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T STAR, WASHINGTON, time has had s tellin, effect on the life of the people. he citigéns of Hamburg on the whole are better dressed than the residents of Berlin, the shops look prosperous and every- patch received here from Vigo, .body seems contented. The radical elements in Hamburg have lost their Portuguese border, today. Several regiments of the army and PORTUGAL FEARS REVOLT. Harry a portion of the navy sre said to be w- T‘YI", IM. Sections ef Army and Navy Are [£ PETSR OF i revolutionary plans. ‘l’ai'nting Said to Be Involved. —_— | By it Ariaciated v reas: ‘ Paperhanging Decorating Col. 1073 on the I CHARGED WITH MURDER: EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohlo, August-d.— Harry Mitchell, alias Carmen, wanted on a first-degree murder charge in_connec- tion with the death of Harry D, Cum- mins, .Steubenville automobile ‘dealer, was arrested by authorities at $alem, Ohio. He was later removed county jail at Lisbon, where he Will be held pending arrival of the Steulrenville offici 3 —_— # BURGLARS STEAL LIQUQR. MEMPHIS, Tenn., August 4.4Bur- lars, after overpowering servants st the :ome of McKay Van Vieet here, invaded the cellar, loaded an automobile full of | old wines and liquors valued at several thousand dollars, and, before driving away, shattered a number of the remain- ing bottles on the cellar fioor. 5,000,000 SHP TONS INT330GERMAN AIM Hamburg Leads Regurrected Merchant Marine, Reviv- ing the People. BY GEORGE WITTE. By Wireleas to The Btar and Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1021. (Following is the second article fn Mr. Witte's serien on the revival of business ac- - Do Your Hair Nets Break? ‘That’s becsuse the hsir brittle. UNICUM Real Human influence over the workingmen, which is.the more remarkable. as Hamburg used to | & hotbed of commuists. The average wages paid in Hambyrg are around 1,200 marks (normally $285.60) a month, which is above the average paia in other cities (n Germany. At the same time the cost of living s 22 per cent cheaper than in Berlin, for instance. In a recent report the senate of-the city of Hamburg expressed the ho:e that Hambur, e Leigh Jones, who comtrols more | MADRID, August 3.—Signs that a |yotal, restaurants and catering es- | revolution is being fomented in Portu- | tablishments in London than any one | gal have been observed, and meas-|man, i8 proud of the fact that he be- ures have been taken to combat it,|gan his amazing career as a kitchen 2333 18 N.W. since it came into being. says a dis- | boy. | would soon be ti first German city where there would be employment for all as a result of the boom in shipbuilding. “In half a year," said the report, “there will be twice as many men employed in the shipya as there were before the P ”* Nets and KX ¢A‘:i.u‘:fl-( Cap'’ Nets 1S¢. each—2 for 25e. end up You'll find them at leading shops 4-Piece : d docks EO. H. GARY CO. tivity in Germany.) m €148 Irving Place . BERLIN, "August 4-—Hamburg has | CIVIL WAR VETERAN DEAD. SHEFFIELD el resurrected its pre-war black, WhIte | s nispateh to The shar TEA SET and red flags after celebrating the return of a 21,000-ton ship which the STAUNTON,/ M1 August 4.—J. A. $12.50 | | S Wright, aged eighly-four, civil war German South American Steamshi| 5 Company brought back from Englang | veteran, died at his home on Church SEABRIDGE after she had been turned over by |street. The funeral was held yester- W COo. |! ADVERTISEMENT. the government in fulfiliment of the [duy at Bethel Church, in the sounty, JEWELRY CO: )| ADVERTISEMENT. ‘How to Make | . Your Own Complexion | - Treatment at Home . | A Free Oatmeal Prescription Does i Its Work Overnight. = e |. New York—“It is my own dis- treaty of Versalilles. 724 9th St. N.W. German's ship- conducted by Rev. H. 8. Turner. Mr. Z ping world has accepted this event as | Wright leaves a widow and six'| Charge Accounts to Responsible Parties a “harbinger of Germany's reawaken- | children. > ing mercantile marine.” Almost simultaneously Germany's wharves at Lubeck launched the fourth freight steamship built th concern owned by Hugo Stinn four vessels were launched this year. These ships are for the South Amer- | ican trade. Build Twenty New Ships. In the first six months of this year twentyships, with an aggregate ton- nage of 134,000, have been built in German shipyards, and Germany's shipping has been increased from 500,- 000 tons to nearly 700,000. In addition SRR A Collar Calendar and arms and no matter how rough and ungainly the hands and arms, or what abuses they have had through hard work and exposure to sun.and wind, this combination will work a wonderful :nnsrormmou,| Thousands who are using it report | the same results 1 have had.” 1 very, and it takes just one night to Fet Such marveious results,’ says Mge Edna Wilder, when ner friends Germany is bullding 200,000 tons of shipping for the allies, to be deiivered this year. Miss O. C. says: “My complexion | man dates the start of was poor and my skin rough. My | neck, chest, hands and arms were | dark from exposure. The very first | application of this wonderful Der- | willo-oatmeal combination convinced me that my poor complexion and skin blemishes would soon be a thing of the past. In a few weeks all these unsightly defects had en- tirely disappeared and I shall always | use it to keep my complexion at its best all the time. I have recom- | mended it to my girl friends and | they are just as enthusiastic over | k her about her wonderful com- | Plexion and the improved appear- | anee of her hands and arms. “You can do the same thing it you follow | my_advice,” she says. “I feel it my | duty to tell every girl and woman what this wonderful prescription did | for me. Just think of it. All this | change in a single night! I never | tife of telling others just what | brought about such remarkable re- sults. Here is the identical formula that removed every defect from my | tace, neck. hands and arms. Until | you try it you can form no idea of | “Germany will again have a mer- chant marine of 5,000,000 tons by 1930, or the same as before the war, but the freight capacity will be larg- er. Most of these ships will be bullt ||| to_carry merchandise, whereas be- fore the war much of our shipping consisted of passenger liners de uxe.” This statement was made to me by & prominent director of the Hamburg- American line. The _10,000,000,000 Imarks (normally $2,380,000,000) his neck linen dress- iness from the first time he had his starch- ed collars TOLMAN- IZED! which the German government has paid over to various shipping con- e it will make | it as T am. We all use it before ||| cerns in compensation for losses sus- B e ot The preserip- | SoIng to the theater, dances or ||| tained by them. In the couras of the tien which you can prepare at your | Parties, and it's wonderful what a || war, and as the result of the peace treaty, will be used chiefly for ship- building purposes. The German ship- yards today have a capacity of more than 750,000 tons a year, or 50 per j cent more than before the war, sev- | R 2 eral new wharves having been’ built § own home is as follows: Go to any grocery and get l0c worth of or- dinary oatmeal, and from any de- artment or drug store a bottle of Prepare the oatmeal as | directed in every package of Der- Before applying ' Derwillo | cleanse the skin fhoroughly with a | good cleansing cream. (Liska cold | cream 1 have found to be the best.) difference it makes in our appear- | ance.” H Mrs. G. V. writes: “Oatmeal and| Derwillo have worked miracles with my complexion. I had many despised | wrinkles and a sallow. rough skin. |1 My hands and arms were covered | with freckles. After eight weeks' | use of Mae Edna Wilder's wonderful | complexion | prescription these oh- jectionable defects have entirely | vanished. I look ten years younger | and advise every girl and woman to | try it and I feel confident after one or two applications they will use it continually and be just as favorably Impressed with it as I am. I recom- | &@@%fififififi%g during the conflict to construct war- ships. Recollections of Hamburs. When I visited Hamburg early in 1920 the city as a whole, but espe- cially the harbor. looked as if & plague had visited the district and killed off all life. What little ac- tivity there was segved only to emphasize the general atmosphere of depression. But in the last eight- | een months a marvelous change has come over the city. In January. 1920, scarcely 100 ships touched at Ham- burg to load or unload goods. In July of this year more than 800 ships | arrived and 900 sailed, the tonnage aggregating 2.000,000." This com- The Tolman Laundry F. W. MacKENZIE, Manager Cor. 6th and C Strects N.W. ' No rough edges and slow wilt in hot weather. That's why men call Franklin 71 in order to TOLMANIZE! parent, smooth and velvety. Pecially recommend it for dark, sal- low skin, shiny nose, freckies, tan, syn spots, coarse pores. rough skin, ruddiness, wrinkles and. in fact, every blemish the face, hands and |arms are heir to. 1f your neck or chest Is discolored from expoaure, | apply this combination there and the | ohjectionable defect will disappear | as if by magic. 3 harmless and will stimulate a growth of hair. short sleeves are in vogue The Aristocral of Summer Beverages. Wholesale Distributors Frank Hume, Inc. A. E. Beitzell Altemus-Hibble Co. i 4 [ 15 e et P mend it to all of my friends.” NOTF—Ta eet the hest effect be sure to | foilow the complete directions contained in everv. prckage and it is w0 of Derwillo, o pares with 1,200 arrivais and 1,300 de- partures in the same month in 1913, | when the total tonnage was about 2,500,000. G This_revival of shipning in a short fer the first ! *he manex e toilet counters nader a money refund guar- tee. it pplication or they ' is nécessary to have beautiful hands o % 4 — R R VT ROX JXOTOT X We're Overstocked On These Bathing Caps . Ev 50c ans:l» ';hs-é’u Priced to Go Quick Ba:ll;yingCap... 29(: Every $1.00 and $1.50 Bathing Cap. $15 Shap Silk jncoats . . . . podyear MAN'F'G OMPAN 1004 F Street $ .~ Upright Piano (Used) A Real Bargain, $165 Terms-te Suit Arthur Jordan Piano Ce. G Street at 13th Homer L. Kitt, ‘Seq-Treas. * Many children innocently cheated : . out of the very food they need daily Everycne knows that health is the most valuable asset of life. F&&nbfi"hbm!m'ity'nthe“omfluethnpuiod.” A robust and healthy child will usnally develop into a vigor- . normal growth and when the child reaches maturity he or she is anemic, poorly nourished and liable to disease. . Many children today are innocently cheated out of the very foods they need. Some parents, either through lack of knowledge, It is the duty of parents to think for the child in these matters. Grape-Nuts, the well-known food made of whole wheat flour and malted barley, served with milk or cream, is ane of the most nutritious foods in the world. It provides the elements necessary to nutrition and is a balanced food. - . appetite appeal. Especially attractive with fresh fruits or Let Fatima smokers tell you ~Ask them at 2 the Track Meets = Among college and club men, Fatima’s enduning popularity has been amply proven. Notice, for example, the number of Fatima smokersatanyrepresentative meet. - . CL” = Nothind by o . -and restaurants; at lunch counters; in every good grocery in every city, town or village in the United States. Where you can’t find Grape-Nuts—you won't find people, Grape -Nuts—the Body Builder “There’s-a Reason” GARETTES TWENTY fir 9 ¢ =but taste the djj el e ¢ i