PARLEYS MAY END
S1EEL BLOCKADE
McGrady and Labor Lead
ers to Confer as Navy
Work Waits.
A determined effort to clear away
the blockade on steel for naval con
struction resulting from the unwilling
ness of the steel Industry to abide by
the Walsh-Healey act will be made
this week in a series of conferences
conducted by Edward F. McGrady,
Assistant Secretary of Labor.
Tomorrow McGrady will meet with
a small group of Interested labor
union leaders.including John P. Frey,
head of the metal trades department
of the American Federation of Labor,
and Philip S. Murray, representing
the Committee for Industrial Organi
sation in its effort to unionize the
steel industry. Frey is reported to
have lined up with the steel industry
and the Navy Department in urging
that steel for naval construction be
exempted from the wage and hour
provisions of the Walsh-Healey act.
lest, craft union workers In the navy
yards be thrown out of work.
Steel Bids Lacking.
The Navy has been unable to get
bids for 18.000,000 pounds of steel
needed for nine ships—three sub
marines and six destroyers. Naval
construction officers have expressed
fear that the construction of two new
battleships, authorized to be laid down
thus year, may be held up unless the
Impasse is broken.
The Walsh-Healey act forbids a
firm holding a Government contract
for more than $10,000 from employing
child labor, paying loss than the
minimum wages fixed by the old N.
R. A., and working employes more
than 40 hours a week. The 40-hour
week is the stumbling block in the
steel industry, where a rush of private
business has resulted in a 48-hour
week. In addition, the limitation of
profits on naval construction con
tracts to 10 per cent is reported to
have put an additional damper on
the interest of the steel companies
In providing steel for the Navy.
Unless sufficient supplies can be
assured in the near future, the Navy
Department will attempt to allot ail
contracts for its 1937 ship construc
tion program to private yards, it is
believed. Under the terms of the
Vinson-Trammell act. construction is
supposed to be divided equally be
tween private builders and the Gov
•rnment yards.
Thousands of Job* at Stake.
But If the President finds that
Circumstances warrant, he may allot
. any or all naval construction to
either private or Government yards.
The shift of all the 1937 program to
private yards would provide employ
ment there, but would cause the lay
ing off of thousands of employes in
the navy yards.
Unless steel orders can be placed
Immediately, it will be necessary to
start laying off men in some yards
by March 15, according to naval con
struction officials. The yards first to
be affected would be those at Boston.
Norfolk, Charleston, Philadelphia and
Portsmouth. The Portsmouth yard
was assigned two of the submarines,
' Bculpin and Squalus; the Mare Island
yard was assigned one submarine,
the Swordfish. Boston has the de
stroyers O'Brien and Walker. Norfolk
has the destroyers Morris and Wain
wright, Charleston has the destroyer
Roe and Philadelphia the destroyer
Buck.
In December the Navy Department
asked for bids on 25.000,000 pounds
of steel for these nine ships, but
received bids on only 7,000.000 pounds.
Until steel of the proper specifica
tions to complete the ships is as
sured. construction will not be begun.
The Navy also has had difficulty
In obtaining oil, alcohol, machine
tool* and copper.
Despite the fact that the metal
Workers may be found supporting the
*teel industry in urging that Navy j
steel be exempted from the Walsh- i
Healey act, Mr. McGrady is expected
to try to work out some way in which
the steel companies can work their
shifts to comply with the 40-hour
week.
(Copyright, 1»;)7. by New York Herald
Tribune.)
-•- — —
Lewis
tContinued Prom First Page.)
Selassie. He may have a few na
tionals in the industry, just like
Green, but why discuss Ethiopians.”
The militant chieftain of the C. I.
O. is recovering rapidly from influ
enza. which sent him to bed during
the last stages of the General Motors
atrike settlement negotiation* this
week. He said he would leave for
Washington Sunday to plan hi* cam
paign in the steel industry, and to
work on renewal of United Mine
Workers' contracts with mine opera
tors.
He likened the steel campaign to
“the crouching lion of the labor
movement.”
Asserting that the A. P. of L. had
been ‘‘pecking away” at the auto
mobile industry for several years,
Lewis declared it remained for the
mass-production United Automobile
Workers of America to organize ef
fectively.
‘‘Collective bargaining has definitely
come to the automobile industry,” he
said. ‘‘After 24 years, General Mo
tors, for the first time, has agreed
to bargain with a responsible labor
organization.
‘‘The union in the automobile in
dustry has a membership of 200,000,
conservatively speaking, and within
a few months will have double that
number.
"Seven weeks ago General Motors
Would not deal with or recognize any
union and publicly proclaimed that it
would not in the future. Now it has
entered into an eminently satis
factory contract with a responsible
union.
"General Motors occupies the same
relationship to the automobile in
dustry that United States Steel does
in the steel industry. Each pro
duces about 40 per cent of the total
output in its field.
"The General Motors policy sets the
pace for the industry and we expect
other companies to fall rapidly into
line. There w'ill not be undue haste
about this procedure and the union
will proceed in a logical manner.”
Asked when he expected formal de
mands to be made on the Ford Motor
Co. and the Chrysler Corp., Lewis
said:
“I have no definite announcement
to make on that score at present,
but we will have them bargaining
by next Christmas. Mr. Henry Ford
and all his millions does not daunt us.
He is just another citizen with a lot
of money.” ft
Half Century Devoted to Union
Is Record of Andrew Furuseth
Head of International
Seamen Known as
“Old Viking
By thy Associated Press.
Andrew Furuseth, dean of the
American labor movement, this year
rounds out half a century of service
to various seamen's unions.
Just 50 years ago Furuseth was
elected secretary of the Sailors' Union
of the Pacific. He then was a cru
sading Norwegian sailor of 34.
Today Furuseth is president of the
International Seamen's Union, an
organization he helped to build. Al
though bad health keeps him in a
hospital a good share of the time,
Furuseth still visits the Labor De
partment and Congressmen in the
interest of his union's program.
Known as the "Old Viking." Furu
seth is the only American labor
leader whose bust stands in the La
bor Department.
Furuseth first came to Washington
in 1894 to seek protective legislation
for seamen. Photographers asked
permission to take his picture. He
told them they could when the legis
lation he sought was enacted. On
March 4. 1915—19 years later—he
walked out of the White House and
confronted photographers.
"You can take that picture now,”
he said.
I -
Strike
__
(Continued From First Page.1
headquarters at Alexandria and re
ported confiscating three shotguns,
two rifles and ammunition.
Reuther called the martial rule a
‘‘signal victory" for the union, add
ing:
! "It is regrettable that men had to
be shot before the State recognized
i conditions weren't as peaceful as the
mayor had said they were."
Mayor Harry R. Baldwin said po
lice protection had been afforded the
unionists ever since the first dem
onstration several weeks ago.
| ‘‘The police twice have performed
; heroic service." the mayor added, ‘ in
rescuing these agitators from the re
| suits of their own conduct, and on
both occasions they have turned on
j their benefactors. Their every act
has been with studied purpose to
arouse resentment in the community.”
None of those wounded in this
morning's clash was in a dangerous
condition. Only four remained long in
a hospital, the others having fled et
the approach of police cars.
Emory Shipley, proprietor of the
tavern where the trouble started, said
“two car loads of men" drove up and
demanded that Evon Robertson, a
non-unionist who. police said, re
j cently engaged in an altercation with
; a union worker, come outside.
Shooting Starts.
Shooting started, Shipley said, after
I he answered that Robertson was not
present. Shipley told police he fired
a shotgun to drive the crowd away.
1 He was not held. The crowd was gone
and the tavern a wreck when police
arrived.
Union and non-union employes of
the Anderson automotive plants have
been engaged in a feud ever since
union workers at the Guide Lamp Fac
tory Joined the ‘'sit-down" strikes
against General Motors last December.
State motorcycle police escorted the
Michigan cars back to the State line
late in the day. The police led the
procession of cars Into a nearby fill
ing station for a free fill-up of their
gasoline tanks before starting the
homeward trip.
Many of the cars had been held up
on the highway for hours before the
decision was reached to furnish them
escorts back to Michigan.
Union leaders have made frequent
protests to Federal and State officials
complaining of their treatment by the
Anderson mayor and police chief.
Secretary Perkins sent an investi
gator of the Labor Department here
several days ago when unionists com
plained some of their members had
been beaten by Anderson policemen.
United States District Attorney Val
Nolan conducted an independent
investigation of allegations that strike
breakers had been imported into the
State.
* 000 BACK AT JOBS.
Guard Demobilisation Started as
Workers Return.
FLINT, Mich., February 13 </P).—
Three thousand similing. happy auto
mobile workers today returned to thejr
jobs In the giant Fisher Body plant
No. 1 as the roar of machines marked
the real end of the six weeks' General
Motors strike.
These workers, idle since December
30, when the plant was closed by a
sit-down strike, were the first of 100,
000 who will go back to work by next
Tuesday In the corporation s plants
throughout the Nation.
A few hours after the day shift of
1.500 punched the time clock at the
Fisher plant. National Guard officials
started demobilization of the 3,3G0
troops on duty in the strike zone.
A Cavalry regiment and a Field
Artillery regiment, totaling about 750
men, left for their homes during the
morning. The other troop6 will leave
Flint some time next week.
Wear Union Buttons.
The “return-to-work” movement be
gan at 7 a.m. as the workmen filed
between company guards at the gates;
many of them wore union buttons on
their overalls. Before the strike, wear
ing of the union insignia in the plant
was forbidden.
Only the south unit of the plant
resumed operations today. In the
north unit, where the sit-down took
place, maintenance men were busy
tearing down makeshift barricades put
up by the strikers and preparing the
plant for work by the middle of next
week. The Fisher No. 2 plant, which
also was occupied by strikers, will
be ready to open Tuesday.
With the exception of the final
assembly line, the Buick plant will be
reopened Monday, with 12,500 persons
returning to their Jobs. The Chevrolet
plant also will resume operations Mon
day. By the end of the week. General
Motors officials said, virtually all of
the 43,000 persons employed in Flint
STOP AND THINK..
MTRRSON OIL WORKS
^COLUMBlAMaj^
ANDREW FURUSETH.
The La Follette seamen’s act had
just been signed.
Throughout his career as a union
* official Furuseth has fought com
munism. An insurgent faction in his
i own union now opposes him. He
still had sufficient strength at the
last convention, however, to be re
| elected without opposition.
by the corporation will be back at
work.
The same thing is true of General
Motors workers in other cities. Ap
proximately 40,000 Chevrolet workers
| in six cities have been ordered to re
port for work Monday. Oldsmobile.
at Lansing, Mich., will step up its
force from 3.000 to 8.000. Cadillac
will open at Detroit Monday on a re
, stricted basis.
General Motors officials have estl
mated a production of from 225.000
' to 250,000 cars and trucks during
March and possibly during the follow
ing two or three months until they
catch up with the heavy backlog of
orders now on hand.
I In Detroit leaders of the United
Automobile Workers of America and
General Motors executives prepared
i for conferences scheduled to open
there Tuesday to negotiate problems
not settled in Thursday’s agreement.
Deniee Anderson Blame.
Robert C. Travis, union organiser in
Flint, said of the labor disorders at
Anderson. Ind., today that he could
not account for the presence of Flint
workers at the scene of the trouble
and denied that union officials at Flint
: had issued any “marching orders.”
I Travis charged General Motors had
I “induced the civil authorities to with
| hold protection from our people.”
General Motors officials did not com
ment on the disorders, which did not
occur on the corporation's property.
Almost forgotten in the excitement
attending the termination of the Gen
eral Motors strikes. 70 men completed
the forty-sixth day of their sit-down
l strike in the Standard Cotton Products
| plant today.
The management of the companv.
which supplies seat padding to the
' Fisher Body plants here, insists that
: it cannot meet the strikers' demands
j for a minimum wage of 50 cents an
| hour in view of ils contracts with
! General Motors. The present mini
mum is 30 cents.
The strikers are members of the
United Automobile Workers. Address
ing a mass meeting in front of the
plant Friday. Norman Thomas. So
cialist party leader, referred to them
as "the forgotten men who are the
real heroes of this labor war.”
I -._
HEARINGS TO CONTINUE
Government Units to Give Views
on Ramspeck Bill.
Hearings on the Ramspeck bill to
extend the civil service to emergency
agencies and other •'old-line" offices
of the Government which have not
heretofore been embraced within the
classified civil service are to be con
tinued on Tuesday.
Chairman Ramspeck hopes to hear
representatives from the various units
of Government concerned in this leg
islation.
--•-- »
Auto Pay
_(Continued Prom First Page !
per cent and totaled $13,000,000 to
$14,000,000 a year.
Packard's increases boosted the
yearly pay roll about $2,000,000 and
averaged about 5 cents an hour.
These companies produce about fiO
per cent of the Nation's automobiles
and trucks. Their announcements
leave the Ford Motor Co. as the only
major company that has not made
general wage increases in the last year.
Ford Raises “Continuous.”
A member of the Ford organiza
tion, asked if any Increases were
planned, said wage increases with it
are “a continuous process” and that
its wage rates ‘‘are still well above
those of the other companies.”
Another Ford official said the com
pany had raised wages by $44,843,000
during 1936 and that the average
hourly pay is now 83 cents. The
pay roll rise was caused partly by an
increase in the number of workers
from 108,000 to 128.000, the official
stated, but the annual earnings of
the workers were increased $141 a
man on an average.
In addition to the vast sums dis
tributed through wage increases, the
automobile industry is spending mil
lions of dollars a month for plant
expansion. During the past two years
the industry has spent $150,000,000
for this purpose and for increasing
inventories.
AMERICA'S FINEST PIANO VALUE ]
MUtTNOCTWrA^jS^RgYAL
Service Employes to Be
Called Out Tomorrow and
Tuesday, Official Says.
by the Associated Press.
NEW YORK, February 13.—Chris
Houlihan, a union president, an
nounced tonight that service employes
in the city’s large hotels will be called
out on strike Monday and Tuesday.
Houlihand, president of Local 320 of
the Building Service Employes' In
ternational Union, predicted that
4.000 dishwashers, elevator operators,
chambermaids, bellhops, porters, door
men, telephone operators and others
would walk out.
He named atx of the biggest hotels—
the Biltmore, the Commodore, the
New Yorker, the Pennsylvania, the
Roosevelt and the Waldorf-Astoria—
as the first targets in a drive to
negotiate for a shorter work week and
improved wages and working condi
tions.
Hotel executive scoffed. The union,
they said, was weak and they were
confident their staffs would stay.
A year ago there was a short strike
of hotel employes, following the city
wide strike of building janitors, ele
J vator operators and engineers called
by James J. Bambrick, president of
Local 32-B, in apartment houses and
loft buildings.
] Last Monday Bambrick started pull
ing union men out of apartment and
office buildings to force agreements
where there were none with the union.
He said that 554 contracts had been
signed because of the drive, with an
other 1,500 or so buildings to be
struck.
Bambrick suspended further strike
activity over the Lincoln birthday
holiday week end.
Labor
(Continued From First Page >
the colorful Johnson was the high
light of the week-end labor news in
the Capital, the status on other fronts
was as follows:
The La Follette committee investi
gating espionage and coercion in labor
relations postponed for several days
at least its decision on eventual action
! toward Robert A. Pinkerton, youth
ful head of the Pinkerton National
Detective Agency, who defied the
probers on two specific occasions on
Friday.
Refusing, on advice of counsel, to
surrender to the committee some 50
■ original espionage report* turned in
j by Pinkerton informants in the De
troit area and to disclose the identities
j of under-cover operatives who partici
pated with worker* In the ait-down
strike* In three Flint plants of Gen
eral Motor* Corp., Pinkerton may face
charge* of contempt of the Senate.
Pinkerton May Be Recalled.
Scheduled to resume open hearings
tomorrow, the committee may recall
Pinkerton or some of his aides to
the stand at that time. Already
standing by for a week, five personnel
officers of General Motors are sched
uled for appearance within the next
day or two.
With Lewis expected to return to
Washington from Detroit over the
week end. subcommittees of the Policy
Committee of the United Mine Work
ers continued their executive sessions
today in consideration of their
strategy for the soft coal contract
negotiations this week in New York.
A definite outline of their desires, ex
pected to embrace a 30-hour week and
Increased hourly rates of pay, will be
reported back to the full committee
tomorrow and upon final approval is
to be submitted to the industry repre
sentatives in New York on Wednesday.
Possibility of an impasse in these
negotiations is the circumstance lead
ing to fears that a soft coal strike
may develop by March 31, when the
present wage and hour contracts
expire. With the C. I. O., with
which the United Mine Workers are
affiliated, about to intensify tneir
organization drive in the steel in
dustry, the threat of Joint action
against the two major industries is
obvious.
Review* Former Relations.
Reviewing the cordial relations
which existed between the A. F. of L.
and Gen. Johnson while the latter
was head of the N. R. A. and recall
ing that the former Government
official had never voiced any criticism
of the labor leadership at that time,
Green's letter continued in part:
"It is extremely unfortunate that
a serious division has taken place
among the affiliated organizations of
the American Federation of Labor.
Undoubtedly you are entirely familiar
with the undisputed fact that this
division is not to be attributed to the
American Federation of Labor, but
that the fault rests solely and primar
ily with those organizations which*
dissatisfied with the decisions of an
unquestioned majority reached in
open and regular conventions wherein
they participated, set out to enforce
their minority will and their arbitrary
form of organization upon the ma
jority, in conflict with every rule of
decency and equity and in direct
violation of the constitution and laws
of the American Federation of Labor, !
to which they had agreed and which
they had pledged their honor to
support. , ,
‘‘It is not only unfortunate but 1
extremely regrettable to find that you
now favor and advocate the virtues
and rights of a minority to direct,
control, dominate and dictate to the
majority, contrary to every rule of
justice and of mutual agreement..
We are amazed that you should now
give encouragement and support to
those who would so flagrantly disre
gard their agreement and obligation
and assume the role of irresponsible
Called Labor Foe
GEN. HUGH S. JOHNSON.
—Harris-Ewing Photo.
dictatorship. Indeed, we And it
difficult and Impossible to reconcile
your previous attitude regarding the
validity of the rule of the majority
in all collective relationships fairly
and democratically reached, with your
present attitude in favoring a minority
rule sought to be enforced ruthlessly
in the affairs of the American Fed
eration of labor.
"We are amazed that in all of your
references to the Committee for In
dustrial Organization and the Ameri
can Federation of Labor you have ;
invariably lauded the principles and
leadership of the former and found
fault with that of the latter. Not
content to express your opinion and
J judgment upon the merits or demerits
of the Actitlous Issue raised regard
ing so-called craft or Industrial or
ganizations of labor, you likewise
take occasion to belittle if not be
smirch the character and abilities of
some of the trusted officers of the
American Federation of Labor and
of the labor movement as represented
by the A. F. of L.
"We can only conceive that such
conduct on your part is designed to
lessen the confidence of the rank
and file of labor in the principles and
leadership as exemplified by the
American Federation of Labor and
its affiliated national and interna
tional unions, regardless of whether
your conduct was inspired by mo
tives of malice, of good will or of
indifference.
"Whatever motives may have
prompted your unfavorable observa- !
tions toward the American Federa- i
tion of Labor, whether your published
statements were well or ill designed
and particularly and especially with
'out thought, purpose or design of In
^ PER CHECK
WHETHER TOD WRITE 1 or 100
CHECKING ACCOUNT
■
All of the conveniences and safety of a
checking account may now be yours.
ADVANTAGES
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5. Total cost 5ff per check.
6. All conveniences of the usual checking account.
7. Write as many checks as you wish.
8. Damaged checks, replaced without cost
You simply request an attractive book of twenty
checks, at 5^ per check, and you may use them over as
long or short a period of time as you wish—all in one
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are no other charges. When you need additional
checks they may be obtained in the same manner.
Popular Checking Accounts are offered in addition to the
regular checking account service of this Bank. Plan now
to pay all your bills this modern, inexpensive way.
A telephone call will bring you full details by the next mail.
MORRIS PLAN BANK
» I • ?
1408 H STREET, N. W.
terfering in the slightest way with
your utterances or in any way in
fluencing or causing you to change
your attitude or public expressions
regarding the American Federation of
L*bor, the Executive Council wishes
you to know that it regards your pres
ent attitude and activities as a con
tribution of service to those un
friendly to the cause of labor who
would divide and weaken organized
labor and thus strengthen the forces
arrayed against labor.
"Certainly we cannot regard your
public utterances and expressions as
a service to labor or an effort to
bring about unity In the ranks of
labor."
G. W. U. MEDICAL CLINIC
TO BRING ALUMNI HERE
Sr. Cyrus C. Sturgis Will Be
Guest Speaker at Annual Ban
quet Saturday Night.
A large number ot George Washing
ton University 8chool ot Medicine
alumni from all sections ot the coun
try are expected at the fifth annual
post-graduate clinic conducted by
members of the faculty for the alumni
and general medical profession next
Saturday.
The day will be devoted to scientific
assemblies, demonstrations and labora
tory inspections at the school and
hospital.
Dr. Cyrus C. Sturgis, director of the
Thomas Henry Simpson Memorial In
stitute of Medical Research, and pro
feasor of medicine at the University
o' Virginia, will be the guest speaker
at the eleventh annual banquet and
reunion of the George Washington
University Medical Society at the May
flower Hotel Saturday night. This
affair will end the clinic.
"Types of Anemia and Their Treat
ment’’ will be the subject of Dr. j
Sturgis’ address. Dr. W. Raymond
Thomas, president of the society, will
preside. More than 500 physicians
and surgeons are expected.
Patz to Join Baltimore Firm.
Theodore J. Patz, assistant advertis
ing manager of Raleigh Haberdasher,
has resigned his position here, it was
announced yesterday. He will become
associated with the Harry J. Patz Ad
vertising Co. of Baltimore. i
- 1
CHARLES W. B. HURD
FETED BY WRITERS
New York Times Correspondent to
Be Assistant Manager of
London Bureau.
A group of Washington newspaper
men assembled last night at the May
flower Hotel to honor Charles W B.
Hurd of the New York Times, who
has been ordered to that paper's Lon
don bureau.
Hurd for the last five years has
been the White House correspondent.
He will be assistant manager at the
London bureau.
Those who were paying tribute to
Mr. Hurd last night were mostly
White House correspondents. The
party was in charge of Claude A. Ma
honey of the Wall Street Journal,
while Walter J. Trohan of the Chi
cago Tribune, newly elected president
of the White House Correspondents'
Association, acted as toastmaster.
Other speakers were Earl Godwin of
the Washington Times and Thomas
P. Edmunds of the New York Times.
On the entertainment program was
the White House quartet, led by Mar
vin H. McIntyre, presidential secre
tary; George O’Connor, George Wil
son and Pulton Lewis of the Uni
versal Service.
— 1 •
Agricultural Exhibit Set. '
Czechoslovakia will hold Its next
agricultural Exhibition at Prague in
May.
McDevitt's 16th
ANNIVERSARY SALE
Taffeta & Hand Tufted
SPREADS »/4 OFF
Substantial Reductions
On Entire Stock—
Curtains—Draperies and
Slip Covers
MCDEVITTS "ho"
1317 E 3rd Floor
13 1* s American Bldf.
Starts Monday, February IS, at 8:30 A.M.
Many Items at Cost or Less Than Cost
Take advantage of the tremendous savings available in this
once-a-year sale. No telephone orders, exchanges or deliveries.
ftotens of other items not mentioned below.
GAMES
Qaan- Sal#
tity. Value frirt
10 Ethiopian Games ,$1.00 $ .39
31 Stock Exchange
i addition to Mo
noply. Easy Money! .50 .29
900 Assorted Games .25 to .50 .1#
500 Wood Jig Saw Puz
zles _ 1.00 .It
69 Politic Games _2.00 1.00
33 Covered Wagon
Games .1.00 .25
81 Jumbo Bicycle
Cards...1.50 J9
325 Double Deck Fancy
Back Playing Cards .50 .39
121 Decks Pinochle
Playing Cards_ .35 .19
129 Boxes Poker Chips, .50 .29
61 Roulette Wheels
and Cloths_1.29 .95
MISCELLANEOUS
611 Donkey and Ele
phant Match Hold
ers ..$ .25 * .10
100 Cigarette Boxes,
ejecting__ .50 .10
25 Cowboy Chaps .. 1.50 .79
50 Cowboy Chaps
(small sizes) .. 1.00 .25
98 Rubberized Brief
Cases_ .50 .25
51 Sweaters, assorted
sises and colors .. 3.00 1.95
10 Suede Jackets_ 6.50 3.95
50 Assorted Golf Put
ters _ 1.00 .19
47 Assorted Golf Clubs,
woods and irons ,. 1 50 .39
288 Golf Balls, when
new 75c. Repaints .19
GIFTS
15 Doc. China Salt,
Pepper and Mus
tard Sets _) .50 I .11
28 Ice Buckets_1.50 .85
20 Hoetess Sets.2.50 1.49
19 Mirror Lamps_2.00 .95
16 Kitchen Electric
Clocks, all green — 2.00 .85
51 Gilbert Clocks,
radium dial___2.00 1.39
54 Card Tables_1.25 .85
60 Assorted Smoking
Stands .. 2.25 1.49
21 Desk Sets. 6 pieces 1.25 .95
34 Cocktail Sets,
chrome, 8 pieces — 6.00 1.95
42 Men’s Military Sets. .98 .59
11 Perfume Set*,
Prince Charm
ing, list-2.50 *.00
34 What Not Shelves. .50 .29
38 Cheese and Cracker
Sets .. 1.00 .39
30 Blue Hostess Sets.. 1.00 .49
20 Baking Dish and 6
Custard Cups_ 1.50 .98
55 Refrigerator Sets.. 1.00 .49
30 Butter Dishes_. .98 .39 •
20 Mayonnaise Sets.. .98 .39
35 Cake Plates_ .98 .39
37 Chromium Tld Bit
Sets . .98 .39
22 Lazy Suzan Revolv
ing Dishes_ .98 .39
13 Vanity Sets..1.25 .95
45 Lamps, China Base,
Pastel Shades_1.50 1.29
Assorted Tie Rack*_1.25 .89
Bill Folds..1.50 .98
45 Bakelite Lamps, as
sorted shades_ .75 .39
21 Breakfast Sets_1.25 .79
71 Men's Traveling
Toilet Sets _2.00 1.39
137 Ingraham Lapel
Watches .1.39 1.19
161 Ingraham Wrist
Watches.J.50 2.19
16 ladles'Handbag*.. 1.95 1.49
17 Moviematlc
Cameras_5.95 2.95
57 Films.1.00 .69
11 Straps. .50 .29
13 Handles -. .50 .29
*13 Cases.1.00 .69
Blackboards. 1.00 .69
Blackboards_... .59 .29
Electric Heaters_ 3.50 2.39
814 Ash Trays_ .50 .25
25 Camel Tea Pots... 1.00 .49
BOOKS, STATIONERY
Q"Sn- Ssle
tils. Vatu* Prlrr
18 Dor. High School
Binders and Fill
ers .$ .30 I .89
38 Dor. Plastic
Solder_ .25 .09
16 Doz. Pleated Cups
Pads (doz.)_ .10 .05
6700 Ruled Scratch
Pads (dor. i _ .10 .05
11500 Hytone Linen
Envelopes _ .15 .06
51 Boxes Paper and
C o r r e spondence
Cards_ .25 .10
72 Boxes Writing
Paper and En
velopes _ .35 .19
40 Boxes Children
Writing Paper_ .25 .10
30 Pints SheafTer
and Sanford Inks .40 .20
100 Rolls Shelf Lining
Paper, 14 in. by
50 ft__ .25 .05
200 Packages Fancy
Plates_ _ .10 .05
1000 Sticks Dennison 3 for
Sealing Wax_ .10 .10
800 Assorted Fiction
Books. . .39 .10
300 Assorted Story
Books _ .10
250 Assorted Paint and
Crayon Books_- .10
48 Photo Albums.— .25 .15
75 Photo Albums_ .50 .29
12 Stamp Albums_ .50 .25
26 Wahl Eversharp
Fountain Pen and
Pencil Sets_ 1.95 1.59
48 Alco Fountain
Pens. 14-k. Point. 1.25 .69
30 Desk Pens, heavy
base_1.25 .69
60 Autopoint Pencils. .50 .35
New Sac__ .29
All Pens Expertly Repaired
TOYS
200 Cardboard Forts .10 $ .05
100 Cardboard Forts... .25 .10
50 Cardboard Forts... .35 .15
75 Iron Automobiles 1.00 .50
89 Iron Automobiles.. .50 .25
17 Badminton Sets... .50 .25
27 Radio Game Sets.. .50 .25
55 Walk A Long Trixie
Pull Toys .1.00 .50
25 Assorted Racing
Games _ .50-1.00 .25
20 Gilbert Chemistry 3 00 2.00
9 Micro Chemistry
Comb._ _ 3.00 1.50
7 Micro Chemistry
Comb. . 7.00 3.95
16 Micro Sets.. .59 .25
12 Gilbert Chemistry 5.00 2.95
8 Lincoln Log and
Brick Sets_ 4.50 2.95
15 Texcraft Crayon
Sets...1.00 .50
13 Ride A Cockhorse
Soldier Sets.. .. 1.00 .SO
15 Dick Tracy Police
Sets. 1.00 .50
31 Register Banks_ .50 .25
83 No. 711 Scarab
Buddy "L" Cars .. 1.00 .09
22 Children Carpenter
Benches_1.00 .50
15 Wood Streamline
Trains_ .25 .10
119 Bullet Streamline
Autos .. 25 '.10
15 Electric Klick-It
Marble Games 2.00 1.39
103 Klick-It Marble
Games_1.00 .69
10 Raster Rita.-.3.00 I.#5
12 Aluminum Dish
Tea Sets .. .25 .10
42 Reystone Movie
Projectors __1.00 .59
9 Movie Projector
Screens --1.00 .59