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500 prs. Men's Oxfords Y *Knocked-Out™ !‘ Down .fbr the Count’ - HIS is where 500 men get the best shoe bargain they have known in years. We have taken that number of pairs of High-grade Oxfords out of our regular stock and are letting them go at $3.95. Many are worth double that right now! _Include(l in part are— _ All our White Canvas ,Oxfords. and broken sizes of 3 White Nubuck Sports Oxfords. Tan Calf Ball-strap Sports Oxfords. Tan Calf Wing-Tip Brogue Oxfords. Black and ‘Tan Calf English Oxfords. Medium-Toe Blucher Oxiqrds; v Brown Calfskin Semi-Brogues, large perforations. And other styles. Some in nearly all sizes. Others only a few of a kind. You'll find some on Bargain Tables for easy selection and our Salesmen will “go the limit” in trying to fit you in a pair you like. : All Sales Final! None exchanged. None C. O. D. No dealers. New Autumn Tans HW « OR the woman who is tired of her summer shoes here are brand new Fall Oxforgg and Strap-pumps. Their unmis- takably “Classy” appearance "and good workmanship create a new Fall standard of shoe-value for the moder- ate price of $5.95. 5 Included are two-buckle and one-button ball-strap Pumps and Walking Oxfords of Tan Calfskin, Brown Kidskin and Black Kid- skin.” Flexible “Goodyear” welt ‘soles; medium or low rubber- tapped, walking heels. Come in sizes 2 to 8, AA to D widths. en. Since then, they have appeared elsewhere—but not with uniform success. For it takes special lasts and unusually clever shoemaking to make this quaint riovel- ty fit perfectly and hold its shape. . - WE were first tp introduce them to Washington wom- Only one or two Brooklyn Manufacturers were pre- pared to make them properly. And they have been kept busy supplying a chosen few stores. PR Pictured a 3-Buckle model of Patent leather , with “Spanish” Louis heel. Several other charming-$125o. styles also, but in limited quantities at........... P& \. . “Keds" .. . Tennis Shoes * Dxfordsand Pumps: for boys, girls and young women. . Cor $135 @ $1.95 -Th &K 233PaaveSE . - Remaining White Shoes Of Kidskin, Nu- buck, Canvas and leather trims, now $4.85 Gains by Sword Lost in War, ; '. 'de'sDr. Jordan, 'CitingEu'rbpg 4 By the Amoclated Press. * HONOLULU, August 13.—Dr. David Starr Jordan, chancellor of Stanford University, In an-address before the pan-Pacific educational conferente of nations bordering on the Pacific de- clared that no nation ever gained yanything by the sword which it did I not later 1086 by the sword. He cited as examples Prussia and France dufing the time of Napoleon. . Dr. Jordan, who is president of the educational confereace, made a plea for disarmament, He urged peace between all countries through an edu- | cational understanding and a mutual appreciation. He declared the “build- iing of armamént and the manufacture jof war materials o be the greatest {danger to peace. X { body loaded, nobody would explode.” | BY HIRAM K. MODERWELL. By Cable to The Star and Ohicdgo Daily News. Copyright, 1921 MADRID, “Spain, August 13.—The capture by the Moors, after a heroic resistance by the Spanish garrison, of ! Monte Arruit leaves the Spaniards a sipgle foothold ! Morocco, namely, the seacoast towu {of Melilla, and presents a formidable ‘problem for the new government now in process of formation here.’ The long defense of Monte Arruit {was a desperate operation.. It was |impossible tor the Melilla garrison to f send rellef without exposing Melilla, itself, to capture. Hence, Gen. Navarro | with '400 soldiers defended the place without adequate munitions or sup- | plies. An attempt was made to sen {these things by airplane. but there {was no suitable landing place in the village und the articles had to be dropped from an altitude of 3,000 feet. This device, therefore, had to be abandoned and Gen. Navarro was obliged to surrender. Fear General Upriaing. This. the penultimate stage in the East Morocean insurrection. which s led by a lame Moorish newspaper man, is causing widespread uneasi ness, not only in Spain, but among the powers possessing Mo- hammedan colonies. If successful, it would undoubted stimulate a simi- lar insurrection in_ the neighboring French Morocco. It indications of the widespread ment in the Mussulman world exem- plified at present in Egypi. S Turkey and India. Up to this there have been only slight signs of unrest in- French Morocco. Spain is now making up her mind as to how far she is willing to go to i recover her lost prestige in Morocco. In the last week, King Alfonso has consulted nearly all the prominent leaders. These consultations, which are broader than any others held in vears. constitute a sort of ! plebiscite and a new government is expected soon. It will probably be a coalition and Senor Maura, a former { premier, is most frequently men- i\lnned as its head. He is thought to ihave definite ideas as to what course 10 pursue. Meanwhile the government main- tains 2 severe censorship. Discus- sion of the Moroccan policy is not lallowed. Meetings, especially labor jand republican, are prohibited and |outgoing news dispatches are rigor- ously controlled. reinforcements intention of making a general ad- vance in the near future to regain {all the 1lost territory. There are almost daily sailings of fresh con- tingents from the principal ports and volunteer companfes are forming. - It is said that the present active army of about 160,000 should be sufficient THE WEATHER For the District of Columbia and Maryland, showers and thunder- storms today and tonight; cooler to- night; tomorrow partly cloudy and cooler; moderate southwest winds, shift- ! ing to norithwest winds. , ’ ‘or Virginia, partly cloudy today probably local thundershowers; to- morrow partly ecloudy and cooler, _vobably showers in south portion jmoderate to~fresh southwest, shifting spec to northwest nds. Yesterday's Temperatare. Midnight, 74; 2 a ., 72;'8 s.m.. 75; 10 am.. 3 p.m., §9; 4 p.m., 89; 0; lowest, T1.T Relative aumidity—S a.m. .63; 8 p.m., .70. Rainfall (8 p.m. to 8 p.m.)—0. Hours of sunshine—4.8. Per cent of possible sunshine—33. Departures. Actumulated excess of temperature since January 1, 1921, +890. Deficiency of temperature ! August 1, 1921, —16. Accumulated deficiency of precipita- {tion since January 1, 1921 —3.% Deficiency of precipitation since August 1, 1921, —1.66. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 89; lowest, 69. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States coast and geodetic survey.) Today—Low tide, a.m. high tide, 3:58 a.m. since d and 4:25 p.m. ‘Tomorrow—Low tide, 11:30 a.m. high tide, 4:4% a.m. The Sun and Moon. 5:19 am.; and and sun 5:28 a.m; 5 p. Moon rises, a.m. Automobile lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset. TUp-River Waters. HARPERS FERRY, W. Va., August also | He added, “If no- | idealistic Embittered by Discharge, Leads Moors to Victory ! i | in eastern Spanish!of the streets until long is one of the!against the s fer- ' perament Tl e Professor M. Anesaki of the Univer- sity of Tokio, another speaker, urged the co-operative' psychological inves- tigation * be ‘'made of ‘the principal racial traits of the people of the occi- dent and of the far esst to establish of relations. Ll s cellor of Peking University, expressed the belief that education is the pana- cea for all the ills of humanity. “The problem before the world and before this conference,” Dr. Tsai said. how through education may spread internationalism and peace. We must put an end to national greed. We “The cast is Jookins towaru the west. The great forces which awak- ened Europe during the period of the renaissance are now takin tue far east. ‘Ll realizat value of _ecivilization is dawning." without mobilizing the reserves, but jpast few month all leaves have been canceled. Meanwhile, to the naked eye Mad- rid shows no signs of the politicai of the great heat, population, aged four to fifty, dances, drinks and plays games in the middle er mid- night. On Sunda ights to which newspapers are de there are \ ‘ | f ole pages in thel : d. all the ar-| | tistic detulls being scrupulously re-| ported. The causes of the Moroccan upr are still obscure, but undoubtedly chief impetus came through the re- markable personality of the leader, Ben Mohammed El Jatabi. The son of a village chieftain, he studied K anG then editor of .l of the Melilla news, czette. He was the Spanish and hoped Morocco ¢ome a nation. seditious. Thereafte have become a bitter ny of the Spanish. He was arrestel and con- fined in the fortress of Restrogordo, from which he attempu>d 1o e~cape b sllding down a wall at nisht. } fell and broke a leg. but refused to ermit a_doctor to set it because he was unwilling to accept a favor from Christians. Finally he obtained visit his father in his and he then organ permission to ative viltage, d a holy war paninrds. His fiery tem- made him the though lame and unacguainted wit! The unleashed Moors fough in whirl'wind style. It is asserted that the Moors carried the head of the captured Spanish generai from vi lage to village, causing a fire of ei thusiasm. Starting_ only with smali arms, the Moors large Spanish guns, trained against the defenses of Me- lilla. is not thought that place is in any danger, and the pur- pose of the immediate operations, it is believed, is to secure the military occupation of the entire coast line. BRIDGE REPAIRS MADE. Structure Over Rappahannock Now in Excellent Condition. Speclal Dispateh August The general staff |13.—The building of the new floor by assures me that it Is sending large|th ecity in the bridge spanning the to Melilla with the| Rappahannock river at this point, has been completed and it is now one of the strongest and smoothest struc- tures in this section of the state. The work was commenced about {he mid- dle of March 2nd was completed four and one-half months’ time not- withstanding the fact the workm. were greatly handicapped by the al- most continual flow of traffic over the bridge, it being on the Washington- Richmond hi The floor of the structure wiil be covered at an early date with a coating of tarvia manu- factured at the city gas plant. P S — BLOODHOUNDS TRAIL MAN Negro Traced to Home and éhuged ‘With Afson. Dispatch to The Sta: LYNCHRURG. V: August 13— Bloodhounde from here, which be- long to the Virginia kennels, late Thursday were the direct cause of the arrest of Hizer Anderson, a colored man. now charged with arson. A storage house on the farm of Wi llam Hunt, in Pittsylvania count forty miles from here, wa: Wednesday night, and Thu dogs were taken to the sce mediat they picked a went straight to Anderson’s hov There Mr. Hunt identified a bass. of eggs which, he says, were in tle house before it was burned. The negro was taken to the county jafl iat Chatham to await trial. —_— FIGHTING FOR LIFE. Young Woman Shot in Quarrel at Lynchburg, Va. Special Dispatch to The Sta LYNCHBURG, Va.. August 13.—Al- though it was thoughtyat the time of the first investigatiod that Bessie Nowlin, a young white woman, who was ghot Wednesday evening by Mar- vin Tyree, was not seriously injured. her condition is such now that her life is despaired of. The wound in her right side at first seemed to be a trifiing one, but -ray - photo- graph has disclosed that it penetrated 12:59 ' a lung and stopped just as it touched | the heart. Tyree, who has a finger ehot off and a wound in his right arm, is in jail. He says he shot himself trying to get his revolver from girl, and then he fired at her three times. She says he shot her because 13.—The Potomac river was muddyshe refused to go with him-on a trip. and the Shenandoah clear this even- {ing. ‘Wepther in Various Citles. Precipi- tation. RESTIRREN RERBHBRZ 3 Hissasse e esEasIngaaR e e gnes s N % [ PEFTE LT PEREL TS L8 & §§ The trouble hanpened in a Bedford county suburb of the city. i. !A aptured a number of | which are now the | |, Wealthy British Landowner A .Victim of Old H. C. L. drives the aleohol addict The Duke of Portland, more Londen renl estate t other individun!, hax-Wold - a great| number of hix holdings during the Hix cane hnn caused | nome aurprise, and his’ statem he aknll have to dixpoxe of extate eane. —— NEED U. 5. CONTROL { | i i Ex-Bishop of Islands Thinks | Partisanship Impeded | Progress in Past. i By tie Associnted Press WILLIAMSTOWN. Mass, August 1 i “the time will come | mutual un United hemselves, be recogn plite - autonomy I3 by Bishop Ciarles H. Brent | jof the Lpiscopal diocese of wesiern New York, in an address before the | Institute of Pol pere tonight. | Bishop Brent, who for man s | 1 Bishop of the Philip | cized the Wilson administration’s policy toward the island; nce 1961," he control of the Philippines h to the islands an unprecedented pe: of peace and prosperity. Poli the watchword maintatied b: has been ! ve independenc the development of America ¢ in this direction there are Lwo ne last ad at Washington. The first is s all appointments 0 Philip- pine office had formerly been made v n home poli- | tics, after 1913 the partisan line was | very sharply drawn. The second is that, ! men of real leadership hzd | before been- sent to nigh m‘fl-ei been of the kind who are content mer ad out what the people want an give them their desire. %1t 5ia 2’ wnique” atiempt the United | States has been making in the Philippine { Islands—to show that it can be possible | for a strong nation to be truly the tutor | land friend of a weazer people—but we | have thus far succecded and we owe it | 10 ourseives. to the Filipinos and the | world to press on unill the task is com- | pleted, however long this may take.” | Referring to reports that Maj. Gen.} Leonard Wood would s0on become gov: ernor general of the islands, he said that Gen. Wobd “carries with him, today, the strong confidence of the ~Philippine | people themselves.” e . The song “Home. Sweet Home. written by an American, John Pa; . aud composed by an English- m: r Hesry Bishop. Repaired - $2 SEABRIDGE JEWELRY CO. 224 9th St. N.w, The Herb is a vegetable product that | no bad effect upon the wystem. onstipation 15 the cause of most. dls- | {| eases. Biudtone eliminates this condifion. purifying the blood 2nd tending to relievs | | |{ rhenmati scrofula, eczema, pimples, | {! boits, sciatica, lumbagn, cough: and isorder of the etomach, 1 || kidney: ‘ M. A. LOUIS & SONS, 229 G Street N.W. - Treatment for Various Ailments. ‘The Herd Specialist. kind of Camera or | Kodak you want. - A Bex Brewate See'Full Page a. m. ready same day, 4:30 p. m. 1210 G - $2:50 0 $86 Ad in Today's Artcrm - HARRY C. GROVE, Inc. Street sa might A report f 1 department r 1N AR | s o Taceate) Amcentral home nnd seek | Loie rarob oL Boy crisis or of social ferment. Becauge|lexs expensive quarters leads one 10 near Capon life here begins | believe thut the high cont of I at_sundown: after which the whole|hnax been particutarly “hhgh” I hin{the medal for proficiency jming beir g and ot Drug Addiction Cases Trebled In'New Yortk Since Prohibition In 1918 hospRals treated 116 cases of drug addictian. In 1919 this num- ber increased tg 339. and in 1920 493 addicis were admitted. Tiese figures resent only a small portion of thé 1 number of {irug addicts treated instance, the 1920 figures are for with no totals. for Special Dispatel to The Star. NEW YORK, August 13—Drug ad diction cases, the depariment of pub- lice welfare asserted today, have trebled since prohibition went into ¢ is said to be shown by on drug addicts treated in | prohilition has not per- lcssened the num! ice that are treated in pitals. In 1915 there were 1,145 men and women treated for alcoholism. In Jice the high cost of alcoholic e were 1.024 cases treat- f 121. and the first alcoholics were drug addicts total Commissioner Bird 8. Coler these cases, as well as alcoholic cases ow a stendy inc Whether the fculty of getting strong drink nto the drug | habit is g question, the commigsioner | aid, but he held a sirong inference drawn from sayvs | be the reported | tre statist c d poli ity in ing up drug add police departnient measure for round- | “Virtually =il the’ drug addiction -as-s are 1aken to Kings County Hos- i Here the addicis ar. cwervthing possible is hem back+to a normal incrense “o.er’s | done to bring e of living. BOYS WIN HONORS. Winchester Scouts Are Awarded Medals in Camp. | ACCUSES IRONWORKERS. | Judge Landis+Charges Violation of Arbitration Agreement. August —Carging b part of the Soructur Union, whose labor is arbitrating. Judge today aavised a con- 3 whom a strike was lied. 10 place non-union faen on the {joh_if the sirikers did not return to Monday nion v Special ts dur ntiy on the Bridge. ier honors have been bestowed upon Milier of ol Mil airplane, this summn d the arbitration r 0 consuit . the Nine-tenths of Our Customers Are Motorisis For The Chimney Corner. while off the beaten track pedestrians, is easily accessible to those who. seeking cool and attractive surroundings. find it just as easy to motor to The Chimney Corner as it is 1o drive ound the Speedv. The Chimney C orner is located on Ninetcenth treet, just off Potomac Drive. two b'ocks directiy west of the Pan-American Building. Dinner will be served today irom 3 until 7:30 p.m. of Chicken Soup Prime Rib Roaxt Virginia Baked Baked Chicken Beunn Corn on Cob Stuffed Irish Potatoes Hot Bixeuiix Hot Railx Pineappie Fritier Fruit Salad Avacado Lettuce and Tomnioes Dumpling with Hard Sance lee Cream Buked Custurd with Whippcd Cream Green Appl- Pie Cofiee Milk Lemonade lced Orange Juice Like Getting Money From Home These seasonable values in men’s wear George is offering for Monday. They're quality all the way through and the prices—they speak for themselves. Union Suits Fine Quality Nainsook in the popular athletic style. Knee length, no sleeves, elastic belt back. For men and boys, es from 26 to 45. ; ividual Chicken Ple hicken F.enh L Cake Lemon Ple leed Tea Pengee Pajamas The best of Cotton Pongee in lavender, blue, champagne and pink. Silk frogs to give them the classy appearance you like. Sizes from A to D. A real §1.69 value at WHITE SHIRTS, with stiff or soft cufis. The soft-cuff shirts are made of - mercerized Oxford. 3.1 .69 WASH TIES of very fine quality and highly mercer- ized. A real 25c value at 3 ties for— 50c Young Men’s Fine Wool 3-Piece Suits els. unfinixked Wor- nteds and annimeres, in Browux, Greens, Grays, Blues The stiff-cuff shirtsare of the famous “Arrow” make. Sizes from 14 to 17. Clean-Up of All Men’s and Young Men’s PALM BEACH SUITS Broken lots, but mostly all = 8875 A variety of styles. rices 13, boae Stripex. Siges from to 40. Reguiar- 1y priced at $25 910 Seventh St. We' Request the Returii of *Anything that Can Be Bought- jor Less Elscwchere