Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Impromptu Programs Curbed fo Bar Spies’ Messages on Radio Quiz Show Precautions Are Added to U. S. News Censorship Code Regulations to keep enemy spies from broadcasting military data te submarines or secret stations over impromptu radio nrograms were issued today by the Office of Censorship. In addition, radio stations were told that because they were being heard abroad by Axis intelligence operatives, “certain material which may appear on the news service wires as approved for newspapers may not be appropriate for radio.” Mr. Price explained that while printed matter is censored at the national borders, “no such post- publication censorship is possible in radio.” He announced that J. H. Ryan of Toledo, Ohio, assistant di- rector of censorship, would admin- ister the radio code. Censorship Director Byron Price called on broadcasters to ban cer- tain types of quiz and request pro- grams and conduct forums and au- dience interviews with caution. Request Numbers Banned. Tt was asked that no telephone or telegraph requests for musical num- bers be accepted during the war, and that no given request be given at the requested time, Request was made that “all audi- ence-participation type quiz pro- grams originating from remote points, either by wire, transcription or short wave, be discontinued” with certain qualifications. It was noted that any program permitting the public access to an open microphone “is dangerous and should be care- fully supervised” and that generally epeaking “any quiz program origi- nating remotely, wherein the group is small, and wherein no arrange- ment exists for investigating the background of participants, should| be discontinued.” When large | groups are involved, “where partici- pants are selected from a theater audience, for exsmple the danger 1s not so great.” In studio-audience quiz shows no | ndividual seeking participation should be guaranteed participation, the code said. Buch quiz, request, interview and forum programs, the censorship of- fice warned, might be used by Axis | agents to communicate with their headquarters or with saboteurs | through prearranged signals. These restrictions are in addition | to the news censorship code. Weather News Restricted. The code asks refusal of requests | to call mass meetings or make emer- gency announcements, except when | they come from official sources. Sharp restrictions have been placed on weather broadcasts. The radio may use only such weather | date as specifically approved for it by the Weather Bureau. and broad- casters have been asked to avoid ref- erence to weather conditions in de- scribing current events | The code asks withholding from the air reports of information from | unidentified sources as to ship sink- | ings, or reverses or successes of land forces. Mr. Price advised radio to “steer | clear of dramatic programs which | attempt to partray the horrors of | combat; to avoid sound effects which | might be mistaken for air raid | alarms.” Favorable reaction to the new code was general in local radio circles. | Officials pointed out most of the rules already had been adopted here un- der network or station policies. Pred Shawn. assistant manager | of Stations WRC and WMAL, ex- pressed the opinion the code would not mean program adjustments for the National Broadcasting Co. and Blue Network outlets here, since | appropriate safeguards already have | been taken to prevent a particular person’s being assured of place on a quiz period. The stations have had no man-in-the-street features re- cently, Mr. Shawn added. Only One Feature Affected. Harry C. Butcher, Washington vice president of the National Broadcasting Co., praised the code | 8s “a good document” and said he felt certain its enforcement would be accomplished voluntarily .since the industry had been consulted | in its preparation and had con- fidence in censorship officials. “I think it shows a good deal of restraint,” Mr. Butcher commented. Miss Madeline Ensign, program director of Station WOL, said vir- tually the only feature affected ati the local Mutual outlet was its all- night telegraphic request recording | program. Miss Ensign explained it would be studied with a view to de- termining whether it could hold its audience without the request fea- ture. Sam Lawder. program director of Than on Déc_ 6. 741, Sue. siley pleace “tail 'ESTHER MAE ICK GOING To take any_kind of a I Moo or Box_206-M. 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR / ANY debts incurred by any one other o HERMAN WEINGARTEN, 10 xmn. P, WILL District there. nw “NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING ¢ o The lnnul| mt(ll!‘ of Warhington Gas Lf.m Company will_ be held at the office of the Company, 411 Tenth Street, Northwest, Washington. . C, February_ 2 oo EE N a g, thara Time the purpose of electing directors and for the transaction of such other business as | may be brought befors the meeiing of AnY adlourpments thereof, By Order of the t Directors. EDW. T. STAFFOR! L REPORT OF 'mF al:CbRrrY STORAGE COMPAN . the undersigned. the Prmdem and maJority of the Board of Directors of the | Security Storage Company of Washington. C.. do hereby certify that the capital | gck 'of the said corporation is $500.000 550,000 of Which has been actually paid ins and_un exisiing debts. WJP ATHER, T T Paul Alves- Steeeiary of e Company of the District of Colum- b [0 hereby swear that the facis stated inethe above certificate are true to the oem of my kngwledse and belie AU ALVEY. Becretary. jubscribed and sworn to before me. Ty public. in and for the District of mbia. this 12th day of January, A.D. XLIJJ HQR.RY P. JONES. otary Fublic, D C. My commission_expires March i1, 1948, ADmMS'mATRj NOTICE ed s administearix of the Having qua! estate of Irene V. Btout, deceased. all oy *indstred Yo shid estars: ore Quested to make promot settiement. and il Befsons to whom the estate s indebted are Fequested to present their ciaims promptly fothe undersigned. properiy certified for Paymen JANE E. STOUT. Administratrix, and Wainut st. Jr., Director. Director. [ 194 Cor. Washington e _Alixandria. Va. FREE DUMPING. igm bric-a-brac, cinders, Tocks, asbes. ] ‘block Bladencburs rd. ne. PART-TIME BOOKKEEPING, 3 Beoer TSR A S IOR M, tar. | need for air strength, and partia:- L= the stockholders | 12 for | the Security | RIDE ’EM, COWBOY—R. A, F. place training plane while f£yin, He managed to grab the tail of tI self up astride of plane. Australian Declares British Government Knew of Needs By the Associated Press. MELBOURNE, Australia, Jan. 16.—Former Prime Minister Ro5- ert G. Menzies today laid tae blame for the shortage of Briti:h air strength in Singapore axd the Malay Peninsula on tae | shoulders of military leaders n London. “Whoever is % blame for tie shortage of airplanes at Singapere and in Malaya,” he said in a broai- cast, “it is certainly not Gen. &ir| Robert Brooke-Popham.” Sir Robert was removed at tie| end of last month as the commancer in chief of the British Far East~n | forces, with headquarters at Singa- pore. Since the Japanese have swept down the Malay Peninsula he las been criticized 28 being responsisle for inadequate preparations. (One factor cited for the loss of the British battleship Prince of Wales and battle cruiser Repuse under Japanese air attack was tae| lack of protecting British aircraf:.) Mr. Menzies seid: “When I was passing through| Singapore early last year, Sir Robert | from the first to last spoke to me| about the urgent and predomingat ) larly fighter strength. “He is & brave man, but he was in a state of the greatest possiile| emotional disturbance about our air weakness. “Sir Robert Brooke-Popham knew | center at Tuscaloosa, Ala., tfe War Department revealed here. Yerterday, he demonstrated how he rode plane as his instructor brought craft to safe landing. Menzies Lauds Brooke-Popham, Hits London for Far East llls | gravity and urgency. the service chiefs in London took a | more modest view of the air require- ments for Singapore and Malaya * than those on the spot.” THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Cadet Derek M. 8harp, from Yorkshire, England, was bouxced out of the rear seat of a two- g near the Air Corps training he plane as he fell, pulled him- —A. P. Wirephoto. GEN. SIR ROBERT BROOKE- POPHAM. —A. P. Photo. the facts. The Australian govern- ment knew them and the British government knew them. “Conference after conference took place in London about the quemon of air strength in the Far East. “On behalf of Australia, the prob- lem was put as one of the greatest “Accurate adherence to historical fact requires that I should say thnt‘ Station WINX, and Norman Reed program director of Station WWLIC, said they did not expect progrsm changes as a result of the regui- tions, having abandoned man-ii- | the-street broadcasts after the st- tack on Pearl Harbor. Request numbers have been Te- | stricted to those received by masll, | and have not been played at a particular time, they reported. Mr. Reed said his station’s m)y‘ present audience participation fea- | ture is one in which groups of se-v- ice men have taken part with ques- | tions checked carefully before use Defense Probe (Continued From First Page.) thought Lhe committee report ought to have a “very wholesome effiz:t” on the defense setup. The repnrt| charged shortsighted and inefc.mt administration by Government ofi- cials, as well as selfishness on the part of private interests. Meanwhile, Senator Truman Dld reporters that while a definite gram for the future had not been worked out, the commitee members “want to see that he| Government’s expenditures are’in the public interest and we will ksep trying to get & fair return for ‘he | money that we spend.” “You have to keep watching he people that spend it in order to c- complish that,” he added. The committee's function, he stid, was to gather thé facts and mske them public, depending chiefly on public opinion to enforce refoxms | where needed. “We are not going to assume 'he prerogatives of the Department of Justice,” he said. “If the Dep#rt- ment of Justice can use the evi- | dence in the record we make, §: is | available.” Major Findings Listed. Among the committee’'s major findings were these: That “after two years of fraatic effort, we have too few planes to sllow adequlu flying time to >ur own pilots.” | 'That men receiving private salaries | from big business concerns Have worked for the Office of Producgon Management for $1 a year or for no compensation and have actunlly been “lobbyists” for private busixess | interests. The committee called for | an end to this practice. That there was failure to expand production of many vitally neeied war materials, such as copper, lad, | zinc and aluminum. That the armaments program vas handicapped by unnecessary strices, though of late these had been : ess of this obstruction. That the automobile industry 'vas | | permitted to build new plant fecil- | ities for defense manufacture, wing | Government funds, instead of ¢on- verting existing facilities to defense production, thus leaving the industry free to continue automobile proguc- tion at the highest level since 1329. Sundt;y School Plans Show A moving picture program, mxade up of “My Man Godfrey” and taree shorter films, will be sponsore¢ by the Sunday school of the Chap# of the Redeemer at the fire hall at Glen et‘ | registered in respect to due merits ! | Aguirre wrote President Roosevelt | asque President Joins United Nations’ Stand President Jose Antonio de Aguirre | Cail_ | of the Free Basque Government has | g | notified President Roosevelt that his ‘iuvernment adheres to the declara- | tion of the United Nations, it was | announced today. Senor de Aguirre was elected Pres- | ident by the Basques in Guernica | | during the Spanish Civil War, which | precipitated a separatist movement for the Basque country from the rest of Spain. His headquarters now | is in New York City, while the Basque | | country administratively is subject to the government of Gen. Franco. “I wish to request that the sd-‘ herence of FEuzkadi—the Basque country—to the accord reached in Washington on January 2, which I| have the honor to convey, might be; and in order that the Basques might | have the honor to continue the struggle on the side of those coun- tries which defend the liberty of men and nations,” President de‘ on January 9. The Euzkadi government never has received any official recognition from the United States. 3 Air Corps Generals Assigned to New Duties Three Army Air Corps general of- ficers were assigned to new duties today in official Army orders. Maj. Gen. Barton K. Yount, now commanding the West Coast Air Corps Training Center, Moffett Field, Calif., will start duties im- mediately in the office of the Chief of the Air Corps here. Brig. Gen. George E. Stratemeyer and Brig. Gen. Ralph P. Cousins, both on duty in Washington, are assigned to command Air Corps training centers. The former, now in the office of the Chief of the Air Corps, will command the center at Maxwell Fleld, Ala. Gen. Cousins, now assigned at headquarters of the Army Air Forces, will command the Moffett Field center. CLASSES STARTING JANUARY 19 SPANISH FRENCH-GERMAN le:lll Method 134k & Eye’ lable ONLY @i of unflluin NAtional 0870 | submarines in the German and Ital- Threat of Axis Mines Off East Coast Seen Affer Shipping Raids Observers Here Blame Need for Successes for Propaganda Purposes By the Associated Press. The Axis underseas campaign ex- tending the battle of the Atlantic to American shores today brought the threat of enemy mines, as well as , to East Coast shipping lanes. Mines played an important part in U-boat successes in coastal waters during 1018, and it was fully ex- pected here that the present trans- Atlantic raiders similar methods to boost their bag of tonnage. There was s growing. suspicion here that a pressing Axis need for some quick and showy successes prompted the present raid just as much as any military considera- tion. One coincidence that did not com- pletely escape the Capital's notice was that the raiders’ appearance al- most in the shadow of the Statue of Liberty was timed nicely for the opening of the Pan-American Conference at Rio de Janeiro, Propaganda Apparent. ‘The bold undersea foray, it was pointed out, might well serve even more apparent propaganda pur- poses. The most obvious was the “we're-with-you” gesture to Tokio, which has yet to join the Rome-Ber- lin end of the Axis in war against the Soviets. There was also the hy- podermic effect that spectacular raiding might have on the German and Italian home fronts after the depressing reverses in Russia and Libya. And there was Vichy, which has shown less “collaboration” zeal since the United States entered the conflict. ‘Two things about the current raid have led some familiar with subma- rine warfare to be somewhat dubious that its purpose was strictly mili- tary. They pointed out that it wasa | punishing season of the year for trans-Atlantic submarine operations —the World War raiders all waited for summer weather—and that the first sinking reported was note- worthy in one respect for the expen- diture of torpedoes it involved. ‘The known types of ocean-going ian navies are believed to carry a dozen torpedoes. In view of this limited supply, considerable surprise was expressed in naval circles that the raider which sank the Pana- manian tanker Norness off Long Island Wednesday used three tor- pedoes, even though the ship was | less than 10,000 tons. Three Torpedoes Fired. Accounts of this attack indicated that the raider fired three torpedoes into the ship in quick succession would resort to 52 LOST. ;E‘umx Tost T rmT penm it - Bl C. out_handles. Initi g, "”'énn?-m miscellaneous tespondence, val only to owner _Reward. RE. 851 CASE containing Bible and notebook. on sireet car owned by minister: 83 reward. | Finder call GE_ 37 CHANGE PURSE. y beads. some chan 3 and Wis Re DIAMOND RINGS (2), n-lv' Dairs Ros- Pflse'nd!n mro earrings set in oll- unset matching_eat eare Atlantic_7AA5. af| ENGLISH BULL DOG—Brindie and white; | ltlnllcd ]13;!! lnx 26; vieinity Bethesda. \ YER. i l} ER in allez | HAIR ats. and E. between Q_an onn. ave. 0 black shoe. Re- nl red hlrneu “with | 00d of 47th and Wagzen h 4626 Warren st. n.w. S m ., male. black _and_ whit JPluto." vielnity 61 and 7th on Syete Riider Re: ATCI hne [ ld l'lfln Detween: Bl atgl% B! Navy Bidg. Arlll\l(un. Phone Dupont 7456 WATCH _CHAIN, Phi Beta 'H raved “Martin'J. Roen 'ort Kemble "lYl Ret Chain_Bridge rd. nw. wi 34 new v nu..ru. ppa Key en- F R e ke rd. Return 3030 WILL THE PERSON led Lois Tar- it about n DUrse which was Taung. please call again? The address was misunder- stood. WRIST WATCH, man's Hamilton, 1%- 4in e- 1. al = ,:ud AAug class " ring. vic. 141 WRIST WATCH—] mu lumar blnd. dent in_back of gold case: contained in plain white envelope it round eold handmade iy Indi ring: vieinity Woodwar ‘2’ cab 'aboyt Toal” ME. 0316, Large Worseshoe Reward. North 8219 PET RACCOON With leather collar. Reward. WO. 7971 PITT BULLDOG d white: answers to name “Gin- e g vieinity mnmxt e WARD.__Call Woodle: _FOUND. FUPPY wohnbly police and setter, male, onths old. 'Emerson 6193 before found lmurm o call' Bethe 3045, : l,_n“nd Tand PUPPY, whil e Qi Gsorpetown, = 1 u ital. xxun TCH, last_8unda: herd Dll Car Care By Ed Carl Truth is Better Than FRICTION American cars are built to do 100,~ 000 miles. The trouble with car owners is they won't scare about wear, They ehlnn oil catch-as- catch-can. They change grease hit - or - miss. They clean spark plugs when something serious lays up the car — yet motor strain # from plugs that . fire unevenly is often what lays up the Friction wears out parts. Worn . WI FEVENING) PARKING AT THE CAPITAL GARAGE 35¢ OP.I. 1AM Day Rates, 80¢ 1st Hr. Echo at 7:30 o'cloek tonight. Ly 1320 N. Y. AVE, ED CARL parts wear out | 8ood parts. Put your “Car Care” on a regular inspection basis at Call | Carl, Washington's “Little Detroit” —get the 100,000 miles your car owes you! Night or day, Call Carl ' Brightwood—Georgia Avenue at | Peabody, Street; Northeast—at 604 | Rhode Island Avenue; Downtown— i at 614 H Street N.W. ¢l CARL~ ecar! | 'c’.,,.m."l'll WIN THE WAR? | | D. C, FRIDAY, United States Navy pays $10,000 aplece for those it uses—and an ex- perienced submarine commander s not wont to fire any more than nec- esaary in enemy waters, unless he has orders to make doubly or triply sure of his victim, ‘The number of torpedoes used in the second reported sinking was not disclosed. Definite evid of enemy min- ing operations has not yet materi: ized, as far a3 can be learned from naval announcements. However, World War experience shows that the mines sowed by underseas raiders accounted for one-fourth of their bag. 1918 Torpedo Record. The 1018 record ocredits enemy | torpedoes with 68,141 tons of ship- ping in American raids; mines with 280 tons and gunfire or explosives ;nh 80,405 tons, a total of 209,835 ns. One U-boat raider spent eight days sowing mines in the approaches to New York Harbor. It was prob- ably one of these that sent the armored cruiser U. 8. S. San Diego to the bottom near Fire Island. The battleship Minnesota hit another mine in Fenwick Island Shoals, damaging her forward compart- ments, but did not sink. ‘The counter-measures now being taken - against enemy mines and raiders are military secrets, and the Capital did not look for any report on the success of operations imme- diately, in line with the war policy of not disclosing such information promptly when it would be of value to the enemy. The Atlantic submarine foray added a new, if not entirely unex- pected, problem to the press of war work that kept President Roosevelt 50 busy that he canceled his usual press conference today. The Presi- dent’s virtually uninterrupted con- centration upon war matters for the past few days has led to conjec- ture that some important develop- ment or announcement may be in the offing. Nine Men Killed in Crash 0f Army Bomber in Idaho BY the Associated Press. SPOKANE, Wash, Jan. 16—Two officers and seven enlisted men were killed Wednesday in an Army bomb- ing plane which crashed and burned 13 miles southeast of Boise, Idaho, the 2d Air Force announced last night. ‘The dead were listed as: Second Lt. Elmer M. Munn, jr., pilot, Fort Worth, Tex.. Second Lt. Darrell Wing, co-pilot, Phoenix, Ariz.; Staff Sergt. Carl Funkhouser, Skedee, Okla.; Staff Sergt. Carmen R. Gis- | mondi, Oliver, Pa.; Pvt. (First Class) Andre A. Chisholm. Woodside, Long Island, N. Y.; Pvt. Robert F. Adams, Vale, Oreg.; Pvt. Lloyd Knight, Thompsonville, Ill.; Pvt. Leland 8an- ders, Odessa, Mo., and Pvt. Stanley Sansenbach, Parkersburg, Iowa. The announcement said the plane was on a routine flight. ICE CREAM —/¢'s Delicious! Methods of production are aceepted by the Council on s of the American Medical Association Melvern Dealers or HObart 1200. WIIAT MUST BE DONE 5. | Hear: RUTH McKENNEY Author “Industrial Valley” Somuel Darcy, well-known writer and | organizer A W. B , Negro Communist leader et Films: “STALIN SPEAKS” “RED ARMY IN ACTION” Fri, Jan. 16—8:30 P.M. ational Pms Auditorium Latest Complete Line of AGBESSORIES, SUPPLIES and INSIONIA for all U. S. ARMED FORCES Post Exehange & Ships Storss S &M STORES 9th & D Sts. K. W. JANUARY 16, 1942 Gen. MacArthur's Contempt For Danger Steels Troops exile anxiously are appraising the qualities of American officers and the morale and efficlency of the armed forces of the United States. ‘Washington is the last jumping-off place; the final clearing-house for the hopes and fears of those who threw in their lot with Englaad. It the United States potential doesn't :.:mm. tide of battle, all is lost for em *n this city full of foreigners, in- cluding royal and titled refugees, the drab uniform of the American field officer suddenly has taken the stage from the tunic of the diplomat. Stories about the No. 1 American hero of World War No. 2 are mul- tiplying in Washington drawing rooms where handsome Gen. Douglas MacArthur was once & popular figure. Gen. MacArthur himself sends back very meager reports. He has cited some cases of outstanding bravery on the part of the men| under his command but says nothing of himself. Letters from officers stationed in the - Philippines, Just | before the fall of Manila, describe | “The General” as he is called in | the islands, as the “Same Old Dough.” Gen. MacArthur appar- | ently has kept his well-known con- | tempt for physical danger. When the Japanese force was at- tacking at Lingayen Bay, Gen. Mac- | Arthur was inspecting with the calm | detachment of a general making a | peacetime appraisal of the style cr | his troops. Gen. MacArthur never has been an apologetic servant of the lrmed forces. Even in those days when | officers stationed in Washington were appearing in uniform as little | a5 possible so they would not in- flame the peace leagues, he wore his service clothes everywhere. He | frequently would appear at dinner | parties in uniform—something his colleagues would never have thought | of doing. Proud of the Army tradition in | his family, each succeeding star has | been a source of great satisfaction. When Gen. MacArthur was advised in Manila of his promotion to full gen- eral he was so pleased that he im- mediately had a fourth star sewn on his fatigue cap. He makes an im- posing figure as he moves among his mel There is in STARTING JANUARY 19| SPANISH FRENCH-GERMAN Berlits Method THE BERLITZ Hill Bids.. 17th & Eye NAtiensl 6% OGROSNER OP 1325 P OTREST New Shipment! ® REGULATION NAVY OFFICERS' GABARDINE COATS With Detachable Limings Complete Stock of MILITARY UNIFORMS COATS MEMBERS POST KXCHANGE & SHIPS SERVICE Grosner of 1325 F Street ON WEEKLY Ofir SEMI-MONTHLY m And whit's mare, theres charges. mmfis a mos| WASHINCTON'S LITTLE DETROIT CATIONS District 2115 2 tfwmfiw‘:fi Wuhln‘m that Gen. MacArthur may be —For 63 Years— Berlitx Has Never Failed ©. Marshall, is much too busy for the peace-time round of parties, but when he does go out he is just one of the crowd. QGen. and Mrs. Marshall went to call late one afternoon on a sub- ordinate. It was the maid's day off. ‘The hostess apologized for not being able to ask the Marshalls to stay for dinner. Mrs. Marshall promptly ‘went out to the icebox and helped the young wife prepare & pot-luck meal for the two men, who were deep in talk of military matters. In- cidents such as these seem entirely natural to the average American, but to the thousands of foreign dip- lomats and members of missions in the Capital they are startling, al- most revolutionary. (Released by the Bell Syndicate, Ine.) AIR RAIDS ON U. S. may never come. But it would be folly not to be prepared. 8imilarly, we anticipate no coal shortage. But there may be difficulties of transportation. 80 why take chances? Fill your bin NOW with BERLITZ MID-YEAR COURSES ARE STARTING THIS WEEK in BERLITZ SCHOOL The Language Center of Washington Hill Building, 17th & Eye NAtional 0270 Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite the low-ash, MONEY-SAVING hard coal. Then, whatever happens, you are assured & warm home ... AT A WORTH- WHILE SAVING on heating costs. Marlow Coal Co. 811 E Street N.W. NAtional 0311 In Business Over 83 Years Our Coal and Service Must Be Good OVER 52 YEARS THE PELZMAN'S HAVE BEEN CLOTHING WASHINGTON'S BETTER-DRESSED MEN Be Farsighled! You read the papers . . . You know what’s going on. You know that good wool clothing is already being sharply curtailed. Our advice to you is to follow the action of the many smart men who are buying 2 and even 3 garments during this great Fashion Shop annual Sale. The reductions now quoted are available only becau: of Fred Pelzman’s policy not to carry over stocks into a new season. . .. Now, buy better clothing to make last longer! Fred Pelzman’s 13th & F Fashion Shop 52:“{ ANNUAL WINTER Sharp Reductions on Our Entire Fall & Winter Stock Topcoals « 0°Coats * Suils Including our Entire Stock of Fall and Winter Rondo Coats. Zipper Coats with removable, insulated warmer feature. Luxurious, fine qual- ity overcoats, Rich Camel H Imported Harris Tweeds, Handsome Coverts, Famous Doublew Id the press) Suits, Tuxedos, Tails, Sport Coats, Army Officers’ Overcoats and Mackinaws. Quantities limited—better work fast! COATS & SUITS Values up to $40, reduced to_ ... _______ COATS & SUITS 534.15 Values up to $50, reduced to_______________ COATS & SUITS 344.15 Values up to $60, reduced to_______________ $75 Coats & Suits Reduced to__.________$54.75 $85 Finest Camel Hairs Reduced to.____$59.75 $125 Coats Reduced to _$79.75 Other Groups Reduced in Propomon! LIMITED GROUP OF IMPORTED $45 HARRIS TWEED COATS REDUCED TO ___ ~