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FREE MANCHURIAN STATES ARE URGED Japan Opposes Separatist Plans by Chinese and Mongols. tinued From First Page) requesting the moral support of the ' Japanese government in their proposal | 1o establish the independence of the Parga district, with Khatlar, city on ! the Chinese Eastern Railway, as cap- | ital. The Mongolians proposed this | move once before, just after the Rus- | sian penetration of Western Manchuria | two years ago. | Consul Hayashi, it was explained | here, told the delegation Japan refused to give the Mongol movement any sup- port whatsoever. | Announcement was made that the commander at Mukden had moved & | detachment over a Chinese Railway line from Szepingkai to Taonan after Japa- nese at the latter town appealed for protection. Chinese agitators had been active 2t Taonan, it was stated, and the Mukden commander acted without con- sulting Tokio, considering it an emer- gency and sending an armored train. CHINA IS DISAPPOINTED. Officials Are Discouraged Over League Refusal to Restrain Japan. NANKING, September 26 (#).— Keen disappointment and discourage- ment was expressed by Chincse officials | today when they learned the Council of the League of Nations had rejected China’s plea for an inquiry by an im- partial commission into the clash of Chinese and Japanese troops in Man- churia. This was despite the fact that Ja- pan's representative had informed the Leigue Council that Japan intended to complete withdrawal of troops from positions occupled in Southern Man- churis since the conflicts of last Satur- day and that withdrawal already had begun. While no Chinese official comiment was forthcoming, government leaders privately said the Geneva news was discouraging and disappointing. China had hoped its recently acquired seat in the League would be a big factor in gettling its differences with Japan. The note of Henry L. Stimson, ‘American Secretary of State, urging Japan and China to confine military operations in Manchuria to require- ments of international law, reached Nanking only today through American Minister Johnson at Peiping. Hence no official statement was made. The Chinese press and government circles were made aware of the Ameri- can note yesterday, and expressed deep gratification. Some newspapers interpreted it as a stern rebuke to Japan. Bitterness against Japan has resulted in the old Chinese weapon—the boy- cott—being invoked against Japan il\" many cities, with fcations it will be the most severe ban on Japanese trade since 1919. Prominent at Taney Memorial Unveiling CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES CHIEF SPEAKER AT FREDERICK CEREMONY. i Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes was the principal speaker at the unvelling ceremony of & memorial to former in the Court House yard at Frederick, Md. yesterda standing by the memorial, are Mrs. Hughes, Chief Justice’ Hughes, Gov. Ritchie of Maryland and Joseph D. Baker Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney, of Frederick, Md. LINDY ATTACKED BY CHNESE MOB Flyer and Companions Flee as. Starving Sufferers Pre- vent Aid. By the £:-ociated Pres NANKING, China, September 26— Charles Lindbergh's experimental flight to take physicians and medicines to flood-isolated centers of Northern | Kiangsy Province fal'ed today because a starving Chinese throng erying for food rushed the plane and endangered | the initial relief expedition. | Declaring the fajjure “the most heart- rending experience of my career,” Col. Lindbergh and his companions sadly | returned to Nanking, convinced the only | THE WEATHER | District of Columbia—Fair and cooler md;y; tomorrow fair and continued | €00 Maryland-Virginia—Generally fair and cooler today; tomorrow fair with slowly rising temperature in west portion. | West Virginia—Generally fair and ! continued cool today; tomorrow fair with rising temperature, Report for Last 24 Hours. Temperature. Dey 4 idnight am, M 2 ‘Temperature same date last Highest, 96; lowest, 70. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) |ago while defending his actions as a | Hughes delivered the dedicatory address BUILDERS VISION BOOM IN INDUSTRY Base Claim on Survey Show- ing Increased Purchasing Power of Dollar. BY MORRIS WATSON, Associated Press Staff Writer. NEW YORK, September 26.—A four- |ing over steel and masonry with five- | billion-dollar effect is the vision of | building men for the 12 months begin- ning October 1 ‘The five-billion-dollar effect grows out of the increased purchasing power of the 1931-32 dollar, as compared with the 1929 dollar. | Sponsors of the figures, the National | Bullding Press group, claim they repre- sent an accurate and reliable picture of America's second greatest industry. Least Active Period. Estimates complled by the division of statistics and research of the F. W. Dodge Corporation show that $1,850,- 000,000 should be spent for building projects of $5,000 or more each during {the six months beginning October 1. | The Building Press group then makes what it calls & normal allowance for the fact that the figure covers the least active part of the construction year and arrives at the impressive $4,000,000,000 total for the 12 months. Thirty-seven Eastern States, the Dodge Corporation belleves, will spend $1,370,000,000 during the six months. New England’s share should be $135,- —A. P. Photo. | 000,000, metropolitan New York $355,- 000,000, up-State New York $62,000,000, Middle Atlantic States $160.000,000, Pittsburgh $135.000.000, Southeastern States $60,000,000, Chicago $145,000,000, Central Northwest States $31.000,000, Southern Michigan $49,000,000, St. ‘bouh $60,000,000, Kansas City $80.000,- | 000, New Orleans $37,000,000, Texas $52,000,000 and 11 Western States $480,000,000. ; Total residential building for the six months captures $560,000,000 of the es- timate; non-residential building gets $680,000,000 and public works and util- ities $610,000,000. Schools Head List. Commercial bulldings in the 37 States east of the Rocky Mountains account for $143.000,000 of the six months' esti- mate. Factorles are predicted at $56,- | 0o, educational bullding, _ $120.- By the Associated Press. | 500.000; hospitals _and . institutions, EREDERICK, Md., September 26 | $37.900,000; public buildings, $91.000.- Speaking from the steps of the 166~ | 000; religious and memorial hulldlngs] year-old Prederick court house, Chlef\’21'1‘00'000"3;%85““)00"’“’ne“':‘;_f;“‘a:, Justice Charles Evans Hughes today Pulldings, b obogn' s paid high tribute to a predecessor, | {amily Houses, $323.500.000; aparteen Roger Brooke Taney, distinguished son | and hotels, 8192500000, aid . public of Maryland and storm center of Amer- ( WOrks and utilities, $450.080.000. = .. ican politics in the days of the Civil | The public works and utilitles W highways, bridges, power plants, water and sewage systems as well as public edifices. “The figures are lower than the ab- normal peak building years just pas but still they show an astonishing vol ume of work available,” says the build- ing press group. “Four biilions of dol- Left to right in photo, Hughes Pays Tribute to Marylander as Bust Is Unveiled. ar, Standing where Taney stood 100 years Government servant, Chief Justice at the unveillng of a bronze bust of the famous statesman. Gov. Albert C. Ritchie accepted the bust for the State. billion-collar chorus of workmen sweat- | The: Dole Seventh of = series of based upon first-l study of_conditions 1 of the British Isles. history, the current situation and the soclal and economic effect of the dole upon every class of popu- ation. artic ntimi every section describing the BY HENRY J. ALLEN. Former United States Senator and Governor of Ka i growing problem of married women who lare taking advantage of the dole in a fashion not intended by the act. The interim report of the Royal Commis- the parliamentary debates last month just before Parliament adjourned. This subject is on the mind of the manager of every labor exchange who sees a large contribution going out weekly to a class which s not dependent upon the dole, but which under technical ap- plication of the act is within strict legal rights. It works thus: A woman who has engaged in an insurable employment marries. Prior to her marriage she had paid her contributions of 9 pence a week to the unemployment insurance fund. Many employers refuse to en- gage married women; they dismiss them upon the theory that the woman can depend upon her husband for main- tenance and the job she held will be filled by some one who needs it. Still Eligible for Dole. The newly married woman, even though her husband may be making a wage ample for her suppart, remem- bers that she has always kept up her insurance. The fact that she has been dismissed from an insurable employ- ment for no other fault than that she has married makes her eligible to col- Ject the dole. She may have been & weaver in Manchester and moved to London with her new husband. There is no weaving here, but she can apply for any other insurable occupation. She may signify her willingness, for example, to take a job as a char: woman. She knows that this occup tion is overfull and that there is no danger of her getting work at this. Nevertheless her failure to find work at this job which she did not want, and probably would not take, renders her eligible to her dole, and she goes upon the unemployed register at 15 shillings per week. Her husband may be draw- ing $40 per week, which would be & big wage in England, but this in no wise interferes with her right to take about $4_per week from the government. It is a problem not easy to settle because in England many women do work after marriage, especially in dis- tricts where women are employed in large numbers in the industries. “But,” says the Royal Commission, “we cannot avoid the conclusion that en who have no wish to work have no difficulty in obtaining unemployment benefit. | dence before us that there are many since their marriage have not worked and have no intention of doing so.” But how are you going to separate All gver England I have heard of the | sion cites it; the subject broke out in |in under present conditions married wom- | We are satisfied on the evi-| married women receiving benefit who in England Newly Married Women Drawing Money From Government, Although Supported by Husbands, Preseny Problem. given the chance from those who would not, since under present circumstances it is not possible to offer either a job? Amendment Hotly Debated. Parliament to make every married woman qualify all over again after marriage in order to catch the shirk- | ers was hotly debated and brought warm_ defenders of the present system who became eloquent upholders of a ersecuted sex. Mr. Buchaman, who aving first declared that he had in his district “the biggest biscuit factory in the world,” employing women, said “It always seems to me that women are blamed. When a cabinet minister goes wrong, we look for any excuse 2nd say ‘It's a woman.' If a member of Parliament fails to keep his promise, some one comes along and says ‘It’s a woman.' What are we proposing? A married woman must qualify after mar- riage. If she does not marry, but co- habits with & man, she gets benefit. If | you go straightforwardly and marry, |you are penalized, but if you live in sin you get your weekly benefit from the government.” 300,000 married women would be affect- ed by legislatic upon this “anomaly.” Anot!ic: Anomaly Presented. Mr. Tu.hanan did not mention an- other anomaly, along the general line {of +his thought about wronged virtue. | It was disclosed that dependent women | living with men to whom they were not | married drew the same dole that a dependent wife drew. It was finally |ruled t$hat a dependent thus abiding irnun be the housekeeper and that the | man must have ateleast two children |before taking into his home a depend- | ent housekeeper. Another anomaly has to do with em- ployed married women about to become mothers, These women are often dis- | charged by their employers some weeks before there confinement is expected They claim they are still fit for light work and often claim their unemploy- ment_benefit up to the very birth of the child, even though by the very na- ture of things the expectant mother has not the slightest chance of obtaining work, and could not perform it if she did. Therefore, many thousands are actu- ally born into the dole, justifying the somewhat peppery claim of an irritated Conservative author of prominence who said “they live on the dole, get married gz] the dole and have babies on the le.” : | | CANADA WORK IMPROVES OTTAWA, September 26 (#).—A further increase in employment was re- | corded at the beginning of September in a rej issued by the Dominion Bu- reau of Statistics today. \ ‘The increase was largely due to in- | creased highway construction under- taken for the rellef of unemployment in Quebec. the married women who would work if | An amendment recently discussed in | It was etimated by the debaters that | DRIVE MAKING IOLE PICK COTTON GAINS - | Police Round-Up of Jobless Spreads From Arkansas | Into Two More States, By the Associated Press. LITTLE ROCK, Ark, September 26. —Warnings went out today to the un- employed in several towns in Arkansas and neighboring States to go to the cot- | ton fields or to jail. | Inaugurated at Helena, in Southeast | Arkansas, a few days mgo, the cam- paign of police authorities to drive the del! loiterers from the crty streets with | threats of arrests for vagrancy, and at | the same time supply a shortage of cot- | ton pickers, had spread to at least one | other town in Arkansas and int> Mississippi and Texas. | Sheriff J. J. Holmes at Devalls Bluff, | Ark., began a drive there to force the | unemployed into the cotton and also the | rice fields, where a labor shortage exists. | _Officials of Bowie County, Tex., on the Southeast Arkansis border, prepared to take similar action beginning Monday. Meanwhile, at Helena, where the cot- ton-picking enforcement drive started, police and county officials continued to round up loiterers and send them into the fields. Trucks leave with the work- ers every morning and return them from the fields at night. The Jow rate pald focr cotton picking | 35 and 40 cents a hundred, has not af tracted a sufficient number of pickers in | many sections of the cotton belt. Although the situation has not yet become serious, agricultural leaders sald that with a shortage of pickers, & | period of rainy and stormy weather | would result in heavy damage to the cotton crop. WILL FETE EVERSON Retiring Chief of Militia Bureau to Be Guest at Dinner, Maj. Gen. Willlam G. Everson, chlef of the Militia Bureau, will be the guest of honor-at a dinner given by his official associates in that bureau at the Arm{ and Navy Club tomorrow ng. even! The dinner will be an official fare- well to Gen. Everson, who has resigned as chief of the bureau, effective Decem- ber 1. He has been granted leave of | absence to thdt date. He will assume | the pastorate of the First Baptist Church of Denver., Spcciai Swallow Fountain Pens Ideal for school use. . Fully guaranteed .. o 98c GARRISON’S 1215 E St. N.W. | TOmOrrow, | 3:20am. | 3:22 pm. 8:52am. 9:12pm. | ‘Today. 2:49 am. 2:57 pm. 8:12a.m. 8:38 p.m. The Sun and Moon. lars (five billion at 1929 values) spent | in one year for building construction | is, in the light of other industries, a titanic figure. “A public more bullding conscious s | coming into the market, encouraged on| “Chief Justice Taney discharged un- flinchingly the supreme duty of his office,” Chief Justice Hughes said.| “With the passing of the years and the | softening of old asperities. the arduous | service nobly rendered by Roger Brooke way to place doctors in the flcod towns would be to send them with military | escorts. | Mrs. Lindbergh did not accompany | LEAGUE WATCHES MANCHURIA &g“h Officials Are Satisfied Situation is High Meoving Toward Solution. Low .. GENEVA, September 26 (/).—Despite many criticisms of the attitude of the council, League of Nations cfficials said tonight the Manchurian situation was moving—if slowly—toward a solution, under the watchful eyes of the League and of the United States. The council did not meet today, but the members kept themselves informed of dovelopments in the Sino-Japanese dispute. They Were in readiness to take further action when and if events in Mznchuria, Tokio and Nanking war- ranted. Assembly on Alert. ‘The assembly, which had intended to adjourn today, was unable to finish its work and with the council will remain on the alert for several days for op- portunities to exert its good offices for & pacific settlement. Criticism of the ccuncil amounts to the charge it showed weakness ifi the face of Japanese unwillingness to &c- cept a Manchurian inquiry by a neutral committee. The official attitude is that the League, with the support of Washing- ton, is accomplishing the withdrawal of Japanese troops from Manchuria and that this is an acccmplishment deserv- ing congratulations. It was emphasized that the council does not intend to relax its efforts to bring the controversy all the way to a satisfactory issue. Briand is Re-clected. Aristide Briand, French Foreign Minister, this afternocn was re-elected president of the European Commission pri [ her husband on today's flight, missing | a dangerous and distress: She remained in Nanking, that the two medical men who nu::mrnnled her husband needed the space in the plane on the flight to Hinghwa, 70 miles northeast of here. Crowd Gathers Quickly. The passengers were Dr. Heng Liu, head of the National Flood Relief Com- mission’s medical staff, and Dr. J. N. Grant, American member c{ the Peiping Union Medical College faculty. The plane was loaded with medical supplies. As soon as Col. Lindbergh alighted on the flood waters on the outskirts of Hinghwa, normally a city cf 600,000 population, there was a rush of sampans crowded with starving people who, see- ing the medlulur!cmn in the plane’s fuselage, believed food had come at last. Most of the le in the mcb never had seén a plane before, and some re- garded the machine as some miraculous ter intercession. In the midst of the clamor there arose the cries of women and children, and :i:rl which may have been cf thanks- 8- Hundreds of hands stretched for the The mob paddled to | cki visible Ee m: in sampans, tubs, anything floatable, and threatened to Sink or at least damage the plane. Attempts to Explain. Dr. Liu, the only one of the party speaking Chinese, tried to explain the mission, but his voice was lost in the E! din. Leaping from sampan to sampan. he tried to saivage his medicines and | Ing; His efforts were exp‘hm their use. at a session in which the Prench dele- |futile. Mzurice Pesche, expressed the at M. Briand's visit to Berlin would “mark the beginning of & new era” in relations between France and Germany. Thereupon Count Heinrich von Bernstorfl arcee, walked over and shook hands with the Prenchman. Dr. Giuseppe Motta of Switzerland end Nicholas Politis of Greece were elected vice presidents. A special committee to study the Boviet economic non-aggressicn pact proposal was appointed to convene No- vember 2, with Russians and Turks| emong the designated members. The | eommission requested the council to in- ) vite the United States to participate in the study of the BSoviet scheme. ! Australia, Canada, Chile, China, India, | Japan and Uruguay also were invited to take part. HOLLYWOOD MURDER | LINKED TO “DON JUAN” Police Look for Boulevardier Seen With Woman Vietim Hour Before Slaying. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, September 26.—An unnamed Hollywood boulevardier, de- scribed by police as wealthy and debon- r, was sought by police as the possible slayer of Mrs. Wilma McFarland, 22- year-old candy shop clerk, whose body was found in & small room of the shop Bast night. J. T. Davidson, inspector of detec- tives i< police suspicions of the Holly- wood boulevard suspect are so strong that the first theories of robbery and murder by Mrs. McFarland’s former husband have been discarded. David- son said the suspect, known along the boulevard as a Don Juan among women. | was seen talking with Mrs. McFarland less than an hour before she was slain. The body was discovered by Bert /Austin, shop owner., who told authori- ties the cash register had been rifled Detectives, who at first believed Mrs. McFarland had been murdered by rob- rs or shot and killed by her former usband because of jealousy, said they now believe the murderer rifled the cash register as & ruse to throw police off guard. Mrs. McFarland bhad been strangls Ellce said, indicating the assailant aj rently had attempted to force his at- ntions upon her and then killed her when she resisted his attempts. &3 , The Journal of the Rev. Willlam Merle, at Oxford, England, from 1337 %o 1334, furnishes us with our earliest #Rnown weather data, [ The hunger-mad people tore open many of the packages and, finding no food, turned upon the doctor. The air rang with shrieks of disappointment. The situation looked desperate. It was evident the three men were in dan- ger of bodily harm. Liu regained his Pplace in the plane only with fireat diffi- culty, leaving the crowds fighting over his chmfil The three decided it was helresl to try palling situatisn and that it would be ‘better to save the plane. Col. Lindbergh said tonight it was not the danger that worried him and his companions as much as the bitter re- alization of their helplessness in the face of stark human misery, with hun- dreds so near starvation they wers un- able to understand the humanitarian purposes of this visit from the air. Lindbergh Glven Medal. The plan had been to take physi- cians and medicinal supplies to a flood center, leave them there and return to Nanking for another medical unit for another center. It had been hoped this method would check the spread of lood | epidemic diseases in the area, many parts of which are inaccessible |save by atr. But after the experience at Hinghwa, Col. Lindbergh and his companions said it was apparent military escorts would be_needed to protect such expeditions. Earlier today President Chiang Kai- Shek at a formal ceremony in the na- tional government offices decorated Col. | Lindbergh with China’s aviation medal, | Workers as a minimum. He withdrew the first awarded since the decoration was established. AGITATION PLOT CHARGED TO JAPANESE IN CHINA Cable to Legation Here Reports Effort to Stir Up Soldiers and Laborers. By the Associated Press. A cable to the Chinese legation yes- terday from the Nanking government said Japanese were reported stirring up anti-Japanese agitation as an excuse for military action and fomenting un- rest among Chinese soldiers and la- borers. “According to reports received.” the message sald, “Japanese in Tsingtao and Shanghai have attempted to stir up labor troubles. They have captured & number of insignias and uniforms be- longing to a detachment of the north- eastern army (Chinese) and have dis- tributed them to Japanese residents at Tsinan (capital of Shantung Province) in order that they may appear as Chi- nese soldiers, and also have employed | 80 communist elements to stir up anti- Japanese activities in Tsinan in order to furnish excuse for further military experience. | try to face such an ap- Por | Sun, today . | 8in, tomorrow. | Moon, today .. | Automobile half hour after sunset. Monthly rainfall in inches in the | Capital (current month to date): Month, 1931, Average. Record. January . 1. 3.55 709 '82 6.34 ‘84 884 '91 9.13 '89 10.69 '89 1094 '00 10.63 '86 August .5 4.01 1441 28 September ..,2.31 3.2¢ 1081 '76 ‘Weather in Various Cities. ~Temperacure.— Preciple . Min. _ tation.8 Pri” Sat.pm. o v.night. 8p.n. D m. F L X 233 03 327 3.75 327 3.60 413 417 Buffalo, | Chicago, 1 polis, Jacksonvill Kansas City, Memphis, Miami, Mobile, N Nor Omaha, Nebr. Philadelphia, *P Phoeniix. Ariz Butburgh, L Me. Springfield. Tampa, Fla Toledn, Ohio Vicksburg, Miss. ...’ WASHINGTON, D. €. 'UNION PAY URGED | "ON D. C. PROJECTS BY SECRETARY DOAK (Continued From First Page.) Maj. H. L. Robb, assistant Engineer | Commissioner in charge of the Dis-| | trict's building program, several weeks | g0 recommended writing into the con- |tracts for municipal work the wage | scales paid by the District to its own the recommendation, however, wheh | advised by the District’s legal authori- | ties that this would be unwise, The minimum scale proposed by Maj. | | Robb was considerably less than that of | | the union workers, and was strongly | opposed by organized labor, who con- |tended the scale on which it works | constitutes the “prevalling wage scale” referred to in the Bacon-Davis act. So far as is known, complaints have | been made against only two contractor: engaged in work for the District for failing to adhere to the “prevailing scale.” Secretary Doak named them as f"he Charles 5. Bennett Co. of Phila- delphia and the W. P. Rose Co., in a letter to the Commissioners August 27. In this communication, he said com- plaints had been filed at his office re- {u’dln' these two concerns. He asked he Commissioners for the rates paid on their work in the District, ‘The Rose company is building the ad- dition to the Woodridge School. Farm buildings are being erected by the Ben- nett company at Blue Plains, D. C. ‘The scale of the Rose company has never been disclosed, but District offi- cials said it is lower than the union scale. The Bennett company scale was 1;lney has received its fitting recogni- tion, Was Great Chief Justice. “He bore his wounds with the forti- tude of an enviable spirit. He was & | great Chief Justice.” As the Chief Justice uttered his final words flags fluttered and unveiled the bust of the man who went through the Maryland Legislature, through many high posts in the Government to a term of 28 years as the head of the Su- preme Court, during which he adminis- tered the oath of office to seven Presi- dents, including Abraham Lincoln. Where the Chief Justice concerned himself almost entirely with the works of Chief Justice Taney, Gov. Ritchie | spoke only of the Supreme Court itself, | and the great part it had played in building the Nation. “So today Maryland lays at the feet of Brooke Taney, the Chief Justice of that court in trying and tempestuous tiies, her tribute of pride and enduring memory for a distinguish- | ed son,” the Governor said. Ceremonies Broadcast. The ceremonies were broadcast over & network of the National Broadcasting Bystem, and were attended by members of the Maryland Court of Appeals and high ranking members of the State bench and bar. Chief Justice Taney was chief of | the Natlon's highest court from 1836 to 1864, was Attorney General of the | United States from 1831 to 1833, and | Secretary of the Treasury from 1833 to 1834. President Jackson found in him his closest advisor. Prior to the unveiling ceremonies, Chief Justice Hughes, Mrs. Hughes, |{ with _the life of Justice Taney. | every hand by lower costs and new and easier methods of building or acquir- ing bulldings. “The figures presented are cold, stark facts—they have not been colored or arranged to present a favorable out- | Took; they show the building industry as it is today, and as it will be during the next six months.” SHIP AIRMAIL TO STOP |Service to Bremen and Europa to Be Discontinued Soon. The ship-to-shore plane service of the steamships Bremen and Europa will be discontinued after their next voy- ages. The Post Office Department, in an- nouncing this discontinuance today, said that in all probability the service would be renewed next Summer if business warrants. Governor Ritchie and other State offi- clals were guests of honor at a luncheon given by the Roger Brooke Taney Memorial Association, which fostered erection of the bust. They also were taken on a tour of points connected THE WATCH REPAIR SHOP 737 13th St. N.W. MORRIS BLUMENFELD Satisfactory watch repairing for the last 25 vears. WATCHES—CLOCKS—JEWELRY A" Baok — doing SMALL things BIG Time This bank time and money for ton families who are wrapped up heart and soul in the busi- ness of getting along. Come In Morris Plan Bank Under Supervision U. S. Treasury re) to be 35 cents an hour for common labor, 70 cents for carpenters, cents for steel workers and brick- layers, 75 cents for plasterers, 90 cents for plumbers and steamfitters, 70 cents llfl‘ electricians, 80 cents for tile set- 4ers and 60 cents for finlshers. and Money has lots of plenty of Washing- New Pianos Reduced Used Pianos Reduced PIANOS Upright ....... $25 Stultz ......... $40 Bradbury ...... $77 Regent ........ $99 Foster ........$195 Wheelock .....$137 Steck .........$165 Knabe ........$190 | of PIANOS 2d RADIOS Monday and Tuesday Only Save Money on Nationally Pfib{d Merchandise We are for two days giving bargains like we never offered before. New radios— New pianos—Used radios and pianos offered at big savings. radios and pianos in our line will be offered special for these two days (not complet lines). Don’t miss this 2-day sale. Come see for yourself. This is your chance. Jor&n special terms offered for two days only. 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