Evening Star Newspaper, June 2, 1922, Page 9

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DRESSES: Ging- ham. organdles, linens and dotted Swisses. La test styles, sizes 16 to $1.95 Up CAPES, in Can~ velours, ser ge S- Roshanara ani fadine. - Lat 59.95 Up FOR BEST VALUES Shop- Here coL’l‘l. in silks velours, ~Polaire, serge and trico- latest styles. »“‘u(l"n'r's, P n ens, gabardines. plalds, .sflks and fancy stripes,lall sizes. 95¢ Up Phillips Smart Shop Corner 9th and H Streets Northwest 5N ton crepe, popling, SYITS: Wonder- ful rtment in serges, Polret twill and tricotines, sizes 16 to 46. $5.00 Up All sizes, ‘WAISTS, in cot- ton and silks, all - #izes, neat styles, best materials. 95¢c Up % | By the Associated Press. 7| Roald Amundsen' # | Maud, crammed to the last inch of il llllnrllht Gton this spr Conn, ., June Thomas Lawrason RIgEs, professor of English at Seattle—Will Seek Phan- tom Ships in Arctic. SEATTLE, Wi June 2.—Capt. xploration ship her cargo holds with equipment and supplies, is ready to set sail tomor- row on the first lap of the long voy- age through the ice floes about the horth pole, Capt. Amundsen said to- day. Two alrplanes, to be "used tn mete- orological and topographical investi- gations in the uncharted polar basin, were loaded aboard the vessel. Capt. Amundsen will not sail with the founders _of Bank of Washington, D. C,, is to be- ‘come @ priest af the Roman Catholic Church. His ordination to the priest- hood ‘will take place at ‘St. Joseph's Cathedral, Hartford, June 10. o [ o g v e H 3 n ‘| Amundsen’s Ship to Leave [Ge*the interaitica tntelligence bursau at Paris, and son of ome of the the Riggs National Prof. Rigss, Yale, '10, pnwed at completed, T e Sl to "' ch'.‘ ln‘:nt out with | made from red alternathera. This ouund- oi little vhnts whish, when | will be surrounded by &.white fisld iread: e e e e et large six-pointed star | letters ot red nument | of evonymus. The lettering will be eongoud of the same kind of plants of e Washington Monument beds. rs at work on thesq he | in a circle of mon llb!.lorpll. with aiternanthi ‘The bed in ,fl‘ll:lll" Plr 'fll ‘“Judiciary Park- k least a Maud, but will join his ship at Nome, Alaska, leaving Seattle Sunday on the steamer Victoria. Lumber Important Item. A deck load of lumber forms an important item in the Maud's cargo. The explorer explained that after the ship is frozen into the Arctic ice pack —with which he expects to drift past the north pole—living quarters for the dogs of the expedition and huts for scientific observations will be constructed on the ice. The ship, by means of lumbey, will be converted One of Our Greatest Millinery Events Sale of Brand-New * i ' into a “house.” Where for the five or( THOMAS LAWRASON RIGGS. more the Vil Tve e Vessel Will drift ehe| o i inster School, Stmsbury, and University of Washington woman |atter graduation from Yale, took a students are planning o eontrbeis | four-year course postgraduate course ¥ / Worth at the university b, of. 7 in making c:nd))" l;::::x:%:r:n&'fi‘: signed to St. Thomas' Seminary{ as Mlldl @ expedition. Candy, it seems, is an|® Professor. He served as a prefect $ More ; < ' Hidden Treasure —— SPPPPEPPEPPS b Db I, crew will live. This inspiration of countless volumes of o P 5 their share to the shi ®lat Harvard. He was then chosen fiction exists as a fact in hundreds of homes Urday Just befors ming. tone: Bar RESTesacE ot Mirat Iysar SES Il Nt See the ~ - days the explorer's feminine admi; ‘ale, serving until going to France. 2 & —one might say in almost every home. Ehged Riggs probably will be as- Display in the Window essential in the nawi, of studies there the past year. Since Arctle "wasten and” Capt Amundsen |Loturning from, France he pusucd e atadies Bt D s s saitng sIh Catholic University at Washington In Search of Lost Ships. and at St. Joseph's Seminary at Dun- As Capt. Amundsan dritts slowly|“°°%'® ¥ across the cheerless expanse of the polar basin, from which no white man ever emerged, he will search the white waste about him for signs of the “phantom fleet"—4he frozen com- pany of lost ships that the Eskimos claim swings around the north pole year in and year out, gripped in the inexorable clutches of the great Ice Old ;jewelry, discarded and forgotten be- cause it is no longer fashionable, yet poten- tially as valuable today as it was in years past; often more so. Let Us Remodel and Restore It By reason of a very remarkable purchase; we are able to offer the season’s newest models—in Dress, Street and Sports Millinery—at a price that scarcely covers cost of manufacture. Materials: TWO NEW FLORAL BEDS. Monument Grounds and Judiciary Park Gain Features. One of the most attractive features of the summer garb of the National Capital is now being arranged under direction of Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Offering Several Hundred Sports Hats Colors floes. Scouting over a wide area on each |Sherrill. Two floral 4e.lhzn bed:‘are Transparent Fabrics Pastel Shades . : side of the auxiliary powered schosn- | being laid out—one on the Washing- 3 5 Bring us your old diamonds and other gr Maud, the famous explorer will | ton Monument Grounds and the other —in new, pleasing Canton Crepes g‘g‘m Shades = . ave an extraordina opportunity to|about the fountain in Judiciary Par : ‘:rm. M gems and let our expert design a new, mod- investigate the repoats of the cerie| Thousands of visitors take snap- shapes and colorings— Felt g y 3 % fleet brought out from the farthest|shots of these design beds, and the that, regardless of Baronette Satin Navy ern setting exclusively for yqu—or, if you reaches of the north by the natives. | children take delight in spelling out < ‘Leghomn Black % Vessels have disappeared strangely worth, will be marked— i 8 = E prefer, choose from our complete showing in the unexplored polar basin since Combinations of Materials White the beginning of Arctic navigation. In one fell swoop thedhungry ice pack in 1876 carried off thirty whaling ships from the waters north of the American continent. \Most of the men fled to the ice and escaped to Pojnt Barrow and other points on e Arctic coast, but sevienty refused to desert the ships. The slow but cease- less movement of the carried them of newest mountings in stock. America’s best designers are their authors—developed in high quality and ‘exquisite tints. I Vunningham & Co. * SALE OF 1,250 New Summer Dresses at 40 to 50% Less Than Regular Prices Divided Into Two Exceptional Groups 95 The most remarkable lot of dresses from a \ quality and price standpomt that we have ever assembled — comparison will prove their worth! Compare! Brand-new Dresses, fresh from the maker’s needles—delightful models in fashion’s choicest fabrics. Frocks that are altogether new and altogether lovely. Women who like to be first with the new will find this a wonderful collection to chog;e from. = Linens, Ratines, Voiles, Dotted Swisses, Organdies, Summer Silks, Satins and Taffetas. Special Dinner Dance Saturday Evening From 7:30 to 12:30 into the mysterious uncharted north fie e o ittt | Wardman Park = A Hotel Marriage Licenses. Marriage licenses have been issued to the Helmal J. Lystad, Hudson, Wis., and Mar. cla B. Thom, Boftaio, Wyo. Beautiful, appropriate pieces for wedding and graduation gifts and for all purposes can often be se- cured sn this way for very little cost. GOLDSMITH&(0 . 1205 F Street. For Table Reservations Phone Columbia Two Thousand A R S S L SRR R R R A T R R R R L AR I L SR B R RO A TR LR I R R T R Laces and Lace Curtains Linens, Blankets Cleaned and Renovated Mme. Viboud, Inc. 77 11th—Main 4071 and Eatherine Hand_Laundering and Needlework * ..|[Crowds Turned Away From the Anna Maud Hallam Lectures at | I'llnum A, Mluln and Mildred L. Herbst. Po“" Theater S T city, Marle J. ‘The many students of Anna g Maud Hallam's Washington class, recognizing the eagerness of the ‘Washington people to hear this eminent lecturer and educator, are graciously giving up their seats to those who have never heard Anna Maud Hallam. This consideration is_appreciated by the hundreds who were turned away from pre- vious lectures. The management regrets the lim- ited capacity of the Poli Theater. which does not meet the demands of the ever-increasing popularity of this. nationally known and in- spired educator.—Advertisement. * g T L T E S e R S R S T T T R TR TR P SR TR TR TR R R TR T TS T X PERR. this city, . Springfield. Mangan and C Chs Dale, Elmira, M. Norwood, this city. Washington’s Oldest Sewing Machine Dealers oblfred NI Branecilein and (Margaret 4. A Sale of New SR And Nearly New Sewing Machines That Marks the Lowest Price Level Reached in Years! Ask About Terms Here is a gift suggestion, ideally adapted for June bride giving. With prices so lib- erally reduced on machines of | recognized standard quality and make, backed by a 10- year guarantee and two years of free service, it would mean nothing short of folly to ig- nore this event! Oppen- heimer’s Department of Sew- || ing Machmes has grown with [ Willis 4 William C. De Ford and Marte Middlekam, both of Baltimore, Md. & mobirles L. Nisewauer and :Lavinia . Hallock, thi apitol Heighte, Md 1 Beetor and Helen B Eybr. L’Hommedleu, ner.mlt. Mich., and Winifred Batchelor, this ol Arthur Beach, this city, and mlen M- ler. Springfleld, Dabney W. Sackzon and Aan mm- {hmes B, Jackmen and Sade L. ichard A. Knight and Agnes B-:m;n. Harry Ward and Bernice Ford. Edward Stouffer. Ridiey Park, Pa., and E. Myrtle McGee, this city. Mrs. Mildred Brandt, recentlyyelect- ed police magistrate in Freeport. lll holds court in the parlor of her 66 Years in Business T oat 12w Minewelz Fur Cald Slomge Far Repmrmg Complete' Clearance —1s the priogram in our . Annual June Sale that .. 'is now in{progress All Sults, Coats, Wraps Sports $ulu of Tweeds:and Homc— . spuns. 2 Tn"ored Suits ‘of Twill Cord, Tricotine, Poiret Twilland other fabrics. =« Sports Coats of Tweeds, i[mported Camel’s. Hair Cloth and Fancy - Mixtures. N Wnfip:m ofé’rddyu%a Mar-| vella; a epe, nton| v Crepe, Imported Camel’s Hair OFF Cloth and Velette.’ Plainmodels, - © others.” trimmed 'w‘lth Fur or ii One new Davis Rotary machine. Tegu- ll larly selling for $55.. Washington only because of its strict adherence to a rigid policy of fair dealing and un- quesnonable,values Ii Two new “New Home” 'm.lloglny i ;nm new “Standard? Desk Electrio Wonderful Values in Nearly New Machines- J i e e R g5 ()() Wonderful Sale of _ Sale of New Silk and Cloth | n:pdnnalelkn-_wfnrw. Sale price.... 0 J i $37.50 . Silk f:';lnton Crepe—Sullz Tncolette | : S K IRTS Worth 52500 : Smart ityles in Canton Gtgpe, fur col New P Singer ‘in unusually t. Cleaned and adjusted in our §l own shop. Snlepriee._............."...-. vl‘hnu'el. .Pr.lmdh..',[v@:edé; Basket Jerseys, in every wanted color. .

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