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3 k:nl Serve ine:zauce in & bowl. 8 FEATU LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON I have often wondered how those; people feel who are always blaming| things on the other fellow. The kind of u man who is always velling| “Favoritism!” to cover his working shortcomings, and his lack of ud-‘ vancement in the game. The kind| of a parent who is always blaming | God for a large, ill-cared-for family, | a bunch of debt and u leaky roof, the | while he or she sits on the back stoop and whines. The kind of a wife who always blames “the other woman" for luring her husband aw less of the selfishness or ® her own character which started the whole trouble. How do these people | feel who think that they are always in the right and that the is responsible for their grief? What ! a comfort it must be! i It is a comfort I have been denied, although I would -villingly have an- nexed it. I entered life endowed with a father with a peculiar viewpoint and plenty of ability to enforce the same upon his family. Dad thought that things were always your own fault. He didn't think you could mend troubles by blaming them on some one else, but that you'd better keep your mouth shut and hustle. We might get by with a fib in our family. but there wasn't a ghost of a chance for getting by with an excuse. Con- sequently I've gone through life with- out the comfort of an alibi. 1 haven't always appreciated this fact. 1 would give much to think that some one else is to blame for my sins and failures—but doggon it, T can 1 know perfectly well that I alone a responsible. The others were mere accessories to the fact. There' use in trying to fool socie They're all wise to me. S nothing for me to do but straighten out the messes myself, and I've pro- ceeded to do it. * And after all, I've this consolation: 1 notice 1 get the job done more! quickly than the chap with an alibi. even if there aren't so many standing around holding my hand. Things You'll Like to Make. no Cheosing Partners for Thanksgivmg Dinner An interesting and exciting way of choosing a partner for a Thanks- giving dinner is to make a large pumpkin of orange crepe paper. Fill it with small fruit or vegetable shaped pincushions. You can buy| the frame for the pumpkin or make one yourself. It consists of a wooden board with eight wires nailed to it and. bent into the shape of the pump- kin. Pad very slightly with cotton and cover with the paper. Lefore twisting and tying the paper around the stem at the top, place inside the| pumpkin the cushions with a ribbon | tied to each. Let the ribbon hang| out over the sides. Now make book- | marks of heavy paper or thin card-| board similar to the one shown af the left of the illustration. Have a head! on each bookmark to match one of the cushions. The tie is cut atound on three sides to go over the page of “the book. Give the gentlemen the | bookmarks. Each lady pulls one of the ribbons. The gentleman has as| partner the lady who draws a fruit or vegetable to match the one on his bookmark. FLORA. (Copyright, 1921.) Children’s Luncheon Baked beans. Cold slaw. Brown bread sandwiches with peanut butter. Coffee and milk. Baked Beans.—Soak the beans, par- boil them. put them in a casserole with pieces of bacon, pepper, salt and a tablespoon of molasses Cover with + the water they were parboiled in, put them in the oven. When browned cover them and finish baking. Keep hot in the oven or in hot water boiler fashion. Brown Bread.—Mix together three cups of sour milk. one cup of mo- lasses, one teaspoon of salt, one and ! one-half tedspoons of soda, one egg, | five cups of graham flour, two cups of whits flour and one cup of raisins or nuts Bake for one hour in coffec cans two-thirds full. This makes three loaves Mother’s Favorite Cake. Beat three oggs until light, add, one and one-half cups of sugar and | beat again. Add one-half cup of soft butter and beat from three to five | minutes longer. Add one cup of milk and beat once more. Measure off three cups of flour, add to it two heaping teaspoons of baking powder, | #ift twice and add in two parts to: the mixture, stirring _ip_thoroughly | each time. Bake in iez® Zorm in a moderate oven. A %ive addition to this cake is one Zy of raisins, cur- ! =R OF MUt eats. 'This cake s ! rully as good A made a few days| before using. Steak With Vegetables. Cut a round or sirloin steak into pleces about four inches square, or! any convenient size for frying. Salt and pepper well, then dredge it with flour. Fry the meat in hot bacon drippings until it is a dark brown, slice one large or two small onions, dice three or four small carrots, one| or two turnips, one medium-sized fmlo and one sweet pepper and add o the brownéi steak. Let this cook for a few minutes, then cover with boiling water and put it on the back of the stove, so that it can simmer for_an hour or less. When nearly @one add a few sprigs of parsley. Salt may be added if it does not seem salty enough. Curried Banana Let one cup each of grated cocoa- nut and sweet milk soak together for an_ hour, peel and cut in lengthwise halves three bananas and fry them a light brown in twé tablespoons of hot butter in which one tablespoon of curry powder has simmered. Re- move the bananas to a heated plate and pour into the pan the cocoanut and milk. Add a teaspoon of sauce and a little ualt and cayenne. Boil up once, remove from the fire and whip rapidly Into a well-beaten egg. garnish the bsnanas with rice balls R, | for half an hour. RE PARGE., ~ By Lucille WHEREIN IS DISCLOSED WHY “CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN" MISERABLE! HE fat dressmaker by the day sat, thimbie on finger, ready to begin. Clothes to the right of her, clothes to the left of her, clothing hanging on all four bed posts, clothes hanging on the lighting fixtures, and a tempestu- ous youns person with red hair was flinging more clothes from the depths of the closet. They seemed such grand clothes to the modest seam- str that she couldn't comprehend why this fretful young woman was throwing them about so viciously. “If there's unything floppier or mangier than a trousscau on the wane, I don’t know what it X grumbled the owncr of the garments as she stacked a pile for the dry cleaners’. “Beasts!" She kicked at two innocent sport suits, “Why are you both rrow, when wide, wider, widest things are coming in’ The fat dressmaker, who had a touch of asthma, tried putlingly to conciliate her new customer. “You could combine the two skirts into an elegant pleated model with plaid collar and cuffs laid over the in coat— "Like a chari hand-me-down: p! child in her aunt mouned Merriam. “Oh-a-weel-ah-wey! I'm married to the nicest man in the world, but he simply has no clothes sensé!” was confiding her soul's inmost crets to her seamstress, woman_in the [“Do you know ecked about clothes 1 could se 1 have the dearest, generousest dad in the world who weuld love to buy me clothe: and the silliest, quixoticest husband in the world who thinks it wouldn't be sporty to let dad do it? And every day I'm getting mangier and mangier!” And I feel like a highway robber when 1 ask John for clothes mon; You see. he hasn't any more idea than a plum-orchard rabbit what real honest-to-wickedness clothes cost! His mother and his sisters make their own things with tissue paper patterns and a rubber dress form and remnants from a bar- gain counter, and go about boa: that they only spent 30 cents. looking Tike it! perate U she simply didn't care lhow she e: ated. she was dumping out shoes, bush- ¢1s of shoes—oxfords with run-over heels and ver had tarnished, and s scuffed _toes. uede pumps with The fat dressmaker ripped chiffon thoughtfully. She couldnt help liking this” little red-haired person, | even though she was making a spoiled-baby fuss about nothing. The clothes looked perfectly all right to the dressmaker; she knew from gen- erations of resuscitation that they would come out crisp and smart-look- ing. But she said nothing at this poi mply went on snipping. “Do you ’'spose you can do any- thing with this?” Merry’'s voice Merriam felt so des- | ce slippers that | THE EVENING 2TAR, WASHINGTON, Brides Will Be Brides Van Slyke draw bey ed dolefully as she held out a ggled white lace. 11 rip it and you wash it and we'll have It like new.” comforted the fat angel. “Going visiting?¥ Merriam ngdded, a lump in her throat. “'Mongst your old friends?” “At the spiffiest house—from Fri- lday till Tuesday—oh!" she sighed |deeply. “Do you think we can ever dig enough out of this junk to last me five days?” She wouldn't for a million dollars have had anybody — except this stranger'—know how terribly she hated to have her old pals see her sh~bby, especially her old beau, Richard Slocum! ~ It .was Richard who had predicted she'd feel this way some day. “It will be all right at first, but rough road work about the time the trousseau begins to look limp—" she could hear his smooth baritone as plainly as though he had sald it yesterday. She hadn't seen Richard for sev- eral weeks, not since he had played a rather cruel practical joke on her beloved John. She wanted to look so_fresh and lovely and desirable that Richard would be utterly miserable! “This old question about whether women dress for men or women don’t guess is any question of sex. the dressmaker's monologue pulled Merriam _out of her revery. “A woman always dresses at somebody she's mad at. I can tell whether its a man or a woman, whether I'm sew- ling on news or makeovers.” jood gracious!” gasped Merriam, feeling deliciously as though she had come across a cheap but relizble for- tune teller. ' “Could you—can you— guess me?” ome: begrudges admitting it after I've told ‘em.,” the fat seamstress leaned forward, “but I never guessed wrong yet. Tell me what yvou want 1 should work on and I'll tell you—" “f want the white lace and—and that too-low-necked black net that goes with my Spanish comb and my green feather fan and——" The dressmaker resumed her sway- ing and snipping. She eyed her patron over disapproving steel- bowed specs. “Women don't wear black or white evening things for other women,” {she sniffed, “because any woman can see right away they're probably makeovers. They generally wear {black or white to make some old beau think he's missed the only woman in the world—spite clothes, 1 call ‘em!" She rocked violently. “Spite clothes!" Merriam swallowed. picked up a vellow taffeta and an orchid chiffon, and drew herself up to all of her five-foot-one. “You will please do these, | dered. But in the solitude of the kitchen she giggled. { “Rich’ Slocum,” she whispered to the man who wasn't there, “that pious old frump hds saved you a very uncomfortable week end, darn her!” hard. She she or- (Another eplsode of this story in tomorrow’s Star.) Blacky Gets a Dreadful Shock BY THORNTON W. BURGESS, ‘When friends prove false, Trust ‘The springs of faith are turned t¢ dust. —Rlacky the Crow. Blacky the Crow was in the top of his favorite tree over near the Big River early this afternoon. He didn’t know what was going to happen, but he felt it in his bones that something was, and he meant to be on hand to see. For a long time he sat there seelng nothing unusual. At last he spled a tiny flgure far away across the Green Meadows. FEven at that distance he knew who it was. It was Farmer Brown's boy, and he was com- ing toward the Big River. “I thought as much” chuckled Blacky. “He is coming over here to drive that hunter away.” # The tiny figure grew larger. It was Farmer Brown's boy beyond a doubt. Suddenly Blacky's ecyes opened so wide that they looked as if they were in danger of popping out of his head. He had discovered that Fa mer Brown’s boy was carrying something whom may we “I—I—I DO BELIEVE HE IS GOING TO TRY TO SHOOT THOSE DUCKS HIMSELF,” GASPED BLACKY. and that tha something was a gun! Yes, sir, Farmer Brown's boy was carrying a terrible gun! If Blacky could have rubbed his eyes he would have done so, just to make sure that |there was nothing the matter with them. “A gun croaked Blacky. “Farmer Brown's boy with a terrible gun! What does it mean?” e Nearer came Farmer Brown's boy, and Blacky could see that terrible #un plainly now. Suddenly an idea pobped into his head. ps he is Zoing to shoot.that hunter!” thought Blacky, and somehow he felt better. Farmer Brown's boy reached the Blg River at a point some distance below the blind built by the hunter. He laid his gun down on the bank and went down to the edge of the water The rushes grew very thick ther, and for a while Farmer Erown's bo was very busy among them., Blacky from his high perch could watch him, and as he watched he grew wore and more puzzled. It looked very much as if Farmer Brown’s boy was build- ing a blind much like that of the hunter's At last he carried an old log down there, got bis gun and sat down just as the hunter had done In his_blind the afternoon before. He was quite hidden there excepting from a place high up like Blacky's perch. “I—I—I do belleve he is going to try to shoot those Ducks himself!" gasped Blacky. “I wouldn't have be- lieve@ it if any one had told me. N sir, I wouldn't have believed it. I- I—can't believe it now. Farmer Brown's boy hunting with a terrible gun! Yet I've got to believe my own eye; < A noise up the river caught his at- tention. It was the noise of oars in a boat. There was the hunter rowing down the Big River. Just as he had done the day before, he came ashore :boi:e. his blind and walked down o “This s no place for me,” mut- tered Blacky. He'll remember that I scared those Ducks yesterday and, as likely as not, he'll try to shoos me.” Blacky spread his black wings and hurriedly left the treetcp, heading for another farther back on the Green Meadows. where he would be safe, but from which he could not see as well. There he sat until the Black Shadows warned him that it was high time for him to be getting back to the Green Forest. He had to hurry, for it wi later out after dark. Just as he reached the Green Forest he heard a faint “Bang, bang!" from over by the Blg River.'and he knew that it came from the piace where Farmer Brown's boy was hiding in the bushes. “It is _true” croaked -Blacky. “Farmer Brown's boy has turned hunter!” 1t was such a dreadful shock to Blacky that it was a long time before He could go to sleep. (Copyright, 1921, by T. W. Burgess. e e e e e Baked Apple Charlotte. Cut some bread into slices one- fourth of an inch thick, then into strips one and one-half inches wide and as long as the height of tne mold to be used. Cui one piece to fit *he top of the mold, then di it into five or six pleces Grease the mold. dip the slices of nreed into melted butter and arrange them on the bottom and around the sides of the mold. fitting closely together or overlapping. Fill the center entirely full with apple sauce made of tart apples stewed until tender and sea- soned with butter and sugar. A lit- tle apricot jam can be put in the centet 'f desired. Chopped almonds also may be added. Cover the top with bread and bake in a hot oven 'Il'lhke bread !l’!l?llld be an amber color, like toast. Turn it carefully onto a flat dish and serve with any sauce that you like. Tapioca Blanc Mange. Soak over night a level cup of tapi- oca in half a pint of cold water. It should be soft in the morning and look clear. Bring to the scald a pint of fresh milk and stir into a cup of granulated sugar and the prepared tapioca and cook for a quarter of an hour, stirring frequently. It is better to cook this in a double bofler, in which case it will take about twenty minutes. When done take from the fire, turn into a bowl and beat well to make the whole smooth, flavoring with two teaspoons of vanilla or lemon extract and a small pinch of | half cup of cranberries, three-fourths salt. Turn into a mold and let stand for several hours In a cold place, then serve with cream and powdered sugar or with a fruit sauce. —_— Cloth dresses are trimmed ‘' with motifs of orlental embroideries, which panel and sleeve, . Fads and Fancies. Colored fringe is used as an ef- fective triraming on plain, straight- line costumes. The favored glove of the moment is the long black kid, eight or twelve button length. Appliques of dark brown velvet ap- pear on a tam and scarf set of seal brown duvetyn. To wear with plain broadcloth skirts are very short jackets in mole or Persian lamb. A little girl's dress of crepe de Chine is trimmed with brown braid and Belgian lace. A cloth coat of emerald green is trimmed with caracal, making a most effective combination. One smart winter dress of henna duvetyn shows painted leather trim- mings on belt and cuffs. - If the winter coat does not have a collar of fur, it features a throw collar with tasseled ends. —_—— Apple-Cranberry Charlotte. Butter a bowl or earthen dish. Trim the crust from eight slices of stale Yread and cut them into neat pleces of equal size. Spread each slice thickly with butter, line the dish with bread, buttered side down, fill the center with about six apple: pared, cored and quartered. Add on cup of brown suggr, one-half teaspoon of cinnamon and two tablespoons of het water. Cover the top with bread, buttered side up and bake in a slow oven until the apples are soft and the bread is brown. If the oven is very hot cover the dish part of the time. ‘Turn out carefully. sauce. - than usual. and he was afraid to be | Serve with hard | tab With Chocolate Chocolate Pudding. Melt an ounce and a half of choco- late in a double boiler and add a table: spoon and a half of cornstarch mixed with three-quarters of a cup of sugar. Stir till smooth. Add two cups of hot milk, stirring slowly as you add it, and cuok for twenty-flve minutes, stirring from time to time. Then a beaten egg yolk and a teaspoon of vanilla. Pour into a baking dish, cover’ with a me- ringue, brown in the oven and serve very cold, with or without cream. Chocolate Bread. Sift together two and a quarter cups of flour, five teaspoons of baking pow- der, a quarter of a cup of sugar, three tablespoons of cocoa and a teaspoon of salt. Add an egg beaten in a cup of {milk and three tablespoons of cooking oil or fat. Mix and then add a third of a cup of nuts, Bake slowly in a loaf for about forty minutes. Chocolate Snuce. Heat in a double boiler one cup each of cream and milk. Add two heaping tablespoons of grated chocolate rubbed to a smooth paste with a little cold milk, and thicken with the beaten yolks of two eggs. Take from the fire and add half a cup of powdered sugar, a few drops of vanilla and the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs. mediately. Chocolate Pancakes. Mix four tablespoons of flour, two ta- blespoons of sugar, a cup of macaroon crumbs and two tablespoons of melted butter, with the yolks of six eggs and the whites of three. Add enough milk to make a pancake batter and fry in small thin pancakes. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve with choco- late fudge sauce, made by melting four tablespoons each of melted chocolate and sugar In half a cup of milk and cooking to make a thick sirup. Chocolate Cream. late and mix with two cups of cream, yolks of six eggs. Cook in a double boiler until smooth and thick, stirring constantly, then add a package of gela- tin which has been soaked and di: solved. Take from the fire and when cool, but not set, fold in.a cup of cream which has been whipped solid. Add a few drops of vanilla. Mold, chill and serve with whipped cream. Chocolate Jelly. One pint of bolling water, two pinches of salt, one and a half squares of chocolate, one-third package of gela- tin, two level tablespoons of sugar, one teaspoon of vanilla. Put the water, salt and chocolate in a saucepan. Stir over fire untii the chocolate melts, then let it boil for three or four minutes. Soften the gelatin in a little cold water and pour the boiling mixtu-e over it. Stir until dissolved, then add sugar and vanilla. Pour into a mold and set aside Lo aacden. Serve with plain or whip- ped cream. Frozen Chocolate. One quart milk, two and a half squares No. 1 chocolate, one and a quarter cups sugar, one tablespoon va- nilla, few grains salt. Put milk and chocolate in double boiler and wi milk has scalded and chocolate h: melted add sugar, vanilla and salt. Chill wid freeze, using three parts finely crushed ice to one part rock salt. Serve in sherbet glasses with whipped cream. WHAT ABOUT AN ENGAGEMENT RING Does good form require that an engaged man present his flancee with a diamond engagement ring? This is a question that is often asked by the young man after he has proposed marriage to the girl of his choice. And the answer to the 'question is: “Certainly not.” To be sure. most men in this coun- try do present their financees with some 8ort of betrothal ring. and when they can afford it is usually a diamond ring, simply because diamonds are associated in most girls’ minds with engagements. But the young woman ought to be consulted as to her choice in the matter. Many girls nowa- days—when girls are given to having original ideas on so many subjects— profess a dislike for the conventional engagement ring, simply because it is go usual. Of late years the dia- mond circlet has been in high favor and sometimes a youns woman pre- fers her favorite 'stone—an emerald or ruby or sapphire. or even a pearl or opal—either alone or set with diamonds, to any plain diamond set- ting in the world. It is the young woman who has to wear the ring and the considerate young man suits her taste rather than his own in select- ing it. Lest there might be ag embarrass- ment in purchasing the ring togethe a young man often goes to his jew- eler beforehand and selects two or three rings of the price that he {wishes to pay and then asks his [flancee to select the one she prefers. Any considerate jeweler will carry on this little transaction without let- ting the question of price enter into the negotiations with the young woman. The only hard and fast rule there need be about engagement rings is that their value should be propor- tionate with the financial position of those who buy them. A you: man with enough money to do so would be regarded as selfish if he did not give his flancee any engagement ring, but. on the other hand, a young woman, knowing her fiance had many respon- sibilities and little money, would be extremely inconsiderate if she per- mitted him to make much of an ex- penditure in this way Young women sometimes differen- tlate between a ‘“ring engagement” and an ordinary engagement with the absurd notion that where there is no ring engagement obligations are less binding. Of course, this is silly. Many an engaged business woman prefers not to wear a ring that will |attract attention to what she con- isiders her own affairs and not those |!he meets in the course of her daily work. For this reason the business girl often prefers not to have any engagement ring whatever. The man in the case has nothing to say in the matter. Though he may be ex- cused for Insisting that his wife wear her wedding ring. he has no such claim regarding his flancee. —_——— Salted Chestnuts. Select some large-sized chestnuts. Remove the outer shells with a sharp knife, then blanch the nuts by pour- ing boiling water over them, after which the inner skin can easily be rubbed off. Cook until tender in slightly salted boiling water. Drain, dry and place in a baking pan with a_little olive oil, about a tablespoon of the oil=to a pegnd of chestnuts. Toss them around -,0 that the oil will be evenly distri>.uted, sprinkle with salt and place w« the oven for ten or fifteen minutas so as to brown the nuts slightly. Salmon Croquettes. Soason one-half pound, one solid cup, of cooked fish—canned salmon is excellent—with salt, lemon julce, paprika and mustard. Mix with thick | White sauce made with one ounce of ! butter and two tablespoons of corn- starch and one cup of milk. Cool, shape, roll in egg and crumbs and fry in deep fat hot enough to brown quickly. They should not stay in the fat more than two minutes. Sweet Potato Soup. Put one-half tablespoon of butter and one tablespoon of flour into a saucepan or a double boiler, blend and add one pint of milk, one pint of stock, one-half teaspoon of onion juice, one-half teaspoon of salt, one- fourth teaspoon of pepper and a small stick of cinnamon. Stir carefully over the fire until the mixture is hot and beginning to thicken, add the sweet potatoes, stir well and cook for ten minutes longer, strain into soup dishes, sprinkle chopped parsley over the top and add a dash of grated nutmeg: Serve very hot with crou- tons. . English Biscnit. Sift together -three cups of flour, one cup of cornstarch, four teaspoons of bakin, mwderngd ht:lrea tabl spoons, of sugar. o this one tablespoon of lard or butter, then add one egg, one cup of milk, one-half cup of currants and one poon of .coriander seed. . Roll B3 nag ¢ s *'D._C, WE Serve im« | Grate three squares of bitter choco- | [half a cup of sugar and the well beaten | For Your Convenience WANT ADS. NORTHWEST. 1|| 25th and Pn. av, | 1901 L st., Morse ma 13th Pharmacy. 14th and Pa 3204 M st., 0'Don 28th and P et macy. n Washineton and He! L d’ Foung. For Sale and Poultry, Pets a Automoblles for Rooms for Rent i|[4 cents a wora. 2 times, 18¢ per 14 tim 11 mnst be nt The St excentions: Lost and Found. Death notices. Wanted Help. Wanted Rooms. fleations wili be fice, 11th day of iseue. 20¢ per 1t [{[PAY REFORE ISSUE. with the i and Pa ave All _advertisements for The day Btar must be received at The Star office by 6 p.m. Saturday. from transient Ryl r time clerk's Pharmacy. rmacy Pharmacy. NORTHEAST. North Capitol and Eye sts., Keneally Phar- nd East Copitol sts., Lincols Perk SOUTHEAST. 8th and Eye sts., Weller & Moskey's Phar- macy. 11th and Pa. ave,, Fealy's Pharmacy. ‘Pharmacy. | GEORGETOWN. Smrser' nell's Pharmacy. . Pride’s Pharmacy. 36th and M sts., Weller & Moskey's Phar- suburhs for— ind_ Situations Wanted. dLivestock. Sal d_Wanted. Business Opportunities, etc. . Rate Outside of i Washington, Real Estate Ads i||8 words to the line, 8-line minimum, st 8 times, 17c per lige. 7 times, 16c per line. . 15¢ per line. Star Office Open Until p-m. ar office by 11 Wanted Rituations. until 10 May be left at any of the following Star Want Ad Branches an Phormacy. desk). Pharmsry. igley’s Pharmacy. O eroats. Pharmacy. Rate—3 Cents a Word anted Miscellaneous. and Wanted. All advertisements for The Eveniog Star m. the following Advertisements under the above classi- ccopted at The Star of- ) DNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1921 WANTED—HELP MALE (Comtinued.) 'ARE YOU DISSATISIFIED? Because yoyr work 1is uninteresting? Our work 1s fascinating snd pleasant. Because your business is at a standstill—no progress? Dur company s growing rapidly aud con, tinuounly. Because your .organization is small and offers you no futdre? Our company is big. Executive positions await ambitious men. Our managers all come up from the ranks. | Because of lack of co-operation or encour- |agement? Qur orgnnization has progressive and aggressive mauagement and a_policy of helptuf ration which assures results. | Because of limited earnings and little chance of fncreaxe Our organizatian offers you full earnings for your efforts and ability.” Many' men, up our work. immediately increase thelr earn: fugs over 100 per cent. It you earnestly deaire the full returns for . your ‘work, if you are over 25 and a Gentile, {call between 10 and 4 o'clock. SUITE 306, | MUNSEY BUILDING AKD BAKER wanted at once. Apply at 1839 st n.e. Bischofl’s Bakery. 17 ANDY MAKER—Bxperienced and up to date. osembry Candies, 1401 H st. n.w. 170 HELP AND SITUATIONS. WANTED—HELP ‘WANTED—HELP MALE—Continued. FEMALE DOMESTIC—Continued. F0U g der twen- | GIRL—General housews R B el [ clerk in insurance office; ""'x'..,,‘:.‘: per| GIRL for gegiral hovsew: month; employment permanent. Box | GIRL for gegir 2R, Star olee. in own handwritiog, giviok | *LaY_Bights. _Plone ¢ referénces. GIRL, white, for ousework. YOUNG MAN, 25 years of age or over, eager | ol Inquire 123 R g 10 learn and willing to work; highly remuner. | 2 ative position Tor the right person. Call at 718 | GIEL &6 cook und 0o Tauidsy. —Sfust be well ¥ . cook 11, Albes bldg.. between 10°a.m. and 2:30 p.m. * | free; pince. o' HElt gie Uiary, S0, 4903 ENPLOYMENT AGENCIES. Georgla_ave. or plione Adams 77 160 JR. DRUG CLERK with prescription exp. ASBT. JANITOR, Catholic pret L BOOKKEEPER, exp. with plumblog supplies. BOOKKEEPBR, STENOGRAPHER. EPL iddle-uaged, for - wnburim_ Box 271. 8. Riverdale, Md. _ * WHITE GIRL for chambermaid and waitress in family of 2; good wages. 1863 Columbia SHIFPING CLERK, fim busiess: good open. | rd., Apt. 301 C . salary and commis D WHITE OHAMBERMATD-WAITRESS: o> STENOGRAPHP ttled man, $125 Per MO. | 1ory until Junuary; references required l"n'.'r.’ STENOGHAPHER, $25 per week. ational Personnel Bu., 302 Bond bidg., 13th Cleveland 1995. and N. Y. ave. WHITE WOMAN a8 working housckeeper; $30 th, W. G N o FEMALE. .f. mon! Miss Flia arth, Manass: AMBITIOUS LADIES from 25 to 50 years in- | WILL GIVE HOM terested in making $100 a month, to care for open districts and give residence corset service to clients for the Spirella Co. Give phone number. Ad x 76-R. Btar office. 18 BETTER POS| U cwirae in shoeth and typing, taught in THIRTY DAYS, has care of two children. Ca WOMAN, good, rellable, us references required. Phone A WOMAN—Competent, for genc stay nights. Apply 1815 Kilbourn helped muny to get advaucement and a_better for goeeral housework; must give position. Now {s the time to enroll. Inquire 3916 Huntington st. o.w. 30-Day Stenographic Bchool, Maryland bIdg.. | WOMAN, white, to care for two small children WP Hst.ow, afternoons; refersnces required. Phone Oleve- CASHIER for lunchroom. A 1and 1632 (before 2 or after ) 1 pply Merchants' Lunch_Co.,_ 521 1th st pw. 1T WOMAN—Competent, for general housewor CANVABSERS, $4 to $7 daily. Apply 918 F st. n.w., room 41, 4 to 5 p.m. CARD WRITER. The Hecht Co. requires the serviceS of an experienced show icard writer. Rermanent position. Apply Supt., The Hecht Co., 7th St. at F. TARPENTERS wanted. A landy man to re- ipair farm house mear D. C. line; 3 months i Job. Write qualifications and wa, expected. !’Address Box 115 Rutland Courts, 1725 17th {8t n.w. { CELLO and violin for movie in evening; must ibe A Phone North 9000 after 6 p.m. 3 Private family: city i Whiite: Tef- Apply (in writing) Box 69.R UIN. wiite; must_have jdentifica- rd and know the city well; best wages. rear 1131 17th st n \LESMEN, several, othes Sliop, 930 F _st. n.w. ed yromotion; good e Room 3812, 1311 f HAND wanted, with small . to manage and work small farm near | Whenton, Md. “Address T W. Sclineffer. 1039 Woodward_bld; steady job. J. Carey Kin n {HOTELS NEED TRAINED MEN—Nation-wide CHOCOLATE DIPPEKS—Experienced; at on Main_store, 3012 14th s A ) 2 COLORED GIRLS (10) to work in paper fuc- tory. Apply Washington Paper Stack Co.. Rosslyn, V. CORPORATION desirer services of cultured, refined lad; permanent; advancement: splen- did salary, ‘bonus. Address Box 327K, Star office. DEMONSTRATOR. and L ats. n.e. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT. with stenographic stay nights; $10 & week. Phone Clevelund 793, * WOMAN, competent. for cooking and general housework. 1804 Kiibourne pl. WOMAN wanted, willing. about 40 v can turn her hand to any housework, prefer- ring good home (o & salars: references e changed. _ Phone_(in_morning) West 1700, 1% WOMAN for cooking and general howework; stay nights. 1112 10th_er_n.w. G Apply Swift & Co., ability: must read and correct proof for gram. | COOKS, white or colored, wanted; best wages. mar and punctuation: initial salary, $1.z00 [Rev. F *. 1221 25h st _16* with advance to $1,400 in 2 months. ' Addres« S, part Time by legter, stating sge, experience and phone Fuller's, 1221 number_ Address Box 117-R. Star office. ENGLISH TUTOR wanted by Japanese gentle- WANTED—SITUATIONS Address Box 25-R, tar office. HOTELS EED TRAINED WOMEN wide demand for tralned women; all depart ments, botels, clubs, apartment bouses; un crowded fleld; Bne living, quick advancemen! our methods indorsed—onr students employed 170 TANT Toakkeeper-Typi firn of accounti refercuces: 1 -R._Ktar ot or corpora- erate salars. by leading hotels everywhere. Open evenings. | 3 [ “ran, ¥ Call for particulars. ~ Lewis Hotel Ttll:rn‘u , of ¥ 8 . wishes mosie School. 1824 New York ave. . tion with reliable firm d experie cost_accounting and eystematizing books recently held position as asst. treasurer accountant. with large corporation. Add ce. 1 v in [0 peat colored HOUSE girl; must write a good hand; reference. 13 st LADY—We have an opportunity that will be | Box 220-P, St e AT attractive to a lady of business experience | ACCOUNTANT, now employed, wishes por and executive ability who is desirous of mak- | tion with public accountant or large eorp irg a place for herself in the fuancial world. | tion; best of references. Address Box 11T, Please call to_see Mr. Lewls, 345 Munse | Star office. B bldg.. betwean 2 and 4 p.m. — | ACCOUNTANT, 3 T 5 venrs' leneomen from door To | ACCOCNTANT. “bookkeeper, T3piat; 5 vears LADIES, 'two, bext : Bo: door; good money. Address Box S-R, SIar | Sonp. sier smec ) Ticrences. Address Box ofice. 16" | FOOKREETET, cierical or salesman, positi LADIES wanted by Targe concern: two €xpe- | desired by ambitious Young man, 23; neat th street n. and pa; Star bife DOG, English setier. It " WASHINGTON IGNITION COLLEGE, | The 708 13th st. nw. LOST LINOTYPH, OP) ERATOR — Fermanent. cut steel " ba, Phone_Col._4 RPIN FAG—Tuesday night on the between Clifton and Newton sts. Retury to 1434 Clifion st I near Hotel La Fayette: all Frank. 605, or office of Hotel l‘l | RLACK TRICOLETTE SCARF—Nov. 11 i streed box LITHOGEAPHIQ SAL AMBTHYST PIN. lady's, oval shape, valued as ) ence. wanted._ 1702 F_at. Zift._Retnrn th Reward. 16 MEN WANTED. Your future fa in your own hands—take ad- i vantage of your hest opportunities d make | for yourself a successful future. scientious, diligent work with +Matosss the company that is placing the no- {axle automobile on the market. should put - [¥ou in a_position of large trust and responsi- blity. Do you want this opportunity? We teach you salesmanship and co-operate with pots: answers to na me of “'Goldle. cafeteria ¥, W. C. A. Mrs. Bailey, 027 Ovou Let's talk it over. oL, L1 i ‘I_ BIRMINGHAM MOTQRS, BRACELET WATCH « Figi, plain et ase. Rewnrd, Mrs. n.w. 828 14th St. N.W. N BUNCH OF KEYS. R nitor, Colo- | 3. perienced on_glass-polishing _machiny rada bidg.. cr phone North 2750. * {and Inside glnss Atting: state salary expected CAMEQ PIN, between 15th and 18th sts, on Address Box 35-R. Ktar office. Florida ave. Finder please return to 1436 [ MAN, grocery and vegetabies, experienced. Relmont st. 18° | 2101 Runde Inland ave. n.e. 18 T West Point: reward. MAN for farm; must be able to milk. Rhode himaNorth St e Lo Dairy Farm, Beltaville, Md. 170 FOX TERRIBR PUPPY, white with vellow { SIAN To solicit_orders and deliver bread and Strayed n.w. Reward for return. other bakery products; must havé own mi chine or wagon: splendid opportunity for & ‘rom 1001 Irving s Timmed; Teward. Nov. 12,_vicity, n'w. _Columba AT 2318 hustler. _Address Box 332-P. Star office. 17% MAN with ambition, over twenty-five yea of age. who can qualify for the administrative department of & large company. This oppor- tunity is for a man of energy and resource ¢ho is willing to work to prove his ability | of Immanual ms 619 front Chureh. ck, leather-lined, on Columbia rd.. Finder phone Call to see Mr. Lewls, 345 Munsey blds., be- tween 10 a.to. and 1 p.m. L) WATCH on biack ribhon guard; initial A long-established Wall street fnvestment to 1218 Kenron n. {30, A Monday erenion: anse s opening for sales manuger for its Hompdhice, %8, Bstnm Wasningron bicer Thile experience1s desireds ML 2t st Reward. |1t 15 not essential. Highent references re-| HANDBAG, brown, two handles; containing | quired. Address Box 63-R, Star office. ’ silk dress and Insirance papers. ‘etc. Liberal i e Bo R oo Sy ceward Goshen. 3023 13th st n.w.__ _16° |3, " ince to get what von are worth is of- TADY'S WATCH, small, gold. Reward. retnrn | fered you. Call 334 Southern bldg. between 18% 10 and 1: and 2 and 4 p. pearls. Landover, Md. H. POCKETROOK containing $25 and string of | Reward return Mrs. Gerande, 18¢ MEN to traiu fo their spare tgne for excellent positions as draftemen; individual instruction. day or night. Complete ccurse in 8 to 9 month POOKETBOOK, ai Rialto Theater, containing key and money. Franklin 3156-J. Reward. 17¢ Rates to be increased on September 21. 2nrol now. Full particulars on request. Columbia POODLE—White to, Reward, Return to 12 Columbin_10381. answers to name of New York ave. tortoise rim, in Bdmonds_case. Irving st. n.w. Reward. Phone THREE DOGS—One broken front leg: one picce cut out of teft Alredale gyp. slate lace on I Whi 4P o 16°__ | ear. and it can be learned with our copyrigh black-and-tan hound with | ed course in four to eight months. day or eves e Airedale ing classes. No experience or previous knowl ear and te!i cut off: one |edge needed. We have trained over 5.000 m colorsd. with hair off in | during the past seven years, Call at our office ck. Any vpe returning to O. T. .. will be given $50. 1 WILL the Thursday, | Reward return sa; me to 100 4th ilor who found the 1812 pendant, st. n. n.w. School of Dra ing. 14th and T sts. n.w. MEN—Wireless offers you the greatest oppor- tunity for a resl, permanent. increasing in- come and !ateresting work. Wireless men to- day are averaging from $1,800 to $10.000 a hetween ® a.md. and 9 p.m. and let us tell you ahout yonr opportunities in this fleld. or write one Main 1376) National Radio School. 1345 Pennsvivania_ave. n.w. METAL CEILING WORKERS (two) with good k] WRIST WATCH—_Lady's, gold, Swiss: Monday alght, bet. P and F sts. on i8th or vicinity. {experfence. Apply at 1206 9th st. n.w. (after 4 o'clock). 17 i rienced ladies for Landling ledger and cash: | pearing; 6 years' experience; references. A. ] | demand for trained mer: all departments. | nyst be first-class at figures and willls to b A X ol » ol Cash With Order {liotels. clubn,'‘apartment Touses: uncrowded | work: references: Reply' in own handwriting | s Box 285-P. Rtar office. 1 1 ts fiel fine living, quick advancement: our| p\qqress Box 72-R, Star office. ts job working in kitchen, or garace Is required for all advertisements|||meiiods indorsed-—our students emplored by [ ¢ DRESSSTARING and il Trat 9 fth st mw. g advertisers. {leading_Lofels everywhere. ~Open 'evenings. ESSMARING and milinery, Prol | CHATFFER, colored, reliabie, ¢aperiences articulars. Lewis Hotel Training . 2 Wwill do housework; references. 2410 P ey York ave. 2 SARCEL WAVING LESSONS by French pad » FOUND. By o o T ons | fesor. 020 17th st Call Main 3578, & | CHACFFEUR—Tady Teavieg the oy w B e opposite Wardman Park | iplomn secared It graduste. like to piace her chauffeur, whom he h Taguire Hiriewas, 1131 LEARN IGNITION. PERMANENT found careful driver, nd reliable. C ation and repair of starting, lighting . ‘D( :"“6. P"\’{‘l!hhu l!nfl)ne and"ixnition systemrs, magnetos. etc. Practical POSITIONS 2000 e {instructlon by cxpert. Limited class now form- THAT PAY i CHAUFEUR—Good; colored: city reference 419 0 st nw. . CHAUFFEUR in private family or truck $17 PER WEEK FIRST FOUR WEEKS $1,100 FIRST YEAR. driver; can give reference: G years' experi- AVAILABLE TO SINGLE | %k Bechenical ability. Write N. Rob- WOMEN CIGAR SALERMAN with long experience d BETWEEN THE AGES OF it “stines Bot SL5. sttt omce: = 18 AND 25. COACHMAN—Posltion by white man: Enows thoroughly the care of horses and the city. Address Box 84-P. Star office. 16* COOK, butler or valet by experienced Filipina. Address 1418 11th st. n.w. 176 COOK, Japanece, first class, wants position in private family; thoroughly experienced: trust- Good eyesight, hearing, health and willingness to work the hours assigned are the essential qualifications. worthy; good reference. Ohira, 325 Tth st. we. No PREVIOUS EXPPRIENCED HOUSEMAN wishes a can_furnish good reference; colored. 314.P, Star ofice. 16° FILIPINO STUDENT wishes to work in pri- vate family as_ butler, waiter or housemn Address Box R, Star office. o el GENEHAL OFFICE clerk, experienced ledger and correxpondence work, desires tion. _Address Box 124-R. Star office. HOUSEWORK. general all around done. _ quire R. C. Myers, 640 Acker st. n.e. INTERPRETATIONS and translations inguages especially, French, German, | Bpanish, English. Lewis Simoncic, EXPERIENCE NEEDED. APPLY - * FIRST FLOOR, 722 12th ST. N.W. THE CHESAPEAKE & POTOMAC TELEPHONECO. ROOM, board and small compensation to girl or woman for assistance with housework. 612 Otis pl. n.w. i SALBSLADY wanted in jewelry store. APDIY 1309 F st. n.w. ol LADY WANTED for furs, &t once. Ap- tween § and 10 a.m., the Model Fur 1310 1 By colored man_a i JANITOR—Apartment. wife. Phone N. 9184. MAN, efficient, to act as steward or ik charge of dining"room in club, hotel or res will go out of city. Address Box 3 ST iy Khiop. 823 G_st. 0.w. SALESLADIES, experienced. for our dress d partment; good salaries paid to those tho F gugils, competent. J. B. Cunnlngham & Co. {pyacy gy chaufieur: _colored boy: privats family _or_delivery. 1544 Columbia_st. PRESSER wants steady work, band or ma chine. Albert Johns Address 10 Rallron ave . Hyattsville, Md 1 REGISTERED DRUGGIST desires rellef: erences. _Phone_Lincoln 2600, 17 SECRETARY wants temporary work for a three or four weeks. Address Box 47-R, ffice. SHIPPING CLERI BEAMSTRESS, expert upholstery and dra Reni. Veaner. 905 New York ave. Phoe } 5964, i STENOGRAPHER — Experienced; for perma- ment position; reference desired. 720 13th NOGRAPHER, quick and accurate; must be familiar_with patent work; $25 per week. Room 721. Washington Loan & Trust bidg. 16° STENOGRAPHER for real estate office, one Tetail clerk, typist, by » 3 i high familiar with conveyancing preferred; refer.|Young man of white, experience 3 3 school graduate and two years of college work fiff‘m'.%.u sf.'rmofi;?' and salary. Addrese | ool werk at anything: best of references. Ad dress Box 51-R. Star office. SPANITS experienced, legal commercial education, ally_connecied: good references. Please rr._Address Box 241.P. Star office. 16 STENOGRAPHER, educated, 5 vears' stenc hic and general offce experience, capah ndling correspondence without dictation. . sires immediate employment; moderate sularr Address Box 325-P. Star office 16 STENOGRAPHER-BOOKKEEPER: age 0 singie: five years' experience; capable of fak ing charge of office; immediate conpection {Address Box 6-R. Star office. 16° TELEPHONE OPERATOR, experienced: some clercal experience. ~ Addrées Box 12K, Star office. TNAVELTNG POSITION open Nov. 19 to five educated women, 30 rears or older, with high \ xehool or college training, free to leave city in- definitely: unmarried woman or widow without incumbrances preferred; income, $200, inclu ing salary, commissions and bonus. If willing to work, are optimistic, ambitious and bave persistence and determination to succeed. call Miss Bettion, Frank. 5595, for interview. TYPIST who has had stencil-cutting expe- rience, by information bureau of large corpora- -ENGLISH _stenographer tran: WANTED—HELP | references. profits. Fred Putt, City, 26 Rose st., AGENTS to sell specialties during armament Cconference; ex-service men preferred: liheral w York n.w. REGISTERED DRUGGIST—State age and ex- AGENTS. 1nn-rfi§w-. Address Rox 30-R. Star _office. 1 REGISTERED drug clerk; capable of managing store; good office. MEN, EXPERIENCED truck sale man to handle live truck propo- sition. Address Box 89-R, StariBox 23-R. Star office. * isalary. Address Box 291-P, Star office. SALESMAN, real estate, with _automobile; { prospects furnished; established office. Address | SALESMEN—Batablished local house desires { ]m ‘or two men for its sales force; must have ‘WANTED — One of a salary of a commission and men who have not business, but mus ergy. the art opportun! year. come of our year durlng 19 of 1922 training. Address. Rox 217-P. Star offic was_$2,500. = T B SALARY—Twelve Tundred Goliars (LI00). " | £ood education. Fhr ‘oth ogressive life insurance agencies ‘n Wi Tagton wishes to employ five ‘good salesmen on $100 per month, or more; or on the larg an renewal contract;' el have ambition prefer been in the life insurance d en- ‘We train and instruct our salesmen in of selling “f!' blfl!ll! nce, In,gmfo!‘ that Tenson pay 8 guaranteed salary. - This 15 an Rty tc make gt least $2,500 the firet References gird experience sent to will be treated in esnfidence. The average in- resgnt salesmen for the first We feel satl {fled that any good salesman during the vear should” do as well under our special giving telephone number. SALESMEN, two, representing General Ourd Tires; responsible men omiy, of good addross o0d education, appearance and sales ability. n. SALESMBN—Men who are mnot afraid of work and who can stand prosperity; one sale & day akes & nalary of $36 per week: men in other cities making a8 high as $320 per month. We teach you how. if alive. Apply 204 Dist. { Bank bldg.. 14th and G sts. n.w.. after 3 p.m. HOB SALPSMAN, experienced: one who can | S Midhest credentials: Dermanent poat- e TRAVERS' SHOES, 314 7th st. n.w. 5CK ~SALESMEN_Eliminate _canvassing: !fi;h‘ have. Established concern _requires iZervices of high-grade salesmen. Livest kind of leads to start on, and a selling system {hich you will quickly see emables you to Tclose'" sales far more easily than you have ever thought poisible, and, in addition, cre- ates more “live" prospects’ than you can fol- | t highest class trade, Genera' wire 1low up pfimnlllly. ‘with many sales better Saaca Colt 1411 14th st. mow. Phowe Main |than 306 made “in advance.” Good commis- 6694, 18* sion and tle most unusual sales co-operation ! Weite Sou have ever recelved. _Call at Room 230, SALESMEN—Write for 1ist of Iines and full Y. ave., between 10 particulars; earn $2,500 to $10.000 yearly: big nexperienced or experienced. ilding, 1400 N. o clock, or telephone Main 948 for ap- ticle, exclusive territory i sells to householders and car owne: Address n the District. Box 125-R, Star office. 18* demand for men; N pointment. N esmens Tr. Rl h;?';ln[;.'chlc.fi""" Bal 0s" | TAILOR. Navy Yard Tailor, 407 B st SIX LIVE SALESMEN—Fully guaranteed ar. | So 'KULBLD and_mandolin_ pupils wanted by 4;.mml lady. 2825 14th n.w. Adams 1894. ¢ SAL! fered about See Mr. Levi. «THE H TRAVELING ESMEN ECHT CO,, 7th at F. e e, W oo ADVERTISING MEN, references, for Kelth's Calling on retail trade can take on good paying side line, selling blankets; these blankets are of- one-third below regular price and sell on sight. JUNREGISTERED drug clerk; good salary to right party. Ad- dress Box 289-P, Star office. CPHOLSTERERS WANTED. 1008 B st. n.w.* WANTED—1,600 raflway trafic imspectors. No experience; train for this profession through epare-time home study; easy terms: $110. to $7200 monthly and expenses guara teed or money back: ‘outdoors; local or travel- ing; under big men who reward ability. Get free booklet N-66. Btand. Business Tralning Inet.. Buffalo. N. Y. GVASHMAN—Experienced in flat and starch work; must be capable and have experience. Réward. Apt. 1. 2182 F st n.w. 16" | STTAT WATCHMAN and freman: thoroughly | tion. Oall 581 Southern bldg. BTEXOGRATHIC POSTTION 7. Sows med “H, lady's Elgin, _with goid | seitled. alvolutely reliable white man: steads | {7 {{GT DRAPER, white, first class: long sea- | thoroughly trained in shorthand and type- T, Friaay at Powheton Hotel, with o O e il hent Intanrity, | $018; £00d galary. Address Box 70-R, Star | writing. = Franklin 2094, MC.D. engraved on back. Reward.' West | {0 10 St B et Wilkina. Jonm H. | O 20°_ | WHITE MAN, 58 years_wints work 1 grevi 48, 18" | AihTne (o 519-538 Rhode Island ave. n.e. WHITE, mufile-.rm. w, x:muewox: for tw: :r:ludu rue Felearnor. S’Jnnl;;\r,‘ or w“""x" n d -3 P NEN' N . { Young men on farm; state experience an res Y reen, A1 now. R WRTCE fo e I | nERMAYCYT posrmioNa o i e men: | st on oo o, dnte Sperace gad L o Return to 1211 Girard n.w. | 500 iR with bicycle, experienced; must have | WOMAN, experienced, to help in tailor shop le grocery house; 4 vears' expe Eho 17 ‘Apply Mrs. Walters, 1415 G st. | 1250 H st. n.e. 17* best reference. Address Box S0 Star office. e YOUNG MAN, industrions, desires position i in past 30, for permanent position; business ex- perience not necessary. ~Address Box 127-R, |grocers or garage; have had exerience Star _office. both. “John Duncap, 1403 Girard st no. YOUNG GIRL—Bright, with some knowledge | . 164-W. T of switch board work: answer, giving age. NG MAN, 24, married, desires positi Address Box 123.R, Star office. at anything; neat -pg;c.nniH and _wil YOUNG LADY of refinement under 30 years | worker. Address Box 128-R, Star office 1 of age to assist young married woman in FEMALE. houseliold duties where servants are employed; no onc of the servant class need apply; state accomplishments and salary desired in addi- tion to excellent room and board; give tele- phone number. Add. Box 239-P, Star office. 17° YOUNG LADY, refined, to teach modern danc- ing, evenings. Call at 1141 Conn. n.w. YOUNG WOMAN, well connected socially. snd gne capable of defeloping u large and profitable business for hersel unusual opportunity for the right woman. _Call at 718 Albee bldg., between 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. . p.m. EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES, HEAD WAITRESS, exp., $25-330 per week. BOOKKEEPER, exp. in plumbing ‘suppiies. BOOKKEEPER-STENOG., experienced; know!- edge of accountancy. North 10474, Br. 55. 1z CLERK, four years' business experience, with knowledge of typing and insurance detail work; references. OColumbia 8097-W. . AT sud_dress making. 1540 California st T Penheim, Apt. 108 North 19909, * DRESSMAKER—Eaperienced making and al- tering dresses in private houses or at homie. Addrexs Box 115-R, Star office. DRESSMAKER wants sewing to do at home: children's clothes a specialty. Address Box 45-R, Star office. . YOUNG LADY, general clerk In cafeteris. | DRESSMAKER, reliable, reasonable: take MILLINERY SALESLADY, experienced. t. Address Box 41-R, St STENOGRAPHBR, beginner, most be accurate, | ags, 0™ ©F 0 ou e STENOGRAPHER' with good personality. STBNOGRAPHER with public stenog, erp. TYPIST. 25 or 30 years of age, experienced. National Pe 1 Bu., 302 Bond bidg., Mth and N. Y. . MALE AND FEMALE. OANVASSERS—] EVENING WORK by expert stenographer 213 Mills bldg. Maln €918. 2o HOUSPKEEPER for small wdult family, ecm ploved; very capabls. Phose Adams 39, = * MIS8 BERT—Street, af:erncon and evening enced; salary aad com- alty. edells Phe Col Bt e . Bare, o o W |y b el mhtclag " Fiood FREE LECTURES on real estate salesmanship | NURSE—Desires convalescent or elderly rer- son._Address Box 116-R. Star office. OFFICE_ASSINTANT in physician tist's office, refined young business woman . sires_position: experienced bookkeeper, typi Willing to begin d salary if chance for meritorious advancem daily at 5 p.m. Ch: slavery salary systems: will not nterfere with resent employment. Some making more than $100 weekly while attending classes. ~ Allan W. Gibson, 220 Colorado bldg. 17° HIGH-OLABS STOOK SALESMEN and sales- women; references required. Apply 604 Mc-|is good. Address Box 223-P, Bt: . Lachien bldg. 19°_| FTATN SEWING and dressmaking for ¢b dren a speclalty; by the day; reference. V st nw. SECRETARY-TYPIST by an experienced. re- SEN AND WOMEN quickiy learn Teal estate Dusineds; Peceive pay while learaing: peed not interfere with present employment; some mak- ing $100 @ week. Free class lectures every | BECRETASN, 2 raday, teson, ) igent, settied woman. Addres Thuratay, & D William F. Matf 31 | Lisble, intelligent, ' set 3 STENOGRAPHIC POSITION—Young high school and busivess college gradu: Dank and legal experience. Franklin 2004 TYPIST and general ofice Wwork or WADAFING bousekeeper. Call North 1046-W. . 'WOMAN, educated, desires pa"l‘lllon; .km;:l:ay-l rience, typist, accurate figures. knowledge Smperiente pit, acusle Spuces WoTicte Btar office. YOUNG LADY desires position as and general office clerk: experiencad. Oolumbia 5698 _after 5:30 p.m. NG LADY desires position a# clerk and oINS Kdiress Box 320F, Star ofee, -_17* YOUNG LADY, capable, desires general offce ous. Phose Franki 2000, The inatl . ne n ‘;.’lltv:ll;flxe.:ic‘t Preparatory School, s.e. cor. l%ll n nw. i i U DY or you! ‘with pigh schoal ¥OUXG LADY o oung s i ek sl taition. Arvli at once to Strayer's Business College, 721 13th et. FEMALE DOMESTIC. GYRL wanted to Baip oL OEke care.of ehildres, ~OSL TR, Buchanan et n.w. COLORED STUDENT; board and room in exchange_for_light, inner_service at ) p.m.nm“mll!{:fllt st., near Walter Reed bookberser (2 o 1411 1 Hospital. * | work or operating multigraph machina. 5 " Thestar, attar 10 mora: | Apply Manhattan Laundry Co., | ot iatieaged, for o cor. | dress Box 65, Sia- olicw ’: 1346 Florida ave. ored family to mother chiliren and do T WAL& _AAD FEMALE. Automobile Insurance Men. |wgrrs BoYS for messenger works must Eave | lisht work: good o small wages. 1310 | SR AND GOOK—Colored man 2 it Full or part time. blcycles; steady work; . Baltimore | Que 2 want work with private family. Columbia Address Box 267-P, Star office. Optical Co., 1811 G n.w. 16° 558 boweemald, v private Tam] 4386 160 BOY—ia Teading insurance office; $5 & Jeek | WHITB MAN, youns, hovest, fo drive Ford | piy 1713 N st n.w., between chauffear _and 5 otion; fine chance to learn | delivery and keep two machines clean. If not e Paraen Box 1208, Star offce. do_not answer. Salary 3 Week, | FOUNG MAN as bookkeeper with_ra) tion, = in own bandwriting, stating age, rience and sniaiy expected. Star.fice. . S o Eib " Aha. ‘Box 22T, Star oifico. 17+ | woman, APply at Apt. 74-M, Wardman Eark pply |Hotel____________________ 1 ference, | GENERAL HOUSDWORKDR; must be good eereiws | ook and have refereace: oo lauadry. = AbpLY 2§05 Livisgston 4 0 © even! COUPLE GENERAL HOUSEWORKER wanted; reliable | = ithe ehllb-rnu:l...uléz §422 {t st onowe. 19" MAN AND WIFE as cook and butler; rienced. Call 1521 T st. X EMPLOYMENT AGENCIER PHONE NORTH 8070.J for super servioe »