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! e ey A G Influenzais a germ disease. The influenza ;iverm is especially te- nacious. Its, favorite breeding round is the throat membrane. here it must be destroyed. Formamint tablets are recom- mended by physicians as the sci- entific germ-destroyer Melting slowly in the mouth, they release apowerful yetharmlessantisepticwhich thoroughly disinfects every remote crevice of the mouth and throat, actu- ally killing germlife. At all druggists. Fopmamintio ur tredemarks Established 1875 Now Is the Season for Vegetables Can lue Ridge June....15c Blue Ridge Sifted June . : Blue Ridge Extra Sifted Early June, 25¢ A-1 Extra Sifted....33c River Side Gem Extra Fine Little Darling Fine Sifted.......35¢c. Premier Telephone. .25¢ Doz. $1.65 Magruder Fine Grocers Conn. Ave. and K St. “Homesick” is capturing every one. But for real fox-trot spirit and spice get the Columbia Record i played by Ted Lewis and His Band. “To-morrow” on the other side is it’s twin. At J coLUMBIA DEALERS L) Doyou yearn“l for a clear complexion? “Try the Resinol products a week and watch your skin improve! Resinol Soapthoroughly cleansesthe tiny pores and rids them of impurities. Resinol Ointment soothes and heals the in- flamed, irritated spots. The most ag- gravated cases of skin affection have readily responded to this treatment. Can be cbtained from all druggists. Resinol THE EEBRUARY SALE OF LIFETIME FURNITURE, BRLLIANTTHRONG VAL HEAR OPER Cosmopolitan- Audience As- sured for Presentation of “Aida” at Poli’s Tonight. SING “TOSCA” TOMORROW | 0.4 Many Citizens Hope to Make Visit | of Singers Annual Event. Leave Wednesday. ‘Washington's operatic season opens tonight. Today members of tho Chicago Civ- ic Opera Company, who are to appear in “Alda” tonight, are secluded in their rooms at the Washington Hotel preparing for the production, and members of a genuinely cosmopolitan audience which will attend the “first {night” are completing preparations for the greatest event Washington i3 to experience since the appearance here, fourteen years ago, of the Mot~ ropolitan Opera Company. The “Alda” members of the opera | company will tonight appear before! an audience that Washington alona | can produce. Its far-famed society, members of the diplomatic corps, offi- clals of the government, officers of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps and personages high in city life, as well as those who have devoted thelr lives to music alone, will greet some of the tain rises at Poll’s Theater. Requested by Citizens. The Chicago Civic Opera Company is here at the request of many cltizens, bent on making Washington better in music in every way. And it is the desire, the alm and the ambition of Washington's leaders In music to make this an annual occasion. Firmly supporting this movement today was Cyrena Van Gordon, who le Amneris tonight in “Alda.” “The opera,” she said. “is the center of interest in every city in the United States. Washington is the capital of the country and is endowed with many forms of culture, but I do think | Miam! that music is the very top of culture. And Washington does need an opera to bring this culture to the highest |§ degree. If it cannot support an opera of its own, it should, at least, have a season.” Miss Van Gordon, whose name is familiar to the musical world, suffer- ed a severe cold in Boston when the company was there two weeks ago and was confined to her apartment for several days. There is still evi- dence of the illness, she sald today, butat no time did it affect her voice. | § Orchestra of Eighty Pleces. One of the features of tonight's performance will be the orchestra which accompanies the opera com- pany. It numbers about eighty pieces and, aoccording to an authority on music, is “simply wonderful.” Giorgio Polacco is the conductor. He former- 1y held the baton at the Metropolitan Opera Company and has appeared in the role of leader in South America and in countries of Europe. an American descent. Tomorrow night Puccini's “Tosca will be sung in Itallan as will “Afda”™ tonight. Numbe red among the ingers are Mary Garden, Giulio imi Georges_ Baklanoff. The will close Wednesday night, “Snow Madiden,” fmsky- citizen of { “seaso { with Korsakoff, with Edith Mason, Miss Van Gordon, Irene Pavioska and Mr. Baklanoff. The company will then fill a short engagement Pittsburgh, after which it will return to Chicago and disband for the season. Several of ithe forelgn members of the company, which {8 60 per cent American, are planning tours abroad. With them will go Mary Garden. who sails March 15 for Monte Carlo, several solo concerts. Officers of the company say the present tour is a short one, but all indications for next vear point to one that will last much longer. WAR WORK FATAL. Miss Hazel Churchill Dies From After-Effects of Influenza. An impressive military funeral terl Miss Hazel Churchill, a yeoman (F) during the world war, who sacrificed her health helping the stricken in the epidemic of {nfluenza in 1918, from which she never recovered, and who died last week at the Oteen Hospital, North Carolina, was held this after- noon from Calvary Baptist Church, at 2 o'clock, under the a by in to appear in y ‘was met at Union station vesterday by a dele- gation of the post auxiliary and taken to the church, where the body lay in state up to the commencement of the services. The interment was in Arlington national cemetery. ! The honorary palibearers, headed by Miss Eunice C. Dessez, post com mander, and Miss Ray Fenwick, as- sistant commander, were assoclate | war workers. Miss Churchill enMsted ! from Maine at the beginning of the | world war. —_————— past savage drum alone were heard. 2 2 . Upholstering TO UPHOLSTER YOUR 3-PIECE PARLOR SUITE Your 3 ou Furniture By our; experts at prices which are 25 per ceat lower than any other concern in Washington. New YorkUpholstering Co. 619 F St. N.W. Phone, Write or Call Man Wil Bring Samples Phone Main 3687 THE ONWARD MARCH -of Bron. chitis, and deep seated Coughs is arrested by Dr. Pleree’s Golden Medi- eal Discovery, + In scrofulous conditions of the blood; In ‘severe, lingering Coughs — this medicine is 2 PROVED: Temedy. H a blood-cleanser, | and Thromt aftectionn, | and tn discases which exn Semeait, Golden Medical Discovery is _an _herbal remedy ¢hat mearly every one uses. » i AT THE WEATHER (Hoover Must License Radio District of Columbia—8now ‘tonight and tomorrow; little change in tem- perature; lowest tonight about 26; moderate to fresh northeast winds. Maryland—Snow tonight and to- morrow; not quite so cold tonight; in- creasing northeast winds. - Virginia—Snow of rain on the coast and snow in the interior tonight and tomorrow; not much change in tem- perature; strong northeast winds and Probably’ gales on_the coast. West Virginia—Unsettled, pre snow lite tonight or tomorrow ly rising temperature. Records for Twenty-Four Hours. .. Thermometer. low- .m., 20; 8 pm. ;4 am, 26; 8 p.m., 30.40; 8 p.m., . 12 midnight, 30.39; 4 a.m., 30.36; a.m., 30.41; noon, 30.46. Highest temperature, 30, océurred at 3 p.m. yesterday; lowest tempera- ture, 24, occurred at noon today. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 39; lowest, 35. Condition of the Water. Temperature and condition of the water at § am.: Great Falls—Tem- perature, 24; condition, very muddy. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States coast and geodetic survey.) r—Low tide, 5:12 am. and ; high tide, 11:02 a.m. and 6:3¢ p.m.; high tide, 11:5¢ a.m. The Sun and Moon. Today—Sun rose 7:12 a.m.; sun sets 5:33 p.m. Tomorrow—Sun rises 7:11 am.; sun sete 5:34 p.m. Moon rises 10:27 p.m.; sets 9:36 a.m. Automobile lamps to be lighted one-half hour after sunset. Weather in Various Citles. F g % i g 3 ] ot Stations. Wono] State of Weathor. oo gmyemorng ¢ i el 1en “w'eg o my Abilene, Tex, 30.42 iban; 30. world’s best singers when the cur-|Aibany i 823333 5882588 Pt.cloudy Cloudy Cloudy B3 223 | 825828088558 FOREIGN. (8 a.m., Greenwich time, today.) Part cloudy Part cloudy Clondy Part cloudy Cloody Mrs. Charles B. Smith of Buffalo, elected president of the state civil service commission, s the first wom- an to head a department in the New Yerk state government. ably fpany to operate a radio station in the i A i Firm, Court of Appeals Rules striction entering into _the lice) 135 wave length named by the Secr tdry merely measures the extent of the priviléeges granted to the - censee.” Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Com- merce, today lost his appeal from & mandamus requiring him to issue & ilcense to the Intercity Radio Com- nse. CONFEDERATE CURRENCY USED TO PAY WAR BOND Georgia State Official “Redeems” $800 Paper in Novel Manner. NORTHAMPTON, Mass,, February 6. —Payment in Confederate currency ot $300 for a Confederate bond issued | in 1862 has been recelved by Abner Leo Squiggins of Worthington from Attorney General George Napler of Georgla. Mr. Squiggins, who is spend- ing the winter here, nt his request ' for the payment of the bond addressed to “President Jefferson 1 C federate States of America. ter fell into the hands of the Georgila , attorney general. The letter to Mr. Squiggins from the rney general's office Tead: lease find- $800 ,in Confederate currency, which we sent you recently in exchange for your bond. This let- ter was grll sent to Worthington, Mass., but returned to us_ as u claimed. With best wishes for your city of New York. The District Court of Appeals In a decision by Justice Van Orsdel sustained the action of the District Supreme Court and up- held the order for the writ of man- damus. The act under inquiry reposes no discretion whatever in the Sec ry of Commerce, the court finds, in ia- suing licenses' to persons and corpora- tions coming within the classification designated by the law. His duty 1% mandatory and the courts will not ‘hesitaté to uire {ts performance. Secretary Hoover refused the license because the radio station was claimed to be Interfering with the sending of that Congress recognized there would be interferences, and the act under- takes to prescribe regulations by which the interference may be mini- mized rather than prevented. “The only discretionary act” says the court,” “is In selecting a wave length within the limitations pi scribed in the statute, which, in Jjudgment, will result In the least pi Rible Interference. The issuance a license Is not dependent upon the fixing of the wave length. It is a re- LIGHT ON EVERY SUBJECT Now in our New Store, 709 13th, one door above G ESTIMATES FOR HOUSE WIRING AND LIGHTING FIXTURES GLADLY FURNISHED 1 We do finest work, and offer for your selection an unequaled selection of artistic fixtures for all parts of the home. C. A. MUDDIMAN CO. Specialists in Heating & Lighting Equipment 709 13th St.—One Door Above G St. FRANKLIN SAYS, “eat to please thyself, but dress to please other..’’ Thir seems to make even the care of one’s hair, a public duty. Well, 1 think it should be. No one har any right to neglect thir wonderful gift of nature. Yours for beautiful hair, Begin todsy to ve and beautify your hair with No. 13 Can of GOLDEN CROWN el FREE With This Attractive Crystal-Cut Glass Syrup Pitcher = 50¢ When you visit the Food Show this week at the Convention Hall be sure to stop at the Golden Crown Syrup Booth and get one of these beautiful Crystal Cut Glass Syrup Pitchers. Every home needs one. They are five and one-half inches tall, have an exquisite grape design cut on both sides and the practical nickeled top can easily be removed for cleaning, These pitchers are alone worth almost twice the special food show price of STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. l&f)fi'l)’AY! FEBRUARY 5, { 1923, prosperity and h.fplll.ll ” n_his re t for the redemption ?l the bon 3 !qllllilnl eaid he ‘wanted to fix up the house so he llcht accommodate summer board- —_—————— C. W. DENHAM DIES. Clifford W, Denham, sixty years old, 314 Jefferson avenue, Riverdale/ Md., Visiting at 113 E street northw became {1l last night Emergency Hospital. under the care of a physiclan for heart trouble and asthma. Mrs. Nettie Heath, sister of the dead man, re: ing at 523 10th street southeast, & ranged for the care of the body. STt L Upper air weather forecasts for the benefit of aviators are being made daily by the United States weather bureau. ‘What You Want \ ‘Whea You Want It COPPER KETTLE CAFETERIA 821 Vermont Ave. (Opposite War Risk) Usnfler Management of H. Papps pecial Every Week Day 40c and 50c Dinners, 4:30 to 7:30 INCLUDES 3 VEGETABLES, SALAD, DESSERT, COEFEE, TEA OR MILK, HOMEMADE PIES A BPECIALTY. PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 8 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $800,000 A Special Saleof Table Crystal An opportunity to secure exceptional values in attractive table crystal. Reduec- tions from our regular stock. Ruby Table Service Imported $42.00 dozen 324 dozen Goblets .................. $42.00 dozen 824 dosen 820 dozen Tall Sherbets $33.00 dozen Ice 31 8 dozen 318 dozen $30.00 dozen Ale Tumblers . $27.50 Mineral Engraved Crystal cents, and in addition we give you a No. 1% can of Golden Crown Syrup FREE. Don’t miss this oppor- tunity. Visit Our Booth at the Convention Hall, 5th & K Sts. N.W. Everybody Likes the Flavor of Golden Crown Syrup This rich, delicious syrup has a flavor that blends perfectly with any food on or in which it is used. Golden Crown is a syrup of QUALITY UN. Hawkes $32.00 dozen Goblets $32.00 dozen Stem $18 dozen “all Sherbets . $28.00 dozen Sherbets ....... $30.00. dozen $20.00 dozen % 812 dozen Mineral Tumblers .. 18 dozen $30.00 dozen Finger 50¢ A table of greatly SURPASSED—you'll like it on pancakes, waffles, hot biscuits, bread, and in-any way. Use it for cooking— for baked beans, candied sweet potatoes, etc.—as well as for making the most delicious candy you've ever tasted. Your Grocer Sells GOLDEN CROWN SYRUP _ . Ask.for it by name! STEUART, SON & CO., OF BALTIMORE Colonial Crystal ‘Service $50.00 dozen Tall Sherbets $45.00 dozen Tall Sherbets $33.00 dozen Footed Tumblers.... $45.00 dozen Sherbets $32.00 dozen Finger Bowls .......... $40.00 dozen Finger Bowl Plates.. Silver Band Laurel Wreath $40.00 dozen $ dozen Goblets .................. 24 $45.00 $ dozen Tall Sherbets .. . 24 $45.00 dozen $115.00 dozen Grapefruits $40.00 dozen $42.50 dozen Table Tumblers .. $857.50 dozen Finger Bowls 32 4 dozen A special table of Stemware Sherbets, etc. MAIN FLOOR—G ST. ENTRANCE { DULIN&MARTING, 1215-17 F Street and 1214 to 1218 G Street ' Hours—8:45 to 5:30