CTMHAY BE SWEPT . ;, FROM BRIDAL PLEDGE IN EPISCOPAL CiMllM IcmMW'ipjsrtsr- ton, opcninK ' -"- morrow, Would Also Re vise Lord's Prnycr ;tfAY ALTER DECALOGUE n.tia Mo Oct. 10. The Ten Com IT LOUIS, MO, wi. . . piiAMntt. ' y tood tlirouRh "" P?b changed y H Orncrnl Con ura are to M ."".. ..iiMmiMl Church. ' SMS V. tomorrow" th. report rtfch ?'"- - .ubcommlttcca ore ln- ,he 'f,BlhrC he won! -;obey" la tf 5drt"SS.'" he Xlnuted. that tho Mol tho hrlde b omitted en-S-ir and that the brldcBroom proml-o to Ciow" the brldo ''with hit hi worldly " a . -lllaawl committee will recommend that the 2ft thTSSonfor their observance Tho mmYhdallon lll bo baied on tho fact ' 2ft the reasons were peculiar to the life, i the Israelites mi v......!. LwV have robbed tho augments of much r weir , v The committee on revlxlnr t Jl litr will recommend the elimination of ' ft, word -aor ' '"" "". 'i' "" IS?ln the omlmln '.he commute will C w?:' i. Knnailintn a t art of the dox. , jLt added by early trmislitora nnd thnt iy aTC HOI III ii' w. ,.. - - .....,, twintiirea. The omission would make tho JSeV Identical with tho Itoman Catholic Ttrnlon. The fame committee will probably n.k the dteilaatlon from the Boo't of Common ! praytr of the prayerH for "Jew p. infidels aaa Turks." Tho proposal la based on tho .,nrf thnt It Is unwnrtnnted to class tho j,Ti with the others. 1 Ji canon prolilhltlnrf marr.aRi wlied either i ,Mrtr to the contract has n wife or husband SWitf and has been divorced for any cause i arialnf after marrlaua will bi presented Hr action. Many notnblo churchmen Kath . end htre today for the opening. MEXICANS GROW FffiM AFTER U-BOAT EXPLOIT ( Possibility of German-American Crisis Causes Carranza Con ferees to Gain Confidence ATLANTIC CITY. N J.. Oct. 10. The artlritles of German BUbmarlnea off the jurican coast and tho possibility of on- ' Whr crisis between tno unneu states anu "Otrmany had an appreciable effect upon tie Mexican conferenco here. Tne Carrania delegates wero elated at tat prospect of this country belnp Involved b further International entanRlemonts, and their attitude stiffened considerably. Dr. Luis Cabrera nnd his colleagues sue ended in artaln placing tho question of ' lorder control uppermost In the deliberations e( the conference, the proceedings of which wri surrounded with the greatest secrecy. . J"q official statement wan made to the press. 'and Chairman Lano aald that no Infor liMtlon could be Imparted beyond the fact Stoat several plans for control of the bor Iter were discussed nnd that today's session twin be devoted to tho rame topic . Pending the arrival or Amnassaaor Bti'inate Arredondo, who left Mexico City tor Washington on Sunday ntght and will , tome here from the capital. It had been awme4 that the conference would continue eiaciuslnc matters which tho American eommluloners consider an Integral part ef the problem of Mexican rehabllltat on. Bt the Mexican commissioners took tho k(ltlon that they are still bound by their rlflnal Instructions nnd asked that consld- tnutai of other matters be deferred till , later In tho week. j j Suggestions for border control submitted r the Mexican representatives wore gone ever carefully by General Bliss and the t Americans placed before the Mexicans some I K the Generals opinions. CASH FOR SWARTHMORE FIELD rfW,000 Raised for Athletic Ground by Alumni Committee and More Is Assured fVlTltr'tKtltlrtrm r4 nnnoAvliMA t aIi I7A AAA rHHiuntiwiia we, xiJ4 iAiiuuici IVW I BalVta fiaatn AAllAAt4 ... OV nlrnnnl ham. Ht?e of Swarthmore College In Its cam- Fin ior iunaa to complete tno Hwartn fjtoto athlet'c ne'd A summarized utato- 5 Mttt nf tflt AAmmlttna'a Inl.ni-a iltt n n- r Jn the Thoenlx, Swarthmore's colleKe j faxlne, showing the contributors by class PfJjMllona from every class In tho history - """' wnvfcsi kfWIII IDItl, US IUUIIU4UUII ' l0 the presenl undergraduate bodies. w " wmmmee, 01 wnicti Howard Cooper ; Jon, an attorney. Is chairman. Is gratl- v. KC,":rn' na genr-.ouH response, While thA nthttlo f1iM la nnt flnlha.l COmnlAtlnn m nMai.KA I... UA A..1 r - ,-. ....... .o ,.u0MiKu w v.ia jcbuiib rILifv':ampalRn' Tne na"ies of Individual rfWrloutors have not been announced. Friends' Home Quarantined wac Home, a refugo for elderly men rSJ men members of the Society of C-JIMML gl.tiated nf T'nw.ll nA c..i. t-.Norrl.town has been quarantined r Uh i Norristown Bpa,rd of Health follow ir..u .1 f l imanuie paralysis in I i-T. "".'"" '"o victim, a six-year-old ti!ifl ?i th8 matror. Mi Alcorn, la tho liwd i xne "'aeaso to be re- frk. '". """"own. it wu a week alnce fTSaSX.W"""?0 and the ttut T 1 . UIB" w neneve that the .u..u)r naQ Deen ontirly WPe,i out SmNae?h"!de,Phlan,9R Ik utoZ-i,:s:,zir X:zrii.e-r" ar- 1lKiW? ,waa ,,e,d ,or cou-t. on a itiin t. "" ,rom a ,oca' bote a ad. h..b e, contl"ltr ItOOO worth of MituT. TT. ' , eher tho bag nor 1 wusu have been recovered. Plant Tubs and! Flower Pots ,Jt ) now tlmi to bring ten Z. P1""'' mdoor. for the . Many of thwn will 'VM a new tub or pot. Jtatime f?,r pUnUng priiig ?- omiw u her. a aJt PHILADELPHIA PROTEST STARTS COUNTRY-WIDE WAR ON MILK FREIGHTS International Dcnlcrs Associa tion Names Committee to Fight "Gradual but Ma terial" Increases in Rates ORY OP DISCRIMINATION Mm!"AFa. ?cL ,0 T"' International 3111k Dealers Aaprclatlon, meeting In Chi. cacti, hn appointed a commttteo to plan nnd conduct a flRht ana'nst the "Rrndual but mntcrlal" Increase In rates for the shipment of milk nnd Its byproducts. The committee, ncdordlnR to tho associations plans, will apply to the Interstate Com merce Commission nnd the various State public utilities commissions for reductions whenever a freight Increase la proposed by iiiu wirrirr. The organized opposition of the nssocla, tlon ban Hi-own out of complaints filed with tho I'cnnsyUnn'a Public Service Commission by tho l'nlladtlphla Milk KxcbaiiRe nitnlnst the tnrltTs adopted January 23 by the Penn. lanla lUltroad Tlvs rcnnsylanla'a tarKTs lncreitsed rates on all lines tast ot I'lttrhurirh nnd llrle and nre regarded by the I'll Indel.ih'n Milk KxchnnRO as dls crmlna' -y Tho h-lfis contend that tho present rates .14 nuny rallroadi nr so mado nnd group me so arranged that dealers nre forced to develop distant trade territory Nearby farming arena, they say, hao not tho transportation ndxantnges that their locations should g ve them. It Is nn economic waste, the dealers say, to haul milk for long distances If It may bo obtained nt shorter distances, and no rate adjustment can be successfully defended which deprives any shlprer of tho natural ndantages his nearness to the consumer may glvo him. 'When we consider." one denier ex plained, "that tho railroads transporting milk to Philadelphia have not paid out any money to build up this business, surely tho producers n. arest to Philadelphia markets hao been discriminated against. "When a tabulation Of tho rates In ar. ous sections of the country had been made. It was noticed that decided advances had been made by the rallrotds within tho last few years, especially on distances beyond twenty-fhe to thirty miles, with a further tendency on tho part of tho railroads to luhanco rates on milk nnd cream In those districts from which chlpments were not moving, but from which they might be moving within a. few years. The railroads recognize, dealers say, that tho Increased population of the cities is gradually forc ing producera to ship from a greater dis tance." Complaint nlso has been filed with the Public Service Commission ngatnst freight Increases by tho Philadelphia and Heading Hallway Company. Under n genernl Investigation hearings hao been held In Doston. New York, Phlla dolphin, Chicago and Cincinnati. At tho hearings In Philadelphia dealers point out it was shown th.U: In 1907 on all milk rates thcro was a general increase of npprox'mately fifteen per cent. In 1911 by tho Pennsylvania Railroad Company rates wero further Increased fifteen per cent to "cocr tho cost of Icing" In 1912 tho Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company rates wero Increased twenty per cent to cover the cost of Icing, while tho Ilaltlmoro nnd Ohio rntea vrete Increased 33 lO per cent for wme purpose. In 1912 there was a further nnd more marked increase In most rates on the Pennsylvania Railroad, over which tho traffic was then moving. In 1915 there was a further incrcaso In tho rates of the Pennsylvania for all distances beyond sixty five miles. The net effect of these Increases and changes in the rates dealers say, has been to Incrcaso very materially the rates on milk on the Pennsylvania. Krom Phila delphia to Harrlsburg there has been on Increase of seventy-seven per cent within eight years, while on the P., B. and W, Division for tho first thirty miles there has been an Increase of fifty-four per cent ; ror tho next thirty miles an Increase of thirty-two per cent, while tho average In crease amounts to more than flftv per cent when the volume of milk moved Is taken Into consideration. EVENING. LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1010 3 BERNHARDT ARRIVES FOR ANOTHER GOOD-BY "Divine Sarah" Just a Little Bit Older Looking, but Young as Ever Inside NI7W TORIC. Oct. 10. The divine Sarah Demhardt returned to America today for Htlll another good-by. She arrived on the Kspagne, and as usual monopolized ninety per cent of tho attention bestowed on the passengers aboard tho ship. She was just a little older looking. She wanted that made plain. Inside, she In sisted, Bhe's as young as she was forty years ngo. And the flash of her eyes, except when "her bleeding France" was mentioned, tended to corroborate her claim. K C riilladelphla-MndeS. (sV Xat'enally td NSS. THE WHITE tiNAMEL III THAT STAYS WHITE III irlJ In your horn when thlncs look lirltht. rhterrui. You ran taUa rhn thlilM lo r!nl and ttrectlv, n Mttriftlvn th nation's home. It For 112 rears nrfmfit Knamel Kmb tided In tnak- ------ - - .. ... ...... i imparu to any surface a. nniia tine an pnwlaln and nurawe Iron, vorcellle Bnipi mf distinctive, beautiful Interiors Auk jour dealer or painter tor Information. For Wood. Metal and Planter At Your Htore or tiiomhos vmon riv. co. 115 North 4th Ht. "BANQUETSSjk ftanscomrs 929 Market Si. 1221 Chestnut St, 5nJ for Manna We Cater for Weddings, Receptions, etc. ThHUrera A Specially lU6Walnuf Street l.n-nn.mV MISTER McDEVITT "SUBMERGES," SNUBS PHILADELPHIA AND "SAILS" SEAWARD "Nominee for Presidency Adopts Platform, Saying, "I'm Irish, Always Prepared" Goes to Atlantic City, to Make Speech of Notifica tion to Himself Mr. J. J. McDevltt, ot Wllkes-Uarre, !., prealdentlal nominee of the Mr. McDevltt party, snubbed 1'hlladolphla and hurried toward Atlantic City today. The cradle of American liberty, where tha Mr. McDcltt party candidate was to fire the opening gun of his campaign, was "passed up," as It were, nnd tha 'million aire for a day." sometimes colloquially referred to as "Butcn," hastened . toward the sea. if Mr. McDevltt and entourage w.ll ecr get there depends upon the condi tion of tho Mr. McDeltt party cnmpalgn fund This fund was 13900 before the con entlon In New York yesterday, but then conxentions are expensive. At Atlantic City Mr McDeltt will maUo a notification speech, after which Mr. Mc Devltt will launch Into a speech of accept, ancc It Is not known what Kx-Mnor Riddle, of Atlantic City, will say when he's notified that he was nominated for the vice presidency. In the presence of thirteen loyal dele, gates, Mr. McDexItt nominated Mr. Mc Doltt nt N'ew York yesterday, between drinks. In a hall nt Terrace Garden. The following platform was read; riret Wo believe that all men are created Ptanks tn Platform of Mr. McDevltt Party SELL tho Philippines and buy Ire land, so wo can rrct policemen for nothing. As for tho tariff, wa don't give two whoops for tho tariff. Let the Mexicans fight. Wo do not btlievc in prohibition. As for preparedness, 1 am Irish. eoaC tut aomo of them do not take danta Hi-cond We urae that tha rhlllrrlno Ulanda ba old and Ireland purehaard. ao o tan set our policemen for nothlnt Third Wo promlao to rale a new standing armr to tV the place o( tho one which was loat In Mexico. . - , . . t'ourth As for prtparedneaa, I am Irian ana nm alwaa prepared , .. elfth So far a tho tariff la concerned, the Mlater MrlHt Tarty doean't tvo two whoopa for tho tariff . Hlith t'oncernlnr the Mexican allusion let 'em flahtl What ood ato they, anyway? Serenth There haa hen much talk of protect. Inc It- homeo. Tho Mlater Mctevttl Tarty prom ! to protect the homes of the lUat and Part of the Weal Kiwi v oo not pellete in proamnion e heilevo every man ahouUI have the rtiht to pet u maaea h eaaier ior mm io vr i". When a aoher man heata h!a wire tne drunk, ulf. nani Mr. lh. the brute!' Hut when drunken man beata hla wife they aay, The pcr 'nan aa drlnklnsT Ninth We denounce the hyphenates, I am a loyal lrlah-Amerlcan, and a want no hjphtn atr. John J. McOraw, Wllbert Robinson, Hilly" Sunday, Ilrlan tl, Hughes, Mayor Mltchel nnd Dudley Kleld Malone were promised places In the Cabinet. It is expected that Mr. McDevltt will re turn to his Job In a Wllkes-Uarre Iron foundry within a few days. ABSOLVED OF SOCIETY GIRL'S DEATH IN AUTO Accident, Coroner Rules in Dougherty-Tower Tragedy in Park Thomas Harvey Dougherty, Jr., of School House lane, Oermantown, was exonorated today by a Coroner's Jury of guilt In connec tion with tho death of Miss Ciertrude Tower, nineteen-year-old daughter of Charlemagne Tower, former Ambassador to (Jet-many, who received fatal Injuries when Dough erty's nutomoblle turned turtle near Memo rial Hall, Knlrmount Park, May 13. Miss Tower died four days later, "There Is nothing to warrnnt holding any one criminally responsible." Hald Chief Deputy Coroner Sellers in his Instruction to tho Jury. Tho accident was due to faulty recon struction of the motorcar, according to the testimony of Robert M. Abbott, 6S29 Had-' field street, a .Packard Inspector, who ex amined the wrecked car. Two days before the accident, ho said, it had been trans formed from a. Ilmousino to a roadster, causing a defect in the steering gear. Two witnesses of the accident. William D. Aubrey, of Bryn Mawr, and John M. Dun can, of 32 South Fifty-fourth street, said they saw tho front wheels appear to lock together on tho curve, heard Dougherty put on tho emergency brake, and then saw the machine skid nnd oerturn. It was going at a modcrato rato of speed, they said. Dougherty, represented by former Attor ney General John C. Hell, a friend of the Tower family, limped to the rtand, appear ing to be In a daze. He said ha could re call nothing of the accident. He is slowly recovering from his Injuries, which In cluded concussion of the brain. He fore the Inquest he was held for the coroner by Magistrate Stevenson, Fortieth Btrcet nnd Lancaster avenue, and taken at once to City Hall. READY TO EXTRADITE FOUR IN JERSEY MURDER Driver of Auto Identified as Murderer of Cranberry King's Brother JUKY ACCUSES PROSECUTOR County Attorney in St. Joseph Indicted as Wife Slayer ST. JOSEPH. Mo. Oct. 10. County Prosecutor Oscar McDanlet today was Indicted by the Grand Jury for murder In the first degree after a ten-day probe of the mystery surrounding the killing of his wife. McDanlel conducted a search for tho murderer for several days before suspicion was turned on him and he was arrested. Hxtradltlon papers havo been signed by Goernor Urumbaugh on which tho four mon under arrest In Philadelphia for hold ing up nnd shooting the occupants of the pay nutomoblle of A. J. Rider, "tho New Jersey ernnberry Ulnjj," will be taken to Ilurllngton County, N. J., for trial. Frank Vassella, driver of the automo bile. Ins been Identified by Rider as the murderer of Henry Rider, brother of the cranberry grower. Frank Lcdonne nnd Giuseppe Rossi also have been Identified na participants In tho hold-up nnd murder. Mrs. Hlsle R. Smathers, daughter of A. J Rider, and her fnther, who are recover ing from their wounds In Jefferson Hospital, identified tho three men. John M. Rlgby, suffering from six bullet wounds, has been too weak to see the prisoners. The detecthes vho accompanied the prisoners to tho hospital were surprised at tho Identification of Vasella nnd I.edonne. Their stories had been that they wero not implicated In the hold-up In the New Jersey cranberry bog except by hiring the auto mobile to Rossi. Vasella Is now charged with being the leader ot the gang Instead of being, ns he has contended, a dupe ot Rossi. . Rider, besides being positive that Vasella was the man who had shot him, charged that tho Italian was the actual murderer of his brother, Harry. Mr. Rider said that Vasella had shot him In tho arm and had given Rlgby one of his wounds. Ledonne was the only member of tho gang, Rider said, who did not wear a mask. He said ho did not see Idonne Bhoot, but that he had a. revolver In his hand. """'Millie dl Marco, who had been suspected by tho police of being the leader of the gang, was not Identified by either of the wounded. Rider recognized her, however, as a former employe. Rossi was taken to the bedside of Mrs. Smathers to be Identified. His face was partly covered by a mask to make him look as victims of the hold-up said the hold-up men looked. Mrs. Smathers Identified him an the man who had shot over her head when she dodged. atuseppe Rosso, Millie dl Marco, Frank Ledonne nnd Frank Vassella will be taken back to New Jersey by Ellis It, Parker, Durllngton county detective; Sheriff Wil liam T. Specher and Deputy Sheriff Joseph Fleetwood. SIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIS aiwiv The very choicest offerings in America of Persian, Turkish & Chinese Rugs AT PRICES WHICH HAVE BEEN AFFECTED E NEITHER BY THE CESSATION OF PRODUC- E S TION NOR BY LIMITED IMPORTATION. E: During this ale you may purchase any rujr in our rE : immense stock at figures which prevailed more than , . two years ago, H This week may not be your last, but it is surely S j your best opportunity to secure one of these gems 5 which the passing "months make increasingly rare. tIARD'CKMAGeeCo, I 1220-1222 Market Street liiiiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll - s VXV "YPBOMOUHCID OVTINO) TKc Store of fixmoua JShoca.) u 1230 Market Street Present thfe Second of the "Classic Series"; a model ertph a siting the paifMtaking care of the Geutmg organization Jo create m a woooWful refinement ef 7 kywiP-wppMaVn , . . -M lsssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssi AsllssssssssssssssssssssH I ' ' ' i 'in wwtw iiiiwi i. . -, . A.i&m.lj aissssssssstv Laassssssssssst Mabel Knoll (nbovo), and Eliza beth Walsh. TWO 17YeAR-0Td GIRLS MISSING FROM HOME Police Asked to Find Depart ment Store Employes Mys teriously Gone Two Bcventecn-year-old glrla have disap peared from their homes and their parent have aalted the police of the Trenton nc nue nnd Dauphin atrcct station to find them. Tha ulrla nre Mabel Knoll, of 2600 liial Cumberland street, nnd hllrabeth Walsh. 1438 i:ast Hanard Btrcet. They left their homes on Monday night. Two married sisters of the Knoll Rlrl, Mrs. llcssln Knwrlght und Mrs. Mary Hookey, had trono to Horticultural Hall. Mr. nnd Mrs. Knoll had cone to their bun galow at Clemcnton, N. J and Mabel was left nt homo alone. When the sisters returned they found he had gone. An hour Inter a relative of the Walsh girl Informed them thnt she. too, had dlsapeared. Iloth. clrls aro employed In the perfumery department ot n Market street department store. Their parents fear that they aro being detained somewhere ngaln.it their wishes. The mother of Ktlrnbeth Walsh has been suffering from nervous prostration for bov cral months and her condition was mado woree by her daughtcr'a disappearance. Child Left at Doctor's Door NOItlUSTOW.W I'a.. Oct. 10. A baby. Just born, was found on tho -doorstep of Dr. J. Qulncy Thomas, or Conshohockcn. last night by Policeman Kays. The child was brought hero to the hospital. It was In a bundle, warmly wrapped. ELLIS STILL ALIVE; IS NOT LIKELY TO RECOVER Nephew of Slayer's Wife Gets Permission to Take Body to Old Home William Howard Kills, who allot nnd killed hla wife In n fit of Jealousy at Ihelr home, Hollyhock Knrm. near Ambler, on Sunday nnd then ahot himself. Is Mill alive nt the Chestnut Hill Ilospltnt, but physi cians say he cannot recover Tho body of the wife, Augusta Wllloughby Kilts, will not llo beside her husband It he din, but mill be burled In the family plot In the cemetery of her former home, .Saratoga Springs, N Y A nephew of the murdered woman. Thomas Oago. of Samtoga Springs, haa obtained permission from Coroner Mo aiatchery, of Norrlatnwn, to tako tho body. Tho burial permission waa ulxen by tho coroner to the nephew ngatnst the requests of Kll a'a mother, who desired to retain the body of her son" wife for burial beside Kills In his home cemetery, should he die of his wound At Kllls's bedside nt the hospital la his mother, and the father, who was In the South nt the time of the shooting, la ex pected to arrive today. Tho three children of tho family aro being cared for by friends. Spain Denies l'ood to Submarines ..ON'UON. Oct Hi. A Madrid dispatch saya ordcra have been Issued by tho Spanish Oovornment prohibiting tho rcvlctuallng of foreign BUbmarlnea In Spanish waters. I jcripps33oo$ 1 Welcomed at 1 tlie best liomes I GEO. W. REINBOLD 250G N. Broad St. mm ",LJVHi,.n!.WiS?E!wu. on oniNH rnit cahh ... JI.HT.LKUS i:cil.NflK " " ath Ht.. Phlla. IMione Wnlnut 4 US aVBBSJKStfBSBBBjBBBBJB TIIK ENJOYMENT OF 0UTD00H HI'URTS la ponalble only If you- ft are free from ihe palna of corn. cnllouar and bunlom. il nJ'' absolute foot comfort consult us HANNA 8 E C0R ,3T" SAN80M ... . 'Over Crane) and Corns Itfrnmed, 28c . Manlmrlnr. tSe J. E. Caldwell & Co. 902 Chestnut St. Important Mew 'Silver Dinner Services REMOVAL: In tho early Autumn tho business of J. E. Caldwell & Co. will bo located in tho Widencr Hulldlntr, Chestnut, Juni per and South Pcnn Square. , PssNVMIRO KExczunmAl LOCOMOBILE Closed Cars The Locomobile chassis was specially de signed to receive a fine body. The radiator, fenders, bonnets, body and other elements were then designed together with relation to each other. This produced an ensemble superior in beauty, fine proportion, style and good taste. Locomobile Closed Cars are unique in many ways. Pices from $5600. to $6800. THE LOCOMOBILE COMPANY OF AMERICA .,.t-M.Wi r, Ltri&aSaia..; j.xfjcuj.ii,',.. Li. Perry Fall Suits and Overcoats' at $15, $18, $20, $25 rW 1 Perry's 'MEN'S rASI'IOABLE'' All the atyla and smartness of the "yonnjeat" models, with comfort and ease for men ot girth and mora ma ture development. Moder ately lilah, narrow ahoulders, drawn-In waist lines; soft rolling lapels, various treat, ment of pockets and elceve cuffs. Narrow trouaers. Cost us more to make than ever before; but the qualities at each price are the same as they've always been to You! We'll sell morexof them vastly more of them, just as soon as men compare them with Scjjlfcjand Over coats markeal5, $18, $20, $25 everywhere else, and that will com pensate us for our les sened profits on each individual garment! And you'll find at Perry's . Selections and Styles not duplicated anywhere else! J Rich colors of Au tumn browns, Ox fords, grays, greans, russets, stripes and dia mond weaves w 1 1 h-1 style lines that arc dis tinctive of Perry tailoring. PERRY&G "N. B. T." Wk u