Evening Star Newspaper, January 8, 1929, Page 5

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

LINKS WEST INDIES WTHU.S.BY AR Cuba, Porto Rico, Haiti and‘ Missive Lost in Cellar Dominican Republic Are on Route. ' B3 the Associated | MIAMI, Fla., January 8.- |after Col. Charles A. Lindbergh blazed !the “Lindbergh Circle” on his good will {flight through the West Indies Central America, America’s first inter- national air passenger system will be inaugurated over 1400 miles of that famous route. The new mail-passenger line, which will bind five nations with the United States as the first step in the operation of an airway that is to link the Amer- icas. will be opened formally tomorrow. vear ago Lindbergh was his Latin American good blazing a trail which he hoped might be followed by air liners of the future in linking the nations of Central America and the We: more closely with the United States His hopes seemed to be another one of the youthful hero's far-sighted wishes, which few thought would be fulfilled in less than a decade. Through balmy winds and across tur- quoise waters, air passengers will flown from Miami to Havana, Cama- guey, and Santiago in Cuba; on to Port au Prince, Haiti; Santo Domingo City, Dominican Republic, and San Juan, Porto Rico, at the far tip of the West Indies. While this 1.440-mile route is flow three times each week in huge, tr ,motored passenger planes, daily service will be maintained between Miami and iHavana, a 261-mile flight. Nassau, the ,British Tesort in the Bahamas, will be served from Miami three times a week by an eight-passenger amphibian. Passengers from New York, Chicago ,or any other central point in the United States will be able to purchase through air-mail tickets to their destinations in Cuba, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Por- to Rico or the Bahamas. The fare, ac- cording to officials of the air line, will be approximately $25 more than the Tegular rail and sieamer fare for the rip. Just 8 year Mail Contract Given. Mail_contracts awarded by the Post ©Office Department under the Kelly for- !eign air mail act will serve to speed the delivery of mail to the five countries to the south through which the airway asses. Three through trains from New York and intermediate points da direct connections from Boston, will provide a thorough service for passen- igers and mail to Havana; two trains from St. Louis and three trains caily {from Chicago will provide the same ac- {commodations. The new air-rail com- ibination will clip from 8 to 10 hours from the fastest previous time to Ha- vana from New York and provide Chi- ;cagoans with a 44-hour service to Ha- !vana instead of from 55 to 70 hours by rail and steamer. | Fleet of 10 Planes. A fleet of 10 multimotored planes, | some of them land planes and some | amphibians, are to be used on the in- ternational routes of the Pan-American Airway, Inc. They are radio equipped with a special receiving and transmit- ting apparatus. An air passenger terminal at the new Miami airport will provide extensive ac- commodations for the air voyagers. The Pan-American Airways, Inc., op- | erators of the new route, also holds | contracts for mail service between Miami and the Panama Canal Zcne, via Havana and the Central American | republics. The routes are a part of an extensive System of airways planned by J. T. Trippe, president of the operating company, of New York, WALLACE EDDINGER, NOTED ACTOR, DIES — . . T {pursued his medical course at Howard, Originated Title Role in “Little|from which he graduated in the class Lord Fauntleroy” at Early Age. i By the Assoclated Press. PITTSBURGH, January 8.—Wallace Eddinger, noted actor, who had been suffering from pneumonia in_ the Presbyterian Hospital here since Janu- ary 5, died early tod: NEW YORK, January 8 (£).—Wal- lace Eddinger, actor who died in Pitts- burgh early today, began his career on the stage at the age of 6 and shortly and | ing ; |and friends of the Howard University 26-Year Delivery Of Letter Blamed On Doctor’s Error ! Postal Department Avers By Physician. The Post Office Department today hit back at its critics who accuse it of being years late in delivering mail | and announced that investigation by | an inspector of its service disclosed that | the letter recently claimed to have been 26 years in transit to a ‘Washing- tonian from Harrisonburg, Va., was in | reality only two days in the depagt- | ment’s keeping, and a doctor, who had | mislaid the letter among old papers {in his cellar, was responsible for the | delay. |~ Postmaster General New. in a brief statement, asserted that ‘ninety-nine out of a hundred cases in which letters | are delayed in the malls for years are | found on investigation not to have been the fault of the post office.” | Inspector W. F. Chester was detailed |a few days ago to investigate the case of the letter said to have been mailed |26 years ago and delivered to the ad- | dressee, E. Burkholder of 153 V street | northeast, on January 3. Inquiry by | Mr. Chester revealed that Dr. H. R. | Street of 1414 Girard street northeast | had placed the letter, mailed by Burk- holder’s wife while on a visit to the Virginia city on February 2: among some old papers. Thi overed by Dr. Street on Janu- 1, 1929, and he looked up Mr. Burk- present address in the tele- ctory and suggested that the Post Office Department try 153 V street northeast | “The next day.” Inspector Chester's report said, “he took the letter to the War Depariment, where he is employed, { and remailed the letter there. The let- | ter bears the Washington postmark of January 2, 1929, at 2:30 pm., and it | was delivered' by City Carrier W. F. {Gross on January 3 at 153 V street { northeast.” HOWARD U. DEAN ACCORDED TRIBUTE! | Tablet Dedicated in Medical School to Dr. Edward A. Balloch. A bronze tablet was dedicated to Dean Edward A. Balloch in the auditorium of the medical building of Howard Uni- versity last night. The occasion marked the seventy-first anniversary of the birth of Dean Balloch and his fiftieth year of service in connection with the Howard University School of Medicine. ‘The project was launched last Spring by Miss Louise Young of Baltimore, a member of the college class of 1927 and the junior medical class. The plan called for numerous subscriptions of small proportions, so as to permit the largest possible number of persons to participate in the tribute. More than 400 peoge, including stu- dents, members of the faculty, alumni ‘Schgol of Medicine, contributed to the und. The tablet is similar in size and de- sign to the one erected in honor of Dr. Lamb in 1923. The plaque bears the following inscription: “1379-1929. To the Inspiring Man and Scholar, Ed- ward Arthur Bulloch, A. M., M. D,, Sc. D, F. A. C. 8. In Ackici'ledgement of His Unselfish and Enthusiasm, His Loyalty and Untiring Service for Half a Century, as Teacher and Dean, We, the Students, Faculty, Alumni and Friends of This School Gratefully Ded- icate This Tablet.” After completing his college training at Princeton University, Dean Bulloch of 1879, when he entered the service of the Howard University School of Medi- cine as demonstrator of anatomy. In 1890 he became lecturer in minor surgery, assistant professor of surgery in 1899 and professor of surgery in 1904, |He has been dean of the School of Medicine since 1910. The program of the dedicatory exer- ises was as follows: Piano selection, erman Smith; introductory remarks, | President Mordecai W. Johnson; ad- ldress, Dr. John W. Mitchell; music, University Glee Club; address, Dr. M. O. Dumas; piano selection, Miss Lillian | Mitchell; address, Dr. Paul E. Bartsch; | address, A. J. Sayers; address, John A. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D€ TUESDAY,- J ANUARY 8, 192 TWO DRIVERS HELD Building and Loan Official, J. P. McArdle, 69, Seriously Injured by Auto. James Patrick McArdle, 69 years old, of 2140 I street, vicé”president of the | Mutual Serial Building & Loan Asso- | ciation, is in a serious condition in Emergency Hospital from injuries sus- tained last night when an automobile | struck him as he was crossing the street. | The driver is at liberty under $300 bond, | charged with reskless driving. Hospital | physicians say Mr. McArdle passed a restful night, showing slight improve- | ment over his condition immediately | following the accident. According to police, the injured man was thrown into the air by the force of | the collision, and landed on top of the | radiator of the machine. The accident occurred at Pennsyl vania avenue and Twenty-first street. | Edward N. Anderson, 21 years old, of | 2901 Sixteenth street, the driver of the | car, took Mr. McArdle to the hospital. | Mr. McArdle'e injuries consist of pos- sible fracture of the skull, broken right leg and left arm, lacerations to his scalp and several broken ribs. el Clarence Dawson of 103 Woodbine | avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.. was arrested | by fourteenth precinct police early this morning on a charge of reckless dri ing following a collision with an auto- mobile towing another car. Miss Lil- lian Auger, 21 years old, of 514 Nine- teenth street, who was riding in the | second car, which was driven by Charles | F. Walsh of 307 Eleventh street south- west, sustained lacerations to her face. She was taken to Emergency Hospital. S AR CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. ‘The Sunday school of St. Paul M. E. Church_South will serve a turkey din: ner at 6 o'clock at the church. Enter tainment will follow. Washington Ladies' Auxiliary to the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society of Denver, Colo., will give its annual ball at the Jewish Community Center. Mrs. Morris Stein, chairman. The Business Women's Council will} meet in lecture room of the Church of | the Covenant, Rev. F. Bland Tucker of | St. John's Church, Georgetown, will have charge of the Bible class from 6:45 to 7:15 o'clock, and the Chadwick Orchestra. will feature the later prc-| gram. The District of Columbia Retail Drug- | gists' Association will meet 7:30 o’clock at the Raleigh Hotel. Interesting pro- gram. The National Genealogical Society will meet, 8 o'clock, at the Mount Pleas- ant Public Library, Prof. George M. Churchill of George Washington Uni- | versity, will speak of “The Colonies of the Far West.” The “Echo de France” will meet, 8| o'clock, at St. Paul's Hall, 1423 V street. ‘Washington Academy of Sciences will meet, 8:15 o'clock, at the Carnegie In- stitution, Sixteenth and P streets. Rob- ert S. Sosman, retiring president, will speak, Address will be followed by an- nual meeting of the academy. The Society for Philosophical Inquiry will meet 4:45 o'clock, in room 43, New National Museum. Dr. Willlam Thomas Shepherd will speak. Victory Review, No. 12, Woman's | Benefit Association, will give a benefit | card party, 8 o'clock, at 1750 Massa- chusetts avenue. Mrs. Minnigerode Andrews will be the guest-speaker, 8:30 o'clock, before the Center Forum, at the Jewish Com- | munity Center. Subject: “Thomas Jef- | ferson.” Public invited. ‘Women'’s Home Club of North Beach, Md., will meet, 8 o'clock, at Thomas | Circle Club. Mrs, H. W. Wiley will speak. District of Columbia Branch of the) League of American Pen Women will meet, 8 o'clock, at 1108 Sixteenth street. | Columbia Heights Business Men’s As- | sociation will meet tonight at 1415 1419 Park road. B. A. Levitan, presi dent, will preside. St. David's Soclety will meet, 8 o'clock, at Wilson Normal School. Pro- | gram and refreshments. | Northeast Boundary Citizens' Asso- cfation will meet, 8:30 o'clock, at Bur- ville School. Work With Air Ex- press Line. Herbert, Jr., Also to Study Technical Aviation on New Joh. Herbert Hoover, jr., radio “ham.” is turning to the plaything of his child- hoad days as his life work. | Selecting for himself a career in | radio_and_aviation, the of the President-elect on February come affiliated with the Ve Express, Inc. of Los Angel the pioneer commercial air transporta- tion companies. As technical assistant to the president, Harris M. Hanshue, voung Hoover, just 25, will direct the radio telephone communications of that company and also apply himself to technica ion. i To enter his chosen profession, Hoo- ver forsakes his professorship at the Business School of Harvard, where he is doing aviation research work under a fund created by the Guggenheim fund for the promotion of aeronautics. Like his father, he is an engineer and a graduate of Stanford University at Palo Alto, Calif. Yesterday the junior Hoover, who since his early school days has been a student of radio, was a caller at the Federal Radio Commission. It was his second visit in the past month. He discussed matters relative to his own experimental license as a radio amateur, but also took up the pending application in_the West. For about two hours he was in con- ference with Dr. J. H. Dellinger, the commission’s chief engineer, going over technical details of the new field of adio telephone communication between plane and ground. Then he conferred with Commissioner Harold A. Lafount, representing the Pacific radio zone, within whose jurisdiction the Western is operated. ago, the Western Air E: nnels in the short wave spectrum for radio telephone | communication. These a_temporary basis pending development | channels have not yet been designated. | and Hoover’s mission ostensibly was to | discuss this matter, perhaps for his own | information, as he is not yet associated with the company. He also obtained from the commission’s licensing division | a number of license blanks, to be filed | by the air express for additional chan- | s that the company evidently pro- | s to employ in the establishment of its radio telephone network. The President-elect’s son has long been active in radio. While Secretary | of Commerce, the senior Hoover once | said that it was “junior” who had awakened in him the Tadio spirit. Herbert, jr., is listed in the amateur radio log as operator of amateur Station | 6-XH, Palo Alto, Calif, the Hoover home. In 1921, he spent the entire | Summer at the radio laboratory of the | Bureau of Standards in experimental short-wave work. During that pepiod | he set up a short-wave apparatus for | communicating with amateurs of Eu- | rope in those early days, when long- distance communication by short waves was a real accomplishment. He credited with being a pioneer in long distance transmission and reception, by | dint of his constant activity in this line, | which now is shaping his career. Young Hoover is married and has a | daughter 3 years old. He left Washing- | ton last night to return to Cambridge, | where he will bring to a close his work | as an instructor. He will leave Harvard | through Washington long enough to say good-by to his parents, and reach Los Angeles by February 1, to embark on his new career. (Copyright, 1929.) Separate Veterans’ Department Urged By House Membe By the Associated Press. A move to set up a separate department of veterans' affairs, whose head would be a member of the cabinet, has been instituted in the House by Chairman John- son of the veterans’ committee. The department would handle all matters relating to veterans and its chief would have four assistant secretaries, each of whom would receive $10,000 of the Western Air Express to establish | radio telephone communication contacts | and Georgia avenues. toward the end of this month, passing | LEGION CH'EF I | | HERBERT HOOVER, JR. HAVENNER CALLS COUNCL MEETING Federation of Citizens’ Asso- | ciations Convoked for First Time Since Last Fall. Dr. George C. Havenner, president of ere granted on | the Federation of Citizens' Associations. | today called a meeting of the Citizen: of airways communication. The actual | Advisory Council Thursday night at 8 ' o'clock in the office of Engineer Com- | missioner William B. Ladue in the Dis- | trict Building. It will be the first ses- | sion of the council since last Fall and | the first meeting under the leadership | of Dr. Havenner, who, by virtue of election to the presidency of the fed- eration, became chairman ex-officio of the council. | Although the council has not met for | vearly four months, the members have | | not been inactive. Constituted as com- | mittees, the councilm:n have consid- | ered a number of bills affecting the Dis- | trict introduced at the current session | of Congress, reports on which will bey submitted at the Thursday meeting. These include bills to establish a code | of law for the District, to amend the | | YOUNG HOOVER TURNS TO RADIO | New Soap Is Found AS LIFE WORK, LEAVING HARVARD| As Laundry Help = | AHEWDENTSSW of President-Elect to Moves to Strike | Chemists Declare Inven- i tion Will Do Away With Jashing Machine. ‘ By the Assoclated Press | | SAN FRANCISCO, January 8| { Many bolled-shirt parties programed { for San Francisco may be compelled | to turn very informal if a threatened " strfke of Chinese laundry workers is carried out. | . These workers, numbering hundreds | and used by thousands of citizens, an- { nounced yesterday they wanted an 11- | hour day, instead of the 15 they have ! been working, and Saturday afternoon off. The workers are members of the | Sok Chinese Laundry Workers' Asso- * clation. | They want an answer to their de- mands by January 11 Meanwhile, it's an ill wind that blows no soap bubbles. The same papers that i carried announcement of the strike | threat carried a story of a new syn- | ! thetic soap invented by San Francisco | chemists. | | This soap, its inventors claim, does | the work of a washing machine and !a scrub brush. All one has to do, if | one is bathing, is throw in some soap . and sit still. In a few minutes one is | ! clean. —Consult an E Makers of Eye G by Preseription Exclusively Since 1899 act authorizing the Commisisoners to ! || close certain streets in the District, to | peotect the title of motor vehicles in the | District, to define the term of regis tered nurse, and to exempt from taxa- | tion certain property of the National | Society, United Daughters of 1812. i Dr. Havenner will be the guest speak- er at an informal entertainment to- | night of the Sixteenth Street Heights | Citizens' Association in the North- | minster Presbyterian Church at Alaska | He plans to talk | on the work of the citizens' associa- tions of the District. URGES BIG NAVY Paul V. McNutt Addresses Rich- mond Group on President's Address, By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va, January 8.—Paul V. McNutt, national commander of the American Legion, told business men and Legionnaires at a luncheon here to- | day that the atest practical step toward the maintenance of peacc which the United States can take at (P:us time is the strengthening of thc “Conservative as the President of the United States needs to be in his publte utterances in dealing with subjects of But it won't do the ironing. In Mexico 144 cotton mill | and only 1 idle. are busy For Impaired Vision e Physician Eyesight conserva- tion should begin in infancy and be ob- served all through life. ® EDMOND == O PTICIAN—= 915 Fifteenth Street WASHINGTON sses and Spectacles Let Us Emphasize the Im- portance—to YOU—of this Clearance Sale It’s a senii-annual affair—that gives you unusual opportunities—both in the “big things” of the ward- robe—Suits, Overcoats and Topcoats—and the “small wears’’ as well. The reductions are genuine, and the selection from regular stock. Suits and Overcoats Include Fashion Park, Charter House, Richard Austin (London) and Mode—truly the world’s best makes—here and abroad. The Suits §35, $38 and $40 $0Q).75 grades Reduced to $45 and $50 grades 339_75 $47.75 Reduced to ...... $55 and $60 grades 55775 $65.75 Reduced to . ... .. $65 and $70 grades Reduced to .. .... $75, $85 & $90 .grades Reduced to The Topcoats 35, $38 & $40 i :radel Reduced to $29 75 45, $50 & $55 . :rndet Reduced to $39 75 60 and $65 grades i ?Zed::ed to grn .e. $49 75 $75 and $85 grades Reduced to The Overcoats $35 and $40 grades $29.75 Reduced to . .. ... $48 sl e grades SUEETE $49.75 Reduced to . ... .. $55 and $60 grades $55.75 $65.75 Reduced to ... ... $65 and $70 grades $75.75 $95.75 Reduced to . ..... $75 and $80 grades Reduced to ... ... $85 and $100 grades Reduced to $125 and $135 grades Reduced to No Charge for Alterations | international import, there was no mis: | taking the warning of his address of Armistice da the commander said. thereafter originated the title role in |Martin; address, B. F. Jones; music, “Little Lord Fauntleroy,” which he | University Glee Club; presentation of Gt Gl Ly P y. Y played for two and one half years. FUTURE. would be provided at a similar He was born in_ Albany, N. Y. in 1881, his parents, Lawrence and May Eddinger, both being in the theatrical Pprofession. After a successful career in child roles, he was sent to school. He returned to the stage in 1902. He made his first appearance as a full-fledged star in 1910, playing the_title. role in “Bobby Burnit.” One of his greatest successes was “Captain Applejack.” He was twice married. His first wife was Mrs. Ivy La Grove, whom he mar- ried in 1912. They were divorced in 1920. In 1924, he married Margaret Lawrence, the ac who recently ap- plied for a divorce. FURNACE FIRES SCHOOL. Flames Destroy Building in Ports- mouth, Ohio—ZLoss, $135,000. PORTSMOUTH, Ohio, January 8 (#). —The second big fire in four days to- day destroyed the Union Street School Building, a landmark, at a loss of $1' 000. Last Friday flames caused a $200, 000 loss to the Kresge store and the store of the A Co., dealers in women’s wearing arel An overheated furnace is believed to have caused the school fire FTEE A MILK STRIKE PENDING. Producers in Chicago Area Refuse to Pay Farmers' Prices. CHICAGO, January 8 (#),—Definite indications that a strike of milk pro- ducers in the Chicago area impends were seen yesterday, when 150 farmer members of the Pure Milk Association met at Woodstock to consider action. W. C. McQueen, president of association, described the sentiment as generally favoring a strike if Chicago dealers refuse to the $285 per hundredweight demanded by the farm- ers. A vote will be taken locally throughout the region today and Wed- ay the association will convene again at Woodstock for final decision projected strike, Me: ributors were refusiz n $2.50 per hundredy their supply and asserting they felt no shortage. MRS. VANDERBILT, Suffering From Attack of Influenza. Nev., January 8 (&) Vanderbilt, jr., wife of spaper iher and rhilt Pneumonia RENO Corneli former ne to the Vand 10 al irom an his wife influenza nderbilt rom ~ the | IR, ILL. After was taken suffering | tablet, Miss N. Louise Young:; accer - |ance of the tablet for the university, | Dr. Emmett J. Scott. The University of Michigan Men's | Club will meet for luncheon tomorrow, — [KING HAS QUIET DAY, RETAINS STRENGTH i British Public Accepts Reports of { Attending Physicians as Assuring | Sovereign's Complete Recovery. { By the Associated Press. { LONDON, January 8.—The British ! public today accepted the complete re- covery of King George as a foregone conclusion. The tense solicitude which formerly characterized the crowds around the gates of Buckinham Palace has disappeared. Last night's bulletin said: “The King had a quiet day. There is no change to report in his majesty's condition. The next hulletin will be issued tomorrow evening.” It was explained for the benefit of the public that the words “no change” did not imply that the King's condition was unsatisfactory, but meant that he was holding his own. It was expected today that in the long climb to con- | valescence—a stage which has not yet been reached—there might be several days when no definite improvement would be recorded. As long as there is |no setback and the King maintains his strength it was felt that doctors would not be dissatisfied. The return to the issurance of only one bulletin a day, as at Christmastime, was taken as an indication of the doc- tors’ confidence. It was understood that King George's condition was much about the same this morning. SHORT WAVES DEADLY. JENA, Germany, January 8 (#).— Prof. Esau, who has becn experimenting with ultrashort radio waves, is reported to have discovered that they will kill small animals upon contact and will destroy bacteria cultures. This has led to the hypothesis that they may be put to_surgical purposes. With an entire transmitter occupying only the space contained in a cigar box he has succeeded in sending 250 miles without an aerial. Confesses Murder of Two. BLAIRSVILLE, Pa.. January 8 () | District Attorney L. E. Miller late yes : | terday announced that John S. Kinnan of Black Lick, near here, whose wife and 14-month-old daughter were found 12:30 p.m., at the Cosmos Club. Capitol Hill W. C. T. U. will meet to- morrow, 2 pm. in Waugh Church, | Third and A streets northeast. Parkview Citizens’ Association will meet tomorrow, 8 p.m, at Parkview Platoon School. George E. Keneipp, manager, D. C. A. A. A, will speak of “School Boy Patrol: Refreshments. The Rotary Club will meet tomorrow, | 12:30 pm. for luncheon at Willard Hotel. Rev. M. P. G. Leonard, D. S. O,, associate padre of “Toc H.,” will speak. | - i The Woman's Auxiliary and Sunday | School Institute of the diocese of Wash- ' ington will hold a joint missionary | meeting January 15, at 8 p.m., in Epiph. any parish hall. Mrs. Willlam Wylie wife of the Archdeacon of the Domini. can Republic, will speak. Subject: | “Spreading the Kingdom in the Land of Columbus.” Burnside Corps, No. 4, W. R. C., will | hold an installation of officers tomor- | row, 8 pm, at Grand Army Hall. District _of Columbla_ League of American Pen Women.—The civic com- | mittee has arranged program for Thurs- day, 8 pm. when Dorsey W. Hyde, secretary of Washington Chamber of Commerce, will suggest topics for special articles on' the civic development of the Capital. Kismet Council, Royal Arcanum, will meet tomorrow, 8 p.m., at 935 Grant place. Speaker: I S. Childs. ¥ — Following a 24-hour strike, a rail- | way in Paris agreed to increase wages and at the same tilme to raise fares to cover the amount of the increase. GOODMAN For Good Meats We assume the respon- sibility for your satisfac- tion with what we send you. Seclection of meat is more or less of a lottery BUT W KNOW- only w we are sure of gets a place in our stock. We are experts—in meats and fowls, No matter where you live— Goodman service will reach you —four phones—Col. 1656-78.9, slain in_the Kiunan home yesterday. had confessed to the slaying, saying he * | did it because his wife “nagged” him. Two charges of murder were lodged against Kinnan. Mrs. Kinnan and the child were shot while sleeping. | E. T. Goodman Arcade Market salary. In addition, the proposed bureau_would take over the Na- tional Home for Disabled Volun- teer Soldiers and the Burcau of Pensions. “The President told us that the Wash- | ington Conference of 1922 has b come a failure, because only the United | States has lived up to the spirit of the agreement as to the 5-5-3 ratio in nava: out mo: wes less $8.85 No Foot too Long No Foot too Short No Foot too Wide No Foot too Narrow 612 13th Street 14th & Park Rd. S " Edmonston & Co. Exclusive Washington Agency PHYsIcAL (ULTURE SHOES Style Plus Comfort Physiulture Shoes A rare opportunity and of Three Groups 10 EdmonstoneTo. = /NCORPORATED === No Branch Stores CARL M. BETZ, Mgr. | - strength’.’ | REDUCED standing importance. The st itable” shoes women ar. Lirst in style—match- in comfort—“corrective.” $9 85 o West Side— Bet. F & G Sts. - Finest of silks, quard, etc., separa lars to match..... radium, jac- 3 for $20.00 Were $8.50, $10 and $12 Best of madras, etc., plaited and negligee, with separate 53.95 ollars to match, at i 3 for $11.50 Were $5, $6 and $§350 y Fine madras, efc., soit and stiff bosoms, separate collars to match or attached $2.39 collars 3 for $7.00 Were $3, $3.50, $4 and $4.50 Shirts with collar attached, separate collar or neckband. $2, $2.50 and $2.75 $1.69 values 3 for $4.50 Tmported English Broadcloth, plain shades and white; ne band and collar at- $1.89 tached 3 for $5.00 Were $2.50 Best! aradel 6& Gocaont | cloth, white only; neck- band and collar attached $3'19 3 for $9.00 All Manhattan Shirts Are Reduced Hats Small lot of Mode Soft Were $5, $6 and $7 Small lot of Henry !};;;«:h (English) Soft l»‘.ch 35.95 "'Were $10 and $12 Broad-* Neckwear Included are Welsh-Marget- son, of London, Paul Olmer et Cie, of Paris, Resilo, and our special domestic makes. Cut Silks and Knitted Silks. $1.00 Cravats ... 3 for $2.00 +-$L15 3 for $3.00 and $2.50 Cravats.... $l.39 3 for $4.00 $2.89 3 for $8.00 $1.50 Cravats . .50, $4, 85 and $6 Cravats Lounging Rcbes vere $8.75 $12.75 $21.75 $32.75 S0 §49.75 Brocades, that $11 and $13.50 $15 and $16.50 Silk lined, that Were $25 and $35 $40, $45 and $50 Silk- lined Robes $65, $7 § and Silk-lined Robes Union Suits Mode Athletic Union 8@ Suits, in madras, etc...... 3 for $2.50 Were $1.50 and $2.00 The Mode—F at Eleventh A4

Other pages from this issue: