Evening Star Newspaper, November 5, 1928, Page 7

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THE EVENING STAR, “'A\SHINGTOI\'.. D. C. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1928. SAYS KIDNEYS CLOG AND NEED FLUSHING | — | Drink Water Freely an Often, Also Take Salts if Back Hurts. When vour kidneys hurt and your lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and frritate the entire urinary tract Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a which helps to remove the body's urinous waste .and stimulate them to_their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filtet the blood. In 2¢ hours they strain from it 509 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of good water—you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts in a glass of water before brealfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for ars to help clean and stimulate ogged kidneys: also to neutralize the acids in the system so they are no longer a source of irritation, thus often relieving bladder weak- ness. Jad Salts is inexpensive: cannot injure; makes a delightful effer- vescent lithia-water drink which everyone should takeinow and then to help keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this; also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt vou will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache, —Advertisement. Stubborn Cough Quickly Ended by Famous Recipe | Here is the famous old recipe \\ which millions of housewives \\ have found to be the most depend- able means of breaking up a stub- born, lingering cough. It takes but || a moment to prepare and costs little, but it gives relief even for those dreaded “tiu” coughs. From any dru t, get 215 ounces of Pinex, pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain gran- ulated sugar syrup or strained honey. Thus you make a full pint of better remedy than you could buy ready-made for three times the cost. It never spoils and tastes so good that even children like it. Not only does this simple mixture koothe and heal the inflamed throat membranes with surprising ease, but also it is absorbed into the blood. and acts directly upon the bronchial tubes, thus aiding the whole' system in throwing off the cough. It loosens the germ.laden phlezm and e hest soreness in a way that is re astonishing. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creo- sote, in a refined, palatable form. Nothing known in medicine ix% more helpful in cases of distres- ®ing coughs, chest cold, and o bronchial troubles. 5? E/ Do not accept a substitute, for Pinex. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or & money refunded. for Coughs_Jji \e WHIPPET FOUR COACH 939 oadster (2-pass.) $485; Roadster (with rumble seat) $52! Caupe $533; Cabriolet Coupe (with col= lapsible top) $595; Sedan $610. Touring $45 WILLYS - OVERLAND, New and Used Car Display Rooms 1711 14th St. N.W. C. LEO McKENNEY Alexandria, Va. CENTRAL GARAGE Warrenton, Va. Take a tablespoonful ' PORTO RICO VOTING | PRESAGES TURMOIL Alianza and Coalition Strug- gle Brings Most Acute Crisis Since 1901. " SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, November 5. | —Porto Rico is in a political turmoil, the like of which has not been wit- | nessed since the establishment of Amer- | ican eivil government in 1901. Predic- | tions have been made that the Alianza, |the party in power, will lose heavily | = Remonstrates Against Making Be-| liefs Paramount Issue in Presi- | | and possibly suffer defeat in the ei tions tomorrow, and that Senator An- | tonic R. Barcelo will lose command. Certainly he is confronted with the strongest opposition he has ever faced. Coalitionists hope for | of the island’s and claim four as certain. Alia leaders, on the other hand, profess to | certain as ever of retaining con- not only of the Legislature but of a majority of the municipalitics. At { the elections the island chooses all of its elective officers. In Control 20 Years. For more than 20 years the faction has been in political contro | The Allanza proper was formed fous years ago by the merging of the Union: ist party and a majority of the Repub lican party. The present coalitionist group is made up of the old Socialist party, of which Senator Santiago Iglesia, Spanish language secretary of the Pan- American Federation of Labor, is head, | ¢ | and the minority “pure” wing of the old Republican party, in recent years | the Socialist party, has shown more growth than either of the other parties. There was _opposition within the Alianza itself, from those who felt that the two groups forming it should separate. Barcelo composed the dif- ferences, but solidified the opposition in the coalition. Senator Barcelo’s most | daring step was to force the nomina- tion in San_Juan of Robert H. Todd for mayor. Todd was holding office for the fourth time, elected in 1924 by the coalition. His administration had not been peaceful. | Claims of Coalition. | coalitionists now feel certain of carry- | ing the senatorial districts of San Juan, | Ponce, Mayaguez, Humacao, and pos- | sibly Arecibo district. This would leave | the Aliancistas only two districts. For the first time since Porto Ricans began to vote under the American regime the Spanish and Corsican plant- ers have come out openly in favor of the coalition. This year the coalition- ists will be equally represented with the | Aliancistas. Manuel V. Domenech, who | became Republican minority leader in | the House in 1905-06, now is coalition | candidate for mayor of San Juan | against Todd. Domenech served one | term as mayor of Ponce. ‘. MEXICAN TOWN LOOTED. 1Rebels Rout Garrison and Execute Two Captives. MEXICO CITY, November 5 (#).— A special dispatch from Guadalajara to | E Universal, today said that insurgents had looted the town of Zihuatlan, exe- | cuting one civilian and one policeman. | The band under Vicente Cuevas and | Manual Bouquet drove out the small | federal garrison. | At Cerro Gorda the chieftain Isidoro | Jasso was captured, court-caritaled and | executed, Eighteen insurgents and two | soldiers “were killed in two encounters at Tecultit and Las Trojes, the federal |troops routing the insurgents in both cases. STERRETT & Home of the G Champlain St. at Kalorama Rd. Culpeper, B. & . §ERVICE CoO. Laurel, Md, ictory in five | seven senatorial districts, | IN !Aviatrix, Hurt in Crash, Walks 18 Miles | | | By the Associated Press. | BRADFORD, Pa, November 5.—| | Having walked 18 miles through woods, | notwithstanding fractured _ribs, Miss Helen Crandall of Alfred, N. Y., who| owns and operates an airplane, was under the care of physicians today. | She made the hike to get aid for her | co-pilot, George Eyer of Hornell, N. Y., {who was injured when her plane | crashed in a forest 8 miles from here. It was near dark. Eyer was caught in the wreckage with a fractured skull. | Miss Crandail fought her way| through thick underbrush, which tore | Through Woods to Get Aid for Co-Pilot ,at her clothes and sapped her strength. She knew that finding the way back to the woods might be difficult, so as she | walked she tore pieces from her clothes | and tied them to tree branches | Finally she fcund a farmhouse. Back | through the rain and the forests she |led five men, lr way marked by the fluttering bits of cloth. Removing Eyer, | they made a rude litter. | It was Sunday afternoon when they | reached the farmhouse, whence an au-| tomobile took both flyers to a Bradford | hospital. ~ The plane was on the way | from Oil City, Pa., to Hornell, N. Y., when it crashed i DR. CADMAN SCORES | ' RELIGION IN ELECTION| dential Campaign. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 5.—Rev. S Parkes Cadman, president of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in Amer- ica, in his weekly radio sermon yester- day warned against making religion the paramount issue in the presidential elec- tion. I venture to enter a sincere remon- ance against making any man’s re- | ligion the first ground for his preference or rejection,” Dr. Cadman said “Be he Jew, Roman Catholic or Prot- . he should stand or fall on his cter as a man, his gifts for th ublic service, his devotion to that serv- ard his actual experience of its natare and its demands. ‘Once we go beyond these require- ments we enter the arena of bitter, u less strife which settles nothing, uj | mu~h and leaves behind it ruptures slow | | to heai and edingly detrimental_to public sanity, solidarity and welfare. We must remain one people with one law, one language, one mission and one | destiny. | | “Thank heaven, whichever presi-| | dential candidate is elected, a believ- | | ing man will be in the White House Although there has been an increase | of 50,000 cows a year in England, until | | this year, there are now 67,000 fewer | | than "12 months ago. | | ver before such value.} WHIPPET FOUR AND WHIPPET SIX HAVE MANY COSTLY CAR FEATURES The Whippet Four and the Whippet Six have raised the engi- neering standards of the entire light car field. The Whippet Four was the first light car to introduce the impor- tant safety factor of 4-wheel brakes. The Whippet Six—the world’s lowest priced Six—is the first light Six of low price to offer the smooth opera- tion resulting from a 7-bearing crankshaft. These are only two instances of Whip- pet’s alert and progressive engineering. All other features are entirely con- sistent with'what you would expect to find in cars which have blazed new trails and estab- lished their own high standards of motor- ing superiority. C., TOLEDO, FLEMING, Inec. old Seal Used Car Catlett, Va. ville, M OTHE! MONROE EALDWIN Mitehell . RS NT BR s Capitol Helghts, Md. OHIO Columbia 5050 CATLETT MOTOR CO. Cat yeling Preacher truck by Auto on 25,000-Mile Trip LUMBERTON, N. C., Novem- or 5 (/).—The projected 25,000~ mile missionary journey cn a bi- cycle planned by Rev. Alves Estes of Athens, Tenn., ended Saturday night when the preacher was struck by an automobile driven by W. S. Britt, local attorney. Estes yesterday was in a local hospital recovering from cuts and bruises and his bicycle was a wreck. Estes, a missionary Baptist minister. started from Dallas, Tex., September 20, handcuffed to his bicycle, with the keyholes of the shackles sealed with solder. His plan was to pedal 25,000 miles and preach 1,000 times in the hope of reaching 1,000,000 people. He says he had preached 67 times in 10 States since leaving Dallas. LLLCTION NIGUT o DINNER IDANCE ' W\ CONTINUOUS RETURNS ¢ RECEIVED OVER DIRECT @ WESTERN UNION WIRE- /”. 600 P M. SPECIAL ELECTION ALA DINNER. CARTE Page SERVICE *W P RESERVATIONS i SUGGESTED New and Used Car Display Rooms 1711 14th St. N.W. SOUTTER MOTOR CO. Quantico, Va. COLLEGE PARK AUTO PLACE ] Coligge Park, Md, Step right up, gentlemen, and see the greatest show in all Washington! It’s a show that every man can enjoy and appreciate—for among the 7 Wonders on exhibit here are suits to fit each and every man in town— whether he’s light enough to ride as a jockey or heavy enough to fill the doorway when he comes in! Seven wonderful fabrics to choose from—seven marvelous models—and two pairs of trousers with every suit! Our clothing buyer, Mr. Drob, was struck with wonder when he first saw the 7 Wonders—but he recovered from his wonder quick enough to snap up the opportunity to offer 2-Pants Suits of such outstanding value to the men of Washington at $20).50 $23.50 And just to pile wonder upon wonder, the 8th Wonder of Washington— WINSHIP CLOTHES fialurtng RLUES 335 Plain blues and pencil stripes—and STYLE in full meas- ure! The creation of a master designer who wins'a hatful of prizes every year! And Winship Clothes are guar- anteed with a real guarantee. we're offering “Use Our Budget—Many Others Are Doing It”’ THE MEN'S SHOP OF GOLDENBERG’S FIRST FLOOR—DIRECT ENTRANCE FROM K STREET

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