The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 18, 1922, Page 7

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99° THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1 WAR GRAFTERS — PROBE SCORED Solon Says Daugherty Can Shield Friends : | } | RY JAMES 7. KOLBERT WASHINGTON, May 18 Insiat ing wn a congressional investigation Of alleged laxity In the prosecution be. of war grafters, Representative Woedruft republican, Michigan, | charged today that Attorney Gen eral Daugherty s put himself tn ; & position where he can proaecute Rw enemies and shield his friends, if he cares to do so." | Woodruff criticised Daugherty for hip statements before the house ap: | Propriations committee recently, to the effect that he would not take ® War fraud case Into rt unless © Was convinced as a lawyer, that) nviction should be obtained. In that statement," declared! airuff, “the attorney general s upon himself, witpout au ity of law, the functions of » Judge and jury, He puts him in a position where he can vose whom he shall prosecu Whd can, if he sees fit, punish his enemies and protect his friends. “In view of that statement and the fact that Daugherty has been tm office 14 months without« single Prosecution In war fraud eases, I Rot as hopeful as # other members of congress seem to shout the resulta that would be ob- tained tn the ‘vigorous’ roundup of war criminals that ts now prom ined.” Mathilde McCormick HERE’S MORE ABOUT PHONE CO. STARTS ON PAGE ONE de service, not time, and when that service is cut to the limit and the customer penalized each tim he lifts the phone hook, the elth zens Intend to take measures to remedy the situation, they say, “Regulation of public utilities is at present & farce,” declared ® prominent business man, “The only thing to de is to take over the phone company and run it ourselves as a municipal corpora- tion.” As the proverbial “horrible exam. jple.” he cited the case of the Puget |Bound International Light & Power | o.,, whieh furnishes Everett with “Juice.” HERE’S MORE ABOUT TREASON STARTS ON PAGE ONE whe Insixted on their constitu- onal rights of free speech, free assemblage, and their rights to join labor unions, and the non- union coal operators, their gun- “The report of the light company men, deputy sheriffs and the [showed them to be making a 43 per state constables who were de jcent profit. The public service com termined to prohibit the exerche of those rights.” eee BY PAUL BR. MALLON | “The light company used to eel! | CHARLESTOWN, W. Va, May 18. |‘Julee’ in Seattle at five cents a kilo- | Fighting to preserve its case Watt, and charge Everett 11 cents, / Against Bill Blizzard, United Mine over the same wire.” | Workers chief, the prosecution today | William Neal Winter, president of Igunched a counter attack designed |the company, consented to be inter to sweep aside motions made by the Viewed Wednesday defense for dismissal of the treason| He deciared that he “was content indictment Ito let the case reat on the facts to A. M. Belcher, chief counsel for|be presented at the hearing, June # the state, rallied scores of precedente and did not care to say anything| from legal archives to prove his con. | further.” tention that Blizzard was guilty of| Winter previously defended the) Digh treason against the West Vir-|telechronomeier with the assertion ginia state government tn leading «| that the phone company was “chart-| ™arch of miners on Logan county |ing v nown seas” with the device, last August. jand no previous experience to| “A man may be gullty of treason | guide them tn fixing rates at thelr | ‘without actually fighting the state,” | present figur Belcher deciared. nee Ho admitted, however, thet “If the “This defendant would be guilty | telechronometer fails at the board even if he did not march with his | hearing, that's the end of i.” | a” [That Everett citizens are still hot PRESBYTERIANS === i oo tas | GO INTO SESSION sions: Bryan Eliminated In Race jmission demanded a redugtion to an | § per cent profit | “What did the ight company dot| ‘They got an injunction restraining the commission from tnterfertng with them, and the case may never be nettiod —at least pot the way the | ED T. WHITE, 2938 Broadway, | member of the Riverside Commercial club: “The phone meters are wrong tn principle. They take the people’s| lrights away from them. They make! living tn the country worse. wet fight them, sure.” MRS. P. KURE, 2618-Rocker ave | “What do I think of the meters’; for Moderator, Is Belief Rotten! Va save money with a (3 nickel phone.” DES MOINES, Ia, May 18.—Two! MRS. KE. L. EMMANS, 2420 Ruck thousand representative churchmen|,, "are: ‘The phone ts only good for from all sections of the country were|on omament now, and @ poor one here today for the opening session! a+ that. 1 told them to come and of the 134th general assembly of|taxe tt out. Working people can't jy oe afford m phone now!" Following @ week of presssembiy| sing. 1. V. EMMONS, 2606 Tar. conferences, the delegations met 1D] non gve,, received @ bill for $5.80. | formal conclave this morning and/ana yet the meter registered’ 15} listened to the opening sermon. de-| joints under her minimum 150 of livered by the Rev. Henry C, Swear-|)) 1. cones! ingen, St. Paul, retiring moderator.| “sq 1. PD. PATTERSON of Rev. Choice of a new moderator was! iy pary, ordered her phone re first of the business problems con-| oveq after receiving a bill for $3.95 fr ng the delegates this afternoon. | iiliam Jennings Bryan, alternate] from the Florida Presbytery, was con- sidered virtually eliminated from the race for mederator today with the MES. 0. D. GRISWOLD of Pine hurst: “I won't have a phone that }costs me $2.10 when it's never used jonce. I was away from home for a month and that was my bill.” eee oe ne Guly elected layman)” MRS. BERTHA STOREY, 2615 an, however. will be a big fig] 7 AM: “T Rover Weed the phone! ‘the convention. He will bel Ut uri rte, SOF nee mS WF ee ead will be over ler ppeoicer Content when he) MRS. FRED TREIOHEL, 2613) rd for ministerial relie,| Hoyt ® “] Genes, Ste Seite | Dr. Cleland Boyd McAfee, of Mc.|*#king for removal of the maters.| Cormick Theological seminary, Chi |My bill was the sane but I'm not) cago, and Dr. C. C. Hays, pastor of | “#ins the phone much | the First Presbyterian church, Johna-| 5. A. BRABANTSA, 3780 Hoyt town, Pa, showed outstanding| ®ve: “I've had a phone £0 years, but eth as the political leaders of|1 had mine taken out a week ago, the assembly marshaled their forces, | because my bill ran too high The preliminary to the balloting for the| meters are dead wrong, highest Presbyterian office. DAVE MYER 4415 Hoyt ave, kicked when he received a bill for atre s $8.60. | MISS J, McELROY, 2711 Hoyt Home Brew ape midst ll tae temsmtek tee what she thought of the system, but |compromised on, “I've signed the petition, and I want the flat rate (Starts on Page 1) back again. My bill was twice as aoe Sat ve eee wee the! auch as it used to be. You won't of the A a. aint whet I aie at ey Fry heh ne irat w DD There was a thin maiden called) give took the reporter for & tal Greener ephone company investigator. Who worked with a vacuum cleaner;| Siw demanded, “What do I think But she got in the way of the phone meter? 1 think it is Of the au one day, And since then nobody has scen her. tion KOTTEN! TERRIB y people must think we're FOOLS? Bang went the door. Another housewife at 2424 Rucker “I'd like to smash that what I'd like to do! It's Be that as it may, Warren Rabbit lives In Alpena, Mich. Seems as tho} , he ought to run for something. said r, that’ nuisance! A prominent business man’s wife, lon Hoyt ave, declared she expected | her phone bill to run as high as $14 |next month. She uses the phone for! BY THE SIDESHOW TENT “Is the bearded lady your mamma?” “No, she’s my daddy.” Photographers Plan Annual Convention te San Maz Oser Hundreds of photographers from Washington, Oregon, Ida ho, Montana and British Colum bia are expected to come to Seat te for the ual convention of the Photographers’ association of the Pacific Northwest, to be betd fa Queen Anne ball, First ave W, and Roy st, from June 13 to 16, inclusive, George Harris, of the firm of Harris & wing, of Washington, D. C., one of the most celebrated photographers in the country, and Juan Abel, secretary of the National Association of Phot raphers amd publisher of Abel Weekly, photographers’ trade Journal, will be among the speak rs at the convention. Tn addition to hundreds of photo graphs which will be exhibited by members of the association, all of the forsign pictures shown at the recent national photographers’ convent{n, in Kansas City, wil! be on dixplay. A general “get-together” meeting, with dancing, will feature the open ing of the convention. The following committee ha» been named to take charge of the program: Mra, M. A Grady, chairman; Mies Ellen Me Bride, Mra. 8. N. Morrihew, Mra, De vid Hughes and Mra. B. 8 Curtis On the arcond day of the conven tion the delegates will be taken for a two drive around the vards of the city. Frank Nowell and HERE’S MORE ABOUT CRIME GIRL STARTS ON PAGE ONE ried between the coat and body. “I was not s good alumnus. The firgt week out I wae caught. 1 had been nerve ndawkward Saunders got out on $1,000 bond. Wel afte? that it was a regular orgy of jobs in Memphis, San Antonio, San Diego, Low Angeles and elsewhere. “1 dropped back to Portiand for » visit and there met my husband, Harrison Crothers. For four months after that I was the happiest girt In the world. But it was too good to last, One day I saw a detective outside the house—oh, yes, I had learned to know detectives by sight. “Hot on the trail of that came word that dim Russell, a new gang leader, had learned of my whereabouts and was on his way to find me. A week tater Rus sell appeared in Portland and 1 reeelved a threat of death unlews I met him. They also threatened my husband's life. You nee, my husband did net know my ot and I did not know what to “Without a word I picked up and left him. I was afraid. I thought it would be for the best. Well, we came Francisco. I determined I would do my last jobs, I came with la gang member known as Bert Wil. | Hams and took quarters In a good hotel. Williams told me they haa had another gir! working San Fran claco but she wan getting too well known and they were going to switch her to another place. “I worked hard and fast and cleaned op $15,000 worth In a week. Then I slipped some resses away for myself and tn- tended to get enough money to get away with. He caught me trying to hold out money. Well, the upshot was that they caught me and thank God they did. Now I am safe from them and when this is thru I can start all over. AERIAL STUNTS AT FT. LAWTON Exhibition Sunday In Inter- est of Training Camps Aerial acrovatics whic) will rival the most hatr-raising scunts of the world war will be god for the bene fit of ttleites Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at Fort I lon at a big get-together rally of last year’s civil- jan training ap students. More than 100 students who atvended the summer camps last year will be the » of the army offivecs at Fort ca eu Lawton and Col. Oscar J. Charles, commandant, invites the publie to come out and nd the afternoon. Commencing at 2 o'clock the Coast Artillery band from Fort Worden will play en hour, tollowed by the arrival of a German Vokker war boule: | MILLIONS AND MATRIMONY TANGLED IN M’CORMICK ROMANCES Mrs. Edith R, MeGormick } 1. N. Webster have charge of this | phase of the meeting City displays will be limited to five | prints, the sixe of mounts ranging from 11x14 te 16x20 Inches. The following committees have) | been appointed to arrange for (Me nT iat dad, Marold ¥, has| meeting looked with Jens disfavor on the| | Program—J. A. Zinn, Jr. and 8. N- | match, however; rome of his friends | Merrihew, Publicity--M. A. Grady. | thing because he, too, is in love. But! 1. N. Webster, Fred C, Carter and ing hog poeitively refused to discuss } Walter Miller, Hanging (portraits) | Wayne Albee and Kirkpatrick) |(commerciqlh) C. @ Todd, C. N. Bow-} len and Nate Stevens. Lighting—Da | vid Hughes and Emery Smith. The following attended a prelim! nary meeting, at which plans for the convention were adopted Mr. and Mrs. M. A, Crady and Flarry Jackson, of Grady’n mudio; Mr and Mra, David Hughes, Mrs, Hulda | Peterson Allen, Emery Sonith ‘i and | Sylvia Berman, of Harteock studio; | Mra, B. 8, Curtis, Mrs, Violet Askel! | o4 Mra. Amy Thompson, of Curtis | studio; Mr, and Mra. © .B. James and Mr. and Mrs. 8. N. Merrihew, of! James & Merrthew; Nate Btevens| and 1, N. Webster, of Woeteter & Stevenn; Wayne Albee of Mefiride rtutio Mise Millen Meliride and Mr. and Mra. G. Young of Young & ( well J.D. Crone of Crean Dale studio C, 8. Todd, of De Pue, Morgan Co; J. A. Zinn, Jv, of Kiddygraph, and Frank Nowell. | HERE’S MORE ABOUT WRECK VICTIM STARTS ON PAGE ONE fon hae not been clear of mind #inos her resous, “She speaks continually of the av- tomobi of the water, and of my jaunt,” sald Miss Pound Thursday | morning. She thinks she ts still in the) car. She nees the truck approachin, | Pinchot and Beveridge Vic- Harold McCormick CHICAGO, May 18——The mixup of the MeCormicks, millions and matrt mony becomes more of « snarl every day. I's an yet unsettled Just when Mary Landon Baker will discontinue postponing her marriage to Allister McCormick. He's reported still woo jog her in France. The Marold F, MoCormicks have three causes for being before the pubile. Piret, there is 16 year-old | Mathiide’s determination to marry Max Oner, the Swiss riding master But her grandpa, John D. Rockete hin friendship with Ganna Walska. the opera singer, who Is separated from her husband, Alezander Smith Cochran, further than to say she ls & “delightful wornan.” Mre. Harold ¥. McCormick, who recently got a divorce, is devoting |herself to numerous important proj-|In addition to his widow, Mra. Jus-| ects, including # ChieagoNew York alr line and « papchotanalysis tnetl- | tution, But her friends on the Gold Coast think her friendship with « air line and a prychoanalysis inati-| something more than merely mutual aclentific Interest. OLDGUARDIS BADLY SCARE tories Alarm Bosses | BY RBERT W. WALKER WASHINGTON, May 13. Victory of Gift I ot over the once powerful Pennaylvania republican machine, coming close on Senator | New’s defeat in Indiona. has thrown a real scare into the old guard here here One of the immetiate results of the Penneylvania progrossive's tri umph in a state where the Penrom organtzation has reigned supreme for | many years will be an attempt on| the part of the old guard leaders in| the senate to mpeed up legistation, | |them again and she shudders. She| ave =e (ned le back of the} |atarts to leap. The nurse had to; °@ euard oe me hold her down tn her bed all night,| 2. Reelization, privately edmitted, he thinks she ts in the water, then |reaches out Jor the floating plece of rail, that sho clung to before | being lifted from the water Wednew | |day afternoon. Bhe cries contin-| ually. “Her onty comfort comes when she |remembers that her friené, with whom she and my sunt had been to luncheon tn the University distrtot, | 4id not ride back towerd town with | them. They hed awked her to, be fore leaving her home.” Mrs. Carlson had been ériving the car before its plunge aver the 60-foot bridge into Lake Union. Mrs, Marcum, seated beside her, became frightened at the close appreach of a truck coming from Northlake ave. fhe is said to have grabbed the wheel, causing her sister to lose control. A mo mont later the car plunged thru the rail Into the lake, Mrs, Carl son opened the door of the ear and jumped to the water, while her sister remained In the seat of the auto, The body of the dena woman ta now at the Bonney-Watson under [taking establishment Bhe was the wife of Charlies Marcum, of the Mar. cum Optical company, She was 87 years old Mrs. Carlson, a Aelicate, fratl tittle woman of 25, ts the wife of George Carlson, proprietor of the Rainier | Drug company, 915 First ave. | pon. od etl tie BELFAST, May 18.—Bight per- | ons, including five Sinn Fein gun |men, were killed in pitched battles |and bombings here today, Police and military are making a | house-to-house search of the repub- |}ican quarter for gangsters who tn- vaded the Musgrave police barracks, murdering a constable. | . The Ulster capital expertenced its | worst night of terror since March 16. |}Hinn Fein gunmen engaged tn |wtreet battle with police. Five of the gangsters were killed A gang of armed men, whether j unionists or Sinn Feinera could not be determined, boarded a Belfast tram cer at 8 o'clock this morning |and shot and killed two passengers. | A party of Sinn Feiners, claiming | to be police officers off duty, knocked lat the Musgrave police barracks, the to | | in the heart of the city, at dawn y, and were ad mitted. ‘The raiders killed a con stable and escaped. largest in Belfa that a large block of voters ts dinsat- \tefted with the present congrems. 3. A desire to wind up the present seasion end get back to thelr respect- tve districts to “mend fencer” 4 @ result of Pinchot's victory there ts an increasing belief here that the political machines thruout the country are losing, to a large degree, thelr effectivenens. Pinchot and Beverage toth buck: e4 strong party organiza/jons, BOOZE ISSUE IN ELECTION WASHINGTON, May 18,—TAberals In the houne joined hands today in a vigorous campaign to Inject the wet end dry issue into this fall's eke tions, Their hope ts to force a vote in the house and perhaps also in senate on the proposition of legallz Ing light wines and 2.7% per cent i* that people over ihe country will know Just where the 1023 edition of congressional candidates “Volsteadiam” and can cordingly ‘The fight for a wetdry vote tn |the house will center arourd @ bill introduced by Representative Hill, re- | publican, Maryland, giviag each con- gressional district local fall on the manufacture of heer and wines, to be used only ia homes and taxed 20 cents a gallon, Pinchot Plurality Now Nearly 15,000 PHILADELPHIA, May 18-— |@ittord Pinchot, victor of the primarkes of Tuesday for the gubs natorial nomination Alter, has a plurality of nearly 1 000 today with 2,000 districts min ing At the rate he has hem gaining the poll of the missing districts will put his plurality to about 30,000, it is estimated. United tates Senator George | Wharton Pepper, serving now by ap. pointment, 1s winner of the seat held by the late Boies Penrose by an esti-| mated majority of 250,000 over Con- gressman William J. Burke, 16-YEAR-OLD GIRL SOUGHT choo! attendance authorities were co-operating with Mre, M. F. Loomis, | of the women's protective division of | police, Thursday, in renewed efforts | © OR | 0 jal work. |plane, piloted by Lieut. Prank B.} h: p agree” to find some trace of Hilda Albutt, tec Bhom mosen , other woman who refused her! ‘pyndail, army alr service. I4eut.| PLANS HAVE BEEN LAID by|16, who disappeared May 8. Not s thing name gaid: “I don't like the meter |qyndall will put the plone thru all|the Daughters of the King of the Phe girl's mother t# about crasy | Gone. at all, T never kieked on anything | th» spectacular stunts known to alr-| diocese of Olympia to entertain dele-|with grief," said Mra. Loomis, “If | a ae before in my life, but J’m kicking |men and he promises the thrills of a|gates to the convention of the St. |r1iida doesn’t return home I'm afraid | Even the babies are beginning to NOW. Mr. Winters is certainly fool- | iifetime Andrew Brotherhood in Seattle in| Mrs, Albutt may lose her mind.” talk im wireless! One infant we ‘8h if he thinks we'll stand for the} ‘pie third battalion of the 8th in- | August The girl in thought to have had| know says "Daddedead, Daddad,, meters.” jfantry will stage a formal guard| " about $6 with her at the time she Dad-a-dad, Dedad, Yow-how-ow-owo MRS. J. H. GILLETTE, 2620 Hoyt | mount at 8:30 o'clock, followed by a CONTRADICTORY vanished. She is described as fatr, | owo-wo-wo-wo!” ave., was the only person In Kyerett| luncheon to the former students. | “Got any thin model rm|with medium brown hair and blue! “28 |that I encountered today in favor of| The pose of the meeting Is to | clocks?” eyes, She in about 5 feet 2 inches, | “MARY, PITY WOMEN” hronomoter, She “was per-\talk over this summer's citizens’! “gure, ‘They're thick around|welgha about 112 pounds and was| First, it was the golfing | | fectly matiofied with it.” military training camps, to he hold|here."--From the Retail” League, |wearing, when she disappeared, a hand who never came hy | at Camp Lewis and Fort Worden, | Philadelphia, tan tam, long Hght cont, brown shoes | cept to sleep; now its the SPOKANE.—Grand Lodge, | July 27 August 25. A drive has been - and bose and two agate rings. husband, who refuses to Knights of Pythias, In seston here, | started to get 1,000 applicanta for the| SERVICES for the deaf will be! She was a student at Franklin the receiving set until the lorses construction of $100,000 K./eamps. Headquarters of the drive is held at St. Mark's Episcopal chureh high school and lived with her family is dead, ¥. hopw ia Vancouver, Wash, at #16 University ot, at 3 p.m, Sunday, @t 6512 45th avo, & |WITHOUT BAIL’ the | option this | over George E.| PAGE 7 Mary Landon Baker Students Due to Make Apology Allister MeCormick POSTAL DOPE DEALER FOUND COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, With GW, Claugen held in the aay 18.—Studenta of Colorade Centralia city Jail, federal narcotic | coliege, who participated in the ree agents and postoffice Inspectors were jeent “stuffed animal cireus” when |nearching Thursday for three Seattle the museum was raided and speck [men who are said to be the heads of |menge of birds and beasts placed | the campus as & Ganna Walska PERSE 0 HERE’S MORE ABOUT MURDER STARTS ON PAGE ONE bors’ heures. pal and I found that Holm 4 flourishing mati order dope supply went to a house at about 66th and! pustness, nelenl about against the sdministration of Prete dent C. A. Duniway, were scheduled to apologize today for their action. ‘The apology will be in the offered in Jenene nt, asking if they had any) ork for @ painter. As they did) ot Dave any he went away on| enanee at | Last Friday, !t became known to- day, © letter addressed to Clausen | and containing $12 worth of narcot a in, |Of & resolution tes t Cent “Aine gun found by the body Se ee ee eg eae % | Nothing will be sald of the adminis i not his, Mrs, gg + ban |full confenslon. it 1» paid, implicating beige of the president, hs gun was foun in the |ine three Seattle men. \to those acquainted with the situm house. He was wearing a big tion. Clausen ip credited with etating that drug addicts in outlying towns were regularly mupplied with narcot- | jfes thru the malis, and that it ts) | “easy to get if you know the ropes.” Waltham watch when he left the house, and usually, Mrs. Holm said, carried quite a bit of money. The neighbors cor roborate this in general.” Holm was born in Norway tn 1945, tina Holm, he Jeaver a son, Edward, | employe d by the fire department, BANKERS HELD HAVANA, Cuba, May 18---Bail Will be refused Herman and Albert Upmann, heads of the German.Cu-| ban banking firm in Jail here, if any} is offered, it was stated today, The bankers, who are held tn con. nection with their bank's $2,000,000 failure, will be charged with turther violations of Cuban law All the bank's books and éocu-| ments have been seized. According | & gtatement by the prosecuting attorney at the preliminary trial of the bankers yesterday, off wells and man marke were not the only un _ Refrigerator A good size for small home or apartment Well built, takes up little room, costs lit The “8-Minute” OHIO. Range satisfactory investments made by | tie for ice. Outside dimensions, the Upmann firm. The sum of $200, 69 00 21x16%x40 Inches. Ice capace 000 was sunk in sugar and $100,000) e | tty, 25 pounds (commercial in farm uty measurement). The price is only— $14.90 hole Model; 16-Inch Oven Best 6way Water Coll “THE VALUE OF SERVICE? snail the subject of Prof. Clark P. Blanett's address at the Swedish hospital | kraduation exercises Wednerday night. The program and diploma | FREDERICK Presentation were held at the Bwed. teh tabernacle. Sixteen nurses were graduated. FREDBRICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET | Up-to-the-Minute Styles in Low Shoes $6.45 HE DOWNSTAIRS STORE takes partic- ular pride in presenting patterns so eminently desirable at such a mod- est price: 35-inch Taffetas At $1.29 Yara ‘OOL, fluffy Frocks for Summer may be fashioned at little cost from these soft, lustrous taffetas. Colorings include— Pink, Tan, Rust, Rose, Orchid, Nile, Black, Coral, White, Yellow, Fuchsia, Gray and Turquoise. Very attractive value at $1.29 yard. j 40-inch Canton Crepe At $2.45 Yard JST as effective in plain street frocks as in bead- trimmed evening and afternoon modes are these ich Crepes, in Jade, White, Silver, Canna, Brown, Navy, Black, Fuchsia, Periwinkle, Tan and Rust. Priced at $2.45 yard, —THE POWNSTAIRS STORE Summer Dress Voiles At 30c Yard NEW display offers delightful choosing in favored colorings—and especially features checks, dots, figures and stripes on light grounds. Thirty-eight inches wide—30¢ yard. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB “Handipack” Cheesecloth Special 25c 5-Yard Package IVE YARDS of soft, absorbent Cheesecloth are contained in these sanitary paper packages—36 inches wide. Special 25¢. —rum_ pownsTairs stoRB 750 Pairs of Boys’ Stockings At 25c Pair HHESE heavy-ribbed Black Cotton Stockings are “great” for wear. Knit from extra strong cotton yarn, in sizes 6 to 1014. The pair, 25¢. -THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Ebony-back Military Brushes At 75c Pair N encouragement to neatness for boys—a pair of these Military Brushes, with firm drawn white bristles (11 rows) set in concave ebony backs. The pair, priced low, at 75¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Black Satin, with the smart wide single strap, light-weight sole and me- dium Spanish $6.45. heel — Patent Leather One-strap Pump, with light-weight sole and medium Span- ish heel—$6.45. Low-heel Pump in Pat- ent Leather, desirable for growing girls as well as women-—smart cut- out model, with covered heel— 86.45. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB

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