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12 T Y S A I S R T Overcoming Bad Breath I_!ere are ways and means for re- Hieving this embarrassing condition, af due to constipation. The bowels must move daily; ¢he intestines enustbe relieved of gheir waste matter in order to enjoy good health. Irregular elimination many times produces bad breath. The poisons must escape somewhere—either in a naturatmovement, or the offensive form. Try tonight CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Druggists, 25 and 75¢ red packages. Don’t Fuss With Mustard Plasters! Don't mix a mess of mustard, flour and water when you can relieve pain, soreness or stiffness with a little clean, white Musterole. Musterole is made of pure oil of mustard and other helpful ingredi- ents, and takes the place of mustard plasters. Musterole usually gives s, re, musclop bruises, | chilbininy, . “colds of The chest (it may vent pneumontu) . Jars and Tubes LS;.;re Way to Get ‘ Rid of Dandruff here i3 one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely, | und that is to dissolve it. This de- stroys it entirel s, just get about ounces of plain, ordinary lauid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to | moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of vour dandruff will be gone, and two or three more applications will com- pletely dissolve and entirely de- stroy every single sign and trace of it. no matter how much dandruff yon may have. You will find, tog, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be| fluffy, lustrous, giossy, silky and soft, times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store and four ounces is all vou will need. This stmple remedy | never fa dvertisement. f DRINK WATER FREELY IF KIDNEYS BOTHER Also Take Salts if Back| Hurts or Bladder | Troubles You Flush your kidneys by vlrinklngi « quart of water each day, also I saysa noted author who tel much rich food forms a paralyze the kidneys - efforts to expel it from the ! They become sluggish and | then you ma a dull misery in the kidne: the back or your stomach and when ave rheu- fine gets ment, th an- sore and irritated, seek relief two or ing the night. itralize these irritat- . full of sedi To help n 1ds: to help cleanse the kid ! flush of he body's irinous waste, get four ounces of d Salts from any pharmac tablespoonful in a g before br ast for a few nd r kidneys may then This famous salts i 1 the acid of juice, combined wi s been used for sh and stimulate o neutralize ts is inexpensive; can not re and makes a delightful ef t lithia-water drink.—Ad- re” | 1d Jook and feel a hundred ||| | SOUTHEAST INDOOR HEROISM IAY WIN LATTIVER PARDCN 1 iFormer League Ball Player, Life Prisoner, Helps Block Escape of Criminals. | ! | By the Associated Pres | | | COLUMBLUS, Ohio, November 10.— C. W. “Tex" Lattimer, former big| league base ball player, now serving | a life sentence in the Ohio Peniten- tiary for second-degree murder, may | have won himself a pardon or other | clemency by his heroism during the | pitched battle that attended the es- cape and recapture of 13 convicts at the institution Monda Lattimer, a trusty, was working in the penitentiary office when the riot alarm sounded. He seized a revolver and joined the guards Miss Amanda_Thomas, daughter of Warden P. E. Thomas, heard, in the | residence quarters above, the sound of the shooting and started down- stairs. Lattimer endeavored to per- suade her to stay upstairs in safety. When she refused, he placed himself in front of her, it was said, to shield | her from the convicts. | Sentenced Two Years Ago. Lattimer was sentenced from Xenia, Greene County, two years ago. He is aid to have slain a man who was declared to be out to “‘get him.” Lattimer was a catcher with the Saltimore American League team in 1901, and a member of the Brooklyn | Nationals in 1902. Gov. Vie Donahey yesterday prom- ised -to push the official investigation of the esci fled as mer" pe until he was fully satis- o the facts. He said Lattl- case hed been discussed “‘un- ly,” but no action had been “Something may be_done lat- he said. % Oliver Glaspy, the only one of the 13 convicts not captured, had not been heard of by prison officials last night. Warden Thomas indicated that grand jury action against the men particl- pating in the escape would be asked. Escape Planned for Months. Evidence indicating the wholesale escape had been planned for months was revealed vesterday. Officials said a road map of Franklin County, clip- ped from a Columbus newspaper early in July, was found in the pocket of one of the escaped prisoners. Prison officials believe the men plan- ned the escape during the Summer, hinging its execution on the opening sageway. This occurred when guard George Bennett, accord- | ing to Warden Thomas, opened both | gates between the vard and the guard | room at once, in violation of orders. Gov. Donahey said he “had no fault to find with Warden Thomas.” He | said he would question Bennett per- sonally when the latter recovers from wounds inflicted when the fleeing pris- oners beat him. Warden Thomas has | placed full responsibility for the es- | cape on Bennett. { | ' GARNIVAL PLANNED Proceeds of November 26 and 27‘ Affairs Will Go to Com- i munity Center. An indoor carnival for the benefit of the Southeast Community Center has been planned by the citizens of | Southeast Washington for the nights | of November 26 and 27, at Hine Ju- nior High School, Seventh street and Pennsylvania avenue southeast, where the center activities are staged. A large committee of volunteer workers is making plans for the event. The organizations involved include the Southeast Citizens’ Association, the Southeast Business Men's Asso- ciation, Parent-Teacher Associations of Lenox, Hine Junior High and*Wal | lach-Towers, Boy Scouts and Lincoln Park Citizens' Association, while the | community at large also is assisting. Vaudeville, a community dance. | games, exhibits and sale of refresh | ments are on the program. “Hi-Boy, | the Glraffe,” is promised as a humor- | ous feature, the nature of which has | not been disclosed. Mrs. M. W. Davis, community , announces the following ¢ men: Mrs. John H. Virnstein, com- | munity dance; Mrs. Reid K. Middle- |ton and Mrs. Curtis Draper, refresh- M. J. Arnold and Mrs. | by Mrs. M. J. Moran, ) {ran and Miss Lula Laura A. & wdon, game: fish pond; Mrs checking: Mr. J Howard Willson, fong Samuel Ni- . Bell, coun- | of the Southeast | ssociatlon and the Assoclation _will | committee and Capt. Wil Southeast Citi- | 8. Offutt of the | Southeast Men and | Jessie Robbins of the Forrest Pla have been selected as treasurers of | | the carnival. Admission to the building will be 10 cents and small additional charges will be Ukuleles Pinch-Hit For Pipe Organ In California Town By the Associated Press. PITTSBURG, Calif., November 10.—Ukuleles pinch-hit for the pipe organ in the community church of this central California town. A ukuelele sextett thrums liturgical music .and leads the congregation In psalm singing at Sunday serv- ces. The Rev. C. C. Champlin, pastor, admits installation of the “‘uke” as a source of sacred music is a de- parture, even though its tones may be as soft as any produced by the psaltery dulcimer, timbrel or sack- but, assoclated with sacred music In the Bible. However, the con- gregation has lauded the pastor's originality. The ukuele sextet soon will be increased to a sacred orchestra of 24 pleces. ONE-TIME NEEDY BOY TO REALIZE HIS HOPE Maurice Schwartz, Penniless 25 Years Ago, Soon to Open Million- Dollar Yiddish Theater. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 10.—Maurice Schwartz, who wandered the streets of London 25 years ago, hungry and in need of passage money to America to join his father and mother, is about to realize his life's ambition by open- ing a million-dollar Yiddish art theater on the lower East Side. Schwartz's mother, en route from Russia to New York in 1900, had to leave 10-year-old Maurice behind when steamship officlals decided he was too big to travel half fare. Two years later an advertisement in the Agony column of a London paper brought about his reunion with his parents, who lived on the proceeds of an old rag shop. Some time afterward he saw David Kessler, the Yiddish tragedian, from the gallery of a Bowery theater. He then resolved to become an actor and build a theater of his own. Schwartz was paid $8 a week by the first stock company In which he played. Farmer Goes to Sleep With His Cigarette Lighted. Special Dispateh to The Star. HAGERSTOWN, Md., November 10. —William Shockey, 29-year-old farm- er of Ringgold, near here, went to sleep with his cigarette lighted. His father, Amos Shockey, found his body near the door early today, near where he had fallen while trying to reach safety. The carpet and bedclothing had been smouldering throughout the night where the cigarette had fallen upon {t, the smoke suffocating Shock COAST WILL OPEN PAINTING EXHIBIT Display of Work of American Artists to Be Seen in San Francisco. By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, November 10.— An exhibit of selected American paint- ings, said by critics to be the greatest vet attempted, will be opened here Sunday at the Palace of the Legion of Henor, a monument to California’s war des and will continue until the end of nuary. There will be 200 paintings on exhibit from all parts of the country. Notable among the paintings will be John Singer Sargent’s double portralt of Mrs. Augustus Saint-Gaudens, a Venetian interior, also by Sargent; Winslow Homer’s “The Wreck” and J. R. Shannon’s ss Kitt Metropolitan to Aid. There will be contributions from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Detroit Institute of Art, the Worchester Art Museum, the Albright Art Gallery of Buffalo, N. Y., and the City Art Museum of St. Louls. The Cleveland Museum is sending one, and the Hackley Art Gallery of Muskegon, Mich., has loaned six pic- tures, among them Whistler's “Study in Rose and Brown.” Natives Will Exhibit. The Cincinnati Museum has sent 10 paintings, and the John Herron Art Institute of Indianapolis and the Fogg Museum, Harvard University, have also contributed. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fleishack:r and Mrs. Alma de Bretteville Spreck- els of San Francisco are notable con- tributors, as is W. K. Bixby of St. Louis. The Milch Galleries of New York have grouped an exhibition of 46 canvases, representing most of the great American artists. Numerous California painters are represented. BLAINE PARDONS RIOTERS. Five Who Disturbed Klan Meeting Are Released. MARINETTE, Wis., November 10 ®).—After serving only a few da of their three months’ sentence, five men who were convicted on a charge of inciting a riot at a Ku Klux Klan meeting here last June, were par- doned last night by Gov. Blaine. Although formal hearing on a peti- tion, which was signed by several hun- was not scheduled until the governor ap- 1d to the request for executive clemenc: The incident, which culminated in a grand jury Investigation and ultimate- 1y led to conviction of the five men, occurred on Jun> 25, at a klan meet- ing which ended-in fist fighting and burning of the tent. Panama soon is to have-its first shoe factory. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN’ - Gpnuine When vou see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physi- cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds Pain Headache Neuralgia Neuritis Toothache DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Lumbago Rheumatism CIVITAN CLUB FATHERS AND SONS HAVE DINNER! Novel Entertainment and Award- ing of Prizes Features of Program at Banquet. Members of the Civitan Club of ‘Washington and their sons dined to- gether at the La Fayette Hotel last night in observance of “father and son” night. The feature of the banquet was a blackface monologue by J. W. Mullings, and the award of prizes to the oldest son of a Civitan, the youngest son, and to the Civitan having the most sons present. The nomination of officers, by res- olution, was postponed until the De- cember meeting, to be followed by the election and installation in January. The program included the rendition by Boy Scouts of their oath and pledge to the flag, and an exposi- tlon by' Willard Goldheim, of a fa- ther's influence on his son in teach ing him the Civitan creed. The dinner was opened with a re- cital of the Civitan creed, followed by Chaplain J. J. Dimon, and the sing- ing of “My Country, "Tis of Thee.” ‘Walter Humphrey won & prize for his_regular attendance at meetings. Thomas L. Phillips won the prize as COLDS THAT DEVELOP INTO PNEUMONIA | Persistent. coughs and colds lead | | to serfous trouble. You can stop | | them now with Creomulsion, an | emulsified creosote that is pleasant | to take. Creomulsion is a new | | medical discovery with two-fold| | action; it soothes and heals the| | inflamed membranes and inhibits | | germ growth. H | Of all known drugs, creosote is | recognized by high medical authort- | | ties as one of the greatest healing agencles for persistent coughs and | colds and other forms of throat | troubles. Creomulsion contains, in! | addition to creosote, other healing | | eloments which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the| irritatian and inflammation, while | Ithe creosote goes on to the stomach, |is absorbed into the blood, & ! the seat of the trouble and S | | the growth of the germs. i | Creomulsion is guaranteed satis-| factory in the treatment.of per- sistent coughs and colds, bronchial thma, bronchitis and other forms | | of respiratory diseases, and is cellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold is not after taking according to directions, Ask your druggist. ‘ SDAY, NOVEMBER 10, Advertisement, ! the youngest son of a Civitan, Lowell Harding as the oldest, and D. C. Crain as the Civitan having the most son: two, present. The Robert Thomas Orchestra furnished music and the members sang selections from the song book. Thomas M. Stearn !and Elmer Mayberry arranged the Sidestepping His Finish. From the Caleary Herald. It doesn't pay to jump to conclu- sions, but the pedestrian must jump sometimes to avold a very important conclusio: decorations. Practically every one of the more than 700 tractors in Porto Rico were Slg’py the heavy foot of friction The ogre of the mechanical age is Friction. But— “Standard” Motor Oil makes the heavy foot of friction slip. Its oily, persistent film gets into the pores of bear- ing surfaces, and friction loses its killing grip. Thus freed, your motor gains power. With such a weight of friction gone, naturally, you can feel the difference. Make your own test. A Quarter a Quart “STANDARD" MOTOR OIL STANDARD OIL COMPANY (N. J.) UNDERWEAR for the “DRESSES made for vaudeville and | dancing. | \ e e ! & | OFFERS COPY OF WILL. # is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Si Accept only ‘‘Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy, “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. lieacld | | Widow Informs Court Original of Doctment Is Lost. ! Lois . Henderson today 5 5 2 the Probiate Court to admit Satisfaction Since 1859 e 1 carbon copy of the will of her husband, es W. Hender- son, who died September The { copy is signed by the testator, but | does not show the name of the | subscribing witnesses. Mrs, Hender- the court that the original ‘ 4 ] been lost and after diligent search she thinks it was accidentaly royed The will named the widow as ¢ of the estate and d as executrix n is survived | Thomas C. Hender: Howard T 810-818 Seventh Street NDERWEAR must sheath your body closely under | the slim dresses of today. It must be deftly cut— smooth fitting. Yet you want real quality—durability. You want innumerable washings to leave it still soft and pliable. Free from Worry “The seat in an engine cab is no place for piles! But no man whose work is stren- wous need fear them. Nor lose an hour’s time because of them. Pyramid is certain, Is headquarters for women’s, misses’ and children’s Forest Mills Underwear. Wool, silk-and-wool or cotton the will be pro- AR XEXEXEXEXERER XS the carbon copy imitant oelict. hated as expressing the intention of T So thousands of women always buy Forest Mills. For Vhy do ' dy S day b= ! v . 9 o . . " M‘r”}‘ o e Tenderson owned premises 522 | @) In the “First Year Sale—Women’s they know they can depend on this famous line, which i y ha d s . assessed & ; a ik z of Pyramid! For s single sopposicory, | trust detes of §4,000 aud cash of has already pleased three generations, to combine old- $ Attorney Walter M. wpears for the widow. vl Indicted in Slaying. Bastian oment’s privacy, brings abso- Yes, even when they are the | painful bleeding kind, or protruding. Ask any druggist! fashioned quality with utterly modern style. In a variety of designs and weights and prices, see Forest Mills Underwear today at your favorite storel Forest Mills UNDERWEAR Forest Mills Union Suits $1.95 Sixty ceats the bos, the world around, | Special Disbateh to The tar. or free box to try, if you mail coupon: | AGERS' 2 Md., November i 10.—George Thompson, Martinsburg, ; . . . 3 » e | WiV, vesterday was indicted by the Women’s finely tailored medium-weight HOR young girls and children, grand jury in the murder of Edward men and boys you can buy this wool suits, with rayon stripe, in cream color. Bodice top, tight knee, reinforced, and well made. Sizes 36 to 44. PYRAMID DRUG CO. 1900 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. | Please send me a box plainly wrapped, | sealed, poscpaid, and entirely free. | \ G. Kendall of Hagerstown. Kendall, with 14 stab wounds in his body, was found on the street here. Thompson was identified as the last man_seen with him. No motive has been found for the crime. - same well-fisting underwear that is as comfortable at the end of the season as when first worm. - (Pifth Floor. The Hecht Co.) THe HEcT Co-F STREET EXEXEREXEXEXEXEXR Have Trials Enough. Baltimore Sun From the \ In Peking they are executing editors | without a triai. Well, most e\hlorsl ———— | have trials enough. . " t 3