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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. e e e e R BIVRNINGE D T R R VAR TNV UING o), G LS COERCION UNDER N.R.A.ISCHARGED Head of Printing Concern Says Code Is Dominated by Big Business. By the Associated Press. A self-termed small business man complained to the Senate Finance Committee today that big busincss had attempted to coerce and intimi- date him through an N. R. A. code authority. George S. Tracy, president of the Perkins-Tracy Printing Co. of St. Paul, Minn., was the witness, the first of the “little fellow” group to charge oppression under the Blue Eagle to the investigating Senators. He said the graphic arts code au- thority, dominated by big business firms, sought to keep him from get- ting a State printing contract on the charge he bid below cost, though he was complying with the code wage and hour provisions. Smith L. Scoggin, president of the St. Paul Typographical Union, backed up Tracy’s charge. He contended the Perkins-Tracy Co. was ‘‘persecuted” for employing union labor. Tracy told the Senators his business was purely intrastate. He charged the Code Authority tried to make him adopt a system of cost accounting under which he would have continued to charge depreciation after his ma- chinery was paid for. Opposed to Price Fixing. Some one directly concerned as a competitor, he said, was making an effort to prejudice his bid. Tracy also contended the code authority action apparently was dictated by three big printing companies which he said had & monopoly in the Twin Cities. The witness said he favored the wage and hour provisions of N. R. A., but was opposed to price fixing be- cause it would give the big companies an advantage. Scoggin said he was opposed to “any trade association governing a code.” He said his organization felt a “great injustice” had been done to the Per- kins-Tracy Co. Cuban Narrowly Escapes Firing Squad | Manuel Fonseca (in dark suit) is shown standing in front of the wall against which he was to have been him. Fonseca was sentenced to die | squad. Dr. Nestor Carronel, defense | shot by a firing squad, but a commutation of the death sentence to life imprisonment at the last minute saved for having explosives in his possession. This dramatic photo was taken at the time the commutation document was being read by Capt. Jesus Gonzales Hernandez, commander of the attorney, dressed in white, is shown on Fonseca’s left.—Wide World Photo. WARDMAN PRICE Refusal of Supreme Court to Pass on Case Lets VIRTUALLY UPHELD targest Balloon in the World To Make Stratosphere Flight Attempt Next Summer to Carry New Safety Devices, Heavier Fabric and Non-Explosive Gas. MELLON REVEALS SALES T0 ASCALOT Tells of Transactions While Debating Whether to Ac- cept Ambassadorship. By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, April 2—Andrew W. Mellon disclosed today at his income tax hearing that he was offered the post as Ambassador to the Court of 8t. James several weeks before he re- signed as Secretary of the Treasury in 1932. The disclosure came as Robert H. Jackson, chief counsel for the Gov- »rnment in its efforts to collect $3,089.- 000 additional -tax on Mellon’s 1931 income, started his second day's cross examination of the financier. Jackson began delving into the sale of several blocks of stock by Mellon in 1931 to his daughter’s Ascalot Co., a holding concern. H ‘There were two transactions and | Mellon said he thought there was a day or two intervening between their discussion of these while he was in Pittsburgh sometime in December, 1931. “How many days were you in Pitts- burgh?” Jackson asked. | “I don't recall. It was approaching | the time I was going abroad,” Mellon | replied. | The financier’s resignation from the | Treasury was not announced until 1932. “Did you know in December that you were going abroad?” Jackson | pressed. Debated Going Abroad. | “Perhaps not,” was the reply. “I do not recall just when I knew it. The | post had been offered to me. I had been asked to go abroad and in the beginning I was doubtful whether 1 desired to go abroad and that matter was in abeyance—Oh. for a couple of | weeks or more. I don't recall the | time you are referring to. I don't re- call just where I was when I made my decision.” { Jackson shifted his questioning to | transaction after transaction, ranging | from 1931 to 1933, and Mellon showed TUESDAY, 'APRIL 2, 1935. thought would be a good investment I said the best I could think of at the moment was Koppers Gas & Coke. I knewgall about this, which was pay- ing 6 per cent dividend and was a sound investment. It was difficult to buy in any amount on the market and I had this block and I said if he wanted to, I would sell. It was quite a bit ago, but my recollection is the sum was about $100,000. Q It was $92,000? A. Yes, $92,000. Q. Ascolat’s income was improved? A. Yes. Q. And Ascalot and you took tax losses? A. No dcubt. Aluminum Held Best. Jackson pressed Mellon for his rea- sons in recommcending Koppers stock to his children as investments, and | the subject of aluminum company stock also came up. Letters intro- duced yesterday that were written by Mellon to kLis children said he con- sidered aluminum the best investment of all his holdings. “When you have good management you don’t need to exercise your mind about 1t,” Mellon said in reply to one question. He asserted that while in Wash- ington he several times had met and talked with Roy A. Hunt, president, and Arthur V. Davis, chairman of the board of the aluminum company. Mellon repeated several times, how- | ever, that he was not taking any part in the inanagement of either concern, and referred to a Supreme Court decision which held that cwn- ership of stock is not engaging in trade and commerce, a pursuit denied the Secretary of the Treasury oy rul- ings. Mellon also said a Senate Com- | mittee had investigated his business | activities and given him a clean bill | of health. | G. U. AND PRINCETON DEBATE ARMS TONIGHT | International Pacts on Shipments to Be Argued by Students in Gaston Hall. Whether nations should agree to| prevent the shipment of arms and mu- | nitions will be debated by teams repre- senting Georgetown and Princeton | Universities tonight at 8:15 o'clock in | Gaston Hall before alumni of both in- | stitutions. | Judges for the debate will include | Justice F. Dickinson Letts and Justice Oscar H. Lubring of the District su-l preme Court, Judge Charles S. Hatfield | NOW 1 EAT Hot Dogs Upset Stomach goes in Jiffy with Bell-ans. ANS\ FOR INDIGESTION 9% TIME TO HAVE YOUR SPRING HAT CLEANED REBLOCKED BACHRACH Millinery and Hat Blockers 733 11th St. N.W. BRIG. GEN. DOWNEY, RETIRED, IS DEAD Former Assistant Quarter- master General in Army Long IIl. Brig. Gen. George Faber Downey, U. 8. A, retired, former assistant quartermaster general of the Army, died last night at his home, 2112 Le | Roy place, after a long {llness. Born in the then Territory of Ari- zona, July 30, 1866, he entered the Army during the Spanish-American War and saw action several times in | the Philippines, when ambushed by natives who learned that his unit was convoying large sums of money over inland routes. He acted as chief of receipts and disbursements at Manila until October, 1901. After a short time in the Department of Luzon he served as chief paymaster, Depart- ment of Colorado, until 1904. At this time he acted as chief pay- master of the Army of Occupation in Cuba until, in 1907, he was assigned | to the Quartermaster Department Headquuter_s here. He also served as depot quarfermaster here for three years. During the World War Gen. Downey | :‘:5 in charge of the base at Cher- | urg, was inspector of rail heads at | ’ the front and at the storage and sup-} ;“h"“"’ Gleceat... ply depot at Montierchaume | & rlr:en Mamet Assistant quartermast general from | ek ......co000 1921 to 1923, serving at the War De- | | ESYPHian Black partment here, he had lived in Wash- Stove Enamel .... 25c ington ever since. Spesiet Swny He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Fence Paint ...... Mattie Davis Downey, and two sons, Fairfax E. Downey of New York City | and George Faber Downey, jr., of Sewickley, Pa. Funeral services will be conducted at the home tomorrow at 2 p.m. by Rev. Ze Barney Phillips, who will also conduct services at Arlington National Cemetery at 3 p.m. PeeGee utiful Shades. Qt. 21 Beal « 95¢ White 1.05 Porch & Floor Enamel 1.00 Interior Gloss ........ 1.05 Gal. Best Quality— Priced Right— 12-Pt. Pt. Qt. 75¢ $1.30 35¢ 55¢ 99¢ Gallon Expert Paint Advice Free MUTH 710 13th St. N.W. a good memory. The union head testified the com- | He recalled that in December, 1931, | ) Purchase Stand. pany was using the accounting method required by the Internal Revenue Bu- | _————— | of the United States Court of Customs | By the Associated Press. /gen, wnich sometimes explodes 1f |Ascalot had bought from him blocks | and Patent Appeals, Merle Thorpe, | reau for tax purposes. Senator Clark, Democrat. of Mis- souri contended such a cost account- ing system as the code authority de- manded would have required the small man to allow as much depreciation on a second-hand car as the big man did on a new automobile. Tracy charged “collusion” between the State compliance director for N. R. A. and the code representative. Herman Roe Scoggin, pursuing this charge. said the same parties had “failedto co- operate in the® enforcement of the labor provisions of the code.” Charges Code Violation. One of Perkins-Tracy's competitors, he said, had violated the labor pro- visions of the code and been permitted to “flaunt the protests of the com- pliance board.” Competitors of Perkins-Tracy, Scog- gin added, pay only 50 per cent of the ‘wages paid by that firm “We like N. R. A. and want it to continue,” Scoggin said. “It's done a great deal of good. but we want to protest permitting trade associations from governing the codes.” Scoggin added that under the system in force, based on volume of business, four firms in Minneapolis could out- vote all the rest of Minnesota and North and South Dakota combined in administration of the code. With N. R. A. already under heavy fire in Congress, the Government meanwhile had sought and obtained Supreme Court permission to avert an immediate test of the constitutionality of that hub of the recovery program’ The court yesterday granted a mo- tion by the Justice Department to dis- miss its appeal in the Belcher lumber code case, while a move was under | way in the Senate to get a decision in the case as a guide to Congress in enacting legislation to extend the Blue Eagle’s life. Senator Hastings, Republican, of Delaware, one of the authors of the Senate move, immediately hailed the Government’s action as evidence “the Department of Justice feels it can't | sustain N. R. A" It showed, he contended, “no hon- esty of purpose in trying to comply with the Constitution.” and added a charge that Donald Richberg, N. R. A. chief, is trying to “confuse” Congress. 6. 0. P. TO CONFER ON SECURITY BILL; REPORT DUE SOON st Page.) ballot that way to swing the decision. Others contended, however, that Tecent pressure from high administra- tion officials would enable them to beat down any such attempt. In its final form, the bill called for two kinds of aid for the aged. Under one system the Federal Government would pay up to $15 a month on a matching basis with States to aid the needy over 65. A second plan would levy special taxes on pay rolls and earnings, with the collections going to the worker in annuities after he reached 65. Payment Provisions. Under the former system, if a State donated $15 an aged person would get $30 a month. Under the latter, a man who was under 40 when he began paying the taxes would, if he made $150 a month or over and pald for 45 years, get $82.50 a month. SPECIAL NOTICES. DR. OHAS_ ¥. CONRAD. CHIROPODIST. pox masociased with Brs” W W L0 L irict_04bd. ‘8:30 a.m. to 5:30 pam. NTED—] 5 WA LOADS_Fi RO- chester. Providence. Albany. Buffalo. Mem- phis. New York. Detroit. SMITH'S TRANS- FER & STORAGE CO.. U st. n.w Phone North 3343. DAILY TRI TN loads to and from Baito, Phila. an York. ~ frequent trips o other Eastern cities. “Dependabie Service Since 1806 THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO.._phone Decatur_2500. TRUCKMAN WANTS RETURN LOAD T New York: 3.000 pounds $20. C. LEV- ESER. 414 East_Capitol. Lincoln 3417, ON AND AFTER THIS DATE. I WILL NOT be responsible for debts contracted by any one other than myselfl. HOWARD H. HOLMES. 1212 D st. n.e. WANT TO HAUL_FULL OR PART_LOAD 1o or from New York. Richmond, Boston, RASTSEEn he ollpat o, e N_Y. ave. Natl. 1460. Local movin % BE RESPONSIBLE FOR by anybody other than SELLS. 3023 14th n.w. * "RAINY DAY ROOFS —the kind that keep you dry when mrm come. Why have the other d? Let us end your roof worries. Repairs our specialty. KOONS S5ora COMPANY OUT OF THE ORDINARY. et}fn but ot 'ti!:' ordinary fi%fi?fié of reproduct SRS o eotor EsRmates trte. Columbia Planograph Co. 50 L 8t. NE. Metropolitan 4861, Hetsdontrasted ebts contractes selt. LISTER Refusal by the United States Su- | preme Court yesterday to review the | action of District of Columbia courts approving sale of Wardman property |in Washington, in effect upheld the foreclosure sale of the property hold- ings for $2,800,000. Opponents of the transaction contended the property, including a number of hotels and | apartments, was represented as worth | $28.000,000 and assessed at $15.- 000.000. After failure to meet payments due on $11,777,095 bonds. the sale was | made on October 21, 1932. The prop- | erty was the Chastleton Apartments. | Cathedral Mansions Center, Daven- | port Apartments, Park Hotel, Carlton Hotel, Cathedral Mansions ments and the old Department of Jus- tice Building at Vermont avenue and K street. Milton Shillback and Paul Brunn, the only qualificd bidders, obtained the property. The bid was grossly inadequate and unconscionable, W. Bissell Thomas | and other bondholders contended, de- claring the income, even during de- pression, was about $2.500,000 a year. A minority group of bondholders said there had been “collusive action and a fraudulent conspiracy.” They declared the properties had been bid | in under “plans of the conspirators” | by representatives of Leonard L. Stan- ley and George C. Shriver, described | as “managers under a fraudulent re- | organization plan intended to deprive and control of the property and to transfer large interests in it to the | benefit of themselves and other con- spirators.” In 1928, Harry Wardman and asso- ciates, through the Wardman Con- struction Co., Inc., of Virginia, owned | several hotels and apartment houses, and Emory Coblentz owned others and an office building. New corporations for control of the property were formed through Halsey, Stuart & Co. of Chicago and Hamble- ton & Co. of Baltimo: T —— If he paid only 20 years he would get $37.50. The contributory annuities and un- employment insurance systems would be limited to persons earning less than $250 a month. In addition to aid for the aged and unemployment insurance, the bill still provided appropriations for ma- ternal and child health, public health, crippled children and dependent chil- dren, as well as for vocational re- habilitation of persons injured in industry. Four States already have readied themselves for the old-age pension provisions of the measure and two States have passed unemployment in- surance legislation since the pro- gram was bundled up to Capitol Hill by the administration. A survey yesterday showed that three States actually are ready with unemployment insurance laws. Wis- consin has one in operation. Wash- ington and Utah enacted such legisla- tion at their last legislative session. Sixteen of the 45 States whose Legislatures were in session already have adjourned. Of the 16, 4 prepared for the old-age pension in which, under the administration plan, the Federal Government would help bear the expense. Montana, Arkansas and Oregon passed oid-age pension laws. For Arkansas it was a new venture. For the other two, the bills were simply to bring their existing laws into line with the Federal measure. The Wyoming Legislature simply authorized its Gov- ernor to accept Federal aid for pen- sions. Whether this will be construed as ample conformance with Federal requirements was not made clear. The 16 States whose Legislatures have adjourned are Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Mon- tana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Louisiana, West Virginia, Wyoming and Nevada. The Florida Legislature will adjourn tomorrow. Stoneleigh Court, | 2700 Connecticut avenue, Wardman North, Boulevard Apart- | the bondholders of the management | The largest balloon in the world will rise to the stratosphere from South Dakota next Summer fitted with many new safety devices. | While people on earth are swelter- ing in the Summer’s heat, Capt. Albert W. Stevens and Capt. Orvil A. Anderson of the United States Army | will fly toward the upper atmosphere in an air-conditioned gondola, secure in the belief that every possible danger has been planned for. | Every detail of the investigations | made after last year's stratosphere | | flight ended in a ripping of balloon\ | fabric, a gas explosion and parachute | jumps by the three passengers of the | gondola has been used to make this | Summer’s trial safe, the National Geographic Society announces. The society is backing tke flight joinly with the Army. | Helium, a non-explosive gas, will | be usede All previous stratosphere ! balloons have been filled with hydro- | mixed with the oxygen of the air. Heavier fabric will be used in the balloon, and it will be filled out with gas and air from the start to prevent a recurrence of the ripping which endangered the fiyers' lives last year. A stratosphere balloon is only partly filled with gas, because when it reaches high altitudes, where the air pressure is less, the gas automatically expands. Last year the unfilled part of the balloon was folded up under the gas- filled part. While folded. part of the fabric stuck together and uneven stress resulted in the rip. Because a non-explosive gas is being used this year, air can be used to fill up the bottom of the big bag. When it takes off the whole balloon will be flown open in the shape of a pear. As the ship rises and the helium ex- pands the air will be forced out of the bottom of the bag. At the top of its flight the balloon will be spherical in shape. UNTIONS BODY * SUBNITS REPORT Nye Committee Lays Dras-; tic Plan of Industrial Con- scription Before Senate. By the Associated Press. Drastic plan of industrial conscrip- | tion in war time was put up to the Senate today by the Nye Munitions Committee as an insurance of a profitless conflict. The group's formal report, based on six months of investigation, ad- vocated: 1. Constitutional amendment elim- | inating tax-exempt bonds as means of plugging loopholes for evading taxes. 2. Encouragement of the Geneva Disarmament Commission. 3. Arms embargo in event of war breaking out between other nations. Disapprove Baruch Plah. In acting, the committee disap- proved the price “ceiling” plan of Bernard M. Baruch, chairman of the old War Industries Board. As the first report of the commit- tee's work was read into the Senate record, a draft of the plan of John T. Flynn, economist advisor of the committee, to make the country “pay as you fight” was sent to the Public Printer. “Nobody can say it isn't drastic,” | commented Chairman Nye, Repub- | lican, of North Dakota. He added that all members of the committee were supporting the plan. “The committee is in substantial agreement on a very thorough plan to take the profits out of war and to equalize the economic burden of war,” he said. Essentials Included. Every major essential of the Flynn plan, Nye said, was incorporated in the first draft of legislation going to the Printer. It included: Conscription of industrial leaders, placing them under disciplinary con- trol of the War Department. A corporation tax plan taking 50 per cent of the first 6 per cent or less of profit on capital investment and 100 per cent of all profits above 6 per cent. & An individual tax for taking vir- tually all earnings above $10,000 a year. Stiffer tax schedules on earnings under $10,000 and reduction of indi- vidual exemptions from $2,500 in the present law to $2,000 under the war law for married persons; from $1,500 to $800 for single persons and from $400 to $200 for dependents. Night Final Delivery The last edition of The Star, known as the Night Final, and carrying a row of Red Stars down the front page, is city at 5! at 70c per month. This is a special service the very latest and complete rinted at 6 pm. and delivered throughout the per month or, together with The Sunday Star, that m: people desire for news ot‘ge dnyp N Call National 5000 and say that you want the “Night Final” delivered regularly to start immediately. your home, and delivery will STREET CAR ROUTE CHANGES ORDERED BY COMMISSION (Continued From First Page.) Chase can turn west on Columbia road and go downtown via Connecticut avenue instead of using Eighteenth street, U street and Fourteenth. The commission, in selecting the G | street connection to Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue, selected one of four proposals. The order stated, however, that if experience should prove this plan is not adequate, one or more of the other schemes still could be ccasidered. One of the other plans was for a connection on F street, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth; another for construction of tracks in Fifteenth street, between Pennsylvania avenue and H street, and another for laying tracks in H street from Four- teenth east to Thirteenth and then south to F street. There were objec- tions to all three of these latter plans from persons aand institutions along those thoroughfares. “The most difficult phase of rerout- ing of the street railway lines of the Capital Transit Co.” the commission | said, “has to do with the downtown area. In the very heart of this area there are traffic congestion and other con- ditions adverse to the movement of patrons of street cars, to a large ex- tent brought about by the existence of four tracks in Fourteenth street and New York avenue. The highest court in this jurisdiction has taken judicial notice of the dangers incident to the existing track layout in Fourteenth street and New York avenue, Wit~ nesses and others were all of the opin= jon that the track layout should be changed; however, there was no simi- lar unanimity of opinion in the method of accomplishment.” The commission then outlined the alternate proposals for tracks in Fif- teenth street. H and Thirteenth streets, and the connection on F street |between Fourteenth and Pifteenth streets, reciting the objections made by witnesses at the public hearings. elry and watches into MONEY at of American Locomotive, Texas Gulf | editor of the Nation’s Business, and | Sulphur, United Light & Power and | J- Fred Essary, Washington corre- | Westinghouse stock on which he had | SPondent of the Baltimore Sun. Wil-| deducted $380,000 from his income. | llam Jennings Price, formerly a pro- | “The purpose of the sale was fessor at the Georgetown Law School, what?” asked Jackson. | will preside. ol “It was to simplify my holdings.| Princeton will take the affirmative | | There was no especial reason for Side of the question. being represented keeping the stocks and I considered | by Gordon A. Craig, James L. High- them suitable for sale,” was the reply. . Jr. and John S. Harlow. The | Georgetown debaters are Leo F. Curley, Desired to Realize Cash. John S. McKenney and George H. Q. No question of money involved? | Guilfoyle. Jackson continued. - e ‘ A, Oh, yes. That was a factor, A b yes T HELD IN SLAYING A. I don't recall. There was a| e | desire to realize some cash. I don't Man to Face Grand Jury in Dice | recall the circumstances now. | s | | Q. You also, about the same time, Game Shooting. | got some shares of Pennroad and | willie Taylor, 27, colored, alias| Republic Steel from Ascalot on which | Willie Morgan, was held for the grand | it had a tax deduction? jury yesterday by a coroner’s jury for | A. Yes. I think I had some Penn- | the fatal shooting early Sunday of | road and they (Ascalot) said they ' Johnnie Mickens, 31, colored, in @ | would sell it to me. »| house in the 300 block of L street. Shifting to 1933, Jackson asked | Police said Taylor admitted shoot- | about the sale of other stocks to | ing Mickens and also shooting and Ascalot on which Mellon claimed | wounding three other colored men | deductions. He recalled only a block | early Saturday morning as the result | of 2,500 Westinghouse, but on prompt- | of arguments over dice games. The | ing by the attorney said that there | dead man lived in the 300 block of | was some United States Steel. | L street, near the house in which he | Q. In November, 1933, Ascalot sold | was shot. Taylor’s home is in the | some shares of Southern Pacific? | 100 block of K street, police say. | A. I recall it now. Mr. Bruce | =————— | (David K. E. Bruce, his son-in-law) | | said he thought it would be a good | I: idea for Ascalot to sell its holding in | his concern. He may have given some | . reasons. The company was not pay- | FINE FURNITURE ing any dividends and had no pros- | ith and H N.W. pects of doing so. It would be bettes for Ascalot to sell and put the pro- | ceeds into something that would pay Q. When was this conversation? A Real ECONOMY SERVICE Thursday, Friday & Saturday are red letter days for Washington Housewives. The complete family wash at a saving of one cent a pound. The average cost is about 79 cents. 5 SPECIAL “HOME LAUNDRY” FEATURES at no extra cost 1. Handkerchiefs are completely finished. Special attention is given to mono- grams and initials. 2. Soft collars are com- pletely finished and returned in glassine envelopes. 3. Necessary pieces of wearing apparel are starched, returned damp, ready for ironing. 4. Each plece of wearing apparel is shaken out and folded (no knots or tangles to straighten out) and re- turned damp, ready to iron. 5. Wearing apparel is wrapped in waxed paper to prevent mildew. —and in addition Home Laundry finishes all flat work at NO EXTRA CHARGE. Shirts. Uniforms, House Dresses, etc. A. I don't remember. But it was before the sale. | Agreed to Sale. | Q. You agreed it was desirable to sell and it was sold? A. Yes. | Q. The proceeds remained in your account? A. They may have. Q. Some time later you sold some securities to Ascalot? A. Yes, I sold them some Koppers Gas & Coke preferred, which I had. When Mr. Bruce said he saw no prospects of any dividends from Southern Pacific and asked what ll One A.Kahn JIne) Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. STREET ‘| 1. EVERY GOLD STAR CAR is exactingly recon- ditioned and then Road Tested before offered for sale. 2. PRICED TO SELL! Quality considered, GOLD STAR CARS are rked at the Lowest Prices in town. 3. Liberal Trades and any Terms that you require. Check our low finance rates. Table With Shelf * 8 Theres no place R % LAalNDRY SEE THEM ALL! Comparison Is Worth a Thousand Claims ’33 Ford V-8 D. L. Coupe New slate grey finish. Rebuilt motor, rumble ’33 De Soto D. L. Sedan The stronoest Boosters for Gold Stez buyers who shopped around, All we Go% is @ fair com= parison, DA A real Quality ial. Hand-Finished for * 10c Each Extra. < likek HOME *34 Ford V-8 Tudor *34 Ford V-8 De Luxe Tudor. °34 Ford V-8 Victoria ....... *34 Ford V-8 Standard Coupe Ford V-8 Standard Coupe .. ot g1 vsrsen 33 Pontiac ‘30 Lincoln *31 Buick 866:S Sport Coupe.. .. . 499 . 319 . 459 359 459 359 495 D. L. Coupe (R. S.; Berline Sedan Cost over $5.000 erigin: ’32 Ford De Luxe Roadster . ’33 Ford V-8 Tudor . 32 Ford V-8 Std. 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