Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1924, Page 12

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Gl . 'AUGHTERS OF 1812 | QUIET VOTE PROMISED. | COUNTRY HOME LOOTED. RE_ELEBT OFHCERsfflynnsvi‘:le Primary Campaign Liquor Valued at $40,000 Taken | Postporre Case Here Until Court ln:Beported to Have Ended Everglade| and business in s Of that coun- | Amsterdam having fifteen German Marked by Little Rivalry. :5. R. €. Maxwell and Mrs. F. W. Mille;av to Hold Places Lnother Term. n! YTHER POSTS TO BE FILLED:L}KIMK “cview (. Immigration Problems | Given,_ Convention. held the iate DIRIGIBLE TC-3 SAFE; | STORM STOPS FLIGHT o EAirsl'up Had Started From IIlinois; to Keliy Field at San An- | tonio, Texas. ! rry Slade of New tates Army non h left he night World Court. = -— in th mest for 3 our Sprini Vacation t thern A nt and the rnational RECEIVER IS ASKED FOR HOUSE OF DAVID Petition by State of Michigan Charges Fraud in Cor- poration Change. $2.50 to $15.00 Beads, $10 to $35 (Mr. Foster's Shop.) One door fro 14th Street On° ooy from Alxo 1220 Pa. Ave. sousht Atutory e brought by two' s members of the colony. TRUE i DETECTIVE YSTERIES Hours of Intense Excitement With Famous Detectives You will enjoy True Detective M all newsstands ........ . “Dead Men Tell No Tales” by Bernard Levy, formerly of the U. S. Sceret Service “Blackmail” —by Lieutenant Martin Regan, president of the Homnor Legion ofe the New York Police Departmeat, “The Cleveland House Mystery” by Detective John J. Keely of the St. Louis Detective Force, Actual Experience of Famous Detectives Most of the stories in Macfadden'™ True Detective Mysteries are written by or under the supervision of famous detectives and promi- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23 1924 DEFER LANGLEY TRIAL. { RAINS QUENCH FIRES. Taemuy’, Marks Well Distributed | to establish banks for handling | capital transferred to Holland. 1t i Since the mark has beon 5o ridicu- | StFICtly German business. In the | estimatel that Germans ha | lously low in any, capitalists | Netherlands especially is this true, | away” nearly a billion and 2 half doie lars or that equivalent in the Crilt try have invaded many forcign citics banks investing or managing German | States, & Co Rt From House. Kentucky Acts. Blazes. N. J, April 3.—Seven| The trial here of Representative, MIAMI, Fla., April 23.—Early re- night held up the Jopa-|John W. Langley of Kentucky, on ! ports today in the country home of | charges of comspiracy in connection |rains Untermeyer, New York |with liquor withdrawals will be post- | q ber. five mjles poned until after conclusion of his!r: for many days in d loaded $40,000 | trial in Kentucky on a similar charge. | of the Mvergludes immediately and vedan automoriier s °" ®|Next Monday had been set as the trial | of Miami The truck ran out of gasoline and |date, but the Kentucky hearing since| The airplane which | been postpoi ¢ 6, from Mi. 1 on bot 1 Special coach lunch service at little cost . The Manhattan Meaning of “the net gets the wear and the clothes get the wash” It has a very important mean- ing—with its two purposes. The different classes of Clothes — comprising your “wash” are carefully assorted—each into its separate net—but only your Clothes in these nets—not a mixture of everybody’s. Then these nets go into the washing —protecting the clothes while they are spotlessly cleansed. Day coach passengers can enjoy a light luncheon without leaving their seats, on all Baltimore & Ohio trains equipped with Dining Cars. To those who do not care to utilize the regular Dining Car Service. fresh sandwiches, milk, tea or steaming hot coffee and ice cream are served in day coaches from the Dining Car. Reasonable prices. Going To California? The Travel Bureau in the Such results—with no damage Woodward Ruilding. 15t} - . & H Streets. N. W, will to the fabrics or colors —are Sadly hely von bl i il i i every detail of your trip m’lpoulble in home laundering. cvciyder o et It's the Manhattan way—that duced fares. and stopovers produces Manhattan satisfac- to hotels and itinerary tion. Telephone: Main 5771 . WALTER V. SHIPLEY Ass't. Gen. The sandwiches are individually wrapped in wax puper The beverages are served in ganitary containers. ' The Line of the Capitol Limited 1216 F St. N.W. AreYouMakingthe Mostof Your Clothes Allowance? Whether vour income is 30c or $3,000. the economists have worked out certain fairly definite proportions for the spending thereof and have named the sum of those percentages “BUDG ' With an ever-increasing number of women it has become a very practical fashion to budget their income. If you'd like to know how to budget vours—what to pay for clothes and what to pay for coal, so to speak—write to— “Madame Budget,” Care Advertising Dept. Meanwhile here are a very few practical hints— Phone us — Main 3954 — and test our Service. You’'ll appreciate the difference Manhattan Laundry Service Co. Plant, 1346 Florida Avenue—Phone North 3954 Branch Office, 2506 14th St.—Phone Col. 5596 I == o] —— o] —= o] ———— b ——alo] c—aa] =0} Garter “run” pro- tection for men— Gold Stripe Silk Sox, $1.50 pair. It's Time to Store Furs Phone Main 725 The Home Is The Advertisement Ever Written! to your pers not extreme eith unusually fine illustration o is the navy blue twill su long roll revers are alm hecoming and i smart this year and next The Coat Is Important It's quite possible. too, to combine in one handsome garment a coat ior both general wear and for dress—a means of reducing the budger that is increasingly popular since stores are showing dress coats made in such stunning sport fab- rics. Pictured is a beautiful coat of soft tan Pompom Flamingo with collar of cocoa dyed squirrel, $110. OUR home is your own personal advertisement. And you write it your- : self! It is the expression, not only of yourgood taste, but of your conception of life itself. All who enter your door instantly read this most important of all advertise- ments. The message is Two Smart Frocks The Three-Piece Suit Pictured —perennially smart since its first public. Other Thrilling Mysteries in the May Issue “The Crentare That Walks Up- side Down.” Suppose that you o to find the corpse of a nger in your bed and human Your bedroom ceil- reepy horror of this - he life of & business man wil send ci up and down your spine. Not a bedtime story. “Mark Twain’s Burglar” The bing e why he did it, how e did it— of his ure with the goods and of the screamingly amusing act of Twain in connection with, nent police officials about actual cases they have handled or have had the exceptional opportunity to observe. Already the co-operation of many noted detectives nnd the police departments of two of our greatest cities have been secured. great sleuthx znd police departments are being made. Never was such a fund of wenderful detective material made available to the Similar arrangements with other “The Quest of Shadows.” In his account of the sensational expose of two of the most auda- cious spiritualistic’ fakes that ever hoodwinked a credulous public, Samri Frikell gives you a series of eerie thrills that will stand your hair on end. Other Features Are: “Flat-foot Billings,” by Ellis Parker BDutler. “How Yom Are Being Pro- tected.” y “Who Killed Beautiful Louise Lawson?” “The Woman in Black.” Out of the Underworld.,” “Who Shot Earl Brandon?” “How I Would Have Handled the Dorothy Arnold Case.” “Revelations of the Qucen of the Bootleggers.” “Framed for Divorce.” A Macfadde.n Publication ; True Detective Mysteries May Issue Now on Sale 25¢ DISTRICT NEWS COMPANY 80S Eye Street N.W. | Distributors clear, the impression permanent. The Romance of Furniture Quality furniture, alone, serves the purpose. It is the . only kind we sell, and you may buy it, very often, for no more than you are asked for inferior furniture. FOLDING Butterfly tableswereoriginally made of pine and are of early American le——"lol——n]ole—|o]——c———|n[== inception because it is as a rule becoming to the woman who shuns the more severe lines of the tailored suit—because it is con- veniently for so many oc- ms whe its tailored sister not so correctly go. This sea- practical, for therr smart seven- eighths coats can be worn with perfect assurance over the love- liest of spring frocks. Sketched, three-picce costume of navy!blue charmeen whose long tunic over- blouse is of brocaded chiffon with a stunning touch of red. Price, $78.50. —cither one of them will fit ac- ceptably into most any woman's wardrobe. The lines are quite sure to become—and while they could never be ‘“presented at court” either one would grace most any other social occasion. The draped irock with slit sleeves is developed in block brocaded crepe; price, $45.00; for the other, Alice blue crepe de chine'is finely pleated in straight unbroken lines from cream lace yoke to hem, price, $35.00. / * Three Budget Groups of Universal Interest Coats—Suits—Dresses—$38 Each Beautiful dresses in the most fashionable silks—gecorgette crepe, crepe de chine, satin, crepe Elizabeth, Roshanara and flat crepes. Some beaded or effectively combined with with lace, others drapéd or pleated edges breasted ¢ or smartly tailored. Love! color, individual in style 36 to 4. Tailored Suits in great va- riety—Men’s wear checks, pen- ine stripes; plain or line-plaided twills; jackets in short box or longer styles, braid-bound cil and hai: ik double- losings. Navy, blue, lighter assortmeént to solve many a Stunning Coats in dress, sport and mannish modes— brilliant or conservative in col- or, rich in fabric—fine twills, soft sport coatings and smart mixtures—distinctive in style and variety of trimming—an budget problem.

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