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More Than Ordinary Care Needed to Check "Acid-Mouth" For ' 'Acid-Mouth'' is a com mon and particularly baffling con dition. So common that 95% of all persons are said to have it. So baffling that only the most scientific care can make headway against it. P?B?CO R*. U. S Pat. Off. TOOTH PASTE Counteracts "Acid-Mouth" Twice-yearly examinations by a re liable dentist, and the twice-daily use of Pebeco Tooth Paste seem to be the most 'effective mefns of combatipg harmful mouth acids. Pebeco simply encourages the saliva to do its normal daily work, and there is no tooth cleanser, mouth wash, or neutralizer of "Acid-Mouth" that can equal natural alkaline saliva. ES jgg g ggB BOfjP't i^r Sold by drv agists everywhere The Dulin & Martin Co.'s Unrivaled Collection of Fine Cut Glass As agents for the world's three finest cut glass manufacturers?Libbey, Hawkes and Dorflinger, we are enabled to offer our patrons an incomparable selection from the moderate price to the most elaborate and finest pieces at reasonable prices con sistent with quality. ? Cat Glass Bowls $5.50 to $35 Cat Glass Vases $2.00 to $57.50 Cat Glass Bon Bon Dishes $1.75 to $10.00 Cat Glass Nappies $5.00 to $10.00 Cat Glass Sugar & Cretans. $4 to $12 Pr. % Cat Glass Sandurich Plates. .$8.75 to $15 Cat Glass Candlesticks $3 to $825 Ea. Cat Glass Water Sets .$7SO Up Cut Glass Comports .$2.75 Up Cat Glass Jewelry Boxes $6 to $25 In addition to the above our collection embraces a wide range of cut glass novel ties including French Dressing Bottles, Candy Jars, Mayonnaise Sets, Fruit Dishes, Desk Sets, Cigarette Boxes, Cabarets, also a complete line of table service in finest heavy cut rock crystal and engraved de signs. Dulin & Martin Co. 1215 F St. and 1212-18 G St. N. W. Get the Right Paints Stains, Varnishes and Finishes "Well begun is half (10116'' you know, and you can't start any redecorating job well unless you have the right mediums. We'll see that you get proper finishes when you come here, and you'll benefit also by SPECIALLY LOW PRICES WOOD-BRITE - Floor Finishes Stain & Varnish - CALCIMO - Wall Finish in All Tints .STIMATES FURXSHKI)?CORKKSPXDEXCE IXVITED PROMPT SHIPMENTS TO ALL POIXTS HUGH REILLY CO. 1334 New York Avenue WHOLESALE RETAIL | STRIVING TO RAISE RED CROSS QUOTA IN TWO DAYS LEFT Hundreds of Workers Go I Forth to Solicit Additional Dollar Memberships. Two days remain for Washington to fill its double quota for the Ked Cross of 100,00ft members and $100,000. With the end in view of pushing Washington to more than its pre I scribed quota, every available re ! source of the Thanksgiving victory j | roll call managers was put into op- ; eration today and will/remain in op ! eration until the close of the cam paign tomorrow night. Hundreds of Red Cross workers in | uniform, aided by numbers of volun teers wearing the otfU^ftl canvasser s badge, went torth today, determined on pinninj it button on every man ;ind woman not already wearing the Ked Cross emblem. Contributions | over the dollar asked will be turned over to the war-time relief fund. I Special Matinee This Afternoon. A special matinee for the benefit of the lied Cross fund will be held this afternoon at 5 o'clock at Moore s Garden Theater. In addition to show inn the feature film. "Soldiers of For tune," from the book by ltichard Har dinK Davis, the Mack Sennett bath ing beauties will appear in person through the courtesy of Tom Moore and Sidney B. Lust, and after per forming their act will solicit mem berships in the audience. Reser\ed seats for the perfofmanee are on sale at the principal Red Cross stations and at the theater. The entire pro ceeds will go to the relief fund. Arrangements now in course or completion with the State Dep.^t ment promise a treat for the Pr'"ce of Wales on his arrival in Mn*sh'"S" ton tomorrow. Present plans have it that Miss Dorothy Beauty Brown, the most popular Red Cross Walter Reed Hospital, will pin a Red Cross button on the future king .on his arrival at the Union station. Strenuous eflorts will be made in the short time left for soliciting to ; 1 have Washington take Jities in ' ! amonc the leaders of the cities ln ! the Vnited States who ha\e an overwhelming vote of eonfv^nce in the organization. The work that lies before the Red Cross has been repeatedly brought before the pub c and the pub'.ic is looked to to do its share in carrying on the work here and abroad. Gratifying Reports. One of the most gratifying reports received yesterday by Thomas Bell Sweeney, chairman of the campaign, came from the Lyceum Theater. The chorus girls at the performance Sat urday night volunteered to go among the audience and . within ten minutes i collected more than *100. Every member of the company, as well as ; every employe of the house, has en ' through the courtesy of the Semmes Motor Company and the Graphoscope Comnany open air pictures of:Red Cross activities were shown Saturday nieht and will be repeated tonight and tomorrow night. The above firms have donated a motor truck and a moving picture machine. Thirty-two per cent of the workers I in the Washington navy yard have I already joined the Red Cross, and ef i forts are being made today and to ! morrow by Commander H. L. Fence to ! get a subscription of 100 per cent, or : the 9.497 employes of the yard. 3,0-3 \ have joined. Colored Woman's Offering. : So universal has been the appeal that many stories touching on efforts of poor persons to help make the campaign a success have been related by Red Cross workers. Miss Alys Downing reports that a jar of jam was ofTered to one of the workers in lieu of a one-dollar membership fee by an old colored woman who said i she wanted to do something to show [ her appreciation of the Red Cross for I saving her son s life in France. ! An old lady called at campaign ! headquarters > in the Wyatt building f yesterday and said she could not give ! any money, but would like to wash ! the windows and scrub the floors or j do something to show her gratitude ! for the Red Cross for taking care of her children during the influenza epi demic last fall. ; Prominent. Women Helping. Among the many prominent women of Washington who are assisting in making the drive a success are Mrs. Ralph Jenkins. Mrs. H. H. Flather, Mrs. I. H. Saunders, Mrs. M. P. Maus, Miss Virginia Hunt, Miss Helen Park er. Miss Elizabeth Collins, Miss Myra Hendry. Miss Eleanor Johnston, Miss Elsie Cassels, Miss F. Blake, Mrs. G. C Minnegerode, Mrs. George B. Mose | ley, Mrs H. B. Merrick. Miss Marie Murray, Mrs. Lula Grubbs, Mrs. C. T. ' Swann, Miss A. Hill, Mrs. Thomas i Kelly, Miss Katherlne Kanary, Miss ? Mildred Ralph, Miss Louise Kjng, ' Miss Sarah King. Miss Elona Cal ! deron, Miss C. Lenihan, Miss Muriel ! Denys. Miss Dorothea Denys. Miss Marian R. Trumbull, Miss Helen Ham lilton. Mrs. Charles W. Semmes. Mrs. 'lee D Latimer, Mrs. Robert Fleming. Mrs. Allyn K. Capron, Mrs. 1. Gal- , Iowa- Mrs. J. Dimond. Mrs L S. Wolfe. Mrs.. H. W. Hubbard. Mrs. Charles V. Wheeler. Mrs. George Mevers Miss Elizabeth Mead. Miss I Helene Ulster, Miss Leila Draper. Mrs. John C. Shephard, Miss E. P. I Walker. Miss Katherlne Horner Miss ! Elizabeth Engsteir, Mrs. Victor, i Kauffmann, Miss Edith McOammon, Miss Abbie McCammon, Miss Mar i traret Milne, Mrs. Edgar T \an 'Winkle, Mrs. N. W. Hankemeyer. Miss Marion King, Mrs Alphonse I Rogers. Mrs. J. E. Collins, Mrs. Harry Test Mrs. Elizabeth Hawkins, Mrs. John Van Schaik. Mrs. E. D. Roberts, Mrs J A Hull, Mrs. Thomas Calver, Mrs! Mary Van Ness Fauth. Mrs. F. W True, Miss Laura Volstead Mrs. C. M. iDewell, Mrs. E. A. Quintard Miss i Fdith Raddant, Mrs. O. B. Johnson. Aliss Svlvia Lyon, Miss S.argaret Paine. Mrs. K. Swavely Miss Jane Ir ving. Miss Helen Netherwood Miss Grace Ocumpaugh and Mrs. Anne A\ . Brandon. WILL INDORSE RED CROSS. Eight Governors and Tuberculosis Experts to Approve Christmas Sale. NEW YORK, November 10.?One of i the most important health confer ences In the history of the United States will take place in (Chattanooga, Tenn., November 29, when eight gov i ernors of as many southern states i will meet with tuberculosis experts from the Nationa. Tuberculosis As sociation in an effort to cut the tu ? berculosis death rate in the south and to indorse the Red Cross Christ mas seal sale. This is the first time in the history of the organized fight on tuberculosis that such official action which promises such far reaching results, has been taken. SWEDISH RED CROSS TO AID. ' ^ | STOCKHOLM, November P.?The (Swedish Red Cross Society has decid i ed to begin energetic action to re lieve penury and suffering" in eastern | Europe. A c ommittee has been i formed, headed by Prince Carl of ! Sweden and appeals for contributions ?of cereals, flour and other supplies are to be scattered throughout the coun try. A proposal will be submitted to the next riksdag for a grant of 1,000,000 kroner to be applied to Red Cross work. A relief expedition will be started out at the earliest possible moment. NEW YORK PUBLISHERS REOPEN THEIR PLANTS First Test of Strength "With Strik ers Since Pressmen Took "Vacation"' October 1. NEW YORK, November 10.?Th<; first test of strength essayed by New York publishers since their plants were closed on October 1 by a com bination lockout and strike came to day. when several large plants re sumed operation. Some ran almost normally, but few compositors were at work. Pressmen have voted to re join the . International Pressmen's Union, from which they seceded, but typographers, who began "vacation ing" at the time of the pressmen's strike, are demanding n forty-four hour week and a fart weekly scale be fore they return. The International Typographical Union has repeatedly ordered them back. Most of the feed ers and paper handlers remained out today. The Printers' l,eaguc announced that in shops where the typographers re fused to return plates would be made by photo-engraving typewritten copy. Typographical Union, N'o 6, voted unanimously yesterday to offer to re open negotiations with the employing printers and reindorsed the demands for a $"i0 weekly wage and a forty I four-hour week. POLICE TO OCCUPY OLD EMERGENCY HOSPITAL Arrangements for turning over the old Emergency Hospital property at I Ohio avenue and luth street to the District government for use as a house of detention by the police department have been completed, and it is expected the police will be given possession February 1. The building also will house the department's woman's bu reau. Mrs. Mina C. Van Winkle, head of the woman's bureau, long ago asked for more commodious accommodations for her bureau. In the new quarters she will have ample room for all who may be detained while their cases are under investigation. The branch of the United States pub lic health service occupying the old hospital building will move to the Ox ford Hotel, 15th street and Pennsyl vania avenue, which will be vacated about January 1 by its present occu pant. 'EmAINS WHY GROUPS BE UNABLE TOME Industrial Conference Split Over Construction of Collective Bar gaining, National Board Says. BOSTON, Mass., November 10?In an official statement issued today the na tional industrial conference board points out that the recent industrial conference at Washington "split, not on the issue of collective bargaining, the principle of which had been ac cepted by the employers' group, but on the issue of so construing collective bargaining that an employer could be forced to recognize an outside labor union agent as the representative 6f his employes regardless of whether or not he maintained an open shop.'' Position of the Employers. The statement calls attention to the fact that "speakers from the employ ers' group said again and again that they did not deny the right of waare earners to organize and that they did not oppose the principle of collective bargaining." Moreover, "at no timp tdid the employers' group deny the right of the employer to meet repre sentatives of labor unions not in his employ, or other outsiders, if he vol untarily elected so to do." ; The employers' group, however, in sisted emphatically that "no employer should be coerced into bargaining col i lectively with his employes through [ an agent of labor unions who is not j one of his employes." They pointed lout that "such agent usually is j not familiar with the circumstances of i the Issue and has primary interests other than those of the employes whom he claims to represent; and, further more. that usually he is not really chosen by the employes, but by the labor union." Record Is Quoted. The following exerpt from the of ficial, record summarizes the position of the employers group on this point: "The employers' group regards it as of vital importance that the employers and employes in each individual estab lishment should exercise every effort to settle between themselves all ques tions arising in the employment rela tion without the intervention of out siders. Management and men should regard this as one of their prime priv ileges and duties." "In the final analysis," the statement continues, "the stand taken by the em ployers' group was predicated on the maintenance of the open shop, which j they regarded as a vital American prin ciple and which they saw endangered | by the adoption of the type of col : lective bargaining insisted upon by the j labor group." a ' |y. w. c. a. at wernersville. i World Program Conference Holds | First Meeting This Afternoon. I The world program conference. , called by the eastern central field j of the Young "Women's Christian : Association, is holding its first meet- J | ing this afternoon at Wernersville. | Pa. Two hundred women from Wash- | : ington. D. C.: Maryland. Delaware and I Pennsylvania are attending the con- | ; ference, which will continue through | ! tomorrow and Wednesday. Five | | Washington women are delegates to j the conference. I ! The world program conference will j deiine the place of the y. W. C. A. in terms of world citizenship, based , on the slogan, "American Women for ? the Women of the World." Mrs. Rob- i , vrt K. Strawbridge of Bryn Mawr, . : Pa.,* is chairman of the conference, j Miss Gertrude Marvin will direct j ! Maryland, Delaware and the District i of Columbia. She recently returned | from ov?Tsoas. when- sht- wis in the ROBUST CHILDRtty A child should not look pale, thin or worn. Such condition I denotes malnutrition. To | keep up growth and robust ness a child needs a pleni ! tude of food rich in vitamins. , Scotl's Emulsion | abundant in growth-promoting I properties, is an ideal supple I mental food that could well be ; a part of the diet of every : growing child. ! Children always do well on Scott's Emulsion. Scott A Bowncs Bioomfield N. J. 12-12 canteen service with the 29th Di vision. The Washington women who are delegates to the conference are: Mrs. Hamilton Bayly, Miss Florence M. Brown, Miss Vesta M. I,ittle. ceneral secretary of the E street branch; Mrs. Eva Cowling Weston and Mrs. Wil liam Xotz. +++++ + % Special Lunch :: lliM to 2 The reasonable prices prevailing at the Nankin enable the whole family to eat the best of food in refined sur roundings. (< Lunch, 45c Dinner, 75c ?? Two military aviators, Lieut. Patan- | + chan and Maj. Cheutln. have arrived IT at Tunis by airplane from Rabat Morocco, without a stop. The flight covered a distance of more than 1.200 miles it ! T .A ? NANKIN CAFE Sit 9th St N.W. Victor Goods Exclusively / Select Your Christmas VICTROLA NOW We'll deliver it* when you are ready for it. ROGERS O 1313 F Wholesale and Retail 1 $10 NO MORE TO PAY FOR 30 DAYS To Approved Credit This Beautiful Player Only \ 88-Note?Brand New Guaranteed 10 Y ears SEE IT HEAR IT THIS new-and beautiful Player-Piano is an 88-note instrument, guaranteed for 10 years, which assures you of absolute satisfaction and protection. The instrument is designed along plain lines, yet is so artistic that it is certain to satisfy the most scrutinizing buyer. It contains a five-point motor, bell metal plate, fine sounding board, the latest improvements and devices, copper wound bass strings, ivory keys and ebony sharps, hinges finished in brass, loud and soft pedal expression devices?in fact, is a model Player-Piano and an instrument that compares most favorably with Player Pianos sold elsewhere for a great deal more. HERE is a suggestion worthy the serious consideration of every home and music lover. You may come to Knabe Ware rooms, Inc., the most distinguished, highest class and largest exclusive piano and player store in the city, and select one of these fine Players. For a small down payment of $10 to ap proved credit and a long time to pay the bal ance. you may have the instrument delivered to your home. The moment this Player-Piano arrives, your home becomes bright and cheery with music. Every day and evening takes on a new and happier aspect for you and yours. All piano music is at your command. Dances, light and grand opera selections, sacred, patriotic and popular songs and the great classics are available to you. Surely this is a home suggestion you should adopt?this is the Player-Piano that should be in your home! Compare This Player at $439 \Vi(h Other Players Selling Up to $600 By coming to Knabe Warerooms, Inc., and buying one of these Player-Pianos, you secure the best value that the markets of the entire world afford. We believe you cannot secure such value in a Player-Piano elsewhere than at Knabe Warerooms, Inc. Other stores sell instruments?some at higher, a few,at lower priccs. But this Player-Piano at $439 will compare, we believe, with other instruments sold up to $600. IMPORTANT NOTICE! The number of Player-Pianos at $439 is very limited. To make stare of securing one for immediate delivery, a prompt selection is advised. This is the opportunity you have been waiting for?don't put off buying another minute. As to our responsibility?we refer you to any bank or trust company in the United States? . sWnmoomfi , Inc. 1222 G Street N.W.