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n - 6 ' THE EVENING STAR. With Sunday Morning Edition. TWASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY. October 3, 1922 THEODORE W. NOYES. tarihr‘ewsmper Company aud Pennsylvania Ave. The Evening % The Evening Star, with the Sunday morning cditlon, i~ deliv by earriers within the city | (060 cents per monthi: daily only, 47 5 por wonth: N cents per mor Or- by “mail, or telephone Mai: riers st the Mail—Payable in Advance. aryland and Virginia. 8.4 6,00 $E40; Iy and Sunday.! i Aily only. | ay s | 3 the lim rovern-| ment © ta prevent the | near « she, in uls v to Bishap J: wmon, who, om Par t the U will while be held outraz ainst Chris notes the wernment - for re tes inaction iitted Mr, Hughe heen ¢ e a tians in . fact that there has been no n to justify the United n attempt by arnmed fo ¥ the near east “or to engag i s of war.” Without such action | the executive ovity to s nd the course it has pursned. In{ brief, short of geing to war with Turkey th vernment could not the have been bl have prevented ter, and it t not to prevent it even if at war, i Cannon’s | appears from op s that in July ican church dics urged th » Department to take whatever Steps were necessary sastern Christians, s that in June 1 to join in the On the Sth of September. before the burning of yrna, the American high commis sioner at Constantinople untry’s feeling in ing thoriti rost energetic steps to insure the population of the occupied territorie sentiment of the strongly of protecting from Turk- United States has no political interest in the near east- ern situation. It hi however, a strong humanitarian interest, there as elsewhere. It has expressed that in- terest to the limit of ability in works of succor and relief. Involvement by the United States in e political situation in Asia Minor would not necessarily have prevented the disaster at Smyrna or the other ! rors in that region. Most Amer- ans feel that this government should it become thus involved. War—for it would mean war if the United States made a formal protest with de- termination to enforce it—would plunge this country into all of the tur- moil and the intrigue of European | pelitics, would cost it tremendously in and in treasure, would perhaps spread the flames of conflict over all the world. The powers in Furkey know the at- titude of this government toward the treatment of Christians in Asia Minor. Tt requires ultimatum to define | that position. the peapi is The live no Congressional Criticism. a fashion of wit to in flippancies at the expense Ithough the proverb: of the Hon. Hiram tiokum of Hickville have long since disappeared from circles of reputable repartee, the gibes at the men elect- od by people to serve the interests of the peopie surviv ustained effort at levity one topic soon becomes per- functory and rapidly sinks to the level | of irresponsible abuse. However just | may be some of the criticisms of the | United States Senate, based on sus- | pic conditions attending a fe‘w; elections to its membership, these| criticisms invariably 1t has long been indulg i 1 i 1 on 1 i i i us directed against an individual, whose case b comes notorious because of viol tion of custom, and these individ senators are not to he tre critics as typical and 1y | The r iv nch in any | countr stem of government i titled to the deep It element of government for whi ple have fought dium of expr Tts utmost pu en- | s the | h peo- | nd suffered: the me- | v will. | ught of the popu fication is to | of 3e serious discussion or of popular ! t, can only work for harm, ——— London has 1 hearing music from K. by radio. Amer-! ican art is at last appreciated by Eng- | land. At Mudania Today. i Today in the shadow of Mount] Olympus. at Mudania. on the shores of | the Sca of Marmord. are assembled | _representatives of the and of the Turkish nationalist govern- | men: discussing .terms of armistice. k an arrangement by which he averted between the “urks and the Britjsh. Mustapha Ke- mal Pasha, military leader of the Turks. and head of the government of s~xgora, thougn not the titular head ; of the government of Turkey, in effecxl ! holds the power of decision. The in- <uence of France, whose representa- tive, Franklin Bouillon, is described in dispatches as Kemal's best friend, 1s exerted toward a peaceful settle- ment, and such a settlement appears 0 be most likely. For it is more to the interest of Kemal to avoid a con- flict if he can gain ultimate possession of Thrace than to precipitate a war 1 which Great Britain will have al wne advantage of greater sea powe! and the virtual certainty of suppor from France and Italy. What seemed to be a paradoxical P own parking sp: { which leav obstacle to peace has been apparently removed. When Kemal demanded the immediate evacuation of Thrace by Greece and the right to occupy it with Turkish troops he imposed a condition which could not be granted short of a complete abandonment by England of its eastern policy and in- volvment in dangerous intrigue in Europe. The Greek revolution, predi- cated upon the defense of Thrace, seemed to make the granting of Ke- mal’s demand an undertaking on the part of iIngland or the allics to com- pel Greece, perhaps at the point of arms. to abevdon she Thracian fleld. ut now a compromise’ proposal has been advanced, the Kemalists indicat- ting willingness that Thrace should be occupled by allied forces and the civil administration turned over ks quickly as practicable to Turkish officials. Thus it may be that the government at Athens will find a way out of the difficulty by yielding to an allied occu- ion, anthusiasm for war against Turkey over Thrace has visibly waned at Athers, and the way now seems ! for a settlement that will s the face of the new Greek government without involving turther flict. But ve any con- by whatever steps the settle- ment is reached, it is assured that Kemal Pasha will leave the Mudania meeting a winner in substantial terms. He has been under severest pressure and the strongest temptation o press n to Constantinople and into Th and deubtless when the full story is told it will be found that he has| fpeen a factor for peace und not the conquer Turk usually Whether he had any sh sponsibility for myrna horror is That fact that not now known. to be told. 1 emains did not he rike a week ten days 1t the aits shows either a pacific disposi tion or a shrewd realization of the military odds which have been in 't him steadily as the forees. The Mudania meeting will not settle the near eastern question. merely supply the basis of a future conference at which these troublesome | matters relating to the s its and to the control of Constantinople and the ajien nationals within the sh arca and y ¢ the a will be di A news note: ident Har are beginnin the elec House of Repr ter would be little short of a calam- ity, Representative Wood of Indi wn of the republican congi ign commit - White House It would undoubtedly unsettle mat ters consid Iy, There House would ing belirves the to Le of a peo- ivineed democratic . A democratic obliged to handle tic conten- tion is that the Fordney law is ex tremely injurious to the country, and the feel that question. The dem is tal should be displaced as soon POS- sible. Of course, a demg tic House could not alone effect displacement, but it could, and would be pected to, present and pass a bill giving expres- sion to the democratic idea of what form tariff revision should tak The merchant marine question would probably be haited. In the face of a democratic verdict in November it would be impossible to write on the books the so-called subsidy bill next winter. The question is not p political. but it is a f - ters stand the bulk of the opposition to the subsidy bill is found in the democratic party: and. naturaily. the success of that party in the congr sional campaigns would strengthen the sentiment against the bill. post- pone further consideration of it un- til the meeting of the Sixty-eighth Congress. and thus throw it into the next presidential contest. On the other hand, another republi- | ! can House would insure a continuation | of united authority. and thus contrib- ute to the stabilization of matters in the count —————————— An era of prosperous busi tivity is predicted in financial eire which will make industrial dispute: less interesting than ever. Labor is not rated as a commodity. but the matter of supply and demand figures influentially in its relationships. ————r—e—————————— An enormous growth is predicted for Washington. D. C. Unfortunatel the new residents cannot bring their ¢ as well as cars. ——————————— Wash! has murder s little for the detectives, but much for the alienists to consider. —_————————— a There is a demand in several coun- ics for an underwriter bold enough to place ihrone insurance. Smyrna Turkish triumph means. N South American Trade. cable from Cherbourg, France, A Burgomaster Adolph Max, the war- time mayor of Brussels. arrived S urday on the steamship Berengari: He expressed himself 'as delighted ith his recent visit to South Amer- ica. and was high in his praise of the Brazilian statesmen. “It is toward South America that oughi to look for their most impor- tant commercial outlet,” he said. added that there were cordial bonds of sympathy shown in Brazil both for France and Belgium. America should be supreme in all allied powers | those markets, and can be made so by | the proper management. First of all, there must be estab- lished an ‘American merchant marine. America must be able to deliver her products to her foreign customers wherever they reside. She cannot af- ford to be longer dependent on outside sea-carriers, no matter how complete their equipment. The larger her trade the greater the necessity of her inde- pendence in controlling every feature of it. Then follows the necessity of study- ing those markets, not with the view of changing their tastes and wishes to conform to American notions, but of making the proper preparations for supplying what is needed and wanted. American representatives of American astablishments should take up resi- lence in those countries, master the anguages spoken, mingle with the seople In their eéveryday lives and thus gather all the information re- but will | -+ Though many of them mu is an example of what a| our countries | He | 2 THE EVENING STAR, Here and There in Washington BY “THE MAJOR” quired for serving them inthe matter of commerce. England and Europe and Japan all have their sharp eyes fixed on Sovuth America, and all are expert traders. They are not strangers there by any means. - All had trade relations well established in the ante-war days, and are moving new to revive and enlarge them. .So that if we are to get into the game successfully against such competition we must look alive. Stock Frauds and the Grand Jury. In its final report to the court the retiring grand jury has noted the fact that, despite its utmost endeavors dur- ing the term which it has served. it has been unable to complete inquiry into schemes that it believed to he fraudulent. and it expresses the hope that its successor will be requested or directed to give attention to this mat- ter. Wholesule swindiing, it points jout, has for vears practiced in the Distriet of Columbia by promoters of dubious kinds of tling { prom ery industr, a dividend po s of these schemes have made a rich winning from an’ overconfident public. Taking advantage of the fact that few inv cok advice before comprising all stock The s ybuying, they have sold practieally | without restraint, in the absence of | registration laws, sceurities that have heen practically wo cently stated that 1ced the: ashing » fuke s v sales m at over one million dol ome indictments have recently 1 returned to the court by the | grand jury that has just completed its term, and if its successor takes up | this work in the same spigit and with Iequal industry others will probably be | found, unless the promoters of these | fraudulent enterprises quit the juris | diction. The matter has been well ex. ! posed. however, by these grand jury presentments and the accompanying | pulicity, and it would seem that the ple of arned a hington had been fully NSt uncautions security jbuvite. Yet experience has shown i Im‘t it is impossible to protec. the | people merely by warning them, and jthat the only safety in this matter fis to make it impossible by law for indlers of this character 'to operate in the District ope A bill is now pending in Congress that will afford a measure of security in this r it enacted, and the hope is that in view the showing made by the grand Jury tus measure will he put on its P 1 of Con- age at the coming gress The members of the retiring have accomplished a valuabl i task. for which they are to be thank; by the community. ————— Campaign orator: now wonder {ing whether they will have to read up | for a forceful and discerning discus- sion of the near east situation as well the tariff and various other items 1. are interes —_——— Mustapha Kemal is much to select his own itinerary and pay no attention to traflic signal is S0 many nations world who are not ttered around the { The Dardanelles have always heen {more ar less troublesome for Euro- | pean experts on inland wate H % SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOINSON, H Babel. ;1 try 1o listen with respect | Toall my fellow men, neglect i To speak in terms that will connec With my untutored ken. i { Plain English is the tongue 1 call ! My own. And T admit {As vet T haven't learned it all. i 1 shall, with labor far from small, } Keep on acquiring it. But if the meaning 1 would seize Of all who speak today. T'd have to comprehend with ease French, German, Russian, Japanese And all the vast array. i | | X [ This is. for the plain, plodding mind. Too great a tas | And this is why we alw | Clear understanding 'mongst mankind i So difficult 10 get. H { { Ability. | “There arc many able men in Con- 1 gress.” . o doult of it,” replied Senator { Sorghum. “A man who is able to get i to Congre demonstrates that he is i i no feeble spccimen.” Jud Tunkins says some of us never ! get over the merry-go-round habit. We { want to keep zoing fast, regardless of whether we're getting anywhere. : Musings of a Motor Cop. Hortense Magee of yore would clean Her Sunday gloves with gasoline. But now. she says, it's in bad taste A precious fluid thus to waste. More Decorous Fashion. “French draperies are no longer so lscam: 0. rejoined Miss Cayenne. “Paris | has gone into the business of clothing instead of unclothing.” “A man dat kin preach foh a couple of hours,” said Uncle Eben, ‘“shows wonderful endurance; an’ so does de congregation.” “Physician slays dentist in self-de- fense.” The outcome of this cnse will be watched wIth great interést, as some sort of precedent on the matter of defense against dentists has been needed a long time—Kansas City Star. Now we learn that' the western coast of Baflin Land has been incor- rectly mapped heretofore. Whom can. Wwe trust?—Minneapolis Journal. They've never named a race horse Taximeter yet. - That's because there never has been that can go around-that ¥ and jury just | inclined | ———— A classic dancer ceased to be an American citizen when she married a Russian poct. She was ordered to | Ellis Island. thercby securing pic- turesque publicity not only for her 1. but for a pew poct i —_——— | Exciterpent over the world series renews surprise that there should he | interested | Aits: Atheir NOTHER indication that fall is near at hand is shown by the fact that many of the smaller stores _throughout the- city are displaying the grotesque things that the kiddles call “false faces,” and if some evening, just at dusk, you should happen to turn a corner and you are confronted by a most unusual looking creature do not imagine that the home brew that your friend gave vou is working overtime. It is mere- ly one of the youngsters having fun. * ok % % AH! rah! rah! Soon we will hear these blood-sfirring and curdling sounds echoing from the campus and through the streets at night, for the ollege boy§ are once more in our midst and will be until the campus turns to velvety green, and the vac: {tion period .. Those who are dis- contented with their lot should en- deavor to place themselves in the "'position of the freshman. He comes like a lamb led to slaughter, he enters the arena with fear and trembling, for does he not know that the sophomore is eagerly waiting for the time when he his place in life: is the mindful of the time when ¢ to roll a peanut dow or don a and m n teach the freshman former not he W F street b of t he not freshie” that he is but @ mere worm: must ke not also show the members of the junior cla that he is of such stock that Juniors are 1 . and must he not try to thought into the upper tier life where seniors live that r the college let- ? Hold not in de- rision, east not scornful glances when you or more freshmen doing stunts on the public highways; it is the modern-day price of primary col- lege education * X ¥ ¥ 7q* K other day 1 happened to be .[ talking with one of those publi benefactors who, for a small fee, ar- ngex vour trips for you, gets ‘kets, secures lower berths, provides toothpic! ranc impress upon the a ter on his swe | vou @ decent stateroom on a i ship. ut the exchange in {money the change in time 13..‘1 w thou nd one other things that aid vou i what he said: “We do not mind workiag out an itinerary for those who are really contemplating going somewhere, but the individual that we look upon us u nuisance is the thought trip) the one who hap- pens to he glancing over the atlas or reads the date line of a story from some far off place and immediately in his or her mind the idea that a trip there is an rediate neces- i Defeat of Carpentier Raises Color | Question. pugilist, the ves, orfolk Ledger- fights once s to join the band of pugilistic who did not know when To American editors. however, an element in the fight between 18 heroes stop.” | there is nquished French idel and the man from the African jungles {that goes deeper than interest in sporting event. As « writer puts jit. “some knockouts are heard around ithe world. The last blow adminis- ftered 1o M. Geor: Larpentier by I Siki, the Sencgalese, is reverberating {whime the skins of some folk are {darker than the skin of other From the viewpoint American i writers, Carpentier ha: joverrated as a figh happened when, in | the pink of cond of 1 epped out It eet his swarthy foe” was, ac- P ng to the Danville (Va.) Bee, {“the very thing that common sense might have taught. Siki. a clumsy tfant. unskilled in the technique of sal Doxing, was a block of ada- ant to the white man's onslaught. There was no real science in the light, unless it was the resort, one after noiher, by Carpentier to the various ‘\\'xh of the game.” But “no amount of butting, feinting and other ‘scien- tific’ stuff,” ‘he Roanoke World-News |says, “can take the place of ability to nit hard eno knock a_man {out,” therefére is a shining {example of the ultimate end of the iprize fignter trying to get by on s rather than punch. He's done dra his_whole box of tricks and the tough | i this picture, “Carpentier fHashed ibulk of Siki took { back hungrily for Carpentier's technical them all and came What was of punch fin and parry compared to the sheer brute laught of the 7 Carpentier lost i. as he was losing his crown, the winds his fistic art, resorted iy desperate tactics of fouling and stalling in order to win, and made an inglorious exit into dreamland, with the { throng hoo rooting for its new hero and ngg the man who once had all Paris { " The behaviour of. spectators interes ! the Minneapolis Tribune, for, it s: 10 English or American crowd ever {showed a_finer understanding of the {true spirit_of sportsmanship than did !this French crowd,” when, after “the referee endeavored to cheat the Sere- | galese of his_victory of awarding the battle to Georges on a technicality * * & it demanded that the prepos terous decision be changed,” even { though it might “readily be supposed | that a French crowd, patriotic to thé core and decidedly partisan to Georges, {would have applautied this unfair de- { cision.” : ! Patriotism, however, did not have a i great deal to do with the matter, other writers think The Buffalo Times says | “the fight was ac though one French- i man vere fighting another Frenchman. 1 The @nsitive chord of national vanity {had little or nothing in the circum- i stances to set it tingling. That, with’ | the Parisian love of novelty, and the rather too ready human wiilingness to cry ‘the king is dead, long live the king.’ sufficiently accounts for the roars of acclamation with which the specta- tors welcomed Siki’s victory.” Thus “France's pugilistic crown has suffered the fate of the crown of the Caesars.” the Cincinnati Times-Star find: What was proudly worn by ;Auguszus and Tiberius ~_eventually graced the head of the barbarian em- peror: The laurel that was worn Jaunt] by the graceful Frenchman now is tipped upon the curly head and blact brow of a Senexalese soldier.” Siki, the Cleveland Plain Dealer ob- serves, “Is a strange figure in the jrealm of pugilism. There has never ‘been another like him. There have been many excellent colored fighters. but they have not been natives of Africa. Siki is a child of the wild, the product of primitive sdtial con- ditions. He literally comes out of the jungle to prove that for real fighting the highest civilization is not a prime essential.” In a game in which “the { white race has certainly laid down the rules of competition,” the New York Tribune adds, “the Senegalese pounds his way to triumph,” a de- velopment which leads the Durham (N. C.) Sun to wonder whether or not it will “change the old rule that highly orgapized elvilization manages to excel in anything which it turns {its hand.” The Boston Globe believes that it will, and that “the white monopoly of force seems to haye had .~ ¥ white folks 1a upremacy. th ey - WASHINGTON, D. C, your trip, and this is| ' EDITORIAL DIGEST wo | ) Georges Carpentier | sity. We have some of these kind of individuals who drop into the office every day or 5o and they generally | take up about an hour or so of our time explaining why they want to go to such a place, and they ®et us to prepare a route for them, but in many cases they fail to start on the journey. These kind of people we call ‘thought trippers’ and it is not an uncommon occurrence to later hear some of them describe a trip that they have made, but the most distant point on said trip is our of- fice. Being a tourist agent is a great Iife—for the developmgnt of patience.” * ok kX 1D vou ever stop and think what an unreal life the majority of those on the stage lead? In the land of make-believe they lead an exist- cnce unlike any class of people in the world. ‘Their hours are topsy- turvy and the vast majority of them have nothing in common with the rest of the folks in the world. It is an artificial glamour in which they shine and there are many of them with one-track minds; they do not appear to be able to grasp any of the great | fundamentals ot life nor can lhe)’l i seem to appreciate anything except the groove in which they live. I ¥ ok Kk X S the winter months approach A one mind instinctively turns to snow and slush, rain and cold, damp days, to the coal supply, and just fwhat winter wraps will be needed {during the rigors of the months to come, and as you contemplate the coming of the sniffling and nose tin- gling season you cannot help but won- {der what Is to become of the goloshes {that the flappers wore last winter. L | JUST about a month and the trouble J will be over for two years to come, that is, the active hard fighting part of the trouble. The constant under- surface seething will continue, but ihe nerve-racking, back-breaking | work of vote getting will be over in a few more weeks. Orators are on the stump, meetings of this or that committee are being held, conferences are the order of the day, political leaders are marshaling their forces | for the Ides of November. Those who would save the country from imme- | diate destruction are putting down on paper plans for the next Congress. Marching clubs are being formed, bands are rehearsing and the dealer in red fire is dusting off his ca | Pushing. pulling, tugging, strivine | for vietory at the polls, and from some of the statements hurled from the stump ay the opposition one would imagine that the quest of the man with, the lantern wa: vai not dis- “wishes 1o s victory over the en a new turn to| | basis which knockouts will turb,” for whether Siki have it so or no | White man has g the auestion. 1 Dead Dogs. i ‘Let sleeping dogs lie” ] loug-honored maxim that must go into the incinerator. Yea, even though Fido be sleeping the eternal sleep of death, he is not {0 be per- is another mitted to lie still and continue his nap. Thomas J. Allen tells hicago Broup of scientists that he can take @ dead dog, or one apparently dead, and by certain manipulations of heart and lung se and walk. The dead dog can be made to act just like any other dog, except that his brain apparently doesn't function. The learned doctor believes the same methods may be applied suc- cessfully to dead people. or apparent- Iy dead people, whose organs are not worn out. But will the doctor confer a great blessing upon humanity by applying his methods of resurrection? The dead dogs were made to function in every w. except mentally. The trouble with cur world right now ts that we have altogether too many people functioning that way. Do we want to raise up the dead to vote according to the most catchy slogan?” ! i"r. Do we was. an_army of ghosts| to follow tne first loud-mouth- ed jingo Into war? Does the nation need any ac those who ons to the ranks ot pick their teeth in the streets, jay ve on busy corners, ladvocate ship subsidy in the interest | of the farmers. split infinitives and hairs and blame their wives for the cost of living? Unless vou car make them function mentally. doctor. better let the sieep- ing dogs and Lumans lie—Wichita Eagle. Diet and Efficiency. “If music be the food of love| what's the food of war? “Upon what meat doth this, our Ceasar, feed that he hath grown so great?” is a ques- tion that has never been answered in detail. Jack Dempsey says he eats meat once a day, drinks coffee in the morning and gets away with, plenty of fruits and vegetables at all | meals. In the German army the diet of the troops was thought to be re- duced to a matter of scientific ex- actness. But the war upset mor. than one German theory. It appears that the favorite food of the Amer- ican doughboys was not meat all, but sweet chocolate, chocolate cake and | whipped cream, plus cigarettes. At least that was what they consumed in vast quantities during the early days of their occupation of the Rhineland, and they introduced this {inspiriting fodder to the German people, and the craze for these things ' has now spread throughout Germany. | ‘The rotund native German now sinks | into a_chair in a cafe of the Unter den Linden and instead of a stein orders a cup of chocolate, large quantities of whipped cream and as | many cakes covered with thick choc- | olate frosting as the waiter willl bring him. Several portions are usually ordered; the demand for cig- | arettes has increased in the same! ratio. Who says the American can't teach the learned Germans a thing or two?—Anaconda Standard. Constantine seems to know an exit when he sees it.—Asheville Times. Note to the janitor: “You may fire when ready, ~ Gridley. hazoo Gazette. The public has respect for a dry dry or, wet wet, but not for a, wet dry.— Boston Herald. It will be a great series. New York hotel prices are expected to go wild over it.—Detroit News. ‘We should welcome the invention of a political fence that would keep the political bull from roaming at large— Columbia Record. ‘There i8 no reason why the old shouldn’t be a wonderful lovemak;'..uflfl: has nothing else to do.—Toledo Blade. England may have saved her soul, as Is‘z‘f:‘mtzm;-l“‘ l:ml it h)o!k‘.etha United es Ip_her save her bacon.— Cincinnati - Enquirer. ‘Canada Moves to Curb Fi - worc” - Dam 1t 1a the 6y o tharothar side of the border, and “Damn it” is the echo on this.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. Most young men and women, says rduu.wr need a sort.of education u:: is not given by the ave college, Now. what gulfi. i TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1922. e Sold ane Caarantec’ hvemmgr L suffered for 2 years with Eciama in fte lg_fim... or e CWeition Duo yesrs afier CRANGLENE.) AtatiGrugstoves, 35cA81. | | Money Pesitivaly Returned if Not Satlsfiec 3 | | .‘"‘;lnp-uhnmloy"| 1 icCracken. Peoples Drug Stores SKIN OF VELVETY LOVELINESS MADE SO AND KEPT SO BY Dermatone Soap 19¢Calm~3far S0 A We don’t often use comparative prices, but shirts identical with these are selling in stock now at $5, $6 and 87. So we are sure of the values. They are shirts appreciate comfort—shirts that fit as they should, .with every detail finished to custom-make precision. The more you know about silks, the better you will appreciate the v: ues—choice of all these: —Baby broadcloth silks —Satin-striped jerseys —~Gayley & Lord’s finest fiber silks (best there is). Collar-attached styles & negliges The collar-attached silks are in white broadcloth silks onl: The negliges are in white, colors and fancy stripes. All sizes 14 to 161%. ! Sale other fine, mesh knits. The Silk grenadine knit ties ; $2.50, $3 and $3.50 kinds Pure silk—twisted and knotted in fish net and plain’ colors and combinations in fancy stripes and Paint-Wise People & | —insist on getting RELIABLE PAINT PROD- | i UCTS, such as we handle. They know the | economy of QUALITY PAINTS and are satis- fied of the superiority of DYER BROS.’ goods. We are ready to serve you with all fall “beauti- fiers,” including— i HOUSE PAINTS BATHTUB ROOF PAINTS, ENAMEL, | PORCH PAINTS RADIATOR WALL PAINTS, ENAMEL, FLOOR STAINS MOTGR CAR { VARNISEHS ENAMELS, and WAX, POLISHES, Etc. SEE US ABOUT GLASS TOPS —for that office desk, your buffet, dining table and bureaus. We cut and fit glass for this purpose at moderate cost. Distributors of All Sherwin-Williams Products DYER BROTHERS ic. Wholesale— PAINTS AND GLASS —Retail 734 Thirteenth St.— Phone Main 2164 for men who know quality and —Heavy radium fiber silk —W hite broadcloth silks Open end and four-in-hands— 5] & (The Hecht Co., men's shop, first floor.) Hecht Co 7th dt_/ F