Evening Star Newspaper, July 29, 1921, Page 8

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W = = || = 1219-1221 G Street Store Hours—8:30 to 6—Saturdays, 8:30 to 3 Every Bathing Suit in stock for Misses and Children cluded in this Clearance Sale. Sizes are somewhat broken but nearly all sizes These prices should prove very attractive just at Midsum- Women’s Suits W 85139 S reduced omen, mer. $13.50 SUITS re Mis ANl $4.75, and $6.00 Suits reduced to. report present. 50 SUILT duced S reduced ses’ Suits JtiMte $5.00 One of the Oldest and Best Known Danking Institutions In Washington R Plaiting, ' Big Reductions on Bathing Suits and Bathing Accessories for Saturday Until 3 P.M. $3.49 Bathing Accessories Complete Clearance of All High and Low Bathing Shoes—Regularly sold a 1 $1.49 and $1.98. Reduced to.... Sors $ . 69c Bathing Suit Bags. Reduced to " 85c Onyx Silk Hosettes. . $1.75 Onyx All-Silk Hosettes. Reduced to. $1.25 Bathing Capes. 89¢ and 79¢ Bathing Caps. Reduced to . 35c and 29c Bathing.Caps. Vil BT E UK Designer Patterns Reduced to. SOCIETY T SR TRY S T’N.w. is in- .. $7.49 ... $9.69 $14.39 Children’s Suits $125 Suits reduced 98C 0 ...cecccccnnccncnnn dueed tom.nre. $1.98 Reduced to- Reduced to The Largest Savings Department of Any Bank in Washington Lincoln Said: By the form of the rament ol dne gove t under which we live ants but little power to do mischief, and have wi equal wisdom provided cqual wisdom pr for, the retum of that little to Such of you as are now Constitution un % the laws of your own framing administration will have no imm would, to change either. people have wisely given their public sarv- ha th at very short Z dissatisfied still have the old and on the sensitive points. under it; while the new ediate power, if it " THRIFT Thrift provides the umbrella Ml against the proverbial ‘rainy %) day. Itis plain horse-sense ap- ; plied to both saving and spend- ing. Profit You to Be It Will ‘ Thrifty e lite @ e @ .idjiie Lincoln 1212 B b o ) gl it | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, FRIDAY, cilety President and Mrs. HE President and Mrs. Hard- ing will sail late this after- noon on the Mayflower. for Plymouth, Mass., where they will attend the tercentenary celebra tion of the landing of the Pilgrims. The Secretary of War, Mr. Weeks. will be a member of the party which will accompany them, and after spend- |ing Monday in Plymouth will cruise along the coast to Portland, Me., where they will land on Tuesday morning. . The presidential party will motor trom there to Mount Prospect, N. H.. where they will be the guests of Sec- retary Weeks at his summer home for a week. Last evening the President enter- tained at dinner at the White House. when his guests numbered fifteen. and included a number of republican leaders in Congress. The Vice President and *Mrs. Cool- idge, with their sons, John and Calvin, left this morning for Boston, and will go to Plymouth Monday, to take part in the tercentenary celebration. The Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Mellon, will leave this evening for Hot Springs, Va., where he wlill spend the week end with Miss Mellon at Barton Lodge. The Secretary of War, Mr. Weeks, entertained at luncheon yesterday at the New Will Chiet Justice T Guest at Dinmer. Chief Justice Taft and Viscount and Tady Bryce will be the guests of hon- or at a reception this evcning which the president of Williams College and Mrs. Harry A. Garfleld will give at Williamstown, Mass. Chiet Justce Taft, Dr. Garfleld, who was the former United States fuel administrator; the Governor of Massachusetts, Mr. Chan- ning H. Cox, and Mayor Peters of Bos- ton, will speak tomorrow at the open- ing of the institute of politics. and Viscount Bryce will give the first of his course of lectures tomorrow even ing. Baron Sergius A. Korff and Dr. Stephen Panaretoff, former minister of Bulgaria, will also give lectures in the new institute, Former United States Ambassador to Japan, Mr. Larz Anderson, will sail from New York tomorrow aboard the Baltic for Liverpool. The United States vice consul at Liverpool, Mr. passenger on the Baltic. Viscount Northcliffe and Mr. H. Wickham Steed were the honor guests at a luncheon given today at the New Willard by the Overseas Writers, an organization composed of Washing- ton correspondents, whd have had journalistic experience abroad. This evening Viscount Northcliffe will dine with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Beale Mc- Lean at_their suburban home, Friend- ship, when their guests will inclufle a number of guests from official and smart resident society. Capt. Piero Civalleri, naval attache of the Italian embassy, entertained at dinner last evening at the Powhatan, when his guests numbered six. The new United States ambassador to Chile and Mrs. William Miller Col- lier have given up their apartment at 2400 16th street and left last evening for their home in Auburn, N. Y. They will sail from New York August 4 aboard La France for a short stay in Europe before going to Dr. Collier's new post. Representative and Mra. Scott Entertain for Miss Todd. Representative and Mrs. Frank D. Scott entertained at dinner last even- ing in_their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel, in honor of Miss May Todd of Cheboygan, Mich., whose mar- riage to Mrs. Scott's brother, Mr. Ed- ward W. James, will take place Sep- tember 3. Covers were laid for ten. Miss Todd will leave Sunday for her home in Michigan, and will go from there to Santa Rosa, Calif., where her marriage to Mr. James will take place. The United States minister to the kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slo- venes, Mr. H. Percival Dodge, will go to New York Sunday, and sail from there Thursday, August 4, for his post, Mr. Dodge has been in Washington for several weeks and was accompa- nied on his return here by his daugh- ter, Miss Alice L. C. Dodge. She will also leave Washington Sunday and go to Jamestown, R. I. to remain throughout August. Miss Dodge has been occupying the apartment of her grandparents, Rear Admiral and Mrs. J. Dexter Adams, who left shortly after her arrival for a motor trip through the north. They are now at Concord, Mass. The assistant to the Attorney Gen- eral, Mr. Guy D. Goff, will return to Washington today from a brief ab- sence abroad and join Mrs. Goff at Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. A. B. Johnson and her daugh- ter, Miss Rachel L. Johnson, will leave Washington Sunday for Bos- ton, where they will join Mrs. John- son's son, Maj. Alfred B. Johnson, who is studying at the Boston Insti- tute of Technology. I R R R R BB S L B il b l Col. and Mrs. S. L. H. Slocum were among the guests at the ball given t evening at the Griswold. New ndon, Conn., in celebration of the arrival of the cruising yachfs of the New York Yacht Club. Mr. and Mrs. Irwin B. Laughlin were hosts at a_dinner party last evening ;: lr.lnds End, their villa at Newport, Mrs. Stephen B. Elkins, who is in New York, entertained at luncheon there yestérday, at the Hotel Ambas- sador. Mr. Claude Langlais has gone to White Rock, Me., to join Mme. Lan- glais, who is epending - the summer there. Mrs. Ashmead Fuller will go to Maine next week to join Mme. Langlais for a visit. ‘The new United States minister to China and Mrs. Jacob Gould Schurman will sail from San Francisco tomor- row for the former’'s post. Gen. and Mrs. Hines Go to New York. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. F. T. Hines went to New York Tuesday and are at the Hotel Astor for a short stay. Mrs. Julian C. Smith has arrived in Narragansett Pier. R. L, where she motored with friends from Washing- ton. Maj. Smith. who is with the At- lantic fleet, will arrive in Newport 25c Free to Each Lady By presenting this Ad any day ntil August 10th, you will be= entitled to 25c free on any of = your work. Garden Rose Beauty Parlor S 1110 H Street NW. = Franklin 3224 H Open Evenings: £ Expert Hair Dyeing. = Shampooing Manicuring Cruise Today—Vice President and Mrs. Coolidge Have Gone to Boston. Robert R. Patterson, will also be al, Y 29, 1921 District of Columbia and Maryland, unsettled tonight and tomorrow, probably showers and thunderstorms; not_quite so warm tonight; gentle to moderate southwest winds. Virginia, local showers and thun- derstorms probable tonight and to- morrow; no change in temperature; moderate southwets winds. ’ West Virginia, unsettled weather tonight and tomorrow, proabbly local showers and thunderstorm change in temperature. Records for Twenty-Four Hours. Thermometer—4 p.m., 77; 8 p.m., 81; 12 midnight, 78; 4 a.m., 77; 8 am., 79; .m., 29.91 29.87; 12 midnight, 29.90; 4 29.87; noon, 29.82. PHOENIX, Ariz., July 29.—On the Painted desert of northern Arizona Hopi Indians next month will hold their noted snake dances. This year the dances will be held in the villages of Walpi and Mishong- novi. Most people believe the snake dance is a Hopi rain dance. This is not correct, according to Emry " Kopta, a sculptor, who claims that the,ceremony is a form of Indian ancestor worship. Mr. Kopta has - Harding Leave for Iaa.m-- ancestor ; Mr, Kopta b ¥ Te, 94, occurred en living in Walpi village for atflég:‘;:f ;:::Pr:lr:;u 1:;w2:t tempera- [ Se¥en Jears) sr:u} sny-‘lhe Hopis al- ’ i 3730 p.m. yester-| Ways hold their rain s in ey A8 pcousrain L a0 B FORten June and July and the snake | Condition of the Water. Sngeaiin A"gus!-‘ ot Temperature and condition of the _ Origin of Dance. Great Falls—Tem-| _Describing the ceremony, Mr. water at 8 am.: perature, 81; condition, clear. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States coast and geodetic survey.) Today—Low tide, 9:22 a.m. and 9:18 .m.; high tide, 2:19 a.m. and 2:41 p.m. Tomorrow—Low tide, 10:22 a.m. and ln'{fl p.m.; high tide, 3:16 a.m. and 41 p. Kopta declared the dangers open the dance by stamping upon a plank laid over a pit. This is in- tended to notify the dead that the ceremony has begun. Between 100 and 150 snakes are needed for the annual dances. Out of the scores of Hopi tradi- tions has come a story telling of the origin of the snake dance, ac- cording to the sculptor. The tradi- tions tell of a Hopi youth, a dreamer, who once set out to find what lay beyond the far hills. He floated down the muddy Col until he came to a land belie to be California. There he met and wed a maiden of a strange tribe and took her back to his Hopi vil- lage. Moon. 6 a.m.; sun sets The Sun Today—Sun rose p.m. Tomorrow—Sun rises 5:07 am.; sun sets 7:22 p.m. Moon rises 12:01 a.m.; sets 2:17 p.m. ‘Automobile lamps to be lighted one- balf hour after sunset. Up-River Waters. HARPERS FERRY, W. Va., July 29. —The Potomac river was clear and the Shenandoah slightly cloudy this morning. ‘Weather in Varfous Cities. Children Were Snakes. The first children of th couple were snakes, and the expelled the two from the vil Then the crops failed, the Ind suffered from starvaiion and the old village priest said the trouble was brought on by the expulsion. He declared rain would not fall or crops mature until the couple were brought back. Acting on the priest's advice, the Indians searched the deserts for the two and eventually found them. After leaving the village, the woman had borne human chil- dren and these were brouzht back Deaths Reported. reported to last twenty Temperature.o: Stations. U. 8. «o+ e zajamoavg Asbury Park about August 20, and Mrs. Smith will join him there for a briet visit. rad Cloudy Cloudy Clear | Cloudy Cloud Pr.eloudy Cloudy Rain Cloudy arles Ammon. Ptelondy | Annie E. Jouel cloudy | pital. e | P Freq Gornely, 17, Providence Hospita i Hummer, 67, 1417 Commander Jewell has left for a |} month’s vacation, and will join his parents, Hear Admiral and Mrs, | Jewell, at the Bay Voyage Hotel, | Jamesfown R. L. ving deaths have bLeg department within Hotel Senate Elizatetl’'s Hos st | Mrs. J. B. Ames of Boston was !} hostess at an informal dinner party last evening at the Powhatan. Mrs. William Atherton Du Puy, national president of the League of American Pen Women, accompaned by her daughter Jaqueline left to- |dny for Edinburgh, Va. to.join Mr. and Mrs. Houston Newman and 4 party of friends, who will motor 1 Allison Kan, | Los A Lautsville Portland, from Edinburgh to Mr. and Mrs. Newman's camp in the Adirondacks, |}hiladel ———— Pitraburgh s irey 1 iy 2 Portland, Or 8. Luke City Antonio Marriage Licenses. Charles 1. Gross, Virginia | avenue southeast Tnfant of A 11704 10th str e e Hemstitching and ButtonsCovered Cotton, 13c; Silk, 14c You do _not have to wait for Your workl Quality the very best. Quick service. MRS. M. E. HOLLEY r and Gussie James, 7 hours. | ules of this city, & Kunsellville, Ky, Mries und Anna M. Fe E Melel Dail Births Reported. The following births have been reported to the health department within the last twenty-four hours 3 Fdith Newell, girl ie Crawford, girl and Felicia_Hughes, girl Emumuel and Helen T. Hoffman. boy. % nt of this cit E. Johnson of Baltimore. % Leonard E. Rrashears and Margaret F. nd Helen E. Johnson and Ella Wilson, both phenson and Bertie Jones. Walter L. Ball, jr. and Mdred B. Gra- ham, John C. Settle and Ethel M. Hendershott Geory £ . 27 23 5 . . 2 p endershot ieorge and Bert Huddleston, boy. Col. 9178, 2561 15th N.W. “._u'.‘n hel Brown and Betty Martin, buth of | Meyer H. and Sadie Landay. girl 2 - timore. Andrew D. and Roberta g boy. | olin A and Grace A. Have your measurements taken NOW. in the 1224 Infantry, 31st Division, a.| Earl and Irene Watkins, girl E. F. has been appointed assistant director of the bureau of vocational education. He succeeds R. T. Fisher. Mr. Clark has been with the voca-|the District of Columbia in - - C general ;ll::nbleter"al’nr:n_g bureau since 1919, andlterm have dismissed a complaint i a number of the branch | brought by the grievance committee Ttisakid thatki against Harry L. Tignor, colored, a With the Genat his appointment meets | member of the bar. The disbarment orans oreamoral approval of the vet- | proceedings brought against the law- of Midlang Cpations. He is a native|yer were determined by the court in hio. his favor and he was exonerate LAWYER IS EXONERATED. The justices of the Supreme Court of Logan of Pittaburgh, and Ruth (dirosin e ety Genevieve Wotkyns, ‘boy. F S e l A o) of lerchantville, N. Dunnean and ¢ o 3. a1 Grigger o thix Dale 8. and Marzerate . girl. ur PeCId Jobn K Cluse and Car Schell Howard and Mary E. Mason, girl Cubit Warner and Ida Bagby R. and Culena R. King, boy. ( sl e y oo Miller”and Susie " both of| Aseaival D and Itose L. Kenson. wirl. [ Until Aug. 15 we shall Nosioa b 'r"" ‘Charles H. le 3. Geesling, hoy. tak lers ki o ou 8. Phifer and Helen B. Iverson. Murwin F. 1 | take orders to make (o_mm\- WAR vm_ | ure, 45-in. plain or trimmed GETS POST. " Elizabeth Doras. g || d Sersh A, Bombard. girl. | Alaska seal s Herman C. % eelor, .. boy. Owen W. Clark Named Assistant :..:;. ".:.. sna Im..:‘;:..,.mm v wn. | Henjamin and Helen White. boy. - Vocational Director. Jtajoixh and A;.m 1. W fl’rl.“ i Coats for $350 o Andrew ‘nad Flossie ¢ . i Owen W. Clark, formerly a captain| George F. and Zita Rohinson. boy. I Repairing at Summer Rates SAKSFURCo. | “MANUFACTURERS WHO RE | AT WHOLESALE PRIC 1212 F Street —_— B = = . Open All Day Saturday A Special Sale of Women’s . Sports Oxfords & Strap Pumps. We have reassembled our Entire Stock of Women's White Nubuck and White Canvas Sports Oxfords and Strap Pumps with the pcpu- lar Black and Tan Trimming. All new, this season’s styles, and all taken right out of stock i for this sale. An especially timely event, just at i midsummer, when so many are getting ready ior i vacations. 4.95 Women’s Patent Oxfords and Pumps We still have a good selection of styles and sizes. All high-grade shoes, that formerly sold as high as $12.00 a pair; mostly welt turn soles, Louis Heels. Again at— 2.8 $1.50 Values up : to $9.00. i Reduced to | | Saturday Shoe Special for Misses’ and Children White Nubuck, Tan 'Russia Calf, White Canvas and Patent Leather One and Two Strap Slippers. All at the very Special Price of— 2.95 Women's Pure Silk Hosiery— In Black, Brown or White. Specially priced for Saturday. JOS. STRASBURG CO. : 310~ 312 SEVENTH STREET THE WEATHER. |SNAKE DANCES OF HOPI INDIANS TO BE WIERD SIGHT NEXT MONTH But the snake children had glided off into the desert. In celebration of the couple’s re- turn, the Indians danced the first since the snake found, they brought all the snakes they could find to attend the ceremonies, Polar Cub Electric Fan 16-Inch Electric Fans, $20 “MUDDIMAN & . snake dance and, children could not be 1204 G St Table Floor Boudoir Bridge 607 l4n >t Main 140 AUGUST SALE of Lamps ' Lamps 5 PAY YOUR ELECTRIC LIGHT BILLS HERE Potomac Electric Annliance Co. —araac.. Eleetric Building, 14th a SOCIETY Hair Goods and . Beauty Shops 809 7th St. N.W. 1771 Columbia Rocd Main €635 Col. 16153 Est. $5 1856. Phone 616 12th West Clifton Terrace 14th St. Entrance 10% Discount On Al Corsets For Saturday Front and Back Lace For Every Type Figure Prices, $2.00 Up Fine Hand Made and Silk Underwear Hundreds of Magnificent Lamps in This Great Sale Marked at Big Reductions This sale means that our entire stock of Lamps and Shades will be reduced in price AR STAY ey 73 g throughout the month of August. To relieve the con- gestion of the first day and to make selection convenient we will ex- tend to our patrons the privelege of three | Courtesy Days, to day, Friday and Saturday, the last days in July. Those who desire to, can make selections and give orders to be filled on August Ist. No matter what your fancy may be—whether it demands a simple but elegant Lamp or a large stately one designed by master designers—it will be found here at a gen- uine bargain price. All Shades go in this sale. It is a very wonderful showing, in- cluding every kind that is new and worthy. It is impossible to ap- preciate the scope of the reductions until you have seen the Lamp or Shade you want and note the price quoted. gl L.ore, Wusungion Rallway una C Sts. N.W. Main 955 £

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