Evening Star Newspaper, March 10, 1930, Page 20

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Sight That Satisfy \HE well appointed office or home demands harmony in furnishings. This new Erveralite, ‘with its rich marble buse and classic pedestal surmounted by adecorative Ererald glass shade, enhances any interior and re- tains the many practical features that have made Emeralite so popular, including the special screen which changes ordinary electric light into soft eye-saving daylite that eliminates glare and improves visibility. Emeralited offices look better— have more output—daylight on every desk—best eye insurance. Genuine Emeralites are branded for ‘yous protection. Lol on the Green Gla Daylite Screen. Itisa ing service that natisfies. 8old by office supply and electrical dealors H. G. McFaddin & Co.. 32 Warren St.. N. Y. Established 1874 fluub TO EYES T S ‘Skin Hopeless? Is it marred by pimples, black- Then : heads or similar blemishes . ::slnotodny to use Resinol Soap intment. Apply the oint- ment to the irritated spots. In fifteen minutes wash off with Resinol Su¥ and warm water— rinse well. simple treatment is bringing smooth, clear com- Mem to many who had thought hopeless. The daily use of Resinol Soap tends to prevent FREE Tt mivmmit Resinol Help the Sickly, Frail, Puny Child Your doctor prescribes Cod Liver Ofl for your frail, back- ward, listless boy or girl because it contains Vitamins A and D. ‘Without these health-buil Vitamins, the bad :tasting that children hate to take would be useless. And now, Mother, when you' are absolutely sure of getting these mdq'le-l vm:m in. the new an mgmnd cCoy's Cod Liver Oil Extract Tablets, we know that you won't torture them with obnoxious liquid Cod putting them in sugar-coated tablets that chil- dren love to take. Two of these tablets to one teaspoonful of Liver Oil. We would not be allowed to make this statement 1f it was not true. McCoy's Tab- lets can be taken Winter and Summer and for every ailment, sickness, rundown or under- weight condition for which Cod Liver Oil is prescribed, McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Extract Tablets are equally as good. And that means for grown-ups as well as children. No drugs— Vitamins only. 60 tablets, 60c at | any drug store in America.—Ad- vertisement. 'WOMEN WILL BACK T6TH AMENDMENT National Leaders to Testify for Dry Cause Before House Group. Prominent women from widely sepa- rated sections of the Nation will come to the defense of prohibition when the House judiciary committee on Wednes- | day resumes hearings on measures to | repeal or modify the eighteenth amend- ment. In a continuous chain of three-min- | ute speeches they will represent nearly |a dosen national women’s clubs with | a membership of 12,000,000. Among their number will be a former mayor, a foreign mission board chairman and & college president. Statements from women unable to attend will be pre- sented. Among these is one from Mrs. Henry Ford, sent to and made public by Mrs. Henry W. Peabody of Boston, chairman of the women's national com- mittee for law enforcement. Mrs, Ford Supports Law. In that statement the wife of the automobile manufacturer said eighteenth amendment ‘“has been of | untold benefit to the women as will| as to the men of our country in .m: roving living conditions” and making | ‘a more prosperous Nation.” Ford | sent a telegram last week urging reten- tion of the dry laws, as did Thomas A. Edison. d The woman witnesses, led by Mrs. Peabody, will present their testimony on the drys’ third day before the com- mittee. Wets assailed prohibition and its results in hearings on seven days. The drys will be given an equal length of time for their argument. The president of the General Fed- eration of Women's Clubs, Mrs. John F. Sippel of Baltimore, will be the drys’ first witness Wednesday. Heads of | other national women’s organizations will follow Mrs. Sippel. These will in- clude Mrs. F. 1. Johnson of New York, | president of the Federation of Foreign Mission Boards of North America; Mrs, Clarence Marshall Busch of Miami, president of the National League of American Pen Women; Bertha K. Landes, a former Seattle, Wash., mayor, and President Mary Woolley of Mount Holyoke College. Other Witnesses Prominent. Among the other witnesses will be Mrs, Jesse Nicholson of Baltimore, the | of soeiety people in naming new daugh- . The Topnotcher e A s e S I watch the fellow who excels, who cuts a swath, who's wearing bells, and I admire his curves; whatever glory he| may share, whatever garlands he may wear, he certainly deserves. When peo- ple talk of supermen, we think of giants of the pen, who write majestic tomes; of nclm:l:tl who read the skies; t:: merchants great the! stock of fine-tooth combs. It is inspir- ing when one sees the captains of great industries who largely, nobly plan: sueh | men are great, but who would scorn the | gent who shucks a lot-more corn | any other man? In nearly every town we find some unassuming master mind whose work is out of sight; some trouble-shooter who can tell why your old car's not working well and promptly make it right. You take your watch to fix-it lads, who charge you many hard- earned scads. and still it won't keep time; it gains some seven hours a day, or idly loafs along the way until it seems & crime. And then at last you find a guy who puts a dice bex in his eye and sees just wha wrong; he knows just why it jumps and jerks, and speedily repairs its works, and life's a grand sweet song. There is a barber | down the street and people jog on weary feet to sit in his large chair; he has 8| gentle, scothing way of trimming off the surplus hay that toiling voters wear. In every trade, in every line, there is some | chap, whose work is fine, who sets his standard high: he takes a pride in do- | ing well; he tells us what he has to sell, and we go there to buy. o 0ld-Fashioned Names Again. Old-fashioned names are again ap- pearing in England, following the lead ters Ann, Mary, Elizabeth and similar appellations. One observer has been introduced in London recently to three than | crats of the “fightin Lavenders, four Marigolds and numer- ous Rosemarys. One aged bachelor re- marks that he hopes that Rosebud and Lilybud will be left out, for he knows of two women over 40 who are still Miss Rosebud and Miss Lilybud. Teachers, and Orrin ‘York, president of the Council of Wom- en for Home Missions. DRY WITNESS IS THREATENED. Baltimore Woman Warned Not tfo Appear at Hearing. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., March 10.—Mrs. John F. Sippel, president of the General Federation of Woman's Clubs and one of a score of prominent women sched- uled to appear in support of prohibition before the House judiciary committee in ‘Washington, Wednesday, was warned today by an anonymous telephone caller to cancel her engagement. According to a police report, the clubwoman was threatened with lly harm if she lp{)elred before the congressional com- mittee. As soon as the caller hung up, Mrs. Sippel called police headquarters and reported the incident. Policemen on duty in the neighbor- hood of Mrs. Sippel’s home were ordered to keep the house under observation. i PARENT-TEACHER FETE IS HELD AT LA PLATA Thirty-Third Birthday of Congress Observed by Local Association in School Auditorium. Special Distpatch to The Star. LA PLATA, Md, March 10.—The March meeting of the La Plata Consoli- dated School was held in the school au- ditorfum. The program was planned in celebration of the thirty-third birthday of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers. Miss Jane R. Bowie gave a talk on the history of the La Plata Parent-Teacher Association. R. H. Lee Reich talked on the history of the National and States Congresses of Parents and Teachers. The other part of the program consisted solo by Miss Carmel Torrens, a mem- ber of the senior class at Lackey High School, songs by a quartet from In- | | | TAR, WASHINGTON, DEMOCRATS OF NINTH DISTRICT PLAN FIGHT Meeting of Virginia Party Is Called for Bristol on March 20. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., March 10.—Demo- ninth district of Virginia will convene at Bristol, V: March 3C for the ing a candidate for November election. Time for vention was set a executive committee session will take place of Bristol Virginia High School. Basis for r tation by counties at the convention will be one delegate for each 50 votes or major fraction thereof cast for John Garland Pollard in ~ the 1920 gubernatorial election, e m of sel tes, as to whether they will be chosen at rmlnct meeting or county mass meet- ings, was left to the judgment of county chairmen. Decision to hold an early convention a meeting of tI of the district. The When Pain Comes Two ‘What many people call indiges- tion very often means excess acld in the stomach. The stomach nerves have been over-stimulated, | and food sours. The corrective is an alkali, which neutralizes acids instantly. And the best alkali known to medical science is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. It has remained the standard with phy- sicians in the 50 years since its invention. One spoonful of this harmless, tasteless alkali in water will neu- tralize instantly many times as In Respect to the Memory of This IStorc will close tomorrow at 2 p.m. hours after eating {much acid, and the symptoms disappear at once. You will never use crude methods when once you learn the efficiency of this. Go |get a small bottle to try. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia pre- scribed by physiclans for 50 years in correcting excess acids. 25¢ and 50c a bottle—any drug store. “Milk_of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark | of The Charles H. Phillips Chemi- |cnl Company and its predecessor |Charles H. Phillips since 1875. Hon. William Howard Taft —1late Former President and Chief Justice of the U. S. ~ Impored Tobralco Prints 85C Yard " Exclusively Here in Washington These Tobralco prints come from England to make some of the smartest frocks for Summer. Many children’s clothes. patterns are particularly suitable for 36 inches wide. Printed Pique, ,5¢ yard The Leading Sports Cotton A fine-ribbed pique—the smartest of cottons for Summertime—may be had in all the pastel shades and leading colors. 36 inches wide. CorroN DREss Goops, SEconp FLooR. Homespuns and Tweeds, %4 yard Are the Important Woolens for Spring Lacy tweeds for suits and frocks—and basket- | i t- [and wage one of the most intensive ever conducted by Demo- WOMAN PAYS $100 FINE. the past | Pleads Guilty to Liquor Possession. in the auditorium ' to again English in Russia Complain, English people is Russia are com- plaining that they are being treated with seant courtesy. Men and women, no matter how high their station in life, are reported to find it impossible to engage the help of any servants, and are forced to do their own house- Escapes Jail Sentence. Special Dispatch to The Star. MARTINSBURG, W. Va., March 10. ~—Mrs. Frank Ward was fined $100 and costs and sentenced to 30 days in jail in a magistrate’s court here yesterday when she pleaded guilty to possession of four bottles of lgor seized by offi- cers in a raid on her Summer home in the mountains west of here, She was immediately paroled after payment of the fine, Officers secured a warrant for the Taid after in_the home. only one | the rald. Officers said | she pleaded gullty to shiel Shanghai, ct:n. is to have two new S Frmises DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist This Is Better Bedding Week Every week at Woodward & Lothrop is Better Bedding Week. ..but this week we devote to promoting the fact. Woodward & Lothrop makes a serious job of Better Bedding—every piece of bedding we offer is outstanding in material, manufacture and comfort-giving qualities. Every piece of Woodward & Lothrop bedding is Better Bedding...every piece will give the utmost in comfort, wear and value. BeTTER BEDDING, S1xTH FLOOR. March Brings a Special Value in 3-Piece Slip Covers, $31-%0 Custom-tailored slip covers made to individual order...in our own shops, by experienced workmen. The choice of fabrics and the splendid work- manship are unusual at this low price. Imported Wanda Cloth (a sun and tub fast jaspe) may be had in green, rose, natural, blue, apricot or gold...or you may choose plain and striped Belgian linens (part cotton) in a variety of colers. All covers are tailored with plain skirts, and French seams. (22-yard allowance.) UPHOLSTERY, SIXTH FLOOR. Learn How You May Cook and Serve in Krust Kook-in China We are having demonstrations of this fine, hard-fired porcelain ware all this week. tures; you may both bake and serve in it. Krust Kook-in Casseroles and Pie Plates, Special, $1 Cuva, FirTi FLOOR. Krust Kook-in China is not affected by the highest or coldest tempera- A Consultant From Rogers Silverware Studios Is Here This Week Miss Mitchell will tell you the correct and smart use of Rogers Silverplate. Consult her about your new table decorations. Smveawars, Fmst FLoOR. Bronse-finish Table Lamp Sketched—with indivect lighting fea- tures. Complete with atsractive parchment. paper shade....$27.50 Bronze-finish Floor Torchiere Sketched— particularly desirable for reading and bridge. Equipped with 300- watt Mazda bulb, s22. .50 Wo dshire Suits always two trousers Modern Lamps Shed An Indirect Light They Eliminate Glare and Shadow weave Homespuns for suits and coats are ex- ~ tremely important for Spring. In the best colors. 54 inches wide. . ‘WooLex Dress Goops, S8zcoNp FLOOR. When You Use Paris Patterns You Wear Paris Clothes These patterns are made from the original creations—the latest designs of the sixteen leading Paris couturiers—and are carried by us exclusively in Washington. Priced at 65¢c. PATTERNS, SECOND FLOOR. dian Head and two pageants, “Lighting ;MTc-nd.lel" and “Growth of La Pllu, A" ‘The following_had parts in the pro-| glm: Mrs. T. P. Downs, C. Lancaster, . Mays, W. Griffin, Miss Laura Reese and Misses Emily Rae Wilhelm, Char- lotte Turner, Kitty Lillie Mitchell, Dee Gwynn, Julia Cox, Eliza Padgett, Kitty Cochrane, Hazel Hancock, Hilda Lyon, Doris Winifred Dyson, T. J. Mitchell, Hancock, Catherine Garner, Helen Hicks and Hazel Sanders. At _the business meeting Prof. Milton M. Somers, principal of the school, presented a check for $357 as the re- ceipts from & minstrel show given for the benefit of the association. Of Sturdy Worsteds for Serviceability $45 Business men know this sturdy worsted fabric wears lengthily and holds its shape lastingly, despite days of exacting office wear. The patterns and colors are in good taste, making them assets to his appearance. Models for men and young men. Other Two-Trousers Suits, $35 TaE MzN's Stons, Szconp FLOOR. son, A new and modern indirect lighting is kind to strained, tired eyes—par- ticularly good for young eyes . . . restful, subdued and efficient. Wood- ward & Lothrop presents these and many other new indirect lighting lll:l'lp! in our— Lamp Section, Seventh Floor Wherever You Go . . . Hartmann Trunks are the smart way to travel With vacation just around the corner— the luggage problem fakes on immedi- ate interest. Whatever your lulflfi' needs are—you will find precisely the correct type of traveling equipment here among our Hartmann trunks. Colds are often serious. Never neglectacold. Each day millions %lg%eo Cli. u‘sfiu(‘;rfiie'- hhx.tin ] —the re nized l!lnfllrd remedy. e At all druggists 80c. Grove's Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets ful Since 1889 When you have used these authentic Paris Patterns for reproducing these French cre- ations you will marvel that such chic is ob- tainable despite the ease with which the patterns can be made up into garments. Flower Hat Stands, 50c ‘Add a Springlike Note to One’s Closet Celluloid flowers top these wooden hat stands—an attractive note for the smart closet. Nortions, Aisie 22, First FLOOR. —— Turning Back Time’s Pages. Tracks which animals left in Ala- bama 250,000,000 years ago, a petrified crocodile which succumbed New Mexico 60,000,000 years ago, dinosaur bones at least 80,000,000 years old, the trified skeleton of a man who settled perhaps as much as 20,000 years ago and the frozen bones of ani- mals which roamed Alaska at about the same period, were among the im- portant sclentific discoveries announced by the American Museum of Natural History recently as a result of the ac- tivities of the organization. Average Person Only 68% Alive Because of ACIDITY Think of those restless nights and | gastro-intestinal canal and stimulates loggy days you experience. Think of | the activities of the intestinal walls those “headachy” afternoons and those | which aids the natural movement of mh of “nerves” and despondency|the bowels. All three effects are come on you and make you feel necessary to the true of “what's the ml:-.d ‘A'::d&duy does mn:; acidity. than cause aicd-indigestion, . g sourness, burning and fullness! 5-Day Acidity Test It uumnp ‘;:mnhuan putrefac- see just b “geld” you are s this” test. Get & of gastro-inf hich steal " ” agera’ package - D e Oxoids from People’s Drug y other e Then they are practical, too—for the Sower ‘Suc may hold a bit of sachet—and scent your Laird, Schber & Company Pumps Special $ I 2'75 ‘ A limited number of these smart patent coltskin pumps offered at $12.75 though they were made to sell at a much higher price. Trim- med with mat kid and pearl-luster kid; turned sole and spike heels. With the characteristic Laird, Schober styling and workmanship. Wouen’s Ssoes, THImD FLOOR. And when a Hartmann accompanies you on your journeys, you have the assurance that you are traveling the smartest way. Sketched Left—Full-size Hartmann Wardrobe Trunk off in black vulcanized fil lined blue karatol. s A wers and back-of-dra: ing device, 10 hangers, laundry ba and germent protective cushion.. Other Hartmann Trunks $38.50 to $160 - These sizes—AAA §, 5%, 6, 6%, 1%, 8 AA S, 6,7,8; A 4%,5 5% 617;:B4 4%, 5, 5%, 6, 6%, 7, 7%, 8; C 3%, %4, 5, 6, 6% ond 7. your nerves and make you so restless at night that you can't sleep. || Magnesia Oxoids, a marvelous new | da; acid-corrective, . discovered in Ger- | f m;:ly, deais with “'efés in m:d r‘i"?nt wa pon contact B the stomach, te test. an! good A after each meal for five see how much better you more soundly you juch more energy you the resufts don’t morc than ‘the balance of the to qum d he it

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