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18 4437 CARED FOR | BY VISITING NURSES Report of Four Months’ Work | Shows 2,737 New Patients Visited. G A total of 4,437 patients, of whom 2,737 were new, were given expert eare during the months of June, July, August and September by members of the graduate nursing staff of the Instructive Visiting Nurse Society of Washington. In all, 25,830 nursing yisits were made by these young Wwomen during that time, according to figures submitted by Miss Gertrude H. Bowling, director of the society, at the first regular meeting of the sea- son of the board of managers held yesterday in the board room. Star uilding. An analysis of visits made showed that 38 per cent were to maternity cases, 33 per cent to patients acutely 1ll, 13 were welfare visits, 7 per cent to chronic cases, while all other sorts were 9 per cent. The welfare included instructive visits for c {of N. G. David at Dunn Loring, Miss ROAD WORK DISCUSSED. Dunn Loring and Merrifield, in Vir- ginia, to Get Aid. Special Dispatch to The Star. FAIRFAX, Va., October 13.—AL a road meeting last night at the home Corita Seoane for Merrifield and Romyn Taylor for Dunn Loring. | urged fmprovements in the highway, | which has been the subject of much | complaint. ; | President Harry Leigh of the| County Board of Supervisors stated | that funds were unavailable at this time, but when crops are marketed $500 each could be made available for resurfacing the Dunn Loring to Merrifield stretch and repair of the road from Dunn Loring to the Lees- burg Plke. Franklin Willlams pre- sided, and District Road Commis. sioner Miller was a speaker. About 35 residents attended. Court Crier Becomes Lawyer. Thomas Dewey Quinn, crier in Justice Stafford’s court, was ad- mitted to practice before the bar of the Supreme Court os *ue District of Columbia today on mation of John Paul Earnest, chairman of the examining committee. Mr. Quinn is a native of Portsmouth, N. H., and was graduated from University Law School. Georgetown | cause for 14 vears. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. WOMEN T0 HONOR FIRST SUFFRAGIST Plans Are Laid for Memorial Building to Susan B. An- thony in Capital. The Susan B. Anthony Foundation, which plans to erect a memorial build- ing here to the pioneer suffragist, now formally incorporated under the laws of Virginia, held a preliminary meeting_in the Hamilton Hotel last night. Organizations will be created in every State and an intensive cam- paign started soon to raise funds for the structure. cording night, in style, 230 by 150 feet, with a main auditorium seating 2,000, two smaller auditoriums and about 24 clubrooms. Plans submitted by John H. Coxhead, architect, were approved. Mrs. Clara O'Brien McCrone was elected president. She succeeds Mrs. Anna E. Hendley, who has headed the Mrs. Hendley asked to be relleved, that she might to plans shown last the building will be Grecian devote her paigning. Other officers elected were: Vice presidents, Mrs. Corbin Thompson, Mrs. William E. Chamber- lin, Mrs. J. W. Frizzell, Mrs. Luella time to outside cam- McKennan, Miss Mate Lewis and Miss Mary Heyler; secretary, Miss Lucy Cooper Shaw: . corresponding secre- tary, Mrs. Mary H. Heath; treasurer, Mrs. Corbin Thompson, who Is also a vice president, and assistant treas. urer, Miss Florence Caroline Adams. The officers were selected at a meeting of the board of directors pre- ceding the regular meeting. Members of the board are: Mrs. Anna E. Hendley, Mr ette B. Paul, Mrs. William E. Cham- berlin, Mrs. J. W. Frizzell, Mrs. Corbin Thompson, Mrs. Luella Me- Kennan, Mrs. Virginia Peters Park- hurst, Mrs. Clara O'Brien McCrone Mrs. Manola Bren Adams, Miss G Mary Heyler, Mrs Mate Lewis and M. e T Church Body to Meet. Special Dispatch to The Star. EAST RIVERDALE, Md. October 13—A meeting will be held at § o'clock tonight by 'the board of St. John’s Lutheran Church. At a con- gregational meeting tomorrow new of- ficers and a_Sunday school superin- tendent will be selected. Nan- American X-ray equipment is be- coming popular in Australian hospi- tals. .| Francis, the Academ | trons C., WEDNESDAY, WOMAN IN DAZE MAY BE CATHOLIC NURSE “Got Off Train in Baltimore When It Was Dark,” She Says, in Ef- fort to Identify Self. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, Md., October 13.—In brief periods of lucidity a well dress- ed woman of refined appearance and about 45 years old, found wandering in Charles street last night, identified herself as a trained nurse, who work- ed in a Catholic hospital and “got off a train in Baltimore when it was | C: dark. She has not been able to tell her name. Two Connecticut addresses, "|one with the name of a nun attach- ed, led police to query authorities in cities of that State. Mother M Baltic, Conn and Hartford, were 'inserip tions foung in the woman's bill fold. Once during quizzing by police ma- e mentioned the name “Cava- naugh.” * A baby’s ring with the ini- tial also was found among her effects, together with Catholic medals and a rosary Conn. Chambers Steel g Burial Vaults $8 ANY MAKE OCTOBER 13, 1926. SLASHED IN FIGHT. Special Dispatch to The Star. FRONT ROYAL, Va., October 13.— George Cayne, a bus driver, was slashed across the’ stomach and is in a dying condition at a Winchester hospital, while the police are looking for Shirley Kidwell, charged with wounding him. Cayne, who drives on the line be- tween Washington, Va., and Winches- ter, was standing on the street talking with a friend. Kidwell, who came here a few months ago from Mary- land, passed. An argument arose when Kidwell charged Cayne laughed at him, and in the fight that followed Heating Plants Fries, Beall and Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. Main 1964 OUR GRADUATE OPTOMETRIST —Will examine your eves and frankly advise you. If you do not need glasses —so much the bet ter—and if you do need them you are assured skilled ser at CHAS. SCHWARTZ & SON. Home of Perfect Diamonds Look for the Schwartz Clock Wiz, 4 :mab /A V¢ welfare and corrective work. Exhibit at Convention. Announcement was made that, at the invi ii. Clifton King of this Homeopathic in convention hs was arranged I V. N. S. at convention headquarters which featured nurses’ equipment and model Infants’ layette as recommend- ed by the local organization The board passed a vote of thanks to Mrs. Joseph Saunders and her sis- ter for a gift of a delineascope and $50 for its equipment in honor of their father, Emile Berliner, on his 75th birthday anniversary. a special exhibit stalled by the MWoodhward & 10th, 11th, F and G Streets Tue WaLnuT Room Third Floor Mrs. Cross Presides. Mrs. Whitman Cross, president, pre- sided. Other board members present ra_Barry, Mrs. Paul H. is Brodhead, Mrs. e, Mrs. Dwight . Davidge, Mr: ranklin ffmann, s. Keith Mer- 'Wear a Tailored Cloth Frock and Know You are Well Dressed Luxutiously Furred Coats In the October Coat Sale at These Special Prices For Misses and Women $59.50, $89.50, $115 FFor Larger Women $89.50 $115 The well dressed womar will appreciate the unusual value of these coats of elegant lines, richly trimmed with soft, sup- ple furs. Fashioned of suede- like and velvety pile fabrics in the smartest silhouettes. North lis, Paris considers the tailored cloth frock of extreme importance—all of the well- known Paris designers—\Worth, Pa- tou, Jenny, Lelong, Miler Soeurs, have contributed cloth frocks to the Winter mode—and now— THE WALNUT ROOM presents clever replicas and smart adaptations of these famous fashions—in that love- liest of cloth fabrics, Mirroleen—show- ing— : E. Weedon and Miss Eleanor Wilson. g Named to Fill Vacancy. Harry E. Halliday of Cairo, 111, has been appointed by the Secretary of ‘War. a member of the advisory board of the Inland Waterways Corpora- tion, to fill the vacancy caused by the recent death of Milton H. Hunt of Memphis, Tenn. Eee g The auto stage line between Bag- dad and Beirut is to have a new 110- horsepower Pullman_coach. These coats are outstanding values—not only for the quality but the quantity of handsome furs that trim them. See It Today! The Smallest Watch in the World HE world’s smallest watch is now on dis- play in our windows. Black Satin Negligees Notably Low Priced $13.50 Made of lustrous satin—shimmer- ing, soft, indescribably alluring— these negligees are quite indis- - pensable in every woman’s ward- robe. Each shows individual chic in puffing, cording, embroidery or hand-painted designs. SKETCHED—Black satin negligee, trim- med with ruby puffing and metal embroid- ery, $13.50. Black satin negligee, hand- painted and embroidered in usual designs, $13.50. Negligee Section. Third floor. LAST TwoDavs Miss Margatret May OF NEW YORK- Will Be in Our Corset Section to Show the ROSE MARIE COMBINATION \ perfect fitting combination’ gar- ment, with detachable brassiere that may be removed for launder- ing. Corset Section, Third floor. The Frock with the Chic Blouse The Frock with the Colorful Vestee The Frock with the New Jenny Cuff The Frock with Metallic Thread Embioidery $50 and $60 Luxutious Furs That Ttim These Coats Squirrel Beaver Caracul Fox Wolf Goat Chipmunk Pointed Lynx Fitch Muskrat Jap Mink Platinum Wolf Otter Palmi Lynx Viataka Squirrel Badger This tiny timekeeper— smaller than a dime—tells time with a precision that only Burova knows how to build into a watch. Mole SKETCHED — Autumn brown Venise fashions this coat of slender, wrappy lines, that is handsomely trimmed with a huge pointed shawl collar and pointed cuffs of beaver, $115, Coat Sections, Third floor. Bob Evans Maids’ Unifofms Exclusively with Woodward & Lothrop in Washington Woodward & Lothrop Be sure to see it today. It is one of the marvels of the age. oy e AR Optometrists Opticians 935 F Street 34 Years at the Same Address Discriminating women outfit their maids at Weodward & Lothrop, where a wide assortment of fabrics and colors in Bob Evans Uniforms and the correct accessories are always available. Straightline Uniforms, in Black and Gray with White Collars and Cuffs. Cotton Pongee Swartzette ...... Cotton Poplin .. Silk Poplin . White Uniforms Of poplin and English broad- cloth, with the new Goupy and Chanel necklines, $5 to $6. After Outdoor Exercise (leanse And Freshen The Skin With Cuticura ‘Warm baths with the Soap cleanse, cool and refresh the skin. Assisted by the Ointment they help to allay irritation, redness and roughness of the face and hands, and keep the skin soft and clear under all conditions of exposure. the old hood / OUR this new and better “Standard” Motor Oil into a troubled engine. Throw away the first lot with the loosened carbon after about 300 miles. Giveitanother filling of fresh *“Standard” Motor Oil. You won’t need to change that for a long time. You have restored life to a tired motor. You will feel the difference as the clutch picks up the load. c/l Quartcr Stick to “Standard” Motor Oil and a Qu 1 rt keep your motor new. ; “STANDARD” MGTOR OIL STANDARD OIL COMPANY (N. e. Ointment 25 and SCe. Taleum 3e. Sold % o each free. I Morning Uniforms Of blue chambray and “striped ginghams, with long and short sleeves and with self or white collars and cuffs, $3. For Junior Misses Coats $29.50 to _$125 Dresses $12.50 to $39.50 The two sketches typify the gen- eral smartness and spirit of youth that prevails in these coats and dresses—showing the leading fash- ions and newest fabrics. SKETCHED—A vyouthful two-piece dress, ith a black velveteen jacket and plaid nnel skirt, $29.50. A smart slate-gray Venise coat, richly trimmed with plati- num wolf, $125. Junlor Misses' Section, Fourth floor. After careful and exhaus. tive study, the Polk Miller Products” Corp. has per- fected a remedy. SERGEANT'S RUN-FIT MEDICINE has been thoroughly tested. Cured thousands of dogs. Easy to administer. $2.00 at your dealer’s or by mail, Unqualifiedly guaranteed FREE, DOG BOOK. 48 pages. Tllustrated. On feed- ing, breeding and care. Come sl:;::‘ymqu chart. Our advice ment will answer questions frees Write fullys Sergeant’s DOG MEDICINES POLK MILLER PRODUCTS CORR 11, 713 W. Broad Street Ricauoxn, Vas Dainty Apron Sets Of sheer organdie, fine lawn, cross bar organdy, dotted swiss and imported organdies, smartly trimmed. $1.50 to $6. Net Apron Sets, $3 to $6. Taffeta Aprons and Caps, $4 Caps, to match sets, 50c and 75c SKETCHED—Bob Evans Maid’s Uni- form of black silk poplin, $12.50. Apron, Collar and Cuff set of dotted net, $3. Cap to match, 75c. Untform Section. Third floer. EEeEEREBEEBRR B J-)