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Quality and Charm ° Distinguish "SALADA" T E A HIS “The most Delicious Tea you can buy” Mrs._ Busy Wife: ET us introduce you to a real friend—a de- licious meal that takes but a few minutes to pre- . Nothing to do but = 1‘:;“ Made from the fa- 9 mous Gorton’s Cod Fish on —NoBones.Theoriginal ready-to-fry fish cakes. ReaQy-to-. Cod Fish Cakes Rejuvenation OR a woman to look fresh and fragrant is not a matter of money. Garments that have been discarded can be made as crisp and alluring as a clear autumn morfi- ing—at The Hoffman Company. CALL MAIN 4724 CLEANERS & DYERS I MAIN OFFICE 740 12™ ST N.W. ne ou are getting directions. Han d Ive tablets cost gew i Iso sell bottles o af toothache. lumbago, rheu . and for pain in general. of Salicylicacid. ~ Just the rihllf' szze for any head HAIR NET that déesn’t draw too fifl:" flattening down your carefully A net that doesn’t stand out in loose : mfim up plainly in every light. i l"s'::?y-dufigm al sitstrue. It is size, always style of hair dressing. A better net in every way. Finer, more visible hair, more careful more igid i ion. Yet the cost is only 10c. Comes in all required shades, in “cap” and “fringe” styles. Take home half a duenhd_ly,mdhvethmonhndfvr Sitroux HAIR NET ** package which contains| Frank hoxes of Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester | is the hair nét that s 58 ARMY STATION TOBE ELIMNKTED War Department to Sell or Transfer Cantonments, Fly- /| ing Fields and Depots. MOVE IS FOR ECONOMY! 1 e i Fifty-eight Army cantonments, fly- ing fields and depots have been elimi- nated from the lists of military posts administered by the War Department. Troops have been moved from them to permanent stations, and the prop- erties soon will be either sold at pub- tlie auctions or turned over under re- vocable licenses to states which have applied for them for use of the Na- tional Guard. Closing of tlie various stations, the War Department. announced, was de- cided upon as a necessary step in the reorganization of the Army and the reduction of its enlisted strength to 125,000 enlisted men. It also was explained that, in many instances, the {buildings and temporary quarters, | Which were occupied by troops during the war, have deteriorated to a point where their mantenance is now pro- hibitive from a standpoint of'economy. Camp Lee in List. Cantonments to be leased to states for use of the National Guard include Camp Pike, Ark.: Camp Lee, Va.; Camp Jackson, S. C.; Camp Grant, I1L.; Camp Dodge, lowa, and Camp ¥Funston. Kan. ' Camps Kearney, Calif, and Sherman, Ohlo, already have been turned over to the Veterans' Bureau. The program of the department also calls for the abandonment of Forts Dade and De Soto, Fla.; Camp Shan- non, N. M., and Camp Hidalgo, Tex. Fort Apache, Ariz., will be transferred to_the Interior Department. Quartermaster depots to be aban- doned include Atlanta, Ga?; Seattle, Wash. (except one covered pier): Omaha, Nebr.; New Orleans (except for reserve supplies): Port Newark, l.\'. J.; Norfolk, Va. (7,200 railw: sold ' to Poland to 'be twelve months); Roston, Mass. burgh, Pa.. and the Hawthorne race track.” Tlinols. Ordnnnce Plants (o Be Sold. r he s0ld r plant, the Roe nt, and the Chica , While the folowing r mmunition will be Va. Toledo, Ohi J niman, Va.; Sparta, (to Lo used by~ Agriculture Department in pre- paration of explosives for highway works for probably six months); Middletown, Pa. (transferred to air seryice). fervice plants at Chapman Love 1 o1 and the 5 will be s The follc elds will be retuined with ng detachments only: Carlstrom Field. Souther Field. G: . Ca Ellington Field, and Montgomery depot. Ala. Meade Among Those Saved. Of the great war time cantonments those to be retained under caretakers as corps area training camps with only non-perishable supplies on hand are MacClellan, Ala.: Devents, Mass. Dix, N, J.; Meade, Md.; Lewls, Wash.: Knox, Ky, and Custer, Mich. “It is not contemplated to expend funds on the building (at the above named contonments) retained but to make use of them as long as possible n order to save tentage,” the de- partment’s statement said. —_— GEN. LORD TO SPEAK. Twentieth Century Club Will Meet Thursday Morning. - The Twentieth Century Club wAl hold its first meeting of the fall eea- son at 11 o'clock Thursday morning, in the auditorium of the Cosmos Club. The officers for the ensuing year are: President, Mrs. William H. Her- ron; first vice president, Mrs. Frank H. Briggs; second vice president, Mrs. G. Wilkius: recording secre- arkfield, Fha: Dorr Rose Tex., tary Yard: treasur ; assistant tre: : directors, Mrs. G Mrs. GNbert H. Grosve | B. Swormstedt. Mrs. . Aspinwall, Miss Emma Laurence F. Schmecke- i nor, Mr: I Clarenc | bier, Miss Grace Willis, Mrs. Truman 1Abhe. Mrs. Frederick E. Farrington, Mrs. John C, Merriam. ‘The president announces the follow- ing chairmen of committees: Program committes, Mrs. Joshua Evans, jr.; membership committee, Mrs. Philip 8. Smith; flnance committes,” Mrs. Samuel G. Blythe; hospitality com- mittee, . Mrs. Frederick V. Coville; press .committee, Mrs. -Marius B. Campbell; printing committee, Mrs. Luke C. Strider;-ushers, Mrs. Albert N. Prentiss. [ At the meeting Gen. H. M. Lord, I director general of the budget, will }speak on “The District and the Budget.” i i WAR MEMORIAL PLANNED. Funds are being collected in the medical department of the Army to _meet the expenses of installing a large bronze memorial tablet to the memory of the officers, nurses and _enlisted men of that department who lost their Ilives in the world war, in the new Army Medical School building, in course of construction on the Walter Reed General Hospital reservation. Col. Paul C, Hutton, Medical Corp: the office of the surgeon general, War Department, is in_charge of the fund. | i i | i German Inventor May Use U-Boat In Dash for Pole By the Associated Press. BERLIN, October 2. the North Pole in a U-bo: This is N the slogan be- hind a project launched by Dr. Anschuetz- Kagmpte, inventor of the spinning compass, which s being increasingly used in the “ world’s shipping 7~ after distinguish- ing itself on Ger- man submarines during the war. The Germania shipyards have replied favorably to an inquiry by Dr. Anschuetz- Kaempfe as to whether they could {buHd a suitable U-boat for a polar expedition. He specified a submarine of 500 tons, manned by eight men, With & cruising radius of 10,000 miles, i i capable of remaining submerged fif- teen hours at a time. Her capacity would-be sufficient to hold provisions and equipment ot two years. The promoter of the project be- lieves such a submarine’covid reach the pole more quickly than any other style of craft. He figures on a sur- face speed of six miles an hour and la submerged speed of eight miles. | His investigations showed the great- est depth of ice under which the ves- | sel would have to travel would be | twenty-two meters (about seventy- two feet). He declares conditions would be favorable for steering at & depth of forty meters and permit travel in a fixed direction without the aid of a searchlight even 100 meters down. Although doubt has arisen in scien- tific clrcfes as to the practicability of the plam, the promoter’s chief difficulty at present is said to be financial. —_—— NELSON YOUNG BURIED. Navy Photographer’s Body Laid to Rest in Arlington. Neison Young, thirty-elght years old, 30 Givard street northeast, died at his ihome early Wednesday night. Mill- tary and Masonic funeral services were conducted at the residence Satur- day at 2 o'clock, after which Inter- ment took place in Arlington ceme- tery. Mr. Young was born in Kingston, Canada, June 21. 1884: came to the United States when a young man and enlisted In the marines in 1905, where he served until 1913. He /had been em- ployed as a photographer in the bu- reau of construction and repair of the N Department for a number- of . having accompanied Secretary and President Harding as chief rapher on the recent divisional maneuvers. while passing vived by a wife. | and three H { « Laura Hope Crews Starring in “Pomerey’s Past,” Saym: 1 find Noon- an's ,Lemon Cream 8o bene- ficial to skin _and delightful use that I can- not understand! how any wom- an can afford 4 to be without s NOONAN'S LEMON CREAM Four Creams in O 7 A Bleaching, Astringent, Clean: ing Cold Cream, 75c the jar, 36¢ the tube. For sale by P Drug_Stares (all ) Ensvura L Brov esa oter good * Do you serve - rice often enough? Ak for Comet Rice at your grocer’s. I [P . e = e — 'HE VERY BEST TIME to take Doctor Pleree’s Golden Medical Dis- ecovery is NOW, if you feel that your blood s out of order. Don’t wait until have CURE w‘hflnfl_fl" easier mess, m that are some of the sym You meed this . tonmie, II'E =1 IIII‘II-I‘IM':'I! . Dr tn CARTOONIST-J. M. BAER CONVENTION SPEAKER Dietitian, 85, Also to Address Nat- -uropathic Association at Ses- sion at Willard. Former Representative John M. Baer of North Dakota, cartoonist, and Dr. V. M. George, eighty-five years old, dietitian, of Columbus, Ohio, are among the thirty speakers who will address the twenty-sixth annual con- vention of the American Naturopathic Association, which opens at the New ‘Willard Hotel next Thursday, closing the following Monday. Cartoons of the head and body, showing the various bones and or- gans, will be drawn by Mr. Baer, who is scheduled to lecture Friday night. Dr. George, who speaks on the open- ing night, will speak on dieting. The convention opens at 10 o'clock Thursday morning in the hall at 1110 F street northwest, when a short business meeting will be held. The publia sessions begin at 8 o'clock Thursday night. Arthur E. Seymour, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, will make an address welcoming the delegates to the city. KER & T. THE BAl i BOND RAISED T0 $1,500. Themas A. Shaw, Accused of As- -uult, Held for Grand Jury. Thomas ‘A. Shaw, one of the Wash- ington terminal striking shopmen, charged with assault with a deadly weapon upon James A. Good, long employed at the Union station shops, and who refused to go out on strike July 1 last, when his fellow workers struck, had a preliminary hearing in the United States branch of Police Court Saturday and was held for the action of the grand jury. He had been out on bond of $590, but Assist- ant United States District Attorney Ralph Given asked the court to raise it to $1,500, which was ordered by Judge McMahon. The evidence showed that Good, ac- companied by Harold King and Wil- liam M. Warfield, fellow workers, left the railroad shops at midnight Sep- tember 18 and started to their homes near 61st street, at the Chesapeake Junetion, and that when they left the Btreet car at that point they were assaulted by a party of six strikers,, among them Shaw. = “BELL AND WING” By Frederick Fanning Ayer reab woAT THESE ENGLISH authoriies SAY OF THIS MOUNTAIN.NEST OF VERSE, THESE SUPERNAL FLIGHTS OF SONG “Power and originality”. . . . . . . . . . Cork Examiner (Irish) “A subtle thinker” . . .. ... Publishers’ Circular, England § “Absorbing, astounding, inspiring, baffling” . Ame, London “A savage virility” . . . . . . . . . . Literary Guide, England “Hefeelsandthinksdeeply” LeytonDistrict Times, England “Analert and bold intelligence” Occult Review, England “He belongy to a different world from yours” Montrose Standard, England 4 PRICE, NET, $2.50 AGENTS 354 FOURTH AVENUE -leather YLOR COMPANY THIEVES REAP HARVEST * OF EASY MONEY HERE Petty Robberies in Various Parts of City Reported to Police. Tieves found easy picking Saturday, operating everywhere from the new Navy building to a street car. Miss Grace Marion Parker of 1359 Taylor street northwest, reported to the police the probable theft from! room 1601, new Navy building, 18th and B streets northwest, of a xmy{ pocketbook containing small purse and $69 in_bills, cni tokens and a solid _gold watch- shaped vanity case, valued at $20. George N.. Seltz announced that his pocket was picked of a .leather pocketbook _containing $2 in _bills while he was on a Washipgton ‘Rall- way and Electric Company car, at 9th street near New York avenue. Lena Mahanes, 1415 Swann street northwest, had in a pantry at 1724 Connecticut avenue until this afternoon, when the money disap- peared. Daniel Driscoll, 1742 14th street, missed $20 from a cash register. : designated might protest. — SEEK SKATING RINKS. Commissioner Oyster has referred t« the traflic bureau for report the recomn mendation of the Thirteen Club tha places be designated In different parc of the city as skating rinks for boys an: girls. One difficulty in the way of such 3 scheme is that residents of streets s The Commis sioners aiready have received a lette: from one woman, protesting in against the setting aside of her stree as an island of safety for skating chil dren. : CASTORIA For Infants and Children tnUse For Over 30 Years Almn;bun Signature of IF YOU HAD A NECK AB LONG AS THIS FELLOW, AND HAD ALL THE waY 4 S5c. and €0c. Hospital Sise, 31 ALL DRUGGISTS 'l. i FOR YEARS DISCRIMINATING WOMEN HAVE INSISTED ON Nadine Face Powder Try it in the New Biue Box, You will like its soft textur R ' g e Nadine . Constant applications At toilet ‘Whita, Flesh, Bruneite, Piak. NATIONAL TOILET CO.. ¢ Paris, Teasesses, - whiter, prettier teeth? by dental advi Do you realize that men and wmm; millions of them —have found a way to Look about you. Note how teeth glisten now—teeth which once were dim. So it is everywhere. Careful people of some fifty nations now use this new method, largely If you don't know this method, we urge you to make this test. Watch the delightful results. You will seec and feel some new effects you would not go without. Combats the dingy film One object is to fight the film on teeth, that viscous film you feel. It clings to teeth, A Revelation The prettier teeth that show when you are successfully combating film Has two effective ways Dental science, after long research, has found two ways to fight that film. One acts to curdle film, one to remove it, without any harmful scouring. Many careful tests proved these methods efficient, then authoritics endorsed them. Now leading dentists the world over are advising their adoption. A new-type tooth paste has been created, based on ‘modern research. It brings five effects now considered essential. It avoids Note several old mistakes. These two great film L enters crevices and stays. Food stains, etc., .discolor it, then it forms dingy coats. Tar- tar is-based on film. Film also holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause deedy. Germs breed by millions in it. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Under old methods, all those troubles were constantly increasing. tively fight ‘most tooth troubles. REG.V,S. some film-caused trouble. Beautiful tecth were seen less often than today. All be- cause the ordinary tooth paste cannot effec- film. And film is the cause of apsode The New-Day Dentifrice Created to bring-five new effects, now regur(ied as essential. Leading dentists the world-over now advise its daily use. All druggists supply the large tubes. starch Few escaped tooth-protec those forces fight the enemies of t_eeth. combatants are embodied in it. The name of that tooth paste is Pepsodent. A new dental era Pepsodent, in essential ways, means a - new era in dental hygiene. It does more than fight film. It multiplies the starch di- gestant in the saliva. That is there to digest if ich may otherwise fer- ment and form acids. It multiplies the alkalinity of the saliva. That is there to neutralize mouth acids, the cause of tooth decay. Old methods brought just opposite ef- fects, due to soap and chalk. So this new way means a vast increase in Nature’s ting forces in the mouth. Now, See h Men who Free A 10-Day Test To show what Pepso- dent does. Simply mail the coupon. Then you will know that there is a way to new beauty, new protection, Men’s Teeth ow they glisten now smoke are now using Pepso- dent to combat the smoke-stained film. You whiter teeth the absence That test Cut out the 10-Day Tube Free THE PEPSODENT COMPANY, Dent. F-8, 1104 S. Wabash Ave,, Chicago, i1l Mail 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent to will see the results if you look. Those mean safer teeth as well To children Pepsodent has brought new protection. It is helping them avoid the troubles which their parents may have suf- fered. Under old methods, scarcely a child avoided film-coats and decay. Send the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark of the viscous film. See how - - teeth whiten as the film-coats disappear. will convince you that this method should be used by you -nd yours. coupon now. >