Evening Star Newspaper, September 29, 1922, Page 13

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£ilka b —swtinld 1 . r BUDGET WORK OF D, G.. {Uncle Sam Jilts Junk Man, - This Guarantees Clean, Clear Copies ; Assured by Using MULTI-KOPY CARBON PAPER Bustness cannot afford Imperfect, Blurred Copies of Correspondence, and when it s just as ecasy to have Perfect (o/m'v why have Imperfect ones? There are a Hundred different kinds _ of MULTI-KOPY, on Five different wweights of paper. That's why there 1s one that fits your business. STOCKETT FISKE -CQ PRODUCING STATIONERS 910 -E-STREET'N'W M‘ CLOSE FIT HAIR NETS \’VEAR WELL le Mesh fgor 25¢ Double Mesh C ¥ MITTELSTAEDT, Inse., New York =G Cakes for breakfast and . Your W Satisfaction R i HEADS IS CONNENDED Conduit Road Citizens' Body Also . Urges Guardians to Return Ken- yon Children to Mother. 1 The District Commissioners were commended for their action in en- deavoring to convince the budget bu- |reau of the needs for schools, streets (and other municipal improvements in- jeluded in the city estimates, by the {Conduit Road Citlzens' Association, { which met last night in St. David's Parish Hall. The approval of the as- sociatlon was voiceéd in a resolution !introduced by Charles A. Baker and !which was unanimously adopted. " Miss Cora Van Sant also secured the fadoption of her resolution. which placed the association on record as indorsing the request of Mrs. Laura Kenyon to the board of children’s guardians for the retura of her five children into her custody. Miss Van | Sant said the mother was undble to take care of the children for a short i period last winter when she became ill and some one, without the mother’s knowledge, informed the board, which d is seeking their re- te. a local coal dealer, dis- Smoot, president of the associa- —_— MAY BE REORGANIZED. Changes Considered in U. S. Sec- tion Inter-American Commission. Reorganization of the United States section of the inter-American high commission s under connldernflon closed in ol . S. Rowe, secretary-general of tho section. has tendered his resignation and, it is understood, other changes in the administrative staff are to be made as well as changes in the mem- bership of the section. Vacancies occuring in the section shortly probably will be filled to per- mit of representation of both the and Commerce departments, while the view is expressed lhxt the functions of the section may be de nitely confined to a scope of actlvuy which would ellminate any 0851~ Dility of dupllcating duties of elther of those departments. Selection of Wilbur J. Carr, director of the consular service of the State Department, and Dr. Julius Klein, di- rector of thelbuneau of foreign 'and e > s with the possible designation of Mr. Kleln as vice chairman. A successor Rowe as secretary-general is <aid fo be undecided. I . fast table bright and early. Auctwns off Hvuse Relws Uncle Sam put one over on-the junk man yesterday. Collecting & lot of truck scattered about - the House office building, one of -his representatives hired an auctioneer and a boy to go out and ring a bell. Auction news travels swirtly and in a little while an army of women had arrived. Some threadbare rugs over which statesmen might have tread, some old water coolers of the ype long outlawed, some filing ¢abi- re (hRE might At in & corner of the kitchen as a receptacle for pots, and no’ men v bones, were Fobbled up as quicksy as if lhey had come from Westminster Abb littie man In & brown derhy bought a little faded screen after somebody had whispered it used to sit before the open fireplace at Thomas Jefferson's home: It Jooked quite as old as all that. A tall man, fifty years old, wearing & dark suit with ‘green pencik stripes, bought a fling cabinet which long stood in Champ Clark’s office, and counted it a bargain. ‘A woman, Stunning in a new fréck which reached below the top of her boots, and a big black hat with a red bird anchored on the star- board side, paid $19.50 for a rug out of the Speaker's lobby. at the feet that ‘Look have traveled over it,” she exclaimed as q‘l‘l‘s‘ boosted -the” pflca the last two * “And look'at the dust they left” ;:;42;( rival as she quit bidding at DR. LORENZ OF AUSTRIA * TO MAKE HOME IN U. S. Orthopedic Surgeon, Who Person- ally Treateg} Many Serious Cases Here, Returning With Family. Dr. Adolf Lorenz, Austrian ortho- Mdlc surgeon, i8 due to arrive on the S.'S. Reliance in New York today, ac- coimpanied by his wife and sen Albert. Dr. Lorenz came to this country last | Novemper and remained until April During: that; period he treated person- ally mauy serious cases.and gave ad- vice in hundreds of Other,cule!. On his departure from New York he stat- ed that he had come to America solely for the purpose of expressing the gratitude of his countrymen for the relief work which had been done in Austria. b would_re later dato to make his home in the United States. Shoes and Oxfords of the finest sort, built for early Fafl wear. Each pair is made with that painstaking care that stamps them as shoes of the better kind. RICHS- Proper Footwear o F Street at Tenth Exclusive Agents for Wn Shoes—Bezt for Men Y i i \ 5= S HILDREN know what is good and are quick to demonstrate their wants in hearty fashion. No wonder! Just whisper to the folks that you are serving Auth’s Sausage Meat ou’ll have them crowdmg the break- % Preparing ‘breakfast ceases to be a routine to be gotten over ! ¥{th when you serve Auth’s Sausage Meat Cakes.: You will . want to linger and join the happy circle of Auth’s Sausage ! Meat Cakes enthusiasts. o) “ 'Auth’s Sausage Meat is fresh and spicy. It is @ real treat - fo the family, You can get-Auth’s Sausage Meat at your grocer But be sure you.ask for Auth’s. Fancy Sweet Potatoes . Fresh String Beans . . perlb. 10c Fresh Spinach | / , Fine Granulated Sugar (in cart;n), b, 7¢ gly '”- i=Fancy Free Stone Peaches, 31bs.for 25¢ Fancy Pink Meat Cantaloupes,each 10c Large Cooking Apples, 7 Ibs. for 25¢c per lb. 2¢c . ... perlb. 10c Large White Celery . per bunch 8c Large Head Cabbage . . per lb. 3¢ Fresh Radishes . . 2 bunches 5¢ Yellow Onions . . . . . perlb. 3¢ Fresh Tomatoes, Corn, Beets, Carrots, Pears, Grapes and All Other Fresh Fruits and Vegetables at All Our Stores. Sunset Gold Sliced Pineapple, No. 1 can, 18¢; No. 2 can, 27c; No. 2Y/3 can .. Lady Alice Grated Pineapple, No. 1 can, 13c; No. 2 can Wagner’s Tomatoes, No. 2 can, 9c; No. Gold Medal or Pillsbury’s Best Flour 12-Ib. Sack ..... 24-Ib. Sack Crisco, 1 Ib. 1Y/2-Ib., 31¢; 3-b,, . .. Wesson Oil, pts. Wesson Oil, gts.. ... .. Mazola Oil, pts. Mazola Oil, qts. Your Luck Coffee, per Ib” G. Washington Soluble Coffee. Small, 36c; Medium, 71c; Large, $1.10 Postum—Instant, small, 23¢; large, 38¢c Postum Cereal, small, 12¢; large, 20c Housg of Lords Tea, -lb., 18c; 1/2-Ib., 35¢ Lipton’s Yellow Label Tea, small can. .8¢ ~ -Ib. can, 21¢; 3-b, can........ 4lc Salada Tea, }-lb. ; ..23¢ Banquet | & C Tea, 10c size.. . . ........ .8¢ Banquet OPor Gunpowder Tea, bocam oot : Pompeian Olive Oil, 12-pt., 30c; pts., S6c; gts. .. . . ..$1.06 Welch’s Grape Juice, pts., 30c; gts., 55¢ - Not Sp ecials—but Del Monte Tomatoes, No. 212 can . . . .18¢ Pride of Illinois Corn, No. 2 can Silver Run Corn, No. 2 can. Little Prince Asparagus Tips, No. 1 No. 2!/> Round Can Del Monte Asparagus Picnic Tips . . . Little Prince (Petit Pois) Peas, No. 2 can . B Little Prince Fancy Slfted Peas, No. 2can .. Quaker Macaroni, Spaghetti or Noodles, per pkg. Kirkman’s Borax Soap, per bar " Fels-Naptha Soap, per bar .22¢ ceeees e Soapine, perpkg. ... 0ld Dutch Cleanser, per can Fresh Creamery Butter, }-Ib. prints perlb. .. Fresh Eggs, per doz. (in carton) Every Egg Guaranteed | Every Jay Prices T T I ey

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