Evening Star Newspaper, August 28, 1935, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

FRANCE T0 0PPOSE LEAGUE SANCTIONS Laval Empowered to Fight Reprisals Against Italy in Event of War. By the Associated Press PARIS, August 28.—The French eabinet today empowered Premier Laval to oppose the application of sanctions by the League of Nations against Italy in its conflict with Ethiopia. In a four-hour session, the cabinet heard Laval's plan to induce the League Council to regard an Italian war against Ethiopia as a “colonial” expedition. The premier has been given a virtually free hand. The ministers were reported agreed that it was im- perative for France to retain the friendship of both Italy and Great Britain, but that it was important te save the League from a loss of prestige by attempting a program which French authorities said they thought was impossible. The premier told the cabinet Eng- land was less determined to act dras- tically and realizes the danger of | the Italian stand that “sanctions mean war.” Hope for a solution, Laval was said | to have told the ministers, was bright- | ened by Il Duce's agreement to pre- sent the case at Geneva, indicating a desire to avoid a break with the League or the big powers. The premier is still free, officials | said, to negotiate a peaceful settle- ment, if possible, but they also indi- cated they believed such an attempt | hopeless. Edouard Herriot, minister of state, will j#in Laval at Geneva for the | League Assembly meeting of Septem- | ber 9. when the Italo-Ethiopian dis- | pute will be taken up if the Counci 1s deadlocked. Asks Peace Prayers The Empress Menen ‘of Ethiopia, who has voiced a call to the world THE EVENING STAR, GARIBALDI VISIONS ITALO-BRITISH WAR Ethiopia Situation Declared Sec- ondary to Clash Between Powers. By the Associated Press ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., August 28. ~—Gen. Giuseppe Garibaldi, grandson of the famous Italian liberator, said | in an interview here today his coun- try's difficulties with Ethiopla “are of | secondary importance” as compared to “the real trouble that will arise soon between Italy, Great Britain and | France.” | Basing the prediction on what he ‘termed a “showdown on the Medi- terranean,” the former Italian soldier | said: “Great Britain can no longer lay | claim to the title of controller of the Mediterranean, and she fears Italy's convenient position and powerful fighting forces.” Asked what' he considered the proper steps for his country to take in her needs for new lands, Garibaldi | answered unhesitatingly, “Fight the | British In the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan | and the French in Tunis.” Gen. Garibaldi had difficulties sev- eral years ago with Mussolini and left the country. He spends his Winters here. POPE ENJOINS NURSES TO SHUN “NEUTRALITY” | Word Held Liable to Inject “Un- christian” Attitude in Care of Wounded. By the Associated Press. CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy. Au- gust 28.—Pope Pius enjoined nearly 2,000 delegates to the International Congress of Catholic Nurses yesterday not to permit the word “neutrality” to divert them from their duties to those wounded in battle. The Pontiff said this word might be 80 construed as to inject into the problem of rendering aid to the wounded ‘a worldliness which he char- acterized as nothing less than un- christian. Earlier, the Pope told the nurses, 25 of whom are delegates from the United States, that they must oppose materialism and modern paganism which he said were not only a threat but in too many cases had already caused serious destruction. SPECIAL NOTICES. WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY Qebis contracted (or by any one but myself, HENRY SCHOTTER. 33 R sl OGUNCED ‘rm\'r TH] rr sl( attached to the British Em- be closed for the period Sep- inclusive 1 OT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR debts contracted by any one other than myself. " JOHN M. WEIDMAN, 525 Quincy x'wiu, NOT BE_RESPONSIBLE FOR debts other' lhan mme made by myself. PASQUALE SANT 7 4th st. n.e. 1 WILL NOT BI ISIBLE FOR BI ‘made by any one other thln mystl! IT 18 ANN Consulate. bassy. oge PEACHES, 3,000 infl Elbertas, 2 " CLEANEI BU., GEORG] Phila, and A; ('Y 3 iew T ARM. lchel Drive to Rockville, Md., ELBERTA PEACHES Silver-Spring - Culesvlll. pike Thltl what you get when you call on lurnrlu you. The cost is most reasonable. Free estimat, FURNACES —rctu, cLEsn BELLE miles north of Colenvfl)m 'SON. Ashts b other Eastern PEACHES — PEACHES flberll on _road to Potomac. AT QUAINT ACRES. Note detour sig Let us have your next order for Columbia Planograph Co. VACUU! ris. nlkl‘glu ons‘l\lmbm: llz% R 3121 lflth St. ] NW G LOADS ice Since 1896." ml.l UIT FAl P ghen 1 mi 0_Potor Chibice :llow freestones for canning. Perfect Reprodumons Teproduction and we'll do & lob thatli 50 L St. N.E._Metropolitan 4861, [ Creek Chireh Td: naw. . Adsms 7 'WORK. Antistic—Durable—Sanitary. ELLETT 1106 9th St. NW. N“lnml 8731. Afl TO g W OR !DAD T mona. lmbon.r.fl:l‘nlu’a -ll way fo[l‘nls‘.‘ ”;}c{lt,!l rll;fl A ONAL Notr- 1460, Local movini s, POR__RENT, TTABLE P L '!hifllnl! (hl!!l. ln i'n ll's I’flllln chairs for rent o -rla STORAG! Sor' S8 10th st n.w ul:roomunmu THE_HOLDERS OF MOR = GAGE BONDS oF RATIONAL WOM- N'S UNTRY JUB: The sale under the deed of trust secur- fng these ‘bonds having been ratided by the court. the undersigned trultu 'fll make distribution to'the bondholders of the neét proceeds of sale as soon as the amount is determined by bonds should be flled wit! after the auditor's report is filed and ap- proved, to entitle the holders therenf t rece!ve pumem nf thelr distributive share hrike. Buldine. of the, S RRE T A DEAL FUNERAL AT 375 same service as one costing L OARTIR “Trust over for women to pray for peace. “For 16 days I have fasted and prayed fervently for Ethiopia and the world. I should like to appeal to women the world over to join in my prayer.” the empress said. Should peace 'and foreign ministers. efforts fail and hostilities start with Italy, she plans to march with the troops against the invaders. This Changing World Soviet Statesmen Forget Diplomatic Niceties When World Revolution Is Discussed. BY CONSTAN' The Soviet government is another edition of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyds In international relations at Ge- neva and elsewhere Stalin Litvinoff & Co. are like other heads of state They use the| stereotvped good - will sentences and talk like statesmen and diplomats. But of the Third Internationale they abandon their role of “excellencies,”| the niceties of international diplo- | the frock coats and silk hats. | macy, They don the red blouse, let their beards grow and plunge with the other revolutionaries in planning plots to overthrow the existing " .social order. And this is quite natural. The leaders of the Soviet Republics are real revoiutionaries and not parlor Bolshevists. they have been hounded by political | police, they have been kicked about, threatened and persecuted. When they became the heads of one of the biggest countries in the world and received adulation from mighty powers like France and Great Britain, to say nothing of other minor states, they liked it. Caviar, champagne and other nice= ties of life, such as solemn recep- tions and fuss made about their personalities, appealed to them. They lulled themselves into the idea that they are masters of their own destinies and could do what- ever they wanted. But they were soon brought back to the sense of reality. The Third Internationale, meeting in Moscow, discussed the question of a world revolution. The revolution- ary blood in all the Sovie leaders | is stronger than the pleasant life they have been leading since 1928. And when those who do not wear frock coats, drink champagne and eat caviar and sturgeon brought back to their memory that the real aim of the Third Internationale, of which all the Soviet rulers are members, is to assist the disruption of the ex- isting social order Stalin & Co. cheered with the rest and promised And they | to help the best they can. can do a good deal, * % K Never, in the history of the world has the possibility of a world revo- lution been nearer. The great world powers are ready to embark in a supreme folly—another world war, more ferocious and more disastrous than any previous conflagration. The members of the Third Inter- nationale hope that after a few months of slaughter the “cannon Jodder,” properly influenced, will turn against their own rulers and take the law into their own hands. And the Third Internationale wants to be ready for that eventuality. Whether Stalin, Litvinoff and the others want to play the game is im- material; they have to play to the D | tune of the revolutionaries who don't wear frock coats and are not re- ceived with ruffies when they are abroad. * % % x That the United States should have been recently selected as the central point of revolutionary activities is only natural.” It will be the last power to suffer from the war folly and the overwhelming majority of people in this country are stubbornly devoted to the Constitution and the E | existing social order. * k¥ % During the meeting of the Third Internationale, its members en- deavored to out-Machiavelli Ma- chiavelli. President Roosevelt is not per- ,,":,,, undm,,‘,{';, sona grata with the world revolu- tionaries. He appeared promising at | first when he recognized the Soviet regime. Many of his brain trusters were liked in Moscow; their ideas taken from treatise of economics lished in Germany and other countries of the Old World some 50 years ago, were approved by-the when the question of world | Tevolution is raised at the gatherings| Until a few years ago| —Wide World Photo. 'TINE BROWN. Communists. Not because they were | | in keeping with the Communist ideas | —they were not at all—but because | they tended to create a somewhat un- | certain situation in this country. And the Communists can fish only in troubled waters. But President Roosevelt is re- garded by the members of the Third Internationale as.a danger- ous man. He would never go suf- ficiently to the left, and has the ability of backing out of difficult situations. “One mever knows what he will do if he is re-elected,” one of the American Communists pres- ent at the meeting of the Third Internationale, is reported to have said. Consequently, Comrade Dimitroff's | statement that the Communists ought | 10 do their best to have him re-elected | could be used as an excellent weapon to defeat him. The Communist- | | phobia in America is so strong that ‘any support from that quarter is | certain to defeat any office seeker. | ) ‘The British are experiencing at | present a sense of helplessness. Pari centuries Britannia has been used to | |rule the seas and at her frowning |every nation stood up and took notice. To see her well known frown | flaunted by Italy is & heavy blow to | her pride. But facts are facts and the British, always practical, are ready | to bow to the inevitable. * X X ¥ The display of force of the British Navy, which a few years ago would have spread terror in Italy, is having no effect now-a-days. Il Duce treats it light-heartedly. .The truth is that the famous Brit- ish bases at Gibraltar and Malta, invulnerable as long as the battle- ship wds supreme, are now ez~ tremely vulnerable. A well organ- ized and powerful air jorce could ruin them in no time. And the Italians have that air force. There is no doubt that if it came | |to war between Italy and Great | Britain the former would be defeated | in the long run. But Downing Street realizes only too well what such a war would mean to the rest of the world, and after having shown force it will allow Italy to do whatever she Ppleases. In order to avoid friction with Great Britain Il Duce has promised not to enforce a blockade on Ethiopia. By this, Mussolini really does not make any concessions to the Ethio- pians. They have no money and no credit—hence there is mot much that foreign vessels. can transport to them. . Canning Strike Settled. CAMBRIDGE, Iowa, August 28 (#). —A strike of 60 workers at the S. T. Farmer Canning Co. plant ended late yesterday when the management agreed to increase the pay of its | adjust the situation prior to Septem-| ‘| reaffirm its adherence to the prin-! WASHINGTON, BRITONS AROUSED 10 PERIL OF WAR Senator Pope Declares Fear for Suez Canal Is Widespread. Senator Pope, member of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee and a leading American advocate of the League of Nations, is in Europe for a series of unof- ficial conversations with statesmen there. In London he has talked with leading statesmen, both in and out of the government, and the following dispatch reflects their composite views. Mr. Pope will see Premier Laval in Paris and then go to Geneva. BY JAMES P. POPE, United States Senator From Idaho. LONDON, August 28 (N.A.N. A)).— Britannia, ruler of one of the greatest empires on earth, is worried. And well she may be, along with all her international neighbors. Never in 15 years have the dogs of war snapped more voraciously at the jugular vein | of the empire, the Suez Canal. Mussolint is going to war. No peace- ful negotiation short of Ethiopia’s sur- | render or universal economic sanctions can stop him. As a matter of fact, T suspect that the Duce himself is now unable to| avoid the conflict. Having spent some | $60,000,000 in transporting troops and | supplies to Ethiopia in the face of wavering national credit, he is barred | from withdrawing by nationalistic, patriotic public opinion. He has crawled too far out on a limb and | must either wage a successful, profit- able war or meet unprecedented op- | position from Italian public opinion. Canal Eventual Objective? England has no real assurance that if Italy conquers Ethiopia she will not then undertake the conquest of Egypt and, eventually, of the Suez Canal. Moreover, if Mussolini is completely engaged in his Ethiopian campaign, Germany and Austria will be free to endeavor to effect the reacquisition of | Trieste. Prom that point, no one can predict what would develop. France has hesitated and the entire | burden seems now to be shifted to Great Britain. Therefore, the most | important question in international relations at present is; What will Eng- land do? I understand that the action of the British cabinct a few days ago con- sisted of decisions on four points: | First, the British government present- | ly intends to defer all action on the Ethiopian question to the League of Nations Council meeting at Geneu September 4. Continue Efforts. Second, the cabinet decided to en- deavor, in co-operation with France, to prevent war and satisfactorily (o This, while a good course of | action, is extremely unlikely to be fruitful not only because of the hesitancy of France, but because of the practical impossibility of persuad- ing Mussolini. Third, the cabinet is determined to | ber 3. i ciples of the League of Nations. Fourth, and most important, the cabinet delegated power to act in an emergency to an Imperial Defense Committee, which stands in readiness | at all times for a meeting. This seems | to indicate that England is not un-| aware of the possibility that she may become directly involved in warfare. 1t is quite obvious that England will push the entire problem squarely be- fore the League of Nations and say, “There must be no war. We are all | obligated to prevent it.” There is much speculation as to the tone in which she will say it. ‘The League is unable to apply sanc- tions, military or economic, to Italy without & unanimous vote. This assent | will be very difficult to obtain. Pressure Problematical. In the present case there is much uncertainty as to the amount of pres- | sure Britain will exert for sanctions.| Taking advance of this situation, | Mussolini has played a very shrewd | game. First, he has in recent state- ments given assurances that he will recognize all legal rights of European | powers, and he asserts that England | recognized Italy’s right to Ethiopia in | 1923, The English version of the 1925 ‘ | correspondence is that Italy was as- sured that England would not com- | pete with her for commercial and | economic advantages in Ethiopia. | In a prior statement Mussolini said that if sanctions are applied to pre-t vent his Ethiopian campaign, it will | mean warfare in Europe. In other‘ words, he is endeavoring to convey the impression that the other nations of | the world have everything to gain | and nothing to lose by giving him a | free hand. It is reported that the British ad- ‘ | miraly has stated that the Mediter- ranean fleet is not powerful enough | to act as an efficient fighting unit in )~ !the event of war and that England | | does not have sufficient strength Xn" armaments to fight a war by herself | against Italy if the League of Nations | fails. At the same time, Britain has | sent 1,200 troops as relnlarcemenns to Malta. Contending that England cannot | without extensive preparation inforce her demands and decisions, some of her ministers are seeking further armament both on land and sea. The British government is furthermore trying to obtain a pledge of assistance from France if the worst comes. Some responsible thought holds that if England refrains from action de- signed to restrain Italy and permits Mussolini to carry on his war to com- pletion, public opinion will be sc aroused as almost to force an Italo- British conflict. Not only the states- men of Britain but her entire popu- Iation is avidly following every detail of the Ethiopian situation. At no time employes. Coal Advances You can still save mo Reading Anthracite. Call NA. 0311 NOW like it. 811 E St. N.W. a supply of the Finest Fuel Nature Ever Made. Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite will keep you warm when other fuels fail. CALL NA. 0311 TODAY 77 Yean of Good Coal Scflnn Marlow Coal Co. since the World War has Britain been September 1st ney on Marlow’s Famous and place your order for Service as you e C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1935. MARCONITO SPEED ITALIAN MESSAGES Enlistment Kept Secret Until After-Trip to Brazil. By the Associated Press. GENOA, August 28.—Guglielmo Marconi, inventor of wireless telegra- phy, will direct the telegraph, tele- phone and wireless communications of Mussolini’s armies in East Africa, intimates of the inventor said today. They said Marconi had already volunteered for East African service, but his enlistment has not yet been published because he plans to go to Brazil first as that nation's guest at the inauguration of an ultra- powerful radio station at Santos. He will sail for Brazil September 10 in the steamer Augustus. After & 10-day sojourn he will return to don the uniform of a naval capthin, & rank he holds from pasi service. Marconi, his intimates added, ex- pects to be transferred to the Naval | Engineering Corps, where his elec- trical wizardry would be most useful | to the land forces. Marconi has just returned here from Rome, where he conducted ex- periments of the micro-wave, which he has already made famous. He declined to make a statement concerning experiments he is re- ported to have made with the radio wave capable of paralyzing the igni- tion system of airplanes while in flight. EtlliopiaV (Continued m First Page.) the Conciliation Commission repre- | senting Ethiopia on the Ualual inci- dent. This professional talent costs the Emperor tens of thousands of dollars annually, but he appears not to mind. Moreover, he has an income of | $5,000,000 a year. ANTI-ITALIAN STRIKES LOOM. British Labor Restive—Spain and Latvia Back England’s Policy. LONDON, August 28 (&) —Labor movements against Italy in her con- flict with Ethiopia and the backing of | | two foreign nations for Great Britain's | peace campaign at Geneva were re- | ported today. Meanwhile, the British war office, a military source stated today, has ordered all senior members of the Army Council to remain in the vicinity | of London and to take no more holi- | | days until further notice. British and continental labor lead- ers were said to be considering joint | action by general strikes throughout Europe and by boycotts to hamper Italian war moves. Ambassador Ramon Perez de Ayala of Spain and Charles Zarine, the Min- | ister of Latvia, were indicated by in- formed quarters to have assured the | British government that their govern- | ments will support the British policy at Geneva in the council session Sep- tember 4. Hoare and Pope Confer. At the same time, Sir Samuel Hoare, | foreign secretary, discussed the gen- eral European situation with Senator James P. Pope, Democrat, of Idaho, and reviewed problems of the domin- | jons with Stanley M. Bruce, high com- missioner for Australia. It was understood the Spanish and Latvian envoys, ences with Anthony Eden, minister for League of Nations affairs, dis- cussed the dispute as it concerns their countries. It was suggested that the situation at Gibraltar, where the British are | strengthening defenses, formed part of the conversations with Ambassa- dor Perez. Senator Pope's visit, the foreign office emphasized, was entirely private. It was stated that Ray Atherton, the | United States charge d'affaires, in- troduced him to Sir Samuel and it was announced that no communica- | tion or statement of an official char- acter entered into their conversation. Gesture to Britain Forecast. ~The Daily Mail today quoted Mus- solini as saying: “After the cabinet council session the Italian government will publish a declaration announcing its complete readiness to respect all rights of the British Empire.” In the interests of world peace, the paper added, “the British government might well consider whether it would not be wise to transfer to Germany territories which at present are held under the direct mandate of Britain.” Reports from Rome and informed quarters here indicated that Mussolini would attempt an indictment of Ethiopia as a treaty breaker at the uague Councll and follow it by de- so aroused to the danger of an tnter- | national situation. Not only is the possibility of an Italo-British conflict important, but some leaders of English thought ar: thoroughly convinced that any ex- tended warfare in the modern world will spread. The conclusion is inescapable that the Ethiopian war cloud, with all its intricate diplomatic ramifications, has already destroyed the efforts toward disarmament in all parts of the world. When England takes the matter to the League of Nations she will of a cer- tainty fight not only to solve the pras- ent crisis but to endeavor to cure other case of armament insanity that is rapidly encompassing the world. (Copyright. 1935 by the North American Nawspaper Alliance, Inc.) NATIONAL 1328 New Yeork Ave. NAtional 0311 in separate confer- | SUPPLY (0. "= Dawes 70 REFUSES TO DEPART FROM BUSINESS ROUTINE, | By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, August 28.—Gen. Charles | G. Dawes was 70 years old yesterday, |and although his friends made his birthday anniversary an occasion of importance, the general refused to de- | part from the ordinary routine of his business day. | The former Vice President and American Ambassador to England re- ceived a number of friends in his office | in the City National Bank & Trust Co., |of which he is chairman. He puffed | energetically on one of his famous “underslung” pipes as he said: “It's always been my custom not to give birthday interviews, and it's cer- tainly too late to change it now.” Samuel Insull, sr., former head of the Midwest Utilities System, was one of those who called on Gen. Dawes. mnnds ol the uecmm o( E\‘.hlapll‘ from the League. | The reports added that smould the | demand be ignored Il Duce was iikely | | to issue an ultimatum that unless | other powers yielded Colonial territory in Africa to Italy he would proceed against Ethiopia. ROME CANCELS FURLOUGHS. Italian Soldiers Must Remain Ready for Conflict. ROME, August 28 (#)—The govern- All | tary furloughs, informed circles said. The order, these sources related, will cancel the annual holiday of every member of the army, navy and avia- | tion forces. Five more vessels are being recondi- tioned in Genoa to reinforce Italy's| bridge to East Africa, it was rehtbly reported. The minister of propaganda iodly | officially denied reports published | abroad that 12,000 Somali troops | armed and trained by Italian colonial | officers had deserted to Ethiopia with their arms. | Competent sources insisted that re- | | ports of an Italian airplane being shot | down while flying over Ethiopian ter- | | ritory disguised by Ethiopian insignia I were “absurd and ridiculous.” \ | | | | | IL DUCE’S SOLDIER SONS HAILED. I Thousands Cheer as Italian Contin- gent Arrives at Port Said. PORT SAID, Egypt, August 28 (®) | —Thousands of Italians gathered here | to cheer Benito Mussolini's two sona‘ | and his son-in-law when they arrived | | last night on the S. S. Saturnia en | route to East Africa. The Italian minister and others boarded the ship | | to greet the soldiers. Turn your old .trinkets, jeweiry and | watches into MONEY at— ' A.Kahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. |43 YEARS at 935 F STREET MARTINI ‘VE RMOUTH ® There is no substitute if your palate is sensitive. ‘ ‘mportedby W.A.Taylor&Co.,N.Y. e e ] ment decided today to cancel all mili- ||| JAPANESE ASSURE ARMS TO SELASSIE Ethiopian Foreign Office Says Six-Month Supply Has Been Arranged. ADDIS ABABA, August 28 (N.A.| N.A.).—Arms shipments sufficient to | LIFE INSURANCE and all forms.of Insurance J. Blaise de Sibour & Co. INSURANCE BROKERS 1700 Eye St. N.W. NAtlL 4633 meet the needs of Ethiopia for six months have been arranged with Japan. This definite assurance was given | by an official at the Witchkidine, | or foreign ministry office. The ship- | ments will include rifles, machine guns, revolvers and ammunition. | Whether larger arms wfll be sent | could not be learned, but it was un- | derstood that this is not likely, as| heavy guns are not considered vital | under the Emperor’s present plan of | campaign. With arms on the way from Japan, the business of war-making becomes more and more involved in Addis | Ababa. Trench and other defense | construction plans continue, but war- riors who hoped the rains would soon cease now cheer the daily downpour. | The longer it rains, the longer the delay, and the longer the delay, the Other Cars Proportionately Low nearer come the rifles from Japan. (Copyright. 1635, by the North American | mm BRAKE SERVICE R g o 303 N ST N.W. DE.5483 REICHSMARK— durch SPEZIELLE KREDITMARK fuer Hausbau, Hypotheken, Grundstaeckkauf, Unterstuetzungen, Rueckwanderer, Reisezwecke, etc. RELINED 4 Wheels Complete FREE ADJUSTMENTS FORD;, 28 to ’35 or CHEVROLET (’30 to ’32) | | Prompte Ausfuerung Gewissenhafte Beratung German American Securities Co., Inc. 29 BROADWAY NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SHOP O' Summex 0DDS «ENDS Thursday, Friday and Saturday 'Td 9 P.M. MEN'S CLOTHING $27.50 TWEED TOPCOATS; Raglan sleeves, half-belted models; sizes, (1) 36, (1) 40, (1) 42 _ $13, $24.50 and $29.50 TOPCOATS: tan, blue, gra: and set-in sleeves. (1) 34, (1) 35, (1) 36, (2) (1) 42; short, (1) 39, (1) 40 (8) $12.50 to $17.50 SPORT COATS; tan and ¢r 36 and 37 (5) $2450 IMPORTED SCOTCH CHEV IOT SPORT COATS. (1) 36, (2).37, (1) 40, (1) 42 $8.50 to $10 SPORT PANTS; now. $7.50 SPORT PANTS; now Raglan , (1) 38, $9.85 (18) $24.50 SPORT SUITS 39.85 Suitable for (32) $29.50 and $34.50 SPORT SUITS $13.85 Cheviots and Tan and gray. Fine flannels, Tan and gray. Harris tweeds. early Fall wi (1) $37.50 WHITE GABARDINE SUIT; size 37, regular.._$21.85 _(20) $35.00 CAMELOT GABARDINES and DOESKIN SUITS; regular, (1) 35, (2) 36, (3) 40, (1) 42; short, (3) 36, (1) 37, (3) 38, (3) 39, (2) 40; long, (1) 39.___$19.88 (7) $45.00 GABARDINE SUITS, by GGG; (1) 36, (1) 37, (1) 39, (1) 40, (2) 44; short, (1) 37 2 §. $1450 and $1650 IMPORTED “HITE LINEN SUITS; gle and double breasted; regular, (2) 35, (2) 39, (1) 40; shorts, (1) 36, (3) 37, (2) 38, (3) 39, (3) 40, (1) 42; longs, (1) 38, (1) 39, (1) 40, (1) 42 (9) $2250 and $2500 IMPORTED WHITE LINEN SUITS; English drape models in double breasted; regu- lars, (1) 36, .(1) 38, (1) 39, (1) 40; shorts, (1) 35; (2) 37; (1) 39; long, (1) 37 e §1285 (1) $22.50 IMPORTED BROWN LIN SUIT; English drape model; size 38 double-breasted regular -.$12.88 (1) $2250 IMPORTED BLUE LINEN SUIT; En‘hsh drape model; size 42 regular; double breasted ___ $12.85 ) !ZZSJ% IMPORTED GRAY LINEN SUITS; sizes, flwvls 37, (3) $2500 WHITE AND TAN CONGO SUITS (1) 36; short, (1) 39; (1) 37 (5) $24.50 TROPICAL WORSTED SUITS regulars, (2) 36, (1) 38, (1) 40 ___ 1385 (3) $17.50 end $19.50 TROPICAL “dRSTED SUlTS (1) 37, 2) 38 -$11.85 (1) $13.50 LINEN SUIT (soiled (10) $12.75 SYLKATALIA SUMMER SUITS; white and tan; single and double breasted; regulars, (1) 37, (1) 38, (2) 39; shorts, (1) 37, (2) 39, (l) 42; long, (1) 40 $2.45 Senforized SPORT SLACKS__ MEN'S FURNISHINGS 8 slos and $295 SHIRTS; soiled 39¢ WASH NECKWEAR; reduced to $1.65 BEACH ROBE ppers_and bag to match medium sizes $1.00 ALL-SUMMER SILK NECKWEAR $1.50 and $2.00 SILK SUMMER NECKWEAR. $3 to $4 STRAW HATS; now $1.00 TERRY CLOTH BEACH SHIRTS; window faded $1.00 SPORT BELTS $1.00 NAINSOOK UNION SUITS; % No Alterations All Sales Final, No Charges, No C. O. University Shnp 715 14th St. NNW 28.85 (22) $7.85 128§ regular, $13.85 short, (1) 36; - sizes 13%; and 14; 39¢; 3 for $1.00 S for $1.00

Other pages from this issue: