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_THE FEVENING *STAR.- WASHINGTON,- D. C.” FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1929. | ) ES MAIN 3257-3291 We are the people who clean your rugs and carpets and who want to please YOU—who want satisfied customers to tell their friends of the good work we do. SANITARY CARPET & RUG CLEANING CO. Acme Renovators ROBT. LEE PYLE 106 Indiana Ave. NW. Our Phone Is. | Unsightly Pimples cleared away in two weeks Taunton, Mass.—“I have always had an unusually good complex- jon until a shert time ago when a number of unsightly pimples appeared on my face. I tried every kind of soap I could think of, but with no satisfactory re- sults. Then I read about Resinol Soap and Ointment, and_began at once to use them. In two weeks’ time my skin was as clear and smooth as ever.” (Signed) Billie Enos. In many homes where Resinol was _first used % correct skin trouble, it is now the only soap used for the toilet, bath and shampoo. Aided by Resinol Oint- ment it tends to keep the skin and hair naturally lovely. Atall druggists. Sample of each free. Dept. 63, Resinel, Baltimore, Md. Resinol - HORSEMAN'S LIFE LIKE BOOK HERO'S Van de Kritzinger, Who At- tended Show Here, Was Trainer in Transvaal. Among those attending the National ||| capital Horse Show last week was a ||| quiet, middie-aged man, who watched the entries with the keen, critical eye of an expert. ||| A lifetime association with horses, started as a boy on his father's farm in South Africa, has made Frank Van de Kritzinger of California and South Africa, one of the foremost authorities in the country on the proper training of horses. Recognized by the United States Army authorities as such, Mr. Van de Kritzinger for many years has been employed by the Government to direct in the breaking of horses at the various remount stations which the Army maintains throughout the coun- try from Virginia to Washington. Van de Kritzinger's life reads like the story in a schoolboy’s hero book. Born in_California, he was taken to South Africa by bis father, a promi- nent doctor and scientist of Dutch ex- traction, when he was 8 years old. There he lived on & ranch in the Trans- vaal, and at the outbreak of the Bcer War Van de Kritzinger joined with the Boers, later rising to the rank of com- t general of the forces of Cape Horse Trainer as Child. As a child, he had trained horses on his father's ranch and, to use his words, “had learned to speak the language of the horse.” Through this knowledge, much of the training of the hourses for the Boer Army was under his super- vision. ? After the war he started a trained dog and pony show and with his wife and children toured practica civilized continent. The show, consist- ing of 14 dogs, 12 ponies and 8 horses, visited Australia, Europe, Africa and the United States. It was while he was in Australia that Van de Krit- zinger supervised the breaking and training of 5,000 horses for the British ‘my. He states that from 25 to 50 day were broken. During his travels as a showman, he offered a prize of $100 fot any one who could bring to him a horse that within 20 minutes he was unable to break and Youth Drives Car Into Glass Door; Father Arrests Him By the Associated Press. PROVIDENCE, R. I, May 31.—After he had driven his automobile through the glass door of an apartment house, Nason Rudolph, 20, of 2840 Scarborough road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, was ~taken to police head- quarters, where his father, a deputy sheriff from Cleveland, arrested him on a warrant charg- ing Insanity. Rudolph was badly cut by the shattered glass. The crash followed & wild ride through the center of the city, during which he was pursued by a police car. ride. Van de Kritzinger never lost his t. Joins British in Egypt. During the World War he joined with the British forces in Egypt, later taking part in the fighting in Turkey, where he was severely gassed and blinded in one eye by a piece of shrap- nel. After the war he returned to the United States, where until two years ago, after his back was broken by a horse falling backwards, he was em- ployed by the Government in breaking horses for the Army Mr. Van de Kritzinger has wrmen‘ several articles on the breaking and | training of horses. He is frequently | consulted by horse lovers and horse raisers on technical points relative to breeding, raising and training. He be-| lieves that any horse in the world can | be broken if properly handled. He does not_advocate breaking a horse until it is five years old. “Frequently nervous- ness or so-called viciousness of a horse,” remarked the expert, “is due to the wrong bit or the wrong handling of the bit.” Asked what was the best thing to do with a hot-headed horse, Mr. Van de Kritzinger replied, “Sell him to a cool- headed man. . Hunting Wedding Held. As’a fitting climax to & romance started during a fox hunt, George Evans, master of the Hampshire Hounds, and | Miss Diana Smith rode to church in Ropley, Ireland, attended by the hunt, for their wedding. The bride, bride- groom and many of the guests were in hunting costume, and the hounds fol- lowed to the gate of the church yard. After the ceremony the happy couple walked down the pathway lined by hunt servants and hunting folk to an adjoin- ing field, where 500 hunt followers joined in'the wedding reception. | beans. them poured to the ground. | WATER ON BEANS CAUSES MORE DAMAGE THAN FIRE Pressure of Expanding Vegetable Cracks Open Bins Untouched by Flames. BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (#).—Wet soy beans, soaked when water was pumped on the Funk soy bean elevator to ex- tinguish a fire, caused as much de- struction as the flames. Biné that were not touched by the | fire were craked wide open by the tre- mendous_ pressure of the expanding Forty-five thousand bushels of Sent to driers at Peoria, the beans were found to have increased their | | moisture content from 14 to 16 per cent | | up to 40 to 50 per cent. It is estimated | that in the 34 carloads of beans there were 81 carloads of water. Desert Place of Punctures. Kalahari Desert in Bachuanaland, Africa, is no place for autoists who dis- | like punctures. So declares a report of |an exploring party that has just re- | turned from there. Punctures averaged |20 a day, says the report, and this was due chiefly to stumps of dead trees, | which often lie just beneath the sand | with points like sharpened pencils. In- dications are that plentiful supplies of good water exist, the report adds, and | if these could be located by deep boring the desert could be transformed into a fine ranching country. i)octor i’ound Women and Children Sick More Often than Men As a family doctor at Monticello, | Tllinols, the whole human body, not any small part of it, was Dr. Cald- | well's practice. More than half his “calls” were on women, children and bables. They are the ones most often sick. But their illnesses were usually of & minor nature—colds, fevers, head- aches, biliousness—and all of them re- quired first a thorough evacuation. They were constipated. | “In the course of Dr. Caldwell's 47 | years® practice, he found & good deal | of success in such cases with a pre- | scription of his own containing simple | laxative herbs with pepsin. In 1892 he decided to use this formula in the manufacture of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup | Pepsin, and placed it on the market. The preparation immediately had as great & public success as it previously had in Dr. Caldwell’s private practice. Now, the third generation is using it. Mothers are giving it to their children who were given it by their mothers. Every second of the working day | some one somewhere is going into a | drug store to buy it. There are thou- sands of homes in this country that | are never without a bottle of Dr. Cald- | well's’ Syrup Pepsin, and we have many hundreds of letters from grate- || ful people telling us it helped when | everything else failed. ‘While women, children and elderly | people are especially benefited by Dr. lClldWell’l Syrup Pepsin, its mild, | AT AGE 83 gentle action is promptly effective on | the most robust constitution and in the most obstinate cases. Containing | neither opiates nor narcotics, it is safe for the tiniest baby. Children like it and take it willingly. Every drug store sells Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, EJERO of Barcelona Beauty Advisor by Appointment to 3 Rez'ghz‘ng Queens advises daily use of Palmolive Soap Spanish beauties bave long known the cosmetic value of olive oil. Scientifically blended with paim sils, it bas its greatest beauty \effects in Palmolive Soap. “Regular cleansing twice a day with Palmolive Soap is my advice to my clients. The effect of the pure palm and olive oils in this soap keeps the skin always in the proper condition.” IN SPAIN, the country of the olive-skinned beauty, care of the skin is entrusted to men who are not only beauty specialists but derma- tologists as well. Of these, one of the highest in rank is Tejero, of Barcelona. A skin s at the faculty of medicine at Zaragoza. He holds & surgeon’s diploma and has practiced his profession in Paris, London, Berlin, Brussels, Vienna, Budapest and Prague. In Paris he was privileged to attend the Queen of Holland and her daughter. In Belguim he served Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth. He has, of course, attended the Queen of his native Spain . . . and his many distinguished include not only Ladies-in-Waiting from all the Courts of Europe but numerous celebrated artists of the stage and musical world. pecialist of renown, Tejero studied Senor Tejero always prescribes Palmolive and attributes much of his success to the fact that his clients follow this advice. Tejero on skin care ... *“No skin can remain healthy for long unless it is thoroughly cleansed twice a day with ‘soap and water,” says this famous Spanish authority. “The effect of the pure palm and olive oils in Palmolive Soap is to penetrate gently but deep down into the pores, to remove all accumula- content include Cavalieri, of patrons radiant complexion will be: Greatest professional endorsement of any product. tions and to soothe and rejuvenate the tissues.” Other international authorities who prefer Palmolive and stress the value of its olive oil f Paris; Jacobson, of London; Attilio, of Rome—and hundreds of the leading beauty artists of the world. You may act upon their advice this very evening. ‘A clear, your reward. Massé of Paris vecommends, as do the culturists of Europe and America, twice daily "'founds- tion cleansing”’~the massage with rich, warm Palmolive lather for 2 minutes, followed by warm, then icy cold water. grest beauty houschold duties must be made simple . . . The heaviest houschold duty is the cleaning . . . The greatest simpli- fier of cleaning is the electric cleaner The best elec- tric cleaner gets out the most dirt—fastest and with least effort . . . That cleaner is The Hoover.* ® (The Hoover removes more dirf per minute than " any other cleaner. Itisthe most efficient machine on = HOOVER= Barber & Ross, Inc. Dulin & Martin Co., Inc. AUTHORIZED HOOVER SERVICE—BANK OF COMMERCE AND SAVINGS BLDG—MAIN 7600 the market.) The Model 700 Hoover is only $75 cash. Model 543, $59.50. With dusting tools $87.50 and $72.00. Ask fora demonstration. Liberal allowance for your old cleaner. Convenient terms; $6.25 down; balance monthly. THE HOOVER CO., NORTH CANTON, OHIO It BEATS ~- as it Sweeps = &5 S. Kann Sons Co. Lansburgh & Bro. ‘Woodward & Lothrop Heeeseena et s ses e serenteansape s st R e tasentasasas: 5 Hours saved fo - Pacific North West Five hours shorter time Chicago te San Francisco. Five hours faster non - extra fare service to Los An- geles. Two hours faster to Denver, Effective June 9th. Overland Route PORTLAND LIMITED Only Through Train Chicago and Portland ++4 63 hours en route Five hours faster. Saves a business day with no extra fare. Luxurious observation club'car. Barber,maid; valet, bath, Through Pullman to Seattle. . Lv. Chicago (C&N 8:30-p. my ot e i Another Convenient Train Continental Limited 200 miles along the Columbia River by daylight. Drawing room, compartmenty standard section Pullmans; tourist sleep~ ing cars and chair gars. Through Pullman to-Seattle. = Lv. Chicago (C&N W) 1 11:20 p.my; Ar. l?orth«l( . :30 p. m, Union Pacifi em: