Evening Star Newspaper, January 15, 1933, Page 5

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- VOLSTEAD LAUGHS Says Beer Advocates Ignore Saloons, Bar Flies and Drunken Hushands. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., January 14 (N.A.N.A.) —“Nice, wholesome, health- ful beer, containing all the ingredients of milk—but not intoxicating!’ Andrew J. Volstead, “father” of pro- hibition, having uttered those words, leaned back in his chair and laughed scornfully. He was thinking of those men in Congress who are trying to legalize beer with more than 3 per cent alcoholic sontent. He shrugged his aging shoul- lers. “Maybe they can do it; I don't know,” he went on. “But while they're going into ecstasies over beer—its wonderful qualities, the enormous revenues and the rejuvenation of business—they don’t say anything about the saloons, the stink of beer out in front, the bar flies and drunkard husbands. They forget to give us that picture. It has been 13 years since prohibition went into effect. Monday will be the anniversary. And on the eve of mark- ing another milestone in the fight for national temperance, Andrew Volstead is just as certain now as he was back in the early days that it can be ac- complished. Unconcerned Over Onslaughis. ‘The onslaughts on the eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act don't concern him much—not after 13 years of prohibition. He has become an old man. He was 60 when prohibition went into effect and he was a member of Congress. He is 73 now. He is still an ardent prohibitionist. He will tell you it is “right” and that it will pre- vail in the long run. He doesn't think that the proposed modification is right—either in law or in principle. Congress, he says, may do it—he can't tell just what they will do. “If they do make the change, saloons will be back,” said Mr. Volstead. “So ‘will drunkenness. So will all those evils that we fought back in the days when we were trying to wipe out the traffic through local option. “The beer that we had in those days ran about the same content as is being proposed mow. There were, of course, some brewers who made it stronger, but generally speaking it was from 3 to 3.5 per cent. “Three glasses of that beer contained as much alcohol as two glasses of whisky. Six glasses of beer had the same amount as four of whisky. Wouldn't four glasses of whisky be in- toxicating? “I know many men who will readily admit that even one glass of whisky bas an intoxicating effect on them.” The brewers, went on Mr. Volstead, are anxious for the return of the sa- loon. Legalization of alcoholic beer would bring saloons back over night. ‘There would have to be places at which the beer could be sold. There would ] “0ld Woman” Needs Children’s Shoes ANUARY ! FOOTGEAR FOR SCHOOL GROUPS EXHAUSTED BY CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION. ATWETS' CLAIMS, makers, to send them to the Old Lady, at 727 Seventeenth street. OLD WOMAN WHO LIVES IN A SHOE,” who has been supplying the meedy with footgear through the g Winter months, found her cupboard bare of shoes for children of school age yesterday morning when the came to work. The big supply of new children’s shoes that had been on hand was exhausted and there were scores of little ones waiting for shoes, but none to give them. George Emerson, who is running the shop, issued an appeal for parents of children of school age who might have shoes that could be made serviceable by shoe- —Star Staff Photo. CLAIM 305 WINE WOULD TURN SOUR Some Experts See No Merit in Product, but General Opinion Differs. Sharp difference of opinion broke out yesterday over the question of whether a good wine could be made with only 3.05 per cent alcohol by weight, or 3.81 by volume, as authorized by the re- vised beer bill pending in the Senate Judiciary Committee. THE WEATHER District of Columbia—Fair and warmer today; tomorrow cloudy and warmer, rain in afternoon, much colder tomorrow night and Tuesday; gentle southerly winds, increasing by tomor- Tow. Maryland and Virginia—Fair, with rising temperature today; tomorrow cloudy and warmer, rain in afternoon, Lnuch colder tomorrow night and Tues- ay. %Vest Virginia—Fair and warmer to- day; tomorrow rain in the morning, | colder tomorrow afterncon and night. | | River Report. | Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers | clear yesterday afternoon. Record for Last 24 Hours. Midnight 12 noon 34 | changing to snow flurries and much | NEW EASTERN STAR - HEADS'INSTALLED | Jewels Given Retiring Grand Matron and Patron at Closing Session. ‘The thirty-seventh annual session of | the Grand Chapter, Order of the East- |ern Star of the District, ended last | night in the Mayflower Hotel with the | | instaliation of officers, elected Friday | night. | The new officers are: Mrs. Elizabeth ISNELL CALLSG.0.P. T0PLAN CAMPAIGN House Bepublicans to Pre- pare Reorganization Here on March 2. By the Associated Press. ‘The Republican membership of the House will be called into conference March 2 by Representative Snell of New York, floor leader, ta reorganize the party's. Congressional Campaign Committee and lay plans for the next Congress. All but six members of the Congres- sional Committee, including the chair- man, Representative Will Wood of In- diana, and the vice chairman, former Representative John Q. Tilson of Con- necticut, were not returned by the No- vember elections. The committee is composed of one member from every State that has a Republican delegation. 60 to 70 Seats Is Aim. With only 117 Republicans in the House, 28 of whom are newly elected. Snell and Representative Darrow of Pennsylvania hope to build the ground- work for the recapture of from 60 to 70 seats in the 1934 congressional elec- tions. “We are going to have the Congres- slonal Committee work with the Re- publican National Committee,” Snell said. “It will be the record of the House Republicans that will determine how many seats we will regain in 1934.” The Republicans lost 96 seats in the | November elections. At the conference the Republicans will select their nominee for Speaker. Snell is unopposed. They also will have to name a suc- cessor_to Representative Bachmann of West Virginia, party whip, defeated in November. Englebright Favored. Representatives Englebright of Cali- fornia and Martin of Massachusetts are being boomed for the place. Engle- bright is considered to have the advan- tage, having been an active assistant whip under Bachmann. Representative Bacon of New York is being mentioned as a possible successor to Wood as chairman of the Republican Congressional Committee, along with Representative-elect James W. Wads- worth of the same State. However, many of the leading Re-| publicans prefer a member from the Middle West. since Snell is from New }(ofl; and Englebright is from Cali- ornia. e LUCAS RE-ELECTED BY MU-SO-LIT CLUB Consents to Serve 30 Days Until Another President Is Chosen. AUTO SHOW ENDS IN CHEERFUL KEY Astonishingly Large Crowdsil and Sales Reported at New York. OFFICERS TO BE NAMED Board of Hebrew Home for Aged| Will Meet Today. | New officers and directors of the He- brew Home for the Aged will be elected at the eighteenth annual meeting of the board at 2:30 p.m. today in the au- | ditorium of the home, 1125 Spring ro.d[ Reports on the activities of the institu- | tion during the past year will be pl'&[ sented. | More than 55 guests were provided | with & home during the past year, the | (Cukrlldsr being supplied by the Community | est. HAWK “BOARDS” PLANE Crashes 'l"lrvu[h Window of Craf§ Going 130 Miles an Hour. OKLAHOMA CITY. Janus 14 (P). —A Bawk :“Bosrded” & Hewth - port plane while it was flying 130 mi an hour between Amarillo, Tex., ® Oklahoma City today. The pilot, Jack boung | Transcontinental & Western Alr Tranoed Wade, of St. Louis, was showered with | glass as the bird crashed through the cockpit windshield. A jagged frag- ment sheared the visor from his cap, but he was uninjured. There were no | whose interest in the new car is due to passengers. By the Associated Press. : NEW YORK, January 14—The Na-' | tional Automobile Show closed its an- || nual exhibition at Grand Central Palace tonight and prepared to move on to| | Chicago, where the Western section will | | open in the Coliseum January 28. Meanwhile, the Newark, N. J., show | || opened tonight and Brooklyn prepared to open its show next week. Alfred Reeves, manager of the Grand Central Palace Show, hailed the attend- ance and sales reports as an “astcn- ishing demonstration” of public interest | | which was “so unexpected that it al- || most caught us unprepared.” “It proves again,” he said, “how in- dispensable the motor car is to our every day life.” “There was a record registration of dealers representing 29 different States, with one dealer dinner at a New York Armory of more than 3,400.” | Official attendance figures for the seven-day show will not be available for several days, he said. Reeves said one of the most whole- some developments was a “tangible evi dence of the entry into the autcmotive markets of purchasers and prospects the necessity of replacing worn-out WALK-OVER CLEARANCE SALE ' SHORT LINES OF LADIES’ SHOES FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK 6.95 equipment. 5,000 Bicentennial Events. More than 5,000 separate celebrations | by Massachusetts | civic, fraternal and this year in con- George Washington have been held schools, churches, patriotic societies nection with the Bicentennial. MONDAY — | WOLF'S WALK-OVER SHOP 929 F St 830 AM. TO 6 PM. — AT WASHINGTON'S FINEST MEN'S WEAR STORE ODDS & ENDS CLEARANCE 37| M. Plitt, grand matron; F. Frank Kim. 37| mel, grand patron; Mamie L. Greel 37 | street, associate grand matron; Edward " & 2 am. 2pm. While some wine experts claimed such | § a'p’ 4gm_ a wine could be manufactured, and sold, 6 am. 6p.m. have to be saloons. “Do you remember the old saloon Quantities limited . . . all items subject M. Grant Lucas was re-elected to a days?” he asked. “Do you remember the boisterous crowds inside singing raucous songs and doing things they wouldn't do when sober. Do you re- member the old barflies—those broken down men of the gutter who ‘earned their drinks by cleaning out the spitoons and lived off the sausage and crackers on the bar?” Among the many other things to be remembered about the saloon, Mr. Vol- stead said, was the drunken husbands who squandered their pay checks and ve their wives a few cents for iood $or tne tamily. 2 “That's what we'll have again if they give us 3.2 per cent beer, even if 1t is & ‘nice, healthful, wholesome beverage with all the ingredients of milk’” But Mr. Volstead’s arguments aren’t all confined to the moral side of pro- hibition. Laughs at Tax Estimates. “They say we'll get $1,500,000,000 in revenue from taxing beer,” he said, and again threw back his gray-mopped head, to laugh. “At the most prosperous times before prohibition, when we levied a tax of $6 & gallon for spirts, the best we ever got out of beer taxes was $125,000,000 8 year. It's amusing to hear them jug- gle up the figures, particularly now when economic conditions are as they are. “To whom are they going to sell all this beer—even enough beer to net a tax of $125,000,0002 Do they think they're going to get it from selling beer to people who haven’t any money? Who can afford these days to buy it?” The father of the prohibition act paused for a moment and then took up the argument that the restoration of beer will mean an increased demand for farmer’s grain. “They're making beer in Canada openly. The prices for grain in Canada haven't been above those in the United States. As a matter of fact, I am sure that prices in the United States have been higher than in Canada. So the farnlers cannot expect better prices through the return of beer.” i (Copyright, 1933, by the North American Newspaper Alliance.) GRIGGS ELECTED HEAD OF SCIENCE ACADEMY President Is Chosen at Annual Meeting—Radio Engineers’ Affiliation 0. K.'ed. Robert F. Griggs was elected presi- dent of the Washington Academ: Sciences at the annual meeting of the society yesterday. Dr. Griggs is pro- fessor of botany at George Washington University and has been in charge of a number of expeditions to Puerto Rico, Guatemala, Texas and Alaska, the best Xnown of which was the ope to the “Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes” in Alaska. Other officers were elected as follows: Non resident vice presidents, F. A. Ven- Ing Meinesz and Edward A. Birge; cor- Tesponding secretary, Paul E. HO cording secretary, Charles Thom, and treasurer, H. G. A M. C. Hall and S elected members of t gers for the three January, 1936 Vice presidents representing the va- rious affiliated societies of the academy were elected as follows Anthropological Society Archeological 3. Townsend Russell; Bacter cal Society, N. R. Smith; Biological Society, H, H. T. Jackson; Botanical Societ 4 Chemical Society 3 bia Historical Society, Allen C. Clark Electrical Engineers, E. C. Crittendon Entomological Society, Harold Morri# son; Geological Society, F. E. Matthes: Helminthological Society, G. Steiner Mechanical Engineers, O Hood; Medical Soclety. H. C. Macatee; Mili tary Engineers, C. H. Birdseye: National Geographic, F. V. Coville; Philosophi- cal Society. H. L. Curtis; Society of Foresters, F. C. Craighead, and Wash- ington Engineers, N. H. Heck At yesterday's meeting, the affilia- tion of the Washington Section of the Institute of Radio Engineers with the scademy was approved. ’ . 0. E. 8. Chapter Plans Dance. The annual dance and card party of ‘Bethany Chapter, No. h: held February 28 be determined. Past matrons and pa- trons of the chapter will be hosts. Mrs Iccak rs. A. Rohwer were board of mana- ar term ending in N. M. Judd: = e jage of the 11 to 14 per cent of light 24, O. E. §, will | trict. at a place yet to|to have promment mass meeting. great wine interests here who de-| nounced the proposal as impossible, de- | claring that 3.05 per cent wine would deteriorate within 30 days into a sour and unpalatable vinegar. While all wine interests appeared ap- | preciative of the inclusion of wine in| the bill, their sharp differences over the merits of 3.05 wine stood out as an interesting development. Possible by Two Processes. According to one chemist connected | with wine interests in California, it | would be possible to manufacture the | wine of 305 per cent alcobol by weight, by two processes. The fer- | mentation could be stopped at that| point and allowed to proceed no fur- ther. In the second place, he said, grape juice could be allowed to fer-| nent to its natural alcoholic percent- then the beverage could be | wine, and He | “plended” with pure grape juice. admitted, however, the danger spoilage, copecially after the bottle 1s | cpened. | pE)n the other hand, a representa-| tive of one of the largest wine groups of the country contended that such a wine would be a failure, not only as a beverage, but as a producer of revenue. | It would turn into a poor quality of | vinegar within 30 days, he conlended,f and would be impossible as a beverage. | Dissatisfied with the wine nmend-‘ ment, Judge Marion De Vries, counsel | for the Grape Growers' League of Cali- fornia and other Eastern grape-pro- ducing interests, issued a statement de- claring he and his clients would fight | for new legislation. | Pleased by Recognition. Judging _ from published Judge De Vries said, the Grape Grow- ers’ League of California and the grabe reports, | there were other representatives of | | High 8 am. 10 am, . = Highest, 37, at 4 ago, 6. Lowest, 28, at 4 a.m. yesterday. ago, 45. 35 10 p.m 5 Year p.m. yesterday Year Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) ‘Today. . 30:30am. . 5:54am. . 10:41 pm. 5:02pm. The Sun and Moon. Rises. Sun, today ... 17:25 Sun, tomorrow 7:25 5:11 Moon, today .. 9:18 p.m. 9:38 a.m. Automobile lights must be turned on ‘Tomorrow. 11:12am. 5:28am. 11:24 pm. 5:44 p.m. Low High Low . Sets. 5:10 | one-half hour after sunset. Precipitation. Monthly precipitation in inches in Month. January February. March April. | May June July. . August September October . November December 3.32 Weather in Various Cities. ture.— Precipi- T tation. & Sat.p.m. to .8p.m.Ep.m. 40 Average. Record. 7.0 6.84 '84 884 91 913 '89 89 ’00 '86 28 76 1933. 0.75 'é.’o 89 ‘01 Asheville, N. C.... Atlanta, Ga. Atlantic City. N.'J. | Baltimore, | Birmingham, Ala..". Bismarck, N. ‘Dak growers in the United States generally were pleased with the “recognition of the right of light wines to be mc]ui(‘di with any beer legislation.” i “None can dispute that the one is as| much the subject of the Democrtic | | national platform as the other,” he de- clared. “We take it, however, that the grape interests are entitled to legalize a wholesome product. Wine of 3.05 per cent alcohol is neither a wholesome r‘.uf‘ a commercial product. — Moreover, a wine of & higher alcoholic content, with | restrictions as to its mroper use accord- ing to all authorities, can be legalized within the inhibitions of the eighteenth | amendment. The fight of the grape interests, therefcre, will be to sec@re such legislation.” Beer interests here said beer could be | made at the lower alcoholic percentage a5 palatable as pre-war beer of the | slightly higher and more normal per- | centage of abcut 3.20. per cent alcohol by weight. 115 CITIZENS CALL DRY MASS MEETING Gathering January 22 to Protest Against Black’s Beer Bill for District. | Called by a group of 115 citizens of | Washington, a mass meeting will be held uncer prohibition auspices January 22 to protest against the Black be bill designed to legalize the sale of beer in the District of Columbia. “The group calling the meeting charges ¥ tnat the passage of this bill would re- { establish all the evils of the saloon in the District Two meetings are being held. the principal one in the New Masonic Tem- ple, Thirteenth and New York avenue, at the New York Avenue Pres- %’&Ufln Church. The committee plan- ning the protest meeting consists of Dr. Everett M. Ellison, Dr. Eugene L. Crawford, Dr. William Sheafe Chas | Mrs, N. M. Pollock, Gordon Barnes, | Col. william O. Tufts. Dr. Harvey Bak Smith, and Dr. Frederick B. Harris. Dr. Ellison will preside. Special ef- | forts are being made to enlist all the | young people’s societies of the various churches. At a meeting at Calvary Baptist Church on Priday this committee gave instructions for forwarding a letter to Congress protesting against any effort to legalize the liquor traffic in the . Arrangements are being made address of 3.05, but it would not be as good, nor | p, | Portland. 3 pm., with an overflow gather- | Chicago. Cincinnati, Chesenne, India Jacksonvill Kansas City. M Little Rock. Ark Los Angeles, Calif. Louisyille, Ky Marauette, 3 Memphis. Miami. Fla : Mobile New Orleans, La New York, N. Y. North Platte. Nebr Omaha. Nebr Philadelphia. hoenix. Ariz Pittsburgh, Pa Portland. Me. Qreg Lake Gity. Utah Louis. Mo Paul.’ Minn. | San Antonio. Tex. San Diego, Calif | Ban Francisco. Caiif Santa Fe. N. Me: 0.0 044 | Sait Savannah. Ga. | Seattle Wash | Springfield. Tl | Tampa, Pia... | Toledo,” Ohio. Vicksburg. Miss, WASHINGTON, D. C. SOL BLOOM TO SPEAK { Masonic Club of S. Kann Sons Co. [ to Hear Representative. | Representative Sol Bloom will ad- dress the Masonic Club of S. Kann Sons | Co. at_their first meeting of the new year Thursday. The meeting will be held at the Harrington Hotel at 7 o'clock. President Samuel Feldman is re- turning early from a buying trip to New York in order to attend the meeting. The Entertainment Committee has | planned an extensive program and the | entire membership is expected to be on hand to greet Representative Bloom. rofesiredosdeadufoadosdsifodoed Perfect % DIAMONDS Also complete line of standardege and all-American made watches. Shop at the friendly me—‘:’ 're always greeted wlthnlmue? o —with no tion to buy. Charge Accounts Invited b4 M. Wartzburger Co. 901 G St. N.W. 8p.m. 37/ | 0.01 N. Riley, associate grand patron; Rose | A. Yost, grand secretary; Lillie Mc- | Kenzie, grand treasurer; Helen L. , Brashears, grand conductress; Louise | Krelow, -associate grand conductress; ‘MEX‘)’ E. Seabridge, grand chaplain; | Mary 'E. Teachum, grand lecturer: | Pauline I Loveless, grand marsh: Etella M. Arsenau, grand organist; | |Mary B. Warren, grand Adah; Elsie Babcock, grand Esther; Bernetta B. | Hoffman, grand Martha; Ruth F. Buck+ | ner, grand Electa; Louise W. Chase, | grand warder, and Howard E. Wacker- man, grand sentinel. Past Grand Matron Gertrude B. Milans was installing officer, and Katie |M. L. Gude, as grand marshal, and | Grace E. Kimmel, as grand chaplain, also took part in the ceremony. An ex- | ception was made in the case of Mr. | Kimmel, who was installed by his wife, | after which Mrs. Kimmel reverted to | her office as grand chaplain. The customary jewel was presented to the retiring grand matron, Miss of | the Capital (current“month to date): |Edith A. Williams, by Past Grand Ma- | tron Julia N. Streater, and the jewel of | a past grand matron to the retiring in- | cumbent, Paul B. Cromelin, by Past Grand Patron Reuben A. Bogley, who also is junior pasi grand master of Masons in the District. | The meeting of tAe Grand Chapter | | began Tuesday night with a business | session. | ARMY OFFICER DIES {Lieut. Col. Mathews Was on Duty | | in Hawaii. | i Lieut. Col. Laurence O. Mathews, Quartermaster Corps, died Friday at the Scofield Barracks Hospital, in Hawali, where he was on duty, according to & | message received at the War Depart- ment yesterday. He was 54 years old A native of Newcastle, Ky., he was commissioned from the ranks, having entered the Army as a private soldier | | from 1899 to 1901, when he was ap- | pointed a second lientenant. His early service was in the Infantry and during | | the World War he served as a lieutenan colonel in the National Army. He was | transferred to the Quartermaster Corps |in 1920 and given permanent rank of | lieutenant colonel on July 17, 1921. s. Frances E. Mathews, his wife, was with him when he died. HEADS ALUMNI GROUP |Rev. M. Elmore Turner Is Elected by Lynchburg Graduates. Rev. M. Elmore Turner, pastor of | Takoma Park, Md. Christian Church, | was elected president of the newly | organized Washington Chapter of the | Lynchburg College Alumni at a meeting | Friday night at the Y. M. C. A. Other j‘olfit elected are Mrs. W. M. Ritter, first vice president; J. B. O'Toole, sec- ond vice president; Rev. Virgil E. Low- der, University of Maryland, secretary, and Miss Thelma Stancil, treasurer. Dr. J. T. T. Hundley, president of ;a‘)g;f‘hburg Col]lege. and Rev. J. D. gomery, alumnl secretary college, spoke. ! 2 | “Buy American” | Hot Water Heat Installed | Authorized American Radiator Dealer 6-Room House as low as Low Monthly Terms 2 and 3 Years to Pay Installed by AMERICAN Mechani, ENGINEERING CO. 907 N. Y. Avd Nat. 8421 fourth consecutive term as president of the Mu-So-Lit Club, Inc, at the or- ganization’s annual meeting Friday at 1327 R street. He| consented to serve | for thirty days with the under- standing that an- other president | would be chosen at the expiration of that period. Other officers chosen were John A. Lankford, first| vice president; Ed- ward F. Arnold, secretary - treas- urer; George H. Murray, chairman of the Executive Committte, and Dr. Robert B, Pearson, chairman of the House Committee. In addition to the officers, the following will compose the Board of Governors: Dr. A. M. Curtis, Maj. Henry O. Atward and A. Lang- ston Taylor. Plans were begun for a general re- organization of the club, for the annual celebration of the birthdays of Lincoln and Douglas, and for participation in a function to be held during the week of March 4 in honor of the inaugura- tion of President-elect Roosevelt. INDORSES TRADE DRIVE Kevin Barry Council of Washington of the American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic, yesterday voted to co-operate with all other Irish-American associations in a Nation-wide campaign to foster trade relations between Ireland and the United States. The council asked support of all Irish-American organizations in seek- ing passage of a bill by Congress grant- ing reciprocal tariff concessions to Ireland. == SCHAINUCK’S 1318 F St. NW. Upstairs - SUITS 0'COATS Great F (0} OFFER Now! 213 19 Your Choice of Any 2 Garments Any 2 Sizes Any 2 Colors If You Cannot Use 2 Garments Bring a Friend and Divide Absolute Satisfaction Guarant CHAINUCK’ S 1318 F St. N.W. M) UPSTAIRS—Take Elevator Between the Fox and Palace Theaters, Open Every Evening Until 9 p.m. M. Grant Lucas. to prior sale . . . all sales final 8 Hart Sdl‘lliner & Marx and Raleigh Suits—Light Spring shades. 40 and 42 in regulars; also 3 sport suits with trousers and knicke: MEN'S CLOTHING sizes 35 and 42 medium stout; were originally $25 and $29.50. 2 Topcoats—Sizes 35 46; 39 stout; were $30 and $35......... RS 2 Hart Schaffner & Marx BInevOVQrcolll—-S gle and double-breast- ed; size 42; was $35. 2 Hart Schafiner & Marx Overcoats—Heather-! 36 regular and 42 long; were $35......... and 36 regular, brown mixture: e $12.75 es 35, 3, 37, 3, $14.75 $9.75 “'$9.75 $13.75 $16.75 and 3 Hart Schaffner & Marx Imported Scotch Plaid Overcoats—Raglan shoulders; Prussian collar; black-and-white and brown; sizes 36 and 37; were $50........... 14 Hart Schaffner & Marx and Raleigh 36 and 37 stubs, 39 and 40 medium-stouts. size 36 long; was $50. 18 Raincoat-Combination-Topcoats—Tweed on one side; rainproofed gabardine on other side; all sizes to 40; were $20. ... coal coats; all sizes; were $35 and $30. . 297 Hart Schaffner & Marx and Ralei sizes; were $42.50 and $40 194 Hart Schaffner & Marx and Ral coats; all sizes; were $50 and $45... .. . coats; $1.45 to $1.95 SHIRTS 360 Shirts; white, solid shades and fancies; collar-attached and neck- 95¢ ; 27 Suede Leather Vests, zipper sty! band styles. 430 Shirts—Were $1.65 to $2.50...51.19 165 Shirts—Were $2.50 to $3.50...§1.59 22 Belts—Were 85c 37 Belts—Were $1.00 and $1.50.. 4 Belts—Were $3.00... ... 20 Pr. Gloves—Were $1.00....... 29 Pr. Gloves—Were $1.50. 28 Pr. Gloves—Were $1.75. 60 Pr. Gloves—Were $350.. 160 Pr. Hose—Were $1.00. 17 Pr. Hose—Were 4 Money Clips—Were $4.50, & 97' Ties—Were $1 and $1.15..... 847 Ties—Were $1.65 and $1.50... 60 Ties—Were $1.65, §2. .. 71 Dress Ties—Were $1 and $1.50..50c 107 Pr. Pajamas—Were $1.19, $1.39.69¢ Now..... to 42; $5.50 . Now and $1..... 50c 7% $1.50 50c 75¢ 95¢ .$1.75 47c 79 $1.65 5. .$1.50 s5¢ 79 ...5129 1 Silk Robe—' $1.50. . $2.89 and $3.95 and and Over- igh Suits, Topcoats and Over- 81 Pr.l 9P.]-mu—w=re $1.55 to 29 Pr. Shorts—Were 39c 76 Pr. Shorts—Were $1.00.. 37 Union Suits—Were $1.00, $L.15. .79¢ 68 Union Suits—Were $1.35 to $19.75 $16.85 $19.75 $12.75 its—Sizes }5 to 42 regular, ostly light shades; were 117 Hart Schafiner & Marx and Raleigh Suits, Topcoats nnd Over- all sizes; were $29.75 and $25. - 5 1 9-75 134 Hart Schafiner & Marx and Raleigh Suits, Top(olil $23.75 $28.75 elgh 'S.uiu: .To‘pcoah and Over- $3 3 7 5 NOw, 5 Canes—Were $3 to $15. $130 to $7.50 219 Pairs 50c and 75c Hose. 56 Pr. Golf Hose—Were 95c 3 Flannel Robes—Were $7,85. 1 Flannel Robe—Was $9.85... 2 Flannel Robes—Were $11.85..$5.95 Z Silk Robes—Were $12.95. .$4.95 ..$6.95 Was $9.85... ..95¢ 23 Pull-Over Sweaters—Were $3.50 8 Pull-over Sweaters—Were $4.95. 3 Steamer Robes—Were $25.00.$8.95 MEN'S HATS AND SHOES 67 Raleigh Hats—Were $3.50 and $5.00 54 Knox Hats— Were $5.00 59 Knox Hats—Were $7.00. 37 Knox Hats—Were $10 and 4 Knox “Forty” $40. Sizes 67, Now .$2.85 $3.85 ..$5.85 Hats—Were 7, 7%, 7%..916.75 37 Pairs Hanan Sample Shoes; sizes 7A, 7B and 7C. larly $13.50 to §16.50.. . 144 Pairs Raleigh “8” Shoes. . 116 Pairs Sta-Smooth Shoes NOwW 5 Knox “Twenty” Hats—Were an. Sizes 67 7 7, T 7' . $10.75 Regu- $6.85 Use Your Charge Account Here, or open one during these sales RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street

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