Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
6 *» SUBURBAN NEWS. §250 AWARD MAD INR. 1. AVE. SITE Jury Agrees on Price for First Parcel of Right of Way. BY GEORGE PORTER. Stafl Correspondent of The Star. HYATTSVILLE, M July 26.—An award of $250 for 3, square feet of land needed for the right of way to ex- tend Rhode Island avenue this aftornoon given to the owners tions of two lots between the Washing- et b. rd is about onec-half the ed by the owners and 10 mt offered by the State, that the extension of nue would really bene- v involved rather thah | sperienced assesors told d was worth about $487. and representa- Commission and v OWners , on the condemnation _proceedings were e Melrose crossing this he suit was filed in Prince Georges nty Circuit Court two weeks ago by e State Roads Commission after a {BoO! serics of negotiations with the | rs had failed to result in an agree- | price to be paid for the ) of lend are the last e rights of way for the ex= oughfare “and failure yure them up to this time has held ward of the contract for the r nite sentiment the and business f this portion of the county ng the extension of Rhode avenue so that it can be opened conjunction with the overhead bridge at Hyattsville, now over half completed. Today's Defendants. The defendants in today's proceed- s L. Weinstein and Mrs. ein, his wife, and Mrs. melfarb, “tenants by the record owner,” Tespec- operty desired. tb property involved in of 2l lots 2 and 3, ision, which lie be- o awn parallel to and ap- feet from the center of in the suit against s wife is described as subdivision, which se avenue and the *the Washington ric Co., and a 15-foot ween lots 1 and 2 of Melrose 5 a building on this land q by a_store, which will fter the State acquires the Weins lot 1, Attorneys in Case. Attorneys re] enting the State ds Commission in the suit are T. obinson, attorney gencral of Mary- H. Archer, assistant at- reral, and William Stanely. iff Charles S. Early, who will ide at the hearing, has summonsed 20 citizens, 12 of whom will serve on the juries which consider the cases. ’ The panel summonsed by the sheriff ollows H W. Gore, R. L. Wells, Horace r, and Jacob Fisher of Marlboro; mes, J. W. Rogers, Joseph E. Baldwin, A.” M. McFadden elt of ry Clark and Max Hoffman od; Hugh O'Neill and George of Bilandensburgh; R. E. nn, Louis Porton, Pete Galt, John aul McFarland and C. W. | ttsville. EX-MAYOR OFFUTT BURIED IN ROCKVILLE! rmer Official Vietim of Apoplexy After Illness of Only Few Hours, Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md,, July 26—Funeral | services for former Mayor Lee Offutt, | who died Tuesday morning of apoplexy after an iNness of only a few hours, aged 67 years, were held at the home this morning and were conducted by Rev. Dr. Millard F. Minnick, rector of Christ Episcopal Church. Burial was in Rockville Union Cemetery. The active pallbearers were Judge ! Robert B, Peter, George M. Hunter, Harry C. Hurley, Charles Veirs, H. Worthington Talbott, Charles J. Mad- dox, F. Hazel Cashell, George Peter and Albert M. Bouic. and the honorary pallbear were the directors of the! Montgomery County National Bank of ville, of which Mr. Offutt was a rector and vice president at the time | of his death | Mr. Offutt had long been connected with the management of the cemetery where he was buried. As a member of the board of directors for many years, he had much to do with the gradual development of _the burying grounds into a beautiful resting place for the ead. DRIVES FROM CHICAGO WITHOUT AUTO TAGS! Motor Car Is Impounded by Vig- ilant Montgomery County " Police. Br a Staf Correspondent of The Star. BETHESDA, Md., July 26.—Although he came all the way from Chicago with- out tags on his car, Edward H. Schultze of that city, tailed to get by the efficient police patrol of Montgomery County. raveling along the road yester~ Sergt. Leroy Rogers of the West- district station, noticed something pecu r about the automobile, and fur- ther study snowed that it was without regular marks having pastboard howing that a license had been Tor. When the driver was halted he ex- pleined that he bousht the car in Chi- cago and was in a hurry to reach New York, He said he left orders for the tazs to be procured and sent to him at Nw York. But they will have to come here, as police have impounded the car until official markers are obtained. BIDS FOR MOUNT RAINIER STREET PAVING OPENED By a Staft Correspondent of The Star.” MOUNT RAINIER, Md., July 26— Bids for the paving of a final group of streets to be improved this Summer were cpened at a special meeting of the meyor and council last night, the Fred Loomis Construction Co. of Wash‘ngton being given the award. Their bid was 0.210. 60.210. ¥ The streets to be improved under this contract are: Thirtieth street, from Bunker Hill road to Grape street; Thirty-first street, from Perry street to Dunker Hill road and from Ash to Cadar street; Thirty-fourth street, from Paker to Date street. This street is the bovder libe batween Brentwcod and Piount R2¥ and each town will pave half of it. . A Rhode Irland avenue; to be widened from the District line to Thil et d | little girl playing alongside the North |strong in fact that she told Examiner | to ! WEEDS EVIDENCE Witness in Takoma Park Hearing Sure Wild Growth Prevented Unloading. Gives Interesting Account of Early Explorations of Rails on Disputed Park Land. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md,, July 26.—A pen- chant for weeds and grasses and a hor- ror of grasshoppers when she was a Takoma siding left vivid impressions on the mind of Miss Mary F. Lerch, so i Kenneth Lyddane here yesterday, in the hearing of the suit between the Balti. more & Ohio Railroad and the town of Takoma Park over the use of the siding, that she was quite sure the tracks had never been used for the un- loading of freight from 1903 to 1911. The railroad company has contended that it has had the use of the strip for many years for the unloading of freight, and a long line of witnesses have been produced by the town in an effort to show that in the early days of the sid- ing freight was not delivered over the park lands. So that Miss Lerch’s im- pressions were regarded as rather im- rtant, because they were offered to show that the natural growth of weeds was so thick there during the period for which she testified that trucks could not have used the land to get to and from the tracks. Tells of Explorations. EShe could tell the growth from the early Spring all through the Summer. In the months, she remembered, there were Spring grasses that blackened a person’s stockings if they traveled through them, and she went home many days with this black, gained through her explorations not only of the strip, but of other parts of Takoma Park, for, she testified, she could tell where any kind of wild flower grew in the town. Her home was near to the switch. In | one section of the park plot, she said, there was an abundance of Queen Anne’s lace. Then there was a patch of Spanish needles and coarser grass; two stunted pine trees. Right by the switch there was a patch of goldenrod, she told the court, and a little farther {0 the west was a patch of blackberries. There was some sumac “and many grasshoppers,” she said. “I remember them because I hated grasshoppers. These were in the east end of the field, while further up was the land of gar- ter snakes.” She said that the qiass in the plot now contested in the suit was very tall, and she remembered that the town authorities had the grass cut between 1902 and 1910, Rails Not So Shiny. | _As to the siding itself, she said that the rails there were not so shiny as those on the main line and scemed to be much smaller. She remembered their unpolished condition because *they ! were easier to walk on than those of the main-line tracks,” which, -she said, | were slippery. She had seen flai and THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 'C..‘ FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1929, AND GRASSHOPPERS AGAINST SIDING MISS MARY F. LERCH. —Harris-Ewing Photo. coal cars on the siding, but never saw any unloading. She testified that she noticed the unloading activity in 1921, not by observation at the siding, but by the increase in the traffic of heavy trucks t her home, accompanied as it was B;".hz heavy vibration and the increase of dust and dirt made by the heavy traffic. When taken for cross-examination by Willlam F. Prettyman, of counsel for the railroad company, she was asked how the men from the work trains, which she had testified were on the siding at periods, got downtown. i “I didn’t know they ever went down,’ she responded. Then Mr. Prettyman asked, if they wanted to get to Takcma avenue, if they wouldn't have to walk across the strip. “Yes,” she responded, “unless they were pretty good jumpers.” Miss Lerch sald she never recalled that there were any box cars on the siding and asseréed that there was no occasion for the use of the siding for unloading until Walter Reed Hospital was built. In 1917, she added, there was some sort of unloading. Other Witnesses. Other witnesses produced yesterday . by J. Bond Smith, corporation counsel of the town, were Mrs. Mary Cady Lee, Mrs. Ira Johannes, John F. Wynn, town engineer; James G. Taylor and John R. Adams, councilman of Takoma Park. Generally, they testified that the plot was not used for unloading until re- cent years. Before the hearing was concluded yesterday Mr. Prettyman said that the railroad company had produced all of | the records that had been called for by , the defense and which could be found. He sald that some of them were de- stroyed in the Baliimore fire of 1904 and that further search was being made among the salvaged records in an ef- fort to produce all that had been de- manded by the town counsel. The hearing was adjourned for an in- definite period, awaiting the time when Daniel Willard, president of the Balti- more & Ohio, can appear, in answer to a subpoena. issued at the instance of Attorney Smith. {SCHOOL VACANCIES IN COUNTY FILLED |New Trustee Named in Prince | Georges and Teacher Added at Riverdale. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md,, July 26.— | Announcement of several personnel | requirements and one trustee change | in the Prince Georges County school system was made by Supt. Nicholas Orem today. The recent order prohibiting Army officers on active duty from accepting civil appointments has caused Capt. Frank B. Bonner, trustee of the Fort Washington School, to resign. Mrs. Olive L. Bonner has been appointed in his place. Because of the increased enrollment at the Riverdale School an additional teacher will be installed there next term. This brings the teaching force of the school up to 8, the enroliment being about 350. Vacancies still exist in the follow- ing positions in the county school sys- tem: Laurel High School, manual training | teacher; Oxon Hill High School, com- mercial course teacher; Hyattsville High School, manual training and mathe- matics teachers; Brandywine High School, Latin and English teacher; Seabrook and Fairy Springs, one- teacher schools, each need a teacher; Cottage City Graded School, a fifth grade teacher; Takoma Park Elemen- tary, a first grade teacher, and Laurel Graded School, a fourth grade teacher. P FISHERMAN BELIEVED LOST AT GREAT FALLS ‘Walter Weaver Thought to Have Slipped From Rocks—Police Drag River. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. BETHESDA, Md., July 326.—Mont- gomery County Policemen E. R. Jones and J. E. Shoemaker today are grappling in the waters of Great Falls for the body of Walter Weaver, 36, of Baltimore. He is believed to have fallen into the Po- tomac and drowned while fishing. Weaver and his wife, Mrs. Viola ‘Weaver, and their 12-year-old son, ac- cording to the police, had gone to the falls for a picnic yesterday. The hus- band went fishing, while the mother and son are said to have taken a wal ‘When the father did not return at 6 o'clock in the evening his family be- came uneasy, and a search disclosed ‘Weaver's fishing rod and kit on a rock a short distance below the falls. Fur- ther examination by Montgomery count{ Policeman Douglas Dosh disclosed heel marks and evidences of where fingers had slipped on the moss-covered rocks. The mother and son refurned to Balti- more. gay colors—red, blue, green, 607-14th BUS LINE TO ASHTON CASE TO BE REHEARD Public Service Board Reconsiders | Granting of Permit on Wash- ington Protest.. BALTIMORE, July 26.—Acting on a protest of the Washington Rapid Transit Co., the Public Service Com- mission announced yesterday it would reopen the case granting the Inter- City Motor Coach Co. the right to op- erate a line of busses between the Dis- trict Line and Ashton, Montgomery County. ‘The commission, July 13, granted the application of Inter-City Motor Coach Co., Inc, for a permit for & bus line over the Columbia Pike via Ednor, Burtonsville, Fairland and White Oak. Protest having been made to the com- mission by the Washington Rapid ‘Transit Co., the commission has noti- fied the company to suspend operations until the final determination of the | matter by the commission after a re- hearing, which has been set for Wed- nesday, August 7, at 10:30 o'clock. At the same time the commission will hold a hearing on the application of the ‘Washington Rapid Transit Co. for per- mission to operate a line of busses be- tween the District Line and Linden, Forest Glen, Four Corners and Bur- tonsville. The application covers prac- tically the same territory as that grant- ed the Inter-City Co. YOUNG PEOPLE IN SESSION| Special Dispatch to The Star. MOUNTAIN LAKE PARK, Md., July 26.—The theme of the thirty-seventh national convention of the Young Peo- ple’s Christian Union, United Presby- terian Church of North America, being held in the Bashfor Amphitheater here, is “Take Christ, Live Christ, Give Christ.” The convention got under way yes- terday after a formal opening Wednes- day night and will end Sunday night. ‘There are over 2,000 present, repre- senting 57 presbyteries in all sections of the United States. James Wieland of Pittsburgh was elected president of the convention and Miss Neva Wallace, Davenport, Iowa, secretary. Octogenarian Is Dead. LYNCHBURG, Va, July 26 (Spa | clal).—John Addison Lee, 80 years old | a resident of Bedford County, died at Memorial Hospital Wednesday. He is survived by a son, Dr. William of Danville. GINGER TIGER NONE BETTER A. G. HERRMANN 750 Tenth St. Southeast Phone Lincoln 1981-1982 Come in and see Brownie Cameras in color The world’s most popular cameras now come in five gray and brown. Models are Nos. 2 and 2A, priced at $3 and $4 respectively without case, and $5 and $6 with case. See the Colored Brownies today. Eastman Kodak Stores, Inp. St.,N. W. | @ speed trap in the village, E. Austin | MOTORIST ARRESTS ARE HELD fLEGAL Action of Mount Rainier Au- thorities Said to Be in Vio- lation of State Laws. Speclal Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., July 26.—Follow- ing an investigation of a report that town police of Mount Rainier, Prince Georges County, have been conducting Baughman, commissioner of motor ve- hicles, notified the attorney general that the village autorities have been making arrests not in accord with the State automobile laws. The report turned over to the .at- torney general also said that court costs assessed the arrested offenders amounted to $3.75 each instead of the $1.45 which the State allows to be charged. | Special Set of Laws. | According to Mr. Baughman, an in- | vestigator, who was assigned to make an examination of the system empioyed by the Mount Rainier’ officers, found that a special set of motor-vehicle laws, not in accord with those of the State, had been enforced there since Septem- | ber 20, 1926, when the mayor and town council passed local ordinances dealing | with speed limits, reckless driving, | lights, driving while drunk, etc., and since that time the town constable has | been enforcing these ordinances. | . The investigator also reported that Eugene Plummer, chicf of police, has been using a motor cycle since June 1 of | this year, placing offenders of the town ordlnances under arrest and accepting collateral from motorists at the road- | side. This form of roadside trial was permitted by a special clause in the ordinances of the village without the | necessity of the motorist appearing be- | fore a police magistrate or a clerk of | the court. Probe to Continue. The motor vehicle commissioner will | continue his investigation to ascertain the disposal of collaterals obtained in | this manner and also fines levied by | local magistrates before whom motor- | ists were taken instead of to the Hyattsville branch of the Prince Georges | County Police Court, which, Mr. Baugh- | man said, was the proper place of trial. | The investigation also showed that during the time the chief of police has | been serving as a motor cycle omerrl more than twenty-five motorists have been stopped for violations of the ordi- | nances and have forfeited collateral, | which was paid to the arresting officer. | The attorney general was requested to notify the Prince Georges County au- | thorities that the authoritles of the township have been iilcgally enforcing law other than the State motor laws and that he take such steps as are possible against the mayor, city coun- cil and Mr. Plummer as provided by the State laws covering such action. B Charles MofTatt, 54, of Wallsall, England, died recently from blood poi- | soning caused by the peck of a hen. | B SUICIDE ATTEMPT ENDS IN TORN ARM AND JAIL Cumberland Orchard Worker Fails to Hit Heart With Shotgun, Special Dispatch to The Star. C ERLAND, Md., July 26.—John Edward Hartsock, aged 40, an orch- ard worker of near Town Creek, this county, in his attempt at suicide at his home yesterday landed in jail with a left arm badly crl))pled, the result of the shot intended for his heart hitting the arm instead. He attempted to place the muzzle of a shotgun against his heart, but the bar- rel was too long and when he pulled the trigger the load tore the flesh from the elbow. It is thought he will be per- manently crlp&led. He was arrested by Deputy Sheriffs James McGregor and Robert Harvey, sr. He had made threats, it is said, to end his life after his wife left him and came to Cumberland to take employ- ment, following domestic difficulties. They have two small children, WOMAN IS ARRESTED IN HUSBAND’S DEATH Elkton Woman Charged With Be-| ing Accessory in Case—Another Man Held. Special Dispatch to The Sta ELKTON, Md, July 26—While au- thorities hold Lambert Hines, 25 years 1d, in jail here charged with the mur- | o der of Calvin Cox, 37, police yesterday afternoon arrested Cox's widow, Mrs. Mildred Cox, on a charge of being an | accessory before the fact in the death of her husband. The widow was arrested at her home near Earlesville on a warrant issued by State’s Attorney Henry L. Constable. According to Sheriff G. Clinton Logan here Cox returned from Delaware last Saturday and is alleged to have warned Hines to stay away from his home. Early Sunday morning Hines said Cox attempted to set fire to hfs automobile and also made an effort to stab him during a quarrel. Hines told police that in order to defend himself he struck Cox over the head with a base ball bat. Local officers, however, declare this story false, stating that Hines struck his victim when he was unable to de- fend himself. The officers further stated that fol- lowing the alleged assault Hines left in his car. A coroner's jury will hold an inquest into the death tonight when a number of witnesses, including Mrs. Cox, will be heard. e FIRE THREATENS TANKS. 500,000 Gallons of Gasoline En- dangered in Southwest Blaze. With a fire on a dump in South ‘Washington sending threatening sparks dangerously near the gasoline tanks of the American Oil Co. which contained 500,000 gallons of gasoline, four county fire departments responded and after pumping water 2,000 feet to the blaze succeeded in extinguishing it. The companies responding were from Clarendon, Arlington, Ballston and JefTerson District. HOOK-UP CONTESTS AT FIRE CARNIVA Men and Women to Compete at Annual Silver Spring Event. By a Stal Correspondent of The Star. SILVER SPRING, Md., July 26. Volunteer fire departments from various parts of Montgomery and other Mary- land counties will come here on the evening of August 3 to show their prowess and speed in hooking up to fire rlull and getting streams on an maginary. fire. It will be the formal opening of the annual carnival of the Sllver Spring Volunteer Fire Depart- ment, which will continue until August 10. Even the fire lassies of the county have been invited to take part in a similar contest. Teams Challenged. The Rockville and Sandy Spring | ladles’ teams, which have shown such speed at other carnivals, have been challenged by the Silver Spring fire ladtes to a contest. The Silver Spring team is composed of Isabelle Hewitt, captain; Louise and Thelma Fling, Mildred and Ruth Cole, Margaret A. Hewitt, Doris Leizear, Dorothy Matter and Bessie Harris. The Star's horseshoe pitching tour- nament will be part of the show. It was announced that Justice of Peace | Charles P. Clark, district chairman of | contests in this area, has in co-opera- | tion with the fire department officials | made arrangements for a contest each | evening at 7 o'clock, the first one to be | on_August 5. | _There will be other competitions | throughout the carnival period, includ- ing & beauty contest and folling pin contest, with others to be announced later. Music will be furnished by the Silver Spring Community Band, and there will be dancing nightly. The fire- men will be aided by the Woman's Im- provement Club of Silver Spring, of :'m:b Mrs. Harvey Johnson is presi- ent. The arrangements for the affair are in the hands of the following: General committee, William J. Jouvenal, chair- man; Leo Bender, treasurer; Harry Strickler, Pred N. Oden and Everett Schrider. Assistant _committeemen are: Joseph B. Beam, Charlss Definbaugh, John T. Crawford, L. L. Swindell, George F. Hamilton, George T. Tyser, Dewey Agee, C. C. Reed, Harry Strickler, Bryan Abell, N. B. Wootten, Ernest Sayer, A. W. Cowell and George Hall, | Landover Church to Show Picture. LANDOVER, Md, July 26 (Special). {—"“The King of Kings,” religious mx | tion picture, will be shown tonight and | tomorrow night at the Magruder Me- | morial Church here for the benefit of the church fund. J. F. Cook, who is |in charge of the affair, announced that | motion pictures would be shown every Friday night in the future. Proceeds will go toward the church fund. | QFmtage stamps are being canceled in | Que | ser More Than TIME UT—you say—clocks are made to tell time and nothing else. That is true in most cases, but at 708 7th Street N.W. is the “GOLD” Clock that directs your way to “Washington's Family Jewelers” since 1888 —THE HOME OF PERFECT DIAMONDS. YE -, A House that has “Grown up” with Washington v 1 ; : —this clock 1s a “Safety front of our door. Beacon” standing directly in The phrase “Look for the Gold Clock” is a safety slogan for your guidance—directing you to Per= fect Diamonds, Reliable Watches. known merchandise is sold at nationally advertised cash prices— PLUS—Schwartz Satisfactory Service. Where entire families bought Jewelry —for over forty years ENTIRE PAMILIES and their friends have been coming to this popular jewelry center for over forty (40) years, fully satis- fied with the service and merchandise they receive. A House where nationally Convenient credit terms arranged. Pay weekly or monthly, as you desire. Our ONE-PRICE Policy Our ONE-PRICE Policy means that everybody pays ex- actly the same price whether they pay all cash or buy on terms. Not one cent is taken off for cash, not one cent is added for credit. This is the only honest way we know of to treat every- one the same. “Family Jewelers—Since 1888 - CHAS SCHWARTZ & SON Perfect Diamonds 708 %ot CLOCK " 7th Street N.W. Also 709 14th St. N.-W. and Hagerstown,; Md. , SUBURBAN NEWS. BYRD CONGRATULATES ANNAPOLIS MAYOR Bends Radiogram on Election From Base 'in Heart of Ant- arctic. Special Dispateh to The Star. ANNAPOLIS, July 26.—Congratula- tions on his election as mayor were re- ceived yesterday by. Mayor Walter E. Quenstedt from the Byrd expedition in Antarctica. ‘The congratulations came in the form of a radiogram which was relayed to the mayor through the offices of the New York Times from-the base in { Little America. Mayor Quenstedt is acquainted with many of the members of the expedi- tion, having made several minor explo- rations with Comdr. Byrd. STUD FARM BOUGHT BY BALTIMORE BANKER Laurel Park Property Acquired by F. Warrington Gillet—Plans in Making. Special Dispatch to The Star. LAUREL, Md., July 26—F. Warring- ton Gillet, Baltimore banker, has pur- chased the Laurel Park Stud Farm,‘ac- cording to an announcement yesterday. Plans have not yet been formulated for the property, Gillet said. He de- clared he would send a number of his ;mrses, including steeplechasers, to the arm. ‘The stud farm, consisting of 370 acres with a mile outdoor track and a quar- ter-mile indoor track, was established treal race horse owner, at a cost of more than a quarter of a million dollars. el el i _ Foreign designs are being incorporate in automobiles being made in Italy. FOR THE ACCOMMOD . COur Big Now Going | years ago by Comdr. J. K. L. Ross, Mon- | GOUNTY INDUSTRIAL SURVEY 1S FAVORED Morris Suggestion for Censué of Arlington District Is Being Considered. By a Staff Correspordent of The Si OLARENDON, Va., July 26.—The suggestion of Henry C..Morris that an industrial survey of Arlington County be made by the special staff of the Virginia- Polytechnic Institution en- gaged in such work is bei | serious consideration by the :‘mllml: | committee of the Arlington Count; Chamber of Commerce, according to P. P. Wocedbridge, secretary. The survey, Woodbridge said. would serve a dual purpose, in that it would not only aid the industrial develop- ment of the county but would greatly assist the Zoning Commission in the proper designation of light and heavy industrial areas. Officials of the edu- cational institution have said that they | can make the survey in October. | Fire Threatens Luray Block. LURAY, Va.,, July 26 (Special) —A fire which started shortly after Wed- nesday midnight was discovered in | time to prevent what might have been | the destruction of a whole block in | the_business section of Luray. |, The fire. which was in Brown's Res- | taurant, caught from an undetermined | cause among the stored matches and | cigarettes. It burned over the ceiling nd center of one side, causing a loss { about $500. 9th & E—Fashion Shop Open late--- Saturday Night! ATION OF OUR MANY FRIENDS WHO WISH TO SHOP LATE SATURDAYS— Store Hours 8 A.M. to Late Saturday Night Summer | Clearance I S-A-L-E-! Full Blast! One month earlier than usual—we have advanced the date of this Midsummer event—supply your vacation needs— YOU REALLY CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS THIS SALE! More Than 200 Famous wa 2 PANTS DOUBLEWEAR SUITS Including Hollywood Models TREMENDOUS On Balanc ring an SP (Except COOL Gabardines 7777, e Z Z Tash $35 Suits $175° %55 Suits $27% %65 Suits $32% 85 Suits #4250 Alterations REDUCTIONS e of Entire Stogk o d Summer Suits Middi B ades) SUMMER SUITS—REDUCED Imported Linens Reduced as Low as. . . .. Tropicals and 5112 Reduced as Lo v Summer Trousers REDUCED INCLUDING NOVELTY OUTING TROQUSERS : as low as $4.95 WHITE FLANNELS & STRIPED WHITE SERGES : as low as $6.95 THE Ion Oth & E rreo peLzman, presivent 5(] Ninth Bring the Ladies—They Know Style.and Value!