Evening Star Newspaper, July 17, 1929, Page 20

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2y -DENIES TURPITUDE in Colorado and for nine years THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1929. “WALL OF WIND" FORMS MENACE ADMITS THEFT, | tesion o Coado snd fox mine geams| _ Argentinn Stevedores Strike. | Oapt. Jobn Tonkin Dies Monday pleaded guilty to charges of [ By Cable to The Star. OIL CITY, Pa., July 17 (4).—Capt. TO WEST EAST OCEAN FLYERS rm D o e e net & AIRES, July 17.—Several | John Tonkin, 92, prominent ofl and -, Former Colorado Court Employe | funds. s plea was made betore | thousand stevedores walked out Mon- |gas man and president of the Central District Judge Samuel W, Johnson at | day in Buenos Alres and Santa Fe| Kentucky Natural Gas Co, died at his PALM BEACH and MOHAIR TROUSERS' $4.65, $5.65 N DRY VIOLATION U. S. Appeals Court Orders Release of Deportation Defendant. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 17.—The United * States Circuit Court of Appeals yes- Zterday ruled that a man who violates - the prohibition law is not necessarily 7 guilty of moral turpitude. =~ The court ordered the release from *Ellis Island of Bernard Iorio, formerly of Gallup, N. Mex., who had been held for deportation to Italy on grounds of moral turpitude based partly on the fact that he had been convicted of violation ©of the prohibition law. After having lived in this country since 1902, Iorio returned to Italy in 1926, and re-entered the United States in 1927 on a vise obtained from the American vice consul at Masena. Last ~ January he was arrested on a charge of ~ making false statements in an applica- « tion for a vise, It was charged that, - whereas he had served a prison sentence for violating the prohibition law, he told - the vice consul that he had never been | " imprisoned. | ~ The opinion of the Circuit Court of | Appeals, written by Judge Learned | »~ Hand, held that Torio's “mistatements" | had been “irrelevant.” { b “Please do not regard every viola- ~tion of the prohibition law as a crime * involving moral turpitude,” the opinion | - Teads, “We cannot say that among the commonly accepted mores the sale - or possession of liquor as yet occupies 80 grave a place, nor can we close our eyes to the fact that large num- . bers of persons otherwise reputable do not think so, rightly or wrongly.” AIR FIRMS ARE UNITED. | * Xansas City Corporation Buys ChiJ cago Concern. NEW YORK, July 17 (#).—Amer- fean Eagle Aircraft Corporation of | Kansas City has purchased the Wallace | Aircraft Co. of Chicago, E. E. Porter- fleld, jr., American Eagle president, an- nounced Monday. | The factory of the Wallace Co., | - maker of a three-place folding wing | . monoplane, will be moved to Kansas | City and operated as a unit of the | newly formed American Eagle sub- | sidiary, Porterfield Aviation Interests. | | Inc. The purchase was sald to involve $250,000. Stanley Wallace, designer and general | . manager, will remain as chief engineer | of the Wallace company. t | . Guatemalan to Fly to U. §. | - By Cable to The Star. | GUATEMALA CITY, July 17.—Col. | Garay of the Guatemalian army | has ‘announced he would start his | 2 -will flight to New York and re- | ~ turn in August. The fiyer plans to stop : at Havana and Mexico City in addition to New York, Washington and a num- - ber of other American ci | same time as the French plane Satur- | By the Associated Pre:zs. NEW YORK. July 17—The wall of wind which Dieudonne Coste held ac- countable for his failure to fly the North Atlantic has been the great stumbling block for all the morefthan a dozen expeditions which have gttempted to fly westward over that perflous sea. Flyers here belleved that it was to blame not only for Coste's failure, but | also for the crash of the Polish plane that started for America at almost the day_morning. ‘That wind no doubt had much to do | also with the disapearance in westword Atlantic flights of Nunges:er and Coli Princess Lowenstein-Werthelm and_her two men companions and the Hon. Elsie Mackay and W. G. R. Hinchliffe. Officials of the Naval Hydrographic Bureau at Washington have estimated that Summer is perhaps the worst of all times for a westward flight of the North Atlantic, because of this very wall of wind which moves eastward across the ean. Th early Autumn it has less veloeity. | although it is almost always in evi-| dence, causing fyers to refer to the westward crossing as an “uphill” flight. Aviators have estimated that in effect the westward flight is 800 miles longer | than the eastward because of the re-| tarding effect of the wind. ! Another advantage for the eastward | fiyer is that storms on the North At-| lantic follow the direction of the pre- G ot valling winds, from west to east, and to some extent he can fly it along with the weather he starts in. But when going west the flyer may well encounter head-on storms that have blown up after he left Europe and of whch noth- fog was known on his departure. Prevalling eastward currents are also the chief foe of westward fiyers, because they cause the laboring planes that buck them to use up so much fuel in the effort that dry tanks are an ever- | fii increasing possibility before the ocean has been crossed. 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From Two of America’s Foremost Mills $1.25, $1.65, $1.95 and $2.50 Qualities if Firsts Values in Furniture In Vienna: PESSL In Parss: CAVALIERI I Ber/in: ELISE BOCK ~ So, in Washington . . | " THE WARDMAN PARK BEAUTY SALON " Recommends this 2-minute olive-and-palm-oil complexion care “The emollient effects of the bland palm and olive oils contained in Palmolive Soap are greatly beneficial to the skin.” MRS. CHRISTINE HOULIHAN, Mgr. Waroman Pagx Hoter BEAUTY SALON Complete 8-Piece i Walnut-Finish Bedroom Suite Here’s what you get—Large Dresser, French Vanity, Chest of Drawers, Full Size Bed, Coil Springs, Mattress and Two Pillows. An outfit that you'll be proud to own. IT is strikingly significant that the leading In Berlin, Mme. beauty authorities of Europe and America Bock—in London, agree on one basic beauty rule, a rule for Bertha Jacobson. k:lelgingfcom quiorg ndi.nml'): lovely. They Independently, call it “foundation cleansing. the great experts of Chest of Drawel's Not only in this city but in every im- Eu“.’g;e lufe dis- portant beauty center of America and every covered for them- Regularly g e ; 3 3 \ 3 y “capital of Europe, today, the leading author- selves the amazing $11.75 = N\ | . i AR ities advise a simple home treatment to keep effectiveness of this ed, four-drawer, b skin beautiful. Tt is a treatment involving the olive and palm oil e twice-a-day use of Palmolive Soap and water. complexion soap. chest of draw- flnflll ers. Specially \ | e s “Foundation cleansing” priced— Walnut finish- Pecsl, of Vienna, represents & bouse famous forsts beauty care during the past 100 years. He advises bis Royal and aristo- cratic patrons to use Palmolive. The Palmolive daily massage THE WARDMAN PARK BEAUTY SALON make-up. And this is done most effectively, ment recommended © & 3-PC. BED O *"Foundation cleansing,” as advised by the great experts, is simply the daily elimination p—— e 36. 75 Your credit is good with us of pore-clogging dirt and dust, of rouge and Here is the treat- 50c a Week IYEIERTN VAT EINCIN AN N Special Book Trough End Table NACHMAN FURNITURE CO. 8th & E Streets N.W. consulted regularly regarding complexion wood metal bed, re- versible mattress and spring. 50c a Week FREE Gift With Purchases of $25.00 or More care by its smart clientele. Beauty culture has become an exacting pro- fession today. The American woman relies on her beauty specialist not only for treat- ment but also for advice. And the average beauty specialist today has studied skin tex- ture and the connection between health acd beauty, between cleanliness and beauty. The endorsement above, of one of the city's greatest experts, is in utter agreement with the advice on care of the eomplexion offered by Madame Jacobson of London, Institut de Beauté of Paris, and leading beauty experts of Berlin, Vienna, Geneva~twice-a- day cleansing with Palmolive Soap, they find, by the bland, creamy lather of by beauty author- Palmolive Soap. This internationally-used complexion soap, blended of oils of olive and palm, rids the skin of secretions—provides 2 basis upon which individual beauty treatments are found to be most successful. Y In Paris, Mme. Cavalieri, after much study, adopted Palmolive for her clients’ use as a home treatment. So, too, did Vincent and Massé— other long-established leaders. In Vienna, Pessl decided upon Palmolive. ities: massage a smooth lather of Palmolive Soap and warm water into the skin with both hands. Rinse first with warm water, then with cold, until all impurities are washed away. That's all! Yet this simple treatment is an important reason for the increasing number of lovely complexions all over the world. Consult your own beauty expert. Follow her advice and this very day begin “founda- tion cleansing” with Palmolive Soap. A clear, radiant complexion will be your reward. PALMOELIVE SOAP

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