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'B—12 «# THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. . FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1935. ey | A Man's a Better Man for ALL T I 1935 Total Far Short of 1928-32 Average and Under Forecast. By the Associated Press. The cotton crop for 1935 will be | 8.525.000 bales less than the average ! production from 1928 to 1932, the | Agriculture Department announced to- day. | The indicated total is 11,141,000 bales, based upon conditions as of November 1, a reduction of 323,000 from the October 1 forecast. This | estimate is 1.505,000 bales above the | 1934 production. | Early frost in Arkansas, Oklahoma, | Tennessee and Missouri joined hands with the A. A. A. control program and the Bankhead law to bring the de- cline in crop prospects. A. A. A. POLICY ASSAILED. 7 ’ The Inside Story on SHELDON SHIRTS When it comes to shirts we're mighty particular. So particular, in fact, that if the buttons aren’t sewed on with the proper thread we’ll have no part of the shirt at all. You can imagine then, what a thoroughbred of a shirt the SHELDON is if it was made to conform exactly with every ore 6 5 (] cemm s FEBRERIANLERIEN ARSRIASIEMIBRIREENI 2 of our particular specifications . . . and, we repeat, we can be particular. The SHELDON is a true Hecht Co. product (exclusive with us, you know). The trubenized collar, that needs no starch, the expert fit, the exclusive stripes and patterns, the fine broadcloth . . . all these added together, plus our exacting demands gives you the SHELDON SHIRT at a modest 1.65, which gives you a bargain. To appreciate the real inside story of these shirts, get inside of one. (Men's Shops, Main Floor) 3 H i Cotton Reduction Bringing Loss of Markets, Broker Says. 8 the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, November 8.— Eouthwest members of the United States Chamber of Commerce were told today the net result of two years of cotton planning by the A. A. A. was a 3,000,000-bale reduction in the | Nation’s markets and a correspond- ing increase in the markets of for- eign competitors. The statement came from W. L.| Clayton. cotton broker of Houston, | Tex., who said subsidies for destruc- tion and for non-production, process- ing taxes and “so-called loans,” plus the “blighting eflects of the Amer- dcan tariff, have since played their tnevitable part in drying up the springs of commerce in American | cotton.” He went on: “There is a sure way to make un- | employment the permament problem that some seem to fear it may be- come, and that is by freezing into our | mnational economic fabric the present policy of price raising through Gov- ernment sabotage of production, “Ii we continue the present policy of attempting to make the market pay through planned scarcity, we must face the eventual loss of all our export markets for cotton; we must find some other use for 25,000,000 | acres of agricultural land, most of it in the Southwest, and some means of livelihood for 1500000 Southern gamilies, and we must write off sev- eral hundreds of millions of dollars of investments in cotton gins. com- | jd s, warehouses, cottonseed oil n railroad and dock terminal 1 llli:'rll:“:l uummmummm“ | BN HEILEY —to the back of the crown is what gives that certain air to... FOUR BANDITS GET $18,000 IN BANK | | Nationally Famous WOOL HOSE Bullets Fail to Stop New Jersey | Robbers’ Flight in Automobile. | B the Associated Press. { Mallory's PATERSON, N. J., November 8.— : Four men, one armed with a machine | . E } gun and the others with pistols, held | 4 c | up the Prospect Park National Bank | ; 1\ I i at Prospect, near here, today and' H escaped with $18.000. | H ) f The bank's paying teller, Albert i Bauman. emptied a gun at the rob- | ¥ / ers as they fled in a waiting auto- | i i i ol e . rnfl\nlf‘ S el e : Tt facauives fuither dic Great Scott, aren't these s 30c, T3¢ and £1 socks? / and police expressed belief one of the L q S - That's what they all ask when they see these wool hose, and / men was wounded. | tinctiveness through its thjy'rp }:11 correct. We Aian'l tell you }:ho name and we Bank officials said the four men ! = s on’t have to . .. you'll recognize them just as fast walked into the bank, ordering em- flat snap brim and its as the other men who know their socks. Wool mix- piojes)ardbuabionsits uskelin e, welted edge. Grey, tures with that substantial fecl in spaced figures, gistance. While two of them kept e = checks, plaids and clocked effects. Discontinuec those present covered with their guns, l_"l own, blue .and green numbers, but their colors and patterns are the other two scooped up piles of cur- H in the new mixtures. . as new as tomorrow. Sizes 10 to 12. - rency Officials said the large amount of bills had been brought to the bank ; 4n order to cash pay checks of work- | (SRR o o €rs in dye shops in the vicinity. When the men fled a bank employe | sounded the burglar alarm and officers | of the institution, who were meeting | in a two-story section of the building dn the rear, hurried acrpss the roof , I, " e to the front. | Their presence on the roof and the expressions on their faces moved a passerby to sound a fire alarm, VOORHORST RITES AT 0AK HILL TODAY Coroner's Verdict Awaits Chem- | ist's Report on Retired Pharmacist's Death. i Funeral services for J. Clarence | Voorhorst. 54. retired pharmacist, who | died Tuesday at George Washington University Hospital, were held today st Oak Hill Chapel. Burial was in | ©ak Hill Cemetery. | Honorary pall bearers were Capt. | C. C. Calhoun, Col. Ashby Williams, | John Collier. Harold G. Moulton, | Wayne Kendrick. L. H. Alderman, | V. Valta Parma. Dr. M. W. Morgan, Robert J. Surguy and Lawrence B. Campbell, ! The coroner has withheld a cer- | tificate of death in the case pending | A report from the District chemist. | Mr. Voorhorst at first was believed to | have suffered a paralytic stroke, but | traces of poison later were found. | Born and educated in Michigan, Mr. | Voorhorst was an engineer before he came to Washington as a pharmacist. He 1s survived by his widow, Mrs. Bertha Taylor Voorhorst, and two brothers. Ray G.. of Flint, Mich., and Albert L. Voorhorst of Milwaukee. (Men's Shops. Main Floor) (Men's Shops. Second Floor) ~ For the Right Slant on Shoes 1 o=\~ . ’ 1 1 Ay } st : Mac G1egot Sweaters | “Put up a good back” is the theme this season when it comes to men’s sweaters. And when it comes to good backs MacGregor bows to no one. (Of course, these sweaters have fronts, too, and plenty handsome). In the ] et ~< ~ It's PACKARD KENT Why? Very simple . . . they’re styled right, they fit right and they look right. And what’s more $ they’re priced right . . . We rest our case with a “Kidnap” Humor Goes Sour. KANSAS CITY (/).—Wilford Wood, 29, a soda pop salesman, told police . new Fall shades and patterns. today. “I'm just a victim of my own i £ ‘humor.” ® Brushed Wools ® Crew Necks %; i i He was arrested after Mrs. Erma Pl . ® V Necks McDermott. 16, whom he had given ¢ ©® Baby Shakers - O Back a ride, leaped from his car when he ancy CKS gsked as a joke: ©® Half-Zippers ® Plain Backs i llk‘;‘L;'Ll:\l; l‘i“;]}l::l;e" youjever/kdnageg 2 (Bport Bhop, Main Floor) i o e o S 0 LAXATIVE FACTS: | IEE Espotabs relieve with- out griping, embarrass- ment or inconvenience. convincing and arresting array of black and tan * calfskins, black and brown grain leathers, black kidskins and patents. Sizes 6 to 11, AA to D. (Men's Shoe Bhop, Maln Floor) 4T CO. MEN'S sHOPS F Street at Seventh - ' . b t ) P : = | | - AT ALL DRUGGISTS