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- FUNDRESTORATION URGED FOR PARKS Women’s City Club Says Slash Would ‘Disrupt’ Rec- reational Program. Restoration of funds stricken from | the budget of the District Playground | Department when the House, through & legislative rider on the District sup- ply bill, transferred a portion of its activities to the Community Center Department, was asked last night in resolutions adopted by the Women's City Club. | The recreational program developed | by the Playground Department with the approval of the Board of Educa- tion, the Commissioners and the Na- tional Capital Parks Office would be “delayed, disrupted and made more expensive” by the proposed division of | activities, the club contended. If any change is to be made, it should be done by legislation, de- Yeloped after open hearings, and not | by attaching a legislative rider to an appropriations bill, the club con- tended. ‘The club’s resolution said, in part: | “The recreational co-ordinator ap- | pointed over a year ago as a result of long agitation to harmonize the three | departments in the city providing! recreation for the young has so worked | out a program that there is neither | sverlapping por duplication. | “It seems a pity to upset this project 80 well begun. To do so would mean | duplication of effort and the need to | replace recreational workers tramed‘ after many years of successful per- formance.” The House Appropriations Subcom- mittee transferred $97,565 from the Even Judge Smiles As J. P. McMahon Draws Traffic Fine Hilarity prevailed in Traffic Court yesterday when John P. McMahon was arraigned on a charge of speeding at 40 miles an hour on Bladensburg road northeast, and was fined $5 by Judge Walter J. Casey. The reason for the mirth, which even brought a smile to Judge Casey’s face, was that the defendant has the same name as presiding judge of the court. EDITORS MEET HERE 3 DAYS NEXT WEEK Mencken and Webb Miller Will Be Among Noted Speakers at Society's Convention. Editors of the country's leading newspapers will arrive here next week for the three-day convention of the American Society of Newspaper Edi- tors, which opens at the National Press Club a week from today. Henry L. Mencken, the sage of Baltimore, and Webb Miller, famous European correspondent, are among the noted speakers who will appear at the convention, which will hear also Marriner Eccles, chairman of the Fed- eral Reserve Board, and Joseph P. Kennedy, chairman of the Maritime Commission. - Charles O. Gridley, president of the National Press Club, will extend greetings at the opening of the fifteenth annual meeting, and Marvin H. Creager, managing editor of the | Milwaukee Journal, will give the an- nual address. An established feature of the con- vention is an “off the record” meeting with the President at the White House, for members only. This will be at 8:30 p.m. Thursday. THE FEVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1937. Playground Department budget to the Community Center Department and charged the latter agency with the re- sponsibility of keeping open public school playgrounds during the Sum- mer months and daily after school hours. The club also adopted a resolution advocating enactment of legislation which would make the District's minimum wage law applicable to men &s well as women “A minimum wage law, including | one class of workers and excluding another class, is likely to place one class at a disadvantage in competing with the other classes for employ- ment.” SCHOONER CHARTERED BY JAMES ROOSEVELT By the Associated Press. James Roosevelt, the White House disclosed yesterday, has chartered the two-masted schooner Sewanna, which his father sailed up the Northeast Coast last Summer. President Roosevelt piloted the trim 86-foot craft to the family Summer home at Compobello, New Brunswick, on his 1936 vacation The White House said James might bring the Sewanna to Washington for use on short cruises with his family. - Cook i ntil custard MiE pour W s nothing we handle with more satisfaction than lour, and there isn’t anything that is a better trade builder. That is because it always makes good and rand % once you use it you will be sure to continue, for it is truly » e Jold in ¥ €. SUOTC wonderful flour. A REAL family flour—that we sell with the 2 t. vanill, spr strongest guarantee that is given any flour you know of— : e to give BETTER SATISFACTION than any other flour you HAVE EVER USED, ond it does it, too. We sell all three— ringie. T, i s, YELLOW CLING PEACHES . . . tender, golden fruit . ’. fairly bursting with a rich Summer’s store of California sunshine . . . sweet and fragrant tree-ripened fruit . . . swim- Plain Washingtun Flour, Self-Rising Washington Flour, ming in delicious nectar that might be liquid sunshine itself! especially for biscuits, waffles, etc., and Martha Washingten Cake Flour.” i That’s HUNT’S Supreme Quality Yellow Cling Peaches. W. E. Cellison. If you want the most delicious straw- Whether served simply in their own mellow lusciousness . . . berry shortcake you have ever eaten i a ¢ Line platter with 18 smothered in snowy, fluffy whipped cream or encased in —make it with : { * leaves, &"’;}"flmm«: shimmering, colorful gelatin, they captivate every taste! " ?’,}ff?su%fi‘ é:';,‘yl‘é Serve HUNT’S Supreme Quality Yellow Cling Peaches to / iy cg%}&"fi - your family often. Like all other HUNT’S Supreme Quality Foods, Yellow Cling Peaches are the “pick of the crop” . . . carefully selected for their brilliant color, size, flavor and superlative quality . . . all “fancy quality.”” That’s what the word “Supreme’ means in HUNT’S Supreme Quality trademark. For more than 40 years HUNT’S sincere efforts have been to supply you with the finest Canned Fruits and Vegetables in the world. Praises of the exacting Washington housewife assure us that we’ve achieved our goal. Here are two different recipes that you'll like. 4 - 2 ~ 1 l‘gswg One with using Plain Washington Flour. The other r. . P;‘,,C,fis, : with Self-Rising Washington Flour that comes g 4 1 L ready mixed with the exactly correct amount of 1 i e purest lecvening phosphates. Plain Self-Rising Washington Flour Washington Flour iy iaree rlerten Wlenr Biscuit Dough 1, tesspoon baking powder 1t 2 'glnnl' Self-Rising Washingien lou HUNT BROTHERS PACKING COMPANY ® Baa Francisces © L % i ehortenine 1 ess Milk to make seft doush % )‘d‘;fi;\l:: and sift the dry & tsblespoons shertening ingredients; blend in the Sift and measure the Self- shortening; add the egg and Rising Washington Flour; milk. Bake in a hot oven biend in the shortening; add (400° F.) about 20 minutes. milk to make a soft dough. Split, and spread with butter, Bake as individual short- HUNT’S SUPREME ORCHARD-FRESH FRUITS Bweeten strawberries to taste; cakes; spiit while hot; spread crush slightly and put be- with butter and crushed Royal Anne Cherrie Bartlett Pears Yellow Cling Peaches Black Cherries (halves) Peas All-Green Asparagus tween and on top of short- _strawberries. Garnish top 8 cake. Garnish with whipped with strawberries and ullls.l "IM Cherries Yellow Cling Peaches ¢ pinsch Natural Asparagues Tipe cream. whipped cream. All-Green Asparagus Red Raspherries (sltced) (small) Tematass (Sotia:pecked) : Black Raspberries Fruits for Salad Green Asargus Tomale Satice Every Sack of Washington Flour Is Guaranteed Italian Prunes Freik Cocktan (mammoth,) Tomate Juice Plain Washington Flour, Self-Rising Washington Flour and Martha Washington Cake Flour are for sale by ALL grocers, delicatessens, chain stores and markets. Don't ask for Flour— ask for WASHINGTON Flour. 4 Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. Weiington A Washington-Owned Industry HUNT’'S SUPREME GARDEN-FRESH VEGETABLES CANNERS LEAGUE OF CALIFORNIA L r R