Evening Star Newspaper, March 23, 1922, Page 6

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- THE EVENING STAR, < With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY......March 23, 1922 THEODORE W. NOYES... Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company b Fork Omee; 130 N New vo : 150 Naseao 8t. Chleago Office: T 5 Baropan Ofbes. 10 Hegeat Bt Landon, England. The Evening Star, with the Suuday morning «edition, is dellvered by enrriers within the city 60 r month; dally only, 43 cents only, 20 ceats per moni be y ‘mail, or telephons on. 14" made’ by carriers el monta. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Dally and Sunday..1yr., $8 40; 1 mo., 70¢ r Dr- nin the Dally only. ¥r., $6.00; 1 mo., 50c Bunday only. yr., $2.40; 1 mo., 20¢ - All Other States. + - Dally and Sunday..1 yr., $10.00; 1 mo., 35 Dally only..o: e 500 1 o g $3.00: 1 mo.. 25+ e ———. Insisting on American Rights. Secretary Hughes, in his identical notes to the allied governments, has made plain the position of this coun- try with respect to the $241,000,000 due on account of the cost of keeping American troops on the Raine. This government wants clear and unmis- takable recognition of the fact that the cost of maintaining American troops is on an exact footing with the cost of British, French and Belgian troops, and that the entire cost of the Rhineland occupation is a first charge on German payments. With the valid- ity of this clalm recognized—it re- quires no establishment—the ‘Wash- vington government is willing to listen to proposals as to how the debt can be discharged without imposing undue | galaries issued by the National Edu- hardships upon the allies. The American government and the American people would be glad 0 re-{out that the salarfes’of teachers, po- ceive in cash the $241,000,000 now due, but they recognize that under the cir- ~ cumstances this is not practical. It would exhaust the cash payments made by Germany, leaving nothing for other creditors more sorely in need of a little recady money. What this government and people resented was the calm way in which the allied gov- ernments proposed to ignore the American claim and to apportion the proceeds of reparations among them- selves, without so much as by your lea All the governments in ques- tion already owe us considerable sums, and it was felt here that if they pro- posed to increase the indebtedness by hanging on to money from, Germany which properly belongs to us, they _, should at least have gone through the " “motions of asking our consent. A few Americans appear to be cen- siderably wrought up for fear we may Lave wounded the sensibilities of our | European friends by insisting upon cur rights. That is an utterly unwar- ranted apprehension. The effect of the ‘Hughes note will be to increase re- spect for the United States. Time never was when the “‘easy mark” was held in anything but derision. et Macfarland Memorial. The plan to erect a memorial to Henry B. F. Macfarland is gratifying to the whole body of our population. ‘The thought of paying deserved trib- ute to his memory has been in the minds of many thousands of his fel- low citizens, and has now crystallized into definite shape. The memorial is 1o take the form of a bronze bust to be placed in the District bullding, where. by the way, something very much like a gallery of memorials to eminent ‘Washingtonians—a local hall of fame ~—1Is being developed. Mr. Macfarland was given many of those honors which are within the power of the people of the District to bestow. He was actively and intelli- gently interested in most—perhaps in all—of the thoughts, plans and meas- ures of his period which aimed at the betterment and advancement, moral and physical, of our people. He gave un- grudgingly of his time, experience and abilities to everything which held _out & prospect of being to the ad- “{vantage of Washington and its people. “A broad-visioned and sincere-spirited man; & faithful and devoted leader of the community; a gentleman in every Just and proper meaning of that word; the memory of Henry Macfarland, so vivid today in the hearts of those who knew and loved him, should be pre- served as an inspiration to generations of future Washingtonians, who will benefit through his works. l Maine could not reasonably be ex- pected to equip all its elections with landstide facilities. 1 ‘The kind of peace Ireland has se- cured is one that requiresamendrents and reservations. . Gandhi thought England was care- ‘less when she was only trying to be patient. Control of the Army. In the pending Army appropriation bill Congress is seemingly intent upon " delivering a backdianded blow at the _authority of the President under the Constitution, as commander-in-chief of the naval and military forces, to al- locate and distribute troops. A clause in the bill provides that no part of the appropriation, except in time of emergency, shall be used for payment of more than a specified number of officers end men in China, on the con- tinent of Europe, in Hawaii and in the Panama Canal Zone. , In the debate in the House there . ‘Was general admission of lack of con- gressional authority affirmatively to direct the distribution of troops, but ‘“the claim was asserted that it could be controlled by refusal to furnish money for their upkeep—which method of procedure may be said to constitute the indirect questioning of the Pres- ident’s ‘supreme authority in the premises. ‘While doubting the wisdom of the limitation, Mr. Mann of Illinois con- .- tended that the House possesses the right to meke it. “We could provide - in this bill,” said Mr. Mann, “that no .Ifart of the money should be paid to anybody in the Army but red-headed ;.ymen or blue-eyed men.” The chairman _of the committes of the whole. Mr. -Longworth, frankly stated that he * was “so much opposed to this proposi- tion he has tried to find some way of holding it out of order,” but could not. Secretary of War Weeks told the “{ delegates President Harding accepted commiittee which brought in the bill |ing an unusual utun_lun‘;fht us ell that he doubted the power of Congress | hope that they fully succeed.s to do this thing, but even if it had the| Business everywhete, must he re- power it would be a mighty bad thing |vived and stabilized. Something' re- for Congress to exercise it. President |sembling chaos exists everywhere. Harding is understood to maintain|The greater the business arrange- that the power is his alone, as com- | ments and activities before the war, mander-in-chief. the greater the dislocations and dif- The essence of practical objection to { ficultles now. As both Germany and the limitation, aside from the consti-{ America were highly organized pro- tutional question involved, was tersely | ducers and distributors before 1914, stated by Mr. Rogers of Massachu-|they stand in the greater need today setts, when he said. “If we embark on |of skillful guidance in all matters of a policy of trying to run the Army |a producing and distributing nature. from the House of Representatives| The two countries for many years and the Senate it will result in the | prior to the war were on trading terms most colossal and most untold damage | with each other mutually profitable. to the morale and efficiency of the|Those terms can be restored; and it is Army for all time.” If authorities dis- | the object of the two governments to agree on the constitutional point, why | draw together again end increase both not foliow the path of safety and drop | the volume and the variety of the ex- the limitation.from the bill? changes between them. It would seem unnecessary to pre- cipitate a head-on collision between the legislative and executive branches, when it is admitted by competent au- thority in the legislative branch that the proposed action will militate against the public service and the ex- ccutive branch is convinced that it will do 0. —_— S we———————— A Way Out. The District Commissioners are well advised in not definitely opposing the Capper bill designed to improve the salaries of school teachers and officers. They point out in their report to the Senate District committee that the schools of Washington should be sec- ond to none in the United States. To bring them up, the ealaries must be increased, for they are now much below the school salaries of most progressive American cities, as is shown by a recent report on teachers’ —_———— ' Three Questions. Three questions have been under discussion on Capitol Hill and else- where, éver since Congress met in special gession, now almost a year ago. ‘The railroad question seemed sched- uled for early action. Hearings were ordered, and for a time earnestly con- ducted. Owners and officials were called. and had thelr say. Railroad transportation, in all of its bearings and from every angle. was examined. But, as yet, no action has been taken. A law which has failed remains in operation unamended. The tariff question had been under examination even before the session began. Prompt action on that was i promised; and the House did its part. But in the Senate the question is still In committee. The Underwood law is still in operation. There is announce. ment that the House bill, considerably changed, is at last about ready for the Senate's attention. A definite proposition as to an American merchant marine has re- licemen "and firemen have been in-|cently been submitted. The President i:;’::"‘;t ’:l“‘c!:::e"]‘“ihh“ been "‘; is behind it. But it is under fire, and n the salaries of other statutory employes of the Dis- :::;::::iwmn AHopeRsIRy s 0ms trict government for forty years. The | Ag ymportant as these questions are implication is that if there is further|__touching as they do the business life increase in the salaries of teachers the | of the whole country—there is sugges- present lnj}:suce of the ol!ier 8tatutory | tion now and then that they go over salarfes will, by comparison, become | (o the next session, which means, of even greater. 5 course, to the next Congress. How le:"::: ‘;s :::u":: b:“‘n:f. :‘1‘:‘ :‘3' would such a record affect sentiment in £ cf Y Ithe fall campaign? What chance Congress to improve the salaries of | ywaylq the republicans have at the teachers for ‘fear of' heightening the|pone after such a display of im- injustice in salaries of the other Dis-| hotency? trict statutory employes, probably the worst paid government workers in ‘Washington, or should justice be done Only a man of Col. Bryan's gifts to Both the teachers and other District | C0uld genuinely revive interest in Dar- government employes? = winian controversy. He is one o! the The interest in teachers on the part | Men Who have the ability of making of Congress is great because many |2V subject, whether relating to the pest, the present or the future, seem congressmen have chiiren in the schools, and because Congress general- | O Of extraordinary and immediate s interest. 1y would like to see the schools of Washington made a model for the whole country. The Capper bill has been carefully worked out by the school authorities and in consultation with the joint congressional commit- tee on schools and should be enacted, but simultaneously the Senate should complete the reclassification legisla- tion already passed by the House al- most overwhelmingly, and reported to the Senate by its committee on civil service. The salary schedules now await approval or modification by the Senate committee on appropriations. The bill should be speedily perfected and passed. There lies the way out to do justice to the great body of govern- ment employes, including the worst paid group of all—the statutory em- ployes of the District. ——— g The President and the Senate. 'Senator Robinson is of opinion that President Harding made a mistake in going to the Senate for two of the delegates to the armament conference. On the contrary, did he not by the act compliment the Senate, and invite the confidence of the country in what was on the card? He complimented the Senate by as- sociating it with negotiations upon which it would subsequently be re- quired to pass. He might have ignored it completely, as President Wilson did in the case of the Versailles treaty, until ratification time, and then laid it on the Senate's table with & notice to take-it or leave it. That proceding by President Wilson caused sharp re- sentment in the Senate; and the feel- ing was not confined to one side of the chamber. In going to the Senate for the two cation Association. The Commissioners do well to point —————————— The public will be expected to pay enough to prevent the mine operators from suffering loss in the ultimate ac- counting. The loss to manufacturers through lack of fuel will be made up in the same way. When the working- man strikes the public is hit. ————————— It is becoming difficult to secure a jury to hear the Roscoe Arbuckle case. Curiosity at first made a reserved seat at the trial something of an induce- ment. The story is now old and was never pleasant. . —————— Some of the state#men who have been very unreserved in advising Un- fcle Sam about his politics have not been very successful in managing their own. —_————— Lenin has been ill for many months. Innumerable Russians whom he mis- led could not afford so long & con- valescence. ————————— The public that has responded lavishly to so many “drives” grows aconomical when a sales tax looms up. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Initials. Still the initials come to view ‘Which with regret we see; They bring the message, “T. O. U.” And also “C. 0. D." Of TNT we've had enough, Though oft it served us well. But the ones that really treat us rough the Senate's appraisement of the men. Ace;thessame Gld HCL, He chose the leaders of the body. The republicans had set their seal of ap- proval on Mr: Lodge, and the demo- crats theirs on Mr. Underwood. He could not have improved on the Sen- ate’s judgment, formally expressed. In recognizing both sides of the chamber the President gave assurance to the country that no party ad- vantage was sought; that the business of the conference would rise aboveparty and be of general concern on patriotic lines. Thet assurance was cbserved in the negotiations, and appears In the terms of the treaties submitted. No Secrecy. J “Do you think there are any diplo- maitic secrets?” “My friends,” replied Senator Sor- ghum, “if you had been around execu- tive sessions and other confidential gatherings as much as I have you'd know the number of hours untfl the next edition of & newspaper is the time limit for any kind of a secret.” “I'm glad,” seid Uncle Bill Bottle- top, “that the government frowns on prohibition jokes, because they're all so kind o’ gloomy. i ‘When Warmth Was Free. As scarcity of fuel is foretold, Fond memory turns again to days of old. For that hot August afternoon we beg ‘When on the payment you could fry an egg. Nations are sufficiently philosophical to realize that forgetfulness about paying small lcans has spoiled the pleasure of many a friendship. * Enterprising Berlin theater man- agers ought not to neglect to lay by e few bales of German marks for future use as stage money. Public Buildings. “If 1 decide to settle in your beau- tiful and enterprising community,” said ‘the plausible stranger, “I shall raise funds to build e jail and a hos- pital.” { The story thas France is preparing | to give away ehampagne is another of those prohibition jokes that evaded ogusorship: “That's mighty kind of you,” re-l e plied Cactus Joe. “But I wouldmt Two Ambassadors. waste much money on the jail. Justice works fast in Crimson Gulch, and when there's any. sure-enough trouble all we have much real need 6f is the hospital.” The newly appointed American am- bassador to Germany speaks German, knows the country, and should be at ease in his post. He is a business man acquainted with politics, and has been successful both in business and in politics. This warrants expectation that ke will be successful also in dai- plomacy. The newly appointed German am- bassador to America speaks English, has had large expérience in large pub- lic matters at home, and ranks with the successful men in the flelds of Ger- men business and econoinics. He should be at his ease here .in Wash- ington. These appointments have been made 'with care, and with the object of meet- “When I sees a man playin’ check- ers three or four hours every after- noon,"” said Uncle Eben, “I don’t need no credit men’s agency to tell me he don’t have to pay mno surtax on hi income.” Nobody so far has had the hardi- hood to propose Sing day.—Charles- ton (W. Va.) Dalily i), A man who took several shots at his wife offers the excuse that she tried to make a fool of him. She llflould h"t. llmown quh:p:l‘el:nu. of trying to improve upo: 1. Loy Angeles (Calif.) Express. \ \ Blame Is Placed on Parents » For Delinquency in Schools ORAL | delinquency among children has followed in the wake of the lax social con- b ditions of adults and has confronted the educators of fhe coun- ' try with a serious problem, in the opinion of D.r Frank W. Ballou, su- perintendent’ of Washington schools, and Stephen E. Kramer, assistant superintendent. They agree that the problem is es- sentially one for the home to solve. But this fact, tbey contend, parents are slow to realize. “It would cease to be a problem,” said Mr. Kramer. “if the parents would sit down together and discuss the future of their children like they do financial questions. The girl needs the advice of her mother and the boy the companionship of his father.” * k% * One of the principal contributing factors to juvenile moral delinquercy, according to Supt. Ballou, is the pres- ent mode of dress of the girls. Dr. Ballou criticized in strong term: the short skirts, open-work hose and low-cut and fimsy waists worn by schoolgirls. “The school boys and girls of to- day,” he declared, “are in no way modest. And their immodesty Is re- fiected In the present conditions. o * ok E % “As long as boys and- girls are thrown together as they are in the schools,” ~sald Mr. Kramer, “there will be found a small percentage of moral delinquents among them. This Lalso is true at gatherings of adults. But in the school the teachers have the opportunity to observe them and, for this reason, the condition among school children is more noticeable.” The first step in reducing juvenile maral delinquency, school officials befieve, should be the teaching of girls to dress properly. On the other hand, the officiala contend that it will be difficult to impress on the girls the need for dressing modestly while their mothers garb themselves in the clothes of a “flapper.” ® & k¥ School officials also charge the home with the fallure to teach re- sponsibility and to maintain adequate control over its young people of high school age. This failure, they declar- ed, Is the largest single factor af- fecting the efficiency of students, lax discipline In the average home and the habits of irresponsibility ac- quired there serlously affecting the capabilities of students. Parental restraint and example are not only short in the home, they say, but are failing to follow the young person inte his soclal activities, with theresult that these are becoming more and more an infringement upon the time for study. With & larger percentage of grade school graduates entering the high schools than ten years ago, the stu- dent body of the high schools today is made up of lcss capable and less amblitious groups, it is asserted. The factors influencing the working abil- ity of the student are regarded as of greater significance even than those influencing numbers. * % % % Prominent among causes which contribute directly to lower student efliciency were named present over- crowded conditions of the high schools and the necessity for placing unusually large groups of students under a single teacher, eliminating the possibility of individual contact between student and teacher. Some of the other. factors pointed out by educators as salient among the causes of student inefiiciency ure: Parents are too ‘decply engrossed in their own pleasures. The moving pictures and the free use of the automobile, Numerous student organizations which have programs of social af- fairs. Absences for trivial reazons, one of the most serious problems in the high school. This is said to be essentidlly @ home problem. i Parents and adults of the com- munity set an example of irresponsi- bility, such as in violation of the prohi- bition laws, in actual bad citizenship. Cigarette smoking, which is on the increase. The absence of duties in the mod- ern home, especizlly among the boys, is aligned with gang-loafing in pub- lic places after school hours, and its related evils. * % x % All the social tendencies of today toward frivolous amusements, the movie craze, the dance mode, are veflected in the way the student spends his time and his school work. The only difference between the stu- dent and the adult outside of school is that the student, who is younger and more enthusiastic, often goes a faster pace. The cloistered wall no longer surrounds the educational in- stitution. 2 In most instances the students who succeed are those who s0 arrange their school and social life or out- side work as not to give the latter prominence. Those who lose their balance, who try to “get in"” on every- thing the city has to offer in the way of entertainment, sooner or later find themselves among those no longer present. EDITORIAL DIGEST That Proposed Plesiosaurus Hunt! “If you haven't a plesiosaurus in your home you cannot be happy.” Any American unbeliever in this doctrine has not read the latest edi- torial pages. The suggestion, fathered by that really eminent solentist, Prof. Cle- mentl Onelli, direotor of the z00log- 1cal gardens in Buenos Aires, that the Mesozolc monster reported at large in Patagonia can and will be eaptured, has resuMed in a great volume of comment, some serious, some we are tain to confess rather humorous, but all typically American. It all seems_ designed to shift the minds of readers of editorials from the various topics that make for ses- sions with “Sir Gloom.” “The idea of such an expedition, says the Waterbury (Conn.) Repub- lican, *gives the adventurous =& pleasant thrill. If by any chance the Argentine expedition should succeed in finding a plesiosaurus the excite- ment might reach 2 high pitch if the animal resented intrusion -and at- ‘tempted to vary its placine diet with a fricassee of homo eapiens.” i) *If we ever find that plesiosaurus,” suggests the Evansville Journal, “he must be fierce. We all domand it.” But there is the editor of the Co- lumbus Dispatch. He declines to be convinced. “At the risk of being accused of a lack of continuity of thought,” he pens, “we shall close cur remarks with the statement that the Volstead law does not apply to the Patagonian lake region.” “What kind of diet will extend the life of a plesiosaurus another B, years?' demands the New York Her- ald. There's an idea for the bucket shop men. Plesiosaurus preferred, get it in on the Cretaceous floor. “The tougher they are the harder it is to make them stay dead,” in- sists the Rockford (Ill.) Republic, be- coming nasty as he couples our pro- posed parlor pet with that ancient relative, the late John Barleycorn. Still the editor of the Beaumont (Tex.) News would suggest a mis- sion for the—to be extracted—denizen of Pgtagonia. *“It is too bad” he suggests, “that the plesiosaurus has a, very poorly developed brain. We would like to ask him, for instance, what he thinks of flapper, the radio telephone, or—' “This gigantic aquatic lizard,” care- fully explains the Asheville Times, “departed this terrestrial globe some ten million years ago. Could it be ipossible that such a visitor really iwas living in the piping times of normaley?” “Qrdinarily repeated experiences with an incredulous public,” sug- gests the Manchester (N. H.) Union, “gfter a time temper the ardor to spread the news. But when & report like that from Patagonia is backed by scientific or semi-.scientific author- ity, why, then, naturally enough, the discouraged observer of other won- ders takes heart and rises to testify that in his day, too, he beheld some- thing passing strange.” The Baltimore American waxes sarcastic over the eyesight of the scientists.” “To mistake a megathe- rium for 2 plesiosaurus!” it laments, “To confound a plesiosaurus for a glytodon! To fail to distinguish b tween a middle-aged monster of 10 000,000 years and a babe of 1,000,000! {It must be evident to all that South America badly needs the attention of the Anti-Saloon League.” “Who are we to further seek this crehture’'s merits to disclose?’ d mands the Milwaukee Journ: “From every decent human thro: should rise & protest against the crowning &ct of man’'s insensate in- stinct to destroy anything that is big- ger than he, or which he does not un- derstand.” “There ain’t no sich animile, say we all,” suggests the Mobile Register, “and it the zoologists catch him any- way we shall call upon the author of that other classic sentence which deposes that ‘the man who caught that fish is a liar.’" “Man is most curious about things that do not exist or that he doub®s the existence of” breaks in the Rochester - Times-Union. “The things that excite us most usuajly are imag- inary. The appeal of imagination is 8o strong that people strain their gullibility attempting to turn the imaginary into the real. Be thank- ful for ’that. It is what makes progress.” “The anima} has not been captured at t accounts,” insists’the Los Anj ress, “and in the interest Exp! of ltfu integrity of sclence it is to be hoped that he will not be. French Praise of Dr. Rathenaun. LONDON.—The appointment of Dr. Rathenau as German foreign minigs- ter has been received here with gen- eral approval, writes the Paris corre. spondent of the Times. At this criti- cal stage in the task of pulling Eu- rope out of the alough that the war S find Bl i ng and confiden K The French have confidence in.Dr. l that thay and Rathenau. and they feel understand his point of view, that he understands theirs. No one wish i supposes that Dr. Rathenau y more than cessary, but it is felt that in a arge, broad way he has long ago realized that Germany has to pay a good deal, and that the best way, even for her own sake, is to face her obligations decently. The French feel that it is to him and_his views that they owe the Wiesbaden agree- ment, a positive translation of his ideas into action that is, perhaps, the main cause of their confidence in him. The Debats refers to Dr. Rathenau as one of the German statesmen whose views “are most favorable to conciliation,” and the Temps greets the new German fo; minister in the warmest term t quotes with approval passages from the book written by Dr. Rathenau durl the war (the French title {8 Chases a Vinlr), criticising the old German or- der of thingh, denouncing the false pleasures of despotism, and praising the pleasure that responsibility brings, “the pleasure that one ti in fun- ning risks, in workin, things out, the pleasure of creating.” The Temps hopes that Dr. Rathenau wiil “succeed In his task, which iz not at all easy,” and that he will find a pleasure In “running risks and working and worrying things out.” as he wrote during the war years. It ie naturally quoted to his credit that he negotiated the Wiesbaden accord, and also that “in the last few days he has_maintained that an international credit operation is indispensable for a solution of the problem of repara- tions,” which, the Temps says, “is also our conviction.” Talk Across the Pecific. It may be somewhat of a surprisc to some_unobservant persons to know that Uncle Sam a wireless tele- phone service that, with the aid of super high-power sending stations, makes it possible for his workers to talk from Cavite, in the Philippine: to San Francisco on an uninterrupt circuit. Secretary Denby, however, casually announces that this long- distance radio service, on which more than 2,000 words. daily are flashed across the Pacific, has been In opera- tion for a year. = This_is not alone an indication of the advance that has been made in wireless teJephony. It also serves to show that you never can tell what is going on around you. Sclence makes rapid strides these days, and it is pleasant to know that, in some re- spects at least, our government fs Jeeping abreast of the times.—Buf- falo Evening News (republican). » Mary Pickford has done well for herself and hasn’'t done badly for-a lot of her lawyers.—Providence Trib- une. The vital and telling phrases coined day by day soon are incorporated into our slanguage. — Richmond News- Leader. v Paris dancing girls have joined the reds. This should give a deeper blush tp their pink tights.—Phila- delphia Record. The congressmen’s announcement that they will not increase their num- ber met with & response from the people that was more hearty than flattering.—Long Beach (Calif.) Daily Telegram. The Humane Society doesn't need to worry about their killing or cap- turing the Patagonidn monster. That's one dumb animal that is able to take care of itselfl.—Omaha World- Herald. Damrosch st that jazz has no message for the head. You don’t dance with the head.—Greenville (8. C.) Piedmont. The latest example of optimism is the old bartender who still pays his union dues—Minneapolis (Minn.) Journal. German marks are easy and the al- lies seem to place the United States n the same class.—Indianapolis, (Ind.) News. ‘We enjoy many blessings. For ex- ample, D’Annunzio and Vesuvius are not in eruption at tho same time.— Milwaukee (Wis.) Journal. After all, happinesa does not depend on an automobile. Even a poor man can run down his neighbora.—Rochi ter (N. Y.) Times-Union. A Connecticut_farmer transformed an antiquated filvver into a still. Which means that it will keep on killing people.—Nashville (Tenn.) Banner. About the only kind of & pet animal that would look good on the street th thes ewark a_ woman who wears would be a baby elephant.—I (N. J.) Star-Eagle. We never realize the consequences of the loss of ise by our first !flllt un.aocfl -l.-u—.-!‘Ap les ::.‘e'.’.g: sach.” Milwaukes (Wisg ‘Sentinel. A Beautiful Complexion & Admiration Ladies—A few days’ trestment with will do more to clean the skin than all beautytreat- ments in crea- ation. An im- fect com- plexion is caused by a e e i 7o ions. . old, middle: Stomach’ and A SDEVITT) WHEN THE KIDDIES | Spring Suggestions: f o S SIFFER FRONCOLDS _Windew Shades to ordes Mais SxBest work — reaso: prices. sy 1003 9th St. N.W. HILDREN'S colds should not be I's Pine-Tar-Honey on hand, and give them some as directed. It helps in relicving irritation and loosens that hard packed phlegm. Clears the air passages. Take Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey yourself for that heavy cold. Get a bottle from your druggist today, 30c. xtra cost. DAINTY LINGERIE and FINE TABLE LINEN A Speclaity Twenty-Four-Hour Service Without Extra Charge CALL LINCOLN 1777 SUNLIGHT LAUNDRY Operated by THE NATIONAL TRAINING SCHOOL FOR WOMEN AND GIRLS, Inc. D. G. S. BUTTER~the best STRICTLY FRESH EGGS . . . . . . . 29c MORTON'S SALT . . ..........10c ARGO SALMON . ............2c 10 CAKES KIRKMAN'S SOAP, Special. . 49¢ GORTON’S Cal to Fry dy CODFISH .. .... 18 FANCY MACKEREL CAMPBELL’S BEANS ..........10c SMOKED SHOULDERS,b. . . . . .. 17c GOLD MEDAL BUCKWHEAT, 3 for . . 25¢ BORDEN’S Evaporated - MILK Always have it on hand. It is best in coffee, cocoa and chocolate. Can be diluted and used for sauces, puddings and cereals. An absolutely sal fi . FOOD. % *Sinall Can 10c 5¢ Tall Can JOS. PHILLIPS ORIGINAL All Pork SAUSAGE Prepared from the very best materials— good, wholesome, tender pieces of pork and . not cheapened by sundry substitutes. Its correct seasoning helps make it nutritious. Ask for the ORIGINAL. 5c Ib. AUTH’S Smoked SAUSAGE “Not the cheapest, but the best.” Use them for a nutritious, ;economical and enjoyable meal. Washington’s BEST! 2c Ib. SunShinE Powder TRY ONE BOX. When everything else has failed, Sunshine Powder does the work. A - washing powder that does fabric. . It Is Wonderful! not injure hands or & DELICIOUS That’s what everybody says of the Corby Special Layer Cakes They touch that spot of satisfac- tion—not only with the dainty flavor —but with their rich nutrition. Pure as pure can be—and “Full of Life.” Cocoanut Maple Vanilla Marble Corby Ovens Orange Mocha Chocolate Strawberry E At All Our Stores—Fresh From _the. Fountain Brand Hams Thrifty housekeepers have learned the FOUNTAIN difference. If you have never tried Fountain Hams do so on the D-G-S recommendation—this week! - 3% . 'CERESOTA FLOUR ®The prize bread flour of the world” Highest awards have been won at world’s greatest expositions! Why 5—“:. Bag. ... ? GELFAND’S tang to most anything you use it on. Small “ OLIVE MAINNAISE Tall : Just a jar full of goodness—that adds a THERE IS A D-G-S STORE NEAR YOUR HOME, WHERE YOU Wll.l. FIND : DAILY Gnocrmr SAvu«:‘s 5593 121b. Bag. ..o loeennnennnn 6ic * \

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