Evening Star Newspaper, March 12, 1935, Page 3

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REYNOLDS DIVORCE ERROR IS CLAIED First Wife of Tobacco Heir Attacks Deposition in Estate Fight. By the Associated Press. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., March 12—Mrs. Anne Cannon Reynolds Smith in a response read in Forsyth Superior Court today swore she did not know she made the deposition used in securing her divorce from Smith Reynolds in Reno, Nev, on November 23, 1931. The response was read into the record in the hearing in progress before Judge Clayton Moore on the distribution of Reynolds' $30,000,000 trust estate. It was offered in rebuttal to one filed yesterday by Albert D. Ayers, her Reno attorney, in which he said he took care to see that his client was in full possession of her mental fac- ulties when she made the deposition and discussed with her before hand the answers she was to make. Mrs. Smith's claim for the entire fortune for her small daughter, Anne Cannon Reynolds, 2d, is based on the contention that her divorce was il- legal. She 1s seeking to exclude Libby Holman, Broadway actress and Rey- nolds’ second wife, and Christopher Smith Reynolds, child by the second marriage, from sharing in the fortune. She asserted she had been persuaded by Reynolds against her will to seek | a divorce. D. C. INCOME TAX PROPOSED TO PAY WORK INSURANCE (Continued From First Page. ) )8 not required to make a direct per- centage contribution. Mark Lansburgh, local department store owner, speaking for the National Retail Dry Goods Association, was the first witness, assuring the committee that the association is in favor of enactment of such a program na- tionally. As amendments, however, he proposed that the bill require em- ploye contributions and that a more flexible scale of employer contributions | be devised. Pointing out that some employers do and will maintain more stabiliza- | tion of employment, Mr. Lansburgh suggested that such employers event- ually be allowed to make a lower per- | centage contribution. For instance, he said, all employers might be required | to contribute 2 per cent of total pay | rolls for three years, while employes contributed 1 per cent of their wages | and the local Government added 1| per cent. At the end of this period, | however, he proposed that employer contributions be determined by the degree of stabilization which have maintained in their business, the range beng from 1 per cent to 3!z per cent of their pay rolls. The second witness was Robert J. Cottrell, executive secretary of the ‘Washington Board of Trade. In ad- ditlon to the same suggestion that employes contribute directly to main- tenance of the program, Mr. Cottrell warned the committee that placing an excessive tax on the employers alone probably would result in their cutting pay rolls sharply to balance the new expense. Mr. Cottrell also urged that the bill contain a figure as the maximum amount of reserves allowable. With this safeguard, he pointed out, a check would be available against p11~ ing up the fund to an unnecessarily high total. The Board of Trade is they | Rev. Father Coughlin Says ‘Chocolate Soldier’ Is Tool of Wall Street. DEFENDS CAMPAIGN Foresees Effort to Drive Him From Air—New Deal Break Denied. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, March 12.—Picturing Hugh 8. Johnson as & “chocolate | soldier” playing the role of “Man Fri- day” to Benrard Baruch, Rev. Charles E. Coughlin replied last night to the former N. R. A. administrator’s “pied piper” speech. “The money changers whom the priest of priests drove out of the Temple of Jerusalem,” said Father Coughlin, “* * * have marshaled their forces behind the leadership of a chocolate soldier for the purpose of driving a priest out of public affairs.” Father Coughlin’s reply was made in a 45-minute radio speech over the | same network Johnson used at New | York last week to call him and Sen- ator Huey Long “two mad pied pipers” appealing to “the lunatic fringe of the pecple.” Lashes at Baruch. Father Coughlin expanded his re- buttal to take in Baruch, the “War- burgs. the Morgans, the Kuhn-Loebs and the rest of that wrecking crew of internationalists whose god is gold ana whose emblem is the red seal of exploitation.” He declared he would “oppose these men until my dying day | Baruch, he said, was the “un- rrm\ned prince of Wall Street,” the “unofficial acting President of the United States.” After declaring Johnson was .‘ “political corpse”—the “first great casualty of the New Deal"—Father | Coughlin answered one phase of | Johnson's speech of a week ago ques- tioning his citizenship. “More American Than You.” “My dear general,” he said, “I am as much if not more an American citizen as you are or ever will be. | Your parents are but one generation | | removed from Ireland. My paternal grandfather's bones are buried in Lackawanna, N. Y. * * * I was| | always an American citizen.” He ex- plained that he was born of American | parents on Canadian soil. | In asserting his right to speak on | political and economic topics, Father | Coughlin declared: “Some one, irre- | spective of his Catholicity, or of his | | Protestantism, or of his Jewish faith, | was required to raise his voice, if | for no sther reason than to condemn | those who, refusing to leave this land of sorrow, obstructed our passage to the land of prosperity. * * * In ac- | cepting the dignities which my re-| | ligion conferred upon me, I sacrificed lin no respect the rights ldentlfled with my citizenship.” | Appeals to “Sanity.” In assailing the former N. R. A. chief for classifying him with Talleyrand of France and Judas Iscariot, Father Coughlin said: “Gen- eral, what insanity possessed you to say such things? What desperation | forced you to utter such exaggera-| tion?” Admitting that his Radio League of the Little Flower gained $12,000 by en investment in silver futures, | Father Coughlin said it had brought | him no personal profit. “Gen. Johnson,” he said, “some of | your fair weather friends have heaped | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTOY, Father Charles E. Coughlin, denounced by Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson as & “political padre,” photographed last night as he went before the microe phone to answer the former N. R. Copyright, A RADIO PRIEST MAKES LASHING ATTACK ON JOHNSON; ‘PIOUS FLUBDUB’ IS COMMENT OF EX-ADMINISTRATOR A. chief's critictsm. P. Wirephoto. The Hot Shots Picturesque Language of Johnson, Priest and Long Crackles on Air. By the Assoclated Press. The quarrel in which Hugh John- son, Rev. Father Charles E. Cough- lin and Senator Huey P. Long are engaged is piling up a large col- lection of denunciatory phrases. Here are some the combatants have hurled at each other to date: Father Coughlin—At Gen. Johnson: Political corpse; first great cas- ualty of New Deal; braggart; chocolate soldier; distorter of his- tory; perverter of logic; unjust ag- gressor; a figure to be pitied and not condemned: & cracked gram- aphone record squawking the mes- sage of his master’s voice. Gen. Johnson—At Father Cough- lin and Senator Long: ‘Two pied pipers; a couple of Catalines; plausible Punchinello and political padre; public political enemies No. 1 and 2; economic shysters; demagogues; political termites. Senator Long—At Gen. Johnson. Late, lamented, pampered crown prince; one of those satellites loaned by Wall Street to run the Gov- ernment; scapegoat; speller and speaker and spoiler; a great sol- dier, though he never smelt pow- der or heard a cap snap; a great lawyer, though he never tried a lawsuit. \WALLACE SEES END OF CROP REDUCTION Secretary Says Curtailment Will Last Only Until Balance At- tained With Consumption. ot officially on record with regard to | upon my desk the fulsome record Of | o o ao i inill the bill, Cottrell told the committee, his testimony being merely an ex- pression of the feelings of some of ils | members. Rufus Lusk, secretary of the Wash- ington Taxpayers’ Protective Associa- tion, declared that no law should be; enacted for the District until national | legislation is im effect. Lusk then at- tacked the pending bill, section by section. “There fsn't a cent available to pay this required contribution by the Dis- trict,” Lusk said, “unless new or in- creased taxes are voted. This bill calls for six or seven hundred thousand dol- lars for the District. If it was raised by real estate taxation it would add from $5 to $20 a year to the tax bill of every home owner in the District. It 1s estimated that about 77,000 workers | would benefit from the plan. They are the ones who should contribute.” Lusk Attacks Set-up, ‘The witness also attacked the pro- posed administrative set-up of the | law, saying “we always get along| better here when our affairs are administered by local people. This law should be administered by local citizens, residents here for at least three years, appointed by the Com- missioners and not by a Federal| board.” | ‘The committee adjourned today be- fore Lusk had completed his testi- mony, but Chairman Ellenbogen asked him and several others to return on Thursday. With no sessibns sched- uled tomorrow the chairman said he hoped to complete the hearings on ‘Thursday. i SPECIAL NOTICES. BALTT- Y TRIPS TO AND PROM £y phint o gnted. States s SITHE an: $RANErFER & eTORACE CO._ Rortn 3341, S [OVIN LOAI AND fill’l loads to lnd fl'flm Bllw. Phlll and w York. Prequent trips to other East- ern tlllel “Dependal Service SInC! THE DAVIDSON TRANSFE] & 'AGE CO._phone Decatur ”_ll(\)_‘ XLL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debll made by any one but myself. PRAN'K NEWMAN, 511 3rd st. n.e. FROM S goats highly recommended, tore, Columb 1-8\5:0“ in !cznn lected Swiss Peoples Drug MA A’ M., I at Eunbe rg's auction. Essex sedan. ind serial No. 1161671, for e paite. uttiern Auto Body WANT TO HAUL_ FULL_ O] m to or from New York. Richmond, r‘zon&-: h and all way points: special rat m“b""u.' mvzm{wsa INC kers wrld Comvleu funznll Io' up fs° twelve parlors, ser Ild ambulances. t'lnt!-fl 0 undertakers and assistants WE CAN REPRODUCE _ mxeur ormn-) copy, maps, patent draw. ifications. etc.. either bl‘ck White."or colors. from & dozen mlny Cobies 45 may be Tequired in less time and at less cost lhln any other process Ask for_an estimate. Columbxa Planograph Co. _50_L Metropotitan 4861 LONG DISTAN CE MOVINGS Take advantage of our special return- load rate on, hnuuhold movings, full in- wans, Pree' catimates AcE] vmlgoan'n RF. 013 Wood. d H sts. Nnuoml $ale mnhu. Cleveland_5646. Saving Leaky Roofs ——has been our business in Washington for 35 years. Let our long experience suide nu. Our wi thorough e ecnd® e un .fk mfis' ROOFING 933 V 8t N VM OONS G3Grant “Nortn 4a2s. | and not condemned. &t | tion. your personal life. * * ¢ I disdain to refer to it. * * ¢ “I am not important, nor are you, | but the doctrines I preach are im- ‘ portant. While you were content to | vomit your venom upon my person | end attack my character, the Ameri- | can public is fully cognizant that no'.‘ once did you dare attack the truths | | which I teach. * * * I need not | | condemn you. You have condemned\ yourself by omitting this. “Your Wall Streeters.” “s ¢ * These cry babies which you so inadvertently called them, these cry babies of yours whose tears have welled to their eyes because you and your kind have lashed them at the pillar of poverty * * * will never forget you snd your Wall Streeters.* “My friends, I appeal to you * * to bear no ill will against Gen. Johnson. * * * Today he appears| before us as a figure to be pitied | He has been | cast out by an edministration be-| cause he and his plans were failure. * * * Remember that he is to be | regarded as a cracked gramaphone’ Tecord * ¢ *.° Father Coughlin said he anticipated that Johnson’s speech was “the open- ing gun in a well- orgnnized attack’ against me.” “I fear it not because I am pro- tected,” he said, “by the support of these cry babies to whom you referred and those rats, as you called our peo- ple, whom you have forced into the ranks of the National Union for Social Justice.” “Cream Puff General.” In picturing Johnson as "Man Fri- day” to Baruch, Father Coughlin said Johnson carried Baruch's plans in his pocket “to regiment industry and destroy competition * * *.” “You strutted upon the stage of this depression like a comic opera cream puff general. You.organized a comic opera parade on the streets of New York. Why, General, before your name and your underslung vocnbullry became household words * * these pioneer associates of mine were fighting * * * the enemies of the New Deal.” Denies New Deal Break. Father Coughlin denied that he had broken with the Roosevelt administra- tion. Johnson had said in his speech that the publication of the silver lists, revealing the radio league as a silver investor, marked the break between Father Coughlin and the administra- “I still proclaim that it is either Roosevelt or ruin. I support him to- day and will support him tomor- row * * * I dare not be diverted from my course by a red herring even though it chances to be a dead one. America’s destiny is in the process of fulfillment.” PILESi m Ilfl. I and promoter healing, Eases pain to make you mere comfortable 'tll. the medication gets at couse. Don't suffor no aet PILEFOE today tor pusrantond phey results. ples Drug Stores or mm PHILADELPHIA, Marchr 12.—Sec- | retary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace last night rejected an “economy of | scarcity” except as an expedient to | restore the “balance between produc- tion and consumption.” Declaring he viewed such economics | “with abhorrence,” Wallace in a | speech at Temple University said it | was started by industry in 1930 and 1931 “when factories were literally plowed under.” “Curtailment of production,” he asserted, “will last only until the bal- ance between production and- con- sumption has been restored. I think ‘we are nearer that balance now than | we were under the rigidity of prices that prevailed in 1932.” In every agricultural staple, he de- | clared, there exists a large surplus, despite the efforts of the Government, through the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, to brirg about a decrease. \Third Quintuplet In Weight Is First To Have a Tooth Annette Leads Sisters, 9 Months Old, in Teething. By the Associated Press. CALLANDER, Ontario, March 12.— Annette Dionne, who, with her four sisters was 9 months and 12 days old at 4:30 am, produced her first tooth today. The tooth came through her lower gum overnight and was discovered when the nurses at the quintuplets’ private hospital made their first in- spection of the morning. Annette, who ranks third in weight of the five girls, is the first to have a toot! Salesmen Meet Tonight. The Washington unit of the Sales- men of America will be host tonight to groups of salesmen in Washington and vicinity at a meeting in Epstein’s hall, 421 Eleventh street, at 8 o’clock. Codes and legislation benefitting sales- men will be discussed. Wesley Beights 4422 Lowell St. Most attractive six-room home with 2-car garage and nicely landscaped lot. Re- conditioned 1nside and out and in absolutely new-house shape. An exceptional op- portunity for the young couple who aspires to live in Wesley Heights environ- ment at low cost. Inspect today—open daily and Sun- day until sold. W.C.& A.N. MILLER 1119 17th St. Dp WEEKLY BUSINESS SURVEY PLANNED Department of Commerce Will Centralize All Reports for Issuance Here. By the Assoclated Press. Department of Commerce officials today planed to make their agency a clearing house for weekly business re- ports to Washington from the de- partment’s 24 fleld headquarters of- fices throughout the country. ‘This comprehensive information on Nation-wide trade trends is expected to be of great value to business in planning manufacturing and selling programs. Reports to Cover Field. ‘The reports to be sent by the de- partment’s 52 representatives in 76 cities, as well as the 24 field men, will list conditions in these lines: Retail, wholesale, weather, employ- ment, banking and credit, crops, real estate, new construction, new indus- trial developments and outstanding sales orders. Any especial developments in other | lines will be noted. ‘The information will be gathered from business establishments, blnks and authentic sources. The plan was worked out at . meeting of department field men, and disclosed simultaneously with publica- tion of Commerce- reports listing nu- | merous trade increases fer February. These included: Production Gains Shown. Substantial gains in activity for | some of the major producing elements. A 10 per cent boost in industrial output, larger for automobiles. | Moderately higher retail sales than | a year ago. Some expansion in commercial bor- rowing. At the same time it listed: A recession in some industries, nota- bly steel. Fewer construction contracts than | a year ago, which it said was due to | & high number of public works con- | | tracts let last February. Minor declines in stock and bondi prices. - DR. DAS TO LECTURE Will Discuss “Korea and Japa- | mnese Foreign Policy.” ‘ Dr. Taraknath Das, special lec- turer on Far Eastern affairs at Cath- olic University, will speak on “Korea and Japanese Foreign Policy” at 8:15 | o'clock tonight in the university's | music building. This will be the third of a series of Tuesday lectures on “Foreign Policy in the Far East.” Tonight's address will be followed | on subsequent Tuesdays with talks on | “British Foreign Policy in the Far| East and the Anglo-Japanese Alli- ance” and “Present Problems in For- | eign Policy in the Far East.” | Fraternity to Hear Brough. | Charles William Brough, chairman | of the Washington-Virginia Boundary | Commission and former Governor of | Arkansas, will deliver an address be- fore the Washington Alumni Chapter | of the Sigma Delta Kappa law fra- ternity tomorrow evening. The meet- ing will be held at 9 o'clock at the Carlton Hotel, i 'l‘un': t”;" t:ll_f’l. trinkets, jewe! and wltehes into MONEY at A.Kahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET No Pnymts Until Fall Installation D. C. TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1935. Former N. R. A. Chief Says He Expected ““Ly- ing Bunk” in Reply. PROMISES ANSWER Labels Father Coughlin and Long “Pair of Political Termites.” By the Assoclated Press. Hugh 8. Johnson bid for the co- operation of “every thinking Amer- ican” today to ‘“exterminate” the influence of Rev. Father Charles E.| Coughlin and Senator Huey P. Long— whom he called “a pair of political termites.” The former Blue Eagle chief dropped a hint that he would carry his fight to the radio again in a statement in which he called Senator Long and Father Coughlin “economic shysters” and “public political enemies No. 1 and 2.” At the same time, a denial was made by his secretary of a report that Johnson is negotiating for a series of commercial broadcasts. It was ex- | plained that though representatives of Erwin Wasey Co., an advertising con- | cern, handed to the press last night a statement in which Johnson replied to Father Coughlin’s speech, they were acting as friends of the general and | not as representatives of the concern. | Promises Held Visionary. | Johnson declared that the clergyman and the Senator were making “vision- ary promises backed up by phony statistics.” Father Coughlin's speech of last night he called “pious flubdub.” Declaring that he would answer Father Coughlin in detail later, the general said: “I wili have to answer him on three important particulars; first, his abso- lute distortion or falsification of my simple statements; second, his falsi- fications of facts in general, and third, his falsifications of my record and | other circumstances. | “It doesn't take half the intelligence | of a Hitler to know that you can win followers by promising them the world with a fence around it. Old stuff! That great dictator, Julius Caesar, taught these Loreleis their philosophy | when he said: ‘Men easily believe | what they wish to believe.’ Expected “Lying Bunk.” | “Of course, I expected all the lying | bunk about my being the tool of bankers and big business. Why, I} batted those babies around so hard | in N. R. A that I am less popular | with them than the smallpox. If they | wanted to hire me, it would not be to | talk but to keep still.” He said he believed “there is a mightly bulwark of sane, sensible | American opinion with me in believ- | ing that the gospel preached by these | economic shysters is a gospel that leads away from recovery and progress | to disorder and anarch)’ 3 GORE SCOUTS REPORTS Johnson Could Not Be Qualified to Seek Senate. Senator Gore, Democrat, of Okla- homa is inclined to minimize reports | that Hugh Johnson, former N. R. A. | chief, might be “drafted” by the ad- ministration to run against him for lant, Says | the Senate next year. | “I don't believe,” he observed, “that the general could take out his final | naturalization papers in Oklahoma | in time to file for the place. Besides, | Blue Eagles cannot vote in Oklahoma.” But he said: “The more the mer- rier” | | JAILED FOR WRECK PLOT | 1 Trnnslent Accused of Damaging | Switch on Sante Fe Line. LOS ANGELES, March 12 (#)— | James Winston, 45, colored, transient, was held in jail today, charged with attempting to wreck a fast passenger train. Deputy Sheriffs Ray Bogie and P.’ M. Kunou said he admitted removing | two bolts from a switch on the Santa | Fe line, but claimed he intended to become a “rewarded hero” by Ilm\l‘ll officials before a train passed. The faulty switch was d\scmered 30 minutes before the California Lim- ited was to pass. "34 Far out. ’34 | ment mentions were untaxable. Spick-and-span inside and Road tested. Won- derful buy .... One car in ten thousand. Equipped with air wheels, improved type. Leather upholstery. Rumble Seat. MELLON'S STEEL DEAL SCRUTINIZED U.S.Claims Merger Actually Was Sale and Financier Owes More Taxes. By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, March 12.—What happened to the McClintic-Marshall Corp.—the Mellons’ steel baby which grew into a giant—furnished the Government material today for one of the most technical questioning bouts so far in Andrew W. Mellon’s income tax hearing. A financial history going back to 1900 and continuing until 1931 when the big steel fabricating concern al- legedly was merged with the Bethle- hem Steel Corp. is being traced by Government counsel to prove its con- tention that Mellon should have paid $1,000,000 more income tax on the deal than he actually did. $3,089,000 Asked in AllL The Internal Revenue Bureau con- tends that, in all, Mellon should pay $3,089,000 additional in tax and penalties for 1931, and the McClintic- Marshall deal is one of the major | phases of the case. Mellon himself insists he should have a $139,000 re- fund for that year. McClintic-Marshall $250,000 concern, a the | began as backed by | former Treasury Secretary and his | brother, the late R. B. Mellon, and in three decades grew to a $65.000.000 | | corporation. The Mellons at the start | owned 60 per cent of the stock and H. H. McClintic and C. D. Marshall, |20 per cent each. | Merger Called a Sale. | It is the alleged merger with Beth- | lehem, closing a romantic chapter in the progress of the steel industry, | which the Government is trying to show as a sale, not a merger, and therefore, Andrew W. Mellon should pay the 20 per cent surtax rate on the entire $6,549,000 received by him in the deal. Earle J. Patterson, former secretary- treasurer of McClintic-Marshall, sup- plied the mass of figures which began | unfolding the tale of the corporate existence of the firm which helped build the Panama Canal. He was called by Frank J. Hogan, Mellon’s | chief counsel, trying ‘o show the finan- | cier should only have paid taxes on | $1,830.000 cash received in the deal | and that other sums the Govern- | Mellon Paid on $1,830,000. It was testified Mellon did pay on the $1,830,000 his share of cash (mi- nus an original investment claim) received. Hogan argued that, in the merger, Bethlehem acquired all of McClintic- Marshall assets in exchange for 240.- 000 shares of its common capital stock | and $8.200,000 of its bonds. He said only the cash should be taxed, point- ing to the statute which says where all assets of a firm are exchanged for those of another, the value received | is not taxable. F. R. Shearer, Government account- takes the view, however, that | Bethlehem acquired only 30 per cent | of McClintic-Marshall and that the Union Construction Co. was formed to take over some $41,000,000 in as- sets not wanted by Bethlehem. = Woman Convicted of Matricide. | LAUREL, Miss., March 12 (#).—A Jury today convicted Ouida Keeton of murdering her mother, Mrs. Daisy Keeton. Judge W. Joe Pack imme- | diately sentenced the defendant to a | | life term in the State penitentiary. | MAHOGANY AND WALNUT POSTER BEDS Double and Sincle sizes. Many styles 1o select o Specially priced for one day $6.95 BJ.Nee Co. FINE FURNITURE @ 7th and H N.W. Ford V-8 Std. Coupe above average condition. 31 "33 ’33 Tires practically new. 33 - $499 31 |in the bottom: Bad weather. FLETCHER VISIONS LIBERAL PLATFORM Thinks G. 0. P. Can Harmo- nize “Left-Wingers,” but Makes No Forecast. By the Assoclated Press. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 12. —A Republican platform in 1936 lib- eral enough to find favor with “left wirgers” of the party, without antag- onizing the conservatives, was pre- dicted here vesterday by Henry P. Fletcher, chairman of the Republican | National Committee. Chairman Fletcher, who leaves to- day for Washington after several | weeks’ rest in Florida, scouted re- ports from the Capital that there would be a reactionary Republican ticket and a progressive Republican ticket. “It’s too early to be specific as to| what will happen in 1936, said Fletcher, “but it is safe to say that there will be no divided Republican party when the time comes to line up for the next presidential cam- paign.” Fletcher said he couldn’t guess whether Senator Huey Long would run for President, nor what cffect his candidacy might have on the result of the election. e Frog for Weather Forecasting. TORONTO, Ontario (#).—The new- est in barometers is described by An- | drew Thompson of the Meteorological Service. A medium-sized frog is placed in a jar of water. If the frog stays I it ambles around the midle of the jar: Fair weather. If it stays near the top: Sure sign of good weather. says Mr. Thompson. NOW 1 EAT Cucumbers No Upset Stomach TlME TO HAVE YOUR SPRING HAT CLEANED REBLOCKED BACHRACH Millinery & Hat Blockers 733 11th St. NW. PRESTIGE . . . POSITION . . PROMOTION follow that EXTRA accomplishment {ANOTHER LANGUAGE French . . Spanish Italian . . German Made as Easy as English by the Berlitz Method | THE BERLITZ METHOD IS THE | SAME METHOD BY WHICH YOU LEARNED ENGLISH Only at the Berlitz School may you expect genuine Berlitz instruction in any spoken larguage. No individual. no other institu- tion can offer you the advantages that are | yours in a real Berlitz School. Private or | clase instruction. Day or evening. Rea- sonable rates. Ease So | < pavments ANY NEW CLASSES STARTING THIS COMING WEEK — RESERV VENIENT HOUR— ERLIT SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES The Language Center of Washington. 1115 Connecticut Ave. NAtional 0230, Between the Mayfiower Hotel and L st. N.W. You'll need lots of Colonial Anthracite before Cherry Blossom time. How’s your coal bin? Leok up “Col nl-l c-n Lady’s HAMILTON Wrist Watch White or natural yel- low gold filled. . .$40 With filled gold bracelet $42.50 Open a Charge Account ® Jewelers @ Stationers ® Platinumsmiths Nash 882-R Spt. Coupe. Chevrolet Master Coupe. Terraplane 8 Cabriolet. . Pontiac D. L. Coupe.... ’32 Ford V-8 D. L. Tudor... Buick 866-S Spt. Coupe. ’33 Pontiac D. L. Coach.... °32 Ford B-4 Victoria ...... Ford V-8 Cabriolet Radio. o 32 Low mile- Like new.... $565 1820 14th St. N.W. °30 Lincoln Berline Sedan.. ’33 Ford V-8 Coupe. ’32 Ford V-8 Tudor. 32 Chev. Spt. Coupe, air wheels 3 Ford V-8 Cabriolet.........295 '32 Chevrolet Coach .......... 339 “Ac“ " I- Yellow Section Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres, 43 Years at 935 F St. 1933 Ford V-8 TUDOR Best buy of the month! Finish like new. Motor smooth and pow- erful. Interior spotless. Will sell on sight, so hurry! 1114 Vermont Ave. N.W. 1423 L St. N.W. 5949 ¢:¢. Ave. N.W.

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