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THE" EVEMNG STAR, WASHINGTON, "D. C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1922. ~ %4 g e bl School Shoe Headquarters Am S:ylc, Comfert and Lasting Satisfaction Children's Shoes with extended soles to save thetoes .50 Sizes e 11% to 2— ARTHUR RURT : 1343 B F SLCO' THIN, FADED HAIR NEEDS “DANDERINE” TO THICKEN IT 35-cents buys a bottle of “‘Danderine.” Within ten minutes after the first application you can not find a single trace of dandruff orfalling hair. Danderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them, helping your hair to grow long, thick and luxuriant. Girls! Girls! Don’t let your hair stay lifeless, colorless, thin, scraggy. A single application of delightful Danderine will double the beauty and radiance of your hair and make it look twice as abundant, Largest Selling Hair Saver and Beautifier in the World Ring the dinner bell! And Serve Auth’s Frankfurters The dinner- bell rings true when it heralds AUTH’S Frankfurters for dinner! And how the folks do welcome the sound of the bell when the rumor spreads that their favor- ite dinner is on the bill! AUTH'’S Frankfurters taste good . and make good. They are just as wholesome and nourishing as they are delicious to eat. The rich spicing of the Auth secret process does it! X Serve ’em for dinner often and for lunch just as frequently! .0ld Man Coyote Runs Away. | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. No matter how you'd like t 0 *Tia often best to run -wu.° ek | —O0ld Man Coyote. | 014 Man Coyote just couldn't keep away from Farmer Brown's dooryard. i He knew he had no business there. He :now that sooner or later he would be iscovered. But he just couldy't kee away from there. You see, the ufi‘molg of that balf of ham ae had found there before sun-up on New Year day, haif a ham which Farmer Brown had con- eidered spoiled, but which Old Man Co- yote thought was the finest dinner a Coyote could desire, kept his mouth watering for more. | So every night, no matter where he | hurited, he managed to get back there [Just before it was time for jolly ,round, red Mr. Sun to begin his daily climb up in the blue, blue sky. Each time als heart beat high with hope of finding another piece of ham there. - Each time he was disappointed. Still le persisted. ‘Where there has been one feast taere may be another.” he would say to him- self. “And if ever thers is I'll never get it by staying away. 8o, like a gray shadow, he would steal up behind the barn and then, keeping in the blackest of the Black Shadows, would steal around the barn and the hen house, and even around Farmer Brown’s own house. Once he caught one of the children of Robber the Fat who had started to run from the barn t0 the hen house, and taut took the edge Off the appetite that these winter days kept him thinking of his stomach most of the fime. _Always he took the greatest care not to disturb Bowser the Hound He knew just where Bowser slept, in a snug little house built just for him, and he would first make sure that Bowser was there and fast asteep. Then he would take the great- est care not to make the least sound. So.night after night Old Man Coyote prowled .around = Farmer Brown's dooryard, and no one was the wiser. |, He had been there so often without being discovered that he grew care- less at last, and one moonlight night he forgot to first make sure that Bowser the Hound was asleep. Be- cause Bowser had been asleep on so many other nights Old Man Coyote Jjust took it for granted that he was asleep this time. Perhaps vou can guess how he felt when turning a corner of the barn he almos ran into Bowser, who had come out of his little house’ to look around in the moonlight. Each stared at the other in sur- prise for a moment. Then Old Man Coyote whirled and ran. It wasn't that he was really afraid it wasn't that. Right down in his heart he felt sure that he could whip Bowser the Hound in a fight. He ran because he dldn’t want any one but Bowser to know that he had been there. Instantly Bowser was after him, his “wonderful voice echoing across the snow-covered Green Meadows to the Old Pasture as. with his nose to Old Man Coyote's trail, he followed as fast as he could. Farmer Brown's Boy awoke and listened. “Reddy Fox must have becn around and Bowser has found his trail,” he murmured sleepily, and rolled over. Old Man Coyote is light and swift on his feet and he had no fear that Bowser would catch him. But he didn’t feel like being chase So he made straight for the place where he had run across the trail of Reddy Fox earlier in the night, and by a sharp trick managed to break his own trail. Losing this, Bowser picked up the trail of Reddy Fox and =oon he had Reddy running. Bowser really didn’t care whose trail he followed so long as it was fresh and easy to follow. Old Man Coyote grinned as he listened. Then, like a gray shadow, he swiftly returned to _Farmer Brown' dn%:xuf.%.undxs:um about for a dinner he could hunted a! not find. The next story: “Old Man;Coyote Makes a Daylight Visit.” <5 (Copyright, 1022, by T. W. Butgees.) SAVES $1,000 FROM FIRE. Special Dispatch to The Star. ; . FREDERICKSBURG, Va. Janvary 6.—The house of George Dent: agent of the Richmond, Frederickskiirg, and Potomac rallroad. at Sumwit, six miles ‘below this city, burned to the ground Monday nighi. The cause is ‘indetermined. Charles Bullock of Summit climbed through a window of the burning building and saycd a Pocketbook containing nearly a thou- sand dollars from destructios by the dames. While all members of the family were attending church Sunday. the dwelling of S. R. Reynolds, at Stubbs, Spotsylvania_county, was burned to | tRe ground. The origin of the fire is unknown. Neighbors who reached the scene, were able to save some of the furniture from destruction. The residence was partially insured. Italy Declared New and Old (The following is the first of & serles of arti- cles by Edgar Ansel Mowrer on modern Italy.) BY EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER. Before everything else, Italy is old. It is saturited with history and still a little tired with having twice car- ried the burden of occidental civiliza- tion. The alr is heavy with the dust of too much life. For nearly 3,000 years men have lived continuously on the seven hills we call Ronte, and during most of this period Rome has been a city unlike others, more im- portant than they, a center of power, riches, art and nearly everything that men have most sought. Close to Civilisation. In consequence, even in their pres- ent dimmed glory, Itallans are closer to the thing called civilisation than any other white men. There is no pure Latin race, but there is a Latin tradition still active whigh stands e3- sentlally for civilized 1iving, with its virtues and defects. The new Italian sap rising vigorously in the country today runs perforce in the old trunk. But Italians may not, because of this young energy, be classed with crude, truly youthful peoples. However 1o they may fall, they can never become barbarians. Their vices. like their muscums, are those of highly civilized men, worn with much living, old. The history of Italy, of twice con- quering upconquerable Rome, of the hundred jeweled cities of the middle ages, of the mighty men of the re- naissance, epitomizes that of Europe. Egypt, Assyria, Greece represented moments in _human _achievement. France, Spain, Holland, England, Ger- many, however productive of human values, have remained national, each with a nation’s ephemeral radiance and sure mortality. Italy, Both New and Old. But Italy is different; national, yet something more; broader in spirit, ap- parently undying. Though the last centuries seemed to mark a definite decline, the urexpected awakening during the lifetime of still living men checked rash judgments. Italy is old and new at the same time. "It will thrill the world "again some day, and then its universal spirit—so broadly human compared with the petty na- tionalism of other countries—will be the more powerful to save because Itallans carry in their blood the as- pirations and failures of the entire: Christlan era. Nortkern Europe and America rule the world; thelr cities are full of a modern energy, a bustling mechal ical production, a restless curiosity {and courage. Is it not a still greater | marvel that after 3,000 years of pre- ominence Italy is still alive; that it has kept its personality and reforged its nationality? A country that can twice arise from the sleep that is brother to death deserves the epithet | immortal. In the Italian power to come back there is matter for com- parison which might make the en- thusiast over modernity a little skep- tical. What is there in the Italian type of life, the Italian mode of thought, which has saved the coun- try from the oblivion of Egypt, the ignominy of Byzantine Greece, the . sullen somnolence of Spain? It needs investigation. Appeals to Ma: makes its appeal to many It you have forgotten Ttaly kinds of men. MANILA HOLIDAY REFUSED Banks’ Request Meets Governor General's Opposition. MANILA, December 29 (by mail).— Governor General Leonard Wood has declined to grant a petition from the banks of Manila to declare Saturday, December 31, a legal holiday. The banks sent their request to the gov- ernor general with the explanation that since Friday, December 30, anni- versary of the birth of Jose Rizal, Filipino patriot, was a legal holiday they thought Saturday should be de- clared a non-working day as well. In his reply the governor gemeral said that such a proclamation would mean stopping business throughout the islands and depriving an indus- trious man of work necessary to his family's support. “When Hubby starts to get‘picky’ abouthisfood,” wifey confides,“l just add variety to his meals with Ancre Cheese —and he praises me loudly!” New, Coaled, Sanitary Wrapper . ANCRE Hith the Gonuine Roqacfort Flawtr: CHEESE Made by SHARPLESS, Phila. sse A PERFECT COCOA ~protected from the tin” == SIR THOMAS & LIPTON Lipton’s Instant Cocoa is protected by a special airtight grease-proof paper lining that prevents contamination from the can. G Lo s PTON'S cOCOA Cru If your husband were unfaithful, if he had deserted you, you beg him to retutn? [ Thatis what an! wife must o s English wife mus cle on the divorce problem in England and America. The January Bazar features g cha Eati b seadigas. t to Mandfiftblxmub I : ‘Be sure to getyour - 2 early. o Now on Sale THE USUAL QUANTITY | In Story of Glorious History that man is only man down the ages and not in any one place or moment, If you have estimated study Italy. beyond the just value the modern pe. riod of mechanics, or have grown foolishly proud of your own country and its intangible institutions, re- member Italy. Coal or grown frantic at the unre- lieved ugliness of commereial and im- provised centers of life, visit Ital For te unde; nding is to perceive why God, lootfl:‘ln‘ on His work, saw that it was good. Permanence Rome’s Suggestion. “Rome was not built ina day” But Chicago was and Berlin was and Liverpool was, and even London was largely reconstructed in the days of Queen Victoria, and looks it. Already the New York of a gemeration ago is disappearing to make room fof new constructions. Churches pronounced marvels—hyperbolically, of course— are replaced by the temples of big businéss, bigger and better than ever. At Rome the stock exchange is housed behind the grave of Corinth- lan oolumns of eptune’s temble. That is the differenc In the cities of progress &verything is rebuilt within the life of man. Onward and upward! Youth and efficiency and the will to power! Vim, vigor, victory! Throw away vour hammer and get a horn and blow, brother, blow! “I remember,” cries the ecstatic octogenarian, ‘when cows grazed over what is now the center of the city of Chicago.” Don grandfather; they will again there. Why should they not? there anything in our American citles that was intended to last? Our present skyscrapers will have been constructed many times before the sites are abandoned, but it may well be that when Rome means no more than Nineveh the Colosseum will stand indomitably in the Cam- pagna and the temples of Paestum still testify to doric taste when an Asiatic or African. flag_waves over Europe. ~That is the difference. On one “side change, boundless, largely aimless activity, faith and unlimited self-esteem: on the other stability, eontemplation, skepticiam and en- And, most of all, if you have been hungry for light as you worked in gloomy streets under sodden skies in the cities of King e Italy with the eyes of the during monuments, Life must be work and worry as LIMIT ON MARRIAGES. well' as enjoyment and mediation. it STy Surely, we t ali live in Italy, Pro D ey ubat gy Dawish Tew, T ropossd A Rectin giths Insane and Imbeciles. Then he who brings nothing but curiosity or contempt shall go away COPENHAGEN, December 16 Persons of deranged minds and “im- as empty as he came, swearing that there is nothing that need appeal to Dbeciles of a higher degree” would not be allowed to marry without perm the giants of the modern world. But to him who comes with sympa- xion, under a proposed law pending in_the Danish parliament. thy, humility and imagination ali Paorsons suffering from a certain things shall be given. Heavy Heritage of Past. infectious disease or epilepsy would not be allowed to marry unless the By a normal pressure of elimina- tion only fine oid things have sur- vived in Ttaly, and compared with the|other A o creations of the moderns they scem | Viously informed ) fects anc the work of superman. They are;|both parties have been warnel by o they represent the sifting of cen-|Medical man of the dangers of mur- turies. It is no wonder that most|Fiage in such circumstance Ttalians, drawing the comparison, - should foolishly respect all that is ol TWO COLLEGES TO BUILD. Special Dispatch to The Star. LYNCHBURG, Va., January The wuxecutive committee of en to the extent of intrusting their government to old men, or that inde- pendent Itallan youth should revolt violently aguinst the oppressively :-:;:cfll"-u."‘"“:;ge:r‘fla;:i’éu‘l;':?fl"}“g‘l’fi, Womarr's College here hus let a m-i movement is a little too slow to suit ods. Twenty centuries of greatness|iract i@ John P. Pettyjohn for erec-| Australis. Australian government of- Weigh heavily on modern shoulders,|tion of a student building to cost|ficials point out that Great Britain e ey o o o ders|$175,000, the work to be fnished for| cxpended nearly $1,600,000,000 in 1920 and in matter of mere echnlaue e icommencement week in June. in public assistance to unemployed a3 nes adm The sume company has started work | and others, and they add that much on the new Baptist College near | of this might have been saved if these Blueficld, where three new buildings| idle persons had been transported to are to be erected at a cost of $200,000 | Australia, where they could have sup- for use next September. ported themselves. The Standard of Purity them as a human heritage and do not have to live with them, each ancieml custom or costume, each mossy stone, may be a source of undiluted pleas- For Matchless Quality is Far Ahead of Any Other Tea Moy ure. I remember my joy when an old “The Sealed PacKet is Your Safeguard’’ Sl g et e e AUSTRALIA MAKES BID FOR 11,000,000 PEOPLE Wants More Inhabitants, White, and Preferably British, to Help Develop Resources. MELBOURNE, November 30.— Aus- tralia wants 11,000,000 more inbabi- tants as soon as she can get them, and prefers that they should be of good white stock, preferably of British derivation. ~ This additional population is regarded as necesgary 110 develop the resources of the coun- ! try. in the light of those figures, Aus- tralia can hardly be eaid to be en- tirely satisfied with the arrival of 20,000 former soldiers of the United 6.1 Kingdom, who have emigrated to | Australia’ under the government emi- thel gration scheme since thé war. This fisherman at Capri explained away the swelter of an August day on the ground that it was the “heat of the lion.” He had never heard of the zodiac. 1t is annoying to Romans when for- elgners suggest that all the-houses along the Corso, or principal street. might profitably be torn down to make room for interesting archeo- Jogical excavations, but there is much to be said for both sides. At Naples, amid streets overflowing with street cars, automobiles and pe- destrians, I have seen garbage thrown in a heap on the front steps of a large modern apartment building. Later a man drove a flock of twenty goats through the traffic to those same steps, and while he milked the goats the zoats ate the garbage. The sy: tem is not general and surely not san- itary, but it pleased me. In much of southern Italy these goats are a per- fect pest, devouring all vegetation and small household objects within reach, and even climbing into young trees and eating the tops. It annoys the inhabitants, but I enjoy it; they | are not my trees, and the sight of a pensive nanny perched in a tiny tree overhanging a 600-foof drop is in- epiring. Foreigners can afford to be rolerant. = — | at i | FREE With Every Pur- chase of $100 or More a 26-piece Set of Wm. A. Rogers Guaranteed Silver- ware or a 42-piece Set of Beautifully Deco- rated Dinnerwar Kettle, 5-qt. Aluminum 69c v i Coal Hod and Shovel.. Guaranteed Quality at The National Furniture Co. Left from Stock-Taking, and the quantity is limited, so if you want one, act quickly. Greatly reduced—to close—at— $2.98 $3.49 $4.98 Mahogy-F inisLiving Room "igite Consisting of Table, Settee, Arm Chair and.Arm Rocker, covered with good grade of tapestry. - Easy Credit Terms at “The National” STORE HOURS: Credit—Service—Low Prices at The National Furniture Co. 8 AM. to 6 P.M. Saleof Warm Comiorts “The National” i i This Four-Piece' Bedroom Suite In Rubbed Mahogany Finish E,t:artly As Sketched Above Only a few of these attractive suites left. They consist o Large Size Range of Large Dresser with plate mirror, Chiffonier, triplicate mirror, Toilet Table and Full Size Bed. Specially priced for the January Clearance Sale............. With large oven, built teed iron. of guaran- High Spe- shelf extra. cial— Easy Terms at 445