Evening Star Newspaper, July 9, 1931, Page 28

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ErEre> ez 2 B_12 %" CAPITAL EXPORTS INCREASE IN 1350 U. S. Figures Show $733,- 000,000, Compared to $450,- 000,000 for 8-Year Average. The Commerce Department has found | that the net export of capital from the | United States in 1930 was $733,000,000, 1 compared to the average for the | :l.‘ht yep:.fi preceding of $450,000,000. | These figures, made public in a study of the balance of international pay- ments, contrasted with $306,000,000 in | 1920 and $944,000,000 for 1928. | In & summary of the report & Julius Klein, the Assistant Secretary of Commerce, said American tourists last | year were estimated to have left abroad | a total of $811,000,000, which he de- | scribed as a relatively small decline | from the record tourist expenditures of | $868,000,000 in 1929. | Equal to Foreign Investments. H “These outlays,” Klein said, “amount- ed to approximately the same as the| total receipts by the United States from the sum of the country's foretgn long- | term investments, the yield of which ‘was placed at $826,000,000. “The number of Americans who traveled actually increased, as com- with the previous year, but care- investigation disclosed that aver- age expenditures were less than in pre- | vious years. Klein said receipts from interest, bond redemptions and amor.ization on American long-term investments abroad, including payments on the United States Government’s war loan account, reached a new record total of $1,300,- 000,000 i “Although Americans bought foreign stocks and bonds in the international security markets to the amount of $360,000,000," he added. “the purchase and repatriation by foreigners of for- | eign securities previously accumulated here involed total payments of $806,- 000,000; with the result that these op- tions necessitated the remittance to country by foreign banks or other | markets on a short-term basis. transfer agencies of a net sum of nearly $450,000,000. Ninth Report Issued. “These payments, together with the fact that the year's purchases by for- elgners of American stocks and bonds | were more than $100,000,000 in excess of the amount paid here for American securities repurchased from foreign holders, accounted largely for the year's relatively small net export of $290,000,- 000 in long-term capital.” In addit.on, Klein said, about $443,- 000,000 went adroad which citizens of other nations had carried on_deposit here or had invested in the financial The “930 report, Klein explained, was the ninth issued by the department and there were no comparable figures for the 1920-22 depression. He added the latest study should “prove to be the firs: definite enrichment of our knowl- edge of business cycles” during a de- pression. - DUKE OF AOSTA BURIED AMID HEROES HE LED Great Men of Nation Gather With | Allied Generals in Last Rites. By the Assocated Press TRIESTE, Italy, July 9.—Thirty, thousand heroes of the 3d Army lying | in Redipuglia Cemetery received into their midst yesterday their late leader | the Duke of Aosta. | The great men of the nation gathered at the cemetery to see his body laid to rest in ground which once echoed with the thunder of | marching, fighting hordes. | An army of comrades of the 30,000, | who escaped the others fate, y of them, however, sadly mutilated, thronged the buriai ground. The duke's widow, the Duchess of | Aosta, his cousin, King Victor Em- | manuel, Crown Prince Humbert, the duke’s two sons and his two brothers, four government ministers and gen- erals of the sllied armies came on a special train from Turin following the funeral train. David G. Farragut, great American | British South African statesman and | empire builder, were all born on July | 5, in 1801, 1810 and 1853, respectiv THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1931 COMMODITY SURPLUS HELD l CAUSE OF Dr. Felix Morley Tells Institute of Public| Affairs Growth of Individual Pro- duction Also Plays Part. BY THOMAS R. HENRY, Staff Correspondent of The Star. UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA, July 9.—The international scope of unem- ployment, now affecting through the world as great a population as that of the United States, was analyzed be- fore the Institute of Public Affairs here today by Dr. Felix Morley of the Brock- ings Institute. The fundamental cause, he said, is the great surplus stocks of coal, oil, wheat, sugar, rubber, copper and cot- ton, which are the basic commodities of all international trade, but this has been greatly complicated by subsidiary factors. One of the most notable of these, he pointed out, is “scientific management.” Through this the pro- duction of the individual, he showed, has been increased since 1914 40 per cent in paper factories, 46 per cent in steel mills, 50 per cent in the mill in- dustry, 178 per cent in automobile fac- tories and 292 per cent in tire factories. “Without denying the long-range value of changes in the interests of efficiency,” he said, “it is apparent that there is a questidnable social gain in producing the same number of auto- mobiles with half the number of work- ers, if the other half find themselves 2s a result without the power to pur- chase automobiles or any other com- modity.” l;'ltlonlllxltlon of Industry. A second factor, he said, is the na- tionalization of industry. by which each country strives to produce everything it needs without consigering the world economic balance. This he charac- terized as primarily political and of only illusory economic soundness in many cases. Thus China is trying to develop. its own textile industry, with the result that Bitish weavers are job- less, and the United States has thrown | admiral; Phineas T. Barnum, greatest many Germans out of work by de- |of showmen, and Cecll John Rhodes, | veloping its own dye industry. A big contributor to unemployment, he said, “is the appalling series of tariff walls whi le the world UNEMPLOYMENT into & honeycomb of artificially re- stricted compartments. Nations are beginning to find that these walls are at least as effective in reducing exports as in keeping out imports.” A less advertised factor, Dr. Morley said, “is the startling change which has taken place in the international finan- clal organization as a result of the war. Before 1914 the world was pretty sharp- ly divided between two groups of d:btor and creditor nations. The latter were those which, on the whole, exported manufactured products. ~The former were those which supplied the food and raw material for the industrial nations. In half a generation the United States has shifted from a nation over $4,000,- 000,000 in debt to a creditor to the ex- tent of more than $30,000,000,000. Yet our farmers are not less anxlous to sell wheat to Europe because our bank- ers are anxious to collect big interest payments from that continent.” 25,000,000 Without Work. The international economy will tend to adjust itself in time, he said, “in so far as the new arrangements are not based on such palpable absurdities as the expectation that 60 years hence the children of people as yet unborn are still going to be paying reparations for the late war.” He criticized “the ob- structiveness of the invernational politi- cal system in a worla which has been made a single parish oy the conquests of modern science.” While world statistics of unemploy- | ment are fragmentary, he zaid, at least | 10,000,000 persons now are out of johs! in the United States and Germany alone. The world figure he estimated at more than 25,000,000. “With their families,” he said, “this means a work- less population carried on the shoulders of those in employment approximating the total population of the United States.” Adjustment of the world economic system, unemployment insurance and public works projects were pointed out as possible remedies. “In spite of the J Fabric Gloves No scarcity here! ‘White, eggshell and Plenty of the Fashionable 4, 6, 8 and 12 Button Satisfaction Since 1859 OPENING! 2.88 DRESS | DEPARTMENT Our New fact that working conditions in the United States are well ahead of the average,” he sald, “this country is far behind the more strongly socialized countries in its handling of the prob- lem. In the development of unemploy- ment insurance, we are exceptionally backward among the industrialized na- tions. Some 200,000 of our employes are covered by private schemes now, and the number increases very slowly. In Germany 16,000,000 workers are now compulsory insured. Close atiention is now being given to the experience of Great Britain and Germany. The for- mer has crerlted its system so loosely and permitted its insurance to degen- erate so far in the direction of a dole system that the expenditure is threat- ening the dislocation of the national budget. But that cannot be fairly re- garded as an indictment of the princi- ple. Nor is it certain that the condi- tion of degeneracy which has overtaken the British system' is worse than the possible revolution which would have overtaken Great Britain without some form of organized relief.” “Depariment of Peace.” A “Department of Peace” in the Fed- eral Government, of equal standing with the War and Navy Departments, and with a Secretary in the President’s cabinet was proposed before the insti- tute last night by Kirby Page, editor of the World Tomorrow. “A national peace budget of approx- imately $100,000,000 annually,” he said, “would provide for the following major items: partment of Peace, with a secretary and an adequate staff; 10 re- glonal offices in the United States, each with 10 regional secretaries, 20 research specialists; 40 foreign offices, each with 5 foreign secretaries; the free circu- lation of a million copies of a monthly peace magazine,, $50,000 a day for radio programs, the support of 5,000 Ameri- can students abroad and 200 professors, the maintenance of an international university, including scholarships for 2,000 students; maintenance of 1,000 professors of international relations in American colleges and 5,000 teachers in our high schools and the payment of the camp expenses of 40,000 young men and women each year. “The times demand,” he continued, | war debts. tem and utter reliance upon the peace system. To rely: upon armaments in the critical days ahead will be equiva- lent to staying with a sinking ship while all on board go down to a fath- omless grave. Unless the ‘old system is abandoned forthwith, it will carry our civilization down to irretrievable ruin.” Denounced War Minded. ‘The Army and Navy, he pointed out, now are costing the United States ap- proximately $400,000,000 a year, with- out including pensions or interest on “As contrasted with their eagerness to appropriate enormous sums for military and naval preparedness,” he said, “the refusal of governments to make adequate provision for interna- tional education constitutes nothing less than criminal negligence.” At the same meeting Dr. M. Ashby Jones of St. Louis denounced the “‘war mind set, inherited from the past, which blinds men to the truth that every fort on a frontier produces an- other fort across the boundary line and every added battleship makes less se- :&n the homes and freedom of all na- ns.” Governments, he said, “have nar- rowed their conception of patriotism by identifying it with the martial spirit and distorted the superb spirit of dare- deviltry and adventure by making i 8 :‘ynonymoua with the risk of life in bat- SAN JUAN LAW OPPOSED SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, July 9 (#)— Mayor Roberto H. Todd and six mem- bers of thé San Juan Municipal As- sembly yesterday brought legal action against Gov. Theodore Roosevelt by re- questing the court to direct him not to inforce the new city commission gov- ernment law, which becomes effective next month. ‘The city officials charged the law was in essence an attempt to legislate them out of office. The mayor declared he would stay in city hall until his term expires in January, 1933. Judge de Jesus declined to issue an | | regiment. “a complete break with the war sys- | order until a hearing has been held. $1 Allowance for Your 0ld Iron it ment lien of $950,448. |15th Regiment in Peru Crossed $70,000,000 TOWN SOLD FOR $250,000 Nitro,” W. Va., Built in War Time by Government, Goes to Industrial Concern. By the Associated Press. Cl STON, W. Va., July 9.—The wartime town of Nitro, W. Va, built by the Government for approximately $70,000,000, was sold at public auction yesterday to the Nitro Industrial Cor- poration for $250,000. ‘Thirty factory buildings, erected for the manufacture of explosives; their equipment, nearly 1,000 acres of land and 432 residences were sold. ‘The proj y was owned by the Charleston Industrial Corporation, ‘which purchased the wartime city frem the Government in 1921 for $8,000,000. A foreclosure action resulted in Federal Judge George W. McClintic ordering the holdings sold to satisfy a Govern- The Nitro Industrial Corporation was formed by a group of Charleston law- vers and engineers. They said they tm:;:ded to put the property up for | resale. P e e REBEL TROOPS PUNISHED | Out of Army List. LIMA, Peru, July 9 () —The war| minister yesterday anncunced that it | wes punishing the 15th Infantry for its | part in the Cuzco rebellion by crossing | its number from the army ranks. It| added that military justice will be mer- | ciless in punishing officers and troops M found to have been disloyal. The decree | means the eventual abolishment of the MICHAEL BULL ENGAGED TO NORSEN HENNESSY Wedding Will Take Place Within Next Few Weeks, Chicago Friends Are Informed. By the Associated Press. ll, K. C., to Miss Norsen = nessy, third daughter of Maj. Sir George Hennessy of London, former t.r:u\ge“r, o{}umuu household of Hl.sdlnj- esty, King 2, was announced yes- terday to their friends in Chicago. Although Michael Bull is a barrister of the inner temple, London, friends here believed they might make their permanent home in Chicago. The wed- ding will take place within the next few weeks in London. The engagement of Miss Rosemary Bauer, daughter of Mrs. Jacob Bauer of Chicago, to Bartle Bull, another son of Perkins Bull, was announced a few weeks ‘The wedding is to take place in the Autumn. KELLOGG GOES ABROAD Judge of World Court Sails to At- tend Tribunal Session. NEW YORK, July 9 (#).—Former Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg, a judge of the World Court, sailed with Mrs. Kellogg last night on the liner Aquitania to attend a session of the international body. He had dinner aboard the ship and retired without seeing reporters. E. H. Sothern, the actor, also sailed en route to Geneva, where he will spend ;he Eur{nm!r h‘l‘"k:‘ :ls w‘l!fi. Julia Mar- lowe, after which they will go to Egypt for the Winter. Sir Ronald Lindsay, British Ambassa- dor, canceled his passage at the last inute. . Large modern apartments are being erected in Johannesburg, South Africa. Y Week-End SPECIAL MONTHLY ON 7 LIGHT BILLS Toward the Purchase of This New Proctor Automatic Regardless of the age, type or condition of your old fron, we will allow you $1.00 for it toward the purchase of the New Proctor Auto. Candle Lounge Lamp We are offering a limited number of these handsome Lounge Lamps at an unusually low price. They have attractive.shades in combinat. ions of black and yellow or two tones of green. For this week-end only, the price has been reduced to. other colors in single and double woven slip- on fabric gloves, in all sizes.—Street Floor. matic, the wonder iron with the perfect ther- mostatic control that protects against overheat- ing and scorching. The New Proctor also has a dial you can set for ironing Cotton, Wool, Linen, Silk or Rayon at just the right tem- peratiure. This fine appliance is beautifully chrome plated, fully guaranteed for one vear and comes complete with cord. No housewife should miss this liberal offer. It is for a limited time only. Buy Now! 2,000 beautiful new Summer dresses— super-values in every sense of the word. —Second Floor and Street Floor. NS PALACE 810-818 Seventh St. N.W. $4.95 ON BALE FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY For the Home CURTAIN GOODS — Remnants of curtain marquisette, dotted Swiss and cretonne. Useful lengths, many can be 9¢ matched. Yard OILCLOTH TABLE COVERS, in sizes 54x54 and 45x45. Attrac- v 2 - ;;;; p.m'.erm }sngm uc 29¢ Stamped Pieces 1, Price Were 25c to $1.00 Now 13c to 50c Stamped children’s dresses, tea towels, women's dresses, bungalow aprons, lunch cloths, crib covers, linen scarfs and rayon pillow tops. STAMPED MODELS, HALF PRICE—Beautifully finished mod- els worth $1.00 to $10.00, now 50c to $5.00 GARTER BELTS, SANITARY APRONS AND SANITARY BELTS, 50c to 69c values. 29¢ POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE COMPANY “ELECTRICAL MEADQUARTERS™ 10th &' E Sts. W, Prone NA. 8300 POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE COMPANY wieermicar measouaRT bridge, table and floor 4‘9(3 om et e uw Prame lamps FELT-BASE RUGS, size 4.6x0 feet. Tile and carpet patterns. Slight sec- s] 79 8inch Stationary 10-inch Oscillating Debon-Air (10-inch Oscillating) 12-inch Oscillating 16-inch Oscillating . COOL BREEZES for HOT DAYS Choice ODDS AND ENDS NOTIONS— Elastic, soiled thread, shoe polish, rubber aprons, etc. 50 Women’s $2.00 | Wash Frocks $ 1 - Quick-selling charming dresses in rayon crepe, pongeen, organdy, voile nd lawn. Plain colors, dots, figured and floral patterns. Flared, circular and pleated skirts. Trimmed with white or colored organdy, pleating, ties and belts. Sizes 14 to 40. All sales final, no C. O. D. or ‘phone orders. WOMEN'S $3.00 PAJAMAS in two-plece style. Silk pongee, ray- a:ucrepedlnldibrw‘ldclum. Dots, res and plain colors. Sizes 15, 16 and 17.... 31‘98 $1.00 UNDERWEAR in silk and rayon crepe. Tailored and lace- trimmed styles in French panties and step-ins. sales final 79 to $1.00 VOILE UNDER- WEAR in broken sizes. Chemises, step-ins and panties in pastel col- ors and prints. Also non-cling costume slips in peach and 25(: 69c| in frocks of 'y Hosiery and Underwear $1.00 & $1.50 SILK HOSE—Full- fashioned pure silk hose, seconds, in chiffon and service 33': weights. Pair .. . 3 Pairs for $1.00 BEMBERG FULL-FASHIONED HOSE, slight irregulars. Rayon hoslery de luxe with French 4_9 heels, Popular shades . ... i $2.00 GRENADINE SILK HOSE, seconds of a famous brand. Extra sheer two and three strand quality with picoted top French heels $1.00 SILK MESH HOSE, slight irregulars. Pure silk hosiery in the favorite Summer fashion. 59 d c AN ELECTRIC FAN FOR EVERY NEED ... A SIZE FOR EVERY PURSE . . . EASY PAYMENTS ON M'll)le;l'HL LIGHT BILLS IF YOU W . POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE COMPANY “ELECTRICAL MEADQUARTERS™ SOth & € Sta. NWL Phone NA, 8800 This Philco LOWBOY ONLY 389 ® 75 CASH Complete With Tubes Leading $1.39 OUTSIZE SILK HOSE, sBulgh; lrregulurs.l P‘;ull h{ashioned. ack, gun metal and other shades . 69c $1.50 . SIZE SILK HOSE in full extra sizes. fashioned. Chiffon 2nd service weignts. slight @1 () 'S 25¢ TO 50c SOCKS irregulars . CHILDREN —Perfects and irregulars of silk, rayon, lisle and mercerized cotton socks, in all colors. Half socks, “whoopee” socks and boys’ golf hose . 15¢ PERFECT SILK HOSE—Pure thread silk quality, in service weight. Popular colors. 55 2 Pairs for $1.00 $2.00 FULL-FASHIONED SILK MESH HOSE in large mesh and diamond mesh. Slight s‘l 19 irregulars . RAYON UNDER- the Low Cost ... Convenience .. . Enjoyment... $1.00 Wash FROCKS Sizes 14 to 38 sheer lawn, broadcloth and gingham. Floral and figured prints and dots. Trimmed with organdy, piping, ties and belts. All sales final—no C. O. D. or ’phone orders. TN AV AR AT N APATI S VA TS TUATE TR PR AT A O AV Children’s Wear TOTS' BATHING SUITS, sizes 26 and 28. One-plece suits with solid -color pants and 39¢ DRESSES in AvaAw A GIRLS’ $2.98 Pfln!ed pique and Jinene. Sleeve- less, short sleeves and capelet gl:leves.d :lefied Blmi flared skirts, t and buckle. Broken sizes. All sales.final.. 81’98 GIRLS’ $5.98 SILK DRESSES— of “('h"‘; silk 101’!5! kde chine, just 6 of them in broken sizes. All sales final.. 82'98 TOTS' SUN SUITS, sizes 2 to suits in g g’elfla Bl"%ldl:l:)l.l’:l . esh and peach, pipe colors 29c $1.00 PANTY DRESSES — In printed dimity, voile and broad- cloth, hand embroidered and trimmed with contrasting 590 colors. Sizes 2 to 5 years.. CHILDREN'S 59¢ RAYON UN- DERWEAR in broken sizes. Com- binations, slips, gowns and 390 bloomers. S8lightly soiled. . $1.00 HATS & BONNETS—Pique and pongee hats in white and colors, and organdv1 and lawn ' bonnets. Slightly 50 $1.00 HOOVERETTES, tallored of white dimity and piped in col- m. roken 1lco 1s now & i Balanced Superhetero- dyne. Only in a Balanced Superheterodyne can you get the sharp selectivity to separate—at all points on the dial—the 300 broad- casting stations which in any other type radio tend to interfere with each other. that comes with owner:ship of a 6-Button Gloves Smart new fabric gloves in white, egg- 9c shell and tea rose. Also short fabric gloves with fancy cuffs. . Street Floor. $1.00 & $1.25 WEAR, in regular and extra sizes. Perfects and irregulars in Sombray and_Chardonize ravon, including combinations. chemises, dznce sets, gowns, step-ins. bloomers and pan- ties. Lace trimmed, tai- 590 lored and snplioved s WOMEN'S VESTS—E'asti~ rib- bed knit gauze vests: slight 100 irregulars of 25¢ grade.... Street Floor. Gracefully executed in American Black Walnut and “V”- matched Oriental wood. Decorations in pin stripe American Walnut and quilted Maple. Hand-rubbed finish. 4-Point Tone Control—Oversize Electro-Dynamic Speaker, 25 per cent more efficient—Illuminated Station Recording Dial, with Glowing Arrow Indicator for exact tuning—Long Distance Switch—Two 45 Power Tubes—Push-Pull. EASY PAYMENTS ON LIGHT BILLS ASK TO HEAR IT IN YOUR OWN HOME Friday Bargains In Men’s Furnishings MEN'S 50c UNDERSHIRTS— Sleeveless pull-over. athletic shirts in flat knit and Swiss ribbed 29 cotton. Sizes 34 to 44 c MEN’S 25¢ SOCKS, sizes 10 to 11%. In rayon mixtures and lisle. Many popular new color 17 schemes. Pair " o MEN'S FANCY SHORTS in solid colors and stripes. Made with half elastic waistband. Sizes 30 290 to . Sweeping Clearance for Friday! Sold for $10, $12.95 and $15 Fashionable Spring models—and needed evenings. In twills, spongy woolens, silks and $ tweeds. Tailored and fur-trimmed styles. Suits in sizes 14 to 20, coats in sizes 14 to 20, 38 to 50. Jackets Coats $5 Sold for $5. White and Sold for $15 to $20.75. 8 chin- . and 2 lapin coats. Small sizes only ful fur fabric. —14, 16 and 18. $2 Rough Straw Hats . $2 Silk Crepe Hats Fashionable rough straw hate with assorted bands, plain and em- popular hair hats, fancy straw hats —also odds and ends of white and ors in the lot. Brim hats and close- fitting hats in all head sizes. Panamas Reduced to Medium and wide brim models in these cool, smart Summer hats. Trimmed with ribbon 18c to 48c l 2 ]/ Goods 2 to 6 yard lengths in novelty and staple cotton and rayon fab- printed batiste, printed dimity, flock dot voile, printed rayon and rayon voile, percale, fancy shirt- plain rayon satin and crepe. Rayon Chiffon 34c . Voile Yard Newest Summertime patterns in ed rayon chiffon voile, guaranteed fast colors. Light and dark grounds. Perfects and slight seconds—Street 150 Coats and Suit now for seashore and mountain wear and cool 25 Lapinette $1 OO 14 Winter . tan, Sizes 141038, Beanti- child coia’d deesey Cloth fecots Second Floor. . C $2 Smart Hair Hats broidered silk crepe sport hats, the colored felt hats. Black and all col- . . Imitation 8 8 bands—Street Floor. Wash Yard rics, including: Printed _volle, ings, plain volle, plain broadcloth, Beautiful Printed this exquisitely sheer 36-inch print- Floor. General Eleetrie SHOE DEPT. Refrigerator TENNIS SHOES — 500 pairs men'’s, women's and children’s Hood and genuine “Keds” tennis shoes, also “Buddy” make, with rubber soles or crepe bottoms. First 690 quality. All sizes .. CHILDREN'S SANDAL! sizes 6 to 2, tan leather tops, two 890 straps. Very fine grade... (75 PRS.) HOLLYWOOD SAN- DALS, '1’? sizes 21; lAd) 41, only. White, blue, green an el . ' $1.29 (96 PRS.) WOMEN'S “BREEZE" SANDALS, with crepe soles. In the popular Summer col- sl .69 CORSETS No C. O. D. or Phone Orders All Sales Final (6) NEMOFLEX GIRDLES of couti!, with elastic gores over hips. (11) R&G foundition garments, with gflw}:{fihcul m:m:'mben. boned over diaphragm. $5 models, reduced to 32.95 (5) R&G STEP-INS, made of fine br\x:heh with kniticd elastic gores over hips. $5.00 values, reduced to $1.00 (18) R&G FO TON GAR- on stripe ma- MENTS, made of boned over dia- $1.00 As Little As S10 oown Balance on 24 Monthly Light Bills style; snubber back. 36 to 42 .. MEN’S 2! gl and Paris garters, single-grip style, with comfortable pad. In 16 assorted colors . c MEN’S $1.00 SHIRTS, in plain and fancy broadcloths and fine madras. Collar-attached and neck- band styles, sizes 135 to 17. White, eolid colors, stripes and fig- Qo ures. Perfects and irregulars. Street Floor, BOYS' WASH SUITS, sizes 3 to 10. White, plain colors and combinations. Popular S mer styles .. $1.39 BOYS' WASH KNICKERS, 1n plain and plaid linen and sturdy khaki-colored cloth. Sizes 950 to 15 39¢ POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE COMPANY “ELECTRICAL WEADQUARTERS™ S E St NW Phomne NA. POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE COMPANY ELECTRICAL WEADQUARTERS® LIty Phose NA. 8508 terial, phragm. $2.00 models, reduced to . Second Floor. 59¢ BLOUSES, sizes 8 yea In white, plain-col- sred and fancy broadcloths, LIRS R 8 LA N G A AR R VA Y ST I L TR R TR LA A AR Second Floor.

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