Evening Star Newspaper, January 30, 1931, Page 3

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chance on ACUTE INDI- GESTION? If not—have Bell-ans on hand. _BELLANS =2 FOR INDIGESTION Grand PIANOS Upright PIANOS Player PIANOS *50 0 °235 Terms as Low as $2 Weekly WE RENT PIANOS FOR CONSTIPATION Feen-amint Subscribe Today It costs only about 11; cents per day and 5 cents Sundays to have Washington's best newspa- per delivered to you regularly every evening and Sunday morn- Telephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- lect at the end of each month. SPECIAL NOTICES. \DS_TO _AND FROM PH] YORK. BOSTON and all West Wi DELPHIA, NEW oints Sou%n and LIPT, IS THANSFER & STORAGE C 1505 Fou St R W, Phone North mzv..su MANAGER OF AN APARTMENT OR CARE- taker. by 8 conservative ex-business m best of references. Address Box 213-K, WANTED FOR FLORIDA OR Pointa south, Call Lincoln 321" BTERLING HOTEL OFFICE WILL BE TEM porarily located at 27tn and L sts xo'rxc: smsv GIVEN TO ALL THAT I will be responsible for no other debis ex- Gept thoge contracted by myself. JOHNSON, 1630 Foxhall rd. n.w SCRAPED AND FINISHED; B DO e R ., 1016 20th st. West 1071, OUR ONE JOB 18 TO MOVE YOUR GOODS with care, consideration and low cost to or 000 miles. and well tell you kiow much AL DELIVERY A T BE xuspohsmu: nmfl' ANY gndunu of Blair Military sionary College. Tak LONG-DISTANCE MOVING — WE 1 HA been “keeping faith with the public since the crime and forms a pathetic figure our country-wide service. c-u Nmun-l nzzo DAVIDSON TRANSFER u..um VAN LINES. EBRVXCE WANTED—RETUR From BOSTON > 3an. From DETROIT GREENSBORO™ To KNOXVILLE 10 CHARLOTT 13 w;um \trucv xnr smml ots" 5" and from nd N NTY STORAGE COMPANY, w8 Capiiol 81 Atlantic 2100 Pamtmg—Papermg eed, work; prices 30 y¢ars at Rucker s, NA 0333 30 5 7 2 reasonable: i | Avalor: Theater, in Chevy Chase, D. C., AGENT ALLIED | said, that he was in Washington on the Ave also pack and Shid bY | date of the hold-up. DANIEL | of an automobile. £9 *eil U5 | held here, claims to have mads his first ieb, | in the hold-up. Paul Taylor, Who is & 5| county traced a telephone call he made JEWEL BANDITS HAD PROIBITION BADGE Emblem Was Found on Phil- lips, Believed Leader in Laurel Hold-Up. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., January | 30.—Police authorities were . today | checking with the office of Col. Amos W. W. Woodcock, national director of | prohibition enforcement, to find out how Internal Revenue badge No. 654, which was found in the possession of Thomas A. Phillips, 30, one of the two bandits under arrest in’connection with the Laurel jewelry store hold-up Wed- nesday, came into the bandit's posses- sion. Parents Coming From Kansas. Parents of Louis C. Taylor, 30, fon of a wealthy Grantsville, Kans., nursery- man, and bridegroom of three weeks, | who committed suicide in a swamp near Lausel when cornered by Maryland Stafe police, notified authorities today that they were leaving Kansas by mo- tor to claim the body of the dead bandit. An inquest will be held tomorrow at 3 o'clock before Judge Harry M. Scott at Laurel into the death of Louis Tay- lor, who died from a bullet wound over the heart and one in the right temple. ‘The dead bandit’s bride of three weeks and Mrs. Alpie Olsen, reported woman friend of Phillips’, who have been held at Ellicott City on a technical charge following their arrest with Phillips Wednesday, will be released from cus- tody today, according to Deputy Sherift ‘Thomas H. Garrison of this county. Meanwhile the two bandits who were quickly rounded up by the Maryland police authorities are behind the bars here. The men are in separate cells, one on each side of the building. Phillips, who police are trying to con- nect with a series of robberies in this section and with other major crimes through the country, pleads for a chance to get his hands on Paul M. Taylor, baker and college graduate, the other member of the bandit trio. According to Phillips, the hold-up failed through the *“chicken-hearted- ness” of Paul Taylor, who became scared and drove off in the bakery truck in which the bandits were to make their getaway, leaving his two confederates without means of transportation. Phil- lips stated from his cell yesterday that he would “get Paul Taylor if it took him 10_years.” Detective Sergts. Dowd and Flaherty of the Washington police, who visited the local jail yesterday, characterized the capture of Phillips as the most im- portant criminal catch in this vicinity in recent years. Phillips ‘claims to have been a mem- ber of the notorious Whittemore band of highwaymen which terrorized Bal- timore several years ago and openly praises the “Candy Kid" leader of the Whittemore gang, who died on the gal- lows for the murder of a prison guard following his arrest, as a real leader. Questioned by Washington Police. ‘Washington police questioned Phillips yesterday and said he answered the de- scription of the man who held up the last August. Phillips admitted, theY His fingerprints | were taken for comparison with those of the Avalon robber. Baltimore detectives plan to question Phillips today concerning the recent hold-up of the Commercial National Bank in that city, where six men ob- tained about $15,000. It is und-°rstood they will also try to connect him with a series of other robberies in that city in_recent months. Phillips is also said to be wanted in Los An'eles for forgery and the larceny Local county author- ities also believe that he may also be wanted for a murder which was com- mitted during a hold-up about six months ago. Paul M. Taylor, 28, the other man venture into crime when he took part Academy, N. J, and Ohio Wesleyan University, and is the son of a distinguished lec- turer, blames drink as leading him to beside Phillj Louis Taylor, the dead bandit, is also believed to have bzen more or less of an amateur at the hold-up game. Paul Taylor was captured in a Balti- more restaurant Wednesday night after Deputy Sheriff Tom Garrison of this to his wife, who operates a bakery in Chevy Chase, D. C., asking for clothes and money. A taxicab in which Paul Taylor's wife left for Baltimore from her Kensington, Md., home was trailed by Maryland polic= and Taylor was arrested by Corpl. Kreiss of Maryland police as he wllwd for his wife. TUXEDOS FOR HIRE PRESSING WHILE YOU WAIT. 210 9th ST, N.W. . MET. 702 Window Shades @5¢ Genuine 150 auality Hartshorn water. up to 36”x6 o phone orders. THE SHADE FACTORY 3417 CONN. AVE. ROOF WORK —ot any nature promptly and capably looked after by practical roofers. Call us up. Roofing 119 3rd St 8.W. Company District 0933. Printing Craftsmen ... are at your service for result-getting publicity The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D St. N'W. Phone National 0650 Re-Upholstering s -1 larger McDevitt £ h an estimate on that chair or suite. s and prices submitted. McDevitt’s Upholstery Shop re s Bamples of mater 1202 G St. N.W. Dist. 321 J 'C. FLOOD CO %25 Years Dcnem:amz sepy Plumbing, Heating, ¥ mnmg Jobbing a_Specialty, TR Dec 2700 enings. Clev. 0619, _ THAT MATTRESS OF YOURS HAS ‘Bevn siept on, & Good whils Row and hecas repovating; You Are Also Wondering —why the bed looks humpy and feels un- comfortable. We are awaiting vour order 1o renovate it. i, . 362 Bedeil Mig. Co. 610 E_ST. N.W._ L. NE SERVICE v trips for part loads Baltimore, Philad ATES STORAGE CQ., 1N it 11 u “CARS WILL BE 8OLD Auction, for charges, on February John Nipson. C: Sidsmobile sedan. PeTI0 v'\'enm;} Chevrolet coupe. Md. evrolet touring, P.7 . Hudson conch, P-5710 ord F-9 Tiack Rowe, Chevroet Goupe, 0-5836 The following curs will be sold at Wesch ler’s Public Auction, for chi n Febru- Hupmobile tour ord coupe; V-7831. ‘All above hn hre 1% sedan. N. Y. 7-P-1239. | LAND BANK BOND DROP LAID TO FORECLOSURE Farm Loan Commission Links Price Decline to Policy of U. 8. Board. By the Assoclated Press. Congressional discussion of suspend- ing Federal Land Bank foreclosures was said today by Paul Bestor, Farm Loan Commissioner, to have been accom- panied by a drop in pricss on bonds issued by the system. “Since the moratorium agitation, the bond market has dropped 4 points,” Bestor told the House Banking Com- mittee. “I don’t know whether this was the only factor,” he added. Later in his testimony the commis- sioner said the price decline “may have been just a coincidence.” Asked by Representative Steagall, Democrat, Alabama, whether the price decline was due to postponement agita- | tion or to the board's opposition to | m(‘dr‘"asmg its capital reserve, Bestor | said: “I don't know, but the policy of the hoard was well known. ‘The largest known bulk of “drowned gold” is that of the Vigo Bay plate fleet: belonging to Spain. In 1703 the flotilla took refuge in Vigo Bay, north- west of Spain, guarded by French warships, but was sunk by British raid- ers. The gold and silver ingots are re- puted to have represented $100,000,000. 177zpzriiizzzzzzzZ2Zd ROUND $1.50 TRIP DAILY BALTIMORE Good for return within seven days of date of sale. Tickets sold commencing February 1 for all Congressional Limited—Crescent Limited—Liberty Limited and The Senator. Pennsylvania Railroad trains except THE EVENING WASHINGTON D. C., FRIDAY, Will Rogers HOUSTON, Tex—Well here we are in Houston, back at the Rice Hotel where the last time I was here was at Democratic Convention. The bell boy: teil me they still find old empties around from then. I have always said this was the coming town of the whole South, this is the town that dug an ocean. That's too bad about Smedley Butler. Don't really belicve he meant it that way. Good thing for our public speak- ers that Russia hasn't got an am- bassador here, or he would have half of America reprimanded. PREMIER BENNETT HERE FOR PARLEY White House Calls Visit In- formal—MacNider Returns With Canadian Official. Richard B. Bennett, prime minister of Canada, who arrived in Washington on an unofficial visit shortly after noon to- day, will confer with President Hoover and Secretary of State Stimson later this afternoon. 1t was said at the White House that the prime minister's visit to the Capital at this time is of a purely informal na- ture. It was said also that during his conferences with the President and the Secretary of State the general relations between the two countries will be in- formally discussed. Will Discuss Waterways. 1t is understood that the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence waterway project as well as the Niagara Falls situation will be prominent among the matters to be taken up. It is thought likely that Col. Hanford MacNider, American Minister to Canada, who accompanied the pre- mier to Washington, will sit in during the conferences. The President and Mrs. Hoover will tonight entertain Premier Bennett at an informal White House dinner at which only a few persons will be pres- ent. Besides the premier there will be only Secretary Stimson, Col. MacNider, Home Wrong, charge d'affaires of the Canadian legation, and William Castle, Assistant Secretary of State and liaison officer on Canadian affairs. Greeted at Station. Premier Bennett was greeted upon his arrival at the Union Station by repre- sentatives of the State Department and the Canadian charge daffaires. 3 He was taken directly to the Canadian legation on Massachusetts avenue, where he had luncheon before entering on his busy afternoon. WICKERSHAM SEES CRISIS FOR CHURCH Declares Organization Must Be Im- proved—Holds Soviets Direct Challenge. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 30.—George W. Wickersham told a group of church- men last night the Christian Church had reached a crisis and must look to improvements in its organization. “There never has been a time.” the former Attorney General and chairman of the Hoover Crime Commission said to the Church Club of New York, “when it was more necessary for the church to examine its machinery and look closely to discover what possible im- provements can be made in its organi- ullgn than !?ldn n every hand we see the loosenin; hold of religion on our social life." . “We demand too much of the clergy,” he said. “We expect a church rector to be a pastor, preacher, social worker and executive as well as a good companion.” Asserting that an entire generation 0[ young people in Soviet Russia was “growing to maturity espousing a mili- tant gospel of the negation of God,” he sald this was a direct challenge which the laity look to the clergy to accept. Wickersham made no mention of the recently submitted Crime Commission report. Bishop William T. Manning, who sat next to Wickersham at the speakers’ table, praised the ‘“‘thoroughness, com- pleteness and fair-mindedness” of the recently submitted chk!rsham report. PLAN FLIGHT LECTURE Paul Edward Garber to Talk Before Flying Club. | Paul Edward Garber, curator of | aeronautics of the Smithsonian Institu- tion, will give a lecture on famous | flights and_famous_fliers before the Standards Flying Club at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the east lecture room of the Bureau of Standards. Mr. Garber is a | noted authority on the history of avia- | tion. Clarence S. Bruce, president of the club, will preside. i ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. and La. Ave. N.W. 65th Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments James E. Connelly James F. Shea President Secretary 2% o % % 7 ) T.E. COTTMAN, &, TAKES OWN LIFE Baltimore Business Leader Found Dead in Garage of His Home. Speclal Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., January 29— Thomas E. Cottman, president of the Cottman Co.. was found dead in the garage of his home, Westbourne, at gcclciton, in the Greenville Valley to- ay. Friends at the house answering a telephone inquiry today said that he hed shot and killed himself. Coroner Christian Volz was summoned by the Pikesville police and went to the house to_make an investigation. _ Mrs. Cottman was in the house at the time, but it is said that a servant found Mr. Cottman. Mr. Cottman's brother, L. Warrington Cottman, vice president of Cottman Co., reached his office downtown s of his brother's death was received at the office. He left imme- diately for Westbourne. Friends who live nearby hurried to the Cottman home to be with Mrs. Cottman. Death Was Surprise. ‘The news came almost on the eve of a debutante party at Westbourne Mr. and Mrs. Cottman had planned to give a supper party therz on Sunday night for Frances Carroll Rasin and Gertrude Craig. Intimate friends were totally unpre- pared for the news. They said there has been nothing in Mr. Cottman's recent attitude to suggest such a de- velopment and they were at a loss to explain it. Mr. Cottman is about 52 years old and has been the president of the com- pany bearing his name for years. He had taken an active part in Baltimore affairs, especially those concerning shipping and was regarded as a man of strong character. He was an enthusiastic horseman and was_interested in social affairs. Mrs Cottman was, before her marriage, Miss Margaret Darlington Bennett of Boston. They were married about 10 years ago. ‘They have no children. They were seen much in Greenville Valley society and Mr. Cottman was a member of many clubs. Was Trade Leader. Surviving him, in addition to his widow, are the brother, L. Warrington Cottman, and a sister, Mrs. Hugh North, of Lancaster, Pa. During his career Mr. Cottman heid various posts with local trade organi- zations. In 1922 he was chosen presi- dent of the Export and Import Board of Trade. He filled the unexpired term of Austin McLanahian. A year later he was appointed “ae board’s national counselor to represent it in the Cham- ber of Commerce of the United States. | The council of which he became a member serves as an advisory body to the board of directors of the chamber. HOUSE DRY PROBE PLANNED BY DYER Missouri Representative to Pro- pose Investigation by Judiciary Committee. Representative Dyer of Missouri, rank- ing Republican member of the House Judiciary Committee, yesterday pro- posed an independent prohibition inves- tigation by the committee. Dyer announced he was drafting a resolution for the inquiry after Chair- man Graham disclosed that the State | Department had refused to allow Amer- ican Ambassador Morehead to return from Sweden to testify before that com- mittee on the Wickersham prohibition report. Graham said_he was considering taking up the Wickersham report in regular hearings, but that since the de- partment had declined to co-operate he had “no plans.” A modification of the Swedish system was suggested by Com- missioner Henry W. Anderson of the law enforcement body as & substitute for prohibition in the United States. Dyer said he would offer the resolu- tion at the committee's next meeting. LOOK FOR CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Dance, Delta Sigmu Nu Fraternity, ‘Willard Hotel, 9 p. Meeting, Temple Club of Master Masons, (U. S. Post Office Department), Odd Fellows' Temple, 419 Seventh street, 7:30 p.m. Card party, Rathbone Temple, No. 8. Pythian Sisters, Pythian Temple, 1012 Ninth street, 8:30 p.m. Card party, Omicron Chapter, Kap- pa Beta Pi Legal Sorority, Hamilton Hotel, 8 pm. Card party, St. Joseph’s School Hall, Second street, between C and D streets northeast, 8 pm. Dance, Seat Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department, Beaver Dam Country Club, 8 p.m. Meeting, Loyal Ladies of the Royal Arcanum, Odd Fellows' Temple, 419 Seventh street, 8:30 pm. Election and installation of officers. [THURT, 200 ROUTED IN BROADWAY FIRE |Great White Way in Turmoil as Six-Story Building Is Destroyed. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, January 30.— Dancing flames leveled a six-story building on upper Broadway early today, driving more than 200 persons into the cold, injuring 17 others and throwing the Great White Way into a turmoil. Of the injured, two firemen were grievously burned when the fourth floor collapsed, catapulting an entire hook and ladder company to the floor below. Two newspaper photographers were dangerously hurt a block from the fire when flashlight powder prematurely ex- ploded, mangling the left hand of one and possibly blinding the other. Artists and Actors. Most of the tenants, occupying 190 apartments on the upper five floors, scurried to safety via elevators, fire escapes and metal bridges leading to adjoining buildings. Others were helped to safety by firemen and fellow lodgers. The majority were artists and theatrical folk and many were elderly. The scene was the Lincoln Square Building, known also as the Miller Building, which is located at the corner of Sixty-sixth street and Broadway. It houses an arcade leading to Loew's Lin- coln Square Theater, in a separate structure and shops on the ground floor. The construction is of wood and brick. Starting on the third floor about midnight, the fire spread rapidly in a steady wind. Broadway Excited. Some 400 firemen fought the flames from every conceivable vantage point. From the streets, nearby elevated struc- tures and adjoining _buildings _they | poured tons of water into the inferno. The theater building, a movie house, was not damaged and all its patrons had departed before the blaze began. Meanwhile, Broadway was in the throes of the greatest excitement in years. Thousands flocked to the scene from all parts of the city and police were forced to rope off an area four blocks square to restrain them. All elevated and street traffic was sus- pended. Total loss in the fire, said to have been one of the worst in New York in the last 30 years, was estimated at $1,000,000 by a representative of own- ers of the building. Grippe Spreads in Mexxcan Jail. MEXICO CITY, January 30 (#)—An epidemic of grippe, apparently of mild | character, has broken out in Belem Jail here. The jail hospital is filled with victims of the malady. OYSTERS Baked in Shell 72n0 YearR Pennsylvania Ave. at 11th Street Deliciou inners, $1.25 & $1.5¢ THE SCHWARTZ GOLD CLOCK ON SEVENTH ST. —a special low price that should sell all of the 36 of these estfield Nationally Known 15-Jewel Woatches Man’s Type Strap Watch at the same low price $17.75 PAY 50c $|7.75 A most unusual price for a guaranteed 15- jeweled movement in a beautiful chromium case . . . absolutely will not change their bright plahnum-hke finish. WEEKLY WTTZ &Son Founded 1888 708 Seventh St. 709 Fourteenth St. JANUARY 30, 1931 28 MINERS KILLED INPIT UNDER SEA 25 Others Escape Deep Shaft in England After Fatal Explosion. By the Associated Press. WHITEHAVEN, Cumberland, Eng- land, January 30.—Twenty-eight coal miners are known to have been killed in an explosion which buried them in the deep Haig pit here yesterday. The total was computed by mine officials who issued a casualty list at noon. Six- teen bodies had been recovered at that hour. All the others had been located and were being brought out as quickly as possible. Twenty-five miners brought out alive. Twelve of them are in serious condition in a hospital. The min> owners said a number of men caught on the fringe of the explosion turned back into the gas- filled passages and rescued some of the injured. But for thm the death toll would have been higher The cause of the accident has not been determined. 200 Men in Pit. About 200 men were down in the Haig pit—which is a deep mine with workings running some miles beneath the sea near here—when a mighty blast occurred in the part known as “No. 3 North District.” This blew out a brick wall which had been built to seal an areg where 13 e died in an explosion three years Adjoinlnz the Haig mine is the Wel- | lington pit, where 130 men and boys | were killed by an explosion in 1910. | The men gassed were those working | there last night, but they were brought up without any deaths and were taken | to a hospital. As soon as the explosion was heard | rescue parties were organized to go| down in the mine and physicians and | nurses were assembled at the pit head. Soon the entire surrounding population Jammed around the mine, with an estimated 3,000 wives, children and other relatives anxiously awaiting news from below. Visited by Prince of Wales. Rescue parties went down well equip- ped with special apparatus, but were handicapped in fighting after damp. They pushed ahead as fast as possible and quickly sent up those who had escaped injury altogether or were slightly gassed. Distressing demonstrations of sorrow were witnessed as the dead were brought up and identified by the rela- tives, Many haggard women collapsed with grief and had to be taken home by sympathizing friends. The Haig Pit was visited in 1927 by the Prnce of Wales. Wearing miner’s overalls, the British heir descended 1,200 feet in the shaft and was trans- | ported in a pit-truck to the coal face, a ll;nlllfi under the sea, where he operated a i The workings already reach 8 miles | under sea and are constantly being ex- tended. BUILDING Bll:L APPROVED ‘The Senate Naval Affairs Committee today approved a bill authorizing $3,- 200,000 for a building program at the United States Naval Hospital in_this city. As passed by the House last June, the bill authorized only $1,500,000. Of the amount authorized by the Senate committee today, $100,000 vlvuld be charged to the Naval Hospital fund. The bill would enable the Secretary of the Navy to remodel, rep]lce or extend | existing buildings and to erect addi- tional structures. SN World's Finest Dairy Plants— Not Connected With Any Other Dairy Industry DECATUR Kindness to Mother Of Friend Wins Man Legacy of $50,000 By the Associated Press. OTTAWA, Ill, January 30.— John G. Schumacker, city com- missioner, and Irving Campbell were chums when Campbell went away to the Spanish-American War. “Look after mother,” Campbell said to Schumacker, “I may not come back.” Campbell died aboard ship dur- ing the war, and in the years that followed Schumacker found time for many little kindnesses for the woman who had lost her only son. Last week Mrs. Campbell died. Yesterday her will made public. In it was a les’lt‘y for Schumacker and his family. Its value was fixed at $50,000. NAMED TO WEST POINT Alexander P. Gordon Appointed Cadet at Large. Alexander P. Gordon, 3110 Thirty- fourth street, this city, has been ap- pointed by the President a cadet at large at the West Point Military Acad- emy, subject to qualification at the en- trance examination in March. Congressional appointments to the Military Academy have been issued to George M. Miller, jr., Laurel Md.; Rob- ert T. Violett, Mount Rainier, Md., and Thomas R. Proctor, Chesapeake Beach, Md,, the latter two being alternates. ‘The custom of using evergreens for decoration is older than Christmas. It dates back to the Feast of Saturn in early Roman days. RUM SALE SUSPECT 1S FOUND GUILTY Sam Hurwitz, Accused of Taking Order in Senate Of- fice Building, Convicted. Sam Hurwitz, Miramar Apartments, was convicted late yesterday afternoon of transporting, sale and possession of liquor by a jury before District Supreme Court Justice Oscar R. Luhring. ‘The chief witness for the Government was Roger C. Butts, former undercover man at the Senate Office Building for the prohibition unit in the campaign to catch George L. Cassiday, “the man with the green hat,” who was said to be_the * cmclll Senate bootlegger.” Butts testified that he first met Hur- witz in the stationery room of the Sen- ate Office Building and arranged with him to deliver to him a half gallon of alcohol at Thirteenth and Irving streets July 16. The arrest of Hurwitz followed the delivery, he said. Attorneys James A. O'Shea and John H. Burnett for the accused sought to avall themselves of the recent amend- ment to the Jones act making the pos- session of less than a gallon of alcohol a misdemeanor, but Justice Luhring ruled that it might be a felony if the offender was known as an habitual vio- lator of the national prohibition act. Sentence was deferred. Assistant United States Attorney James F. Hughes con- ducted the prosecution. Going Out This Evening? You'll come back to a warm house if you happen to be using Marlow's Famous Reading Anthra- cite. Here's a fuel that you can control—per- fectly—at any hour of the day or night; a fuel that has made thousands upon thousands of friends because it is so long burning and de- pendable, Ask Marlow for it. Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 Radio Prices Slashed Below Cost—Must Be Sold 20 high-grade Freed-Eisemann electric sets at considerably less than hali price. Beautiful console models, $100—were $275. $300 consoles now $125. $227 consoles at $85. $200 table models at $60 and $175 table models, $50. All sets complete with tubes and installation, guaranteed for 1 year. These sets are the famous Freed-Eisemann neutrodyne with 7, 8 and 9 tubes. Carroll Supply Co. 717 12th St. N.W. Natl 7320 THOMPSONJ DAIRY 1400

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