Evening Star Newspaper, July 30, 1935, Page 19

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S News of Virginia and Maiyland Virginia Official at Springs. Rowie Post- master Away. Mr. Lawrence W. Douglas, com- monwealth’s attorney for Arlington County, and Dr. P. M. Chichester, Arlington County health officer, joined Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. Chichester for the week end and returned home Sun- day from Shrine Mont, near Orkney 8prings, where Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. Chichester spent the month of July in the very interesting old home of Bishop Robert. Gibson, sixth Bishop of Virginia, now in the possession of his son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Woodward. During their stay Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. Chichester attended the lectures and conferences given there by prominent educators during the Summer months. The postmaster at Bowie, Md., Mrs. Nettie Fowler, is spending a short va- cation at Galesville, Md. Col and Mrs. W. W. Overton of Arlington Ridge Road, Va. have as their guests Mrs. Overton’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Brabson of New York, in compliment to whom they entertained at tea yes- terday. Among the other guests were Col. and Mrs. Adna Chaffee, Maj. C. P. Richardson, Maj. Raymond Harden- bergh,. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Brubaker of Washington, also Maj. and Mrs. Glenn P. Wilhelm of Oakcrest, Va., and their house guest, Mrs. Roy Henry of Chattanooga, Tenn. Lieut. Comdr. W. M. Thompson, U. S. N, and Mrs. Thompson of Lyon Village, Va., returned Sunday evening from a week’s visit with Miss Ellen H. Smith of Richmond, Va., in her Sum- mer home at Irvington-on-the-Rap- | pahannock. Mrs. T. Edgar Aud entertained at a bridge luncheon yesterday in her home in Herndon, Va., when her guests in- cluded Mrs. Russell A. Lynn, Mrs. Wil- liam H. Dawson, Mrs. George F. Buell, Mrs. Arthur Hyde Buell, Mrs. E. Bar- bour Hutchison, Mrs. Harold F. Weiler, | Mrs. William Meyer, Mrs. George Ramsey Bready, Mrs. Harvey E. Hanes, Mrs. David M. Aud and Mrs. Allen H. Kirk. Miss June Seamans has returned to her home in Herndon, Va., after a three-week visit in Norfolk, Virginia Beach and Ocean City. Mrs. George R. Dye with her daughter, Virginia, has returned to her home in Sligo Park Hills, Md, from a vacation in Ocean City, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Shadick and three children have returned to their home in Hyattsville, Md., after visiting relatives in Minnesota. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Blake have with them at their home, Bannock- burn, near Fairfax, Va., Mr. Ellis Middleton, who flew from New York. Miss Mary Worley of Harrisburg, Pa, is the guest of her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey T. Casbarian, in Hyattsville, Md. Miss Frances Smith of Fairfax, Va., who spent a fortnight with her mother, Mrs, E. D. Smith, in Han- over County, returned yesterday. Mrs. Herbert Gardner and son, Charles Robert, of California, who have been visiting in Glenn Dale, Md., for several weeks, left Saturday for home. Miss Alice Crutchfield, Fairfax County home demonstration agent, left yesterday for Blacksburg, Va., to attend the Institute of Rural Affairs. Before returning to Fairfax she will visit her parents in Danville. Mrs. Charles Y. Latimer of Takoma Park, Md., president of the Takoma Park Women’s Democratic Club, with bher two children, Nance Jane and Ellen, have gone to Junction City, Ky., where they will pass some time with Mr. Latimer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Latimer, Mr. F. P. McDermott of Aurora Hills, Va., will leave tomorrow for a two-week visit at Lake Minnewaska in the Catskill Mountains, where he will join his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth McDermott of Elizabeth, N. J.,, and ‘both will be at the Cliff House. Miss Virginia Horner and Miss Mildred Horner of Silver Spring, Md., have returned to their home after a imotor trip to Ocean City, Md., where they accompanied their aunt, Mrs. Jerome B. Lawler, who is spending a month at the Chandler House. Little Marjorie Ann Templeton, for- merly of Washington, but now a res- fdent of Berwyn, Md., after spending two and a half years in San Diego, Calif,, where her father was stationed at the naval base, has returned to her home after spending a week with her cousin, Georgia Catherine Hor- ner of Silver Spring, Md. Mr. Holcomb Rogers and Miss Edith Rogers have had as their guests last week at Blossom Hill, their home at Floris, Va., Miss Dorothy Rogers of New Brunswick, N. J.; Miss Katherine Rogers of Trenton, N. J.; Mrs. John P. Willman and her two children Edith and Jim of Ithaca, N. Y, and Miss Mary Eleanor Rodgers of Fa- ber, Va. { Jobless Drop in Scotland. | Registered unemployed in Scot- $and now number 320,000, a decrease ©f 14,000 in 12 months. “Only ONE QUALITY . » hjut’gfln BEST ” OCIETY. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1935. Mountain of the Dead Rears As Chinese Floods Recede Wooden Coffins Are Piled High, While Hundreds of Bodies Are Recovered After Wide Devastation. By the Associated Press. HANKOW, China, July 30.—A great pile of rude wooden coffins—a veri- table mountain of the dead—is grow- ing ever higher on the banks of the Yangtse River near here. Red Cross workers are pursuing their grim task of reclaiming the bodies of flood victims swept down from the inundated up-river districts. A corps of carpenters is working feverishly in an effort to provide the coffins in the huge numbers needed. Every corpse must be encoffined in accordance with the Chinese belief that the spirits of the dead are doomed to eternal restlessness unless their bodies are decently interred. 1,500 Coffins Piled Up. Already 1,500 of these unpainted ‘wooden boxes are stacked along the banks while hundreds of other bodies await the construction of their last receptacles. The bodies recovered are believed to represent only a fraction of the total loss of life in the floods, as it is known that tens of thousands of vic- tims were trapped inside the walls of cities and behind dikes or swept sea- | ‘ward. Although the peak of the floods was definitely believed passed today and | the waters were receding sharply, the details of the devastation are only be- ginning to filter in. Only One Town Escapes. The Rev. Adolph Koehler of Nico- lett, Minn., returning from a 70-mile Jjourney up the overflowing Han River, said he encountered only one town in that entire distance which escaped inundation. “High spots on the dikes and other patches of dry land were literally black with humanity,” said the Rev. Mr. Koehler. “When we stopped, they crowded around by the hundreds pleading for medicines and food. “Many of them are subsisting en- tirely on the occasional watermelons which are floating down the river. Hundreds are ravaged by dysentery, typhoid and other epidemic diseases.” Stories of Missionary Heroism. Deeds of missionary heroism are frequently told by the flood victims. At Chung Hsiang, north of here, an avalanche of water poured into the city with such violence that one sur- vivor “thought the end of the world had come.” Missionaries saved scores of lives by rescuing victims irom tree tops and the roofs of sub- || merged houses. In some of the flooded districts, the people have returned to their ruined homes and now are fishing from boats PART OF PLANE DROPS 2,000 FEET INTO HOME Piece of Steel Penetrates Roof and Lower Floor Ceiling—Barely Misses Girl. By the Associated Press. SALT LAKE CITY, July 30.—The | steel rocker box of an airplane cylin- der head worked loose 2,000 feet above the city yesterday and hurtled down through the roof of the home of George C. West. West said the box, about six inches deep and a foot long, tore through both the roof and the dining room ceiling, barely missing his 13-year-old daughter, Barbara. Clyde Freeman, pilot, made a safe landing with the crippled motor. Mattresses s Remade The Stein Bedding Co. 1004 Eye St. NW. ME. 9490 A DELICIOUS 6-COURSE DINNER that exemplifies the excellence of the Am- bassador’s cuisine. To add te your em- joyment and comfort, the Dining Room is AIR-COOLED. Many body ailments s rheumatism, Wednesday—Thursday— Friday—Saturday Any Garment (INCLUDING WHITE DRESSES) Except Linens and Flannels CASH AND CARRY PRICE 39- Call for and Delivery Price, 59¢ All Stores Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 1744 Columbia Rd. N.W. 310‘ O St. N.W. for their sacks of rice, beans and cther possessions. Among the many stories of whole- sale tragedies, few are more poig- nant than that told by the survivors from Miehyang, who said that 1,000 of their townspeople were swept to death while laboring to repair a weakened dike. The workers on the dike were isolated as on an island when both ends of the abutment were swept away. They, too, were carried into the flood before the eyes of their neighbors and relatives. BIDS OF $1 TO $150.99 FOR THE MACON REFUSED Navy Abandons Scheme to Get Some Compensation for Loss of $2,500,000 Dirigible. By the Associated Press. SUNNYVALE, Calif,, July 30.—The Navy believes bids of $1 to $150.99 for wreckage of the §2.500,000 Navy dirigible Macon, now reposing some- where in the Pacific Ocean off Point Sur, Calif,, are too low. Officers of the air base here said yesterday naval executives had sought to obtain some return from the wreck- age, but when offers ranging from $1 by Max Eugene Nohl of Milwaukee, Wis., to $150.99 from the Winchester Salvage Co. of Portland came in they decided to abandon the project. The Macon sank with the loss of two lives last February after, accord- ing to.testimony preseuled at an in- quiry, the metal structure at the top fin collapsed. MARIE ANTOINETTE NECKLACE STOLEN Bandits Take Famed Jewels in $40,000 Robbery at Fifth Ave- nue Shop in New !m‘k. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 30.—A ruhy neck- lace, which jewelers claimed once adorned the neck of Marie Antoinette, was in the hands of thieves today ‘after a daring jewel robbery. The necklace, valued at $10,000, was seized with other gems valued up- ward from $40,000 during the rush hour late yesterday from the store of Nicolai Miller at 743 Fifth avenue. ‘Two robbers bound and gagged two clerks, and within 10 minutes cleaned out the show windows and show cases. Hundreds of pedestrians hurried by in front. Traffic-jammed automobiles honked. Neither these nor the shrill blasts of the busy Fifty-seventh street traffic’ policeman’s whistle disturbed the efficiency of the robbers. Before the clerks could free them- selves the loot-loaded thieves had dis- to be. The necklace was made up of 25 flat-cut rubies of from one to two carats each, set-in gold filigree with small diamonds and with a ruby and diamond clasp. 15,000 TO LOSE RELIEF TORONTO, July 30 (#)—Onta- rio’s 15,000 or more single jobless men will be crossed off the relief rolls Thursday under Premier Mitchell Hepburn's plan to increase the avail- able supply of farm labor. A protest movement led by Mayor James Simpson of Toronto appeared to have little support from other municipal leaders. Hepburn said there was a scarcity of farm labor. SOCIETY, DISTILLERY CHARGE DISPUTE IS DROPPED Clark Tells Bottle Lock Designer He Will Not Press In- quiry. By the Associated Press. Following an exchunge of heated correspondence befwesn Senator Clark, Democrat, of Missouri, and Lester P. Barlow, boitle designer, over Barlow's refusal a% a Senate Finance Committee hearing to explain charges that big distilleries headed “bootleg rings,” Clark today dropped the matter. He told Barlow in a letter that, “As I do not believe that the expenditure of public funds or waste of valuable time in advertising your patent prod- uct would be justifiable, I shall not press the demands for your citation.” Barlow, an engineer for Yale & Towne Co., had appeared before the committee with a bottle lock which he said would put an end to ging as practiced by several hrn lelfl:o: cnrponunlg: ‘When Barlow be- more specific, charging National Distillers Corp. with beinz “head of & bootleg ring,” Senator Clark threat- ened contempt proceedings for his re- fusal to give proof of the statement. In a subsequent letter to Clark, Barlow expressed his rcsentment at the “bullying” he had received and said he was willing to accept the con=- tempt citation in order tc “expose the bootleggers.” The committee hearing came up in connection with the Federal alcohol control bill. Alfonso Is Exonerated. * MADRID, July 30 (#)—The Su- preme Court exonerated former King Alfonso and his brother-in-law, In- fante Fernando de Bavicra, yesterday on charges of graft in connection with & contract involving the Onta- neda Calatayud Railway during the dictatorship. It's healthy to shop at Jelleff's—clean, cool air to breathe! Mid-Summer here-vacations ahead and tomorrow our monthly Half-Price Day Half-Price, Third-Price, Quarter-Price and Mostly Summer Apparel! Je THE heW Hleffs 1214-1220 F STREET When we say “average of half-price,” we understate lhe facts! But that's the Jelleff way—we'd rather you’'d be surprised at the values than disappointed! Close to $40,000 worth of our kind of apparel and accessories in our tomorrow’s Half-Price Day! From our own stocks, from manufacturers we know and whose mer- chandise we can be sure of—"Twill be the greatest of the year! And comfort for all in this healthy, comfortable, air-conditioned store. Constantly cnrcula!mg clean cool air with no humidity for you to breathe. " Now please—No C. O. D.'s, no telephone or mail orders and no credits or exchanges. Shop comfortably and leisurely, and be sure you are right before deciding. Pin-fittings 25¢ on half-price days! French Room—Second Floor Average Half Price 8—$49.75 to $65 Dresses Including 6 dark sheers, 1 necum suit, brown suit ___ 7—$19.35 COS' chiffon_evening 1—$63 CHIFFON for wo en, 1 gown o 2 EVENING GOWN for miss DRESSES—8 printed crepes, 10 vening dress, 4 printed chiffons_ 30—3$25 to $35 Dresses Including 3 printed chiffons, 2 printed crepes, 10 light-toned sheers, 15 dark sheers. 30—$29.75 TO %31 spectator suits, 6 Broken 'sizes—12- Special Size Shop—Second Floor 7—$13.95 PRINTED CREPES for larger women » $12.50 0 evening gowns. 12 dark sheers, % , 4_printed chiffons__________$11.88 , 1613-24'3—in all groups! Average Half Price 35—$16.95 to $19.75 Dresses 10 printed crepes, 4 pastel crepes, 30 dark sheers [5,DEESSES-—2 dark sheers, 10 piinted creves. 3 peinted sheers, 1 evening Eown—t 2.50 chiffon: 3 1—820.35 DAnl !lluls to_wear Fignt. into. Fall - $14.88 Broken sizes—3813 to 52%:—in all groups Women s Dresses—Second Floor k. brown ___ 50—$16.95 Dresses Average Half Price Including 10 washable crepes, 6 dinner dresses in net and printed crepes, 8 sheer suits, 14 day- time crepes, sheers. DRESS! Is, mavy, black and bl Incomplete sizes, but 36-46, 1 Misses’ Dresses—Second Floor 25—DRESSES. ORIGINALLY $13.95, $16.95—Si plain sheers—choice Friday 55—816.95 Dresses . dinner l“‘ evening styles, sol ue with hcleli Il iz in all groups Average Half Price ery printed Printed crepes, dark sheers grand for fall, pastel crepes and washables, navy and black chiffons—to Junior Deb Dresses—Fourth Floor Broken sizes 11 to 17 in all groups ts. n ".'.2':‘..‘1'.“1‘..;_, u ek to 20s in each gro Average Half Price 1] 17—8$16.95 Junior Dresses Chiffons and nets for afternoon, vacation travel and business; one-piece and jacket frocks in IS—IIOM SHEER Cl.ln DRESSES for juniors, navy’ with jacl la—uon EVENING ' GOWNS. in EVENING DRES! BLACK OUILTED Even! .95 in S WoOL CRENE REDINGOTE CONTS in mav. Cotton Frock Shop—Fifth Floor 200—$1.95 Dresses Half Price Marvelous group of printed cottons, batistes, dot- ted voiles, tissue ginghams, dimities, cool cape sieeve styles, capes, short and 3; sleeves, pique and ribbon trims; broken sizes and colors. 15—‘5 .95 DRESSES—Handkerchie! tone effects for misses, wi llolul sizes, 11 55 DRES: bot style in pri 98¢ t00—in two- ne also llrlnl 0d shirt D aist and cap sieeve *n—jal Tna chirred waistiine Tor misses: roken sites, 13 {o 41 Inexpensive Dresses—Fourth Floor For misses, and Sacket iourse, Us"a clearance! Lots in navy blu for women—oprints in bolers iries ece Average Half Price e—one-Diect ses—linserle E $3.48 70—8$10.95 ?NI-PI!(,'! AND JACKET DRESSES for misses and women— Sark sround prints. plain creves: plenty of navy. some d Erichine Tace nd Hngerie Spert Shop—Stmt Floor 150—8$3.95 Knit Dresses Including chenilles, boucles, movelty knits in two- piece dresses; uu.wmumumlflhb blue, chartreuse; sizes 12-20. 30—$1.95 BLOUSES—Satine, 100—81.95 cmon BLO! L nnnu; ‘whi "_".-.’%.m JLoUEE © 30—82.95 n'l-, “linens, 98¢ Little Shoe Shop—Street Floor 100 PRS. 100 PRS. $2.45, RS, 3245, $2.05 SANDALS, colors; broken sives Better Shoe Salon—Street Floor 95 SUMMER SHOES. in white with contrasting color trims —s$2.4. Cuban heel types in all :m- Average Half Price Sport Shop—Third Floor Average Half Price 126—$8.95 Bathing Suits Zephyrs, dressmaker and silk jerseys, one, two and three piece styles, halter tops, many with skirts in royal, white, navy, brown; sizes 32-44 60—81.65 BEACH Mlll‘l‘ $4. 48 24—8$3.95 JERSEY SLACKS, Illl! ‘-rl shades s sizes 11 to 44 20—3$10.95 wnlnnu:’nent Dresses a1 and nuuh sizes 35—$10.95. $13.95 KNI~ "t icce siyies in white 15—$16.95 KNIT DRESSES. bos types; broken sizes 11 to 40 20—$3.95 SWEATERS, classic types in twin sets. slip- 42—82.95 SWEATERS, sl 35—8$3.95 SKIRTS of light-wi 32—$2.05 COTTON SKIRTS, 30—8$5.95 JACKETS, flannels sizes 14 to 20__ astels. dark shade: 20—8%2.95 BLOUSES, tallored. frilly creves, strives; sizes 32 to 4: 45—$3.95 BLOUSES, plain ereves, sirived ereves, satins; sizes 32 to 22, Misses, Juniors’ Coats— T hird Floor 20810 COATS (eriginally, £16.93) odels; in navy, brown, beige; 11-18__85 lored types—swasgers, belt 30—s$15 Coats Average Half Price furless, with ecapes, jabots—alio tal- Originally $19.75, $25—dress types, casuals, swag. gers, paddock, belted styles in navy, brown, I,hck crepey wools, checks, diagonals, tweeds; 13-20.._ 8—$12.95 TAFFETA COATS. brown or navy, sizes 11-18. 5—813 GER_COATS in o > vy ik, Mac, Biwe, matse; 141 CASUAL 'I'Wlll! COATS, paddock llylel- single breasted or Ay, 2o brown, blue mixtures; --814.88 DRESS coA'rs Suits—Fourth Floor IECE Summer Suits of waffle blouse in white lilac, navy-and-| 30—$16.95 to $19.75 Spring Suits Dressy crepes, swaggers mostly navy; sises 10—213.95 SUMMER SUITS in in"rose and liac; 11 to 18_ % sizes for misses 29—$29.75 to $39.75 Three-Piece Suits Tailored and dressy types; two-piece models with topcoats—tweeds, checks, crepes—man with blouses; brown, navy, bl.lck and '.Ill. sizes 12-20 10—$49.35 TWO-FIECE SUITS—o! In biack and brown; dressy a: $14.88 kind. most of them in mavy, few r: lm' .-ll.flel sizes. 24.88 Women’s Coats—Third Floor s—-anq, BROWN COATS of rstmann wool, 38. 3—8.? 35 llll!! CoA'I'! with fox and ermime collars on 3 36, 38 and 10—$39.75 Dressy Coats In navy, black, brown; furred with kolinsky, galyak and squirrel; or furless with quilted taffeta collars; 36-42, 3514-39%, 4215-48% __ 50.73 'UIIED DI.E!S CDA'I‘S "‘/:. ermine, fox, galvak o I own, Nlell 5 19 10.95 nn'rn\ BII-K AND CORDUROY it blue. maize; 36-40. 1 16.95 SWAGGER SP 1031695, lars; 1935 FURLESS DI ¥3; mavy, black, brown; 36-41 G Glove Silk Undies—Second Floor Average Half Price 300—$1.65 Pure Silk Milanese Panties Lavishly trimmed with imported lace medallions— bloomers, bandee-legs, step-ins, briefs, vests; 4.7___. 84« 1oo—c| IANDIAIJX to -lhh above ‘ll“lfi Im trimmed: 32-38_ 1.95 S| f Bember shadow-proof hems, er's discontinued strle; d " Satin-kink rayon—twe full cut, pre. tearose in sizes in 34-10 GOWNS, full length, fitted styles discon- wn maker: 13-18; leau tops; tearose; 32-3 Corset Shop—Second Floor i R T35 RATON MESH cm:nnu'rloxs. with Half Price 5—$1.95. $2.05 FOUNDATIONS for Jender ot Junier miss figures—coal, rous lastex and a few nets 81—$3.95, $5 Foundations and Girdles Of broche, French, batiste, a few girdles in satin; 24-27; the majority small sises ... 66—86.50 TO Iullldl',ll-lfi few girdles sizes to 46.. $1.95 $8.50 GIRDLES and Foundations in satin, uima.fi voile: sizes 30, 32 few .98 50—$5.95 Negligees, Pajamas Grey Shops—Second Floor Average Half Price 500—$3.95 French Crepe Slips Pure dye and pure silk, in bias cut tailored and lace-trimmed styles; tearose and white, broken 1 95 2008105 FRENCH CREPE SLIPS. white, trimmed with white lace in sizes, 81 ll" l"l!l Sattereel |'u e 131 reap: broken 1517 500—$1.95 SILK UNDIES, ': printed Pnlul Srspe o tea m—nu tearose and whit 5 IAGD—DOIII bacs for evening 7.50 HANI tailored pa se, bive, UNDIES—Dance chemises of fine ¢ lace trimmed: broken piece models in X nted cotton broadcl beaded. lace and sequin eveni "b' nd_sequin evening ba $2 BAG AND CAF SETS for children; biue, Toiletries—Street Floor 24—S$1 Boxes Tre-Jur 144—81.56 MOIRET TOILET WATEE. with De Vilki Dea. chypre. nuguet and lilac odors 6—81 rou'lzn nomzl:ls 00—30¢ B0, LLEF! F'S CLEAN :»—u nox:s RIVIERA SOAP. y LES TRE- Al JUR_FA! SCIETY HYGENIQU 0—S1.25 mmnum—: Jogdhan | baif price 30 _TO $2 HAIRB S BATH RRUSHES lane handi u'—m S VANSTY "KERCHIEFS. with re! OTTLES NU-NAIL for brittle -10—-'!)‘ ll'\"(f‘ :Tl”n) BOXES OF DU l”—ll BOXES TRE-JUI IS Taleum MYE Theal BOXES TOILET SOAP. BOXES CORDAY'S Face Jewelry—Street Floor R Dusting P-'s-r Half Price 500 Pieces $1 Costume Jewelry In summer shades—bracelets, clips, pins, earrings RHINES' JEY bolote. Slipe Snd sarrings- 3 REINESTON JEWELRY, ing bracelets, 8I|u elips__ REINESTONE JEWELRY, clips. earri Men's Ties, Sox—Street Floor CKTIES FOR MEN. movelty patlorns__ HICKOK of initials _. . broken Neckwear—Street Floor 100—50¢ TO loo ECS. NECKWEAR, -m-l--lly S WEAR—Original F o eriop and Fritly sty 144—$1.95 Taffeta Jackets and Capes Pastel, evening and street colors in attractive styles 1.95 FLOWERS, sport, tull.e“"elln[ types__ 98¢ Handkcrcbufs—Strcet Floor 25¢ BLL-LINEN HA! elties, slightly counter seiled NDKERCHIEFS for w Umbrellas—Street Floor 395 PLAID SEERSUCKER Parasols, es onanoff_ handi 3,95 Gloves—Street Floor 300 prs. 50c to $1 Mesh and Fabric Gloves Also some net afterncon gloves with half-fingers; blue. 125 Pl!. 81, $1 Dfl ORGANDY P:"!hll with bu Jrith efandy tops: white, 25 PRS. $1.50 Gln S, ‘white 25¢ b tops; also mes] nn;:: Knitting Yarns—Half Price! 238 BALLS 30c feateh Worted 35¢c Spanish Stockd %0 BAILS 49 Germantown 1735 Conn. Ave. N.W. hird St. N.E. Mostly one of a style and color in 826 Bladensburg Rd. NL—C-II A‘l‘lume 1415 cottons 221 PRS. $7.75 TO $10.75 SUMMER SHOES. whil eolored trim: Little Hat Shop—Street Floor Pt 135—81 I‘JIIIIIA'H (originally lusu u).l-‘bfiuvnm e e e de e a e e Better Millinery—Street Floor 1 IR g Al TS (ecimitn 99 4 BiSA: ol 82 “Highest Quality ;L FEETISY

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