Evening Star Newspaper, July 18, 1932, Page 16

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THE EVENING STA Problem Solved It 1s no longer necessary to dan- rous poisons to be sure of feminine jene. Sclence 'has = perfected v, nonpoisonous, hygienic powder that provides a safer and su; 3 keep ‘free from ives _protection Body odors. FEMININE HYGIENE The First Step fo Health and Charm Women_everswhere are rapidly learn- Key's Astringent Powder, a Te- eloothing and purifying hy- . Effectiyely combats lurk- disease-breeding perms. vet is so e safe that it cannot irritate ™' the most dellcate tissues. r_only 50 cents you can get this safe nElenic powder 3¢ peon] Telfable Gruggist today. Economieal and || BY the Assoclated Press effective. | CHICAGO, July 18.—Police shuffled | through a slim deck of clues today in [P=JETMRTT] | their inestigation of the slaying of K POWD E RS Carl, storekeeper, foretold, his dow said, 60 hours in advance, by rds of death” she drew from a | neighborhood fortune teller's hands. They held for questioning Ivan Grilec, ‘38 a brother-in-law of the dead man, | who, they said they had learned, sold | Mrs. Vera Carl, the widow, a $5,000 insurance policy with double indemnity clause, in which she was named bene- ficiary. Grilec, however, denied having any insurance dealings with Carl. Husband Declared Warned. | Mrs. Carl told police she and hdr : | mother, had warned Carl that on | Thursday she turned up three cards. which predicted his death, at the home of Mrs. Susie Ballo, who has a neigh- borhood reputation as a soothsayer. He laughed at their forebodings, she said. Mrs, Ballo corroborated their statements as to the “fatal” deal. Carl was found shot to death late Saturday night in his South Side gro- cery store by his wife and son ~The widow notified police after calling a friend, Jobn Pettek. The rear of the store,was in much disorder. the cash register overturned and empty. Police Lieut. Herbert Burns said while Carl might have been killed by robbers, he was investigating also pos- sibility that the slayer had simulated robbery. No weapon was found. Son Tells of Shooting. First information of the occult turn of the case came to officers from the victim's 9-year-old son, Dorn. He said that Friday his mother asserted: “Your | father will be shot Saturday night. It's in the cards.” Mrs. Carl then acknowledged drawing the death cards, \and Mrs. Ballo, questioned, repeated that the cards not only foresaw the - FORETOLD SLAYING {Widow Declares Fortune Teller Revealed Tragedy 60 Hours in Advance. every skin - trouble, the foun- dation of a clear, soft, healthy skin. From the slightest rash totheseverest eczema, fromatiny pimple to tortur- ing piles—Resinol Ointment fur- nishes quick, effec~ tive relief. In in. fancy as in old age, Pimples Use Resinol. Poison Ivy For free trial size samples with new booklet on Skin Treatment write to inol, Dept. B4, Baltimore, Md. Resinol X Ecsema Teching Irritation Redness Chafing Burns Scratches Sunburn DISTRICT GROCERY STORES /nc.| REAL SAVINGS FOR THE ENTIRE WEEK *x Kk k k K COLLEGE INN PRODUCTS This brand is in the higher quality class. Offered at all our stores for this week at an extremely low price. Tomato Juice Cocktail 16 5. 17¢c Chicken a la King............an 35¢c SPAGHETTI A LA MUSSOLINI OR RICE DINNER 3«=29c VAN CAMP’S MILK tall §c 6 ;. 29c FLOUR . 19c 2 39c TEA 22c USE A _Gr: LORDS stz r 19ce.35¢ CRISCO % 19¢ 53¢ CHUM SALMON . . 3 5! 25¢ ARGO SALMON . . 2 - 35¢c 4-STRING BROOMS 19¢ GOLD BAG COFFEE BUTTER . 27e Ao 29e Roll Butter » 23¢ MEATS 8 VEGETABLES Auth’s Franks. .. .. 25¢°| New Potatoes. 10 ms. 19¢ Auth’s Royal Pork.iw. 33c | Stringless Beans..m. 5c Rettberg’s Franks.m. 25¢ | Carrots. .. .2 bunches 15¢ American Beauty GREEN APPLES Bn m.25¢c| 4w 19¢ Bacon Fountain Brand Oranges Hams .....» 23¢c An Akron Dirigible Free with the Purchase of Tall Can V4-lb. (o) pkg. WELCH’S Grape Juice 13%-Lb. Can 28c¢ Each . 25¢€ GOLD BAND Country Style SAYS ‘DEATH CARDS violent death of Carl, byt indicated his widow would “get some mopey” and would have trouble with the suthorities The position in which the body was und indicated, officers said, that the slayer had sat talking to Carl. They were checking the movements of Mrs. Carl and Pettek, who, they sald, had accompanied her home from a friend's some time before the body was found on the night of the shooting. MAN HUNTED WHO FLED “ESCAPE-PROOF” PRISON Several States in Search for Ralph Richards and Three Other Eastview, N. Y., Fugitives.' By the Assoclated Press. EASTVIEW, N. Y, July 18.—Ralph Richards, who has a law degree and & reputation as one of the country’s slip- periest’ criminals, was hunted in_sev- eral States today after escaping East- view Penitentiary by a lock trick that left jailers gaping. He and three others put leather smEa over the tumblers on the locks of their cells Saturday night. These kept the automatic levers from making the doors fast, yet registered on the indi- cator that every cell door was closed. It was the first time in 16 years any one had circumvented the ‘“escape- proof” system. Fleeing in a car they stole from a young couple, the four separated later. Two of them. John De Rosa and Ar- thur Palumbo, Manhattan hold-uj men, were captured near Alpine, N. J. Frank Larocco, New York bandit, was still at large today with Richards. Richards was serving a year for as- sault on a policeman. Four years l‘o he escaped Tombs Prison, New York, where he was held on a charge of im- personation. | | DE s g Nt Pineapples Three-for-Five. Competition among Havana's.pumer- | ous street vendors has reduced the %mce ‘gt large pineapples to three for 1 5 cents. “Music that Satisfies” Every night but Sun- day. Columbia Coast- to-Coast Network. 10 o’clock E.D.T. © 1932, Rsccerr & Myaas Tosaceo €0 Native of Capital Formerly Paris AT AGE OF 74 YEARS Representative of Phonograph Company. Marion ‘Dorian, former treasurer of the Columbia Phonograph Co., died yes- terday at his residence, 1424 Meridian place. He was 74. Funeral services will be held at his home at 2 p.m. tomorrow, in charge of Federal Lodge, No. 1, F. A. A, M., of which he was past master. Burial will be in Glenwood Cemeterys Born in this city, Mr, Dorian studied law at Columbia Law School and en- tered practice here. He later entered the offices of the phonograph company here, and after a few years was trans- ferred to Paris, France, as head of the Prench offices of the company. He be- came assistant general European man- ager for the company before returning fo_the United States as the company’s head auditor, and subsequently its treasurer. In all, he was with the company more than 30 years, 10 years of which were spent in Europe. He retired from the company about 12 years ago, and re- entered the legal fleld here as a con- sulting attorney, but retired from prac- tice about 8 years ago. He was a member of the Wi Bar and was active in Masonic circles. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Louise Dorian, and a son, Otis Dorian, both of Washington. FRANKLIN assures quality Cane Sugars WASHINGTO! MARION DORIAN DIES POSTAL RATES.ONCE HIGH Fee in 1792 Was 25 Cents Per Sheet for 450-Mile Distance. CHICAGO, July 18 (#).—Persons not yet resigned to digging down for that third penny when they post letlers can eomole(thzmulvu with the fact it once required & 25-cent stamp. A scrutiny of Post Office Department records yesterday showed that in 1792 the charge to carry a letter 450 miles or more was 25 cents per sheet. A let- ter of more than one sheet was con- | in sidered to be as many letters as there were sheets. The rate was 6 cents for 30 miles, and increased with distance. Man Gored by Bull. CUMBERLAND, Md., July 18 (Spe- cial) ~Newton Savage, 67, Friendsville, Garrett County, is in a serious condi- tion #t Memorial Hospital from having | been gored by a bull on his farm. He is injured in the chest Throw CHIHUAHUA ELECTION FIGHTS INJURE 30 Quevedo Apparent Victor Over Orozco in Bitter Contest for Governorship. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, July 18—Victory for Rodrigo Quevedo, candidate for Governor of Chihuahua against Fer- nando Orozco, 2] almost certain in yesterday’s elections there, accord- g a dispatch from Chihuahua City last night. ‘The dispatch sald that 30 persons were injured in_ polling booth fights early yesterday, but that no one was killed in the City of Chihuahua. Quevedo, candidate for the National Revolutionary party, was regarded as the certain winner of the governorship, it was said. Saloons were closed throughout the state all day and Federal troops pa- trolled the polling booth areas. Away That Gas Mask! USE FLYOSAN INSTEAD OF THAT STRONG-SMELLING SPRAY. FLYOSAN LEAVES NO ODOR DOUBLE-STRENGTH LEAVES NO ODOR! Another dispatch said excited poli-|said Quevedo pc' 7,992 votes tcans his moroing wsed. lear as fn| 103 o Oroake "o’ he'ots con! of some of e . | show 29,600 for eV nmuremml from Chihuahua City| for Orozco. . Shiaveda:agatnat 56 YOU Can Renew Your Old Floors | —successfully, and make them beautiful, AT SMALL || COST, with the DREADNAUGHT DUSTLESS « ELECTRIC FLOOR SANDER. Anyone can || operate it, and it’s inexpensive. Ask About Our Moderate Rental Charge We'll be glad to make a demonstration of The Dreadnaught—also of SUPER- VALSPAR Floor Varnish. Come in and find out how to rejuvenate your worn floors, at small cost. § SPECIAL No. 7 Auto Top Finish Dressing Pint ., $1.00 Brush . ..20c reg. $1.20 value T Special, 85¢c et 1334 New York Ave.—Phone NAt. 1703 will see this.. WHY vill this advertisement appear in more than 1,800 newspapers, reaching over 85,000,000 readers? BECAUSE we want every smoker throughout the length and the breadth of this country to know that Chesterfield cigarettes are milder . . . The tobaccos are the mildest that money can buy. Ripened and sweetened in the sunshine . . . cured by the farmer . . . then aged for two years in wooden hogsheads. We want to tell every smoker from coast to coast that Chesterfield cigarettes taste better . . . Chesterfield’s way of blending and cross-blend- ing fine Turkish and Domestic tobadcos brings out better flavor and aroma. We want every man and woman smoker to know thiss Chesterfield cigarettes are pure—just as pure as science cain make them—just as pure as the water you drink. We want every one to know that you can depend on a LIGGETT & MYERS product. ‘Wherever you buy Chesterfields, gw get them just as fresh as if you came by our factory door

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