Evening Star Newspaper, July 16, 1922, Page 7

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Hot- 4 "Made from Fine Leathers, Made from Silks, Made from Beads and Ornamented with Beads Samples and closesouts from makers of fine Fine Leather Bags—made to sell at $3.50, | All in one big | goods. $4.00, $5.00, $6.50, $7.50 and $8.50. Ibt. Choice, each, This includes a large variety of leather bags, many swagger styles, JFitted with two to four fittings, also center compartment, also genuine pin seal real Morocco, calf-finish mottled calfskin. All are lined with silk moire and have purse and mirror. Stunning Silk Bags Made to Sell at $5.00, $6.50, $7.50 and $38.50. All in One Lot. Choice $2.98 Each This includes Moire silk, also satin stripe and Moire combination and Pekin Meire. All are richly lined, fitted with center compartment and mirror, others with purse and mirror. Also a few van- #y styles. $2.50, $3 and $3.50 Bags Choice, $1.98 Each Leather Handbags, of tooled leather, talf grain and many other leathers. Colors are black, brown and tan; also a few party boxes, fitted with several useful fit- tings. At $1.98 each. A Midsummer Sa.le Extraor(.iinary Women’s Silk Hosiery Exceptionally advantageous purchases at greatly below normal costs 5 From makers of the best grades of silk hosiery. Mostly Full lengths, but including the vogueish rollette styles. $2.25, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 and Up to $4.50 Qualities In One Marvelous Collection at Choice, Pair ‘This includes full-fashioned iall—silk} stockings, with dainty lace, insteps, in | black, white and colors. All perfect ! goods. Full-fashioned silk stockings all-silk stockings. square heel, perfect | quality ; black, white and brown. ) weaves. Women’s Van Raalte Silk Hose ) $1.59 Pair Values, $2.25 to $2.95 Full-fashioned thread silk with mer- cerized tops. Regular and extra Iblack, white, brown, gray and beige. irs! and second quality. At $LS9 ok. Lovely styles, with lace embroid- ith tofiches of -handwork. ~Sizes to $1.98 ;| House and:Porch Made ‘of m, cham- bray or percale. Neat styles, good washing colors. gi:en . to 46. At & ; 3 Palais Reyal-iTaisa Fiser. Summer osebud del, rib- es to 50. Marvelous Values in *5,000 Wbrth of Bags, Specially Bought for This Sale with mercerized tops : Some plain, others $ ‘ pevith silk embroidered clocks and with | Pointex or square heels. Full-fashioned | L] Glove Silk Stockings, plain and chiffon ribbed, in black, white and colors. Some of these are first quality, others have slight defects. Rollette Stockings, ‘glove silk and thread silk, in plain and fancy Women’gFull-Fashidned Thread Silk Hose Values, $1.78 to $1.95 With mercerized taps, in. black, sizes. Plenty of black and white. Ak bfown: Rusian talf: ehath b i wi Gt > ) s i = back, in black, white, champagne and o e pagne and gray. Slightly irregular gray. Stightly irregular weaves. fik Hose, full-fashioned, ail-over pRres Women’s Imported Lisle Hose, full- silk, black, white and colors. Glove Also Silk Hose, scamed back, silk- fashioned in dainty open-work styles, Silk Chiffon Net Hose, black and embroidered clocks and self-satin black, brown, gray and navy blue. olors—irregular wuveE. GlovehSil\: i_(ripe. I:dblnek,o :llhile alnd colorfl; All mr:le“. Sl an@u& jarge i i First & secon uality. i 0! s Si 3 ack, e s ot o white and’ brown. ' Rolttops. First Hosettes, with rollette style tops in - black, white and brown. ity. At $L19 pair. " Py 52.98 hatsyat this price. r $1.75 .and $2 Bead- Trimmed Bags Choice, $1.00 Each Imported Beaded Bags, very pretty de- signs, neatly lined dark background, gun metal frame and chain handle. At $i.00 each. $1.50 and $2 Bagsl Choice, $1.00 Each Leather Handbags, of tooled - leather, <calf grain and many other leathers. Colots are black, brown and tan. Also a few party boxes fitted with several useful fit- tings. At $1.00 each. s Palais Royal—Mals -Floor. \ Don't confuse $5.00. i &énfs Silk and ' ’ Imported Lisle Hose Pure thread silk hose, fashioned irst qual-’ and second quality. ‘At 69c pein Paleis Reyal—Nain Fivor. § A Fortunate Purchase of . gt Corsetletts and Brassieres 7 With Garters Attached. Regularly - .- ', $2.50, $3 and $3.50 ' ' Special at $1.69 Made of beautiful silk hro;lde, satin_and nc‘reky fabrics. . 5 » bandéaw of clinging brocade combined with a girdle : and spreading. | the hips are fi; N B e Y T X L Ll L i e e e e e e T e T i The Shopping Centerrlth and G Sto. ~ £at. 1877.<A. Liswer, President hgeously and With Foresight and chrumnhbn and Offered in This Sale at a Very e Policy Here and That is Carried Out in This Sale to An Excess. Some of These Values rices. Read the 2 Pages of This Advertisement * ™= " ™™o {5 g Handmade PHILMONT HATS, Regular $10 2 to $15 Values, TENNE HATS, Regular $10 to $12.50 Values, - $5.00 Monday morning we offer a special sale of 200 hats from two of New York’s leading &gsigners, at much less than regular cost. Every hat is a special value at this low price, and has style and individuality not found in \ For your approval are large, hats for the bobbed-hair miss. Favhioned of Canton Crepe. Spodts Hats, Tafjeta Hass, Satin Rats, Horse Hair Hats, Leghorn, and Velvet cambina- tions, Davetyne Hats, Maline Hats and Sports Hats. In black, 'white and colors. hese hats with the usual advertised hat offered at this price. to our Millinery Department will readily prove to you the nflp‘sua.l_‘";yle and wvalues incor- porated in these hats\at the small price of See our 11th Street Window Display. manently waved by our new oil steam process. by atmospheri hair for six price. Done b; plete up-to-date? " of white Canvas, trimmed with black calf and smoked elk, . Baby , Cul " plete. At $6.50. Permanent Hair Wave at a in Heyald ami I Page in Times Cavefully Current Needs Now. A visit % Paliis Royak<Beevisd ¥iowr. N Very Moderate Price Now is thre time to have yoar hair per- Not\ injurious and not affected conditions. Have wavy ths at a very moderate xperts. Visit our com- auty parfor. | Alkokol at 75e 60c Jars, 45¢ Full\size bottle— Our famous Facial Zi%‘ .n;::::gt ‘i:: Cream, Almond Cream and face and{body—and Mud Pack—60c jat, spe- ‘& be invigorated in cial at 45c. Get three jars ody and #nind. | and save 35c. Spectal Bale—Peadity RoyhicaMain Floor, Balcony. Widsummer Sale of Dorothy Dodd Shoes | White Pumps.and Oxfordg T w$485 | Includes 615 puirs, consisting of White Canvas Oxfords, with Cuban or Military Heels. White Canvas OnesStrap Pamps, with Baby Louis or low heels. 3 * White Canvas TwimStrap Pumps with low heels. Alzo inclided at the same price ams Ope-strap Pumps with low heels of patent coltskin, black kid black satin, And with Baby.Louis heels are one-strap pumps made of tan calf, brown or biatk kid and patent coltskin. 4 And a limited munber o8 Women's Sporty Oxtords, made trimmed with brown calf. : White Kid Strap Pumps, Formerly Sold Up to $10. Special at $6.50 Ineludes 150 pairs One-Strap Pumps with Louis XV, Cuban.or low self-covered heels. Sizes incom- XIMILIAN FARDEN. Foremost Publicist. The Btar, Copyright, 1922 BERLIN, July 15.—Waiter Rathe- nau and I once sat beneath a oypress B tree near Fiesole, 'dreaming of our ‘While a painfully overwhelming conviction forced me to break with years he always called me his best, 1 mot his only, friend. g T 8| Rathenaucontemplated sbasdontg Paris to develop a painting talent .o which he had ih good measm: With @ | phophesied that some day Wilhelm I would be forced to Intrust me, @ whom he hated, with the ministry of foreign affairs. This was to happen as soon as Germany had a constitu- @/ tional government like England’s. The prophesy naturally sounded fantastic to me, for 1 had taken this Ttalian holiday to recover from the {effects of imprisonment for lese ma- jente. 8" But now, m|dreame in ¥ Rathenau, w m|ported the monarchy a ism and aristocracy and who @ | unhappy because his Jewish biood revented his becoming an officer, ally, after hard striving, attained the office he had prophesied for me, only to be shot by boy criminals Attacked From Behind. A few days later and a foW minutes from whers he met death equally young but more cowardly bandits attacked me from behind, and here I still am, with a torn and blesding body, with elght frightfully painful head wounds, scribbling these lines for the eable in the hospital of Prof. Moritz Borchardt, one of Germany's greatest surgeons, A_mocking bird is singing In the garden. What does it say? “Becauss you disputed Wilhelm's divine right, the imperial government at has become of our le? o omhunh.glc-ny sup- nd Prussian- {0 ruin von physically and materially by a series of criminal proceedings. rou could not believe there spiracy in 1914, nor wallow in a vic- tory delirium; because vou disap- proved of the invasion of Belgium and of ruthless submarine warfare;be- cause vou did not believe in the dev- astation of northern France and of Poland, and because you disapproved of all the militarist acts, from the Iying ultimatum to Serbia to ths ex- torted Brest-Litovsk treaty, tha mili- tary censorship twice suspended your weekly paper for five months and al- most ruined you by a hundred con- fiscations and petty persecutions. Attitnde Toward Republie. “Because you migfntained the con- viction that the mew-born republic was mindless and soulless, its leaders dilletantish and superficial, you are hated by the new powers as by the old, who now hire gcoundrels to mur- der you. “The republic has not protected has not punished open ap- sinate you which have By the Associated Press. PARIS, July 16—Twenty-six blg [} chiefs of West African coast tribes, ‘who never before had left the slave- B recruiting region whence the Ameri- can black race came, constituted an original feature yesterday, of the Frenck Independence day. They rep- | resented six different French colonies @28 they marched up to be decorated by President Millerand and to be M| thanked for the 200,000 fighters they ] sent to France during the war. I They got as much applause as did B the poilus on their first appearance ! on parade after the armistice. Inci- [ dentally, the gorgeousness of their attire discouraged a good many wom- en who, with hand-painted gowns, ‘were trying to outdo the picturesque- | ness of jungle fashions. With their numerous wives, L L} and Br the Associnted Press. PARIS, July 15.—The minuet, the gavot, the marurka and other old favorite dances are coming back along with the waltz and the polks, and the “shimmy” and similar freaks have got to go along with Jazz music, in the opinion of close observers of tendencies of the times. French 'dancing masters already have started a movement to revive the old picturesque dances dating from the seventeenth century, which, they say, are the only ones that go gracefully with the old styles In women's dress which are , back into favor. Jusz also is likely to suffer from increasing restrictions exercised by pleasure scekers. nearly 37,000,000,000 francs in paper money in France, it is showing it- self with less and less liberality in places where peopie enjoy them- selves, and jagz, sald the manager of one of these establishments, “doesn’t g0 with anything but fexz.” The municipal council, moreover. has given notice that the jase kings from Dixieland must abdicate after next New Year day. They wiil be permitted to make only 10 per cent of the noise In Parisian pleasure re- ———— e . 2ppeared again and again. twice threw you in prison and tried 26 AFRICAN CHIEFS FEATURE OF FRENCH INDEPENDENCE DAY Chided by Mocking Bird in Hospital Gardens, Publicist Recalls I1l-Omened Experi- ences With Rathenau. You have been infamously slandered in the of- clal newspapers, and even now they have no single word of regret for the shameful deed of July 3. “But look, your sick room is full of flowers sent by sympathizers the ‘world over, including m&ny unknown to you, and the flood of letters and telegrams mounts higher and higher. “Your government, however, does not betray, direetly or indirectly, the slightest grief or shame that only by a miracle a writer of world-wide reputation has escaped death by as- sassination under the very eyes of its police and may. perhaps never hope to be entirely healed. pub- lic prosecutor demands a fine of only 0 ‘xn;‘:kl (:ddolll.r) f':P.M inclte- men murder, gTotesqus reward of 10,000 miarks ($20) is of- fered for the capture of a murderer. Obviously they do not desirs the criminals eaught Don's you realize now what a pitifully useless fellow you are? Why con't you learn from Swift that neither in the land of glants or dwarfs does the truth telier get anything but distress for his re- ward?" Dear mocking bird, I have learned my lesson. Numberless times I have been threatened and warned, but I have always thought “Why should a private political writer, whom nobody is forced to read, b f2rdered”” Chief Criminal Focapes. Well, they tried anyway, and the accomplice in the act was caught. The chief criminal, a twenty-one- year-old liedtenant, was not taken. However, the police learned from let- ters that the criminals were employed by & secret organization in Bavaria (naturally) of “brave and loyal Ger- mane” to kill me, whom they didn't even know. How “brave and loyal” it was to attack an unarmed man from behind! It seems that for weeks they watched my path, meantime squan- dering thirty-five thousand marks ad- vanced to them on account. Needing urgently the rest of the money prom- ised them, they already had written to say “Our orders have been punc- tually executed.” For people who fn these hard times ot riotous living from sts’ bands “business is business.” Rathenau, meantime, has had the glorious death his Ambition desired end the government now fulfill his dearest wish—a un the monarchist and industrialist * pleg party” supposed! tection of the republic Everything 18 tottering. Only ene thing ‘is certain. Murder continues But untii more capable murderers at- tack me 1 shall continua to ery od help you, German peops. out of the morass of lies and the unscru- pulous cunning of those who seek ouly power. But you , QUr enemles of yester- duy, come to the assistance of this poor misled people, which is noble at heart. Help It save its self-respect through brotherly acts of human kindness. Today my voice Is weak, for if the g00d professor knew that his patient upon whom he has worked £o sk was continuing to write dis- against his orders, 1 would have bitterer truths to swall So that is all. lest there be day of celebration at Doorn forty servarts, the big chiefs are lodged in barracke near the Hols de Boulogne, where once resided one of the princes of Dahomey, son of Gle Gle, the Dahomian king, who first ceded African territofy to the French The chiefs, their wives, and follow- ers, were 80 dazzled and bewildered by 'the sights of the French capital that 2 considerable number of gua: were required to keep them from g ing astray. When asked what w the first thing they wanted to = upon their arrivhl, a spokesman, in fairly good French’ repiied: “Big Chief Foch. The marshal escorted them to see the last resting place of another “big chief"—the tomb of Napoleon, whose renown also has penetrated into the African jungles. The official program of their visit will take them to ses the battlefieids, where African rifiemen did yeoman service for France, but some of the chiefs already have made it known that they would rather stay in Paris. s| PARIS DGOMS SHIMMY AND JAZZ; 17th CENTURY DANCES COMING BACK sorts where gince the armistice the l have had & practical monopoly. T! action, requiring orchestras to he nine-tenths French, i8 a concessior to #rench musicians, 3,000 of whom are out of employment, including some of the prize winners of the National Conservatory of Music. M. EVEREST CLIMB FAILURE FORESEEN London Not Surprised That Explorers Were Unable to Reach the Top. By the Amoriated Press. LONDON, July 15.—So far the year 1922 has not been a triumphant sea- feon for British explorations. The fallure of the Mount Everest expedi- tion to reach the summit of the high- ! st mountain in the world was dis- { counted by most authorities, who said the greatest surprise had been that the climbers were able to go as. far as they did without oxygen and that they were able to transport oxygen apparatus to almost the high- est slopes. News Was Anticlpaied. The definite nmews that they were returning was taken for granted be- fore it remched England. Whether , the Royal Geographical Boclety will renew the enterprise another year i questionable. 'he expedition, with 1:a long caravans of coolies and pack -nlnuw one of the most costly ever at may make “ol'ib“ Mount Everest. campalgn ble. ’ The late Sir Ernest Shackleton's lttle ship Quest, according to re. ports, is about to sail homeward fro: the south Pacific, thus glving up th tartic explora-.” studied several years. Thought Ship Too Small. Sir Ernest’s death was not the onte: of the enteb. succeeded h, con: eause for the fail prise. Capt. Wild, command after his chiel's ! ted, and financial reasons

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