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RICHMOND, VA., SUNDAY, JANUARY IS, 1920 70TH YEAR. PRICE, SEVEN CENTS NVENTOR OF TANK PRAISES AMERICA aencral Swinton, Awarded $5,000 and Citation Recently, Speaks of Tour in United States. lUDED IN LOAN CAMPAIGNS risit to This Country, British Officer Declares, Was Reve lation to Him. BV FOItBKS W. FAIRBA1HX. LONDON, Jan. 17.?Signal honor ha* "inn renderod by the British govern ment to Major-General K. D. Kwlnton a result of the recent investigation 'nto the respons.bility for the Invcn ^16n of the tank, a war weapon which, '.ccordlng to many authorities, did more to uiidcrmlno German moraio ban a.ny other single factor. A purac of $5,000 and a citation of oralse were the reward given General Swinton by the royal comm.sslon which Rat ?.o determine the exact au thorship and Invention of tho landship. General Swintoh is exceptional, y well known In the United States. ?rbero he assisted the government in ihe Liberty loan drives in the apring v-nd summer of 1918. From February >o July, 1918, lie Btumped the country from coast to coast, telling tho tale of the tank to va-st. audiences In New York, .Chrcago, San Francisco, Detroit, Philadelphia and other principal AnMruan {clties. 'Ihc citation reads a*> follows: "The ollicer. acting outside the r.?op? of hit general duties, made an important contribution to the inven tion and adoption of the tank. This '.acjuaed. first, the conception in Oc tober, 1?H, of a machine-gun destroyer of the general character of tho tank; *ocond. the persistent, energetic ana suc?fe?atui advocacy from men onward oi tne value ana teaaioiilty oi tne cui of such an .nstrument of waxiare, and, tnud, tne specilio uehni Lioo in juuo, lJli?, of tne necessary <Jkaxacier>aiica of the weapon, tne tojuui tiuiia or its use and tne teste ??vhicn It must be required to satisfy. "We conceive mat tue terms of ret ?.r*ncc to ub do not contemplate tne i-oeoniineudaiions oi awards tor gen era* services such as those secondly mentioned aoove. out limit us to tnoue whivh contributed to the invention and rlaeign of the actual weapon of war tare in Question, and in respect of thcae latter services we recommend ~i.n award of $j,u00. ? But beyond th.a we desire expressly to recognito the atill greater vaiue of Uv&t part of Msjor-Gerieruj Sainton's work for Which a pecuniary reward io not ap propriate. ' Other Tank. Awards. Sir Wliiiam Trittou and Major Thoma*? \V nhon were gran ltd t/o.uuo lor their part .n the Invention of the lank. These two men actually built tne Instrument of war, acting .upon tne suggestions and ideas o: others, and were responsible for its appear ance on the battle fields or i- i jnce. Itecognition was a.ao given Winiton Churchill, IJrit.Mh Secretary of War, and nine others. In discuiainff tho r?"?rl him. ?teneral Hwlnton raciUed Rla ejtperl c nces in America. "I delighted In America, Its cities and its wonderful people," he eald. "1 was glad Indeed to give any itssist .vnce I could In the LRierty loan drives. My tour o: the United States wis a revelation to rne of the country and its people. I certainly want to visit Amtrlc-a. apaln. ."tt'onderfol Andirtcea " "Never have I had such wonderful .1 'jdlcnccs- In the Middlo West espc ? ially, which was popularly supposed to be exceedingly neutral. I found a g.-eaf response to the appeal of the allies. Chicago and its surrounding rities were wonderful In their recep tion <?'. allied emissaries. Typical of the receptions given me was that of Jpliet, 111., where I spoke In flic Ma sonic flail. Joliet, as I remember. Is ?I manufacturing town with a great Yoreign population, mostly from Cen tral Europe. Yet. I never saw such loyalty itnd pro-Americanism in all my life. The hall was draped with American flags and Union Jacks. When 1 entered I was so touched that I was hardly able to speak. I never tame nearer crying. I'll always re member Joliet and the hundreds of other cities I visited. 1 love America." only ioT-Ttons of cut DIAMONDS NOW IN WORLD J hia Is Kstimatr of Sffltlnflml Kxprrt, Who Says They Conld Be Parked in Clothe* ClMrt. CHICAGO. Jan. 17.?If all the dia monds mined in history and existing to day as cut ajid polished gems were gathered from tho ends of the earth, they would form a pile about as large a wagon load of coal dumped on the sidewalk. The pile would contain 46, ?jr.5.474 carats and the gems would weigh 10 1-2 tons. If the pile were in the form of a ~-\ne. it would have a base diameter of cljrht feet and a height of five feet. Keekonlng the diamonds at $300 a carat, it would have a value of $13, 006.642.200. It would contain 710 1-3 ?^rallons worth $5,539,023 a gallon: or 76 1-5 bushels, valued at $51,570,729 a bushel. All :he world's diamonds could l>e packed in a ordinary clothes closet or a kitchen pantry. This is the interesting speculation of a Chicago statistical expert. It is based on an approximation of the total output of rough diamonds in the world's entire history. India, it is es timated, has produced, all told. 50.000, 000 carats; Brazil, 15,000,000; South Africa, 170.571,000; Borneo, 1.000,000; F'.ritish Guiana, 50,000; Australia. 150, 000; China, 2.000; Siberia. 500; United States, 500. This is a total rough out put of 236,777,37-t carats or 55 3-5' tons avoirdupois. Only about f>0 per cent of rough dia monds are cut into gems and lose t.houl 60 per cent of their weight in being out and polished. Diamonds are practically indfBtructibln and the first diamond ever mined may possibly still he In existence; some princess or mil lionaire's wife or a waitress In a res taurant may he wearing the world's ?irst diamond or a fragment of it But ! the entimate allows for the loss of at toast 1,000.000 carats by flood, fire. 1 ihipwreck and other disasters. These reductions and losses leave the total of ?lit and polished diamonds at 46,355,474 carats. Tho estimate of $300 a carat is the very minimum price at which dia monds can be bought today. The pop ular demand for diamonds wa? never so great and they have become the gem of working people as well as the wealthy classes. They are worth three times as much now as before the war md at from ?300 to $1,000 a carat. So in view of modern prices, the val uation estimnte given may be consid ered cxtromely modest. PLANS WIRELESS SYSTEM ffritlflh Parliamentary Committee planned <? Consider Kiient of Imperial Program. LONDON, Jan. 17?A committee un ier the chairmanship of Sir Henry K'orman, member of Parliament, hrta >oen appointed to prepare a complete >lan of imperial wireless communlca " The points to bo considered are what ?leh power wireless stations the Brit ish empire should ultimately possess, the cost of each station, the probable imount of traffic and revenue, and the ?laclnB-of stations recommended in iuilr order of urgency. With Country Dry, What Use Is Money? {Hy Universal Scn1?f.| CHICAGO. Jan. 17.?"Nice homey ?nine hornfjr, l\?vc 'no?MT one. I)nn'( like tlilnKleii?hlc! Try n f-f-flmpf. 'Snl| came to me. Here's n nil* *hucy ten ahpot. Take a bite, olrt top." "Tut! tut!" exclaimed Traffic I'o lleeman 1'atrlck Donahue last Fri day. '?What'a the his Idea?" ??Keedln' my money to the borahes." the latter stated, with aa effort ut great precision. "Conn ry'n Koln' dry t'day. Cant unet, anj-way." He ?ni? hauled to the (looiegow. MARRYING DEAN TO RETIRE CANON SHEPPARD FAMOUS IN LONDON SOCIAL CIRCLES ? Proverbial Maying That AH the Wfd dliiffa at Whlrh He llin OtTlelated Have lleen Happy Oars. ' IJv Unlv?!TPal Srrrlce. I i IJDNDON, Jan. 17.?Canon Kdgar J Shcppard, chaplain to the Kins' I subdean of the Chapels Royal for I thirty-five years, is contemplating re j tlremcnt. ! Canon Shcppard, who Is In his aev ; enty-fifth yea-r, is a great favorite of | the King and Queen, to whose chll j dren he has lone been religious tutor. Hiti personality if bo charming that j he has smiled for many years under j the BObrirjuet of "the universal rnar ! rler," from the fact that very few : fashionable weddings take place at J which the subdean is not present to officiate. Only Happy Marriage*. i It is almost a proverbial saying that ! not one marriage by Canon Shuppard ? has proved unhappy. He conducts the i rites with an urbanity which con j tributes to the happiness of both I parties Tho subdean is so widely t liked that it was once averred that to be baptized, married or buried with out his assistance was next to impos sible. An engraving of the coronation of the present King and Queen, signed by every person of the many figuring in it, is hanging up in hie office at the Chapel Royal. St. James" Palace. The excellence of the choir at the j Chapel Iloy&l ia due largely to his I musical knowledge. Dr. Shcppard I once resorted to a novel method of composing his sermons, which, during th* war, were characterized by a dlg i nlfied lack of passion or panic. He ; often walked backward and forward in Hyde Park, near the Serpentine, for | hours at a stretch, Jotting down oc ' eas.onally a few notes. Ilottle of Sherry Opened The present Bishop of London came i to preach at the chapel not long after ; Dr. Shcppard was appointed subdean. i and the usual bottle of sherry from tho Buckingham Palace cellars?an old custom when an outsider preachcd ?waa opened. Dr. Ingram tasted the sherry, pulled a wry tace and pronounced it rank! The subdean, who had never troubled to taste the wine himself, discovered that the verger had been substituting for the priceless royal Madeira a bot tle of the cheapest sherry procurab'e. and at the sarrv? time had made a lit tle nent-egc for h'msrelf by selling the Queen's wfne. The subdean dismissed the man and took the opportunity of j ending the shcrry-hibblnt- practice, of which he entirely df^approved. n:ew plan of insurance FAVORS WORKERS IN BANKS When Kmployee S?w .1 T*er Cent of Salary. IVen Vork Company Adda Same Amount. I NEW YORK, Jan. 18.?An interna : tionai life insurance plan has been adopted by the Kmpire Trust Com t pany, which provides for the addition i ay the corporation of 5 per cent of an I employee's salary to a like saving by j himself. j The following illustration demon t strates how it works in the case of ! an employee, aged twenty, who desig nates sixty-five as the age of his rc j tirernent: ~ Salary $1,200 a. year or leas. .Monthly payment by employee. $5; | monthly payment by Empire Trust i Company, $5. Cash surrender values: I end of second year (employee having j jaid $120), $15S.47; end of firth year j (employee having paid $300), $517.65: [end of tenth year (employee having ? paid $600), $l,0a6.f>0; end of fifteenth ! year (employee having paid $300), $1, 5S4.75; end of twenty-sixth year (em ployee having paid $1,200), 52.113. 1-oan values are the same 3.3 above. At age 65. employee having paid in j <2,700, at his option receives $10,205 I i 1 a lump sum or a monthly income of i,$75.?7 for the remainder of his life (in | no event less than 120 months). toTjevelop island Australia P.naetn I ji \t Seeking to In - creaae Production of Phosphates In Paedfle Region. SYDNEY. AUSTRALIA. Jan. 17.? The lower houso of the Federal Par liament at Melbourne has adopted a bill providing for the future govern ment and development of Nauru, a formerly German phosphate island in the Pacific. The bill provides tnit phosphates of Nauru are to be dividci between Great Britain, Australia and New Zealand. Administration of the island Is to be vested In an Austral ian administrator and a board of three commissioners to be appointed by the three countries mentioned. Apart from Great Britain, Austra lia and New Zealand, phosphates from Nauru would not be supplied to any other cotnMsry, except by unanimous consent or5 the three commissioners. The bill was Intended as ratification of the peace treaty agreement re specting the island. IRISH WANT FREEDOM Member of Parliament Says No \r Scheme Can He Pound That ? Will Satisfy. LONDON, Jan. 17.?Kennedy Jones, member of Parliament, addressing his constituents the other night said he had recently visited Ireland and there was no doubt that many of the people there believed they could secure a complete, free and independent repub lic. Knowing Ireland and having studied the Sinn Fein movement. Its teach ings and its ram.fications and realiz ing its "overwhelming strength," he said ho did not believe it was within tho wit of man to devise any scheme, Bhort of an independent republic which would satisfy the majority of the population south and west of Dub lin . BRITISH SHIPBUILDING England'a Report Shows Illg IniTease In Construction of Merchant Vessel*. LONDON, Jan. 17.?Merchant ships building in the United Kingdom Sep tember 30 totaled 2,816,773 tons, an in creaso of 293,000 tons as compared with last Juno and 1.070.000 greater than a year ago. These figures have Just been announced by the govern ment. Tho output during the quar ter, however, shows a falling oil of 112,000 tons compared with tho pre vious three months. The total building abroad, 5,231.000 tons, a decrease of 262,000 from June figures, Is accounted for hero by a fall ing off In the United ?tatoa. WORLD AIR SERVICEj IS VAST ENTERPRISE I j Is Too Great for Private Capital; to Undertake to Handle. ! AUSTRALIA'S GREAT FEAT Flight From England to the Anti podes Considered as Magnifi- ? cent Achievement. : BY CI.AUDK GIUIIAMi; WIIITK. LONDON, Jan. 17.?The magnificence of the achievement of <the two youns Australians who have succeeded In i flying from Kn gland tr. North Aus- j tralia can only be fully realized by those who understand the innumer able dittlcultles which th^y hail to cn j counter. The flight is a veritable triumph of skillful organization, Indomitable grit . and money. 1 am sorry to intrude such a tnun* * danc factor into t>o romantic an | achievement, but in view of the future < 1 of aeronautics generally too great a j stress cannot be laid upon tho llnan- . cial aspect of the question. 1 flight .Mark* >?mv I'.rn. These were the three factors which resulted in so wonderful a victory, a victory that marks a new era in com mercial aircraft development, an era of which, as an empire. we may feci j vastly proud of being the plotters. ! It must not be imagined, however. I that now this one flight hac been ae } complished an aerial world service*1 ' will be instituted within a week or i two. Even the most optimistic of Ud j j know better than that. Before ever such a desirable consummation of our ' hopes can corne about we have got to ? ' almost eradicate?not merely sur | mount?the difficulties which Captain i and Lieutenant Ross Smith had to j contend with. And as I have pointed 1 out, it begins arid cads in money and i organization. There is no single firm, however i large, which could attempt such a i huge undertaking a? a world air spr . vice, even on the smallest scale. The . cost would be too great. For instance, there would have to j be airdromes in different parts of the I , world, and an extensive organization . i to insure safe landings. There would have to be elaborate | ! wireless telegraphic and telephonic i installations connecting the various ' airposts. the various signals and lights i I to insure safety during night flying, | ; and a hundred and one other con - , j sideratlons to take into account. Kent Mttle t'ndrri?tood. ; To read in cold print the number ? of miles these men have flown and [ the time in which they have covered ; the distance gives not the slightest i idea of the amazing nature of their uu 1 dertaking a storm or a sale. He'has no ' conception of what it means to fly I across &,000 miles of uninterrupted ; ocean. j In view of the immensity of the ; thing only tho respective governments | of the world could ever undertake schemes of such vast magnitude and. so far as we arc concerned, the BritiFh I government should not hesitate to realize the immense possibilities which j have been opened by this success. The government and the'nation gen , erally must rid themselves of their smug conservatism and realize that young men arc possessed of brains and are quite as well able to use them ' in the service of the empire as are ! their ciders. | The flight to Australia has been ? I splendid vindication of youth and, j whllet lack of imagination has been a national failing, and whilst those who have possessed imagination have on more than one occasion been con sidered "cranks." it Is not too late to ; realize that energy and vitality in brain as well as in body form a na ! tional asseA. | CONCESSION iV^GRANTED FOR LINE THROUGH AIR Lnrge Sum In Set Aside for tl?c De velopment of Aviation by Bngliohincn. RIO DR JANEIRO, Jan. 17.?There is a keen rivalry between airplane manu ! facture.rs of the United States. France, ] Great Britain and Italy for the privi j :ege of developing commercial avia tion in Brazil. All of them have had I representatives here for months cn j deavoring to interest the government ? in their projects or to obtain conces- | sions permitting them to operate a??rial freight and passenger lines. The British Handicy-Page Compsnv has obtained a government concession j to establish an air line for passen gers and cargo between the principal cities of Brazil, hut no British ma chines have yet arrived. It is said , that ?2,000.000 has been set aside to i develop air routes by this concern j along the entire coast from Pernam- : buco to Buenos Aires with stations at eight points on the way. It is stated that powerful machines of the four motor type capable of carrying a ton of freight and twenty-five pass'ng^rs will he used. The British company proposes to operate the lines until Brazilian companies are organized to take over the business and buy tne j airplanes. | One American company has two ex ! pert aviators and four machines here, 1 i hut it is not known that they have j : done anything other than to five eome ] i exhibition flights. Applic:$ion has j been made to the government for per ! mission to establish a limited pas senger service in the vicinity of this city. A representative of a large Ameri can financial Institution who recently investigated the possibilities of com mercial aviation in Brazil, said that this country did not at present offer a profitable market for American air piano manufacturers, buf he added: "The foreign manufacturer who re-, mains on the ground during the lean years and aids in the development will eventually receive financial reward, and what is more important, he will <>lace the nation he represents in a po sition of greatest Influence in South American aeronautics." PLAN ROME-TOKYO FLIGHT Italian Aviator* Kipeet to Cover Dis tance In Fourteen Days, With Many Stop*. TOYKO, Jan. 17.?Lieutenant Gen tille, pilot aviator of the Italian armv, who has arrived/ in Tokyo to make preparations for the Home-Tokyo flight, says the Jtalian aviators will make short * stops at the following places: Br'.ndlsi, Saloniki, Adalla, Aleppo, Bagdad, Basra. Karachi, Delhi, Calcutta, ? Rangoon. Bangkok. Ajnoy, Canton, Poocliow, Shanghai, Tslngtao, l'eking. Wiju, Seoul, Fusan and Osaka. The journey is cxpectcd to occupy fourteen days on account of the nu merous stops the aviators will make en route. At each halting place an officer and two soldiera of the Italian ' aviation service havA been stationed to ! make preparations for supplying the' machines with gasoline and to effect | repairs. Wan Mother's SI*ter-ln>Liiw. CHICAGO. Jan. 17.?A real rela tionship tangle was unraveled here when Judgo Barrett annulled the mar riage of Mrs. Lillian Weaver to Fred Weaver. Weaver was Lillian's mother's . second husband's brother, and by mar rying him Lillian became tho 'step mother of her mother's two nieces by marriage and her etepfathor'n sister in-law. Lillian was under ago at the time of her marriage. Turks Still Putting Armenians to Death | lily Universal Srrvivc.l .Inn. 17.?A SuKn pn*tor nuninl Kuiulrr, uhd mix in A rnicnln tliroiiiclioiii (lie uar. iiml Iiiin Just rc liirned In '/.uricli. confirms Ihr ittntr ineiit llmt IArmenian* lintr lirrn ituiftfttMTCt), mill nmrr *>*?!! nre liclns lulled n lid robln-il I?y de iiioliilty.ril Turkish troops, while S.'iM.dlKi liomelrv* orphan* nrc roam Inir thr country and rvlibliiK In order to live. Tht* pnitor <nu Inrue liniuH of lirlplc** mill foodle?? Armi'iilnii* lie 111 u driven nt tlio point of tlie bayo net Into desert* to die. ' BOLSHEVIST GOATS EAT, BUT REFUSE TO-PRODUCE Municipality tin* Merit AVbleb llna liunr on Strike and >'o I.oncer tilvej, Milk. I By I'nlvcrsa! Kcrvleo.] HAM IJUItG, J;m. 17.?A herd of goats., 100 strong, owned by the municipality <>f Kaf-sel. h.v- uom on strike. and has, yielded no milk whatevi r for many months. louring the war the town expcndc'l a lartre sum of money on the purchase of coats, with I object of add.itK to the failing tniik supply. Pastures, wore? acquired and a number ot' persons : were appointed to supervise and dc- ! velop goat culture. l-'rorn th-- first, however, the goats' proved obstinate. The milk they yielded was so Insignificant in quantity as not to warrant the upkeep of the farms. Finally an expert w.v summoned tn Inquire into the seorer of the failure, i ti his report, to the authorities he stated: "I cannot explain the milk sterility of your goats. The anlnia'.s have, a good appetite r.nd arc quite frisky. i .an only form the conclusion that they are inhab.ted by the souls of departed Hulshcvists. Get rid of them, that :s: my advice." The town of Kafsel rold its goati, I but for so small a sum that a eon-) Mderable deficit now exists tn the' municipal treasury. LONDON SUITS WILL! BE HIGH IS SPRING! " ? Increasing Cost of Material Sends Price Up to Twenty Guineas. CLOTH DISTRICT VERY RICH Bradford, Where Factories Are Located, Is Wealthiest Sec tion in British Empire. I Bv Unlversil Service. 1 r.KADFOUD. Jan. IT.?The London i (aslor prophesies that next flprinc ami .summer suits will ?ost twenty guinea* I S 1 Of.) liccausn of tho still increasing price of material. Bradford, whom the cloth comes from, retorts: "We have more money j per head of tho population than any : other citv in the British Isles." 1*. rail ford, with its 300:000 people, piy more income tax than its neighbor, i.e'eds, with nearly twice the number of people. There are no new poor here, but there are plenty of new rich. It Is commonly reported thai one cannot walk up the step? of the Bradford 12x chance when the House is nicotine | without rubbing* elbows with a po3t- : war millionaire. "We are simply sticky with money, j Sonic men don't know what they have made," said a merchant. District Ooim Money. Bradford i.- still on the crest of a wave of wonderful prosperity. Wool and tops merchants, yarn spinners, I cloth manufacturers and dyers?j through each statre in the trade mil-! lions have been made. Even the oper* ! atives, judged by ordinary middle-class j standards, are exceedingly well off.', (Continued on Sixth Page.) Wife Proves Devotion By Ending Her Life (n> I'nlverNnl Sforvli'f.] CHICAGO, Jan. 17.?The devotion of Mrs. Kllr.nliet It Stuknrt for her hushnml, Arthur Stuknrt, vnnnot lie furrcilrd. Stukart, returning home from work, found hlH ivifr, lirrMKril in hrr host clothing, drml on llic kili'hm Hour. (in<i mm i-kcmpIiik from ihr range. Hesldo flip Itoily the hu.shuiiil foiimi n 'note, whlrh rcnil: '?Dear Arthur?I have Inrn a drnK on jiiu a Inni; time. My Ill ness would, perhaps, prove fnlnl In a short llmr. nnd I ilo not Mlnh to I'misr yon morr trouble. You liavr been tl?r best husband In the world." FED FREE FOR YEAR BY FEIGNING HE WAS INSANE llohrmlnn Violinist IJrwIvM Hospital Stnir Into llellef lip Un*y>an scrou? Mnnlac. ! Hv Universal Service.! Vt IINN'A, .tan. 17.?Karl Krarninez, a Itohe.mian violinist, has- just been ill.- barged from the municipal luna tic asylum at Budapest, where for twi: 1 v months ho successfully feigned insanity to procurc free hoard and lodging. iMinnvr his stay there Kramincz de ceived the whole of the medical staff, v\ iio were convinced that In? was a dangerous maniac and placed him in a solitary roll. Thence he recently succeeded by scratching away a part of the wains'-J coling in making his way into the , general ward. There he read the new? that food \ and lodging were now to be. obtained1 in the town at more reasonable prices. ! The supposed maniac instantly ho- ' came a normal being, and when quos- i tioned by the house doctor and > warders he calmly confessed his ruse. ; Kramincz now plays at night in a restaurant orchestra, and at the con-! elusion of each performance an : asylum official deducts from his pay a I fixed amount toward repay.ng "his ; expenses while being a '?madman." ARE SEEKING WORK AT LIVING WAGE Teachers by Thousands Are Abandoning Professions for Better Pay. PUBLIC MUST BE AWAKENED Expert Says Public School Sys tem Must Be Entirely Reorganized. IIY .lOSKPHINK COUI.ISS PRESTON. WASHINGTON. Jan. It.?If there is to be a riomoeratization of Industry, there must, also he a de.mocratization of our public school system. Our first ureat job la to educate and nfouse public wntimcnt to an appre ciation of the situation as relate*! to the welfare of the children, the com munity, the State, and the nation, a? well ;ta the teachers. The people must be made to feel what every intelligent person knowr if h>? would ?top to think?that tha public schools are organized and tar ried on by them to do for them a ne cessary work; thart If their schools are not properly supported they cannot be cilicient and will ultimately deterior ite; that it is most important In this very critical period of our history that there should be competent, well-trainea teachers In all the schools, that under present conditions there are thousands ->f competent teachers who are leaving the profession, and promising; youn^r men and women are not being: at. tracted to teaching; that thousands of schools in rural districts are without teachers today, and the outlook fot* ?he future is not encouraging; that the Mily remedy for these conditions is (Continued on Sixth Page.) Every price is n Paramount illustra tion of MURRAY'S SCPKE3I A CY ? a practical lesson in economy. Why Pay More? During this sale tvo will not exchange gar ments, allow no re funds. Every sale is absolute and final. More Distinct Values are Impossible of Conception! Sale Starts Promptly at 9 A. M. Monday ? ""1 jf t)' nitary utei "cashed an COATS! Now Comes a Sacrifice to Force Quick Clearance! $ 25 .00 $ 15 .00 COATS Some Are $50.00 Values None Lower Than $40.00 Choose from? Chameleon Cords? Bolivias? Silvertips? Frost Glow? Wool Velours? COATS Some Are $29.95 Values None Lower Than $25.00 Choose from? Silvertones? Chamoisuede? Wool Velours? Bolivias? Broadcloths? Fur Trimmed and Tailored Trimming of Raccoon, Nutria, Opossum, Sealine, Coney and Self-Materials, Every garment lined and outerlined with finest plain and flowered silks. All .styles, belted, flare back, etc.