Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WOMEN HEAR PLE FOR CAREFUL VOTE Macerial Poscessions Frowned Upon Speaker Tells G. 0. P **School™ Electorate Must Be Educated. A dlea combat mobs 1 educated ~s, propapan ment Davenpor in col sho Describes Budget System. Representative Mondell of told the school of the work- appropriations committee of and the budgot svstem. He the place of Representative of Mlinois. who was unable to Pormer Wromi th s were received by Pres at the White House this or to the session at which ative Fort and Mrs. Alice Pat- senator of Con- o scheduled to speak Congress. headed by Rep- > Tilson of Connecticut, Re- publican leader. expounded party poli- cies before the school last night. Rep- Tese e Edith N. Rogers of Massa- spoke on American fareign and Represontative Winter ng gued that the party has d for a proper balance be- twes Federal and State authority and r Government supervision of big busi- ta setts comme: of Wyom = LEGISLATOR TO SPEAK. Representative Griffin of New York and Col. G. W. Pratt of Alabama are to be the principal speakers tonight at the meeting of the Al Smith Demo- cratic Club in_the Burlington Hotel Supporters of Gov. Smith In the Dis- trict and the public are invited P. A. Sugrue, secretary of the c.ub. today announced a partial list of speakers at the coming Jefferson day luncheon to be held in the Burlington April 2. as_follows Senator Edwards, New Jersev: Rep- resentative White of Colorado. Mrs Jeremiah Joseph Desmond, wife of the former mayor of Norwich, Conn Retired‘Atter 58 Years. Jay Stone, chief clerk of the New York Harbor Line Board in New York has been placed on the retired civil service list, after a continuous service for the Government of 58 years. includ- ing four vears in the Army. seven years in the office of the Secretary of War and more than 40 years in the encineer Gepartment at New York. Mr. Stone's gervice in the office of the Secretary of War extended from March 7. 1380, to Nox North h_ 23, 1928 rO ALE THAT 1 WILL, PHRIES A NOTIC il TRAUSAGE MEAT. FRES H it * MFEAT ey h st D PREFERABLY FRESH Soider s BAKER Family FOR THF ni Batto ASr;fi'!h"s Tra;lsfcr.‘&"Storagc o Ko, ON S, ADAM 'PRINTING IN A HURRY ' i Hien ea WITH 1, OF YOUR LIFE N BED We Stop Roof Leaks Kook COMPANY ¥ [RONCLAI This Million-Dollar Printing Plant na + The Natio PLUMBIN FEPAL 1 Capital Press G HEATING 1 REMODELING i {eatin A% i’édzr;l F g (TJ'”’J‘ 1S YOUR ROOF SOVIET CODE RI PUTS BAN ON Theory of Governm BY THEODORE DREISER. of the th only look upoa world that would n of its very sofl at times and At man_should a land of winds and vast spaces. It the same time not a littl this same land, dot so huge a_ population ed by such untutored hould b> the { th s scene of periment in human govern- accustomed Westerner 1y mild pitiful to © 15 almost d it necessary One thing osphere h as que: a mi 1 iearned for myself in that and that I scarcely so joned in America, is that to imagine that any distinction for man is to be de- rived from mere material possessions There is really nothing to that. Man e distinction is, and should be, men- thoughts—their meaning to And true power is some- from thought that echo in the minds I, changing all Wealth Frowned Upon. that mere seizing personal use as again: of many, the bare in- signia of thought, which is all that ma- terial possessions are, ig wolfish. Worse. is devoid of any important person let alone general. meaning. Life is be: more colorful and soiritual, without it Another thing I picked out of Russia was the sense of & government that means something that is thinking: that intellectually (idealistically) as well as nomically is going somewhere. W 1 America were once, at least theoret- jcally (or 1 assumed so). going some- where, seeking consciously for ourselves a high spiritual or psychogenetic stat~ out of which would arise more and nore wisdom. more and more intellec- tual curiosity. more and more the glory of monta! achtevament ow. it may be that I was entirely wrong in assuming any such generative or mental bent in my people. I some- times think so: that I am merely wish- ing for what may be in America. I have even of late rather tended to abandon this thought in connection with America, for we are so wholly materialistic, in the main so utterly puerile mentally. But in Russia how different! swish and the tang of actual, seri generous. non-material, highly-spiritual mentation. Think of a group of lead- ers. men and women, there are som~ 167 in the Communist Central Com- mittee, representing every nook and vhase of that enormous empire, who are not thinking of just Russia alone. as we in America are thinking of America, but of the entire world You can actually sit down with a man lite President Kalinin, the little peasant father of Russia. and perhaps its kindliest and most loving advisor. or Georges Tchicherin, its foreign min- ister, or Stalin, the secretary of the Communist Central Committee, or Alexei Rykov, president of the All Union Council of People’s Commissars. or Nikolai Bukharin, the ostensible head of the Third International of Russia, and communism’s principal present-day theoretician as well as philosopher, or Lunacharsky, the commissioner of edu- cation, or any one or every one in con- nection with the present-hour Commu- nist control of Russia. No Sense of Party. And you feel that vou are talking not with a politician or an official as such. or to an individual who for one reason or another in connection with | his official or political position must talk in a certan way, or say thus and so, but with a man or a woman, officially powerful and active, who is deeply in his own emotions and reason convinced not only of the importace but the actual necessity of all he says and does. Conditions being what they are, he has no flavor of a “party” or of speak- ing in benalf of any particular group, financial. political, soclal, as in Amer- |ica, England, Germany, France. On the contrary, you are facing a man or woman Wwho is thinking first and immediately of the welfare of the com- munistic ideal, its import, not only to Russia. but to all the world, and after that of the immediate mental as well as material necessities of Russia as an exemplar of this ideal, and not other- wise And in connection with this—and that is why it is all so stimulating and refreshing—there is no sense of party politics or the material or social wel- fare of any group or sect, but only the welfare and the practice of clean and flashing principles that concern all men and gre intended for the welfare | and advancement, the intellectual and social peace of all the peoples of the earth It is astounding. n, and because reading of the very doomed to politic and intellectual failure. But how clean, how forthright, how personally disinterested! May Remove Social Misery ill another fact I have harvested in Russta, and which I will never forget 15 this' that via communism, or this collective or paternalistic care of every- | hody for everybody else. it is possible | to remove that dreadful sense of social | misery in one direction and another which has s0 affiicted me in my life | America ever since I have been old | ugh to know what social misery was The rich districts as opposed to the | | pror ones in all of our great citfes and oar poorer and smaller towns and vil- | iazes. The fine houses as opposed to | the wretched ones, and the slums, the | trikes. the unemployed men. So late | #. 1907 in America, how common it | was 1o see crowds of men in the poorer | regions of our cities idling ahout and brooding, or if they had a little money, | drinking ! The old Bowery in New York. with | hundreds of thousands of “down | outs”; South, State snd Clark in Chicago, with their sham- bieary, hopeless hordes. The | joints.” the bread lines, the | pen coffee or milk stands in Winter And strong men in ragged clothes rllflA‘ ng alongside 1o mutter, “For God's ke Cap. & dime, will you? Gimme | Beyond e holding needs of The It may be mis- of error in the chemism of man, 1 ‘,1 reets bling Lunk cpough for a cup of cofiee or w sand- || wich And then Fifth avenue, Michigan ave. | Schenley drive, aclank and aglit- | with the trappings and the vanities and the gauds and follies of those who ad endiess means to do with. And ihe | loughs of despond only & mile or a | block away, where swarmed those who had nothing. The gulf was too wide, | the comparisons cruel and unnecessary And after a fashion they endure to | | this hour only how greally reduced, st of the venity and the arrogance | “racted, ubout as one might extract | tooth But in Russia how different, the ailing tone of the cities and the towns omething that has never heen any- | where before, 1 assume For where are | the rich? There are none, And where | e groveling. feverish poor? Gone also. | You cannot Ik the sireets of any ey wwhere iesin. Odossa. Leningrad, | g Baku, Kiev Novoseblisk and ather, i anv of these places A sug- ction _of 16t difference belween nue pr RELIEVES Social Misery Through Paternalism. POOR: CLASS STRUGGLE STAR. WASHTN CREW OF S TRIED in ent That Eliminates Found Scarrcd by Heavy Blows. haunted is not pos- classes and condition you in your childhood sible that It March 22.-Muie evidence ast some of the 40 entrapped officers and men aboard the submarine S-4 had sought in vain to chisel their way out of their stecl tomb has been uncovered by the naval board of in- vestigation The board is inspe ng the craff, now in dry dock at Charles town Navy Yard The oozy debris of the motor torpedo compartment decks has up an assortment of cold chisels, hand wrenches and .other battering tools while the walls of the motor compart- ment. scarred and attered by heavy blows, attested to the use to which the instruments had been put Tried to Chisel Hull, spot in the motor room. where crew survived for many hours the sinking of their ship wh collided with the Coast Guard ¢ rover Paulding off Provincetown last ember, showed clearly an attempt te chisel through the steel hull One by one the dying men in compartments fore and aft of pierced and flooded battery room disab'ed control compartment had s cumbed to the deadly and ever-mour iv cumulation of carbon monoxide gas Some fell into the shallow water on the floor and drowned. Others me! death in their bunks, the investigators found Another disclosure was that the sub. marine’s salvage air line was in worlang order and in a test functioned perfec lv. Had an airline been connected to i* in the earlv hours before rescue work turned to salvage operations air could have been pumped info all parts of the S-4 to maintain life until the mon- oxide hed a fatal percentage General Needs Are Met Do you sense the import of that? It is not_even possible. Fine homes, te o sure. And buili by men and women wh bofore the war were prideful, and arro- gant perhaps. as prideful and arrogant any and possessed of millions st a peasant’s or a work othing But how now? Wh who lives in these places L. That a hospital au. Th library. That a club That a natorium or rest home or lying-in hospital or kinder- garten or manual trainmg or art school for this or th es union Not a house palace of any tentiousness anyvwhe country or t that has been absorbed into the general social welfare, given over to some general as opposed o some pri- vate need. And the crowds in the street they may be poor, if you like, and no very well dressed yet, and without much money, no doubt many with very little but of actual want. where is that? Wi has become of that old, intense misery of the poor which you could actually feel, as opposed to the and the v ity and luxury af the rich? It does exist. You cannot feel want here more than you can feel material luxt because they are not ital differences. of course thess cxist everyw And official _differences sen. cne man or woman may occupy a more responsible position y another, m b> looked up to as mentally more im- portant and so socially more essentia for the time being But gauds and fripperies. the dog hungry and eveing hopelessly the h and the show and the vanity of identally or wolfishly strong and z ruthless and un- ined class struzgle. these are out Code Aids Poor. And when. as in America, of the sly and the cunning and the in artistic and spivitually dead who so often possess the means without the ca- pacity for any worthwhile thing, not even honest. competent machine labor. vou are inclined to exclaim “Wrong! And to the.communistic code “Right!" For if it has lessensd the glitter anc e show, it has at any rate taken the heartach» and the material tragedv from millions and millions of lives. An¢ that is something. T am sure. And that 1s something that came to me in Russia and not here in America Copsrisht, 1998 \ American Newspaps WIFE TAKES HER LIFE BY DRINKING POISON Kentucky Woman Dies at Hoepital e are_they? And This one That a pub- and given not h city thi the bec under- Closed Leaking Line. Comdr. Harold E. Saunders, who di- voctrd the salvay operations, upor learing of this. said that the subma- crew probably had opened the air line. and. when it leaked water. decided was ruptured and closed it This air line was the line to the ba found broken Y.W. C. A. RESERVES T0 GIVE OPERETTA The Pied Piper” Will Be Present- ed Tomorrow and Saturday Nights. ou it not the same a t tanks which was The Girl Reserves of the Y. W. C. A will present their operetta, “The Pied Piper,” tomorrow and Saturday nights in Barker Hall in the Y. W. C. A Building, Seventeenth and K streets The performances, which will be given under the patronage of Ambassador, will be for the benefit of the maintenance fund of the associa- tion More than 100 girls from the senior and junior high schools and the graded schools of the District will appear in the operetta, the libretto of which was written by Anna J. Beiswenger. The musie is by Joseph W. Clokey. Direct- ing_the: production are Miss Imogene B. Ireland, Mrs. Alice Sigworth Morse, Miss Elsa M. Peterson. Miss Mabel R. Cook and Miss Dorothea McDowell. The Toy Symphony Orchestra, made up of graded school girls and conduct- ed by Audry Gill will play between the acts. The Filimore Girl Reserves, winners of a recent song contest, will sing Playing the leading parts in_the op- eretta are Alta M. Smith, Katheryn Townsend. Margery Harris, Virginia Robey, Mary Livingston, Virginia Plugge, Virginia _Campbell, Evelyn Sligh, Betty Sceds, Rachel Neidomanski Mary Middleton. Ina Holtzscheiter Martha Fisher and Elizabeth Cain Swallows Potion at Sister's Apartment Leaving a note saying she could rot bear to be separated from her husband, Mrs. Lucille Carmichael. 24 years old, of Lexington, Ky., drank poison in the apartment of her ‘sister, Mrs. Catherine Reid, 1333 Euclid street, yesterday and died last night in Garfield Hospital First-aid treatment was given the patient before she was,removed to the hospital. where she was treated by Dr W. C. Cantrell. Her condition was so critical. however, that the physicians were powerless and she died In a few hours. Coroner J. Ramsey Nevitt is- sued a certificate of suicide. SLAYER CHANGES PLEA. Reed Admits Manslaughter at Trial for Murder. James A. Reed. alias James A. Parker, colored, yesterday interrupted his trial before Justice Siddons and a jury on an indictment charging murder in the second degree and entered a plea of gullty of manslaughter. He shot Richard T. Mitcheil, colored. In a quarrel January 17, at 1031 Thirteenth street southeast. He was remanded for sentence. Assistant United States Attorney Raymond Neu- decker conducted the prosecution . Tnhér Not at Hearing. It was stated erroneously in The Star Monday that Representative Taber, Re- publican, New York, had appearcd at the House hearing on the Welch bill and spoke in favor of the measure. Mr Taber was not at the hearing, and says that he opposes the measure, which would establish & $1,500 minimum jay for Federal employes also Ocean Flyer to Speak. Lieut. Walter Hinton, first transat- lantic flight pilot, will deliver an ad- dress at a luncheon of the Washington Round Table in the University Club to- morrow_afternoon at 12:30 o'clock Nurse to Be Honored. Mics Kathleen Smith. a senior stu- dent nurse ‘at Providence Hospital, whose poem in observance of the birth- day of Jane Delano recently won for ner the Red Cross flag awarded by Miss Mabel Boardman, will be honored to- night at a reception at the nurses' home of the hospital GULDENS Mustard How He Likes W?arm MILK 1'he Knowing Mother il Have No Other I'he bling over little fellow is just bub with health energy. His rosy and smiling lips tell he drinks Chestnut Health Department rates it highest and cheeks Farms Milk 'hone Ihe PPotomac 4000, The Argonue SIXTEENTH STREET and COLUMBIA ROAD NORTHWEST RELIABILITY —Owned as an investment, not a speculation The Argonne Is interested not only in signed lease this year, but n living up to the letter of every promise | made, first to preserve a worked for and valued reputation, secondly as insurance against dissatisfaction and vacancy In years to come RESPONSIBILITY —Operated directly by the owner, its careful and eficient management per mits no shifting of responsibility regarding any complaint, repair or suggestion tending to Increase the convenience or contentment of 1t wecupants. In this bullding direct dealing with the responsible interests means direct results PERMANENCE,— Euch year of our ownership has meant im- proved conditions regarding both physical charactertstics of ‘The Argonne and excellence of Its service Here (o SUAY continue to tmprove with time as the only sound method of maintaining an investment HION. . €. THURSDAY, T0 CHISEL WAY ouT Walls of Motor Compartment the German | MARCH 22 » | ost of Ra May Total Congress Advi ¢ ing S-1 186.000, ed WOMAN INJURED AS CARHITS POLE | advised yesterday | afternoon that the Navy expeets the cost of raising the sunken sub- marine S-4 will amount to $186,000 Driver Escapes Hurts——Truckl ek sl oy oy and Taxi Collide—Cab Reay Admiral Beuret, chief con- A | structor of the Navy. In testimony Driver Held. on the annual Navy supply bill. made public yesterday. He said the Navy had paild $120,000 for miscel- roous labor and material, an ad- ditional $16,000 to replace one of the pontoons lost en route to Province. town, and that while it was imprac- ticable to make a satisfactory esti- mate in advance. it seemed reason- able to expect an additional $50,000 would be necded The total cost submarine §-51 640, CITIZENS OPPOSE RAILWAY SIDINGS Southwest Group Protests Plan for Congre: Miss Emma Benning. years old 5 Ninth street, was tr at Emer- Hospital for an injury her carly today, suffered when the in which she was riding left the | roadway in front of 4700 Thirteenth crashed into an electric light pole and overturned. The driver, Al-| fred M. Houghton. 41. of 3134 Seven- teenth street, escaped injury A collision in front of 1801 Thirty- fifth street vesterday afternoon between a motor truck driven by Robert John- son. colored, 35 years old, of 2256 Sixth street, and a taxicab driven by Edward O'Brien. 24 years old. 1023 Twenty- sacond street ilted in slight injury to Johnson. O'Bricn, held by police on a charge of reckless drivine. was re- | Inased on a $300 bond for his appear- ance in court Miss Marie Crowley old 1839 North Capitol street d con- cussion of the brain and bruises of the left wrist and knee when she was struck car driven by Christopher Cloar Eighteenth street southeast. ~ She treated at Emergencv Hospital A broken rail derailed a car on the Takoma Park line at Third and Sheri- dan streets shortly before 5 o' vesterdav afternoon. The car was ing north in the direction of Takoma Park when the accident occurred. Pas- engers in the car were shaken up. according to police. and onme of them Mrs. Regina Kelms, 48 years old. was iniure John Havden was motorman and F. Leonard accident caused traffic WILL CONFER ON RUBBER. Dutch ate gency to back car the | street, $205 of salvaging s amounted (o irs at Ninth Street and Vir- ginia Avenue Southwest ieving the temporary railroad necessitated by construction work the Federal Government's build- ogram will be objectionable in re 1al districts, the Southwest Citizens meeting in the Fairbrother ht, voiced its disapproval ich spurs on nia avenue south ed a committee to Hre the District Commis- the committee Frank Johnson -and under n s 4222 Fourteenth street in charge of the was conductor an interruption 3 The issioner now i fo for tem- 2 vas pointed out. and only one of these, that calling for the laving of tracks along Fifteenth street, we { the Bureau of Engraving met with approval of hte associa- tion A The Engir considerin porary r threc ad sp th Growers to Get Touch With American Consumers, THE HAGUE. March (#).—The Dutch rubber growers' committee form- ed March 1 to look after the interests of Dutch rubber growers and producers has decided to get in touch with foreign producers and American consumers The committee will visit England shortly with this in view. Subsequently | conferences will be arranged with the chief American_consumers in uest is to be made by the organi- n that a traffic light be installed at Seventh and C streets. as the assoc tion claims the intersection is sufficient- Iy congested at all times to merit con- nt traffic direction mstead of rush honr police control &s at present Vice President J. Millard Hall sided EXPLORER TO LECTURE. Will Talk on historic Monsters. pre- Barnum Brown Pre- STORES FOR RENT ¥ Best Business Sections. Consult Us Regarding Profitable Locations for Your Particular Business. RANDALL H. HAGNER & CO. Incorporated. Hunting Big Game of Other Days is the subject of an illustrated address to be delivered tomorrow night befor rembers of the National Geographic ociety at the Washington Auditorium Barnum Brown Mr. Brown led an expedition to a remote section of the Red Deer River Canyon, in Alberta, Canada, and" un- ;vmmrd scores of skeletons of dino- | saurs and other creatures that lived | millions of vears ago. Parts of a motion picture, “The Lost World,” will show some of these creatures as they are be- lieved to have appeared in' life | Shades In nearly all building specifica- tions Shade Shop's Shades are spe- cified. This evidence of their superior quality. b; Phone Main 9700. is | Made | to Measure hy Washington's Leading Windouw Shade Factor) W. STOKES SAMMONS, Proprietor Let us estimate upon furnishing, Made - to - Measure TONTINE Win-~ dow Shades for your home. Tontin is waterproof, fadeless and durable | B 4|tlnull' New-with many features found in HighPriced Homes | | | I ho belong to tomor- fireplace, hard- ar-lined closet, 1, shrubbery of a fine Coloni 1 th and bath, op hot-water heat, ¢ sereens, garvage, lot 60x150 fe trees, veranda, plemty of monthly, ' and eated daily RREN NIRRT filalllllfil’l'l‘i’l‘ll 52 Sold Already—Only a Few Left Big 6-Room Homes Built-in Brick Garage 3 Big Covered Porches Tiled Bath, Built-in Tub and Shower | 5th and Delafield Sts. N.W. On the Highest Point in Petworth ony ¥7 950 Hardwood Floors——Artistic Decoration Cemplete in every detail of ecuipment SEE OUR NEW CORNER HOMES 14th &K Easy Terms | Belgian family will travel ROYAL FLIGHT BARRED. Belgian Ruler's Family Compelled to Abandon Air Trip. BRUSSELS, Belgium, March 22 (%) A projected air trip by the Belgian royal family to Copenhagen on April 16 has been abandomed by a decision of the Belgian government because of pub- lic anxiety over its potential danger The Danish court, which Kingz Alber and his family will visit, also objected to the proposed flight and instead the by rail by Belgian royal LIEUT, FTCH RITES TAKE PLACE TODAY €-4 Victim Buried With Mili- tary Honors at Arlington Cemetery. way of Germany. The | visitors will travel incognito, thus avoid- ing any official German contact which might distress public feeling in Belgium KELLOGG IS SUED IN VISA CONTROVERSY Woman, Bvi?fi-shr S\;th-ect. Charges She Is Deprived of Rights in Im- migration Ruling. imeral services for Lieut. Graham N. Fitch, one of the officers &ho died in the iorpado room of the submarine S-4 when it went down following a_collision off Provincetown, Mass.. were held this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Fort Myer Chapel, following which the interment was made in Arlington Cemetery with military_honors. Capt. C. H. Dickins of the Navy Chaplains’ Corps officiated at the services, which were attended by many officers of ihe Navy on duty in and around the National Capital Six of the Naval Academy classmates Lieut. Fitch came over from Annap- olis, where are on duty, to act as honorary pallbearers. They ware H. M. Westcoat. R. F. Armiknecht Hutchinzon. W. J. Hoimes, B. B. Justice and W. B. Holden Funeral services will be held tomor- row at the Fort Myer Chapel at 11 o'clock for Russell Crabb. torpedo man, first class. who also died on the S-4 Capt. Dickins also will officiate at the services and the interment will be in Arlington Frank B. Kellogg. Secreta sued tn mandamus yesterday in the District of Columbia Supreme Court b; Mrs. Rachel Titchiner, a Britis ject residing at Niagara Falls, Ont Through H. Ely Goldsmith. consultant in immigration matters, and Attorney Harvey L. Cobb, the petitioner charges that she is deprived of a visa by which she may re-establish her American re dence. which she forfeited by her mar- riage to a British subject, because of the action of Secretary of State Kellogg in directing that commuters who cros the International Bridge at Buffalo daily for working purposes. without intention of establishing residence in the United States, are given visas which take up he assignable quota and prevent ac- tion on her application. which is on the_waiting list The petition points out that the Cir- cuit Court of Appeals for the second circuit_has ruled that visas issued under general order No. 86 of the Immigra tion Bureau, to commuters, is illeg: vet the Secretary has declined to direct the abandonment of the practice and 18 depriving her of her righ of State wa Forty Twins in Schools. f The Star. ‘ BERKLEY, Mich.—Berkley is a twins’ city. There are twenty pairs of twins here. Ten pairs attend the public scheols. and keeping tab on who's who is no easy job the teachers sa —= The HOLMES salesman carries a valuable ecargo— an interesting cargo. He brings it right to vour door every day. [It's a« fresh a< if von had made it yourself. His cargo is bread and haked specialties. Different breads. . .white and brown...little breads...haked spe. Ities in various forme. . .all delightful, all delicious. TRY THESE TWO “SPECIA for SATURBAY Pecan White S s R s I D S IEEE Pincapple Strip Layer Pie 55¢ each 30¢ each Place vour order tomorrow Remember. these are “Specials™ and must be ordered from the driver or direct from our plant, one day ahead of the day scheduled HOLMES MODERN BAKERY [@ NL.W, i, 17 1z 7 47 / Look in the Saturday Evening Post OSTONIANS are advertised in the cur- rent issue of the Saturday Evening Post. Look for the announcement. Read of something you've overlooked in shoe buying. New York knows them, and Washington is learning. A wide-awake shop is selling “Bostonians.” Men who are particular about their foot- wear, and pay $15 to $18 for shoes, can save 50% of this expense. BOSTON IAN Shoes forfMen Exclusively in Was.hm.lon at