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SONDRY CIVILBILL PROVISONS FORDC, — Rock Creek “a1.d Potomac Park Ap_propri ation Among Approved 'iltems. 'SHITHSONIAN (CETS FURDS Bill Halted by De¥ at Qver Amend- ment, Giving-$10 Muscle Shogls - Twportant items £qr Columbia, in the ‘sund he District of y civil appro- priation bl hate ba p passed over with approval in thes-gommittee of the whole. Provision for' §200,00 ® for the Rowk \Creck and Potomac pagk Wa¥ commis- sion, payable 60 per icebt from the District revenues and. 3, cent frod The federal treasury: war | made. This sum is to allow the ¢ nmission 1o tontinue acquisition of land for 2 connectin rkway betw-leen Potomac vk, the Zoological Pai % and Rock Creek Park. Fat Smithsonian Ite 9 An appropriation of $5( §000 is made + the Smithsoniun Ingt dtution for juternation exchange 1 > other ntries: $46.000 for rll!( ogical ve- h among th 00 for the United > i International ie of Sci- wific Literature: § for the a ophysical laboratory: §0.000 for cases and furniture: §312,4 2\ for pres- ervation of specimens flxworfng xpeditions: $15.000 for adm Pnistration f the National Gallery of Art: $125. 900 for roads. walks and 1 widge il provements in the Nationli ! Zoologi- cal Park. and $1.000 for j trehase of additional land for the “Zoo. “Wave of Talk™ Haltd ! After wading through ngywiy one fourth of the 171 pages of { by sund vil bill, the House last jiight was ted by another wave of Lilk over mendment_providing $104 000,000 fo I an Work on the Wilson dam, p art of the Muscle Shoals nitrate plant:a.¥ofect in Alabama. : There were insistent dems Pd fo time. Southern mémbers espec Il de- siring 1o speak in behalf of tpe amend- ment_ offe ¢ Representative BYTIES. democrat o1 “The ap- tee. It fingy My was 7 to an eady to sst the 1 that it ress it. hen Republicans, of order agai make a point amendment with every assurance Would be sustained, declined to so that everybody could talk an bring the question squarely to a wol & House Makes Few Changes. In taking up the bill item by ‘iterh be- fore reaching the dam question, the § fo 3se approved it with few changes. A1 iiP- propriation of $75.000 for the Coa=wacll National Defe: was stricken out, 45 to 23, with the result that this w "ar- created agency will be left without fu nds after next July 1 The expected fight on the Shippl & to \do . there because it was desired to go ny length to compel:the board to what Congress already had direct it was explained later that Hoi action in eliminating the guragra would leave the Shipping Buard wit out funds after July 1. except 1 nd for expenses of the board in the District of Columbia and of an in— Every to b Heavy 10-inch LOBeccwececcecnaronasnn to 6 Kind,” sizes 2% to 6 $14.00; sizes 9 to 11. Now Army and Cadet Shoes, and dark brown; all sies; Now ... .- Men’s Felt Bedroom S| Maroon. Now Every hat in our stock. up to $7.50, now. ...... 7 Those that sold up to $2 n India Es' share in } Eh forlvisions of the that great harm had resulted to pa- $459,000 for salaries of commissione = ke 0! een pre. DON’T- First Floor: Boys’ Shoes ™~ Heavy Service Tan Shoes, sizes 2AYi s Scout Shocs, “The Gold Meday} lfint Blue CHICAGO, | | melped mave ! Ha I tressure. 1 | the | fmure with is a mirror. siar's hasty painting by pinte at the residente of W T. Cresmer of Glencoe, a wuburb, early Sunday morn l it hax become kmown. Monster Painting Terrifies Burglar; Leaves Rich Gems mnunry 4. — A rank Duveneck jewels and A burginr had entered the ome, gathering many valn Inrge sack. which left in one room, while he for further [] et e gleaming eyen brintling moustachiox. The Hght caused the pieture o be reflect- rexmer said WM. she heard some one aay. “Holy smoken,” followed by the bur- exit. uables were found burglar had left vestigation of foreign discrimination against American vessels and ship- pers. Original Request for $147,000.000. | The board originally asked for an | appropriation of $147.000.000. Instead of allowing this amount, priations committee inserted a para- i graph in the sundry civil bill author- izing the board to use funds on I “the amount received during | the coming fiscal year from operation i of ships and not to exceed $55.000 de- | rived from the sales of ships and By striking out this.par- plained, the House {left the bourd without auihority even {to use funds derived from sul of Its equipment for operating ex- It was predicted that an ap- for the board would be| inserted in tre bill when it reaches Liuly 1. 4equipment. penses. propriation the Senate. i L ! constitution so us to allow the admis- members. lof the lent. ) isociations upon medicinial purposes of whisky con per cent of alcohol. In a letter to Chairman Volstead of the House judiciary committee Vare declared there had been whole- of the medicinal pro-|public affair: act, and|has withstood the ' greatest credit ing less than 45 sale violations tients for agraph, it was gate to the Fede; thal were elected Paul F. Groves, | - SAVE INVALID’S LIQUOR. i{Eill Introduced to Prevent Adul- teration of Medicinal Whisky. when it enforcement the appro- nd Ivaging WOULD ADMIT WOMEN. . !Sixteenth Street Citizens' Associa- tion Starts Agitation. That the Sixteenth Street Highlandg igens’ Association should amend its sion of women . as gradual. . F = SO ey Argued last night by thelthe whole, is sound. And it appears gres‘mod in the absence of the presi- |secretary of the association E. R.|that only in a limited number of in-|d€nt: ,\‘ondst'm. l’l‘ho _meeg:g > ‘Khflld - dustrial lines is there anmy funda- | Sieth Presbyterian Church, Kennedy |mental or pronounced overextension. { street. near 16th. Action. however. “The chief prerequisites of an ac- RlTES FOR MRS. RUGG. was deferred until the next meeting association, {thought more members would be pres- was i"J. M. Maupin was appointed dele- ration of Citizens’ As- the resignation of the {former delegate, Dr. Lewis J. Battle, who asked to be relieved. | " Charles N. Hess, Lyman P. Wilson, w. E. Humphreys and Gilbert Loven- } to full membership. president, presided. Board item fell down, although § he - A = "5] A bin designed to prevent thefquickened. M and M i P s ne doard to & 11| 5ocioring or adulteration of the sick| “And. finally. we should bear in {4 shive and bulid o wore M&".{ ws|men's liguor was imtroduced yesterday i hese few significant facts: This | perity is stored in many ways for our dered out on the ground that It Yan foy Representative Vars, republican, of | country ervested in 1920 one of the|continued use; the markets of the covered by existing Ify, Cbain Jit- [Pennsylvania. - Specifically it would) larecat crops in its history; its trans- | world demand our products and a Good of the appropriddons Somr. B fstop the manufacture and ssle for|portation Pongestion has been re-|great mercantile marine is prepared Mr. THE EVII?LNII\G STAR, TUESDAY. STABILIZING HELD NEED OF BUSINESS |Head of Guaranty Trust Com- Wins Favor of Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. | Copyright. 1921. | PARIS, January 4.—Once more art is oblized to give way to science, and this time it is in criminology. By need of the mew year by Charles H. Sabin, president of the Guaranty Trust Gompany of New York. In a state- ment just, issued he calls for “stability in prices, production, consumption; briefly, in supply and demand as far as practicable.” | Mr. Sabin says that we face serious and complex economic problems at the beginning of 1921, but that there {is so much in the present situation {o Inspire corfidence and hope that there seems to be ample justification for sane optimism. He says, in part: Police efficers, have now completed courses in elementary physics, chem- Dballistics, practical work in REFUSE TO TAKE ACTION | ON “BLUE LAWS” FORD. C. | Stanton Park Citizens Hold Up | Drastic Resolutions for Lack | of Information. | When retail prices fully reflect de-{ On the ground that the reporied |clines in wholesale prices a Eencr “Sunday blue laws” for the District | fuying movement surely will develop, [had not assumed materialixtic shape and that vague reports formed the basis for debate, the anton Park | Citizens' Association at a mecting in the Peabody School last night refused to take final action regarding their| support or opposition. F. W. Vedder introduced a drastic| resolution calling for a boyeott of ministers, merchants and all persons | who favored the emactment of suchi resolution, which was downed piece by piece on account of the opposition of members who declared that the proposals had not assumed tangible shape. The fight on the blue law proposa marked a continuation of a Struggle for definite action on this topic, which | has featured several of the past meet- ings of this association. L. G. Bigelow, R. B. Whitehurst and W. E. Maloney were elected to mem- bership in the association. H. F. Lowe { because there is a very large unsatl {fied domestic demand for goods. The revival of buying, not on an extrava- gant scale such as characterized the period following the armistice, but i common sense buying, will move the Stocks of the retailers, increase the productivity of the manufacturers and Stimulate business generally on a and sounder basis. “The readjustments that we are €X- periencing began later than was ex- pected. Many farsighted banking and business interests began to prepare for them a year and a half ago, and consequently have today strong re- serves on which they can draw in any emergency. Such anticipation of the inevitable, although salutary, post- war readjustments has ended very materially to cushion the reaction, and it is a matter of national congratula- tion that the readjustments have been The industrial situation, on tive business revival are the prompt completion of the readjustment under way and the establishment of such a measure of stabilization in commodity prices as will bring about full utiliza- tion of our enormous productive ca- pacity. The problem in its essentials is largel:y psychological. The latent demand of consumers will not become active until there be confidence that the downward movement of prices has been consummated. The uneven- ness of recessions in prices and wages disturbs the relative buying power of individuals and groups. Those whose buyzag power is reduced a step in the revision of prices gain by succeeding steps. With a renewal of confidence that the bases of relative stability and equilibrium of prices have been | provided, - business activity will be Funeral of Charity Worker Held at Late Home. Fumneral services for Mrs. Mary Curtls Rugg. charity worker, who died Sunday at her home, 1813 Newton street northwest, were held this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at her late residence. Rev. Dr. Jason Noble Pierce, pastor of the First Congrega- tional Church, and Rev. Dr. John Van Schaick, Jjr. officiated. Interment was in Rock Creek cemetery. Mrs. Rugg was eighty years old. She is_survived by three daughters, Mrs. Kirk Holmes and Misses Ellen M. and Lura C. Rugi to transport: them, and this country has not been overbuilt or overavtend- | ed in any of its-underlying activities, lieved and its rallroad system is in a soudder, financial and operating posi- tion; we have passed through a na- tional election and are assured of four years of sane administration of our banking system ment along lines which usually pre- cipitate a sustained economic depres- sion. industrial and political condition than any other important nation In the worl strain in its history, and is on a sound e basis; the accumulated | of ev laboratories erime to lea of crime So been ists for ten of the leadin These men in turn will help th Scientific Detection of Crime HREMENSLEAV[ - Europe’s. Police and on the scenes of rn methods of camouflage, | | identification, photography, collection Jence and the study of traces the re- istr: DAYLIGHT THIEF ROBS WOMAN OF POCKETBOOK Man Eludes Pursuers in Franklin Park—Other Robberies Are Reported. snatc dl A young man patent leather Gana Maddox. in Franklin noon. Th and a oung lady made number of after the rob kly outdistanc nd disappeared. Treasury Departme ss. The rob- | Will | Younger brother with a small sh ber snatched the ha s each house at a time. 1 se all shovel. Pountsins stasted andbag neat the | “Chist Watson stated that he intends He said he and his mother tried to Lion of T street ana disappeared in an | to recommend to the (‘ommisrsiontrs e ;;‘:f;-cdwh;reunf‘-’ the lat- a y. X that more men be obtained for the| ©F y e , procured a long e f carving knife, threatened to kill the An unidentified hurgiar was discoy room of Ida Dade, 1:30 o'clock d in the ree Sth about morning, @ flashlight he held arous- |chief added that he also favors thirly X ing the sleeper. The robber took a|days' annual leave for firemen. as The father turned upon him and was zold pin and $15 in cash. Marjoric | other government emploves are al- | @pproaching with the carving knife Yeager, another occupant of theljgwed, instead of twenty davs. when the shot was fired. Hogamrinaanmobbe . Timiaudus aiso pin-| Cotosor Newlts aive hold au Snmenpl Mrs. Caroline M. e e oIl safute superior | in thecase of Joscgh Jones, colored, 328 F. Montague, occupants of apartments Cstreet. southwest, who was shot and 1939 17th str of $7 from_the aps mer and $5 and s from the Montague a R. G. Howland, 1016 at $100. James Mason, 240 V_street, told of the theft of $274.30 from hi The money was in a' paper bag, he said, and was stolen early yesterday morning. Frederick Robinson, 951 Florida sve- nue, reported the theft of a sealskin taken from his o'clock yesterday 130 o'clock last night. coat valued at $150, room between 2 afternoom and Joseph McCourt, 2913 7t Anacostia, was robbed of a pocketbook containing $54.50 and an Army pass. was committed The robbery home yesterday morning. Theft of fiftecen Army blankets was reported by M. Raysor, 107 D street northeast. He valued them at $30. Report was made of the theft of two lued at $250 and a plush cur- $150 from the place of business of the Randall X-Ray Com- tube: tain worth pany, 930 14th street. NEW YORK ELECTORS TO SIT. ALBANY, N. Y., January 4.—The i s college, and faces no program of readjusi- composed of forty-one men and four women, will meet here Monday to cast as electors for Warren G.|Osaka, has been We are in a sounder financial.| Harding for President and Calvin s Precitent Bugsaved | Tokohams disirict court. form of & eard, will be | has been directed to pay Mr. Murakami New York ate electoral ballots Coolidge for ballots, in the from I the police her ! reported the theft ctment of the for- h reet, re- ! ported the theft of an overcoat valued Auto Hurls Men ) Into Hospitat for | Doctors’Attention SELMA. Aln. Januar: | Mugh Mauldin and James | Oglexby are recovering from in- | Juries wustained while they | were returming from a New ‘DIVIDED BY RULES Ten Days in Summer and s of nd the | roas their annual leave in winter remaining ten days in summ the result of a new rule written into the book of regulations of the depart- ment, which has just been revised for the first time since 1914. Fire Chiet George S. he realizes no man W in January, February, November or December, but that it is absolutely necessary 1o spread the furloughs over the entire twelve months under the two-platoon system in order to pre- e of men on duty. the chief explained, two Attacked Family. Watson said nts vacation sota avenu. afternoon, Deanwood. brown ! Last vear i morgue yesterday afternoon. Miss | men from each house were permitted | Among the witnesses examined were | increased. In order to fight fam sty e ™ Jeave simultancously, oue|the father and mother of the dead [and attack capitalism solidly throux} e 4o Lk dus and one from the Mgt iman. The father showed a scar on |out (he universe these things shou n oul-{shift. After allowing for men on|yis face that his son inflicted a num- |be done Jjoined S leave and others onispecial de=liper Crtu ol o o, By al the mothes | is quoted further as sayine ie lat- | tails, however. the battalfon chiefs e he mother ithat other nations plan to fight so how { found, according 1o Watson, that they |00, 8 J I hot always have sufficient men oy BET SOk be allofved on furlough from it will not be rs for firemen n winter. The department 8o that necessary in future y to take their vacatiol 1 this his wife. officers. ‘Another regulation requires the men to wear their uniforms while sitting \here they may be seen by the public passing the engine house. {"A clause provides that when an of- ficer visits the engine house for in- spection the company shall line up at attention and salute, repeating the performance when the officer leaves. “Running Book” Revised. Chief Watson announced that the; “running book,” by which the com- panies respond to alarms, also has Been revised, providing _that one deputy chief shall respond with the battalion chief to every four-company store. mitted suicide. oner that it to the grand jury. street, —_————————— box. hit 4 he (s | The commitis W IIEL Seer B B2 NEW CLASS FOR SALON. book” was composed of Deputy Chiel P. W. Nicholson, First Battalion Chief James Keliher and Battalion Chiefs Thomas O'Connor, C. W. Gill and Peter R. Davis. OLD NOTE IS HELD GOOD. TOKIO, January 4—Found in an iron pot in 1917, a note of the Mitsuir Bank drawn in 1380 for Y. 160,000 and purchased by Yasutaro Murakami, a medicine manufacturer of Dojima, held good by the The bank Free of Charge. The between street, the face value with ac intere: than 300 students. The old-time self-made detective sults t furthaer s : £ - : i | when thelr autcmo- pany Gives Counsel for |scems destined soon to be replaced |Instituted a igher courac in, Coimic Winter Is Decision of P by the graduate of the scientific Po- |which are admitied P holice magis- b | lice college. Following the estab- |trates. federal detectives, doctors. T out ¢ atich schools in Luusanne, {1awyers and officers of the Renairi | Liege, Rio Janeiro, Rome, London and erie, The 1a(er, cQUie, (o sists of \ . = e Fociiation nas been started, un- thirty-nine lessons, including tAE 207 i SEES COMPLEX PROBLEMS [ ior ke EadthiSe 7 fanid: e e Wiorors, mainnds, ot uent iy |ONE. MAN_OFF AT TIME, ¢ eminent police specialist of Lyon. for |tion collect of evidence, medical Doctors there dressed their ; cminent Bolce e a police coliege, | rescarch, decoding., - comparison of | wounds, Oglesby having hin probably on the Belgian model. M handwrifing and the study of docu- {5 Eremnte oty | i ifica- | Steeg. minister of the Interior, is said |ments pis course, which is con- 5 : 3 | Declares There Is Ample Justifica- [ Stees. minister of the In(orD heeid by Prof. Rechter ‘and 1rot Other Changes Made in Revised i T e Ay ore e Belgian Dolice col- |Stockis, enjoys the king's speclals . : tion for Sane Optimism in |2 Wal® Concoived by Carton de [patromige. e st Regulations, Which Have Wiart in 1913 and was realize ¢ is probable that Minister Steeg i - Country. the heginning of 1920 by Emile Van- will request D Locard to_ erganizt Been Adopted. YOUTH EXONERATED . Gervelde. One hundred and forty a similar cours france 1o Ural ¥ A o Stabilization ‘is held the Paramount| yaents, chosen among the communil fmr ely ten laboratory Bt e Aepart- FOR FATHER’S DEATH Parents of Deceased Man Testify That He Overindulged in Liquor. told the jury that liquor indulged in had been the cause of much trouble to her and his family. | .\Izdd;)" ";I"r‘ ! e to fight fires properly. Phe Hont yio I LN & contained $74 in cash, a $30 ‘ 3 | S who did the shooting told O e S0 oty bond. Ghimit | o Omc Weee Tack Mo of how his father had been drinking cards, thea and Under the pew rule only one Man|and of how he had gone after a whole family and went in pursuit of Medford went to his mother's aid. illed in his home Friday afternoon. 'mma Stewart, colored, also an occu- pant of the C street house, was held to await the action of the grand jury. Emma’s statement to the police was that she and Jones had a quarrel and while in the room together he com- It was testified by the deputy cor- there were no powder jmarks on the dead man's forehead, suggesting that the weapon was not held directly against the flesh. The jury concluded that the case should be further investigated and referred ever-increasing demand for linguists by the government as well as by private interests has caused the board of governors of the Washington Salon, consisting of leading society ‘women and prominent men, to decide at its_regular meeting last night to organize_an additional free tuition class in French for beginners Thurs- day night at the salon school, 1413 H :30 and 8 o'clock, when applications will be registered. The various classes, which meet every night, are at present attended by more Actis f All-Russia gress - French Language to Be Taught i o e RIGA, reports a complete victory for the sup- porters of the Russian bolsheviki premier, Russian_congress of soviets. regarded in Moscow as significant, be- ing taken as an indication that the pol- jcy of granting concessions to foreign- ers, which is favored by the Leninites. ‘will be adopted. It is frankly stated in a report sub- . mitted to the congress that soviet Rus- sia is unable to make use of her raw materials unless foreigners furnish her ‘with machinery and instruct Russian workers in its use and the best method= of productiol POLICY OF TERROR ADOPTED BY REDS Nearby Countries to First Feel Effects of Moscow’s “KEEP BOURGEOIS BUSY” Hoped That Outsiders Will Not Be Able to Injure Soviet A new policy of terror abroud, esj. cially in nearby countries, has bees decided upon by the Russian soviet according to official advices from Mos cow received today by the govern- ment. Nikolai Tcain is quoted by the ad vices as saying in a proclamation 1. |the commune committees of Europ: Medford Weaver Johnson, a colored |yeep the Boucgeoine youth. who shot and killed his father, Thomas C. Johnson, fifty-three years ! old, at the Johnson home, 1027 Minne- | Saturday r exonerated by a cor- oner's jury at an inquest held at the keep the bourgeoise enemy busy witl niernal trouble in order that they cannot injure soviet Russia.” “Great strikes should be organi throughout the world,” of the proclamation says, “and awiia- tion for the establishment of comm sial relations with Russia should viet Russia by the use of spies scck ling to enter Russja with the apparent purpose of organizing revolls again= the soviet. SHARP WITH RUMANIA. Red Foreign Minister Sends Second Note, Alarming Bucharest. By Cable to The Star and (1 SOFIA, Bulgaria, M. Tchiteherin, commissar of soviet Russia, second note to Rumania to that Gen. Wrangel's defeated forces. The note was sharp and has made an im- pression in Bucharest. newspapers sound an alarm against bolshevist encroachments They say that as the bolshevist urmies are now free from any serious danger on any side. against being fthe next objective of a blow by the reds. Apprehension is justified. say {the mnewspapers. as information at hand showing that the bolshevist armies are being concentrated, with nine di- visions along the three divisions along the Razdelnava railway. The Rumanian government has not yet replied to the bolshevist note. LENINITES ARE VICTORS. Decision. Russia. indispensable this versie: cago Daily News Copyright, 1921 January the foreign 1—M affuirs sent x relation toward in country’s attitude where the and danger Rumania should guard Dniester river and garded Significant. Letvia, January 3.—Moscow at the all This i< Nikolai Lenin. Tan School Shoes, ball straps, sizesy 2% Men’s Shoes Black and Tan High Shoes, sold ury o Herman's were $3.64 0. & a e - Men’s Lined Gloves For Street and Auto Buckskin. tan dogskin and capes, a fey - mocha snd black, all at the ome price.. .y | Men’s Hats )‘ < All that loh‘ 0.00, i )‘ nake, in tan $3.95 $4.45 $7.24 $6.00 $1.35 $3.38 $3.35 $6.85 i . Artidle in Our Immen OVERLOOK A SINGLE ITEM Second Floor Balance of Our Stock of Fall and Winter Ribbed-medium weight cotton, in white, ecru or silver gray. Light-weight wool and cotton in silver gray. Medium-weight wool and cotton in silver gray. Light-weight Sea Island cotton in white. A All weights of fine wool, wool and cotton, weol and silk. Ribbed white or ecru, medium-weight cotton. Were $3.25 to $4.00, Now $1.65 | ~——— All weights of wool and cotton, in silver gray. Extra grade of nearly all wool, in silver gray. ! First Floor ' Men’s Union Suits at Less Than Wholesale Prices Were $3.00, Now $1.65 Were $5.00, Now $3.35 MEN’S Were $7.50 to $12.50, Now $5.65 Men’s Underwear Shirts and Drawers Were $1.75, Now 90c Were $6.00, Now $3.35 e SUITS $19.75 qumerly Up to $67.50 ONLY ABOUT 100 LEFT! 32 to 42 Get In Early and Get Yours \ “The Store With a Smile” Third Floor Women’s High Shoes That We Sold From $10.00 to $15.00 Now $4.65 Consisting of tan with buck top, fleldmouse, pat- ent leather, patent leather with buck top, tan and black kidskin; all sizes 2% to 8, but some ef the lots are not in all sizes. WOMEN’S PATENT LEATHER PUMPS, French sizes 5 to 8 only. heels; Now . $4.65 ‘WOMENS Ph:TENT LEATHER OXFORDS, with Baby French 1s; sises 4 to 7 only. WOMEN'S BLACK KIDSKIN PUMPS, with mili- tary heels; gizes 3% to 8. Now o $4.65 Seme in tan, sizes 2% to 8%. $4.65 MISSES' TAN or BLACK LACED SHOES, sizes 11% to 2; were $5.50. 53‘95 traveling, i CHILDREN'S BLACK PATENT LEATHER SHOES, sizes 8% to 2 buttonedorheed.$395 $2.85 TWEEDIE'S BOOT TOPS, Black Satin and Cloth; were $4.00. Now..... WOMEN'S SATIN MULES, only about 30 pairs; were $5.00, DOW............. $2o85 se Stocks Included to Make This Annual Event—-The Great 1...NEW BARGAINS ADDED DAILY Men’s Shirts Any Madras or Percale Shirt, with or without collars, $2.15, or S.... fOr oo ceecnccccococosconene Any Silk or Silk and Linen Shirt, $5.25, or 3 for. .- ... WOMEN’S SUITS for street, spori or including all tweeds and jersey suits; were sold from $40.00 to $75.00, now.. .. —— - oo oo-- MIDDIES For Misses and Children The Famous “Paul Jones” Make In Sizes 4 to 22 Yrs. $1.69 (Formerly Up to $3.50) est Ever! m $6.00 $15.00 $24.75