Evening Star Newspaper, December 25, 1922, Page 5

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, DECEMBER' 25, 1922. e 5 TEN OPPORTUNITIES LEFTTOBEFILLED Not Quite Two-Thirds of Sum Asked Has Been Received. $5,000 STILL NEEDED Time Yet Remains, However, to Subscribe Toward Keeping Needy Families Throughout Year. Still ten opportunities open, al- though some of these are within eight of their goal. Christmas morn- ing sees the fourteen opportunities quite two-thirds - subscribed—a ttle less than $5.000 is still needed 1o take care of all these families for the coming year. Remember, there is still time to- night to drop in the mail that last Christmas gift, for which Cuno H. Rudolph, the president of the Asso- ciated Charities, has issued a Christ- mas appeal. Grateful for Donations. The officers of the Associated Char- ities, speaking in the name of the weventy invalid fathers, widowed and deserted mothers and their children, not forgetting the three old people _of No. 5, are grateful to the hundreds. of contributors who have already responded. The soclety still that when the final returns are in it will be found that the opportunities have been befriended by at least 1.000 | izens. Two churches were n this morning and others wore known to have taken up collec- terday. One of the two was | artment of Mount ional Church. and nth Street Presby- nt ¢ terian Chureh Sunday school. Contributions still be sent to the Associated Charities, 923 H street northwest, or to the office of The Star. Fourteen Opportunities. OPPORTUNITY _NO. NOBODY'S FAULT—JUST SHEER MISFOR-! TUNE. v AND HUSBAND, SIX CHILDR In a little six-room house with a front yard, where masses of Howe: bloom all summer long, lives th gentle, childlike woman, whose nerves have never fully recovered from an accident which occurred in girlhood. A devoted husband protected her and cherished her until illness deprived her of his care. He is gradually growing wo at the hospital, where he has been for more than a year. There are six children, obedient and sweet, all devoted to their mother. Amount ask 36 Previously pwledged, G Ao X al of the Di- ct, Knights o LoV H. F. C., $10. Total, $8: , $104. TY NO. EDUCATION IN HOMEMAKING AND HEALTH. WIDOW AND FOUR CHILDREN. Education in homemaking and health, this is what the care of the Associated Charities has meant to Thrown by upon her own ath of her ssume the head- Now, thanks the society’s was unprepared to ship of her household. to the instruction of home economist, are becominx adepts with their needle and the mother is a much improved housekeep Amount asked for. $1,404. Previously newledged, $589.50. Mrs. Jeffries, Mr. H. H. §2; C. E. B Total. § 0 Still needed, $08. OPPORTUNITY NO. 4. A REUNITED FAMILY. WIDOW AND SIX CHIL- DREN. Left a widow, with a baby two weeks old and five other children under ten, this mother knew of nothing else to do but place two of the kiddies with relatives and the others in orphanages. Misfortunate seemed to follow her. Her baby died, and the oldest boy had a fall, result- ing in the loss of a leg. All the children were homesick, unhappy and in bad physical condition. But now | the long e seems to have taken a turn. The amily has been gotten together again with the aid of the Assoclated Charities and has taker ja little place on the outskirts of the city, where the mother, with the help of the children as they grow older, farm Amount asked for, $728. Previously acknowledged, $411.° M. W. C, $10; I H.. $10; L. S. F., $5. Total, $436. till needed, $292. OPPORTUNITY NO. 6. THE GOAL IN SIGHT. WIDOW AND FOUR CHIL- DREN. This widow is doing all in her power to make a home for her four children. and shortly her will bring its reward, for the eldest child will soon be old enough to go to work and to make a substantial contribution to the support of the ramily. With the goal in sight, sure- iy it is worth while to extend a help- ing hand, for the home is an excellent one and the mother takes advantage of every opportunity to improve as a housekeeper under the instruction of the home economist. Amount asked for, $1.300. acknowledged, $ . T., $1; Mrs. B. F. 8.50. Still needed, $611 OPPORTUNITY NO. 7. SHE REFUSES TO SURRENDER TO MISFORTUNE. Left to shift for herself by a hus- and who is a drug addict, this little woman (colored) refused to her three babies, one to three y of age. She broke herself down with overwork until she had to have a major operation ve her life. Amount 0. Previously . Mrs. C. A. S. - vmpathizer, §2; Mrs. J. H. H., W. J. Smith, $1; M. E. B, $1. Total, 71 Still needed, $485.29. OPPORTUNITY _NO. 8. HER CHIL- DREN JOY ENOUGH. DESERTED WIFE—THREE CHILDREN. “Now I am living,” is what this de- serted wife said after she had begun 10 receive her weekly allowance made possible by the contributions given at Christmas ‘time. Her two boys and baby girl are her delight. “I don’t need to go out for entertainment. Amount asked for, $780. Previously acknowledged, $62450. V. R, $25; M. B. M, $10; C. S. T, $2; C. 5, $1; "fre. C.R.S,$;G.T. T, $15; M. B. L, $2; W. P. K, §7; W. H. C, $10. Total, $701.50. Still needed, $78.50. OPPORTUNITY NO. 9. A PROBLEM IN HOUSING, INVALID COUPLE AND THREE CHILDREN, _ Have you ever tried to look for rooms when you had only a slender purse or nothing at all to pay with? This family had been self-supporting until the father became too old and too ill to work any longer. With vings exhausted they were evicted r non-payment of rent. The moth- er herself is very frail, but the-three children, all under fourteen, are promising youngsters. Amount asked for, $1,508. Previously acknowlodged, '$624.50. . E. S. Taylor, hopes | this mother | the two little girls| struggle | {Locked-in Baby, Not Fire, Needs Engine Company The Washington fire department i3 accomodating as well as effi- cient., : Yesterday afternoon Logan Car- lisle Ramsey, jr., eighteen-month- old son of Lieut. Logan Carlisle Ramsey, U. S. A, managed to lock hims~If in the nursery. Then Logan junior began to yell to get himself out. Of course, it was his own fault, but you can’t argue with a baby. Logan junior couldn't get out { and Logan senior couldn't get in. Pretty soon neighbors were ex- cited to see No. 28 engine company roll up to 3082 Porter street. where the little boy had imprisoned him- self. gan junior was giving such an .excellent demonstration of lung power by this time that the fire- fighters had no difficulty in locat- ing the “trouble.” A ladder was quickly raised and a gallant fireman went to the res- cue. Cheers went up as Private George E. Hunt went through the ndow, unfastened the door and let Logan junior cut from his self- created_prison. §0; B. L. §25; 3. L D, %. Total Still needed, $793.50 {OPPORTUNITY NO. 11._ HER WEALTH SONS. DREN. For many years this widow (col- |lored) has struggled early_and late {to support her six sons. When we { first knew of her she was working all {day and doing laundry in the evening. | When she came home at the end of {the day she gathered her children | from the different neighbors who had | been caring for them and frequently it was long past dark when she had | them with her. IS HER _SIX YOUNG WIDOW AND SIX CHIL- 780. Previously Dr. M. O. D, . CAL S B, $1: M. till needed, $426.59. OPPORTUNITY NO. 12. “SANTA" B! LIEVE IN ORAL HYGIENE WI1DOW AND THREE CHILDREN. “Mamma. have you brushed your | Will? fcome.” !the three-year-old tot in the family of a widowed mother and three chil- dren, the eldest nine. The mother is now. facing problem of separation from her bab! Amount asked for, $1,248. If you don't, | Previously C.H. B, $2. $723. OPPORTUNITY NO. 13. FOR EVERY TEAR. AND FIVE CHILDREN. “A smile for every tear” is the way this widow (colored) expresses he: appreciation for what has been done for her. Nearly blind from cataract and losing her husband from tuber- is, she is making a hard fight to_keep her home and raise her five chiidren properly. Amount asked for, $1,040. Previously nowledged. $ 0. Dr." M. O. D. sh, $5; Mrs. C. H. T., $1; Dr. C. 3 ; Mrs. A _SMILE WIDOW ¢ $1:° al, $414. Still necded, $626 Ucdesignated, $100. Summary. I Total amount asked for Total amount received .$13,056.00 Siisaszin $ 4,843.79 contributions received at Still needed ... { _Aaaitional {The Star for the opportunities were: {1 B. B, $1, for any: E. L. L.. 60 cents, |for No. 7; E. McG., $5, for No. 7; | Theodore W. {needed; M. A. Lee, §5, for No. 7; S. ) McG., $5. for No. 7; D] M. E.. $20, $5 cach’to Nos. 1, 3, 6 avd 9: O. B. G 10, $5 each to Nos. . 3 $1 each to Nos. 1 and 0. $2 each to Nos. 1, 2, J. G. Whiteside, $1, for No. 1; Mrs. W F. Vale, $3, to the most needed; Dr. and Mrs. A. M. C., $9, $3 each to Nos. 7, 11 and 13; E. C. 5, for No. 6 Edward_F. Colladay, ., for any; Sophie Pearce Casey, 35, for any: Anna iB. N. Pitcher, $5, for No. 12; Mrs. T. 5, for No. 7; A. J. S., $10, ; ML N. Gaphart, $5, for any; Philipsborn & Co., $50, ten of the | opportunities. i 1 New Mexico Wonder. E of the natural wonders of New Mexico is the Alamogordo, or Tularosa, desert. It is a sandy plain, measuring from 100 to 125 miles from inorth .to south and from 35 to 50 " Total, $353.50. ; teeth like we learned at Camp Good | Santa will_not} t o e " at "oy | 1etting the water stand three inches Noyes, $i5, to the most | { With a furious rush a greater vol apillway gates of the Panama eanal. ume of water t Every second 103,000 cublc feet of water foams its way to the lower levels. The photograph shows one of the gates. FEED THE BRUTE | Favorite Recipes by Famous. Men. } BY HUSSEIN KAHN ALAL Minister to the United States from! Persia. i | Chirin Polow. Necessary Materials—One pound of rice (Carolina rice is most suitable), one spring chicken, the peel of four | oranges, four ounces of sugar, half; a pound of salt, two grams of Span- ish saffron; two ounces,of almonds; half a pound of butter. i Mtheod of Cooking the Rice.—If the dish is required for a luncheon at 1} clock, It will be necessary, the night | before, to rinse the rice three times in | water, rubbing it each time with the| palms’of the hands. Change the water | each time. Next, soak the rice in tepld water, over the rice. Pour the half pound of salt on the rice and let it stand until 11 am. of the next day. Into a two-gallon caldron pour six quarts of water and let it boil. As soon as it boils pour out slowly and with care the water in which the rice has been soaking since the night be-| fore. Empty the rice into the boiling water. Cover the caldron and in- crease the heat. As soon as the caldron | containing the rice begins to boil re-| move the cover and stir the rice gen- tly with a flat spoon. Then replace the 1id and let the contents of the caldron boil again. Repeat the stirring proc- ess three times. Next drain the rice in a sieve, shaking it to remove all adhesion of salt and starch. Now melt a quarter of a pound of butter in a} large cup of water. Pour half the melted butter into a one-gallon cal- dron and gently empty the rice intol the caldron in such a w it will | spread uniformly without sticking to- gether in rice balls. Place the Ildrl;n' in a hot oven. Close the oven and aft- er five or six minutes see if the cal- dron is hot; if it is, bring out gen- tly and pour the remainder of the melted butter over the rice and Te-| place in the oven. Now reduce the! heat until the caldron gives a hollow sound when rapped with the fingers; this will indicate that the rice is suf- ficiently cooked. Preparation of the Almonds.—Boil the almonds for_a few minutes until the skins fall off and the almonds become white. Cut the almonds into four quar- ters perpendicularly. Preparation of the Orange Peel move the wr.te peel to such an extent th E of the peel are of the same colos ‘When this has been done cut the peel into long thin_strin These should be boiled in two waters o as to remove all bit- terness. Then strain. Combining the Almonds and the Orange Peel.—Mix the almonds and the orange peel and boil them in a sirup of sugar for ten minutes. Strain and keep in a warm place until necded. Cooking the Chicken.—Begin boiling the chicken very slowly at 8 o'clock in the morning. Boil to such a point that the skin and bones detach themselves from the flesh. Preparation of the Saffron.—Warm the saffron to remove all dampness and pound it to a powder in a mortar, after which dissolve it in three table: spoonfuls of cold water. Dishing _the Polow.—One-half of the rice should be taken from the caldron and mixed in a bowl with the orange | peel and almonds. Over thix sprinkle three tablespoonfuls of saffron water to color well. Now pour over it about two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Next remove the remainder of the rice from the caldron and dish it up ready for the table. Place the chicken from which the skin and bones have miles from east to west, and it rep- resents, in the opinion of many au- , the upper surface of a expects to support herself by truck | jzantic block of the earth’s crustipeel and colored with the saffron. i that sank after the deposition of the ‘cretaceous strata. It is surrounded by an elevated border, and on the east, especlally, the cliffs rise sheer to a height of 1,000 feet. The curi- ous Organ mountains are on its south- ern border. Within the plain, where {floods of lava once swelled up, are i vast deposits of gypsum, which forms as white as snow, which the wind {drives into vast drifts. The vegeta- tion is peculiar and highly interesting to botanist Ilhe whole with the rice which has been | Coal Shortage Drives Poor of New York to Fuel Administration’s 49 Relief been removed on top of the rice. Brown mixed With the almonds and orange This will make a delightful and pleas- antly flavored dish—chirin polow, which means “‘sweet polow. BY CHARLES W. CHESSAR (“Beefsteak Charlie.”) Tips on Steak. “Why can’t we have steaks like this one when we dine at home?” Thousands of people have asked me that question during the eight years that have given a real significance to the ‘sobrique eefsteak Charli Stations G B ST ‘Winter's first real cold weather sent thousands of temement dwellers in fi“ York city to the emergency coal stations thrown open by the state; fuel administration. the supply for those the fuel. G TR g City, county and state oficials combined te safoguard who were umable to buy in large quantities or to atore more tham a small amount. The coal was %old in lots of 50, 100 and 200 pounds, at 70 cents a hundredweight, the buyers immediately earrying } High sh "BEAUTY CHATS Wrinkles. A new treatment for wrinkles comes out almost every week. To read the literature about these just-discovered methods, one would imagine that the | millennium had arrived and that every | woman could now go fresh-faced and voung all her life. Whereas, in truth— Well, in truth, a tiny bit more is known each year about the skin, and | no doubt some time a grand cure for wrinkles will appear. But we know of none yet. We do know that as a woman ages the tiny, tiny muscles that lie beneath the skin relax and sag. which mark themselves all over the face and are generally called wrinkles. And when we combat this natural ten- dency we use the methods the Greeks and Chinese used in- the days of their ancient civilization. We have varla- tions and improvements, to be sure, but we employ unguents to feed the skin and astringents to stimulate it, and there we are. Masks have always been effective in treating wrinkles. Many of the effemipate French kings used pink | face creams and oiled silk masks of various delicate colors. But some- thing more comfortable and some- thing often quite effective is a bit of | the | silk courtplaster pasted over wrinkle after the wrinkle has bee gently smoothed out with the fingers. Sometimes massage cream is used |A bad complexion is surely due to first. Personally, I think simply smoothing out the wrinkle, applying the plaster and letting it stay on all | generally do. Have all the windows The cold | wide open and breathe deeply of the ¢ream massage and other stimulating | pure air before you even try to sleep. night is the best way. measures be taken in §h morping. can Many . readers tell me they have|find sleeping hard. The chances are found this a most effective way o treating the from between the eyes. Henrietta—The best method of keeping the nails cleaned when they are ridgy is to use a nallbrush. A file will always roughen the nails’ surface, and as a result the nail col lects soil. An excellent brush fol bristles also should be very stiff and only about a quarter of an inch lower. Rub plenty of oil or cold cream into such nails each night. Mary Ellen—Thick ankles will grow a little thinner if you give them daily vigorous massage. Rub and kneed at the flesh as though it were dough. laced snugly, not enough, however, to impede your circulation, vill also tend to make them thinner. \ And my honest answer to that ques- tion has always been: You can’t—unless your butcher is willing to hang your beef for four or five weeks—and then you probably would not want to buy it because of its appearance.” Many people ask me how to cook a steak. There is really no secret about the way it shoufd be done—but most heme cooks put the steak into a cold and light the fire. That is And it is just as fatal if the minutes. The broiler should burn full tilt for some time—until it is blazing hot. Then introduce your steak and let the intense heat of the broiler seal it instantly. If there isa secret, that's it! But keep this {n mind: the most careful broiling will not help if the beef is too fresh. Fresh beef simply will not do if you want the real thing. Buy the choicest cuts of sirloin or porterhouse from beef that has been hung at least four weeks; broil in the way I have described, and your dinner guests will register many polite hints for another invitation. you will not have to worry about a sauce. Butter; salt and pepper Will properly dress the finest steak in the world. (Copyright, 1922.) Oranges. One of the reassuring things about our food habits through the ages is that most of them, though we did not know {t, have a good scientific foun- dation. It is only recently that we have come to undersstand the science of food. Dietetics is a new science. But, nevertheless, throughout the ages the food habits of various races have followed unknown food laws. Not always, of course, has this been true. Probably only hard outdoor work saved the New England farmer from worse dyspepsia than he used 'to have in his days of fried food diet. And one wonders what antidote the ladles of Queen Elizabeth’s court took for their breakfasts of a pint of ale and a pound of beef and a generally too meaty diet. But, on the other hand, take many of our food customs, and you will find that even in the light of modern dietetic science they are good. For instance, the habit of serving a salad of green leaves at dinner. In addition to the meat and bread or potato, which would give starch and protelns, and the dessert, which would give sugar, the salad was relied on to give zest to the meal. Indeed, some adepts in_the art. of dining have thought that the salad should come before the main courses as an appe- tizer. Anyway, the point is that vita. mines, now considered essential to an all-around diet, were introdiced ‘in the leaves of lettuce or endive or chicory that went to make up the salad. And so apple sauce with roast pork, boiled onfons with poultry and potato salad with cold meats—all these com- binations are good ones from the die- tetic point of view, though they may firdt have been made from the appe- tite point of view. R And now we come to oranges. For years, of course, it has been known that onnge- are wholesome. Orange juice has been given to.children. And oranges have always been a standby winter fruit for everybody who could afford them. Before they were usual enough to be easily afforded we used to look on them in the light of very desirable luxuries, and tuck one into the stockings we filled for the poor children of the neighborhood and carry them by the choice half dosen to_friends who“were ill. Now, of course, since the expoai- tion of the vitamine theory, we un- derstand just why oranges are and always have been so good for us. It =0 the skin falls into creases | doesn’t make them any-more deli- . . 4 r— at Niagara passes through the el By Edna Kent Forbes. claim will reduce ankle fat, but expensive and hard to get. Do You Look Healthy? The thoroughly healthy woman not always be beautiful, but she always be most attractive. Shem and she would always be' well 1il healthy as well as those who this divine gift. It is a divine gift, but it can be tivated by even the poorest mo Yet, for some reason, few of us to cultivate good health in any tematic way. We take it for gr: ed until actual doctors and medicine bottles. It after each meal! skin of good health? {ful? Do you sleep well and do wake refreshened? say “yes” to all of these You are ! in normal health, and you are not as | pretty and as attractive as you ought to be and can be. due to chocolate cake or roast p | something of the sort | Go to bed an hour earlier than A hot drink and an amusing sl tory will help you drop off if vou'll have bright eyes in the m lines that run upward | ing, for that dull expression iy often due to insommia. | Marionette—While lanoline is cellent flesh builder, it is not | visable to use as a massage for | face unless you are sure that ihave no tendency growth of hair. If {will find that it is nourishing | there will be no doubt about its | couraging the growth of hair. | Kate L.—After you hav awkwardness of movement. as you can forget muscles and get into the rhythm music will gulde vour motions {vou will be relieved of your em rassment. i A lo ten g e o e from their goodness to know | | they contain in abundance those | tie known vitamines. son interested in dietetics it is very interesting. What Are Sun Spots. English sclentist, during | course of an address made before has only been burning a few | Royal.Society, suggested that there; may be certain levels In the brill shell of hot vapors constituting visible surface of the sun, where | below the critical temperature of elements there present. into liquids, if the pressure were ficently great. floating in gaseous matters of gre: density, would, it is thought, pre: the characteristic appearance of | rounding photosphere. When pears. This theory implies that Some shops sell a creanf~which they have the worst features in the world, but she couldn’t possibly be homely, That's because there is a physical vitality, a physical magnetism about health which attracts others equally illness sends us to easy to get well by swallowing an unpleasant teaspoonful of something Have you the bright eyes and clear Are you cheer- If you cannot Change your diet to slmpler foods. Often a gloomy view of life is only to a superfluous you choose a such use is one that is concave. The | cream made from fine almond oil you had more | practice in dancing you will lose this As soon that vou have clous, nor does it in any way take | But to the per- PBY_ay of explaining sun spots, temperature, although very high, falls In that case those elements would be precipitated Such liquefied masses, t spots, for if the.liquod were opaque | 1 might add that if the beef Is rightly; " 0y1q look darker than the sur-| liquid re-evaporates the spot disap- | sun spots are the first visible begin- nings of a change of state in the sun. URGES WOMEN AID IN CONSERVATION Charles Lathrop Pack Says National Debt Could Be Paid in Five Years by Savings. MUST CONSERVE FORESTS Would Have Industrial Conference Focus Attention on Waste of Natural Resources. It the industrial conference of which is to con- vene here January 11, were to focus its attention upon the waste in in- dustry and bring about an intelligent saving of coal, natural gas, yellow pine and cereal straw, enough money American women, ight would be saved in five years to p: tion, it's ]rallpd the conference of women, Mr. may will 1ght Engineers. Little first demonstrated It was Mz, the tion of coal, straw. gas, ked. said that could such saving be made, to be. This would, of course, | mendously affect women in industry. Quotes Clemenceau. lack cul- rtal. try sys- ant- adds, on reparations before the s SO New coal and forests. This, Mr. you letter in part follows: not industry can get together in th man need be poor unless he prefer: to can be made a fac Mr. Little, § an article in Collier’s, mentions low pine. the statements of M. when he speaks of reparations. ork! Clemenceau you a country lies. soil. A few da government made a s hort, you from Germany. “Forest products as the ‘bond’ yment is the great lesson to Ame: But what is orn- i p {ic an ad- the you jumber products into her state. and en- door." Must Plant “There are more acres of idle iand fit for nothing but, growing Trees. than 80,000,000 the and bar- i off America’s entire war debt, accoril ing to Charles Lathrop Pack, ‘presi- dent of the American Tres Associa- In a letter addressed to Secretary Davis of the Labor Department, who Pack pointed out that he thought at least one man should be at the con- gress, and he is Arthur D. Little of the American Institute of Chemical | who i tremendous saving to be had through conserva- pine and cereal In a recent statement Mr. .Little no man need be poor unless he chose tre- M, Clemenceau also drives home to Americans the great lesson on the value of natural resources when they | are wasted because of war, Mr. Pack in calling attention to a talk York Chamber of Commerce, in which “the Tiger of France” consiantly refers to Pack | points out in his letter, shows that the famous Frenchman knows where the real wealth of a country lies. The “If business men and the chemical icountry, Mr. Little's prediction that no n| A1 I want to couple that with He'| knows where the natural wealth of | He knows it is in the | ago the French atement asking | that coal and forest lands be turned over to it as part of the reparations of | appening in this {country as to the waste you so point out? Minnesota is paying thirty mil- r for imported forest prod- is paying five mil- lion a year in freight bills to import most of it is east of the Mississippt river. Ask Missourl where the popu- lation of her forest counties has gone to in the last twenty years. Ask the state of Michigan what has happened to the population of ten of her biggest pine-growing counties. These ques- tions should be of the greatest inter- est to women. “Frahce lost much of her forest cover during the war. We are send- ing a third shipment of American tree seeds to France to help reforest those - areas. Back of the idea of helping is the hope that these seeds of international friendship . will awaken the American people to what must be done in this country. Future Safety at Stake. “Regardless of what opinion the American people hold as to interna- tional politics, they will all ngree with Clemenceau and with Mr. Little that the wealth of the country is in the sofl. It will be but a short time, I hope, they will all agree that, for the future safety of this country, the idle soil must be put to work. Let the Wwomen at your conference turn their attention to this. “If we do not wake up to this fact our civilization goes the way of the Maya civilization of Central America; it goes the way of China with her floods sweeping treeless lands year customers and friends who after year. this now In the floods of the Mississippl. We see it in Georgia where millions of dollars in wealth in tillable soil is swept to the ocean every year by her jlly for- ested rivers and streams. “If the women of the country will investigate, then demand that idle land be put to work, there will come a prosperity such as this country has never seen’ WOULD LIMIT BORROWING. TOKIO, December 25.—An_ effort being made by the Kato ministry to keep the imperial government’s borrow- ing to 150,000,000 yen yearly. This ‘would be outside of the raising of neces- sary funds to redeem old bonds falling due, whigh, during the next fiscal yea amount to approximately 500,000,000 ye! ONE KILLED IN CAR CRASH. AUGUSTA, Ga., December 25.—L. F. Wolfe was killed, and Hollix G | mer and Willle Cook were seriouxly injured and three other men we: reported painfully hurt in an aut mobjle accident near here yesterday. Wolfe was pinned the machine and died bifore | ance could be rendcred him. n- benea assis While extending best wishes for the season to every one, permit us to extend our heartiest thanks to the many have made this past year an- other excellent one for the House of Andrews. tnane2PAPFR COMPANY 727-731 13th St. N. W. to in Sngland is paying much more when H| once these sections had all the trees they coulgd use . o. b. the factory in this country trees. | That land must be put to work, for Merry Christmas | To All— —and an earnest “Thank You” who have made this Christmas one of the busiest seasons this establishment has experienced each of the many friends its 52 years. that ; lit- | all Pennsylvania Avenue an the | the | iant | the | the | the | sut- ater | sent sun { the | the CHRISTMAS Everybody at Everybody at Your Place. a Very Merry Christmas and a Most ~ Happy New Year Our Place Wishes . - WASHINGTON 1 ! | | - Saks & Company A Special Sale of 500 Pairs Ladies’ Shoes —in the New Winter Models— $2.85 Values up jto $7.00 sent us from. a high-grade maker or two. Colonials; Tongue Pumps; Flapper Pumps; One and Two-strap Pumps; Buckle Pumps; Street and Dress Oxfords; Brogue Oxfords; Dance and Party Slippers, etc. In Black and Brown Satin, plain or beaded; ‘Black - Kangaroo; Patent Leather; Tan or Brown Calf; Black or Brown Kid; Black > Suede, etc. . In the combined lots are all sizes and widths. ‘Tongues Attached to Any of These Shoes at 500 Pair | 1 It’s a clearance of our own stock and Shoes l Seventh Street ~

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