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VAL OIS B, ST ENTE Mayor Insists He Will Await | Ruling of State Su- preme Court. Br the Associated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, October 13.—Al- | though formally sentenced to 30 days | in jail, fined $1,000 and disbarred from | public office for four years from No- | vember 2, 1 for violation of the| corrupt pr act, Mayor John L. | Duvall still held his office today, in-| sisting he would continue to do So caused by ind ion. y Plum fell in a sand liam H. Armitage, local fer a doctor t'day. privilege of naming thre ci e AR - Horse Wears Trousers. e of the Associated Press. Allerton far- vall resign. vere divided as | member to whether Duva appeal held in | them over abeyance the fou » ineligibility to | trived a J hold office. I cutor William 1. | them up. Remy declared the mayor is hold- ing his office il : with his No immediate decisic L Some attorneys ! bonds issued by t H OR CO D acts performed by Duvall fence ad bren pronounced ¢ Foe THAT HANGS ON e S e | A sTILL SEEN IN PAR'S‘ jous trouble. You can stop now with Creomulsion, an | | fied creosote that is pleasant | Herds of Goats Go to Doorsteps of | Creomulsion is ‘8 ‘new} Customers in Populous || medical discovery with two-fold ac- | Neighborhoods. 1| tion: 1t soothes and heals the in- t [| lamed membranes and inhibits Correspondence of the Associated Press, || germ growth. PARIS.—The recent notice by the e ! s e0S: i bureau of health in Paris warning | ,.,f;:,’(,",.‘;wfi“\,“\!‘,?,;’,f':.*,i;hig}"l‘.fi{}".,,',? against the 1 se of milk from the goats || | jne of the: greatest healing of the city without its heing first boiled ||, es for persistent coughs and has reminded one that there are travel- | | ¢ ana’ Gther LrMb oL AHOaE ing dairies on many tree-lined boule- ||| troubles. Creomulsion contains, in | vards and smaller streets. ddition to creosote, other healing | These herds of goats, numbering || elements which soothe and heal usually a dozen in each, are not found ||| the infected membranes and stop | in the Place de I'Opera or the Rue de || the jrritation and inflammation, la Paix, but in the populous Vilette ||iwhile the creosote goer on to the | quarter on one side and in the quarter || stomach, is absorbed into the blood, | near the Porte d'Orleans there are sev- || attacks the seat of the trouble and Or'%l .!u(‘h‘ herds driven each morning ||/ checks the growth of the germs. " and evening to the homes of cus-||| Cregmulsion is guaranteed satis- | tomers and milked on the front door- || tactory in the treatment of persist- | s ent coughs and colds, bronchial Traffic does not scare these animals, ||| 55thma, bronchitis and other forms | which are city and not country bred: ||| of pespiratory diseases, and is ex-| they skip in front of trolley cars and (| cellent for building up the system | taxis with no show of excitement.|| after colds or-flu. Money refunded | Their owners pasture them on the va- ||/ it any cough or cold is not relieved cant land outside the fortifications and ||| atter taking according to direc-| they sleep in the open, so that the || tions. Ask your druggist.—Adver- revenue from the milk is almost all ||| tisement. W. B. Moses & Sons Established 1861 F Street and Eleventh | THE ASTONISHED ENGLISHMAN SRW WITH HIS OWN EYES WHAT!HIS COMPANY SAID CQULDNT! BE DONE'!! HE factory in England where linoleum was invented, had asserted it was impos- sible to make linoleum wider than one yard. Then—in Staten Island, New York— the superintendent of the factory where Wild’s Linoleum is made, achieved the impossible with the Hydraulic Inlaid Press. The incredulous English sent over a director to in- vestigate. He was taken into the factory where Wild’s Inlaids were being made in two-yard widths. Seizing a knife, the superintendent slashed off a piece of the linoleum full width. “‘Here, take this over to London,’’ he exclaimed, “‘and show them that Wild’s Inlaids are actually made in the two-yard width.”’ PRt Achieving the impossible—in manufacture, in quality, in pattern design—has earned and main- tained for Wild’s the position of linoleum leadership for 54 yea:s. \ Wild's was the first linoleum made in America. Wild’s was the first INLAID linoleum in the world. Wild’s was the first battleship linoleum. To this day Wild’s has remained the first linoleum in America—first in improvements, first in wearing quality, first in style. Linoteams, Second Floor | Detour Past Royal Residence O e | ansiden milli parslet: in) hie peace -or, She enrolled this semester. | now seeing more of Buckingham pal-|still suspected of haunting certain THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THUKSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1927 _______————————-——————-————'-"—’———_l_.—.i—_—___ BUCK'NGHAM PALACE a bus one can ses over the hedges n[g r:zfl.’\cp to the clnmdernallon of dig- | ' Woman Engineer, jr— = and high fences which shut off the [nified footmen. It was never possi-| y 3 view for persons passing in ordinary [ble to discover how the boy entered uwl URBANA, 1l.—The first time in its Edmonston & Co. Inc. cK GOAl vehicles. Consequently ordinary busses | palace, but iie entered repeatedly and | history the University of Illinois has '] RUBBER'NE are converted into rubber-neck wagons [ was discovered in all sorts of outof-|; weman student in the engineering by Americans and other tourists who | the-way s. Dignified ladiesdn-| oo " i Grace Wilson of Ur- s y ¢ | wi : a s afraid he wa want to get a glimpse of the lovely ways \ of .| bana, studying to be an electric engi- T [— Exclusive Washington Agency & For Several of the Leading Shoes on the American Market and the tales much of her time. 6.65 FRIDAY & SATURDAY 8 Buckingham Palace is far less his- verts Ordinary Busses Into | CC€qESROT " of the other royal . : 5 residences. It hasn't celebrated ] Sightseeing Vehicles. ghosts, like St. James Palace. But icb lavor conees g there is one little spook, a rather re- |cent one, which troubled aged ladies LONDON.—The Tondon public I8 fin \waiting a few years ago and is old .Mal%e woods recz])& rouds than ever before. | rooms. That was a little ragamuffin called i past King George's | Boy Jones, who had a v of turning and from the top of up unexpectedly in va o —n—=n=—=n |0 ——=]0] A cup of n\glzl‘g‘“ We're aiming to dou- Autumn | "\ A cup of brown sug?t k AUayer of sugar-cured pof ble, at least, the sales these days and force up the month’s average. brings the end of the vacaticn season and a new start of life’s activities. alayer of beans a |ilyo The Quality Is There. The Value Is There. The Styles Are There. The Comfort Is There. [——[o|———]olc———[a/———c} el g .od por It is a good time to open a new savings r of sugar curedF ; to renew interest in a neglected al; .ans o 2 dyor olgbed PUMPS AND OXFORDS in Patent Leather, Black and Brown Kid, and Black and Brown Calf. one. The Union Trust Company will welcome mis outdoor oven your deposits, whether small or large. called the “bean_hole" 26, Paid on Checking and 3% on Savings Accounts in the Maine woods ! produces the finest baked bean flavor L - My : known —~ — a flavor spiemenstnr ' SOMBICY | e baked in the Maine woods EDWARD J. STELLWAGEN President Expert Fitting adds to the value in service as well as comfort. Edmonston & Co. INCORPORATED No Branch Stores CARL M. BETZ, Mgr. 612 13th Street_ Yo SideBet F &G su. ol lal—x The Private Life of a Lady of the XV Century By JOHN ERSKINE, who told us All 77e Ought to Know About Helen of Troy and Galahad FTER looking over a copy of Cosmopolitan recently, Mr. Hearst, who knows at least as much about the publishing business as any other man living, said: ““There’s no question about it: this is the aristocrat of magazines. Any writer with a real message to deliver or a real story to tell, sooner or later chooses its pages as his avenue for reaching the reader who will understand and appreciate!’ (o lc———oJc———o]c——— 0] Which is quite true. John Erskine, who wrote ‘“The Private Life IrvinS.Cobb andE. PhillipsOppenheim, Arthur of Helen of Troy”’ and ‘‘Galahad” begins in Somers Roche and Capt. Thomason, distinct- Cosmopolitan a new set of private lives— the ivestory-tellers;'of W. Somerset Maugham and first being the leading feature of the November ~ Maurine Watkins, distinctive playwrights; of Zissue (just now on sale). Dr. Erskine found, Peter B. Kyne and A. E. W. Mason, distinct- when he addressed his classes at Columbia, ivenovelists; of George Adeand H. C. Witwer, that dry-as-dust facts were good only as so- Ring Lardnerand O. O. Mclntyre, distinctive rifics, but that those facts, interpreted in the ~ humorists all; and of others outstanding in ra.;:guagc of our day and given the glamour of their ficlds. l'Ol'l}llanCc, drc}:cmwdsan stimulatc((ll }tlholl)‘(;g:l:; ; So he wrote history as romance—and his . : . sold in thousands. Now he wishesto reach even fppc;';;%nfixlfifigg pgflxggh:lfi?::l;p;haz 8 widér audience, andhe chooses magazines. world, thelargestaudience of intelligent readers; And naturally he gravitates to Cosmopolitan. ., jydience so determined to have the bestand Naturally to Cosmopolitan, because there he only the best that each reader pays each month A LADY OF THE XVth CENTURY... finds the companionship of George A. Dorsey for his copy a price which would buy scveral ~ JOHN ERSKINE, who is sow revealing, is the mast besutiful woman of her time and Will Durant, distinctive thinkers; of other magazines. Cosmopolitan, some more Prioate Lives An Atheist Who Flouted God—But Goes to Church Every Sunday ERE, in the story of 2 woman who could not and did not accept God, is H one of the finest and frankest outpourings of the heart that ever has been put on paper. “God in the Darkness,” by Honoré Willsie Morrow, is so power- ful that it may cause to think even those who accept faith blindly. 14 Short Stories « « « 7 Outstanding Features . . . 4 Serials ) A o By E. M. Hull, George A. Dorsey, Will Durant, E. Phillips t' h mal' al Oppenheim, H. C. Witwer, Captain John W.Thomason, Jr., 5 5 zon Belle Burns Gromer, Katharine Brush, W. Somerset Maug- combined with ® ham, Frederick R. Bechdolt, Thyra Samter Winslow, O. O. | Mclntyre, Ethel Mannin, George Ade, Arthur Somers Roche, Maurine Watkins, Ring W. Lardner, Peter B. Kyne, L % | : , Irvin S. Cobb and Charles Dana Gibson. Royal Brown an oy i s November — Just Out