Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ECONOMY PLANS OTO CONFERENCE Further Pay Cuts Are Barred in Bill as Adopted by Senate Vote. (Continued’ From First Page) with what" was left of the committee’s original recommendations, made aggre- gste new savings of about $165,000.000 The existing economy act, most of which is continued for another year, i8 estimated to be raving this year something over $100,000,000. How many of the new :avings will finally become 1aw, however, :till depends on the de- elsicns of the conferees. Reorganization Approved. After determining yesterday after- noon not to cut Government salaries er than they cre at present, the te quickly went through the re- maincer cf the bill, making the follow- ing decisions at the night Approval of the reor submitted by Senator crat, of South C President to t abolish any Go r t an enti 5 he Pres- jon would take s after they are reported | g law, by one b. to £icn order, but under the Byrnes plan both branches would have to pass a joint resolution end this would have to go resident for signatu If the such a case stood by his the resolution a sim President, original order and vetoe sapproval, a twe b 2s of Congress then vould be re- quired to prevént the reorganization from taking place. n it is consid- ered that all this would have to be accomplished within 60 d to pre- vent o reorganization order from goirg into effect, it is the broadest power ever given the cxecutive on this subject. Limited to Two Years. An effort by publican, of Nebraska, to extend it still farther by empowering the President to consolidate and abolish departments as well as bureaus was defeated withou: & roll call , however, ac- cepted an t by Senator Cepeland, Democerat, of New York, de- claring that this power is being given because of the existence of “a serious emergency” making it necessary to re- duce drastically all Government ex- penditures. Senator Byrnes accepted another amendment placing a two-year limit on these presidential powers, The Senate also rejected without a rcll call vote the recommendation of the Economy Committee that 10 per cent be cut from the checks of dis- abled veterans who receive more than $1,000 a year. The amendment first was modified to make the proposed cut 813 per cent, but later it was stricken out entirely, after it had been opposed by Senator Robinson, Republican, of Indiana, and others. Two days ago the Senate voted to apply a 10 per cent cut to enlisted personnel of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard, but following rejection of the new cut of 123 per cent on civilian employes, the Senate went back anmd modified the reduction on enlisted personnel to 83 per cent, to make it the same as the present re- duction on civilian workers. Bingham Motion Fails. Senator ' Bingham, Republican, of Connecticut, made a last-minute effort last night to strike from the economy law the married persons clause, which provides that when a reduction in force i8 necessary in any office, married per- sons must be let out first if the hus- band or wife also is in Government service, The motion was voted down, however, without a roll call, and the Senate then proceeded to pass the vo- luminous bill This bill contdins the specific appro- priations for the Treasury and Post Office Departments, as well as the gen- eral economy program applying to the Government service as a whole. The Treasury and Post Office section of the measure came from committee carrying a total for the two depart- ments of - $961,441,597. More than $22,000,000 of this sum was eliminated on the floor. The largest cut was the atriking out of the entire item of $19,- 000,000 for the airmail service, pending a study of airmail contracts, after which it is expected some provision will be made. Other cuts were made in the Customs Bureau and Internal Revenue Bureau. Interior Bill Next. This is the first of the regular an-| nual supply bills to get through the Sénate, and will be followed today by | consideration of the Interior Depart- | ment bill. The vote by which the Sepate yes- terday afternoon rejected the new pay cut of 12; per cent on Government sal- aries was 44 to 39. The roll call follows: Yeas—39, Bailey, Bankhead, Barkley, Bingham, b, Bratton, Byrnes, Ciark, Con- ickinscn, Fess, Fletcher, George, Goldsborough, Gore, Grammer, Hale, Harrison, Hastings, Hebert, Hull,i Kendrick, McKellar, Metcalf, Moses, Norris, Patterson, Robinson, Arkansas; Sheppard. Smoot, Stelwe ‘Thomas, Idaho; Trammell, Tydings, Vanden- berg, Walcott, Walsh, Montana, Wat- son. Nays—i4. Austin, Barbour, Black, Brookhart, Bulkley, Bulow, Coolidge, Copeland, Costigan, Couzens, Cutting, Dale, Davis, Dill, Prazier, Hatfleld, Hayden, Johnson, Keyes, La Follette, Lewis, Logan, Mc- Gill, McNary, Neely, Nye, Oddie, Pitt- man, Reed, Reynolds, Robinson, In- diana; Russell, Schall, Schuyler, Ship- stead, Smith, Townsend, Wagner, ‘Walsh, Massachusetts; Wheeler, White. Adopts Costigan Proposal. The Senate previously had adopted, B2 to 30, the Oostigan amendment, for- bidding any further wage cuts or fur- loughs as a means of saving the 5 per Ashurst, Blaine, Capper, The Morris Plan Bank offers the INDIVIDUAL the facilities of a SAVINGS BANK with the added feature of offering a plan to make loans on a practical basis, which enables the borrower to liquidate his ob- ligation by means of weekly, semi- monthly or monthlydeposits. It is not neces- sary to have had an account at this Bank in order to borrow. Note MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W.; Washington; D. C. #Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit” vote of both | Senator Ncrris, Re-| The BANK for the INDIVIDUAL Amt.of Deposit $120 $180 Hit by Sen > , dependent establishments also will face 1dimculfles. particularly those that al- ready have been hit. At the Civil Service Commission it} | was said the Bratton amendment would | take off about $68,000, which would bring the commission’s funds about a| quarter of a million dollars under esti- | mated needs for the next year. 1 Sl SERVICE CUTS HIT NEARLY 43600 MEN ;Reduced Pay Held Likely; Under General Econ- omy Bill. Probable reduction of personnel in four departments—State, Post Office, Commerce and Labor—ana n the Navy decommissioning of ships and a slowing | down of the construction and moderni- tion progrem was seen today as the immediately apparent results of the new Senate economy program, me time though, it was said, n that would be followed by the incoming administration would be {the real determining fac The passage last night by the Senate of the Treasury-Post Office supply bill, | embodying the policy to be followed in | other appropriation measures, had, in | general, given department heads insuf- fictent time to forecast accurately just | what would be necessary if the House falls in line. Loath to Dismiss Men. That there would be a decided dis- | ation to dismiss workers was ev dent, but those in authority were sturped by being confronted on one | hand with the Costgan amendment to save 5 per cent on all appropriations and cn the other by the Bratton amen ment, waich will not permit this | reducing pay scales or resorting to fu ther use of the furlough plan. It was pointed out between 70 and 80 per cent of the average appropria- tion goes for personal services and fhe rest for the expense involved in the activity itself. ~This would make it | impractical to impose the whole saving | on this latter item. For the second year in succession, State, Commerce, Justice, Labor and Interior will be' hardest hit, it was rointed out. as these five. departments suffered a blanket 10 per cent reduc- | tion in the current year that was not | imposed on other departments and no account was taken of this when the | budget for the next fiscal year was | made up. ‘ ‘Fears Dismissals. “I think this is going to force the de- partment to dismiss employes.” Malcolm Kerlin, administrative assistant to the Secretary of Commerce, said. ‘‘There might be other activities on which tu‘ make a saving, but it looks like the | major portion will have to be done by | reducing personnel.” | _ A like opinion was held at the State, | | Post Office and Labor Departments. | Two marked examples of the problem | |that is faced are in Post ce and Treasury. At the former the appropriation is | | divided, roughly, as follows: Salaries, 70 | per cent; ocean and airmail subsidies, | 5 per cent; rent, supplies and miscella- | neous expenses, 5 per cent, and trans- | portation, 20 per cent. | The airmail item has been killed in | the Senate, but it is expected some por- tion eventually will be restored. So far as ocean mail is concerned, there can |be & reduction, but only by mutual | agreement between department and contractor. The department also is | confronted with the contract problem in | renting of quarters and in some phases of transportation costs. It would be possible to make some saving in rail- road mail pay, but at the expense of slowing up movement, using storage | cars for handling mail and leaving the distribution for the point of destina- tion instead of distributing it en route. Surplus of Employes. With the present volume of business, the Post Office Department has a sur- plus of employes, it has been declared by officials. The Treasury appropriation includes such “untouchable” items, so far as any reduction is concerned, as build- ing construction and internal revenue refunds, with the net result, it was said, that if the expenditure for per- sonal serviges is not taken into consid- | eration, a saving of $9,000,000 would have to be effected out of a total of about $34,000,000. At the Navy Department, the mod- ernization and construction program involves, roughly, four cruisers, three | battleships, two submarines and a half dozen destroyers. This program would | have to be slowed up, and the Navy | also would have to discontinue enlist- ments, it was believed. There was no | figure given as to the probable number | of vessels that would have to be de- commissioned. The same statement was made at | the Navy Department as was made by Assistant Secretary of War Payne that | appropriations already have been cut to_the bone. | “The cut can’t be made any place | without doing damage,” was the way it | was summed up by Mr.. Payne, who | said the general staff would have to | study the matter. At neither of these establishments was it thought that reduction of civilian personnel would be necessary. Mitchell Report Cited. At the Department of Justice there is uncertainty as to just what the out- come will be. It was recalled that | Attorney General Mitchell had said in his annual report that the limit had about been reached in savings, and that a further cut would call for a new survey of the entire situation. The hope was expressed that it would not be necessary to dismiss any workers, and the same expression came from the Interior and Agriculture Departments. It was pointed out that, when the current economy act was passed, de- partment heads had conferred with the director of the budget to work out a plan for uniform administration, which later was incorporated in an executive order, and that a similar action could be expected logically when the new ad- ministration comes into power. The executive departments and in- cent in expenditures provided for in the Bratton plan. ‘The Bratton 5 per cent saving amend- ment, witkh this restriction, then went through, 50 to 33. Senator Reed, Re- publican, of Pennsylvania tried to modify the Bratton amendment so that it would be permissive rather than com- pulsory in the case of the War and Navy Departments, but this was beaten, 47 to 34. Loans are pass- ed within a day or two after filing application— with few excep- tions. Monthly For 12 Months $10 MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year; though they may be given for any period of from 3 ——| to 12 months. DISMISSAL OF MORE EMPLOYES FEARED IN ECONOMY PROGRAM| ?State. Post Officc. Commercial and Labor Departments Expected to Be Hard | estimates, greatly exceeds the Army in | NOW going on and NOW { going stromg! THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, ate Action. Approximately 33,600 enlisted men of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps u.ml{‘ | Coast Guard, as well as nearly 10,000 | | retired enlisted men of these services, | are likely to receive pay cuts this year | under the general economy bill, it was: learned today. | Exempt from any cuts last year, the | Senate, however, has voted to place all | enlisted men of the services receiving | more than $1,000 a year in the same | category as civil employes of the Gov- |ernment. While this $1,000 exemption |excludes all privates and most of the non-commissioned officers, it takes its toll of the higher-graded “non-coms,” | partizularly those with 30 years or more oi _service. In the Army the three top grades of sergeants will be affected. A master sergeant, for instance, receives from $126 to $157.50 a month, depending on length or service. Many of these vet- erans are receiving more pay than a commissioned lieutenant. Most of the ursi se.geants, or technical sergeants, wili be afiected, although some only slightly, and stafl sergeants with over 16 years of service also come in for a pay_ cut. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, chief of stafl, has made the same protest against cutting the pay of retired enlisted men as he made in the case of retired com- missioned personnel. Their retired pay, it is claimed, is based on & contractual relationship with the Government and | because of the retired provisions, the | active pay of an officer or enlisted man | is kept smaller than it would be other- wise. According to_statistics placed in the | Congressional Record, the enlisted men affected by the proposed pay cut are | enumerated as follows: Army, 9,155; retired, 6,103; Navy, 19,015; retired, 3,089; Marine Corps, 932; retired, 388; | Reserves, 75; Coast Guard, 4,500; fe- | tired, 356. | The Navy, it will be seen by these the number of higher-paid enlisted per- | sonnel. SCHOOL IMPROVEMENTS REQUESTED BY P.-T. A.! Improvement of the heating plant, | playground and tollet factlities at me{ Henry D. Cooke School is requested in | resolutions adopted by the Parent- Teacher Association of the school at & meeting last night. The association declared the heating | plant at the school is unsatisfactory Installation of a modern heating plant during the coming Summer was asked. Declaring the school playground in “deplorable condition,” 'Ee association requested that the ground be resurfaced and provided with drainage facilities. The tollet facilities are incomplete and insufficlent and should be improved and modernized, it was sta - other resolution. i ==SOL HERZOG lm:.g Anniversary SALE! $1 All-Silk TIES. nNew '"fa‘l:'.hm“"' and solid 55c and Wik Tipped. 5 for $1.50: COLLARS ...... 4 for #] All sizes and styles. Suits & O’coats Sold up to $35 Worsteds, Blue s 1 7 .33 Serges, Tweeds = and other fine & as Other Groups s in Proportion 3 for Van Heusen Wilson Bros. SHIRTS and SHORTS ....... Solid colors and fancy b with clastie” waist o side. Sies BhIE slip-over, flat lisle or ribbed. 3 for $I. $1.95 and $1.65 ‘1°=9 SEHIRTS ... ....... Madras & broadcloth. Solid fancy. " tab ‘and’ Yepular collars Nethpang in White only. AIl breshrunk. 3 for S | PACKARD SHOES All shades of tan and $3.95 plain black, black and and tan and white, $ 1 .09 . —_ s with contr: two-tone tan. All sizes. piain - neek I and that no hot water is available. ! In broadcle Solid colors, 3 5 Pancy borders. B trim—stri All sizes. HOME OF THE BUDGET PLAN $1.95 and $1.65 iip-o?&“:ol'deh. Al sizes. Full-Cut HANDKER- Sor HejzoG - PAJAMAS ... Quality HOSE .... 23 C CHIEEFS .. ¥ Street ar Q2 % PARTY CONTINUES CABINET GUESSING Many Names Mentioned in Connection With New Appointments. By the Associated Press. MIAMI, Fla, February 8.—A merry- go-round of politics is going on down here, with the leaders of Democracy try- ing to guess who President-elect Roos velt and James A. Farley are going to | pick for the commanding offices of the | new Government. | The posts of Secretary of War and | Navy are the principal offices agitating | the party leaders just now, but beneath ‘e surface there Is a whirl of specula- | tion about who is going to ge who in the “little cabinet” of the Roosevelt administration Many Mentioned. Conceding that the selection of a| cabinet is solely and entirely up to the President-elect, the Democratic chief- tains are proceeding warily in their talk about names. It is known, how- | ever, that Henry L. Stevens, former | commander of the American Legion, | and O. Max Gardner, both of North | Carolina; Senators Swanson of Virginia | and Barclay of Kentucky, Gov. Ritchie of Maryland, and George Dern, former Governor of Utah, are in the eye of | Mr. Roosevelt for these portfolios. Meanwhile the talk goes on about the other Government offices. This brings | up the names of Jesse H. Jones of Texas for chairman of the Reconstruction | Finance Corporation; Oscar L. Chap- | man of Colorado for commissioner of Indian Affairs; South Dakota for commissioner of in- | ternal revenue, William T. Kemper of Kansas City for Assistant Secretary of Commerce, and Mayor Frank Murphy of Detroit for Assistant Secretary of Labor, “Lame Ducks” Barred. ‘While all the speculation is going on there is not the slightest indication from Farley, who is going to man the Demo- | cratic ship of state. | This much is known, “lame ducks” are not in order in the new adminis- | tration. “LAME DUCKS"” WORRIED. By the Associated Press. The report from Miami that Presi- t-elect Roosevelt intends ‘to bar T William H. Howes of |+ of several colleagues isolated elections due to reapportionent of House ! Mrs. Roosevelt has increased her re- representations. Virtually the entire Democratic pha- lanx in the House and Senator Harri- son, Democrat, of Mississippi, have urged selection of James W. Collier of Mississippi, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, to the Tariff Com- mission. He lost out in the reapportion- ment in Mississippi representation. Ewin L. Davis of Tennessee, chair- man of the House Merchant Marine | Committee, and brother to Norman H. Davis, is being boomed for a place on the Federal Trade Commission Representetive Ruth Bryan Owen n(’ Florida also is being supported for some ost. P Several members have urged appoint- ment of Representative Butler B. Hare of South Carolina, chairman of the House Insular Affairs Committee, as Governor of the Philippines. Representative Patterson of Alabama, squeezed out in the reapportionment, has the support of his State delegation for an appointive post. WARM SPRINGS PATIENTS WILL BE ROOSEVELT’'S GUESTS ON MARCH 4 (Continued From First Page) birthdays, and the birthdays of his friends at the colony have been occa- sions observed with gayety. and friends in Georgia regard that State as_his second home. Work was started today on the inaugurai stands on the north and south sides of Pennsylvania avenue, in front of the Treasury and the Riggs Bank buildings. Contract for this work has been awarded by the Inaugural Stands Committee, headed by Waddy B. Wood. to Walter B. Avery, and the cost of the contract was announced as $11,523. ‘The Star Spangled Banner” will be sung by Rosa Ponselle, Metropolitan Opera soprano, as one of the features of the inaugural ball on the night of March 4, it was announced today by Mrs. John Allen Dougherty, chairman of the Inaugural Ball Committee. Miss Ponselle also will sing with Lawrence Tibbett, also of the Metro- politan Opera, in the concert on the night of March 3, in Constitution Hall, when Efrem Zimbalist, internationally known concert violinist, and the Na- tional Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Hans Kindler, will play. In an_interview in Baltimore yes- terday, Miss Ponselle revealed that within the space of two months she will appear in two great national cere- monies, the inaugural here and be- fore a great national gathering in Rome quirements for the Inaugural Ball to two boxes, J. Pred Essary, chairman of the In- augural Program Committee, will speak on activities of the Inaugural Commit- tee on the blue network of the National Broadcasting Co. at 7:30 o'clock to- morrow night. The talk will be heard locally over Station WMAL. The Inaugural Committee has ac- cepted the offer of the Boy Scouts of | America to furnish aides for Gov. Roosevelt in the reviewing stand on inauguration day. Admiral Grayson, in a letter to James E. West, Chief Scout executive, | asked that four Eagle Scouts be de- | tailed to the President’s stand and that another group of Scouts be designated to be placed every 10 feet in front of the presidential stand in the Court of Honor. Both the National and the Columbia Broadcasting systems, it is announced, have completed plans for giving the Inaugural Committee three 15-minute broadcest periods each, to be used by speakers on subjects in connection with the inaugural. The Columbia Broadcasting System has given the period between 6:30 and 6:45 on Tuesday, February 14; Tuesday, February 21. and Thursday, March 2. The Nationai Breadcasting Co. will sup- on Thursdays, February 16, February | 23, and March 2. Col. Henry L. Roosevelt, vice chair- | man of the Parade Committee; Mrs. | Dougherty and Mr. Kindler already | have been designated for three of these | periods. A representative of the Con- gressional Inaugural Committee and two additional speakers will be named later for these general broadcasts. Other radio activities for this week include talks by Ray Baker, chairman of the | Committee | over WJSV_ Friday night; Huston | Thompson, chairman of the Committee on General Entertainment, over WRC | the same night, and Mrs. John R. Wil- | liams, vice chairman of the Inaugural Ball_Committee, over WMAL during | the Chamber of Commerce Forum Sat- urday night. Letters containing 70,000 applications | for grandstand tickets have been mailed | by the committee on ticket sales out- | side of Washington to editors, bankers, | elvic organizations and other organized | groups all along the Atlantic seaboard. | The committee hopes in this way to | have the out-of-town, as well as the | local spectators, equipped with tickets ;;efo;ehmd and avoid any last-day jamb. to refuse to “take down” the love let- ters of their employers, as it is an “in- sult” to their dignity. has | our economic distress, | ply the periods between 7:30 and 7:45 | on_ Distinguished Guests, | ST R Stenographers in Paris have decided SHAW PRAISES SENATE’S ATTITUDE ON PAY, CUTS Rejection of 1 2-3 Per Cent Reduc- tion Hailed as Proof Congress Has Heard Workers’ Pleas. The action of the Senate in reject- ing the proposal to apply an additional cut of 12; per cent to Government salaries was hailed as “proof that Con- gress has heeded the plea of Federal workers that to cut salarles further would be nothing less than intensifying Govern- ment employes its undeserves by John Arthur Sha Employes, in a statement last night. He recalled that the House had re- and said that “when the United States | demand for additional wage cuts, it | | serves notice on the country that this means of balancing either our national or industrial budgets is unwarranted and ineffective.” BT HARVARD MEN TO DINE Sir Willmott Lewis Heads Speak- ers Tomorrow Night. Sir Willmott Lewis, Washington cor- | respondent of the London Times; Dwight | P. Robinson, president of the Associated | Harvard Clubs, and Prof. Kenneth B. Murdock, dean of faculty of arts and | science, Harvard University. will be the | principal speakers at a dinner to be | held by the Harvard Club of Washing- |gon at the University Club tomorrow at |7 pm. Frederic A. Delano, president of the will, will preside. WAR SERVIC.E HONORED Dr. Charles W. Tegge, 1801 I street, | today was awarded a silver star for | gallantry in action in the Meuse- | Argonne, where he served as a lieutenant in the 23d Infantry, 2d Division. The presentation was made by Assistant | SBecretary of War Payne. i Dr. Tegge is now on the staffs of the | Episcopal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital | and Children’s Hospital. . Sure Fur Coat Is Fur. COLUMBUS, Ohio (#) —Claudia Hills of Ohio State University is one co-ed Congress refuses to keep step with the | RONCOURDEFENDS FRENCH ARM PLAN Holds National and Interna- tional Security Nec¢essary Accompaniment. victims,” | By the Associated Press. W, president of the | American Federation of Government | GENEVA, February 8.—National ang international security is an absolutely | necessary accompaniment to disarma- fused to go beyond the 8% per cent cut, | ment, Joseph Paul-Boncour told the World Disarmament Conference today. defending the French disarmament plan which has been assailed by the other great European powers. That plan, he said, is based entirely upon the League of Nations covenant 4nd upon the League's policy for the organization of peace. He recalled the persistent attempts of France to bulld up security by means of mutual assistance and non-aggres- sion pacts and by its efforts to define and establish international penalties for an aggressor nation. Critics of the plan are mistaken, he said, in asserting that it lacks any pro- posals for genuine disarmament. On the contrary, he asserted, it proposes reduction of naval and air forces and is aimed at substantial reductions in of- fensive arms. The American scheme for limiting ef- fectives, he declared, cannot be realized without those guarantees and criteria of security which the French plan offers. Hopes for attainment of security agreements the French plan proposed have been strengthened by recent pro- nouncements of the American State De- partment and Senator Borah and by Secretary Stimson’s note to Peru giving a warning on the Leticia situation, M. Paul-Boucour said. The proposal of Maxim Litvinoff, Russian delegate, for a straight definition of aggression also has strengthened this hope, he sald. Card Party to Aid Children. Awdg:ty.woued‘dvhhhvm go into a d to be used for the needy children of the school, will be Monday night by the Thomson Par- who is sure that her fur coat is fur. She saw the two leopards killed by native spearmen when she was travel- ing from Cape Town to Cairo. l 3-DAY SALE OF GLASSWARE loads of the finest glassware at prices hitherto unheard in this city. ent-Teacher Association at the school building, Twelfth and L streets. Re- ;elhmenfil will be served and prizes ven. O FURTHER acquaint the public with our completely equipped station with its exceptional service at 2800 Sherman Ave., we are offering you four car- Below are some of the exceptional values—Many others are here Ash Tray Sets This exquisite, ly equipps Special Ofter! To better a c ed staiot and exceptional service ays Only ?Ilaint the public with our complete- ! ... With purchase of each 2-gallon can of Pena Magic 100% Pure Pennsylvania Motor Oil at $1.08 (tax included) we will give FRE ing of four tumblers and gl shown below. Cocktail Set (Green or Pink) most durable Bridge Ash Tray Set, ideal for parties. beautiful box. Set of four, packed in Seven-piece Berry - Bowl Set, ‘most beautiful design. packed one set to a 39¢c Price, carton proof 2800 Sherman Ave. N.W. PLENTY OF PARKING SPAC a credit to any home....... This genuine Macbeth Chip- Beverage Set, 19 pieces, 79 ! DICK RALPH'’S SUPER SERVICE STATION The five-piecce COCKTAIL Set, con tray, as Luncheon Sets Unequalled in value anywhere, this complete 22-piece Macbeth Bridge Luncheon Set. ~79c Grill and Dinner Plates to Match 9¢c Each Water Tumblers Genuine Macbeth chip-proof, 9-ounce Water of two styles. Dozen Tumblers, choice 29c . Corner Sherman Ave. 8 Girard St. Open 6 A.M. to 12 Midnight