Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
VIRGINIA HONORS FIRST PRESIDENT Achievements of Washington . Are Recalled on Anniver- sary of Birth Today. By the Assoclated Press. RICHMOND, Va., February 21.— Americans everywhere, both at home and abroad, inevitably will turn their thoughts tomorrow to George Washing- ton and the stirring days of the pro- motion, but in Virginia the 199th an- niversary of the first President’s birth holds unusual significance. Not only the day mark the anniversary of Virginia's most illustrious son, but it finds active preparation under way for celebration of the Sesquicentennial 'of his victory at Yorktown, where inde- pendence was won. Resolution Recalled. February 22, a hundred and fifty years ago, found Virginia, along with the other Colonies, in desperate straits. Benedict Arnold’s British troops had wrought havoc in the Old Dominion. This was recalled this week end by Virginians as they made plans for the great celebration of October 19, the 150th anniversary of the battle of Yorktown, where Lord Cornwallis was trapped by the coinbined forces of Washington and Lafayette. Wakefield, birthplace of Washington, is being restored in Moreland County, Va., to take its place with Mount Ver- non as a national shrine. A move- ment has already begun for school chil- dren to donate 10 cents each, the funds to be used to purchase Perry Farm, near Fredericksburg, where Washing- ton lived as a boy and where, if any- where, he cut down the cherry tree of the legend. . Virginia, in co-operation with the United States Government, is making plans for the Washington Bicentennial of 1932, The 199th anniversary will be ob- served Monday in hundreds of schools, since February 22 comes on Sunday, and banks and public offices will be closed. The Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution are sponsoring services in many cities and in Richmond wreaths will be laid on the statue of Washington in Capitol Square. INDIANS ASK MILLIONS FOR HUNTING GROUND Spokane Tribes, Claiming U. §. Vio- lated Two Wreaties, Ask $3,000,000 Compensation. By the Associated Press. SPOKANE. Wash., February 21.— Spokane Indian tribes tcok the legal warpath today, hoping to scalp the Federal Government of nearly $3,000,- 000 compensation for their buffalo hunting grcunds and berry flelds. The three bands of Spokanes, who once roamed this country with toma- hawks and arrows in hand, opened fire in Superior Court with briefs and writs, claiming the whites stole their hunt- ing grounds 100 years ago. The plain- tiffs number 750. Their claims that the United States Government _ violated two _treaties, signed in 1855 and 1887, will be prose- cuted before the Bureau of Indian Af- fairs of the Department of the Interior. The Indians, in tribal conclave at ‘Wellpinit, authorized the action, which contends lands extending from the Spokane River west to the Grand Coulee and their hunting and fishing rights and berry field, were unlaw- fully taken from them. They claim in 1855, Isaac Stevens, first Governor of Washington, met them Washington’ BY THOMAS R. HENRY. ‘The ancestry of George Washington Wakefleld National Menorial Associa- tion, which is engaged in resforing the Virginia birthplace of the first President An expert genealogical and historical investigator, now attached to the as- sociation, spent 16 years in quiet re- search in England. This research, according to officials of the association, carries the Washing- ton family back to a landholder, William de Hertburn, who in 1182 disposed of the manor of Hertburn in the county of Durham by the' North Sca and pur- chased the manor of Wessyngton, in the same county. The record of the pur- chase still is extant and apparently is the first bit of evidence to be found bearing upon the Washington genealogy. This was about the time family nam were coming into use in England. Wil- liam de Hertburn had two sons who in- herited the manor of Wessyngton Both took the name of the family seat and it was inherited by their descend- ants, with occasional alterations in spelling, for many gonerations. With indisputable documentary evidence, of- ficals of the association say, the fam line is traced through the counties Westmorland and Lancaster to one Lawrence Washington, who in 1538 was granted titls by Henry the Eighth to one of the three manors in the parish of Sulgrave, Northamptonshire. H- evidently was a man of considerable ability, for twice he had been mayor of the city of Northampton. Family Ranks High. Documentary evidence has been un- covered, according to assoclation of- ficials, for members of the family in each generation which shows them to have been at all times landlords, public of- ficials or notable churchmen rather than, as was asserted by the historian Rupert Hughes, “people of persistent mediocrity enduring for many genera- ons.” From Lawrence Washington the Sul- grave manor descended to his son, Robert, who was born in the manor house about the year 1542, and died there in 1592. This Robert, the gene- alogist has established, was the father of 15 children by two wives. Evidently there came a rift in the family. The two older sons, Robert and Lawrence, were children of the first wife. Evi- dently they found life unpleasant at the manor house with the stepmother and her large brood and asked their father to give them their share of the estate and let them seek their fortunes elsewhere. The old landlord consented and shortly before his death sold a large part of the lands of his Sulgrave manot to his nephew, Lawrence Makepeace, a wealthy man and probably a distant relative of the novelist Thackeray. Thackeray had, it is likely, no idea of the distant kinship when he painted the character of Washington in “The Virginians,” many years later. But old Robert Washington continued to live at Sulgrave until he died, and after his death Makeplece allowed the second wife and her children to_ continue to make their home there. But the his- toric enanor had passed forever out of the direct line of George Washington. Brothers Leave Home. The boys took their money snd went out in the world to make careers for themselves. They found a patron in a relative, Robert Spencer, Baron Worm- leighton, ancestor of the Earls of North- ampton, who owned, among many other esiates, the manor of Great Brington in Northamptonshire. In a house still standing in the village of Great Bring- ton, the Investigator insists, Robert Washington lived from 1600 to his | | and made the treaty. History paints the picturesque scene with the blue- coated soldiery of the Governor com- ing from white tents and the gaudily- p';lnl;:k m&hmiemer‘gml from dlepeel smoke the pipe of peace and si the parchment. - ‘SKETCH BOOK’ TRIAL QUASHED IN CHICAGO Judge Throws Case Out of Court; Holds Censorship Matter of Personal Opinion. By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, February 21 —Charge of obscenity brought by the police against members of Earl Carroll's “Sketch Book” cast were dismissed today. The court granted a defense motion to quash complaints against James Carroll, Earl's brother, who manages the show. William Demarest and Don Howard, two male principals, and 26 chorus girls. The company moves to Milwaukee tonight but will return after one week for a second run here, “Shows should be censored before they are presented to - the Judge Justin E. McCarthy ruled. “I had the pleasure of seeing the show before and after the police raided it, Pebruary 13. Obscenity is determined by the average citizen, not by statutes of law, and I have aiso in mind the me tendency toward frer and more elastic aspects of the stage and the screen.” i EDGE SAYS U. S. KEEPS WASHINGTON'S SPIRIT First President’s “Common Sense” Btill Dominant Trait, Envoy Tells Club. By the Associated Press. PARIS, February 21.—“The Wash- n it of calm and common sense” is still the dominant note in American life, Ambassador Walter E. told his countrymen tcnight at the annual Washington's birthday din- ner, organized by the American Club of Paris. The Ambassador seized the occasion to defend the United States against | O charges of materialism, which he said :lnl‘d been “in some instances insult- I must denounce as an absurd fal- lacy the suggestion that our people are standardized or that we desire to standardize other people,” he said. “I am convinced that in spite of a mad scramble for material success, the ‘Washington spirit of calm and com- mon sense is still the dominant note of our people.” Since Washington's birthday falls this year on Sunday the American em- bassy and consulate general will ob- serve a holiday Monday. ing Ambassador Edge place a ‘wreath before the equestrian statue of Washington in the Place d'Iena and the Stars and Stripes will be hoisted over the Hotel de Ville of Paris, At noon the Ambassador will give a luncheon for the Latin American diplo- mats, an annual affair instituted by the late Ambassador Herrick. Ensign Carusi Coming Here. Ensign Eugene C. Carusi, son of the late president of the Board of Educ: tion, Dr. Charles P, Carusi, is coming to Washington for duty. Naval orders, nnounced yesterday, direct that En- sign Carusi be doctached from the re- celving ship at San Francisco and that be ry duty at the Navy Yard here. has recently been on tic Fleet, aboard the at public,” | also death in 1683. He never lived, it is asserted, in the nearby village of Little Brington, where a house which bears over its door the inscription, “The Lord Giveth and the Lord Taketh Away” has been proclaimed as his residence. This was established, asso- ciation officials say, through the cour- tesy of the present Earl Spencer, who permitted examination of his family | Ppapers, The other brother, Lawrence Wash- ington, lived first, after leaving Sul- grave, Wormleighton, in Warwick- shire, where a child born to him died in infancy and was buried in the church attended by his brother at Great Brington. The legend over the door of the pseudo-Washington house has been associated with the loss of this child and also with the lcss of Sul- grave, but the historian has proved 1HE_ SUNDAY S TAR, WASHINGTON, D €, FEBRUARY 22, 1931—PART ONE s Ancestors Genealogist Traces Paternal Kinship to William de Hertburn in England, Who in 1182 Bought Wessyngton Manor. dren. CHLD PROTECTION * HELD INDEQUATE Doctors Tell Deficiencies of Health Work at Final Session Here. the peace of Westmoreland County, and she was the mother of five chil- John Washington lived at Mad- dux Creek from 1656 to 1665, when he purchased a small part of what later was known as the Wakefield estate of 3,500 acres. In the house he built on this land on Bridges Creek he died in the year 1677 of the Julian calendar. He, his first wife and four of their children were bured in the graveyard he established close to this residence, which recently has been located and restored by the Memorial Association. More than 20 of his descendants and those of his younger brother, Lawrence, who came to America and joined John in 1658, also were buried there. The site of John Washington's house has recently been located, the Memori- al Association announces. Here his son John lived and died. His son Law- rence—evidently an exceptionally able man, for he was a judge on the West-! moreland County bench when he was 20 years old and a representative in the House of Burgesses at 25—carved out a carcer for himself. President Born. . Lawrence’s fon Augustine in 1717 built a new house about threr-fourths of a mile east of Bridges Creeix, where his son George was born by his second wife, Mary (Ball). This son became th» first President of the United States. ¢ ‘Warhington's ancestry. according to these researches, has been greatly com- plicated bv the fact that there were three English Washington families, en- tirely without relationship and deriving the family nzme from three distinct sources. One of these families origin- ted from the parish of Ravensworth in Yorkshire, where thére was an es- tate called Washton. Members of the family took this name when famil names came into style, and In th course of generations it was expanded to ‘Washington.” . The, other family derives its name from the village of Wasyngton, just south of London. So far as could be found, there were no intermarriages between these families. But they have led many historians far astray. This is the first time, association offi- cials say, that any authentic informa- tion has been given to the public which can be supported throughout with documentary evidence on the fam- ily tree of Washington. The first President, it is pointed out, expressed curlosity 'concerning his own English ancestry, but never was able to secure st ini ly th of sa every year of diphtheria, every case of 95 in to pl al of in of of m nually, it was revealed, only 22 Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary Interior, received a message from Dean E. P. Lyon of the University of Min- nesota suggesting that another national conference be called to consider the question of human heredity, which, it was asserted, has been largely neglected Lyon wrcte, stock, as contrasted with human stock, envircnmental factors. by the contrast between the large ex- penditure of public funds, foundation endowments and private gifts extended on the environmental side and the com- parative neglect of the practical aspects Great gaps remain to be closed in protecting the health of America’s childhood. Deficiencies in medical knowledge and ill_greater deficiencies in the appli- cation of what is known, as shown by tefive investigations of approximat>- 350 prominent physicians and health workers over the past year, were out- lined at the final meeting yesterday of e medical service section of the White House Conference on Child Health and Protection. With 55000 cases of smallpox an- ~r cent children are vaccinated. Five thou- nd children under 5 years of age die which s held preventable by immuniza- tion, of which only 22 per cent of the children receive the benefit. due childhocd, were found in more than Bad teeth, to improper nutrition in early per cent of children. Another Parley Suggested. ‘The final meeting, presided over by of the favor of environment by the present conference. “One has but to envisage,” Dean “a cenference on farm sce how great a part heredity would ay in’ the ciscussions and researches. We believe the knowledge of heredity ready existing opens great possibilities race improvement, quite as important the opinjon of many_authorities as We are moved heredity as applied to man.” Many Mothers Die in U. 8. ‘The United States lags behind the civilized world in prevention of child- birth mortality, it was reported to- the conference by & committee headed by Dr. Fred Lyman Adair of the University 15,000 deaths of ‘This, he sald, un- Chicago, with others each year. authentic information. FORMER MRS. CHILD From U. 8. Ambassador to Italy, to Become Mrs. Pavenstedt. By the Associated Pres: WILL MARRY BROKER Maude Parker, Divorced in 1926 SOUTHERN PINES, N. C,, February 21.—The engagement of Mrs. Parker doubtedly contributes to the dependency or delinquency of children deprived of their mothers from birth. This com- mittee stressed the need of better train- ing in obstetrics in all parts of the country. In those localities where the population is too sparse to support a trained physician with fees, it was recommended that trained medical men be maintained by subsidies. Among the 345,000 Indians of the country, it was reported by Dr. Philip Van Ingen of New York, the medicine man—usually entirely ignorant of medi cine—still is & powerful factor. Ignor- ance and superstiticn, he said, keep up high tuberculosis and infant mortality rates. The hospitals and sanitariums provided on the reservations, he said, are in almost every case below the |of the world in interests of interna- Child of New York and Southern Pines to Edmund Willilam Pavenstedt, New York 1‘”“::' was ux}]nn:nced at a din- ner given here tonight by Mr. an i St;_uk:herx Burt. i g ey will be married in Ne City March 31. bl Mrs. Child, who writes under the pen name of Maude Parker, was grant- ed a divorce from Richard Washburn Child, Ambassador to Italy from 1920 to 1923, in 1926. She has resided here ;1‘(,)1 ?er two, g;ugll;urs for. the last eral years. e a_granddaughter of the late Commodore Foxhall Pugrkfr. 2d, former commandant of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. YOUTH’S PILGRIMAGE TO EUROPE PLANNED Mobilization of Women and Chil- dren of World to Be Inauguration in Hunt for Lasting Peace. Mobilization of women and children ya be ge: ca wil tional friendship and understanding is being undertaken in a movement Xngnu- gurated by the United States Flag As- soclation Women’s National Council, of ing M that there was no association between it and these events. Lawrence ‘Washington, after leaving Wormleighton, became general mana- ger of the Manor of Wyke Hamon, in Northamptonshire, owned by Baron Wormleighton, and died there in 1616. He was brought to the church at Great | Brington for burial with the lost child But he never had resided in that par- | ish—an error, association officials say, which has caused considerable difficulty | in tracing the Washington lineage. | Lawrence was married and had one | son before he left Sulgrave. This son, | Lawrence Washington, entered Brazenose College, Oxford, and re- | mained there for 14 years. He had the | degrees of bachelor of divinity and mas- ter of arts, and served as lector, then | the highest educational office at Ox- | ford, and for a time as proctor of the | university. ‘This, the historian ‘asserts, is convincing evidence against some pletures which have been presented of the great-grandfather of George Wash- ington as a good-for-nothing country minister. Weds Amphilis Twiggen. While at Oxford he married Am- philis Twiggen. Under the rules of the university no professor could hold office more than a year after marriage So he resigned and obtained a living— that is, a parish—at Purleigh, in Essex, near London. That was in 1632., The same year his son John, George Wash- ington’s great-grandfather, was born. Another son, Lawrence, was born in 1635, while his mother was visiting her e in another county. | The rectorship of Purleigh, the old records show, was a very profitable {“lving.” He and all his familv re- | mained loyal to the crown during the bled days of the civil war ana teral were given high commisions in | the military and government scrvice by | | Charles the Pirst. Then came the bt- | | ter days of Cromwell and the “round. | head” Parliament for the Loyalists. | i lost his head. Lawrence Washington lost his living and was for bidden to read from the book of com. mon praver cr to teach religion in any form. The charges against him, the historian asserts, were false. | The broken clergyman lived on until | 1652 on the estate of a gentleman near | Purleigh. 1In that year he died and | was buried at Malden Church nearby, | where a memorial window recently has | been placed by the City of Malden. | | | i Mass. “His eldst son, John, without an inheritance, was forced to make his | own way in the turmoil of London. In 1656 he became a partner of an Edward Pre<cott. who was engaged in the Vir- | ginia tobacco trade. Goes to America. In connection with the sale of to- bacco he went to many of the s-aport twns of Northern Evrone. goine ne far as Dantzig in Poland. There he joined {one of Prescoti’s ships and tou-Ted ot | many ports in Germany, Denmark. Sweden and Norvay, disposing of the cargo of Virginia tobacco. In 1656 he sailed from Copenhagen for Virginia, arrived at Maddux Creek cn the Po- tomac, 3 miles up from the present town of Wakefleld, and remained there. e married as his first wife, Anne, daughter of Lieut. Col. Nathaniel Pope, & prominent merchant lmk Justice of | ~ . chairman. |June when three-score American boys | % which Mrs. Herbert Hoover is honorary u The project will formally begin in 2nd girls from all parts of the country will make a patriotic pilgrimage through the States, after which they will visit England and France, taking with them a message of good will, Informed of the movement, Gen, John J. Pershing gave the following in- dorsement: “Universal peace will never be estab- lished upon the earth until lasting {riendship founded upon mutual under- standing is created among nations. It is not possible to create such friendship except through education extending over several generations. The inaugu- ration of such a movcment among the citizens of tomorrow by the United States Flag Association deserves the support of all loyal Americans who are well-wishers of mankind.” Se St: th for HUGHES TO BE SPEAKER Chief Justice Will Address Patent Law Association Banquet. Chief Justice Hughes will be the principal speaker at the annual ban- quet of the American Patent Law As- sociation, to be held Wednesday eve- ning at the Mayflower Hotel. Among those expected to attend are judges of the United States Supreme Court, the Court of Customs and Pat- ent Appeals, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, the United States Court of Claims and the District of Columbia Supreme Court. Secretary of Commerce Lamont also is expected to be present. George A. Prevost, oresident of the organization, will preside. BRATTON MAKES TALK bil di fe _Senator Addresses Banquet Held | !t by Law College. The thirty-fifth anniversary of the Washington College of Law was ob- served with a banquet at the Mayflower Hotel last night. The principai speaker was Senator Bratton of New Mexico. Approximately 300 persons attended the banquet, over which Grace Hays Riley, dean of the institution, presidet Ry Bo %o o feroiesiradrefrdeddrddedoadodd Specialising in < Perfect DIAMONDS Also complete line of stand- ard and all-American made wetehes. Shop at the friendly store— you're always greeted with a ;ml‘e—wlth no obligation to uy. < i L 4 2 | ,} Accounts Invited urtzburger Co. 901 G St. N.W. oo BOdadrfodradrotsdosdecred By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. Idaho Senate Votes th minimum standards. CEREMONY T0 BEV HELD AT TOMB OF UNKNOWN Registrar General of Children of American Revolution Will Lead Service at Alexandria. ALEXANDRIA, Va. February 21— Ceremonies at the Tomb of the Un- known Soldier of the American Revo- lution, which is located in the church- rd of the old Presbyterian Meeting House on South Fairfax street here, will held Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in commemoration of the birth- day of George Washington. Mrs. Josiah A. Van Orsdel, registrar neral of the Children of the Ameri- n Revolution, will be in charge and 1l be assisted by a number of the na- tional officers of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Buried in the old Presbyterian Meeting House churchyard are a_num- | ber of the intimate friends of Wash- igton during his lifetime here and at ount Vernon. . S. AIDES WILL ATTEND GENEVA POLICE PARLEY cret Service Head and Bureau of Engraving Director Sail for Counterfeiting Parley. Chief W. H. Moran of the United ates Secret Service, and Alvin W. Hall, director of the Bureau of Engrav- ing 'and Printing, salled yesterday on | e Olympic for Europe. They will be gone for some time, at- tending ‘the first Conference of Rep- resentatives of Central Police Officers at Geneva, Switzerland, where they will | appear in an advisory and_expert ca- | pacity representing this The conference starts March 4 and is Government. r the purpose of international co- operation in the suppression of coun- terfeiting currency. DIVORCE BILL PASSES for 90-Day Residence Requirement. BOISE, Idaho, February 21 (#).—A 1l to make it possible to file suit for vorce in Idaho after 90 days’ resi- dence in the State was passed by the Senate today, 27 to 17. was a reversal of the Senate’s stand | yesterday when the measure was de- The action ated. Today's balloting represented a change in the votes of six Senators and an addition to the Ust of two who were | absent yesterday. Senator Callahan of Shoshonc County reaffirmed his opposition to the measure | and asked the Senators to in spite of the sordid interests {avoring | t 'stand firm bill.” bill was sent to the House, where will come up next week if it follows usual course. “Good Enough” isn’t good enough for us CERTIFIED T With a Money-Back $695 $545 “29” Buick Master 6 Sed: Dodge Senior 6 Sedan “29” Plymouth Sedan ........ them. We don't care to stake our reputation on makeshift overhauling. We don’t guarantee any car unless we know it Wwill make' good with you. REPORT SAYSBULL | T0BE GANG VICTIM "on Life of Lawyer Hurt in Michigan Crash. By the Assoclated Press. TORONTO, Ontario, February 21.— ‘The Toronto Star sald today police had been warned from three separate sources that three Chicago gunmen were in Toronto waiting for a chance to kill W. Perkins Bull, prominent lawyer. Mr. Bull now is in a hospital here as a result of an automobile accident while on a hurried trip from' Chicago. The Star said that detectives were searching for the men, although Sergt. William McConnell, in charge of the Detective Bureau, denied knowledge of the warnings. ‘The newspaper claimed to have re- liable information that “Bugs” Moran, Chicago gang leader, was in Toronto recently and said he might still be here. It stated that a man from Hamilton, Ontario, who figured in a recent murder case there, telephoned a Toronto editor and said that the Chicago gunmen were out to “get” Mr. Bull. “He'll never leave the hospital alive, the man was quoted as having said. The Star said it had learned Mr. Bull had been ordered twice to pay tribute to the Capone gang and had failed to do_so. Mr. Bull was injured near Coldwater, Mich., when his car was struck by truck. MRS. SIDLEY DIVORCED. Her Husband Is Suing W. P. Bull to Halt Alleged Spying. KINOSHA, Wis. February 21 (P)— Mi:. Mabelle Horlick Sidley of Racine, Wis., was granted a divorce from Dr. John Streeter Sidley in Circuit Court at_a special hearing here today. Mrs. Sidley is the daughter of Wil- liam Horlick, Racine malted milk manufacturer. Dr. Sidley was formerly an_official of the Horlick company. Dr. Sidley was not in court. He is suing W. Perkins Bull, K. C., of Toron- to, one of Mrs. Sidley’s attorneys, in & Chicago court to enjoin him from allegedly setting spies to watch him. The court session was unannounce] and the interlocutory decree was grauted on grounds of desertion, with- out opposition from Dr. Sidley’s at- torney, who told the court a reconcilia- tion was_impossible. Both Mr. Bull's and Mrs. Sidley's apartments on the Chicago Gold Coast were raided last Saturday night by Fed- eral narcotic agents, who afterward termed the raid a “mistake.” A seven-foot shark and 60 young ones {were caught recently in the English Channel, the young ones surviving after being placed in the aquarium at Brigh- ton, England. Building? New l...umber New Millwork New Plumbing Save Money, Too! L2 ’ (/ 3—Branches—3 MAIN OFFICE-I5™& H Sts. N.E DOWNTOWN-62 & C Sts. S.W. BRIGHTWOOD-5925Ga Ave. N.W H WASHINGTON,D.C. TR DD TR RO PO O | HEATING IS CHEAPEST [LOMAT Most Dependable Is Absolute quietness and economy are made possible by the new dif- fusor, which is standard equipment | on our burner. Visit our show- rooms—see why Ollomatie is heat- Ing more homes tha any other burner— DOME/TIC | | SE PHONE POTOMAC 1048 WmH.GOT TLIES - MNGH If & car needs mew pistons, it gets If it needs paint, we paint it. RADED CARS , New-Car Guarantee Studebaker Dictator Sedan Studebaker Commander Vietoria “29” Essex Sedan . $395 ... $325 LEE D. BUTLER in. 2155 Champlain St. Above 'V Near 18th Toronto Paper Learns Plot! |l RUMMAGE According to our custom, we have culled out all the small lots, cese ger A e NI NS e IR aie 6 008 W ee bs st e a s ne o eommemee e o mnca e o T ) 29¢ 39¢ 79c wwass.. 09C 98¢ 12 19¢ 49c $5.95 $1:2 broken sizes, odds and ends, etc.—cutting the prices sensationally— Monday—S8 to 1 No Charges—No C. O. D.’s—No Alterations No Deliveries—No Exchanges—in this Sale l 6.75 VHRSOBIIATRON, . . oo . oo o i cuis ot oie e SO —_— 10 Rain Coats Imported, light weight. Slightly soiled. Were $15. .95 Left from suits........ e Sy S . s3= 16 Pairs Wool Knickers $ 3,95' Were $7.50 to $15. .. »cumommeast eI TR wres . - — ; & 1Q.75 Were $70. S'!zen 34 and 35...... come o ommomme mms m—onm. s18= 3 Pairs Flannel Trousers White, but soiled. Sizes 40 and 42......0000 00 cmecmmoms sumeo s szassase $8 and $10 value........ceuo. mmommomnoomne et matumennles ¢ an¥e s oo 95c Fancy Shirts Were SLqu [T 1R - L S S S —— B 79c $.59 Were $3.50, $4 and $5...c.cocommessormercmmons cmmemmommerngiio s o5 s 000 — Slightly soiled or damaged. Sizes 14 and 14%% Dress Shirts $1:3 Were $2.50, $3.50 and $4. Slightly soiled. ... omemeecssmerecesuin — $9.69 Were $7.50. Slightly soiled. Sizes 14, 1414, 16'; and 17....... — Rayon Polo Shirts 4-in-hands and bows. Were $1 and $1.50.. Silk Cravats By sd by BIOPIRT: . . . . oo sniovs b sis s/s e asienormmms s o sininismals s 9c Mufflers Cashmere and silk. Were $1.50, $2.50 and $3.50...................... 69c Were $4.50. Sizes 7, 774 and 7%.... Woolen Gloves §1.79 Damaged by display ........... — Pajamas Silk and wool and fancy lisle. Were 75c and $1. Union Suits Madras; athletic model. Were $1 and $1.50........ Were $1.00 & . - Pull-on Undershirts Rayon and lisle; mostly size 40. Were 75¢c and $1.. ‘White rayon; all size 40. Were $2.50. .. Lisle Union Suits Some athletic; some ankle lengths; all size 40. Were $2, $2.. Athletic coat style. Were $3.50 to $5.. Shirts and Drawers : American Hosiery Co.; medium weight lisle. Were $4 a garment. . . ... Were $§1 and $1.50. Sizes 30 and 32...... Tan Buckle Belts Were $1, $1.50 and $2 placing them on sale— Suits, Overcoats & Topcoats $ e g = 95 19 Pairs Wool Trousers 2 Full Dress Suits Linen Street Vests Fancy Shirts Fancy Shirts 39¢ Silk Shirts Silk Cravats 29¢ Silk Cravats Mark Cross Gloves $1.19 3 Lounging Robes Hosiery Rayon Shorts Athletic Union Suits Silk Undershirts Strap Belts 6 Leather Windbreakers Were $5, $6 and $7... Cloth Caps Henry Heath of London; and domestic makes. Were $2 to $5 The Mode—F at Eleventh