Evening Star Newspaper, January 30, 1933, Page 5

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FORD BODY PLANT DISORDERS GROW Ten Demonstrators Arrested as Briggs Company Plans to Resume Work. By the Assoctated Press. DETROIT, January 30.—Ten demon- strators among the striking Briggs Manufacturing Co. employes at the Highland Park plant were arrested this morning. Their names were with- held, and police indicated they would be released later. Meanwhile company officials said “between 300 and 400" former employes had returned to their benches. “About 200" also were reported to have returned to work at the Briggs company’s East Side plant. Al those urning this morning are form-r em- ployes of the Briggs company, :nd in the'r decision to return company offi- cials professed to see a gradual break- ing up of the walk out, which involved 6.000 - workers. Pickets Active. Outside the plants. however, pickets still were active. They carried signs reading “no violence, please.” These, the leaders said, were directed to both police znd the strikers. The deadline which the Briggs com- pany set for the return of 6,000 striking employes passed at noon today—with no indication that the men, who walked out last week, would return imediate- 1y, or that their positions would be filled today from the ranks of the unem- ployed Employment gates of the company’s plants were thrown open to all appli- cants. No lines formed, however, Crowds about both plants were larger this morning than at any time last week and included many women. At the Highland Park plant it grew to | such numbers shortly after 7 a.m. that Manchester avenue on the south side of the Highland Park plant was jammed. Mounted polce forced the crowd away from the plant gates. Three Women Arrested. ‘Those arrested were seven men and three women. Highland Park police said few of them were Briggs workers and explained they were arrested be- cause they refused to stop addressing ! the crowd. As the crowd at the Highland Park increased, firemen were called to aid in handling it Fire trucks clanged through the crowds and hese lines were Tun to house and building taps. Inside the plant, large stores of tear gas had been placed. It was discovered, however, that the wind, from the south, woul blow the gas, if used, right back into the plant entrances. Strikers Beat Man. One man was beaten by a group de- scribed by police as strikers shortly after 11 am. He was Arthur Noblet of Ferndale. State police who rescued him said he was beaten when he tried to enter the employment gate at the High- land Park plant of the Briggs Co. Police forced the group back into line at the company gates and took Noblet to the Highland Park General Hospital, where his injuries were said to be severe, but not serious. The Strike Committee reported this morning that a telegram had been sent to Gov. William A. Comstock it Lan- sing, informing him the strikers wculd .‘resent” the sending of State Militia to the Briggs plants. Gov. Comstock on Friday reported he had received a request for troops, but | declared he believed the local authori- ites aided by State police would be able to handle any disorder. The Gov- ernor refused to state who made the request for militia. Ford May Make Bodies. e belief that the Ford company is laying plans to turn out its own bodies, if necessary, was strengthened by a brief statement from Henry Ford Saturday night that, “One way or an- other our plants will be going again at full tilt in a very short time.” ‘The Ford company owns the dies used in_the Briggs company’s Highland Park plant and on short notice could swing into production of its own bod- ies. Henry Ford visited the Briggs plant Friday morning, but what he dis- cussed with Briggs officials was not re- vealed. If operations in Ford plants are re- sumed by tomorrow or Wednesday, the actual delay will have been slight. The suspension was announced last Thurs- day after most of the men had com- pleted their three days a week. COOL TO SEAWAY PLAN Head of Lake Carriers’ Association Sees No Immediate Benefits. HALIFAX, Novia Scotia, January 30 (#)—Joseph’ S. Wood of Cleveland, president of the Lake Carriers’ Associa- ticn, said here yesterday he could see no immediate advantage for Canada cr the United States in development of the Upper St. Lawrence for ocean-going commerce. Mr. Wood, who was a mem- ber of President Hoover's Commission on Transportation, arrived aboard the Montcalm on the way to Cleveland after & short holiday in Europe. “It is possible that 50 years hence such development might benefit both countries,” he said. DELEGATES NAMED CARLISLE. Pa. January 30 (P).— Eight ministers and eight laymen to- day were chosen to represent the Penn- sylvania Conference of the United Brethren Church at its quadrennial fineral conference at Akron, Ohio, in ay. Washington. D. C., vicinity include Revs. F. Berry Plummer and Paul E. Holdcroft of Hagerstown, Md.; Paul R. Koontz of Baltimore, Md.. and Simpson B. Daugherty of Washington, D. C.; lay delegates, E. N. Funkhouser and J. H. Kiracofe of Hagerstown, Md.; H. T. Lutz and W. N. McFaul of Baltimore. Plan Barn Dance Friday. SILVER SPRING, Md., January 30 (Special) —Plans are being made for an old-fashioned barn dance and party, to be held in the gymnasium of the i The ministerial delegates from the Japanese in | { THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1933. g Walled City IMattern and Griffin ~ Will l flight. railroad gateway between Manchuria and North China, after they had won control of the city from the Chinese. Shanhaikwan’s famous south gate. THIS picture shows seme of the first Japanese troops to enter Shanhaikwan, They are pictured near —A. P. Photo. SEEKS REPLACEMENT OF SUBSTATION “A” Police Quarters Near Laurel Oply Frame Structure Still in Use. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md., January 30— Maryland State Police substation “A,” near Laurel, the first to be erected | after the force was organized, and | which has been in exjstence almost long | enough to be classified as a Baltimore | Boulevard “landmark,” will be replaced {in 1934 if the Legislature accepts Gov. | Ritchie’s budget recommendations. | The executive has recommended that | $6,000 be appropriated for this pur- pose, the present station being consid- | , ered obsolete and poorly ventilated. It | is the only frame substation remaining, all of the newer ones being tile or brick. | The budget also asks $6.000 to build a new substation at Salisbury where | police_are now quartered in a rented bungalow, and $5.000 for a new station in the vicinity of Hancock, Md., to- | | gether with $180,000 to build two wings to the present office building in B: more which is reported “outgrown.” MONTGOMERY. FARMERS TO CONVENE TOMORROW | Several Hundred Are Expected at 14th Annual Meeting at Rockville. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., January 30.—Sev- eral hundred farmers and dairymen from various parts of the county are ex- pected to attend the fourteenth annual meeting of the Montgomery | Farm Bureau to be held in the court { house here tomorrow. Josiah W. Jones, who has been presi- dent of the bureau since its formation, will preside, and morning and afternoon sessions will b2 held. | Election of directors and transaction | of other important business will consti- | tute the morning program, and in the | afternoon addresses will be delivered by | | Represcntative Jess Busby of Missis- sippi, Dr. Raymond A. Pearson, pres! dent of the University of Maryland; {Charles T. Cockey and Miles H. Fair-| | bank. president and secretary-treasurer, | respzctively, of the Maryland Farm Bu- | reau Federation, and others. | Taxation and other matters of big | i interest are scheduled for consideration | | and resolutions setting forth the organi- | | zation’s attitude are expected to be | | adopted. | T T |PLAN OLD CLOTHES CLINIC | Three Women's Groups to Meet | Thursday at Mt. Rainier. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. MOUNT RAINIER, Mda January 30. —An old clothes clinic will be conducted | by Miss Ethel M. Regan, home demon- stration agent. at a joint meeting of the Women’s Civic League, the Chillum District Study Club and the Women's | Ciub of Cottage City, in the Episcopal | Church here Thursday night. | The public is invited. Those attend- | ing are requested to wear or bring old | | clothes. The program will also include | musical features. Safety Bar Kills Child. NEW YORK, January 30 (#)—An| iron bar used by his parents to prevent | Vincent Hughes, 8, from falling out of a window was the cause of his death yesterday. Vincent's brother Frank, 12, took the bar from the window while { they were playing about the house Sat- jurday and threw it striking Vincent, County | DEBT CUT FAVORED BY NATIONAL C. OF C. Members Indorse Leniency for Debtors Unable to Pay, But Oppose Cancellation. ‘The United States Chamber of Com- merce, representing business interests all over the country, is on record for curtailment of war debts owed this country, but opposes cancellation. Announcing the result of a referen- dum on five proposals, the chamber said its members approved, 1,834 to 89, a proposal that further postponement of payments on governmental debts due the United States should be authorized by Congress on a temporary basis in the case of debtor nations showing in- ability to make present payments. The members indorsed recommenda- tions that modification of existing debt agreements should be conditioned, first, by guarantees by debtor countries that American goods would have access to its markets on fair competitive terms and, second, upon reduction in expenditures for armament. By a vote of 1,826 to 44, proposals for the United States to cancel war debts were rejected. CANADA TO STUDY PACT WITH FRANCE ON TRADE Details Proposed Agreement Cabled as Secretary of State of Cahan Sails Home. | By the aAssociated Press. | OTTAWA, Ontario, January 30.—A proposed tr:de agreement between | France and Canada to replace an ar- | rangement terminated last June |is ibeiug brought to Canada by C. Cahan, secretary of state. Details of the agreement have been cabled the government and on the re- turn of Mr. Cahan, who hss for the last three months been negotiating with the French government, the cabinet will study it. Governmental circles declined to dis- cuss the propos2l, but because of popu- | lar interest in the matter, i is thought it might involve French text books, wine, wheat, cattle and other commodi- ties. The old treaty was abandoned partly because the most favored nation clause was extended to almost every country with which Canada deals angd not alone to France. GEEN TELLS COURT OF “JAKE THE BARBER” Co-Defendant Says Factor Had No Schooling, Read Only 3 Small Words. By the Associated Press. LONDON, January 30.—Harry Geen took the stand in his own defense today and detailed at the outset his early re- lations with John “Jake the Barber” Factor, whose personal secretary he be- came in 1925 at a salary of £8 (ap- proximately $26.80) per week. Geen is on trial on a charge of re- ceiving, in association with Factor £14,000 from the Broad Street Press, with the knowledge that the money was irregularly gained. Geen testified that Factor appeared to be a man of great wealth and spent large sums. Asked if Factor was illit- erate, Geen said, “He told me after I had been there a week that he had had no schooling of any kind, could only read the smallest printed words with difficulty, could not read written | unintentionally, in the head. words and could hardly write.” SPECIAL For This Week “EVALAST” | i . : Electrolytic Copper-Back MIRRORS H.| tion: PLAN GLOBE FLIGHT 0 LOWER RECORD Leave in June or July to Girdle Earth. James L. Mattern and Bennett Grif- fin, who set a transatlantic flight rec- ord last year on their around-the- world attempt, which ended disas- trously, will take another shot at the Post and Gatty globe-circling record this Summer. After a conference ti morning with Col. Clarence M. Young, Assistant Sec- retary of Commerce for Aeronautics, Mattern revealed he and his partner have been working on plans for their flight ever since the first attempt was terminated abruptly by a crash when they landed in Russia. Using the same plane, the renovated Century of Prog- ress, 2d, they intend to take off either from Chicago or New York in June or July and make their way around the world in less than the 8 days, 15 hours and 51 minutes Post and Gatty hung up as an all-time record for the Silent on Mark Reduction. How much they hope to cut the old record, Mattern would not state. “It's a darn good record and we will be sat- isfled to beat it at all,” he said. But with such luck as carried them across the Atlantic in 10 hours and 50 min- utes last year—an average of 192 miles an hour in a plane with 150-mile cruis- ing speed, they might be able to take an appreciable slice out of the Post- Gatty time. Mattern’s conference with Col. Young this morning was held to pave the way for the permits the Department of Com- merce now requires of aviators who in- tend long and dangerous flights. Re- cent regulations have been put into effect to prevent unqualified and poorly equipped flyers from attempting flights sure to end in disaster. Because of his proven ability, and that of his companion, Mattern antici- pates no difficulty in obtaining official sanction for his project. During his visit here he will go also to the De- partment of State to make visa and assport arrangements for all the coun- ries he will traverse, and then will re- turn to New York for test flights at Floyd Bennett Airport. Will Alternate at Controls, Griffin and Mattern will alternate at the c atrols on their flight, and a rangement which they hope will gi them an advantage over Post and Gatty, one of whom stuck* to piloting and the other navigation. The Mat- tern-Griffin flight will be equipped for metereological and other scientific ob- servation, but will have the speed rec- ord as its main object. ‘The longest hop of the trip will be | from Irkutsk, Siberia, to Nome, Alaska, | a distance of 3,100 miles over rough, mountainous and wooded country where the chances of getting down safely in case of trouble are almost| non-existent. CATHOLIC U. DEBATES RITTSBURGH TONIGHT | Government Ownership of Power Utilities Is Subject for Discussion. Catholic University debaters will | meet a team from the University of | Pittsburgh, tonight, at 8 o'clock, in the auditorium of the music hall at the Brookland institution. It will be the first intercollegiate debate held at the university since 1930. William J. Barron of Trenton, N. J., and John H. McDonald, Grand Junc- tion, Colo., sophomores at Catholic, will represent the affirmative of the ques- “Resolved: That Government Ownership and Operation of Power Utilities Is Desirable.” ‘Washingten is the first stop of the Pittsburgh team which is making a 3.275-mile tour of Southern States, dur- ing which it will compete with nearlyi a dozen colleges. fthe Senate providing for printing 5,000 Civil Service List Of Patronage Johs Now Best Seller Democrats Demand Book- - let at Rate of 600 to . 700 an Hour. By the Associated Press. Best sellers never were more in de- mand than the now-famous Civil Serv- ice Commission booklet listing from 135,000 to 150,000 patronagz jobs. Democrats hunting the jobs are be- sieging Semators and Representatives for coples of the booklet and requests are pouring into the Government Printing Office at the rate of 600 to 700 an hour. The demand, however, far exceeds the supply. Members of either house are trying to retain single ies for reference and the printing of kept only 200 lists after they were struck off. A resolution has been introduced in additional coples at a cost of $1,500. If the resolution is approved the new coples will be divided between Sena- tors and Representatives. IRISH RAP BRITAIN, PRAIE DE VALERA Group Here Asks U. S. to Halt Debt Negotiations With England. ‘The State Department was called upon to halt debt negotiations with the British government “so long as Great Britain tries by starvation and oppres- sion to collect from Ireland stupendous sums of money that are neither legally nor morally due,” in a resolution last night adopted by a mass meeting of Irish sympathizers, galled to mark the re-election of Eamonn De Valera as President of the Irish Free State. ‘The action will be communicated to the department in the next day or so. The meeting was held in the Pl house and attended by 300 persens, whe heard Representative Douglass, Demo crat, of Massachusetts, couple criticism of the visit last week to the Senate of | Sir Ronald Lindsay, British Ambassay| dor, with an attack on Senator Robin- son of Arkansas, Democratic leader, who invited the envoy on the floor. “The Ambassador must have thought the United States is still a British prov- | ince,” Douglass said. Representative La Guardia, Repul lican, of New York, another speak promised support for recognition by this | country of an independent Irish re- | public. Charles Edward Russell, president of | the Kevin Barry Council, Ameérican Association for Recognition of the Irish Republic, under whose auspices the meeting was held, described the De Valera victory as making a crack in the British _empire. - John F. Finnerty, who presided, said that the American press is realizing that the Irish people want nothing less than independence. Rev. W. J. Hubbard, pastor of Foun- tain Memorial Baptist Church, and Thomas W. Lyons were other speakers. ‘The meeting adopted a resolution of | felictation to President de Valera and | indorsed the “Buy American” move- | ment. | Similar meetings are being fostered | over the country by Kevin Barry | Council. Sorority Meets at Clarendon. CLARENDON, Va., January 30 (Spe- | | cial) —A meeting of Alpha Chapter, | Phi Delta Gamma Sorority, is an-| | nounced for tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. Anne Chew, Courthouse | road. The chapter will hold a party Saturday night at the home of Miss Adele Johnson, 126 Maple street. BASE FOR TARIFF Adoption of U. S. Sale Price Advocated by Woll at House Hearing. By the Assoclated Press. With the House Ways and Means Wm considering whether to boost duties a es that have de- serted the standard, the Tariff Co n a study today to de- termine if it uld adopt the Ameri- gvl':usfl!ln; price as the base for tariff Adoption of this method of valuation, which would automatically increase tariffs, was advocated by Matthew Woll, preside:* of the American Wage Earn- ers’ Protective Conference. He de- scribed the United States an an “inter- natfonal dumping ground” for commodi- tles -produced by cheap labor. ‘The Ways and Means Committee, ap- prouhlnfmhe end of its hearings on the Hill bill, listened to the contention of James W. Bevans of New York, rep- resenting the National Council of Im- porters and Traders, that decreasing im- ports did not bear out the assertion that previously had been made by other wit- nesses that depreciated currencies were increasing the importation of fore! merchandise. S e Method Used for Century. Woll, in speaking for the American method of valuation, was joined by rep- resentatives of the American Tariff League, the American Manufacturers’ Association and other groups favoring increased duties. For a century the ‘United States has used the foreign value of a commodity as the base. This method has been abandoned by every other important ccmmercial nation, John G. Lerch, an attorney representing the Tariff League and other groups, told the commission. Woll said as a result of debasement of foreign currencies, American work- €rs in many lines of production are re- ceiving no protection at all. Lerch, a valuation expert formerly employed by the commission, said im- porters’ statements of the foreign value of a commodity are “often fiction”; that there is no legal way to compel importers or foreign producers to give the exact foreign value of their product. i The result, he said, is tha! the assess- ment base does not accurately reflect the foreign cost and American producers are the goat. Lerch said that changing from the foreign value base to the American sell- ing price would enable the American selling price to be easily ascertained and eliminate the large corps of foreign investigators now maintained to de- termine the foreign values of com- modities. Before the Ways and Means Com- mittee, McGugin, Kansas Republican, contended any movement to meet the question of depreciated foreign cur- rxency must be met by monetary legisla- tion “The manufacturing industry can not deliver itself from its present dilemma by coming to Congress and obtaining a further right and privilege to pick the pockets of American agri- culture,” he said. “This bill will make more unemploy- ment instead of less unemployment.” Will Instruct Firemen. HYATTSVILLE. Md. January 30 (Special) —Two members of the volun- teer fire department, who have com- | pleted the course in the drill school held for Washington firemen, will hold classes this week to impart their newly acquired knowledge to other members {of the local department. They are Capt. Ernest Davis and Harry Wilcox. 1101 I St. N.W., Roo; Phone Metropolitan m= Discpntinued Patterns Gulistan Rugs at reduced prices 790 9x12 ft. size Here is your chance to buy a famaus Gulistan Oriental type rug at a saving of $20.50 on the 9x12-ft. tiful Oriental patterns . . tinued numbers .. every size. Beau- . the discon- one perfect, with the same luxurious sheen, the same shimmering beauty and the same jewel-like colors as in costly Orientals. Now ... wh ile they last ... we urge you to secure one of Regularly $100 LEVIES 15 STUDIED i [ STAMFORD, Conn., January Plaster in Father’s Biscuits Kills Him And Child; 4 11 By the Associated Press. 30.—Merle Nicholson, 40, and his 5-year-old daughter Carrie are dead and four other children are ill as a result, officials said, of the accidental mixture of plaster with some biscuits made by the father, . The girl died Saturday night shortly after dinner. The father died several hours later. Helen, 4; Merle, jr., 9; Verlette, 11, and Georgiana, 6, remained in the ital last night. Physicians sald they would recover. ' Verlette said her father had using plaster which he mixed on the kitchen table. As he prepared dinner he mixed biscuit dough on the table. Offi- cials belisve it became mixed with the plaster. GETS GEORGETOWN POST St. Marys City Priest Receives Transfer to New Pastorate. Special Dispatch to The Star. LEONARDTOWN, Md., January 30.— Rev. Father Edward F. Callagher, rec- tor of the St. James' Roman Catholic Church, St. Marys City, Md., and the St. Ignatius Roman Catholic Church, St. Inigoes, has been transferred to the Holy Trinity Roman Catholic Church in Georgetown, Washington, D. C. Father Callagher was the pastor of years, and during 1916 and 1919 he was pastor in Medleys Neck and New- town Neck at Leonardtown. EE s R France's exports of synthetic prod- ucts are becoming an important item of revenue, these two churches for the past two| %3 A8 BROWN IS SPEAKER AT CHURCH OF GOD Police Chief Attends Services Pre- sided Over by Elder Michaux, Radio Evangelist. While the Church of God was jam- med to capacity, and traffic on Georgia avenue reached congestion proportions, Chief of Police Ernest W. Brown last night was acclaimed by a crowd of 1,200 persons, 90 per cent of them colored, as he spoke at services pre- sided over by Elder Michaux, celebrated colored radio evangelist. The police superintendent congrat- ulated the congregation for supporting the social service center idea sponsored by the evangelist, at Seventh and T streets. “The good cheer your famous ‘Happy Am I' song brings to thousands of de- pressed and despondent radio listeners is a fine achievement,” Maj. Brown said. The meeting was to further the cam- paign to raise $3,000 by February 10 toward the $250,000 to recondition the group of buildings at Seventh and T streets for the center proposed by the elder. The property has been donated for the purpose by R. B. Behrend to house evicted, deserving families. Elder Michaux, in introducing Maj. Brown, said: “As I am a minister of grace, so is he a minister of the law. He pastors a hard head, and I pastor a soft heart.” He used for his text, “Keep Yourself Unspotted From the World,” developing the thought that “if you live right, you can't be spotted by the police, or be put on the spot by the world.” . Many Others May Follow. Mrs. Mae Heller of Chicago obtained a divorce on allegations her husband trod on her toes to keep her from dancing on the stage GROSNER of 1325 F STREET No Compromise Just one day left to clear stocks of all the “odds and ends” before we take inventory . . we call it. .. With Quality * NO=C. . C.0.Ds CHARGES DELIVERIES REFUNDS ALTERATIONS ALL SALES FINAL “Before We Take Stock’ Sale! Here they are! ., Quantities on sale tomorrow, while they last! Open 8 am. for those who shop early ITEM SHIRTS band, white only. NECKWEAR SHIRTS, SHORTS and UNION SUITS PAJAMAS HANDKERCHIEFS Fancy & plain shade. hand-rolled -edge. — HOSE ruin. tancies. amt clocks HATS SUSPENDERS SWEATERS it Wl ™ ROBES srocadea. UNION SUITS LEATHER JACKETS GLOVES Genutne Mocha. DRESS SETS St yink"™ Includes whites plain ades, fancies and neck- Pull-ovet ahd ¢oat style. $1.95, $1.65 and $1.35 $1.00, $1.50 $1.00 €165 and 1.95 and $5 $1.00 & $1.50 $3.50, $5.00 and $8.50 $5.00 $1.00 $156.50 $3.50 $5.50 to §10 CLOTHING ‘Takoma-Silver Spring High School on | Friday night under the auspices of the | Parent-Teacher Association. Mrs. John |k Keele of Silver Spring and Mrs. Johu- son of Takoma Park are in charge of arrangements, ITEM OVERCOATS KOONGORA FUR COATS .REVERSIBLE TOPCOATS SUITS SLACKS TOPCOATS Take Advantage of this Special " EVERY FALL SUIT ]/2 PRICE! ALTERATIONS at cost. Now 5148 & $1725 We will charge these suits. g these famous Gulistan Rugs at the { . Z - i H “EVALAST” permanently brilliant ; 5 specially reduced price. mirrors are guaranteed. They are not affected by moisture, because a continu- cus sheet of impervious pure copper is electrolytically and_inseparably bonded to the silver film, which is thus hermeti- cally scaled, preventing moisture pene- tration. Handsomely framed in Walnut, Mahogany, etc. Size 14, x50Y; Special, $6.99 (INCLUDING FRAME) Any in the House 1/37 1/39 All Regular 1/37. $95.00 8 it. 3 in. by 10 ft. 6 in. Reg. $94.50. Special.. 6x9 feet. Regularly $66.00. Special.... 4 ft. 6 in. by 7 ft. 6 in. Reg. $39.50. Special . 36x63 inches Regularly $18.00. Special $14.50 7x54 inches. Regular) gn.oo m;p::ifl. m " % $8-75 HUGH REILLY CO. MAYER & CO. PAINTS—GLASS Seventh Street. Between D and E 1334 New York Ave.—Phone NAt. 1703 \ $75.50 $53.00 $31.50 $20.00 “BLADDER TROUBLE” (CYSTITIS) This extremely painful and often serious ailment r $24.75 Longs 1/39, 1/40 3/31, 1/33 1/ relieved a ed acids and Doisons— TAIN VALLEY WATER alkaline minerals Yhat the acids ion _ and MOU contains nd_to _neutralize which cause the irri ain of Cystitis. It Phe 'kidness to funciion normally and to prevent further accumu- Iation. Also a large new stock of framed and crystal mirrors ALL AT 259, Reduction FREE SAMPLE To Residents of Washington Only Nai — Address .. MOUNTAIN VALLEY WATER CO. 1405 K St. N.W. ME. 1062 We Deliver

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