Evening Star Newspaper, January 22, 1923, Page 22

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—Ia Furniture, Lamps ment to select fror BT m and the extremely reasonaple. . 'CORNELL VIAI.I. I'APER CO. $14 1306 N.W. PIQTN \WORCHS 1o G @ EesT.1879 -~ in ESCAPES At the first sign of bleeding gums, beon yourguard. Pyorrhea, destroyer of teethand health, is on the way. Four persons out of every five past forty, and thousands young- er, are subject to it. Brush your teeth with rhans FOR THE GUMS More than a tooth =it checks Pyorrnec - 35¢ and 60c in tubes J eseoe Stlff Jomts" Do yours ache when yon move them? Do you feel poalus ia the nnkien— wrivin nud eroiwnt Feel age was comin ue (lme? Yoa wast rid of that stifi~ 0000000000000 000000000000000000000000000800000000000000000000000000000000000000008809000008 Bt whows jou have net yet tried the old and reliable PLANTEN'S "RED MILL™ CENUINE IMPORTED L HAARLEM OIL cle cuemy 1o o1d ame feelin formula as wsed two centurien ago ¥ine heen @ ANTEN & SON, Inc., BROCKLY nle at Peoples Drug Stores and lending 3 ST T S A R TG T NAATTAL AT Hil (LHUTU LU LU T TG U AT ST H BT A seeesevvesssccssoctanmans \unnnmnomwnuuumm Our Optical Department is in Charge of % \chldnnonl V'\‘!dl Known Eyesight Specialist Doctor L. Berman Dr. Berman ,has relieved hundreds of peo- ple of eye troubles in and “around ington, and enjovs a high reputation as an evesight specialist through his many years of careful, conscientious eye examinations . and prescribing proper glasses (if needed) that are accurate, comfortabje and becoming. FISCHER’S BEHIND LAST YEAR Maryland Haul 200,000 Bushels Short Already, But’ May Be Improved. BEDS ARE BEING TREATED Alarmed at Depletion, Offiials Act and Dump Shells Back in Water to Stimulate Growth. Special Dispateh to The Star, | BALTIMORE, Md. January 25— ©Oyster production {n Maryland is 200,- 000 bushels short for the period be- tween September 1 and January 1, in comparison to other years, according to Harrison W. Vickers, chairman of the state conservation commission. This, it is said, would cause a large shortage in redeipts for the year from the tax of 2 cents a bushel should production fail to increase during the remaindr of the oyster season. Mr. Vickers said, however, that he ex- pected production to equal that of last year, when 4,600,000 bushels were taken. This figure is a great drop from the annual catches of 15,000,004 bushels made twenty years ago. Since that time there has been a constant deple- tion of the oveter beds in the state, | and until a few years ago no effort was made to replenish the beds. Beds Are Treated. Oyster shells have been used recent- 1y. however, and many bushels were | dumped in 1921 and 1922 upon the beds throughout the state. This was the first time in fifty vears, however. | that an effort was made to bring the oyster industry back to the high de- gres of importance it formerly” occu- pied. Mr. Vickers said that the fact that oyster shells were salable was re- sponsible for the present shortage. Until oyster packers found out in | recent vears that crushed oyster shells |could be used as chicken feed, base for roads and fertilizer, the shells ! were dumped back into the bay and | no restoration by the state had to be i thought of, he declared Mussell Menace Passing. . in the re officials It was several yeurs a season of 1917 that | became alarmed tion. In this year the production fell to 2,600,000 bushels. The following | | bushels. 14,740,000 bushels, and 1920-21 showed a {further increase, with 5.000,000 bushels. Last year the production fell back to 4.600,000 bushels. This may be blamed on the great ‘numh»r of mussels which attached themselves to the oysters, Mr. Vick- lers said. He sald that the mussel danger has now passed in some places and only in the Chester river-is there much trouble with them. RATIFICATION OF ARMS Italian Premier Also to Ask Depu- . ties to Approve Treaty Guaran- teeing China Freedom. | ROME. January 20—Premier Mus- | solint will ask at the reopening of | the chamber of deputies, on Febru- ary 6 or 8 for ratification of the treaty guaranteeing the independence of China, approval of the conventions concluded at Washington during t disarmament_conference, ratification of treaties of commerce with France, Czechoslovakia and Poland, and a proval of a_ commercial modus vivendi with Spain. The treaty of Santa Margherita with Jugosiavi relative to Fiume will also be sub- mitted to parliument 1t was expected that the prer will make an importar the internal and foreign policy of Ital Electoral reform will con fore the chamb me to Public Demand—Qur Liberal Offer WI“ Be Continued Just One More Week Many letters from people that could not attend the sale tinue it. Of course, profits, but we don't know a Optical Department to the public. We will guarantee to give perfect satisfaction where others' have failed. Just think of the number of people who have been fitted and not a single domplaint heard from any one. Isn't that a good enougll have the opportunity.- recommendation? This is the ONLY PLACE in Washington where you can obhln the expert services of Dr. L. Berman. - 0.000 | registered | PACT AIM-OF MUSSOLINI | statement of | this means a sacrifice of most of the Buried Arm Pains Man in Hospital, MY ASK MONEY . After Acczdent Special Dispatch toThe Star. . FREDERICKSBURG, " ;,-n.-, e uary 22.—The unexplained laws of nature pertaining to the .discom- fort of a person who has lost a limb if the severed member is not straightened to its natural posi- tion before burial was given a ulr(klng illustration here this Lloyd Latham of Stafford, who is a patient at the Mary Washington Hoapital here, following an acci- dent at a sawmill in Culpeper county, in which he lost his right arm, declared to his physicians that he was suffering with a sen- satiofl or hallucination as if his severed arm was bent in an un- nautral poscition and was painting him. At his request the arm was dug up from its resting place and was really found to.be in a shape described by the patient. Mr. Latham now i$ in a satisfled and '~ ‘more comfortable mood. Whether the demonstration is one of autosuggestion or not is @& matter of discussion and specu- lation. BORAH MAY AIR VIEWS ON EUROPE IN ROME International , Chamber of Com- merce Will Invite . Him, By the Associated Press. PARIS, January 20—The council of | the International Chamber of Commerce declded today to ‘put the question of interallied war debts cn the agenda of the chamber of commerce’ convention which opens in Rome on 'March 18, Reparations; international cregit change and transportation, custo) { ulations and the double ta n of firms_established abroad ‘will also b discussed. { The council decided to invite United States Senator William F. Borah tol talk fo the delegates concerning the | American viewpoint on European af- fairs. RULING AGAINST KLAN. Eansas Supreme Court Refuses to Quash Summonses. TOPEKA, Kan, January 20.—The Kansas supreme court today over-| ruled the motion to quash summonses | {served on alleged officers bers of the Ku Klux K et I t the ovster ques-| tl The court allowed the Klan | twenty days in which to file swer to the original petition Loosen Up That Cold With Musterole Have Musterole handy when a cold starts. It has all of the ad- vantages of grandmother’s ~mus- tard plaster WITHOUT the blister | | You just apply it with the fingers.| First you feel a warm. tingle a” the healing ointment penetrates the | ing ser | Made of pure oil of mustard and other simple ingredients, Muster- | ole is recommended by many uursn? {and doctors, - Try Musterole for | | bronchitis, sore ‘thiroat, stiff neck.| pleurisy, rheumatismi. kpmbago croup, asthma, neurabg!_ ‘conges- tion, pains and aches of -the back or joints, sore muscles, sprains, bruises, chilblains, frosfed feet, colds of the chest. vent pneumonia and “flu* 63c, jars and tubes. "' Better than a mustard plaster ‘ Wl NOLE LISy~ IO D LT LU L _—::mElmEmams—:m A R in the city and out of town T so far have asked us to con- better way to advertise our Come to us while you "l"lllilllli!lllllllllIIIII|I|IIII i 1f you have the slightest trouble with your eyes, here is the opportunity of a lifetime to secure perfectly fitted glasses at $2.00 ‘the pair. Examinations free. Extra Shur-on or dainty finger ‘Wash- . ings your own $1.28. Special nose glass mount- adjusted to while you wait for Special lowest prices -for pres scription ‘and bi< focal lenses, made to order. Ocu- lists’ prescrip- tions accurately filled at balf price, Fit-U piece lenses r, Berman's mapy ‘patients wili be glad to know that he is again pmmlu I3 ‘Washington at Jewelers and Opticians 918 F Street N.W i, : mies't_lon ‘of Finanding Young- €r Members of Royaity Comes Up. By the Associated Pregs, LONDON, January 22.—The comlnl marriage of the Duke bf York to Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon; dauglrter of the Earl of Strathmore, brings before the British people a question which has not arisen in many’ years, but Which, in times past, has been a point of difference, and sometimés ot bitter feeling, between the crown and par- liament. 'This question is financing a younger'member of the royal family. lnY rvpoul to flnlnp- the Duke of York on any ‘pflnefly scale, either in {he form of a lump eum or an annuity, certain to bring on disagreeable e he duke has no Ereat for- his oyn, nor has his prigésto- W Ily wealth {s mostly: t{‘ad‘luon “ castles, md ‘latter: there et todayy tnr&%fi- -? on sale than;th ..,r. bu; fd: was o ip a yean sgo- that the Duke of was a suitor for ‘the hand »f Edwina Ashloy. who inherited the millions of ber grand- father, Sir Erpest Cassel, but .she preferred the Duke's cousin, Lord Mountbatten. . _GUILTY OF CONSPIRACY. Jobn Eaminski Convicted in Con- nection With Mine Battle. B {he Ausociated Press. © . WELLSBURG, W. Va., January 22.— Avella, Pa., has been convicted of con- spiracy in connection_with the Clifton- ville, W. Va.. mine battle last summer, when Sheriff H. . Duvall and . six Lothers were killed. - The jury detiberated thirty-three minutes. Kaminski, triedl last month on a mur- John Kaminski, aged. nineteen years, of | The Prince of Wales hag. s. own de\"indlc(men‘t Frowing out of the bat- estates, appertaining. to his title | €., Was acquitted on that charge. which aré suffielent fof hfs Bubport. |a e eriar A date (o mepuoments : Melent a mew trial. A date for grguments Princéss Mary married one-of the will be set Monday. richest men in the kingdem, Viscount Lascelles, so there was no difficulty in her case, although King.George had precedents aplenty for gojng to par~ Chevy Chase Tiament for & money grant if he had. thought it. necessary to do so. Must Matutain Stations. Hardwood cut in 8-in. ins lengths deliver- for half-cord The king’s younger sons, ‘In start- ing households of their own, must have subsidies appropriate to their stations in life, and parffament either must make grants for the father, must finance them own fortune. Although Kin wealth is a matter of guesswork, he probably might well afford to launch his sons in life financially, if it gvas judged by ordinary standards;.-but custom, strong in England, entitles him to expect the nationul exchequer to provide for them. Custom forbids the kipg's sons ‘to work for a living, exgept’in sugh e ployment as the army or na | the pay is lgsignificant. 1¢ also: tom- pels them to live up to thei¥position. Labor Paty to Object., With labor -members canstituting the second party in the dower ‘house | of parliament and withasgnore than | 1,000,000 unemployed in Yhe: eduntry, ‘At Special Low Rafes This Month to " Keep Qur Force Busy<sExpert Work 3-l‘le5e Parlor Suites &y - < isivor- $12 .“‘\\\\\\‘(\"\‘\\m-\ stered"and Lt AL Labor Only P this month at finished like new, . special BEAUTIFLL TAPESTRIES, VELOURS AND SILK MATERIALS AT COST PRICES - MERICAN UPHOLSTERY CO. 627 F St. NW..o B"%0% Write %53, Phone Main 8139 EEE— E‘EEEE: o] 5 Clavs Table Togs B Our Customers Benefit | I —by expert counsel as.well as Roof & b\' specially low prices when E they have their paint wants filled at Reilly’s E n§ 1 Our salespeople know paints, oils and stains from A to Z, [ and are always glad to advise 'E best mediums, Sugg est proper methods. of application, and in other ways help. you with your “p‘;int problems.” Varnishes Wall &2 Prompt ‘atténtion given' correspond- ence. - Shipments promptly made. stimates furnished. HUGH REILLY CO. CRETAIL < 0 PAINTS WHOLESALE 1334 New York Avenue Cod Fish c%kes n-kindolfihuku wn-ktww-dfwheamh-vedme. Gvrlon'l famous h(NcBanu)hm D h--n.l.lm‘y 1mw¢mmdh1.mwm&ham 1d, damp weather.t - ‘f P v BROMO. omnm'fifl.:, ey fust before retiring every night. Mixed Nuts, 23:.. s topic and laxative effect will fortify ghe sy»too:::i agamst Colds, Grip and Influenza.Fhe C s It’s Great! Each Loaf Sells Another A One-pound Loaf of bread that’s so good vou always want more. HOT FROM OUR OVENS C . Tuesday and Wednesday Specials Real Red, Ripe Strawberries, 55, Luscious berries direct from the farm at a popular price. Here’s your opportunity, serve strawberry shortcake tonight. : Extra Fancy Grapefruit, 10c each Smithfield Bacon, 28;.. Just as nice as Smithfield ham. : Genuine Virginia cured with a flavor 1ts own. Specially priced, by the piece, for this sale. All-Pork Sausage, 25c¢ 1b. Lamb Chops, Shoulder Cuts, 25;. We have just received a shipment of selected lambs which will be offered as a special attraction for this sale. Leg of Lamb, 38¢ lb. Blue Ridge Bacon, 355%. Wafer Sliced The finest- flavored bacon in town. Cured and smoked in our own plant under spe- cial process, Get acquainted today. Potato Salad ., 2 lbs., 25¢ Sirloin Steak, 38;. What a difference in steaks! Cut from top quality steer beef, they are alvsa.ys s0 leCV and tender. Let us convince you. Top Round Cuts, 28¢ Ib. Pork Tenderloin, 45;. . Unusually fine and priced surprisingly low. Coffee Rings, Special, 2 for 25c The ‘demand for these rings, when on special sale, always exceeds our expectations ; order early. \ Layer Cakes, each, 22¢ Pineapple, No. 2 ... 15° ; Plantation Grated Hawaiian pineapple paéked on the plantation in syrup of the natural pineapple juice and sugar. Buy now and save twenty-five per cent. Dromedary Dates, 2 pkgs., 3 Baker’s Chocolate, 3% Ib., 19¢ Old Dutch Famous Coffee, 25:. It’s bound to be good. We blend and roast it ourselves so that when our manager hands it over the counter to you—it's fresh. S5¢ Old Dutch Ginger Ale, 3 bot., 25¢ c 1bs. 2 Ibs. 45 for $ 1 This is the time to lay in your winter supply, all new crop nuts: Blue Label Ketchup, Ige., bot., 19¢. Queen Jelly, 3 glasses, 25¢ Wet Cocoanut, 3 cans, 25¢ Currants, =%g., 23¢ All our' markets will supply the articles advertised so far as their stocks permit. The few items not in their stocks will be on sale at the Master Market. X )& sl 622-24 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. 2576-2569 Phone Main

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