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8 CRADUATES HEAR | SENATOR RANSDELL Speaker Stresses Welfare of Empoyers at School for Secretaries. ation. Miss Esthe calist, and Miss Mary Elizabeth Kunna pianist, completed the program. Diplomas Presented. Dr. Richard T. Ely, president of the Echool, presented diplomas to the fol- Jowing: Lucille Bowden, Florence Close, Jessie Cloud; Walter M. Edwards, Mar- garet E. Fisher, Clara Elizabeth Gere, Eva Smith Hardy, Margaret L. Hoff- m es, Hilda Margaret Prowse ginia Brown, Frances Castleman, Pauline Chadwick, Dorothy Virginia Clum, Irene Colt, Harriet okfield Clarke, Adele Davis, Justina | cesco, Maria Di Fran-| ou osemary s Jessle Durrier, Virgil M. s /ida Pauline Funkhouser, Eve- Iyn Goldburg, Agnes Lenore Goodwin, Virginia Louise Hall, Marie Harrington, Olga Mae Harveycutter, Mary Louise | Haslup, Mildred E. M. Heider, Ruth| Lucille Herbert, Kathryn Elizabeth Hirs, Margery Kengla Holland, Edith ‘Aline Hopkins, Elizabeth Hunt Hopkins, Regina, Marie Horn, Margaret Frances Hughes, Annette Roberta Hoover, Fran- ces Eleanor Jones, Rose Charlotte Kayian, Katherine Briscoe Knox, Mary Flizabeth Kunna, Mary Elizabeth Leith, Sophie Litman, Mary Paxton Macatee, Ellen Elizabeth Matthews, Kathleen Mc- Cormick, Margaret Ceila Moxom, Lor-| raine Nichols, Bulah Bell Orcutt, Sol- Veig Helen Osterwald, Margaret Eliza- beth Otto, Alice Perham, Mary Kather- | ine Perry, Meta Parthenia Phillips, Frances Elizabeth Pope, Thelma Lee Pulliam, Mildred Frances Pullman, | Ruth Richards, Gilda Richey, Clara; Helene Rolando, Frances Hildegarde | Rolfes, Louisa Page Saegmuller, Hulda | Ella Saffran, Bernadine A. Scherck, Ruth Murray Shacklett, Ruth Sherwood, | Mildred Eugene Sisler, Mary Libbey | , Jack H. Spicer, Mary Alice Bertha Wilhelminia Walter, et | Flizabeth Walther, Alice Spell Williams, | Vera Hooker Wilson, Virginia Mae Wil- | son, Elizabeth Kathryne Wise, Margaret Witt, Clara Zanoff and Miriam Ann Zeltzer. ROSENWALD ESTATE MAY PASS $50,000,000 877,919 Shares of Sears, Boebnck‘ Stock Chief Property of Late ! Philanthropist. | By the Associated Press. of which the late philanthropist was chairman for many_years | The value of the Rosenwald holdings | was difficult to estimate, for 386,559 of the Sears’ ehares were pledged as col- lateral on loans whose amounts were not given. The stock is quoted around $10 and $11. It was announced that the estate has made no public sales of Sears’ stock and that 1t is unlikely to be forced | to sell a stock for taxpaying or| KNOX SEES PRESS BEST | CLUB FOR DEPRESS!ON% Reversed Panic When Country’s Banks Were Threatened in January, He Declares. Pre-Fourth of July Special No holiday 1s com- plets’ unless you ave one of Jack's specially _prepared W ve Complete Price $650 || No extras Regularly $15.00 Also—A Genuine Steam Wave for the Mere Normal Hair $5 Complete—Reg. $10 Shampoo and Finger-Wave, $1 Call Dist. 9718 | JACK’S PERMANENT WAVE SHOP 1320-22 F St. N.W,, 3rd Floor, Front Entrance Over American lee Co. 3rd, Floor Front, Suite 336-37438 S——r THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JUNE 26 1932—PART THREE. A Few of the Hundreds of Bargains in the Sale OU will find 2-piece English Club ’Living Room Suites for $49.50 . . . $6.85 Occasional Chairs for $3.65 . .. $150 Seven-piece Ma- hogany Dineite Suites for $97.50 . .. $65 Large Mahogany Secretary, $49.50 . . . $125 Solid Mahogany Sofa, $59.75 . . . $6.85 Cretonne Cov- ered Boudoir Chair, $3.95. 10-piece Twin Bed Bedroom Group for $39.75 . . . And a $28.50 Colo- nial Barrel Back Chair for $19.50 . .. All Feather Pillows at 69c each and Inner-Spring Mattress for $8.95 ... Buy a 10-piece Wanut Ve- neered Dining Room Suite for $98.50. HEN we have $4.95 and $5.95 Summer Rugs at $2.95...9x12, 8x10 and 6x12 Fibre and Crex Rugs, at $6.99 . .. And the heaviest quality $19.95 and $24.75 Imported Belgian Mourzourk Rugs, for $14.95 ... This is only part of the story. The rest will be found on our Fourth Floor tomorrow. Delivers Any Suite During This Sale The balance is payable in convenient monthly sums] on The Hecht Co.’s Budget Plan. We'll hold your purchases for future delivery, without charge. THE HECHT CO- F STREFT AT 7™ FREE PARKING WHILE YOU SHOP HERE Has the FURNITURE MARKET gone Haywire...? WE decided to make a survey of the furniture market. We wanted to know what was the amount of stock on hand? How much of it was moving? What were the prices? The survey proved a revelation. We found hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of fine furniture sitting idle in show- rooms and factory floors. Crying to be bought for a song. O we paint a dismal picture? We're sorry. But we must tell the facts so that you may grasp the significance of this, The Hecht Co.’s greatest furniture sale. HAT so much fine furniture could be bought in the whole- sale markets, for so little money seemed fantastic. And, since it was the human thing to do, we bought . . . and we bought generously. 6€TD UT what are we going to do with the furniture on our floors of equal quality, now selling at higher prices:” we asked ourselves. “Reduce it to replacement costs,” came the order. A crazy situation, yes. Buta favorable one for our customers. You can come down here tomorrow expecting to find, and actually find, quality furniture, beautiful and comfortable furniture...for every room in the house, and for every possible human need.And theprices willbeastoundingly low, HE public has the money to v buy merchandise when it is confident that the quality and the price are right. f_rzdfl and Soturday were the 2 Biggest Days in our Furniture Depart- Bear in mind that this is not a matter of re- ot iy Cinstousiie Rua ducing prices merely to meet a new level. But an actual case of buying furniture that was piled up in warchouses and had to be sold at less than production costs. And then re-marking our own great stocks in line with unhesitatingly and told us that they got the most unusual values in a decade. We are dll set for another tremendous day Monday. these prices. 100000 =t o HECHT Co. Furniture At Less Than Today’s Market Levels!