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Drought May Swing Votes to G.O.P. Effect Will Reach from Farmer to Con- sumer. BY DAVIDP LAWRENCE. E political effects of the drought are matters of gen- eral conversation here at the political capital of the Nation but knowledge of just what the final Tesult will be is necessarily meager. Some of the drought States which | will be aided by direct funds will | probably improve g the situation of the New Deal party but, on the # other hand, the § cost of living, B which is always & source of em- barrassment to the party in power, may rise between now and election and sub- tract many of the housewives from what might otherwise have & sentimental in- terest in New Dea These are the tv of the drought measured in political terms. But there are other| factors at work in the farm regions | which may be intensified by the drought developmen Thus, if the price of food products rise to the point where large importations of corn | and dairy products. for instance, will | overflow even the tarifft walls, the farmer in many States may get back to his earlier Republicanism, which | has been so closely associated with | tariff protection. | Already in the West there is a lively | eontroversy over the effects of the| reciprocity treaty with Canada. Canlei raisers are saying that the price of | beef is lower today than a year ago because of heavy importations Irnm‘ Canada and other countries. New| Deal officials say it is due to other causes, notably increase in production. | influences Controversy May Be Revived. | It would appear that the drought | will send the prices of meats up some- | what but not before the Autumn elec- tion. Other articles in the food basket may go up in price, in which event the old controversy will be revived s to whether America would not have been better off without the restricted production and A. A. A. policies, in which the farmers were paid for what | they didn't plant { The New Deal indignantly denies | this and says the situation would have | been much worse in the pre-drought | years without Government aid. Never- theless, the farmers who have been accustomed to regulation of agricul- | ture by sun and rain are going to be talking and thinking of what might | have been their revenue had the arti- | ficial control not been instituted to keep acreage down. A classification of drought States outside of the solid South shows that there are about 176 electoral votes | in the drought area, out of which, when the border States of Oklahoma, Missouri, Kentucky and Tennessee ere excluded, there is a total of 130. which might be affected one w or the other by the politics of the drought. The New Deal is well on its toes with reference to politicai effects and is preparing to rush funds and direct aid of every kind in the hope of gaining political advantage in the States where disaster has overtaken the farmer. This is a power which no | other administration has ever enjoyed | 80 extensively. The New Dealers, by | voting to the Executive a $4,800,000,000 ‘ fund which can be used for almost | any purpose, do not have to ask Con- gress for authority. In a sense, this is defensible, for had there been no emergency fund available the farmers would have been pleading for an extra session of Congress and a Federal sppropriation while their cattle starved. | Federal Policy Changing. | It would appear that national ad- ministration of emergency problems will become a permanent part of Federal policy as they relate to acts of the weather and the elements. | | cute him, but only in extreme cases, THE EVENING Behind the News Revival of Triple Alliance Seen as Germany, Austria and Italy Reach Accord. BY PAUL MALLON. HE Austro-German accord, whereby Germany promises to respect the independence of Austris, has been hailed as a great step toward the pacification of Europe. This optimism is likely to cool shortly when the implicetion behind the agreement sinks in. It looks good on the outside because it lessens the danger of an im- mediate outbreak, but what worries the diplomats on the inside is the series of events leading up to the handshake. They happen to know that Mussolini decreed that Germany could get together with Austria again and sanctioned the inclusion of a Nazi in the Austrian government. This means a rapprochement between Mussolini and Hitler. They confidently expect that this friendliness of the European dic- tators will probably lead to an Italo-German understanding in the near future. And it is likely to include a promise by Hitler to guarantee the Austro-Italian frontier. Thus, behind the happy accord stalks a ghost bearing an unhappy resemblance to the old triple alliance —Germany, Austria and Italy. Neither Hitler nor Mussolini would have okayed this Austrian deal a few months ago. Hitler would not, be- cause he did not have much con- fidence in Mussolini as an ally in event of an Italo-British war. Mussolini would not, because he did not want Austria to go German and risk involving himself in a European war while he was tied up with the African campaign. Now it's an entirely different story. In fact, two different stories. The Austro-German accord is Hitler’s subtle answer to the Anglo-French military general staff agreement, whereby the general staffs of both nations plan to crush Germany in event of @ mew war. It is Mussolini's answer to Britain and sanctions. Together they stand again, the two continental dictators, the only men of action in Europe. If that means peace, it means peace at their price. T The one nation most panic-stricken by the so-called peace move is Czechoslovakia. It sticks up between Germany and Austria like a piece of cement roadway expanded by the heat. As a part of the old Austro- Hungarian empire, it has a large German population. With Austria now professing itself a German state, the little nation in the middle will certainly be ironed out before long. * ok ok % There is an unwritten international law among governments providing that no one shall ever make an international incident out of a spy case, If you find a foreign spy, you ship him home quietly and let it go at that, To create an incident causes ill-feeling between the people of the two nations. Unless one government deliberately intends to stir up war fever, nothing is done ercept to get the spy out of the country. Of course, if one of your own people is involved you prose= where beneficial disciplinary results are expected. This is what happened in the two notable naval cases recently de- veloped. In both instances, the real spy was missing. The truth is more than a dozen suspected fore eign spies have been told compara- tively recently that their presence in this country was no longer desirable. The way that works is this: Once Army or Navy intelligence confirms suspicions concerning a foreign agent, they slip the word to immi- gration authorities. The immigra- tion people immediately inform the agent that his permission to remain in this country has expired. He knows that, once he has been spotted, he is no longer of any use to his people. There is no use in raising a diplomatic rumpus about it anyway, because the foreign government will disown its spy in any event and profess complete ignorance of his activities. * The Japanese press became somewhat involved in the Thompson spy case and nearly upset the unwritten international law. The trial of Thompson was given big play in Japanese newspapers, and apparently the propagandists at home were a little worried about its effect on the Japanese population. At any rate, they gave circulation to an American spy scare story as a counter-irritant. They came out with suspicions that two American institutions, St. Paul's Episcopal School and St. Luke’s Hospital, were harboring spies. They intimated the Japanese government was taking the matter up with the State De- partment. The department has never hedrd of it. And never will. One thing to remember about spy stories is that there was rarely a day during the latter stages of the World War when the Allies in the front-line trenches did not know the secret plans of the Germans, and vice versa. Nobody will ever tell how, but you may accept it on the highest authority that they knew. (Copy. * ok x ht. 1936.) { down in heaps and the merriment sud- | denly turned to fear. There was a wild | scramble for life preservers. | Sergt. Menash Katz, personal aide to Gov. Nice, seeking to avert a mass hysteria, started the passengers to singing. The screams of the woman Freighter’s Prow Cut With Torches After 200 Are | Taken From Bay Steamer. entertainers and the shouts of excited | By the Associated Press. | | { men died down. The danger passed within half an hour as the passengers climbed over the steamer’s battered side onto the deck of the freighter. The Love Point ferry Pittsburgh, Capt. W. I. Woodall, on its regular BALTIMORE, July 16.—Tugs today | freed the freighter Golden Harvest from the Chesapeake Bay steamer State of Virginia, rammed amidships while some 200 passengers on a con- | vention cruise watched a floor show. | The steel-laden freighter was towed | run, picked up the passengers and landed them in Baltimore about 5 a.m. Most of the passengers had regained their composure when the ferry docked. Many of them still had on life pre- servers when they climbed into taxi- cabs. Railway passenger traffic in Ger- & # %, b S Thompson to Elevate Shows False Gods Are EARLY this month the third gates attended it, claiming to adequately reported in the metropoli- usually called a captured by the ened to withdraw of their own. The anti-war and op- adopted with Dorothy tion of rights drafted last year in De- | entitled to a useful, creative, and | | steady employment at adequate wages, That the problems and frustrations | eration is a world-wide phenomenon. STAR, WASHINGTON. Congress at Cleveland Worshipped. BY DOROTHY THOMPSON. American Youth Congfess met in Cleveland. A thousand dele- represent a million young people. The meeting was, unfortunately, very in- tan press. But it was clear, first, that the congress was dominated by what is radical spirit, al- though it was Socialists who, indeed, threat- and form a sepa- rate organization congress revealed itself as strongly posed to military training. It slight amend- ments a declara- troit and, among other things, de- | clared: “Our generation is rightfully happy life, the guarantees of which | |are, full educational opportunities, | security in time of need, civil right, | and peace.” of youth during the depression have | led to the radicalization of this gen- Not long ago youthful delegates rep- resenting most western nations and demonstration in Geneva. symbols as the Christ child Catholic Trades Unions and the ham- | mer and sickle of the Soviets. They presented petitions demanding that | the school age be prolonged, youth hostels established, voluntary labor camps opened, and the working week | reduced. One petition even demanded | free motion pictures once & week at | popular expense. Many Are Unemployed. Statistics compiled in Geneva from facts furnished by 20 governments in- | dicate that 33 per cent of all unem- | ployed in the western world are youths | between the ages of 14 and 25. Miss | Grace Abbott has estimated that in | this country there are six and a half | million young people between the ages of 18 and 24 who have never worked. | The experience of Germany indicates that these unemployed young are the source of every revolutionary move- ment aiming at overthrowing the ex- isting social order, whether it be Com- | munist or Fascist. This will be in- | evitable as long as youth feels that so- | ciety has no place for its services. For | | this is the final frustration | But there are some disturbing things | about the present unrest of youth. It is not essentially a revolutionary un- | rest, although it may be utilized by | revolutionary movements. But, for the | most part, youth does not apparently desire to inherit responsibility for the social order, and assuming that respon- | sibility, reorganize it into a more intel- | Iligent and reasonable pattern. The aiscontent of youth, the world over, is ‘takmg the form of making demands | upon the existent and very ill society. Youth is not laying claim to the State. It is making claims upon the State. And the claims are not what one would expect from the young. Since when has youth demanded security? Youth has always cried for opportunity, for the chance to prove itself. It is some- thing new for it to demand relief jobs |at trade union wages as was done in | Cleveland. Creative Life Demanded. | | And amazing is the demand for a | creative life. Nowhere in the Youth | Congress, nowhere in the radical pub- lications designed to politicize youth, such as the “Champion,” is there any | indication that the creative life is ex- | i acting and often painful, however deep | its compensations are; that no State | and no society can guarantee it; that | | the demands of the creative life are Heretofore, the Red Cross has been | into dock here. The steamer remained | many has increased nearly 10 per cent | not upon the world, but upon itself; relied upon for' relief of stricken | families. The depression has intro- | duced the principle of governmental | aid. This will no doubt mean careful scrutiny in the future to see that public funds are not disbursed for political ends. | Whatever is spent, however, in| direct aid in the drought States may | not bring in enough votes to offset | the effect of the argument that re- striction policies were wrong and that had they not been attempted the | weather would have ironed out over- | production. The criss-crosses in the farm area are quite numerous nowadays. The | Lemke-Coughlin ticket and now the | Townsend old age pension agitation are calculated to take votes away from | the New Deal ticket. The biggest | nucleus of farmers is probably Re- | publican. If defections due to| drought controversies and third party | tickets keep away many votes from | being cast for either Mr. Roosevelt or Mr. Landon the decisive influence in most of the large States wiil be the | populous cities” votes. It is here that | the cost of living issue may diminish | the New Deal strength. It is in the cities where the housewife may be- | come interested in why food prices | have gone up that the full effect of | the drought may be felt in the na- | tional campaign. (Copyright, 1936.) | showered some of the passengers. for the time in shallow water off [in the last year. occurred Tuesday night. The passengers, including GovAJ attending the convention of the Auto- mobile Trade Association of Maryland, , e No one was injured. Z i H O U R The workmen had to cut a gaping to free it from the steamer. Its prow | nosed 10 feet into the State of Vir- | Meanwhile, pending their appear- ance before a Federal board investi- | members aboard both ships refused to discuss the collision. Companies ducting an investigation. At the time of the collision most mobile Trades Association of Maryland was gathered in the salon of the bay | a floor show by entertainers taken aboard at Annapolis. | their first indication of trouble was the frantic sound of whistles imme- | ‘The crash buckled the piates and rails of the steamer. Lights flickered Seven-foot Knoll, where the collision ' Harry W. Nice and other State officials were brought ashore early yesterday. | hole in the prow of the Golden Harvest | ginia’s side. gating the crash, officers and crew operating the vessels also were con- of the convention party of the Auto- | steamer State of Virginia, witnessing | The passengers generally asserted | diately preceding the impact. and went out. Oil from broken pipes | The impact threw the passengers Of gentlemen'’s Fini Hats, Panamas, F and French-Shriner GET ACQUAINTED 1409 G S Store-Wide Sale MEN’S STORE DURING THIS SALE Lewis & Thes. Saltz., Ine. NOT CONNECTED WITH SALTZ BROS., INC. little space. Specifications: @ 8 gallon double coated porcelain enamel tub—clean and sanitary ® Regular cast aluminum agitator @ Precision Naxon motor with Naxon motor with lifetime bearings— nothing to burn out or replace. e Clothing, Straw ine Haberdashery and Urner Shoes WITH THIS NEW pei TUESDAY and FRIDAY Till 9 P.M. Other Days Till 6 P.-M. t. N. W. CORAD CORAD CLHRADLLRIALCLHIAI ORI LHRAYD . Friday Night-7 to 9 ONLY SPECIAL Naxon Washer 1;95 ELECTRIC 1.95 Cash 2.00 Monthly Good-bye! DAILY WASHING DRUDGERY For the first time in the District of Columbia, the Kelly Furniture Co. offers the Naxon “Family Maid” Washer at this ridiculously low price. The “Naxon” does a thorough job in It is fully portable and will tuck away under kitchen sink or fit neatly into any corner or closet. Come in now and see these marvelous washers. realize how really beautiful and dependable they are. You will Capacity: © 2 lbs. dry clothes @ Overall height 20" (with cover) ® Tub diameter 152" ® Weight only 25 Ibs. 1245-47 Wisconsin Ave. Georgetown, D. C. claiming to speak for 7,000,000 unem- | published a survey showing that in- ployed young people, staged a moving | dustries were competing with each They car- |other for a thousand skilled young ried insignia including such divergent | men who could not be found. of the |country needs all-around machinists | | been | done, if we are not to go from bad | | find jobs, industry is crying aloud for | THURSDAY, little beyond its spiritual and intellec- tual means, straining always to a goal so0 high that the man himself must ex- pand and grow to attain it. On the contrary the creative life is pictured to youth as something to be handed out as a “right” along with relief jobs and free motion pictures. One’s very sympathy for youth en- genders indignation against such mis- leading of it, and the issuance of false hopes and false promises. Youth is being told today that this is a land of plenty; that only the criminal greed of the rich prevents everyone from having all that he needs or de- sires, with & minimum of effort. It is not true. We are a country which has squandered its resources by an irresponsible and speculative spirit shared by rich and poor, middle-aged and young alike. ‘We are a Nation which has lived on futures and charged today's luxuries up to to- morrow. At present we are doing this on a scale hitherto unknown in the | world. Not Enough Production. And never, at any time, have we begun to produce enough, nor have we at present the equipment to pro- duce enough, even if it were uni- versally and equitably distributed, to assure every one even a half-way de- cent living. If youth wants more than we have ever had, then youth has grave responsibilities. Under whatever po- litical or economic system might be devised, the coming generation will have to work harder and more skil- fully, think more clearly, live more austerely, accept more disciplines ana\ make far greater demands upon itself | than the generation just past has D. C., to worse. Whoever tells youth differ- | ently tells a lie. ‘There are curious anomalies, too, about youth and unemployment. At the same time that the young cannot highly skilled young artisans and cannot find them. In our metal indus- tries 20,000 skilled workers are needed at this moment. If we approach again the production level of 1929 there will be 123,000 new jobs in the metal industries alone—and it will be hard | to fill them. In June, 1935, the Na- | tional Industrial Conference Board The | with trained hands and trained minds, | young men who can read blueprints, | order materials, understand and oper- ate various kinds of machines and who are competent mathematicians, Apprenticeships Necessary. 1 While we have stopped immigration | from Europe, which used to furnish us with our best artisans, we have| training up a gencration im- patient of the long apprenticeship which all high degrees of skil! require, who do not want to use their hands and who think that it is more noble to file papers in an office than to know how to use and control a com- | plicated machine, or properly till a field, or handle delicate woods lovingly and expertly. Hundreds of second and third rate colleges turn out youths supposedly trained in the lib- eral arts and professions, who are next to illiterate. And the trades unions frown upon apprentices! while industry itself has bee; nally lax in opening up opportunities for learners. We have been educating a Nation of clerks whose idea of the creative life is to,spend money plenti- v for tawdry imitations. This is not youth's fault. It is youth's mis- fortune. There is nothing in any social sys- tem which will enable it aulomatically to rise above the level of the ca- pacities of its citizens. And the best civilizations have never been those which handed out the greatest amoun: of comfort for the least amount of effort. Great civilizations are those which make the most prodigious de- mands upon men, setting the lofties standards. (Copy ht. 1936.) Paramount Change Announced. NEW YORK., July 16 (#).—Directors of Paramount Pictures, Inc. have formally terminated the contract be- tween the corporation and John E. Otterson, former president of the com- pany. Barney Balaban, president, an- nounced that Russell Holman had been appointed director of all production activities in the East under Adolph Zukor, chairman of the board. ! 2MWE SELL U. S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATSIiiE 11 7th St. NW. STORE SLICED ROAST _ BACON AR LEAN BOILING TENDER Fancy Stewing FOWL 1b. Fresh Ground Beef . 121/5¢ VEAL--VEAL SHOULDER ROAST SHOULDER CHOPS RIB GROUND COFFEE 15 N QUART SALAD DRESSIN Cantaloupes| 29° i3 . 25° S SNMUMEWNNIOPEN TILL NINE ’\ T 1T New Potatoes 3 16° LARGE WHOLESALE RETAIL IIOIIllIIIlIlIIIIIIIll|IIllIIllllflllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIll||Il|||l|||llIHIlIHIIIII|IllIllIlIIlNII||IllIIllIIIII|IIIIIIIIIINII!II BEEF---BEEF 12427 STEAK g ge Pork Loin ) ROAST | Chickens 1b. The Spy-Minded Japanese Probably No Nation Takes Peace-Time Espionage So’ Seriously—Distrust of Tourists Illogical. BY BEN McKELWAY. N JANUARY of 1935 & lieutenant commander, Yoshio Matsuda, of the Japanese Navy was arrested in St. Petersburg, Fla., and held for a time in a cell. He was photographed for the newspapers looking through the bars, and there was a short-lived spy scare in the headlines. He had been arrested by a suspicious policeman for taking photographs of the St. Petersburg waterfront, including the Cruiser Trenton, then lying at anchor in the harbor. He was released after a short time, there being no law against taking pictures in St. Petersburg, although, perhaps, there ought to be. Most Amer- icans probably felt a little apclogetic about the business. Why get excited because a Japanese tourist takes pic- tures? Of what use to the Japanese Navy could there be in photographs of the St. Petersburg waterfront, or of the Cruiser Trenton at anchor? Better photos of both could probably be obtained from commercial photog- raphers or from the files of the Na- tional Geographic. Accurate charts could be obtained from the Coast and Geodetic Survey. But if Americans felt apologetic over the overzealousness of local police- men, there was doubtless no resentment over the incident in Japan. The Japanese are 50 spy-minded that the action of American police officials must have appeared entirely logical. And any American tourist in Japan, taking pictures of the Yokohama waterfront or of Japanese warships riding at Headline Folk and What They Do Mary Astor Shows Deep Maternal Interest in Fight for Child. BY LEMUEL F. PARTON. HE Gloria Vanderbil’, case, the Ann Herding case and now the Mary Astor case stir public discussion about children of oroken homes being taken away from their mothers. This writer notes many editorials pondering the Van- derbilt precedent with misgivings ar wondering whether this is not anott field in which the law and govern- ment have been too intrusive. There has been | much sadness in | the life of Mary Astor. Soon after her daughter Marilyn was born, the said— anchor would have fared worse than the Japanese Naval officer. The Amer- ican tourist would have probably lost his camera and his freedom until the United States Consul explained everything to the suspicious Japanese. That would have taken considerable time. * k¥ % All nations are engaged in peace-time espionage. But it is doubtful if any nation takes the business as seriously as do the Japanese. So fearful are the Japanese of spies in Japan, it is only natural to suspect them of want- ing to find out everything they can through their own espionage abroad But their precautions against American spies, disguised as tourists, are not entirely logical. The passage on a Japanese steamer through the Inland Sea of Japan, from Kobe through the Straits of Shimonoseki, is memorable because of the simple beauty of the scenery—and the strict bans against pho- tography. Many American tourists dely the ban, to the sorrow of the Amer- ican consular officers, because they can see no sense in it. There is no sense in it, but, as the consular officers wearily explain, that is not the point. The point is that the Japanese do not want such photographs taken and it is their country. You cannot, above all things, take a picture of a Japanese war vessel, But you can buy pictures of Japanese war vessels, or clip them from Japan- ese newspapers, and the Japanese passenger ships display on the smoking room walls detailed charts of the course through the Inland Sea—which ship’s officers will courteously help the interested tourist to copy in his note- book. They will also explain the tortuaus passage through the straits, where red and green traffic lights tell the mariner the strength of the tides. These, it would seem, would be more helpful to a real spy than a photograph of a pretty Japanese fishing village, perched on the side of a cliff, * k% Few American Naval attaches are invited aboard Japanese war vessels, and when they are their visits are jealously conducted. The opinion h: expressed that this precaution is taken by the Japanese more bec; what they lack on their ships than because of anything startling they have to conceal. Japanese war ships are not noted for their cleanliness. Be that as it may, the ban on visiting ships of war or taking photographs is all the more silly when it is realized how little one could gain through such meth- ods that would be of any value to naval experts. In the United States almost anybody can go aboard a warship on an in- spection tour. There is a fleet rule which denies such inspections to for- eigners at San Pedro. But little effort is made to look up the citizenship of the thousands who visit our ships of war. Certainly a Japanese Navy offi- cer would receive the courtesy of an inspection trip for the asking. The point is that the Japanese take espionage seriously, with the dead earnestness which is a national characteristic of everything they do. In Tokio the American visitor gets the impression that he is under observation from the time he registers at the Imperial Hotel until he leaves. And at Nagasaki, the last port before leaving Japan for China, the tourist is apt to Teceive the shock that came to me when a Japanese immigration official in uniform walked aboard as soon as the ship tied up—walked straight up to me, called me by name, mentioned my newspaper and, taking out his no book, fired questions at me about what I saw and what I liked, and if th were any suggestions I could make about adding to the enjoyment of Amer ican visitors to Japan. They were all polite and rather flattering but I felt like a spy. caught with the zoods, all the same. How did that fel- low know I was on board. get m: name correctly, and pick me out of the crowd on deck? Then there was the American newspaperman in Peiping, who got so tired being followed around by a Japanese in civilian clothes that he got hard-boiled and told him to “scram.” His little shadow did not understand that, but he did under- stand the effects of brandy and soda which the newspaperman tried next The Japanese also take their liquor seriously. The newspaperman lifted a notebook from the coat pocket of the slumbering Japanese, there to find neatly recorded everything the American journalist had done for the pa week. But nothing ever came of it. When the Japanese recovered he plead for the return of his book. “I am disgrace,” he explained. “I have lost my book.” A spy who gets caught is simply out of luck. There's nothing to be done about it Investments in England. Ore-fourth of England’s present na- tional wealth is invested in govern- ment and municipal securities. e | German Workman Poet Dies. | Heinrich Lesch. the workman pc has died at Remagen, in the Rhine- land, after a brief illness, at the age of 47. Before his works became fa- mous he earned his lving by making kettles. An oft-quoted line of his, written when he entered the war in 1914, ran, “Germany must live, even though we must die.” land it did not appear to be the usual Hollywood | cliche—that her | baby meant more to her than a thousand careers. and thereafter the child would absorb her life. Her | her estranged husband, Dr. F: Thorpe. incurring notoriety might injure her film the depth of her maternal interest Her first husband, Kenneth Hawks, film supervicor, was one of 10 persc killed in a collision of m planes in 1931, three years marriage. They had been p | devot to each other. Then came the depression and of all she had saved of her earnings of $500,000 in | 10 years in the films. Other troubles | assailed her | She was a femini day lot. ary Astor. One eth Pagliaccl. 1 after Kenn had the line. * band read script de; countena; meant a new W She fights to keep She was Li Illinois farm family when her father became a teact German at @ The war pa: ¢ swept him out of his job. They we: to Chicago and her taught a girl second prize in a film m contest and that set h to Hollywood. azine beauty on the wa ARIOUS emissaries of this partment report that R. Miller of Teachers’ lumbia, is the first educa e to offer instructio: ' Such de- He has been at that no man is r v educated un- less he is trained to know a fake whi he sees it Mr. M the Cleveland Plain Dea many famous stories with S tion. He solved all the tricks of t press agents and learned to spot t buried ace of propaganda clear across street. When of the divisi Cleveland publ over his unadu Also when he became the bureau of educational s Teachers' College in 1928. He is former teacher at Ohio State and Western Reserve Universities. is current opus he pe; “glittering ing.” sucker cards.” and “stacking th EISEMAN’S Seventh and F FRIDAY SALE 3146 M St. N.W.: SLICED COOKED ». 10¢ 14¢ b. b. Small Frying 1h 2 e SLICED SWEITZER CHEESE 289 Ib. L LARGE Fancy Veal Cutlets___ . 33c LARGE Pineapples 12%° ~ Juicy Oranges 15¢ P.M. SATURD:YH|l||l||||||IlI|IlIlIIlIIIIII N 30° [HINIIII0E (§ 39¢ Shorts - - - _26¢ |} 29¢ Hose 19¢ 19¢ Wash Ties__ _13¢ 55c¢ Silk Ties_ ___37¢ 69c Belts_ - _____46c¢ fifi|!llll! T No exchanges All sales $15 IMPORTED LINEN SUITS 4 0FF 310 All sizes and models $30 ALL-WOOL SUITS L4 0FF 20 3-piece woolen suits in smart grays and tans FURNISHINGS 5 OFF $1.50 Shirts __$1.00 $1.95 Shirts _ . $1.30 $1.50 Pajamas $1.00 $1.50 Hats $1.00 $3.95 Panamas, $2.63