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TROPICAL-WORSTED SUITS FOR MEN —presenting the newer models in tan, gray, blue, brown and heather mixtures. 3 25 A pasr of White Flannels will offer a change of costume.... MEYER’S SHOP 1331 F Street 8850 BROWN ShoePolish Goes farther — * Buy it for walue. More Shines and better Shines in the box. Keep Your Shoes Neat! More than a Gasoline— ‘a Scientifically Balanced Fuel for Your Motor WHEN we introduced our improved, bal- anced gasoline last year the response of motorists was enthusiastic. It needed but a brief trial to become established with thou- sands of new friends. They have stayed with “STANDARD”. g : In the manufacture of this gasoline we combine the most desired properties from the crudes te give you quick start- ing and maximum mileage. When your gasoline is right —and . lubrication properly cared for by . Polarine—you should not find 1. Chronic overheating ’ ITESTED COAL FIELD JUSTIGE: ARRESTED| Lawyer, Bréving Mine‘Pofiee,, " _Finds Court Action De- cidedly Brief. 5 By the Assoclated Prese. NEW YORK, May 31.—Arthur Gar- fleld Hays, New York attorney, who went into the Pennsylvania coal flelds [under the auspices of the American Civil Liberties Unfon to test the power of police and guards in the em- ploy of the collleries, has announced, through the union, that he would bring sult against the Vinto Colliery Company, in New York, on charges of assgult, battery and false arrest, Hays went to Vintondale, Pa., last week, after announcing his intention to learn whether, as was alleged, mine operators controlled the colliery towns to such an extent as to exclude transients, prohibit open meetings and arrest union organizers. He accomplished his mission, a statement from the union said. He, with members of his party, were ar- rested soon after arriving at Vinton- he clalmed. In retallation, Hays sal e caustd the arrest of four of the private police, including their chlef, and three officials of the Vin- ton Colliery Company. “Vintondale Armed Camp.” “I found Vintondale an armed declared Mr. Hays. ican city,” “he continued. vate police, mounted and heavily armed and acting under the direc- tions of officials of the coal company, permit no one to stand for a moment on the streets. They greet new ar- rivals with threats of arrest, obscene language and physical violence. “No sooner had our party arrived in Vintondale than we were ridden down by armed guards, who assault- us and attemptd to throw us bodily into the automobile in which we had come. They sajg: ‘You bust up or we'll bust you up.’ We left the town to obtain warrants for their arrest and returned with constables from a nearby town. I was on,my way to the justice of the peace, Who held court in the company’'s office, when I was arrested on a charge of trespassl: Justice Sprints Along. “I was seized by two troopers who confined me in a filthy cell for an hour. When 1 appeared before the Justice of the peace he asked if 1 was ready for trial. When I said ‘Yes' he said, ‘Guilty, I fine you $5.' He then announced he would suspend the fine if I left town at once. hen I refused to leave and de- manded a hearing the justice said the case was concluded; that T was not guilty and would not be fined, and he and the company guards left me alone in ‘the courtroom.” Hays asserted that his experience was “no mere incident of the strike.” Mine operators have controlled their towns for years, he alleged, from police to church and post office. INFANTRY DRILL OPENS JUNE WEEK FOR MIDDIES | Naval Academy Program Includes; Presentation of Colors to Winning Company in Year's Competition. | ANNAPOLIS, Md., May 31 (Special). —The spectacular and_ serial events of June week at the Naval Academy began today with a closed order in-| fantry drill, .in which the first and second battalions participated. { The features of the week have been 86 arranged that there will be little call upon the time of the midshipmen. Tomorrow, the third and fourth bat- talions wiil give an exhibition of €x- tended order drill, and there will be no further demand except for dress parades this evening and tomorrow evening, which are short. In connection with the parade this | evening, the colors will be presented | to the second company, commandid by Midshipman Willlam B, Auit of; Oregon, that unit having won the su- ! preme honor in a competition last- ing through the year and including various_drills and professional exer- cises. Next in order, was the fifth! company, commanded by Midshipman Emery E. Learson, the foot ball team captain. { "This évening, the garden party .for | the members of the graduating class and their friends, to be held at the| residence of Supt. Wilson, will be the high feature. Dances for th€ un- derclasses and their friends will be held at other places. { HAS MEXICO’S SUPPORT. By the Assoclated Press. H MEXICO CITY, May 31—Mexico has extended recognition to the new | Guatemalan government. President Obregon, in a letter made public to- day by the foreign office, addrossed | President Orellena,- and expressed | wishes for cordial relations between the two nations. The . Mexican government’s action aid not come as a surprise, as Presi- dent Obregon stated a few weaks ago at recognition would be extended “yery shortly. - WASHINGTON, D. ©, WEDNESDAY, MAY 31 o2 ~ SERGT. YORK, BROKE, TRUSTS IN GOD; GETS DEED TO FINE 400-ACRE FARM Speclal Dispatch to The Star | CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., May 31. —Alvin York, war hero, sergeant of the ‘A. E. F. and Tenessee moun- talneer, today 1s the owner in fee simple of 400 acres of the best bot- tom land of Fentress county. A voluminous deed, in which was re- cited the sergeant’s exploits In the Argonne, for which he was term- ed by Marshal Foch the “greatest hero of the world war,” was turn- ed over to him with appropriate ceremonies at his home in Pall Mall by J. T. Wheeler of James- town, one of the trustees of the York fund. York's struggle for existence ce he was mustered out of the service and returned to his moun- tain homeland has been a severe one. He steadfastly refused to capitalize the fame which came to him from his single-handed cap- ture of nearly an entire German battalion after wiping out a series of machine gun nests. He has in- sisted that his success was “an act of God” afd, mithough offered, it was said, $100,000 for a brief engagement on a vaudeville cir- cuit, he refused to allow himself to be e!xglollad. Returning to Tennessee after antly tasting 69c bottl Cocoanut Oi o (largesize) This Is a Semi-Annual Occasion. The-Sale Lasts Only Three Days. T}i’urulag. ir?lay, Saturday, June 1, 2, 3 25c size KLENZO DENTAL CREME The purest white, most pleas- cleansing dentifrice we know. Aspirin ©.p.co >3 Each tablet contains 5 grains of pure aspirin. 2 for 70c '.25 Violet Dulce Soap « ;.1'5 Rexall ToiletSoap .« -« 50 Harmony! Sha;;xpoo (with 110 Liggett’s Hard Water Soap . 2 for 11c ) 66¢ dozen 40 Riker’s Tooth Powder Peroxzone ey } being mustered out York was ‘ feted, libnised and Jauded to the skies. The Rotary Ciub of Nash- ville determined to present him Wwith a fine farm. A 400-acre tract of rich ground on Wolf river was procured at a cost of about $24,000. An initial payment of $10,000 was made, the balance being left in mortgages due in 1921, 1922, 1923 and 1924. The sergeant accepted the farm and announced -that h would devote the remainder of life to his home people. He m ried his pre-war sweetheart, & girl of his own ' simpl Last year Alvin York. ji gladden the lives of the couple. Farm prices crashed In 1920. Then came the drought which burned up the crop he had beén able to plant. His available money was gone and he had none with which to meet the payments on the mortgages. When the first installment was due he did not have a cent. The storekeeper at Pall Mall reluctantly was obliged to shut off his credit. But through it all no one heard a.com- plaint. He accepted fate with the simple philosophy of the mountain Christian. “If it is the will of the Lord . that I am to lose the farm I am willlng. 1 am not afrald or troubled,” he said. The story of his plight became 13th& F 418 7th St. and thoroughly le of 100 The wonder box—never before sold at less than $1.00 per pound box. ;7; . 2 for 26¢ 2 for 51c e o o o "7, 2 for 41c e o o o 50 Violet Dulce Face Powder . 2 fof 5lc .35 Rexall Cream of Almonds . 2 for 36¢ .35 Riker’sImproved ColdCream 2 for 36¢ 1.00 Bouquet Ramee Face Powder 2 fif 1.01 /1,00 Truflor Toilet Water . . . 2 for 1.01 .23 Violet Dulce Talcum . #.2 for 26¢ 904 F St. _13th St. & Pa. Ave. Peter’s Original Milk Chocolate 35chalfpoundbar 2 for 36¢ $1 Orange and Gold Package noised abroad. Subscriptions to meet the mortgage payments were asked for by the Nashville Rotary while ‘a state-wide move- eeded u?.l‘{.n wWas 5 ohnson of Knox- ville. Within a short time the mortgages had been canceled and it was possible to present the war hero with a clear claim to his farm. Throughout his most trying experiences fhere was no com- plaint from York, he telling those who sympathized with him that his future “was in the hands of e g His faith brought its reward. (Oopyright, 1922.) YORK SPURNS RICHES. Would Rather Be Pauper Than Capitalize War Heroism. WILMORE, Ky. May 31.—Sergt. Alvin York of Pall Mall, Tenn., in an address at the celebration here of Asbury College, revealed that he-had recelved offers as high as $1,000 a night to go into vaudeville, motion pictures or on the lecture platform, but declared that he had rather be “s pauper and homeless, knowing that he was serving God, and would have a home in heaven.” York said his faith in God carried him through the exploits that made him famous as a world war hero, ‘William Jennings Bryan followed him on the program, with an address on “Evolution.” The Safe Drug Stores » 15th & G 1717 Pa. Ave. 4th& F 1006 F 2 for 1.01 .50 Riker’s Milk of Magnesia . 2 for 5lc .25 Blaud Iron Pills . . .19 Bicarbonate Soda (11b.) . . 2 for 20c .35 Cascara Tablets, bottle of 100 2 for 36¢ .79 Rexall Nux & Iron Tablets 1.00 Rexall Syrup Hypophos- hites 1.50 Pint Beef Iron and Wine .50 Rexall Antiseptic Powder .25 Rexall Little Liver Pills (100). 2 for 26¢ 1.25 Rexall Iron and Cascara Tonic with Celery .30 Rexall Larkspur Lotion . . 2 for 31c 35 Riker’s Foot Balm . 30c Rexal In this sale you get two articles for the price of § one, plus one cent. In other words, you buy § one article at its regular every-day selling price and get another similar article for 1c additional. A Toilet Powder of rare qual- ity, perfumed with 2 most charming -s:‘\,d;_updv:dn‘odm. Zd'fof 51c - Shaving Aids 1 Shaving Cream. R FAVORS LESS ARMAMENT. Chile Hopes to Effect Reduction in South America. By the Ansociated Press. % SANTIAGO, Chile, May 31.—Chile hopes to bring about a genera! pro- portionate reduction in both naval and land armaments throughout South America through action at the pan-American congress to be held here next March. A communication suggesting inclusion of the subject in the agenda of the congress has been sent to the various nations to be represented. ‘The note points to the success of {the armament limitation program at the Washington conterence, and to the example set by Argentina and Chile in reaching an understanding as to naval strength. ECCENTRIC MAN DIES. AIKEN, ay 31.—James C.Gar vin, el known as “Uncle Jimmie® and famous throughout thisx section for his eccentricities, died ut his home, in the Wagener séction of the counfy, yesterday very suddeniy. Although reputed to be fabulously wealithy, having boasted that he was worth $1,000 for every year of his life, Garvin left & fortune of onmly $40,000. —_— Twenty-one woman dry agents have been appointed to secure evidence t bootleggers in the larger of the country. agal cities THE PLAN .. .2 for 26¢ . 2 for 80c . 2for1.01 .2for1.51 .2 for 51c 2 for 1.26 Food Specials The following items are sold in our storés every week-end, Friday and Saturday. We quote them because they represent excellént values and fit into One Cent Sale plan. 2. Valve seats pitted with earbon 3. Gummed valve stems 4. Uneven running, caused by cylinders missing 5. Contamination of the lubricating oil in the crank case 2 6. Necessity for frequent carburete} adjustment Cream 2 for 31c 2 for 26¢ A disappearing cream, easily absorbed, o perfumed wich real 45c Rexall Shaving Lotion 2 for 46¢ pure 7. Vile od exhavst canscl by e : Pelete:::;::i]:); or m:ed P‘owerb’ With. a Big Stock bt %p‘t«nz for 5]¢ . M g . ¢ 8 Spark plugs fouled. 9 Stingen Mele 33 cent zecocos 2 for 26¢ Stationery Tooth Brushes Fb Of pure bristles. Different ahxu. Eiendld values price of 35c. 2 Jor 36¢ Look out for these symptoms. “STANDARD’’ MOTOR GASOLINE will help you in avoiding them. Use a good oil—Polarine. STANDARD OIL COMPANY ; 38c _MAYON- Nk oaessive: 2 for 39¢ 15¢ CHOCOLATE soooie. 2 for 16¢ e e 0 1,2 for 26¢ ELECTRIC FANS Pay Your Electric Light .d —— o 6oc Box'Writing Paper, 24 sheets and 24 en- " Y Rite Here wepee cuges D for 3T e | | oo Bound Wiing 1" s P , ab . POTOMAC %% FEANUT BUT: 9 for 36c sl PR She : 4oc Envelopes, 50' in “$2.25 maximum Fountain _Byringe, mn":med T nyu.r 3 $2.25 maximum Hot-water e, guaranaed 1 year. 2 for $2 2 for 38c GRAtON vev.vvnivuuan 2 for 41 15¢ Writing Tablets. .. 2 for I 75¢ Symphony Lawn Stationery, 24 sheets, 24 envelopes........ 2 for T6c 35 VANMILLA ~ EXTRACT 2 for 36c mogme e o%tor 91c 607 14th St g Branch WW * 37c First Aid Adhestve «Mlhd;x!y-fi ‘Experienced ;Advéftisers Préfgr