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EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C. TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1928 i 2 Purn e, toe for | CHAIN BRIDGE 0PEN 10 TRAFFIC SOON D. C. Rushes Work by Let-i ting Contract for Floor- | | \ Sultey deys and sticky, breathiess | nights=~August. You can make-them | endurable by having plenty of pure | iced drinks. Serve lced Tea and| Frosted Coffee in place of hot! drinks. And ‘have tall, clinking glasses: of chilled fruit juices., B remember that an iced o Te e nd scient oleon n welcon: Sparkling American from water filtered purified is ¢ mer drink American ICE Company ing of Span. A contraet for 70,000 feet of timber costing $10.063.04 for reflooring Chain Bridgs was awnrded by the Comm al sioners today to J. A. Maloney & Co. | C. Whitehurst. Assistant Eng'nsar Com- missioner, anounced that the span, whieh had boen ciosed for more than a | | year. would be reopensd to traffic within 10_days The lumber contract American Drivers will take yeur erder for American Quality Coel. Telephone Main 6240 was given the original contract de- u'ted after the Commissionsrs decid>d 2t th> timber it ‘had prepared to shi rashington did not comply k Would Take Weeks. Although the lumber under the new contract will not be deliversd for Capt. Wir'tehurst has planned to reopen the bridge just as soon as the Wanted Live Wre Salssman In Real Estate Firm Must have auto and ex- perience in selling houses. Lidberal Commission J. Dallas Grady 904 14th St. Main 6181 is completed and the floor of the river ! span is redecked. The work on the abut- | ment is almest finished, and bridge en- gincers have estimated that the river span can be refloored within a wesk. ofiooring of the remainder of the o will be done while traffic is cress- the preparations for on Chain Bridge s0 b>gan an ar of bias ing A ridge, which is ed. The bids wore opened yesterday afternoon and because of the alternate proposals to the ssecifizations included | © the contractors. the determination of the low bidder has been delaved. Contractor Asks Exemption. The prices quoted on ths straight bid ranged from 97 cents to $1.20 a cubic foot, Because of the peculiar conditions on Highway Bridg> one of the contrac- accompanied his proposal with a to be releas>d from a provis.on | in law which requires the contractors | to k2ep new pavements in repair for | one year and for four s if inferior or defective materials ¢ responsidle for breaks in th> surface. AUTO SMASH&S PORCHES AFTER DRY SQUAD CHASE Run: Wild When Abandoned by Driver. Who Is Captured. Liquor Seized. HEAT) AT ITS BEST"| Running wili when abandoned b; | driver in the face of police pursuit. a | liguor-laden car this morning climbed ‘O“ATI | the sidewalk and smashed the porches & et 5261 and 28 R street before coming to 7 > {3 hait. OIL BURNER |~ A seizure of 90 gallons of contraband | g e " was reported and the police dry sguas “The Obligation of Leader- | Readed by Sergt. George Little, booked | ship” rests on “Oil-O-Matic | Leonard W. Shoemaker, 4 years old, of | No leader can stand still in {3113 Georgia avenue, on charges of il- | the march of progress. There- {12gal possession. transporting and reck- fore, invesiigate the now | model “J” Burner. less driving, taking him into custody | after a chase. Domestic Service Corp. 1706 Connecticut Avenue The squad went on the trail of ths | PHONE POTOMAC 2048 —_——— four the Zero milestone All Kinds. Come in and Browse: BIG BOOK SHOP, 933 G St. STONELEIGH COURT Connecticat Ave. and L Street A_few desirable apartments from three to seven reoms and bath. Under WARDMAN Management Anply Resident Manazer. spected car at North Capitol and S| reets about 9 o'clob, chased it west !into Q strect and then through an alley | { to R. where it was abandoned with the | {engine’ still running. The members { then set out after the driver, who had | RS . taken to his heels vac-mrl THE | The liquor was turned over to Rev- Nations nsur- | o = of ihe District of Columbs. | “1u¢ Asent Cornett spee held July 7. 1928, —an o ® 2 resolution te ineresse the cap'tal f eaid company £100. '\ TAILOR WITH COFFEE POT. NABBED BY LIQUOR SQUAD #ioc’: Aividend o stocknold: 32 o'clock moom en Ausust fming 1o each stactholds Max Ienbiendir Arrested on' TOPE BUILT & REPAIRING “TOP- Charze of Transportation and o ;'-a‘-‘«‘mfvt':.;;-cuu}n cariain Lenee > 3 FRrtalne. Shp covers e T S T 18 RUMORED. ULATED 1N | Pachingtas that Chapel Point is auaren- | W Tonod asarnst Teoneid.This rumor 1+ with- | ment at his 20 foundation Maryland State i — Possession of Intoxicants. ‘ N TR T A tailor who left his place of employ Tleventh street shop euh‘ officers ¢ |day” carrying an innocent-looking_cof- 12 Pita. Marviand will y today ran afoul of same. one case of | feet pot " yhich Eha t liquor squadron. ATY |the result that he was locked in ] in the sixth precinct station house on | el charges of transpertation and posses- DP"“‘AHU‘RL R s sion of I:l:‘mxlunu SR | e 1 The tailor is Max Ienbiendir, 51 years | ECcading aa Maze Bros. has |0ld. who told police that he lives in the | | | | Sergt. -Lml;’ was ',gl.dd ml A man | g a coffee pot n_supply- 1 e thirsty on downtown l:lzvmth1 | street with liquor, so today waited until | the tailor came out, attired in working | Iclothes. In one hand he carried the | coffee pot. while beneath his npronl could be seen the shape of four half- * | pint bottles. which were found to con- | |tain alleged “red” whisky. { Following Ienbiendir's arrest the po- | 4 | lice went to the taflor shop and found - |2 trap door beneath a table. When they - {raised it they discovered 21 half-pints, 6 pints and a gallon jug of what they deseribed as whisks. The jug was bt | hailf filled | MRS. SMOOT RALLIES. | Stricken WH' nil.!-r;;(or Suxh(lyj Improved, The condition of Mrs. Alpha M.| Smoot. wife of Senator Smoot of Utah who suffered a paralytic stroke two | days 2go, was slighdy improved today. | Senator Smoot said she had spent a mere restful night and that she ex- pressed confidence that she would re- | cover. 'Her condition, hs said. still was grave. She is at the family home, 2521 Connecticut avenue. Real Estate Loans (D. C. Property Only) No Commission Charged T Whom It May Concer: Notice. i hereby ziven . at the Bioan Company. siti nw. in the city of Distriet of Columbiz. { #eli a1 public suction th personal heds. poceases, Dictures, pAInLInGs. o contents. Labies e purpose of sati: ms lien of the undersigned on said property for siorage charges and eharges in connection with car 107 “enc “saieceeping the iaid pe Properts. iogeiner with costs of said a.Dtied st Washingion, D.C. ‘this thir rat day of FEDERAL BTORAGE €O ROBERT B_HALL Viee Pres_snd Gen. onal L ANY | ther then my- | 15th st se. | T RIBK THE CRiP- piing eflect of rheumatism, arthritis and | Teuritis The use of Mountain Valley Waier from Mot Springs. Ark natural way | of eliminating the b acids and pol sone ! available here none 167 ;zv WATER CO. OUNTAIN VAL- 268 Dist. Netl. Bank Bldz renkiin_7143 WANTED turmtuge to or trom Kew Tork. Boston icnmona 'sna PR "rraNrER & STORAGE Gy 1273 You 8t v Wortn 3 1 WEVER DISAPPOINT BYRON S. ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY Rian rzoe. put ot nigh oriced T B A CHOICE APPLES $100 per B._ 60c per i Bu. Now reedy at int Acres To nave 7o ) You can take 12 years to payv off your loan without the expense of renewing $1.000 for $10 per month mecluding iterest and prin cipal. Larger smaller loans at proportionate rates PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Established 1881 9 pm Peaches will be ripe about Aug 16 ‘@ualiey frie. prices Jov 3 This Million-Dollar Printing Plant —is 81 your serviee WMo o receive caretul attention ‘The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D B¢ NW Phoue Mais 6% | BETTER TAKE HEED | s 4ines walls and falling pluster an £ “Huye us make the smai re is KOW Roofins Bave your dollars KOONS Zooier Reliable Roof Work ther orminers or order 100 smali Lk 19 30 B B Largest in Washington Assets Over $18,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W, L ES BF esident | PR A A ot ur IRONCL Pucser Nortn ¢ no nigher amine vour 30-Nortn 27 of Now York. At the same time Capt. H. | 14 60 and the sarcopnegus to his memor; chester, V! at 3014 N s known to Washingtonians. ington Fraser. tus Saint-Gaudens designed the statue | of Alexander Hamilton on the Treasury Department grounds: “Journey Through | Life,” 'y Ericsson Memorial on th> banks of the Potomac and the bust Roosevelt in the Senate chamber. Iikewlse des’gn=d the new 5-cent comns. Mr. Frasel cago oid Fert MEMORIAL AT GRAVE TO HONOR |GALILEAN FISHERMEN SON OF GREAT EMANCIPATOR | Bier of Robert Todd Lincoin to Be Marked by Stone Sarcophagus. James Earie Fraser Expects to Have Monument Com- p'eted by This Fall. A memorial to the late Robert Todd ncoln. son of the Great Fmancipaior, | will b2 erected this Fall over his grave in Arlington National Cemetery James Earle Fraser, tie scuipior whe will_complete ihe memorial, ha | ished is the sseond | model is now brin; that has been awarded. The firm which | his scudio 1 New small models and a full i cuted in clay at Yor; Mr. PFraser is | i Washington arranging further de- tails in connscifon with the work and P has already made numerous moasurc- with ' menis ana studics of the site end its | rel | vieinity. uon to hisoric landmarks in the Mr. Lincoln lies buried on the east lope of Ariington National Cometery will | be erected on tha: spot in a direct line s e | from the Lee Mansion to the Lincoin concrcte abuiment on the Virginia side | yemorial, near the Virginia terminus of the Arlingion Memorial Bridg, now | in process of construction. Frienas of M. | Lincoln consider that on one¢ side of the Poton is an imposing memorial to the pator and across the river in A will b a cophagus t it eminently fitting simple et imp: his son The carcophagus will bs of low-colored Creek, Conn hign Y aciess. end of the sarcophagus, backed by ever- green troes. quarries and will b 10_iect long and 5 or 6 There will be two ;eais at th2 Robert ‘rodd Lincoln died at Man- 26, 1925, and his home et in Georgstown is well Many pleces of sculpture in Wash- have been executed by Mr. The former assisiant to Augus- in Rock Creck Cemotery: ths of Theodore He has just completed for Chi- two bridgzheads on the site of Dearborn, featuring a group Will Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS.—Flew inlo a Los Angeles airport to wait till the fog raised to got over to another onf at Santa Monica. when all at once a plane dropped down through fog that was thick>r than smoke in 8 presi- - dential nomin2i- ing roem, and who crawled out of the thing but the kid himself, Lindbergh. Fog don't stop that lad. I asked him where he was go- ing and he told me, “Ccnfiden- tially, East." Say. what do you know about my old friend, White? He asked Al a question and Al didn't answer. When they gst Al to hesitating on an answer, why he looks bad. Many a public man wishes thers was a law to burn old records, kl_'lny Fevef l;eav'es After 40 Years Recovery Due to Discovery of Real Cause of the Disease. Hay Pever sufferers will be greatly interested in the following letter recently yritten by W. E. Campau, optemetrist. 431 Grand River ave., W. Detroit. Mich. I had Hay Fever fo trouble with Asthma 20 years. In that time I tried various remedies. but until 1 used Dr. Fugates Remeds, not one bad ‘any éflect on mw afier the first ar At first T was somewhat skeptical, hut after nearly three vears of relief. 1 will aiways recommend Dr. Pugate's Hay Fever and ‘Asthma Remedy to all who suffer from these diseases. “T have not been hathered with either Hay Pever or Asthma sines I first took your remedy in 1926 Dr. Campau and hundreds of other suf- recovery realize from taking the Fugate's discovery Hay FPever and erers reporiing complete the benefis deriveq remedy based on Dr of the true cause of Asthma Copies of their lefters. together with an fmportant honklel on Dr. Fugate's dis- covery of the eause af thess diseases will Indianapolis. seriaus you hooklet. - Ad Tndiana write for fremant this free r 40 years and || ROBERT TODD LINCOLN. called “The Discoversrs and the Ploneers” and v.snalizing La Salle and Marquette. He was the sculpior of the Jefferson_statue in front of the Mis- souri,Capitol and of the memorial 1o Lewis and Clark in Jafferson, Mo, Among the prizes which he has won for his work was a gold m>dal for his “End of the Trail." Mrs. Lineoln, who is having the sar- cophagus o hor lat> huchand erscted, ix at present at her ¢ m-r hems 2 Manc er, Vi TO HOLD MEET HERE %Ats!mbly Opening Monday Will Be Seventy-Second Anniversary of Order Founded in Baltimore. The convention of the Supreme Tab- | crnacle. Order of Galilean Fishermen, will be held here starting next Mondasy (and marking the seventy-second an niversary of the order and its fourth biennial assembly. The local commit- teo has completed all arrangzments for ons. which are to be held at reet southwest, lasting through The delegates will come from eight States, the Virgin Islands and Jamaica The_organization was founded in 1856 in Baltimore by two slaves, Hemsley and Harrict Nichols The program committee includes James Ross, George Brooks. Robert John Roberts, Huberi Hinton, Irene McEldery, Sadie Huff /ant, Fannie Green. Jennic Rrown Lee is the general ch2irman. “L" CRASH VICTIM DIES. Others, in New York Sma NEW YORK Cerillo, cne of collition of night, d Seven Injured . in Hospitals. 41 (P).—Joseph rsons injured in a evated trains Sunday last night in a hospital s were fractured in ths cra His brother | whose leg was crushed. and six others whose injuries were serious, also were in the haspital. ‘The condition of two was reperted as critteal. New roads in part |TRADE BOARD ENDS - CONTEST TOMORROW 1 Awards for Building and Home De-{ ‘ signs for Washington Area to ‘ Be Made in Fall. ‘ Tomorrow iz the last day on which subjects will b> receivad by the Board | | of Trade for considz on for awards | to ba made by ths orgenization this Fall | for merit in buildings, signs. settings | of homes and storcs and designs of de- | | velopment constructed in or near Wash- | ington during the biennial peried end- | ing January of this y2a The meritorious awards are made bi- ennially by the Board of Trads under | auspices of the committee on munieipal | art, of which Anpleton P, Clark, jr., is, chairman. Subjects dsemad wortiy of | e to be selectad by a jury of own architects, which is to be later. Th> awards are to be pressnted at a full meeting of the Board of Trade some time during the Fall. The scop2 of the | awards has boen broaden=d this time to includ> d~velooments in _ suburban Maryland and Virginia as well as in the District of Columbia 2nd will include a number of items in addition to ths de- signs of stor:s and hemes, it is an- nounced Amonz new subjects to be considered are signs, in rolation to buildings on which thev ars placed: the ssttings of buildings, including stepz, walls, copings, | planting: pant housss on office build- |ings and_other largs structures: and back ~ards, garag-s, rear elevations of | houses | Own-re, architects, builders, dealers n reel estots and other interestad par- 115 2+ ta b= suhiaot to consideration That's the word for them, as millions now know. As you’ll know, too; with your very first Muffet. Whole wheat, cooked, drawn. out to a filmy-thin ribbon, wound round and round, layer on layer. Baked. Toasted butternut brown. Light! Crunchy! Crisp as potato chips.~ Crumble your Muffet. Add sugar and cream. Fruit, eat! too, if you like: You get alories, minerals, bran. - Easy digesti- bility. And—something mighty good to You can be the discoverer of Muffets for your home. Let Muffets win you thanks, applause. Introduce them to your family tomorrow. BEST BY OFFICIAL TEST Every publishes month the Distriet the following tent of (he milk, farm score, Health Department information dairies in the Distriet of Colum! about Butterfat e seore; and rates the milk for whol tiness and keeping hacteriological amalysis. tivhed in a et and may be office. 1t aftards What “Cattle Scor Prestige A T' pasturing, milking anc by extrs reasons why Chestnut had at the he ink evidence of the su ority of Chestnut Farms Milk. ~ > O the ” IE cows which produce Milk are carefully select housin rdinary precautions. The Quaker Oats Co., Chicago. Highest Means! Chestnut Farms ed stock. Their g are surrounded This is one of the Farms Dairy can offer vou the best and most wholesome milk in the District. period of vears) awarc The cattle score ( ave ed us by the Health De- ged over a partment is higher than that of any other dairy, The scoring is on equipment, general condition, cleanliness and healthiness of stock, and an aver- age is made of all cows scored. d itions of Chestnut Iarms | Because con Jairy cows have been better over a period of vears than of cows of other dairies, our score is highest and Chest Highest. Average Cattle Score fover a period of years) of Any Datry tn Washington FAKNMY :‘ 4 I / | | Delivered nut Farms Milk is best. Yet 1 The Kilowing Mother Witl’l H‘gw";;:fijnomer Dty | "OYSTER'S" POTOMAC 4000 at your door, or sold it costs no more. in grocery or delicatessen, Chestnut Farms Milk is always the same quality Baby Photo-Portraits Reduced 25% Photo-portraits nizht! An Underwood Size 4x6 & Underwood baby pie- ture mirrors permanently those entrancing _ first Regularly $16 a dozen Catch that fleeting baby days when the world moved around his majesty —the bhaby. UNDERWQOD & UNDERWOOD 1230 Connecticut Ave. Decatur 1100 Not Just Another Flectric Refrigerator. The Heart of the Norge Is Its Exclusive Rotary Compressor COMPARE THIS VALUE 615 bic feet actual food space. 9 square foet shelf space. 1% and 2 inch insulation. A BEAUTIFUL WHITE PEFRIGERATOR But meost important, the NORGE silent rotary ice maker. EEL —puts this lifetime plant in vour home. Fully guaranteed. 1925.00 On converient terms if desired CARROLL ELECTRIC COMPANY 714 12th St. N. Main 7320 vy g mllllw HEN cooking, why slight Nature's own food, which man’s work has never surpassed--cMilk? By itself, or in conjunction with a meal, Milk should be a part of the day’s food. Whenever the/appetite calls for warm dishes, use more creamed stews, soups and scalloped vegetables. Ycu than have the added food values found in Milk. And for th-se dainty luncheons when the appetite seems jaded--salads, light sandwiches and Cooling, Refreshing 9, ompsons e, . o711} Serving Washington Homes for 47 Years 2012 Eleventh St., N. W, Phone Decatur 1400 Visit Washington's Oldest Dairy—In Washington's Newest Plant. Qi LS INERVES—pooh, pooht™ Thar was the way Mother answered m; famous old excuse. And she dis more than that—she gave me a real remedy for that feeling of distraughe, weary irritability! I'd tried the whole range of ordi- nary laxatives; health lemd\ that took weeks to act, cathartics that wracked the svstem. And 1'd come to distrust them terribly . . . Feen-a-mint is different! It's just like a bit of delicious chewing gum. You don't swallow it—you chew it! Its magic laxative principle is released slowly, the way science meant it to be released. It actually be- comes part of the digestive fluids—does not disturb digestion. It works with the body—not agaiost it! It won't torture you with griping pains. It won't roisan or weaken the system. It won't enslave you to axative pills. Get Feen-a-mint at your druggist's. Correct constipation—now! Feen-a-mint . Chew it like Gum