Evening Star Newspaper, July 19, 1931, Page 5

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JAHNCKE ABSOLVES CRUISER BUILDERS New Ships Laid to Naval Economy. i Weakness of Stern Posts ont i ! i BOSTON, July 18 () —Emest L.: Jahncke, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, in a statement today cleared thel builders of responsibility for the defects in stern post castings Of the new 10,000- ton cru'sers. The defects In the cruisers refer only to a weakness in the stern posts which was a result of attempting to save too much weight, he said. Jahncke came! here for the launching of the Matson liner Marimposa at Fore River. “The Marine engineering corpora- tion, a central designing bureau set up by the shipyards for co-operative designing and purchasing for the con- struction of these vessels, developed the | design prepared by the Navy Depart-| ment and made working drawings,” Jahncke said. The Navy Department| alo co-operated n this work and ap- proved all plans. All Castings Weak. “The sternpost chased by the pr same foundry. Castings used in Navy yard construction were made in one case in its own foundry and, In the other case, purchased from an outside | contractor. Weaknesses have appeared in the castings from all of the sources of supply. “It must be pointed out that every effort was made for lightness in design of these ships to keep within the treaty 1limit of 10,000 tons displacement. This resulted in drawing the line too fine in the design for the sternposts and, al- though all of th econtract bullt ships but one successfully stood the rigorous tests applied during the builders’ trials, such as, for example. going ahead and backing at full speed and putting the | helm hard over in each direction, still, subsequently, while in service weakness appeared in all but one sternpost. Navy to Share Expense. “The Navy Department will add some weight to the castings and provide for improved attachment to the hull and; make these changes as opportunity of- fers. The expense for removal will be borne by the Navy in the case of thej cruisers built at the Navy yards and the cruisers built at private yards where the guarantee period has expired. In the case of the cruisers built at private | yards, where the guarantee has not ex- | pired, these yards have been called upon to bear the cost of replacement. “The Navy Department does not wish the impression to hold that there was poor workmanship on the part of the private shipyards which built some of these ships. The design of the castings was not only fully approved, but the material and workmanship was sub- Jected to rigid naval inspection through- out the manufacture at the foundry and subsequently during the machining and erecting operations at the builders’ CUT IN U. S. AIRMAIL SUBSIDIES FORECAST Brown Says Aid Will Be Reduced | if Passenger Traffic Is Maintained. By the Associated Press. A “substantial” reduction in Govern- ment airmail subsidies next year was predicted yesterday by Postmaster Gen- eral Brown if the present rate of plane passenger trafic is maintained. Though the general depression has affected aviation, Brown said, the num- ber of passengers flying on lines hold- ing postal contracts had increased so much this year thus far as to permit a reduction in the price of contracts without impairing service. Under the law, the Post Office De- partment is required to adjust the con- tract rates at least annually, and Brown said two reductions have been made since inauguration of airmail servic several years ago, when the rate ap- proximated $1.06 a mile. I BISHOP SOEDERBLOM GIVEN ROYAL RITES Swedish Prelate Buried at Upsala Following Requiem in Cathedral. | By the Associated Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden. July 18.— Flags were at half staff throughout Sweden_today and from 11 a.m. until noon all church bells in the country tolled a requiem for Archbishop Nathan Soederblom, whose funeral took place at noon in the Cathedral of Upsala. Silence _prevailed throughout the Upsala _district as the archbishop’s body was carried to the grave. Street car and other traffic halted as the royal mourners, headed by King Gus- tav, arrived in automobiles at 11:30 am. at the archbishop's residence. The body was lying in state and a last farewell was offered by the King and his cortege. The casket was followed by the cabi- net and diplomatic ‘corps and by rep- resentatives of religlous organizations from all parts of the world. $28,341,000 EXPENDED BY U. S. FIRMS IN CHILE Figures for 1830 Show Total Spent by Three Copper Companies for Mining Work. Br the Associated Press. SANTIAGO. _ Chile—Figures just compiled for 1930 for the three major American copper companies show that a total of 236,175,248 pesos (about £28,341,000) was spent in Chile by them in the form of wages, freights, mer- chandise, taxes and social law com- Ppensation. The three companies are the Chile Exploration Co., at Chuguicamata; the Andes Copper Mining Co. at Portre- rillos, owned by the Anaconda Oo., and the Braden Copper Co., at El Teniente, owned by the Guggenheim interests. LINER TASTES PACIFIC, LAUNCHED IN ATLANTIC Bottle of Water From Sydney, Australia, Broken on Bow of New Mariposa. By the Associated Press. QUINCY, Mass, July 18—The new Matson liner Mariposa got her first taste of the broad Pacific, her future home, as she glided down the ways at this Atlantic seaport today. Mrs. Wal- lace S. Alexander, wife of the line's wvice president, broke a bottle of water from the harbor of Sydney, Australia, across her prow in bestowing the name of the California county upon the vessel. The Mariposa will accommodate 750 passengers and will be operated be- tween Pacific ports. She will leave for the West Coast in February. ————— Miss Ishbel MacDonald, daughter of the premier of England, recent! rocession of 10,000 women B: the Labor movement at louu:g SBhields, ! painted eight-room structure standing led a i} THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JULY. 19, 1931—PART ONE. ITROTSKY, LOYAL TO SOVIET, SCORES STALIN ON POLICIES Exile Breaks Silence to Say “Retreat™ to! i Right Results From Faulty Direction, but Denies Turning Toward Ca.pitalism.' Unshaken lovajty to_the Soviet regime is expressed by Leon Trotsky in the fol- Towing interview, the first he has granted in_some time. WHhile criticizing the cles or Joseph Stalim, Trotaky cateso; rically denfes Stalin’s recent political and economic innovations are a turning to- ward capitalism. He declares that when the reforms he wants have been effected in Russia, his leftist opposition will take its place’ in the ‘‘common ranks’ of cmmunism, BY PRISCILLA RING, (Copyrizht, 1931, by the Associated Press.) MODA, Turkey, July 18—For the first time in almost two years Leon ‘Trotsky has unlocked the iron gates of his retreat to admit an interviewer. He received an Assoclated Press cor- | respondent in his small wooden villa at Moda, an Asiatic suburb of Istanbul and a favorite Summer resort of the Anglo-American colony. ‘The house which the exile rented here_after fire destroyed his residence on kipo Island is a modest, un- in a neglected garden. High walls and locked barbed-wire gates surround it on three sides and the front gives directly over the wide expanse of the shining Marmora Sea. Watches Soviet Ships Pass. i From his window Trotsky can watch | day after day ships churning out from | the Bosphorus carrying millions of tons of Soviet exports to the four corners of | the capitalistic world. | Within, Trotsky's writing room and | its ante room on the second floor of | the two-story house are lined with| crowded bookshelves, the volumes be- ing freshly collected from Europe and | America since the fire which destroyed | his huge library a few months ago. | At a long table covered with manu- scripts sits Trotsky. He would scarcely be recognized as the man who slipj out of the Soviet embassy’s semi-prison into the public view of & Pera hotel three years ago. Exile Ruddier Now. He is ruddier and more elastic, and his face reflects humor rather than bit- terness. The heaviness and sallowness are gone. ‘The sporting costume he wears, white shir: open at the throat, white trousers and blue jacket, adds to the atmosphere be Of vitality now about him His thin, pointed face is sunburned from hours spent fishing on the Mar- mora Sea—his one recreation. His bristling hair and pointed beard are al- most white. Despite recurrent attacks of malaria, he is a man of such power that the air about him tingles Trotsky shot out cordial greetings in French, with some English “how are you's” and right's” thrown in. He Teads English easily, but prefers not to talk it. Attacks Questions. Pirst stipulating that his declarations were to be published word for ward or not at all. he attacked the questions which at his request had been sent in in advance. “You have asked me a number of very complicated questions concerning the interfor development of the Soviet Union,” he said. “To questions serlously and_conscientiously it would be necessary to write several articles. “Within the space of an interview it 1s fmpossible to give an analysis of the complicated processes which form the contents of the present transitional eco- | nomic system of the Soviet Union, a system which constitutes a bridge be- tween capitalism and socialism. You know that ordinarily I avoid in- terviews, especially because they too easily give rise to misunderstandings even if they are absolutely loyally trans- mitted. In fact, this abstention from interviews, as shown by my recent ex- perience, does not insure one agalnst most untrue misunderstandings and mutilations. Stand Is Unvacillating. “During the past weeks a dispatch | passed through the world press which attributed to me some opinions directly opposed to those which I have exposed and defended. ‘The enemies of the Soviet regime, at least the most obdurate and least per- spicacious, expected after my expulsion from the Soviet Union hostile actions on my part against the regime hated by them. They were mistaken. and there only remains for them to take refuge in ;a::;gicluon& relying on credulity or bad aith, “I use the opportunity of the ques- | tions asked by you to declare again my relations to the Soviet regime have not | vacillated even an iota since the days | when I participated in its creation. “The fight which I carry on together with my friends and my closest co- thinkers within the Communist ranks does not touch the general questions of Soclalism, but the methods of the real zation of the tasks imposed by the Oc- tober revolution. “If those at Warsaw and Bucharest hope the interior difficulties of the Soviet Union can reflect the tendency represented by me in the camp of the N W answer these | L Ul ‘defeatists’ of the Soviet Union, they are truly mistaken, as well as their more powerful inspirers. “In the moment of danger the so- called ‘Trotskyists' (opposition of the Left) will fill the most combative posi- tions, as they did during the October upheaval or during the years of the civil war. “You ask whether the new course pro- claimed in the recent speech of Stalin signifies a turmny toward the road of capitalism. No; for such a conclusion I find no basis. Calls “Retreat” Tactical. “We have- before us & zigzag along the road from capitalism to Socialism. ‘Taken in part, it is a zigzag of retreat. But a retreat has, nevertheless, a tac- tical character. The strategic line can remain the old one. The necessity for the turn, and its sharpness, were brought about by the faults of the Stalinist di- rection during the recent period. “These faults, as well as the inevit- ability of the turning itself, were pointed out by me dozens of times during the last two years in the Russian Opposi- tional Bulletin, published abroad (Paris- Berlin). Hence the turning was the least possible surprise for the opposition of the Left. To speak on the occasion of this turning of the renunciation of the goals of Socialism is to take nonsense. Scores Five-Year Plan. . “The new course of Stalin may, nev- ertheless, not only encourage some light-minded enemies, but also discour- age some friends. of the Soviet Union who do not think very profoundly. The first feared, the second hoped, that dur- | ing a few years in the Soviet Unlon the | peasantry would be entirely collectivized ped | and Socialism would reign. | “The quastion of the five-year plan | took on the inadmissible character of & jumping competition. “The opposition of the Left decidedly warned against this policy, especially against the premature and precipitate transformation of the five-year plan |into & four-year plan. | Sees Outcome Inevitable, | “It goes without saying that it is | necessary to do everything for the ac- | celeration of industrialization. But 1if, | when put to proof, it should be shown that the plan is realizable not in four, but in five or even in six or seven years, that, too. would be a magnificent success. Caplitalistic society developed immeasurably more slowly and with a much higher number of zigzags, turn- ings and clashes “It is indubitable that the present zigzags to the right have been caused | by previous faults in direction and sig- | nify an inevitable transitory reinforce- | ment of bourgeois | dencies in the country. “However, to conserve state property on land and especially on essential means of production, it does.not sig- inify in any case a regeneration of | capitalism. Such a regeneration is in general impossible without & forced es- tablishment of private ownership of the means of production, Which would necessitate the victory of a counter revolution. Seeks Political Regeneration. “By this I do not want at all to deny that there are certain political dangers connected with the new turn- ing. The fight against these dangers should consist in this, namely, to Te- generate the political free activity of | the masses suppressed by the bureau- | cratic regime of Stalin. | “Precisely along this line the prin- | cipat eforts of the opposition of the | Left are now directed. Once the re- generation of the Soviets, the trade | unions and the party is established, the | opposition of the Left will take, na- | turally and inevitably, its place in the | | common ranks. Plans Book on 1918. “You ask me about my own plans. I am working now on the second vol- ume of ‘The History of the Russian Revolution.” The more extensive ex- tracts of the first volume are now being published. If my political dog days are going to continue I want to write a | book’ on the year 1918, which has | taken in the Russian Revolution the | same place as 1793 in the French Revo- |lution. It was the year of enormous difficulties, dangers, losses, the greatest tension of the revolutionary masses, the | | year of the German offensive, the com- mencement of the intervention of the allied countries, interior conspiracies, insurrections, terrorist attacks—the year of the creation of the Red army and | of the commencement of the civil war whose fronts soon encircled the Mus- covite center in a vise. “In these books I want, by a method of comparison, to submit to an analysis the Civil War between the Northern and Southern States of Americ | T suppose American _readers _will d striking many of the analogies, as I myself was | surprised while studying the American Civil War. “It is unnecessary to say that I fol- forces and tenwf SPANISH WAR MEN MAY CONVENE HERE Fight Planned to Get 1932 Session of Order for Washington. | A determined effort is to be made to induce the national nization of the Naval and Military r of the Span- ish-Amerjcan War to hold its reunion in this city next year—the George Washington ~ Bicentennial year. Pre- liminary steps to this end were taken at the recent monthly meeting of the District of Columbia Commandery of the order. Six delegates were elected to represent the District of Columbia Commandery at the reunion to be held in New Orleans, La., September 7 to 10, and _they were instructed to exert every effort to secure the reunion in the year 1932 for the National Capital. the official delegates & of Columbia Commandery pledged themselves to sttend, with members of their familles, the New Orleans reunion to augment with nu- merical strength the official represent- atives in presenting the claims of this city. The District of Columbia dele gates will include three of the natio officers—Robert Lee Longstreet, senior vice commander in chief; Sam Small, chaplain in chief, and Robert H. Chap- pell, historian in chief. They will join the other deleg:kx in urging on the national bodv that this organization of naval and military officers of the war wth Spain pay ~patriotic tribute to ‘ashington. . The support of all local organizations was invited by the District of Columbia Commlndlel’y }n tg;el:&n to secure the 1932 reunion for the city. The local members of the order who will attend the reunion in New Orleans this year will depart from Washington September 2. Some members will make | the round-trip by water from New York, using the slenmerx as mafl:pe "::fn‘n :{I:zl; in the Crescent City, an days in Havana, Cuba, on the return reunion in New Orleans will be held in connection with the thirty-third annual encampment of the United Spanish War Veterans. o SLAYING IN HOLD-UP CONFESSED BY WOMAN DENVER, July 18 (# —Police said | today the had obtained a signed con- fession from Helen J. Hill, 28, of Chi- cago, that she killed & man in a Chi- | cago hold-up. The confession stated the Victim's name was White, and that he was shot in the robbery of & drug store. Miss Hill was arrested in company with Irving Spanner, 34. She said she was wanted for the robbery of the Rose- | moor Hotel in Chicago and for several other robberies in St. Louis, Little Rock and Shreveport. s S |= — low with greatest interest the develop- ment of events in Spain. Minister of Foreign Affairs Lerroux expi him- self in this sense, that he saw no rea- son for refusing me a visa. However, the provisional government, directed by Alcala Zamora, found it more prudent to postpone a decision on the question | until the convocation of the Cortes and the formation of a new government. “I shall not fail naturally to renew | my demand as soon as the government | is formed.” | Trotzky closed the interview with & | sudden smile and an emphatic final |nod. As he rose he picked up & book | lying on the table and asked, “Have | you read this? No? Take it along. It's an extra copy.” The interviewer went off with a re. |cent book on Stalin published in | America. Daughter and Wife Il | _ Downstairs in the cool, quietly fur- | nished rooms of the old Turkish villa a tanned girl in big spectacles brushed by. It was Trotzky's daughter. She suffers from serious throat trouble and probably will have to be sent to Europe for an operation this Winter. That will leave Trotzky and his wife, herself in ill health, alone. | The son Ivan, who came with them from Russia, is now in Germany and takes care of his father's publications there. | " Through the garden in which strolled a Turkish secret service man, a revolv- er on his hip, Trotzky's Austrian secre- | tary conducted the correspondent down | steep steps to a little wharf and into the same rowboat in which the exile takes his long fishing hours of rest | from_writing. /| Fox Theatre Holds Auditions {| Monday morning July 20 at 9 a.m. | For All-Washington Revue Here’s your chance for the stage. Applicants must be over {| 18 Apply Theatre Stage Door. e e !} SHOE REPAIR SHOP OPENS FOR BUSINESS TUESDAY, J THIS ATTRACTIVE SHP HAS SO0 THAT YOU MAY WAIT S IN HINGTON’S MOST M DERNISTIEZ_; ULY 21 ’ BEEN DESIGNED COMFORT We have endeavored to install the most modern factory equip- ment, which enables us to repair your shoes in the quickest possi- ble time. As an attraction for the opening we are offering two of the most nationally known makes of rubber heels at reduced prices. SPECIAL—MONDAY AND TUESDAY O’SULLIVAN'S OR GOODYEAR HEELS f Half Soles, 75¢ either women's or m using genuine white o shoes— leather. ‘Courteous Service’ Is Our Motto A trial will prove our superiority Open 7:30 AM. to 7 P.M. You are cordially invited to inspect our new shop tomorrow |y WHITE STAR SHOE REPAIR CO. FIRST SHOP FROM 7th ST. 629 E ST. N.W. Loses Sight BLINDED TEMPORARILY BY MORTON DOWNEY. NEW YORK, July 18 (#).—Morton Downey, radio singer and husband of Barbara Bennett, actress, was under the care of a physician today as a result of a temporary loss of eyesight caused by peering into a sun ray lamp. He visited an ill friend Thursday and did not take the precaution of wearing dark glasses. Early yesterday morning he became jll. He filled a radio en- gagement last night, but canceled an appearance at a theater. DISTRICT BUILDING WINS MANY MORE CHAMPIONS Others Write Senator Bingham in Support of Plan to Retain It in Triangle Program. Senator Bingham, Republican, of Connectticut is still receiving letters agreeing with his view that the pres- ent District Building should be left standing and made a part of the Federal building layout in the triangle after it | is taken over by the United States. ‘The Senator called attention yester- day to another communication that has Jjust come to him from a man who d scribed the District Building as “a model of symmetry and sightliness” and urged its retention. When Senator Bingham, who handles District appropriations in the Senate. expressed his opinion on the subject several weeks ago, he said he had no objection to_the 'Federal Government buying the District Building., but felt the structure was worthy in appear- ance of remaining in the triangle de-| elopment. . Sixteen theaters in the Panama Oanal Zone have been wired for sound. BALLOONS READY FOR START OF RAGE Six Entries Will Take Off Late Today—Storms Menace Path, By the Associated Press. AKRON, Ohio, July 18—A half dozen huge gas bags will drift lazily away the Municipal Airport to- morrow, carrying with them the as- pirations of six crews for the national balloon championship and the honor of representing the United States in this year’s international Gordon Ben- nett race. ‘Two of the bags will carry the khaki of the Army, one the blue of the Navy and the remaining three the colors of civilian pilots. The latter includes Frank Trotter and Roland Blair of Akron, who raced for first time last year and won. ‘The winner and the second place balloon will complete the three United States entries in the Gordon Bennett race. The veteran, Ward T. Van Or- man of Akron, automatically assured himself of one place last year when he was victorious in the international contest started at Cleveland. ‘The 80,000 cubic feet balloons, filled with natural gas, will start taking off in 5-minute intervals at 5 p.m., East- ern standard time, tomorrow. They are expected to drive Northeastws toward the St. Lawrence Valley—the same course most entrants took in last year's international race. Distance is the only factor in determining the win- ner, and each crew pits skill and en- durance . against the luck of the weather. ‘The Army No. 1 entry will have the favored position of taking off last— both from the standpoint of being able to judge how the other bags sre fected by the air currents and from a half an hour's less traveling in the sunlight which ex{lnd& the gas and causes its gradual loss. ‘There will be only one newcomer this year—L. P. Furculow, who pilots the Del-Mar-Virginia Eastern Shore As- sociation entry. Besides Blair and Trotter, E. J. Hill of Detroit and Lieu:. T. G. W. Settle of the Navy have held the honors. Hill was first in the international in 1927 and Lieut. Settle in the national 1929. The two Army crews have com- peted previously, although neither have won. Following are the entries, and crews in the order they will take off: Army No. 2—Lieut. Edgar M. Fogelsonger as pilot, Lieut. John Tarra as aide. Made Defendant SUED BY MAN SHE BELIEVED HER HUSBAND. [ i #RS. WANDA MAE BENNETT. Sued for $100,000 in a breach of promise action by the man to whom she said she believed she had been married for more than a year, Mrs. Wanda Mae Bennett, wealthy widow, was made the defendant in a breach of promise action in which E. L. Elbury, | advertising man, alleged she had prom- | ised to become his bride, but later de- | faulted. “We met at a Hollywcod party | and that very same night he proposed | to me,” Mrs. Bennett declared. “A week | later I promised to marry him. We | REPORTS RECEIPT OF BLACKMAIL LETTER Musieal Composer Says Missive Is Similar to One Charged to Youth. By the Assoclated Press. - NEW YORK, July 18—Miss Pauls Garten, a musical composer, has in- formed District Attorney Eggelson she received a letter similar to the one sent Mrs. George E. Gibson of Larchmont by William E. Manheim, 20, of Fresno. Calif., now awaiting trial on blackmail charges. Manheim is accused of having de- manded $1,000 from Mrs. Gibson in & letter threatening to involve her son, ‘William, a student at Dartmouth, in & scandal in newspapers. Hearing on the case was adjourned yesterday until July 24. Manheim’s father is en route here from the West Coast, while Manheim is free under $1,000 bail. Miss Garten said she had received the letter from the youth July 9. She said she was about to leave on a vaca- tion and would not be able to give testimony in the case until her return some time in August. Dunison Chosen G. 0. P. Head. SANTA FE, N. Mex, July 18 (#) — The New Mexico State Central and Executive Committee of the Republican party, meeting here this afternoon, by & rising vote unanimously elected Judge Carl P. Dunison of Silver City, N. Mex., as the Republican State chairman to succeed Ed L. Safford, who resigned. American cigarettes are now being sold in more than 100 countries. Po %o 20 % o0 o%o% 0300.».“:00}‘00:00‘“.00'M Specializing in % Perfect b4 2 Del-Mar-Virginia Eastern Shore As- o1 . P. Furculow &s pilot. John Relker, Akron, as aide; Radio Station WJR, Detroit—E. J. Hill as pilot, Arthur Schlosser as aide; United States Navy—Lieut. T. G. W. Settle as pilot, Lieut. Wilfred Bushnell as aide; United States Army. No. 1—Capt. Karl 8 Axtater as pilot, Lieut. H. H. Couch as aide. Established 34 Years Specials Monday and Tuesday Genuine Toric Glasses Far or Near Complete With Shell or Metal Frame $3.50 Complete Outfit, With Case and Cleaner Included Genuine Toric KRYPTOK Invisible Bifocal Lenses First and best quality. pair to see near and far). Toric Kryptok Bifocal Lenses—(one Best lenses made. Sold regularly $15. Special price Monday & Tuesday, $7.50 KAHN OPTICAL CO. 617 Seventh St. N.W. Between F and G Streets Fair Warning g cee Our stores (ond most all other leading stores) elose All Day Sat- urday. Co-operate — shop Dbefore Friday, 6 P.M. J uly Clearance Sale All $16.50 Linen Suits Moneys Worth Al $30 $22.50 3-Piece Linen and Nurotex Suits $1675 All $25 Tropi~ cal Worsteds or Money Back DJ Kaufman 1005 PENNA. AVE. SOUTHEAST COR 1744 PENNA. AVE. NER __14THAEYE went to the San Gabriel Mission. A}.‘. priest said something in Latin, I asked | z if Mr. Elbury had the license and was | o told that everything had been taken | § care of. We went on a honeymoon trip | %¢ and when we came back I changed the | name of my two children Elbury. 1 gave him a car and $6,000.” —Wide World Photo. DIAMONDS 3 Also complete line of stand- ard and all-American made .0 watches. Shop at the friendly store— z’ youkirz ll‘v,gys "::X‘l:l Jm:h g: >y smile—w] no jon @ o < Charge Accounts Invited X M. Wurtzburger Co. 901 G St. N.W. %M».xxso:»:o@o:ww; Because they cannot keep up the&rl installment payments many bus oper: tors in Sumatra and Celebes are giving | up | the vehicles and quitting the busi- | TWO STORES 827-9 Seventh St. N.W. 1213 Good Hope Road SE. \ \ opportunity %o literally coliect that amount! $159.00 Overstuffed Bed- Davenport Suite, covered with finest three-tone jacquard ve- lour; best spring-filled uphol- stery on seat and backs; pat- ented sagless spring in daven- port. Your choice of high-back chair or bunny chair. Reduced to $104.50 — less 57450 $30.00 for your old suite in trade.... $179.00 Dining Room Suite, of genuine walnut veneer; 60- inch buffet, large extension ta- ble, period china closet and set of chairs with tapestry-covered seats. Reduced to 59 7.(]) $127.00—1less $30.00 for your old suite. $14.50 5-Pe. Unfinished Breakfast Set, including 4 chairs and drop-leaf table. All pieces are sanded and ready to be §myOS painted. Monday 7 many only at......... more $98.00 Overstuffed Living Room Suite, upholstered with woven velour, a three-cushion settee with your choice of Chesterfield club chair and high-back chair, made with :e- versible spring-filled cushions. Fully guaranteed and reduced to $79.50 — less § 50 $30.00 for your old 49 - suite in trade.... Low Arranged Weekly or Monthly Allowed for our old Bed, Matiress. Regardless of their condition we will allow you $5 for each one . or, if you wish, we

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