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BYRD DESCRIBES ANTARCTIC REGION Antics of Dog Igloo Outlined in° Talk Over Radio. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 24.-—Describing | the Antarctic as the world's last frontier, Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd last| night pictured that frozen territory in a | radio speech broadcast over a Nation- | wide network from the studios of the Columbia Broadcasting System. He stressed his belief that much more Ant- | arctic exploration will be required to | solve its mysteries. 1 Icy wastes, where penguins and seals | e the only native life, were described by the admiral, who illustrated the vast | extent of the territory by pointing out that its 4,500,000 squdre miles are about equal to the extent of the United States and Mexico combined. He said the Ant- arctic might one day develop unsuspect- ed power. | The great Ross Barrier, a_mysterious | floating mass which has defied the in- | quiries of sclence, was describzd in some | erlous Ross Barrier is 500 | sald Admiral Byrd. “It is | afloat, and, despite our investigations, it | is still somewhat of & mystery. Entirely | of snow to the water line, it becomes solid ice beneath the surface On this floating mass the expedition | camped part of the time. Admi:al Byrd | said huge icebergs kept breaking from | the Barrier. He told of one 30 miles long. To escaps being flung into the sea, the expedition chose a camp well | back from.the edge. Admiral Byrd devoted a pact of his speech to his dog, Igloo. The animal began his association with the. explorer on his North Pole expedition. Although sble to stand considerable cold, Igloo could not endure 32 degrees below zero in Little America; consequently the ex- lorers made an “Esquimau_suft for | gloo, with boots, which enabled him | to venture out when the thermometer ‘was 60 below.” Byrd told an_amusing incident re- arding Igloo's first meeting with the enguins, who “were almost human in their droll dignity.” Igloo, he said, at- tacked the birds, but could not “lick them.” Afterward he treated them with much more respect. The admiral also found time last night to attend a dinner by Norsemen Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, in honor of Bernt Balchen, first pilot for the Byrd expedition. 'Several other members of the expedition sat at the table with Balchen. ADMIRAL SPENDS FULL DAY. Three Speeches and Congratulations Fill Byrd's Time in New York. NEW YORK, June 24 (#).—A lunch- eon talk, a dinner talk, a radio talk| and a personal talk—that was the pro. gram yesterday for Rear Admiral Rich- ard E. Byrd. A hard program for one who is a doer rather than a talker, but it has been his daily fare since’ returning last week from his flight over the South Pple, and it will continue to be the order of his days until he definitely retires to pri- vate life on July 13. The day began with a personal talk with Col, Charles A. Lindbergh. So| crowded was the Byrd program that he and Lindbergh had only 12 minutes to- gether, but they made an appointment | o meet again, after the admiral's round of welcome celebrations. is over, for a | more lengthy discussion of the many phases of aviation, in which they are mutually interested. Then Admiral Byrd hurried downtown to & luncheon of the Chamber of Com- merce of the State of New York, where he followed his usual custom of an- nouncing that he appeared merely as the spokesman for his men. wm the afternoon he attended to duties incident to the demobilization of his little army and in early evening went to Brooklyn to attend a dinner given in honor of Bernt Balchen, chief pilot of the expedition, by the.Norse- men Lodge No. 878, Free and Accepted Masons. The dinner was scheduled for 6 o'clock, so that the admiral would ha 2 time to return to Manhattan to deliver a broadeast talk between 9 and 10 over the network of the Columbia Broadcasting System. ‘Tornorrow the admiral goes to Albany to be received by Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt. He leaves a North River pier at 6 o'clock in the morning on the a r Bainbridge and will return in the afternoon by train. ARRESTED MAN SEEKS DAMAGES FROM COUPLE | Claims Identification as Smith Mur- derer Maliciously Caused Arrest in Muskogee, Okla. By the Associated Press. MUSKOGEE, Okla., June 24.—John ) 1. Wike and Lawrence Struges of Con- | necticut today faced a $125,000 damage suit filed in® District Court by R. L. Benton, whom Wike identified as the slayer of David and George Smith, | Connecticut capitalists. The suit, filed yesterday, charged | ‘Wike and Sturges had maliciously | caused the arrest of Benton and his detention in the county jail. ‘Wike, who was found bound and | gagged In the hotel room where David and George Smith were slain April 26, identified Benton &3 one of the two men | who shot the Connecticut capalists | when they resisted robbery. Despite the identification, county authorities have not filed charges | against Benton. Wike and Sturges, a | brother-in-law of the slain men, were | told by county authorities to get more evidence against Benton before swear- ing to charges. NINE HURT IN WRECK OF PASSENGER TRAIN | Three Cars Are Overturned Near| Dacula, Ga., on Seaboard Air Line. By the Associated Press. A DACULA, Ga., June 24.—Nine per- sons were injured, one seriously, in the overturning of the dining car, a Pull- man and a day coach of northbour Seaboard Air Line passenger train No, 6 near here yesterday. Miss Florence Barkdale, school teach- er of Chatsvorth, Ga., was in & hos- pital at Winder, believed to be injured internally. She was taken from the wreckage unconscious. Among persons injured were Miss F. L. Henderson, Columbus, Ga., bruised knee; S. M. Shuper, Norfolk, Va., cuts on forehead and left ear; W. B. Smith, Atlanta, right shoulder and wrist bruised; S. L. Maxwell, jr., Lexington, Ga., right oulder sprained; H. T. Clark, dining car steward, of Hamlet, N. C., right knee fractured. Railroad officials said they believed the wreck was due to the buckling of ralls on account of the heat. . s Helmet Spray for Firemen. Firemen of Berlin, Germany, may go into burning buildings with a covering | of water released from the top of their | helmets, if a new invention, récently tested by the department, is adopted. The helmet spray consists of a nozzle- and back. Astrologist, Reading Infant as Flyer or Diplomat, Evangeline S. Adams, who, in the article following, casts ‘the horoscope of the son born to the Lindberghs. has devoted her life to the study of strology and is fcremost in this fleld. She makes no pretense of phophec simply’ reports interprets zodlacal signs and planctary portents. BY EVANGELINE S. ADAMS. ‘While thousends” of wellwishers of | Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and his wife turned to their telegraph blanks when the anpotificeliient was made thar a son had beén -born to toem, I turned to_my horoseope” blank. These other wellwishers were anx fous to be amcng the first to con- | gratulate the happy parents on having | any baby at all. I was anxious 1o be | the first to know with absolute mathe- matical certainty what kind of a baby had come into the Lindbc-gh iamily First I looked up what I had writ- ten in. my astrological bulletin for June 22, lomg of this child’s- birth, and here is what found: T “Don’ts” and “Musts” Dangerous. “Children born on June 22, 1930, will be most capable, but many ‘don'ts’ or ‘musts’ should be eliminated from the vocabulary in training them or they may develop into being very stubborn and contrary. On the other hand, if they are very much loved and praised, they can develop into very clever per- sons, as they will have diplomatic minds and learn languages readily.” I give this advice to Col.. and Mys. Lindbergh for what it is worth. This optimistic statement was based on the astrological indications for the day as a whole, which, as I discovered last week, had Jupiter, the great fortune, and the sun, giver of life, in conjunction in the astrological heavens. This is a particularly fortunate con- dition under which to have a child. In fact, Mrs. Lindbergh couldn't have | picked & better day if she had set out u; have her baby on the astrological | plan. Now, however, that I know the exact | moment and place of the eaglet's birth, | I can describe the chiid and his future with more accuracy and detail, ‘Will Be Aviator. ‘The first thing everybody will want to krow—it was the first thing I looked | up for myself—is whether he was going | to be an aviator, like his father, | The answer is unequivocably “Yes. _ Neptune, the planet which rules fly- ing, was in the midheaven when he was born. ~Almost every aviator who has won fame by his exploits, such as Ad- miral Byrd, has had Neptune promi- nently placed in his horoscope, and the fact that Mrs. Lindberg's baby, the son | of the greatest fiyer of them all, has | the aviation planet in the midheaven of his chart would seem to be a rare min- gling of astrological truth and poetic Justice. Neptune also rules diplomacy, which would indicate that the boy might be- come an ambassador, like his grand- father, rather than an aviator. But I don't think so. A careful comparison of his chart with that of his two dis- tinguished forbears indicates that the | influence of his other planets will be more toward flying than diplomacy. It he adopts either of these lines, for which he is so conspicuously fitted, it is-almost. certain that he will follow in his father’s air steps. That he will be a successful fiyer like his father is indicated by the fact that Jupiter—the planet which rules success, honor, glory and fortune—is also in the midheaven of his chart. In fact, four important and favoring planets—Jupi- ter, Neptune, Venus and the sun—were all Jooking directly down on the Mor- row homestead in Englewood at the mo- ment of this child's birth, Venus, in addition to ruling affairs of the heart, also has to do with honor, , success and wealth. In fact, it is cailed the lesser fortune to distinguish it from Jupiter, the greater fortune. Any baby born with either of these planets favorably placed in his chart could be sald to have a very fortunate horescope. To have both in the one chart—and both most favorably placed— | would seem to be a complete realiza- tion of the good wishes which the whole world has been waiting to lavish on his beloved parents, Courage Seen Prominently. In view of his father's reputation for courage and the fact that his mother 1 1 Rear Admiral Byrd is shown with Col. Lindbergh in New York City when the conqueror of the South Pole congratulated the colonel the colonel congratulated the admiral on his successful trip to the Antarctic Stars Smile on Little Lindy Become a Society Man if Unguided. before I knew the date | | 3908 Fourteentt’ street. i §1 ELECTRIC || e i THE EVENING STAR, his new son—and ==A. P. Photo. ’s Horoscope, Sees Career but Hints He Might Lindbergh Dolls May Be Sent On From Collection By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, June 24.—Visitors to Jefferson Memorial here used to look at some of the gifts Col. Charles A. Lindbergh received after his flight from New York to Paris and smile. What, they wondered, would he ever Go with the eight dolls he received? Today Mrs. Nettie H. Beaure- gard, curator of the Missouri Historical Society, _ustodian of many of Lindbergh's gifts, said she was ready to send the dolls to Col and Mrs. Lindbergh if they asked for them. has flown more than 30,000 miles in the _year before his birth—and, up to three days before, was still flying—we need rot be surprised ta find Mars, the planet of eourage, of energy, of initia- tive; of strength, prominently placed in the hearty, powerful, generous sign Tavrus. The courage of the warrior and the strength of ‘the bull should be the heritage of this young man and, ac- cording to the stars, jt is, . I have not confined my investigations entirely to the sunny side of the Lind- bergh baby's horoscope, Wishing him, as I do, the best of luck and health and success, I should feel it my duty to mention any danger that might beset im, so that his parents, being fore- warned, might arm themselves against it. I have searched the heavens for such dangers and I have found none—unless you call it a danger that he has the planet Uranus in his house of health, a condition which applies to every child born on this day, and which was chiefly responsible for my saying what I did in the general bulletin befcre I knew the day he was born about the neces- sity for using sympathy rather than force in bringing the boy up—a policy whieh will, of course, be pursued by his gentle. sweet young mother, ‘There is one other danger. some might call it a danger, though others might think it an asset. This young man, with Mars in Taurus and Venus in the midheavens, just cannot help growing up to be much more of & soclety man than his father. (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- paper Alliance.) YOUTH BROUGHT BACK Accused of Stealing Employer's Car for Southern Trip. Arrested in Pageland, S. C., in con- nection with the alleged theft of an au- tomobile here, Clyde Limerick, 22 years old, of 820 Sixth street southwest, was returned to Washington last night by Henry M. Jett, a headquarters detective. He was alleged to have stblen the car of his employer, Edward C. Hoover of Limerick was quoted by detectives as saying he had driven away in Hoover's machine in’ order to visit a young ‘woman in Pageland. He wrecked the automobile en route, bup escaped serious injury. MRS MACGREAL BURIED Services for Paralysis Victim Con- ducted Yesterday. Funeral services were conducted yes- terday for Mrs. Carlotta M. MacGreal, who died of a stroke of paralysis at her residence in the Dupont Hofel Pri- day. Interment was in_ Congressional Cemetery beside her husband, the late Wilbur ‘P. MacGreal. Mrs. was the daughter of the late Francis X. Burke. A favorite form of invest- ment with those who want to make certain of continued income—of definite amount and time. May ' be purchased amounts from $250 up. in like device which throws water in a cir- cular direction from the top of the headpiece, g ki Englend - are meking country. a Aero clubs -of @i tours of the 4 : was $14,000,000 less, At least || MacGreal | | LINDBERGH BABY'S NAME IS DEBATED Family Remains Silent, Open- ing Gates Only to Thousands of Felicitating Messages. By the Associated Press. ENGLEWOOD, N. J., June 24.—Pub- lic interest in the son bern to Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh was cen- tered today upon the choice of a name for the famous infant. Despite the reticence of Col. Lind- bergh and other members of the Morrow household since the announcement of the birth of a seven and three-quar- ters. pounds boy Sunday, the public seemed to take it for granted that the child would be christened either | Charles Augustus, jr., after his father, or Charles Dwight, a name combining that of his father and his maternal grandfather, Ambassador Dwight W.| Morrow | Unofficial word filtered past the guards at the gate of the Morrow es- tate that Mrs. Anne Lindbergh and the son born on her twenty-fourth birth- day were “making satisfactory progress,” but that was all. Messenger Boy Busy. A messenger boy tofled up the hill to the Morrow home at half-hour in- tervals all day yesterday, each time bringing a sheaf of telegrams and cablegrams of congratulation from all pa:ts of the world. Among them were messages from President Hoover, Don Manuel C. Tellez, Mexican Ambassador to Washington, and persons prominent in aviation circles. A_baby carriage manufacturer who | attempted to deliver a_sample of his product as a gift to the Lindbergh baby was turned back at the gate with the information relayed from the house through the guards that the Lind- berghs had not ordered a baby carriage and did not want one. May Make Long Trip. Next in interest to the probable name of the baby were the future plans of the Lindbergh family. ! Col. Lindbergh, who called upon Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd yesterday, that he “hoped in the near future make a tour of all the Pan-American Airways lines. He is technical adviser for the lines. Such a trip would take him down the west coast as far as San- tiago de Chile, across the continent to Buenos Aires and down the east coast to Rio de Janeiro. His previous South American flights have taken him to Venezuela, Colombia, Dutch and Brit- ish_Guiana One newspaper heard that a ship- | vard had been ordered to prepare the | Lindbergh honeymoon power yacht for | & cruise within a month. ~ Reports | were that the Lindbergh family planned | a cruise as soon as Mrs. Lindbergh is | able to travel. $223,000,000 SURPLUS REPORTED IN TREASURY | Expenditures of Last Week of June May Cut Figure Before Fis- cal Year End. By the Assoclated Press. ‘The Treasury's surplus for the 1930 fiscal year reached $223,020,522 last | Saturday. | As disclosed today, the Government | income then aggregated $4,106,318,144, | while its total expenditures since July 1 were $3,883,297,622. The receipts were $142,000,000 more than collected in the same period last year, but the surplus While the surplus exceeded $223,000,~ 000 last Saturday, it may not be so great on June 30, as expenditures in the last week may reduce it. A year ago on the same day the surplus was $237,- 000,000, while at the end of the year the surplus was $186,000,000. Expenditures for the present year have exceeded expenditurts for the same period of the 1929 fiscal year by $157,- 000,000, Income tax receipts for the present month have amounted to $497,000,000, bringing the total for the year to $2,381,607,020, an increase of $85,000,- | 000, as compared to the same period of the previous year. Customs receipts, which have shown | a spurt within the last 10 days, now to- | tal for the year $575,639,211, a decrease | of $13,000,000, as compared with last ' year, Very Special 1 value of regulatio A very 3 Rayon, wit B. F. SAUL CO. Natlonal 2100 985 15th St. N.W. | | | i | WASHINGTON, {MRS. HOOVER SENDS | over a N. B. C. network. Polo Shirts, $]-2° sleeves—in Blue, Tan and Green. The Mode—F at Eleventh . .C., TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1930. - FEATHERS FLY AT 4-H ANNUAL ENCAMPMENT Members of the 4-H Club, who have their tented city on the midst of a pillow fight which was part of the exhibition staged by them a visit tod; a trip to Washington. The club is formed by farm boys and girls who e: ounds of the Agriculture Department Building, in the hem when Secretary of Agriculture Arthur Hyde paid xcelled in some form of agriculture and thereby won | ~—P. & A. Photo. 4-H CLUB GREETINGS Regrets Inability to Be With Boys and Girls in D. C. En- campment, By the Assoclated Press. Unable to be in Washington for the 4-H Club Encampment, now in prog- ress here, Mrs. Hoover has written her regrets to the boys and girls who make up the organization. | The following letter was received from | the President’s fishing camp in the Blue | Ridge Mountains, where Mrs. Hoover is convalescing from her recent back injury: ‘0 the boys and girls of the 4-H Clubs: so hoped to be in Washington again this year at the time the 4-H Clubs were camping there, that I might | be able to attend your dinner and have | you all come to’see me again and tell | me the things your clubs had accom- plished this year and all your pians for next year. But, since I'am not to have that pleasure, I must content | myself with sending my greetings to | | those of you whom I met last year and | terday to 15 months each in McNell Is- | to you new members who have come to |land Federal Penitentiary, camp in Washington for the first time. “With the best of good wishes for a joyful and constructive camp and new year's program, I am “Yours cordially, (Signed) “LOU HENRY HOOVER.” Leadership in bringing the farmers together and in manning their organi- | zation is the greatest need of agricul- ture, Arthur M. Hyde, Secretary of Ag- riculture, said last night in an address | to the 4-H Clubs. It was broadcast Secretary Hyde sald that agriculture is a “worthy field for the life efforts | of the best of men. “Agriculture needs | you,” he said to the representatives of | 756,096 4-H Club members. ‘“Millions of American farm-families fling a chal- lenge to you. That challenge is: that you devote the intelligence of your head, the vitality of your health, the labor of your hands and the purpose of your heart to the leadership of the agriculture of the future. The broadcast from the camp in. cluded a description of the camp site by Morse Salisbury of the radio divi- sion of the Agriculture Department and the singing of “The Plowing Song” by the delegates, with the United States Marine Band accompanying. Man, ;E, Makes Run of Life. Accomplishing what he long desired, 78-year-old Thomas May recently ran from Kingston Vale to Putney Bridge, England, a distance of 3!, miles, in 25 minutes. “I have realized a life-long | ambition,” said May. “I have always | wanted to complete the run, and I am gludi and happy that at last I managed | to do it. | Feather- weights Mode tailored Linens and Nurotex Suits—with and with- out vests. The Linens are carefully pre-shrunk; correctly cut to fash- ion, and superiorily tailored. In natural, blue and tan shades. $15to $25 With Vests—$20 and $28 Nurotex—the finest of the weaves of its class —smart in de- sign; supremely com- fortable in weight. 51750 v ith Vests $22.50 f a well known make— n_long roll collar; half SCHOLARSHIPS OPEN | Wnshinzton\‘AIumni uf. Unlver:lty§ of Virginia to Make Appointments. | Two alumni scholarships to the Uni- | versity of Virginia for residents of the District for 1930-1931 are open to ap- | plicants, the appointments to be made by the Washington Chapter of the | University Alumni Association. The scholarships entitle appointees to exemption from tuition fees in the academic part of the university and to | remission of half of the university fee, Applications will be received by Rich- ard E. Shands, Shoreham Building, sec- retary of the local chapter. FOUR MEN SENTENCED IN IDAHO RUM CASE Two Others Get Prison Terms After Conviction in Liquor “Rebel- lion” at Wallace. By the Associated Press. COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, June 24— Four alleged leaders in the “Wallace rum rebellion” case were sentenced yes- | They were H. J. Rossi and W. H Herrick, former mayors; R. E. Weniger, former sheriff of Shoshone County, and W. J. Balley, chief of police. Twenty-three other male defendants were sentenced to four months each in the Kootenal County Jail, and four women were sentenced to two months each. Joseph Whalen was sentenced w‘ 30 days, as by the expiration of that | time he will have completed a 10-month | tence on another liquor charge. Judge J. H. McNary assessed no fines, | piracy is two years and $1,000 fine, | The term of former Sheriff Weniger | will run concurrently with a two-year sentence he received when convicted in the recent “Mullan whisky rebellio The maximum penalty for liquor con- trial, which involved similar charges— | that officials permitted liquor selling and vice and collected toll to support the mining Cities: of Wallace and | By the Associated Pr Mullan, BYRNS WILL MAKE Veteran Tennessee Representatives and Three Others After Nomination, 5. NASHVILLE, Tenn., June 24.—Rep- resentative Joseph W. Byrns, veteran of 11 terms in the National House of Rep- resentatives, yesterday became the fifth aspirant for the Democratic nomination for the six-year United States Senate term, beginning March 4. In the primary of August 7 Mr. Byrns will be opposed by another veteran Ten- nessee member of the House, Repre- sentative Cordell Hull of the fourth district. Andrew L. Todd, Murfreesboro capitalist, also is making an active cam- paign for the nomination. Dr. John R. Neal, Knoxville lawyer, and a member of the defense counsel in the Scopes evo- lution trial at Dayton, and David W. Dodson of Nashville are the other two candidates. Senator William E. Brock of Chatta- nooga, incumbent, is a candidate for only the short term, from November. CHOLERA IN PHILIPPINES Natives Conceal Bodies, Making Health Measures Difficult. By Radio to The Star &hd the Chicago Daily News.' Copyright, 1030 MANILA, P. I, June 24—An epidemic of, Astatic cholera, aggravated by famine, raging in the Bantayan Islands, according to reports from ‘the health authorities of Cebu Province. Families of the sick persons hide them and the health officers find their patients only when they have died. Many huts and in some cases entire villages are infected in this way, in a region where cholera seems to be be- yond control. Few Americans are threatened, but the toll of native poor | is heavy. All airports in the United Kingdom now are vernment controlle CHIEAR HOT SPELL CAUSES 12 0EATHG | 97 Degrees Reportet Theityld While Heat Is General’fif Entire Régioh. By the Associated Press ~ CHICAGO. - June 24~ i tiice. hgah & setting & new seasoy’s record Al 9% Afea grees, caused 12 deatdis. iy, GRICARG. terday. e The weather mad B pre thundershowers would . end lfu WY §ein suffering during the night but daWibe found the thermometer. cqgifig. g in_the eighties il N In other parts of Tilingls fempckas. s tures went even higher and Copizaia Teported pavements buckling WIGgE 8 heat of 106 degrees. Lincoln, Nobf., registered 102 degrees, and &, ther- mometer on a porch with a sobthern exposure at Edgewood, Iowa, had the , almost incredible reading of 132 in the.y sun, a Among the Chicago deaths, one man rg succumbed to sunstroke; anotner, oversa come by the heat, fell from a scaffold. uy Three were drownings and deaths by, heart attack which physicians ascribed to the blistering heat. > The list of 12 Chicago dead was greater than the entire death list frork heat for the Summer of 1929, | _One of the heat victims was James. | Firea; 65, who died from runstroke while' mowing a lawn, It was Firea's | first day's work since Inst Winter, Ane other who died was Mrs. Fannie Rosen- thal, 48, who, finding the heat in her bedrcom oppressive, whlked to the porch for relief and fell dead. Y8 tad Y ATTEMPT TO BRIBE DETECTIVE CHARGED, Man Demands Trial by Jury and Is Released Under $500 Bond. For an alleged attempt to bribe Detective S, F. Gravely of the third | precinet, William Dorsey, colored, 900 block of Hughes court, was bound over to the grand jury under $500 bond in Police Court yesterday. | Dorsey was also arrested for posses- | sion of whisky. He demanded a jury | trial and was releasted under $500 bond,’ Gravely charged that when he raided * | Dorsey’s home yasterday afternoon and | discovered a half-gallon of liquor, the ;(’Dlnrrd man offered him $20 to break the jar and destroy the evidence | The policeman declared that the man held i his hand two $10 bills which he brought to court as evidence. Colored (CAMPUS IS DECORATED . | BYCO-EDS IN SHORTS"” | | f What Marshall College Men Will Do About Trouserettes Not Yet Evident. By the Associated Press. HUNTINGTON, W. Va., June 24.— ! Shorts have come to the Marshall College campus—but the falr young * | eo-eds, not the men,, are wearing them. ‘What the men will do about it*has not yet become evident. ‘The new outfits consist of dark blue silk shorts, reaching to a few inches ' above the knee, and low-necked sports '%s shirts. Whether socks are worn or not = appears to be a matter of preference, No official statement was forthcoming | from college officials on the matter of.- co-eds in shorts, but the belief seemeds+ | to prevail - that college ~authorities - uld not interfere, WoobpwARD & L.oTHROP isso GO OIDEN ARNIVERSARY VY K\' YEAR 1930 Litle Women's Silk FROCKS $13.50 An Unusual Value At This Low Price Identical models of many in this collection have been in our regular stocks at much higher prices. Little women will find these frocks solvé the diffi- culties of proportions . . . that the tailoring and styles are the best. Sizes 3714 to 4114, Shantung Jacket Frocks Striped Tub Silk Frocks Washable Printed Crepe Frocks Embroidered Georgette Frocks Plain and Printed Chiffon Frocks SrrcAL-Srze ApPAREL, THID FLOOR. Mallinson’s Indestructible Flat Chiffon Voile Regularly Much We obtained a limited quantity at a special concession, so we 4;e nblé tofoflg_r this famous Mallinson’s Indestructible Flat Chiffon Voile at $1.95 yard. Jt is the 9 Higher $ I " yard well-liked heavier chiffon . . . in small, well-spaced, floral patterns or large languorous designs. Light and dark grounds—many duotone patterns. SrLxs, SxcoNd FLOOR.