Evening Star Newspaper, November 1, 1926, Page 29

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UNCHANGED NCENTER ARKET i i Mo Shortage of Turkeys for! & {Thanksgiving Is in Pros- {z. pect, Dealers Report. — | Market prices showed little change today after the Halloween festivities of Saturday, although decided fluctu- atlons in a number of staple com- modities are in prospect during the week. Dealers now are looking forward to the Thanksgiving season. It is fore- cast that there will be no shortage of turkeys, with live turk bringing 40 cents ‘this morning and dressed stock selling at 45 and 50 cents. There was a usual Monday morn- ing oxowd on hand along the market stands, with prices practically the same as Saturday. Today’'s Wholesale Prices. nd prints, "ked, 38. hennery, one-p : store p: lected, 45. young, 20; #0; old, 45850, chic $0290; ol : Meats—Beef, 18219 veal, 22a24; lamb, 26a30; fres| 28a30; shoul ders, 23a24; loins. 35; smoked hams, 33; smoked shoulders, Live stock—Calves, choice, 15 me- dlum, 13a14; thin, 7a8; lanbs, 1213a14. Fruit and Vegetable Review. Today's market and vegetables, compil ket News vice, cultural nomies, Ats, young, b sed —Turke: keats, young, 4a40. Dre 433 on fruits the Mar of Agr report i by w Boxes, arge size extra es reported to guot n. medium_to Delicious, 3.00a sthans, 2.00 tzenburgs, 2. \wmans, ryland ieties 11.00, few 1 Cabbage—Supplies liberal noderate, market steady: New ulk per ton, Danish type size, 27.00a30.00, lars Celery—Supplies mode moderate, market steady: M % crates, 2.50a3.00; full quality and condition, Grape upplies it moderate, market steady: New York, gquart climax baskets. Concords, 13%al3: 12-quart climax baskets, Con cords, 50a55 Lettuce—Supplies moderate; de- mand moderate, market steady: Cali- fornia, crates, leeberg type, 4-i-dozen, 8.00a3.50; few higher. Potato Market Steady Onions—supplies moderate; demand moderate, market steady; Indiana, Ohio and Michigan, 100-pound sacks Yellows, mostly, 2.00. Pears—Supplies light; demand light, market steady; Oregon, boxes, An- fous, extra fancy. Potatoes—Supplies moderate, 150-pound New York, 6 Whites, U. 1, 4.75 Sweet potatoes—Supplies moderate: demand moderate, market slightly stronger; North Carolina, cloth-top stave barrels, Yellows, mostly 2.26; some medium size, Cucumbers—Supplies ligh moderate, market stead: square bushel crates, fancy, choice, 3.00a3.50. : bushel bas: nd Virginia, No. 1. various medium to large demand York. nedium 5.00 s demand W Yo demand i cks, Round demand Florida, 4.50; - AGAIN BANANA PORT. United Fruit Co. Ships Make Charleston With Cargoes Now. CHARLESTON, S. C., November 1 UP).—Charleston again took her place | @s one of the banana ports of the Tnited States when the steamship San Bruno of the United Fruit Co. line docked at the Southern Railway pier with a cargo of 35,000 bunches f the fruit this morning. The o fnaugurated a weckly service 1o this port and @ ste: iled from Cent every Monday, bringin; for distribution in the Georgla, Florida. Virginia, Tennessee and Alabama. The resumption of the use of Charleston by the United Fruit 0. for the importiation and distribu- | *ion of tropleal fruit comes about 11 vears after the service was discon- | ttnued. | 1l e here NEW YORK PRODUCE NEW YORK, November 1 (Special). —State Concord grapes were in liberal supply. Western and central New York 12-quart baskets peddled out at 85 to 40 cents. The Niagara varfety n similar containers real 60 to 65 ~ents Rec pts of celery re ful. Golden blanct rough, from the westesr State wholesaled ut $2 rally $2.75 per two-third cr pite limited arrivals of ! its, the t ruled « i Barly business on 100-pound sacks was | reported at $1.40 to $1.7 i Good quality seckel pe: < 5 per | 3010 $2.00; 1 Duchess, §1 to $2.00! | Sheldons, $1.7 ind Kieffers, 75 | cents to $1.0 i The bar appl : st trifie firmer on g5, inch RY e tngs changed per | of | ¢ $3.00. | in_ the part of the ! » $3, princi upstate | found e Island ¢ 00 to €3 western at § bulk, round whites | und £5.00 per 180 | . | COMMODITY NEWS ! WIRED STAR FROM | | ENTIRE COUNTRY | | out mainly ¢ pounds SPRINGFIELD, L—Twelve hundred have been sh reglon S0 far this season vield is expected The grape harvest has with more than » ATLANTA. T} able ke the eities and only a s in wholesale busine h @plte the slump in cotton prices. 18 becuse Georgia has dvanced fur- ther in diversified farming than over efore. BISBEE, Ariz—Arizona's Fall mo hair clip, tokaling 350,000 pounds, has been sold to Boston buyers for 55 0 68 cents a pound, with the average 56. This was the larzest clip in the history of the State, exceeding | the 1925 yield by over 50,000 pounds. LYNN, Mass.—) ingland's shoe Business {s expanding. The produc first nine months | >r than that for the | oorresponding period of last year, but now 60 per cent of the shoe workers of the Stats are on a full-time busis. November is of apples Ozark The total to top 4.000 cars been completed, cars shipped. has been no ap- retail trade in | tight recession | month, de- | This | | many { com; | outstanding plenti. | | bouscht | overextended small fry fact in 3 was | & MEN AND MONEY By M. S. Rukeyser. (Copyricht. 1926, Charles Henry Markham, chairman of the Iilinois Central Railroad, who many regarded as the ablest railroad executive in the country, sees no grounds for business pessimism. In discussing the current railroad prosperity with me in his New York office, Mr. Markham observed: “The railroads are in a stronger position than they have ever been in before. Never before has there been such a widespread appreciation on the part of travelers and shippers of the serv- ices which the railroads render.” Asked concerning the general busi- ness outlook. Mr. Markham asserted that there was, in his opinion, no basis for pessimism. Out in the Mid- dle West, he added, the wheat States have good crops and fair prices. In the South, I am hoping that the extraordinary size of the cotton crop will help to keep up purchasing power. “The current skepticism toward the business outlook in some quarters is based on no special analysis of exist- ing conditions, but merely on the general assumption that when busi- ness is good 1t must get worse, just as when it is bad it must get better.” Began as Section Hand. Mr. Markham was schooled for the business of railroading in the ranks. At the age of 20, he began his railroad career in 1881 as a section laborer on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe. What is there in Mr. Markham that differentiated him from the other sec- tion hands with whom he started at par? Mr. Markham ascribes his own ad- vancement to the habit of doing small things well—to what he calls “a zest for small things.” Mr. Mark- ham in his maturity developed broad- er qualities of leadership, having a singular capacity to get large groups of men to work together for similar | Mr. Markham has ‘built in the 1 perhaps the smooth- ailroad machine in the country. With his genlus for the operating side, Mr. Markham has de- veloped a school of railroad leaders, of whom have gone to other nies. L. W. Baldwin, president of the Missouri Pacific, is one of the graduates bf the Mark- aim: ham school. The Illinois Central system is the outstanding North and South railroad of the country. Its long and con- sistent record as a dividend payer has given a relatively high investment status to Its securities. Earnings in recent years have been somewhat held down for accounting purposes because of huge expenditures for de- velopment, particularly in respect to electrification. \When' the electrifica- tion program is completed, monthly reports will give a truer picture of the real earning power of the system. Depression From Plenty. current discussion concern- ing the cotton crop, we are con- fronted with the paradox of depres- son resulting from plenty. As a matter of fact. there are in- dications that the South will get $1,- 000,000,000 from the current crop, de- spite the marked slump cotton prices. Before the war, that would have been conside bumper vield in cash, aithough it is somewhat un- der the figures for the last three However, in figuring the pur- sing power of the South for the next few months, it is well to remem- ber that the farmers are freer from indebtedness than they have been since the big slump in 1921. In previ- ous years, part of the proceeds from the crop was used to efface outstand- ing debts. A larger proportion of cur- rent proceeds will be employed for ac- tual new purchases. Thus it should be evident that the purchasing power of the South, though somewhat af- fected, will be less disturbed than a superficial reading of the figures would indicate. The effect of the unprecedentedly large crop on the textile interests will bear watching. The textile trades pressed during the rec perity in other industries, Before the break in_cotton, many felt that the textile industry was on the verge of a great revival, after the post-war slump. Cotton goods were actually rising in price after the big break in raw cotton started. The far-reaching decline in the raw material, however, checked the spurt in goods. Numerous factors favor expansions in the cotton textile trade, which has the additional advantage of a possible spur to consumption from the prevail- ing low prices, Moreover, umu- lated stocks of cotton textile as a result of the new custom of hand- to-mouth buying, by the trade. In the d le of prot THE BUSINESS OF GETTING AHEAD. Speculation Unbeatable Game? In America we erect magnificent monuments to men whose judgment on stock prices proves unerring. And well we shaquld, for they are rare souls—if not supermen, at least exceptional beings. The gorgeous Ttalian _marble palaces along the North Shore of Long Island, for ex- ample, the American means of ibute to the extraordinarily ulative judgment of success- 4 This is 2 huge coun- and the crop of millionaires s and growing, but for every built to glorify those who <tocks near the bottom and sold them near the top there are tens of thousands of homes rendered a little sadder and more harren because of the faulty financial calculations of the breadwinner. chnical reactions, during bull markets, such as the coun- try experienced in violent manner last March and to a lesser extent in o frequent wipe out ~culators. Human nature is bundle of con- tradictions. Individuals too frequently ceordance with emotions, in- steadd of in conformity with analytical thought. The exceptional individual who wing in Wall Street speculation capitalizes recurrent perfods of mass excitement and widespread delusions. The reward for keeping one's head and thinking capacity independently during times of frenzied speculation fs vat riches. at lu Attracts tens of thousands of litile men with a vast @mount of faith to the great specula- tive whirlpool They succeed for time, but ultimately most of them fail. Usually small traders last only as recent se: oy Lift Right OFf with Fingers - No Pain! You'll laugh. really! It is so easy, so_simpie—Why wait? Drop “Freezone” on that old, bothersome corn. Instantly it stops hurting; then shortly you lift that sore, touchy corn right off with your fingers—without any pain or sore- e low, | LAKE SHIPBUILDER CTIVE THIS YEAR Inland Water Traffic Shows Big Increase Reflected in Construction. BY J. C. ROYLE Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, November 1.—While many of the shipyards of the At- lantic, Pacific and Gulf Uoasts are only partially busy, an exceedingly active Winter is ahead for ship- builders on the Great Lakes. Those facts indicate unmistakably the dif- ference in prosperity between the carriers of the Inland waterways and of the oceans. On the former wages are high and so are profits. On the lather wages still are comparatively low and profits in many instances are lack- ing. There are those who say frankly the reason is because inland water- ways transportation effort is treated as a modern business, whereas ocean transport is considered in the light of an old tradition. Big Freighter Ordered. Six of the seven new lake freighters contracted for recently will be bullt at the Lorain, Ohio, yards of the American Shipbuilding Company. The other vessel, a car ferry, will be built at Toledo. The latest vessel ordered will be the largest ore carrier on the measuring 630 feet over all, oot beam and a carrying of 13,800 gross tons. More than 5,000 tons of steel will go into the which Is being built for Plekands & Mather, managers of the Interlake Steamship Company, which the second largest fleet on the nd seas. This makes five new s ordered by this concern since August, 1926. The flow of water-borne trafic on the Mississippi 18 heavier than ever. The Federal Barge Line is being com- pelled to refuse shipping in either | direction, and this line probably will handle half a_miliion tons of bauxite, ore from which aluminum Is extracted, alone, by the end of December. Huge shipments of Pacific Coast canned goods are being carried up the Mis- sissippl from New Orleans and dis- tributed to Midwestern points. Working on Missouri. Work on the Missouri River from Kansas City to St. Louis is being pressed to the utmost. Since June work authorized on revetments and dikes aggregate $2.396,470. A six-foot channel will be available within 214 vears, according to Maj. C. C. Gee, United States Army engineer, in charge of the work. The- Mississippl Valley Associution, whic! in St. Louis in Novem- |ber, is expected to ask Congress for appropriations in & lump sum suf- ficient to complete the country’s riv- and harbors projects approved the Army engineers within five with capaci; | STREET MORE OPTIMISTIC. NEW YORK, November 1 (®.—A decidedly more optimistic sentiment is | developing in Wall Street towards conditions in the south since the | break in cotton, attention now being | drawn to earnings of Southern Rail- roads for the last quarter, which are expected to be large. This hopeful situation has been aided by the $3 extra dividend of the Norfolk & Western, and talk is heard around the financial district that other southern carriers may do likewise. The good showing of the Louisville & Ville thus far this year has roused interest in the forthcoming meeting of directors at which favor- able dividend action is anticipated. long as the duration of a cycle of bull or rising markets. 1 It is estimated that 97 per cent of the Individuals who seek to make a clean-up in margin speculation ulti- mately lose their capital, two per cent break even and one per cent profits. On the other hand, those who seek to invest their savings safely in ac- cordance with expert advice have a high average of success. Money in- vested at 6 per cent compound inter- est will double itself in 12 years. One factor in speculative losses is the huge cost of Wall street overhead, consisting of brokerage commissions, interests on debit balances, State and Federal transfer taxes. Incomd taxes on profits are another factor which make the odds uneven. The man who is right half the time goes broke be- cause of the expense of ofling the ma- chinery of speculation. In view of these facts, Edwin Lefevre feels im- pelled periodically to write a series of articles warning the public against speculation. Speculation Essential. Speculation, or the assumption of risks, is essential to the business life of the country, but it Is a luxury and highly speculative funds should be limited to those which the individual can afford to lose. Every stock is more or less speculative, but purchase on margin greatly intensifies the haz- ards through getting the venturer over-extended and incapable of wait- ing patiently through periods of tem- decline. Outright purchases of stocks, though fraught with business risks, constitute a much safer pro- cedure, and, if guided by an intelli- gent policy, have proved since the Civil War more suitable for long-term investment than any other type of se- curity. In the purchase of securities skill in investment management is essentlal. The amateur should seek out good advice, or invest through others in avings banks, building and loan asso- fons, life insurance policies, invest- ment trust shares and similar instru- mentalitie: Of course, suckers are needed to | maintain speculative markets on the | present scale, but fllling the role is a | thankless job. As Jullus Tannen, po- | litical economist of the vaudeville and | | revue stage, observed, a pauper is a | person who used to be a sucker. / porary ness. time. A tiny bottle of “Freezone” costs only a few cents at any drug store, sufficient to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn and corn be- tween the toes and calluses—Try jt1 It works like charm, every EVERYMAN’S INVESTMENTS BY GEORGE T. HUGHES. Bulls and Bears. This is the first of a series of ar- ticles explanatory of some of the tech- nical terms more commonly used in Wall Street. Necessarily it must touch upon speculative usages, but that is a subject the investor ought to have in- formation about even though he has 1o personal interest in speculation.,In any case the line between speculation and investment cannot be drawn sharply. The ones merges into the other. The two terms most often heard 1 connection with operations in the se. curity markets are “bull” and “bear." Hardly an account of a day in the stock market but that uses these two words in one connection or another. It is sald that the bulls were success- ful in putting up prices or that the bears were able to put them down or that this speculator is bullish on this stock or that operator is bearish on some other one. These two words have been used for so long a time that most stock market followers have for- gotten their origin if they ever knew it. The explanation most widely cred- ited is that a bull is a person who de- sires prices to advance and the figure is that of the well known animal us- ing his horns to lift quotations-up. the same way au bear rearing on his hind legs and using his two forepaws to pull prices down. A man 1is bullish on the market whether of stocks, bonds or commodities when he believes that prices are going high- er and conversely he is bearish, when he is of the opinion that quotations will decline, Now it is easy to see why a specu- lator might want prices to go higher. Having bought securities or commodi- tles of any kind he naturally wishe to see an advance so that he may realize a profit by disposing of his holdings to some one else. Most peo- ple when they think of speculative operations of any sort think of the possibilities of a Fise in pric How any one might benefit by de- clining quotations does not appear evi- dent at first sight. There are always more bulls than bears. And just as nobody likes a fat man, so nobody loves & bear. And yet profits are to be made in a declining market just as large and much more rapidly than in an advancing market. The only difference is that there are fewer speculators hardy enough to attempt the operation. The technical process of making money, by speculating for the decline, or being a bear, will be taken up in the next article. BUILDING BODIES GROW. SAN FRANCISCO, November 1 (Special).—The combined assets of the building and loan assc *ali have increased from $140,657,000 to $190,107.000 in the last year. Twenty four new associations have been formed. In| plctured as | fation operat- | NOVEMBER T, 1926. SOUTH MOBILIZES IN COTTON GRISIS Brains and Money Summoned to Avert Menace of Eco- nomic Disaster. By the Associated Press. MEMPHIS, Tenn, November 1— | Brains and money of the South, sum- noned by threat of economic disaster, are mobilizing forces of relief from | | Texas to North Carolina in an or- }gzm)zefl drive to meet the emergency in cotton prices and restore stability | to the bale-burdened market. ! Energetic determination had | placed cries of loud distress and busi | nesslike calm succeeded the panicky |fear of early October as machinery | for financing retirement of the current |surplus was being devised in every | State of the American cotton belt. | Success for the Southwide cam- | paign for guaranteed reduction of cot- |ton acreage next year was predicted here as agricultural experts viewed the progress of the convass for a. com- plete census of the industry, whose purpose is to pledge every farmer to curtall planting. | Optimistic Over Activities. Observers here, in the heart of the cotton-growing area, . pointed tonight with optimistic finger to last week's actlvities in the training exchanges as first fruits of the rganization’s relief | measures. Under the smashing blow of the Government's record-breaking crop estimate, the market trembled, but did not coilapse. On the final day, indeed, new buying strength appeared ind prices made appreciable improve. ment. Experts see in the finance corpora- tions now in process of formation in cotton States the most potent factor in the more hopeful attitude. istim- ulated by the visit of Eugene Meyer, ‘hairman of President Coolidge's commission for relief, and A. C. Wil- liams, chairman of the Federal Farm Board and Mr. Meyer's as- Southern survey, bank- eting executives have undertaken to form these companies |In order to make loans available to the growers. Corporations Being Organized. Already these corporations are be- ing org in_North Carolina, South ¢ Georgia, Alabama |7 oulsiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Tennes see and Mississippi, and a_proposed combined capitalization of $16,000,000. This makes possible a loaning fund of $160,000,000 under the authority of | | the intermediate credit banks to lend to such companies at 10 to 1 on their {own resources. The plan of the corporations is to lend the grower 9 cents a pound on i his cotton, taking warehouse receipts dis- e of storage as security. The loans are to run for 18 to 20 months. Leaders in the movement propose by this means to withdraw from the market approximately 4.000.000 bales of the present crop. This relief, they belfeve, will restore prices to a level where they will pay at least the cost of production. Financers in each State where this movement is under way have agreed to use their influence in controlling the acreage for next season’s planting and to assure reduced production by diverting a part of the area to other crops. Unless this control can be {essured, Mr. Meyer emphasized, the movement is doomed to fallure. No campaign for reduction has ever been a failure, Dr. Tait Butler, head of the executive committee of the South-wide conference, declared in ex- plaining his committee’s optimistic view. Another Proposal Submitted. Another movement for removing part of the current crop surplus, start- ed in Memphis but purporting to have support throughout the South, pro- poses the abandonment of cotton fields on December 1, and the plowing under of the unpicked remnant. Some 150,- 000 acres have been pledged to this plan. which in four days of activity is already backed by a vigorous cam- paign. Plowing under will be worth more to the sofl than the money value of the poor quality of cotton left in the flelds at the end of November, pro- ponents of this plan declare. Suffering from the depression in thelr markets incident to the low Prices of cotton, cottonseed crushers of the country are also seeking means of bolstering the demand for cotton- seed meal, cotton ofl, hulls and linters. Increased Consumption Urged. Sundry movements here and there over the South are being agitated in behalf of increased consumption of the staple and its manufactured prod- ucts. Women in some communities have sought to organize under the pledge to substitute cotton and household goods for articles of sllk and wool. Students of the Miss- issippl State College for women, at Columbus, Mis 1,200 in number, have pledged to wear apparel made of cotton. The final results of such ‘By the Assoctated Press. | Ma clothing | movements, cotton men believe, are full of possibilities, but as yet undeter- minable. Agriculture, always slow to organize for its own interests, accord- ing to the logic of expert observers, may vet as a result of current con- sideration of the problem learn the lesson of co-operative effort. OHIO LEATHER HAS LOSS. | NEW YORK, November 1 (#).— Ohio leather had net loss of $9; for the first nine months of 1926. Its inventory is § on January 1. DENIES MERGER PLAN. NEW YORK, November 1 (#).—H. W. Phelps, president of American Can Co., said today there was no truth In reports that the company ake over, or in E. W. Bliss Co., or that such a trans- action ever had been considered. | Milk of Magnesia” has been pre- would | any way acquire, the | 29 COTTONIS STEADY IN TRADING TODAY clu Market Sells Up Then Down| Slightly in Early Dealings. NEW YORK, November futures opened steady: December, 12.60; January, 12.72; March, 1287 13.22; July, 13.44. The market opened steady today at an advance of 3 to 7 polnts in response to higher Liverpool cables, reiterated reports of improved demand for cot- ton goods in Manchester amd con tinuation of the buying movement responsible for the firmness on Satur- day. “ The advance met considerable south- ern selling, however, supposed to be largely in the way of after selling up to 12.73, H acte® to 12.65. the market ruling | about 2 to 4 points net lower at the end of the first hour. A private report stating that pres- ent prospects pointed to a crop of at least 17,600,000 bales was about in line with exceptions, but may have encouraged some local selling on the opening advance. Private cables reported covering with local and Bombay buying in the Liverpool market. New Orleans Market Clased. NEW ORLEANS, November 1 (P). 1.=<otton za & of he New was holiday LIVERPOOL. Cotton prices steady middling, | strict | strict Tow middling 6.14: ordinary, 5.14 ber. | May | _NEW The average service s line |cents a gallon a | same week last year, Drug | production | Januar; 1 631,29 at th agaainst .7; October ump’s, Fisher, Yal NEW The Co. from 8. today Orleans cotton market osed today. All Saints’ day here. Liverpool Quotations. November 1 good business American_strict W middling, .64 middling, 7.04. 64; low middling. » Spot, middling. strict good Futures wember, 6.75; Decem : January, 6.84: March, 6.91 7.00: July, 7.08; October, GASOLINE IS HIGHER. YORK, November 1 t week is figured at nst 19 the Ofl, 1 Reporter. Crude in domestic 1 to October 30 is ealcu els compared in the sune period product 4. 000 Current rate of 2 FISHER'S PRICE INDEX W HAV Prices, 1 aves 146.1; conomist ¥right. 147 N. November 1 (Spe 0.0; purchasing power. e, 1485 and 57.4 I LEAD PRICE REDUCED YORK, November 1 @ American ing & Refining reduced the price of lnau 5 to 8.10 cents per pound Stomach PHI].LIPS' Milk of Magnesia Instead of soda hereaiter water any time for indi 8,000 lower than |sour, acid, gassy stomach, and relief | the system ! far more pl will come instantly. BETTER THAN SODA For fifty vears genuince “Phillips scribed by physicians because it over- | comes three times as much acid in the stomach as a_saturated solution of bi stomach sweet and free from all| H “7 ) take a| gases. little “Phillips Milk of Magnesia” in | fermentations tion or | gently urges this <o Insist upon “Phillips.” cent store the U. The rbonate of soda, leaving the | Company and its predecessor Chas Phitlips neutralizes the bowels ing waste without purging asant to take thi TRY A 25¢ BOTTLE Twe five ity cent bottles, any drig Milk of Magnesia® has bee: S. Registered Trade Mark o H. Phillips Chemica Jesides. 1t in acid and om soda nd Charles nee —— A FEasiest Credit Plan in Ame Running on the Good Clothes Ticket, the Liberal Store with its Sensational Five Dollar Outtit Open Saturday Evening Till 9 has swept Every ton’s all opposition with a landslide of man andv Y really great stores. outfit. Your Credit is Good Wear the Newest Styles llfl‘fl new:;.e ;’:lo"d]'“l:o’b‘::::’ griredhwnrlng ren than at endly Li s styles arrive daily. Heré you always can <choote from mfndndn of“::l, :;1:.“3: Nowhere in all Washington will apparel for Men, Women arid C| Use Yoar nve A Sik A Fal Hat. . Outfit Number 2 ns A Fur nve A Pine Sik Dress. $29,98 A Smart Fab Hat ] A Silx Outfit Number 4 A Beautiful Hat .. ... // Are Welcome * B to Open an Accouat woman in Washington and vieini clothes without CASH, will always vote a mig).xyt‘tldtfi for the especially for us, and guaranteed to give satisfaction Outfit Number 1 A Weman's Pall Coat $29,50 COR.7th& E Sts. votes that fa i e Apsa DOLLARS DOWN RUTS Dress -« 1498 e 588 DOLLARS DOWN BUYS Trimmed Cout $35,98 Outfit Number 6 PIVE DOLLARS DOWN BUYS ~ A May's QOvercont A Man's Fall Sult . 2250 A Fall Hat ., e “phn .oxfu cllzthesft;:xying. el an of buying "UBEm" one of Washing- Come tomorrow. Just bring a $5 bill and take home a complete new to wear and looks. Outfit Number 5 FIVE DOLLARS DOWN BLYS A Man's Fahl 8uit.. 34,50 APl Ha ... . Bhoes, $7,50; Shir, 395 3.95 A GREAT -$29.50 offer. 3.95 eredit plan you Outfit Number 7 DOLLARS DOWN BUYS 9.98 DOLLARS DOWN BUYS 5.98, W, /T ‘Entire .Over Kresge'’s S & 10c Store FIVE DOLLARS DOWN BUTS AHigh Grade 0'Caat $39,50 A Stylish New Hat Fashionable Shoes . 5.98 6.95 Outfit Number 8 PIVE DOLLARS DOWN BUYS A Bey's Suit. A Boy's O°Caat. .., GicP's Cont -$10.95 12.95. Second Floor— Offer to Men &Women Yes, the Liberal store does as.it advertises. No red tape, no delays, when you come to take advantage of this great Just bring a $5 till and choose a complete outfit, airanging your payments to suit your income. On our easy ly miss the money. A

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