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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, June 18, 1946, Image 3

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ADVERTISEMENT.
Gas on Stomach
Relieved in S minute* or
double your money beck
When excess stomach arid causes painful, auffoeat
nf (as. sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually
•teacrlbe the fastest acting medicines known foi
cymptomatir relief—medicines like those in Boll-am
Tablets. No laxatif#. Bell-ana brings ooasdort in a
wT »r double your money baek pa return et bottle
tp M. 25c at all druggists.
PAINTING
PAPERING
SRTCRAFT DECORATORS
| MI. 8681 Frr^^stimate^^
DIAMONDS
•. '> WANTED!
Sell wisely at Burn
stine's. Rely on our 80
y e m r reputation. We
pay highest prices for
diamonds and diamond
jewelry. »:
919 F Street N.W.
80 lean ef Reliability
f
3
j
Idim A. Weschler and Son. Auctioneers
To Settle an Estate
Frame DwellingNo. 410,
New York Ave. N.W.
Brick Dwelling No. 715,
6th Street N.E.
By Public Auction
in front of the respective premises
Wednesday, June 19th, 1946
at 4:30 o’clock p.m.
Lot 119 in Square 859. improved by
brick dwelling No. 715,'6th Street N.E.,
containing 6 rooms and bath.
At 5 O’clock P.M.
Lot 814 in Square North of Square 515,
Second Commercial Zone 90D area,
improved by frame dwelling No. 4J9
New York Ave. N.W., containing 6
rooms.
Terms: Cash. A deposit of $500 on
each property sold, required at time
of sale, balance of purchase money to
be paid within thirty days from date
• »f sale, otherwise right is reserved to
resell such parcel or parrels in default
at risk and cost of defaulting purchaser,
after five days advertisement of such
resale in some newspaper published in
Washington. D. C\. or at the discretion
of the undersigned, deposit shall stand
forfeited as liquidated damages for
default in compliance with terms of
sale. Cost of examination of title con
veyancing. recording, revenue stamps
and notary fees to be paid by pur
chaser. This sale does not require
approval of court.
John F. Hillyard- Attorney
416 5th Street N.W.
LOST.
AMETHYST RING, for small finger. Sat
urday, June 15, afternoon. MRS. BUR
GESS, MI. 8000.19*_
BAR PIN, diamond centered, lost Sat., 4
D.m., 3rd floor, Woodward & Lothron; sen
timental value. Reward. EM. 4022. —19
BILLFOLD, in Anacostia Park Sunday.
June 16th: finder, keep money, return
billfold with other contents. WALLACE
WARNER. 2200 Prout st. s.e.. Apt._4._19*
BILLFOLD, red leather, lost in Hot Shoppe.
Wis. and East-West hwy. Reward WO.
6840._—19 _
BLUE SUIT, lost between Georgia ave. and
Kansas ave. around 8:10 pm. Monday
will person who called thf cleaner call
MISS POOLE at RA. 9114. after 5:15 p m.
_ —20
BOSTON BULL TERRIER, male, brindle
and white, in Silver Spring children's
pet. ' Please, oh. please, return. ’ Re
ward. Silver Spring t>6J 3._—211
BOX—Keep cash, but return other con
tents of box lost at the College of
Preachers. 3510 Woodley rd. n.w — 20
CANVAS HANDBAG <B-4 Army type),
taken by mistake June 6 from checkroom
of Raleigh Hotel: name “C. D. Small and
serial No 0910454 burned in top leather
strip. $25 reward for return of personal
papers B. W. MATHES. asst, mgr Ra
lelgh Hotel. __—-18
CARD CASE. silk. Friday, in or near Sate
way. I4th and Webster: bills and sale
deposit box key. Reward. TA. 1954 _•
CERTIFICATE 183. Apt. 102. Rutland
Court Owners. Inc., issued Nov 1 1920.
in the name of Mflly E Bond. Annie B
Gotta, having been lost, notice is hereby
given that application has oecn made for
issue of a new certificate. Dated June 4.
1940. ROBERT B GOTTA, administrator
estate of Mary E. Bond and Annie B
Gotta.___*
COLLIE DOG. brown and white. 4 mos.
old, harness but no tag. vie. Cottage City.
Mt. Rainier or Brentwood. WA. 3592.
-_—19
DEBATER’S MEDAL. "J. B. Peters” on one
side, "R. C ” other side. $25 reward Re
ply to Box 193-M, Star._21 • _
DEED to Charlottesville. Va.. property,
left- in taxi pickup 10th and F sts. to 16th
and Riggs pi. n.w.. Saturday at 11 a.m.
Liberal reward. Very important to owner.
Call AD. 1956.—18
GENTLEMAN’S DIAMOND RING, with
guard. Reward LI. 6399._19*_
DINNER RING, in Lansburglvs. Saturday.
June 15: diamond and platinum, center
stone, 99/100 carat. 4 stones. »4 carat
each and 2 smaller cut stones. MRS.
DORA J. NOEL. No. 1 Hawaii ave n.e.
RA. 2008. Reward._19*
DOG, large black Scottie, female, about 8
frs. old: answers to "Minnie"; vie. 7th-No.
Carolina ave. s.e.; Thurs. night. June 13.
Reward EX. 59QP_—18
ENVELOPE, containing currency June 14.
p.m., between Blair House and State De
BirUnent. Pleas call DU. 3800. Reward.
7**^_—is_
IbUNTAIN PEN. lady's Sheaffer lifetime,
bright green, vie 17th,- Conn, and L st.
RE, 6700. Ext. 2901_•
FOX TERRIER, black asd white, female,
strayed lrom 324 Little Falls st.. Falls
Church. Va. Reward. Falls Church
3P06-J._-X20
Fraternity pin. phi sigma Kappa, set
With pearls, rubies, diamonds; bet. 14ih
and Colorado and 8th and H, Thurs.
TA. 4157._-—18
GERMAN POLICE PUPPY. H mos . male,
ooliar marks on neck; children s pet. Re
ward. TA. 3207. —18
GLASSES, amber-colored frames: brown
leather case: "Brown" name on case, re
ward. 3E. 8833.— JS
&OLD BRACELET, with white enamel
daisies. Reward. DU. 8686. Apt. 611. 19*
IRISH SETTER. 5 months old. answers to
the name of "Cairo." Reward Call CH.
4367.__—19
KITTEN. gray and white, half grown
little boy* net. at Huldekoper pi. and
Benton st, n.w. OB. 4367.
LAPEL WATCH, lost at Great Falls Park.
Va.; yellow gold. Waltham Premier watch,
ah bowknot pin. Reward. SH. 2696. —20
Pekingese. brown, male on Monday.
eve., near Calvert st._WO. ,3102. —19
#OCKETBOOK, black fabric zipper, lost on
So. 30 car: contents, brown billfold con
taining sum of money In bills, charge
accounts identif.. driver’s permit, beaded
dhange purse with silver top. bunch of
keys; generous reward. Return tn MRS.
B. H. ANDERSON. 1614 17th st. s.e.
Apt. 4. AT, 0625____ —19
POCKETBOOK. brown, in Potomac Park
ear on Sunday morning, containing pass
to Chicago. 111.. $23.75. nylon brush and
comb, stockinas bunch of keys. Keep
money and return other contents. NO.
4666._ _—19
PORTABLE TTPEWBITER. veteran’s. Rem
ington 5. No. V 953619 lost on curb
Across from American Legion on 15th and
Euclid. Tues. morning. June lb. Reward.
Call MI. 8716 after 5. —26
PRESCRIPTION SUN GLASSES, Sunday,
near Tidal Basin; of no use to any one but
met. EX. 0351. —IS
' A
Senate Unit Approves
RFC Extension to '52
Without Rule Change
I The Senate Banking Committee
today approved extension of the life"
of the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
until June 30, 1952, without change,
after Senator Taylor, Democrat, of
Idaho, abandoned a move to require
directors of the agency to give up
all outside business connections.
The Taylor suggestion brought
back brief memories of the recent
appointment of former District
Commissioner George E. Allen to
the RFC Board.
Mr. Allen won Senate approval
after he told the Banking Commit
tee he would give up his salaried
job with an Insurance company. As
to his directorships in various other
companies, Mr. Allen said he would
like to do what other RFC officials
have done, file a list of such con
nections with the secretary of RFC
and take no part in any applica
tion pertaining to those companies.
Senator Taylor said he did not
I blame Mr. Allen for not wanting to
I give up more than other RFC direc
tors have been required to relinquish,
i but thought the law should be
amended to make service on the
RFC board a fulltime job.
"Would you apply the same rule
to members of Congress?" asked
Majority Leader Barkley, pointing
'out that Senators and Representa
| tives do not have to give up a private
'law practice, or service as bank
directors.
Senator Taylor replied that he
would, at least, require lawmakers
to make known their outside con
nections, if not to give them up.
He said he had considered offering
such an amendment to recent labor
legislation, and might offer it at
some future time.
Senator Radcliffe, Democrat, of
i Maryland suggested Senator Taylor
!give the committee more time to
study his amendment and take it up
separately at some later date. Sen
ator Taylor agreed.
Before the committee voted*to ex
tend the life of the agency, Senator
Taft, Republican, of Ohio suggested
that during the forthcoming con
gressional recess both houses should
make a long-range study of the Gov
ernment’s lending laws, with a view!
to co-ordinating them.
DETROIT.—TORNADO LEVELS CHURCH—The Grace Baptist Church was wrecked yesterday
when a tornado hit the River Rouge business district near here.
All four walls of this home of an unidentified family were knocked down by the force of
| the storm.—AP Wirephotos.
News Guild to Submit
Paid President Issue
To Referendum
By th# Associolvd Prill
SCRANTON, Pa., June 18.—The
American Newspaper Guild. CIO,
decided today to submit the ques
tion of a paid president to a ref
erendum vote of its membership.
The 13th annual convention, after
brief debate, adopted a resolution
directing the International Execu
tive Board to conduct the referen
dum not later than six months be
fore the next convention.
Under the proposal a paid presi
dent and paid secretary-treasurer
would be substituted for the present
top-level officer setup*—and unpaid
president, full-time executive vice
president and full-time secretary
treasurer.
Changes Proposed for 1947.
The changes, if adopted, would
become effective with expiration of
terms of the present officers on
November 1. 1947. Present officers
are Milton Murray, president; Sam
B. Eubanks, executive vice presi
dent, and William W. Rodgers, sec
retary-treasurer.
Mr. Murray, in supporting the
resolution, said he “deeply regretted
the controversy” that develop>ed over
“a simple proposal to change the
type of organizational setup,” and
that the referendum was designed
"to alleviate the situation that has
arisen.”
"The most aggressive organizing
and collective bargaining drive ever
undertaken in the newspap*er indus
try” also was under consideration
today by 250 delegates. Mr. Eubanks
announced.
Mr. Eubanks, in outlining the
drive, said it “will launch the first
all-out. long-range program to bring
Guild membership to every eligible
worker."
He said the delegates were called
i into closed session to discuss the or
| ganization campaign plans drafted
by the International Executive
Board.
Will Mobilize Resources.
The organization program "will
mobilize the full resources of the
guild to advance the wages for news
1 paper workers to levels in keeping
.with the prosperity their labor has
[created for the industry,” Mr. Eu
banks asserted.
William W. Rodgers, guild secre
tary-treasurer, reported the organi
zation's membership totaled nearly
25.000 on April 1, an increase of
3.000 from a year ago. He said the
union's assets exceeded $100,000.
Four Slashed in Battle
Over Eviction Order
One colored man was slashed
seriously and three others suffered
knife wounds early today in a battle
started when a landlord attempted
to evict a tenant in the 400 block
of Third street N.W.
Police said the landlord. Lindsay
H. Russell. 35. colored, 614 Orleans
place N.E.. and his wife. Willie Mae.
went to the Third street apartment
shortly after midnight and told the
tenant. Sarah Battle, 21. colored,
she would have to move. A visitor
to the Battle apartment, Joseph H.
Copeland. 24, colored, of Aberdeen.
Md.. sided with his companion and
the fight began.
All were cut. Copeland worst.
Russell and the two women were
charged with assault with a dan
gerous weapon, according to police.
LOST.
RED LEATHER BILLFOLD? lost in Yellow
cab about B:3n p.m Sunday: contained
considerable cash and identification for
Edith Galey Olson: reward. Box 133-L,
Star. 20
UMBRELLA, man’s, initials "R. T. H„” on
gold band on handle: reward. Phone N4.
o538, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.—20
WALLET, lady’s, brown. English, lost Bat..
containing personal identification and
money: vie. Garflnckel's or Willard Hotel
Reward. Hyattsvllle 6308, -So
WALLET, brown, containing money, per
sonal identification. '44 class ring in
change purse: initials N. M. H. Also black
leather folder, containing Postal Savings
notes, birth certificate, personal Identifica
tion. on board S. 8. Potomac Sat. night
Finder may keep money, return other
articles._ ig
THREE ISO BILLS, between rear door of
Hotel 2408 and Dorchester Pharmacy,
approx. 2 pm. Sunday. June 16th’ lib
eral reward. Call GLADYS STEWART,
CO 72IHI, —go
_FOUND.
For LOST DOGS and docs for adoption,
call MONTGOMERY COUNTY ANIMAL
SHELTER. Sligo 5183. 9 to-4; Saturdays. .
0 to 12_
SUM OF MONEY found in envelope. Box
301-M, Star.
T
Woman Dies on Airliner
MIAMI. Fla., June 18 i^.—Louisa
Rosa, 23. died aboard a Universal
Airlines chartered plane approach
ing Miami last night. She was a
passenger en route to New York and
had boarded the plane at San Juan.
Puerto Rico. Physicians said she
apparently suffered a heart attack
as the plane prepared to land at
Miami.
Clark Outlines Rise
Of American Press
Through Two Wars
ft* the AfcftO<iot«d Pr«ti
COLUMBUS. Ohio. June 18 —At
torney General Clark last night as
serted that American journalism
has "undergone a revolution in the
last 25 years as drastic as the
change from the automobile to jet
propulsion. ’
Mr. Clark spoke at a testimonial
dinner lor Howard Stodghill, busi
ness manager ol the Philadelphia
Evening Bulletin, for his work in
promoting the sale of War Stamps
and Bonds by newsboys.
The dinner was sponsored by the
International Circulation Managers’
Associations on the eve of their
47th annual convention.
Prestige Has Increased.
"Years ago in Washington, news
paper correspondents were treated
on a plane of equality with hack
drivers.” the Attorney General said.
"But the prestige of the working
newspaper reporter has risen im
measurably in the last two decades.
"Two world wars have brought
Europe and Asia into the American
newspaper’s "city room.”
Speaking over the American
Broadcasting Co.. Mr. Clark said the
"question with us in the Govern
ment • • • is not freedom of the
press, but better relations with the
field of journalism.”
In his address. Mr. Stodghill de
fended employment of newsboys
under 16 years of age.
Defends Right to Work.
Referring to a bill before the Sen
ate Labor Committee last March, he
said it "would have extended the
jurisdiction of the Children's Bureau
to cover all newspaper boys under
l£”
“This is a battle.” Mr. Stodghill
said, "which you will recognize as
having started more than 20 years
ago and which has been waged
almost unceasingly ever since. Bit
by bit. those who contend that the
work of a newspaper carrier boy is
oppressive child labor’ and should
be banned by law have closed in.
“* * * Let us perpetuate our
right to offer to the youth of
America the equality of opportunity
to make an honest dollar out of
school hours in a healthful occupa
tion.
"* * * We should not have to
ask for class legislation since • • *
the carrying and selling of news
papers outside of school hours does
not in any way constitute oppres
sive child labor.”
Other speakers included Gov.
Lausche. Matt Sullivan of the
Gannett newspaper group was toast
master__
P " NA 4370
GICHNER
Natal
Venetian Blinds
• I
Cfreulatian, May, 1946
(Average net paid.)
The Evening Star.... 214.078
The Sunday Star__327,265
<96.8% in the City and Tradtna Area.)
A t
Liquor License Sought
For Night Club in
Willard Ballroom
The historic grand ballroom of the
Willard Hotel will be converted into
a night club if the Alcoholic Bev
ierage Control Board grants applies
: tion for a class C liquor license, it
was learned today.
Request for the liquor permit wasi
filed with the ABC Board June 10'
by Anger-Young Enterprises, Inc., a
local firm, w’hich has leased the top
floor ballroom contingent on re
ceiving the license.
Alan W. Payne. ABC Board chair
man. said the corporation had not
provided specific details of the ball- i
room conversion plan,' but has j
requested a hearing to outline pro- i
posals for a smart supper club.
Whether the license will be,
granted depends chiefly on how the
night club owners propose to ar
range a separate entrance to the
lOth-floor premises. Louis Berry,
president of the firm which owns
the Willard, already has requested
the ABC Board to withdraw the
10th floor from the area covered by
the hotel's liquor license.
Mr. Payne pointed out that noth
ing can be done toward granting
the license until after the plan has
been cleared by the building inspec
tor, Police. Health and Fire De
partments. He said it was his un
derstanding that the Anger-Young
firm proposed to arrange with the
hotel for exclusive use of the hotel's
F street elevators.
Mr. Payne said that if a separate,
entrance could be arranged, the
plan would receive prompt con
sideration. However. District of- i
ficials expressed some doubt as to
, whether exclusive use of a set ofj
elevators would be interpreted as
complying with the rigid terms of
the so-called egress law.
Harry Anger, former Warner
Brothers theater executive here, and
President of Anger-Young, said, Paul
Young, a vice president of the group
and owner of the Roumanian Inn.
was slated to manage the New Wil
lard Hotel night club.
If the ABC Board refuses to grant
the permit, the Willard will resume
operation of the ballroom and with
draw its request for removel of the
premises from the area embraced by
its restaurant and liquor selling
license, Mr. Payne said.
TEACHERS
W* ere now filling positions for toll,
1946. Salaries—$1500—$3900
No Registration Fee
ADAMS TEACHERS' AGENCY
Colorado »ldg„ 14th b G RE. 393»
I GENERATORS J
AND m
STARTERS fl,
/^STALLED Xfltlr U
w» $»M Only E»oc> Foctory Dvplicotf* fl
AtjTO EQUIPMENT CO. U
102 NEW YORK AVE.. N. E.jf
ADoms3100 I
LOANS
•n DIAMONDS, WATCH El, JEW
ELRY and other articles af value.
Eet. INS
LOUIS ABRAHAMS
3225 Rhode Island Ava. N.E.
WArBelC 34M *
*
proper and other areas which had
not been harmed by the freak tor
nado failed to grasp immediately its
significance.
But as reports poured in, rescuers
on both sides of the border rushed
to help the stricken.
Detroit hospitals were hard pressed
to handle seemingly endless streams
of injured, many of whom were
discharged after first-aid treatment
without their names being recorded.
Large details of State police and
State troops were rushed to the
River Rouge area after acting State
Police Commissioner Donald S.
Leonard telephoned to Gov. Harry
F. Kelly and informed him of the
extent of the disaster.
But even as Michigan residents
administered to their wounded and
sought to find temporary shelter for
the homeless, it became apparent
that Ontario had taken the worst
punishment.
Canadian police reported that the
Sandwich area, largely a rural com
munity, had been almost completely j
flattened.
Tragic stories were unfolded in
quick succession as the bodies of 13
victims were recovered and scores of
injured were rushed to Windsor hos
pitals.
Windsor hospitals, hard hit by loss
of electric power, struggled to handle
the great influx of emergency cases
and Red Crass workers and other
volunteers joined the fight.
Numerous tragic scenes were en
acted as relatives came to the hos
pitals in search of friends and rela
tives missing since the blast struck.
Most of the searchers were be
wildered by the tornado, an almost
unprecedented thing in the recent
history of the Detroit-Windsor area.
Pathos and Heroism.
Stories of pathos and heroism were]
intermingled. One man told of see-|
ing a boy lifted off his bicycle and,
into the air as the tornado hit. The
smashed bicycle was found: the body,
of the boy was not recovered.
A Canadian mother—Mrs. Joan
Beaman, 19. Jibway—injured as the:
blast hit her home, gave Caesarian
birth to a daughter, but both died, i
Several hundred workers of Chrvs-■
ler Corp. of Canada, who had met at
Windsor to take a strike vote, speed
ily assumed the rples .qf rescuers,
w'hen they got word of the1 tragedy, j
They formed first-aid squads and
hurried to the area to aid in the
task of pulling timbers off the piles
that once were homes to search for'
bodies.
Bus drivers turned their vehicles:
CASH F0Rczr
/ Better Sell New While
( Price* Are Still High.
I Wo nr th* (all cetlin* price la
( eaih. Gat on oar preferred new
l car deUTCrr lilt.
/ LOVING MOTORS
1 "Your Friendly Packard Dealer"
( 1 822 M St. N.W.
JuMt Call RE. ,fT/* _ir-u
M HI ALT OK
I 1113 17th St. N.W. • RE. 6661
H Serving the Washington
fit Public for Over 30 Tears
—For 68 Years—
BtrlHz Has Never Failed
VETERANS
you eon now enroll at
BERLITZ
SUNNER COURSES
SPANISH
FRENCH-GERMAN
I or any other language
BERLITZ SCHOOL
The Language Center of Washington
839 17th St. N.W. (at Ey)
NAtional 0270
THERE IS A BERLITZ SCHOOL IN
EVERY LEADING CITY Of THE WORLD
into emergency ambulances to rush
victims to hospitals.
Windsor hospital authorities ob
tained some relief from the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in Detroit.
FBI agents sped across the river
with portable lighting equipment to
alleviate the situation.
Telephone and electric light lines
on both sides of the border were
particular targets of the tornado
and the New York Central Railroad
reported its Windsor area freight
yards were turned into shambles.
Freight cars were tossed about as
if by some giant hand. Roofs were
torn off freight buildings. Some
boxcars were smashed into kindling
as the freak wind toyed with them.
Windsor and Ontario police faced
the task of preventing looting, aid
ing the injured and forming the
rescue parties which embarked on
their task today.
Heavy Rains Create Quagmire.
Authorities expressed lear that
some residents had been pinned in j
the ruins of their demolished homes
and began the search of the debris.
The Canadian press estimated
that "15 to 25 and probably more' ,
had lost their lives.
Officials forecast that additional
bodies would be recovered from the
15-mile area torn by the tornado.
They said heavy rains which pre
ceded and followed the huge funnel
had largely turned the scene into a
quagmire w’hich probably held the
secret of the whereabouts of addi
tional victims.
On the Detroit side, the dead in
cluded two persons killed by con
tact with live wires and a third who
died of a heart attack.
It is just plain common sense to
“Back Your Future” by buying U. S.
Savings Bonds NOW and regularly.
fcUECTRIC MOTORS
KtfAIKtD and IXCHA* ,
■UCTKIC IOUIW4iNt CO. 147J Shaman 4»n.
2020 M Si. N.W.
WHAT A MEAL!
WHAT A BARGAIN!
\ Tonight’s Dinmr ,
\ Special /
I I ROAST STUFFED TUR- [
II KET. BAKED CRANBER- 1
7 RIES. GIB LET - . \
' !A?„C£ *£ $1-90
b— --- f
p Dinner 5 to 9 L
S. Luncheon 12 to 2:30
N Air Conditioned /
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
16th and Eye Sts. N.W.
SO COOL ON OUR
OUTDOOR DECK
Tenight’s Dinner
Special
FRIED CHICKEN «A M
A LA FARROT-. 4iIIU
Accomvanied—as always
—by hot home made
cornsticks, rum buns,
^ and home made desserts.
k Dinner 5 le 9
Luncheon 1? to *2:30
* Cocktail Lounge
r The Parrot
RESTAU RANT
Canit An. at R St.
Free parking i
Banks are community servers.
The Second National was organized and is being
conducted in that spirit.
Broadly, banking functions are prescribed by
charter. But we are adding from time to time
special services of convenience—all rendered
with that famous “friendly smile.”
We’ll be glad to have you join our “banking
family.”
The Second National Bank
OF WASHINGTON
1333 6 St. N.W. • 509 Seventh St. N.W.
Oriuiuta mil
N«mk*r r«4ml »*>«»» C*rMrlli»»
LRSSONS
FOR TWO
aftAe
PRICE OF
Just ONE HOUR at Arthur Murray’a
and You Can Co Dancing Tonight!
• Come in today. Right now
Arthur Murray offers dance les
sons for two at the price of one!
Thanks to Arthur Murray's
“Magic Step’’ and his expert
teachers, you can learn enough in
an hour's lesson to go dancing the
same night. And in a few more
hours you'll be a "whiz" . . . have
a real Rumba down pat or a
tricky Fox Trot. Or waltz as
smoothly as if you'd started danc
ing school at the age of eight.
Don't miss this chance to be
come a popular partner at half
the usual cost. Enroll today and
make the hit of your life at your
next party. Phone EX. 4100 . . .
or visit the air-conditioned studio.
Open evenings until 10.
ETHEL FI ST ERE, Director
ARTHUR MURRAY
1101 CONNECTICUT AVE.EXec 4100
WE MANUFACTURE OUR OWN
custom built VENETIAN BLINOS
In Washington
Call our plant for estimates
PROMPT DELIVERY
Blinds made of your choice in
Steel, Wood, and Aluminum
Slats to fit your windows
perfectly.
Southern Venetian Blind Co.
WE ARE THE ONLY VENETIAN BLIND
MANUFACTURER IN WASHINGTON
Phone ADoms 5400 o 2251 9th St. H.W.
| Leo M.Bekxsteix & Ca
j 1415 K Street N.W. • ME. 5400
A Complete Real Estate Institution
!
New Shipment
Valentine's
YACHT PAIYT
In Gloss White—Flqt Whit*
Semi-Gloss White
Copper Bottom Paint
Red and Green
The best paint or varnish is always the most
economical—jo phone, write or see . . .
BUTtfR-WfMM
For Every Surface s' N. For Expert Advice
For Every Purpose \PAINTSy por free Delivery
609 C St.. N. W. • MEtropolitan 0150
IF YOU DON’T LIKE
CHLORINATED WATER
DRINK
JhlaitdlUater
HL0RINAT10N of public water is often
necessary to assure purity, but oftentimes
this very purifying process imparts an un
pleasant taste to the water. For this reason,
thousands have turned to Poland Water for a
really fine and wholesome table water.
Poland Water brings you the natural purity
and refreshing taste of crystal-clear, deep-rock
spring water—bottled and sealed at its source.
That's why Poland Water has been the choice
of discriminating people for over 100 years.
Enjoy this beneficial, natural water in your
home! Order a ease of Poland Water today and
know how good really fine table water can be.
On salt at
ALL QUALITY FOOD AND DRUG STORES
w Tel. Poland Spring Co.. M'askio /). C.
Tel. District 9010
iOTTLED ONLY AT THE SPRING, POLAND SPRING, MAINE
Tornado
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