Evening Star Newspaper, June 11, 1923, Page 15

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Get Your Money’s Worth Invest in Brass pipe plumbing. ; You can buy Brass pipin; g for nearly the same first cost as iron ~or steel plumbing. Ask your Plumber. Iron or steel pipe rusts smailer each year. . Leaks. Has to be ripped out and renewed. It costs 10 times as much to rip out and renew plumbing pipe as it does to install .«,3 pipe in the first place. Insist on Brass plumbing pipe in your house. tog will outlast the buiiding. Brase and Copper are cheaper bocunse you pay for them enly ONCE B COPPER o BRASS RESEARCH ASSOCIATION 95 Brondway Now York — e CORNS L Lift Off with Fingers | Doesn’t ‘hutt @& bit! Drop a little *‘Freezons" on an aching corn, iastantly that €orn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it wight off with fingers. Trul g Your druggist mlls a tiay bottle of “Freezone' for = few cents, sufficient to re- ‘move every.hard corm, soft corn or corn be- tween the toes,;and the calluses, without sore- mess or irrifation. TWO MEN KILLED - BY ROBBER GANG Patroiman and- Merchant Shot to Death at Roadhouse Near St. Louis. By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, June 11.—Patrolman Edward Griffen and John L. Surgent, produce merchant, were killed yes- terday during the robbery of 'a road- house in St. Louis county. The police believe the men were slain by & band of gangsters, which held up several roadhouses. All available policemen and detectives were scouring the city last night in & search for the slayers. A young woman, who was present at the policeman's death, also is being sought as a witness. Officer Griffen, who was in uniform, but off duty at a resort, was shot to death before he could pull out his revolver when the gangsters at- tempted to hold up the place. The officer was shot in the neck, head and heart, and the robbers fled with his revolver. Merchant Dies of Wounds. Police, who said Surgent probably was passing the roadhouse as the gangsters were fleeing, expressed the opinion that he was forced to take several of them into his automobile. {Shortly afterward Surgent was found uns¥nscious with a bullet hole in his bo#y on the sidewalk. e died at a | bawbital before regaining conscious- Hess. Surgent's machine was found &bandoned. The girl, aged about twenty-three, ®aw the policeman shot, and held him in her arms when he died, according to patrons at the résort, who declar- ed she had been sitting at a table with the officer. They sald she knelt by the dving officer, her walst being blood stained before she disappeared. Other patrons were reported to have fired at the robbers as they departed. Several Arrests Made. Following the kiiling, the police arrested several men at a rooming house. Detectives identified a re- volver found in a drawer at the house as Griffen’s. One of the men arrest- ed had a bullet wound in his left hand {APHASIA VICTIM HELD; | ENTERED WRONG HOME Women'’s Screams Bring Aid; Man Insists He Is in Springfleld, I1l., Residence. By the Associated Press. LANCASTER, Pa. June 11.—Suffer- ing from aphasia and believing that he was at his home in Springfield, 7, Willlam Wheeler was taken in- to custody here, when he gained en- trance to a home in the fashionable residential section. and entered the room of two woman members of the family. Screams of the women brought the man folks to the room. ‘Wheeler knocked one of them down with his fist and the other sum- moned the police. The intruder was taken to the detention ward of a lo- cal hospital, where physicians to- night said that he still was under the impression that he was in Springfield. 3 Wheeler was said to be an em- ploye of the Chicago and Alton rail- road and to have recently been granted a leave of absence to re- cuperate from a mervous breakdown. SCHOOL FAVORS COURT. New York University President As- sures Harding of Support. NEW YORK, June 1l.—Announce- ment that he had sent a telegram to President Harding, stating that a large part of the faculty and stu- dents believe strongly in the plan for a world_court, was made by Chan- cellorElmer Ellsworth Brown of New York Ui rsity in his bacca- laureate addre: Chancellor Brown declared he was spokesman for the majority of opinion in the university in sending the message. EX e Beflveen your Millions gre spent every year for tooth phstes and powders, but teeth keep right on decaying, tartar forms, pyorrhoea, ulcers, loss 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 bave been warned to use both mouth washes and dental floss in order to: clean between the teeth where decay starts. - Easler Method Found ¢ But sclence has finally discovered * an easier, safer and more effective way of thoroughly cleaning and pro- teoting your teeth. The new discov- ery was made at the celebrated Mellon . Institute, University of P h, end is called Mu-Sol- Dent, Fyour daily dentist™ - Cleans Between Teeth . Itcléans by a new principle, with- put friction, by dissolving dirt and Teeth decay is lurking Tooth pastes and powders do not get in to clean there. germ laden film on your teeth. It is & liguid 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 tan tar—the two universal causes of dental disorders. Eminent dentists who have thorougbly tested Mu-Sol- Dent, recommend it as the only dentifrice which will actmally do both of these things. Healing, Convenlent ‘Mu-Sol-Dent is remarkably healing and soothing for sore throat, inflam- mation, sore gums and tender tissue. Indispensable for cleaning false teeth. It is 80 safe it may be swal- lowed. It saves time and is eco- nomical because it takes the place of all tooth pastes, mouth washes and dental floss combined. Get s bottle today from your drugsist, or send for free sample. Cleans BETWEEN Teeth : Prevents Decay and Tartar i 21 Faiths Unite As One Church; Creed Is Broad NEW YORK, June 11.—A religious experiment uniting twenty-one denomi- nations under one minister and one roof was started yesterday at Jackson Heights, Queens, with the dedication of the Community Church by Bishop Lu- ther B. Wilson of the Methodist Episco- pal Church. The congregation included Presby- terians, Baptists, Methodists, Episco. palians, Moravians, Unitarians, Univer. salists, Congregationalists and others. Broad denominational lines were fol- lowed at the service. Dr. Niles of the Dutch Reformed Church offered prayer, Rev. Platner of the Baptist Church read the Scripture, Dr. Cravner of the Epis- copal Church preached and a Proesby- terian clergyman gave the benediction. “The church has changed its program to meet the changing needs of the peo- ple,” said Rev. Fred R. Corson in charge of the Community Church. “It must keep step with the progress that is be- ing made along other lines of human ac- tivity. That is what we are trying to do here. We hope to have an ideal church for an ideal community.” LOANS TO AUSTRIANS TOTAL $175,000,000 Will Have $75,000,000 Reserve After Paying Debts; Grateful for Aid Given by U. S. By the Associated Press. VIENNA, June 11.—Chancellor Sei- | pel has Informed the correspondents that a guaranteed loan to Austria from all sources aggregating $175,- 000,000 was now virtually assured. After the payment of various interim loans there would be left about $75,- 000,000 in Dr. Zimmermann's hands for use in the next eighteen months, as the government required, for bal- ancing the budget. After dealing with the enormous moral effects of having such a re- serve, the chancellor concluded: “The happiest circumstance and the best augury for the future is the faot that the people of the United States have DEBS ASSAILS U. S. PART IN WORLD WAR “Finishes” Speech Tha: Result:d in Sentence to, Federal Peni- tentfary in Cleveland. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, June 11.—Call- ing attention to the fact that it was Just five years ago that he deivered an address against war at Canton Ohio, which resulted in his convic- tion and sentence of ten years at At- lanta Penitentiary for violation -of the espionage act, Eugene V. Debs, socialists leader, in an address here vesterday declared he proposed to “finish” that speech in Cleveland. He assailed war in general and the world war and the American leaders in it in particular. His enemies and those of the socialist party he at- tacked. “It was in this city that I was been moved to extend their support to Austria in her effort.” indicted and tried in & capitalistic court and, of course, convicted,” Mr. the barrel gives a feeling of “life” found only in Waterman'’s. Selection and service at Waterman dealers the world over L. E. Waterman Co:npanv 191 Broadway, New York WRIGLEYS At great and flavor. to make t Sealed Tight in all its flavor. develored the product to meet our ideals in quatity Then we spared ho expense he package worthy of the contents. — Kept Right. "Il get WRIGLEY" You'll always .3 Pure chicle and other Ingredients of the highest quality obtalnable, made under modern sanitary conditions. refunded if you are not thoroughly satisied. r large sample bottle (nearly half pint) will-be sent free it you mail this coupon, enclosing* & cents for postage, to V. B. Corpora- gion, 916 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. umj iy Mu-Sol-Dent from your druggist, your at it never would have been heard out- side of Canton. As it is, it has been transiated into twelve languages and spread around the world. not one word logise for or take back if me to the gallow: retract. would a; 1t carries MEMORIAL TO ROOSEVELT.! NEW YORK, June 11.~The corner stone of St. Luke's Protestant Epis- copal Church, at Forest Hills, the | Theodore Roosevelt memorial, was lald yesterday by the Rt. Rev. Fred- erick Burgess, Blshop of Long Island. The edifice is being bullt by th churchmen: of Long Island as s :no.n?flfll—‘ to Long Island's greatest CATERPILLAR MEETS FOE “Army” Which Invaded Oregon Bection Decreasing Hourly. CORVALLIS, Oeg., June 11.-—The ‘caterpillar army, which recently in- 'vaded this section, swarming over the rafls in such numbers as to delay | several trains and sometimes cover- ing sidewalks to a depth of an inch or more, has met its natural enemy and been defeated. Flies have overtaken the marchers 'and lald eggs In the heads of many. The eggs, in turn, have produced \parasitical larvae whose actlvitles #00n kill the caterpiliar. There still are great numbers of caterpillars in the army, but the in- ers’ strength is decreasing hourly. For Burning Eczema ! Apply Zemo, the Antiseptig Liquid—Easy to Use. g From any druggist for 35¢, or $L00;{+ for large size, get a bottle of Zemo! ic When applied as directed it effectively i+ removes Eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also Snes.‘.rfi Burns, Wounds and Chafing. It peme: trates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is a clean, dependable and inexpensive, antiseptic liquid. Try it, as we believe nothing you have ever used is as effec- tive and satisfying. Brookfield Youth will be served = Brookfield — as Youth votes in favor of superior flavor, fra- grance,andfreshness. <

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