Evening Star Newspaper, January 24, 1922, Page 15

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— Lisk Your Appointments In Half-Hourly Appointment Books These convenient little books — just the thing for physicians, lawyers, bankers, bro- kers and other profes- sional men—sell for $3 They are ruled and printed with half-hourly figures for each day in the year. The covers are GENU- INE LEATHER, the paper HIGH-GRADE and the edges GILT. wor What Is the Lure of ‘the Other Woman?” 915 SOUTHERN BUILDING. | IFFER OVERCAT INPRIE OF NEALS One Man Sees Decline, While Another Says Portions Shrink With Charge. Are restaurant prices in Washing- ton high or low? ng publication in The Star f an article telling of low- on such meals, divergence seems to have arisen among those who patronize these eating ‘ places. Armstrong Perry of 1513 O street 1 presents the bright side. He declares , that it is possible to get an adequate ! breakfast' in Washington for one- lthh‘l.l the sum of 75 cents to $1.25, | prices quoted in the article referred to. He cites a modest cafe where he ts two meals for not more pia per day. If he eats a he has been eat- : thero for threc months and a { thorough physical examination - has ;shown him to be in excellent condi- i tion. Boosts “Reasomable” Places. | “We kick a good deal these days bout high prices,” Mr. Perry said. 1 can say from experlence that it is uch more satisfactory to hunt until find a place Where the charges are satisfactory to me and then boost that iplace. That hurts the profiteer just {as much and helps the general condi- | tion. mor restaurant gives a breakfast consisting of fruit, THE EVENING BTAR, | watermelon that' .t"all!:l a_value of 0, Tipped Out of Bed By Fraternity Brother, College Student Dies UTICA, N. Y., January 24— His ukull tractured when he was playfully tipped out of bed by a fraternity brother at Hamilton College, William Duncan Saun- ders, xon of Dr. A. P. Saunders of the faculty of the college, died in a Utlea hospital. ‘The young man, a freshman, felt no ill effects at first from falling on ‘hix hend, but later beeame unconscious, He was only fifteen years old, the Yyoungest student {n the college. ing to size, and sometimes 5 for a sufficiency of gingerbread; a-pint of milk for 10 cents; bread and butter, relishes, condiments, etc., for a penny or two or_ three. civing din- ner served there for cents would have satisfied any one but a gourmet. “On the other hand, there are mary places in Washington w under a vicious system of reducing the size of the portions and increasing the prices therefor, charging extra for bread and butter, drinks and side dishes in addition to the hlnplu chnrge for a scanty table d’ employing a dim t of bringing Dle table, you @ quan- . which test at- mpt to flavor, for anywhere from 75 cents to §L or more, plus a dime for the waiter. Cannot Blame Wholesale Price “This gloomy picture has its e: ception which points to the loose screw. It was my experience not long since to eat in an Italian res- , where, although the food idishes to rest on iure vermitted to & or bacon or ham |3 st_beef hash with hash brown 1 or toast, coffee, This is a sample. { Luncheon r from 30 to 40 cents, fund dinners from 40 to 50 cents. This restaurant is located near onc of the zest government buildings. There is a roast spring chicken dinner for 65 cents, i __This sounds good. But adlong comes | Barl Browre of 1916 F street, to say ’that he has been “gouged” in a mod- est, unassuming little eating place “which does .not even boast table linen” and he must needs take up the cudgels for the Washington man or woman of moderate means whose employment compels him or her to forego the viands of a boarding house and adopt the alternative of shopping about for food. He believes that the article referred to had reference in the main to eating places such as | hotel cafes, restaurants located nea hotels an laces boasting, in addi | tion to their menus, something addi i tional in the w phere” or servi l)lnlur for 60 Cen | s In 1 of the supper or dinner variety ‘uhlchi\\er one cho: 1 160 cents at the m | the rule in this p! for rge for the meat base office busines more. The c of the menu s two years and | de dishes ar ts, salads 10 or 1 sert, 10 oF 15 cents, accord HY must ““another woman’ so often come into mental reservations? woman?’ Read How Lillian Gish Learned to Con- centrate—by Martha Parkhurst Why did Minnic Maddern Fiske and John Barrymore declare Lillian Gishthegenius amongmotion-picture actresses? How did this twenty- three year old girl achieve this dis- tinction in but eight years. By her beauty ? By the direction of David Wark Griffith ? An absorbing article tells you how she learned to concentrate on her role in spite of hot, blazing lights that almost blind the eyes ; clicking cam- eras; stage carpenters—and all other distracting and nerve.racking annoyances. o 1s to be Psycho- o ired by Floyd Del «¢] wasn’t satisfied with myself,”” says Mr. Dell. <1 wasn’t achiev- ing anything. I wanited to write 2 novel, but I had been fiddling on, always gomg to, never doing any- thing about it, spending sy time dreaming. «¢Jwasn’ta lazy person. Icould work like a lumberjack at any other tok. What was prcvcming me? Nothing—and yet everything! And so 1 had myself Psycho-Analyzed.” What is the secret of her scemingly irresistible attraction that draws him away from home and family? What is that strange spell that brings destruction to so many happy lives? Is it true that a man cannot hold faithful to his wife for life? takes his vow at the marriage altar with Why will a man trample under foot the devotion of a beautiful, faithful wife,—cast aside loving children—hurl ambition, achievement, and honor ‘into the discard—wreck his life’s work to bask in the smiles of “the other Wuh motive-dissecting pen Mr. John R. Coryelllays the bidden mpulses and passions that actuated Robert Thorn to cast aside marital duty and honor for «the other woman.’ Through this heart gripping story yoa will learn the price that Barbara Thorn paid to learn the nature of ¢¢her one man.”” Through this frank, enlightening story you will a man’s life? ; ‘That he ‘Stenographer or Wife Beginning in February Issue of The National Pictorial Monthly learn who is to blame for the double standard. you will think this Well, it «took!”’ Mr. Dell wrote his novel. Hundreds of thousands of copies of it have been sold, and the people are still talking abont it. Will Psycho-Analysis do for you what it did for Mr. Dell. He tells you in this article. Are the Newspapers Responsible for the “Crime Wave?” «The Press, Prohibition, and the Reform Laws have caused many of the hold-ups that have terrorized business and society.”” ‘This is the startling as- sertion made by a reformed bank burglar. The < Crime Wave*’ is one of the most serious menaces to our social and industrial life. Can it be stopped? This former bank burglar says it can, and tells how in an amazingly interesting article in the February number. ‘What Man Has Done You Can Do! Whatever your ambition in life someone before you has done that thing and done it well, And you can do it too if you know how to go about it. The reason for existence of the National Pictorial is to farnish inspiration to its readers—to convince them that they can accamphsh the things they want to do, that they can achieve the things they have ia mind, by showing them how the same ambitions have been realized by- others, - While entertaining you delightfully, think along the lines that build success. self. February issue now on sale at the news stands—z5c per copy. National Pictorial Monthly Now on Sale at all Newsstands 25 centa o\ 3 Suppose that you were to dmwer that gour husband thought more of his stemographer while with you than of you while With his stenographer it must be in order to faithfully depict an evil that is rarely given much publicity. But every woman who reads it will at least understand the possible situation that she may be called upon to face tomorrow—perhaps has already faced it. the same figure in t of resta This thing—wholesa longer be held ceou charges on the il of fa D to but one may no t for the “Thers are some individual items the charges for which are nothing less than painful and quite unex- plainable. The particular cause for this burst of indignation was two slices of pineapple pierced with three toothpicks for greater ease in han- dling, at- 30 cents. Had the pro- prietor been: present or had the servant been a man it would have been necessary to extract half that charge from my hide. And from all that I can ascertain, corn fritters are worth their weight in silver. If there is any one In Washington who can obtain more than seven or| eight square inches of corn fritter rage thickness for less than ts 1 should like to make his Corn fritters are to v m . but I know of element that enters into their com- ition. 'He who first contrive to charge 10 cents for one and one-half boiled (plural) must indeed have . nce he mashed those added flour and ps butter for the and produced a pasty sub- hat no Irishman in his most ucid moments would ever recognize. The charge made~ for potatoes (plural) applies to one and one- h hsrmonfuln of b 25-cent Georgia Perhaps enthralling serial sordid in places — as the, National Pictorial will make you Get a copy.to-day and convince your- \ /7 D. C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 24 1922. ° REPUBLICANS TO GATHER FOR LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY Biggest Party Gathering Here in More Than Eight Years Is » Expected by Leaders. Practically every member of the re- publican national committee. and & number of the republican state chair- WPSET Sll ‘WASHINGTON, men and ,governors of republican states wilf be among the many promi- nent guests who will attend the Lin- coln birthday banquet to be given by the League of Republican State Clubs of the District at the Willard Hotel, February 11. ‘Willlam Tyler Page, clerk of the House of Representatives and presi- dent of the league, in making this fact known, said that the indications are, from the great demand for {nvitations, | that this occasion will be featured by the. largest gathering of prominent national republicans anywhere from $1.75, all through the magic of & 20-cen: rail- road trip. Calls Cretonne Camoufiage. . “Another breed of food profiteer seeks to reap all the advantages of the self-service system in the way of lessened overhead expense by remain- ing blissfully unconscious of the fact that the word cafeteria spells lower. sentatives, ‘members ‘Washington. There present. A. E. Chaffee, prices. Prices at this type of place smack altogether too strangely of ta- ble linen and waliters. A few yards of cretonne and eccentric-looking chairs and tables may constitute the|, camouflage that bridges the gap, but they do not fill the aching void at meal time. “As may readily be seen, it has not been my purpose to be profound or to present a mass of data of painstak- W ‘That have made is to be no lriflP —and R ing accuracy. Rather has it been my alin to present the side of people per- | [ndigestion Flatulence haps a grade lower in the soclal scale nd" bere. than those represented In your story. | Gorness Acndlty Palpitation 2 and to present it in like tenor. The 0“ : whole question is a matter of com- mon knowledge among people in Washington who find it necessary to take their meals in reastaurants, cafes and cafeterias, and there can be but little doubt that they all feel that the time has come to call a halt in food prices. If the restaurateur has mnot yet learned that the war period is past and that the time to come down to earth is really at hand, he should be apprised of the fact in uumistakable ters 100 YEARS OLD; NEVER H.L. DANIELSON, Conn., January 24— Daniel Cook Rawson, who observed the 100th anniversary of his birth yes- terday, claims that he never has had professional medical advice as to health. He spent the day in bed be- cause of a recent fall. He likes to read history, but has never been to the “movies.” yenrs. Instant relief! No wémng' A few tablets of harmless, pleasant “‘Pape’s Diapepsin”’ correct acidity, thus regulatmg digestion and making distressed stomachs feel fine. Beststomach corrective known. i x AM. to 4 P.M. Popula”i'f Records By All The Most Popular Stars Do you know that nearly nine-tenths of all the phono- graph records made in America are popular numbers? Song and dance hits, popular ballads, band music, - vaudevilleand comic opera tunes, old familiar melodies —that’s the music most people rcallyv,‘v'vant and enjoy. Americansarealight-hearted,laughter-loving people. They refuse to take their amusements too seriously. Because Columbia ‘has always led in up-to-the- minute music, all the up-and-coming popular artxsts make records for Columbia only. You follow the crowd to find a good show. Follow the popular record fans and you’ll get what you want on Here’s the Pick of the List more than eight years. Besides these out-of-town guests there will be present senators, repre- and others in high official posttions in possibllity of President Harding being ! will onvinced ®hat tha there ‘Terms of payment fo nu—ex-ml Cleanliness is one of our many —30 years of good, honest ll(.nll!ll‘y our record. Open Every Evening Until our affice in your mind. Dr. Wyeth, FOX-TROTS QUARTETS ‘Wabash Blues. The Colum-’ Inthe Evening by the Moon-} General Pershing Mmh bians . . . ... . -|A.3497 | light. Male Quartet. Co Prince’s Band A-6053 Tuck Me toSleep (In My Old {750 lumbia Stellar Quartet . .{A-2683 | pagadena Day Mmh $1.25 Kentucky Home). The Co- Where the Silvery Colorado[ 75¢ Prince’s Band . lumbians. . . , . Wends Its Way. Tenor ] O e Ay Ll e, olum] e el 3 B e Who'll Be the Next One (To(A756 + |~ Comfield. Male Quartet.| , 457" mfl;‘nfim"“’,m‘h Cry Over You), - Medley. SOR “: 5 Q“"D:':“ 75¢ The Hapgy Sz e Columbia Btellar Qartet . RepacsBandMarch, P“"‘" Say It With Muflamgl‘%o S Ginstieakate . Pen Band il A-2987 gz‘l‘u.:b&x .R o "l “12 tet. Columbia Stellar Quar-{ o _oggy l’::rnxcc:: Band m 3! 25¢ Rainbow. m il J"t'::lmb'ia;- e SweetAdeline. MdeQuarm. gkl March Boceacclo. Prince's Yoo-Heo; ‘Tt Heppy Sik A o Quiastet Band . ., . . ,. .|A-6195, i ‘Happy Six - . Vacant Ch-ir. M-l:Qunrtct. When the Grand | ou FI-: $1.25 : e = Tanting Tonight on the Old {A7A808 . » Sweet Lad, fim\Tm‘arm. ‘enting To on 4 wl;:ro."vynnpln: Ro-e,”'Co- ~Camp.Ground. -Columbia | - 7§c St. Julien March. Columbia A-6100 oy oo Gyl Elientiileodl i Salute to Butalo Murch. [ $125 South Sea Isles, Intro. “She’s( 75¢ ‘When I’m Gone You’ll Soon Columbia Band . '. . R Ay 18 Farget. Beetlcss Quartet . | ) 3310 Ay ite's s . 1 Love Y. Jmtth.S‘m., Patrioti Aln.Medl Part1. The Happy Six . . . . Sweet Adeline: Male Quar- 5c ’.Pdmxc .ey 3 WnngWuuBluu. Tedl.ewh tet, Pecrless Quartet -, Patriotic Mn. Medley pm * and His o el o3 75(: OntheBahksof the Wabash: IL. Prince’sBand . . Home Anln Bl-m- 'l‘ed Male Quartet, . Columbia| . '3 . -|A-2903 Sal-0-May. Paul Biese Trio .| A-3484 | M of Old Songs. Mate[ 7 e = h A Catallna, Béul Biese Trio } <t 'Co{um'ba. s‘f‘“"f lmh&mv arc] 75¢ ‘Hark, the Herald Angels in this® city for tendance. of the 'cabinet is also = strong reported that the indications more than 600 persons will be in at- re that Among these will be a number of women prominent in re- publican politics, one of whom will be included among the speakers. C. L. Snyder, chairmmn of the speak- ers’ committee, announces that there only four .or five speakers at Edgar this “republican love feast,” but they Dr. s dental perfection. the ,most SANITARY and best T, PQLIPPFD offices in this part of the country. Four “entire’ floors of two -entire buildings glwn over to operative and mechanical dentistr. thing in the practice of modern dentistry you \\l“ All work domé withouf the slightest semblance of pain by Dr. Wyeth and Staff of Expert, Careful Dentists—that haw, be my record forgthe past 30 on free. ng features My perfect|Golda Crowns Suction Teeth | and Bridge 'Will Not Slip Work, or Drop—S$5.00. Other Sets of ‘Teeth, $5.00 up. Per Tooth Lady and maids in attendance. Opposite Lansburgh & Bro. and Tnlon Tea Co equipped parlors in Washington. Fillings. 800 to §1 in gold, silver, gam or poroelai chairman of the| will be selected from among the best finance and invitations committee, has ' republican orators of the nation. W TO SEE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES h's work famous throughout’the District hile trifles make perfection—perfection is R o'clock, and on Sundays 10 All work Fully Guaranteed for 20 Years. Kl.llly keep name and location of 427-29 7th Street N.W. over Grand Largest and most thorough, Ph. M. Columbia Records All 85¢ 10-inch Double Dlsc Records Now 75¢ SACRED l.nad Kindl, ht. Cysena Gwd;U' . |A-3308 1 N..d Thee Evety Hour. | $1.00 Cyrena Van Gordon . “Life's R'Afl\ynyjtq, Heaven. . Oscar Seaglc an eQunr A-3420 s B, T5% .8 s, 00 The Name' of Juu- is So > Sweet. Oscar Seagle . . Abide With Me. Rosa Pon-| 78557 selle and Barbara Maurel . | $1.50 bara Maurel and Male Quut:t 2805 A-6198 $1.50 Sing. Barbara ur:l and Male Quartet . Steal Away to Jesus. Fiske A-2m o Com All Ye Faithful. ] University Male Quartet Little David, Pl-y on Your Harp. FukeUmv:nltyMule Qumet . He Lifted Me."Gipsy Smith . |3 Juun.thol-ithlof tl-eWorld A;l‘;? All Columbia Grafonola Prlces Reduced $275.00 Model Reduced to $175.00 225.00 165.00 150.00 ’ 125.00 Prices on all Columbia Grafonolas have beeq reduced. as shown here. ° modern Grafonola with all improvements for less than you would pay for an old-fashmd unimproved phonograph. . - Visit the Columbia Dealer nearest ym:. ‘He will gladly play for you'any, Columbia Record " you wish on any Columbla Grifonola. COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY , New York Sats You can get a - “« %' « 150.00 “[ \“ % 14000 - e 125.00 n ’loooo, {7 o) ss00 4 45.00 30.00,

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