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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 'C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1927. HOUSE IS UNCHANGED |50 i mniioek tmusher, anton the RUSSIANS REPORT DRI ST S . : THROUGH 250 YEARS| Fanet #zgs the od wicming e snuffers and other necessities rest on the tables or in the cupboards. 1 I Correspondence of the Assoctated Press. s ot e P ive ° i p . # PLYMOUTH, Mass.—History turns| i, history. A quaintly fashioned | § % : back three centuries at the threshold|ash shovel, with a four-foot W | A < § NG 3 3 of the old Harlow house. was thet weapon |;;<ml lhy a | 3 woman to protect herself again. The ancient dwelling, thanks to the attack by Indlans; With It she fs : : . : : 5 efforts of the Antiguarian Society, to- sty Fre w & .| known to have killed one of her at-| nch and Soviet Find Com ‘ vkl 4 R e e : ! mon Gi d in Principl d : . ; William Harlow built {t in 1677, using [ One of the rarest possessions is a | " round in Principle, ] timbers from the anclent. fort on |Dutch sink of heavy sandstone. | i S \ Burial Hil Standing on a threelegged pedestal, | . - its lip protruding through a hole in | Litvinoff Says Nt : . o | | Seveny simole surnishings ity |13 I wretrd . ] 5 - : , ntents could be emptied | | [the early Colonial period. Some have | {1 Wt U8 fontents —— ¥ %een in l'hu }Aouw since it was built. T i s massive fireplace i graced by a ) | Phone for Our i MOSCOW, Russia, September 23.— { . SIRTIC Com wHich Wang ifon, Retties i AL Routeman to Call i A full agreement has been reached on | H the debt question between the Soviet | and French delegations studying the R & ] question, Maxim Litvinoff, chiet of & D - i3 - x the Soviet legations abroad, declared. %t ! 2 = | a pound , Interviewed by the Soviet news ;::ncy tass on dopbts expressed in % h ¥ . nch newspapers as to whether an s L > U agroement had been reached between | " ; . j Are Your Valuables ) . ; e delegates, M. Litvinoff said: | . ) X For the home where there are children or for 1 emphatically afirm and authorize | i | A . 5 > f . fi Safe While You any large family bundle. Everything-Ironed is a ."hO‘l publicly to report that between | 1 elegati b . o e Soviet and French delegations a wonderful service. Every piece is washed clean fall a | i i \ \ { i O T L | : Are Away From Home? as a pin and ironed—but not by hand. Every- ment has not been signed only be- & § 904 3 . . Py cause the French have not vet ac- thing-Ironed is one of our most popular services. cepted our proposals in the matter of Four famous European artists, who came to the United States to serve on the jury of award for the Carnegie m Safe Deposit Box in our Safe Deposit credits. Ins i i intng at Pittsburgh, photographed on their arrival here yesterday, Left to right: ; < g b ‘Will Deposit Fund. r‘l‘:51‘»“'6.i:::h“‘.’,'c"i".if.'..fi2.";"1%."5:!3?4’ ;:‘lz(?mnnn;-.‘:\rlfu'xrl‘:-u"nmis of France and Maurice Grieffenhagen of England. Jf Vault costs as little. as $3.00 a year and is [ ° E the best place for bonds and stock certifi- |4 an - rone lrts “Although agreement in principle c:‘:m?:': :::‘nnc‘;fe“’tam\‘xnmers‘t{-“:m? r(: Scientist Sees Art Of Military Defense TOURIST TREK TURNS il cates il fmos eape Pleweip et N Whenever you want your 1 2 garding their size has not been AWAY FROM FRANCE Let us show you this interesting depart- iwevar a1l \Aoubin will isoon ibe Amply Exempllfled in the Animal World Rea s 4 { ment' and explain our arrangements for [i shirts hand ironed, wrap them met at rest when the French public " . < B - : will Joarn $hat the Soviet §’;°m,‘,‘n,e,§§ Large Numbers of Americans Pass U your service and convenience. | separ a(el} :End pllt' them in 1s ready within the next six months to | Corrospondence of the Assoclated Press. protection by the fact that they are Through Paris on Way to side your Everything-Ironed deposit in an agreed bank the first| IONDON.—The crab, which holds|almost colorless. 4 | 4 i Bundle. . apiece extra half yearly installment of 30,000,000, <ponge five times its size over its| In the insect world there are hun- Other Countries. o £0ld francs (abqut $6,000,000), from | paeen dareds of examples of camouflage Which the first payments can be made | The hermit crab, which tuck The cockroach, the leaf insect, spreads | Correspondence of the Assoclated Press. on ationa an ) 10 the French hoiders of Russian se- i int |its wings over the leaf until he be.[ PARIS.—American tourlsts in large ; ] curities immediately after the ratifi- : i comes invisible. i Bate. have bben Warene gt “The Bank of Utmost Service” \ e ome un e i e g X 18 B, | which lusisrs avind ¢ (Vg 0, g e Prance thin Summer to_sperd their| 509 Seventh Street N.W. | A Modern Laund I odern Laundry eral agreement on debts and credits o le a sisonous b v & s we authorized Rakovsky (Soviet | g enepivie ' S0ty Mapping Baffin Land. time and dollars in other countries— Ambassador to France) yvesterday to| 'rhese are a few of a thousand in- | From tho New York Times. 5 ot 8 is and l | : . 3 3 a3 e a fe P sand n- o .. |just at travelers from St. Louis an I | Lincoln 8386 Lincoln 8387 eclare o the French Gelegates.” | stances which show (mat the acience | Beforo he sailed to the Arctic Circle |JSt 8t travelers from St Lol S Temporary Uptown Bank Hailed as Victory. ary defense is a highly culti-| (5 explore the Fox Basin coast of | hiaon their way to New York. Last f | : 1336 N. Y. Ave. N.-W. : 1101-1109 Raum St. N.E. The officlal organ, Izvestia, com.|Valed,art in the unimal worlde | pogin Land, George Palmer Putnam |vear France got the lion's share of menting on the announced debt settle = ; ot them. He | estimated the area of that terra incog- | the transatlantic rubber-neck trade A = 4 g ment with France, halls it as a vic. | aturalist, knows many o7 C1e, ©6 | 625 me 24 § and the hotels waxed prosperous. Thix We Also Call in Nearby Virginia tory of Soviet diplomacy, stating that | I ed his life to the study of | hita at 300,000 .«\\m‘lc miles, two-thirds vear none of them are filled to capac 2 'y g it offers the basis for a working un-|3IS o o0 (hich hu- | Of Which, he said, “not only is unmap- | jty—that is, none of the hotels. el derstanding with the bourgeoisie world | | - 19 B0 2% [ lioveq 't any extent | ped, but literally has never felt the | Visiting the Saint Lazare Statlon in and undermines the ground under- the first time during the World|foot of white man.” The east and |Paris, where nll the trains from Cher- neath the bitterly anti-Soviet elements | . ") yeen part of the daily life | southeastern coast has been fairly well | bourg and Havre deposit their pas- by settling a problem to the mutual [ 50, iR Py dreds of centuries. | mapped, for Davis Stralt and Baffin | passengers, a glance at the baggage satisfaction of the parties concerned. | g SCPR N o1 T adopt the warning | Bay are accessible enough in the Sum- [room reveals that a large proportion After stating that Ambassador | A TC R Tq) to Cug animals, | mer months. William Baffin explored | of foreign visitors merely pass through 'leovuky had been instructed to noti- | (0 (B 9T SO Clves against | the great bay named after him as long | France instead of stopping. Much of 'y the French delegation of the readi- | ;" ohic hackground. ago as 1616, A great deal of work has | the baggage from New York is in ness of the Soviet government to de-| “'g iqo. crabs dress their shells with | Since been done by other explorers. |bond. Labels on the trunks indicate posit the first payment of 30,000,000 | (B €T FE e (PG debris, Haig | But interfor Baffin Land still remains | final destindtion as Italy, Switzerland gold francs, the balance to be paid in says. Some have shells with a porous |2 blank. Its geography is mythical. | or Germarny—mostly Italy this year. ennuities of 60,000,000 gold francs for | it e on which sponges grow, com. | Dr. Boas reported mountains 8,000 feet | Many tourists spent most of their s s iotely " shielding them. from more | high “in the central parts” but evi. |holiday in France 12 months ago ntly this compromise means | P %% 1° L kine animals. dently at long range, for the Oxford |merely because prices were lower in :fi:finfirhn on our part as well, but| "y Ui ttlefish ejects a sepia fluid | SUrvey of the British Empire says of [dollars than elsewhere in Europe. Tth ihls agreement, which substan-| e, “ylinding nature when pursued | Nis account that “if this 13 correct the | That is no longer true, and they move e {»oul v-tn geous to us, we knock |} . c0r fish, A large number of | faT northern mountains may surpass on. Hotel prices in francs-are about L, i Dottom from underneath the ele-| oo’ uolluscs also can create a|the Torngats of Labrador in altitude. | the same as in 1926—except in hotels i ey O iihe, French bourgeoisie, | Uon oy "Soreen” Some whelk, re- | Dr: Robert Bell, the Canadian geolo- (de Juxe. whcre the gold standard is ¢ | ch incite the masses of petty | TINS SCOE Tiktiwise *emit gist, “has found wide bands of crys- | followed. But,in dollars, French hotel | French bondholders hit by the annul- talline limestone associated with | prices are 70 to 100 per cent above the @ ment of the czar's debts.” T e e yciun | Gnelss” in Bafin Land. 1926 charges. T A + purple used to color festal garmen — b r:ccoflllrtlt5 to recent disclosures, | Vhile the young of many fishes are| Many men and women tie up their |. Halifax, Nova Scotia, is to have a m:l"“ i;“oflo B. C. were trying to|still unable to defend themselves,|dogs at nigl but allow their chil- | provincial exhibition next year, and produce r free from cloudine: they achleve an automatic kind of dren to run around promiscuously. special buildings will be erected for it. KAY KLOTHES SHOI SELLING OUT!! Our Entire Stock of Men’s Fine Clothing and Furnishings Sacrificed at Prices That Seem Incredible Our FIRST Real Sale—But It's a Humdinger! Be Here Tomorrow When thz Doors Open at 8 A.M. ' Our Lease Is Expiring -nd We Must Vacate!! 4 - thy:k 325 and $30 WOOL SUITS Some With 2 Prs. Pants $14__-_9_5 LOOK \ " PERFE:'I' . for the i DIAMONDS $25 and $30 Novelty $15 and $18 ; $35 and $40 fl SCHWARTZ TOPCOATS | Mohsi aud Trosico | OVERCOATS || f|" 2 \ SO0 Think of i e An Example of ‘We have derived much satis. .. e orke $3 and $3.50 $30 and $35 Wool $2 White Duck faction f this birthd TI'OIISCI'S s]."'—g SUITS $ 1 8&5 P ANT S 99c 1 @O céalcel:)(;gtiol;?—r{lfirs’é,sbeéauseaist’: asglml:)%ngr is free from ‘SOUVENIRS’, 50c CASH — $350 Li ¥ ! : Trowers ‘28| siswitn oy 4| Kaickers 99c Weeks i icormamaes $7 and $8 Collegiate OVERCO ATS 24__ b e PRICE SLASHED’ atmos- s P $7 and '$8 plfueri:1 and so clalkd bargains DIAMOND e the usual Anniversary 75¢ CASH Trousers $7.00 SLICKER Wool Knickers to pay Saler. 75¢ WEERLY $4.69 RAINCO ATS $3£ $A.69 The public has confidence in G i Chas. Schwartz & Son. They : DIAMOND f@r have come to believe us when $1.00 CASH % Bargains in Men’s Furnishings we say—WHAT WE SAY $1.00 WEEKLY IT IS—IT IS’ Our dealings 35¢ Aratex 75c and $1.00 $2 and $3 Whit Wool 2-pi - COLLARS.... 23| SilkHose ..... DDC | Broadclots Shirs. - 51-17 {JSND::‘E!WEXCI{ 89 any in the past have warranted $150 PERFECT 35¢ Lisle $3 and $3.50 per garment .. C . this confidence and we want DIAMOND 19¢ 51.69 e e e ... SHIRTS ... $1 Heavpweight Q) to thank our patrons for $1'50 WERKLY 5 2-pc Underwear their favors . . . and to as- 25¢ and 35¢ 50c i s :_lu:;d \310510 Garters ....... llc Suspenders . ... 29(‘, ;mfi':sss'oo 51.49 ; lP RFECT s;l:;s g?fir‘r;e i};ai;a‘fiz ;E’Vfil[ljrgll{ ng;) IXMEROMND $1.50 Wool $1.00 ) - o/ - Hose ......... 49(: TP 39c ol 49(: ;:ml&x;lty : .51,95 the outstanding feature in $2.00 CASH d $1.50 $2.00 F D N]D CHAS. SCHWARTZ & SON $2.00 WEEKLY 1 - 2.00 ' $1.00 Athleti 7.50 F : lsw.:knwm ik 59(: SHIRTS - ... 89c UNION sfu'fs ';9(: (s:ollm ‘."f.....slm . ‘ $100 PERFECT PERFECT DIAMOND = DEALINGS!! . TR e Pricect CHAS SCHWARTZ & SON 709 4 + D 3123 29t Perfect Diamonds e miguw | 708,7th St. NW. | *A&W Look for the Big Schwartz Clock Georgetown