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I " ???????????????? |j Are You OoSimg South? HAHN'S JANU/ I ^ ^ Ill At Following Spsci i' j Men's Regular $3.50 Tan ?"alf or Black Gnn Metal Calf latced and Button Shoes, single and doubl" soled: also "INDKSTRl'C- ^ _ _ TIB1.K" Soled <Sf g BOX fair Bin- jry ; ] chers: reduced to. | Women's Dept. $5 and $6 Grades Black Suede. Ten or Black Calf | and Patent Colt Dress Boots; ? d? -j ea I smart button and /u)f5 j laced styles ^ S3.50 and S3 Grades S of Patent Kid. Patent Colt or ! Yici Kid Button or l.aced Boots; Dull Calf High-cut Skating Boots: and d? ^ a few Tan Calf Boots: 1T? styles at...^ Excellent $2.50 Values Yicl Kid. Patent Heather and Black Gun Metal Calf Biucher 1 L.aced or Button Boots, with medium or heavy d?> u q soles; 1J desirable H # O ^ styles '.. Si.50 to Sj Grades Remnants of Daniel Green & Co.'s and other Warm Furtrimmed Juliets. Bath Slippers and Old Ladies' Warm q f=j Beaver Shoes. A table- (Q ful at I - 1 I Winni.Hatting Three Reliable Shoe 1 1 ? ? 4 . Ml | I Bmsiimegg Hours 8 |Tlhyrsday I Ladies9 Fn jj 11 K Ladies' Furnis t\ (\ \ tional values for :: yV \u goods have qualit 3 ' bargains in the rc t Ladies' $2.50 All-silk h m3 brellas; blue and Si.98 |> uiacK ^ |j Ladies' Si.50 and S2 Strap || Pocketbooks; light and g J dark colors ^ 50c Doilies 25c g Si Doilies 50c | These are slightly soiled. :i Lot of Ladies' Si.25 ant g Sr.50 Austrian Wool Gloves plaid and white: few ^(01^ | sizes only n ????????????????? \l Phoenix Mufflers; S/Th.r' * all colors. Special | WM. H. McKNEV | tamasmxssmasamxmmmax HEAL ESTATE SALES. Valuable Property in Massachi setts Avenue Transferred. 1 Mis. Margaret B. Confer lias purchase! through the oRice of Liebermann & Hawi the three-storv residence JG7 Massacht setts avenue northwest. The house lit pressed brick double bay-window fron brownstone trimmings and contains twei ty rooms and three bathrooms: it h'ated by steam. Tlte lot has a frontas ?f forty feet, running baet about feet to I. street. The purchaser intent > re. ting a four-story apartment house c the J. street frontage. Mrs. Confer's sot in-law and daughter. Dr. and Mrs. Baile arid her grandson, will accupy the hou: as their home. The price is not give but is understood to be in tlie neighbo hod of S.".im,?n>. Stone I-'airfax Real Kstate Corpot; ti.>n rep. 1 its sale for H. \V. Mahoney < tue two-story and cellar bay-windo brick dwelling pjl K street southeas Tl.'s house is heated by steam anil eo t i lllv kiit'Oti e. i/Me l.' I .1 t It T li o til I T . I I W11 IO il MM * '? * I I. * IIC I ' V* chaser will Occupy it as a home. Post Office Department Changes. The following promotions in the Poj ' 'ffi e 1 a partment were announced t' la > \V Hurley Roberts of Pennsylvania, ink. from $1,400 to $1,600 per annum Malcolm Kerlin of New Jersey, a cler from $1,200 to $1,400 per annum. Roy L. Sluiman of New Jersey, a eler from $1,000 to $1,200 per annum. Mox Roman of Maryland, a clerk, fro $000 to $1,000 per annum. Also the following reappointment: Edward W. Chatterton of New Yor from the position of clerk at $1,600 p annum to that of post office inspect tt $1,200 per annum, with $4 per diem, the office -?f the Postmaster General. We have the kinds of stylish boots ami low shoes yon will require for Florida, the West Indies and other winter resorts. IRY SHOE SALEj tS bringing US good results because it provides j YOU with footwear Ij needed now ? at prices ji you can't help appreciating. Surplus stocks of several highest grade shoe manufacturers ?as well as our own surplus stocks? i| I all Prices This Weeks i Men's $2.5? Grade "KXGLISH WKf/TS." made of good wearing box calf, gun moral ealf or vioi kid in 10 blucher or laced styles; . i ?"ssi$L95 Slides. This week. | 1 I Thursday Specials j Whittemore's Tan or Black i Combination Dressing: a box OC ! | j jl Men's or Women's Good Quality Rlaek Cloth Over- tl | gaiters 1 VC Men's. Women's or Child's in Bedroom Slippers?in imitation ;|| alligator, warm felt. Child's Tan. Red or Gray Astrakhan Leggilts. .Vic to The values ? Ciiild s Durahlp Kid Button or T ared Spring Heel Boots: a e* I . i...... ... w l" , f T.ittle Boys' and Misses' Good $1.5o Grade Box Calf L>aeed Shoes. Girls' sizes to <g 11 11 g I!. Boys' to 4>11. 11 D | Bis Boys' $1.7.' Grade Good Heavy Storm Calf. Double-soled School Shoes; sizes <P t| "2*5 to .V2 C9 Cor. 7th & K Sts. N.W. Oo S - 191MC Pa. Av?. N.W. Houses, j Pa- Ave. S.E. 3 "Strictly Reliable Qualities." jf I Si^f^tetofe [ | 953 Pa. Ave. :! 8 An Exclusive Ladies' Cloak, Suit f | [| and Furnishing House. f: :30 a.inn!. to 5s3? p.m. || Specials nrn | urnSsIhiiinigSo I hing Departments offer excepThursday's special selling. The | y with "LOW PRICE?they're I: al meaning of the word bargain, fj Lot of Ladies' I2l'c Initial || and Colored Handkerchiefs; f: slightly mussed. Spe- tl cial ^ || Latest novelties in Lace f| Stocks and Rabats. l\ Special 4ns** g Loi of Ladies' 35c cmbroid- l| ered Cotton Hose, 'l/for- H Special | 7? 7~ ; ; a 1 Ladies* 75c Extra-size Vests ; g sizes 40, 42 and 44; high neck g dal !on! .s.kev?"?'.S| e*.. 48c J A?l Men's Bath Robes | Reduced. " 8 V CO., 933 PA. AVIS. | THEY MAY PICK GREGORY. i- Virginia League Is Unsettled Yet. Boyer Likes South Atlantic. d. j I.YXrHBl'RG. Va.. January 6.?Tt i?, j would not bo a surprise to persons who i-l are following the situation in the Vir is ginia League this winter to see E. N. t. Gregory, jr., of Richmond elected prest> dent of the league. Mr. Gregory has is been secretary-treasurer of the league tc since its formation, and much of the diXt rection of the league has been done by Is him. this being especially true when Mr. >n Wells has been away front Richmond on theatrical business. It does not seem y, possible to re-elect Mr. Wells, and Greg,e ury is looked upon by some as a strong M probability. The whole matter will come ,1 up here next Monday. 11 is hardly expected that C. W. Rover will be a candidate for the office, as lie is f,f alleged to have stated since the last u- meeting that he was never a candidate ;l for it and did not want it, but that he a- does want to be re-elected president of r. the South Atlantic League for another year. There is a big fight in that circuit for and against Mr. Buyer, and the; Macon <Ga.> Telegraph seems to be one of the st leaders against the Hagerstown man. o a McKINNON-SULLIVAN DRAW, k. Go Twelve Even-Up Rounds at Armory A. A., Boston.' BOSTON. Mass.. January ?5?Jack (Twin) Sullivan and Bill MeKinnon, the rising young light heavyweight, went twelve even-up rounds last night bell. fore a crowd that packed the Armory *"r A. A. to the doors. It was McKinnon's j maiden effort as a "star" performer in the ring of the big club, and lie acquit ted himself creditably. Sullivan resorted to his usual jabbing i tactics, sending his left often to the face and body of the rushing McKin. non. In the early rounds Big Bill was doing all the fighting, but as the bout wore on the experience and cozy tactics of Sullivan told. MeKinnon tired in the last four rounds, one right to the jaw in tin- ninth round nearly finishing him. He made up some of his lost ground in the last two sessions and fairly earned a draw. . ? af ) vWmSF^ SEEKING BAD ROADS trnmrnmrnmrnmrnamm^^m^mmm ! Fort Myer Riding Classes Look for Difficult Feats. HORSEMEN ARE EAGER i ; Classes, for Officers and Non-Commissioned Men. ??? ! I ? WAR PROBLEMS WORKED OUT Situations Likely to Arise During a State of Hostilities Imagined and Met by the Biders. XV" irarel sometimes where the road is. But mostly we goes where it ain't. We'd shin up the side of a sigut>oard And trust to the stick of the paint. ? Kipling. Tlte first uf these statements is already true about the cross-country riding class at Fort Myer. and the latter part will be realized if the officers and men keep at the work with their present enthusiasm. It is all an outgrowth of the President's test-ride order, but the younger men of the army have taken hold and are carrying the thing beyond the strict official interpretation of the command, but in a way that is likely to win the approval of President Roosevelt and redound in a general-way to the good of the service. For many years the troopers, and latterly the artillerymen, at the fort have been in the habit of giving riding'exhibitions in the big tan-barked hal! there. They have done bareback and other rkling stunts that would be a credit to a circus. It is all for the good of the men and the horses, for it gets them familiar | with one another and makes both more efficient. Easy for the Youngsters. T"> it.? rvciciuiy w utrii inc ricsiucni insiaiuu uii belter physical condition among the offi\ SENT DOWN AS VAGRANTS. Colored Men Arrested for Begging on the Avenue. Policeman "Jerry" McCarthy saw Jack Thomas, Sammy Hamilton and George Ray, colored, begging nickels from passersby last night on Pennsylvania avenue and proceeded to arrest them. As he placed his hands upon the shoulder of i one of t'nem they bolted and ran. A long chase in which several citizens participated followed, and the three were eventually loaded into the sixth precinct patrol wagon, but not before one of them pulled out an ugly looking irpn bar and threatened to use it. A tightly gripped policeman's mace and a peremptory order was sufficient to make liim drop it however, before any damage was done. They were convicted In the Police Court this morning of vagrancy and in default of $10 line committed to the workhouse for thirty days each. ??*i*i*S*2*JaJ <2*r*2*2*3*2*S*2,it*J*3*2M3*3*i*'i? | *-IN THE^ I |Sunday Star.? J; T % The Bachelor Has His Say: | ^ "It seems to me that the atti- ?|? tude of the girl bachelor is that **? X she is too good for matrimony, T <?> which sounds like a pleasantry; T X while the attitude of the think*2* ing man bachelor is that he is *3* not good enough, which sounds 1* like affectation. Many men X marry for the same reason that T they ptit on their best clothes ?*? X on Sunday?It is the conventional X X tiling; all the best people do it; T X a habit almost universal. We T are all of us raised on the idea X that we shall marry when we X are old enough, when we reach V the age of discretion." X *s> X V This is only a part of it. In W X | "The Complete Bachelor," | By Howard Steele Wood, X ??> V In our next Sunday Magazine, % *? he answers the spinster's argu- X V ment of last Sunday, which X V Edith l.ane Miller made under X X the title of "Why. I Have Never X Married." He says some rather *r X unlovely things about the fair ^ ?Jt sex?and some nice things, too? T and both men and women, mar- 3! ??> lied or single, will want to read X his complacent reasonings, if X T only for the pleasure of dis- <ff agreeing with him. i?< y , X t The End of the Texas Trail. $ X ?Some more entertaining ranch- A <;? life reminiscences by one with V wiiose work our readers are X *f? familiar, X X By Edgar Beecher Bronson. % f J ? A Besides these special articles. X <v? there will be "The Wedding A ?j> Dance." a weird tale of the East X V aioe, oy v:naries aomerviue; Y "Shorty and the Lady Rollei-s," ??? ? by Sewell Ford; a strong install- ^ T ment of "The Ring and the Y X Man," by Cyrus Townsend T A Brady, an<j the second part of I "The Winsome Wizard," | | By S. E Riser, | f? IN | t NEXT SUNDAY'S MAGAZINE g ! OF THE . | X x fSunday Star. | vy?SwC">3"S> v '# v <rvi"T 'fr-fr'S"? IMY OFFICERS II j^ :'?4>-'*'> * y*? 1^* \ Pi ' :'X>- r J^\X 1^ N t\ . -. BR ijj&|K^z^jAdg^^^sv. ' -'^L . <>: *5' .-WV j ?-???^??-^??? cers a good deal of fun was made of putting a fat colonel on a horse and making him rover thirty miles a day for a series of days. It resulted in weeding out some of the older and more corpulent officers. [ but the youngsters, most of whom were ; pretty hard anyhow, considered it merely a lark. Still, a riae of that sort once a , year or once in six months meant noth- j ing toward keeping in condition. What , the pond rider* amnnsr the vounger ele i ment wanted was exercise every day or : two. polo and that sort of thing. So the cross-country classes began to be formed. There was a regular routine, of course, an order from the President, another from the Secretary of War and finally one from 1 the post commandant. Col. Hatfield. The; i material was all ready to hand. The government has kept at Port Riley, Kan., j ; for some years an officers' riding school, j | modeled somewhat after the big army riding schools of France and Italy. The I I instructor at Riley, by the way, is Capt. j I Walter Short, who used to be at Fort [ Myer with the 6tli Cavalry. He is one of i the best horsemen in the army, has served In tiie Philippines and been detailed at the French riding school since he was here. He is a little tougher than hickory and has managed to embue most of his graduates at Riley wkh some of his own enthusiasm. One of these is j Capt. Hennessy of the .Id Field Artillery. He was detailed as instructor when it was decided to institute the cross-country classes at Myer. The instruction is Riven on the theory that there is a lot of difference between a good rider and a good horseman. There are plenty of the forj mer in the army, but fewer of the latter j than the authorities would like to see. So the instruction has been devoted to getj ting the riders and the horses in touch iCMO JAIL HORRORS i i ; Liberated Political Prisoners ; in Pitiable Condition. j WEAK FROM STARVATION Communication With Friends and Relatives Denied Them. i; BRUTAL GOVERNOR ARRESTED: Accompanies Freed Men on Board: | Ship?Protected Against Inj I jury by Them. mmrnmm?mmmmmmmmmm?m NEW YORK. January 6.?Fuller details of the release of more than a score of Castro's political prisoners, their pitia- | ble condition anil tales of the treatment they had received in the barbarous dungeons of Fort San Carlos, on an island off Maraoaibo, were brought here yesterT day by passengers who arrived on the steamship Zulia. the ship that carried the prisoners from the fort to l a Gualra. The prisoners, twenty-seven in number, were men of the best families in Venezuela. They were all that remained of droves of prisoners sent to the fort for political reasons by Castro during his term of jrower. Their deliverance came because of Castro's overthrow. Many Unable to Walk. The prisoners, when they came aboard i the Zulia at Maracaibo, presented a cu- ; rious sight. They were well dressed, shaved and beards trimmed, but they were cadaverous ana weaic. Many coma not walk without assistance. The prisoners said they had been systematically starved, the allowance for their keep presumably going into the pockets of their jailers or others in the government employ. They subsisted on such fish as could be caught off the shore and cooked hy themselves as well as they could. Communication with relatives and friends or with any one in the outside world was denied them. They had no 1 tidings of even their own families until release came. The Ztilia's passengers were overwhelmed with pity at the plight of the poor fellows, many of whom could not walk even a few steps without painful limping. Two who remained inseparable companions on the ship told of having been chained together for months to the same spot and so close together that when either wanted to move tils fettered leg he gave the other man warning Otherwise the chain would chafe the sore spots where the fetters had bitten into the flesh. Families Greet Liberated. There were tearful scenes at La Guaira, where the forlorn-looking prisoners were met by their families and friends. r< An DAIIA U.. J ^1,^ ~ ^ vjcii. ocjiu, wuu imu tiiiirge ui r ori San Carlos and of the prisoners, was also a passenger on the Zulia from &aracalbo to La Guaira. He is described as a bony, grizzled man of fifty, and, according to the passengers, has a somewhat brutal appearance. He, perforce, had to go with his own prisoners. Several military-looking men accompanied him, ostensibly as a guard ; against violence from his former captives. It was suspected they were to < see. too, that he went nowhere but to j Caracas. ] Hello enjoyed himself about the decks j \ * THE FIELD F '^ T/.^^^JBF'v^:-.- -S^-pj^KM ^BfciSSSS with each other and giving them confidence in each other. Where a Horse Will Go. It is an old. accepted fact among horsemen that a horse c^n go anywhere that a man can go if the man does not nse his hatuls. The horse can usually do the trick aiso with the man on his back if the man will stick and let the horse alone. One of the first principles of the bank climbing feats of the classes is to sit still and sit still, and then keep on sitting still. When it conies to a jump, of course, the man can help the horse a good deal, but in the average cross country work the 1 horse does better when he is let alone. There are sonic impossible looking ) pictures advertising a certain make of photographic lens in thP back of the magazines showing Itaiian army officers going down nearly perpendicular inclines on horseback. All unknown to the population of Washington there have been some almost equally remarkable feats performed at Fort Myer within the last week or two. There is one drop down by the pistol range hack of the fort where the horses go over the edge of a twelve-foot drop, sit down and slide and come up right side up at the bottom. There are two classes at the fort, one for officers and the other for non-commissioned officers. One of the indications that the men all really take to the work is that every day when the classes go out some of tite officers go along voluntarily with the non-coms and the non-coms Join the officers' classes in the same way. English Saddle Used. The classes use the Knglish hunting saddle for practice. There are a certain number of these saddles allowed by the the steamer, and professed confidence that his actions us governor at San Carlos would not only be indorsed, but commended, at Caracas. Castro in No Present Danger. BERLIN, January t?.?Cipriano Castro, the former president of Venezuela, who was operated upon. Monday, had an undisturbed sleep last night. Dr. Israel said today that the patient was doing well, and that no dangerous symptoms were observable. ? Joshua T. Stone Dead. Information was received here today that Joshua T. Stone, who resided in the Portsmouth apartment house and was a 8 Senate Blend is not a new c I your parents' childhood to the p Per pound (5 lbs. lor $1.15) Four Ext Prunes. French 0,, ! Mackei Oregon, lb , lb. kit. 1 A & P Apple Butter, jar... 18c ! g Millar's Irish Marmalade. I jar.... 17c a Campbell's Baked Beans, g can ioc if Fancy Tag Bloaters. g smoked 5c I A & P Tomato Soups. 3 g cans 25c jj Bensdorp's Dutch Cocoa, g I >-lb tin 30c g Van Houten's Cocoa, l/^g lb. tin 23c ' j VE< g \Yc have almost anything v g you. | Tomatoes. 1 Be g Victory Brand, can r?c OB?.S g Iona Brand, can Sc g Sultana Brand, can 10c 5 A and P Brand. ean...12t*c ! g Gallon Brand, each. ... . J.V I I BEANS. M Pa ll imoeo Ct a ndo ?-.t r.o r% O uon aiivi c utauuai u, ton. 5; Refugee Brand, can l<)c t Luxury Brand (Lima), can luc A & P St ring less, can 15c j; A & P Lima, can .....15c * i Main i Markef^^? n Stands: ^? If 21st & K Sts. Mkt "II Center Market \V Eastern Mkt. S.E. ' \\^th & K Sts. Mkt. (C OR RIDING TES1 if**.- ntwlv^ ? * :fe.>ag! ~'.V <'. ..-. ?.. '" " " j - ^ r 4. ? ? * ' fr ? ? ? * . . ' ? % S \ ,? * ' - '? - ?.* - : : > .-4 ?.-* : * .;.* ,; . ' . - f. . < ;. '' >: >.' . ":' < "!% > ",+. < . ' >,' V t-x-x-::V. J>y.t : - .> ? '? j i * '' >''< :? ': * ' ' :: **: . : ? ? ' > ? ' * ? * ? * * ? > * 4 ; - ' +, . ..> 4 ' I i <- ,:</ : :. 7 ' * ' ' j&v*' f3/t, * '< & War Department for tlie polo team, hut | : oil of the c 1 ffi 1 ?> t*c Q riil o rnnihpi* nf t ip un U4 IOV v/lliv V.I4J ttliu U VI l,,V J ' non-commissioned officers have bought | the saddles with their own money. Enthusiasm that touches the pocket looks 1 like the real thing. The riders go without spurs and in many cases without stirrups. , It is done for the sake of balance. "Of course, anybody can ride with a cow saddle or a McClellan," said one of the officers. This is not strictly true, as any tyro knows, but it answers for purposes of illustration and it indicates why the riders use the English saddle. The classes start in the early afternoon from the fort and the instructor takes them on a roundabout road for an hour or so over the worst country he can find. I . They jump dutches, ford streams, go up and. down perpendicular banks and loop the loop across the Arlington cemetery i wall where there is a good chance. Some of the officers and men have been , scouring the country to find bad spots that the instructor has overlooked, and if the classes keep on progressively they expect to try climbing some of the stone quarries along the river pretty soon. War Problems Suggested. When the classes were started some of the officers, and pretty good riders, too, clerk in the office of the auditor for the n Post Office Department, die dthis morning . at Versailles, Ky? the former home of his wife, where he was taken about three , w eeks ago in the hope that he "would recover his health. He was stricken with < nervous prostration the first part of December. His wife and infant son survive him. RICHARD ?. BEALL DEAD. Longtime Employe of Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Passes Away. Richard E. Beall. for sixty years an ' employe of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail- ( road Company, arid who. with one excep- , tion, was the oldest employe in point of 1 late Blend Cofi ?nc. Its popularity extends in an i iresent. Its use assures von Coffee ra Specials for Tihi rel, 8- Peaches, choice Muir, lb 1 Van Houten's Cocoa, jilb. tin 45c A & P Cdcoa, 14-lb. tin. ... 10c I A & P Cocoa, pj-lb. tin... .20c Walter Raker's Cocoa, V>ib. tin 20c Atmore's Celebrated Mincemeat, lb 12c Royal Raking Powder, can 12c, 22c, 40c Sweet Florida Oranges, 20c. 25c, 40c jETABLES (Carom 011 may want in this line, and every st Quaiity Succotash 1 Butter, lb.. Va"ey a j A & I* Brand, can... a5^C? Pin Money Vegel PEAS. Iona Brand, can 10c Sultana Brand, can 12c Reliable Brand (sweet >. can 12*je Imported Movens Quality, can l.'Jc A. & P. Brand, can 15c Imported Sur. Extra Fine, can 18c Store, Cor. 7th and E Sts. yVftnn it ftnnno m? S) v-? JJ TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS AT ALL BRANCHES. ?>???uiuwnnff?}???????????t?m<? 'S. P^ i mZ~ '"-r*:.? ** > * "s 1 J "**? * #**' I *** : ^.. V , ' - I * ml. II ?^f : ?- > ^ -jj H . * .: 'k tfe,: * " * v I ?*?? "%*% '* < " ,.u * 'I . <... ^Sr ^Sfl^K A aiWwfcw^ vif ^ ^ 5 it*? . 1 Paid that it was impossible for a horse to ro over a Rood deal of the country near the fort. But the instructor put the proposition to them in this wise: "Suppose you are surrounded- by an en'krv* " "?'> rvwltr ?*u\ /ill* ic A fO T* CfimP li' Ci iiaim me uiii.t n u ,i w?< i 10 u * v this game country, are you going to make the stagger to set throcgh o.' are you going to lie down and get captured? Suppose you make the rustle ami break a leg or two: the enemy will get hold of you, say you are a good fellow and put you in the hospital with the honors of war. If you get captured with a whole s^tin they will say you are a mutt and put you in jail, and serve you right. too. "Now, let's take a little problem. You are surrounded by the enemy You have important dispatches to get through, and the only way out is an ai line across country. Now git out and git." The class tried a number of problems of this sort and liked the excitement so well that it is trying now to tind bad country to go over. The chances are that the officers" class will be increased, and that the course will be made compulsory for all non-com missioned offk-pr?. But from indications they will not need much compulsion. continuous service, died at his home In Laurel, Md., Monday last. Mr. Beall was born near Laurel November 28, 1^28. and entered the employment of the Baltimore and Ohio company in 1840. At that time railroading was in it* infancy and the rails were laid on stringers. cross-ties not then being in use. It was under the direction of Mr. Bead that 1 tie Washington branch was equipped with cross-ties. During the greater portion of his long service with the railroad company Mr. Beall was supervisor of the Washington branch. His wife, three sons and four daughters survive him. His eldest son. who has been twenty-six years in the employ of the Baltimore and Ohio company. is assistant supervisor of the Baltimore terminal. inbroken line from llie time of if ffnnrlneiii; at all timr?< t=zj ff r. : zs>c | s Week. 1 8c nr.Rkc:. Sc | l ull Cream Cheese, lb 17c 2 Crape Fruit, each.. .7c and 9c Rumford's Raking Powder. can 10c. 13c. 25c gj Mother's Oats, pkg IOC 5 A & P Oats, pkg ioc gg Quaker Oats, pkg .'.tocg Hornby's Oats (11-O) pkg. 14c 8 Crystal Domino Sugar, 5- H lb. box 40c fg Rest Granulated Sugar, lb. .5c 2 Conf. XXXX Sugar. lb....6c II ed). I package is guaranteed to suit ? lC* ? vui nio n Brand. , _ , ,2 j1)c lona Brand, can fcc :X I*:'10 I Sultana Brand, can 10c il tables, (X ...lrt?: I A & P Brand, can.... lUVic ;* FLOUR. if Ground from spring-grown wheat of best grade: 3ls-lb. sack. 14c; 7-lb. ; sack. 27c; lH'i-lb. sack. tl 43c; 24Va-lb. sack, Ij.jc: full ?j? *7?? ; barrel (wood) N.W. 11 ysr Branch ^ Stores: 1318 7th St. N.W. 11 1620 14th St. N.W. J J ^ 3077 M St. N.W. Jj ^N^^815 H St. NE. Z' nin-Tinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintf j