Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1931, Page 31

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

424 FINISH COURSE AT CENTRAL HIGH Capacity Audience Attends Graduation Ceremony at Auditorium. At a ceceraony attended by a capacity audience of friends and relatives, 424 students were awarded diplomas by Central High School last nighi in the school auditorium. Mrs. Henry Grat- tan Doyle, member of the Board of RBducation and wife of Dean Henry Grattan Doyle, who Tuesday night de- livered the commencement address at Business High School, acted as pre- siding officer, and introduced the speaker of the evening, Rev. Albert Jo- seph McCartney. " Following the entrance of the gradu- 's, Rev. Walter M. Michael opened the exercises with the invocation. Mrs. Doyle then presented Rev. McCartney, who urged the young graduates to place permanently in the halls of their lives the “golden shields of service, chivalry, patriotism and faith”” Em- ploying the parable of the decline of Solomon’s kingdom under the reign of s son, and the substitution of brass jelds for the golden ones which had orned the walls of the famous tem- of Solomon, the speaker charged his audience never to be content with life's second best, to refuse always to accept the brass instead of the gold of true values. Life Pictured as Fight. Rev. McCartney told the students that it is their duty and responsibility as citizens of this Nation to “honor | its past. serve its present and dedicate yourselves to its future. fight to the finish a fight with oneself,” the minis added, and warned his hearers against the tempta- | “Life isga tion to challenge the valued institutions | Henry Brooke Stauffer, John Stanley| | of society. In eclosing he pleaded with them to give their best and prophesied | that the best would come back to them. | Dr. Harvey A. Smith, principal of | the school, made the announcement of | scholarships and awards. Those receiv- | ing scholarships were: | The Masion ~Kinney Brookings | scholarship to Wellesley College—Arria | Griffith McGinniss. | Olin scholarship to Wesleyan Uni- versity—Bernard White. Kendall scholarship, George Wash- | ington University—Armand Gordon. | American University — Margaret | Hedgcock and George Sanderlin. American University from the State of North Dakota—Kirkley Coulter. College of William and Mary—Vir- Rinia Shankland. St. John's College, Annapolls, Md.— William Mascn. Washington College of Law—Naomi Friedman. Bliss Electrical School — Armistead Iman. Su’;yem Business College — Jean eech. Columbia Business School — Bessie Bragoff. Southeastern University of the Y. M. C. A—Ida Malickson. Columbus University—Benjamin Ka- sow. Wins School Prizes, A. W. Miller award. a cash prize hool service not otherwise recog- was given to Arria Griffith Mc- | Ginniss. Bernard White, who won the Olin scholarship to Wesleyan University, represented his school this year in The Star area finals of the National Oratorical Contest and received a $100 cash prize as winner of his division competition, Diplomas were presented to the 193t class by Jere J. Crane, first assistant superintendent of schools. The honor graduates of the class were: First hon- ors—] e Bragofl. Irene Guy. Arria . Adele Meriam, Periey Put- ting and Helen Sherfey. Seconi hon- ors—Karl Achterkirchen, Elwood Back- enstass, Alfred Bronough, Eleanor Cran- ford, James Cranford, Joan Creech, Charlotte Dubin, Clara Erdman, Ar- mond Go:rdon, Harold Graves, Thomas Hinkel, Ruth Jenkins, Ethel Jost, Claude Pierce, Frances Pigg, Frances Pope, George Sanderlin, Dorothy Schmidt. Cecelia Silver, Charles Weber, Betty Weist and Matilde Woolfolk. The program closed with the singing of the school song, “Tenax Propositi,” by the graduates and a march by the school orchestra. Diploma Reciplents. The complete list of those receiving dinlomas_is: Karl Howard Achterkirchen, Louis Pickney Allen, ir.: Harry Clifton Ames, jr.; Clarence Willlam Armstrong, John Ciayton Ashton, Manuel Auerbach, Ross Elwood Beckenstoss, Moulton Hardy Balch, Ronald Goheen - Balthis, Fred- | erick Charles Bamman, Isadore Paul Bauman. David Bonar Bell, Louis Philip Bell Otto Benesh, Mark Bensinger, William Lee Berlinsky, Thomas Edward Berry, James Mark Bickford, Maulsby Ness Blackman, Albert Chester Blaisdell, George Blanken, David Noah Blaser, Walter Harrington Boaze, Joseph Bor- rows Bogan, jr.; Charles Robert Boucher, George Willard ~ Boynton, Herbert Brainin, Leroy Albert Brill, Thomas Farrar Bristol, Henry Fickinger Broad- bent. Alfred Taylor Bronaugh, Abraham Brook, Samuel Howard Brooks, Richard Blaine Browne, Frederick Louis Brueck- | ner, William Oscar Buckingham, Her- | bert von Arx Burkart, Robert Eugene Burke, Thornton Rollins Burns, jr.: | ‘Thomas Jefferson Busby, Jack Daniel Callon, Alexander Phiilips Campbell, Joseph Carroll, Roscoe James Carte, Beverly Randolph Carter, Willlam Alex- ander Carter, Charles Ricardo Casassa, Noel Oker Castle, Constantine Peter Chaconas, Charles Bennett Chamberlin, r.; John Clivious Chewning, jr.: Leon omas Clark, Eugene Fiore Colella, Ernest Taylor Coleman, Tracy Carlisle Coleman, 8. Armistead Colman, Louls George Cossette, Kirkley Schley Coulter, James Allan Councilor, jr.; James Reed Cranford, Chester Burton Cross, Carl- ton Lambert Crymes, Willlam Mansfield Day. jr.; Brady James Dayton, jr.; Louis Frederick deLesdernier, Edward DeLisio, Jack Diener, Arthur Edward Dinger, Tovers Deggett, Lloyd Wilbur Dorsey, Claire Orlando Ducker, Jack Camp- bell Duffield, James Wilson Duncan, Themas FPrancis Edwards, Frederic Arnold Eidsness, Charles Showalter Elier, Julius Epstein, Julius Ep- stein, Willlam Kempton Everett, Henry Allcn Fly, Jack Leon Folstein, Charles Paymend Fowler, Melville James Fraser, Fors Lauder Pryer, jr.; Willlam Joseph Fumage, jr.; Marvin Allen Gardner, SELLING OUT $9.98 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Ralph Garfinkle, Milton Genderson, | ces Burke Ridgway, Margaret Ann Rie- Wflfilm George Gentner, jr.; Theodore | del, Eleanor Margaret Riley, Frances Herzl Ginsburg, Harry Sterling Glick- | Eunice Rumsey, Jane. Bordley Sapping- man, David Abraham Goodman, Ar-|ton, Dorothy Augusta Schmidt, Natalie mand Byron Gordon, Jerome Joseph|Hammond Schneider, Yetta Shirl Gottlich, Harold Nathan Graves, jr.; |Schneider, Virginia Haskell Shankland, John Willlam Groves, John Bowman | Genevieve Frieda Shattenstein, Frances Gunion, Clifford Conrad Hamilton, | Allyn Sheild, Helen Roberta Sherfey, Frank Bailey Hand, jr.; Hugh Wells| Cecelia Silver, Ruth-Martin 8 Hetzer, Peter Prost Hi ‘Barnard | Lota_ Janiée ‘Smith, Mary Elizabeth Benjamin _Hillyard, a Mae Hinkel, John Webster Hitz, John Henry Holmead, jr.; Paul Edward Holmes, Saul Holtzman, Phillip Sandys Irey, Elliott Jackerson, Samuel Smart, J n, Ben- jamin Kasow, Nathan Katzman, Robert David Kaufmann, Max Kay, John. Jo- seph Keenan, Leigh Charles Kelsey, jr.; Joseph Willlam Kiernan, Frank Lassiter Kilmartin, Earle Monroe Knibiehly, Eu- gene Kressin, Frank James Leach, Wayne Lowry Lees, Sam Levin, Frank Levine, Louis Levinson, John Hunter Linton, John Charles Ludlum, Charles Herbert Ludwig, Joseph Jacob® Lyman, Robert Carlisle Mainfort, Nathan Louis M , Willlam Thomas Mason, Joseph rshall Mathias, Walter Louis Mc- Caddon, James Benjamin McCarty, jr.; Edward John McLain, Plerce Baynard Michael, Davidson Church Miller, Hum- phreys Wilson Miller, Louis Miiler, Jean Fischer Mitchell, Samuel Moerman, George Mansfield Moore, jr.; Albert Marcus Morgan, Charles Herbert Mor- ris, Harry Mulligan, jr.; Gerson Nord- linger, jr.; Perley Gilman Nutting, jr.; Claude Connor Pierce, James William Pike, James Lawrence Pinckney, Daniel Carroll Pollock, Charles Wright Poole, Charles Beattie Potter, Lawrence Au- gustus Pyle, Meyer Ratner, Clifford Bur- ritt Raw, Joseph Corbey Reamy, Wil- liam Wallace Reamy, Downey Rice, Val Richter, David Thomas Roadley, LeRoy Robins, Joseph Oliver Rock, Archibald John Rose, jr.; Louls Ross, William Larkin Rothrock, Norris Elliott Ruck- man, John Alvin Ruehle, Sidney Wenzl Ruseell, George Willlam Sanderlin, Carl Stephen Saphos, John Kramer Sasnett, Leo Schloss, John William Schorr, Lee Arundell Selecman, Samuel Selsky, Milton Israel Shapiro, Raymond Rodgers Sheppard, Charles Martin Silverman, Joseph Sitnick, Clarence Fisher Small, Charles Walter Smith, jr.; Claude Robertson Smith, Clyde Willard Smith, Huron Maybee Smith, Robert ‘Turner Snure, Louls Snyder, Eugene Joseph Staniszewski, Alexander Smith Cutler Stant, Carlion Benedict Starkes, | Stevens, Louls Vincent Stevenson, Berpie | Edward Swaim, Vernon Walter Swiger, | Herbert Philip Sworzyn, Irving Tash, | Robert Wal Thomas, Willlam Nor- man Thompscn, James Turnbull, Hel’-i bert Allen Via, jr.; Abner William Wald- man, Charles McGregor Walker, Frank | Seymour Walters, Charles Dunkhorst | Weber, John Willlam Weeder, jr.; Alfred | Weinberg, Bernard Hunter White, Don- | ald Dearborn Whiteman, Leonard Stern | Wiener, Jack Stuart Wilfong, Norman Eldred Williams, Woodworth Sylvester Williams, Roy Alfred Wiseman, William | Gaston Wrenn, Clarence Young, Abra- | ham Louls Zuckerman. Mary Elinor Adams, Margaret Martin Anderson, Jacqueline Auguste, Frances Benedict, Elizabeth Marie Bennett, An- toinette Olga Berger, Margaret Lois Bingman, Margaret Jeannette Bittner, Helen Louise Black, Mary Blake, Stella Elizabeth Blose, iscilla Allan Bogue, Virginia Louise Bolton, Helen Anne Bradley, Bessie Louise Bragoff, Mildred | Brill, Ann Marie Brown, Frances Holmes Brown, Helen Brown, Mary Elizabeth Browne, Milicent Lucille Browne, Carol Catherine Burke, Evelyn Frances But- ler, Tillie Cafritz, Martha Atkinson Can- non, Charlotte Esther Carliner, Valliere Verna Cash, Kathryn Leigh Chiswell, Amanda Ellen Chittum, Dorothy Anne Cleveland, Dorothy Virginia Clum, Lois | Eunice Collier, Belle Dailey Colman | Lida Eileen Conner, Helen Ruth Cook. Camille Marie Cottini, Catherine Maude | Cowen, Eleanor Ruth Cranford, Jean Elizabeth Creech, Marguerite Culver, Isobel Louise Reishus Dahl, Wilma Es- telle Dahn, Mary Elfzabeth Davis, Helen Irene Day, Elise Demaray, Helen Dick, Veronica Ann Dodd, Mollie Faye Drazin, Charlotte Adelene Dubin, Lois Theodora | Edmunds, Estelle Katina Eliades, Lea Kathryn Engel, Clara Erdman, Karina Adelaide Erickson, Florence May Evans, Eleanor Felser, Amella Jackson Fleet, Cristo Lane Fogle, Rita Estelle Fogle, | Mary Evelyn Follin, Beverly Mae | Poulk, Marjorie Elizabeth Fowler, | Leah Gail Friedman, Dorinda Ma- Sokoloff, Margaret Wy- etta Spe! , Marie Thals Spencer, Helen Pearl Starbecker, Margaret Alden Stonier, Irene Strickland, Jane Eleanor Sudduth, Josephine Delahunt Sullivan, Virginia Mae Sullivan, Catherine Louise Surine, Leonora Taube, Ruth Elizabeth ‘Taylor, Sara Bradford Taylor, Mildred Mae Telford, Louise Bunnell Thompson, Lois Thornton, Mary Louise Ticknor, Mary Abbie Tilton, Charlotte Amelia Toepper, Julia Leigh Treger, Kathryn Jeannette Trott, Doris Postley Tucker, Martha Underwood, Nona June Under-. wood, Virginia Mary Venable, Rachel Elizabeth Waldrop, Bertha Wilhelmenia Walter, Bettina Mae Weist, Alcena La~ mond White, Marian Palmer White, Margarita Widdifleld, June Eleanor Wil- coxon, Louise Burkett Willlams, Mil- dred Miriam Willlams, Helen Phelps Williamson, Juliet Margaret Winckel- mann, Elizabeth Kathryne Wise, Ma- tilda Belle Woolfolk, Frances Elizabeth Wright, Mignon Theresa Yingling and Amy Eleanor Zukofl. Bill Provides Gold Shipment. CANBERRA, Australia, June 18 (#),— The House of Representatives has pass- ed a bill to ship $25,000,000 in gold to London to meet immediate Aus- tralian liabilities, reducing the statu- tory gold reserve of the Commonwealth Bank by 10 per cent. Musicians of Switzerland have formed a society to fight the talkies. HOME CIRCLE ENDS CONVENTION HERE Three-Day Meeting - Closed With Banquet, Dance and Initiation Rites. ‘The three-day convention of the Su- preme Protected Home Circle closed Fere last night with a final session at the Willard Hotel. The last meeting included a banquet, dance and initia- tion ceremonies. Addressing the 500 members gathered at the banquet, Representative Sol Bloom of New York, director of the George Washington Bicentennial, out- lined the possible ald which may be rendered to the Bicentennial by fra- ternal orders through participation in the programs of 1932 and opposition to the tendency of some modern writers and speakers to undermine George ‘Washington's good name. Officers Held Over. ‘The speaker said only 40 per cent of the history of Washington is known, but before next year all information about the Father of His Country should be at hand. Chicago will be the scene of the next biennial gathering of the Home Circle, it was decided last night. No change was made in the roster of officers, as THURSDAY, elected in 1020 to serve [ ney 8. H. dent; Judge J. A. McLoughry of cer County, Pa, vice president; W. 8. Palmer of Sharon, supreme secretary; Frank Gilbert, mayor of Sharon, su- preme treasurer; Fred A. Service of Sharon, national attorney of the ci was made in the roster of officers, as cle; Lloyd Lininger of Sharon, supreme gul A. J. Martin of Jamestown, N. Y., supreme sentinel, and W. A. Cul bin of Cleveland, supreme guardian. Davis Is Speaker. A class of 60 was initiated into the higher order of the organization by the Inner Circle last night. Senator James J. Davis of Pennsyl- vania spoke before the morning meet~ ing of the. organization-yesterday. He told the members that, their group ex- emplified the strong: power of .the home. in the Nation and asserted that “as long as the homes. are “secure, the ?aumry cannot_ be overthrown by any orce.” 2 ' four CLUB PLANS EXCURSION Stella Maris Members Will Go to Chapel Point Sunday. ‘The annual excursion to Chapel Point, Md., sponsored by the Stella Maris Club, will be held Sunday immediately after 10 a.m. mass at St. Gabriel's Church. ‘The young people of the church who make up the club have made arrange- ments for the exeursion and will meet in front of the school hall, on Webster street. Sports and games will make up the program for the day. Francis Schwoerer is chairman in charge of arrangements. }. i | | | “Seroco | Open Until 9 P.M. Today Sears’ National Dollar Day PAINTS Yet Actually Cost You Less! 99 JUNE -18, 1931. !PRELATE SAYS CATHOLICS MAY. JOIN LABOR PARTY Cardinal Bourne Declarei Pope's Encyclical No Deterrent to Politics. Catholic prefate, declared in an ad- dress here last night that there was nothing in the recent encyclical of Pope Pius XI which should deter Cath- olics from becoming members of the British Labor party. ‘The cardinal upheld the freedom of all Britons to join any political party IRST you manufacturing Seroco Paint and middlemen [ s | Seroco Paints are | “save the surface” longer. profits! second saving strenueus thi tions . e pi Hence. we fully guar Seroco! save by buying their Roebuck, the world retailer. P! 's Seroco Paints. for every purpor | tilda Gauzza, Elizabeth Gelman, Eve- | | lyn Goldburg, Roberta Paul Gordon, | | Virginia May Gr Adele Irene Stephanie Guy, Dolores Veronica ' | Hackett, Virginia Louice Hall, Marian ' | Barbar Harrison, Elizabeth Ivers Hatcher, Gertrude Hatcher, Lillian_Col- vin Heath, Sophia Elma Herrell, Ethel Pauline Heyser, Frances Elizabeth Hisey, | Violet Edna Hobbs, Mary Elizabeth | Hochbaum, Nellie Leona Hoimead, Edith | Aline Hopkins, Regina Marie Horn, Marian Davidson Howard, Edith Myd- dona Hughes, Margaret Prances Hughes, Julia Margaret Hunter, Estella Margaret Israel, Hilda Simpson Janes, Georgia Ella Jefferis, Ruth Eachus Jenkins, Ellen Loretta Jennewine, Althea Rosalie John- 1son, Helen Jones, Ethel Margaret Jost, | Sylvia Kaplan, Elizabeth Ann Kaufman, Marian Edith Kidwell, Nina Kathryn Kilgeur, Bernice Janet Kleeblatt, Bertha Kline, Rhea Kozlow, Eleanor Martha | Krieg Ruth Lafount, Margaret Lee Laws, Sylvia Fannie Legum, Almarinda Catherine Lind, Dorothy Louise Linton, Felicia Lee Locke, Helen Frances Lyon, | Verabell Mason, Frances Beverly Math- | ews, Ellen Elizabeth Matthews, Mary | Montgomery McCarty, Arria Griffith | McGinniss, Marian Alice McKinney, | Virginia Mae McLaughlin, Katherine Ruth McNary, Margaret Helene McRey- ’ nolds, Mildred Martha Mennen, Adele Stuart Meriam, Helen Naom! Merryman, ' Esther Mae Milstead, Joan Isabel Miner, Olive Dorothy Monarch, Carmen Ange- line Montes, Ruth Morgenstein, Rebekah Stiles Morris, Kathryn Marguerite Mur- phy, Mary Margaret Murphy, Mary Prances Nelson, Pearl Mae Nichols, Bar- | Elizabeth Ann Norsworthy, Martha Nus- baum, Solveig Helen Florence Osterwald, Fay Ellen Otte, Miriam Ottenberg, Edith | Rita Parker, Millicent Louise Pairy, Catherine Marie Pfluger, Frances Vivian Pigg, Frances Elizabeth Pope, Ethel Vir- ginia Poulton, Ruth Diane Quick, Dor- othy Viola Quinn, Guida Richey, Fran- | REMODELED Bring in your used furs and we will make them into the latest style neck Fur coats handsomely remodeled at very moderate Summer brices. We Call for and Deliver NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS Benjamin Sherman, Prop. 618 12th St. N.W. NAT. 2456 Entire Stt;ck $5 and $6 Shoes Newest Models All Sizes All Styles Whites & Combinations Patents, Etc. Choice of Any Shoe in Store LA PAREE SHOES 940 F Street N. W. Gusack, | | bara Elizabeth Norcross, Sylvia Norris, | | 26 Beautiful Colors | Interior Floor Paint 31 98 gallon Lustrous, spic and span inside painted floors are y and in- ex| obtained when you 1se “Ser " Interior Floor Paint. Eight beautiful colors. Satin-Finish Paint s2§_5_ gallon An interior paint for wood- work walls. and apply, easy quickiy, Sear: Store, Bladensburg Road at 15th and H Sts. N BLADENSBURG | Wear Longer e about one-third | g we bring you by thus eliminating all jobbers' is yours because more durable, Gruelling times more Small wonder that millions of people t from Se: largest You, too, can save . . . by buying There is a Seroco Paint Master-Mixed House Paint washes like new, lasts a long time. Produces a satin-smooth finish... beautiful tints. coats 200 square feet twice. * Paints Now at ‘‘3” Sears’ Washington Stores SEARS, GUARANTEE SATISFACTION OR Y' MONEY BACK in our own and paint White, $3.20 Gallon FORMULA Master -Mixed Poist No. 143 Moster-White NGMENT “% White Lead (Carbonate) . 43% White Lead (Sviphate) . . 12% Shiicate of Mognesive . . % 0% VEHICLE . . . 4% 2 e Oryer and Velathle . . . . 10% 00% Made in Sears own factories under the finest formula ever devised—the exact formula used in the production of the most famous nationally advertised brands. Super Service Floor Varnish 3415 gallon “Super S@vice” Floor Varnish— ml’:'"‘ and finest varnish “Seroco” Screen Enamel 45¢ qt. Put a coat of this ll'ic:.nfl;':'! black screen enamel screens mow. It pays to keep screens well paint s Pint Size, 25¢ “Seroco” Gloss Enamel Your walls and woodwork will be resplendent with a porcelain-like glossy sheen. Washes like new. 67¢ Qt. Easy to to clean, 11 One gallon Sears’ New Retail | Store, 1825 14th St. Northwest, Sears’ New Retail Store, 3140 M St. N.W., Georgetown. RoEBUCK anp CoO. ROAD ' AT 15TH ‘AND H STS. N.E. By the Associated Press. EDINBURGH, Scof Cardinal _Bourne, tland, June Britain’s 18.— | said, Tanking ' which they wished, but they must guard, he against sometimes affect parties” and ship in the Labor party. “erroneous principles - JBJones * 1219-1221 G Street N. W. Quality Silk Slips, Danc- ettes, Teddies, Step-ins, Pan- ties. Regular and extra zes. Finest fabrics, lace trimmed or tai- lored. Lounging or Beach PAJAMAS Fine Fruit of the Loom Fab- rics. Beautiful Floral p terns. Wide legs. Attrac- tively trimmed DRESSES Silk Piques, Shantungs, Flat Crepes and Cotton Rayons Plenty of Jacket Frocks for 35 Styles for All Occasions. es Siore 31.47 in contrasting shades. All sizes. each person must “‘obey his consclenes® | when it comes in conflict with party: principles. t ¥ Commenting on the declaration of the Pontiff that “no one can be a good Catholic and at the same time a list,” the cardinal said he o L that interpreters of the encyclical would read it from end to end, and if this were done it would be seen nothing the | Pope sald militates against member- & Co. Between 12th and 13th Streets SALE DRESSES For all hot weather oc- casions. New styles in Batiste. Handkerchief Linens and Printed Voiles, All sizes. DRESS Silk Shantung, Silk Prints, Flat Crepes, Silk Pique. Jacket Dresses. Sizes, 14 to 46, Whites and pastel shades. ES DRESSES Fancy Printed Silks. Also Whites and Pas- tels: Styles for all oc casions. All sizes. s3.gfl_“77 DRESSES A selected group of higher.priced _mod- reduced for Friday Clearance. Prints. Whites and Pastel Shades. All sizes. DRESSES Plenty of the new Jacket and Cape Dresses. Not odds and ends but duplicates of new styles you'll see elsewhere at two and three times this price, $h.8 ~-ond Floor The quality you want . . e how smooth and is. hout laboring. Over a back road, Ponti surely do: and the other niceti If the things you want most in a motor car have cost more than you care to pay—and if the cars you felt you could ly buy have not quite satisfied you —here is a timely message . . . S, se you are driving a Pontiac for fl:.:?i.nt :;'Il- What do you find? Going along at medium speed, you quiet the You wonder how it will be s 60 h. p. big enough to do all you ’s “rubber insulation” at 43 points in the chassis take up road shocks and ives Pontiac fine-car riding So ’o the four hydraulic shock absorbers, genuine moh soft, and the d adjust the way you How about protection against heat, n?—you ask. A lot of people just like you have found in Pontiac both the quality they want and a price they approv. cold, and learn that the fin Everything has other peopl along the str. ¢, now you are the price you approveX You examine the Pontiac interior, and you see that ir or whipcord. You that seat springs are deep, cushions e uplnlnhznldl v’ t easy bo like And you Fisher-built Pentiac body is weather-tight and leak-proof. been done for your complete comfort. There remains only Pontiac’s effect on Glances you notice and the comments of Iour friends soon settle that! -You o1 ht in your judgment. But don’t stop at this imaginary test. and ask it to do a car to do. the quality you of design. Take a new Pontiac out on the road verything you want Let it prove that it has want—then ask the price. 1t's a figure you will warmly PONTIAC $777* MAKING NEW FRIENDS AND KEEPING THE OLD Two-door Sedan or Coupe, equipped and d D E Four-door Sedan or Convertible Coupe, $847. Custom Sedan, $887. fr::: and rear bumpers, shock absorbers, five wire wheels, and extra tire. tube and tire look. General Auto Truck _Co., Inc. 2100 Virginia Ave. N.W. TR Maior co. Dam, . Md. Tease M. Gue e M o Culpeper, Va.. La Plata, M. Dlek’ C. Weaver Gaithersburg, Md.. . i oy 8 Ceniral Garage 4 L. P. Steuart, Inc. « Salesroom—14th & R. I. Ave.—DEcatur 4800 H. R. King 514 H Street N, Inc. 1800 Nichols Ave. Coast-in Madison. Ve, ‘arpenter Motor Co. Prince Frederick, Md. Frince Frederick Motor Co. LIVERED ered in Washington, $777. Sport Coupe, $817. All cars equipped with 1 " Service Station—1119 21st $t. N.W.—POtomae 3208 Coast-in Auto Works, ? M. L. Beckner 3110 M Street N.W. M Servics, Ine. Usver o [ g o Wi f, ‘M. 'aldorf Sales Co.. Ine. ‘Warrenton, Va., Carpent ter Motor Co.

Other pages from this issue: