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THT, EVENING You Are a Financial Power Plant Your earnings, the current that operates your home; your savings-plan, a storage battery to supply income when your earnings stop. The best “storage battery” is our Insured-Savings Plan. regularly by your premium-deposits, it will sup- ply power to keep your home going: 1. In your old age, 2. In case you are totally and permanently - abled be'ora agn €0, 3. In event of your prema- ture deaih. Send for literature today New York Life Ins.Co. Darwin P. Kingsley, President | Call, write or telephone to E. D. Krewson, dgency Director 3RS 15t StONW. Tel. Main 624 | IF YOU HAD A ASLONGAS THISFELLOW AND HAD ALl THE WAY DOWN TONSILINE EPISCIPAL WOMEN PLAN LARGE [ Offerings Will Be Made at { General Convention of | Church Here. | Women of the Episcopal Church are | preparing to make two large monetary offerings at the opening service of the General Convention at Washington Cathedral on October 10. The united thank offering, which it is anticipated will reach $1,000,000 and | represents a_three-year collection, in ad- dition to other offerings, will be used for extra missionary work of the church. A corporate gift of $100.000 will b pre- sented at the same time and will go for the support of these six mission fields: St. Agnes School, Kyota, Japan; St. | Timothy's Hospital, Cape Mount, Libe. ria; Holy Trinity Cathedral, | Prince, Haitl: Church of the Resurrec- tion, Baguio, Philippine Islands: St. Mark's Mission, Nenana, Alaska, and the | Church of the Nazarene, Livramento, | Brazil. Both these offerings are from women all over the world and denote a | iriennial effort. With this auspicious start, the wom- en of the church will be represented dur- ing the General Convention by the tri- ennial session of the Women's Auxil- iary, ch meets coincidentally with the General Convention and this year will convene at the Mayflower Hotel. There will be mission exhibits and each society will give demonstrations of its work. Among these will be the Giris® Friendly Society. the Daughters of the King, the Church Periodical Club, as well as a number of lesser guilds, so- cieties and leagues of the church. The Church Periodical Club will pre- sent its work in dramatic form and Washington parishes are rehearsing scenes depicting various phases of their S8R TheNational Sore ThroatRemedy | activities While this preparation is go- Mrs. Isabel S. Hunter Mrs. Isabel Sewall Hunter, teacher of drawing at Sidwell's Friends School, 1811 I street, who is a specialist in the school use of newspaper and magazine | material, has recently returned from the convention of the National Education Association at Boston, where her plan for stimulating interest in “Washington —the Federal City” and other subjects through the use of scrapbooks among school children has met with signal success. Mrs. Hunter, who is the founder plans to have a booth at the associ tion’s Summer meeting at Minneapoi Minn,, July 1 to 6. Numerous teachers and school au- thorities from all parts of the country came to her booth at Boston, Mrs., Hunter said, and were enthusiastic | P GELFAND ‘DELICTOUS of the Sewall-Hunter School of Art, ! butter Distributors STAR, WASTITNGTON URGES NEWSPAPER ARTICLES AS AIDS IN TEACHING SCHOOL Describes “Scrapbook Method™ for Instruction of Children. over her aphook mcthod.” Two teachers from Vermont, she cxplained, Miss Jennle C Allingham and Miss Margaret R Kelly. who are_working on a course in geography. told her that ther would put “Washington—the Fed- eral City” m their geography course. Defends Press Material. | Mrs. Hunter said that new por and m: zine material often | goes into the waste basket when it could be conscrved and used for teach- | ing things that need much to be taught.” “Abstract ideas can be brought down to earth,” she said, “and since the chil- { dren themselves make th apbooks, they heve an added interest Mrs. Hunter has 20 scrapbooks of her own for which £he has been responsible, but countless other books have been BUTT-R-NAISE is a new spicy cream to be used as It gives the fa- miliar sandwiches and salads a fresh, piquant fla- vor. It is pure creamery butter whipped with lemon jui fresh egg. yolks specially prepared; vegetable oils and spices. Delicious just on crisp crackers and on pie-crust llent for one’s use of the vita- mines in it. Delivered fresh, three times a week, in 30c glass jars at your dealer's. Gelfand's French Dressing is very e land. Thes: ous fopics, but a favorite method is for teachers to have the children as- semble clippings for a scrapbook deal- ing with thelr own home town. Clippings Preserved. Fifteen clipplngs from book entitled “Golden Deeds” which Mrs Helen D. Sutch, another teacher at Sidwell's Friends School, supervised These newspaper storics illustrate the better things of life, Mrs. Hunter said, and teach the children to see what is good in the newspapers, Instead of searchingZout the sccond best and the undesirable. Mrs. Hunter has just been appoint- ed chairman of a committee of the Washington Conference of Congrega- tional Churches to work on a course of ethics with spiritual values which will be acceptable to people of all religlous faiths. Mrs. Hunter pointed out that ‘The Wash- | ington Evening Star appear in a scrap- | NN R I R AT XTI are built into the in this work she Is trying to see the relation between esthetics and ethics and formulate this through the use of newspaper and magazine material in serapbook form and by putting ideas that are rbstract in concrete form THREE FACING CHARGES | UNDER BANKRUPTCY LAW | Harry C. Johnson, sr. 427 Madison street: his son, Harry C. Johnson, Jr., 410 Fifteenth street northeast, and James S. Hadley, 449 I street, were held yesterday under bonds of $1,500 each by United States Commissioner Needham C. Turnage on a charge of conspiracy to violate the national bank- ruptey act. A. D. Balley, an agent of the Department of Justice, investigated the charge that the men conspired to conceal from the trustee ruptcy certain assets of the elder John- son, which are said to have been stored at Cottage City, Md., January 23, 1927. An indictment against the men has been returned by a grand jury in Prince Georges County and removal proceedings to the United States Dis- trict Court at Baltimore are in prog- €55, in bank- | List Your Rented and Vacant Houses With 3,150 KOLB Just sink your teeth into the goodness Clark’s Teaberry Gum. Then notice tlf spread of its refreshing flavor to of mouth and throat. It moist,allays thirst, keeps teeth clean and aids digestion. Isn’t that a big nickel’s worth? every part keeps the mouth THE CARPEL CO. Washington. D. C. GELFAND’S BUTT-R-NAISE fine too. The Gelfand M | ing forward in the Capital various meet- c . Baltimore. inzs are being held in different parts of the globe to further the offerings of the women of the church. The bene- ficiaries of the united thank offering are known as united thank offerng workers in the mission flelds. At the | 1ast General Convention, held at New Orleans in 1925, the women honored | Most Rev. Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, | formerly presiding bishop of the church, | by appiying the $100.000 git for & fur- C%car itself | fma’):q&';njw!? ‘GARK BAOTHIRS CHLWING GUM CO MAKENS FITTSIURCKL B 0.8 | lough house in New York and for | training girls for church work and for 1a colored school at Raleigh, N. C. 'TALMUD IS THEME OF RABBI'S LECTURE | Hebrew Leader of Chelsea, Mass., [ to Make Address in Washing- | Pre_fgr_red.’ If you can't decide whether you like blendes or brunettes best. here's a bit of evidence thatll heip you make up your mind. paint her blonde beauty and theater- goers rave over it. She’s Elsa Cover, of 630 West 173rd St, New York City. “When people tell me how much they admire my hair,” she says, “I'm always happy to tell them what | do to keep it soft and gleamy. It's really %o trouble. All I do is put a few dashes of Dandcrine on my brush each time I nse it. That's the way nearly every really smart girl I know is doing hers. My hair doesn’t need shampooing more than once a month, now. My scalp fecls better than it ever has felt. It has gotten rid of all my dandruff, and it makes my hair easy to dress and holds it in position.” Danderine is not oily. the oily film from each strand and restores the natural color and lustre. It dissolves dandrufi, cleanses and invigorates the scalp. It is delight- fully fragranced. The big bottles are just 33¢ at all drug stores Smooth, gleaming healthy hair for a few cents. DANDERINE Artists love to | It removes | ton Synagogues. A series of talks on the importance | of the Talmud will be given in all the My7 | synagogues of Washington during the next two weeks by Rabbi Jerome Widisky of Beth Aaron Temple, Chel- | sea, Mass.. who has spent the last 14 years in translating the complete Tal- | mud and Jewish Code into English. | While here Rabbl Widisky is the guest | of Rev. William Tash, 1118 Fifth street. | _ The English translations produced by | Rabbi Widisky, after his 14 years' labor, consist of the Talmud in 32 volumes. | totaling 9,000 pages, each 12 by 17 | inches, and the Jewish Code in 14 vol- umes, totaling 4,500 pages. The print- | ing of the code was recently completed | by a New York publishing house, but | the Talmud has not yet come off the | press. Both books contain the Hebrew | and English text, in parallel columns, | with extensive footnotes at the bottom | of each page explaining the ecclesiasti- | cal terms. Rabble Widisky's visit to Washington is a part of a tour he is making of the various cities of the country to raise $1,000,000 for the printing of the Eng- l\sl“l translations of the two Hebrew | epics. e GET RESERVE POSTS. | Capital Men Receive Commissions | in Corps. Commissions in the Resqrve Corps of the Army have been issued by the War Department to Winfield Scott, 5003 Beventh street, as a colonel of llnhmry: to Hampden Wilson, 1435 | Girard street, as a major in the Quar- termaster Corps; to Willlam C. Barr, jr., 3050 N street, as a second lleuten- ant in the Medical Administrative Corps, and to Isaac M. Capayas, 2124 1 street, as a first lieutenant of Infantry. Lead to Success A confidence as every of success. HAPPY breakfast fillsa man not only with satisfaction but puts a sub- lime confidence in himself. And self- one knows is the bhasis Hot cakes and Golden Crown Syrup on a crisp morning is a most joyous repast that starts a man off smiling with a cheer and joy that outlasts the day. Golden Crown brings the true Southern flavor to hot cakes, brings joy, energy and wholesome satisfaction. Of course, the whole family will enjoy it. At All Good Grocers Wiite lor 1t Ntewart, Bon “lik o 1 ke Tompg & Co., Batimore LDEN 0y With the True 5outhern Jlavor story has always enthi EMILLUDWIG, wh genius— Rembrandt, “osmopolitan, Shirley Warde, 0. McINTYRE, . lipolis, O., is probably rate many folks throug his famous *Day by Day He sho writes each mont put the essence of a play emission to reprint his 7 s - GIFT aeto help win more I p— born in Plattsburg, Mo., and brought up in the most typical New Yorker. Al hout the country - favorite stories of the year in this for iends for Cosmopolitan Magazine. o1ToR 2 Féwrire Stories of the Year By O. O. Mclniyre The Man Who Made New York Famous Gal t any KNOW New York only through in New York” in their home-town newspapers. h for Cosmopolitan, And because-hisability to or novel, or the spirit of a city, intoa single page weed me, 1 am particularly glad he has given me m fot C WI 7his Special Edition of O. O. Mclntyre Stories A GIFT your newsdealer for a copy. LUDWIG'S Newest Biography and DREISERS 4 Gallery of WoMEN" Both in April Cosmopolitan o wrote those f Faith Baldwin, inating lives of Napoleon and Bismarck, . . . = t: = arce has come to America with a new biography, the loves : and tragedies of a He is a great man writing about a great man with sympathy and understanding. Tracing Rembrandt’s development, he shows how his loves, his environment it 5 . y A - N . . 5 = ’ his (h:mp of friends, h!n financial and domestic tragedies served to color his work during the successive stages of his glorious but tragic ¢ er. Naturally Emil Ludwig wanted to reach the largest possible audience of intelli- %wm readers. And naturally he chose to publish this latest work of his in Other Stories, Serials and OQutstanding Features by Irvin S. Cobb, Rex Beach, George Ade, Robert Hichens Meredith Nicholson, Peter B. Kyne, Adela Rogers St. .lulms’ George A. Dorsey, Percival ChristopherWren, Sir Philip ( lihbs’ Ring W. Lardner, Brig. Gen. Henry J. Reilly, Frazier llunt' Capt. John W. Thomason, Jr., W. W. Jacobs, Rube Goldber: ‘: % . Phillips Oppenhei 0.0.Mclntyre, Richard V. Culter and (]Imrlct.: I)mlull :;‘i'l::‘::::: To make more friends for osmopolitan TH April Cosmopolitan your newsdealer will give you a copy of O. O. McIntyre’s Seven Favorite Stories of the Year, which have been published separately in a special edition to help make more friends for Cosmopolitan. Ask HEODORE DREISER, whose “An American Tragedy " was so success- A ful, wrote a book some years ago called ““T'welve Men.” Many eritics cone ”d".fihs I““nk. an even greater achievement than his novels, ** Sister Carrie "’ and *“T'he Genius.” The portraits of these twelve men are, to quote one critic, “‘as massive and hard-wrought as a statue by Rodin.” x J g .~ . por < Y N 1 1 Now Dreiser writes for Cosmopolitan a remarkable series of stories about w omen, l.)rms:‘r paints men and women as they are, with every line and wrinkle, and like Rembrandt, succeeds in revealing their souls. : “Rella”=the first of Mr. Cosmopolitan, Dreiser’s stories about Women=- appears in April st5 International combined with 0SMOpO . I & April—Just Out