Evening Star Newspaper, March 8, 1922, Page 10

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&% 4 THE EVENING STAR; WASHINGTON . | Fiume national assembly elect a chief MOTHER! CLEAN CHILD'S BOWELS WITH-“CALIFORNIA FIG. SYRUP” Even Cross, Feverish, Sick Children Love its Fruity Taste and it cannot Injure Little Stomachs. « Don’t let child stay bilious, constipated. Hurry mother! A teaspoonful d tomorrow. If your bilio went a sick cai child is constipated, fretful, has cold, co is_sour. tongue coate "FOR INDOORUSE= . feverish, | directiops stomach | printed on the bottle. Say “California” bad, re- |or you may get an imitation fiz syrup. of jmember a good “California Fig Syrup” today may pre- |often all that is “physic; laxative” 18 Genuine “California Fig Syrup” has for Keep your flashlights always ready for instant use— ‘ keep them loaded with snappy long-lasting Eveready Batteries Eveready Batteries are universally used because they are better. They are fresh when you buy them; they give a brighter light; they last longer; they fit all makes of flashlights. Eveready Batteries are sold at electrical, hardware, sporting goods, drug, and auto accessory shops; garages; general stores. If you have a flashlight, see today that it is fitted with an Eveready Battery. If you haven’t, buy an Eveteady Flashlight now—after a week’s use you babies and children will find it a necessity. Insist upon Eveready | be so_rated. CHODSE GURIAT FUME GOVERNOR Fascisti Asks Italian Govern- | ment to Appoint D’Annun-, zio’s Former Aid. By the ciated Press. ROME, March $.—Fascisti ldentified with the recent coup at Fiume are insisting upon the appointment of | Glovanni Giuriati, former chief of| Gabriele D'Annunzio’s cabinet, as head of the government of the Fiume ! free state in succession to the Zanella government. The Italian government, however, is understood to have de- clared to Giuriati's supporters that such a course would be in violation of the treaty of Rapallo, the agree- ment with Jugoslavia. under which the Fiume free state was established. | Proclnimed Head of | A news agency dispatch from Rome ! today said Giuriati had been pro- claimed head of the Fiume govern- ! ment, but no direct advices have con- {irmed this report and such action | would appear from the present dis- | pateh to been out of line with i i 1 i the Ital government's intentidn. The ian authorities at Fiume, who aretrying to restore order and | establish a government to replace ! the overthrown Zanella regime, have! not decided, according to the latest Fiume advices, whether to have the to succeed Zanella or call new elec- tions. { Crisia Chief Tople. The Fiume situation continues ic of discussion-in the ament. Some of the contend that the Italian government can take no other course than to restore Zanella to power since he was constitutionally elected and then evicted by armed fascisti, whose action was not resisted by the Italian carabineers or by the warships stationed at Fiume. 1t is réported from Fiume that Com- missioner Castelli, the Italian repre- sentative at Fiume, is making every effort to bring about an agreement ! between the warring factions there and organize a coalition government. e o {WOULD END BLACK SMOKE.I Senator Ball Introduces Bill Pro- viding Penalty for Nuisance. deputies Senator Ball, chairman of the Dis- trict committee, today introduced a bill to prevent smoke nuisance in the District of Columbia. The bill pro- vides that emission of smoke of a degree of darkness or cinders equal to No. 3 of Rigelman's smoke chart, pub- lished by the bureau of mines. for a period of more than one minute in any fifteen minutes, from any smoke- stack in the District, shall be held a public nuisance. Violations of the proposed law are to be punished by fines of not less than $10 or more than $100 for each offense. The District Commissioners are directed to desiz- nate an inspector from the health office to louk to the enforcement of the proposed law. The senator also introduced a_ bill { amending the of December, 1913, fixing the salaries of the Metropolitan | police, So that patrol drivers may be rated above cdass two privates. Un- der the existing law they may not / | FLASHLIGHTS | & BATTERIES @QROUP OF ENGLISH SONGS Novel Program Given at Recital | Before Fine Arts Society. The Washington Society of the Fine Arts presented Francis Rogers in a song recital last night at the First Congregational Church, often fre- quented by Washington concert goers ago. Rogers' program was unusual , because of -of in spite of sources. It was a scholarly and ar- tically constructed compendium of English songs. from “Summer 1Is A-Coming In,” perhaps the oldest-sec- ular_song which has come down in writing in any land, to well selected examples from Harty, Rebecca Clarke, Frank Bridge and others of the young English writers of today. No attempt need be made to deter- mine how far the program vindicated England as a musical country. Much of it was too familiar, too much a part of the family, so to speak, to be set up for judgment. It was, in any case, well worth while, and hard- ly any group of songs sung with such consummate art as Mr. Rogers brought to bear could fail to be ef- ve. In the group of earliest songs, per- T DN N N DN \ \\\ TV 11 FRANCIS ROGEHS SINGS haps “How Sw;l Is § to words -4 3 v c F AR D. C, WEDNESDAY by Ben Johnson, stood out for sheer beauty. In the middle scction we fear Handel, who can be called Eng- lish only by adoption, had rather the | best of it in his * | | Thou Leave Me?", although Edward | Purcell’s “Passing By” so won the | audience that it had to be repeated. ! Mr. Rogers invested Hullah's well | Sleep, Why Dos | worn “Three Fishers” with an extraor- | |dinary amount of atmosphere and| gave to the picturesque and exact- ing songs of the cotemporary com- | posers all the grace of phrasing and, i rhythmic Swing and color of his fin- ished art. Miss Lucy Brickenstein was, through- out, a skillful and sympathetic ac- companist. —_— e s ANARCHY IN CRIMEA. 1Famiue Conditions Cause Peasants to Run Amuck in Food Hunt. | LONDON, March $.—The newspa- | per Golos Rossiji states that (n con- | sequence of the famine conditions |in the Crimea becoming worse daily | anarchy has broken ont in several | Crimean districts, says a Central ews dispatch from Helsingfors to- Clean your liver and bowels! You are dizzy, bilious, headachy, and sick from constipation poisons. You need one or two Cascarets to- have wrecked houses, shops and pub- lic buildings and carried oft all the food they could fin when you wake up in the morning. Cascarets work while you sleep. They never gripe or stir you up like cathartic pills, salts, calomel }m,\: hln Sellmslnp. Feodosia un‘d = : 3 o]r oil. Cascarets empty the bowels Kertch particularly, it is ‘asserted,| pijght to physic your liver and |thoroughly. They cost only ten mobs of hunger-stricken .peasanls | p,yels then you will feel fine [cents a box at any drug store. Children love their candy taste. Feeling Grippy? Cold Coming On? DRY. tickling sensation in the throat, headache, feverish, eyes ache. Dpn't play with that on-coming cold. Dr. King’s New Discovery at once. You will like the way it takes hold and eases the cough, loosens the phlegm and relieves the congestion in the eyes and head, and soon breaks up the most obstinate attack of cold | and grippe. Children and grownups alike use it. No harmful drugs, but just good | medicine for colds, coughs and grippe. Sold by your druggist for 60c. Dr. King’s New Discove For Colds and Cougalg ‘Tired Out in Half a Day? You wouldn’t be if your bowels were acts ing regularly. “Try Dr. King’s Pills for sluggish bowels. You'll keep fit for worlk. At all druggists 25c. PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE Dr. King’s Pills =~ —Clothes ‘Daigned u | Sport Models for Spring | P Popular styles for both business and out-door wear _ . Effe@ive in one-tone shades and light mixtures - é These attraive models are styled in varied proportions to - fit and please young men, and older men who seek variety in dress and change from the stritly conservative. T sy "The high standard of Kaufman Campus Togs for young men’s proportions is immediately recognized — the corred, distin&ive styling and air of refinement appealing. The many small, yet important niceties that immediately express the better quality, are apparent in the tailoring. High-test, long strand, all-wool fabrics emphasize economy by long wear, and we guarantee satisfation. §$35 t0 $50 * Clothes for Young Men CHAS. KAUFMAN & BROS. CHICAGO

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