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MISSISPP HALS | SHLESTAXESULT Anticipated Receipts Exceed- ed Every Month Since Enact- ment Last May. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. | JACKSON, Miss, December 10— Mississippi has attained financial se- | curity and the sales tax is largely re- * sponsible. The State budget is balanced. Mis- sissippi bonds are finding a ready mar- ket and, despite dire prophecies, her citizens are buying at home. Business is good if the steadily climb- | ing return from the sales levy is any indication. Mississippi_has balanced the budget | 11 months with some $50,000 to| spare. i The announcement was made this, week by Chairman Alf H. Stone o the State Tax Commission. Success | of the State's emergency revenue pro- | gram is. an old story, dating from the first month of its existence. | Estimate Receipts Exceeded. 1 The 2 per cent gross sales tax has, exceeded estimated returns month since it went into effect ]IL\(‘ ‘When the new fire house on Thirteenth street, which also houses the police and fire clinic, was dedicated last night, every | a portrait was presented by the family of the late Dr. James J. Kilroy, chairman of the Board of Police and Fire Phy- | sicians, to be placed in the clinic, which is designated as a.memorial to Dr. Kilroy. Grouped around the portrait, left THE SUNDAY Clinic to Be Memorial to Physician CUMMING REPORTS DROP IN DISEASE Research of Year Includes Airplane Rides Given Mosquitoes. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., DECEMBER 11, 1932—PART ONE. 5,214 ARE RESCUED BY COAST GUARD Commandant Commends Men in Annual Report for Faithfulness. A declining disease rate was reported | yesterday by Surg. Gen. Hugh .| Cumming in the annual report of the Public Health Service. | Research experiments which furnish | effective weapons in the never-ending war on disease were described—freezing | of plague bacilli for nine years at a| stretch; taking mosquitoes for fact- | finding airplane rides, and taking notes on the whole life of a typhus-carrying flea. A new low record for the death rate | for tuberculosis was reported, 66.3 per | 1,000 in 1931, as against 68.8 in 1930, the previous low. Low Smallpox Incidence. Smallpox incldence was but 24.4 cases per 100,000 population, lowest incidence | since 1916. A slightly higher diphtheria rate was recorded in 1931 than 1930. Typhoid | fever showed a slight Increase in By the Associated Press. A brief report yesterday related In | matter-of-fact words how the United | States Coast Guard had saved or res- | cued from peril 5,214 persons during the year ended last June 30, Tersely, with few lines of praise for the personnel, Rear Admiral H. G. Hamlet gave statistics recounting the activities of his men from braving the freezing gales of Alaska and the ice- berg infested North Atlantic to more placid duties in regulating national and international yacht races. Expresses Appreciation. To the men who faced the hardships to ald suffering persons, the Coast Guard commandant expressed his “warmest appreciation and acknowledg- ment of their faithful labors and devo- tion to service.” ‘Turning to law enforcement, Admiral Hamlet said in his annual report: “The operations of the service in its law enforcement work for the preven- tion of smuggling of liquor into the oty /en's Shop 1319-1321 F STREET BOSTONIAN SHOES STETSON HATS % The greatest “After Christmas” Savings in 20 years, NOW. Because usual starting date for this event is December 26th. % Every garment in this Sale bears the famous St. Albans label. % Every garment is taken from our regular stocks. May. November réceipts were $260,814, | against an estimated $166.000. | Norton, Judge Robert E. Mattingly, Commissioner Crosby and A. J. Driscoll. ‘The sales tax is the backbone of thP“ 3 { to right, are: Mrs. Kilroy, Daniel J. Donovan, District auditor; Commissioner Reichelderfer, Representative Mary T. S tar Btaff Photo. prevalence in the first half of 1932. A | United States from sea proceeded satis- serious epldemic of poliomyelitis in the | factorily throughout the year and were Suramer and Fall of 1931, heaviest in |accompanied by gratifying results when the Northeastern States, was noted. | the difficulties and perplexities of the emergency revenue program enacted by the 1932 Legislature. The program com- | bines eight special taxes, the sales| tax, the income tax, franchise, amuse- ment, tobacco and malt tax, State-wide vilege, registration license, and in- | eritance taxes. ‘The emergency revenue program has made it possible for the State treas- ury to receive $9,820,175.79 in revenue during the first 11 months of 1932. a:e 1932 Legislature drew up & dget of $0,770,000 for the 12 months. Mississippi’s income is greater than the cost of government for one of the few times in history. Taxable Property Shrinks. ‘This has been accomplished in the face of a $100,000,000 shrinkage in the assessed valuation of taxable property. The treasury deficit in January was CROSBY ACCEPTS NEW FIRE HOUSE Large Crowd at Dedication of Structure on Thir- teenth Street. To Entertain DANCERS TO APPEAR AT V. F. W. PARTY. NOBEL PRIZE GIVEN 101. 5. SCIENTIST King Bestows Award at Cere- mony In Sweden Before Distinguished Group. nearly $8,000,000. How it happened is best known to Gov. Martin dSEnh:ett Conner. Gov. Conner proposed the emergency revenue pro- g'll‘n and pushed it through the Legis- ture in the face of strenuous opposi- More than six months ago a mob stormed the State Capitol to protest enactment of the sales tax. It overflowed into the Governor'’s office and demanded an audience with the executive, which was refused. Today, Mississippians are paying the sales tax with a smile. ‘The sales tax is within 1 per cent of the 1932 estimate set up by the Legislature with nearly two months col- lections yet to be counted. Other Measures Successful. ‘The gross sales levy has rolled $1,270,- 682 into the State treasury, against an The new fire house on Thirteenth | street, between K and L, which will house Engine Company No. 16, Truck | No. S and the police and fire clinic, | was dedicated last night in the [ presence of a large audience, which in- | cluded Representative Mary T. Norton | of New Jersey, chairman of the House | District Committee; city officials and | representatives of civic groups. ‘The occasion also was marked by the presentation of awards for bravery to & group of men from the two services. The fire house itself represents the latest development in that type of con- struction. The modern clinic is the first that the city has furnished for the police and firemen, who heretofore have been treated at George Washing- ton and Emergency Hospitals. Designed as Memorial. By the Assoclated Press. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, December 10. —Nobel Prizes were awarded tonight by one American and three Englishmen at & stately ceremony attended by the royal family of Sweden and by a dis- tinguished audience of scholars, diplo- mats and government officials. ‘The prize in chemistry went to Dr. Irving Langmuir of the General Electric Co. at Schenectady, N, Y., for his dis- coveries in surface chemistry. The other recipients were John Galsworthy, literature; Sir Charles Sherrington, medicine, and Prof. Douglas Adrian, also medicine. Sir Charles and Prof. Adrian were recognized for their re- search into the function of the nerve cell and its processes. Galsworthy Not Present. Health conditions as a whole, as shown by mortality rates, were said to have been “maintained at a very high level during the past two and one-half years of unfavorable economic condi- tions.” However, the surgeon general pointed out that “extensive data on any inciplent untoward health conditions caused by hard times are not available.” So complete ,was the quarantine ad- ministration during the year there was no instance of the importation from abroad of any quarantivable disease into the United States. Inspection was made of 18,048 vessels, 2.407,154 persons on ships; 88152 travellers at border stations; 8,798,598 fe‘moxm in local inter- urban traffic, 17.387 persons arriving at airports of entry. Planes Bring Mosquitoes. ‘Twenty per cent of all planes arriving from tropical countries brought mos- quitoes. The service took mosquito- carriers of the disease on flights, proved that 20 to 50 per cent of those liberated ?l'lx Pnl‘rnmnfl?d C?lntnl America liked e plane ride well enough to aboard to Texas. " e “Altitudes of 15,000 and 16,000 feet seemed to have no deleterious effect on the yellow fever mosquito,” said the report. Another experiment on 4,000 children in 10 States resulted in the announce- ment that “contrary to the assertion of many persons opposed to pasteurization for one reason or another, there is no difference in the growth-promoting efficacy between heated and raw milk.” | boarded 102,268 vessels and examined problem are considered. “Liquor Volume Declines.” | “There has undoubtedly been some falling off in volume of liquor brought to the United States coasts for attempt- ed smuggling, but this reduction in volume has been comparatively slight.” The commandant said the service had their papers, reported 2,358 vessels for law violations and assessed fines of $300,~ 756. Coast Guard airplanes flew 93,750 miles and were in the air for 1,250 hours during the year, he reported, add- ing that construction of five new sea- planes was about 80 per cent complete. — $792,000 IMPROVEMENTS PROPOSED FOR HONOLULU Recommendations Are Made to Congress by Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, Engineers’ Chief. By the Assoclated Press. Improvements to the harbor at Hono- lulu to cost $792,000 were recommended to Congress yesterday by Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, chief of Army Engineer: Brown said that the Board of En- gineers had deemed it advisable “to | provide for an entrance channel 40 feet disp at mean low water and 500 feet wide.” It would be necessary to replace ex- isting depot facilities of the Bureau of Lighthouses to make way for the im- provements. The report also recommended an an- estimated $1,300,000. Others of the spe- cial revenue measures have been equally successful. Mississippi was the second State in the Union to outlaw liquor, but the com- bined stamp taxes on malt anl tobacco yielded $714,802 from May 1 to Decem- ber 1, against an estimated $755,000 for the period ending January 1, 1933. ‘The income tax is just $43,000 short of the $300,000 total fixed by the Legisla- ture. The State-wide privilege tax has yielded $313,277. The combined yield of the eight spe- eial taxes, including the sales tax, up to and including December 7 was $2,- 696,649. The total includes collections of $101,169 during the first seven days of December. Advalorem taxes accounted for most of the $9,820,175 collected by the State during the first 11 months of the year, but the special taxes provided the wide margin that balanced the budget with & surplus. It is designed as & memorial to the late Dr. James J. Kilroy, in recogni- tion of his work as chairman of the Board of Police and Fire Physicians. Representative Norton eulogized Dr. Kilroy, as did other speakers, and a portrait presented by his family was unveiled. It will be placed permanently’| in the clinic. Mrs. Kilroy and their son, James J. Kilroy, 2nd, were present. A. J. Driscoll, chairman of the Mid- City Citizens’ Association, as temporary chairman, introduced Judge Robert E. Mattingly of Municipal Court, who pre- sided. The building formally was accepted | by Commissioner Crosby. under whose | jurisdiction the police and fire depart- ments come. Personnel Is Praised. | Both Mr. Driscoll and Judge Mat- | tingly praised the personnel of the tw branches and their commanding offi- cers—Maj. E. W. Brown and Chlef| DRAMA “NATIVITY” WILL BE PRESENTED Play Will Be Given at Three Churches Beginning Next Sunday Afternoon. Churches in all parts of the city will be represented in the cast of “The Nativity,” which will be presented at three churches, beginning at 4:30 p.m. next Sunday in the Church of the Holy City, Sixteenth street near Q street. Presentation of the drama, adapted a fifteenth century French manuscript, will be preceded by an offertory ceremonial by Rev. Paul Skerry, pastor of the church. He wil be assisted by Rev. William L. Darby, executive secretary of the Washington Pederation of Churches. The play will be presented for the second time at 8 o'clock Sunday night in Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church. ‘The third presentation will be at 8 pm. Tuesday in New York Avenue Church. ‘The Religious Drama Committee of the Washington Federation of Churches George S. Watson. Other speakers in- cluded Dr. Luther H. Reichelderfer, president of the Board of District Com- missioners; Maj. Daniel J. Donevan, District auditor, and Dr. Daniel L.| Borden, chairman of the Board of Po-| lice and Fire Physiclans. Supt. of Police Brown read the ci- tations for the decorations for the po- licemen and Deputy Fire Chief Charles E. Schrom for the firemen. The pres- entations were made by Henry Stein, chairman of the Committee on Awards. | Pyt. Thomas D, Bacon of the Police | Department and Pvt. James F. White of the Pire Department received gold | medals; Capt. Michael L. Raedy, re- tired, of the Police Department and Battalion Chief John R. Groves of the Fire Department, silver medals, and Pvt. B. A. Dye of the Police Depart-| ment and Capt. C. D. Bartelmes of the | Fire Department, bronze bars. It was| the second time Groves and Bartlemes | have been decorated for heroism. Program of Music. Mrs, Swannie Crofton and Wilson Oliver sang, accompanied by Mrs. | Mabel Clark and C. R. Busch. The Fire Department Band played, | and after the ceremonies there were dancing and refreshments and the| guests had an opporunity to inspect| the building. The dedication was WMAL. broadcast by | HELEN CLUM AND ELEANOR WEN, Pupils of the Smithson-Hodgson School of Dance, who are announced as a fea ture of the program at the dance of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, in Masonic Hall, Mills and Rhode Island avenues northeast, December 17. RALS SEEK TOQUIT POOLING REVENUES | Association Also Asks I. C. C. to Extend Present Rates After March 31. By the Associated Press The Nation's larger railroads yester- day asked the Interstate Commerce Commission to extend after March 31 the rate increases now in effect, but to eliminate the plan which sends the revenues into a pool from which needy carriers can boOITow. The increases, in the form of sur- charges on freight bills, were approved last January by the commission to run until March 31. In its petition yesterday the American | Railway Association asked that the sur- charges be continued indefinitely, as serting that revenues have declined s much that carriers operating approxi- mately half of the class one mileage cannot pay interest on their bonds. It presented a tabulation showing that as a group only the Pocahontas rail- roads, carriers serving the coal regions of Virginia and West Virginia, had a surplus after meeting fixed charges dur- ing the eight months ending August 21 ‘These roads had a surplus of $21,490,367 while roads in every other region of the country combined had a defic ‘These deficits were fixed at $1,482,827 for New England carriers; $42,276,311 for the Great Lakes region; $8,832952 Mr. Galsworthy was unable to be present because of illness and his cer- tificate of award was received from King Gustav by Archibald J. C. Kerr, the British Minister. Dr. Langmuir is the thirteenth Ameri- can to receive a Nobel diploma and to be numbered among those who, as specified in the will of Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor, have in recent years “conferred the greatest benefit on hu- | manity.” The award ceremony followed prece- dent. The prize winners sat to the left of the flower-bedecked stage of the concert house. To the right were the | academy heads, who explained why the | awards’were made in each instance and }\’.‘ho introduced the recipients. Former prize winners were grouped at the back of the stage. King Bestows Awards, King Gustav and other invited guests were in the first row of the audience. They arose as the procession of digni- taries and prize winners moved to the stage. By turn the men honored left the stage and proceeded down carpeted steps to reecive the diplomas, medals and prize money from the King. After the presentation the prize win- ners were honor guests at a dinner at the Grand Hotel, and each of them made & short address. Tomorrow eve- ning they will have dinner with the King at the royal castle. John M. Morehead, the American Minister, and Mrs. Morehead enter- tained Dr. and Mrs. Langmuir at din- nc;‘:lt v’he legation last night, | ericans previously honored Nobel Prizes are: 4 o Physics—R. A. Millikan, 1923: A. H. Compton, 1927. Chemistry—T. W. Rich- ards, 1914. Medicine—K. Landsteiner, 1930. Literature—Sinclair Lewis, 1930, | Peace—Theodore Roosevelt, 1906; Elihu | Root, 1912 Woodrow Wilson, 1919; Charles G. Dawes, 1925; Frank B. Kel- | logg, 1929; Jane Addams and Nicholas | Murray Butler, 1931, CAB DRIVER l.S JAILED FOR COUNTERFEIT COINS Theater Complains to Police Passing of Spurious Money by Hackman. of GEN. PATTER.SONEECTED TO HEAD CARABAO ORDER Surgeon General Will Succeed Gen. MacArthur — Other Officers of Military Organization Named. Maj. Gen. Robert U. Patterson, sur- geon general of the Army, has been elected to succeed Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur, chief of staff, as head of the Military Order of the Carabao. His title | is grand paramount carabao. Other newly elected officers of the or- ganization are: Col. Harold C, Reisinger, grand patriarch of the herd; Rear Ad- miral Ridley McLean, grand bell cara- | bao; Col. Joseph M. Heller, grand lead | and wheel carabao; Col. John P. Wade, | MOST TOPS—MOST CARS ACME TOP CO. Now AT 630 L St. N.W. MET. 6638 +94000000000000 00 [WRIST WATCH - grand councilor of the herd; Maj. Gen. Kenzie W. Walker, grand jefe de los banos; Col. Henry H. Sheen, grand Jefe de las bebidas; Col. A. Owen Sea- man, grand jefe de los cargadores; Rear Admiral George C. Day, Col. Harty N. Cootes, winder of the horn. Brig. Gen. Hugh Matthews, carretonaro, Col. Randolph Coyle, gamboling cara bao; Col. Eugene R. Whitmore, veter! nario, and Col. Charles L. Mitchell and Maj. Richard D. LaGarde, directores de flesta. WILL DISCUSS PATENTS Commissioner Robertson to Address Engineers’ Meeting. Commissioner of Patents Thomas E. Robertson will address a meeting of | the American Institute of Electrical En- | gineers, Tuesday at 8 p.m., in the audi- torolum of the Potomac Electric Power Co. His subject will be “Patents as Re- lated to the Electrical Industry.” Prior to the meeting, a dinner will be served at 6 p.m., at the Harrington Ho- tel. Refreshments and a social hour will follow the meeting. In all shapes kt. 1 E | A regular $15 value, at and designs; 14- white gold filled, guaranteed years; fully jeweled. $6 75 . Buy at the Upstairs Jewelry Store and save 40% on all standard make watches, rings and other jewelry. PHILIP FRANKS 812 F STREET N.W. ONE FLIGHT UP “The Upstairs Jewelry Store” Capt. Millard Sutton commands the | s being presented in celebration of the | new station. | g;lvent season. The drama 1s directed | S ——— Mrs. Elizabeth Gatlin Pritchard. Arranigements are in charge of a sub- | EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS “committee_composed of Lewis Barring- ton, Mrs. R. L. Sanford, Hugh Stewart for the Central Eastern region: $42.-| 735,030 for the South: $67.324,013 for| Police yesterday arrested Joseph L. the Northwest: $9,057,840 for the Cen- | Stegel, 29, of the 500 block of D street tral Western region, and $24,691,421 for | northeast, a taxicab driver, in connec. the Southwest. The deficit for the en- | tion with the passing of alleged - tire country was placed at $174,909,527, | terfeit coins. Slegelgls hemg he‘;gux:t as compared with a surplus of $67,683,- | the third precinct pending further in- 8mith, Mrs. H. G. Torbert, Miss Mildred Merrill, Miss Bess Davis Schreiner, Herman P. Riess and Mrs. Louis ‘Wynne. | e ARMY RE-ENLISTMENTS HERE ARE 100 PER CENT Figure for War College Detach- ment Compares With 3d Corps Area Average of 74. Army re-enlistments in the Army War College detachment here were 100 S cent during the month of Novem- r, as contrasied with an average re- enlistment of 74 per cent for the en- Ztire 3d Corps Area during the past * month, according to the monthly report of Col. Lawrence B. Simonds, corps area recruiting officer. Only in one other place in the corps area, at the Virginia Military Insti-| tute, did all enlist men whose en- listments expired re-enlist. At Langley Field, Hampton, Va.. 89 per cent re- enlisted and at Bolling Field 86 per cent. Opening of recruiting to original en- | listments 1 eplacement both for local nd ove: garrisons is reflected in ¢ the figures which show 428 enlistments §'for corps area assignment and 425 for outside the corps area, Col. Simonds ¥ zeported. Baltimore again led all re- ting districts in the area with 170 mlistments. Philadelphla was second &h 109 and Richmond third with " DISPLAY HELPS BABIES Being exhibited in department stor ghow windows -apparently is good for es. At any rate, Miss Gladys Phipps, 8 nurse, reported to the board of man- agers of the Florence Crittenton Home Friday that the babies placed on dis- play at Lansburgh's during the Com- Chest drive seemed “improved” 88 a result of the experience. For one thing, Miss Phipps said, the babies, Who ‘were exhibited in groups of six each, seemed considerably more friendly to- HIT IN WORLD REVIEW Banking Firm Holds Removal Is Essential to a Restoration of Trade. By the Associated Press | NEW YORK, December 10—In a review of international conditions, is- sued today, the banking firm of J. Henry Schroder & Co., expresses the | opinion that Temoval of exchange re- strictions, now operative in about 35 countries, is essential for a restoration of trade. Pointing out that the problem should be solved by the forthcoming World Economic Conference, the review raises the point that if credits could be ted by & consortium of central banks, for the purpose of frecing trade from exchange restrictions, “their use could not fail to stimulate trade and their general and concerted adoption | would rob them of the terrors still | {roused on the continent and elsewhere | by the recollections of the fate of the | German mark and the Austrian crown in the period of unrestrained inflation.” “Exchange rTestrictions,” it is added, “while imposed in order to give an artificial appearance of strength to the currencies of the countries that indulge them, are quite ineffective from this | point of view because they deceive no- body, but are most unfortunately ef- fective in checking trade and making | all economic intercourse difficult.” Whether removal of restrictions of | monetary transfers can be carried out by & process of devaluation of curren- cies, or by a provision of credits by the chie{ cent: banks, the review hoids | that drastic steps to correct the situa- | tion are necessary. | APPLIES FOR 1940 JOB Texan Files Request for Work as RN Federal Census Taker. Democrats may be hungry for jobs, but Texas has one willing to wait & long, long while before he to work. The State Democratic chairman has | on file an application for Federal census taker. IR 825 for the same period last year. The commission, in granting the in- creases, estimated the increases would yield from $100,000,000 to $125,000,000. Owing, however, to trafic decreases, the railroads say the total for the year will be_about $60,000,000. The statistics cover 162 roads operat- ing 242,150 miles of track. The peti- tion estimated that only 32 out of the 162 will earn their fixed charges this year. VISITOR IS MISSING Friends Ask Police Hunt for Abra- ham Cramer, 70, of Michigan. Reported missing Friday night, Abra- ham Cramer, 70-year-old Michigan barber attending the National Farmers’ Relief Conference here, had not been located by police late last night. ‘The request to search for him was made by companions who accompanied him to this city. Christmas | Jewelry Shop et the friendly store— you're always greeted with a smile—with no obligation to buy. % 1) . Specializing in Perfect Diamonds and all Standard Watches Hamilton Elgin Hllinois Gruen Complete Line of Gifts A small deposit wi reserve your Durchase. . # Charge Accounts Invited ${ M. Wurtzburger Co. 901 G St. N.W. Open Evenings b4 s ~® <2 S e e e e T e 1f the applicant gets the job he won't bave to g0 0 Work vestigation. The case came to the attention of police when employes at the Gem The- | ater on Ninth street between F and G | streets, gave them two coins made of a | metal which appeared to be pewter. | One was a dollar and the other a half dollar. Police were told the coins had becn declared counterfeit at a bank. | Siegel was arrested by Detective Sergt. J. J. Tolson at the theater yes- terday afternoon. Siegel denied he knew the money was counterfeit. Origin of “Vagabond Stars.” Astronomers wondering at the com ing and going of the “vagabond stars may only guess as to their origin, Dr. Howard ~Shapley, director of Harvard Observatory, said at a dinner of the gptclety of Arts and Sciences, New York i || American Radiator Co. | Hot Water Heat | | 3 Years to Pay Lowest terms for immediate in- stallation. Buy now—phone us. | American Heating ENGINEERING CO. > ve. Nat. 8421 Glasses Make the Difference! Defective eyes cause headaches and even more serious ailments. Don’t wait until it’s too late. Let our registered optometrist examine your eyes at once and if necessary prescribe for you the correct lenses with becoming frames. 50¢ A WEEK! of any kind. REPLACED FREI 1004 F St. N.W. eeececcesepecsse T Annual Sale of $t. Albans California Weight Camel’s Hair OVERCOATS $17.50 No Charge for Alterations! * 3,200 New Season St. Albans SUITS Extra Trousers, $3 % 850 New Season St. Albans Caifornia Weight Camel’s Hair Overcoats are the Coats that are irable for our Wi ton climate, months of ‘the year; every new style; every size! A tremendous St. Albans value. This collection includes the finest quality St. Albans wor- steds—made famous by their durability and iloring—in every mew style and color. Sizes to fit men of every build. Y Sale Started With This Number Lounge Style Broadcloth PAJAMAS %2 Guaranteed pre-shrunl solid colors with contrasting piped edges; large attractive sash to match. Others up to §5 Make His Christmas Merry with one of these Silk Lined St. Albans This is the hat you've heard so much talk sbout. Outstanding for quality, styling |n_d their extremely low price. Event! Pre-Shrunk St. Albans Broadcloth SHIRTS $1-35 3 for §4 Neckband shirts in white only; collar-attached shirts in white and solid blue, gray, tan and bamboo; all sizes and sleeve lengths. Others up to $3.50. Here’s a typical Young Men’s Shop Christmas Value! Leather House Slippers Soft calf leathers in either brown or blue $ 65 with soft heels and soles. A real comfort. 10 y IlIlmI|Il“llIII|IIIlm|llllllIIIIIllIIIIIllMIIHlIlIIIl!ll.lIIIlIllIII“IIMIIMIIIlIllIlIuWll R A AL AR LORUTLE OO LTGRO TSI TP OV LD R AT LT LMD LRI