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Screened COAL
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Buy Montana Coal From Us
and Help the State Grow
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PIONEER FUEL AND BRICK CO.
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TELEPHONE 6541
5
8
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§gg ROSTER If Si
BUTTE TRADE UNIONS
.
.
Council
s
I
Bow Trades and Lab
ery Tuesday evening at 8 p. in.
i' Hall. Charles Malloy,
Silver
tH
pom
t (
Crimes. Sec.; P. O. Box
Harry
1*
1257
No. 83,
■ Unit
Butte Stationary Bnglnee
I. U. of M. M. and S. W. Office
nd floor Carpenters' Union Hall,
ery Wednesday at 7:30 p.
. ; Frank McHugh,
H. Weldenbach, Recording
Sec.; James Combo
or Box 229.
id
hall. se<
Meet
J. C. Whlteley, P
I
;
Vice Pres.:
p.
Business Agent.
s
Vickers
Men's Union—Jol
Street C
Pres. ; Newell I>. Evans, Sec.
first and third Wednesday at 11 a.
at Musicians' Hall, 41% N. Main St.
Meets every
I
*ts every Thursday
Headquarters Hall, 71%
P. J. Connors. Busl
i'lnanclal
Teamsters' Unio
night at Unior
East Park Street,
ness Agent; W. J. McIntosh,
. Box 1114.
«
I
i*
Secretary.
i
I
d Steamfltters, No. 41. U. A.
Plumben.-- . , T . TT „
Meets Mondays at Carpenters Union Ha I
at 8 p, in. AI ('amltsch. Pres.; I-rank
Rooney, Financial Sec.; John Caddy, Re
cording Sec.; S. J. Perry, Treas. P. O.
Box 740.
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241. Meets third
No.
Musicians' Union,
Tuesday each month at 41% North Main
St. Howard R. Rich, Pres ; Earl Sim
mons, Sec.-Treas., 41% N. Main Street.
!
Butte Workingmen's Union. F. L. U.. 1298B,
A. F. of L. Meets every Monday evening
at 7:30, Union Headquarters. 71% East
C. L. Williams, Secretary.
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Park St.
if N. A.
.m al 333, A. M. C. & B. W.
scond and fourth Thursdays at 8
'clock, at Eagles' Hull.
îck, FI
Meets
Ben Roncbutto,
•ial Sec.; Chas.
nd Business Agent.
Pres.; J. II.
S. Young. Secretary
The,
Mattausch, Sec.-Treas
Bridget Shea. Buslne
. r »7. r >8. Meets first
in.; second ar.
p. in., Carpenters' Hall.
T
in's Protective Unit
bold, Pres. ; Le
i'll-
Agent.
1 third Fridays at
id last Fridays, 8:30
1 p.
Jnion, No. 1, I. U. M. M. &
dth the A. F. of L.
at Carpenters'
Butte Miners'
S. W., affiliated
Meets Sundays at 8 p.
Union Hall, Room 1. Office open every
evening from 7 to 8 o r clock. Lew J. Mc
Lewegan. FI
Mai Secretary.
Olectrica!
Brotherhood of
65, Butte. Meets every
third floor Carpenters'
. .Toe Reardon,
Burkhard, Recording Sec. ;
W. C. Medhurst, Financial Si
Box 84(1. Financial Secretary
1st floor of Carpenters' Hall.
I ntetnatlonal
No.
Friday night,
Union Hall at 7:3« p.
Workers
■i
p. o.
office,
Sheep Shearers' Union of North America,
No. 1, affiliated with A. F. of L. Head
quarters, 554 S. Main. A. A. Evans,
Phone 2-1893. P. O.
Pres.-Si
Box 14
1 Paperhaugers' Local No. 720.
Hall. Lew iso bn Block,
ning at 7:30 o'clock.
Painters'
Meets at Eagle
every Friday ev
L. Roat. Financial Sec., 818 West Quart/,
St.; H. C. Holland, Recording See., 720 S,
Alabama St., Phone 2-1300. Club Room
and Office at K. P. Hall. 120 South Main
E
Sueet.
Rutte Theatrical Stage Employes and Mov
ing Picture Operators, No. 94. Meets
second Tuesday of each month at 11:30
p. in. at Union Hall. Zzz I.rr; ::z~, I'rzz. ;
A. E. Elge, Vice-Pres. ; L. G. Farmer,
Financial Sec.; Ed. Curran, Recording
See.; Earl Wiles, Business Agent, Mon
tana Hotel, Phone 2-3427.
Cooks and Walters. J. J. Colllgan, I'res. ;
Palmer, Business Agent; Frank
Murray. Sec. and Trees. Meets first and
third Thursdays, 8:00 p. m., Teamsters'
Hall.
Butte Typographical Union. Meets see
•h month at Carpenters'
nite St. J. F. Bart
1 Hotel; J. Clark Hether
Avonuc.
nd Sunday in
Hall. West G
Uni
ington. Sec.. 1858 Tei
LEGAL NOTICES
HIIKRIFF'8 SALE
Under Deere«*.
UNITED STATES BUILDING AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION, a corporation, Plaintiff.
. CHARLES H. HOI DA. ANNA S.
HOIDA. his wife; ADELINE HOIDA.
ADELINE HOIDA as administratrix of
the estate
THONY J. HOIDA. deceased; LOUIS
HOIDA. MABLE HOIDA. his wife; OC
TAVIUS HOIDA. LAURA WHITE, nee
HOIDA: MAUDE FARTHING, nee HOI
DA; ELIZABETH WOOD, nee HOIDA:
RAYMOND HOIDA and CHARLOTTE
HOIDA, Defendants,
To be sold at Sheriff's Sale
day of December, A. D. 1932. at 2 o'clock
P. M., at the front door of the Silver Bow
County Court House, City of Butte, County
of Silver Bow, Stale of Montana, the fol
lowing described real property, to-wlt:
Lots Twenty-six (2(1), Twenty-seven (27),
Twenty-eight (28), Twenty-nine (29), and
Thirty (30), of Block One (1), Lenox Ad
dition to the City of Butte, Montana. Also
that portion of the surface of the Summit
Valley Placer Mining Claim. Mineral Entry
No. 3125, In the Southeast Quarter of Sec
tion Nineteen (19), Twp. 3 North of Range
West., Montana Meridian, which is par
ticularly described by metes and bounds
as follows, to-wlt. Beginning at the South
east Corner of Lot Twenty-six (20), In
Block One (1), of the said Lenox Addition
to Butte, and running thence South 23
degrees 25 minutes East, along the West
line of Florence Avenue 160 feet; the
South (It) degrees 35 minutes West, 8.3 feet;
thence West 108.1 feet to the center of the
alley extending South through said Block
Addition; tin
25 minutes West, along
alley lO?.? feet; thence
North 00 degrees 35 minutes East, along
the South line of said Lot Twenty-six
(20), Block One (1), of the Lenox Addi
tion 108 feet, more nr less, to the place of
beginning, together with the appurten
ances. tenements and hereditaments there
unto belonging.
LAWRENCE
Sheriff, Silver Bow County, Montana.
By Bernard Barde, Deputy Sheriff,
Dated November 10, A. D. 1932.
First publication Nov. KL—4t.
Has AN
>f A. J. HOIDA.
the 1st
One (1)
North 23 degrees
the center of said
f said I
l
wmn.
SHERIFF'S SALE
Under Judgment and Decree
Pleadings.
the
corporation. Plal
MONIDAH TRUST.
. SILVER ROW CLUB BUI LI
rporatlon,
pi red ; W. Mc C. WHITE.
tiff.
ING ASSOCIATION, a
charter lia
EUGENE CARROLL. J. H. ROWE. M. C
SMETTERS, R. J. MacDONALD and J.
A. BROPHV. SURVIVING DIRECTORS
AS STATUTORY TRUSTEES FOR THE
CREDITORS AND STOCKHOLDERS OR
MEMBERS OF SAID SILVER BOW
CLUB BUILDING ASSOCIATION, n
corporation, and Silver Bow Club, a cor
ro r, ^ oD .o.?tt n & R s ».o „„ tu.. i«t
Ä,.£ f P» the' Â-Ær'if
SX sr-ss? s
Montana, the following described real
uronertv to-wlt
P Lots nu m bered 16. 17. and 18. In Block
numbered 16 of the Original Townslte of
Butt**. Sliver Bow County. Montana, nc
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS FRIENDLY TO LABOR
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Ask Your Grocer
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for
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A Home Product
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Amalgamated Sugar Co.
Missoula
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cording to the Official Plat and Survey
thereof on file and of record in the office
ty Clerk and Recorder of Sti
nt y , Montana, together with
all and singular the lands,
hereditaments,
nces thereunto belonging
appertaining.
LAWRENCE WEIR,
Sheriff, Silver Bow County. Montana.
By Bernard Barde, Deputy Sheriff.
Dated November 10, A. D. 1932.
First publication Nov. 10—4t.
f the Co
vor Bow C
•nts,
and appur
In nny
te
■fse
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
TAX DEEDS.
Notice Is hereby given to John J. Me
Hugh. John Andrew and Patrick F. He*
longliery, and to the heirs of John An
drew, to-wlt: Mary Andrew. John T. An
drew and Mae Andrew Riley, and to the
heirs of John J. MeHugh, If he he do
dcrslgned will on Hie
20th day of December. 1932, apply to the
of Silver Bow C
Montana, for Tax Deeds (by two separate
groups) to the following described prop
erties. to-wlt:
All of the "COYOTE''
the "CLARA
-ased, that the
ty tre
(patented ns
A" and the
"ROVER" lode mining claims, Sur. 9235,
ca. 23, 24. 25, 20, Twp. 2 N.. R. 8 W.,
Amount required to redeem
Dec. 20. 1932, will bo $98.21.
All of the "BIG SIX." the "MANHAT
TAN" and the "GOLDFIELD" lode mln
Secs. 23 and 24. Twp.
s. Amount re
•deem, Dec. 20. 1932, will be
'Cnyotte'),
1
Ing claims. Sur. 94
2 N„ R. 8 W. t 01.43(1
qui rod to
$101.90.
Dated, Butte, Montana, November 17tb.
M. F. DELOUGHERY,
Applicant for Tax Deed.
First publication Nov. 17—2t.
SHERIFF'S SALE
Under Judgment
SAMUEL HERMAN. Plaintiff, vs. ALEX
C. RODGER and GERTRUDE RODGER,
Defendants.
To be sold at Sheriffs Sale on the 8th
day of December, A. D. 1932, at 2 o'clock
P. M., at the front door of the Silver Bow
County Court House, City of Butte, County
of Silver Bow. State of Montana, the fol
lowing described real property, to-wlt:
Lot numbered Seven (7), in Block num
(4) of the ('arte Blanche Ad
dition to the City of Butte. Silver Bow
County. Montana, according to the official
plat and survey thereof now on file and
of record lu the office of the County
Clerk and Recorder of Silver Bow County,
Montana; and the tenements, heredltn
»nts and appurtenances thereof.
LAWRENCE WEIR.
Sheriff, Silver Bow County, Montana.
By Bernard Barde, Deputy Sheriff.
Dated November 17, A. D. 1932.
First publication Nov. 17—4t.
ml I Iferf,.
bered Fo
SHERIFF'S SALK
Under Deere
JOSEPH ACTIS, Plaintiff, vs. FLORA M.
MARQUIS and S. D. MARQUIS, other
wise known ns S. DAMASE MARQUIS.
Defendants.
To be
Id at Sheriff's Sale on the 8th
day of December, A. D. 1932. at 2:30 o'clock
P. M.. at the front door of the Sliver Row
County Court House, City of Butte, County
of Silver Bow, State of Montana, the fol
lowing described real property, to-wlt;
The South Sixty (00) feet of Lot num
bered Twenty (20) In Block numbered
and (ho Nortli Forty (40) feet
of Lot numbered Twenty (20) In Block
mbered Three (3) of the Empire Addi
tion to the City of Butte, Montana, Sllv
nty, according to the official plat
rey thereof now on file and of
•ord In tin* office of the Clerk and Re
corder of Silver Bow C
All of the foregoing pieces
land, comprising together
(20) i
Three (3)
Bow C
ty, Mont
parcels of
11 of Lot outn
umbered
To
it h all and singular the tene
nents, appurtenances, ease
d all other rights belong
ppertalnlng thereto.
Block
Three (3) of said Empire Addition
geth
bered
Twenty
»nts, heredit
»nts, water
lug
anywise
LAWRENCE WEIR,
Sheriff, Silver Bow County. Mont
By Be
>puty Sheriff.
Dated, November 1(5, A. D. 1932.
First publication Nov. 17—4t.
rd Barde,
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING.
Notice is hereby given (hat the
»eting of the stockholders of the Algodorc
rporation organized
mil
Mining Comp
under the laws of the State of Mont
will he held at the office of the Company,
No. 400 Silver Bow Block, Butte,
Mont
Uo<
Friday,
December 0th, 1932, at 9 o'clock A. M., for
the purpose of electing seven (7) directors
lug year; to âp
re of all the acts and proceedings of
the Board of Directors since the last nn
l meeting, and for such other business
before said meeting,
from 9 o'clock A. M. to
Sil
H
servo during the e
I
Polls
dll be
• pet
12 o'clock M.
E. C. JANSSEN. Secretary.
St. Louis. Mo.. November Hi. 1932.
First publient lo
Nov. 24 3t.
ORDER TO SHOW C AUSE WHY ORDER
OF SALE OF MINES AND MINING IN
TERESTS SHOULD NOT BE MADE.
No. »455.
«"ïr entltw Court h,s
gräWÄ
!1 "'
of Harrut Armstrong dj
larly set forth and described In said Pe
title,, which I
hereof made a part by this reference.
AND. It appearing to the Court fn
rt of the Second Judl
the District C(
I
f Montana, in
and for the County of Stiver Bow.
the Matter of the Estate of HARRIET
ARMSTRONG. Deceased.
, the Executor of the
» of Harriet Armstrong,
having on the
clal District of the Slate
Alex J. Johns
>f November, 193
1 (I
»ale
nier
*d, partie
hereby
>fe
I
'I
Approves Personnel
Classification Plan
Federal Employes
CINCINNATI, OHIO.—Approval of
personnel classification for govern
ment employes, with certain excep
tions, was given by the executive
council of the American Federation
of Labor in its report to the annual
convention of the Federation in Cin
cinnati.
"The American Federation of Labor
energetically supports the principle
of classification and is thoroughly
in favor of the enactment by the
Congress of the United States, ap
plicable to government employes in
both departmental and field service,
exclusive of employes whose wages
are or should be fixed by wage
boards, or such class or crafts who
do not desire it," the report said.
"The executive council is of the
opinion that the field personnel
should enjoy the same rights to
classification and appeal as are ac
corded departmental employes and
also the same pay for identical or
similar work.
"The council recommends that
classification procedure, including ad
justment of salary and appeal, be
extended to the field service, prefer
ably by a joint resolution of the
House and Senate.
"This joint resolution should direct
the extension with instructions that
the personnel classification agency,
which is now a part of the Civil
Service Commission and before which
Labor should have representatives,
should make an immediate review
of the allocation of field positions;
that it should be empowered and
directed to change allocations with
out having jurisdiction over the field
employes, with provision that the
employes affected shall have the
right to appeal their reallocation,
and that the proceedings and testi
mony in the appeal should be made
of record, open to inspection by the
department and the employes af
fected.
"The council further recommends
that in conjunction with the execu
tive officers of the American Federa
tion of Government Employes an ex
tended study of classification now in
effect, as well as proposed classifi
cations, be made and that a classifi
cation plan embracing all activities,
both departmental and field, exclusive
of those trades and occupations whose
wages are or should be fixed by
wage boards, or such class or crafts
who do not desire it, be developed."
INCREASE IS DEMANDED IN
CHEMICAL WARFARE BUDGET
WASHINGTON— (F. P.)—In face
of proposals for a $700,000,000 slash
in the federal budget, the Chemical
Warfare Service of the army has de
manded more money for next year,
in the annual report filed by Maj-Gen.
H. L. Gilchrist, its chief.
Gilchrist told Secretary of War
Hurley that conditions at the Edge
wood depot of the Service are "alarm
ing" because of lack of new buildings.
said Petition that it Is both
and for the advantage, benefit
Interests of said Estate
terested therein that
Mining Cla!
had
1 best
nd those In
sale of said Placer
(1 Mining Interests be
de:
IT IS ORDERED, and this docs Order,
interested lu the said
I
that all pers
Estate show cause, If any they have, be
fore this Court, In Department III thereof,
the City of Butte,
,'ounty, Montana, on Saturday,
the 24th day of December, A. D. 1932, at
I M., or
said matter <
of Sale of said Mining Claim*
Interests should not be give
1 directing the
1 the Courthouse I
Si I v
thereafter
:
be heard, why
an Order
ml Mining
de.
Executor to
lerlng
sell the hereinabove
•al p
.1
P
inlng claims and
inlng Interest
r here particularly described i
erty,
follow
The HATTIE ARMSTRONG RAR
Placer Mining Claim,
S. Patent therefor being
ded in Book "13" of Patents, at
•face
Survey No.
I
U
page 470—excepting certain
rights thereof granted by deed of
record In Book 157 of Deeds, at page
11 records of Silver Bow County,
Moiil ;i 11:1 ;
HATTIE ARMSTRONt
Placer Mining Clal
United States Patent there!
recorded in Book "G" of Pi
»cords
NO. 2
871(5.
being
nts, at
of Silver Bow
53.64
Su
; 1.3
page
County, Monta
; embracing
All of said property being situate In
the C
Montana.
And. together witli all the rights, prlv
nd appurtenances therewith
ty of Sllv
Bow, State of
connected.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that
copy of this Order be published 1
MONTANA LABOR' NEWS, a
newspaper printed and published In Silve
Bow County, Mont
The
weekly
reek for
secutlve weeks prior to the
hearing of this Order to Show C'a
that a copy of this Order be p
served upon George Belfred, the Guardian
of the property and estate in the State
of Montana of Jennie S. Frankfort, Inc
potent, at least ten (10) days before the
* appointed for the hearing of said
Petition, and this Order to Show Cause.
Dated at Butte, Montana. November 22.
four (4) c
■ I
ally
tl
1932
LYNCH, Judge.
JEREMIAH J.
First publient io
Nov. 24
It.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Estate of WM. WILKINS. Deco
hereby given
utrlx of the
»asod, to the credit
'1
1er
by the
•state of W
Notice i
signed, Ex
Wilkins, d.
I
mid
having claims against the
dth the
<b
d, t<
Mbit them.
•iiths after tin
■itbin fo
n of this notice,
South Idaho Street
me being
he husim
the County of Silver Bow. Slat
first publica ti)
said Executrix
Butte. Mont
for the
estate, I
of Mont
I
he placi
of
EMMA WILKINS,
Ite of Wi
Executrix of the E
Wilkins, Dece
•ii
Dated, Butte, Monta
. this 12th day o
First publicatioi
Dec. 1—4t.
WASHINGTON SCENE
led fio
harsh
anil the brazen falsehoods of the
outgoing regime.
But even before the full returns
were in, and before the defeat of the
Old Guard senators—Watson, Jones,
Moses, Bingham, Smoot, Glenn—had
been celebrated as it deserved, the
Bourbon Democrats had begun to
plot against the income tax. They
were exchanging opinions as to how
to hasten the adoption of a sales
tax at the coming lame-duck session
of Congress, with a view to grad
ually displacing the direct tax upon
incomes and inheritances. This was
the Hoover-Raskob policy, endorsed
as to a sales tax, at least, by A1
Smith. They felt the need of stealth
and haste, in order that a majority
of Democrats in Congress should be
committed to the scheme before pub
lic protest could be aroused.
P P
cruelty, the class selfishness
Adoption of a temporary or emer
gency sales tax for a two-year period,
as demanded by some of the lawyers
for the huge private fortunes, would
require the setting up of a vast and
expensive machinery of collection—
far too expensive for the results
that would be secured. Making the
sales tax permanent, in order to jus
tify the expense of the collection
machinery, would be serving notice
on the wage-earners and the entire
low-income majority in this country
that Congress was out to repeal the
income and estate taxes. Repeal of
the income tax would betray the work
of the Bryan Democracy and the
other liberal and radical elements,
over many years, in securing the in
come-tax amendment to the Consti
tution. It would be a direct betray
al of the Democratic pledges made
in the 1932 campaign to the pro
and to the public at large.
is what the sales tax j
promoters are trying to make the
present Democratic majority in the 1
entire Democratic I
gressives
But this
House, and the
administration after next March, ac
cept from Hoover and Mellon and
Mills. It is designed to head, off a
restoration of the higher surtax rates
on big incomes, the reduction of ex
emptions under which well-to-do now
are able to dodge most of their in
come taxes. It is a bold maneuver
to reverse the election returns by
throwing the burden of federal gov
ernmental costs upon the poor.
Smoot and Moses, Bingham and
Glenn, Jones and Watson, are for
this class legislation. So are the
Wall Street Democrats who follow
Joe Robinson. But the progressives
in the Senate are still able to block
banditry in a lame-duck session. It
is likely that Blaine, Brookhart, La
Foliette, Norris, Cutting, Johnson,
Frazier, Nye and Shipstead will line
up against this sales tax scheme, and
will open such a debate on the issue
of rule by the rich at the expense
of the poor—without touching, of
course, on the social economics which
make this struggle inevitable in a
dying capitalism.—that the whole na
tion will wake up to the danger.
When the new Congress comes in,
the chance of adopting a sales tax
upon the poor will be sharply re
duced, unless present indications are
faise. Such new men in the Senate
as Bone of Washington and Clark of
Missouri, Russell of Georgia, Thomas
of Utah, and Overton of Louisiana
are expected to carry on the defense
of the income and estate tax prin
ciple within the Democratic ranks.
Every attempt will be made to whip
them into line, but it is significant
that among the greatest triumphs
of the senatorial campaign have
been those of Democrats who agreed
with Huey Long's demand that a
definite limit be placed upon big
incomes and inheritances. At a time
when the farm debt and other pri
vate debt in the United States is
crushing out the hope of economic
recovery, the struggle against the
sales tax becomes a struggle against
suicide.
Organized labor is fighting to pre
vent this economic crime.
SENATOR BORAII AGAINST
"DILUTED" MORATORIUM
WASHINGTON.— (F. P.)—After
learning that Garner, Snell and other
House and Senate leaders who con
ferred at the White House on the
war debt situation, were in accord
with the Hoover proposal that British
and other impaired currency might be
deposited abroad in place of gold pay
ments due in Washington, Senator
Borah announced Nov. 25 that he was
against it.
"The proposal is a diluted form of
moratorium," he said. He explained
that nothing could be gained by deal
ing with the situation in this piece
meal fashion. He would take up the
war debts in connection with the
other problems which must be solved
vorld trade can be rj. tored.
These other problems he indicated to
he the restoration of a common mone
tary level, and reduction of armament
costs.
before
•^5.
-s?S:
FLYING COST REDUCED—LOW RATES OVER
^aiSt
National Parks Airways
Between Great Fails, Helena, Butte, Pocatello, Ogde
and Salt Lake City
*«*&?t.**&S -*ÿ!5L-iaS
!
J. C. PENNEY CO. Inc.
MEN'S AND BOYS' STORE—WOMEN S AND MISSES' STORE
101 West Park Street
For Better Values and Lower Prices, Try Penney'»
Senator Threatens Jail
For Stubborn Landlords
WASHINGTON— (F. P.)— "D o n ' t
forget that men can be put in jail
for not complying with a request of
the senate," was the threat to real
estate men in Washington, voiced
by Senator Copeland, chairman of
the rental-probe subcommittee of the
Senate District Committee, at its
Nov. 10 hearing.
Despite promises that full infor
mation on existing rent scales would
be submitted Nov. 1, the testimony
was wholly vague. H. Clifford Bangs,
president of the Washington Real
Estate Board; J. F. Bowie, former
president of the Board and now
vice-president of the H. L. Rust
Company, one of the largest local
real estate concerns, and other wit
nesses absolutely denied that their
Board had made any attempt to fix
All appeared unable to
prices.
definitely compare January rentals
of this year with present rates.
In August the Senate District
Committee's counsel sent a ques
tionnaire to 78 Washington realtors
to ascertain actual rental conditions.
1Only :i3 replied, and these failed to
specify what reductions if any have
Been made in rentals since the de
pression began. Efforts by the com
mittee to secure the records of the
Real Estate Board and the minutes
of their meetings have been met
with promi
fulfilled.
which have not been
"October is our busy season; we
are short-handed; we haven't suffi
cient funds" were some of the ex
cuses offered for the delay in answer
ing the questionnaire. Bowie finally
promised complete information by
Dec. 1.
Not much impressed by one more
promise, Copeland said the District
Committee was there to do justice,
not to "knife the real estate men,"
but that their attitude looked very
much as if they "didn't want the
truth to be known."
"You may be sure this investiga
tion will go on," he concluded. "If
there is no co-operation, there will
be force."
Hearings will be resumed Nov. 28.
C-A-S-H
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