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ORGANIZED PEACE THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON,' D. €., SEPTEMBER 13, '1931—PART - ONE. 1AM OF FRANC But Fear Is Felt Drastic Arms Reduction May Be Impossible. DY PAUL SCOTT MOWRER. By Cable to The Star. PARIS, France, September 12— lFrance asks no special or unilateral [guaranties. On the contrary, it is itself ready to co-operate fully in collective [action to help any State whatsoever which may be a victim of aggression, | including, naturally, Germany. How- lever, without the organization in ad- vance of some system of mutual aid, [Prance fears that anything like a dras- tic reduction in armaments at the forthcoming conference will be found difficult if not impossible.” The foregoing, in a nutshell, is vir- tually France's whole position on dis- larmament, regarding which all the [chancellories of the world are today so ourious, The French view, which, it is nerally believed, will play such an Brportant Tole in' the conference, was explained to me authoritatively by a well-known personage here. “We fully expect the conferenc be opened at Geneva February 2. my informant, “and we ate making our plans in consequence. The present sit- uation in Europe and in the world un- fortunately is far from reassuring. The yesults of the conference will be cor- xespondingly serious for the preserva- tion of world peace. Must Strive for Maximum. “The problem nas been fully raised and must be solved. Concrete results [must be achieved. Perhaps these re- [sults will be incomplete, perhaps they Will be merely the first step. but we must try energetically for the maxi- mum.” “How does France regard the prob- full-rigged in the Potomac Riv I BRITISH HONDURAS IS BIT OF ENGLAND IN NEW WORLD |Sport Activities, Living and Architecture Reveal Certain Affiliation With Mother | sailing yacht, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Inglis M. Uppercu of New York, is now at anchor | formerly the Swedish training ship Abraham Rydeberg. —Underwcod Photo. to keep busy the America. ror_this outflow to America there is an inflow not wholly confined to money and goods. Some British leaders com- |plain” that the colony is becoming | “Americanized.” Newspapers and maga- zines from the United States far out- number those from England. American agents gain much business in competi- tion with the more leisurely methods of the Bfitish; and a number of repre- restless jaws of | going to America for their higher educa- tion, tend on their return to look to | America for their intellectual leadership. sentatives of the younger generation, | BROWN 1S URGED ASG.0.P.LEADER Watson Asks Appointment in Conference With Presi- dent Hoover. Selection _ of. Postmastcr General Walter F. Brown for chairman of the Republican National ~ Committee is being strongly urged on President Hoover. It was disclosed here yesterday that pressure is being brought on the Presi- dent by a number of prominent Repub- licans to have th> Postmaster General made head of the national committee. President Hoover, there is reason to be- lieve, is scriously considering it. Wztson Confers With Hoover. Senator James E. Watson, Republi- can leader of the Senate, who conferred at length with Presideni Hoover Friday, took up the national chairmanship among other things with the Chief Executive and_ urged the selection of Mr. Brown. Senator Watson has for months favored Mr., Brown as chair- man, and in the conference he is under- stood to have dwelt on the need of reorganizing the committee and getting | things under way in preparation for | the presidential campaign. It is th | theory of Senator Watson that the Re publican campaign for next year should largely be made this year. Thus far, however, there is nothing | to indicate that the White House is | ready to call for a change in the chair- | manship. Senator Simeon D. Fess of | Ohio, the present chairman. although he has several times indicated he ex- pected to remain in the chairmanship indefinitely, and probably until the next national convention, has also made it plain he stood ready to step aside when- ever the President desired it. Other Nam.; Suggested. Talk of various prominent Repub- 2" I asked. e lu_r_!1 he real problem is the organization of which disarmament is only one aspect. As long as nations con- to feel insecure, no amount of rmament can remove the danger of Once security is establishea, the probabilities are that nations will vie with one another, not to increase, but to reduce armaments and, in the in- terests of international order, will have to be restrained from reduction, so that each shall bear ir share of the com- on police duty. oI ¢ States.” 1 remarked, “In the Unit any persons believe that disarma- ment will of itself bring security, espe- cially when taken in connection with verious treaties like the covenant of tae League of Nations and the Kellogg treaties are excellent as far| es they go. In particular, we attach great importance to the treaty called the gencral act of arbitration, which s0 jar France and Great Britain are the only great powers to have signed and under which all disputes whatscever are to be submitted to international arbi- gration. This act practically solves th> vexed question of determining the ag- gressor, for it indicates that the ag- gressor is the state which refuscs arbi- | tration or refus:s to acccpt an arbitral decision and, breaking its soiemn en- gagements, resorts to arms against an- other state. Obliged to Disarm. “However, as long as nothing inter- natonally is agreed on to insure prempt and efficacious international aid o tke nation which may be a victim of aggression, peoples will feel inse- cure and will be rluctant greatly to diminish _their armamenss - ment without security can cly 1 ndestine armament in cert and to a new race to suititute ntity of armament ingenious in= lity of armament.” o't the peace treaties which dis armed Germany oblige the other sig- natories also to disarm?” “Yes, but taking into account the sp2- cial conditions of each and only to the point that each considers compatible with its present degree of national se- curity and its obligations to participate in any possible common international action. “ “This does not mean either that all must disarm to the German level or that Germany has the siightest claim to rearm to the level of the others. Germany's disarmament under the treaty is unconditional.” “But will not the limitation of arma- ments in these conditions serve merely fo perpetuate the status quo, which Germany refuses to accept and which many people think unjust?” “Whether the treatizs are fust or un- Just is & question which each must dc-| cide for himself. Fiance believes that the treaties, though perhaps not per- foct, ar> far more just than the pre- Wwar situation. We think, moreover, that i‘hry have not yet been given a fair ost, "n any case it is certain that no treaties are eternal. The organization of mutual aid does not mean that the treaties may never be revised. It means only that they cannot be revised by other than peaceful means. Mean- Shile, until they are revised, they are the law of nations. Mutual Aid Necessary. «Moreover, until the organization of mu?fi‘;x aid makes it_certain that no attempt will be made to revise th> treaties by force, the nations which be- Jieve in and are defending the treaties Wil inevitably fear that they are being asked to disarm mainly for the purpose of forcing revision by the threat of war. The aim of the conference is to organize peace, not to_upset the existing order for the bencfit of certain dissatisfied er the best meth- od of disarmament «“It would be something if each coun- try would agree not to exceed its pres- ent strength, But we must try for more. None of the popular schemes, such as all-around percentage reduc- tion, or comparison of arraments in different years, or establishment of fixed ratios, or all-around parity, is AN\ir or practicable as long as mercg is no mutual aid. Once mutual aid is organized, all armaments can immedi-| ately be cut to the minimum compatible with the preservation of internal andl external order ! “The idea that after the League of Nations covenant and the Kellogg pact there can ever again be such a thing as neutrality is out of date. Morality, law and nzational interest all oppose it. “If any state comits the crime of Country—Mahogany Main Product. British Honduras, often known as) " from the name of its capital is cne of the keast known and onc | neglected patches of the With its vastly more sister country, Canada and Newfoundland, it shares the distinction of being the cnly British territory on the continent of North America. British Honduras is a pait of Cen- tral America, and its real bid to fame bas been that it was 100 per cent revo- Jutionless, says a_bulletin from the National Geographic Survey. In spite of the fact that in many ways it is neglected, still British law and order hover over it; and it has been to a certain extent, like the Dutch West | Indian colony of Curacao, an asylum tor political leaders of neighboring lands who were more revolutionary | than successful. The countrys 45,000 inhabitants in- clude probably less than 1,000 whites. The remainder cf the population is made up of Negrocs and mulattoes and Spanish Indians. the latter living chiefly in the back country But in the capital, Beliz2; throughout the whole coast country and wherev hes beer un. re. whether it be made up government or sport, is British. Policemen Like “Bobbies.”.- Few conce: have been made to the climate, be described as tropical tempe: ather steady sea | breezes. Th and three stc houses that line the main _residen street of the capital city, of accepted British architecture. Coa re clothed much like and n and bewigged the London * begcwned judges sit in the the open spaces cricket m often be found in progre: bouts arc preferred y pronouncing Negroes to the cocl and bull fights of their Latinize® neighbors. Geographic names tell of the sudden transition from the lands of Spanisi culture to this little patch of the Span- | ish Main that has been Anglicized. One leaves Puerto Cortez, Honduras or Puerto Barrios, Guatemala, to il a few miles farther on past the Coxcomb Mountains, All Pines and Stann Cr . Inland are Middlesex and Orange Wa Belize is one of the few exceptions. and even that is said to be a corruption cf the surname of an ea Scotch set S English nemenclature its apéx in Belize, where the ferry is called “the haul-over.” British Honduras, a trifle larger than ‘Massachusetts or -New Jersey, - is wedged in between fthe Mexican Staies of the Yucatan Peninsula an the north | and Guatemala on the west and south, while Honduras, Nicaragua, Salvador, and Costa Rica are nearby. It due | west of Jamaica, some 600 miles across | the Caribbean, and has always been to | a certain t under the wing of | that British island. | The mahogany industry is justly | commemorated on the flag of British Honduras by the representation there of the tools of the trade.. Mahogany lured early settlers to the coast, put meney in their purses, furnished some- thing for them and their backer, Great Britain, to fight the Spzniards about, | and has always been chicfly responsi- | ble for the land’s main industry, lum- | | bering. City Built on Chips. The people of the colony even tell | solemnly how the lowsst portions of the city cf Belize, once a secmingly bot- | tomless swamp, have been filled in and | made usable by the millions of mahog- | eny chips hacked there from logs which | must be roughly squared b>fore they arc | reacy for market. Assisting the chips in the work of stabilization—they tell with equal solemnity—were the thou- | sands of cmpty rum bottles thrown | aside by the axmen. Formerly the timber industry was a very casual affair. Early sctilers cut down the trees near. the beach, loadzd them and sailed away. Later the timber along the rivers wes ut and floated down to the coast. Most of the easily eccessible timber has been cut mow and_transportation | is more of a problem. Some tremend- | ous logs are handled, weighing 20 or 30 tons each. A unique scene is the | “snaking out” of these logs from the | forest by ox teams in the cool of the After | iThc official money unit of the colony is the American gold dollar. hai*manship, such a: , former Senator Wil- sachusetts and former Senator Lawrence C. Phipps of Colorado, which been rife here in ecent d: is regarded as reflecting he feelir Republicans that tion with a view to an active organization and pub- licity campaign this 1l and Winter wvithout waiting for the period between the national convention and the elec- tion The commit on rafts and flat boats, had the best of the signal victory. British claim to the ter conquest. well as 1862 tha settlement ‘colony” and was given nder the t was made a se MAN IS FOUND DEAD .ON BALTIMORE BEACH ! v rested on In was a Samaica. Tn 1 rate crown colony Body With Bullet Weund in Head Is Identified as New York Architect. Agricuiture Hindered. like the other countr side of Central America, ha ing region along the coast with ds farther inland. I dense tropical forests have discouraged agri- cujture. Growth is so rapid that it is 2 task of the utmost difficulty to keep trial open. Most travel is along r and little is known of the interior awa; from the streams. There are rumors, however, of the existence near the western boundary of extensive a ruins like those of Yucatan and Guate- mala. The one important exception in the matter of inland development is, the scuthern region tapped by the only | who said he was Nact's brothe Iroad, along which thousands of said Nast had been highly is acres of banana plantations have been | Nast. he said, lived at East Orange but established to supply a part of the mar- | had his office in New York City. ket in the United States. Nact registered at a hote e] ch of tropical scenic terday. Brown said he r n Bel Its coast region is a | egram from the architect asking maze of intensely blue lagoons and to come to Baltimore and bring some channels of calm wate dise for | mor but when he arrived last night the chtsman and S boatman. | Nast had left Everywhere are gem-like coral islands covered with coconut trees which in y ,cases grow to their very edges ang mirrored in the surrounding e will meet in December | to fix the time and place for the con- vention. Some leaders think a change in the chairmanship may be made then. but others say it is entirely uncertain. It is pointed out that the Executive Committee of the National Committee has power to select a chairman, ARM SEVERED IN MINE, WEST VIRGINIAN IMPROVES Amputation Performed by Doc- By the Associated Pres BALTIMORE, September 12.—Wilh a bullet wound in the head the body of a man identified as Adolph E. Nast a New York architect, was found on a beach in front of the Arundel Boat Club today. An automatic pistol and cane lay nearby and police advanced a theory of suicide. 3 Charles Brown, East Orange, tor Rescues Workman Pin- ned by Rock. By the Associated Press. CHARLEST W, Va. Septem! 12.—Aukstcck Cottor, 30-year-old mi whose arm was amputated in order to extricate him from a pile of slate, was ported by a hospital at Montgomery night to b “getting along fine.” The fall pinned both of Cotter's arms to the ground while he was working in a Pow:llton mine. An touomobile jack was used to free one arm, but no amount of effort could release the other. W. B. Davis, company 3 crawled through’ a tunne! pierced by miners. injected a local anaesthetic and, working in a cramped position, amputated the arm Mandatory Night Shirts Urged. AUSTIN, Tex. (P).—If Mrs. Lee J Rountree has her way, silk pajamas wil be bootleg goods in the Lone Star State. As a membe she proposes th years | quiring men 1o wear old- of thousands of bales of chicle, the shirts to aid the cotton in@ustry of chewing gum., have would add 8 inches to the length of joined the siream. to be shipped north shirt tails, too -PHILCO- WORLD'S LARGEST SELLING RADIO HERE’S THE RADIO you’ve been waiting for Down the rivers of British Hondu: s of dollars’ worth of mahogany wood have been floated during : of the colony. In la LEFT: Philce Radio — und torted tone, sharp station separation. RIGHT: ary Rag torted tone, orers lapping stations. Ordine — dise 15-foot | | Legislators’ Bad Spelling Excused By Texas Judge Mexican Who Possessed Narcotic Weed, Marihu- ana, Fails to Get Off. By the Associated Press. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., September 12.— Texas legislators may have erred in spell- ing marihuana, but Alfonso Rodriguez was given two years in prison for posses- sing the weed, which has an effect some- what similar to narcotics when smoked. Rodriguez was charged with posses- sion of “marijuana.” His attorney argued such did not exist and a Spanish language expert testified there was no such word, but that it could be a com. sound word translated into “Mary Jane. However, Judge W. S. Anthony ruled that the intent of the Legislature, rather than the spelling was what counted and refused to quash the in- dictment. TRUSTY FOILS ESCAPE PLOT AT CULPEPER Five Convicts Trying to Break Into Gun Cases After Slugging Guard Driven Back. By the Associated Press. CULPEPER, Va., September 12.—Fi long-term prisoners who attempted to escape from the convict camp here this morning had their effort frustrated by Nathaniel Peterson, colored trusty. R T. Jones, 65, a guard. was taken to a hospital seriously injured by a blow on the head struck by one of the men at- tempting the break. F. B. said that J. H. Bowell, serving a ar sentence for murder. and four d prisoners escaped from their hen Jones, who was accompanied Peterson, opened the door to per- e basket to be put out. kS nes w knocked down by blow from a sashweight the men wen 0 the guard room and attempted to break into the gun cases but did not | succeed and were driven back to_their i 11 by Pegerson who secured a pistol a | foreman had locked in another cabinet. Southend, England, will install flood- at the beach to encourage night | ing. | MONDAY September 14th I | i (2) and covered with best ¢ Clearaway Sale price. . (4) large dresser, chest of draw Your choice of maple or Clearaway Sale price (6) spring-filled scat cushions, you some have short davenport, suit size bed. Values up to $225.00. Fine 3-piece Liv (2) $39.50 Studio Couches and 3 extra pillows, covered with best grade cretonne. (8) $19.50 Simmons Sliding Day Beds, complete with pure cotton pad. Opens to full size bed. Clearaway sale price... 5 Foster Coil Spring 3 . equipped with heavy cretonne-covered mattress. Makes comfortable, full size bed. Clear: away sale price PASTOR WINS POINT ON GIRL'S CHARGES Judge Quashes Warrant When Defense Argues Law Does Not Apply. | Spectal Dispatch to The Star. DANVILLE, Va, September 12.— Judge Henry Leigh today sustained a motion by the defense to quash a war- rant charging Rev. J. Arthur Winn, temporarily suspended pastor of Moseley Memorial Methodist Church, with im moral practices, and the accused minis. ter stood dismissed in the Corporation Court of the charges brought by Miss Bertha Mabes, 18-year-old member of his_congregation, The dismissed case had been ap- pealed from the Police Court, where the | pastor was convicted and fined $50. The defense motion to quash the Mabes’ case was based on the grounds that the State statute did not apply. M. K. Harris, counsel, contending tha ’lhe Virginia act under which the min * B-S MAP OF FAIRFAX COUNTY 15 DRAWN Plat Will Be Used to Show Work to Be Done With U. S. Funds. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. FAIRFAX, September 12.—The Ni tional Capital Park and Planning Com- mission is preparing a map of Fairfax | County land from the Potomac River to the Chain Bridge and Great Falls | oads. Every picce of property with owner’s name is shown on this map, now being prepared by Hugo Stahl and |W. G. Haywood, engineers for the commission. The present plat extends from the property of Newbold Noyes at | of Chain Bridge hill to Great Fal is ng platted from the records of the deed books in the county clerk’s office in Fairfax. A map, based on ister was being tried was intended to Aactual surveys, has aiready been :nade be used in the suppression of disorderly | for the territory from Key Bridge to houses and that it would have to be | NOycs' estate. The plat taken from the shown that the church was so used Gced books is intended to minimize the before it could apply. |, Judge Leigh in his decision held that | the second and third counts of the war rant alleging immoral practices and giving information on the location of the pastor’s study did no more than charge the defendant with an intention The first count of the warrant charg- ing assault had been dismissed in the olice Court. | The minister still faces 10 other warrants charging assault on as many women on which he still may be tried | if the State so chooses. | Rev. Winn, who is | brother- | Walter Mapp, who with Brooks Mapp is defending him, must stand an past 50 and -law of former State Senator f work necessary for a later more de- tai'ed survey. | Just what the Federal Government will do in this section has not yet been definitely decided. It has bzen pro- posed that the Government build a road to follow the bluffs along the shore of the Potomac from Mount Vernon to Great Falls. It has also been proposed that the Government build spur roads from the present Chain Bridge High- way cut to scenic points along the river. stll a third plan placed hefore the commission for consideration but which would need congressional action to be- come lawfu!, would bz taking over th> present Chain Bridge and Great Falls a The maps now being prepared at Bishop, superintendent of the | ecclesiastical trial, which will be held | gajrfax will be used by the commission Unprecedented Furniture | |in Main Street Methodist Church on Seplember 23, a commitiee of i3 clders O Canner aving already been appointed to hear | cyamt, e | cramton act. i | South American Tour Ended. RIO DE JANEIRO, September 12 ). —D1 lter Wililams, president of the University of Missouri, left here for New York t-day after completing Air Primer in Curriculum. SAN FRANCISCO (#).—An “avia- | tion primer” will soon be a part of the tudies in _California’s schools. The Board of Education has approved a an extended tour of South America. | text book compiled by the Aeronautical ~ He said he believed th> South Amer- Ccmmittee of the State Chamber of ican continent “belongs to the twentieth Commerce which outlines the histo *"and predicted that cultural of transportation from primitive Indian usiness relations between North |times to the modern air transport!and South America would be closer in tem the future. 3 BIG DAYS! We have set aside Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to clear out all Floor Samples in or- der to make room for in- coming merchandise. Un- usual opportunities await the value-wise shoppers at Pcerless. WEDNESDAY September 16th TUESDAY September 15th Values! ing Room Suites, carcfully unholstered uality velours. Sold regularly for §98.00 $48'50 Complete 4-piece Bed Room Suites, made of fine cabinet woods, ers, vanity dresser and Colonial 4-poster Salem mahogany finish. Regularly $109.00. Gorgeous 3-piece Bed-Davenport Suites, all made with loose, revers mohair or tapestry cove All davenports open to r choice of gem able for apariment use. Your choice $19- *10 *19 (10) $24.50 Colonial 4-Poster Wood Beds. vour choice of mahogany or walnut~ finish; all sizes. Clearawa (12) $8.75 Simmons’ Guaran- teed Bed Springs, in all sizes. Clearaway sale price (15) $9.75 Extira-heavy Roll- edge Mattresses, with good cov- ering. All sizes. Clearaway sale 88 .95 (3) §17.50 Finest Pure Layer Felt Mattresses, fuil 50-1b.; best coverings; night by the light of torches. Superheterodyne Lowboy «eo. . and believe us, it’s a radio ‘WORTH waiting for. Think of it—a 9- tubePhilcoSuperheterodyne American (12) $9.75 Pull-up Chairs with handsome carved frames and uphol- stered scats and backs. Complete your living room with one of these beautiful cbairs. Clearaway sale (7) $13.75 5-piece Breakfast Suites, made of hardwood; drop-leaf table and 4 Windsor style chairs, all sanded and ready to paint. Clearaway sale (100) $1.98 Cash Specials — Your choice of end tables, table lJamps, bou- doir lamps, bed lights, fish aquariums, $4.88 $7 .88 all sizes. Clearaway sale price.. (1) $24.50 Nationzlly Known and Guaranteed Inner Coil Spring Filled Mattresses, resilient and restful; all sizes. Clearaway sale price. .. = (10) teed Fine Coil Bed Springs, resilient helical spring tied tops 1 si Clearaway sale price.... $19.50 Twenty-year Guaran- (5) $9.75 Hall Console Tables, with new-style mirrors. Clear- away sale price $9.99 .$8.75 $4.85 87¢ card tables, Clearaway sale price.... (2) $139.00 Complete 9-piece an aggressive war, it is the duty and interest of the others to combins against it. Why not frankly recognize this? The only true parity henceforth, in Germal just phrase, is ‘parity of security'—the right of each to receive help from all against aggression, cach aiding in proportion to its strength and special situation and geographical posi- tion.” “But_if any state is liable to break the Kellogg pact, is it not equally liable! to break the rutual aid treaty?"” | “One state by breaking the pact can| cause aggression. It is extremely im- probable that a majority of the simultancously would break the mutual aid pact.” “Then what ycu really propose to organize is a war—general war.” “No—peace. Unfortunately for some people, the fear of the police is the be- ginning of wisdom. But what state will cver contemplate aggression when it realizes that it will immediately have all the others against it?” “How do you proposz to wake sure/ that the disarmament finally agreed to will actually be chserved?” “Experience shows that the only real control in this respect is the control of public opinion, which, in turn, is a real control only when the people feel really secure. Thus, by whatever path you approach the subject, you get back always to the same thing, namely, the necessity of organizing mutual aid sgainst possible aggrassion.” Gopyright, 1931) states : man-eating sharks. the logs reach the coast they are| squared and lashed together into huge | rafts. There is a great coral barrier reef about 10 miles off the ccast of | British Honduras outside which the largest ships must anchor. The gr rafis are towed out to the ships b: steel cables and winches. They arc then broken up and the separate tim- bors hoisted aboard by cranes. The lives of the workers on the rafts is none too secure. Rough seas some- times batter the structures to pieces, | and always the waters are alive with | British Honduras came under the | British flag largely through the well- known “squatters’ rights,” grown to in- | ternational stature. Spain claimed the | entire “Main,” or mainland, from thc time of the earliest explorers. But she was interested chiefly in gold and silver; mere trees scemed bene:th notice, So British and cther adventus- ers who cut timber on the castern coast of Yucatan, the present British Hon- duras, and the Mosquito country, far- | ther south, were not molested at first. | When the settlers were seen to be making a good thing of their mahogany trace, the Spanish changed their policy and began harassing them, A series of wars and treaties between Spain and Great Britain followed. In 1798 the| Spanish made a supreme effort to drive what they considered the “squatters” out of Belize. - But the settlers, with cannoffmounted | Walnut Lowboy at such a remarkable price! ... Only Philco’s tremendous facilities could produce such quality at this undreamed-of low price. Come in—See it— HEAR it! FREE HOME DEMGONSTRATION Col. 0101 Open Evenings CO. 2900 Fourteenth St. N.W,, at Harvard K| (20) Linolenm Rugs, choice of several terns. Clearaway sale price ster Seamless Rugs, all perfect; 9x12 size. Clearaway sale price. (11) American walnut. ~ Clearaway price (6) $17.50 CONVENIENT $4.95 6x9 Perfect Felt-Base (4) $39.50 Velvet and Axmin- $12.50 Chiffoniers, made of cabinet hardwoods, finished in oak or Large Size Dressers, with big mirrors; 3-drawer style, fin- ished in walnut. Clearaway sale price, Arranged in Weekly or Monthly Payments Walnut Dining Room Suites, ex- pertly made with hand-rubbed finish; your ckoice of 2 period styles. Clearaway sale price. (6) $29.50 Fine Coxwell Easy Chairs, deep, luxurious Spring filled seats and backs; finest cov- erings of velour and tapestries. $1 1 Clearaway sale price...... (3) $19.50 Ladies’ Spinet Desks, $9 pat- $9.49 $27 .50 %6 $ finished in American walnut. Clearaway sale price............ sale TERMS 827-9 Seventh St. N.W. Branch 1213 Good Hope Rd. S.E.