Evening Star Newspaper, February 3, 1930, Page 7

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RELGIOUS SURVEY WL ENLST 5000 Districts ‘and Chairmen for March Campaign Are Announced. In-preparation for the religious survey ‘which is to be made of Washington in March, 5,000 volunteer workers are being cnlisted by the general committee for the Kernahan-directed survey and visi- tation evangelical campaign. The campaign is to be carried on under supervision of the Undenomina- tional Ministerial Union and under per- sonal direction of Rev. Dr. A. Earl Ker- nahan. A large committee of pastors and laymen, recruited from 2ll over the cl'-{. is planning to do the preliminary work, under chairmanship of Rev. John R. Duffield. The city is divided into 10 dis- tricts, each to be in charge of a clergy- man or layman of that district. The committee which has had charge of dividing the city and outlying portions, including Arlington County, Va., and the Anacostia section of Maryland, is headed by Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, presi- dent of George Washington University, with Lieut. Col. William O. Tufts of the United States Army (Reserve), topo- graphical section, as vice cl . District Chairmen Announced. This committee has turned over to Dr. Jason Noble Pierce, pastor of the Firsi Congregational Church, a map of the districts to be covered. The dis- }r(cLfi and district chairmen are as fol- ows: South Washington, Rev. Freeley Roh- rer, district chairman—Bounded on the north by the Mall and East Capitol street and including everything between the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers. Central Washington, Roscoe Brane, district chairman—Bounded on the north by S street northwest, on the south by the Mall, on the east by North Capitol street and on the west by Six- teenth street. i North Cen! ‘Washingtor Rev. Moses Lovell, district chn.l.rmm:'l!ound- ed on the south by S street and Con- necticut avenue; on the west by Con- necticut avenue and Rock Creek Park, on the north by Park road and on the east by Soldiers’ Home and First street noflhwfist.w ingtor Nort ‘as] n, Rev. George F. Dudley, district chairman—Bounded on the west by Rock Creek Park, on the south by Park road, on the east by Sol- diers’ Home and Riggs road and on the north by the District line. This district includes Takoma Park and . Silver Spring, Md. Northeast Washington, Rev. A. E. Barrows, district chairman—Bounded on the south by East Capitol street, on the west by North Capitol street, on the north by Florida avenue and the Baltimore branch of the B. & O. and on the east by the Anacostia River and District line. Rhode Island avenue, Rev. O. O. Dietz, district chairman—Bounded on the west by North Capitol street and Soldiers’ Home, on the south by Florida avenue and the Baltimore branch of the B. & O., on the east by the District line and on the north by the District line and Riggs road. This district in- cludes Hyattsville, Mount Rainier and Rflv!rdflew“hm P. C. Bd ‘West n, Rev. P. C. e wards, district chairman—Bounded on the south by Potomac River and the on the north by S street northwest, Connecticut avenue, Calvert street, Cleveland avenue, Woodley road and Massachusetts avenue and on the west by the District line. This district in- cludes Burleith, Foxhall Village, Wesley Heights and Conduit road. . Connecticut avenue, on the west THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1930, street, Cleveland avenue, Woodley road | and Massachusetts and Massachusetts avenue; on the west district includes Bethesda, North Chevy i Ju . Chase and Kensington, Md. Anacostia, Rev. Thomas 8. Davis— Includes everything east of the Ana- costia River. Arlington ' County, Va., Rev. Percy Mitchell, district chalrman—Includes e south of the Potomac River. Survey Begins March 9. District chairmen are holding meet- ings of pastors and laymen in their re- spective districts in preparation for the survey, which will take place from March 9 to March 21. The visitation evangelism campaign will follow the survey, from March 30 to April 11. Both will be under the personal direction of Dr. Kernahan, who will arrive prior to March 9, by which time the entire per- sonnel of survey and campaign workers will have been assembled by the vari- ous chairmen in charge of the prelimi- nary arrangements. According to plans submitted, there will be one worker for every 20 members in each church in the campaign. The survey will be conducted in the morn- , afternoon and evening hours by different shifts of workers, under dis- trict chairmen, and the list of workers must be ready by February 21 and in the hands of the district chairmen for transmission through Dr. Duffieid to Dr. Kernahan. BANK AIDE KILLS SELF AS INSTITUTION CLOSES Reopening by Clearing House Would Be Futile, Fort Worth, Tex., Financiers Say. By the Assoclated Press. FORT WORTH, Tex., February 3.— L gB. Ward, assistant cashier of the #a.s National Bank of Fort Worth, nich closed its doors Friday upon recommendation of the Fort Worth Clearing House Association, shot and killed himself yesterdady afternoon. Representatives of the clearing house banks of Fort Worth reported yester- day that it would be impracticable for the Clearing House Association to take over the bank, which failed to_ open Saturday and pay the depositors. Losses were found to be such that no feasible plan @ paying the depositors could be ‘workea out. American textile machinery is being used in Bolivia. IS TAKEN BY DEATH Former Dean of G. W. U. Dental School Will Be Buried Thursday. Dr. J. Roland Walton, former dean of the Dental School of George Wash- ington University and for many yel;'l engaged in the practice of dentistry in this city, died at his home, 5302 Reno road, Chevy Chase, D. C. yesterday, after a short illness. Born in Leonardtown, Md., in 1861, Dr. Walton was the son of the late Dr. John Randolph Walton and the late Mrs. Margaret Marshall Walton. He was a direct descendant of Leonard Calvert and the Duke family which settled in Maryland in the eary part of the seventeenth century. He was graduated from the Balti- more College of Dental Surgery in 1886. Later he was professor at the National University here. In 1903 he was ap- pointed professor at George Washing- ton University, afterwards being pro- moted to dean of the Dental School there, which position he later resigned. Dr. Walton was former president of the District of Columbia Dental So- ciety and a former member of the board of examiners for the District. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Virginia Walton. Funeral services will be conducted at the residence, Thurs- day afternoon at 2 o'clock. Interment will be in Congressional Cemetery. MILK FOR BEER URGED. BERLIN, February 3 (#).—Christened with a bottle of foaming milk, a bal- loon was sent up on an endurance flight yesterday by Dr. Dietrich, minister of food and agriculture, as a propaganda stunt to urge greater consumption of milk instead of beer and other holic drinks upon the Berlin citizens. ‘The minister christened it with the impressive title Federal Milk Committee by smashing a bottle of milk over the gondola. Sick stomachs, sour stomachs and indigestion usually mean ex- cess acid. The stomach nerves are over-stimulated. Too much acid makes the stomach and in- testines sour. Alkali kills acid instantly. The best form is Phillips’ Milk of Mag- nesia, because one harmless, taste- less dose neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Since its in- vention, 50 years ago, it has re- mained the standard with phy- sicians everywhere._ Take a spoonful in water and Reduce the Acid In sick stomachs—instantly ably end in five minutes. Then you will always know what to do. Crude and harmful methods will never appeal to you. Go prove this for your own sake. It may save a great many disagreeable hours. Be sure to t the genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia pre- scribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. 25c¢ and 50c_a bottle—any drug store. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical Company and its predecessor Mysterious Chair Rocks 4thMember Of House to Death Spectal Dispatch to The Star. FRANKLIN, W. Va,, February 3.—An aged and decrepit chair in the Dickinson Mountain dwell- Ing of the Eye family last week Tocked the fourth member of that household into eternal sleep. Apparently in perfect health, . Miles Eye, 72 years old, sank Wearily into that mysterious family = rocker. she had just mpleted ing the breakfas! dishes, A fow, moments later she followed her husband, who died similarly while resting in the Some yvears ago Miles Eye's grandmother found her final rest in the chair. His mother quietly succumbed to the hands of fate that rocked the chair. Two sons, five daughters, taree brothers and three sisters survive. e e it it All-Red Cat Active. H. C. Brooke, of Taunton, England, believes he has one of the most unique cats alive. It has short hair, which from whiskers to tail tip, is dark red, without any lighter shades or signs of tabby stripes. The pet rarely sits about like other felines, but paces or trots to and fro continuously. CLAFLIN Opticicn—Optometris: 922 14th St. N.W. Established 1889 Furniture New and Slightly Used Oflfl% :np‘:-tl";. I.I‘l.lrv.—'A"l'l’.A?flllel awes Furniture m'S‘B.ecmlty Co. 8t. N.W.. at Col. Rd. e PALAIS RO G STREET AT ELEVENTH Tues Dak., will succeed Elelson as president and manager of the Alaska Airways, an auxiliary of the Aviation Corporation. He will be responsible for completion of the contract in the performance of which Eielson is believed to have lost his life, that of bringing passengers and furs from the trading ship Nanuk, ice- bound since November off North Cape, %0 die Eison, tather of Ole Efelson, father of the missing ex- plorer, will sail Wednesday on the ?mm ship with Johnson, in the hope that his son's body may be found so that he can bring it back for burial at Hatton, N. Dak., his home. He declared, how- ever, that he was inclined to agree with the growing belief that wolves have left no trace of the hodies, EIELSON SUCCESSOR AND FATHER TO SAIL Arthur Johnson of North Dakota to Be Head of Alaskan Airways. Crash Three Months Ago. Authorized. band return By the Assoclated Press, SEATTLE, Wash, February 3.—As searchers today began the ninth day of d g in snow and ice for the bod- ies of Carl Ben Eielson and Earl Bor- land, where their plane crashed three months ago, 90 miles southeast of North Cape, Siberia, two North Dako- tans were waiting here to sail north- Barcelona. . The lish Benevolent A: e Engl ‘The ssoclation for the more than 180,000,000 people. Cultivation of German Art recently presented Donizetti’s “Don Pasquale” and Mozart’s “Cosl Fan Tutte” in Ber- ARMY BAND PLANS TOUR. Series of Concerts in Eastern Cities The Army Band at the Army War College has been authorized by the War Department to make a concert tour this Fall to citles in Pennsylvania, New Jer- sey, New York and New England. This b will be the first trip of the kind since the ed from its visit to| Spain last Summer as the musical fep- | resentative of the United States and other members of the Pan-American | Union at expositions at Seville and language uhspoken by FOR BILIOUSNESS Dr. Tutt's Pills quickly, surely re- lieve biliousness, sick headache, indi- gestion, constipation and other com- mon intestinal disorders. Try them and feel good. GUARANTEED ward on widely differing missions as & result of the supposed death of Alaska’s air hero. Arthur Johnson of Jamestown, N. ». We Will Loan You Money! To Refinance or Purchase D. C. Property lin, preparatory to giving them in small towns, which otherwise could not hear the operas. Our loan plan is the most liberal in_this part of the country. Be your own broker and save the additional ex- pense usually necessary when making loans. Investigate our plan NOW. | ness—that clouded Open Daily 9 to § Saturday until noon | | due to an acid system. | on your Savings PERMANENT Building Association Organized 1890 949 Ninth Street N.W. Just Below N. Y. Avenue Under Supervision U. S. Government saps physically and mentally. ach, nascent, or active, Charged with Laziness— Guilty Simply of Acidity! That persistent felling of tired- mind—that lack of dash and fire—that missing punch that decides so many situa- tions in business—are all usually Excess acid, formed in the stomach as a result of our unnatural eating NATIONAL OR MORE with gas, sourness and burning and sets up poisonous putrefaction in the gastro-intestinal canal that our strength and vitality, taxes our nerves and pulls us down Magnesia Oxoids, developed in Germany by a famous, 100-year- old_pharmaceutical house, correct acidity in the right way! contact with the acid in the stoms Magnesia_ Oxolds generate, oxygen. “live” oxygen stimulates the alka- ! drnggist and he will cheerfully re- line gastric mucus, checks putresj fun. Upon The faction in the gastro-intestinal canal and stimulates the activities | of the intestinal walls which aids the natural movement of the bow- els. All three effects are necessary to the true correction of acidity. 5-Day Acidity Test To ascertain just how “acid” you are, make this 5-day test. Get a package of Magnesia Oxoids small cost from Peoples Drug Stores or any other good druggt.:. |l Take two gfter each meal for » | few days and see how much better you feel—how much more soundly you sleep and how much more en- ergy you have. If 5 days' use doesn't tell you volumes, return jthe balance of the Oxolds to the your money.—Advertisement. day Lady Washington crepe is a super-quality flat crépe. Its tested quality is assurance of satis- faction—a lovely, heavy, distinctive quality, woven for finer frocks by a mill that stands Phenomenal Sale! 8,000 Yards Lady Washington Crepe 74 TELEPHONE DISTRICT 4400 s Special Features We have gqod reason to be immensely proud of Lady Washington crepe. For luxury and long use it is superb, and at this sale price it affords our patrons an unusual opportunity to benefit. You buy it with the assurance of your unhappy condition will prob- ELECTRICAL HEADQUARTERS 14th and C Sts. N. W. X END WASH-DAY WORRY! Charles H. Phillips since 1875. supreme in silks. wearability and washability. 1 . YARD This Special Price for Three Days Only Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday The color range, too, is so wide as to include just the right shade for every style of frock. Exquisite evening tints or daytime shades wait you—60 in all. In this wonderful color assortment you will find such smart shades as: Take Biue Monday from the calendar NOW—with an ABC Washer to fli,rebr‘a;i: sKyota Pl r:[;i;i:dzfi: J;z’;;?e%:: make the job of washing a joy! Electrical Headquarters displays models Yacn amoa green lid = bl 4 to exactly suit the laundering needs of the apartment home as well as the capucine frais de bois salad green apple blossom large family. Any of them are obtainable on our Convenient Terms— and many others | Select a Pictorial or a McCall Pattern and fashion yourself a garment of this marvelous crepe | PALAIS ROYAL—Second Floor Easy Monthly Payments with Electric Bills The Apartment Washer shown to the left is delivered by Elec- trical Headquar- ters for only TheABC Apartment. AWasher of remarkable capacity for its size. Folds down to tuck-away under the sink. Complete with wringer, a remark- able value at What One Dollar Will Buy For a Little Girl Tomorrow the Girls’ Department celebrates Dollar Day. Give little daughter a dollar and let her come and select a frock or some pretty undies for her Spring wardrobe. Whole trousseaux can be assembled from this collection Sale! Luxurious Lingerie Of Pure Silk 288 3.88 regular 25%size GENUINE bumat SHAMPO UU ASHERS e Pretty Tub of et s e ¥irmnbnbioy Values from 3.50 to 7.98 Frocks ey Many garments are one-of-a-kind. Reductions of one- s Curran Tonie third to one-half on the entire collection. Purest, un- 1 Shampoo for weighted silk and gleaming satin, trimmed in imported e et laces, French flowers and two-tone ribbons—some of Ever 0 » : A many nowN ;::di.fl Ul: them were handmade in Switzerland. fe‘fulhtntwh:wfl otice t] s A YEAR TO PAY BALANCE— differenee in gowns bloomers chartreuse bass dressed siths s b pajamas combinations @hite pinks e e ‘e nile peach well ‘made and ———— dancettes bed sacques Lido blue iy slips eggshell Sioes 710 11 hawe PALAIS ROYAL—Third Floor straight-line and !uek’ft'n‘: styles. Girls’ Rayon Bloomers 2 for $1 Any girl would like a big supply of these pretty peach, pink or white bloomers. In sizes 8 to 14. Rayon Vests 2 for $1 In flesh only, sizes 6 to 12 Well made, and will launder splendidly. Rayon Combinations $1 Your choice of the built-up shoulder, or bodice style with shoulder straps. Made of fine quality rayon and cut ABC Companion The highest quality obtainable in a wring- o er-type Washer. All- porcelain throughout for easy cleaning and enduring finish. A powerful yet clothes- saving action—quality higher than its low price would indicate— $135 removes excess water from ng out to dry. Facilitates ickens entire washing operation. All-porcelain finish in attractive green—as is efficient. Delivered for only $10 DOWN, We sponsor two splendid foundation garments With the inner belt 95 abdominal weight—how your outlines are subdued and moulded into the lines demanded by the new dresses. And its strength Silhouette insurance is what this comfortable garment repre- and durability will be a great comfort to you as well. Sizes 44 to 52. sents. It's especially designed for the larger figure. Just slip The W. B. Corsetlette ABC Playmayd The low price has never before com- manded a porcelain- finish Washer of this quality. Full-size, agi- tator action, compact construction, only $99.50 | Amc Spnner | The de luxe, wringerless Washer. Improved Spin.Dry mecha: clothes and makes most of them ready for ironing without han; rinsing and beautiful as it on and feel how the wonderful inner belt lifts and supports Women who appreciate the importance of the right foundation generously full. Sizes 6 to 12, for their frocks will want one of these beautiful W. B. garments. 95 Rayon Gowns Each one is of lovely brocade—hips and waist are moulded into . y slim lines with no sacrifice of comfort. Sizes 34 to 48. sl PALAIS ROYAL—Third Floor Such cute nightjes, in peach, flesh and white, | Sizes 8 to 2 PALAIS ROYAL—Third Floor

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