Evening Star Newspaper, October 8, 1929, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1929. { e oom BELD AS BANDIT 7| |GIRL BANDIT LOSES - [i.fnxot oot oms; sh| v i, Soimem, i e St R B IRON NERVE IN COURT |5 35 , L Race Track Daredevil Bursts Into . 7 We’ll Give You Names in RAILWAY EDIFIE HAS NEW TENANTS BT i it Your Naborhood * They Will Tell You Old Southern Building Now s ; . . .?,m',‘, e e Used to House Federal 27 e Assosniad Prse. ioaty 10 T AR Y G e e CHICAGO, October 8.—Joan la Coste, R —— ¥ Government Bureaus. successful daredevil of the auto race| geiyyig; Party Picks Inukai. Here are a few who chose the BALLARD JUNIOR OIL BURNER. Why? Because it is clean, safe and silent. It is impressively economical and so dependable that if is guaranteed outright by the factory for THREE YEARS. A track, who last week was arrested in | { . an lmmd Tobbery with a toy pistol | BY Cable to The Star. The f Southern Railway Build- - . and oform-soaked handkerchief,| TOKIO. October 8.—The leaders of e former Soul y ;aurdni;llolt her nerve completely and e skl slph m‘"llfl: ' & h“llau': meourt‘w ?m “fi’;fi‘m’m . arty head to the late , is rapidly being filled up Wi el e grand jury X . | & party A4S Successor g:gg::;u’:c &n.’m, ;vmn&g a Joan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W, Baron Giichi Tanaka, but the rivalry wide variety of entries from Uncle Sam. Some 70 employes, the entire Division | of Co-operative Marketing of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics of the De- partment of Agriculture, are being, moved into the old Southern Railway | Building. This division was transferred | bodily from the Department of Agri- 9 L\ Mrs. culture to the Federal Farm Board un- i Senator A. W. Barkley, 3102 Cleveland Ave. N.W. der an executive order issued by Presi- American Securit: y and Trust Co., 722 H St. N.E. O o The Hon. C. C. Bolton, 2301 Wyoming Ave. N.W. visions under the board’s make-up. o g:w}-; C.JBr;ckatyez l7Is<m 16116 St. A e ion. J, B. mpl,m luesada St. W, Other Bureaus Coming Later. JOAN LA COSTE, Martin D. Delaney, M. D., 131 North Washington St., Alex., Va. Tentative sarrangements are under | prominent woman auts racer, held by police in Chicago, Ill., on attempted / i , E. H. Droop, 5207 Colorado Ave. N.W. way i incve Uie Bureau of Identifica- | robbery in a Chicago hotel with cholorform and a toy pistol. When first arrested f Frank W. Harper, 3846 Cathedral Ave. N.W. 702 nnd the field section of the DepAIt: | she refused to reveal her identity. —P. & A. Photo. \ Judge Chase. S. Hatfield, 4335 Cathedral Ave. N.W. oot sirots o Pebn. 7. Carey King, 6100 Sligo Mill Rd. N.W. :y‘fvmhg avenue into the iormer South- THREE SEEK POS'T'ON Wm. C. Larman, Old Georgetown Rd., Bethesda ern Railway Bullding. W. B. McGroarty, 122 South Fairfax St, Alex., Va. Richard V. Oulshan, 1518 31st St. N.W. Mrs. Marshall Field, 2600 16th St. N.W. bel Walker Willebrandt, 3018 Dumbarton Ave. N.W. a candidate should not seek the office out wait until he was called to serve, For demonstration, booklet and other infor- mation, visit the FACTORY BRANCH, 1015 Fifteenth Street N.W., or telephone NA- TIONAL 6131. Now open day and night. Coring Soap! ONE OF WASHINGTON’S GREAT STORES BALLARD JUNIOR . O°1T L B URNER ‘he Bureau of Customs of the Treas- is opposed for renomination by former C. C. Rodgers, 2 Quincy St., Chevy Chase, Md. ::x;’x?ule;::rd belng the otfier 0cCUPANt | oo ons Ave Apathetic, With :rlx‘:rllxemz‘ham;nmdgse.m“n bench to The Hon. Wallace H. White, 2449 Tracy Place N.W. Rockville High School, Rockville, Md. ment is slated to occupy offices in the pansion of the Bureau of Census of | By the Associated Press. the Commerce Department, incident t0 | pETROIT, October 8.—A three-cor- essury Department will move into the | mayoralty candidates op & non-par- f Y F old Southern Railway Bullding in the | tisian ticket furnishes what little inter- or Iour rurnace next few weeks. est has been shown in today’s biennial the Office of Public Buildirgs and Public optimistic of election officials predict a Parks, in the absence of Lieut. Col. U. total vote of not more than 135,000, iR atl. third floor is ready for the Prohibition Bureau. The second floor is to be fin- wry Department now occupies the AS DETROIT’S MAYOR [Mayor John W. Smith and Charles ~outhern Railway Building, the Federal Bowles, who resigned a six-vear posi- | 3 S % ?‘L Slep!;:inl Church, 2436 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. Conrad Murat Strong, Seminary Hills, Va. A portion of the supervising_archi- = teet's office of the Treasury Depart- Slightly More ThnnVOne Fourth | me—— — o Expected to Vote. ilver Spring High School, Silver Spring, Md. big building. To make way for the ex- 2 R = P - pring High School, Silver Spring, Md. the forthcoming Nation-wide census of ved SR vitor o inations epa“ a 1930, the Bureau of Prohibition of the |nered contest fo 0 nomina ad Floor Assigned to Dry Law Force. city primary election. Out of a total ALL ARP Maj. V. L. Peterson, acitng director 0f | yote registration of 428,000, the most FRIES, ?Et h St& Nstlv S. Grant 3d, the director, who is on a i & Mayor John C. Lodge, who two years trip to Detroit, explained today that the ago was elected on the platform that _—- 0 0 ished about the 23d of the month and the first floor will be completed about November 1. The Prohibition Bureau , will start to move in between October 20 and 25, he has been advised, and y the moving program of this bureau is - HERE FOR BRIEF STAY Wife of Speaker of House Says She “ Plans to Attend No Social w cxpected 1o be completed by Novem- ' ] “TLAW MRS. ALICE L'ONGWORTH y “E . ik OVERHAULING w FENDER AND B0ODY WORK ' One of the many piciuresque sposs on the blue Danube in B: World travelers consider tbm the mast beastiful cities in al} Exrope. Functions at Present. By the Associated Press. Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, whose absence from the Capital during the visit of Prime Minister Macdonald has prompted some comment in social 1 PAINT!NG“ ] circles, was in_Washington today for NEW TIRES What she described as 2 very short visit. Pl | ——t—rete— G- She said she returned “in the middle Lattad /) of last night” and would leave “prob- 2 b v & AT Ty T if"hen ably today or tomorrow.” She said she did not intend to .ake part in any social entertainments, explaining her RSOCHAtIC home here was not open. To iurther | |3ROCEHG questloning she replied: “I never give ship upad interviews. g wher!a!dl‘ venienc Actress Displays Diamond. NEW YORK, October 8 (#).—Claire ‘Windsor of the screen is wearing a big diamond on the forefinger of her left hand and Anthony J. Tsaklakis, wealthy lawyer of Alexandria, Egypt, is visiting her. Engaged? Claire, arm in his, smiled and remarked that she and “Tony” recently attended a dance and had a nice chat with Bert Lytell, her former husband, and his flancee, Grace Mencken. P e I ask all my clients to use one soap—Palmolive!” Shellac is a product of animal life, | the exudations of myriads o ftiny red | insects which swarm on tree branches, feed, propagate and die. «mlnuhl’uhufiu: yenture: says Madame Stefania Weisz, of Budapest, leading beauty specialist to the aristocracy “Because so many soaps are definitely harmful to the skin, I ask all my clients never to use any soap except Palmolive.” i Seventh Strcet Dealers in Sentiment Mayer & Co. deals in sentiment—the sweet and kindly thought of home and fireside joys. The man and woman who furnish a home are sound to the very heart. They are citizens of sterling quality. The consciousness of being a home-maker is one of the blessed felicities of life. It appeals with logic and ambition, pride and deep and abiding affection. Choose Lifetime Furniture, though, for permanent satisfaction. Y MAYER & CO. Between D a'nd E "Amoucfl skins vary considerably,” says Stéfania Weisz, of Budapest, “deep, thor- ough cleansing is the basic requirement of them all.” Thus Madame Weisz explains the need fqr regular use of soap and water. But it must be Palmolive Soap. Madame Weisz is consulted by the former aristocracy of Hungary, by the lovely women of the film and theatrical world. To all of them she says, “If you will only cleanse the skin regularly with. this pure blend of olive and palm oils, it will re- spond much more effectively to my treatments.” Echten, of Budapest, says nothing takes the place of Palmolive * “Whenever I give a treatment in my salon, 1 add the advice to cleanse the skin twice daily with PalmoliveSoap,” says Echten,another great Budapestexpert.“Nothing else,in myexperience, so thoroughly removes all the tiny particles that collect and clog up the pores, and unless all this accumulation is removed regularly, no amount of treatment can really keep the skin youthful and healthy.” That statement, you'll find, is typical of the specialists of Middle Europe. Pessl, of Vienna and Budapest, agrees to it. So does Lavecky, of Prague. And they are joined by an interna- tional group, including Paris’ most gifted beauty advisers. Here is the suggested treatment With the finger tips, massage a smooth lather of Palmolive Soap and warm water into the pores. Rinse away the impurities with warm water, then cold. Use Palmolive for the bath, too. Let your whole body enjoy its advantages, since it costs no more than ordinary soaps. Mil- lions of people obey this advice. They have made Palmolive one of the two leading toilet soaps in France, home of beauty; the first of all facial soaps in America and 48 other countries. A salon treatment by Weisz, of Budapest. Madame Weiss insists that desp, thorough cleansing is the basic vequiremens of all beauty treatments. And Palmolive Soap and water is best for such cleansing, in ber opinion. Here is the greatest professiondl endorsement in the world! 17,502 beauty specialists recommend daily use of Palmolive

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