Evening Star Newspaper, April 8, 1925, Page 12

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8. 1925. P e TR ing Government agency about which |part in the greatest relief drive in |organization that delivers the goods!” |reply came, sullenly, “Breaking this ErrrEEEx ExEEEETEEEEE YO] AND l [NCLE S q M the people of this country and their |all the history of the world. Dr. William Mather Lewls bresl-|rock.” The second in b grsime g o FRIEND- OF-LINCOLN DIES. i h . . very | dent of George Washington Univer- 2 el o < :slg bors throughout the world| ‘It was on April 6 1917, the’very|dSnt of Ceoree Washingion COMiCla [auestion sald, “Working for my bread |y oty woman Wrote Extensivel I H A Y E R now more than about almost any|day this nation entered the World |representatives from the Eastern|and butter.” The third one answered, 5 '5 4 Ed ! other branch of Government work.|War, that President Wilson sent out|area at Red Cross national headquar- | “We are building a great cathedral.” on Emancipator’s Life. PRODUCER OF THE BEST eries o ucational Articles Tellin, y Sovern- Individually, as well as collectively, ters: “We are engaged in a great| Three men with the same business, f Education s Telling How Federal Govern : civa. M miaage” smonasaing | 1o 2 8ro STERESdn & ETeAC | Thege men with i see staett| weoowrimin, x. 2. s 1-wee |§ PRINTING ment is Organized and How It Functions—Written they have put their hearts into this American Red Cross, Incorporated by |y, , of the Ameri cople, Just as hand with it 4 with | Caroline Gehrmann, 74 years old, wh —_— S B work, with a sincere spirit of co-|Congress, as the official volunteer aid | fare © Sricun peopiey e h: its monotony &nd ‘wit Sl el A | T Small Work Exclasively Expressly. for School Children. operation to bring the largest meas- |organization of the United States,|Sssential as a shoestore, a bank or |weariness; the second, thinking only | claimed to be one of the few remain- ' — T i (Ao A haMant I oomsn. ixder thelpmmfactibn: agihe| S0y adier oreanlatiol AN e R RO RsCAR Kot Out of the oDk, Dt e persons” who Bad'x cloxé ac-|§ main'1816 909 12w smmeer ! No. 47. Official A 3 = 5 space of time to the largest number |treaty of Geneva and ‘has received |WOmern Yve foselanmee "‘eh‘;""' ik gl ‘Viston! e the completed | quaintance with Abraham Lincoln, | [ 0. 47—O0ur cial Agency to Aid the Suffering. of needy. | ety cognition from all forelgn gov- | Welfare must have an essential place. | structure and glorying in the part, no | died early yesterday at here home here. || HOWARD S. FISK, MANAGER ] e = 1|” One o the late President Wilson's | ernments, so that its status both at|YoU 89 {9 thepeople’af thls copntry | matter how, humble, that He took in| Mrs. Gehrmann came, in 1894, from gl i hen the ltile i 2 oS mostages was 1n plactag |home- and abroad had been definitely |88 the highest type of investment|feshioning it. And so the American|springfield, 1ll, where she said she R EErais o litle Nome that hard-|as the official and efficient agency of |our relief work during the World |determined and assured even before | S3lesmen: offering to the American people are assisting, each his share,|)ived as a nelghbor to Lincoln when 2 toiling people have spent a lifetime | the United States Government. War, co-ordinated and concentrated, | this country through its potent aid people the best investment they can lr‘: rearing a great cathedral of serv-| he was spending his lelsure studying| === in making is swept away by flood| If there Is one tning in our life, |under one organization that it might entered into the cause of the allles. | make. 'l"';v,‘ '-;‘:"fldm of relief, whose beau-|]aw. She related to many .visitors den man to man, that makes all the|be made the most thoroughly ef-| President Wilson sald, “It” serves| In this connection he told the fol- l“ l"““"“ in war and in peace in- | how she often visited the Lincoln ro 112,000,000 people of this country kin | cient. On February 2, 1917, when|so noble and beneficent a purpose [lowing little story as showing the | SPire all peoples. home, with the result that a friend- | TOOTH PASTE ing, when pestilence is rampant,|with all the world besides, It is in|war seemed inevitable, in the inter- |that it must appeal to all who love | consciousness of the American peo- (Copyright, 1925, by Will P. Kennedy.) ship developed which President Lin-| when armies in the field need the|human sympathy for the unfortu-|ests of preparedness, the Washington | their country and who love human- ple that they are co-operating in a coln maintained after he went to| For Germ-Free (ender touch of womankind, the |nate, for those suffering from the |headquarters of the Red Cross sent | ity.” great work through the American| The forty-eighth article in this| Washington. Mrs. Gehrmann wrote Cleanliness matioan Hed Cross ia always on | scourge of famine, pestilence, fire,|a telegram to 267 chapters. and| In times of calamity and catastro | Red Cross: A pedestrian came upon | series will be on “Bullding Roads to|many newspaper and magazine arti- {he Job. bringing the voluntecr relief | flood or warfare. In this way the [ within 90 days each and every one|phe the siogan is, “Give the right of|three men cutting stone He asked |Make Us All Neighbors.” It will be|cles on incidents of Lincoln's life contributed by the American people ! American Red Cross is an outstand- | was thoroughly ready to bear its|way to the Red Cross, for it is the|the first, “What are you doing?" The | printed in this paper next Sunday. and character. i fl_—___—_—_—————————-————__—_—_______—_____—__‘._———.—— I--I.IIII.-IIfl...-.--.-I..IIIIIl.--..--I.I-III...l..-Il-.-..-..--.'.--....-.-....---I-l-.lIIIIIII..IIII ' For the Convenience of Early Shoppers ’ : : ; _ Men’s Shop Opens Thursday at 8 A.M. % MMS R@% Estra Selling Space and ' : : Extra Clerks for Quick Service Buy Them on Your Way to Business | g & 1 ss. Service and Courtesy Established 1877 l ‘ ‘Our Annual Sale of Men’s Shirts Starts Tomorrow Morning at 8 AM. or tornado, when children are starv- IIIIIIIIII.IIIII-IIIIIHHIIIIIflllIIl.llllll.I.' Colors Guaranteed Absolutely Fast Sizes 1315 to 18 Every Shirt in This Lot Is F ull Cut in the Lot _ The Workmfznship Is of the Best / ‘ Shssesdinngihs Buttons Securely Sewed On 6 for $ 9 33, 34 and 35 Pre-Shrunk Neckbands Included in This Sale Are: 3,600 Genuiné Imported English Broadcloth Shirts —of unusual quality. Neckband and _collar-attached models. High lustrous, durable quality. Plain colors, White, blue and gray. 120 Genuine Siosette Shirts, with collars attached. v360 Amory Browne Ardsley Woven Madras Shirts, in 480 Genuine Lorraine White Madras Shirts. This is the Rt mesn siipes. T vpeeel finest quality of white madras. Neckband model. 480 Genuine Lorraine Woven Madras, in exclusive 120 Genuine Imported Balloon Cloth. Neckband and patterns. 7 - collar-attached models. 300 Flantex Shirts, with collars attached. 120 Genuine Burton’s Irish Poplins. Neckband and collar-attached models. 300 Novelty Shirts, with laundered collars to match. 300 All-over Rayon Shirts, in plain colors and stripes. 300 White Mercerized Oxford Cloth Shirts. Neckband Neckband models. and collar-attached models: 360 Genuine “Doucettine.” - Plain colors—white, tan and 360 Genuine White Blackstone Madras Shirts. Neck- gray. Collar-attached models.’ y ; band models. This Is a Once-a-Year Evth That Washington Men Look Forward To! It is an unusual collection of well known makes of shirts in all the Plenty of neckband and collar-attached styles. are sare to find shirts in this assortment for every occasions. cerized Oxford Sports Shirts, Novelty Shirts with collars to match. . - -:--------1--.-----------i-----------\- ----------n----------l---i-u-l-’--'-t-nl---------------------.---- 4= 4% EiSl

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