Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. » X 3 Children’s Thrift Coupon : It's Worth Fifty Cents The Liberty National Bank has arranged to help every Washingtonian, especially boys and girls, start a bank account. This coupon is worth' 50 cents to you. Cut out the coupon, take it, with 50 cents, to the Liberty National Bank, at 15th and I Sts. N.W., and you can open a $1 savings ac- count. nEns - Besides being credited with a $1 account, - each depositor will be furnished a Liberty Bell Bank. A picture of the bank is inset in this coupon. Sign your name and address here and bring this coupon with you. OBREGON OFFERS RADIO STATIONS TO.REPUBLICS Jentral American Movement for Annexation to Mexico Said to Be Developing. HAVANA, September 29.—With the purpose of bringing about closer re- lations between Mexico and the Cen- tral American republics, President Obregon of Mexico has offered to construct, free of charge, powerful wireless stations in Guatemala, Costa Rica, Honduras, Salvador and Nica- i ragua, according to Rafael Cardona Jimenez, the new Costa Rican consul in Mexico City, who is here on his way to the Mexican capital. . The offer of Gen. Obregon, Senor Jimenez is reported to have sald in an Interview, was made as a feature of the celebration of Mexico's cen» tennial of independence. Each of wireless atations is to cost $500, 000 and construction of them will be started shortly. In addition, to offering the wireless stations. Senor Jimenesx is reported to have asserted that President Obregon has opened the Mexican military academy, at Chapultepec, to students | from Central America. After having sald that the proposed Central American Union had met with insurmountable obatacles through the objections of Nicaragua and Costa Rica, Senor Jimenez is sald to have declared that this failure had re- sulted in a popular movement in the five Central American republics for annexation by Mexico. He asserted that there existed strong parties in each of the southern republics, which were supporting the idea. ———— Spirit Lake. in Jowa. was held in awe by the native Indlan_tribes be- cause it was believed the Great Spirit presided over its waters. " Solid Oak Dmmg Table: Beantifully finished, highly polished ; extends to 6 feet when open, with three leaves. $14.75 $1.50 Cash—$3 Monthly Solid Oak Buffet Rich golden finish, highly polished:*Extra well made. $39.50 $4 Cash—$1 Weekly : Porcelain-Top Kitchen Cabinet Splid oak, white enamel in- terfor, roll-front start at $25.00 Cash—$3.50 Weekly " teed construction. $3.50 Cash—$1 a Week Double Duty Duofold Beds Oak or mahogany finish. Upholstered in black or brown leatherette. - $34.75 $5.00 Cash—$1 Weekly ° o o . 10-Piece Dining Room Suite Your choice of Walnut or Mahogany, consisting of 60-inch Buffet with mirror back, China Closet, Inclosed Serving Table, Extension Table, 48 inches wide (B4=inch Table $10.00 lddllloml). 5 Side Chairs, 1 Arm- chair, seats upholstered in various shades of genuine leather.... Bcthr Kmd” DIVISION OFAMERICAN HOME FURNISHERS CORP: 785 &6 ST.0LW-BETWEENG Chifforobe Your choice of oak or mahogany? finigh§: guaran-< Must be seen to be appreciated. $38.75 Prices 259 bl “MANNA” FROM SOYA BEANS WILL AID EUROPE’S STARVING . BY HIRAM K. MODERWELL. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1921. LONDON, September 30.—Dis- patches recelved here report the /| discovery of a new “manna,” pro- duced from the soya bean, which, 1ts Inventors say, will do almost as much for starving Burope as the original product did when the ravens delivered it in biblical times. Reports received from Vienna de- seribing the experiments, which are being closely followed-by Arthur MURDERED WOMAN FOUND PACKED AWAY iN CLOSET Couple Lived in Room Without DENVER, Colo., September 30.—Dr. Gillbert I Lininger, Pueblo dentist Hugh Frazler, the American high commissioner ‘there, state that ‘he inventors of the new food produce bread flour and milk from the soya bean which, they say, is more nu- tritive and cheaper than the best previously known roods. Soya milk costs only one-sixth as much as cow’s milk, and soya bread is 40 per cent cheaper than wheat bread. Hitherto the soya bean has been cultivated chiefly in the orient, where it has formed one of the main articles in their cheap diet. Although it is not very palatable to westerners, the inventors claim that their “manna” is delicious, and announce that the soya bean will soon be sown extensively in east- ern and southeastern Europe. “It Is a matter of the highest po- litical importance,” says the dis- coverer of manna, “that the west should learn the lesson of cheaper living as taught by the east in the use of the soya bean as food. This is the only real solution of the problem of reconstruction.” Knowledge of Crime—Husband of Victim Sought. NEW YORK, September 30.—De- tectives today were trying to trace a couple known as Mr. and Mrs. Bou- langer, who, it is believed, lived for several days, unwittingly. in a room where the body of a young woman friend—murdered—had been stored. The body, packed away in newspa- pers, was found last night in an un- used closet of a lodging house room the Boulangers had occupied. A cloth; gag had been tied into the woman's mouth with a white stocking. The date of one of the newspapers, Sep- tember 21, is believed to fix the date of the murder. The Boulangers did not quit the room until last Monday— | four days later. Other lodgers said | they thought the Boulangers had! gone to Montreal. ! The murdered woman was known at the lodging house only as “Mrs. | Fay.” The proprietor told the police “Mr. Fay" left the house last Thurs- | day. saying “Mrs. Fay" had fallen ill and he had removed her to a hospital. He js being sought in connection with her ‘death. 26 FIREMEN HURT IN BLAZE. MILWAUKEE, September 30.— Twenty-six firemen were injured, three of them serlously, in a fire which caused damage estimated at $1,000,000 to the plant of the Ameri- can Hide and Leathor Company here last night. The backfiring of an automcbile in a frame shed on the river bank next to the plant was be- lieved to have atarted the fire. Up-to-Date Time Sheets Your stationer will be glad to show you the National Weekly Time Sheets (long and short leaf form)—printed on bond paper,11x 84, punched to fit standard Ring Binders. Ask for National Form 80 A. D. The National Ring Binder to use for these sheets is No. 6408. Look for This Trade Mark NATIONAL BLANK BOOK €O 1% Riverdale, Holyoke, Mass, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1921. ' old customers and new ones too, respond to our printed word at a time when everyone is talk- ing about a business de- pression! Worsted Suitings Fall & Winter Overcoatings Made to_Measure Savings of Many Dollars Hundreds of men are flocking in here and ordering ma overcoats at a wonderful saving. Who talks about & business depression—there is none at Newcorn & Green's, and this sale is the reason why! giving event in our entire 23 years' history. See the worsteds and overcoatings displayed in our windows. Then you will know why! Newcorn & Green The wush is on! ics durlng August, Dhittoned. &t Camp Jackson, £. C. We Continue This Offering— for the response has been wonderful! We are booking a volume of busi- ness—though the profits are small on each order—the accumulative vol- ume is needed to make this offering possible. It is gratifying to find our and former Army officer, was ar-|Lininger was arraigned before a ‘Ex-m DENTIST HELD. - |Tested at Pueblo on_ a charge|United States commissioner and of theft of Army dental sup-|ordered held for trial at Ailken, 1919, while |S. C. Three brothers living in Denver furnished bail for Lininger's release. 32 thelr new suits Really, the most remarkable value- Merchant Tailors 1002 F St. N. W.