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34 WED AND SEPARAT N BREF PEROD Pridegroom Hunting Wife Whom He Married Despite Restraining Order. s By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, September 27.—Not- withstanding a court injunction re- straining their marriage, J. Clarke Dean, jr, and Mrs. Josephine See- berger Lasher have not only married, they've separated, it appeared yester- day. News of the wedding preceded oy mere moments the news of the separa- tion when young Dean, son of. 3 wealthy stock broker, appealed to th2 police for aild in finding his bride. Dean and Mrs. Lasher, it was learned. were married in Crown Point July 25, 18 days before the injunction issued by Judge Sabath expired, on Dean’s twen- ty-first birthday. ‘The restraining order had been obtained by J. Clarkes Dean, sr., soon after he learned his son was planning to marry Mrs. Lasher soon after she had divorced Howard Lasher, New York banker. It was just two months atter the secret marriage yesterday when young Dean returned to his apartment to find his bride gone. Unable to reach her at the home of her parents, he ap- pealed to the police—and the secret was out. He wanted them the home of his parents-i % the effort was fruitless, for Mr. Sec- reported his daughter was ying with friends. “I can’t understand it,” Dean said “Something must have happened. haven't quarreled.” VIRGINIA LEADS NATION IN VISITS BY NURSES 01d Dominion State Reports 88,849 Calls Made to Mothers and Children. In its co-operation under the ma- ternity and infancy act, Virginia led the Nation last yeaf, according to a re- port of the Childfen's Bureau of the United States Depattment of Labor. Reporting a total of 88,849 visits, the Old Dominion topped Pennsylvania and New York, the former listing 87,068 visits and the latter reporting 73.78¢ home visits by State nurses during, the fiscal period. During the year the 39 States report- ing and the. Territory of Hawaii listed 721,000 home visits, practically all of them being vigits'to expectant methers, infants and pre-school children. In some Stafes thy program is entirely a nursing one, and the aim is to reach parents with advice and aid in.&# care of the mother and child through contact with trained nurses, according to the report. In the more sparsely settled States particularly effective work has been reported in reaching remote and isolated settlers with information regarding the care of mothers and infants. b Modern fashions, which call for less cotton thread and the decline of em- broidery and erocheting, are having a bad effect on the sewing cotton indus- to search | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. T, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 |YAMPA CANYON LENDS SAFETY TO BIG HERD OF WILD HORSES Many . Animals in Mystic Gorge, Seeing Men for First Time, Fail to Beat Customary Retreat. This i§ the fifth of a series of articles by A. G. Birch leader of the first expedition o have ex- plored successfully the Yampa River Canyon, in northwestern Colo- rado. one of the last “blind spots” on the map of the United States. BY A. G. BIRCH, Special Dispatch to The Star and the North American Nevspaper Alliance DENVER, Colo., September 27.— When we went down to the river on Wednesday morning, August 22, we found a perfect maze of fresh deer tracks in the wet sand beside the water. Judging by the different sizes of these tracks, the animals must have been there by the dozens in the night. Gathered on a tiny sandpit across the river were 27 large, fine ducks. The really " uriexplored state of this canyon was apparent {rom the faet that the ducks had no fear of us and did not stir for hours. Guns were taboo in our party. Following the déer tracks down- stream, we surprised a monster beaver at work about 30 feet up the bank He seemed almost as large as a seal. Apparently he never had seen a human being. for he sat still, regarding u: curiously for 30 seconds. Then he took fright and, in his haste to reach th: water, simply tumbled down the bank Then came the blue herous. This canyon seems to be a favorite haunt of these big birds, for we saw dozens of them every day. Nearly dvery sand- spit held two or three herons. We always approached quite close. before they flew leisurely off. Hunt Cliff Dwellings. While we were eating our breakfast of a cereal, flapjacks with honey, bacon and coffee, Fred Dunham sgjed, high on the cliff abové us, a hollow similar to those in Mesa Verde, where the pre- historie, cliff dwellings aré built. d been on the lookout for pd A > /GO ARANTEED 7 1009, bURE & i ” The Hsfi %{8 it Au“?!li Motor Qil assures you o supreme performance—more ;'Silllel of safe lubrication per To fully appreciate Autocrat Motor 0il quality, hewever; you should use it Straight— have your crank «ubé dzained, and refilled with €léan, new Autocrat. 4 Nothing is more important than thorough lubrication. DIFFERENT FROM ALL BTHERS Bewate of Substitutes. Bayerson Oil Works Columbia 5228 cliff dwellings, so we studied this place carefully with field glasses. We wers too directly below it, howéver, to set whether it contained evidence of Indlans. After breakfast we investi- zated. The eanyon at this point presented two levels. Red sandstone cliffs rose almost sheer from the water to a height of 1,200 feet, Beyond these was an inner plateau, from half a mile to a mile wide. Above this the outer walls rose another 1,600 feet. The hollow we had spied was about 100 feet below the rim of the inner cliffs, and seemed accessible from the top. The eanvon walis were so steep we could not seale them. So we rowed across the river to a point where we could climb up about a thousand feet. From there we studied the hollow with the fieldglasses. There were no evi- denees of oné-time Human habitation. Wild Horses. In seeking to find a way up the cliff we had goné a little distance down- stream, where the canyon widened into a small park., Here we cameé upon oné of the most beautiful sights I have evér seen—a band of over 100 wild hotses. Hvery one was a magnificent animal, with a sleek coat and head held high. They were of every color— from jet black to purést white—with many pintos in the herd. These horses were as wild as any animals I have ever seen. Glimpsing us at a good distance away, they be- tame as alert as deer; and when we continued to advance, they snorted shrilly and darted away down the can- yon, leaping up rocky places where it seemed only a mountain sheep could go. We were to sec many such bands of wild horses—some numbering fully 250 head—while traversing the Yampa River Canyon. On the way back to our camp we came upon another strange sight. Along a narrow strip of sandy bank, where there were no trees, we saw a thick clump of bushes about two feet high. All were without leaves and apparently dead, except that they bore, at the ends of the stems. long blossoms the size and shape of large cat-tails, of & marvelously rich, vivid shadé of blue. Flowers Prove Bugs. Upon approaching these flowers we were amazed to find they were not blossoms at all, but dense masses of blue bugs, clinging to each other like ants, and all in slow movement up and down the stalk. The bugs were a quarter of an ineh long and shaped, in miniature, exaetly like the armadillo of South America. Where our white sailor trousers touched them, a spot of vivid blue was left upon the cloth, which nothing would remove. Which skin fault mars your beauty? Now easy to cotteet flaws—bring out the real loveliness of your compléxion— with this healing toilet cream : HE skin in its healthy normal state is smooth and clear—soft, fine-textured and attraetive, dryness or oilifiess, But it's 8o easy to get rid of these common Just use Noxzema, the antiseptic toilet cream doctors and nurses recommend. ks soothing, healing medica- tion sinks deep down into the pores —heals up blemishés almost like magic—tefines d stimulates a dry or oily skin to ftesh, glowing, loveliness. -Snow-white and greaseless it serves both as skin faults now. coarse skin texturé—tones Yet all too ofteq its rea) beauty is hidden by tiny flaws sucll ae blemishes, large potes, roughness, chappingy Which? 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Phone Atlantic 3305 Listen to the Michelin Tiremen—W]Zand the Blue Network—every Thursday—10 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time “Marwelowsly soothing and healing,” say life- quards. was the only collection of these insects we saw anywhere in the canyon. ‘We had heard that the Yampa River was full of glant whitefish, some weighing more than 40 pounds. This morning we saw them jumping fre- quently. We had only a line and some hooks; not nearly strong enough to land such monsters. Mace and Dun- ham tried theit luck one evening, bait- ing the hooks with grasshoppers. They MRs. G. FRANELIN “Appetizing in appearance and taste”’ “For years I baked my own to make sure my bread was pure and wholesome. Recently I tried a loaf of Rice’s and now my husband prefers it to my product! 2 “Other bought breads ac- centuate the superiority of Rice’s—it is appetizing in ap- pearance and taste and has a close knit texture that keeps it fresh for several days. “‘And best of all it is pre- pared for the market in one of the most sanitary and best equipped bakeries in ghe world.” Mfts. G. Franklin Wisner, 7 Denwood Ave., Takoma Park did not get a nibble. to be no trout am this stream. After lunch we plucked up courage and headed into the rapids we had avoided the previous evening. were by faf the worst we had yet seen. Before entering them we all strapped on our life preservers. To our surprise and delight, we darted through this rough stretch with perfect ease, the boats behaving as if There are said | they were in a shoot-the-chute. The trip was immensely exhilarating. Dun- ham got seme good “movies"—first of Moritz_and myself going through, and then shots from the prow of his own boat as it plunged madly between the narrow, perpendicular walls, Although we had to get overboard and haul the boats over fields of boulders many times, we had fewer rocky stretches than the day before. oe They When we quit, at 5:30 o'clock, we estis mated we bad made ‘about 9 miles in the half day. That night we camped on another sandy flat, with a view down the river that_included two great rocky prom- montories, fully 3,000 feet-high, that ‘ntmons Capes Trisiy . Fusenity o s {a the Saguenay River 1 Canada. "~ °" (Copyright. 1928. by North A Daper Alflancey o can News. husban prefers it to my own WisNER Huseanps — we dreds of letters housewives — are 22 learn from hune from Washington a very important factor in the selection of bread. Most men prefer the home-made kind, and they simply will not be suited with any that does not have a good, old-fashioned ‘‘homey’’ taste. Rice’s — Washington housewives tell us — has that quality above all the other brands they have tried. That’s one of the big reasons they will have no other. You can get Rice’s Bread at your own grocer’s—fresh twice daily. “I want the best and that is Rice's” “My husband is very particular as to his food. I tried all kinds of bread on him; at last I said, ‘Please try this just once.” He did and liked it. Now he and I eat two loaves a day. He wants no other kind, as this is puse, sweet and always fresh. “When I go to the grocery and they want to give me some other kind of bread, I say, ‘No, I have tried all the others, but I want the best, and that is Rice’s.” MRs. RUTH MORSS RICES BREAD Mrs. Ruth Morse, 935=8th St., N. This week . . . on the Liberty Limited Boneless Chicken Pie with Mushrooms MAGINE a plump chicken cooked along with a pert, fragrant onion, a young carrot like a golden cornu- copia of delicate flavor, and celery, crisp and succulent. Think of fresh mushrooms, cooked with butter and a few stimulating drops of lemon juice. Crisp bacon. Firm white potatoes. Picture a savory sauce of butter and flour and fresh chicken broth, seas soned with lemon. And then imagine the meat of that young, juicy chicken imprisoned steaming hot along with that sauce and those flavorous mushrooms and bacon and potatoes, under a flaky golden crust that fairly melts in your mouth! That is Chicken Pie Pennsylvania. It is only one of the dishes that is making the Pennsylvania diners more popular every day. You can have it— or one of the many others—on the Liberty Limited this week and on other Pennsylvania trains. Boneless Chicken Pie Pennsylvania. It’s a dish for an epicure! Liberty Limited Less than 19 hours to Chicago. No extra fare Lv. Washington...3:10 P.M, Ar. Chicago. . e...9:00 A M. Additional trains leave Wash- ington for Chicago at 7:55; 10:50 A.M.; 2:15, 7:05, 7:20, 10:30 P.M. To Detroit, the fastest train is The Red Arrow — 163§ hours. Lv. Washington...4:05 P.M. Ar. Detroit. .8:45 A M. For information and reserva- tions telephone Main 9140. Sundays and holi tele- phone Main 73&0}”‘" C. E. McCullough,' General Passenger Agent, 613—14th Street, N. W., Washington, D. G. PENNSYLVA JIA RAILROAD Carries more passengers, hauls more freight than any other railroad in America w