Evening Star Newspaper, May 23, 1921, Page 14

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CHEVROLE “For Economicsl Transportation” HE CHEVROLET “FB 50" Touring Car has been built to fit the requirements of critical motorists. Its smart design, roomy comfort, certainty and economy of service reflect the thoroughness of its construction. CHEVROLET MOTOR CO. 1218 Connecticut Avenue N.W. Phone Franklin 5627 T HllIIIII|Hllfl(l’"l(((lIHII“IIMIllII(IIHIIIIIHIlll.lll)lllllllllI(IIIIINHHIIII R e T —— I IESE “Back to N ormalcy’ The President pleads for areturn to “normalcy.” Nature also pleads fora return to normal living —for a return to simple, nourishing foods. All the food elements you need are supplied in Shredded Wheat It is 100 per cent whole wheat in a digestible form—thoroughly cooked and ready-to-eat. Two biscuits with milk or cream make a nourishing meal and cost but a few cents. Delicious with berries or other fruits. TRISCUIT is the shredded wheat cracker, a crisp whole-wheat toast, eaten with butter or soft cheese. why thousands take aphysic even when ““regular’’ e EFTER every trip, the railrogd locomotive is X inspected, and needed 12> A% ) repairs are made. Main- tenance is continual. Are you as careful in maintain- ing your health? Youshould be— the human body is the most intri- cate mechanism in the world. Many people believe, when their bowels seem regular, that a physic is never needed. This is not true. Elimination, though regular, may not be complete. And waste mat- ter remaining in the intestines is a breeding-ground for sickness. Physiciansrecommend a periodic flushing whether or not you are constipated. Cleanse your system, at regular intervals, with a quick- acting water laxative. Don’t gamble witr siow, over- night cathartics; the poison should be r-moved without dangerous loss of time. Pluto Water works in thirty minutes to two hours. It flushes the systemquicklyand com- pletely. Certain; gentle; harmless. Bottled at French Lick Springs, Ind. Your physician prescribes it PLUTO WATER VBaie” When nature wont PLUTO will THE EVENING KTAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. MONDAY, MAY 23 19°1. Capital Sidelights | BY WILL P. KE Representative W. W. the ninth Ohio district. who succeeded Gen. Isaac R. Sherwood, the nestor of the Sixty-sixth Congress and the old- est man who cver sat in the House, {1:as some record for achievement. He !entered the Grand Rapids High School one winter term as a green coun boy. The superintendent of scho called for volunteers who wanted to do some work in their spare time. Young Chalmers and his “brother Jim" got a job stoking the school furnace all night so that the building would be warm enough the next day. They fixed up the furnace every hour and meantime sat at the desk of the |superintendent of schools studying {their lessons. Within ten years from {when he sat at that desk as a stoker, getting $1.50 a night, he sat there as superintendent chools, at $3.000 a year. “Brother J is now president of the state normal school in Fram- ingham, Mass. EDY. * ¥ X There is at least one man in Con- gress who doesn’t smoke—Represent- ative L Clinton Kline of the sixteenth He Promixed to Marry it . Pennsylvania district. Also, when be- ing heckled during his campaign, he promised to marry if elected. * ok ok K Consider the nomenclature of Con- gress and pause. Naturally one might expect to find in the law-making body some men who_are W Strong, Hardy or Youn me even who Green and some who land on Merri But one would not be inc find there one man who Wright or to find that the biggest bill ever put through any legislative body in the world was fathered by Little. Nor would you expect to see in the American Congress a touch of royal- ty—King, with a Knight and Page. Though they might come Young, you'd hardly think to find them all the from Ladd to Mann on life's journe: In the good old V. S. A. wouldn’t you think that the laws would be made by more than one Freeman, and more than one whose name is as good as any Bond? Of course. to be truly American Congress should have all sorts o cupations represented—Porter. lor, Barbour, Driver. Dyer. Weaver, Cooper, Mason, Collier, Butler, Fish- er, Carter and even a Bankhead. Naturally, too, thi try should be Tepr bringing a touch Flood and F er more po. le, Vaile and Moore, or even R . and that re- minds of Mudd. 100, should be Parks with a Swing and Howers with a Rose, and evea Roseen- bloom. The religious side must not be overlooked, for. besides several or- dained ministers, one of whom is for. tuitously a Temple, we have a Parrish and a & and to get down 1o more de: Pou, and even in the ecclesiasti iment a Stoll. Speed is American mania, although ngr has not been ac- with the automobile industry repre sented in Congress by such names as Paige, Knight, Kissel, Chandler, Chalmers and Cole, something may be expected. There i8 no color line in Congress, as witness—Black, Brown, Green and France and Ireland. the French, and roll call. arret. and the es- has a Lodge that American. from Kitchin to tate of Ci is distinct There is Senate who is still New. have been guarded by a Cannon. For recreation tha members have Ball and Bowling. for specimens. Id Congress want to es to lock them or there munication legislative some there off, the Cable riders become and a ant-at-arms in pre: ing pea Open Evenings Till 9 0'Clock An Exceptional Bargain Steinway GRAND PIANO (Used) Special, Tuesday, $685 Terms to Suit Arthur Jordan Piano Co. G Street at Thirteen Homer L. Kitt, Sec.-Trea Chalmers of | great free coun- || i there | cused of overmuch speed at times, but | White, Yes, it true that in Congress you find “Hicks.” and even one dis- tinctive 3 Occasionally 0ss a for- eign tinge among the lawmakers— even London, are represented in the n old member of the For more | than forty years the appropriations here s a good chance to study natural history with Roach, Fish, Bird, Codd and Lyon store gome of the too many bills | <'a Box and Hammer handy | B away. It is call for international com- is there. It trouble- is a Colt to throw them Kopp to help out the Congress has no Price—there's & Free vote on every roll call. * % ok ¥ There are three Raineys contest- ing for seats in the House: Representative Lucius B. Rainey of Gadsden, Ala. holds the certiticate. jbut the right to the seat in the seventh district is being contested by C._B. Kennamer. Representative stockvards district. Tilinc contestant, one Gombolis: mer Representative Henry T. Iso of Chicago, is contest-| seat now occupied by Guy . republican. i * 3 % % John W. Rainey | Raine ing t L. “Puss in the corner” is a game at {which Representative Harold Knut- son, the republican whip. is becoming an adept. Be it known that with the change of administration and with the influx of new members after a i congressional election, the task of assigning offices in the Capitol and | Representative of 1 New Jerse) D. Flood of Virgin it. Well. the whip a convenient office and to vreferred list. st. along came Representative m Winslow of Mas irman of the com- d fore. zued until he got the B ative Knutson Isaac Bachrach . Who have tried be on the son was promis first floor of the vacated by Represent- Andrews and rticular adv of that room is that on the painted merely stead of the o D But Repre Burton and again . to keep pea which is his particula. retired gracefully, albeit regret- HONOR SOLDIER DEAD. Irish Societies to Decorate Graves in Mount Olivet Sunday. Together with members of the Irish- American Union. the Padraic H. Pearse branch of the Friends of Irish Freedom will decorate the graves of the soldier dead of the former organi- ization at Mount Olivet cemetery Sun- day, according to a decision adopted at a meeting of the society at Typo- graphical Temple last night Means of aiding the m erect in Washington a re loch Hall. the birthpl 3 velt's mother at Roswel - Will be considered at an executive meeting of the bra Longstreet, asking the organization House office building is anything but |1 ia sinecure—ask Speaker Gillett or|q or Representative Hal| M3 supposed to get | e | Milicr, h. A letter from Mrs. James | § 28 YOUNG WOMEN TOENTER MISSIONS Many States Represented in List of Those Going Abroad for Baptists. NEW YORK, May 23 —Twenty- ht young women trained as medi- cal, evangelistic and educational mis- sionaries will depart fcr foreign flelds under the auspices of the Woman's American Baptist Foreign Mission So- ciety during the coming summer and fall; lounced nere today. the hume cities 17310 s Harrietr Barrin, to south India; 2 Beatrice Bickel, to Japan s, Boston, to Burma. me M. Goldenburg, Cincin- to Burma; Miss Anne R. cil Bluffs, Towa, to east Grace 1. Hill, New Bruns. to Bengal to v . Bay Carrie . to south . Rockford, rtrude Teele, Miss Helen China; 1., MAKES LIQUOR TAX RULING. Distillers are exempt from extra taxes on liquor withdrawn from houses for non-beverage pur- . if diverted by theft to illegal under an opinion by Attorney retary Mellon. The opinion was given in response 1o a request of the Secre- tary in a ruling as to the liability of - | distillers for the so-called differential tax on liquor when diverted for non- beverage purposes. The differential tax on distilled spirits amounts to a gallon, representing the dif- ference between the beverage rate of night. F. rd Mitchell preside 1!0 aid the movement, was read last d v‘fim and the non-beverage rate of The Star delivered to | i 1%c a Day | and 5¢ Sunday and Sunday morning for, 60 cents a month costs you about 113 cents a day and 5 cents Sundays. Telephone Main 5000 and Delivery Will Start at Once | vour home every evening vour pride of property pride in action. foot-bath, and soak and rub IN PEACE For over 25 years Allen’s STANDARD REMEDY blisters and callouses. HPC Property Pride That spick and span neatness of your home— the tell tale hand of paint—HPC Paint, produces results that beautify and last. Inside and out solve your paint problems with HPC conservative paint costs. HPC Outside House Paint Colors, $3.75 gal. White, $4.00 gal. HPC Interior Flat Wall Paint $3.00 gal. Sales branch at Factory, 3233 K St. N.W. Powder. Shake it in your Shoes Use it in the Morning And walk all day in comfort. and takes the Friction from the Shoe. for hot, swollen, smarting, tender, tired, perspiring, aching feet, comns, Nothing gives such relief. Over 1,500,000 1bs. of Powder for the Feet were used by the United States Army and Navy during the war, Ladies can wear shoes one size smaller and shoes and stockings wear longer. Those who use Allen’s Foot=Ease have solved their foot troubles. = Sold by Drug and Department stores everywhelé assures HPC Paint Put your Ppossession. At night, sprinkle it in the the feet. It freshens the feet AND WAR Foot:Ease has been the bunions, neral Daugherty, submitted to Sec- || trimmed with round and V neck ing eelors. girls will need them this summer... M:r. W. W. Spnlding Director Mr. Spalding’s training as a lawyer is very valuable to this bank and our depositers. He is a specialist on internal revenue matters. Mr. Spald- ing was formerly Secretary of the House Committee for Dis- trict of Columbia affairs. and was also a member of t Union Station Plaza Commis- sion. SECURITY Knowing You By First Name The banking business requires a certain dignity and formality in the conduct of affairs. But many people are confused by these details and lose sight of the big principle by which our bank is guided—to make every depositor a friend. ‘We may not call you by vour first name. it is and often feel like dropping the “Mister” and just saying “How are things going, George ?” We Pay 3 Per Cent Interest commenaiar, BANK But we know what ‘WASHINGTON'S"LARGEST SAVINGS BANK Corneryof 9th and G Streets A Purchase and Sale of NoveltySilk Poplin Skirts UNDER UNITED STATES TREASURY SUPERVISION Modish, New and Ready for your Decoration Day- Outing l‘-\" U g g I l\!lf!"flll Satin stripes and block plaids in such colors as pink, white, light blue—then there are black, navy and taupe for business and general wear, but what we want you to note particularly is that The Bar- gain 6th is selling these natty skirts at a price that would scarcely pay for the making alone. Gathered waist line, two pockets and fancy pearl Women’s and Misses’ Silk Dresses—Special— buttons—just as jaunty as you could wish.” Con- sidering the fact that women contemplate an out-of- door holiday, these skirts have come just in time. $8.95 This is a clearaway of much higher-priced dresses, including fine Taffeta, wool Jersey, satin and mignonette. Not many of a kind, but every kind so desirable that you'll find a dress to your liking, and you'll pay only $8.95 for your choice. Girls’ Gingham Frocks, $1.95 Summer styles and summer-weight Gingham that is so easily kept in order by laundering. Pleated or gathered skirts with large novelty pockets and wide sashes. Sizes 8 to 14 years. At this price, why not several for summer? Women’s Porch Dresses, $1.95 Ginghams and chambravs in pink, blue and the standard washable colors. Billie Burke or regulation waist line. White pique collars and cuffs, unless you prefer self materials; if so, they're here, too. Bargain-Table Specials O Summer Nighties Muslin, Volile and Lingerte Cloth. White and rose tint, prettily 1 Tailored, " lac pwPhilippine Gowns Handmade and hand embrold- ered fine quality lingerié ma- terlals, terns. ceptable EiftS........eeesesen . pw-Children’s Dresses Plal Varfety of pretty pat- These gowns make ac- $1.79 and checks in pretty colors. cella nd cuffs or contrast- s 4 to 12 years. T! 89c Sixth Floern—Lansburgh & Brother. pwWomen’s Drawers 50c Open and closed models. good quality Muslin and with neat embroid to by made of trimmed This is a 1 and save swOrgandie Frocks Fine quality,-well made In pretty girlish styles; trimmed with rib- bons. Sizes 7 to 12 years. Charm- ing lttle vacation froc! ] Ot sturdy percale In well covered designs on light and dark grounds. Ample proportions and the kind that washes well $1.95 s Polly Prim’ A prons 35¢ ==ty s |l i

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