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DETROIT 1S CALM AMID“SIT-DOWNS' Majority of Citizens Polled | Say They Are Getting Tired of Situation. Epeclal Dispatch to The Star. DETROIT, March 23 (NANA).— Detroit may be sitting on a powder keg of industrial strife, but the man in the street refuses to get excited about it. | Police have evicted sit-down strikers | from three small plants and & welfare | office in the last three days; 6,000 | stay-ins continue to occupy all | Chrysler plants in defiance of a court injunction ordering them to evacuate; the United Automobile Workers Union has called a mass meeting in down- town Cadillac square for Tuesday, de- spite refusal of the City Council to grant the necessary permit; the U. A. W. has threatened a general strike in the automobile industry if police raids on sit-downers are not discon- tinued—but the man in the street shrugs his shoulders and declares, “Everything will work out all right.” Blames Gov. Murphy. “It's all Gov. Murphy’s fault,” said Mrs. Alice Baker, an office worker “If he had called out the troops up in Flint and put out the General Motors strikers, all these sit-down strikes in Detroit wouldn’t have happened. They don't treat strikers that Canada. They've had one si there and the police broke it up al- | most as soon as it started. However, | I think the Detroit police will handle the situation here without any trouble.” | An employe of a collection house expressed the sentiment of most of those interviewed during the evening rush hour in downtown Detroit when he said: “My sympathy was with the strik- ers when they first started, but this wave of sit-down strikes is giving me & pain in the neck. I'm a working- man, myself, so naturally I was in sympathy with the strikers at first. It seemed to me that if they couldn’t get working conditions, wages and hours improved by any other way, why, & sit-down strike was a pretty good stunt. But they’ve carried the thing too far. When you stop to think about it it just doesn’t seem right to take a man's property away from him and order him out of his place of business. I don't care what kind of complaints the worker has—it just doesn't seem like the American way of doing things.” Says Attitude Changed. Another woman, whose sympathies eriginally were with the strikers, said her attitude changed when it was re- vealed, in a recent department store sit-down, that the union, organizers were hoodlums with police records and that at least one of them was a “pro- fessional sit-downer” who got $50 for each “job.” “I'm just about fed up with these sit-down strikes and the way they’'ve erippled business,” said H. F. Reaume, employe of & large Detroit bank. “I'm sympathetic with the strikers’ efforts o better their conditions, but I cer- tainly don't like their methods. Espe- eially, the methods used by these gang- sters who are trying to run the work- ingmen. I don't blame the employer | who refuses to deal with such men If I were an employer I wouldn’t — LOST. BOOKCASE DRAWER and contents Sun- gay. at 'd and Farragut n.w Reward for return. 30 1st_st. n.w.. Apt. | POSTON BULL TERRIER—Male: black. brown and white: answers name ‘‘Happy eather harness. tag No, 4133 ilson lane, Bethesda, Phone Wis. $094 Rewardéil Ao’ it 5 COCKER SPANIEL—Dark brown ehest. green collar; vicinity 30th and ats. n.w.__Reward. North 5076-J. ENTAL BRACE RETAINER lue Bird Barbecue (near lost_vicini! alrport): $ T fifth floor. afternoon, TAMOND RING. Garfinckel'’s stote arch 20. Pinder ple eward. _Address Box_ . Star_office. 'YEGLASSES. {n Leese case. in neighbor- 00d of Park rd. Please call Walnut 8436 or Potomac 5043. EYEGLASSES, near 8th and H ne Re- LA SR et Se. Mr “Munay. FOX TERRIER—Black, white and tan. male. Liberal reward, 4905 Ilinois ave. nw. 4728 24 RISH SETTER. mal icense No. 23452 Reward e et Y OCKETBOOK —Biue leather. containing ey comoRel_ keve: Chevy Chase, D on March 22. Reward. Emerson 5616 POCKETBOOK—Brown. Saturday night: confaining money. check driver's permif and registration card. Finder keep money and return articles. Elsie E. Jackson. 4517 Bth st nw. 4 PURSE—B! pirport, Su u as le_ red, mame ‘Pat Call Decatur 280 ia ivet, near Washington nday. Reward. Emerson SPECIAL NOTICES. £ NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY le‘:“l}lléong'ltlefl by _any one other lh:_An myselt. E. ROBERTS, 233 Fla. av nw . “WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY Pbliuénnlrlued any_one other_ than @myself, JOHN L. W, BURKE. 1668 Trini dad_ave. n.e. Apt. 4 e J WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts other than contracted by muyself HAMPTON REDFORD. 3003 7th st. s.e. 24% BUSINESS BEING SOLD NOT RE- sponsible for any goods unless ol by me _ Effective_immediately. AN LA ANSELMO. 1325 Water st. 5. At s WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE™ TOR ebts contracted by any one otHer than vselt ' JOSEPH EARL ROBEY. 1317 enyon st. n.w. e {.,SPECIAL OCK- ol will by by rdered DREW M N ders of the Home Building Association be held at the office of the associa- 2006 Pennsylvania ave. n.w.. Tues- A 23 1037, at 7:30 o'clock p.m. to act on s proposed amendment to the ronstitution relative to the examination of titles to nmner{‘v offered ?stgecur‘ll!!rnfeavr o the duties of the attorney. Jores i lE'RED L. VOGT. President JAMES M. WOODWARD. Secretary. _ ‘OLD DAGUERREOTYPES, TINTYPES. KO- sk prints or any treasured ‘“keebsake ictures’ restored. impr d. copled. ED. RIONETON STUDIO. 1503 F st. nw. NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR | any one other than [ASTASIO, 9 f wiLL Febts contracted by myself. ANDREA AN, pming ave. n. MARCH 24. 7:30 P. for storage and othi . engine 30100 1227 R st et 170N O LONGER BE RESPONSIBLE 037. U WILL or any debts except those contracted by mysell on and after March § A JAMES K. HUNTER, 228 Hamilton st. n.W. AILY TRIES MOVING LOADS AND PART oads to and from Baito. Phila. and New ities, ‘‘Dependable rvice B SHE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO._Phone Decatur 2500. BPECTAL THIS WEEK—3 VANS RETURN. ng to Fla. 2 to New York. 3 to Atlanta MEiropolitan 3800, SUDDATH MOVING, & STORAGE CO. EHYRK 25 AUCTION SALE—FURNITURE OF EVERY description to_be sold for storage charges pn Thursday, March 25, at 10 a.m., in our warehouse, 420 10th st. n.w. first floor, Zonsisting of living room suites. bed room Uites, dining suites. dressers, tables, chairs, eds. linens, dishes, books, rugs, etc. UNITED STATES STORAGE COMPANY. § WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debis contracted by any one other than my- o W Sd3 T6tn stonw. 240 THINK IT OVER! The handy man will “fix” your roof at less Cost than we charge to repair L right—but, when rain comes our Wi s—keeps you ONS Hooring " "e3s v st. N.w. COMPANY __ North 4433 CH B is one of the largest CHAMBERS {fdcrtakers “m the world, Complete funerals as low as $75 up. 8ix chapels. twelve parlors. seventeen , hearses. twenty-five undertakers and assistants. Ambulances now only $3, 1400 Chapin st. n.w. Columbia 0432 517 11th st_se. Atlanitc 6700. Rapid, Efficient Reproductions llow us fo estimate on your next job. Ve provide pgrfect reproductions of ali books. maps. (Sreign language matter. etc. We make a specialty of reprints and ex- tra copy work. Prompt service assured. Columbia Planograph Co. 80 L 8t. NE. Metropolitan 4802 A | | | | | | | | | | | Several raids, two y vicinity 308 | | attachment. | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON Vacation Studies of the President . G The President appears thoughtful. e These three studies of President Roosevelt, now on vacation at the little White House at Warm Springs, Ga., were made yesterday. At left: Center: He ruminatively rubs his neck, and, at right, he laughs as he jokes with the cameramen. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. | want an outsider telling me how to run my business.” Two auto workers, one employed in | other thrown out of work as the result of the Chrysler strike, expressed the idea that the sit-down method of en- | had been | union demands | forcing by the outcropping of sit- | “ruined” | downs in every conceivable type of | business. “I suppose it's our own fault for | showing them how it should be done,” | said one of the worker: Bootblack Offers Opinions. paratively unaffected by the sit-down | epidemic, a colored shoe-shine boy, gave voice to another sentiment which is fairly prevalent throughout the city. “The police are certainly making a fine showing against the girls in the cigar factory and the old folks in the welfare office,” he said, “but you don’t notice them trying to kick out the | boys in the Chrysler plants, do you? | Bo; i try it? won't that be a picnic when they Of course, they got sense | enough not to try it. Tl take the | whole Michigan National Guard to put them boys out.” (Copyright, 1937. by the North Americia Newspaper Alliance Inc.) Strikes (Continued From First Page.) strikers in small, plants, While the union deferred its threat- ened call of a citywide automotive strike as a more formidable protest against those evictions, city officials | announced there would be no further | interference with “peaceful” strikers. terday, avowedly were based upon information that non-employes were among the strikers. The announcement of an impend- | ing meeting between Chrysler and Lewis at Lansing climaxed long-con- tinued efforts to bring them together |in New York. Chrysler heretofore has refused to meet any representa- | tive of the union as long as strikers | continued to occupy the plants. It was assumed Lewis would offer | tomorrow to settle the Chrysler strike on the basis of the recent General Motors agreement, calling for ex- clusive bargaining rights for six months. Chrysler conferees here re- jected that proposal yesterday. Nine Are Convicted. Nine men were convicted of con- tempt and given suspended sentences | today as an aftermath of the ejection | of 66 strikers from the Newton Pack- ing Co. plant Saturday. The nine men and 13 women refused to apologize Saturday when they were arraigned before Circuit Judge Allan that they leave the plant peaceably. The other strikers apologized and were released. Today the 13 women made full | apologies, but the nine men persisted in their refusal, contending that they had no knowledge of the issuance of the injunction and subsequent writs of Judge Campbell said he was confident they knew of the court orders. Homer Martin, U. A. W. president, had announced a city-wide walkout would be ordered if police persisted in their activities against small sit-down protests. Two such strikes were broken up Saturday and two more yielded quietly to police pressure yesterday. Mayor Defends Police. Mayor Couzens, in a statement de- tin’s charges the police were “brutal” in ejecting strikers, gave assurance there would be “no interference with peaceful so-called sit-down strikes.” The only action, he said, would be in disputes where outsiders partici~ pated. Martin charged late yesterday the union had evidence the corporation “deliberately withheld” evidence sub= poenaed by Senator Robert M. La Fol- lette's Special Committee on Civil Liberties. B. E. Hutchinson, chairman of the Chrysler Finance Committee, denied the charge and said it appeared the U. A. W. had “added the crimes of breaking and entering and burglary to their already illegal seizure of our plants.” K. T. Keller, Chrysler president, an- TRANSFER AND MESSENGER SERVICE, Inc. At your convenience respon- sible uniformed drivers will call for your baggage, light moving, hauling or packages. At Reasonable Rates Phone Nat. 1070 622 K St. N.W. " a plant not closed by strike and the | One man, Whose occupation is com- | non-automotive | Campbell for ignoring a court order | fending his department against Mar- | nounced Herman L. Weckler, president and general manager of the De Soto division, had been named a vice president of Chrysler Corp. in charge of industrial relations. Weckler has been participating in negotiations with the U. A. W. Talk of recall movements against both Mayor Couzens and Gov. Murphy was heard yesterday. Martin said he was “seriously considering” such ac- tion against Couzens because of the strike raids. G. L. Williston, a manu- facturers’ agent, telegraphed the Gov= ernor a demond that troops be used to oust the Chrysler strikers, with the threat a recall movement would be started April 1 unless the chief execu- tive acted. The Governor disclosed vesterday that threats against his life had been received but had been given no atten- tion. Negotiations in the Reo Motor Car Co. strike at Lansing entered second day. Mayor Max T. Templeton, | who brought the two sides together, | | was appointed spokesman for the con- | ference, but declined to comment. | Each side had seven representatives. | More than 2,000 were made idle by the | strike. The Hudson Motor Car Co. strike, dating back to the start of the Chrys- ler sit-down, was stagnant CHICAGO EVICTS STRIKERS. Against Use of Technique in State. Widespread manifestation of the sit- down strike technique incurred the | censure of a growing number of city |and State officials today. At Chicago law enforcement offi- | cials invokéd a 75-year-old law to | dislodge more than a thousand sit- | down strikers from three establish- | ments. | Kentucky Govesnor Warns | | joined Mayor Neville M.ller of Louis- ville in a statement terming sit-down strikes unlawful and warning sit- downers will be evicted. Previously. Governors of Tllinois, New Jersey and | Connecticut had condemned the sit- | down stratagem | Chicago police moved swiftly | against sit-down strikers on orders of State’s Attorney Thomas J. Court- ney, acting under authority of an old statute providing penalties for | denying use of property to owners. Approximately 800 strikers en- trenched in the Wilson-Jones Co. stationery plant for five days, 160 in the Maremont Automotive Products Co., and 150 in the Logan depart- ment store were evicted without dis- order. A hundred policemen removed 300 | strikers from the Louisville, Ky., tex- | tiles factory. A wage agreement ended a sit-down strike of 150 girl clerks in four Pittsburgh 5 and 10 cent stores. At San Francisco a strike involving 700 garment workers in 11 factories was settled. | Stones, bricks: and rotten eggs | greeted non-striking workers of the | Coulter Manufacturing Co. when they emerged from the automotive plan | at Oshawa, Ontario. | persons attacked the workers. Several persons were injured. A projected strike of 1,600 street car workers at Columbus, Ohio, was | postponed for 24 hours. Approximately { 18,000 other Ohio workers, including | 11,500 at the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, remained on strike. | Cotton Mills Closed. The Ada McL#an cotton mills in West Lumberton, N. C. suspended operations yesterday when a num- ber of employes walked out. Seven hundred striking garmen! workers at San Francisco were ordered back to work in 11 factories, ending one strike as the troubled labor scene shifted to Francisco’s hotels. Fifty-two cutters, members of the United Garment Workers’ Union, were the only strikers, but 650 other work- SEE (S BEFORE YOU CLOSE ANY DEAL On a New De Soto or Plymouth MID-CITY AUTO CO. Washington's Oldest De Soto and Plymouth Dealer 1711 14th St. N.W. | BARGAIN EXCURSIONS SPECIAL ROUND TRIP FARES cified trains only=— vers —consult agents Saturday, March 27 Previdence 00 Boston Or on Easter Sunday, March 28 $3.75 New York Newerk $3.73 Atiantic City Baltimore $1.28 Every Saturday - Sunday $1.50 Daily — Good for 3 days PENNSYLVANIR RAILROAND | vice their | Gov. A. B. Chandler of Kentucky ers refused to pass picket lines in a month-long strike. George Slater of Chicago, union representative, an- ‘nmmred a mutually agreeable settle- ment with operators. Terms wer not disclosed. | | Hotel culniary and maintenan-e | workers and bartenders called a mass meeting today to decide whether to authorize a joint executive board to | call a strike “if and when necessary.” | General wage increases are sought. Ernest Farmer, spokesman for the workers, said 125 had struck to enforce |a demand for higher wages, shorter | hours and elimination of what he | termed a stretchout | Farmer said the employes had no union affiliations David B. Robertson, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Firemen and Enginemen, announced at Cleve- |land that demands for a 20 per cent wage increase for railroad workers went to “all railroads in the United States” yesterday. The demands were made on behalf of five railroad brotherhoods repre- senting trainmen and switchmen, en- gineers, firemen, enginemen and con- ductors. They ask that the wage in- crease become effective May 1 The proposed wage increase was approved at a meeting of brother- hood officials in Chicago last month and later ratified by approximately | 300,000 members of the five brother- hoods. Congoleum-Nairn, Inc, announced a general wage increase for all hourly paid plant employes, effective March 24. The company said it was making a minimum base rate of pay of $5 a day for an eight-hour day at its major plants at Marcus Hook, Pa., and Kearney, N. J Settlement of a strike of 700 em- ployes of the Malleable Iron Fittings Co., which kept the factory at Bran- ford, Conn,, idle for almost two weeks, was announced by Thorvald F. Ham- mer, company president. Drive | i, (Continued Prom First Page.) would be under the C. I. O. workers “give us time.” Meanwhile C. 1. O. headquarters in Boston announced a strike at the Al- brow Shoe Co. in Everett had been settled with the 375 workers being granted a 15 per cent wage increase and union recognition In addition to the settlement of the Albrow strike and the Providence | strike, 700 returned to work at the Malleable Iron Fittings Co. at Bran- ford. Conn. A shoe factory in Malden and a leather goods plant in Clinton were | closed, however, while workers sought higher pay or union recognition. More than 10,000 workers if the were | affected by wage increases in Wor- | | cester, Pittsfield, Leominster, Medway, | Lawrence and Woonsocket, R. I. PAINTS }GLASS Since 1888 HUGHREILLY § 1334 New York Ave. 1703 :30 AM.-5:30 P.M. SAT.—7:30 AM.-4:30 PM. Police said 200 | | ! NATIONAL On Diamonds. Watches, Jewelry, Guns, Cameras, Musieal Instruments, etc. Pledges Lewest o For Sale Rates Possibl Take Any Bus Leavin 11th and Pa. Ave. Unredeemed You drive down EASY STREET o1 when you switch to richer RICHFIELD HI-OCTANE GASOLINE See ad on Pages A-7 and A-15 its | ) DAVISONS' BANK AGCOUNTS BARED Records Brought to Court in Effort to Show Mayor Concealed Assets. By a Staff Correspondent ot The Btar. ALEXANDRIA, Va., March 23.— Records of the Citizens’ National Bank of Alexandria today were presented in evidence in the trial of Emmett C. Davison, Mayor of Alexandria, on a charge of concealing assets in a bankruptey proceeding. The records were introduced today in United States District Court in an effort to show he had sought to conceal such assets by transferring a savings account to his wife and daughter. Chester G. Pierce, cashier of the bank, produced the records under a subpoena issued by the court. Under questioning by District Attorney Ster- ling Hutcheson, it was brought out that a checking account in the name of Davison was closed out at the bank March 15, 1933, when the bal- ance was $527, and redeposited in a savings account in the names of him- self and wife. Subsequent deposits, Pierce testi- fied, brought the total up to $3,756 on October 22, 1935, when the ac- count was closed and redeposited in the names of Mrs. Ora L. Davison Bund Mrs. Ora M. Heflin, their daugh- rh Seldom Visited Bank. Pierce testified, under cross-exam- ination, by William E. Leahy, chief withdrawals on the account were by Mrs. Davison. He said Davison came to the bank only eight or ten times to his knowledge. Of the 118 checks drawn on the joint account, only 13 were signed by Davison, it was brought out Following the changing of accounts October 22, 1935, Davison filed a bankruptcy petition November 18 The present charge against him is based on iestimony given at a hear- ing before the referee in bankruptcy. Davison was indicted by a grand Jjury last June. As court recessed at noon Williams E. Willin, assistant general secretary- treasurer of the International Asso- clation of Machinists, of which Davi- son is general secretary-treasurer, was on the stand explaining records of the | association, which showed various | payments to Davison as salary. He | brought out the Alexandria chief executive is paid $6,500 & year by the | machinists. | Judge Luther B. Way is presiding and the case is being heard before a jury. | | | PREDICTS VICTORY Farley Tells St. Louis Democrats Roosevelt Will Win. ST. LOUIS, March 23 (#).—Post- master General James A. Farley as- serted during a brief visit here yester- day that he is willing to stake “my reputation as a prophet” on the out- come of President Roosevelt's Supreme | Court reorganization proposal. On his way to Waco, Tex., to dedi- cate a new post office building, Far- ley addressed a meeting of St. Louis Democratic workers. Order Burton's Easter Flowers Now—For Easter Delivery Early orders naturally get the choicest selections—so phone NOW. LILIES $1.50 wp Hydrangeas .- $150 wp Dish Gardens and Terrariums $250 up Box of Assorted Flowers, $2.00 up [ I Gorgeous Corsages, $2 up I | Members Florists’ Teleoraph Delivery Association FLORIST | 4000 Baltimore Boulevard NURSERYMEN ATLANTIC 0162. HYATTS. 785 Open Evenings SERVING WASHINGTON Putting the n NDERSON'S se materials for S| HE real interest. harmonious colors, into your home. We Will Be Glad Assist You and Of Real Imp FINE FURNITURE D. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, of defense counsel, that most of the | 1937. CAMPUS OF 6. W, BARRED T0 RALLY Dr. Marvin Warns Students in Proposed “Strike Against War.” A ban on campus demonstrations in connection with the proposed “Strike Against War,” called by the National Student Peace Committee on April 22, was issued today by President Cloyd H. Marvin of George Washington Uni- versity in a statement in the University Hatchet, student newspaper. “If any of our students wish to take part,” President Marvin said, “they are, so far as the university is con- cerned, personally free as indiviluals to do so. But such activity must take place outside the limits of the uni- versity, and students, of course, will be subject to the usual consequences at- tendent upon absence from classes. “This applies with equal force,” he said, “to any studen$s opposed to the tactics or the views of the persons sponsoring the strike against war, who may seek to demonstrate against the demonstrators. No demonstration or counter-demonstration on university property will be countenanced.” The statement was made, Presi- dent Marvin declared, “because of the circulation on the campus of unsigned Printed matter” concerning the strike. “Let me say at the outset,” he said, “that the university’s position has nothing whatsoever to do with the feclings of the institution, or of indi- viduals who compose thQe institution, | for the cause of peace. All of us are | for peace. But belligerent and inap- propriate action is neither educational nor effective It breeds opposition and counter-demonstration by those cause. The resulting melee accom- plishes nothing except to temporarily upon the dignity and true purposes of university life, “The function of the university, Dr. Marvin asserted, “is to search out the truth. If it is to fulfill its func- tion the university must be free of the influence of all outside pressure groups, however high-minded the causes they espouse.” Meanwhile, pamphlets distributed on the university campus announced the first “strike rally” sponsored by the National Student Peace Com- mittee will be held Thursday at Friends’ Meeting House, 1811 I street. | The announcement said those on the program will include Paul Ward, political correspondent for the Balti- more Sun and the Nation; Repre- sentative Kvale of Minnesota, co- sponsor of the Nye-Kvale bill against compulsory R. O. T. C. training; Rep- resentative Honeyman of Washing- ton and Dr. John H. Gray, former professor of economics at Harvard United States Department of Agri- culture reports show lower Rio Grande | Valley citrus is being carried by truck tc 26 States beyond Texas. f0 Blessed relief has been the experience of fhousands who have used PILE-FOE This o0thing ointment relieves burning and itching of Blind. Bleeding. truding Piles. Promotes healing and tends to reduce swelling needlessly . . PILE-FOE sults. At Peoples Drug Stores or other good druggists Inleinational Photographs TUESDAY, MARCH 23, TO FRIDAY, MARCH 26, INCIUSIVE e A remarkable exhibition of win- ning photographs—made by Kodak employees, in twenty-two countries all over the world—on view this week at Mayflower Hotel, Main Lobby. Open daily from 10 A.M. 10 9 P. M. Ad- mission free. Free lecture: “Photography Today,” Italian Garden, %‘hsn;- day night, March 25, 8 P. M. EASTMAN KODAK CO. get a tube of soothing OVER HALF A CENTURY Home “Summer Dress” lection of new Spring ip Covers and unusual fabrics for Upholstering will be found of The use of the proper materials, combined in will bring new life and color to to Submit Estimates ortance to You HENDERSON Has Only One Location: 1108 G Street. There Is No Other Store Connected with HENDERSON. James B. HenpErsoN 1108 G Street N.W. INTERIOR DECORATING who resent the tactics though they | may be sincerely enthusiastic for the | intrude | Pro. | Don’t suffer | today for guaranteed re- | y steady south winds of the past few ITALY HAS RED RAIN |® days. The rain drops, they said, were colored as they fell through the swirle ing dust, AINTERS’ - SUPPLIES, *'% INTS—LEAD—BRUSHES U 10 13TH Dust From African Desert Causes | Riviera Phenomenon. GENOA, Italy, March 23 (#).—Red rain mystified the residents of the | Italian Riviera today and caused fore- | boding among the superstitious peasants. Meteorologists explained the phe- nomenon was a result of clouds uf red dust borne from the African desert HATS Y CLEANED BLOCKED AND TRIMMED BacaracH Millinery ‘ and Hat Blockers 733 11th St. N.W. ~ SPECIAL Shaving Outfit This Week Only 25 Double-Edge Blades. 1 Large Tube Shaving Cream. 1 Can Talcum. 1 After-Shaving Lotion. 1 Brilliantine. Total Value, 70c Al for 3 5‘ None Delivered THE GIBSON CO. 917 G St. N.W. NA. 6386 AMERICAN COMFORT AT AMERICAN PRICES WASHINGTON APR. 7* MANHATTAN — APR. 215t Pres. Roosevelt Apr. 14th Pres. Harding Apr. 28th A Sailing Every Wednesday at Neon Tolreland, England, France, Germany Also American “One Class Liners" weekly to London — fortnightly to Liverpool Ask your local trovel agent fMce. 713 11th St. N.W. 2690 Company’s O Tel. National EASTER Flowering Plants Potted GARDENIAS (The Queen of Easter Plants) ROSE Plants Two of the most durable and popu- lar of Easter Plants. Especially selected to give continued satis- faction, first in your home, and later if you choose, outdoors. Both plants are of select grade and have open fragrant flowers as well as buds. The Roses are avail- able in a variety of colors. See them—tomorrow! EACH Wednesday and Thursday Only THIS SALE IN OUR HOME FLOWER MARKET (No Charges—No Deliveries) 185 FLO NO& 7000 _@ 01l Gt THERE is still time to learn about the wonderful heating value of this finest of Pennsyl- vania’s anthracites. When you scrape the bottom of the bin, call for a ton of ‘blue coal’. It will keep you warm now . .. but better yet, you’ll know all about this famous fuel and can plan accordingly when you order your supply of coal for next winter. (RIFFITH- (ONSUMERS (OMPANY 1413 New York Ave. ME. 4840