Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1929, Page 3

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THE EVENING &'I'-\R WASHINGTON, D. ©. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 18.- 1929. TIRE BARGAINS We have a limited quantity of NEW tires taken off of new cars and _ tra n on John Boy '10-;- at these low prices. 29x4.50 Goodrich $6.90 29x5.00 K. Springfield and Fisk, $8.40 29x5.50 Fisk $10.62 A Small Deposit Will Held Them LEETH BROS. 1220 13th St. NW. Two bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitch- en, xeception hall and bath. Blectsicalt refcigeration. Reasonable Rental THE ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Rd. Fine, New Office Rooms $20.00 per Room and up Modern, fireproot building, large rooms, elevator service, ex- cellent janitor ®ervice. Lunchroom in build- ing. Splendid neigh- bors. Outside re- stricted parking zone. CHESTNUT FARMS BUILDING Pa. Ave. at 26th St. S RICHMOND $3.50 FREDERICKSBURG . $1.75 JACKSONVILLE $20.00 nwn Gl.‘fll: MIAMI | Ul TAMPA AL BEACH - 2880 ORLANDO e S ,,;,. JUGOSLAV DOCTOR | NEW ORLEANS 3635, + PITTSBURGH $7 00 gErrrsune .3 27 CLEVELAI llflnmul 1350 . . 20.00 'm and Information at Union Bus Depot 1336 New York A Phone Mnnp.m-n uxz SPECIAL NOTICE. PAPERHANGING: ROOMS $2 AND UP OOM! 70u have the paper; will bring sampl mlmun PAINTIN Douting: reasonablé pFiccs.. NGrih s314, day — nllm Ajax Roofing Co., 2038 18th — afy’fiu, ‘CUR ONE JOB 18 TO MOVE YOUR oooDs with care, consideration and low cost to or from any point within one thousand miles. Tell us your problem and we'll tell you how much it will cost and how long it will take. National Delivery Ass'n, Inc.. Natl | mn Slatig TWO DS FROM LY B Ve to Waskiogion, Baamore. Bnia: New York. Phone Fairfax 3FS WANTED—RE' LOAD rom_Boston. Nov. 190K trom_ Hartford. Kov™a0ths grom New York_ Glov Nov, 3o0e: from New York Oity, Nov. 2Ist; delphia. Nov. 22nd; 23rd; 10 cnatti, Nov. 27th. Special T for part fonds to and froin Philadelphia and New TES STORAGE CO., Metropolitan 1845, ETING OF THE STOCK- Tiolders o the Liberty Laundry Company of the District of Columbia for the election of directars for the ensuing year will held on Wednesday, December 1he office of the company he Trust Bullding, corner, 15th and 61 sta. B Washingtan, o'clock p.m. The glock transfer booka wm be closed Decem- er 11th and 18th. kD 1. mLLYER, Secretary. THE SIXTEENT TERLY DIVIDEND of one and one-half per cent (1%%) on the 67 series of 1925 preferred stock, and the tenth quarterly dividend of one and three-eighths per cent (1%5) on the 5%% Horten o Ty reterred. sk, of the Boo inmac_ Electric Power Company nave’ been declared payable December 1, 1923. to pre- stocknolders of record on November ooks for the transfer of the said preferred aock will be ciosed trom the close ©of business on November 20, 1929, to the opening of business on Novemner %30 1928, __H. M. KEVSER. Secreiary ROOFIN G:—by Koons Slag_Roofing, Tinatne, Roof Painting and R va. " Thoroush, s “ere” work: by bracticsi roofers. Let us estl mate, KOONS Booins District 0933, 112 5ra Se. B.Ww. A Printing Service —offering ,qxceptional for a discriminating clientele The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D ST. N.W._Phone Nstional 0850 APPLES—CIDER snd Black Twik apples e from hnnfl»piul;‘rd apples. facilitie ocx‘:u.u FRUI FARM, Tel. Rockville : NTED—RET! U'RN wAD OF FURNITUR! ;,u‘m New_ York, Ph! tiantic City. Richmond, Va., . Transfer & Storage Co,, North 3343 "Roofs That Will Last SLAG—TIN—SLATE Prompt Attention to Repair Work Gcorgc W, Barghausen 1126 _9th St. N W. Mc? 1328 ONG - DISTANCE beon ket ing faith TA08 A Zall watinnal 9320" STORAGE CO. OV = AVE i uv- mvhllr Sinee ur conntry Service B First National Banks of Mount Rainier | officers and directors of both of the | | Says: nAvm::nN ‘TRARSFER | [T RAINIER BANK MERGER EXPLAINED Prince Georges Vlce Presi- dent Shows Shortage of First National Met. 1 . ] | Issuance of a statement fully explain- | ing the position of both revelation of more details which led to the merging of the Prince Georges and were developments in the case today. The statement, given out by T. How- | ard Duckett, chairman of the Washing ton Suburban Sanitary Commission, | who is also a vice president of the Prince Georges Bank, contains the as- | surafice that his bank guarantees pay- | | ment to the depositors of the First Na- tional Bank in full. It was also charged this morning that Clatence F. Schatz, vice president and | cashier, had been juggling accounts since last December. " A shortage in his | accounts was discovered last weck, it | was charged. while the bank examiner for the territory was making one of this perfodical inspections, when a $2,000 check was presented against which there was no deposit on the bookkeep- er's ledger. ' Last Publicity Statement. A study of the last public statement *of the First National Bank, given fol- lowing the controller’s call of October 4, showed the institution was operating on a surplus of $5,000. Other items in the statement are: Loans and d counts, $206,381.29; overdrafts, $3,061.50; United States Government securities owned, $25475: cash and due from banks, $10,629.27; ‘outside ¢hecks and other ‘cash’ items, $47.60. The capital stock paid into the institution was $25.000. Mr. Duckett's statement follows: “The Prince Georges Bank, by agree- ment with the board of directors of the first, National Bank of Mount. Rainier, | took over the assets and assumed the | liabilities of the First National Bank as | of Saturday morning, November 16. | “An_examination of the First Na- | tional Bank of Mount Rainfer made re- | v, disclosed the fact that there was | {a shortage in the cashier’s accounts of | | approximately $20,000, a large part of which, however, was covered by the cashler’s bond. The board of directors in a thorough canvass of thes ituation Friday night concluded that in order to completely protect its depositors. it was advisable to make some arrangement | with the Prince Georges Bank to pay the depositors and take over the assets | of the First National Bank. At a joint mesting Friday night of the board of directors of the First National Bank and a. committee representing the Prince Georges Bank, an arrangement was worked out, whereby the Prince Georges Bank guaranteed the payment to the depositors in full, on demand, as well as the other liabilities of the First Natfonal Bank, consisting mostly of | outstanding cashier’s checks and Christ- |mas savings “accounts, the Prince | Georges Bank taking over all of the as | sets of the First National Bank. Continuance of Affairs. ! “Until such time »s the Mount Rainier branch of the Prince Georges Bank can’_rearrange it facilities for handling the enlarged clientele, the affairs of the First National Bank will continue to be operated from its present bank building on Rhode Island avenue, but | it is thought that within a weck or 10 days the consolidation will be com- pleted and the transaction of business of both institutions wgll be conducted at the Mount Rainier branch of the Prince Georges Bank. At the time of the transaction the assets of the First National Bank of Mount Rainier were aboat $300,000, with deposits and Christmas savings | funds of about $210,000. The assets of the Prince Georges Bank are $2,700,- 000, with deposits at its Mount Rainier branch alone of slightly over $1,000,000. 1t is thought by those familiar with the banking situation in Mount Rain- ier, and it is the expressed hope of the institutions, that the consolidation will result in greater service to the com- munity. The Mount Rainier branch of the Prince Georges Bank is begin- ning immediately to make all the ne sary arrangements to facilitate handling | the' business of its new clinets, ‘IS GIVEN 11 YEARS }Special Court Imposes Heavy Pen-| alty for Lese Majeste and 5 Xmultmg General. By the Assoclated Press. BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, November 18. —A special court yesterday sentenced the physician, Mitan Simitch, 40 10 years in the penitentiary for les majeste. He was piven an additional year for in+ sulting Gen. Zivkovitch, dictator, after King Alexander suspended the consti- tution last January. THEFT SUSPECT KILLS SELF ON WAY TO .IAIL Companion, Wounded by Same Bul- let, Is Expected to Die~ at Hospital. By the Associaled Press. DECATUR, Ga. November 18.—The bullet” with which one man ended his life here last night seriously wounded his unidentified companion. Ben Plazz, 29, and his companion were arrested as suspected automobile thieves. Near the end of the trip to jail in a police auto- mobile, Plazz pulled a pistol out of his rubber’ boot and fired & bullet into his right temple. It came out through the left temple and lodged in the brain of his companion. ‘The unidentified man was given little chance for recovery by hospital at- tendants. Papers found on Plazz's body included & non-commissioned officer’s warrant naming Ben Piazz corporal in the guard ‘company at the United States | Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leaven- worth, Kans,, dated September 9, 1926. The men denied the automobile 'which | aroused suspicion was_stolen, saying | they had bought it in Chattancoga. {| Will Rogers | HOLLYWOOD, Calif.,, November 18.—I see where a transcontinental air line has made a big cut in fares, That's what aviation should have done in the first place. They knew they had to lose money for a year or 50, so lose it carrying a full load. It's the financial fear that keeps more people on the ground than the “ physical fear. Another suggestion, if I may: Choke the ad writer or chamber of commerce that uses the expression “air minded.” People thinks its some kind of mental con- Aition that you have to work your- self up into before leaving the ground. If you ride in a 1918 Buick, you are not necessarily “Buick minded,” or if in a Lincoln, you are not “Lincoln minded.” You travel in what you can afford. Even | liquor raid by county anks and || MISS SUE COLQUITT HARDM! daughter of the Governor of Georgia, who presided as Queen of the Pageant, “America of Yesterday and Todw,” Valdosta, Ga. FRAT HOUSE FACES PADLOCK AGTION Raid Is Bel;evod to Have Exposed Bootleg Ring at Illinois U. By the Associated Press URBANA, Ill, November 18.—A officers on the, Gamma Eta Gamma fraternity house early yesterday has brought 35 Uni- versity of Illinois students face-to-face with the prospect of arrest and expul- | sion from school. Twelve gallons of alcohol, gin and whisky were confiscated at the fraterni- | ty house, which,officers said, was being | used as headquarters for a ring of stu- | dent bootleggers, who, they believed, had | | been operating all Fall. The Gamma Eta Gamma house is three blocks from the university campus. State’s Attorney Cline and Sheriff Shoat saild padlock action would be started to close the place as a public nuisance. Three Students Arrested. Three students were arrested. Wil- liam Sherman of Crown Point, Ind. a sophomore, was hetd by officers to have been the leader in liquor sales. Alfred J. Whithers of Hibbing, Minn., a fresh- man, and Ernest Longbons of Marion, 1il, a° junior, were the other two held. Preliminary Shoat to believe that bootlegging had been going on since school started in September, alcohol being purchased at | $12 a gallon and sold for $32. It was believed that only a few students were actually involved in the sale of liquor, | but officers regarded the entire fraterni- ty as implicated. J. D. Lewis of Orchardville, 111, members would be present whenever the State's _attorney wanted to question them. When students at the fraternity house were questioned immediately aft- er the raid all denied knowledge of any | liquor in the house. Trunk Pelds Alcohol, ‘The raiders saild a trunk owned by Withers yielded a 5-gallon jug of al- found in Longhons' trunk. The other liquor was found in various caches about the house. B. W. Hoare, a student of the School of Engineering, admitted, under ques- was released on his promise to hold himself ready to testify. Saturday was Dads’ day at the Uni- versity of Tilinois, and several thousand fathers were in Champaign and Urbana for the occasion. Gamma Eta Gamma is_a national law school organiaztion. Officers said if ownership of liquor could be traced to escape padlock action. Keeps Undesirables Away. At last tramps, hawkers and other nuisances may be discouraged from an- | noying the housewife. A Dutch in- ventor has devised an inexpensive de- vice that will fit any doorbell and cause it to ring only when a penny is dropped into the siot, says Popular Science Monthly. Visitors, errand boys and others who have legitimate business at a house will not be out of pocket, however, for they may receive their coin back as soon as the door is opened to them. MANY SAMPLES LEONARD FOOD-| BABY CONTEST DAILY 3 P.M. Any baby over one and under four years may enter. Winners are selected by ap- plause. Prize, $2.50 in Gold Contest Al d night Matinee, 10c Night, 25¢ a pilot’s mind has no more air in it than a subway guard's has, Yours, WILL ROGERS. Will Admit You given at the Lowndes County Fais at Wide World Fhoto. | investigation led Sheriff | presi- | dent of the fraternity, pledged that all | cohol, and that 2 gallons of whisky were | tioning, that he had made liquor pur- | | chases at the fraternity, police said. He | individuals the fraternity itself might | DISTRICT GROCERY STORES PRIZES GIVEN AWAY Including A CHEVROLET COACH SERVEL GAS REFRIGERATOR MAJESTIC RADIO PREMIER ELECTRIC CLEANER CONTEST EACH NIGHT TONIGHT Ple Eating Contest for Ladies. TUESDAY €iyncopated Foxtrot AUDITORIUM 1900 E St. N.W. Bug Ask Any D. G. S. Store for o Cmmx-n Thee CAPPER UPHOLDS FARMERS® ATTITUDE, Hopes Rush to Protect Busi- ness in Stock Break Will Not Be U. S. Aid to Speculation. ! By the Associated Press. ! ‘The hope of farmers that “the rush| of national leaders to protect legitimate business against the speculative stock | market crash is not to be diverted into | an attempt to ‘place the Government | in business’ for the purpose of extend- ! ing ‘governmental ald’ to & speculative | stock market” was expressed last night | by Senator Capper, Republican, of Kan- sas. In speaking of the farmers’ attitude ‘in a radio address over the Columbia ‘Broadcn.sung System, the Senator uod‘ the farm States were not entitled to tHe appellation of backward States “be- | cause they have not boughc and paid | for certain legislation.” “To the conservative flrmrr mind,” { | he said, “the underlying theory of the speculative market that 6 per cent divi- dend stock could be worth two or three times its income value is ‘economically unsound,’ to'quote an expression we farmers have heard numerous times in the past eight years.” He asserted that after eight years of «ffort the farmer now “sees a Federal I)‘h:m Board getting into action to fos- ter co-operating marketing and give to | agriculture =~ the collective bargaining power that legislation already has as- | sisted in giving manufacturing and in- }duer\ finance and commerce and labor.” BUTTERWORTH SPEAKS. Business Liberty Ts Held on Good Be- | havior, C. of C. Leader Says. | “Business liberty is held on the tenure of good behavior,” William Butterworth, | president of the Chamber of Commerce | of the United States, declared during | the Colller hour which was broadcast | 1ast night over the National Broadcast- | ing_Co. system. | “Business must “understand that. as such, it has no sacred privileges which | the ‘public is bound to respect,” he | added. “It must realize that it it is to retain legitimate liberty it must win and keep public confidence: and the only way to win public confidence is to dr‘scr\e it.” Butterworth@declared, however, ohm "t the public is to appraise and ! fairly judge the value of economic processes and the characler of business practices, it must be properly informed. its information, he stressed, should be kept fully abreast of the rapid and ex- | tensive manifestations of business growth and evolution. These changes, resulting from the normal unfolding of the economic struc- ture, he pointed out. necessarily con- | front the public with new business | technique, new processes, new methods and new practices. AMERICANS HUNT LONG-HAIRED TIGERS Museum of Naiuml }{lsfory Expe- dition Off From Moscow to Search | Siberian Caves. By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, November 18-—The North Asiadic expedition of the American | Muscum of Natural History of New | York left vesterday for Siberia to hunt for long-haired cave-dwelling tigers in | the Amur River district. Tiness contracted during his recent hunt for the rate Saga antelope in | Tadjikistan prevented Willlam J. Mor- | den of Chicago from leaving at this time. He still hopes to join George G.| Goodwin, George C. Graves and other | | members of the party later, but the | | physicians insist that Mr. Morden is | fo0 weak from the rigors and priva-| tions undergone in the forests of Tad- | jikistan to withstand another long | hunting trip. It is possible, lhcrrlnrr,, that he will return to New York short- | ly with the six antelope specimens for the museum. COAST GUARD CUTTER | | SAVES 25 OFF STEAMER | | Boat Ts, Beached After Striking | Rock Near Cape Decision, on Alaskan Coast. By the Associated Press. | KETCHIKAN, Alaska, November 18. | —The Coast Guard cutter Cygan ar- rived here yesterday with 25 officers and members of the crew of the steamer Depere, which struck a rock near Cape | Decision, Kuiu Island, Southeastern | Alaska, Friday night and later was| beached because it was in a sinking | condition near Port McArthur. | | “'With_the exception of George Kin- near, chief engineer, all those brought here’ will leave for Seattle on the next | southbound boat. Kinnear will return to the wreck on the Salvage King, ex- pected here today from Victoria, British Columbia. Capt. John Newland and eight men remained on the ship. The Depere struck-at 6:55 p.m. Pa- cific time, and was beached an hour later. Water was flooding the engine Toom and the ship could not have been kept, from sinking five minutes longer, survivors said. D AND MASTER ICE BOX WEDNESDAY Rolling Pin Contest for Ladies. THURSDAY Solo Dancing Contest for Couples. for Men. ing to enter should ecome to the ontest. Prizes for each event. Nov. 13 to 23 2 to 5 P.M. 7:30 te 10 P.M. lin the gala functions of ‘the Austrian | at Night for 15 { | | FLORA JELLINICK, | Beauty of Viennese soclety, is a leader | capit: —Associated Press Photo. FLYER LANDS SHP ON ROF OF STORE Machme ls Destreyed but Two Passengers Are Saved by Pilot. SEATTLE, Wash, November 18 Selecting the flat roof of a downtown department store for an emergency landing when the engine of his air-| plane “froze” while he was taking two | Boy Scouts on a sight-seeing trip over Seattle, Bob Wark, veteran pilot, brought led craft, down with only minor s to himself and his passengers | esterday. The plane was demolished. | Wark took off from Boeing Field | with his passengers, Ben Taylor, 17, and | Fred Knoph, 15, and had circled over | the city and was ready to return to the | field when the engine froze. Realizing | it would be impossible to make the field, | he dived at the department store roof.| To avoid striking the brick wall at the edge of the roof with his land gear, he nosed the plane slightly and it landed upside_down. Wark and his passengers extricated themselves from the wreckage. INVESTOR FOUND DEAD. | Peter Doerr, 70, Retired Chicago Realty Operator, Lost on Stocks, By the Associated Press | CHICAGO, November 18 —Losses. in the stock market are believed by police | to have prompted Peter Doerr, 70, re- | tired real estate operator, to ‘end his! life with gas. Doerr's body was found | in the gas-filled kitchen of his home | yesterday by his son, Adolph. The lat-| ter told police that Doerr had lost prac- tically his life's savings in the recent | market slump. TONTINE! i = il e nl||ul|| Washal Ask for Samples and Estimates W. STOKES SAMMONS, 830 13th St. N.W, l REPORTS ON DRY SITUATION CLASH W.C.T. VY Says Claims ot Wet Groups Are Refuted by Facts. The National Woman's Christian Temperance Unicn said in a statement today that the increasing severity of State enactments against the-bootleg- ger is “the best test of America’s de- termination to rid itself of liquor.” At the same time the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment said in a statement that “more than four times as many killings as the Fed- eral Government has ever reported will be shown by a complete canvass of deaths due to prohibition enforce- ment.” The dry statement was based on the annual survey of Mrs. Lenna Lowe Yost, director of legislation for the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. The wet side was presented in a report called “Reforming America With a Shotgun.” Dry Majorities Cited. “Dry majorities are expanding, wet authorities are shrinking,” said Mrs. Yost. “In 1989 every State Législature except Wisconsin that took action on prohibition strengthened its laws.” ‘The Association Against tbe Prohibi- tion Amendment said that a study of " | 66 prohibition killings showed “six dis- tinct types of murderous prohibition enforcement.” A study also was made, it said, “of the various methods of soft- | pedaling Volstead killings and protect- ing the killers from paying the penalty in court.” “It is charged,” it added, “that Gov- ernment. reports of fatal shootings are ‘generaliy meager’ and in some cases | ‘biased and actually untrue.’ " Claims Held Refuted. ‘The Woman's Christian Temperance Union said that the “facts in the case of national and State legislatures are | a refutation of the wet claim that the American people are opposed to pro- hibition and its enforcement. “Year after year the lawmakers, | elected by popular ballot, have imposed greater and greater penalties on the bootiegger,” it added. “This is evidence that the lawmakers are going to the people for advice, rather_than to the metropolitan wet press, because instead of slackening en- forcement, nearly all the States have increased 'the severities of their origi- nal_anti-liquor laws.” The Association Against the Prohibi- tion Amendment report said “the death records of the Prohibition Bureau_are liberally sprinkled with cases in which Federal officers have been charged with homicide or murder, the Federal Court has intervened and the defendants have been acquitted.’ e believe that this practice, while entiteld. Within the IAWE Bkt ot ne frequently blocked the punishment of reckless shooters,” it said. CAUTION DN LOANS Peru Is Urged to Avoid Borrow- ing. By Cable to The Star. LIMA. Peru, November 18.—The | Peruvian government should abstain from foreign credit operations while such unfavorable conditions exist in foreign markets, the official newspaper, La Prensa, said yesterday in ap edi- torial analyzing the decline of 'prices on the New York Stock Exchange.*“By making necessary economies in the na- tional budget and living within our re- sources, we will be able to make future loans under conditions more favorable than the last ones contracted,” the edi- torial saig. Beautify your home with DUPONT TONTINE Window Shades Made to Order at Factory Prices IDimict 3324-3328 ' Proprietor Children’s Book Week: at ‘Brentano’s VERY special child will find books and games, maps and globes, and under- standing friends in our Juvenile Department. Every parent will find it very simple to plan for' the children’s play time— study time — reading time — by visiting Operatic Find NEW GOVERNMENT FAVORED IN SPAIN Duke of Alba Is Mentioned as Successor to Premier De Rivera. By the Associated Press. LONDON, November 18.—A Gibraltar dispatch to the Daily News today reports that increased attacks on the dictator- ship of Premier Primo de Rivera have induced King Alfonso to propose that the Duke of Alba form a new govern- ment. The correspondent said the opposition to the premier was coming from those who condemn his financial policy as incompetent as well as from his usual opponents. The Duke of Alba, who is 51 years old and a close friend of the King, Ve Supposca né had been suggested t Was suj ad been as the bc':t means of saving a difficult situation. KATHLEEN KERSTING Of Wichita, Kans., 21 years old, will make her operafic debut with the Chicago_Civic Opera Co. this season. Her voice was discovered by Mme. Erma Cave on 2 visit to Wichita, elght years ago. Miss Kersting has studied for several years under Emma Calve in France. P. & A. Photo. One Doctor for 25, 000 CONSTANTINOPLE (#)—The gov- ernment is trying to double the number of students in the state medical school here. Doctors are so scarce in Anatolia that when 1,000 lives were taken in the quakes, floods and fires at Rizeh, there was only one physician to ad- minister to the town of 25,000 inhabi- tants. The duke is almost as English as Spanish, being a descendant of the royal family of Stuarts and of the Churchill family. His full title is Duke of Alba and Berwick, the latter title having been bestowed on an ancesior by James II of England, —- Tce Age End Seen Near. Back from his Summer’s exvlonfions into the Arctic regions, Donald Mac- Millan says the ice is receding farther North every Summer. This is notice- able especially as regards the great ice cap on Baffin Land, covering 700 square miles. MacMillan believes we are near the end of an ice age during which t.he ice sheet from the North pushed as far as Southern Ohio and 'nll.nol.s Missourl and Kansas, as shown by the :&lld drift and granite boulders depos- The Blackistone Floral Service Is Most Efficient T'ravelers arriving here from all over America tell us that the Blooms we sell and the Service we offer are not excelled anywhere in the world. 1407 H St. Between 14th and 15th Sts. Telephone National 4905 When You Entertain —at luncheon or dinner, there's little occa- sion to worry over possible damage to the table that’s equipped Polished plate glass touch of smartness, practical purpose. Glass Table Tops Cut to Order Very Reasonably Home beautifiers, nishes, Stains, LOW PRICES. ’ Lacquers, all nationally-known kinds at SPECIALLY “Floor Wax & Polishing Brushes HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS & GLASS 1334 New York Ave.—Phone Main 1703 with a GLASS TOP. tops give an added too, as well as servea A S T such as Paints, Var- Enamels, etc., of YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO VISIT THE LINCOLN METROPOLITAN SALON OF FINE CUST OM-DESIGNED MOTOR CARS AT THE MAYFLOWER HOTEL NOVEMBER 15th TO 21st GREAT PLEASURE is taken in presenting this very unusual display of fine coachwork in both open and closed body types, representing the work of the foremost coachmakers . . . in conjunction with an interesting mechanical display illustrating the unusual methods of which Lincoln employs. precision craftsmanship If you are a lover of fine things, you will be well repaid by a visit to the Mayflower Hotel, at any time between the hours of 10 A.M. and 10 p. M., until November 21st. THE LINCOLN

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