Evening Star Newspaper, February 8, 1921, Page 12

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12 : ' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 192L . Broken TRUNKS REPAIRED PROMPTYY | : : o ' = 1$13,000,000 Hospital Meas~ | |{ T8 'N T=uBLel o & . i | use Passed—$100,000,000 : = = : s 4 85 6 | Road Bill Goes Through. E : e y ) J —By BUD FISHER. oo WCRE A SAP t T DogbE THE (Copyright, 1921, by H. C. Fisher. Trade mark re Pat. Of.) HUUSE RUSHES B“l M‘UTT AND JEF FT-—There Are Times When Mutt Is in His Glory and This Is One of Them. | (WHEN SUBDENLY Jo€ SPIIS OR.DIDI? THE APPEARED WITH A BRICK. c SUEING SPWIS AND T AIN'T J&ZUC::‘!‘}E PRICE FRIENDLY SINCE T oF THE PLATE CuT HIM oUT WITH S Re IS GIRL AND HE GCASSWINDAYS = THREW THE BRICK SAYS IF T HADN' DODGED THE BRICHS STRAIGHT AT MY % BEAN AND T THE GLASS WOULDN'T b J/WeLy, T wAs i UsTen, st® SIowey, ") | WAARS HAFRENEY | Gri\Bine. 1 ERonT TWANT TO MECT To YoV, JEFF, S ]-0 HEI—P SUI—UI[RS YoUR BARRISTER! THATRBYRCED STORE, MuTT, Don'T T e (T now! I'LL NEUER MAKE A Fool MISTAKE LIKE THAT AGAINY Do You THINK You7 DAMG NOTRING CAN ARRANGE (T £ BUT JusT STANDING TOPHAM'S Two big relief measufés were put . | through the House in a-harry ves- (No Branches) terday and a third was bedten by .1! 80 L St N E | stight margin . . . | Called up under suspension of rules, (Established 1855) ta proceeding which required a two- TRUNKS MADE TO ORDER | was pas S ¥ jvote and 0 YOU TAKE PRIDE 1173, '% v | The big upset of the day was the de- IN YOUR HOME?: [\ et iflonds "onder Pai wil aml"n‘lxr b Interior and Exterior Work. | when the Winslow ®. k. FERGUSON, Inc. 3in’s.. a Painting Department. Ph. N. 231-232. | ORGANIZATION ACTIVITIES. |, 115, K%, Bt ™nv<ton **| CHURCHES TO START LENT | Fictor s, Myl ™" ™ M A[.H TR m i Parent-Teacher association of the| AT SERVICES TOMORROW e e B T Washington Council, K. C., will meet| ) c X shington Council, K. G, Wi M) N. P, Gage School will be addresscd half hours” for women. These serv- Open evenings till 9 o’clock ||! . | to consider recommendations of the new| py District Commissioner Boardman Fm——— ices will be held every Friday during | home committee. Later, the council's{at & o'clock at the school, 2d and V 4 A 2 Lent. except on Good Friday, and| [ndioestion G Acidi of the bill |basket ball league will meet Potomac | streets. | Communion Will Be Held in Morn- | will be in 2 continua- 2 ases cidity — {tion_of the for women - hospital- men W similar - Dean Rous-| SOUrNess Flatulence Cathearal, Bos- ay will be “The Palpitation am for the entertainment of | mpo Gamma Delta Rho George Washington Univ give a reception from 9 to Nu Fraternity house, 1733 | Cour { the membership. noon and Evening Meetings. Ton. Ths tepicHeom | Hallowing of Dut | ing by Most, With Many After- |conducted 1 o MLIGE b churches in the eity will hold | Let “‘Pape’s Diapepsin” correct your digestion by neutralizing . eption in the m o e Ne: v 7 248 iotaloeis S Y ! L . ception in the ballroo There will be a dance at & o'clocl tomorrow Ash | AUTHORIZED BY PRESIDENT. the harmful acids in the stomach and in.estines, then you can-eat i Willard. at the Catholic Community House as a [\ qy <qay, which marks the usher- _ % & i benefit for the Holy Comforter School. | ool WP SEL L (% (0 he] The President has authorizea thel favorite foods without fear. Prompt stomach relief awaits you. Areme Chapter, O. E. S., will give a 88-Note—Used Player-Piano . An Unusual Bargain Arthur Jordan Piano Co. 13th and G Sts. Features th 4-piece Wa Anne period—fe vanity Toilet T: reproduction ¢ Twin Beds. in we= House & Herrmann o Some examples of what you can save by buying now: Inut Suite, straightline designs, re- s 00 lieved by dainty carving. Reduced from $360.00 to 29 o 4-piece Mahog 8-piece Mahogany-finish § This Whitney Library Tables . Sulkle Fumed Oak Library Table, grained top; drawer Made of reed and, as illustrated, and cross Bhell-sl 7.75 Scru finish, rubber-tired wheels, wooden geat, folding wood handle— anogany-finish Library Table, and a most exocellent with ni < rt in every detail of $ 65 racks on e’it’h_ers 00 construction and finish. 7- e s nE 7. dle . S. Jacob Jones Post, No. 2, Ameri- L e n Legion, will meet at § o'clock at ction of five 3710 Rpode Island avenue. Miss Maud - | Aton will speak. pitals Planned. Vavigation Instruments and Their Uses™ is the subject of a lecture by Dr. | B. Bennett to the United States Power ! Squadron at the Corinthan Yacht Club. The Short Story Club will meet at § " | o'clock at the parlors of the League of b | American Pen Women, 1722 H street. e b | The_program is in charge of Mrs. Mira 3 | M. Metcalf. 00 for t The Benning Citizens' Association ! will meet at 8 o'clock at 1. O. O. F. [ Hall. = The Brookland Brotherhood will hold executive meeting at 7:30 in Lord emorial Hall. A business meeting i called for § o'clock, and at 8:30 District Commissioner Boardman will ¥ f k on “Washington, the City Beau- 1 passed-by the House making | $heqk ey ppropriation for good roads would | tiful.” Members are e D reaen 50 sitb 000,000 | their wives, families and friends. as offered_as a substitute for s vl ey |appropriate that sum each year fori,e § o'clock; social dancing party at lthe next f o8 Rev. J. F. X. Murphy, 8. J., will de- liver the third lecture of his course on “Ireland” at 8 o'clock at the Catholic ‘ Community House, 601 E street. Sub- Seventh and at show the advantage you gain by - supplying your home furnishings through us. Bedroom Suites v-finish Suite, one of the Queen ring the Chifforette and semi- $ 00 able. duced from $400.00 to...... i 3 ite, In the effective the early period school of design; duced from $115.00 to. : RESIGNATION ACCEPTED. The President has accepted the res- igration of Lieut. Col. William B. Rochester, finance department, as an officer of the Army, to take effeot on his arrival in the United States from his station in the Philippires. ORDERED TO WASHINGTON. Capt. Frank L. Pinney, commandirg the U. 8. 8. Cleveland, has been or-|city, who dered to this city for duty as assist- |Thur. the afternoon ant chief of the bureau of ordnance, |be add 1 by Rev. C. Navy Department. rector h | churches communion will be held at| vice and at the 11 o’clock service. h services also either in the afterpoon or evening. Masses will be held in the Catholic churChes, | together with the blessing of the ashes. At St. John's Church Canon Doug- las, the acting_rector, will hold the first of the . services, which nshout Lent, dress at the be made by rector of St. | New Yorl w Rev. Dr. Leighton Par! Bartholom {appointment of Mrs. Emma V. Morgan to a position in the classified service in the Department of Labor, “without reference to the requirements of the civil service rules”” The order was aade on the recommendation of the Sccretary of Labor, who said that Mrs. Morgan “is a woman of very unusual ability, efficiency and reliability.” ASSIGNED TO DESTROYER. Lieut. Commander Francis 8. Cri- ven, on_duty in the bureau if ord- nance, Navy Department, has haen ax- to duty with the destroyer tlantic fleet. i Always attractive as furnish- ing as well as useful. straightlin€ design, with attractive SPECIAL ........... ly grained top, book $5 Down —and the balance in convenient monthly payments, buys this new Columbia Grafonola, Typg E-‘Z $125:0 —fitted with racks for the record books. . _All 10-inch Double-disc Blue Label Colum- bia Regords, except those made by exclusive Columbia artists. NOW.... ; N United Who are the Customers for US. Tires NCE in a while even now somebody buys a car just to make the neighbors sit up and notice.!” ) But ninety-nine per cent ,of American families buy a car because they know of ten times more wuseful ways to useit than even car-makers themselves can think of. + Thegreatest thing that ever fhappened to the motor in- ' dustry was when the motor car achieved the dignity of i being an essential item in the : Jamily budget. A fact just as wholesome in its bearing on the tire business. * * L URING 1920 the makers of United States Tires had their chance to prove the mental good health of the average American citizen. Nobody can find out any- " thing about motorists by '\lumpingmorethanS,OO0,000 | of them together as a mere " mass of tire prospects. Nor by jumping into a free-for-all stampede for their tire-money. But when you think of them as individual, separate persons, surprising things happen. It is the United States policy to make tires for the men and women who ride in the cars—not just for cars, no matter what price, weight or wheel-base. It is this same policy that remembers that Americans were raised on quality ideas about merchandise. When was there everany faith in job- lotters and i s s s A A,'L through 1920 every pressure was brought to bear to lower U. S. standards in order to-get out more tires. . But the United States Rubber Company dide’t in- Branch, 1303 H St. NW. to sell more tires. It held to its standards. As a result it satisfied more people. 1t registered economy in more individual pocket books. These people had their own ideas about their own money. They placed empha- sis on confidence. They passed by the flam-' boyant tire-bargains on every street in the country, and _went calmly to the legitimate fied by the United States L 1 & They got the best of it.) L d * * v S is why the Company) \' feels that it hasmore than ' a “market.” It has a follow- ing. Independent-thinking, brass-tack human beings. In 1921 this following will get fresh, live tires of current production. There will be more and better U. S. Tires this year. And there will be many thousands more peopleadded to the long nation-wide roll of customers for United States products. / S United States Tires States @ Rubber Company

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