Evening Star Newspaper, November 28, 1922, Page 34

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What Part Is Americ_a Taking Now? Read OUR WORLD December The full story is told in 24 timely, illustrated written l;vy men and umnc: of .-M.,aflda, Where Uncle Sam Takes a Hand; America’s Overseas Wards; America’s Dependencies and Zones of Influence; America Leads in Radio; Uncle Sam’s Ships on the Seven Seas; The World From a Haystack; Clinching Our Foreij Trade; A Trade League of Nations; Admiral Bristo Quarterdeck Diplomat; Seaports for the Prairies; The Bankers Look Ahead; and Mussolini’s P for Iraly; ier; Our World study , “What would do about it,” ulm:rdy mdandm'; four great n-flonalm wt-ntz;-u' All Good Newsstands 25c—$3 Yearly All annual subscribers receive the world wide services of the Institute of International Information which answers all their questions about the world. Send your subscription today ‘The Houston Publishing Co., Inc. 9 East 37th Street, New York Dear Santa Claus: ing certain persons at Christmas the following timely suggestion: in the same design, if your heart EVERSHARP has the exclusive rifled tip EVERSHARP last year. Both are made as writing sets. See them at your dealer’s to-day. Made in U. S. A. by The Wahl Company, Chicago i H i { THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1922. RADIO NEWS More than 1,000,000 radio recelving Schedule of Local Wireless Entertainment. 5 ranto Tonav | |POPULATION INCREASES | issue a proclamation calling upon the directing the Klan to disband within | disguise in public to further such . Ku Klux Klan to disband. a certain time.” [conspiracy, the Klan as an org The Massachusetts senator sent to| The former district attorney, whose |tion be charged with conspira the Attorney General a letter receiv- (name was not disclosed by Senator | the federal courts, Logether witk ed from a former assistant district|Walsh, also suggested that under|Of its8 members whose ide attorney of a western state declaring |section 19 of the penal code, which!known to various distriet attorney study of legal practices had convinc- |forbids conspiracy to deny any citi- | —_— Knowing the difficulties you have had in pleas- Look over your gift list and see who writes. Send to these worthy gentlemen and gentle- ‘women, an EVERSHARP or a WAHL PEN—or both guarantee exquisite satisfaction, for, between us and the North Pole, there are no finer writing instruments than EVERSHARP and WAHL PEN. the lead. WAHL PEN has the sensationally-new all-metal barrel that cannot crack or split. Look again over your gift list—and give a WAHL PEN to every one to whom you gave an or silver, in the same beautiful designs, and match perfectly. You can choose from 90 styles of WAHL PENS. Any dealer can supply velvet- lined GIFT BOXES in which EVERSHARP and WAHL PEN can be presented singly, or together, sets in the United States are expected to pick up the Thanksgiving day ad- !dress of Alvin M. Owsley, national | commander of the American Legion. which will be delivered at 8 o'clock tomorrow night and broadcast from the powerful naval radio station NOF in Anacostia on a special wave length of 425 meters. Commander Owsley | will deliver the address in person. The message of Commander OWS- !ley will be of a highly patriotic na- | ture and will tell of the leglon’s poli- cies during the coming year. Dr. J. K. Griflis’ address on “The American Indlan—Yesterday and To- day” at the City Club this afternoon at 1 o'clock was broadcast by sta- tion WJH of the ‘White & Boyer Company. This station will give its regular Weekly program tonight be- ginning at 7:45 o'clock. Ladies— A few days’ treatment with CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS will do more to clean up the skin than all the beauty treat- ments in crea- ation. An im- perfect com- plexion is caused by a :I’uumwiwva‘. old, young and middle. take for Biliousness, Di u-a% Dt Siomaeh o wdfinfid of Constipation. time, we make is full. We that grips in gold We Carry a Complete Stock of Eversharp Pencils and Wahl Pens PORT S PAPER COMPANY 914 FSt. NW. 1410N. Y. Ave. Eversharp Pencils and Wahl Pens “The Ideal Gifts” MART 1303 F St. 721-31 13th St. N.W. Eversharp Pencils and Wahl Pens Sold Here Fand 12th Sts. N.W. [D. ALPHER A Full Line of Eversharp Pencils and Wahl Pens From 50c to $25.00. 907 G Street N.W. Eversharp Pencils—Wahl Pens—All Styles Walford’s 909 Pa.Ave. N.W. We Carry a Complete Stock of Eversharp Pencils and Wahl Pens 1402 N.Y. Ave. JULIUS H. WOLPE, Eversharp Pencils and Wahl Pens Barber & Ross =it r=: ‘We Sell Eversharp Pencils _.E'ischer_’s oy e 14th and R Sts. N.W. 11th & G Sts. N.W. 918 F St. N.W. NAA—Naval Radio Station, Radlo, Va. 3:45 to 4 p.m.—Closing live stock markets. 4 to 4:15 p.m.—Hay and feed mar- kets. 6 p.m.—Weather rsport. 5:30 to 6 p.m.—Dally marketgram. 9:45 p.m.—Weather forecast. 10 p. Time signals; weather re- 2,660 mneters. 10:30 p.m.—Naval press news omn 2,650 meters. 11 p.m.—Weather forecast. (Except where noted, sending is CW 5,950 meters.) port; orders WWX—Post Office Department (1,160 Meters). 3:30 p.m.—Report on fruits and veg-~ etables. 5 p.m.—Report on dairy products and grain. 7:30 p.m.—Live stock and grain re- ports. 8 p.m.—Report on fruits and vege- tables. 9:45 p.m.—Weather forecast. (380 Meters), 5:30 to 7 p.m.—Phonograph selec- tlons. WIAY—Woodward & Lothrop (360 Meters). 2 to 3 p.m.—Selections on the repro- ducing piano and phonograph. WEAS—The Hecht Company (380 Meters). 3 to 4 p.m.—Phonograph and piano- player selections. WHMU—Doubleday-Hill Electric Com- pany (360 Meters). 5:30 p.m.—Program 4:30 of music, to NOF—Naval Air Station, Amacostia, D, C. (413 Meters). 7 to 7:15 p.m.—Talk by Charles F. Marvin, chief of the weather bureau.} 7:45 to 8 p.m.—Public health serv- ice bulletin No. 69 on “Safety and the Public Health,” a special Safety week broadcast by the section of industrial hygiene. A WIL—Continental Electric Company WJH—White & Boyer Co. (360 Meters) 4 to 4:30 p.m—Muslc and features.{ 7:45 p.m.—Regular week concert be rendered by the following artists: Mrs. Edith McIntosh, soprano: Mi Helen Dodge, violinist; Miss Mabe Keenen, ist: Miss Helen Brown. pianist; P A. G. L. Welmer, pianist,and F. Edmond Boyer, planist. Selections to be announced as ren- dered. ]JOHNSON OF KENTUCKY, MEMBER OF HOUSE, ILL Former Chairman of D. C. Commit- tee May Not Be Able to Serve During Called Session. Representative Ben Johnson of Ken- tucky, former chairman of the House District committee, but now a mem- ber of the subcommittee of the House appropriations committee to frame the District supply bill, may not take up his duties in the present session. He has been seriously ill with a severe cold for several weeks. He expects to arrive in Washington today, but has notified his secretary by wire that, If he does not fecl better, he will imme- diately return to Kentucky. Representative Johnson is anxious to get himself into shape physically to participate in the conference on the District budget when the District sub- committee meets to consider the esti- mates about December 15. SPENS TO QUIT OFFICE | FIRST OF COMING YEAR Fuel Distributor Persuaded by " President to Remain Longer Than ‘Was Originally Intended. Federal Fuel Administrator C. E. Spens will not leave Washington until the first of next year, he announced vesterday. At that time the emer- gency distribution powers of the fed- eral fuel distribution office will cease, {in a measure, but the fuel adminis- { tration will still go on under the directorship of F. R. Wadleigh, chief of the fuel division of the Department of Commerce, who has been assisting Mr. Spens in his fuel distribution work. l Mr. Spens will go back to his post i { as operating vice president of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy rail- road, from which he obtained a fur- lough to come to Washington as fed- eral fuel distributor. His duties will actually cease December 31. The fuel distributor originally in- tended to remain in Washington only until December 1, but was requested by the President to remain another month, by which time probably diffi- culties of fuel distribution or trans- portation will be cleared up. —_— In Pennsylvania it is illegal to ar- rest or imprison & woman for failure to pay taxes. Complete Stock of EVERSHARP PENCILS 50c to $5.00 Self-filling Fountain Pens $1.00 Up Get It at Gibson’s 917919 G St. N.W. Better Thousands i Have Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards® Olive Tablets—the sub- stitute for calemel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver is almost instantaneous. These little olive- colored tablets are the result of Dr. Edwards’ determination not to_treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. The pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have no bad after effects. They don't injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why care the liver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays bgvoc with the gums. Sodnmo:lu liquids. It is best not to take calomel. Let Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets take its place. < eadaches, “dullness” and that lazy feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets when you feel “logy” and “hegvy.” They “clear” clo brain end “perk up” the spirita 150 and INU. 3. PENITENTIARIES ed him “there is ample authority for t |zen of rights secured under the Con-| Women journalists in Paris have he President to issue a proclamation 'stitution, and penalizes the use of 2 ' organized a club. Counterfeiters, Drug Salesmen and Auto Thieves Held Cause of Influx. | There was an increase of more than 1,000 prisoners in federal penal insti- tutions throughout the country dur- ing the fiscal year 1922, it was an- nounced today by Attorney General Daugherty. The announcement was based on the report by Supt. of ! Prisons Votaw. | The fncrease over the previous year was attributed by the superintendent to the “large number of prisoners re- celved for violations of the anti-nar- The total number in federal instit tions and in state institu than county jails on June was 6,395, as compared with year previous. uring the year it cost the govern- ment $1,313,627.37 for the maintenance of the 5,540 prisoners confined in the | United ~ States penitentiaries, as; against $1,298,659.44 for the support | of 4.296 prisoners who wero confined in the same institutions during the fiscal year 1921. A total of 702 federal prisoners were released on parole during the year, as compared with 942 during 1921. ‘The paroles of seventy-thr prisoners were terminated for viol tion of the conditions of their parole, | as compared with thirty in the prior fiscal year. Paroled prisoners earned for themselves during the year $593,- 404.20 in money, besides in many in- stances receiving hoard and loding. The ocst of administration of the ! parole law during the year to the| government was $3,783.38. as compared Wwith $11,770.36 for the previous year. | WALSH ASKS PRESIDENT ; DISBAND KU KLUXERS | Urges Daugherty Consider Plan for | Proclamation Similar to | Grant's. : other 1922, the Attorney General Daugherty “.’IS, asked today by Senator Walsh. de ocrat, Massachusetts, to consi proposal that President H fter the manner of President DR BL’ S its fitting. every morning AND more, you wear Kayser Ialian Silk Underwear for the most matter-of-fact reasons imaginable. One is the ease with which it can be washed with soap in a bowl—dried over mghfioffuhpufnd hll:e new in the morning. And perhaps the fact that it lasts so long is the main reason why most i women wear it day in and day out. Women revel in the beauty of Kayser Italian Silk Underwear—they delight in the perfection of its tailoring, in the comfort of Marvelfit reinforcement $3.50 and up medism weight. Thvee-star for beavy Underwear Owner and Operator have equal reasons for wanting the new Quiet Remington No. 12 It wins the operator because of its many features which make the day’s work swifter and easier. Prominent amongthese is the “Natural Touch”, that triumph of Remington de- sign, which makes the operation of the machine like second nature—as mechani- cal as walking and almost as unconscious as breathing itself. The new Remingtofi No. 12 whisper, but will be heard around the world Price $110 Call or phone for a demonstyation Remington Typewriter Company 804 Seventeenth Street N.W. It appeals to the owner because its work is surpassingly good—and consis- tently good under all circumstances. In quality as well as quantity, it gives him the results he wants. And because it is so quiet that its operation never disturbs him, no matter how near him it is used. onlyina Washington, D. C. Telepkone Main 336 A good typewriter deserves a good ribbon. Paragon Ribbons—made by us. 75¢ each, $7.00 a dozen

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