Evening Star Newspaper, November 27, 1929, Page 3

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You Can’t Be Too Careful : About Table Ice Almast evervbody knows of the dangers from impure water and impure milk. But many Hnl to realize that they chould use 'the same care in buying | ice as in water or milk. American Tee is absolutely pure. is made from filtered and ntifically purified water, frozen in itary con- tainers and delivered in clean trucks. Keep your refrigerator at an even cold and preserve the delicate, fresh flavor of your food. American | ICE | FREE TEXT BOOK FORD. C. APPROVED Parent-Teacher Association Indorses Capper-Zihiman Bills Before Congress. ‘The bill providing for free text books for the elementary, junior high and high schools 8f the District of Colum- bia introduced in the House and Sen- ate by Representative Zihlman and Senator Capper, chairmen of the re- | spective District committees, met with the unanimous a val of the Trues- E . EVENING ECKENER TO RECEIVE AWARD FROM NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC | Gold Medal to Be Given Graf Commander for World Flight.. Presentation Ceremony Will Be Held in Capital Next March. ST Dr. Hugo Eckener, famous German aviation expert, will receive the National Geographic Society's special gold medal | AR. WASHINGTON. | Queer Wedding Trip Is Por- D. €. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER NEWSREEL SHOWS CHUTE HONEYMOON trayed in Star-Universal Film in D. C. Theaters. The strangest honeymoon trip on record, from the clouds to the earth in parachutes, is disclosed in the latest Evening Star-Universal Newsreel which is starting today in the Stanley-Cran- dall theaters, the Rialto and other the- aters of Maryland and Virginia, 2% -1929. {ADMITS TAKING DOZEN Will Rogers Says: ! BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.—No _comedian of our generation but has profited by seeing the old. master, i Raymond Hitchcock, work. Such | ease and originality. Knowing and admiring you for years, Hitchy, I believe you would like this on your headstone: “Here lies & cheerful “soul, who spent a lifetime creating fun for others. Yet in doing so he has never copied any man's method. He lived, was loved, and ho died, just ‘Hitchy,” unlike nobod: And to make the day entirely obituary, I read of the death of Capt. Cuddihy, our crack Navy DOUGHNUTS AND BICYCLE| Defendant Given 15 Days for Each Cookie and 8ix Months in Theft of Vehicle. Joseph Pasquelle, 22 years old, ad- mitted having taken a dozen dnulhnuu and a bicycle from a house in the 1900 block of Bennings road and was sen- tenced to 16 days for each doughnut and six months for having stolen the bicy- cle by Judge Isaac R. Hitt in Police Court_yesterday. E. C: Munger visited the home of Wil- liam Puscoe on Sunday. He parked his bicycle in the hallway of the Bennings road residence. Pasquelle entered the house, grabbed a dozen of the Pusco: glm;flmum and escaped on Munger’s ve- cle. Police of the ninth precinct investi- | gated the alleged thefts and arrested Pasquelle. He pleaded guilty. A charge of vagrancy was dismissed by Juige Two Killed in Car Races. By Cable to The Btaj SANTIAGO, November 27.— Automobile nelnl-&mdly at the South Circuit resulted in two deaths, six se- riously injured and four cars destroyed in a series of accidents. Antonio Freitas, driving & Chandler, was burned to death with his mechanic, 3 when his car turned turtle while trav- eling at high speed. Enrique Cortest, piloting & Chrysler, won the race, covering the track dis- tarice of 330 miles in 4:03:103-5. R. Gallo, driving -An Alfa Romeo (Italian), d A. Jenkins, Porrl fifth. ~ Thirty’ cars competed in the race. Noted Physician Is Invited: Special Dispateh to The St SANTIAGO, Chile, November 27.— ‘The Congress on Pathology, meeting in January in Concepcion, has invited the famous Spanish physician Dr. Gregorio dale Parent-Teachers' Assoclatic~ last| night at a meeting held at the %orge | Truesdale Public School, Eighth and Ingraham streets, The association also indorsed the Crampton bill, which pro- vides that the District of Columbia negotiate a loan from the United States Treasury of $16,000,000 to provide parks in recognition of his recant ‘round-the- | world flight in the Graf Zeppelin and of “his other noteworthy achievements | which have contributed so much to the | advancement of the sclence of aero-| nautics.” Hitt | Maranon to attend Company American Drivers will take order for American Quality Coal pilot. Just three weeks ago he spent three days at my ranch, along with Secretary of the Navy for Aviation Ingalls (whom he was piloting). A fine chap and a great pilot. It just looks like the good ones go and us bum ones stay. The wedding took place in the cabin of a big Sikorsky plane high in the air over Roosevelt Flying Fleld on Long Is- land, N. Y. The bride was Marjorie Klinger, 18, and the groom was Donald Babcock, 20, both of New York City. Thev were married to the tune of & Open and Heated Thursday for Your Inspection DR. HUGO ECKENEK. $1.25 EXCELLENT THANKSGIVING DINNER WILL BE SERVED FROM 12 TO 4 PM. THE PLEASANTRY 3164 Mt. Pleasant Street Recervations May Be Made by Calling Col. 7941 If. Selling? Yes. Bi Canvassing? No. and women, full or part tim Well-known local compa unus opportu State experience, address, phone. Address Box 40-E, Star Office ¢ A FREE PALM with $2 order while they last Visit our store and see the wonderful display of Cut Flowers and Potted Plants. See our Prices on Week- End Sales RODMAN BROS. 14th & Harvard Sts. N.W. Phone Col. 8178 and playgrounds for the city. School Board Election Indorsed. At a previous meeting the association had placed itself on record as unani- | mously in favor of the Capper-Zihlman | bill providing for the election by popu: lar vote of a Board of Educafion for the District of Columbia. Mrs. William T. Bannerman, lellsll tive chairman of the Fed District of Columbia, was the principal | speaker at the meeting. the main was the bill to election of the District cation. Miss Holland Presides. Bilbrey, president of the group, Miss Sarah B. Holland, principal association, presided over the meeting. of the progress of their children, SUGGESTS METHOD Gen. Summerall, port, Recommends ‘“‘Selective Service” Law. By the Associated Press. method of ew. units “for the the Army. In other respects the re| tion throughout the said that, “even in ing new troops.” “There is no way.” he declared, lon of Parent-Teacher Associations, and vice chairman of the joint committee for the || | election of a board of education for the Her topic in rovide for the rd of Edu- Owing to the illness of Mrs. J. H. Truesdale of the school and vice president of the | ¢ Following the meeting the mothers visited the various school rooms, where | they met the teachers and were told TO BUILD UP ARMY in Annual Re-| A selective service law was described today in the annual report of Gen. C. P. Summerall, chief nl staff, as the ane procuring. flr-lmm-compleu" Inrlntry division of port re- flected & generally satisfactory condi- Army. arding the Infantry, Gen. Sum- our first-line , our basic units are far from complete, and much time must elapse before divisions are ready for combat, even if necessity did not re?ulre the utilization of their personnel for train- The bestowal of the award upon Dr. | Eckener was announced today by the Geographic Society and notification of the award was communicated to the aviator through the German embassy he Dr. Eckener, in turn, has cabled that he will come to Washington in March, at which time the medal will be presented to him at a meeting of the Washington members of the Na- tional Geographic Society. The presentation ceremony will be similar to those occasions upon whien Comdr. Richard E. Byrd was given a medal for being the first to reach the North Pole by airplane and when Cocl Charles A. Lindbergh received the so- ciety’s medal for his flight from New York to Paris. Attacks Experiments. On both those cccasions presentation of the medals was made on behalf of the | society by President Coolidge, now a | trustee of the society. Dr. Eckener’s association with the de- velopment. of dirigibles, paradoxically, | i dates from the time when Eckener was editor of a Frankfurter newspaper and printed bitter attacks upon the experi- ments then launched by Count Zeppelin. Count Zeppelin sought out his edi- | torial foe, took him up on some of his | flights, and both narrowly escaped death | later when one of Zeppelin's early air- ships exploded just befcre landing. Eckener Fosters Subscription. After this disaster Count Zeppelin threatened to abandon aviation and it was Eckener, then converted to the fu- ture of the dirigible, who persuaded him to resume his work, and fostered th popular subscription which enabled him to do so. - Thenceforth Dr. Eckener was closely associated with Count Zeppelin. H“h- .| erto he had been a passenger and ob- | server; now he became a pilot, and studied all other phases of aircraft op- eration, which was to -be his lifework. Upon the death of Count Zeppelin he became acting head of the Zeppelin con- struction works, and last year was made president ‘of the Zeppelin Co. ‘Two flights to America won Dr Eckener world renown before he made his epochal flight around the world last August. In October, 1924, he brought the Los Angeles from Friedrichshafen. Germany, to Lakehurst, N. J. In 1928 he pnoud the Graf Zeppelin®from G many to the United States and back to Friedrichshafen, carrying passengers ! SIBERIAN WAR DEAD NEAR HOME SHORES Steamer Bringing Bodies of 75 Back to U. S. Is Due to Dock by Friday. B the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 97.A~Aflerl lying for 10 years in lonely Siberian graves, the bodies of 75 American war dead were aproaching their homeland today to receive the honors of their country. The steamship President Roosevelt of he United States Lines, bringing the bodies from France on the last lap of | their journey, is scheduled to arrive l!‘ its Hoboken pier either tomorrow night or early Friday. The ship has been delayed by gales. ‘The Americans had been sent to the Archangel front as part of an allied force to prevent the Germans from seizing the North Russian ports for ubmarine bases after the Russian revolution. They were members of the 339th Infantry, 310th Engineers, 337th Amb;fllnce Company and 337th Field Hospital 102 Bodies Returned lll_ 1919, Some of the men were killed in ac- tion, others died of wounds, discase and | exposure. In 1919, 102 bodies were re- | turned to this country. The others have lain in scattered graves along the | ‘Trans-Siberian Rallroad until recently, when they were located and removed through the efforts of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Eleven more bodies now are in France awaiting: word from relatives living in Europe. Full military honors have been ar- ranged by the Aimy and the Navy fo the reception of che dead. The Presi- | seen cutting up high jinks just before ‘mcm drills to honor the late Emperor | made just before his death. | aboard ship and the ralls and ties taken pair of 525-horsepower Hornet motors in place of Lohengrin, kissed each other and immediately dived through the rlu\:g: on their honeymoon trip to the earth, The best man, Eugene Kraus, accom- panied the pair on the brid: ip, tak- mg the plunge from a height o '2,000 feet with them. All landed safely, al- though the bride had a narrow escape, her parachute not opening up for a distance of 1,100 feet. The big silken bag finally came open, however, and she was the first to touch the earth. Performing Monkey. A bit that will delight every girl and boy is & performing monkey, a rea “Lady” Chimpanzee, who does her daily | dozen on an_serial walk out in Culver City, Calif. Her name is Mary, and she is the coolest headed girl you ever saw. She walks a tight rope, like a circus robat, and performs all kinds of tricks on the rope without the slightest fear | of falling. The Stanford University freshmen are the gridiron clash with California. They built a huge bonfire as a- defi to their rivals and danced about the blaze, said to be the biggest bonfire in history. A gorgeous pageant is seen at Mex- ico City, where countless thousands turned out to celebrate “Revolution ay.” There was a great military pa- with splendidly decorated floats di T and with marchers from the athletic division of the army. President Portes | T! Gil did honor to the heroes who put down_the last uprising. Pageant in Japan. Another pageant was caught by the cameraman in far off Japan, where 20,000 school children went through Melji. In contrast there was a very simple and pompless funeral ceremony for Georges Clemenceau, the Tiger of France, who was burled in an obscure wood near Paris at his personal request, That the customs-men of Washing- ton State are on the job is shown when they captured an old “Lizzie” which contained $25,000 in drugs. 1 One of the interesting sights fs the loading of an entire ralroad onto a steamship bound for South Americ: Seventeen locomotives and 30 cars were | lifted by great cranes and hoisted with them. The embarkation took place | PUBLIC HEALTH GROUP T0 MEET ON FRIDAY Chamber of Commerce Committee Will Hold Organization Ses- sion in Afternoon. An organization meeting of the re- centlv appointed public health commit- tee bgo Washington Chamber of comm-rce will be held at 12:30 o'clock Friday afternoon in the chamber’s of- fices in the Homer Building, it was an- | nounced today by Dr. James A. Flynn, | chairman of the committee. Dr Ramsay Nevitt is vice chair- an, and the other members of the mlhllc health group include Dr. Viola Russell Anderson, Dr. Bernard A. Baer, Russell Balderson, Dr. Frank W. Ballou, Frank B. Crown. Alhn Dlvil John l Dickman, Miss G. E. Dodd, Rev. Geol W. Dow., A. O. zdmonduum‘ Le ! Flemer, Clara L. Free, R. Gllll"lch‘ Howard Grifith, Paul D, Orlm ‘homas A. Groover, Herbert Gt heim, Walter W. Hall, Emanuel R. III, Mitchell Hanson, Wallace Hatch, Fred C. Hays. Carlton B. Hazard, F. C. Hei- gle, Leon H. Herben. Lawrence F. Hig- llnl Hallett Hill, W. R. F. Hines, Henry Hirsch, Dr. R. T. Holden, Harry L. Hamnnn. PFred W. Horton, Miss Nora B. Huffman, l:dslr B. Kay, Philip King. August King- mnh Dr. Lewis H. Kras- kin, Grant Leet, Dr. Harry S. Lewis, Miss Mary A. Lindsley, Raymond Lurbe, Simon Lyon, Dr. S. B. Muncaster, Har- old F. Pellegrin, Dr. C. Jabel Robinson, Sidney Seidenman, Mrs. Vluinh w. Speel, Dr. Grace A. Thom) G. B. Trible, Mrs. Susan R. H wfllllm Ford E. Youn' and John Zanier. PR v MEETING IS POSTPONED. ‘The executive council of the IHinois State Society, meeting Monday night in the office of its president, Senator Charles S. Deneen, passed a resolution to post- pone its December meeting out of re- NEW ‘!:tlgltfih Bomes WO()DLEY PARK 6 rooms, 2 baths, electric re/ngernunn, 2-car garage 2914 CORTLAND PL. Prive out Conn. Ave. to Cathedral Ave., left to 29th, and 1 Square north to Cortland Place AL S Qansfiury NY INC, flwnzn—fluilden Will Women Abolish War? EN managed the world for centur- ies,and wars went on. Women have voted anly a dozen years, yet already more has been accomplished to end war than in all the past. What of the future? Read “The Steps That Lead to Peace” by Florence Brewer Boeckel, inter- national authority, in D'EC E M BER GOOD HOUSEKEEPING EVERYWOMAN'S MAGAZINE features by EARLE LOOKER, FRANCES PARKINSON KEYES, GEORGE W. GRAY, BRUCE BARTON, EMILY NEWELL BLAIR, and many more. dent Roosevelt will be met off Ambrose Litghship by the United States de- | Should the ship arrive before sunse trmv planes will circle overhead. xfl“,., ional salute of 21 on both trips. ‘Dr. Eckener’s services to the science of aeronautics include not only his im- portant work in helping develop the semi-dirigible to a passenger vehicle of nine the air and in demonstrating its utility (A na from Essington. Pa. spect to the memory of th me Becn- From England comes a pussle picture | {25c" o v "oa” The mext meeting | 2 sam’{,‘..',’;“",‘;fi DS Dlc.| will be held January 8 in A _wm.m‘ and it is up to the spectator to|Hotel guns will be | guess before the answer is finally Mistol - Rte.U.6.BAT. latest scientific: procure - Teplacements or new units without the enactment of' a selective service law. Months would be required for such a law to be enacted and to +become effective.” Outlining the mission of the Army discovery checks colds, B dbnde: tors, proved sore wvery helpful by throat! thousands of people, Mistol soothes and heals. head and throat mem- branes irritated by colds. Get a bottle today at any drug store. Put Mistol fre- quently up the nose with handy dropper in package. Gargle ‘with Mistol, too. authorized Congress,” Gen. rail outlined & survey made with | ility in mind “that our extent Summe! the responsibility military forces must always be in such state of preparedness that the Army may, without delay, take the mmnuu: for the protection of our country in the | event of an emergency. ‘The state of tnlnln' of the Regular Army was ducflb-d as “generally satis. factory” with the system of decentrali- zation “justifie Increased ration lowances, it was added, “greatly im- proved the morale o( troops.” GEN. SHAW TO RETIRE FROM ARMY IN MARCH in war as one “to utilize speedily and effectively the national resources to the | hy his famous flights, but also in his nbservations on atmospheric conditions fired from Govermors Island. At the Hoboken pler a room has been especially prepared, where the bodies | | fiashed on the screen. notably toward for ‘future aviAl of the upper air whkkh have contdibuted ing the skies safe By the Associated Pres WOONSOCKET, R. I, November 27. BANK IS HELD SOUND AS RUN IS STARTED Rival Inlmnhonl in lhode TIsland Town Refused to Accept Deposits. will lie in State under a military ‘lurd flf honor. Military funeral services will be held Priday at 11 am.. with chap- Iains of the Veterans of Nreltll Wln | ofciating. 29 as Yet Unidentified. J | On Saturday morning 56 of the bodies (29 of them unidentified) will be | put aboard a special train for Detroit, | which furnished most of the men for the 339th Infantry. Other bodies will | be sent to Washington, Chicago, New Richmond, Wis., and other points in the Midwest. At Detroit the highest military honors | | will be paid. Upon arrival of the special | | train at the Union Station there at 10 | | |a.m. Sunday the bodies of the Detroit | dead will be escorted to the City Hall SLANDER ACTION FILED Clenfln‘ nnd Dye Workl Is lued‘ for $25,000. Slander is charged in a suit to re- | cover 25,000 damages filed in the Dis- trict Supreme Court by Samuel Cohen against the Majestic Cleaning and Dye ‘Works, in rear of 633 H street. northeas:. and Isadore Janet, its general manager While in the employ of the establish- ment, July 27 last, Cohen says Janet, in the presence of other persons, accused him of putting sulphuric acid in the trucks of the concern and with an in- tenticn to blow up the plant. Cohen says he consequently has suffered in his good name and reputation. He is repre- Apartments. In Perfect Order Only a Few Left Hall. 1915 K St. patn 13430 Hieaihhyr i 8548 L. W. Groomu 1416 F St. TIRE BARGAINS k O BT T O'PrAYY by a detachment of Regular Army | sented by Alwmey George W. Sutton. troops and the Michigan National Gulrd | and the entire m-mbenhl —Rumors that the Woonsocket Institu- | tion for Savings had suffered losses in | the recent stock market decline uurum a offic] 0 e nk denied the n‘pvm and the State bank | ™ bodies will lie in state i for several days at White Chapel and e e oatiauea” g 1o | then be entombed until next Memorial Broiear Ly day, when they will be buried. When the bank closed it was an- nounced that it would be open as usual in the morning and those who wished to withdraw_their funds would be able %o | o so. Bank officials said they would | have plenty of money on hand to meet the demands. Most of those who withdrew their money v;ntdw th:hrr_lrxl\_ah:scnf th‘e, lumbia National Guard, and afterward | Rhode Island Hosp! st Co. -an: - | the Industrial Trust Co., to deposit their | Senant, 270 Unibod States Tnfantyy, | Withdrawals, Officials of both banks refused to take the money, telling the depositors to return their funds to the | Woonsocket Institution. The head-| quarters of the Hospital Trust and the Industrial Trust in Providence also offered to purchbse all deposit books of the Woonsocket Bank at their face value. They said that they would hold | Pleasant and easy! Colds are dangerous. Protect yourself this scientific i way! MADE BY THE MAKERS OF NUJOL We have a W}Ilflkfly of NEW tires taken off new. cars and traded in en John Boyd Dunlops at these low prices. 29x4.50 Goodrich $6.90 Former D. C. National Guard Officer; Ordered Home to Await Return to Private Life. Argenf un 's 1920 wheat crop totaled CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS. PRESBYTERIAN. 29x5.00 K. Springfield and Fisk, $8.40 30x5.00 Goodyear $8.76 29x5.50 Fisk $10.62 'IH IMIW LEETH BROS 1220 13th St. N.W. Brig. Gen. George C. Shaw, stationed at Fort Rosecrans, Calif., who holds the Congressional Medal of Honor and a Silver star citation for heroism in ac- tion, has been ordered to his home to await retirement for age, March 6 next. Born in Michigan on March 6, 1866, he bsgan his military service in the Spanish War in May, 1808, as a first leutenant of Infantry, District of Co- DR. RAY GIVES LECTURE. | Tells of Exploration of Unknown Territory in Bolivia. Dr. G. Whitefield Ray, lecturer and | | explorer, gave an illustrated lecture on | the results of his exploration of un. ’kna'n territory in Bolivia, in Columbi Hall of the Washington Missionary Col lege, Takoma Park, last night. Dr. Ray displayed many interesting Indian curios and pictures collected by | him during his 16 y for_the Bolk CHURCH ANNOUNCEIINT! LUTHERA! LUTHER PLACE MEMORIAL | SPECIAL NOTICE. ROOF REPAIRING. PAINTING. prices _Norih Roofing Co.. 2038 18tk Church 16th and Kennedy Sts. N.W. Thanksgiving Morni at 10 O'Clock Sermon by tha Paster, Rev. Godfrey Chobot d by Rev. Douglas P. y_ mysel BARTECH. 1456 Belmont st. n.w. 27% CORPORATIONS ORGANIZED. ESTIMATES upon inquiry. CORPORATE ORGANIZATION go NY. 308 Na- Union Trust Bullding. o5 2800, ‘NOT IN BUSINESS FOR MY HEALTH, BUT for the "health of your busine: gravhing, Mimeosraphing, Address Dist. N Bank Bids. Fr. 1143, Open 830 am. | wCourage Wins Happmess in Tough Battle Nurse tells how even a broken leg can be forgotten if simple rule is followed assault, and, under a heavy fire from WE the enemy, maintaining alone his posi- B M YOUR. NRIGHEOR=LST 'Uf | | tion on the parapet after the first three and you, too. men who followed him there had been StORNGE Co, DAVIDSON TRANSFER & |iilled or wounded, until & foothold was gained by others and the capture of the place assured.” That action occurred | the books and that If the depositors at Fort Pitacus, Lake Lanao, Mindanao, | wanted to repurchase them they could P. I, May 4, 1903. do 30 without loss on interest. | ‘suPrevkgt:ly he ‘had 'been a lr‘ded - o > | e ver Star citation for gallantry in | t Thom: action during the campaign about| PLAN TO BEAUTIFY ! Marahui and espectially in the assault | on Fort. Bacolod in Mindanso in April WATERFRONT GIVEN | 0. K. OF WAR OFFICE Since the World War he served in (Continued From First Pag The I’ublu‘ Is Invited o2 PETEREATh EPISCOPAL. rmz HIRE, LARGE CLOSED VAN B — gay’ or Job. "Owner drives; 1007 s Dist. 5636, Eve st St. Margaret’s Conn. Ave. and Bancroft Place Rev. Herbert Eeo(( Smith, D. D. r DR M TSEM ST 8W., AN- | Tounces hat. his dental omee will be. closed Iring the months of December and J W OUR_REPUTATION COMES FROM ful handling. “on-time” ~arrival nnd Xo- costs in moving household l'oodl from Bo"!ll B!N INC. y 7:30 a.m.—Holy Communion. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector. St. Andrew’s Day— 1 am. ALL WELCOME ALWAYS this city as a member of the War De- partment general staff and was espe- clally active in the development of rifle| practice among the citizen soldiery. He reached the grade of colonel in June, 1 and was promoted to brigadier general June 25 last, NEW AIR EXPRESS LINE TO OPEN DECEMBER 1 Route From Capital to Cleveland Will Connect With Nation- Wide Systems. Air express service from the Nations! Capital to Pittsburgh and Cleveland, connecting there with Nation-wide air express systems, will be put in operation abcut December 1 by the Railway Ex- press Agency over the Clifford Bail air- line, it was announced today. Daily express service from this city will be given, planes leaving Hoover Feld at 12:30 p.m. for Pittsbuigh and Cleve- land, where deliveries will be made the same afternoon. Air express matter sent from Washington before noon will be_delivered the following morning_t. points as far West as Salt Lake City and on the West Coast before nightfall the second day, it was announced. e Standard regulations governing the !w’:nfl weight of packages will be fol- YOU would think a very old lady laid up with a broken thigh ina plaster cast would be a hard person to keep happy. Yet, according to | Nurse Helen V. Griffin, 64 Pros- pect Avenue, Hackensack, New Jersey, it can be done—if you know | how. We may not have broken legs to make us sad, but we have other | troubles many of which fly away when we follow this good advice. “My patient,” says Miss Griffin, “being unable to move about by herself became very econstipated. | Many medicines in pill form were | used with little or no results. Finally ‘when we came home from the hospital I began the use of a tablespoonful of Nujol twice daily, later reducing to one a day. “Soon my patient became regular and comfortable, without any pain | or discomfort, This of course gave her confidence in eating as much as her appetite’ required. - Now she is happy and cheerful, since regularity has begun and continued with such little trouble. I could state many instanees of excellent resuits from | Nujél, but this is the most recent one.” That’s what happens when you learn this easy and simple way to good health. Nurse Griffin knew how harmless Nujol is, containing | mo drigs or medicine, but acting only as a natural lubricant. She kmew how it keeps the excess of body removal of the unsightly structures and | Saturday, the general beautification of the entire water front of Washington Channel, also | give adequate faollities for the charac- || ter of commerce now handled and |j which may reasonably be expected to move over this water front in the fu- ture. “Rail connection has not been found necessary for handiing the present trat- | o (@ s Dt atre s demh braith A~ ™. E. non CHURC of the local commerce is ex; whic] =3 H Galbraith 6th St. Sts. N.W. m. Would justify the very large expendi- fure required in providing direct Tail . stor. connections. In carrying out the pro- . posed plan & modification of the hnrbor, 1am. s ,:‘k:““'l Sermon | | lines will be necessary, as the piers| d would extend about 60 feet channel-, f ward of their present location. It seems | ees particulatly desirable in this case that | the improvement proposed should be | —. undertagen by the Distriet and Federal Governments rather than by private in- terests under . some arrangement for | long-term' leases. While the chief-of en- ineers s not prepared to submit a rec- | ommendation as to the proper financ- | ing of the improvement, he reports that | improvement of the water front on the || north side of Washington Channel is || deemed_advisable following in general | he pians proposed. T D o 'mfnnnxpm. end New Youk Oity TED STATES STORAGE CO.. INC, n 10th_St. ww —_Metropolitan 1845, LIVE OR ] STORAGE u'ronomnss FORYOURT HA!\KQ(H\'] dinner order today Hildick's | Pure Apple Juice. No orders| delivered Thuarsday. SAMUEL | €. PALMER CO\ Wisconsin ave. West 0190. Roofs That lel Last SLAG—TIN—SLATE Prompt Attention to Repair Work eorge W, Barghausen 1126 9th Bt. N.W. Met. 1325 EOOFING—by Koons Slag Roofing. finnine. Roof "Painting Re- paire. Thoro or! Tooters | Let, onti- KOONS focfit) puncon, A Printing Service foefering exceptional tac) Siscriminating _clisntele Thz 'National (Pihapxtal Press 1310-1213 D ST. N.W. ational 0850 The Celebrated Cider Barrel “You Know It” be open every day and Sunday. except stmas Day, until New Year, inclusive. Autumn_Gold, Best Cider nn Es h 1l im - iled to tour thousand gallons. hile 30 canit will keep tweet o ione time 15 Frind Predesick. Flln WANTED RETURN u Bemon h! the Minister, “Ye TI lllkl. 0 Christ Church, Georgetown O and Thirty-first St Rev. E. PINKNEY, WROTH, Rector THANKSGIVING DAY 9:30 a.m.—Holy Communion. 10:30 a.m.—Community Thanksgiv- ing Service, West Wash- ington Baptist Church. Preacher, Rev. Thomas K. Nelson, D. D. i % Shureh School chmrui music for Wi These are the girls who help us to smile when we need it mo-t. Senior will ‘Tender These 4 ! INTERDENOMINATIONAL. ' Francis Asbury Methodist Church Sixteenth Street Between Irving and Lamont Thursday, November 28, 1929 Union Thanksgiving Service _© 11:00 A.M.—Sermon “THE THANKFUL HABIT” By Rev. Frederic W. Perkins Co-Operating Churchu Columbia Heights Ch Church M I Chureh INTERDENOMINATIONAL. poisons from forming (we all have them) and helps carry them away. These are the poisons that make us blue, and low in our minds. We || all have to get rid of them. Women need a natural aid like Mujol just as | much, if not more than men. There | are 80 many physical conditions | they have to go through that throw them off balance—upset their ncr- mal schedule. 5 Take Nurse Griffin's adviee now | and see what Nujol can do for you. You can get it at any drug store for the price of 2 ticket to a good movie. You will find that Nujol works easily, normally. Keep it up for two weeks and then see the difference. | You'll wonder how you ever lived | without this natural, pleasant, easy 1 ‘way to health and happiness! | —Advertisement No Dnnhnr—-lmn lome' JACKSONVILLE, Fla, November 37 (#)—Soft drinks must be served 1 plfier cups at the Thanksgiving foo game between Florida -and w-h body seen drink- to be ejected, inded. MORGANTHAU IS IN RENO. RENO, Nev., November 27 (#).—Henry Morgenthau, former Ambassador to Tur- key, accompanied by Mrs. Morgenthau, arrived here today for a visit with their dlulhur Mrs. Agma uorlen!.hlu ‘Wert- heim. It is believed Mrs. Wertheim, who hu resided here several weeks, is TOA] FORNTTOR to_file suit for divorce, from New York. Phi) delnnlc Atiantie City. thou:h ohe has refused to confirm or | door attendant, 2; cheek girl, 1. N J.;: Richmond. Va. and Baltimore. M. deny the report. Mrs. Werthsim’s hus- ' Rockefellers, John D. senior ~and Smith’s Transfer & 5"’“%' (0., band is Maurice Wertheim, New York junior. visited & restaurant and left a 1313 0 Bt North 3343 banker, il of dimes. ~ ticket money being refus Standard Dimes liTl‘ipl. CAMDEN, N. J., November 27 (@) The correct ratio : Lv. West mphb. 6:51 P.l All Steel Equipment Pengs Ivania Railroad ncis Asbury Methodist Church . All Souls’ Church (Unitarian)

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