Evening Star Newspaper, February 8, 1921, Page 14

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o OQuURPASTRY SECTION CORNWELL'S JELLISLYCE (Individual Size) ELLY from the juice of fresh red currants centered in crispy turn- overs of French puff pastry—airy light and buttery rich. Baked golden and glazed with sugar. PASTRIPHONE Main 875 CORNWELLS 1415 H Street TIVE A ") ) A Aok <! z. LOST ON MOUNTAIN, % CARRIES INJURED CHUM BOSTON, February 8.—Braving death from exposure and ice-coat- ed precipices while lost last night on Mount Monadnock, N. H., dur- ing a week end trip, Karl H. Rob- inson, a Boston University fresh- man, carried Rupert Robinson, a fellow student, from the summit to safety, after Rupert had been rendered unconscious by a fall. They are not related. X For many miles Karl Robinson bore his stricken chum on his shoulders. He finally lost his way and was about to drop from ex- | haustion when he heard a_ dog | bark. Guided by the sound. he | pushed on to safety. Rupert Rob- inson, in a delirious condition, was rushed to Fitzwilliam, N. H. for medical treatment. He recovered | quickly and returned yesterday to the university. p Karl Robinson’s home is in At- tleboro: Rupert's in Keene, N. H. ——————— 10 Per Cent Wnge Reduction. PITT: | February 14 at the plant of the Eato! days a week. There are 900 employes. OVER ICY PRECIPICES SFTELD Mass.—A 10 per cent re- | quction in_ wages will become effective !l Crane & Pike Company manufacturers of stationery. The mills are running five D. C, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1921 Life’s Darkest Moment. n, NOW , ALBERY ¢ WANT YOu Yo PROMISE ME THAT YOU WILL MIND AUNT SALLY WHILE WE ARE Awavy. Dow'Y FAIL TO WEAR YOUR. RUBBERS WHE N YCU GO OUY ine THE Smow AmD BE SURE YouR WINDOWS ARE UP WHE™N You Go To BED — MO MATTER HOW COLO ¥ 1S. AUNT FacLy Wit SE~ND US YOUR REPORY CARD EALH MomTH Se WE LL KMow JusT How YOU'RE Doi~e AT S(HooL Dor' T WORRY, CLARA . VLU SEE TMAT HE ToES THE MARI el ey e both material and wo! Set of Teeth An X-ray picture, such as this, indicates the location of abscesses. Eliminate all guess- work, you lose no teeth that can possibly be saved. tract teeth absolutely without pain. BRIDGE WORK—My bridge work is| patented, ai P DeWrig PAINLESS DENTIS T -. e S S SN S N S SR S N 38 e e N M S0 S0 M e N 35 e DENTISTRY &1 The old adage, ONE OUNCE OF PREVENTION IS WORTH A POUND OF CURE, is more than exemplified in your teeth. Deadly germs lurk in the cavities of decayed teeth and the pus pockets of unhealthy gums. YOU WOULD NOT EAT TAINTED FOOD. Yet with decayed teeth and infected gums, that is exactly what you do. In time your health must pay the penalty. Be PRUDENT, have your teeth attended to NOW. A small payment down will start the treatment. The rest as you please. NO CHARGE for a careful examination. A CATCHOUC PLATE made by me is guaranteed, PAINLESS EXTRACTION—By the use ;)f a_simple botanical discovery we have been able to ex- 1 also administer gas where it is indicated or desired. “natural teeth, both in service and appearance, l'hal has yet been produced. without pain and guaranteed for twenty years in writing. $3—$4—and—$5 22-k. Gold, Vitrilite Porcein and Platinum rkmanship, to stand up for twenty years. Will not absorb odors, is extremely thin and light A Catchouc Plate | jn weight. $5,$10, $15. patients most. (No charge for X-ray pictures) nd is without doubt the nearest approach to All work accomplished 437-441 7th Street N.-W. Expert Dentist, 19 Years’ Experience Open Sundays, 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. Other hours, 8 A.M. to 8 P.M., Testimonials on Request. Main 5247. CAUTION—REMEMBER NAME AND ADDRESS. Hahn's Modern. Daylight “Shoe-Hospital" One of the largest factories in the United States devoted exclu- sively to “rebuilding” worn shoes. And quality built it! Introducing new methods, new machinery, highest standards of workmanship—could not help rev- Best Leather Half Soles with Rubber Heels at- tached—Men's—Women's ' $1.25 Half Soles only— without heels— 414 9 Cor g 1014-16 Pa. Ave Tt &K 233PaAve SE olutionizing the Shoe-Repair Bus- iness. And the same efficiency which enables this factory to turn out better work—also enabies us to supply it at practically the same prices you pay for ordinary old- time “‘cobbling.” 1.5 Whole Soles— Men’s or Women’s— $9.50 Phone, Mail or Bring to the nearest o o11 HAHN‘ Store —prompt deliveries St. A RS RREARI w7 %) ok RRATRAR R FOoR FLORIDA % Two THIROS ©OF T By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, February 8.—In a se- iries of raids conducted early today and during the night in the Mulberry Bend district, skirting Chinatown, po- lice’ and federal officers seized nar- cotics valued at $135,000, destroyed a moonshine still they found in opera- ition and arrested seventeen men. ! One raiding party fought its way through a narrow passageway In Hester street, and after a struggle lasting half an hour took four men in custody. In one room they found four demijohns of moonshine whisky land a still at work. A further search which they battered down. Behind the wall the police said sev- en men were lying in bunks. The room was murky with oplum fumes, they said. The raiding party found drugs they valued at $40,000 and sev- eral opium pipes. Federal operatives found $80,000 in drugs secreted beneath headstones in an old cemetery in 2d street. yester- day, and placed two men under arrest, charged with violation of the federai ldrug laws. 1In later raids four ar- |rests were made and additional drugs were found. Actress Burned to Death. SAN FRANCISCO.—Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson, sixty-six years old, years ago a Broadway musical comedy fa- vorite, known as Betsy Darling, was burned to death in a fire that de- stroyed her home, near San Bruno, a suburb. Makes Rescue With Afrplane. DAYTONA, Fla—] C. Merrell crashed his airplane into the ocean in trying to save J. Eigear of Day- tona, who had been caught in an undertow at the beach here. Life guards finally rescued both men, who clung to the machine. Schooner Breaks in Two. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.—The steam schooner Klamath, which was swept ashore early Saturday at Del Mar, eighty-five miles north of here, has broken in two and has been aban- doned, according to a wireless mes- sage received from the coast guard Service steamer Unalga. The passen- gers were taken from the vessel Sat- urday. Disabled Transport in Harbor. NEW YORK.—With a low-pressure steam lurhlng b;okeAn al:d he!rrnl'a':- ines crippled, the American - o Ca.m,'i:ny was towed to the Ho- boken Army pier. The Cantigny sailed for Antwerp With troops aboard last Saturday and became dis- abled thirty miles east of Fire Island. Signs Beer Bill Repeal. TRENTON N. J.—Gov. Edwards has signed the bill repealing the 3.50 per cent beer bill which he had put through the legislature last winter after having been eected governor on a “wet” platform. The governor, in signing the repealer, said he was actuated by the fact that ‘the Vol- stead act was now & law of the land anda that its definition of intoxicating liquor superseded any state enact- ment. = N Y ‘The Buffalo C BUFFALO, N. Y.—The Buffalo Com. mercial, which a year ago reduced its street sale price to 1 cent, has re- turned to the two-cent price. The an- nouncement of the increase says that blication costs have been materi- ly increased and at this time geem to be pegged at thelr highest known altitudes for an indefinite period.” i Predicts Sik Harmony. YORK.(—;!‘II;I lflll( ulnflullt’ry will maintain friendly relations be- tween the United States, China and Japan, Roland 8. Morris, United Btates ambassador to Japan, ssid here to the 8ilk Association of America. “A “silken cord of friendship and commerce binds the United States, Japan and China together,” he as- serted, “and it is the greatest guar- antee of friendship that the three countries could have. Tin Plate Mills Reopen. PITTEBURGH.—Twenty of the Mo- Keesport Tin Plate Company mills at McKeesport have resumed opera- wl:.n“ a ":‘:""fi", .I'-.? work sccepted & of the quarters revealed a hidden door, | * THE FAMILY LEAVES Coomright. 1821, H..T. Websten Officers Seize $135,000 in Drugs, Moonshine Still and 17 Men Find Part of Narcotics Under Tombstones—Actress ! Burned to Death—Edwards Signs Beer Bill Repeal. Pearson Plans Air Trip—Other U. S. News in Brief. reduction. of the company Twenty-four other mills re still shut down. Pearson Plans New Flight. DOUGLAS, Ariz.—Lieut. Alexapder Pearson, winner of the transcontinen- tal air race last y-ar, left Camp Harry | J. Jones for Pablo Beach, Jackson- ville, Fla., whence he will start anoth- | er transéontinental flight February 22. He expects to fly from Pablo Beach to San Diego, Calif., in about twenty- one hours’ actual flying time, starting at 12:01.a.m,, February 22. Must Pay Fines or Go to Jail. ATLANTA. Ga—O. L. McMichael, president of Local No. 8, Interna- tional Printing Pressmen’s and Assist- ants' Union of North America, and nine other officers and members of the union were ordered by Judge W. D. Ellis in superior court here to pay fines or go to jail for alleged con- tempt of court. The charges grew out {of alleged failure by the dofendants to obey an injunction restraining them from interfering with non-union em- ployes of the Atlanta Envelope Com- pany and Webb & Vary, two commer- clal printing concerns, during a strike. Murphy Gites Himself Up. CHICAGO.—“Big Tim" Murphy, la- bor leader and politician, sought in lconneaflon with a $100,000 mail pouch } robbery at Pullman last August, has surrendered to Chief of Police Fitz- morris. A warrant for Murphy’s arrest was sworn out by federal officers, but Murphy sald he preferred to surren- der to Chief Fitzmorris. Vincenzo Cosmano, an associate of Murphy, ar- rested on the same charge, is out on bond. Both men denounced the charges as a “frame-up.” Funeral of Sousa Soloist. BATTLE CREEK, Mich.—Funeral serv- ices were held here for Mrs. Edna Grey Clemons, for many vears a soloist with Sousa’s and Gilmore’s bands and a prima donna with an English opera company.' Mrs. Clemons had lived in retirement her for several years. She was born In New York fifty-nine years ago and died last Friday. Longtime Probate Judge Dies. GREENVILLE, 8. C.—J. B. Newberry, for thirty-four years judge of probate of Pickens county, died vesterday. Judge Newberry came into some prominence a year or so ago in connection with the second marriage of Mrs, Vernon Castle, well known dancer and actress, when it was discovered that he had issued a license upon which she was secretly mar- ried in Greenville several months pre- vious to & public marriage in the “Little Church Around the Corner in New York." Woman Figures in Two Trials. ATLANTA, Ga.—Mrs. Sarah Glass, fifty years old, mountain woman from Pick- ens county, Ga,, was convicted in fed- erad district court of operating an illicit still and, according to prohibition officers, after serving her sentence will return home to be tried in the state court for killing the man who told on her. Clad in a gingham dress topped by a gray shawl], the sturdy looking little woman gazed defiantly at the ‘“revenoors” who testified against her and when, the verdict was read her only comment was, “They didn’t tell the truth.” Metion Picture Producer Dies. WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.—Nich- olas Power, sixty-six, of New York, retired inventor of motion picture projection apparatus, died at a local hotel of chronic nephritis. Blissard Hits Newfoundiand. ST. JOHNS, N. F'—=<The worst bliz- zard in years, and the second to sweep the island within a week, is raging here, with the result that rail- road trafic was completely blocked and steamehip service tied up. The fall of snow in this city was the heaviest in some time. Plan for Delousing Immigrants. NEW YORK.-—Suggestion that Camp Dix or some other Army ocamp be taken over by quarantine authorities as a delousing station for European immigrants was contained in a letter sent to Burgeon General Hugh 8. Cumming of the United States public health ' service Health sioner Copeland of New York city. Dr. Copeland announced the plan as & means to protect this city from typhus and _oth diseases about he with - Commis-. —By Webster [MINE OWNED BY PRISON CLaRA, D1 You REMEMBER-To PUT N QUR BATHING SUITS AND THE TEMrS RACQUETS? 1 \WisH 1 HAD Room For ALL My FisHING TACKLE BUT MEBBE ' CAN GET ALomG WITH fifteen representatives of transatlan- tic steamship lines. | Minor Planet Discovered. | CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Discovery of a planet, believed to be an asteroid or iminor planet, wes announced in a cablegram received at the Harvard 1 College Observatory from th- central | {bureau for astronomical cablegrams {at Brussels. Prof. TomasseNi of Bar- celona, who made the discovery. gave the position in astronomical terms in |a section of the heavens that would be between the constgllations of Can- cer and Leo. From the brief cabled { description Harvard astronomers {ferred it was an asteroid, and {the object was so faint that there was n6 hope of amateurs finding It | with ordinary telcs~opes. Working Agreement Stauds. NEW YORK —Efforts to negotiate with the marine engineers on the) lquestion of modifying the existing working agreement bctween that | !body and the American Steamship | Owners’ Association have failed, and | ithe ship owners=announced at their | annual meeting that the terms now in affect would be strictly adhered to. |The agreement expires May 1 next. Mme. Galli Curel Goes to New York. NEW YORK.—Mme. Galli-Curel, so- prano, has been engaged by the Met- WILL SUPPLY IT WITH COAL FOR NEXT CENTURY CHARLESTON, W. Va., February 8—There is enough coal In the mine recently bought by the state and operated by convicts from the penitentiary at Moundsville to sup- ply the prison and all its shops for fully 100 years. R. M. Lamblie, chiet of the department of mines, made this estimate upon his return to Charleston last night after an inspection of the mine. Mr. Lambie said the shaft had been driven down eighty-seven feet and had been concreted from the surface to a point where it en- tered the solid rock. Coal is being mined from the Sewickley seam, which. at this point, is almost five feet thick. The mine is well lo- cated on the prison farm. about one mile from the penitentiary. The penitentiary uses ten tons of coal a day. son of 1921-1922, it i# announced. Her contract with the Chicago Grand Op- era Company, with which she now is isinging here, expires at the end of the present season. Held Without Bail. ABINGDON, Va.—Bert Terry, aged twenty-five, ~automobile machinist, charged with asgsaulting a young woman on the Bristol pike, near this place, has been held without bail. Noted Steamboatman Dies. GALLIPOLIS, Ohlo.—Capt. John W. Thornburg, seventy-eight vears of agze. 'retired river man, who command- ed the famous steamboat Pittsburg, twhich beat the Messenger in a race when Jenny Lind and her company were being taken from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati, more than fifty years ago, died here. Confesses to Murder. DUBUQUE. Iowa.—G. D. Larue con- fessed to the police that he killed Matt Daly, former county supervisor, and attacked Mrs. Daly and her niece, Constance Lahey, with an iron bar, when he entered their home in search for Mrs. Edna Daly, a daughter-in-law. who, he said, had repulsed his attentions. Mrs. Daly was not at home at the the attack, having spent the night at the home of friends. “She is the one I wanted to get” the police quoted Larue as saying. Yeggmen Rob Sussex, Va., Bank. NORFOLK, Va.—Yeggmen attacked the Bank of Sussex. at Wakefleld, Va., and, after blowing off the door At the first chill! Fever, Stuffiness. Always say “Bayer.” ropolitan Opera Company.for the sea- i Christiani | Drug Store 426 9th St. N. \V. OPPOSITE GARDEN THEATER Entire Stock of Fixtures, Inciuding Soda Fountain, to be Sold Regardless of Cost Colgate’s and’ Santox Goods, Also Fountain Pens, of Contract Goods TOILET GOODS ---and the following Glass —Including— Soda Fountain, complete Prescription Case with e e ———————————————————— 2 BAYER Take Genuine Aspirin marked with the “Bayer Cross” to break up your Cold and relicve the Headache, This save subs! essential oils, basic chemical drugs and olher valuable a essary adjuncts store—a while the stock lasts. of the safety di with liberty bonds and war saving stamps valued at $30,000, but falled to onen the safe in the wvi con- taining a larger sum in cash. robbers escaped in an automobile. Lassen Pesk Disturbed. REDDING, Calif.—Lassen peak, Cal- ifornia’s only live volcano, threw out clouds and steam and then sank into & somnolent stage. : Opposnes Rallroad Consolidation. N.—Fear that New Englan! would be turned into a rich man summer playground while indust development languished, if the rai roads of this section should be consol- idated with lines west of the Hudson, was expressed by Mayor Andrew .J Peters in an address to the city coun- cil. He warned that management of affairs would pass from local control in event of such a merger. Former Col s Member Dead. BURLINGTON, N. J.—John J. Gard- ner, a former member of Congress fro the second New Jersey district, died his home, at Indian Mills, near her He was seventy-five years old. Taking Wealth Back to Russia. BOSTON.—With a total of nearly $500,000 in their purses and $260,000 worth of jewels, 200 Russians, who ar- rived here seven years ago as poor im- migrants, are about to return to their native land and expect to spend the rest of their lives in ease. They will sail for Libau and proceed on horseback te the interior, whero their families await them. For several years the Russians have been employed in Lynn industrial plants and their prosperity is the resuilt of war-time wages, frugal living and thrift. All the cash is in American gold cr gold certificates. At the present rate 1of exchange they believe their savings of $2,000 to $5,000 each will entitle them to be called rich in home circles. Bridegroom 111 of Smallpox. RICHMOND, _ Va.—Verton Hewson thirty-two, of Brampton. near Toronto, Canada, was halted on his honeymoon ax a patient in the smallpox hospital here. with his bride, formerly a Miss Splers of Toronto, as his nurse. The bride- groom is reporfed suffering from a well defined case of smallpox. Tornado Ruins Home, Family Injured GOLMER, Tex.—T. E. Bowden and six members of his family were in- jured when their home near this city was overturned by a tornado. eral other buildings were dam- ged. A dlspatch from Hughes Springs stated that the Presbyterian Church and several dwellings there were wrecked. Warning! When you wish Genuine Aspirin prescribed by phy- sicians for over 19 years, ask for “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” and look for the name “Bayer” on the package and on each tablet. Each “Bayer package” contains safe and proper directions for the relief of Colds—also for Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache. Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis and for Pain generally. Bayer-TabletsAspirin Boxes of 12—Bottles of 24— Bottles of 100—Also Capsules—All druggists Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacld NOTICE TO DRUG STORES offers an oppertunity te tial ‘eums_ on. HACtY well stocked to of the savings ] ycurselve OUR OTHER TWO STORES 9th and Pa. Ave. K. W—~Union Station re not affected\ by the closing up this store. All Street N. W. and Pennsylvania Avenue Store, where customers may and accurately refilled on order. s rescriptions_fled at 426 Ninth P .pwlll Be filed at the 9th have them promptly , Excepted, As These Articlcs Are ‘Lease Sold---We Must Vacate Mar. 31st This is an unusual sale of the highest integrity—no goods have been run in extra— nothing sold will be replaced with fresh goods—it is an “out-and-out” closing-out and closing-up of this big, well-known metropolitan drug store with huge stocks of everything a modern drug store sells offered low for a sweeping windup. . A $27.000 Stock Sacrifice SUNDRIES Electric Motor loe Shaver Rbeostat uithurbanlhlllsuoh_ filing system Desk Scales L .

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