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Clean Rugs make healthy homes! Call Mr. Pyle about cleaning and storing floor coverings Nat. 3257-3291-2036 Spring health Aids The““turnof theseasonisa critical time foryourdog. Give him careful treatment mow, and he will be the happy, spirited ‘companion you want him to be. GLOVER'S Condition Pills or Iron Tonic liquid). . . . each & real tonic, appetizer, stimu~ R e GLOVER'S Round Worm Capsulesor Ver- mifuge (liquid). Needed by puppies regularly nd by older dogs 2 to 4 times & Worm Capsules. For 65e. GLOVER’S Digestive Pills comforting to stomach and intestines. 65c. 8old at drug stores. pet shops, kenn (goods stores. 1f desler cannot supy on receipt of price. FREE: 104 pa, advice 119 Fifth Avenue, New York, U.S.A. GLOVER'S . ImPERIAL ¢ POG M DICINES Hundreds of Thousands of Wise Americans Demand Kruschen Salts | Keeps you in good health all the | time—skin clear and body free from fat. and sporting illustrated dog book, also our veterinarian. Just think of it: These new, bet- | ter and different salts were only in- troduced into America a few months ago—yet a host of intelligent Amer- icans ‘are healthier and happier be- cause of thelr supreme goodness. Kruschen Salts are the daily| health dose of millions of people the | world over—they are the largest sell- ing medicinal salts in Great Britain. ©One half teaspoon of Kruschen in 8 glass of hot water every morning gently but surely stimulates the liv- | &, bowels and kidneys to healthy | elimination. | But the six vitalizing and rejuve- | nsting salts in Kruschen do more than cause regular elimination—the man or woman who takes them reg- ularly need have no fear of poisons polluting the system which is the cause of many annoying and de- pressing ills. One bottle of Kruschen Salts (lasts | 4 weeks) cost but 85c and one bottle will prove of vast benefit to people who have constipation, headaches, indigestion, nervousness, rheuma- tism, depression, acidity and auto- intoxication. Not only that but one botile will bring about body activity—increase in energy, vigor and ambition, spark- eyes and freedom from pimples blemishes — millions know all this—you ought to know it. Sold by Peoples Drug: Stores and Ameriea over.—Advertise- | of a plane piloted by the aviator. | Dr. ARPLANE CRASH S FATALTO WO Pilot and Wife Killed and Two Passengers Hurt—Fog Blamed for Accident. | By the Assoctated Press. HAYS, Kans, April 17.—Fog, , the | enemy of aviation, has claimed at least | two additional lives, | plane crash here yesterday. the result of a A. J. (Steve) Lacey, 27, Wichita, Kans., test pilot and exhibition fiyer, and his wife, 20, died following the fall Rus- sell Guild, 22, of Holyoke, Colo., is in a critical condition in"a Hays hospital. H. C. Hill, also of Holyoke, the fourth occupant of the plane, less seri- ously injured, also is receiving hospital treatment. Exact extent of Guild’s injuries has not been determined, pending an X-ray examination later today. It is believed his spine is fractured. Dr. Hill received l‘bsbroken nose and several fractured ribs. According to Dr. Hill, the pilot ap- parently lost his sense of direction after flying for 20 minutes in a dense fog, and headed the airplane into the ground. The plane speeded 3,200 feet and buried itself in a pasture. An investigation of the crash, in an effort to determine the exact cause, is planned today with the arrival of Clyde C. Cessna, president of the company that employed Lacey, from Wichita. J. P. Brock, county coroner, said he would co-operate with the airplane company official and his assistants, their investi- gation to determine whether an inquest would be held. The same fog thought to have caused the crash prevented the arrival late yesterday by air of the Wichita party. TWO-HOUR P.I-\RKING LIMIT | & IS ORDERED AT MUSEUM Arrangement Made to Accommo- date Tourists Visiting Smith- sonian Institution. Oalculated to afford visiting tourists an opportunity to park their cars and see the National Museum and the Smithsonian Institution, & two-hour parking limit was placed in effect yes- terday in the Smithsonian grounds. This announcement was made by Capt. Ray Montgomery, U. 8. A., superintent ent of the United tSates park police, under whose jurisdiction this area comes, Capt. P. J. Carroll of the park police explained that this arrangement will be effective at once between the hours of 8 am. and 6 pm. The parl spaces hitherto have been monopol by the all-day parkers, Capt. Carroll said, so that there were no places for the tourists to park. All the park- ing facilities were utilized by Govern- ment workers, because persons who were employed blocks away left their cars in the Smithsonian area all day. The adjoining streets, too, were taken up by all-day parkers, so that the visiting tourists had little or no chance. Capt. Montgomery said that while the park police regret the necessity for this rule, this area is now necessary for greater usefulness, and Washing- ton, famed as a tourist center, must care properly for its visitor motorists. BUHRMAN IN INVITED TO JUDGE MODEL BOATS Boston Club to Hold Elimination Races in June for National Contest, Due Later. Alf G. Buhrman, assistant clerk of the District Supreme Court, who recently completed 40 years of service in that office, has been invited to act as a judge in the elimination races held by the Boston Model Yacht Club in June for the national model yacht races later in the Summer.. . Buhrman is chairman of the regatta committee of the local model yacht elub. The Boston club will hold elimina- tions from June 26 to 28, and the invi- ment. tation to the lacal sportsman is re- garded as a signal honor, both to him and to the local elub. Everay Habits Cause Acid We may enjoy the things we know ! “we shouldn't do” but nature | makes us pay for the overloading of delicate digestive systems, with Reartburn, sick headache, biliousness and Semporary constipation. ‘These are symptoms of “excess acid,” 8lways a menace to health. Food curdies into insoluble lumps, gas forms in the digestive tract, and we suffer from | heartburn, biliousness or fiatulence. | Often excess acid, if uncorrected, results in chronic indigestion, ulcers or eonsti- pation, You can correct stomach distress slmost at once. The surest and quickest way is Milnesia Wafers—which are pure milk of magnesia in & pl tly flavored wafer. By chewing Mi Wafers or allowing them to dissolve in the mouth the moment symptoms appear, a fine alkaline film is at once deposited over , the mouth, stomach and intestinal lin- ings, correcting and protecting them from acid sttack. Excess acids are im- mediately meutralized. Poz'sonmg Thousands of physiclans and dentists are daily recommending Mil- nesia Wafers in preference to the old- fashioned liquid form of milk of mas- nesia because they, are more effective. more convenient and less expensive. afers are also rapidly teking e of old-fashioned stomach such soda, indigestion powders and dyspepsia teblets. Ask your drug: today for the home package of Milnesia at 60c or the con- venient “carry” package for vest pocket or purse at 20c. MILNESIA WAFERS (Mill of Magnesla Wafers) P | NOTE TO USERS OF LIQUID MAGNESIA: We guarantee each Mil- Wafer to contain magnesium hydroxide corresponding to ome tablespoonful of U. S. P. (U. S. Pharmacopoeia) Milk of Magnesia. It is the only tablet c g pleasant-tasting Mi Wafers ju to the old-fashioned the genuine hydroxide of magnesia. d with its chulky taste. gladly refund your money if you are not entirely satisfied. T st once and you will never go Your druggist will ’ > THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGION, D. €, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1930. Kites—How to Build Them BY PAUL EDWARD GARBER, U. 8. National Museum, Smithsontan Institution. Prepared for the District of Columbia Model Aircraft League ARTICLE VIIL The Hexagram Kite. The matter of how kites got their .ame is somewhat like the question, “Which came first, the chicken or the 2" There is a bird called the “kite,” which files at it heights; some peo- le think the bird is so called because it ies like & kite; others infer that the kite is so called because it flies like the bird. I believe the latter inference is correct. Kites were introduced from the Orient, and the high-flying bird was probably named long before kites were known to English-speaking peo- ple, and so when people learned that a combination of wooden frame and fabric covering could be made to rise to great altitudes, they named it after the bird, which was noted for a similar performance. The Germans call kites (the toy) “drachen.” Veterans of the war will recall the drachen balloons which the Germans had over the front lines for artillery fire direction. They were 8o called because they embodied kite characteristics to enable them to fly steadier. The French name for tes 1s “cerf-volant.” There is a mighty fine book by that name written by J. Le Cornu, and although it is in French, you can learn a lot from the pictures even if you can’t read it. ‘The kite illustrated is easy to make and presents & sight in the air. Suppose we one 36 inches tall. It will require one sfick that long by five-sixteens inch square and two sticks of the same section 31 inches long. Mark off the long stick into fourths, and at the upper and lower mark lash a cross stick at its center and at right angles. Next, using the cross-sticks as bases, form two triangles with outline strings extending from the ends of the stick to the furthest end of the vertical stock. This frame is covered by laying it on a large sheet of paper and marking out the outline with a one-inch margin, cutting out the shape and pasting the margin over the out- line string. The result is a six-pointed star or hexagram. ‘The bridle is composed of three strings connected to opposite ends of the sticks and joined -at- an apex 18 inches from the kite surface and oppo- site the upper cross. Such & kite is usually flown with a tall, about 15 feet lon%, made of rhcu of paper 10x5 inches, tied a foot apart in a length of string. The tail is fastened E: ents may be made in lig! tail if the two horizontal sticks are bowed backward, as in the Eddy kite described in Article VI. R — REPORTERS TO0O RITZY Every so often the city editors here have to call a halt on “journalism.” Reportess take on spats and walking sticks and get to looking so smart a distinguished that to send them out on police stories and the like almost seems sacrilege. One city editor recently gave a look about the office, observed the number of walking sticks and the gen- eral trained-seal look of the staff and remarked: “We need a couple of old-fashioned reporters. There's nobody on the prem- ises that I'd have nerve enough to send out to cover & e Wool- worth Building were bu: i (Copyright, 1930.) She’s , Never Heard of End Point or Specific Gravity But - - rd - FOUR DENY CHARGES and four OF POLICE RUM SQUAD | wiltism Mayso, Mount Plemsant Supply Co., on Bighteenth Street, Is Raided by Eighth Precinct Officers. Following & raid late Tuesday by the | after eighth ct liquor squad on the Mount Pleasant Supply Co., in the 2400 block ef Eighteenth street, when a large quantity of liquor was reported seized A ery in the nigzt may be the first warning that Baby has colic. 'I;Io dc“I“EI'hfor alarm if Castoria is andy is pure vegetable pre; aration brin, uickegomioflg lnpt; can never do the slightest harm. Always keep a bottle in the house. It is the safe and sensible thing when children are ailing. Whether it's the stomach, or the little bowels; colic or constipation; or diarrhea. When tiny tongues are coated, or the breath is bad. Whenever there’s need of gentle regulation. Children love the E;-e-l and taining & nuisance Assistant District Attorney David A. Hart in Police They all will be given jury trials. Detective W. R. Laflin reported that & warrant was sworn out for the search an informer had ht three pints of gin from one of the men sub- l.*l'll:ntb arrested. e raiding police reported discover- ing one of the most ingeniously ar- taste of Castoria, and its mildness - makes it suitable for the tiniest infant, and for frequent use. And a more liberal dose of Castoria is always better for rowing children than some need- essly strong medicine meant only for ‘adult use. Genuine Castoria always has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the. wrapper, Pre- scribed by doctors! she Rnows performance and value HE'’S the 1930 girl, driving from the front seat and driving wcil enough to give many all-knowing and critical males some pointers on handling a car. sign sclentific awarded Prof. Michelson for the fection of devices used to measure accepted clung to their present titles. TAys. Juicy and Sweet FOR PLEASURE AS WELL AS HEALTH FLORIDA ORANGES sty GRAPEFRUIT For Health Drink Orange and Grapefruit Juice p \@g-n;l'u _LEARING )/ 1o You could talk for hours on specifications of any kind of gas and she wouldn’t understand 2 word you said. She’s interested in eliminating knocks, not in hearing about “end points”, in power on hills, not in «specific gravity”, in get-away in traffic, not in “distillation”. And, because she is a critical judge of values, she knows that even though - AMOCO-GAS costs slightly more per gallon, more miles to the gallon and reduced operating expense makes it really cost less per mile. The 1930 girl drives frequently, drives well and drives on AMOCO-GiAS. She’s read all the ads, tried all the fuels and found that only AMOCO-GAS will give absolutely knockless performance - - - the quick starting and speed that she demands. She’s glad to pay a few cents more per gallon because power, getaway, experience has taught hér that AMOCO-GAS is the most economical fuel in the end. You, too, are coming to AMOCO-GAS. Start today. The AMERICAN OIL COMPANY Afiliazed with Pam Amasicnn Pecsotenm & Tepasport Compeay. Gemorsl Qffives: Balrimore,-Md.