Evening Star Newspaper, April 18, 1926, Page 25

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FLOUTING OF LAWS DEPLORED BY FESS Senator Addresses G. W. U. Law Groups at Annual Dinner at City Club. Addressing the annual banquet of (.!\mp\ Wasl m Univers ool ant Columbiun-George . Law School Assoclation last night at the City Club, Senator Fess of Ohio declared the true greatness of a natlon o ted not in its catness, but in the “character of : 1 and women the country can pro duce. Senator Fess called upon the stu- ts to prepare for not only a “liv but a “life,” and said that it was he lezal profession as one of the rincipal factors, if not Indeed vrineipal fuctor, to which the could ook for bullding up a gre I e and loyalty 10 Roversment. aining that he did not clahn the present form of administering na tional affairs was perfect, Senator Fegs charged there was flouting of the laws of our country and of those things which we regard as the foundation of the Nation Thinks Attacks Wrong. “I can see evils. too,” he said, “that ought to be correcied. I know there re wrongs that should not be. But do not think there is ground for the K at are from various siem of hich we live.” tendency toward | ernment under Digcussing the centrallzation of Federal Government |ant expeditions or of dependl here, Senator natural tendency in national life and was to he seen equally as much in industrial life where it had been considered in many vespects the basis of efficlency and economy. In the present interdependent inter- ests of varfous jurts of the Nation the speaker said, “cach is interested in all, and all are interested in each.” The better way, Senator Fess though was not so much to “forbid ency toward centralization cise proper control of it. The public was coming 1o demand the highest type of character in the egal profession, the speaker em- phasized. - Praises Van Fleck. President Willlam Mather Lewis of the university pointed out that the law school had raised its requirements of admission, and was recognized now 48 a class A institution. William C Van Fleck, dean of the luw school. and hairman of the evening, was praised by President Lewis for his wark in | forwarding the school and uplifting its standards. In his remarks, Dean Van Fleck stated that the school was now the largest in the District of Co- lumbia, with 856 students. Short speeches wers dents of the three cl: Cormick, Marlin Casey ie Bonebrake. Prof. Hector Spaulding led in singing parodies on popular melo- dies. The George Washington Univer- Quartet, consisting of H. C. Sonn- tag, J. L. Bwin, R. H. Harmon and W. L Cleveland, proved popular in a number of selections. Dancing fol- lotved the program of the evening. At the speakers’ table were the fol- lowing, including trustees of the uni- versity and members of the faculty: Theodore W. Noyes, Dean Howard L. Hodgkins, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Kramer, William Bruce King, Dean and Mrs. Van Vieck, President Lew Senator Fess, Justice Wendell P. Stat- ford, Col. Archibald Hopkins. Committee Personnel. The committee in charge consisted of Prof. Earl C. Arnold, \l!«n Helen Newman, secret law school; Vernon Brewst alumni secretar George D. Bonebrake, Marlin Case Lynn N rmick, _ Virginia Mildred Thrasher, Terese Wallaée G. McBride, Moses Byington, Gertrude Nordstrom, Howard Gordon, John Ketcham, Fay Woodward, Morgan Conlyn, Ted “Moore. At a business meeting of the Col- umblan-George Washington Law School Alumni Association prior to the banquet the following officers were elected: President, Edward Staf- ford; first presiden: Peyton i ent, Frank - president, W. L. Vernon I George Dalzell Miss Olive , and Moultrle RFES AV REE ARVISTICE TERMS “We Want Peace, But Not at Any Price,” Delegation Leader Says. Fess sald this was a the growth of s to exer vice Stephens; third v Symonds By the Associated P OUJDA, Morocco, April 17.—An armistice bringing to a close the Rif- flans' G-year Wwa thelr short spiri paign against France, tomorrow when th ed 1-year cam- y be signed hind the battic line, s north of Taourit. Both theé F'rench gations profess optimism that the war will come to an end, the Riffian delegates may balk at the allies term “military guarante and re- fuse to permit Irench troops to ad- vance about five miles on various parts of the front and occupy many strategical positions commanding ex- tensive territory. Ready to Strike Blow. An ment which militates against acceptance by the Riffians of the Franco-Spanish terms is that the French troops are ready to move northward from El Kifane, while the Spanish also are prepared to strike a blow to the southwest, from the Melilla region, turning Abd-el-Krim's left wing. The Spanish delegation arrived in Oujda this evening. They are under- stood to be less inclined to peace than the French. Senor Lopez- Olivan, acting under instructions from Madrid, said he felt that a great chance to crush the Riff seeds of rebellion forever, whether from Krim or other leaders, is being thrown away, with both French and Spanish ready to strike. No Unconditional Surrender. The Assoclated Press correspondent journeyed to Taourit, 70 mfes west ot here, and met Caid Si Mohammed Azerkane, head of the Riffian delega- tion, who said: “We’are ready to sign peace. We want peace, but we do not want peace at any price. We are not vanquished, and if the conditions imposed upon us amount to unconditfonal surrender we might well take the fleld again :nd die free men, rather than live as slaves."” This is the spirit in which the Rifflans are entering the peace con- Lerence, the | the tend- | against Spain and | d Spanish del and Spanish dele- | jjeved to be able to travel considerable too much | Smithsoni gov- | { many lines is constantly handi THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, SMITHSONIAN EXPEDITIONS UNRAVEL EARTH’S PROBLEMS Scientists Go Half Around World to Co-Ordinate udies of Man’s Origin—Much Left to Be Done, Says Dr. Wnlcon After 19 Years’ Work. An cxpedition half around the world to co-ordinate the studles of man's origin; an expedition to Baluchistan and Africa to find a site for a new solar obser in order to furthy the development of long-range weather forecasting; expeditions to rope. to | the Cana s. to Tennessee, | and Canyon, and to Florida for the study of the carth's crust and the fossils : botanical i1} also ex- Haitl mammal boues, to Chiva for the col lection of mammals, birds and to many corners of the study of Indian tribes dences of their past—all of th ine 1 in the fleld of activities the Smithsonlan Institution in the | fiscal year 1925, s revealed by the iu- | stitutien’s annual Exploration Pamph- let. which is just off the pre ! The Exploration Pamphiet reveals the astonishing extent to which the n 18 aiding in unraveling the history of our earth and of the life upon it. Carried on annually for | S0 vears, the sum total of the results of these’ scientific expeditions consti- tutes a great contribution to human knowledge in nearly every branc h of | natural and physical scienc e scope and continuity of the fleld work | however, Is sharply restricted by lack of adequate funds, and the institu tion’s definite program of research in apped | impori- | 7 upon by the necessity of foresc | co-operative arrangements with other | | { i | | | high, | | | vears of field work [ lower Paleozoic | the temple priests forbade him to col- agenci The past season is signalized in | Smithsonian history in that it saw the ompletion of Secretary Walcott's 19 in the Canadian Rockies. In spite of heavy snows, Dr. Walcott collected a fine serfes of fos sils from critical horizons in the great | section north: of Bow | Valley. Work Awaits Students. In summing up his 19 years' work in the Rockies, Dr. Walcott “A | few of the problems encountered have | been cleared up, but many remain m[ be studied by young, well-trained men with strong hearts, Vigorous and the high pur the res student, seeking to discover the truth | regarding the development of the | North American Continent und of t} life of the waters in which the miles | in thickness of sands, nd limey | muds accumulated during a period of several w \ years of lower Paleo- zoic time.” Dr. Walcott e nsfer the sc work to some an Rockies. Other expeditions for the study the earth’s crust and of fossils w <. Bassler in Tennes- | central New | 5. Resser in Imore in roh | pects next | )f his geo v in the | I by Dr. Cl s Arizona, and by Dr. Jumes W. Gidle in lIowa, Florida and Oklahoma. Dr. | Gilmore collected fossil footprints esti mated to be 25,000.000 yvears old in the Grand Canyon. He says of them that they are probably the best preserved and most extensive series of Permian footprints known anywhere in the world. The astrophy financed by the National Geopraphic Soclety for the selection of « solar observatory site in the eastern hemisphere is still in the fleld. Word has just been received from Dr. Abbot that he has decided upon Brukkaros in what was formerly German South- west Africa, and is now building the | observatory. Daily measurements | of solar radiation from this station | ill serve as a chéck on the two other mithsonian stations in California and Chile, and decrease the error in the a values of the solar constant, which, it is hoped, will rtually | make possible losig range weuther for- | casting. ! War and Bandits Hinder Work. | Civil wars and bandits added to the | difficulties of the natural history ex- plorations for the Smithsonian by Rev. David C. Graham in_the province of Szechwan, China. Nevertheless he succeeded in reaching the top of Washan Mountain, where he collected some interesting specimens. Describ- ing his experiences, he writes: * a_ sheer cliff several thousand fee with only one road to the ton and back. * * % The rond made n reles, and soon I found myself Iking along the edge across the top | of that cliff, with only a foot or more of dirt and gome small bushes between me and the precipice. Later the road leads a long way on the edge of «| narrow ridge, on each side a_sheer precipice of thousands of feet. In one spot the path is about three feet wide, and I think a little less. It took all the grit T had to cross that place, and 1'd hate to attempt it in rainy weather when the rocks are slippery.” There is one place which affords no foothold, and the precipice is bridged by poles placed side by side; under the bridge is o chasm that one does not like to look at. To cap the climax, near the ton are long ladders.” From Mount Washan Mr. Grahem turned his attention to Mount Omei, one of the four sacred mountains of China. Though he reached the top, | expedition e lect specimens on the ground that shooting there would cause some to believe that the Buddhist priests were insincere. ploration of certain caves in Haliti containing foss!l mammal hones led Dr. Gerrit 8. Miller, jr., to the conclusion that the bones were of no great geological antiquity, though they include hones of animals now | extinct, ¥Fresh-water shrimps, which are be- distances over land when their parent stream goes dry, were among the finds made by Dr. Waldo L. Schmitt in a study of the crustaceans of Brazil. In the course of his work under the first award by the Smith- sonian of the Walter Rathbone Ba- con traveling scholarship, Dr. Schmitt extended thesrange of a number of specieg of crustaceans and found a couple of new species. In his heredity experiments with mollusks at the Carnegle Marine Bio- logical Station, Tortugas, Fla., Dr. Paul Bartsch continued his work on the cross-breeding of cerions. Hy- bridization produced great diversity and modification of the internal an- atomy from the types planted, and the results will soon be ready for pub- lieation. Dr. Bartsch also exposed 1,600 feet of moving picture film un- der sea, which he hopes will show some of the faunal associations found on the coral reefs at the Tortugas. Collected Botanical Specimens. Mrs. Agnes Chase went to Brazil to collect botanical specimens in re- i:h)nh‘ many of which have hitherto been fintouched by botanists. At Vi- cosa in the state of Minas Garaes, she visited the government agricultural experiment station, under the direc- tion of an American, Dr. P. H. Rolfs. Of special interest here was a row of little chaulmoogra trees, the seeds of which yield an oil that has long been highly valued in India and China as,a remedy and a specific for leprosy and other skin diseases. There is much leprosy in Brazil, hence the im- portance of these trees. Another expedition in the interests of botany was undertaken by E. Killip to the greater European mu- ! South | eredted by pre-Pueblo peoples. | deposits which covered these primi- | mea | dlogist dissimilarities that could only | in On | succeed | biogenetic myth. | she named Nanabozho (. seums. Of recent years a large amount of material has came in from | South America which bas Leen difi-' [ cult to identify because a great pro- portion of the species peculiar t& America are known to botan- ists of this country only by unsatis. fac descriptions, the original | specimens belng_deposited In Kuro- pean herbaria. Mr. Killip took Mlh} him 500 specimens of South American plants to compare them with type or original specimens in Europe. A review of the remarkable con- clusions reached by Dr, Ales Hrd- licka as a result of a 50,000-mile journey In the interests of physicl anthropology has ulready been pub- lizhed. Equally interesting results Were obtained by Smithsonian ci- entlsts in archeologlcal and_anthro- pological exveditions In 1926 among the native Indlan tribes of Amerfca. Under the auspices of the National Geographle Soclety, Neil M. Judd continued his excavations of Pheblo Bonito, # prehistoric communal vil- laze in northwestern New Mexico. e most Important discovery made was that 10 feet below the founds- tions of the great puebla were buried remains of two primitive structures The tive structures—deposits consisting of successive layers %of ash, blown «nd and rubbish from razed and re- built dwellings—save the long- sought stratigraphic evidence by s of which the inhabitants of Pueblo Bonito could Le separated. Groups Remain Distinct. Pueblo Bonito was occupied co. temporanecusly by two distinct groups of prehistoric agriculturists. Thelr dwellings, their ceremonial chamber their cultural remains were alike divisible into two classes. Thelr clan organizations were ob- viously similar, their daily activities were probably identical: yet the utensils they used daily in their sev- eral households reveal to the arche- ulted from the industry of groups, each trained to it thought and welf ex have res separate own mode of pression. Although the Choctaw Indians were at the time of first contact with Europeans the most numerous of all the Southern Indians and are generally regarded as a basic type, culturally and physically, of the great Muskhogean linguistic stock, very little work has been done among them by archeologists. For that reason Henry B. Collins, jr. exca- vated a number of Choctaw mounds sissippl. Flint knives and other artifacts unearthed strongly sug-| zested northern influence, indicating that the Choctaw people maintained st a close trade relationship Northern tribes. | Walter Fewkes, chief of the Bureau of Ethnology. under the di- rection of the Smithsonian Institu- | tion, studied the ancient ruins on & newly created Wopatki National Monument, Arizona. Dr. Fewkes first described these ruins in 1900 and it was largely through his efforts that they were made a National Monument by presidential proclama- tion in 1925, In the largest of these prehistoric buildings three stories can be distinguished. They have produced many evidences of a high degree of culture, not the least of which are the elaborate geometric designs on the pottery unearthed. J. P. Harrington began in 1925 his | research among the California Indians on which he is still engaged. In the Santa Ynez Valley alone, he inspected more than 40 ruined villages, and in the Otay and Simi Valleys some 30 more, At San Marcos Mr, Harring- ton found two boulders 6 feet apart. Indian boys used to attempt to jump from one to the other. If they suc- | ceeded it was a sign that they would | be able to jump around the moun- tains in later years without fiklnmng’ their legs Attends Race Health Rites. The Fox Indians, near Tama, lowa, afforded Dr. Truman Michelson sub- {Jects for the continuation of his ethnological researches. During his visit, a Winnebago enrolled among the foxes was injured in an automo- and Dr. Michelson had | the rare opportunity of witnessing a sweat-lodge performance and ing to the Winnebago prayers it. | bile accident, listen- and arches umonz the six Iro- | forie il the Grand River | Canada, J. N. E. Hewitt | in defining the yloxl(ri nabozho of the Algonquin This story, which is remarkable for beauty and com- prehensiveness, relates that on the shore of the great primal sea dwelt Misakamigokwe (i. e., the entire earth mother) and her daughter. This en- tire earth mother is the impersona- tion of the inert earth, while the daughter is the life-increasing power of the earth—the life mother—the mother of all living things. These two personages were of the super- race of the “first people” who lived when the earth was yet new. The entire earth woman cautioned her daughter, saying ‘“Daughter, bend not yourself against the sun at noon tide, because the Great Father Spirit at that time looks on you. Remember, I command you, not to forget my words, for surely if you do, evil will befall us; since our time to increase the number of living things, on the earth on which we live, is not vet fully come.’ But there came an evil day when, very busy with her mat-making, and with her back unconsciously turned sunward at noon tide, she dropped her mat gauge on the ground and un- wittingly stooped forward to pick it up. Instantly she was seized with exhausting pains after the manner of woman. So, in due time, the daughter =ave birth to a Hon, whom ., created quois name by a look). Francis La Flesche did some prof- itable work among the Osage In- dians in Oklahoma, while Miss Frances Lensmore recorded the songs and studied the musical customs of the Menomini Indiang in Wisconsin. Ske found three classes of songs not recorded In other tribes. These are the £ongsY c(mnecled with games played as a “dream obl(gailon " the songs of “adoption dances,” and the songs connected’ with the use of packs or bundles, by individuals, for the purpose of securing success on the hunt or warpath. The two games plaved in order to secure benefits promited in dreams are the “bowl and dice game,” played by women who have dreamed of the “four spirit women in the East™ and the lacrosse game, played by men who have dreamed of the “thun- derers.” The shell and sand mounds of Pinellas Peninsula, Fla., were in- vestigated by David I. Bushnell, jr. He found that three classes of mounds can_be distinguished: The large mounds of a definite form, composed of shells and sand; sec- ond, the sand mounds, and third, the shell heaps, of no clearly de- fined shape, which resulted from the extensive use of shell fish for food. Resignation Accepted. Resignation of Second Lieut. Her- bert Davidson, Corps of ineers, stationed at Fort Humphreys, Va., has been accepted by the President. Puedbauey The first printing press in America, it is said, was established it Mexico, about 1349, s PRESIDENT URGES MORE F00D STUDY Writes Conference on Health Here That Homes Must Be Gaided. Development of 'health and phys- ical efficiency in American homes re- quires a study of food consumption, President Coolidge wrote yesterday to the first conferente on food habits, held at the Departiment of Agricul ture. The President{s letter was read to_the conference. “Natlonal econom.f,” he wrote, “is based upon a combihation of effiélent production and wike consumption, The home s the gre:test consumer of agricultural productss. If this con- sumption is to be gfzm"’ along lines that make for health and physical efliciency, more detuiled facts must e known about present food habits. | I feel, therefore, thal far-reaching ef- fects on national economy and na- tional health may come from the findings of this conference.” Of 20,000 children recently exam- ined in Baltimore thnics, approxi- mately 95 per cent were fousd to have dietary deficlendles, asserted Dr. | A. F. Woods, president of the Univer sity of Maryland. Parents Aveld Milk. One of the most tmportart factors im this undernourish ment of the chil- dren, Dr, Woods said f¢ the fact that the parents are either afrald to feed children milg, or else they do .ot ap- pri > its “food velue. Many of these parents actually Ao not believe in milk as a food tfor children, he sald, This conditfon applies riot only to the poorer classes, L. Woods contin- ted, but even in the homes of skilled laborers and high-cflass tradesiien. Many children tables in the dfet, some of the most fertile sections of he country a persan can travel for 00 es and never spe 4 growing gar- den,” he sald, polntimg out that this is due to the lack of understandng of what constitutes u proper diet. “Thesa persons devote ucres and acres to raising produce for marketing,” he sald, “and fail to rals foodstuffs that improve the health of their Many Other Speakers. Miss Sybil L. Smith reported on the nutrition and dletary work being done at various State agricultural experi- ment stations. Other speakers | cluded Dr. Henry C. Sherman, head of the department of chemistry, ¢ lumbia University; Dr. Margaret M. Justin, dean of the division of home economics, Kansas State Agicultural College: Miss Alice Blirn, research editor of the Delineator, and Miss Flora Rose, director of the college of home economis “ornell University. A letter from’ Secrewary of Agricul- ture Jardine, commensding the work of the conference wmd pralsing the value of the lessons they seek o teach, was read. 9 GROUPS AIDING INFOREST SAVING D. C. Schools to Have Promi- nent Part in Conservation Education Week. More than 90 organizations, many of them national, have joined with the | general committee in “promoting ob. servance of American Forest Week which opens today. President Cool idge has issued a proclamation desig- nating the week as one in which the American people should give thought to the preservation of their forest- clad hills and valleys. Proclamations also have beén issued by governors of most of the States, according to an announcement last night by former | governor Frank 0. Lowden of Illinois, chairman of the general committee. The children in the District of Columbia Schools will take an active part in the celebrations, through a series of assemblies at which they | will be addressed on forestry by prominent speakers and at which forest service films will be shown. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture R. W. Dunlap will address the as. sembly at the Central High School tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Harry O. Hine, secretary of the Board of Education, will preside. There will E mueic by the United States Marine | Others Will Speak. Hpeakers at the various assemblies during the week, it was announced. will be Col. William B. Greeley, chief of the United States Forest Service; Dr. John G. Merriam, president, - negie Institution of Washington; Will €. Barnes, assistant United States forester, and John B. Cuno, wood technologist, United States Forest Service. These assemblies have been ar- ranged by Paul A. Reddington, as- sistant forester: Mrs. Lillian T. Con way, assistant in forestry education: Mrs. Marle Heisley, assistant In forestry education extension, and Mrs. E. K. Peoples, in charge of na- ture study in the District schools. This year's forest week is the sixth annual observance of a special for- estry education campaign designated by the President of the United States. The first was inaugurated by Pres dent Harding in 1921. Prior to that time the campaign had been limited to the Pacific Northwest, Special émphasis has been laid this year, the committee announces, upon the prevention of forest fires, the need for growing tree crops on all land sulted for that purpose and the neces- sity for keeping forest land produc- tive. Organizations Aiding. Among the organizations actively participatin in American Forest week are the United States Forest Service, all State forestry depart- ments, General Federation of Wom- en's Clubs, American Farm Bureau, National Grange, American Engi- neering Councll, Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo, American Forestry As- sociation, American Legion, Boy Scouts, National Lumber Manufac- turers’ Assoclation, the National Conference on Qutdoor Recreation, Motion Picture ucers of Amer- ica, Motion Picture Theater Owners' Association and American Newspa- per Publishers’ Assoctation. American Forest week will be ob- served Tuesday in Congress, the House having voted to allow threo hours for a general debate on the subject of forest conservation in ac- cordance with the President’s spe- cial forestry proclamation. The bate will be non-partisan. sentatives Woodruff of Michigan, Davey of Ohio, Leavitt 6f Montana and McSweeéney of Ohio are among those scheduled to speak. —— Britsh theatriecal stars who brou;ht number of young alligators to Eng- land have found them difficult pets and sent them to the London Zoo. ' i} strap neck, pockets, etc. i Girls’ Dresses i $1.49 Women's : 1 and 2 Pc. Fancy Crepe i STEP-INS i 59¢ to 89c Girts’ f 49c Khak H $1.98 Values W Women's § Voile Underwear # Women's $1.5 # 79¢ Infamts’ White : DRESSES i LONG KIMONOS f ot ot_embroidery ## hand_stne B Of good m dress. “panta an i Extra Size # Muslin Gowns $1.98 Girls' Khaki MIDDY SUITS Fast Color, Good Weight Khaki glnusv with bloomiers to match. 1 S|t Middy Sizes s Dresses coars&surrs 1 Small lot. Odds and ends. 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Sizés to 28, Short and long: Women's $1.50 Extra Size 51 GOWNS & SLIPS Mudtin Gowns and Siips. full cut 4 Prs. 51 39¢ Bloomers & Good Q\ml!l\' C"nl‘ B!oom-m STEP-INS o Sping. esoried colors 69c Women's 2 PI‘S. 31 Bloomers Vindsor creps. plun or flowered: st ra xiro siz Organdy Caps (Both) sl g Infante’ Fine Tucked, Ruffled and Lace- ri of whits batiets 7e8. | PAJAMAS imed Caby, pink or blue lining. '$1.49 Girls’ 2 to 6 Years sl trim, collar, Button front. pockets and_ belt; APRIL 18, 1926—PART 1. N No Mail, Phone or C 0. D. Orders; No Charges or Will Calls HARRY UFMA 1316-1326 Seventh St. N.W. 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Sumn bending top: perfect qualits ROMPERS, CREEPERS and PANTY DRESSES New Spring Styles | ayon ik, with cuff ton 09 7 o 101, or weizht haod contrast SOC Wemen's Summer | Union Suits Reyular and extra 3for$l 1) knee: fine Shell Knee Pants 3Pl’S.$1 Extes size. band top. fine ribbed. ht: pe MADRAS inches wide terns for men’s shirts women's and_children 59¢ Yard-Wide nge of Piouses and Yowest 1 n stripes. checks patterns. 5. beautit lar 75c hose. perfect auun Reeu ralterne . all stae == Yd.-Wide English Prlntss Yds.sl Mercerized finish, fast colors patterns: cut from full Dieces newest A Sensational Purchase and Sale of Women's & Girls’ Tweed Coats $5.75 A new lot of women's, misses’ and girls’ all-wool tweed coats, made in the approved styles of the season. full lined and neatly trimmed. or with capes: women's convertible collars. Girls’ coats. plain with notch or 2 2 T 2 2T, Men's Spring UNION SUITS sl Medium-weight Union Suits, long sleeves ankle length. _Sizes 34 fo 22¢ 32-In. Dress GINGHAM 8Yds.51 Fast s women's and children’s 6 Wool Sweaters buff, brown or peacock. Girls” Gym Stride BLOOMERS 4for$1 Pink or whife batiste. double stitched, 0_years. Men's Fine 4Prs‘ SI Lisle Hose 18c English 10Yd5.,sl Longcloth Clgsely, yoven, rule. pure bleached. fin- iahed soft for infants’ wear, underwanr full cut: sizen $1.98 lnfiml' Hlndmnde 31 Philippine Dresses Hand-embroidered. Handmade Dresses. of fine nainsook: 6 monthe 1o 2 years. 39¢ uslin 4 W-i DRArWERS Fine muslin, 5-fow tucked stitched; straight lcx. Sizes 2 to 215 sears 59¢ Polly Prim 3 f&s] APRONS ## Fastcolor percals and gingham. in nest eheckte ang fivtres: iy s $1.49 Serpentine Crepe sI Flowered or plain crepés. sdtin ribbon 2for3lA trim: neatly m: 75¢ Body-WuIst Union Suits Fine ch drop semt: elastic insat. # $2 to $3 Long or S nr\ Infants’ Coats gashmere, or. batiste. ueat ecalloped ritnmed. 1, ots' s Voile Dresses l Plain 0] or, g:lllll gnd fine d:mmel Ko sur ST Women's $1.49 o SI CORSETLETS 1.49 Of heavs ausliy Mitg pinke brocade, elastic Light- '!\Yht Hose, wflh remlor('d sole, 2 and h colors. Boys" BLOUSES 'me'sl Neat Striped Percale Bl fact_color. _Sizeés § to oven cufl. fimg‘mua.‘"'s’l’ UNION SUITS Perfect qualitr, genuine brosdeloth and fine_madras: well made. Sizes 34 to Men’s & Boys' JERSEYS ZfOl’sl For uidaor wesr. turtleneck Jerse: and Tong siceves. " Siies 54 4o = MEN'S 2.PANTS SUITS MEN’S Topcoats e ’25 for Woru: $3750 to uo L 7LI LI LI 27 P71 112120701 20T LI T AP PP L1 LTI 0 02 b,nrr 2 T2 e T 72x80 Crossbar Unlnn !ull. full et Sizes 24 | we 2Yds. 51, 69c Printed Satin Charmeuse in newest dots 78110 to 20 y $2 Red Star DIAPERS @ood, ahsorbent hirdeys, perfect quality: syFETlNG 7Yds.$1 LIS et e, closs Strap Sllppers Black kid_finished. one strap. with low rubber heels. fof house or ‘street wear: all aizés 4 to Children's $250 & usl 69 Strap Pumps Patent one strap d |\\o—pyp|nt N ties; low rubber heels: sizes 813 to 2. 59¢ lmported Broadcloth Yard wide: high mercerized finisl white, biue, tan or gray i Shirts & Bands f’] Silk _Strips Bands $nigte Plrat - s 59c Women's GOWNS PR i (18 $1 Rubber ord-Hleeve Sizes 1 3fors1 flef colots: neat $20hect, i | Crib Sheets 2tors1 gcrl«:l quality: sive 24x86 Costume Sllps 2‘01’ s ‘Women's High-luster. h&m ateen 81t n. 2torS1 1n flesh and white. i‘u\l cut, _and well made. sl ‘Boys’ New guaran- $1 Extra Size Sani 'l:al.,le Cover‘:;.Z for sl 25 patterns size-—58x5! WASH SUITS i PANTS §1 Solid_and combination colore, £ sizes 310 8. Sturdy-wedring Pmu oD blue and gray mixtures Sizes 8 Bmctie " 2Prs S mm-n Dcnlla 'mh, with bib; well SUIT Sl CASES Cfi g E“ Cases, remromed: made 75c 58-Inch 3Yd8 sl Tnble Damask il mercerized m‘lu;.-mu or colored | | Moh: Note the extra 25c Lynoak Amoskeag TOWELING [ Yds.$] Part-linen wi and welt: 18 inches P A i R e A T g3 YdsS1| D(;z.,51; 2 25c A mnskeax GINGHAM | New Sprine_dress patterns i KS .SPrs $1 4¥4s 51 Cretonne Drape Set sl 37" . ti’;“%';““;;'s" for S1 ‘;NM ;anu uff F-!:losnc GIL()\e;s 2 f0r$1 : ;; ;‘J‘ klvon Silk $l E’E 6’5‘353 DS 51 ‘sl.;r':)obf' Tic! 3Yds $1 $150 V. Rxfflgd Lurtamspr 4 Yds. 31 :eh‘l“i;:;:l lee4YdS $1 4Yds $l ‘V EC K SC AR FS SL50 S4-imch Bordered | Silk Printed ]/2Yd $l CREPF Children’s Rayon SILK SOC | Fancy weave | solors: wres 4 | 50c Mercerized ! P inted Pongee wide, 10 a patterns: fas choi 9 | i Srichie A. Feather- Turte strin 39¢ \lrd-Wldc Tico Satme 59¢ Crepe Flock | Dot Vo:le newest 25c All-linen | TOWELING 5Yds.$i | pAltinen e T ed o H $‘1' SYds.Sl |$1.50 AIL-Silk 39-Inch Crepe de Chme :Sl 75 All 5||k 39—lnth (leorgette Crepe 's9c Floral Prmled | VOILES 40 inches wide, 85c 8-4 Fel’t-Blse | Floor Covering | Assorted patterne an. | $1.75 Console or Colomal errors & 35¢ New \prmx &retonnet | 79¢ Pure \\'hi(e | Enamel Ware Guarantesd perfect: Covered Sav Dishpan, Stewine Pan. Dairy Pan s 3Prs. 1 59¢ Women's Rayon Hose 15¢ and 19¢ Cannon MILL TO\\'FL§ 9‘ l Moclk-fashioned b. d honevcombs: m horders. 'i‘éins.,$1 $1.98 Towel Rack a}nu mperfact Bathroom Mirror 'uc Unb'd MUSLIN Standard count. closels wiren 19¢ Yd. \\lde Bleached Muslin 9 Yds.$1 Iy woven standard 8Yds. 51 — vds$1 Tord and Ralt wide, new patierns. miil Jon t base of rood quality ot 41Yds. 51 50c Tnble Meritan Table Oull nches w Oilcloth in ! A'll!"'\~ weconds. Sanitas Brand Oilciot -ous 10c Shelf Oilcloth 12 vards to 1 1o Choose rom 22 Ne;n' :flpfing Percales Yard wide, <. dre stenciled ToWELiNG 121651 All white or fancy M‘p( ;2 Felt-B:se Bordered sl HALL RUNNERS 18x108 inches: good patterns. pretty colorings, and durable erade $1.75 Double-Bed . Mohawk Sheets Slfilfl stam) Empire. to s el S 2 rdered: heavy weight: yard Jonzibe: (Linit, 2 15¢ & 20c Gold B-nd China Dishes 0f°f$1 Fine zrade of china: choice of eeverat size_plates. soups. cereal and fruit dishes. Plllowcases 4for31 1 Empire. Note er.) awk natoner < nit. $15% 25¢ Yard-Wide 8Yd$. Cretonnes New patterns: fast colors: beautiful col- o limited Yot SRR 3383388 23133883 6Yds$l‘ BRI xxmmxmmumfl m:mxxmmx:txu:mu:mmumm 23323121 s ‘xxxmmnmmmm::mm;xxzm‘ S i3 m::mx:a:x:n::x:um :x:mm:

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