Evening Star Newspaper, August 23, 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)

DAY ARRITTE T DUTEH INDES Netherland Interests Propose Plane Service From Hol- ] are in the divorce court and Jus- | ] tice Siddons, before leaving on his land to Colonies. —— ' BY LEOPOLD ALTERINO. . . Br Cable to Tix 0 Daily News. AMSTERDAM, Duteh gov prent committee of expe the possibility of inaugurating an | service between Holiand and the ! . — The | appointed “a i to’ investigate | |School Petitions i To Get Rid of 2 !, Court Charges The Epiphany School for GIflE, 3017 O street northwest, wants: to’, get rid of the two children of " |. Francis M. Williams and his wife;: Agnes M. Willlams. The parents ion, selected the school as a Place ‘for the children while the diyorce proceedings are pending. The authorities of the s®hoot ha e Med a petition in court requesting that some other school be desig- | nated. N ears old, and Frances M., When' they first came | 0ol they were well be- !merce haved. court Is told. but are |address now unruly and disobedient. As the | fall term of the school approaches )utch Indies. Thereby the Dutch aré ! the fear is expressed that they |that th following the example set by ish government. which alrfll\‘ly! prepared to organize a regular | resents the school. service between London and the} i y dominions as soom as eco- o tnent conaions are| LUTHERANS SEEK favorable I'iie Hague government realizes per-; sctly well that air communication | [eiWeen Englana and. other parts ot | the British empire would not only be fn the interest of at Britain. but 8ixo of far-reaching econowic impor- | tance to the Dutch colonies. Hence | Jolland's government concluded that ‘s international duty tolorganmization tending ‘to unify the| e part in the develoP-{Lytheran churches was suggested to j * world's air trafiic. H s Trinl Flight. April, Vanderhoop. a Dutch | Wwill make a trial flight from | to Batavia. a distance of following I Am-|suggest the plan’to various Lutheran | quences will follow. ! tLis for neariy six months now and) we are still waiting and expecting | | the worst. and the Netherlands relat-| r navigation. The writer ement, shortly. 1t} regarding | clal | iage p two points| “h air navigation in-| tigh 1 together with| which may be of great in view of the future de- international air traffic. PUBLISHERS FACING RUIN IN GERMANY § The entire has been i the result | | | Mo publishers | § andon reprints of Standard German s Bave decided to new editions o ; and the: ) &'Vith Authors for new pub- i<, many of which had been | 1 for the holiday season r agreed upon by pub- 1y novel, which used comethin® over two marks | Aling the 2,000,000 of scicntitic | d these ont ( s and public] CH. Bavaria August 23.— v's best_known comic weekly. liczende Blaetter, is threatened ! extinction as a result ‘of -the lificulties confronting pub- | Germany. With i scale of 1 compositors, of paper and continued losses | the publishing business itself operating on a excess of that prevailing | he W as 1 in Kn!fl] nad with thing ho pre-war j with Die Fllegende Blaetter| 1 was founded in 1841 and wiose - - cari have heen | picd the world over, a number of | medi 1d seientific | vurnals apparently also on ‘the | Tpin suspension. i i i . : ALLEGED THIEF ESCAPES. : WAYNESBORO. Miss., August 23.— | aynesboro, Ga., who | here from Augusta, | frars stealing automobiles, | wade cscape from the county | Me broke the lock on his cell and broke i hole through the jail wall: Sheriff | m Crosby offered a reward, for. s captare. i Hay Fever Tortures il Banished in 24 Hours||! i Relfef Positively Guar- | teed—Test FREE. After eight years' intensive ‘study study wi tory trea 000 & es— | atment for hay | as cen discovered. can be ne question of a || about this - marvelous new |’ treatmient. Of the 2.000 cases treat- || ed in the clinieal tests, 95 per cent ||| were completely Telieved — not in | ! weeks or days—but actually in -four hours! Almo: like | their fearfully* “runny” eves their distressful sneez- depressing _headaches, | | the Ciinic that these amazing results | will follow in practically every. case || | positively guarantee relief | -four hours, or the treat- | ment is free, 1 This new trealment is known as | Dr. Platt's RIN Prescription. It is cntirely different from any other treatment. No mere surfacc spray, ointment or inhalation which oniy | soothes surface - irritation.. No mere adache or fever remedy which only makes you temporarily forget your .~ No narcotics or habit-form- ugs—no bad after ffects, This. wonderful new {reatment in con-| venient capsule-form goes direct to || | the causc of hay ferver in your system—and removes it. The result elief in the short epace of twenty-four hours. ter how long you have had or how severely you have. INEX will banisk _every nptom—thia is positively anteed. The regular size packaze ¥ $1—to be.returned.in full does not do the work. But jusf . through a speclal introductory arrangement, you can obtain a trial treatment entirely FREE. . Simply go to any of the drug stores named below and ask for. a trial package of RIN. Take the pre- =cription for just one day—just TRY | IT. We KNOW it will do what-we 4 But here you can haye.FREB PROOF—if, you act at once. Don't. ay. Be sure to ask for your free pent within the next three | —this offer is limited. RINEX may be obtained in this c FPeoples Drug Stores (14 stor suffered the| might affect the morale of the tin Eizenach, Thurngia, to by’ Dr. school. Attorney Harry F. Kennedy rep- . |althoug {1ong as i gitions as it TO FORM UNION i L1 - “PHE ~EVENING ASSERTS BUSINESS FEARS UNFOUNDED Editor- Tells - Cotton. Men. Americans Do Not Tremble at Europe. By'the Associnted Press. MEMPHIS, Tenn.. Auguét 23.—Tak- .ing as his text the story of Timarous The' children are Anna M. Wils -Fand Mistrust in “Pligrin’s Progress.” | | Theodore H. Price, editor of Com-| and Finance, declared in an before the Cotton States | Merchants' Association here today e world today is full of men who “are running away from lions that are powerless to harm them, | h their roar is terrifying as they are invisible.” “In g0 far as our democratic con- are concerned our situation | scems to be about as nearly perfect ‘er befomes.” he declarod, but asserted that, despite this, “there is scernible throughout the country a of apprehension and a sub- . lity of confidence that is r By Wirelexs * n Ne nervat BERLIN, Aug straining enterprise and gradual ing the energy that ought to orld-wide | e devoted, to the production and re-| A world-widé ; | odquction of wealth." “As far as 1 can see,” he continued, is_attributable to the roaring of {he first Lutheran world convention | {he KEuropean lions, which we can pupers iear but annot see.” We read in th cach morning that a revol John Morehead. who formed thetion threatens in Germany: thi “American Mecrey” Relief Organiza- | Frange ters. He intends 1o cover ftion. A committee will be named to | HItagoRISM churches. it was stated. | There are delegates at the conven- and England arc in hopeles the occupation of and that the direst conse A4 with ) We have heard ; ‘STAR; "WASHINGTON, HEATED ARGUMENT MARKS FRAUD CASE Defense Athey in 0il Men’s . Trial Demands Opportunity to « Bhow Court Books. By the Associated Press. i PHILADELPHIA, August 23.—A apirited argument between opposing counsel yesterday enlivened the trial of Max W. Friedell of Marlon, frid, and two other former ofliclals of the Black Panther Ol Company, charged udulent ‘eonversion of more than $1,250400 .belonging to stock- helders. ancis T. Tobin, counsel for Frie- dell, president; Harry F. Lindley of Harrisburg, Pa, vice prestdent, and Reuben Douglass of this city, diree- tor of the defunct company, request- ed thet papers. books and documents in the possession of the receivers be produced for examination in court. Assistant District Attorney Lemuel B. Schofield protested. “Why prolong this trial by searching through that incomprehensible mass of matter?” he asked. The argument waxed warmer until Judge Barnett of the quarter | sessions court. Interposed, Tobin also demanded to examine a black bag which he said contained 31,600,000 in gilt-edge securities" and bolonged to Friedell. The prose- cuting attorney said the bag was in their possession by order of the court “nd would be produced “at the proper time.™ Former Judge Robert M. Van of Marion. Ind, one of the law s i defendants. questioned M. B. { Mis treasurer of the bankrupt e\ regarding a statement made | | D ‘G - THURSDAY; WATERSPOUT HURTS MANY NEAR GENOA Four Towns' Along B.iviétfl A 5" ~fected, Biildings Un- - i Toofed. By the Associated Press. 7 GENOA, August 23.—A huge water- spout burst upon the coast of the Genoese Riviera today, injuring nu- merous people and doing much dam- age. The principal places affected were Sestri, Pegli, Cornigliano ‘and San Pier d'Arena. . The storm lasted pearly af. hour at Pegli, where the Ansaldo Pig Iron Works were unroofed and several persons injured by falling tiles. At San Pier d'Arena thie damage to. the Ansaldo depot is estimated at 100,000 lire and various wounded were con- veyed to the hospitals. At one point a brick house was leveled to thel! ground. All the wooden houses at Cornigliano | were razed and for a half mile ulong the coust all bathing establishments and trees were swept away. | The electric power lines are down. It is belleved they cannot be restored on the eastern Riviera for several days und on the western side for a} wich longer time, in 1921. Prosecutor Schofield had at- tacked the statement as improper. Mishey admitted he had given the data for the statement to the ac- countants, but he said he had no per- sonal knowledge of many of the properties and tions, as he had from records furnished by i by expert accountants in New York | | which oceurre tion, from cightecn count repre “It_is mbout time for us to dis- senting nearly eighty million Luth cautions and fears of erans. s timorous and mistrust,” he said in | It was pointed out that Dr. More- | concluding his address, “und procecd : head's organization distributed $£2.-'to grasp with energy and firmness the ! 300,000 and 2,400 tons of clothing | opportunities that are ours. If we! after the war. The distribution was|do this and continue simply to put) made through local pa tnd con- one foot ahead of the other as we\| trol committe Ninety-six cents of | mount the hill of difficulty we shall dollar. it was said. reached |spcedily reach the summit and find needy Lutheran jourselves within the walls of the| In speaking about Germany today | “velestial *sooner than we ex- r orehe: id ! r than now seems ( be faced with priv- |} 1 4 ho persist in be- ! ations not much less acute than thoee | e pocimistic because the roar, of In Russih when the ! h¢ chained lions across the Atlantic was intense . Germany iS|j.s made the bells of American pros- th a food and fuel shortage. | perity for the time inaudible.” v -is without mone i QUESTION LOAN TERMS. e i Real Economy For the price of almost any new, single article of wear, you can have an entirely tiew outfit by using the expert dyeing, cleaning and repairing facilities of The Hoffman Company to rejuvenate last year's wardrobe. CALL MAIN 4724 TEST OREGQN SCHOOL ACT. | PORTLAND, Gre.. August 23. i stitutionality of the | 4 motio school —law.!of finance ral election last | explain in_the United { unc ed by 3 RUENOS Suit | chamber of deputies last night adopted | . i CLEANERS & DYERS 5 70 13th Sreet N.W. ATRES, August 3-—The n requesting that the minister ear before it Friday to the $60,000.000 loan the New York bankers | congress author => S>> > > > > Iso are ¢ 1ing 1§ Holy issue of not more than $150,100,000. —_— Tt Follow this simple, method and your floor will be beautiful and easy to keep clean. First remove all dust with the \Wizard Dust Mop, illustrated below. Then go over the dark spots with a rag saturated with Wizard -Cleaner. This removes-dirt and WzARD . The best mop in size, quality and service: After vears of use, you can trim it and still have a larger, bet- ter mop than the average new onc. Washing does not hurt its special chemical dry treat- ment, or its soft, absorbent qualities. Patent elbow joint, special padded metal frame, jumbo strands make it durable.ecasy and safe to handle. Three Sizes: $1.25 $2. $250 WIZARD - Floor Polisher The latest, most improved device for applying wax to a floor. Automatically adjusted to. hold 73 cloths of any thick- ness se- curely. No springs, brushes, or compli- cated mech- . anism. 3 o 4 Simple and durable. Special design permits of lightérP\L:eight iron. No stooping and back-breaking strain. For use on all kinds of floors, hardwood or soft-" wood, painted or varnished; also linoleum. $4, With 1-1b, Can Wizard Wax Included Housewares Section, Fifth fioor. MWoodward K Lothrop WIZARD Waxed Floors ~May Be Kept Like New With Little Effort and at Small Expense grease spots quickly and easil floor is then ready for Wizard Wax. The old way of applying wax was labo- rious and tiresome. But now, applied with ou will be de- the Wizard Floor Polisher. lighted to find how easy it is. Dust Mop” WEARD Wax Made in paste form from a special. South Amer- ican wax that preserves .the wood. Hard and. wear-resisting. Will not gather dust—easy to keep clean and lustrous. 11b., 75¢ A treniendous improvement over washing with soap and water—retains the original luster of the finish. Especially recommended in preparing floors to be waxed. It cleans them per- fectly. - Just the thing,.also, for cleaning. white wood- work, ivory furniture, and ...for removing ink spots, - . stains, etc. Easily applied with a rag, and cleans quickly. : You will find this a great help. In full pintiand quart ° cans. Pints, 75¢ 2 Ibs., $1.40 WIZARD Cleaner Quarts, $1.25 AUGUST- 23,1938 Woodmard & Lothrop DOWN STAIRS STORE Friday is Remnant Day Remnant Merchandise Is Not Returnable or Exchangeable; Not Sent C. O. D. or On Approval; Mail or Phone Orders Not Accepted 5750 Knife-Pleated Skirts, Now 3.75 12 Crepe de chine and spiral crepe skirts, beautiful pleated models in white and tan Skirts, $2.50 Were Much Higher 16 Eponge and Crepe de Chine Skirts, in pleated and plain styles. Very special. Skirts, $2; Were $4 16 Krinkle Crepe, Spiral Crepe and Satin Skirts, gray, tan and white, in pleated and plain styles. Capes Reduced to $8 5 Canton Capes. all crepe lined, in tan 1 Jaspercttc Cape, crepe lined. $8; much higher. . Poiret Twill Coats, $10 8. with braid-trimmed collars and cuffs: all satin de cygne-lined; in navy only Crepe de Chine and Fiber Dresses, Now $5 16 Crepe de Chine and Combination Fiber and Crepe de Chine Dresscs, in the very popular prints; contrasting collars and cuffs on some. Voile Dresses Now $2 17 Checked Gingham and Printed and Plain Voile Dresses, trimmed with braid and or- gandy. A very good value. Trico Frocks, Now $10 25 Black and Navy Trico Straight-line Frock Plain and Moire. Special, $10. DOWN STAIRS STORE Men’s Silk Shirts, $2 10, seconds of $3 grade. Brown Striped Silk Shirts. Very good value. Broken sizes. 40 Men's Wool Bathing Suits, $2; were $2.95. High-grade, All-wool Bathing Suits, perfect, but broken sizes. 8 English Broadcloth Shirts, $2; were $2.65. White, with collar attached, in broken sizes Mostly perfect. A 15 pairs Men's Socks, 15c; were 25c. \White or Palm Beach shade. Broken sizes. 30 Ties, 10c. Clearance of shghtly damaged ties, knit and cut silks. i DOWN STAIRS STORE Sleeveless Sweaters, $1 29 Light-weight Summer Sweaters, very low priced. In seasonable colors. Slip-Ons Now 75c 15 Plain Color Summer Slip-ons, in popular colors. Dimity Blouses, 75¢ 25 Dimity Blouses, daintily tailored, with neat little collar and cuffs. DOWN STAIRS STORE Summer Hats .~ Now 75‘c' Just 11_Summer Hats in clearance. so you will realize the necessity of sclecting " Fall Hats, 53.95 Beautiful Velvet Hats, with cher hroid- ery in this Fall's new and wanted colors Many smartly trimmed with ch DOWN STAIRS STORE nd wool Gowns, 50c; were 51 14_Muslin Gowns, with contrasting trimming pairs Muslin Bloomers, 50c pair; were $1; flesh only Blcomers and Corset Covers, 38¢c 30 Nainsook Bloomers, fl olor. Corset Covers in white, broken s . Porto Ric Gowns and Chemise, $1.68; were much higher. 4 Philippine Go . $§2 each; were $2.95. DOWN STATRS STOR® Double Size Bedspreads, Yz Less 15 Satin-finish Bedspreads of fine quality in double-bed size: slightly soiled. Were $3.65 and $3.95. Now $2.43 and $2.63. 100 Fancy Turkish Towels, whitc with pink stripe and borders, and pink with self color stripe. 25c; were 40c. 96 Damask Napkins, 10c each. Figured mercerized napkins, hemmed, ready for use; specially priced. Size 18x18. 225 short lengths Wash Dress Goods at reductions of '; to ; from prices. In the | an Crepes, Voiles, Perc: d Creton 38 inches Batiste, i DOWN STAIRS STORE Women’s Silk Hose, 25¢ 20 pairs Black. White and Brown Thread Silk Hose, broken sizes; irregulars were much more. Chiffon Hose, §1; were $1.50. 25 pairs in black. Perfect, but broken sizes. Cotton Hose, 15c. 43 pairs women’s cotton hese. Per- fect, but broken sizes. DOWN STAIRS STORE shades. 50 Corsets, Special, $1 Light-weight Corsets—lightly boned and medium length models in sizes 21 to 28. 15 Girdles, $1.68. Broche and elastic girdles lightly boned and fine pink broche with section of elastic. Made to fit and give comfort. 150 Bandeaux, 58c, special. Good quality pink satin, in regulation model with back fastening. 20 Brassieres, 68c; were $1. Pink treco in two different models. Long line or bandeaux style. Sizes range from 36 to 44, DOWN STAIRS STORE Voile Porch Frocks, 75¢ Reduced from $1.35 100 Voile Dre Broken 50 Heuse Dresses, S1 cach; were much more. Voilc, dotted Swiss and batiste. DOWN STAIRS STORE Glove Silk Vests, $1.25 20; in white, flesh and or- c irreguiar. 10 Glove Silk Bloomers, $1; were $1.95. Brown and mode. Small sizes o in light sizes Petticoats, 75c; were $1.50. Petticoats, $1.95; were $2.95. Petticoats, $1; were $1.95. DOWN STAIRS STORE Girls’ Voile Dresses Reduced to 75¢ These 18 voile dresses in odd sizes only. 19 Girls’ Ponges Dresses, $2.50; were $5. Fancy embroidered; in sizes of 6 to 12 years 73 Voile Dresses, $1.50; were $2.95. \ery attractive patterns, sizes 6 to 14 years. these dresses are good as school dresses 20 Boys’ Khaki Pants, 75c. l'ull-cut pants in small sizes. 60 Children’s Rompers and Creepers, 50c; were 88c. In very attractive colors. Sizes 2 to 6 years DOWN AIRS STORE Shoes at Low Remnant Prices Children’s . Canvas Footwear, 55c 50 prs. Black and White Canvas One- strap Pumps, broken sizes from 9 to 2. 25 prs. White Canvas Oxfords, broken sizes 9 to 1. Women’s Canvas Pumps 25¢ Pair 25 prs. White Canvas-One-strap Pumps— and some high shoes in broken size range. White Canvas Pumps, $1.65 Pr. 65 prs. Women’s One-strap Pumps, with Cuban heels. Sizes 3 to 7. 50 prs. Strap and Button Boots, of white canvas ; small sizes. 55¢c pr. Men’s White Canvas Oxfords, $1 10 prs. in broken sizes 5.to 10. DOWN STAIRS STORE August Sale Winter Coats 528 338 %48 %60 80 *100 While shopping here tomorrow stop to see the special selling of ‘New Winter Coats, at prices ' much less than when the season opens. Beautiful, fashion- able models of rich pile fabrics, the majority handsomely trimmed with fur. All silk lined throughout. Buy now and you will save much on Jour planned Fall wardrobe expenditure. Models for women and misses. DOWN STAIRS STORE

Other pages from this issue: