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Lot TR D. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1923.° FINED $35 FOR IMBIBING “MEDICINE” TOO FREELY L}ndan Bimms Convicted of Drink- ing Alcoholic ration in Public Place. For imbibing too freely in a me dicinal preparation containing a large percentage of alcohol Linden Simms was fined a total of $35 by Judge THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, 'Healing Gored Matador Wins ICHEMICAL PATENTS Indians Over to Missionaries m B _KE_PL SECRET Judge Reiterates Intention to popular name for the preparation used to rub down athletes. The court thereupon imposed a fine of $20 for drunkenness and an addi- tional $15 for drinking in public. SHERBROOKE, Quebec, July 11.— WIFE ASKS ANNULMENT. The Roman Catholie Church and ked in'Presbytery at Weedon, near here, were destroyed by fire. Defectl CATHOLIC CHURCH BURNS. | Defective Wiring Starts Blaze in ! Quebec Institution. BAND CONCERTS. Concert by the United States Soldlers’ Home Band at the bandstand, Soldiers’ Home, this evening, beginning at 5:50 o'ciock; John 8. M. Zimmer- mann, bandmaster. March, “The Ploneer”. Overture, “Zampa”. .Herold Ballet, music from ‘Faust” (8uite No. 1) (1)Waltz for the Corps d! Ballet; (2) Ensemble of Helen and her Trojan mald- OPERATORS STUDY ~ MINERS' DEMANDS Increase for Contract Work- .Crosby TR Annulment of marriage Is a sult filed in the District Supreme Court by Grace Marshall against|wiring started the blaze, officlals sald Robert Marshall. They were mar-|The damage was estimated at $75,- ried at Fort Myer, Va., April 2, 1920, 000. among them. Their customs are so insanitary that they fall prey to dis ease. The skin diseases come becaus of the excessive use of alcohol. The Incas in Peru were bad enough in Thrilling experiences and danger- ous situations beset the paths ef those who are missionaries in the| heart of South America, according to o union is in touch with the coal strike | the ringmaster announces: “And | . NS | gkin diseases. We company “to learn those secrets” and are set for i 2 not excellent values— } Unlon e in touch e Coa | ey, e O IOR: e pa | WOUld Fésemble a blacksmith's bellows. | used the stomach pump When they § conbnr” peopicsr™ {iose secrets” and t for banishment. Not that they are been advised that the moeting called | hear from our Magnus.” Whereupon Helped Sick Nativ have eaten dry barley flour and|lecarn how to do the things not ace but he is replacing them with others he considers better. yesterday of the district board of)our Magnus lumbers on the stage,| “It was to help these poor unfor-|Washed it down with water, and they | cording to patents they have taken ¢ ers May Be Taken Up First _ in Committee Meeting. By the Assoclated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 11— Operators and miners of the anthra- cite reglons of Pennsylvania will re- (sume consideration In subcommittee this afternoon of the demands of the employes. There was no fixed Ing a 0 by the Wash- 1 to all Indians who will go In ] rogra hioh demand will be i Arriving at _a place 300 miles in | free discluse publicly trade secrets would f‘k:’“‘“ o ‘:’ :"\80“ e Ington Boys Independent Band. the interior of the country with six | (0 BSt It. and sublect themselves o) " FAnnwiceme:l s Pennsylvania Seventh n up, but i P mallwood, assistant di- bullocks and carte they lved In a|8ttack from the bulls who are mad- d z A one asking for increased wages for| | rector. N dened by Instruments of torture that|after Assistant Attorney General Avenue Street M “Inv 1", . Lithgow mud walls, a straw roof and a to their flesh Afid 5 contract miners will be considered. arch, “Invercargill”..Lithgow the earth as a floor, with the door as | 27 driven into thelr flesh. Anderson had read a prepared state- o Yesterday the opcrators renewed their suggestion that the minors agree to continue work after August 31 in the event no agreement 18 reached by that time, but the union leaders showed no disposition to change their position to the effect that there is plenty of time to nego- tiate a contract. The operators wanted such an agreement in order to allay public apprehension that there will not be a continuous sup- £ply of coal next fall and winter. The miners replied that it was an un- warranted anticipation that the sub- committee could not reach ax agree- MINNESOTA FOR SENATE |these people live,” says Mr. Ford. -1 |Performed. . 3 Anderson's | ment by the end of ‘August and have seen drunken Indlans wallow in | Treat 100 in Morning. S s e It has become necessary for our Shoe Department to take on would have the effect of insuring no early agreement, as there would be no_reason to hurry. While carrying on tie negotiations with the anthracite operators Inter- national President Lewis of the miners the Nova Scotia miners to consider his instructions to call off the strike because it was In violation of the contract with the coal company was postponed until today. It is expect- ©d that if his instructions are not|pedts fi 80 o to tell me about for. | Patched up broken heads, broken arms | and then expect to return to_their 1 Specdlly carried out he will take|gign afaire La Follette, he will tell |and broken legs, relieved indigestion | work in South America. Mr. Ford's E::;:“f-h“Hl’he‘h::‘:;g‘n‘:“gf“ fo the furti:er action. Mo what o de about the railroads. |and treated their skin diseases. Drother, John E. Ford, and s wifec | court that the information sought GOMPERS RAPS REPORT. | Bays Everything Is Against Min- o ; @ oxderbut 1 ‘Qectare u|iD April of that year that the before a government chemist, but this ers’ Interest. e LA [northvest pay up $2.000.000.000 nt was abandoned after the chemist pre- nce. Instead of preventing a crisis, IN CONSUL. sented to the court declined to be Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation, of Labor, in commenting today on the report of | Then he goes on telling them how [siarted by the democrats and was | Many Representatives Abroad | worked out simil. enti X 3 L . . r ar processes from the United States c‘(,fif‘rl'\&s(;?n"'“tilx‘:‘nxlhe Is golng to make those plutocrats | continued” as normalcy by the re- i original research he would be placed Witheut a representative of the mine |in the Senate stand around: how he s Transferred or Pro- o s e workers, s forcing compulsory work | will bawl them out and tell them Wants Better Money System. i moted. e | roup o | on the miners while shielding the|\here to get off. He declares him-| “If elected. I sha 4 | p y ‘ SR, minert TS NI IS whers 0 et o, Ho deslares M| 1 slected, { shal do all } ean 0] cnunges in ne vnised siates con- | WIND HALTS LECTURE. s “Real penalties for the miners, |will come to grief if it tries to put|ihe money and credit question and to|SUIAF Service are announced at the I | phantom penalties for the operators, seem to be the outstanding feature in the program favored by the Fed- ens and Cleopatra and her Nublan slaves; (3) Entry of the Nublan' slaves: (4) Bolo Gance of Cleopatra. Belection from the opera, e Wallace ‘M-A-Double M-¥,” Nelson ‘Silver Sands of Breau Cohen “The Star Spangled Banner.” Concert at Lincoln Park this “Maritana Fox trot, ‘Walts song, Love" Finale, “Canadian Serenade. “Mooning’ .King March, “New Colontal”... . Hall Yes, We Have No Bananas” .. Waltz, “My Buddy”.. March. “Parade of the Wooden Soldlers™ cioes Jessel March, “Apollo”.......... King Fox trot, “You Tell Her, I Stutter” Rose “The Star Spangled Banner.” JOHNSON, MINUS COAT OR COLLAR, STUMPS (Continued from First Page.) erudite orators, who explain the ele- mentary principles of the tariff, for- eign affairs, the world court, the Fed- eral Reserve Board and so on. Then minus coat and galluses. He discards collar and necktle, “I stand by what those fellows say,” he begine. “I don’t know much about those things. I wait until Brook- This Federal Reserve Board I don't know, but I would turn every one of them out and put in dirt farmers. | For that Supreme Court. I believe in law and order, but I don't think that Make Plutocrats Jump. s skull- In a recent interview he anything over on him with 1 duggery. {Federal Reserve Board. Mr. and Mrs. Orley Ford, who are visiting In Washington, and who spent six years among the Incas of Peru and the Quichaus of Equador as Seventh-Day Adventist mission- arles. There is enough adventure In such an undertaking_to thrill any one, for Mr. and Mrs. Ford arrived among a hostile populatior and it was only after acting as physiclans, surgeons, dentlsts and counselors that they won the confidence of the Indian: the only umnlnr They lived in this hut one year before they got a better house. Thelr first night In the hut they had helplessly drunken Indlans and guinea pigs to keep them com- pany, sald Mr. Ford. Opposed by Priests. Fanatical native prlests, he de- clared, stirred up the Indians to de- Stroy ~ their lives and mlission sta- tlon; many threats were made against them, yet they ministered medioal re- Uef to thousands of the red men and ‘women, and never before had the In- dians found a white man and woman to show such an interest In their physical and moral welfare. “I am sure that my father would not | put his cattle in the houses in which | the mud like hogs wallow In the mire, and when they arose in the morning thelr clothing was caked with mud just like a horse is caked after lying in the mud all night.” Mr. Ford says he has seen them eat dry barley flour and drink water and then swell up until their stomachs tunate creatures, who know nothing about the laws of health, and nothing about the plan of salvation, that we went in among them,” he declared. “We have extracted bad teeth,| “The Indians never knew what &l misslonary until we went iIn their drinking habits, but the Ecuador Indians are_ten times worse. “Every Sunday lIs carnival day among the Ecuador Indians. The white men, much to their shame, ar- range bull fights with skiliful mata- dors, but they also plan the program in such a manner as to look upon it as a tame affair if an Indlan or two are not killed in connection with It Get Drunk Before Fight. “These bull fights are held in tenced inclosures, and in the middle of each inclosure is placed a barrel full of “Chicha." Ladles are placed around the barrel, and this is given “The Indians get more Intoxlcated every time they go to the barrel. and the time comes when they cannot run from the bulls. They are then gored to death, and the more blood they lose in this terrible ordeal the more will the onlookers shout. “We galned the confidence of the Indians by treating a woman whose eye had Leen gored out and her face torn from her forehead to the back of her head by a maddened bull. She lay with her eye out for twelve hours and then I was called to glve rellef. I placed the eye back in the socket, after removing some of the bLone, and In_the course of time she got well. This news was carried over a radlus of 100 miles and the In- dlans felt that a miracle had been “We have treated as many as 100 in a morning without leaving the front porch of our house. They have come ten miles, fifty miles, even 100 miles. Their teeth are bad, their stomachs as bad, they have bolls, carbuncles and various blood and have frequently get terribly disfigured as the result of the many fights in which they engage with sticks and stones.” Mr. and Mrs. Ford will spend about a year in America on their furlough have taken their place while they are in the states. _—_—mm—— — little in early 1920, sent out a demand brought it on. rotten That was a case of management. Deflation was provide a better management for the You can de- CHANGES ANNOUNCED | State Department as follows: M. W. Altaffer of Ohio, promoied vice consul at Stuttgar Protect Defense in U. S. Suit Against Foundation. Police Court today. On_the ready drunk, partaking of Schuldt in the District branch of the tand the arresting officer testifled that he had found Simms, al- 'som and the plaintiff asserts the defend- ant misrepresented his mcntal con- dition to her. She declares he was of | —_— A Canadian mill is said to have suc- ceeded in making a high-grade of blotting paper from wood pulp. Here- By the Associated Press. WILMINGTON, Del., July 11.—Fed- eral Judge Morris emphatically an- nounced today that his ruling of yes- more Jumpsteady on the public street.’ Inquiry by the court elicited the infor- unsound mind at the time the cere- mony was performed. Attorney J. 8. Detwiler appears for the plaintiff. in e exclusively | blotting terday that witnesses in the govern- ment's suit agalnst the Chemical Foundation would not be required to ment asserting that the government felt that it would be “serfously prejudiclal to its rights and interes :n this litigation to accevt the sug- gestion of the court” that testimony as to trade socrets be taken in ambers and held Inviolate by coun- ard the court. Declaring that he did not know that it was necessary for him to make any statement In these “un- usual circumstances,” Judge Morris sald that by the ruling the govern- ment would “not be embarrassed in the trial of the case In this court, nor embarrassed in the trial of the case in any appellate court”” His duty is to protect both the government and the witness, he.sald, adding that this was the object of his ruling. Characterizing Mr. sc charged in effect that the govern- ment's purpose In seeking to have Dr. Ernest H. Volwller, chief chemist for the Abbott Laboratories of Chicago, testify as to how his company made workable certain German patents for drugs was to permit rivals of the out.” air. Anderson replied that such a charge was unworthy of notice; that “the government of the United States does not indulge In that kind of highly technical nature that counsel uld not understand it without con- sulting an expert. There was a sug- zestion that the testimony be given present on the ground that if some of his colleagues in his laboratory Senator Willis’ Tent Is Blown Down. Store Summer Hours: 9 to 6 Daily, 9 to 2 Saturdays A New Buyer’s Sale of Ladies’ Summer Footwear a new pilot—and his sailing chart calls for different lines than those of his predecessor. He is to be given a free hand—which means that certain lots In the meantime you shall buy at prices that ring out decidedly as bargains. values up to $10 b S Commission for dealing | was quoted as saying: pend on me to say ‘no’ to the appolnt-|or Virgin i the anthracite coal industry. into things. These lawyers in Wash- | not for keeping business on. an | aPPointed from Chautauqua lecturer to Can- “The commission, by its recom-|ington, they say they know so much. | o " E. De Courcy of Texas, promoted & wian Heve sesterday. wheo & i ° mendation, would invoke the penalty | but half of it is just to fool the other jeven keel. consul at Geneva; A. H. Doyle of |hcavy storm wrecked the tent in of compulsory labor upon the miners. | fellow. I am for the common peo-| “I am as much against labor defla- | Michigan, appointed vice consul at|which he was to appear as chief But for the monopolistic owners of the coal mines the commission would provide a slap on the wrist—a se- .vere dose of publicity. That would ‘be only the ghost, the merest shadow, of a penalty. No Mine Worker. “It is plain to see that of all the “dright minds’ on the committee not one was a representative of the coal miners. 1f there had been & SIngle |ing the bubles and talking farm wich | Stomach |s no blgger than a work-|peg. resigned: E. N. Atherton of Dis- . representative of the men Who &c-|ihe women. He is a dirt farmer him- | Ing&man’s [trict of Columbia, vice consul at 0 A) loe tually produce anthracite coal the|selr. Trieste, transterred to Sofia tempo- — commission would scarcely have rec- PARTY LINES BREAKING. rarily: 'J. W. Bailey of Maryland, ap- ommended that the President be glven full power to fix the wages to be paid tha workers in the event of a suspension of mining opera- tions. “Any attempt to outlaw the right to stop work as a means of improving the condition of the working people of the United States is doomed to fail. Such attempts have failed in the past and will be equally unsuc- cessful in the future never give up the right to strike as a last resort in the fight against wrong and oppression. Profits Now Greater. “The very fact that the commis. have a vots in the Semate. and in a of Arthur Lesuer, one of the organ- slon found that anthracite operators |crisis when it may turn the scale izers of the Non-Partisan League and are receiving nearly three times as|of the legislation pending let us see B! It is said that the chigger, as soon 1 r is at- arge a profit as before the ‘a strong argument against any tempt to force the miners to remaln clared platform: candidacy of Magnus Johnson, farmer- 2 . ; < stand up und i ai work, vear in and vear out re-| Unified government control of rail- [[ICESY » SELU YouRSTeRIISSsI N A i eHIpRtany = P 5 ol 'helfzm ardless of the attitude of the roads, with Immedlate reduction in : % tA . < c wear that normal Samers.. ‘The operators have been|freight rates. Lesuer criticised Mr. Johnson for| Walt Mason. the poet, would call oys { Teaping enormous profits, yet we are told that the miners must be content Labor will | ple and 1 want to be common. I don't give a da for books. I want | things that are alive—not things that | |have been dead thousands of. years. | 1 have read more histories than any | man, but I can’t see a thing in them, | oniy about Lincoln. 1 stand where | he stood. He was a great man. I tquote him in my speeches.” Then he goes down from the plat- | form, mingling with the crowd, Kiss- Senate Shoeked Before. Now, the foregoing is not written | In an unkindly spirit, but just as a picture of the man. Goodness kno he will be no type in the senate. We | have had our “Sockless Jerry” Simp- sons, our bewhiskered Peffers, our i Pitchfork Tillmans and there may be | one or two there now who would not hesitate to do a little demagoguery on the side. But now we come to the serious point of the case—to realize he will | what he stands for and what are his !policies. Here is his officlally de- Government control of federal re- serve banking system. tion. as I am against farmer deflation. | the strength and happiness of a na-! tion depends on the prosperity of its| city workers and farmers, not one or the other, but both. Business in gen- eral can gain nothing by cheap labor and farm prices below cost of pro- duction. Lawyers, doctors. dentists, need a prosperous people to pragtice | on. Grocers and butchers need cus-| tomers who can buy. A millionaire’s | Democrats Urged by Leader to Vote for Gov. Preus. 1 Bs the Assoclated Press. ST. PAUL, Minn., July 11.—Dissen- tion in political ranks which may affect the outcome of the July 16 Uufted Stateg senatorial election in Minnesota, is causing concern among various party leaders. One of the latest “breaks” is the announcement for many years a worker in labor organizations, that he opposes the voting, while a member of the state . J. Fletcher of Malne, as- signed vice consul at Naples: R. F. Howard of Georgia, promoted vice consul at Milan; D B. Lasseter of orgia, vice consul at Hankow, de- atled to State Department: W. J. Mc. Cafferty of California, consul at Han- kow. transferred to Amoy. tempo- Bucharest; S. tarliy; C. E. Macy of Colorado, pro- | moted vice consul at Coblenz; V. W. O'Hara of Kansas. conful at Winni- uevitas: T. E. tts, appointed i W. N. Carroll ul at Lon- pointed vice consul at M Burke of Massachu vice consul at Bombay of North Carolina, vice co; don. transferred 'to Dundee, rarily; W. A. Dunlap of Virginia, vice consul at Melbourne, transferred to Tampico; G. L. Fleming of Missouri, vice consul at Basel. transferred to Bradford; J. W. Henderson of Mary- land. vice consul at Saloniki, trans- ferred to Catania: A. G. Parsloe of Georgia, appointed vice consul at Santos, and A. J. Tavares of Brazil, appointed consular agent at Maran: hao. as he gets all he wants to eat, im- mediately dies. And so a day or so after you come back from a fishing “little red tents tempo- { speaker on the afternoon program. Insurance men said more than $10 000 damase was done crops in this cifit Gie Tack . I Sturdy shoes that will give them. A splendid White Kid, White Canvas and the Colored Kids—Oxfords, Strap Pumps and Sandals. They are all this scason’s good styles—and the lot embraces all sizes from 3 to 8. A Group of Styles values up to $7.00 3.69 Pumps and Oxfords—in the popular leathers—plain and With ‘their present wages. and must| Government control of coal mines, {lesislature, unfavorably. according | foundation for school or | combinations—smart and conservative shapes—flat, low, Cuban, or @ ronditions thin o water power sites and other natural 3 sevt 3 . not iundsc any. condiions Sehink S| water poy ural {to Lesuer, on several labor questions. i Military and Louis heels. They are all excellent makes—and in ceasing their ¢ that will permit the operators to fat- {en at the exnense of the miners de- e L M pocayse | _Cradusted tax on incomes, inherit- | RSk o con's ‘Tormer conection ¢ it ‘Will insist on fair play for the fances and excess profits. with the Equity. Anderson is sup- miners there is no danger of their striking. i “Charges that the commission's re- port had been ‘edited’ by Attorney General Daugherty for political pur- poses may or may not be true. But a reading of the commission’s proposals for dealing with a suspension of mining leads one to believe that it “On the whole, the report cannot 4be considered as constructive, though could hardly have been better cal-( Leglslation making the constitu- Asks Democratic Votes. 83 months. It H = ‘in for the administration | tional rights of free speech, free or - £ H f;,‘i“:.,‘};;’rl”o’} B e press and peaceable assembly effec.| In. the democratic ranks, Daniel W. = L n uar H the commission’s recognition that coal | Iote speech, £ St. Paul, both i p h ithd be- c H : & previous tone of radi- | nor of St. Paul, prominent in party on shares withdrawn be is one of the most po- ) vance. tions that anthracite dealers be com- pelled by Congress to make current reports to the federal government re- garding costs, prices and profits in Order to protect the public and that operators should combine to guaran- tee a standard quality of anthracite for the consumer. +SEEK TO PROVE U. S. SHIPPING CAN PAY Congress to Be Asked for Use of Seventy Million for Campaign. BY EDWARD PRICE BELL. ‘Wireless to The Star and Chica Dail = News. Copyrignt, doza, o0 Do SOUTHAMPTON, July 11.—Coming over on the Leviathan, the writer Jearned that authority will be sought from the next Congress to use $70,- 000,000 in the present loan fund and money that may be realized from the sale of government-owned ships in an effort to prove the commercial feasibility of the American merchant marine, on the theory that, when the proof is established, the banks will back private investors in buying gov- ernment boats and putting them on a permanent paying basis. AIDS PLAYGROUND WORK. Reading Commissioner Oyste: for volunteers to help supervise i Favors Soldiers’ Bonus. Cash bonus for ex-service men. Restriction of courts in the use of | 1 Injunctions in labor controversies and in nullifying acts of Congress. Friendly relations with all nations and entangling alllances with none. Stabilization of prices of farm prod- ucts through federal regulation. tive. In a recent address, called his key- note speech, he modified his_utter- Johnson should be elected,” he said: Outlines His Views. “If for no oOther reason, I belleve the people of Minnesota should elect me to the senatorship as a protest' and the equally vicious inflation pol- icy of the previous democratic admin- istration. I am for helping business run on an even keel. I want the debtor's dollar to be as good as the creditor’s dollar. I do not belleve in a dollar worth 50 cents in 1919 when a farmer contracts a loan and worth 100 cents in 1921 when he is asked to pay. The dancing dollars do no ]oue any good except the large finan- clers and speculators. We common | people need a money system and a jcredit system that will keep business running on an even Kkeel. “Many of my good friends think of the federal reserve system as too bad to be remedied, but to my mind wrong management is more at fault that the system itself. It was designed to ex- tend help to borrowers at times when we thought & panic might be ap- proaching. It did provide a more elastic credit system than we had prior to 1913. But power for good I also power for evil, The Federal Re. serve Board, instead of helping us Caille “5-Speed” Rowboat Motor Five models to select from. Will push & boat anywhere. engine. John J. Odenwald 1209 H N.W. _ Phone Frank. 6903 “TheWorld'sFinest” ED. PINAUD'S Lilac Talc 5c Ex against this vicious deflation policy | Scratie. voters should throw thelr su Life guarantee with each | || \w!lh renewals when prices sagged a! Lesuer 1s a stockholder in the Equity Co-operative Exchange, whose former porting Gov. J. A. O. Preus, repub- lican. Several prominent republicans have come out openly for Johnson, includ- ing Thomas Frankson, former lleu- tenant governor, and Julius Schmahl, former secretary of state. They are opposed to the policles of Gov. Preus. Lawler of St. Paul, former democratic candidate for governor, and R. T. O'Con- their followers to vote for Gov. Preus in preference to the democratic candi- date, State Senator James A. Carley. These democrats declare Carley will poll only & small vote and has no chance of election and that therefore the dem port to Preus in an effort to beat Johnson. Earl W. Cummins, St. Paul attorney, in a letter sent today to all attorneys in Minnesota, appealed for ald for Gov. Preus and criticised Johnson. “Trial by jury, free speech, free press and religious liberty,” are menaced by the political doctrines of Johnson, ulld' the letter. fri glasses. Itis As You Wear Our Glasses part of our Optical Department. A frame may become bent, a small screw dislodged,, and any number of little things may en which we will be glad to adjust or you whenever you bring in your to use more than 62,500 satisfied cus- tomers—and we expect to continue PERPETUAL ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 Pays 4 Per Cent Assets More Than $8,500,000 Surplus More Than $850,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. You can feel assured of a endly interest in them on the hap- such service that has brought The Avenue at Ninth L T T PR A PP T T T O Efficient Plumbing tent guardians of home health. Depend upon a reli-= able organization, such £ as this, when you have S Plumbing Installed or E Repaired and you'll be 100% safe. G wExtra quick service on repairs. MAURICE J. COLBERT Heating—Plumbing—Tinning 621 [ Street <zl 3016-3017 (T AT M B | N (U OTTTTT T A i Special Attention to Nervous People Those mervous and of pay- sult. Ex- free. 'ment to am Sears of socd,”honest My Ferfeot Hon "Foetn Wil . S o Other Sets of Teeth, $5 Up the lot are all sizes. A Group of Sandals Regular $3 value .. $189 Some Oxfords—some Two-strap effects are included—most of them with welt soles. They are essentially Shoes for young ladies and growing girls—and sizes range from 3 to 6. A Group of Pumps Regular $5.00 value $2.79 ite quality. : " 1 ds, O S, Jen- for character of service as long as we Fillings, 50¢c Gold Cro '.':"‘-“‘:n;:’."l‘“;:{’E‘{’E:,:’n’:"“}?a‘:'f“fi“ PINAUD'S £ ule. e Do :I:: in the Optical Business. g to $1 up, and Bridge White Canvas and Kid Strap Pumps—with turn or welt sole. g::f:‘?.n‘%terfiraod:n,::E:x‘;;:r.vlu%r lo'i Lilec Talc EBDWA"E A h‘_':,l‘:’.m o | ss.00-sic0 Both one and two strap styles. A popular outing Shoe—and in as Faa experionce In directing boye: 88 Fitos Ave s Do Eye Glasses as Low as $2.00 __porcelain $5.00 _re Torn all sizes. activities, ROBBED AS HE SLEEPS. An intruder entered the sleepin; room of Charles Rosenfeld, 1201 5t street. between midnight and 7 o'clock this morning, while the oc- el?“t was asleep, and stole a $20 1 Sold plece and two diamond rings. rings money were in_his srousegs” poffiste, o o1 the pottce.: The Baltimore-Washington Bivd., at Laurel, M4, e, Toar s Accommodaf 4 g, KA e | | [ tofore rag pulp has been used almost the manufacture of