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PAGE 16 | cttgfont when, without moving from }your apartment, without having to |trudge thru the Parisian rainstorms | lee pay what the tax night-hawk de- mands, you can “listen In” on the! best voices In France, the most ac- PLAYERS PLAN Musicians Face Ruln as) This toar was transiated Into no-| Result of Wireless | tion when the Paris Orchestra, giving | a recital in the Salle Gaveau, refused | — | to play in front of @ wireless re- | PARIS, Bept. 28—French mud-| iver, The musicians advanced two clans and singers are aghast at the }reasons, First, they were expected | fnroafs of the wireless concerts on|to supply the wireless organizers) their emoluments. They belleve they | with something for nothing, which Is }to gain? @re facing ruin. {naturally against their principles. Who Is going to pay the price of |Second, they do not want their @dmission to a musical recital or a| music to be deformed,—eo they aver S| ony L. & C. Meat Market: Formerly at Westlake Market Rolled Rump Roast, Ib. ..25c Short Ribs of Beef, lb. .....10c All Fancy Cuts on Display to Choose From NEW FARMERS’ PUBLIC MARKET WESTLAKE, VIRGINIA AND SEVENTH Stall 8 Davie-Brook Co. Bakery Goods, Candy, Heinz Condiments Special—Full Cream Cheese, tb...... Courtesy and Quality Stall 5 Strictly Fresh Artington Creamery, Ib. 48¢ to 54¢ HEADQUARTERS FOR MALT AND HOPS Stall 25 From Our Own Ranch Daily Poultry, Eggs, Milk, Butter Free Shopping Bag with each purchase FARMERS’ MARKET GROCERY Sugar, 8 Lbs. 76c¢ 100-Pound Sacks, $9.50 Prices MASON JARS 4 lbs. of Macaront Go Hand Cream of Whent... Quarts, doz. .83¢ 4 Iba, Rolled Onts.. in Pints, doz...69¢ | Citrus Washing Powder, Ige.. JAR RUBBERS Hand White or Red, dot, 4.266 Td TOILET PAPER High Quality } Crepe, Be Roll 6 for 26¢ ;ANNED MILK Where Highest Quality and Lowest chnut Spaghetti, in enna, 14¢ % Ibs, Small White Be Creme O11 Sonp.. Hine Rone Rice. of Spnghetti.... hirnrdetiitn 1-Ib, can .. Dinmond Snfety Matchen,. Orange VPekow Ten, Ib Rex Nut Margarine. Bt, Thomas’ , thelr own pretentions to artistry to be nullified—by transmission thru medium over which they have mo control. “It is all very well for the wireless people to talk of the publicity they give us,” said George de Launay, leader of the Parts Orchestra. “Per- haps a musician who is absolutely unknown to the public may have something to gain. But a Paderow- ski, a Riser, an Isnye, what has he On the contrary, he has everything to lose. You can Iisten to what he fs playing, but you do [not get his technique. . “There in another aide to this ques- tion. When we gave the concert in in the Salle Gaveau tt was for the benefit of the parish of 8t. Roch. Hundreds of persona, who have wire- |lena equipment, boasted that they | were going to enjoy the music with- out paying @ sou. “A wireless soctety tried to ret the Lammoureux society to permit wire- less transmission of Ita weekly con- certs, The wircless people offered a ridiculous sum, which was not nc- cepted. The Lamoureaux society will lone at least a quarter of a mil- lion francs @ season thru this unfair competition. The broadcasting of concert programs {s likely to empty the concert hall “THE BEST OF IT Trom the Washington Star. “Don’t limit your piety to Sunday,” said Uncle Eben. “Old Satan will be puffickly satisfied if every sinner lgives him a six-day week. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS EVENING SCHOOL RE-OPENS Monday, Oct. 1, 1923 ‘AllAre Welcome’ a Everything free to all ex- service men and women of the World War, regardless of church membership. Moderate tuition feo charged non-service students. Supplies free, The School for Results COURSES OFFERED Arithmetto Accounting Penmanship Commercial Art Buriness Bnglish Snlesmanship Public Speaking Journalism ‘Typewritine Radio Telegraphy Bookkeeping Auto Mechanica Welding OFFICE HOURS On Monday, Wednesday, Frt- day from 1 p. m. to 10 p. m. On Tuesday und Thursday from 1 p. m. to 6 p,m, On Saturday from 9 a. m. to 12 noon For Information Write, Call or Telephone 916 FAST MARION ST. Phono EA st-8556 —ENROLL NOW— THE SEATTLE STAR Among the New Books” The Hero of the Philippines, The King’ Powde rr, The Love Child, The Timber Treasure, The Sa- hara Hunters, Stories About Horses, Pellucidar, The Yellow Seven, Studies in Classic American Literature HERO OF THM FILA | published CHARLES BDWARD BLL AND ) Kh ROD. 4; CENTURY Jone Th est man are “Travel Heroos,"* subjects “Outdoor Bt “THE oT Everyday the following | Friends, zal was not only the great: | ete Malay race has. pro | was one of the greatest times. He tual will the Next to the dog, the horse tp the joved animal Horses” ja tion of such stories, the thelr kind that have appe o ways. St. Nicholas.” It will de those many readers tial to horses but also many more who like | stories woll told whatever their out times and above | jects, and jo the end eee eatest mart “PELLUCIDAR,” friend and co-| “At the Marth’s Core,” laborer of the foremost adientists of | Burroughs; A. C. jHurope and be was the idol and) 4, saventurer bivounced for the leader of his people at home, night on the torrid sands of the His life wan a series Of strange) Sahara desert in awakened by a adventures, When 4 student at the | gta, o wound coming from the juniversity he was driven from the/earth beneath his head. Digging, | Philippine islands because of his jhe unearthed a box containing tele patriotic activities, He returned! graph instrumenta from which a Jonce and was deported. He return-| cable extended straight down thru Jed again and was exiled to a lonely | tho earth, In this box he found [spot on a distant island, where he| initialed D, & lip of paper |spent four years in recondite acten-| Knowing that 11 year ago in if le investigatic writing poetry | this arid spot two prospectors had and modeling statues, one of which |tunnelied their way to the core of won the gold medal at an Interna |ine earth, he recalled that one was ltlonal fair. After further adven-|peyia Innes, who Mr. jtures he was put to death by the/ nad chronicied on that earthward government in his 86th | rrp, He immediately informed Mr, Burroughs of dis find Mr | Burroughs hastened to the spot and soon was in telegrapbio communi. cation with David Innes. From the core of the earth comes a strange and marvelous account of his exploration of the Great Em pire of Peljucidar,’ {ts peopl gt Jeantio animals, grotesque beauty, Its perpetual sun and his love and hagardous search for Dian the Beautiful. Mr. Burroughs has giy-| en us this story just as he received it by telegraph from David Innes in Pellucidar, $00 miles beneath “THE KING'S POWDER,” Alber | ing earth's surface, ltus T. Dudley; Lothrop, Lee & Bhep- one ard Co. “THR YELLOW 6EVE The leading characters are @ D®& | und Snell; Century Co trict son of a Tory father in the prov who have enjoyed fax ince of New Hi hire, and his novela of the Far former chum at Exeter, whose | 7 met een is thrills powerful frame enables him to serve |. ci vatery.love story well both friend and country. The et memorable plot turna on the! solaure of the /ify ana his neme gunpowder in Fort William and) ois” gervice Chinese Mary, in Portsmouth harbor, and In-lnne stories recently cludes the agtion of Btark’s troops |r.” gtar in serial for at B er Hill, where our hetoes render @ service that wins the ap-|, There was @ secret a proval of Washington himself, For | 7! 10 boys of high school aga most universally “Stories Juced; he all races and all ing intellec amazing | collec Dent ured mht not who are thone 00d men of was an astonis prodigy, distinguished by achievements in many di Ho wan a great mologiat, poet, ethnologist, sculptor, | biologist, illustrator, goologi#t, emsay: iat, linguist, educator, re former, and at al all @ groat patriot one of the world's novelist, ophthal: | only readery aequel to Edgar Rice McClurg & Co, Ho was the admire: Burroughs Spanish year This book ts the first complete ac Joount of Rizal's life to be offered to the American public. Besides the} story of his exciting career and tragic end, it gives the plote of his two novels, examples of his poetry, mummarios of his treatises, describes | some of his most famous works of |sculptural art, and deals with his | profound and historic influence upon the Far East, where he has become ja figure of portentous and always increasing significance, a ee Readers Bast adven: law-abiding people of the head of it was ¢ Rertha |Of the auietest, mont 6 W,| ost yellow villains that across the pages of an Or nee, When « sclected elved a card black on one eld: ‘eliow on t other dotted In seven |places, he sought whatever tion he could think of; fo knew that presen ep would be practicing its daviltry upon him. Chinese Pennington, a young Ing: | Mabman whose eyes nature had eet | Jin his head with the Chi: | |nese slant, was set upon the trail | ing of his family and of his wifo, and |of Chal-Hung and his gang of ban the story of Annie, the one of Yek-/|dits. The narrative of the contest | el's daughters who is kin to him in |of wits and weapons that follows spirit. ‘The efforts of father andjone of the last words in Far East daughter to break thru the reticence | thrillers, of long misunderstanding and ex- e850 Press their love are recorded with| STUDIES IN CLASSIC AMER. | the same vividness of scene and keen |TCAN LITERATURE,” D. HL Law eye and depth of psychological in-| rence; Thomas Beltzer, might which were remarked upon in| yn this book we have an Engitsh Mra Moore's earlier work author Ufting “out the swaddied tn. | fant of truth that America nome time back”— Frank Lillie Pollock; Century Co. ren ee ‘Tom Jackson, the son of a|'* 7% on, the son of wealthy Canadian lumberman, haa] It deals with the writings of | spent money freely and taken more | 2¢2Jamin Franklin, Hector St. John | Interest in college sports than in|%® Crevecoeur, Fenimore Cooper, his studies, Checked suddenty in| 24s8f Allen Poa, Hawthorne, Dana, this, he goes to the northern woods | Melville and Whitman, | to visit an uncle, Instead of find. Lawrence explains “There ts aj Ing friends, he is stranded in a| few feeling in the old American solitary wilderness. ‘Too proud to| books, far more than there ts in the | fo home, he tries to straighten out|modern American books, which are) the wreck of @ backwoods ‘tarm,|pretty empty of any feeling, and | finds an unexpected resource in| Proud of It. There is a ‘different’ hunting and trapping and, with the | feeling In the old American classics, | ald of a young Indian friend, begins | It is the shifting over trom the old to develop a ploneer life. psyche to something new, a displace. Suddenly he finds that he has| ment.” | enemies about him. Puzzled, ho| And that is the {dea he tries to gets wind of a buried treasure—|bring out as he dissects the works A strange treasure, as it turns out,|of the men enumerated above, but valuable. Ho finds It, is cheat. ed out of it, regains it thru several 1 perilous adventures, and finally secures ft just in time to redeem| hia thoughtless college career by saving his father's business from DAIRY SESSION. ruin, Every Phase of Business to Be Discussed “THE LOVE CHILD” Pearl Moore; Thomas Seltzer, both at, New York. When Bertha Pearl's first novel, “Sarah and Her Daughter,” appeared, | ° readers and critios agreed that there was no one like her to interpret the | dumb heart of the immigrant. “Our |* hope,” said one writer, “that a really | inspired document would come from the Ghetto ts at last realized.” The Love Child ia the moving story of Yekel, an Old World, un- practical, postio man, baffled nade dumb by the non-understand. ever prote well he | low sey. | proper “THE TIMBER TREASURE,” “THE SAHARA HUNTERS,” DR. FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co, Nowhere does there exist a people more savage and less known than the Black-Veiled Men of tho Desert, the Touaregs and the Tubbus. As yet, explorers have only dared to | dreds of de representing 39 fringe the outskirts of thelr coun: | nations will assemble here October f | try. Their fastnesses, in the Hog-|for the opening session of the| gar mountains, which lie lke a| World's Dairy congress. ridge across the Sahara desert, are! The seesions will continue here two | all unknown. ®, in Philadelphia on the 4th, and] ‘They still live as in Syracuse, N. Y., from the 5th to plundering caravans, pillaging Bed-|the 10th. ery phase of dairying} ouln encampments, and trading in| has been given a place for discussion slaves, Dressed all in black, with |on the program. ja black veil over their faces (which | Foreign governments having dairy- vell is never removed even for eat: | Ing departments will send represent- ing nor during sleep) and mounted | atives to the congress, Othor dele- on their racing camols, they terror. | gates are from agricultural associa- ize a region almost half as large as|tions, co-operative associations, re the United States, |Search Institutions, pure food organ- Yet their customs are curiously | izations, societies Interested in breed- democratic, and women possess per-|ing, and commercial and scientific fect Independence. A boy, who {s | associations, half-American by birth, is captured | The congress wil take up the by this tribe, his father 1s siain by |many problema connected with datry- ja strange devilrity, and yet thru |ing in tho light of post-war develop- |his friendship with @ marabout and| ments. Experts on every question with a water-finder he succeeds in {confronting the dairyman, from bringing this hostile tribe into | breeding to the marketing of milk friendly relations with civilization, | Products, will address the congress. The book {# extraordinarily full of | It is hoped that the interchange of the desert (whence its author has | Views among authorities from all sec~ jJust returned) and strikes a vivid | tons of the world will prove of in- adventure note in regions where | estimable benofit to tho industry. \few men have been. Moreover, Itke rama NER IER sang all the Rolt-Wheeler books, ita in- cf ESS WwHo formation ts as accurate as its story |*rom Kansas City Star. Is thrilling. “Whon a college student gots a pink, perfumed letter from his home “STORIES ABOUT Horsms,"| town, and then rushes to the fra- retold from St, Nicholas; Century |'nity plano and noftly plays the | Co. bad march,” says our Mount} ns |Oread correspondent, “it 1s 10 il Ne saad gut navihlta tneei tee chances to one ho ts not thinking of t his Sunday school teacher, or his mers srep ooh rai! een linet Hdear old grandmother, who marked andsome 0 . books that are eminently eany to | iif New socks #0 nlcoly Just before he packed hi lread, Among the yolumes already schoo” Lay: WASHINC Sept. 28.—Hun. | land pltrates, eee 1923. FRIDAY, SEV LEMBER 28, The Monson Groceteria Stores HOME BREAD —machine wrapped 1-Ib. loaf .-----7¢ 1%4-1b. loaf....10¢ P= G BUCKET SALE 19 Bars OG P & G SOAP PG and one 10-quart Galvanized Pail, $1.40 value, for....... Vt wort |MAeHTWA SOAP 1 He weit | RABHTNA S040 THe WHITE MAPHTHA SOAP P-G RAB pig i IARHTHA SOAR HAPHINA SOAR another big Boap feature— JAP ROSE SOAP CLEANSER Polar White Soap a. ss cALUHINUM & D. sna %, " ry : ng ve Mado by. Palmolive 35c g mans FOR TOILET SOAP gocreve Salmon {! 29c TOM THUMB HARD WHEAT LOUR —a strictly hard wheat, fancy pat ent Montana Flour ace: INZ 49-lb. Sack 29¢ |BEANS|*1.90 DOZEN .-------$3-45) Small | Med. | Large Can CASE ceecececee 86.85 Can | Can FLAG CATSUP Botte OC}! 10 ¢|14c}24c a COFFEE = 29¢ —our big feature in Canned Goods —very small and deliclous—grown and packed In New York State, ROMAN MEAL the ideal health food; pkg. SPECIAL PRICES CANNED VEGETABLES FOLGER'S golden Gate Stree cut COFFE! WACOM PACKED FOLGER’ t= 25C DOWNTOWN STORES Groce, No. 6—85 Pike St Groo, No, 14—Westlake Public Market Groce. No. 7—South End Public Market UNIVERSITY DISTRICT Groo. No, 16—University Public Market Groo. No. 121006 46th Bt ort : Groo. No. 21-—Market alee NS Place, 4th and Brooklyn N. B, BALLARD DISTRICT [Grow No 4—0419 Ballard Avo. E Vacuum Packed Orange Pekoe and Japan FLAG BRAND Flag TenderSweetPeas “:’173c $2.00 $3.76 FLAG rete BEANS “cx a? 23c «(2.64 4.97 Flag Small Green Limas **::'29c FOLGER’S ‘“tin’ —have you tried it? a ane NEW YORK STATE’S FINEST Buy In Dozens and Case Lots Now—There Is a Saving Worth While . FLAG SUCCOTASH *::' 21c 2.36 4,54 FLAG vory‘Sme PEAS “is 15¢ 1.68 3,24 Refugee FLAG coit*'vsx BEANS Xba? 29c 3.40 6.75 3.32 6.26 45 GRAIN PURE APPLE CIDER VINEGAR ©: GATE COFFEE Unusually Good 1-lb. can C TE ol. UMA ‘orry Un N. No. 81—Cohimbia BROADWAY DIgTRIOT Groc, No. 9—212 Broad- way N. . | j g Unies on paq not get uct pi twenty: million: ache, Sa di L ¢ a s t