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Star's Lessons Demonstrated At Auto Show _H. Advances Made in Industry Emphasized as 20th An? nual Exhibition Opens at " Palace and Armory Here i General Bullard Speaks ?Urges Preparedness in De? velopment of Transporta? tion and U. S. Highways ? ?America's automobile builders, their ??Far work done, showed yesterday how t*fh?y had embodied the lessons learned "daring the struggle in the veh.cles ?af peace, when the twentieth National automobile Show, the largest in the ^orld, threw open its doors. <?. Thousands of men and women, many If whom had depended for their lives \j% automobiles in overseas service, tame to examine and select them for lome or commercial use. Those look tig for passenger cars went to the S rand Central Palace, where four joors were ailed with cars, bodies and ?accessories- Motor trucks were to be jjeen at the 8th Coast . Artillery ___r__.ory, Kingsbridge Road and Jerome S venue, the Bronx, on an unobstructed oor of 180,000 square feet. ? A year ago, the automobile dealers fSf New York City had an exhibit, but ?the present show is the first of a ?nation-wide scope since the armistice. 3t is the first chance for the public itc find out in a large way how the Bf_r has affected the third most im ortant industry of the country, in the ??construction period. Highway Transport Conference B A highway transport conference, -which will continue throughout the freak of the show, began yesterday at ?he armory which houses the commer rial vehicle section. Lieutenant Gen? eral Robert L. Bullard, commanding; general of the Eastern Department, U. S. A., and Colonel Francia H. Pope, rep? resenting Major General Shanks, spoke at the formal opening last night. General Bullard took ?s nia topic, "Commercial Development of Motor Transportation with Preparedness in View." He said that industrial effi? ciency, like military efficiency, was use les? unless a high degree of mobility was provided. He declared that mili? tary preparedness should be kept in mind in devolopment of commercial motor transportation and national highways. Eighty-four individual car manufac? turers had exhibits at the Palace, while mor? than 300 commercial cars, ranging from a giant fifteen-ton truck to a small light delivery wagon, and devices for quick changing a passenger car Into a commercial car, were drawn up in long ranks on the Bronx armory floor. Cars to Match Purses Every man's purse was catered to in the shiny models presented; and the little spick and span two-seater at $715 drew quite as much attention as the dignified touring car at $11,000. According to ah expert the cars' did not exhibit tendencies toward refine? ments as in former years, but showed the war influence plainly in the im? provement in efficiency and endurance. What changes were made were not im? mediately visible, but were the kind that v/ould prove themselves on every mile the car was driven. Streamlines were more pronounced and more gen? erally used, and the cars without ex? ception got away from frills and fads, to a higher standard than ever before. Beginning to-morrow and continu? ing through next Saturday the passen? ger car and motor truck shows will be open daily from 10:30 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. Nursery Rhyme on H. C. of L. Illinois Women Adopt Novel Slogan to Halt Soaring Prices CHICAGO, Jan. 3.?The Women's Fair Price Commission for Illinois will have an official slogan to impress conservation on the 70,000 club women who are assisting in the campaign against the high cost of living. The slogan, Mrs. Maude A. Turley, secre? tary of the committee, announced to? day, reads: To market, to market, To buy a fat pig. Home again, home again; Prices too'big. Murder of Brown Now Held to Have Been Robier'sWork Physicians Attack Theory Millionaire Was Killed in Car; $15,800 in Cash and Securities Are Missing * Special Correspondence MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich., Jan. 8.? While attention has been focused on thosa who had an obvious connection with ' the social life of J. Stanley Brown, the wealthy young man found murdered in his automobile on a lonely highway three miles from Mount Clemens, to-day's developments gave a new viewpoint to the puzzle and led investigators to center their attention upon an entirely new solu? tion of the enigma. That Brown was not killed at the wheel of his car, as was indicated by the position of the body when found, is the declaration of several physi? cians upon being told of the position in which it rested. The body was tipped to the right, the right arm hanging down at the side and the left through the spokes of the steering wheel, apparently indicating that it had slipped from the wheel rim when death came. The physicians say that wounds such as Brown received in the head almost without exception cause an in? stant contraction of the muscles, es? pecially the hands, and that had Brown been driving or grasping the wheel the hand or hands that held it would be clinched so tightly that it would have been exceedingly difficult to unclasp them. In case Brown met his death other than at the wheel the entire matter is placed upon a new. basis that in? cludes the possibility of his being shot in Mount Clemens, and driven to the lonely spot where car and body were found. VThe theory that Brown was killed by some jealous person fast is being relegated to official pigeon-holes in favor of a theory that robbery was the motive. It has been definitely ascertained that Brown, on November 28, drew from the Detroit^Trust Com nanv $12,000 in stocks and bonds and $3,800 in cash. Brown explained to friends at the time that he wanted to raise f 10,000 with which he planned to purchase the Bales rights for the State of Florida for a gambling ma? chine. Mrs. Blake Held Insane Trial on Charge of Drowning Son Is Unlikely ATLANTIC CITY, Jan. 8.?Testi? mony given here to-day before Judge Robert H. Ingersoll by two physicians of the country insane asylum, where Mrs. Esther Miller Blake is now con? fined, indicated that the woman never would be placed on trial on a charge of throwing her five-year-old son, Buddy, into the sea from Ventnor pier. Dr. Clarence Oarrabrant and Dr. James Mason testified that the woman was a victim of dementia prsecox, and in their judgment might never re? cover. James M. Blake, her husband, agreed with Judge ingersoll that she should be confined in some institu? tion. It is probable that she will be confined in the New Jersey Asylum at Trenton. ? i.. Held as Sugar Profiteers Four Cleveland Grocers Bound Over to Grand Jury CLEVELAND, Jan. 3.?Four Cleve? land grocers, arrested to-day on Fed? eral warrants charging profiteering in sugar, were bound. over to the Fed? eral Grand Jury by United States Com? missioner Marlatt. The technical charge against them is violation of the Food Control act. The grocers are accused of charging from 18 to 21 cents a pound for beet sugar. The government has fixed 14% cents as the fair price. Prnicipals for Sixth Annual Passion Play Are Selected Principals for two casts for the sixth season of the passion play, "Veronica's VSeil,' at St. Joseph's Auditorium, West Hoboken, have been selected, and re? hearsals are being held twice a week. The first performance thia year will be February 22. A sixteen-foot cross has been erected on the tower of the Passion Play Church, which will be illuminated every evening while the play is in progress to serve as a guide post. James McCreery & Co. 5th Avenue 35th Street Second Floor January Clearance Sale of Men's & Young Men's Winter Suits You should have seen the way our customers went for these suits on Friday and Saturday ( REDUCED TO THREE PRICES 39 .75 47 .50 5750 Reduced Reduced Reduced from from from $45, $48 & $50 $55 & $60 $65, $70 & $75 ??S Rarely do suits like these get into a clearance sale because they might easily he car? ried over to next season and fetch even more than this year's prices But that's not our way of playing the game. We price our clothes low throughout the ?season ?and we get our price. But when clearance time ?arrives we disregard both former price and former profit and put a reduc? tion on our stock that simply sweeps it away. It is always absurd to express a prophecy with finality, but we honestly believe that the time will never again come when suits tailored as these are will sell at such low prices as we've reduced them to. You can't imagine what bargains are awaiting you until you come and see them. ? ma *> Extra Salesmen, Tailors & Fitters No C. O. D/s, No Approvals, No Returns With Pride and Pleasure We Announce the Opening of Our New I Fifth Avenue Millinery Shop Together With an Exposition of Spring Modes A beautifully appointed, enlarged Millinery Shop will be for? mally opened tomorrow morning on the third floor of our Fifth Avenue Building. It Consists of A Salon for Imported Model and A Section for Street, Sport and Pattern Hats. Afternoon Hats. A Section for Mourning Millinery. A Section for Girls* Millinery. Also Flowers, Feathers and Untrimmed Hats. Elevators in Our Fifth Avenue Arcade or Main Building. ?Ti""' "< .. -.- i'ii _iipM ?! j.,. Our Opening Offer Exclusive New Millinery At Exactly Cost As an opening offer we have arranged in our new Millinery Shop an ensemble of fashionable new Hats suitable for immediate wear, marked at exactly the amount we paid for them. In the Salon 150 distinctive models, exact copies of latest Imported chapeaux.. 20.00 , Luxury Tax 50c. 100 beautifully embroidered Sport Hats in suit or pastel shades.. 12.50 In the American Section 300 modish Hats of Liser? or Italian Piping Straw combined with Satin. Black, Brown and Navy Blue. 6.00 600 Hats of Hair Cloth?Draped Turbans, roll effects and turn-back models. Various colors. 4..50 ssfc^ 300 Sport Hats of Heavy Faille Ribbon in solid colors or two- yfr ?va tone effects. 8.50 //$ a\y\ Third Floor, Fifth Avenue Building. ?llf e MW Street