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TREW dkfl Al AL Steiger-Vedder Company SUCCESSOR TO C. S. HILLS & COMPANY . _'Saturday=,=Ecr Item A Better Value In nearly every department of this store tomorrow we offer some of the most remarkable values ever known here. - Come to- morrow ‘and buy. Come with the expectation of seemg all kinds of special lower priced better values, merchandise that is timely, needed and of a high grade. This store is the value goal for week-end shoppers. FVERY ITEM HERE REPRESENTS A LOWER PRICE LEVEL === A BETTER VALUE THAN YOU EXPECT CHEVY CHASE Dresses. The most popular Dress made for, zene Colors are Copen, rose, pink. able knene. one of these at only “‘La Helene'’ 99¢ Third Floor. ' 99¢ Sale Smocks of fine Linene in white, ender and pink. others in nice styles. Voile -and Harding, lav- Some plain, Gmbmldemd- 99¢ 2-clasp. lnd strap wrist imported Fabric Gloves. Value to $1.50. 99C Per pairi ... “Our Special” Brassiers, fine quality cambric, lace frimmed, hook : 3 for 99c emnants, 40 to Woo! Dress 50 inches wide, assorted colors to $2.50. and qualities. Value 99¢ Choice per vard ...... Girls’ Dresses, made of plain Gingham 'in belted models or with sashes. - Sizes 6 990 to 14. - Talcum Powder, or Arbutus 6 99c¢ Mavis Talcum Powder . Pebeco 'l‘oozh Paste or Pep- sodent Tooth tubes o 99¢ Men’s Athleuc Union ‘Suits in Nainsook and Madm.s Value to $2. 99C make in, pink bro- cade with elastic top long skirt, free hip and rustproof boning. Pair - ear In good, dur- ekl 1 KIDDIES’ SWEATERS 300 Novelty Sweaters for chile dren. Many styles and colors, 2 to 6 years, each 99¢ Main Floor 99¢ Sale Men's Pure Thread Silk Hose in black an cordovan. This pairs Sale .. for 99c¢ Men's Belts with fancy buckles. Valued at $1.00 cach. This Sale . Men's Night Shirts of superior quality Muslin, Regular $1.50. Sale, price, Men's Hose, fine quality tn b'am: and colors. his pt"s Sale for 9 9c Mens STk Four-in-Hand Ties, the 75¢ grade. for Friday & Siturdz,yz 99 C Manhattan Soft Collars, all styles and sizes. Regular 35c. This Laco Castile Soap and Coleo Soap ... 10 bars for 99c Jergen's Witch Hazel Soap and Jergen's Violet Glycerine ewre ... 1257 99¢ this sale . STEXGER-VEDDER CO—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY GLOVES Women's 2-clasp Pure Silk Gloves, These are exception- ally good and worth double. Per pair 99c¢ "Main’ Floor 99c Sale Women’s Outsize Lisle Thread Hose with elastic rib top, lack, white and cordovan. Special, two pairs for Women's Sport Lisle Thread Hose, m navy, brown and Rus- sia calf. Special . two pairs for 'Children's Socks, and three-quarters length, plain and fancy tops. This sale four pairs 99c Women's Union Sut loose and tight knee, band top, .eZ= ular and extra sizes. Special two for ...... Women's Vests and Bodizes in a quality priced at 85c. This sale, 99 c two for . Wome: Vests and Bodices. high-grade value. Fri- A good 99c day and Saturday Sitk Tep Uk four for Wome! “Suits, 4n flesh ‘and white, all sizes; value §$2. This sale, each © Pebeco Tooth Paste, Friday and Saturday, three tubes for 99C Colgate’s Tooth Paste, Pri- day and Saturday, five tubes for .. 99C Mennen's Shav Friday and Saturda three tubes for .. For loose regulation STEIGER, VEDDER CO TUNION SUTTS knee, band top, ular end extra sizes. Very special 2~ 99¢ Main Floor 99c HATS women, ‘tn b!uék. white, and tight for street sport wear. Value to $7.50 each. 99c Third Floor 99c Sale Dwight Anchor 9x4, value 69c per cial Friday and Saturday 2 vards Bleached Cotton, 36 dnches wide. Saturday, 9 .yards for .. Huck Towels, half linen. Regularly Friday and Saturday Sheeting, vard. Spe- o 99¢ soft fi Friday inches 16c. 99c¢ !8,\36 in- sells regu- 99c Turkish Tows and Saturday, 6 for .. Extra Large Turkish Bath Towels, 25x50. Regularly $1.25. Friday and Saturday, Victory Tugcheon Sefs of 5 and 13 pieces.. Friday and Saturday, special at .. Jacquard 20x40, Turkish Towels, Friday 99¢ 22242, Tri- Saturday, special sale Grass Towels, 22 formerly 75c. Friday and urday, 2 for Ruffled and Lace E. tatns, 2 1-4 vards lor day and_Saturday, special, Per pair .—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Waists Of fine voile in plain and novelty weaves, tailored and lace trimmed, short and long sleeves. jumper dresses. Each .. Peter Pan models for 99c Third Floor COFFEE PERCOLATOR 8-cup capacity, al! aluminum, Special each 99¢ Main Floor superior quality. CREPE KIMONOS A smart Kimono of crepe in either plain or in figured designs., Bach (o Third Floor 99c Sale Apron Ginghams, all sizes, blue checks, regular 15 cents. Friday gs‘”d” 100 vards for 99 Outing Flannels, 27 :’Das. wide, heavy quality, regu! Friday an 6 yards !or 99 Saturday... G‘.ng“:a.ms. 32 inches wide, fine Zephyr quality, plaids and ¢hecks Reg, T5c. Fri. yards for and Saturday 2 99 ono Crepe, Japanese and floral patterns, reg. 39¢c. Friday :sscsjturday 4 yards for 99 c Duretta Cloth, 38 inches wide, heavy twill, value 29c. axd Saturday 6 yards for 99 Organdie Swiss permanent fin. ish, 45 inches wide, all shades, regular $1.25. Friday 99 and Saturday, per yard [ House dresses of percale in checks and stripes, Friday 99 and Saturday, each...... HOSIERY ‘Women's fibre Silk Hose in black, white, cordovan and Rus- sian calf. Value $1.39. This BUNGALOW APRONS Every bit of them is a bargain. You can't have too many of them either. .Buy another one mmqr- row, only” [ Main Floor 99c Sale Nainsook, white and flesh, fine quality. Value 49¢- per yard. Friday and yards for Satyrday Silk shirtings, 323 inches wide, regular $1.50. Friday and Saturday, per yard ([ Playtime Suitings, heavy .eight 2or ch.!drens hard wear, value Suurd.;y.‘. 5 et 99 Cretonne, 36 inches wide, fine quality. Value per yard Friday and Saturday... Printed Voiles, balance of our 75¢ val. Fri. yards for and Sat.... Fancy Voiles, in beautiful silk stripes and figures in value up to $1.75, - Friday and Satur- 99 day, per vard [ 500 remnants from 2 to 5 yds. long. Very desirable wash goods. Very specially priced 99 Friday and Saturday, ea. C Percale Aprons with bib and pocket trimmed with rick 99 rack braid. Fri. and Sat. [ ‘White sateen Petticoats, with scalloping and. hemstitch- 99 ing. Fri and Sat. each [ — MEN’S SHIRTS Of fine percales and madrad, soft double cuffs, neat patterns. Each [ Main Floor GOWNS Good quality, - cotton .in -flesh and white, cut full. Buy them now Third Floor Steiger-Vedder Co.—Friday and Saturday JERSEY SUITS Formerly to $22.50 BETTER VALUE— ' Come for one of these Jersey suits tomorrow as the values are really great. You will be pleased with the fine choice of style and the excellent smart shades which are very popular. The _vogue of Jersey suits has only just begun. When the evenings get a bit cooler every woman and girl will be glad she has one. lower priced. As a business suit there is none better or SATURDAY—- Your Choice! Buy One Now! $10.00 Wearing Apparel—Fourth Floor BED SPREADS 200 fu!l size hemmed crochet Bed Spreads, value $2.00. Very special, 240 full size Wearwell Bed Sheets, 81x90, free from starch or filling. SILK REMNANTS Also Satins, various colors and qualities % to 2% vard lengths. TIE-ON SWEATERS Of pure wool in black colors, $5.95. ana formerly marked to Only 30. 7 i g THE DAVIS OBELISK MONUMENT READY President of Confederacy Honored m South Louisville, Ky., Aug. 12.—The Jef- 1erson Davis obelisk,’ crowning mon- ument to the president of the south- orn Confederacy, wil be unveiled June 8, 1922, at Davis' birthplace in Fairview, Ky, on the 114th anni- versary. 3 The Davis homestead is about 140 niles from Hodgenville, Ky., where Abraham Lincoln was born. TW obelisk, which will be 175 feet high, s today within five feet of com- pletion. It was planned originally to erect a shaft 350 feet, to be excelled only by the Washington monument, but the Jefferson Davis Home associa- ticn decided to hasten the unveiling :n accordgnce with the wish of Con- tederate veterans. Anxious to par- Jcipate in the ceremonies, the thin- uing ranks urged completion as soon as possible. The work was started in 917 ‘and interrupted by the world war. Profiles in bronze ot Mr. Davis and his ‘daughter, Mrs. Margaret Daf¥is Hayes, one of the most beautiful women of the South, ornament the hase of the monument, which is 43 teet square. It contains a room for relics. The shaft is situated in Jefferson Davis Park, which takes in part of the farm on which the president of 'he confederacy was born on Juné 3. 1808, less than a year before Lincoln, The park comprises about 22' acres. The town of Fairview gains its name from one of the most beautiful land- scapes in the South. The cost of the monument to date is about $100,000, which was raised Ly popular subscription. Mrs. Roy McKinney, of Paducah, Ky., ‘president general of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, at the head of a committee of Daughters and Confed- erate veterans, organized every coun- ty in the state to complete the shaft Gen. William B. Haldeman, -for- merly owner with Col. H. Watterson of Louisville Courier-Journal, is pres- ident of The Jefferson Davis Home association, succeeding the late Gen. Lennett H. Young of The Louisville, four times commander-in-crief of the United - Confederate Veterans. “ien. George W. Littlefield of Austin, Texas, and Gen. Julian §. Carr of Durham, N. C., were promoters with Gen: Young of the qriginal concep- tion. Care of the monument and park will be supervised by the State of Kentucky after the unveiling, by act G the 1920 legislature. Two other. monuments commemadrate the Confederate president, one in Richond. Va., the. capital of the Confederacy, and the other in New Orleans. Both were built througl eforts of the women of the South. HARDING MUST BE ON OR OFF FENCE Rolt Declares No Mid-Wey for Peace Corse Lake Junaluska, N. C., Aug. 12 Calling upon all true friends ot the league of nations to give President Harding every opportunity to-perfeet the suggested association of -nations, Hamilton Holt of New York, one of the leaders of the pro-league repub~ licans, speaking here tonight at the Laymen’s conferenca of the Metho- dist Episcopal church; south, declared: that the president soon must choose. between ‘‘the pro-leaguers iff his cab- inet. whom he madeand the biter-en- ders in the senate who made him.” “Let our political leaders make no mistake,” said Mr. Holt. “The league issue will not be settled until it is set- tled right. Every friend of interna- tional peace and progress therefore must withhold final judgment until Mr. Harding sees fit to disclose the detailed plans of his association. - But this is clear. If he wants the per- manent support of most of the Ameri- can people his assoclation. must be more than a mere group of nations agreeing to be good and peaceable and all revolving about a court. Jeague of nations. And if Mr. Hard. ing could get the world or the senate at the present moment to consent to establish a better court with wider Jjurisdiction than the admirable one Just created largely by the genius of Elthu Root and already adopted as the chief- tribunal by the present league o fnations. And if Mr. Hard- ing’s assoc¢iation is under no compul- sion to do anything except when the spirit moves, the nations would be no better off than they are now with or without an association. “The present league with its forty- nine members and its truly admirable record of things accomplished in the one short year of its existence is well ‘worth preserving. Indeed, it is bet- ter to have the present league con- tinue as it {s without the United States during the term of the present administration than to en'asculate the leaguc in order to get the United States to enter it. - “But we cannot wait much longer. The world is on the verge of revolu- tion. famine and pestilence. Mr. Harding must choose hetween the pro-leaguers in his cabinet whom he made, or the bitter-enders in the sen- ate who made him. The decision must be made reasonably soon. If not, all friends of the league must organize SO as to capture congress in 1922 and the presidency in 1924. They must tread the path of the opponents of slavery, who continued fighting even though clection after election went against them. “Nearly all the demccrats and more than half the republicans—a clear majority of the American people — want the United States to enter some kind of an association with enough teeth in it actually to lessen the prob- dbilitltes of war. They can win it they unite.” GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE ____Hs.‘-—_‘__—_-+———._b The most for the Money Is Given By Us In TRUNKS, BAGS and SUIT CASES. This Store is thé; Home of | Hart Schaffner and . Marx Clothes. - EMERY SHIRTS' Nettleton ShOeé for Men e LONDON D0G SHOW Ameérican Dog Lovers Picking pp New Strains at English Show—Lonsdale Cup to Pekinese. London, Aug. 12.—Dog-loving Americans, desirous of picking up ‘0od strains of breed, were numer- ous at the Kennel Club’s 60th annual siow which closed here recently, but [ greter 1§ realo! - .| scarcely’ mny “a: mainly bgcause English types hee collies, - mastiffs and deerBoundsfrhich were curiously : the mminority compared with the Altatians®jand jther foreign dogs tch ag | which arg the raze of the moment here. & King ‘&eorge competed’ with a ~ouple Labraor dogs which, how- cver, fatld totake a ‘prize. The LonsdalexCup_br,the best male dog n the Bw wht'to a Pekinese and for the Bt fenale, to a bull.