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See the Parker- Bridget adver- tisement on page 5 of this paper Painters May Paint ial low prices are belng quoted by un For ok o be ‘completed quring Janu. afy and February. 1114 9th St. N.W. Ph. N. 331-233. PAINTING DEPARTMENT Check) [“Chex” That } With iCough Cough] 30¢ nome‘“'smp At All First-class Drug Stores. CLOTHES GREAT SACRIFICE SALE Every Suit and Overcoat In the House Reduced educed Rochester’s Famous Hand- Tailored SUITS CLOSING OUT ALL RAINCOATS AT COST STANLEY CLOTHES SHOP 1209 Pa. Ave. N.W. STANLEYi ——— [T e e e e —— PHILADELPHIA WOMAN AMONG HIGHEST IN TAX RETURN ON $6,157,638 | PHILADELPHIA, Pa, January 27.—Oue of the largest individual tax returns ever recorded in Phila- delphia has been filed by Mrs. Anne W. Courtland Penfleld. She ac- knowledges ownership of personal property worth $6,157,638, accord- ing to tax books which were open- ed for inspection today. Alexis I du Pont, whose return several years ago exceeded $5,000,000, made a re- turn for the present year of $812,- 700. ' The A. J. Drexel estate flled a re- turn of $9,668,284, and the H. H. Pennsylvania corporations. Houston estate, $7,160,296. The late Senator Boles Penrose's personal property was valued at_ $100,000, and Benjamin F. Shibe, base ball magnate, who died recently, re- turned $103,388. The city tax is assessed against real estate, money at interest and stocks and bonds of other than —_— ARCHBISHOP ASSERTS RIGHTS OF CATHOLICS Baltimore ,Prelate Proposes That Organization Be Improved, in Holy Name Address. Improvement of organization among Catholics for the upholding of their rights as American citizens was urged by Archbishop Michael J. Curley of Baltimore last night before more than 2,000 members of the Holy Name So- clety of Washington in the Holy Com- forter Parish Hall He spoke plainly of his disbelief in letting' “sleeping dogs lie.” “If you let men walk on you, on your rights as American citizens and as Catholics,” he said, “they’ll walk on vou, and they're right. If we al- ways lie low and wait for the storm to pass it will never pass.” He spoke of conditions in Florida and other southern states, which, he declared, had seen an intensified anti- Catholic campaign growing during the past seven years. He sald that he would mention no names in reference to those attacking the church, but added: “You know who they are as well as I do.” The need for providing educational facilities for children of persons un- able to afford pay for higher educa- tional courses was emphasized dur- ing his talk. He declared that children were not being given sufficient education and urged that the child be given a chance to go higher than the par- ents. He urged especially the com- pletion of a high school course for children. Archbishop Curley also gave a brief resume of the activities of the Holy Name Society and {its history from the time of its institution to the present, and concluded his address with a eulogy of the late Pope Bene- dict, whom he termed ‘“the Pope of peace and the lover of mankind.” Representative W. Bourke Cock- ran of New York, also delivered an address, in which he urged members of the Holy Name Society to lead an upright Catholic life and let the Holy Name Soclety spread. Patrick J. Haltigan, archdlocesan president of the Holy Name Society, presided at a short business meeting preceding the addresses, and intro- duced Rev. P. Gavan, pastor of the Church of the Sacred Heart, who made ‘t:hel speech presenting Archbishop urley. —— PACKERS ARE ACCUSED. Complaint Filed Against Armour & Co. and Fowler Packing Co. Violation of the packers and stock- yards act of 1921 by Armour & Co. and the Fowler Packing Company is charged in a formal complaint filed with Secretary Wallace of the Agriculture Department. The complaint, which was said to be the first formally filed under the new packer oontrol legis- lation, charges that the defendants’ practices include “price fixing in its worst form” and are “tending toward an absolute monopoly in the purchase and slaughter of hogs.” The complaint sets forth that the two packing companies receive, buy, water, hold, weigh and handle hogs at the Mistletoe stockyard in Wyan- dotte county, Kan., in a manner which violates the control act. Shipments, R is alleged are solicited and ship- pers consign their hogs to the Fowler Packing Company. On arrival, the complainants declare, the “hogs are unloaded, weighed empty, watered, but not fed, and then reweighed.” The companies maintain a staff of buyers, it is charged, “whose duty it is to watch all sales of hogs on the open competitive market at Kansas City, in the morning, return to the Mistletoe stockyard to fix the prices to be paid for hogs consigned that yard,” where ‘“shippers are without representation,” the defendants’ buy- ers acting “in the dual capacity of buyer and seller.”” . —— Miss May Hamilton Horton of Bir- mingham, Ala., is one of the few women in the United States who are holding official positions as weather observers. You;l_i_ Ag’ree Glass Table —a_handsome table, buffet or bureau is 'worth protecting. Why worry, then, over the small cost of hlvlnw vide a GLASS TOP? BECKER PAINT & GLASS CO. 1339 Wisconsin Ave. Tel, W. 67 CHAS. E. HODGKIN, Mgr. Be Careful What You Wash Your Hair With Most soaps and prepared sham- poos oontaln too much alkall, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is Mulsified cocoanut ofl shampoo, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It'e very cheap and beats anything else all to pleces. You can get Mulsi- fled at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. - Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. About a tea- spoonful of Mulsified is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, ereamy latl thoroughly and rins ‘The hafr dries quickly and evenly, and 1is soft, fresh-looking, brisht, d easy to handle e i R cleanses ment. R AR SRR Relieves Rheumatism Musterole loosens up stiff joints and drives out pain, A clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard, it usually brings relief as soon as you Ir start to rub it on. It does all the good work of the old-fashioned mustard plaster, with- out the blister, Doctors and nurses often recommend its use. Get Musterole today at your drug store. 35c and 65c in jars and tubes; hospital size, $3.00. Better Than a Mustard Plaster THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. U, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1922. T — i ‘EIRMRALTGL g B H L RGN First of All— Dependable You can bank upon the authenticity of what you read day after day in The Star. It’s news-gath- ering organization is trained to a degree of conservatism capable of differentiating between FACTS and sensational rumors. The world is the field covered, and every min- ute of the twenty-four hours of the day the argus eyes of this army of correspondents are keenly focused upon what is happening— seeing everything; ex- aggerating nothing. 5 g § 2 g 2 A A TR ATARARATRAE ol The Editorial Section Eagerly looked for Sunday for its special articles on the vitat topics of the times—from the pens of those most competent to discuss them. fall of Eamon De Valera. And in addition: O NN i MO ?MWWMMWMWWWNWLMWW There's lots to be told of So- 2 Clety’s doings. The season is at 2 its height right now. It's all in 2 Sunday's Star. Mr. Business Man, the Finan- cial News in Sunday’s Star will interest you, showing as it will the trend of the market and the tendency of securities. O AT T Next Sunday’s menu will include: Strengthening Morale of Labor, by Will P. Kea- nedy—the big part Secretary Davis and the Depart- ment of Labor are playing in the administration’s program to make and keep America prosperous. Fate of Irish Patriots, by Rev. Dr. Peter Guilday, professor of history at the Catholic University of American—an historical reflection inspired by the The Chile-Peru Controversy, by Ben McKelway —an explanation of the Tarcna-Arica dispute, which is being brought to Washington for settlement, upon invitation of President Harding. Former Vice President Marshall, N. O. Messen- i ger, Oliver Owen Kuhn, Henry W. Bunn, Edward N. Dingley, G. Gould Lincoln and other writers familiar 5 to Star readers will have articles of timely interest. E Mt ot TR P Reflecting European Th Especially at this stage of the international tangle is it interesting to read the views of our European These are graphically set forth by The Star’s trio of special correspondents located at three strategical points— cotemporaries. L R George S. Barnes—who sits in the British Par- liament and is a participant in, as well as an interested observer of, his nation’s policies—writes of the Eng- lish mind. Andre Tardieu—a distinguished Frenchman who has lived among us as High Commissioner for his government, and who is close in her counsels, is in wonderful position to accurately reflect public opinion over there—which he is doing in his weekly letter in The Sunday Star. Maximilian Harden, the German publicist, is a plain and forceful writer, with clear vision of condi- tions on both sides of the ocean—and is interpreting for Star readers the political and economic mind of his countrymen. L T AR A G R Anne Rittenhouse has dropped the ladies of Washington a “spe- cial delivery” letter on Spring " fashion, written from Paris. You will read it Sunday. Muse with the Muses—read of what's being done in Art, Music, Literature—locally and elsewhere. Nothing so T Pictured News The Rotogravure Section brings to you in picture events and their participants while they are still news. phically illustrates and so realistically portrays as does Rotogravure. It is the last word in picture printing. it S The “fans” will have lots to read about in the Sporting Sece tion of The Sunday Star. They are “polishing up the diamond” now for a lively season. The Merchants’ Messages were mnever more interesting than they’ll be in Sunday’s Star. You'll find all the store news there. ought T A e L ners of the earth. a loud report. place. afford to miss it. The Fraternal Societies and Clubs are doing things these days—which make an interest- ing chapter in The Sunday Star. There'll be a scramble for the Comic Section Sunday. All our old friends are mixed up in ludicrous situations. Four col- ored pages of hearty laughs. iR M The Sunday Mazagine An appealing popular feature of The Sunday Star, with its always fresh and enjoyable miscellany. You'll pronounce next Sunday’s a banner number. “Uncle Sam Goes Gunning For Trade With a © Motion Picture Camera” A romance of American business. film, showing our industries, are going into the far cor- Wholesome The mission of The Star is to supply to the community of Washington a history of current. events, so complete that it keeps = one fully informed. To i read The Star—Daily and Sunday—is to know all about every- thing that’s transpiring at home and abroad. But it.is printed with a strict.censorship that keeps avery line clean and wholesome—fit for the reading of every member of the family —and welcomed into every home because it is a safe and sane news- paper. | How tin cans of “Old Iron” A Story by Stacy Aumenier. This new writer to The Sunday Magazine has pro- duced a tale like you have never read before. look for another story by Stacy Aumonier. “What About Your Coffee?” Do you know where it comes from? The story of the production and marketing reads like fiction—but it is fact. “Missing Out On Bumbo” The title of this story tells you who wrote it. Sewell Ford writes very few “duds,” and this story goes off with You will “She Climbs to Fame on a String of Pearls” The fact story of a “Scottish Jenny Lind,” who paid for her musical training with a string of pearls. The last pearl is secure, and the singer has found a prominent “The Men of Zanzibar” P One of the last and best stories of Richard Harding Davis. The famous author, traveler and war correspondent reached the fiction heights with this tale. You cannot “Lardner’s 1922 Rules For Warfare.” “Rambler Continues Story of Bladensburg.” “Sun, Sand and Soap,” by H. Bedford-Jones. “Great Links in National Park Chain.” gt I S NG LR Mo E N The Screen and the Stage— what's coming to Washington theaters and gossip about the leading lights in both profes- sions. The Automobile pages will be full of practical “dos and don’ts” that will help the motorist to care for and operate his car more satisfactorily and safely. LR U ek 2 AN s T e Star Carriers Will Deliver The Zoening Shoe—The Sunday Shar Direct to Your Home—Promptly and Regularly 60c a Month. Cé.ll Main 5000---Circulation Dept. 8 i 1 AT P T T PN W LT & ] H e g = = 5 RN