Evening Star Newspaper, July 4, 1936, Page 3

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RALROADPLARNE T0 PACFY IAYAS ardenas Hopes to Halt Secession Sentiment in Yucatan. An iudependence movement a- mong the Mayas of Yucatan, who seck to set up a sovereign matior. under :he protection of the nited States, is described here in sirth and last of a series of articles on present-day Mexico, written by an experienced mewspaperman who has traveled widely in that country. BY GORDON GORDON. MERICA, Yucatan, Mexico, July 4 (N.AN.A)—The Mayas, descendants of those people who built one of | the greatest empires of ancient times, want to secede from Mexico and establish a sovereign nation under the protection of the United States. At least, that is the consensus of a | considerable portion of the educated | Mayas and also of the descendants of | their conquerors, the Spaniards. For | almost a century they have dreamed | of restoring the glories of the ancient Mayas in & country of their own, but | seldom has the fire for freedom burned 80 deeply as now. ‘To offset this movement, President Cardenas is speeding plans for a rail- road which will connect Merida with Mexico City. Government engineers are penetrating into the jungles of Chiapas and Tabasco on & survey of the proposed route. When completed, the railroad will be one of the greatest engineering feats of all time for Mex- ico, piercing as it will through here- tofore impenetrable jungles where there aren't even cart trails and where few white men have ever gone. « Cardenas firmly believes that, once the railroad is built, the Yucatecans, as the people of Yucatan prefer to be called, will forget their dreams and become devoted to the republic. He and other statesmen blame a lack of transportation for the separatist movement. The only means of travel | at present are by boat and airplane. | U. S. Influence Large. The American sphere of influence | has been far-reaching here. This city is closer to New Orleans than to Mexico City, and consequently, many Merida students of college age attend American universities, and the wealth- fer residents spend their vacations in the United States. English is as much & language with the educated classes | as Spanish and Maya. But there is still a closer connec- tion with the United States. Yucatan depends upon the sale of hemp for its prosperity and sells millions of dollars of it yearly to Americans to be used in the manufacture of rope. And Yuca- | tan’s back door, Quintana Roo, is en- | gaged in the chicle business. Market- | ing the sap of the zapote tree to | American chewing gum buyers. Many of the Yucatecans are con- fident that. if Yucatan were under the protectorate of the United States, it would enjoy better trade, would profit | by modified tariff regulations, and would escape the heavy taxes imposed by Mexico City. Some of the Yuca- tecans, also, are incensed over the Socialistic program imposed on their state, & program which is now being expanded so that the government will | virtually control all hemp production. | The heirs of the Mayas are, by tem- | perament, rugged individualists and | most of them prefer to operate their own plantations in their own way. A secret society flourishes here. is the patriotic Yucatecans, and boast. & membership of 30.000, or about one- third the population of this city. While the figure is believed by con- | servative observers to be ridiculously | high, the association is militantly ac- | tive in spreading propaganda which glamorously pictures the one-time greatness of the Mayas and how the Yucatecans might again create the culture and prosperity of the old em- | pire. The society does not urge armed | resistance to Mexico. Its program, on the surface, anyway, is confined to educational lines. It advises that Yucatan “be prepared and await a favorable opportunity.” Autonomous Once. “Yucatan was an autonomous na- tion at one time. It broke away from ' Spain when Mexico declared its in- dependence in 1821, but it did not Join the Mexican confederation. The Yucatecans, though, didn’'t have an army large enough to protect the coast from the savage raids of Indians liv- ing on the nearby islands, and even- tually the republic agreed to enter | the Mexican confederation in ex- T straved from . on Thursday. " TERRIER. male: broi L. Tiax on Tight side neck: collar plate TM. M. G. Ha 1014 B St. Teads t e unnymeade pi. trayed from 331+ Call_Emerson_$244. _Reward ERS] CAT. yellow; _disfigured ear. answers to name “Timmie"; cinity 40th and Benton sts. n.w. Cleveland 5018 PIN OR BROOCH—Round. “?-carat dia- mond in center, $urrounded by six small stones: morning of July 2. in Diamond Cab or between Pan-American Building Wil- lard Hotel and Fox Theater 1If found re- f turn to Mrs E_E. Norris. 2204 Wyoming | nw_ right lost vi- Reward to! BCOTT! . answers yonker q nw. | emale Reward. Vt. ave. North_ 8042, BUIT CASE._marked Hickling: 1st st ne. Tear Union Station % p.m. July 3. Reward Fi call Adams 323R-J. | WRIST WATCH, la SPECIAL NOTICES. i AILY TRIPS_MOVING LOADS AND PART | .. Phila. and New o TRANSFER & STORAGE atur 2500 5 ND GRAVEL MIXTURE | Blair_rd._and_Underwood st.n.w RMINAL VAN _LINES OF TAMPA FLA Padded Vans—Pioncer Distance Movers. Offces & hSt. N.W. West 0919. 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ebts made against me other than myself TURNER. 1255 Eve st. n.e. Wash- ngton. D_C. 3 HEREBY NOTIFY THAT 1 _WII not be responsible for any debts contract- any one other than myself. No rental. no rents received other than b myself or my legal representative. WM. A. [ XON. twood. Md. FTER THIS DATE I WILL BE RESPO! ible for debts contracted only by myself. WILLIAM J. SPENCER. 1675 Columbia rd. ATTENTION, BRICKLAYERS, NO. 1, D. C. Eiection of 'delegates to the B. M. &n raphical Temple, Polls open from 1 p.m. to ORDER OF THE TRUS' \ DEAL FUNERAL AT $75 [Provides same le;:ice as one enutlgl $500. [Don’t waste ance money.' Call DEAL, with 25 years' experlence. Lin- HAMBERS © oi orld, Complete funer: ip. Six chapels. twelve N ATS, hearses, twenty-five undertakers and B AT oL T 1 il S A of the largest akers in the THE - EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. SATURDAY, Jes Lest We Forget on Independence Day There Is Still Taxation Without Representation in the United States of America! | posed Week After Wife || Pursuing its charge that he drowned JULY 4, 1936. |JAMES MIRTHFUL AT MURDER TRIAL Woman’s Testimony He Pro- Died Brings Laughter. Py (he Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, July 4.—Robert 8. | James' murder frial jury pondered | an impr.ssion of him today as a jovial defendant moved to loud laughing and back slapping, by the testimony of an important State witness. The trial was in adjournment until | Monday. | W ashington’s 500,000 Inhabitants Are as Voice- lessin the Nation’s Affairs as W ere the Colonies Prior to the Declaration of Independence! One hundred and sixty years ago this Fourth of July, the Thirteen Original Colonies, resentful of taxation without rep resentation, declared their independence of Great Britain. TODAY—1936 A.D.—more than a century and a half later, here at the seat of the Federal Government, the same obnoxious, undemocratic situation prevails which produced the War of the Revolution. Washingtonians, disfranchised and de- Americanized, demand a voice in the levy- ing of the taxes they must pay, in the making of the laws they must obey and in declaring the wars in which they will have to fight. On this Independence Day the District of Columbia invites the Congress and the States to consider its voteless plight and pledge themselves to remedy it. WHAT MUST BE DONE ABOUT IT? CONGRESS must adopt the Constitutional Amendment now pending before it, empowering Congress to grant to the residents of the District of Columbia voting representation in the House of Representatives, Senate and Electoral College and access as citizens to the courts of the United States. HERE is the Amendment: Resolved by the Semate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled (two-thirds of each House comcurring therein), That the following amendment to the Constitution of the United States be proposed for ratification by the Legislatures of the several States, which, when ratified by the Legislatures of three-fourths of the States, shall be valid as a part of said Constitution; namely, insert at the end of section three, Article IV, the following words: “The Congress shall have power to admit to the status of citizens of a State the residents of the District constituting the seat of the Government of the United States, created by Article I, section eight, for the purpose of repre- sentation in the Congress and among the electors of President and Vice President and for the purpose of suing and being sued in the courts of the United States under the provisions of Article 111, section two. “When the Congress shall exercise this power the residents of such District shall be entitled to elect one or two Senators as determined by the Congress, or such other representative in the Senate as Congress may provide for, Representatives in the House, according to their numbers as determined by the decennial enumeration, and presidential electors equal in number to their aggregate representation in the House and Senate, or as Congress may provide. “The Congress shall provide by law the qualification of voters and the” | Agua Caliente and the other casinos, G | portation is the all vital question. His It | time and manner of choosing the Senator or Senators, the Representative or Representatives, and the electors herein authorized. “The Congress shall have power to make all la which shall be neces- sary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing power.” Information and Literature available at headquarters of Citizens’ Joint Committee on National Representation for the District of Columbia, Room 310, Evening Star Building. Phone National 5000, Branch 297, internecine warfare until 1876, when it once more slipped back into the | Mexican fold. Since then, the Yuca- | tecans have attempted twice to secede, to shell Progresso, the only harbor | town of any size, and lay waste Mer- | ida, and the Yucatecans succumbed | before many shots were fired. Today, however, they are angling for American support. They make it | & business to entertain influential | Americans on an elaborate scale and | place before them their plans and hopes. 1f Mexico should be torn by | revolt again, the patriotic Yucatecans | would make a bid for recognition by | Washington and place the United States in the embarrassing position of | either refusing & people who are eager for American protection, or of offend- ing Mexico to the point of a war, | A similarly precarious situation, al- | though entirely different in its roots, exists in Lower California, where many are intensely angered at the Federal Government because Cardenas closed depriving thousands of their jobs. Half starving, they are in the bread lines today and Mexico is maintaining peace only by providing the necessities of life | for many thousands. The Lower Californians talk, and so far it has not passed the stage of pure gossip, of revolt, but they will have none of Representative Charles Kramer's suggestions that the United States buy the territory. They have seen too many Americans to wish such a protectorate and most of them are a little suspicious that President Roose- velt's program may not be so different from that of Cardenas. But they do| want their freedom to operate Agua Caliente and transform Lower Cali-| fornia. even more so than it has been in the past, into a mecca for Amer- ; jcans. Here again, President Cardenas is moving swiftly these weeks to block such sentiment before it passes from the talking stage to that of action. And he believes that here, too, trans- engincers will arrive in Santa Ana, Sonora, within a few days to begin a survey of a railroad from there to Mexicali, which would span one of the hottest desserts in the world. To reach Mexico City by & land route it is necessary now for Lower Californians to enter the United States and travel over California, Arizona and sometimes Texas before crossing the border into their own country. This ONG-DISTANCE MOVING. July 6th van leaving for Florida, poini outh. Returning July 10th. ~Special firn load rat July _13th, Priando, Fla.. returning, New York, Phil oston; weekly trips. Large, padded vans; uil insurance coverages. "R"'BgA xON éWWAREHA%USI 1(;‘0RP4 = 8. Ave. A ms 3377, Sundays and Holidays, Cleveland 5640, also makes the movement of troops a serious question. Like the proposed Yucatan railroad, this one across the scorching sands that border the Guif of California would be a feat in engineering. The problem ef developing eloser ¥ © paper editors and statesmen have re- peatedly pointed out how Texas slipped away from Mexico, and are warning that the federal government must pay once in 1910 and again 14 years ago, | more attention to its distant states | but in each case Mexico threatened | and territories or Mexico will experi- | ence another Texas tragedy. “Remember Texas” has become al- most a watchword in the present handling of the Yucatan and Lower California problems. ONTARIO RURAL FOLK VISIT AT MARYLAND U. By a Staff Correspondent of Tne Star COLLEGE PARK, Md., July 4— Thirty-eight Canadian farmers and homemakers of Lincoln County, Ontario, visited the University of Maryland and inspected the Depart- ment of Agriculture's research center at Beltsville yesterday as they con- tinued their tenth annual tour of the East, Middle West and South. ‘The nine-day American trip, which left Canada June 27, is designed to give the group a picture of agricultural conditions and governmental husban- dry agencies in this country. F. C. Meier of the Department of Agricul- ure conducted the party yesterday. Treating Snakebite Starts Girl, 18, on Career as Nurse Mary Parker, Senior at Roosevelt High School, Saves Man’s Life. Mary Parker, 18, who hopes to be & nurse some day, got a good start & few days ago when she was credited With saving the life of a man bitten by a copperhead snake. Miss Parker, a senior at Roosevelt High School, was on a visit near Castlemans Ferry, on the Shenandoah River, when Richard Owens, 24, Bal- timore salesman, entered a store there to ask for aid. He had been bitten on the hand by a snake while pick- ing berries, With a razor blade, Miss Parker made two incisions in the hand, where the marks of the snake's fang showed, and squeezed the wounds. Applying & tourniquet midway up the arm, and bathing the wound with an antiseptic, she sent Owens to a doctor in Berry- ville, Va., for treatment. Miss Parker, who lives at 17525 Georgia avenue, sald upon her. re- turn home yesterday that she hopes ; 1 | change for a few battalions of troops. ties between Yucatan and Lower Cali- In 1840 Yucatan seceded and re- | fornia and the rest of Mexico has im- | mained independent for a short time | pressed itself more on the Mexican | before it voluntarily returned to the public recently than ever before. The | Mexican Republic. Withdrawing again | reason is the opening. of the Texas in 1847, the country was ravaged by | Centennial Exposition at Dallas. News- | FOR COLONIZATION Development of Ethiopia’s Resources to Be “Slow but Steady.” Ey the Assoctated Press. | Ethiopia will be “no gold rush, but slow, steady, well-planned concentra- day. The former secretary of the treas- ury was charged by Premier Mus- solini with organizing branches of industries in large groups, including technical, scientific and practical ex- perts, to study the resources of the new empire. Count Volpi, who arranged Italy’s war-debt agreement with the United States and is now president of the Fascist Confederation of Industry, declared: “We will go ahead carefully. Al- though we thoroughly admire Amer- 1the Far West, our tactics are going to be different.” Six principles will govern the de- velopment, Count Volpi said. They are: 1. “Adequate preparation in ad- vance so effort and money will not be wasted. 2. “Private enterprises will be pro- tected, but 3. “There will be no monopolies, and 4. “There will be no harum-scarum rush of mushroom businessmen or carpet-baggers. 5. “No black army will be built up. The natives will be needed as work- men to fructify the country. 6. “The Italian race will be kept pure and every effort will be made to prevent commingling of the whites and blacks.” Sees Economic Possibilities. Count Volpt summarized these eco- nomic possibilities in Ethiopia: Coffee—“Plenty of it. Not preparation needed.” Cotton—“Possibilities, preparation needed.” ‘Wool—"Possibilities. Kenya Colony is growing good wool. Conditions in part of Ethiopia are similar.” Minerals—"“We shall see what ‘we shall see. Reports of prospectors are being awaited.” Asked how long it would be before the first settlement is founded, he replied: “We'll take it in our stride. but much The to enter training as a student nurse lmnch went into Algeria in 1830 and [ % was not until the end of the cen~ - ROME, July 4.—Italy’s policy ln‘ tion,” Count Giuseppe Volpi said to- | ica’s development of her empire of | tury that they really began to de- velop it.” Ly Count Volpi’s connections with the United States have been numerous to America. has had frequent busi- ness ties there and is president of the CULPEPER WHEAT CROP EXCEEDS EXPECTATIONS spite Severe Drought Dur- ing Month of May. Speclal Dispaten to The Star CULPEPER, Va.. July 4—That the drought prevailing throughout this section during the month of May did not cut the wheat crop as much as at first feared was shown by speci- mens exhibited in Culpeper this week, when from 4 grains of wheat 70 stalks were produced and all of these heads were well filled. Straw, wheat and barley, is unusually short, but the heads of grain are well above the average. This remarkable yield was grown in the farm of A. G. Hud- son, near Mitchells, but similar re- ports come from different sections of the county. {Culpeper Citizens Not Sure They Like New Mail Delivery Miss Going to Post Office and Object to Modern Boxes on Old Porches. CULPEPER, Va. July 4—For the first time in the 177 years of its exist- ence the town of Culpeper has city delivery service of its mail, and the citizens are not sure whether they like 4t or not. They say they miss going to the post office, long the general gathering place in the mornings, and some object to porch mail boxes on esthetic modern con- trivances do not harmonize so well | with Colonial columns. However, the city delivery is here, having com- menced on July 1, and two carriers are in charge. It is rather a coincidence that Sir Alexander Spotswood, first Postmaster General of the Colonies, should have at time owned the land upon which the present Culpeper post office is built, and that a hundred years later, in stage coach days, “Extra Billy” Smith, whose network of mail coaches ran from Washington to At- lanta, Ga., also owned this property, and various. He has made many trips | Italo-American Association in Rome. | Grain Well Above Average De-| both with | his seventh wife, Mary, in a bathtub | after exposing her to a rattlesnake’s | fangs, the State introduced Mrs. | Madge Reed, a pretty Los Angeles | woman, who testified yesterday he proposed to her a week after his wife's death. { Not the Mourning Kind. | Mrs. Reed testified James told her | he didn’t believe in mourning. “He | said as soon as he buried his wife and collected the insurance he wanted !me to marry him and go Nonh."[ she seid. Her testimony appeared highly amusing to the defendant. He chuckled and guffawed. He slapped a defense attorney on the back with great merriment. Mrs. Reed testified James discussed his wife’s death with her and tried to enlist her as an alibi witness if he were charged with murder. “He said if he was indicted he want- ed to spring me as a surprise wit- ness,” the witness continued. “He said | he would pay me $2000 if I would} testify that on the morning of her | death I happened to go by their home, | saw her on the porch and stopped. l‘ Sore Not to Be Mentioned. “He told me to say that she was lying on the swing and complained of | not feeling well.” She said James told her: *“Above all, don't mention that she had a sore on her leg.” An autopsy on the body of Mary James disclosed a leg wound which &' toxicologist testified was caused by a rattlesnake bite. | Defense counsel recalled to the stand vesterday Charles Hope, ex-sailor, who has pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in connection with Mrs. James' death and testified he purchased snakes for James to use in torturing | nis wife. | | Hope angrily denied he had en- tered into a conspiracy with the defendant to kill Mrs, James, | BELGIUM AIDS U.S. - | ILLICIT RUM DRIVE to Be Prevented From Loading Stocks on “Runners.” | By the Asccciated Press. | After months of negotiation, the United States has secured a pledge of Belgian co-operation in plugging what officials have termed the last re- | maining “spigot” through which illicit rum and alcohol has poured into this country. | The Belgian government has in- | formed Ambassador Morris it will take | effective measures to prevent ships flying the Belgian flag from continuing to unload illicit alcohol on the high seas for transshipment in “rum run- ners” to the American coast. ‘The United States has similar co- operative agreements with Canada, Cuba, France, Great Britain and Mexico—who control the gateways to | to the American borders. Foreign alcohol, made for only a few cents a gallon, is subject to a tariff of $5 a proof gallon and $2 excise tax a gallon. Some American officials estimate that a least 500.000 gallons, made in Belgium, has been smuggled into this country during the Ships +| last year. ‘The cheap Belgian alcohol, officials said. has been ‘“cut" colored and mixed to be sold as whisky, gin, rum | and other liquors. | The Belgian pledge of future co- operation resulted from an exchange of correspondence which began when | the Coast Guard trailed three Nor- wegian ships suspected of smuggling alcohol from Belgium, FOUR ON LYNCH LIST First Half of Year Records Three of Victims in Georgia. TUSKEGEE, Ala., July 4 (#).—Four lynchings—three in Georgia and one | in Arkansas—were recorded for the | first six months of 1936 by Tuskegee Institute’s Department of Records and | Research. All of the victims were colored. The number equaled the first-half record for 1935. In 1934 there were six lynchings before July 1. The report showed the following | offenses charged to the 1936 vietims: | Rape, two; attempted rape, one; mur- | der, one. . Iran Curtails Business. Private business enterprise is being gradually eliminated by the govern- ment of Iran. TOUCH TYPEWRITING GREGG SHORTHAND Opening new classes for college students and high-school graduates desiring to make use of shorthand and typewriting in their college work . Beginning and advamced classes in secretarial sublects for those wishing employment . . ., Exclusive place- ment_service for all qualified students. MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL FOR SECRETARIES, Tivoll Building. 14th St. and Park Rd. lephone _Columbls. FINAL TRIAL EXAMINATION THURSDAY, JULY 9 On Thursdsy, July 9, at 7 day, July 9, at 7 p.m. Tivoli Theater Building 14th Street at Park Road Appointed WASHINGTON MEN GIVEN MARINE POSTS, LEAGUE SEEKS END OF WAR DEBATE esolution Is Submitted by teering Committee—Vote ~ on Motion Delayed. By the Associated Press. | | GENEVA, July 4—A lengthy reso- Col Charles R. Sanderson (right) and Lieut. Col. David L. S. Brewster, former Wash- ingtonians, who have been named to head the Marine Corl:: Depot of Supplies at Philadelphia. Col. Sanderson will be depot quartermaster and Col. Brewster will serve as his assistant and executive officer. Col. Sanderson re- lieves Col. Seth Williams, who came to Washington Wednes= day as assistant to Brig. Gen. Hugh Matthews, quartermas- ter of the Marine Corps. MIDDIES ENJOYING HOLIDAY LIBERTY Destroyers Bring 180 Jun- iors Back to Annapolis in Time for Fourth. By the Associated Press. ANNAPOLIS, July 4 —Pive de- stroyers dropped anchor at the Naval Academy yvesterday, bringing 180 members of the second (junior) class of midshipmen back from a four-week crulse in time for the Fourth of July holiday. The entire second class, which is studying at the academy this Sum- mer, was given liberty in Annapolis and viciity from 3:30 p.m. yesterday until 9:40 pm. today. The 467 mem- bers of the new plebe class got their first liberty from the midday meal until evening formation today. All ships at the academy are in full dress, with flags flying, today. U. S. S. Relia Mercedes, station ship, fired a national salute of 21 guns at noon. ‘The civic clubs of Annapolis have joined to arrange a community cele- bration on Weeks Creek. A program of swimming, sailing aad sport events has been arranged for children. The destroyers Claxton, Taylor. Barney, Biddle and Babbitt arrived at the academy shortly before noon vesterday. They left here on June 8 and cruised to the Navy proving grounds, Dahlgren, Va.: Newport, R. I, and New York City. In New York the midshipmen visited the Hayden Planetarium. On Monday the destroyers, with another third of the second class aboard, will leave on a similar cruise, returning to the academy on July 31. The remainder of the second class will leave on the cruise on August 3. Houses For Sale or Rent—Fu SHOULD you wish te The ! | lution to wind up debate on tie Italo- | Ethioplan War was submitted to the League of Nations Assembly today by a Steering Committee. Action on the motion was post- poned after several delegates informed Premier Paul Van Zeeland of Belgium, assembly president, they wished time to study the document. Delegates were called back for a meeting at 6 pm. (noon, E. 8. T). The commitiee’s unanimous recom- mendation followed lengthy debate on the language of the motion to suspend Italian sanctions and pave the way for prospective reform of the collective security system. Stefan Lux, Czechoslovakian newse paper man who startled the assembly by shooting himself in the chest yes= terday, died in a hospital as the com- mittee tackled its complicated task. Protested Jewish Persecution, Death came from an internal hemorrhage after Lux, a Jew, repeated 2 protest against treatment of Jews in Germany. Funeral services were planned here after the arrival of his wife from Praha. Informed sources predicted a three- pointed motion would emerge from the committee room, including: 1.—Suspension of economic and financial sanctions against Italv for | her declared aggression in East Africa. 2.—Some pronouncement, possibly | without mentioning Italy, on the pole icy of non-recognition of territories acquired by force. 3.—Some mention of future reform of the League and the existing system of collective security. Delegates expected the resolution, | winding up what some diplomats have called the “Ethiopian drama.,” would be placed before the Assembly for a vote tonight. Revision Threat Raised. Fears of the permanence of post- World War treaties were aroused in some quarters as a result of declara- tions by Dr. Halvdan Koht. foreign minister of Norway, who urged re- vision of article XIX of the Covenant dealing with peaceful rivision of treaties. 1f such a step were to be contemplfted, some delegates declared, the floodgates might be thrown open to zealous revisionists, imperilling the status of the war settlements. The Assembly faced another session of speeches with the alleged German attempt to draw the free city of Danzig from under a league protect- orate listed as one of the principal subjects. The death of Lux closed the second incident in a week to create an uproar in the auditorium. Sitting in a gal- lery, the newspaper man-photographer whipped out a pistol, shot himself in the chest and slumped to the fioor, gASpING: “I want to die as a public protest to the way Germany is treating Jews. I am not sorry. My mind is completely lucid.” ‘W ANTED rnished or Unfurnished Sell or Rent your house we can be of service to you if you will list it with us. We have numerous requests for City, Suburban and Country Properties. RANDALL H. HAGNER & COMPANY INCORPORATED SALES RENTALS ecticut Avenne N.W. HE PERFECT “CLOTHES INSURANCE Telephome: DEcatur 3600 LOANS LINE“—CLEVELAND 7800 @ WASH SUIT Department ONLY the safest methods, made possible by the finest equipment such as this institution offers, can guarantee you such satisfactory results at no greater cost. The thousands of families which already de- pend upon our service is your guarantee for any type of laundry and Zoricdry ¢ leaning service you require. (] MEN'’S and WOMEN'’S SUITS Perfectly Laundered Cleaned), Perfectly Pressed— (or Zoric 75¢ Lodies’ Swagger Suits with Long Coats, 10c Extra. PROMPTLY CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED—JUST PHONE Z.TOLMAN <ty N F.W. 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