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4 * RESIDENT FINDS - FEE Lake Tupper Place May Be-! come Summer White House Next Year. SSELL YOUNG. Stait Correspondent of The Star. WHITE PINE CAMP. Y.. Sep- tember 3.—Somewhat near the middle of Lake Tupper, one of the largest And_most beautiful lakes in the Adi- rondacl situated a island of several hundred acres, which 18 next Summer. his vacatic gh, the President had trangely en Summer, bhut the better tacilit ¢ 1 other personnel. he decided on the Kirkwood estate, ut White Pine Camp. The Prekident had not seen the island &pot then, aithough he was deeply in- terested from the deseription furnish- ¢ John B. Sheppey of Toledo, i i of the President, owner of the who went to the White House the President had a Summer White ed friend place. to offer it hefor made a selection of House. Now island. the President has seen this e indicated that he was 80 his intimates be- well pleased, that lieve he may take the Sheppey place next vear. However, that s a long Ny oOff. and all sorts of offers will 4 i{he White House. But be flooding those close to the President s he surely will give this consideration, and they would not be ar all surprived if he decided in itx favor. ! Fish Lake Good. ides the natural beauty of the e the attractive arningement of the c \dings, the fishing in Lake Tup) out, in which the | acquired a genuine interest since lishing experience this Summer, arc -sald to be very plentiful. | Turing. his inspection of erans’ hospital ..H t('u]lh bt \merican Legion's vec | ::t:rn\ % miles farther up the lake. President Coolidge went nearly the full dength of the lake in a small motor boat. and it was then that he taught his st glimpse of Mr. Shep- | pey-s little island canp. the is- | Tind was pointed out to the President from the boat he asked that the | ourse be A o w8 0 G 3 course be 1 P shore line in ¢ i bud view of the spot. | ix not enly close to the he could get Mr. Sheppey. the owner t @ close frend of the President’s but Wasa still closer friend of the late Presi- | dent Hardin: was Mr : who ain E S tional by o wing to President nd 3 {arding Laddie | Airedale. % last Spring | Boy. the popular When Mr. sheppey read that the President wanted some place | in the mountuns and near a lake. he | hurried to the \White House and of- fered his home. Hls prop- n heppey 1sland, and | erty is k is general most beaut one of the| ble | irul and lake camps in this The loca- | | tion is conside w one of the ' choicest in this { the country.| The seclusion. desired by the Presi- | dent would be even more l'nmlblku-‘ than that afforded now by White | Pine Camp. However, the President | has nojcause for complaint re the seclusion at the latter. | Likes Mountain Country. ! than It has been indicated more once by the, President while discu picturesque _lon 81.000 bond, pending t Falsification of birth records— whether through a desire to hood wink the Covernment or through a pride whicn causes the employe to regresent himseif as vounger than he actually is—Is receiving the increas- ing attention of personmel officers of the Government. With the increase in annuities re- ceived hy Government employes and the large number of employes retired ually, chief clerks and appointment clerks have renewed again their care. ful scrutiny of bicth records, believ- ing that some employes may have de- liborately sworn falsely to birth rec- ords in _order to gain an increase in veuars of active pay before retirement at the retirement age. Falsifications Disclosed. Many cases of falsification —de- liberate in €ome and unintentional in others—have been revealed in the overnment service here, and several employes have been dropped from the service when the birth entry has been found to have been intentionally fatsified. Others have been severely reprimanded. In others the employe has heen warned to seeure proper legal documentary evidence of time of birth, and lacking a complete birth record, the record has been substan- tiated by affidavit from close friends RAL CLERKS SUSPECTED OF RETIREMENT LAW FRAUD AIJ-UR'NG |8|-ANn30ffici-als Scrut'i;izi;géReco"rcls to Deter- mine Extent to Which Falsification of Ages Has Been Practiced. more than a year ago, is again being 1gitated and personnel officers have bheen warned to be on the watch for falsification of birth records. Herc is the way It works out: A person en- tering the. Government service may give his age as 35 years when reality he Is 40 years of age. When he reaches the age of retire- ment he may work five vears longer than he is entitled to under the law and recelve active pay for his work, while those who have sailed under true colors may be retired and receive retirement pay only. Gives Under Legal Age. In addition, many high school girls under the legal age of 18 years stretch their ages a year or two so they may take cjvil service examination for the Government employ. It does not af- fect any employe with 30 years' ac- tive sel e, because he is eligible for jalmost certain, as retirement at that time anyway. Some cases uncovered in the Government service have been proven to be fla- grant. In one case, that of a woman with a married daughter, her age at the time her daughter was born would have been 9 vears, according to her birth records. Clvil Service Commission officials say falsification of birth records is or from physicians The i ion. which came up POLICEMAN FREE ON BOND Officer Taken on Woman's Charge That He Jilted Her. Policeman Raymond Whitfleld of the sixth precinct, who was confined at his own station house last night on chages porferred by Miss Haille Nuckols, a roomor at 3 Alabama avenue southeast, today was released | ial, which | set for September 10. i ‘oth complainart and defendant ap- | peared this morning before Assistant rney Joseph Bruce. Miss was in tears as she told her | of being jilted by the policeman. | more often found in the case of male employes than in the case of women. TWO CARS HIT AUTO. Driver Narrowly Escapes Death as Machine Is Wrecked. Mrs. Emma T. Meehan. 46 years old, 300 N street southwest, narrowly escaped death today when her auto- mobile was struck by 2 street cars. As she was driving north on Third street her car was hit by a west bLound man E. M. Dawson and Conductor M. L. Spitzer. The force’ of the impact hurled her automobile directly in the Whitfield was taken into custody at 322 Seaton place northeast, where he | fooms, after an_investigation of the | givl’s charges had been made by Lieuts. 1. H. Groves and \W. G. Stott, | SEARCH ON FOR WIFE. Nearby Officers Asked to Find Mrs. | Rose Van Ness. Mrs. Rose Van Ness, 31 years old, 4231, Tennessee avenue northeast, is mentioned in a police message tele phoned to the local and nearby Mary- land and Virginia authorities asking aid in a search instituted for her last night. Her husband told police bhis wife had been missing from home since Monday. ‘The missing woman is a blond with blue eves, police were told, and wore a blue dress when she left home. She wore no hat. She is described as being 5 feet tall and weighing 12 pounds. POLICEMAN ASKS ‘APPEAL Dorrenbacher, Found Guilty of At- tacking Woman, Fights Verdict. the supject’ with friends that he ¥ mountain country, the air and the| policeman Howard J. Dorrenbacher, scenery appeal 1o him " ..l who was found guilty by the police As itence ot the President's|yijq) board of charges made against preference for trout fishing, ix the | pyy py Mis. Jessie L. Lilly, has filed fact that today he has gone (o Ausable | 270 S8 o) itk the Distriet Commis- River. a swiftrushing = mountall | goners through Attorney Bertrand stream 10 miles from White Pine Camp |y t00 RN S0 T lleged that to indulge in this sport. The place he | l;ul‘ snk u h’ol: ullm‘k("d Mrs, Lilly has selected for his trout lizhing today and that county until In first nklin fishing U in September, County, where White Pine Camp Is located, the season for ut fishing olosed August The President w regretting tter fact and was | about willing to’content himself with | fishing tor pike and 1 and other species tor the remainder of his stay | up here, when he learned about the | difference 1 the county game laws, President Coolidge, when he heard this . good mnews vesterday, smiled broadly and quickly gave instructions | 1o make ready for trout fishing today. It has not been learned vet how it| happened that he selected Ausable | River for his sport The tact that th a fishing spot so f. some little surprise i where he fished last ‘Tuesday, 20 miles away. and even that expedition called for some raising of eyebrows. But Ausable River is more than twice the distance. The President passed it last week on his motor ride to and from Plattsburg, and it was probably on this trip that he was told about the splendid trout fishing. Leaves Physician at Camp. The President did no James F. Coupal, his physi ! S. A. Cheney, his military ald, with him on this long trip away from home today. He was accom three or four secret service men and Ormond Doty, his official guide. No indication was given b rty when 1t pulled out immediately breakfast this morning when it would return to the camp. It is thought likely that Fred Stark, who owns the property on which Ausable Chasm is located, will act as host to the presidential party, and that he will_have a big spread ready when | luncheon time arrives. | On his inspection trip vesterday to | the two veterans' institutions the| President was not accompanied by Mrs. Coolidge or his son John. He rode alone in his big limousine. At the hospital conducted by the Veterans’ Bureau for tuberculous patients and which cost more than $4.000,000, which the President visitod yesterday afternoon, he found much o interest and impress him. A num- ber of convalescent patients and offi- gers of the institution were lined up in front to greet the presidential | party upon its arrival. Col. Richard Cook, physician in charge, personally gonducted the party through the big building and pointed out the various objects of interest. Other than a brief peep in the receiving ward, where only ‘one bed was occupied, the President Ad not go to the wards, but he in- apected the interior of the kitchen, the “Bakery, dining hall, the occupational sherapy workshop, where the patients ‘engage in various kinds of work, such as drawing, weaving, and leather craftsmanship and sewing. | This hospital hes a capacity of 410 Peds, with 352 patients now being | “gared for, 50 per cent of them being #n the advanced stage of tuberculosis. | Visits Convalescents. The President next motored to the recuperation camp conducted by the American Legion, five miles distant. At the recuperation camp all kinds, of convalescent patients, who are vet- erans, are treated, irrespective of the origin of their disease. At this in-| stitution only 20 patients are now be- ing treated, although it has a capacit. of 56 beds. At this camp the President met the officers and ph: ians and most of the patients, and after shaking hands President selected | after stopping ta question her, and a | sionens. man who was seated In_an automo- bile near Alabama and Branch ave- nues southeast about a month ago. In the appeal to the Commissioners for a reversal of the action of the trial board Attorney Emerson stressed the point that the grand jury ignored the charges against the policeman. The attorney asked permission to be heard orally before the Commis- ENVOY INJURES MAN. Polish Minister Figures in Traffic| Mishap at ‘Worcester, Mass. WORCESTER. Mass., September (®).—John Ciechanowski of 2640 Sixteenth street, Washington, D. C. Polish Minister to the United States, while driving through here today struck a wagon driven by Hyman Stone of this city. Stone was thrown from his seat and slightly injured. M. Clechanowski reported at the Tolice Traffic Bureau that he W his way from Manchester, where he had been spending his va. cation, to Washington. PARIS, September 3 three da of quiet sightseeing and shopping. Andrew W. Mellon, Amer- ican Secretary of the Treasury, left Paris for London this afternoon ac- companied by Theodore Rousseau of the Parris office of the Guaranty Trust C dent, and there was some little dis- appointment when it was discovered she was not along, but the President promised to see that a large basket of flowers, presented by Mrs. Edward B. Frenette, wite of one of the éfficials of | the New York American Legion, was | delivered to her when he returned home. No callers were scheduled for today, either at the Coolidge camp or at the executive offices at Paul Smiths. Rep- resentative Bert Snell of New York, chairman of the House rules commit- tee, and one of the group of Repubil- can leaders in the House, and Mrs. Snell are to be guests at the camp tomorrow. Having heard at length from two outstanding wet Republican leaders on the G. O. P. outlook in the Stat President Coolidge will hear the new of Mr. Snell, a dry. Mr. Snell, like the President, is a graduate of Amherst. He is a power in Washington, and a force in north country Republican politics. He op- posed the prohibition referendum, which he says will accomplish nothing, but now urges all voters to participate in it so that the day after election a false impression of wet sentiment in New York will not be given. Mr. Snell also is one of the chief pro-, ponents of & law enforcement plank | in the Republican platform. Miss Wilson in Village. Miss Margaret Wilson, eldest daughter of Woodrow Wilson, arrived | at the hotel at Paul Smiths last night. | where she will remain for several days as the guest of John Tennant, manag- ing editor of the New York Evening World, and Mrs. Tennant. | Howard Elliott, chairman of the Northern Pacific Railroad, who is visit- ing at the camp of Dr. Walter B. James, on lower St. Regis Lake, called at the executive office today, and was told by E. T. Clark. acting secretary that the President would not be at all around he posed with them for | the office until probably late this aft- a group photograph. Mrs. Coolidge ernoon, and that he felt sure the latter was expected to accompany the Pren-‘would be glad to then receive him. 4 Mellon‘ Quits Paris for London. | P).—After | path of an eastbound car in charge of Motorman E. J. Wilson and Con- ductor Berkley, the two wreckigg it. Mrs. Meehan was hurrled to mergency Hospital, where she was treated for bruises, shock and prob hle fractures of several ribs. She taken home after treatment. 5 FIRE OFFICIAL INJURED. Riverdale Assistant Chief Struck in Eye by Hoze Nozzle. Spectal Dispatch to The Star RIVERDALE, Md., September 3.— E. C. Stewart, assistant chief of the Riverdale Fire Department, was in- jured and John T. Cook narrowly escaped being overcome by smoke yesterday when fire partially de- stroyed the home of Dr. Cook's son, John A. Cook, on Buchanan street, Riverdale. The elder Mr. Cook, who is par- tially paralyzed, was assisted from the house. the eye by a hose nozzle and is con- fined to his home. The house is owned by Miss E. C. Short. The blaze started from a short-circuit in a lower hall and all the furniture in four rooms on the second floor was destroyed. The loss is estimated at cars, $2,000. - g o, Frank Kirby Sued for Divorce. Mrs. Elizabeth Kirby today sued her husband, Frank Kirby, for an absolute divorce, charging cruelty, de- sertion and misconduct and naming a corespondent. They were married at Alexandria, Va., October 18, 1913, and have one child. Mrs. Kirby says her husband takes other women riding in his automobile and spends much money on their entertainment. She street car In charge of Motor- Stewart was struck in |- is represented by Attorneys Raymond Neudecker and Walter M. Shea. Fashi IN BOTH Changing the calendar to mothers! too, for his business-man Alterations at Cost Half Price Doesn’t Tell You “The Half of It” The Two on Off, ALL DAY SATURDAY Every 3-Piece Wool Suit .and all Hot-Weather Suits e Tashion Fred Pelzman, President CONFOUNDS PEACE FOES, SAYS GIB __(Continued from First Page.) aps vear. . Not Likely to Happen. That is not likely to happen. I certain of anything in internatic affairs when so many racial passions moral THE EVENING ST._\R. WASHINGTON, D. C.. FRIDAY. ISPIRIT OF LEAGUE T BS | semi-permanent seats on the League { Council which would again check Ger- | many’s admittance and per {set all hopes of the league's | power and prestige, so badly shaken up- t is ar as one can be | onal | ' and national ambitions are at stake, | that Germany will take her place with | honor and dignity on the appointed | date. isut shocks which have not yet subsided. Spain, with Italy whispering in her { world affairs. ultimatum ear, has delivered an which amounts to saying, “Give control of Tangler or I will quit there have been certain | me the | League of Nations.”” But even Spain has not gone as far as saying “C me Tangier or 1 will veto Germany 1t is certain now that this Spanish demand will be examined later quite a separate problem, and in judgement Spanish and Itallan hopes Morocco will not be fulfilled, cal neither England nor Fral will weakén their naval position the Mediterranean to please Sig in Mussolini and his brother dictator in Spain. That question is very difficult and delicate and may lead to gr trouble in the future, but not imm ately In Geneva. Far more trou some at the present time is the prob- lem of the future composition of s members; That Is being grappled with after 4 long and by Lord Cecil ? i crance, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Poland powers. When I saw Lord € morning _he looked _extren afternoon K othe this worried about it, but it may have been | con- lank than international made his long her which heat troversy rue council and its non-permanent secret | tive | m) be- nee in | nor | | f | reat edi- ble- the this | and Bel and ecil nely figure droop and puckered his high wcetie foreboad with many wrinkles. Cecil a Shock Absorber. As we watched him pass an Amer- ican said to me, “That Lord C of yvours is the greatest shock sorber in the world,” and it is clear and subtle brain, his wonde suavity of manner, his almost ang smile when all his colleagues h: lost tempers or their sense of humor. friendly which generally leads to compromise or some _elabo formula which seems to solve eve thing while meaning next to ne ing at all. Viscount international for a formula a blind man t hat in a dark room. which will give Cecil and those ot jurists are search: vith the diligence a bl l ecil ah- his rful elic | ave ate y h her | ing | of | ack | a formula permanent members the right of being re-elect- ed by a two-thirds vote of assembly. That, at least, is W it is supposed to mean. What really means is some method which Poland, which raised whole question, and Spain, which is | standing upon a point of woun pride—the old Hidalgo spirit is the | hat i | by | the | ded | not | dead—may be guaranteed permanent ; seats on the council or more or less permanent seats in fact, although in_name. The French M delegate, geot, who wishes to support Poland as_far as honor and public opinion will stand, has put forward a com- plicated proposal by which certain powers should be marked up as suit- able for re-election immediately t! Froma- | not | hey IF your Labor Day Onting is to be via Motor Coach, consult the advertisements in The Star's Motor Coach Lines classifica- tion, on Page 39. Con- venient schedules are listed to many popular sections in various di- rections. | l | Shops STORES September isn’t going to make any miraculous change in the weather. Lots of hot weather still in store for Washington! Lots of days on which you'll be glad tb slip into one of these three-piece Light Colored Wool Suits—or two- piece Hot-Weather Suits—at half price. Collegiate models for school—that’s good news for And plenty of more conservative type, -father! No Charge Accounts No Exchanges kho 15th& G Next to Keith's | man journalists have crowded into | peniiCr | reality many SEPTEMBER_3 ‘ism. And yet, with all the weakness of this League of Nations, and with all these national rivalries seething beneath the surface, the spirit of the peacemakers is gaining over the plots of the trouble makers. Spirit Is Forceful. World_opinfon s sionger and nobler than the selfish interests of this or that mation. As I left the palace of the ‘league today 1 gave spiritual salute to the tablet on the wall outside: “To the memory of Woodrow Wilson. founder of the League of Nations.” He failed. His weaknesses are now known to the world. But out of failure and weak- ness human nature learns. The league is a school of international philosophy and nations are its pupils not far advanced, making many mis- takes, showing some lack of disel- pline, but unable wholly to resist its spirit. were elected and providing that from that group alone should new elec- tions be made. This would create a kind of caste of nations, pronounced officially as highly virtuous* and worthy powers from whom non-per- manent members would be chose: with every chance of retaining their seats. Plan Held Impracticable. M. Fromageot became so involved In his explanations, so tangled up in his own complications, that his argu- ment dissolved in laughter when Lord Cecil end the Italian delegate pointed out their practical impossibility. To- night some new method will be pro- posed, but the world will not tremble with excitement when it hears the atest formula. All ‘that is unimportant comp with Germany's - unhindered entry. For when Germany comes in it will not be a passive member, listening silently while other powers exchange Germany will play a strong hand in all future councils of the world powers. Quietly but per- sistently, as German politicians here in Geneva frankly avow, she will press her claims - for. practical revision of outstanding problems such as the Polish_corridor to Danzig, Polish con- trol of Silesian mines, French control of the Saar Valley, which are open wounds in German pride and causes of future wars. The League of Nations will be kept busy in considering questiops of that kind during the next few years, and although they are highly inflammablc subjects, it is possible that by bring- ing them openly before the iworld opinfon as it is represented and ned by the spirit of the League of Nations they will be less dangerous and more easily settled according to rules of justice and common sense than if they were left smouldering as Meanwhile, in anticipa- coming recognition, Ger- d (Copyright. 1926.) HADLEY‘REFUSES BEING DRAFTED BY DEMOCRATS Yale President, in Accord With G. 0. P., Declines to Run for Senate Against Bingham. By the Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Conn.. September Arthur T. Hadley, president emer- jtus of Yale and nationally known economist, has declined to consider becoming the Democratic candidate for United States Senator. because he is in accord with the policles of the present administration. The Demo- crats sought to draft President Had- ley for service, so as to have some one who would seriously contest the issue with Hiram Bingham, present Sena tor from Connecticut. President Hadley formerly He severed hi: 3. | Geneva with lady typists. guide books _ 5 i itz o i {tion with that pa . howe! to Switzerland and lbraries of propa- | { "5 We"on the issue of Bryan and Eaidas his silver standard. Since then he Company Is Sfrange. has been affiliated with the Republican Lt L party in the matter of beliefs and | In the corridors of the League |policies. Palace one meets strange company, which no other city in the world could® bring together. Nominally most of | them are delegates or journalists. in, of them are peace- makers, trouble makers, ideallsts, cynics and propagandists, all watching this assembly of the ‘league with difterent hopes, racial ambitions or personal Interests. Indian princes rub shoulders with Irish delegates. Little Japanese gentlemen, speaking perfect nglish, go up in elevators with Czechs, Hungarians, Poles. Swedes, | Brazillans. Far ends of the world| meet in the central hall and men who cight vears ago would have killed each other if they had met in No Man's Land. pass with friendly nods or cordial handshakes. Among them all today stood Jane Addams, one of the peacebakers, and 1 could not help smiling at the sight of her in this place of secret rivalries | and national intrigue, where, in quiet | corners, cynical fellows whisper their doubts of world peace, estimate the forces of conflict and reveal selfish motives that are concealed under dip- lomatic langudge and eloquent ideal- SHENANDOAH TRIBUTE. Those who lost their lives in the disaster to the airship Shenandoah, which occurred a year ago today, ceremony at the graves of officers who are buried in Arlington Cemetery. Lieut. Charles E. Bauch, who was watch officer on the Shenandoah, act ing for survivors of the dirigible wreck; officers of the Lakehurst, N. J.. naval station and those of the dirigible Los Angeles lald wreaths on the graves. He was accompanied by representatives of the Navy Depart- mnt. Mrs. Rose White Seeks Divorce. rs. Rose White has filed in the District Supreme Court a suit for an absolute divorce from Lawrence T. White. The wife charges that her husband deserted her for another woman. _Attorney I. Q. H. Alward appears for the wife: Open tomorrow—Saturday—all day Closed Monday—Labor Day “Pedigreed” Hats We’ve done the discriminating neces- sary—so that you can choose any Hat we show you—sure of its shape—sure of its shade—sure of its becoming proportions. For they are Hats from the world’s famous makers—most of them confined exclusively to us in Washington. Henry Heath—of London—Hatter to H. R. H—and sold in Washington ex- clusively here. Soft Hats and Derbys... $10 12 $14 Borsalino—the famous Italian Hat...... slo 5 Stetson's—America’s premier. Mode special blocks, snap $@ and-$ brime, and others .. Stetson’s Genuine Velour Hats.......... Mode Special—the new snap brim........ 85 All the accredited colors are available— in all makes About 75 Three-piege Suits —Fashion Park and Mode Made— —remaining of the Spring and Summer stock. Broken sizes— $19 75 . but bargains if you can be fitted......... Alterations at cost. The Mode—F at Eleventh wera remembored here at a simple | PROBE OF LYNCHING PROGRESSES SLOWLY No Indication of Indictment After Two Days’' Grand Jury Work 2t Wytheville, Va. fied persons. The probe bej resentatives of by Gov. Byrd to ai | tion, co-ordinating 1 {those of the jurors |identify members | party.” Six men we | terday, but be adduced fi they were dis than a score « summoned. no tan | | { By the Associated Press WYTHEVILLE, Va., September 3 l'As the special grand jury of Wythe 3 County S B v i | ki . ‘ounty citizens smpaneled to investi }Trensury Modifies gate the lynching of Raymond RBird, G ! negro, concluded the second day of| Quiring Annua its probe vesterday no indication wids| The Treasury apparent that sufficlent evidence had | liquor permit reguls been ohtained to warrant any indict-| the annual rer ments. Neither did it app fol- | permits for the lowers of the hearing declared, that | portation. prescript the jurors were approaching the end | liquor of their labors. All other Bird, charged with criminal assault | with a recent di upon &, white girl, was shot to death | Court of Appeals. w in his cell in the Wythe County jail | revoked by the Gove on August 15, where he was held for up by the permitee. toc ma permi 720-22-24 7th St. N.W. EHREND For Labor Day 70 to 10° Dre Jerseys—Satins Silk Crepes Twills Sport Styles Dress Styles Reds, Greens, blues, blacks, grays. 16 to 42 sizes. Extra and regular sizes. Satin, Silk Crepe and Geor- gette Dresses for street wear, dressy occasions or sport use; all the newest styles and colors. | LIQUOR PERMIT RULING. f unidenti- with special rep- tate, appointed 1 in the pros heir in f o lynehins re examined yes Ble could testimony and far mors Regulations Re- 1 Renewals fay modified its ations to require those nufa ins jon or accordance the Circuit o until give . in m by ill he ernment ot 91 N SSES Worth 25.00, 30.00, 35.00 Fur-Trimmed Winter Coats Medium-weight Fall Coats All colors and sizes in smart new styles for young girls and women. Fresh From Our N. Y. Office Nobby Felts Lovely Velvets Satin and Velvet Combinations New Shades of Green Red Brown Black Wine Gray Navy Smart style for sport «dN " 100 WOMEN'S—MISSES’ COATS 500 BEAUTIFUL HATS Worth 2.69—2.98—3.50 \ 85 4 wear. New pretty fancy mixtures for boys 7 to 17 years. Entire suit of long and short pants, vest and dou- ble - breasted coat Special. 2.50 10 entirely new styles for school wear. Made of pretty checked plail and plain ginghams. 5 to n Chic models for dressy and 3:007Girls' Dresses 85 Heavy, lustrous quality, full 40 inches wide and in all the new, wanted colors foi Fall and Winter dresses. 4.00 and 5.00 Garments All-wool Suits, in nearly every color. 1-piece overskirt or Beach Girl styles; | some have striped borders. Inch Dress Satin CLOSING OUT ALL BATHING SUITS =" Up-to-the-Minute Styles Regular 3.00 4.00 and 5.00 Pumps, Oxfords and I | || Satins | Patent Colts | Suedes * Blond Kid And Grays All Sizes Flat Cuban 51:0&::l h & All High Widths Heels to 11 for 98¢; and sizes 1114, to 2 for. . . .. " also 200 Pairs Children’s Tan Calf Lace Shoes—5 $129