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It means less expense when you purchase paint that you know is guaranteed to cover generously, and outlast 2 or 3 paintings of ordinary paint. Ours are guaranteed na- tionally-known brands which when_applied_properly give untold satisfaction. We certain of this by g you at every step. e glad tell you the roper ts to use, the t color schemes and the proper amounts to_buy, as wn!rs as detailed directions as to the actual painting. Best Results Are Inevitable This has won for us the genuine confidence of all who place their paint prob- lems with us. Tell us your paint problem today! I H Ona block east of 76 €75 AweA\ \ CUTICORA HEALS FCZEMA IN RASH On Arms. Spread On Body. ltched and Burned Badly. “Eczema broke out in a rash on my arms, and then spread in spots as large as my hand on different parts of my body. It itched and £ burned so badly that I had to scratch the affected parts. My clothing ag- the breaking out and I could not sleep on account of the irritation. ““The trouble lasted sixteen ¢ p 1n about thirty days.” (S(ged&m” Bertha Martin, R. 1, Holly Pond, Ala. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal- camareidealforevery-daytoilet uses. Sample Each Free by Mall. Addreas: *’Cuticura Lad- ‘eraseriss. LA iden 43, Mass " Sold every- ‘where. Snap - Ointment 25 and f%. Talcum F -~ Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. D Typewriter MULTIPLE: MIND'S X\\stnm‘.\\b Le“\z(my :&3\‘.‘?{} type styles, many )languasges Xnob 1o of lange of Earlier Model and Other Makes iterature Hammond Typewriter Corp. 3il Colorado Bldz.. 14th & G N.W. 150,000 VETERAN GOING TO MEETING President Expected to Ad- dress Legion Convention at New Orleans. {PROGRAM IS ELABORATE 1 | Pershing, Lejeune, Gompers and Landis Among Those Ac- cepting Invitations. La, August is preparing to st gathering in its tory when 150,000 members of the | American legion and other visitors jcome to the legion’s national conven- tion here. October 16-20. With the tentative acceptance of the invitation by President ng and Gen. Pershing, and the e acveptance of Maj. Gen. John ention tarine Corps; Samuel Gompers. ent of the American Federation Labor. and Kenesaw Mountain . commissioner of base ball. ion meeting will assume na- importance. Convention offi- also expect to entertain a famous shal of France and other world r notables. Prominent among the {distinguished guests will be twenty- {five wearers of the congressional med- al of honor. the highest award for bravery made by the United States. President Sends Reply. President Harding has written con- headquarters that he will come to New Orleans if the pressure public affairs does not interfere, message has been re- ceived from Gen. Pershing, who led the legion men in France and who was a guest at their national gather- ing in Kansas City last vear. The visit of Gen. Lejeune will be of espe- cial interest to legionaires, since the Marine Corps leader is a native of Louisiana and was one of the most popular commanding generals in the American expeditionary forces. The presence of Mr. Gompers at the con- vention is expected to develop closer relations between the legion and or- ganized labor. Judge Landis is the father of a former service man and has spoken at legion gatherings in all parts of the country. In préparation for the visit of the thousands of former service men, the convention committee has prepared an elaborate program of entertainment Convention sessions will be held only in the mornings. enabling delegates and visitors to participate in the fes- tivities the remainder of the day. Athletic Meet to Be Held. The first American Leglon national Olympic meet will be held at the con- vention. Leglon athletes from every state will compete for national cham- pionships in track and fleld events, aquatic sports, amateur boxing and wrestling, golf and tennis. There also will be a national marksmanship con- test and a tournament of professional | boxers. A decision bout between Bob Martin, who won the heavywelght championship the ~tournament {staed by A. E. F. fighters after the jarmistice, and Capt. Roper, heavy- | weight champion of the service men | who remained in America, will be one of the leading features of the boxing card. The leglon bantamweight championshin will_be settled when Johnny Buft and Pal Moore meet in the convention ring. Ranking with the athletic meet will be a naval show in the port of New Orleans and on Lake Ponchartrain. Dreadnaughts, druisers, submarines and subchasers from all the great naval powers are to be on exhibition. Legion national officers are now making arrangements for ships to come from Engiand, France, Italy and a number of South American coun- tries. In addition there will be a flo- tilla of yachts and small pleasure craft on Lake Ponchartrain. Seaplanes to Attend. number of seaplanes from Pensacola, {Fla. On one of the convention nights these planes will fly over the business j district. dropping flares and lights in imitation of the bombing raids made by the Germans over the American trenches and billets. Memories of days in France will be revived by a number of New Orleans societies, which will combine in the presentation of a French carnival night. Stores will be labeled with French signs and the plcturesque garb of Brittany, Normandy and oth- er French provinces will be mingled with the khaki, blue and green of the veterans. Downtown streets will be {lluminated by 28,000 electric bulbs and will be decorated with flags of allied powers, state seals and legion banners and emblems. Doughboys in search of former comrades will meet in_impromptu reunions under divis- ional insignia flags to be hung over the streets. 50,000 to March. Fifty thousand marchers and 100 bands are expected to participate in the convention parade. The legion- naires will march by states in the order of membership increase during the last vear. To stimulate the at- tendance of bands from all states $1,750 in prizes will be awarded to { the finest legion bands in the parsde and $330 will go to the best drum corps. Col. Guy Malony, superintendent of police of New Orleans, has announc- ed that 1,000 uniformed legionnaires will assist his police force in regu- lating the large crowds thronging the convention parade streets and that the legionnaires will serve as provost guards In the business dis- trict. The grant of a rate of one fare for the round trip to the convention by all railroads will augment the con- vention crowds, according to local legion officials. Special Rates Provided. Housing arrangements are being undertaken with a view of accom- modating 150,009 visitors. A special rate of $1.50 a day without bath and 2.50 a day with bath has been grant- ed by the leading hotels. Pullman citles, equipped with the conven- jences of a modern hotel, will be es- tablished by three large railroads to house approximately 14.000 leglon- naires. The housing committee also is considering the creation of a tent city and the placing of cots in halls and business properties. Thousands of visitors will be entertained in New Orleans homes. “Meet me on the levee” will be the slogan. The convention sessions will be held on the banks of the Mis- sissippl river. A large covered pler, nearly 1.000 feet long and 400 feef wide, astride the levee and parallel to the “Father of Waters,” will be the scene of the national convention de- liberations. Amplifiers will be installed to in- sure good acoustics. The legion committee will spend $10,000 in pre- paring the pier and decorating it for the eonvention's use. e RULER ESCAPES DEATH. e Costa Rican President and Daugh- ter in Plane Accident. SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, August 25.— President Acosta and his daughter Zulay underwent a thrilling and dan- Streams swollen by an all-night yesterday Wwhen the engine of a sea- Plane in which they were passengers went dead at an altitude of 1,400 feet, compelling the pilot to make a forced landing at sea —_— Experiments indicate that red glass bottles preserve milk best in hot weather. s The United States Navy will send u| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JOURNALIST HITS GOVERNMENT WAY OF “DISHING” NEWS WPILLIAMSTOWN, Mass, Au- gust 25.—If journalists are to be -expected to behave as gentlemen they shculd be treated- as gent- lemen, sald M. Raymond Recouly, political editor of Figaro, in an address at the Institute of Politics today. M. Recouly asserted that governments had no right to at- tempt to take the place of the press by founding press bureaus “more or less in disgulse,” to sway public opinion. “Every country. every govern- ment has the right and the duty to see that the essential facts, the news of the important events should be brought before the pub- lic abroad without distorting the truth,” M. Recouly said. “But its initiative should stop there.” (CANDLER ROMANCE HITS CHURCH SNAG Methodist Bishop Objects to Brother Marrying ! Catbholic. By the Associated Press. RENO, Nev., August 25.—Objections on the part of his family to her ac- tivities as suffragist and society lead- er and the fact that she is a divorcee may stand in the way of her marriage to Asa G. Candler, Atlanta, Ga., multi- millionaire, Mrs. Onezima De Bou- chelle, formerly of New Orleans, ad- mitted today. But she denled any knowledge of poison pen plots de- signed to break off the match. | Mrs. De Bouchelle said that mem- bers of the Candler family, including Candler’s hrother, senior bishop of the Methodlst Episcopal Church South, ob- Jjected on religious grounds. “I am a Catholic, and a divorcee.” | Mre. De Bouchelle said. I have been in soclety and have been a suffrage leader. Bishop Candler does not ap- prove of any of these things.” Exigency of business and the $100. 000 damage suit brought recent v Mra Sarah G. Byfleld agalnst Can- dler's son, Walter, Atlanta banker. have been combined to delay Candler's trip west, according to Mrs. De Bou- chelle’s statement. She said she re- ceived a telegram from him today seeking her acquiescence {n the sug- gestion that he postpone his trip un- til the “storm blows over.” POISON WRITERS TRAILED. —_— | Two or More Prominent Persons | Said to Be Involved. NEW ORLEANS, La., August 25.— ldentity of two or more persons so- cially prominent in New Orleans, who are alleged to have “intermeddled” In the affairs of Mrs. Onezima De Bou- chelle, local club and social leader, whose engagement to Asa G. Candler of Atlanta was recently announced, are expected to be made public within the next few days. This information was included in a statement authorized yesterday by Harold A. Moise, a local attorney, sald to have been retained by friends of Mrs. De Bouchelle to identify and prosecute the authors of several “polson pen” letters alleged to have been sent to Atlanta, bearing a New Orleans postmark, in an effort to slander the New Orleans woman. It was announced that a sweeping investigation, participated In by pri- vate detectives and postal authorities, had been concluded. CANDLER TO PUSH SUIT. Blackmail Charges Against Byfleld to Be Settled in Court. By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, Ga. August 25.—The charges of blackmail recently made against Clyde K. Byfield, local auto- bile dealer, in suit filed in Fulton Superior court by Walter T. Candler, Atlanta banker and son of Asa G. Candler, multi-millionaire ~manufac- facturer and financier, will be press- ed In court, according to a statement by Reuben Arnold, counsel of the wealthy sportsman. Indications were also given by the attorney that the sult for $100,000 by Mrs. Sarah G. Byfield, wife of the automobile man, against Mr. Candler would be fought to a finish in the announcedment that “we expect to decide these cases in court.” The cases are not expected to reach trial | stage in court for some time, how- ever, Mr. Arnold sald, because of the badly congested condition of the court dockets. | Charges embodied in the sult} against Byfield alleged that he ob- tained the note by blackmall as the result of an occurence aboard the steamship _ Berengarla, while Mr. Candler and the Byfields were on their way for a tour of Europe to- gother. The young wife of the de- fendant in Candler's action charged the banker in her sult for damages with having attacked her in the By- fleld stateroom on the vessel. She claimed that her health was s riously affected by the alleged attacl Byfleld and his attorney, Luther Rosser, senior, maintained silence, relative to their trip to New York, where it had been reported they went to interview passengers who were on the Berengaria at the time of the oc- currence thgt brought forth the liti- gation. D C———of——] | . Kneessi’s Sons 7 Days More of opportunity to save in the very popular— } (% OFF ¢ Sale of All to $150 Wardrebe Trunks u’lcl-‘cled to $18.80 to $1383 ing Cases 1 ardrobe Truak ; A WINNER R [‘] $37.50 OUR “ONLY” STORE Biw 425 Tth 5 N.wW. b ———— =k S AREF OPEN FOR BUSINESS. . ngine Company and H. Backenheimer of the Tenley- 4 at Wardman Park Hotel, looking for e and firemen's base ball game, to be staged ptember 9, for the bhenefit of widows' d SOVIET CONCESSID 1 the world. or a pint and a half for ¥ man, woman and child in the States, or sPx and a half s for every person in Call- that {= how much wine is on bonded wineries and govern- ehouses in California, Rex collector of {internal ie for southern California, an- nounced toc The figures do not include privats | stocks. The total is 21,371,820 gal- lons, Goodsell stated Product has exceeded with- h an extent that the ¢ is increasing at the rate of lons monthly.” Goodsell DRINK OF WINE FOR ALL WORLD IN CALIFORNIA By the Assaciated Pross. Moscow, Expecting Big Crop, | Grows Independent of | Foreign Aid. | | i Goodsell, BY F. A. MACKENZ £ nnd Chicago Dails News . 18 MOSCOW, August 25 the failure of the conferenc Hague are now being felt powerful section of governing clals, believing that nothing more to be hoped for from the west, are| striving to enforce the narrower in-| PLANS INTERNATIONAL terpretation of the communist pelicy | by withdrawing the concessions which| COURT FOR WAR CRIMES Law Association at Buenos Aires Russia recently prepared to make in ! Would Provide for Prosecution of order to win European co-operation Cases Involving Belligerency. By Cable to The sl and good will. Their purpose Is strengthened the amazingly optimistic ex as to the coming harvest, wt believe will make Rus of foreign aid | | Bt i BUE { manent fir Assoc A per- fonal criminal court. to FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1922. BOBBED HER HAIR; HUSBAND ENRAGED; POLICE AID ASKED MOTORLESSPLAN SETS NEW RECORD By the Asmociated Press. MOUNT VERNON, N. Y., August 25.—The question of “to bob or not to bob," as applied to women's ing in Ajp| hair. came up tonight at police German Flyer Remains in Air headquarters when Sergt. Wrenn was appealed to by a young for More Than Three | 1ot mmwwwed o e s soone to accompany her home, while Hours. | she packed her clothes { "My husband has left me be- — cause 1 bobbed my hair,” she said. [ R [ “Will you help me? 1 am afraid to go back home for my clothes 4 come in and at wful mad over my i i having my hair bobbed Glider Experiments Declared Long | Myilnk "y hair Javhedsl oy, 2, long and short of the situation, Step Toward Solving: Prob- told the voung woman to go to the Tuck Dolice. lem of Soaring. e AT R —_— of this is particularly true of those making almost all students of are built by groups By the Associated Pre nical schools BERLIN, August 25—A new record for sustained flight in a motorless aif-| (he hes: records—whereas the French plane was et yesterday by Herr Hent- | argely the product of zen, student fiyer of the Hanover Tech- sries. Nearly n soaring nical School, when he remained in the are monoplanes, without alr more than three hours. wire bracing, with tapered wings and The filght was made on the conclud- | bartly covered with plywood ing day of the gliding competition heid | WIh DIYwood bodies, the avera y of the gliding competition loading a little over 1wo pounds p In the Rhoen mountains, near Gersfeld. somewhat higher than Hentzen's machine landed 330 meters | above the starting point. Afr Carrenta Mantered. ‘Hentzen is the flyer who startled the pilots show great skill in world of aviation lust Saturday by re-|3I418 Jloral: conaiffons and knowledge of current: which is maining In the air two hours and ten|of prear advantage: long fights are seconds, breaking all records by a con-|atiributable primarily to this use of siderable margin. i urrents, Airman Botsch of Darmstadt took off m _of soaring cannot hie b below the Wasserkuppe mountain and, solved. but long steps despite squally gales, landed on its sum- le, as illustrated by mit. Herr Hackman, also of Darm- Hi e Sutunday: 1Eting stadt, landed 330 meters above his | tu seconds, ' during starting point. | d a helght of ap- feet. e remained SOARING NOT SOLVED. starting points, work- S ck and forth in a rising cur- = | rent on the face of a hill for an Glider Experiments, However, De- | hour and a half, then strick out | the country aud landed over clared Long Forward Step. iles from where he ascended. By the Assctlated Proes glider built by the students | St 2 Hanover Technical sSchool CERSPELD, Germany extraordinary efficiency in all Whitethe glider. oxr | It has standard airplane have not solved the problem of €oar- | (010 W1, "Wlng Warping. Some | ing, they represent long steps in || Dol - it that direction, Prof. E. P. Warner of [\71¥ succestul )?;??y::; o udnaes the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- | it" mac R voled TWInE tips Lor Al nology, told the Associated Press |2l [AINE PITOLCE, WA vesterday, in discussing hia observa- | € tion of both French and German | L trials. The new connty hall in London has The machines used here.” he said. (900 rooms and cost more than $20, “differ from the French in that they 000,000 to build. put [ 2] APPEAL FOR SMOKE REVEALS FUGITIVE IN WOMAN’S GARB By the Associated Preas. ABERDEEN, Miss, August 25.— ‘Will Atkinson momentarily forgot the role he was playing and beg- ged a clgarette from a federal pro- hibition officer who was searching for him at Kosciusko, Miss., and as a result today was in the Monroe county jall on a federal charge « operating a stll. The siill wa raided a few days ago, but Atkin xon escaped. Ii was reporied Ke was in a heuse at Kosciusko, but a party of officers found only an old man and a “woman.” The officers were about to leave when one lit a cigarette. The “woman” asked for one. Investigation led the of- ficers' search had ended success- fully. WILL ADOPT BABY GIRL. i i i Wallace Reid. Screen Star, Files Court Petition. LOS ANGE alif, August 25— r. Mre. Wallace Reid expect to ented with a bouncing baby rl soon, according to a {file in the superior court tod: {askes the legal adoption ' { Mummert, three years old. parenis hav isented to the tion. Mrs. Reid is known screen as Dorothy Davenport | WORLD FLYERS ILL. | Aviators in Hospital Suffering From Exposure. CALCUTTA. August Capt. Norman MacMillan and ¢ Madl- lins, upon arriving at Chillagong on their round-the-world flight nt- . Iv abandoned by were taken to a geverely from exposure. H to a message received here today. ! '%flappers" 622-24 Pa. Ave. N. W. Saturday Offerings at Lenin Resumes Control. on in all cases involving This policy is apparently prevailing | or crimes that could cause in Russia for the time being. Much | yred by the International depends upon Lenin's attitude, as he on now in sesston here. { is now reassuming control. He visit-| The organization at its first afternoon's ed Moscow less than a week ago and is already preparing a program of speeches for the conference of the sesslon, held yesterday, approved by a the proposal for such d by Hugh H. L. Bel- international communist party nextlot. head of the British delegation. October. Ly session was further enlivened Reports reaching me from mated debate on a proposal by 1 Antokolotz of the University Airesd, that no nation should luded from the league of na- The French representative, M. ferent districts do not suppc expectation of a bumper cro Paxton Hibbert, American org: of the Russian Red Cross, has just returned after visiting -eight | villages in the province Samara. | Simbirsk and Kazan, and tions. Baudelot, argued that the question did within the scope of the asso- adding that in the not com. ciation’s agenda, event of a contrary decision the French he a very gloomy report. The area sown is small and the vield noor,|delegates would "withiraw, becoming 5o that in some d ts the harvests | mera spectators. The question of ad- are inadequate to keep the people | missibility was refsrred to a committee. All the delegates later attended a gala performance given In their honor in the Colon Theater, where the sessions are being held. through the winter. Quaker repre- sentatives in the Buzuluk district send similar reports. Gambling Regorts Open. Moscow continues to enjoy. pros- —_— perity. The streets of the big c = are packed with people and traffic [ witnessed nightly, great crowds and luxury is increasing, although |staying in diminishing numbers un- the working classes poorly off. | til breakfast time next morning. The A sign of the times is that the | baccarat, chemin de fer and roulette es are thronged and the stakes higher than at Monte Carlo. take at the highest uivalent to $20. DDDDDDDDDE authoritles have permitted the open- ing of gambling roc the Her- mitage, a summer garden resort. Tere extraord HA.ILJL'_:IJDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD T TheFinal Drop are O_s a3 216 Pairs Infants’ High=grade ‘Turned-soles Shoes. Sizes $l 00 4to8....... eesessseacns . 1,000 Pairs of First Qual- ity Keds. Men, Women and Chitdren Infants’ Children’s and Misses’ Play Oxfords and Bare Sandals .. ks $1 .00 Misses’ and Chlldrens'l‘hgh-top Lace ey o $2.00 to 2. $2.00 no $1.00 Elk-skin leather............ 500 Pairs Women’s Pumps and Oxfords; high and low heels ......... eorrseecsonne L-dllu' lI:"llgll-grude"Tllrn- ed-sole umps and Ox- 5] fords ............. $3-00 Men's High and Low Shoes, black > /) ;ndhtuln. AI\;Valted ;olu, with rub- er heels. sizes; Satur- 7 i _day only....... ey $3.00 Open All Day Saturday 729 7th St. N.W. 0o00o0p00000000N000000N0N0no000 000000000000000C000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 Washington’s Greatest Market FINEST FRESH MEATS Prime Rib Roast. . .1b. 28¢ Rolled Blade Rib..lb. 25¢ Clod Roast ........Ib. 22¢ Old Dutch Roll. . .1p. 12Y%¢ Fresh Picnics. . ....Ib. 18¢ Fresh Hams.......lb. 27c All Pork Sausage..lb. 27c Legof Lamb. ......1b. 35¢c Rolled Lamb Roast.lb. 27¢ Stewing Lamb ....Ib. 15¢ Leg of Veal .......Ib. 25¢ Fresh Calves Liver.1b. 50c Rib Chops ........lb. 25¢ Strictly Fresh-Killed Veal Loaf Baked and Milk-Fed Springers, Weighing frem 2 GROCERY SPECIALS Hershey’s Cocoa 1’8 .. ....2 cans 25¢ Granulated Sugar 10 Ibs. T2¢ PILLSBURY FLOUR 24 1b. bag..........$1.10 121b.bag...........56¢c 6lb.bag...........20¢ New Pack Tomatoes - .6 cans 59¢ New Pack Wisconsin Peas .....:.2 cans 25¢ Challenge Milk .3 cans 40c Palm Olive Soap. .4 for 30c Clean Easy Seap. .3 for 10¢ Fairy Soap . ....... .6 for 29¢ Celery Sunshine A *,_f 3 1b. average Potato Salad..........lIb. 15¢ Imported Swiss Cheese 1b. 63c FRYING CHICKENS, Roasting Chickens.lb. 43¢ Broilers, 1%5-lb. av. ea. 65¢ VEGETABLE SPECIALS Faney Sugar Corn, Nancy Hall Sweet Potatoes. . ....3 Ibs. 10c Large Slicing Tomatoes .. . .. N. Y. Head Lettuce, Fancy White Bananas ........doz. 25¢ Coffee Cakes ...each 25¢ 0Old Dutch Coffee. .1b. 25¢ HOLLAND BELLE BUTTER, Ib. 44c SMOKED MEATS Hickory Smoked Every Day Smoked Picnics Smoked Hams. Virginia Hams Sliced Bacon .. Westphalias ... Smoked Beef Tongues ........lb. 35¢ DELICATESSEN SPECIALS Cooked Ham..........1b. 70c Cooked Tongue.......lb. 80c .1b. .1b. .1b. .1b. Ib. 15¢ 22¢ 43¢ 32¢ 35¢ Stuffed Chickens, ....ea. $1.25 Ib. 42¢ to 3 pounds doz. 25¢ ...Ib. 5¢ 10c ea. ...bunch 10¢ Cakes. .each 18¢ Choice Blend H i