Evening Star Newspaper, December 15, 1922, Page 37

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY. DECEMBER 15, 1922. Huses vests simply can’t roll up or wrinkle, because they are so long and shaped to fit the waist and hips. They stay down., BESIDES, they are Iialian Silk—the best silk there is—and Italian Silk, so well tailored, hangs snugly to the lines of the body with a feeling of fitness that has never been equalled. Kayser Italian Silk Underwear is the most lwxurious—yet it costs less, because it lasts so long. Look for the Marvelfit rein- forcement u; 'z(h: aoed:xurof r of = step, giving comfort and ease movement. Marvelfit reinforcement £3.50 and up Losk for the starred label. ~ One-star_for star for beavy RAR St Designed for comfort, a Kayser Ttalian Silk Union Suit fulfils its purpose—with “room enough” yet ly fitting the figure. Look for the Marvelfie reinforcement. $6.00 and up DtctianSilk Underwear By the Associuted Press. ! NEW YORK, December 15.—Two !letters believed to have been written | by Mrs. Abraham Lincoln deseribing | the straitened circumstances of the | martyred President's family shortly after his death were produced’ here vesterday by R. Sherman Fowler, who | sald he found them recently in a secret panel of an old rosewood book- | | casc, which came to him as an helr-i STORY OF DEATH | - AGAN CHANGED { {Chicago Man Accused of Murdering Woman, Weak- ens After Grilling. By the Associated Press. I CHICAGO, December 15.—Arthur Foster, held in connection with the disappearance of Mrs. Kate Mitchell Trostell, telegraph branch office man- ager, under stress of simultaneous questioning by thirty datectives early today after he zlready had undergone nearly 100 bours of examination by officers working in relief detalls, changed his original statement re- garding the alleged death of the woman. Early yesterday he told the officers ldrainage canal. Today he said that statement was wrong. but that the} missing woman leaped into the water | lat a point one hundred vards away from the spot first indicated. A equad| of policemen dragged tha canal :.n) vesterday for the body. s { The first change in Foster's de- meanor came after a friend of Mrs. { Trostell spent more thas reading to him from th after Mrs. daughter faced him night with the accusat had murdered her mother, him to restore the be burled before C nd pegzed | 0 it migat} is attitude | id_indiftererce. ; After the little girl's plea F 2 cald to have admitted Mri was dead, hut denied he w: sible. He maintained she leaped i the canal. Stains on Foster's automobile said by the coroner’s chemist to been blood, and in his motor car de toctives said they found a but ! from Mrs. Trostell's dress and a pen | i1 such as she used. i | Raw materials become more valua able as they go through manufact ling processes. The value of pig iron is_ doubled when it becomes stecl. | When made into plano wire it is; worth $50,600 a ton; as hair springs| for watches its value is $500,000 a | ton, and as fine surgical instruments it is worth something like $2,500,00. | U.S. Ungrateful toLincoln, Wife ’ | Wrotein1865 Letter Just Found, i i mi il Mrs. Trostell jumped into the Chicago |- 87 Lincoln. In it Mrs. Lincoln also dis- l the letters over to the New York His- cusses a bill which a Mr. Moses held | torical Society, of which he s 2 against her. The amount was not member, with a cash book of the stated. . { dollar fund, also found in the book- Mr. Fowler said he expected to turn ! case compartment. USE RADIUM Do you suffer from Nervousness, Insomnia, Neurasthen or-High Blood.Pressure? USE RADIUM. = i Arc you 1in agony with pain of Rheumatism, Neuritls Arthritis? USE RADIUM. © © o - I Constipation, Kidney Trouble or Prostatitis is ige order—USE RADIUM. i Many eminent authorities also giye this advice. As sold in our preparations, it is HARMLESS ter on yesterday, have concluded to write and thank you, most gratefully, for your kind intercst in our deeply afficted family. We have indeed lost our all. “The idolized husband and | great injustice of a people who owed | s0 much to my beloved husband does | { not (‘anlrl'fll)um vard lessening our | avy trials. Morton Py e | loom fror his grandfather, Benjamin | Hetyvewell dinner ‘o his frieadg in | B. Sherman, a founder of the Union’New York in return for their polite | League Club. attentions to him.” | The letters, Fowler said, were writ-| S ';""‘:" ten to his grandfather, who was pres- | The second letter, dated January | 1dent of 'the. Central Union Trust. 13, 1366, is longer and of recciv: | Company, at the time was in charge of ollar fund” which col- | lected $10,747 for Lincoln's widow. | The first letter, dated the day after Christmas, 1865, and signed Mary Lincoln, said, in part: | “We Are Homelesn.” “We are homeless, and in return for the sacrifices my great and noble | husband made, both In his life and in his death, the paltry first year's salary 1s oftered to us, under the cir-| cumstances. | "Such injustice has been done us as calls the blush to any true, loyal | heart.. The sum Is in reality only! $20,000, as the first month's salary | was paid my husband, and I presume | the tax on it will be deducted from it. The interest on it will be al)uul, $1.500. 1am humiliated when I think that we are destined to be forever | homeless. 1 can write no more” | The letter began: an, INEXPENSIVE On sa's at - O'DONNELL'S DRUG STORES RADIUM PRODUCTS CORPORATION 1105 Connecticut Avenue N.W. Main 6797 EFFECTIVE TAKE PEP-PHOS THE ToNiC 4t Pecples am _ Other Gond Drug Stor . Price. 8160 i ‘ ¥ son wrote you a let- Only Eight More Shopping Days to the Nation’s Brightest Christmas in Years CTOBER last, according to the Department of Com- merce, showed the greatest production of essential commodities since the war. Unemployment has been reduced to a negligible minimum, banks show growing deposits, business is booming, progress and prosperity resume their normal trend! Christmas, 1922, will be a good, old-fashioned Christmas, with the gift-giving spirit cheerily active. HOP EARLY, for the Christmas crowds give threat S or promise, as you interpret it, of greater magnitude than ever. Shop here, because we can meet your every requirement, save you steps and worry and money. Our stock of gift jewelry is without precedent for size, variety and beauty; it offers vou the utmost in sugges- Gifts for Family & Friends Scarf Pins. with cut dia- Watches—All standard Bill Folds—Genuine monds, American makes, Jeather, with solid gold corners, $7.50 to $150.00 Solid gold with set stones. $2.00 to $10.00 $16.85. to $200.00 Military Sets—Two brushes and comb in case. $5.00 to $15.00 W rist Watches—Plati- e Cuff Links—Solid gold, double link, $5.00 to $25.00 Set with diamonds, , $15.00 to $50.00 Braided. Bracelets—14- karat solid gold, $16.50 to $30.00 num cases with diamonds, $100.00 to $600.00 Wrist Watches—Gold- filled, $15.00 to $40.00 U. S. CAPITOL: At The Capital il Life Member of the United States Funeral Directors Association Chas. S. Zurhorst . Washington, D. C., Undertaker 301 East Capitol St. [ From Holland To the Isle of Guernsey To Martinsville, Ind. !l To Washington, D. C. ' “ZURHORST” 1857-1922 The lifework of three generations . Jewelers and Diamond Merchants for More Than Half a Century. 10. '40.00 With cut diamonds and i | $10.00:to13 platinum top, Photo Lockets—Solid Emblem Rings—DMasonic. $25.00 to $500.00 silver, Qdd Fellows, K. of C., etc., $2.00 to $10.00 in solid gold, _ s = $10.00 to $35.00 | G‘ft ']\ anity Cases—Solid 3 ifts silver, With cut diamonds, $25.00 to $100.00 Bar Pins—Solid gold. $2.00 to $30.00 $15.00 to $100.00 Signet Rings—Solid gold. $5.50 to $30.00 Set Rings—=Solid gold. In solid gold, $29.85 to $100.00 Little Finger Rings— Solid gold, with set stones, $5.00 to $35.00 $12.00 to $35.00 Toilet Sets — Complete ling of genuine Du Barry white toiletware, also solid . silver sets, Pearls—Lady Fairfax. $7.50 to $12.50 ;) Waterman Fountain Pens, $2.00 to $60.00 For The Home Complete lines of Sheffield Reproduction Holloware, Solid Silver Holloware, plain and with Period decorations: Solid Silver Flatware, in Fairfax. Mary Chilton, Elizabeth Tudor and other famous patterns; plated silver flatware in Comi- munity. 1847 Rogers, R. Wal- Jace and other art sign and a most a showing of Cut (ilassware, plain and with gold or silver incrustation. Cigarette Cases — Solic silver, $10.00 to $35.00 Eversharp Pencils: $1.00 to $30.00 Walde- de- Pearls—Richelieu, e $13.50 to $22.50 Mesh Bags—Solid silver, $25.00 Watch Chains, mar solid gold, $6.50 to $50.00 sentiments, for permanence as a reminder of you. your generosity and gocd good diamond now is a splendid investment. for the market is certainly advancing. \d fortune and, in' no small degree. good foresight, have placed us in possession of we may conservatively ca'l the largest and best stock of fine diamonds we have v assembled. Ivery one of them is a fine diamend, for we confine our dealings now. 4s we have for over 30 vears, to diamonds of definitely fine quality—and the name, R. Harris & Co., is a guarantee for You, absclute and inviolable. Let Us Show You Our Collection of Set Diamonds at $50, $75, $100, $125, Up to $2,500 e e e et et S e . S— <A~ S —— e e We Will Reserve Your Purchases on Payment of a Small Deposit We Will Cash Your Christmas Savings Fund Checks ' There is another thought in connection with using this store as your Gift Headquarters that will commend itself to you. It is this: That the name of this old established firm, R. Harris & Co., carries prestige that is gratifying to both donor and recipient. , i R. HARRIS & CO. i fo Seventh and D Lxcieiy Iomin 2 in Washington. ]

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