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TR RS R From To Farms You An “in-town” 44 OF JOLY —for those who are remairing at Rome. OR VISITORS TO WASH- INGTON, we have prepared SURPRISE TREAT in the way of an_especially delightful menu for dinner—served from 12 o'clock. DINNER A dclightful hot-wea- ¢ ther menu served in our lunchroom ...... 3y, | " 4 cool, quict dinner ¢ —the table service $ .25 will appeal in our lunchrooms . . es served Special cold d nd tuncih for breakf: BELLEVUE FARMS LUNCH 1334-36 G $t. 1338 N. Y. Ave. DINING ROOM 1332 G St. N.W. EZDS A HIA S PAINT NOW _ ‘We will give you a perfect Painting job at & moderate cost. 1 K. F y R. ‘erguson, ¥ Painting Dept. 1114 9th St, Phones Main 2490-2491. Distifictive Styles in Monogram and Summer Stationery BREW®D TWELFTH STREET bectwesn Fard & Free Your ORIENTAL RUGS —from chances of having moths Thoroughly Cleaned Now Phoune or Send Postal . Hekimian 1516 H N.W. Main 2063 get into them by having them | CLAFLIN Remember Our New Address Eres examined for glasses. Occulists’ Rx filled. ChflinOpficalCo. cn‘yx::‘ E:l‘r.ix. Beautify . Complexion IN TEN DAYS treme cases. Rids es and tissues of impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy. At leading toilet counters. At Pre-War Prices, Twe Sizes, 80c. and $1.00 NATIONAL TOILET CO., Paris, Tenw Bad For Washing Hair Most soaps and prepared sham- poos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is Mul fled cocoanut oil shampoo, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap and beats anything else all to pleces. You can get Mulsifled at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole mily for months. [ Two or three teaspoonfuls of Mulsified in a cup or glass with warm water is all that is| d. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. ‘The hair dries quickly and evenly, d ft, Sresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Be sure your druggisi rlve'l you Mulsified.—Advaertise- ment. Cille j embassy, and th {ldge. jr., \__Rear Admiral William S. Benson left | Washington {coast, going in connection with affairs |for the Shipping Board. {accompanied him and they will be ab- Senator and Mrs. T. Coleman du Pont Give Use of Their Yacht Tech for the Senate. Ladies’ RS. COOLIDGE will preside at the weekly picnic luncheon of the Senate ladies, to be given on board the Tech, the yacht of Senator and Mrs. T. Coleman du Pont, Tuesday of next week. Mrs. du I'ont is a memher of the orgaw- ization and a more charming change from the weekly routine would be hard to imagine. All of the details of the regular weekly parties will be carried out. even to the members taking their own sandwiches. The Pastmaster General's Sixty-Second Amniveraary. The Postmaster General and Mr. Work will celebrate the former's birthday anniversary with a small ¢ ‘dinner party in treir apart- dman Park Hotel, this The minister of Siar Karavongse, and the counselor of Je- Phya Prabha { gation. Phra Sanpakitch, returned to Washington last evening after spend- ing the week end with Mr. and Mrs. lliam Goodman at Chestnut Hill iladelphia. - Mrs. Henry Getty Chilton, wife of the charge d'affaires of the British children will leave Washington Friday for Grand Rapids Mich.. where they will spend the sum- | mer with her parents, former United States ambassador to Japan-and Mr Thomas J. O'Brie Senator and Mrs. Tasker f. Odale are expected to return Wednesday |, 'S [OTmer € rectil O from New York, where they are spending several days at the Hotel Ambassador. Representative Joseph G. Cannon, his daughter, Miss Helen Cannon, and his granddaughter, Miss Helen Le- Seure, will start by motor Wednes- day for East Gioucester, Mass., whare they will be guests of Mr, and Mrs. J. L. Loose of Kansas €ity, who are cstablished there in their summer home. Mr. and Mra Loose spent a poriion of the winter in Washing- ton, visiting Representative and Miss Cannon and later took an apartment at Wardman Park Hotel. Miss Hazel Jone: daughter of Senator and Mrs. Wesley L. Jones of Seattle, Wash., and Miss Marian Cameron will leave Washington urlay to motor to Seattle. While the actual details of the journe: not quite complete, they are fully equipped for the long journey. Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge, wife of former Senator Beveridge of Indiana iand who is a nominee for the Senate in the autumn, and their two children, Abby Beveridge and Albert J. Bever- are in their summer home, The Farms, in Beverly, Mass. Mrs. Grafton Minot will entertain at dinner this evening in her summer home The Alhambra, at Prides Crossing, Mass., in honor of the third assistant secretary of state and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss. Mr. and Mrs. Reginald C. Foster of Boston, the later formerly Miss Frances Hoar, daughter of Mrs. Frederick H. Gillett, are spending the holiday with Mrs. Minot. Mrs. Henry C. n will_sail from New York Saturday, July 15, for En- rope. She will be accompanied by her sister, Miss elen Patten, and they will not return to this country until No- vember. Saturday for the west Mrs. Benson sent for several weeks. Mrs. Wade H. Ellis has gone to At- lantic City to remain for a week or ten days, until Mr. Ellis returns from a business trip to San Franeisco. Dr. Louis Lehr Married In Baltimore Saturday. The marriage of Mrs. Eleanor Moale {Hillen, daughter of the late Dr. and William A. Moale, and Dr. Louis Charies Lehr. son of Mrs. Lehr and the late Robert Lehr, took place Saturda: morning at 10 o'clock at St. Ignatiu: Catholic Church, Baltimore, where the ceremony s performed by Rev. Father Thomas Dilehant. The wedding was very quiet, with no ! one present except the two immediate famliies. The bride was given away by her uncle, Mr. John 8. Gittings, and Mr. Robert O. Lehr was his brother's best | man. _There was no reception, Dr. and Mrs. Lehr leaving at once for a wedding journey. Their future home will be in ‘Washington, where they will be at home after October 1. ) Mrs. Lehr, whose first husband was the late T. O'Donnell Hillen, belongs to one of the oldest families in Maryiand. | Dr. Lehr also belongs to & prominent | ftamily. Mrs. Alonzo Tynér and her daugh- ter, Miss Mary Louise Tyner,' left Washington yesterday for New York. snd on July 4 will sail for Europe on board the Aquitania, to be absent in Europe until early in October. . The marriage of Miss Mary Carolyn Morris, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John Norfolk Morris of Sykesville, Md., to Mr. Richard Francis Brawner of Indian Head, Md. took place Satur- |Haan, U. 8. A., gave day. The ceremony was performed at Delmor, the country home of the bride’s parents at Sykesviile, by the | Rev. William Milne. Maj. Gen. and M supper danc and garden party Wednesday even- |ing in the studio and garden of the residence at 1825 M street, which they have taken for the summer. Mrs. Haan is planning to give. several of these informal parties later in the season. Their guests Wednesday In- cluded: Gen. and Merritte W. Ireland, U. 8 A.; Col. G. J. Rackham, British war office; Gen. and Mrs. G. F. [| Downey, U. S. A Chevy Chase, Md. W. D. Connor, U. 8. A.; Col. and Hull, 0. 8 A Mrs. M. A. Delaney, U, 8. A. Mrs, H. C. Barnes, U. 8. and Mrs. R. C. Marshall, -Gen: Mry. G. Le R. Irwin, U, 8. 5 and Mrs. J. W. Gulick, U. 8. i H. C. Collins, U. S. A.; Mr, and ‘Mrs. T. J. D. Fuller, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Adams, Maj. West, U. S. A. U. A.; Maj. ant ¥ A Partridge, U. S. A.; Col. Frailey, Col. and Mrs. W. R. Smedberg, U. S. A. Col. and Mrs. fi C. Langd Ge orge T. La T. 8 and Col. J. W. Beacham, U. S. A. Mrs. John Upshur Moorhead has closed her home on K street and gone to Cape May, N. for the remainder of the season. Col. and Mrs. E. D. Bricker have given up their house at 13 New Hampshire avenue and have taken an apartment at 1870 Wyoming avenuye. Mrs. Stanley, wife of Lieut. Com- mander Emory D. Stanley, U. 8. N, left Thursday for Minnesota, with their children.’ They will make some Lunch Ju]y 11. ing a few days with the Army and in their apart- Chicago, are spend! the surseon general Mrs. Merritfe Ireland, ment in the; Wyoming. Dr.. and Mrs. mes B. Holmes Ml Baltimore :re spending the holiday with the formsrs mother, Mrs. Jemes Holmes in Washington. Mrs. Herbert Shipman will spend July 4 at Newpet. Miss Bess lflumv of Texas, who has been the gitest of Mr. and Mrs. William Mills at Chevy Chase, left Thursday for Atlantic City for 2 week end visit. Bhe will then join her mothet and family on Long Island. Miss Murphy was a mem- ber of a recent house party entertained at Valley Vlew, the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. er A. Drury, above Blue- mont. This is the former summer home of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Gale, which was purchased last year by Nr. Drury and greatly added to and improved. B Mr. Frank G. Carpenter has ar- rived in Parfs. He will remain_in Europe throtgh the summer. His mountain home above Bluemont, Va., lis occuied tigs season by Mr. and | Mrs Dudley Fiarmon of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Chrl Mr. and Mrs Albert opened their home at Kasthampton, (L. L. for the summer. They spent ast winter in California and have recently returmed to the east. Mr._and Mra. Archibald Robison of ! New York are guests at the Powh: tan while steying in Washington. The former director of the budget spent some )days with Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Wil- ‘liam H. Carter, in their summer home lon tl mountain above Bluemont, | Va., before Jeaying Washington. Gen. | and Mrs. Carter have been for a month in the mountains, and will re- ‘main until the 1st ¢f October. It is sthe former hame of the late Mrs. ) Curtis J. H{Hver. | Mrs. Walter ‘Wilcox is now in Paris, {where she will wipend some time. She will not return to this country until the autumn, and will visit a number :of other cities an the continent dur- |ing the summer | Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bennett are on a motor tour intended to include | Atlantic City and other ocean resorts !along the way to New York. They {will return about July 5. The marriage tok place Wednesday evening, June at 8 o'clock, in the j Waace Memorial Uni Presbyterian Church, of Miss SAma E. Hammer, the ! davghter of Mr. mj1d Mrs. George T. Hammer, and Mr. 'Willlam K. Houser. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. J. Alvin Camgfell. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore «a gown of silk lace over a foundation of silver cloth, a girdle of orange blodsoms marking the walst Iine. Her tulla veil fell in grace- ful folds forming a (rain and was be- comingly arranged with a bandeau of orange blossoms. Shi carried a bridal bouquet of lilies of, the valley and white roses. The biide's sister. Mra. W. P. Lambert, was the matron of honor and wore a cliarming dress of ! orchid organdie over pink and carried pink roses. Little Imez Lambert was flower girl and_wore a dress of pink- and-bluc organdy and carried a basket of pink roses. Mr. John Houser. brother of the bridegroom, act~d as best ma The ushers were Mr. Hurry Houser, M Perry Huff, Mr. Ralph Childs and M aven Hammer. e e™ Mouser and his bride left later in the evening for thelr wedding trip to Bristol, Tenn., where they will visit relatives and friends, the bride wear- !ing a smart traveling sult of gray cads ton crepe, with cape and hat to match. They will be at home at %08 Crittenden street northwest, \Waskington, after August 1. Mr. and Mrs. William Bruce King will occupy their place at Blyemont, Va.. for the month of August. Mrs. King, who has been seriously ill, is recuperating in the country and will be Joined there later in July by Mr. King before they go to Bluemont. Mr. and Mrs. George R. Shields of Washington ‘occupying the King place until the } 1st of Augus an Herter and Herter have De Guerre—Hoskinson { Wedding in California. | "Mr. and Mrs. George P. Hoskinson announce the merriage of their Qaughter, Derothy Louise, to Mr. Syd- ney Chester de Guerre, Saturday, 1July 1, at San Francisco, Calif. Miss Dorothy Quincy Smith, daugh- iter of Mr. E. Quincy Smith, who for two vears has been attending the Sorbonne at Paris, has passed her ex. amination with honorable mention. Miss Smith leaves Paris this weel for a course at the summer school of the University of Spain {n Madrid. Miss Eleanor S. Mussey, who spent the winter with her grandmother. ! Mrs. Charles A. Shields, has returned |to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam H. Mussey, who now teside in- Chi- cago. Miss Mussey is also the grand- {daughter of the late Gen. R. D. Mussey and Mra. Ellen Spencer ses. his widow. A wedding of Interest in Virginia !and the District of Columbia is that lof Miss Katharine Cabbell Flournoy and Mr. Willlam Caldwell Powall, both of Norfo'k, but well known in- | Washington. which took place June 17 in Norfolk. Mr. Powell is the son of Mrs, “William Levin Powell of| Lecsburs. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Beverldge, Miss Anne Herwood Beveridge and Miss jAnne Herwood Griffith of Richmonc Va:, are in Washington, and are at the Powhatan. Miss Amy Adler announces the mar- riage of her sister, Lucille, and Mi Samnel Middleman of Philadelphi: Pa.. on Sunday, July 2, at 2 o'clock, in Philadelphia. Miss Amy Adler is spending 3 week: in New York city. the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Albert Behrend. Dr. Paris Breugle and Mrs. Breugle sre in Atlantic City; and are staying at the Hotel Dennis. Judson and Elliott Bowles, sons of Mr. and Mrs. B. A.- Bowles, enter- tained a number of their little friends at a lawn party at their home on i Albemarle street, Chevy on Saturday evening, the occasion being the ninth and eleventh birthday annivar- saries, respectively, of the bovs. Games were anlolycd by the children on the spacious lawn, after which refresh ts were served at a lomg tabl decorated in colors, each birthday cake containing tlie proper number of candles. —_— ACCUSED OF RING THEFT. Ice Wagon Helper Said to Have Admitted Taking $175 Gem. Albert Ignatius Brooks, ‘colored, 1120 Reeves Tt, who came here from Ma. bout. visits there and then go to Nebraska |thai for the latter part of August. They have given.up the house on Massa- chusetts avenue Which they occupled for several years, and will join Com- mander Stanley iIn New York early |pol in September, to safl with Peru. Commander Stanley hhn’gw'?x: New York state, but has been ar-. dered to Lima in connection with the gmmg ;{ the new I“ll', of Peru. o and his family will sail abou September 10. ¥ r v and Mrs Tomm P8 - AT o A i !too, might achieve much it he would i consistently MISS MARIAN CAMERON, Who, after spending several months as the guest of Semator amd Mra. Wesley L. Jones, dopart Satur- day with their daughter, Miss Hasel Jones, to motor to Seattle. Births Reported. The following bizths have heen reported to the ‘health deparcment in® the lage twenty: four bours Coleman, girl. Hillcary, boy. girl. irl, A Wilwon. West, W Joseph D. Annie Ewery L. and Madge 6 Jeouerd ‘aad Mildred §. and J G . urbu ‘ton K. i t Wikliay Wil 1. a Waiter and Ha B B. and Hosa n, boy. oy, od liertie Fitzhugh, giri. James and Pearl Bryas, gi Deaths Reported. the health depurtme Tours piloim Chase, 27, Georgetown Universify’ Hos- B.'F. Seott, 65, Unlon station, firi Hospitul, Saiah E. Miller, 74, 3007 Michigan avenue Bortheast. Mattie B. Gable, 61, 308 Rbode Island ave- " 01ysaes h, Elizabe th ital ysses Laffoth, . Elizabeths Hos Cetella Wheeler, 00, Frevdmens Horpital James Watson, 17, Washington Asylum Mospital. Elizabeth Smith, 69, Hospital. Lobr Paraham, 7 months, 7 Washington Asylum 7 M street. LOOK FOR-THE GOOD. BY H. ADDINGTON BRUCE. Copyrighted, 1622, by The Associated News- | pipes. Two men met performance both had attended. “How did you like the play?" was the grecting of one. “First rate,” came the prompt re- sponse. “It may not have much of & run, but T found it interesting. And| you?z' H “It hored me utterly. I haven't had ! such a duil evening in a long time. How it ever reuched the stage ] can no more imagine than I imagine what you saw in it to like Then, after a medltative pause: “But T might have known you'd see something good i it. You contrive to see something good in most every- thing. That's & habit of yours.” Most certainiy it was not a habit of the speaker's. = His habit, rather, was to search out weak spots, to carp, to criticize, unmercifully to detect and call attention to faults and flaws, And poesibly because this was his habit life had not been overkina to m. At fifty he was an emblttered, dis- appointed man. Whereas the ma of the opposite habit—the habit of seeing something good in every thing—had to his credit a degree of business success. of creative accom- plishment, which compelled the other’s grudging admiration, 1t only that other, years before, had recognized the possibility that he. look for the good. If had pondered and taken to y phi- insight and true only he heart the words of a latter- losopher of keen vision: “You can constantly find in others | schiel something good to praise and iIn dorse. Look for the best, the bright, the beautiful all about you. Make your thought constructive and pro- gressive. The habit of generous and Tie following deaths have been reported to! With marks and later transform them 1o the isst tweniy-four | Into double the | D.C. Mery’ A Lucey, 0, Home fof Aged and In-| hold them until people sre willing to Clules F. Stuke, 34, United States Naval| scicber. after a theatrical ! pictyres {me an estimate on the bookcages. 1 IN GERMANY NOW Profiteer and Smuggler Gets Wealth and Advantage Out of Conditions. . "(‘r‘.,;unln’u another- of Mr. Modsrweil'e les on present-day ; living conditions Germany.) 4 BY HIRAM K. MODERWELL. (Bpecial Correspondence of The Star and Chi- cago Daily News.) BERLIN, Germany, middle class of Germany has lost its wealth through the devaluation of the mark. Who has picked it up? The visitor gets part of the answer in the first day he spends with Ger- men people. He asks a German friend to dinner at some elean, pleas- ant restaurant. . “I really don’t enjoy going there,” replies the German friend. “It is full of schieber. You look up “schieber” in your German dictionary and discover that it means “one who shove After further investigation you find that it meéans “one who shoves illegal goods under the hand when the police are not looking.” The word was adopted during the war to describe thut furtive fra- ternity who provided the German burgher with milk a«nd butter and eggs and teat und sugar and coffee | when these thinks were nominally rationed aud ;o tainable, 1t hus been retained to de- seribe all who profited by uny ques- tionable practices during the war, and especially those who since the war have profited on the suffering of others. Work en Wide Scale. The schieber, who once were sneaks peddling lumps of sugar from back door to back door, are now those who i smuggle German 'stocks of food and clothing into Switzerland; those who bring Czeck crowns in thelr shoes into Germany; those who buy up the | sugar beet crop und hold it for high- er prices; those who purchase dollars g number of marks. | When supplies of food and clothing are short there are some who will know how (o accumulate them and Day more for them. These are the When paper marks flow from the printing presses by billions every month (here wre whose who know how to grzb them and purchage things to resell later to the people at double prices. These are the schicber. When industrial securities are falling there are those who know how to buy them from needy holders and reap a stock bonus at _the next emi-unnnal distribution. These ure he schieber. The schieber go to the best res- taurzn The rchieber have the best soats he opera. The schieber buy those charming silk kimonos which cost a month’s wages. . Buy Pictures ond Books. The schieher buy pictures. It is said that the s-hieber want tures which are safd to b hire ect them. H not yet But the s . and for «o; book critics. Hence the taste ! in literature ha- decdedly dechined, | A echieber recently eatered one of the best book shops fm Munich and | saw the exquisitely bonnd volumes | shelved against cnc wall “How much do those books cost?" he asked. “Well, wiich cnes would y repiied ‘the proprietor. you Goethe, or Schiller, “Oh, 1 don't care replicd the visitor. T need books in my house. Make an estimate and send me the bill tomorrcw. Ang while you are about it, send me the. bill for those books om the other wall. And you might as well send noticeably need bookcases, too. The story has the double advan- tage of being interesting and abso- lutely true. It is elear to the visitor at the first glance that the people who nowadays occupy the best places in the theaters and restaura: peopie capabie of fine discrimination in art and music and literature. not people capable of wise and moderite political ~thought, or of de themselves to unselfish public or of adding to the nation's learning and beauty. Effect om Character. Certainly this shift of econdmic ! powe‘rnnom !hehmlddlo class to the | r must ve a profou e Toct on the life of Germany It"is too eariy: to eeti: te fts extent or character.. Exactly a imilar change came over France during the great revolution, after Napoleon had shot ock of | appreciative praisc of others will give, you a mental uplift. Aye, and also it will send the blood coursing more swiftly through your Veins. Tt will help to keep your bload free from toxins and impurities. It will- react to energise your whoie organism. to raise your vital powers. Persistently gcnorous thoughts have a dynamic influence far reaching in ultimate effec = Persistently ' unkind thoughts, on tho eontrary, persistently critical eaustic thoughts. shrivel the person- ality and slow down the processes of life. narm to tho than to those against whom they are entertained and uttered. In time they impair the efficiency, perhaps _impair it to a vanishing point. They may even impair hedlth Jeself. 1f it is a trulsm that when a man’s health is poor he is the more likely to be cynically minded, it is equaily true that the cyrically minded @R is likely to have poor. health. ! "R our own profit. ! ember this for -rfy'“in moke the habit of looking for the good your habit. It is a habit that will advantage you in many ways. MISSING GIRL BACK HOME. Miss Anna H. Ihrie, fifteen years old, reported missing from her home at 1302 Monroe street, Friday night, ';“i":“dcl home. visited ‘rien going AwWay ::khout telling of he: intended destination. Strategy. From the Los Angeles Times. “Stiddy there, lion; take it aisy,” quave: the Irish soo attendant in his most soothing and ingratiating tores, as the transfer of a wild beast was being from one cage to anoth effected. “What's the 1dea?’ queried a com- rade. “Callin’ that hyens lion?” “Have ye no_tact? Can’t ye fistterin’ him I am? The e 'tis ‘scyum._ Cleaner and we why. Use it on the rugs, uph BUY ON EASY TERMS otomac Electy jof the domiruting class in France Inevitably they do far more;and 1 ? irl hAfll near Frederick, Mt l 'Supe_r New Vacuum Cleaner No ;Ii. cleamer compares with the Super the popular protost. full of grapesh France suddenly bleesomes with & clasz of nouveaux riches, who had speculated money, supplied the | army or purchared nationslized land with depreciated aszignats. And these peorle ; bycame the ancestors today. When and if Germany attain - Dbility, the schfeber may become .‘:: tains of industry gnd finance, leaders of thought and’ arbiters of taste. 'rrenlefla; %55 and daughters “are al- ering the riva 2 universities. . After il tas descendaats of high-ciass But for the present the public. m‘:s and amenities of German 1ife are in the bands of those who are chiefiy gxpert in “shoving illcgal goods un- W;-k}::"{um when the police are not BUSY MILK PROVIDER. Greensboro, N. C., Community Cow Rents for $1 a Week. From Survey. The Church-by-the-side-of-the-road in Greensboro, N. C, has a commu- nity cow, rented out at $1'a week to familles who cannot afford to buy cows. The proceeds sre being saved to buy other cows, so that eventually there may be & community herd. The community cow was firat placed with a family of six chilirén. A. W. [ partment there. Aft who entertaln them { German pre-war aristocracy :v'(‘-'re the [ € e | James D. Bailey, self-styled mem- offices and post roads, who recently offered fo sell automobiles to rural letter carriers for $50 aplece, and who fled from Washington when his scheme was found out. was arrested Saturday at Winston-Salem, N. C.,, on telegraphic Instructions from F. R. Barclay, inspector, in charge here. Bailey, whose plans nearly secured hundreds of dollars from ryral car- riers, each one eager toyget one of those nice, new automobiles which a kind government was offering to selected :few, ered at a hotel at Winston-Salem under the same name which he had used when he played “congressman.” Comparison of the name on the hotel register and the name signed to the letters sent rural carriers, which were upon House of Repre- sentatives stationery, believed stelen from the House, led to the arrest of Lailey, and prelimingry hearing at Winston-Salem before = Willlam H. Beckerdite, United States commi sioner, Bailey was held on $5,000 pail for another hearing July 17 charged with using the mails to de- fraud. Pcstmaster Gauses Arrest, He will be brought before the grand jury here. His arrest was brought about by Postmaster John T. Benbow of Winston-Salem and the police de- Postal Inspectors B. B. Webb and R. W. Hodgin appeared al the preliminary hearing for the goyernment. e S During the past six weeks inspec- tors have held up hundreds of doil: worth of money orders riade pa. to Bailey at 121 Maryland avi northeast, from which pkce he when hi3 scheme was discovered. leaving behind nothing but a few Gollar marks scrawled on the walls and bits of torn letters. During_ his few days' stay at the Maryland avenue address Bailey typed and mailed out hundreds of letters, using House of Representa- téye envelopes and. paper, securing his addresses from the postal guide, in many cases addressing the lettets only to “the carrier on route No 1.” ete. Early Acceptance Urged. The letter offered practically new CASTORIA Por Infants and Children InUse For Over 30 Years Always bears the R WE SPECIALIZE on school and church fomitire. Austrien ent d folding chairs earried Lentwood chairs sud folding chairs carried Clean, mothp-eaf asd Sanitary Carpet . 419 New Jersey Ave. Linwotn TA38 or 3481 fter business beurs, Nerth IS5 McAlister, one of .the founders of the Church-~by-the-side-of-the-road, writes: “You should see how these children are blossomimg forth. You €am see the bloom in their cheeks, and the scales have a story to toll also. At least once a week our community nurse looks in on the community cow to see how she i and how she is be- ing treated.” 3 4 - PR New want you to know etc. * FREE TRIAL it Appliance Ca. ‘Washiogtoa Raliway and Electric and C Sts. N.W. Phone Main 965 ;5¥a Teny oy Abagie b4 ba desry: PRICLON. “SCHIEBER” REIGNS | “Satesman, ” Offering Surplus Army Autos for $50, Nabbed 258 ave | Xegoe gmrs 55 ber of the House committee on post]certain carriers, and advised Boned CHICKEN ‘WHEN APPETITES CLAMOR tasty and that satisfies, Chicken is the answer. for somethin R & R Bone For fifty years, it has had a place on the pantry shelves of busy housewives. For fifty years, it has been a required article in many an expericnced camper’s equipment. Marriage licenses bave been issued to the y ai o & o S, T o 4 mAs H. Porter of Rartholozew I ed as s l ‘Russell both of B ore, i ows ‘Monroe of_Btatesville, ¥. C. Tell M. Peterson and Mary J. Marocker. and post roads committee, came mneat blank, so that 21l the rural car-. Jgier had to do was sign on the dotted ne and inclose a money order for uu‘-;;eq-an-unnu-!., - s and Mary Bradley, both of - dame 254 Lillan V. Houpe. both member of the House post offica The carrier was assured that in ad- dition to the first payment, there would be only one .more paym ent, s not in excess of $30, 80 that the total cost would not run over $100. Bailey, who is twenty-three years old, south gave N. C LOCK ’EM OUT OF JAIL. |'neing a Fiji Convict Is “Soft,” But came to Washingion from the to carry out his scheme. He his home as North Wilkesboro, It Has Its Cares. From the Chicago Tribune. j The i prison in Suva, Pij! Islands, is “most imposing place, writes a cor- ndent. It presents a fine stone i iwall to the gaze of the visitor com- ling up the road. There is a great in the most 4gne with & small gate to come in 1 just - as But upon wall the many jokes of the Fijian penal system. It'e the ground: -leaving the ‘prluons in European countries. improved once inside the jail it dawns you that the imposing stone is nothing but a joke—one of xtends only around three sides of - com- pletely. apen- 1o the busk and hills, jas if the whole establishment were a {model and meant only to, be looked at from the front. “Doing ’time” is not a very heart- {deal breaking affair. jand lawns of the town want a great The grass edging of trimming and the convicts with_knives two feet in length are iput to work on the job. i |” Sometimes a convict acts as mes- |songer to various goverpment depart- ments. i An day long one may see stalwart 'Fijians in broad-arrowed. rig loafing around the doorway and shady veran- das or conveying letters to govegnment house, the banks or the cable station. One of the pet jokes of Buva is the home-going. of the prisoners. ‘The Jail gates-are closed at 6 o'clocl and a few minutes earlier gangs © convicts can be seen collecting frois sutomobiles of & popular make tojevery part of town. Jy: If they are mot in by $ o'clock < ear] acceptance, gs the surplus cars, the terrible punishment awaits them—a property of the War Department, punishment they would do anything would soon be gone. Below the signature ,to avoid. of Bailey, sign-! They are shut out of jail —— . Seccl? "SALADA" So simply and cheaply made and yet the most refreshing beverage known Be sure, of course, that you get ‘Salada’, for the flavour of iced tea is the secret of its fascination. woan Makes any tempting dish that can be made from chicken meat. And it’s economical, too. In 6 0z. and 13 oz. tins.