Evening Star Newspaper, April 22, 1926, Page 15

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THE EVENING S8TAR, —By WEBSTER. THE TIMID SOUL. MR, MILQUE TOAS T, WILL %0U PLLASE TAICE THIS BOOK HOME Yo YOUR WIFE 7 | PROMISED To LEND VT 10 HER: A L00T IS RECOVERED INPOSTAL ROBBERY Bandit Says He Held Up| Mail Truck to Get Money April 22.—AN but $148 0 taken hy a robber who rek held up a mail true { Indiana Harbor. Ind., hasx heen re- | covervi or sccounted F. Heslov. 26, a former fessed 1 is under s 1. Ind ley and his wife were ar Fuesday ht. In a o I inspectors Hedley ed the robbery hec: 23-vear-old wife is about to become | a r. Mrs. Hesley was released. Throughout the day Federal off downtow rection found caches which held the remainder ui the loot. APPLE BLOSSOM QUEEN | ANNOUNCES PRINCESSES | Diss Fliscil;; Bx'i\lée: of Hancock. Md., to Reign This Year at Winchester Festival. | | | | s OH MES . THE SIN SYNOICATE . \ READIT YE>TERDAY ArD OF ALL THE OL1* FASHIOME O, MID-VICTORIAM NOVELS | BER ( PuLL Dowit wiE ) “ SHAPES! HERE S A j | Boor MRS FLime SEMT You! . the Wincheste will have in he colonial prince Pittman, €. o following ses Eleanor Town, W. Va Kernstown, Va. tinsburg, W. Va.:| luse, Va.: Thelma Va Jean B. Mary Win- | Mi Flizabeth Anne Ha Irene Sti Peffer, Bricker, Klin , Ve Julia Ren, v Crawford, S ssell. Winchesi Vinchester: Susan k. Dorothy Ithodes. alds of honor will | and Stuart B. Kern, desty, v Shutt, Eleanor Weaver, Front Royal addition to a large number appointed | and to be appointed by members of nia House of Delegates from | nties, in compliance with a r adopted by the House dur- | the recent session of the General Assembly, | many of them dating back to the "l‘enlh and H streets, Saturday eve- | ning. days when Washington boasted of D. C. MILITARY LEGION Order to Produce Names. Children born in any of the prov- inces ceded to Italy after the World War must be given Italian names, | says the Pathfinder. To give them | names common to any other nation- | ality is to be considered an anti-| national act ich was the ruling of | the Court peals at Trieste. The | The annual dinner of the Military action is ed to make common |Service Legion of the District of Co- such name Gabriele Schmidt ! e | tion, which came into being through Event Saturday Night to Bring |(he efforts of Gen. Simms for the pur pose of advancing through It the in- | Maj. Gen. Together Leading Spirits in terests of the National Guard in the | mand of th National Guard. Speakers at the April dinner of the { | Anton Stephan, in com Division, 3d Corps M. Brett and others. | District. All_members and former | Ayen: Gien. | members of the National Guard of | the District are eligible to member- | | ship. ! v 14 There are many men who were just The annual dinner serves, there- | dudes before marriage turns out to be fore as a yearly reunion of the lead- |suhdudes afterwards, says the Office as Benite Holzbaum or [ lumbia, Col. Stirling Kerr, command- ing spirits in District military circles, Boy. | er, will take place at the Ebbitt Hotel, Your bare floor will seem barer Your old floor will look older When you see these New Amstrong floor designs But you won’t mind that. They'll start you planning. Their beauty will stir your imagination. Their cconomy will tempt your purse. Above — Armstrong’s Embossed Handcraft Tile Inlaid, Pattern No. 6018, Left — Armstrong’s Printed Linoleum Rug No. 86s. A!.WAYS l: the lead in linoleum qualityand design, Armstrong offers several new floor ideas this lp"ing. You can see them at any of the good stores. Embossed Handcraf Tile Inlaids a great step forward in lisoleum-making All thelinoleam you had ever seen had an inlaid lino- lAmm of embossed dl;- b::- tiful sam of difl'etert-voned tiles with depressed morer lines or iater- liners berween the tiles. That m-:d that these diles smad ighdy There is o - + “COME IN,” says this entvance hall. And the tnvitation can be traced to the floor of Arm- strong'sMarbleInlaidLinoleum, Pattern No. 76. Notice how ce- menting the floor in place has done away with unsightly tacks and seams. A FREE Book “The Astractive Home— How to Plan Its Decoration” By Hazel Dell Brown Tms book outlines asimple method of planning home decoration. It contains pho- tographs and color reproduc- tions of model interiors and colorplates of new motifs in linoleum design. Sent upon- receipt of & post card beating your name and address. .o, inlaid partern of Armmzfi‘s Linoleum Prénted Linoleum that is low-priced is laid properly — cemented in place but doesn’t look st o7e Kot Omcenim ek 1t o o T pianid inaieara sy el da (0o ey penenem oot % fine inlaids, Armstrong'’s is definitely {;gwen an ocasional waxing and superior. While not expensive, these I In some of these patterns litde her- aldic matifs are spotted here and there. ;l‘h;:y;h notstwracted by any “repeat” n esign. Already le who have seen these meunedmmfi Tile Inlaids ace telling their neighbors about gun. Yon, too, will enjoy looking at em. Mavbleixed Tile Inlaids with a very special quality Aswith all Armstrong’s Inlaid patterns, the color and. design of the new Marbleized Tiles run clear through to the burlap back. ‘These designs will remain clearand distinct polishing it will grow better-looking printed patterns are far too durable 8s long ss the linolcam will lJast—and no and should be satisfactory for more snd ateractive to be confused with one can say how long that is. Forwhenan than a lifetime. : temporary floor coverings. ARMSTRONG -CORK COMPANY, Linolesm Disision, Lancaster, Pennsylvania Armstrong’s Linoleum PLAIN JASPE INLAID PRINTBED: for eve floar in the house WASHINGTON, Che Military Service T. s a | so f the crack co ¢ th TO'HOLDANNUAL DINNER | ..o’ s rite or. chlamble jorganias | comtry. o o oaee of e {1egion will include Maj. Gen. Lejeune, | 99 o s 22, 15 cession, succeeded his father, 0 R. Spitzer. as head of the inswick post office, at the latter’s th. APRIL 1926, Addams, whose exploration has been amgng the slums_of Chica [FAMOUS U. S. WOMEN |3t e, o FETED AT LUNCHEON ¢ S St St s v o, | deol | M \ 8 , postmaster of Byuns. | old Zelsler, pi A s A fod abtine Son, head of the Women's B ’f"‘“,“! iy of the Department of ULE BIRICIORe ché Edifh Rockefeller McCe of funds of the office Miss Itina West, the fi p 1,700 president of the Natlonal Fraternal oI period of about six days, was repo Association All of them added thelr ng of tham added’ thele, names | o o 15 Holsexpostofealnamscte At @ hearing before Commissioner - " to those of less famed sisters visit- ceminine | ing the exposition on an_ autograph - on-wide | album to be presented to Mrs, Calvin | Maller 1t nounced that Spitzer uncheon which | Coolidge. ‘The album will have more the shortage, althou duy at the Wom- | than 100,000 names by the end of the st Lo LR LT ¢ any shortage exists, and until the ernment investigation has been com fair. pleted, I cannot make any statement. Spitzer, who was a_member of the House of Deleg: of Maryland of the New Address 612 13th St. ONE-DAY SALE Making Shelf-Room for Qur New Line of Specialty SHOES The Physical Culture Shoes 480 pairs of Women's Plain, One and Two Strap Pumps and Oxfords in a whirlwind sale for quick clearance. ¢ BLACK KID, PATENT LEATHER BROWN KID, TAN CALF BLACK SUEDE, BLACK SATIN Not every size in each line, but nearly every size in the assortment. FORMER PRICES WERE UP TO $11.00 50%, Were $7.50 to $8.50 509, Were $9.00 to $11.00 Sale Price $ 5. 8 5 5.0, THURSDAY, 1917 Cleans Typewriter Type 1| Use a cloth saturated with Carbona. Re- Actresses, Authors, Social Service that clog Leaders, Judges and Executives Attend Function. coverin | Cleaning Fluid?, | REMOVES GREASE SPOTS ‘Without Inyury to Fabric or Color 200 300 60¢ &1 Stae Bottes ot ol g Sves, featured wi en’s World 1 Actresses d authoresses were guests with women whose invasion culine flelds Is o definite that ve not yet been accorded Germany now has its first bullding activity in many months. to distinguish them from male cotemporaries. opolit sat an gathering. at the table tional Council of Mary Hastings dent of the 1 Amerfcan Indians, Bradley, who has shot lions in Af- rica, shared the limelight with Jane L St L M S et S e 2 The High Grade Fstablished 1842 Pianos Sold Direct from the Factory We Invite You to Visit Our | Warerooms 1340 G St. N.W. J. C. CONLIFF, Mgr. R L R R A ? w to Get 'Rid of PIMPLES - Quickly! Adainty, medicatedvanishing cream—snow- | white and greaseless — with remarkable heal. | ing powers. Apply it before you gotobed,and | all night its soothing, antiseptic ingredients | work to dry up every beauty-destroying skin blemish. Used during the day as a powder base, it continues to clear away all eruptions. | Almost before you realize it, they are gone. | | . Noxzema, as this splendid medicated van- | | ishing cream is called, is different. Not sticky ormessy,like ordinary ointments and lotions, but a snow-white, healing, antiseptic cream * | that is instantly absorbed into the skin with- out staining the clothes. on All No Exchange—No Refund—All Sales Final EDMONSTON & CO. (Incorporated) West Side— 612 13th Street ;. & ecs ANDREW BETZ, Manager | Get a trial jar today and see for yourself why over 1,150, were used last year. Costs only a few centsat | all good drug stores. OXZEMA “Feel It Heal” = Wet and Dry Battle At jars of Noxzema Cream [ Washington Arouses Nation Profoundly important, the press agrees, is the case against and for Prohibition as stated by wets and drys in the hearings that began on April 5th before a subcommittee of the Judiciary Com- mittee of the Upited States Senate. The matters involved are principles and practices that affect the daily life of more than a hundred million people. “Unpalatable. as may be the assertions and claims put forth by the wet leaders,” remarks The Christian Science Monitor, which is one of the foremost journalistic champions of Prohibition, “they must be read and studied to be controverted. Evil thus exposed to the light cannot long survive.” The case was opened by the wets, who called witnesses to show that in actual effect the prohibition enforcement is a tragic failure. By the testi- mony adduced they hoped to pave the way for a modification of the Volstead Act. Inasmuch as the drys have not had their inning as the “DIGEST” goes to pre cle in this week’s number is a careful summary of the testimony of the wet wi reaction throughout the country to that testimony. In next week’s “DIGEST” case will be reported in the same unbiased manner. In addition to this important news-feature, there are many other articles of profound interest in THE LITERARY DIGEST for April 24th—On Sale Today All Newsstands---10 Cents Home-Grown Rubber Pompeii Revived at New York’s Art Museum The American Theater in London Questions from Chapman’s Grave ‘““Applesauce, Brother; Applesauce” How Asia Takes to Our Movies and “Speakies” Putting Our Emotions on Canvas Publicity as She Is Made A Napoleon of Fire-Fighting Hail to the Smock! How the Jersey Lily Doted on the Gee-Gees ss, the leading arti- ses and the editorial the drys’ side of the Wall Street Adversity and National Prosperity A World Court Defeat The First Democratic Senator from JIowa Since the Civil War The French Budget Finds Its Balance Is a Lynchless Year Coming? War and Peace in Morocco Europe’s Competing Political Systems How the Soviet Machine Works Do Sun-spots Affect the Earth? Glass That Will Bend Bringing Down Warm Air to Save Oranges Investments and Finance Are College Men Educated? Topics of the Day Color keprodudim——“kN ITALIAN GARDEN"—By Eleanor Abrams Many Interesting Half-Tone Illustrations and Humorous Cartoons Itisamarkofdidinctiontobearcaderof The ]_'tgmxy Digest EMILY POST’S ETIQUETTE—"The Blue Book of Social Usage” The most lete book on social useges thet Bell 1,000 copies & week! _ 630 pagee—many illustra- M:n- -“:--—GM;;. Tribune. sl u:‘ $4.18, net. :x mhm’;‘o in l;;’dfy: or FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, Publishers, 384-360 Fourth ‘Avenue, New York

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