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\ Rug Beauty Our Duty Call Mr. Pyle Nat. 3257-3291.2036 Sanitary Curpel & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 lnd Ave. N.W. Admits the healthful, tanning, ultra - violet rays shut out by ordi- nary window glass. VIT Quickly and economically installed. ‘Write or phone. HIRES TURNER GLASS CO. Rosslyn West 2560 Glass for All Building Purposes DEALERS SUPPLIED A |a SantaFe WARM DAYS await you Galifornia and Southern Arizona There is mellow warmth all down the California coast, warm dry gold in the winter sun at the desert oases of South- ern Arizona and California. Nor is it expensive togo... in Santa Fe comfort, with rail fares the lowest in years. Phoenix Pullman, too, tri- weekly on THE CHIEF. Ship your cor along. Costs only 3.6c per mile when owner's party holds two or more first-class one-way or round-trip ticketsl (4 Ask for folder about ALL - EXPENSE TOURS [ May we help plan your trip? ©.C. DILLARD, Dist. Pass. Agent 302 annun 'lrun Bldg. 1340 Chestnut 8t. at 150 PHILADELPHIA, PA. Phones: ittentonss 14841468 Special Busi- al and Review ; Easy g lean. BOYD .o, Courses. 2-10 Month: Position guar | Beginners® and Advanced Clasces l Day and Evening Sessions Day Classes forming every Monday 1420 K St. N.W.,, NATIONAL 3258 Accountancy Pace Courses: B.C.S. and M.C.S Degrees. C.P.A. Preparation. Day and Even ingClasses: Coeducational. Send for 28th Year Book. BENJAMIN FRANELIN UNIVERSITY TRANSPORTATION BLDG. MET 281§ WashingtonCollegeofLaw Second Semester Begins February 4 New Classes Both Day and Evening MEt. €585 MOUNT IPLEMAM SehooL §{l[rl?[l\plt$ Opening Classes for Begimers February 4 Day and Exvening Tivoli Theater Building 14th STREET AND PARK ROAD Telephone, COlumbia 3000 PEABODY of Music Baltimore, Md. Otto Ortmann, Director Phone Vernon 5398 ng mnnnl 1 Department Virginia Blackhead. Supt. . Mt. Vernon Place Phone Vernon 2nd TERM FRIDAY Arrangements for admission now be- ; Ia received for private and FELIX MAHONY ART SCHoOOL fi-ln. Commereial Art, Interior Decora- on, Costume Design, Life. Day and ight Cl: Children's Saturda sl lll:l 'm”“ug; .l' 7 Class. ll747RI Ave.Na. 2656 The NATIONAL INSTITUTE ¢ of | ADULT EDUCATION ( ~—In Announcing— | The installation of its next Local Seciety on February 7 at the May- Aower Hotel —Directs Attention— T its Unique Course in the Liberal —Affording— A comprehensive Cultural Back- ground to the busy man and woman of today obliged to economize on time, effort and expenditure, se communieate with it Executive Secretary,’ }'.'...‘L".c..mi-.. ‘Telehone: Dis- triet 2677. | Bducational directors of local socteties: Dr. Charles B. Hale, Dr. Waiter Jaeger, and Dr. Adolsh Zucker. PARLEY ON COURT Summons Four Senators to Line Up Victory on Weighty Issue. (Continued From First Page.) under the Monroe Doctrine. rejected yesterday, 46 to 35. Senator Robinson amplified his pre- pared address on The Star’s forum as follows: “The real danger of gag rule comes from the unprecedented effort of per- sons outside the Senate, who have misunderstood or misrepresented the facts in inflammatory radio speeches and appealed to their hearers to wire their Senators urging opposition to the court. “In illustration of this, attention is called to the address of Father Coughlin delivered yesterday, in which he impugned the intelligence of Senators, implied that the Presi- dent has misstated the nature of the World Court in his message to the Senate, charged that the support of the court is derived from plutocrats and internatonal bankers, assailed the court as a political institution It wes of the court hu been crluclnd as- serted that all ve are to the court and even charged um the constitution of the court indi- cates that it will wage war on women and children. Holds Them Untrue. “All of these statements are in- correct. Judging from his speech, I assert that every Senator is better informed concerning the World ! Court than Father Coughlin. The | President’s message does not misrep- resent the issue. It presents the issue in accordance with the record and the facts. “How can Father Coughlin assert that the chief support of the Court is derived from plutocrats and inter- national bankers? Does he not know that the National Grange, the Amer- ican Federation of Labor and the principal church _organizations of America of all faiths, as well as nu- merous commercial and civic clubs, have declared themselves in favor of the Court? When he criticizes one decision of the World Court as poli- tical, he should recall that decisions of our Supreme Court have from time to time been likewise characterized by prominent Americans. “The American Legion in 1925 and 1929 adopted strong resolutions favor- ing adherence. “The assertion by the reverend father that the constitution of the Court indicates it will make war on women and children is simply incom- prehensible from any standpoint, as there is ‘no fact on which to base it. He has simply allowed his imagination to run riot.” Urges Protest on Hearers. Father Coughlin, speaking from De- troit, assailed the World Court as & | “double-headed hydra born of the | League of Nations” and a “Franken- S stein raised up by the international bankers * * * for the purpose of pre- serving their plutocratic system.” “If you want to keep peace in America,” the priest said, “keep clear of the World Court. I beg you in the name of the God of Peace and justice to wire your Senators * * * to vote no on the World Court, with or with- | out reservations.” Father Coughlin quoted from the covenant of the League of Nations sections which pertained to the World Court, assailed the tribunal for its “rotten decisions,” which he said made Austria “bow its head in shame because it submitted to an injustice * * * which stinks in the nostrils of civilization,” and hurled the follow- ing challenge: “Be . not deceived! The so-called World Court is a double-headed hydra born of the League of Nations. It is part and parcel of it. It is as much related to the League of Nations as the brain is to the body. It is its adviser.” Later, Msgr. Ryan, speaking from Washington, said: “I believe in the ‘World Court and I believe in judicial processes instead of force for the set- tlement of international disputes. “Another reason for taking this op- portunity to speak is to let the people of the United States know that not all the Catholics of the country are op- Court.” The radio addresses last night were mad: from five cities, New York, Washington, Detroit, Cleveland and Pittsburgh. Excerpts of Addresses. o Excerpu from other addresses fol- Gen. O'Ryan—“Are we now to let the world shift and drift once again because we refuse our stren and prestige to the World Court? It is impossible to believe.” Senator Bailey—“I rec that the recent agitation (against adher- ence) has been calculated to appeal to prejudice, to incite suspicion, to arouse fear, perhaps to impair na- tional faith in the present adminis- tration. If there be those now listen- ing in whom such emotions have been awakened, I ask of them odly that they look beyond the tirades that have been shouted into their ears, to the simple facts of the case.” Baker Criticizes Priest. Former Secretary Baker: “To those who know the facts it is entirely clear that Father Coughlin has confused both the functions and the perform- ances of the League of Nations and the World Court, and that the things he criticizes about the Court are in many instances things with which the Court has never had the least con- cern.” Before Selling Investigate the Prices We Pay Old Gold Jewelry of every description, bridgework, silver. No matter how old or dilapidated any of tore:otu articles might be you will greatly surprised at the cash pfle- paid by us. (Licensed by U. 8. Govt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F St. N.W. Phone NA. 5543—We Will Call COAL ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS COKE—WOOD—FUEL OIL of the Finest Quality R.S. MILLER 805 Third St. N.W. Phone NAT. 5178 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1935. Here is what was left of the Hotel Prince, a five-story structure in Brooklyn, N. Y., after a five-alarm fire swept through it, leaving it in ruins. Burning debris from the building buried two nremen but they were rescued with only slight injuries. NEW N.R. A. POLICY AIDS CO-OPERATION Reassurance of Business Sooner Would Have Pre- vented Strife. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. Although more than a year and a half has passed since the question was first raised, the Federal Government has only this week put into effect a policy that permits voluntary co- operation by business and industry under the Blue Eagle and the codes of the N. R. During the time that has elapsed, such controversies as that between the | N. R. A and the Ford Motor Co. would have been unnecessary and mil- lons of dollars would have been saved to business and perhaps to labor where strikes were involved, if the | | Government had removed the fear on | | the part-of companies generally that, in subscribing a code, they were for- feiting or waiving their constitutional rights. This attitude grew out of a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the famous Booth Fisheries | case, in which it was decided that | anybody who accepts the benefits of | a statute cannot later attack the con- | stitutionality of the law by claiming | that his constitutional rights have | been impaired. Cummings Questioned. ‘When lawyers generally were advis- ing their clients not to sign codes be- Tomorrow —at 9:15 AN, because one out of the 44 decisions| Note snow on the ground and the cloud of steam and smoke billowing into the sky. cause of this precedent, the matter Firemen were seriously hampered by frozen hydrants and ice-choked water mains, —A. P. Photo. it. The language is brief and to the was fully discussed in various articles | point in the press. This correspondent asked Attorney General Cummings aboyt it in August, 1933, and his reply was that a citizen could not inadvertently walve his rights under the Constitution and that signing a code would not be & walver. But in those days the N. R. A. was functioning with its own legal department and the Justice Depart- ment had nothing to do with the handling of the codes. The hesi- tancy on the part of many com- panies to accept the codes was at- tributed entirely to the existence of the Booth Fisheries case and the disinclination of the N. R. A. to| permit any clearing up of the ques- tion by a specific stipulation in codes. Thus the newspaper publishers had a controversy on this very point and the protection of their constitutional rights was included in the code itself, but with the comment that it really WaS Unnecessary, Weirton First Test. The first test of whether the rights of the citizen or company who sub- scribed to a code were being waived came in the trial of the Weirton case | in the Federal Court at Wilmington when en assistant attorney general | invoked the precedents to the effect | that the Weirton Steel Co. had signed the code and hence could not attack the validity of the national industrial recovery act. Ever since then the problem has been bobbing back and forth in the Government departments, but no solu- tion satisfactory to well informed lawyers was forthcoming. They in- sisted that the Government itself in a formal way should disavow any| effort to take away constitutional rights from those who signed codes. Accordingly, an executive order was drafted by Attorney General Cummings at the request of Presi- dent Roosevelt, who has since issued as quantities last! “It is understood that neither the Government nor any member of in- dustry waives, or can properly insist that the other has walved, any con- stitutional right pertaining to the Goverpment or to any individual by approving, assenting to or co-operat- ing under a code of fair competition.” Applies Only to N. R. A. ‘The foregoing executive order ap- plies, of course, only to the national industrial recovery act. Farmers who accept benefits under the agricultural adjustment act or railroads which ac- cept benefits under the railroad pen- | sion law would not be able to attack the validity of the statute, though it is supposed here that the broad policy would probably apply as a mat- ter of practice to ail emergency statutes. The specific executive order on the codes, however, clears up all doubts and permits the whole problem of business and industrial co-opera- tion with the Government under codes to be approached in a new spirit and with a clearer realization of the power of voluntary rather than in- voluntary agreements to bring results under the American system. It repre- sents a milestone in the New Deal’s progress and it is only unfortunate that it took a year and a half to bring the needed reassurance. Crosses Pacific 100 Times. Capt. Shigehiko Takahashi, com- mander of a Japanese liner at the age of 50, has completed his one hun- dredth crossing of the Pacific Ocean. cuu&nmfi THOXINE long as the 25 Remnant When we think of what we paid for but things are down to posed to our entrance into the World | this merchandise we get a headache— “Remnant Lots,” and they must be cleaned out before we take inventory Thursday night. If come early ever meant any- thing . . . it’s tomorrow! o-.nmy Article 31 iSHlRTS White, Description slightly soiled. 44 |SHIRTS Fancy. T, [ 81.65.81.95 and $2.50 $1.65 5 81.95 68 |TIES 87 |TIES 94 [HOSE s ~ 7 |PAJAMAS Bilke, sun?mn‘.fiau.‘ Jacquards, slightly sed. Handmade. reailient construction, with ~cut_wool lining. e, resilient construction. with ‘wool_lini lso_some_knits. patterns.| stripes_and 127 |GLOVES Pigtex. 22 |MUFFLERS Silks and wools. 43 |BUCKLES Hickok. initial. 19 |TIE CLASPS SWEATERS 17 — —|LEATHER 11 |JACKETS —|BATHING 3 '|TRUNKS ROBE Fancy Zipper and plain, good colors. 10 to 12 A B, C, 7% to 8% $1.00 $1.50 & $2.00 53¢ X p| 85 to $15 and button front, Gantner Hi-Boys. Tattersall flannels. ROBES Silk-lined brocades. ~|HATS Medium gray and brown, snap brim, raw_edge. UNION SUITS HA'DK’RCH’FS Initlal. Athletic style. HA'DK'RCH’FS Initial. 45 SUITS Originally $29.75 and $35 9 25 OVERCOATS Originally $35 and $40 19 We Will Alter and Charge These Suits and Overcoats FATHERS TO ADVISE WHEATLEY SCHOLARS A Fathers’ Advisory Council of 8 closer understanding between fathers and sons. Themmmthnuphnnmlmv: W. & J. Sloane with the Fathers’ Council of the Parent-Teacher Association of the school. Mrs. Alice S. Brooks, teacher in charge of safety of the school, addressed the gathering, telling it of the splendid school boy patrol consisting of 32 members. H. E. Shilling, former sec- retary of the Trinidad Citizens’ Asso- ciation, also addressed the council. Foster A. Tourart was elected chair- man. The council will meet the last Monday of each month prior to the meeting of the Trinidad Citizens’ As- sociation in the Wheatley School. #% A5 Mihailoff Reported Slain. land of Rhodes. Yugoslav officials claimed that one of his former body- guards was King Alexander's slayer. Mihailoff was an outlaw in Bulgaria, where he was recently indicted in connection with another murder. 711 Twelfth Street A Sale of “This and That” The After-Inventory Clearance, which closed Saturday night, left in its wake these odds and ends. Only one of a kind; maybe two in some instances—occasional pieces, living room, dining room, bed room Ssuites, rugs, draperies, etc. We have made the reductions deep enough that it shall be over and done with in a day. Come tomorrow—and early— to have the fullest choice. No exchanges—No refunds—Every purchase final. For Living Room $110 Mah. Empire $145 Mah. Shera- ton Sofa .. $135 Sofa, ma- roon frieze $67.50 $155 Queen Anne Love Seat..$77.50 $15 Mah. Lamp ....$8.50 $90 Drop Leat ...$49.50 $65 Mah. Drop Table ... Table ... .$72.50 For Bedroom $375 Classic-Moderne Suite; 8 pcs.. .$250 $298 Decorated Suite; 8 pcs.. .$165 $275 Directoire Suite ....... $360 Chippendale Suite; 8 pcs...$240 $90 Chaise Lounge; old white frame ..$45 $72.50 cnaise .$120 ....836.25 The House With The Green Shutters Lid Desk...$30.00 $25 Maple Book Table ......$12.50 $22.50 Maple Butter- fly Table...$11.25 $29 Maple Bench .....$10.00 $62 Maple Tavern Table ......$25.00 Bookcase . $30 Maple Console $75 Mah. Easy Chair ......$49.00 Chair ......$37.50 $76 Mah. Easy Chair $85 Easy Chair; lea. covered ...$59.00 Table Desk.$65.00 $85 Queen Anne $30 Pie Crust Coffee Table . .....$15.00 Table ......$17.50 $80 Twin Studio $90 Walnut .$45.00 Card Table.$14.50 $75 Occasional §$97 Mahogany Secretary . .$42.50 $35 Folding Card Couch . .....$50.00 $12.50 Tavern Table .......$6.25 $17 Directoire Side Chair . .$8.50 $37.50 Leather Easy Chair ......$18.75 $50 Ll::‘alry t';‘illnsez: 2-pedestal. . $25.00 $55 Iron Backgam- mon Table. . $27.50 $30 Queen Anne Side Chair. .$15.00 $50 Carved Console Table ......$25.00 $100 Early E nglish Center 'rable. .$49 $25 Mah. Bench; u holstered . .$12.50 $25 Chippendale Side Chair. .$12.50 19 Seamless Rugs Reproductions of Orien- tal designs; in colors that are popular. All 9x12 sizes. Regular Prices $33.50 10 $57.50 $26-5° 10 $45°5° 27 Oval Rugs Artistically patterned in colorful shades. Size, 27x50. Regular price, $4.95 711 Twelfth St. N.-W. A Lounge $75 Mah. Colonial Bureau ....$37.50 $50 Mah. Low Boy.szs §$18 Shaving Mirror $9 $60 Maple Bureau; baseonly .....$25 $60 Cedar Lined Wardrobe . $29.50 $75 Moderne Bu- reau Base, round mirror .$35 $100 Adam Chest of Drawers ...$50 $40 Satinwood Bed; full size ...$29.50 §$25 French Pro- vincial Bed $12.50 $55 Directoire Bed .......$27.50 $22.50 Early Am. Maple Bed . .$11.25 $40 Colonial Mah. Bed . $35 Maple Poster Bed; single.$17.50 $60 Chlppendale Bed; single ...$30 $80 Early Am. Poster Bed ...$25 For The Dining Room $425 Colonial Dining Suite. .$195 ining Suite .$150 Dining Suite .$550 $80 Hepplewhite China Cabinet.$35 $40 Mah. Server..$20 $80 Sheraton Sideboard ....$35 $375 Walnut Welsh Cabinet .....$120 $70 Set of 6 Dining Chairs .$35 $125 Hepplewhite Sideboard .$62.50 szso Sheraton Dining Table.$125 $315 llgth Century $1100 Mah. 43 Pairs Tie-Back Curtains Ecru, Point d’Esprit, dotted brown and dotted white; 214 yards long; complete with tie-backs. Regular price, 5 $4 pair . sz 5 165 Pairs Tie-Back Curtains Miscellaneous assort- ment of interesting types —dotted marquisette, baby ruffled marquisette, eggshell marquisette; 214 yards long. Regular price, $1.70 pair District 7262