Evening Star Newspaper, June 10, 1922, Page 5

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THE EVENING STAR, Learn the Password To Mealtime Delight! SANITAR\' GROCERY (O Unlock the Magic Mountain that holds the good things of life! Prepare for an Arabian Nights Entertain- ment of your own—a personally-conducted adventure into the Fairyland of Food. “Green Bag” is the “Open Sesame” of the Twentieth Century—easy to remember, 2asy to sav—but impossible to match as a passport to cof- fee perfection! Sanitary’s Famous Green Bag Coffee would have sent Haroun al Raschid into transports of jov—perhaps, might have quickened Ali Baba’s wits to remember the password—and might even have transformed the Forty Thieves into benevolent gentlemen! If you are one of the rapidly decreasing minority as vet unacquainted with this Boon of the Festive Board, ~hearken to this prediction: No matter how many of the delights of living you have tasted—or how wearied your palate—you’ll sit up and take notice when you do meet that Green Bag flavor rich and rare. Why not today? SANITARYS FAMOUS GREEN BAG OFFEE Stores = For Sale C Everywhere— Only By U 2 ; 4 One Near Sida élb' Your Home ANITARY GROCERY CO., Inc. WASHINGTON ’ JOB DRIVE STARTS , D. C, SATURDAY FOR MAIMED MEN Veterans Bureau Seeks Places for Every Veteran Finishing Training. An employment service to find posi- | tions for all the wounded and dis-| abled veterans of the world war emerging from their rehflhllllallnni training at the rate of more than 500 & month, has been inaugurated by Col. Charles R. Forbes, director of the Veterans' Bureau. Maj. W. J. Lent of New York hus been named manager of the new service and has taken his desk here | in the national headquarters to es- tablish a country-wide organization, with branches in each of the four- teen districts. “High Level” Renched. At the same time it became known | that officials consider the pr. 1t &as “the high le in rehabilitation, with a conscquent great need for placing men who ha pmpleted their training. The number of men entering the rehabilitation division had been steadily mou month since its organiz: May 1 there was veterans in i a decrease, it was announced from the April 1 total by 'month of April the training was smallest num since January, To20 Maj. Lent, Who is an expert on em- ployment, plans first to confer with the largest industrial organizations in | the country and carry on a thorough and intensive campaign to place 986. During th number entering said to be the has entered every one of the men “graduating” |} from the rehabilitation division. Such men are not permitted to terminate their training, it was sald, until the bureau is assured that they are skilled and capable of carr, the vocation for which th trained and meet the requir the commercial, industrial cultural worl, The u! struction vary in 1 year to four y s, while th length of a course is two years. Training in Every State. Instruction in the rehabilitation vision is given in technical schools, commere as well as in business es A|rll\hln shops and on farms. The men are in training in every state of the Union and in every large city in the coun- try, it was announced by the Vet- erans’ Bureau. st percentage rep: s in trade and indust affairs, with 31 per cen and commercial pursuits in numbers with 26 per 14 per cent of the men took up p fessional careers and 14 per chose agriculture. The campaign to land the d and trained veterans in their c work is being extended also throug the trade journals of the ‘ which have been asked to c Persons with openings for have been asked to habilitation D) tion, U. Washington. Maj. Lent, manager of the employ- ment service, was employment - ager for one of the largest telephone companies in the country. He served | overseas as a major in a combat di- vision and was later, upon his re-| turn to this country, in charge of demobilization of veterans at Camp Dix. were | 14 ployment Bureau, dismissed without notice by “ADAM AND EVE” PAY $354 GAME LAW FINE Plea That Their Example of Liv- ing Close to Nature Helps World, Fails With Judge. HOULTON, Me., Sutter of Boston garet broke the 1 get food nec June 10.—Carl and his wife M ame laws of Maine SSAry lo sustain life, they told Judge James Archibald here vesterday when pleading guilty to five violations of the game code. It that ~ the man woman, while living as the “modern Adam and Eve" in thé woods near Howebrook, trapped a deer, killed partridges, caught fish and made fires without reference to state regula- tions. They paid fines and c ag- gregating $354. ) Describing the plan of him Z t and his wife to live six weeks in the wilderness under natural conditions, i without clvilized clothing, fuod or weapons, Sutter told the judge that the good resulting from his exper- lence would more than balance any harm done by him in the woods. “If you are willing to suffer for humanity, then You must suffer the penalty of the law,” the judge re- plied. —_— ARSENAL-NAVY YARD WAGE BILL OFFERED Representative Hull Introduces Measure Following Committee Hearings. Establishment of a board of wage adjustments for asenals and navy yards is proposed in a bill introduced by Representative Hull of Towa. This s a direct result of hearings before a subcommittee of the naval affairs committee. on another bill by Representative Hull, seeking to main- tain_the existing 'force of expert workmen in the navy vard and, if possible, to restore many who werl putting Into the arsenals and navy vards all government work possible. The bill, Introduced yesterday, pro- vides for twelve members of the board of wage adjustments, who shali serve without compensation, but whose expenses shall be paid by the federal government. It proposes that three of these members shall 1 appointed by the Secretary of Wa. three by the Secretary of the Navy and six by the employes, which means the District of the Intérnational As- sociation of Machinists, which in- cludes all machinists in the govern- ment service. ——— MURDERER OF CHILD SAVES LIFE BY PLEA Slayer of 7-Year-Old Ida Kramer Confesses—Jail Sentence to Be Determined. By the Associated Press, CAMDEN, N. J., June 10.—George E. Monroe, who kidnaped seven-year-old Ida Kramer from her home in Wood- bury and crushed her head with a rock when she made too much noise, 1w‘m not have to stand trial for his ife. Prosecutor Wolverton announced yesterday he had agreed to accept a plea of “non vult” from the prisoner, who has confessed his crime. He said he would confer with Justice Katzen- bach to determine the degree of mur- der for which Monroe shall be sen- tenced. The non vult plea eliminates possi- bility of a death sentence. DWARF DIES AT 81 YEARS. MORGANTOWN, W. Va., June 10.— “Major” Lewis Davis, retired circus dwarf, died at his home in Granville, near here, vesterday, aged_eighty-one years. For more than fifty years “Major"” Davis traveled with circuses as a sldeshow attraction. ty-seven inches in height, He was thir- ling prozram consis {MUSIC INDUSTRIES ELECT. Richard W. Lawrence of New York | giv: JUNE 10, 19232.° GIRL RESERVE CAMP TO BE OPENED JUNE 24 Y. W. C. A. to Conduct Place at Ammendale, Md.—Cpen to Girls Between 10 and 20 Years, Opening of the girl Reserve camp of the Y. W. C. A., at Ammendale, Md., will take place June 24, it was an- nounced today by, the camp committee, Miss Agnes Miller, chairman. The first four weeks are to be re- served for grade school girls, and the remainder of the summer for high school girls, While open to all girls between the ages of ten and twenty dents are serves the camp may be r being 56 cents « 5 The charges for © $6 pe k | and the limit of a stay Girls have been in: middy blouses, bloomers, heeled sho bathing towels, on middy. Becaus the cvening pro ments and masque be brought. Visitor ing winter. T by train, to bring | are welc nducted along rve program, | among other and visitors are asked to bringing candies and 4 ore is open | week, fruit and | may be bought at a milke_chocola onable I program _includes rising The daily bell at am.: fla ng and sct- | ting-up dnll before | . which is D inspection at 9:45; swimming. ball, until dinner period, 1:30 to 3 p.m. reation and supper hiking ind stunts, . lights out at Helin MeQuil ch the gITs how to conduct garm so that when they re- help the younger o te and recreation turn home they children in where there are few 1 Heads Chamber of Commerce. reside ' first viee n. Cymden “Diana? Wildest of all! Clever, reckless, talked about. Give her room!” they advised Maitland. Yet the first time he saw her, disregarding the traditions of his life, he yielded to her fascination. IHUNT IN VAIN FOR SLAYER Where Trail Is Lost. JACKSON, Mich,, Ju a fru yer of Miss Alics ron of the Community Activities for District Public Schools to Close Thursday. Commun Mallett, thirty- Crittenton Home body was found five, m. ¥ centers of 1l hools will clos hurs rer and will not reopen until October 1, it was announced to- day by M eral |} r de-| or the st Norton, g mmunity ce of the center: programs, arranged crime, poiice partment. In however, specis Bloodhounds various or before the clos set, will month. | High | whic center at the will be one will be open at different pe ing the remainder of the month cial music work is being carried on | and grounds. Outstanding Features. celopment of community ties and pa try the outstanding featu v center work iss Norton ¢ UE Svaric to aha s aeany eono Q o 9 under irection of Miss| ed_out the i 0 pzucxous music, v been dram p - Powell ead” Ly the Petwor Other Notable Productions. You'll find they'r after thi. cooling, tie d cénters princig 431 Ninth St. 719 14th St. 3034 14th St 1004 F St. —to take the inside story of New York’s plutocracy—its good and its evil—its scan- dals,its foibles,the skeletons in its closets —and combine them in such an unsparing revelation of present-day social life as does Arthur Train who, by birth, association and professional experience, has had the opportunity to know the truth. A lawyer of wide social acquaintance in America and England, a formerdeputy attorneygen- eral and assistant district attorney for many years, he tells us with great dramatic power just what is going on these days in what used to be known as “the 400.” Do Not Miss B ——and Sheila, youngest of all, little bundle of nerves—debutante of a week. Helpless victim of materialism. Whose fault that she progressed from drink to drugs before her first season ended? HIS CHILDREN’S CHILDREN cArthur Train’s New Novel %‘_I—_J What Makes a Fascinating to Women ? That depends on whether the womanis a iover-woman, mother-woman, or neuter- woman. See Elinox;Glyn’s searching study. Golden Honeymoon More than humor—by RING W. LARDNER Man Would You Marry for Money? If you did, how much misfortune do you think you could withstand successfully ? Read “HisWife'sMoney,”byldaM.Evans. Man’s Best Friend A dog story—Dby PETER B. KYNE _ Lillian Russell’s Reminiscences George Ade on the human pest. Edgar Guest, Gouverneur Morris, Frank R. Adams, Achmed Abdullah, P. G. Wode- house, Montague Glass. More of Robert Hichens’ and Meredith Nicholson’s great serials, and cover by Greatest Magazine 0Smop Harrison Fisher. For July— Just Out itan ROW! AT ALL NEWSSTANDS America’s

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