Evening Star Newspaper, March 9, 1922, Page 28

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28 0. LANDRVBIL SUMAYEA 20 Concerns, Employing: 2,100, Wash City Clothes, "Rotarians Are Told. local laundries employing 2,100 people. and costs the citizens of the District more than $4,000,000. annually to keep clean, according to statistics given by Fred W. McKenzie of the Tolman laundry, before members of the Rotary Club at the New Willard Hotel yesterday aftérnoon. | Mr. Tolman, who was the first sec- retary of the local Rotary Club, de- tailed the workings of the up-to-date laundry, and cited a few figures) showing that the local laundries do cach year some _§,500.000 collars, ,000,000 shirts, 7 00 pieces of bed and table linen, 15,000,000 pieces of body clothing and 4,000,000 lace curtains and blankets. 25 Minutes for Family Wash. Tt busy, keeps twenty Delegates of Church Council Call on | R o NE Ad! A Flock oF News- PAPER PHOTOGRAPHERS *SHOTING" SeME STAR. I'LL GRAB SOME oF THAT ® PUBLLEITY STUbE MyseLe: __— REPLACED BY AUTOS BY 3 GREAT LAKES FISHERMEN THe TRAINING cAMP AT By the Assoclated Press, NS LAST. NOW To SHow BUFFALO, N. Y.. March 9.—The z v picturesque dog teams used for o Hesc P Rook F'sn generations by fishermen during | SOME CLASS. the winter fishing season were second in popularity this year to lightwelght automobiles. ~ There were few gules on Lake Erie while the jce was forming, the result be- ing a smooth, solid surface from shore to shore for a distance of miles Ifrom the head of ra river. Fishermen found could reach their tavonite ELL, HeRe T AM AT they fishing spots earlier and keep their lines through the ice later in the afternoon chines for transportation. when they used ma- They aiso formea more substantlal windbreaks for protectiun against storms. 5 Several fishernfen reported mak= ing the tri cross the lake by au- P tumobile 1rom Woodlawn Beach, \ on the American shore, to Crysial Beuch, on the Canadian side. Last year the luke was free from ice all winter. ‘Tne winter catch was good. ASK U. S. COAL BOARD." Two Department Heads. i Worth M. Tippey, executive secre- e T e o o et e wna's | SEX DETECTORS 'FAIL TO WORK, “who work at con s very muchigoi.gution representing that body. | like the methods employed in thi tomobiles. It takes ap- twenty-five minutes for a family wash to run the gantlet of these eight girls.” Charles W. Semmes presided, and. after calling on all new members taken into the organization during the past six months to stand, an- nounced a special meeting of those otarians who will attend the con- tion of International Rotary at Wos Angeles in June. This held | following the regular me Arthur May presiding. A la zation of Washingtonians are ex- pected to make the trip. Maine Mayor Present. { Reading a letter from Carter B. Keene, Col. Fred C. Cook introduced Walter Gilpatrick, mayor of Saco, Me. a barometer of how the po- litical situation is at present in the r. Gilpatrick.” |’ democrat and | mayor in the| cted strongest republican bailiwick in all of that state” Representative Arthur Free of Cal- ial invitation Club of local Rotal ngeles this s all at Los A Conference Plans I'rogress. William Clabaugh reported progress by all committees In charge of conference of the fifth_distric Rotary, to be held here March Robert Dulin, Fred W. McKenzie and Dr. D'Arcy McGee were ap- pointed a special committee of three to investigate the loss of the cup presented to the Washington club by the Atlantic City organization for the best attendance percentage by the ladies. Upon location the cup isi to be placed in the hands of George Harris, secretary, “for safe keeping.” for the observance of “Char- ht,” April*24, were discussed in detail by members of the Lions Club at their regular weekly meeting ; at the New Willard Hotel vesterday. | Chairmen of various committees were given final instructions by Vir- gil F. Bourne, director general of the aftair, which promises to be the most pretentious yet young.organization. Many delegations from other clubs in the international organization are expected, and arrangements for sightseeing trips and other entertain- ments usual on such occasions, will be carried out-on an elaborate scale. CAPT. PRESTON ASSIGNED. Capt. Charles F. Preston of the Navy has been assigned to duty in the ofiice of naval operations, Navy De- partment. No Need to ¢“Break Themin” “Cantilever Shoes are comfortable, casy, the first time you put them onl | No need to “break them in” slowly and painrfully. No need to suffer till the newness wears off. In Canti- levers your foot is not compelled to assume the shape of a shoe. For the Cantilever Shoe is shaped like the human foot. It is built on the lines of good taste—graceful, sensible. It is made for perfect comfort. The foot has fréedom to arch and bend, to move and exercise,”unham- pered. The shank of a Cantilever is | not stiff and unyielding. with the action of the foot. The natural inner sole line and tire well set heel combine to encourage correct posture. Ordinary shoes, ich twist the toes outward, cause the weight to fall on the inner side of the arch, its_weakest point. Byt Cantilevers distribute the weight properly; they correct and prevent flat foot. They enable you to walk or stand with less fatigue. And they are good looking. Cantilever Shoe Shop 1319 F Street NW. Second Floor - Over Youns Men's SWep " visited commission or tribu | the coal indust, | wholesule and { portation c: fluencing con {that the suggest to Senate and Hous j concerned. surrounding the government's effort | operators in the central competitive | cggs, fietd and the scale committees of the |that poultry raisers were promised | cerned, before April 1 when all wage contracts expir jare stl {enter into disc attempted by the[* It flexes |! | 'BRANDED AS FAKES BY U.S. CHEMIST. Beware of the sex drtector, says|would seem to be little difficuity in ecretaries Hoover und Davis} /. urging that a government i 1 be set up in! esterd vhole strike it as between the | H {miners and the mine operators. be | the Department of Agriculture. It 15| the case of dairy products. ; ithrown open, and that an Inquiry be | l_“_d A B! 4 uu.-‘ “Even the criminologist was offered | instituted as o lahor costs, mining, | > d¢ly advertised ‘as one ol | assistance, for it was claimed that retail ' {greatest “marvels” of the age, butithe unfailing little detective would profits, trans- | | ts and other factors in- | there i¢ nothing to it the department tions. Th dt | Ak hey announced i ygserts in a formal statemént. would be taken | “Joors 10 & FO tell the sex of the person who shed the blood found on clothing or eise- : | where. Ome ‘manufacturer said that cominittees most | According to its manufacturers and | by attaching a wire to the apparatus 108t | ublicity agents, the detector is ajand running it l)lll;louihxuol'(ez'g?epek;fl 0 o) 5 i i 'y o letermine 2 & AL the Labor Department activities | small instrument that will unfailing. | Sould, determine the Sex Of 1% oo ity ot | wire.” adding to arrange a meeting of the mineily indicate the sex and fert the departiment says, i . f the Agricultural Department made iphenomenal hatches and as high 2| tesis of several such were said still to be | percentage of females as they might | e, however, was | desire by its use. ¥ Secretary Davis and | nited Mine Workers, the union con- ers have now gone out of business! “One of the detectors,” mmet - shaped device made of kel-plated iron and filled with a reenish mixture of calcium carbonate nd an aluminum salt and suspended y a fine thread. pected of this simple but od that mine operators | might be ng "“‘;"”lflhgness to | potent little device," declares the de- sion with t i A 5 % regarding a national ummn:fl;‘_“"’“‘ partment in & recent circular. "It was said to tell the sex of oyster: 3 ST butterflies, caterpillars, beetles, Worms | “When held an inch above an egg In Spain a woman's mantilla is held | and even the séx of the animal from | contuining a male germ: the stuffed nnot be sold for | which were obtained such products as| tuba was said to &wing back and ther a cese. although therelforth like the pendulum of a clock “ . THE CARPET OF BAGDAD A favorite tale of the Arabian Nights concerns the Carpet of Bagdad. A magic cloth which carried men wherever their hearts desired. It transported the lonely worker of the fields to the friendship and wonder of the city. It moved the weary town dweller to the comfort- ing vistas and refreshing air of the country. | | Three million farmers today can see the cities of their dreams. 4 i | Two million city families can have the quiet and { solace of the open road. ; i Five million small town citizens can travel, see, and learn. That’s where motor cars are. That’s how they l serve. : ' ® i | 1 | il it THE EVENING. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, MARCH -9, 1922 : PICTURESQUE DOG TEAMS | MUTT AND JEFF—Everything Is Merry in the Southern Triining Camps.. At the suggestion of the Post Office ; Infertile Department, the bureau of chemistry instruments, | with the result that all manufactur-; | continues | “But this was only part of whal|tne report, “was an elongated tubular, | N A (Copyright, 1922, by H. C, Fisber. Trade mark registered U. 8. Pat. Off.) AND WHEN) THe PAPERY CoMme ouT WITH MYy MUG oNTHe SPORTING PAGE T'LL SHow €M TO JEEF JusT ™ GET, HIS GOAT. BABE RuTH MUST BE HeRe! ‘Now Pose | Lke You'd JUsT Knocked but if the egg were of the opposite | sex the bob would describe ligtle cir- cles, and in the case of an ¥nfertile <gE there would be no motion at all. “Another device consisted ¢¢ a small | TROUSERS POCKET RAID BANNED | BY MEN'S “EQUAL RIGHTS” BILL may be imprisoned. where it is shown the husba: pendent upon the wife for gilded wooden ball havingla cavity | a filled with red lead and covered b, small iron disk, the whole suspen by a cord. The telltale motions w ciaimed to be the roverse of th / { husband and children. s the Associated Press. ., ator Fox's bill is entitled “An act to | ANNAPOLIS, Md.,, March 9.—Time-!give equal rights to men,” and would | whipping post that indicated male and female w honored prerogatives enjoyed b: dd fifteen articles to the state con- the other instrument= =~ © .| women are mcnaced in u bill intro- | stitution, . it 4 ry as the Agricultural Depart-|gq cq ; e G | _One article. which might be aimed ment_experte wane thar could pof | Quced in the legislature by Senator | [ PN SIS Sisiom f raiding b get the “miracles” to work. Tests on | Benjamin W. Fox of Baltimore. Fur-|that“the wife who tukes her h cggs and other things by a number | thermoré, there shall be in the fu-|band’'s trousers pockets provi of persons showed that all the in-|ture “no laws passed giving any{band’s money may be tried for em struments were useless. No two per- |rights, benefits or preferences to i bezzlement or larceny. tofore diiposer UNONyal s0us got the eame resuits with the|women that are not guarantced to| The bill also provides that— | caually imposed upon same ¢ggs, and eggs known to be | members of the opposite sex,” the| It shall be the duty of the wife to the opposite sex. gave positive indications | measure decrees. | contribute at least one-half to the that they would hatch both pullets| Designed o counterbalance the | expense of the home and the sup- and cockerels. | “equal rights” bill for women, Sen- | port of the family. i Address Communications to President—2325 18th St. N. W., Phone Col. 9855 ‘ I Is:TRICT 6-STRING: BROOMS 69c Fine Quality Philadelphia’ CREAM CHEESE is_limited to for Women are gi in judgment upon of “these provisio rticles, which reads: “That the duty of jury & nde ne-third of the ROCERY YOCIETY At the ALMAS TEMPLE SHRINE FAIR (Convention Hall, March 6 to 18, inclusive) You Are Invited to Have a Cup of GOLD BAG COFFEE ] Visit the District Grocery Society Booth. If you z f 25 like our coffee our demonstrator will be glad to sell or £J¢ PETMILK .. ... .10¢ J0s. { FANCY RIPE TOMATOES, 2 bbs. ... ..35¢ PHILLIP’S | GREEN CABBAGE (Early York), Ib. ...5¢ ORIGINAL | FANCY SPINACH, No. 3 can. .........2Ic _ AL PORK | FIRST QUALITY TOMATOES, No. 3..17¢ - SAUSAGE | MAINE STYLE CORN, can. ... ... .10¢ 35 Ib. FINE SIFTED PEAS, can. . .15¢ ARGO SALMON, can. . .20c -GELFAND'S | GOOD TUNA FISH, white meat. .25¢ OLIVE CRISCO, Tb. ...t o .20¢ MAINNAISE COMET RICE, 1-lb. package. ...........10c Large 350 | MUELLER'S NOODLES, MACARONI Sl 180 and SPAGHETTI, 2 packages. . .....25¢ Jar......... 108 | POST TOASTIES, 3 packages. .. 25¢ ' BORDEN'S KELLOGG’S CORN FLAKES, 3 packages.25¢ EVABDEATED SHREDDED WHEAT, 2 packages. . ...25¢ L 10 QUAKER OATS, package. ...........10c Can......... 0G| GOOD FAT MACKEREL, each. .. .....10¢ Bpel s _ Bg | IVORY SOAP, 3bars. . . ... 20c FRESH FISH AND OYSTERS AT ALL D.G. S. STORES The Ready-at-Hand Dessert You've got to think ahead to bake; and worry over the oven. Don’t do it—rather send around to any of our stores for.a \ ¢ : Corby Special ,Layer Cake everybody ardund vour table will appreciate Stawberry. D-G-S BUTTER 45¢ Lb. Ju;t Try One Pound. It’s a Winner ..Be AUTH'S SMOKED SAUSAGE 32 Ib. Small Can ... Tall Can FOUNTAIN BRAND HAMS 3¢ Pound— Large Whole CERESOTA FLOUR “the prize bread flour of the world” 5-pound 12-pound and you'll get the-tastiest c-lessert—ogé that and enjoy.. Choite of Cocoanut, Vanilla, Orange, g Marble, Chocolate, Mocha, Luscionsness -hidden under a deep blanket of fluffy ilcing. : s - “Pure as Mother made it” The wife who deserts her husband | During pendency of divorce actions she must pay for the maintena The wife may be sentenced to the for assaulting | husband, but the number of lashes ance to it wing out rvice here- shall be members of Rice forms the staple food of about world’s population. 67c P2 her another NN 2 7/ 7277707770 727722770, 2 2 Y22

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