Evening Star Newspaper, August 1, 1926, Page 27

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MAKESBOYS SIRUP Much Other Material Seized on Raids Cenverted to Hse by Government. Bootleggers' sugar destined for corn lquor made in a swamp has been seized and turned Into molasses in- stead for hoys' flapjacks at breakfast. g jars Intended hold that corn’liquor have heen filled with fruits and vegetables for Government wards. Kegs which were purchased by the bootlegger to hold his have been sawed. In two and form grace ful pots for flowers and plants at the Botanic raen. Copper stills through whose shiny throats the vaporous bootleg liquor guzzled In merry glee at woodside re- treats, have been transformed into vases, candlesticks. watch fobs and other products of the deft craftsman’s art. One old still is actually jn use by ‘the Government - Try to Salvage Stills. These and numerous other strange transmutations have taken place through the operations of prohibition here in Washington. They result from the economie practices of officials in charge, who are trying to salvage all possible material from the wreck- age of raided fllicit moonshine plants. Of course many things, such as poisonous moonshine liquor. illicit liquor plants, and bottles of poorly made product of the still, have been destroyed. Thousands of gallons have found their way down the sewers of Washington. Many an illicit still has been chopped up or gone up In a blaze of smoke in some secluded syl- van dell, where the owners thought it would be safe from the vigilance of the Government. But the campaign to save what could be utilized out of these prohi bition raids in Washington and vicin- ity has resulted, according to records in the office of I7nited States Marshal E. C. Snyder, in the salvage of ma terial to the value of about $500,090. Example Copied by Others. Not only have these useful by-prod- ucts of prohibition been utilized for the benefit of the Government and fts wards in Washington, according to Marshal Snyder, but the example set here in Washington has been fol- lowed somewhat by the courts and offices of United States marshals throughout the countr The saving not only has brought to light some strange oddities In the way of peculiar transformations, but has resulted in putting into practical use many saized articles, which would have brought low prices on an auc- tioneer’s hlock. prices so low perhaps @s hardly to cover the costs of han- dling. All such transactions are by court order. The sugar seized by prohibition agents in raids around Washington has proved perhaps one of the. most interesting and valuable of savings. A total of 4,465 pou=ds of sugar, in- to wares Above: The copper from seized still colls is turned over to the.soldiers at Walter Reed, who use it to fashion souvenirs of all sorts. Lower: A still which once turned out moonshine liguor now distils water for batteries at a Treasury Depart- ment garage. HEARINGS PLANNED N ST. ELIZABETHS Controller General Ready in Three Weeks for Open Probe of Hospital. hearings on the administra- tion of St. Elizabeth's Hospital over the last decade will start within three weeks before inspectors of the office of the controller general of the United States. The inquiry, author- ized by concurrent resolution of the Senate and House, has been in prog- ress for a week and will last through November, according to officials ef the controller general's office. H. A. A..Smith, chief investigator Open cluding both corn sugar and cane sugar, have heen turned over to the! Natienal Training School for Boys | under decrees of condemnation issues by the Supreme Court of the Distriet. | Sugar Made Into Sirup. Some sugar will be delivered during the coming week. a shipment of about | 2,000 pounds. This was seized by ! prohibition agents and on order of the | court turned over to the marshal's office for disposition, Much of this | sugar is melted up into sirup for the | boys at the school to eat on their s at breakfast. alds it 18 not unusual for pro- hibitlon officers &nd police to confiscate empty half-gallon jars. Often some of the jars which contain liguor are in such eondition that they can be emptied without breaking and kept for use. Many of these have been turned over to the National Training | School and St. Elizabeth's for use in canning fruits and vegetables, Between 8,000 and 10,000 pounds | of copper in the form of stills und kettles have heen turned over to ! Walter Reed and Mount Alto Hospi- tals, according to Marshal Synder's estimates. The occupational therapy clinic at | Mount Altoe has been discontinued now. hut formerly used a great deal of | this copper for use by the patients Walter Reed still is nsing It In the oceupational therapy department, | where boys are making all sorts of | novelties, ineluding vases, candle- sticks, card trays, plaques and other | things. Alcohol in Radiators. Alchohol seized in raids has been used for radlators of Government automobile irucks during the Win- ter here. Not only have 931 gallons of alchohol been distributed from the still supplies here to Govern- ment departments for use in their trucks, but 54 barrels econtaining 50 gallons each have heen brought from Baltimore for distribution here 1o Government -departments. That intended for automobile radiators is turther depatured by the marshal's office by pouring kerosene into it. Some liquor captured by prohi- bition agents is found to be of good quality, although according to labo- ratory record the percentage of %00d stuff found is very small. Whisky testing sufficient purity has been turned over to various institu- tions here, such as the Naval Hospital and the National Training School for Roys. Other Property Utilized. Other property from still rai turned avet to other departments i clude 10 hydrometers to the Wash- iagton Navy Vard, alcohol to the fur- niture repair shop of the House of TRepresentatives; alsohol to the l‘hll-l dren’s_ Hospital: crocks and kegs to| the National Training Sehool for Boys and the Botanic Garden. and water bottles to the Department of Agriculture. The program of using such material was worked eut for full co.operation betwean the lous offices and de- partments eoncerned, after confersnce With officials of the Department of | Justice, and then by court order. One still which used to make boot- leg liquor before it was seized by the Government and condemned is still in operation here in Washington, but this time by the Government itself. It was turned over (o the Treasury, and is now used for tilling water for automobile batteries at the Treasury garage, at Fourteenth and D) streets. Boy Killed by Father's Truck. Special Dispatch to The Star. FRONT ROYAL, Va., July 31.— Charles Vaught, 12 years old, was killed yesterday when he fell under the wheels of a truck driven by his father. Funeral services were held today, with burial in Prospect Hill Cemetery, Falls 4 Stories to Death, Speeial Dispatch to The Star. MARTINSBURG, W. ¥ July 31. —Roy Connor, laborer, 38 3 s old, fell four storiss from his working post on a mill construction job here this morning to the bottom of an elevator shaft. He was dead when fellow em pioyes reached him. An 13-yearel widow. and Infantcsuryivee I Humility is the altar, God of the office of the controller gen- eral, is in charge of the inquiry and now has 11 investigators working with him preparing the way for the hearings and the intensive survey of the hospltal administration to follow. efore the investigation Is concluded experts from many other branches of the Government service are expected to be called in, including physicians and experts on nervous and mental diseases from the office of the Surgeon General of the Public lealth Service, Mr. Smith was in charge of the in- vestigation into the accounts of local coal dealers ordered by the Senate District commltiee last Spring, Secretary of the Interior Work is sympathy with the in- ew out of the cl ouse during the lust sion of Congress against District Commissioner Frederick A. Fenning and allegatfons by Representative | Thomas I.. Blanton, Democrat, of Texas, that Dr, William A. White, superintendent of the hospital, re- celyed large fees ax an expert witness In criminal cases involving insane. Dr. White was an expert witness in the Leopold-Loeb case in Chicago. The concurrent resolution passed by Congress July 3, the closing day of the long session, authorized the. con- troller genera! to investigate the ad: ministration of St. Eiizabeth’s Hos: pital sinee July 1, 1916, “including the administration of the personnel of the hospital, all recelpts and expenditures, use of appropriations, the extent and manner in which the officials have per- formed their duties, the commitment, treatment, release and discharge of patients and the recelving, safeguard- ing and disposition of funds and prop- erty of patients.” The resolution orders the controller general to report on or before the beginning of the next session of Congress, and empowers his agents to subpoena witnesses and administer oaths. In all, nearly twoscore investigators are expected to be drawn into the in- quiry of the Goverpment Hospital for the Insane before its conclusion early next Winter. STRIKE TIES UP TW CHARLESTON PAPERS West Virginia Capital Publication Plant to Resume Shortly on Open-Shop Basis. By the Associated Press. CHARLESTON, W. Va., July 31.— West Virginia's capital city Is tempe- rarily without daily newspapers; due to a strike of the compesing room forces of the Gazette and Daily Mail. Adoption of the open shop plan in their typographical departments, and re- sumption of publication in g few days was announced by the publishers to- ay. Under the old contract with the printers, which the publishers said they offered to renew, day men recefy- ed $47, and night workers $50, for a 48-nour week. An- increase of $8.60 for day workers, and $5 for night men, with a: 44-hour week has been asked by the union. Proposals to sub: mit the matter to arbitration 'were re- fused by the printers, the publishers said. The strike became effective at mid- night at the expiration of the' year's contract, and following . failure to draft a new agreement. The Gazette, a morning paper, published by Willlam . Chilton, was issued as usual today. KANSAS LISTLESS | OVER7S PRIMARY No Real Opposition in: Big| Races or Stirring Issues Before Voters. By the Associated Press. | TOPEKA, Kans., July 81.—Kansas | voters faced the most listless primary in & decade. | With no.real opposition confronting United States Senator Charles Curtis or Gov. Ben Paulen, both seeking Re- | publican renomination for their re.| spective offices, voters will go to the | polls August 3 with interest centered | in some State office races, in one or two congresional contests and in red- hot local fights where law inforce- ment issues have brought out floeks of candidates. | State-wide fssues are lacking. Ring- | ing in the ears of the voters, how- ever, is the appeal of two Republican candidates to look upon the primary as as referendum on the question whether the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan of Georgia shall obtaln a Kan- sas charter. These candidates are Willia mith, assistant attorney genera s'the nomination for attorney general, and Frank J. Ryan, seeking renomination for Secretary of State. Both Smith and Ryan are open and bitter foes of the Klan and, as members of the State charter board, repeatedly have voted against grant- ing the order a charter. Should they be nominated and elected in the Fall they would control the dharter board; as the attorney general and secre- tary of state are ex-officio members of that board of three, The bank eommissioner, an appoiniee of the governor, is the third member, Ryan has three opponents for the nomination and Smith has four. Twice tried and acquitted on charges of selling pardons, former Gov. ' Jonathan M. Davis is. back again in the race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Opposing him is a youthful lawyer, Donald Muir of Anthony. Retirement of Repregentative J. N. Tincher, Republican, left the race wide open in the seventh district and chlef interest in the Kansas congres- sional contests centers in the west- ern district. Six Republicans and two Democrats are seeking Tincher's seat. s Guatamala's threatened damage by a grasshopper plague has been avert- ed by rains which drowned thousands of the insects. |on the AMERGAN U, YO CONTRACT S LET $100,000 Structure to Be in Use Next Fall—Contains Auditorium Feature. The building program at American University ried forward an- other step ve: ¢ with lefting of contracts for construction of the new ymnasium, to cost about $100.000 d to he ready for the opening of hool next Fall. Work already is progressing rapidly Battelle Memorial, which also is expected to be ready for oceupancy when school opens. The gymnasium is to he of fire- proof construction _ throughout, will be 60 by 150 feet, and will contain an auditorium capable of seating 1,000 persone. Fully Equipped Stage. Among the features of the new building will be a completely equipped stage of 60 by 25 feet for college dra- matics. Beneath the stage will be matic workshop,' where the and’ stage property mdy bhe constructed and where students will be glven Instruction in the mounting a dramatic production. Beneath stage shop will be showers, lock- oms, storerooms, offides for the coach and other faciliti Plans are being made by. Prof. Will Hutchins, instructor in dramatics, who 18 now in Europe studying mod- ern art, for extensive dramatic' work among the students at American Uni versity next year. General contract for the gymnasium was let to Charles H. Tomkins & C the heating and plumbing cont ent to the G. & H. Heating Co, electrical contract to, Philip Little. More Stress on Athletics. Chancellor Clark of the university apnounced yesterday with the acqui- gition of the new gymnasium:the in« stitution expected next vear to. place more stress than ever on physical ed- ueation and sports for the .student bedy. The: young women of the university already have a completely equipped gymnasium _in their residence hall, but it was explained that for big events, such as an Interscholastic basket ball game among the girls, the big gymnasium would be used. About the gymnasium room is to be a large gadlery, which will-increase the seating capacity of the hall when used as an auditorium. and There is no sych thing as an omen. Destiny does not send us heralds. The Daily Mall, afternoon paper, pub- lished by Walter E. Clark, falled to appear, and neither paper will print Sunday editions tomorrow. : e, Dwyer to Get Treatment. NEW YORK, July 81 (®.—Run- ning liquor may fession as it soupds. Bill Dwyer, con: victed head of a great rum. ring, has received permission to be taken from jail every few davs to be treated for an injured jaw and crippled foot, legacies of an auto smash-up- of the days before his arrest. MERURIE e es ol offerin, s By the Assoclated Press. JACKSONVILLE, Fia., July 31.— Thirty members of the Italian steamer Ansalde San -Giorgio Secundo last night had their first regular meal in five days. The battered and wave-torn vessel not be as easy & Pro-| aropped anchor here last night after| heing. znmod to_port by the United States Bhipping Board steamer West Harshaw, which answered digtress signals. of the Italian eraft ‘when mountainous. seas and. the - 100-mile gale of the tropical - hurricane. 1 Monday thréatened to swamp. her., The Ansaldo today was a.picture of e esing. o and el First Real Meal m Five Days Served To 30 Members of Rescued Sh ip’s Crew bridges, broken stanchions, - ripped iron crossbeams and smashed deck machinery testified to the fury of the mountainous seas. The .Ansaldo salled. from Mobile, Ala., July 23 and headed inte the edge of the hurricane on the night of July 25, off the east coast of Fls . The vessel was, caught in the hur- ricane center and the rudder torn loose, Capt. Currarino said. Attempts to re) the slashing steering gear were futile and distress signals were broadeast. These were answered by the West Harshaw, which stood by until. the storm. abated. - A line was] then passed to.the Halian craft and slow. journey - to . Jackeonville 2000 WILL ATTEND WTGEEERTD Steamer to Make Three Trips to Marshall Hall With Families Tuesday. Two. thousand members of Kallip- olls. Grotto and their familiesy wiil go to Marshall Hall Tuesday on'the an- nual -outing of the organization. The steamer Charles Macaléster will make three trips,.at 10 a.m., 2:30 p.m. and 6:30. p.m. - A pretentious program of ente tainment _has heen arranged the committee in charge, headed by Harry | B. Plankington. A Charleston con-| test’ will be the feature, There aixo will be concerts by the Grotto Band, athleti dancing and free refresh- ments. “Joseph Leverton will be in ibcommities assisting Mr. Plankington with the arrangements follo " . Honorary ‘and advisory Hstes, Stephen H. Talkes, Arthur Poynton, ‘Edward 8. Schmid, E. Libbey and’ Charles P. Shackelford medical,; Dr. George. F. Day. Dr. Thomas ‘. Crisp, Dr. Grant 8. Barn-} hart and Dr. Wade H. Atkinson; puh»l ", Leverton; prizes, | : - program and Whiting | M. W Burton; advertising and souyenirs, A. Mitcheil Phillips, Arch B. Willlams and Ralph T. thletics, Joseph W. Leverton, ed by ‘members of the Grotto base ball team: finance and_ticket Harry Scroggins, Lloyd H. Hinman, William J. Erskine and Adolph W. refreshment: Charles ‘H. r1al ladies committee, Mrs. B. W, Mrs. Stephen H. Talkes, Mrs. Charles D. flhacktl'ord.‘ Mrs. William J. Erskine, Mrs. C. P. Boss, Mrs, J. H. Yeatbower, Mrs. L. B. Robinson, Mrs. Charles A. Stevens, Mrs. C. T. Thorpe, Mrs. Herman Weakthall and Mrs. F. A. Herrmann: welcome, J. H. Shreve, A. H. Rogers. . Gompers, M. W. Pickering, C. Boss, Charies A. Stevens, R. B. Dickey, G. H. Emmons. T. Thorpe, | Bergman, C. A. Brewton, A. H.| Fenton, F. S, Ratcliffe, S, J, Gompers and Archie Engel. FULL PHONE RATE INCREASES DENIED New Virginia Schedule Only| Partially Met and Company Will Appeal. and Willlam M. H. P. By the Associated Press RICHMOND, Va.. July 31. der was entered tonight by the State Corporation Commission denying the new rate schedule petition by the Ches- apeake and Potomae Telephone Co., filed more than a vear ago, but grant- ing specific increase which will net the company about one fourth of the addi- tional venue requested. Incréases were granted on residential phones only in a few places that here. | tofore have had preferential rates un-; der franchise provisions. Individualj husiness phones are increased 50 cents per month by the order, and two and four party phones are incréased 25 centa per month in Richmond, Norfolk and Portsmouth. * Increase About $200,000 Yearly. Complete detalls of the order were not made public today, but*it was said that the specific increases granted will aggregate about $200,000 a year. The -ement that the commission | pared to enter the final order ne just two hours prior to the time | limit fixed by law. ‘The opinion which | must accompany the final order has not heen drafted, although Commi: ner Lewis Kpes is expecied to hand | s opinion some time next weel About one-fourth of the busines phones proposed increase was granted. | The increase on residential phones and the remaining threc-fourths of the phones was denfed. * the law the telephone com: pany privileged to set aside the commission decision and install. the | higher rates set forth in the petition under bond. It is expected that thi course will be followed. A. B. Berry, president of the Chesa- peake and Potomao Telephone Co., late tonight fssued an official statement shortly after the State Corporation | Commission had denied the company's | petition for full incr in telephone rates, in which he declared that an appeal would be made to the State! Supreme Court. Called Plainly Inadequate. “We have just received the order of the State Corporation Commission, the president said. “The amount of increase granted is plainly inadequate. It amounts to something more than one-quarter of what we asked for and { what the evidence before the commis- wion clearly showed we were entitled to. ' We therefore feel in justice to the company that there is no choice but to take an appeal to the Supreme Court of the State.” Mr. Berry declared that the pro- cedure under which the company was to take its appeal and begin charging its rates under hond was described in detail in the State constitution and asserted’that ‘‘the provisiens are fair, both tb the public and the company. “Telephone subscribers,” -he said, “will be assured of a refund if the rates charged are not finally sustain- ed, and if they are sustained, the com- ny will simply have collected only hat to which the court says'it is just. 1y entitled.” DICKENS’ LAST LETTER BRINGS LESS THAN $200 By the Associated Press. LONDON, July 31.—The last letter Charles Dickens ever wrote has been gold at auction for £40, a figure much below what was expected. The letier, dated “Gad’s Hill Place, June 8, 1870,” is addressed to Mr. John M. Makeham, who had complained that Dickens: was thought to have been guilty of irreverence in some of his books. Dickens wrote in reply: “It would be quite inconceivable to me but for your letter that any rea. sonable reader could possibly attach a scriptural reference to a passage in a book of mine, reproducing a much abused ‘soclal figure of speech, im- pressed into all sorts of service, on all sorts of inappropriate oscasions, with- oyt the faintest connection of it with its ~original source. am truly- shocked to-find that any reader can make the mistake. v ““I have always striven in my writ ings to express veneration for the life of lessons of our Savior, because I feel it and because I rewrote that his- tory for my children—every one of whom knew it from having it re. NOTED INVENTOR DIES. ALLENHURST, N.J., July 31 (®).— Max Levy, sclentist, inventor and one of the ploneers in the photo-engraving business, - died at his Summer home ‘here today, % He invented preeision machinery for the making of half-tone screens, used in “cuts” for printing in newspapers and magazines. He was born in De- troit in 1857. Pistol Found Beside Baby. NEW YORK, July 31 (®.—A loaded revolver; found beside ‘a sleeping in- fant in a baby carriage, was not re- garded as a_proper toy .by policemen who found it, and caus# the arrest of the child’s mother, " Mrs. Tessie Neceli. Policemen raided ier store looking. for bandits, said to have made it a headquarters, $83000evvicvssisasioss 0“5‘6“63“‘“‘3‘3‘:“ © 720-722-724 No Refunds All Sales Final PATENT COLT VICI KIDS TANS BLOND KIDS SATINS AND SUEDES FANCY CUT-OUTS 1 STRAPS OPERA PUMPS SANDALS NOVELTIES EHREND 3388338338838888888388888883888888828888883888328 No C. 0.D. Washin - 7™ e oo Bearded Women Seen if Bobbing Of Hair Continues By the Associated Preas. CHICAGO.. July. 31.—Pleturs grandmother a couple of genera- tions from now. stroking a long gray beard, “Women_ who bob their hair are complaining by the thousands of the growth . of mustaches, beards and hairy growths upon their faces,” Miss Frances Martel, sec- retary of the Ameriean Cosme- ticians Soelety, said today.. As a result, the hob is liely to be cast into oblivion. * In a recent month New Zealand re eeived 986 motor vehicles from the | United States, 986 from Canada and | from the I'nited Kingdom. | 7th St. N.W. GREY ALL SIZES 2', TO 9 ALL WIDTHS C TO EEE Women’s Silk Dresses At Extra Special Savings Georgettes, Chine, Wash Silks, cleverly styles. weil. Feature Monday, all specially at $12.75. ) We Rayon Street Dresses 3.98 Values Beautiful shades, tern Crepe ilks, Printed Smartly fashioned— trimmed — many Also checks, many color combinations. de Dresses to wear now and for coming months as event $25 - for Values priced Emphasize the Sale with self-toned pat- stripes and plaids in gton’s Greatest SHOE SALE 486 Pairs of Women’s & Misses’ Shoes 1.96 19 1 .95 TRAIN HITS DAZED MAN. Quarryman Sitting Between Rails Meets Instant Death. Special Dispatch to The Star. HARPERS FERRY, W 31— Edward Donivan, 23 1d quarryman, was instantly killed by the east bound Capital iimited of the B. 0. Railroad, near Engels, east of here, this morning as he st In a stupor between the tracks. His body was hurled against banks of the cut Fe was 2 native of Ei had worked here some years. the Va., but . With the rise of the general stand- rd of living in Italy since the World War, the demand for soap has so i creased that soap making has become an important industry there. IS Colored Voiles Light and dark ]’\,'n) ook a0y voliles in MONDAY’S GIVE AWAYS Boys’ Tub Suits otk mbdeie, $ | light and made ot "linent and dark col ors. 40 in, Wi e e 1.50 Crepe Kimonos Long Crepe Kimonos, in scroll patterns. Full cut and full length. Al colors. 50 Babies’ White Muslin Skirts and Dresses — 4.00 Women’s Wool Bathing Suits n made hishop and yoke style. Lace or embroidery, trimmed. full size Round Black colore. and Tots’ 69c Sleeveless Dresses 50c 75¢ Boys’ Blouses Madras, Percale and K haki Scores of charm- ing little stsles in printed Sizes 2 to 6 pafterns. Blouses, sport attached co 1l v ! Every yard brighter than ever before! s a real value! Fabrics Patterns are newer, made from these fabrics at GREAT SAVINGS! | Voiles! | Patterns Regularly | 49c Yard | aualitz. Conservative dots, floral and convent and dark shades. 40 inches Crepes! Silk Crepe de Chine, Reg. 1.69 ‘a Yard . Tabric. Tight and dark sh mer apparel. 40 inches wide. 49c light colors, 29¢ Pillowcases 3-inch 49c Colored Wash Goods Alida _Cloth, also Plain Colored Broadcloth ... | Lovely patternr in 2 durable. hard twist C Beautitul printed_patterns——4nd youwll | marvel at tha lustrous quality of this fins i ades—for Sum- Good. Quality Bleach;(l Muslin, | hem, . size 42x i = 19¢ " Pongee! Printed Silk Ponges. This fabrie is ful @colors, with small figure. * Satins! 1.44 copenhagen, | 1.98 Sport Satins, 40 In. Wide | Tan, porchid. black and white. gray, rose, Gingham, a Real Value at Many attractive patterns in Tissue Ginghams Extra fine quality. n large and small check— % 49c¢ Silk and Cotton Pongeé @ princess. slips, 36 inches wide ? 29c White Batiste Soisette, Dotted Tubcilla, Printed | Very fine weave, soft finish, free 29¢ | from “dressing, 36 inches wwide colors are Dainty, cool Summer Wash Frocks can be blue, All newest colors, including Nat- Lural; used for children’s dresses and 39¢ | 19¢ -+ 5bc 69¢ Men’s Colored Madras Union Suits Full cut gar back insert. full c 2.50 Abdominal Reducing Corset bust, Sipes 28 69¢ Ladies’ Ribbed Union Suits Lace- trimmed and extrs 3 i SEPOPipmer 1.50 Men's Pajamas Made of fceable coutil with abdominal atraps. Medium : vard wide and eomes in light and dark neck with draw. strings. Regular, Sheer Muslin, made 2 | 2. ' piece style with 3 silk || frog trimmings. Blue, tan, white, lavender, pink. 1.50 Ladies’ Colored Umbrellas 1] stronaly . made H 7-rib Paragon fram full size | Ladies’ Umbrellas. All colors and | viack 1.50 Traveling Satchels Strongly made with 2. clasps and lock end key. Well lined. Underwear 59c Women’s Crepe Gowns Extra Size Costume peated to him long before they could read, and almost- as. soon as ‘they could speak: but 1 have never mada iamation of this from the house 1.49 Ladies’ House Frocks Not 5 Benialow Apron 79c Made of ext) ood Bamian Snambra: a3 et 2.50 Hoover Aprons ecks, % rgandis trim- vack aah, Al 79¢ Ladies’ Rayon-and- ilk Hose ack i =:=H53c Guaranteed Silk Chiffon Hose sol BI % Reversible Dresses 1 Pure-thread silks, llfi:}‘tfiu better ma- als wit bie collars.

Other pages from this issue: