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| ARMS LIMITATION ¥ conference a e - SSUEOF LABOR Machinists’ Lodge Will Not | Participate in Sympathetic Demonstration. -~ | Limitation of arms and the’backing which organized labor will give it has become a local issue in the labor field. Following the schedule of the American Federation of Labor, as outlined in a message to unions throughout the country by Pretident Samuel Gompers of the federation. | the committee from Central Labor Tnion working on plans for the| limitation of arms demonstration at Convention Hall on Armistice day. November 11, has been going for- ward steadily with its project. Local organized labor. through Central La- Dbor Union. last week decided to sup- port the demonstration ufter a sharp | dcbate between opnoents and pro- | of the proposition. i » Decline to Take Part. ¢ Cenural Labor in the demonstration. Keeler. delegate from that lodge to Central jon. announced that the rea- ! 1 DISMANTLE SANDA COURT j BY GOVERNMENT ORDER Four-Story Building, Erected for Navy Department During Widr, Condemned as “Fire-Trap.” | “Sanda Court, a four-story frame buildiz in the north court of the State ‘War and Navy buflding, ix being dis- mantled by government forces under the direction of Col. Sherrill, the officer in charge of public buildings and grounds. ~ All the avaliable lumber, in- cluding sidings, flooring, window frames, ete., is being removed in Army trucks to the government propagating gardens, south of the Washington monument, for future use wherever needed. Some of it will be utilized in the construction of | s at the tourists’ camp in East Potomac Park. Radiators, pipes, ete., will be utilized in_the temporary frame buildings near West Potomac Park. Sanda Court’ was built by the Navy |} Department as a war measure and re- cently was condemned by the Smoot public bulldings commission as a “fire trap.” LIVING "NSTS DROP. Food Higher in u. C., But Clothing Prices Come Down. Cost of living in showed a slight combined from M Washington rease in all ftems 1 ? 1921, to Septem- ber. according to figures made pub- v the Department of Labor. food showed an increase in u the four-month period, cloth- dropped more than 25_per cent rnishings showed a 17 per cent se. food pricas in ten cities showed a tendency to decrease dur- eptember. In the cities where were_obtained September 15, .\ THE EVENING by the members of his ori one. Richmond. Va. had an would not_receive th tion they desired at t lnitation of arms. The n 10 withdraw the support of appros s of Jocal organ- | | amounted to but 2 per cent>In Wash- ington the drop was not quite half of 1 per cent. Retail food prices in Washington mately. 3.000 memb during September were 65 per cent sl L the an- ! above tho pre-war level. rcuncement eame t trict 44§ i S——— of the International on of Odors from freshly painted walls which jurisdiction | will be readily absorbed if a bucket employe: fresh water is Set in the room government | ds throvghout orward to the! lution _ recently | adopted at the convention of the dis- trict asking that as a first step toward | limiting_armaments the delegates to ! the conference would consider plac- ing all plants for the manufacture of implements of warfare under direct contrel of the respective governments. | Why Step Is Advoeated. i eve that if this is arcom-! night. would 1di 15 apen S lim- ¢ toward s of the various. nations will have been taken. We can- | nd 2s a district of the! would be { stand for | rangements to up before the Xitation of arr | ARTHOLDI RESTAURANT Eveless Edes for Men Do you know thAt some men have never " enjoyed the Bartholdi® men as they Dumb. Deliclous “‘chofes’” breakfast. Across from the New. Bbbitt Hot 3 Rupp=l, chief op of ar n telephone excha Lincoln. Neb.. is the heroine o' sensational chas - after two desperate men who had escaped {rom the state | 1enitentiary. Believing that she recogmized the two msgeu down the road on their way to | the open country.. Miss Ruppel notified the authorities. A Handy Book for the Road..,. . This National Loose-Leaf Special Filler has right-hand page for expenses, left-hand page for cash report and route. . To get complete outfit, ask your stationer for National No. 04471. National Loose-Leaf Memo Books are con- venient for the pocket, buiit to stand the hard wear of traveling. Look for This Trade Mark When You Buy in every quality for which the Rem- 2 ington Typewriter is famous. Like - the Standard i models in strength, in durability, in dependabil- ity,in speed, in the beauty of its work. Portabl A new Remington departure in light- ness, in compactness, in conveunience for use anywhere and everywhere. - Fits in a case only 4 inches high— and remember—it has the Standard i other typewriter that bears the Rem- ington name, No shifting for figures. o8 Price, complete with case, $60 REMINGTON TYPEWRITER COMPANY (Incerperated) 1340 New York Ave. N.W. Washington. Phone Main 336. se over August prices, and this || | STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 British public was the Chestnut Farms Dairy, Washington, D. C., U.S. A. PR A S S gy SS S Interior of GEORGE M. OYSTER’S DAIRY, Washington, D. C., U. S. A. Where the Milk Is First Pasteurized and Then Bottled and Capped by Automatic Machinery The Bottles are Brought and Taken Away. on Moving Platforms The National Clean Milk Society (Incorporated) AMERICAN CONSULAR SERVICE 18 Cavendish Square, London, W. I. August 21, 1921. Mr. Gardner F. Johnson, President, Gar, -John:on Advertisers’ Service Bureau, 307 Stat Building, Washington, D.C., U. S. A. Sir: I am directed by'the Consul General to reply to your letter of July 22, 1921, concerning the exhibit of photographs. etc., of the George M. Oyster Company milk bottles, etc., at the In- fants’ Welfare Exhibition. I have made numerous inquiries concerning this, but have not been able to get any news- paper clippings as to the same. I have, however, secured a number of reports of the exhibition and one of the photographs of the George M. Opyster’s Dairy used in the exhibition, and the report of the National Clean Milk Society, all of which I am inclosing. Trusting that this will be of assistance to you, Very respectfully yours, Sy st American Consul. 2 Soho Square, London, W. 1. IDEALS have been the dominant attributes that have made the Chest- _ nut Farms Dairy the perfect dairy; a model for another great nation. Far in advance of public awakening we felt our responsibility to supply only the most wholesome milk and milk products. you observe in your own kitchen, would fall far below the standard that we in- sist upon in our dairy. The naked eye is not permitted to be the judge of what is clean and what is not—it must pass the uncompromising inspection of our Y EARS, THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS, PAINSTAKING EFFORT and bacteriological tests. Your health and the health of your family depend so much upon the character of your milk supply that you have a DUTY to be very particular about it. ° DOUBLE telephone” exchange, with eight private wires, enables patrons to communicate with our office at any time during business hours; twelve automo- biles, fifty delivery wagons-and seventy horses enable us to make prompt and fre- quent deliveries to any part of the city. We Cordially Invite Y our Inspection of Our Dairy at any time during Business Hours. GEORGE M. OYSTER, Jr. Lol N + HENRY N. BRAWNER, Jr. — 1116-1120 Connecticut Avenue "URING National Baby Week in London, England, (July 5th-9th) an important exhibition was held at the Central Hall, Westminster, for the purpose of instructing the British public in the latest methods for decreasing child mortality. In a place of prominence, commen- surate with its importance, was the proper handling of the milk supply. Aside from our gratification, we feel certain that the Washington Public at large, and our customers in particular, will be pleased to know that the dairy selected as the model for the LONDON, ENGLAND (Spe- cial Correspondence). For its sanitary and scientific handling of milk on a commercial scale, the firm of George M. Oyster & Company of Washington, D. C,, is now being held up as a model to the British Public at the big exhibition on “In- fant Welfare,” which is taking place in London understhe joint auspices of the National Asso- ciation for the Prevention Infant Mortality and the Na- tional Baby Council. This exhibition, which 1 drawing great crowds to Cax- ton Hall, is intended to in- struct the British public in the latest methods for cutting down child mortality and the proper handling of the mi supply is given a place of prominence. Under the warning caption: “How NOT To Do It,” are en- larged photographs showing unsafe milking methods and the present unsanitary method of milk distribution practiced in England, with the small dealer pushing his cart from door to door and filling his tin cans from the large can which he carries. In striking con- trast with these are photo- graphs showing scientific milk- ing as beginning to be prac- ticed on certain model Enzlish farms. notably that of Lord Rayleigh. Then come photo- graphs of the interior of the Oyster plant in Washington, D. C., showing the cooling, straining and sterilizing of the milk, the cleansing of the bot- tles by mechanical action and by germ-killing solutions, the filling of the bottles by ma- chinery, their corking and their delivery on an endless belt te-the wagons. The American milk bottle is a comparative novelty in Great Brit- a‘n. It is said that there are not ten thousand of them in all England. Towever, populur agitation against the present methods is certainly in- creasing. Special Correspondent: MR. CHAS. T. HALLINAN, 28 Radcliffe Square. London, SV. 10 Ordinary cleanliness, such as The plant, with its equipment for pas- teurizing and bottling milk and cream, is thoroughly modern in all its appointments. The various operations may be conveniently observed from a balcony in our Connegticut avenue salesroom. |