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THE ' EVENING WASHINGTON. D. C. 20. _192%. 10 ‘ | Rumanian Official, |CITIZENS OPPOSE | Persistent Pl | FATHER, 53, TO WED BALLOU OUTLINES ll::;li::l?ssail;::’ PARK BOND ISSUE- IZZT::):; (;rzl\:'ting DAUGHTER'S FRIEND . NEEU@"Z[N& In Car's Cushion — Chevy Chase Group Urged to, Seek Junior High and Three | Portables. STAR. THURSDAY. OCTOBER IExpedition Off to Find Long Lost [ N Wreck of La Salle's Lake Boat .cvve P i Wesle: od ded vest {ospital from shock and a broken hip following » fall, fe lived with his daughter Mrs. ¢ lex Eirich Three sony alsn survive. A, T. and rene Crutchley Cumberland. and John Crutchle: Fairbanks, M1 Br the Assncrated Prees, ltmbnlfl‘nfl! century, when ha sailed BUFFALO, N. Y.. October An [t up Lake Exie and the Detroit River expedition is en route to Gore Bay.|on'y o have it sink during a storm Lake Huron, in an attempt 16 And | mne hoat was huilt at a noint : o i oint fust the long lost wreck of the Griffn. the |, e % Fallson t Sk | first boat ever to sail the Great Laken. | oo o o kars, Lalls on the spot where | | The party is headed by H. G. Tucker. | ouzh ‘which bears La Safle's name. . | lauthority on Indlan history. who 4 claims to know the exact point where La_Salle’s ill-fated craft went down. fiin was huilt by La Salle, famous French explorer, during the Massachusetts Official Admits He Is to Marry Pittsburgh Girl, 27. 20.- Scnlencofl_lo Jall ‘ Dahlgren Terrace Body Asks Open- ing of Two Streets in Northeast. Br the Associated Press SPRINGFIELD, Mass.. October Fred Grant has a little zarden in his car. A bulbous growth ap- regularly in a_corner of the seat of his coupe. No matter how | many times eaks it off it comes right back again, pushing its way up through the upholstery to eady for the pruning knife fortnight. | One explanation offered is that the spores of a fungus, blown into | the car on the highway, became | lodged in the corner. MISSION FUND RAISED. Adventizts to Spend $4.428,361 in | Br tha Associated Press BUCHAREST. _October 0. Dispatches from Bucharest report that the Rumanian minister of public_health, Dr. Nicholas Lupu, | | has been sentenced to imprison- | A petition requesting the opening ment for 40 days for assaulting |of Fifteenth street northeast, acros a n:llr—,mal-l\ at me_r;’ime M; the ;; the Baltimore & Ohio and the Penn- | cent elections. e policeman, A 5 | it Abpears, failed to treat the min: | vIvania railroad tracks. as an out-| ister with sufficient civility when |let to the southeastern part of the| ever the minister was campaigning in |city and the opening of New York | ”:'e rf‘“""l"." fl"";:’h ;"‘hli l""'“)“';’k' avenue for access to the business sec- | ed Dr. Lupu. who attacked him. & Whalaicestea o When Premler Bratianu learned |t Will be framed and directed to | oThe ot e Ak ea Indeh. | meinice o) Association, 1t was Ingly, “Our next cabinet council |gecided at its meeting last night. will have to be held in the minis: |~ 5 " resolution seeking the removal ter's cell. . | of trolley poles on Rhode Island ave It is the first known case in Ru- | o hetween Fourth and Twelfth oo Adriatic shipva are idle W.L.DOUGLAS . By the Associated Press. i BOSTON, October 20.—An unusual romance was brought to light hfre] today with the confirmation by Lieut. Gov. Frank G. Allen of Norwood of a report from Pittsburgh, Pa., that he i{s to marry Miss leanor H. Wal- lace of that city, 1925 graduate from Wellesley and a close friend and class mate there of his daughter Mary. | Mr. Allen is 53 years old and his ance is Miss Wallace taught for a vear in privata school in Brookline, and st June, in company with the lieu tenant governor and his daughter Fr That the Chevy Chase community i« agitated over the need for immedi- ate additional school facilities was evi- denced by the fact that nearly the en- tire session of the Chevy Chase Citi- zens' Association last night was given aver 1o the discussion of school prob- leme, The meeting, held in the E. V enchfi DOO]‘SE Reautify Your Home Now Rrown School, Connecticut avenue and MeKinley street, considered a report of the executive committee recom mending the appointment of a special committee on schools which would set up machinery for the proper handling af school matters. The resolution was unanimously adopted and an ap. propriation of $60 was made so that the committee could at once become active, Frank W. Rallou. superintendent of schools, told the assembly that con- ditions with respect to educational fa- cilities were no more acute in Chevy Chase than in other sections, and urged that reasonable requests be made, adhering closely to the items outlined in the five-year school build ing program. He pointed out that the Board of Education was asking for a junior high school on the Reno site | ¢ and three portables 1o he located on Grant road just off Connecticut ave- | nue. Would Relieve Congestion. { This, he said, will relieve some of | the congestion at the E. V. Brown School and if. after these byildings | hecome available, there still is addi nal facilities needed in the!Chev: Chase section action will be mobe like- v 1o follow in making_ requests for | additions 1o the Brown School than if it is tried to add to the latter building before the others are obtained, The Bureau of the Budget, he said, is adamant against deficiency appropria- tions for schools, preferring to handle them in the regular way. | President J. Francis Moore was in- atructed to_ appoint, besides himself, | Alfred T. Gage, Fred 8. Lincoln, At- wood M. Fisher, Manley Nichols, S. von Ammon and William P. Bartel as the special school committee, which will elect its own officers and plan a campaign 1o be followed in order to| appear before the School Roard with | 3 united front in expressing the wishes | of the community in school matters. Circle to Be Improved. A communication from the District | engineer's office informed the associ- ation that its request for curbing and other improvements about Chevy Chase Circle would be complied with. On recommendation of H. V. Schrei- her, chairman of the safety committee, it was voted to reward the members | of the schoolboy patrol who have | shown their worth with junior mem- | berships in the association at the De- cember meeting. Unsightly condition of hedges and other shrubhery on a public parking on Connecticut avenue south of Nebraska avenue will be called to the attention of the Com- missioners with request for improve- ment. Commissioner Proctor .. Dougher- tv, a member of this association, ad- dressed the meeting briefly, bringing the wishes of the Board of Commis- sioners, New members elected were H. T.| Thurber, J. H. Vaneman, W. B. Allen. James K. Norton, 0. G. Lange, L. T. | Hopkinson, O. A. Juve and Albert: R. Merz, | man’a where a cabiner member has been sentenced to jai VOLUNTARY BANKRUPTS. Walter A. Buscher and Spruce A. Baird File Petitions. Walter A. Buscher, a clerk, residing at 1101 Euclid street, yesterday filed a petition in voluntary bankruptcy. He 9 his debts at $5,371.38 and esti- mates his assets at $4 . He is represented by Attorney Thomas H. Patterson. Spruce A. Baird, a jeweler, 1747 T, street, is also bankrupt. He lists his debts at $3,092 and places his assets at 2, Attorneys Doyle and DeNeale appeared for the bankrupt. . Certain kinds of blue cloth stamped | | “holy” are worn by wandering Moors | of Africa who believe it makesethem immune to disesse. (COLDS THAT | DEVELOPINTO PNEUMONIA Persistent coughs and colds lead | | | | to serious trouble. You can stop | them now with Creomulsion. an| | emulsified creosote that Is pleasant | totake. Creomulsionisa new med. ! | cal discovery with two-fold action: it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs, creosote Is recognized by high medical authori- | ties as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and | i colds and other forms of throat| | troubles, Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal | | the infected membranes and stop | the irritation and inflammation, |while the - creosote goes on the | stomach, is absorbed into the blood. | attacks the seat of the trouble and | | checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satis-| | factory in the treatment of per. | sistent coughs and colds, bronchia’ asthma. bronchitis and other forms | of respiratory diseases, and is ex- cellent for building up the system | after colds or flu. Money refunded | it any cough or cold is not relieved | after taking according to directions. | Ask your druggist.—Advertisement. We Have the New Fall Designs in Armstrong’s Linoleum Let us measure your rooms and tell you how little these new- day floors Phone M Livouwrm Swerion, Frrrw Froor. Woodward will cost. ain 5300 & Wnthrop Linoleum See our six model rooms, each | charming Armstrong pat. One aid with different __- of our many Nationally Known lines. { s'reets northeast was adopied by the association and will be forwarded to The citizens voted proposed £10,000,000 ho. $ar to opnose nd i the purchase of p: As outcome of discussion for the location of an airport the asso | ciation decided in favor of the Ben Ining race track site. The association commented on the | proposed compulaory auta liability the e hy the ks, | insurance bill, but no action was taken. C. B. Phelps. chairman of the en- | tertainment committee of the Brook- | land Citizens’ Association, addressed the citizens in regard to a celeb tion to be held at conclusion of the | paving of Twelfth street northeist hetween Rhode lsland avenue and went abroad for a trip. from which they only recently returnad for the marriage of Miss Allen to Francis V. Crane of Ded! The first vears ago. Foreign Fields. v the advancement of the foreign miscionary operations in 1928 of the Seventh-day Adventist Churches ap. opriations tot 1,428 3 have hed made 10 announce ment of the Foreizn Mission Board vesterday. This will he an increase of more than £200,000 over the foreizn mission expenditures this year. | FREDERICK, Md. Oectober The_bcard announced "that more| Rev. (. Bilis Williams, pastor of than 700.000 lay members of the de-| (alvary Methodist Church here, for- nomination had participated in some | yerly © of Washington. annmunced kind of missionary work in the last| yecterday that an addition will be two vears, “whose efforts were repaid | yiage' to the Sunday school building in the conversion of 7,500 new be-|at"a cost of §30.000 Werk awill liever ata the ne: e Next Saturday has been set n.\ld('! tEviegin e near fitires by the Adventists a< a day of fasting | and prayer in hehalf of the Chinese | m. Mrs. Allen died three Sunday School Annex Planned. Special Diapateh tn The Star 20 be APARTMENTS T0 LET 1. W _GROOMES, 1116 F ST. ANDIRONS FIREPLACE GOODS '| Fries, Beall & Sharp 734-736 10th St. N.W. Monroe street. John G. Miller, president, presided the meetin; and denominational workers in that | conntry. Much of the Adventisis’ | ission property has been destroyed in the Chinese civil war, it was said and missionary operations in tha in . Auto frucks in the world now num nearly 4 2 S ' 4 N - Children 4}) need Foods made especially Nourishing | SIXTEENTH Jt. CORBY'S MOTHER’S BREAD REALTORS K STREFT _MADV! cAsk Your Grocer About It Poundad in 189740 Y sare of Reliabla Sevvise Age-toned Flagstone Effects an embossed linoleum floor that you should see Close your eyes to how uninteresting and troublesome most floors are. Prepare your mind to an entirely new idea of floor beauty and comfort. Embossed Handcraft Tile Inlaid has the beauty of a cut-stone floor. It has the character of a hand-set floor— even to the embossed mortat lines pressed into the design. The picture gives a hint of the “handcraft” air thae gives distinction to these patterns. But it cannot show the aged-toned colors; colors not regularly repeated, but freely and delightfully blended. An exclusive Armstrong creation. At little more than the price you would pay for refinishing an old floor, it can be permanently laid in any room in your home. Jaspé in soft green and NEW Taupe shades Green—the cool, eye-resting color. Taupe ~—the neutral color that suits any scheme of decoration. You can have your choice of many shades of green or taupe in softly blended Jaspé or in other new effects Book of model rooms “The Attractive Home—How to Plan Its Decoration™ shows how the new Armstrong Floors look in fine in- teriors. A simple, practical guide to home decoration. Sent upon receipt of ten cents. Loek or the CIRCLE A ek e " ARMSTRONG CORK COMPANY, Linoleum Division, Lancaster, Pennsylvania Armstrong's Linoleum for every floorin the house PRINTED PLAIN - INLAID - EMBOSSED IASI“;ARABIQQ | | | A popular Fall style of imported black calfskin—exceptionally good value ONE OF 100 STYLES FOR FALL Douglas Shoes Satisfy It is reasonable to suppose that shoes which have satisfied millions of wearers will meet with your approval, too. Douglas shoes are built to a standard of style and quality which is a result of careful selection of high-grade mater- ials and skilled workmanship. A personal inspection of the new Fall models.at any Douglas store will convince you that our prices are much less than you would have to pay elsewhere for shoes of such excellent quality. MQrP than 100 Douglas stores in the principal cities and the most reliable shoe dealers everywhere are now showing new Fall styles. If Douglas shoes are not for sale in your vicinity, write for catalog. /2 America's Best Knoun Shoes 7 Men's Shoes 85, $6 and 87\ [ Boy's Shoes $3.50 and $4 \ The Douglac name and re- tail price stamped on the sole of everv shoe is your guar. antee of quality and vaiue. W. L. Douglas Shoe Company MANUFACTURERS AND RETAILERS — FACTORIES AT BROCKTON, MASS. Stores in all principal cities of the United States W. L. Douglas Store in watingron 905 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W. ’E‘:";‘..’?; lustrous, washable this paint replaces expensive enamel! PREAD out a brushful of Barreled Sunlight and see why thousands prefer it to other paints or expensive enamels. Smooth as satin—washable as tile. Rivals the finest enamel in beauty but costs less and covers better. Guaranteed to remain white longest. If more than one coat is required, apply Barreled Sunlight Undercoat first. — Where tints are desired, you can obtain exactly the shade to match any color scheme by aimply adding oil colors to Barreled Sunlight. Ask about the new, easy-mixing Bar- reled Sunlight Tinting Colors in handy tubes HUGH REILLY CO. § - DISTRIBUTORS Paints for Every Purpose—Glass for Every Need 1334 N.Y. Ave. Phone Main 1703 Barreled Sunlight Is Sold by the Following Dealers: A. ABELMAN. 1309 Ga. Ave. \.W. N HARDWAR v 5 7th St N.W. BRIGHTWOOD HARD 5415 Ga. Ave. N.W. BLOOMINGDALE. HARDWARE (0., RESE 0O KW 1841 1st St. Maryland & Virginia Dealers H. L. RORDEN, Strashure. Va. G. G. BRADLEY. Rethesda. M CAER RROS. & BOSW! Hattaville, Wd. PHARMACY, 08 18th St N.W. GEQ. M. CASPER. 1013 N. C. Ave. D. DEL. VECCHIO. 1134 Fla. A H > CHAMBLIN'S L I DINOWITZER. 620 P Herndon, Va. CHAS. T. HAWKINS, HOMER T. REFLIN WILLARD HER| DK HARDWARFE. STORE. Md. St and Want v X.¥ DRUG CORPN.. Ralpine, Md. VT RS, LYNCH. Falls Chureh, Va. nnedy St N.W. GDERN AUTo SUPPLY co., MONARCH AUTO 1801 1, S MOORF. iexandria, Va. Haymarket, Va. .. Leesburg, Va. Roads. Va n m:nfi- RE. rahn HREV Cherryy R & FORD e b 13 _Condul R. 716 4 N RDWARFE, AL RREY PARwER 3 s con : NION rant' Roval, Var T ‘QT‘ iS. Deanwood. M4, I T o7 Conn: . Ave - FVDER & COMMINGS. ATT R 8. ; Neat Pleasant. Md.