Evening Star Newspaper, April 6, 1923, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

P - STWO WOMEN SERVED IN RANKS OF U. S. ARMI HETHH T Sprivate soldlers throughout the revolu- | Ttionary and civil wars, taking part in dattles and recelving wounds, and in| Severy way assuming a man’s part, were Trevealed today in a search of the rec- Zords of the pension office. | Z The woman soldlers were Deborah | SGannett, who served during the revo- Suttonary war, and Albert D. J. Cash-| =i or Hodgers. They are the only| Army and Navy Officers Of Interest to Capital Army. Maj. Donald C. McDonald, fleld ar -tillery, at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. has been ordered to this city for tem- orary duty, on completion of which “tho United States dward R. ireiner, BICdlcfll‘ . at Omaha, Neb 1 Corps, at n assigned | woy partment, have | United States for } Maj. Chester B. tilery, ut Fort Bliss, Tex., has been datatiéd to duty with the Oklahoma ! Natlonal Guard, with station at Ada, | Oxla. i The resignation of Field Clerk Je P. Johnson, at Governors Island, N.| Y., has been 1 d W Coast Ar- detailed to duty tional Guard, with Ind. B! y &g the reproduc- ington barracks, y . Stark, Coast Artil- at Findlay, Ohlo, hus been Honoluly, Hawali, 2 Capt. Franklin T. Lord, partment, at Fort Hunt. V assigned to duty at Omaha, Col. John H. Hess, Den and Capts. Daniel . Hutton and Rob- ert C. Kirkwood, Medical Corps, have been relleved from duty in the Philip- pine In ent and ordered to the United State: tion plant, Maj. Ha Navy. Pat Bug tieship and Maj. At-|jension and be ES IN TWO WARS, Records of two women who served as|women in American history who were paid pensions by the United States for actual military service. Del Gunnett enlisted in April. 1751, in a Massachusetts regiment under | the assumed name of Robert Shurtleff. She served until November, 1783, as a private soldier, when she was honorably discharged. She fought at the battie where she was wound and w in the ranks when Lord Corn- wallis was captured by the revolutionary s. Her real identity was revealed after the war, and in 1838 Congre passed a special bill for the relief of her awarding them a pension. in described as _“Deborah | er of the revolution.” | . man soldier was Al-| bert D. sh r, whose real namo | was Ho ue’ enlisted us a pri- | e infantry regiment | Augu 18 nd was mustered ! st, 1865, She went through : campaign with her regi- rent, was in the engagements lead- ing to the fall of Vicksburg and was Juckson and East Meridian She also was in the battles of river, Cloutiersville, Mansura, s, France, for| yellow u and in the Red river ry attache at}expe dit scharge she returned to | n nd worked on a farm, herd- ig cattle. She was later awarded a 1 inmate of the | iome Quiney, Il Her | tseaverid until she sus- | leg as the result | tomobile accident. rtow 1 in 191 Oatmeal —a “new dish” This has solved the oatmeal problem in_thousands of homes. Stew raisins and mix with the eal after it is cooked. Add the ice also. aisins furnish mineral salts and valuable food-i But best of meal attra healthful sweet Sun Maid Rai tmore than the f Seeded (in 15 Seed or Seedless (11 0z =15c Seeded, in tins (120z.)=320c Seeded, in fins (8 0z.)=13c Ask dealers for Sun-Maid I, they make oat- e with the lure of should cost you 20 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, Woodward & Lothvoy Boys' Shop Values are the Best Woodward & Lothrop qualities and selections are noted for excellence . and these values are the best A Skirt, with Blouse or Sweater makes a Smart Outfit for a Girl Junior Girls’ Skirts $9.50 Better Service Suits Every suit has two pairs of trousers; that’s one of the best features about these splendid all-wool, well tailored suits for boys of 7 to 18 years. eral different styles; one sketched. New Felt Hats, $3.75 New shapes and new colors that boys are asking for to wear with new Spring suits; tan, brown, stecl and slate; silk lined; sizes 6}% to 7%4. Little Boys’ Spring Topcoats Sizes 3 to 10. One smart model, in camel color cloth, with Icather buttons, sketched, $15. Others with raglan or sct-in sleeves; varied shades, $11.75 to $18. Smart New Straw Hats, $3.50 | Every little felloy shapes; in brow Boys' Blop, Fourth floor. is ready for a mew straw; smart new , black and navy. Other styles to $10. *12.75 Sev- $13.50& %15 Boys’ Handkerchiefs Have Colored Borders and Initials 25c each These handkerchiefs are really the sort that boys would chose for themselves; 'APRIL 6, 1923. Smart Sports Hats, %5 For the woman who wishes a smart sports hat—a hat she can just put on and wear, and wear, and wear— this collection at $5 offers a smart choice. Three models sketched —others in equally smart styles —straws ~turned up or down, with narrow ribbon crown bands; soft crushable silk-rib- bon hats from Paris also included in many shades. Millinery Seetion, Thirg fioer. A Delightful Collar and Cuff Set 50c or $1 ——care add such a lot to your costume. Here are— ‘White Or“lndy Collar and Cuft Sets, with crocheted buttons and dainty tuckings for trimmings. $1 set. Linen Coflar and Cuff Sets, with drawn- work and embroidery. $I set. Real Filet, also imitation Venise lace collars. $L. Peter Pan Collar and Cuff Sets, of linen—roll sets of organdy—and eyelet embroidery collar and cuff sets. 56c set. Separate Collars, color embroidered. soc. Neckwear Bection, Pirst Soor For ] 7 Burnt orange or mand straw, with white facing, ¥5. Three Smart Glove Modes —that fashionably women are wearing. The 6-button Strap Wrist Over- seam Glace Glove, with three rows of fancy embroidery; in mode, gray, black, white and tan. $4 pair. The Pull-on, or Biarritz, in the new mastic shade, a favorite Parisian mode; with three rows embroidery. $4 pair. Eight and Twelve Button Glace or Suede Gloves—in the wanted new tans—sands, and mode shades; also black and white. $4.50, $5 and $5.50 pair. Glove Bection, Pirst floar dressed sythe Tailored Silk Blouses B35 of fine cambric, with smart looking woven borders and embroidered initials— in tan, blue or lavender. rchiet Section, Pirst fioor When you wear a Forsythe Tailored Silk Blouse, you have the urance that you are wearing the smartest thing in tailored silk blouses. —show many attractive models in the popular wrap-around style, of novelty homespuns or camelshair. 1 with novel pockets or buttons for | Alsnd t the naval | have been accepted Commander J orps, ha the transport Henderson. ames D. Blackwood, Med- | toal Corps, of the U. S. S. Trinity, has been transferred to the marine bar- racks, Quantico, V Lieut. Roscoe Avery, Medical has been assigned to duty at val Hospital, this city. Marine Cory Col. Dickinson 1 tached from 1st Krigade, Haiti, and ordered to marine heudquarters, this Randall, at navy| e Island. Calif, has been | Philadelph du cis T. B a Albert Maj. headguarte tailed to Capt. Thomas 4 ed to duty at Quant Second Lieut. John B. W been transferred from the naval torpedo station R tcond Lieut. David V. Pickle has been transferred from FParis Island, |} 8. C., to Quantico. U. S. EYES LIQUOR EXPORTS ASKANCE e temporary Hd which prohibit e clampe n on applica- | tions to export Ameri iquor to! Seotland and England, the home of | good liquor, for “medicinal purposes,” | may be looked on as a permanent lid, i¢ a sharp investigation now under way by United States consuls abroad | confirms the government's worst sus- piotons of “bootleggers and smug- slers.” What do Scotland importers want with & boatioad of American lquor (his year, when the flood of liquor Las always been going the other way? This 1s what the American sovernment wants to know about | those funny-looking permits to ex-| port. America mever did export liquor to Scotland, it was sald. The | State Department {s. co-operating | with the Treasury in the investiga- tion. i Definite evidence was obtained. it! was disclosed today for the first time, 1 that one big shipment intended for | export to Europe was in reality de s-’ tined for export merely for the pur- pose of giving it a double twist some- | where, to be sneaked back illegally | into the United States. The movement to get liquor out of this country to Europe was no small proposition, it was revealed. The Rumber of permits to export that had | niled up was enormously large, sus-| piclously large. In one single shi ment, it wus said, there were plans for export of thirty carloads. Tinal reports from the consuls as to the medicinal needs abroad, par- ularly in England and Scotland, tor American liquor have not yet| peen returned. Meantime all appli-} cations for export are being held up here, temporarily. The drive made on such exporters. liowever, it was explained, will not | be allowed to operate disudvantage- ously to bona fide medicinal trade. Successful stoppage of leaks from | warehouses in this country through illegal channels is suspected by offi- sials to have driven bootleggers and smugglers to the international ex- pedlent of exporting for import |Careless Shampooing ‘ Spoils the Hair Soap®should be used very care- fully, if you want to keep vour || hair looking its best. Many soaps | and prepared shampoos contaln too |1} Tuch frec alkall. This dries the ||| scalp, malkes the hair brittle, and | ruins it. | _The best thing for steady use is Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo ‘ (which is pure and greaseless), ‘and s better than anything else you can use. Two or three teaspoonfuls of Mulsified in & cup or glass with a little warm water is sufficient to hair and scalp thor- | moisten the hair | rub the Mulsifled | makes an abundance of | ,rich creamy lather, which rinses Lout easily g every parti-| “cle of dust, dandruff :u\d‘ excess oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp ||’ soft. and the hair fine and silky, | bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get Mulsified cocoanut |0l shampoo at any pharmacy, it is very cheap, and a few ounces will | supply every member of the family | for months. Be sure vour druggist | gives you Mulsified. —Advertixement n C. Parham, | ; been detailed to| 1 has been de- ! { formula that often causes that intense PETERSON'S Good o the Jast drop ore thana slogan to the man whose travels have taught him how bad coffee can taste; it is a downright state- ment of fact. | MAXWELL HOUSE COFFE ITCHING GONE IN ONE NIGHT ‘There’s just a little something in the itching and burning to cease with one thorough application. Tens of thousands of grateful people know of the mighty healing power of OINTMENT i They know blotches, blemishes, erup- | tion, acne, rashes, redness and roughness | make the skin unattractive and that Peterson’s Ointment succeeds inbanishing these troubles after other remedies fail. One 35¢c box makes a lifelong friend — Druggists know all about it. trimming touches. Overblouses for Girls $2.50 to $6 There are many delightful styles in blouses this spring. One dainty style (sketched) is of white voile, trimmed with blue and white checked tissue gingham, $2.50. Others of dimity, cotton pongee, silk pongee and Paisley. Girls’ Sweaters, $4.75 Almost everything that's smart in sweater fashions is here for girls— slip-ons and tuxedos in plain col- ors and attractive color combina- tions. One sketched in blue wool with tan stripes, $4.78. Other mod- els to $7.50. 12 to 18. years. Boys’ and Girls’ Athletic Underwear These athletic undersuits are well tai- lored, of good quality nainsook ; in white. FOR GIRLS, they have the bloomer leg, drop seat and hemstitched top. $1 Suit FOR BOYS. the undersuit has a flexible band in the back that offers perfect free- dom. Sizes for boys of 8 or 9, to 16 75¢c and $1 Suit Sizes Two models at $5.75 are illustrated; one is of white La Jerz, with V neck and smart turn-back cuffs; the other, a sports shirt of natural color pongee, with a convertible collar. Bleuse Section, Third floor, The Very New Knitted a Sweater-Suits Young People’s Tnderwear Section, Fourth fioor. Girls' Bection, Fourth fleor. Boys’ Haig Sports Oxfords The New Haig Sports Oxfords, for boys, are built on a commen enuine Russia calfskin; a model that meets the requirements of boys who like to dress up to date; in gun metal, sizes 1 to 6, $5.50 pair; in tan Russia calf, sizes 274 to 6, $6 pair. Youths' Sports Oxfords, of dark and light elkskin combined; with spring heels and Goodyear welt soles; sizes 113 to 2, $5.50 pair. Boys' Shoe Sectlon, Fourth floor. sense last, of Sports Hose for Boys, 50c pair All the newest shades to wear wjtfi new sports oxfords; three- quarter length, mercerized cotton; in tan, beaver, brown, cordovan, smoked elk and black. Misses’ Poiret Twill Suits *39.50 . These are the suits that misses are buying now for both street and dress occasions; for any of them with the addition of a colorful overblouse would prove a charming costume for any daytime occasion. The little touches of fin- ish—the latest trend of the mode—perfect tai- loring—fine quality fab- rics—all of these things go to make these suits the smart models they are.. The Box Jacket Suit— The Braid-trimmed Suit—- The Side-button Suit— The Straight Tailleur— These are the styles in- cluded —one of which we sketch; a box jacket model, cleverly braided in black silk braid—and linego in soft gray crepe. Mluses' Sectien, Third ficor. Mother Goose Sweaters Iiddies. for Kiddies, $4 Mother Goose Sweaters, or Happywear Sweaters as they are sometimes called, are made of the finest yarns, in the love- liest styles—and their quaint designs from Mother Goose rhymes appeal so to the One style has little chicks, another has a swan, and still another has a funny old elephant, all worked right into the border; they come in tan with blue, or copen with tan; brown with tan, and jockey with white. Sizes 2 to 6 years. Infants’ Section, Fourth flor. Laceless Sports Girdles Are Popular with Girls The athletic girl must be comfortable, and these supple and flexible corset-girdles are made especially for her. Easy to slip into; comfortable to wear; supporting her thoroughly ~ throughout strenuous exercise— golf, tennis, riding, or whatever she chooses. All Elastic Models Part Elastic Models $3 to $12.50 Corset Section, Third floor. Base Ball Season’s Open Everything in Equipment Here Base Balls, 10c to $2. Fielders’ Gloves, 75¢ to First Basemen’s Mitts, $1 to $5. gastchers' Mitts, $1 to 15. Masks, $2.50 to $4.50. Base Ball Suits, $1.95 to $5.25. Sperting Goods Bectlon, Fourth foer. Shoes, $3.50 and $4.50. Socks, $1 pair. Reach Base Ball Guide, 25¢. Score Books, 10c to 55c. Shin Guards, $3.50. Shoe-Toe Plates, 15c. Caps, 45c. Fashion’s latest vogue—the vogue for things “knitted,” is smartly ex- pressed in these smart knitted Sweater-Suits. The collection shows several dif- ferent and distinctlvely smart styles—the popular Tuxedo, the fashionable jacquette, and the de- lightful slip-over; in wool, in fiber, or in wool striped in fiber. Smart color combinations include —bisque and copen, gold and brown, black and white, copen and rose—sizes 36 to 42. $11.75 to $29.50 Sweater Sectien, Third Soor. Homemade, Real Cream Chocolate Butter Creams 60c Ib. A variety of flavors—chocolate, vanilla, raspberry, lemon, orange. pineapple, peppermint—Bo Peeps and Marquerites—and Bonbons. Salted Almonds, $1.25 1b., Marsh- mallows, 1-1b. tin, 50c. and Salted Peanuts, 50c 1b. Fresh daily. Candy Gection, Fourth floor. Ultra Smart and Effective With a Close Coiffure You may choose from a fascinating array of :arrlngs in lovely colored <tones and chic designs, and delightful shower earrings in jade and pearl, onyx and pear], and onyx and crysta g.u to $18 palr. Earrings illustrated, Colored Bracelets Appear On the Smartest Wrists Round Jade Bangles are 75c; Onyx, Lapis, Pearl and Crystal Bead Brace- lets, connected by dainty silver links, $2.50 to $6; Bangle Bracelets of sterling silver, $1, $2 and $3. Rainbow Gem Necklaces, *1 These exquisite 30-inch Graduated Bead Necklaces are reproductions of precious and semi-precious stones, shewn in crystal moonstone, onyx, lapls, aquamarine, topaz, amethyst, turquoise, jade. Jewelry Section, First foor. $10 Selection Records Delivers This $100 Console Victrola to Your Home Our Club Plan x;xa’kes it possible for you to own and enjoy this handsome Console Victrola while you are paying for it. You select and pay for $10 worth of records; then pay $9 monthly thereafter, without interest, until it is paid for. , Hear your Victor Records in our seund-proof demonsirating rooms — Victrola Galleries,

Other pages from this issue: