Evening Star Newspaper, March 1, 1922, Page 23

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

COUPON SALE So well known are the values this bi-monthly sale brings forth that ‘we> fllily receive letters asking when the next Coupon Sale will be advertised. To the Many Inquirm—HERE IT IS! ~—COUPON 1— Women's Striped Madras Waists 92¢c Tailor - made waists of fine corded madras; styles with z ow'” "~ colla: beautiful striped pat- terns. Plain Color Serge and Nobby Plaid and Check Spring Coats for girls 4 to 13 years all sizes in all colof $3.99 Girls’ Black Bloomers ‘Well-made, Full-cut Size Black Bloomers, for girls 4 to 12 years; c elastic tops and bot- ioms. ] 'COUPON 3 A B Women'’s Satine Bloomers Brown, Blue, Green and Black _Satine Bloomers: big, full-cut C sizes, with elastic waists and bottoms. “COUPON € Up to $4.00° Two Piece Suits Boys’ Suits Cloth and” Cor- duroy One and $l 39 for boys 2 to 6 o button-on and “Tommy Tucker” $3.00 Women’s Sweaters 29 Sweaters, in blug. sand, and green; slip-over, sleeve- les: style; for spring wear. COUPON 8 50c Satin-Striped Underwear Nainsook Lavender, blue, 39 COLPON O 4:29?; :lh:l:ish Towels siz heav els. fipished with hemmed ends. COUPON 16 45c White Flannel - Good quality Wkhite 29¢ COUPON 11 Wool-mixed Flannel, for baby's underwear, $1.50 81x30 Seamless Sheets ete. Big. Double-bed $ Size, Full-bleached Sheets, 81x90 size. good quality cot- ton; deep hems. COUPON 12 Yard-Wide Muslin COLPON 13 39c and 50c Pongee and Crepe ly all colors, and Beau- 29c tiful Floral Pattern Silk _ and Cotton- Crepes; 36 inches wide. < as much as you want. mixed Pongee, in near- COUPON 1 $1.00 to $1.50.Georgette and Georgines 36-inch-wide good quality Georgine and Georgette, in white C and colors; values to $1.50. Store Hours: Where Your Dollars Count Most BEHREND 720-22-24 7th St. N.W. Open 9:15 A.M. Rickrack Braid .... ..4c Pearl Buttons, 2 doz. for 5c’|. Men’s_Neckbands... 3¢ Snap Fasteners, 2 doz. for Sc Hair Nets, 3 for.. 10c COUPON 16 20c Flowered Ribbons Dresden Pattern, Fine, 9% Heavy Quality Silk Rib- bon, for girls’_ hair, trim- mings, art work, etc. 'COUPON 17' Babies’ Dresses Long and Short 39 Dresses of nice, soft batiste, made in bishop style or with embroid-_ ered yokes. - -.l' ‘OUPON l; Girls’ Suspender _ Dresses Newest _Spring Dresses of plain color or _pretty check and ~plaid ginghams, for girls 4 to 14 years. 'COUPON 19 “Ferris” Waists Well Known Body Walists, “Ferris” Brand, in sizes for misses and women. c Lot limited, so come early. - "“COUPON 20° Flesh Brassieres Perfect-fitting, bust- confining Brassieres ol open-mesh coutil; all l7c $1.00 to' $1.69 House Dresses sizes in lot. 97 Dresses of ging- 68 ham and percale, in plain colors and neat striped patterns; only small sizes in lot. Close 6 P.M. "COUPON 22° Women’s Black Underskirts Petticoats ruffles. of fast- color black materials; adjustable waistbands and accordion-pleated 49¢ COUPON 23° $1.00 Boys’ Wash Suits Two and One Piece 59 Wash Suits for boys 21, to 7 years; stripes, cheeks and piain col- slightly "“COUPON 24— $1.50 Middies Girls’, Misses' and Women's Plain White and Blue Trimmed c Blouses of good qual- "COUPON_25° s 3 Women’s Muslin Gowns Flesh and White Ba- tiste Gowns, comfort- 38c o 4 Women’s $2.00 Crepe ity jean. able, slip-over styles, Gowns with shirred fronts; Blue. Pink and $ 15 l‘ ors; soiled. some full-cut and well made. Lavender Crepe Sowns, in a pretty variety of dainty styles: women's and misses’ sizes. Up 10 $2.50 Girls' Hats 89¢ Abont 200 lats - for_girla years. Prettily trim- med or tallored styles ull _colors and slinpes in lot. 'S Children’s Ribbed Ribbed Drawer Bodles; “COUPON 28" and overblouse, for 'COUPON 27 Drawer Bodies Boys" and Girls' Well Known “Acor perfect quality, and in 22 3 to 13 sizes. c e ———e. s 6] " Girls’ “Panty” Dresses Two-plece Dresse: consisting of “Pant 89c tots 2 to years. Beautiful + styles and fast-color materials. 'COUPON 28 Boys’ Overalls Khakl Overalls, made in suspender-over-the- shoulder style, for c Boys: trimmed with d colored braid. “COUPON 30° s a? $1.00 Babies’ Gowns Button - Down - the- Front Long Gowns, for baby, made of good- C quality. nainsook, and braid edged. 'COUPON 31 Men’s Blue Work Shirts Made of good qual- ity blue shirting: col- lar attached; doubl stitched; one pocket; full-cut sizes. = . COUPON 83— ’ Men’s Socks Closely - woven _Men's Hose, in brown and blue; ribbed cuff top; all sizes; c irregulars of 19¢ values. 'COUPON 33° Ladies’ Gauze Ribbed ' Vests, 2 for T.adies' Gauze Ribbed Vests, medium and large sizes: erochet c armholes, taped neck and draw strings; sub- ject to imperfections. COUPON 34 Made of good, fine- count percales, coat 88c cuffs; full. cut and well made, and neat . Men’s Dress Shirts style; double soft stripes and plaids. 'COUPON 35 Ladies’ Chamoisette and Fabric Gloves To close out odds 39 and ends of Two-clasp Fabric Gloves: black, brow mastic and beaver; not all sizes, and values up to 69c. OUPON 36 Ladies’ Onyx Silk Lisle Hose 39c A beautiful quality Silk Lisle H of the well known brand, in black and cordovan and white, ~seamed back and high spliced COUPON s $1.00 Ladies’ Leather Swagger Bags A Real Leather Bag. v for ladies, in brown and gray, with inside c purse and mirror; all the newest shapes. “COUPON 38 » Bouys’ Bear Brand Hose Heavy Bicycle Rib- bed Hose, for boys, In black only; sizes 7 to 10%5; reinforced knee and heel and toes; irregulars. SUIT DEPARTMENT BARGAINS THAT CAN BE BOUGHT WITHOUT COUPONS v : Tweed Coat Suits | $12.98 and $15.00 Sport Suits for misses and women, of fashion- able tweeds, in grav, blue, brown and green mixtures, styles, $15.00 Silk Dresses $Q.99 About 200. Handsomest styles Canton Crepe, Taffeta and Satin Dresses, in blue, black, brown, gray, etc. Some have embroidered georgette -trimmings, some are braided. others beaded, in new elastic waistband blouse styles, straight line models, etc. 899 nobbily made with inserted pockets, narrow belts and notched' lapels. Dress and beaver. in mannish wear, your high- est expectations w realized this_line of In lot are pokes, < mush- Tooms and soft sport in straws, sitks, olIk braids, felts SPRING COATS Coats dnd Sport Coats of sport cloth, in tan Some have in- verted back pleats mannish lapels and narrow all-around _belts; loosd flared-back styles. and others 9‘.69 SILK ‘Wonderfully High-class Can- ton Crepe, Crisp Taffetas, Georgette and Satin Dresses, in exquisite shades of fuchsia, tan, rose, navy, black, gray, white, etc. Several hundred. marvelously beautiful, entirely new styles to select from. scotine its |Brown, Blue and Black Stri $35 Tricotine Suits | e n i triped Smartest New Spring _Suits of high - grade, all- wool tricotine, in lovely flared styles; vestee models; belted, flared or straight- tailored; 14 to 54 sizes. Sport Skirts, fashionably in sizes for misses and women. tiest color combinations of -and brown. 5 Well made, perfect fitting line effects; elegantly silk-lined- and magnificently | and wonderful values. ~ |Dlue, black Pret- $1 175 MINING EXPERT GIVES ADVICE ON CARE OF FURNACE AT NIGHT Advica to operators of house-heating |the fuel bed. in tinfe the fire' would go furnaces, who, under the keen urge of heat. The chill blasts of winter, have applied to the bureau of mines for a solution of difficulties experienced in caring for their first fires overnight, is given in.a statement made by O. F. Hood, chief mechanical engineel of the bureau. There are several ways of managing & furnace as there are several ways of driving a horse, says Mr. Hood. ‘The general principle is quite obvious, but that principle can be applied In differ- ent ways. In the process of combustion two quantities must be supplied—coal and air. The coal one pays for, the air one gets for nothing, but the quantity of air required in weight Ll! from twelve to twenty times as much of coal required. s the quantity If one had to pay for air he would pay @ great deal more at- tention to the supply of this necessary material, Mr. Hood says.— Given a bed of coals that are redhot, the fire will burn just in proportion as alr is fed through the fuel bed. ‘The question’ of keeping a fire overnight, Engineer Hood asserts, is one of having |a bed of fuel large enough 8o that at least the center of it can keep redhot without belng chilled by the cold sides of the furnace, or the cold ash pit be- Tow. If absolutely no air was fed through —eeeeeeeee JOB AGENCIES SCORED. Gen. Beach Would Prosecute Mus- cle Shoals Exploiters. Muscle’ Shoals, Ala., gireers, Fra Unitéd States employment service. closing copies of adverti sibility of employ] large number of fee of $1. cle Shoals. supply all men needed for ers was required. Are Presented. to vaudeville specialties, World Loves a Lover.” Wwas repated last evening. Joseph Overend Celestine Brennan, Ursula DRAMATIC CLUB BOWS. iPlnylet and Vaudeville Specialties | Employment agencies which are “exploiting the people and preying upon the unemployed” in connection with prospective operations at the{ power and ni- trate project should be prosecuted, Maj. Gen. Beach, chief of Army en recommended in a letter to cis 1. Jones, director general of the Gen. Beach's letter was in _reply to a communication from Mr. Jones in- ments ap- pearing In the press throughout the: country stating that there was pos- ent for a very ndustrial workers | at Muscle Shoals in the very near future and soliciting an enrollment Director Jones declared that from the information in possession of his service there was no basis in fact for such advertisements and expressed | the belfef thit measures sheuld be taken at once in informing the pub- lic of the true facts concerning Mus- He requested an expres- | sion from Gen. Beach regarding the status of the Muscle Shoals projec {and stated that the United States em- ! i ployment service was in a position to | work there, without expense to the appli- cant. 'Whenever the presence of work- | i The newly organized Holy Com- forter Dramatic Club made its bows! Monday night at the school hal, 13th ! and East Capitol streets. In addition the club ! i presented the one-act plaviet “All the ||® The performs | ance, which is for the school_fund, | had the leading role and was assisted by the Misses Ivory, | Frances Klimkiewicz, Barbara Hess, | I 1 x ilo add to the resistance of the flow out because of loss of problem, then, is to feed just air enough through the fuel bed to maintain wem- perature. \ The ash pit of most furnaces leaks enough air 6o that if there was a con- siderable draft or suction above the fuel .bed produced by the chimney more air would leak into the ash pit and up through the fuel bed than enough to sjmply maintain the tem- perature, Mr. Hood explains. Too mucl', alr fed through the fire would burn’up the coal and the fire would not keep. The problem, then, is to cut down the flow of a¥r through the fugl bed. This can be done in numerous ways. One can put on a large amount of coal and cover the' top with very fine coal, or even with ashes. This increases the resistance through the fuel bed, 50 that only a small amount of air| fidws. Another way, and a good way, t0o, according to Mr. Hood, is to al- low ashes to accumulate gn the grate of-air. While this is a good way in mild weather, it is not 8o good in severe weather, because one cannot get as much coal into the firebox, and it is usually best to keep the firebox completely filled with fuel. Even when the resistance through the fuel bed is Increased, if the draft is maintained there is apt to be too much leakage through the ash pitand too vigorous a fire. By opening the check draft so that air can flow up the chimney without flowing through the fuel bed, the air passing through the fue bed is greatly reduced. It makes little- difference whether this is done by opening the check draft in the chimney, or done by opening the,| damper in the door, allowing the air to flow above the fuel bed. In the latter case, however, the air Is drawn through the boiler and helps to cool off the boiler in addition to checking *he flow of air through the fuel bed. e A very short story We have to tell. Eat HOLMES HEALTH BREAD It keeps you well. Phone Main 4537 Victor Records for MARCH ON SALE TODAY Come in and hear them "Including . CARUSO’S LAST RECORD “Messe Solennelle— Crucifixus™ R B 1922 ‘ : A maker forced for space closed out to us ; these suites at practically onr own price ~ 4-piece bedroom suite 5140. 2 Walnut or* mahogany finish This is great, but don’t forget that other people are reading this beside you, and that we have only 14 suites in all. Queen Anne Period, just as il- lustrated. Suite includes large dresser with plate mirror, full size vanity casé, bow end bed, man’s chifforette. All master made furniture of endur- ing quality. B " Overstuffed living room suite Upholstered in $ l 45 7 tapestry or velour A suite that is made for comfort as well as for attractiveness. Three pieces, cov- ered in a good grade velour or tapestry. All made up, ready for delivery. Special orders taken from a variety of patterns of your ewn selection at the same price. " New spring showing of Neenah all-fiber rugs Recognized as one of the best fiber rugs in America. Durable, sightly and sanitary. Shown in a number of effective patterns—all-over ~and bordered designs. Blues, greens, tans.and browns. . - 9x124t. 8x10-t. 6x9-ft. ; Pauline Monday, Pearl Wells, Rose | Prentice and Agnes Fleischell. Among | those participating in the specialties were Conlon, Rothmond and Rolan Margaret Tappan, Donelly and Simp- son, Jaeger and Conlin, Lee James, : Rothman and Roland, Edna Hilliard | Howard, Conlon and Davis and James | Stakem. Music was furnished by the Holy Comforter orchestra under the. {leadership of Joseph Miller, with Miss Aljene Ivory at the piano. | The dramatic club was organized by | Rev. John Sinnott Martin, assistant pastor of Holy Comforter . Church, Kashmiri Song Todien Lave. Soag, Evening Brings Rest You By LAMBERT MURPHY Victor Record No. 45108 T JESE 516.95 (The Heebt Co., fourth floor.) and is under Willlam F. McCully, disector, and Miss Dorothy Hi tants. George A. acting as business manage and Mr. William ‘A. Cariin. as assis | Fleischell is the stage director and Thomas M. Harvey SPECIAL Tak National Canned Foods Wee March 1-8 CIAL CANNED FOODS SALES EVREYWHERE Ask Your Grocer! ’ By using modern and efficlent equipment, we give ou room house at a five-room cost—Ave-room efliciency at a three- In one of our for-room bungalows we give you the equivalent of Room, Dining Room, Three Bedrooms, Sleeplng Porch, Sun Parlor, Pullman Breskfast Room, Tiled Bath, All porcelain Cabranetied Ki D ry. All in a Livable, Likable Four-Room Bungalow The Iabor of housekeeping and expense of npkeep rediiced to a minimum. 1f yon want a home with 100% convenience plus ample room space amount of money, come in and let us show you our plans, photos and the equipment that Hot-air Heat, Gas and Electricity goes with our homes. EFFICIENCY BUNGALOWS : $500'Cas d $50 Per Month, the service of & seven- m cost. Large Living tehen,” Hardwood I'loors, Hot-water or. for the lesst TLe price and terms are lower than you have been accustomed to paying. D. C. Development Co. Room 304, 1319 F Street N. Main 7958 " This breakfast room suite g gg’lgi;:; %ug‘i:t;;'ig « as l 00 ) Five-piece mahogany dining or breakfast room suite—ideal for an apartment where space is limited. Gate-leg table extends to 6-ft. size; four chairs are in the artistic &indmr design. = Brass and steel sample beds formerly sold from $2250 to $37.50 » $15.?5 Through display they have become marred or slightly scratched, other- 5 wise they are perfect. Brass {eda in bright or satin finish; some with ribbon bands. Steel beds in ivory and white en- amel finish. Single and-double sizes SAMPLES—that’s why these Floor lamps formerly selling from $20 to $35—go at 5137 They have served their purpose as samples, but in do- ing so have been slightly scratched. inchuded. marred or perhaps P .. damaged. i y Alllayer felt .b'f nl: eERate mattress *18% st : ' < at less than the : We can fully gnarantee: these mat- ice of the " tresses because we know the high qual- se only. 0 ity of the materials and the expert But bear in workmanship put in them, : sind—thi s price, Restfnl and resilient, closely tufted, includes both base finished with rolled edge and patented and sk lamp five-row stitch that prevents it from shade. sagging or going flat on edge. Covered with floral cretonne. \Sale! Pianos and player pianos 1 Closing out reserve stock of one of our Baltimore stores. Included are a number of slightly used (but fully guaranteed) pianos and player-pianos that are now from $100 to $400 below original prices. < The Hecht Co. 7th at F ’j_;:ufidenslw 7th at F

Other pages from this issue: