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“buy" at this price. $1.00 and $125 Chamoisette Gloves, 65c Strap-Wrist and Twelve-Button-Length Gio! in_white, pon Not all sizes In every color, season’s most desirable styles. covert. beaver, brown and gray. but all sizes In the lot. With Little Regard for Price--REMNANTS ) X N A A S A These are the stockings that so many people Get your Gold Stripe tomorrow! Remnants—Gloves Cool, Washable Summer Gloves at jJust the right prices. $2.50 Heavy Milanese Silk Gloves, $1.65 Sixteen_button length, made of finest hoavy quality siik. In sliver, oak, tan, brown, navy and nude. RIRIRIRINSR IR I An exceptionai two of the coffes, oak, 1216 F St. N.W. A A A Y A A A X X X ) A ) X S ) & S More GOLD STRIPE Silk Stockings, Including White, at $2.00 Pr. Exitra Heavy at $2.50 Pair—With Silk Garter Hems, $2.75 Pair have been waiting for! The Silk Stockings that WEAR! - Garter-clasp cuts cannot ruin them. Remnants—Hats No regard at all for price, you'll say, when you see the reductions. $12.50 Junior Hats, $3.50 the hats young girls adore. Big, floppy leghorns with tacy Tuscan edges. Trimmed with French flowers and narrow metallic ribbon streamers. $10.00 to $25.00 Summer Hats, $5.00 Bright-colored_Tallored Hats—Attractive Garden Hats of beautiful straws. Trimmed with flowers ana ribbon. Jui Because the season is so far advanced, and—because our stock-taking period is only ten days away—Rem- nants are now offered with little regard for price! Tomorrow should, therefore, be quite a day for those who like good clothes anil who are yet economically inclined. By having a little patience, looking through broken- sized lines, one frequently comes across something that just answers one’s desires. So it may pay you big to shop tomorrow—with remnants selling with little regard for price! § P. S.—Our telephones were ringing all last Saturday morning and people were asking what time the store We are closed all day Saturdays during Jul: and August—so do both days’ shopping to- was going to close! morrow ! ‘With Little Regard for Price! Underwear $3.00 Philippine Underwear, $1.95 Gowns and Envelope Chemises, taken from regular stock and reduced. Hand-sewed . and hand-embroide: yokes—gowns with round and squ eck, " $4.00 Philippine - Underwear, $2.95 Gowns and’ Envelope Chemises, beautifully hand-embroidered in soiid and eyelet work. A few with hand- drawn work. $4.00 Silk Vests and Step-Ins, $2.85 Radical reductions on Radium and Crepe de Chine Vests, with hem. stitched top and self-straps, and Step- Ins with picot edge. Flesh, orchid and light blue. $2.00 and $3.00 Gingham Trimmed Underwear, $1.35 Envelope Chemise, Vests and Step- Ins, of fine, soft-quality nainsaok. Trimmed with gingham, $2.00 Gowns, 95¢ Gowns of fine nainsook, with Val lace yoke and sleeves—taliored styles —edged with embroidery. $3.00 Petticoats, $2.50 Tub Silk and Satinette Petticoats— straight-line models, with hemstitched or scalloped edge. Also Shadow- v‘r';o' Petticoats, in satinette and tub silk. Tub Silk Petticoats, $1.95 Straight line, with hemstitched or scalloped edge. Double panel front and back. ‘With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Blouses Marked so low that any one can afford to buy them $2.95 and $3.95 Tailored Cotton Blouses, $1.95 Dimitles, batiste, voiles and dotted Swiss. Ali-white, Color Combination and Colored Biouses, both machine and handmade. Peter Pan, tuxedo and frill styles, in broken line of sizes. $5.60 to $8.95 Silk Blouses, $2.95 Crepe de Ckine, Printed Crepe, Georgette Crepe and Satin Blouses, slip-over, tie-back and tailored mod- els. Some are beadsd and embroid- ered in contrasting colors. _Broken line of sizes. $5.00 to $6.95 Handmade Blouses, $3.95 0Odd Blouses, taken from ocr regular stocks and reduced. French volies, batistes and dimities. Trimmed with hand.drawn work, embroidery, dots and filet laces. Tuxedo, Peter Pan and frill models. All iong sleeves and turn-back cuffs. $10.00 to $13.75 Silk Suit Blouses, $6.95 Crere de chine and georgette crepe, tie-back and tuck-in styles, round or V neck lines, long or short sieeves. Some are beaded or embroidered in contrasting colors, mostly navy and black; a few light-shade blisque, henna and canna. $16.50 and $19.50 Dressy Suit Blouses, $10.00 High-grade Crepe de Chine Beaded Blouses, In overbiouse effect. Round necks and short sleeves. In pretty bright shades that go so charmingly with the navy sults. A few imported blouses in this lot. With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Handbags $5.00 Handbags, $2.75 Silks and leathers, In_every shape and size. Shopping Bags, Vanity Cases, Party Boxes, Purses. Some with “cord ‘and some with leather handles—all of them fitted. Black, sand, taupe and blue. Which will you ave? With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Flowers At Y; Price Our entire stock of artificial flowers to go—with little regard for price! 50c Flowers, 25¢ Apple Blossom Garlands and Bunches of Rosebuds. Dainty trimming fe frocks and hats. % R 75c Flowers, 38: Bluettes and Bunches of Geraniums, charmingly realistic and very effec- tive for trimming. $1.00 Flowers, 50c Red Popples, Yellow and Black Fleld Flowers and Bunches of Wild Flowers. For hat trimming or corsages. $1.50 Flowers, 75¢ Flower Wreaths, Short Wreaths a Long Garlan In a variety of flower ‘combinatiol Trim your own garden hat for 75c With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Umbrellas $6 to $7.95 U, Some of our most popular ‘u(yfi in this group. Fine sun and rain siik,4n smart large tips and ferrules. $10.00 and $15.00 Swagger ‘Umbrellas, $7.95 ‘These ought uhmkc a hitl: Sun “smart, swagger > > handles with rings, or fancy strap handies. - Tips and ferrules to match. . brows, gray, beige, beaver. With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Women’s Dresses $6.50 and $7.50 Gingham Dresses, $2.75 Quite a few—25 In all—of thess Pretty Checked Gingham Dresses—red, Copenhagen, green and brown with white—crisp or- gandie collars and cuffs. $11.50 and $12.50 Wash Dresses, $6.50 25 Wash Dresses, tailored In the Wooltex factory, of materlals that simply won't shri nd linene—and you may wash them any way you ple: too, are fast—green, leather, The rose, Copenhagen, orchid and also white. $14.50 to $25.0.0 Wash Frocks, $8.75 50 Dainty Dresses, but broken assortments. Trey Include georg ette, volle, dotted Normandy volle, checked batiste, dotted Swi ratine, Imported gingham and tissue voile, both dark and light colors. You ought to have one of these! $26.50 and $30.00 Silk Dresses, $9.50 Siik Dresses at $9.50! A remnant prize, Indeed! Here are beaded Canton crepes, siik laces and sport satins in many attractive styles. Brown, henna, cornflower, tan and navy. Only 15 in all. $17.50 and $18.50 Printed Crepe Dresses, $11.75 Printed Crepe de Chine Dresses—the summer's favorite—both dark and light colors—figures and dot designs, with Venice lace and embroidered organdle collars. Forty of these. Neariy every size. $30.00 and $35.00 Canton Crepe Dresses, $16.50 25 Tallored and Beaded Dresses, In a fine Canton crepe and crepe de chine. In navy, black and brown to choose from. $38.50 Beaded Silk Dresses, $18.50 Beaded Canton Crepe Dresses, In blouse and tunic styles. White, rose, henna, periwinklie, brown, navy and black. These are exception- ally fine. 25 garments ta choose from. $29.50 to $32.50 Shantung Silk Dresses, $19.75 Cool Shantung Siik Dresses, In slip-over, straight.line, tunic and coat styles. Smartly tallored, self and leather beits. Sizes 34 to 44. Nearly 35 dresses for Friday selling. $39.50 Foulard Silk Dresses, $22.75 10 only. Come early If you want a Navy Biue Foulard Silk Dress for $22.75. Blue grounds—dotted in white. Panel tunic style, with wide girdies. $47.50 Roshanara Crepe Dresses, $29.50 5 Roshanara Silk Crepe Dresses, in cornflower and tangerine, at. tractively trimmed with white panels and embroidery in self-color. $16.50 and $18.50 Silk Sport Dresses, $5.00 What a pricel 20 La Jerz and Striped Tub Silk Sport Dresses, straight-line and blouse styles. White, striped in black, Copenhagen blue, orchid and green. With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Suits—Coats ' $29.50 and $32.50 Shantung Silk Suits, $18.50 In the wantea long-Jacket style. Good-looking, panel plaited and belted models. $50.00 and $55.00 Navy Blue Suits, $28.50 25 Navy Blue Tricotine Sults, with: medium panel, box and very long Jackets—belted and unbelted styles. A striking Friday value. Suits of high quality. N $55.00 to $65.00 Navy Blue Suits, $34.75 Smart Tailored Suits, all with long-line jacket—most desirable styles—beited and unbelted, handsomely tallored of high-grade Polret twill and cordine. To see these sults Is to appreciate them. $55.060 to $75.00 Suits for Large Women, $39.50 15 Suits, designed for ‘large women. Tailored and dress styles. Long-line and beited box jackets in navy and black twilicord of high quality and talioring of kigh excellence. $69.50 to $85.00 Suits, $39.50 Here are 20 of our very fine suits. Navy blue and black tricotine. Tailored styles, with long-iine and pane! box jacket. Just the suit to buy for long and sat!sfactory wear. $30.00 Ribbon Trimmed Capes, $13.75 Navy Tallored Capes, full silk lined and trimmed with cire rib- bon. Mighty pretty. Elght only. $26.50 Tweed Coats, $15.90 15 Diagonal Tweed Coats, in smart straight styles. Gray, tan and browi 1 $65.00 Wraps for Large Figures, $26.75 20 Wraps and Capes, that large women wiil find to fit perfectly, of those fine Bolivia cloths, with cape sieeves and full backs. See these. 46 to 54 bust. $45.00 to $69.50 Dress Coats, $27.75 15 Coats for afternoon wear, of high-grade Bolivia, suedetex and cordalure cloths. Colors Include navy, black, brown and gray. $45.00, and $50.00 Camel’s Hair Top Coats, $34.75 The genuine ca ’s hair cloth, In rtest o7 top coat: Tan and brown, with full backs and belts. Alwa marz and becoming. $25.00 Homespun Sport Suits, $5.00 10 Suits only. Come early! They are sport suits In homespun and trelaine, in orchid rose shades only. $35.00 Sport Suits, $8.75 10 Very Good Tweed Sults, but only in Copenhagen blue. Belted box Jacket style. $25.00 Wooltex Sport Jackets, $4.75 8 Cport Jackets, of tweed and chinchilia cloth. Rose, gray and Copenhagen bive. These are Wooltex tallored. $10.00 Sleeveless Flannel Sport Jackets, $5.00 20 Sleoveless Flannel Sport Jackets, smartly ound with white slip braid. Cbpenhagen, red, green. Sleevelgss ia the style. $25.00 Sport Coats, $9.50 20 Full-length Tweed Sport Coats, of tan and green diagonal tweeds, with raglan sieeves and beits. Wonderful ror $9.50. Coats, $1450 5 Tan and Blue Plald Pongee Coats, In a smart cape style. With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Stockings If you don’t need them now, you will very soon. » 39¢ Lisle Stockings, 35¢ - 3 for $1.00 Mercerized Lisle Stockings, seam well reinforced; not all siz , cordovan. = $1.00 Sport Stockings, 59¢ Lisle Sport Stockings, in two-toned colors. Drop-stitch and _wide rib. Light ‘and dark colors. Not all sizes. Stockings, 95¢ Sport Sllk and Lisle. Full-fashioned Two-toned Stockings, In light colors only—rose, orchid, gray, camel. $2.25 to $4.00 Stockings, $1.65 Plain Open.work and Noveity-strips 8ilk Stockings, good assortment of colors, but not all sizes. $3.00 Rolettes, $2.25 footwear! plete. Sizes incomplete. Open-work. and Net Rolettes, with fancy silk ruffie, elastic garter top. Good assortment of col tack, $3.00 and $3.50 Stockings $2.50 Fancy Glove Silk Stockings, also a few White Thread Silk Stockings in Richelleu Rolettes, $3.25 . Glove Silk Rolettes, with fancy black and white ruffie top; in black only. Just a few pairs, so core early to get your size. comf You ought to come footwear to fit your feet. $10.00—Tan Calf Oxfords, with thiban and military heels. $8.00 Black Calf Oxfords, with welt soles, flat heels and me- dium round toes. Nearly all sizes. And your choice for— A Sample Purchase of High-Grade $10.00 Low Shoes ‘Samples of a maker of high-grade footwear leathers of the season. Retall pricss on f0o! $10.00 palr. Your choice—and there is & wide range of chcice—for. Remnants for the Children, $4.00 and $4. Oxfords for children, In brown calf and white horsehid ortable—making excellent play shoes—for. | With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—MISSES’ Suits, Coats and Dresses -Come 14 to 20 Year Olds for Extra Friday Choices! o d Misses’, $15.00 to $25.00 Garments 2—$15.00 Jersey Capes, In green and rose. 4425“ 00 Rose Tweed Sport Coats, for every-day o wear, 85, 1 00 Tweed Sults, In cool rose and violet shades. $5.00. 15—$15.00 Cotton Frocks, of volle, gingham and dotted Swiss, in attractive ades of orchid, tan, rose and red. $5.00. Misses’ $25.00 to $45.00 Garments 3—$25.00 Woolitex Sport Coat brown mixture. 2—§25.00 Brown Plaid Wooltex Sport Coat: 0. beautifully tailored. $10.0C. 3—$25.00 Rose Sport Coats, with full fiare backs. $10.00. 15—$29.75 Tweed Sults, beited models. Orchid and rose. $10.00. 3—$45.00 Navy Blue Poiret Twill Suits, with box coats. $10.00. Misses’ Coats and Capes 2—$29.75 Duvet de Laine Capes, in ss.so h . Enn:—&&fl) Pepper-and-Sait Mixture Sport Coats, the slzm kind you can wear right through the fall. " 8—$35.00 Orchid and Light Blue Sport Coats, radium sl4 75 silk lined: straight tailored model. . i 2—$49.50 Navy Blue Tricotine Coats, Wooltex s‘s 50 talle d. tes ~ 027)—%50 and $50.50 Capes and Coats, of marvella, szsm lined with crepe; Wooltex epongee, well tallored, In tan - and Copenhagen; Poiret twlll, in navy and tan; silk lined and beau- tifully tallored. 5 .00 Silk Canton Crepe Capes, with deep silk szzm fringe. ot HID—“Q'W Canton Crepe Capes, of Roshanara and szs 75 wvelette, with smart monkey for trimming. .. Misses’ Dresses as Low as $3.50 5—$12.50 Gingham Frocks, in red and white and navy §3 5() and whits checks. 8—§13.75 Dotted Swiss, Gingham and Chambray Frocks, 4 5() in pink, red, brown and white check, red and white check = and green and white check. The nicest sort of frocks for summer days. % 6—$14.50 Dresses of Normandy volle, tissue gingham, $6.50 dotted voiles and gingham, In navy, Copenhagen, brown, pink o and rose. Attractively made In simple, youthful models, with or- gandle or seif-trimming. 6—$25.00 to §65.00 Dresses of Canton crepe, In tangerine €Q 75 and henn: d of fiimy white lace. - £—£2%.50 Canton Crepe and Crepe de Chine Dressss, 19 50) gray, orange, rose and jade. o 15—329.75 Crepe Dresses, In navy blue, black and &5 () white; straight.fine belted models. - Misses’ Suits Down to $15.00 .00 Navy Blue and Black. Tricotine Tailored Suits, for traveling or business. $15.00 10—8$35.C0 Imported Tweed and Mixture Sults, In tan, slsm gray, brown and rose: beautiful fabrics; perfectly tariored. > —$49.50 Navy Blue Poiret Twill Suits, in good-looking 319 w tallored styles. ‘ot 20—$65.00 to $89.50 Polret Twill Tallored and Box Coat sz7 m Sults, tan and navy. With Little Regard for Price! P Remnants—Sweaters Prices slashed beyond recognition—it’s going to be a clean sweep on sweaters! $5.00 to $10.00 Light-Weight Wool Sweaters, $3.95 About sixty of them. All-wool, silk and woo! and striped mix- tures: in plain and noveity stitches; buff, navy, brown, henna, peacock and two-tone effects. $16.50 to $20.00 Pure Silk Slip-Overs, $10.50 Pure thread silk. in round and V neck slip-overs; stripe and block weaves; navy, black, Jade, Harding, gray, orchid, tan and brown. $22.50 to $27.50 Silk Tuxedos, $18.75 Pure Thread Silk Tuxedo Sweaters, in pretty novelty weaves, . with heavy plaited sash; navy, black, white, jade, buff, orchid, henna and purple. - 7 With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Bathing Suits Our most popular bathing suits; made by manufacturers who have studied their product and know what will give satis- faction—“weather the water,” so to speak. $8.50 to $10.00 Bathing Suits, $6.95 Swimming Suits, of finest all wool. Many noveity and Black, navy, gray, tan, Mohawk, Copenhagen, brown and green. Extra sizes up to 56 included. $5.00 to $6.95 Bathing Suits, $4.65 About 50 sults in all.. Include wool jersey and surf satin two- plece models; also Mannish Swimming Suits in Jockey, Kelly, tan, Mohawk, navy, black and gray. Others in two-colo- combinations. With Little Regard for Price! Remnants—Skirts $8.50 Sport Skirts, $1.95 15 Tweed Sport Skirts, in solld coloré and shadow plaids. Rose, Copenhagen, tan and orchid. $10.00 and $14.50 Sport Skirts, $4.50 20 Skirts of imported tweeds, striped epongee, novelty plaids and crepe knit. Good sport colors and styles. $12.50 and $14.50 Skirts, $6.50 35 Skirts of the best colors, In striped pruneila and striped Bed- ford cord—all of them box plaited. Note the colors—navy and white, brown and tan, navy and tan, black and white, brown and white. Sizes Broken—Therefore Scarcely Any Regard / at all for Prices on Remnants of Summer Footwear and see if you can't find a pair or two of this high-grade All on sale at our main floor shoe shop! Make a note—See $5.00 White Canvas Oxfords with ivory leather soles and Cuban 52-95 heels. Notall sizes. @ ..........coceuuenunnnnn /$10.00 and $12.00 Pumps, mostly gray and brown leathers. High and low French heels. $10.00 Black Kid Oxfords, with Cubair heels. Sizes incom- $3.9 |s4.45 Pair Mostly medium sizes—4 AA to 6% B 3Y,C, 4B and 415A in the most popular styles and s v o posut st ans - $G3.95 3450 §9.95 Soft, light {end of the one hundred-year period | one dollar of the principal. The peo- {the gift. With the expenditure of no imoney there is to be turned over to a Ithe world with which this can be com- ipared. Civilization is without a prec- i FORD PLAN RAPPED IN NORRI REPORT Senate Agricultural Commit- tee Urges Nebraskan’s Proposal. STRONG LANGUAGE USED , Offer -of Motor Builder Declared { Unreasonable in Asking Much and Promising Nothing. In a comprehcnsive report sub- mitted to the Senate today by Chair- man Norris of the Senate agricultural committee Henry's Ford's offer for the purchase and lease ~f the govern- ment's war-initiated p ects at Mus- cle Shoals, Ala., is condemned in un- usually strong language, while the Nebraska senator’s bill, proposing de- velopment of the propertics under 2 governmgnt owned and controlled corporation, is described as “the most wonderful plan” that has ever been proposed in the history ot the coun- try. On the question of the Ford bid, the repost says, Senators Page, MeNary, Keyes, Goouding, Norbeck, Hacreld ard McKinley, republicans, and Kendrick, democrat, concurred With the chair- mam. With reference to the govern- ment ownership proposal, the report gives the names of five senators, Nor- ris, McNary, Gooding, Norbeck and McKinley, as favoring its passage by the Senate for the solution of the Muscle Shoals problem. Because of this line-up of the com- mitteemen, the report is characterized as a minority opinion insofar it expresses approval of the government ownership bill, but is presented as a majority opinion insofar as it deals with the rejection by the committee of all proposals for Muscle Shoals de- velopment. The Ford offer is dealt with in un- sparing terms. Its adoption, the re- port says, would put “the government of the United States into business with 4 vengeance,” adding that “those who ask Congress to accept the Ford offer ask us, in effect, to lease this property to this corporation without any real consideration, and then in addition thercto guarantee to repair and keep and maintain it in good con- dition for a period of one hundred years.” Hold Bid Misinterpreted. “It is_difficult to harmonize our !xdea of Mr, Ford's fairness." the re- port continues, “with his silence on this subject, when his name is so often used in exaggeration and m reprecentation as to just what he does offer to do. The country has been given to understand that Mr. Ford has guaranteed to reduce the cost of fertilizer by one-half. He has done nothing of the kind. He has made no guarantee of any kind in the way of the reduction of the cost of fertilizer. The country has been given to understand that he pays the government 4 per cent in- terest on its investment in the two dams. He does nothing of the kind. He has not made any such offer, and no such proposition is included in his bid. Giving his _corporation credit for every dollar that it pays. he will be paying to the taxpavers less than 3 per cent on the money which he uses out of the Treasury of the Tnited States, and when we consider that this loan runs for one hundred years, it requires even the stretch of the imagination to understand the enormous profit that this corporation secures in this one item alone. “Assuming that a fair interest rate in the commercial world is 6 per cent interest, this would give his corpo- ration during &« hundred-year period a total gift of cold cash of $236,250,- 000, and if this money were com- pounded, a5 Mr. Ford asks the gov- ernment to compound what he pays, the profit to the corporation at the would be $14,500,000.000. This is more than half our total cost of the world war. “The country has bheen given to un- derstand that the Ford offer provides for the repayment to the government within the one-hundred-year period the entire investment that the gov- ernment has made. His offer does nothing of the kind. On the other hand. the total payments Included in the offer of both interest and amorti- zation amount to less than 3 per cent on the investment, and he never pays ple of the country have been led to believe that the Ford offer means a reduced price for electricity to the consumer. It means nothing of the | kind. He has not agreed to furnish a single kilowatt to any home or to any manufacturing concern except his own. The mighty power at Muscle Shoals will be devoted entirely and exclusively to the use.of the great corporation which Mr. Ford will or- ganize. Dazed at Unreasonablemess. “When we bring together the re- sults that must follow from these two divisions of the Ford offer, the mind is dazed at the unreasonableness | of the propositionsat the enormity of ! corporation property of the value of more than $100,000.000 and the right and privilege to extort unjust profits from the citizens of this country with- out limit. “There is nothing in the history of edent. If the Ford offer is accepted. | then the fight for conservation that BICYCLE—Owner can lhave same by ing and gaying for ad. Apply 719 13th st. PUP—Brindle, short tail, male: poodie, white, male, tan eara. ~Apply Wash. ‘Animal Rescus League, 849 Md. ave. s.w. TEBTH—Owner can have same by identifying ing for this ad. Call at 200 Tth n.w. 1 Restaurant. . WRIST WATCH. gold.__Call North 4250 * LOST. CAT—Siiver Persian, male. Any information thankfully _eeceived, 1811 Trving — 1910, on Rranchrille car last . Libaral hone North 6866 (after 7 p.m.) 21° i return to 321 or Dorse N A1d., or_phone Cleveland 8. Reward. _ =1% EYEGIASSES, Iady's: name in case. ed Box 60, Falls Church, Va. N PIN. ladr's, between 18th st., Columbia road and Pa. ave.: probably on car. Ple: Turn to 2508 25tk 8. n.w. Reward. TADY'S PURSE, black patent leathor: Wed-| B3| PIN, Greex letter: . gold_anchor wet wi | pearis. Reward. H | RING_—Ruainess college. 71 Woodward & Lo- | throp's, Friday: reward { SETTER pupps, black and white ticked fe o | from B2 Sht i marked ! name B nesday evening. Keep money. return’ purse 2nd other contents to Apt. 21. the Cumberiand. 218 COLLIE. white and_brown, named Heward' if recurned to 1625 16th. st McCarthy. NOSE GLASSESName Ethel Hall, 3115 WE. ‘;lg:n:gl st., inside case. Finder please retu: etard. 210 Phone Cleve. T07-W. * PIN, circle, pearl-amethyst. Tuesday. Liberal reward. Tel wfl! 135-J, 3001 Dent place n.w., Georgeiown. POCKETBOOK—Contalning carpenter's union card snd money, July 16. Reward. Harry Johnson, 418 12th st. n w. . Phone Cley. 1758. Reward. G PLPPY, ok a apswen to r. Wil the party who found him Please retura same to a broken-hearted little Rirl and. veceive Tibera! reward® 1331 N at. sel R WATCH FOB 380 Fold pin, Fagraved W. B Rl _reward. Roum 200, Biever oulld 1356 B a.w. th st. b.w. TERR! 1ER b THE WEATHER | n District of Columbla—Unsettled this . ton, 8. C. July afternoon, followed by generally fair b e e L }:‘I"l’hl and tomorrow; little change | Edisto Isiand, §. (. e i emper: ; Maryland—Generally fair- tonight| teu grandc ca, = g7 and tomorrow. preceded by showers| Mon-inlaw. Funeral will ‘ake place f in east portion this afternoon; little | LOMAX undertaking establishment, 14th ] change In temperature; moderate to(py W& ¥ 8t 2 o'clock Friday, July 21 * fresh northeast and north winds. AVIS. Tuesday, July 18, 1022, at 5:40 Virginia—Generally fair . tonight| §™; JOHN beioved husband of Rose and tomorrow, preceded by showers| on"s, Kundthi), uged 54 yesrs. Funersl on the’ coast” this ‘atternoon little | v Fritay Sus S ik o, Ioterment 40 change -in temperature; moderate to| Glenwood cemetery. Relative fresh rortherly winda. Taeiiead Sahy. I iNCwes JSaN e West Virginia—fair tonight and to- | FASTNAUGHT. P morrow; slightly warmer tomorrow. | hit residence. 2055 Ty T, Biciras for Torenty. Wore Hanes. ERT L. FASTNAUGHT, beloved husband of Catherine (nee Meyers). Funeral Fri- Thermometer—4 p.m., §3; 8 p.m., 70; day at 2 pm. from residence. Interment 12 midnight, 73; 4 am. 70 8 am. 71} noon, 75. Lo Burometer—é pm. 29.93; § pm. FoO] n'n.rwfl'&"{.’.' morning, July 19, 1922, Aam, 2990 | Buind S50 Corbin "place moe.. CECELA FORD. " widow of the Iate Glenwood cemetery. Relatives and friends ted. Ed 8 am. 29.93; noon, 29.93. Highest temperature, 84, occurred at 2 p.m. yesterday. Lowest tempera- ture,*70, occurred at 4 a.m. today. Papers please copy.) 20 Condition of the Water. GAINES. July 19, 1922 37 Temperature and_condition of the | " ne. MEK LALEA v CAr e e water at 8 am.: Great Falls—Tem-| wife of Major S. M. Gaines. Funeral pri- perature, 78; condition, very muddy. vate. Tide Tables. GRINDER. Tuesdas, Juls 18 1922 at 5:30 (Furnished by the United States coast | |ufe Josopn tnd mihoin; urighier of the and geodetic survey.) neral from the home of her sister, Mrs, Today—Low tide, 11:10 am. and| Firet E. Trotter, 633 F st muw: Fradey ¢ 1108 p.m.; high tide, 4:14 am. and 2 Relatives and friends invited. s GUINEY. Wednesday worning. July 19, 1922, Tomorrow—Low tide, 11:59 am. and | Saueni ot i i, Cp GUINEY. beloved 11:59 p.m.; high tide, 5:08 a.m. and| e fuines Ponint vl teke el Fine 1 ke ‘Tiace. Tro 5:32 pm. her Iate rexidence, 47 K. st. n.w Frioay The Sum d Moon. morning, July 21, at 9 o'clock. 7, 08ay—Sun rose 468 am.; sun sets o pogticeny 453 pemben of Moy B .m. W.. are hereby Mlili’d “t E t at 150 Tomorrow—Sun rises 4:59 a.m.; sun .t 8 pires FeMey. Joly TL, o raxke sets, 7:29 p.m. Moon rises 1:27 a.m.; sets 3:49 p.m.i Automobile lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset. day, 1 k. Columbia Lodge. nd .1 giclor 85, Weather in Various Cities. S ST, S G AYM. b A apRvis, e A GEO. F. HATT et Ty ETflnpenllln . Fin, 3 3iE T EORFF. At Mount Ida, Va., July 19, 1922, 5 33 %2 J0HX K. EORFF. teloved futlier ot Mra: 2 . T. L N ol - b : iz E"' i ST rehan. " Notice of funersl bere e Wenther | MONELLY. Wednesday, July 19. 1922, at Providence Hospital, ' ADELAIDE PYLES MeNELLY, widow of Nicholas MeNelly. Funeral services at her late residence, 814 A st se., on Saturday, July 1 o'clock. Interment privafe. 21 SANFORD. Wendnesday, July 19. 1822, at 8 a.m., ELIZARETH EANFORD, beloved Tife of George W. Funeral from e residens a 5 . Deutim, 513 19t gt ehs Sataraay. ol Abtlene, Tex 29. Albany . 30, Asbiry Park ... Atlantic City 20 Baltimore Charleston . 29 2 oo - SMITH. Tuesdsy, miduight. July 18, 1922, at Cincinnati .. 30, Round Hill, RACHAEL L. EMITH. ek g widow of the iate’ Samuel Smith, mother of 20 Mary E., Julian J., Willoughby R. and Mrs, H. H_Buelling. Funeral Friday. 2 pm., from Ephiphany Fpiscopal Church. later- ment in Rock Creek cemetery. (New York. New Jersey and Berkeley, Calif., papers please copy.) = a Kansas City. Los Angel Loulssille Al cemetery. 'WILSON. Tuesday, July 18, 1622, st Laurel, Md., WILLIAM H., beloved husband of the 5. Phoenix . Pittsburgh '~ Portland. Mc 30.08 Inte’ Barah_Wilson, aged from W. W. Deal’s funs st. n.e., Saturday, July terment Congrestional cemete more, Md., papers please copy.) 'WILSON. The officers and members of Fed- eral City Lodge, No. 20, I. 0. O. F., are Liereby requested to meset at the chi W. W. Des ¥ W Deal & Co. 816 Hut. ne., on Satur- 22 t2:30 p.m.. ‘to perfor the 0 Fellow: burial services Jor oot Forelgn. geceared brother, WILLIAN HARRIS Wit~ 5 grand. who died T: (8 a.m., Greenwich time, today.) LAYTON C. WARNER, Noble Grund Stat 8. NMALLORY, Recording Secretary. 21* In Memoriam. oot gwed B Glow tockholm, Sweden 5 y BARRETT. I R AT @ Lo [PAEITLI e by pegmre Hamilton, 'Bermuda. 78 Raining ETT. who departed this life one yea n Juan, Porto Ri 8 Cloudy Juve 10, 1921 ‘und our dear inother, A 80 Cl M. BARRETT. who departed this Lif ana, Cuba.. lear Colon, Canal Zooe 82 Part cloudy Just @ line of sweet remembrance, Just & memory fond and true; has been waged by public-spirited and patriotic men and women all over the country is not only lost and given away, but those who are unwillingly compelled to make the gift are to be taxed one hundred years to make the gift more profitable. It is the great- est gift ever bestowed upon mortal man since salvation was made free to the human race.” Other features of the Ford proposal are vigorously attacked. That pro- posing the hundred-year lease of the water-power projects, the report as- serts, would make the federal water- power act, in effect, “a scrap of pa- per.” : “If there were no other reason for HERSHEY. of our dear daughter, RUT) HERSHEY. Just a token of our devotion. we all wtill think of you. TED CHILDREN. MAGGIE, PERCY VID. In sad but loving remembrance H §. HERSHEY who left us one yeir ago t 1921, I think of you_ in ilence, Few eyes can see us weep. But_many silent tears we shed When_others are fast asleep. HER DEVOTED FATHER AND MOTHER.® In sad but loving remembrance of our xister, RUTH HERSHEY, who left us one year ago foday, July 20, 1921. Today recalls xad memories Of s loved one gone to rest. And the ones who sre thinking of her today rejecting this offer,” the document adds, “it ought to be rejected for this one provision alone, and if it is ac- cepted with this provision in it, then Congress ought to lay down the bars and permit any organization organ- ized by any other person to have the same privilege an the same right of a lcase for 100 years of complete | Model Chapel. ' =~ = X and unregulated control of power de; il oy vigable s ams.” - veloped from our navig: tream = ey T It is estimated that a total amount lfl:fi‘i’éfl é“flH HINES Co. Are the ones who loved her best. HER_SISTERS AND BROTHER. ® FUNERAL DIECTOES. JAMES T. RYAN 317 PA. AVE. 8.E. Lincols 143 paid by the Ford Corporation by amortization during_the 100-year pe- W. R. ¥. HINES, Prop., riod would be only $4,368,398, and the 29012903 14th st. Tate of interest paid by Mr. Ford on vate Ambulanee. the money provided by the Treasury e is ‘shown to be 2.79 per cent rather ReSreareCo than 4 per cent. erestond 3208 ‘H_STREET NW. rgptalet ] | " @ormzRivssoF STIM) The statement is made that the gov- PHOIN‘ MAIN § ernment cannot afford to enter into N O “the loaning business at the expense | ARSpeare Cutichols of the taxpayers and for the enmrich- [ ——* ————— ———— —_ Srent of & great corporation that un- WM., H., SARDO & CO, der the very terms of its ofter will | Vi & ur. o be beyond the regulation of e er ~haDel. federal or state authority" Setecn Chipal- s Automstils Wiseclle: | Regarding Senator Norr pro- m posing government, develgpment and V.L.SP CO, operation for the Muscle Shoals proj-| 5 > Pt "the report contains a reference | , NUIther the, SuSceasors Of B0t an fo the attitude of senmators, who, it | Exiutiishment = 940 W, says, are seemingly --?ezgi-m?edd o | Enimr Vi any G028 t. NW. turn this property over to Mr. Ford or - absolutely prevent its development by QicDIpnitedyeat BRElE e vins. any one.” Seven members of the agri- . W cultural committee who voted for the 816 H ST. N.E. Lincoln 3464, favorable report of the Ford offer and | Automobiie Service. Chapet opposed a favorable report on the Joseph F. Birch’s Sons Norris biil are mentioned in this con- 3034 M St. N.\, Establisied 1841, nection. % i it Phote West 98 u report says, * o yant 'With them e Tep & Actomobile Service. seems to be Ford or nothing. When We take Into consideration the won- STWILEIAN LEK Feancial Dissciss derful development that it provided |ssd embalmer. Livery in connection. {1 S.3420 (the Norris bill). particular- |gious chapel and modern crematorium. Moderate Iy for the south, it Is dificult to un- |prices. 332 Pa. ave. n.w. Tel call M 1385, B rand how senators from that sec- |~ T 1 Coior’s Some Co tion can assume such an attitude. Frank Geier’s Sons Co, UIn this bill there is offered to the | 1113 SEVENTH 8T. K.W. country, and _particularly to _ the | Maera Chapel. Telephone . Mum 2473 outhern states, the most wonderfu . San for the development of power Timothy Hanlon D he Tennessee river and its dis-| e H BT. N.E. Phoos L. 5561, tribution over the southern states = 7 at has ever been proposed in the \ sz e R e country, bnd It 13 Nil, Gawiess difficult to understand how repre- iy SO0 -.x: sentatives from thst section could Piock progress of this kind and insist that this great property should be thrned over practically without con- Sideration to ome corporation. and that the power on the great Ten- Heasee river should be leased for 100 Vears without regulation and without | restriction” ut thilt only five of the | nting ou nly of xle;‘:‘!n !gel'lllflrn on the committee | goleums) of quality and character. I fesced In that part of the report| A representative will cail by appoint. commending the Norris plan, the re- |, ¢ with portfotios of desigrs and sug- 3 MORTICIANS We specialize |n designing and erect. ing memorials [monuments and mau- { port continues. in part: - in eomparison with its (the Norris | gestions. plan) provision regarding fertilizer, THE J. F. MANNING CO,, INC., the Ford offer sinks into absolute 014 Fifteenth Street. nsignificance. It offers the greatest | ope to struggling agriculture, it frankly recognizes that lmproyemenul must ‘be made if we would cheapen the production 121 fertilizer, and it ———me-cfim—— ides for the use of the govern- Tent pr ‘The Park Cemetery Perpetual Thent property and funds to miike the Pecessary investigation for such im-| wop-Sectarisn | Care ¥ Beautiful and fitting location. provements. “Instead of turning over the sur- plus power to.any ome individual or n . Readily accessible—on oe N ey electric car line. I be able to supply electricity to . The “people “at larme, and citles an {On Baltimore boule rs of this | \rite ¢ar Illustrated Booklet The report points out that elec- tricity developed at Muscle Shoals FUNERAL DESIGNS. to ohe corporation, to be used for his or its financial benefit. without reg- camn}umu;? hllmdsr:dn‘ of Tfi"" d||a-‘ vard, at District line. tant from uscle oals, W receive benefits either directly from this Ofic 5 7;‘hs source, or indirectly. by the cheapen- | e: 70 17 LN-W. Phone should be furnished to manicipalities | S ——————4— === at A% near cost.as possible and should Gude Bros. Co., 1214 F St be. so distributed- that all of the Prompt wuto felivers service. & ll|’l|0fl from any source whatever, it wil ing of electricity by men and corpor: i e tions who will be competi governmental corporatfon.” people, both rich and poor. would re- e—ine: 5 eive' praportionate. benefit to_the | ——AMite=stprmmie_uermaltC cheapening of electrical energy. That |GEQ C. SHAFFER st sw. 5 ocompiush, tne- peport adda, - | SMBDELLEY FRLE