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ma ed nd as ut ers to the with com. ctpal from start de on ons bout ir of ission rte CQ WRECK WEDNESDAY, §& __ *TEMBER 12, 1923. JEFFERSON DUE @ HERESATURDAY | HERE'S MORE ABOUT DESCRIBES QUAKE STARTS ON PAGE 1 Refugee ‘Ship Will Bring | up. ranting the tamec, making tha | ceo ahh every evalla t . 1 before the fire reached|U, 8. DESTROYERS B rvive | them MDED IN RELIEF = of e “y rre People fled in all directions, but Most of th fuge t is al tieaien from la thousands we mo and met | beard all night, and w mithed the esses esident Jeffor.|'®*!r fate, unable to escape Btates consu _ tt aes first vessel to touch at an}, “We immediately launched our | "od read ciPsina wintea' On ney, se ae yg Hee A. tte ts and began rescue work, | Por 10 one's archi 5 month Saturday |#94 the harbor was one of pande a 1 aki Baty» ere | moin as the hundreds, yea thousands, | | “Other biog ies ale oer ue seaaenn the Admiral Orienta} | #mall craft carried on their work sauna’ Lad “atavtas Gash ta tebe eon of taking those alive to the ships in |*¥PPHes and started back T the we hama to asnist furth relief The ship enough pro. | work, arriving at Yokob “ the visions for t agers, according With only 30 hours’ water on | r¢ September 6. Here we to the re atcleall ot | board, as we had planned on tak: | fuy ditions much improved er cargo and fe t} ing water at Yokohama, we decided | United states destroyers had arrived at Yokohama for the suffering Jap-|© retur nto Kobe, carrying a8/and were assisting in every way to nese, and as the rvs many refugees as we could handle nder succor and ald clay in arriving here, the f ny needing medical attention! “One of our refugees is a man y aboard the ship is running low, | Which was given them by our ship's! with» wooden leg, who walked the captain reported surgeon, |from Tokyo to Yokohama to take Among the passengers man It was pitiful to sew the thous-| passage on our boat, We ified who were injured severely by fall-/ands of injured and wounded—many {shipping in the harbor that the ng masonry, many who narrowly |being so badly burned that welbreakwater had disappeared, and escaped with their lives. One of/could not assist them. Tfie scene! while there the ol! tanks along the the most seriously injured is J. R.|was of indescribable horror. Hun-| water front broke, menacing all Hughes, seaman, who was with the /dreds of stretcher cases were on} shipping in the harbor as the flames captain of the steamer Steel Navi-/boant our ship—many had been|apread, making it a sea of fire, The gator at Yokohama, The captain | separated from loved ones, whose| ships rescued many who had fled Was killed in the crash of buildings was not known, and prac-|All injured on board progress. that follow » first and/tically all homeless and penniless. |ing, due to excellent Hughes w He will be treated he Bankley, Brit ying School of Japan, w the Jeff L J manager of the Yokohama ranch of Frazar & Co., is also a nger, ® vessel Saturday m 68 Ch steerag! It was at first be t she would proceed with al ed direct to ttle but orders were counter. ed and she arrives here Sat. urday evening, if her present speed maintained. JEALOUS MAN THROWS ACID Husband Tries to Mar Wife’s Beauty; Fails Mrs. Lee Parrott, 517 Madison st., was painfully burned by acid thrown upon her by her husband in a fit of jealousy Tuesday evening, according to reports to the police Wednesday. * 1,700 TONS 60 * * (CREMATE QUAKE TO HELP JAPAN VICTIMS’ BODIES sre «t wicerl/ Seattle Supplies Enormous; | Clear Away Wreckage in Japs Raise $42,000 BY JOHN W, NELSON | the $100,000 mark, exclusive of $42, }000 collected by ready |new cargo space and new contribu tions pouring in daily, this city's | splendid response to j Japanese quake and fire victims ts setting the pace for the entire coun try. To date, of canned milk, |tons of hardware, 15 tons of drugs, | 1,000 pairs of blankets and 500 over. coats. PLAN HUGE CARGO OF SEATTLE LUMBER | In addition, Seattle ner hands over her face when she | the shipping board ship West Hen saw what her husband was doing |*haw when that relief vessel arrives and sustained burns whick will not | here September 17 or 18 from San | elt et prove serious or mar her beauty.| Francisco. This vessel will carry an of the people there trapped in Parrott hurted the acid at his wife | exclusive cargo of lumber. after an argument in which he had} accused her of indiscretion, she told the police. HERE’S MORE ABOUT WRECKS STARTS ON PAGE 1 the Mare Island navy yard, which arrived at Point Arguello today. Plana are under way for the im- mediate floating of the vessel, but the other six destroyers are to be left to their fate on the rocks. The freighter Cuba, which went ashore on San Miguel island only a few miles away, bay possibly be saved by the tug Peacock, which lett San Pedro today. Capt. Holland, of the disabled boat, is remaining on the island until the last chance of saving the vessel either proves suc- cessful or Is abandoned. Meanwhile, naval officials pre- pared today to give evidence con- cerning the destroyer disaster to the special board of inquiry set up at San Diego. Motion pietures taken of the wrecked vessels from navy | airplanes are to be flashed on the| sereen for the vestigators. The work of recovering the dead is progressing slowly and was aguin impeded last night by a fresh thun- derstorm which unexpectedly broke along the coast. Under the fitful flashes of lightning, searching parties scoured the barren reef, but no additions were made to the three bodies already recovered. Twenty men are still missing, according to the revised ‘official casualty list and an attempt may be made today to break Into the hull of the de. benefit of the in- ~ stroyer Young, where most of them are supposed to be. ——— *- BOAT BEING SOUGHT SAN FRANCISCO, Sept, 12.—A mall boat or raft believed to be from one of the destroyers wrecked off Honda, California, last Saturday night and possibly bearing survivors of that wreck, was being sought by mariners today upon request of the 12th naval district headquarters here, A Message received by the navy radio office here last night reported information from a “reliable source’ that the raft was seen floating seven mies north of San Miguel island, Further details were not given. The point at which the raft is be- lleved to have been seen is several miles seaward from Point Arguello, where the seven destroyers are brea’ up. If the raft bears a human freight of sailors it will materially cut down the score and more report- ed missing following the disaster. COMMISSION UNDER ARREST ROME, Sept. 12.—The Corfu cor- respondent of the Epocha states that eight members of. the Pan-Eplrote commission have been arrested and taken to the Janina foil, The Greek government disclaimed any responsibility for the men, ac cording to the Kpocha, and is deter: mined to arrest Col, Bozaria, whom they regarded ay the chief organizer of tho assassinations of Italian of- felals, The Pan, Eplrote company haw been described in previous Rome dis. patches a# an organization of Greek officers along the Greco-Albanian frontier, Italian circles have con- aistently charged this commission with the murders of Italian officials witch rewulted in the allan ull. Ko EEOC Oe towards donating the lumber, Should the lumber industry fall to give the lumber as a gift, it will be pald for by the American Red thru Seattle as the purchasing point. ANOTHER SHIP IS ASKED FOR President Frank Waterhouse of Cross, Wednesday made a formal re- quest to the U. S. shipping board for a rfief ship for general cargo. The West Henshaw has been donat- ed by the shipping board for tum. ber cargo and another vessel 1s needed for general cargo. Cargo space on three vessels was offered relief headquarters Wednes- tember 14, donated 200 tons of space. The Tempaison to sail Sept. 7, has offered 160 tons of space and 21, has donated 300 tops of xpace. All of this will be used, according to Major A. A. Oles, fiscal agent for the Red Cross in Seattle. HARMONIZE WORK WITH RED CROSS Not only is Seattle leading in the selection of this port by the Ameri- can Red Cross as the principal point for purchasing supplies has enabled the local work to be harmonized with that of the Red Cross. Major Oles, who has been employed by the Chamber of Commerce to direct solic- itations, has been appointed fiscal agent under Frank Waterhouse, who has been named purchasing agent for the Red Cross. In addition to purchasing supplies as ordered by the Red Cross, the same organization will be utilized to spend $100,000 donated to the quake sufferers by Seattle citizens. Hyvery shipment of this stock will be labeted, “donated by the city of Seattle,” it was announced. CHURCHES RAISE $1,280.61 SUNDAY Total donations to the relief fund Wednesday noon were $99,775.89, This includes $26,000 donated to the fund from the emergency fund of the Seattle Red Cross. In Wed- nesday morning's mail there was $753.10, Contributions to the fund gathered in Seattle churches during Sunday's services totaled $1,280.61, In addition to this money is the $42,000 Seattle Japanese have col- lected. They will spend this inde- pendent of the Chamber of Com- merce and Red Cross relief work. Ticket Aoents io. Meet in Portland PORTLAND, Ore., Sept, 12.—Dele- gates were gathering here today for the annual convention of the Amer- jean Association of Railroad Ticket Agents, which will be in session during the remainder of the week. A number of well known business men are scheduled to addreas the convention, including Ralph Budd, president of the Great Northern railway. STRANGE FISH MILFORD! HAVEN, Eng., Sept. 12-—A strange fish measuring 4% fect around the head and 12 feet jong has been caught by a trawler off the northwest coast of treland, The mouth in bottleshaped and toothless, but the body resembles a shark's. SOUVENIRS MUNICH, Sept. 12—During a five-day athletic festival here recent ly, visitors carried away with thom na mementoes 6,000 beer mugs, 480 Knives and forks and thousands of With Seattle's relief fund nearing Seattlo Japanese;| with 1,700 tons of relief supplies al.| Pitiful scenes are being enacted, par loaded on vessels which are | steaming towards Japan, and with | of cremating bodies and cleaning the the need of a total of 1,700 tons of| | rellef supplies have been forwarded | to Japan, This lot includes 800 tons of flour, 400 tons of fish, 100 tons 75 tons of rice, 30 is Preparing | Mrs. Parrott was able to throw|to load 4,500,000 feet of lumber on| Relief headquafters are prepared | jto ship the lumber without an in-|*08Es of Japan as they awaited, un- stant’s delay, altho the Douglas Fir|*#nchingly, certain death. Exploltation & Exporting Co, has not as yet decided what it can do the: Chamber ef Gomanaees aua Red | Wivering, Plans for reconstruction day. The Yomel Maru to sall Sep-/ the President Jefferson, to aall Sept. | relief work of {ts citizens, but the| Devastated City BY CLARENCE DUBOSE United Presa Staff Correspondent | TOKYO, Sept. 12.—(10:30 a. m) ticularly at Yokohama, as the work wreckage left by the Japanese horror of September 1 is getting under way, At Yokohama, where the havoc was the greatest, thousands of persons are roaming thru the ruins of the city where thousands of persons were burned alive, trying to pick the jbodies of thelr relatives from the seemingly countless numbers of corpses. The bodies, some burned crisp, others possibly still recognizable, are piled up like cordwood awaiting cre mation on vast funeral pyres. | JAPANESE SING |AS DEATH COMES Comparatively few of the bodies re being identified, yet the efforts ¢ the survivors are unending. Stories coming from Yokehama jerumbling buildings and all escape jeut off by fire, singing the ‘folk The death toll In the Yokohan:a theatrical district. particularly in Official records in Tekyo have dis- closed that up to today 1,300 earth- quake shocks, beginning with the siant upheaval of September 1, have |been recorded. But almost with the ground still are going ahead. Premier Yamamoto has been |named chief of the reconstruction |five billion dollars in rebuilding | Tokyo alone. | Reliable figures on the forelgn }dead In Yokohama, just compiled, |show 146 dead and 882 foreigners in jured. Most of these were Euro- peans. It is estimated that leas than 60 | Persona escaped from the South Grand and Oriental hotels at Yoko- hama, out of a total of several hun- dred guests, many of whom were | tourists who had just arrived. Most of those who survived in Yokohama saved themselves by Jumping into the sea and standing neck deep in the water, dipping their heads beneath the water's surface at |intervals to escape the terrific heat, Two thousand foreigners saved themselves in that manner, accounts reaching Tokyo showed. The Polish minister to Japan was flung by the earthquake into the Yokohama canal. Roaring = fires blazed up almost instantly on both sides of the c=nal. With fire raging around him he remained in the water 18 hours and finally came out alive. OFFICIAL ASKS GREATER UNITY Wants Better Co-Operation in Law Enforcement Bemoaning the fact that the sanc- tity of the federal courts of the na- tion has been lost and that they are now cluttered with a great heap of petty prohibition cases that should be tried in police and county courts, John T. Williams, district attorney of San Franciser id spect nis sary of Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty, who arrived in Seattle ‘Tuesday, announced Wednesday that a& general revision of law enforoe- ment methods in all branches of gov- ernment would be recommended, “The prohibition enforcement de- partment fg now in the habit of nam. ing the charges that shall be placed Against offenders who are arrested This {6 the duty of the district attor- ney, who should decide whether or not the case shall be tried in, federal court and upon what grounds,” said Williams, He announced that prohibition, narcotic, postal and other officials would be called together with federal attorneys here and a new code of law enforcement would be advined, Wil- Hams is here in an advisory capacity and {# endeavoring to bring about greater unity between county, elty, state and federal authorities. He Is touring a number of the larger cities of the country. He haw been in Seattle for auch a whort timé that he admitted he waa unfamiliar with affaira here and evaded questions to the effect that William Whitney, assistant state pro: hibition direetor, might be shorn of ile title of “legal advisor” to the de- partment here, Whitney, av nswistant director, jcommission which expects to spend | THE SEATTLE j fore i HERES mone Anour )(WOMAN STILL _ 2% 'eeescoxee von “or UJ, P, Gives $25,000 | Oyster House Man SRE'S MORE ABOUT : . 4 he was taken # li A d by Stat . UNCONSCIOUS |. i's contents ae for Japanese Relief rrested by State STARTS ON PAGE 1 Mrs. Rose Keon, 44, of the Fale geasddias ta See t snd wen found |e $25,000 to the Japane elief}ated food unfit for human use, A. einai ree ~ aes Behr washer tae oa ed that her bod. be emated t nl office A wupp s an 4 \ fornia Oveter He e, 613 agi! ave, state re ntative from King! lowing what is believed to be an at-|the ashes scattered Puget|thru the Red ¢ other prope W. H. Coffin, ounty; Dean Hugo Winkenwerder mpt on her own life Monday Bound b of ‘ inesday. He the University of Washington She hax been in a state of coma oH 1 in Justice C. C. ewe of Forestry; Fred EH. Pape,|¢ ont 48 hours MUBKOGEE, Okin., Sept. 12.—Two | © "878" Maia mM the etate forentr ervi and} She is said to have taken polson, | coaches a St. Louis & San Frar 5 J.J of Bellingh told) but the nature of it has not been | cisco passe r train crashed thru meat and chieken he onditions and prob-| determined. She was being sued for| burning bridge near McBride, Okla Ma nk are were spoiled, ” Northwest *8\NE | divorce by her husband, who first | lat yesterday, but no one was ir of oUme ompinint Take i fu outed the sulcide theory, saying jured, Meliride ts north of Muskogee nim The biggest problem the state mes: the committee was told by = Winkenwerber, is that a 1 One-third the total ea of the state ix owned by the government And state, faking it off the tax rolls Additional lands are being acquired by the governments, making @ ser! | Us problem of taxation. | In addition, the state. reforesting logged-off lands, become practically valuciess when the taken from it, finds that it must induce the private own: | er of the land to reforest it Te #0, the state must arrange taxation wo that reforesting will not be a bur den but @ profitable investment | for the owner | This means, Winkenwerber that a special form of light taxation } must be applied to lands which are replanted with trees, and the burden |Pput on lands that are left idle in | thelr barrenr desirous of which trees ar naid T TAX |ON REPLANTED LAND It was recommended to the com | mittee that the government make | *#0me restitution to the state for the | t&X moneys which are kept from the state by government ownership of jands, which holdings, exclusive of reservations, will equal 10,000,000 jAcres, The state's holdings at pres ent were put at 2,500,000 acres |. A constitutional amendment may be sought by which’ taxes on land which has been logged off and re planted will not become due until jthe new growth of trees is ready for cutting. These taxes would be | Ughter than ordinarily, as it wan esti. Jare required for the growth of fir {&nd spruce to lumber sizes. The/ || Prospect of paying taxes on such a long term would not be attractive to | the lend owners, according to the! committee. Winkenwerder also suggested that | the state of Washington was entitled jto @ government forestry experiment | station, such as the Great Lakes! station and the Appalachian moun. | tains station. ASK GOVERNMENT AID IN FIGHTING FIRES Senator McNary, chairman of the committee, was asked also for gov- ernment ald in making protection from forest fires 100 per cent ef. ficient. Improved methods, he wa told, of detection of fires and com batting them wan ensential if the | growing areas of timber were to be | fully protected | The ntate has embarked upon a Vast program of conserving the for: | est lands, according to Saunders. | At present $200,000 in public utility | bonds is available for the purchase ef such lands, which-will be re- forested as soon as acquired, and when grown with timber will be Sold back to logging interests, Purchase of logged off land by the state is usually made at $2 an cre, altho two years ago the atate acquired 6,000 for as many dollars, an exceptional buy. addition, had been already replanted. “Tax matt in regard to forest land are at present the greatest obstacle to the whole program,” Winkenwerder paid. “Tho situation |!s made more difficult by reagon of | the different valuations and assess. ments of the various counties. It will take years for the proper solu- tion of this matter,” NORTHWEST IS GREAT iy LUME_R STOREHOUSE | The Northwest is the greatest storehouse of lumber in America, | and its forests and waterways must | be protected and conserved, Winken- | werder declared. Only close co-oper- | ation between the United Staten for | entry service, the state and the pri-| vate owner can accomplish the vast) tank | At the present rate of cutting tim. | ber, the last tree in the great for-| ests of Washington will in 85 more years been cut, dragged to the saw: mill and split, and the logging mills | will have closed, and that army of | Plepurenque loggers have forsaken ||| the woods and faded into memories | of the past, leaving the once beauti. | ful hills but misshapen and ragged | peaks, | | HERE’S MORE ABOUT ITALY STARTS ON PAGE 1 amide on Italy's suggestion, nego. | tintions for interpretation of the! treaty were renewed by a Joint} Italo-Jugo-Slay commission aitting | part of the time in Rome and part | in Belgrade, | ‘The work of thix commission final- ly reached a place where the chief | controversy centered around Port Barros, a part of the Fiumian harbor which Belgrade demanded be placed | under Jugo-Slay control. Italy re.| fused this suggestion, declaring the| entire harbor must be under super. | vision of the joint commission with | Italian onl Jugo-Slav areas retained | to the west and east as originally planned, Finally, during last month's | sessions in, Rose, Premier Mussolini | sent a letter to the Jugo-Slay dele. gates curtly demanding acceptance of tho Itallan thesls and leading up to the present situation, eee | Mussolini Again Threatens Greece ROME, Sept. 12.—Italian mMtary forces will evacuate Corfu when the Ttalian sanctions against Greece have not only been accepted, but executed, Premier Mussolini told the cabinet today. “Italy has weathered the eriats,' ||) the premier said, “Let us now walt | }| flolally recognized as legal advisor, according to officials, It is rumored | ]) that hereafter Thomas P. Revelle will perform all legal services for the prohibition department, Williams complimented the en: forcement personnel in Seattle, both in federal and state departments, and declared that their efforts were meeting with as great success As ANY other department in the Northwosr, merely uses his logal abllittes in.d termining the possibility of conv! | tion following axreaty and ts uot of Januda has more than 1,000 fur . mated that between 30 and 60 years|[) STAR FREDERICK & NELSON | FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE PAGE 9 . The Autumn Promenade of |. Practical Fashions Downstairs Store ’ THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY—SEPTEMBER 18, 14 AND 15 ‘THURSDAY, and Dresses and Sports Apparel will be shown. Saturday afternoon—at 2:30—Children’s and Junior Misses’ Apparel will be j shown, Women’s and Children’s “Sample” UNION SUITS 50c to $2.50 Women's and Children’s “Sample” Union Suits in broken size and style assortments, Cotton, cotton with fleece lining and wooland- cotton styles, Higherade garments, Broken-Size Lots of Women’s Stockings 65c Low. Priced at the Pulr Broken-sise assortments of wom- en's fibersilk-boot stockings, fiber- andellk-boot stockings, white silk stockings; “Burson” mercerized cot- ton stockings in out-sizes and extra ovt-aises. Brown, White and Black in the lot (but not in each style). Sizes in the lot: 8% to 10%. Low: priced at 65¢ pair —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Cut Glass Syrup Pitcher and Plate 95c ‘Cut Giass Syrup Pitoher with Plate, inthe pleasing shape sketched, cut work in attractive design. Low: priced at 95¢. DOWNSTAIRS STORE 200 Pairs of Women’s Black Kidskin Oxfords $4.95 Women's Black Kidskin Oxfords, with Goodyear welt soles and me dium military heels, Mado on a com: fortable last for business and street wear, Widtha AAA to D, Sizos 2% to 0 Unusually low-priced at 94.95. DOWNSTAIRS STORD MAZDA LAMPS Complete stock of styles and sizes In the Blectrical Section, Downstair Store. Will Be Presented in the Friday afternoon—at 2:30—women’s and misses’ Coats, Wraps, hE ae Ie wh TR 6555 New Chintz-Patterned Cretonnes NEW shipment of Cretonnes in unusually attractive pat- SPECIAL terns, simulating the designs usually found on fine YARD chintzes. The backgrounds for these striking patterns (four, as Dotted Curtain Marquisette sketched), are in yellow, tan, rose and blue shades and black and white. Cretonnes that will find many uses in the home. In 86-inch width, special 30¢ yard. Special 32c xara Evenly - woven Curtain Marquisette, with woven 36-inch Curtain Figured Drapery Marquisette Marquisette dots, especially attractive for ruffled curtains; white n Special |G 2 vara Special 25c Yard Figured Marquisette may be used either for curtaining the window or as a drapery. In colorful White and Cream Cur- tain Marquisettes in an even weave, suitable for flower plain or ruffled curtains. patternings on Rose, Blue, Tan and Gniy, Width 36 inehe ; . S, Spe- Width 36 Inches, special Brown grounds. Width 26 inches, ial ae yard, special 25¢ yard. 18¢ yard. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Juvenile Boys’ Suits $1.95 to $7.45 HE DOWNSTAIRS STORE offers a wide selection of Suits for little boys of 4 to 8 years, in pleasing styles, within a moderate - price-range. OLIVER TWIST SUITS, with wash walsts and corduroy or tweed trousers; sailor or Eton collar, $1.95. JUNIOR NORFOLK, MIDDY and BUTTON.ON MIDDY anf BUTTON-ON gtyles in Suits of serge and styles in Suits of service: : ee able quality corduroy, Jersey: ‘The middy styles ‘ Cl serge, tweeds, cassimeres have tie, sleeve-ornament Boys loth ats and Jersey, In the wanted and brald-trimmed collar shades; $2.45, $3.25 and $4.95. Boys’ Good Worsted Sweaters $6.85 Boys who like to wear a Sweater-and-Trousers outfit for school—or play—will find these worsted Sweaters in the “ruff-neck" style much to their liking. In Black, with school-color stripes on collar, cuffs and bottom. Sizes 28 to 36 (chest measurement), Price $6.85. and cuffs. Tan, Srown and Blue shades—$7.45. $1.35, $1.75 and $2.00 Sailor, Tam and roll- brim styles in boys’ Hats of serge, plush and tweeds, some leather- trimmed, Sizes 6% to 7, Mod- erately priced at $1.35, $1.75 and $2.00. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE NEW AUTUMN FABRICS In the Weights and Weaves Favored for Women’s Autumn Coats, Suits and Frocks OWNSTAIRS STORE displays of new Autumn Coat, Suit and Frock Fabrics comprise a wide assortment of Domestic and Imported weaves in wool and silk-and-wool. Dependable qualities, fashionable patterns and shades—at moderate prices. NEW “SPIRAL" CREPB, a NEW "“STLVERTONE" VELOUR, an Imported fab- lustrous silk-and-wool fab- VELOUR, ‘ant Tupanted sabe ric in a good wolght, sult» Tha lay eapaninliy: cine ctor NEW POLAIRE COATING in” plain and plaid weaves and ® good welght for Autumn Coats for women and girls, able for dresses, skirts and goats und capes. In a soft, Beayor-brown, Sorrento: Y . draping quality, 54 inches bluo, Brown and Reinde a Ne Poem atte Wide. African-brown, Dolte: Drown. shades. Width 46 hawk’ chenna) Navy-bluo, plue) Navysblue ae Eisen. aan . Hinek and White, Width 8 Heeb ee een eng, NEW PLAID - BACK COAT. INGS, Beaver-brown, Dark= brown and Sorrento-blue shades backed with the plaid im contrasting shades, A sports coat fabric that re~ duires no lining, In 5 S-Inch Thess $5 and $6 tho yard... NEW NORMANDY COATINGS In softy, shone. quality ap- propriate for fine coats and capes, Lustrous finish, in Pe Gey ey ea riean-brown | an ROK, Width 66 inche NEW NOVELTY PLAID POL» AIRD COATING In Gray, Neaver-brown and rown plald off nd for sports coats, Widih he inches: theigatas . We . ee $3.95 darker so mutch &