Evening Star Newspaper, January 24, 1922, Page 12

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D. 0, "TUESDAY, ‘JANUARY 24, 1922. ALBERT H. MOOREHEAD DIES. WACO, Tex., January 24.—Albert Hodges Moorehead, a teacher of voice here and son of the late James Turn- er Moorehead, former Governor of Kentucky, died here last night. He was born. in. the gubernatorial man- & -WWAHNGTofi,. FINDS FUSEL Q. | P&rececrions or Boys anp GIrLs - HELD MAINLY DUE TO LAZY PARENTS INBOOTLEG LIQUOR |Only 2 Per Cent Free From Poison, Prohibition” Di- rector Declares. ¥ NEW YORK, January 24.—Assert- ing that only 2 per cent of the “vile Stuff” being 'seized By prohibition agents is found to be free from Polsonous fusel oil, Roy A. Haynes, national director of prohibition e forcement, told 500 New York pastors that-he .was “not surprised” at the number of post-holiday alcoholics under treatmént fn New, York hos- Warning to motorists. Don’t Be Misled by the Just-as-Good Kind ‘ EBONITE For Transmissions and Differentials Flows into EVERY MOVING PART N and stays there, lubricates better and longer. TAKE NO OTHER. Sold in five and twenty-five pound cans by garages, gasolinc stations and acces- sory dealers. C.G. Sloan & Co., Inc. AUCTIONEERS 715 13th St. »m A wonderful collection of Genuine English apd American Antiques, Valuable Paintings, Persian Rugs, BEGISTERED \ojern Mahogany Furniture of Every Description,. Japanese Art Objects, Rare China and Glass; Curios, Brasses, Mir- rors, Draperies, etc. At Public Auction (by Catalogue) : Within Our Galleries 715 13th Street; Wednesday, Thursday and Friday January 25, 26 amd 27 At 2 P. M. Each Day. By ordér of John W. Childress; Executor of the O. G Shpliu Estate; F. S. Key-Smith, Attorney for a client in Europe; the heirs Modern 1ife {s not interesting to children. The adolescent girl's amusements are created for her; she has few tasks to hold her mipd. The modern girl is all right; she is as fundamentally sound, as her grandmother. It's her surroundings that are all wrong.” Miss Ferris made a plea for young woman social workers. “The older women,” she said, “do not understand the girls, and they ' permit them amusements which the girls themselves would taboo were they to_,be put in charge. ‘They will be uch more strict than the older gtneration.” The conference awarded Miss Cecil Francesco, Kansas City lead- er of the Camp Fire movement, the medal of honor for having submitted to a blood tranfusion to save the life of a man, a ‘stranger to her. By the Associatéd Press. > 5 NEW YORK, January 24.—Par- ents have grown laxzy, and are re- sponsible, in the main, for: dere- lictions of boys and girls, Lester F. Scott, national executive of the Camp Fire Girls, and Miss Helen Ferris, member of the executive board, told 100 executives at a conference here. - It {s because parents permit children to crowd yast excite- ments into a short period of life, Whereas these experlences should be absorbed only after years, that adolescent boys and girls get wrong impressions and viewpoints, both speakers maintained. Glr,l:l and boys should be taught work,” sald Mr. Scott. “The mod- ern child now is surfeited with films, jazz dances and what not. sion at Frankfort, Ky. He Is surviv- ed by his wife and two sons, James T. and Alfred H, both of Lexington. He was seventy years old. For Office Help Phone Main644 BAYERSON OIL WORKS * Manufacturers, Erle, Pa. Pennsylvania Petroleum Products MAKERS OF AUTOCRAT MOTOR OILS Houses to Sell We have immediate purchasers Phone or write description. Union Realty Corporation . 1410 G St. N.W. Main 8415 ERIE PENNSTLVANL ot the Woodhull Estate and others. ; % “‘f‘:{!:'d Tl oo SAILORS NEAR MILLI ONAIRES Th . Now-on View. g the Taw In the purehame of the atuff I 4 4 e d it i i Catalogues on Application to ghiu ittt BY MONEY OFFERS OF RUSSIANS| by E L rm: . G. Sloan Inc., Aucts. “When you hear & 5 rea Terms Cash C. 6.8 & Co, Lonalell‘;'en nzc?“ fi:ll;:':n!:nily "\:fiw‘: “‘f,:‘.fi,’ o lsALn-‘Ak;. N s; January 24— lth;t& ep;uand ne;llrg. a?gntol:’flt h:l had sp flld . f l k B ootlegger’ he either has not thought ailors on the Canadian government i pound for 750, rubles. on the 2 s “I was told by R > 8ovi ty G order’ which the bootiegger repre- :;;:::’;‘,,p“;::::’u;f‘:m:nfi:l“d wo\;m‘i:'?:tumhy a’;;log;i‘é:'u':r;czlffi;;;f | Daily The .ex-ceptlonal q:uah of E rove = utter sents or a d P es ant O tat] - Valuation on the eanctity and majesty | of becoming millionsires white tneic) | . ment “eventually wottd he: enten - | Bread eXplalnS 1ts popularlty. -Through years it has of the law."- : ship was at'anchor at Novorossisk, | Loned:” he udded. —*Business ap. | 4 pedred to be dead. Well dressed people were seldom seen, but food seemed fairly plentiful. Everybody ‘was pessimistic about the future of Russia except the official propa- gandists of the soviet.” Says Law Is Being Enforced. Director Haynes insisted that pro- hibition is being more and more rigidly enforced. despite what he characterized as “an insidious, clever, unpatriotic, false, wet propaganda, particularly in the large metropolitan centers, that had for its object the delusion of the American people into southern Russia, from which port she has just retiyrned. The steamer was sent to Novorossisk with a car- £0 of railway cars ordered by the Russian government, and almost every man had opportunity to ex- I — change what money he had for bol. | The Dest in the Cheapest shevik rubles at a rate of exchange | . that was almost bewildering. capt. | We will Faulkner said one of his men was always preserved its uniform excellence. Elk Grove Butter the belief that the prohibition v is a failure; 2 R S oftered a million rubles for an Eng- | your 1.03:7 comes in neat germ- ! tha s no eing enforced and | = | on mont y i 1 - [ serted” there. are thivey mald organi: COURT.RULE FAVORS 20, |payments pl'OOf cartons which zations in evistence, “striving night and day to bring about the impossi- ble—the repeal of the eighteenth amendment.” ¢ & The speaker called ipon the <clergy 1. 1"8CHarr Electric Co.| 739 11th St. Main 1286, NEW YORK, January 2. rly a score of aliens detained at Ellis Is- land come under last week's ruling of the United States District Court of Appeals declaring imprisonment pending deportation for a greater period than four months illegal, Rob- ert E. Tod, immigration commission- er, announced last night. The decision was handed down in the case of McGregor Ross, a Scots- man held at Ellis Island more than a vear for deportation as a radical. The British government refused to permit Ross to land in Scotland, and the prisoner finally obtained his re- lease on a writ of habeans corpus. The court held that “the right to de- port does not include any right of indefinite imprisonment under the | guise of awaiting an opportunity for | deportation.” | Some of the aliens being held in excess of the four-month period were Sold By Grocers Who Supply Their Customers the Best Butter hospital cases, Mr. Tod said, others | being detained through operation of | wisseaselis. GOLDEN & Co., Distributors 00 | The Great Pyramid and Washington Monument Three thousand years B. C. the Egyptians. built the Great Pyramid. 3 Eighteen hundred years A. D. the Americans built thé Washington Monument. . The Pyramid was built in twenty years by - 100,000 slaves; the Washington Monu- ment was built. by contributions from millions of free Americans. The Pyramid is a monument to the exploitation of the many by a sin- gle tyrant. The Washington Monument keep it nice as long as there’s any left. to uphold him, saying that prohibi- tion was sponsored by churchgoers and {ts enforcement ghould have their support. Definite and Sure. “I make bold to make this state- ment,” he said, “that there never was serlously of the menace to law andl { a law enacted in any civilized coun- try as drastic as this law, which had been so early and =o successfully enforced.” He described the prog- by 30 years With Each Pound of Elk Grove Butter Are Inclosed Two Coupons, Which Are Redeemable in Rogers Silverware. ress of enforcement as “insistent, definite and sure.” asserting it de- crees “the final doom of the -illegal liquor business.” Optimism for prohibition enforce- ment also was expressed by William H. Anderson of the Anti-Saloon League, who followed Mr. Haynes with a statement that “a year ago crooks, both officlal and unofficial, were not only partners with bootle; gers, but were getting away with Today many guilty men, both of cials and others, are in the federal penitentiary and others are on their way.” —_———— NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN BAPTISTS IN CONVENTION Informal Sessions Are Devoted to Educational and Other Subjects by Religious Leaders. COLUMBIA, Mo., January 24.—What those present_said was the first con- | ference between members of the ‘norflnrn and southern branches of the Baptist church since the war be- tween the states, began here today with laymen and divines from many parts of the country attending. Education, especiaily that of a ligious, nature, in Baptist institutio. was one of the principal subjects to come before the conference, which lwm continue through Thursday. At the outset it was stated that | the meetings are wholly informal and Ithal none of the churchmen present | Start with the simple A, B, C Espandex guides. ‘Note that all tabs are at.. the extreme left. -Fi irst Expansion When too many cards .represent any organization. sccumulate behind any - k d y ‘The opening program called for the | presentation of suggested topics fo one, guide for rapid ref- | Bonversaion 3 MEE Hele Bt H lontgomery, ochester, erenee,dr.opml first ex- | dent ‘of the Northern Baptist . pansion guide. Co! vention, Dr. 'E. Y. Mullins of Louisviile, v, president h Southern Baptist Convention. Others on the program of the three: 7 Record, Raleigh, N. ®; Emgqry Hunt, president of Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.; Rev. R. . _Hitt, editor of the Religious Herald, Riq mond, Va.; C. W. Chamberlain, presi- dent of Denison Wniversity, Granville, ©Ohjo; Dr. J. Y. Aitchison, director general of the board of .promotion of the Northern Baptist Convention Rev. Shailer Matthews. Chicago; Kathleen Mallory, Birmingham, Ala.. Rev. J. E. Dillard, Birmingham, Ala., and Rev. J. A. Francis, Los Angeles. Second Expansion When there is s still further accumulation of cards, drop in a second e was erected by a free people pansion guide. Thus, the to the memory of the man name “Andrews” is filed whom the whole world . ‘behind A-N-D. honors and reveres. The store of bygone days . over whose door could have been printed the words, “Let the huyer beware,” is as far removed from PIGGLY WIGGLY as the Great Pyramid is from the Washington Monument. ‘Over the PIGGLY WIGGLY Stores could appropriately be printed the sign, "‘Satis-' faction to the customer,” for at PIGGLY WIGGLY the customer finds only nationally Third Expansion ‘When too many “An- drews” cards accumulate, known goods, the customer selects the goods with his or her own hands. The customer separate them .from all can return the goods if not satisfied and the purchase money will be cheerfully refunded. - Sne s 5 & G Nuts—These nuts are left from our with A-N-D by dropping tter, Gilt Edge Cream- 4 | Soap, Kirkman’s Borax, P. 3 u hese v Kyl in an “Andrews” guide. o er:'; > Pe: lbI i Lt 45¢ Naptha, Star or Fels Naptha. @ fancy Ch’f‘fitmasuegechtgseaflgtz 1;;1:3; g 2: g § & ase e vene i : Same for the “Bennetts,” Egi Fresh Brookfield. - PBerubar! st iniaan il ¢ we are mixing e o “Browns,” eto. HowtOB eStr ong In cgfts;ms, per'doz......... 55 Y Soap Powders, Star Nap- ?)fm ;gls. Sp eaa ! pr B p i 25 C .Exercise makes strength.] Exercise Cheese, Wisconsin E““ SOC flll: and Fels Naptha. Per 6 % C ; Cocoanut, Baker's - Fresh 1 5 C ot e Cream. Perlb............ DEE. Setddhe St et e Grated. 10-0z. can......... Shoes contribute to weakness or strength, to illness or health. The only objection to proper. shoes— ‘“they look so”—has been entirely overcome by the manufacturers ofl Cantilever Shoes. Style has swung around from .the . .poitited, long vamped, high heeled shoe to the efficient, correctly shaped shoe for daytime wear. (Evening dress -is another matter.) . Shaped like the foot, flexible like ‘the foot arch, Cantilever Shoes are encoumaging women to: walk more, to exercise, to enjoy an_active life. The flexible shank permits the arch muscles to function'naturally when you walk (instead of kinding the ), -and this exercise makes , prevents weak and fallen HE most scientific and effective method of obtaini equal : sub-divisions andjnstant reference _valué in your card’ index. Let us tell you* more about it. When you wear Cantilever Shoes, you are taking steps to improve your streéngth, yoar health and your hap- piness. And you are dressed, in good style, Sold in Washiangton ~only{S 128 13th Strest NW. . i by'ms. . Desks, Chairs, Tqun,“l"l:fin( Safes 1319F St NW. .’ i Peas, “Petit Pois.” No. 2 ‘Peas, Sifted Early June NOS 2 CAR s b e susriis Peas, Early June. No. 2 ' Tomatoes, Del Monte. ‘No. 2 can, solid pack........... ‘Tomatoes, Wagner’s. No. - 2can,. : Tomatoes, Wagner’s. No. *30¢c 18¢ 14c 20c¢c 14c 16¢- 385tores : Piggly Wiggly 38 Stores Cleansers, Old Dutch, per Cocoanut, Baker’s Shred- pkg., 11c; Sunbrite .......... ded, 2-oz. pkg., 7c; 4-oz. pkg. 6¢c 13¢c Gamsiid - Bl O B O ArPZO ...uliigaaiaane e R ZOC Corn Starch, llc L Per pkes il e i Duryea ......ccoococncenes Raisins, Small Sun Maid. 4C Flour, Gold Medal- or Pillsbury’s Perpkg, .ooiilion . ciiogensn Raisins, Sun Maid, seeded, 2 5 C . or seedless. Per pkg........ v Chocolate Bars, Borden’s 5 Pod . Sweet Milk or Almond....... 4 C Best, 24-1b. sack, $1.20; 12-1b. sack, 60c; 6-1b. sack........ 32C Pancake Flour, Pillsbury’s 1 5 Pod 17¢ or Aunt Jemima. Per pkg.. Buckwheat Pancake Flour, Pillsbury’s. Per pkg....... Gum, Wrigley’s, all flavors. Per pkg. ... = 3 ’

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