Evening Star Newspaper, April 11, 1937, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A—-22 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, APRIL 11, 1937—PART ONXE. 0.P.COFSFATHER | Going Back T S —— P.-T. A. GROUP TO MEET | 2m. Tuesday in the board room of the | steel Diesel-engined lighthouse ten- |signed to the fifteenth lighthouse dis- ippines today watched & military dis- | reception tonight by Foreign Minister ESCAPED KENTUCKY PRISON National Education Association Bulld- | ger for service on the Missour! River | trict, with headquarters at St. Louts. play by cadets at San Jacinto Mili- | Eduardo Hay and his wife at Chapul- The last meeting of the Board of | "% will be S hebr; May 10, 1t was Q ——v-t g fary Academy, “Mexico's West Point.” | tepec Castle. EARS AGO. Managers of the District Congress of . A annount today by H. D. King, com- uezon Visits Academy. The island executive and his party »- = 1o Parents and Teachers for this “par-| Lighthouse Tender Bids Asked. |, iner of 1gnthouses, Commerce| MEXIGH CITY, April 10 (P).—|later visited the nearby pyramids of | Northern Ireland now has 1 pase cmt-teecher yoar” will be held at 10:30 " Bids for construction of & new Department. The veasel Will be na- ' President Manuel Queson of the PRl Tectihuacan. His program included & ' senger automobile to every 40 peopia, Retired Methodist Clergy- man’s Funeral Rites Will Be Held Tomorrow. Rev. Walter Peyton Conway Coe, 77, retired minister of the Metaodist Episcopal Church, South, and the father of Conway P. Coe, the United States commissioner of patents, died yesterday afternoon at the residence of his son, Allen C. Coe, on Glebe road, Arlington, Va. Funeral services will be held at 2 pm. Monday at the Mount Vernon Place M. E. Church, South, Ninth street and Massachusetts avenue. In- terment will be in Glenwood Ceme- tery. Mr. Coe was the son of Rev. Dr. Willlam Gwenn Coe and Anne Arm- strong Coe. He was a native of Fair- fax, Va, and received his education &t Washington and Lee University and Randolph-Macon College. He was ad- mitted to the Baltimore Conference of the Southern Methodist Church in March of 1879 and served as pastor of various churches in nearby Mary- land and Virginia for more thamn 40 years. He was superannuated in 1919 because of poor health and thereafter resided with his son in Arlington. Mr. Coe married Miss Ada Ball Prigg of Washington in 1885 and cel- ebrated his fiftieth wedding anniver- sary two years ago. He is survived by his widow and five children: Mrs. A. L. Ely of Akron, Ohio; Rev. Ed- mund G. Coe of Charleston, S. C.; Mrs. J. Emerson Powell of Falls Church, Va.; Conway P. Coe of Chevy Chase and Allen C. Coe. Gridiron (Continued From Eighteenth Page.) uel Spruce, Bethesda, Md.; Lawrence Stafford, Booth Newspapers; William F. Stafford, New York City; Dr. Camp Stanley, E. W. Starling, Kenneth B. Steere, Kansas City, Mo.; Edwin C. Steffe, Frederick Steiwer, Senator from Oregon; Donald Sterling, Oregon Jour- nal; Leonard P. Steuart, John L. Stewart, Washington (Pa.) Reporter; Frederick H. Stinchfield, president American Bar Association; Philip Stockton, Boston, Mass.; Alfred J. Stofer, Birmingham News; Thomas L. Stokes, New York World-Telegram; Frederick A. Storm, Somerset, Md.; Gustav Struve, second secretary, Ger- man Embassy; James A. Sullivan, Mark Sullivan, New York Herald Tri- bune Syndicate; Hatton W. Sumners, Representative from Texas; Henry ; Stan- y Suydam, Martin Sweeney, New York City. b Harold M. Talburt, Scripps-Howard newspapers; Myron C. Taylor, New York City; William H. Taylor, Phila- delphia, Pa; Mark Thistlethwaite, In- diznapolis News; Dr. Edward P. Thomas, Frederick, Md.; Milo Thomp- son, Associated Press; Elliott Thurs- ton, Theodore Tiller, Bascom N. Tim- mons, Houston Chronicle; Charles T. Tittmann, Dr. E. W. Titus, John G. ‘Townsend, jr., Senator from Dela- ware; Niles Trammell, Chicago, Ill.; Allen T, Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts; Dr. George B. Trible, J. T. Trippe, New York City; Walter Trohan, Chicago Tribune News Service; Joseph P. Tumulty, Joseph P. Tumulty, jr., New Ygrk City; Charles L. Tutt, Colorado Springs, Col. v Frederick D. Underwood, New York City. v Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan; William A. Van Duger, Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana: George O. Vass, Earl Ven- able, Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia. w Robert F. Wagner, Senator from New York; Richard H. Waldo, Mc- Clure Newspaper Syndicate; Ernest G. Walker, A. D. Wallace, Washing- ton Daily News} Wilmer J. Waller, David I Walsh, Senator from Mas- sachusetts; Frank P. Walsh, New York City; Gerald A. Walsh, Frank- lyn Waltman, jr, Washington Post; Harry Ward, International News Serv- dce; Justus Wardell, C. Dorsey War- field, Washington Times; Albert L. Warner, New York Herald Tribune; William B. Warner, New York City; Frank H. Weir, Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger; Sumner Welles, Assist- &nt Secretary of S.ate; Henry L. West, Vernon E. West, Chevy Chase, Md.: Warren Wheaton, Burton K. Wheeler, Benator from Montana; T. J. White, JOHN MURPHY, Or Brennan, as he was known in the South, who will be sent back to Kentucky, where he escaped prison 17 years ago after being arrested with an- other man for $3,000 robbery of the Tobacco Growers’ Na- tional Bank in Crittenden, Ky. He has been living an exem- plary life at Weekstown, N. J., Jor the past 10 years, having been employed as a W. P. A. watchman at $57 a month since he went broke with his chicken farm a year ago. —Wide World Photo. ford, Chevy Chase, Md.; Richard P. Whiteley, Frank J. Wideman, Graf- ton S. Wilcox, New York Herald Tribune; Henry Willard, Gen. Dion Williams, U. S. M. C,, retired; Edwin M. Williams, United Press Associ- ations; Samuel B. Williams, Electricel World; Stanley D. Willis, George H. ‘Wilson, Lloyd B. Wilson, Lyle C. Wil son, United Press Associations; Smieon Winch, Oregon Journal; Lewis Wood, New York Times; Russell Wood, Dr. V. V. Wood, St. Louis, Mo.; Robert ‘W. Woolley, James Wright, New York City; James L. Wright, Buffalo Eve- ning News; Thomas Wrigley, Uni- versal Service. X Henry Xander. Y Harold R. Young. J. Russell Young, Washington Eve- ning Star. z Orville Zimmerman, Representative from Missouri. R. R. Zimmerman. Bartenders to Nominate. Nomination of officers will be the Pprincipal business taken up at a meet- ing of the Bartenders’ Union, Local No. 75, at 3 p.m. today at 720 Fifth street. Elections will be held April 25. —_— The LOWBOY will bring your home up-to-date A piano only 2” taller than a yardstick and oc- cupying less floor epace than a 2'x 5’ rug. It is so finely proportioned that it will be a beautifying addition to any home. See and hear the piano everyone is talking about and you'll want to OWN $219 Pay $2 Weekly ARTHUR JORDAN PIANO COMPANY Hearst publications; Roger J. White- | 1239 G Street ... Corner 13th ONE WEEK ONLY! GENUINE GROUND-IN BI-FOCALS KRYPTOK Round Lenses Only 6.45 Nationally famous Bi-Focal lenses with an invisible seam, no cement or paste. Remember every pair of Bi-Focal lenses sold by us is guaranteed to give the utmost of comfort and perfect satis- faction. Use Your Charge Account OPTICAL DEPT.—STREET FLOOR. SLansburghss SV B § sy O Hear Christine Holbrook, Home Furnishings Editoy of “Better Homesand Gar- den”—Tuesday, A pril 13, at 2:30 in the Fourth Floor Ubpholstery Department! Spectacular Purchase Silver Fox Scarfs We purchased the entire spring stock of Silver Fox Scarfs from one of our best wholesale furriers—at extraordinary price concessions—because he was anxious to be- gin on his new season's coats! And $68 is remarkably near the wholesale price for Bilver Foxes of this quality. Richly furred pelts, with the desired “black cast.” Lansburgh’s—Fur Salon—Second Floor % Women’s Washable “WearRight” Fabric Gloves $ 1 pair Pull-ons in the new 4-button length that folds down to show a bit of your wrist—also novelty styles in a grand variety! All flawlessly cut of fine fabric in brown, beige, gray, green, dusty ink, black and white. All sizes—Lans- urgh’s—Gloves—Street Floor. Kleinert’s Reducing Girdles 1.25 The famous “Sturdi Flex” reducing girdle not only banishes those un- seemly little bulges—but gently re- duces your hips to sylphlike dimen- sions. Perforations make it a com= fortable process, too. Sizes 25 to 34. Lansburgh’s—Notions—Street Floor. Please send me _____ Kieinert’s 14. Reducing Girdles at 1.25 each____Hips__ L ansburehs SEVENTH, EIGHTH and E STREETS District 7575 Special! 835 to 497 COATS AND SUITS reduced to 29.75 « Furred Dress Suits o 3-Pc. Wardrobe Suits Furred Sports Coats Furred Dress Coats o Dressmaker Coats You might expect reductions like these at the end of the season! But saving as much as $20 on important, successful fashions now comes un- der the heading of sheer good luck! Every one beautifully tailored of fab- rics that will be a thrill—if you like fine fabrics like we do! With the deftly worked fur details and dress- maker touches that mark expensive apparel. Sizes for women and misses. Lansburgh’s—Daylight Coat and Suit Shop—Second Floor. * Navy Sheers! Black Sheers! Blue Sheers! Capes! Jackets! Women’s Dresses 29.75 Jackets that add inches to a short waistline . . . capes that come right to here in back—strategically straightening the back sil- houette and falling in soft flattering lines in front. Daytime dresses with lace tops you can turn into informal dinner dresses by simply removing the jacket. Allin a new triple sheer with lots of char- acter and lends itself sup- erbly to smooth fit. Sizes 36 to 44.—Lansburghis— Women’s Dresses — Second Floor.

Other pages from this issue: