Evening Star Newspaper, June 21, 1922, Page 5

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THE EVENING STAR. SEE US If You WANT A Five-Room and Bath APARTMENT In the Northweat —on one of the best streets, facing oo & large city p in walking distance of most of the government departments. TERMS: $100 Cash, $235 in 60 Days Balance, $49.50 Each Month Yonr 5room apartment will cost you $19.50 3 month. 30 of your monthly ment will go pa. tow ving the a ot In I nths yon would own the apart- ment, with no rent or montbly payments to_make Splendid propesition for a family or sev- eral ladies or gentlemen R. E. L. YELLOTT & CO. 1517 H St. N.W. Main 8115 The coal strike continues— In the meanwhile we are bookin of coal 2 orders for delivery after the strike.” Anticipating a big rush will be filled in r receipt. Or- —orders arder ced now will have ‘Annou ncing ¢ op of the Ufi;i ed Shoe Repair Shop 1335 7th St. N.W. Monday, June 19, 5 P.M. A special for 4 days only: A $1.50 job, half soles and heels, 635c; O'Suilivan and Goodyear heels, 30c. Be sure to bring this coupon =2 J.NO MY Bring this ad DENTIST One Doilar Down and Gne Per Visit 627 Pa. Ave. N.V with you for terms X A Cheery Beverage There's a zip and zest to G. & G. Ginger Ale akes it especially re- hing. it too sharp— but just right: and gingery enough to be good. We want to emphasize the purity—as vouched for by a leading chemist’s anal- sis and report—ior purity is an important considera- tion. Brewed right here in Washington, and served at the leading clubs, cafes and fountains. Delivered direct to your home by the case. Phone us—\Main 7637. G. & G. Bottling Co. 931 C Street N.W. AAAARAAAAAAAA/ PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $£800,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY. President JOSHUA W. CARR, Secr We offer sou_the services of qualified expert dentists the lowest fees con- sistent with the hest work. That has been our record for the past 30 years We employ evsry worthy preparation and approved _devics for the alleviation of pain by Dr. Wreth and Staff of careful skilled entists. My perfoct Suction Testh will not siip o drop—35. Other ssts of teeth. $3 up. Gold Crowns and Bridge Work, 83 84 and $5 per toth. fn goid. siiver. Fillings, 500 te 31 up, emalzam or porcelain. No charge for painless extraction whea other work is dore. Examination and ad- Vies always free. Al work guaranteed. Open == O, WYETH e 427-29 Seventh Street N Opsosite Lansburgh & Bre. Union Tea Co. Largest a 100 GET DIPLOMAS AT BUSINESS HIGH ‘Representative White Speak- er in Place of Repre- sentative Reed. One hundred graduates of the! four-vear course' of Business High School were awarded diplomas at the annual commencement exer last night in the auditorium of the insti- | tution. The commencement addre: |was delivered by Representative | Hays B. White of place jof Representative Stuart ¥F. Reed of West Virginia, the scheduled speak- er, who was ill and unable to atte The following scholarship awa were made by ipal Allan Scholarship, Anna Kennelly, Dorothy Lauten, Erna Otto, ¥ 4 { Florence Rizzo improvement in schol Carpenter, Mararet €c ans, Catherine Forteney, [ Mar Lavison, Lillian M Norfolk. I w Rich, Elizabeth Tew | and Jennie W der;, Galt priz n- didates in history. Blanch Philpitt and William Muck 3 Many Others Honored. m W. Whitson was awarded the hi 1 Lee Uni- | hip to Na- | | | i 1 | ses in and Coolk, Universit to State scholarship Law School. | Invocation was by Rev. | Judson J. Ringer. Graham. | member of the board n. pre- | sided. A pro was rendered | Iby the Business under the dire son. Reciplents of Diplomas. Diplor nted to the f {lowing gra James T. 1 { member of school board { Day Anders th Rebecca i Muriel McKen: { Baron, ! Baumann, { Mary Louise | kinia Burton, i ritz, Sarah Helen € nter, Glady izabeth fritz. May | trude Dovet h Dyer, Gladys peth Forteney, R rah Rita Goldber Myrl Louisa Heffner, Mary Margaret Mary Kennelly, Gertrude Viv DeVee B lar, C ide Larman, rtha an Ainsworth r Arthu | Leonard Botsch. E Paul ward De | Lewis, Roselia Cecilia Loftus, | Virginia Marggra Jllian Mead < ler, th Ruth { Maude Er | trude Otto | Mildred Wenonah Rich, Dor lorence Mar; ansbury, Jennie Emma Widenmyer. Dorothy Ruth Aldr as Vernon Den lace Josep Benjamin oldm. ». | Hahn, Elwood Wara Kind Henry King, John Jerc eph Kronman, Geore Carl Levy., Sau) Gilbert Liteh.. Henry Colman is, Willam Gia stone MacKay. Alfred Aloy M i Garraghy, Benjamin Franki | Stacy James Middleton, | | worth Rue, Louis Geore ok Charles John Sincell, Jo Sprague, John Wise Tastet, Henry Malcolm Terrett, John Andrew Wahi, Willlam Warren Whitson and Harold Zirkin. THREE HIT BY AUTOS; TWO HURT ON BICYCLES Motor Cycle Rider Also Figures in Accidents Reported to Police. While walking north on Nebraska {avenue near American University last t. Mary Elizabeth Hand. seven old. 4. Klingle roa was ed down by an automobile driv- en by Lena Farnham, 224 Wooten ave nue, Chevy Chase. Md.. who was un {der auto instruction. She was taken {home and treated for injuries to her farms and right knee. Amacio Quaresma, thirty-five year: 1 01d, 1925 12th street. sustained a fra { tured rib and injuries to his head y. | terday afternoon when his bi | collided with an automobile at Florida { and Connecticut avenues. He was| tuken to Emergency Hospital. Allen L. Hall, 521 8th street south- west, riding his bicycle through the | Capitol grounds last night attempted fto pass hetween two automobiles go- {ing in opposite directions. One of ; ithe machines struck his wheel and| {threw him to the ground. He was i taken home, where his injurles were i treated. Gladys Swan, colored, seven years i old, 705 4th street, was knocked down {in front of her home yesterday aft-| {ernoon by the automobile of Conrad | | Kauffman, Walker Chapel, Arlington | county, Va.. and her head hurt. She received treatment at home. Sarah Goldberg, 300 15th | { i street ! southeast, under instructions in auto- s !'mobiling. was driver of a car that! i atruck ncis Brown, colored, eight i | years old, 251 14th street southeast, on | the street mear his home last night. | | The boy was treated at Casualty Hos- { pital for slight injurfes. Ralph Wengerd, twelve years old.! 1476 Belmont street, was Knocked down by the motor cycle of Harry Eu- | bank and slightly hurt. He was tak- }en home. —_—————— ACTS IN PICKFORD CASE. | Nevada Attorney General Asks Re- hearing of Divorce Matter. CARSON CITY, Nev., t- | torney General Fowler has filed with | { the supreme court a petition for a rehearing of its decision uphdlding the divorce of Mary Pickford and| Owen Moore, motion picture star The attorney general also an- nounced his willingness “to_institute | an action to set aside every fraudu- | lent divorce which has been procured | by creating an apparent jurisdiction | in a Nevada court by the exercise of | i | { i | fraud and collusion.” Automobile Showroom Northeast cor. 14th & T Sts. Available July 1st Apply J. E. Chamberlain 715 14th St. | Raleigh Hotel las puny mea pable of righting, even in what the league i would h: { Leslic Garnett spoke on local condi- | itor of the Wilson rotary alrplane en- ISEES LOCAL GOVERNMENT |Assumes Powers of Lenin AND LEAGUE AS ISSUES Senator King Tells Democrats Keeping Out of Association Has Left World in Chaos. Local self-government and the league of natlions will be two of the issues of the forthcoming campaign, enator Willlam H. King of Utah stated in an address at a meeting of the National Democratic Club at the night. Of the former question to be thrashed out, the senator felt secure, he said, in the bellef that the people, when the opportunity presented itself. would repudiate the attempt (0 usurp their authority. He spoke of the drift toward centralized government, say- ) ing that it should be headed off, and that individualism should be allowed to prevail | Failure of the United States to enter the leapue of nations has left the world 1 chaos and disorder, the sena tor said. “If this country did enter industrial and economic conditions | would be stabilized, and the many American ships now rotting at the docks would be covering the mighty seas, carrying American products to corner of the globe.” He re- red to the four-power treaty as a tion The result of the election held at the ting 1s: Vice president of the tional Democratic Club, Miss Anna man; treasurer. Chester J. Fitch; man of executive committee, » Holland; chairman of the con- ion. Capt. David A. Pune, and sec- retary, Jess Ward. The club will hold a business meeting Tuesday evening t the Raleigh Hotel NATIONS IN ARMS LIMITATION COMPACT ! Holland, and France Among Those Reported to Have Agreed. Belgium Iy Cable to The Star and the Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 1 AMSTERDAM, June 21 cently | the Dutch newspa published a £e from Genoa to the effect that countr: ding Holland. and F had engaged ves with the league of nations ed g the two coming to mount of the last naval and air budgets. The news voked lively critic The pub ppreciative of the fact that g ement for the His C hi Illness of 1. RYKOFF, One of the triumvirate, composed of eral chairman; Edgar B. Henderson, |will be concluded with a business ses- J. V. Stalin, Leo Kameneft and A. L |finance: S. G. Nottingham, fireworks. | sion. Rykoff, who have been placed Rev. John J. Queally. athleticsii In a proclamation issued here today charge of soviet atate affairs, accord- | Ulysses Butler. children’s parade. |by Gen. Julian 8. Carr, commander-in- ing to word from Moscow, in view s T. Hamilton, moving pictures;|chief of the United Confederate Vet- of the wudden ilinems of Nicolal| Scarle. electric illumination; B.|erans, the people of the south and the Lenin, who hax been ordered by WASHINGTON. D. C. WEDNESDAY. JUNE ef physicians to take a six-month rest. RIVER RISES FROM BNTDELFT Texas Flood Crest Expected Tonight—Aviators to Drop Food to Sufferers. Br the Associated Press. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. June 21 —The stage in the lower Rio Grande wants to flood, which has inundated was left in}| acres in S Hidal out e present|and Cameron counties, marconed & econ an recom- | nearly 1.000 Mexicans in small border in the last speech from the | the war bLudget now | more than 56,000,000 | e naval budget n 10,000 guilders. The radical par are | i in elv 1o ask the governmen { | = (2 (%) m m = = =) = ‘m = = > o m World Politics. i NTO, Ontario. June 21 —For- ator RBeveridge of Indiana.| speaking at_the international con- vention of Kiwanis club attributed from world from three-quarters to a mile wide | ption of the United The volume of water is So gr “creating a | at Laredo, Tex, where an unoffic vhich shall be ' stage of fifty-two feet was re known Y, n people at 11 o'clock yesterday morning, t “The job before the United States is| river still was Afty feet deep 4t the fusing of a collection of racial | o'elock last night. At Eagle biss, grou imto one harmonious whole ot RiAgs waE tedeneil Mr. Beveridge said. “American in- B S anal it had terference with foreign disputes ¢t above normal at & o'clo serves to reverse this welding proe Suasday evening ong the racial group: Such collections of racial groups.” he added. “are present in no country | f the old world or of Asia, and af-| no Furopean or Asiatic gover: ment Such a tremendous ircum- stance should be clearly born in| mind by those who assume to pass| | judement on the motives of the Amer the FORBID ASIA MINOR QUEST Turks Object to U. S. and Allied Inquiry Commission. B the Associated Pross. CONSTANTINOPLE. n peoples and the poli American government.” June 21-—The | Turkish national government will not permit a commission of inquiry of Americans and representatives of the allicd powers to go into Asia Minor. ccording to a declaration made in a peech by Mustapha Kemal Pasha. the nationalist leader at Ismid. Kemal xpla conclusions drawn by officers ny governments were ably biased. He considered the allied demand for the inquiry unprec- edented. No government in the world could be expected to agree to such an untair proposal, even if it came from a friendly country. PLAN DAILY AIR ROUTE. Passenger Planes to Fly Between Baltimore and Lynchburg, Va. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, June 21.—Daily air- plane passenger service between Bal- timore and Lynchburg, Va.. with stops at several cities in between, will be opened about October 1. according to an announcement by G. M. Sparks, fa- mous as an aviator, and now a mem- ber of the Wilde-Sparks Airplane Company of Charlottesville, Va. Mr. Sparks, with one of the pilots of the company, T. B. Wilson, inven- ine, is spending a few days in Balti- more making final arrangements for the service. i All-metal monoplanes of the JL-6 | be will he used in the service, Mr. Sparks sfid. They carry five pas-| sengers each and trips will be made | daily in both directions. Stops will | be made at Washington, Orange, Cul- peper and Charlottesville, Va. 10,000 FLOOD VICTIMS. SOFIA, June 21.—Ten thousand per- i ons have been made homeless by de- vastating floods, which inundated the suburban districts of Sofla following rains Monday and Tuesday. No loss of life has been reported. There was much damage to live stock. I s, and covered the roads leadi west is expected bet nidnight tonight and dawn Thurs: west of Mercedes, is expected betw h the edge o T eoun This flood. the result of a cloudbu in the hills of Terrell county. Te i1 Saturday, is remarkable in t of the river, not only beca has exceeded all previous rec use of its slow ained volume Grande Feet F stream normal vards wide and eighteen ow b it but also bec ment and sus R m Deep. ng en ay n 1y ret -x he 35 move- ! 0 to 300 hes 1o six feet deep, the Rio Grande has becoms fifty feet deen at the flood crest o The flood crest appears to be mo t five miles an hour, which w 1% it 1o the lower valley after m night tonight. Those familiar w th . much of which is ba sea level, fear t the spread far peyound all previc marks. Great Crop Damage Feared. Great damage is feared for the gro ing crops. The ing many cantelo kets and In recent into a large producer tables. especially cabbages, oniol caulifiower and tomatoes. T farms are irrigated oy canals suppl by pumping from the Rio Grande in time of flood these canals be men: a ing_to estimate, follow Mission-Sharry districts, MeAllen, 4,500 acres; and Alamo. 12.000 acres. Donna, Weslaco, Mercedes and Lofe had escaped inundation thus far. Red Cross Plana Relfef. 1,500 acr nd | hed he ! a ceded - 1 id- lower Rio | upper us w- ns, truck ied nd ! e a Areas inundated by districts, accord- es; Parry, San Juan Land near rig Red Cross relief for the flood district already is under way. Hundreds Mexicans living in have lost all belongings, while at Pied Negras, across the river. the food si ation is admittedly serious. of Sagle Pass lowlands ras tu- Three aviators were dispatched from Kelly Field, San_Antonio, vesterday, to the lower Rio Grande valley for flood relief work. Their instructions are to work from Camp McAllen and drop bags of food to marooned farmers who may be found in the flood areas. Eighth Corps Area headauarters was expec this morning to dispatch a company engineers with pontoons to Eagle P and help restore communication th ted of ass ere with Pledras Negras, both railroad and highway out. No figures are available on life in the flood. Mexicans living in the lowlands caught and swept away. One Mexi after riding down stream nearly Toss bridges having been washed of It is believed many ere an. 100 miles on a roof, swan ashore at Laredo fatt SMALLWOOD —Can sell your house, he has the purchasers. Do you want to buy? He has the largest listing in the city. GRAEME T. SMALLWOOD 1022 Vermont Ave. Main 3070 Electric a Westinghouse Electric Fan—fos | ¥ PAY YOUR ELECTRIC Potomac Electri Westinghouse If you would enjoy good solid comfort these hot days, buy r Office and for Home. LIGHT BILLS HERE ¢ Appliance Co. 607 14th St ¥ Seiig, s end ¢ St NoW. Phone Main 955 21, 1922, 5 —_— PINEY BRANC}-i PLA-NS HUGE CELEBRATION Patriotic Speaking and :Coltume Parade Will Be Features of Fourth of Julv Event. Preparations have been completed by the Piney Branch Citizens' Asso- clation for the most vretentious Fourth of July celebration ever at- tempted by that organization, and yesterday large three-color posters announcing the program were dis- tributed. The exercises, which will be held at 13th and Emerson streets, start in the morning with a band concert, follow- ed by a patriotic address by Senator L6V WILELEE COMMANDER TODAY iGen. Carr, Col. Haldeman and Gen. Freeman Men- tioned for Post. By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va., June 21.—The elec- ition of officers, choice of the next re- union city and reports of four Important King of Utah, the reading of the Declaration _of Independence by |committces were in order when the George A. Finch of the Carnegie|United Confederate Veterans, on the Peace Endowment, patriotic songs second day of their thirty-second annual reunion got down to business here to- day. The committees are those on the Bat- tle Abbey, the historical committee, the committee on resolutions and the mon- umental committee. The reports and recommendations of these bodles will have to do with the accomplishments of the past and plans for the future of the veteran organization in connection with | | memorials, monuments, parks and pro- | visions for needy veterans and widows | by the audience and presentation of greotings to America from France by Ambassador Jusserand. Boginning at noon and lasting through the afternoon a grand car- nival of athletic contests will be held, for which a large number of entries have been registered, and at night the children of the community will par- ticipate in a patriotic costume parade, featured by floats, extra bands and other attractions. A prize will bo given every child in costume, and special prizes will be awarded for the best costumes and floats. Following a band concert a| | fireworks display and moving picture {of veterans. Memorial exercises, in entertainment will be held, after|which the old soldiers and members of | which refreshments will be served. |the Confederate Southern Memorial As- | Chairman tees are: Ale of the various commit- nder G. Hamilton, gen- sociation will participate, will be con- |ducted at noon. The forencon program Hac s T. Alden Bradford. booths, and C. R. enberger, police and permits: | sons and daughters of veterans through- out the nation are urged to give moral and financial support to the proposed | establishment of a natlonal park on the j fields where the first and second battles of Manassas were fought. ‘Three Mentioned for Chief. The election of officers and choice of next year's reunion city are sched- { uled for late today. Three names have been mentioned prominently in connection with the post .gf com- mander-in-chief. They are Gen. Juilan 8. Carr, incumbent; Col. Wil- liam B. Haldeman, Loulsville, z commander of the Kentucky orphans’ | brigade, and Gen. Willlam B. Free- | man, Richmond, commander of the Vir ginia division, U. C. V. While Gen. Haldeman is not an | active candidate, it was understood ltoday that his name will be present- ed by admiring comrades The Ken- tuckian has publicly announced that 225 {he does not care for the honor, that \WET® ) his greatest ambition is to bring about the completion of the Jefferson Davis monument at Fairview, Ky. upon which $20,000 already has been ex- pended and to which Col. Haldeman has given much time amd interest Close friends of Gen. Carr declare {he will be a candidate to succeed him- Thompson. publici GEDDES GIVEN DEGREE. University Also Honors Georgetown Professor. NCE. R. I. June 21.—Sir B ampbell Geddes, British ambassador to the United States, was awarded the honorary degrea of doc- r of laws at the 154th commence- ment of Brown University today Baron Serge A. Korff, assistant gov- of Finland, under the government and now pro- fessor of political science and history the foreign service school of Georgetown Univers! was given { the honorary degree of doctor of law: Degrees in course were given to & students, of whom forty e students at the women college. Forty-five advanced degrees were awarded QUICK SENTENCE GIVEN. Brown George iself. At the same time it is under- ge Straub Leaves Jackson, [{8.0q unomcially that Gen. Freeman Mich.. for Jail in Ten Minutes. |Wwill not be averse to having his STUAR: name presented. He has been iden- | GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, June 21.— prominently wRh veteran ac- j tified ! tivities known south. widely the Arraigned rutes at { confessed iJackson w. in Virginia and is by comrades throughout and nced within te Jackson, George Straub,! i ! se slaver of Alice Mallett, | fare worker, is en route 1o Marquette prison to begin a life | term at hard labor in solitary confine- ment. the maximum penalty under the | Michigan law In custoday of four officers Straub left within an hour after his arrivali fr ackson The prisoner was | ought here following the brief! at Jackson. when | < spread that another attempt would be made by a mob to take him from the jall Disposition of Straub's case was one the quickest in Michigan histo prisoner. who had been hel ause of the high feeling & in Jackson, was taken to| kson under h guard of state police. armed with riot guns. His ar- raignment and sentence after a plea of guiity took but ten minute HEIRS END LONG WAR. NEW_ YORK. June 21-The will of Amos F. Eno, disposing of an estate valued at approximately $13,000.000. the result of an agreement reached |between contesting beneficiaries a | month ago was admitted to probate vesterday. With the signing of the j decree admitting the will by Surro- i gate Foley and the granting of testa- mentary letters to Lucius H. Beers the surviving executor, seven vears! of litigation were brought to a close. The will left large bequests to Co- lumbia University and other New York city institutions. Amos and : chot are beneficiaries. Cities Seek Convention. Among the cities which are being prominently mentioned for the next | reunion are Jacksonville, ‘ew Orlean: Others are Tenn.; Louisville, Ky. and Tex. Dailas alread put ir for the headquar the Sons of Confederate Veterans, wili be decided on today row The sons were having their third | day’s session today, which was sched- uled to continue throughout the d lection of officers and reports fro jimportant committees are on their | program { Judge Edgar Scurry, Wichita F: Tex., last night. announced Adjt. Carl Hinton of the sons he will decline to stand for re-ele tion to the post of commander-in- hief. Among the names being me tioned today for the position are those o W. McDonald Lee of Irvington, V'a state commissioner of game and in- land fisherles, and Dr. Garnett King | ¢t Fredericksburg, V Between 5 and ception will be given to the vi ins and maids and sponsors ountry Club of. Virginia, one of Rich- mond's show places, north of the city A ball tonight, in which all veterans | Sons and other organizations will par- | | ticipate, will conclude today's tles Veteran J. F. Beasley, who pave his {home as Alabama, was overcome by the heat yesterday and taken to a lo- cal hospital, it was learncd today His condition is said to be not ser Dal s ¥ - Exchanging Photographs & B> e —with one’s relatives and friends is again the fashion. All prices reduced 25 per cent this month. <xcellent styles now as low as §15 dozen. Very special—large 8x10 portrait 3 for $10. Make appointment today. UNDERWOODeUNDERWOOD Portraits of Quality 1230 Connecticut Ave. Phone Main 4400 Use One of Our New Dodge Brothers Cars While We Paint Yours We paint all makes of cars and we furnish you a car at a cost not to exceed the amount you pay to operate your own car and give you a ' paint job equal to, if not bet- ter than, the original. Upholstering, Slip Covers and Top Work SEMMES MOTOR COMPANY 613-6]19 G St. N.W. Phone Main 6660 Rt 2 & PN X L % ] &« DOIjGES BOOTLEG SCOWS|CUBA'S LURE IS CLIMATE. Pussyfoot Johnson Fears to Sail on “Wet” American Ships. NEW YORK, June 21.--When Wil- liam E. (“Pussyfoot”) Johnson salls for Liverpool tomorrow to resume his pro- hibition drive overseas it will be un the British steamer fcsthia “I will not ride on American bootleg acows,” he ®ad today, announcing his decision. “I don't regard such ships as being safe to travel on | “The managers of the United States Shipping Board spend much money ad- Wet Features Not Chief Drawing Card, Says Havana Ex-Mayor. NEW YORK, June 21.—The lure of Cuba for American tourists still is the cligiate and the winter spo-ts- not, as some people suppose, the fact that ome can buy drinks there, de- clared Fernando Andrade, former mayor of Havana, upon his arrivi here on the steamer Orizaba “Americans get drun vertising in American newspapers ap- | Gaimed. 0. no. no' That's a pealing 1o Americans to ride on their | 4€F upon the * Americans. 1 ships for patriotic reasons, and then [DeVer seen an American drunk in more money in European rewspapers | Havana. Many who go there don't appealing 1o Europeans to ride on|12uch a drop P American shipe because there is plenty | He lauded the work in Cuba of of ‘booze’ on board. 1 don't know what | Gen. Enoch Crowder and declared with sugar again selling these Shipping Board folks could do to | that the prosperity of (‘uba seem make America more ridiculous in the! profl eyes of the world assu The next time you take a hike in the 0ods or spend the day “up the river” take along some of AUTH'S Frankfurters. Broil them over a wood fire, occasionally rubbing them with but- ter; then place them between rolls. Plump, tender, flavorously sea: soned, they fully satisfy that gnawing hunger that fun in the out-of- doors brings. Be cer- tain you get the “Franl furters with the flavol by specifying AUTH' Made in Washington by N. Auth Provision Co. INCORPORAT ED : 1316 1324. 7 STIN.W. Special New Group of 100 Fine $3.79 Organdy Dresses ist arrived these new Organdy Dresses. made with revers or surplice fronts. ruffles. tucks and wide Colors— Mtz . N neauty « green and orchid. Sizes to 44. Ratine, -Organdy and Voile Dresses in a Sale A beautiful_assortment of Rati idy and Voile Dresses—in nav copen, orange, red and green terials: sizes to 40, Made w ks or Quaker collars—wide elts. dotted checks or n round or kid Sale of Women's & Misses’ Fine White Gabardine Skirts fine gabardine: po and pearl hutton tr xtra sizes at $1.95. ne organdy 5129 wide all kets. belt med; - regul Jersey Silk PETTICOATS §]-89 Gingham House DRESSES 66° Good grade of fast $3 Crepe de Chine TEDDIES $ 1 .69 A pretty assort- | color gingham, in neat Made of a good ment — pleated ruffle | Stripes or plain « weight all silk crepe. bottom of contrasting | ors; made with | with heautiful trim. colors, rose. | stitched waists and | med yukes and val Ereen. and | full skirts. Sizes to | lace on bloomers Full brown: all sizes 42 cut 85¢ Khaki Overalls, 49c Children’s Tan Over- alls, made with long leg. bib front and shoulder straps. Sizes to §1 Fine sook OWNS, 69c Women's Fine Qual- ity White or Pink Gowns. with neat voke trimmings. Also extra sizes, C-Be-R& G CORSETS, $1 in 10-YD. PIECE LONGCLOTH —LONG SILK GLOVES Bl ) [ qualities English Longeloth, with & soft chamais $1.15 wear, etc. e white, grax. pongee Al sizes Stylish . Snappy Seasonable The correct models for summer wear. in elastic top or medium b 1 sizes. 25c _All-Linen Handk’fs, 15¢ Women's Plain White Hemstitched Handker- chiefs finely woven linen: full size. Values up to $7 Large variety of the very newest stvles in strap pumps and oxfords. Models with one or two straps and cut-out styles. Fancy - Top Mercerized SOCKS, 25¢ Plain colors or with fancy tops. in all siz 4 to 9';. Perfect qual- itie: 40-Inch All Colors Organdy, 25¢ ‘White and all the best selling shades for summer dresses. Sheer and crisp grade. $1.35 Hemmed DIAPERS, 85¢ Heavy quality bird- eye; antiseptic, absorb- ent’ and non-irritant. One dozen, in package, 85¢c. b)) Yard-Wi PERCALE, 10c Large variety of light and dark ground pat- terns, in useful lengths. Leathers are patent. tan, black, also black satin and white sea cloth canvas. vacation wear. All sizes from to 8. Silk Hose, in black, white or gray, with bright. wie tops. All sizes and strictly Men’s All-Worsted Well made Bathing Suits, in plain colors with combina piece with two-piece effect. Sizes 36 to 46. About 50 suits Styles suitable for street, dress. sports and Three patterns in fancy striped Glove $1 98 perfect quality. —— 33.45 tion armholes. They are one in the lot.

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