Evening Star Newspaper, January 14, 1930, Page 5

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THE . EVENI NG STAR. WASHINGTON, ve_vor o NGARAGUAN CANAL * BLAST KILLS FOUR Bandits Fail to Obtain $35,000 Through Heroism of Injured Man. By the Associated Press. WILKES-BARRE, Pa., January 14— Four men were dead today, victims of | would-be robbers who yesterday dyna- mited a pay car of the Glen Alden Coal Co. in an effort to obtain a $35,000 pay roll. Two others were in- Jjured, one critically. All but about $3,000 of the money was saved by the heroism of one of the | injured men. That amount was be- lieved to have been blown away by the blast. The dynamiters, believed to have been ‘four in number, escaped in a blue automobile bearing New York license plates. No trace of them had been found today. | Attack in Mountains. The explosion occurred a mile from Manticoke in a wild, mountainous sec- tion near the coal company's Truesdale Colliery. It rocked the district. The pay car was being hauled up & narrow-gauge railroad by a mine motor to pay off several hundred work- ers when the explosion occurred. The dynamite, which had been placed un- der the track, was exploded by means of wires and a battery hidden behind & barricade 200 feet away. The force of the blast wrecked the pay car and uncoupled it from the motor. Without stopping for investi- gation, Harry Powell, the motorman, roceeded under full speed to the col- lery and spread the alarm. Arthur W. Webb, 32, of Scranton, Ceremonies were held at St. Patrick’s Church yesterday for two Sisters of the Holy Cross and four Society of Catholic Medical Missionaries who will leave soon for India. In the photo, left to right: Sister Mary Jarlath, Oakland, Md.; Dr. Dorothy Finnigan, L. D, S., St. Mary's University, Aberdeen, Scotland; Sister Theresa McArdle, R. N, of St. Mary's Hospital, San Francisco, Calif.; Sister Hi elen Herb, R. N., of the Deaconesses’ Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y.; Sister Frances Her¥, R. N., of Mercy Hmlplul: Oshkosh, Wis., and Sister Mary Charlita, St. Joseph, Mo. Attractions in Washington Theaters ymaster in charge of the car; Frank g.umk!. 40, & miner, and Martin Burns, section foreman, were killed almost instantly. James: Shovlin, 32, a sec- tion foreman, died a few hours later. Guard Critically Hurt. Fred Pfaff, 40, a guard of the car, suffered crushed feet and internal in- juries. He was in a critical condition today. The pay roll was saved by John Sookil, & 50-year-old miner, who was only slightly injured. Although dazed, he threatened away one of the bandits and stood over the iron-bound pay chest until posses arrived. The other bandits fled without offering attack. FINANCE COMPANY PLANS LIQUIDATION Commercial National Co. Says Periodic Distribution Will Be Made. Plans for the liquidation of the Com- wmercial National Co.. a finance and in- ‘vestment firm of which R. Golden Don- aldson is president, were announced ‘rh’e company has an authoriged issue of 10,000 shares of preferred stock at $100 par value each, and at one time there was outstanding about $800,000 in this stock. A 7 per cent annual dividend was paid quarterly. In addition to the ferred stock there is an authorized me of 10,000 in common stock, held in trust for the benefit of stockholders of the Commercial National Bank. Officials said that during the process of liquidation of assets, periodic dis- tribution will be made to the stock- holders, having regard to the priority nf nreferred stock. The Commercial National Co. is a distinct and separate organization from the Commercial National Bank, it is stated, though officers of the two con- cerns ‘are the same. Officers of the company are: R. Gol- den Donaldson, president; James B. Reynolds, James H. Baden, Laurence A. hter, vice presidents: Walter J. , secretary, and Frederick H. Cox, assistant secretary. These, with Hayden Johnson, form the directorate. FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR JAMES E. COOPER r. John M. Cooper Officiates, With Interment in Rock Creek Cemetery. Puneral services for James E. Cooper, 82 years old, prominent local architect, who died in Georgetown University Hospital Saturday, were conducted at the residence, 4447 Greenwich parkway, this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Dr. John M. Cooper, professor of anthropology at Catholic University of America, offi- clated. Interment was in Rock Creek Cemetery. Mr. Cooper was widely known among the leading architects of the city. He had designed many beautiful homes and other structures noted for their archi- tectural features. He was a member of the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Pallbearers at the funeral were Harry K. Boss, B. Lowndes Jackson, John W. Kearney, Albert E. Landvoigt, Dr. Alfred P. Stokes and George Worth- ington. WALTER EVERETT HUTTON| DIES AT RESIDENCE HERE Real Estate Dealer Had Been IIl for Several Months—Funeral Tomorrow. Walter Everett Hutton, 64 years old, for the past 11 years associated with Louis P. Shoemaker in the real estate business here, died at his home, 1411 Newton street, yesterday after an iliness of several months. He was a native of Michigan, but had resided in this city for the past 25 years, He was a mem- ber of the Virginia Soclety and the| Bouthern Society here. Mr. Hutton was the husband of Mrs. ®adie Hutton, president of the District | of Columbia Branch of the United; . Daughters of the Confederacy. | Funeral services will be condutced at the residence tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Interment will be in the South- | ern Methodist Episcopal Cemetery, Alexandria, Vi i ARMY TRANSFERS TOLD. | Maj. Clyde B. Simpson to Come Here From Philippines Post. Maj. Clyde V. S8impson, Signal Corps, now in the Philippines, has been or- dered to this city for duty in the office of the chief signal officer, Munitions Building. Maj. Philip G. Blackmore, Ordnance Department, at San Leandro, Calif.,, has been ordered to the Aber- deen Proving Grounds, Md., for duty. Capt. Edward C. Atkinson, 29th In- fantry, has been transferred from Fort 2 ., to Fort Slocum, N. Y. Capt. George P. Hays, Field Artillery, has been ordered from Fort Sill, Okla., to the l’hl“gpflnu Capt. Arthur B. McDaniel, Al comes from San Antonio, Tex., to this city for duty in the office of the cHief of the Air Corps, Munitions Building. Capt. Robert E. NATIONAL—George M. Cohan in “Gambling.” An exquisitely tough and cleverly dumb young person shared the curtain calls with George M. Cohan, in “Gam- bling,” last evening at the National ‘Theater, as he ambled in and about one of the bright spots of his career, which as a whole has been largely notable for its high illuminating power. Next to George himself, Mary Philips as Mazie, murder suspect and lady of leisure, with whom “nothing counts ex- cept the grand total,” may be properly described as the hit of the month. She is to be credited with having won rec- ognition as the incarnation of all that is Cohanesque in manner and expres. sion. Mr. Cohan himself, a figure of the stage since childhood, steps into his role of amateur detective as easily as if he were chatting with a native on Long Island, and as he chats through the four acts of “Gambling” he becomes even more real than the production. When these two clever entertainers sit under the soft light of a library a luxuriant apartment, with an otherwise darkened roo: nd match wits in airy language over a life-and- death matter, they enact a stage episode which creates a hush of admiration and stamps the play as not only bright, but dramatic in the extreme. me hundred and fifty minutes of Cohan” would be an appropriate sum: ming up of the entertainment. Varl- ous other actors deliver a great many of the lines, but these all bear the hall- mark of the actor-producer-playwright. An examination of the script of the play in all probability would disclose a ise cracks. Not just the author has always employed to em- phasize the personalities on the stage. In this case they are eflg:t;yed in work. ing out a murder mystery, which has the merit not only -of being elusive, but also of covering up every step of the way with genuine suspense. Mr, Cohan occuples one Mlcuhrl niche in the theatrical gallery, which seems to have been reserved particular- ly for him. That is in the production of a type of diversion, which he has it times described as the melodramatic comedy. That description, however, merely fits the framework of the story. In the hands of a less skillful artist it might be an excuse for form instead | of cleverness. But with his pen there is no lost motion. The succession of laughs is strung on a plot which never misses a chance for either fun or thrills. This plot may often be forgotten in giving attention to a group of char- acters taken from the provinical life of a great city, while a company well trained in roles which furnish striking contrasts breezes - through an evening o e tnatinctive stagecratt of th e ctive s e au- thor tends always to the introduction of some unexpected thrill on a crowded | stage. In this instance, it is a gam- | bling raid of great realism. The real novelty of the production is the tele- visionistic representation of a figure Dni the Pacific Coast talking by phone to a group in New York as part of the climax of the play. D.C.O. POLI'S—Jane Cowl in “Jenny.” A new solution of the old problem of what to do about the younger gen- eration is offered at Poll's this week by Jane Cowl and Guy Standing in “Jenny,” a comedy of manners in four acts by Margaret Ayer Barnes and Ed- ward Sheldon. According to more than one good hus- band the suggested solution is excellent. But more than one good wife will leave the theater offering devout thanks for the unquestioned fact that there is only one Jane Cowl in the world. If there were more Jane Cowls running around loose the problem of the younger gen- eration wouldn't hold a candle to the problem of the older generation—some | times known as how to keep father at home. John R. Weatherby (Mr. Standing) wins a lawsult in Washington and re- turns to his country house at Green- wich with a $70,000 fee, awfully glad to get back home. The fee and his return, however, mean certain definite things to the various members of his family. To Mrs. Weatherby (Katherine Emmet) they mean a Rolls Royce to take the place of the Lincoln. To Jack Weatherby (Ben Lackland), the son,| they mean a new speed boat. To Nora Gerfish (Joyce Carey), a married daughter, engaged in the process of deserting a perfectly good and hard- working husband, they mean a mink coat. And to Angela Weatherby (Helen Brooks, the 16-year-old flapper daugh- ter, they don't mean much or anything, | because Angela is too full of inferior | gin to realize that the old man is back. Into this happy family, which we a: led to belleve is more or less typical of the age, with father paying the bills | and knowing, in a helpless and befogged sort of way, that something ought to be done, comes Jenny Valentine (Miss | Cowl), a famous actress and beautiful ! woman, who starts out to set things right in her own way. ‘The picture of family life in America is not new, the same elements have been mixed before as ingredients of a common enough situation. For a time the audience is threatened with the traditional method of improving the tmosphere by having father do some stepping- out, just to show that he is not as old as he looks. This formula, it is understood, usually works, and the remainder of the family is cowed into submission by the rejuvenation of father. But Jenny is different. Her advent presents a more reasonable turn of events. As that turn is not taken until a split second before the final cur- tain, it would be unfair to anticipate it | here. It may be said, however, that the male population will give it sympathetic approval. Such finished ists as Miss Cowl and Mr. Standing are the greatest by | | Shannon of Brooklyn, N. Y., comes to the office of the quartermaster general, 30th Pirst Fort G. xfl. Md., has been on his application, after more than years' active service, g Lo+ warks against the loss of the legitimate theater. They stand like a pair of Horatios at the bridge against the on- rush of the talkies. May their good mnfiu hold and remain strong for . 'This sparkling little com- of enny” provides snother ve- hicle for thelr' own way of dealing with the foibles of life. They get away with some things in “Jenny” that in less capable hands might result in a hurry call for the Women's Bureau. But Miss Cowl could get away with anything. ‘The company in support is capable, the work of Lewis Martin as Eustace ‘Wade, Ben Lackland as a son of Yale, Helen Brooks at the flapper daughter and Katherine Emmet as the kittenish mother and pillar of society, being most pleasing. M. McK. DRAMA GUILD PLANS ITS ANNUAL TOURNEY One-Act Play Series to Open at Columbia Heights Community Center January 22. The fourth annual one-act play tour- | nament sponsored by the Community Drama Guild opens the night of Janu- ary 22 at Columbia Heights Community Center, Eleventh and Harvard streets, and not on January 23 at East Wash- ington Community Center, as originally planned. Mrs. Marie Moore Forrest, executive secretary of the guild, found it neces- sary to alter the program somewhat to allow ample time between the close of the preliminaries and the opening of the finals. Other preliminary contests, in addi- tion to those of the opening night, will be staged at East Washington Com- munity Center, Eastern High School Auditorium, on January 23; Columbia Heights Community Center on January 25 and at the same place on the 30th and 31st. ‘The finals will be held Friday night, February 7, at McKinley Auditoriung, at which time the four outstanding '&ly& of the tournament will be presented. DETROIT BOARD IRED BY SALARY PROTEST Fire Commissioners See Ulterior Motive in Captain's Opposi- tion to Increase. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, January 14.—The Detroit board of fire commissioners at a meet- ing yesterday took an unfriendly atti- tude toward Capt. Charles A. Creed, secretary of the Fireman’s Fund, who announced Saturday that firemen do not want an unsolicited 5 per cent wage increase voted recently by the commissioners. The board will go ahead with its plans to put the raise into effect. At the same time instructions were given to Chief Stephen J. De May to take such disciplinary action against Creed as he sees fit. Creed's making a public announcement was asserted to be in violation of a department regulation and to “put the board in a bad light.” Charles F. Clippert, president of the board, said he had been informed that Creed and his assoclates wanted to hold off the 5 per cent increase in the hope of getting a larger raise through a referendum, as was done recently in New York. Chief De May sajd believed most of the men do want the increase. ICE LOCKS “PORT” OF LITTLE AMERICA {Byrd’s Men Start Sledging Load for Return to Bay Inlet. BY RUSSELL OWEN. By Radio to The Star and New York Times. LITTLE AMERICA, Antarctica, Janu- ary 13.—The bay ice shows no signs yet of going out, despite the many cracks in it and the open water along pressure ridges. If it does not go out by the time the ships arrive, moving materials through the pressure of pumps to the edge of the ice will be difficult, and an attempt is being made to meet that condition by taking some things over to the other side of the bay where there is no pres- sure. Materials will be stored there on the side of the Barrier slope along one of first sled loads went out today. They had to go south for some dis- tance on the camp side of the pressure ridge, which runs along the eastern side of the bay. before reaching an opening in the ridge where the sleds could go through without tipping over or sliding into a lagoon of water lying in the troughs of ice. Once on the other side of the pres- sure, the bay soon smooths out and be- comes a flat, level plain which presents no difficulties except an occasional crack. From this new cache the materials can easily be hauled to the ship, and, if the ice did go out, the ships could come at that point, and load in safety. Every one is patiently awaiting the arrival of the ships, which will get here much later than had been ex- ted because of the unusuaily heavy e pack this year. We sit for hours and talk of food and clothing and mail. Men “roll their own” because the cigarettes are all gone, and think of Arthur Paape's grand hotel in Dunedin where the bath- tubs are six feet long and where Paape, who is used to expeditions, beams a welcome to all roaming voyagers. We dream of bathtubs and food. Any man in camp would run 10 miles for a steak and a baked potato. The ships are not expected before the first of next month, for, although the pack is not so bad as it was, it is disintegrating with aggravating slow- ness. The worst thing we can think of is that it may not break up sufficiently for the ships to get through, although two whalers managed to force their way through. They are big ships of 12,000 tons and with several thousand horsepower engines. They could go back and forth through packs where the small bark City of New York, Admiral Byrd's flagship, would butt unavailingly against the ice for weeks. As it was, two whalers, one of 15,900 tons and the other of 23,000, which ;urkua through the pack, had to turn ack. We “has hopes” that by the time the City of New York gets down to the pack, which won't be long now, as she is at about 54 degrees south, the pack will be open. But how slowly the days go! This period of waiting is the most trying time we have had. Copyright, 1930, By the New York Times Louis Post-Dispatch. publication reserved thre out the world. Jee Etz and See Better' PERSONAL /}» EFFICIENCY Good Vision is an asset that a business man can count on as an outstanding He realizes that correct, assure “sight efficiency,” but health. asset. comfortable Glasses not only have much to do with general Have your eyes examined every two years. The service here is exceptional. 1217 G St. N.W. 1217 G Street~ 1217 G St. N.W. the many ice inlets from the bay. The | alongside the Barrier, which is very low | D. C. TUESDAY, SURVEY 1S PUSHED 0x Carts Carry U. S. Army Engineers Into Interior to Set Up Base. By the Associated Press. Faced by heavy difficulties imposed by | | nature, the military engineers who have | undertaken to survey a route for the proposed canal across Nicaragua have dug themselves into bases and are ready for their task. H In a report received by the War De- | partment from Maj. Dan I. Sultan, en- | | gineer in charge of the survey, it was disclosed that ox-cart transportation and two-day 15-inch rainfalls have not slowed up appreciably the work of the expedition. Base Is Established. One company of Engineers crossed Nicaragua by ox-cart to establish a “ase from which it is to survey Brito Harbor und check the topography of the west- | ern end of the canal route. Another company is based at Greytown, on the Caribbean shore, surveying the harbor and the route from that point to the east divide. Four radio stations have been erected for communication between the two outposts, headquarters at Gran- ada and the supply base at San Carlos. Expedition Is Praised. Maj. Sultan reported that the surve; party had been given high praise b¥ prominent Nicaraguans. He quoted Senator Joaquin Gomez of Granada, who said: “Uncle Sam can sleep quietly, for his fine sons are always awake for him.” CAPT. ELWOOD STEWART BURIED AT ARLINGTON Infantry Officer Who Died at Wal- ter Reed Saturday, Given Military Honors. Funeral services were held in the chapel at Fort Myer, Va., this afternoon | for Capt. Elwood M. S. Stewart, United States Infantry, who died at Walter Reed General Hospital last Saturday, and were followed by interment in the Arlington National Cemetery with mil- | itary honors. Capt. Stewart was born in Carlin-! ville, Til, November 21, 1891, and, after | service with the Officers’ Reserve Corps, | was commissioned second lieutenant of Infantry in the Regular Army in Au- gust, 1917. He served in the World War and, in July, 1920, was promoted to the grade of captain. He received degrees from Blackburn College, Illinois, and Washington University, Missouri. His | last military duty was at Fort Benning, Ga. His widow, Mrs. Mary A. Stewart, is here. | INJURED IN COLLISION. Virginia Highland Youth in Hos- pital After Motor Cycle Accident. HUME, Va.,, January 14 (Speclal).— Phillip De Grouchy, 18 years old, of Vir- ginia Highlands was injured this morn- |ing when his motor cycle collided here iat the fork of a road with a heavily |loaded truck of the West Bros. Brick | {Co., of South Washington, Va. The truck was being operated by James Pinkney, colored. De Grouchy sustained a fractured nose, injury to the right arm, bruises and burns of both legs and his right arm. He was rushed to the Emergency Hospital in Washington in a passing ‘r’nncmne and was treated there by Dr. | President JOHN H. CLAPP AUGUSTUS CRANE FLOYD E. DAVIS President, Lincoln Nat. L. WHITING ESTES Mail Order House. ALBERT F. FOX S. H. KAUFFMANN Architect. GEORGE A. KING Attorney-at-Law. JANUARY 14, John B. Larner Director, Federal-Am. Nat. Bank. FREDERICK V. COVILLE Botanist, Dept. Agriculture. Formerly of Crane, Parris & Co. JAMES R. ELLERSON, Jr. of Ellerson & Wemple. Director, Columbia Nat. Bank. MELVILLE B. GROSVENOR National Geographic Society. HOLCOMBE G. JOHNSON of Johnson & Adams, Insurance. JOHN A. JOHNSTON Trustee, Vandergrift Estate. Evening Star Newspaper Co. CARL B. KEFERSTEIN 1930. Entertains Children STAR GLUB HOLDS | CHILDREN'S PARTY MARIE GLORIA HILL. TWO MILLION DEAD INCHINESE FAMINE Investigator Predicts Many More Will Die in Next Few Months.- as By the Associated Press. PEIPING, China, January 14.—The China International Famine Relie! is confronting the most hopeless situation it has ever faced in famine-ridden China in the northern Province of Shensi, where thousands of persons are dying daily from famine and exposure. Grover Clark, a former Peiping news- paper editor, returning from a six- week inspection trip in the Wei River district, sald yesterday that 2.000,000 persons were doomed to die within a few months. He asserted that after in- vestigating whether the Famine Relief could be of aid, he had absolutely no hope of saving them. He estimates that 2,000,000 persons out of 6,000,000 in the area, which ex- “|tends on both sides of the Wei River, died during the past eight months. Thousands were frozen to death during the recent cold wave. Clark reported “the most disheart- ening scenes I have ever witnessed in all my years in the Orient and in all my travels in the interior.” “Even if the China Famine Relief had plenty of grain to send into the area we could not reach it for months.” he %aid. “The local authorities are help- less and in many instances are them- selves on the verge of starvation.” —_— Wife Sues for Maintenance. Mrs. Elsle T. Cook, 746 Third street, has filed suit for maintenance pf herself and three children against Julian J. Cook, said to be a brakeman at Wash- ington Terminal. They were married in 1925, and the wife charges desertion in a ?{e‘!;:uon filed through. Attorney Nita ma: Adherence to the highest principles of sound and progressive banking practice has won for The Washington Loan and Trust Company the confidence of the community and held the busi- ness of many thousands of depositors to whom safety and satis- factory service were prime considerations. The character and strength of its Board of Directors are assur- ance of the care and prudence with which its policies will be governed, while the experience and training of the official per- sonnel, through many years of connection with the institution, continue to be the basis for the quality of service by which the Company is best known. The Washington Loan and Trust Company F Street at Ninth Seventeenth Street at G John Joy Edson Chairman of the Board DIRECTORS J. LEO KOLB Real Estate. President. Retired. Bank. Vice President, Editor, Evening A. CHAMBERS OLIPHANT Joint Committee of National Utility Associations. JOHN BARTON PAYNE Chairman Central Committee, American National Red Cross. WILLIAM E. PCEARSON o. WALTER S. PENFIELD Attorney-at-Law, ARTHUR PETER Attorney-at-Law. HARVEY W. WILEY Scientist and Author. DONALD WOODWARD President, Woodward & Lothrop, Inc. Virginia Brick JOHN B. LARNER JOHN C. LETTS HARRY G. MEEM THEODORE W. NOYES Juvenile Dancers Headline Program of Merriment for Boys and Girls. | | | | | With two juvenile dancers featuring the bill, the sons and daughters of the employes of The Evening Star were the guests of The Evening Star Club at its annual children’s party in its club rooms last night. For more than two hours the youngsters enjoyed the enter- tainers, as the former stralned to keep their eyes open to take in the long pro- a) gram. Miss Marie Gloria Hill, 8 years old, thrilled the children in two difficult dances in costume. Miss Betty Jeanne Wheatley, 5 years old, presented the | Russian dance “Trepak,” by Tschaikow- |sky, in a Russian costume, which | pleased both young and old. She also sang “Little Pal” Then Tom Howard, blackface come- dian, caused little eyes to wonder as he thumbed his banjo. Lingerman, ven- triloquist, shot his voice to several dum- mies and then threw it from the cellar to the roof and back again. The clown juggler, Dale, tossed balls, plates and other objects in number, balanced various objects and, incident- ally, provided more thrills when some of them slipped into the audience, by design. But the biggest event of this part of the program was the Punch and Judy show, which kept their interest from the time Punch beat up Judy, until the alligator devoured Sambo. The pro- gram concluded with a sketch, “The Haunted House,” by Tom Howard & Co. At the conclusion of the formal pro- gram, each of the children was pre- sented with a bag of toys and a decora- tive hat. ning Star Club, in a brief address open- ing the program, welcomed the children, and told them what was in store for them. ‘The music was furnished by Meyer Goldman’s Orchestra, and at the con- clusion of the children’s party, the floor was cleared for dancing by the grown- ups. ARGENTINA POLICE PROBE RED ACTS Before Mexican Embassy at Buenos Aires. By the Associated Press. BUENOS AIRES, January 14.—The police yesterday launched a general in- vestigation of Communist activities as the result of a demonstration early yesterday mcrnll_}%‘in front of the Mex- ican embassy. ey held under arrest 11 alleged leaders, only 1 of whom was described as a native of Argentina. In the demonstrations about 30 per- sons stoned the building and broke sev- eral windows. They shouted, “Long live the Mexican Communist party; down with imperialistic Mexican Fascists!” They threw printed handbills lhrollglh the windows before police broke up the demonstration. ‘The Mexican embassy is on the | samé street with the United States disturb the latter. g e e SN | An exposition of modern decorative | and industrial arts will be opened at next April | Maintaining Its High Reputation Star, ! i Frank Hurley, preident of The Eve-' 11 Are Seized After Demonstration | embassy, but no attempt was made to A-S NEW UNIFORM ALLOTTED. Olive Drab .Garb Prescribed for Military Training Units. By the direction of the Secretary of | War all unused olive drab service uni- forms with standing collars are to be issued to students in Reserve Officers’ Training Corps units and those at ,civilian military training camps, | as the available supply will it. Re- quests for these uniforms have been received already by the quartermaster general from six military schools and from headquarters of citizens’ training camps in two corps areas. b | Tune'in on the Budget Boys and Me, Tomorrow, 7:30 P.M—~WMAL Well, Folks: In the morning when the clock strikes 8 we start our Final Prices on Overcoats, Topcoats and Suits. Nothing more to wait for— now's the time to buy. and don’t fordet the Kaufman Bud- get Plan. Final Reduction! $35 & $40 O'Coats, ‘24.75 $45 & $50 O'Coats, s34.75 $55 & $60 O'Coats, 544‘75 Final Reduction!! $30 Topcoats 3 319.75 $35 Topconts . $Q4.75 $40 Topcoats 529.75 Final Reduction!!! $35 Suits 5937 Xtra Pants, $5 $40 Suits $9875 333.75« Xtra Pants, $6 336.75 $45 Suits ....... Xtra Pants, $7 $50 Suits Xtra Pant, No alteration charges

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