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D. C. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 19284 hteen Million ~ Flephones/ ‘THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. 6 L e gt P ik Paengers| e o e for Term Beginning October 1. RIDES OUT STORM | After campaigning over the East in it inf T Special Dispatch to The Star, believe it when informe > was Vhe Republican vice presidentisi nomi- | UFPPER MARLBORO, September 12. “catch-as-catch-can” style, Senator Curtis, the Republican vice presiden- everywhere.” nee, and the Senator joined in the josh- —Associate Justice Joseph C. Mattingly ing by replying, “They pull that on me | of the seventh judicial circuit of Mary- Crowds Cheer as Craft Bat- |ia1 nominee, has prospects of getting & private car for part of his Western trip. tles Lake Gales Over ¥ % i land has selected jurors to serve at the ey comitves | Camaival for iBchieol Funds. | County Cireult Court, which convenes Detroit. TP Fall term of the Prince Geopges has hinted that the nominee, who has | Special Dispatch to The Star. here October 1. G. Sherman James, a 1 kno been carrying the brunt of the speaking | pyerp1oT HEIGHTS, Md., Septem- :”dn mmwe: }:;nkerno& mml{:.“?; be < v, will ha ;";'53’.“'2 sglgm;r{g; "é‘nfé'.‘.’é;‘, ;rx‘t“:; ber 12.—Under suspices of the District | and his associates will be selected from When he goes out late this weck on Heights Citizens' Association and to .“'t"l::t‘lg bt Sy wi o this tour. raise funds for transportation of local | jueted from the ,e’m't.’,'nd“ of the list By the Associated Press. i : : s nas DETROPT, September 12.—The little | However. the Hangas SCRAO 150 school puplls a carnival will begin at| from which the grand jury is selected. plsiliiadl i il o semi-rigid balloon, Puritan, & Zeppelin | customary for presidentiai end vice | Shady Oak Inn Saturday, to continue type craft, owned by the Gopdyear Tire |presidential candidates to have private one weck. There will be parachute | A “baby" auto in London is sporting & Rubber Co, of Akron, Ohio, had a|cars because of the heavy travel. day | jumping, & tournament September 22 |a nunting bottle of silver as & radiator mascot. “In 1907 there were about 6,000,000 telephones i United States, but they were only pnfi:lly intel»:'lc:;hll5 nected, while today there are over 18,000,000 tele- phones in the United States sointerconnected thatit is possible for practically any one of the 18,000,000 to be connected with reasonable promptness with any other victory today over one of her | coaches and Pullmans have been his and dancing and other attractions. raditional enemies, nfe lower lakes gale. |lot so far. Only once has h> been ina i ht after | drawing room, but he told fricnds that a mnwnmm‘;‘m'mw DJ.Z’%'“’?E‘ g‘fin three | “this is the way I am used to going it.” | one of the 18,000,000 * * * months ago was caught in a 55-mile- Senator F:rth} savs h> has enjoyed ) v] s threaten- | visiting — wit ellow passengers on ) :;1 ul;oal;’ whg:_di:‘:m;t -}{,T':'""" tame | his trips through the East. Many of v WALTER S. GIFFORD, g with little more than 8 moment’s warn- | the passengers recognize him, but oc- n OW - ident of the American Telep Ing, and caught the ship as it was |casionally he visits with a person who - Pres e of ! traveling over the Eastern residential S°ems to have no idea of his identity, at lrh&"r“agh Com) pany One passenger who had chatted. with | il him for some time recently refused to | The first gusts caused the Puritan to oitch violently. Pilots A. J. Boettner and Vernon Smith headed the craft into the wind and the perilous battle | * that was to last for 35 minutes was on. As the wind velocity incremesed the | dirigible’'s motors were turned up to meet it, until finally they were doing | 1,700 revolutions per minute, the maxi- | mum. The ship held its own for a| time then slowly began to give ground, at the same time, alternately plunging t?vnrd the ground and rearing into the air. | These gyrations increased with the added wind velocity until it seemed that | the ship must nose over or under, with certain destruction awaiting when | it struck a cross wind | ‘When matters looked darkest for the | little craft and her passengers. however, | the storm, by a freak peculiar to the| area, abated as suddenly as it appeared. Thousands of Detroiters. homeward bound during the rush hour. witnessed | the thrilling duel and sent up cheers| when the storm lifted and the Puritan, | assuming an even keel, turned her noss | nroudly toward the Ford Airport moo ing mast and safety. | In addition to the crew. the Puritan | -arried three passengers. Don Pollard. | rawrence MeCracken and Carl. F. Zeis- | | ‘ar, all Pontiac news»2per men. for Fall = 4 \ [ | Painting! There isn't any better time of the year for exterior painting, than Fall. If you've “put it off” during Spring and Summer . . . put it on NOW . .. give your property a fighting chance against Winter. Q There are now over 18,000,000 telephones in and con- nected with the Bell System in the United States. And it has beent less than the span of a lifetime since the telephone first talked. @Q It started with one man, a set of crude instruments, and N Rl Tope : vflsmn of a great service that might be given if the way could No Esibarvassmest e found. That was all. Bring Your Car Registration Card Get Your Tires on the Spot Q The way was found and today, instead of two telephone workers— the inventor and his assistant—and two telephone instru- ments, 374,000 men and women and 18,000,000 telephones make possible a service—a continuous service—used more than 73,000,000 times each day, saving time and moncy and bringing comfort and convenience to millions of people. A service within the reach of anyone, anywhere! Of Course You’ll Use “Murco” Lifelong Paint because you want beauty . . . plus! Beauty plus Durability . . . that’s what Murco gives vou. Made 1007 Pure at all times, it is little wonder that ‘“Murco” gives permanent satisfaction, always. Come in any time for suggestions. E.J.Murphy Co.,Inc. 710 12th St. N. W. Main 2477 qQ Today,' there is one telephone for every seven persons in the United States and thereisscarcely a hamlet without the service. T:e nation is made one neighborhood for you through your tele- phone. Military Academy Opens. secial Dispatch to The Star. STAUNTCN, Va. September 12.— iaunton Military Academy opened the | ~w season this morning with a capac- | ; enroilment of 640 cadets. Several | aculty changes have hen made. S @ The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company with ~ more than 145,000 telephones in the District of Columbia, is'one of the associate companies of this nation-wide system. Its policy is the same—to give you a quick, dependable and reasonably priced tele- phone service. To that end we are bending every energy. - Cz’vz’lz’zatz’on’s curse can be conquered, AIM says famous British M. D. THE CHESAPEAKE AND POTOMAC TELEPHONE COMPANY in press Interviews Lafayette Ltd.. London sik WILLIAM A vBUTHNOT LLANE Bart., C. B. From Leading Newspapers PHILADELPHIA PUBLIC LEDGER— Sir William declared, “that a shortage of Vitamin B is responsible for intestinal stagnation, ‘the curse of civilization’ . . . which deficiency is made up by the addition Tllm sears ago SIR W. ARBUTHNOT LANE founded with the late Earl of Oxford ana Asquith and other prominent Britons the wow famous New Health Society, which is teaching millions how to lead healthier lives. Baronet, Companion of the Bath and Chevalier of the Legion of Homor, Sir Arbuthnot has won these distinctions in his field: Fellow, Royal College of Surgcons; President, Fellowship of Medicine; Consulting Surgeon Gay’s Hospital and Hospital for Sick Children; creator of universally adopted surgical methods. HEN Sir William Arbuth- not Lane speaks the world listens! In a recent interview Sir Ar- buthnot made the startling state- ment that constipation is civiliza- tion’s greatest curse. American newspapers reported his message in prominent space! In this interview Sir Arbuthnot reflects the view of en- lightened medical opin- son—health through nat- ural corrective foods. One of the most important of these foods, many doctors agree, is fresh yeast. In a recent survey throughout the United States half the doctors reporting said they prescribed this remarkable food for health. Fleischmann’s Yeast is a food as fresh as any garden vegetable. Unlike cathartics, which merely “scour out” the lower intestines, yeast keeps the entire digestive tract clean, active—healthy. When constipation goes, digestion has a clear track ahead! Appetite picks up. Your skin clears. Your whole being awakens to a new vigor and alertness! at 3 cakes of leischmann’s Yeast y. a cake beiore each meal or be- tween meals. To get full benefit from yeast you must eat it regularly and over a sufficient period of time. Start now. At all grocers, and many lead- ing cafeterias, lunch counters and soda fountains. of fresh yeast.” BOSTON GLOBE — Sir W. Arbuthnot Lane, Bart,, C. B., Britain’s most brilliant exponent of preventative medicine, points out that one of the important sources of this vitamin (B) is yeast. CINCINNATI TIMES-STAR — “Vitamin B is essential to life and health.” Sir Arbuthnot Lane then says, “Yeast is an extremely valuable food, particularly in its rich store of Vitamin B.” MACON (GA.) TELEGRAPH — Sir Ar- buthnot Lane has attacked “the curse of civilization"—clogging of the intestines. “One of the principal causes,” he says, “is deficiency of Vieamin B . . . most readily made up by the addition of fresh yeast.” NEW YORK DAILY NEWS — “Most Brilliane English Doctor Advocates Yeast As Foe of Disease.” SAN DIEGO (CAL.) UNION=-Sir W. Arbuthnot Lane says, “Diet suffers from a shortage of Vitamin B, made up by the addition of fresh yeast.” STORES IN 'Rl“glsPQl. CITIES See ’ Tomorrow’s Newspapers for Announcement SN 4