Evening Star Newspaper, July 24, 1936, Page 1

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WEATHER. (U 8. Weather Bureau Forecast.) Fair and slightly cooler tonight; to- morrow fair with moderate temperatures; moderate north and northwest winds. ‘Temperatures—Highest, 93, at 3 p.m. yes- terday; lowest, 67, at 10 p.m. yesterday, Full report on page A-2. Closing New York Markets, Page 14 No. 33,687. Entered as second class matter post office, Washington, D. C. h WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ¢ Foening Star WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1936—THIRTY PAGES.#**# BOWERS TAKES REFUGE IN FORT; U. S. CITIZENS FLEE SPANISH RIOTS; Is Slain in ) ———— READY TO SAIL ESg45 Street. France and Britain| 4,000 KILLED IN Consulate Aide 100 AMERICANS \ tect Citizens. By thc Associated Press. Aghast at the killing of an Amer- fcan consulate employe and a British subject endeavoring to protect Amer- ican lives, 100 citizens of this country sought refuge today aboard e rescue ship which reached Barcelona, Spain. Simultaneously embassy officials at Ban Sebastian reported to the State Department that conditions there ‘were “horrible” and that American Ambassador Claude G. Bowers still was cut off from his office. | The American Embassy at Paris| was advised during the day that Bowers has taken refuge at Fuenter- rabia, a fortress 9 miles northeast of San Sebastian. Meanwhile, the United | States, France and Great Britain agreed to pool their facilities to evac- uate refugees. Hallett Johnson, counselor of the | control. SAN SE BASTIAN * Trouble Spots in Spain Battalions of armed civilians, thrusting out in two direc- tions, were reported to have won a smashing government victory over rebel forces of Gen. Emilio Mola. of the situation today. Principal objectives of government troops are cities underscored. Some are reported under government Map shows high spots —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. Madrid Embassy, still was in San Se- bastian, and nearly 100 Americans were in the embassy at Madrid, the embassy was told. The battleship Oklahoma was ex- pected to arrive in Bilbao today, and the Coast Guard cutter Cayuga was en route there, the embassy said. France, England to Aid. Arrangements for the three- cornered evacuation plan were made‘ in Paris between the United States and France and in London between France and Great Britain. | France offered America the use of the ship Indomitable, which will ar- rive in San Sebastian tonight, to re- move Ambassador Bowers and other | Americans. 12y tne Associated Press. Facilities of other French ships DETROIT, July 24.—Associates of were offered to Americans at Valencia, | Rev. Charles E. Coughlin said today which also was understood to be the | that he “probably will have no com- center of conflict. ment whatever to make” regarding re- Collaboration between the three na- | ports that a telephone conversation tions in rescuing refugees was de- | with the Vatican preceded publication FATHER COUGHLIN Associates Say He Pre- pared Apology Before Re- ported Telephone Talk. T0 HOLD SLENEE scribed as a matter of “convenience.” The American Embassy at Madrid asked Spanish authorities for addi- tional police protection and closed the American consulate. Eric C. Wendelin, third secretary of the embassy. reported to Washington | that approximately 120 persons spent | \ast night in the embassy. He considered the present guard of four men assigned to the building in- adequate and hoped to obtain armed militia, as had certain other foreign embassies and legations in the Span- ish capital. Madrid Is Quiet. ! Wendelin said the city was quiet; last night. Most of the available mili- | aary forces had been sent to the north | or east, but some groups of armed militia patrolled the capital nnpl ex- amined credentials of all foreigners on the streets. j Lynn W. Franklin, American diplo- | matic representative at Barcelona, re- | ported that Santiago Itsurralde, Span- fard, who has “served this consulate faithfully 17 years,” and a British cubject serving as his chauffeur were shot to death while driving on a mis- sion designed to protect American lives. | The American Export Line reported | to the State Department that the| steamer Exeter arrived at Barcelona | at 9 pm. (Barcelona time) and that | the master was given a list of 100 Americans and 100 other foreigners who wished to be evacuated. The master expected to sail for Marseille, France, this evening. “Conditions Horrible.” PFrom San Sebastian, Johnson, counselor of the embassy, reported in a message filed last night: “The city is without government, conditions are horrible and there have been no communications in or out of the city for three days. “Ambassador Bowers was heard (See AMERICANS, Page 5.) e MERCURY TUMBLED BY HEAVY SHOWER 84-Miles-an-Hour-Wind Gusts Aid jn Dropping Temperature 19 Degrees. Cooling winds and a heavy shower this afternoon sent the temperature down 19 degrees, from 85 to 66, in about a half hour. Gusts of wind which preceded the shower, which began shortly before 1 p.m., reached a velocity of 34 miles an hour, it was said at the Weather Bureau. The temperature had climbed to 8! noon. It remained high until the approach of the storm about 12:45 p.m. and had gone down to 67 degrees at 1:15 pm. Showers may continue at intervals through the middle of the afternoon, the forecaster said. Fair and slightly cooler weather is predicted for to- night, to be followed by clear skies and moderate temperatures tomorrow. The heaviest precipitation since May 3 was experienced last night when 198 inches of rain fell. The storm was preceded by winds that of the priest’s public apology for hav- ing called President Roosevelt a “liar.” They said they did not know whether such a call had been made and de- clared that Father Coughlin began preparation of the apology immedi- ately after his return from Cleveland, where he made the attack on President Roosevelt July 16. In the same open letter which con- tained the apology Father Coughlin expressed an intention to do all pos- sible to defeat President Roosevelt for re-election, In a subsequent interview at his Shrine of the Little Flower, Father Coughlin said that “I have no per- sonal quarrel with the President, and | T believe he is well-intentioned, but he succeeds in surrounding himself with crackpots.” The formal statement was published under the heading “An Open Letter of Apology to President Roosevelt” in the July 27 issue of Social Justice, organ of Fatner Coughlin’s National Union for Social Justice. Signed by Father Coughlin, it said that he spoke “in righteous anger” when “I addressed to the President of the United States in a speech at Cleveland July 16 the word ‘liar,’” and “for that action I now offer to the President my sincere apology.” Shall Work for Defeat. The same open letter said that “as my President I still respect you; as a fellow citizen and as a man I still regard you highly, but as an execu- tive, despite your excellency’s fine intentions, I deem it best for the wel- fare of our common country that you be supplanted in office. To that end, in a gentlemanly and courageous manner, I shall strive.” The possibility existed that Father Coughlin’s efforts toward that end might be restrained. An American prelate in Rome said the church was considering action to curtail the Royal Oak priest’s po- litical activities, which have included indorsement of Representative Wil- liam Lemke as candidate of the Union party for President. Any such action awaits the arrival at Rome of Bishop Michael Gallagher, Father Coughlin’s ecclesiastical superior at Detroit. Father Coughlin said that “what- ever orders come from Rome curtail- ing my preaching social justice, I (See COUGHLIN, Page A-3) Ship Sunk in Collision. COPENHAGEN, Sweden, July 24 (). —The American steamer Clifftwood sank the Bjornvik, a 1,065-ton Es- thonian ship, today in a collision at Oregund, four miles south of Kullen, Sweden. U. 5. TAKES SUIT 10 SUPREME COURT Attacks Ruling by Appellate Body in Holding Com- pany Case. Attacking the ruling of the-United | States Court of Appeals for the Dis- trict, the Government today filed with the United States Supreme Court a petition for writs of certiorari in the holding company suits brought by the North American Co. and the Ameri- can Water Works & Electric Co. against the Securities and Exchange Commission. The two cases were among seven brought in this jurisdiction, but in which action was stayed by the Dis- trict Court after Attorney General Cummings had made a personal ap- peal for holding the suits in abeyance until & decision could be reached in the Eiectric Bond & Share case filed in New York. Subsequently, however, the Appeals Court over-ruled the District Court stay in the two cases specified. The Attorney General’s contention that the issues were the same in these cases as in that of the Electric Bond & Share Co. was refuted in the Cir- cuit Court’s opinion, and it was stated that companies involved should be allowed their own opportunity for court settlement, Government Argument. In presenting the petitions today the Government advanced the follow- ing argument as its first reason for granting the writs: “The Court of Appeals for the Dis- trict of Columbia has decided a ques- tion of far-reaching importance af- fecting procedure in the Federal courts. The Court of Appeals has held that a Federal court is without discretion to stay its own proceedings pending the final disposition of an- other suit involving similar issues of law and fact instituted in the same or another Federal court. It has held, in effect, that power to grant such a stay does not exist unless the issues and parties in both suits are identical and the disposition of one suit will render the other res:adju- dicata. However wasteful of the time and labor of an already overburdened court trials of numerous cases in- volving substantially similar issues may be, the trial court is deprited of the right in the exercise of its (See NORTH AMERICAN, Page 2.) SHIP STILL ABLAZE Exploding Oil Tanks Force Others to Stand Away. MANILA, P. I, July 24 (#).—The Danish motor ship Nora Maersk was still afire today in Zamboanga-Harbor, Mindanao Island, with its oil tanks exploding at intervals and forcing all Threatened With Shotgun, Says Wife, Suing Physician 5= 708 District Court today for a limited reached a velocity of 38 miles an hour. | givorce, Between 9 and 10 pm., when the| Through Attorney Jean M. Board: rain fell in torrents, the mercury | man, she told the court Dr. Magee, & drepped from 83 to 67 degrees. physician, was cruel to her for 10 Streets were flooded near Arkansas|years and that she is entitled to & avenue and Delafield place and a|decree. The couple was married here miniature river washed out some 200 |in 1909 and have seven children, five feet of new roadway under the Six-|of whom are minors. teenth Street Bridge in Rock Creek | According to the bill of complaint, !:nrk. the physician “threatened to kill ts ESE Fierce Fighting Rages Near Madrid. “STARVATION” MOVE SEEN Rebels, Loyalists Die in Border Battle. BACKGROUND— A Leftist victory in Spain last February put radicals in control of the country. Last week a rebellion broke out in the army at Morocco. Rebels were advocates of return to conservative government, joined by those who desire return of mon- archy and by those who see Spain’s only hope in fascism. The revolt at Morocco was suc- cessful and the revolt spread to the Spanish mainland with heaviest Aghting at San Sebastian and Madrid. An unestimated number of persons have been killed. Be- cause of widespread fighting and lack of communication no one knows which side actually is ahead at moment. i (Copyright. 1936, by the Assoclated Press.) Col. Villanueva, Spanish Fascist commander at Vera, estimated tonight 4,000 were dead in the fighting at San Sebastion. The rebels pounded the town most of the day with a battery of three “75s” from the hills to the south, and Villanueva said he would continue the attack “if it takes all month.” He admitted what was left of San Sebastian was in loyalist hands. At the same time the colonel an- nounced Gen. Emilio Mola, directing the insurgent attack from the north of Madrid, had cut the capital's two sources of water. The rebels he said, “expect ter- rible suffering under the intense Sum- mer heat of Madrid” would bring the government to quick terms. Fight Near Madrid. Rebels fought Leftist government forces only a few miles from Madrid, while the Fascist high command was e to be maneuvering to “starve out” the capital city and other stra- tegic points. “Starve-out” tactics were contem- | plated also for San Sebastian and Irun. On a front a few miles northwest of Madrid the government threw rein- forcements into & mountain pass, called the Gateway to Madrid, in an effort to stem the rebel advance. The rebels themselves trundled re- inforcements north to besiege Leftist strongholds. At Endarlaza, Northern Spain, 55 rebels and an undetermined number of government militiamen were killed in a vicious battle. Battle Near River. ‘The engagement was fought out across the Bidassoa River at a point where the stream is less than 50 feet wide. Three hundred soldiers and cara- bineros in the rebel column tried to cross the river at the point where loyalist forces had blown up the bridge. They met merciless resistance and were forced to retreat almost 4 miles to a camp outside Vera, from where ;hey were attempting to march on run, From rebel headquarters in Vera, Col. Villanueva admitted control of what was left of San Sebastian was in the hands of the Loyalist popular front. From Pamplona, Gen. Emilio Mola, northern Fascist commander, sped toward Madrid to take personal charge of the troops battling south- ward. Truckloads of peasant volun- teers streamed over the highways to rebel-held Pamplona and to the San Sebastian front. In Madrid a call was issued for re- inforcements. Spanish Communists in San Se- bastian threatened to kill 500 Spanish aristocrats it the rebels did not stop bombing the resort from the air. Rebels Lose Place. Renewing an attack blocked yes- terday by liberal artillery, infantry and airplanes, the Fascist armies of Gen. Francisco Franco, rebel leader, fought for control of the Pass of Guadarrama, gateway to Madrid, but (See SPAIN, Page 5.) MERIC OT A COMMO] ) '© BE DELIVERED AN INITIATNE DITY The only in Associated evening paper Washington with the Press News and Wirephoto Services. Yesterday’s Circulation, 130,388 (Some returns not yet recetved.) Associated Press. TWO CENTS. N PACKAGES THROUGH A GOVERNMENT BUREAY” AW.THAT'S b | JUST TYPICAL. PRAIRIE STUFF! FORGET (7! Team Backs Eleanor Jarrett In Fight for Reinstatement BERLIN, July 24—Dropped from the American Olympic team for vio- | statement after a tearful plea for “one more chance,” Eleanor Holm Jarrett fought today to be given the right to defend her 100-meter backstroke | swimming championship. 220 Sign Petition After Expulsion Order Is Upheld—Swimmer Getting “Rough Deal,” Lawson Robertson Says. | Ry tne Associated Press. appeal to Olympic officials, a petition, | signed by 220 athletes, requesting her reinstatement was handed to Avery | lation of training rules, denied rein- | Brundage, president of the American | Olympic Committee. | Brundage said he would give con- | sideration to the petition and any | other information which might alter | Mrs. Jarrett’s case. [ . TALMAN ENDS LFE WITH BULET Body in Bath Room * of Home. Charles Fitzhugh Talman, 61, an outstanding authority on meteorology, shot and fatally wounded himself to- day in the second-floor bath room of his home, at 2010 Hillyer place. Tal- man was found by his wife with a bullet wound in his head at about 8 Dies Hour After Wife Finds LANDON QUTLINES CAMPAIGN COURSE WITH HAMILTON Refuses to Amplify His Pledge of Cash Payments to Farmers. TALK WITH VANDENBERG SCHEDULED NEXT WEEK Governor Urges Unity in Recovery Drive in Acceptance Speech Last Night. (Landon text Page A-6.) BY G. GOULD LINCOLN, Staft Correspondent of The Star. TOPEKA, Kans,, July 2¢.—Gov. Alf M. Landon, Republican nominee for President, acclaimed by millions of his followers, who had only praise for his speech of acceptance, got down to business today outlining with his campaign manager, John Hamilton, his future course. The Governor would not amplify his discussion of the farm problem, in which he ! pledged cash benefit payments to the | farmers, nor would he discuss other | subjects more fully. He plans to make lrurther campaign speeches dealing | separately and in detail with the farm problem, the merit system, taxation {and budget balancing and Government | waste, reciprocal trade agreements, {the currency and other important | subjects after his conference with Hamilton. It is expected that some announcement will be made regard- ing his coming swing into the East. Messages Pour In. Thousands of telegrams and mes- | sages poured in on the Governor today congratulating him on his address | last night, in which he called a united American citizenry to turn the coun- try to recovery and prosperity along American lines, with freedom of op- portunity for all, and demanded that | the “fumbling” of the New Deal ad- ministration with recovery be ended. Senator Arthur M. Vandenberg of ‘The lovely New York girl was; “I'll never touch another drop of dropped from the team last mgm‘llquor,” Mrs. Jarrett said. “All I want when the liner Manhattan docked at | is one more chance to show I can take | Hamburg for repeated violation of the | it and make good. | rules forbidding drinking and late| “I talked for over an hour with hours. | committeemen on the train from After-she, herself, had failed in an| ~ (See JARRETT, Page A-2.) |am. He died in Emergency Hos- | Michigan, who was a potential candi- . | date for the presidential nomination pital about an hour later. and whose selection as running mate On the floor beside him when his | for Landon was ardently advocated at wife found him was a .32-caliber re- |the Republican National Convention, volver and blood was streaming from | is coming here to confer with Gov. the wound, just behind his right ear. | Landon early next week. Early today Mrs. Talman said she did not hear | Harry F. Guggenheim of the Guggen- CLAUDE RPPY 2 UP ATIBTHINORIZLE He and Greiner Unable to Break Par in Public Links Semi-Finals. Ay the Associated Press. FARMINGDALE, N. Y., July 24— Claude Rippy, co-medalist from Wash- ington, led Walter Greiner, young Bal- timore student, 2 up, halfway in their 36-hole semi-final match today in the national public links golf champion- ship. Playing for the most part in a drizzling rain, both players were un- | able to continue their near-par pace of the last few days, Rippy scoring a medal of 38—38—76 to Greiner's 39— | 39—78. They swapped six holes with four pars and two birdies, the Wash- ington ripper winning two holes, one each side. One up at the turn, the Ripper stuck his approach 2 feet hole high for a birdie 3 on the 340-yard eleventh, to g0 2 up. He laid Greiner a dead stymie to go 3 up on the fourteenth, but laid an iron stony to score a birdie 3 on the long fifteenth, cutting his handicap t@ two holes again. Rippy's chance to win the eighteenth was foiled when Greiner, over shooting the green with his second, laid Rippy a dead stymie to get a half in bogey 5s. Rippy Wins Two of First Nine. In the front nine Rippy won two holes, lost one and halved six. He took the first hole in par as Greiner hammered his second shot into the woods, but the match was squared on the long third where Rippy's second hit a trap and he flubbed his explo- sion shot. Greiner was short with his approach on the short fourth and he lost it to Rippy’s par, going 1 down. ‘They halved the next five, both taking bogey 58 on the sixth because of wild approaches. ‘The morning cards: 445 344 354—36 - 545 445 354—39 - 446 345 354—38 - 344 454 534—36—72 Greiner—Out POSTMASTER ORDER HELD SHAM REFORM i Vandenberg Says Action by White House Decree Instead of Law Is Typically Rooseveltian. Py the Asscciated Press, - 345 563 535—39—78 - 335 554 535—38—76 Abbott Also 2 Up. Movie Extra Pat Abbott of Pasa- dena overcame a 2-hole deficit through the first eight and played the next 10 in 1 under par to grab a 2-up margin over Bruno Pardee, steady plodding New Haven, Conn., insur- ance salesman, halfway in the other semi-final. —_— EXPLORERS DEPART Soviet Party Off to Seek “Land of High Mountains.” ARCHANGEL, U. 8. 8. R, July 2¢ 1., SAVINGS BANK. T0 PAY 17000 | Third Dividend, Amounting to 10 Per Cent, Authorized by Controller 0’Connor. A third dividend, of 10 per cent | amounting to $170,000, was authorized today by the controller of the cur- rency to be paid to 6,900 depositors of the United States Savings Bank. ‘This brings the total of three divi- dends to 90 per cent, amounting to $1,537,930, made available to depos- itors. ‘The new dividend was made possible through an additional loan obtained from the Reconstruction Finance Corp. on the remaining assets of the bank. This loan was obtained several months ago, but the dividend had to be with- held until determination of a suit filed by Col. Wade H. Cooper, former presi- dent of the bank, to force the Secretary of the Treasury and the controller of the currency to dissolve the receiver- ship. The Court of Appeals recently dismissed Col. Cooper’s suit, and this paved the way for payment of the dividend. The dividend will be made avail- able by Receiver Carter B. Keene at the bank, Fourteenth and U streets. Payment of the new dividend began this afternoon. In order, however, to make the payment in an orderly man- ner, depositors were asked to wait un- til they are notified by mail to call for their money. The receiver -is sending out cards in alphabetical or- der to invite depositors in groups, so as to prevent congestion by crowds in the lobby. -——— MRS. MAXWELL’S TRIAL TO MEET CONTINUANCE Will Allow Ruling on Appeal of Daughter in Slaying of Father. WISE, Va, July 2¢ (#)—Trial of Mrs. Anre ‘Maxwell, indicted jointly with her daughter, Edith Maxwell, for the slaying of Trigg Maxwell, will be continued when it comes up in Wise Circuit Court August 5, Common- wealth's Attorney Fred B. Greear said today. The continuance, he said, will af- ford time for a ruling by the Virginia Supreme Court on Edith Maxwell’s appeal from a 25-year sentence im- by & local jury. Night Final belivered by Carrier Anywhere in the City [ J Full Sports the shot fired. Dr. Robert S. Beale, who had been treating Talman for the last year, was called and ordered his removal to the hospital. He died in the operating room. Later, Coroner A. Magruder Mac- Donald issued a certificate of suicicu, Pinned to a curtain in the bath room where Talman was found was an unsigned note declared written by him. Addressed to his wife, it said in part: ‘ “Darling, please forgive me. Ask (a friend of the family was named here) to help. He will for Marjorie’s | sake. “I ask to be cremated.” Came Here in 1900. Born August 31, 1874, in Detroit, | Mr. Talman was educated in the De- | troit public schools and at Kalamazoo College. In 1900 he came to Wash- | ington and in 1909 he married Grace Edes of this city. In additica to his widow, he is survived by a daughter, Constance Marjorle, Who married Mario Rodriquez of Chile last Fall. j Rodriquez was attached to the| Chilean Embassy here at that time, but is now in Lima, Peru, on duty. The former Miss Talman is with him there, | Surviving also is a son, Ensign| Benjamin L. E. Talman, now on duty on the U. S. S. Maryland. Talman entered the service of the | Weather Bureau in 1896 and advanced | through the service to his present post | of consultant meteorologist. During | numerous assignments he was on duty | in Norfolk, Va.; in the West Indies, at Boston, Springfield, Ill, and Buf- falo.. Since 1909 he has been stationed here, serving as librarian of the bureau | and doing a great amount of scientific | writing. | Author of Many Articles. He was author of more than 2,000 articles, syndicated scientific | articles and books and has been en- | gaged for several years in compiling & dictionary of meteorological terms. This work was not finished at the time of his death. About one year ago his health began (See TALMAN, Page A-2) | 800 TO RESUME WORK AT HARDWARE COMPANY C. I. 0. Announces Settlement of Pittsburgh Walkout With 5 Per Cent Wage Boost. 85 (he Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, July 24.—The Com- mittee for Industrial Organization of the steel industry announced settle- ment today of a strike of 800 employes of Hubbard & Co., hardware manufac- turers, with a 5 per cent wage increase. The workers went on strike a week ago, demanding a 20 per cent increase. ‘The workers' committee claimed the company also agreed to recognize the union as a collective bargaining agent. Base Ball Scores, Race Results, Complete Market News of the Day, Latest News Flashes from Around the World. What- ever it is, you'll find it in The Night Final Sports Edition. THE NIGHT FINAL SPORTS and SUNDAY STAR—delivered by carrier—70c & month. Call National 5000 and service will start at once. | heim Foundation conferred with the Republican candidate fo three-quar- ters of an hour. | Urges United Nation. | Gov. Landon stands today commit- “ ted to the proposition that all Amer- | icans must ge forward together’ for permanent recovery. “The time has come to pull to- gether,” he said, addressing a huge crowd which hung upon his words last night as he formally accepted the Presidential nomination. “If we are to go forward perma- nently, it must be with a united Nation—not with a people torn by appeals to prejudice and divided by class feeling.” And so the Republican candidate lifted the gage flung down by Presi- dent Rosevelt in his speech accepting the Democratic nomination in Phila- delphia—a speech which has been in- terpreted as arraying class against class. The Republican candidate stands committed also to the proposition that the American form of Government must endure with powers divided be- tween the States and the Federal Government, and that there must be no usurpation of powers by the execu- tive branch of the Federal Govern- ment. He stands committed, too, to the proposition that those who need re- lief in this country must have it. He said: “Let me emphasize that, while we propose to follow a policy of economy in Government expenditures, those who need relief will get it. “We will not take our economies (See LANDON, Page 4. POLICEMAN BOMBED IN SYRACUSE STRIKE Explosive Hurled From Auto Lets Go as Officer Stoops to Pick It Up. | My tic Associated Press. SYRACUSE, N. Y, July 24—Pe- trolman John E. Hanley was seriously injured early teday by an explosive missile thrown from a car. The pa- trolman, on duty as a guard at the strike-closed plant of Remington- Rand, Inc, was injured when he stooped to pick it up. ‘Taken to e hospital, his legs were found injured severely. Police were unable to find a trace of the missile. C. E. McCarthy, & friend of the injured patrolman, said he saw smoke or steam arising from the object and shouted “Don’t touch it.” Just as the patrolman leaned over it exploded. McCarthy said it seemed to have been in a paper bag. Four men found near the plant were taken to police headquarters for questioning. Readers’ Guide Answers to Questions Death Notices Editorial - Finance - Lost and Found News Comment Features A-9 ---B-7 Serial Story A-17 Washington Wayside Women’s Fgntures ..

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