RESORTS.
_ SHADY SIDE, .MD.
RURAL HOME HOTEL
Famous Food, Marvelous Bathing, Sunset
Trip #n Bay Daily. A. W. Andrews, Prop.
_ Phone West River 12-F-5 _29*
_SCHWENKSVILLE, PA.
miles from Washington. _DI. A.'tOO
NORTH CAROLINA.
PEF THE ‘‘LOStToLOVY —IDEAL VA
cationland—Surf Bathing—Fishing—Boat
ing. F'or reservations at Wilbur Wright
Hotel, Kitty Hawk, N. C., phoi.e EM. t»7l8.
•
r _j_ ,
SERVICE
Appointed postmaster-general of the
American Colonies in 1753, Benjamin
!:ranklin improved the service between
*Jew York and Philadelphia from one
o three deliveries per week. When you
omt to Philadelphia and the Benjamin
rranklin you'll Jind us always on the
ilert to make ANY possible improvement
n our service. 1200 rooms from $3.50.
THE
BEKIMMIMI
ERANKUW
Ceo. H. O'Neil, Managing Director
GREAT GREAT
NAME HOTEL
ADVERTISEMENT.
Kidneys Must
(lean Out Acids
Excess acids, poisons and wastes in Tout
Idood are removed chiefly by your kidneys
Sleutln5 UP NiShts, Burning Passages, Back
®ch.e. Swollen Ankles, Nervousness. Rheu
matic Pams, Dizziness. Circles Under Eves
find feeling worn out, often are caused bv
E?PrfSrRa.n c J*,nd non-systemic Kidney and
®iradd" troubles. Usually in such cases, the
l^r'i fitst dose of Cyatex goes right to work
helping the Kidneys flush out excess acids
find wastes. And this cleansing, purifying
Kidney action, in Just a dav or so. may eas
make you feel younger, stronger and
5-r„nLrfhan lrVoar,s- A printed guarantee
*™PP<d ?round oach package of Cyatex in
sures an immediate refund of the full cost
you are completely satisfied. You have
f^fjythmg to gam and nothing to iose under
S5*®, positive monev back guarantee so get
lyetex from your druggist today for only 35o.
We Always
Have MONEY
to LOAN on
REAL ESTATE
at a low rate of
interest and on
payment plans
made convenient
for the borrower.
Our Officers Invite
You to Confer
The
WASHINGTON
OAN & TRUST
COMPANY
F S*. at 9th
17fh St. at Q
Member, Federal Deposit
~ f Insurance Corporation
Mrs. Dora D. Forbes,
92-Year-Old Aunt
Of President, Dies
Frederick A. Delano
With His Sister at
Their Family Estate
By the Associated Press.
BAI.MVILLE, N. Y„ July 22.—
Funeral services will be conducted
today for Mrs. Dora Delano Forbes,
92, aunt of President Roosevelt, with
burial tomorrow in Fair Haven,
Mass.
With Mrs. Forbes when she died
yesterday were her two sisters, Mrs.
James Roosevelt, mother of the
President, and Mrs. Price Collier,
Tuxedo Park, N. Y., and her brother,
Frederic A. Delano, National Re
sources Planning Board chairman.
Mrs. Forbes had returned from
her Paris residence on November
15, arriving on the liner Manhat
tan.
Born in Northampton, Mass., in
1847, Mrs. Forbes was the third
of 11 children of Warren and
Catherine Robbins Lyman Delano.
She was a member of the family
which had been founded in this
country by Phillippe de la Noye, a
Huguenot and a native of Holland,
who landed at Plymouth in 1621
as one of 35 passengers on the
ship Fortune.
Family Followed Sea.
De la Noye settled at Duxbury,
Mass., later altering his name to
Philip Delano. Six American vil
lages and a town in Canada and
one in Flanders have been named
for the Delano family.
Mrs. Forbes' maternal ancestors
included officers who fought in
Queen Anne's and the Revolution
ary Wars; Richard Lyman, a
founder of Hartford, Conn.; the
Rev. Nathaniel Robbins, member
of the Massachusetts convention
which ratified the Constitution, and
her grandfather. Judge Joseph
Lyman of Northampton.
Her family followed the sea for
generations and was closely identi
fied with the period when Amer
ican vessels became known over the
oceans of the world. Mrs. Forbes'
father had a fleet of clipper ships
operating to China and the west
coast of Africa, and became head
of Russell <fc Co., largest mercantile
and tea house in China. Mr. Delano
purchased Algonac, on the west bank
of the Hudson, across from the
Roosevelt home at Hyde Park, after
his marriage.
With the panic of 1857, Mr. Delano
went to China to rebuild his fortune.
In 1862, Mrs. Forbes, then 15, made
her first ocean voyage, sailing with
her mother and sisters and brothers
aboard the square-rigged ship Sur
prise to Hong Kong. Eight-year-old
Sara Delano, mother of President
Roosevelt, kept a diary of the ad
venturous trip.
Wanted to Fly to China.
Since that first trip Mrs. Forbes
had hade 10 voyages to China from
Paris and the United States and in
numerable trans-Atlantic crossings.
In later years, the President's aunt
’ had expressed the wish to fly to
1 China with the advent of the air
clippers, but her advanced age made
; this inadvisable.
During the sojourn of the Delano
family in Hong Kong, Frederick A.
Delano was born. After four years.
, the family returned home, stopping
for a year each in Germany and
Paris..
It was in Paris, in 1867, that Dora
Delano was married to William
Howell Forbes, a junior member of
Russell & Co., whom she had met
in China. Mr. and Mrs. Forbes re
turned to China, where they lived
for nearly a quarter of a century.
Later they went to Paris to live.
Mr. Forbes died in 1896 while he
and his wife were visiting at Al
gonac.
Long Resident of Paris.
After her husband's death, Mrs.
0 vrtUR BUDGET, HERE ARE
Regular $7.50 \
SLACKS
S^.95 \
Y All wool gabardines, tropicals,
\N flannels, doeskins ond celanese in
numerous colors and patterns.
Sanforized
WHITE
SHIRTS !
SJ .69
\ Cool, comfortable
\ and well made. Will
\ not shrink. The
1 collars ore quaran
\ teed to outlast the
i^T shirt.
X I
B. V. D.
SHIRTS & SHORTS
33c
Cut with plenty of
freedom to as
sure sum
mer com
fort.
MONTHS^
TO PAY
il Foot Fan
'ventilated shoes
CA QE The shoe find of the
season. Always cool . . .
™ with slipper comfort.
MRS. DORA DELANO FORBES.
A. P. Photo.
Forbes returned to Paris, where she
lived for six months each year for
48 years, usually returning to the
United States for Thanksgiving
each year. Active in relief work
abroad during the World War, Mrs.;
Forbes later devoted herself to work i
for the blind.
She witnessed the inauguration of
her nephew as President of the
United States in 1933. and had
visited the White House. Just be
fore the outbreak of war in 1939.
the President’s mother was visit
ing Mrs. Forbes in Paris. Mrs.
Roosevelt sailed for home on the i
liner Washington, at Ambassador I
Bullitt’s insistence, and Mrs. Forbes !
sailed a month later.
Mrs. Forbes had no children. She !
is survived by her two sisters and I
brother.
Miss Sophia B. Sanger, 59,
Former Teacher, Dies
Miss Sophia B. Sanger, 59, of
2714 Ontario road N.W., a former
teacher in the District public
schools, died early today at her
home after a long illness.
Miss Sanger, a native of Wash
ington, was the daughter of the late
Raphael and Caroline Sanger. She
retired about 10 years ago because
of ill health.
A member of the Washington
Hebrew Congregation, Miss Sanger,
together with the late Dr. Abram
Simon, was instrumental in estab
lishing a kindergarten for the con
gregation.
She leaves three brothers, M. R.
Sanger and Davis Sanger, both of
Washington, and Harry R. Sanger
FREE LECTURE
—ON—
Christian Science
—BY—
Louise Knight Wheotley Cook, C. S. B.,
of Kansas City, Missouri
Member of the Board of Lecture
ship of The Mother Church. The
First Church of Christ, Scientist in
Boston. Massachusetts.
IN
First Church of Christ
Scientist
Col. Rd. and Euclid St. N.W.
Tuesday, July 23,
at 8 P.M.
t nder (he Auspices of
First Church of Christ, Scientist
Auditorium Air Cooled.
No Collection All Welcome
of New York City; two sisters, Mrs.
Prank Levine of New York City
and Miss Essie Sanger of Washing
ton.
Funeral services will be held at
10 a.m. Wednesday at the home.
Burial will be in Washington
Hebrew Congregation Cemetery.
Woman's Party Leader
To Support Willkie
by the Asseciated Press.
CHICAGO, July 22.—Mrs. Helen
Hunt West of Jacksonville, Fla.; an
active worker in the Democratic
Party and publicity chief of the
National Woman’s Party, said yes
terday she would support Wendell
L. Willkie, the Republican Presi
dential candidate, because she could
not conscientiously vote for a third
term.
Emphasizing she spoke only for
herself and not for the Woman's
Party, she also said that the Demo
cratic party’s failure to adopt an
equal rights for women plank in
its platform, as did the Republicans,
was “a matter of great disappoint
ment to millions of women through
out the country.”
One of the aims of the Woman’s
Party is to obtain a vote by the
States on an equal rights amend
ment to the Constitution.
Japan fears epidemics of in
fectious diseases as a result of water
shortage.
_a_
j—FOR 1
+J4ti l/Vlaje&ty.
*lJour BABY
(
Thousands of mothers
have found DyDee Wash
more economical than
Bes at home.
e cost of ma
V fuel, and
will find Dy
>s expensive
you the as
utmost semi- l
tion provid- ,
1 by leading J
“ *
2-QUART I
s--«‘"S-1
10 Vi-INCH |
fRYING PAN i
«>■ AQ W“h<io1
ga $109 i -M
*“ 6.QUART 1
i DUTCH OVEH 1
cm99
W:lrhd^2v 1
8-CU«» ]
coffEE maKER
- ^ price
e^69 Without
s’Z ®
—I III
15-lNCH
OVAL ROASTER
Price
55 99 Without
With ^ Card
At a Mere Fraction
of Former Home
Demonstration Prices *
H/UoufAfiu* EASY CARD PLAN
Don't miss this splendid opportunity to own modern,
thick-molded aluminum at such amazing savings!
Majestic Cookware is designed for waterless, top
stove cooking, to retain much of the natural flavor and
other valuable elements in food. Fresh vegetables and
meats can be cooked in their own moisture without ad
dition of water, thus helping to preserve the goodness
that nature puts into food. All cooking, including
baking and roasting, can be done on top of the stove!
It's easy! It helps to provide healthful and flavorful
meals... and at the same time helps to save cooking
fuel! ACT NOW!
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
(MAJESTIC COOKWARE is thick-molded aluminum
... designed for convenience and efficiency ... made
to last a lifetime. If not satisfied, return within 30 days
for full refund.
YOUR CREDIT CARDS
CAN SAVE MONEY—
DON'T DELAY
Bring in your credit cards. For each fully punched
card you are entitled to buy one Majestic utensil
at the remarkably low card price. If you do not
have a card ... ask for one and have every pur*
chase of groceries and meats punched on it. You
still have time to build a set this easy, money*
saving way!
. ,,ur to 1933.
NEWEST ACME MARKET
Now Open in Arlington, Vo.
4707 Lee Highway
CORNER OLD DOMINION ROAD
Plenty of Parking Space
BJ22 GEORGIA AVE. N W*
8529 GEORGIA AVE.*
1335 GOOD HOPE ROAD*
Old Georgetown Rd. Betheeda*
16th A F STS N.E.* W
8217-19 GEORGIA AVENUE
614 13th STREET N.W.
1426-28 PARK ROAD N W.
2938-40 14th 8TREET N.W.
1839 BENNING ROAD N.E.
1429 20th STREET N W
8.E 17th A R STREETS N.W.
2744 14th STREET N.W.
1652 COLUMBIA ROAD
6335 GEORGIA AVE. N.W.
906 G STREET N.W.
421 13th STREET N.E.
221-223 Md. Are., Hjattsvllle. Md *
Some Prices Vary in Md. A Va.
★PARKING SPACE
Your Dollar Buys More At The Acme
CHOICE
_ No. 2
Tomatoes can
CHOICE MIXED
Vegetables
Alaska Pink Salmon
2 cans 25®
FANCY RED
Salmoncan
Bartlett Pears XftM; N°a2* 15«
Marshmallows Puritan 2 pkgs 25c
Lunch Tongue Armour's 2 cans 25C
Fruit Cocktail 17c
Pure Grape Juice & 19c & 10«
PRINCESS COLD MEDAL or
OLEO I I p,llsburv
” , ” 1 I FLOUR
2^19* S A 22*
SAVE ON -
FILMS OOLD.ML
„ ALL-PURPOSE
8-Exp. Rolls ■ _
20c-23= I HOUR
28c <^^^^Jl2A37*
Heinz Beans 12,"7« 3 29«
Beverages Sparkling Ass'td AZS*
Pork and Beans o°:i; 4 S 19«
Preserves Strawberry '!? I7« T 14«
Apple Sauce HG.'r.T,i. 4 ^.g2S«
E-Tal-E Cooked WHson’s Certified
°VenV^CTOR8l,eedJ I Spaghetti MOR
Bread jj 3 S.0,i9c ’^23«
16 ox C II Woodbine Toilet Tissue 3 rolls 10e
loaf d || Wytex Bleach Water 2 qt bots 19a
Rich Milk 2 q.|Kc II s*'Boda (fordeaning) 2'/2-lbpkg So
BREAD |V1 19 || 10-Quart Qalv. WELL-MADE
doVuts d°* 10 PAILS Brooms
I7< -17*j
Cantaloupes
«a. C
U. S. No. 1 WHITE -m a
POTATOES IO»-15e
CRISP ICEBERG JUICY CALIFORNIA
LETTUCE OR A AGES
head 5° doz.10°
CHOICE SLICING V
TOMATOES Jc
Ifteat/tyferithutitSfceuu&f
DRY CURED by f jm
STRIP BACOA r 14c
SELECTED MEAT LOAVES % ib. 9c
FRESH MADE POTATO SALAD ib. 12V2c
FRESH MADE COLESLAW_ib. 12l/2c
MILK FED ) ^^ou* Outlets ib. ,35c
w (LOIA CHOPS ib. 33c
VF/Ili [RIB CHOPS lb. 27c
R / shoulder Roast ib. 15c
• GENUINE SPRING LAMB •
LOIN CH-OPS * 25c shoulder
CHOPS sar i9c ROAST
lb 39' KfR "> 10c Ib-15c
TRY OUR FILM DEVELOPING SERVICE
Get Prints Almost Double Size and Save Money
Prices Effective Until Wednesday Closing, Quantity Rights Reserved