Evening Star Newspaper, December 3, 1921, Page 8

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limit of satisfaction 233 and the limit of value in the 234 Fuel we furnish. ' GRACE 4th and F Sts. N.E. PERLING FURRIER Importer Exceptional Values in| Coats and small pieces| of guaranteed quality 1336 F St. N.W. Don’t let winter's winds ahd snows play. havoe with the woodwork of Your home. Paint Phone us. Interior and Exterlor Work. &- K- FERGUSON, INC. 3iy's.. Patating Departwont. Ph. N. 231338 XMAS TREE Ol‘TFfl‘ WHIL LAST ¥or House Current or Battery . E EVERY SET GUARANTEED Also large assowment of different coler ®ulbs, fancy and plain, at reduced prices. PENN ELECTRIC & GAS SUFPLY CO., I 9112 NINTH ST \ ©pen Evenings Prons Matn 813 | A Beautlful Lamp? . BOUDOIR LLAMPS TABLE LAMPS FLOOR LAMPS Beautiful Silk Shades in the new at- tractive shapes. Priced to please every purse. $5.50 Up. + MUDDIMAN 616 12th St.—1204 G St. ; on!” i LL ul:.y :oldsbused to make me a ‘shut in,” but no longer, for ¥ take Dr. Bell’s Pme«Tmffioney at the first warning of a cold. This standard remedy soon relieves a ool grippe, cough and hoarseness. Eases ti ling in throat. Safe for the ht(lefellg:oo. USE SLOANS TO | EASE LAME BACKS| U can’t do your best when your | back and every muscle aches with | fatigue. Apply Sloan’s Liniment fieely without rubbing, as it penetrales uick glow of warmth and com- Im ml put the “pep"” back into you. for rheumatism, neuralgia, lmnbago. sciatica, sprains ‘and strains, aches and pains, bruises, stiff joints, bed weather after-effects. For 40 fimmSlmn 's has been the nt in thousands of bmu all over the world. You'll find it clean too—lav’lng no skin stains, muss or cl;ged pores. its very odor—health stimulat- fi:;—sugguu the it will do. Keep a bottle handy for you never when you will need it. = - Atall drugguu—-&Sc 70, $1. 4’0. H mpden—"Bomeo and Juliet.” | \ | ithe Senate in {counts of thi v {HOUSE P. 0. COMMITTEE lcommittee on post offices and post mental appropriation bil Iwinding iron. stair ithrough so that the committee clerk ifor the agr INDUSTRIAL UNREST REPORTEDIN JAPAN' Rumoljed Lay-Offs, | Strike and Agrarian Dis- . putes Cause Discontent. ed Press. { vember 8.—Industrial dis- d land troubles are churning, n Japan into a spirit of unrest according to the! and discontent, Asahi | Rumors that 00 workmen would the Kawasaki dock rly this month greatly excited the ! ofticers of lh ! r at fresh work would be s the construction of the At: | & still larger vessel than the Kaga. | ssertions that the plant o company sold to a of the past week, w ted with the workmen, issal if the plant changed the E h |When their application for ine | wages was refused. Agrarian dis Ad in the Hi th & s ultimatum jalternative of {auest or of s 1h.mu ot to A creditable performance of “Romeo and Juliet” was given last night at| the Shubert-Garrick “Theater to a| { crowded house. Walter Hamps Mabel Moore left l‘. ed. Miss \hmrel S s of i lqul meu\ ]uul?m in the ,. { Vation of the role of one of the Pen- | st of heroines. Mr. |1} cutio was spiedt | B of his robust ssence of elaborate scenic ef- mentioned before. | hances the inter- | in the acting of | again mentioned | vorthy comment. SAYS INTERCORPORATE HOLDINGS WRONGLY USED i i { Included in Figuring Returns on Investment, Brotherhood Econ- omist Tells Committee. se of intercorporate holdings in uring rates of return was charged against the railroad corporations of (the United States by Frank J. Warne, economist for the railroad brother- hoods, in testimony yes rstate confine [tee. He added that as | continuously lower retur |ed by the railroad companies. Mr. Warne said that the capital ac- corporations showed in- rday before ce commit- nsequence | (3 re report- tments of bonds of other 25 per cent of the ! aimed as transportation | Such investments, he as- I serted, were not aiw governed by { their anticipated revenue production, | {but were made for the purpose of con- | trolling or influencing managements. The intercorporate holdings, the iwitness said, had resulted in many iforms of evil in financing, the least {of these, he added, being the decep- | tice on the public in the cor- efforts to "show poor re- | !turns on the investment as a whole. MOVES FROM OFFICES | Change Made Necessary to Provide More Room for Appro- priations Committee. This is moving day for the House It is moving out so that the ap- fons committee can have larger in which to conduct simulta- hearings on several depart- The House |)Jpr1)pn iarged in the ns committee, ngress to thirty- ns functioning re to handle ap- rtmentally under m. This uircs a considerable increase in cler- help as well as mcre coramittee rooms large enough for hearings. The appropriations committee gets | three new rooms on the first floor of ol. directly under the old! ions committee room. A se is to be cut n its reorzanized fon bills dej can proceed quickly from one floor to the other. The room of the House post office ymmittee was originally designed | hltural committee and ls' considered one of the finest (Gmmllw H one of Brumidi's cinnatus at the just been restored ‘after having been partially disfigured by the fite. This| room was the one originally done by | Brumidi to show Congress his skill | as a decorator. It is considered his best work in the Capit GREENFIELD -INDICTED | TWICE FOR ROBBERY The grand jury reported .two mdm-l mente for robbery yesterday against Philip R. Greenfleld, 20 vears old, who is charged with robbing Ernest L. Brown cashier of the People’s Commercial and Savings Bank, 3608 Georgia avenue northwest, last July. In the daytime, Greenfield is alleged to have appeared ) at the bank and covering the cashier with a pistol, rcquired him to surren- |(} der a bundle of ten and tweénty dollar bills, totaling nearly $1,000. i\ The second charge against Green- ! M} field deals with a hold-up at the store |1l of H. W. Kendrick, 3325 M street: northwest, July last, about one week | prior to the bank robbery. Mr. Ken- | drick told the police that about Llos- ing time a man walked into his store | and asked to be shown a pistol. He!: then requested the merchant to load. the reyolver, which he did. ' Taking the loaded pistol, the robber pointed Fer M\IDOM it at the merchant and then bnckedl ) out of the door. Greenfield was not apprehended un- | @Al til late in September, when he was | located at Savannah, Ga., and re-| turned to Washington. | Others indicted ‘and the charges against them are: James Page and | Maywood Pope, robbery; Wilkiam Al- fred Branson, housebreaking and lar- ceny; Murray Wison, William H. Beckton, Grant Russcl and Richard |33 Freszzeill, grand larceny. ; (xeorge is at a most inter- % esting stage—dealing with the happenings at Versailles, NG ECEMBER 3," ‘1921, In Evew Edition of The World Accurately Mirror he Fnening Skoe — The Sunday Star You'll read about. ev thing that’s transpiring every where—just as it happens, not colored by imagination: but the FACTS as seen and heard by The Star’s great news-gathering forces. It is printed with the comprehen- sive detail that makes The Star a COMPLETE newspa- per; censored only to the de- gree that sustains its reputa- tion as a CLEAN newspaper. To read The Star is to know all about what is going on everywhere. Philip Kerr’s series of ar- ticles on David- Lloyd in which all America is con- cerned. ~ Anne Rittenhouse has had a peep into the studios of the leading Parisian designers of feminine fashion and has written telling her lady friends all about what she has seen. Nitti, former premier of Italy, writes an- other of his interesting and instructive articles on the phases of political and eco- nomic affairs in Central Eu- rope. Francesco Andre Tardieu, former French high commissioner to the U. S. reflects his countrymen’s views on the developments of the Arms Conference. George N. Bames. British parliament leader, in a very interesting article, will give the trend of thought in Iing- land as shaped by the trans- pirings in the Limitation of Armament Conference: “The Man Who Would Be Crooked”—By Arthur Train. Only the very highest class fiction finds a place in the Magazine of The Sunday Star. This special story will delight and thrill you. “The Alibi Absolute”—By Ger- ald Mygatt. A writer new to the’ Sunday Magazine, but a story which will hold you to the very last word. “Schools for Uncle Sam’s Detec- tives” — William ]. Burns, new chief of the nation’s bureau of in- vestigation, has started schools where detectives are trained. Read of his plans for a system greater than Scotland Yard. ‘“When Marines Guard the Mails”—This new job.of the Ma- this branch of the U. S. fighting force. What the Marines have ac- complished in the past. 4 Is to have it dellvered to your home DAILY and SUNDAY by Star Carriers. The *agazine Section Never more readable than it will be this Sunday —sparkling with these and other unique features: rine Corps is but an incident with - A Feature of the Rotogravure Section on Sunday is the great gridiron battle fought be- tween the Army and Navy cadets last Sat- urday. Our photog- rapher succeeded in getting graphic pic- tures, which thce Rotogravure process has faultlessly repro- duced. “The Rambler in Prince Georges County”—A continuation of the story of Vansville and Ammendale neighborhoods by this popular writer. “Inez in a Skidding Act”—By Sewell Ford. “First-run” story by an.author wha has been featured for many years. “The Poisoned Wine”—By H. Hesketh Prichard. The last ad- venture of Don Q., a fascinating character of fiction. “Little Things That Tell Who You Are”—One of the most inter- esting, features in niany a day. \Iarjone Wilson, a writer of note, interviews one of the world’s greatest identification experts, and —but wait for the article. “The Best Part of My Golf"— By Ring W. Lardner. The Arms Conference A true record of its progress, chronicled by trained newspa- per men, whose profession it is to report, not theori o re- late facts, not exploit fantasies —thus giving to Star readers an unbiased and impersonal digest of the council’s delibera- tions, written in the plain Eng- lish of journalism, rather than in the mystic phraseology of diplomacy. To read The Star is to be correctly in- formed on the vital topics of the day. The Speg:ial/ Features in Sunday’s Star will be of engrossing interest to everybody The Be' W» 0 Get ; T Star‘ Then you will not miss a single issue- Society has had a busy week, with a busier one in prospect. The Sunday Star will tell you all about who is entertaining who in of- ficial and private circles. Financial Digest. The business man will be inter- ested in the reliable gossip of the markets, both local and *“‘on change.” ‘What is your hobby—art, music, literature, the clubs, the screen, the stage ? Which- ever it is, you'll enjoy the entertaining news concern- ing cach. - The Comic Section—Get ready for a hilarious visit from the funny folks in four colored pages of laughable episodes. This section be- longs to every member of the family. The “Store News"—The Star carries the complete messages of Washington’s leading merchants, and just at this time, when Christmas shopping is an engrossing topic, you will find the ad- vertising columns rich in suggestions profit e to fol- low. Daily and Sunday............60c a Month' - Call Main' 5000---Clrculat|on Department

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