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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, December 04, 1938, Image 6

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1938-12-04/ed-1/seq-6/

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Zeiss Photographic Exhibit
Dec. 5th to 17th, Inclusive
-
—Announcement—
We are pleased to announce that beginning
Monday, Dec. 5, through Saturday, Dec. 17,
we will have on display in our Exhibit Salon
over 100 prize-winning prints made with
Zeiss Ikon Cameras.
You Are Cordially Invited to Attend
9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Daily

EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC
1003 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W.
NAtional 8933 MEtropoliton 8898
I TRADE? SURE WE WILL TRADE I
Turn in Your Set on a New Model I
Authorized Official Lionel Repair Service Station
Distributor of Lionel Repair Farts for the District of Columbia.
We Repaired Your Dads’ Trains, Why Not Yours?
28 Years in Business Is Your Protection
Here’e what the Lionel Factory thinke of oar aervice
“We are very glad indeed to have you continue as Au
thorised Lionel Service station and Distributor of Parts for the
District of Columbia.
“The service work which you have been doing for the past
several years on our product has met with the utmost satisfac
tion of our trade.”
We Carry Every Type of Lionel Train Sets in
Stock—from $6.98 tip to $97.50
A Complete Line of Train Accessories
and Model Railroad Supplies
Store Open Today 10 to 4
Superior Lock & Electric Co.
1410 L N.W. Phone Met. 9439
NO BRANCH STORES
OPEN EVENINGS* Parking Space Available. Cataloguer Free
Pay on Your
/ \ ELECTRIC BILL!
I I ... or on our own plan
' f of easy payments. Terms
so low that you will never
miss the money from your
budget. 3 years to pay.
Pictured to right is Fin
Series Oil-burning Boiler.
I \ L. P. STEUART
V j & BR0„ INC.
’ ' l» 12th St. N.E. LI. 4300
_ _ I
XiaiX X'BTn*
/over 3,oooVfluidheat1
I FLUID HEATl MEANS I
V BURNERS A LONGER J
\IN D. C/ V LIFE yfl
ADAM A. WESCHLER Sc SON, Auctioneers
A sale at an opportune time to purchase at your
own price from a valuable collection of
STERLING SILVER
SHEFFIELD PLATE
DIAMONDS-JEWELRY
By Catalogue
AT AUCTION
At WESCHLER'S, 915 E St. N.W.
TOMORROW
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
Commencing at 10 A.M. and 2 P.M. Each Day
INSPECTION PERMITTED
Today, December 4th, and Mornings of Sale.
Unusual Sterling items include Five-piece “Stieff” Repousse
and Six-piece Antique English Tea Sets; Bowls, Center Pieces,
Trays, Large Assortment of Ornamental and Serving Pieces,
Candlesticks, Flat Ware and innumerable pieces by well
known Craftsmen such as Kirk, Gorham, Caldwell; Bailey,
Banks St Biddle; Tiffany Stieff; Black, Starr St Frost and others.
Fine Diamond Pieces including one-and-one-half karat gem set
in platinum; smaller Diamonds; Diamond Wrist Watches and
other jewelry.
This sale consists largely of items'formerly pledged, title
having been obtained by legal sale, and now sold to reimburse
present owner, offering an unusual opportunity to secure sub*
stantial gifts for the coming holiday season at tremendous
swings,
(CATALOGUES UPON REQUEST)
TERMS; Caih. Adam A. Weschler A Son, A acts.
'Abraham Lincoln'
To Be Presented
At Georgetown
Play Unanimous Choice
For Sesquicentennial
Celebration
Memories of a President’s wartime
visits to Georgetown University will
be recalled Friday evening when the
university’s Mask and Bauble Club
presents John Drlnkwater’s histori
cal drama, “Abraham Lincoln,” be
fore an audience in Gaston Hall.
It will be the club’s contribution to
Georgetown’s sesquicentennial an
niversary celebration.
History records several visits of
President Lincoln to the little college
on the outskirts of Georgetown dur
ing the years of the Civil War. The
first time was when he came to re
view the famous 69th (Irish) Regi
ment of New York on May 10, 1861,
before its engagement at Bull Run.
The Jrish regiment was the first
of a long series of regiments to be
quartered on the campus until 1865.
Its 1,500 men occupied all the space
in the Maguire Building and the
Mulledy Building and tented also on
the campus. Lincoln visited them
in the company of Secretary of
State Seward and other officials.
The New York men were soon fol
lowed by the 79th Regiment, also
from New York. During the war
some of the college buildings were
used as hospitals and on several
occasions the sorrow-burdened Lin
coln walked between the rows of
cots. On one of these visits to
Georgetown he lingered to see a
new painting, the “Calling of Mat
thew,” which had been presented to
the college by Gen. Meade.
Georgetowns colors, blue and
gray, were chosen as a symbol of the
reconciliation of the North and
South. To the Southern cause the
school offered two young men who
became nationally known. One was
Edward Douglas White, a Louisiana
boy who later became United States
Senator and Chief Justice of the
United States. Another was a young
poet, James Ryder Randall, whose
“Maryland, My Maryland" became
one of the great war songs of the
South.
With Georgetown steeped in the
tradition of the Civil War and with
its alumni fighting just as hard for
the preservation of the Union as
some others did for Southern inde
pendence, Drinkwater's "Abraham
Lincoln" was the unanimous choice
for the sesquicentennial play.
There will be 54 students in the
cast, with Carl W. Watson, jr., as
Lincoln and William J. Driscoll, jr.,
as Mrs. Lincoln. The latter is presi
dent of the dramatic club.
—-9-—
Poiomac Man Acquitted
In Fire Negligence Case
By • Staff Correspondent of The Star.
ROCKVILLE, Md„ Dec. 3 —A Cir
cuit Court jury yesterday returned
a not guilty verdict in the trial of
Robert M. Pier of Potomac, on a
charge of allowing a fire ot spread
and burn down a $10,000 house and
several outbuildings on an adjoining
property.
It was the only not guilty verdict
to date in a criminal case during the
November term, which included 72
indictments and 51 criminal appeals
from the Police Court.
Defendants in 39 of the indict
ments have pleaded or been found
guilty, and in 31 of the 51 criminal
appeals cases guilty verdicts have
been returned. Twenty of the ap
peal cases have been nolled prossed
by State's Attorney James H. Pugh,
and did not go to trial in the Circuit
Court.
Mr. Pier was convicted of the same
charge in Police Court and given a
six months’ sentence by Judge Har
old C. Smith. It was on an appeal
from that verdict that the jury yes
terday found him not guilty.
Testimony showed that he had set
a trash fire near his home last
March 8, which later spread to a field
and whipped by a high wind jumped
across a 30-foot road to the property
of J. B. Duley. Their home and sev
eral outbuildings were burned to the
ground. Mr. Pier testified he had
taken every precaution to prevent
the fire from spreading.
Sends Son to Jail
PITTSBURGH, Pa„ Dec. 3 (A*).—
Farmer John Stoyko kept his word,
sending son Mike to jail for four
months. He told a Federal court
jury he had pleaded with the boy
to remove an illicit whisky still from
an abandoned mine on the farm
property.
“If they raid the still, I'll tell
them you own it,” he said he warned
the son.
A guilty verdict wasVetumed in
15 minutes.
Boy, 12, Catches Eagle
UNION, Wash., Dec. 3 OP).—Ernie
Ahrens, 12, heard a commotion in
his pen of geese, and found the in
vader was a golden eagle, 6 feet from
tip to tip of wings. With the tech
nique he’d used in catching geese,
Ernie grabbed the eagle by the neck
with one hand, and caught both
the bird’s feet with the other. The
eagle was caged; the boy was un
scathed. f
31000-Volt Shock
Victim Expected
To Recover
e
Bj the AuocistedPreii.
BLUEFIELD, W. Va„ Dec. 3.—
E. J. Hager, 30, Appalachian
Electric Power Co. line foreman
of Princeton, W. Va., was
shdcked by 33,000 volts of elec
tricity, but lived to tell about it
today at Bluefleld Sanitarium.
The accident occurred late
Thursday in a remote area of
the Cumberland Mountains
near Jackson, Ky. Mr. Hager
did not reach the hospital here
until today, but doctors said he
would recover from second-de
gree bums of the arm and back.
Mr. Hager told of being
hoisted off a mountain by fellow
workers using hand lines. He
was propped on a horse to make
four more miles to Jackson and
medical aid. He was brought
here by ambulance.
|l I-,--T—
END OF THE WAR BETWEEN THE STATES—Georgetown stu
dents re-enact the scene of the surrender of Lee to Grant as part
of their production of “Abraham Lincoln.” Thomas F. Mullahey,
Jr., is shown as Gen. Grant; Grover A. Whalen, jr., son of the gen
eral manager of the 1939 New York Worlds Fair, as Gen. Meade,
and John F. Bolton, Jr., as Gen. Lee. —Star Stall Photo.
- - - t
Ex-Blacksmith,
90, Is Ardent
Rabbit Hunter
By tht Associated Preu.
BRIDGETOWN, Md., Dec. 3.—At
an age when most men are content
to remain close nIo the hearth. Jacob
B. Gibson, 90, has dispensed with
spectacles and is going hunting.
The retired village blacksmith,
still with the powerful physique he
acquired in shaping horseshoes, dis
carded his eye-glasses because of
"second sight,” he says, and has gone
rabbit hunting every day since the
season opened except for squally
weather days.
Mr. Gibson's one regret was that
on his birthday anniversary, No
vember 19, the weather was "not
fit.”
He brought home four rabbits this
fall and neighbors found three more
which they said had fallen before
his marksmanship.
A friend recently took him to a
symphony concert but Mr. Gibson
decided he "preferred the music of
a pack of foxhounds.”
True to his trade, Mr. Gibson has
never owned an automobile and dis
likes them.
He and Mrs. Gibson remember
when Bridgetown was a slave trad
ing center.
Students Protest Liquor Ban
NEWARK, Del., Dec. 3 OP).—“Are
we men or are we minors?” indig
nant University of Delaware stu
dents were asking themselves today.
Students and liquor dealers have
THIS POPULAR
FULLER
. FLESH
k BRUSH
ii-49
ORDER
TODAY
>2-39 ^
FAMOUS FULLER
BRISTLECOMB
On* regular six* tub* *f Fuller Tooth
Fast* or on* larg* can of Fuller Tooth .
Powder with every purchase of 3 Fuller
Adult or Professional Tooth Brushes.
S hr 99*
4 For SI.95
FREE
Btiutiful Christ*
ims Gift Peekes*
inj with iMnyful*
Isr products. Ask
ebout them.
Short Time
Write your
Pkoie IN. 3488
mr Writ•
977 Mifl Pm* Bldg.
Just discovered, through a warning
from the State Liquor Commission,
that an old law prohibits any one
in this university town from selling
liquor to the college boys and girls.
Hunting Story
DULUTH, Minn., Dec. 3 OP).—ThU
story Is Lloyd C. Da the’* of the Bar*
num (Minn.) Herald, and he says
he’s coins to stick to it:
Lester Munter, a hunter, shot a
4-year-c'.d doe. It had, he told Mr.
*
Da the, silver fillings in its teeth. A
dentist and a veterinarian said so,
too.
Probably, Mr. Dathe theorized, the
doe bit into some feed containing
Silver, and filled its cavities as it
ate. No one has advanced an alter
native possibility.
Engineers Elect
STILLWATER, Oltla., Dec. 3 OP).—*
J. V. Martlnus, University of Minne
sota, was re-elected national presi
dent of Pi Tau Sigma, honorary
mechanical engineering fraternity,
here today and Georgia Tech was
named host for next year's conclave.
Learn the New Dance
Steps Before Christmas
You’ll have the gayest, merriest holiday
season you ever had by becoming a
smart, interesting dancer right now. And
/you’ll be surprised to see how quickly
and easily you dance the Fox Trot, Rumba,
Waltz and Tango, with THAYER instruc
tion. Low Fall rates are still in effect.
Come in tomorrow and arrange your
schedule. Open daily from 10 to 10.
Dance Lessons make an ideal gift for
entire family. A gift that will last forever.
Ask about special gift certificate.
1215 Connecticut Ave. \
Metropolitan 4121
A Gift
for all the i
years to come
AAOST of the things we | ^
buy are things of the
moment... in a short time
they are outmoded, gone for
ever. Not so with a piano. A piano is truly
a lifetime gift. A gift that for years and
years gives back far more than its purchase
price—and having given, is still good .. .
Let us show you how easily you can afford
a piano for your loved ones this Christmas.
It is the one gift you will never regret.
NEW BABY GRANDS
A small but well-toned grand fin
ished in gleaming mahogany . . .
full keyboard and all standard
piano features . . . the type of in
strument that you have seen priced
at least $100 higher.
$5 DOWN . . . START PAYMENTS NEXT YEAR
The Biggest Piano Value of the Year
The New
HUNTINGTON
SPINET
Only* 239
Full keyboard .. . rich ma
hogany finish. Unusually
well constructed of better
materials and designed in a Colonial
style that will match almost any surroundings.
PAY $5 DOWN . . . START PAYMENTS NEXT YEAR
Two Populor Model* of the Fomous Musette
LOUIS XV MODEL
Richly ornate, this beautiful little
piano reflects all that’s best in this
popular romantic furniture style.
Well-toned like all Musettes. Sur
prisingly moderately priced.
FEDERAL MODEL
The most popular spinet piano in
this country today. Smooth, taper
ing legs, perfectly flat top when
closed. A handsome Instrument
small enough to fit on a 2x5 ft. rug.
VERY EASY TERMS ... OLD PIANOS IN TRADE
For the musically inclined boy or girl
what would make a better gift than a
fine new or used instrument from our
complete department? Sold on very
easy terms and with a course of pri
vate lessons if wanted.
Accordions_$19.50up
Saxophones_$32.50 up
Cornets_$17.50up
Trombones_$12.50up
Guitars_$5.00 up
Violin Outfits_$14.50up
Clarinets_$36.50 up
Drum Outfits_$20 “P
Bugles_$2.95 up
Xylophones_$52.50 up
Ukeleles_$2.25 «p
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE OF ALL KINDS
Largest Selection of Pianos ^
in the city:
MASON b HAMLIN HUNTINGTON
MUSETTE HENRY F. MILLER
MARSHALL &WENDALL CABLE
CHICKERING WINTER
STORY b CLARK
Arthur J jwm
VXAXa COMPANY
1239~ G Street ~ Cor. 13 ~ N.W.
* OPEN EVENINGS EXCEPT SATURDAYS

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