Evening Star Newspaper, April 3, 1921, Page 11

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riginal Menfs $2 Neglige Shirts $1.19 Men'’s High-grade Neglige Shirts, ! ! 4 of corded madras, crepe madras, high-count madras and mercerized shirtings. Soft cuff style, with five- button fronts; all new spring pat- terns. Sizes 14 to 17. Men’s $1.25 Athletic Union Suits, 95¢ Men’s “Faultless” Ath- letic Union Suits, of fine grade, soft-finished checked nainsook ; made with new blouse back, which insures perfect comfort. Men’s Fibe Si;:. :lalf Hrose } 44c Men's Onyx Fiber Silk Half Hose, seamless and fully reinforced at all wearing points; in black and all plain shades; per- fect quality. 2 Regular $7.95 Value (Tax, 30c extra.) Men’s 50c Ath- | letic Underwear | 29(: Made of checked nain- sook, sleeveless coat shirts, knee-length draw- ers. Only a limited quan- tity. .. Mostly all sizes. (Limit, four garments.) Men's Union | Men's $1.25 | suits, Worth | $1.19 | Chambray 85¢ Men’s “Varsity” Athletic Union Suits, made of striped madras, sleeveless style; knee length ; made with per- manent closed crotch. Sizes 34 to 46. Men’s President Suspenders, 35¢c Men’s Genuine President Suspenders, wide or narrow webbing; stripes and plain colors; all new, fresh stock. (Limit, two pairs.) g Men’s 75¢ Athletic Underwear, 45¢ Men’s High-grade 72x80 Checked Nainsook Athletic Underwear, sleeveless coat shirts, knee-length drawers: made with double seat and side adjusting straps. All regular sizes. Men’s $1.00 Work Shirts, 65¢ Men’s Golden Rule Bilue Chambray Work Shirts, with collar attach- ed; full-cut sizes; finished with one pocket. Sizes up to 19, Regulation Fireman Blue Chambray Work Shirts, made with neckband; finish- ed with one breast pocket; full cut sizes; perfect qual- ity. Men’s $1 “Onyx” Silk Hese, 69¢c Men’s “Onyx” Thread Silk Half Hose, full fash- ioned; in black and plain colors. These are classed as seconds, and for this reason the label has been removed. Sale price, pair, 69c; or six pairs for $4.00. Men’s - . $1.50 and $2.00 Nightrobes, 95¢ Men’s . “Faultless” Make Nightrobes, full cut sizes; V neck style; fine quality mus- lin and cambric ; odd lots and me slightly imperfect * With One and Two Pairs of Trousers who prefer the extreme ones. weather. effoete, Leown, tarn. ete. Men’s Silk Shirts “spring patterns; all perfect quality. Men’s Silk Shirts, of Eagle crepe, I silk stripe crepe and satin-stripe flat } silks; soft cuff style; many new i @ | | Regular $2.00 Value Men’s Union Sui ,length legs. Sizes 34 to 46; seconds of a famous btand. Regular $1.00 Value 34 to 46. Regular $598 Value guaranteed fast. Worth 69c Pair Up to $1.00 Men’s Neckwear soc Men's Neckwear, good quality silks, made in, the new medium shape four-in- hand style: in stripes, me- dium and large figures and plain colors. Men’s Garters Pair at l6c Men’s Brighton or Paris Pad Garters, in black, white aad plain colors. (Limit, 2 pairs.) Men’s Gordon Hose 12%4¢ Men’s Gordon Economy Half Hose, good quality maco cotton; fully rein- forced at all wearing points; perfect quality; black and plain colors Sale of Clothing! Men’s, Young Men’s and High School Students’ New Spring Suits These suits are from several makers of high repute, and they are of a high standard of quality and workmanship. It’s the big clothing opportunity of the spring season—and men whe have been waiting for just such a sale should be here early tomorrow for first chojce. The patterns and shades represented are those which are most in demand—and there is sufficient variety of styles to meet the taste of those who desire conservative models as well as those mere: and Thibets. STORE Men’s Union Suits , of fine quality ribbed balbriggan; light weight for spring wear; short sleeves and full- slight Men’s Athletic Union Suits Men’s Athletic Union Suits, made of first quality 72x80 checked nainsook ; armholes and neck full)_' taped ; closed crotch. Sizes Men’s Bath Robes Men’s Terry Cloth Bath Robes, full round co'lar, plaited back, finish- ed with’,cord at neck and heavy waist girdle; new patterns; colors Men’s Bath Slippers Men’s Terry Cloth Bath Slippers, made with'carpet soles; fu'ly bound. sizes 30 to & 14 ~ A Separate Store for Men— Clothing and Furnishings Main Floor Direct Entrance From K Street & Imitated in Name—But Not in Value- Giving $1.00 J Men’s $2.00 Neglige Shirts $1.59 Men’s Ox-weave White Neglige Shirts, with soft button-down collar—a popu- lar model for young men. Sizes up to 18, ] J% 69c $4.29 45¢ All sizes. Men’s Cotton Union Suits. 99C Men’s Cotton Ribbed Union - Suits, plain white only; short sleeves, knee- length legs; perfect quality. Sizes 34 to 46. Men’s $1.00 Otis Underwear, 69¢ Men’s Otis Balbriggan Underwear, short-sleeve shirts, full-length legs; drawers made with extra re- inforced seat; subject to slight imperfections. Men’s 50c Athletic Undershirts, 35¢ Men’s Athletic Under- shirts, fine ribbed cotton; pullover sleeveless style; white only. A Sale That Answers the Clothes Question. Suits with one and two pairs of trousers, in a large assortment of celors, including brown, tan, green and gray, in stripes; single and double breasted models. suits in sizes 16 to 20 years, young men’s styles in sizes 34 to 42. Men's and young men's suits of Blue Serge, Blue Cheviot and Fancy Mixtures, in Cassimeres and Cheviots, with one pair of pants; including plenty of conservative models. Regular sizes, 34 to 42. Men’s Spring O’Coats—Special, $24.75 Men’s Spring Overcoats of light-weight materials—just the proper coat for this Single-breasted models, lined with venetian. Regular sizes, 35 to 42. Sale of Trousers at $4.75 Pair Men's and Young Men's Trousers in a large assortment of patterns, including gray, green, Of Cheviot, Cat Students’ bl 2 waist measare, | o Tieather Goldenberg’s Clothes Shop for Men—First Floor—Entrance From K Street. { THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, O@ BOTH SIDES OF 7™ AT K ST. “THE DEPENDABLE JDay oale ns ‘nrnishings Here is the sort of news men will be glad to read—the announcement of our THREE-DAY SALE OF MEN'S FURNISHINGS. There couldn’t be a better time for such an event—right at the beginning of the season and at a time when the average man wants to replenish his necds. GREAT AND HUMBLE AT BURROUGHS BIER Famous Men and Children Bring Wild Flowers at | Last Simple Rites. By the Associated Press. WEST PARK, N. Y., April 2—In the rustic_house that was the retreat of John Burroughs for nearly half a cen- tury 150 representatives of the thou- sands of nature lovers who admired his outdoor life and writings gathered to- day at his funeral. The ceremonies! were short, of great simplicity and reminiscent’ of the career which the { great naturalist pursued among the hills and streams and flowers and beside his rugged stone hearth with volumes of lmerson. W hittier and Wordsworin. By train and by automobile the little group of mourners arrived throughout the torenoon at Riverby, the naturalist's home, situated among the pines and inaples, where the Shawangunk moun- tains mert the waters of the Hudson. Scientists and manufacturers of wide prominence mingled in sorrow with Boy Scouts and the children of the neighbor- hood. Publishers and horticulturists bowed revercnt heads with a gvoup of religious men from the Holy Cross monastery. The mourners came from among the rocks and rills of New Eng- land, the banks of the Potomac, the shores of Lake Michigan, the snows of Canada, the great stone buildings of the patriarchal countenance of the ven- erab.e naturalist. H Come From Far and Near. i Amonge them were Thomas A. Edison, Henry Ford and Harvey . Firestone, who for several years have spent their vacations outdoors with Mr. Burroughs. Next to Mr. Edison stood an aged and gray-haired man who had pedaled his bicycle from Binghamton, more than 300 miles away, to witness the epilogue of the great naturalist’s stay upon the earth that he loved so fervently. This man was Charles C. Branhall, an acquaint? ance of the naturalist since childhood days. ) The sun was shining brilliantly and the pines at Riverby murinured sadly in the breezes from the Catskills when the funeral service began. From a muffied phonograph came the soft violin strains of Pinsuti's “Remem- brances.” The Lord's prayer was said {and then slowly a reader spoke some lines written by Karl W. Willlams, which Mr. Burroughs felt charac- teristic of his own self. i ““The forest nods in fellowship,” they read, “the winds my playmates are; the waters lisp the sign of brotherhood, and In the thunder's voice I hear a tongue which is not wholly strange. The stars are kindly coun- selors to me; I claim a kinship with the worm that crawls, and with the 'c|ly wherein the simple tale of its dim life is writter.” Read From His Own Works. Quotations from Ewcrson- and ‘Wordsworth and Walt Whitman, com- panion of his middle age, also were read. Then Willlam Ormiston Ro: of Montreal, 2 friend of Mr. roughs through many years, read ex cerpts from “Waliting,” one of the first poems penned by the naturali and from “Accepting the Universe, his latest book. Rev. Franklin D. Elmer, pastor of the Collegiate Baptist Church at Col- gate University, likewise a longtime friend, led the prayers and made a few remarks: “There are here to pay him tribute,” he said, “those who have come from the woodland and the field, the shop and school, the church and offices of state, the mart and the ocean’s shore. This man, O Lord, has taught us the beauty of your creations, of the rivers, the sky, the valley, the birds and the beasts.” Last Leok at His Face. ‘When he had finished the soft flute and violin notes of a cradle song spread over the room where men, ‘women and children were crowded in sorrow. Then the mourners flled by the bier for a last look at the face of Mr. Burro Some of them picked wild violets from the coffin te keep as a remem- brance. There were many floral of- ferings, but they did not come from the artificial atmosphere of the city hothouse. They were wild flowers gsathered from the fields and hill- sides. ‘The children of West Park, who frequently visited Riverby to sit at the feet of the aged nature lover and learn of a 1 and vegetable life from him, trod slowly past, each one leaving a, bunch of wild flowers. From all sections of the nation letters came today telling of the love for the natural and of his inspira- tion to those who find comfort and contentment in the great outdoors. Tomorrow, \r. Burroughs' eighty- fourth birthday, his body will be taken by automobile into the western Catskills and interred at the place where he was born, near the town of Roxbury. Many of those who at- tended his funeral today will go to ‘Woodchuck Lodge, his den in the moun- tains, for burial. —_— BERLIN GOMPLAINS OF FRENCH TROOPS| Note Sent to League of Na- tions Protesting Saare Territory Control. By the Awsociated Press. GENEVA, April 2—Germany has sent another note to the secretariat of the league of natlons, protesting the presence of French troops and the ex- ercise by them of military jurisdic- | tion in the Saare territory. She considers these measures contrary to the Versallles treaty and demands that the protest be sent to the mem- bers of the league, who. the note says, should decide upon the question. The protest has been transmitted to the league. council. Custems Penalty Approved. PARIS, April 2—The council of ambassadors tod: approved the line recommended by the allied high com- mission in the Rhineland for the col- lection of German oustom dutles, as provided for in the penalties decided upon by the allies in the London reparations conference. The commission now has full au- thority to enforce the penalties estab- lished by the conference. Ready to Contrel. COBLENTZ, "April 2.—French _cus toms officials to the number of 3 and ffty Belgia rrived in Cob- lenz today and i ediately departed for the limits of the zones of occupa- tion. They will be ready to begin en- forcement of the allied customs pen- alty on Germany s soon as the allied high commission in the Rhineland re- ceives official notice that the council of ambassadors in Paris has approved the system for collection of the duties. British, French and Belgian repre- sentatives will handle the American sones, it is announced. The actual work will be done by German func- tionaries under the supervisien of al- lied officials. Liquor Boyeott Threatened. BERLIN, April 2.—The Berlin hotel proprietors are threatening a boycott of the wines, liquors and cigars pro- duced by former enemy countries, as a reprisal for the occupation of Ger- man cities by the allies and the application of the other penaities de- cided upon at the London reparations conference. The Proprietors’ Association is tak- ing & vote on the question, however, and, while this is not complete, it has revealed to date a considerable degree of opposition to the boycott proposal, APRIL 3, 1921—PART 1. New York to look for the last time upon {CTop “Practically Wiped Out” By “BURROUGHS CLUB” TO HELP NATURE ’ SUGGESTED TO HONOR NATURALIST | To the Editor of The Star: |« bezinning be made than right here | Permit me to express my apprecia- | i e loved tion of vour editorial about John || W ] Burroughs. which appeared in | rounded when there were Issue of last Tuesday. What you |able said would have pleased him. I know., {(0uld not the He was our dear personal friend for schools—all of them f 11 children thr many vears, and we loved him as did |t ike up this matter of all who knew him. it He was a great universal lu\'.»r‘nlnl the | avail | in our| nucleus | in_his nam himself. This city of Washingten |&tanding love was dear to him. ‘W in sight | tion of all wil of ‘the dome’ akes me feel | stroy the thin that 1 am commg hor he would say. Not that h o love »uld limit this \u;.l, When he visited us we usually ' interest to children. he who never went to the Center market, one of | limited anything: but I feel that he the finest markats in the world. he ‘would choose them as. starters. “Chil-{ thought. He liked to come in . are our t educators.” was one the latter part, s pet id | was in its beginnings. a.movement would be the monu- would go to market to buy aspara- ' ment to him he would like best gus, of which he very fond. and | Therefore, let us encourage our lilacs, “because of | children to go forward through the Whitman,” r|ages bearing in their hearts the love | 1 d things. The chii today follow in the train eral procession ca they he said. But would walk up that B street where all those torn-up wild flow. and shrubs were dispiaved. It hurt of hi he ne him to see them. “It's all a matter |ing in ds fle in toving of education,” he would say. “We | memory of one whose will find don’t destroy the things we love.” rest in the bosom of 1t universal It was with him in my mind that T mother whose loyal and devoted son spoke in your paper last year for | he was. the preservation of the dogwood and | The spot of resting is that of his all wild growth. | own choice, amc the hills of all Now, it seems to me. is the time |his life and to which his eyes were to start Burroughs clubs all over our | ever lifted. land, and in what better place could ! JUNIE MAURY COYLE PATTEN. VIRGINIA FRUIT RUINED. |BODY OF MRS. PULLMAN ARRIVES FOR BURIAL Frost and Freeze. The fruit crop of Virginia was Accompanied by Former Governor “practically wiped out” by the freeze Mrs. Lowden—Honorary and frost of March 29 and 30. Henry | Pallbearers Announced. M. Taylor, state agent, reported yes- | terday to the bureau of crop esti-| CHICAGO, April 2—The body of Mrs. | mates in the Department of Agricul- |George M. Puliman, who died at Pasa- ture. Peaches, he said, appear to dena, Calif.. last Monday, was brought have beer completely ruined and|here tsday in a special car. Accom- apples “almost as bad.” | panying the body were former Gov. .If the Piedmont section has as|and Mrs. Frank O. Lowden, the latter much as 10 per cent of a crop it will | \rg Puliman's daughter. surprise me.” Mr. Taylor asserted. Funeral services will be held at the Damage to the crops in the valley | pyjian home tomorrow afternoon. of Virginia and the Shenandoah val-| Mrg Pullman will be buried in Grace- ley “appears as complete as here”|land cemetery, beside her husband. Mr. Taylor sald, quoting from reports | Among the honorary pallbearers are to him by a resident of that section. | Robert T. Lincoln, son of. the former Early gardens, all fruits and alfal- | President; Judge K. M. Landis, Brig. fa scemed to have suffered.the great-|Gen, C. G. Dawes, Cyrus MeCormick, est damage, Mr. Taylor declared,|J. Ogden Armour. Dr. Harry Pratt while wheat and other small grain do | Judson, president of the University of not seem to have been injured. | Chicago. and Dr. Frank Biilings. i { and { | % 1 PLAN T0 LIQUIDATE DEBTS OF NATIONS Senator France Proposes Settlement hy Giving Ger- many Credit for Holdings. B the Associated Press PHILADELPHIA, April 2—Plan for the liquidation of the external obli- gations of every nation was present- ©d here tonight by United States Sen- ator France of Maryland before tha American Academy of Political and Social Sciel enator France termed unconditional ncellation “unecor ceivable,” but, maintaining some y must be adopt as internatio debts block world trade circulation, upon which civilization is dependent, aid “The United States should call a conference of the interested powers for the purpose of proposing to them this method of settlement, or one em- bodying these principles. The Ger- man indemnity would be fixed at the sum which was tentatively agreed upon at the Anglo-French eighth con- ference, fifteen billions of dollars, Germany to recelve credit for at least five billions of dollars on this sum for the marine cables and for the territory in Africa and Oceania trans- ferred by her under the treaty to the allied and associated powers 1. . Would Purchase. “This method of liguidation would enable Germarny 5t once begin to purchase from F nd. France Rus- sia and the United & es what she ately needs for the g n of her industries. The d States would then purchase from the allied and associated powers for at least seven billions of dollars, or possibly—and I would go so far if necessary—for the full amount of the debts owed by the allied and as- sociated powers to us. these marine cables and these territories in Africa and Oceania transferred by Germany to the allled and associated powers. This operation would give us liquida- tion not by cancelation, but by sub- stitution of valuable assets for se- curities of doubtful value.” —_— The warmth found in a covering of Wool or snow is due to the same rea- son—holding the air in the inter- stices of both. re- 33331 For The Is $38383838333383833383338383 for. NO MONEY DOWN! possess a Pathephone. 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