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Danderine The One Minute Hair Beautifier *SCENTED" CORSICA Reminders of Napoleon Are Brought With Framce’s Activity on Island. “A corkless perfume bottle, where the sweet scent of the mlquis shrub permeates the atmosphere; where men are lazy and women’s heads vie with donkey carts as transports; where modern customs have only trickled a short distance beyond the quays of t.he larger ports and left the pancak hats, and the stone and mud huts ot‘ the natives as they were centuries ago.”” | Such, according to a bulletin from | the National Geographic Society, is Corsica, France's largest Mediterranean island possession, which the French government is fortifying. Turtle-Shaped Island. “Corsica_is about one-half the size of Massachusetts—an area of rugged mountains and verdant valleys peopled by slightly more than a quarter mil- lion inhabitants—human remnents of Phoenician, Etruscan, _Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Goth, Pisan, Genoese and Morish invaders,” says the bulletin. turtle, stretches toward Genoa. the exception of a shallow bay here and! there, the island’s eastern shore forms | a smooth turtle shell while the mck ribbed cliffs separate the deep gulfs nr the western coast form the legs of he imagis animal. A circle to note (.he location of the town of Rogliano, far up on the northern peninsula, marks a good position for the turtle’s while ;h:‘ hook of hnd -t me I stubby tail. “Bastia, I typical Genoese city with buildings three and !our amnu flnnkmg mmw uueu, is pen on Co‘l'll hrzr sea nt:’uflm nestle in pmucud spots arous lhbrellneolfiu‘ul!son'.hz“m shore of the island. Among these are Ajaccio, the island capital. That city of 20,000 inhabitants has wide boule- lighted with electricity, and automobiles mingled with donkey carts. There are no beggars, a fact in which Corsica takes much pride. Reminders of Napoleon. “Corsica _was the birthplace of Napoleon. But outside of Ajaccio where travelers may visit the house in which the French leader was born, the is- landers appear unaware that Napoleon was one of their illustrious sons. Ajaccio, however, insists that Napoleon shall not be forgotten. “Travelers llnd on the Napoleon Quay. Guides lead sightseers to t.ha Rue Napoleon, two of the cit; Cours Napoleon and the Rue Naj lzon,l two of the city's important streets. There is a Cafe Napoleon, a Napoleon Grotto, a Napoleon Museum and a Na- poleon Theater. The souvenir stands are cluttered with statuettes of the general and picture post cards of his birthplace. And men smoke ‘Petit Caporal’ cigarettes while lounging lbout two large statues of Napoleon, ‘Government roads are reaching tl - | Bostwick Busses and private automobiles throw dust into the faces of the stubborn little donkeys of the rural districts, but they have not yet driven v,hz reliable Corsican transports from roads. “From bus or train window the mvem gets a glimpse of what keeps Corsican in food and clothing. the tiny mountain v!lllaen from rocky perches, herds of sheep and goats whl.ch jd the skins and wool that figure in Corsica’s trade. Then there are vast groves of olive trees, and small Debdeced and presceved by the matives uced an natives while chestnut forests furnish chest- nut meal for Corsican bread. The nuts also provide feed for animals.” DAMAGES AWARDED IN SUIT ON SHERIFF Mobile Jury Allows $2,500 in Case ‘Where Innocent Man Was Shot as Rum Runner. By the Associated Press. MOBILE,"Ala., October 18.—A Circuit Court jury ymrdnffluwu&d Herman Lovelace of Apalachicola, Fla, $2,500 damages ‘in Clrthh Irwin of Baldwin County, Ala. for wounds he allegedly received from a deputy sheriff’s fun Lovelace sued for $5000 and testi- fied that he was mistaken for a rum runner and shot by Deputy H. R. Buck- ley of Baldwin County. He said he had lost a finger as the result of the shoot- ing. He also charged that the shooting was kept secret for some time because deputies cll.l.med it “would have a bad effect in the political campaign” then under way here. The shooting July 3 last. - TOKIO SENDS REGRETS Sorrow Is Expressed Over Death of Treaty Flyer. ‘TOKIO, October 18 (#).—Messages of condolences were dispatched today from Premier Hamaguchi to President Hoover and from Baron Shidehara, Japanese foreign minister, to Secretary of State Stimson on the death of Lieut. Willliam ‘W. Caldwell, American Army flyer, who crashed in Wyoming while escorting the plane bearing Japan's ratification of the London naval treaty from Victoria, British Columbia, to New York. Ambassador Debuchi in Washington was instructed to ascertain whether the Tokio government could do anything further than to express sorrow over tlie aviator’s death. YEAR FOR ASSAULT Marl- ing occurred Colored Man Sentenced at boro—Another Fined. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MORLBORO, Md., October 18.—Charles Digges, colored, of Marl- boro yesterday was sentenced to 12 months in the House of Correction by Judge J. Chew Sheriff for assault and battery on John Fleet, also colored. Pleet was seriously injured when hit by an_automobile pump. William Neal, colored, arrested for driving while drunk and reckless driv- ing by State olman Willlam A. Rogers, wu fined wm of $101. WOMAN DISAPPEARS Mrs. Gretha L. Duke Missing Since ‘Wednesday Afternoon. Mrs. Gretha L. Duke, 39 ynn old, is reported missing from her home, Aj mem 424, Boulevurd Apartments, since Wednesday afternoon. Her daughter, Mrs. Lorine Cuthrielt, with whom she lived, asked the police to institute search for her. The daughter told the police that her mother was suffering fiom a nervous breakdown. I, SR Obur;;l Reversion to Homes. NEW YORK. chber 18 ().—A wave making has nmfifllb!“!‘l. At All Drug Stores - Thirty Five Cemts SOniepted Wi his suit against Sheriff | the THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, MRS. HOWARD CLINTON CROSS, Before her recent marriage Miss Claire Steece Julihn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Edward Julihn. Mr. Cross is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Cross. —Bachrach Photo. AUTOPSY ORDERED IN CHILD'S DEATH Man Held for Questioning After Finding of Body in Denver Lake. By the Associated Press. DENVER, Colo, October 18.—An autopsy was ordered today on the body of 10-year-old Leona O’'Loughlin, found yesterday in Berkeley Lake, two days after she had disappeared from her home. She was the daughter of City Detective Leo O'Loughlin. Authorities ordering the autopsy said they were considering the poulbmty that the child had been murdered and the body thrown in the lake. Police late last night arrested one man for investigation after they had been told he was seen a week ago within a block of the O'Loughlin home attempting to entice two small girls into his car. Police sald they would question him today and check his past activities. A preliminary examination of “the girl's body by Depm.y Coroner George Dennis, city pathologist, dl.sclmed m deep wounds onthemotherhmmdbmlseson her left upper arm. The _child’s other, Mrs. Leo the | 0'Loughlin, was n_to police head- quarters and questioned at length after fl':‘ body. Prank who roomed at the O'Loughlin’s, was nlso questioned. Nm,her could throw light on the girl's disappearance. Mrs. O’Loughlin, like her husband, has been suffering a mysteripus ailment | for several days, occasioned, she said, by eating tainted food. O'Loughlin was in a critical condition at 2 hospital lest night. O gt e HITS OCEAN FLIGHTS Admiral Moffett Declares Land Planes Can Prove Nothing. Long ocean flights in land planes were condemned Friday by Rear Admiral Willlam A. Moffett, chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy De- partment, who asserted that when sea- planes of sufficient size are develo] they will contribute to aeronautical knowledge in this field. “There is nothing further to be proven by flights over the Aflantic in land | planes,” the admiral said in discussing e proj return flight from Ireland o Newfoundland by Capt. J. Errol Boyd and Lieut. Harry P. Connor in the monoplane Columbia. “Nolhlr;g‘ can be accomplished and flights of this nature might prove harm- ful to the cause of aviation,” he added the detective, | ANDREE RESEARCH FUND IS STARTED Swedish Society for An- thropology and Geography Sponsors Move. By the Assoclated Press. STOCKHOLM, October 18.—A special Andree fund to support future geograph- ical research has been started in Stock- holm under the auspices of the Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geog- raphy, of which the explorer Salomon August Andree was a member. The first contribution came from the Norwegain newspaper Aftenposten of Oslo, which gave 10,000 crowns (about $2,600), from the sale of Dr. Gunnar Horn's personal story of the discovery of the lost expedition, dis- tributed in the United States by the Associated Press. An_ appeal for further contributions | has been sent out by Sweden's lead- ing geographers, Gerhard de Geer, Sven Hedin and Prof. Nils Lithberg. The backers of the fund, including the surviving relatives of the three explorers, expect that other funds will be derived from the sale of a memorial volume, including Andree's diary, now unaer preparation in Stockholm. k will be issued about De- cember 1 in nine different countries. It will contain Andree's own account of the preparations for the trip as well as his diary before and after the actual start, of which part has already been published under the aus- pices of the Swedish Geographical Soclety. There also will be extracts from Nils Strindberg’s notes and reproductions of the maps he drew. The final chap- ters will be written by Dr. Horn and Knut Studsendorff, leaders of the two ev dmona whlch found the relics at this Summer. This book will be pubu&hed in the United States by the Viking Press. e s ARy EX-VICE CONSUL SUED Misappropriation of $1,146.60 While Serving in Mexico Charged. ‘TOLEDO, Ohio, October 18 (#).—Ed- ward H. Mall, Tiffin, Ohio, former United States vice consul at Manzanillo, Colima, Mexico, and the Maryland Casualty Co, as surety, were named de- fendants in a suit for $1,146.60 and in- | terest, filed in Federal Court here yes- terday by Lee N. Murlin, assistant | United States district attorney. The petition charges Mall with hav- ing misappropriated Government funds to that amount during 1928 and 1929 while serving as vice consul in Mexico. 'A'he peuurm said he was under $2,000 d of Lhe euunt compmy SNEAK THIEF BUSY Pocketbooks Containing $15,Watch and Wallet Are Stolen. A sneak thief made off with pocket- books containing $15 from a back room of Mrs. Charles C. Cawson’s apart- ment, at 520 E street northeast, Fri- day while Mrs. Cawson was enter- taining & party of friends, she re- ported to police. The intruder also vtmed the apartment of James Thomas on an upper floor, getting a watch valued at $60 and a w-uzz kontaining ng‘ht We want to clear MRS. CAROL J. GIULIANI, Tnbemolhomrnnd:murnml this afternoon with Miss folanda L. Gllllhnl of 2701 Ontario road as host- ess. Mrs. Giuliani is a recent bride. —Harris-Ewing Photo. CRASH KILLS STUDENT Four Others Hurt Victims in cident in Rented Auto. SOUTH BEND, Ind, October 18 (#).— Robert Driscoll, 22, Ithaca, N. Y., senior at the University of Notre Dame, was killed and four other men, three of them students, were injured in n automo- bile collision here last night. ‘The injured were James Mutray, 21, Batavia, N. Y.; Willlam Walsh, 20, , N. J., and Thomas Dunn, 18, , Pa. students, and Frank Justus, Grand Rapids, Mich, Mrs. Justus and he'l‘ baby, riding with Justus, were uninjured. University officials said the students had violated rules of the school in driv- ingul&he automobile, which they had rented. Ac-| THE REASON Why a Jack’s Permanent Wave is a dollar for dollar wvalue. The finest material and the best workmanship can always insure you of the proper results. October Offers a $10 Wave for 5 Complete Including Two Shampoos nd a - Finger Wave “Guaranteed Work" Finger Wave and Shampoo, $1 CALL DISTRICT 9718 Jack’s Perm. Wave Shop 1320-1322 F St. N. W. Look for the sign “Jack's” Srd Floor Fromt Now! out our Stock of Fur Coats Every fur coat is reduced at a price so low amaze you! it will Now is your opportunity to buy a fur coat and save, too! Special Prices On Pony and Trimmed Seadline Coats Value, $175—Now $75 Remodeling and Repairing Model Fur Shop 923 G St olor Northwest must come before the powder AND WITH POWDER MUST BLEND THE SKIN E natural skin tone you hear so much about today cannot be had with bargain counter powder. For in this day and age no sophisticated woman “relies on her powder box for color. Color must come first and the powder that goes on fop must actually blend with the skin . .. That new Beige powder from Primrose House Is the favorite in smart circles today because it exactly the right shade and texture for that natural effect. So fine, it actually becomes a part of the skin. It does not cake or clog the pores nor does it ever leave the face spotty or hard as do the very light or extra dark shades. Costly? Perhaps. But you can easily learn its worth by buying a dol- lar's worth of this $3 powder. In boxes, $1 and $3. Primrose House, 595 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Primrose Howse Toilet Preparations are on sale at: Julivs Garfinckle & Company Wardman Park Pharmacy Woodward & Lothrop Primrose House “HERE DWELLS YOUTH" OCTOBER 19, 1930—PART THREE. BEER RACKETEER - SYSTEM REVEALEI]i Alleged “Pay-off Man” Tells| Inside Facts, Say Chi- cago Police. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 18.—The man the police say is the “pay-off man” on th> Northwest Side for Al Capone, notorious gang leader, did some talking, and, as a result, the police said they heard some | interesting things about the beer bush ness in Chicago. | Prank Lawler, a former garage me- | chanic, arrested in his expensive suite | in a Loop hotel with $1,000 in cur- rency in his pockets and $6,000 in bills in a safety deposit box, was the man who talked. At 3 am. each morning Lawler has been driving his expensive sedan to the South side, where a large and fast truck loaded with beer and covered with tar- paulin rolls up, he said, adding that his business has been to follow it up to | Warn the driver in case an officer is seen. “Of course,” he was quowd as say- ing, “if a copper stops us, we carry a roll of bills for that.” | The utmost secrecy, according to| Lawler, is maintained within the gang One man, he said, drives the truck from the brewery, another to an intermediate point, while a third takes it on to the speakeasies. This system, he explained, makes it possible for only one driver to know the brewery’s location and only |one to know where the customers are | to be found. 1370,000 Arknnsas Voters Eligible. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Octcber 18 (#). —More than 370,000 persons, the larg- | est number in the history of the State, will be eligible to vote November 4 in the general election, a check of poll tax figures in the office’ of State Auditor J. Oscar Humphrey revealed yesterday. The total vote in the August Demo. %-aue primary was approximately 252,- Wed in September MRS. RICHARD F. CREATH, ter of Mrs. Anne H. Williams, the wed- ding being an event of September 27. —Clinedinst Photo. OKLAHOMA COUPLE ACCUSED IN LARCENY | Former Broadway Dancer and Hus- band Implicated in Theft of Jewels and Clothing. By the Associated Press. . Okla, October 18 —Grand hmxrxg chm were bem‘L yfi" lay against Forrest and his wife, who clalms to h’:m Russian house of Romanoff and a for- mer Broadway dancer, connection ‘v‘m.h the theft of jeweiry and clothing ere. Several trunks and sult cases con- taining articles alleged to have been from homes in which the couple were entertained here were seized by | Tulsa detectives when they arrested the | couple yesterday in a Bartlesville hotel. | (Mfi'mémd .:lumh 8 t0 be a d ! of a grand duke who was personal sician to the late Czar Nicholas. NE"WI- paper clippings in her possession, wnun |told of her marriage to Hudson | Nuevo Laredo by a Mexican justice ol the peace on December 31, 1920, re- | ferred to her also as a dancer in the Ziegleld “Follies” of 1923, and described Hudson as an engineer. | Formerly Miss Thelma Williams, daugh- | SUPREME COURT TO ACT | Highest State Tribunal in Califor- nia to Rule on Pantages Case. LOS ANGELES, October 18 (#).—The tate carried to the California Supreme Court yesterday its battle for affirma- tion of the conviction of Alexander Pantages, under a one-to-fifty-year San Quentin_Prison sentence for assaulting | Eunice Pringle, co-ed dancer. The action was faken in the flllng: with the high court of a petition for review of the Appellate Court’s recent order of a new trial for the theater megnete, lln-llru. rfait, Pine- g 5T serts a lee ONE DOLLAR g e ulgr Dinner. Costume jewelry One way to spend that 33 you save Costume jewelry is merely one suggestion * for spending that $3 you save by using Listerine Tooth Paste instead of tooth pastes in the 50¢ class. Women, sternest judges of tooth paste acclaim this modern one at 2 5 ¢ Listerine Tooth Paste has passed the greatest test that can be put to a dentifrice. Tried by more than 2,000 women, the most critical buyers in the world when beauty and health are involved, it has won their enthusiastic acceptance. wvorites at a high price have been discarded in favor of the new one at 25¢. In order to win such approval, Listerine ‘Tooth Paste had to establish gentleness and absolute safety in actual use. millions of teeth of varying degrees of hard- ness —and never was precious enamel harmed. It had to show quick and thorough cleansing. Not merely front and Pro-phy-lac-tic Tooth Brushes back of the teeth, bu to disclose ability 000 American Old fa- performs these tasks. t between them. It had to remove stains, dise coloration, and unsightly tartar, quickly, cere tainly. And show power to preserve the lovely, natural lustre of sound, beautiful teeth. Millions now comment on how ably it The fact that Listerine Tooth Paste sells for It did so—on Get a tube of Listes The makers of Listerine Tooth Paste recommend 25¢ the large tube, effecting an average saving of 83 per year per person overtooth pastes in the 50¢ class, is another point worth remembering. rine Tooth Paste today. Use it a2 month. Judge it by results only. 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