Evening Star Newspaper, February 21, 1922, Page 14

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" 14 Are You Educating Your Children? Your boy or girl may not be ready for a higher education just now, but they will be some day. Will you have the money when that day comes, or will you have to send them out to work? The Mt. Vernon Savings Bank’s Insured Savings Plan will answer this question for you. Here’s how it works: If -you are accepted under the plan a monthly deposit of (at the average age) $8.20 for 120 months will not only accumulate $1,000 in cash for YOU at the end of that time, but your life will be insured for $1,000 all the t.ime you are saving this amount. The same deposxf;- $8.20—covers both your savings accumulation and the insurance protection. Suppose you had saved your first $8.20, and the next day after yott had been accepted under the rules of the bank and the insurance company you lost your life. Your dependents would im-. mediately receive the full $1,000, just as if you had lived to save it. There are many other advantages to this plan co-operatively conducted by this bank and the Continental Assurance Company of Chicago. Come in and let us explain the,plan fully. “The Same Deposit Covers Both” Savings Bank N.E.Cor9tESt. andMass.Ave Public Iibrmy HIGHEST RATING oot OFFICIAL Wh :‘é,’?.fé zléig:: ena \ erimisn DEPT. PUBLIC Mother ; Come s to Us--- —we feel honored, because after all only a woman can truly appreciate cleanliness. Almost_every day we have doctors and scientific men from many parts of the H country visit our dairy. They tell us that the Chestnut, Farms Dairy is one of the finest,and ‘best equipped dairies in the United States. This is very gratifying, and assuredly appreciated, but we would much rather have a mother with several children visit* us. Her interest is not scientific, but PERSONAL, and it's people such as she that we are trying to please most. EVERY DAY IS I}ISITORS' DAY : At The 1 i16-1120 Connecticut Avenue . Telephone Franklin 4000 ; The Mt. Vernon “Insured Savings ;’an" MISS MCORMICK HAS WON JOK . 0il King Says Girl, 16, May Wed if Riding Master- | Becomes U. S. Citizen. CHICAGO, February 21.—That ll‘x- teen-year-old Mathilde McCormick | has obtained approval of her pros posed marriage to Max Oser, Zurich, Switzerland, riding academy head, from her grandfather, John D. Rocke- feller, sr., was stated here todsy by 4family friends. It was reported that his one coondition was that Oser should become an American citizen, ut th ‘was no confirmation of this acCormick family. Mr. age still was a subject for debate, numerous persons here and at Milwaukee who professed to be cousins contended the Swi trian 1is fifty-seven years ol Howard A. Colby, friend of the: Mc- Cormick family, maintained that he is only forty, as against first reports of an age of forty-eight, thrice that of Miss Mathilde. Emil Burgy, Chicago interfor deco- rator, the first cousin to make him- self known, visited at_ the McCor- mick home yesterday, but was in- formed at the front door that Mr. McCormick and Miss Mathilde were not recelving. “It is the custom in the old coun- try,” he told newspaper men camped about the McCormick home, “when a couple become engaged for all her relatives to call upon him, and all his relatives call upon her right away. Mrs. McCormick, who recently .ob- tained a divorce, maintained yester- day her previous statements that she had nothing to say regarding her, daughter’s engagement. —_— PLAN TO AID UNCLE SAM- IN ORDNANCE PRODUCTION Society of Hact;nnlcnl Engineers to Co-Operate in Meeting Peace- Time Problem. NEW YORK, February 21.— The American Soclety of Mechanical En- gineers announced that it had organized an ordnance dlvision to assist Army ordnance department heads. Col. C. L. H. Ruggles, ord- nance department, is a member of the division and Waldo H. Marshall of New York chairman. The question of engineering co- operation with the Army in the pro- duction of ordpance will be taken up by leading ordnance thorities at the society’'s big five-day meeting at Atlanta, Ga., beginning May 8. “With the passing of emergency,’ according to the society’'s statemen “the ordnance department of the Army, which during the war was able to enlist the co-operation of manu- facturers of ordnance material and mechanical engineers generally, is now finding 1t difficult to secure from" private industry the assistance which is necessary if the most practical types of ordnance material are pro- duced. “It is essential to the national in- terest that this apathy on the part of outside manufacturers be broken down, in the opinion of Brg. Gen. ‘W. S. Peirce, assistant chief of ord- nan in immediate charge of the work which involves this problem. “Gen. Peirce believes that a widely held view that ordnance specifica- tions are too theoretical can be offset entirely if machinery and materlal manufacturers-can be interested suf- ficlently to go into the subject deep enough to understand the military problems involved. —_— ASK PRESIDENT TO SHIFT INSULAR BUREAU CHIEFS | Directors of American Chamber of Commerce in Philippines Want Gen. McIntyre Retired. MANILA, P. I, February 16.—The board of directors of the .merican Chamber of Commerce tou..y adopt- ed a resolution requesting President Harding to retire Maj. Gen. Frank McIntyre as head Of the bureau of insular affairs and recommending the appointment of Col. Frank McCoy, a member of the governgr general's executive staff, to succeed him. The resolution says: “Greater harmony between the government of the Uhited States and the government of the Philippines and greater harmony between the American residents of the Philippines and the Filipino people are’ meces- sary in order to promote harmony and the development of this ecountry. The greatest obstacle to this har- mony lies in the person of the pres- ent chief of the bureau: of insular affairs, Gen. McIntyre, and harmony, progress and development can never proceed or be accomplished 80 long as he holds this position.” FIRST CORN FROM U. S. HAS REACHED RUSSIA Trainloads Being Sent to Aid Starv- ing in Worst Famine. Areas. LONDON, February 20.—The first corn bought with the American con- gressional appropriation of $20,000.- 000 has reached the Volga valley, in Russia, according to a report re- ceived by the American Relief Ad ‘| ministration authorities in London. Eleven trains loaded with corn are on their way to Ufa, Orenburg, Sam- ara and Saratov. % Loading of corn at Novorossisk, on the Black sea, is proceeding at’the rate of sixty cars, or 900 tons, daily. Thus far the soviet government' has allotted only 700 cars for the trans- portation of corn and many more are needed. —_— PERU ENVOYS ELECTED. Dr. Velarde Expected to Head Dele- gation Coming Here. 3 LIMA, Peru, February 19~—HernA: Velarde, Peruvian minister to Argen: tina, is prominently mentioned i well informed circles as the leading mem- ber of Peru's delegation to be sent to Washington to carTy- on - negotia- tions there relative to the contro- versy with Chile. Dr. Meliton Perras, ex-minister of foreign affairs, is ex- pected to be the other delegate, while Dr. Solon Polo will probably: gg up to ‘Washington as counselor for the del- egation. All three men- have had much experience in diplomacy. Information on the make-up of the Pe legation is refused in of- ficial quarters. LAUNCH CARUSO FUND. $1,000,000 to Be Sought to Ald Students of Musie. o e n nge: &m J‘ lnflm‘c;nu . 21.—Metro- rmer fellow o, and’ thou- memorial foundation-as- an-ald to students of music. and the tenors little | aaugheds Glorta cosaried audience. ‘underworld, but In the interests of | a box of tribute from the| CLAIMS LANDRU WOMAN _. VICTIM STILL LIVES Mme. Heon in Montreal in' 1916, . Landlord Says—Report Not Yet Verified. MONTREAL, Que, February 20.— Bearing out anonymous letters recelved in Parls by attorneys for. Henr$ Lan- dru, the “Bluebeard of Gambais,” Paul Larhcer; ‘a “landlord, today ' declared that Mme. Heon, oné of Landru's al- leged victims, had been a tenant of his in Montreal for about six months dur- ing 1916. Larcher declares that Mme. Heon often.had referred to a “horrible experi- she had in Paris, but never men- tiomed the naine of the reputed slayer %" ten:women who is now awaiting the gullletine. * Landru was accused of having mur- dered- Mme. “Heon October 6, 1915, Pau) Naggiar, the French consul general‘here, sald he could not cor- roborate Larcher's story that his countrywoman was here in 1916, Larcher’s stomy appeared prominently in today’s afternoon papers. The property which Larcher said he rented to Mme. Heon, is on Henri Julien street. The landlord formerly lived in Paris. —_— BISHOP AGAINST DRY LAW. Episcopalian’ Believes Volstead Act Is Too Drastic, CHICAGO, February 21. — Blshop Thomas F. Gailor, preside al Council ‘of the E; aid In an address here that he “the eighteenth amendment | was a mistake.” He also said that he | believed in the modification of the Vol- stead law. “I am In_favor of morality,” he #aid, “and I personally observe the Volstead law, but I am opposed to putting sumptuary laws of so drastic a character in the Constitution. It; partakes of the old philosophy that matter is inherently evil. I am not speaking in_the Interests of the | intelligent, upstanding men. INFLUENZ The pure food elements in FATHERIOHNY uild energy to resist Colds and Grip UNUSUAL VALUE Genusine Afista ToietHi Hold your own outfit of toiletarticles as if specially made for them. A delghtful convenience on all your trips for many years. An onal value in sturdy, flex- ible cowhide at $5. Other FITALLS in waterproofed fabrics and leathers, at from $2 up. P ).9. ¥ . 7 = 938 F Street N.W. Better - o - Dentistry All; this specializa- tion,” systematizing and’ organization is for the purpose of Broducing better work—a high- er grade, more artistic den- tistry. ) . A careful examination of your teeth and an exact estimate of cost will be given free of charge. Easy Payment Terms to All MY ANGHOR So:3 owns PLATES ® $ $5 ASet ppgr voorm and Up AND UP FILLINGS . 0t Gola, Silver, Platinum and Porcelain, 50c te §1 DR. WHITE 407 7dh St. NW. HOURS: 8:30 to 8 P.M. Sundays, 10 to 1 AvoidtheMenace of Sore Throat OU ‘ cannot help inhaling the -Y infectious germs which cause sore throat, and the soft lin- ings of the throat are a_ good soil for them to thrive in, but wher- ever you are, at the first sign of soreness, yolu m‘tukw. of ;.'l: convenient, “pleasan! Ingy Pt antiseptic Formhmint blets. . Dissolve one in the mouth slowly, nowhand then, where it releases an efficient antiseptic which mixes with .the saliva and continuously bathes tall the membranes of the throat, ‘checking germ life and.possibly pre- venting throat infection, laryngitis, tonsillitls, “flu.” Relieves hoarse- ness. Helpful f aotors, speakers, smokers, - lecturers, _ete. 'Children like them. 60c-at all drug- ‘Recommended by physicians, den Eists. throat specialists, and drla. gists. GERM-FIGHT THROAT TAB - MWoodmard & Lothrop New York—WASHINGTON—Paris This Is How Men Share In the Anniversary Sale $27.50 New Top Coats for Spring, of all- wool fabrics. Sizes 36 to 44..... 5SRO0 English Gabardine Rain Coats, Crav- enette water-proofed ; “Drianlite” make. Sizes 34 to M....... 5 Two-trousers Suits, new Spring $27.50 models; all-wool fabrics. Single and double breasted models. . ..... . $34'50 Separate Trousers, strip: teds, $4‘50 fancy cheviots, cassimeres and serges..... $4.95 Oxfords, tan golf or sports, Blucher and English lasts; also Plain-toe Patent $5.75 $1.95 $1.55 High hoes and dxfords of Norwegian grain and tan Russia calfskin, $4.95 and.. $1.65 $2.75 Madras Neglige Shirts, one of our reg- ular makes, insuring best service and value $1.15 $1.85 Cut Silk Four-in-hand Ties, new Spring colors and patterns........ 5 Knitted Silk Four-in-hands, in plain colors, stripes and heather mixtures.... Linen Handkerchiefs, madegrom Aero- Chamois Gloves, m\tumi color; wash- $i 15 able; soft and pliable ; spear point back. ... . Fancy Striped Silk Socks, with lisle double heels and toes; 9% to 11%.... 95C Ribbed All-wool Socks, double soles and 5 5 C $3.35 Pajamas of woven madras, in neat striped patterns; fast colorS...c.eeeeeeens Night Shirts, soft-finish, plain white muslin; sizes 15 to 18, plane linen; hemstitched’ narrow hems. Dozeni uic e Soncnsone et Tan Cape Walking Gloves of selected, soft, pliable skins; embroidered backs.... toes ; Oxford, brown and green Felt Hats in Spring shades of brown, tan and gray; many shapes...cccccceecees Men’s Clothes Bection, Second floor. Men's Furnishings and Shoes, First floor. Wrist Watches, %27.75 A sale that keeps time with the Anniversary Value-giving 14-karat White and Yellow Gold Wrist Watches, 16 and 17 jeweled movements, with grosgrain ribbon straps and 14-karat buckles. shapes— HEXAGON CUSHION SQUARE TONNEAU In these new and artistic TULIP OCTAGON “At $27.75 you are saving just about 1/ Jewelry Bection, First floor. Real Leather Handbags Low Priced, *3.45 Of beautifyl glazed Pin Morocco Leather, in the most artistic and desirable shapes for spring, and in colors of black, blue and brown. Linings of exceptionally fine qual- ity silk, in tan, lavender or gray, with the convenient fittings of mirror and small purse. And a beautiful selection of Fancy Silk Handbags with plain or fancy linings, rang- ing from the novel small sizes to the largest used this season. Leather Goods Section, First fioor. Special, $4.95§ FOR JUNIOR GIRLS Spring Silk Dresses, $19.75 Correctly styled for the girl of 13 to 17 years. Fine Quality Canton Crepes, Taffetas and Geor- gette in basque models, full skirts, side panels, drapes and short-sleeve styles. Girls® Section, Fourth floor. copen and gray, in' very well tailored coats, exempli- fying every- thing youthful and swagger- Tlike. Full silk lined. Sizes 6 to 16 years Dress Accessories Priced Low---Anniversary Real Leather morocco, ‘silk lined, smartly Fancy Silk Qarters—Silk rib- bon, flower trimmed, 45C variety of colors; pair Peggy Sets—Of white and col- ored linen, with embroid- ered dots. i set ... Fiber Silk Sports Scarfs—In smart Roman striped effects: with fringed ends ........ voslisos o ‘White Organdy Shjeld, Collar and Cuff Sets—Bright col- grcd organdy folds. $1.65 et . French Dotted Economy Veils —In all the leading 40¢c color -combinations.... Silk Handbags—In a vanety of colors and $495 shapes 2 Women's Silk Sun and Rain U'!nhdfli"‘_;:h:l alvariety of colors, finished wit! strap or ring....... $5‘95 Women’s Handkerchiefs—Pure linen, sheer quality, 95C narrow hems, 6 for... Wood Bead Girdles—Lovely color combinations, in §5¢ great variety..coeecees Necklaces—Metal and stone set, very attractive and dis- tinctive— 95¢, $1.45, $1.95 Powder Puffs—Long handle, ribbon trimmed, as- 35¢ sorted colors Assorted Hair Pins—180 in small cabinet. Special, 95: 9c box; dozen boxes.. Light-weight Dress Shields— Nos. 2, 3 and 4. Spe- cially priced, 18c pair; 3 pairs.ee.... rted French Taffeta Rib- on—Fancy Spring Color- ings, silk stitched me- lsc tallic edge. Yard..... Women's Silk Hose, with lisle + tops, full fashioned—in black, white, gray, cordo- $1.35 Women’s All-Silk Hose, full- fashioned, in black, $2.35 Women’s French Kid Gloves— 2-clasp, P. K. sewn, three rows fancy embroidery, brown, beaver, tan, $1.45 16-button White Glace Gloves— real kid. Special $350 Wrist Chamoisette Gloves—In white St Dress-Accessory Sections, First floor. Women’s One and Two Strap Pumps . Anniversary Sale Price, $8.95 pair Most of them are handmade throughout. Conuy from one of our best makers, all embody the exacting standards of quality which we set for our shoes. Several models . are illustrated—described as: | ONE-STRAP PUMP —Fastening with peart button. Miy be had in black calfskin, brown kidskin, patent leather and black satin, patent leather and gray suede combinations and gray suede. All styles shown, with Louis or Baby Lmfl; heels, hand-turned soles. Z TWO-STRAP PUMP—a most attractive miodel joins in ‘the Anmiversary at this same low price—$898. It is of black patent leather, with quarter and straps of gray suede. heels, hand-turned soles. ‘Womei's Shoe Section, Third Baby Louis Soor. Handbags—Pin fitted with small $3.45 Real Pin Seal Bill Folds—Cases and Hip Books, leather lined $1’55 ‘Women's All-LinendEmbraid- ered Corner Hand- kerchiefs, six for.. $1.45 Two-tone Lingerie Ribbons— Various widths, lovely col- ors—sold by yard or piece, 10 yards, according to width— $1.10, $1.40, $1.90 and $2.40 piece Eyelet Embroidery Peter Pan Collar and Cuff AW~ Sets ..... cesecsecsceas 5‘ > LACES Special for Anniversary CHANTILLY FLOUNCINGS—36 to 40 inch widths in black and white—lovely patterns and un- usual values at these very low prices. $2 and $2.75. HANDMADE IRISH AND FILET LACES—very much in demand for lingerie, blouses and chil- dren’s dainty clothes—take spe- .cial Anniversary prices— Irish Laces, in a wide assort- ment. Picot Edges, 15¢, 25¢ yard. 1-inch Edge, 60c to 90c yard. 1%-inch édge, 65¢ to $135 yard. Insertions to match edges— 1-inch width, 40c to 85¢ 1%-inch width, 85¢ to $1.63. FILET LACES—Ilovely pattern, 1-inch width, 35¢ yard. 1%-inch width, 40e to 5S0c yard. 23-inch width, 75e to $1.35 yard. Rose pattern edge, 1% Inches, 60c yard. Insertions—from ¥ to 43 inches wide—varying in price accord- ing to width. 25¢ te $1.50

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