Evening Star Newspaper, June 29, 1922, Page 3

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| DEMOGRATS ASSAL SHP SUBSIDY BIL Minority Report - Declares | Project Will Cost People P $2,800,000,000. - Vigorous attack on the ship sub- ®idy bill was made in a minority re- port from the merchant marine com- mittee of the House filed vesterday, and signed by all of the democratic members. Declaring the merchant tonnage about $3,000.000.00 government-owned cost the people . the minority held that it probably would be sold for $200,000.000, meaning “the people will Stand a loss by deflation of $2.500,- €00.000." ... 'Furthermore,” the report added. it is contemplated that either exist- ing shipping companies or companies to be organized, which buy the ships, will capitalize them largely in excess of the cost price and sell the stock and bonds to the American people—so that the people will be standing the | war intlation, the post-war deflati and then the promotion deflation. The people, through the government, the report declared, “will sell the ships for _approximately $200.000,000, lend $125.000,000 to recondition these ships or build others, and then pay the own- ers approximat $750,000,000 in subsidies and aids within the next ten Years, with the chances that such bur- dens will hereafter continue indefinitely and prcbably increase, if this policy once fastened on the governmen The democrats asserted it was “not even claimed by the proponents of the DIl that ocean freight rates would be Teduced ; that loans from the §125.000,- 000 revolving fund would be made at 2 per cent. “‘whereas under the federal farm loan system farmers are con Pelled to pay about 6 per cent interest” : that the bill confers “autocratic and un- precedented powers” on the Shipping ard, and that the board is not re- quired to make any accounting to the President or Congress. “This bill authorizes the granting of subsidies and all other aids to the Standard Oil Company, the United States Steel Corporation and other large concerns which own and operate their own ships in the transportation of their own products, and does not require them | to operate their ships in whole or in part as common carriers,” said the re- port. [ e —— SHRINERS ENTERTAINED IN LEESBURG TODAY | Members From Virginia and Other States Enjoy Day of , Festivities. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. LEESBURG. Va.. June 29.—Lees- burg and Lotdoun county are enter- taining today the nobles of the Mys- tic Shrine of Virginia. The town is beautifully decorated and has put on | & festive appearance for this big oc- casion. The all-Shriner special. con sisting of six Pullmans, arrived .at 1:30 o'clock and will remain here un-} til midnight, when it will return to Richmond. Many Shriners from this| and other states are present. The program for today includes lhel assembling of the candidates at the town hall, followed by a luncheon. A reception will be given to the official | party after which a sight-seeing trip to the places of interest in Loudoun county will be taken. They will visit the battlefield of Ball's Bluff, many of the beautiful estates, including Morven Park, the farm of former Gov. Westmoreland Davis, and other interesting scenes. Following this there will be a street parade. a con- cert by the b of Acca Temple and a patrol drill in the courthouse yard. A business session will then be held and an elaborate banquet has been | prepared In the evening a ceremonial session will be held in the town hall and vaudeville acts from one of the large theaters will be staged on the court- house steps Seventy-five candidates will make the journey acro. the burning sands of the desert toward the holy city of Mecca to This is. perhaps, the largest class of candidates that has ever assembled anywhere in the state of Virginia for i tion into the Or- der of the Mysti rin SPECIAL NOTICES. NOTICE 1S HEREBRY GIV] hat a dividend of 3 per. MERICAN c July 10, 1922, e close of That AN EXTR CENT on the capital said company ias been declared pavable Julr 10. 1922, fo the stockholders of record at the close of busi- ness on June 30, 1922, and That the transfer books of the company will be closed from the Ist to the 10th of Juls. 1922, both days inclusive. CHARLES J. BELL, President. REDUCED PRICES ON ALL INTERIOR painting_and (Emnln for July and August. P CADY & DEETOY, 621 22nd st. n.w. 29% NO. 12194. TREASURY DEPARTMENT, OF- fice of Comptroller of th Wash- | sogton, D. C., May 5, 192: ninclory evidence present ed, it h ar that ‘The ashington.” ia the City of Washington, in the District of Co- Jumbis, bas complied with all_the provisions ©of the Statutes of the United States. required o be complied with before an association sball be authorized to commence the business of L i been made to aj Hamilton Natlonal Bank of banking. Now, therefore, I, D. R. Crissinger. Comptroller of ‘the Currency, do hereby ceriify ¥hat *The Hamilton Natioual Bank of Wi ton,” in the City of Washington, in istrict of Coiumbia, Is authorized to commency he business of banking as provided in sectiod fifty-one bundred and sixty-nine of the Revisel Etatutes of the United States. Converston of the Hamilton Savings Baonk, with a 1oala office @nd three branches located within the limits of the city of Washington, District uf Colun. Bia. 1o testimony whereof witness my band ‘and seal of office this FIFTH DAY OF MAY. $522"*(Seal.) D. R. CRISSINGER, Comp troller of the Currency. The Kind of Printing You Need —No job too large for efficient execution. The National Capital Press 12101212 D et. B.w. CALIFORNTA CARS FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS and baggage st rednced rates, with greatest security and |—Los Angeles, July 15. SB- S TRITY STORAGE CO.. 1140 15th st. - SAVE YOUR EYE Let our Graduate Optometrists examine your ) eves. Broken lenses quickly and_sccursdely Teplaced. WOLPE'S JEWELRY STORES, 1402 N Y. Ave. 14th gnd R-Ste. The Shade Shop i W. STOEES SAMMONS, 830 13th St. ™% High Grade Window Shades—to Order at Factory Prices Tin Roofs—Slag Roofs RBPAIRED AND PAINTED. Call Maia 790. Grafton&Son,Inc,, T8, 2 Tr. bldg. M. 760. ““Heating and Roofing Hxperts 85 Years™ | by & |George R. Gill, Distributor. Abe Martin*Says: Al Wouldn’ it be fine if we could run out o' debt? Th’ feller with th’ best ideas is allus hooked up where he can't use ‘em. (Copyright National FIREWORKS ORDINANCE TO BE ENFORCED JULY 4 ewspaper Service.) Only Sparklers to Be Permitted, Use of Explosives Pro- hibited. Trouble for residents of this city who respond to advertisements of the sale of explosives in nearby Mary- land and Virginia is predicted by the local police. “Sparklers are the only fireworks permitted,” Inspector Charles A. Evans, acting superintendent of po- lice. will tell members of the depart- ment in a bulletin that will be’ dis- tributed Saturday morning. “While these are supposed to be harmless.” the inspector will tell members of the force, “children using them often invite accident by stick- ing them into another’s face, hair or clothing.” The police will be told to prevent accident and injury by enforcing com- pliance with the safe-and-sane regu lation governing the holiday. Chil- dren are to be cautioned against the careless handling of sparkiers, and for the benefit of all persons inter- ested Inspector Evans will call at- tention to the provisions of the so- called safe-and-sane regulation. The regulation reads: “No fire- cracker, squib or other fireworks or noise-making explosives of any kind shall be sold and delivered. dis- charged or set off within the city of Washington, or the fire limits of the District of Columbia, or in the more densely populated portions of said District; provided, however, on oc- casions of public celebration and ex- hibition, fireworks may be discharged or set off on special permits issued the Commissioners defining the time. place, storage, and such other conditions to be observed in refer- ence thereto as they may deem nec- essary to_the publ fety.” orge S. Watson, chief of the fire department. will not issue any Fourth of July order to members of his com- mand. “We don't have to issue them any more,” he remarked this morning, recaliing the trouble the firemen ex perienced before the enforcement of the safe-and-sane regulation. FIND BOCCACCIO’S BONES? Skeleton Unearthed in Home of Fourteenth Century Novelist. FLORENCE, Italy, June 29.—Bones believed to be those of Giovanni Boc- caccio, the great Italian fourteenth cen- tury novelist and poet, have been found in the house at Gertaldo in which he lived. The bones were solemnly re- moved to Florence vesterday by a well known archeologist, accompanied by various Boccaccio admirers. SPECIAL NOTIC! TO WILKES tivshurg, Harrisbu for thre TOCKHOLDERS® MEETIS t 0il and Refining Compa Thursday evening, June 29, third-floor front Toom of the Pythian Tem- ple. 1012 9tk st. n.w. The public {s iovited Atforney R. L. Montague will speak. A. BE "A. President. ES. TAGTICS IN OHID Representative Declares Revenue Agents Ordered to Defeat Him. Charles L. Knight, member of the House from Ohio, and a candidate for the republican nomination for governor in that state, today made public a let- ter to Secretary Mellon, charging that deputy internal revenue collectors in Ohio had received orders from “higher up” to work for the nomination of Carmi Thompson for the gubernatorial nomina- tion. Mr. Knight In his letter to Mr. Mellon said he wished to submit “the following facts which seriously concern your.de- partment of the government “A primary campaign is in progress in Ohlo, in which Carmi Thompson, | Harvey Smith, Rupert Bectham, Arthur ‘Day, Daniel Williams, C. H. Durand, J. W. Durnell, Harry Smith and Charles L. Knight are candidates on the repub- lican ticket for the office of governor. “That the collector of internal revenue for the eighteenth district is one Carl F. Routzahn, whose office is in Cleveland, Ohio. Ordered to Ald Thompson. “That Frank E. Schmiedel, the chief deputy for the Akron district, has offices at 54 East Market street, and has ten deputies under his control and direc- ion. “That on or about June 14, 1922, the said Schmiedel called a meeting of all his deputies; that at this meeting the said Schmiedol told them orders had come from ‘higher up,’ and that Col- lector Routzahn had instructed him that every deputy must immediately £0 to work to secure the nomination of the said Carmi Thompson for gov- ernor; that they must interview and submit written reports to him for transmission to Routzahn as to who are for and who are against Thomp- son; that at all times they must have in mind that ‘Congressman Knight must be defeated.” " Ready to Give Proof. The Onio representative said he had documentary evidence to support his statements, which he was willing to place in the Treasury Secretary's hands, and had “good reason to be- lieve that substantially the same or- ders have gone to every deputy col- lector in Ohio.” ¥ “If, indeed, this flagrant violation of justice is allowed to go unrebuked and unpunished,” Mr. Knight's letter sald, “the conclusion will be inescap- able that the time had arrived when at least one department of the Bov- ernment proposed through its agents to interfere and influence the people to elect high state officials of its own selection. Neither Ohlo nor the United States is vet ready to adopt this proconsul theory of government. —_— SEES PATRONAGE LOSS FOR DRY U. S. SHIPS House Told Greatest Threat to Merchant Marine Is Bar- ring of Liquor. It is not the loss of profits from the bar, but from loss of patronage by those who insist upon sailing on a ship that provides a bar, that menaces the prosperity of the American mer- chant marine, according to Repre- Sentative Georse W. Edmonds of Pennsylvania, chairman of the mer- chant marine subcommittee that framed the ship subsidy bill. He spoke in the House yesterday in reply to attacks on the Shipping Board for permitted the sale of liquor on its vessels. “It is the loss of passengers owing to the lack of this commodity upon the ship, particularly when it is supplied by other vessels in the same trade. that would constitute the greatest danger to our merchant marine,” said Mr. Edmonds. Referring to speeches in Congress against liquér selling at sea, Mr. Ed- monds said some representatives were willing to go to the extreme of sink- ing the entire fleet in order to stop it. Any man in Congress ought to know, he added. that “the power to control as to liquor selling is entirely in our hands, that we have the police power to prohibit any vessel entering Amer- ican ports, and if it is absolutely nec- essary for us to invoke that power it can be done —_— { TRAVELERS’ AID BALANCE DECLARED NON-EXISTENT NEW_ENGLAND FURNITURE VAN LEAV- ing Washington about July 1 would like a load of furniture or merchandise. Communi- cate with M. H. 1611 Irviog o.w. TOAD OF FURNITURE JULY 3, FROM CLEVE- LAND JULY 3. WEEKLY SERVICE FOR FMALL LOTS TO BALTIMORE. PHILADEL- PHIA AND NEW YORK. F1G 4 TRANSFER COMPANY, INC. 14th st. n.w. Main 2159 FOUR_BEAUTIFUL FLOOR CASES, ALSO otl ec fixtures for sale; big sacrifice. SONG I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANT debts “except those contracted by myself. DAVID ROSENTHAL, 900 9th 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR AX debts other than those contracted by myself. JOSEPH_ESUNAS, 404-6 7th st. s.w. GRAND AND UPRIGHT PIANOS FOR REN planos taken in ax part payment on victrolas UGO WORCH. 1110 G n.w. Kranich & Ba and Emerson pisnos TELEPHONB COLUMBIA 2376, 2417 14th ST. N.W. k about our _reasol a_drycleaning, Floor Finishing FLOORS PLANED AND SCRAPED. SAND- PAPERED AND FINISHED: ESTIMATES. nd ndry LINC, 6325. C._B. PRICE, 80_A ST. S.E. BRING US your old gold. silver. platinum, DIAMONDS and discarded jewelry. e need them in our manufacturing 'department. WILL PAY HIGHEST PRICES. Kahn Inc, 935 F St. TROOFS ggmve — Learn the truth about your roof. Repairing and painting. R. K. FERGUSON, Inc. Roofing Dept. 1114 9th st. Ph. M. 2490-2491. For Your Painting ‘Chores” Keep Brush-Nu for your FIVE. bandy mai Restores ~ old MINUTE brushes, bleaches floors for BRUBH-NU | refinish and for other uses: CLEANS see package. If not at your BRUSHES, | herdware store, get it parcels GLASS, ' |- post prepaid. 'Send us your FLOORS, ler's name and 85 for ETC. balf pound, 60c for. pound (stamps or_silver). 642 Pa. s.e. Ph. Linc. 6800, Linc. 2649. Roofing Misfits! ] ‘Why do they haj ? Bimply because the wrong material or the wrong roofer ‘was selected. Better advise with us first. Call Main 14. KRONCLAD Roofing 1416 F et. Company. Phone Main “Helping Home Building —BY QUOTING CASH-SAVING PRICES ON ALL KINDS OF Millwork and Wall Board ' Geo. M. Barker Co., Inc, |$1 up pt- CUSHIONS : F Church Boaotror House We make all kinds. BEDELL'S FACTORY. Main 3621 610 E st. n.w. Is Your Car a Credit —to_you? Make it so_b Enamels applying Becker's Auto- E"E .- ameis. They're won for Autos, | et In yarioss col- ors as low a $1 pint & Screen Paint, gosia v i i w e | Becker Paint and Glass Co. Puts HEAT in Heating." Comfortable You'll 1 —next winter if you have fiicient | o, f in & modern VAPOR apor | HEXTER uow. Material prices 2 re down—quick _action in- eating | sures you & good saving. 'AB.I&!' W. BIGGS, P-e-mg.t. L 3510 14th st. B.W. Tel. Frank. 817, ZSRgACe A CHAS. E. HODGKIN, Mgr. 1239 Wisconsin ave. Phore West 67. $1,500 Reported on Hand Obli- gated, Says Chairman, and More Funds Needed. Arthur C. Moses. acting chairman of the Travelers’ Aid Society, declared in a statement yesterday that the report that “we have a balance on hand of $1.500 is misleading.” Mr. Moses said tae error was made in giving out ‘the report of John B. Larner, treasurer of the society, which showed this balance. “It was not explained, however.” he said. “that this sum is already obligated for the continuation of the work. “At this time of the year. Mr. Moses continued, “there is an “ex- ccpetionally heavy travel to Wash- ington, which necessitates an in- creased watohfulness and extra work on the part of the Travelers Ald Society. We need funds to meet this emergency, and letters have just gone forward asking our friends and the public to help us. Instead of having a balance on hand that is available for immediate use, we are in need of funds to meet the extra demanus that are being made upon us. “The Travelers' Ald Society is main- tained entirely by the voluntary con- tributions of the people of Wash- ington. and I most earnestly ask them to come forward at this time with whatever sums they can give, so that_we may continue to function a® efficiently in the future as we have in the past. We have never appealed in vain, and I believe this appeal will be met with the same spirit of co- operation that has characterized the people of Washington in any appeal that is worthy.” —_— ACCUSED OF BIGAMY. F. P. Jennings, a Chauffeur, Must Answer Charge. Frank Paul Jennings, forty vears old, a chauffeur, residing at 641 Kenyon street, was arrested last.night by De- tectives Darnall and Springmann and held to answer a charge of bigamy, the complaint being filed against him by Annie V. Girardi, Mrs. Jennings No. 2. 1t is sald_that wife No. 2 learned of her husband’s former marriage in a let- ter received from his father, and the husband, it is charged, denied the for- mer marriage. Later, after a certified copy of his marriage record had been received from Richmond; it is stated. he told wife No. 2 that his first wite was dead. The Richmond record showed that Jennings and Florence D. Fleming were married in that city in 1913, while the local record shows his marriage to Apna V. Girardi by Rev. Titus E. Davis ‘August 23, 1919. Jennings was taken to Police Court today, but the case could not be tried in the absence of the first wife. MISS MATTERN WED. Printed “Salesmen” of Ability ‘That's lalty. HIGH GRADE BUT NOT HIGH PRICED. Co.| THE SERWICE SHOP PRINTERS, BYRON S. ADAMS, TR CINCINNATI, Ohio, June 29.—Miss Coranell Mattern, confidential secre- tary to President Harding, was mar- ried here yesterday to Norman P. Sheppard, attache of the 'insurance bureau for former service men. Mrs. Sheppard has been in Mr. Harding’s amploy since 1317, _ ~ ~ tRussian. Attitude at Hague TRMGESURAR oo v ot g . BY PAUL SCOTT MOWRE! By Cable to The Star and Chicago Dally News. Copyright, 1922, THE HAGUE, June 29.—The second phase of ‘the conference is beginning under good auspices. Contact with the Russians has been taken and there is every evidence that they mean business. So do the western powers. - The United States, however. Is_stil] .unrepresented, even by an ob- server. - Having washed its hands of Genoa, It is now repeating even more completely what a. Polish delegate. Ditterly characterized to me as the “gesture of Pontius Pilate.” The American ‘minister at The Hague i§ on a vacation. The commercial at- tache has peen absent since before the ‘conference began. The charge d'affaires, Louis A. Sussdorff. jr., and the military attache, Maj. James B. Ord, are showing great energy and good will, but, in my opinion, the logation is entirely unequipped for the emergency. What is required is an experienced diplomat or official to watch developments and safeguard American interests. Russian Problem Complex. So far as the Russian problem is concerned, The Hague is more impor- tant than Genoa was and stands a much greater chance of success. This Russian problem is not nearly as simple as some people in the United States seem to imagine. On the one hand is its immense human misery; on the other is its menace, almost cqually immense to the peace of the world. All the powers represented hore are moved by one or both of these considerations — Despite Maxim the famine being ended, the best sta- tistics I can obtain indicate thatmil- lions more of helpless sufferers will face death within the next year. The population under soviet rule had already fallen in 1920 to 125,000,- 000. What it is now nobody knows. From the Volga centér famines radi- ite, more or less, in every direction. Last spring Fridtjof Nansen esti- mated that 20,000,000 persons were actually without food. The American Relief Commission is feeding 7,000.- 000, other agencies 3,000,000, but the for. True, the new crops are bring- ing a slight alleviation, but they are utterly inadequate. Of the 47.900.000 acres of grain land which shouid have been sown last spring and winter in the Volga region to meet the needs of the population, the merest fraction l)ms been cultivated. Relief Work Inadequate. People lack not only seed, but horses and cattle and physical energy for tilling the soil. ~Consequently what the autumn will bring one hardly dares to contemplate. In any case it is evident that the magnificent work of the American Relief Commis- sion is entirely inadequate. What is needed is general co-opera- tion in the whole Russlan problem. The soviets are ready to compromise, and so are the western powers. Only the United States now stands aside. It is felt in inside circles here that unless some form of co-operation is reached a grave political situation in eastérn_Europe Is certain to ensue. mile Vandervelde, the Belgian so- cialist, just from Moscow, declares: “There is a kind of xenophobia and redoubtable nationalism developing in Russia. due to the clumsy policy of blockade and _intervention. Even non-bolshevist Russia reproaches us with the death of thousands and thousands by reason of the lack of medicines.” The rest of the story is told by the sensational revelations I cabled yes- terday concerning the reorganization and new efficiency of the red army. To the United States, separated from danger by the half of Europe and the whole of the Atlantic ocean. this potential menace may be a mat- ter of Indifference, but to the nations of eastern and even western Europe it is vital. The first point that the people of the United States must realize is that all observers agree that the fall of the soviet govern- ment in the immediate future is out of the question. The cheka, or se- cret tribunal, is more efficient than ever and can crush any incipient plots. More important still. with the in- 2 Take a Good Book by s On Your Week End Trip New Fiction, 75¢ We have the book you want to read. PEARLMAN'S BOOK SHOP i 933 G St- Near Corner 10th & G Sts. P Litvinov's optimistic remarks about! remaining 10,000,000 are unprovided P augural of the “new economic policy, communism s dead. 1 Firm fold on Peasants. _The soviet government now frankly bases itself on the new middie class which has-sprung up under the boi- shevist regime and on the mass of the peasants. The peasants demand- ed two ‘things that have now been granted by.the géviets. Small trade and small property are now {free. Only the big industries, mines Knd railways ‘remain nationalized. - This {5 no longer communism, but a new regime which might be called state capitalism. The result is that the systematic opposition of the peasants to the soviets can no longer be count- ed upon. It the soviets are going to dis- appear, experts here declare that it must be by co-operation and evolu- tion'and not by opposition from with- out or within. The second point which must be understoad {s, that whatever the United States does and whether the conference at The Hague succeeds or fails the westorn powers are go- ing -ahead just the same to devise some means of co-operating with Russia. Poland and the Baltic States have recognized Russia de jure, the rest have recognised it de facto, and Italy, Sweden and Czechoslovakia have prepared far-reaching commer- cial agreements. France Unable to Resist. . Even France is unable to resist>the current. France feels strongly that if the powers would stand togefier. and, above, all, if the United States were here, then greater concessions and better conditions wodld certalnly be wrested frém the arrogant soviets. But, with the United States absent, France is obliged, above all. to con- sider its relations with the little en- tente, and the nations in this group or in sympathy with, especially Po- land and Czechoslovakia insists that co-operation must be tried, for they are actually trembling for their own peace in the future. Until the Russian problem is settled even the British admit that a diminu- tion of land armaments in Europe 15 unthinkable. ORDERED TO FORT SILL. Col. William W. Harts, fleld ar- tillery, has been relieved from duty at the Army War College, Washing- ton barracks, and ordered to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, for duty. ASSIGNED TO ARTILLERY. Maj. Arthur D. Budd, infantry, at the War Department, has been as- signed to the 1st Field Artillery, at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. WANTED Two experienced real estate salesmen to sell small and medium size houses. A good opening for a hus- tler to take charge of this important department in an established realty corporation. Address Box 218-P, Star Office. Hupmobile Reliability means that ever- lasting regularity of perform- ance which every motor cer should supply, and which every jone concedes to the Hupmobile. Sterrett & Fleming, Inc. Champlain St. at Kalorama Rd. (Relow 1Sth St.) Telephone North 5050 Like certain housewives you know— Heinz Vinegars have that knack of making every food they touch taste good. This fa- mous member of the “57” ismore than “just sour.” It'saflavor. A tangy, zestful, yetmel- low flavor. Fourkinds. In sealed bottles. PURE VINEGARS 3 Late Hits For Your Player-Piano Stumbling—Fox Trot. Do It Again—Fox Trot. Oogie Oogie Wa Wa. No. 1938 No. 1914 No. 1942 On Sale at McHUGH & LAWSON Everything Musical 1222 G St. N.W. Match Your Odd Coat With Our Special TROUSERS $4.65 Save the price of an en- tire new suit. All col- ors, sizeg, patterns. EISEMAN’S 605-607 7th St. N.W. Vacuum Cleaner No other cleaner compares with the Super New Eureka Vacuum Cleaner and we want you to know why. Use it on the rugs, upholstery, portieres, etc. BUY ON EASY TERMS FREE TRIAL Potomac Electric Appliance Co. 607 l4th st. —Branch Store, Washington Railway and Electric Building, 14th and C Sts. N.W. Phone Main 955 A Design of Character Proven a Big Success IN THE Shannon and Luchs Intown Suburb 14th Street Terrace The first outlay to buy a Home in this com- munity is about the same as in far less desirable sections. In the end it is infinitely cheaper, because there is character and personality in the Homes, and this develops a greater future value. Among our purchasers are several builders. a number of engineers, real estate men, govern- ment people and many of our merchants— ALL PEOPLE WHO K} OW VALUES To Inspect Take 14th street car (finest service in all Washington) to corner of Jefferson street n.w. Several sample Homes, open every. evening until nine o'clock. HANNON - & LUGHS Owners and Builders Semi-annual Sale Grant Circle at Varnum St. A = Superior ST, oo 605-607 7th St. $12 and $15 Genuine alm Beach Suits $ 85 *. The biggest values in town. The best Palm Beach Suits at the lowest price. In light or dark gray, brown, tan, sand or pea green. : Regulars, Shorts, Stouts, Slims. . Sizes-34 0 '44. 98 » pring and Summer Suits of all our . Excepting only Palm Dress Clothes. In other words, every Blue, Black, Gray and Fancy Suit'ih our store is reduced. Golf and Sport Suits, too. This, in spite of an appreciable stiffening of woolen prices, and a perceptible upturn in the cost of men’s clothes. Group One Group Two now reduced to now reduced to 32 37 , ! ; ' Group Three ~ Group Four now reduced to now reduced to 43" 49" S Five & which includes our choicest suits : Raleigh Haber of imported and domestic woolens, now No charge for-altefations dasher St 1109-1111 Pennsylvania Avenue =ik rgrn e T TR R T T T

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