Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1937, Page 11

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)

THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1937, *& A—11 HELENW. BEDFORD, OILHEIRESS, WED Married to Arthur McCash- in, 30-Year-0Id Salesman, in Connecticut. By the Associated Press. ‘WESTPORT, Conn., Nov. 20.—Miss Helen Wolcott Bedford, 24, heiress to a Standard Oil fortune, and Arthur McCashin, 30-year-old salesmen, were married today on the estate of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred- erick T. Bedford. The Rev. Charles Lillis of South Orange, N. J. assisted by the Rev. H. J. Carroll of the Church of As- sumption here, officiated. Close rela- tives and friends were present. Mrs. McCashin, whose grandfather, the late Edward T. Bedford. was one of the founders of the Standard Oil Co., and founder and president of | the Corn Products Co., is an outstand- ing horsewoman. Her father is presi- dent of Penick & Ford, Ltd., and is 8 director of a number of banks in New York City, and of other corpora- tions. « Mr. McCashin is the son of James McCashin of Morristown, N. J., The bride was attended by her sisters, Mrs. Lucy Briggs Cunning- ham, jr, and Miss Ruth Bedford. Mr. McCashin's brother, James, was his best man. Mrs. Helen Bedford McCashin is well known in local horse show circles, having exhibited at the National Cap- ital and Washington Horse Shows in recent years. She also has been a frequent visitor of the Virginia and Maryland hunting country near this city. Mr. McCashin also is a nationally known figure in equestrian circles, having been a steeplechase rider some ’ years ago and more recently manager of the Julius Bliss stables in New York. At the National Horse Show in | Madison Square Garden this year he achieved the extraordinary feat of rid- ing three horses in succession to make | the best score among all the interna- tional and civilian teams entered in the Irish Free State Challenge Trophy event, DISCUSSION BY PANEL TO FOLLOW LAWES TALK | Huff to Head Group in Crime Clinic Session Here Tomor= row Night. The crime clinic talk by Warden Lewis E. Lawes of Sing Sing at the Wardman Park Theater at 8:30 p.m tomorrow will be followed by a panel | discussion headed by Ray L. Huff, superintendent of District Penal In- stitutions. Warden Lawes will discuss penal institutions and their social value, the ninth talk in a series of 28 sponsored by the Institute of Criminal Science. | Other members of the panel will be Col. Claude Jones, superintendent of the National Training School for Boys; Dr. Gustav Peck, member of the Board of Prison Industries, and Maj. Henry Leonard, a special appointee under Attorney General Wickersham | to investigate conditions in Federal prisons. The panel members will be among the at a luncheon for Warden Lawes orrow at the Mayflower Hotel. *Other guests will include Maj. Ernest W. Brown, superintendent of police; Police Court Judze Edward M. Curran, Dr. James Nolan of the Wash- ington Criminal Justice Association, Father White, dean of Catholic Uni- versity law school, and James Ben- nett, commissioner of Federal Prison Industries, Inc. SOVIET OFFICIALS out | vania avenue SE.. who was taken to MOSCOW, Nov. 29 (P?.-D.plammic { sources said today that several high Boviet officials had disappeared from public life recently. Among those reported missing were | Jean Joseph Arens, former chief of | the Foreign Press Department and | CHARLES A. HINKEL FUNERAL TOMORROW Burial for Late Head of Carpet Firm Will Be Held in Abbey Mausoleum. Funeral services for Charles A. Hinkel, 56, president of the E. P. Hinkel & Co., Inc., carpet dealers and cleaners, will be held at 11 a.m. to- morrow at his late residence, L 1m0 Webster street NW, where he died Saturday. Rev. Dr. O. F. Black- welder, pastor of the Lutheran Church of the Reformation, will officiate. Burial will be in Abbey Mausoleum, ‘where Masonic rites will be held at the grave. A lifelong res- ident of this city, Mr. Hinkel was graduated at the old Business High School here. He was active in sev- eral organizations, belonging to S8t. John's Lodge of Masons, the Wash- ington Board of Trade and the Opti- mist Club. He was treasurer of Abbey Mausoleum. C. A. Hinkel GIRL SHOT IN EYE WITH BOY’S RIFLE Ernestine Ware in Hospital After Being Injured by Pellet From Air Gun. Doctors at Episcopal Hospital tos. day watched closely the condition of | 10-year-old Ernestine Ware, who was shot in the right eye yesterday with | an air rifle while playing in the { 3 1000 block of D * o street S.E. The lead pellet feiled to punc- ture the girl's eyeball, doctors say, but it will be necessary for her to remain in the hospital for at least & week for treatment against infection. The gun Wwas fired , according to police, by 13- year-old James. Aceto, 908 Pennsyl- Ernestine Ware. the fifth precinct and charged with discharging an air rifle and posses- sion of an air rifie on public space. He later was released in the custody of his parents. Ernestine first was taken to Provi- dence Hospital by her father, William Ware, Capital Transit Co. machinist, of 1013 South Carolina avenue S.E. FELLOWS FUNERAL SET Rites to Be Held in New Britain, Conn., Wednesday. NEW BRITAIN, Conn., Nov. 29 (#), —Funeral services for Dexter Fellows, dean of circus press agents, will be held at his home here at 2 pm. Wednesday, his mother-in-law, Mrs. Martin W. Sandstrom, announced to- day. Fellows died Priday night at Hat- ' QUALITY PANT S OMINE “SKETCHES” 'PIGGLY WIGGLY Maxwell House ____1. Chase & Sanborn___m. This Lovely Wllkms__y, . 15¢ . 26-Plece Service for Six Crusader Silverplate For only $1.98 and a punch card showing the purchase of $10.00 worth of groceries WILL MAKE A MOST OUR FAMOUS WELCOME XMAS GIFT| | GREEN BAG __ Fall Baking Needs PURE , Royal Baking Powder__ % 19¢ LARD Calumet In All Meat Marhkets CHECK THIS AD THOROUGHLY THERE'S MANY A VALUE Prices quoted are for District of Cn.lumbia until close of busines. chnuday, Dec. 1, 1937. " SPECIALLY PRICED | GROSSE & BLAGKWELL 22,4 __ 9 cuns 29 | . 14 Ib. Walter B,“kcr s.chocnlute ",".' 15¢ It's delicious with Philadelphia cream cheese and guava jelly. Hershey's Baking Choc. & 12¢ Meke triple decker sandwiches the next time you entertain, SWIFT'S Dromsduy Cocouut 3 % | WALTER BAKER'S COCOA WS 1210 JEWEL Baker's Prem. Cocoanut__pk; 5¢c i Last Shortening ‘The old, old favorite at & bang-up price. We offer it until garl:héf’“ Currants Saturday's closing subfect to prior sale. Better get four or ulk Citron ___ 11b. ‘Izc pkg. Lemon Peel | LIBBY’S PINEAPPLE JUIGE “x98c | GIBB'S Pork and Beans & ‘The large economy can . . . of natural Hawalian pineapple Glace Cherries 11b., 40 can juice. Keep unused juice in a bottle in your refrigerator for Glace Pineapple the next meal. Sun Maid Raisins_ PRESERVES A Real Value at PURE Sanico Vanilla s“"“}o FRUIT 2 Ibs. 250 poxes 10c Food Coloring 2 Hik e el Flako Pie Crust-______pkg. Lake Shore Honey____ ‘v Campfire Marshmallows . bis: Specmlly Priced All This Week! LARGE BUDDED <G5> DIAMOND WALNUTS Fresh Ibs. H 21b. 1937 Sanico Peanut Butter____ 1. jar 19¢ SAH|E0 BREAD Major Mincemeat Jar Stock Silver Skillet Hash_ _2 &% 25¢ The Toast of the Town Karo Syrup Ziia T Sanico Mayonnaise Full One 90 2 oz. bot. 1 bot. 9c 12¢ § 19¢ raspberry, blackberry, pucn Remember it's a 1!; pound jar. PAPER SHELL PECANS 2. 35¢ | IBC i You'll want pecans for the holidays and here’s your oppor- 4 tunity to buy at & worthwhile savings. Large nuts—guaran- 25¢ teed quality. l4c | WET SHRINP 9 cans 29c | '2 Serve shrimp cocktail at home. Make a sauce of Stokely e i 3 chili sauce and horseradish. Serve well chilled. 29 | 2 cans 250 - PRIDE OF VA. HERRING 7c § & big bargain this week. A special s A regular 14c seller . . . Whole prces g. 7C & parchment paper lining protects it from the tin. Brown Sugar : 8¢ 8 oz ¢ ok ey . HUNT’S SEEDLESS GRAPES _ _ 8 oz. can B X 2 Small grapes, sweet as honey. Keep a few cans handy for Carnation Milk 8¢ Pet Milk Sealect Milk __ 7c Morton’s Salt _ Columbia Salt 2 o ~ can 11b. pks. adding to desserts, saiads, etc HUNT'S FRUIT GOCKTAIL _ . _ 9 ™. 45¢ | The three-way dish. Use before dinner as an nppenur during as a fruit salad or after dinner as a dessert. Con- tains five deiicious diced Hunt's fruits, N.B.C. HONEY GRAHAMS rke. 8¢ Baked with pure honey and sugar. A big favorite with children. Highly nutritious and beneficial, é - VIMPEP DOG FEED {5f A full one pound can. Try a can or 50 and we are sure you'll want a case for $8c. Z A Case, # " REDHEART DOGFEED & _ 6 &% 48¢ | The nationally advertised dog feed at worthwhile savings. Available in Diets A and B. Jumbo Roll Butter Sanitary's Butter Grade A Sanico Eggs 11b. cans 11b. Look for this Din- cans mond in RED ink stamped on every shell It's your guarantee of get- ting _cenuine Dia- monds. Corned Beet Scot Tissue __ __3 rons 23¢ Waldorf Tissue 4 rons 17c 0. K. Laundry Soap____3 pars 10c Cider Vinegar quart |0c Stokely Cut Beets Stokely Succotash _ Stokely Calsup Brer Rabbit Molasses_ X Duff's Molasses__ Keystone Peaches Sanico Grape Juice Pound Loaf.___ Weston's Cookies________2 pxes. 25¢ N. B. C. Ritz Crackers_ __1 w. pks. 21 ¢ i“!x Phila. Cream Cheese Full One D Davis Codfish Cakes 10 02 can 9c | pound Loaf____ PAN ROLLS ** |°° sweet cream. MILK 5¢ Candies & Gums 3 s 10c Cigarettes 5 poputar branas___2 pigs. 25¢ Substantial Food Canned Corn Banquet % House of Lords % b, Lipton's ___ Lipton's : Astor. Tea Balls pe. Tender Leat ___pxe. Salada O. P.__% . Sanitary’s Special Afternoon 1 Orange Pekoe " Ib. 150 % Pure Maple Syrup 2 Gibbs" Spinach___ # Stokely Pumpkin # Stokely Turnip Greens ¢ Stokely Chili Sauce The famous trio from the LAND 0’ LAKES Stokely Baby Foods___2 eans 15¢ For sondnesss sake. ask for " Lakes in butter, milk or cheese. Lond O’ Lakes BUTTER 93 score. churned from fresh, Land O’ Lakes From the rich dairy regions of Wisconstn, Land O’ Lakes Aged Cheese . 28¢ Proctor and Gamble QUALITY PRODUCTS 1% ozs. Seasonal and Reasonable Bulk Prunes 70-80 e -—-— f Sunsweet Prunes_ Zion Fig Bars__ # Quaker Oats_ *3, % Cream of Wheat._ ¢ Puffed Wheat £ Puffed Rice * Ralston Cereal___ ? Shredded Ralston Apple Cider__1; ga1. 20c, ga1. 35¢ Argo Corn Starch Dromedary Dates____2 pkes. 25¢ Camel Pitted Dates 10c Layer Figs e 20c Deming’s Salmon 2 cans 25¢ Pillsbury Pancake Mix__pke. 10c ¢ Sanico Pancake Mix__2 pkgs. 15¢ PKg. 2 Sanico Buckwheat____2 pkgs. 17¢ New England Syrup_____pt. 17¢ pt. 35¢ ean 2lc 2 canmt 25¢ w 10c Log Cabin Syrup Heinz Soups , %5} Sanico Jelly White House Apple Butter 3',‘.," 15¢ Hominy Grits Halves o’ Gold Pears__ Harbauer's Catsup____*%,i 10c e Ige. - 10c 14c Corn Meal Ivory Soap___. Large Ivory____esxe 10c P&G Laundry 6 vars 25¢ Ivory Flakes 1se. pxs. 21 ¢ Ivory Snow - 15¢ Chipso Oxydol CRISCO - medinm eake 6c 31b. 53¢ Musselman’s Tomato Juice Case of 6__$1.69 Gives perfect results 2 43 Gold Medal rLoun 12 1b. sack Golden Heart or Harvest Blossom FLOUR 121b. 39@ sack We guarantee these eggs to be 1007 Satisfactory for practically every use. For cooking, baking, frying, scrambling—everything but poaching, coddling or soft boiling. tee them . .. SELECTED s7orac: Nucoa Margarine v%uh 2 Lang’s Pickles 1b. §Tc talt an Te Jell-O Desserts Royal Desserts O&C Potato Stix Wyman's Blueberries Dulany Sweet Potatoes____2 cans 23¢ N. B. C. Premium Flakes_ _7:4 oz. pz. 9c Keystone ¥2siea We guaran- what more could you ask for a quarter? EGGS - 25¢ ____m. 20c Apricots targe ean |7¢ Bakers Choc. Dessert Kre Mel Desserts Fruit Juices until recently Consul General at New | York; Solomon Bron, former director | of Amtorg. the official Soviet trading | organization; Erich Asmus, former Minister of Finland; M. Bondarenko, 30-yeur-old Premier of Ukraine, and | Vladimir Zatonsky, commissar of education in Ukraine. URGES TRAFFIC “TOI. L BALTIMORE, Nov. 29 (#).—State Senator Raymond E. Kennedy, Balti- After the “class struggle” the losers’ consolation prize—a new pair of— TROUSERS at Low Cost Standard Tomatoes Stringless Beans___ * Navy Beans Bulk Rice Domestic Sardines 3 eans 10c Peerless Macaroni__pke 2 s 9¢ Early Blue Ridge Phillips Emerald Par/c wn Ic Early June Honey Stokely 5¢ June - — R 9 Pod - Stokely Party__ *.* 15¢ Green Giant____ M3 [7c Canned Peas Hunt's Supreme 14,52 for 25¢ No. 2 No. 2 eans 15¢ 25¢ 10c Del Maiz Niblets_ 2 cans 27¢ Del Maiz Gim._ -2 cane 23¢ Dainty Shoe Peg__2 cans 23¢ Key Mar Sugar__ = 7c New Fare Shoe Peg 22 10c Silver Run Corn__ =%~ 8¢ Stokely W.G.G.B. 2 2%:25¢ Treesweet Orange 'z~ 10c Pomorang____ % 2 ror 25¢ Blue Ribbon Fig___ 1z 8¢ Hunt's Tomato___ %+ 6¢ Libby's Tomato___ &4~ 6¢ Dole Pineapple 4,5 2 tor 25¢ Stokely Grapefruit ¥:.* 10c Stokely Tomato *%a* 10c ean No. 2 cans No.2 15¢ can Jumbo Fruit Cake A good, dark fruit cake made of good ingre- dients. A marvelous value at the price. w49 = $1,19 SANICO FRUIT CAKE Light_variety in mnmuuhed tins. DE LUXE rnun CAKE Light variety in useful iestherette boxes. 51b. size more Democrat, seeking a way to re- For As $ Little As b at No.1 31b. 51b. duce the traffic death toll here, sug- Phillips Spaghetti % 6¢| | Shriver's A-I 7c size size gested the City Hall bell be tolled three minutes to announce each auto- mobile death. Kennedy said 121 persons have been killed by automobiles here this year. ‘Tolling of bells, he wrote Mayor How- ard Jackson, would make drivers and pedestrians think more of traffic safety. DUSTLESS POCAHONTAS COAL ls CLEAN Coal! Every lump of Dustless Pocahontas Coal is thoroughly cleaned over the nlost modern elec- tric vibrating shaker screens. Then it is chemically treated to prevent dusting. That's why you get all lump coal—the cleanest bi- tuminous ‘coal money can buy. STOVE SIZE_POCAHONTAS heats quickly . . . burns thoroughly and lasts long. Delivered to City and Suburbs. A. P. WOODSON CO. homes of 5 to 8 rooms. COAL . . . FUEL OIL . . . DELCO OIL BURNERS - 1202 Monroe St. N.E. 1313 H 5t. N.W. Phone NOrth 0176 Stokely C. G. C. S. 3~ 8¢ Lo aunns - 2% i APPLES -APPLES -APPLES ib. 256 END CHOPS P 23?0 We bought 4 carloads (2,000 baskets) for this SELECT CHOPS . _ _ . sale . .. and are going to offer them at this Fresh Shoulders ..»c. . 19¢ attractive price uhtil Wednesday's closing or pounds while supplies last in stores . . . We invite your Satisfaction in Beef at Low Cost. Try It. Your Taste Knows PP T ¥ T NEDIUN SIZE "STAYMAN WINESAP APPLES Bushel ROUND STEAK _ _ _ _ . 33¢ You’ll want at least one c Basket 7 SIRLOIN STEAK . _ _ . 35¢ Porterhouse STEAK . 37¢ i 6Lbs. . _____1% REMEMBER they’ll go fast at this price. Better get yours as soon as possible. Back to the old Price Delivered to Our Stores This Morning € | . and the quality still the same Siring Beans v, 2 16¢ 39 : SANITARY’S SPECIAL 100% PORK Penna. Polaloss_.__10 »- IT¢ BOLOGNA ___" 250 - 4o SAUSAGE MEAT . 16e Briggs Scrapple - 15¢ Per Pound Nancy Hall Sweels___4 - 16¢ Campbell's Tomato 223 10c EISEMAN'S F Street at Seventh Largest Selection of Trousers in Washington Whole or Half - - “A. S Ib. effective Ten cents per pound price reductiun in a month’s time and that’s the only change: It's the same delicious 100% i THOROUGHLY, follow the directions on the wrapper. Onions ", Pears 3o ... 3,456 10¢

Other pages from this issue: