Evening Star Newspaper, January 27, 1929, Page 19

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)

VALES MINE TR PLANSAREHALED Prince Will See Distress Among 300,000 Jobless for Himself. BY HARRY B. WELLS. By Radio to The Star. LONDON, January 26.—With the Prince of Wales' decision to make an Informal automobile tour of the prin- cipal coal flelds, in order to observe for | himself the distress among the 300,000 Jjobless miners and their families, the heir to the throne, in the consensus here, is again to set a record for his instinct for “doing the right thing. The news of the Prince’s forthcoming visit has been received with the deep- est satisfaction by the population of the | stricken areas, who from both an economic and the human viewpoint | constitutes one of the stiffest post-war | problems this country has to face. The Prince plans to visit the people in their homes, to view the derelict collieries and to observe the whole- sale stagnation into which the whole industrial areas have sunk, and then to use his personal knowledge of the situation in a further effort to con- centrate the national sympathy on the miners’ plight. Ever since the Prince made his memorable dash from the THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, |SCIENTISTS HERE |Standards Bureau Physicist | Says 5,000 Now Able to | Grasp Theory. i, Prussian Academy to Release Three-Page Work in Next Few Days. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. Approximately a dozen men in Wash- | ington are awaiting nervously the thrill | that comes once in a lifetime. | It will be realized in the next few | {days when the Prussian Academy of | Sciences releases a_ three-page pamph- |let_of mathematical symbols. | For at least 99 per cent of the world, | | these obscure equations will have no | meaning whatever. For the few, the | Greek letters and algebraic signs will be like chords of celestial music swell- ing and diminishing through the cor- ridors of the stars. It is with a decidedly accthetic an- icipation that these dozen men in | Washington await the publication of | a unified field theory” by Alfred Ein- stein. | | Contribution Hailed. | “Einstel id one of them, “already | has rendered a distinguished service to | humanity even if there never is any | way to make practical use of his EAGERLY WAIT FOR NEW EINSTEIN PAMPHLET DR. CHESTER SNOW. ity for men and women because they | cannot experience it. Lead In One Direction. Attempts to visualize a hyperdimen- sional concept, says Dr. Snow, “are futile and lead only in one direction— to insanity.” The mathematician plunges into this world in a sealed car of formulac and doesn't try to look out of the windows during the trip. He rides across vast, weird distances with- out the slightest idea of the scenery | that such thickness exists. minute into assuming that the wall has no thickness simply because we do not see the thickness. That, ordinarily, is as far as we go—although we may recognize a fourth dimension to the wall, its continuance in time. We can visualize the thickness of the wall with certainty without any sensual evidence ‘We simply take it for granted because our minds are constituted that way. Yet, as Dr. Snow explains, we have | very good evidence that, even with the | assumption of depth which is not up-| held by our eyes, our actual picture is | inadequate. 'We assume thi; depth without questioning because our ex- perience has taughi us it is there, even when we do not see it. The only rea- son why we do not assume other di- mensions is because we have had no ex- perience with other dimensions. We | have no possible way_of imaging what they would be like. This merely illus- | trates the inability of our own minds. | Life in the world has gotten along very | well for millions of years in three dj- | mensions and has had no incentive to | evolve a mind capable of Iaur-dimen-i sional experience. | Einstein found that certain natural | phenomena could be explained more simoly and with fewer hiatuses in the explanations they could be con- ceived of as happening in a four-di. mensional world. There was, for in- stance, the phenomenon of gravita- tion. Newton had expressed it very neatly—that every particle of matter in the universe was attracted to every other particle by a force proportional to the masses and inversely proportional | to the square of the distances apart. What this attraction was he didn't | know. He had to assume that it ws | rescue with universe constructed mathe- "D. C, JANUARY 27, 1929—PART 1. some mystical force inherent in maf ter. It simply acted that way. Obscure Phenomena Observed. The Newtonian law seemed to ex- plain everything at first. But as the years went on certain obscure phe- nomena were observed which didn't fit. They chailenged the physicists until Einstein in 1915 advanced the picture of a fourth dimensional structure of the universe into which these anomalies, as well as all the other phenomena of gravitation, would fit perfectly. The new theory was capable of verifica- tion by exact observation and stood up | well under tests. It demanded a universe which nobody ever had seen or ever coud hope to isualize in the wildest flights of imag- ination. It was way out beyond the circumscribed circle in which human beings live. Bui that didn‘t worry the | mathematical physicists. They simply | admitted its existence without any ef- forts to visualize it. They gave it a symbol and put it in equations and then worked ahead to other symbols and other equations. Of course, all of them didn’t accept it. From the first certain incongruous fe: tures were pointed out. Similar to gravitation in some respects is another mysterious force — electro - magnetism. This also Einstein sought to explain by the structure of his four dimensional universe itself rather than by any in- herent force in matter., He didn't suc- ceed very convincingly. Then he him- self was puzzled when he found errors in his own equations. Other mathematicians stepped to the matically so that they would fit both the facts of gravitation and electr magnetism. Notable among these werc’ two European mathematicians, Weyl and De Sitter, who provided five-dimen- sional universes. Still there were ob- scurities and Einstein was not satisfied. He set to work himself behind locked doors with his formulae, his violin and his piano. Other men all over the' world went to work at the same time to construct mathematical universes from | the structure of which the observed | facts of gravitation and electro- magnetism—the two architects of the universe—would naturally follow. Some | of this work was done in Washington. Five-dimensional and even ~-dimen- sional universes were proposed. Once the mathematician has crossed the boundaries of the 3 dimensions of human experience the sky is the limit. He can have 20 dimensions if the exact calculations in mathematical symbols lead that far before coming to a logical conclusion. Einstein on Gravitation. | Einstein had described the phenom- enon of gravitation as due to the fact that a mass distorted a four-dimensional | space-time continuum and that all other | masses coming into that vicinity, since they must keep on going through space- time, must follow the curved surfaces | into which space-time had been dis- | torted. It was like rolling down hills | of space rather than being attracted | by any mystical force. In the new theory Einstein provides for a space-time structure which will | explain electro-magnetism also in terms | of natural relationships. It identifies gravitation and electro-magnetism as different aspects of one central phenom- enon—space-time itself, Everything Ise in the uni with per fect logic, from the structure of the uni- verse. This, says Washington mathematical physicists, 1s all that can be said, until the Prussian Academy of Sciences pub- lishes the actual equations upon which the man whom many of them consider the supermentality of the age has la- bored for the past 10 years. The standing of the relativity theory says Dr. Henry D. Hubbard, assistant director of the Bureau of Standards, gl:ls i all | been especially curious since la: when Prof. Michelson of the University of Chicago told the American Optical | Sagjety in Washington of the results of the repetition of his experiment on the | drift of ether upon which the whole theory was built up. “The field equation,” says Dr. Hub- bard, “have not been satisfied, but the theory of relativity, which resuited from them, appears to be more confirmed than ever.” Dr. Michelson himself was unwilling to admit the Einstein contention that | there was no ether, but only a four di- mensional space. To explain the phe nomena of. light, Dr. Hubbard beli it still is necessary to assume the exist ence of a hypothetical ether—something filling all space, the nature of which is unpicturable, but which is far more ten- uous than the most tenuous of gasses, far more elastic than rubber and far more rigid than steel. But this, he , need not disturb the validity of Ein- stein’s relativity. In England, it is said, 56 per cent of all traffic accidents occur when the autos involved are being driven at a rate o 10 miles an hour or less. 19 | TWO AMERICANS ESCAPE IN CORFU PLANE CRASH | { U. 8. Banker of Paris and Daug ! ter Sate—Two Killed, Two Hurt' as Machine Hits Rocks. | By the Assoctated ress. 3 ATHENS, January 26. — Charlés Holder, an American banker of Parid, and his daughter escaped injury whem an Italian hydro-airplane of the Piraeus-Brindisi Service hit rocks the northwest coast of Corfu befor dawn today. ‘Two other persons on the plane were killed and two were injured, the second pilot and the telegraph op~ erator being the victims. 3 Mr. Holder and his daughter were at a hotel in Corfu tonight and they ex- | pected to embark on a steamer for Brindisi tomorrow. He had been ads vised by friends not to take the air trip, but had insisted uppn going. The accident was ascribed to a dense fog which led the pilot to descend. He was unable to pick out a suitable land~ ing place and the machine hit the rocks instead of open water. The accident | occurred near the famous Monastery of Palaiokastrizza. Two Soldiers Are Retired. Sergt. Chow Big, an Indian scout af | Fort Huachuca, Ariz., and Master Sergt. | George W. Murrow, Tank School, Fort | Leonard Wood, Md., have been placed |on the Army retired list on their own | applications. Each of these soldiers has | bad more than 30 years’ acti - Wy | theories. He has made a great aesthetic | contribution. The world will never be | |50 dull again for the intellectual man. | The new theory will be beautiful.” | Friends of Einstein have described | the new theory as “reducing all physics 1\ outside. We live in a world of three dimen- sions, Dr. Snow explained, with a vague possibility of realizing a fourth dimen- sion. Yet these three, or even four, dimensions are not inhérent in nature heart of Africa, at the critical stage of King George's illness, he has been deeply concerned about the people in the long, silent mining valleys in South Wales and North England, . . \ . \ \ 1 | % \\\\\\\\\\ I\ iy = = = W A \ / Wy = \ \ = \\ = and it isn't to much to say that since | his return to England no single man | has done more to bring home to the nation the sufferings of the unem- ployed miners and to stimulate practi- cal expression of public sympathy. the message broadcast mation. wide on Christmas day he made elo- guent appeal in behalf of the Lord Mayor of London’s miners’ distress fund with the result that the total fund has now reached more than $2,500,000— with the government granting a pound sterling from the national exchequer for every pound contributed by the public. ‘The Prince of Wales has always shown & deep personal interest in the coal mining industry. In 1919 he made a tour of the Rhondda Valley of South Wales and went down to the cymmer pit, where he saw every phase of the miner’s life. Here in one of the tunnels a miner had written in chalk on the wall, “Welcome to our soldier-prince— long may he live.” The Prince, asking for a piece of chalk, immediately wrote | first theory, which disproved the New- to one law; from which everything else/ can be derived.” In 1915 when Einstein published I{is tonian law of gravity and contained revolutionary implications regarding the structure of the universe, the German hysicist is quoted as saying that there are only 10 men in the world capable of understanding this.” But since then, says Dr. Chester Snow, mathematical physicist of the Bureau of Standards, there has been “an Einstein renaissance.” He be- lieves there are about 5000 persons now in the world who can follow every step of the mathematical reasoning and a great many others who can grasp the general trend of it. Both the old and new theories re- quire one to grasp the idea of a four or five dimensional world. Such a step is posible only to one endowed with a mathematical imagination. A world of more than thre® dimensions cannot be visualized because it is so utterly outside the possible experience of any human being with the limited underneath, “Thank you, Edward, prince.” . (Copyright. 1920.) human endowment of sense organs. Such a world never can have any real | having only | and breadth. Yet, although we do not 'STOPS itself but in the structure of our own minds. We look, for instance, at_the wall of a building and we see a plane two dimensions—length see it, thicknes: we sense a third dimension, We are not fooled for a FALLING HAIR BumsteadsWormSyru ‘Where IT NEVER “To children an angel of merey.” directions are followed. FAILS, Despite scarcity normous cost of SANTONIN, it contains full dose. Stood sixty years' fest. Sold everywhere or by mail, 500 a bottle. Est. C. A, Voorhees, M. D,, Philadelphis Two Things that Everybody Ought to Do, Right Away! First, Subscribe as And come to this imp(irtant Shoe Sale at Hahn’s! We bought a manufacturer’s overstock of women's fine Spring shoes and offer them at huge savings. Libérally as you can to Washington’s New “COMMUNITY_ CHEST” Included are styles like these pictured —and other and tie effects. New strap, buckl Many “Hug-Tite” Arch-Supporting Shoes—regu- larly $5 and $6—in the lot— plenty of all sizes. Including als Most of our own surplus stocks— popular suede, kid, calf and patent dress and street shoes. Now further marked down forimmediate clearance. At Two “Hahn” Stores Only e 7th & K 3212 14th [ofol——=o]———=8l——=|alc———=|0l——n[——=|lo]—=[o]c——=1|p]———|o|———[o|c———=lo|————|a[———=[o] ———[0] ——=[0] —=]n] 1$2.50 Part-Wool Blankets Double-Bed Size $1.39 each Size 66x80 inches; choice of rose, blue, gold, tan and gray block plaids; weight 2 pounds. First Floor Women's $2 to $3 Gloves § Imported Glace Kid. with fancy cuffs and embroidered _backs: machine menders. Al sales final. Fl 39¢ Colore.;lur;l'owels, 4 for § Colored Turkish Towels, size 22x44 inches; double thread; blue, gold, rose and green. First Floor. 39¢ Imported Broadcloth, 5 yds. $ Imported English Broadcloth. 36 inches wide; perfect quality; full pieces. White and colors, First Floor. 69¢ Wool Tint Bloomers, Zflf‘or’ Sk Women's Rayon Stripe Bloomers. s: Tegular and extra sizes. Perfect qual- irst Floor. Krinkle $2 Bedspreads § snuo?ed Spreads, size 81x105 inches: rose, blue, gold and green stripes. First Fl $1 Fringed Window Shades, 2 for § Cholce of green, ecru and_ white: size 3x6 ft.0 perfect quality; several style fringes. First ioor. 69c Brocade Satin, 3 yds Brocade Sport Satin, 36 inches wide: all col- ors and white. For siips, etc. First Floor. s $1 Terry Cloth, 2 yds. Ly ide, in new Spring patte dowor "doo; drapes. "Pertcl Guallty and ‘sun First_Fle 50c Part-wool Vests, 3 for § With rayon stripes: sizes 36 to 50; perfect avatity: Teevelsss. > First Floor, 50c Esmond Baby Blankets, 3 for § Size 30x40. pink or blue with white stripe border. _ First Floor. 59¢ Radioux Chiffon, 3 yds. § ds_prints; new 1920 patterns 3 ebiof ubprost.” Firsi Blsor. and colors:_tul $1.98 and $2.50 Values Felts and Crochets, in a brand new as- sortment of clever new ‘ styles for women and misses — all sought light and dark shades. 1 head sizes. At this low price one can have several smart hats without Ieeling extravagant. Kaufman's, Second Floor $1 Double Bed Sheets, 2 for § Pull _bleached, standard brand; run of the mill. Fiest Floor. s 29¢ Pillowcases, 6 for 3 dard make: ' perfect quality; bicuthed, thret-fnen nem. First Fioos 59¢ Sunfast Cretonnes, 4 for $ Yard wide, in new Spring patterns, valance to match. First F $1 Part-wool Union Suits, 2 for $ tripe. sleeveless and knee length, exlen sy, rosular and extra sipes. First loor, P R DOLLAR Sale Shoes Women's 4-buckle Galoshes, all sizes. V:omen‘l Leather Slippers, 3 Boys’ and Girls’ Shoes, 7 to 2. ‘Women’s Storm Rubbers, 2 pairs for $1. Men’s Storm Rubbers $1.59 Hemstitched Sheets $ 81x99 extra length f ble beds; plain, hematitched and sehllobed: Tun ot The mh ; $1.50 Feather Pillows Bed Pillows. 20x28 size—fancy featherproof ticking; new curled feather flling. First Floor. $2 to $3.50 Lace Panels $ Filet or Cable Net., with silk fringe: 40 and rds_lon Fir: I 45 _inches wide. 214 va t_Floor. 19¢ Ginghams § l 10 yards for Dress _Ginghams, 32 inches wide, ‘neat checks' and plaids; pretty colors. 69c Rayon & $ cotton, and Silk Hose; assorted black. Slight irregulars. inches wide, up to 5 ft. 3 for Wool Hose, 3 prs. ‘Women's Rayon colors, also Window Shades $l 3 for ‘white, ivory, ecru and Slight irregul; ,Drive Begins Mon- February 6th. 39c¢ Table Covers Stenciled Ollcloth, size; twelve attractive patterns. Tuesday—No Mail or Items Advertised Here on Sale Monday and HARRY KAUFMAN: 1316 to 1326 Seventh St. N.W. Men’s Suits and Overcoats Half Price $25 Suits and Coats. . .. .$12.50 $30 Suits and Coats. . . . .$15.00 $35 Suits and Coats. . ...$17.50 Phone Orders Filled Spring’s Newest! nsembles Real $10 and & Dresses $12.50 Values $6.95 The woman or miss in search of a good ooking up-to-the-minute outfit will certainly find something to her own liking from this as- sortment of cleverly made Ensembles and Dresses. ? . Ensembles of all-wool tweeds, in various mix- tures, combined with silk crepe blouse with frill— choige of three-quarter or short jackets, finished with belts. All the newest styles are 'shown in these dresses, flared, tiered, plaited and ruffled effects, of flat crepes, crepe de chine and georgettes. Colors include violet, purple, blues of many shades, tans, greens, reds, black, etc. Sizes 16 [ to 44. 25c¢ Dress Prints, 6 yds. $ Yard wide, fast colors; pretty new Spring de- signs and colors; full pieces. First Floor. $ 89c Comfort Batts, 2 for Double-bed size, pure white cotton, 2-pound weight. First Fl $1 Celanese Satin, 11/, yds. $ d wide, all newest shades, for bedspreads, lows, "siips. " @raperics. eic pertect. First l""'29: School Hose, 5 prs. for § hildren’s Derby Ribbed Hose, all colors and DSk, s 6 o 10: Dertect quality, First Floor. $2 Picot-top SilkMHo:e hmil , sheer ¢ welEhEy sl fromn top. to toe. Fifst Fioor. Seco Silk Hose, thrs.’ leSfl : poln o I B T e $2 Mattress Covers Sl ble-bed size-—good grade unbleached sheet- 1ng retecdon Tor- satircsses. ~ First. Floo Women’s $1 Underwear, 2 for $ ‘Winter-weight _separate garments—choice of several styles. First Floor. $1.25 Celanese Voile, 11/, yds. § 40 inches wide, beautiful new printed designs; guaranteed washable, First Floor. $1 Chamosuede Glove‘s, 2 pr;y|$ i 4 oy cul v aade g sie. “Firet Floor. $1.29 Longcloth, Ten Yards § Yard-wide English Longeloth, soft chamois finish grade. Plnl‘mr. $1.50 Plaid Blankets, Each § various colorings. perfect ed size. First Floos Flannel, 8 Plain white and striped effect quality. 'First Floor. 39c Hemstitched Towels, 5 for § Fan stitched Towels, blue, pink and w0ld Bordersr 10398 then Kise. Firss Floor. 19¢ Dress Ginghams, 7 yds. § ide; ks and plaids fn new Soving shades; x}n?&fi.& Fies? Floor. Children’s 50c Hose, 4 prs. ‘Winter-weight Golf Hose, fancy turnover tops; new Jacauard pacterns. First Floor. Boys’ 79¢ and 89c Pants, 2 prs. $ Sturdy- cloth, in dark patterns; stronsly A to 15 years. Sweaters and Lumbetjacks $ Por boys—Woolen Sweaters and Warm Lum- bcl’)ltk’l sizes 6 to 16 years.—I Boys' Col irst Floor, 69c and 89c Blouses, 2 for § attached style: fast-color materials; 15 years—First ¥ % Men’s Ribbed Union Suits $ ‘Medium and heavy weights: fine quality, per- fect; sizes 36 to 46.—First Floo: Men’s $1.50 & $2 Sampi‘e Gloves $ 4 Medium and heavy welghts: fine quality, per- ¢ Floor. bk m!ifl:‘n’(: 315.6 Overalls $ made with bib; blue denim. white bac sizes 32 to 42 st_Floor. 220 DOLLAR DAY IN BARGAIN BASEMENT $9.95 Mattresses $7.65 Just 50 to sell at this low price—filled with new rolled strongly tufted; covered with art ticking; all sizes. 25¢ Cretonne 6 yards £ $l Attractive patterns and colors. 39¢ Felt-Base Sl Runner, 4 yds. 18 inches wide; plain and fig- Feltbase Mats 1 4 for 4 59¢ Felt-base Cover- 1 ing, 3 sq. yds. 22x36 inch size: and carpet patterns. Trregulars cut from full rolls, 2 ds. wide. edges; neat '1 45-inch Kaufman's—Second Floor Men’s 79¢ Work Shirts, 2 for $ Amoskeat chambray, collar attached, two pockets and triple stitched. Sizes 1413 to 16%z. irst Floor. Men’s $1 and $1.50 Shirts, 2 for $ Of broadcloth, mostly collar attached: fine §rade: some slightly soiled. = Sizes 13%a to 17.— irst. Floor, Men’s $1.69 Pants $ Gray cottonade, good, serviceable quality; strongly made: sizes 30 to 40.—First Floor, Men’s 55¢ Hose, 3 prs. Fancy silk-and-rayon and silk,/ assortment of patterns; some slight irregulars.—First Floor. Men’s $1.95 Sweaters Sport stvle. with V neck, in heather mi; : sizes 36" (0 40 —First Floor, Tehiner mistures Men’s Ribbed Underwear, 2 for § Ecru color; shirts and drawers; perfect qual- 1ty; sizes 33 to 46.—First Floor, ' 9 Men’s $2 to $3 Hats One and two of a kind; fi lity;. all 3 sizes” 6% to Tia.—Firss. Flogrs ¥ Sl colors “Men’s $1.50 Pajamas elette P - ; e phajamas, Tayon {rog-trimmed; all Children’s $1.49 to $2 Hats § Felt and velvet in assorted colors and styles; some with contrast trimming. Second Floor. Girls’ 69c Flannelette Wear, 2 for $ Nightgowns, slips, sleeping garments and pa- amas; sizes 2 to 12 years. Second Floor. ’59c Br'dc’h & Sateen Slips, 3 for $ Pink. peach and white; strived sateen or k;g.:;gclotge; hemstitched tops; all sizes. Second Women’s $1.25 Fine Gowns $ Lingerie cloth, imported embroidery trimmed: hand-embroidered crepe: lace and satin trim- med tops. Second Floor. Baby 49c Creepers, 4 for § Plain colors and prints: contrasting color DIDING; sizes 1, 2 and '3 years. ~Second Floor. Girls’ 79¢ Dresses, 2 for § Sizes 7 to 14 years, neat prints; fast colors; nicely trimmed. Second Floor- - $1.69 Rayon Satin Slips High lustrous. close woven twilled quality: Fhite. pink, peach and tan; full ot Second 21.39 Lingerie an(} lsnyon Slips $ Lingerfe with ha; 1 I size: 1 n pink. peach. nile and white: hi hems; regular and’extra sizes. Second Floor 50c Flannelette Bloomers, 3 for $ For women, neat stri 3 well made. Second Flogp, CTCCtsi ful cut and Bloomers and Step-ins, 2 for § Rayon-stripe Voile, pink, . orchid, nile and' white: others of white 1lagerie Slothe" Sese ond Floor. $40 Suits and Ccats. . ..$20.00 No Charge for Alterations 59cCrepe &Nainsook Gowns, 3for $ Soft finish slipover style gowns, shirred front, full cut; pastel shades.” Second Floor. Child’s 50c Underwear, 3 for § Vests and Pants, winter-weight ribbed grade; sizes 2 to 12 vears, Second Floor. 79¢ & $1 Rayon Underwear, 2 for § Perfect and slight irregulars; flatlock seams: bloomers, vests. chemise and panties. Pastel shades. 'Second Floor. 69¢c Extra-size Gowns, 2 for § Soft-finish nainsook, white and pink; made with shirred fronts. Second Floor. $ 59¢ Panty Dresses, 3 for An assortment of pretty prints: all light col- ors; sizes 2 to 5 years only. Second Floor. 79c to $1 Sample Bandeaux, 4 for $ Pink, white, nile, orchid, satin. silk and satin stripes; sizes 36 10.4 . Second Floor. 50c Extra-size Bloomers, 3 for $ _crepe, in pink, peach and white. plain and flowered: others of nainsook. Second Floor. 79¢ Emb. Flounce Slips, 2 for § Good grade white nainsook: neat designs; all regular sizes. Seeond Floor. $ : New Spring Blouses Of white broadcloth, with fancy rayon collar and tie: sizes 36 to 44. Second Fleor. sses $ 7 to 14 yr. Cindere| and broadeloths: all Second Assorted new prints newest styles: assorted sizes. Secon: T 2 for § 79¢ Lace-top Slips, 2 Soft-fnish nainsook: handmade lace top an: Medallion trimmed; hip hem: sizes 36 to 4. Second Floor. Girls’ $2 Butterfly Skirts Pull plaited, + atract Great Savings for Infants’ $1 Day Muslin Gertrudes. emb. trimmed Muslin_Crib Sheets.............. Pillowcases, plain and ' hemstitche Esmonq_Biankets. size 30x10.... s1 Renben Rubber Pants, all cols.i perfect. 8 for $1 Ravon Stripe Shirts..... SIE for §1 Flannelette Gowns, Kimonos, 's Shirts .. % FPart-wool Rueben’s ‘Bands @ All-wool Sacaues and Sweater: White Dresses. long or short Hand-embroidered Dr Hand-embroidered Creepers Baby Buntings or Bath Robes Silk-quilted Carriage Robes. . Capitol Silk and Faille Silk Ho: Walking Dresses, with panties. Kaufman's—Seeond Floor R “ Women'’s Striped Pajamas Fine count, soft finish percale, in_pretty con- trast colors; full cut size. Second Floor. Inner Belt Corselettes § elastic insets; four Ravon stripe material: garters: sizes 36 to 46. Second Floor. 79¢ Middy Blouses, 2 for $ Of heavy white Jjean, long sleeves, full cut; sizes 6 to 18 vears. Second Floor. $ 89c Sateen Slips, 2 for Hemstitched tops, fine lustrous grade; assort- ed colo,rs. all sizes. Second !‘Iogn Boys’ $1 Broadcloth Suits, 2 for $ with check trim- Good_grade, plain_colors, ming: sizes 3 to 8 years. Second Floor. Girls’ 39¢ Flannelette Wear, 4 for $ g Bloomers. Gowns, Slips. Combinations and Sleeping Garnients; sizes I to 8 years. Second o Perfection Maid Dresses § Of vat-dved fabrics, various neat designs and calors; several styles; sizes 16 to 56. Second *“Women’s 39¢ Bloomers, 4 for § Of crepe and nainsook: pink. peach and white: regular sizes. Second Floor. . 59¢c Sateen Blocmers, 3 for § Regular and extra sizes: plain and striped; lisht and dark colors. Second Floor. 79¢ Smocks and Hoovers, 2 for § Of pink, blue, green and helio chambray; well made: sizes 36 to 46. Setond Floor. $1.25 Broadcloth Smocks Double breasted, good erade broadcloth, in ‘white, blue, green, rose and helio; sizes 36 to 4“. cond Floor, $1 Handmade Gowns, 2 for § ‘White, pink. peach and honey: hand embroid- ered; full cut sizes. Second Floor. 1 PIECES ALUMINUMWARE T™W for Every and full size. q piece perfect e quality 4-cup Percolators 3-qt. Paneled Kettles 1-qt. Double Boilers L ) G L 3 < Ny 134-qt. Water Pitchers 4-qt. Preserving Kettles 3-qt. Covered Saucepans 8-in, Round Roasters 9-in. Colander 4-qt. Lipped Saucepans Kaufman's—Bargain Basement

Other pages from this issue: