Evening Star Newspaper, March 16, 1923, Page 21

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District of Columbla—Rain this afternoon, oloudy and colder tonight; tomorrow falr and colder; lowest temperaturo tonight near freezing Sstrong west and northwest wii diminishing by tomorrow. ¢ Maryland—NMostly cloudy and cold- er tonight; temorrow falr and cold- or; strong west and north vest winds, gales on the coast, diminishing to- 1a—Mostly cloudy and colder tonight, probably rain on the coant; tomorrow fair and colder; strong southwest, shifting to northwest winds, gaies on the coast. West Virginia—Cloudy and dectd- edly colder :-night, probably local Snows {n the mountains; tomorrow fair colder in east jiortion; strong westerly winds, diminishing tonight. Records for Twenty-Four Hours. Thermometer—4 ‘p.m., 46; 8 p.m., 41; 12 midnight, 42; 4 a.m., 50; 8 am., 57; noon, 56 Barometer—i{ p.m., 30.48; § pm., midnight, 30.26; 4 a.m., 30.06; . 29.94; noon, 29.88. Highest temperature, 60, occurred at 11 a.m. today; lowest temperature, 40, occurred at 9 p.m. vesterday. Condition of the Water. Temperature and_condition of the water at 8 a.m.: Great Falls—Tem- perature, 40; condition, very muddy. Tide Tables. (Furnished bv United States coast and geodetic survey.) Today—Low tide, 1:40 01 pm.; high tide, 7:32 p.m. omorrow-—Low tide, ; high tide, 8: $:35 pm. The Sun and Moon. Today—Sun rose 6:20 a.m.; sun sets €:15 p.m Tomorrow—Sun rises 6:18 am.; sun sets 6:16 p.m. Moon rises 5:51 a.m.; sets 5:38 p.m. Automobile lamps to be lighted one-half hour after sunset. Weather'in Various Citfes, g i g 1 ®tations State of Weather. eoegupragsac B sy 18 Anilene, Tv. ~. Clear Albany 34 28 Rain Atlantic Cit .... Cloudy Raltimore a3 .. Cloudy Rain Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Pt.cloudy Clear Philadelphis Phoenix. Ariz 3 Pittshorgh Portland. Mo Tortland, Ore 3 Raleigh, ¥ ( K. Lak Snokane a3 WASH.,D.C. 299 in FOREIGN. Cloudy Cloudy Clear Ciouds ASKS DIVORCE AND BABY. Julia K. Daily_twenty vears old, by her father, W. Tavlor. yesterday District ~Supreme 4 divorce from her 1 member t. They and have i the wife Mr avs her husband her, EVERY BOOK OF New and Popular FICTION You read them only once Save money and rent The Book You Want When You Want It o only library in the world Giving © prompt ervice . of new titlas. | The' books are clean—insiting. You Iy auy book of d_popular fiction sted.Start and stop as you please. Pay a small rental fee while book is in your pos- sexxion. The Miscellaneous library supplies all the newest and popular books of non-fic- tion, including travel, his- tory, biography, etc. Womraik’s Library 607 13th St. N.W. (Between ¥ und G Sts.) Also at 2, 1335 C. Jane Bartlett’s 1333 Conn A BAD WRECK—of the constitu- tia ilow in the track of a Don't run the ce's Golden Medical Dis- covery tions ‘duc to impure blood or inactive Jiver. The germx of discase circulate through the blood; the liver is the filter which permits (he germs to en- ter or not. The liver active, and the hlood pure. and you escape dinense. When you're debilitated, weight be- low the standard, the “Discovery” buildx up_the hody. Thick Lustrous Hair Kept So By Cuticura At night touch spots of dandruff and itching with Cuticura Ointment. Next morning shampoo with a suds of Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse with tepid water. Keep your scalp clean and healthy and your hair will be luzuriant. Sazmple Bach Prae by Madl, A¢ ) ‘M» S e 'Caticurs Soap shaves without mug. & THT EVENING STAR, TTASHINGTOX, O. €., TRiDAY, MARCH 16, 1927, THE WEATHER |Deaths in Traffic Accidents Drop 67 Per Cent in February March Safety Bulletin for School Teachers Points Out Lessons From Deductions. Deaths in trafiic accidents during| The death list of children in February, ltne past month, when three fatalities | Which ranked the same as January, i { H i 1 = showed that in each month fgures of were recorded, fell off 67 per cent as|accidental death to children were 76 per compared with January, when nine|cent lower than the average month of were killed, while no children of|the past year, when elght per month during February, It was disclosed in|in all types of mishaps, and six were the March Safety Bulletin, made pub. | Serfously injured. lic today by the Washington Safety Everybody Can Help. Counell. The bulietin says, in part: Two children under . school age,| ““Two children were killed in January however, met their deaths while play. |and two in February, against an average Ing in or about thelr homes, one|©Of eight each month last year. Let ¢hild, aged two and one-half years, |US Keep this good work up and save our drowning in 2 swollen stream and |little ones. Every mother and every another of the same age falling into | 5chool child can help. a tank of hot water at home and dy-| ~TWo children were injured seriously Ing of scalding. in February. One was a boy six years a Bulletin for School Teachers. board of an automobile, when he fell The bulletin is issued primarily for |off and was badly hurt " The other was = @ boy of fourteen, who was playing in use of school teachers, presidents o | § bV Of FOUTIEAN, WG VAP BN Hng women's clubs, citizens' associations | his skull. The February accidents to and parent-teacher associations to |children emphagize the folowing: ald in curbing deaths from accidents Two Points Emphasized. “The effort of our teachers in in-, *“l. The need of impressing safety structing their classes in safety,” |upon the very young children and super says the March bulletin, “is bringing | vising them in their play. The school splendld results.” The March bulletin, | child can heip the mother to safeguard which lists all of February's deaths | the younger brothers and sisters. by accidents, is being distributed to- The great danger of ‘hooking € day to all school teachers, including A child should never get on a public, private and parochial schools, | vehicle without the driver's consent and to be used by them in their regular|the only if it is safe.” safety instruction to the children. There were ten adults killed and six Haae ae SPR Get Out the Moth Balls Winter? The Old Man’s getting weak. He may rear up and raise dust for a day or two—but don’t let that fool vou. It won't be long now till you’ll be putting moth balls into winter clothes. *Spring buying is on. Goodman & Suss and other suits and Topcoats bet- ter than ever. A strong line of suits at $35 and a beautiful selection of top- coats at $27.50. The Tasuion Ghop FRED. PELZMAN, Pres. Goodman & Suss Clothes 15th & G Tailored at Rochester 9h & E Manhattan Shirts Reith' . Opposite Crandall’ Ant e Rl Stetson Hats—Interwoven Socks o . Try This Wonderful Soap If you are not satisfied, you get your money back v 9 i hite) tak an S::x‘p;%clm—_:::yu&y;‘z or wl ;.t) es the hard work out of Dirt, grease and germs disappear like magic. You will have the fluffiest, whitest clothes you ever saw. At the same time you can be certain that Clean-easy will not injure cven your fine cottons or linens because it is made from pure vegetable oils. CLEANS CLOTHES IN 10 MINUTES This is just the have been for. .m:I;uf.;ry:mlxn‘g:yw-pm ve waiting for. Be sure to get Every Household Needs Two Soaps You peed Van Cemp's Cleancary (ot lsundey and Van Camp's White Ni for kitchen and old scrubbing and wood- b T R T Van @mp’s CLEAN-EASY AND WHITE NAm SOAPS Made by Van Camp Products Co., Indianapolis old. who was riding on the running |§ sori, inju) causes were as follows: Btrack Autom Overturning of ller. . . from wind. red in February. The Causes of Accidemts. . strange stone flgures of men more |placed great cylindrical ‘hats’ of mnt tatues ake aster than thirty feet high stood every- |different colored stone, each weigh- where about its margins, their backs |ing several tons. ' to the sea. The natives had only the “Easter island, discovered by the Serious crudest of tales to account for theso | Duten end oo i Aoyl e I land Plac 1 M WY oo e o0l s W ow " belongs o Chilé, > S a e O ste jmages, SVich Svidently had been | the Spanish, now belongs to Chile, " putting eoal hea ] hot f 1igl [Bnenlie nteit tional Geographic Society: Easter isiand, rumored to have | disappes disappeared beneath the Pacific at the | viously lend support. whence. came the idea for such time of the recent destructive earth-| ' Far From Everywhere. statues on this lsolated island, and |year a ship calls, leaves supplies and quake shocks in Chile, is the subject | “Situated 2,000 miles west of South | of the following bulletin from the |America and almost an equal dis- ‘the natives, have proved baffling Washington headquarters of the Na- | tance from other Pacific islands, Eas- enigmas. SORlY. aBaNte 200 Hattver oA s s but for long periods there has been Recent study has shown that the Ino civil Chilean representative in; {mages were mounted on terraces, be- | residence. A Chilean company op- . |low which the bodles of the dead were | rates a cattle and sheen rarch on arance of the {sland might ob- |exposed and often buried. But|the {sland, which supporte s ruxurlant growth of grasses. About once a,; how some of them, welghing many |takes away wool and hides. The cat- tons, were moved and set in place by |tle are killed for their hides alona and the surplus meat is thrown away. ter island s one of the most isolated Statues Wear Hats. now live on the island, but it is st Inhabited regions on the globe. Its o Totals. . ... r “If Easter island had sunk beneath | greatest length is less than fiteen | *The statues were carved from vol- | Posed L unported | scvestls Only three persons were killed in | thousand inhabitants in the past the ocean, as it was rumored to have | miles and jts greatest width about |canic lava on the slopes of an extinct | peruvian slave traders kidnaped close traffic’ accidents - Fomreanc 164 2| done, this final dropping of the cur.,SCVeR. but its trlangular shape glves | yolcano. Scores of them remain still | to 1000 at one time during the past pared with nine In january. it an area of only fifty square-miles. |in and near the quarries. Others |century. Since then there has been tain on the island might have gone |Many an fsland so small has gone|have been moved various distances, | practically no tribal organization. some way toward solving its mystery, | practically unnoticed, but former In- | some remaining horizontal, others “Easter island played its part ! BRITISH MARQUIS DEAD. for this tiny bit of land, with its |habitants unwittingly ‘advertised’ |placed in an upright position. Some |the world war and evidently had Easter island by setting up huge | were moved—the natives say by |ured for years in German naval p MALPAS. England, March 15| U090 glgantic statues, is shrouded | jmages along Its beaches, and to |maglc—for miles across the island. |ov: inst ‘der Tag.’ German ve Lord George Henry Hugh Cholmon- deley, fn mystery and has remained since its | geographers and students of human | Altogether nearly 200 of the huge ports of the the fourth Marquis of Chel. |diScovery one of the world's unsolved | institutions and tivities it is as | figures are now visible and others are | quietly assembled there in the = famous as any island of the seven |believed to have been buried in land- [mer of 1914, preparatory to united mondeley. dled here today. He is|Flddles. One theory has been that it | geas. slides. The largest standing statues |action under Admiral von Spee. Ryt succeeded by his son, .the Earl of |TePresents the last pinnacle of an Rocksavage, a well known polo and tennls player. % 2% 2 2 P % ancient Pacific ‘Atlantis’ which dis- ““The mystery of Easter island be- |are thirty-two feet high, but one still |it was a rendezvous with deafl came recognized when Dutch naviga- | reclining in {ts quarry measures|From there the assembled fleet sailed appeared beneath the waters many | tors discovered it on Easter morning, | sixty-four feet in length. On the | to its destruction by a British squad- ! centuries ago—a theory to which a | 1722, and reported that hundreds of heads of many of the figures were | ron off the Falklands.” This S.aturclay’s Store News of——- - Our 9th St. and Pa. Ave. Stores Open Saturday Nights Every Man has his own pet ideas, about new Spring’ Shoes! That’s why we carry so many dif- ferent lasts and styles. More than 25,000 pairs to select from, at all times, in our 5 Washington Stores. And this immense Buying-Power makes our values matchless! “Florsheim™ E202—The Parkway. One of the most popular Florsheim lasts. Medium shade Tan Calf. Also Black Calf and Patent $10 Leather ........ “Florsheim™ E261—The Pathfinder. A full-toe last, good-looking but extremely comfortable. Nut Brown or Black Calf, trimmed $10 with 6 rows of stitching............ “Tri-Wear“ E216—New square-toe last. Toney Red Calf trimmed stitching ..... E279—The Hague Last. Lots of toe room. Medium Tan Hickory Calf; also Black Calf..... $750 “Hahn Special™ E229—A new Semi-Brogue with short wing-tip. Toney Red Calf; also Black Calf ....... $6'50 “Hahn Special” #£127—A snappy square-toe model. Won- derful value for tze price. Black Calf, Dark Tan Calf or Patent Leather and 25 $5 other styles. Shoes or Oxfords...... “City Club Shop” 1914-16 Pa. Ave, 1318 G St. 233 Pa, Ave. S.E. NRQNUES For Misses and Children New Gray Suede and Patent Leather Pumps, $4.50 to. $7.50. Patent leather instep straps, $3.25 to $4.75. Plain Toe Tan Calf Oxfords and Norwegian Calf Sports Ox- fords, $4 to $5.50. Other Oxfords in tan, brown and patent lcather, $3.25 to $4.75. Patent Leather Roman San- dals, $2.50 to $5. For Boys Tan Elk, Brown Russia Calf and Toney Red Oxfords, $4.50 to $5.50. Smoked Horse and Tan Elk Play Shoes, $3.50 to $4.75. [5e Women's Suede Sports Shoes Bask smilingly in fashion's favor eSS & “Kiltie” Pump $ “Hahn Special” Gray or Beige Gray Nubuck; Beige Suede; Buck ...........$192.50 Leather Trim....$8 50 Gray Nubuck .....$5 95 “Speedwky" “Hahn Special” Gray Buck; Kid Trim, Gray Nubuck; Gray }_\'u})uck; Cherry ‘Tan Calf....§10 Beige Suede Tan Calf 5.95 Making’ $1.95 a Big’ Issue In Women's Silk Hosiery N the same big way that we've gone into “Hahn Special” $5.95 Shoes for Women—we’ve made a big issue of $1.95 Silk Stockings this Spring. Included are strictly perfect, full-fashioned Silk Stockings of best known makes, including— “Phoenix” “Alwyn” "Radmoor” —and other brands famous for quality. Every pair guaranteed per- fect. All the new Dress and Sports Shades. Fallow, Tiffin, H-Ooze, Beige, Gray 31, Mouse, 95 Cordovan, African, and others besides a dozen e different types of superb Black Silk Stockings. Allat ... .0 “Onyx” Chiffon—new lace-clock effects Girls' and Boys’ new Spring Sports —and All-Silk “Pointex” Heel Stockings, Stockings and Socks, with turn-down tops. in all new shades. More than 50 different designs. $2.75 and $2.95 50c. 65c, 75¢, 85c. $1. $1.50

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