South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 221, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 August 1922 — Page 2
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES WEDNESDAY MORNING. AUGUST 9. 1922
2
CONGRESS MAY BE ASKED TO ACT IN STRIKE
Hardin::, in View of Present Crbi, Ask? House to Remain in Srion.
,r. ifr.t -f m i h l r. ; V s .1 c ": .1 t: r.. :r. ;rjr;c wtatcr.ient f'd.ty, in - . i!,n'.'! thn ill the ra!!r.'.id union .: J. r:'.c i to met. FrÜay, wouH I upon th ar..vpr th? .trikln?, urn v. Ill m k to th- prr .si iT.t's f.-.a! yror'O-cil. 'iiiintr out f. sr.jr5 of h cor. Jiticn of railroad julprr.rnt, Mr. Jr-hr.'on n.wrtM it "would th r.i!.roi.i ;t year to Ktt tr.rir r,':lpr.r-r.t hi'k Into shar-e. if th fr.k ph'.'U! ! stop r:rh! now." T;',' f urth'-r rhir 1 th'it trike-Treik'-r v. ?r f -!r.r "h.r ! :n !Iu-rc-. particularly IJr.jrland. by som rf th- rr-a-1.-. rimir.x th '.v-a-Ohio on" ."jch ro.t1. Arrari, r.'if-r.t.s wre rr..-ii"' for th1 head of th k-vh trikir uni'riif hin. i 0! ie rrr. k r lli'k.mlth. nmicn. h! metal worker. r;f . :r:r.T r.s an ! fr.vinnary fir--mn nr.. I lWs to .!. wiMi Mr. J-'.NfII tomorrow. Tho'U'h thf j.rfs-i-2r-r.t's final pni'H'- 1! for a trik0 t-' tf If-rnr.t wa. a-11r'---s i flirrt y to th'-.na. it ur.;l-r.stooi thf-y would withhold tl.'ir fl n 1 1 r'-ft'Or." to it until l"r. lay, w.yn of!'. of th four bro-.hf rhoo !i of train -rvi'e mp'oyf-?, th w!t."hmin an 1 telefrapher. will ho! I joint conferences with th'- shop rraft. Warrtn S. .Sinn", rh';-f of PiivficTü, has called th brotherhood . poksmen in, Mr. Jfwfll ua-r. assured, and the entire t'.ifhTir. will consider the policy to be adopted.
CH IX AT OWN SEES SECOND SHOOTING IN AS MANY DAYS (Continued from Pa One) die- riri crazlly and fell to !t t'.i& with a bullet In its head. To r.?ht and left men dropped six In addition to the felld around the cr rner. The crowd drex back for a morr.en. It was enough for the car to c!jh through nn2 away. Into Third f.v., it turned. Ih:r.d j p-eJ evral mr1 lutomoMI. Among the pursuers wer four defectives who had rm seated in a ear t feorM ivt-., and Second t. when they heard the shots. Through the trafTlc. in and out of evateil pillars, dashed the machines. Finally the gunmn' car flipped away, but not before one Selective L- a!d to hav taken Its number. Meanwhile anotherd blu ar. with five occupant, was picked up by detfctivf-F. who had received the general alarm from headquarU r. It was not the car they were af:r. but in It was found a black Jack.
WORKS BODY TALKS IMPROVEMENTS FOR PUBLIC HIGHWAYS
Action on Proposed Work Taken at Meet Remonftrators Fight Paving. Several proprsed impro .nients alrody put under way were pro-trr-.Ml a step furrhf-r toward acconiplishmeni and other new oneä contemplated by petitions, tool: up the greater pir: of the business s.on, Tueday, of the board of public work.". Hid.s were received for pavement of Dayton and Milton t.v. extending from Miami st. to Mumford ct., and tor a tub-trunk sewer at liroadway and Dalo ts. Grade, curb and walk improvemnt.s (n an extensive scale were fought by tiie C'olpaert Itcalty Co., for their now Itiver Park addition. Petitions filed v:th the buard pru-v;-Ie for thii character of work on l.xh, ir.lh. 11th and 13th &U., from Mi.shawaka av. to tho (Jrand Trunk railroad r.i;iit-of-vay, and on Has:-in-.-. and Wall pt.s , froiii th; aih-y borweea CUT-rd ct. and lL'th s.. A pv-;i;ion v.is also fibl for the pavenir.t of Kendall r.r. b' Lwcen lnfjana av. and Calvert st. IU-solutioni v. i'i o ordered. Iilo llcmontraiuv. A lenrthy remonstrance was prc-fv-.ted at the meeting dt-alint with t!:- recent proposal to pavo HarriFors av., from Ur.coln way W. to Cal.fornia av. A heirins will be lie'd Aug. oO at winch In erected pt p' nty owners will he g:en an opportunity to offer objections. A 1-xat minute petition seeking th chTnir. of the type of pavement came to th T'Ublic works body's attT.tion. The pavement In question L- :ha.t proposed fr N'orth Shore dr:e, from Michigan st. to Jafav:t blvd. Fr'"m the original order for Mexican a5-phalt:c concrete igTl-
N'FAV YORK. Au. 8. (Hy A. P.) Two Chines were arrested today,! eharfrd with murder in connection with the f hooting of KoIow, head of the H!p S!n?r ton?. !n Chinatown last n!?ht. Another Chinnman was detained an a material witness. The police aid that three w!tne.-se had identified one of the two suspect Toni Yev as one of the gunmen, savin? that they had seen him Are thre. jhot at Ko Ixw. Two pretty youn? white women also were quizzed and told their stories of a dinner with Ko Low and Charlio Kin?, another oriental, In the Cafe Del Monlco just before they went down the narrow hallway at whc?e end marking plstola were waiting for the ton? chieftain. Veteran policemen of the district kept cautious .watch on th groups that scanned the bulletin board before the ton? headquarters today fearful of an outbreak of the ton? war that has been absent for ten years from the new Chinatown, but which one left rows of dead alons the curb. But "There will be no tong." said Charlie Kinjr, secretary of the tong, a:, he fat, dre.ed In college campus style at his desk t tong headqi arters. "That's old Chinatown. Ko Low had some persona, enemy. This U not the work of the tongs."
POINCARE PLAN IS SUBJECTED TO OPPOSITION
Great Britain and Italy Object to Financial Control Over Germany. (Continued from Page One) in view of the guarantees lately impeded by the committee on guaranee after Its visits to Berlin.
Ilupture fossiblo PARI. Aug. 8. (By A. P.) Prime Minister Lloyd-George tonight epressed the opinion that a rupture In the entente was probable if not inevitable accordin? to some of the French newspaper corres-
pondents attending the allied cors 1
ference in London, one of whom Is "Pertinax." political editor of the Ccho de Paris.
ers of the petition
for the use
of err.uliitted aphaltic concrete. Tho reti'ion was referred to the engineer for rheckln?. th" contract for the p.. v.r.? to t awarded Wednesday
MURDEK CHARGED IX "DYNAMITE" SLAYING l LI ..IVAN. I;:d., Aug. S (By A. P. Kimer Hale. 3.".. f th: city. formally chars-vd todiy Kh the m;;r!r of John Cverliart. ::ö years old. who was killed Sunday whe . 1 charo of dynamite, whi'-h was placed unu-T th, front .---at of his u:tomob.l-e, exploded. The charge was preferred hy Prosecuting Attorney Ne rval Herri, v. ho f:!ed an affidavit with th justice of peare. Hale has bm lield in the county jail here since the death of I'verhart. It was R.iil by witnese that when Everhart attempted to htart the automobile th charge cf dynamite exploded. Th ;ctim of the accident was buried this nfteruon.
CABLES CRIPPLED BY IRISH SEIZURE L.TON. A-:-: (By t. P.) '"able c r.imur.irat: or. between the Pr..tM States and Great Britain. France, Germany. Ireland and northern Kurope wi tidly crippled to lay when Ir.sh rebels occupied the Wv,:ern I'm or. cable .ttt:m at Val-
ert.i. Ireland. nly thrte estem; I'r.icn c abl- wro working out of j I'-rr.ir.c Erg. j The carles of th Commfre:a! Ca- i ble Co. were f.'.ll out of r?T.':v,;on i
e . z u r by Irish: nrany's "at.on at j
Iverry. Irt land. '
Citv Briefs Pinal arrangements for the annual picnic of the Auten W. R. C. Xo. 14, to be held at Hudson lake on Aug. 16, were made last night at the rfgular session of the organization in the Old Court House. Thirtyfive members attended the meeting AItslus James. 110, V. Foote st., enlisted in the navy yesterday and will leave for the recruit depot at Norfolk Vo., thia morning. Mrs. A. H. Hunter anil hon, Arthur Pershing Hunter, left the St. Joseph hospital Monday for their home at M? Cushing st. Albert Balder, of Watkcrton, m!io was injured Monday whlde at work for the Christman Construction Co.. returned to bis home yesterday. IrfH-al Kdict Mero notified Ttws(Iay night to he on the lookout for a Ford H'dan, licence No. 1T.383D which was Molen from M. Salla-was.-er at Michigan City. Tnd. Howard FMer. nf 1-akevllle, Ind., ho was crushed between two Pord trii'"k. five days ago, was brought to th" Lpworth hospital yesterday. He suffered a broken leg and serious internal injuries, and his condition is critical. lVank Mo. Columbia City, was arrested Tuesday afternoon at the corner of Michigan st. and Jefferson blvd . charged with driving his automobile with an imrroper licn.se. He was released from custody after furnishing a bond for his appearance in court today. Paul I., smith. 21.1 I-l Paris ft., was arretted at 11:35 o'clock Tuesday night by Motorcycle Orficer Carl Hamilton charged with exceeding the speed limit. He was released upon hla own recognizance at the station and is to appear in court t c 1i v.
to Uy
trintta: ni'nxn R1:LLI:VILLE. HI.. Aug. ? (By I N. S Two tre: en the Illinois Central railroad at Church station, near here, were damaged rv f.re early today, the ori;!n of
"JUST MY LUCK r
By Juanita Hamel
11
mm
; .....
1 crn
1 .
5 j-r- :m
4 .'t'.7 - r '7. Ii
5
1
BRITISH MERCHANT MARINE DECREASES;
AMERICA'S GAINST
Orher Couttrie. . .
Toul br-sj.
World's ti:a! I .- !
it is : n t r t 5 '. r.
sties p new-
car there ha 5
growing Ftrcr.sth
4,
t 4.112.'--3
A
1 4.,-.n"0
i.
that
i merchant
rr.arir..''.
to rr that f t a - during th" past i c r a s t e a 1 i 1 y in the German and f.cures ir.di-
r ; r . ' ; s ft.
c j . ' ' cate that w ithin a few months GerL. loniiage Increased bv!manys mercantile trength will b
More Tlian 10.000,000
Tors Since 1914.
in:
jrn war. Lur;r.g th" last months the German tennis-.
least half of whit it was
During th" 1.
or
tw e .v has in-
" tons, the
nv iaid y. nruRcii
LONDON. Aug. g. (By I. N. S.) the s,-rcr arc,t ;r.-::1c
arg-
Ac.a
A;r I ; . - o c. T s i . r ? ii
J!.'-v". Or." a dwellinr 1 a v. d a v T-.V--Q e , , V. -
h Ir : T.t Co., i:i4 N- . i :.: . s I:v..-rn-.T.t C-, HI' . .. l-o .-m-r Co., 21X5 v . r::.ir.v-r. p. ?ixth t.. rh--k. Iii". N. rt .
Johr.
Hat
ft.
y frame "5 Clev-
f ea
I" V A
vreat Brifiin's mercantile
gea power !s diminishing. This is shown by the latest statistics on world tonr.ago issued by Lloyd's. In 1M4 approximately 44 H percent of the world's sea-going steam tonnage was under the British fiag.
but today only ZZ ptrcer.t of this j tonnage Is British. J Britain's chmces of recouping herj
position are slim. British shipyard?
are reported empty of work and it : 1
is predicted that before the. end of!
cleaned by 1.121."
est increase .hown Vv ariv nation.!
1
.iv.r l.l .... .
d-rllit? l'n:ri a v..
P.r.A Mike
. o v.
a growth cf
y e . : 0 t-o
Mi ig pr.i:nr
the Iutch merchant mann Building I-arccr Lloyd's 5tar!?ti:s Fho'.v thit
t e n d e n c v i r. s h i
T I
"i to 1 "
I.
bu.ldmg r.r.w
larcer
s ; n c e
found that s can be mere than th- se o
it
lari:"
na s
s tor j been i
ecmonucady o; small tonnage.
rat"
: e
Interesting s ! d e '. ; g h I
a r tro
power o: the world 5 i.eet?
I ty statistics regarding
wer of the worh
perse nt of th" total
h o w n
motive ' In 1911; tonnage
the vear approximately SO percent of "aa 7rf'd b' ' l'" T" British shipyard workers wall be idle. I n l' ; percentage ha, . ropr- . The sea.erlnr tonnage of the'1" 4' V'rctnt. Oll an 1 intern,.:
n - - ü
T. r.-::. 4 : N L :
j P. P. V. :t.j 14-? Lin-'-:n v ;i
Mr. i . .v'--;r av. to 1 ','.". I.:-.".-
J. W G!7-s-.-.k. to :cr. Wid :r t. c. v. . ;;: " l
j t o Michawak i.
Mrs. r,r.-r.-' .-r'- - :ut s'. to 1 1 T '.:; ; .-j r r''. : rv.a ' . , ; r i o 4M P. ;'i
w 1 y
:m! av
to
1 1 ,-. i
urg. :drita . n v. a y ' : -:. 2 It :r !-'.! st.
wv TI
sxX
II 1
11 A Jlir
'7
The
United
more than
1514.
of the
Matei haj increased by '
lOOinn tons since i 11 " "- - '
Increase since that date arei;i:n- , 5ea5' "l 1
, . . . , e e rrn . l'e f!-.sH5 HOW navt" U..S üiv.i.r also noted by Japan, 1. 6S...0H0 tons ! -.. France. 1.3S5.000 tons; Italy. 1.172.- J"' l1 l r urr 000 tons; ard Holland 1 .1 4 2.00 0 . the T'n but in 1 P 2 2 the percentage had inof y ' . , . I creased to 22. ,14. Coal burnt-! s w ere
" V .VV- . . . S.r6 rercent cf the total in IM 4.
v-ompieio hiaiisiics Fnowint uif
tonnage in 1914 and in 1 922, at the end of the fiscal year in June, are as follows: Difference June, ltC2 between Country 1JC2 and 1014 Tons gross Tons gr b'üited Kingdoai.. i:,O.V,N.t UO.ooO HritUh Dominions. 2.-Jm1.i TtM.(VMi United States 12.;S.oi 10."o.h
Nil
" percent
but in 1022 were but 7r'.tll.
STATISTICS
.ustria-Hungary. . Denmark France Oerm-iny tlrre
HoKand Italy ... Japan Norway
l4d.OAO C.:k.s.ooo 1.7n,..'0 2.ibi.ooo 2.tuwt oo ."..li'i.ooo 2..'k,.7xi
1 TC.OOO l.:iv"..Mo) S. sir. .oi to 10?.INV 1.142.IHH) 1.172.OO0 1Äl.ooO
414. 000
Spain l.lS7,oo
BUILDING PintMITS. One-gtiry frame dwellings; Securities Investment Co. 1810 Elwood av . Si. 500. Swuritif.s Investment Co.. 1 K 1 4 B'.wocd av.. $2.000. Securities Investment Co.. 12 Pi N. College t-t.. $2,0 00.
'4M unties Investment Co.. 114. ..
4.0x) iT.-noid sr.. $2.:,
oo.
i
i 1
i j cigarettes
i 3 v. r s. ; . .i
They are GOOD!
Bay this Cigarette end Sere Money
ON the shimmering sands where the waves roll not to swim and suddenly is caught in a downpour invitingly, many things may happen some of rain? Her gay sunshade must do duty as an fraught with danger, others filled with fun. umbrella or her wrmdrous costume designed on the But could there arise a more tragicomic situation principle of "Yes, my daughter, go down to swim, than that which confronts her who comes to stroll but don't go near the water," will get all wet!
Development of Helium Gas Is Story of Romance In Science
Government Maintains Three
AT nniiFietnrinrr
of Substance.
w h ; c h
Relieved to have ben ln-
Wi:erv:;: . County yesterday.
KLAX JURY PM;L TO IIKQITKE TWO WKFKS LOS ANV,i:i.i:s. Aug. S. (By 1. N. ) I: wa estimated today that It may re4u:r two weks to s.ure a Jury to try th" 3 7 men charged wdth rartlc:?a:in in the Inclewood mob violence, m cf whom artf members of tho Ku Klu Klan. But two of the initial panel of 12 hid f: 'n examined and rejected -i.en court convened today.
cendiary. One of the trestles was so badly damaged that travel over i: w .14 stepped. P re apparatus from this city and Past St. Louii wa sent to th -ene. Sheriff Martin Schnipper of this city is making in inve.!gation in the belief the blaze was et from ier.eath the trestle.
rrrvitost: riuirT rius V." AS 1 TIN TON, Aug. S (By I. r". B ) W.ll:au-n B. Steward. es!4tnt eecretary to the senate f.r.ar.e cemmittee, died her today cf heart failure. Steward connecfd v. :th senate comrnttts for the last 2- years and wls an Intimate of the lte S-.n. Pe-.ro. H! former hont wij in jLL6xisx, Pv,
i WOHKM.W INJUIUII. I Cuest Grote, 52 years old. cf Nlles. iMi.h.. who i-s fmpKij-d at the I Trench Papr Mills, of that city, wes !.-r:-u-ly injured yesterday nt r.ron
h. : 00-pound roll of paper fell on his h-ad. He wtla Immediately rushed to th Brworth hospital, whsre he reeived medical attention.
TTLVIX KILLS CTOLD. MTJNCIE. Aug. 8. (By A. P.) Lillian Ewinfr. year oW, waj killed tonight rhen she was truc)c by a Pig Four pawer.ger train at a crcpring here. MrB. 'JeMe Ewlr.y, mother of the child, who sent hron va txraad, witnessed the accident.
By H. K. Itl.YNOLDS. Interuatlorvil Ncnvs Sericc Staff Corro o tu 1 on t WASHINGTON. Aug. S. The
story of the development cf helium i gas, which, because of its non-In-' flammability, is eagerly fought for j the operation of gigantic military ; dirigibles, i. one of the romances j of science, according to officials orj the Unjted Statea Bureau of Mines, j Helium, which exists 'n the air we breathe in the proportion of onej part by volume to 1S5;:.0. is one' of the best examples of x discovery' in pure science that has wide com- ; mercial application. j In 1S6S n eclipse of the sun wa.! visible in India. Several cientifie j men who were making oberva tiens of the eclip.se turned a spec-1 troscope for the first time on the; ?olar chromosphere that part of! the atmosphere of the ?un which i
merges into the coma. A bright yellow lino was observed and was thought at flm to be due to sodium. Line Found to Vary Jansen showed, h wever, thAt
this line was not Just the same as) either the PI or D2 lire of podium, i although it was extremely cloc to j these lines. Hence he suggested ; that the new line have the de.'igna-! tion D3 . Frankland and Lokyer I decided that 7)3 was due to an ele-j ment In the un not previously dis- ' covered on the earth and suggested!
for it the name of "Helium" from j the Greek word helio. meaning th j sun. j For several years nothlnsr more i was don In conetlon with this element. In 1594 Sir William Bam-1 ay. in connection with Lord ' Kayleigh. made his memorable discovery of argon in the atmosphere After this discovery Rom say looked for other sources of the element He learned that Dr. W. F. Hillebrand, of the United States Geo. j logical Survey, had obtained an !n ' ert gas from certain uranium minerals, which gs-s he had decided : was nitrogen. Ramsay bel!vt 1 j part of it might be argon. He ob- , tained from Hil'ebrand for experimental purposes a sample of th mineral cleveite. one of the uranium mlrerals. and. after fxtrei!n ga-s from the mineral and puri-, fylng it. he ran it into a spectrum tube. The line obtained, however, were different from thof of argon. Among them was the bright yellow line noted by Jansen. Thus wa. terrestrial helium di?cDvered. Hfllum Takt ii from Air Dr. K. P. Moore, chief chemist cf the Bureau of Mines, says that from sumple. of air taken at an altitude of several miles the proportion of helium h proved to be about the same as at lowfc levels one part by volume to 115.000. At extremely high altitudes, such a 100 miles or more the proport.cn may be greatly Ir.ereaied. Dr. Moore sayj. , Before the World War the Germar.. had developed a type of dirigible called Zeppelin after Count Zeppelin its Inventor. The French and British had on dirigible? at the beginning of the war. but later hastened to repair their dcdidett-y. From experience gained in the defense of London it was recognized that the dirigible w.j vulnerable against a well-organizea attack. The German, too. recognized this and Invariably made attack in England at night, operating from a high altitude In order to mimmlze attack.' by alrplape, as a single incendiary' bullet fired Into a dlrigiM wruii quickly bring the ship down, a mas of fimes. Ths Inflammability of the hydro-j
ite-n contained In the ship was the one weak po int in this method of attack. The remedy for this situation vas to he found in a non-in-flimmihlo rrrij. litrht enough to replice hydrogen at a lifting force. Helium the only pi. known to have thee qualities. When the United States entered the war helium for . se in dirigibles was disouel among Bureau of Min s otlicials. and the matter wn.s presented to the wn.r rind navy departments. Thrt nir service approved the proposition, and allotments of money were made from the army and navy appropriations to corry it forward. Three experimental plants were constructed in Texis under the direction of the Bureau of Mines two at Fort Worth and one at Petrolla. Plants at Fort Worth One ei the plants t Fort Worth v.a.- completed in October. 1920 ard was operated during part of lf'21. It produced v about 2.00.000 cubic feet of helium, which makes available at the present time a total of about 2,400.000 cubic feet of helium over r0 per cent in purity. Most of the gas is graded around 95 per cent. Two helium purifb'.ation plants have been constructed by the army. r.e of these i.s at Langley field. Virginia. The other unit has been installed on two railroad cars mo it can be moved about as needed. Complete niulpmtnt for conducting research at low temperature the Ciyogenic Laboratory of the Burem of Mines is located at Washington. Helium cm probably be reduced in this plant for ten cents a foot, but of!; i'.s think this cost can be redrced to three or two cents a foot.
Poet IIS I i - mi ii r
HAKRY P. ROBERTS. The body of Harry P. Roberts, of Kendallville, Ind., who died in Fort Wayne. Ind., yesterday following an operation, was received at the Whiteman and Day Undertaking parlors last nisrht and will be held there pending the announcement of funeral arrangements. Mr. Roberts, who was 32 years of age at the time of hl.s death, is survived by his wife, Katherine, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Roberts, four brothers and five sisters, all of Kendallville.
The efficiency of my merit is to know that my merit is not sufficient.
TACK ON $25. Raising, of tuition at Notre Dame from $130 to $175 is the only change in the student expense account as listed in the university catalog for the coming term.
OLM
i ,21
rm EATER
-TON IT E7:30 and 9:15 That Dizzy Sea Going COMEDY
Hi Mud u
Bright and Snappy
1 1 I ! . 1
1 i,
I':,!
I
I! i'ljj r'li 4 'll'l
III' i i l; pi I .tj! $1 I'M
Don't Have Your Vacation
Turn to Aggravation Breaking your only pair of glasses will mar your pleasure and rob you of your vacation. Take a duplicate pair of glasses with you.
I!,! I'll
ii1!
ii'il :!
ft'i II i" . I!'.
! ' !
!;'
212 South Michigan Street Blackstone Theater Bldg. Rogers Stores in Indiana, Ohio and Illinois
Iii
Special! Summer Sale 1847 Roger Brothers Silver Ware' Big line of Knives, Forks, Spoons and special serving pieces at Extremely Lowered Prices You are invited to examine this silver and take advantage of the savings offered. Sale Starts Wednesday Morning Jewelry Store
The August Blanket Sale 10 Discount Throughout the Stock Pure Wool Blanket 66x80 block pattenrs in blue, pink, grey and tan Regular $7.50, Sale Price $6.75 Melbourne Blankets All wool all colors 66x80 block patterns Regular $8.45, Sale Price $7.60 Scotch Plaid Blankets Wonderful quality pure wool size 66x80 several colors Regular $1 0.00, Sale Price $9.00 St. Mary's Blankets Fine and fluffy extra large 70x80 several colors Regular $12, Sale Price $10.80
Separate Pieces Of Fibre Furniture At 20 DISCOUNT During Our August Furniture Sale
Porch Chair Was $4.95 Now $3.60 Rocker or Chair Was $9.50 Now $7.60
Table Was $5.95 Now $4.76 Book Rack Was $7.25 Now $5.80 Sewing Basket Was $7.50 Now $6.00
30 in. Fernerv Was $10.50 Now $8.40 Stand and Bird Cage Was $1 5.75-Now 512.60
The August Sale Of Furs 15 Discount for Cash or V4 Down and Balance in 90 Days Stone Marten Chokers Cash $42.50 Credit $50.00 Sable Squirrel Chokers Cash $14.88 Credit $17.50 Pointed Fox Scarfs Cash $42.50 Credit $50.00 Black Lynx Scarfs Cash $38.25 Credit $45.00 Hudson Seal Capes Cash $ 1 27.50 Credit $ 1 50.00 Brown Coney Capes Cash $12.75 Credit $15.00 Mink Stoles Cash $106.25 Credit $125.00 Kolinsky Stoles Cash $170.00 Credit $200.00
Round Thread Art Linens Very Specially Priced 18 inch width 65c a yard 20 inch width 70c a yard Prices considerably lower than today's quotations. White Art Linen 36 inch, in an extra good quality. Well worth $1.50 a yard. Limited quantity at $1.00 a Yard Aero Plane Linen 38 inches wide. Natural color. Excellent grade 59c a Yard Linen Department
Store Opena ÜJ JfJDT fli Saturday ' Closes 5:30 (S Tül 9:30 ;
i
