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MODERN HOUSEWIVES OUST OLD-FASHIONED CLEANING EQUIPMENT 0-Cedar Mops and Polish 1 bring new hours of freedom | and cleaner, brighter homes | Ever see an O-Cedar Mop in ac- tion? Go into any one of thousands of gleaming homes and you'll see why more women prefer fa- | mous mop than any other kind. It | fairly skims over the floor—right through the whole house—gather- ing up every speck of dust, cleaning and polishing in one easy operation. The improved triangular O-Cedar Polish Mop cleans corners quickly and thoroughly, gets under radia- | tors and. into other inaccessible spots. Slip-on pad instantly re- | moved and laundered when neces- sary. Easily renewed with fragrant | 0-Cedar Polish, which is as great | for hardwood or waxen floors as it | is for fine furniture and pianos. At hardware, grocery, drug, de- | nartment and other stores. Mops, | ’5¢, $1, $1.25. Polish, 4-oz. bottle, l | 5 10c; 12 oz, 60c. | . = S 3 e, l“ x To quickly end headache, take one or two Ants KamniaTablets —pai i «ions used annually. Sold by all druggists ir tins 25 cents. A-K oneach tablet a Anti-Kamn Quick Relief from Palns and Ache: Broken Out? Are you, too, one of those who have tried one thing after another for the skin, yet without results? ‘Then try this simple treatment— used by thousands with amazing success. Rub on a little Resina! Ointment at night; wash off with Resinol Soap in the morning. You will be surprised at the QUICK- NESS with which it acts. The Soap also to keep the complexion con- stantly clear and soft. A4t all druggists For free_sample of each, write Resinol, Dept. 30, Baltimore, Md. Resinol | hall last night. | Perry, T34 ARE ENROLLED INGITIZENS' GROUP Membership of Rhode Island Avenue Association In- creased to 1,562. Three hundred and thirty-four new members, enrolled in the annual drive conducted by the Rhode Island Avenue Citizens' Association during the past month, were officially admitted to the organization at its meeting in the Sherwood Presbyterian Sunday school M. C. Wilson, president of the association, who presided, an- nounced that the drive brought the total membership to 1,562, sustaining the Rhode Island avenue group's claim to_the largest enrollment in thz city. Eleven prizes, consisting of garden implements and foodstuffs, were awarded to the persons bringing in the most new members. First prize, a wheelbarrow, was won by Wallace E. who obtained 57 applicants. The other prize-winners were J. I. Hardy, F. J. Roy, J. B. Tinker, C. G. Bellinger, P. A. Metz, M. C. Wilson, J. F. Belfield, A. F. Higdon, V. R. Durst and George S. Dodge. The association approved three rec- ommendations submitted by Ira B. Nutter, chairman of the schools com- mittee, to be included in the proposed second five-year school building pro- gram. The recommendations were that the Woodridge Scl.ool be completed by the addition of an eight-room building to include an auditorium and a gym- nasium, the purchase of additional land for a playground for that school and the purchase of all vacant land ad- jacent to the Langdon School for the same purpose. Roosevelt Stadium Indorsed. The efforts being made by the Board of Trade and other bodies to have the Roosevelt Memorial take the form of a stadium located in Washington was in- dorsed. Harold J. Clay, business manager of the Neighborhood News, official publi- cation of the association, announced that Kenneth Reynolds, 1617 Monroe street northeast, has won first prize in the competition for the design of an official seal of the organization. Reynolds was awarded a $10 gold piece. Second honors went to M. B. Sawri of the Woodley Apartments. The 1iist. of new members follows: George 1. Bassett, E. L. Boteler, D. D. Brower, Mrs. Margaret S. Conway, Kath- erine Donahay, Mrs. G. B. Hall, Robert C. Hall, Lee Hammer, Dr. J. J. Kelly, P. Iibanati, Thomas A. McDonald, T. S. .; H. H. Loresberg, William E. F. Robinson, Miss Marian Effective T | A. Newman, George H. Paltridge, E. A. Perry, George J. Sanderson, Alexandria Whitman and W. A. Grannaway. Mrs. B. 8. Albaugh, H. V. Alexander, James Allan, Frederick R. Allen, Mrs. M. M. Allerton, Edward H. Alsop, C. H. Amonette, Herbert F. Andas, Marshail V. Andrews, F. J. Ardeeser, Robert H. Armstrong, Joseph Asero, Mrs. James S. Atkinson, O. C. Barber, Thomas J. Barnes, John C. Baxter, Capt. A. W. Beer, Frank A. Bennett, Joseph J. Berger, R. R. Birch, Albert Balimaa, G. W. Bodkin, Herbert Bose, Walter Bram, Paul Bredekamp, H. J. Briggs, Mrs. Mary M. Briggs, C. A. Broker, E. H. Brown, Emmett W. Brown, Joseph G. Brown, Mrs. Anna Brownfield, Mrs. S. H. Burgess, C. T. Burriss, J. Q. Buz- bee, C. L. Calhoun, J. M. Campbell. Antonio Caruso, Stephen Cerstvik, Hardee Chambliss, S. Christiansen, Harold R. Clark, Staley M. Clarke, Mrs. Agnes V. Clements, Charles C. Coakley. W. W. Cochran, K. D. Coffman, Mrs. K. D. Coffman, Frank S. Colman, George M. Coleman, Charles H. Cooke, Mrs. Lorene J. Coulter, S. M. Croft S. F. Crupper, Louis C. Cunninghar, J. L. Cutsail, Scott Dampier, Richard H. Davis, J. A. S. Dawson, G. Jerome Deinlein, Thomas J. Devlin, Mrs. W. C Dickert, C. S. Dilley, William J. Doolan, Ferdinand Dorr, Frank J. Dorr, John V. Dorr, E. J. Dowling, R. T. Drum- mond, Peter Dulac, E. F. Dwyer, Charles B. Eckloff, Charles H. Elms, J. 8. English, Miss Margaret Evans, C. A. Fabritz, Gordon A. Ferris, Edward E. Fisher, S. H. Fleming, Arthur H. Ford, Mrs. Arthur H. Ford, Albert Forrest, E. B. Frazier, E. A. Fuller, J. M. Galnes, J. A. Gamble, J. C. Gan- non, Mrs. F. G. Garman, R. C. Gar- nand, Edward Gertsch, W. Wylie Giffen, A. M. Glynn, Mrs. H. Good- sight, John E. Grady, T. V. Graff, Mrs. T. V. Graff, Fred M. Gregory, Helen Griebel, W. C. Griffin, Willis W. Grist, L. J. W. de Grossart, C. Chester Guy, George W. Hackley, William D. Haislip, John A. Hammer, P. A. Ham- mer, F. H. Hanger, James W. Hardey, Mrs. C. E. Hargett, W. C. Haring, Miss Cora B. Harwood, John H. Hausenfluck, Charies Hayden, H. E. Heckrothe, C. C. Hefner, Addison R. Hester, Mrs. M. Heyl, Quintin E. Heyne, Mrs. Mary E. Higdon, Mrs. F. Higdon, Joseph W. His- cox, James Hodge, C. K. Hodgson, Miss Josephine Hoffman, R. W. Hollidge, C. L. Holthaus, W. C. Hopkins, William A. Horn, Albert R. Houch, Melvil L. Hunt- er, Andrew L. Huss, Ed H. Hutchins, A. G. Hutson, Willlam C. Isel, Willlam E. Isemann, Lawrence H. James, W. S. Jamieson, O. I Jarrett, C. E. Jones, Grace H. Jones, T. E. Jones, J. J. Kava- nagh, John J. Keane, John R. Kelly, John M. Kemper, Charles W. Kieny, Mrs. Edith A, King, Mrs. Elizabeth H. Krams, Fred H. Kuffner, V. A. Laciny, H. D. Lambert, Mrs. Lydia S. Langdon, Cleota Langdon, E, H. Leavell, Marion E. Leek, Arthur Lewey, C. A. Lewis, J. C. Lindsay, Mrs. T. J. Llewellyn, Mrs. Thomas Loeffler, W. W. Lord, J. G. Lovelace, Jesse N. Lutton, Mrs. M. C. Luyster, J. R. Luber, John H. Lynn, George T. McCauley, James T. McCary, Joan McGlade, J. J. McDermott, E. L. McNale, Joseph E. McGeary, Willis B. Magruder, ir.. Walter B. Mallorey, NOVEMBER 1st MOTOR COACH SERVICE Between WASHINGTON and PITTSBURGH (Via the Scenic National Highway) Fare, Leave Washington 9:30 AM. Teave Pittsburgh 9:00 A.M. $6.40 Arrive Pittsburgh 9:30 P.M. Arrive Washington 9:00 P.M. (At Plttsb;n'gh the terminal facilities of the Yellow-Way bus lines, at No. 113 Ninth Street, will be utilized, with con- nections to and from that System for all points West.) The Blue Ridge Transportation Company The Raleigh Hotel, 12th St. & Pennsylvania Ave. Washington, D. C. Phone Main 3810 OVERCOATS TOPCOATS-SUITS TUXEDOS including silk vest CARTER’S do the price at the beginning of the season to take care of ‘‘mark- downs’ at the Always, one price not ‘‘mark-up”’ season’s end! $22.50! ~Made EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, Henry E. Matheny, Mike Mantonis, George H. Maisch, Harry A. March, Charles F. Markey, R. T. Markham, Siduey Mattingly, T. Freeman Matting- ley, E. W. May, H. C. Maynor, W. J. Meyer, Emmet Midkiff, Miss Jessie 1. Miller, Mrs. John O. Miller, R, L. Miller, R. Carl Mitch- ell, W. O. Mitchell, S. A. Mont- gomery, C. M. Moran, John S. Morton. Leo A. Motley, H. H. Moye, Lee Mur- rill, Alfred V. Myers, Mrs. Grace J. Myers, Elmer Myers, Vidas Nakarada, Charles Melvin Neff, E. M. Nelson, James O. Nelson. P. I. Neuhaus, John Norris, O. B. Norris, Harmon Norton, Harvey L. Nye, Edward O'Brien, jr.; John E, O'Brien, James L. Owen, M. L. Palmer, E, J. Patch, L. C. Patterson, Dewitt Payne, Thomas H. Peach, Lawrence B. Pendleton, Andrew M. Pennington, Mrs. Wallace E. Perry, Mrs. A. L. Peterson, Charles K. Phelps, John T. Pinkham, W. S. Flager, William F. Plummer, T. E. Pollard, Mrs. Clara B. Potter, Alfred G. Powell, Harrison C. Pratt, F. L. Pumphrey, C. A. Quencer, Everett J. Quinn, Arthur Reese, Ray- mond J. Reilly, John J. Renals, V. C Richardson, V. May Riley, Oiin W. Roakes, Jessie E. Robertson, John M. Robey, Mrs. Walter W. Robins, F. M. Robinson, P. M. Rousseau, Keith W. Rowe, A. B. Ruppert, Clarence J. Rus- sell, Sam R. Russell, P. J. Ryan, Albert W. Sager, R. R. Salter, Charles W. Santmyers, R. L. Sartain, F. C. Schlauch, Theodore Sartain, Mr. Scroggins, Shan- non & Luchs Construction Co., Inc.; Norman B. Sheppard. John E. Siemon, Miss A. M. Sissol Horace R. Smallwood, jr.; Charles G. Smith, Mrs. Emil Smith, Hildreth B. Smith, W. P. Smith, Mrs. Ivy I. Snyder, Horace Spence, Reuben Stafford, Mrs. Guy W. Stanton, Philip Stearn, W. W. Stevens, L. W. Stoltz, John H. Studds, William P. Sutton, George Targett, Fred Taylor, George H. Thomas, David A. Thompson, L. F. Thompson, F. E. Tucker, W. M. Tinsley, D. C. Tippett, Charles J. Tobin, Walter J. Tobin, Grant M. Tomlin, Joseph C. Toomey, Mark E. Towers, Richard F. Trimmer, Mrs. R. F. Trussell, A. W. Tucker, H. C. Vaden, Mrs. M. O. Varney, C. E. Vaughan, O. G. Wagner, Mrs. K. H. Walker, Harry N. ‘Ware, Henry P. Ward, Richard E. War- {ner, Mrs. Carroll A. Warthen, R. W. Watts, C. A. Weckerly. John G. Weigel, F. C. White, W. H. Wilcox, A. I. Wil- liams, Mrs. R. I. Williams, Joseph A. Willkie, R. V. Wolfe, Earle C. Wood, Earnest Wyatt, J. C. Wyvill, Protection for Postmen. MOSCOW (#).—Residents of Moscow wno own dogs can no longer expect to have letters delivered at their doors unless they keep their pets leashed. Some time ago the post office supplied all letter carriers with whips to protect themselves, but this proved insufficient as a safeguard. of the home. CLASS NO. 1—Small 6-room Brick in a row. .300 to 400 Sq. Ft. of Radiation .200 to 250 Sgq. Ft. of Radiation Hot-water Heat Steam Heat. ... Installed Complete— 3475 Cost of operation (gas consumption) for the 7 months of the heating season....$150 to $200 CLASS NO. 2—Large 6-room Brick in a row, or Small Bungalow ...400 to 450 Sq. Ft. of Radiation .1...250 to 280 Sq. Ft. of Radiation Installed Complete— $500 Hot-water Heat Steam Heat.... C. Nevitt, William Newman, Charles L. | n, Charles H. Sithens, | 3Ae ~O. D.. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 19 Historical Legacy. Democrats to Speak. WASHINGTON, Pa. P).—Letters| FAIRFAX, Va. November 1—Repre- purported to have been written by |Sentative R. Walton Moore and E. H. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson | Allen, Democratic campaign manager of the county, will speak in the school- and Benedict Arnold are among docu- | houso at Forestville. = At Oakton tomor- ments and papers bequeathed by Mrs. | row Wilbur C. Hall of Leesburg and Carrie Morgan Reitsch, who died here | John W. Rust of Fairfax, vice president {of the county Democratic committes, | recently, to her son, William Duane |y speak. At Herndon tomorrow night Morgan of New York. ' 'J. R. Saunders of Richmond, attorney To break a cold harmlessly and in a hurry try a Bayer Aspirin tablet. And for headache. The action of Aspirin is very efficient, too, in cases of neuralgia, neuritis, even rheumatism and lumbago ! And there’s no after effect; doctors give Aspirin to children— often infants. Whenever there’s pain, think of Aspirin. The genuine Bayer Aspirin has Bayer on the box and on every tablet. - All druggists, with proven directions, Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; ® it does NOT affect the heart have done mend. Noxzema THE Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salleylicacid “Let the pup be the furnace man” This Winter Heat YOUR Home with immediate installations general of Virginia, will address the Herridon Smith-Robinson Club. Andrew Chapel, on the same night State Senator Frank Ball of Cl IT'S afact. that most women would have a lovely complexion if it were not for certain common skin faults that in sidiously steal away its real beauty. Blemishes or large pores sometimes. Or the skin may be roughened or chapped. It may betoo dry, too oily. But all chese faults can be easily corrected now. healing toilet cream nurses recom- 59" from the eighth congressional ndo} k. Thofiéafidscdfil& have a lovely skin . . and don’t know it! any other toilet cream you have ever used. It’s medicated—healing. Use it as a greascless, non-drying powder base—massage it intu your skin at night, See how quickly its gentle medication makes blemishes vanish—coarse pores shrinks Watch your skin grow softer smoother, younger—lovelier in eve way. You'll see an amazing dif- ference—in 10 days. Don’t defay, Try Noxzema now. All drug and department stores carry it. Geta small jar today. oxze/ma HEALING TOILET CREAM Beauty experts all agree 4,000,000 women it—with Noxzema, the isentirelydifferentfrom GAS! The Finest Heating Service Money Can Buy ‘And we offer a special inducement for if orders are received before Saturday, Nov. 17, 1928 BRYAN forHotWater,Steam With Bryant GAS Heating there are no temperature fluctuations. Always the exact degree of warmth you wish. 71 de- grees all day and evening—and 538 at night for sleeping, or any other combina- tions you desire. The changes are made automatically, just when and as you de- sire, with positive regularity, and you need not even glance at your heating plant for days and weeks at a time! We desire that as many home owners as possible have the full enjoyment of Cost of operation (gas consumption) for the 7 months of the heating season....5200 to $225 CLASS NO. 3—Large Bungalow or Small 8-room Brick in a row 450 to 500 Sq. Ft. of Radiation ...280 to 300 Sq. Ft. of Radiation Hot-water Heat. Steam Heat. ... Installed Complete— $575 Cost of operation (gas consumption) for the 7 Bryant GAS Heating in their homes the coming winter, therefore this special inducement. Here's your opportunity to have in- stalled in your home and enjoy the finest heating service money can buy. We will be glad to give you an estimate of the probable cost of installation, and operat- EATING Vapor and Warm Air : OTHING money can buy will mean so much to you and your family now; and for years to come, as the wonderful comfort and convenience of a Bryant Automatic GAS Heating Plant. The reliability of the warm comfort for every single winter’s day is - an almost priceless asset. And it brings a new cleanliness that is apparent throughout the house, for GAS heating is clean. There are no ashes, soot or oily vapors; no fuel storage of any sort. Your basement is transformed—it becomes a useful, livable part CLASS Brick. Hot-water Heat. Steam Heat NO. 4—Detached House, - 6-room 500 to 650 Sq. Ft. of Radi 300 to 400 Sq. Ft. of Radiatiew Installed Complete— 9650 Cost of operation (gas consumption) for the 7 months of the heating season....$250 to CLASS NO. 5—Detached House, 8-room Brick. Hot-weter Heat. Steam Heat 650 to 800 Sq. Ft. of Radiaties ..400 to 500 Sq. Ft. of Radiation Installed Complete— $700 Cost of operation (gas consumption) for the 7 months of the heating season....$325 to $400 CLASS NO. 6—Detached House, 10-room Brick. Hot-water Hea Steam Heat. .. 800 1o 1,000 Sq, Ft. ..500 10 600 Sq. Ft. Installed Complete— $750 Cost of operation (gas consumption) for the 7 nd John 8. Barbour of Fairfax, seme« At | ber of the State Democratic committee district, ing (gas consumption) for.YOUR PAR- TICULAR HOME. possible by volume sales and tremendous production in our own factory! New Styles, Fabrics, Weaves, Always FIRST at CARTER'S# NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS S Clothes 1341 F Street N.W. STORES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES months of the heating season....$225 to $250 months of the heating season....$400 to $500 We have installed Bryant GAS Heating Plants in hundreds of homes in Washington,.and will be glad to give you the names as reference. Terms can be arranged to suit your convenience— come in, phone or write for full particulars. Be sure to see our exhibit at the IDEAL HOMES EXPOSITION, Washington In order that you can clearly visualize the complete cost, we have made six classifications or divisions into which we have grouped homes of various sizes and exposures, based upon a given number of square feet of radiation. The prices DO NOT INCLUDE RADIATION. Auditorium, October 29th to November 3rd. WASHINGTON GAS LIGHT COMPANY HOUSE HEATING DIVISION MAIN 8280 GAS APPLIANCE HEADQUARTERS NEW BUSINESS DEPARTMENT 419 TENTH ST. N.W. GEORGETOWN SALESROOMS Wisconsin & Dumbarton Aves. Bryant GAS Heating Plants Can Also Be Purchased From Any Reliable Heating Contractor—Terms Av,