Evening Star Newspaper, March 15, 1928, Page 26

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Furnished & Unfurnished APARTMENTS | Special Rates. 1 Room and Bath, $45 up 2 Rooms and Bath 4 Rooms and Bath € Rooms and Bath With Electric Cooker, Current Included Fartial or Full Hotel Service Burlington Hotel 1120 Vermont Ave. BAUMEfiENGUE ANALGES]QUE 1F KIDNEYS BOTHER TRY DOSE OF SALTS Drink Quart of Water if Your Back Hurts or Bladder Troubles n can make a isk part of the waste and poisons {from the blood. Then you get sick. |R!’eu'm\n<m hea ble, ! n quant get about four ‘ounces of from any reliable phar- {macy and take a tablespoonful in a iglass of water before breakfast for = and your kidneys may is made from pes and lemon juice. lithia, and has becn to help flush clogged late them to ac- neutralize the %0 they no longer us often relieving i bladder disorde! | Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- inot injure: makes a delightful effer- lithia-water drink, which i everyone can take now and then to - | candidate ~THE EVENTNG ~RTAR, WASHINGTON, D.”U. THURSDAY. MARCH 15, TOR. THKOF ¢ COOLDGE - DRAFTING REVIVED Fmanclal Centers Cling to| i Hope That President Will i Run Agam. | BY DAVID LAWRENCE. 1 days Washington has | ident Coolidge had decided, to be M candidate for the And as often as the h\-’ profess to belicve that something has | happened warranting the belief that i dent Coolidge will be nominated. | © is 10 question, too, that persons | | interested in the stock market's ups | {and downs have been talking about the | Coolidge candid: on the theory that |i( it were ass he would be the a certain optimism would ;,w v nl in business and financial quar- Politicians Are Worried. Now the truth is President Coolidge it he has (l\'\uu‘(l or will his position. With many of | who want him to run the wish to the thought. And what ed is that xr!‘l(’\ln the oil scandal disclosures | "n\d that only President Coolidge could e day. He weathered the Teapot rm in 1924. and would be ex- it again on the | self is untouched by | forth by sincerepartis Short Earthquake Felt in California Rolls Beds Around)| By the Associnted Press. SANTA MARIA, Calif., March 15, ~An earthquake of about 15 sec- onds’ duration and strong enough to roll & bed on its casters, was felt here at 4:03 a.m. today. The earth movement appeared to be from ecast to west. No damage was l(‘pm’h‘d WAR VVETERAN DIES. Special Dispateh to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., March 15.— Edgar Earl Drake, 36 years old, who was gassed on the Vesle front in France | in July, 1918, and participated also in | the” Aisne-Marne and Meuse-Argonne offensives, is dead at Stephens Cit near here, from a rare malady dia nosed by physicians as Hodgkins_dis which affects the lymphatic | glands. Surviving are his widow, Miss Thelma Headley: his faiher, D. K Drake, Stephens City, and onc brother. | Foidadn: i Levine Leaves Jucksonwl]e JACKSONVILLE, Fla. March 15 (#).—Charles A. Levine took off in his transatlantic monoplane Columbia at 10:40 a.m. today for Charleston, S. C., | after spending the night in Jacksonville, en route from Havana to New York. He planned to continue on to New York to pose, sometimes for a financial reason, ¢ [sometimes put forward to block the Hoover candidacy and sometimes held ns as the only way the Republican p: can get out of its present dilemma revealed by (lgr“ campaign contribution record of (Covvright. 1928 ) v other States there are el that, while Hoover, | might poll a big Re- | ey might not be strong the local tickets | through to victory. | Some of the dyed-in-the-wool Cool- | { 1dge men are well known in the finan- | cial district in New York and Chicago. \ where business men are wont to take ! their cue from what these leaders say. [ | So long as there is held out the chance | | that President Coolidge might be per- suaded to run they will cling tenacious- | ly to the Coolidge standard. | | This is having its effect on the Hoo- | | ver campaign. In fact, it is rumored that some of those Who know the ac-l tual political situation in the various | States and have counted the delegates | obtained. and those likely to be ob- | | tained, are saving Secretary Hoover can- | {not_get a majority unless the la\(-‘ 'dllt‘h Coglidge men give him their | votes. Turning it around. the Hoover \me: { are in a sense Coolidge votes. If friends | of the President had planned the pres- | ent situation, they could not have done a better job in lining up the friends of Mr. Coolidge as against the Lowden- Dawes elements in the party which { have as their nucleus the anti-Coolidge | sentiment of the agricultural region. | Coolidge Talk to Continue. | | Would Mr. Coolidge accept if nomi- | nated> First, there must be a dead- | lock before his name can logically be | | considered. as otherwise the Hoover ele- | ment would feel they had been en-| | couraged 1o believe it Was a free-for-all | | race when it really was not. Second, | | if the deadlock comes and the party demands Coolidge as its savior, the| | oldest of the political leaders: say no !man ever turned down the party that honored him in the past. Mr. Coolidge has never said he would | Established 32 Years KAHN on 7th St. G. W. BILLINGS TO RETIRE FROM U. S. SERVICE SOON Land Office Employe Has Been in Government Work 44 Years. After 44 years' service with the Fed- cral Government in varlous capacitics, George W. Billings, 212 G street,. will be relired Saturday from the General Land Office of the Interior Department. Fellow employes have presented him witha sult case, fountain pen and bill old. Mr. Billings began_his carcer as a Government employe February 15, 1881, when he became a letter carrler at the city post office. He is a native of In- diana. He was a member of the old Washington Light Infantry, serving un- der Col. William G. Moore and Capt. John S. Miller in Company D. Billings will continue to reside in Washington Tor the present. bt plans to move to St. Petersburg, Fla., next » | Winter. A slab in the Berlin Museum dating about 2500 BC.. from a temple in ypt, shows {he varlous processes in smoking hon utiing it n jar: | ing._and_sealin ' Colds Fxhaust our Enerqy MEDICINE STRENGTH OVER 70 YEARS OF SUCCESS Established 32 Y Specials Friday and Saturday Fme Quality Shell Frames —With— Finest Quality Toric Spherical Lenses J EYES EXAMINED FREE Three Regu!ered Optometrists in Attendance .90 == rame Compl¢l¢ Outfit, With Case and Cleaner Included Genuine Toric KRYPTOK Invisible Bif ocal Lenses First and best quality. Kryptok Bifocal Lenses— (one pair Best lenses made. Sold regularly $15. Special to see near and far). price Friday and Saturday. Toric $7.50 I N o Interest or Extras Added to Our Budget PlanIIIIIMNWe Do Not Penalize Our FriendsTIIIIIITY 79¢ to $1 Caps Two for * °1 School Caps, of all- wool suiting mixtures, in light or dark Spring patterns. Sizes 673 to 8. IT "PAYS TO BOTH SIDES OF.7™ AT.K ST. “THE DEPENDAB $1.50 to $2.50 Novelty Suits Mostly Sample STORE" Suits, in sizes 3 to 6 years, DEAL AT 9 i lmitated_ But Never Equaled—Goldenberg’s Original In the Boys’ Department Tomorrow, Friday—One Day Only Washington’s Greatest Sale for Boys 95¢ to $1.19 Pajamas and Night Shirts Two for $ A Manufacturer's _Special Offering of Cotton Pajamas and Night Shirts, in a great variety of materials and colorings. Sizes 2 to 14 years. —— 59¢ to 89c Play Suits Two for $ One-piece Play Suits, of khaki and blue striped ma- terials, sizes 3 to 8 years. Also Blue Denim Overalls, ~with bib front and suspender shoulder straps. Sizes 4 to 14 years. Here’s the Plan— Purchase the First Suit, at $9.75, /) Select Another Suit, J Any Size or Style, for Both Suits for $10.75 Dress Spring Suits, in a variety of classy models; of good, serviceable materials, in smart new mixtures. made and tailored suits. 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