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Eating at Pre-War Prices | Offering the Best Qualities the § Markets Afford It'll Pay You to Read This Menu ALL CEREALS SALADS With Half and Half..10c | Sombination ..... .15¢ Tomato .... .10¢ R WA T A Fruit Salad . 15¢ ‘WITH BREAD & BUTTER— Chicken .35¢ EGGS, ANY STYLE..20c ALL KINDS HAM AND EGGS...... 30c OF VEGETABLES, 10c BACON AND EGGS...30c " ALL KINDS 2 LAMB CHOPS....... 35¢ 0F77P7(V)TATOES, 10c 2 PORK CHOPS....... 35¢ FISH SMALL SIRLOIN Fried Sea Bass ...25¢ STEAK ... Broiled Shad .25¢ POT ROAST CREOLE 30c “ALL PUDDINGS 3 SHORT RIBS OF BEEF ‘With Half and Half....16c & POTATOES....... 35¢ "SLICED TOMATOES. .10c SLICED CUCUMBERS.10c _ LAR(:E GLASS OF ML WITH BREAD & BUTTER— NEW YORK RIBG OF BEEF ROAST PORK s\\ EFT POTATOES 5c HOT COFFEE With Half and Half....Sc Wait on Yourself—No Tips White Palace Cafeterias Centrally 1113 Pa. Ave. Located 314 9th St. N> OVEN BAKED BEANS Your grocer knows why Heinz Oven Baked Beans are better ~ than *“just beans.” Owen bak- ing preserves the rich flavor and food value that choice, hand picked beans naturally have. Heinz famous tomato sauce gives them a delicious taste that you A Perfect Meal for everyday, for busy days, for guests or for the family—nothing quite 80 good to eat, 80 nourish- ing, so convemient, 30 econom- . ical. Serve-them often. - FOUR KINDS HEINZ Buked Beans with Pork and ‘Tomato Sauce \ * HEINZ Beked Pork and Beans (with- } out Tomsto Sence) Boston style . i without Meat (Vegetarian) - Varleties e THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. MISSION BOARD BUYS LARGE AFRICAN TRACT 1 By the Associated Press. MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., April 6.— Capt. Frank Zimmerman and Patrol- || man George Spencer of the Michixan | City police force were shot ana al- ! moet instantly killed last night b | William Ristau a8 the policemen at-| tempted to arrest two women, inmates of a house which the police had raided. Ristau later committed sui- cide. Coming up behind the police auto- mobile in a taxi, Ristau demanded the women be released, and without fur- ther parley opened fire. He then jumped into an automobile '|m=.mn compelled the owner, WTI Kubsch. to drive him to a nearby soft |J!! arink parlor, and demanded a gun of 'fli the proprietor, Frank Arndt. The lat- || ter refused and Ristau shot him twice linflicting minor wounds. Returning | to the abandoned machine, he climbed into the back seat and shot himself in || the head. He: Smow in West. i LEWISTON. A snowstorm continued v the prairie i ston, the depth at Grangeville ched ten linches. Oregon a ington ex- \perienced a return to winter weather { conditions. Snow flurries from many sections and low temperatures from {all were reported. one point on the {Columbia river ghway snow two {fect deep was reported U. 8. Flyer Dropx 1,000 Feet. PITTSBURGH.—Capt. “Jack” Mor- ris, .who for eighteen months was aiflyer with the United States forces in France. narrowly escaped death {when_the airplane with which he was performing at an altitude of 1.00 fectbecame unmanageable and drop. | ped to the ground. Morris escape: unhurt, but his brother, Thomas, 1;.»11 |i thirteen years, received injuries which made_his removal to a hospital neces- sary.” Damper on Building Boom. CHICAGQ, 1ll.—Prospects building boom in Chicago through a re- in wages of labor received a it became kmown that representing 15,000 car- ted against accepting a of wage reductions recently w niitted to a referendum vote of variou tridés by their legders. The carpen- ters yoted (o inkist on their present X H rrpdorlrk ‘A. Plogger. fi bridge soldier killed in the world war on June 6, 1918, was attended here by 5,000 persons from Rockbridge,. with cadets i from Virginia Military Institute, Con- °| federate veterans, Knights Templar 2nd a delegation of the Loyal Order of Moose in the procession. Will Cut Wages Hours. GARY, Indi—A' 20 per cent reduc- tion of wages and the eight-hour day will be put into effect by the United States Stezl Corporation about the middle ‘of th's month. according to unofficial reports from local offices of the comcern. $500,000 Soap FPlant Fire. NEW ORLEA) —Fire of termined origin completely destroyed unde- the J. S. Long Company soap works :x lnl:-ero‘. ho-é across .the river '} from this city, Ofcials estimate thelt loss at $500,000.” 4 ales Tax. Recommen NEW YORK.—Enactment of a sales tax at 1’ per gent op all goods, wa and commodities. for a peri :‘ three years, was unanimously recom- mended at a tax conference just cop- cluded here, Henry J. Burton of Min- neapolis, president of the Tax League of America. announced. Rush Negro Slayer to Safet; LEXINGTON, Ky —After he ' had shot and killed G. W. Abbott, seventy- five, & white man, Willie Dunn, nine- tesn, negrv, wes rushed out of town to an unknown destination to avold po-blo mob violence. Dunn said he t because of uncompll- mml'y remarks he had made. "Ir-" Shoots Physictan. LEESVILLE, 8. C—Dr. J. C Nichol- son. prominent physician, was shot and poseibly fatally wounded here by J. C. Swygert, well known farm- er and citizen of this section. Five bullets took effect. Two of the wounds, one in the abdomen and the othgr the throat, are of a serious aracter. Mr. Swygert surrendered lmmely after the shooting. Watehes Father Kill Himself. m Fh-—fi C. Williams, former d«vht! and Dade county jailer, shot and kllled himself in his home here while his daughter peeped lhn)ufll the doorway to his room, a witness to the tragedy. Williams had ordered her to leave the room, flourishing a revolver and threaten- ing to kill her, too, if she remained. Willlams fired the shots, the first two going wild and the third finding its mark in his temple. Despondency over finanalal reverses was given as the cause. | Officers Arresting Women Slain, Assailant Then Shoots Himself of the Oklahoma here. Policemn DENVER. C killed and were in col Bandit Robs Penny Bank. OKLAHOMA looking for a tered the home and at tl how to ext: ty-six pennies top of the bank when a noise caused e leaving $2 in the bank. him to flee, sveral reporters injured | bably fatal I point of a gun forced ten-| g year-old Marshall Browa to show him ot pennies from the boy's savings bank. He had obtained nine- American Tegion Killed in Aeccldent. 0.—One policeman was CHICAGO, guese tion farm African t and another police- and injured in n police cars : a CITY. Okla.—Police are [ “IHHAc masked man who en- i of J. D. Brown here |Gt i s report. 1914. Before through the slot in the or gazelle. 10,000 Mormons Meet. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah—ore than 10,000 Mormons 'attended the |+ opening of the ninety-first annual|into a sugar mill. conference of the Church of Jesus} tablishment Christ of Latter Day Saints here. President Herbert J. Grant admonish- his audience be charitable and obey the authorities.” ed mandments, Huge Potas Neb.—Fire arks from a locomotive partially destroyed the plant of the American Pot- | OMAHA, by ash Company of the larg A loss esting d $700.000. <t ire RV UNC ful check of the fire which tion of the burned property csti s would range not le about with & aw. building. Arrest Two in Maurder Case. YORK NEW band and rged with lyn. night of eight. Tope said the “LLI Z B. of the Bank, with clesed recently, have Gry of & $263,000 shortage. their arrest, Steele and Whitfield were ‘bonds president of the bank. swore released in Steele, ted at between $500,000 ) % Put at $100.000. the damage wife, atherine Trotto, following her body small pond. Those arrested were Mrs. Carolina_Verderosa, old stepdaughter of the dead womana| and her husband Two boys found which was richly clad, wrapped in an expensive shawl and with a piece of tied about the neck. Physicians woman to death and had days when foun Bank Offici Whitficld, president and cashier Merchants and Farmers State been embez lement. to “keep the com- Plant Damaged. which started | ;07 which Neb., one ! causing | at Antioch, in the world, there: Portuguese West TION, Fla.—After au: y | ed. swept the business sec- city. owners AT 000 insurance. n started clear- tory to re. the memorial. 8,000 Acres Acquired Natives Agriculture and Trades. April negroes on Hampton and Tuskegee Institutes has an automobile | been made by the board of foreign ! missions of the Methodist Episcopal | Church, it was announced here by the hurch committee on conservation and of trades the the trades school forms part of a plan to raise the economic status of the African natives, which investigation found to be necessary for successful mission work on a large scale among them, says the announcement. The property was acquired in ac- cordance with the Methodist Episco- centenary program for Africa calls for a chain of six suc institutes in Central Africa, one for each Methodist mission conference the 4.—Purchase 8,000 acres of farm land in Portu- West Africa for a demonstra- school model The high cost of living in_ Africa the war has caused real hard- to the native population, mission- Cotton cloth and iron hoes cost five times more than the war, plantation hands wore three or four yards of uum around them, now only a half used and many natives Wear only the skin of some bush cat A brewing plant situated on the tract and operated by water power will be converted by the Methodists farm Purchase of the tract at Quessua in Africa toial acreage acquired by ! dists in Africa above 25,000 acres, at nine different points widely separat- brings —_— imposing monument mark the grave of Mrs, nold, mother of Edgar Allan Poe, who is buried in St John’s churchyard, in Richmond, Va. Mrs. Arnold was & noted jactress in her day, and FEquity Association of America has taken the initiative in raising a fund for is _soon Elizabeth Ar- the Actors’ to Teach Metho- Guarding His Own. CANADA MAY AUGMEN TRADE AGENTS IN U. §. More Aggressive Drive for Com- merce Here Urged in House of Commons. Special Dispatch to The Stad. OTTAWA. Ont. April the cook. little, that's all and keep her of Tor of -nvoy look as trade nu’eull in Ameri be increased. In the house Rodolphe Lemieux who, under the Laurier re- gime, so strongly favored reciprocity, with several others urged a more ag- Eremsive drive for United States trade, There seemed to be an idea that with eight or a hundred acti in the United S ness could be materially Lemieux felt that all the v in the states denetrated by Sir George F and commerce, “714-1IST. service. in Roe Shad, Ib...... increased. ant fields hould be peacefully ‘anadian trade agents. ter, minister of trade did not the gov- ernment would not send trade agents to the I'nited States. An announce- ment on this subject ed later. ) an item $230,000 was passed “for expenses of trade agents and offices now main- foreign countries and in the and Sug —_— One of the most famous sources of echoes in the world is the whis- pering gallery in the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral, London, where even the sound made by the ticking of a watch returns distinctly after the lapse of a few scconds. the Here Y’are, Men!—Take ’Em!! Men’ Fine to —Two were the persons, hus- arrested here murder of Mrs a widow of Brook- the discovery last at the edge of a Beventeen-year- Luciano, twenty- the body, had been strangled een dead only two In Arrested. 111--W. A. Steele and arrasted. charsed The bank was following the discov- Following of 530,000 each. out the .warrant for the arrest of ‘Whitfield, it caghier. C. C. Hogue, a depositor, swore out the warrant for the arrest of Steele. while legging Dlrly seeking bootl: lha American lie, ing to report rn:hlnt here, Bootleggers Shoot Officers. MALONE, N. Lafave and Officer Beresault, wounded i Y.—Capt. Benjamin Cana- dian customs officials, were shot and seriously Quebec, at Valleyfield, endeavoring to capture to cross accord- The 'exports: of AméFican coal to Sweden last year amounted to more 8b twelye times as much as in the P (ng vear. See Me All Sizes Soft Coal, $9 Per Ton Consolidation Coal Co.’s Georges Creek and Jenner Philadelphia and Reading Anthracite Coal Immediate Delivery My Lowest CASH Prices Will Save You Money Before Ordering Prices Lowest Now anseNw. J. Edw. Chapm North. 3689 Oppose Freedom of Debs. OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla—A resolu- tion protesting against the granting of executive clemency to Eugene V. Debs, now or at any time, while “many service men are confined in a federal penitentiary for infractions of military law during the recent war,” was unanimously adopted at a meeting of the executive committee F o Now Is the Time ¢ to Install the g bareback rider thrills the audience. Yet, his peril is nggutgr than yours when your sys- tem is burdened with constipation. Constipation is a swift, relentless foe. Poisons spread fast from ac- cumulated waste in the intestines. Disease frequently results. Play safe. Rid yourself at once of dan- gerous constipation. Don’t _gamble with uncertain, slow-; cathartics of the old- fashioned type. Followtheadviceof eminent medical authorities. Usea safe, harmless, quick-acting water laxative—a laxative which will IVE them' another chance. ut on any kind of a sole you wnsh-— rom the fady’s dainty feather- weight hand-turned slipper sole to the heaviest “10 or 12 iron” sole for a man’s heavy shoe. \ PI.U'I'O WATER 5% When nature won’t— PLUTO will Goodyea.r Welt, Half Soles including Rubber Heels. Mcn s—Women S—BOYS Whole women - D Half soles only, with- Sl . out heels eueeeeeeceens 7"'&!(233 P-.Avc. ‘The Sire—Young man, I demand to know your intentions toward Nora, The Son—Oh, just kidding her a Seasonable foods at reasonable prices—that’s PK Coffee —OVUTFITTERS 910 Seventh St. We Request the Return of Anything that Can Be Bought for Less Elsewhere Donqt t}irow thosé I Old Shoes 'Away! A good sturdy half sole-or who]e sole of top grade, oak tanned sole leather mav .; give you several months more wear. Send themtoour— Modern “Shoe Hospital” : The Sire—All right. Flirt with her contented, but don’t you dare to marry her and take her Potomac River Shad 25c | Buck Shad, Ib. © guarantee these strictly Dozen, 26¢c Fresh Eggs-‘mm'fi Doz., $1.00 Virgina. The best cane granulated, Ib.... .9 "0Old-fashioned Brown, Ib.. .11lc *“The Cup Cheers” is That mad ’ TROUSERS Special for. Tuesday Fine quality, worsted-filled Trousers fn neat dark stripes, conservative styles. They go well with any coat. Sizes from 31 to 44. Young Men's Trousers, finely made with cuff bottoms, all-wool flannels, in blues, browns, greens, oxford grays. These two lots combine in making this an unmatchable value at- $3 95 George Also Ofleu Men's Khaki Pan fine hard:wearing quu- sl 25 ity. Sizes 30 to 41 Mews Pants of “Huchmeyer's best guality Corduroy: nsomo with slight imperfections. Light and dark shades. zes $3 98 to 40 o Men® Unmiomw M White . Duck Trousers. $l 50 . Sizes 30 t0 40... .. >y And on the First Yw'll Find Sample Hats purchaned from a lead- ing maker. The finest quality in latest shapes and shades, Sizes 63 107 3:3. A very 52.69 spegial bargain at. Men's amd Boys Caps in gnuch wanted . brown . shades. ; The very latest in aty-le $l 50 and color. All sizes. Famous Springo Suspend ers, guaranteed 12 months. . 69c Canvas Work Gloves, with leather palms, with or wllh- 29c out cufls Headquarters for Uniforms at lmt-iyd?nty-l’flu& N And all-leather heels in any desired height or shape or wood heels, rubber heels of any wanted make. We can done to a shoe that needs rejuvenatingl Yet the cost is moderate, for example; *1.50 most anything that can be soles, men’s or 52.50 P e e 2 « Phone, Mailor _Brini to-the-nearest “HAHN" Store —prompt deliveries