Evening Star Newspaper, March 17, 1935, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTO NEW YORK ARTIST 1S CLARK WINNER Eugene Speicher Painting Chosen Best Among 428 on Exhibition List. Eugene Speicher, nationally prom- fnent New York artist, has been awarded first W. A. Clark prize of $2,000 and the Corcoran gold medal for his pairting. * ‘Red’ Moore.” en- tered in the Fourteenth Biennial Exhi- | bition of Contemporary American Oil Paintings to be held at the Corcoran Gallery of Art March 24 to May 5, inclusive, the gallery announced last night Frederick Car! Frieseke, American artist resicing in Paris, won second Clark prize of $1.500 and the Corcoran silver medal for his painting, “Girl at Piano.” Henry E. Mattson of Woodstock, N. Y., was given third prize of $1,000 and the Corcoran bronze medal for “The Beacon.” Kenneth M. Adams of Taos. N. Mex received fourth prize of $500 and the Corcoran honorable mention certifi- cate for his “New Mexico scape.” The awards, keenly coveted in the world of American art. were an- nounced by C. Powell Minn director of the Corcoran Galle Land- Prize Winners in Corcoran Painting \ D. C, MARCH 17, 1935—PART ONE. Exhibit Right: Oil painting by Eugene Speicher, entitled “‘Red’ Moore,” which was awarded the first W. A. Clark prize of $2,000 and the Corcoran Gold Medal at the Fourteenth Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Oil Paintings at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Left: Oil painting by Frederick Carl Frieseke, entitled “Girl at Piano,” which was awarded the second W. A. Clark prize of $1,500 and the Corcoran selections were made by a jury of | noted artists, headed by Jonas Lie of New York, which spent most of the past week passing on entries for the exhibition, superintending their hang- ing and judging them for the prize competition. Other members of the jury were George Harding of Phila- delphia, Pa.; Victor Higgins of Ta N. Mex.: Henry Lee McFee of Wood stock, N. Y. and Richard E. Miller of Provincetown, Mass. 128 Pictures Selected. The winning pictures were chosen from a group of 428 paintings by 353 artists, selected . by the jury as worthy of inclusion in the Corcoran Gallery's famed biennial art show This is the largest collection ever ap- proved for onme of these events small number of the accepted pic- tures were not entered in the prize competition The first prize winner is'a care- fully executed painting of a sturdy blacksmith, caught in a moment of leisure beside his anvil. “Red” is seated in a chair in a comfortable, re- flective attitude, his arms crossed and his knees apart. His shirt is open at the throat and a soiled leather apron is draped over his lap. The picture is one with popular in- terest, as well as the technical qual- {ties that appeal to an art jury. Speicher is not a newcomer to the Corcoran’s biennial exhibitions. He won second W. A. Clark prize at the “biennial” of 1928, and under rules of the exhibition this left him eligible to compete only for first prize. His painting, “Sara Rivers.” is in the permanent collection of the gallery. The cash prizes, aggregating $5.000, are part of the income df ed from a trust fund established by the late Senator W. A. Clark of Montana for the purpose of perpetuating the awards. The endowment subsequent- ly set up by his widow, and duplicat- ing the Senator's gift, provides the funds for organizing the biennial ex- hibitions. Surplus income from both funds is made available to the trus- tees of the gallery. for purchase, in their discretion, of works by Amer- jcan artists for the permanent col- lection of the gallery. Has Won Many Prizes. Speicher, who has homes in New York City and Woodstock, N. Y., was born in Buffalo, N. Y., April 5, 1883. He studied art in Buffalo, New York City, and in Europe. He has won many awards since receiving his first honor, the Proctor prize of the Na- tional Academy of Design in 1911 Among these awards, in addition to the 1928 second Clark prize. are: The Isidor portrait prize, Salmagundi Club, 1913; third Hallgarten prize, National Academy of Design, 1914; National Acad- emy of Design, silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposi- tion, 1915; Beck gold medal, Penn- sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, 1920; third-class medal, 1921, and second-class medal, 1922. Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, and Potter Palmer gold medal and $1,000, Art Institute of Chicago, 1926, He is a member of the National Academy of Design, New York (na- tional academician, 1927); the Society of Portrait Painters, National Arts Club, Boston Art Club, Century Club, Institute of Arts and Letters, Inter- national Society of Painters, Gravers and Sculptors, and the New Society. Frieseke Previous Winner. Frieseke, born in Owosso, Mich April 7, 1874, also is a veteran e hibitor at the Corcoran shows and winner of third Clark prize in 1928 and fourth Clark prize in 1908. ‘By reason of these previous awards he SPECIAL NOTICES. T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR bills_unless contracted by mysell. JAM W._BLAINE. NY 1 3337 bth st. se. 1K® DR AVON Spiritual medium - Meetinss y. - = 943 Penna. Ave. sy BPRING DAYS BRING FOND MEMORIES Have that dear old daguerreotype. or other treasured picture reproduced into a beau- tiful miniature EDMONSTON STUDIO. 3 __ (Dependable for 27 years.) GIVE YOUR BACK YARD AND CELLAR & Spring_tonic—Have trash_and ashes removed by rel Metropolitan 5300 or writ Special rates o apartment houses. and _clubs. Dail 1 DONE IN YOUR_HOME new sprinzs, $1 50 cach . ‘Star office ¢ CONRAD. CHIROPODIST with Drs. W. W_and E. E. Sth st. n.w_ Phone Dis- ) 5:40_p.m. WEEKLY TRIPS TO AND FROM BALTI- more; aiso trips within 24 hours' notice to a5y peint in United States ' SMITH'S TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. _North 3343 ND DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS A .. Phila_and York. Frequent trips to other East- ern cities. “Dependable Service Since 896" THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER GE CO._phone Decatur_2500. FOR ul TE| cushicns refilled. £ddress Box 68 DR CHAS F. now associated Thompson. 705 trict_ 0453, 8:30 a.m. to T _WILL NOT, BE RESPONSIBLE any debts cont than myself. EUGENE E. PALMER. 1440 R_st. n.w. 17 HONEY, 10-LB.CAN, 1bs.. 90c: 5 combs, by 10 & SPEI $190; BEST. 3 Call West 1Il‘ 4 URN-LOAD RATES ON FULL and part loads to all points within 1.000 miles: padded vans; guaranteed service; local ‘moving also e National 1460 NAT. DEL._ASSOC. 1317 N. Y. ave. INVALID ROLLIN TRS—For rent or sale: new and used: all styles. all sizes: re- duced prices. UNITED S STORAGE CO.._ 418 10th st. n.w. 844, STATE: ME, 1 LKALINE MILK goats at Faun Dairy. Call mgr. of Peoples Drug Store. Columbia 6818, 2618 _Conn. ave. and Lincoin 2778. 1 d E. , or Columbia 2080, 3121 14th CH from Swiss n.w._Daily ‘delivery. LONG DISTANCE MOVINGS Take advantage of our special return- load rate on household movings. full in- Free _estimates AC] P.. 613 Wood- ward Bldg. 15th and g National 311°_nights. Cleve i Preserve Your Records ——through the PLANOGRAPH process. Original copy of manuscripts. ads. pho- tographs. etc.. are reproduced quickly and inexpensively. Inquiries solicited. Columbia Planograph Co. .bo L 8t. NE. Metropolitan 4861 ~|be from 9 am. to 5:30 pm. On all| hogls racted by any one other | Silver Medal. was eligible to compete only for first or second place in the show this year. He is represented in the permanent collection of the gallery by two pic- | tures—"Peace” and “Dressing Room.” | Frieseke was a pupil of the Art In- stitute of Chicago, the Art Students’ League of New York and of Constant, | ens and Whistler in Paris. Other | ds he has received are: Silver medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904: gold medal, Munich. 1904; Temple gold medal, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1913; grand prize. Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915; | Harris silver medal and prize, Art In- stitute of Chicago. 1916; William M. R. French gold medal, Art Institute of Chicago, 1920; Potter Palmer gold medal and $1.000, Art Institute of Chicago, 1920: Edward B. Butler prize, Art Institute of Chicago, 1920. and gold medal, Philadelphia Art s a member of the National | Academy of Design (national aca- demician, 1914); Societe National des Beaux-Arts, Paris; American Art As- sociation of Paris, International So- | ciete of Arts and Letters, New York Water Color Club and he is a chevalier of the Legion of Honor, France. | Marine Scene Is Winner. Mattson's picture is a marine scene, showing a lighthouse on a rock: | coast. Mattson is a native of Sweden, | where he was born in 1887. He is a naturalized American. He was a pu- pil of the Worcester Art Museum and is a member of the Woodstock Art Association and the American Society ! of Painters. Sculptors and Engravers. He received first Harris silver medal | from the Art Institute of Chicago, in 11931. He is represented in the Phil- | lips Memorial Gallery here. Adams’ painting is of a typical | Southwestern adobe dwelling of the | type common in Taos. Born in To- | peka, Kans., August 6, 1897, he is a | pupil of Andrew Dasburg. He won honorable mention for painting in | 1928 and for graphic arts in 1930 at | the Denver Art Museum and first i honorable mention at the exhibition of American lithographs, Philadel- | phia Print Club, in 1932. Gallery Praises Artists. In a statement last night the gal- lery said: “The paintings submitted for the present exhibition were so high in average, both as to quality and in- terest, that the number chosen by the jury was considerably larger than ai any former display of the series. | “The gallery guarantees to mc:udw in these exhibitions all work accepted by the jury, and the jury is not Um-‘ ited as to the number of victures|of its yearly budget on armaments. | west which they may accept. but the rules provide that there shall be no cbliga- by any one artist. called upon to provide wall space for 85 paintings more than were hung the Japanese population is happy to | Gallatin, west to Eighth street, south | two years ago. This Changing World Munition Makers Cash In Now as World Races to Arm. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. HE Nye investigation of profits made by manufacturers out of war material is followed ! keenly abroad. Nobody believes that future wars can be stopped by drasticaily regulating the manufacture of arma- ments or by taking away the profits from those who nanufaciure them. These men have had a share in the outbreak of wars in the past. But it is certain that the causes of the | next war will not be traced to the | same group. There will be no gains | for anybody from another conflict and | the arms manufacturers arerealists. | P But while there can be no profits from an actual war, the armament | race which is taking place now in | every country, from the bellicose great powers like Germany, PFrance, Italy, Japan and the like to the peace- | loving nations like Switzerland and | the Scandinavian kingdoms prove | profitable to the international ammu- ; nition makers. In time of peace profits are not regulated, trade is free and there is plenty of money to be | made by selling war materials to al- x * x At the present pace in two years there will not be a single solvent country left on the globe. Mars is swallowing the profits made by hard-working people. most every country in the world. ‘ = TPu8LIc’s PREFITS | | new terminus at Fourth street and | | Kansas avenue. Japan is spending more than half | This, at a time when the Japanese ' street, north to Gallatin, east to Fourth | farmers are so hard up that they |and north to a stand south of Kansas | tion to hang more than two works|have to sell their daughters to the | avenue. This year we were | yoshiwara houses to pay interest on | north on Fourth street to Kansas ave- their mortgages. Eighty per cent of have a handful of rice and some raw | help Austria indirectly, and if the | visit of the heir to the British throne | could bring a new influx of tourists, | | so much the better for everybody. The prince has set a new fashion while visiting the Austrian capital by wearing a red carnation, The Vienna young bloods proceeded to immitate the royal arbiter of fashions. But they received a police summons | and were threatened with a jail sen- | tence. Red is the socialist emblem. which has been banned since last | Spring when that party was annihil- ated by the late Chancellor Dollfuss. The Vienese Beau Brummells had to discard the offensive flower. PR Great preparations are ‘made in | Amid the March chorus of income tax | England for the celebration of King yaic and groans comes along John | | George's silver anniversary as King- Emperor. Since January, London goldsmiths have been working at Te- setting the monarch’s crown. The Indian princesses have sent, as a token of their loyaity to the sovereign, $5,000,0000 worth of precious gems—diamonds, emeralds, pearls and sapphires of rare beauty—which are being set in the crown. The festivities will out- shine anything London has ever seen. Ships been which have decom- missioned, like the Mauretania, have | been refitted as floating hotels to take | hundreds of visitors to the capital of the Empire. Even the white elephant of the American merchant marine, the Leviathan, will be recommissioned, taking a large number of tourists to these celebrations. The American Embassy in London is swamped by thousands with re- quests from American royalty hunters to be presented at court this Summer. EXTENSION OF BUS LINE AUTHORIZED W. R. T. Given Permission to Run Service From Sherman Circle to Fourth Street. ‘The Public Utilities Commission yes- terday authorized the Washington worth line from Sherman Circle to a ‘The order is effective March 25 Outbound these busses will go north- on Illinois avenue to Eighth Inbound the busses will go nue, southwest on Kansas avenue to to Illinois and thence to Sherman “The gallery has at its disposal fine | fish—whenever possible—once a day. | Circle and to the downtown area over additional exhibition space. western end of the building on the second floor, just beyond the rooms | set apart for the W. A. Clark collec- tion, we have four beautiful and per- fectly lighted new exhibition rooms. | During the course of the current ex- hibition these galleries are utilized for a portion of the Fourteenth Bien- nial Exhibition, thereby affording op- portunity for the best possible instal- | lation.” Director Minnigerode announced that an opening private view of the | exhibition will be held next Saturday | at 9 pm. The exhibition will be| opened to the general public next Sunday at 2 pm. Hours on Sundays will be from 2 to 5:30 p.m.; on Mon- | days, from noon to 5:30 p.m., except Easter Monday, when the hours will | | other days the exhibition will be |open from 9 am. to 5:30 p.m. | several thousand cards of invitation | | have been issued for the private show- ing. 'RANGERS CONTINUE GAMBLING ROUND-UP| Raids in Galveston and Houston Result in Seizure of De- vices and Arrests. | By the Associated Press. AUSTIN, Tex., March 16.—Texas | Rangers were “in the saddle” again | tonight under orders from Gov. James V. Allred to stamp out crime. In a series of raids in widely-sep- arated cities, they seized liquor and gambling apparatus, made a number of arrests and laid plans for a deter- mined campaign to enforce all laws. Gov. Allred called on all “law-abid- ing citizens of Texas to back me up and to demand that their local offi- cers stop this wholesale flaunting of the law.” The Governor telegraphed Guy T. Helvering, collector of internal rev- enue at Washington, a protest against the Federal Government’s levying and collecting an excise tax on liquor in Texas. Prohibition of hard liquor has not been repealed in Texas, although 3.2 beer has been legalized. In Galveston, a seaside resort, a’ fashionable downtown gambling house was raided by Rangers under com- mand."of the veteran Capt. J. B. Wheatley. | In Houston eight Rangers under | Capt. Fred McDaniels marched into | a night club, smashed two dice tables, confiscated a roulette wheel and charged two men with operating a gaming house. Gambling houses in | | both San Antonio and Galveston shut down pending developments. 4] industrious people in the world, but | tary and naval preparation. The British government is spend- ing hundreds of millions of dollars | on the same items, while millions | of citizens are on the verge of starvation. | The same situation prevails France. There the population is being hit not only by increased taxa- tion but also by the fact that every | citizen henceforth will have to give two years of his life to military serv- ice; two years wasted, as the socialists say. * ok x This country, too, is being compelled to spend some $800,000,000 on na- tional defense, a tremendous ex- penditure even for the United States. There is & vicious circle in this armament race. Not every country wants to join it. But the fact that the neighbors have started piling up arms and armaments, renders the position of the peacefully - minded countries precarious. And whether they want it or not they must follow the others, or go one better. France is arming because Ger- many is rearming. Germany is arming because the others are armed. The United States is arm- ing because the Japanese have set the example in the Pacific and the Japanese are arming because the Russians have a powerful military ‘machinery. * kK X The peoples of all these countries do not realize yet how much more taxes they will have to pay in the future. Everywhere unemployment is rampant and the military prepara- tions do absorb a large number of unemployed. Furthermore, it is true that some of the nations which are arming today do it merely as an in- surance for the future. They do not want to be the prey of their neighbor. | Under these circumstances they con- sider re-armament as an insurance premium. A heavy one, it is true, but worth while. * k ok x The Prince of Wales visited Vienna recently in an endeavor to help the Austrian capital to becgme a fash- ionable tourist center. government turned a deaf ear to the suggestion of Herr Schuschnigg that a loan might help the Austrian sit- uation. But Louden is 'lflhl to in| The British | At the | The Japanese probably are the most | the present route. the result of their toil goes to mili- | plans for extension of the route of | A ‘K JLAANh Jne. The commission yesterday approved another W. R. T. bus line from Sher- man Circle to North Capitol and Long- fellow street to provide better service for residents of the Chillum Heights area. This will go into effect March 25 also. Royal Scot Cuts Time. In a recent run from Edinburgh | and Glasgow, Scotland, to London, the | Royal Scot covered the 463, miles from Bletchly to Euston in 46 min- | utes, including 2 minutes’ delay by | signals. ENROLL NOW FOR LESSONS IN Swedish-Dutch PERSIAN RUSSIAN ERLIT SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES The Lansuase Center of Washington. 1115 Connecticut Ave. NAtional 07 Between the Mayflower Hotel and L St. N.W. TERMITES | TERMITE CONTROL CO. Nat'l Press Bldg. Nat’l 2711 “Ask Our Customers” Exempt Citizens | Try to Force U. S. : To Take Tax Cash Ex-Millionaires Living on Relief Familiar Sight to Collector. By the Associated Press. | SAN FRANCISCO, March 16— V. Lewis, 32, the country’s youngest Internal Revenue collector, to an- | nounce that some citizens insist on | paying to the Government though they are exempt from tex. But the Government consistently ‘rdusfis to accept the money. “We get letters every now and then,” said Lewis, “from some one who says he thinks everybody ought to contribute to his government, | whether he is made to or not. Of course, we send the money back. Sometimes it is a check for $5 or $10, sometimes more.” Sometimes the parade of depres- sion tragedies that files by Lewis’ desk | “gets him down." | "“I have had to watch gray-haired | men sit over in that chair and break down and cry,” he related. “In some | cases 1 knew from the records they had bren worth as high as $8,000,000 or $9.000.000. They haven't anything | lett, are living on relief.” "ALUMNI TO MEET IOWA ALUM inner April 3 Will Honor Prof. D | Frederick G. Higbee. | ‘The University of Iowa Alumni As- | sociation will honor Prof. Frederick C. Higbee, executive secretary of the Iowa | University Alumni Association, who is lin the city to attend the American | Alumni Council here April 4, 5 and 6, | at a dinner meeting in the La Fayette | Hotel at 6:30 p.m. April 3. | " Dr. Higbee will deliver the principal | address. George E. McLean, former | president of the association, will be | Rapid Transit Co. to extend its Pet- | guest of honor. Reservations are being | | handled by Karl S. Hoffman and watches into MONEY at Turn your old | trinkets, jewelry | EXPOSURE OF VICE PATRONS PENDING Polly Adler’s Gotham Trial Scheduled to Begin on Tuesday. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, March 16.—The gues- tion of whether Polly Adler's famous roster of clients will be forever sup- pressed or thrown open to public gaze may be determined next Tuesday. That much developed tonight as New York's current campaign against organized vice and policy racketeering moved forward in fits and starts. Trial Begins Tuesday. On Tuesday the notorious Adler woman, & veteran of the Seabury and magistrates’ courts investigations, is scheduled to go to trial on a charge the grand scale. And Assistant District Attorney Maurice G. Wahl has threatened to summon her patrons if he deems their testimony necessary to round out his case. “I don't care who they are,” declared. District Attorney William C. Dodge, who has heen inclined to take a more charitable attitude in the matter, dis- closed today that among the names listed in the celebrated “black book™ is that of a movie actor. Denies Officials Listed. He made this revelation in denying that there were any politicians or public officials among them. | Dodge, who previously had shown | a disposition not to “blast the reputa- | tions of people just because their names are in the book of a notorious | woman,” said “not a single person” | had approached him with a request | to be spared. he ST. PATRICK SOCIETY | HOLDS ANNUAL FETE Irishman's Dinner and Play Fea- | ture Meeting—Senator Borah ,‘ and Judge Wells Speak. ’ | An Irishman's dinner, with every- thing green from the olives to the| {ice cream, and a play that was thick | | with brogue was the way the Society | of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick | celebrated on the eve of St. Patrick’s | day at its seventh annual banquet | in the Carlton Hotel last night. | The drama, “Widow Lally’s Evic- | tion.” a story of rural life in the| | County Clare, was enacted by the | | players of the Priendly Sons of St.| Patrick of the District. and featursd | Denis E. Connell. one of the Capital’s | outstanding amateur actors. | The banquet was opened with in- | vocation by Rev. Dr. Patrick J. Healy and concluded with benediction by Right Rev. John A. Ryan. Senator | William E. Borah and Harold B. Wells, judge of Court of Errors and Appeals of New Jersey, made ad- | dresse: Service Men Needed en. ¥ training. and larger stari Act immediately. 1 Automatic Refrigeration Service School We service electric refrigeration Phone District 2850. STATISTICAL CLERK Opening New Classes March 18 Special course preparing for civil service examination starts Monday, 5:15 p.m. The course includes only material essential for exam- ination, which was especially pre- pared for exclusive use by this school. There is practice material for each assignment, covering in- telligence tests, elementary com- putations, tabulation and graphing, which are presented in mimeo- graphed assignments. The class is personally conducted by an experi- enced instructor who is a practical statistician. Register before 5:15 p.m. March 18. MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL | FOR SECRETARIES er Building Tivoll The of maintaining a disorderly house on | DARROW READY FOR N. R. A. HEARING; BORAH CRITICIZES (Continued Prom First Page.) being subjected to extortionate prices and the report says specifically that this price fixing has the sanction and the protection of the codes. “A similar investigation by this commission would disclose a similar condition, although effective in a dif- ferent way, in other industries. This is not an isolated case. “We are about to vote the burden of some $5,000,000,000 on the taxpay- ers of this country. A large amount of this sum will be expended for mate- rials purchased of these combinations. The material will be purchased at the prices fixed in the manner disclosed by this report. “Thus a large part of this money voted out of the taxpayers’ money ets of these price-fixing monopolies. A goodly per cent of the $5,000,000,000 will by this reason never reach those whom it ought to reach. Williams Quoted. “S. Clay Willlams, chairman of the Recovery Board, made the statement | before the Finance Committee on yes- terday that the anti-trust laws must be relaxed in order to continue the codes. In other words, it was a plain statement that monopoly is an essen- tial factor in the code system. “He also stated that the enforce- ment of the codes would likely destroy about 10 per cent of the small business interests of the country. Well, when you get that 10 per cent destroyed in the very nature of things you must destroy another 10 per cent that is on the outer edge of the industrial world.” DARROW EN ROUTE HERE. will be devoted directly into the pock- | Committee investigating the N. R. A. The Review Board appointed by President Roosevelt, of which Darrow was chairman, severely criticized the N. R. A. in a report last year, and in an interview last month the veteran Chicago lawyer, now 77, de- clared he believed the N. R. A. never would work in its present form. | He refused to say today what testi- {mony he will give before the com- | mittee, because “just now I don't know what it will be.” “I can't tell in advance,” he said, “because théy’ll ask questions and I'll answer them. | “Then maybe I'll lor two,” he smiled. | Darrow said he expected to remain in Washington only several days. RELIEF MASSING IN FLORIDA DENIED Plan to Aid Homeless Veterans Does Not Call for 25,000 in Camps, Says Director. give an opinion By the Associated Press KEY WEST, Fla, March 16— Julius F. Stone, jr.. Florida emergency relief director, said today there s no intention of concentrating 25.000 homeless veterans of the World War in Florida employment camps in the | near future Stone said the 25,000 figure he used in a press conference yesterday was an estimate of the number of home- less veterans in the United States, which he understood had been made by Robert Rechner, director of the C.c.cC. | In Washington, Harry L. Hopkins | Federal emergency relief adminis- trator, said talk of caring for that number of men in Florida public works ¢ amps was ‘“‘without founda- Will Answer Questions Opinions. CHICAGO, March 16 (4 —Clarence | 1Darrow, feeling more fit than he has j=or | Washington today to appear Monday |service men for which Florida had |8t 10 am. before the Senate Finance 'ocen selected as the site several weeks, departed and Give for tion in fact,” and called Stone by telephone Stone said he had used the figure as “background” in outlining the pos- sibilities of an experiment in the re- habilitation of itinerant former BE WISE, HAVE YOUR WATCH REPAIRED BY J. F. ADAMS. EXCLUSIVE WATCH REPAIR FACTORY ANY WATCH Completely Cleaned. Ad- iusted & Demagnetized —Guaranteed One Year L g ey RYSTAL. . 29€C PON e Positive Proof of Reliability Sixteen years of good lonest watch repairing is_our reccrd satisfied customers in Washington and Surrounding Thou: Cities WASHINGTON'S LARGEST WATCH REPAIR FACTORY J. F. ADAMS A. Kahn Inc. Perfect DIAMOND Platinum Ring Half carat (50-100ths). Brilliant perfect diamond, set in handsome platinum mounting. 5175 Other Diamond Rings for Less—Other Diamond Rings for More. Obena Charge Account ® Jewelers @ Stationers @ Platinumsmiths 804 F ST. N.W. Cor. 8th and F NAtional 2032 A. Kahn Jnc. _Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 Years at 935 F St. Arthur J. Sundlum, Pres. | 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET ! Park Road ia 3000. 14th St Telephone Col e NAME YOUR OWN TERMS ’34 FORD V-8 TUDOR *475 Lustrous black fini off by cream wheel: I'd like everybody in Washington to know the difference in a used car and the ones we sell as GOLD y¢ CARS TO begin with GOLD STAR CARS have the rep- utation of one of Washington's oldest and most respected dealers behind them. They are exactingly reconditioned by Master Mechanics and they must make good in an actual road-test before we'll offer them for sale. A 1009, Money-Ba Guarantee further protects vour investment. 32 Chevrolet Coach $339 32 Ford V-8 Tudor smartly set- . A perfect car. 275 1820 14th ST.N.W. 5949 GA. AVE. N.W, *34 Ford V-8 Tudor *34 Ford V-8 D. L. Coupe. *33 Ford V-8 D. L. Coupe. *32 Ford V-8 D. L. Coach. *32 Ford V.8 Cabriolet.. *32 Ford V-8 D. L. Coupe. *33 Chevrolet Sedan ’30 Ford Town Sedan. *31 Ford Tudor.. *29 Ford Tudor 30 Ford Phaeton *32 Pontiac Spt. Coupe '3% Ford V-8 Spt. Coupe. ’33 Ford V-8 Tudor... *33 Ford V-8 D. L. Fordor. EALERS' SINCE '32 Ford V.8 Std. Tudor.... 21 1916 1114 Vermont Ave.NW. 1423 L ST.N.W. ck °31 Auburn Conv. Coupe 325 32 Terraplane D. L. Sedan 325 °32 Chevrolet Sport Coupe 315

Other pages from this issue: