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THE EVENING 10 TAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, ENVUYS AID BI‘"NA Fear of Starving Causes Death IN PI_AN H]R P[AL‘E! Of Germans With Food on Hand Brooding Qver Prospect of Final Lack {All Provincial Governors Call- Prompts Hoarding, Until Under- ed to Round-Table Parley nourishment Kills Many to Pacify Nation. 1923, — - - DEMANDS HANDED CHINA., | tocay preseuted to the Chinese gos- ernment their demards for indem ! omething of a1 value [nities. The “diplomatic represent ovrenment pensions have ahrunk to i | tives acted as committes of the wheie nothing. 1 know w physician, perma. | Bandit Episode Reaches Stage of | [V} 1{ifl %, [ it ioe of the whol nently crippled in the war, who re- Specifying Indemnities. mands. They have been at wo ceives 400 marks a month pension [since early in June, following the re (nominally $100). By the Associated Press lcase of the foreizners afts “That,” he remarked, “will buy me| PEKING, August 10.—Representatives | than a month's captivity. one bad elgar a month:" But now it o the four foreign gowers whose | —— . - Will not buy . ! | U SIS nenepiyes nationals were kidnaped by the! The mud baths of today were popw- tu A woman living near Cologne re-|n i ceiven two pensions, one for her desd | Suchow train bandits early last May, |lar in the seventcenth husband. One is for 100 paper marks and the other for 25. The only thing she can do for a living is to make crocheted lace, which has been out of fashion for twenty vears and has no market. Rellef Work Organizafions. The chief institutions that are help- ing to relieve the most extreme cases of distress in Munich, all of which are entirely reliable, are: Armenamt (municipal Rathaus, Munich. Muenchener Ein- wohnersc Theatinerstrasse 3. Katholischer Frauenbund (Catholic Women's League), Theresienstrasse Institut fuer Soziale Arbeit (Insti- tute for Social Work), Max-Josef- strasse 1. Money sent to any of these societies is used for the most needy cases. wanted in a country where every one immedfately turns his paper marks into something of material value. Magyars Dream of New War To Restore Lost Provinces more Descendants of Hun Tribes Advance Three Arguments to Get Back Unuwilling Peoples. Full of Homeyness and Comfort We have vlanned these Apartments in Ketw Gardens 2700 Que Street N.W. to be more than merely a ‘“‘place in which to live. They are Homes—full of the details of equipment and finish that add to comfort and convenience. They give home as applied to Apartments residence a new meaning—and a fuller meaning. Various sizes are available—two rooms and one bath, to eight rooms and two baths—renting from 850 to $225 per month. Let the Resident Manager show them to you—and he will record your reser- ™ By A, Kiite (Incorperated) 1514 K Street Phone Main 4846 o E === = BY HIRAM KELLY MODERWE thing to eat, she virtually ceased eat- By Cable to The Star and Chicago Dafly News. | INg. ° Meopyright, 1923 | MUNICH, Germany, July 30.—Star-| , vation from poverty, or starvation from disease resulting from under- With the eney received from the P ‘o common 1n | §4le of his uhop bought a house for | & have become so common in|y;yqalr and his fifty-vear-old daugh- post-war Europe that instances of | nd prices rose them pass unnoticed and often are nm‘ little inoney left over after the 0ld Man Tragic Vietim. seventy-year-ald merchant of Munich retired frem business and July 1t ary would poor relief deter- even mentioned in the local new ase of the house shrank next to nothing. They lived on potatoes, but papers. But in Germany thero have | i, 'gie; was not enough fo Sustain been several instances of starvation|the old man in health and he rapidly from sheer fear of starvation in the r!t;li.(.::ml-nm : n y gutastiof iplenty. from friends who were better off to Among the following instances of live with them and share their sim- extreme poverty are three which in- |ple food. They thought the days of their dominion over prov- races formerly received an invitation seer Hatre R Open All Day Saturday It's a Case of “Must” Circumstances alter cases—and prices, too. I am retiring from the retail business—to enter the manufacturing field—and I MUST wind up this store in a hurry. That’s why I have made the reductions so ridiculously big—for brands of wardrobery you know to be the very best. Buy here NOW and for a LONG WAY AHEAD—because prices justify anticipation. Magyars, moreover, r Transylvania (the most im- | Jortant section of old Hungary which Il to Rumania) as o valuable any of the territory turned over Austria, Czechoslovakia, or to the Serbs. Croats and Slovenes. There historical and_sentimemal rea- too, why the Magyars feel more about this than about their| other lost provinces. probably Transylvanian views iy, It is true, he the Transylvanian rtant part in freeing | the Turks. It is true i ws held by the from that city surrounid territory de portien of Magvars in Tran- than ever before or that time the Mag atively and ater n at onstituted nority in his hut to Wlien t now e foree ranr aped from the spe ansylvania 0 of all tl two interesting j First, the Tropical Suits— —including Mohairs, Tropical Worsted didly tailored— $25 and $27.50 grades 222 0 be noted Palm Beaches, etc. Splen- 7722227 $15 and $16.50 grades 00 272, Many Uses of the Machete. The machete is the universal imple- ment in Costa Rica as in other Carib- bean countries and is carried by every country laborer. It is used for chopping brush and trees. clearing ground, cutting grass and sugar cane, BY ALBERT H. PUTNEY, i o o b R Txo s Callsds i AG i anih Jaily News, | €agerly seized. Ixcept for one 3 Dy Cable to The Star and Chiago Dails News. | Gections, in the Austrian half of the em- BUDAPE Hnosfos politically where they naturally belong | BY Cable to The Star and Chicago Dafly News talk could start wars Hun and where the majority of their in- = Copyright, 1923, PEKING, g provinces of Hungary were taken from { the foreign diplomatic corps in Pe- Iutepe. Tn Budapest the greatest ficeR on & Setio el - A i i her by the spontaneous action of their |1y, o gorel, C O OHRTE SOEE W el of the great Europ N powers. o s The Magyars advance, in substance, | of all Chinese provincial governors inces and subject to{territories should be restored to- her: |4 important political and militar. First, because she needs them econon < means of expediting stabilization Among the first objects to attract|for o, many centurles, and third, be-|China and u:’; Qm‘, ,“l L, O: the eve of the visitor in Budapest | o uce the Magyars are a superior race ng settlemen persona < —_—_— 0 the city square. On their bases |iijag Efforts are now under way toward these - marked respectively: Del|™fil qioe of these arguments hardly | obtaining the consent of various DL e e COUNT PLUNKETT FREED. dlcate how the fear of starvation, due = 3¢ feep PP W e Chey represen Ci y > 0 K e old an's digestive A NS (w0 TR St [sion ot wuch a principle might Justify | akree “to participate: the conterance |to the constantly falling O a aat s oraia ¥ £ any se 8 13 . will be called within & month. The|ihe constantly rising prices, has af- | yoars of undernourishment that he| DUBLIN, August 10.—Count Plun- mania, Czechoslovakia and Austria fbe' admitted that the Magvars held | thus far comes from De. S amtaed | fected people’s minds and led them to could not digest his food. The city {kett, the noted republican leader, who Almost any Magyar will tell you that | most of the lost territory for centuries, 0 & ces g can asve Jho announces that nothing can save {,n¢i) they died, or nearly dled, of star- | nounced his case hopeless. He is|Roscommon, has been released from oG Rithy <€ tesitorice: TDherc § ] this areument and this admission show | which he suys he earncstly hopes for | VA100: “They represent pathological slowly dying, literally from having |the military internment camp in the greatest animosity against [ the Magyar in the light of the one race | 1 arlns aahal Tens K & Emissaries from Marshal Tsao Kun | S &8eTation: an able and prosperous business ma He was arrested last April when he Austrians & +assimilation. !Sun to attend or to send represent- ex. In normal circumstances he could|W#8 en route with Miss Mary ‘\h: oF Fumants: Races Fall to Unlte. utives to the conference. The cases that follow were dug out have s at Clonmel. No other releases w. ol 3 o 3 ccords (ex- N z o enterpris awyver |Teported. T Lt eI mriate An ISt hha e DAEROReS 08 STy orduent urll:ln:n»l'.\\'nh Sir Robert Hu Tung, f the Munich municipal r rds (ex A young and enterprising lawyer P against the Rumanians. for the Ru-of the Slovaks anticipated the Norman | Wealthy Chinese resident of Hon e hils iealih B newspaper report) on the Initiative | turned from the war with his health] upied its capit he citizens of { centuries. What chance would there \.»,:“r‘_'“‘“;""l'::,"f‘i\‘xli":::' n‘m’ul|"hfll lvalll- of the Dally News. Their authentd shattered. Since his former law prac- 1 3 show | today o Sepa ing Normans from | €5 0o ‘v s he only 2 iflanyabiane) slwaye Sosaho Y g ormans. on At provincial town and endeavored to racial conflict between them? In ”““'|”'fi|‘ It such ‘a_conference fails ft| ~Recently in ( “orbetha, prov- Ktartanew. But in spite of his efforts ga s Ta s and Slovaks|W mean the continuation of inter-|ince of Saxony, tl widow . et el L higher Because of the housing shortage hel the recent war as racially distinct as | Ure country “into bankruptey und grade) was found dead in her bed. Wwas obliged to live with his family they were when the hordes first swept | S€mi-anarchy Medical examination fact that death had been due to star- savings. : century. After 1,000 yvears of united 2 . £ The police had been notified poiical Magyar and Slovak both Saving the Babies. | who live in communities | Visit her baker and vegetable dealer Iy the housing office offered itween the two as that between a dom- where she had regularly bought the |aim a temporary dwelling, consisting inant and a subject race. Under mod- should consider carefully the results!articles of diet The police were |repair) and facilities for cooking jtime would appear insufliclent to Justi- | of the co-operative rural health work {SPlged to break into lher house|with a wood fire. But the ventilation i v the continuance of such a union. f ty, Mo. A report just received by the | emaciated body. g il filled with smoke. Fresh alr was Mhe claim of @ racial superiority is | United States pubiic health service at| 17 the house, which she occupied |luxury that could not be afforded in always cropping out in the Magyar ar- dér. 15 Lo e o5 | sblte: thale arn 2 ety . interesting to note the Magyar's account | it Springfield and Campbell town- B v {tion, the couple were proud of their racial an T During the beans, cocoa uand chocolate, and under 7 of a whole-time county health de- |tra g Goot und chocolate. and lzslaftves & b . of the worst insults that could be of- | partment. In 1518 the death rate in|aere wiso word oy oviausage There| By chance one of the city nurses| fered to the Germans was to compare townships was i | : 105 per thousand. That 1is. out of Hoarded Her Food. I”w-“l‘: rl.llfl with rel: k“‘»fl' found was bitterly resented by the Germans. |every 1,000 babies L" humble position for th an in a The Magyars, on the other hand, openly Then Green coun-!which in p. times had brought her & direct descent from the |ty decided it ild no longer afford {an incon 3 r gnvxrrn 'l:nu‘ that )u; 1 to go to] Huns and glory in it. Attila the Hun[to continue a year, und furniture ten { Work each day on his i and a health department |rooms. Under the system of fixed The most interesting phenomenon of | was organized ? {had been sold for food. e all in conne ! ihe Mag infant death rate in these !the war the amount she ¢ a4 wias are sufficient for only e tion for the return of their lost prov- | fwe ships dropped to ninety.six|reduced to a fraction of yrme at wh Incos ix e method by which they hoge | %0 townships dropped to ninety-six | provide enough food To restore him ] - , Sk o health. The details of his struggle . cighty-five, in 1921 to seventy-six, and ve according to the value of |t them from an chauvinistic Magyar does not hope that | 5. o tthe mark Magyar « a ke iched 2o h ark and the variations in them again unde Hungary will ever be able to reconquer | 1 1922 the decline reached sixty-one. | purchasing :.-m- to the police officlals who' dealt been formed to prevent any such re. |bell townships reduced their infantbower porhians () "}“n'.,”e';“,.‘,““' of the | with the case sult, and the Rumanian invasion of | MOrtality rate 42 per cent within the |3 the increas- | Ruescher, living in Koringen- the weakest of the entente countries, |2 Striking example of what may be H n spent her | wrote him saving that if he did not Magvars why these general war and the Hungarian o’ | carrying out, with economy and eff. |17, Storing up food for the futur n the next day he would restored to them, and | ganda is directed toward that e clency, a well balanced general pro- | ;mcer, lived like & hermit in one room ; was received, the police broke into of her fine howme in ch, having | the house throush a window, the doo ther clated by some of the Magyars. g6 mex iTouDAin a community iwithi or Lot DIE Bome fa Munlch. baving | the 1 L ind S acaont d by uny It i< in the United States that the |2 “well administered health depart- frrpain yme, at the fixed re 1, barel corpse on the floor, to all MX‘I"'NY'; - ants_of the e Magyars (Seem to hope that this | time health officer. sufficed for her food. Thoukh beforelunces having starved to death some | are Magyars or can [country can be induced to take the ! e 4 1 very sociable, she now refused to see ' slde ble quantity of jewelry and pa-| o > | the inhabitants in any of | to Hungary of her lost territories. her friends. ~ She was proud to|pers showing him to possess a large | rovinces wish to be reunited | the last sesston of Congress { ; nited oo Iness like to sell her remaining pos-|starved, like Frau Schaper, out of | was submi S sessio | fear of starvation. i S s : was subm| nator La Follette essions. | i W . ents. and at h as printed as a Sen. 3 3 £ th idd1 1 1 Hungarian empire an opportunity for | alive at Boba 0 One day, when her tenants returned | Germans of the middle class, ruined ractical If-determinat wus pre- | eastern Europ ar hope and the unrest in from a journey, they noticed a foul by the fall of the mark and the fixed killing and skinning animals, for of- & there was no reply to cheir knocks. o sell thelr possessions. Their bonds N " every conceivable purpose, including | they ormed the police and the room | and their real estate are virtually CITY “SELLS" ITS CHURCHES. ELECTRIC TOWEL NOW. digging holes, says Consul S 5 = gk Waterman, in a report to the Depart- | the last stage of exhaustion. luy on ment of Commerce. Two types are in | the bed almost unconscious. The pe sented to the different sections and was opyright, 182 : FOX o pire. the different portions are today | B CHIRNORI FOX. Le the mest dangerous tinder box in | habitants desire them to be. The lost August 10.—Members of i own inhabitants and not by the armies | FINE i E mination of the Magyars again to ex- observers at a round-table conference three arguments why Hungary's lost niss b leaders for discussion of the best Shetnien s ically; second, because she held them re the four large groups of Statuary | 1o the peoples over whom they 80 long | #himosities between various leaders. (south). Kelet (east), Eszak (north) Ineeds serious consideration. The admis- | leaders to attend. and if all will mark and | organs had been so disordered by his | E7 the Assoctated Uress. the territories lost to Jugoslavia, 1tu- | regard to the second argument it must [only serlous obstacls encountered hoard their food instead of eating it, ' physlcian who attended him has pro- jWas elected a republican deputy from i will never vest until the ve- fsome of it for over 1,000 vears. But|China except 4nother real fevenition exaggerations of a very widespread not enough to eat. He was formerly | County Kildare. Rumanians and least against the {abee 237 shers without powers of raclal | are now endeavoring to pereunde Do . i e have spent his old age in ease and|SWiney to the funeral of Liam L It s natursl that the Magyars! For purposes of comparison it might| 1lans for the conference. which cept one, which rests on trustworthy haveg a wife and two children Tre- Danian army nvaded Hungars and | conquest of the Saxons by nearly two | KOng have been quickly taken up I 722227 tice had disappeared he moved to a upsriare Saxons In Ingland or of stirring up a | Solution for prevaillng disorder. and | t¥ can be vouched for absolutely of Insper. he failed and returned to Munich. ! A e the outbreak of { P4l strife, which is plunging the en- (tor Schaper (state employe of stablished the in otel and this ate up his last over the land at the close of the ninth —_— ause the woman had ceased to Too Proud to Talk, recognized the relation existing be- apathetic to their infant death rate|iread and beets that were her only |of one room and a bathroom (out of ern political conceptions more lapse of now being earried on in Green coun. | fOrcibly and there found the fearfully | was bad and the room was constantly Descent trom Hun Washington shows a remarkable re- |4100€, everything was in greatest dis- | winter, for wood was expensive. De- guménts. Under these conditions it is s ships since the establishment there| 2V coffee. large quantities of peas,!betray thelr condition even to their recent war it was considered that one oL A te s were also gold and sliver trinkets. learned of them and, after placing! them v Huns. The comparison Grery 1000 bables born aiive 103| Frau Schaper owned a double villalh Bumble position for 4 o proclain their 3 bout 3.600 marks, nea unmindful of its baby $750. is one of the Magyar national heroes. | death rate | [An furniture, even to In the following vear, { Fentals which has been in force since tion with the Magyar ag P ng vear, | 5 ! necessities of life und do not 3 S pe ousand 2 . income, varying between and $50 or the T : 1ot L to attain their end.. Even the most | P igusand. . In 1920 it went te the | against approaching death are known from which they A The Httle entenindier | In other words, Springfield and Camp- | fixed rent. but with a America. | A vear ago the former book dealer tionce : The woman, terrified by the 1520 showed that, from a military stand- | SROTt sbace of four years furnitu The owner of the arg ad- | Hungary's only hope lies in another | 2ccomplished In infant welfare by |lid from her friends. and Baroness X, widow of a high army | forcibly dispossessed. Since no reply ¥ which they ap- | though probably it is not fully 2 gram of health work affecting all 1 been obliged 1o rent the other rooms. | being barred. The man was found a wims that | Magyar propaganda is most insistent. | ment under the direction of a whole- her husband’s death she had been: weeks before. In his room was a con- claimed that the ma- | initiative in a movement for the return speak of her poverty and too unbusi- | amount of money. Apparently he had 16\ Bungars from Hung: the United_ States Tpo 1 he Aus Woman Found Unconsclous. i Munt Sell to Ent. pon lapse of the Austro- | ate d has helped to keep _— odor coming from her room. Since|rental law. have no recourse except fense and defense and for almost Henry S {was opened forcibly. The baroness, in; worthless. Their services are nou use, the machete de suelo (ground |lice established that she had become Portland, Me., Business Men Pay'Smali Fan and Hot Air Eliminates ]H"e Your Papering and Painting | for Newspaper. Advertising. Prom the St. Lonis Post Dispatch The wh ale land, ireh a Lusiness houses of | have been engaged in al ng campaign full-puge advertise- in @ loeal newspaper. the first | Dage appearing May 12 After calling attention to the fifty- eight churches in Portland and invit- | ing the er to try them out and | select the that suits, the first| Pake ad | The churches of the United { can seat 55,000,600 people, or less than | half of the total por on Who comprise the 50,000,000 who ! to chu > Not so much the | and the ignorant as the people | who have comfortable homes, assured | mes, motor cars and contentment the folks who are missing | 1 perhaps re one of | fifteen States them What does First of Tike to know vou will hear good music: vou will have an opportunity to take part in 2 beautif nd uplifting service; vou | will hear agood man talk. You will | read from’ the greatest literature in | all the world i urch hold for he people you will | Kindis, sincere. genuine | knowing. And Emptiness of Australia. the rih. Asfatic the Australian | described as st heritaze on e in fa the 700,000,000 who would really swarm great island continent the prople have made it the fundamental | article of their national ereed that the | d races be kept out. The white ralia s hecome more an a political faith: it is virtually religion so fervently beli party dares to challenge it there " are many Australians more than a little doubtful ) their country can be main- home for the white peo- possible. they ask, for a population of 5.300.000 to hold a terri tory of n L000.000 square miles until e filled with white peo- ple? over, the greater part of his seanty population is concentrated in cities on the seabourd. leaving vast areas in_the interior either entirely uninh 1 or so sparsely populated that it is no exaggeration to say that \ustralia is still an almost empty land into wther ed as a les. s it How to Manage a Wife. From the Book of Benedict, by Duncan Swann. Don't e a fit of apoplexy exceeds her dress allowa P, Every irticle in her wardrobe costs three fimes as much as yours, and lasts one- | quarter as long. You ought to if she feel flattered if an-| other man shows appreciation of your wife's charms. It reflects credit on vour judgment. Bes women thrive on admiration If the reason why you were late was that you were having a rubber at the club, don't make a mystery of it. It ihe club had nothing to do with it, the less said the better. Encourage a nice vouth who wants ke her out to dinner or a theater. She gets an evening's amusement free, und you a night off duty. —_———— Midnight Philosophy. From the Boston Transeript She-—John, I'nt sure ir downsta He (drowsily)—Well, we can hecking up the silverware in ni es, there's a bur- tell the Graduate * Eyes Examinell McCormick Medical College Glasses Fitted Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist 409410 McLachlen Bldg., {ers machete) which has a long blade rounded at the end. with the cutting edge sloping toward the handle, the end being much broader than that part of the blade near the handle, the width near the handle generally be- ing about four inches and that near the point about cight inches: and the second type. which is simply a long,: straight knife. England and the United States are the two largest sources of supply. Most of the imports from England are | machetes de suelo. The United States leads in supplying the straight machete. Insanitary Methods. From tlie Compressed Air Magazine. We have had the Turkish towels, cotton towels, linen towels, silk tow- 1 paper towels—but unsatisfac- tory features have attended each in turn w e clectric towel, the last of a large family and, prob- ably the most economical because it sn't @ towel at all, but just a ma- chine that dries the face and hands by evaporat The thing is an enameled watt motor. come simple. Contalned in iron stand, is a 1-kilo- fan. and a little heating which Warms the air as it passes. Wired from the nearest panel box the ingtallation is compicte. The ultimate saving i< apparent in- asmuch as the first cost is the onl: cost except for the current. There i neither upkeep nor laundry expense to be considered. Tt appeals to us because all one has to do is step on a pedal and, zip. hot air does the rest— #nd the operation takes only a few seconds. One of the advantages of the elec- tric towel is that no one touches what has been used by another. In the case of the ordinary towel who knows where it was last week or to what use it was being put? The air towel is, of course, sanitary. The air that dries one pair of hands is God's air— the air we breathe—and is never used again. Infectious diseases cannot be communicated from one person to an- other because there is nothing ma- terial to_carry them. has been demonstrated that evap- ation is a perfect drier. ST T Bride-to-Be Match for Him. From the New York Sun “Are vou the man death warrants?” a county elerk in Ohio. was s 5 beside what he said The clerk understood wanted when the “death ked for, und the girl 1o the British Empire Exhibition. Besides the annual British indus- tries fair next year, a great British | empire exhibition is being planned. | This will be held at Wembley, near { London, opening on or about April 15, according to information received by the British consulate in Boston. All the dominions and self-governing colonies are to be represented in a general display of products of empire trade. In order that visitors to the exhibi- tion may attend the industries fair as well, the latter will be held April 28 to May 8. This large fair, held simul- taneously at London and Birmingham usually ‘opens about the middie of February. —_— Swimming an Insurance. From the Lawrence Telegram. i The man or woman who can swim | is insured, in a_way, against disaster. | When we insuze our houses against | fire or our industry against theft] and when we insure our lives we do | {not do so in the belief that we are | | going to suffer from fire or theft, or | who signs the ! because we expect to die the next | man asked thelday. We hope cur houses will never | His .\wm‘l]war('hun\: we hope our property will not | him and heard | be stolen; we hope to live for years. | So it is with swimming. We do not | learn to swim because we think we | may find ourselves struggling tomor- | row in the water. But, if we should | find ourselves struggling in the water | what arrant” was directed the man and marriage license bureau. As’ they were leaving the office the girl asked, loudly enough for her “in- tended” to hear: “Do you issue per- mits to carry revolvers?” —_ " Among the ancient Romans only | women were allowed to wear red, yellow or white shoes. was how much better it is to know some- thing about keeping oneself afloat! How True. From Life. “Pa, what is ‘rare judgment'? “Any at all.” HIGHER QUALITY, 55c Lb. Mad_e from Pasteur- ized SWEET Cream Creemsweet Butter That is one of the big differences in Creem- sweet Butter, one of the big quality points—for butter made from Sweet Cream tastes better, keeps better and IS better. THOMPSON’S .DAIRY 2012-26 Eleventh St. N. W. Established 1881. Phone North 5997 Ask Thomp- sen’s milk- man te de- lver 1it, in- uire of your grocer, or pheme North 5997 10th and G Sts. N.W. Phone Main 721, fthe | sage. de worms. Hence the foul odor. Through {the care of # friend the woman's life jwas s TFor that reason her name as the woman had money she bought food to store away. But when she found that her money was undernourishment | —done this summer. No inconvenience <he had been| or dirt; competent workmen; moderate i charges. Awnings made to order and re- Daired. CORNELL WALL PAPER CO 14 13th N, Main so weakened that for many unable to move. On the table, in the dr: cupboards were p srt—rice, flour. lar aying and rom hours d in | every \ with When You Are Undecided Claflin Optical Co. S City Club not sufficient to replace what she ute terrified ut the thought ' when her reserves would in order to have spme- she became the day gone. So, Open All Day Saturday Feast of Bargains for Saturday in Our Final Reduction of - Summer Suits Not a single suit was bought for sale purpose and are the finest merchandise that’s possible to buy. The prices are so low it will pay one to pur- chase several suits. Mohair Suits, $ l 3.75 ideal for vaca- tion wear. Sale price .... Gabardines, Whip Cords and Silk Pop- lins; sport or plain models. Sale price... be Palm Beaches, stouts. slims Sale price..... Union Suits, checked nain- 69c 3 for $2.00 shorts, Tropical Worsteds, most Flannel Pants In plain white or stripes. $10 $7,95 and $12 values. .. i §1.15 Gol;_'l-—l—o le:§1.65 summer weigh PR One-Piece Bath Suits Rockinchair Men’s and Women’s Union Suit: and & = Paris Garters. Any Straw Hat Sale'price.. .. In Our Stock —_— Pajamas, all colors. . Your Last Chance to Buy Manhattan Shirts at Regular Sale Price Sol Herzo o= F at Oth == 19¢ $30 to $40 Spring Suits and Topcoats. ......... Cheney Silk Tubular 59c | Scarfs | $1 grades i | 75¢ and Pajamas $1.75 and 51'35 $2 grades. Pajamas $2.50 and sl 88 | $3.00. grades Night Shirts $1.25 95c grade .. .. Collars All 20c and l3c 25c¢ Stiff and Soft Collars Hosiery Fine Black 29c Hose, 40c grade .... Knit Scarfs Berkeley $1-65 Knit. $3 and $3.50 grades . .. L Union Suits $2 and .25 knit- { Eeoasyas and regular Golf Hose The popu- $1.15 lar kind. $1.75 grade ... Golf Hose The finest $2 15 I carry, $3 and $3.50 grades .. 7 %, 72 Worth up to $2.50. Now...... You'll find two groups plete. Well known Metri Madras and Crepe. §14 s of Shirts in which the sizes are quite com- c and Solar brands. Very fine Madras Shirts—up to $3.50. Now..... $1-95 7 7 7 )