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S PP PR —— cemenas: prespres— o A T ST ot Vacation Safety You will enjoy your vacation .more if you have valuable papers and jewelry in one of our— Safe Deposit Boxes Prices Moderate You will travel easier if you carry our— Travelers’ Checks —uwith you instead of cash These checks are as easy to use as cash and are safe to T carry. INCOLN NATIONAL BANK 7th and D Streets Washington, D. C. Mhe Safe Dresg Stores 13th & F 904 F St. 4th & F 15t & G 418 7th St. 13th St. & Pa. Ave. 1006 F 1717 Pa. Ave. PENNIES SAVED RUN INTO| . DOLLARS IF YOU BUY ALL, = DRUG STORE NEEDS AT| LIGGETT'S 1 Coty’s Face Powder . Azurea Face Powder Nadine Face Powder . Houbigant’s Ideal Talc . Houbigant’s Quelque Fleur Talc Pinaud’s Lilac Vegetal ....89c Lyon’s Tooth Powder .....17¢| soc size Pyrodento Tooth Paste soc size Pebeco Paste Brownatone Hi Dy $1 siz> Bromo Seltzer.. 89c Veronal Tablets (in tubes) 45¢ Fleet's Phospho [S77 P 23C, 496, Marmola Tablets ... Gude’s Pepto-Mangan s VACATION? Cigarettes Drop a Carton in Your Grip $1 size Horlick's Malted 200 Chesterfield Milk . ;::-++79¢| 200 Piedmont . Pinkham's Vegetable Com- | 200 Black and White . pound .i......... 5 $1 size Glyco Thymoline .. California Syrup of Figs. Alophen Pills .. $1 size Lavoris $1 size Nujol.. $1 size Danderine . .79¢ Dryco Milk (hospital size) $1.98 Fletcher’s Castoria ........35¢ Nuxated Iron Tablets ....79c Elixir of Babek .53¢ Lord Salisbury (foil) $1.68 Fatima ...$1.95 Omar .. ...$1.95 Egyptian Straights $1.05 (20's, 50's, 100s) Helmar ... (20’s, 50's, 100's) Turkish Trophies .. (30's, 50’8, 100’s) ..$1.05 Carter's Little Li ..15¢| 100 Murad . 100 Mogul 100 Melachrino No. g....$145 (Plain_or Cork) 100 Natural ..............8145 Pall Mall (Natural)..$2.10 No. 7 A z h’]b 100 Phillip- Morris . (Cam- ~ 1 77 SRR S .10 A Writing Paper Offer | Economical for the home, but more | especially made for the traveler. 50 sheets of writing paperin tablet form and 24 envel all enclosed in a flat_substantially made 5 e it 4OC A Complete Shaving Outfit Some of our customers have told us that the smoothest shave they have had in a long time was with one of these Durham Demonstrator Razors. May be had in the old style Razor or the new style as pictured. The complete Razor and Blade free with e el 30c cALSO Buy Several . . At This Price A tooth brush is worth no more than you pay for it. You can buy them as low as 10c. But if youwould do away with the annoyanceof bristles coming out, buy an extra ly of these Tooth Bmyshe-bt lllmv of the family and » few o et o vt S 06 Week-End Food Specials ‘Week-Eads [COREES (4 'i?.'..‘."’m 45 2 for 62¢ TEAGipound) 2 forle COCOA Gigound) . "2 for 26c MG NAE ey sse 2 for 39¢ cHocOLATEFUD: 2 for 16 A S Seioriy 15 2 for 26¢ BEEF CUBES, . w2 fordlec B oy Reauety 35 £ Jor 36¢ VAN X iy 35 2 Jor 36¢ B O rvietysoc 2 for 91c ORIGINAL SATURDAY CANDY Frons? o 390 pound 65c value, During July " { was just above The : | Settle . By Lucille The Tows Printer’s Troubles. HE Hicksyille - /Tri-Weekly Sentinel was not’going to be out on time, it:was going to The | be a whole “day late. editor he didn’t have any to tear, it being conspicuous by ‘its absence. But he chewed his dry smoke viciously, be: |cause he prided himself on always going to press on time. 4 He happened to be the town printer as well as the editor, and for several days past state ot uphéaval because his daugh- ter was to have a leading part in an entertainment for the athletic fund that was to be given at the town ha Her she had been chosen for the honor, not only because of her lovely form and what was known, locally as her antso soaprany” voice, but be-. 2 she aamittedly did have the power of the Jocal press behind her. He said as much. But his bark worse than his bite, and his daughter knew that he didn't intend to print his suspicions. “But what you've dug out of me her rather suspected that WMb\mewmmmmt Sequel to “Brides Will Be Brides.” couldn’t ‘tear bis hair because his shop had ‘been in 2! right gt last” field | crossly, “and I meant ft.* Down! Van Slyke. ; omitted from the program. And Mi: Viola herself, with the tears strea ing down her feverish chéeks,’ was wildly imploring the 6ld doctor to do something, anything, to her aching it, V1" ha protested, I'd like to.” e shaking his. head." swelled -bigger than toad’ cheeks—you've.a spell of dul ing on tHat nobody could stop.” At 2 o'clock that afternoon a bris| little person trotted into the santine office and put a much.pinned and pasted copy for the evening’s program on the editor's desk. “There now,” she cried gayly, “it's “I told tliit committee not later than 11-o'clock,” the editor responded “But, Mr. Santord.” The young pe son lifted grieved ‘brown eyes. . “The thing that held us up was your own daughter's iliness, trylng -to find something we could. put.on in place of the perfactly lovely. things she was Oh, please, please, Adamant, he shook his head. “It's no use, couldn’t do it if I wanted to. Jake couldn't get 'em out and he wouldn’t if he could. Jake is feeling crotchety today anyhow.” The young' person whirled about this last week,” he grumbled at the a ‘on ‘the morning be(urie s in question, aution.” she retorted somewhat | inelegantly. a few little old posters and some tickets and a littie advertising and a few programs? Really nothing: but some ink and pa- per that’ been sticking around dusty, shop® since before the wa “How about your new fixings from the feet up?” he interrupted gloomily. “When you said dress you didn’t let on about stockings and slippers and gloves and- - “All charged at places you can pay for 'em with trade ads” responded the capable -lady, affectionately ad- justing his tie. “Cheer up. Think what a lot of extra copies of the pa- per you'll sell tomorrow. Everybody that's in the show will buy at least five copies to mail away “And that was all monkey nonsense, paper 1 whole day to print a lot of gush about local talent” he added grumpily. “And Il teil you right| now, you befter stir yourselt out of here and get that copy for your pro- grams back here by 11 o'clock by the latest or 1 won't be responsibie for your having 'em in time for your show. Jake won't get time to set ‘em up and run-em oft otherwise.” “Oh, do stop nagging.” ed. “We're having enough troubles without having to pacify you and Jake.- What- with -all the folk that lare down sick—" She cleared her own throat anxiously. *“I don't know however we are going to give a com- plote program. It gets changed every ten minutes.” She whiskea out, leav-, ing him a trifle more cheerful. “Prettiest, smartest girl in th town, If she is mine,” he mused. *T guess they'd be right put to It to have any entertainment in this town with- out her services.” He was perfectly right. For in an- other hour they were “put to it Peter Forgets Everything But 4 His Stomach. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. Who lets his stomach rule his mind in trosble will find. Himself in 8000 P eter Rabbit. My, how good, tender young cab- bage leaves are! By the time he had eaten twd Peter Rabbit had forgotten all his good resolutions. Anyway, it | he nadn't forgotten them he managed to keep them out of his mind, Two of | those young cabbage leaves were only enough to make him feel that he sim- ‘ply must have more.. He just couldn’t stop with two. It was -s0 quiet and still there in Farmer Brown's garden that Peter was no longer nervous. It seemed to him that he grew hungrier with every bite. He could think of nothing but his stomach. He forgot everything else. He settled right down to eating. = Hlur ) Boom! Such a Nolse Close to Peter's 2 Head! He no longer thought of taking just one_leaf at a time. Some plants he ate right down to tI Now Peter Rabbit's It takes a great deal be has anything he enjoys he greedy. Yes, sir, Peter Rabbit greedy. He greedy now. hopped from plant to plant and ate and ate and ate. He had forgotten all zbout Old Mr. Toad. He did occasion- ally sit up very straight to look and listen, for not even when he is filling his stomach with the things he likes best does Peter forget tl danger. often comes when least expected. Loojing and listening had become a hab{t with Peter.Sometimes he would pull off a leaf and eat it while he was sitting up looking and listening, Peter was sure that no one knew he was in that garden. But Peter wag mistaken. Boomer the Nighthawk had been catching his dinner on flying in- sects high in the air above Farmer Brown's garden. Looking down he could see_all that was going on. He had seen Peter before he entered that garden. He-had sean. Reter poke head under the-fence and there hesi tate. He had lqm,?&er nibble th first cabbage leaf. Thefi he h: Peter_séttle down to filling his big stomach. A ET 3 Z o “Peter Rabbit is fixing to get him- self into_trouble,” thought Bool “It is no bus of mine. Of cours not! Just the same. I think Il give him a little scare.’ - S © Boomer flew high in the afr until he eter. Then he closed his wings and shot down. Just as he was almost to the ground close to Peter he suddenly checked himself. Beom! Such a noise close to.Peter’s head! It was g0 sudden and unexpect- ed that !t»flghnnod Peter half vut of his wits, With a plece of cabbage leaf still hanging from “his mouth Peter made a long lexp, ahd away he went across that garden, lpperty- lipperty-lip. alfway covered his wits.- He knew-then what- hlg frightened him. He s an that idee of yours of holding up the | she entreat- | ) g : Pierrot meets Colum- Miss Viola Sanford’s name had to bel land peered across the editorial { “Is that Jake over there?” she { whispered, waving her hand toward {a shirt-sleeved figure bending over I the fonts. | " The editor nodded. ! The young person intrepidly ap- {proached Jake, who céuld set type | faster ind more accurately than an: {body In’ the county, even it he didn't {have but one tooth left in his h To his boss' everylasting bewilder- ment, after five minutes' conversation with the bronze-haired young person, jJake grinned. “And I'd do more than that to ac- commodate a girl like you,” Jake added gallantly as he escorted the young person to the door. His employer wiited until the pro- gram was all but in type. Then he shot his arrow. b come you let that young s wife jolly you Into hustling like that, Jake?” “Sakes alfvel” quavered Jake, his near-sighted eyes wandering from || the: copy on which in Merriam Lind- say's.round script appeared the line, “The entir€ Liction takes place before Pierrot's house.” “That highty-tighty iittle plece didn't look old enough to me to be anybody's wife—and her jaskin’ me, won't I please come watch iher act, because sit'd feel better if she oniy had one friend down “fn tront, her not knowing anybody in town much!” The programs were ready on time, | despite Jake's chagrin. Letter perfect save for the line that he had been setting up when his employer took | {him down a peg. And over thut line | the whole town Trocked with glee when they read the last number on the program, p H Philip 8heldon; Harle- . Leonard, and Colum- bine, Merriam Leland Lindsay. The entire action of the play takes place before Plerrot's souse.” (Copyright, 1922.) (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) h | was chuckling to himself because of his su¢cess in frightening him. It made him very angry, but what could he do about {t? Nothing. Just noth- ing at all. So Peter swallowed his |/ anger and once more thought of hig stomach. He was over by the lettuce bed now and he decided to try that lettuce.- Inside of two minutes he was as busy in that bed of lettuce as he || kad been among the cabbages. And all the time Old Mr. Temptation was ) ¢huckling, -and - wondering when his twin brother, Old Mr. Trouble, would| appear. - (Copyright, 1923 by T. W. Burgess.) Fima e BY ELSIE ROBINSON. ‘Tony and I sat on the edge of the dock and kicked our heel the piling. That s, I did the kicking. Tony was too busy eéating a lunch of ul D hot ‘raviolas to waste his time kick- | Which our foref: Tony is & one of my pals. W “Some eats! noon my old wéman she .bring heem to, “Your wife comes way dow "H,'llfil'{“" ames way n here to “Uh-hu “But the wife, and Bi.. Jamison’s wite—all t! her hesd and takes down the warm what do we medium? part? ), ::'.Adfl ean. b v & class we d0 not nave in America. | think of kicking the piles. Everywhere 2| "es, & Tio Amerioari wives den't brink |shonding class o Spein And Franc down m:ll::hl‘ An‘l. (“l ol peots bring jun least of all Tony. lnl wi how? And what makes it al] hap- pen? And is it HL\! or well that it should happen? it the program iaid out in that first -great vision of democracy—de. in the home &s well as the Or has it departed from agaiost e very mmn as Lucia & ribute a service of which that hot lunch is a symbol. Also, the wives in the caste abo d in the ¢l that, ngshoreman and _in" those foreign countrl serve their families and their men t that she herself be served, not the mistress of t home, but a charming Indlvidu The différences in her position is pre verbial. Every continental writer h cammented on it. Now, is it & good difference? don’t want beasts of hurdBnn. ut You may eet. Every|much less nntl'nulumy in the union | woman ins n Lucia thas ai ‘better work/on & Lucia and all e little Tonys and Lucias profit if Tony does better work. ‘Theréfore she puts her shawl over Tun er wives—Ole Larson’s Wo lunch. “Th, ny| Lucla belongs to the peasant c ped |Nenh-r do we want parasites. And wha! e also allows himself? W it all? Yes, I have some idear on the sub- Ject—lots of ‘em, in fac Ering to air them jyst now. I want 10 heéur what is your. idea of & wites rights and a wifc's responsibilities. Have we gone ahead of the peoples of Europe and the orient or are we really falling far behind ‘what of the men? the 11d and let's have the explosion. What should be the American stand- ard of marriage? Whay's th Says I to Tony: “Borné ro by devieus and grievous rosds? | much th irit as Luc pebir g £ S eats, Tonyl tb,‘i_‘nr. dovis 'flnl‘l"ll- M:o ae :I.Ilrg ¢ same spirit as Lucia serves (Copyrignt; 1922 “Uh-huh!” & Tor lunch. She does do this out of| Only in America is there a differ- = = ny garlicly. | gentimentality. There is probably [ence. Only in America does the Nut Sandwiches. POy t about the man's And what &bdut the luuries Bat do you t. But I'm not them? And Come on! ©Off with -Grind _together an equal gquantity of English walnuts, pecan nut or hickory nut through a food chopper. cup of the nuts add one tablespoon of maple sugar and enough thick sweet cream t~ —ake the right con- sistency to spread. 1ol almonds and meats To each Sport Oxfords and Strap Pumps .. . Ladies’ White Canvas and White Kid . . White Canvas Pumps and Oxfords, limited sizes. P_a(enu,c:;&wn Pznd black kid o‘);gol:dsl. |imite= 3 sizes. ildren’s white canvas higl 00 biitton shoes ....: L 5 51- g «—for children. Sizes 8% to 2...... Genuine U. S. Keds Men's, boys’, youths' and women’s high e D Black and brown itrim, also white canvas strap pumps and oxfords. Good- year. ‘welt soles, -including popular sandal-strap pumps, in. white, ms patent and combinations. .. . door recreation. . .. Boys’ and Youths’ U, 8. Keds Pumps and Tan Oxfords Brown and White Canvas, Brown Patched Sport Lace Shoes, rubber soles. Sizes 11 £0 5% uusvainvzencnrunnsunaionnin. $245 browns. Good sizes am brands .. g Pll.ydny Oxfords and Barefoot Sandals Silk Hose of Rare Strap Pumps for Ankle Strap Pumps and Lace Oxfords White Canvas Reigncloth. Goodyear ‘welt, whité_ivory leather soles. 51.95 —with light turn soles. ' Patents, blacks and ong them. Standard sl 85 Men’s Shoes Take the Elevator on D Street Midsummer Clearance Sale 'Of Shoes for Entire F anfiily. Prices Extremely Low Children’s and Misses' White Canvas U. S. Keds _Ankle Strap Pimps and Tennis Low Shoes. Sizes up to 2 for out- $1.00 - —Of tan leather for real Beauty Misses and Children Both high and low shoes, lzloys and girls. Famous R oaarta P]alenls and plain leather browns and blacks. s3 5 soodyear stitched * styles. Sizes up to Goodyear welt 6 z black, white and 5 ; S » 2.” Spring and low (4 B ;cdts SIZES Up to sl,zs brown 51'45 heels ot o bie ot 51-80 seles i b Miss Elizabeth Marbury, the New 1 York “play broker.,” is sald to have disposed of more plays for dramatic authors than any other person in America. She has served as an agent for the most famous dramatists of Europe and also has introduced a number of noted American play- wrights to the public. ADVERTISEMENT e s o Dorothy Dalton’s Beauty Chat ANGELES, CAL.—Miss Dorothy 4he actress famous the world says: | LOS Dalton, for her beautiful complexion, ny girl or woman = and make. it soft and smooth. - It is easy to apply, solutely _ harmless, nation today on your| face, meck, hands and arms, and you will be delighttully su: prised. Darwill comes in_three shade: flesh, white and brunette. the Peoples Drug Stores and at the tollet counters of all other department stores and druggists. For mle at Gouraud’s ontal Cream ad.eeen, 17 Autocar therg’s 8 road - " What a motor truck bilyer ~wants to know -1 With whom he is personally dealing 2 Responsibility and experience of manufacturer 3 Trade in, rebuilding and reconditioning policy z Design and mechanical superiority : ~+7"5 What size and welfht truck he needs. 5 6 What load he can legally carry ~ ' 7 Insurance and license expense - 8 Necessary gas and oil consumption . 9 Cost of replacement parts n . 10 .Assurance of immediate service Because he wants i), L] g ‘ continuous economical transportation 0 , - .4 cylindery4,to,6;ton, Autocars Whestbase lengths . F 7. T LD | 4 g504a,, 1356 i Maximem overall (chassis, Uninden chacss woghts oy - aede bl Sioane . ooates e 4 cylinder;2 to 3 ton Autocars ~ Whoelbese .'.V‘.(‘. 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