Evening Star Newspaper, May 14, 1923, Page 22

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side trips included On Great White FI summervacationcruises. Jamaica, 15 days, $200 up. Colombia, 22 days, $3165 up. Costa Rica, 22 days, $325 up. All ex- penses. Ask your travel > GREAT WHITE, Graduate Eyes Examined McCormiok Medical lasses Fitted Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONE; Eyesight Specialist 409410 McLachlen 10th and G Sts. Phona Main 721, Bldg. N Establiched 1842 The Recognizd Stancard of Moderm Piano Manufacture We fnvite you to scc and hear our Petit Gi c t wlightly used od. CHAS. M. STIEFF, INC. BRANCH _OF FACTORY Cuticura Soap The New Way Without Mug ewnaflw- DISCOVERY Will Positively Rid Your Home of BED BUGS and Their Eggs Full Qu Fifty Centa it blood isx out of until yon cure disease; easier and prevent it. With the first blotches or eruption or the d earinexs and de- pression that are some of t toms, you need this tomic. It will rouse organs into healthy action, thoroughly cleansxe and repair your wvstem, and build up needed flesh, health and strength. Drucgists sell “Diveovery” in tablets cr liquid. the pro- in the ned in wiv, on May 17, 1 rties interest, Woodles we anges in the highway lan of Woodley road through t 1 aud numbered for purposes of 30, 54. above 1i will constder ests concerning the propos e tioned pl, oY F. 8. BESSON (e sioners of the District of Columbi myl-1it.exsn MOVING. PACKING & STORAGE NATIONAL CAPITAL STORAGE Horth 8345. OVING 0. 1050 Fio. Ave OO N. W, SEPARATE ROOMS, §1 i ), and up Local and Long Distance MOVING. By Careful Men. _Rates Itensonbale. EXPERTS. Goods insured v STORAGE G, SHIPPING, F. 2425 FIREPROOY. MOVE YOU nteed, saving assured; never 1005, District Express Co. 16% MOVING STORAGE KRIEGSPXPRESS PACKING SHIPPING 128 H St. N.W. n 010, CLEAN, DRY STORE FOR FURNITURE AND fanos. Estimate cheerfully given. Conven- lent Jocation. WESCHLER'S, 920 Pa. ave. n.w. Phone Main 1282. Batisfaction g « 23R TRANSFER & STORAGE] LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE MOVERS mooern FIREPROOF suiLDin WE CRATE., PACK AND SHI PHONE NORTH 3343 'RED-BALL National Household Movers. No Limit to Distance No Competition in Price. ~ Give Us 4 Woodward Bldg. ing. * Main 168, * {and the boy, IN SECOND DRY RAID e Police Seize Quantities of Varied Brands in His Apart- ment. Willlam E. Swainson, who was ar- rested In a sensational rald by revenue agents and the police several weeks ago, was not at home last night when Lfeut. Jerry Sullivan and Policemen Trammell and Smith of the eighth pre- cinct dry enforcement squad, and | Revenue Agent Fred T. Rose called at his apartment in the Chateau Thierry, 1920 S street. . Mrs. Swainson, however, admitted the members of the raiding party, thinking two of them were callers who had left the apartment a few minutes before and returned. When she became aware of the identity she got in tele- phonic communication with her hus- band at Cabin John Bridge and sum- moned him home. The husband was surprised when he reached the apartment and found the police raiders in possession. He ac- companied them to the station. Ten jgallons of *“red” liquor, seven gallons lof corn, or “white” liquor, as it is {called; thirty-one quarts of gin, thir- jteen bottles of vermouth and a quan- jtity of coloring and flavoring extracts iwere seized. _Swainson assured the police that liquor in a five-gallon container was not a colored fluld, but 114-proof real whisky, Lieut. Sullivan sald the raid as_based on alleged sales of lquor at §7 a quart to a police agent Satur- day night. Bond in _the sum of $1,500 was furnished for Swainson’s appear- ance. D. C. RESIDENT INJURED IN MOTOR COLLISION Thrown From Auto on Bladensburg Road, Cent to Hospital—List of Traffic Accidents. collision between the automo- of Alvin C. Eoxwell, Riverdale, Md., and William C. Hunt, 624 K street northeast, on Bladensburg road r Mount Olivet cemetery, early to- Paul Moore, twenty-four years 17 2d street northeast, was thrown from Hunt's car and slightly hurt. He was taken to Casualty Hos- pital. ¥ rry Englehart, thirty-six years old, a police chauffeur, suffered a pain- ful injury over his left eye yesterday afternoon when struck by the crank of the eighth precinct patrol. firing of the engine caused the acci- dent. Engle t received surgical aid at Freedmen's Hospital. Mrs. J. S. Thornton, 4415 Dean ave- nue northeast, was knocked down by a_taxicab Delaware avenue and Canal street southwest last night and slightly hurt. She was taken to Providence Hospital by the driver of the taxicab. George H. Spicer, a street car in- spector, was knocked down by the automobile of Orvil E. Sharkey, 5921 Georgla avenue. last night. He was ightly hurt. C. Sollers, forty vears old, ‘mont avenue, standing on the in front of 644 Orleans place northeast Saturday afternoon. was struck by bicycle ridden by Robert Fleming, fourteen vears old, a resi- dent of Orleans place. only slightly hurt. TWO CUT IN FIGHT. {Police Hold Colored Men After Early Morning Row. Harry Matthews, twenty-two years old, 1210 30th street, and Leo Barr, ight years old, 1236 83d re in Georgetown University uffering from knife wounds rly yesterday morning in h colored men at Prospect favenue and Potomac street. Two colored men—Paul Columbus Makle, twenty-three years old, 1 B Alexander, me pect avenue— re held at the seventh precinct sta- tion. Nine { wound { face. stitches were taken in a in the right side of Barr's Both men were in a weakened ition from loss of blood when »y reached the hospital. lieved they will recover. ' AMUSEMENTS (Continued from Seventeenth Page.) for breaking the high tension under ! which the audience has been held for as the beastly trapper o is lame, have reached {the point in a knife duel where the | boy is nearing the end of his rope. Cullen Landis is featured as the v. and_such screen players as o Noah Beery and Berte otte lend excellent support. Winter Has Came,” a Christie com- edy, featuring Dorothy Devore, _and burlesquing the type of melodrama popular in the last generatioin, is an added attraction. An overture by the Columbia_Orchestra, under Leon Bru- silof, and the news pictures finish an unusually good program. CRANDALL'S—“The Town Scan- dal.” A Universal production starring Gladys Walton, in “The Town Scan- dal,” at Crandall’s this week has a somewhat novel aspect in that it takes for its heroine the famous “Follies Beauty.” Gladys Walton, in the role of a stage beauty, a character which ghe can portray naturally. The story concerns a girl who leaves her home at Murphysburg, goes to New York and’ captures Proadway as a Follies beauty, but when she returns to visit her old home town she finds that the “purity league” has got the upper hand of things and is legislating even to the point of forbidding ice cream sodas. Scandal starts, she s snubbed be- cause of her stage affiliations. When she returns to New York the men from Murphysburg, among whom are the most ardent supporters of the | “purity league,” begin to visit her. They find it quite proper when away fr‘n]rn home to associate with a stage ! girl. some minute: CENTRAL—Katherine MacDonald in “Refuge.” Katherine MacDonald, “the Ameri- can beauty,” in “Refuge” her last plcture, shown at Crandail's Central, takes a plunge wholeheartodly into { the furious action of a drama of fren- |zled adventure, Instead of relying upon personal beauty for a hit. The new | “Memphis Blues™ Fox-trots doat come any snappier or mere inviting than this ene, But when Ted Lewis and His Band made their Columbia Record of it fil dance world got a thrill te remember. “Tigor Rag” on the other side is equally contagios. At Columbia Dealers A-3813 7S¢ Sollers was It is be- | THE' -EVENING ST . AND €. ASKED M€ Yo TAKE THE e ThAT STUPIO) CEAD iri THAT STuF /| wrse E oo S s First National picture reveals artistic touches in direction, staging and pho- tography, in addition to a lively story of mid-Furopean intrigue, revolution and personal combat, in a fight for | the throne of Moravia, the rightful inheritance of Prince Eugene, but | plotted for by Ferdinand, a pretender. A beautiful countess, impersonated by Miss MacDonald, is selected by the | expiring king to guard the secret of | the birth certificate that will deter- | mine the line of succession, and so she is made the object of much of | Ferdinand's villainy. The manner in which the identity heir is made known comprises the | climax of the drama and is the source of much of its suspense. Lloyd Hamilton, in “Extra, Extra,” D10 You SEE Y e ST et TBionT care FOR Buv evesvore Says The vt efeesT i ever of the rightful | was AR, WASHINGTON, D. MONDAY, GIVE TO GRAVES FUND. Two Organizations Send in Dora- tions. Two organizations sent donations to- day for the Amerlcan Leglon graves endowment fund of $100,000 for the permanent care of the dead heroes of the world war. Commander David W. Close of Mc- Groarty-O'Connell Post, No. 7, through | his finance officer, Harry M, Cochrane, sent in a check today for $10. The other donation came from the District of Columbia Chapter, National American War Mothers. Edith Sears, treasurer of the organi: on, in a letter to Howard S. PFisk, secretary- treasurer, stated that at the regular meeting of the District of Columbla Chapter held Saturday night it wae voted that the treasurer send a check for $5 for the perpetual care of the soldiers’ graves. The officers of this | tion are Mrs. Carrie White | president; Mrs, Mary T. Shan- | qorresponding searetary, and ith Sears, treasurer. _— C., The ' A Jersey cow owned by a Montreal man’ hay broken all Canadian rce- ords by producing 1,200 pounds of | butter in a _year. | %,\L\,Y 14, 19z3. * FUNDS FOR NURSERY. Donatlon Tea Planned to Raise Money. The Mira McCoy Andrews Day Nursery Assoclatlon will hold adona- tion tea at the nursery house, 472 1 .street mouthwest, n c s care « thirty little children every da: thelr mothers are at work, needs many and varfous articles for the charges. The principal need is money Near Eastern High School. Unques- tionably the best new homes fn the city for the momes. Seven large rooms (four bedrooms) and beautiful bath, gas, electricity, h.-w.h., %-inch onk floors throughout; deep lot to al- ley. Miller-biilt. Price, $6,050. Act aquick 1f interested. W. C. & A. N. Miller Exclusive Agents 1110 17th 8 Main 1790 ! Tue GieL wro DossnY soever. ?DO AMYTHING™ BUT Cook “THREE GOOD MEALS A DAY AND LoOK AFTER A HUSBAND AND Two KIDS worth insuring, too. wherever you are traveli a two-recl burlesque of the trial of a newspaper photographer; the Kino- garms and pipe organ recitals com- ete the bill. With the help of a voung editor of the Murphysburg paper, the Follies beauty starts to write her Impres- sions of the men of Murphysburg in New York. Things begin to hem in the little country town with the re- sult that the purity league backs down and calls a truce in its activi- ties. The production owes much to King Baggott, its director. The scenaria written by Frederic Arnold Krummer. . “The Fatal Photo,” starring Charlie Murray, is entertaining. Pipe organ elections complete the prog: into details with you. fering. Our Mr. Phelps will Boss & “The Home 1417 K Street. By WILLIS LUTHER The title calls it the is more than that. It ciation of weather science.” “It reads like a romance. would thi tion. combines a mass of useful facts World last night with no idea immensely.” The New Air World How to Become Weather-Wise President National Geographic Society, 1905 to 1910. Chief U. S. Weather Bureau, 1895 to 1913. What Competent Judges Think of This Book: Edwin E. Slosson, Ph.D., Director Science Service, Wash- ington, D. C, says: “This fascinating book will be a revelation. ience of Meteorology Simplified; but it the weather vivified and made delightful. The student will find accurate_ scientific information clearly presented; the general reader will find no dull pages: and the popular science writer may study this work with profit. Less imaginative scientists may shy at the author’s vision of ships drawn_by big kites, and future civilization increasing health and efficiency by sky voyages, but Dr. Moore, has, in this book, made a real contribution to the public’s understanding and appre- Dr. C. B. Dreed, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: The subject is full of the most inter- esting facts and they are presented in such a lucid manner I k it a pity if this book did not receive large circula- It is most useful and valuable for a busy man in that it Brig. General Charles G. Dawes: anything about the air, but I assure you that the book was so fascinating that I read it through at one siting.” John Hays Hammeond, Jr.: “You have written a book that should have a wide range of interest. For sale by Ballantyne, 1409 F "St. N.W. MOORE, Sc.D., LL..D. in such simple language.” “I took up The New Air that I would be interested in I enjoyed every chapter Between your Millions are spent every year for tooth pastes and powders, but teeth keep right on decaying, tartar forms, pyorrhoea, ulcers, 1oss of teeth and {1l health follow. Why? Simply be- cause pastes and powders fail ut- terly to prevent tartar and to clean the hidden spaces between teeth. So you have been warned to use both mouth washes and dental floss in order to clean between the teeth where decay starts. Easier Method Found But science bas finally discovered an easier, safer and more effective way of thoroughly cleaning and pro- tecting your teeth. The new discov- ery was made at the celebrated Mellon Institute, University of Pittsburgh, and is called Mu-Sol- Dent, “your daily dentist.” Cleans Between Teeth 1t cleans by a new principle, with- out friction, by dissolving dirt and Cleans BETWEEN Teeth Prevents Decay and Tartar 1t you buy Mu-Sol-Dent from your druggist, your money will be refunded if you are not thoroughly decay is lurking Tooth pastes and powders do not get in to clean there. Teeth germ laden film on your teeth. It is a liquid which not only cleans the visible surfaces, but reaches and cleans every crack and crevice of your mouth and teeth, removing the germs of decay and preventing tar tar—the two universal causes of dental disorders. Eminent dentists who have thoroughly tested Mu-Sol- Dent, recommend it as the only dentifrice which will actually do both of these things. Healing, Convenlent Mu-Sol-Dent 1s remarkably healing and soothing for sore throat, {nflam- mation, sore gums and tender tissue. Indispensable for cleaning false teeth. It is so safe it may be swal- lowed. It saves tims and is eco- nomical because it takes the place of all tooth pastes, mouth washes and dental floss combined. Get a bottle today from your druggist, or send for free sample. i ] [ | 1 Why Run! Risks? There is Insurance obtainable to cover almost every contingency and condition—so that every form of property and every movement you make may be protected against losg from any cause what- Your window, for example. Glass is fragile and easily broken—but it is insurable—and well- Your valuable luggage— too. And so on, through all the features and phases of everyday experience—even to Rain Protection for your profits during Shrine Week. ng—that can be covered, Let the Manager of our Insurance Department go Look into those 7 per cent First Trust Notes we are of- be glad to consult with you. Phelps of Homes"” Phone Main 4340. FErroSTAT NON BREAKABLE QUART Size Now $750 Soid By All Dealers Keeps Iiguids piping hot oricycold MANUFACTURED AND GUARANTEED BY THE STANLEY INSULATING CO., GREAT BARRINGTON; MASS. So they greased |l textile mil and this may be sent direct to the nursery or to Mrs. Gurney B, Btrong, the chalrman, 2129 18th street north- west, Other members of the committee are Mrs. Roe Fulkerson, president of the assoclation; Mrs. S. B, Hecht, Mrs. SPECIAL Paul L. Reed, Mrs. T. W. Barrett, Mr Sydney R, Jacobs, Mrs. Robert Briggs, Mrs. N. R. Jenner, Charles Henry, Mrs. Thomas } ner, Mrs. William A. Jack J. 1. Brooks. Mrs. R. S. will preside at the tea table. NEWCORN & GREEN m EXTRA! From Philadelphia Ledger, May 3, 1923 By ARTHUR D. WELTON Chicago, May 2.—Men are going to T their clothes next winter id Inst winter or than they . Wnges are going to be ad- | vaneed in the clothing industry and | they nlrmdlv have been advanced in the lls. ~Increase in wages is among the rising costs that hnve been | reflected in the price of fabrics. The| expected increase in the wages of gar- ment workers will be another cost ele- | t gnd, when maker, jobber and re- inve finished witlh the price sumer will find himsel? winter. the moat ex- izl - 'CLOTHING FOR MEN MA HIGHER-PRICED NEXT WINTER' Demand for Better Fabrics—Retailers Buying With Freedom—Chicago Manufactarers W orking at Capacity | ' Our Daily Chicago News Letter ] YBE large factory. This is much more pro- nounced than in New York. Some- thing like 70 per cent elothing nade in Chic: in plants baving an al output ex- ceeding $1,000.000. e factories em- ploy about 33,000 workers. _ Tt is probably mere chance that the city that"manufactures such enormoun quantities of food products does alwn so much to clothe men. The value of Chicago’s clothing output for inen is running well above $200,000,000 a recr ‘Value for Nation Two Billlons “That would indicate o value for the ation as a whole of about two bil lions. “Tlhe value of women's rlathe: in still higher. If anvone will take ti uble to to these amonnts the urs, hate. HEED THIS ADVICE | Take Advantage of the | Greatest Offer in Washington! Regular Suit that no other offer city equals this and be convinced. dark colorings. up to the best. " Newcorn make your own comparisons More thart 30 different pat- terns—all desired light and New purchases are added daily—keeping assortments 40 and ings Made to Your Measure ‘33 We are emphatic in stating in the special event—and we ask you to Also a Special Group of Regular $50 Worsted Suitings Made to Measure $39:50 The most desirable pat- terns of the season & Green 1002 F Street N.W. Open Saturday N iglg the bottom of the ship SMART builders of smart ships, those hardy settlers along the Atlantic Coast just after the Revolution. Many a time their sharp-built barks and brigantines showed their heels to the Mediterranean blockade and carried American goods into Marseilles. And one ingenious device for getting a knot or two of extra speed was the greasing of the vessel’s bottom. So while the friction of the water held back their pursuers, they slipped onward to safety. Friction is always a drag against progress, especially in the case of motor cars and trucks. For years this company has been aiming at the conquest of friction by means of a lubri- cating oil scientifically designed. We have been successful. not satisfied. Or large sample bottle (nearly half pint) will be sent free if you mail this coupon, enclosing 6 cents for postage, to V. B. Corpora- tion, 916 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Name Street . City .. Just “a quart of oil.” Ask for Polarine, the “Standard” oil'for motor lubrication— STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey)

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