Evening Star Newspaper, June 21, 1921, Page 4

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This is a Most Important Y Sale Semi-annually we dispose of our entire stock of Men’s Suits—Every one (excepting only Tropicals and Full Dress)—and now’s the time scheduled for the summer clear- ance. Two things make Mode Suits to be pre- ferred—character of design and quality of material and make—and now is added a third consideration—the truly enormous re- ductions. Young Men’s and Conservative models —Single and Double breasted and Sport. $20.75 $39.75 $4/7-75 $57-75 $35 and $40 Suits. . ... $45 and $50 Suits. $55 and $60 Suits. . ... $65 and $70 Suits. Tropical Worsteds— This lightest weight Suiting, woven and modeled in cool and comfortable and dressy Suits—silk trimmed. A selec- tion of very desirable patterns $32.50 EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D.- C, TUESDAY,: JUNE 21, 1991, ROADPOLICY URGED | e cvisvcs ALL OIL BURNERS ’ . mission Bill. cost of and strengthening of th enactment of the create a federal {road system. methods of highway maintenance and the report adds: “Our highway interests of the i for. defenses of intelligently { best | | strengthened spirit use this new and states.” The report, vision of the bill to creat the and a ment ds that if the pres continues it !1ems to_questions as mu ax agricultural, and in ti cultural interests.” Selection of Route: of routes, by states' rights advoca jority contends that “‘unle power is lodged in the fe usurpation of state functions. e | 014 Methods Obsolete. Declaring that “the modern motor | Yesterday afternoon, in Gonzaga College vehicle has rendered obsolete construction, administration,” .. tes TOCUTLIVING COST Senate Committee Reports in Favor of Federal Com- policies must broadened and strengthened to meet ithis changed condition, if public ex- | penditures are to be conserved and the nation Living costs can be reduced, our and nationalism created means of communication between communities a it in presenting the pro- a distinct given the Department of Agriculture, present agency of administration ent arr: “will serve to sub- ! ordinate the purely agricultural prob- h industrial e will over- shadow the purpose for which the De- partment of agriculture was created, greatly to the detriment of the agri- | Touching on the authority of the proposed commission over selection which. has_been attacked |} as the ma- this final eral gov- ernment, state roads of primary im- portance may fail to connect at state lines and thus disjoint an intersta RESIDENT AT DES Permission to make the first photograph of President Harding seated at his desk in the executive offices has been granted by the President to Benjamin Grey of New York, a wounded soldier, trained in photography by the federal gov- :{rnment‘!v vocational education sys- em. The appointment was made by Chairman Kahn of the House mil- itary committee. Hope of further reauction in tne [NOTRE DAME ACADEMY living through broadening nation's | highway policies is held out by ma- {jority members of the Senate post offices and post roads committee, ia formaal report yesterday recommending Townsend bill to highway commis- sion and to establish an interstate HOLDS COMMENCEMENT Diplomas and Medals Awarded to Graduates at Exercises in Gonzaga College Hall. Diplomas and medals were awarded to graduates of Notre Dame Academy at the annual commencement exercises in old |Hall The program included an address by Rev. Father Sweehey. a one-act play, music and addresses by the students and the conferring of scholarships. Miss Gertrude Espey was awarded the tuition scholarship by Trinity .College for the highest record in entrance ex- aminations. The Anna Hanson Dorsey scholarship for day students at Trinity College, founded by the ladies’ auxiliary board of regents, was awarded to Miss Margaret McGowan. Miss Julia O'Con- nor. Miss Elinor Brady and Miss Vir- ginia Kettley, pupils of the eighth grade, were awarded the Blessed Mother Julia cholarship for the classical course at Notre Dame Academy. Miss Helen Josephine Collins. Miss be cared new we { commission of three memb Josephine Anna_Crowl, eral highway administration. beth Carmel Garner, out that appropriations for highw Regina Kennedy. Miss Agnes Jose- constitute 60 per cent of the phine Leahy and Miss -Catherine Elizabeth McMahon were given di- plomas for the post-graduate busi- course. Certificates of admis- to Trinity College were awarded l Margaret Bielman, Miss Covangle, Miss Marjorie Miss Jane Gallagher, Miss Geler, Miss Kathleen Harlow, Florence McElroy and Miss n £ Miss Florence Mattimore. The gold medal for plano was given to Miss Emily Hornig: silver medal for piano to Miss Dorothy- Connor, s Ruth Connor and Miss Gertrude Geary: testimonials for piano_to Miss Katherine Biondi, Miss Marietta 2| Dawson, Miss Alice Donnelly, Miss Mary_Doyle, Miss Margaret Genau, Miss Margaret Ozborn and Sullivan: testimonials for o Neill, Miss katherine Hand, Miss Antoinette | Col. Robert M. Brambila, United | Tanahan, Mary Lesher, Miss |States Infantry, stationed at Camp Helen \lv .nmw Miss _ Catherine | Benning, Ga.. has been ordered to FOR PACIFIC FLEET Coal Burners Ordered to At- lantic for Economy and Tactical Efficiency. ’ Secretary Denby has ordered a re- organization of the Atlantic and Pa- cific fleets 8o as to concentrate coal- burning warships in the former and oll burners in the latter fleet. The| changes ordered will strengthen the Pacific fleet and generally make for economy and tactical efliciency. In accordance with the new policy the battleships Arizona, Nevada and Oklahoma will be transferred from the Atlantic to the Pacific fleet. The battleship Maryland also will be sent, when completed, to the Pacific fleet. The battleships New York, Texas, Wyoming and Arkansas are trans- ferred from the Pacific to the Atlan-| tic fleet. i When the battleship California is| completed she will replace the New Mexico as the flagship of the Pacific fleet. The Maryland will be the most | powerful ship in the fleet and will be the first battleship to be equipped with 16-inch rifles. ' As rearranged, the fleets will be made up as follows: Pacifio—Flag- ship California, Maryland, New Mexi- co. Idaho, Tennessee, ~Mississippi, Arizona, Oklanoma and Nevada. Atlantio—Flagship ~ Pennsylvania, Wyoming, New York, Texns, Ar- | kansas, Florida, North Dakota and | Delaware. The battleship Utah is| assigned as flagship of the European squadron, Secretary Denby said. . Three destroyer divisions will be transferred from the Pacific to the Atlantic. The Atlantic and Pacific fleets will be united for about three months each year in either the Carib- bean sea or the Pacific near Panama bay for training in combined tactical operations. The Pittsburgh, flagship of the European squadron, will be returned to this country. The squadron will then comprize the battleship Utah, the cruisers Chattanooga and St Louis and three divisions, totaling eighteen destroyers. —_— ORDERED TO COBLENZ. MARY GARDEN HOPEFUL. Begards London Outlook for Chi- ‘cago Opera Company Uncertain. By Cabfe to The Star and Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1 LONDON, England, June 21.—Miss Mary Garden and G. M. Spangler, of the Chicago Opera Sompany, Who came to London to investigate the possibilities of a season for their company at Covent Garden, regard the outlook for this experiment as Ibs. for 4 Coblenz, Germany, for duty with the | Sth Infantry. system and obstruct traffic from one ss Mary Cavanagh, Miss uncertatn but not without hope. British music lovers Welcome the Chicago singers with enthusiasm. Public-szpirited men and women of all parties and friends would do like- wise. Certain exigencies connected with the dates of existing arrangements and other matters constitute a diffi- culty more or less stubborn, but Mr. Spangler hopes that every obstacle may be overcome. “We greatly desire to arrange this season,” said he. “Naturally all singers like to appear in the world metropolis. But such considerations For Preserving Now! C 25 Finest American Granulated are relatively slight. We have in mind the larger interests of opern as such and the still more lrnpor!alfl cause of international good will” | —Will do the Peinting, Paperhang: ing or Upholstering in a manner that will please you. 100-Ib. Bag $6.25 Dealers Supplied ‘ | | state to the other.” URGES UNEMPLOYED TO WORK ON FARMS Miss Margaret Herlihy, A nd diplomas were presented to Mi argaret Katherine an, Miss Miriam Aquinas Cav- '\u-mnu Doyle, Miss Gert- Miss Mary Veronica Frances Gallagher, Secretary Davis Suggests Best [Flavin. Miss Jane Miss Florence Patricia Fealy, Miss Nan Means of Relief for Workers |Theresa Geier, Miss Kathleen Marie . Harlo: Miss Frances Maggdalen Where Mills Are Closed. Mealy, Miss Florence Anne McElroy. Miss Margaret Mary McGowan, Miss Florence Teresa Mattimore, Miss Mary Elizabeth Mattimore and Miss Veronica Rita Swinburne. WOMEN ELECT OFFICERS. Miss Ethel Bagby was elected presi- dent of the Business Women's Council at a recent meeting held at the Church of the Covenant. Other officers elected were Miss |Elizabeth R. Groves, first vice presi- tht\ Benner, second vice a Johnson, Solution of the unemployment prob- lem in the United States rests in a change in the mental attitude of the men skilled in trades, who, when the mills close down or trade is slack. mployment outside their . according to Secretary of Labor Mr. Davis said he had found thou- sands of tin workers and workers in MEN’S WEAR fifed” Trades "I the. centra saciern : industrial scction out of work and The Line- Up Of were waiting for work in their | Comfort and Style In particular trades, knowing at the same time many mills 1 not open secre- i Mi y Day, assistant secre- ! ‘and Miss “Anna Wallace, treas- until early fall. He said these men | should find work wherever it is avail- | able, and suggested farming as one Imcnns of tiding them over the in- dustrial depression of midsummer. ur Meetings of the organization are beld Friday of each week, from 5 to $:30 pm. at the Church of the 7 é | retary sai icould readil ained from ranks of those temporarily out employment, owing to a shut-down Many of them are living on their savings and do not |appear to be making an effort to t work outside their trades’ Mr. “The condition an bne and could be easil if the unemploved trades- | f It’s a Summer Economy to Install A Water Heater You need hot water in plenty, but not for long in the summer- I i) ls said. is Ithy Dettered !men would make an effort to secure Extraloudtone Fulltone Softtone Enlargements of Victrola Tungs-tone Styius. Note < ork elsewhere than in their trades. time. The Water Heater is a “Of course. they cannot expect to necessity, yet you do not want the tiny tungsten point. et 1310 oL £1 & %ay on ";'; hr"'r"; the discomfort of building a - & o L the Secretary added. 3ut hey wi i (] DODGING the heat is simple if you are wise enough’ money to carry them ||l 7 | get ‘through the summer and probably enough to last them until the mills {open up in the fall. Mr. Davis announced in connection with the guild movement in England that he may send Lawrence Veiller of New York to England to study the movement with the view of propos- ing a similar movement in this coun- try. That's where the Water Heat- er becomes So essential The Heaters we handle have demonstrated themselves 100 per cent desirable in service, in price, in long life, in economy of operation. Consult us about them! Maurice J. Colbert 621 F Street Main 3016-3017 00 Round Trip ‘War Tax 220 additional. Atlantic City Sunday, June 26 & July 10 SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN Via Delaware River Bridge Eastern standaid time, Lvs. Washington - - - Tickets on eale Friday preceding excur- sion at Oonsolidated Ticket Office, 13th and F Streets, and at Union Station. to the ways of dodging. About the simplest is donning one of the following “light-as-a- feather” suits. And they’re priced right, too. || Linens........$15 Breeze- Weave . $20 Mohairs ......$25 Tropicals .....$32 White Flannels “the better grade” $ 12 SIDNEY WEST, Inc. Fourteenth at G —_— SUIT TO RECOVER LOSS. National Capital Press, Inc., Wants $9,839.92 Paid on Forged Checks. | The National Capital Press, Inc., has filed suit in the District Supreme iCourt to recover $9,839.92 from the | Merchants Bank. The amount sued | for represents the face value of {twenty-two checks drawn to the order | of the plaintiff and which are said to | have been cashed at the defendant vank by Raymond E. Decker after he | |had forged .the indorsement of the| plaintiff. Decker pleaded guilty uome| {weeks ago to an indictment for | forgery. Attorneys Drain & Drain ap- | lpear for the plaintiff. —_— PLEADS FOR IRELAND. Senator Norris Argues for Passage of His Resolution. | | “Ireland free will be England's| {friend; Ireland in_subjugation will be !England’s enemy,” Senator Norris of ! | Nebraska, republican, told the Senate ! yesterday, in an address on the Irish | situation and his resolution proposing | that the United States Senate shall{ ixon on record as saying ‘“the Irishi {people are entitled to a government | of their own choice.” The Nebraska senator was a mem- | ber of the unofficial committee of one hundred which inevstigated the Irish | question. “It will require an army of English- men,” continued Senator Norris, “to ihold' Treland in subjugation, and this imust go on all the time. 'When the days of trouble come it will beper- fectly natural and logical for the Irish people to embrace the day of Great Britain's trouble and make another struggle for Irish freedom.” The treatment of the Irish people by the British forces almost beggars description, the senator declared. The military forces, he charged, violate every civilized rule of warfare and cannot bé defended, and added that ro parallel for existing conditions in Ireland could be found except in “the darkest days of barbarism.” FIREMAN ASKS $25,000 Richard J. Holmes, an employe of the fire department, who was riding on a hose wagon which was in colli- sion with a steet car, has filed suit against the Washington Railway and Elsdlrla Company to recover $25,000 for alleged personal injuries. The collision occurred at 433 street and Virginia avenue southwest, Jan- uary 16 last. Auomeys James A. O'Shea, John Sacks and Anna L. Cooke appear tor the plaintiff. b -DEBTS, $32,254.76; NO ASSETS. Alfred M. Schwartz, recelver of_ the bankrupt Washington Theater Pro- ductions, Inc., has filed in the Dis- trict Supreme Court a schedule of the assets and liabilities of the con- cern. which began business last Se tember and failed in March. Debts totaling $32,254.76 are enumerated and the sompeay has no assets, it is stated. 2 ‘What a difference that tiny ent of tungsten makes! The use of tungsten as a reproducing point was a real discovery and an actual invention. Its soft fibrous qualities were what had been sought for years. This truly remarkable metal always insures a perfect reproduction of the music and at the 'same time gives long life to the records. The tungsten wears itself away rather than the records. You get these advantages only in the Victrola Tungs-tone Stylus—the Victor Company patented the stylus composed of tungsten and therefore has the exclusive right to the use thereof in any form of talking-machine needle. p ; Three tones—extra loud, full, soft. The new extra loud 1 stylus will be largely used for dance music and outdoors. ¢ 10 cents per package of four points—enough to play at least 3 1000 records. Semi-permanent. Changable. Sold by all Victor dealers. ~ Victrola Tungs-tone Stylus — the perfect point for playing Victor Records Victor Talking Machine Co. -~ .. ..Camden, New Jersey AN, Returning Lvs. Atlantic City - - = 6:00 P.M. Pennsylvania System [ IvOURPASTRY SECTION XA X Cornwell’s Napoleon Slyce DX CHEDX @D XA X Have you heard about it? “This.trademark and ¢he trademsrked Dok e the i Lok om S abett VICTOR TALKING MACHINE CO. Camden, N. J. TEE 1 (@D X G XA X @b ) [ € P JUe FE ) T PN

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