Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
= e GENTRAL CITIZENS INDORSE MR. SYME Urge Federation Support of His Work in the Pepco Rate Fight. to Chauffeur. METUCHEN, N. J. March 17 i ent off Mary widely kpown novelist d recently. lof; his wife. Wilkins man. left $200 to ench of his four e the remainder of h 000 estate to his chauffeur, Mohring, of this place, It Known | The will was d last July M, four would that 1 influenced Dr. Freeman and his wite separated October, 1 Harr awn up man and her announced ontest the Freeman that - they will on the ground had been WANT COAL MEN TRIED! in SEEK BOSTON AN Resolution Also Favors Local Suffrage Through Arousing of Sentiment. i support « Pledging themseives the work which Conrad Syme, representing the Public Utllies Comm .t Electric Pow Company the Central night adopted a their delegates Citizens' Assvcia body to urge ciations to go v res Las been done jon in the Potomic rate case clution to instruct s" Association | to the Federation of | to Explain Presence in Apartment. N to regquest other citizens' 15 ex] ort Juvenile essing their apprecis f the work. at a Court i *“This and probably require months of earnest t o nelusio ion and su meeting in the Leen completed | many it work has not e bring the Dor suid 10 a successful « reso lution Slayer of Miss King Through Article. stated. Thoma, e president of the was important that the citizens' s ciations lend their aid to see that s Gcient compensation be granted Syme in order that he may be to carry on the pr ttions 1 Prosec assoeiation it Mr. able Assoviated b v YORK, March 17 spected 1o question Marshall, sapposed The police tions. | today the mys to the Distr ort pur, bute employ met in | terious wio is gener supplied the which Dorothy lown as Dorothy x4y butterfly through to her tragic death be made for the An appeal States attorney ng him to i to have to briv speedy | gee wings with an, | ' noaer (e eom flew pensation toward the additional attorneys prosecutions, was adop ior the the dway to assist ed in the ldireet the murder investigation, lution to be fo orney General o the United | District My re ne expla and Nilson.” their the his of prese ary. of | Wednesda ¥ night in hody w Marshal” nian, about 1in the partm Where the wirl's N My wealthy B old. and enguag ire business, wi New York and I Eirl’s suppo helprul piny bl found hursda i suid to tions b A resolut make an app Distriet throt the matter ar citizens” trade bod talize a also cit sixty e automo- bile ton. Wi | may tives e 1 benefact information, more fai pocket comb, en lea which was i her nk it was ped there by the man who admin- d the ch m whicl e girl's death, Bottle Number Effaced. lue was publi man's sma h ased inoa tound Mr. D who introd resolution ed he was in fave atarting from the ground up.in matter of government and saic missioners sehool supe randents District than appointed how we can handle and then ay having a representative in Cor Commenting on the excuse offered |V ) that the largs negro population in|a user of dry the District prevented tiie i The re of suffrage, the resolution ated | Man in the fur coat, “such an excuse was e and a |2 technical charge vf \eon delusion.” cealed weapons while investizators de. Commend Utilities Body. teacne hisjconusction with the: ca secretary was instructed 10 |0 procecought through mend a letter of commendation to! Wi Batd ,“;»“": ay.. Miss Ke the Public Utilities Commission fo R g ey fonal of their fon in having several o ahade him many costly shanges made in the car stops on the | Capltal Traction Com line in | the vieinity. also, e in the | gl jetter a_request fof @ Stop at the cor- | to the ner of North Capital and I Streets of | der mdhetment s fhe Woshington en TR tion with the failure of & brek tric Compeny's house, voluntarily went ty the orse The one-man ¢ et BTy Welt to the sl as well as ey first got busy factory fr a standpoint But Eighte ciency. President Donovan contended | Additional detatls of Miss K that if the same “progress « were made public today. ward” is continued way companies in regard to tie ty of cars used, that it will mean eventual introduction of the car. J. V. Fitz and F. J rdmitted to membership. the | “om- | Ang chloros ! lessened the furnished by the had scratching off cd_there for The police bottle had Keenun, the e ntd “the e w < with her Wednesday night Guimares, until who is un- c- in conn enan’s he had ven when she separated from (he | whose name her mother . { disclose. he mother, incidentally. White were | was said by the police to have §iven {them the name of the man she suspec 5 {£d to be the murde POINCARE DEFIANT, ) AGAIN SPURNS ANY BUT BERLIN OFFERS i «Continued from First Page. ets at rest the recent agitation for| continental hloc pposition (o reat Britain. It al. s much ir-| esponsible t ndent action | v France for a r of the treaty f Versailles in vor, any en- husiasm for sucl a bloc disappeared fter Ttal:'s flat refusal to consider a ew grouping. oon horse | whose husband would not irected by the 4y to remove the ty from the apartment, other taps the front {door. It was the knos nuns of the Order other emissaries of o urge the daughte al, quict life. ives investigating the life of lel have woven together the trail of vety, whi abarets and other pleasures of 1y Dorothy because she drank erguson, 1 com- ame pe were { there to return 10 a ancer in a Broadway musi edy and a former roommate. iss Ferguson said Dorothy had on several occasions appeared to have taken some sort of a drug and that her fondness for alcohol was growing fast Another friend Miss Keenan was id to have made was Blossom S ley, vaudeville headliner and former renun- {wife of Rube Marquard, base ball ipitcher. There were many others, all of them well known along the White Wa, _——— Repairing or Building Maybe you don't know just where to send to get a Carpenter to do an 0dd job about the place. The Recom- mended & Column in the Classi- ection will send you to a reliable of the devas- In fact, every advertiser in payment to be made, if ommended Service must guarantee nternational opert ; | satisfaction to Star readers—depend the league {upon them in e Reports from Paris and Berlin em- |and domestic phasize the new desire for negotia- | Advertisement. tlons, and point to an carly submis- | sion of an amplific Scheme completed by ¢ CHILE HAS NEW CABINET. as the first move in th ) Sy Security ¥ Germany has béen given the ¢st reason for seeking new negotia- | tions by the Franco-Belgian é&iation of any intention to German territory permanently &8 it is seen in London, road is open for negotiation on the | basis of two points First, a security general treaty fo together with tarization of the second, recons tated areas, possible, an a loan throu { i t Proposed. i | | mreat- pact resting on mutual guaran a_guaranteed demili uhr and Rhineland | al | specialized service.— rman experts direction. PER DIEM LABORERS Saavedra Government of Same Poli- tics as That of Gana, Retired. SANTIAGO, Chile, March 17.—A TO GET PAY 'NCREASE:-IH-\\' cabinet, of the same political All per diem laborers and me- {composition as the minlstry of Fran- ohanics of the District government jcisco Garges Gana, which resigned S i 5 reive | Several days ago, was sworn in yes- who work swing shifts will receive by qay. Cornelio Saavedra is premier increases of pay by an order of the iand minister of interior. The other kngineer deparunent wage board ap-'{ members as follow proved by the Commissioners yesterday. fi"‘,;‘;’::‘gQ.icfi"‘fa’{ The order affects those men whose | struction, Luis $ duties require them to work a few [Jorge Guerra; publi hours early in the morning and a few | Adrian. hours later in the day. All such em- | ployes will receive compensation for VOTE DRY REFERENDUM. s Luis _Izquierdo: justice and in- s Romo; war, works, Vicente an additional hour. For example, a i mechanic getting §8 a day for eight | hours' work will receive $9 if his hours are broken into two shifts Among those benefited are the hor. shoers of the street cleaning and c Tefuse division. WOMAN ADMITS ROBBERY. Anna Bell Cook Pleads Guilty . to Five Charges. Anna Bell Cook, twenty-two years) old, who escaped two or three times Jersey House Action, However, Later Nullified by Senate. By the Ascociated Press. TRENTON, N March 17.—The house, after defeating four measures designed to seek a more liberal in- terpretation of federal and New Jer- sey state prohibition laws, last night adopted by a vote of 31 to 26 a com- mittee substitute resolution calling for submission of the prohibition queStion to’a referendum of the peo- ple_next November. with $i.1 sisters | $100. -1 me hushand's | umduly INMODEL MURDER **Mr. Marshail” to Be Asked_ {POCKET COMB A CLUE] {New York Police Hope to Trace King, the | ml Police Inspector Coughlin, who is : - | - Jupert ELBERT H.CARY. CHAIDMAN OF THE SAFETY CHOPPED WOOD AND FED CATTLE ON A FARM NEAR WMEATON. ILLS. WHEN HE WAP A BOVY. - was waiting for the appearance of 1d on | Clemenceau eluding jeweliry and a fur | according | died—but | - {belle of ery line of personal j from the custody of the police, vester- day pleaded guilty before Justice Stafford in- Criminal Division 1 to five charges of housebreaking and larcency. The young woman was ar- ranged last Saturday on four of the charges and at that time denied her gullt. The grand jury this week re- ported a fifth indictment against her, and when called for arraignment on the last charge she withdrew the other pleas and admitted all the transactions. At the request of At- torney James A. O'Shea the court to Probation refe) the _cage om:&mnw wastigation The senate, however, later defeated the same resolution by a vote of 17 to 2, thus nullifying it. FALLS 3 FLOORS TO DEATH. SAN_ ANTONIO, Tex., March 17. Paul C. Ogle, representative of the Rickenbacker Motors Company of Detroit, fell from the third floor of a hotel here last night and died in a hospital an hour afterward. He struck on his head. Other occupants of the room said that Ogle was sit- ting in the spindow apd became THE TFEVENING BTXR, WASHINGTON, D. | CONTEST $100,000 WILL. ‘ At the Bottom of the Ladder. | Relatives Oppose Bequest of Estate Flos ML Freeman of Metuchen, who | will in which he 1 Do BE CAREFIL. ELBERT ! DONT GET HURT— You KNOW How CARELESS You ARE ° WITH THAT AX U | i i i | | i hif CAMPAIGN .« NCEA, ~Tiger” Still Loved American Woman, Her Friends B the Associn MILWAT . aaroh 17.—The !denth in Paris of Mme. Mary Plummer estranged wife of the Tiger” of France and war-time pre- mier, is announced by the Milwaukee {Journal. Mmne. Clemencean Durand, Wis Mme. Clemenceau was seventy-three old aud has been an invalid in for the last ten years. Al- though separated from the “Tiger,” in « was a native of | vear: Paris |letters to Wisconsin relatives she de- | ied as late divorced | When Georges Clemenceau was an exile from France and was teaching | Frenck in & young ladies’ seminary at mford, Conn., of his E as 1919 that they were pupils. Her name was Plummer and she was the he village of Durand, Wis. Married Before 1870, They were married in New York at {the time France and Germany were izirdmg for the war of 1870. Clemen- {ceau yielded to the entreaties of his and returned to his native country, beginning his remarkable | career” which culminated after the {dominant part he took at Versailles 1in drafting the treaty that ended the world war. | Three children were born to the couple. The Wisconsin woman proud- ly shared in the repeated successes of her brilliant husband. But there came a_mysterious day, when her dream of life-long happiness was shattered. Something developed—-it has never been known—that estranged them and they trod separate pathways ever after. Reported Dead 28 Years Ago. Twenty-eight years ago it was re- ported that Mme. Clemenceau had died. The report was printed in the United { States, but her friends in America said that no announcement of her death was ever made either in France or in this countr: E. Patterson, a Durand, Wis,, lawyer and a close friend of the Plum- mer family, said last fall that it was the firm belief of many persons in_that place that the “Tiger” still loved Mary Plummer. Married While SPRINGFIELD, Mass., March 17.— Mme. Mary Plummer _Clemenceau, whose death in Paris is reported, was the daughter of G. Plummer of this city, a former official of the Connecticut River railroad, now part of the Boston and Maine system. Miss Plummer was at the time of her marriage to M. Clem encean a student in a fashionabie girls school in Stamford, Conn., where Clem- enceau was an instructor in French. The marriage took place in New York city June 25, 1869. CONGRESSMEN GREETED BY MEXICAN GOVERNOR Visit to Lower California Made in Connection With Imperial Val- ley Inspection. By the Associated Prees. MEXICALI, Lower Calif, March 17. —Gov. Jose I Lugo and other state and federal officials of Lower Cali- fornia received the congressional party investigating the Boulder Can yon dam and Colorado river pact pro- posals at the international boundary line here, when the Congress mem- bers crossed to tour that part of the Imperial valley which lies in Mexico, The governor, Wwho accompanied the party as a guest of honor at the invitation of Senator Hénry F. Ash hurst of Arizona, extended a weleome to the delegation as the'personal rep- resentative of President Obregon and on behalf of the federa! and terri- torial governments. Observation cars were provided on the train carrying the twenty-three United States Senators and represen- tatives and their guests, over the Inter-California Railway and the Levee Railway lines of the irrigation districts, that the congressmen might see in detail the intake from the Colorado river, and the various canal and drainage installations in the river basin. Yuma, Ariz.,, was the terminus of today’s trip. one I Mary friends Student. Miss Sara McPike has been appoint- ed secretary of the New York. state department of labalt &%-&-salary of ESTRANGED, DES he fell in love with | | | emancipation | can have all the - |SAYS WOMEN CHEAPEN SELVE! BY PLAYING ATHLETIC GAME CHICAC weakening D, March 17.--Women are and cheapening them- sélves by indulging fn masculine pursuits, Dr. Arthur Holmes, fessor of psychology at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, said’ in a speech Lere. He expressed himself as op postd, as an educator, to anything in which woman appeared as an imi- tator of man, including such things as rifle range practice, boxing and basket ball “You hear a great deal about the| of women nowadays,” said Dr. Holmes. “I, for one. am for it. 1 wish she would emancipate her- self from a lot of her foolish notions. Particularly do I long for the day when she will be ‘free’ from her present obcession to imitate man in everything. and return to her occu- pation of being feminine, the sphere where she belongs and where she | berty she pleas RUHR “ULTIMATUM” ONLY FICTION TALE | publication is practically unthinkable, To a certain degree the disclosure of even so belligerent an intent as the documefit exhibits, whether it ever was translated into fact or not, might almost be considered an unfriendly act by a foreign government. Familiar With Style. The document is admittediy & mas- terpiece of British foreign office style. Somebody perfectly acquainted with the diplomatic niceties indulged in by “his majesty’s government” unques- tionably penned the piece printed by the Nation-Atheneum. John Maynard Keynes was an Important official in Downing street from 1906 to 1819. | He began in the India office, then was transferred to the treasury and finally served as the treasury’s principal rep- resentative at the Paris peace con- terence. After Versailles, Keynes acted as deputy for the chancellor of the exchequer on the supreme eco- romic council. It was his inside knowledge of the makimgs of the treaty *of Versailles that permitted him to write “The #conomic Conse- quences of the Peace” and no man in Great Britain could more astute- ly than he draw. up a reparations “yltimatum” to France, such as the one under discussion. Suggests Threat of War. The Nation-Athenaeum publication suggests that & month ago the Brit- ish foreign office contemplated diplo- matic action that undisguisedly threatened war on France. Anybody acquainted with present-hour domes- tio political conditions in the British Isles understands the extreme im- probability of any such procedure. Great Britain is as divided, in re- spect of its public opinion’ on the Ruhr, as American public opinion i. There is no more “stomach’ among Britons for a new war in ‘Europe than there is in the United States for international hostilities in which America might have to engage. The Northcliffe Press, now administered by Northcliffe’s brother, Viscount Rothermere, for weeks has been conducting an aggressive pro- 'French campalgn over the Ruhr oc- cupation. It has revealed a very wide opposition to the Bonar Law government's policy of ‘‘deserting” the former French entente partner. When war loomed in the near east over the Turks' deflance of Great Britain, there fi up in the British Isles such opposition to that thought pro- | ! better off playing solitaire or bridge.” _— s T orrE | with the King U, SXTURDXY, WXROH 17, 7923. —By KESSLER. PI_AN T[ST F“GHI OF NEW DIRIGIBLE { : TC-1, Largest Built in U. S., to Be Tried Qut Early Next Week. DESIGNED FOR HELIUM Hydrogen to Be Used on Trial Trip, However—Washington Man to Be Pilot. | | BY the Associate | AKRON, Onio, faeronautical today FPress X March experts were preparing a trial flight early next of the latest type dirigible, the TC-1, largest non-rigid airship constructed in the United States new ship h Army for ever The s 4 gas capacity of 200,000 cuble feet, 20,000 more than the D type ships, the largest heretofore built in the country. It has, however, only one-sixth the capac of the ill-fated Roma ho TC-1 s the first of three gibies of this ttype being built at the Goodyear plant here. According to ent plans they will be used as ing ships for airship pilots in preparation for transcontinental flights and are designed to use helium hough hydrogen will be used for the trial flights Speed Sixty Miles an Hour. Two 130-horse power motors have been installed in the ship. They are capable of developing a speed of sixty miles an hour. T cruising speed will be forty-seven miles an hour, with & crulsing radius of 1,630 miles The ship is 195 foet over all and the maximum diameter is 44% feet. Differing from recent Army ships having inclosed car, the TC-1 has an open car forty feet long, four feet six inches wide and three feet deep. Mo- tors are mounted on outriggers. The fixed weight of the ship, independent of fuel, oil and trip equipment is 463 pounds. Provision is made for gallons of gasoline and thirty gallons of oil. The ship is equipped ing devices. diri- h radio and bom| Will Carry Five Men. Operating with helium men can be carried. With hydro- gen the crew can be increased to ten The crew is compos MeKee a crew of pi pilot ofti Bellevue 3 official observer and | “However. if women must fig | them use the original weapons wh were the birthright of Mother Eve & | They are dangerous enough. and|Washington, D. C: Sergt | women can do more damage by shoot- | Barn and Sergt. Olin Brown, motor ing glances out of their s than |and riggin perts, from Scott Field. plaving with long - runge rifies. | JAfter preliminary trials, present Womeh want to be original, and by |plans call for a trip to Buffalo and A1l means let them be so. v arc | Niagara Falls, where aerial pictures ot original in making absurd at-|will be taken. Later the ship will be tempts to do the things that men do. { fown to « 1d, Bellevue, 111, “As an educator and psychologist, 1|its home station, by way of Dayton. seriously affirm that if women con- | Ohio; napolis and St. Louis. tinue in their present endeavors to . imitate men, wearlng men's clothes. | Benito Missolini, prime minister of their short hair on the left side they | <o of & village blacksmith. will ultimately weaken and cheapen ! - & their sex. Women, after all, must have the good opinion of men, and there i= no better way to bring that about than for them to be as femi- nine as possible. _ “Basket ball is the worst game ever invented for the growing girl, asid from its masculine qualities. It hard enough for men. Women are ot is may be relied upon to frustrate effectuall British tional policy that carried with it the seeds of geunine conflict with the French. There are strategic consider- ations not foreign to British policy at the moment, too. Sir Samuel Hoare. the air minister, only this week re- minded the house of commons that France is Britain's superior in the air in the ratio of nearly five to one. France, too, is understood to possess “Big Berthas” that can shoot the twenty-one miles from Calais to Do- ver with disconcerting ease. It is. of course, a solemn fact that the British don't relish the prospect of a France bestriding the continent like the Colossus of Rhodes. With a Belgium completely in French diplo- matic and military tow, John Bull would simply be exchanging France for the German danger on the Bel-| gium coast which he went to war to ward oft nine years ago. The Britis traditional policy of opposing the rise on the continent of & ringle dominant power is still the Downing street program. But there will be many a slip 'twixt cup and lip before a Brit- ish government, amid existing domes- tic_conditions, will mobilize its army and navy for a war to vindicate that policy. any na- other dollars. John B. Cochran. Pres. 4% 2% % (Copyright, 1923.) —_— ESTATE VALUE, $2,665,955 | YORKTOWN, N. Y., March 17.—An estate of $2,665,955 was left by Dan R. Hanna, son of the late Mark Hanna, according to an appraisal filed here. The net estate of $408,402 was be- queathed to his_three sons. Deduc- tions of $2,21 .including $400,000 to provide $30,000 annual alimony to Mrs. Hollis Hanna, his divorced wife, were made from the estate. Mr. Hanna died two years ago. BLUDTONE A Spring Tonic A REMEDY that builds up the blood system, cleansing it of for- elgn matters and humors. A TONTO that tones and builds up the way nature intended. Sola exclusively by M. A. Louis & Sons 229 G Street N.W. clerks. and ice water. that caused the government to aban- don all idea of resorting' to extremes. British labor, which now is dining Largest Screen Manufacturers in the World Recognized standard both WOOD and ‘Washington, D. C. RUSTLE sss for over 50 years in METAL Frames . | nd* engi- | | | i | | Pleasure Today or Comfort Tomorrow? Future Comforts Must be Pio vided For Out of Present Income. The life of a wise man or 'woman largely made up of doing without certain desirable things now to make sure of hav- ingestill more desirable things at some future time. He goes without littie luxuries and pleasures and puts his money into savings; he knows a dollar spent now is a dollar gone foreve: while a dollar in a savings account will return and bring a family 39 on Savings—4Y on Time Deposits Commercial Accounts e FRANKLIN NATIONAL sanx Corner Pennsylvania Ave. and Tenth St. N.W. Thos. P. Hickman, V. Pres. & Cashier. S ko ek ke ko Ak k Large Office for Rent N STAR BUILDING This office is bright, has southern exposure, private lavatory and running ice water. for light manufacturing or office employing many Rent, $200 a month, including heat, light orricea. SECOND FLOOK. 850 sare DUBLIN ON EDGE,, FEARING BIG CLASH (Continued from First Page.) \ will display exclusively g00ds made in Ireland. U The program for the day's amuse- ments is full, ingluding rages, public meetings and dances. Many a good Irishman in Dublin may be obliged to forego today the time-honored practice of “drowning the Shamrock,” for the saloon assist- ants bave decided to take the day off Although the owners assure the pub- lic that their establishments will be open as far as possible, the day prom- | ises to be unusually dry | James Donovan, the irregulars’ “d réctor of cnemicals” has been ar-ipy, rested here. It is officially announced | that he has been smuggling explosives | from England. His arrest is considered | important. Donovan was a member of the it regular army executive committce and | was captured in the Sghting at the ! Four Courts last June, but escaped COSGRAVE GREETS IRISH. BY WILLIAM S. COSGRAV President of the Irish Free State. DUBLIN, March 17.—In the nan of the Irish nation and the gove ment of the Irish nation 1 send g ings to the millions of our bloo throughout the world on this histor oceasion of the first celebration om of many centul national fest 1. The long epock that has elap: since our people paid homage as 1 men to the sainted name of has been an epoch of persecution, infense, unrelieved, for ou : try has gone through & MEE or has borne bigger afflictions for t sake of conscience and ho th Ireland, and during it all our paired, they never last, right triumphed and the enduran of ages has been re warded The goal which hus beent the ambition of every generation of | our people since that fatal day in the |k twelfth century has at last 1 i tained. The Irish people ar a free people and their & Eireann (Irish F tate) has s u equal to any the ~great free democracies of the commonwealth which she has joined. Ireland ha been recognized and .‘aluhfl by nations of the world as their peer. By joining her signature with that of Great Britain to the treaty of|ln London in 1921 Ireland has entered|tow into a pact of concord and peace with i wer hri his of DF prisoner’s FORCIBLE FEEDING RGEDEOR RADICAL Alienist Declares Convicted | Slayer Is Suffering With | Mental Disease. ed Press. Mass, ical, ¢ hoi7 ed of _Nico m 1 4 hun, mental fed L - and shou Webster was informed 1 throush expressed hung al Abr n and no her former enemy and has forgotten, - in the new relationship of amity the | sores and enmities of her tragic past This St. Patrick sees the home- | land of the cleared of a 1| corroding influences and institutio of bondage, There are now no Lroops but Irish froops, no police but Irish | police and no government but an Irish government responsib) solely to the will of the free Irish people. And the greatest event of all J. M. ADAMS HARDWOOD FLOORS 1503 Connecticut Ave. Old Floors Refinished ar tongue of Padraig in which e taught our fathers the atim- | mortal truths of Christianity is no longer suppressed and persecuted, but is recognized by the law of Ire lund as the rightful language of | the people of Ireland In this accompl fully recognize with gr pleasure the splendid, self sas part which millions of_our rac ing overseas in Great Britain, in the nited State in Canada, Australi uth Africa, New Zealand corner of the unive The rland can ne the - and deep W her excite children with_one accord turned her. When she was stricken dow and in sore distress they h | gladl and willingl with their money, their substance, their all and | their_ share in the present accom- | plishment is second only to ethatj taken by the hardest workers am the people at home. fine ment ge | is Suitable -2 224 2 22 2 2 2 4 24 % an Brigflten Your H 'R —— " PERPETUAL ASSOCIATION Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY.... il sosHuA w. PURIFY YOUR | SLUGGISH BLOOD ome For Spring With a Good Coat of Paint et Us Give You an Estimate. . K. Ferguson, : , « Deps. 1114 3th St Ph. M. 2490-249! AUTO SHOW — CONVENTION HALL ALL THIS WEEK BUILDING Pays 6 Per Cent shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,500,000 Surplus More Than $850,000 on on .President CARR, Secretary IN winter you eat freely of rich, heavy foods and do not get enough outdoor exer- cise. Asaresult, your blood is impure and sluggish when srnn comes. You feel dul and sleepy, and are tired out before the day is half over. . Purify your blood and build up your bodily viger with Gude's Pepto-Man- an. lents l)Z'ov.x need for the"‘springhouse-cleaning It contains just the elements ur body, and for perfect health physica(endumnce. Your druggist has Gude’s, 4n both liquid and tablet form. Gude's Pepto-Mangan Tonic and Blood Enricher £ ECZENA SPREAD ALL QVER BODY Of Baby. Itched and Burned. Cuticura Heals. My brother had a severe case of eczema when he was three weeks old. It broke out in small pimples that grew larger and formed blisters, and spread all over his body. ‘The breaking out itched andburned, causin, hhhln s BURROWES ALL-METAL WEATHER STRIPS Are as famous as Burrowes Scresns E Window Shades and Awnings—Disappearing Beds Our Salesmen go everywhere and furnish estimates cheerfully withous obligation. 4 4 Phone Main 8620 or Write to - THE E. T. BURROWES CO. 803 Continental Trust Bldg. Cor. 14th and H Sts. N. W, W, PR T e e e e e T S S e e e e e * » e ° (Scale-of drawing: 1-16-inch=1 foot.) APPLY ROOM 621, STAR BUILDING or Telephone Main 5000 Br. 3. i.’-n‘l to be fretful, an clothing irritated it. “We read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and purchased some, and after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment he was i (Signed) Miss Virginia Shepherd, Valley Station, Ky. Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes. Each Pros by Matl. Address: “CuticaraLab- e e . Maiosn s Sasa. Scid evesy- . Ointment 26 and Sde. Talcum Ste. ifl . Ointment com 22 2 2 2 2 4 24 2 2 2 X 200 X 22 3 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 % 2 %