Evening Star Newspaper, March 5, 1922, Page 10

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P ¢ 9 332 9804400000000 b TR TRTITRHTIT service. There are two kinds of people ~ who buy Rugs One is the kind whose first question is, “How mu¢h is it?” The other asks, “How long will it wear?” And you know which one gets the most for their money, too. A few dollars to the original purchase price often doubles the years of service. : Not how cheap but Low good, is a good thing for you to remem- ber in buying rugs—and yet it is not necessary to be extravagant to get a good rug. Here at Mayer’s Lifetime Furniture Store you will find the best- looking Wiltons—fine heavy Axminsters and lots of Velvets—all good rugs, and yet inexpensive. Look them over this week—you may need a rug or so—but be the * kind of a buyer that asks, “How long will it wear?” Lifetime Furniture Is More Than a Name Seventh Street Mayer & CO 5 Between D & E 3 You'd Sprely Think It a Misprint If we itemized in this advertisement the prices of the good reed furniture on our display floors—a great number of odd pieces and broken suites have been reduced so greatly that if we quoted these reductions the Better Business Bureau would certainly investigate to find if we were telling the‘L truth-—and they'd find we were, too. Anyway, you'll find a suite—a- settee or a sofa—priced so low this week that you'll think it the price of a single chair— and it’s not cheap, ordinary reed either, but £he regular display specially.priced to make room for spring goods. We'll promise you the prices will delight you—so come in, please. Lifetime Furniture Is More Than a Name Seventh Street Mayer & CO. Betw;e;lb &E ¢ 5 Price and Cost—The cost of a piece is the price divided by the years of ]wmeh is in the rotogravure section TIME] S~ jLadd of Boston, an eminent sculp- ] against the sea as a background. On jone side is a camouflaged ship, typi- : : THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON ALMAS TEMPLE FAIR ‘| GORGEOUS DISPLAY Garden of Allah to Be Con- spicuous Feature—Opening | Tomorrow Night. ‘With the last nail driven and every inch of space in the big auditorium decorated with flags and flowers, those In charge of the Almas Temple Shrine fair, which throws open its doors to the public tomorrow night at Convention Hall, declared the re- sult of the undertaking was well] worth the two weeks of work spent | in preparing the huge spectacle. Workmen and scenic artists, under the direction of John J. P. Mullane, director general of the fair, kept hard at their task until ‘midnight last night, and exactly at the stroke of’ 12 -Illustrious Potentate L. P. Steuart, called it “a day,” and an- nounced “the job finishe Outstanding Feature. The Garden of Allah, the out- standing feature of the bazuar,'is clajmed to be one of the most beau- tiful stage settings ever erected in the National Capital, and. ‘according to Mr. Muilane, the Shriner who finds part of this far casi- | himself as one extraordin: Ttmost care in _dec also been displayed tions in the hall entire into a v Following the arrival at the hall tomorrow night of the several units of Almas Patrol, which is scheduled for 7 o'clock, ' Potentate Steuart, flanked on all sides by former po- tentates of the temple, will welcome all on behalf of Almas, after which the big affair will be on. Medical Staff Installed. In anticipation of record-breaking crowds, and to allay any fear of lack of attention in case of accident, the management will install a medical itable fairyland. | ] ‘ staff, with interns and nurses in uni- form, who will render first aid to any that might need it. Throughout the evening music will be furnished by the oriental band, the Almas orchestra, the brass band and the drum corps, and dancing will be continuous for those who desire it. Included In the special features for the opening night are Mme. Lulu Es- corot, “direct from Broadwa. { Tokey, the Japanese “marve I zig, “the crysial ball wizar a full band of gypsy dancers. A l three-ring circus. with all that goes with it. will be in continuous opera- tion throughout the entertainment. Patrol Units in Uniform. All units of the Almas Patrol, which includes the floor team, glee club, oriental band. automobile club, drum corps, drill team, brass band and Saracen guards of the legion of honor. have been ordered to appear in full uniform_ at headquarters of the shrine. 711 13th street, at 6:30 sharp With Potentate Steuart at their head, they will then parade to the hall. The doors of the hall will open each. evening at 6:30 o'clock, accord- ing fo a decision reached by the com- mittee in charge last night. PAGEANT AS FEATURE. \ Entertainment at Cathedral Close for Benefit of School. “The Cross Tqlumphant,” a pageant of church histoty, by Marietta Min- negerode Andrews, will be produced in the Cathdral Close on Friday, May b, when the performances, under the auspices of the National Cathedral 8chool for Girls, will be for the bene- t of the School of St. Mary's in the Grove, Raleigh, N. C. the oldest school of the Episcopal’ Church in America. Rt. Rev. Alfred Harding, D. D.|° Bishop of Washington, is one of the sponsors' of the pageant. Other spon- sors are Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Gailor, D. D, Bishop of Tennessee; Rt. Rev. Charles Henry Brent, D. D., Bishop of western New York, and Rt. Rev. Jos- eph Blound Cheshire, D. D., Bishop of North Carolina. The executive committee, of which Mrs, James Carroll Frazer is chair- man, will meet the sponsors of the various scenes of the pageant next Wednesday at the home of Mrsa Fra-| zer, to complete organization. The vageant is under the direction of Mrs. Marie Moore Forrest. | i JURY AWARDS $5,000. | Administrator Wins Verdict in Death of Abel Savage. Edwin C. Dutton, administrator of | the estate of Abel Savage. has been awarded a verdict for $5,000 damages by a jury _in Circuit Division 1 before | Justice “Stafford against James J. Roche, Otis Angevine and Bertram R. | Spurr. The defendants consented to the amount of the verdict Spurr employed b two sLopping March ‘D. C., MARCH 5, 1922—PART 1. O For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Upset Stomach, i "Colds, Bilious Liver The nicest cathartic-laxative in the world | —thoroughly! “They work while you sleep.” for grown-ups or children is candy-like | Cascarets will not sicken you like salts, oil, “Cascarets.” One or two tonight will clean | calomel or harsh pills. They physic fully, but vour howels right. By morning all the con- | never gripe or inconvenience. Ten, twenty. stipation poison and sour bile will move out | five, fifty-cent boxes at any drug store. e T SERVICE LEAGUE ADOPTS IDENTIFICATION EMBLEM Women’s Overseas Organization Members to Wear Medallion Typi- .fying Work for Soldiers Abroad. As a means, of showing identifica- tion with the American expeditionary |forces during the war the Women's Overseas Service Leaguo has adopted an emblem =signifying such service. The emblems arrived In time for the members to wear them at the meets ing of the league last Wednesday. The emblem, a reproduction of of tod: Star. is of dull silver and was designed by Mrs. Anna Coleman tress. On the medallion is an ideal woman's head, shown in profile fying the experience of all overseas women in crossing the water, and on the other a lurking periscope, repre- senting the dangers and hardships which attended service “over there.” | The words “Women's Overseas Serv- ice League” encircle the design. During the war Mrs. Ladd worked for the American Red Cross in her studio in Paris, modeling masks for the soldiers whose faces had been mutilated by shrapnel. With early photographs of her patients to guide her, she restored the mutilated faces to their original contours by molding light aluminum masks to hide the dis- figurations, painting them to resem- Dble the flesh. A complete exhibit of these portrait masks is now on dis- play in the Red Cross Museum, na- tional headquarters, 17th and D streets. The curator of the museum, iMiss Irene Givenwllson, and her as- sistant, Miss Gertrude Hussey, are both members of the Overseas League. Miss Hussey is chairman of the committee which has charge of the benefit concert to be given thls after- noon at 4:30 o'clock in the New Wil- lard ballroom. Proceeds will be do- voted to the work of the league among the disabled and convalescent service men in Washington hospitals. Franois Rogers, the well known baritone, assisted by Mrs. Rogers, have offered their services for the oc- casion. They were among the first to go overseas to entertain the sol- diers and sallors, and while there gave over ome hundred _entertain- ments during the winter-of 1917-191s. APPEAL MADE TO HAYS. TOPEKA, Kan., March 4.—A request that cigarette smoking by women be eliminated from motion plctures was * i forwarded today to Will H. Hays, new national motion plcture arbitrator, by the eastern Kansas section of the W. OATISFACTION —is assured when Plitt does the Painting, Paperhanging or Upholstering. 3eo. Plitt Co., Inc., 32514 3¢ RoorLess ANCHOR BAR PAINLESS EXTRACTIONS BY CONDUCTIVE ANESTHESIA o R | Plates Ri While Top Walt. i :os. $1.50 DR‘ Specialiat 307 7th St. N.W.—Opp. Saks Opsa Evenings—Closed oa Sundays " Introducing The New 1922 Models Leonard Cleanable Refrigerators It wili be only a few weeks or even days béfore a refrigerator will be a ; matter of urgent necessity—and while you are about it—for your health’s sake get a good one—and here this week we are show- ing the new 1922 styles—the very last word in sanitation—and we’re going to surprise you with the low prices that we quote on these wonderful one-piece seamless porcelain refrigerators. Every Pattern Bears a Special Introductory Price Every single one of these new—not old style —Leonard Cleanable Refrigerators, from the little fellow with only one door to the big one that would hold enough for a hotel, is specially priced for the only time of the year. And this one time of the year—when the price is special—youn won’t find old, : discontinued numbers, but in this = introductory display you select from 4 the very mewest 1922 styles. If there’s even a chance that you might need a new refrigerator this year, we want you to come in and see these fine new styles. This . 5 annual introductory display makes the prices so low that it’s quite possible—and we might go further and say quite probable —that you’d get it this week. Every pattern, mind you, is very special in price—do come in—won’t you? Lifetime Furniture Is More Thana Name Seventh Street Mayer & COO Bttw‘t’l D & E

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