Evening Star Newspaper, January 20, 1921, Page 4

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PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 8 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- © fore maturity Assets Nearing $7,000,000 Surplus More Than $660,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR, Secretary R. K. FERGUSON, Inc. 1114 9th Se. Ph. N. 281-383 Painting Departmeat two prints-made from the same negative. All the prints from a film should be uniform and they will be, too, if you bring your work to us. . Close attention all the “a) through the process ~ of ‘developing and printing is needed get niform results and we are.willing to go to this- extra care bec‘auce know that it our custemers. Twenty- four-hour” service. The National----- Remembrance Shop (Mr. Foster's 8hop) 141h St e . RENCH REPUBLIC PROPERTY) Water For 50 years the standard Mineral Water for the relief of Sour Stomach, Indigestionand . Uric Acid. Only the Better Grade Prompt Delivery 912 New York Ave. Servnce “is a word that has. been largely overdone to the extent that nowadays one hardly knows just what it means. —Plitt_is ready to do your . . Paperbanging ot olstering Firstelass kmanship guaranteed. Plitt has an _extensive showing of Furnijure. Qp Plitt Co., Inc., At the Arcade Market, Serv- jce means the courteous treat- mMment afforded every patron, “from their first purchase to their last. It is also expressed in the willingness and pleas- ure taken in serving you with what you want. And then there are the hundreds of little things which make a regular, steady customer out of a - one-time market. goer. We shalt.be pleased to. have you_inspect this sanitary mar- ket and to-add you to the long list of tegular customers who have found.it worth while to Qeal at the IARCADE 14th and Park Road WHITE t <-—- CLEAN ~“SANITARY Live, Up-to-date Dealers 3 Big Cbain Stores ° " Model ‘Pastry Bakery 7 am. to 6 p.m. Saturdays Open Until 9 p.m. 45 3Advantages 'ONSCIENCE B R A N D RESSES are fo! sanitary, enduring. Whether cotton: folt, silk-floss or hair, the long - fiber filling gives a springiness not found in the . ordinary mattress. Conscience Brand .;:r.:h' e °|: Trves: and Mo ly to your _liver. els I:hhuva :(Vhen bilious, {con‘ H attmses it chy, ui Tun; T 101 ed, headachy, unstrung or for a | n the great sunlight, sani- tary plant of the Interna- donal Bedding Company only clean, pure new ma- terial is used: With its body of long-fiber Ailling (and_ delivered in its tight- nealed. sanitary package), Conscience Brand Mattress s an unususlly economical purchase. upset. stomach, or bad breath, thing acts so nu:ely as Cascarets. zldrtn love them too. 10, 25, SO At dealers in varietien o suit your ‘checked more serioup conditions rfi‘:w::a-fllbe-fld sale at Goldenberg’s Furmi- ture Store—Seventh and K Streets. “Over One Million Tablets Taken Daily.” Cleans Body Inside | Clears Complexion DRIVES AWAY PIMPLES NO CALOMEL OR HABIT FORMING DRUG MADE FROM ROOTS, HERBS & BARKS ONLY MONEY-BACK GUARANTES IN-EACH BOX ALONZO O. BLISS MEDICAL CO. Eat. 1883. WASHINGTON. D.C. § Far sale % Peopic's Dn( Stores. r == We -Sell Conscience Brand . Mattresses because they measure up to our standard of .hygienic qual- ity for bed furnishings. House & Herrmann Seventh and .1 Streets A r Il cille Hudiow, sugar mapie; George Madi- Vote for a National Tree THE EVENING STAR OFFICIAL BALLOT . The American_ Forestry Association is taking a nation- vude vote to determine what shall ‘be Amencal national I Vote for.. Name ... Street ... N School .... Pupils of Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Enght.h Grades take this ballot to your teachers and follow instructions given by the Nature Study Department. All other voters fill this out at once and forward to the American Forestry Asso- ciation, National Tree Voting Department, 1214 16th Strect northwest. Tree Work Exhibition, Wilson Normal School, 9 A.M. to 5 P.M., 7 to 9 P.M., Daily, to Jan. 21, Inclusive. BEST BIRD HOUSES [ == = - wood; Maud Boynton, pine; Jnhn Fin- TO GET RIBBONS = more; Katherine Burke, elm; Hlll apple: Thomas Webster, sugar ma- Lenax School—Rose Catzva, _apple: Florence Hutchinson, oak: Lee Shapiro, tulip; Julia Erb, sugar maple: Michael R, sycamore; Fruancis Mills, dog- Copeland, pine; Joseph Jwmeson, wal- nut; Althea McPherson, hemlock; Mil- dred Tice, hickory. a2 log- American Forestry Commit- tee to Picle Winners at Wilson Normal. Blue ribbons will be awarded me builders of bird houses by a coi } De Moil & Co.’s Popular Vocalion Hits 2aw Miller's Meludy Boys Featured by Ed Wymn “Can You Tell” ¢ “Good Bye, Sunshine” “Hetlo, Moon” Hear Them Here from the American Forestey Assoc ation, which will visit the tree work exh(b[- tion at the Wilson Normal School late this afternoon. The bird houses are a part of the show that continues lhmugh Friday and portrays the nature study | work of the pupils of the public &chools. | Secretary P. S. Ridsdale of the associa- tiop said today that 200 ribbons would be_awarded. Plans have been completed for count- ing the national tree vote the associa- tion is' compiling with the co-operation | of The Evening Star, and every one has been asked to express his choice on the ballot. At the show every afternoon and evening four-minute speakers from the schools set forth the merits of the trees assigned to them in_order to get more votes for their candidates. Speakers Are Amsigned. The last assignment of these four- TIRES minute speakers follows: 30x3'2 Grover Cleveland School—Farl Sang- Snap them ston, apple; Rose Zarin, elm; Joseph “P! Amato and’ Robert: O'Connor, daxwood‘ CHAS. E. MILLER, Inc. Charles Newman, - hickory ; Homer el e 0 812 14th St 4 Doors North of 1l St. eler, sycamore; Rose Epstein, tulip. G_STAR, THURSDAY, JANUARY $9.80 20, 1921, ~ NAME 1S RACKWARD. Japanese Steward on President’s Yacht Seeks Court Aid. Declaring that at the time of his enlistment in the TUnited States Navy his surname was written before his given name, and he has since been known as Tsurusakl Shiro, when his real name is. Shire Tsurusaki, the Japanese steward of the President's yact, Mayflower, today asked the Dis- trict Supreme Court to straighten out his cognomen. On behalf of himself and his two wood ; George West, hi Tabitha Murray, eim: Edward Polley, pine. Tonight a half dozen is will be represented at the exhibition and the vote for the national tree will be an- nounced as soon as a total can be COFFIN WILL IS-FILED. ety of Friends Is Bequesthed $500—Relatives Remembered. | The will of Sarah B. Coffin, dated December 11, 1919, was filed yester- day for probate, She leaves $500 to the Soclety of Friends at 18th and Irving strects northwest, and gives to her sister, Laura C. Berringer, her household and personal eftécts. Direc- tions are given for the erection of a vault in Rock Creek cemetery for| the bodies of her husband and herselt The remaining estate is_devised to Luther A. Swartzell of Washington, Oscar P. Austin of New York, and the National Savings and Trust Company in trust to pay $3,000 to Oscar P. Austin_“for his long and faithful friendship to me and my husband” $1,000 to a grandniece, Grace AL Coffin_of Cincinnati, and $1,000 to Robert J. Coffin, a grandnephew. « The balance of the estate is to be turned over by the trustees to a niece, Lucy Voline. An International Taste Conspiracy A, Genoese confec- tion fnterpreted in choicest American candy ingredient CORNWELL’S BUNGALOW BOX ““5-Room Sweets” An exquisite assort- ment — more than twenty variations of Italian chocolate perfection, com- prised of richest creams, juiciest fruits and crispest nuts. Arranged with art in a box of unu- au?’l uhe—-pmd and-a- er $1.70. qm DO YOUTHINK “THAT YOUR EYES NEED AT\'flmou I\/ 3 If you think that your % eyes need attention the chances are that théy do. After careful ex- amination we will be ablé to tell you their exact vision-status and prqvide you with glasses that will give you com- fort. LS 1415H Strect gpyeepnn) [O) (ooieawte] i ASHER FIRE PROOFING CO. 9IS SOUTHERN BUILDING Cranch Schogl—Lydia Darr, Th Wiley Caffield, Harry pine; Ruth Streighteff, sycamore. Dent School—Margaret Lambert, hickory; Vera Muir, dogwood: Irma Smith, elm; Thelma ‘Stone, tullp; Ma- bel Ludlow, oak; Eugenia Neumayer. sycamore; Gladys Brown, apple; Helen Sprucebank, sugar maple ;: Audrey Blum- er, pine. ‘Ludlow School—Florence Davidson, | eim; John Shaw, oak: Russell Vandel sticg, tulip; Naomi Delco, apple; Mar- jorfe Bartlétt, sycamore; Edna Horner, pine; Margaret Frawley, dogwood: Lu- gan, hickory. Carbery _ School—Arthur _Wandrack, hickory; Martha Hagan, elm; Hilda Ryon, tulip; Arthur Pierdon, dogwoo Joe Wood, oak; Warren BurcH, appl Katherine Poole, sugar maple; Margaret Koontz, ueimore Francis Moreland, ine. K Kewham Bohool—George Martin, hick- ory; Eileen Hudson, elm; Cecil Baxter, dogwood ; William Weitzel, apple; Lena Simon, maple; Willlam Latimer. pine; Alice Nolte, ol‘k. Congress Heights—Katherine Skinner, tulip; Edith Moling. pin oak; Thomas Howard, white oak: Theodore Lingrell, red oak; Edward Steward, black oal Helen Bock. apple: Hinda Coopersmi elm; Margaret Wahler, sycamore ; Rob- erta Tailor, dogwood ; Gertrude Stands- berry, sugar wnaple; Mannie Philps, hickory ; Orville Wright, pine. Randle Highlands—Wilton Gibson, elm; Alfred Wynn, sugar maple; Li cille Gibson, sycamore; Anna Abbo apple; Dorothy Griffith, tulip; Conger, hickory : Ruth Jarvlu dogwood Katherine Gibson, oak; John Sterba, ine. % Edmonds School—Margaret Deysher, elm; ‘Arthur Goldbert, elm; Raymond Torillo, maple; Hazel Montgome sycamore:; Marion . Dyer, apple; thony Stewart, tulip; Carl Tate, dog- wood; George Maschauer, oak; Ruth Change n !l‘lei-lu rn Ratlway discontinu > v ffective with iast trains leaving P : Washington and Danville, Va, Satur. . January 22, trains Nos. 43 and 136 Wil e temporatily discontinued. mneeun Sunday, January 30, No. o on daily at Kl 5 l..m. instead of a.m., swith present equipment, and train Nd. 235 40 #:56 am. Tatter raln making same stops 2e fofmer train No. 43, and han- aling ‘aay coaches only, ‘consolidating | - at Cl lotte with N For complete information reznrduag changes consult ticket agents.—A vertisément. ,@g Bl;y Your ,@; - train 2 Mattress Nine lay;}:, fl'M col what you get. P i E ror !llu ;2: mx;:m. 8 L lary bedding lines. Eastern Star 5 No Just pure cotton felt. ng or renovating. Guaranteed hever to get hard or lumpy. Conforms perfectly to Uines of the body. " Made in severa ‘grades. 81975up. Incloding War Tax NEW YORK The Great Metropolis Sold “Inside Facts” about Stearns & Foster - fo», cm'cnfificalty felted. Laced opemug, know Co}annna to all sani- Mayer & Co. Stearns & Foster Mattresses “See This Trade-Mark, It’s a Guarantee of Satisfaction’ It s a colored silk label sewed on the end of a Stearns & Foster Mat- tress, just below the laced opening, bearing the grade name of each mattress. It’s ‘your guarantee of pure, sweet, clean cotton felt and entire satisfaction. ~ Look for it when you go to buy another mat- tress. Stearns & Foster Label is a guar- antee that only the most sanitary materials are used, that the long, staple, pure, buoyant cotton has been felted by their special process into 9 springy layers, that will not fump up or grow hard, and will never need remaking. Put a Stearns & Foster Mattress on your bed and youll know peaceful, soothing sleep, for they conform perfectly to the body and are’soft and restful. An occasional sunbath will make them as fluffy and springy as ever and keep them 3 clean and pure. The Stearns & F oster Mattress B;tween D®E minor -chtldren, Josephine and- Eu- gene, the steward filed a petition for permission to change their names. He wishes hereafter to be known. as Shiro Tsurusaki, Josephine Tsurusaki and Eugene Tsurusaki. He declares| he has served ten years in the Navy and was admitted to fiull American citizenship December 18, 1918. He has no other reason for changing his Dame, he says. Z714-1IST. We have the lowest prices cousi CONVICTS RAISE FUND. WINCHESTER. Va., January 20 (Special).—Sid Allen of the noted Allen clan of Carroll county. who is servini: a long prison term for his participation in the ‘shooting up of the courthou: at Hillsville about nine years ago, h: leaped jnto prominence again. He raised a fund of nearly $120 among state convicts for the near east famine sufferers. Many of the 150 men who contributed gave all they had, it is said. istent with quality to be found in_the city. Oysters— Eriday Fish Specials Halibut Steak . Pollock Steak King Mackerel Trout Spanish Smelts Shrimp Potatoes Fancy, No. 1 Stock Pk."38¢; 3 Pks, $1 | Doz, $5c; Corn, Peas, Tomatoes Del Monte Tomatoes Sweet Sugar Corn Early June Sifted Peas Your Choice: Can, 12c; 9 Cans, $1.00 P.K COE!E ou’ll find i Oyst; 'ancy, Freshly Shucked Salt-water Quart, 48c Smoked. Fish Herring, ..15¢c; 2 for 25¢ ers. lorida's | vLarge. et. Juicy 2 Doz., $1| 12c Ea.; 9 for $1 Gold Medal Flour 12-1b. Sack, 76c Carnation Milk Tall Cans, 2 for 25¢ Comb Honey, t tastes better tham you've tried 45c Lb., 28c Airline, EHR 720-22-24 Open 9: Store Hours: Where Your Dollars Count Mast END’ 7th St. NW. S 15 AM. Close 6 PM Behrend’s Friday Specials Will be noteworthy, inasmuch as chandise at below ordinary remnant at less than the same can be purch: you buy regular Standard Mer- prices. Every item quoted is priced ased for on any other day. ~ 29¢ Best Standard Apron Ginghams " Sold right from the full'bolt in a of small and large checks, as well as the pop- ular broken check, All are blue and guaranteed absolutely fast color. 35c¢ Dress Ginghams Hundreds of styles and color combindtions to select from. Every yard -is fast color. An ideal quality for house dresses and children’s dresses. CE SR D SR N $2.50 Bleached Sheets Full bed size— made from heavy round thread, full- ‘width sheeting- e e ia free from dressin L4 72x90 inches. oo inchen it iiE R 39¢c Yard-Wide Percales Full -count, perfect qual- ity yard-wide percales in = long range of excellent styles for Men's Shirts, Boys’ Blouses, “House Dresses and Children's Wear—every one fast colors.” 17¢|; full range and white 3 29¢c 38-inch L Fine Unbleached Muslin Extra good quality for seamed sheets, [vlllolfllel and other home By St "ot R l ZC 75¢ Utica 42x36 Pillowcases 39¢ Kimono Crepe Such a variety of nrelty 19 the laundry. ‘We have sold hundreds of dozens at 75c of this well- known, _servigeable ~pillow- Hemstl dtched and & only. large or small Floral Effects” r Kimonos * as -weil as the Plain Pink, Light Blue and White for nighigowns and > ~ $2.00 All-Wool 50-Inch Serges: Mind ycu these are absolutely inches—shrunk and sponged-ready in Black, Mrytle Greef, Brown and Neat lltnped and Plain Color Suits, in 3 to 8 sizes; ‘wanted nnveuy $3.00 Men s ‘Red. Flannel Underwear Shirts Drawers, lower priced than in years. bed Suits (drawer body.and drawers), made with mle rows bul m $1.50 and $2.00 Boys’ Wash Suits $3. 00 Pink Brocade Corsets Made of beautiful quality brocaded coutil, in flesh color. Choice of high or low: okes and four supporters. et atora 20 to 30 sizes. stayed; strong and comfortable. $7. ‘gosg?yfi Cloth Suits 5 $3.99 $1.98 Satine Petticoats spm gy sold for $1.98. 5 $5 & 36 Misses’ Sweaters E.:fi :(':;l?:' e eits $3069 $15 00 to 325 00 Women’s SR "“*si-*sms §' $12.98 Novelty Pleated Skirts -IIQ‘W Rk‘h irEs $6.75 .98 to $10.00 Georgette Exquititety Braid- e o l'lzl!ed o kirts, of finest Brown, Taupe, Fiownand " Copen: hagen Waists of eorgette. bust style— Full Highept-class Ve- luut‘s edine, Tin- for use. They come Cardinal. Thick Gray Suits, in heavy ribbed coldest winter wear. e s O AN $1.00 Women’s Gloves Gloves, in extra warm ‘weal Brown, black and gra. 69c¢ Burson Hose without seams,” flmnlu Burson brand. !ledl m and $2.69 Girls’ Pleated Skirts g 'i‘ll::' hkt lklrl Tl I! Women’s 59¢c Gingham Aprons i of good quality fast color 39c e e Good quality gingham and percale dresses in straight e 94c cuffs. PR rilannivhob il b $39.50 to $59.98 Coat Suits French Seal, Nu- Opowmm and Kbt $18 75 Coney Fur-trimmed Suit: in classiest Arll:‘)n llrlefll tailored garmeats -for older ‘folks. Finest of silk lining. piiks Pscrt vefeLc e R N $10 Flannel Middy Blouses/ Green Wool Blouses. Regulation styles, with yokes, pockets, sleeves and braid tris Women'’s- Up to $59.98 S5 Cooen. " habo. all-wool and tuu 50 ? * - $2.25 Men’s Union Suits styles, form-fitting heavy, and made for Fleece-lined Cashmere weights” for coldest winter 49c The wellAlnown “‘stocking light weights. All sizes. 4; c Galate l l Big full cut Waist Aprons, i S 9 Women’s House Dresses with fancy ‘collars and tria, Australism elty styles for youug girls and women. Red, B'lae snd silk emblems on fl!el, Illr 'fllpfl dnd strictly h“fl!d Remnants $25:00 Satin Evening and Party Dresses Beautifu] shades, white, mllu, light “High-class -, decolette exquisitely made with chiffon blue and pink. Dresses, trimmin =$12.98 $5.95( 1 1 | S g {1 o,

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