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(R srelieve Stomach Gas uickly Stomach gasmeans stomach trouble. JAQ'JES%APSULES break up the gas and restore the normal diges- tion. One or two with a swallow of water give quick relief. Contain only pure, safe, effective medi- m«l o‘l) :fled value. Ea e. ly 60c at druggists JAQUES CAPSULE cé')i. PLATTSBURG V ™ Will Furnish A Complete Modern Funeral Private Ambulan: equipped rolling cot. Local calls only $4. Casket Hearse Burial Case Attend AU Fall Maniets. Sore Throat Wl;uom Torelieve Sore Throat you must getar theseat of the disease, counterdcting ti; cause. TONSILINE is prepared and soi for that one purpose. A dose of TONSI LINE taken upon the first appearance of Sore Throat may save long days of sickness. Use a little Sore Throat wis- dom and buy a bottle of TONSILINE DOLLINGS OFFICIALS CONVICTED OF FRAUD President and Vice President Found Guilty on 11 Counts, Each Carrying 5-Year Term. !ncn SECOND © INDICTMENT Conspiracy Charges (Jnrrly 2-Year Sentence. By the Associated Press, COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 7.—Wil- liam G. Benham and Dwight L. Har- rison, president and vice president Company of Ohio, last night were found gullty by a federal jury here on charges of using the mails to de- fraud in connection with stock sales of the company. The indictment on which Harrison and Benham were convicted contained eleven counts, each of which carries a sentence of five years, Defense at- torneys filed a motlon for a new trial | which will be heard next Monday. | Benham and Harrison face an- jother federal indictment of conspiracy to defraud, which carries a two-year sentence if conviction is secured. Harrison has also been convicted in common pléas court of making false representations in connection with sale of stock in the Phoenix Portland Cement Company of Ohio and sentenced to two years in prison and fined $5,000. The present case has been on trial eight weeks, A y- three Dollings in Indidna and P | respectively of the R. L. ' Dollings | Knee-Length Suit For Bathers and Athletes Favored By the Associated Press. JACKSON, Miss, March 7.—The committee on public health and quarantine of the Misslissippl house of representatives' has re- ported favorably the Jordan bill ‘ to regulate bathing sults and ath- letic suits, requiring that such at- tire must reach thw knees and sleeves that reach the elbows. FRENCH SMOKERS BUY STOCKS MONTHS AHEAD Cheaper Brands Disappear From Market in Heavy Buying to Avert Proposed Tax. By the Associated Press. PARIS, March f.—The cheaper brands of tobacco have nearly dis- appeared from the market in France. Smokers in view of threatened in- creases in price have bought up all the packets of their favorite kinds they can lay hands on. When the increase on which parlia- ment now is debating becomes a law it is expteced to bring little money to the treasury for months, since smokers will be stocked up. - it lFINDS ART IN EUROPE | RETURNING TO SANITY Carnegje Institute Official Reports Big Schedule From Abroad for International Exhibition. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, Mgrch 7.—European art- is returning to strength and sanity even more rapidly than Euro- CZAR’S SECRET AGENT REVEALED AT TRIAL Soviet Judge Startles Courtroom by Accusation Against Chief Prosecution Witness. By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, March 7.—A sudden charge of esplonage against one of the Chief witnesses for the prosecution electrified the courtroom yesterday at the trial of Alexander Krasnotchekoft, former Chi- cago lawyer, accused of misusing the funds of the Commercial and Industrial Bank, of which he was chairman. Judge Soltz, presiding, branded the witness, an engineer named Fisher, as a former agent of the czar’s secret police, who had been ordered to leave Russia by the control commission of the communist party. Fisher was testifying when Judge Soltz, who headed the commission which ordered him to leave Russia, interrupt- ed with: “Your voice is familiar; where did_you come from?” Fisher replied that he came from America in 1921, and was almost {m- mediately ordered to leave Russia. “Why didn't you' go?” asked the Judge. Fisher replicd that the political police told him he might remain, and he stayed, working all the while in gov- ernment bffices, «Counsel for the defense demanded that Fisher's evidence be thrown out, contending he was a prevaricator, but M. Krylenko, the prosecuting attorney, protested and the testimony was al- lowed to stand. BRITISH DRY PACT 0. K. EXPECTED ANY DAY Ratification of Twelve-Mile Treaty U. S, STEEL REFUTES RATE CUT TESTIMONY Corporation Counsel Says Witnesses Misrepresented Its Views on Freight Charges to Coast. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 7.—Counsel for the United States Steel Corporation | yesterday refuted before the Inter- state Commerce Commission the testi- mony of previous witnesses that the | corporation favored a reduction of ! rail freight rates to the Pacific in competition with water rates via the Panama canal, C. S. Belsterling, attorney for United States Steel, specifically at- tacked the testimony of Robert Hula, who_appeared last Monday in behalf of the Chicago Association of Com- merce and Several jron and steel in- dustries in the Chicago district and argued for the rail rate reduction, Another witness to attack the tes- ! timony of the Chicagoans was John Coakley of the American Steel and Wire Company. H. L. Holdren de- clared for the American Institution of Steel Construction that if rates were made on rail shipments from Chicago westward his company would expect . reductions in rates from its manufac- turing centers in the enst to Atlantic Bruises— The throb- bing ache of a bad bruise is a warning that delicate THE EVENING ~STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1924, 21 seaports as well as In water rates| YN|JFORMITY OF TRADE . via Panama. J. B. Bryan, trafiic manager for large Wisconsin pulp and paper in- terests, favored the transcontinenta) rail rate. Luckenbach Steamshi Company officfals objected t5 his tes- timony, however, and the Interstat Commerce Commission sustained th objection on the ground that it was argumentative and prejudiced. New England pulp and paper men previ- ously testifled that Wisconsin com- petiiors would have the Pacific coast business all to themselves If the re- duced rall rate were authorized. ———— Growers of the dasheen, a new po- tato-like vegetable, have organized in Florida to develop a market for their produst before the industfy has be- come Tully established on a production basis itseif. LAWS GOAL OF LAWYERS Arbitration Treaties Between U. §. and South America Favored by Bar Association Committee. o o By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, March 7.—Arbitration treaties between the United States and South America to obtain uni- formity of the mercantile law of mittee on commerce, trade and com- mercial law of the American Bar As- soclation. North and South Amerlca were urged | in resolutions approved by the com- | SAVE THE TROUBLE OF COFFEE MAKING-USE Sitymglons Goffee IT IS MADE ..'JUST DISSQLVE ~AND DRINK IT. ‘A GREAT CONVENIENCE AND OH, SO GOOD! Address Communications to Pres., 2325 18th N.W., Phone Col. 9855 ] DistriciGroc Real Economy Made Practical - At Every DGS Store GIRL BANDIT AT WORK AS POLICE DRILL NEARBY Holds Up Drug Store Across Street From Armory Where Reserves Are Training. today. You may need it tomorrow TONSILINE is the National Sore Throat Remedy — best kmown and most effective and most used. Look for the long necked fellow on the bottle when Boeg to the drug store to get it. e AN~ n Qizn 3100 /\ Aoy ,. \ up Samuel Weiss ners in his drug store NOOR | (s gt e uead | Colds Without Any Opposition Pre- dicted in London. By the Assoclated Press, LONDON, March fibres have been injured pean social conditions. Homer Samt Gaudens, director of fine arts at the Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, de- iclared_vesterday on his return on the liner Berengaria from a two months' tour abroad. On the trip he arranged for European representation in the iinstitute’s international exhibition, s late in April. Sloan’s Liniment sends straight to them the increased blood supply they need to repair them, reliev- ing the pain, clearing up the con- —Ratitication of ‘American liquor treaty by | sh parliament fis expceted | ny day by American officials here, | who have been keeping in close touch with the rum-running question. As soon as the budget is disposed »f the liquor pact will be placed by STRICTLY FRESH gestion. Get a bottle from your ore the house of comm: , druggist today—35 cents. ¢ , serious opposition to its el Snctanatd 1o whole v | . CHOICE POT ROAST, FRESH HAMS, GOLD BAG COFFEE, GOLD BAND BUTTER, JUICY GRAPEFRUIT, 4 for FANCY ORANGES, Doz., 25 EATING APPLES, 4 Ibs., 25 WAGNER’S STRINGLESS BEANS, Can, 15¢ TUNA FISH — Small, 30c 30 American paintings . 270 by Europeans will be in the ex- By the Associated Press = . ihibition. said, Two of the judges. March 7.—While 150 {5 J. Munnings, an English painter. re reserves drilled jand “Albert Bernard, director of the 1e des Beaux Arts of France, also arrived on the Berengaria. The other two judges, Rockwell Kent and Emil Carlson, are Americans, T T B A T T T U A U U T S B IO J B HARRY I AUFM 1316 to 1326 7th St. N.W. 16-Button-Length SILK GLOVES...... 85° New spring colors, all the mewest shades of gray, beige, mode, mauve, white and black. Sizes 6 to 833, All perfect. _Garments of Standard Worth and /Sterling Value! 7 Choice of the House! Every SUIT & O°COAT 1/2om {2920 Suits and Overcoats . .$10.00 £$25 Suits and Overcoats. .$12.50 $30 Suits and Overcoats. .§15.00 $35 Suits and Overcoats. .$17.50 $40 Suits and Overcoats. . . .$20.00 $50 Suits and Overcoats. ........5$25.00 1t's the greatest sale in town, and you will be convinced when you see them. Imagine! You get your unrestricted choice of any suit or overcoat in the house at % price. The original price tags are on all garments; just pay %. We invite every thrifty buyer to look these values over. Sizes in suits for young men, conservative men, stout, short and tall men, 32 to 50, and in overcoats 32 to 48, and no charge for alterations. Early Marcle Clean-Up Sale of Men’s $5.00, 19¢ 20 30 63 25 7 d handsome _male [ Perfect Flos Silk Hose 48¢ Black, grav. beige astioned o followed the re- of Miss Helen cqn held as the She was Te- | e by John Doden- | d she had held | s active Tuesday | a restaurant in : nother fect Brooklyn. She has been much in the limelight for v st two months, most of her ex- ing on Saturday nights. Loty i FIVE SAILORS ARRESTED, | $50,000 DRUGS SEIZED| { Federal Agen_t Gnins;onfldence ofi Seamen After Arranging $4,000 Narcotic Purchase. © k. me makes: tops: ali 5.ze all new colors. New Spring Corset WRAP AROUNDS. ... Several models, all well made, and garters attached. sizes. This will be the most-worn model for spring. An i By the Assocuted Pro ¢ D " YORK, March | valued at $£50.000 were seized, and five scamen from the steamship Goth- | | land were arrested by federal agents lower West Side barber shop | 7.—Narcotic 4 agents was said to have nfidence of the seamen for the delivery of th of the contraband. { were delivered in the total amount car- \e prisoners was worth | ordinary retail prices, the § Read the N LABEL BEANS that are not baked are not labeled baked beans. Heinz Baked ‘Beans have ‘“Heinz BAKEDP Beans” on the label. They are baked. That’s the rea- son for their wonderfully sweet flavor. That’s the secret of their unbroken jackets, their mealy centers, ease of digestion and body-building nutriment. There are four kinds of HEINZ BAKED BEANS Baked Beans with Pork and Tomato Sauce.,Baked Beans without Tomato Sauce, with Pork (Boston Style). Baked Beans in Tomato Sauce without meat (Vegetarian). Baked Red Kidney Beans. OVEN-BAKED BEANS 0'-9‘5, Uit seeee 25¢ Men's SOCKS Seconds of 25c grade; aud colors; all sizes. 12Vpc black Boys’ and Girls’ $6.00 and $7.00 High Shoes Low and » pairs of Men's Button and Lace Shoes. Patents, tans, nd kidskins. English and biucher styles. Sizes 6 to 11. 8 pairs of Low Sh blacks and patents. Sizes 6 to 10. All Goodyear well 3 You'll Be Pleasantly Surprised at Our Enormous Values in pring Coats and Dresses: 100 Sample $5.95 $S Hardly two hats alike; a wonderful selection of excep- tionally made mod- els; elaborately or tailored trimmed. All colors. ‘ Choice of the better grade of Doys' Shoes. _All solid Ieather. English and biucher lace. Sizes 11 to 2 and 23, to 6, Balaice of Ml and Children's High Shi 4 to lack and nding growing girls' size to 8. s Unusu Horseradish and Chow All Pork THE COATS are all full lined of beau- tiful plaids, stripes and fine plain col- ors. The styles are all the most de- sirable and embrace a selection of 18 models. All sizes for misses or women. THE DRESSES are handsome crea- tions, in fine satin-faced cantons, canton crepes and flat silk crepes. All sizes and 25 models. BEARDSLEY’S CODFISH, Pkg., 1 to Fry NORWAY MACKEREL, 2 for 25 23 QUAKER OATS, Pkg., KELLOGG BRAN, Pkg., 20 25 KARO SYRUP, Can, RITTER’S KETCHUP, 2 Bottles 25 20 KRUMM'S 858, qulivy TROCO for butter 29 Chas. Schneider Baking Co.’s Cakes and Crullers LOAF Your Own Kitchen Made Clean Sold Clean CARPEL'S B po Jos. LOFFLER’S FOUNTAIN BRAND PORK PRODUCTS H AMS 100% PURE 3 Learn the Fountain Difference “The Prize Bread and Pastry 5 Lbs., zsc NOT BLEACHED 12 Lbs., 55¢ CORBY’S SILVER CAKE GORTON’S *+» CODFISH CAKES, Can, 14c - CREAM OF WHEAT, Pkg., 10c POST TOASTIES, 3 Pkgs., . 10¢ EAGLE BRAND MILK, Can, Soachet 3 Pkgs., 25¢ Bl The most desirable substilut-e B oo SMALL PULLMAN Jorivs ORIGINAL v SAUSAGE, 35 Flour of the World” Corby Goodness in It That Makes It More Popular Each Day