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y | Try this TREAT for hair and scalp :::you have never hada shampoo that left your hair so beautifully lustrous and your scalp so remarkably soothed. The reason is that Conti Castile Soap Shampoo is made from melted baes of a soap that doctors have recommended for genera- tions as the best soap for the skin—Conti Castile Soap. This shampoo means pro- tection for the beauty of your hair. It contains noth- ing that may irritate the most delicate scalp or harm the loveliest hair. It rinses quickly and thoroughly. All the qualities of the famous Conti pure olive oil Castile are found in this shampoo. Get a bottle today and you will know how good a shampoo can be. CONT) CASTILE SUAP SHAMPAO At Leading Drug and Department Stores Columbia School of Drafting and Engineering Nineteenth Year Paul J. Leverone, President 13th & E Sts. ~Franklin 5626 Three to Six Month Courses - Day Classes—Evening Classes ENGINEERING AERONAUTICAL Mechanical al Steel Architectural gt (Maps) Patent Office Sheet ematics Technical Sublects 1 al Instruction—Enroll Any Time Classes Continued Throushout the Year New course now ready for any- connected with building . prepare drawings, . estimating, _ete. are yourself to become &’ superintendent. THENEW SAVAGE Washer and Dryer With the Exclusive ONE TUB—Needs only one. NO WRINGER—Needs none. Washes, Rinses, Blues, Dries all in the same tub. No clothes or water to lift. “Try It Next Washday” J.C. Harding & Co, Inc. Sales and Service 2822—Decatur—2821 1336 Connecticut Ave. N.W. Dupont Circle Bldg. PRopPER “BLUE EDGE" SAmerica’ Joremost Chiffon Staching LINDY, BOUND HERE, VISITS IN' GEORGIA {Expects to Leave Sapelo Is- land for Washington Tomorrow. By the Associated Press. SAPELO ISLAND, Ga., February 15.—Col. Charles A. Lindbergh land= ed here from Miami at 11:25 am. today to be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Coffin. It was announced that he would be |taken on a pheasant hunt this after- roon and probably would spend thel | night at the Coffin island estate. He will confer while here with Clement M. Keyes, president of the National Air Transport Corporation, and Mr. Coffin. Lindbergh said he expected to.take off some time tomorrow for Washington. He left Miami at 7:37 a.m., negotiat- ing the 400-mile flight in less than four hours. He was unaccompanied. It was announced that Mr. Keyes prob- ably would accompany him to Wash- ington. SPENDS IOURS IN SADDLE. Lindy’s Fiancee Enjoys Romantic Set- ting of Chapultepec Woods. MEXICO CITY, February 15 (#).— Hours' long horseback rides about the |shaded bridle paths of Bosque de {Chapultepec (Chapultepec woods) af- |fords Miss Anne Morrow plenty of | time these days for introspective pon- | dering about the life which will soon be_hers. It is a romantic setting—one which | charmed her husband-to-be, Col. | Charles A. Lindbergh, who flew over it often while in Mexico City. Three hundred feet above the bridle | paths is the Castle of Chapultepec, | traditional home of Mexico's rulers since Carlotta and Maximilian recon- structed it. The hill on which the castle is located is cloaked with flowers and was once an Aztec fortress. Small lakes by the side of the bridle- paths are dotted with large, perfectly white swans, which swim up to riders for possible bits of food. Tall Mexican cypress trees, as much as 200 feet high, some of them antsdating the Conquest, abound and make the park cool and peaceful. Lovers make it a trysting place, and from its higher spots the Valley of Mexico may be seen in all its beauty. Mexicans and Americans alike fre- quent it. . And there some one seeking solitude and her own thoughts may find it without difficulty. Miss Anne is not always alone in her riding, however. Y?terdly she chose as her com- panion Miss Suzanne Beck, daughter of Eman L. Beck, American business man here. They are close friends and may often be seen together on the bridlepaths. Yesfierdn{ Miss Anne played golf with her mother, also a poet. Ordinary social affairs bore her and she is not going to have any more of them than is necessary with life at the embassy. Bhe wishes for nothing more than quiet and the op- portunity to live her own life until after her marriage. There is continued indefiniteness as to plans of Col. Lindbergh to visit Miss Anne here some time before their wedding. #s to when that will take place, beyond the first information that it probably occur in May or June, u;gd either in Mexico City or Engle- RICHMOND-D. C. BUS SCHEDULE REJECTED Utilities Commission Would Avoid Conflict of R. F & P. Line With That of Another Company. i ‘The Public Utilitles Commission to- | day declined to allow the Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac Transporta- tion Co. to operate a bus line between ‘Washington and Richmond, Va., on the schedule proposed by the company. The commission found that the schedule proposed, which calls for four afternoon And little more is known with that of the Washington-Richmond bus line, now operated by R. L. May, operating as the Washington-Richmond Coach Co., Inc. In one case the sched- ules would each put a bus at the en- trance to the Willard Hotel at the same time, and the commission felt that this would develop a race between chines to the door first and get the business. The company was ordered to submit a new schedule for considera- tion. The commission granted the Wash- ington-Luray Bus Lines, Inc., permis- sion to buy three new busses to replace those at present in use on the service. !Institute to Study Human Relations Is Formed at Yale Man Will Be Center of] Research Work at University. By the Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Conn., February 15.— | With an endowment of $7,500,000, an | institute of human relations whereby man himself will be the center of study has been formed at Yale University. Designed primarily to correlate knowl- edge of the mind and body and of in- dividual and group conduct, the insti- tute will enable further study of the interrelations of the factors which in- fluence human actions. The fund is made available by gifts from the Rockefeller Foundation and the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Me- morial, which total about $4,500,000, and the income from $3,000,000 of other Rockefeller donations and the common- wealth fund established by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness. To enable the university to make a study of human behavior in all of its aspects, the departments of natural and soclal sciences will co-operate with the institute and will act as the point of contact between them and as a center for their graduate and research work. Sociologists, biologists, psychologists and economists will combine with their colleagues in applied fields. Close affiliation with the professional schools, as well as with the fundamental departments of study, is expected to en- courage students to think of their pro- fessions as having primarily to do with human beings, rather than with test tubes, statute books, codes or creeds. According to President James Row- land Angell, who made the announce- ment, the institute is designed to permit rogress which cannot well be made as ong as sharp lines divide the various branches of sclence in educational in- stitutions. It is based on the belief that the human body and the hyman mind are independent entitles, and that, in like manner, the individual and the social group can be understood only in rela- tion to each other. The institution is founded on sound principles and will hold no brief for theories except those which grow out of thorough sclentific investigation. trips each way daily, would confiict ||| drivers of the busses to get their ma- | [ff THE EVENING La Porte, Indiana, Is Held Center of Musical America By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, February 15.—The geo- graphical center of musical America, measured by attendance at concerts, is La Porte, Ind, A survey of the support given good music in various communities made re- cently by George Engles, concert man- ager, shows that 9 per cent of La Porte's population of 15158 attend concerts regularly, the highest percentage in th: country. Less than 4 per cent of the popula- tion of the United States are regular patrons of concerts, the survey shows. Newark, Ohio, stands second to La Porte, with a percentage of six. Other small communities where music is sup. HUR A= STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15 1929.° rted by box-office contributions are pP%rumoufiL ©Ohlo; Kenosha, Wis.,, and Aurora, Il ”M?t’mpohun centers like New York and Chicago pull the national average down,” Engles said. “Despite the unex- celled musical resources of these cities, less than 1 per cent of the population attend concerts. “Of the large cities, Boston is perhaps the most genuinely musical. It is one of the few cities which places musician- ship above box-office appeal.” Philadelphia, he said, supported its own orchestra, but paid little attention to outside musical events. L b i Frank R. Van Nest Dies. NEW YORK, February 15 (#).—Frank . Van Nest, former_ treasurer of the General Synod of the Reform Church of America, died yesterday at his home here. He had been ill for three years. He was 85 years old. Gasoline in the Netherlands is now olling at 18 cents a quart, Leaking Luggage Loses Liquor for Chrysler’s Valet @y the Assoclated Press. HONOLULU, February 15.—William Reid, who came to Hawali as valet to Walter P. Chrysler, American automo- bile magnate, was out 81 bottles of as- sorted liquors and $405 in cash today because the eighty-second bottle broke. Mr. and Mrs. Chrysler and their daughter Bernice and son, Walter P. jr., arrived here on the steamer Malolo from San Francisco last Wednesday for a short vacation en route to the Far East. ‘When the Chrysler luggage was being removed from the boat there were cer- tain bags that Reid refused to let por- ters handle. He took them himself. An odor of liquor attracted the attention of AFEW SMALL BABY GRANDS We have four good used grands that we will sell at these low prices during the next few days. If you are interested in a real grand piano at a price savings, now is your oppor- tunity. All of these are guaranteed by Jordan’s. $345 *415 *460 %495 TRADE IN YOUR OLD PIANO The small sum of $10 delivers The balance over many months CHICKERING and cham e. a broken gifly | fclous customs officers. The bags :«l'e“l?: found to contain whisky, gin, rum ‘The odor came from bottle. A fine of $5 a bottle was levied on the | liquor belonged or whem:r.wwn- ally met the expense or his nt. valet. Reid appeared at the customs office yesterday and paid $405 at that| Mr. Chrysler made no comment for publieation, rate. He did not say to whom the T ———————————" RO RO = THE FEBRUARY SALE OF LIFETIME FURNITURE A Dining Room Suite ofv Rare Charm Sale-priced Ten Berkey & Gay Pieces $395 HEN fugitive examples of Sheraton’s creations began to reach America in the Eighteenth Century Colonial craftsmen softened the rugged crudities of their earlier designs and developed a style which com- bined Colonial simplicity with Sheraton ele- gance. Details were more refined. Lines were more graceful. The “Tremont” suite by Berkey & Gay, illustrated above, is a delightful example of this Colonial-Sheraton sort-of-thing—delicate, gracious and delight- fully restrained. There are ten handsome pieces enhanced with crotch mahogany and with two armchairs. A remarkable value in the sale at $395 complete. Other Dining Room Suites From $175 and Up MAYER & CO. Seventh Street Between D and E st A AT . TEN DOLLARS DOWN 1 have been selling cars in Washington for nearly eight years and will these cars with my reputation for square dealing. N. D. HAWKINS P Nash back Jr. SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS Make the First Payment and Drjve Your Car Away No Finance Charges SPECIAL 10-DAY SALE OF USED CARS Starting Today, Friday, February 15th Late models — Road- sters, Coupes, Coaches, Sedans. Ready to go. Due to the tremendous demand for the NEW NASH 400 SERIES cars we have taken in more used cars during the past few months than ever before in our history. We know the tremendous volume of business we will have immediately and we must be prepared. Frankly we have not the floor space to hold them. We are going to take our loss NOW and be ready for the Spring rush. You pay for the car in fifty equal payments. Many cars have payments as low as $3 and $4 Per Week. Payments on higher priced cars will run $6, $8 or $10 per week. A great many people want an automobile, but the initial payment holds up the purchase. There need be no delay NOW. An unusual opportunity for responsible men and women. Every Used Car in Stock Will Be Offered During This Sale Every Car Marked in Plain Figures Drive any car purchased on this plan for five days—If not satisfactory, we will credit your full payment on any used or new car, provided car purchased has not been damaged or abused. Most Every Standard Make of Used Car Is Among Those Offered—Most of These Cars Have Been Overhauled and Put in First-class Condition. of Them Have New Tires, New Paint, Etc., Etc. Cars Are on Dis ESSEX, NASH, STUDEBAKER, HUDSON, OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY Absolutely No Finance Charges 1529 14th Many play at Qur Main Building and Include FORDS, DODGE, BUICK, CHEVROLET, CHRYSLER and REO. : SALE STARTS TODAY HAWKINS-NASH MOTOR CO. OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY Every Car on the St. NW. Street Is a Used Cars on Display in Our New Building Only