Evening Star Newspaper, September 13, 1937, Page 12

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A—12 =% THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. € MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1937. Braths. BELT, MATILDA A.° On_Saturday sep- | tember at Georgetown_Uni- yersity Hoepital MATILDA A Brx'r loved aunt of Mrs. Janie Dorsey ., Katie. Robert and George Bail \ the "Mecuire funersi st n.w. Notice of m. SUSAN. Departed Seotember 12. 10 th Tesidence COCKRELL. = the leaves 1o mou 1085 & devoted © Adhton Cocke Tell: one daug ewis: two sons, Jacob an ers ‘William one h nndcnmrm and other iends. Remains resti rd's tuneral home. | itol st T 143 e neral’ Wednesda v t from Renowoth Bantist Church 4 pm to Ther 1pm Ist st sw. between N Rev Johnson officiating. Interment Wood- jawn Cemetery 14 DIGGS, WILLIAM. Departed this life on | Moncay. Eeptember 1 DIGGS of 1008 Girard Bushand of Bessic Diggs. r Joss ohe s oks “and three brothers Holland A. and Ignatius Diegs. and many nieces nephews and friends. Remains resting 8t the Malvan & Schey funeral home. N. J. ave. and R st. n.w. Notice of funeral later. | and e he ate Bessie Grossell gervices will be held at 1009 H st nw on Monday. September 13 30 pm. | foterment at Wilkes-Barre. Pa HARRISON. ELEANOR M on urday, | September 11, 1937, at tee. | 100 Marsiand ave n.¢ nnmu M HARRISON,__ bel Aber of A Harrison Services at Hysone's funerai home. 1300 N st. n.w.. on Monday. Sep. tember 13. at 4 p.m. Interment Clark bure, W. Va BATCHER. JOSEPH n On Sunday tember 12 his_residence d | ne 19 2 vo<w|| B HATCHER, & illiam i Mo her. Mam! s 16 al day, | ence es e. after a br HAWKINS, beloved hus: | Efficola Hawkins, He a o mourn their loss e brothers and many : . X E y Fiestiny, | k. Rev. F. Friends. invited ton National Cemes 11 Remains may be viewed afte 2 1ce | 1 . HINE HELLER beloved wife of James Heller, devoted sister of Mrs. Ruby Frerss. She also Jeaves otk friends. Re- Ernest Jarvis r 1432 You st. n.w <Will_be held on ‘Wednes mber st 1 pm. Rev L. FPinn officiatine. interment | Gainesville 14 NSON. ALICE, Suddenly. on_Priday. | ¢ oy ALICE HENSON, | beloved sister of Frank Ward. Mo, Jan-‘ ple Carroll Hanson, Mrs Nettie Was! Lena Car Toll. Remains er late resi dence. 1234-A Carrollburg si. s.w. Fu i peral will _be held at Mount Jezreel Baptist Church Wednesday. September 15. at i1 am. Relatives and friends invited. Interment Oal K Gm\: Church Cemetery, Charles coulm | Joll\:r)\ Baturday CARRIF (SMACKUM) Seotember 11. 1957, at 9 and devoted | Former Illinois Representative Is | at his late residence | street | gomery, chaplain of the House of Rep- | resentatives, officiated | Rock Creek Cemetery. | MSGR. QUIRK DIES; | [ wearae * HILL FOLK MOURN Beloved “Lmle Father of the | Hills,” 92, Had Served Parish for 50 Years. By the Associated Press. WESTON, W. Va., September 13.— | | Scores of weatherbeaten farmers and | their families gathered today in solemn | silence at a bleak. isolated parish | house to pay last respects to their 92. year-old “Little Father of the Hil Msgr. Thomas Aquinas Quirk | Death closed the books Sunday on | the beloved Catholic priest's record of more than half a century of service, given unstintingly to his hill folk. | For decades the aged churchman horseback through his three parishes. Two years ago Pope Pius bestowed the title of monsignor upon | | him, the third person ever to receive | that distinction in West Virginia. | army captain, was born in Ireland, lived with his father in England, Can- ada, India and Australia and entered the English army as a cadet. At the | age of 17 he was sent to the United | States to study tactics of the Federal army and joined the famous 69th New York Infantry. He gave up the Lie of a soldier for that of a priest after the Civil War and volunteered to serve in West Vir- | ginia. Members of the (nnzreLaleH said he twice refused to return to Eng- | land to claim his father’s estate, pre- ferring to remain with his charges some 30 miles south of Clarksburg. Here he will be buried. PODENBERG FUNERAL HELD AT HOME HERE Buried in Rock Creek Cemetery. Funeral services for former Repre- sentative William A. Rodenberg of Illinois, who died Friday in Alpena, Mich., were held here at 11 a.m. today 3501 Macomb Rev. Dr. James Shera Mont. Burial was in | The list of honorary pallbearers in- | cluded: Former Senator James E. Watson, former Representative Philip Camp- %1 from hee | bell. Kansas; Representative Harold late " residence ver 11, Knutson, Minnesota: Judge Oscar E. AR barton | Bland, United States Customs and ave. n.w. where requiem s will | Patent Appeals Court; former Rep- be celebrated st 10 o'l - terment &t Mo Olivet Arrangements by McGuire. l)n\SO\ CARRIE S. Officers and mem- | 3 the Ladies' of Olive Immediate ¥ Ate, requested to aitend | { CARRIE §. Ceracte 1 o3 Pz m am. ¥ Church Dunibarton ave .| resentative Edward D. Hays, [R D. Silliman, Clark Griffith, presi- | dent Club; Everett Sanders, | mer chairman of the Republican Na- | tional Committee; Judge of the Washington Base Ball Indiana, for- Judge Thomas S. Ty B‘(::,Q‘F;i*p,gt‘,d,m Williams, United States Court of MARY 2 EMACRUN Ko e Claims; former Representative Leon- | L e, JOHN F.,, Qn Monday Sen: |idas C. Dyer, Missourl; C. J. Chris. r{\:’ndxsgnh\ ‘hn“ “on F. KIEWELE | tian, Washington attorney; Wooten oved brother o d_Ros v Kiawell Beevices g o H FH’mss Young, W. Bissell Thomas, well-known Co. ‘{ugrvn: home. ,"u:’n 14th st .]anorne\ and Charles Gridley, presi- on Wednesday, September 15, at 1 Relatives and friends ipvited. Intermeni | dent of the National Press Club Fairfax Court House. Va. 14| Mr. Rodenberg retired from public Zove, FmA (r!:u((??: Sinday: September | life in 1923 and since then had prac- | eloved brother of Mrs, | ticed law here. He had served as a | ‘,,";‘“,\‘,‘;5"‘": L Republican Representative from Illi- | ;13 L8 pm. Interment | nois intermittently from 1899 until | jthe vear of his retirement, He was| fember 11. 1937, at 71 years old. Bilal JAMES & €outh it Asapnh AL husband of Roses festing at P at #bove-mentioned n_p | ces 1 ming i will be at the on Cemet MOORE, WILLIAM FRANCIS ‘Septemibe Funera emb McWain of Telat neral 4 ineral h in Woodlawn Cemetery RICE, FRANCES. Saturdas FRANCI mlmnn MARY FUNERAL DIRECTORS, " Frank Geier's Sons Co. edBmins: N National 2473 Moder apel V L. SPEARE CO h 1009 H St NW. | ~J. William Lee’s Sons Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Crematorium €th and Mass. Ave. NE _Lin 5200 ]meph F. Birch’s Snns [ AYCOCK. )\ ':2?;;1‘3‘14'2‘1(‘, 3034 M St. N Ww. One or the Largest i Undertakers in the World i 1400 Chapin St. N.W. Col. 0432 817 11th St. S.E. Atlantic 6700 | 918 Cleveland Ave., Riverdale, Md. | $———cve anc Ave, Riverdals, Md. CEMETER‘ LOTS. TEMETERY LOT. 6-GRAVE SITE BEAU- tiful “location ‘in _orominent local ceme. | tery: atiractive price: will take part cash. | ance o sult you convenience. _Box 280-R_Star 147 ot = | l‘['\'EBAl DESIGNS. G[ 0. C. SHAFFER PRESSIVE rmv.AL TRIBUTES MOBERATE PRICES AT E RAT G108, Open Evenings and Sundays Cor. 14th & Eye GUDE BROS. CO. 1212 F 8t N.W. Floral Pieces National 4276 ) mayor, died today 24 hours before 1pnmm election you attribute your long life?” news- paper men asked Charles J. Brown | on his beard,” Brown an: 1 CANDIDATE DIES ‘WASHINGTON, Pa., September 13 | (#).—Ervin L. Easterbrook, one of three Democratic candidates for the In failing health since a paral Hu‘ ,stmke a year ago. Easterbrook became |1l yesterday. He was 66 and had | been a barber in Washington for 36 years. Methusela or Sflmpson? LIBY, Mont. ()—"And to what do | 100th birthday To the fact I've never cut my Braths. SIMPSON, THOMAS. (Departed this lite on a aturday. Septe | is survived by his devi | Simpson: four rer orman A. Mary C. and Teaves | o "also Suthard broth, and | | his Dtember 14 Roberts will Bethel Cemetery fate at | of Ar- Norman erment R at Wal EDITH 1 of Infant the Tabler n When " servic John's Epise sts. nw. a rment in Al Departed this September | WILL «\v~ mnu In Memoriam. BURTON, CAROLINE V. In | mem- Y eward 3. 193¢ DEVOTED WIFE | BAWS. 0scaR E MARY E CRAW FORD ted husb: SCARE HAWS. | Geparted thi " five vears ako iod Beptember 13 When time and sorrow are And the mists have roll God promised we sha that glorious day HIS DEVOTED WIFE. HERBERT. \uvu LLA. In loving mem- ory of our dear mother and grandmother. | MARY ELLA HERBERT. who le(t us six years ago today. September 13. 193] TURNER VABEL HERBERT AND EL- Jmnm\ JAMES S, In memory of AMES S, JOHNSON. who deparied this September 13. 1924 Though the vears have been many. your memory lingers on THE FAMILY. POWELL. JENNIE V. 1In sad but loving | lemembrance of or dear mother JEN N WELL. who departed this life BeBtember 17 a3 Peaceful be thy rest. dear mother. “Tis sweet to breathe thy name; In lite we loved vou dearly. In geath we do the sam HER VOTED DAUGHTER. TR | ae Father Quirk, son of an Eni:hshlam | Omaha | 8an Antonio | 1da Markhannen. District of Columbia—Partly cloudy tonight: tomorrow generally fair and continued cool; moderate northerly winds, Maryland and Virginia — Partly cloudy tonight: tomorrow generally | fair and continued cool. West Virginia—Fair tonight and | tomorrow; not much change in tem- perature, River Report. Potomac and Shenandoah very muddy at Harpers Ferry; | muddy at Great Falls tod: Report for Last 48 Hours. Temperature. Baromet Saturday— Desrees. Incl 4 p.om 7 3 £ pm Midnight ~2222 Sunday {am & a slightly 60 M Today. tam = 8 am Noon Record for Last 21 Hours (Prom noon vesterday to noon today.) 7B, at 4 p.m. vesterday. Year & Lowest, 56. at 7:15 a.m. today. Year Record Temperatures This Year. Highest. 97. on_August 20. Lowest. 19. on February 28 Humidity for Last 24 Hours. (From noon yesterday to noon today.) Highest. 80 per cent. at 3 a.m. today Lowest. 40 per cent. at 3 p.m. yester- day Tide Tables. (Furnished by United_Sta: Geodetic Survey. sh Low : High Low The Sun and Moon. Rises. Sun. today 43 Sun_tomorrow 8 Moon. today 6 p.m Automobile lights must be turned on one-half hour after sunset, Precipitation, Monthly precipitation in Inches in the Capital (current month to date) Mareh .7 & Wea ther in V; arlnus ( ities. Temp. Rain- *h.Lo Stations fall Weath's Abilene, Ga Atlantic City Baltimore. Md Birmingham Bismarck. N. D Boston. A | Buffalo. N.' ¥ | Charleston. 8. Chicago. 111 incinnati Cleveland Columbia_S. € Denver, Detroit Galveston Helena, Mont Huron,' 8. D Indianapolis Jacksonville Kans. City Los Angeies Louisville. Miami Mpls.-St. Paul New Orleans New York. N. Y Oklahoma City Nebr Philadelphia | Phoenix. Ariz Pittsburgh Portland Me Portland. Oreg Raleigh. N. C Salt Lake Cily Sau Dieso San_ Frapcisco | St. Louis, Mo | Seattle. Wash Spokane, Wah WASHXNCTON Cloudy | FOREIGN. (7 am. Greenwich time today) Temperature. Weather London. England Cloudy Paris. France Cloudy Vienna, Austria Rain Berlin ' Germany Cloudy Brest. France Cloudy Zurich. Switzerland . 4% Cloudy | | Stockholm. Sweden 50 ain Gibraltar. Spain 67 Cloudy | (Noon. Greenwich time. today ) Horta (Faval). Azores Cloudy (Current mmnu jons.) | Bt. Georges_ Bermuda Clear s-n Juan, Puerio Rico. A Clear Havana. Cub % Clouds coxon Canal Zone is Cloudy HOLT SEEKS RUI.ING ON SALE OF BOOKS | He Says Congress Should “De- | mand” an Opinion From Cum- | mings on Democrats’ “Hold-Up.” By the Associated Press Senator Rush Holt, Democrat, of West Virginia said yesterday that Congress should “demand” an opinion from Attorney General Cummings whether the sale of Democratic cam- | paign books violates the Federal cor- | rupt practices act Holt made his demand after the Democratic National Committee re- ported to the clerk of the House of Representatives Saturday that sales | of the book from May 31 to August 31 of this year amounted to more than $129,287 “Congress should get from the Attorney General as to whether this is a violation of the corrupt practices act,” Holt told re- porters. “If his opinion says no, then Congress should amend the act. “The committee is staging the big- gest holdup this country has ever witnessed the way they are selling | th books,” he declared. | ethods employed in disposing | of them may not be an outright viola- | tion of the law,” said Holt, “but to | use a term of Presxdenl Rouse\'elts it is a ‘moral evasion.’ Hoit said everybody knows “the people who bought the books did so for protection and that it always | pays to pay protection money when you think you will have to pay more.” | an_opinion BIRTHS REPORTED i Prank and Mildred Durso. girl and Lucy Loughborough. hoy. eph and Anna Mitchell, boy Willis and Virginia Corley. girl Randolph and Margarel Carter boy Arthur and Afleen Barnhart. girl Wilton and Helen Allen, girl Philip and Eva Degnan. boy Marion and Martha Rich. hoy Howard and Tillie Whalen. giri Andrew and Lillie Seicier. cfrl Bud and Arbeila Gray. girl id ‘Beatrice Hall, girl Florence Shaw. girl omas and Carrie Pierce. boy Bernard and Ernestine Holmes. boy | Kenneth and Annie Shepherd. boy. | | Willie and Catherine Moore, boy | eph and Veronica Brown. boy | Benjamin ana Eiizabech Matthews William and Mary Barnes. boy George and Lillian Washington. gir] Leroy and Rosa Tayior. girl John and Minnie Pinkney. girl, John and Janie Brooks. boy boy. Nathaniel and Emma Pinkney. boy Joseph and Josephine Stewart. boy. William “and “Florence Davis. boy Richard and Bernice Mills. boy. Clarence and Louise Mills. boy. Carl and Mary Butler, boy, DEATHS REPORTED Eleanor M. Harrison. 78, Mary Scroana 74 2024 Portner pl Alice A Avery. 74, Garfield Hospital Billie M. St. Clair. 87, Emergency Hospita . Union Station Ruth E. Richards 904 Girard st. n.e Wiimer Wilder., 44, Sibley Hospital Deima B. Dabney, 42 tration Facility Dewey R. Brown. 39. Gallinzer Hospital Infant James E. Ates. Children's Hospital Amy West. 50. 1114 3d st. s.w 40_ Preedmen’s Hospital. Rosn Brooks, 45. Freedmen s Hospital, AND" SON-IN- LR CHOBER A Marearet P, Russell, 35, 1440 Rock Creek Ford r& ' i » rivers | | CONSTITUTION IS LAUDED ! | observed in 250,000 celebmuons Bloom | pointed out. 100 Maryland | Veterans Adminis- AT FORD HEARING |Former Worker Says Offi- | cials Threatened Employes Who Joined. By the Associated Press BOSTON, September 13.—A former Ford Motor Co. employe today told a National Labor Relations Board ex- aminer that six supervisory officials of the company had either spied upon union meetings interfered with right of self-organization, or threat- | ened workers with discharge if they joined a union Alfred J. Soper of Cambridge, the | Witness, was called before Examiner James C. Batten in connection with charges of the United Automobile ‘Workers of America that 22 employes at the Somerville, Mass., plant of the company had been “fired” May 27 and that all were active members of the union. The union charged interference | with the right of self-organization, distribution of pamphlets by the com- pany criticizing labor organizations | and holding them up to scorn and SPYING IS CHARGED | but said one night had been spent in Lost Girl Gaining Fast as Scores Visit Hospital Feet and Hands Still Bandaged—Eats Big Chicken Dinner. By the Atsociated Press. BERRIVILLE, Ark., September 13 —Four-year-old Florence Jackson, lost for four days and nights in the Ozark Hills, held a reception yesterday for scores of persons who came to a hospital to, wish her well, Her feet and hands were still band- i aged heavily their 100-hour struggle with dense undergrowth, but doctors said she was otherwise all right. She ate a large chicken dinner yes- terday, appreciatively, after the diet of weeds, wild grapes and tomatoes on which she lived in the forest. She was still vague about her experiences, 1 from a log, another in a tree, another on | a flat rock and the fourth “with a | black man and woman” in a house deep in the hills. Her parents believed her reference to the man and woman was a dream contempt. warnings by supervisory employes and executives to workmen against labor organization and threats | of discharge if they joined. The union also charged supervisos officials had spied upon two union | meetings in order to learn which of their employes were interested in or- | ganization of a union. Soper said he had been employed by the Ford company for nine years and that he had been “fired” after h(" participated in the formation of a union at the Somerville plant. He said he had circulated about 500 cards throughout the plant prior to May 27 when the 22 men allegedly were dis- | charged. IN ADDRESS BY BLOOM | Safeguard to Rights and Liberties | of Nation Held Secret of Its Stability. The secret of this Nation's stability lies in the fact that its Constitution does more than establish a govern- ment, Representative Sol Bloom, di- | miles from where she went in MISSOURI PACIFIC | |and the International-Great Northern | rather than reality. She came out of the woods nude Friday, seven DEBTOR PLAN FILED Reorganization Into New Com- | pany Sought in Petition Given to I. C. C. By the Associated Press. A debtors’ plan for renruxnxmvinm of the Missouri Pacific Railway system into & new company was filed today with the Interstate Commerce Com- mission Debtor companies listed were the | Missouri Pacific Raiiroad Co., the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico Railway Co. Railroad Co. The Missouri Pacific Railroad filed A petition March 31, 1933, for reorgan- | ization under the Federal bankruptcy:’ act, The reorganization plan provided | for allocation of new securities in full settlement of principal and unpaid in- rector general of the Consmuurm- Sesquicentennial Commission, declared | yesterday in a radio addres The Constitution, he said, safe- | guards the rights and liberties of the | individual man, enables the nobility of human nature to express itcelf, “mobilizes the irresistible power of all the people to strike down every at-| tempt to trample upon the individual | human body or human soul.” ~Because the Constitution extends to every inch of territory under the flag, the 150th anniversary of its signing, September 17, 1787, is being WIDOW OF MEMBER OF HOUSE IS DEAD | Mrs. Ella Foster Aswell Expires at Louisiana Home—Burial to Be Here. Mrs. Ella Foster Aswell, widow of | Representative J. B. Aswell of the| eighth Louisiana district, died yester- | day in Shreveport, La., the Associated Press reported today. The body is be- | ing brought to Washington for burial. | Representative Aswell died here ln\ March, 1931, while serving in the Sev- enty-first Congress. He already had | been re-elected to the Seventy-second Congress. He first was elected to the Sixty-third Congress and Served in | each succeeding Congress up to the | time of his death. He was buried in | Rnck Creek Cemete: Mrs. Aswell's survi son, James B. Aswell, a daughter, Mrs, Georgetown Ky. vors include a New York, and George Cantrell, COLORED BISHOP DIES PHILADELPHIA. September 13 (%), | —Bishop William H. Heard, 88, of the first district of the Abyssinian Meth- | odist Episcopal Church, died here yes- terday. | Bishop Heard returned from a Euro- | pean trip three weeks ago. He was a | member of the Continuation Commis- sion on Faith and Order at a world | conference of churches in Geneva. He was at one time United States Minister to Liberia. He spent eight | years in West Africa for the church | and served pastorates in Mississippi, Ohio and West Virginia during his | 55 years in the ministry. He was born | a slave in Georgia. Funeral Directors Since 1850 L] L] Figures Talk The figures below show the actual costs of 1,000 consecutive adult funerals con- ducted by Joseph Gawler’s Sons. Here is positive proof that quality service costs no more. Joseph Gawler’s Sons, Inec. Alrfed B. Gawler William A. Gawler Walter A. Gawler Joseph H. Gawler 1750-2-4-6-8 Penn. Ave. N.W. Chapel Cremations NAtional 5512 terest on the following claims: $14,- | 584,950 in underlying mortgages, $39, | 806,861 in short term debts, $272.8 153 in bonds of the Missouri Pacific Co., $58.878376 in general mortgage honds, $15,379.863 in secured serial bonds, 858,420,594 in 20-year convert- ible bonds and similar amounts in | divisional, leased line and miscel- | laneous mortgages. C.1. 0. MEN GO TO JOBS THROUGH PICKET LINE | By the Associated Press, TOLEDO, Ohio, September 13— About 800, police-protected C. I. O. | United Automobile Workers marched (hrnugh & jeering Mechanics Educa- tional Society of America picket line mdm and ended a 13-day production | tie-up at the Spicer ) Manufacturing Co. The M. E. S. A called a strike August 31 at the automobile parts plant. C. I. O. unionists, who won sole bargaining rights in a labor board election, did not go through the pickets until peace negotiations failed. While the M. E. 8. A. Administra- tive Committee called a strike of all its members in Toledo, another meet- | Ing is scheduled tomorrow and there was no indication that other M. E. S. A. workers had joined the Spicer unionists. The M. E. S. A. claims 4.500 Toledo workers. It is independ- | ent of the C. 1. O. and the A. F. of L. One man was arrested today on a charge of assault and battery. Com- |pany Vice President E. C. Mogford estimated the plant was in 75 per cent production. Membership in co-operatives Switzerland is increasing in Cedar Hill Washington’s Most Beautiful Cemetery NO CONNECTION WITH NOR INTEREST IN ANY OTHER CEMETERY UNDER THE SAME THE PAST TWENTY-ONE YEARS UPRIGHT CROSS OF ASSORTED FLOWERS Appropriate 51000 AND UP | their ranks to cope with “an epidemic | | will instruct your sergeants to see that | valued at $654. FUNERAL TRIBUTE [ o & C. rLowEr sToREs 804 (1th ST, N.W, 808 14th ST, N.W, POLICE AIM DRIVE AT SAFE ROBBERS Brown Aroused as Bandits Haul Away 1,500-Pound Strong Box With $2,000. Aroused by the daring of a bandit gang which carted a 1,500-pound safe containing $2,000 away from the Washington Beef & Provision Co. of- fice while two watchmen were on| duty, Police Chief ErMest W. Brown today ordered his force to tighten of safe jobs." The provision company robbery, de- tectives said. apparently was en gineered by the same band that re- cently rifled a safe in the Rudolph & West hardware store, in the 1300 block | of New York avenue, of $1,000 and at- tempted to smash open the safe in the Hugh Reilly paint store next door. The robbers apparently backed a truck up to the loading platform of the provision company at 1110 E street southwest to cart away the heavy strong box early yesterday. After learning of the new robbery, Maj. Brown sent the following message to all precinct commanders: “We are now having another epi- demic of safe jobs in the city. You will give special attention to all places where safes are kept in an effort to apprehend the parties responsible. You every possible effort is made to see that this order is complied with.” There have been approximately 30 | safe robberies here in the past six months, police records revealed. Police were harassed over the week end by reports of more than a score | of housebreakings in which loot valued at approximately $3,000 was taken. The Giant Trading Store, 700 block of H street northeast, was broken into | by thieves who escaped with clothing | Russell L. Pippen, 929 L street, suf- | fered a possible skull fracture when | he was struck over the head by two | bandits who robbed him of $72 at | New York and Florida avenues north- east. He is in Casualty Hospital. Clothing valued at $282 was stolen from the home of William E. Hall of 2720 Thirty-sixth place. Bandits broke into the Roxy Valet | Shop at 1637 Connecticut avenue last | night and made off with clothing | valued at $301, police reported. - - — | 753 INVALIDS ON TRIP (]| Infirm _Pilgrims on Way to Shrine at Lourdes. DUBLIN, September 13 (#).—Hob- | bling, limping and some even being | carried, 753 aged and infirm pilgrims | left Kingstown by steamer today to worship and seek cures at the Shrine of the Blessed Virgin in Lourdes, France, About 1,900 others will join the fifth Irish national pilgrimage to the | shrine, which is credited with miracu- | lous cures, tonight. since a2 FLOWERS OUPONT CIRCLE DOCTORS RECOMMEND | AMBULANCES I 3 e Phone COlumbia 0432 One of Ihc Llrl’nt Undertakers e Worl MANAGEMENT FOR 09 178 ST, N.W, 211 F 37, KW, h SHOPPING CENTER 4, Remember—for the Benefit of Our Employees We Close at 1 P.M. Every Wednesday Watch tomorrow’s (Tuesday) STAR for extra savings in our 4-hour Wednesday Only Super Remember we close at 1 p.m. Features Sale! on Wednesday. and SANBORN COFFEE Pound Bag 23 ' PARDDOGFOOD..________. ' GUT-RITEWAX PAPER ______ EMBOSSED PAPER NAPKINS 0XYDOL Highly SUNPRIDE ..::%.. LUXPOWDER ._________________ Lifebuoy or Lux Soap 2 Triple Creamed sPry . reg. bars | MILK-FED Milk-Fed VEAL CHOPS Ib. 32(: TENDER, JUICY PORTER- HOUSE Fancy Jersey Sweel Potatoes California bunch Carrots . Fresh Bay New Pack Meaty Salt Fresh Jumbo Green Fresh Cauy FLOUNDERS. . Get a Fruit Bowl for One Cent with Each Purchase Ire 5 Ibs. 9c Stock Up at This Price POTATOES .: FRESH SEAFOOD MACKEREL 2 o {5¢ __w. 25¢ 1Te Ige. box RINSO-18° CRAX: 14 11b. cans lorge 125 = = = foot roll 29¢ 13¢ Bc 18¢c 15¢ 20c package of 80 Ige. == = = = hox TOWELS ___2 large wrapbed Ige. box IVORY SOAP All § 4 Med. Bars bars for I Large lar-_25° Lean, Meaty Ib. CHOPS___ 2 9° CORNED 2 BEEF. > 9“ STEAK - 41. Medium-Sized 5 Ibs. 9c 8"-29 Penna. Green Moun!um California Valencia Oranges . DELICATESSEN o Pure Lard .5, Borden’s Cheese 13 1b. CHATEAU_2 i 29¢ Original Phila. SCRAPPLE____n. (5¢ Pure All Pork Country Fvnh 14¢ v. 356 3509 GA. RVE. FREE PARKING . 'VEAL CUTLETS =37

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