Evening Star Newspaper, May 13, 1929, Page 20

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Special Until June 15th FUR COATS Repair Edges New Loops Button Sew All Rips Steam and Fox Scarfs—Priced Very Low ISADOR MILLER 809 11th St. N.W Main 5628 INDIGESTION il Consult a physician. 60572 DR. SIEGERT'S Same formula since 1824 z digestive jute. SPECIAL PRICE Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Ladies’ Spring Coats §1 .00 Cleaned & Pressed T (No telephone calls—But price includes delivery.) L) EXQUISITE DRY CLEANING ™ Corner 11th & H Sts. N.W. Phone National 2704 Capital’s Young Set Favors Mello-Glo Kl e and, never gives a or, Maky look” Made frem color at passed by the government, re _Prench-process MELLO-GLO Powder spreads more smoothly and stavs on longer. It produces & youthful bloom and prevents large pores. Buy your package today. —Advertisement. Learned of the Herb Extract Never Saw Its Equal In ‘Washington people by the hun- dreds cill at the Peoples Drug Store, 505 Tth Street N.W., each week to learn more of this great medicine. Numbers of those who have given it a trial return and say they never used its equal and want their friends to know of it also. MRS. J. N. KIDWELL. The_testimonials of ‘praise that have been given for Millers Herb Extract would more than fill a daily newspaper and they are received from people in all walks of-life. Mrs. J. N. Kidwell of 739 12th St. N.W. is one of the latest to endorse this medicine and, as she said a few days ago, she wants all her friends to know about it. Yes, continued Mrs. Kidwell, I was surprised at the quick relief I received and I do not hesitate to say that Millers Herb Extract is the greatest system cleans- er and regulator I have ever used. For years I was troubled with chronic_constipation and I honestly believe I tried every known remedy: at least, I tried every one I heard of; I was also troubled with head- aches, felt tired and worn out and was troubled a great deal with gas and indigestion, 1 saw so much in the papers about this remedy that I made up my mind to give it a trial and it proved to be just the thing I needed. Through its natural action upon the bowels I was soon relieved of constipation and from then on I began to feel much better in every way; appetite improved and I feit stronger and brighter in every way. 1 also find it to be fine for the liver, in fact it is a general system cleans- er and makes one feel better in every way. If any of those who read this statement -are suffering with the above complaints I advise them to try a bottle of this medicine at once. 1 feel sure it will help them the same as it did me. You don't need any pills with this medicine; it is a real medicine within itself— and guaranteed to give results. A medicine you can take three or four bottles without seeing any results is not much medicine. See the special representative direct from the lab- oratories at his_headquarters—Peo- ples Drug Store No. 2, 505 Tth Street N.W., where he is now introducing and explaining the merits of this great nature tonic laxative, if neglected may result in a serious liness. ||| and before he settled down. She quoted THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C, MONDAY. MAY 13, 1929, vhich have bees ing ide Juich pave b raene ovr 5, mde| QUEENSLAND RU serious fires continued to level valuable * COULDBE SUIGDE 'Huntington Ambidexterous | Police Told by Childhood | Friend. I | By the Associated Pr | WINDSOR, Conn, May 13—Re-| | affirming his declaration that Walter T. | Huntington, Harvard student, killed | | himself while home on & week end visit, | | County Detective Edward J. Hickey to- | {day was concentrating on what he termed new evidence which would sub- | | stantate his belief. | | The detective found an adherent in | ! Gertrude Schultz, childhood friend of | {the dead student, who declared Hunt- | ington was able to use either hand | ‘almost equally well. The body had a! | bullet mark in the left side of the head, ! & fact which was instrumental in in- fluencing the formal finding of twe medical examiners that the youth was | killed by some one else. At that time {1t was not known Huntington was am- | | bidexterous. | Nails Chewed Down. | | Miss Schultz sald the student was | | particular in keeping his finger nails | | cared for and said that she noticed | when she saw his body that the nail were chewed down to the quick. Hickey | | professed to see in this an indication {of aervous worry compatible with his ! | theory of suicide. | | The finding of half a dozen blood | | stained handkerchiefs, one a woman’s, |in the student’s pockets has led to dif- | | ferences of opinion by the officials as {to how they were used. Medical Ex-| |aminer Henry H. Costello, of Hartford | {and Aaron T. Pratt of Windsor each | ! declared that the discovery gave reason to believe Huntingfon was not none! { when shot. Hickey on the other hand | {asserted that the stained handkerchiefs | “clinched” his belief. H Planned to Travel. ! Miss Schultz told Hickey Huntington's | mother had heard her son say that he was going to travel after leaving colle:e| Mrs. Huntington as having said the youth once asserted “a fellow doesn’t learn a d—— thing about life in col- lege.” The mother declared, Miss Schultz said, that no young man would say such a thing if he intended to kill | himself. In a search of the Huntington home for clues, after questioning all the me: bers of the family and Burdett Willlams, a chum of the boy and the last known person to have seen him alive, Hickey found another box of .32 caliber shells. These shells were the same as the empty shell thought to have been ejected from the automatie pistol which was believed | to have been used in the killing. The shell was located near where the body ;;.: {&u'r:gnlr;’n L l\eld_hlmt far hn'om the me. e gun been found. R | ARIZONA FOREST FIRE IS BELIEVED CHECKED 15,000 Acres Burned Over in Six- Day Advance—Miner's Lamp Starts Blaze. By the. Associated Press. NOGALES, Ariz, May 13.—After burning over more than 15,000 acres, the greatest forest fire in the history of this section of Arizona today was be- | lieved to have been brought under con- trol by 100 weary men, who had fought the blaze on an ever-widening front for ys ore the fire drivi herds of terrified cattle down mn-hn{nes slopes ahead of flames which licked at scrub oak on a 10-mile front. tains. Building and equipment of mining properties were consumed, while miners fled to Henshaw, a village near here. The blaze was stopped a few miles from the town. The conflagration started when a miner stumbled and dropped his cagbide Jamp in dry grass. The blaze kly spread over grazing land into the moun. low of the bur ing forests was visible at night for more than 50 miles. Unless the wind changed today, rangers hoped to beat out the last em- bers along the fringes of the blackened sides of Palomas Canyon. CIRCUIT TO BE OPENED FOR RADIO TELEGRAPH R. C. A. Communications, Inc., An- nounces Step Wednesday in Nation-Wide System. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 13.—R. C. A. Com- munications, Inc, announced yester- day that it will open its New York- San Francisco commercial radio tele- graph circuit Wednesday as the first mg in a projected Nation-wide system. service, which includes photo radio transmission as well as messages, will operate between San Prancisco and New York, Boston and Washington, D. C. An application on behalf of R. C. A. Communications is pending before the Federal Radio Commission for short-wave frequencies sufficient to serve 30 cities in an inland network. ‘The New York-San Francisco system 1 will bridge the continent without & re- ‘The transmitting and receiving tations represent a capital outlay of more than $500,000. SWISS CRUSH “DRY” MOVE BY OVERWHELMING VOTE Bill Authorizing Local Option on Hard Liquors Defeated by Great Majority. By the Associated Press. GENEVA, May 13.—Prohibition in the United States has not inspired the Swiss to follow the example. Yester- day the inhabitants of the Swiss Con: federation delivered a crushing defeat | | to an initiative bill which was not to establish general prohibition, but merely to authorize local option as to whether sale of hard liquors should be permitted. | Every one of the 24 cantons rejected the measure by an overwhelming ma- Jority and the total vote was im ive- ly negative. The initiative, if it had been accepted, would have given cities and towns the right to vote on whether liquors containing a heavy percentage of alcohol should be allowed to be sold in their precincts. Beers and wines would not have been affected. Temperance organizations had waged a strong campaign for acceptance of llh: law on the ground that the Swiss people were ruining their health by too | Breat consumption of strong liguor. Inouye to Succeed Wilbur. | NEW YORK, May 13 (#).—Junnosuke | Inouye, Japanese banker, will succeed Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur as chairman of the Pacific council of the Institute of Pacific Relations, it was announced | yesterday. Inouye has been first vice | chairman and head of the Japanese | group in the institute. Dr. Wilbur re- signed when npgh\‘kfl Secretary of the Interior, Spot, Endangered. WINNIPEG, Manitoba, May 13 (P)— | The Prince Albert national park, one|;ath of the fires in The Pas and last| ight was threatened by forest fires | rounded” there. katchewan, but reports from The Pas Labor Government Ove indicated that the menace in Manitoba | had been subdued. Wide swaths had been cut across the | BRISBANE, Australia, Canada’s deauty spots, last |reports were that the fires were “sur-| The Queensland Labor Defeated After 14 Years. which has held office 14 years, has been ' land a woman was elected. | defeated overwhelmingly and must re- LE ENDS. | {5 Saturday’s legislative assembly | | polling showed 44 seats for the Na- MRS. HASKELL DIES. terday at the Homeopathic Hospital, where she had been a patient for a week. She apparently was recovering | tionalists, 26 for Labor and 2 for in- Wife of du Pont Official Succumbs satisfactorily from a recent operation. rwhelmingly | dependents, against 43 Labor and 29 Nationalist seats in the present Legis- | May 13 UP).— | The Nationalists presented a cure for Following Recent Operation. lature. WILMINGTON, Del, May 13 (®.— | of Monticello, Fla., and Savannah, Ga. Mrs. Haskell was the daughter of the |late Mr. and Mrs. Willlam B. Denham unemployments as the basis for their Ilis. Elizabeth Denham Haskell, wife of b & o 3 ; government, | campaign. For the first time in Queens- Harry Garner Haskell, vice president of | Vancouver, British Columbia, is to You Can Read This Entire Announcement in Less Than 3 Minutes! LANSBURGH & BRO 7th, 8th and E Sts. —~FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860 Franklin 7400 Concealed Are Yours The Grip-Tite Principle Pear- Shaped Smart three-eyelet tie of white Heel kid with lisaed trim; plenis —two widths brown kid, trimmed with brown narrower than lizard. $8.50. the ball of the foot, keeping the foot firm, regardless of Posltion of oot. Inbuilt Arch Support —that takes all strain off ¢ the arch, putting verve and For street, a ml_.nd ‘uodol foot-free grace into every of black or brown kid, trimmed step. with suede strap and buckle. $8.50. 40-Ini Extra Heavy Printed Flat Crepe In a Lovely Assortment of Smart New Designs '1.88 - Be among the first to wear the Paris inspired flowered flat crepe eve- ning dress! You will find in this specially priced group just those floral de- signs smart women on the continent are wearing. For daytime, smaller designs, florals, dots, checks and conventionals, in the gray Summery col- ors that are now in vogue. 40-In. Washable 40-In. All-Silk Crepe, $1.33 Pique, $2.98 The firm, heavy quality smart All Paris is wearing silk women demand for sports and pique! For tennis, golf and business frocks, lingerie and neg- general daytime wear. A ligees. A half-hundred style- splendid quality in white, pink, right colors, including black and cameo blush, maise, orchid, string and polar bear. Silks—Third Floor Have Your Material Cut and Pin-Fitted ~Dby an expert right here in Our Silk Department at a more than moderate charge! Maybe The Moths Have Planned a Luncheon Party on Your Winter Coat! Really, one can hardly blame them, for these gay little moths like to live on 3-Pc. Hickory Poreh Sets Reduced to $18.45 A complete porch set, made of stout hickory in rustic style, but with smooth fur even better than rugs, sanded surface. This artis- draperies or upholstery— tic set consists of a four-foot and it may mean HUN- settee, a chair and a rocker. DREDS OF DOLLARS in 2 " loss to you! Rustic Hickory e Porch Rocker $4.95 Sturdy rustic rocker of heavy hickory frame, with woven splint seat; comfort- able arm rests. HickoryRockers $4.45 Woven hickory splint seat, spindle back and strong hickory frame. Rustie Furniture—F TFloer Put your furs in our cold Storage Vaults—they will freeze out the boldest moth! Call Franklin 7400, Ovur Driver Will Call Cleaning and Repairing Coats We will carefully and efficiently clean your cloth coat or your fur coat. Cloth Coats, $5 Fur Coats, $7.50 Fur Shep—Second Floor omfort--QOutward Chic In Grip-Tite Footwear The truly smart woman no longer foregoes the natural foot-comfort so essential to her active life! She chooses Grip-Tite Footwear, knowing the styles are fashion-correct, designed along graceful, slender lines, and made over a combina- tion last with an invisible, inbuilt arch support. Styles for every occasion—of patent leather, brown, blonde, white and black kid and satin. e For dressy occasions, this lovely one-strap model of blonde id with interesting cut-outs. A graceful patent leather one- strap daytime model, effectively trimmed with black lizard. $7.50. Shoe Shop—Second Floor A Lingerie Show With Living Models For Feminine Washington 11 A-M. and 5 P.M. Tuesday The new underwear fashions are so in- triguingly different, we just had to show them to you! Tomorrow living models will wear the new arrivals for the miss and for the woman— at two shows—one in the morning for the house- wite, another at 5 p.m. for Government workers. Every Washington woman is cordially invited. Lingerie Shop—Third Fleor. the Dupont Co. died suddenly yes- ' have a $5.000,000 hydro-electric plant. Cleveland Park Parlor Coaches Now Pass Our Doors 3 Times Hourly T De g e coaches are now routed east from 10th and E Streets NW. to 8th Street, south to D Street, west to 11th and north to E Street, where the regular route will be resumed. Coaches will pass our doors every 20 min- utes. Special Purchase and Selling of Fiber Rockers $10.95 Graceful high - back styles with flage arms; comfortable and well braced. In tan and tan, grey and green, with cretonne covered spring cushions. The two styles Big Yank Nationally Advertised $1 Value Union Suits, Special 19¢ 6 for $4.50 Big Yanks are the choice of men who demand com- fort and service. Besides, they are so well made, they wear and wear, cutting down to the very minimum the cost of underwear. Of check nainsook and fancy, madras; crotch and side-opening— and broadcloth in crotch style. Sizes 34 to 46. With These Points Of Superiority 1. Every seam triple stitchea. 2. Points of strain . bar tacked. 3. “Snubber” backs to give easily. 4. Taped armhotes. 5. Form-fitting seat. 6. Spread crotch. Men's Wear Shop—Street Flo

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