Evening Star Newspaper, April 29, 1929, Page 20

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1929. 20 THE EVENING : 2 . gutomobile, handeufted, gagged nd | D Book: Lost by G M . [y o |LUDSPOLICENAN #0035 ol CEATEN ATTORNEY e 5 "R e i by o, .. R n o §5" Yo ARG sion, members of the House can look forward to hot weather with an equa- nimity only equaled by the trepidation on the part of Senators. Designers of the plant say the House chamber and galleries, if necessary, can be cooled to 50 degrees on the hottest Summer day, with virtually all humidity re- moved from the atmosphere. On the Afr currents circulating from the House chamber through the new re- conditioning plant at the end of three months had deposited 11,000 cubic inches of dust and dirt in the fiter, imuch of which might otherwise have found lodgement in the lungs of Rep- resentatives. \;n}?bed him of 32‘000':’n'1.1 wh(%ged hllm. hen, w wn im- meax’la;‘;rn 325,,“3’?“9 ::':;. Bickers| A prayer book, lost by a German,Johannes Meyer, of Dortmund, Ger- | said he made his way to a nearby high- | soldier during the battle of the Marne, | many, which reads as follows: way, where a motorist picked him up |, .. 19 vears ago, and picked up on the | - “My dear captain: hospital here. | 3 a"go}’n'&"gg*if.fi"’ée:férfil ;m‘:rs ago from |fleld by an American officer, was re- ‘Through the kindness of the mili- i , ' Memphis, Tenn., Bickers represented |stored recently to its owner in Dort- | tary attache of your Government and Reform Lawyer to Quit St {local church interests in a fight on dog |y ng, Germany. that of the statistical division of the . | racing tracks, which had been operated | Capt. Walter J. Reed, on duty in the | German war minist: have t back Petershurg After Lashing | during the winter season. office. ot the chief of ihe AlE OO | ary. DERyee: BoOk fTORiyo Plsase so- Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th Street INLIQUOR SLAYING Clinton N. Howard Urges Carnegie Medal fo Rum Spe tl Time Onl FUR COATS Cleaned | This was revealed by the first clean- [other hand, a similar installation in i ST e found the book not long ago while rum- | cept my most cordial thanks. | i ing, which removed a residue in excess |the Senate was interrupted by the by Five Men. .| maging through his trunk locker of war | * “I lost the book over 10 years ago Glazed | Runner Shooting. oF 800 pounds. from. the oll-coated | extra session, and cannot be completed ¥ Stranded Steamer Is Refloated. | 72T on the Mamne. I felt quite bad over and | pipes and water-jets that contact the |until the Fall. MONTREAL, Quehrc.; April 29 () On seeing the book, he recalled find- | the loss, particularly just after it oc- Stored air as it enters return conduits, ac- | Experts figure that each member of | po 4,0 associated Press. The Canadian Pacific steamship Duch- | ing it on the battlefield at Epieds, near | curred. It had been a Christmas gift | ess of Richmond, which stranded just Beauvardes, France, ST. PETERSBURG, Fla, April 20.— | after leaving St. John for Liverpool | battle of the Marne. James F. Bickers, an attorney, who | vesterday, was refloated, undamaged, | name inscribed on the front page, and alinged himself against dog racing and | Yesterday. desirous of returning it to him, the after the second | from my sister. Now I have it again Noting the owner’s | and am very glad of it. I should be P very glad if I could return this kind- ness. If you would be willing, I should | the House receives 30 cubic feet of cool- | ed, dehumidified air per minute, with| a similar allotment to every visitor in the galleries. The system is so arrang- | If bootleggers continue to “get away | | with_their smoke screen devices,” Clin- | Torbert. {ton N. Howard of the National United | “rThe plant not only removes impalpable | Committee for Law Enforcement, yes- | qirt particles from the air, but re- T el arice nchudes Sy gording to House Eagineer Charles . lazing and guaranteed cold storage 2 December 31. Special Prices in Remodeling Expert Workmanship Work_called for and delivered NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS Benfamin Sherman, Prop. 618 12th Street Franklin 6355 LAFLIN Optician—Optometrist 922 14th St. NW. | terday predicted at two different pro- | hibition mass meetings “poison gas | will follow.” Speaking at the Third Baptist Church and at a mass meeting in the Ad-| | ventist-Christian Churches in Takoma | Park, Howard lauded the policeman | who recently shot and killed a bootleg- | ger using a smoke screen, although he |“lamented the death o {the | | runner.” | Cites “Senatorial Satellites.” “The wets and their senatorial satel- lites may shed their tears over the victim of his own folly, and wax in- dignant over the ‘outrage’ .committed | rum | rise to commend the courage and pa- | triotism of the officer who risked his life in the performance of his sworn | duty. He should be given the Carnegie | medal for bravery and voted the thanks of Congress for enforcing the laws Con- gress has passed in defense of the Con- stitution. The House did well to give the officer a cheer. Peril to Policemen Stressed. | “The night following, a bootlegger with his cargo of rum and smoke screen, opened fire on a policeman with- in the shadow of the *Capitol, and missed his mark. It goes to show the peril of the policeman under orders to apprehend night rum runners who re- sort to war measures and murderous, weapons to violate the law. Let them get away with their smoke screen de- vices and poison gas will follow. Let the word go out that Washington offi- cers are instructed not to shoot at high- speed fleeing rum runners and the Capi- tal will become the paradise of the bootleggers, as Chicago is the paradisc of the gangsters.” ORLEANS ANfiIVEREARY stores it to the desired degres of heat {and humidity, and kills about 90 per cent of the germs. With Summer temperatures predicted before adjournment of the present ses- ed, however, that none of the air from the galleries can reach the floor. Willis H. Carrier, thermal engineer of Newark, N, J., designed both the House and Senate systems. |WHITE NAMED HEAD OF WIRELESS GROUP American Section of International Committee Selects Maine Representative Wallace H, White, jr., of Maine, chairman of the House com- mittee on merchant marine and fisher- fes, has been named chairman of a new American section of the interna- tional committee on wireless telegraphy organized here. The international headquarters of the organization are in White represented the United at the international meeting of the organization at Geneva in May, 1927. The 1928 meeting was held last October in Rome. The next meeting of the international committee will be held at Liege, Belgium, in 1930. The objects of the organization are the elaboration of international statutes relating to radio-electricity, the study of judicial, administrative and economic questions, the concentra- tion of documents on these subjects and the establishment of a permanent organ of conciliation and arbitration. The active campaign for members of the new organization is being initiated and those interested may obtain addi- tional information from William R. Stauning Completes New Cabinet. COPENHAGEN, Denmark, April 29 (#) —Theodore Stauning has formed a cabinet with the inclusion of three radi- cals to support his labor party strength. The program of the new government will be to seek military reduction and 2bolishment of the upper chamber or half of the remainder chosen by the people every fourth year. lawlessness in St. Petersburg, today was recovering from a beating given him yesterday by five men who kidnaped him from his home. Bickers said he would heed their warnings to leave St. Petersburg not later than tonight. Some mystery surrounded the affair. Bickers, just returned to his home from church services, when he was accosted by the men, who apparently had await- ed his return near his house. At the point of pistols, he was forced into an "McDEVITT against & rum runner caught in the Landsting of Parliment. This UDDET | 1519 £ gy 2pnq FI, Mai | 3 ; . 4 1 oor Main 3211 | act of committing two felonies, but I Man as Chairman. ;{_‘:“;{’::wgfli;’sni'g"?h":s&‘;‘ (ppocd 10 DRAPERIES SLIP COVERS WINDOW SHADES (n|c———|nj]c———|o|———[q] Like a Bulwark Open Until 5 P.M. April 30, May 1 and Zm Again A little n Every Payday of employment or other emergency, becomes a bulwark against further misfortune. Are you building for the inevitable “rainy day?” o] = The Columbia st Misfortune 1oney, laid by in bank v, in time of illness, loss Columbia__National Bank welcomes initial savings de- posits of One Dollar or more which sailed for Liverpool yesterday. The Duchess of Richmond will be dry-| Capf docked for inspection. . R RS AR RIRA you. But for the present I Start the Morning Right In a Bathroom Gloriously Colored Of course your men-folks are going to warble in lustier tones than ever—that's in- evitable in a modern bath- ‘| | Vallance, assistant to the solicitor of 7 ’ . TO BE OBSERVED IN D. C. ! the Department of State. A 37 ‘S,:‘vdi °:‘ ;oom tha:hsb do:e in colclur. e agets 5 ng! rom toothbrush to towels e | French Society to Hold Service at| Swedish Flyer Buys Seaplane, National Bank 0 Accounts | S 5 | ‘ from toilet tissue to shower Statue of Jeanne TIPEgSAX&hGPTKE'c:g{“ :finfie‘; Safe De fios;‘t Biies i b B i % e Swedish avial 5 Made by aArc. foday purchased “a single motored 911 F Street $3.50 4or 3. | curtams] Everything 1s so Lucky Tiger Concurrent with a program taking | feme with whieh he intends to attempt | blithe and gay, one’s spirits Hair Tonic. place in France Saturday, on the occa- | sion of the fiftieth anniversary of the deliverance of Orleans, a number of French women, members of Le Lyceum, in New York, will come to Washington ‘fio;r exercises at the statue of Jeanne 'Arc. The pilgrimage, which will be headed by Mme. Carlo Polifeme, president and founder of Le Lyceum, is sponsored by M. Maxime Mongendre, consul general from France; M. Paul Claudel, Ambas- sador from France, and Mme. Claudel. ‘The monument of Jeanne d’Arc was erected by Le Lyceum and unveiled on Can You Face of America. MUSIC A COUNTRY CLUB PROGRAM. ‘The Congressional Country Club was | the setting for one of the mast enjoy- | able musical events of the season yes- terday afternoon when “Katherine Havill, mezzo-soprano, and Mathilda C. McKinney, planist, gave a joint pro- gram. Elizabeth Gardner Coombs, one of Washington's capable accompanists, played for Mrs. Havill. The singer has a mezzo voice of much sweetness, with the mellow tone qual-| ity. She sings with artistry and her | diction in both Italian and German is| remarkably good. She gave particularly | interesting reading of Mozart's “Alle- a nonstop flight from Stockholm to New York. A Lieut. Floyd and a radio operator, J. Jupglund, will fiy with him, Shanghai, China, has a real estate boom. The Moths Are Guard Forming for Attack Capital and Surplus $650,000.00 ANSBURGH & BRO Seamless Bléached Shee ts, 89c For the 63x90-Inch Size Finished With Wide Hems Put in your summer supply of sheets now! white evenly w will launder ai satisfaction. These, of heavy snow- oven seamless sheeting, nd wear with utmost Hemmed at both ends. Shower Curtain, $1.95 Chintz Fashions January 6, 1922, in the presence of AVaV o Al OB (@) @ | Presicent arding, by Ms. Harding i ANAER RO o 1ime Busseran, wite of guies Jus- 7th, 8th and E Sts.—FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—Franklin 7400 ; Modern Shades France. It is dedicated to the women | | If you want a bathroom a bit different, use glazed chintz for shades. It sheds water and stays fresh and clean. Lovely floral designs, ard 85¢c yard ..... Plain chintz pleating for edges, yard.......... Studio Sets $1.75 Voile studio sets are become as light as the soap bubbles. Besides it's smart now to have everything in your bathroom in one color. Chenille Bath Mats in Cheerful Hues Chenille bath mats in blue, gold, rose and green complete the color har- mony. They have a soft, thick nap that becomes fluffier each time they are laundered! They are reversible, too! .$1.35 24x48 in.....$2.50 .$1.75 27x54 in.....$2.75 vy color-fast modern- . . lulia” and Campbell-Tipton's “The i isti il your mirror unafraid? Cring o waier” " Your Others— lgleal for dli;a_throo:'ns, fodr istic chenille rugs, $5.50 1t pimples spoil an otherwise lovely | lent and her bravura work showed ad- | Coat 72x90 ey are divided top an Feflection, cleanse the skin gently | mirable power and precision. " She has Si00 Tk bottom. The bottom e ut thoros ith Resinol S 4 studied wi oset evinne in ew . . hen appiy - Resinol Ointment. | York, and she is a young artist of much Already these devastat- 81299 inches co..8119 drawn together insures Charmlng Rag Rugs This soothing healing treatment seldom fails to give delightful re- sults. At all druggists. promise. Mrs. Havill is the wife of Lieut. Comdr. C. H. Havill, who won the na- tional gold medal for highest achieve- ing little insects are pre- paring for a concentrated privacy; the top draped apart lets in light” and Attractively Priced Free sample on request. Write | mont o the year i onenm Heve: | dtiick.” Moth ‘balls or sunshine. White or cream Clean, colorful rugs woven of gayly . 39, Resinol, Baltimore, . s i i als, in hi i Dept. 39, Resing .B-lflm°r= Md. | nautics. tebiec s havemoateos for F u 1 1 B 1 eac h e d voile, with scalloped or colored materials, in hit-and-miss effect. Resinol |zmiimmng| b r i Cases, 29¢ v ... e as a grapefrult and sweet enough in our Lold-dStorage Vaults e 24x36 .$1.50 27x84 in.....$2.50 10 be eaten without, sugar. ) Rl mRn ~— mothproof, fireproof, Russ—Fifth Floor The passengers were transferred M‘bnnk was forwarded through military|like to write more in detail next time. the Canadian Pacific liner Montcalm |channels to the American military at- tache at Berlin. Reed had the satisfaction of re- ceiving the other day a letter from “By that time I may have a picture of myself, which I would like to send send only my best thanks for your courtesy.” | LANSBURGH & BRO 7th, 8th and E Sts.—FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—Franklin 7400 Of extra heavy fully bleached mus- lin, made straight with the selvedge and neatly finished with deep hems. In the two sizes, 42x36 and 45x36. Waterproof Shades, $1.50 dustproof and theftproof. Call Franklin 7400 And our driver will call for your coat Accessories Are | ANSBURGH &BRO 7th, 8th and E Sts.— Franklin 7400 New! Somerset Sport of Fine Knitted Cotton In Soft Pastel Colors Breuvities Domesties—Third Floor An Important Selling Printed Crepe and Plain Flat Crepe $1.88 yard Splash as much as you like in your shower, water will not harm these new waterproof shades. Neither will they crack, pin hole or fray. In all desirable colors. Size 36 in. x5 ft. 9 in. Curtains and Drapes—Fifth Floor After the Bath Proper Towels Pastel-colored Linen Towels haye the honor position on_the Practical As Well As Brightly Colored Rubberized Printed Cretonne Shower Cur tains, floral designs of green, yellow, orchid and pink; 72x72 in., special, $1.95. Other shower curtains of printed cretonne figured rayon, flowered and brocaded rayon with rubberized backs, $239 to $12. White or Green Bath Stools, of enameled wood, with non-skid crutch tips. Special, $1.00. Beautiful Perltex Stools, a new composi- tion that looks like Mother of Pearl, will not crack or chip; lovely shades of green, pink, lavender and blue, $7.50. PANTIES, $1 VESTS, §1 towel rack these days! Pine Pearltex Toilet Seats to match, $12. soft linen neatly hem- 69 . 3 aeled . Gole vk, OO Bath Tub Seats, in white, 98c. Others en- Cut for action, with short, full panties on a sateen band, and vests with low back for suntan tennis frocks. Wonderfully cool, for they absorb perspira- White and pastel. Underwear—Third Floor tion. Paris is talking about! this season! Sunstar Capucine Eggshell binations. Both of that soft, lustrous quali made Lansburgh’s famous for silks since 1860! The Flat Crepe, $1.88 Nothing smarter for the sun-tan back tennis frock so popular A firm, rich quality, with a beautiful flat finish, in more than 50 washable colors. Byrd Blue Yellow Royal Purple Silverwing Whil Helv. Silks—Third Floor Two of the season’s smartest silks—in those fashionable prints and colors all ty and finish that has ' Lido Sand Adamia and capucine, navy and tan—and dozens of other style-right com- All 40 inches wide. i Colored Hem Turkish Towels, extra size and double-thread ‘weight, with borders of 590 pastel shades . Large Turkish Or Pastel Huck Towels 29¢ 21x43-in.. double - thread Turkish towels enter the ‘modern bathroom by way of . their colored borders. Boott of rose, blue, gold, green, orchi Linens—Third Floor ameled in blue, green, red, lavender and white, $2.25. Bathroom Shelves, of glass, 49c and r 3 69c. Glass Towel Bars, with brackets, 25c. a . Diadem huck towels orchid, Chartreuse Killarney Diabolo Red - - Colored Steel Medicine it Pink Cashnew Nut Nugold Navy rose, yellow, blue and green. plat‘; glass mirror; enameled in pink, zrv:en‘: Lucerne leondo"e' Vellum Black a1 d orchid; 14x20. Special, $3.95. COIO':C Border Bathroom Hampers, colored metal, $2.95; * Turkish Towels roomy reed hampers in white and colors, c l'lnte repes, . 20 $3.95 to $5.95. 1 X C “Universal” Bathroom Scales, give ac- A host of stunning patterns; sporty checks, small geometric Heavy, doubl curate _weight; finished in white and motifs, tiny florals and large florals—in black with white, brown e iy s e colotiadis; KRN W e Colored Toilet Tissue, 1000 sheets— rose, green, orchid, blue and tan, 2 rolls for 25c. Housewares—8ixth Floor Sy o)

Other pages from this issue: