Evening Star Newspaper, April 29, 1921, Page 22

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. 3 . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1921 8th and Penna. Ave. N.W. The Only Reason We Don’t Satisfy Every One Is Because Every One 'Doesn’t Give Us a Chance $3.98 to $6.00 SPRING HATS We must make room for our Midsummer Hats arriving daily, hence the reason for disposing of 200 charming ready-to-wear and trimmed hats regardless of former sell- ing prices. All shapes, trimmings characterize the assortment. Choice tomorrow ...... A including smart banded straw sailors; colors . galore and unusual 98 600 Lovely Silk Waists 40 Styles Think of it! An endless assortment of bewitching waists of Georgette, Crepe de Chine, Tub Silks, Tricolette, Pongees in white and natural. In all sizes and wonderful colors, at the surprise price of S2.98. Some tie-back and. fringed models’ among the lot. Choice l Jersey.‘i Suits, $10.98 With Tuxedo fronts or in tailored styles, these well made spits are proving very popular. They have all the smart little touches of ‘style—narrow belts, pleated backs, box coats and tight sleeves. They come in all sizes, and may be had in navy blue, brown, heather. Skibo Tweed Suits, $14.98 There is real service, unusual tailoring, attractive colors and pleasing styles “in these Suits, and they are moderately priced. Tricotine Suits at ‘$19.98 Exclusive Suits Reduced to $29.98 Wraps $714.98 A wealth of styles and colorful fabrics, in plain and embroidered effects. All sizes. Wraps $719.98 Of serviceable Palo coating and mixtures, smartly tailored. All the favorite shades. Fringed Canton Crepe Dresses at $19.98 Frocks that are distinctively different from the season’s earlier modes; tunics show new forms of pleating, fringes and bead arrangement ; new grays and browns, the most favored shades, are dominant. New Taffeta Silk Dresses Tunics of Eyelet Embroidery $14.98 100 Serge and Velour s, $6 98 Dresses, close out at. .. Coats $14.98 Showing all the best fashion features—newly created styles, lowered to a price which meets your ideas of genuine economy. Some elabo- rately braided and em- broidered. 75 Coats $6.98 A close out of just seventy-five Polo Coats in the fashionable styles. Raglan or set-in sleeves, pockets and belt. Get here early if you want the bargain of the season. SIWN FEIN TRUCE, BRITISH PROPOSAL iRenewal of Conversations Expected to Make Possible Irish Elections. LONDON, April, 29.—Conversations between the Earl of Derby and Irish Sinn Fein representatives will be re- sumed in a few days when the earl ireturns to the island, said the London {Times today. He will take no writ- ten proposals from the British gov- lernment, but will be empowered to minister Llovd ! the news- ! paper’ earl had another long interview with Mr. Lloyd George vesterday. It is_ under pod the object of his mission to Ireland is generally to prepare a to a truce, during {which it will be possible for the elec- tions in southern Ireland to be held _There have been {Efared. but mothing has developed |that has given a clear outline of the ! conditions to be imposed. Assertion was made by the Daily have been or the Earl of Derby Comarsation witn | Eamon | Military Makes Statement. DUBLIN, April Maj. Gen. Mac- dy replied today to the resolution, adopted yesterday by the corporation and the harbor board of Cork that as the British high court in Ireland h ministry recognize the ex- tate of war in Ireland, the the four men, which oc- would contravene Civi- nd the dictates of com- | lized wart mon humanity Ready pointed out that the war referred to donncd of armed insurrection.” Iihat “where insurrection exists. it i in accordance with the law and prac tice of all civilized nations that th {ceath penalty may be inflicted oni | prisoners taking part in it.” | {OBREGON ORDERS LAND i RETURNED TO OWNERS i i { Americans Will Get Part of 20,- 000,000 Poses’ Worth, Once Confiscated. MEXICO CITY, April 20.—Lands in the states of St Nuevo Leon, Coahuila and Tamaulipas, Valued at more than 20,000,000 pesos, which were confiscated during vari- ous revolutionary periods in Mexico, e ordered returned to their owners erday by a presidential order, t to the governors of the states. order requested careful study of ry claim, and directed that a re- arn of the lands in question be made i sible. Among the v in the states v Americans. who [deserted their propertics during { troublous times | Among the several conditions im- {posed for the rcturn of the lands { was one that irri ! velopment projects aunder way when the properties were deserted be re- sumed, and that Mexican labor be ¥ employed. President Obregon is said to hope to provide in this way work for thousands of Mexicans who have returned from the United States, where they were unable to find em- ployment |GRAVES OF SOLDIERS ‘ IN FRANCE UNIFORM No Special Monuments Will Be f Permitted and No Distine- | tion Shown. PARIS, April 29.—No distinctions of rank will be made in marking the graves of American soldiers who died in France, says Charles S. Pierce, chairman of the American commis- sion, which has arrived here to pre- pare plans for beautifying the four permanent military cemeteries where h o | cans will be proud,” rly in the discussions we decided | that. regardicss of rank and position, cach grave should be treated in the { same manner and given cqual atten- tion. The only variation permitted {will_be on thé uniform headstones. On the top of these relatives may inscribe any religious emblem they v long as it does not interfere with the uniformity of the stone. “No special monuments will be per- mitted. All the Americans died in the performance of their duty, and. no matter how heroic individuals may have been, the feeling of the nation seems to be that all should be ac- { corded the same honor. | “It is impossible to say just what i form the beautification will take, but money will not be spared in making { the cemeteries the most imposing in 41m world, Congress has appropri- < preliminary sum promise of more. ble that $3,000,000 will be | rnr this ’ It is prol 1 (x;n nded. | “The task of removing the dead will | be completed by the end of October. ! The bodies of those soldiers who are to rest permanently in France will then be concentrated in the four cemeteries. This work, together with I'the development work we intend to {do. probably will take one year | more: £ The commission, which is an advis- { ory body to the Secretary of War and | quartermaster general of the United States Army, is now making surveys {of the American cemeteries. Later | the commission will formulate plans i for a permanent cemetery for Ameri- soldiers in_lLondon l,'% R Siant® '7 Unless you are suffer- % % ing with opacity of the crystalline lens or cor- nea, or unless you have an eye discase that needs surgical, attention, the proper lenses will not only relieve your vision ailments but will also correct your sight. WA Leese OFTicAL (o OPTOMETRISTS 614 _9TH ST. N.W. i OWEN JOHNSON FINDS | The Festinc was that oniy abost 2 ! Bottomm walt ‘a Snimater but after APERHANGING , = UPHOLSTERING 000 was recovered, compared with §1,- | prolonged immersion at twenty fath 250,000 the previous year. | oms below the surface, half an hour mate. Quality workmanship guaranteed. with gravel and silt, which has to | is likely to collapse. The great pres- o : Reports Peasants Have Beaten | o cleared away with pumps. Then | sure at twenty fathoms saturates the e ell Hine Suaiacs: Civil War Record. the steel plates and girders must be | system with nitrogen gas. but in the | Geo. Pnu Co. lnc. e o) ’ --Il cut away | recompression chamber the nitrogen | PARIS, April 29.—The French gov-| _The¢ Racer is now equipped, in ad- ! can be eliminkted gradually. ; : _— ernment some time ago invited Owen Johnson, the American author, who is the son of Robert Underwood John- son, the American ambassador to Italy, to visit the liberated regions and report upon how much had been done to restore them He has just presented his report to M. Loucheur, minister of liberated ro- In doncluding his report he FRENCH LAND RESTORED, |:lucii o the strong - soom. “whers | for alding aivers. with & -fi‘l’lifiifl’;‘?lP AINTING' After the winter storms the divers | has to be allowed for raising him, be Acting for Foreign Government, He | axpect to find the wreckage covered | cause if brought up too quickly he For Fa tl'lerly Advice “In thirty months France, despits every difficulty, has succecddd in ac- i h- o accomplish e civil war, % is comple on its ~ feet, and the peasant has ccomphished | Many a young man stands at Ure.ison. lts wayitowaed fertoration | = the threshold of a new under- two to five years. It is not They do not ne d do not wish it lem of purce and simple other solution can by “France, reg: contention, ha everything p! Germany pays can compl . taking, and hesitates because there is no one to whom he can turn for the final counsel before bi“er F. Groff - he takes the step. three ye: : H i B | Director - " To such young men we offer : er BRITISH TO TRY AGAIN i H Mr. Groff has been in fhic whole- “fatherly advice”’—the kind that TO SAVE GOLD FROM SEA | g T o e grobioa sl ; : [ and has learned the problems and . hag heen backed up by long ex- R 1 diffculties. as well as the dppor- 3 5 > 8 ¢ Bars on Laurentic Will Be Sought | tanities, that fall to & wholesaler’s perience—the kind that has, first t. { E in New Attempt at ! “He s particularly interested in of all, the welfare of the young Salvage. 1 the bank’s contact with Washing- man at hcart. J ton’s wholesale men. LONDON. April 20.—Another at- | tempt is to be made this summer by the admiralty to recover the remain-| JH W e Pa}’ 3 P"r Ccnt Interest der of the bullion lost when the | armed liner Laurentic was mined and | sunk off the north coast of Ireland SAVINGS AND \ SECURI COMMERCIAL BANK : WASHINGTON'S 'LARGEST SAVINGS BANK the fourth summer. The Laurentic went d. int t fathoms (120 feat) of water, four Corner)of 9t}l,and G Streets gales have reduced the wreck to a shapeless mass, and each year the work has been more difficult. Last | in 1917, miles o ffthe coast of Donegal, carry- UNDER UNITED STATES TREASURY SUPERVISION ' summer the divers found that about The salvage vessel. Racer, xnzeth-{ er with the Canadian drifter No. 1. | j will undertake the salvage work for ing gold bars to the value of hetween $10,000.000 and $15,000,000. i Four years of pounding by Atlantic | == 5 = tOmMOorrow New Victor Records ay 1921 1 Passed by Your Window Frances 64948 Favorita—O mio Fernando (Dearest Ferdinand) i 74680 In Old Madrid De Gogorza 64953 Traviata—Addio del passato (Farewell to the Bnght Visions) 64945 . Tosca—Recondita armonia (Strange Harmony) Beniamino Gigli 64944 Canzonetta (Tschaikowsky) Violin i 74678 Just That One Hour 64946 On Miami Shore Violin Kreisler 64947 l‘.,:‘l"s in E“:'l_ni:flg:; é(:hln,m:g 4 ?ano ; Sergei Rachmaninoff 74679 1san u Po e Famagouste (The Quay of the Pon of Famagusta) Ql' i and La Scala Story of the Rose Ay-Ay-Ay (Creole Song) First Aral ue Harp Chanson de echeur (Song of a Fisherman) Harp Rose Butterfly Three Sioux Scouts—Part 1 Three Sioux Scouts—Part II Angels (We Call Them Mothm Down Here) Over the Hill My Mammy—Medley Fox Trot —Medley Fox Trot Mule— ox Trot " All Star Trio assisted by their Orchestra Amwef-—Medley Fox Trot All Star Trio assisted by their Orchestra Kiss a Miss—Wal Jone'phC.SmlfluOrchum RomanchWa.ltz Joseph C. Smith’s Orchestra Wyoming (Lullaby) Charles Hl:rt Elliott Shaw Blue Jeans %um The Rose 1 Call Sweetheart William Robyn Mother of Pearl William Robyn Make Belleve-—Medlzl Fox Trot Paul Whiteman md Hn Orchestra Some Little Bird—Medley Fox Trot ; Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Tm'luy inthe Straw Accordion - Pietro 18743 e Bont Wout Mrimba—Medley Fox Trot AU Star Tio assisted by thei e on — ox- est Siun of a Southern Sea—Medley Fox Trot All Star Trio assisted by their Orchestra } 35707 BB B &R B PR VICTOR TALKING MACHINE COMPANY

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