Evening Star Newspaper, April 27, 1921, Page 6

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i THE EVENING STAR, With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY. .. ..April 27, 1921 THEODORE W. NOYES. ...Editor | With them an upset two years later|to recover from their present low 2 { The Evening Star Newspaper Company Business Office, 11th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. 150 Nassau St. New York Offlce: Chicago Office: First Na : European Office: 3 Regent St., London. England. nday mornins thin the city The Evening Star. with fhe edition. in delivered by carriers At 60 cen's per month ¥ only. 43 cents per | month: Sunday onl cents per monch. Or- ders max be sent by mail, or telephone Main 5000. Collection is made by carriers at the end of eac month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Daily and Sunday..1yr., £ 40: 1 mo., i0c Taily only 1¥r. $6.00 1 mo.. 50 Sunday onl; 1 ¥r. §2.40: 1 mo., 20¢ All Other States. Daily and Sunday.1yr., $10.00: 1 mo., fic | Daily onl. $7.00; 1 mo. i Sunday only $3.00: 1 mo. The Latest German Proposal. Whether or not the German gov- ernment is actuated by good faith inj its latest proj 1 for the payment of war indemnity is, of course. a nlu(ler] of epinion. And unless it is assumed | that good faith is a lost attribute in} Germany. an umption which would | make impossible any settlement of the | reparations question, it is necessary lvvi form opinion on the subject with ani open mind. The task is not an eas: one. For Germany has, by the course she has elected since the armistice,’ implanted in the minds of those who! sit in judgment a clear impression of | combined shiftiness and impudence | W't W is difficult of eradication. The wweer, must be essaved. { = ilush it almost scems thaty Utude been broken. that| iermany is hon what | she regards as the best she can do. The difference between her offer of | 260.000.000.000 gold marks, payable iu: a period of years, and the latest de-| mands of the allies is not great. That | difference. amounting to an approxi- mate $8,000,000,000. has a present val- ve of about $2,000,000.000. And, reck- oned as against the tremendous value ! of a peaceful settlement of the ques- tion which today more than any other retards the rebirth of war-torn Europe, | that sum might well be waived. Ger-| many. if her actual monetary v proposin offer stood alone. might be deemed to have | gone far cnough to warrant the re- sumption of negotiations. It is in the conditions upon whicl that offer is made contingent that| the old doubt as to her good faith re- ceives the mew proof which makes a | settiement so difficult. The talk of a commission of experts to determine her ability to pay; of American sug- gestions as to “a moderate and just golution of the reparations problem” of an “international loan™ at an inter- est rate of 4 per cent: of the annul- ment of all other German cbligations and release of private property inl other countries, and of the discon- tinuation of the established system of penalties, revives the old impression of effrontery, craftiness and clumsy dodg- ing that has too long disgusted the! world. The first impression that at last Germany was attaining to a true; conception of her status in the nego.| tiations and an honest desire to make‘ good is biotted out, and the determina- tion to bring her to her senses is given fresh impetus. | lost a war for which she| was principally responsible and Dby | treaty accepted the consequences of | defeat. Since that time she has sought | with persistence and with that degree | of adroitness of which the German| mind is capable to slide from under ! the obligations then undertaken. Those | obligations were dictated by the vic- tors, as was highly proper. Germany had, through her subservience to the insane ambitions of her kaiser, plung- | ed the world into untold misery; had | been beaten at her own game; and had, | to all intents and purposes, surrender- | ed unconditionally to avoid invasion | Justice demanded that she pay, and; common sense insured the fact that| what she would pay was to be a mat-| ter for the allies to decide. Germany | agrecd that they should decide and! that she would abide by their decision. | The decision was made and the Ger. | man agreement was broken. 8o the allies are going into Ger-| many, to teach her. in the only manner ! by which she is apparently capable of being taught, that they stand firm on their demands; that she, as a crim- inal at the bar of justice, is not there | to higgle, but to pay a penaity. The | best hope arising from the latest Ger. | man propoeal is that the coming les- | #on need not be greatly prolonged, that i she is on the verge of seeing the light. ! Three courses are open to the United | States: To refuse to transmit the Ger- | man offer: to transmit it without com- ment. or to transmit it with an ex- pression of our viewpoint thereon. It | ir to be hoped that the latter course! will be adopted and that the expression | of our viewpoint will be so candid as to brinz home to Germany an approx- imate conception of the solidarity with which we stand behind our late allies | and ihe essential terms of the treaty | of Yersaill 1 ———— | t perfect example of - now in evidence is | wtive resident of the Island | i An Important Committee Meeting. | A meeting of the republican national | About the innocent by committee is planned for early June.! to be heid probably in this town. The ! sject is to receive the n of Chairman Hays and ch his su ! but no authority has been given, even ! ! those few who are aware of the trans- | courts have called the District's or. ;a matter of bookkeeping should brin,’," {ing this way. | vantage of the publicity and set jtself | the democrats win they will lmernret‘ the victory as a turn in the tide. and a forecast of the result two years, later, while if the republicans win they will point to their victory as proof. that the country is still so strongly | will be out of the question. ! So the man who handles the repub-; lican case in that campaign must give | heart and time to the work—his whole | heart and time. It in that spirit | Mr. Hays was chosen chairman s eral ¥ ago: and the fruits of the ¥ in the nd then | onal | con.! selection appea S gressional elections of 1918 in the presidential and cong elections of last year. A “Myth” of Bookkeeping. | It has been said at the Capitol that, the District’s swrplus of unapy 'nyvrlab! ed tax money is merely a “bookkeep-; ing myth.” A myth is something that! never existed. This surplus, however, { had at least the substance of original | actuality, in the form of real money taken from the taxpayers of the Di: i trict and deposited in the Treasur to await appropriation with an equal | sum in federal money. If that is a myth™ then the dofinition of the! word must be revised. | Many yvears ago a certain sum of ! money representing a “surplus” of i government funds immediately ! needed for federal purposes was ‘“'“X tributed pro rata among the stat of the Union, subject to repayment on | demand in certain conditions. That | money has never been repaid and the | total amoun g i $27.000.000. Some of the states spent | on public some of l!wmi distributed it among the counties for | improvements. In others it was paid | pro rata to the people and went into} the private pockets. But, whatever | use has been made of it. it is carried ! on the hooks of the Treasury today, | a charge against the states, as one | of the federal assets. A few s ! ago the treasurer of the United States | asked for the cancellation of this item, not to somet works, yea though it is generally recognized—by action—that the debt is a bad one and might well be wiped off the books. | Even that $27.000,000 of federal loan | to the states is not a “bookkeeping myth.” It is a valid, equitable liability of the states for actual cash advanced on specific terms of refunding. The states cannot write it off by acts of | repudiation. Only the United States, | the creditor, can cance! it. The United States has had the use of the surplus of District revenues, amounting now to nearly $5.000,000, for several years without interest. Thel money has flowed into the Treasur: from time to time and the only “myth about it is that it has not been ph cally kept apart in the original cuins and bills, but has taken its place in the general cash of the Treasury. The | District’s dollars awaiting appropria- | tion have been used for government maintenance, perhaps for war muni- tions and possibly for interest on gov- ernment obligations. But it has been | District money all the time, and it is District money today, in the hands of the United States as trustee. It cannot | be wiped off the books save by breach of trust. Had the terms of the law under which this money was taken from the District taxpayers been strictly ob- served, there would have been no sur- plus at any time, for every dollar of District money would have been matched by a federal dollar and im- mediately spent on local works and maintenance. But owing to the fact that Congress for a long period re-!| duced the appropriations below the | point of the estimates, while confin- ing the Commissioners to estimates | within the estimated revenues, these | funds accumulated and are today an asset of the District. They are surely not an asset of the United States. They | were taken from the taxpayers of the | District on the pledge of the act of 1878 that they would be expended, doubled with United States money, on the District’s requirements. If there has been any mythology about this procedure it has been that the Congress has made a myth of the formal obligation entered into in 1878 in the form of a statute which the ganic act. —————— The disappearance of four million credit to the District of Columbia as!| the ledger to the attention of enter- prising publishers as a work of sum.| mer fiction. i R i ‘Washington is compelled to consider the need of adequate housing accom-| modations for the extraordinarily large number of diplomats who will be com- ————————— Lenin would have been a great lead- | er if he could have organized men for the development of Russia's nat. ural resources as rapidly as he did for fighting. ———— The Island of Yap ought to take ad-| for a real estate boom. Two More Slain. The rural grade crossing takes its toll azain near Washington. Two lives | were destroyed last night at a crossing | at College Park, Md. The exact cir-| cumstances will never be known, as the only occupants of the motor car that was hit by the tr dead. The accident occurred at night and there were no witnesses. Yet the fact remains that the grade in are deadend 1o wre ear, A o ot 2 Editorial Digest | e | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, 1 clump of tre Without warning smashes into the machine and dea: '. The U s‘ Of Cenml Amurwa." sngyss i h) der th : ere is something new und o Just as soon as i begin { Just as soon as the railroads !sun to the south of us, a spick and span new nation; not revolution or a financial state the cure of these evilincw government, but a real new m_‘ conditions should be undertaken SYS-!tion." announces the Louisville Courier- | tematically and thoroughly. It. of ! Journal (democratic). The infant who! money to build under-!birth is thus heralded is th dera r viaducts to carry the high-jtion of Centrai Amer consisting of | h or above the tracks, The [Guatemals, Salvador and Hondur: cost should perhaps be divided between | Who have just consummated i the railroads and the states. But | Which makes them one nation. The ad- 2l _tvent of this new member of the family while these improvements under ; ot Tepublies i warmly welcomed by the way and while they arc being awaited | American press, which sees it as a | nt develoy view. the ~train course pas: costs treaty | are wnt i the movement | every frequented highway track cros b relations e | ing should be protected by n count L definite barriers throughout the period of train Deace In operation. ~ independent repu ir, ————— nized. well thought-out aft nstitution and general purpos: i - accepted as proof.” The plan TheMAgricalturalBinterescs nization, the results of which Senator Lenroot's proposition th wWatched with considerable in- . ieisuitural ! Iy the entire world, Congr agricultural con- | {{RS g e dition portable on the same|ont) s on will e ad- at prevailed in the fnvesti.|ministered by couneil consist- ground that prevailed In the investi-| [0 phfesintative clocted by the | gation ordered in the case of the rail- | people of cach state for five y the roads. feouncil electing from its me s | o . s president and @ vice president for one- | The railroads. conf are in a |} SR fon Gonseeael bad way. The ction. | The Dlegistature will | wo houscs rom failed to put them on their feet h ,\[\‘uh !{{l‘l'lll] b 1ch congr for S0 to That they should be oper yvears, and a ¢ e of deputics | ey e - owners and | Clecitd by the people. There s 10 be a | :‘.I(T:m}” Ir’”"":‘ x'm ‘:::‘:"m“’,’w" ':‘1" ne court and minor Judicial oili- % Iis ! sound ai argument. Hence the wisdom of thef cThe ! ]‘l"dv“:“;v'”_‘-]“"‘r‘ tep taken at the instance of Senator | . 5 e Cummins. The investigation should ! Star (independent republican) points | show what the Esch-Cummins law |0UL: SEegisiation on religfons siblicts failed to supply. and Congress ¢antion of cults that are against act as the committee’s report mo rils or public policy will be an ob- ! S ligatory principle. Compulsory pri- advise. mary cducation will be required. Re- So in the case of the wdividual rights, treedom o R and ropation of power are in a bad way—in a wc w (independ- | current complaint may he accepted. [ent) it e Cincermenty wi r- entr than ever before. They are clamoring | \merican peoples have much in: com- | for help. and in the emerg ey tariff [ nd many reasons for standing ¥ L2 b i ' bill. not far now from cnactment into ! aralioumen: u:’(']l”'"l::;»rfi":"['; law. some help will be rendered by hoaehe aanal Con If more should prove neces. | 1nat “this merging of their individu . the investigation proposed by mr-jt\llf:",.t S T i e Wisconsin senator should disclose the | cipies destined to endure, {] aGt # : al| Ditficulties in the way of consolida- | fact and suggest the supplemental BES L |tion are pointed out by the Christian | Monitor (Boston, independ- farmer's name is legion. And|ent). “Personal ambition has been the! & .., |rock upon which the project h > s not only numerous, but at 1asti,fey heen wrecked. since the com | organized. He is a power in the!pact. “while ele ing a few indi country's equation. Disaster to him | ¥14UAIS (0 positions of greater autior ¢ lity.” must. of cours many spreads. Nearly everybody is affected. {15 the ranks of . 1l rulers.” T onitor feels that “it m ¢ that those in authority oned this coalition p I degree of therefore, |t comfort | 3 mfort z any s Full bins and good prices, are essential not only to hi and prosperity, but to the c prosperity of all who are in of relation to him. admit who have an have dis- | loyalty and| | s very tact that these littie Cen Mr. Lenroot wants a report in ninet American republics over-| SR g this obstacie furnishes a “no- ays, which shows that the sessic day 8l that the session iS| 1. exampl Atlanta Journal | not going to be a romp and a runaway. | (democratic) believes, “of the trend of | prezent-day thought away from pet-| T 11¥ national jealousies toward liberal The investigation of G. C. Bergdoll j’" "rkll'*-'l for the common weal.” e e e D = h ‘rovidence Journal (independ-| draft-dodging is likely to warrant com-{nt) 150" rojntces in this evidenme of | ment which could only be fittingly pro-| the modification, “by the lessons of {the wa {ade ag i national. S 1 O ne ! 3 Berlin has developed a new school | contimurs Shrome, o0 of financial philosophy which measures | later editorial, obligations by what a debtor is able to | e pay instead of what he ow *of the feeling vided by Mr. Dawes himself. was everywhere intensely ————————— the Caribbea Atlanta Journal in a are inde oving per trend tory; to the deeper when the best! - world turns to con- | working as against d X ition among nation he advantage to the world at la SHOOTING STARS. {as the Pittsburgh Dispatch (independ- | BY PHILANDER JOHNSON, €N sees it is “as a guarantee against | o |interstate “disorders’ o frequent in| 5 ZEny ithe past.” and to the Detroit Free! A Quaint Discovery. | fress (ndependent) “the main thing | They once sang a song about grand-|in the whole project” is that it wil S give Central America “what may be Justifiably And the poet wrote stories of grand- | for poacs father's chair. e The old stately measures brought| .oy L2 the United States is as close i b “‘""‘ has been said,” the Pittsburgh | never a shock | Chronicle-Telegraph (republican) ' is To the eye, where the dancers were | NePeful that “the thought of war be | tween Guatemala and Salvador will termed a fighting chance analogy of the new federa- gallant or fair— | 000 be ax impossible as of war be- | Afar in the attic some garments we, 'Ween Pennsylvania and Ohio.” If e { that hope is realized, the Louisville | Courier-Journal (democratic) proph In a corner concealed by the cob-|Sies that “the Federation of Central webs of yore— i America may count on some immigra- v s ition from the United States of North A specimen strange, to fond memories | -rica, with its aspirations for the } n Yy 8 and the mos - The prim bathing suit that my|dous taxation of all the nations of (he grandmother wore. rth." At any rate, the Nashville | n (independent democratic) It was loose in’ the waist; it was high | gnEEFSIS that “the union of in the neck; Uncle his marins home.” The skirt was so long it would never i i i i { i disclose Demoti Re izati emotion and Reorgan: The curve of a knee—and still further | .. zation, = The federal employe: are the to check storm center of the first fight over A curious glance, it provided thick| the rganization of the federal hese 1 classified rvice, which th Harding ose. {administration has promised. For | An ample straw hat with a ’kerchief | three yvears they have been pressing | Sty for better pa A temporary bonus ' arrangement wWas put in effcel during | The features concealed from the!the war, by which all of them draw- ianaentine i [ jnz dess (han $2.000 @ yeur reccived | . et 1 annually provide for the in- We gaze with a_sentiment fine and | ireascd Cost of ving. This atieam. | profound ment still continues in effect. It is On the bathing attire that my grand- | mother wore. sting to note what is now pro- | mandarins of the appropriz jtions committee of the Nenate, In-| Now grandfather’s clock is a thing of | €ludinz Senators Warren, Smoot and | Curtiz, do not plan to hélp the ra k them will rec getting now. en into consi Ze of pay incr deral serviee will the past. fand file of government cmployes to He turns to a wrist watch to learn{any great extent. Their bill stipu- f the time. il«u-s that a substantial number of ve less than they are when the bonus ation. The av- ses for the entire be about SIx0 a His chair has been scrapped, for its legs didn’t last, Though grandpa moves on to aj jazzical chime. fcar, or $60 less than the horizontal = 5 honus which all of them are now We take up the bundle and put it| feeeiving | aside— This is revision downward with a Siich gapments welnever: expec ! vengeance, and it is based. appar- o L& xpect [Oirnli)‘, on the theory that the cost| see more. of living i8 receding. But if the! What has hidden so much now ever |10ng and discouraging fizht of the i government clerks for more adequate - i S 4 { comper been armored w|m| Farewell! bathing suit that my W of truth and ju grandmother wore. H Smoot bill is nothir i {less than hlack reaction. It does not | G = faccept the fact that present old- | An Effectual Effacement. {line statutory salaries are archaic “I hear that Crimson Gulch's big|and demoralizing. It does not accept s e e the fact that the cIvil scrvice ought | garis, resort has been closed. 110 be made a carcer for any young eplied Three-Finger Sam. |man who wants to go into . G 5 jcially in the scientific bran 1 The police got busy at las leaves matters very much v | * “Tweren't the polic had a winnin' streak.” Cactus Joe | have been for generations past timore Sun (independent democ) There's 10ts of tax in the road back | to normaley.—reenville (S. C.) Pied- mont. Jud Tunkins says times have changed. A man who wouldn't harm a fly used to be considered kind- hearted. Now he's regarded as untidy. The Versailies treaty to date is not much more than an entre. Minno: apolis Tribune. That's Different. No vampire shall our praises win, Another of those eternal triangle: pretty woman, not guilty.—L Nor any rude Lothario— o et of course, they figure in | An eclipse appears to be the only scenario. | eessor. Mr. Hays' duties as Post-| crossing, whatever the condi WAL ithing in this country that can stop e 5 . rossing. wha the Conditionsiim | == ! moonshine.—Philadelphia Record. 3 r General require all of his time. | mediately surrounding it, is a death! Forfeited. H = The new man, it d. must be! trap, a o | B . ) An advantage rug-beating has ov. - mus i trap, an invitation to the road users| “Hiram,” warned Mrs. Corntossel.| AP = has over ; Al e v RE _ L ! & olf is t not so many designs fiec t x.x\ h '_uh le time to organ-| to cross the tracks. No matter whether [ “We can't put up the rent on nurigxuxm are nem'ssar)'.ASI.Jflscnthew:f ization work. This was brought out|there are bells or other audible orlgyests this summer without bein® de. | Press. when the nan naton New was al signals. the open trac { nounced as profitee i = sugzested. The Indiana serator i "fywl lk-dl vel m(h' h Sititmouncel enipronte s | A railway statistician has fgured 3= : % & gates on a level is a highw: Under “That's all right. We can get all|out that the railroad trains have to good politician end & hard worker, and | present conditions all the responsibil-| that's comin® to us by puttin’ up the | Jump the track 118 times to kill one on excellent terms with the Pre<ident.’ ity is placed upon the road user, and| price of the board.” {man.” IUs a lot of trouble and takes But he will be seekinz renomination none upon the railroad. At night it is e :‘.‘,'f;‘.lo‘{m:‘:‘:'m-‘l"“'ya:rmixr:::::Pén" next vear. and his hands will be full | possible to drive upon such a dan-! Keeping Up With the Constituents. |Star. y of his own affairs. Indiana politics| gerous position without knowing the| *“Of course you try to appear as 5 . » one s 3 Lol ; - 2 Your Uncle Sam knows too much partakes of the strenuous chi t ‘,....—n There are thousands of these|of the plain people. about base ball to want to be umpire Aund next year's national campaign ! crossings. where motorists and drivers| “Yes,” answered Senator Sorghum,|when the blcachers are full of six- will be of that character. The coun- | may be trapped at any time after dark. | “but it's getting more and more dif. | 8hooters.—Boston Transcript. try will prelably witness i display of | No bell rings and no light appears; no | ficult. You'd be surprised at the num-| There are so many idle freight inten.ive y nest ¢ ©<s | watchman gives a signal. Perhaps the | ber of my constituents who are taking | cars in the country that the hoboes is @ big siake. The winninz of i willbmotor i making a noise so t o howaisteq | 47¢ talking about marching to Wash- b 5 ko 'v x > 20 hat the| to (:m socks and high-waisted | 372, (R E D ORA complaint.—Toledo Learten the winuer fo 1221 wd of the approaching train is | coats. Blade. N b Buy Your Electric FAN Now And pay for it June 1 C. A. MUDDIMAN & CO. 1204 G St. Phenr,, 616 12th St. Main 140, iy ( ) =15 O AN The tables set from the P-K Store are spread with the best on the market and at real savings. Take carc of your preserving lb" 8c nceds now—at this special price 10 1bs., 75¢ LUSCIOUS PLUMS APPLE BUTTER Best cane granulated Sugar '-(‘y’;u“h‘r""‘“}‘;ra’vr’ ’lll\l!h. Viery “ehoicer iquality; Zsc P Lorah g 256 In l4-0z glass jar. PURE HONEY PURE FRUIT JELLY e 35¢ Apple and Currant in ] () for $1.00 7Vs-0z. glasses Real country in the comb Direct importation of choice Flgs Turkish layer, large size, lb., 35C HOME DRESSED VEAL—Choice Cuts Breast, bone out, Ib....15¢ Shoulder Chops, Ib.....20c Shoulder Roast, Ib. ... 18¢ | Rib or Loin Chops, Ib..28¢ P.K. Coffee Ib., 25¢ One cup leads to another—it's so good Seventh at F The Raid on the Refrigerator - The Bohn Syphon is a modern safe deposit for food Children may ransack the refrigera- tor for delicacies without fear of conse- quences (from the food) if it's a Bohn Syphon. Don't worry about the milk making them ill. The low temperature of the Bohn (lower than is possible to main- tain in any other refrigerator made) retards and kills the bacteria germs which are always present in milk not prop- erly chilied. Demonstration now going on —Shows just how the Bohn Syphon maintains this low temperature. It also helps to explain why The Pullman Co. and 9550 of the Rajl- roads use the Bohn Syphon refrigeration —and why Good-Housekeeping Insitutes of New York indorse Bohn Syphon. Come in. Special-Bohn-Icyco refrigerator Made by Bohn Syphon $39 5 Lowest price we’ve known on a refrigerator of this quality Judge the value of the Bohn-Icyco by these specifications. Selected hardwood oak or ash case; cabinet make construction throughout. —Three door front icing style; provision cham- bers of seamless white enameled steel; joint- less as a jug, and as clean. —Outside dimensions 397 inches high; 2914 inches wide; 18 inches deep. —Ice capacity, 75 Ibs. The Heeht Co. The Hecht Co. EDMONSTON’S Home of the Original FOOT FORM Boots and Oxfords for Men, Women and Children The Best Tonic in the World Is Exercise Walk! The Ideal Footwear for All Is ‘FOOT FORM’ Boots and Oxfords The lasts are founded on scientific principles. THEY FIT THE FOOT. There's a last for every foot and a fit for ANY foot. Our trained assistants will ad- vise as well as fit the shoes. The real art of the designing of these lasts is found in the fact that you can wear as stylish a shoe as Fashion demands and enjoy comfort. “Foot Form” Shoes require no “breaking in.” The “Foot Form” Specialty Shoes are famous the world over for their merit relieving and ultimately curing the many Foot Troubles that have been occa sioned by the wearing of improper and ill-fitting foot- wear. Consult us about the needs of your fect. EDMONSTON & CO. Andrew Betz, Manager 1334 F Street Advisers and Authorities on All Foot Troubles Seventh at F Keep him out! Keep Him OQut!! against SCREEN the FLY One fly kept out now means a thou- sand less to swat later. Screen-against the fly for cleanliness; for safety Sale CONTINENTAL screen doors Walnut and hardwood finish frames, covered with | first quality black iron screen; complete with all hard- ware, ready to hang. We picture three of the most popular styles; each of i which may be had in 2.8x6.8; 28x6.10; 2.10x6.10; 3x7-ft. | | One of these four sizes will fit most any door | Price Price Price ’ 52.95 53.48 53.98 : Adjustable window screens All continental make; the best to be had. | These size i 18x33 59¢ 24x33 69¢ 30x33 89¢ 30x37 | $1.05 records 50 double disc Together with this magnificent phonograph outfit Just as illustrated 7-inch size—100 titles. Your own selection 569.00 $5 a month pays for it; no interest No Money Down Just in—Underneath Hawaiian Skies, 85c. 5

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