Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1943 — Page 3

tion of the armed services, either in

'NEEDED--M'NUTT

Press Conference He’s Determined to Solve Manpower Problems Through Voluntary Measures;

-

WASHINGTON, March

Disagrees With Stimson.

1 (U. P.).—~War Manpower

Paul V. McNutt said today that a labor draft bill is not

‘at this time and that

he is determined to solve the

wer problem through voluntary measures.

: ‘McNutt’s view, in conflict with those of Secretary of ar Stimson who has indorsed the Wadsworth-Austin na-

nal service bill, were pre8d at a press conference. first, he took the position he had no comment to But when asked whether he with Stimson’'s view that a national service act is needed to solve the problem, McNutt said: T am determined to try the vol-

tary method and do everything my power—in all sincerity — to

make the voluntary method work.” |

Mind Unchanged

McNutt then explained that his mind has been unchanged on the methods of solving the problem since President Roosevelt broadened his powers by executive order Dec. 5. That order definitely placed the ° manpower problem on a voluntary

When asked whether his mind had changed since Sept. 30, when in an appearance before a congressional committee he said national service legislation as needed, McNutt referred to a recent statement that his mind had not changed since Dec. 5. Congressional lines, meanwhile, were being drawn for a show-down fight over draft labor legislation while the senate military affairs committee postponed for 24 hours a vote on legislation to defer farm . workers from military service.

Farm Vote Delayed

The military group’s vote — orig_inally scheduled for today—was delayed because several committeemen wished to attend a meeting of the ‘senate foreign relations committee, where Lend-Lease Administrator Edward R. Stettinius Jr., called for extension of the lend-lease program. bill by Secretary Stimson, a move that encouraged spohsors of the legislation. The administration's position on draft labor provosals still is uncertain, But the manpower controversy at present appears hopelessly muddled; every day brings conflicting opinions, charges and counter-charges. And some observers believe that it may remain so until there is a showdown on the draft labor bill. Senator Burton K. Wheeler (D. Mont.) promised “a fight to the nish” when the Austin-Wadsworth reaches the senate floor. “This is the straw that breaks the camel's back,” he said. “This is the dictatorship bill which would bring all men and women in the United States under the rule of a dictatorship as tight as any in Europe. And no one anywhere can point, out any necessity for it.” The farm deferment- bill on which . the military committee was to have voted today was sponsored by Sen- ~ ator John A. Bankhead (D. Ala), leader of the farm bloc forces, who contend that the United States faces & famine unless farm labor is conserved, Fears Victory Jeopardized

‘Delay in the vote comes in the wake of a warning by one senatorial “manpower investigator that limita-

numbers or by deferring special groups, would “jeopardize the winning of the war.”

Compare Allied, Axis Strength

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. P.).—Senator Theodore F. Green (D. R. 1.) today presented the following figures as J the strength of allied and axi armed forces, based on testimony before a special appropriations subcommittee investigating manpower: Axis strength in EuropeanAfrican theaters—483 divisions. Japanese strenth (plus 200,000 air tro®ps)—86 divisions. United nations (excluding United States)—321 divisions: United States (estimated end of 1943)—100 divisions. U. S. overseas force end of 1943—2,700,000. " U. S. overseas force end of 1944—4 750,000. Total U. S. forces 1943-44— 11,100,000 (army--8,200,000). The exact numerical strength of an American division has never been made public. In world war I a division normally was 15,000 men. Some estimates place the size of modern divisions as high as 35,000 men. .

R. 1), a member of the senate appropriations subcommittee on manpower, reporting his own conclusions, denounced the proposal of former President Herbert Hoover to reduce the size of the projected armed forces and protested the “defeatist attitude” toward America’s ability to feed and supply 11,000,000 men under arms. These other events are scheduled in the manpower controversy: The senate military affairs committee begins hearings tomorrow on the Austin-Wadsworth “labor draft” bill with McNutt, probably the first witness.

The senate appropriations subcommittee on manpower, some members of which last week said the figures of government officials on labor supply were conflicting and confusing, will question Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard on farm labor problems,

Vote on Absenteeism

The house votes today on a bill designed to curb absenteeism at

naval depots and establishments by ||

referring the employment records of civilian employees to draft boards. The house naval affairs committee, which reported the bill, will hear Capt. Edward V. Rickenbacker later this week discuss absenteeism. Various week-end developments on the manpower controversy included: Defense of the administration’s voluntary manpower policy by Deputy WMC Chairman Fowler V. Harper, who charged that the op-

position to it stems from those who | w¢

would be adversely affected. “Hits at Excessive Army

Opposition by President William Green of the A. F. of L. to “any un-

reasonable plan to strip industry of |g

Senator Teodore F. Green (D,

skilled workers to build up an excessively large army.”

Enemy Concentrating Big ~ Forces to the North of

Australia.

GEN. MacARTHUR's HEADQUARTERS, Australia, March 1 (U. P.).—Today’s allied communique declared Japanese strength was being rapidly reinforced in the arc of islands north of Australia, from Timor, in the Dutch East Indies, to the northern Solomons, and observ= ers believed that Japan was preparing for a major military effort. Tt was the first public intimation from military authority that despite allied victories dn Papua, New ‘Guinea, and in the Solomons, Australia still remains in danger of direct attack. The official announcement tended

Pacific is now as great, or greater than at any time since Pearl Harbor. London Claim Recalled It appeared to substantiate London reports that Japan is now keeping nearly twice as many troops in the islands north of Australia as it took to conquer them. The communique did not say whether the Japanese preparations were for offensive or defensive pur-. poses. Authoritative information in Australia indicated that Japan has been moving many troops and planes as she could spare into the southwest Pacific for weeks, even at the expense of weakening other areas. Allied air assaults, night after night, against vital Rabaul and the increased pounding of Munda, approximately 180 miles north . of Guadalcanal; had warned the enemy that a new phase is about to begin in the southwest Pacific area—with allied strength grouping for an offensive blow northward.

Timor Base Raided On Sunday morning the strongest

‘force of Beaufighters ever sent from

northeastern Australia raked Koepang’s Penfoei airdrome, on Timor, destroying four grounded bombers and nine fighters, damaging another bomber and eight fighters, and shooting down one out of three Japanese interceptors, the communique said. In the raid on Koepang, the Beaufighters used 18,000 rounds of cannon and heavy machine gun ammunition. Anti-aircraft positions were silenced, and fires were started in the building area. On the northeast New Guinea front between Wau and Mubo, southwest, of Salamaua, Japanese ground forces have been pushed back approximately 30 miles from Wau. The Wipaining~Waipali area,

south of Mubo, has been cleaned

out with 70 more enemy bodies counted, Many more uncounted dead are believed to be in the bush, victims of allied bombing and strafing raids.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. S. Weather Bureau

(All Data in Central War Time) Sunrise 7:18 | Sunset 6:37

TEMPERATURE -=March 1, 1942—

Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m.... . Total precipitation since Jan, 1 2 Deficiency since Jan. 1

The following tabie shows the temperatures in other cities: Highest Lowest

Station Yesterday Last Nish

Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Evansville . Wayne. Kansas City, Mo. Miami, Fla. A Minneapolis-St. New Orleans New York Oklahoma City Omaha, Neb. Pittsburgh an Antonio, Tex St. Louis Washington,

Indianapolis (city)

~

oa

FATALITIES County city nT

20 | Arrests 3 | Dead SATURDAY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines Tried tions Paid 17 16 $ 116 2. 8

1 . 1 20 9 5

$151

3

39

RATIONING DATES

AR—Coupon 11 is good for three nds through March 15.

ine—A book—Coupon 4 good for four s through March 21.

_ Oil—Coupon 4 good for 11 gallons h rr Hl 12.

Bee h Iders of A gas books t be inspected hy March 31, upon good for ons pair h June 1.

foods Summ A, B and C good gh March 3

EVENTS TODAY Christian Ministers conference, 1 Christian church, all day. sian war relief, closing Program of ive, Children’s museum, 8:30 p. m Sneeting for zone 3, Washington high

inrial association, meetts Park Methodist church, 10

apolis Manufacturers’ Represenia- $ elub, meeting, Hotel Warren, 6

elub, luncheon meeting, Board de building, noon. Foundrymen’s association, dinmeeting, Hotel Washington, 6:30

County Rural Youth slab, meeting, Bureau, building, 8 ra t Co., dinner, Hote Washington, lon Alumni Afstcintion. dinner Canary cotta Federal rE Tazing Act

‘quarter of 1942 due; form of in jnternal revenue.

ce gross premium tax and ; state treasurer. agents’. Nigente Jenswals insurance epar ual Nstalivient 5 fire mar3 Shnast state tax due - May “15; township

erty assessment reports and jal statements due; Pownahip ASSessors,

s TOMORROW Ra -

nosis Bote, conven- | club, all, day.

conference, ntral Christian church, all day. Ri on problems of international peace, Indiana university extension cen"ter, 8 p. Rotary a hotel, noon. Kirshbaum cenfer, speaker, Itamar BenAn on “What About Palestine?” 8:30

Aeriean Chemical Josiety, luncheon meeting, Hotel Severin, n Whi club, meeting, Hotel On verin, 1:30 Alpha Delta Omega, Hotel Washington, 7

Dp. Lukas: Harold Corp., meeting, Hotel Wash-

‘luncheon meeting, Claypool

ng p. Home Ansurajice : Ce., dinnet, Hotel Washington, 6: 30 p

MARRIAGE LICENSES

These lists are from official records in the county court house. . e imes, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names and addresses.

Clayton Campbell O'Neill. 36, Camp Atlerbury. Sha; Laura E. Heindl, 32, CleveBobet Edward Timmons, 26, Ft. Lponard ocd, Mo.; Mildred Eloise Dowd n, 22, ios 4114 E. Washington. Harold Lewis Lackey, 23, of 1218 Dryer; Elizabeth Ann Ferrell, 25, of 1327 Dukane, Raymond JesSe Polley, 21, Camp Atterbury, Ind.; y Beatrice Watts, 22, of 801 Locke, 494. Lawrence Anthony Schroeder, 22, Camp Ayer, Ind.; Helen Deleskewicz, 22,

Chicago, Ill. John Bruce Flower, 30, of 111 E. Walnut; Florence Ruth Bowman, 24, of 1034 N.

Delaware. Albert Melvin Carnes, 18, of 414. W. 117,

cCarty; Laura Marie Honeycutt, of 1101 S. Senate. Paul Willard Kearney, 34, of 1819 N. Alabama; Frances Rebecca Anderson, 31; of 450 E. Yanut, Howard Hodso tnd of 1340 Kentucky; May Griftfitts, 40, of 1103 Central. Bernard Walter McAdams, 23, of 4 8. Li Mary Lou Sittler, 24, of 2524 olle G. Glenn Miller, 40, Washington, Pa.; Neva Ester Gray, 32, of 3346 5th ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Henry L. Bond, 49, of 629 Buchanan; ghrisime Elnora Smithey, 62, of uc) James Franklin Miller, 23, Camp Grant, Ill; Jeanne Muriel Marsh, 24, of 2026 Koehne. Edi . Heeke, 24, of .1756 Nelson; 1 Rose Etta Horsley, 17, of Paul Franklin, 26, of 2213 W. Morgan; Parlie Allen, 24, R. R. Box 933. Isaac Benton Brunnemer, i of 4940 S. Meridian; Mary Georgia Brown, 21, of 3638 Roosevelt, 3. Herschel Erwin Taylor, 23, of 525 N.

Reaware: Frances Ann Green, 23, 525

Delaw Robert Lee a reediove, 32, of 1244 Blaine; Mary ey othy Walters, 30, of 1206

Wi d Walter Martin Wiltsie, 21, of 1510 Barth; In mosiene La Verne Loughmiller, 11, of

Milton tn tel. 28, oh Barrison; Mary Martin, 28, 55 Ruckle

Bernice Mark deli L. 23,

J Merle, Evelyn Majors, at Metho

629 Ros:

IN INDIANAPOLIS

ff MH HERE 18 THE TRAFFIC RECORD | Indiana Christian Ministers

Washington; Mary Margarel 21, of 1201 E. Souther Earl Gray DeAnguera, 23, Ft. Harrison: Lillian Dorothy Wolatz, Chicago, Ill. George Smow, 13, 2513 Columbia; Minnie Wright, 23, of 2156 Bellefontaine,

BIRTHS Girls

August, Helen Nelson, at St. Francis. Ralph, Wanda Fausey, at St. Francis. General, Mary Scratton, at City. Patrick, Mary Lally, at St. Vincent's. Howard, Mildred Michels, at St. Vincent's. William, Margaret Engle, at Coleman. - Aaron, Mary Leak, at Coleman. Orval, Florence Barnett. at Methodist. Robert, Florence Coolman, at Methodist. Herman, Rachel Henry, at Methodist. Earl, Martha Huggins, at Methodist. Louis, Dora Loutrel, at Methodist. dist. Clayton, Isabelle Mullin. at Methodist. Carl, Betty Rahe, at Methodist. Everett, Velma Rothman, at Methodist. Orille, Elizabeth Vawter, at Methodist. Raymond, Geneva Willoughby, at Meih-

odis Clyde, Lorraine Bedwell, at Emhardt. Boys Harold. Mary Righton, at St. Francis, Bert, Wilma Brown, at St. Franeis. Robert, Catherine Jenkins, at St. Fransis. e Roy, Anna Long, at St. Francis. James, .Lana Ottinger, at St. Francis. John, Gertrude Grott, at St. Francis, Leonard, Lucille Floyd, at City. - George, Agnes Donald, Nellie

Speaker,

Louise Warren, 2 City. Bradley, at Cit Malcolm, Ruth Ballard, at City. Harold. Doris McCreary, at St. Vincent's. John, Lorraine Riley, at St. Vincent’ s, Fred, Martha Barnard, at Methodist, Lewis, Elizabeth Carmen, at Methodist. Everett, Thelma Cox, at Methodist. John, Marjorie Eaton, at Methodist. Calvin, Gladys Burnham, at Emhardt. Harold, Lorean Yeagy, at Emhardt. Wesley. Mary Cox, at Emhardt. Richard, Sarah Sixchell, at Emhardt.

DEATHS

Roy C. Wilson, 586, at 126 : myocarditis : 3 Shelby, chronic ohn ansler, 52, at City, cystitis Lee Roy Wilson, 39. at 1613 a Perman dr., mitral stenosis, ’ Ida May Gordon, 69, at Central, mitral

insufficiency. 78, at City, diabetes

Edward: Eaglen, mellitus. coe- C. Coomler, 56, at Norwa - tarium, cerebral hemorrha 3 Sam Jesse Florence Leatherman, m, at Altenheim, cerebral hemorrhage. Lula E, Collings, 77, at 1725 W. Maryland, tuberculous peritonitis. Ralph Eugene Howell, at 5412 W. Minnesota, congenital heart. Maria C. Shattuck, 81, at 41 W. 32d, cerebral hemorrhage. Carrie Elizabeth Perlee, 69, at 3515 N. Pennsylvania, coronary occlusion, alter L. Potts, 72, at g, carcinoma. Sara 8. Killey, 70, at 840 Lawrence, cerebral hemorrhage. ary M. O’Key, 64, at 464 N. Warman, hypertension. Zella May Templeton, 46, at 136 E. St Joseph, aortic insufficiency. James C. ar, 90, at 41 W. 32d, cereMDa Hage. bell, 56, at 434 N. Mae Florence at 4 Pine, ferebral hemor: od :

22, oft 268. Ww. 35thy Mary of 1453 N. Wallace 2

Bye 13, or 5101 Madison, pers 59, at Oentral, coro-

JAPS. FORECAST

to confirm information that Japa- |} nese strength in the Southwest!

Orson ‘Welles :

HOLLYWOOD, March 1 (U. P.).—Orson Welles, stage, screen and radio star, reported for an army physical examination today. The 28-year-old “boy wonder” of the entertainment world told reporters he had been classified as 4-F until two weeks ago, when his draft board reclassified him as 1-A. “I obtained special permission from selective service headquarters to take this examination so that my studio and I will know where I stand,” Welles said. His selective service board until a fortnight ago had held him unfit for active military service because of bronchial asthma. Asked if he were anxious to serve in the army or navy, he replied: “I can’t say I feel strongly about it either way, since there's a job for me to do either in the services or in my present work.

CLAIM WARSHIP SUNK

z By UNITED PRESS The Italian high command broadcast a claim today that torpedo planes sank a British destroyer of the Jervis class in an attack on a convoy northeast of Algiers. The Rome communique said two other vessels totaling 17,000 tons were sunk in the attack, while a

ways and means

TAX IS STUDED

House Group May Report Soon on Compromise Pay-As-Go Plan.

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. PJ). —A withholding device for deducting income taxes at a 19 or 20 per cent rate from pay checks may come to a vote today in the house subcommittee considering pay-as-you-go methods of collection, The committee temporarily dropped its discussion of plans for cancelling part or all of a year’s taxes in bringing the collections up-to-date. Under the plan now under consideration, the taxpayer would pay his 1942 levies in quarterly payments beginning March 15, as before. On July 1, however, he will begin paying out of each pay check on his 1843 levies. If the plan is approved and nothing further is done about forgiveness or doubling of unpaid liabilities, it would amount to a cancellation of the last half of 1942 taxes and the first half of 1943 levies. Take “Round Figure”

As far as could be learned the subcommittee plans to return to the question of unpaid obligations during the “transition” period after it has decided on a withholding plan, but before a report is made to the full ways and means committee. Members of the subcommittee pointed out that the rate of the pay check deductions will conform closely to existing normal and surtax charges of 19 per cent. The 20 per cent was mentioned as “a good round figure” which would represent a slight rise in taxes but also save taxpayers and the government millions of dollars in bookkeeping and mathematical difficulties. The subcommittee apparently reached a deadlock on cancellation plans such as the “skip-a-year” proposal of Beardsley Ruml, New York banker. This development renewed talk in congressional circles of a move to discharge the ways and means committee from further consideration of the pay-as-you-go question.

WAR AUXILIARY MEETS Auxiliary 15, Sons of Union Vet-

second destroyer and a 7000-ton merchantman were damaged.

erans of the Civil war, will meet

“published the paragraph in giving

BY EARL RICHERT

SATURDAY<WAS QUITE a day for politics with both the Demo-

cratic and Republican editors of the

state meeting here.

And, as usual, it was the sidelights and incidents rather than the main events that gave the politicos plenty to chuckle and speculate

about.

Most interesting of all the incidents was the one about the para-

graph in his speech that Col. Robert McCormick, publisher of the Chicago Tribune and probably the No. 1 Willkie-hater, didn’t give. Newspapermen qilickly spotted the paragraph in which Col. McCormick took a very direct slap at Mr. Willkie and most of them made it the lead on their stories. Republican editors also spotted the paragraph and some of them started protesting that it was in bad taste to give in in Mr. Willkie’s home state, Col. McCormick agreed to the deletion of the paragraph and newspapermen were notified of the change shortly after the banquet started. For those that had filed stories, it meant that they all had to write new leads on their stories. One press association had to send “kills” on the paragraph out of New York and rewrite their entire story which by that time was all over the nation.

But after all this trouble, Col. McCormick’s own paper yesterday

the full text of the publisher’s speech. So, here’s that troublesome paragraph Col. McCormick did not give and which was by far the most interesting poryion of his | prepared speech: “We must be vigilantly on guard to prevent the Republican nominee for president from being picked by his opponent; that certain delegations be not bribed by the appointment of more Republican politicians into the New Deal cabinet; that telegrams sent from smoke-filled rooms ,to business men all over the country, urging them to coerce their delegates to that convention, be treated with contempt; that the galleries of the conventions be not packed for the Democratic choice for the Republican nominee for president. This plan, or its Siamese twin, is to be pulled again.” Note: Mr. Willkie stopped in at G. O. P. state headquarters a few

applause at the end, Col.

.of purge.”

minutes Saturday morning. He was on his way to St. Louis to

-open a Red Cross drive there yes-

terday. ” » ”

They Liked This

EXCEPT FOR THE customary MecCormick was applauded only twice

by the Hoosier Republicans.

They liked this statement: “The Democratic party is so ridden by communism in Washington and by the alliance of crime and politics in the cities that if our republic is to be saved, it will have to be saved by the Republican party, and if it is saved by the Republican party, it will be saved by western leadership.”

td # n

Food for Thought

THERE WERE a couple of incidents at the Democratic Editorial association luncheon, too, that gave the boys something to mull over. One was this statement by the principal speaker, Walter Myers, fourth assistant postmaster general, which was not included in his prepared speech: “So great has been his record as governor in Indiana, I would not be surprised if there wouldn't be a growing demand from outside the state that Henry Schricker be drafted as the next Democratic candidate for president.”

The other was the remark made by State Chairman Fred Bays in his discussion of the recent election that: “There must not be a program

Mr. Myers’ remark about Governor Schricker was viewed by most of his Democratic listeners as merely a compliment to the chief executive, but all agreed that it was “very interesting” since’ it came from ‘an official fairly high in the Roosevelt administration. Many

Indiana Democrats

of states, is in a good position to win the vice tial nomination in the event the race is wide open next year. But they don't expect that the Roosevelt administration will p mit that. Br. Bays’ “no purge” remarks caused a good deal of comment among the party stalwarts. They couldn’t figure out who in the Democratic party could be purged as a result of last November’s de= feat unless it was Mr. Bays him: self. He said, however, that he mean that “Democrats shouldn't be kicking Democrats around.” n ” ”

Lauds Roosevelt, But— ° THE GOVERNOR himself gave the Democratic editors something ¢ to think about by making LB speech which was definitely antis New Dealish. While praising the Aresident ‘and urging full support of him, *

- the governor remarked that “om

are discouraged sometimes at the - acts of his subordinates.” : Turning to Mr. Myers, he sald: “Go back and tell them if you = can, Walter, that we don’t want any waste of the people’s money, “If there are needless employees. on the federal payroll today we": have a right to ask that they be removed and put where they will + be useful. these stories about needless em= ployees are but that is the feeling of the people and that’s who I = am speaking for.” oe Observers listening to the gove ernor’s talk got no inkling of any U. S. senate ambitions. is He repeated the statement he : often has made that his sole am= bition as governor is to write a . record that no one can be , ashamed of.

2

CATHOLIC MEN TO MEET

The St. Philip Neri Men's club will open its 1943 activities with & meeting tonight in St. Philip's school auditorium, Edward P," Brennan will deliver a short talk on governmental functions and the school band will play. An open forum will follow the meeting.

SPONSOR CHILI SUPPER

Sahara Grotto auxiliary will spone sor a chili supper at 5 p. m. Thurse .

day, followed by a card party at al

8 p. m. at the Grotto clubhouse, 4107 E. Washington st. Mrs. Ray” Dille and Mrs. Damon Frederick

will be in charge.

STRAUSS

SAYS: I 7

‘We were

'3

at 8 p. m. tomorrow at Ft. Friendly.

O NE

DAY

NEARER

amused at a little

paragraph in the New York Times recently Hm headed “Tailored!”

It observed

that meetings are

tailored, and programs are tailored, and movies and committees are tailored—women are tailored

and =o are 1

ooks—the word

was presumed to mean—plain without trimmings.

"TAILORED"—It's a word we

love—and live!

Freedom from fussiness—and eccentric

whims—It means taste, "line" —

first-rate quality—endurance.

It issues from a clothing mind—

and from

It expresses itself—in dramatic simplicity

~—that never loses its fashion interest—

clothing experience.

TAILORED—Why, say!—that's our middle name—{(''The Specialty Shop for TAILORED Women").

Here are

TAILORED clothes that

become you—Dbeautifully—the

very essence of Smartness!

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TAILORED COATS, 22.95 32.50, 49.95 and up to $100

SUITS, 43.75.

TAILORED GABARDINE SUITS, 29.95 to 69.95.

TAILORED HOLLYWOOD SUITS, $45.

TAILORED GABARDINE DRESSES, 14.95.

L- STRAUSS & C0.

Y

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a Pa Fig

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res a IR : 0 ‘ Fa SRE is

SHIRTAILORED WASH-

ABLE

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DRESSES, 4.98 to 12.98.

TAILORED JERSEY SACONY DRESSES, 17.95 and up.

TAILORED HATS BY DOBBS, 5.95 to 14.95.

TAILORED BLOUSES, 2.25 to 10.98.

- TAILORED SLACKS, $4 to 19.95.

FOR TAILORED WOMEN (SECOND FLOOR)

TAILORED SLACK SUITS, $4 to $35.

- TAILORED SKIRTS, $410 12.98.

THE SPECIALTY SHOP

I don't know how true :