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The very latest in modern FOOD STORAGE LOCKERS Now Available to the Public Located in Arlington, Virginia i . . . . the only building within 500 miles constructed exclusively for the storage of Frozen Foods! FROZEN FOODS HOME FREEZERS Don’t just ask for."Demand Arman Frozen Foods" .the largest selection of the BEST Frozen Foods NOW OPEN FOR INSPECTION Willows Beach Colony l “CHESAPEAKE BAY'S DIFFERENT RESORT” T3-" OPENED this Season for the first time— and 25% SOLD before Advertising on Merit Alone . . . Willows Beach Colony is a re stricted Summer home resort on Chesapeake Bay, 36 miles from the District line. Many large ' open and wooded sites with ex cellent views of the Bay are still available at pre-development prices with! liberal financing plans. Representatives always on the property. Come and see Willows Beach Colony this Weekend . . . •/ Yes. drive out to Willows Beach Colony this weekend and you'll understand why 25% of this new development has been sold in a few months without advertising! Come and see our mile long, deep white, sand beach; relax in groves of cool shade trees as pictured here. See our new Bath House with its modern toilet and shower facilities. Every Willows property owner becomes a member of the Willows Beach Club soon to be built. Come and inspect the high and dry wooded lots that are now available .. . see the Summer homes now being built. Applicants to purchase—as well as building plans—must be approved by our Board of Directors in order to restrict Willows Beach Colony to discriminating people who want a better Summer home in a well-planned Summer Com munity. Near future plans call for a golf course, boat harbor, playgrounds, etc.,—in short, every convenience to make Willows Beach one of the finest Summer Com munities on the Bay. How to get to Willows Beach Colony » Drive to Marlboro; take routes 4. 416 and 260 to Chesapeake Beach. Turn right there on.Shore Road 5 miles south to entrance sign. Entire development improved by county grade gravel roads. LOTS from $500 up—20% Cash if Financed Willows Development Co, 1229 34th Street N.W. - HObart 8235 Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star I * •■' -V A 1 Croat President Lays Attacks on Priests to Ruling on Godfathers •y th« Associated Press BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Aug. 29. —President Vladimir Bakarich of the Croatian Republic was quoted today by Tan jug, Yugoslav news agency, as saying that Sunday’s mob attacks on Catholic priests in Venezia Giulia resulted from a rul ing by certain priests that persons classed as “enemies of the church” would be barred from acting as god fathers at confirmation ceremonies. Mr. Bakarich was quoted as say ing Msgr. Jakob Ukmar. a Vatican prelate who was injured in the at tacks after being sent to the area to administer confirmation to Cath olic children when local priests ex perienced hostility, had been placed under arrest, and that “together with other participants in the in cidents and their organizers’’ he would be turned over to the courts. Msgr. Ukmar was in a Flume hos pital with concussion and body wounds received at the hands of the same mob which killed Father Miro Bulesich. Charges Provocation. (Catholic authorities have said Father Bulesich was beheaded by a sickle-wielding mob in La nische, in the Yugoslav occupa tion zone, and Trieste newspapers said another priest, a Father Kristen, was found tortured to death.) “The incident resulted from well planned and well-prepared and organized provocation, which au thorities in Istria did not recognize in time,” Mr. Bakarich was quoted as saying. ftp cfliri \t stpmmpH frnm a mppt. ing of the priests of the Society of St. Paul, which he said made the ruling concerning godfathers at confirmation ceremonies. These priests, he added, contended that members of the Yugoslav Army and members of the Youth Railway were not worthy to be godfathers of children being confirmed. They succeeded, Mr. Bakarich con tinued, "in • * • lulling to sleep vigilant authorities who follow a policy of noninterference in church affairs.” He said the mobs were armed with sticks and rocks by elements of the Ustashi, a Yugoslav under ground organization, when they went to the priests to protest the ruling. One violent incident, Mr. Bakarich said, was averted, but the second time the militia was unable to prevent violence and barely suc ceeded in saving Msgr. Ukmar's life. "It is certain that we do not want such incidents,” the Croatian Presi dent concluded, "and we hope they will not be repeated and will most radically suppress any such pro vocative moves.” Belgrade newspapers yesterday published a dispatch from Fiume which declared that “the repeated, provocative stand of representatives of the higher Catholic clergy from Trieste assembled around Bishop Satini,” was responsible for Sun day’s mob violence. Chemical Society fo Honor Standards Bureau Official Frederick J. Bates, retired chief of the optics division of the Bureau of Standards here and an inter national authority on the chemistry be honored at a meeting of the American Chemical So ciety in New York September I 15 to 19. More than 400 chem ists from sugar industry labora tories will at- , tend. A banquet will I be given for Mr. | Bates at the ^ noiei reunsyi vania on the Mr. B«te«, evening of September 17. A scroll will *be presented at that time to Mr. Bates in recognition of his services to the society’s Division of Sugar Chemistry and Technology, of which he is a founder and former chairman. Mr. Bates, a native of Marysville, Kans., has been a leader in re search in physical chemistry and optics, the science of light, for nearly 50 years. He is known par ticularly for his work in the field of polarized light and its extensive utilization for the analysis of sugars. He joined the Bureau of Standards staff in 1903, and retired last year. He lives at 1649 Harvard street N.W. Walter Reed Clerk Kills Himself at Takoma Park James Arlie Thomas, 53, a clerk in the purchasing division of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, shot and ; killed himself yesterday in a bed | room of his home at 19 Boyd avenue, Takoma Park, Md. A certificate of suicide was issued I by Dr. Prank Broschart, Montgomery County medical examiner. Mr. Thomas was shot in the head, i Mr. Thomas’ brother, Charles, who ! lived with him. said his brother had ;been in ill health. Mr. Thomas was a native of the District. He was a member of Our Lady of Sorrows Church in Takoma Park, of the Takoma Park Volunteer Fire Department and of the Knights of Columbus. Besides his brother, he is survided by three sisters, Mrs. Frank Fowler of the Boyd avenue address; Mrs. Susie H. Owens, also of Takoma Park, and Mrs. Katherine Linn of Washington. A brother, Albert Thomas of Takoma Park, who was a member of the county police force, died about a year ago. Mr. Thomas is a cousin of Earl Thomas, Takoma Park chief of police. Funeral services will be held at 9 am. tomorrow at Our Lady of Sor rows Church. Burial will be in St. John'8 Cemetery at Forest Cflen. M ♦ Ky • No need fo travel long distances to save on fine quality toads. Thfse low prices are effective untli close of business Saturday, August 30,' 1947, in the Washington, D. C. Trading Area only. NO SALES TO DEALERS. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Items marked (*) are subject to Maryland Sales Tax. « / Ja U. S. “Commercial” Grade ^a I LUiIQ Sirloin or Porterhouse RIB ROAST usH;r FRANKS "=£" "43c k> < m *r* mmmmmmmmmsmmmmmm&mmmmm s PICNICS as? ‘53° msmsm ■ iVxib.:.v" SLICED BACON 75 Ready-To-Eat HAMS 10 to 14 lb. Average Shank Half_,b 69e Whole Ham_'*> 73c Butt Half_>b 75c Spiced LUNCH MEAT '.lb. 49c Pure All-Pork SAUSAGE NEAT *• 43c EVAP. MILK 4 45° 11 n in' m iiiii|fiMWii ii I in ii mmmm: fi-m: -mm EVAP. MILK El 449c MORTON’S SALT i. T SNO WHITE SALT it T VINEGAR a s 55° mmmmmm mm mmmm. m mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm . - Blended Juice ■& ■ 21c ORANGE JUICE s-11e Sweet Grapes r 2 - 23° ?■•:• 'TiliiiMli~'llllllllllflilllTiiiirr"iKll>'il'li~l'»Tir~ ~ liiiiiitt'1 KMBir'iilMillfi'iBriir'" UPMsH ORANGES _ ‘12c FRESH CORN" = POTATOES « 10 * 29* ....................... ffswsBwix-x+itwowwMWM^xw ..—1. —---- » CABBAGE i wwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmxmwmm ■ A