look out for those half-sick days, When you feel listless, headachy, out- of-sorts. Your trouble may be con- stipation. The real cause of common comstipation is too little “bulk” in meals. Your system misses its regular exercise. Get this needed “bulk” in & deli- cious cereal, Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. Within the body, its “bulk” absorbs moisture, forms a soft mass, gently sponges out the system. Why keep on feeling bad when you can feel good? Millions of people use ALL-BRAN. Tests prove it's safe and effective. ALL-BRAN is guaran- teed. Try it & week. If not satisfac- tory, your money will be refunded by the Kellogg Company. Two_tablespoonfuls daily are usually . Serve as a cereal. with milk or cream. or cook into recipes. Remember. ALL-BRAN also supplies Vitamin B and on. Certainly you'd rather eat a food than . ALL- sake pills and drugs. = Buy at Jour grocer's. Made by Hetloggs in Battle Creek. e 8 Serve All-Bran Regularly for Regularity Bine3er Sorming 5 suls. ne fu forming 8 safs. slewsunt vemedy” for 8 prompt reliel of these an- Boying nasal affections. To prevent many colds ; . . to relleve nasal congesi: i KEY'S Only 5. D.G.S.FOOD SHOW T0 HAVE MATINEE bel Ray Man Wins Hair- dressing Contest as An- nual Exhibition Opens. With a quickly twisted braid and a knot, E. J. Smith of Del Ray, Va, last night won the men’s hairdressing contest at the opening of the District Grocery Stores’ ninth annusl food show in Calvert Hall, 2701 Calvert street. In just a little over three minutes he had the hair of Mrs. Carrie L. Painter of Arlington, Va., neatly arranged, with the tightly bound knot at the back of her head. He was adjudged the winner through receiv- ing the loudest applause from the audience, which shouted its approval a8 Mrs. Painter displayed her quickly arranged coiffure. This afternoon the show’s first mati- nee will be held in Calvert Hall, be- tween 2 and 5 pm, to be featured by a baby show, open to male and female babies over 1 year of age and under 4. An award of $2.50 will be given the winner. Children to Get Souvenirs. At 4:45 pm. Santa Claus will sent souvenirs to every child hall under 6 years of age. ‘Tonight, Washingtonians will ha a privilege which is rare to them. In a special election night program, the “voteless” citizens of the District will have a chance to cast ballots for their favorite presidential candi- date. Although the votes will be un- official, citizens will have the oppor- tunity of putting ballots in boxes which will be placed conveniently in the show hall. The night show will | get under way at 7:30 p.m. ‘Through a loud-speaker hook-up in the convention hall show patrons will receive the latest radio election re- ports. . As a side feature to the election program a contest will be held on the high stage to see who can nearest imitate either an elephant or a don- key. The winner of this event will be given a $5 award. Gifts to Be Presented. Besides scores of gifts of food which will be presented at both the after- noon and night shows, an electric * | mixer will be given away to a patron at the matinee today and & modern radio presented tonight. Last night Mrs. John Horigan, 4007 Fifth street, was awarded an electric washing machine by the show man- agement. George H. Clouden, 2402 L’Enfant square southeast, received an electric iron. Show patrons are served coffee, hot biscuits and a variety of soft drinks free. WASHINGTO THE EVENING STAR, Young Washington ' D. 0, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 193. ' BUSINESS CREDITED WITH U. S. RECOVER ness oconditions, 8. Wallace Dempsey, former New York Representative, de- clared yesterday that what measure of recovery the United States has Avoid Traffic and When You GO TO achieved and will attain in the fu- ture can be attributed to inventors, executives and to the “best mechanics in the world.” In an address before the League of Republican Women at the Mayflower ment of the last 25 years.” He criti- cized Mr. Roosevelt also for his ate tack on “economic royalists” on the grounds that while the President has made blanket charges against busie ness, he has named classes and never individuals. Introduced by Mrs. Louis Weller, Parking Congestion BALTIMORE for the NAVY-NOTRE DAME GAME Saturday, November 7 FOOTBALL SPECIAL of modern BAO Couches Lv. Washingten (Unien Ste.) . T1:50 A. M. Ar. Baltimere (Clifton Park Sta.) 12:55 P. M. Leave Clifton Park Station after game. only s|25 ROUND TRIP TICKETS FOR GAME “The Double Spring Seat” is the title of this dance, being performed at the Janney School. The girls are Lillian Donald- son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Donaldson, 4814Y, Nebraska avenue, and Dorothy Peoples, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Peoples, 5008 Forty-second sireet. Tomorrow: Dick Hite, son of Mrs. Helen Hite, at the Ross School. —Star Steff Photo. SHIP COMMISSIONED NEW YORK, November 3 (#)—A new high-speed destroyer named for Capt. Samuel Chester Reid, naval hero of the War of 1812, was-commissioned yesterday at the navy yard in Brooklyn. Rear Admiral Harris Laning com- missioned the 1,500-ton vessel, which was built at Kearny, N. J., at an esti- mated cost of $4,000,000. She carries five 5-inch guns and torpedo tubes, and probably will go to the Mediter- ranean January 4 on & shakedown ROACH DEATH = CRACK-SHOT Available ot B & O Ticket Offics, Woodward 15th & H Stroets, N. W. Tolophone: Distrid 3300. NEAREST TO THE STADIUM 8 8 O goos diractly to Clifton Park Station —a fow minvtes' ride by Meter Coach from Tralaside to Stodiva. BALTIMORE & OHIO vice president of the league, who pre- sided, Dempsey opened his address with & warning against political fol- lowers who “say they want a candi- date to be elected, but are sure he will be defeated.” 4 Mrs. William Pitch Kelley, league president, who has just returned from & Midwestern campaign tour, was on the platform but did not speak. An- nouncement was made that the league would hold open house at club head- quarters on Scott Circle tonight, where election returns will be ree ceived. Arabs Doomed in Slaying. JERUSALEM, November 3 (Jewish Telegraphic Agency).—A Jerusalem court yesterday sentenced three Arabs to death, ome of them for the slaying of a British Army officer and two for the death of a British policeman dur- ing recent disorders. . TREAT A COLD AS IF YOU MEAN IT! Don’t Fool Around with Half-way Measures and Invite Serious Complications! One of the worst things you can do is “kid around” with a cold. The so-called “‘common cold” causes more serious sickness and more enforced absence fram work than anything else. It's a mistake to treat a cold lightly. A cold calls for a cold treatment and not a “‘cure-all”. A cold calls for infernal treatment, for a cold is an internal inféstion. One of the best things you can take for a cold is Grove's Laxa- tive Bromo Quinine. Your own doctor will tell you that. First of all, Bromo Quinine is a cold tablet, made expressly for the treatment of colds. Secondly it is internal medica- tion and of fourfold effect. Here’s what it does: First, it opens the bowels, an advisable step in treating a cold. Second, it checks the infection in the system. Third, it relieves the headache and fever. Fourth, it tones the system and helps fortify against further attack. Bromo Quinine tablets now come sugar-coated as well as plain. The sugar-coated are exactly the same as the regular, except that the tablets are coated with sugar for palatability. Play safe in your treatment of a cold! The moment you feel the first symptom, go right to your druggist for a package of Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine. Start taking the tablets immedi- ately, two every four hours. That action will usually break up a cold in 24 hours. Bromo Quinine contains nothing harmful and is safe to take. Ask the druggist for Grove’s Laxative B_romo Quinine and insist upon get- ting what you ask for! The few pennies’ cost may save you a lot in medical bills. WOODWARD & LOTHROP 10™11™F AND G STREETS ProNg DIsrext 5300 We “Cover” the Babies . . . with soft all-wool blankets—to keep them warm by night and day. We suggest, for cozy coverage. WRAPPING AND CARRYING BLANKETS woven in pink, blue or white—ribbon or crochet trimmed. broidery or applique HOMESTEAD BLANKETS in pink and blue plaid, rib- bon bound. Approximately 40x60 inches ESMOND CRIB BLANKETS (not shown) in fleecy pink or 56.50 blue, bound with satin ribbon. 40x60 inches. $5 Other Blankets, $3 to $7.50 InrvanTs’ FURNISHINGS, FOURTE FLOOR. — WOODWARD & LOTHROP 10™11™F AND G STREETS ‘Prone DIsmicr §300 THE MEN'’S STORE, SECOND FLOOR You’ve Been Talking About” “Those suits you have advertised as being failored from English fabrics—from the mill of Josiah France, I be- lieve your advertisement sta they have that indefinable something that one eql_ll;ot describe, but that one senses and feels. thnamlnsoel one of these suits, he usually says, “Thar’s dw -uit f&- me.” ‘Pyriceflatifi_vs 28 Seconds by the Electric Stairwey. j » And here they are— - 3 An attractive new pital pin, or.in a In Glen with “four ts “twinne Jw.mwoblc Milanese Gowns $3.95 The soft glove silk that is so pleasant to sleep in— uses lace lavishly and distinctively on beauti- fully fitted princess gowns. AND, IN SILK-AND- BEMBERG, new gowns use effective contrast in pip- ing and embroidery— or are trim- 52.95 med with lace. Regular and extra sises. EnNtr UNpERWEAR, THIRD FLOOR. O Uhniform Bob Evans uniform—with neckline that may be worn high with your hos~ poplin— and buttons, Sizes 14 to 42, Others, 52 to $4 A =Y McCallum “Satinskins” Shining choice in hose for- “dressier” occasions $|.65 3 pairs, $4.80 Smart example of the “brighter’’ side of the stocking picture—is the smooth, sleel k beauty of “’Satinskins'’— ingrain (yarn-dyed for even color) sheer—three-thread high twist—to wear longer with long garter welt and run stop. In Even-glo, for evening— Cigarette, Peter Pan, French taupe and afternoon, Nutaupe, for Wednesday Bake Shop Special utterscotch Pie, 28«

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