Evening Star Newspaper, March 18, 1921, Page 33

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. T, FRIDAY, MARCH mm‘_—’ POLAND AND RUMANIA HAVE SIGNED TREATY STEALS MONEY WITH CANE. | BIRMINGHAM Using the crook of his walking cane|fore the closing hour. while the bank- ' stated. 18, 1921 Ala.. March 18— ¢he First National Bank here just be- rink Coffee at the soda,_fountain While waiting on a corner for the car —when your work takes you out-o’-doors— . on the way home from the movies—drop in a convenient soda fountain and get a good hot cup of coffee. Particularly on cold or rainy days there is nothing quite so sustaining and re- freshing as a good hot cup of coffee. It puts warmth and cheer in chilled bodies. Today—at the soda fountain—COFFEE! JOINT COFFEE TRADE PUBLICITY COMMITTEE 74 Wall Street, New York This is the sign of The Coffee Club. Look for it in dealers’ windows. It will help you find good coffee. for a rakg. a negro calmly helped ing house was jammed with cus- | himself to currency from a cage in 'omers, and escaped. The amount of money stolen cannot be estimated un. til the cash is checked. bank oficials WE LL~DRE S S E D MAN | New Alliances in tral Europei Expected to Have Stab- Last Legs? —The Eternal Raglan — Wider-Legged Trousers By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. ’ PARIS. (Erares. Maith 18—From 4 | Folish source the writer learns that ] By ALFRED - STEPHEN -BRYAN ) et R m e : |FEE e . {|charest.” When it is remembered that Rumania already has agreaments with EORGE BERNARD SHAW going to be a prob- into fashion, because they never go e e o s eonine defines a gentleman as one lem this season, out of fashion. The garment, pic- e L who puts into life more than be when soft hats are tured below,exhibits the new form || Honse mmainat “posmibte. Russan. ag- takes out of it. That definition smallcrownedand of back dnpery—nlrmy at the f"'_‘l’:"'"‘;]';‘ At the same time it is prob. . He in the 3 || Fope. “for they serve to clear awa ke micwmpat The lowering of the high waist- e R lection of his sketch. The color most to be met line upon coats and the shortening oy s entitled oL reater r.{;:'..?é; | clothes thought- isbrown in shadeslike seal,copper or omission of the back vent are im- mpls to resiore genuine peace in ful care. He takes and mocha. However,thepearlcol- portant changes in 1g2x fashions. Pt out of them the oredsoft hat witha black ribbon is Trousersareim- N i ZAL ROYAL ROMANCE. silent approval a well-established favorite and so proved in fit and |Japanese Papers Tell of Young thathisInnerSelf too,is a shade called Naples green. drape by short Prince’s Betrothal. K bestows upon his ‘Who says that spats are on their - lengthwisepleats | Bric """ to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Outer Self. Tobe last legs? Quite the contrary they which are in- m'f?,",’.?“i?.fi?»fir.‘ e e conspicuously well-dressed with- . are as spruce as ever. The guiter, serted aboveeach ! E;A}!‘ercl:g!?x’:;?fll:?;—fl‘:‘ the betrothal o to attract attention by seeming to cloth or canvas look like a con- [ asea ;;’r:\;asec’?)lried a::.n'gc'é'{.;'f_’nf P avoid it; to shun that kind of with 4 buttons. tinuation of it || i the peeresses s is attend- “originality”, which, overstepping The shoe shows The purpose of thisistotakeupthe i W the bounds, betrays the bounder the new oval toe with a plain tip. slack of material around the waist | —that is the secret of making the Raglan-sleeve coats never come and equalize the fullness caused by most of one’s appearance. the bulge of side pockets. The 3-button top coat, All trousers ha:“g .d‘:l:: | illustrated above, intro- and straight. We - i duces those straighter, edmenneverfavored that | squarer body-lines which preposterously spindle- | are prominent character- shanked cut which made istics of this season's fash- the wearer resemble an ions. The front buttons animated pair of scissors. mfuupan,immdnf &> being close together, as g OTE— concern- formerly. The side pock- J{////, %CafltdQD-::of:Mm will etsand the change pocket / s beansweredbyAlfredStephen are of the patch type. 72 Bryan, if addressed to kim i Putting a pint-size hat 7/ b7 f TS T upon a quartsize head is TETHIS .-ooreeeo . WHYNOT THIS? cwociope mss be enclosd. Copright 1981 by Altred Serpben Beyan 4 GOMPERS BACKS PLAN. NEW TOURIST RULES. |“INDEMNITY TOO LARGE.” E%i.iflfb‘%fi!i;fiéfigfi}:fi?;}% $100,000,000 Urged for Building in | France Changes Regulations for |Former Ambassador Gerard Says i = New York. NEW YORK, March 18.—A state foan of $100.000.000 for statewide home building purposes is urged in an _emergency housing relief plan -.made publie-hgre by Nathan- Hirsch, former chairman of Mayor Hylan's ousing committee. The plan is spon- | in these regulations. sored by Health Commissioner Cope-| In the past Americans or other al- land. Samwel Gompers and lahorlnea visitors remaining in France for leaders representing 750,000 citizens | two ‘weeks have been compelled to LS o i B EGs 2 take out identification cards at th‘ She plan calls for the appointment | prefecture of police Under the new of @ non-partisan commission. with | plan such card will be required only a subcommitiee in each city with |if the visitor intends to stay:two population of 500.000 or more, to ad- | yonths. A French vise for the pass- | minister the fund and allot Bullding | [orts of Americans leaving a French loans. port is no longer necessary. STOCKYARD LICENSES END. - Formal announcement of the termi- nation of the licensing and super- vision of stockyards and dealers in live stock was made today by the bureau of markets of the Départment of Agriculture. This foll s result. the announceme repeal of the Lever foo Al rights and Tab under the la nd th the burkau said, continue _ NAVY ENLISTMENTS OPEN. First enlistment ratings in the Navy are again open, according to an an- nouncement made public today by the local recruiting station. 306 9th street. The term of enlistment is four years and is open for men between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five years. This is In addition to the ratings open for ex-service men. and only & limited Forelgn Visitors. PARIS, March 17.—Fresh regula- tions to facilitate visits of foreign- ers to France have been issued by the government. A distinction .has been drawn between the citizens of allied countries and former enemy nations A woman whd earns upwards of $10,000 a year as a commercial trav- cler says that those of her sex who aspire to win sufcess along the same line should have a ready tongue, a wide understanding of people and af- fairs of the day, exceptionally good health and an endless supply of ! physical and mental endurance. number of men will be accepted. The limit is guided by the allowed quota for enlisted personnel and the in- crease of re-enlistments. VIRGINIA FARMER SHOT. PETERSBURG Charles H. Davis. perous farmer of Dinwiddie was shot from ambush and died shortly after re % home. He came to Virginia a on years ago | from Dover, Del. Two negroes who are now being *ought suspected of killing him. No m has been assigned for the crim. A Soft Hat for Palm Sunday ALL THE NEWEST SHAPES IN THE DESIRABLE COLORS - $3.85 | S ° ° pring Suit of Choicest Materials, to Please the Most Exacting Dressers i | | $30.00 | | Dreyfuss Bros. | 617619 Pa. Ave. N.W. MIAMI, Fla., March 18.—The indem- nity demanded of Germany is much too large and the Germans will never | thejr lives in the world war. —_—— Princeton University has planned to establish a memorial scholarship for every one of its 144 mén who gave up Germans Cannot Pay. Quality Minus Excessive Cost g THE password for the nation is “back-to-normal” in prices this spring, yet quality must be upheld. We’ve maintained quality with a normal price in A GOOD Hat at 35 - QOUR usual guarantee of satisfaction and perfection accompanies every hat sold under our name. We want YOU to be satisfied —for that is our aim in business. SIDNEY WEST, Inc. Fourteenth at G A SMALLROLL FRONT ARROW COLLAR FOR YOUNG MEN <~ CluettPeabody & Ca IncTroy NY. - Can (Germany Pay? drink tional campaign conducted b; COFFEE merchants of the State Sao Paulo, Brazil, which Germany must pay, say the Allied bayonets in Dusseldorf, Duisburg and Ruhrort ; Germany must pay, said Premier Lloyd ference; Germany must pay, a and England. But can Germany pay? Is Germany Most editorial observers comme: George, speaking for the A''ies at the London Reparations Con- gree the newspapers ed: + this country as well as in France make an honest effort to pay? nt on the lack of accur. st-war statistics on German trade and finance. Every careful newspaper reader has been puzzled by the contradictory stories coming from Germany. One investigator reports marveious industrial recovery, and another, apparently eqially feliable, describes Germany as a land of hunger and poverty and complete industrial collapse. The view of the Kansas City Times is that “Germany is a dishonest bankrupt hiding her assets and dodging her obligations while pretending to hand over her all.” Germany, says the London Ecoromsst, “has been letting her state finances fall into disorder with a view to showing an economic weakness. Her state services have been run at a loss, and she has used the printing-press with a freedom that has aroused the admiring envy of British inflationists. But her industry is in much better inflationists. But her industry is in much better dustry her power to pay is ul timately based.” The leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, March 19th, deals with all phases of the Reparations problem, and presents the views of European and American editors. The article is illustrated by a map showing the cites and other territory in Germany now oc- cupied by the Allied armies. Among other striking news features in THE DIGEST this week are: Europe’s Faith in Harding * < Translations of Comments From French, Austrian, German and Other European Journals Upon the President’s Inaugural Speech The Waning Turkish Crescent (With Large Colored Map) Mr. Harding’s Attitude Towards urope Secretary Hoover’s Possibilities The Profiteer Goes Free Peril of the “Bar’l” in Politics The Flare-up on the Isthmus New Zealand Against the Anglo- Americanese /Torturing the British Stage . The Steel Workers’ 12-Hour Day Explaining the “Stage Clergyman” . Religious Books as Best Sellers Wilson, the Idealist and Scape-goat The New Hub of the United States European Women Seek Husbands, Homes and Happiness in Japanese Alliance America Armenia Still Under the Harrow A Negro Moses and His Plan for an Living Backward African Exodus How the Railroad Uses Motor How a Magazine Man Interprets Trailers : Japan Extracting Salt From the Sea ‘Topics of the Day Printing Wireless Messages Best of the Current Poetry Many Interesting Illustrations Including Cartoons March 19th Number on Sale Tdday—N_ewsdealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year iterdry Digest This advertisement is part of a8 educa- the leading 'mited St in cbyenh-l with the planters of the roduces more than balf of all the L‘OI‘FE! used in the United States of America. tates

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