MRS. MAY LEVY, LIBRARIAN, DEAD Senior Cataloguer’s Work Responsible, Important. Rites Tomorrow. Mrs. May Einstein Levy, senior cat- eloguer of the Library of Congress, died yesterday after a long illness, at her home, 2807 Connecticut avenue. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 am. tomorrow in Gawler's chapel, 1750 Pennsylvania avenue. Burial will be in Washington He- brew Congregation Cemetery. Mrs. Levy, daughter of Ferdinand J. and Fannie Epstein, was the widow of Harry G. Levy, civil engineer. Born here in 1898, she entered the service of the Library in September, 1920. after graduating with honors from George Washington University. Be- sides her parents, she leaves a sister, Mrs. Bernard A. Baer of this city. As senior assistant in the copyright section of the division, Mrs. Levy catalogued the most important Amer- ican current copyright material, in- cluding books in demand by the White House, the Supreme Court, Congress and the cabinet. As virtually all vital European books are now trans- lated for the American book trade, this involved an extensive knowledge of European as well as American au- | thors. She identified authors and editions, furnished bibliographical descriptions of the make-up of books and, by as- signing appropriate subject headings to them, made them permanently available for all seekers after informa- tion. Cadets W.ill Have Six Hours Leave After Inaugural| West Point Contingent ’ill Be Free From 5to 11 P.M. ‘The cadets from West Point will get 8 good break on inauguration day here, for they will have about six hours’ free time in the National Capi- tal. officials announced today. Inaugural Committee headquarters |~ gaid that after the parade is over, which is expected to be about 3:30 pm, will march back train and deposit equipment. About 5 o'clock they will be granted leave of absence until 11 p.m., when they will return to their train and then the ride to West Point. Navy Department officials sble to say what the situation is con- cerning the midshipmen, referring in- quiries to the superintend Naval Academy at Annapo to the special their arms and Md. nt of the | SECOND-OFFENSE SPEEDING. Charles E. Loeber, 2723 Connecticut avenue, $15. 1 James L. Hospenhorn, 618 I street, $10. Raleigh B. Diamond, worth avenue, $20. FIRST-OFFENSE SPEEDING. Ernest E. Tyrell, 7315 Twelfth street, $10. Russell A. Hirshberger, Virginia, $10. George A Young, 1711 Willard street, $5. Alfred A. Spicer, 402 O street, $10. John F. Reed, Maryland, $20. William M. Revell, 628 G street northeast, $5. Myer F. Friedman, 1801 Sixteenth street, $5. Michael R. Cullen, 1111 M street, $5. Samuel D. Beck, street, $5. Mary E. Clophan, Virginia, $10. Thomas L. Sweeney, 1322 Q street, $5. Oran H. Geedy, northeast, $20. Kenneth I. Thomas, 411 Randolpn place, $5. William F. Miller, avenue, $5. Carl O. Erlason, Virginia, $5. Phil L. Rogers, Virginia, $5. Amos Easter, 1109 Twenty-fourth street, $5. Ray F. Eakin, 825 Fifth street, $5. George A. Thurston, 1107 Fifty- | first street northeast, $5. Arthur F. Newman, Island avenue, $5. Nettie M. Hood, Maryland, $5. George H. Hughes, Virginia, $5. 1700 Kenil- 1328 Sixteenth 2116 Fourth street 2128 Virginia 206 Rhode street, $5. Knapp O. Boone, 4831 Sixteenth street, $5. Mary F. Knee, Virginia, $10. Richard J. Stuart, 4921 Forty-sixth street, $10. Donald L. Mahaffey, Virginia, $10. Tuttle C. Palmer 819 Nineteenth street, $5. John M. Bookhultz, Maryland, $5. George E. Dovell, Maryland, $5. Alfred F. Clark, 1833 Oregon ave- nue, $5. Humbert J. DeFoorsa, Maryland. $5. Wiliie L. Mondy, 118 F street, $5. Julian G. McGann, Virginia, $5. James B. Haggarty, 1831 Florida avenue northeast, $5. Clandies Wright, 944 L street, $5. Jesse O. Gibson, Maryland, $5. George D. Miller, Pennsylvania, $10. New Wuy to Hold Loose FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place Do false teeth annoy and bother by dropping and_slipping when you eat. Ik or laugh? Just sprinkle a little TEETH on your plates. This new, eless powder holds teeth firm and No gummy. gooey Makes breath pleasant Y;ASTEETH today Peoples or any drug store. Harry A. Barron, 1820 Clydesdale | Jay C. Schroyer, 1430 W street, $10. | Greenwood Mills, 2032 Flagler place, Albert Cannell, 1602 Rosedale street, $5. Harry Portner, 1702 Lanier place, $5. Horace Dent, no address given, §5. Richard V. Flynt, 208 F street, $10. Anthony J. Baramowski, Maryland, $15. Virgil M. Mamilton, 2405 E street northeast, $5. Herbert W. Horton, Maryland, $10. PERMIT SUSPENSIONS. Operating permits of the following persons have been suspended for the length of time indicated: Strother R. Asquith, 1629 Columbia road northwest, 36 miles, 15 days. George A. Bedford, 3404 Prospect avenue, northwest, 44 miles, 30 days. Herbert E. Brown, 1609 Nineteenth street northwest, 38 miles, 15 days. Melrose T. Carrington, 502 Colum- bia road northwest, 36 miles, 15 days. Arthur Hammond, 2700 Robinson street southeast, 40 miles, 15 days. Daniel C. Kennedy, street northwest, 35 miles, 30 days (second offense). Francis Leer, 1018 B street north- east, 42 miles, 30 days. Oliver H. Lettman, Brentwood, Md., 36 miles, 15 days. William R. Lipscomb, Arlington, Va., 38 miles, 15 days. Alphenzo H. Lyons, 55 Quincy place northwest, 38 miles, 15 days. Ellsworth Miller, Fort Myer, Va., 36 miles, 15 days. Lucretia M. Mobley, cut avenue northwest, days. Stanley B. Pearce, 200 Sixteenth street southeast, 38 miles, 15 days. Edwin R. Roberts, 5029 Hutchins | place northwest, 38 miles, 15 days. Avery V. Williams, 2819 Eleventh 50 miles, 30 (second offense). New Railroad Line. A new section of the London & Northeastern Railway is being elec- trified between Manchester and Shef- field, England. SOOTHE ECZEMA ITCHING It's wonderful the way soothing, cooling Zemo brings 1elief to itch- ing, burning skin, even in severe cases. Itching usually stops when Zemo touches tender and irritated skin, because of its rare ingredients. ‘To comfort the irritation and itch- ing of Ringworm, Eczema, Pimples and Simple Rashes, always use clean. soothing Zemo. It should be in every home. Insist on genuine Zemo. All druggists’, 35¢, 60¢, $1. JFOR SKIN IRRI 1910 Calvert | 1028 Connecti- | street northwest, 38 miles, 30 days| D. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 193 EDUCATIONAL BOBY PLANS D. C. BRANCH Mrs. Roosevelt Discusses Rural Youth Problem at Session. The first step toward forming a Washington branch of the Southern Woman's Educational Alliance was taken today when the Board of Trus- tees, closing a three-day annual con- ference at the Mayflower Hotel, ap- | pointed a committee to proceed with organization. Representative Washingtonians will be invited to act as sponsors for the movement. The board, which has un- der consideration a change in name to indicate the national character of the organization, decided to keep the present name, adding a sub-title, “National Guidance Service for Rural Youth.” That the problems of underprive ileged youth in remote rural areas are questions for cities as well as the districts concerned was brought out yesterday when Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt addressed the board at a tea given by the American Associa= tion of University Women at its headquarters on I street. Mrs. Roosevelt painted a vivid picture of the underprivileged in many rural sections of the country, |and reminded her audience that “many of them go to cities and are going to make up a large part of ;lhe city population.” Humane Consideration Urged. A humane consideration of the heartaches of young people Who are vironment DID YOU COUGH ALL NIGHT ? Glycerine - plus is one of the surest reliefs known To get real cough relief—moisten and soothe the dry, irritated nse sues of your throat. The most effective way is with Pine Bros. Glycerine Tablets. They spread s moist, soothing film of pure glycer- ine and other helpful ingredients over your cough-torn throat—and relicf comes almost at once. Ask your Druggist to explain why they won't upset your stomach. They taste good, too. 5 pleasing flavors. BIGGER CAR LOWER PRICES PRODUCT OF CHRYSLER CORPORATION | the proof. Graduate to a De Soto! It will | suddenly forced to fit into an en- | superior in educational | \xdvamagcs to the one they are ac-| customed to was urged by Mrs. Roosevelt. Declaring that underprivileged rural areas are not confined to the Southern or mountain sections, Mrs. Roosevelt recalled an incident in her own Dutchess County, N. Y., which is certainly not noe of the under- privileged counties,” where a child, stricken with infantile paralysis when ababy, grew up to young woman- hood without ance having the bene- fit of medical attention, and who had never walked, but crawled. “I know there are many rural areas where children get no medical attention at all, and where diets are sometimes even worse than diets of slum families in cities,” she said. Miss O. Latham Hatcher, president of the 8. W. E. A, introducing Mrs. Roosevelt, pointed out that rural youth in this country is ““30,000,000 strong,” and declared “while there is no ill will against them, one-half of the rural population is none the less ig- nored.” “Since agriculture has been declin- ing as an industry since 1870,” she said, “it is impossible for agriculture to take care of them.” Dr. McHale Presides. Dr. Kathryn McHale, general di- rector of the A. A. U. W,, presided. Groups of the Board of Trustees meeting informally for dinner last night gathered later for a roun table discussion on the “Occupational Out- look for Young People,” with especial reference to mountain areas. Discussion leaders included Dr. Mor- 1 EDUCATIONAL‘ LEARN SPANISH ECONOMICAL COURSES for begin- ners. Intermediate and Advanced Stu- dents beginning January 18. Spanish School of Washington 1343 H St. N.W. Phone NAt. 9369 * Practical Trade Course E L E c Fundamentals of TRICITY Shop Lab.. Theory. D. C. Code Blueprint Read.. Est.. Armatures Columbia “Tech” Institute 1319 F St. NW. MEt. 5626 Eve. Class—Send for Catalopue decal Ezekiel, economic adviser to Secretary of Agriculture Wallace; Dr. Paul David, secretary of the Presi- dent’s Committee on Vocational Train- ing; Dr. Leonard Power, associate di- Dr. Howard A. Dawson, N. E. A. spe- cialist in rural education; Morris Mitchell of Resettlement Administra- tion, Mrs. Marie R. Turner, superin- tendent of schools in Breathitt County, Ky.; Mrs. John Brisben Walker of the Consumers’ Council, Mrs. Henry Lane Schmelz, New York City, and Dr. T. B. Manny, head of the De- partment of Sociology, University of Maryland. . Cattle Brand Listing Drops. GREAT BEND, Kans. (#).—Regis- tration of cattle brands is one Barton County business in a permanent slump. The last registration was in 1935, Only 42 brands have been registered since 1872, and most of these were re- corded before 1900. EDUCATIONAL. Poteet’s 23iive: Secretarial Civil Service Courses Classes Now Beginnin 14th and Eye Sts. N.W. Natl. Special Short Practical Courses RAD'O REPAIR AND SERVICING Good Radio Also Operator Technicians _and Operators Are Always in Demand Columbia “Tech” Institute 1319 F St. N.W. MEt. b626 Eve. Class—Send for Catalogue Accountancy Admi Courses Leading to B. C. S. Degree Forming February 1, 1937 Walton Courses in Accountancy Registrations now hti:l[ Hee.lvfi Columbus University 1323 Eighteenth St. N.W. DE. 3443 And-every one DOCTOR ENTERTAINS Dr. James Alexander Lyon, Wash- ington heart specialist, entertained the District of Columbia Chapter of the Pan-American Medical Sunday evening at his home, Glen- view Farm, Rockville, Md. Members and guests of the chapur‘ heard Dr. Augusto 8. Boyd, Minister of Panama, relate his “Recollections of Medical Practice in the Tropics.” Dr. B. B. Vincent Lyon, nationally known gastroenterologist of Philadel- phia, dircussed “Gall Bladder Disease: Diagnosis, Management and Treat- nlxx%x:‘t! illustrating his lecture with film | 8! 3 EDUCATIONAL. EAR in uleul-\ln machipes more. secure a better position. Opportuni- tles afe numerous . Brief courses Grege or Bovd Touch-typing. | NAt._2340. SHINGTON SCHOOL %%n SECRETARIES WASHINGTON AL pRiSS $10 8 on e A VU1LoING & NEW YO STENOTYPY 150 to 250 Words Per Minute Come in for free demonstration and details about training or phone or write for information. | THE STENOTYPE COMPANY 604_Albee Bide. Phone NAtional 8320 e s i ! PUBLIC SPEAKING Beginning January 25 7:30 P.M. Students speak each session. (Class Limited—Make Reservations Early) Southeastern University 1736 G Street Neo. 8250 (Coeducational) Association | | L. EDUCATI_O\'AL. Accountancy Pace Courses: B. C. S. and M.C. 5. Degrees. C. P. &. Preparation. Day and Even- ing Clase Coeducational Send for BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY TRANSPORTATION BLDG. MET. 2511 NEW CLASSES FOR * BEGINNERS IN Gregg Shorthand Touch Typewriting Indexing and Filing Methods Gregg Review and Speed Dictation Catalog Upon Request, TIVOLI THEATER BUILDING 14th Street at Park Road COLUMBIA 3000 ACCOUNTANCY Courses leadingto B.C.S. and M.C.S. degrees. Graduate course in prep- aration for C.P.A. Exam- inations. DAY and EVENING COURSES Registrations now being received for mid-year classes. Ask for Official Bulletin STRAYER COLLEGE P. J. Harman. Director Homer Building evenly, deliciously fully-flavored by M fl roasting HERE’S WHAT DE SOTO HAS THIS YEAR ENTIRELY NEW 93-H.P. “ECON- OMY ENGINE". . . OWNERS TES- TIFY TO AMAZING SAVINGS IN GASOLINE AND OIL. eFIRS‘I‘ COMPLETELY SOUND- PROOFED CAR. ©14 RUBBER “FLOAT” BODY MOUNTINGS END VIBRATION, ROAD RUMBLE. @ 'CITY RIDE” ON ROUGHEST ROADS...WITH FOUR NEW “AERO" HYDRAULIC SHOCK- ABSORBERS. eTHE FIRST SAFETY INTERIOR! NOTHING TO BUMP OR CATCH OR TEAR. (O SAFETY-STEELBODY WITHSEAM- LESS STEEL TOP, GENUINE HY- DRAULIC BRAKES. How much do you lcnow about coffee? Do you know that over-roasted beans make scorched, bitter-tast- ing coffee? UNDER-roasted ones, flat, insipid coffee? Do you know that one great housekeeper — your American Stores—has solved these two common Eroblems of good coffee-making? OLp wAY—the 47! pounds of coffee you put in your pot each year was roasted by direct heat. fl of those 156,085 beans (yes, we counted!) got over- done, even scorched. So_me stayed underdono,m ;in;ido. But they were all ground up for your colfee-pot. Until — Now —the American Stores housekeeper has dis- covered a way to roast coffee evenly all the way throeugh. By slow. penetrating waves of indirect heat. American Stores exclusive “heat-flo” roasting pen- etrates each bean in all those thousands, roasting it periectly for fully developed flavor. Each bean flavor- sealed, like every other bean. That is why American Stores Coffee flavor is so fresh and delicious. It is the AMERICAN STORES A Great Housekeeper You Should Know UST IMAGINE—this big De Soto, actually J over 1674 feet long, new from seamless steel top to safety-rib tires, selling at a price even lower than last year! Drive it—price it—go over every feature. Put De Soto s new “Economy Engine” to save you money. Ask for Official Commer- cial Credit Company Finance Plan. treat-of-the-day in many thousands of homes. Be« cause this remarkable coffee is prepared by your own community housekeeper for you, perfectly roasted, it actually costs less than other brands. The keeper of your nearest American Stores cup- board has this as well as many other American Stores exclusive product-services waiting for you. Ask him for Asco Coffee — this very day. SEATS SIX PEOPLE on chair- high seats. Low, level floors, More room everywhere. SEAMLESS STEEL TOP, one- piecefrom cowlto trunk, crowns a Safety-Steel body. PRICED JUST ABOVE THE LOWEST ‘Economy Ene gine’ ...hi[hereomprunon. more power on less fuel. DESOTO DE SOTO AND PLYMOUTH DEALERS EVANS-PALMER, INC — 14th and L Sts. MID CITY AUTO CO. 1711 14th St. N.W. De. 5050 NOT THIS KIND NOT THIS KIND BUT THIS KIND under-roasted over-roasted “heat-flo” insipid scorched roasted for and raw and bitter perfect flavor National 3474 KEARNEY MOTORS. INC. 4201 Conn. Ave. N.W. Cleve. 9648 VERNON MOTOR CO. 6700 Wiscansin Ave. OF OO 5388 ‘hevy Chase, Md. MACK'S SERVICE !'I'A'I'IOK Hyattsville, Md. Hyatts. 1008 GOOD MOT! Falls Church. Va. - 9['“!0?.'.!!(. 510 WATKINS MOTOR CO. Fairfax, Vi iy S A!nlndril Va. Alax310e La Plata. Md. La Plata 46 Myersville. .Mt‘l’“"l: MoTOR CO, rers 88 HINTE'S G ‘Waldorf, Md. lu‘n{y‘fiu 30-F-19 SEMMES, RAI.ES. INC. 4121 13th St. N.W. Adams 8500 RUSSELL MOTOR CO. ROSEN MOTO! co. 111 Balte. d. Gr. 2168 N E Colmar Manor, Md. 1811 R. 1. Ave, No. 2337 CASHELL MOTOR Rockville, Md. i cgo k. 183 INCHES MOTOR CO. 921 Thayer St. Shep, 4 Silver Spring. Md. At IIS!OP! !llVlCl DTATION urg 204-F-11 A ] THURMONT GARAGE Thurment, Md. Thur. 92 LOY'S SERVICE ST ‘Winehester, Va. g A;‘lg."ll’ls-l