Evening Star Newspaper, February 25, 1923, Page 4

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RELAND OVERAVED O EBELATTDKS ] Armed Minority Threatens)| Whole Social System of the ! Emerald Isle. ENGLAND IS ALARMED! Problem of Free State Bids Fair to Rival That of Ruhr, BY A: G. GARDINER. Britain's Greatest Liberal Editor. LONDON, Lids fair ebruary al the Rulir a vernment. | black mtaertty of | le sovtat | arplution H i atified the 3 Vo ed a pariament to | awed erate men H And: Turkiey Seored by Tardieu THE SUNDAY Compares Policies With That of. Bloy:b‘ George at Genoa—Memel Outbreak Viewed With: Uneaseness. Sees: No-Clearance of: European. Skies The Ruhr occupancy has settle d down to an endlramce contest and Britain and France continue to drift apart. Insecurfty of their relations adds to the danger of the outbreak between Lithuania and Poland over France is Eending o ncw mission in character, but really politi . France has played with Turk and now does tha same thing w BY ANDRE TARDIEU Former French the’ United Br Cable to The Star. v PARIS, Febr X ish relatiens rémain muddied Bnhr sftuat'on continues There is grave uneasiness over the ! Polish-Lithuanta bres The French | poliey toward Russta has taken u new| turn That weok. i unchansged. | ) t f the ! of the are ar sums up the news of In the Ruhr the strike workers s spreaiing, while workers remaining on the job ackening speed. The nines shops seem to be producing akh for consumption, i d quent! nee amd Belglum ure | i ttling down to « test of endurance. U powers had plenty of thae to seitle the Memel question durimy t ey frit- when the foree Memel. to Russia, designated as economio as Lloyd George did with Germany, France has been anxious to 2 compromise that would satisiy ! giand despite her-plain rigbts, buti he should, 1ike all comproinises, it probably will satisfy nobody. X The nsecurity of the Iranco-Brit- sh relations is particularly disturh- nz not on aacount ot rehas, ia uppening in Germangy, but also be- ‘n|'nR- «.rhnw M!g}“ lopments_in ho TPolish-Lithuanigd = crisis. he hree years, but, a8 usual ered uway thelr time and only de- cided to allot the city to Lithgania latter took possessioh by New Outbreak Complicating. Meanwhile the zrave hostile dents between the Poles and Lithuan. ans in the neutral zone established )y the league of nations has compli- cated the sitution. The Russiuns, N . less. Womnen guilty of ovardr Vie With 2 Bars | AtParis ArtBall A'Y WILLIAM BIRD. | Special Calle to The Star. PARIS, JFebruary 24.—The Latin quarter agiin has tried to stage u comeback. Xt made.a brave cffort to regain e old-time supremacy through the mediums of the bal bullier, famo®y for ronny genera- tions as the svene of gay student revels. Staged last might ey a great “transmontal” ball in behalf of destituto Russian artiste, many of whom are said to lack «othing, it Wwas un assured successa It may have been true that thq Russian artists lack clothing, buu the men who were present at the ball seemed well, wven gaily clothed, while the girls at least mppeared . 1o he well fed. Like its rival function, nual Qu: ures wre sure the the ai z Arts ball, strij:t me: taken ai the dolor to in- attendance of only the lact. Instructions were given to mit only “wite; madmawn, phil- phers, drunkards and - lovers” and to yestrict the erowd: to not more than 30,000, and perhap: whik: not ned upon. he trempendous succass of the function insures its heimy m peat- ¢d next year. Indeed, the qrgan- izers declare they will ghve it annually so long as thero i3 a uglo unclothed Russian in 1arie. vo bars competed with four orchestrus Supplying “the en- and although Dr. cntified ux aong vbody ugreed Wore om. the wetter and excludedq wero in party Zetting wetter {ab (Copyright, 1925.) H —_————— ing’ With Russiimns. \Four Orchastras |Efforts to Declared Doo. \Maximilian Harden Sees Only Temporary 1923 —PART 1. Stakiilize Mark med to Failure Relief So Long as Presses Turn Out Billions in. Currency Every Day No. Salvation. for Garmany ftorts of successtul, eventuaily must fall. Germun industries are unable longer to competd, while increasing prices of raw materials are forcing sbutdowns, ere can be no salvation until the government iinitiates extreme reforms in every branch. are accepted Byen then permanent improvement will come and an agreement with France on ri reached. BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN, Germmny’a Foremost: Journalist. Te 'h and By Cable ta The Star. BERLIN, Februury orinting ’ establishmonts ! work majing money for the | state. | probably-only the omniscient mummay, | Pharach Tutankhamen, { many otbers are secretly-enjoying the | same pastime. | repeated warnings in the public press ! | against specific series of note issues, | which suggests the business of utter- | ing Logus currency, still is a. profit- pastime ~—Thirty-three It is said all to be official. knows how This, judging by the official presses, operating night nd day, are delivering between sixty seventy billion marks to the now are at} | ani; the government to stabilize the mar®, while temporarily Iy when debts materials is / cently have been able to meet theirn y expenses, natumally now are furious, owing to the shyinkage in, the Drices of the actual neceasities of life have fallen little, if- at all, the ap- nfined to calers in. t that they were compelled to pur- #e at high prices and campot sell price of thelr security boMings. parent reductions being Hvernment transactions. X at-any reduction at this time. Situation Grows Worse. THe situation throughout the coun-s try seadily grows worse. It is simple fact that the great portion of Germam industries are unable longer exchange are Shoald the Rubr blockade become real there must be a terrible shortage of coal, because the little bit of British fugi to compete, owing to the situation, and plants gradually shutting down cverywhere. that has been brought in cost too much %o be in reacheor ordisary o dustry. The result will be completo crippting of German industrv, _Stfl} afclaldom endeavors to con- tinus to compel the public to helieve that the artificial inflation of the mark s @ “war measure” which will have a vdry perceptible eficct in the Rubr. It reminds of the old gamble of the kapser gnd his followers in 1914, The proposed gold loan, which is supposed to be an investment and not to redupe the real value of sav- ings of tmose who invest, comes rather late. Only a few discontented people who have fluid cash or are un- able to make immense profits othe wise will take @ chance in this propo- sition, which offers only 6 per cent interest. They will prefer to buy dollars or good imdustrial shares, from which thay will hope to garner cenormous dividends. Litde MHope Now. No country can hope for salvation either through the wand of a wizard or propaganda so far as its currency 18 concerned so longg as it encourages an immense number of drones in its official class, does nat exact from its wealthy clagses their irue proportion of taxation, prints a billion in new currency ¢very few dlys, when coal is short shuts down tha public schools the same time permittgng movies to be shown three timed w day and wastes much electric power in dance halls, tauranty and saloons, There will be no pernanent im- made on the reparation obligations to demonstrate to the world that Germany will keep her word and an agreement is reached wih France whereby there will be u reasonable exploitation of the natural resources existing betwe: c Scheldi and t Rhige. But as intervention by oui- side governments is withheld, such a a (Copyright, 1923.) PR S The bloom of youth is charming, unless it blooms a little lig! one cheek than on the Memmphis News-Scimita and cuts out many tmiins while at| provement until & payment has been | SATIRE ON PROFIBITION BRINGS ABOUT ARREST Secretary of Art Exhibition in New York Held After Showing of Painting. By the Associated Press, NEW YORK, February 24.—Detecs tives tonight arrested Abraham Ba linson, secretary of the Society of Independent Artists, at the Waldort- Astoria Hotel, for violation of the penal code in having permitted the display at an exhibit there of & paint- ing by J. Francis Kaufman, “The Marplage of Cana of Galilee.” The picture was selzed as evidence. It portrayed Christ at the wedding feast of miracles, with a figure, sald | by crities to resemble Andrew J. Vol- | stead, clutching His shoulder and pointing to another figure, & likte- ness of William J. Bryan, who was | pouring from the jug the water Christ {had just turned into wine. Nearby stood a figure in an “iron hat,” viewed as that of Willlam H. Anderson, state syperintendent of the anti-saloon league. GETS WEST POINT CADETSHIP. John L. Voegler of 1447 South | Carolina avenue =outheast, sergeant | in Company C. Mist Engineers, Na | tional Guard of the District of Colum- { bia, has been appointed a cadet at the United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y., subject to qualifl- on at the entrance examination t» eld March 6 reichsbank. but it is expected the out- put soon will reach 125 billions. Still, as in e kalser's time, these marks | bear the promise to pay to bearer the | number of “marks” stated thereon. | Despite the enormous issue there also } is a scarcity, and one. wonders wheth- er trainloads of these worthiess marks may not have been sent to the Rubr: to secure wuges and to repay lhci beles of pessonal currency issued there by the great Industrial firme. | 1 1 All Prices. Hig! { There is complete co-operation b “|ttveen the two countries. Both Par © 1and Brussels sert that Germany o |will tind her adversaries possess in - | vincible tenacity of purpose. Th - {means the present conditions will ntinue unchanged for some weeks ! Least. Law Well Supported. Jdebates tn the house of com- howeal that Bonar Law is well supported in his determination to unde: ¢ nothing to hamper Frunce. {We must admit his “neutrality” is {not th thing us the entente {coraial, but it is gratifying in com- i parison with Lloyd George's aggres- policy. latter et ihe piien: | The, Jtusatens | EDLOGIES IN HOUSE TODIAY diation in threatening tones. . \é. would be interesting to now just! : What German and soviet influences)Services to Be Held for Four Mém- are operating at Knovno { : Anyhow it is just another tinder| bers Who Recently Died. box in eastern Europe. and theleast! pulogies of four recently deceawad we can suy is that, considering the | oabers of the House will by ga liver&\! in the House today. The dew imminence of the conflugration, the tiremen are displuyving a I:annlflbl\’. lack of discipline. iceased members are Representatives At this moment the French govern- | John I’ Nolan, California: Shermart ! ment is preparing to send to Moseow %oy‘fiu{‘rfit}..\ x*"zi‘rkéf{f.’“-‘??,%‘%,J,’fl e T S L | Montoya, Ne&w Mexico, i & {al reason. No.wander, therefore, that what is d ribed as an economical, For the tfir®g time in the history off | these billioms of new currency disap- hut is really a political. mission. (s country & womnan member of (he | peur so rappdly. The German govern. ¢itably toward a rapproche- ! band Moscow last summer established | Chief mourner and successor to her {ing from the victors In the war and Promises Canmot Be Trusted. uch eminent financers as Max War- olding t. ¥. ssed by the outiook f bitterness regardl n profoundly con e of the rapld degeneri. | GIVING AWAY HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS IN OUR BIG OVERSTOCKED SALE Yes—we are going to take a loss of hundreds of dollars to clear our shelves quickly of merchandise you really need right now for home beautifying. We are holding this sale for two days so every one will have an opportunity to share in on these remmarkable values. THESE PRICES ONLY FOR MONDAY AND TUESDAY Fumiture Braid Marquisette Marquisette Colored Madras 21% yds., 10c Curtains A Wonderful Value Blue, Rose, Green or Gold. o 2. Fine Quality an: . Yd, 22¢ Yd, 42Ysc c"z"'; ; *’B‘“ldmoc' Beoes Imitation Leather ~ Mercerized Madras The uftering 1a 1 ry when he spoke H Ald ahout France's action m th Ruhr. He forgot that he signed London ultimatum of May o, 1921, threatening the occupation of the Ruhr if Germany did not rulfill her chgagements and he forgot his own *ch on the Sth of the same mo he forefully defended s dectded on ut the cabi- | on Febru: Al H o - s’ pursued toward the Turks has|the memorial sévvices for her hus | Moimcatione sines Auguct han theown . = whom .fl?" succeeded in- Con large accumulations of foreign cur- -nt with the soviets. Herriot's trip {&ress. Mrs. Nolan will be prexent g \,mfl, onto_the market, besides buy- sion has lost its power Ak o DS ERpiant . JeEWETE b iats fic : e i 1 effort to ere brigang: den. | NS PATENT VERDICT. "RYGSU(T 5 ne face of the aavice of Justice Bailey of the District Su- reme (" 1t hus signed a decree | e 2 This news will be denied. but it is| The {House will ocdipy her seat during!|inent, which has not paid any of its | | the first_point of contact. The Potn- |late husband. lagatmi (iel vl Iy e wac snd )| Mcndelsohn and Melchoir, who urg, For nchmen hold that nego- Pair, 90c Yd, 75¢ osing seifish ssion of the only b for himself hindmost Lurned yours will be of mingicd is infecting cver nber of the community is wondering to v strophe events are driftin e international fiel holds enter of t ing a him political genius 1t and the liberals are so in intrepld leadership that many prophets forecast his early re- sumption of his former place within the party Opposition astutely, situntion Zet back into Hmelight. Liber: r. but his 10 French, ° is seizing upon the 1S the opportunity to prominence and the ” nd lubor opinion ith increasing momentum to the French Ruhr % in making himeelf the nnel for the most decisive expr sion of that feeling Lloyd George is rendering it difficult for his old friend Lo resist hia overtures for re- ion significant fact of the situation 15 that in taking a strong line of ap- parent hostility he is not fncurrin Bonar Law. I to be attac Poincar to the government & the resentment of its the latter's policy hostile to the . but is anxious to ration in par- the French move- strengthened the premier Tench government. whish ows the weizht of publ ments ha with ti now k fon be pressed Zetic with week | more ener- ny new cvents of the ¢ consolidated the on the Ruhr adventure an, definite action eannot much longer be delayed. SUBSIDY STRENGTH LOOMS UP IN VOTE inued_from been prevented by the f coming fo a vote. The this motion follow: For: Republicans—Bail, Brandegee, Bursum. Calder, Cameron, Cummins, Curtis, Dillingham. Ernst. Fernald, Frelinghuysen, Gooding, Hale, Har. veld, Johnson, Jones of Washingt Kelloge, K. Lenroot. Lodge, Me- Cumber, McKinley, MecLean, Moses, Nelson, New, Oddie. Page. Pepper, Phipps, Poindexter, Reed of Panneyl vanfa, Shortridge, Smoot, Spencer, Sterling, Sutherland. Townsend, Wads vorth, Warren, Watson, Weller and Willis—43. Democrats — and Ransdell—3. Total for—46. Azaingt: Republicans—Boral, Brosk- hart, Capver. Couzene, Ladd, La Fol- latte, MeNar: nd Stanfleld-—o Democrats Bavard way. Culberso: Georgé. Gla Hitchcock, Jones of New Kendrick, King, McKellar, Overman, Pittman. Robinson, Sheppard, Shields, Swith, Stanley, mmell, Walsh of Mas . Walsh of Montana and 29, Total aga ibu: s from roil ca 11 on urst, on, sachuset t—28. Ends Filibuwter, Neither side in the fighit would say | imous consent to “extend and revise” | tion enforcement unit. definitely how closely this vote would ve represented Yine-up had the bill been Brought to a vote, but lead- ers on hoth sides said it would not have varied greatly on the final roll call, the variance depending on the amendments to the bill that had been adopted. The test of strength and the agree- ment to proceed tOmMoOTrrow with the motion” to recommit the legislation served fo bring to an end the fili- buster begun last Monday night and continued until adjournrent Friday. After the votes taken yesterday the Senate spent the rest of the session n constdération of caleridar bills, and thé shipping legislation was entiofied but once, when Senator King, Utdh, in the course of remarks on anéthér Bi)l, referred 1o it we ‘s sword of Damdclés hanging over our ontn- | war | Broussiard, Pomerene | ' { matter; facts do not handicap. In Datly DifRculties. | It is rather auda us for him 7 |10 complain of IFrance when for the past eighteen months Germany has avoided all of her 1919 engagements. Honar Law is more reasonable and less unfriendly, but his hesitant policy brings him into daily difficulties. The question of the railroads in the Brit- h occupied” areas is an examiple. rance under the treaty of Versuilles has an undisputed right to use these railrouds, sinee all of the Rhineland 1ailroads are under the authority of Gen. Degoutte as commander-in {chief. But iingland fears trouble in her zone he lets the French troope | {DRY LAW TILT PUTS | HOUSE IN UPROAR | (Continued from First Page.) (Mr. Upshaw) a few months ago | |referred to half of the membership | of this House as drinking rum.” de- | clared Mr. 3 | This was denfed later by Mr. Up-| shaw. who declared that the state- ment was not “borne out by the fac jand that o thing not a fuct i ubso lutely false.’ At the suggestion of Representative Madden, republican, Illinois. Mr. Gal- livan withdrew the language to which Mr. Blanton objected, and went on | cith his address in which he in-| veighed against the Increasing cost of | ! prohibition enforcement, and predict- | |ed that If the present tendency of | erowding the courts with liquor cases continued as a result of the “snoop- ing of federal agents, the Department | of Justice would become the “Pooh| | Bah of America.” | i As he concluded, the Massachugetts I member caused a ning of necks by { announcing that he would address the last paragraph of his speech “to the gentleman who sits behind the clock | in the gallery, the Hon. Wayne B. Wheeler, of the Anti-Saloon League, | {the man who says it is law! to {agitate for the repeal of the Volstead jlaw; [ say to him that he belongs to | the tribe of the Pharoah whose tomb | | nas Just been opened at Lusor after | 3.000 years. | “Drys” Hit Back. Replies by the “drys” were deferred until after Representative Tinkham | nad read into the Congressional Rec- | {ord a letter from Willlam Dudley | Foulke of the Natlonal Clvil Service i League to S. E. Nicholson, secretary of the Anti-Saloon League, in which the charge was made that the pro- hibition enforcement service was ‘corrupted from top to bottom by a set of depraved political officials appoint- od under the 8poils system which you ! promoted.” Mr. Foulke was protest- ing against a Senate bill proposing to { place the present prohibition enforce- i ment force under the civil service, a measure, which He churged, had the suppirt of the Anti-Saloon League. Making the first reply for the “drys.” Representative Dickinson, re- publican, lowa, declared It was Cost- ing the government “practically noth- | {ing” to enforce prohibition beecause {of the fines and penalties collected I from violators of the Volstead act. Representative Cramton followed with @ denial that the Washington | newspaper article to whioh Mr. Gal- {livitn had referred contained any ref- : orence to the Anti-Saloon League di- recting an investigation against mem- bers of Congress. ! “It is all a _part of an attempt to ! pesmirch and hesmudge,” he declared. { "1t is u case where truth does not is 1y to put on here a good vaudeville Loy 0 BuL ot right here, Where we know thie sort of performance. “1f it is n@(‘esla{y. t;) get egfereg. { fent in this country, to spend more | than $14,000,000 we are going to do it." declared Mr. Cramton amid ap-! plause. ! Raps Attack on Lawmakers. i Mr. Cramton had been recognized i for only twe minutes and asked unan- Gallivan. his remarks in the Record. but Mr. Gallivan objected and he was granted two more minutes. “Thadk God I can say in two min- utes someéthing ¢ * ¢ “N6 you can’t,” interrupted Mr. Gal- lvan. “That will answer the statements of men who have spent fifty min- ates,” concluded Mr. Cramton, “In be- smirching law and order and who dare not let me put my facts Into the Record.” “Will the gentlemen tell us about Anderson in New York? shouted Mr. Represenitative Upshaw declared that if he were “as smart as Mr. Gal- {ivan s supposed te be &nd could en- tertain people as he can I would not prostitute my eloquence, learning and time by defending the liquor traffic of the saloon that {s the trysting of anarchy and the gateway to e Declaring that he would rather be | set of men than the members of the {taught to call cvrime,” and Represent- b the soviet under pres- nt conditions only cultics of the present situation s ssive and contradictory promises t Le trusted. It also cannot be ~d that 4n Angora-Moscow -Ber- lin understanding exists, and it 1511 logical that it should. In cvery day languag played f ckers as Lloyd George| was at Genoa. Again the conquerors | Imitate each other's mistakes. France | has played with Turkey as Lloyd George plaved twith Germany, and! now we're doing the same thing with | the Russians. Truly, it is searcely a| zo0d time to choose such & plan. (Copyright, 1925.) Their {2 | | i i 4 “wet” congressman voting “dry” | than a “dry” congressman “voting| liquor on other people.” Representa- | tive Blanton said he did not believe | there could be found a more “sober Senate and the House. Joining in the debate, Representa- tive Quin, democrat, Mississippi, said Mr. Gallivan need not be uneasy about & waste of ey; that what he “ought to be un: about is that he is villifying thoxe who respect tho law and causing some people to have | o he Constitution iteelf.” v shouted Representative shaw above the din of the applause | that greeted this statement | HOLDS DRY LAW TOO COSTLY. Quoting official statistics from the Department of Justice which show that 54 per cent of the time of thel| United 'States district attorneys| throughout the country is taken up, with prohibition enforcement and|| that the cost of the Department of Justice has increased 80 per cent dur- | ing prohibition days, Representative| Gallivan of Massachusetts, democrat, sought to prove that cnforcement of the amendment was practically im- possible. Referring to an_article in The Lvening Star by David Lawrence which quoted President Harding as saying that in his opinion it would be a matter of twenty-five years be- fore the prohibition law would be fully enforced, Representative Galli- van calculated that the cost would be $620,756,996,000,000 or “more money than the world has ever known.” | Scouts Disloynity Charge. 1 He protested that it was not dis-| loyal to the government, but true love for the government which prompts an effort to have the Volstead law re- pealed, sayin “The man who says it Is disloyal and lawless to agitate for the repeal of the Volstead law, or even of the eighteenth amendment, does not be- long to the tribe of Abraham Lincoln, or that of Thomas Jefferson. e be- long to the tribe of Abroham Lincoin Wwhose tomb has just been opencd at Luxor after 3,000 years.” Representative Galllvan said that one of the greatest curses of profibi- tion is that it is breeding defiance of the laws. . “Tt will appear to any man who interests himself that the more ma- chinery we create to suppress crime the greater the increase of crime, or what in recent years we have been ative Gallavan. “You all know that under some of our laws today the American citizen, honored, respected, industrious and patriotic, ts called a criminal at home, yet that same man may cross our international border or sail across teh seas fn any direction where he will be greeted and wel. comed as a most destrable citizen or visitor. “We were told that prohibition, for instance, would reduee crime to a minimum in thls country; that the Taw would enforce itseif and pay fts way. Aye, we were told in this chamber "that it would put millions into the Treasury of the United States. And yet we have had to appropriate in the last few years more than $9,00 000 annually to support the prohibi- | Huge Eafevcement Bill. “You know it, but I want you to know something else, and that ts that our committee has learned in the hearings on this bill that oue-third of all the mouey {h&t you appropriate for the Department of Justice, which for the next fiscal year is approxi- mately $18.560,000, ‘must be spent by that department in the prosecution of offenders against the alleged wholesome (?) Volstead act. “Mark my. words, we will be com peiled to inerease the burden of tax- ation now om the shoulders of our Deople or else we must practice great- er economy in other rtments of the government to enable this one ab- normal law to function; and, as I have said more than once in this chamber, I cannot be persuaded -that it will ever funétion while the Amer- lcan le hold to their old princi- 168 which they learned from the ‘athers of this republi¢c and to which they have held for & century and a half ” s In add to the dim.}PRAY; Inc for infringement. e e will bel o Corporation. noted wn appeal. | supersedeas bond was fizked at $25,000. = 3 & | thes J. has the P, Rowley the manufaqiure of artifi- clal 1imbs. in certait particulars. The ¢ ourt decrced an aopounting by the | anger Company of rived fanger Com- | Couns: Al . tay this hope cannot be realized. fptringed the patent | the msoment they have brought the Company, | exchamnge down from b 20,000, sse relatively cheap coal, copper and foodstuffs. its” profits de-! ddilar went down from sales under the ullexed| suoaks to figures which represent less for the Han-!tham one-third of their real pre-war value. | Millions of rweople, ,000 for a dollar thus epabling them to pur- cotton, But with the the price of all who until New group of women's and misses’ sprinig sport coats of overplaid, mixtures and plain ma terials. Pre ty silk Iing; full lengths, Swagger. back: fan button trin Large ranzse styles, in checks or plain material. box back, most models have pockets. shades. $1 Flowered Gowns, 79c Women's Goad Qual- ity Pink Flowered Crepe Gowns, full cut, width_and_lenct Good absorbent non-irritant; 10 , % posed or 3 only $1. Boyrs' and Neatly Mude Blue or Fancy HT"I; Fast color pink or blue checked ginghmm. Mother HuhbBard styles. i sizes 2 and 3. Mauslin or Knit Bodies, 25¢ Roys' or girle’; well made, strongly taped ceams and taped bof- #1316 TO 1324 7TH ST. I Red Star Birdeye, 10 Yds. rade, antiseptic mnd ds s Growing Girls' and Women’ Patent Leather Pumps | &1.95 A beautiful new patent leal pump, with neatly perforat panels of patent. heel with rubber top lift. Sizes 2% 4o 6. ide sleeves, flare or belted buckle and A few capes amons this lot in leading Sizes to 44. in_bundle, cpm- Worth $1:954 at er, one-strap tip anid side Have regular walking tons.__ Sizew 2 _tm Women's. 25¢ Pink Mesh Bandeaux, 19¢ men's _and ’ stimpen’ Pink Mesh Bandeaus. bound edges, elastic insert; all_wzen. $1 Bungalow Frocks, 79¢ Made of good au 1ty fast color percale: e wevernl styles. Me- dlam and_large sizes. Séc Step-Ins and PBeomers, 39¢ Women's; full eut. batiste, crepe check nainsook. white, forh, orenia ar fiowered. $T_Double-Bed Sheets, 79¢ Made of s sturdy woven blenched sheet- ing eettom, center seam. ' ommed_ends. To 25¢ Yd.-Wide White Goods 12Y/¢ Batiste, nalnsook, longeloth, m uelia. checked " dimity _and pajama checks; sheer e VaraWide Percales, 15¢ 4 to 8. Towels, wilkotime: welght. Sizes 7 to 14 Stippers, made with flexible soles and rubber heels. Sizas 25¢ Huck Towels lity, double thread, all white wetas with seit color border: Reavy government quality. Bedspread Sets Good weight, matin Marseilles Bol- ster and Bedspread, all white, scal- loped and cut corper: ralsed de- signs; each set in box. $3.50 Dble.-Bed Comfort Cavered with a good grade of flowered filled with white, mew ecotton sad stitcled through and through; heavy 18 Men’s Suits, 9 Men’s Over- Suits in sizes 35 to 46, and Qrercoats in sizes 33 to 30. Don't delay, these quickly. Actually worth to $20.00. i > & 5 Boys’ Saits Two pants mixed sults and one pants corduroy suits that must be cleaned out now. $1.00 & | 15¢ tiie is a Size Wx34. '10 s will be sold very Regular $1.00 Quality. Ball Fringe ol Yd" be In All (tklgam Cretonne Braiding Yd, 3%¢ Yd, 5¢ Colored Burlap 25¢ Gold Braid Yd, 18c lzyzc yd. In fi:} '!l'l;:fi;:"l‘l White Awning Yd, 22Yc Fringe, 12'c yd. Marquisette Dotted Swiss Curtains Very Good Quality. Hematitched. Linen Edge Yard, 24c AR Corners and Insertion. Hematitched, Pr., $1.35 Pair, 70c Cretonne Square Pillows 29¢c and 49c Sunburst Round Pillows Each, 69¢ Slip-Cover Linene 22¢, 25c¢, 35¢ yd. Rep, 50 ins. wide Yd, 55¢ Mercerized Rep Yd, 85¢ Satine Lining Yd, 55¢ Marquisette Curtains Some With Linen Edge Pair, $1.10 Scrim Very good quality. Yd, 12¢ Marquisette Extra 20 quality. d, 13c Figured Scotch Madras Natural Color and White. Yd, 29¢ Scotch Madras Green_ Blue and Bose. R, e, Yd,, 35¢ i n All Colors. UPHOLSTERY NOVELTY::».STORE 623 7th St. N.W. . The Reed Shop—The Drapery Shop Ea, $1.25 Pair, 80c Yd, $1.95 49¢c and 69c Near Corner of 7th and G Sts. R R Apartment Size Grand Piano o n‘ w i) ? i i il 95 3 VERY day more and more Washington homes are being supplied with this dainty, compact apartment size, baby grand piano, featured as our club special at $585.00. The number of members in this baby grand piano club is limited to the number of pianos purchased for this event. Don'’t let the club close without getting one of these pianos if you ever wanted a grand. Terms of payment are so easy. Select your piano this week and fulfill your wish—you can own THIS grand piano. Let us tell you. how. Delivered for a Small Cash Payment--- Balance on Easy Terms Homer L. Kitt Company IBrabe = 1330 G St NW. I 1

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