Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1925, Page 35

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Let Cuticura Soap Keep Your Ski Fresh and Youthlfllljl . Ointment, Taleam g B O T, e A Lunch- eon, 75¢; Dinner, $1 & $1.25 Room nv:lr,:m!h, nnlu:.-‘.d‘;ifi and $40. Foom and bath.’ $50 53, oom - $42.50, $47.50, o . fur., $42.50, $47.50, ""?oi;m“ an Bath, complete hotel serv- 2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 Per Day BURLINGTON HOTEL Vermont Ave. at_Thomas Circle Main 891 Rooms in Annex. $1.50 to £2 Day As EBONITE “Shings" to g Sk, SoltWindsZ> Around the Gears MR. MOTORIST EBONITE takes the weather as it comes. No congealing or breaking up like grease. The Transmission and rear axles are protected by a film (of shredded oil) that in- sures long life. You will like the way the gears slide in and out with- out a murmur when EBONITE is in your gear cases. Buy with your mind made up. Demand EBONITE. Take no substitutes. At denlers ound cans, (1IT's SHREDDED. OIL) FOR TRANSMISSIONS AND REAR AXLES BAYERSON OIL WORKS - (OLUMBIA S226 #| Quality Beyond Question Lost: Eyesight Vision—the most precious of your possessions—responds to Bood care in the same way In which it deteriorates with strain and lack of care. (on- stant strain and lack of atten- tion will place you among that list of avoidably unfortunate | ones who cannot see the beauty | which surrounds them. Perhaps you should bs wear- | ing glasses, even if your eyes do not ache or pain you. There is only one way to find out— | come In tomorrow and let our expert optometrists examine your eyes and tell you whether or not they need attention, Years of suffering may be eliminated by early care. | Hove Your Eyes Ezamined Today of.aKalin cIne. | Optometrists Opticians 935 F Street 38 Years at the Same Address BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the substitute for calomel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver is almost instantaneous. These little oilve-colored tablets are the result of Dr. Edwards’ determi- nation not to treat liver and bowel , complaints with calomel. The pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have no bad after effects. They don't injure the teeth like strong mel. and quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the tee h? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gqums. So do strong liquids. It is best not to take_calomel. Let Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets take its place. Hendaches, “dullness” and that lazy come from constipation, and ‘ered liver. Take Dr. Ed- Olive Tablets wien you feel “logy” and “heavy.” They ‘“clear’ clouded brain and “perk up” the spi~ _15¢_and 20c. AR £ z in Distress! Her face grew ten years older, in ten minutes! Indigestion. How distressing to be the life of the party and leave the table, almost doubled-up with pain! And how senseless! “Take this,” said a gentle- man who was never without a Stuart’s tablet. That same evening she ate a ‘Welsh rarebit and f:It fine. Remember Stuart’s, and you can forget dyspepsia, Dyspepsia! Indigestion! Sour stomach! These ailments are nof caused by what you eat. Give your digestive system a ||| chance, and it will function with almost | any kind of food. Yes, doughnuts; baked | beans; dishes cooked with onions. Stuart’s | dyspepsia tablets give your stomach the alkaline it needs—and that’s all there is to it! Eat your fill, and don’t fear acidity, | Pershing as biased uids or calo- ! They take hold of the trouble | 1S SHARE OF U.S. | Losing Side, Despite Pledges, Expected to Declare That Award Is Unfair. By Consolidated Press. The United States Government is thoroughly tired of its job as mediator in the Tacna-Arica dispute between Chile and_Peru, and it will be many years before another intervention, diplomatic or otherwise, will be conxed out of the Washington authorities. Every move made by Gen. Pershing is viewed either with distrust or suspicion. First one side objects that he I3 prejudiced and then the other shows Its displeasure. Anti-American demonstrations in Peru came with |lhc first announcement of the terms of the American plan. Now new: papers in Chile, owned by high gov. ernment officials, attacking Gen. And, the truth is, the American war veteran, who has had many responsibilities before in his life, which were greater in scope, is about ready to take a ship for home? For 30 years the controversy has been going on. Chile is in possession of the disputed provinces, which originally belonged to Peru. In order to determine what shall be done with the territory a referendum was proposed by the United States. The Peruvians claim there can be no free election if Chilean officlals remain on the spot. They charge coercion. Gen. Pershing has tried to effect the with- drawal of all Chilean military and civilian officers. Now Chile claims that's an infringement of soverelgnty. What each side wants is an assur- ance of victory. Anything that looks as if it might alter that result is frowned upon by Chile or Peru, as the case may be. When Gen. Persh- ing does secure the consent of Chile to withdraw her off the trouble will begin over again, for then the problem arises as to what amount of electioneering can be done. In the United States every form of per- suasion is regarded as legitimate short of physical coercion. Any form of argument either by personal con- lon, by letter or advertising is legal except an offer to n’these simple weapons | will cause concern in South America, | because Chile has dominated the prov- | inces and has enough Chilean busi- | ness folks representatives in the | region to v on an effective cam- paign. Should the result be a Chilean victory, Peru may feel that America should have prevented the election- eering and kept the populace free from invasion by Chilean orators or election worker: 11l Feeling Inevitable. Whichever way it turns, there's trouble and ill-feeling ahead. Neither side considers the result except in ion, and every effort land equitably hitherto has failed. The territory has been called the Alsace-Lorraine of the South Ameri- can continent because it has been a thorn in the side of peaceful relations between Peru and Chile for more than a generation. Other countries have taken sides in the quarrel and all of South America is watching every act of Gen. Pershing. President Coolidge has assumed personal responsibility for the carrying out of the terms of his recent decision and is ordering a small staff of American Army officers to assist Gen. Pershing in conducting the election. But the difficultles of deciding a dis pute of this character were acknowl- edged long ago, and the United States Government entered with a full ap. preciation of what might develop. Still it was not thought the two countries would g0 to the extremes they have in demanding advantages in the referen. dum. The theory on which Washing- ton intervention was based was that a war should be prevented. The fairness of the United States was admitted by both parties when in- tervention was asked for by both Peru and Chile. Yet the mediator will pay a heavy penalty in ill-feeling, just the same, and many diplomats here think {1t would have been fa better if the United States had passed the disputa on to the World Court, which is consti- tuted for the very purpose of deciding treaty interpretations and controver- sies involving boundary questions. (Copyrizh 25.) MAJ. COUGHENOUR DIES AFTER RECCRD IN ARMY | Native Nebraskan, 46 Years Old, | Served in Spanish-American | and World Wars. Maj. Allen J. Cough-nour, 46 years old, possessor of a long record in the United States Army, died at Garfield Hospital Saturday. Funeral services were held Monday and burial, with honors, was in Arlington ughenour was promoted to e rank of major during the World ar and later honorably discharged, , after which he enlisted in the Signal Corps as a_master signal electrician and served until retired, due to ength of service. He was born near Hastings, Adams County, Nebr., May 28, 1879. At the |outbreak of the Spanish-American | War he enlisted as private in the {21st Volunteer ( ) Infantr; , 1898. On { April 11, 1899, he enlisted as private |in the 14th United States Infantry and, with the exception of about two months at the close of his first en- listment, remained a member of the Army until his death. He served as private of Infantry, and in the Sig- nal Corps as corporal, sergeant, ser- geant first class and as master signal electrician, while during the World War he was commissioned as captain in the Signal Corps and later pro- moted to major, commanding a bat- | talion of Signal troops in France. He had also been on several tours of duty in the Philippine Islands, served in China during the Box rising and spent several Alaska. In gas-poisoning cases, drag or car- ry the victim to fresh air and apply artificial respiration. Pharmacists say that when all | other so-called remedies fail Joint- | Ease is sure to speedily succeed. | ILL WILL AT ARICA | BRIGHT COLOR OF MALE BIRDS SERVES AS THEIR PROTECTION Construction of Eye Makes Gaudy Hues Less Easy to Denying the plausibility of the long- accepted notion that bright feathers of male birds serve to attract their mates, Dr. Austin H. Clark of the United States National Museum, here, has announced that the structure of birds' eyes and direct observation of their relation to their environment in- dicate that both the bright colors of the male and the modest hues of the female hide the wearers from their sharp-eyed enemies. The idea that our most conspicuous birds are hidden by their brilliant coats appears paradoxial, but Dr. Clark points out that the conspicuou ness depends on who does the looking. The secret lies In the construction of the bird’s eye. It differs chiefly from our own and other mammals’ eyes, he says, in being bulilt about a lens of shorter focus. The image projected by the lens of a bird's eye therefore lies with i Detect—Dull Females Inconspicuous to Dif- ferently Constructed Human Eye. all in one plane, or nearly o, result- ing In the equal definition of all the objects in the fleld of vision. This is necessary for an, insectivorous bird catching its prey upon the wing or for a predaceous bird. Distance means little to them, detection of their vie- tims everything. To a predaceous or an insectivorous bird, therefore, a landscape consists of a clear-cut patchwork of myriads of fragments of all sorts of colors and of sizes. Each stick and stone and leaf stands out sharply, no matter how dis- tant. Against such a background, Dr. Clark explains, those objects must be st conspicuous which most colored in sharpest contrasts, nd light, regardless of what the are. the malian eye only one pl elatively long-focus mam- There are many designs of Frigidaire and there’s a size to meet your needs—all buile precision and crafts- manship. Frigidaire is made by Delco-Light Company— H a subsidiary of General Motors, in the largest plant of its kind in theworld. A Frigidaire unit can be in- stalled in your own ice box. shifting back and forth. Beyond this plane the landscape become blurred, and tends to be reduced to the average color of all f arious elements, so that the creature least conspicuous to a mammal is the one most nearly like the average color. - The dull-coated female bird, which stays near, the nest is therefore pro- tected by her color from attack by mammals, Dr. Clark maintains, while the brightly-colored male, living in the tree tops and perching on the ends of branches, is protected by the gaudier hues from attack from other birds with their wonderfully perfect eyes. VOLUNTARY BANKRUPTCY. Auto Accessories Company and and Woman Grocer File Petitions. The McCurdy Auto Accessories Co., Inc., of 4203 Georgia avenue north- west, has filed a petition of voluntary [ nTWmTJE : St bankruptcy. The debts of the cor- poration are placed at $15,695.81 while its assets are estimhted at $2,800 Attorney Ross H. Snyder appears for the company. Mrs. Lizzle Feinstein, grocer, at 237 Fourteenth street northwest, has filed a petition to be adjudged bank- rupt. She says her debts amount to $1,959.57, while her assets are only $1,282.49. She {s represented by Attorney Morris M. Alin. Nearly four times as much rayon yarn is being brought from other coun- tries to the United States as was im- ported a year ago. A :lESSING TO HUMANITY ~ SoRETHROAT w0 TONSILITIS “keeps the fonsils healthy” 35¢ bottle At All Drug Stores MADE IN WHEELING W.VA THE TONSILO COMPANY in the HOME Artistic period designs—fin. ishes to match surroundings —receding dust-proof glass doors — beautiful, conven ient, practical, adaptable. 15th and K Sts., N. W. Frigidaire Automatic, Permanent Refrigeration FRIGIDAIRE takes the place of the daily cake of ice in an ice box. It never wears out; but goes on working every hour, every day, for years and years and years. or away makes no difference. Whether you are at home With it you have no ice bill, nothing to watch, nothing to turn on, turn off nor adjust. fresh for surprising lengths of time. Frigidaire makes wonderful frozen desserts with the least possible effort. With it all foods remain It makes the breakfast orange a new delight. It wraps all fruits in just the [roper cold temperature—dry, changeless, never-ceasing. It freezes ice cubes sized for pitcher and tumbler—and itkeeps milk in its true natural flavor longer than you'd think possible. Frigidaire decreases work. There's no more lifting nor shifting of chunks of ice. There's no more chopping, no more numbed hands, no more ice pick, no more ice pan, no more drain pipe to be cleaned. There's no more moving of the ice box to get at clogged outdoor outlets. is yours with economy, too. The cost of operation is less than the cost of ice. One hundred thousand users have bought Frigidaires, selecting one of the complete cabinet models or installing Frigidaire in their own ice boxes. Frigidaire is as easy to buy as it is to use. You can own and pay for it out of your income. The GMAC divided payment plan is for your benefit if you like. We are anxious to put into your hands every fact about Frigidaire. Telephone us. Mail the coupon below—or come into our showroom and see for yourself what a really fine investment Frigidaire is—why it is a necessity of modern life. T OF CENERAL 5.~ Made b Manufacture‘;’l ~J Delco-Light Company }he World's Lar [ ‘Washington Sales Branch 1313 New York Avenue N.W. Washington, D. C. Telephones Franklin, 7157—651—6979 All this daire Electric Refrig le'a‘t‘org S, INVESTMENT BUILDING Reoms 211, 215, 217, 219,223 Delco-Light Company gas, or distress in any form! Your First Box FREE! Any druggist in the land has Stuart’s | dyspepsia tablets. A big boxis only 60c— they are less than a penny apicce! So, why suffer> Get a 25c metal box of Stuart’s for the pocket—and keepit filled. ug One box free if you write the F. A. Stuart ||| guis 48 ot "ty gers e Joint-Ease | Company, Dept. G, Marshall, Mich. | Biggest Selling Joint STUART,S | _Remedy in\the World raeeas o Joint-Ease Washington Sales Branch 1313 New York Avenue N.W., Washington, D. C. Telephones: Franklin 7157-651-6079 It's for joint ailments only—that | is why you are advised to use it for sore, creaky, painful, inflamed | rheumatic Joints. | Joint-Fase imber up the joints—males | < Pleasesend the book which illustrates and ha r—t nd penetrat- || - d quick 1t | & 44 | cetite 5, tube at Beobles Drus Btares a0y | tells all about Frigidaire. drus ‘everywhere. when Jofnt-]

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