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STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C; WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1928 10 THE EVEN Green; public health and sanitation, |R. Allen; laws and legisiation, Mr | co-operative action with Maryland or- room addition or portables to accom- | session of the association under the| executive committee. ganizations. modate the overnm':n at the Orr Build- | jurisdiction of its officers who were| The committee follows: Auditing. IPaul McKinney; public _utilities, C.|Gath; trees and:parking, Mrs. Bessis “This open market for bass means iny elected at the October meeting, and it | finance and rules, H. Elmore, M. Collins l Hosley; zoning, streets and lights, R.|Curtis; entertainment, Mr. Barr; policd Hudgins; house and celebrations, R.'and fire protection, Mr. McCall. 8. that the citizens of Maryland who love The association authorized its health | was marked by the appointment of the and W. G. Gath; schools, Mrs. Ralph to fish with rod and reel are being de- committee to study ways and means of prived of their sport by commercial net immunizing of the community’s chil- fishermen, whose thousands of nets dren against diphtheria. work day and nighi, exterminating the A temporary cinder surface will be greatest game fish the State possesses,” sought by the organization for the said Mr. Kemper. sidewalks at the triangle of Twenty- “Market sale of bass in Maryland,” third and Q streets and Naylor road he concluded, “means the State is los- Local Fishermen Plan Appeal|ing hundreds of tnousands of aohlars| Playground Is Unsafe, Randle e ey s . g annually wmc:h would pour into every v will be permanently corrected by con- ! to Maryland Legislators |Gy f"ifere were enoush bess tere | Highlands Group Claims. | “Sfda; men to reward the anglers’ efforts.” N Charging that commercial fishers are Wash Basins Too Few. 7 | to Smp Bass Sale. “bootlegging” bass from Virginia Man SO Nervous Gets Sore When Spoken To " 5] ig] Association is plan- «holesale” destruction of game. fish |Dess and transport the bass caught into | Highlands Citizens . e | Mary : ning to push forward e - recently = in Chesapeake and Potomac waters, Mamyland for sale Tauschod drive for school and genmerai| “It actually irritated me to have 5 | _Mr. Radcliffe, while citing figures to WDICIASE I o'he soutling S Qeml | how: Hhat iGomameroia] Mk sopera: | ClviciinbroVemeits, anyone talk to me, I was so nervous. g‘;&f&?fi;‘;{mfl: 'Srsmrstsa::dtr:«e:fixbg}‘:. tions are not entirely to blame for the| Meeting in Orr School, Monday | Vinol ended the trouble and I fecl e o this effect. were. Iaid Iasi | dwindling number of fish in the Chesa- | night, the members reviewed the state | wonderful now."—Wm. Fahy. The pew: Puckind) eight-in: . { the playing ground at the Randle | "1 . hight at a mass meeting in the offices [Peake and Potomac waters, warned that | 97, i For 30 years doctors have pre- e of the Board of Trade in The Star|Unless restrictive legislation is adopted | Highlands School *which has been | ;.4 iron, phosphates, cod liver line powerplant, compact, —_— streams trxb}:tary to the Potomac for | sale in Maryland, Mr. Kemper said this Spokesmen for the thousands of 10cal | means the conservation progress of| Citing again what they have repeat- @nglers will make a determined fight |Virginia, which forbids the netting of ;dlgo C{Qaracw‘;&ed as hlshl)"’ ul,ms‘gf_ tment by the Maryland |bass and their sale in that State, is|factory” conditions surrounding the e e P awe pronibiting | largely nullifiec. Net fishermen, he | Randle Highlands and Orr Schools in “purse netting” and other methods of |Said, Now operate under cover of dark- | Southeast Washington, the Randle de unsafe by the constant washing 3 i % A = Building of nearly 100 local anglers, |by Maryland the story of the shad and ;";a e eyt Al In the rear of | peptone, ets., known as Vinol. The powerful, vibrationless, is under auspices of the Pofomac Anglers' | [oIOR may Biove to be the same for| {80 e ™the “inadequate wash | very FIRST bottle brings _sound the development of fiveyears O eenicn, oatled as'a wro- | . Mr. Leach told of the development of | basins at the same school, as well as|sleep and BIG appetite. Nervous, of study and research. the overcrowding at the Orr School. | worn-out people are surprised how e eonditions wider |fish hatcheries by the Bureau of Fish- } et M eries. While the bureau is willing to| At the former school, the members|QUICK iron, phosphates, etc., give ¥ | do all possible to restock depleted waters | said, only two wash basins are avail- Gl 73 & mi‘fl;:éngpedadedrfisfidb’fu:rfig?f ;fif With Beh, it must. vecognise. existing | able for the 260 pupils in the bullding, I‘:fii‘gu;‘“ f.ae‘(‘,“l,]&”f')m\ 'g’f},r:zs"s e ernment officials who are promoting | conditions. It would be useless, he said, while at the latter the average enroll- . g o conservation of fish, the gathering au- |t0 stock the Potomac and Chesapeake | Ment in each classroom is 45 in place thorized appointment of a committee |Waters with millions of fish only to see | of the prescribed 42, | ° = & ith 1 _|them fall into the giant nets of the| In its program the assoclation is Senisations.in. vigorous loris,for pas- |commercial operators. secking _the reconditioning _of _ the sage at the next session of the Legis- — Randle Highlands School's playground, g : | the installation of seven ~ additional e Jature of laws to prohibit destructive HOUSEBREAKING BOND | wash basi netting practices and the sale of black bass, v b d in the District d e IS FIXED AT $6,000 Among those who urged such action were Swepson Earle, Maryland con- servation commissioner; Lewis Radcliffe, | Colored Man Suspected as Window Geputy commissioner, Bureau of Fisl eries; Glen C. Leach, chief of the div Al Sl ] sion of fish culture, Bureau of Fsh- Jury. eries; R. M. Estes, deputy commissioner . of internal revenue; Talbott Denmead,| Pleading guilty to two charges of Biological Survey; Edward C. Kemper, | housebreaking, Joseph Wade Craven, “father” of the black bass law of the er” . colored, of the 1200 block of Ninth District; Paul E. McKinney, president | c3lored of the 1200 block of Winth CONSTIPATION | ~which makes every Packard a Packard Eight . | robber who has been looting downtown way of over: ; . Y ’ . et :;g?,‘l‘,d};;“:,},u‘;";‘,;’,“;f stores in the last month, was yesterday .’Te},‘,%r:nlg amaywmtipafii’éi‘,f“gj},‘fi : HE new Packard eight-in-line cars were making V-type motors, to- With the new motor Packard puts gt D 0T, ihe Actin o The Sard 301 Ihere s/ how you can'PROVE it i o powerplant for its 126 and 133-inch day there are but four. eight-cylinder smoothness, power and State dinws Satlle. of Assistant Unjted States Attorney Jo- | _The next time your bowels need i wheelbase models reflects Packard’s i performance at the comm: and of thou- any assistance, don’t take the first R W 30 years of experience in building ~Whereas,previously, twenty-two Euro- sands who in the past did not feel they Citing the extensive rehabilitation |Seph C. Bruce. | . work being carried on by Maryland and | The man was captured by Policeman | laxative that comes to mind. Take : 1 and ‘servicing all types of motors. Eem manufacturers had been mar- coyld afford the supreme luxury of - | McGhee of the first precinct, who had (one the druggist can assure you i . N A e ’:F,;’;L"@,:gf‘:fi:?m;"hgse el b L ey B Thade With CASGARA. Justyas T ¢ B eting V-type motors, today not a (ransportation which a Packard Eight %en Cmadexby con\x%erfiial‘iize? neé' flsh}.‘ ';‘;u; :éflrcne:ncl:gsnssl'fnsg)ig;o?sh’el% S{x:)vrcr; effective as using force, and it's 3 Thg enght-u;’-hne. engm: orlngmstgd single ‘:inec(lis still using them in stock provides. g, Commiscicner Earle declared suc I W good for the system. Indeed, it 3 in Europe where it was developed by car production. o work ‘Was more or less useless unless |show Window of the Potomac Rubber | helps make good blood. For cas- those manufacturers who have since _ You may demonstrate the new Pack: g;::Ieic-?set;;xelgcu’:'rt‘:flesdmu" destructive | 20, and was captured after a chase of | C2I3 iS nothing but the bark of a unanimously abandoned the V-type Five years of constant study of the ard Standard Eight at any time. Come tree. The Indians chew this bark, for it. But Packard was the first prom- Straight eight, based solidly on Pack- in or phone and one will be placed Washington, he said, is vitally con- |several blocks. Beside the show win- | . ” 0 s cerned, since it sends at times as high | dow was later found a brick wrapped |and live to an old age without a - o for it. But Packard was the firstprom- 2 0.5 ceessfal development of this at your disposal. We promise you as 5,000 local anglers a week into Mary- |in a newspaper—the implement used | day’s sickness. . e 5= A by N Jand waters in search of what once was |in most of the other robberies and | What happens when you casca- 'YE‘ engine for its 136 and 143-inch a new experience in motoring luxury. ‘ Packard’s lead was promptly followed ~ wheelbase cars, had so firmly proved a great rt. usually left behind as a “souvenir” for | ri: 2 o §Ir. Earle tirged that & unified sppeal | police. lf-:xz:cg::enbvov:filgor gg%}gfiu&;‘;}lg any aid of any sort for weeks-on- by other American builders so that, the basic merits of the eight-in-line . be made to the Maryland Legislature by | The charges upon which Craven was o ;| end. i . i e ik . The Packard Standard Eight s-pass. 1 interested izations 1 o e - and whereas prior to 1923 thirty Ameri- principle that Packard decided to all interested organizations for protec- | arraigned before Judge Ralph Given perhaps smaller than the first-—| So, the only habit you get from K . . izhi Sedan costs but ‘2 at the f“""?- tion legislation, and announced his un- | yesterday were that he broke into the { B\ 0 U T o O f their|cascara is that of natural and can manufacturers of multi-cylinder completely standardize on eights. 435 oualified opposition t othe “wholesale | store of Phil Friedlander, 428 Ninth [and the bowels function of their . destruction” of food fish. He also came | street, stealing a $55 overcoat, and the | OWN accord for a still longer time, | normal regularity. How different out in favor of passage of a law pro- ' Walkover Shoe Co., 929 F street, taking ' Until you don’t feel the need of |from things one must usually re- hibiting entirely the sale of blass bass |a pair of shoes valued at $8.50. peat on the morrow! Cascara is lnMMagland. i s b A the ideal tlaxatlve: and the fa- ) r. Kemper urges e N of me- “ i ” il diate and positive action culminating in Boss in the Synagogue. i onbiIeas s 100y 1o e definite appeals lwd Gova fibergmc. B0§:I‘ON @), 'Boss in the syna- Asc AR ETS beg for these tasty tablets, and Ritchie of Maryland an e te | gogue,” wrote Bennie Levine, 65, when ( : many men and women wouldn’t Legislature. He and other speakers|he filed notice of his intention to wed. sm,ss;i Ee difficulty of getting pas- -rf; mee p’\llul%edc;:lerk he e;:pl:xi‘ned :’het They Work While S\eep' g)l:nk‘ hoe' ts‘ll(:xsgsemflsmli:a els‘? =% PACKARD WASHINGTON MOTOR CAR CO. and the erection of a four- WHAT A DocTOR KNOWS sage of such needed legislation, due|he was caretaker and every one called to “political” troubles, and urged united | him ‘“boss.” Beautiful teeth are dimmed || <o . ., Aawssso a’mzyer—lqdm COATINGS F you want white, sparkling teeth—clean teeth— perma- nent teeth—you must remove the two danger-laden % coatings which cover them. The soft outer coating can be removed by almost any denti- frice. But the inner coating is so tough, so adhesive, that ordinary dentifrices are powerless against it. It is the strong- hold of millions of tooth-destroying germs—the germs which produce the acids that make teeth decay. A There is only one dental cream that ~ them away! And leaves teeth white, \ removesboththese coatings,safely, sparkling, lustrous, clean! completely — without scratching, This fighting foam is a germ- RoAsT T without scraping the tooth-en- killer. It forces cleansing antisep- B "5\ strength you deliciousl_yyl.:;;fr z;:;, ei{’":;ts amel. Only one dental cream that tics into the remotest crevices of //" w ;5;"“:,:;2 in the mouth. Piquant red cran- kills the acid-producing germs teeth and gums. It gets in and = "\ one-balf inch. berry compote with delicate keen that are intrenched there—Koly- cleans the niches between the teeth. o ) : ?p;;:‘l';:: tan, Ricl;n chestnut dressin, ufi‘lh : nos! A dental cream entirely dif- It cleans @/l round your teeth— " '\ talcream 'uszg;z hint of onion and cei s ferent in formula, in action, from places a toothbrush never reaches! 0 [ ) weaemals ‘L oy R AlD Reimellng 03;“ B ~ any before known! And it bathes and stimulates the < £\ jZers of harvest time are combined in Kolynos foams when you brush ~ gums, keeps them firm, guards Sc this irresistible dish— Roast Young Turke your teeth with it. It becomes a them against pyorrhea. g Penasylownia style ok surging flood of searching, fight- Try this remarkable dental A s 2 Lib i ing f°3m'! And Khls. foam has a cream! Geta tube o.ff(olynos to- i N 1621 Governor Bradford of Plymouth appears I e:?’" lell(j'd solvmt.aman onthe du_:gy coatings day at your druggist 's—or mail | X Colony decreed a day of thanksgiving after on the menu, R ,,,‘,':7,,’,‘: Clogs o that dim the teeth. It literally melts the coupon and we will send you . 2 ;D-S ! the gathering of the first harvest. Through hundreds of Penn- i # them—breaks them up—washes a two-weeks’ tube free. : oy three centuries we have memorialized the sylvania cooks are assembled at special cook- . i American harvest festival under the symbol ing schools in New York, Columbus and “g,‘;,',;f,';{,‘;,:‘“,'m"c,“.’ leave of the turkey, greatest of our mative wild Chicago. Here they receive special coaching 7:35, 10:50 A M., 2‘;‘;“7’1{; game birds. in its preparation from instructors trained in ol {;'::’“ {"{I 4 But there are turkeys and turkeys. Buyers leading American and European hotels. is Thuel;‘:‘d‘ :\:{!;.:{tc:t;:;; 16 5/6 hours. ; Lv. Washington. . .3:55 P.M. Ar. Detroit. ... .8:45 A M. Y The American for St. Louis ;f-‘vla \:j\'uhjngton at _6:30 -M. and arrives in St. Louis at 5:10 P.M. i For information and reser- vations telephone Main 9140, Sundays and holidays tele- phone Main 7380. R giving week on Pennsylvania dining cars,but Agk for Roast Young Turkey, Pennsylvania - for Pennsylvania dining car service are satiss No wonder world travelers accustomed to fied with none but the best. These are no the best, write each month to praise the Penn- so0e o y Iemo v es common fowl you will eat during Thanks- sylvania dining car service! - —— =7\ the choicest birds picked by experts. style—a leader this week on the diners of - > * ] a oot | Moreover, shartly before this delicionsdish all Pennsylvania trains. both.....the dmgmess I ] 08 DPge w0 ™ \ C. E. McCullough, Gen. Pass. Agent, 613—14th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. — PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, Carries more passengers, hauls more freight than czny other railroad in America - ! A