Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1931, Page 12

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NOVEMBER 4, 1931. EXPERT HEATING ROOFING SERVICE M&wm&m&tum'm" for the Winter W.S. JENKS &SON | .. 23 7th St. N.W., NAt. 2092 Washington's Oldest Hardware and Btove Store LEUTENANT QIS FORSERVCECOOD lofficer Who Disappeared | From Post With Funds Not to Be Prosecuted. the Associated Press The War Department yesterday an- | nounced the resignation of Pirst Lieut. hiq h but not high-hat ~ O And emphatically not high- pricediIThot'stheNewYorker... @ skyscraper hotel which shows you New York at its best. Lux- urious...convenient...comfort- able...entertaining...friendly «sand remarkably inexpen- | sive. That Is what we mean by extra valve. And that is what has made the New Yorker the most popular hot York. 2500 rooms...all outside rooms...85% of them at $3.50 to $5. Every room with radio, tub, shower, circulating ice water, servidor, deep, soft beds. Come to see us! New Yorker Bonbonettes...send $2.15for 1-1b. | Packoge of delicious new French candies. HOTEL NEW YOREKER 3dth Street at 8th Avenue, New York Relph Hitz, Managing Director Quick Way . . ° . B . . . . . . . . . Makes You Feel Like a New Person Almost Before You Know It HE thing to do with a cold is to break it up in a hurry—with some- thing you kmow does the job; not to rifle with a lot of trick ideas and reme: Colds are too dangerous fo ex: Deriment with. Get & box of Hill's Cascara Quinine t any drug store. Take two tablets jow. Then follow directions on box. Orink lots of water, too—that's all. Soon that miserable, aching feeling L to go. The cold breaks up. The ns are moved from your system. The world looks like an altogether dif- ‘erent place. ‘Those results come because Hill's ~0es back to first principles by going to the seat of the trouble. It's not a new- angled idea but & tried and proved ‘way that's made to do ONE THING WELL; to knock a cold in a jiffy. Hill's costs only a few cents. Use it ‘or quick relief after everything else rou've tried has failed, HILL’S “&moni™ astest and most excl.uswe in New | Edward A. Dolph “for the good of the service.” | _ Dolph disappeared September 10 from | Port Totton, New York City, where, as | | post exchange officer, he handled the |Tunds of the military canteen or store Arrested on Broadway. He was arrested 10 days later by De- partment of Justice agents and New York detectives on Broadway. He told them he was on his way to Fort Totten to give himself up. Officers at the post reported a short- age of $6,000 to $7,000 in Dolph's ac- counts. After a conference with local authorities the case was placed in the hands of the Army and Dolph was scheduled to be court-martialed The announcement that he had Tgen “lallowed to resign and that Presiant Hoover had accepted his resignation, was interpreted as indicating the short- age had been made up. About $1,000 was found in Dolph's jion when he was arrested. Officers who had traced him sald he had spent consid- erable money on a trip to Canada after leaving his post. Sought Transfer Change. Dolph's disappearance followed un- successful efforts on his part to have | his superiors change an onder trans- ferring him to Fort Monroe, Va. Dolph, & native of Michigan, grad- uated from West Point in 1918. He is the author of “Sound Off,” a volume of soldier poems. He had been at Fort Totten since 1929, is 35 years old, mar- ried and has one child. |ASSISTANT PROSECUTOR WINS HIS FIRST CASE Roger Robb, Recently Appointed, Obtains Liquor Defendant. Conviction of | | Roger Robb, whose appointment as | Assistant United States Attorney was | announced this week, won his first case |in Police Court yesterday when a jury in the court “of Judge John P. | McMahon found David W. Upperman, 128, of 900 block of M street guilty on |charges of sale and possession of | liquor. Upperman, it was testified, made a | sale of liquor October 1 to a police in- | former. _Officers raiding the place the | following day reported seizure of 16 pints of liquor. | b nolle prossed charges against iMH. Upperman, who had been arrested at_the same time. ‘ Robb is the son of Justice Charles H. | Robb, & member of the bench of the | District Court of Appeals. ASKS $50,000 DAMAGES ‘Woman Charges Head of Transfer Company Slandered Her. | _ Clarendon Smith, president of the Emith’s Transfer and Storage Co., 1313 U street, was named as defendant yes- | terday x& a rslulg me\’i Mi,n Wt.gg District Sg- preme_Ccurt for $50,000 damages | Mrs. S, B. Gaffin, 930 G strett, en gaged in the sale of women's apparel. | She charges both libel and slander, as- | serting that Smith wrote and also re- | peated verbally defamatory statements against her when she complajned of munce of dishes in a shipment to { her. By reason of the alleged slander and written statements, the plaintiff says, she has been injured in her good name and credit and has suffered mental and | physical pain and anguish. She is rep- resented by Attorney Calman Mayer. | | | Marine Corps Orders | _Maj. Walter G. Sheard, orders from | Nicaraguan National Guard Detach- | ment to Headquarters Marine Corps, Washington, D. C., revoked. First Lieut. Willard R. Enk, detached Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Va., to Pearl Harbor, T. H., via the U. S. S. Vega scheduled to sail from Hampton Roads on or about December 11. ‘ First Lieut. William R. Hughes, de- tached 2d Brigade, Nicaragua, to Nor- | folk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Va., via {‘me U. S. 8. Sirlus scheduled to sail from Corinto, Nicaragua, on or about November 11 | Second Lieut. Richard P. Ross. or- | ders from Pelping, China, to Depart- | ment of the Pacific revoked. Second Lieut. Joseph W. Earnshaw, | detached 4th Regiment, Shanghai, China, to Department of the Pacific | via first available Government convey- 0 A distinctive train—carrying on every trip across the continent a distinguished group of travelers who appreciate its time-saving schedule, its suave, smooth service and famous food. The Chief will carry a special Phoenix Pullman this winter. After Californio—Hawaii, Famed Battery Trains for N. Y. Horse Show FORT MYER OUTFIT TO DRILL AT MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, OR the first time since 1920 Fort Myer's famous Battery C. 16th Field Artillery, will take part in the Madison Putting_on_even ] 1929, when the gray horses galloped through flaming stakes. the battery will drill this year in a darkened ring The battery is commanded by Capt. H. W. Square Garden Horse Show, beginning tomorrow. with 500 electric lights mounted on its guns, caissons and harness. Blakeley and includes a sergeant, Joseph Haley, guidon carrier, who is a soldier of the old school, having seen UTILITY BOARD FACES BUS LINE DILEMMA| Lamont Street Residents Protest Routing of Vehicles in Their Neighborhood. The Public Utilites Commission is still having its troubles solving the problem of where to run the Park road bus line of the Washington Rallway & Electric Co. without offending any one. | At first this line used Irving street | between Eighteenth and Nineteenth streets. Later the route was changed to Kenyon street. Still later the Kenyon ireeters objected to the passage of the bus in front of their formerly quiet residences, and a neighborhood conigo- e Irving street atraid that the bus line t be returned to thelr street, ob, to any change. & neighborhood pact sultable to both streets was , and_the S S ies i the " “The commision_ obliged falled to clear away tly and an- ¥ith an order to that effect, and the | Boving skin lrritations. For a clear, Lamont _strecters, dublous about the | B R B By T o that might be expected from | Mntisepiic ZEMO. All druggists 33¢, 6 a bus lime on thar. street. came down | A0 $1.00. Extra strength for obsti- yesterday to the commission to protest, | Nate cases—$1.25. The commission accordingly ordered | its order stayed until it finds some Solomon to lead it out of its dilemma. Meanwhile the busses are still runn! on Kenyon street. - lieved "liching’ skim and. has FOR SKIN IRRITATIONS more _ spectacular ~exhibition service in Cuba, Porto Rico, the Philippines, Mexico and in the World War. A PURE PENNSYLVANIA OIL THAT LUBRICATES AT SUB-ZERO TEMPERATURES vwyyvw evnv time you start your cor in win- ter your motor oil changes from the tem- perature of ice to that of fire almost extreme changes with Pennsoil for Wine ter. 1t starts easily in the coldest weather and at the same time insures perfect lud LEHMAN'’S SUPER SERVICE STATION Specialists in Servicing Your Car for Winter. 12th and K Streets N.W. Phone Nat. 0241-0242 Ask for free Pennzoil puzzle o 3 ion! ca Yo Use dation 0 than in| troe LIFETIME! fURNITURE Offering a Number of Floor Sample Radios at exceptionally low prices Standard Models That Sold for Much More priced to close out at $49.75 P Gomplete With Tubes These are all good and good-looking radio receivers—floor samples with but slight and practically unnoticeable use—sets that sold originally from $69.50 to $95 and sets that will give satisfaction. One-and two of a kind, subject to prior sale. COME EARLY New 1932 Models Shown Now of Atwater Kent— Bosch — Philco — General Motors — Strom! Carlson and R. C. A. Victor Radios at Standard Prices NO INTEREST CHARGED FOR DEFERRED PAYMENTS MAYER & CO. Seventh Street Between mplexiod A 5 ,-::1 Fatigue- DOCTORS—including famous specialists—advise fresh yeast. Dand E - The loveliest Complexions get their sparkle OSE hateful-looking blotches . . . ex- asperating blackheads : ; ; eruptions! You'd give worlds to be rid of them, wouldn’t you? : : . to have a smooth, velvety skin : . . radiant, fresh and clear: Then here’s good news. You can have that kind of a complexion : : . if you will only follow the advice of men who have spent their lifetime studying diseases of the skin! Here's what these specialists say: Your skin, they explain, is not just a cover- ing. It is an actual bodily organ, full of tiny glands that help you throw off the poisons that form in your system every day. Now itfrequently happens—especially when the intestines ave wot functioning properly—that poisons accumulate in your body faster than Jrom WITHIN | clear them away regularly. and at the same time stimulates the action that helps Don’t expect salves and eintments to correct blemishes caused by an unclean condition INSIDE You your skin, kidneys, etc., can throw them off. And that's when the trouble starts! These poisons circulate through your system. Head- aches occur . . . bad breath . . . indigestion. And telltale skin blemishes are one of the very commonest results! Now can’t you see from this how useless it is to try to cure such skin disorders with lotions and salves? Don't you see that you must get rid of Intestinal Fatigue? Soukethefitsutepnow.Tb‘um‘J‘, —before each meal or between meals and at bed- time—eat a cake of Fleischmann’s fresh Yeast! A food, Fleischmann’s Yeast mixes with the clog- ging waste masses in your intestines—softens them— ” Thus your whole intestinal tract is “toned up”= purified. Poison-forming matter no longer remaing to stagnate and contaminate your blood. And when this occurs, digestion improves. “Pep™ returns. You tire less easily. And best of sil—those horrid pimples disappear! Why not start eating Fleischmann's Yeast today? Just eat 3 cakes a’day, regularly—before meals, or between meals and at bedtime—plain or dissolved in water (a third of a glass). And keep it up. The reward will be yours! Fleischmann’s Yeast for health is sold only in the foile wrapped cake with the yellow label. It is yeast in its effective form—the kind famous doctors recommend. At ats, soda fountains. Rich in health-giving vitamins B, (g and D, LEIBCHMANN'S YEAST for Health

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