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72 IW. L. JOUGLAS $620 $7.00 $800 $900 & 51099 SHOES LEATH OF W.L. DOUGLAS SHOES. THE STAMPED PRICE IS W. L. DOUGLAS PERSONAL GUAR- ANTEE THAT THE .WORTH THE PRICE PAID FOR They are the best known shoes in _the world. SohiinlO7W.L.Dauglu stores, direct from the factory to you at only one profit, which guarantees to Br:duoed, at uglas name and on the bottom of all shoes before they leave the factory, which is your protection against un- reasonable profits. W. L. Douglas shoes are absolutely the best shoe values i They are made of the best and finest leathers that money can buy. style, workmanship and wearing q equal “to other makes selling at higher prices. They are the leaders in the fashion centers of America; no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. W. L. Douglas shoes are made by the highest paid, skilied shoe- makers, under the direction and supervision of price that money can buy. - CAUTION i e s o s, /4 P (f net for sale in your -W. L. DOUGLAS STORES IN WASHINGTON MTore b 905 Pennsylva of dirt Radiant Heater Takes all the sting out of shaving, bathing and dress- ing, thgse cold mornings. Get @e of these little éx- uders and laugh at chilly weatheid We :pffer two very ef- ficient t#; . $12.50 each, - complete A BETTER SHOE FOR THE PRICE EVERY PENNY SAVED IN THE COST OF THER HAS BEEN nia Avenue, N.W. | wonixs s10rE FOPEN SATURDAY EVE A Complete Home Laundry A THOR Electric Washing Machine and a Thor Ironing Machine make a perfect equipment for your laundry. Ready at any moment to start at work on the soiled clothes and, to.return:thern to. you wilh evéry particle ,-finens made dazzling white and with a smooth, ‘beautiful finish such as you never get by hand ironing. - Qrder an Ironer if you have the Washer. NAL ELECTRICA] JUPPLY (OMPANY 1328-30 NEWWYRK AVF.. MATN R2N0 for aff and Fiqures on the | OLD DUTCH MARXET ANNIVERSARY SALE ~ {asting One rows Papels THE EVENING STAR, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1921 Close “Gay White Way *1A. M.; Other News Notes From the U. S. Lid Clangs Down on Broadway Cabarets at “Unheard-of Hour”—Oregon Bank Is Closed—Other News Notes. FOR MEN AND WOMEN i ADDED TO THE SHOES ARE ALWAYS THEM. the best shoes that can be lowest possible cost. W. L. the retail price are stamped e money in this country. They combine quality, | % The prices are the same everywhere; they cost experienced men, all to make the best shoes for the ‘has not been c! or mutilated. . i'.’l:' Shoe Co., ity, order direct from factory. Catalogus fres. 270 Spark %'m 1327 F St N.W. INGS™ S A oy Pays for ltself HIRING a laundress costs money—sending the Z washing out costs money—of it you do the washing yourself by hand the cost of the dam- aging results upon your health is beyoud estimating, because this cannot be figured in dollars and cents. - -A Thor saves all this—you can do the washing without work in your own home at a cost of only 2 cents an hour for electricity. Or if you employ a maid she can do the weekly-washing in an hour, « leaving the balance of the day for other duties. Besides this, there is the saving on the clothes— clothes washed in a Thor last six times as long. So a Thor actually pays for itself. Thor quality returns to you all you pay, over and over, in a saving that goes on year after year as a dividend on your invest- ment. ; b % Be guided by the experience of over 500,000 sat- isfied users—buy a Thor and begin next wash day to derive the benefits it will give you. A very small first payment, $l 0 the Zac : Satiu Ve f{kere. il [becn obtained. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January l&—)‘er:lm&nt v’::lahlnzum count; along the “gay white way" received a severe jolt wh lice made the rounds | Pa., for $3,500,000, according to re l"otll.ywo:nuplo giarets and_dance | ports received here toda: has sold two of its three mines in e Mining Company of Washingto! The pro . halls with orders to enforce rigidly the!erties include 4,000 acres of coal land state excise laws forbidding them to re- | adjoining the property. main open after 1 o’clock. A series of raids by plain clothes de- tectives in the *lid-clamping™ o of thres bartend- resulted in the arrest H. ers charged with selling liquor without|state veterinarian, was indicted by made before thelthe Harlan county grand jury on a license. The arrests, McLane company's Indicted for Murder. legal closing hour, caused scarcely ajcharge of murder of Miss Lura Par- ripple among the merry-making Pa-|sons, several months ago. trons. ‘The body of Miss Par- protestingly complied with the orders.{sons, who was a teacher at ths Pine Home ' managers, hmvor,‘rem;efm': Mountain losg, although a cordon of patrolmen|found mutilate untain stood guard ready to forcibly close lfl"i';'c‘ trail lca.din; :S ?l‘:‘easlc‘;::gl).' e L 1 C ervance of violation of the exci aw. Oregon Bank Closed. SALEM. Ore—The First State and | was reccived here of the shooting of Savings Bang of Klamath Falls, Ore. | Robert Arnold, well known resider.t was closed by the state superintend-of Henry county, who was killed in ent of banks because of depleted re-|the office of the sSheriff of the county The bank has a capital of}at.Abbeville. $100,000, surplus of the same amount, | Henry county, is in jail charzed with and_ deposits amounting to about|the shooting. serves. $1,225,000. To Clear Wrecked Ship. CHARLESTON, S. C—The United {and Rubber Company has virtually States Army engineer here announced | suspended operations. that as the agent of the owners I‘I;\: the‘ probable date of resumption of activities. wreck of the Norwegian auxiliary}000 has been spent’ by the underwriters has abandoned schooner Korsnaes, the government will proceed to clear the derelict, making it harmless to navigation. The. Korsnaes recently caught fire a few miles off the coast of Charleston. Acquitted of Skoeting. % | Dean, as the result of family troubles. religious riot in the Wesleyan ‘Methodist Church at Rabidoux Corners June 28 last, was acquitted by a jury in circvit court The jury had been deliberating twenty-four hours, Face Swindling Charge. ATLANTA.—Three of the six men {arrested recently in Memphis in con- nection with investigation of an al- ilezed swindling syndicate here, are lodged in the local jail. _Solicitor General Boykin is gathering ad- ditional evidence of the alleged onfidence”s game, by which it was estimated that more than $100,000 has Rail Official Drops Dea AS CITY, Mo.—John W. Daly K. of Chicago, general western agent of the New York Central lines, fell dead | Norfolk and double-tracking of the road in front of a hotel here upon his arrival from Om:ha. is supposed to have been the cause. Woman Found Shot. WOMBLE, Ark.—The body of a woman, believed that of Mrs. G. N. Burkhart, formerly of Jacksonville, Fla., was found hidden in a woods today with a gunshot wound in the back. The body was uncovered du: 'Ef a search made in response to telegram from Jacksonville, signed “Martin,” which stated that the sender had received a letter from iG- N. Burkhart, stating that Mrs. Burkhart had been killed. To Photo Drugz Addicts. NEW YORK.—A collection of pho- tographs of drug addicts and vend- jers, similar to the famous rogues pallery. was started here by Deputy Police Commissioner Carleton Simon. icriminoligist, as_a measure to curb nation-wide traflicking in narcotics. {Through a system of exchange, Ber- tillon records of addicts are to be kept on file by police of all the larger cities of the countr: Paid High for Proteetion. NORFOLK, Va.—Protection at the rate of 3230 for each truckload of liquor brought into Portsmouth was paid by an alleged “whisky ring according to affidavits in the hands of Commonwealth’'s Attorney Albertson, which form tho basis for charges under which Chief of Police Brough- ton and two detectives are suspended awaiting trial. Profits amounting to as high as $2,000 a week were made frequently by this illicit trade, other affidavits show Plague and Typhus Rampant. NEW YORK.—Bubonic plague, ty- phus and yellow fever are prevalent in various South American countrics Dr. Joseph H. White, assistant sur- geon meneral of the United States public health service, and Dr. Sterling G. Wyman of Brooklyn, refiorted on their arrival on the steamship Santa Ana from Valparaiso, Chile. Mad Dog Hunt Begins. Fla.—Acting on a request v commissioners, the Hills- borough county school board ordered | the suburbs and city schools closed two days while a campaign against mad dogs, or those under suspicion, is under way. The school children, approximately 12,000 of them, have been requested to stay indoors dur- ing the two days. Governor Takes Oath. LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—Thomas C. Mc- Rae this afternoon was sworn in as Governor of Arkansas succeeding Charles H.: Brough. Other constitu- tional state officers also took the oath Clemency Is Refused. OSSINING, N. Y.—Gov. Miller, it was learned at Sing Sing prison, has de- clined to extend clemency to Augustin L. Sanchez and Enrique Garcia, two Mexicans awaiting _execution. here during the week of January 24. Attacks Socialist Member. ALBANY, N. Y.—Asserting that As- semblyman Henry Jager, socialist of Kings county, is not a resident of New York state, but of New Jersey, Assemblyman George H. Rowe, re- publican, introduced a. resolution in the assembly demanding that the qualifications and eligibility of Jager be investigated by the assembly ju- diciary committee. The resolution was adopted nimously, with the three socialist Members voting. Four Contractors Semtenced, SAN FRANCISCO—Four building contractors, William Healy, Frank Mor- decai, Frank O’'Shea and R. A. Farrar, ‘were sentenced today to 120 days in Jail or pay a fine of $1,200 in superior court, on pleas of guilty of violating the state anti-trust law. They were taken to jail until they could ar- range the payment of the fines. Hunt to Kill B! Bulls, SALT LAKE CITY, U “The -bison hunt on Buffalo Island in Great Salt Lake; announcement of which brought many protests, is intended only to kill off old bulls which have grown vicious and prevent sheep and cattle breeding, according to a statement by J. E. Elli- son, ono of the lessors of the island. Trges Stock Food Raising, GREENFIELD, Mass—Efforts to raise in Massachusetts a larger propor- tion of the food needed by the people and of the feed necessary to sustain its farm animals were urged by Vice Presi- dent-elect Calvin Coolidge in an address at the annual dinner of the Franklin County Agricultural Society here. Italian Ship Searched. PORTLAND, Me—Sheriff King G armed with a warrant to search the Itallan steamer Monte Santo for liquor, was refused permission to the vessel in the harbor by Capt. F. Steriese. ‘Later he returned with twelve deputies and placed the captain under technical arrest for interfering with an officer. The search was then made, but no liquor was found. Coal Mines Seld. GLENCOE, Ohio.—The Youghigien-. ny and Ohio Coal Company, Cleveland, Heart disease represents the bulk of the work. N. | accepted bribes to protect alleged crimi- Settlement School. was Slain in Sheriff’s Office. MONTGOMERY, Ala.—Information Gus Freeman, also of Tire Company in Trouble. BUFFALO, N. —The Dunlop Tire April 1 is Approximately $36,000,- com- BOMB PROBES PLANNED. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., January 13.— 5 vz;mmn that radicals here are plan- ning & planting of bombs in plants as its main featurs, were re- ceived from eeveral sources by Wal- ter C. Foster, in charge of the Phila- delphia Department of Justice offices. For some unexplained reason, the ir “d that Friday night has been selected. Mr. Foster said that immediately upon_receipt of the warnings he had - |form other cities, an: o also P A onog s, | had informed the New York offices of the department. —_— HONORED AT LUNCHEON. A. C. Oase. merchandise manager of the Palais Royal, next Friday to accept a similar V“ ARLAN, Ky—Dr. H. C. Winnes,|tion with a department store at Fort He was | Me released on $5.000 bail to await trial | ciation. Most_of the cabaret proprietors un-|january 20. “demonstration,” AP LRLEe LIy ML, N M7 L LS ITRTRYIRRTAREYIT nt _of Jl‘ll!ll!'l informants “Pape’s Cold Compound” is Quickest Relief —— Don’t stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up any cold. The first dose opens clogged-up mostrils and air passages of head; stops nose running; relieves headache, dullness, fever- «Pape’s Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest relief known and eo:;’on\y a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assist- ance. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine, Insist upon Pape's ‘who leaves the city tendered & testi- — pany since building operations were started a year and a half ago. Killed by Brother. CHATTANOOGA, _Tenn. — William M. McGarley, a prominent farmer of Lauderdale county, Ala., was shot and killed by his brother-in-law, Earl Law. Children Attead Dog’s Fumeral. KENOXVILLE, Tenn.—A sort of municipal burial was given Dick, & bulldog, by scores of children fond of the dog, who contributed money enough to have him buried in a real coffin and were the “official” mourners. Hold Pair in Murder Case. ASHEVILLE, N. C.—Richard Wil- liams and his wife, “Mary Dick” Wil- liams, are being held without bond by |\ the authorities at Morganton, near here, for the alieged killing of Pink Brittain, a farmer living near that city, according 1o information received here. Rallway to Spead $10,000,000. ROANOKE, Va.—An expenditure of $10,000,000 for additional tracks and im- provement in terminal facilities is being made by the Virginian railway, it wae learned here. Terminal facilitles at from the coal fields to the tidewater Allege Police Took Bribes. NORFOLK, Va.—Charges that mem- bers of the Norfolk detective force have nals have been sprung from two differ- ent sources. One charge was made at the trial of Inspector W. J. Stephens, chief of detectives, for insubordination, while the second came in the corpora- tion court at the trial of a woman caught in recent wholesale vice raids. Dry Agent's Death Unsolved. JERSEY CITY, N. J.—A' coroners jury, in a verdict made public here, found that James A. McGuiness, prohi- bition-enforcement agent, picked up dead December 24 at Point of Rocks, Bayonne, met death by a “shot fired by an unknown person.” Big, Shoe Firm to Reorganize. ST. LOUIS.—Plans for reorganizing the International Shoe Company. dou- bling its capitalization of $25,000,000, are announced. Favor Emergetecy Tariff. MONTGOMERY. Ala—A. resolution requesting Senators Oscar Underwood and J. Thomas Heflin of Alabama to support and -vote for the Fordney emergency tariff act, “now pending in_the United States Senate, for the relicf of the agricultural interests of the country,” was adopted by the||l ve committee of the Alabama ||| i i American Cotton Associa- Pennsy. I PHILADELPHIA. — The Pennsyl- vania railroad amnounced yesterday the_acceptance of the resignation of A. W. Mellon, the Pittsburgh banker, a8 a director in the company. Mr. Mellon was elected a director only last February. Police Shoot Seaman. JERSEY CITY, N. J—Ralilroad de- tectives guarding a silk train in the Pennsylvania yards here yesterday: shot and killed William J. Bock, a seaman. Terence McGovern an Joseph H. Smith, raflroad detectives, Were later arrested, charged with shooting Bock, and were relaesed un- der $10,000 bonds. Guilty of Stealing Alcohol. l NEW ORLEANS.—Seven men, 'on trial in connection with the theft of| a carload of alcohol from the Ken- tucky distillery at Westwego, yester- day were found guilty of conspiracy to rob an interstate shipment and ac. tual robbery of the shipment. The al. cohol recently was found buried in a swamp after ten days’ investigation by the prohibition-énforcement of~ cers. - = Florida —5 Through Tra 3 AT G ane Ruilroes, TS sy, Advertisement. HOLD TOBACCO MEETINGS. LEXINGTON, Ky., January 13.— Four important meetings of those in- terested in the burley tobacco crop were being held here today. Discus- sion of the disposition of the 1920 crop and planting of the 1921 crop was the object of all of the gather- ings Sgre"lhroat Prudence our' ithout a bottle of TONSILINE,. d'n.n’t h:nv what moment it needed to relieve a sudden Throat. Sore a Y when need it most. S5c., 2o 60, Hogpital Sise, 81,00, Your drusgist sells TONSILINE. BLISS DYSPEPSIA RHEUMATISM CONSTIPATION ALONZO 0. BLISS MEDICAL CO. Est. 1883 WASHINGTON, D. C. 3 For @le at People's Drug Stores. - ¥ Saks & Company Pennsylvania Ave. and Seventh Street In the Boys’ Behalf Yes, indeed, some very special selling of values that have a very definite standing-among boys’ wear- ables. *Tween the actual worth and the prices is a saving any parental purse will be glad to make. A combined lot of Suits comprising genuine Crompton’s All-weather Corduroys — Wood Brown Corduroys with two pairs of pants— and Fancy Cheviot Suits, many of which have two pairs of pants. The sizes, which are broken, range up to 17 years. s 9 .—7_5- Specially marked down to ......occevveennnnn Choice of Fancy Cheviot and Cassimere Suits, with one and two pairs of pants—and lots of the famous Right Posture Suits, Sizes up to 17 years. Specially marked down from $16.50, $20, $25, $27.50 £0....0c0cccconscn 3121—-72 Wash Suits, consisting of Junior Norfolks— the cute “Button-on” models, and Middys; some plain White; others fancy. s 1 7 5 . Specially marked down from $3.50 and $3.95 to. Boys’ Fancy Cheviot Knee Pants—some knickerbocker, others straight cut; strongly sewed. Sizes 4 to 15 years. $ 1 48, Specially marked down from $2 and $3 to..... Novelty Overcoats—Double-breasted ; with E convertible collar; Chinchilla and Fancy . Cheviots; cloth lined. Sizes 2% to 10 years. -Specially marked down from $12.75.......... $Q.75 School Overcoats for the larger boys— Fancy effects, Double-breasted; with belt all around; warmly lined with cloth. Sizes 12 to 18 years. Specially marked $ 1 2.75 downto ........oeeeennn = Boys® Shirts— A big lot of Boys’ Neglige Shirts, in neat, effective patterns of new colorings; soft cuffs, neckbands — and in all sizes from 12}% Specially marked 89c Boys’ Notaseme Hose— at. .. eicececrccsanascncee This well known brand of Stockings, in Black, Tan and White — sizes irom 6 to 1I. Specially marked 39c at. 5555 3 for $1.10 Boys’ Wool Sport Hose; in Heather mix- tures; roll tops. Regular price, Specially marked $1:4 Repeating the en’s Shirt Sale We want to caution against delay in attending this sale. - True, it was a very stormy day yesterday when the sale opened—but that didn’t keep the crowd away. They came, and saw—and the values “con- . quered.” 3 3 Remarkable values—really. Shirts that are easily worth $2—in patterns that could not be put into any but Shirts of the better grades. And the price is a real surprise. With Six 95C for $5.50 Woven Madras and Percale—and remember, the es run up to 19%5. —— = -