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Ly New York Sets Million Minimum For Aid of Earthquake Victims Response to Appeals Universal Frou Banks, Manufacturers and Plain Citizens. Br the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September A re Yef fund. of at least $1,000,000 fo: stricken Japan was expected in thi elty Whatever the final estimate the number of dead in ruined Tokio and Yokohama might be. reli workers knew that only the most unusual m ures could prevent the death of countless thousands of refugees from starvation and ex- Pposure, Response to the many appeals was universal and instantaneous. Morti- | mer N. Buckner. chairman of the New York chapter of the American Red Cross, which has charge of the} collection of the funds, will b ' sisted by a citizens’ committee headed by Dwight M. Morrow of the firm of . 1. Mor; & Company. ial meetin,; of v, called by hert chairman of the United S Corporation and a member of executive committee of the society held last night and special re. lief committee of sixty-five was or ganized. \ The contribution of the United States Stecl Corporation will be sub- stantial, Mr. Gary said { Flood of Contributions, i The bulk of the fund is expected | from bu and individuals | rep s-of the city’ &ocial and fiv Contributions were pouring into the Red Cross Feadquarters in a steady flood last! night i [wenty thousand dollars was \otwdl by about seve ese merchants | at a4 me - Nippon Club las night. The Premier amoto at Tokio for re- | lief work. The Japanese relief fund | started by the Red Cros { of Wa headed w - S0 | tributer. | Bank poration pany, who ) ! Kuhn. Loeb There were other wkhich started th 0.000 from | Co. rly con- | luded the National City ! nternational Banking Co 1d the ional City Com- intly $50.000, . & iCo;, 000. ! checks for $10,000, fund toward the | ! million mark before it was fairly un- | der way Wealthy Japanese Meet. Hundr fness men arranged Nippon Club with their New York | cons to begin the collection of | funds which would be turned over to | the uni a meeting at_the | the disaster. | oklyn div ed | it was ready to send Ta on_short notice. tock Exchange and | the board of managers of the Silk | Association of America announced ! meetings today to decide on relief | measures the organization would | \take. The New York Cotton Exchange ! will hold a similar session tomorrow. | Wall street expects government to seck tempor ting the London and York markets as a Tesult but sts for financial | have been received so far. | 3 ven o 10,0C0 REFUGEES DIE | IN FIRE AFTER THEY HAD FLED FROM TOKIO| (Continued from_ First Page.) @ispa The Cross announc 100 nurses to The New | of the! * temporary nsgure. will take some ime, and no definite action Is ex- sected here until the extent of the isaster and the needs of the country re more carefully determined. Theaters of the Motion Picture :’rnd;wflr‘ and Distributors of Amer- ca, rallying to an appeal made b: Will H. Ha, displayed the text 0{ President Coolidg proclamation urging Americans to aid Japan in her hour of need. Many theaters started collections of rellef funds, while others asked the State Depart- ment to arr money to their agents in the far east for relief work CHICAGO RAISING FUNDS. nge for transmission of : THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDN:ESDAY SEPTEMBER 5, 1923, : Relief Work Starts as Detailed Reports Tell of Disaster | 1 Red Cross Alone Plans to Rai:e‘ $800,000. EF the Associated Press. CHICAGO, September 5 mpaigns for funds for in a under way he; e house, The Chicago Red Cross uota of $800,000, and of £50.000 sct as Eoal f palgn of the Salvation Army 1a amounts fixed by tions wh dr are - progress. Japanese organi are ralsing funds among their bership. Mayor William 1 committee of citiz today to make plans for a publie solicitation of funds for “anese quake sufferers. President John J. Stream of the Chicago Board of Trade. named a special committee from that organization to solicit The local Red Cross was already functioning as part of the national ief in in nealy relief fund the cam- re the organiza- already mem- Dever named a who will meet y will be cabled toibody in the relief program of that| organization. In statement con- cerning the offer of the American Red Cross to aid Japan. John Barton Payne. national director, said: ‘We have sent our offer to Japan and are now ready to heed whatever call may come with action character- stic of America and the American Red Cr We do not, of course, nt to force ourselves upon any v, and in a nation so well orga Japan it may not be necessary to send other aid than a nursing force. No Estimate Yet. Mr. Payne said there was no way of rte of the needs until more definite information received. He will go to Washingé ton Thursday to remain until the or- ganization plans are completed, and then return here to direct the activi- an must hav ding what as well as in « destitute. Geor man of the bo Trust Compa ment. “if the press dispatches are correct, this d ster is the greéatest in his- tory.” he said. "What else could Americans do - save to help in an emergency which is an act of nature and not of individual man? Japan must have finageial help: there can be no question abdut that. She must have money to rebuild not only her struc tures, but_her manufactories, her ma- chinery, her railways. If the new is not exaggerated, many millions wiil be needed to rebuild and restere.” MUCH ANXIETY IS FELT FOR MANY AMERICANS IN DEVASTATED AREAS (Continued from First Page.) financial aid in been destroyed ng for her sick and e M. Reynolds, chair- d of the Continental clared in a state- dence and museum in Tokio were burned in the fire following the earth- quake The museum was bullt to house the art objects of the famous Morrison collection of Peking. FIRE FINALLY OUT. By the A iated Press. HANGHAI September in Japan as result of earthquake number 320,000, ing to the latest estimate recci the Eastern News Agency from Osaka Asahi This__estimate were 150,000 dead in Yokohuma; 60,000 and 10,000 in Attami. The fire in Tokio was extinguished about dusk last night. Latest reports from Tokio report that the devastated district of the capital extends three miles north and south and seven miles east and west. ed 350,000 houses lowed the tel The fire raged ‘fifty hours before it was brought un- der control CONDITIONS IMPROVE. —Deaths turday’'s ccord- od by the eald_ there were in Tokio; 100,000 in Yokosuka, By the Associated Press, SAN FRANCISCO, Calif, September 5—Yokohama and Yokosuka, the naval station at Yokosuka and sur- \rounding towns: are in ruins, and ) more than half of Tokio has been ) wiped out by the earthquake and fire, according to the first official state: ment received here today by U. Oyma, £ consul general of Japan, from Shichi- ? taro Yada, formerly consul general of Japan at San Francisco and now sta- \tioned at Shanghai. ‘The offi 1 Japanes tatement says that the nce Kayo has | been killed, and that Prince Yamma- | shina_died ‘of injuries at Temakura. The deaths of Prince Matsugata and Count Takahashi, formerly premier of ,Japan, have not been officially con- !firmed, the report stated. Water System Repaired. Improvement in conditions in Tokio is reported in wireless advices re- \ceived last night from Iwaki radio station, 155 miles north of Toklo, by the Radio Corporation. The water supply system has been repaired and 18 furnishing water in all sections of- the capital; street lighting has been restored in four wards and food supplies have begun to arrive at nearby points. Six naval vessels arrfved at Yoko- hama and Shinagwa (a point in Bay of Tokio, close to Shiba ward of Toklo city, one of the scenes of greatest devastation) with cargoes of rice. scount Takahashi, head of the Selyuaki party, who was reported to have been killed with twenty of his party followers, by collapse of a Dbuilding, where they were holding a meeting is safe, the advices said, as is also his residence. & 216 Distinct Shocks. A _home office estimate places the dead in Tokio at 10,000 and those in Yokohama at 100,000 with many. in- jured in both cities. There were 216 distinct earthquakes experienced in Tokio last Saturday, the most severe having a duration of | Sturgeon entire Yokohama consulate general staff, had been accounted for. An- other, received simultancously, de- clared “Miss Martin (William F.) ason and Vice Consul Leo D. ir are safe and well. Vice Consul Paul E. Jenks. a mem ber of the Yokoha consulate, is reported both from Kobe and Lon- don: to have been killed, and Vice Consul E. G. Babbitt and his entire family are declared to be dead. Confirm Consuls Death. Further confirmation of of Consul General Max D. Kirjassoff and wife was received in official dispatches, although their two chil- dren are said to be safe at Kobe. From the most reliable information obtainable, the American consulate general at Yokohama was demolish- ed and its staff virtually wiped out, The American consul at Kobe wired the State Department, under date of September 4, that the only known survivor of ‘the Yokohama staff is Vice Consul Wardell. His dispatch, which ‘was forwarded to Washington by Edward Bell, charge d'affaires in| Peking, added that the consulate had | been completely destroyed and Con- sul General Kirfassoff killed. aval Hosptial Collnpxes. The dispatch added that the naval hospital at Yekohama collapsed dur- ing the earthquake and Commander Webb was_injured. Other members of the staff were said to have been killed and the State Department was urgently requested to have a fast naval vessel rushed to the scene to act as a hospital ship for the patients who are said to be near death from cxposure. T. De Jordin, the French consul at Yokohama, also was report- ed to have been killed. Announcement in _ Ambassador Wood's message that communications betwecn Tokio and Yokohama had been partially restored was recelved with relief at the State Department, 1t is belleved that full and authentic news of the fate of all Americans in the quake ions will be recely in a short time now. Woods' dis patch was filed in Tokio but was sent by wireless from Iwaki. Sets Loss at 10,000, 1t follows “Communications have just been opened up with Yokohama. The situ- ation there is exceedingly serious and some Americans are reported to have The casualties in ed at- 10,000 I be- ns in Tokio are safe. The food situation is acute. Send supply from Philippines at once, as already suggested.” Consul H. B. Hitchcock cabled from Nagasaki corroboration of, Ambassa- dor Woods' statement that Tokio had not been as hard hit as Yokohama, where two houses were reported to be all that Is left standing. He wired that clearer reports of the situation Were being published in Nagasaki and that “Yokohama has suffered rela- tively worse than Tokio." Relief work in Yokohama is being organized by the American consuls from Nagasaki and Kobe and the British consul from Nagasaki. Scout Island Disappearance. The State Department is receiving scores of telegrams from all over the country, inquiring after persons believed to have been in the quake sectors. Many six minutes from first to last. There were 57 shocks the following day. Earlier reports of the death of the princess Kaya were denied, but it was said she was injured seriously. An officlal report whose source is not given is quoted to the effect that of all Yokohama only two houses re- main standing, all the others having collapsed or been destroyed by fire. Rumors and-.unconfirmed reports are current_éevegywhere, few_of the new: napers, even being able-to obtain con . firmed Information regarding the di 1 wester. the Radio Corpuration’s m page doncludes. | inquirles regarding the safety of Prof. Henry Fairfleld Osborn, and Mrs. Os- born of New York, were noted. Both are safe in Shanghai, according to a cablegram received from John K. Davis, American consul there. Reports that the Bonin Islands, off the coast of Japan, had disappeared be- neath the sea were at least partially de- nied in dispatches received here today from the Postal Telegraph Company in New York. It reported that its cabie station on Peel island. one of the group had spoken to its station on the island of Guam repeatedly | since the catas- trophe. The Commergial Pacific Cables the death | ~Individual . districr's | in fons here | relief funds. | | i | were reported to be oporating efficiently { through Manila, Shanghal and Nagasaki {to p.aces in Japan as ciose to the de- vastated areas as Kobe and Osaka. The main cable between Bonin and Tokio, { however, is_broken, apparentiy elghty miles from Tokio. Vice Cousul Starts for Scene. Consul E. Clark Creager has | been dispatched from Kobe to Yoko- ihama on a relief ship to obtain defi- Inite facts regarding the disaster ithere and report on the casualties lamong American residents, the Ameri- {can consul at Kobe informed the State { Department in & secon® message to- jday. He added that the Shipping { Board steamer West Orowa has been diverted to Yokohama with food, | ! medical supplles and relief workers. representative at The American Kobe said he would advise the State | Americans in Yokohama as soon as! he could obtain information. He he had wired Shanghal asking the American Red Cross officials there to| | rush physicians and nurses to Yoko- {hama, where (he need Is said to be {urgent. | Ships Near Yokohama, H Before night fall it is believed near- | 1y a score of rellef ships will have | reached Yokohama. The faster units | of the American Aslatic fleet should | | have dropped anchor outside the har- | {bor early today and it is believed at | |the Navy Department that already | imedical supplies and tents have been | llanded. In_addition the two Army; transports, Meigs and Merritt, are un- | derstood to have cleargd Manila, filled | {10 capacity with food, tents and more | medical supplies. cores of American fighting craft {and commerce vessels are now load ing additional food and medical sup- ! plies and before the end of the week | it is expected they, too, will land | !tons of necessary equipment in the| devastated areas for fighting famine | and pestilence. the two things that are most feared now that the quakes have ceased and fires in Yokohama | and Toklo are reported toe hav burned themselves out. . Ship Ready to Sall. Secretary Denby notified President | Coolidge today that at the request| of the president of, the chamber of | {commerce at San Francisco, co-op-| crating with the Red Cross, the sup- ply ship Vega, now at that port, had | been made ready to go to Japan with la cargo of foodstuffs {" The Navy Department has & jdered the supply ship Ar: | Pacific battle fleet to Yokohama “‘Hhi & cargo of fresh meat, dry provisions | and medical cupplies. . The Arctic! !\ill report to Admiral Anderson at| | Yokohama, ! The Shipping Board is rushing preparations to meet demands of the { Red Cross for ships to carry supplies | to Japan, Chairman Farley an-| nounced. i Hold Vessels Ready. | In order to avoid confusion and to render the most efcient service, he £ald, vessels will be held in readiness | |at_their present locations to await) definite orders to call for cargoes at | ecified ports on request of the Red | 'W. B. Keene, vice president inj !chlrge of trafic of the Emergency Fleet Corporation, said eight cargo ships, averaging 8,000 tons each, were available at Pacific coast ports, and other ships laid up there could bel “broken out” very quickly If needed. Five to Sail Soon. In addition five passenger cargo | vossels are due to sail west from Pacific ports on their regular sched- ules during the next month. The President Taft sails tomorrow, the President Jackson September 11, President Cleveland September 20. President Jefferson September 23 and the President Pierce October 4. They are due In Yokohama at dates rang- ing from September 21, for the Jack- son, to October 19, for the Pierce. Between September 8 and October 5 eleven freighters are due to sail, arriving_between September 28 and October 23. ‘At various points in the Pacific are seven passenger cargo ships of the President type, and twenty-nine cargo ships, many of which will be available \for relief service. The President Jefterson, the board announced, has already sailed from Yokohama to! Kobe with refuget and the West |Orowa, a cargo vessel, was diverted |ll. Manilla to carry xupp}lel to Yoko- hama. Mensage to Embassy. The Japanese embassy received to. day its first word from the home gov- ernment. It announced the forma- tion of the new cabinet, essentially s carried in press dispatches, with ount Yamamoto as premler and minister of forelgn affairs. Importance was attached to the message to the Japanese embassy be- cause it was signed by Premier Yamamoto and was dispatched the day after the earthquake, indicating |to embassy officials that no harm had befallen the premier. The cabinet was the nounced in -early press two exceptions. Minister of Educa- | tion Okano and Minister of Justice Hirgnuma, as designated for those portfolios in the earlier press advices, were not mentioned, whereas Minis- lur of Agriculture and Commerce Den was given also the rtfolio of Justice, and Minister of Communica- tions Inukal also was given the ortfolio of education. Both Okano and iranuma have been reported in pr dispatches as missing after the earthquake. MANY AMERICANS SAFE. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 5.—Al of the missionaries in. Toklio and Yoko- ? the Reformed Churcl: in W s hama America are safe, according | Department regarding the welfare of ©f Plainficld id a ! pany NAMANABH cablegram from Kobe received today by the board of foreign missions of the church. The church has thirty-five mission- ariés in Japan, fifteen of whom have been stationed in Tokio and Yoko- hama districts, according to the Rev. W. L. Chamberlain, secretary of the forelgn mission board. All American and native staff mem- bers of the Y. W. C. A. In Japan are safe, according to a message received today by the national board from Miss Jane Neil Scott, head of the Y. W. C. A. in Kioto g Representative Saved. Representative k st R. Ackerman N. J.. whose whereabouts in Japan were reported yesterday in consular message from Shanghal to be unknown, is safe in Nikko, ac- cording to a cablegram received from him tod The ng Machine Com- ived a ca from Kobe that all ten of its Amerlcan employes in Tokio Yokohama are sate. Two of the em- loyes reached Kobe, whence the mes- sage wus sent The Texas Company, which has a number of oil distributing plants in apan. received a cable from Osaka this morning, stating that its resentative there had been unab communicate with Tokio and Yoko- hama and to learn the fate of ten American employes. From other sources he learned that the com- pany’s property in the stricken cities was totally destroyed Two Are Missing. The International Banking Corpora- tion today received a cable from Kobe stating that two of its ten American employes in Yokohama were missing. They were McHenry Holbrook of Hartford, Ky., and H. W. | Morse of Burlington, Vt. i Officials of the corporation declared the | possibility that may have left the stricken city for the wegk end and escaped the disaster. Three of the employes succeeded in reaching Kobe. whence the message was sent. Tre there was a missing men lao or- |three American employes of the cor- | tis of the | poration in Tokio have been reported | 1 Park Road Office, 14th and Park Road N.W., as_safe. The bank's building in Yokoham valued at $200,000, was demolished by the quake and fire, the cable said. The National Lutheran Council an- nounced that of sixty-two Lutheran missionaries in twenty-two mission | stations in Japan twenty missionaries are located in six mission stations in_the devastated area The following were without doubt in the devastated area when the de- struction began: Rev. Stirewalt, Virginia: Rev. C. W. Hepner, Rev. Arthur Linn, Dr. and Made only of wheat and barley scientifically baked 20 hours — Supplies Vitamin-B and mineral elements. How can Grape:Nuts be other than a wonderfully appetizing, healthful food ? 9 “There's a Reason and | v 9 P R Avsuma i < i KANAGAW, KA ? X ) % FUsYaAMA . Oy bR A e 2 Ay Mrs. C. Lippard, North Carolina, and Mrs. Stirewalt and Mrs. Hepner, South Carolina. Sal tion Army Seeks Facts. The Salvation Army has sent & host of messages to Japan, but re- celved no responses. Eager to estab- lish a connection through which re- llef work could be undertaken, Com- {missioner Thomas E. Still cabled Lon- {don headquarters of the army for instructions, but had received no re- ply last night. Rellef work probably would have to be launched by way of |Korea, said the commissioner, because of the paralysis existing in the devastated island areas. The Japanese consulate is without official word from Japan. American Express Company officials Ireceived word by cable that the !three American members of thelr Yokohama office staff had escaped injury. Other employes of the com- pany in nearby small towns had not been heard from. Those reported safe were 1. N. McAllister and George Young, both of San Francisco, and IMiss Grace Heller, secretary. Other Amerfe whose fate was reported unknown at New York offices of firms ~they represent include Andrew Pattock of Chappaqua, N. Y., far eastern representative of the General Motors Export Corporation with headquarters in Tokio; two em- ployes of the United States Steel Corporation at Tokio. Ship In Damaged. The American Trading Company has twenty-five or thirty employes in To- | kio and Yokohama. Six of these were | accounted for as safe in a cable re- Subscriptions REGION OF JAPAN WHERE LOSS OF LIFE WAS GREATEST celved today. is unknown. W. L. Farnham, Tokio representa- tive of the National City Company, had not been heard from. Three United States Steel Corpora- tion ships are in Japanese waters. One of them has been beached in a badly damaged condition at Yoko- hama, heads of the corporation learn- ed today. No word has been received from the "corporation’s representa- tivé at Tokio. Prof. Henry Fairfleld Osborn, pres- ident of the American Museum of Natural History in this city, and Mrs. Osborn were passengers on the Pres- ident Madison, which reached Yoko- hama the day before the quake. Since 90 per cent of the passengers to Ja- pan disembark at Yokohama to tour overland, It is presumed they were in the stricken district. _— LANGDON GIBSON DIES. Noted Explorer Was With Perry on Exvedition. ROCKLAND, Me., September 5-— Langdon Glibson, naturalist, sclentist and éxplorer. dled suddenly last night on the island plantation of Criehaven, where he has been spending the sum- mer. He was a brother of Charles The fate of the others | Dana Gibson, and is survived by his widow and two sons, Charles De Wolf Gibson of Richmond, Va., and Burdette Gibson of Chester, Pa. He passed eighteen months with the late Rear Admiral Peary when the latter explored for the first time the northern coast of Greenland. for the Red Cross Japanese Relief Fund WILL BE RECEIVED AT THE Riggs National Bank, Main Office, 1503 Pennsylvania Avenue Or at any of the outside offices: } 7th Street Office, 7th and Eye Streets N.W., generous. z Agonte for N. America: @ ‘Mano.p F. Rireaiz & Co., Ina. ew Toek, Torento. Srdacy, Weilagton Dupont Circle Office, 20th and P Sts. N.W., Washington Heights Office, 2477 18th St. N.W. Immediate relief is necessary in view of ti calamity, and we urge our patrons to be prompt and great 6 Children @ | Aged— ‘The perfect purity, pleasant and gentle action of ENO’s « Fl:iz Salt "::::’e it lhcxeidnl corrective for both young and old. It the most delicate constitution—for sesses the refreshing, purifying properties of fresh, ripe fruit in 2 convenient, concentrated and economical form. All Druggists sell ENOG’'s FRUIT with * NO pos- ATTENTION Automobile Salesmen We .are on the lookout for three capable, experi- enced retail men. We want men who are “go-getters”— men who will appreciate an 'opqortunit{ proposition where your possilibities are li your own efforts. Our line is a genera'motors product— a Light, Six-Cylinder Automobile that will have abso- Production for the coming year will excged 300,000. All replies will be held strictly con- fidential. References required. Address Box 111-B, Star Office lutely no competition. that offers a mited only by R L, I o 7 S A Another Fashion Shop Knockout Beginning 4 0’Clock Wednesday Men’s Suits ¢ Only 19 of them, of linen, cool cloth, duck and Bermuda cloth. "—and that’s not all The only mistake is) our mistake in making a big ome when we bought too much merchandise this season—but we are willing to pay for our overbuying. Following are the odds and ends of both stores, but the sale will be at the Ninth and E Store only. Don’t ask us to charge them—don’t ask us to make any alterations—don’t ask ws to do anything but wrap them 1igp. Now that is Item No. I of this final clean- up. Now get ready and hold ywour breath for some more startlers: Nine Lucky Men Who Can Stand Loud Ones Can Get Goodman & Suss Rochester Tailored Suits That Sold Up to 350 for— , $5\ There are only nine of them. They are in blue, green and black-and-white shepherd checks. A little loud, but they look well on young fellows. What a price! Sizes 34, 35 36 and one size 38 stub. What’s Left of Men’s All- Wool, 3-Pc. Summer Suits and two-piece Tropical Suits and Less Price There are 86 Three-picce Wool Suits, par- ticularly strong on the smaller sizes—which suggests that many a mother can send her son to school in a fine suit at just about half of what she usually has to pay for it. From the 5 ones—which are now $12.50—to the $50 and gfl ones—which are now $25.00—they are all attractive. There are many famous Goodman & Suss Rochester Hand-tailored Suits included. All models—the Brooks, Norfolks, Sports, Golf Suits with knickers, Conservatives—all sizes. We have also included 247 Two-piece Tropi- cal Suits, the balance of our summer stock, at ¥4 price and less. 2 All silk-lined Tropical Gabardines, Imported English Flannels and Fast-color Blue Serges, that werle.l&h. Now, ~ T 8izes, finest 3.75 9 11 Wois(erls, 3 3¢ 35 36 37 38 4b 42 $15 Palm Beach and Mohair Suits $7.50 ) (silk trimmed) $11.25 $35.00 Silk Shantung Suits $12.50 $35.00 Mallison’s Finest Silk Poplin Suits, $17.50 $22.50 Finest Silk Mohair Suits. 3 All-Wool $22.60 .. 3 Offict $3.00 and $4.00 11 _Suits of muda Cloth. Sold up to $15.00 4 Tropical Worsted and Gabardine Suits. $25.00 ... Ve A 11 Tuxedo Sults of Finest Silk Mohair—won- derful opportunity for orchestras to be outfitted. ‘Were $50.00 . 6 Tropical $19.00 $50.00 5 All White and Striped Flannel Trou- Sold up to $14.50 White Gabardine Trousers and finest Linen Knickers. Were $5.00 and $7.00.... Palm Beach Trouser: $6.00 . . . 811! ohair T $7.00 N 0dd Over 1,000 and Btiff Co Rubber Col 30c, 35c, 50c. Madras Sold to $2.00. = White Shirts, ached and neckband ggc styles. (Large sizes only.) Scld up to $3.00 Pure Silk Shirts (Slightly sofled).” Sold up to g3 ) sers. $2.50 & $4.00 $4. &EndsMen’s Furnishings rrow and Ide Discontinued Styles of Soft also limited amount of Bilk Collars and $4.00 . Nainsook Athletic Shirts and Drawers. Sold for 25¢ Genuine Otis Silk Trimmed Lisle Shirts and 35¢ Drawers. Sold for $1.00. . T 4 Men's Pure 8ilk Full-Fashioned Hos plain. Sold \I‘ to $2.50..... Men's Silk Poplin. Belts. 8old up to Men's White Kid Glove: Sold for $3.00 .. Fancy and g Open Evcm’ng; Tasvion Shop 7y 2 R, 2 e R T T, 7Y I e e I