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THE LUCKY ONES GOT THE MONEY Because they had an ELK GROVE carton in their home when our representatives called and gave theg a one ($1.00) dollar bille ' You should always have an ELK GROVE carton in your home. Below is a partial list of those who had ELK GROVE cartons when our represen tatives called this week: Xa. HARRY L YOUT, MY. ORiTRUDE GORDON. 1R. /RUTH AMJN. ZrRNW. N . lVOHtON.rD M I e Na, . l D H eet N.R. WAS. N N. Mis 31k t .% A p t44l Street N. W "?S. N A5 OjD . MO. OD, 1344 N.t StAret . W13 1 0t Ot e .W . = MRS. ANIE G RI M3R~ S. P.J 3I.YI 015 0 D, N U. U 'ALL. UBN8 P.3. ,JA M RR U. N. W. 10 a N. W. 104th N treeht N. W. ~ ~.MTI MNU. ANNiR GRRDNIM, SR. .J.8LLIVAN. 1310 30th Street N. W. lei1 20th Street N. W. LIIAR IR. MARY I. MUNDY. 014 S. C. Are. S. M 1310 17th Ktet N. W. wRa. W. CLUB. MRS. CARLES 3. YFATMAN, 1301% 5. C. Ave. S. 3, 100 5. CBredae Ave. . . CAaaaE a. EDMONDS. YRS. H. FRAME, US N. Car. Ave. S. 3. 1336 a. Caroeiea Ave. B. E. MR. E. T. NEAL. MRS. R. DORNEY. 533 4th Street S. I. 1404 S. CaroUaa Ave. P. F., M. N. W. DRI.L. MRN. I. L. I lPHKRON, 3 4th Street s. K. 336 8th Street S. K. .. HAZEL DREW. MINNIE FNNI, 3000 let Street N. W. 1915 11th Street N. W. MRS. LACRA ROSS. 'MRN. C. MORRIS. 1615 11th Street N. W. 306 11th Street N. W. URN. E. l. MONIM- . N. C. HEDRICK. 1348 You street S. E. 1307 11th Street N. W. TERESA 0. MADIGAN. NRA. RODT TIEOMPSON. 2301 Nicholson Ave. N. U 1413 C Street S. K. OEORPUGE M. CrMMINON, URg. TRIPLggT CURTIS, - 1333 Valley Place S. X. '118 Pleasat Street. MR. W. KKOEMAKI, MRS. A. STEWART. 2014 14th Street S. IL 3138 14th Street 8. E. AIltE DIONDI. MR. . . D-A, ___ 338 0th Street S. . 007 10th Stret S. L . MRM. J. MCH AFFER. 1100 10th Street S. K 1 N L. - MRS. F. E. Harper. URN. J N. BROWN.a 7 0th Street S. IL 1031 Street . 3. R. JAENCHKE. MRS. T. B. NALlET. 540 0th Street S. 3. 744 0th street N. . = LIZEIE TINNER. .: 3328 Volta Place N. W. 413 Jth SIMPS.N, MRM. WHALEN. 3417 Que Street. =er MS IWIS 3313 Volts Place N. WV. =.' 31 Que. Stree. MISS Q. C. MiORGAN. 3 S22 Q Street. - MRS. M. SCOTT. 3415 Dent Place. ___ MRS. HERBERT CIARK. M. PETIS. 3034 R Street N. W. 3306 Re.e,.volr Street N. W. MRS. A. T. STEWART. MRS. T. MOLT. 1006 Park Road N. W. 781 P Road N. W. = MRN. W. A. GREENBURG. 83.V .KLS 007 6th Street 5. E.748 6th S. . - MR. IDA F. OLIVER. - = 747% 7th Street S. L. A. V.7 7LUh =tet . 747% 77thStteettS..U. - MR. CORA E. PRENTICE, MRS. J. IL SPECK?. 518 7th Street S. E. 706 7th street S. E. MRA. M RF1NHARDT, 1015 Eye Street S. . 1 3,Stet . S MRS. B. LICARICONE. R6. Se S I. 1305 Eye Street S. E. URN.V. U XITWULL1113 Rye street S. N. MRS. W. X. MITCHRL.. 1068 K Rtreet P. V. Apt. 3. MRS. MW. STEIN, MRS. E. MAGOmE 138 Potomnae Awe. S. E. = 1114 K Street R 10. MRS. J. D). SIMPSON. MRS. ORA CALDWELL. 1110 K street a. 3 917 Potomac Ave. S. E. URN. OLLINS. = MR. K. H. MOYER. 311 Tulip Avenue. MRS. J. A. PADDLUFORD. MRS. . F.HAR~KR 21 Carroll Ave., Takoina Park. 505 Carroll Avenue. MRS. L. H. CHMIDT,ama Par. 5722 Ga. Avenue. - MRS. A. . STEIN. 30 Nadon Street. 6705 Georgia Avenue. MRS. W. F. ARMSTRONG, R4. ARHTON CODURN. 0846 Georgia Ave. 7520 -Georgia Avenue. MRS. EMILY WOOD. MRS. C. O. WATKINS. 6937 Georgia Avenue. 306 20th Street N. W. MRS. N. KESSLER= MRS. A. I. BLAKE. 737 21st Street N. W. 619 Fairmont St.. N. W. FANNIE MRS. W. D. SCLLIVAN, 617 Gresham Place. MATTIE MARSHALL. = MRS. A. T. vrZ. 2532 6th Street N. W.= 43 Uobart Place N. W. URS. IAUDE .pBC4EY MRS. G. TIERNEY. 627 Harvard Street. 1630 0 Street S. E. MRS. W. W. MURRAY. MR.1510 Potomac A.e. A. - 141 Potomac Ave. . E. MRS. N. . SLATTERY. = ]IURS. J. C. MeTAL?.. 1421 Potomac Avene S. . - 1210 0 Street S. E. MRS. S. F. WIL.LIAMS, =1344 G Street S. . MRS. K. K. PADDON, = 606 I Street S. E. MRS. F. A. ELLIS MA=RLS B. ESTEP. 642 G Steet S. F. 813 Eye Street S. K. URS. C. K. HUDOONS. MRN. JOSEPH DEN. 622 Eye Street S. :. - 934 23rd Street N. W. MRS. M. WEST. U0. DAY. 1321 23rd Street N. . 50 23rd Street N. W. MRS. HARRISON. = MRS. W. N. REC.FAN. 59KSre .V * 814 22nd Steet N. W. MM OEH1.RPTI ELIZ.ARETH VIRTH, 0 2n tee .V 1277 N. H. Avenue. Apt. 44. .wsni. = MU. J K.F.D..113 *2. Stee WN. V - 370 GogtaAveue.MRS. C. H. NALRLE. . * 401 Geog~a mmo . M.AN. J. T. CKER.ON - URN.F. ANREWS4 97t Storaee n . . = 451 Geor~a Avnue. RN. W3. . BOY.= = BERTHADUGAN.3410 Vorta PAce. N. W. = = 528 Gergi Aveue.MIRS. W. MORAN, = 112 35t 14tet N V.MRN. W. L. IANT.ER, ~... . A. . BUOUN. 106 2Qt Street N. W. 118324tu Set .3V MR LI'oir StreetN. W = URN. K. S. WAWNMR01 T SOT.etN.V = 336 Gerg~aAvene.MRN. AW. EAJJ. * PhIIP CAONIC.743 3th Street . V. URN. ...JA.EPERPEC.T. - atoi Os. Aienue.ROaZAe.N. V 1018EyeRtree .. - - URN. W7*L F. A.eR.eCAIL. N. 1110 DyStStrettS.. . = NRA. IL KELLY. 30 3.W STRSINt 3 NUN. HA. D. SIMPCON = K. S5IV~&~S.11.0 K Street S. . p. ~ ~ ~ ~ 31 Street S. K.RN .v.CGN __ UN. . TRCMR 01 J. A.w PLFOD URNB.TCIY321 Saplee ve. Tak.n Pak - MRN.. AD REN = 131 K Steet ~k. 30 K.dee SrAe.. MRR. W.~ 3 F.AMTOG = URN. CL"~ 13 ~ M16. 3R. KErLERN w 52532 6th Street N. W. ETHE VOR~.MRN. UDE BURCE Y Sbutte owingto itsunifor sweetnard antrfevt. * andis deendale bute f 51th tbesof te. housE. * holder of WuhigtoMRR. othe buITTERY, crn parale t ELKGROV, 4a 1 notome Aentez .hE * Ifyourgrocr dos 62o hande SteLK GROVE MnotifyAHFAusAX 52GOLDEN&COMPANYW IIHNHIIIIIINIIUNIlNINNIHMRII.IJOII EPHHII.II REPETTNIIIIIN WEAL1hY WOMAN I HD AS BICAM~T Former Chorus Girl Acoused By Hotel Owner Spends Might - In Police Station. NUW YORK. Aug. .--Instead of ealebrating her thirtieth birthday with' an- elaborate house party as planned, Mrs. Margaret Hynes. for mer chorus girl and widow of a wealthy lawyer, was barricaded in her beautifully appointed home at Uheepshead Day. Friday night. Earlier in the day she was held, in the Coney Island court in $2,00 ball on a charge of bigamy preferred by Frank P. Hynes. proprletor of the cosmos Hotel. Manhattan. Upon furnishing the bond and re turning home she discovered that the sheriff bad levied on all her belong ings-her costly home, one of the show places of Sheepahead Bay: her luxurious furnishings, paintings. bric a-brae, and a $.000 automobile. Fearing that mysterious callers who rang the bell during the after noon and evening were deputy sheriffs bent on driving her into the street. she barricaded herself in and telephoned to her friends that the birthday party was off. HALTUD IN MOTOR CAN. Mrs. Hynes, as she is known, al though she informed a reporter for the New York American. that she never was married to Hynes, is un usually attractive and reputed to be wealthy. As she was starting off from her home Thursday evening in her motor car, Hynes, accompanied by Detective Joseph Lavelle, commanded the chau fcur to halt the car. She was locked up for the night in the Coney Island police station. Yesterday Hynes told Magistrate McCloskey that he was married to her in 1910, and later discovered that she had never been divorced from her second husband, Edward Ruland. a former theatrical man, of 73.1 Fulton street, Hrooklyn. Mrs. Hynes denied that she had married Hynes. Her first husband was Harry F. Johnson, a wealthy lawyer, whom she married when she was sixteen. le died two years later. SAYS RE SaUKS REVENGE. Before she left Ruland. she said. she met Hynes, then a department store salesman earning $14 a week, and added: "I became infatuated with him, but I realize now that I never did really love him. My tirst husband had left me quite a fortune, and I learned to my sorrow that it was this that at tracted Hynes. I gave luim the money with which to start the Cos mos Hotel, and now I am repaid for ny generosity by this outrageous trumped-up charge of bigamy. "After realizing my folly in tak ing up with him I Informed him that I was throigh with him for good. In a spirit of revenge he brings tail charge against me. "It's simply a case of trying to get possession of all my money and be longings. He has already attached my bank accounts." Mrs. H,ynes has two adopted daughters, three and eight years. She comes from a wealthy family in Buffalo. For two years after the death of her first husband, she ap peared in musical comedies under the name of Margaret Palmer. DIVORCED BY HUSBAND TO REWED "DEAD" SOLDIER Veteran Returns to Find Himself Missing Point in Triangle. Gives Wife Choice. KANSAS CITY, Aug. I.-When Henry Curtis, the husband whom she had believed dead in France, return ed, Mrs. Esther Warren Curtis Peel decided that she loved him better than she did Eugene Peel, whom she had weddd after being informed Curtis wal dead. Today Peel was granted a divorce In the circuit court here. The woman who was the pivot of the curious romance, married Henry Curtis in Carthage, Mo., in August, 1914. Peel was another suitor, ac cording to testimony in the divorce suit. In 1915 Curtis joined the Canadian army and after the second battle of Mons his wife was officially informed by the Canadian government that he died as the result of being gassed September 10, 1916, she married Peel, and in June, 1919, Curtis reappeared. He said he had been gassed, had spent months in a hiospital, much of the time delirous, and that all marks of identification had been lost. Curtis discovered that his wife had married Peel and he asked her to choose. She chose the returned sol dier. SUFFRAQISTS EXPECT TO LAND TENNESSEE KNOXVILLaE, Ten.. Aug. ;.--The confident prediction that Tennessee will be the thirty-sixth State to ratify the Federal equal suffrage amend ment was mado here today by suf fragists, who aro forming their skirmish lines for the b~ttle which will begin on August 0. when the Ten nessee legislature meets in .qpecial session. Tennessee is the mecca for suf fragists from everywhere. Some ar rive on every train. The latest ar. rival is Miss Anla Pollitser, legislative secretary of the National Woman's Party. She came fresh from. inter views with Senator Harding and Gov. James M. Cot. "The foundation here is more cc cure than it was in, Delaware." she said. "If Republicans who control one-fourth the legislature are true to their party platform, and if Governor Cox does all he has assured us he will do. Tennessee will be the thirty sixth State without doubt. It is the acid test of their sincerity." Every member of the legislature will be polled and interviewed by the young army of suffragists here be tween now and August 9. THE EAGLE RESTAURANT uS6 Ninth St. N. W. DANBE3 SALON NOW OPE. Dlaner Pnees ee to 8:30. M.5 supper ces, 1:30P..to:0A.. TiHOM.%n .JA RDEN NMWi. Balnees Lunch, 48c. II te I Daily. apecial Dinnet, lac up. 3 to S P. ~i ude Planer. I i A. N. to UJ 8 attentiea given to -heater Men! It's Our Lo y Gain HERE ARE Men's and Young Men's SUITS.-RAINCOATS-O'COATS Included in this sale is merchandise not in the building ON at time of fire. These goods also At Prices That Are Made Possible Because to go at fire sae of the Fire at Our Stockrooms and Store at prices. . '117 E. Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md. Fortunately a Goodly Portion of the Stock Was on the First Floor and Escaped Serious Fire Damage On Sale Now at On Sale Now at Our Washing= Our Washing ton Store ton Store 930F St.Nw. 93_FSNw. D ealers and Merchants Remember the Fire -Attention- Caused the Sale This sale offers you an oppor- But we are selling all our other tunity to buy at less than cost . .; merchandise as well at these today. prices. . Doors Open Promptly Monday. at 8 A. M. Summer and Cloth 1 Three-Piece Wool I Odd Suits _ Suits A few slightly damaged by fire ------- These dar red n m e_ ~ -som onlyspottd by ater.suits, but damaged. In some cases ____ -some only spotted by water. only coats, others vests, others Some in first-class condition; all pants; cloth alone in these suits - styles; all sizes ................. worth nearly double this amount I Men's and Young Men's $4.99 1Three-Piece SUITS = .High-Grade Hand-Tailored Garments This lot should appeal to the man who is accustomed to pay up to 3. $75.00 for his clothes. 3 The materials are worsteds, cassimeres, flannels and gabardines, in= blues, blacks, grays and greens-all this season's styles. Not all styles in each size, but a style and size for every manC They say opportunity only knocks at a man's door once.____ Come tomorrow and buy clothing at less than wholesale today.. A Few Better Grades $24.44'and $29.99 3A e BetrGrai~s,S$8.5, $1.22 $5.55|Odd Coats . . . . $1.98 RULES OF THE SALE Conbro Clothes Shop N.= Al|ain