Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1926, Page 5

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EVANGELIST HELD FOR HIGHER COURT Judge in Pfeliminary Hearing Declares Cause Exists’to Presume Guilt. By the Assoriated Press. LOS ANGELE Aimee Semple McPherson, evange- u welcomed her forthcoming 1 on crimi nspiracy an opportunity to win on for hersclf and he \innie Kennedy, who dant The w pastor, her m November 4. resterds unuel R. Blake prelim de- arguments 5. McPherson Attorney As Keyes denoun ney, and Di: es. After he airs. Ml £ her appear tith her siory « Lerson of guilt Evangelist Turns Pale. ‘Afte 1tion entire < of the s her to conspired to supportin 6l s if., with enneth G. int. posure in courtroom ith tha s God s these in his argument ~'s activities as Jury Tri tion—that 10 he the ea | | | absolute ind wiil be 1 vl upon 1 . | thr | 10—tet WOMEN'S MOODS V. FROM SELF-CONTROL TO TEARS Mrs. Hall Amazingly Calm and Distin- guished Looking—Slain Choir Singer's Daughter Picture of Anguish. BY FRANCES NOYES HART. Special Dispatch to Th SOMERVIL! —The A on a day incomparably clear, serene and beautiful. At a quarter to 10 yes- vember 4. s | terday the white marble steps of the { Somerset zed | tured, - who have obv | mon—curlosity County courthouse were with a jostling, good-na- orted crowd of humanity, pusly one thing in com- —which, for the next few days or weeks, is going to be shared by m-st of the rest of hu manity who cannot get even so far as the courthouse. A curiosit the incredit natic events that are about to trial of Stevens, Henry tevens Hall for ward Wheeler Hall rdt Mills. therefore, endeavor iosity. to temple to ustice, it ns honetted asai regretful breath of the sweet, keen air that is sending the golden-oli leaves lancing ross the b d lawns thai urround it, and we wil hou'der ouvr w through the envious and resent ful crow into the co lors of the temple that has made itself a for- tress. Decorous Pandemonium Reigns. Here reizns a species of decorous nd subdued pandemonium, compr of equal parts of rattling typewriter dignified, but hurried, officia getic and insubordinate sn lavishly decorated with freckles, rus hair and olive drab uniforms to show that they 3. newspaper t and the pretending to be b women, looking colo frankly diverted, and a more fortu- nate and insistent portion of the pub- lie, who have managed to penetrate tic, noses against a ich hangs the magic let- ters “Courtroom.” It ‘s 10 minutes to us produce the little white cket that will bear us as safely and rapidly the guarded portal as though it were a flving carpet. Tnside: The courtroom. Before we make our way to the middle seat in the very first row, let’s have a look at it. It is not a large room; it seats, normally, about per nine rows of golden oak chairs, com- fled, but opt} door over w! sive that | place at the earliest pos- | nt, assured that nothing can fortable enough. The te plaster walls above the vak paneling trifle dingy, but the room and airy, and through the | windows on either side and the d-me al woud b for hoth 6. 0. P. TO ORGANIZE CONGRESS THROUGH EYELASH CONTROL | « by the aors wil' i an appointees by s of both States | ections ear 1a. | s and Pennsylvania are tepublican, the spe. ry, ! d po- | for the not par fate of tien- Col a club to | ke Stand. | in ‘he Senate ill soner or and_for or 1 TMinoi will be ¢hal nditures and not natio 1head f s to tler Defeat Discounted, | more ways th com lowing cans r-Partis in HIGHT HOST TO CLUBMEN Riding and Hunt Committee Dines at Willard. luncheon was' > executive d Hunt d Melvin C. DEES SITES SUNDAY. | to Be Buried by Masons. Boclalist Lea Memorial services for the late gene V. Debs, five times presider nominee Jeader of will be day the Maso rnoon, November 28, are in the hands of | Le for Indu hgements alist party trial ‘Democracy cle. Among th the leaders of ~New York City. of | the Socialist party in| | ed {sessed men and women, glass in the ceiling sunshine ¢ in, lavish and heartenind nt of the nine rows of seits, the first three of which are rese for the press, is a railing—beyond b of many-color le Autumn of us wii to the left, the accused and their counsel. Directly in front of us s the judge on a raised platform and to the right of him is the witness br Rehind the judge hangs the Ameri- can flag, guarded by two amable plaster babie: one wide-eved and armed with a sword, the other blind- but still judicially balancing its scales. Chief Characters Enter. Perched even higher than the babies, on a shield brave with s and stripes. crouches the American eagle, looking at once severe and exalted. Tt is all very reassuring—surelv under such august patronage nothing le: To the r than justice can be done in this place. | e door at the back of the is opening, and the chief in this most arresting of s make their quiet and unhurried . A little group of pale. self-pos- tak'ng their seats in the corner of the crowded troom, as calmly as though they were gathered about a tea talle in a corner of some tranquil d roem. The women, Mrs. Ha Henry Ste: with fur re is a glint of hat, of gold in rge pearl pin tevens smiles in dark cloth mall close hats. Thi silver in Mrs. Stevens Mrs. Carpender it the day he Is to mani fest none of the famed ec s gnly an : -prise in the prominent ves bhu v behind the thick glas: eyvebrows are rai: almost v, giving him an exp: rpetual strained bhewilderment at the turn of affairs that has plung- ed him nto this amazing predicament. Henry Stevens Smiles. Tenry Stevens looks brisk and self controlled, but obviously and deeply annoyed. He smiles, however, con tinuously enough and then, abruptly smile. It requires more and fortitude than the best . perhaps, to smile with tion into those circling er, inquisitive, insensidve »soph us p nuch convi faces. _ In it least, possibly in one, Frances Stevens much maligned wom rs have done She is very id, heavy, dowd one w: shown us. wi ned The q brim n to unobs: acter. re perfectly st not take the trouble to e than once they curve a pleasantly iron She gazes with level nd a curi ment deliberately and ramatic. and yet in all rama ne under to the nt eyes CH month you are out a large amount in rent— vet you dont even own U e spigot on the sink. Rent money is running ay from you like the er from that spigot. Why continue wasting? $750 cah with room monthly actual cost of living in vour 4 rooms, bath and porch apartment in 100% CO-OPERATIVE Connecticut Courts 5112 Conn. Ay One looks at | lue November sk’es—one last, | | | Stevens. this far, and ave now pressing baf- | &__ (Continued from First Page.) | their | ters, | from i l figure is one-half so dramatic as this quiet lady. . A little behind this group sits a 1 onened | Woman with a soft, dark fur muffled thouther face, a charming face, which, unlike the othe looks frankly sad and disturbed. Mrs. Henry Stevens Is chviously making no effort to pretend that she is not utterly weary and sickened of a hateful and distasteful busines: She bestows the most fleet- Inz of smiles on her hushand’s counsel, and then sits motio eves rested on her gray gloved hands Figures That Stand Out. The clerk of the conrt raisss his hand for silence and cries, “Hear ye!” ves, hear ye, hear ye—the greatest criminal trial of this century has commenced. Of the figures that pass now before us—the vanguard of that army of witnesses that is to pass in review be. fore the curtain falls—several will lincer in our memories. John S Dickson, the neat sandy-haired ac- countant sticking quietly but reso- lutely to his tale of how that stum- = figure that he identifi Stevens came shufMine and peer f the murder, find his . whom he had left at the Parker Home for the Agad, op- posite Do Russev lane. If we are to believe the auict, concise Mr. T son. continnally moistening his_lins but otherwise undisturbed, Willle Stevens' alibi of being home in bed that.nieht is rudely shattered. Charlotte Dickeon, his wife, with dark eves snapping behind low-rimmed eciacles, i even mors emphatic. o is unalternbly convinced that the zure that she came from her kitchen nvestigate that evening was Willle he is lavish as to details bow ties. cold clammy hands. wing collars and open-faced gold watches, Her inerensing decision under cross-examination caused what Tudze Parker characterized as undue ilarity among the spectators. Picture of Charlotte Mills. But undoubtedly the figure that will inger longest in the minds of those n the co s first day was he slim, gay dered woman's dauchter, Charlotte Mills, clad in the briefest and bright. ~st of rose flannel dr Aith a vivid i'k tie and a minute hat of tinsel and ~reen velvet. Tragically young, under the powder and pertness and sophisti- ation, she sits weeping, weeping auietly and steadily while the counsel r the defense and prosecutor and the judge indulge in endless and acri monious arzument as to the relevancy of much of her testimony. Small and drooping. her volce so ‘ow-pitched that it is almost Inaudible, we who watched saw the tears h evervthing ugly and hard and nd leave only a lonely hild, who had lost her found a strang nd’ ter- Long after we have for- cotten everything else about that fi ahout and te: mothe ihle world. memorable day, we will see that s i face with its roving eye and tremblinz lips, and we will re- member ( rlotte Mill: TOMBS FIGHT PUTS TWO UNDER ARREST 1UST BEFORE DAWN fice. buildin, Automatic rifles, resembling ma- chine guns, which release 20 bullets at one pull of the trigger, were used by the police, who took up positions In buildngs nearby. The prisoncrs realized they were doomed when they failed to get the ys to the gate, and fi ly turned guns on themselves. Before he shot himself mberg waved to the crowds on ne scapes and the eighth floor of a nearby Three other prisoners reported sick with Glatz, Amberz and McKenna, but were not removed from their cells at the same time. They are thought to have been implicated. Search of them and of the ent son failed to_disclose other hidden arms. Throughout the fighting Thomas M. Ke lay in a narrow ditch he was digzing across the prison yard. Both police and prisoners fired upon him, but he escaped with only a cut shoe lace, nicked by a bullet. ng Sing Guard. night ordered two Smith Orders ¢ ov. Smith ned with rifles, to lo the walls of S.ng | precaution against | a prison riot similar to the one that | ate troopers, > stationed outs broke out in Tombs prison governor explained that new 15 the ontbreak in Tombs gen- | excites s in__ other! He d Warden | s B. Lawes should be provided ' with machine gun equipment for Sing | Sinz as he had requested | tempted Tombs escape result- | the first riot call sounded in | years in New York. All avail-! reserves from police headquar- ! three blocks away, were rushed | to the prison and motor cycle police ! all Manhattan roared 1cross the city to the scene of the | attle. Among the first to arrive was he emergency squad from head. | quarters, men armed smail arm bombs. in 1y able ed with hot guns and gas ARY AT TRIAL IHA LLMILLS TRIAL | ATTRACTS THRONG Closing Scene of Mystery Draws Countryside to Quaint Court. BY DOROTHY DIX. Special Dispatch to The Star. SOMERVILLE, J.. November 4. —At 2 am. Tuesday morning a woman took her Seat on the stone steps of the courthouse at Somerville, prepared to crash the gates when the | doors opened for the Hall-Mills case. By sunrise every road leading into the | little town was packed with vehicles, limousines from the r estates, trucks from thé vegetable gar- dens, flivvers from the village, all bound in the same direction. At 9 o'clock the street was jammed with cars bearing the license numbers of surrounding States, and the pretty green courthouse yard was /packed with the curtous, eager if only for a ght of some one connected with the 1se, and three minutes after court onvened the ‘“standing room only” sign might have been hung out. Nor was this a marvel, for within s to be enacted that great human drama that is as old as time and as new as the latest’crime. Here was to be played out a stark tragedy that had as its plot a mystery far more baffling than any playwright could in- vent, for it is eternally true that truth stranger than fiction. Three Wait in Suspense. Tlere was the pathos of analogy that tore at hearts, and here the sus- pense of three lives that trembled in the halance. Within the court the resemblance to a play was still further enhanced by the setting of the scene, for the court- oom 1s built like a little theater, with the fudge's bench and the witness stand for the staze. the orchestra pit for the counsel and the defendants. while the representatives of the press nccupy what might be callnd the dre ircle, and the audience filled the bal- ance of tha small house. The first of the dramatis person- nae to enter were the lawyers for the prosecution. Senator Alexander Simp son, the special prosecutor, is a small, alert, keen-faced man, with finely cut features, a humorous mouth and wom- 1y small hands. He was dressed meticulously in a dark blue suit, with 2 blue shirt with darker hue figures on it. and a dark tie. He wears his hair rather long, and a little wavy, and hoth in his appearance and his man- ner he resembles greatly the Califor- nia_spellbinder, Delmas, who defended Hary Thaw in his last trial, and who coined the phrase “dementia Ameri- cana” in justification of a man killing the man who had invaded his home. With Senator Simpson was Prosecu- tor Bergen, tall and young looking, who is his assistant. McCarter Heads Defense. Then came the la: fen: Chief of the “‘million-dollar de- fen as it has been called, is Robert H. McCarter, a powerful, gray-haired man, dressed in gray, who was former attorney general of this State, Mrs. "all's special counsel, and who comes of a familv as nowerful as Mrs. I's own. Then Clarence E. Case, State Senator. just re-elected, a tall. clean- cut youngish man, just beginning to grow hald. He is to be the trial law- yer, and he and Senator Simpson clash at every step, because each of them, gossip whispers, hopes to ride into the 2overnorshin on this trial. as did Whit- man on the Becker trial in New York With them was Timothv Pfeiffer, tactual, suave, diplomatic, the liaison officer between Mrs. Hall and the press and the publie, On the bench, back of them the Stars and Stripes and over their heads a shield flanked on one side by a figure holding a naked sword and on the other bv a blindfolded justice, sat the two trial judees. statelv in their black silk robes. The older one, Charles W. Parker, veteran member of the New Jersev Supreme Court, with a tired face and tired eves that seemed as if thev had looked too long on human frailtv and sin. With him Judge Frank L. Clearv of the Somerset Coun- tv Court of Common Pleas. voung, black-halred, sleek. keen eyed, he looked as some voung judge might in a Roman tribunal. Defendants Enter Court. A door opened suddenly and in from the tunnel that connects the jail with the courthouse the defendants came. almost running to their seats. Mrs. Hall does not look in the least as she has heen pictured, either in words or in photographs. She is a woman of medium size, with a good fizure. She is not beautiful, of course ixty rarely is. but her face is strong and kindly and intelligent, and it bears upon it the marks of race and breeding that take the curse off of ers for the de- country | land gold turban, with he THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 19%6. Members oi l.ni JUEY I e saous trial wineh opened yesterday at Somerset Court House, N. way to lunch shoi homeliness. In repose her expression s stern, but when she smiles her face lights up with gentleness and humor. She wears her own honest gray hair long, and there is no touch of rouge or lipstick on her face. She was handsomely and tastefully dressed in a black gown, over wh ch was a biack after being sworn in. GORSLINE DENIES THAT HE SAW ACCUSED AT HALL CRIME SCENE Dr. Hall, who had married a woman (Continued from First Page.) coat with a gray fur collar and cuffs. She wore a handsome black hat trimmed with a simple heart orna- ment. By her side sat her cousin, Harry Carpender’s wife, a charming- looking woman, who wore a black dress with some gay embroidery on the sleeves, and a black hat trimmed in gold, while just behind her sat Mrs. Henry Stevens, her sister-in-law, in a dark coat suit with a gray blouse and a dark hat. . Flanked by Brothers. With Mrs. Hall sat her two brothers, Henry and Willie Stevens, both big, tall, strong, heavy-featured men with crisp, close-cropped, curling black hair just beginning to turn gray. There is a strong likeness between the brothers, except that Henry Stevens' face is a strong, virile one, with a jutting chin, whle Willle’s face is weak and flabby, with a receding chin that melts into the rolls of fat around hal ting Jury selected “cold” two children. lizgion for solace, crab apple tree, testified that a vis- iting card of Dr. Hall" fered in evidence was seen by him propped against the slain rector’s left foot. Senator Simpson said he would offer proof by two experts to show the card bore the fingerprints of Willie Stevens' left index finger. which was of- Selected Quickly. The jury, without a woman member. within an hour and a . The foreman is a teamster. There are six farmers, two clerks, a superin- tendent, a mason and blacksmith sit- with _him. opening address required but 20 min- utes, In it he said the State would show that Mrs. Mills was a good woman whose interes came her Senator Simpson’s after her husband be- to hel s centered in She turned to re- he said, and met of cheerless home." bodies were found. was committed. his_neck The Stevens family is a lova' fami'y. and in their hour of trial they are backed up by all their kith and kin, and in the courtroom one was pointed out, the Gr flins, Mrs. Henry Stevens mother and sister, and_the Arthur Carpenders and the Sydney Carpenders and various other mem- bers of the clan, who had come to ?ROHIBITION VOTE THROUGHOUT NATION CALLED STAND-OFF (Continued from First Page.) express their faith and loyalty in them. Mrs. Hall and her brothers appeared as calm and unconcerned as if they were assisting at a pink tea instead of beginning the fight for their lives. Henry Stevens seemed to regard the whole proceeding as a vast joke. He | smiled continually in almost boisterous good humor. Yet a great criminal lawyer once told me that he had never known any man or woman who went through a murder trial, whether they were innocent or guilty, whether thev were convicted or clearrd, whose nerve was not absolutely broken by it. Charlotte the Flapper. And last, but not least, among the fizures that flitted across the stage was Charlotte Mills, the daughter of the murdered woman. Charlotte was 16 vears old when her mother was killed. She is 20 now and she is rather pretty in her pink jersey sport suit and her tight green ks of and bow with bobbed hair pasted on h; her mouth made in a Cupid the lavish use of lipstic] Charlotte is a sort of the quintessence of this hard-boiled age, when girls have no old-fashioned reverence for a mother's purity, but. on the contrary, condone mother's frailty and help her out in her little s with other men. uper-flapper, arlotte has capitalized her mother's romance with the Rev. Mr. Hall and has written for the press her story of it, in which she called her mother a ‘“chattel of love,” and today he testified that when her father alled up to her on the night of the murder to know if her mother had re. turned, she pretended to be asleep and did not answer him. Jury Swiftly Chosen. It took less than an hour to choose the jury, so swiftlv do the wheels of justice turn in Jersey: and if I were Mrs. Hall and her brothers, it is a jury to which I would like to trust my fate. For it is a fat jury and a middle-aged jury: a well fed, comfort able, intelligent-looking jury, of an rgo that has reen enough of life to teach it understanding and yet not »ld enough to make it censorious. For it is the very young and the very old that are hard and uncompromising in close. res ment. without a can hardly be considered a dry State. ‘The important fact to be borne in| mind is that no out-and-out dry State voted wet and no wet about face and voted dry. vote in most States on the referendum did not come up to the vote on candi- so that it will be diflicult to contend that the referendum more of an expression of opimion on prohibition than i dates who are either wet or dry. It is significant, however, that the wets were much better organized in th have been, and that in some States. like Montana, they put into the field sener organization work than did the rys. All this Indicates that while pro- hibition is a live -issue, the wets are far away from any strength in the g{nuso or Senate which could take the T existing manufacture or sale of intoxicants. dates, has on a Nev S industry writing, but it looks as if the weffort to repeal the State enforcement code would succeed in Montana and also in California, though the vote will be California was once carried by the drys by about 18,000, but the ad- vantage wets grape of the citie: Nevada, by referendum, adopted a olution calling on Congress to call constitutional sider changing the eighteenth amend- | operating seemed to be with the ount of the California and the heavy vote convention to con- da has been te enforcement act, S0 The total any the vote for candi- congresstonal election than they steps toward modification of the situ ation in respect to the (Copyright. 1926.) their judgment. we know to give our fellow creatures the ben- efit of the doul In the briefe heard a prosecutor make Senator Simpson laid the bare bones of his case before the jury, charging M Hall and her brothers with having killed Mrs. Mills and Dr. Hall and de- claring that the fingerprints found on the card at the preacher’s foot were those of Willie Stevens. And with that mystery tingling in the air the curtain went down on the first act of the great Hall-Mills drama. ho In the middle ages w to make excuses and t speech 1 have ever onveioht 1026 T o age 1 ilect Roman colon of Rumania is a introduced by the Hotel Inn 604-610 9th St. N.W., Daily, $1.00, $1.50, 52,00 S6 weel et showe 50 % more. ., $7 rooms, §: 313w $ 2 in room i | | | Rooms Jike Mother's Satisfactory Results From Classified Advertising The best results are always obtained from the advertise- ment containing the most in- formation. The Star will carry your an- nouncement to thousands of readers, many of whom will likely be interested in your proposition, but the reader can- not be attracted unless the de. tails are set forth in the ad- vertisement. The number of classified ad- vertisements published daily in ‘The Star is evidence of the fact that The Star classified adver- tisements produce results. The Star classified advertise- ments containing complete statements of propositions bring the best resuits. R, cereals. Don't do it. “*Washington’s Oldest Dairy* L/ AIRY CHILDREN NEED the WHOLE MILK —buy EXTRA cream for coffee 7 A MOTHER who pours off the cream before giv- ing the milk to the children is deliberately feeding her youngsters milk which no dealer could sell. She is robbing her own kiddies of the wonder- ful growth-promoting Vitamin which wise old Mother Nature put into the fat of milk for the express pur- pose of encouraging the development of fast-growing little bodies. She is reducing the value of her children's milk about one-third and weakening the structure of the most marvelous food known to man. Buy extra cream for coffee and Give the children Nature's food in the form that Nature made it—from 18 o 81 State “turned | Ten members of captured. Gurrola laws. Beauty beauty parlor anent union scale, wealth and refinement and had “suffered the usual result—a cold and The intimacy be- tween pastor and choirster grew to be more than spiritual, he said, and in time became notorious. i Love letters exchanged by Dr. Hall and Mrs. Mills came into Mrs. Hall's possession, Simpson ‘asserted. On the murder night, he continued, Mrs. Hall overheard a telephone con- ! versation in which her husband made an appointment to meet Mrs. Mills | in De Russey's Lane, where their " She then communicated with her brother Henry at his home in Lava- lette, N. J., he said, Willie, and with them drove to the lane to confront Dr. Hall and Mrs. Mills and show them the letters that she had obtained. There they became involved In a quarrel and the murder RELIGIOUS REBEL BAND BEATEN, MEXICO REPORTS Ten Said to Have Been Killed and | Families Captured—Leader Escapes. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, November 4.—An- nouncement was made at the presi- dential office today that a rebel band, headed by “Tirso Gurrola, chief of the Knights of Columbus in the State of Durango,” has been defeated at Ar- royo de Agua by federal soldiers. killed and several of their families panied by 10 of his followers. The announcement asserts that Gur- rola revolted a month ago in protest agalnst the government's religious Parlor Strike Ends. CHICAGO, November 4 (#).—The threatened strike of operators has been called off as a result of recognition as | members of the Journeymen Barbers’ Union and wage increases to & perm- . BECK TAKES STAND INTRIAL OF MORSE Former Solicitor General Ex- plains His Services at Fraud Trial. By the Associated Press, | _ NEW YORK, M. Beck. forme ovember 4. olicitor general of the United =i 'k the stand in the Morse fraud trial y day to answer questions conci his actions while he wi cou the United States Steamship Co. principal Morse concern. | Mr. Beck said he was retained i | 1916 as counsel salary of $5,000 ble quarterly, and that he hel t position untii 1m0 At no time | had he been consulted concerning the organization of the steamship ¢ pany, he said He told of going to the British ad miralty office in London with Charles W. Morse for a_consultation concern ing purchase of ships. and said th the only legal paper h prepares for Morse was an underwriting agree ment for the purchase of some ships “At the time you went to the ad miralty office,” he was asked by ry A. Wise of defense sel, 3 iring with Morse to in the sale of steamship stock Speclal Assistant Attorney Dobyns objected to this que Judge Thacher upheld the ol “unless Mr. Beck wished to nes stoek shown on their Generai put ““ do not doubt it would have bee: denied,” Wise replied 1 if he a1d not, T would deny it for him.” Washi S’martgtl and her brother 0.1 THEATRICAL GALA NIGHT TONIGHT Paradis play host to : of entertaining nota bles. Phil Baker and Ben Bernie will be there with members of their companies as honor guests. Don't for miss this Brilliant will host nything Dazzling, the band were o Tonite Fun Galore Noisemakers Dancing Till 2 A.M. Main 4336 for Reservations R DAVIS FAMOUS £ PARADIS escaped, accom- 2,000 feminine Genuine Ostrich HANDBAGS An “Out of the Ordinary” Offer— Genuine Ostrich 1s really a precious leather—wear rich ens it—because of its superior quali ties it has been classed as a “finer” leather and priced accordingly We've really ac complished some thing “out of the ordinary” by secur ing these GENU- 'NE OSTRICH BAGS to sell at— Other Hand- bags from $5 to 8150 @ Suggestions from our LIST OF GIFT HAT BOXES $5 to $35 GLAD- STONES $20 to $90 PLUSH MOTOR ROBES $20 to $75 Mail Orders Prepaid possibilities MEN'’S TRAVEL BAGS $16.50 to $40 UMBRELLAS $5 t. 825 MANICURE SETS $5 to $30 CHINESE AND INDIAN BRASSES $2 to $35 AR 1314-16-18 E, Street N.W. HAND SEWN GLOVES $5 to $10 BILL FOLDS $2 to $60 Telephone Main 4454

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