Evening Star Newspaper, January 6, 1921, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, With Bundsy Morning Bdition. WASHINGTON,D. C. THURSDAY. ... .January 6, 1921 e e THEODORE W. NOYES. .. .Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company l—r-omumuwmhnhfll National Bank Buil DR s, Eaglen. Chicago Office: Buropean Office: Star, with the Sunday morning red by carrie onth: daily partments proposed by the legisiative bill is 6,480. This figure, doubtless representing the utmost that could be done in the way of economy for the sake of lowering the appropriations without actually crippling the govern- 'ment work, is very much less than that which has been proclaimed as possi- ble. And from every bureau affected by the lowered provisions there will now come a protest on the score that these changes threaten the public serv- ice with disablement and congestion of work. The truth is that there is no such great overpopulation of the depart- the | ments as some have claimed. Ever Daily and Sune Daily only yr. $%. Sunday . $3. e e Americanize the Washingtonian. 1t is suggested that Congress at this time wishes to approximate the Dis- trict to the political status of a terri- tory and not to that of a state; and that, therefore, it is disposed to re- Jject the pending constitutional amend- ment and as a substitute to give the District two voteless delegates in the House and the privilege of voting for Commissioners. : If Congress wishes to approximate the District political status to that of a territory it will approve the con- stitutional amendment, which merely accomplishes this approximation. The privilege of voting for Commissioners and voteless delegates falls far short of approximating the American rights and powers of a territory. (1). The territory has an elected legislature of its own which makes its | local laws. (2). The territory may at any- moment by a majority vote of Congress be admitted to statehood and to privileges which include the repre- sentation in Congress and the electoral college which the District seeks. These are the distinctive and precious rights and powers of the American territory. The sole effect of the pending con- stitutional amendment is to put the District upon the political plane of a territory under the second of the two specified heads, but with radical reser- vations and limitations. The amend- ment makes it possible for the District to secure at some future time repre: sentation in Congress and the electoral college by empowering Congress in its discretion as to time to grant this rep- resentation, retaining, however, na- tional control of the capital and with- out admitting the District to sovereign i statehood. Sl Our constitational amendment mere- | ly takes District representation from inaccessibility and impossibility and makes it possible. ‘The amendment thus meets the sug- gested wish of Congress to place the District approximately (but with radi- cal restrictions) upon the territorial plane. ‘The bill enabling the District to vote for Commissioners and two voteless delegates does mot put the District upon the territorial plane at all. It does not give the District the terri- torial power of enacting local laws or the promise and possibility of future power to participate on American principles in making national laws. If we accept it as giving us genuine territorial status and the constitu- tional amendment is on that account rejected we shall delay indeflnltely] the securing by the District of the rm!i rights and powers of the A.meflcnni'm be in charge. territory and later the national rep- resentationi of a quasi-state. It is hard to understand why either { any ‘Washingtonian or any congress-io"hoaox protectionists, and all primed man who has read the constitutional | since 3t | jouple object of raising revenue and amendment should oppose it, creates no new state, increases the powers of Congress in respect to the| capital and does not diminish in the | slightest the nation's power through ! Congress to control the National Cap- ital and the nation’s corresponding obligation to do financial equity in the upbuilding of the nation’s city. Washington applies to two-thirds of | pog Congress to empower Congress, when- ever Congress pleases, to give national Tepresentation to District residents: and to give first to the seat of gov- ernment the same possibility of na- tional representation that Hawaii and] Alaska now possess. What Washingtonian can be im- agined as opposing this amendment which dignifies and exalts his Ameri- can status and arms him with a cer- tain power which belongs to him as an American, and neither inflicts nor threatens any injury to anybody? Why should any senator or repre- sentative oppose an amendment which merely extends an existing power of Congress on Jogical and equitable lines and which simply empowers Congress | to correct political inequity whenever it sees fit to do so? Surely Congress will not hesitate or delay in co-operating to give to itself by constitutional amendment the pow- er at the right time to cure the evil and shame of completely non-repre- sentative government of the seat of government of the great American republic. —_——— Russian sovietists are said to favor strikes throughout the world. It is plain that Mr. Martens should get back to headquarters and talk a little plain- business =ense. ———— Christmas comes but once a year. An inauguration comes but once in four years. —_———— Reducing the Government Forces. While the gross reduction of clerks tn the government departments en. tailed in the specifications of the leg- islative appropriation bill is 12,183, the actual reduction of what may be re. garded as supernumerary employes is much less. An actual increase of 1,500 clerks is provided for the fnternal revenue bureau for the better admin- istration of the tax. collection work. ‘This brings the net reduction down to 10,683. Of this number, however, 4,203 represent what may be called the sea- #onal shortening of the census force, since the armistice was signed there has been a steady depletion of the forces, which at the peak of the war- time period reached close upon 120,000. Since then there has been a reduction by about 35,000, leaving the depart- ment force in Washington a little more than twice as large as it was before we entered the war. The reduction now proposed in the legislative bill will bring it down to just about a 100 per cent increase from four years ago. It is doubtful whether without dan- ger to the departmental organization the reduction can be carried much further. For as the war time works are closed the normal government business increases, and for some years to come this increase will about keep pace with the depletions permitted by the closing up of the government's war activities. Mr. Harding and Leadership. The Star’s information from Marion that Mr. Harding is showing the strain of his leadership need not be surpris- ing. Except for his brief stay in Texas, which was dashed with a storm, and his passage to Panama and back, he has been besieged by callers with business ever since the election—full {two months. | And the business has been of the | greatest variety. Legislative policies {and other policies, and federal patron- age, large and small, have been dis- cussed with him by men greatly in- terested in their subjects and asking for his interest. l True, Mr. Harding has invited this. He wants to begin his new duties with as much information relating to them jas he can collect from the most re- liable sources. He feels that he needs it. His first act in office will be to communicate with Congress about the public business at a special session he is to call, and he cannot do this safely without having all necessary facts to go upon. But this experience at Marion is not a “marker” to what awaits him in Washington. At Marion he is pro- tected somewhat. Here he will be close to Capitol Hill, where republican leaders will be numerous, and in a {town where visiting politicians are nu- merous the whole year round; and ap- plications for a word with him will multiply daily. His party friends, therefore. will| have to consider Mr. Harding in this relation, and help conserve his phys- 'lml strength. His shoulders are broad, but he ought not to be required to carry too heavy a pack. —_—— The Impending Battle. Those who enjoy a congressional contest, and feel themselves compe- tent to follow one in all of its features, parliamentary and other, should keep their eyes on the Senate when the tariff comes up in that ly, and while it remains up. They will be repaid for their attention. On both sides veterans and experts The republicans ‘will be led by Mr. Penrose, Mr. Smoot, Mr. McCumber and Mr. Watson, all for the impending scrap. They want a. revision on protection lines, with the {fostering business. As veteran legis- lators and tariff experts they are prob- ably not underrating their task, nor what is expected of them. The democrats will be led by Mr.{ |Simmons and Mr. Underwood, both | {orthodox anti-protectionists, and with recent records to show the faith they As a member of the House and jthe majority leader, Mr. Underwood igave his name to the tariff measure now on the books and waiting re- vision, while it was Mr. Simmons, then chairman of the Senate finance com- ‘mmee, who supervised the review o(' i the Underwood measuse as it had been received from the House. The meas. jure was in the Senate’s hands five | months, and underwent many-changes, ’wmch showed differences of opinion | between Mr. Simmons and Mr. Under- wood at that time over details. How closely together the two mepn stand now over the details of this revision is {to be demonstrated. | The fight promises to be a congres-| |sional beauty, and to occupy some| time. It will open shortly after the| special session begins. ‘ ——— i | Disarmament will cause a reduction {in the military market for steel. The demand for material related to plow- jthough with less profit. i ——— France will be inclined, if Germany {joins the society of nation3, to Insist | that the initiation be more or less rough. | | Instead of desiring to terrorize the world, Lenin now wants to talk busi- ness. Hearings. Hearings are the order of the day. Mr. Harding set the fashion. He has been granting hearings for weeks— Ihnl, indeed, been calling men and women to Marion for the express pur- pose of getting their views on all the leading questions of the day. Poli- l!lclzns, capitalists, labor leaders, agri- culturists, lawyers in practice, judges have visited him at his invitation and given him the benefit of their views and information. Upon leaving all have testified to the cordiality of their reception, the patient attention of the host, and to the impression he made on them of his capacity for leadership. All have predicted success for him in incidental to the completion of the|the onerous and enormous task he has enumeration and tabulation work of|in hand. the last census. Thus the real de- Congress 1s following the fashion. crease in the personnel of the de-|It is granting hearings on matters on |another race as long as you live.” its card. . Persons in interest are in- vited to come forward and state their cases, and many are presenting them- selvés before committees. In this way before there is actlon on either the tariff or the immigration question— two questions of earnest and deneral appeal—the lawmakers will qualify for some very important work. It is a good way—the American way. The proposition in a republic is that two heads are better than ofie. Those in authority are put there by the peo- ple, and are answerable to thepeople for all they do in office. Hence, offi- cials are well justified in consulting public sentiment and advising with other men of light and leading before shaping measures for the public bene- fit. —_———— Thanks to Mr. Harding, Mr. Cool- idge will not be obliged to use an un- reasonable amount of his time delv-! ing into “For Sale” or “For Rent” an- nouncements. In addition to the in- augural festivities there will be some highly interesting housé-warmings in {will not stand for wartime wage' s ‘Washington. ————————— The ex-kaiser is still represented as confident that he will be recalled to rule as Emperor of Germany. Aljenists sa. that delusions of grandeur, while comparatively mild in manifestation, are among the hardest to cure. —_— e During the course of his preparation j guctam® with @ clearer appreciation | for the thirty-second degree of Mason- ry it may be assumed that l’rcsidonbi elect Harding found some advice well worth listening to, even though it had nothing to do with politics. —_———————— The Department of Justice won a victory over the Chicago packers and the average household is waiting breathlessly to see what effect it will | have on the price of pork chops. ? Vice President Marshall's ment to private life seems to suit him so well that it is difficult to decide whether he should be classed as a win- ner or a loser. ( Prices and wages are now. expected to take example In their course of re- duction from the old comic pictures, entitled, “After You, My Dear Al phonse.” l American wealth has made several European families comfortable in their foreign relations, as well as felici- tous in their domestic lives. l Whatever the inauguration costs, it can be depended upon not to lead to any call for a series of protracted and mystifying investigations. f Every patriotic citizen hopes that the 4th of March will offer no en- couragement to speculators in um- brellas and overshoes. } Again the dictionary asserts itself in connection with the call, “Back to normalcy!” ' Exactly what is “nor- malcy”? i retire- | Editorial Digest Fair-Weather Partnerships. The theory of profit-sharing as a solution for labor troubles received a black eye in the opinion of the press when the widely commented upon “experiment” in Newbern Iron Works of North Carolina fell through and ended in a strike. Much comment upon the practical working out of ‘“‘communism” was made when tte workers were permitted to share the profit of the mill and when they finally faced a dep d_pay envelope at the end of the period a number of | newspapers accepted the situation as proof against the practicability of jfommuni!‘m, The majority of writers, however, are left with the belief that | While the experiment was too short to show much, it at least. was a good experience for the workers and taught a valuable lesson. The Nashville Tennessean (inde- {pendent democri#t) looks upon the | whole affair as a simple and effectivi onstration of the wages. This by the Buffalo Commercial (independ- ent), which sees in the experiment an “object lesson to some people who do not yet realize that business today ales and that men must take less n they bave been getting if they lare to have employment at all.” That |the expericnce will be beneflcial to i the orkmen who went through it th ‘Trenton Times (independent) is sure {for “it will serve as an education to {the men in some features of industry Ifrom the side of capital, of whic ! many of them are entirely oblivious. {The Philadelphia Bulletin (independ- tent republ also thinks fhat the Newbern strikers now possess a bet- und nding _concerning cmplo viewpoint and will g0 iback to work “under the old e iof the difficulties of industrial part- {nership.” The Indianapolis News (independ- lent) points out that the employer must go on paying his men. whether {he is making money or not. and if the iprofit-sharing plan is really adopted the workers must {with the employer * lack.” Bread, it adds, tered on both sides.” Following this line of reasoning the Birmingham News (democrat) thinks that “the Newbern ironworkers are not_true sportsmen,” and their final vFen business is s rarely but- (independent democrat) ~ declares, “against the share of profits that they {Pad made was nothing short of a that the shops could make.” Many writers take the view the trial not a fair one. that was The mple, conside that it was "avn unfortunate time to put a plan of this I character in operation, for the rea- son that prices are too unstable. Be- | sides, the raw materials which have {been used during this period un- | doubtedly cost more than they will |some months later. From another viewpoint the New York Globe (in- dependent) feels that this case “was not fair or al” since, “if the re- ports are accurate, employes of the |profits only after profits had sunk 5o low that to cut the melon was cheaper than to pay ordinary wages. That the workmen were illogical is the opinion of the Baltimore Amer- ican (republican), which scouts the idea that radicalism had anything to {do with the affair, which was “merely a reshuffing of arrangements in an effort to carry burdens more easily,” land which, since it was unsuccesetul, proves nothing except that “the par- Cincinnati (republican) puts what it calls the adventure” tersely: “Any system of profits, honest in its application, has its appeal. But the appeal is limited to the area of advantage. If it offers advantages to us we are for it, otherwise not. ship relations of the employer in pro- the | xpect to suffer 'strike, the Charlotte (N. C.) Observer ke for more money than they knew { Rochester Herald (independent), for company were offered a share in the Profit-sharing appeals to the partner- | portion to the excess of profits over | | 1 | | lesson” of the Newbern Iron Works The selection of a Secretary of Labor promises to be one of the most laborious of the cabinet responsibil- ities. A world peace will still leave Secre- tary Daniels in a position to insist that it was a fine Navy while it lagted. SHOOTING STARS. r L BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Mnn'nmlg'nrlnk, They tell us that the wave momentous Of crime now growing so portentous To prohibition may be due. It makes men look for liquids new Which bump their brains to such a giddiness; » Morals meander in uristiddiness! | For instance, when 4 thirst is chronic, And makes a man imbibe Hair Tonic, He turns to his beloved wife And reaches for a scalping knife. Then with a flendish lack of charity He barbers her wi*s wild barbarity! Or if he drinks a perfume subtle, In lieu of brew from bowl or scuttle, He thinks with dark, poetic gloom Of caskets with funereal bloom, And straightway adds without apology Another name to the necrology. Or if, to stimulate his liver, He draws the fluid from a flivver, He bellows like a motor horn And leaves the thoroughfare forlorn ‘While he aseumes with flerce felicity An auto’s lethal eccentricity. Our sclentists so energtic Say lite is largely dietetic, And we may turn to joy complete By watching what we take to eat. But, oh, a potency unthinkable Now rests in what a man finds drink- able! Victim of the Horses. “Charley, dear,” gaid young Mrs. race prejudice they talk about.” “What do you mean by such a wild remark?” . “Just what I say. I wish you'd get 0 prejudiced that you'd never attend Better Luck Next Time. “Did the telephone operator you the wrong number again?" “I guess the number was all proper enough,” replied the subdued citizen, “only I didn’t happen to be the right party to fit it.” give Jefferson’s Inauguration. ‘When Jefferson his horse did stop Close to the curb 'mid loud applause Said he, “How lucky there's no cop To tell me of the parking laws!” Jud Tunkins says the law of aver- ages asserts itself in the way a man with the smallest ideas uses the big- gest words. = A Respectful Skeptic. “Do you believe George Washing- ton always told the®uncompromising truth?” “No, sir,” replied Senator Sorghum, with emphasis. “To hold such an opinion would be to cast aspersion on his indisputable attainments as a statesman and a diplomat.” It loses its appeal just in wages. s ion as a deficit develops. propo: Sentiment for Disarmament. There is no apparent obstacle to a policy of - concerted disarmament among the armed nations. Their inclinations, whether officially or un- officially expressed, are plainly in favor of a_ halt in the growth of armaments by a reduction of present | Great Britain makes 'a Plea’for ‘p policy of reduced armaments. “France is in ac- cord with her in this policy, if out of harmony in many others.” Japan ness to reduce her maval program if the others, and especially the United States, will do likewise, and it is very evident that the inclinations of both the people and the government of this country is to unite in a policy of reduced armaments. really armed nations, .disarmament should encounter ne difficulties. ap- parently in an effort of these nations through their governments to agree upon such. a policy. There might be objections to a plan that would change the present relative status by an increase of the American naval power to correspond with its mari- time interests, but they would not be serious in the face of the strong gen- eral inclination to avoid the tremen- dous expense of armament extension under the heavy financial burdens that have been imposed by the war. The real difficulty may come from the nations that are not reckoned. as armed and that may have nothing in the way of navies. In the near or even distant future it is unlikely that the armaments of the United States, Great Britain, France and Japan will be used against each other, but_there is the possibllity that they may be needed separately or together to en- force peace among nations nominally without armaments. Even this, how- ever, should prove no obstacle to a naval holiday, because the naval forces as they now exist are suffi- cient to cope with the problems of keeping the peace of the world, if the four Teally armed nations act in concert.—Bpringfield (Mass:) Union (re- publican). Press Agent for the Pulpit. Even the most callous newspaper worker will be stirred by the word that comes from Chicago, where a good churchman solemnly and sin- cerely proposes the appointment of a press agent. Something of a moral victory is embodied in this. News- paper editors and publishers have be- come more or less inured to a totally | shares may insure more peace, even |Torkins, “I wish you had some of this | different attitude on the part of the church. Newspapers have been de- i nounced for about every conceivable !sin, sometimes with Treasons, but | usdally without discrimination. And !in character and ability, just as do preachers of the gospel. = However, |the press has pursued its way. and 1the pulpit has gone along on its ap- ipointed mission, until now we see something that points to the con- vergence of what at first look like parallel lines. Anyone who stops to think will admit that the reaction of the newspaper on the church and vice versa ought to be for good. The one must essentially be an agent of freedom and light, the other perhaps the champion of a peculiar creed, but each an exponent of truth and a pre- server of good morals. That the church will benefit by having its af- fairs properly presented:for publica- tion cannot be doubted. The bishop should be well warned in advance, however. that the modern editor is profoundly skeptical of propaganda, no matter what its source.—Omaha Bee (republican). 3 ‘ t What with bombings, snipin; shootings, cuttings and renflm_?a, i was indeed a. humorist who penned for a New York paper this heading: De Valera safe in Ireland.—Buffalo Express. ‘There really is very liftle sense in the worrying the paragraphers are doing about losing Mr. Burleson a~ a subject for enlightened comment. Per- sonally we intend to regard him as retroactive for several years.—Colum- bus Ohio State Journal. No doubt the six attending physi- cians have ascertained where Caruso banks his golden voice.—Norfolk Ledger Dispatch. officially gives notice of a willing- | i Such being the disposition of the 1 i | i we submit that newspapers do vary . { I MENS WEAR Never in Our History Such Tremendous Reductions Our Semi-Annual Final Clearance Sale All Purchases CASH! No Merchandise Charged During Sale! BROKEN LOTS At Prices Almost Unbelievable SUITS 1 Young Man’s Dark Sauit, (size 37). Was $25. Now $5.00 1 Tweed Suit (size 39). Was $35.00. Now... .. $15.00 1 Tweed Suit (size 40). Was $30.00. Now... ........$12.00 1 Gray Flannel Double-breast- ed Suit (size 42). Was $65.00. Now.. ....$19.00 1 Tan Tweed Suit (size 36). Was $30.00. Now.......$12.00 Final Reductions on ALL SUITS (Including Stein-Blochs) Formerly Up to $55.00; Now. -$28.00 Formerly Up to $65.00; Now. -$32.00 Formerly Up to $75.00; Now. -$38.00. Formerly Up to $95.00; Now..$46.00 Necessary Alterations at Cost. | ALL OVERCOATS 5 Sport Suits (sizes 36 to 40). : A 2 Were $55.00 and $60.00. Formerly Up to $55.00; Now..$33.00 | 1 Bk white Checic Sat ; i x (size 40). Was $45.00. Formerly Up to $70.00; Now. $42.00 |, Now o bicin ..,.;S.n.iils.oo Formerly Up to $85.00; Now. $52.00 e ) 1 Brown Mixed Suit (size 36). Was $75.00.. Now.. 26.00 1 Gray Flannel Medium- weight Suit (size 38). Was $55.00. Now....:. Gray Mixed Spring-weight Suit (size 38). Was $65.00. Now ... ..$23.75 1 Gray Double-breasted Suit Formerly Up to $125.00; Now.$62.00 And we mean our entire stock of light, medium and heavy weight: 3 overcoats. Alterations at Cost. - Hats = Pajamas up to $5.00. Now.... Shirts Neckwear All Fancy Silk Neckwear. Formerly $1.00. Now.. Was $65.00. Now.......$25.00 Black and White Tweed Suit size 34). Was $60.00, Now $18.00 57 Borsalinos Soft Hats. For- All Pajamas, including Domets, (si lot No. 1. Formerly size 38). Was $55.00. sjmerly up 10.38.00. @9 QB | $3.00 and $3.50. Now. . $2.15 NOW «evne aaennnnne..-$21.00 Soft Hata. Formerly $5 00 : tAu P;]am;s. lnclluding Domets, 1 Light Mixed Suit (size 35). . ot no. . 'ormer 5 D to #1000 Now. oo = %00 and 3800 Now. $2.85 1 Y;V:: Sfl:::l Sl;‘;:w(mu' '3‘6‘)3%'7“ e e ST pRkmes NG e or Was $55.00. Now $24.56 ) ats. 2 g i .00. .U, v ceeeean o $20.00 sma 512,00, Now 99,00 | Ferly 3700 to 31000 @ QB | Gray Flannel Sut (size 36), 11 Wol;en'g Slflk Plush Dunlap me:ll;-s‘::’kzaj‘nl?noad 1ot No. 4. For- 2 (V;Jas sa(,),oo,engw u (, = 3 Sailors. Formerly up -00. ra; orsts ui sizes to:lzlsgo. N;w...,l$%g.gg Nowh o BEM - $8.85 \ 35, 3):6). v&rg 370(. No;;)szs.oo aps, Formerly Light Mixed Suit (size 35). o 1 55¢ 5 All F: Silk Neckwear. 1 Light Suit (size 34). Was All Fancy Nogllgo Shirts. FOr- | pomorly 31.50. Now. . “ODC $55.00. Now.....%s...:$17.50 :::yly ”'5. ey ‘ e $1-65 Lt Stk Neckwear. For- I Gabardine Coat and Troysers libers NeellsesiinaBmor | et et ....81.15 (size 35). Was $35.00. merly $4.00. 2.15 | Al Faney siik Necicwear. “For S;E;R T AND TOPCOSASTGSG JOW . .ivevccs sonens . merly £ to $5.00. $195 ige Shirts. S INOW, o o bot o metll; l;‘:;nocny el S 2 hlrtsz 3’5 0:11 Knitted Neckwear. Fo:mer- 1 Gabardine Sport Coat (size Nows o o 1y $3.00 to $4.00. $2 15 36). Was $25.00. Now. ...$9.50 All Fancy Neglige Shirts. For- | NOW ...... e - 16 FI ] Sport Coat morly, $5.00: $ dze 44). Was $15.00 NOW . co e mieies Sors 3.65 Undenn,ear I(Vowe ). as $15. .54 50 1 Tweed Topcoat (size 38). Was $30.00. Now.......$12.00 2 Dark Mixed Topcoats (sizes 37, 40). Were $35.00. Now $15.00 4 Dark Herringbone Topcoats (sizes 36, 37, 39, 40). Were $35.00. Now...........$19.00° 1 Brown Herringbone Top- coat (size 40). Was $40.00. Now ... ...$22.00 2 Tan Belted Topcoats (sizes 36, 40). Were $60.00. Now $29.00 3 Tweed Belted Topcoats (sizes 37, 38, 40). Were $60.00. Now...........$32.00 All Fancy French Plaited Shirts. g Farmerly $6.00 and* All Winter Underwear Less 1-3 Duofold Wool Union Suits. For- merly $7.50. Now ... $4.50 Duofold Wool Two-piece Gar- ments. Formerly $3.75. $225 Now oo Dnotoldsscooolton Union Suits. Formerly $5.00. Now ... $3.00 Duofold Cotton Two-piece Gar- Hosiery 3500 Now-rr .. 4.8 All Fancy Silk Neglige Shirts. Formerly $12.00 and $13.50. Now........ $6-85 ‘White Neglige Shirts. Formerly $3.50. Now. $2-45 White Neglige Shirts. Formerly $5.00. Now. $3-45 White Collar ' Attached Shirts. Formerly $2.50. $1 85 Now ...-.. oo it o ‘White (;ollar Attached Shirts. Formerly $4.00. White Csollar Attached Shirts. Formerly $5.00 and $3 45 o 6.00. Now..... Broken lines of Woolen Half d g Brokenoliue of Dress Shirts, | Hose. Formerly $1.25. 55 4 Brown l_thed Tweed Top- Formerly up to $4.00. Now . 99C coats (sizes 36, 37, 38, 39). $1.85 Fancy Wool Hose. = For- Were $75.00. Now...... $35.00 merly $1.00. Now....... 3 Brown Herringbone Top- Now 65¢ Fancy Wool Hose. . 36, 38, 40). Gloves rormerty 136 xow SIL1G | - Coate (eizes 35 38, 40, 0dd lot Washable Fabric Gloves. | Formerly $2.00. Now. $1.45 1 Brown Tweed Topcoat (size Latel S1 15| e, Yo, Hose Fomsly 38.) Was $80.00. Now..$35.00 3ad 1ot Wool Gicves. By | Moy 2203300 $1.85 | 3 Imported Tweed Topcoats (sizes 37, 39, 40). Were $75.00. Now............$33.00 4 Tweed Topcoats (sizes 36, 37, 38, 39). Were $80.00. Now . i eenn.....$35.00 Formerly $1.00. Now. ... 500 Broken lines of Silk Half Hose. 0dd lot Lined Gloves. ooty s tittee 70135 | Rormerly 312 $1.00 Al Lined Gloves, Including Gauntlets, LESS 259, 2 Brown Mi'x}:g Bsegud v’{,‘orp- ts (si 2 o All House Gowns and Bath Robes 1-3 Off 58000 Nowr . N TRaz00 SIDNEY WEST, Inc. Fourteenth and G e e T NSS4

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