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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1921. i 23 & Must Turn Qur Stock Into Cash As We Are Going In Another Line of Business Boys’ and Girls’ $7.50 to $10.00 Raincoats, $450 FOR MEN AND WOMEN | FOR MEN AND WOMEN “FOR MEN AND WOMEN RAINCOATS MEN’S MOLESKINS NITED RUBBER CO. 1436 New York Ave. NW. "Regardless of Cost or Loss Men’s, Women’s, Children’s $12.50 to $15.00 Raincoats, Almost Given Awa $ 6.75 All $12 to $15 OATS To Go at $6.75 All $18 to $22 RAINCOATS To Go at $9.75 FOR MEN AND WOMEN All $30 to $33 RAINCOATS $16.50 MEN'S OVERCOATS ‘Were $60. To Go at All $25 to $30 $12.50 ‘Were $30. All Shades $15.75 $23.75 2475 $37 50 i $45 Leather Coats. 3 ow At Cor. 15th St. and N. Y. Ave. %, = = 2. 2/ Tz, A Z s R e I T Corona I5¢ straighs EL PI.KODUCTO is not merely a brand name for a cigar. It means far more than that, does ‘‘El Producto.” To a great army of smokers it means ‘“Real Enjoyment” —the greatest enjoyment fhat cigar smoking can give—a distinctive, satisfy- ing smoke, obtainable only from the finest tobacco. It means a remarkable blend of choicest Havana —a blend with a character different from any other —a blend that can’t be copied. It means quglity in the making—a smooth, even smoking cigar in shapes and sizes as distinctive as the blend. Yes., “El Producto” means quality—and what is more, it means quality that never varies. The next “‘El Producto’” you smoke will prove that. Distributors D. Loughran Co., Inc. 14th and Penna. Ave. = ‘Washington, D. C. G. H. P. CIGAR CO., INC., Philadelphia, Penna. R ) o‘i”":"""’cc' e, RODy, W, \) ’, sy, LY *H0rnan® i q . O From By the Associated Press. JACKSON, Miss.,, March 1.—Fire in- surance cannot be bought in Mississippi because there is nobody selling. For the first time in the commercial history {company is operating. ; | The climax to the insurance situation | was reached at the end of February when licenses expired. Not a company filed application for renewal. This means that no new business will be written in the state until the billion dollar and trust suit filed by the swate revenue agent against 165 companies is settled, according to Insurance Commissioner T. M. Henry. 5 ; Commercial interests and_individuals are in a state of semi-panic over the situation. All funds in the hands of local agents have been tied up for two months by processes of garnishment and recei d an ad- | The state revenue agent has fi ditional charge that the companies failed to pay sufficient privileged tax, and if this contention Is upheld thosc| companies operating after the original} suit was filed in December will be forced j to pay additional penalties. 1 Sherift Dead, Assaliant Wounded. MOBILE, Ala.—Deputy Sherift Earl Fasterling, age twenty-seven, of Mobile is dead and Dan McLaurin, a cripple, aged sixty, lies mortally wounded as the result of an effort to arrest D. M. Mc- Laurin, the latter's son, on a charge of violating the prohibition law. Dan Mc- Laurin came to the door and exclaimed. “Whoever sald my son =old liquor is a — liar!” Deputy Easterling, accord- ing to the officers, then attempted to arrest the older McLaurin, who opened fire on the deputy, a bullet passing close to Easterling's heart. Deputy Sheriff Walter Blackburn ran to the defense of Easterling and was struck over the head with a crutch by Dan McLaurin. Dep- uty Blackburn then shot the aged man in the lower intestines. | Oxygen Explosion Kills Two. KNOXVILLE, Tenn.—Four were kill- d and four injured, two seriously, when two huge oxygen tanks exploded at the plant of the Tennessee Copper Company here. LINCO! Net —The State Bank of Hadar, Neb., carrying deposits of more than $200,000, was closed yesterday by order of the state department of trade and commerce, With the discovery by a bank examiner of an apparent shortage of $20,000. Ex-State Semator Ends Life. CHICAGO.—Emmitt Wilson, former state senator of Oklahoma and recently defeated candidate for alderman in a | recent city election here, is dead of a self-inflicted bullet wound. Wilson shot himself, according to his wife, after he had tried to kill her and their five-year- lold daughter Lillian. Rob Girl Cashier of $12,000. PIEDMONT, Okla—Three unmasked men entered the First State Bank, robbing the girl cashier, Jessie Wadescheck, who was alone in the bank, of $2,000 in cash and $10,000 in liberty bonds, and making their escape in an automobile. Lower Storage Stocks. CHICAGO.—Cold storage stocks of meats and lard in the United States on February 1 were less by approximately a quarter of a billion pounds than on the corresponding date last year, accord- ing to a statement issued by the Insti- tute of American Meat Packers. The statement says stocks were 1,040,296,000 pounds. ARDMORE, Okla.—Mrs. Clara Smith Hamon, charged with murder in connec- [ tion with the death of Jake L. Hamon, i pleadeq not guilty when arraigned in { district court here. Mrs. Hamon was to ihave pleaded last week, but the ar- raignment was continued when her at- torneys announced she was ill. Art Collection Left to City. PHILADELPHIA —The art collec- tion of the late John H. McFadden, milliouaire -cotton broker, said to be one of the most costly and magnificent collections of eighteen century Eng- lsh art in the world, is left in trust te the city of Philadelphia under the terms of his will flled for probate. Sei-tenced to Be Hanged. NEW HAVEN, Conn.—John Kacea- rauskas, aged twenty-six of Bridge- port, was sentenced by Judge James H. Webb in superior court last night to be hanged at the state prison on May 27 for the murder of Mrs. Anna Chernock in Milford on February 1. | Kacearauskas pleaded guilty to an in- i dictment returned charging murder; 'ln the first degree. $250,000 Damage Suit Filed. NEW YORK—Suit for $250,000 damages against officers of the Amal- ated Clothing Workers of America has been brought in the state supreme court by Joseph Skolny & Co., cloth- ing manufacturers, against whom the amalgamated organization has been conducting & strike. Hold Women in Train Robbery. ST. PAUL, Minn. — Three women, charged with having been connected with the robbery of the north coast limited on_the Northern Pacific rail- road on February 18, were held in jail today, in default of $10,000 bonds, following their plea of not guilty. Their preliminary hearing was set for next Monday afternoon. To date $55,370 in currency has beert recov- ered by police and postal inspectors, who are still searching for Delbert Smith. The ‘women are alleged to have been accomplices of Smith. Open Faucet, Whisky Comes. MONTGOMERY, Ala.—Montgomery police, in searching the place of P. D. McRoy, turned on the faucet and re- ceived a bountiful supply of corn whisky. The tank was located in the basement. A supply of whisky is de- clared by the officers to have been found in an instantaneous heater in the home of Lucile King. Steal City Hall Whisky. TAMPA, Fla.—Thieves effected an entrance into a storage room in the City Hall building, directly under po- lice headquarters, and got away with 150 quarts of bottled in bond whisky whioch the police had seized in a raid Saturday afternoon. College Fund Oversubscribed. ORLANDO, Fla.—A total subscrip- tion of $503,458.38, well over the $500,000 goal, was report as the re- sult of the Rollins College endowment fund campaign, which terminated offi- cially at the annual meeting of the Rollins board of trustees. Man Slays Twe. BEIRNE, Ark.—S. C. Shaver, mer- chant, and his son Othea were shot and instantly killed in Shaver’s store by Lon Janes, & former inmate of the State Hospital for Nervous Diseases. James, who is under arrest, says that 1 Mrs. Hamon Pleads Not Guilty. | { | Buy China Life-Saving Stamps 3 Cents Saves a Life for a Day. Clip this coupon and forward it with your contribution to CHINA FAMINE FUND, American Security and Trust Co. Semi-Panic Exists in Mississippi; Fire Insurance Is Not to Be Had of the state not a single fire insurance | = | he is a graduate of a correspondence school for detectives, and that he be- lieved the two men he shot were coun- terfeiters, according to the police. posed Revixion of Wages. VELAND, Ohio.—The revision of of thousands of: laborers is contemplated by the New York Cen- tral Railroad Company, effective April 1. according to special notices received here today, signed by the general of the various divisions. s request that all platform torehouse men, freight handlers,” track walkers, car laborers and other crafts have accredited rep- resentatives attend a conference with company officials in Grand Central station, New York, on the morning of March 8, in an effort to reach an agreement on the proposed revision. SURGEON-EDUCATOR DEAD. have been named to handle these moneys | dsaonEs order pending determination | - py-grIN February 27.—The death Hhe Sult. eantime litigation piles up.|of Sir Charles Alexander Cameron. noted surg: nounced toda first year. president and chemi n and educator, was an- He in his n(nMy-I Charles was a former d professor of hygiene | of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and w»s prom- inently conne with medical and other scientific numerous organi- Cane Sugars The sugar shortage brought sugars from 50 different countries. Many of these sugars were found on arrival to be coarse, dark and unfit for household or canning use. The quality of Domino Cane Sugars has never been lowered —always the best American Sugar Refining Company Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown, Golden Syrup. -——~— [ A <k For —Get Horlick’s \ The ORIGINAL “ Malted Milk Ths “Food - Drink” for All Ages Quick Lunch at Home, Office, anc| Fountains. Ask for HORLICK'S. werAvod Imitations & Sabstitater| Absolutely Y - Painless ¥ My method is with- ; out question the ; most up -to-date %7 prccess used. There is NO pain and NO shock to the nervous system. This is valuable to you whether or not you are of a nervous tempera- ment. Neither is there any feeling of sickness or fll after effects that heretofore made people afraid of the Dentist’s Chair. Easy Payment Terms to All Dr. White, 407 7th St. Doesn’t hurt & bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on en ing oorn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fin- gers. ly! Your druggist eells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove ewery hard corn, soft corn, or corn bebween the toes, and the cal- luses, without soreness or irritation. 4 tional b: BUDGET SYSTEM IS AIM. Many Civic Bodies Planning for Drive on Congress. In anticipation of an early call for 2 special session of Congress, either March 28 or April 4, plans are being made for a drive to get the federal budget system enacted at the earliest possible date. Thousands of members of various | civic organizations throughout the country which are allied with the national budget commitiee in the fight are concentrating upon a pro- test 10 members of Congress against | any suggestion of abolishing the sin- gle appropriation committee. The vote upon the adoption of the reso- lution establishing a single commit- Just Phone and Our Truck Will Call N “TurmLast Year’s Garments Into New Ones” For Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing, Altering and Dycing. QUALITY—SERVICE—PRICE NORRI Cleanser Dyer ;9@ v\ust 1 to 153, with 116 mem- | hers no ing. Wi th anges N3 R e M AT T 710 Ninth Street 3167 Mt. Pleasant Street N.W. ip ble that the caucus may N.w. only concrete constructive reform in a decade, un- | strong protest is budgetary less a_sufficiently entered against this reactionary step, according_to a notice sent out by John T. Pratt, chairman of the na 4 Just Phone and Our Truck Will Call t committee. Not to see the new Packard Single-Six is to denyyourself knowledge of a remarkable motor car which links true Packard character to HIGH GASOLINE MILEAGE LOW COST OF UPKEEP HIGH TIRE MILEAGE LOW OPERATING COST HIGH EFFICIENCY LIGHT WEIGHT The Packard Single-Six Tour- ing is now $2975,f. 0. b. Detroit v PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY » DETROIT v N VAN N RR RN NNY — YOI IERN THE LUTTRELL COMPANY 1100 Connecticut Avenue GLTTTTIIIT What ‘Do You Know About Water? D9 you give any thought to the avater you drink? Do you drik only the puress water obtainable? “‘Wait,** you say, ‘‘the public water in my bome is pure. It must be pure—see how clear it looks—how good it tastes!®® That's just the trouble—much public water looks and tastes pure, hence most people think it is pure. Physicians and other scien- tific men know that bad water may often be colorless, clear, of brilliant lustre, free from smell or taste, and yet full of germs! Drinking water that comes from lakes or rivers contains considerable mineral saits; also the soluble elements of animal and vegetable matter. Filtration or other treatment cannot possibly free it from all of these impurities. 8o it fails to function properly in flushing poisonous wastes from the body. What is a really pure water, you ask, and where can I getit? The purest water shown by United States Government reports is Par- adise Water, which is so pure that it contains less than ome grain of solid and mineral matter in a gallon of 58,372 grains. Although Paradise Water is not a medicinal or mineral water, physicians recommend its continued use for many ailments where it is necessary to restore the normal condition of the digestive tract. It is especially beneficial for people past middle life. Paradise is a delightful table water; try drink- ing six glasses of it daily for a month, and note its buoyant, up-building effect upon your general health. Packed in cases of one dozen quarts, two dozen pints or three dozen half-pints—all full size. Natural or Carbonated. Order a case. PARADISE SPRING COMPANY, BRUNSWICK, MAINE For sale by J. M. Beall, 1963 Calvert N.W.. . A. Bresnahan, 20th and N Sts. {:harles M. Colvin & Co. 2740 14th St. N.W. PARADISE & Doriman, 1742 Columbia Rd., N.W. G. G. Cornwell & Son, 1415 H St. N.W. Wardman Park Pharmacy, Connecticut Ave. Cohen oy WATER (RS LT C R e Mios s