Evening Star Newspaper, November 9, 1925, Page 13

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VIRGINIA TO PUSH - HIGHWAY WORK Washington-Richmond Re- surfacing, Costing $1,400,- 000, 1926 Task. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., November 9.—The State is preparing to compl hard surfacing of the highway tween this city and Washingto the belief and promise that the Wil be finished before the end of 1926. Gov. Trinkle and the State High- way Commission have agreed to switch part of the funds set apart for the connecting of certain roads to the completion of the highway between Washington and the North Carolina line. There are just two places which Will not be included in the new move— the bridge at Occoquan Creek high through the Gov ervation at that poin stood that the Congre to take charge of that part of dertaking, and if that is done the end of the coming year will find a per- fect hard-surfaced road all the way from hington through to North Carolina Work to Cost $1,400,000. The completion of the highway will 50,000, #nd the inten to rush the matter through for benefit of persons who are con- ver that part of the n the gas tax ore money avail- . and some of the money f chmond-Wash- ington Highway will come from this source. 1t is believed certain that will add a cent a > tax on gasoline. Gov. avor of taking such once provide for the building of this road. 5 $400,000 to Carolina Line. The road south from Petersburg to the North Carolina line will be under- taken just as soon as the arrange e completed for the beginning of operations on the line to Washing- been perfected and an- increase be much able for ad from this city to Peters- burg is considered one of the best in the State, and to connect with North 14 will entail an outlay of some Y. W.C. A. ADOPTS SLOGAN FOR BUILDING CAMPAIGN “Capital Gift for Capital Girls” to Be Watchword in Drive for $700,000. “Capital Gift for Capital Girls” will the slogan of the Washington Y. W. . Als $700,000 buildin peign, which is to take place out the ci 2to 15 1s submitted A. slogan competition ersonnel of the associa- A Clty-wide “Help Us ‘Worthy 't ' and “A Na- to Girls. 0,000 fund to be solicited C. A. in this campaign d for a new building at Seventeenth and K streets, for bulld- | ing equip and two years' main. tenance expenses G. A. R. Chorester Dies. = PORTSMOUTH. Ohio, November 8 | OP)—John W. Hank, hational chor-{ ester of the Grand Army of the Re. public. is it his home in | son, Ohlo. Ar. Hank was 81 vears of age. from torturing rashes The minor skin troubles to which infants and children are subject— itching patches, bits of chafing, etc,— 10 easily develop into serious scubborn aff=ctions, that _every mother should have Resinol Ointment on hand to check them at once. Does not smart when applied. No matter how irritated }f tender skin may be, relief is sure to follow the healing touch of Resinol When You Feei a Coid THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGT REG’LAR FELLERS—*Pears” Like Jimmy Would. WE WILL NOW HAVE L MENTA ARITHMETIC! MucH 1s TEN TIMES 2 S —(Copyright, 1925, by The Bell Syndicste, Inc) M OVEMBER (Copyright, 1025, by the Bell Syndicate, Ino. U. S. Pat. Off.) Trade Mark Reg. WELL, WEEL P 1T IN A DIFFERENT WAY! \F You HAD TENACRES OF PE%&‘ AND You MADE T DOLLARS AN ACRE WHAT WOULD You MAKE ALTOGETHERZ wmyseLr SICK EATIN' THE PEARS! - Riviera Hotels Made Modern to Meet Strong Competition of Florida Resorts By the Associated Press. NICE, France, November ida’s bid for Winter tourist business and the boast of Floridians that the American Riviera soon will be so much more alluring than Mediterra- nean resorts that North Americans will cease to cross the Atlantic have aroused many resort hotels in this area from a long slumber. Houses are undergoing moderniza tion everywhere. Americans are so insistent ‘on having rooms with pri- vate baths and are so frank in telling how much better accommodations are in many of the Florida resorts that the hotel keepers along the French and Ttalian Riviera have taken the - | warning. Steamship rates across the Atlantic have become so high and European trips on the whole are so much more expensive than they used to be that visitors from the United States and Canada are much harder to please than in pre-war days. New hotels and blocks of residence apartments are springing up every- where in the leading Riviern centers and realtors are taking on the Florida pace and announcing that this part of the world is destined to have the same sort of a boom America's most Southern state is enjoying. AWARD HELD INADEQUATE Damages of $250 Given in Boy's Injuries Set Aside. Justice William Hitz of the District 8upreme Court today set aside as In- adequate a verdict of $250 dunmgesi',mpanK ai recently rendered by a jury in the case of Wayne K. Wilson, jr., 16 years old, who sued Thomas G. Borden for $30,000 for injuries received in an automobile | accident at Tuxedo, Md., September 11, 1924. The jury deliberated several hours and then reported the verdict. | Attorneys Mark Stearman and Henry Stearman appeared for the boy, while | the owner of the car was represented | by Attorney H. Winship Wheat NEW PLAN AIDS VETERANS Britain to Favor Firms That Em- ploys War-Maimed Men. LONDON, November 9 (#).—With a view to inc ing the number of firms bled former service men, the government is planning to pass a resolution through Parliament laying down in definite terms that all but exceptional government contracts shall g0 to firms on the “King's roll.” This is a list of British firms which under- ake to employ a given percentage of disabled war veteran: Winter was the old New England farmer’s time for trade and recrea- R 27 2% % D27, % 704 2 IS COMING! SEE TOMORROW'’S PAPER Radio TELLS it | ADIO or newspaper: they can tell you what happened —Pathe News can show it to you while it’s happeningl Pathe News can take you scenes at Rum Row, can show you the Japanese and Santa Bar- bara earthquakes, funeral of Lenin, election of Pope Pius XI, Smyrna fire, peace conference at Versailles, Scopes trial, Russian to work off the cause and to fortify the system against an attack of Grip or Influ- enza. A Safe and Proven Remedy. Price 30c. Revolution, arrival of lost PN-9 No. 1 at Kauai, the Shenandoah disaster. Wherever big news is happening, there is a Pathe cameraman, filming for you the Jjoys and tragedies, the disasters and triumphs that daily take place in every part of the world. . You'll find that the theatre which shows Pathe News pre- sents the best of all other pic- tures too. Patronize that theatre. See yourself and your friends in the movies! Twice a week durin; Pathe Anniversary Month, local theatres here will show a ecial Local Edition of Pathe News which exclusively features the people who live here and the cur- rent events which occur right in this city. Don’t mise it! Ask at YOUR theatre when the show the News! The box bears this signature will Local Edition of ;-the MAN SEVERELY HURT IN AUTO COLLISION Skull Probably Fractured When Machine Overturns After Crash. Others Injured. One man sustained a probable frac- ture of the skull and six others were less serfously injured when the auto- moblle in which they were riding over- turned after colliding with another machine yesterday at Wayside, Charles County, Ma. Henry J. Rhodesville, hurt, was brought to Cas pital here, as wers Gu mick, 80 years old, 12 street southeast, and Willlam Sherry, 26, of 1246 Eleventh street southeast. ‘The other four members of the party escaped with brulses and lacerations. Mrs. Kate Condon, 440 M stree was knocked down at New York av nue and Sixth street last night by the automoblle of John Herman, 1182 Fifth street northeast. Her collar- bone and three ribs were fractured. ibley Hospital ington Barracks, cut and shock- hed into a tree Eighteenth Va., the m ed when his ca at Florida avent . | she was riding collided with y | machine at Thirtieth given first aid at Emergency Hospital by Dr. Pickford and taken to Walter | Reed Hospital. William L. Henley, 439 southwest, was driver of a knocked ‘down Ella Dickerson, vears old, Livin, X and Henry A. Vr dan street, at Seve Saturday afternoon 3 street northeast, yesterday whe a ica at Massachusetts avenue and.North Capitol street anfl | knocked him down. Clark was treat 1 ¥ 10, Bal | was siightly injured vesterday after | noon when an automobile in which | Percy Harris third ctreet, was Washington Circle las automobile and injure own T night by yout the head. High School Boys and Girls Vie- tims of Train-Auto Crash. KALAMAZOO, Mich, November | | P.—Four Kala 0o high school pupils are dead result of a tomobile being Central tra The dead William Stevens street as he mad as.| ner, 14 The Importance of Milk in the daily diet - —emphasizes the Simpson’s (Walker Hill Dairy) Milk Just what you drink and refreshment—Simpson’s Milk You can rely upon its purity—for it comes from tested cows that most perfect conditions; and is handled from dairy to counter with se It’s such a little thing to do—insist on Simpson’s Milk—but satisfaction—that it is worth while. Say Simpson’s—ito get the best— 530 Seventh St. S.E. lhe contest is almost over Tms WEEK you will sec many grocers. telling their customers about the Premier Salad Dressing Contest. It closes December 15t—but you still have time tg send in a chatty letter, sandwiches, on } December 1st, 1 Grocers® Address Francis H. Leggett & Company, New York City ier A pexfect mayonnaise 17; Della _Miller, wisdom of choosing Milk for—nourishment supplies. are herded under the rupulous care. results in such large Milk Walker Hill Dairy W. A. SIMPSON, Proprietor New Phone Exchange Atlantic 70 Jisting all the things you have donc with ose bottle, One woman, for instance, writes that she uses Premier on boiled ham, cgg salad, cream cheese ettuce and tomato salad and as a sea- soning for mashed potatoes. There are actually 147 prizes, $2,500 in gold. That will suggest easy Christmas money to many women. The prizes range from $250 to $10. The contest is open to all who have used Premier. One can send more than one list—but only one prize for gny onc contest- ant. In case of ties, each tying contestant will be awarded the full amount of each prize tied for. Contest closes 925. WHEELER HEARING SET. Justice Bailey preme Court today November 2 | to the 1 conspiracy to secure oil and gas pel mits for Gordon Campbell, an opera- | f tor of Great Falls, Assistant Attorne | of dummy_ applic Broken in a day Hill's gct quickly—stop colds in 24 | FOUR KILLED AT CROSSING! % CASCARA Get Red Box of tne District Su set for hearing the demurrer and plea former acquittal filed by Burton Wheeler from Monta ifctment charging him with by Attorney Charles the local bar and Sena Walsh of Monta ment will be represented by E. Leahy and B. R | assistants to the Atto Ste art « ATTENDS SOVIET FETE | Officials Participate in Triumph of 1 bassy in Berlin. | iated Press. November 9.—The ed by CI 3 Stre and Dr. 0. Mei Bolshevism at Russian Em- Ger han- mann, n representing Presi attended the in_embassy eighth anni ling of the Soviet ner, for the first participated fin hevism, the fur h they have been o prevent. more persons n life than have son ambassadors ent was tituted eX/exiYeNi7e I eI evi e i 18118 gen the Mont., with the | Booth, former | eneral, by means | | enator Wheele COkis will be represented K ver and headache disap- s conquered in 3 days millions danger n't take chances, r. Get the best help PUITEE 5 QUININE S PINDLER 801 11th St. NNW. Main 2704 LEAN and PRESS ALL and DELIVER MEN'S SUITS . . . . 95¢ (Silks and Linens Excepted) 'LADIES’ SUITS . . $1.5 S of ONE make of Radio HESE critics (who serve some of the foremost news- papers in America), sensitive to the most delicate nuances of tone—secking for flawless re- production — have chosen to “listen in” in their own homes on Freed-Eisemann Receivers. 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