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WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY......February 17, 1922 and actual effectiveness, would in- evitably“be vitiated. President Harding and Secretary DIRAL-4 WASHINGTON, u THE EVENING STAR, cellent account. His committee assign- ments are among the best. He shows to advantage in the Senate debates. ~ To Visit National Parks | Hughes gave the country formal as- THEODORE W. NOYES......Editor !surance that the maval lmitation o e o Comnany | treaty does not lessen the defensive . Strength of any of the signatory powers. In making that statement they naturally assumed that none of the countries after agreeing to a ratio with the 8 would make-it & fallacy in practice by el 2’4 3{3’?,.:';,"{‘5".5:1. o rendering inefficient any part of the Feuth; Suadey on Seats per month. seia | naval establishment allowed under the m‘ gon;um is made by eal at the lagreement. R et ST Let the personuel ratio conform to Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. |the needs of the Navy established by Maryland and Virginia. the ship ratio as adopted. It is known ggy lntl! Sund&y“: vr., fi'a« } m::. :lsg to be low under present conditions. ly only. -1yr., $6.00; " S0c | Material reductions would make it en- 2 . . ;1 . 20 Sunday only. 1yT., §2.40; 1 mo., trely & vate. Naval gth Daily and s::m 1yrShs::é-xmm w0 | oA gureditn terue ofmen s Daily only. 1yr, $700: 1mo. 60c { Well as ships, and the country will not Sunday only.......1yr., $3.00: 1 mo.. 25¢c|approve what would amount to con- gressional alteration of the popular Facts and Figures. 5-5-3 ratio of naval strength. ———pere———— The fine achievement of the District street-cleaning department in the mat- ‘The Evening Star, 3 livered Bonus Skies Not Cleared. ter of opening the streets of Washing-{ Apparently the leaders in Congress ton to traffic following the snowstorm | are in no less a quandary today than of day before yesterday has been recog- they were before receipt of President rized and appreciated by the com- Harding’s letter proposing that if the munity. The department conciusively | former service men are to be voted & demonstrated that the lesson learned | bonus a sales tax be imposed to pay it. during the blizzard of January 28 had | This is not a new proposal, but com- been assimilated. A definite and prac- | ing now from the President of the tical plan had been evolved which was | United States and the leader of the promptly put into effect when occasion | Party responsible for government, it arose. There was somebody delegated | must be given niew consideration. Its to the duty of notifying the proper‘poflflul aspects’ will have to be exam- efficial when a given amount of snow | ired; as well as its financial and eco- had fallen. The snow-clearing appara- | nomic possibilities. These considera- tus of the department was mobilized, | tions seemingly have checked what- He is personally popuiar. His rela- tions with the administration are cor- dial. He is an excellent organizer, and owes his place in politics to the tire- less exercise of his gift for organiza- tion work. Forewarned is forearmed. The demo- crats of Indiana, and for that matter elsewhere, are expecting advantages from this race. Their hope is that the contest between these two strong men ‘will become so warm the friends of the loser will in the campaign for elec- tion show but & languld interest in the fortunes of the nominee. This might—probably would—spell republican defeat. So from men of their caliber we may expect that in case of Mr. Beveridge's success Mr. New will put his organization at the candidate’s service, while in case of Mr. New's success Mr. Beveridge will put hfb effective oratorical powers at the service of the senator. And work- ing thus together they would probably leave little doubt as to the result at the polls. Bt Faulty Workmanship. New York has found that there was careless building work in a theater which collapsed last November and in which wreck seven men were Kkilled. The testimony is that a steel pillar was not set in a concrete foundation, on the concrete, and that the steel plate was not as large as the base of the pillar. Small pieces of plate were added, and the whele chinked up to but set on a steel plate which rested | us: "] NDUCING more tourists to visit and camp in the national parks throughout the country and carg ing for them after they are there is perhaps the biggest task facing the natlional park service, ac- cording to Stephen T. Mather, direc- tor of the service. Mr. Mather wants District motorists to visit the parks In increasing num- bers this year, belleving that these great playgrounds offer the finest camping sites in the country at a minimum of expense, with wonder- ful scenio and other advantages. During 1921 but fourteen automo- biles bearing District of Columbia licenses entered Yellowstone Park, for 1instance. Thesc cars carried fifty-one people. Once the motorists can be brought to see the feasibility and desirabllity of visiting the nine- teen national parks, Director Mather believes that & much greater number of peofle from this city will avail themselves of the privileges. * * ¥k ¥ During the recent big snow here Mr. Mather saw a bus stuck in a drift. The bus driver endeavored to get the automobile through, but the car couldn’t make it. Just then a small automobile came by. .\ woman was at the wheel. “I saw- this woman look, stop her car and jump out,” Mr. Mather said. “Then she pulled from her car an automobile blanket. This she quickly threw under the rear wheels of the “‘Now back up,’ she ordered. The bus driver did so, without a word, and soon got traction for his wheels on the blanket and was able to sail away. The woman picked up her blanket and t back into her own ready for the emergency. At word of | ever disposition there was in Congress command it moved smoothly about its ‘well planned duties. - In approximately twenty-four hours, working the apparatus available (@our motor trucks equipped with plows and twelve horsedrawn graders) without respite, about 300 miles of Dis- trict roads were opened to traffic. Of these the motor-truck plows cleared 210 miles and the horse-drawn graders ninety miles. The significance of these facts and figures is obvious. It has now been established that the mechanical ap- paratus essential to the efficient han- dling of snow emergencies is inade- quate. It has further been shown that plows attached to motor trucks are more than six times as effective for snow removal as are horse-drawn graders—in that the horse-drawn unit cieared eight and one-ixth miles of road while each motor plow was clear- ing fifty-two and 2 half miles. The announcement made today by the District authorities demonstrates ‘that these facts and figures are to be taken into account in formulating plans for the future. Horsedrawn graders are to be scrapped, and e number of motor-driven plows suf- ficient to open the 524 miles of Dis- trict roads without undue strain in twenty-four hours are to be obtained. The street car companies should be prevailed upon to so equip their snow- plow cars as to push the snow from six to eight feet away from the tracks. Twenty-four snowplows of the type established as most efficient can be purchased for $6,000. Attached either to truéks now owned by the District or 2o those of local business firms which ‘would gladly co-operate in the civic function of keeping District traffic moving, they will be able to do the ‘work which must be done. Even as- suring the hire of twenty privately owned trucks at $25 per truck per day, with an initial expenditure of $5,000, the District problem of freeing the streets of snow would cost in the future $500 per day of heavy storm. Neither figure seems excessive. ———t e Alexandria is to have a white way. The common council of Washington's histeric neighbor has voted that King street for seven squares from Fairfax to Patrick shall glow as mnearly like noon of a June day as electric lights can do the job. Excellent! Advertising pays! Well lighted streets advertise & city, make for business and show to everybody that a town is not only alight but alive. Dim streets are out of line with modern ways. And many of Washington's streets are dim. Alex- andria, when. the new white light proves to all Alexandrians that it is & great, good thing on King street, will brighten up all the other streets at night. If Washington does not turn more light into some of its streets men may sometime say that Alexandria is a city of light and Washington e city of gloom. —————— _There are formalities still to be at- tended to in connection with the ‘Washington conference, and the im- portance of matters suggested as sub- jects for deliberation in Genoa does not prevent an impression that the ‘world public should not be called upon to concern itself with more than one ™ comference at a time. « —_————————— A system of inspection that will af- ford reasonable assurance that bufld- ings will remain intact is an element of the housing problem mot to be neglected. “Furloughed” is a polite substitute for the grim phrase, “out of & job.” ——— O — The Personnel Ratio. Congress, should it carry out the suggested drastic cut in the personnel of the Navy, would contravene the spirit and nullify the effect of the widely approved agresment of the arms conference for limitation of naval establishments of the powers. Moreover, the result would be to place to fush the bonus legislation through and leave for after consideration the problem ©of paying it. The sales tax has many advocates in Congress, but it has been definitely rejected by the republican leaders, and especially those of the House, as a means of ralsing revenue. Whether its advocacy by the President will alter this position remains to be seen. From a political standpoint it appears to have both advantages and disadvan- tages. It certainly distributes the tax widely among the people, but it does not allow any concealment of the fact that it is the people who pay the tax. There is no chance for campaign ors- tors to beguile the voters into belief that it is ‘being taken out of the pockets of the “profiteers.” The President left a way out for Congress in his intimation that voting of the bonus might well be deferred to a more propitious time, but proponents of the bonus are unlikely to assent readily to this. Should the very prac- tical difficulties in the way of an im- mediate grant result in postponement, the discarded suggestion that the pro- ceeds of the European loan be applied to bonus payments might well be re- vived. This proposal was rejected on the ground that it would be only an un- certain promise to the service men, but the British government now has gone on record that it will ask no further postponement of interest pay- ments, so there will be an assured in- come from the largest of our Euro- 1 pean creditors; beginning in April and | May. The principal of the British debt to this government is $4,166,318,358, and interest accrued and unpaid amounts to $508,173,742, a total in- debtedness at the present time of $5,- 674,492,100. If this is refunded at 4% per cent, the minimum rate stipulated in the refunding bill, the annual inter- est charge will be $241,165,914. This would not be sufficient to meet the estimated yearly cost of the bonus, but | there is reasonable expectation that within & year or two the rest of the amount could be made up through the effecting of economies in government expenditures. Safety—With Reservations. Various agencies have tharged themselves with an examination or an inquiry concerning certain obsolete bridges in the District. One of the local traction companies had an ex- amination made by en engineer of high professional achievement. and the report was that the Calvert Street ‘bridge is safe—that is, safe with reser- vations. The modifications are that loads shall be light and that they shall not move fast. Safety with modifica- tions may be. translated as partial safety, and partial safety is unsafety. One of the civic clubs has also un- dertaken to find out how these bridges stand, and the chairman of the club’s bridge committee has reported the En- gineer Commissioner of the Districtas saying: “It is @ well known fact that even the most cereful examination of an old metal structure can go no further than & search for those things that are visible or that can be verified by means of hammer tests. So neither in the case of this bridge nor that of any other iron or steel dridge of equal age is there the complete certainty that would exist in the case of & masonry bridge.” Here it is! “Certainty” is not & noun of comparison. There is either cer tainty, or there is not certainty. The bridge may be safe, but the bridge may not be safe. There cught not to be & “may not” about the safety of & Ireland has made brilliant progress, but has not yet disposed of all its problems. car. Her readiness so struck me that I hurried up to ask her about it. “As I did so I noticed a small sticker on the windshield of her car. ‘Yosemite' it read. And I found out that this young woman was one of those who had visited our parks and learned in the school of the great ng:l-'t.:f-do:lr:hl (l!lelrtlln drbndlnell and ability wi will stand her in stead through life” * * * The director of the national park service heartily believes in the future of automobile travel in the parks, this including the automobile camps which in the last few years have become a feature of park life during the summer. He feels that in no other Wway can tourists get so iatimate en acquaintance with the parks, which are the people’s parks, and which, therefore, the people ought to visit as far as possible. The automobile, Mr. Mather feels, is the cheapest and best way to visit the parks. By becoming a part of one of the “automobile citles™ estab- | lished in Yellowstone, or one of the other parks, a person can remain in the upen for weeks and months and see every nook and corner of the playgrounds. The good roads act is being utilized by the states in making these great natural playgrounds more accessible. 50 that within a few years it is hoped that the dream of a “park-to-park highway” will be a reality. Even now many of the parks in the west are joined by fine roads, and some automobile tourists have made a habit each summer of camping for a few weeks in each park. * x X % Don't leave food in your car, Mr. Mather warns! make. the pillar rest good and true. Men seem prone to take chances, or some men will take chances, and the matter is not found out till the build- ing fails. It is not possible to examine & bullding 20 carefully after it is fin- ished that all defects of workmanship, it they exist, may be discovered. It is during the construction of the build- ing that there must be supervision and vigilance. —— According to report, Germans are working industriously and eating heartily, despite a rather eccentric currency system. The voluminous pub- 1t .tion of money appears to be im- portant only as a concession to time- honored custom, conducted, however, on a plan which permits everybody to have as much as he waats, such as 1t is. ————— There has been 8o much preliminary discussion of @ Genoa conference that the ideas of many statesmen of differ- ent nationalities will be pretty Wefl‘ understood, even if there is no oppor-: tunity of presenting them on the‘ floor.. ——————— Tons of seed wheat have been shipped to Russia. Lenin and Trotsky may be persuaded to turn their atten- tion from vague economic theories long enough to organize a practical and reliable department of agriculture. ———— O —— Those playful bears in the Yellow- Philadelphia is said to resent jestful | stone, for instance, have been known allusions to it as a slow town. New |t e;mc out ‘llm‘o n:h"uuzomn:n: el(y.; snuf aroun n e car seats ani ;’:‘;:“’;o:: :j.: ‘:':“::c:“m';:: begin to rip up cushions in search : of the “grub” You can’t blame a There is no satisfying civic pride. bear. So don’t leave your food T around, careless-like, that's all. Even Experts insist that the Calvert Street | the park rangers cannot be every and Klingle Ford bridges are still use- ful, though they are compelled to ad- mit that the structures are far from beautitul. ———t—— ) Intimations that Lenin will do his 3 i best to make the Genoa conference in- "":,M Vatiosn and 'Worl: ?nli:o:. . teresting do not lend any icular ‘Few questions before the world ar P47 |80 important as the attitude of the encoursgement to the enterprise. new Pope toward modern political is- e S P e m s sues,” declares the New York World. European statesmanship is devoting { 1t is, therefors, “natural that all his & considerable amount of its energies | acts should be scanned for light upon to the preparation of questionnaires to | the probable trend of the papacy.” In- be answered by Uncle Sam. deed, this “probable trend” is a mat- B ter of keen Interest in American pa- ‘Women in politics have not yet un. | *°™ for while, as the Newark News ertak “farm ., |52ys, “as an ecclesiastical event the :loc en ito jorganixe & erette” | 4jection of a new Pope is wholly the concern of the church of which he is ——— the supreme head,” it is “a political SHOOTING STARS.. event also,” and “as such it is of wider concern.” BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. At the present critical juncture, —_— “when . European affairs are in such “Acting Up.” confusion, it is especially im, nt that the new Pope shall be gifted as a statesman no less than as the spir- itual head of the church,” and the Philadelphia Record speaks for Amer- ican editorial opinion when it ap- proves warmly “the selection of one head. lwho h.l.lddl lomatic and lfirelg; serv- ust let the child alone,” she sala, | Ice” and who. consequently, “may be - expected to view world questions in ‘Bad moments come to great andjbroad and liberal ‘manner.” the He's merely ‘acting up'; that's all. *“Heo may be weary of the day; ‘Weary alike of chores or play; Or weary, 88 we grown folks grow, Because the hours are dull and stow. In just s little while he'll be A real oy, all gay and free, \ Answering youth's eternal call— He's merely ‘acting up’; that's all.” They say that men are grown-up boys ‘Who play with more expensive toys. 86 when a friend seems to forget True friendliness, I shall not fret, Tl wait until & brighter day Dispels the shadows, chill and gray, A youngster in a surly mood Refused to play or eat his food. His tather said, “I greatly fear He needs some discipline severe.” The mother smiled and shook hér the new Pope is one to inspire expec- tation that he may show as great a szlp of_international questions as edict XV exhibited.” Undoubtedly his will be thé oppor- tunity to pI “‘a most important part in ordering the affairs of the world in lod of great uneasiness and un- " the Wilkes-Barre Reco (8. C.) State suggests, “he wields per- haps greater power and influence over a ter number of persons than any other ruler on the globe,” the Roanoke Times finds “his announced policy” of “universal pacification and concilia- tion” a “distinctly hopeful” one. Jus: what the reported “liberal tendencies” have an opportunity to know better as time passes” but, crediting him with enuine “liberal tendencies,” the New ork Globe feels that “no man in the And patiently these words recall: world has & better opportunity to ex- “He's merely ‘acting up’; that's alL.” %}2&1;":, ":; :"' el “:' — B s work towa niversal pacl- The Hands of His Friends, fication” the Indianapolis News holds Pius XI “has & chance that was “Your enemies call you & spotlight " the spotlight apparatus in the hands of those who will aim it in my direc- tion.” Jud Tunkins says if the woman folks are going to wear knickers he sueases the only thing for men to do i» to revive Roman togas. . h A Practical Achievement. Had I & great inventor’s mind I should not seek to show off. T should de satisfied to find A way to clean the snow off. war the Catholio Church, because of its hold on its members, is looked to training force needed in the conflict agalnst soclalism, disorder mnmot governmental form.” u“bm' mh“thc new 8:“'1‘ .l.; v‘OM‘. “quite exceptional ri- ! %uu with affairs,” TIrresponsibility. “You disspprove of valentines?” rd | became effective. of Plus XI signity “the world will} Chin, and the other ilis that rise with every | by desire to of { Washington D. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1922. place at once. Everybody likes the bears, of course, so the only thing to do is watch your food, and not forget that a bear has a keen scent. There were 300,000 automobile campers in the various national parks last year. A fee of $7.60 is charged for each car for the season. In the Yellowstone Park there are four large automobile camps, as well as smaller ones. - These camps are laid off like clt] each automobile being given a regular l(;‘t. olll which the owner sets up housekeeping. Proper sanitation and running w:-l ter are provided for each camp ci! y‘: of automobilists. Dr. W. Hammon o the United States public health se:v- ice is now making a thorough study of the sanitation of these camps, an in the future the park service ex- he very lat DECLDE ayatems for the sutomobiliste. e camps must be expanded each year, so popular are they ‘becoming. PR The value of a month or 80 entirely in the open is coming home to the American people as never before. And the national parks afford the, ideal camping grounds for the peo- | ple. For $2 a day one party of three ' from Cleveland took a nine-month, trip. This included the cost of luo-l line. “America outdoors and on wheels each summer.” That is one of the at ideals which the park service %o realization. The trips can be taken safely, it is pointed out. as the park rangers are experlenced men and each park has its full quota. The rangers help with the cars, help, supply food and are able to locate: nybody in a park by means of a telephone service on which they pride themselves. At the larger {’lfkfl. such as Yellow- stone, community houses are being erected. Two are now finished, one at | is helping nd canyon, the other at the, the 0ld Faithful geyser. At the Yosemite ,000 persons. S‘Bfll pl.l’le service is not alone boost- summer camps. | ing the spring-and and tourists at this time of H can ski in Lafayette Park, Me., and | indulge in all sorts of snow festivi- ties in Rocky Mountain Park, near Denver. * % X % When the service secures a far- southern park, such as that proposed on the Mescalero Indian reservation, New Mexico, it will be able to offer the people any sort of clime in the United States. At present, if you want to get warmth during winter in | a national park it is necessary to g0 to the Isle of Hawail. As it is. the national parks ofter great ranges of temperature each sea- son. In the Mount Rainier Park, Washington, It is possible, by climb- ing up the mountain, to run out of summer into winter. In the Sequoia National Park, by climbing, one can get the effect of going to Alaska. In Zlon Park, in southwestern Utah, one man raises figs in a warm clime and corn in a temperate. The natural wonders of the parks, their glorious air, vitalized by nature with health-giving properties, and the efforts of man, as put forth by the park service for the people, com- bine to induce motorists and others to _visit them. Some day, Mr. Mather believes, it will be as fashionable to have a wind- shield covered with stickers from the various parks as it usel to be to have a suit case plastered Wwith European Lotel labels. The parks administered by the ‘I national park service are Hot Springs, Arkansas; Yellowstone, Wyoming, Montana and Idaho; Sequonia, California; Yosemite, Cali- fornia; General Grant, California; Mount Rainier, Washington; Crater Lake, Oregon; Dakota; Platt, Oklahoma; Sullys Hill, North Dakota; Mesa Verde, Colorado; Glaocier, Montana; Rocky Mountain, | Colorado; Hawali, Hawallan Islands; Lassen Volcanic, California; Mount McKinley, Alaska; Grand Canyon, iAlrl;ona; Lafayette, Maine, and Zion, tah. EDITORIAL DIGEST problem which has faced Italy since the war.” o 1 Political experience was added_ to industrial, when he was sent to Po- land soon after the close of the war “to represent the Vatican in the capi- tal of the nmew republic.” There, the Newark (N. J.) Star-Eagle reports, “he came in contact with many prob- lems of which the average American has little knowledge.” He had to en- counter the march of bolshevism into Poland, the Utica Observer continues, and “through his wonderful person- ality and tireless work counteracted the spread of radicalism and carried hope and confidence to the people in that country.” The Chicago FPost feels that the new Pope's experience in Poland “will equip him to meet the leading problems of the new day,” and “many nations,” the Des Moines Capital believes, “will profit by his views on the question of sound gov- ernment.” Smuggling Aliens In. One of the most interesting fea- tures of the smugglipg of human beings into the United States is that there evidently is no punishment for the offense. The 3 per cemt immti- gration law lacks teeth, probably be- cause it never occurred to the framers of the act that European immigrants would try to enter the United States by other than conventional methods. If the wise men in Washington had remembered what happened after the Chinese were legally excluded they might have established a penalty for violations of the 3 per cent law. Chi- nese have been smuggled into the United States through either Canada or Mexico ever since the Geary act The smugglers brought the coolies across the great lakes for $100 a head and the supply of laundrymen in this country was regularly augmented. The Italians, Polish Jews and other Europeans who are I ly barred from entrance because their immi- gration quota is exhausted have am- bitions at least equal to those of the ese. Some of them with rich relatives in the United States are able to pay five times as much as the old cost of smuggling Chinese. The operation of getting them into Amer- ica is more difficult, but not more hasardous. Once -they are in any of the Caribbean Islands adjacent to Florida the task of “dummy running” is easy. The worst the federal thorities can do to the undesired alien is to send him back to the place he came from. The worst they can do to the smuggler is nothing unless he has been unwise enough to try to bring in rum as well as_contraband immigrants.—New York Herald (in- dependent). What the farmer needs most is an lutol:'iut will eat oats.—The Evening or] Ulster is a part of Ireland that seems determined to remain apart.— Virginian-Pilot. The Kentu enate 1s ting o e e Tl a truel—Pittsburgh Press. s One .nice thing about the disarma- ment ‘conference: It 8 a chance to say, “I told you so."— Wichita Bagle. ‘Those 104 midshipmen who failed in tions may have been inspired co-operate with tha' conference, — Saginaw than | News-Courier. Because she was forbidden to smoke tte in & theater, Margot As- declares this is not & free coua- ‘However, the tact t) he Was | i i ay ! = d 1 st ‘Th ‘ i gre: ot rvi 1 al 1 bel gra; he - Park there is an automobile city otl Winter sports are being developed, the ye: o8 THE EVENING STAR,|listment. It the suggested reduction { the possessor to'a leading place in the R = 5 = s S g | S50 e e oo e io| W ANES Capital Motorists ! pr— r———— Yoo icks . The ORIGINAL “ Malted Milk . Our method of “rejuvenat- ing” mirrors makes them re- Furniture—Mirrors flect like new. i J —Diamond: 1 Ask for estimates on Resilvering - Mirrors Our prices are far from pro- hibitive. Call or phone West 67. BECKER PAINT & GLASS CO. 1239 Wisconsin A Tel. W. 67 CHAS. E. HODGKIN. Mgr. Pennsylvania Avenue —that are worth up to $35— Men's Suits-- Suks & Comp | Saturday Remains —the last of the 2-day intensive clearance of small lots. Surely all we need.do is'give you a reminder of what these opportunities are—they are convincingly advantageous. Men's Overcoats-- the Double-faced fellows........ooovuvningennens .welry '] Silver—Sheffield Plate Fireplace and Other Brasses A. F. Arnold Art Galleries 1323 G St. N.W. Auctioneers Appraisers Seventh Street $19.75 - —both Single and Double Breasted— worth up to $40 Boys' Wash Suits-- . Middies and Button-ons— size 3 to 8 years.... $2 3.75 $ 1.69 Boys’ Overcoats-- —for the little chaps—2J4, 3 and 4 years old. $10 and $12.50 grades.. Boys' Overcoats-- —for the older ones—S8 to 18 years. I Were up t0 $22.50.ceeenerncnecnccnncancncaans . Boys’ Wool Suits-- Fancy Belted Models— were from $16.50 t0 $25.c.ccccccacacenitonnaenns Men's Sflk Sl‘xirts-- —finest of weaves, best of patterns. $7.50 and $8 valueS.cc.eeeoecscncerncaancocncoacnnne Men's Cravats-- Silk and Wool Mixture—that are guaranteed wear-proof. $1.15 values.........oeneenn ' Men's Silk Hose-- Pure Thread Silk; full fashioried; all colors. $1.25 grade. Men's Athletic Union Suits-- Genuine Soisette ; and usual $2.50 grade. e eueencancanaaiannnnnn Men‘s Sweaters- Plain and Heather Mixtures— Coat model. $6grade....cesueeiocunarncnccnnncnns ' "Men's Soft Hats~~ Imported Velours and American Felts. $5,$6and$7 grades....oceueenennnnnnnnnnnns Men's Bath Robes-- Silk-bound Blanket Robes; button front, with heavy girdle. $10 grade. Men's Shoes-- § High and Low—Smart and Conservative; Grades up t0 $7.50. . uoneeennncecnans Boys' Shoes--~ * Brown Leather, solid all through. ; Sizes 1 to 6, $295. Sizes 10 to 13%." Boys® Stockings-- ! Black, Tan and White. 50c and 60c grades. Boys' Gloves--~ Velour, in Mole, Black and D) DN Boys Pa] amas~~ One-piece Domet Flannel; silk frogs; $1.45 and $1.95 grades.........ccaceeees Winslow Roller Skates-- 3 —extension model, ball bearing; : e : Men's Athletic Jerseys-- Slip-on model—Navy, Oxford and Khaki color. $4,$5 and $6 grades.......oceununnnnnn Fountain Shaving Brushés-- The Warner combination, with extra filler. Made to sell at $5. Reduced from $1..... Economy Floor--Suits-- Men’s Guaranteed Blue Serge— with two pairs of pants.........cceeeiinelt .Economy 'Floor--Pants-- Worsted and Cassimere; ~ % neat Patterns ..:......... $1 1.00 $13.75 $4.95 95c $1.65 $3 .85 '$2.95 5625 $3.95 $2.75 95¢ 85¢ 95¢ $1-95 TOWIL ceeccsccascacoccncsaccnssssscesssancnss $9.79 : $19.75‘