Evening Star Newspaper, January 26, 1942, Page 23

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Tomorrow . . . We Begin an Important Fashion Event Mfln A 3.DAY SALE $8.95 >. New Spring Dresses | = B\ % ~ For Travel Hints . : feyt—or go_bob- purchased ot our Cashier's ASK MR.FOSTER ' I Travel ice Our Famous $8.95 Newest Arrivals Are Grouped at This Magical Sale Price For Misses’, Women and Half Sizes Here’s an outstanding fashion-value event! Just imagine the good fortune of purchasing our famous $8.95’s at a saving of $1.95, which is more than 20%! There are styles and colors youw'll adore now and well into spring! ® Fashion’s Darling, the “TWO-PIECE DRESS” in many smart versions! Jacket Dresses for your favorite spring outfits! Dressy and Tailored Styles __ perfect for afternon teas and evening engage- ments! Lingerie Trimming, white or pastel, on your beloved navy or black spring dress! ® Gay Prints and Duco Dots in flam- * buoyant colors and interesting designs! The Palais Royal, Thrift Dresses 3 DAYS ONLY! $3.95 DRESSES Career Girls—YOU save $1.20 on EACH dress! And what dresses! They were grand values at $3.95! Notice the deep hems, the all 'round pleated skirts, the many, many details generally found on more expensive dresses! Jacket dresses! Shirtwaist styles! One-piece dresses! Dicky dresses! Stripes—Checks— Plaids—Solid colors—Muted shades—just about every- thing! Sizes for misses and women. The Palais Royal, Daytime Dresses « o o Third Floor SALE! Smart Set’s Regular $1 Half ’n’ Half GLOVES, 79¢ Soft sueded royon fabric with pigtex leather back makes o pretty and proctical glove. * Fits as well.as your expensive feather gloves. And the price, @ mere 79¢c, makes it feasible to buy several pairs! ++« Third Floor Nature’s Children Dairy Cows By LILLIAN COX ATHEY. | milk, though large herds are kept in Uncle S8am has found through in- | the principal dairy States. tensive research that m:mywn;* According to their social register, least a quart of milk & day and of milk with a lower butterfat con- lrwnuplq a pint or more. We can. | tent than any other dairy breed. milk and dairy products are most youthful days it is valuable for important for us as foods. As & Nation, we are just beginning to realize how important it is to eat the right food and the correct amount of it. If you would investigate the food raticn of our most important live- stock you would be surprised to see how carefully their food is selected and measured so that they do not | growth. ~Whole milk is a good eat too much or the wrong kind. source of vitamins, especially the According to estimates of the De- | butterfat in top milk. Both whole phosphorus. e ,m’wm“r&ufl"o’f Fortunately most children like fhirds lod’ them wers catte; of mix [T I 15 8 Siling food, bu 15 it not be permitted to crowd out dairy breeds — Ayreshire, Brown Lrich Swiss, Dutch Belted, Guernsey, Hol- other necessary items of diet. “"The expression “daiy 1 1 L The n “dairy breed” re- P | fers to breeds of cattle espec!nllijrlf(llfl Expected to Act well fitted for the production of milk . . | et ed Lo e coaes piving their | 10 Aid Starving Greeks quota are eligible for registrgtion | By the Associated Press. in & mmm‘ exclusive group, their| LONDON, Jan. 26.—The News name bel placed in a coveted | herdbook. Besides producing the Cchronicle sald today Britain plans | milk snd butterfat demanded, they | 1O Felax her blockade to permit food must also meet certain color qualifi- | to reach the starving populace of | cations and other requirements, | Greece. such as gentleness and love for = . their calves, | The newspaper added arrange. Holstelns are most numerous in ments to this effect are expected | sections where milk is sold mostly |0 be announced at the next session | for making cheese or evaporated 'of Parliament. . At Sloar’s Art Galleries 715 THIRTEENTH STREET Modern and Antique Furniture, including Duncan Phyfe Din- ing Tables, Sets of Chairs, Sideboards, ecretaries, Tambour Desks, Card Tables, Occasional Tables, Curio Cabinets, Leather Chairs, Silverware, Bric-a-Brac, French Drawing Room Furni- ture, Valuable Paintings, Portraits, Colored Prints, Imported China and Glassware, Bronzes, Oriental Rugs in all sizes, Up- helstered Love Seats, Davenports and Easy Chairs, Fireplace Brasses, Decorative Mirrors, Lamps, Aubusson Rugs, Tapes- tries, Victorian Pieces, Clocks, Etc, TO BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION Within Our Galleries 715 THIRTEENTH STREET JANUARY 27th to 31st, BOTH INCLUSIVE AT 2 P.M. EACH DAY By order of Thomas M. Gittings, Executor, Estate of Robert L. Keeling; the Security Storage Co. and Many Private Owners ON EXHIBITION Today, 9 to 6 Catalogues on Application to: C. G. SLOAN & CO., INC., Auctioneers Esiablished 1§91 Terms: Cash ' G. E, WASHERS Fall, thin windows . . . great, huge windows . . . wide, fat windows . . . —all can be fitted in Cushion Dot Marquisette PRISCILLA CURTAIN Length Width (each pair) Price 54 inches 84 inches $1.59 pair 63 inches 84 inches $1.69 pair 72 inches 84 inches $1.79 pair 81 inches 84 inches $1.89 pair 90 inches 84 inches $1.98 pair 90 inches 116 inches $2.98 pair 90 inches. 196 inches $3.98 pair Fluffy clouds of cushion dot marquisette to frame and fit every window—no matter the size! Each pair with back selvedge removed—that makes them hang so much straighter after laun- dering! Headed ruffles! Each palr with bone rings on decorator tie-backs—that’s a feature gen- erally found on much more expensive curtains! Wash them the same way you do hankies— n}xlilté soap suds and lukewarm water! Soft ivory shade. The Palais Royal, Cwrtains « « . Second Floor e T s With Automatic Pumps Use Our Deferred Payment Plan - @ 8.Pound Tub Capacity - ® Finger-Tip, One-Contiol Wringer ® White Porcelain Enamel Tub ® Permanently Lubricated The Polais Rorel, Wenhing Mackines . . . Fifth Floor nephews and nieces should have at | Holsteins produce & larger quantity ! pot have milk without cows, and| What does milk do for us? Inour| partment of Agriculture, we had in and skim milk supply calcium and | Ruthless Executions Reported as Unrest ‘Spreads in Europe 400 Declared Arrested And 34 Executed or Sentenced to Death | BY the Associated Press. 7 | New reports of wholesale arrests, ruthless executions and drastic at- tempts to hold German-conquered Europe quiet under its Nazi master were heard yesterday. These reports from the British radio, the Russian radio, from Switzerland and unoccupied France |listed 400 persons arrested and 34 | executed or sentenced to death. The most drastic German action | was reported in Rumania, where, | Swiss sources said, 150 Rumanians were arrested for opposing the gov- | ernment, and in Norway, where 250 men were reported arrested and | three sentenced to death for anti- | Nazi activity. The Norway inci- | dents were reported by the British radio, C. B. 8. said. The Bucharest radio admitted | that 14 persons had“been sent to & concentration camp for “leading a dissolute life.” Included were two | men who had been identified with | former Rumanian governments. Vichy reported that for the fourth successive day the Germans an- | nounced the execution” of two Frenchmen before firing squads in the occupied zone. They were icharged with aiding German enemies and illegally possessing | weapons. In addition to the arrests reported in Trondheim and the naval dock- yards in Bergen, three men in the Bergen region were executed for seeking to escape to Britain. The National Broadcasting Co. heard a British broadcast saying that 22 railwaymen were executed in Poland near the Polish-Czech border for pillaging German trans- ports. ‘The Russian Tass Agency said seven German soldiess had been sentenced to death by a military tribunal at Muenster charged with desertion. Fate of Son in Nav}y_ Awaited by Alexandrian By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va, Jan. 26— Word of the fate of her son, who was believed to have sailed for Guam a few days before the Jap- anese attack last month, is await- ed here by Mrs. L. B. Mayer of 101 East Linden _street. The last Mrs. Mayer heard from her son, Richard J. Rid- dick, 22, yoeman second class, was that he was scheduled to sail for Honolulu a few days before the attack oc- Mr. Riddiek, curred Decem- ber 7. Parents of two Washington- ians scheduled to sail on the same boat, Ensign William L. Owen and Yoeman Ben Mac Greer, have re- ceived terse cable messages indicat- ing they may be prisoners of the Japanese. “I don't know anything for sure.” Mrs. Mayer, an employe of the Labor Department, said with an at- tempt at cheerfulness Not hav- ing heard from him. I suppose he reached Guam and I'm hoving that he’s alive and well. There’s noth- ing to do but wait.” Yoeman Riddick worked for & Washington newspaper and later for the Southern Railway before enlisting in the Navy last fall. His stepfather also it an employe of the Labor Department Military Police School To Open at Arlingfon A new school to train a corps of military police and provost marshals to meet every need of the expanding Army will be opened at the Arling- ton (Va.) cantonment February 2, with an initial class of 223 student officers. Maj. Gen. Allen W. Gullion, pro- vost marshal general, has assembled a staff of specialists and prepared a course of instruction in the duties of military police. Traffic control is a major problem. The officers will be given instruction also in criminal investigation and military law. The commandant of the new school is Col. Hobart B. Brown, who was deputy provost general in the 1917-18 A. E. F. Walter Chosen President Of Oblate Club The Washington Oblate Club was organized at the Oblate Scholasti- cate, 391 Michigan avenue N.E., y terday afternoon. The following officers were temporarily selected: President, C. J. Walter; vice presi- dent, Miss Nellie A. Broderick, and secretary, Miss Gertrude Woulfe The club decided to hold its meet- ings on the afternoon of the last Sunday of the month. I T NOW sndererm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration 1. Does not rot dresses o¢ men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 39¢* Jar At all stores selling toil (alse in 10e snd 80e

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