Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1933, Page 5

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THE A. P WILL DEBATE l NEWS BR[]AI]BASTS! ‘ Radio Issue to Be Considered at Press Association Meeting Tomorrow. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 22—The annual meeting of the Associated Press will ! start the big week of the year for, American newspaper publishers and edi- | tors Monday with discussion of radio broadcasting of news, consideration of | annual reports and election of directors | included in the order of business. The sessions of the American Newspaper Publishers’ Association will begin Tues-‘ day Associated Press members have al- ready been polled for their views on the question of news broadcasting which | has been permitted since 1925 in ac: cordance with a resolution of the mem- bers. The board of directors in Jan- vary instructed Frank B. Noyes. presi- dent of the Associated Press and pub- lisher of The Washington Star, to can- vass the membership for their views on | this question. Oppose Chain Broadcasting. 1 At a meeting of the board this weck Mr. Noyes reported the result of the poll. which showed a preponderant op- | position to news broadcasting by chains. The board then adopted a resolution | to prohibit the association itself from | authorizing chains to use Associated | Press news, but leaving the matter of | individual member broadcasting to be determined after the members had ex- | pressed their desires at the anncal| meeting. As a preface to the board's | resolution prohibiting chain broadcast- | ing hereafter, Kent Cocper, general manager, reported that the management | had permitted no such broadcasting since the November national election. | In the poll of members, the vote on the question of whether members fa- vored permitting chains to broadcast brief Associated Press bulletins of news of transcendent importance was 264 yes; 768 no. The vote on the subject of member newspapers being permitted to furnish news to their own or allied radio stations was much closer, 433 yes; 5§77 no. Assessments Cited. President Noyes, in an analysis of e vote, pointed out that on this ques- tion while numerically a majority op- posed such broadcasting, those favoring it pay hssessments considerably exceed: ing those paid by opposing members. ‘The amount of assessments on the vote were: Favoring. $78.813; opposing, $5 977. Because of this situation the ques- tion is expected to be a principal sub- Ject for discussion. Annual reports of the board of di- rectors and the general manager will outline to the members the conduct of | the association, in both a news and financial way. in the past vear. ! A third of the directorate will be! elected, five to be chosen from the list of ten recently named by the Nominat- ing Committee. The following are the nominees: W. H. Cowles, Spokesman-Review E. K. Gaylord, Oklahoma City, OKla,, | Oklahoman. ' George B. Longan, Kansas City, Mo., | Star | Frank P. McLennan, Topeka, Kans., Btate Journal. | Robert R. McCormick, Chicago, Il | ‘Tribune. | L. K. Nicholson, New Orleans, La., | ‘Times-Picayune. i W. J. Pape, Waterbury, Conn., Re- publican E. Lansing Ray, St. Louis, Mo., Globe- | Democrat. Charles A. Stauffer, Phoenix, Ariz, | Arizona Republic. Frederick 1. Thompson, Montgomery, Ala., Alabama Journal. i Robinsonuto Speak. Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Ar- kansas, floor leader of the Senate, will | be the speaker at the annual luncheon Monday. A conference of managing editors to discuss the Associated Pross news report will be held Tuesday. Among the man- aging_editors and other newspaper executives who plan to attend are: LS. Dayton, Yonkers, N. Y., Herald- | Statesman; Donald J. Sterling, Port- | land, Oreg., Journdl; William O. Dap- ping, Auburn, N. Y, Citizen-Adver- tiser: Buell W. Hudson, Woonsocket, R. I, Call; L._B. Costello, Lewiston, Me. Sun and Evening Journal; Paul C Howe, Bennington, Vt., Evening Ban. ner; W. C. Stouffer, Roanoke, Va. Times and World-News: Sevellon Brown, Providence. R. L. Journal and | Bulletin: Joaquin B. Ca Spokane, Wash., R. I, News-Tribune:; Earl O. Stowitts, | ‘Amsterdam, N. Y., Evening Recorder: | M. Crist, Brooklyn, N. Y., Daily! Eagle. John R. Flippin, Memphis, Tenn., Commercial Appeal and Evening Ap- peal; C. C. Cain. jr., Attleboro, Mass. Sun; Charles Israel, Philadelphia Bul- letin; Josiah P. Rowe, jr., Fredericks- burg. Va., Free Lance-Star; F. Everiss Kessinger, Rome, N. Y., Sentinel; How- ard C. Rice, Brattleboro, Vt., Reformer: Harold F. Wheeler, Boston Traveler; John A. Hall, Jamestown, N. Y., Jour- nal; Charles E. Gray, Wilmington, Del., Morning News; Oliver Owen Kuhn, Washington Star: William M. McBride, Passaic, N. J,, Herald-News; Edwin L. James, New York Times; Frank J. Hause, the News. New York; E. D. Cob- lentz, New York American: Grafton | Wilcox, New York Herald-Tribune. J. _P. Miller, Savannah (Ga.) Morn- ing News and Evening Press; J. Edwin Murphy, Baltimore Evening Sun; John M. Greene, Rockville Center (N. ) Nassau Daily Review; Fred Gainsway, Jersey City (N. J.) Journal; Robert Johnson, Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) Record; John A. Park, Raleigh (N. C.) Times; | Roy Roberts, Kansas City Star and Times; Thomas Ferguson and Ronald| H. Perguson, Manchester (Conn.) Eve- ning Herald; Walter Irving Bates, Meadsville (Pa.) Tribune; Robert B. Choate, Boston Herald: John Mitchell, Union City (N. J.), Hudson Dispatch; Robert F. Marden, Lowell (Mass.) Courier-Citizen; C. B. Hallam, Wil- mington (Del.) Every Evening; J. S. Parks, Fort Smith (Ark.) Times-Record and Southwestern American. Kenneth D. Tooill, Columbus (Ohio) State Journil: R. V. Dunlap, St. Paul Dispatch and Pioneer Pres: F. E Croasdale, Atlantic City Press and Eve- ning Union; James Kerney, jr.. Tren: ton (N. J.) Times; John K. Quad, New Brunswick (N. J.) Daily Home News; Gardner Cowles, jr., Des Moines Regis- ter an jbune; Roger Connolly, New Haven (Conn.) Register; M. W. Bingay, Detroit Free Press; Moses Strauss. Cin- cinnati Times-Star; Ward E. Duffy, Hartford (Conn.) Times, and represent- atives of the Lowell (Mass.) Sun. In connection with the annual meet- ing a collection of old English news pamphlets and newspapers, sponsored by the Columbia University School of Journalism, will be on display at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, / scene of the meeting. The collection is that of the Press Club of London and is being shown for the first time outside of that city. The American Newspaper Publishers’ Association opens its meeti.gs Tuesday with a conference of publishers of “small dailies” and probably will not adjourn until Friday. Postal legislation, freedom of the press, radio and the usual newspaper problems are among , the topics up for discussion. Program to Be Repeated. DARNESTOWN, Md., April 22 (Spe- clal) —The Easter musical program Fresented at the Darnestown Church jast Sunday will be repeated tomorrow by request, it was announced today by the pastor, Rev. J. W. Lowden. The gm'nm will consist of chorus singing y the junior choir, supplemented by solos by members of the church. | building These four men, all leaders in their fields, are among the Americans drafted by the Turkish Republic in its formulation of a comprehensive program of | Above, left to right, Charles E. Bell and economic _modernization. They are Matthew Van Siclen. and, lower, left to d Walker D. Hines. right, Sidney Paij RED CROSS MEETS HERE TONORROW |Annual Conventions of Na- tional and Junior Societies to End Thursday. ‘The annual conventions of the Amer- | p. ican Red Cross and Junior Red Cross will open in Washington tomorrow ana continue through Thursday. Vital problems of unemployment re- lief, which have faced the Red Cross chapters in more than 3,000 communi- ties in the Nation, will be the theme of discussion at this annual conclave. Sessions of the American Red Cross will open at 10:30 am. in Memorial Conti- nental Hall with Chairman John Bar- ton Payne presiding. A convention chairman will be elected later to pre- side over these sessions, which will be attended by probzbly more than 1,000 delegates. Former Gov. Alfred E. Smith of New York, one of the new members of the Central Committee, will be in attendance. About 200 high school boys and giris will come here for the junior sessions, which will be held in" the assembiy room of the Red Cross headquarters at 1: o'clock tomorrow. Walter S. Gard, assistant National di- rector of the American Junior Rea Cross, will preside at the opening ses- sion. First Lady to Officiate. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt has con- sented to present the rell call honor flag, won this year by the State or { Montana. to Senator John E. Erickson | | of that State, at_the closing session of | the American Red Cross Thursday morning. Miss Mabel T. Boardman, secretary, will preside at this little cere- mony. ~Mrs. John A. Johnston, roil call chairman for_the District of Co- lumbia Chapter, will surrender the flag. which has been held two years by Washington, because it has had tne highest enrollment of members in pro- | pulation, in the United At the opening session of the conven- tion, the invocation will be given by Rt Rev. William F. McDowell of Washing- ton. The first speaker will be a hign school student of Richmond, Ind. , Providence, | Dwight C. Spillman, who won this Brief Eusiness Session Is Held honor in a contest. He is the spokes- man of the 7.000.000 Junior Red Cros&‘ members. His subject will be *Social Responsibility, a Junior Red Cross Op- portunity.” Election of convention offi- cers will follow. Five - minute presentations of the service activities of the Red Cross by the National directors of the services will be next on the program, with tue speakers as follows: War service, Don disaster relief, Robert E. nursing service, Miss Clara D. public health nursing and home hygiene, Miss I. Malinde Harvey: first aid and life saving, Harold F. Enlow: volunteer service, Miss Boardman Junior Red Cross, Edward W. Mar- cellus:; public information and roll call, Douglas Griesmer. Central Committee to Meet. Chairman Payne will outline the year’s work of the Red Cross. The Central Committee of the Red Cross will meet at 2:30 p.m. with sev- eral new members in attendance. Round table conferences in the after- noon will be attended by delegates and a reception in their honor by the mem- bers of the Central Committee will be given at 4:30 o'clock in the head- quarters building. A general session will be held to- morrow evening in the United States Chamber of Commerce Building with Charles B. Borland, ochairman of the Norfolk, Va. chapter, presiding. The speakers will be Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, United States Veterans’ Admin- istrator; National Comdr. Louis A. Johnson of the American Legion, and James L. Fieser, vice chairman in charge of domes! operations of the American Red Cr “Mecting_Relief Needs” will be the| theme of the Tuesday morning session in the Chamber of Commerce Building. Addresses will be by William M. Bax- ter, jr, manager of the Midwestern arca of the Red Cross, with head- quarters at St. Louis; Rev. John O'Grady, director of the Catholic Charities of Washington; J. Prentice Murphy, general secretary of the Child- ren's Bureau of Philadelphia; William B. Rodgers, executive director of the Pennsylvania State Emergency Reliet Board, and Fred C. Croxton, assistant to the directors of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. General discus- sion from the floor will follow these | addresses. Convention Dinner Tuesday. The convention dinner will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Mayflower Hotel, with Chairman Payne as the toastmaster. 'The invocation will be by Very Rev. Coleman Nevils, S. J., president of Georgetown University, and addresses will be by Dean Annie W. Goodrich of the Yale University School of Nursing; Dr. Henry Noble Mac- Cracken, president of Vassar College, and Dr. J. L. Biggar, national commis- sioner of the Canadian Red Cross Bociety. Miss Catherine S. Leverich, chairman of volunteer service of the New York City Chapter, will preside at the Wed- nesday morning session in the Cham- ber of Ccmmerce Building. Addresses will be by Miss Boardman, Harvey Gib- son, chairman of the ergency Un- employment Relief Cm%fie of New York City; Lester D. Wallerstein, mem- ber of tne Executive Committee of the Richmond, Va., Chapter; Mrs. New- ton S. Noble, chairman of volunteer service of the Summit County, Ohio, Chapter, and three-minute presenta tions will be by Miss Katherine Gray of the Motor Corps, Boston Metro- politan Chapter: Mrs. Leo Westheimer of the canteen service, Cincinnati and Hamilton County, Ohio Chapter; Miss F. Evelyn Paton of health aids, Dis- ct of Columbia Chapter. and Miss Harriet A. Robeson of the Gray Ladies, | Metropolitan Chapter. | _The convention will close with the Thursday morning gession. ‘The sessions of the American Junior Red Cross Convention will be held in the assembly hall of the Red Cross na- tional headquarters, beginning at 1:45 .m. ‘The juniors will elect the chairman | and secretary of the convention. ‘The program of the first session follow. Song, “Junior Red Cross Song of Ser icc”: discussion of Junior Red Cross | participation in chapter activities. | Elections Tuesday. The junior delegates’ dinner will b | held at 7 pm. tomorrow in the May> | flower Hotel, with Mrs. August Belmont of New York, member of the Central Committee, as the guest speaker The juniors will hold elections Tue: day, followed by discussion of juniors in emergency relief. From 2 to 4:30 | pm. their session will be devoted to their international activities, with an |acdress by Faik Konitza, the Minister of Albania, and Dr. Henry N. Mac- C:acken of Vassar College. Again on Wednesday morning the juniors will as- semble to discuss matters of their own rganization and hear reports of their committees. In the afternoon they will | make a trip to Mount Vernon and other | shrines in the Capital. Thursday they | attend the closing session of the adult Red Cross delegates. | Another feature of the Red Cross Convention will be the fashion show put on Wednesday night in the District | of Columbia Chapter House by a group of Washington girls, to show the types | of garments that have been made by | volunteer seamstresses all over the Na- | tion from the Red Cross cotton cloth, of which about 75,000,000 vards have | been distributed. The committee in charge of the fashion show is comprised of Miss Elizabeth Brawner, Mrs. | Lawrence S. Carson and Mrs. William ‘Willard. }GOLDENBERG’VS EXECUTIVE {CLUB INSTALLS OFFICERS Prior to Dinner Dance—V. M. | Anderson President. | Officers of the Goldenberg’s Executive Club were installed last night at a brief | business session of the club which pre- | ceded a dinner dance for members at the Club Michel. The new officers were Victor M. An- derson, president, and Miss Jessie Glass- | man, secretary-treasurer. The principal | speakers were: 1. G. Goldenberg, presi- | dent- of the Goldenberg Co.: Harry E. | Ullman, vice president and general | manager, and Leo Baum, treasurer of | the firm. ! Entertainment, arranged by Henry| Leibel, was furnished by Pete Macias and his Club Michel Orchestra. Na- SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, [TURKEY DRAFTING AMERIGAN EXPERTS Several Washingtonians Are Among Group Giving New Deal to Republic. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. Old Turkey plans a new deal. To bring i about, the republic which rose | from the ruins of the one-time mighty | Ottoman empire is drafting American | brains in half a dozen different fields | of industry, transportation, agriculture and education. The Turks desire, in effect, to formu- late for themselves a comprehensive grwnm of economic modernization ased on the best American experience that can be applied to Turkish condi- tions. The plan is primarily the project of Mustafa Kemal, President of the re- public, who, since his election to office in 1923, has instituted so many internal reforms designed to bring Turkey up to fi;u in various branches of national e. To lay the foundations of the plan, President Kemal has now called into | counsel leading American authorities in | such fields as railroads, cotton produc- tion, gold and copper mining, tariffs, public schools and grape-growing. Walker D. Hines Engaged. For the purpose of completing a gen- | eral survey of the necessities and possi- bilities of the situation, the Turkish government, acting through its Ambas- sador at Washington, has engaged Walker D. Hines, famous director gen- eral of the war-time United States railrcad administration and since then a practicing lawyer in New York. Mr. Hines has had long experience in rail road affairs. In 1925 he was commis- sioned by the League of Nations to in vestigate and report on matters con- | nected with navigation on the Rhine | and Danube Rivers. During the period | between election and inauguration, Mr. | Hines was called into conference hy" Franklin D. Roosevelt, and there were reports that the New York lawyer and transportation expert would be offered | a place in the cabinet. Several other men well known in Washington have contracted to go to Turkey and co-operate in the compre- hensive economic program to be under- taken there. One is Matthew Van Sic- len, mining engineer, former assistant chief mining engineer of the United States Bureau of Mines and later en- gineer in charge of the Division of Min. ing Research. Mr. Van Siclen is re- | garded as an outstanding expert in the ! field of gold mining. and one of his| principal duties will be to explore the | possibilities of locating that precious metal somewhere in Turkey. There have been reports that gold exists at Mount Ararat, the famous mountain in Ar- menia which is the traditional resting place of Noah's Ark. Mr. Van Siclen | has surveyed mines in Mexico and New | Brunswick and inspected numerous mines and mining methods in Europe. U. S. Geologist Employed. | Sidney Paige of Washington is going | into the Turkish governmen'’s service as | a geologist and metallurgical expert. He | has had many years of service with the | United States Geological Survey as a | geologist and as a geologist on the Pan- | ama and Niciragua Canal Commissions. He is a recognized authority on stral graphy structure, ore deposits and pe- troleum. Still a third Washingtonian, who is | an acknowledged specialist in his field has just arrived at Angora, Mustafa Kemal's capital, to become adviser to the Turkish railroad administration. He | is Charles E. Bell, traffic analyist. who has been assigned the task of making a nation-wide survey of the Turkish rail- | way situation. Mr. Bell has had nearly 40 years of transportation experience. He is a former traffic official of the| Southern Railway and was one of Her- | bert Hoover's assistants in the United States Food Administratjon. During the war he also served as ‘assistant to the triffic director of railroads. As adviser to the Turkish customs administration at Angora, Robert H. Vorfeld, formerly of the international | relations division of the United States | Tariff Commission. is already on duty. | Mr. Vorfeld, a Californian, has been an outstanding specialist in tariff matters, beginning with such service in the | Philippines shortly after they came into | Amerigan possession. Following his tour | of duty at Manila, Mr. Vorfeld was in the Dominican Republic and eventually wrote its tariff laws. He rendered sim- | ilar service subsequently for the govern- | ments of Paraguay, Ecuador and Bolivia. | Heads Farm Station. In charge of Turkey's new agricul- | tural experimental station at Adana.| an American named Clark. who is a Californian, is entrusted with the spe- cial job of advising the Turks in the field of cotton prodtiction. Yet an- other son of Uncle Sam, named Nou- garet, has been engaged to superin- tend Turkish viticulture, the art of grape-growing. It is possible that at some time in the future the Turks will look to this country for experts in still other fields. Dr. Beryl Parker of New York, well known American authority on child education, is al- ready in Turkey, directing the estab- lishment and development of & sys- tem of kindergarten schools. She was| sent under the auspices of the Turkisl: mbassy in Washington and the ‘American Friends of Turkey, Inc.” of New York City. ‘To Gen. Charles H. Sherrill, who has just left Istanbul as American Am- assador, having resigned as a result of the change in administrations at Wash- | thaniel Cohen was toastmaster. CE AR | [TAXI KILLS WOMAN IN SOUTHWEST SECTION Driver Held in Seventh Street Ac- cident, Pending Investigation by Coroner. Maria White, colored, of the 400 block of Eighth street southwest, was instantly killed last night when struck by a taxi- cab while crossing in the 500 block of Seventh street southwest. She was pro- nounced dead at Emergency Hospital, where she was taken by the Fire Rescue Squad. Her body was taken to the ‘morgue. Loren W. Pecd, 27, of the 600 block of I street southwest, the taxi driver, as detained by police, pending a coroner’s inquest. Police said the taxicab was going south on Seventh and the woman was walking east across the street when struck. The handle on the taxicab door was thought to have struck her as cthe was knocked over when the cab driver made an effort to turn to avoid striking her. it was said. The woman was identified by a passerby. COUPON GOOD FOR Monday & Tuesday ANY MAKE WATCH CLEANED Expert Swiss and American ‘Watchmaker Guaranteed for One Year J. F. ADAMS JEWELRY CO. i 804 F St. N.W. i ington, is assigned much of the credit for Turkey’s decision to engage Ameri- can specialists to reorganize the country industrially. During his period of of- fice at Istanbul, Gen. Sherrill induced the government to depart from the policy of strictly limiting imports from the United States and to substitute for it the policy of admitting American | ¢ products equal in value to Turkish ex- ports to the United States. So far, this privilege has been accorded to only one other country, Spain. The pro-American sentiment Musta- fa Kemal is exhibiting in commission- HOT WATER HEATING PLANT A First Quality Genuine American Radiator Product ean buy at the ahd suaranteed by the Americ Radiater dia 300 feet radiation— EASIEST TERMS IN TOWN. Specially Priced Installed complete Pay AMERICAN HEATING ENGINEERING CO. 807 N. | aict for Shakespeare and the discom- b 99 - Yo =5 APRIL >—PART ONE. HITS DETRACTORS OF SHAKESPEARE Elizabethan Scholar Says Bard of Avon Obtained Full Education. William Shakespeare had all the edu- cation necessary to write the plays at- tributed to him. The Bard of Avon was well qualified to do the work he did. Far from being an untutored rus- tic, he probably was as competent a scholar as Bacon himself, Chaucer, Spenser or even Milton. He had the s2me training that they had, but he made more of his opportunities than they did. ‘These were the opinions which Dr. George A. Plimpton of New York ex- pressed last night to a distinguished audience gathered in the Elizabethan ‘Theater of the Folger Shakespeare Library to do honor to the noet in whose memory the library buliding was raised. _ Publisher, antiquarian, biblio- phile, Dr. Plimpton has spent many years in the study of Elizabethan books, | especially school texts, and the net re- sult of his long investigation is a ver- fiture of those who would rob him of his fame. The great bard, Dr. Plimpton de- clared, almost certainly attended Strat- ford Grammar School between 1570 and 1580, perhaps as late as 1585. If so, be was taught there by Walter Roche, Samuel Hunt and Thomas Jenkins, all university men. The speaker asserted, “When Ben Jonson says that Shake- speare had small Latin and less Greek, he must be read with a knowledge of the fact that what would be ‘small| Latin’ in his day was very much more | than is mastered by the average Amer- | ican college graduate now. Since boys | in country grammar schools were ex- pected to ‘speak Latin purely and readily, it seems we should seek far| today for the few whom Jonson would have regarded as good Latinists. The ‘less Greek,’ like the ‘little Latin,’ com- | pared with our day, may have been & | good deal.” Dr. Plimpton told of his study of the school text books of Shakespeare's time. “The first book put into the poet’s hands as a child” he said, “would have been a horn book, an aid in the learning of the alphabet and prayers. “We may presume that the school at | Stratford had begun, like the rest, to teach the boys to write. Shakespeare used what was called the ‘secretary's hand.’ It was derived from the first; book on penmanship in the English lan- | guage, a work by John de Beau Chesne and M. John Baildon, printed by 'Isl':’(‘))mu Vantronillier in London in| 1570. | “Shakespeare probably learned his | arithmetic from ‘The Ground of Artes,’| by Robert Recorde, who taught mathe- | matics at Oxford. The first edition | came out about 1542, and was the first book on arithmetic printed in the Eng- lish language. | “The poet's earliest Latin grammar almost surely was that of Wiiliam Lily, | headmaster of St. Paul's School, a work in which Colet and Erasmus had their hands. | “The Greek grammar of Nicholas/ Clenardus was in use at Bangor and St. Bees, and there is no reason why it may | not have been studied at Stratford. Fifth form boys at Harrow in Shake-! speare’s day had Demosthenes, Isocrates, | Hesiod, Heliodorus and Dionysius Hali- carnasseus Graece. “As for rhetoric, the poet probably used the text of Thomas Wilson. There | is a similarity between some of Falstaff’s speeches and some of those offered as models in Wilson.” Dr. Plimpton predicated his address on his own valuable collection of early school books. “The plays of Shakespeare are full | of classical allusions, all of which might | refer to what he learned in the school | in Stratford and in his subsequent | readings of his contemporaries. It seems to me that Shakespeare's school- ing must have resulted in considerably more learning than the layman has| credited him with. His educition, how- | ever, cannot account for his success. It | contributed something, it was a solid | foundation, a preparation for further | study: but although others, indeed, very | many, had the same opportunities, yet ve h: only one Shakes nd ing American experts to evolve for| him the economic moderization of Tur- | key are attributable in no small degree to the fruitful missions of three suc-| cessive American representatives who | served at Istanbul since the war —Admiral Mark L. Bristol, who was high commissioner for eight years; Am- bassador Joseph C. Grew, who suc- ceeded him, and\Gen. Sherrill. All three of them won in high degree the con-! fidence and esteem of the “Gazi,” Presi- dent Mustafa Kemal's o7eial title, which means *“victorious. Messrs. Grew and Sherrill, during the course of the past five years, have made many reports to the State Department, fore- shadowing an assured economic future for Turkey under its modern leader- ship—a future for the development of which reliance is now to be placed, to| a wide extent, on American brains and Perfect DIAMONDS J « :§: %® Also complete line of standardege o%2and all-American made watches. o g Shop at_the friendly store— % o2 you're always greeted with a smileg® —with o obligation to buy. b Charge Accounts Invited *® M. Wartzburger Co. & 901 G St. N.W. L4 . ¢ ool Qoadrals deloedodededesdy 219 INSTALLED COMPLETE 6 _rooms—NOTHING ELSE TO BUY. < b & < % Pays for this || Complete Hot Water || plant — take as long as 3 years to set- tle the bill. 129 Phone, Write or See Y. 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