Evening Star Newspaper, March 27, 1929, Page 31

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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 27, 1929. BRIISH QUEEN'S SISTERN-LAW DIES THE RAG Edgar Daniel Torrington lopked at him sharply. “You know my name, then, eh? Pick vp that money, man., and don't be a fuol. What do you want if you don't want money?” ‘A shake of the ’'and,” whined the other, but, nevertheless, picked up the crumpled note, which he had been care- ful to toss no farther than was con- sistent with its safety. | | The reconciliation was made public co- wogene wih o alsmissal in Nassau | County of: a motion in Mrs. Acosta’s Wife of Plane Manufacturer Has|hume to have the fiyer punished for contempt of court. Contempt Motion Dismissed. | In the application for the dismissal - | Mrs. Acosta said the motion had been NEW YORK, March 27 (#)— Recon- | made without her approval and stated ciliation of Bert Acosta, member of the | thet marital ifferences had been Satis- i i i actorily settled. costa now is manu- e s wile 1 facturing airplanes in Trenton, N. J. ACOSTAS ARE REUNITED. Easter SPECIAL! (Week of March 25 to 30, Inclusive) Terrington showed him to the door and closed it upon him. Then he came GE ‘ man’s face. Nobody h“dhkn;‘lw:ll l;‘h'r'lj in ht, 1925, Chicago Daily News i e ha ad & S ot i 2 : but nothing else until one of the guards had addressed him as “Brown” in a facetious mo- ment, and that name had stuck. How did this man—? ‘Then his eyes fell upon the letter and he understood. What did he want? ‘What had been the object of the visit? He had never heard of spotters and their audacity, of the risks run by these Some time after the ocean flight the Acostas separated and their aff~irs have | been in the courts intermittently since. There are 1379 church edifices in Maine. Schneider’s Dowager Marchioness Cambridge Succumbs to Pneumonia. “You must have been young then, my friend,” said Brown, with a half-smile. “I'm older than I look. The fact is. Mr. Brown, I'm on my beam ends, and I thought you'd like to help an old friend who's fallen on bad timgs, it1 _(Continued From Yesterday's Star.). B the Associated Press. LONDON, March 27—The DOWager | ar fTorrington's suite at the Ritz- Marchioness of Cambridge, sister-in- | Carlton—he was Mr. Brown on the 1a% of the Queen, died at midnight from | register—was one of the most expensive scptic pneumonia | in a hotel which did not err on the — ide of cheapness. He saw very few The Dowager Marchioness itors and, for the mattet of that, h bridge was Margaret, who was barn in | was not often visible to the hotel au o - > ¢ ¢ - e floor waiter, wi {he Marquess of Cambridge, brother of |y s private dining room, very few of The marchioness, the widow of Prince | the Stafl knew him. 1t was generally Adolphus, eldest son of the Duke of {!inderstood that he did not wish to see Too as iy Margaret Evelyn | callers: and when a shabby little man \ ” daug 3 “Duke | came to the reception bureau and asked CHAPTER XLIL of Cam- born in ! Place Orders well in advance with your Grocer or Cross Delicatessen INSTEAD of exercise o Millions of busy men and women are keeping themselves in 9 ’ perfect condition nowadays because they've lcarned the secret “ 3 of the exerciser in the vest-pocket box for a dime. Cascarets give your bowels as much exercise as you get from an hour in the saddle. They give you lasting relief from headaches, biliousness, constipation, indigestion, etc. Each time you use them, your bowels become stronger. Oils, salts and ordinary laxatives produce only mechanical or chemical action, which actually weakens the bowels. Cascarets are made from Cascara Sagrada, which stimulates the peristaltic action and exercises the bowel muscles. Nothing else does this. That's why Cascarets are selling at the rate of 20 million boxes a year! CASCARETS STRENGTHEN THE BOWELS 3 “THEY WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP” 3 What would Easter be without Schneider’s Hot THE CHARLES SCHNEIDER BAKING Co. 413 Eye St. N.W. MAIN 9660 H. HINGED-TOP ANDY. 1! D- TIN EOXES e reporters of the underworld. There “I'll help you, all right, if your story | were others who found them most use- s true: but I confess I don't believe | . ou. I've an excellent memory for —— g facet, and I certainly never forget my (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) friends. Where did we meet?” .- - The visitor made a shot at random. gy Kimberley.” he sald. He knew g;atZCREw OF SUNKEN SHIP imberley was the center of e a- | | mond-mining industry. SAVED BY FREIGHTER Grosvenor, daughter of the first Duke T was in Kimberley,” said the other: e of Westminister, and was married when | that his name be sent up the clerk in | “but, then, everybody in the diamond 76 Men From Italian Destroyer she was 21. | charge favored him with an uncompli- | business has been to Kimberley at some When his father died. in 1900, they K mentary scrutiny. time or other. You will, of course, re- Rescued by Japanese Vessel, $ecame the Duke and Duchess of Te “You had better write.” he said. “Mr. | member my name in those days?” Some Found Dritting. but that title was relinquished in 1917, | Brown doesn't see anybody except by But the visitor was equal to the occa- 2 during the war, because it was a appointment.” sion. By the Associated Press. man title. The duke was granted an | .y ceo mew caid the little man| I remember it” he said firmly, “but| TOKIO, March 27.—Wireless dis- English_peerage, with the title of Mar- 0¥, “you ask him if he wom't, | Dothing would induce me o say it. If (patches to naval authorities today told quess of Cambridge. ‘Their union lasted | Q4601 toak intment with him, | % 8entleman wants to be called Mr.|of the rescue of the officers and crew vears, and they had four children. |And I've got an appointment with him, | Broyn_well, Mr. Brown's good enough {of the Italian destroyer Muggia by the The duchess accompanied the duke |00 el ical, |for me. The truth is"—here an in-|Japanese freighter Matsumoto Maru. to South Africa, when he went there for | The clerk was obviously skeptical. | spiration came to him—“I was doing a| The Muggia, with a reported 76 men s«'\'icn( in the Boer }\'arv :m h{nd htlllt‘ i ‘Iagrfl::mggs he said curtly. “What | senence at the same time as you.” aboard, sank Monday night in a storm taste for ceremonials, and preferred a | is ¥ “ v 3 I 150 miles northeast of Shanghai. The imple country life, Where she was| The man told him and the clerk dis- | gmgs‘llggrfig‘l’;ffid';‘m h“":‘gafil; l:";&; frelghter. of the Nippon Visen Iaicha greatly interested in’ animals, and was | appeared into the small room behind | TR0 MO And PUE Bs hand tn e | 1ine Treceived the S O S call and s successful breeder of terriers. Since | the counter, where the wishes of a | Pect{o [T, 900, remember, ¥ou, DU i pyrried to the scene of the disaster. her widowhood, she had resided in Lon- | guest could be discovered without the | ¢/c (#5¢h B &F eople I met on the| There they found some of the crew don, and has been a close companion of | caller’s overhearing an unflattering de- | wr 500 & O drifting in the rough sea and some e Kqueet | seription of himself. He came back in 8 standing on the rocks of a small island. e a fow seconds. (o hiere was a letter on the table which | The men were picked up by the ship, AMES CHILD HEALTH DAY | ,;Mr,Brown has no appointment with | 115, O 168" hod, sty Bahed MU | which started for Shanghal. : 1 e S e lure, but the note paper was too far| The Italian destroyer Muggia formerly : . ‘The little man thought rapidly. away from to read. If he could | was the Csepel of the Austrian navy President Issues Proclamation for| “I'm from—," he named a famous | find some excuse for going to the other |and was one of five ships of the Cortel- Observa £ May 1 diamond corporation in Kimberley. side of the table he would be abso- which were added to the Y e Again the clerk disappeared, and, Te- | lutely sure that his information was y in 1820 when & sixth sis- President Hoover has issued a proc- | turning, beckoned a page. rorrect and, moreover, be in possession | ter ship was taken over by the French. mation designating May 1 as Child | “Take this gentleman up to Mr.|of p fact that not even the clever ones!It was of 850 tons and was launched salth day. The document declared | Brown's suite” he said, “and wait in | kuew. T ‘x‘;l gné»d h;fl(&\ and protection 011' th:flcor;;ider to bring lr(‘xxm dlnr‘n a(zn;‘n." The old man pulled out his case and - hildhood is fundamentai to national| Mr. Brown was writing letters when | put a treasury not m able. TePR : elfare.” | the man was shown in and he trans- | "1 fiope you have' petter luck® he| Virginia Man Gets Captaincy. It invited “the people of the United | fixed the visitor through his gleaming | said. Henry P. Ames, Clarendon, Va.. has tates &nd all agencies and organiza- | glasses. “he little man took the note, rolled i been commissioned by the War Depart- ions pmrestpd in this most important |~ “you're from De Beers?” he said. |it into a ball and, before the astonished | ment a captain of Cavalry in the Re- iibject to amake every ressonable e “Well, not exactly De Beers, Mr. | eves of his benefactor, tossed it into the Corps of the Ar ort, to bring about a Nation-wide un-| Brown,” said the little man, with an | fireplace that lay directly behind him. | erstanding of the fundamental signifi- | ingratiating smile, “but the truth is I|Mr. Brown turned in amazement and 'Dj;'g;r'r‘f“"}‘ hy childhood, and of the | used to know you in South Africa.” in that second the signature was read. ealth and physical vigor of our boys F{;’:e'x‘l l:?:’;";ffl;‘,‘.‘“hceh:‘;ie 8 “I don't want your money.” said the pnd girls throughout every day of the| .p.¢ - little man. *“Do you think I'm only S efore you got into trouble, here for what I can get out of you? You Brown. can keep your money—Torrington{* Mr. HILL NAMED TO POST. | F e — = - $10 ADDITIONAL ALLOWANCE Until April 30th 5 ; ON YOUR GAS WATER HEATER * i Now Is the Time to Install an Automatic Storage or Continuous Flow Water Heater | ASLOW AS $80 INSTALLED GAS CONSUMERS ASSOCIATION 1004 10th Street N.W. Phone Main 3227 hignal Corps Officer Made Radio Commission Chief Engineer. Capt. Guy Hill of the Army Signal | ‘orps, who has been working as head ? the broadcasting engineering divi- fon of the Radio Commission, has een_appointed acting chief engineer of || he Radio Commission, effective April 1. apt. Hill succeeds Dr. J. H. Dellinger, fho has resigned to return to the Bu- eau of Standards, where he is chief of fhe radio division. g 5 Maj. Chapman Is Retired. Maj. William A. Chapman, Medical Porps, recently stationed at New Or- | eans, has been placed on the retired ist of the Army on account of dis- bility incident to the service. A native f Virginia, he was graduated from the | aryland University in 1887, and served n the Spanish War and in the World fvar. He was commissioned a major in ? Medical Corps, Regular Army, ‘“1 puly, 1920. i When laughter gay is heard along the Boulevards of Paris Est. 1878 || ENNA JETTICK Health Shoe ERY woman wants to stride with pride down Connecticut Avenue next Sunday afternoon. New shoes must be good looking, beautiful. But they must be comfortable, too. Why start out smiling—and come home limping? 4 BOULEVARD CAFE IN PARIS with skill. Absolutely pure ingredients—s the highest quality of Jamaica ginger—give it basic excellence. Then an expert and exact process of blending and balancing, combined with a secret process of carbonation, pro= duce that distinctive ginger ale which you know as “Canada Dry.” When you enjoy the thrill of drinking this better, finer, purer beverage, you'll serve it always. For its sparkle gives zest to a meal. 1t simply belongs with dinner. 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Cool as a mountain stream . . . pure as the air which blows across a snow-field .« . this is the quality of “Canada Dry.” L’Heure de laperitif—tea time in Paris— throngs of men and women on the terraces of the cafés . . . the orchestra within play- ing pleasant Austrian tunes . . . and often Americans hear a familiar word uttered in piquant French accents, “Zhanzhair Al"— ginger ale. With “Voici, M’sieur,” the waiter places a glass of “Canada Dry” before a Parisian. ENCE, Hahn’s “Enna Jet- tick” Shoes. Spell that word out — E-N-N-A J.E-T- TI-CK. Be energetic! Feel energetic! In these wonder- ful “Enna Jettick” Shoes! The wonderful, distinctive flavor of “Canada Dry” has a universal appreciation ‘And from the new Ambassador Hotel on the Boulevard Haussmann to the Café du Dome near the Luxembourg on the Left Bank, you'll find gay crowds discussing “le debt,” “le sport,” greeting their friends, and many of them drinking *Canada Dry.” ‘CANADA DR Beg. U. 8. Fat. The (hampagne of Ginger Ales in wide variety of pleasing medels. Tans, browns, blondes, blacks and patents. Good looking—good wearing —marvelously comfortable—and great value! s g Careful methods of making give you a purer, finer, mellower beverage No accident has won it the approving nod of connoisseurs, for “‘Canada Dry” is made Sizes 3 to 10 from the finest ingredients and manufactured AAAA to EEE e v-nine dif- ferent sizes and b4 widths constantly in stock. So, yon need no longer 7th & K 3212 14th “Women’s Shop”—1207 F St. say vou've “An Expensive Foot.”

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