Evening Star Newspaper, November 12, 1926, Page 35

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FAGE DISFIGURED WITH PIMPLES AND -BLACKHEADS Druggist proves a friend m nood Kalispell, Mont., March 1:—“T-wo years ago my face was an awful sight. he skin broke out with pimples and blackheads and itched all the time. I washed it frequently and applied various salves, but | they helped little. One day I asked a druggist for a good cure for my case, and that night I took home a smail jar of Resinol Ointment. Every morning and night I washed my face and applied the ointment, rubbing it in good. treatments I noticed the pimples were starting to decrease and in two or three weeks they were prac- tically gone. [ was so well pleasea with the results that I now keep Resinol on hand and recommend it whenever I #an (Signed) Elkin E. Rerre. 1098 Third Ave. West, Do This when you first ' Sneeze When cold has off that sily headed » But the is to have a sneex started, it It need never dete way to prevent i the right help on bhan i a4 cold has developed You can Rut do more Stop the fever. open eliminate the poisons. cystem much began. The hest help is HILL'S. bines the helps needed modern discoveries. One world's largest laborator it as the utmost helps is so efficient. so complete that we paid $1,000000 for it. The e has grown and grown, uniil millions now employ it You will always know for a cold when you But don’t delay by tomorrow. Be Sare It's e\ Price 30c CASGARA 82 QUININE ®raro¥ withportrait check it that in 24 than tha the bowels, tone the entire Then you will probably feel better than yvhen the cold quickl hours It com- of the rocolds. It what to do HILL'S r that cold Cong ASKIN'S SENSATIONAL OAT SALE After a few | all of them | < developed | NGARACUA PUTS DAZNPRESIDENCY Executive From 1911 to 1917 Re-Elected by Congress Vote of 44 to 2. By the Associated Press. MANAGUA, Nicaragua. November | 12—Adolfo Diaz. who was president | of Nicaragua from 1911 to 1917, was elected to serve n as president | at v session of con- gress last night. He succeeds Gen. | Emiliano Chamorro. who resigned | recently. 1 2 received 44 votes. while for- President Carlos Solorzano re- He will be inaugurated an extraordin en. Emiliano Chamorro, who 4 the governing power from the ! Liberals early in the year, resigned | on October 30. This was after an | unsuccessful conference had been held to bring about peace with the | Liberals, who for many months had waged war against the government. On resigning Chamborro turned the presidentfal office over temporari to Senator Sebastian Uriza DIES IN AUTO CRASH. A. D. Clough. Paper Company Killed in Collision. 12 P of Gar of Trensurer. DU D. November vears old, Ixland, treasurer Pennsylyan . with of s in New . | was killed near here last night when | his automobile collided with another lon a hill. Joseph Jones of Punxsu- { tawney, one of the occupants of the other machine, suffered concussion of the brain and was brought to a hos. pital here. With Clough on an inspection trip of the company’s plants at Lockhaven and Johnsonburg were B. F. Stock of Lockhaven, general manager for the concern. and Auditors J. Walsh and Christenson, both of New York. The latter three were unhurt Modernize Historic Church. | Special Dispatch to The Star i WPORT NEWS, November 12. —Extensive improvements to_historic Spiscopal Church, built in | 1700, at Yorktown, are being made. A vestibule ix being installed and a bel- | fry erected. The building is | eing | modernized. The cost will be $5.000 A | Grace That Will Take HUNDREDS A ND HUNDREDS OF WARM COATS ARE AVAILABLE HERE TOMORROW for men. young men, Wwomen, misses and juniors— \§ Come prepared to go away happy—for you are bound to find the! your heart, on? you may | Kenneth . Ormiston, fugitive radio THE EVENING Champion Coffee Drinker Drains 62 Cups I STAR, WASHINGTO! In 12 Hours and Wins Bean-Studded Belt By the Associated Press. FERGUS FALLS, Minn., November | 12.~Gust Comstock, world's champion coffee drinker, has learned the truth | of the old saving. “Uneasy lies the| head that wears the crown.” | After sipping 62 cups of coffee in 12 hours yesterday he could not sleep. | For some time the king of the coffee tipplers tossed about—but eventually overcame his insomnia. Comstock. who drinks an average of 20 cups a day, ordinarily sleeps like | the proverbial top His performance, marked by the tripling of records set by 11 contestors, resulted in the breaking of his own record of 56 cups, established at Hib- bing two years ago. He was presented with a belt, studded with 62 coffee world’s champlonship mark. In the Armistice day parade he was the center of gyes as he rode in an au- tomobile set aside for him. In the evening he was an honor guest at an American Legion banquet, where spe- cial cognizance was taken of his day’s accomplishment. The champion, who is employed as a porter at a barber shop here, was nbne the worse today. AIMEE PROBE WIDENS. | Declared on Train With Ormiston Aftcr European Tour. LOS ANGELES, November 12 (&) —The miner district attor- ney's investigators have learned that man, and his “blue mystery trunk” | were aboard the same train which last Spring brousht Aimee Semple Me- Pherson back to Los Angeles aft her European tour. Ormiston is said to have boarded the train at Chicago. | District Attorney Keyes has a nounced he will attempt to identify the contents of the trunk as belonging to Mrs. McPherson when the evange. list faces trial in District Court here on a consp charge in connection with her story of being kidnaped. Rattan trunks are popular in Europe, |but are said to be too light for the | strain of travel m this country. ROBBERY SUSPECT HELD. Man Sought in $135,000 Mail Hold-up Taken in Chicago. CHICAGO, November 12 (#).— Tommy Holden, sought since September as a suspect in the $1 000 mail robbery in Evergreen Park, a suburb, was arrested here yester- day in a flat in which the police also found a young woman, who said she was Lillian Griffin, 20, and a man who gave his name as D. J. Kearney of roit. Lactobacillus Acidophilus Call our product “L A" Milk (Trade Mark) . For_Intestinal disorders. Ask your physician about’ it. NATIONAL VACCINE AND ANTITOXIN INSTITUTE Phone North 89. 1515 U St. N.W. Special Sunday Excursions BALTIMORE Tickets on s regular trains—7:15 AM, P.M. from Union Station (except No. 1 rood on all ale every Sunday, including to an 6, 9:10 AM)—good returning on all after- noon and evening trains same day (except No. 5, Avoid 52 P. the M) Sunday highway congestion. 60-minute trains with clean, modern coaches make for travel safety and comfort Baltimore & Ohio S AR SARASANADANA N 4 N -~ -, a RS- 77 S N EAS a < ~ AT SAS LA 4 7. N 2 A N X N7 ) OFIRREATION WL beans, each representing a cup in the | | Veteran Weather Man Claims | the Southw _D. C.-FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1926. PRESIDENT IS TOLD | maw of the one who writes of roas| | that bloom in December and. inci-| dentally, changing the climate of this | countr: | Mr. Dunn’s argument is that “heat | and moisture make a_storm, or in- crease the energy of one already formed.” He says that storms ‘from | all the West” are drawn to or breed ‘m‘er the hottest moisture-laden areas. and that since there are now about 119,000,000 acres under irrigation in where the water evaporates faster than it soaks into the soil. these vast areas “constitute the incubators of atmospheric dis- turbances that make havoc in their eastward paths. Ty | GOLD DEPOSITS FOUND. NEW YORK, November 12.—0n the | i Newl, ground that Irrigation of arid jand is | SiIVer Ore Also Present in y a prolific cause of devastating storms, | i Discovered Italian Veins. Elias B. Dunn of Orange, N. J., head f the New York i ROME, November 12 (#).—New de- o New YO ather bureau | . o CI88s 1o To5e aveather bUral | posits of gold and siiver bearing ore | President Coolidge yesterday, pro- | have n discovered near Giavero, | testing against further reclamation | in the Cottian Alps, according to dis- proj in the W | patches to the local newspapers. © imulations of an| The deposits will yleld from 33 to Mr. Dunn wrote, grams of gold a ton and from 23 | “you are, Mr. President, adding am The conformation of munition to nature lestructive | the ground permits the construction forces, killing or impoverishing the of galleries for the extraction of man at the productive plow. filling the the ore. New Address—$612 13th St. (Bet. F and G Sts.—West Side) Next to Edmonston’s Studio. SHOE SALE Women’s Straps and Oxfords $77.35 $8.50 to $12.50 Grades We've entered into a campaign of “Shelf Room Making,” in or- der to provide more Reclamation Projects Breed Storms for East. | |38 to 230 of silver. room for additional , PHYSICAL CUL- TURE—Style Plus Comfort Shoes—for women and STACY- ADAMS SHOES for gentlemen. Up-to-Date Models in all Wanted Leathers EDMONSTON & CO., Inc. ANDREW BETZ, Manager 612 13th Street Advisers” and Authorities on All Foot Troubles —— life. Dr. J. Campbell McClure of Lor BURNS CLUB FORMED. don is the first president. The hope lis expressed that people of various London Group Believes Interna-|countries fond of reading Bufns' poetry will join the organization. tional Accord Will Be Promoted. PSS ub “has no politics, but the LONDON, November 12 (#).—Sev-|founders feel thn; “ln’Burna’ Do?l?." . ce |and philosophy there fs an excellent :"" :""’,, of Robert Burns have|'no,ns™ o dissipating international ormed an “international Burns club.” | misunderstandings and a sure way of to carry the spirit and phi-|bringing people together in a friendly of Burns into international | spirit. €no Pillsbury: The brightest spot in the whole week —Sunday morning and Pillsbury’s pancakes! A real breakfast — pan- cakes with a rare flavor, (wheat or buckwheat) tender, golden-brown, light as a feather, nourishing and easy to digest! You can make them in six minutes — simply add water or milk to Pillsbury’s Pancake Flour! Good for waf¥les, Ioo‘/ @ Madeby the millers of Pillsbury's Best Flour 20 Weeks to Pay The last day of our THIRD ANNIVERSARY SALE and yoyr last opportunity to select from our great stock of fur collared and cuffed winter coats for women and misses at this sensa- tionally low price— Sold at sz I $30 to $40 $1 DOWN-—and enjoy immediate wear! EASIEST TERMS TAKES CARE OF THE BALANCE ’ MISSES’ | T!“ur-ed c $‘| 9.65 324.85 $29.75 et Formerly They should sell for much more than they are priced, models that are exclusive, different, simply fascinating, on the easiest terms in the world, tomorrow. YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO e [3E] 520 235 30 You Can Charge It, Too Every one of these garments are regular $30 and $40 sellers—each one guaranteed, absolutely the newest in style—the latest iz patterns, cash or easy terms. THE HOUSE OF CREDIT 917-F-Street-N.W. Open Saturday Until 9 P. M. “Ask Your Friends Boys’ Suits & O’coats In warm and serviceable fabrics. sges Wonderful bargains at— $Q.%5 And Up X7 S WA

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