Evening Star Newspaper, March 6, 1922, Page 22

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THE EVENING ST: R, WASHINGTON, - D. C, MONDAY, MARCH G, 1922, HELP AND SITUATIONS. FRENCH DUEL OFF. Ex-Editor Not to Fight Present Editor of Figaro. é RIS, March 5.—Louis Latzarus, retiring editor in chief of the Figaro, will not insist upon fighting a duel with Alfred Capus, the present editor, to obtain satisfaction for an article published by the newspaper under its Threats that such a duel might be fought caused msiderable interest here during the last week, but the seconds appointed by the two editors have examined the article to which M. Latzarus took ex- ception, and have agreed it was of & general character and did not attack the honor or personality of the form- present management. er_editor. THIEF SHOOTS HIMSELF. Youth Caught by Citizens Ends His Own Life in Home. WAVELAND, Ind., March 6—Fred Morgan, sixteen years old, shot end killed himself at his home near here after a posse had pursued him there following his attempt to rob the Spencer hardware store here. Mor- gan was discovered in the store by citizens. o Leaving_the place the youth fled through the downtown streets pur- sped by a large crowd, with whom he exchanged shots as he ran. As soon as he entered his home he fired the shot that caused his death. By the Assoclated Pr PHILADELPHIA, March 6.—Pres- entéday tax makers may be able to take a leaf from the book of Ptolemy Philadelphus, the second of the Greek kings of Egypt, who died about 2,400 years ago, and learn how to assess heavy taxes without hardships to the payers thereof. Records of King Ptolemy Philadelphus relating to financial affairs and which archeol- ogists believe will reveal how he You’li Be | ROOF PAINTS | PORCH PAINTS RETAIL 1334 New —if you paint the roof now, before incipient damages caused by winter’s snows and thaws grow serious, necessitating the ex- pense of tinners’ services. i {Reilly’s Quote ESPECIALLY i LOW PRICES on dependable— ! CEMENT PAINTS FLOOR STAINS, Etc. : Glass Table Tops Cut to Order HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS and his father were able 8o carefully to adjust the heavy taxes they levied in Egypt in order to support some of the other Hellenistic kingdoms without injury to the country have been unearthed by the University of Pennsylvania museum expedition to Egypt. Dr. Clarence S. Fisher, in charge of the excavation, in a cable message received by the museum last night, said the records were the most im- portant discovery of demotic papyri in history. They were found at || Thebes, ancient "capital of upper || Egypt,” and_although not vet fully translated, Dr. Fisher said they would throw great light on the history of Egypt from about 309 B. C. to 246 |§l|B.°C.. and fill a gap which had re- |}/| mainea blank. The records were || written on papyrus leaves in the {l!| demotic language, the language of | | | I Dollars In HOUSE PAINTS WARLL FINISHES. the the common people, _as distin- guished from the heiroglyphic writ- ings of the priests. Very few speci- mens of this writing are in existence, most of the ptolemaic records being in_Greek. Ptolemy, archeologists say. show- ed great favor to the Jews. who had synagogues in all parts of Egypt, and WHOLESALE York Avenue. a ing, Pluto acts in WHEN company is coming —when you want the children to be at their best— remember: acleansystem makes brighter, healthier, happier - child. First thing in the morn- give the children a little Pluto diluted with plain water. two hours, without griping. reason thirty minutes to ing. It Ptolemy Was Real Tax Wizard, 2,400-Year-0Old Papyrus Shows it was hoped that the new discovery would reveal some of their activities at that time, about which little is known. Ptolemy Philadelphus is well known in history as the king who divorced his legitimate wife and maried his own_sister to conform to the customs in Egypt. It was she who was first called Philadelphus, or brother-lover, but historfans also apply the title to her husband, the king. OPERA HEAD RETAINED. Gatti-Casazza to Handle Metropoli- tan Until End of 1925-26 Season. NEW YORK, March 6—Extension until the close of the 1925-26 season of the contract of Giulio Gatti- Casazza s general manager of the Metropolitan Opera Company was an- nounced last night by Otto H. Kahn, chairman of the board of directors. Mr. Gatti-Casazza’s contract was to have expired at the end of next sea- son. His salary was not made public. In a letter-to the general manager, Mr. Kahn sai : “You may well take pride, as we take satisfaction, in the record of your fourteen years of management of the Metropolitan opera, character- ized as it is by the steadfast adher- ence to high artistic standards, by undeviated madntenance of the dig- nity and the prestige of the great institution confided to your care, by admirable administrative capacity and by the emphatic approbation of the is for ENTICING— the only fit adjective that exactly expresses the so many people come back for Adams— | and keep coming bagk for more and more. i opera-going public, as attested by an attendance that has been kept in- creasing steadily from year to year. why NATIONAL—“The Brouldwly " Whirl.” “The Broadway Whizl,” specializing in whoop-em-up jazz music and girls who dance and sing, opened last night at the National Theater. The show comes from the Artists Producers’ Com- pany, is staged by Bert French and features Blanche Ring. Charles Winnin- ger, Winona Winter and Jay Gould. Those who witnessed the opening per- formance of “The Broadway Whirl” waited expectantly - throughout. to the finish for something new in the way of musical comedy to crop out somewhere— their vigil was unrewarded. 3 At the same time the vigil was riot found to be too long drawn out and it was an_entertaining vigil withal, for the show doesn’t drag and is carried along through all its stages with the pep and go necessary If a production of this kind is to succeed. The show is entertaining, not too rough, and while probably it will not create a sensation anywhere it will give its patrons the worth of their money in an evening’s entertainment. If that isn’t enough, what is? Blanche Ring, Charles Winninger, Winona Winter and Jay Gould are four bright spots in a production that needs them. Miss Ring and Jay Gould espe- cially keep things moving along at the right pace, and Charles Winninger, in such numbers as “Wood Alcohol Blues.” excels in his interpretation of a char- acter that_ prohibition has failed to ob- literate. He shows to adyantage also with Miss Ring in a bit of condensed comic opera that from some viewpoints is one of the cleverest. bits of burlesque seen hereabouts in many a day. Two numbers on_the bill, “The Rain- bow" and “The Stars of Broadway,” are pledsing features. In the last men- tioned, “The Stars of Broadway,” some .presentable _impressions of favorites, such as Ann_Pennington, Marilyn Mil- ler, Dorothy Dickson and a few others, are made by pretty girls.of the chorus The average man who visits a_musi !cal comedy and draws an aisle seat al- ways looks with something akin to an enjoyable dread on runaways. One never can tell what they will be used for. And last night, when a score of chorus ladies, dressed in flimsy gar- ments of something or other. trooped down the runways and into the aisles and backed up to various males in the audience who occupied aisle seats, re- questing these males to “button me up the back,” it is suspected there were some blushes from members of that audience that would make a sixteen- year-old schoolgirl at a June gradua. tion look like a sallow ghost in com- parison. = The same - thing happened again later 'on, when down the runaway a bevy of these same chorus ladies hopped, proceeding without more ado to_cut severdl blushing cuties’ cuticles. Despite the blushes, judging from their “after-its-done” expressions. male members of the audience enjoyed both ordeals. BELASCO—Shubert Vaudeville. An entertaining, well-balanced bill, with two stellar features, is pre- sented at the Shubert-Belasco Thea- ter this week. Alice Lloyd, the Eng- lish singing comedienne, who has an excellent repertoiry, was repeatedly recalled by the audience. She sang several new songs and_was assisted at the piano by Burton Bro Marie Nordstrom, in “Tick Tock,” shared the honors, in character songs and impersonations that were very well received. Emily Ann Wellman and Richard Gordon presents “The Actor's Wife” | in ten scenes, written and directed by Miss Wellman, and telling the ry of a man who has a jealous wife and is driven to ruin by her taunts. It is one of the best offer- ings of the bill. Arthur Terry, a son of the west, poses as a cowboy and is entertaining. Fred Allen, a monologist, is very good and the au- dience .showed its appreciatioh in laughter and applause. Amusements the rank and file of a strata where crime tempts want, and police are forever on guard. Considered as drama, the story has for its beginning and ead the inter. weaving of three age-old passions: Love, temptation and sacrifice. The triple force is embodied in a gangster whose environment has made him a thief, but who fights_circumstance and becomes a man. The evolution makes the plot. While admitting the dramatic asset of a famous stage name, Mr. Barrymore's screen art owes much of its success to the fact that he never looks like an actor, but always conveys an impression of being in reality the character he peragnates. The “Boomerang’—good- natured enough to rescue a tiny Chinese girl from the peers and blows of American fledglings, takes her to the laundry where she is al- |lowed to live, and at the jovial advice of a good-natured “bull” attends a democratic dance, where he looks on with lonesome aloofness until he gets a chance to save another girl from the offensive endearments of Tony the Wop. A love as ideal us Strephon knew comes into the heart of the gangster, and he gets him an honest job. Fate sces to it, however, that good and bad do not mix, and that the home of love canjiot be built on a foundation of crime. To save his girl's. mother he does his last burglary and is put behind bars. When he comes back to freedom fate straightens out one golden strand of the snarl that represents his life, but—to tell more would be to spoil the story for those who were not in the audiences re- | newed from an overflowing lobb)’] throughout yesterday afterncon and evenin The “Barrymore ability” was rein- forced by a cast that gave individual excellenece to the produstion as a whole. For fun ntrast there was an ab- surdly funny omething called “The Rainmaker,” with Lloyd Hamilton to the fore; motion travels and a very real pleasure for lovers of “Robin | Hood” in the rendition from that opera given by the Rialto Orchestra. N L CRANDALL'S—“Cameron of the | Royal Mounted “Cameron of the Royal Mounted,” the feature attraction at Crandal the first three days of this week, will stir the blood of those who enjoy stories of rugged outdoor life. with its action in every foot of the film. ston Glass. ably portrays the leading role and is efficiently sup- ported by Vivienne Osborne and Ir- ving Cummings. The picture has the added value of. an alluring back- ground that goes with a story of the Canadian north. led to be- Cameron, who has been lieve he ‘raised” a check while un- der the influence of liquor, lvn\‘es] Scotland and seeks to escape the memory of his deed in the open land | of Canada. There he becomes a 1ead- ing figure in many thrilling adven- tures. In the end he succeeds in proving that not he, but another man, to flee in disgrace to Canada. Mack Sennett's two-reel “The Dpck Hunter,” and short features complete the program. PALACE—"The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.” Rex Ingram's great Metro screen production of Ibanez's novel, “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse,” continues to hold its attraction for Washington patrons of the photoplay. Large crowds viewed it yesterday at Loew’s Palace Theater and there seems to be Tlittle if any decline in l“rhlsed the check, which caused him | comedy 1eel iper day f LOST BAG, siver mesh, Bunday, March . Potomac Park car. Phone Miss Clark, Main G400, Branch 542. Reward. e BAR PIN—Three dlamon: Liveral “reward. 2846 FOOKREEPER and_typist: apply 16 writ Address Box BO overs test_for o CERTIFICATE for 25 sires Interborouzh Metropolitan_common stock. Reward. Ad- bseription drens Hox 387-L. Star_office Seorkhir: Sxhccin | young women: permanen: i, abillty quickly recog- . D. C. poxitions; nized. I COLORED o Aperienced, as sleeve froner: rienced in tinishing and folding Laundry. 620 perienced i _cutthg _children gise references aml t positions with fu- 98L, Star DOG—Strayed, short, fat, black and whit apotted cur; Fight front foot deformed: wirs | r with brass ring. 111 Aoacostia’ road, . C._$5 reward. A Fman police, male and female Col. 2538, 5 . LEATHER CARD CASE with D, C. driver's permit, Md. driver's permit, Md. registration card and several other cards. Fiuder pleasc May, 817 C Reward. SIOLE FUR STOLE, between 2125 8 st. and 1634 Conn. ave. Reward if returned to 1634 ~ to work in tailor nw. Col. 1985, * —Firstcluss tailor 068 M. Plensant st jeimes oo i Vir st 3 Black fox, on_New Cut or Con duit_road, Sunday, March between 3 and 5. Reward If returned to 1901 35th st. n or pl TRR N PEARLS —String of Indestructible, Sunday, nvv(.klet‘lhm or on 13th aund D sts. car Oen exenings. otel “Trainin Sehool, 13 raining LAD periene “wunted at 3 in men's tailoring. 1 evers businexs wom ‘oodley road or in or near pin, _with Phone’ Cle: PIN—SAT! to 5th and La. Lansburgh’s, a small stone of ‘bluish green. iand_304. " POCKETBOOK, litite black, containing bill, with some change and street car cliccks alx lost in car 159, at Vermont s., which was ran into by Blick Lros 11 Miss Criswell, Main Reward. dny or'eve. class. Telephone School, 726 LADIES, LEARN. Bribg your own material and learn to make your garments and smart and attractive Dositions furnished graduat Frof. Li Franklin LEAR lexmons from expert teaches tation. Call 1 )—Take private Cap. also private die- UMB x ant Saturday night 10 o'clock; [ ain toniac_Park_or night, between Wood rd. and 16th st. Finder please return to Conn.. ave.. Apt. 702 RIST WATCHInitials A. M. F., Reward. 1620 18th st. n.w. expericnced Taundry, 620 B years old, 1o interview prospective students in Washington and vicinity; leng hours and Call in person only 1o Mr. Hales, —Experienced, capable, smart on gowns: able to indle high- 3 ition for right party. office. 1 WRIST WATCH, lady's, in_neighbo 4th and Virginia ave. xe. Return to . $250.00 REWARD. Black envelope purse containing four ¢ mond rings, small ruby ring and emall change, on Potomiac Sunduy, February 26, be- tween 6:30 and 7:30 p.m.. of at l4th and You Finder please return to 2550 14th st e_Col._2199. WANTED—HELP AGENTS. appearing, cluss cli to-wear department. Apply Superintendent, main floor bal. cony. The Palais Royal, 11tk and G streets AGE Men, women, big commissions S OFEIE "‘x‘,::t!"{m',‘ EE";EE; ext goods;~tepeaters. C. L. Hamilton, 1O Srar offien, - &= itk AR = TRAVELING _POSITION—Natonally ¥mown LESW firm hng openings for two women, S0 yeare of oier. high school graduates, serious ‘minded tactful and ambitious; must be unineum aud free 10 leave city indefinitely; to succsss- ful applicants, free training and quick ad- vancement to $30 weekiy, including salars, refarences, Win RESIDENT SALESMEN to sell a nationally advertised prod- uct; experience not necessary; $2.50 per order; 6 to 7 orders daily, if you will work 6 hours Cal! 120 McGill pldg. employment assured short course_in operation eof book Communicate with Mrs Mills bldg. Matn 4259, WHITH A with child under thre« years, to work In institution with babies. Ap 1 between 3 & 5 p.m., Mr. Braus- dorf. mpaign 10 ew Mrs. Enge ing device: no competition. 9| B to 12 and 2't0 4. Room 401, Baitic bidg., 606 | yOUNG LADY to read in private home to geu A] 6% | tleman with injured eyes: from 4:30 to 6 p.m Tiie opport of & lifetime | Mondays to Friduys, inclusive. Address Bus lesman capable of earning $100 star office. selling & new window display N LADY for general office work: need ture; reply stating experie: not e stenographer. Apply to manager, N. Associated Advertis and _proven ability Sersice, Germantown, #51 L _ave. LADY, with good education, fur . intereiting work: $1.500 first ‘year merit.. Address Box 252K, Star TNEVER mail GRIGINAL recommendations in_applying for employment. Use COPIES. ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMEN—Give de-| TOUNG LADIES—We tails, training, experience, salary. Address| tional advertising esmp Architecture, Box 340-L. Star office. 8¢ ladies bet. 18 and ey = ington und vicinity Call 404 Tth #. pw Auto Instruction. Room_212. Coutses of ¥ M. C. A, Quality. MALE_AND FEMALE. echanics—Auto Hepair. Lo e G [ N u on in Stenogral Generator and MOTOR REFATR. TVIT o 10 Mtesorahy Owners—Driving. DAY and Evening classes. and Agril exams Tuition, §5 for those is harmless and safe. (Try the same thing, too, for yourself.) Bottled at French Lick Springs, Ind. Your physician prescribesiit, P.S.—and MORE! The bill opens with Mathieu Taflan and Claude Newell, in “A Chink Epi- sode,” and do excellent work on the parallel bars. Yvette, with Eddie Cooke and Kino Clark, appears for the second time this season and is as pleasing as on the first appearance, L] | e It is needless to retell the story, one of the most tensely interesting that| has been brought to the screen. It} CAR WARHERK, white man.__App (bring references) C. H. Smith Garags interest. The picture will be shown! Y. M. C. A. AUTOMOBILE | i er thin wk. The Civil Service Prepar at the Palace for the last time Wed- SCHOOL o, » e, cor. 13th & ¥ n.w. Fr. 2080 | nesday, and be succeeded the re- =B = mainder of the week by “Love's| _ __1956 G 'st. Main 8250, SEN AND WOMEN quickly Tearn real estais Boomerang.” featuring Ann Forrest | CABINETMAKER — Thoroughly expericnced | Tecwive pay while learning: need not and David Powell. must be fast worker. Henderson Mfg. Co., | interfere with present emplormerft: some mak 1319 W st. n.w. & $100 8 week. Free class Jectures every William F. Matteson, 610- A clean body makes a clear mind PLUTO WATER 'PEPSIN cuMm ! i | i | | | WARNING! ;‘AIWays say “Bayer” when youl buy,’AAspirin.' . When you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are getting Colds . Os Ho o : TootBache -~ Accept only “Bayer” package Headache Neuntis Neuralgia Aspiria is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of i.-p;\mm of Balicylioacia \ ! genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 21 years and proved - safe by millions for ‘ _:Rheumafimfi . Lumbago® Pain, Pain which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayes™ bozes of 12 tablets cogt only a few cents. Druggists also sell bottlcs of 24 and 100, i girls last night. and Billy McDermott, who admits he is a survivor of the famous Coxey's Army, has a good line of talk, which he puts over in an amusing manner. News pictures complete the program. STRAND—*Dance Follies.” One of the most attractive little acts shown for some time at the Strand Theater is Victor Hyde's half dozen pretty girls, who work under the title of “Dance Follies," this week. The costumes are rich in coloring and brevity. and the girls dance excep- tionally well, both as & group and in individual efforts. While the singing scarcely measures up to the other features- it helps to round out the act. A half dozen curtain calls glad- dened the hearts of the perspiring Other numbers on the program include Joe Weston and Grace Eline, who have become local favorites; Renee Noel, in a pleasing sketch, entitled %A Friemd in Need"; Willlams and Daisy in juggling of merit, and Dorothy Wahl and Alan Francis, in song, dance and musical specialties. Irene Castle the star of a photo- play entitled “French Heel It is an interesting love story by Clarence Kelland. The subtitles are good and the scenic locations effective. News pictures complete the bill. Photoplays. COLUMBIA—“A Fool's Paradise.” A Fool's Paradise,” the film at- traction at Loew’'s Columbia this week, holds the interest during every moment of its two-hour showing. The plot shifts from France to Texas oil fields, and later to picturesque Siam. and its many developments are as sudden and unexpected as the changes in scene. Dorothy Dalton has the central role of a cabaret singer in a border town, and opposite her are Conrad Nagel, as an ex-soldier and would-be poet, whom she loves, and Theodore Kosloff, as a Mexican who loves her. Mildred Harris, in the part of a French dancer who has become a dream-girl to the soldier-poet, further complicates the thread of narrative. Rather a novel situation is evolved when Miss Dalton mimics the dan- cer's foreign accent and the poet, suddenly blinded, marries her in a belief that she is hig ideal, instead of the cabaret singer whom he de- spises. There is a dramatic moment when his sight is restored by a skill- ful operation and he discovers the fraud, and then the action moves swiftly forward to the climax. Human suffering and untiring sac- rifice, heartlessness and repentance are contrasted as sharply in this drama of the silversheet as the scenes, varying from a humble shack to a sumptuous eastern temple, and although when analyzed some of the scenes may seem improbable, there is yet a foundation of everyday sor- rows and joys which give it a wide- spread appeal. The spectator may be dubious as to the likelihood of two intelligent men descending into a pit of alligators to recover a glove thrown there by a coquettish lady, but the incident of a blind poet fingering lovingly the pages he be- lieves inscribed with his own writ- ings, while in reality they are those of a cookbook, cannot fail to tug at the heartstrings. And so let those who enjoy wit- nessing fundamenta} human emo- tions strangely intermingled with fanciful dream-episddes go to the Co- lumbia this week and see “A Fool's Paradise.” The.program is supple- mented with a news pictorial. E. D. RIALT0—“Boomerang Bill.” “Boomerang BIll” with Lionel Barrymore in #he title role; had its first showing here yesterday at the Rialto, where it wi}) remain through- out the week. 2 As in his previous screen play, the star takes his hero from the seam: side of life, with a H “Jim, the Penman” his forger has for background a life laughter, : . ! chiifons. difference; In dressed His present portray: { that i gay with|warrant issued in accordance with the in 1s and The musical score is not a small fea- | ture of attraction. CONDITION OF. MOTHER Police Conviction Grows That Hus- of Two Young Boys. : By the Associated Press. H DETROIT. Mich., March 6.—Police | of Detroit and Canadian border-cities have redoubled their efforts to locate Ray Besse, who disappeared with his two young sons Friday, followiAg re- iports from attending physicians that Mrs. Besse was in a serious condition | from shock. Besse disappeared with the boys after telling his wife, it is said, that he intended to “do away; With them and make her suffer.” Mrs. Besse, according to physicians, has -become partially paralyzed since the disappearance, and her condition was said to be grave. Belief tirat Besse had not taken his | own life and that of the boys in De- | troit river was strengthened further, police sald, when Besse's hat and sev- eral letters addressed to him were found on the river bank. As the spot where they were found had been carefully searched Saturday the au- thorities announced their belief Besse | might have placed the articles there | in an effort to strengthen the suiciqe theory. ' Contents of the letters were with- | held by the police, but it was said { valuable clews as fo Besse's possible | Whereabouts had been. obtained. i e i MEXICAN REVOLT FAILS AS LEADERS FLEE TROOPS | Reports From Many States Declare ! That Movement Has 8 Died Down. By the Associated Pres MEXICO CITY, March 5.—Reports received by the war office indicate that the rebel movement in Mexico, | which flared up several weeks ago at scattered points, has died down. Gov. Ignacio Enriquez of Chjhua- hua, where the most important ac- tivities were recorded, says all the uprisings in his State proved com- plete failures. Pablo Amiya and Mdnuel Gutierrez, who headed small forces in Chihua- hua, are declared to have been forced across the international boundary, and Rosalio Hernandez, another al- leged _rebel leader, is reported to have been defeated. Federal military operations against Gen. Miguel Aleman in the state of Vera Cruz are being successfully carried out, says the Teport from that district. The state of Michoa- can admittedly is still disturbed, but the dissatisfaction there is said to be directed against Gov. Mugica. —_— VIRGINIA BILL OPPOSED. Federal Constitution Relied Upon to Avert Search of Cars. Special Dispatch to The Star, od WINCHESTER, Va., March 6:—Pre- dictions are being freely made that thousands of Virginians will arm themselves for protection in éase pro- hibition officers undertake to carry into effect the drastic amendment to the state prohibition law, passed this week by the senate, authorizing-the gearch of automobiles for liguor with- out warrant. i Many farmers in town today were heard discussing the amendment in the vicinity of the courthouse, and not a few declared they intended to do all that was possible to resist any officer who “underfook to stop and search their automobiles without a fourth amendment to the federal Con- stitution. SPURS HUNT FOR SONS |2 band Did Not Take Lives el i Addre vi tar. | 14th_st. n.w. 3 DOMESTIC. tor, famous as a photoplay producer. | {9HiTa ] 804 PY ght parts. ¥25) work in apt. cliy reference requiri COLORED ORDERLIES (3); oue ca driving _an Atlas car. Apply at | Superintendent, Casualty Hospital, 708 Mass. ne. = COUNTER MAN—Young man, experienced in lunchroom counter work; no Sunday work. dway Delicatessen. 7i4 K s L STIMATOR on_millwork: must know how to & in Mount ¥ nights. Apply eral housewnrker: stay mights take quantities from plaus: young man prefer- | COOK red. _Hendvrson Mfg. Vo.. 1319 cnee. 1 experienced. _Caarles COUNTRY GIRL—He Reneral FARM H. Varnum st. work: stay nights. o ook and_housework suburbs. Addres: D. 1, Landover, Md. _ brakemen, beginners. $150. (which po: $250; experience unnecessa “Box $0-L. Star office. HOTELS NEED TRAINED MEN demand for trained men; all hotels, clubs, apartment ~houses; feld: fine living, quick advancement: our metliods indorsed-——our students employed by leading hotels everywhere. Open -evenings. Tewis Hotel Trainiug help_mother_with house. ironing or cooking: g\.u! Address Box 3551, C GIRL to no washing, for nice girl epartments, | ‘uncrowded . Address Woodward bldg., of telephone in L2 m&mmm‘ AGENCIES. MALE AND FEMALE. also man_and _wife dany workers: nu- wanted by real estate office: an_experienced listing man, one whe is thor. ghiy familiar with real estate values in ! Washington; attractive proposition to right party: good references necessary. Address Box Star office. HINISTS, etc., to qualify in record time | well paid, steady positions as _skilled pléasant, congenial work: can maids, MALE DENTAL operatar, reg { PROMOTER, young man, esmun; ‘top salar, used, £100 mo. and_me I operator (white), $50 & meals. assisin sales; 820 wh. XIOR drug cler wk.; exp ! 'CLASS organizer: bank work: good sal. for draftsmen: learn in spare time: practical individual train- { ing_guaranteed. Columbia School of Drafting. | SHELD e A ambitious, wanted for part time saies | JU For full information apply 8§28 1sth | a el S | MEMBERSHIP solicitor; good salary. Fuller Brash Co 1" Over 60 other open sis. openings for bigh-class men: perm: | FEMALE OPENINC i ply 019 Metropolitan Bank Lidg. | veauts parlor, salary and mesls 0k b one, $20. Ve positions for seversl men wio | & 3 r and are in position to make tment. This is your opportunity let_your capital ‘work while you are ea a guarauteed salary and bonu small inve larze hoiel, £ood opening. s for white domestics, Sov permanent. Apply EI Car Taxi Co. AR com. baxis. S o * ! Puone Min 3 g{}l.\gfi:}. 'n?fffli':;m‘;méofi?o a_month. See| -’l\:’i‘li‘?)q A’i ‘mrpr‘::‘}li-gb “f‘\?{\"fif, PAINTERS, non-union, © experienced. | SERVICE BUREAU, after 6 p.m. 1604 Ist st. n.w. { Bond BME. 13th and N. Y. ave. ® PAINTERS. Ap) r|'y 86th and Porter stx. = HELP—FEMALI S renced, permanens pouition. \Cooenst's | COTORED WATTRE 1013 Pa. ave. iohal to_enroll to cover local territory selli in_ Josephine dealers: guaranteed salary of $100 week I eSOl ine et 1548 o right man. The Commercial Radium Co.. 5th en’_Registey. . - Ave. bidg., New York. o o O HELP—FEMALE DOMESTIC. 5o Tnundresses aund chamber- Rev. Fulle Tor_local and out-ol-town w iwo live wires, for selling vacuum cleaners and washers. Apply Mr. Lannan, after 4 p.m., 607 14th st SALESMEN (4) for accident and health insur- anee business: experience not necrasary. Al | SITUATION—MAL enifer bldg.,_before 9:14 n.ln. —— | ANGLISH_BUTLER, Spanish butler. Fillpino SALESMEN—Fastest selling auto_sccessory. | BNGLISIE B e ;rrm: (r,or Msutsomsers: Low price. See ok, colored. The Iutemational Bxchange, 700 st w.e. i SALESMEN wanted (3) to take orders for fast- selling article. Apply by letter only. Dillard | Silver Supply, 5301 13th n.w. 6 BATESM n o sell_direct in Tousewives our line of products, mostly neces- sities in great demand. We instruct you as / tions NEVER mall ORIGINAL recommenda in_appiving for_employmens. Use COPIES. to our methods of doing business and pay you | GOOKKEEPER, ten years' office experience while learning. To those who qualify we of- | good Neteregocs, “Address Box: ZBL. Star fer straight salary of $24 weekly or liberal | ffice. o commission. Also have attractive proposition for two men with light cars for rural and sub- urban territory. Apply after 4 pm. lo W. & | H. Walker, Inc., 215 Stewart' bldg., Washing- | ton, D. C. Ask for Mr. Culver. SALESMEN, for our silk and dress goods department.- Apply e Superintendent, main floor bai-| e Dot 5. St ofice. i 0 cony. The Palais Royal, 11th |DISHWASHER and elerator boy. 915 W st. nw. and G streets. STENOGRAPHER and typewriter. BOOKKEEPER-TYPIST: 4 years’ experience; double-entry bookkeeping: expert typisi 23. Address Box 142-L. Star office. 2 CARPENTER wants work; alterafions, repairs, partition, fencing, anything. Address Box 60- L, st office. o CARPENTER foreman wants to bulld befter v FIREMAN or boiler cleaner, experienced. Call 1000 21st_st. m.w. R T This is an e | JAPANESE seeking a position opportunity for young man to get practical operionce, Henderson Mrfg. Go.. 1815 W at. | valets first.class: with Dest reference. Write nw . or phone. Address Tommy, 1519 E. L sve. n.w. Phone Feanklin 1577. 8 0Pl ERER to Work exfra_time; cushiions 2. -~ Tuilder, can you.use wide-awake. and old work. - Address Box 162.L, Star office. | AN ond man In ‘sour office or fo aupervisc 6* v ary’ act . WHITE BOY_for memenger work, with bi- | the, Jotet 15 yeurs: acties buliding lexpert eycle. _Apply 1811 € st. n.w. i YOUNG MAN, bookkeeping experience. wanted N. 2345, 7300 {g temporary work. Address Bex 307-L. Star office, & STERING and _painting; ok Eiward Rofoton. Tel. N. N st n. - TWhIte) With Two years’ YOUNG MAN. mneat appearance, for advertis- experi 1 ing property; good opportunity for hustier. 411 o A utomobiie ahd Tractor BEMoo)? de- Pope bidg. > on with up-to-dnte garage. Address YOUNG MAN of refined and agreeable dispo-| P. 0. Box 3104 5 sition, as nurse and companion o young man FEMALE. suffering with mental trouble; one who has had some experience preferred. Will give good BOOKKEEPER-ACCOUNTANT, —univ. grad- Jome in private family and pay $75 per month. | uate. liank position preferred. Best refer- Givo phone pumber i possible.” Address Box | encex. Phooe Betiesda 14, between 10 and 3251, Btar office, YOUNG MAN—] » Wwith sales abllity; referonce. _See Mr. 1613 U ot. n.w: YOUNG MBN for wiring department of screen factory; hustlers only need apply. Henderson Mzoufacturing Company, 1319 W st. n.w. 11 _o'clock a.m. CARB of sick or old person. Address Box 823-L,_Star office. . DICTAPHONE OPERATO! 4 years' experience; A Tooe. ATt S-L, Star oflice.

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