Evening Star Newspaper, January 26, 1933, Page 12

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A—12 Burchell’s Famous Bouquet A really fine coffee. 25c Lb. Why p N. W. Burchell 817-819 Fourteenth St. N.W. SAVE MONEY BY BUYING GREAT VALLEY ANTHRACITE Great Valley is a genuine hard coal mined in rginia. It is a free-burning, white ash, high heat, non-clinkering hard eoal. Great Valley Is the ONLY Vir- ginia Anthracite that is cleaned by an ULTRA-MODERN clean- ing plant, eliminating impurities. Per Ton, 2210 Lbs. Great Valley Stove..$12.00 Great Valley Chestnut 12.00 Great Valley Pea. .. 9.50 JAMES E. COLLIFLOWER & CO., INC. 1001 15th Street N.W. South Wash- 306 5th St. SE. ington. Va. Metropolitan 4237 - more? Clarendon 393 Hangs On, Mix This at Home Saves $2. So Easy! No Cooking! The best cough remedy that money could buy can easily be mixed at home. It costs very little, Tet at's the most reliable. quick: acting medicine you ever used. The it takes “hold of stubborn <, giving immediate relief, is astonishing. ¥ Any druggist can supply you with 215 ounces of Pinex. Pour this into a pint bottle, and add granulated sugar syrup to make a full pint. To make syrup, use 2 cups of sugar and one cup of water, and stir a few moments until dissolved. No cook- ing needed. It's no trouble at all, and saves two-thirds of the money & family usually spends on cough med- icine. Keeps perfectlyand tastes fine. Tt is surprising how quickly this loosens the germ-laden pllegm, soothes and heals the inflamed membranes, clears the air passages, and thus ends a severe cough in a hur Pin a compound of Nor- way Pine, in concentrated form, the most reliable heal- ing agent for severe coughs. 1t 5 is guaranteed tozive prompt % relief or money refunded. o As Smooif B8 an\ EMEMBER those aerial performers R Hurled through space at a dizzy speed ... yet they never at the Circus? A.F.OF L PRAISED FOR PAST RECORD Representative Black Tells Federal Workers of Its Influence. The American Federation of Labor was praiscd as an “organization that | can make itself felt on election day” by Representative Loring D. Black of New York as he spoke last night at a meeting of the District department, | American Federation of Government | Employes, in the Hamiltos® Hotel. The Federation of Government Employes, organized within the last year, is af- filiated with the A. F. of L. Only a powerful organization like |the A. F. of L. can get things done by ‘Congres& the speaker said, adding that | in the flood of propaganda and misin- | | formation, “it is a great relief to us | | (Congress) to know there is an organ- | ization like it on which to rely for a | true reflection of public opinion.” Declares Votes Count. “If you have votes, it has a lot | greater pressure on us,” the New | Yorker told the Government workers. | “You might as well know it.” | The Government pay cut was called |a “special tax” on those who bear it, | and “they won't do it to you if you're | strong” and control enough votes to | make your wants felt, the speaker con- | tinued. “With a little intelligent handling, and making the men in Con- | gress know that you mean business, he said. “you can get what you want. You can't go alone.” . “If you want to stand better with us Join the crowd we pay attention to,” he concluded. Advantages Outlined. | A. J. Oliver, national organizer for the federation, outlined the advantages of afliation to organized labor and | pointed out that “from 1912, when | President Taft signed the law abolish- | ing the so-called gag law, there never | has been an instance when organized | labor refused to aid Federal workers in | their struggles for a living wage and | better working conditions.” . Samuel Sacco, president of the Ad- Jjutant General's Office Lodge, was ap- pointed by Michael D. Schaeffer, presi- dent of the department. as chairman | of a committee to obtain permanent | quarters for the department, which now | includes 30 lodges in the District. Reports were received and plans out- lined for a card party and dance at | the Carlton Hotel February 10 by the | Tariff Commission and U. S. Employes’ Compensation Commission lodges. U. S.-Turkish Pact 0. K.'d. ISTANBUL. Turkey, January 26 (). —The Turkish cabinet voted a new trade arrangement whereby the United | States may export to Turkey without quota system restrictions, certain goods in quantities sufficient to offset the un- favorable’ American balance of trade. Minute Mysteries Solution to A HORRIBLE MISTAKE. (See page A-3.) Had the tragedy occurred as re- lated by Danlley, at least one of the bullets which passed through the body would have broken the window, which Fordney found closed. NO WICKEDNESS HAS ANY GROUND OF REASON.—Livy. WASHINGTO BARUCH. WOMAN AWARDED $2,500 ON STOCK TRANSACTION | Misrepresentation Alleged by Miss Grace L. Hutton Against New York and D. C. Goncerns. A jury in the court of Justice Jen- nings Bailey, after a trial of three weeks, has found a verdict for $2.500 in favor of Miss Grace L. Hutton against the New York Title & Mort- gage Co. and the Capital Title & Guar- | antee Co. for alleged misrepresentation in connection with the sale to her of stock of the latter corporation. A letter written by a representative of the New York company was used in a publicity campaign to sell the stock of the local corporation and influenced the Jury in granting a verdict against both companies, it is stated. A number of similar suits are pend- ing in the District Supreme Court by other stockholders of the local com- pany, who claim to have been influ- enced to buy stock on the same repre- sentations as made in the Hutton suit. Miss Hutton was represented by At- torneys Levi H. David, E. Hilton Jack- son and Allan David. @ These Ventilators insure plenty BARUCH BELIEVED FIGHTING INFLATION Significance Is Seen in Sound Currency Defender’s Warm Springs Visit. BY MARK SULLIVAN. Without attaching too much signifi- cance to any one of the hundreds of visitors to President - to - be Roosevelt, and admitting that Congressmen who visit Mr. Roosevelt and later compare notes sometimes find that he has been amiably sympathetic to opposing views, it is nevertheless impossible not to infer that the visit of Bernard M. Baruch to Warm Springs is a sign pointing strong- ly away from any prospect of inflation of the currency by the coming admin- istration and the new Congress. Among all Democrats, leaders or rank and file, Mr. Baruch is the most aggressively in- sistent on what the Democratic plat- form last June called “a sound currency to be preserved at all hazards.” To say that sound currency and sound fiscal practice by the Federal Govern- ment, including balancing of the budget, is a hobby with Mr. Baruch would be to underrate both the man and the cause. It is a passion with him. He thinks| more about it and gives more time to it | than to his private affairs. He has| been an earnest an intelligent critic | of the present Republican administra- | tion for not having done as much to- ward balancing the budget as Mr. Ba- | ruch thinks it could and should have | done. He holds most seriously the cen- | viction that balancing of the budget by the coming Democratic Congress will, almost as an act standing alone, be enough to start the country off on a period of prosperity which will make | the Nation happy and give the Demo- crats a long lease of power. With equal positivencss he holds that failure of the Democrats to balance the budget will doom the country and the party to a miserable experience. | Urbane and Tolerant. L . To say Mr. Baruch is uncompromis- | ing on sound fiscal practice by the Gov- | ernment is not to impute to him the | | harsh intolerance sometimes associated | with the word “uncompromising.” He | i in fact urbane and tolerant, but intel- lectually he is sure that sound money | |is a principle as impossible to compro- J Let Us Equip Your Office Perfection Non-Draft Ventilators of FRESH AIR, without dangerous drafts...The best insurance against colds...no blowing of papers off your desk...also indispensable in the Home and Sick Room. ® The LOW COST (according to size of window) will pay big divi- dends in HEALTH and COMFORT. CALL OR TELEPHONE FOR ESTIMATES HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS—GLASS 1334 New York Ave.—Phone NAt. 1703 Old Gold THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1933 ;nheumlmmtnmdmmm our. Mr. Baruch persuades be to his views. The fact is that every formal public utterance of Mr. Roose- velt about currency, and every report of visitors who have had informal con- versations with him, all reflect him as 2 believer in sound money and in what conservatives deem to be sound fiscal practice. All this inference about the visit of one man to Warm Springs is justified by the fact that it comes during a widespread wave of assertion that the United States is going into a period of inflation. Mr. Baruch’s visit to Mr. Roosevelt coincided almost to the hour with a scene in the Senate in which another Democrat, supposed in the past to be close to Mr. Roosevelt, Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Monta; making a fight for the free cof silver in a ratio to gold, “16 to 1,” iden- tical with the formula upon which William Jennings Bryan made his vain attempt to win the presidency during the depression of the 1890's. Source of Inferences. Most of the world outside Washing- ton and much of Washington is making | its inferences from the Wheeler type of Democrat rather than the Baruch type. Nevertheless, that part of Washingto which has the most sure-footed judg- ment believes, on the contrary, that the new Democratic administration will keep the currency sound and will bal- ance the budget. It is true as a record of current fact that much of the finan- cial community in New York and in European cities is going on the assump- tion that there will be currency infla- | tion. There is present reappearance in Europe of that “selling short” of the | dollar which is based on anticipation | that the dollar will be worth less in a | few weeks. It will be recalled there was | LOWER Bus Rates Il points in the United and Canada. Savings of up to 25% by bus EVERY- WHERE. Travel in comfort via Jhe ShortTLine New Bus Terminal 633 F St. N.W. DI. 4224 ENDED HIS COUGH! Your throat and bronchial tubes are lined with millions of pores like tiny “bot- tles” continually sup- plying moisture to the delicate tissues . . . un- til you “catch cold. hen these pores clog. Phlegm collects — dangerous germs find & breeding place. Tickling, irritation and coughing set in. Your cough will be cured only when you increase the flow of your throat's natural moisture, loosening the phlegm so it can be expelled. Many cough “‘remedies’ contain_numbing drugs which merely “‘deaden” the nerves . . . but don’t get at the real root of the trouble. PERTUSSIN, a scientific remedy, is the extract of a famous herb which opens the tiny glands, stimulates the flow of throat moisture and brings quick re- lief naturally. If your throat’s the least bit raw or dry, take a few spoons of PERTUSSIN now. It's absolutely safe, even for children. At all drug stores, 60¢. —Advertisement. writes R.G.. New York City. much of that ‘practice_nearly a year ago, during April and May, 1932. was done in the expectation that the Congress then in session would not lay new taxes nor enact economies in gov- emment. On that occasion President Hoover went before Congress in and asked them to do the things would preserve the fiscal integrity of the country. Congress immediately took the steps necessary to bring assurance. The present ix a good time to re- member that ancient quip comparing Congress to an old-fashioned *“worm” fence—every rail is twisted and each panel points in a different girection, but somehow the fence does get to the point it started for. An important fact | in the present situation is that this existing session of Congress, before | Maerch 4, is likely to pass legislation to | facilitate reduction of mortgage and | other' debts. Reduction of debts once accomplished will remove much of thz justification of cemand for inflated cur- rency and much of the agitation for it. e person which Some of the tiny islands of the Pa- cific are used as “signal stations.” EXCURSIONS $3.50 New York Newark Elizabeth—Plainfield Sunday, January 29 Leave Washington 12:01 midnight or $:15 a. m. Return same day. —r $1.50 Harpers Ferry $t Martinshurg 83 Cumberland Sunday, January 29 Leave WasFingion $:25 a. m. Return rame day Baltimore . $1.25 Saturdavs ang Bundays #1.50 daily. ¢ for 3 days EVERY WEEKEND Greatly reduced fares to all B. & O. points. Leave Friday noon until Sunday noon. Return gaty Monday midnight. ALTIMORE & OHI Starts Friday ’ OC€W § $25,000 ASKED IN SUIT Mrs. Catherine White Names W. R. & E. Alleging Personal Injuries. Mrs. Catherine White, 1119 Penn, street northeast, has filed suit to re- cover $25,000 damages in the District Supreme Court against the Washington Rallway & Electric Co. for alleged per- sonal injurles. She she was a pas- Police Emergency Squad No. 15, New York City, was called out to rescue g cat from a small island in Prospect Park Lake. AUCTION SALE Today—Friday and Saturday Starting 11 A.M. Each Day RARE ART GOODS FURNITURE: Living Room, Dining Room and Bed Room Suites, Occasional Chairs and Tables, Console and Coffee Tables, Curio Cabinets, Secretaries and Bookcases. SILVERWARE: Tea Services, Candelabra, Service Plates and Trays, Platters, Vegetable Dishes, Salvers, Table Flatware, etc., by Tiffany & Co., J. E. Caldwell & Co., Gorham & Co., S. Kirk & Son, and Stieff & Co., in- cluding a RARE TREASURE in Old English Silver de- NEPTUNE AND HIS COURT Outstanding example of the English Silversmiths’ Guild and other acquisitions, formerly property of the late LORD BALFOUR OF ENGLAND PORCELAINS: Royal Sevres, Vienna, Dresden and Limoges picting Pottery, and Table China. PAINTINGS: Old and Modern, including Works of Famous Masters. TAPESTRIES: Screens, Panels, Etc., in Aubuson and Flemish Weaves. STATUARY: Bronze and Marble and Other Objects of Exceeding Merit. CAPITOL ART GALLERY and AUCTION ROOMS, Inc. FOX Stage— GEORGIE PRICE ANATOLE FRIEDLAND ~ONE WORD describes it—GREAT! Only the screen itself,throbbing with the action of this Belasco stage hit, misty with the tears and heart-aches of an immortal love story can tell you what is in store for you. Until now “Smilin’ Through” was M-G-M’s proudest offering of the season! Now a grander romance reaches into your heart! M-G-M’s newest Scregn thrilll miss! Pretty smooth, eh? It’s smoothness that makes OLD GOLD a better cigarette. Made of the choicest STAR OF “FAREWELL TO ARMS" AND “The SIN OF MADELON CLAUDET” Helen Hayes has won filmdom’s high. est acting honors of the year! Now, costarred with Ramon Novarro, she challenges the screen world for this Turkish and domestic tobaccos, queen- leaves from the heart of the stalk, OLD GOLD gives you every quality you want in a cigarette . . . coolness, throat- .ease, flavory taste appeal. Get this again! BETTER tobacco, prop- erly aged and cured: that’s why OLD GOLD never misses in its effort to please. o s s A ©® Don't forget thi OLD GOLDS are FULL-WEIGHT %, NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD

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