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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, September 25, 1947, Image 3

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7
/ Shirlingfon's Co-op
* Department Store to
Poll Area on Needs
Six buyers for the co-operative de
partment store under construction
at Shirlington, Va., today will begin
a survey of homes to determine what
merchandise is in most demand by
purchasers in that area.
This was announced yesterday by
Lester G. Ott, president of the Board
of Directors of the new co-operative
department store. The store has been
Incorporated as the E. A^Pilene Co
operative of Virginia and will be the
first co-operative department store
in the country, Mr. Ott explained.
"These buyers will tour the area
and determine what the people who
shop at Shirlington want in a de
partment store,” Ott declared.
To Go Into Homes.
He said they actually would go
into homes to find- out what size
curtains will be in most demand and
what sfee rugs prospective customers
want. It is planned to gauge the
quality merchandise by the average
income in the area.
The store is planned for comple
tion by January 1 and is expected to
open March 1. Mr. Ott said *300,000
in common stock is to be sold at *50
a share. No one person will be per
mitted to own more than *1,000
worth of stock, he said.
Stockholders will receive an an
nual dividend of about 5 per cent,
according to profits, Mr. Ott ex
plained, and in addition funds left
over after stock dividends are paid
will be used for purchase refunds
to stockholders who made purchases
at the store during the year.
Store Leased for 20 Years.
"This ‘patronage-refund’ is the
most important feature of the store
and is particularly pertinent in these
days of high prices,” Mr. Ott said.
"All moifey saved or earned through
store operation, with the exception
of adequate contingency and educa
tional reserves and repayment of
notes held by Consumer Distribution
Corp. (sponsors of the store), will
be paid back to the members as a
savings-refund.”
The new store, which has been,
leased by the consumer group for
20 years, will be a three-story build
ing with 52,000 square feet of floor
space and 75 employes. Robert Whit
son, a department store manager of
20 years’ experience from California,
is to manage the new enterprise.
Virginia Ban on Klan Film
Protested by Producers
A Virginia decision to ban the
movie entitled “The Burning Cross”
was protested in Washington today
by a representative of the pro
ducers, the Screen Guild, who said
the matter will be taken to court
unless the action is reversed.
The film, dealing with activities
of the Ku Klux Klan since World
War II, was banned by the Vir
ginia Board of Motion Picture Cen
sors, according to Associated Press
dispatches, on grounds that it is
"inhuman and of such character
that its exhibition may incite to
crime.” The board said the sub
ject “is inflammatory and not con
ducive to keeping the best rela
tions among various racial or re
ligious groups.”
Jack Cartwright, public relations
director for the Screen Guild, who
arrived here by plane from Holly
wood yesterday, said that Virginia
is the only State to ban the film
and declared he believed “the real
reason for the ban is because the
picture tells the inside story of the
Ku Klux Klan.”
Mr. Cartwright planned to take
the case up with the Virginia cen
sors. adding that unless their action
is reversed he would appeal to the
courts.
Mr. Cartwright said, however, that
he hopes to convince'the censors
that “The Burning Cross” is not as
brutal as many films they have
previously passed and that it only
could incite the public against in
tolerance. He declared it is based
nn fart onH rrvntanri.As4 +Via vuiklln i
is entitled to see such a picture.
It was on Good Friday night, 1865,'
that Abraham Lincoln was assassi
nated.
LOST.
aSSBaDEI grown female, "Yana," vU
emits Capitol: reward L. H. HARRIS.
No. 1 Terrace Ct. n.e. (between 217
219 A at. n.e.)•
WCYCLE. on Turkey Thicket Playground:
red and white, front fender mlasing. Call
Michigan 8258. Reward._—25
BRIEF CASE, dark brown leather, contain!
trig music, in. cab, ylc. 4500 Cathedral ave.
Reward. Ordway 0224,_ _25
BROACH, horse-shoe shaped, 35 diamonds
»et in gold and platnlum, Sept. 16. nr.
Sutler Hotel. Reward. Call NICHOLS
CO-' MB, 03in. _ , ,
CLOTH BAG. white. 3x2 Inches: black
stitching, containing money, lolded 2
inches square; approximately 830; reward.
RA. 4543, •
COCKER SPANIEL, blacx. male, named
"Bourbon,” tag No. 9638. DU. 0189.
. _ —23
COCKER SPANIEL (black) male, answer
to the name of Bobbie”; reward SH
8301. 27
COLLIE. BLACK; answers to name
"Blackie"; strayed from 5407 Tilden rd .
Decatur Heights. Md., Sat. night: no collar
or tag; child's pet. Reward. Phone UN.
81*1-___—26
FRATERNITY PIN, 81gma Aloha Epsilon.
near Dupontr Circle. Reward offered. Call
RE. 8676,_26
KITTEN, vray. with white front and paws:
Strayed from 6401 Maple ave.. Chevy
Chase, Md., Tuesday; reward. OL. 5618.
Kolinsky tub scarf, initials f.ljT,
lost vicinity 11th and G n.w.. Wed.
afternoon; reward. GE. 5437 after 6
pm.—26
POCKETBOOK, black, vie. Fla. ave. street
car. containing eyeglasses, keys, other arti
cles: Wednesday morning: reward. Please
return to L. PAYNE. 37 Que st. n.e.
DU 6ffS7. __07
POCKETBOOK, navy blue; keys and dTiv"
*r s license most Important: vicinity of
14th st. and Park rd . or Arcade Market:
reward. Call NO. 6611 or NO. 7850. —25
POCKETBOOK, black patent: Kresge 5 &
10. 3427 Conn, ave.: keys, driver's li
cense. registration card and other papers
most important to owner; keep money and
return valuable papers and keys. 126
34th st s e.. TW. 8300, Ext. 768 26•*
REVOLVER, Colt: official police revolver.
38-caliber: serial No. 711468: In holster;
property of Metropolitan Police: vie. No.
9 precinct; raward. 3403 Lancer dr.,
Hyatts'tile, Md. WA. 8655, — 07
RING, carved jade in carved rose, yellow
goia mounting: oetween 28on conn. ave.
and Woodley rd. n.w.. or Calvert st. Ter
minal sentimental value. Reward. Call
CO 8097 after 6 p.m, _25 *
. SCREW-TAIL BOSTON, male, white fore~
paws. sore toe right foreleg. 4025 1st st
S.W., or RE. 7400, Ext. 62308. Reward
_ 26*
SKIRT, brown, lady's, lost in delivery
Tues. evening, vicinity Union Station;
310 reward. 539 3rd at, n.c —26
WALLET, pigskin, case type, in or near
Columbia Hospital between 8:30 and 11
p.m. Sept. 24: several cards containing
name of owner. Finder please call OL.
3008. _ _1
WRIST WATCH, lady's, white gold. HamF
ton: gold link band; Vic. 13th and F its .
Sept. 25: reward. Rockville 2533. —27
WRIST WATCH, small, gold, lady's, with
gold bracelet, lost in 1100 block Conn, ave..
Tuesday, noon. Reward. Call NA. 2626.
ask for MI3S GAITHER._—25
2-HANULED BAG. tan leather, left on
Walker Chapel bus on Mon.; reward.
Glebe 2648._25
IN TAXI, Illinois pocket watch chain and
Cristy knife attached; reward. Phone
TW, 0606.•
LOST, woman's black shoulder itrap
purse, in taxi between Carlton Hotel and
American University, 7:15-7:30 p.m. Tues.
eve.; liberal reward. NA. 6140.
FOUND.
bOG, male, collie, found in Montgomery!
County. WI. 3281.
IRISH SETTER, large male, injured and
sick, to be returned only to proven owner
showing current lie»nse tag; vicinity Con
tress Hgts. VI. 71427
TAf,R GLASSES, 16th and H it*. !
B.». Call NO. 3722. J
»
A
IROQUOIS, ONTARIO.—COLLIER BURNS AFTER COLLISION—Aerial view of the Canadian
collier Milverton burning in the St. Lawrence River yesterday after she collieded with the oil
tanker Translake. At least 2 were killed and 10 injured in the collision, which set off a terrific
explosion and Are on the coal ship. All casualties were aboard the Milverton, which became a
mass of flames from oil spilling over its bow. Ten of her crew still were unaccounted for last
night. All 22 aboard the tanker were safe. __AP Wirephoto.
Five Zoning Petitions
Approved, 12 Denied
By Montgomery
The Montgomery County Commis
sioners yesterday announced ap-!
proval of five petitions for change of
zoning classification, denial of 12,
while one was deferred.
Hearings on the petitions have'
been held during the past two
months.
Petitions approved were:
Earle E. and Elene E. Osmond,
residential A to commercial D of
property on the southeast side of
Del Ray avenue near Norfolk ave
nue, Bethesda.
Forest K. Harris and Katherine B.
Hundley, residential A to commer
cial D of three lots on the north
west side of Auburn avenue near Old
Georgetown road, Bethesda.
Lawrence V. Lutes land on the
south side of Thayer avenue, Silver
Spring, from residential A to com
mercial D.
James E. Thiem, residential A to
commercial D of land at the south
east comer of Colesville road and
Cedar lane, Ednor.
C. Willard and Virginia W.
Harvey, residential A to commercial
D of property on the east side of
Brookville road, Olney.
Petitions Denied.
Denied were;
Dermot Nee, residential A to C of
six and one-half acres on the west
side of Connecticut avenue between
Jones Bridge road and Rock Creek
Park.
Kass Realty Co„ Inc., residential
-ra. KU v l/i UliCC iVU) UU TV Cfil
highway and Montgomery avenue,
Bethesda.
Donald K. Staley, attorney for
William Scrimgeour and Evelyn T
Scrimgeour, two petitions for the re
classification from residential A to
commercial D of land at the south
west corner of Georgia avenue and
Penwick lane, Silver Spring.
Richard A. and Clay P. Geraci,
residential A to commercial D of
land on the southwest side of Phila
delphia avenue between Gist avenue
and Gist court, Silver Spring.
Kate Woodworth, residential A to
commercial D, one acre on the east
side of Brookeville road one-haif
mile south of Layhill road.
N. G. Frederick, residential A to
C of property at the southwest
corner of Ritchie and Sligo avenues,
Takoma Park.
Silver Spring Decision.
Robert^ E. and Helen M. Meeds,
residential A to commercial D of
property at Pershing and Ellsworth
drive, Silver Spring.
Martin Ricks, residential A to
commercial D of land on the north
side of Norbeck-Sandy Spring road
about one and a half miles east of
Brookeville road.
Charles Sheffris. residential A to
commercial D of land at the New
Hampshire and the proposed inter
county highway.
Donald P. RabbiW, residential A
to commercial D of land on the east
side of Brookeville road near Hewitt
avenue.
Charles P. and Margaret E.
Turner, residential A to commercial
D of property at the northeast
corner of Old Bladensburg and
Sutherland roads. Four Corners.
Action was deferred on a petition
by Gordon A. O'Connor for the
reclassification from residential A to
commercial D of land on the north
west side of Colesville road between
Fenton and Spring streets. Silver
Spring.
Greek Rebel Surrenders
Reported Cut by Amnesty
ly the Associated Press
SALONIKA, Greece, Sept. 25.—
Gen. George Papageorgiou of the
Greek 3d Army said today that since
the government amnesty offer last
week “there has been a noticeable
decrease in the number of guerrillas
coming down the mountains to sur
render.”
He declared in an interview that,j
because of the amnesty offer made!
by the new coalition government
when it came to power, guerrilla
leaders were terrorizing their fol
lowers to prevent surrender and,
that the customary number of sur
renders was being reduced.
Aristiadis Bassiakos, Governor
General of Northern Greece, said
a heavy influx of refugees in Salo
nika and other large towns threat
ened to present the cities with their
biggest problem this winter. He
estimated the number of refugees
at 220,000.
Cast of 'Winslow Boy'
To Sail for U. S. Today
ly ths Associated Press
LONDON, Sept. 25.—The cast of
Terence Rattigan's play, “The Wins
low Boy,” was due to sail for Amer
ica today for performances in
Washington and Baltimore prior to
the scheduled Broadway opening
October 27.
“The Winslow Boy” ran for 14
months in London and won the
Ellen Terry statuette for the best
play of 1946.
The all-English cast is headed by
Alan Webb, Valerie White and
Prank Alienby. ji
ft
■ft
Suicide Crews for U. S. Planes
Carrying Atom Bombs Proposed
on the theory that the nation
making the first atomic bomb strike
in force will be the victor. Col.
Dale O. Smith, USAF, has pro
posed that the Air Force establish
.an American version of the Japa
nese “suicide” force.
"One-way combat" is the name
. given the proposed tactics, which
| would send atom-laden planes on
missions from which the bomber
could not return but with crew
men given a fighting chance for
survival.
The views of Col. Smith appeared
in the Quarterly Review of the
Air University at Maxwell Field,
Ala.
A spokesman of the Air Force
Department, asked for comment
today, said that as far as he knew,
Stepfather Accused
Again in Custody Fight
Mrs. Edith Bessie Dye, former
WAC who is seeking in a habeas
corpus proceeding to regain custody
of her 6-year-old son from her
mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde L. King, 300 block of Seaton
place N.E., today repeated charges
in District Court that Mr. King had
made advances toward her.
Mrs. Dye also testified on cross
examination, that she had told her
mother of the alleged advances and
that Mrs. Kink had told her to “for
get it.” Yesterday, Mrs. Dye testi
fied she left the home of Mr. and
Mrs. King because of the step
father’s advances.
Mrs. Dye, who now lives in Savan
nah, Ga., was the first witness yes
tciua.v aim turn nuw oxxc jcxl txxc wj
with the Kings when she was work
ing in Baltimore and later while
serving in the WAC. She said she
got out of the WAC last year and
that her stepfather and mother re
fused to give up the son, Edward Le
Roy Dye.
Mrs. Dye said, in her habeas cor
pus petition, that temporary custody
of the boy was awarded her in 1941
in connection with a suit she
brought against her husband, George
W. Dye, for separate maintenance.
The maintenance suit still is pend
ing, it was said.
Snyder Says Germany
Must Aid Recovery
By th» Associated Press
BERLIN, Sept. 25.—Secretary of
the Treasury John W. Snyder said
today it was “perfectly clear” to him
that the productive capacity of Ger
many must be utilized in the re
covery of Europe.
Mr. Snyder expressed his views in
a statement forecasting a German
economic comeback “during the next
several years.”
The statement, issued after con
ferences with Gen. Lucius D. Clay,
American military governor, and his
staff, declared that, although Ger
many’s present financial and eco
nomic condition is serious, the
"foundation for recovery has been
laid.”
Mr. Snyder said Gen. Clay had
mvited him to visit Berlin during
his present trip to Europe in order
to “summarize' for me Germany’s
immediate financial and economic
condition as well as plans and hopes
for the future.”
LONDON, Sept. 25 h/P}.—Authori
tative Whitehall sources said todav
France had expressed concern to'
Britain and the United States over!
the new British-American arrange- j
ments for the future of the Ruhr!
coal mines.
The French were said to be con
cerned particularly with the plan to
install Germans to manage the
mines and over the future of those
mines in which {he French hold
interests.
Sacred Heart Instruction
For Converts Resumes
The Rev. Lawrence J. Wempe of i
the Shrine of the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Sixteenth street
and Park road N.W., has resumed
his weekly class for converts to the
Catholic faith, it has been an
nounced.
Father Wempe, who last year
tutored 60 persons in the religion's
teachings, holds his classes at 8
pm. every Tuesday at the church.!
. .4
the proposal had not reached any
top-level planners in the depart
ment. He pointed out that editors
of the new magazine said articles
appearing in it “do not all agree
with established policy and doc
trine and it must be made clear
that articles appearing in this jour
nal reflect the author’s opinions
and do not necessarily coincide
with, nor are they those of the
Air Force or the Air University.”
The proposal was made. Col.
Smith said, because he would not
have enough long range B-36
bombers to make normal round
trips across the ocean or North
Pole in case of a war in the future.
The colonel believes»that the United
States can get combat crews to
fly one-way flights.
FIGHTS FOR CHILD —Mrs.
Edith Bessie Dye, former WAC,
pictured at District Court yes
terday, where she launched a
legal battle to regain custody
of her 6-year-old son Edward
from her estranged husband’s
parents here.
Star Staff Photo.
Party Set in Fund Drive
For Washington and Lee
A cocktail party honoring the
newly appointed regional chairmen
of the Washington and Lee Uni
versity bicentennial fund campaign
will be held by the school’s Dis
trict alumni at 5 o’clock this after
noon in the Congressional Room of
the Willard Hotel.
The Washington residents named ■
by Dr. Francis P. Gaines, president
of the university, to head the drive
for money in this area are Richard
E. Hynson, class of 1906, and Fred
P. Guthrie, class of 1911,
Celebration of the college’s 200th
year will begin formally this Janu
ary. University heads have an- I
nounced a campaign to raise $3,
000,000 during the coming year to
be used to establish memorial •
scholarships, new construction and
increased endowment.
Animal Welfare Unit to Meet
The annual meeting of the Ani
mal Welfare League of Alexandria
will be held at 8 p.m. October 6 in
the auditorium of the Virginia
Electric Si Power Co.
ADVERTISEMENT. j
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or double your money, beck
When the miming, masting niajewi mlasrr
othay fewer makes yon feel soggy and sick all over,
doetars usually prescribe the fastest-eetfng medicine
known for srmptomatle relief—medicine like that
In Bdl-ets tablets. Bell-ets brings comfort In a Jiffy
er return bottle to us for double mousy back. 60eJ

1
Arlington School Slate
Accused of Seeking to
Blast Faith in System
The flve-man slate nominated for
the Arlington School Board by a
convention of citizens’ groups was
charged last night with “attempt
ing to destroy the faith of the en
tire community in the school
system.”
J. Foster Hagan, president of the
Greater Arlington Association, which
has indorsed a second five-man
slate for the county's first popularly
elected school board, made the ac
cusation last night at a meeing of
the GAA in the Virginia Highlands
firehouse. The election will be held
November 4.
Commenting on last Saturday’s
visit to five county schools by the
rival slate comprising Mrs. Edmund
D. Campbell, Barnard Joy, Colin C.
MacPherson, O. Glenn Stahl and
Curtis E. Tuthill, Mr. Hagan said:
“I am indeed glad the opposition
has at last gone out to examine the
schools. It was something they
should have done months before
they began blasting away at some
thing they were ignorant of and
thereby attempting to destroy the
faith of the entire community in
the school system.”
To Inspect Ail Schools.
Mr. Hagan added that the GAA
candidates—William Montgomery
Smith, Ernest C. Betts, jr„ Dr.
Charles M. Cake, Ralph M. Kimble
and Ernest T. Gearheart, jr.—"are
people who have kept themselves
informed about the schools and have
enough faith in them to send
meir own cnuaren to them.
At the completion of Saturday’s
tour the candidates said they
would inspect all of Arlington's 31
public schools prior to the election.
Three of the GAA slate. Dr. Cake,
Mr. Kimble and Mr. Gearheart, ad
dressed the meeting as did P. Pree
land Chew and Harry W. Cup
pett, County Board members who
are running for re-election with
GAA indorsement.
Records Attached.
As Mr. Chew and Mr. Cuppett
were speaking at Virginia Highlands,
their records on the County Board
were being attacked at a meeting
of the Arlington Better Government
League at the Lyon Park Community
House in another section of the
county. The Better Government
League has indorsed T. Oscar Smith
and Mrs. Florence Cannon for the
two County Board seats.
At the league meeting, Mr. Chew’s
record was attacked by Daniel A.
Dugan, County Board member; Har
ley M. Williams, league chairman;
Mrs. Charles E. Planck, former presi
dent of the Arlington League of
Women Voters, and others.
Meanwhile, it was revealed that
she Arlington Citizens’ Committee
lor School Improvement has turned
so doggerel verse in the campaign to
sleet the convention’s flve-man slate.
A notice of a Citizens’ Committee
neeting at 8 p.m. today at the Ar
ington Forest Methodist Church
jegan with the following:
Better schools for girl and boy.
Vote for Campbell. Vote for Joy
MacPherson, Stahl and Tuthill,
too!
A vote for them is a vote for you.
John M. Stewart and Mrs. Lucy
jr. Bussey, incumbents, are running
is independents, in addition to the
swo five-man slate.
Maryland Probation Board
Studies Sutton Case Today
ly tha Associated Prats
ANNAPOLIS, Sept. 25.—The State
Board of Parole and Probation had
>efore it today the request of Albert
3. Sutton for commutation of a life
sentence imposed in 1934 after a
Montgomery County slaying.
Board personnel said they exoect
:d the hearing room in the State
Dfflce Building to be packed when
;he board began consideration of
Button’s plea for release from the
Maryland Penitentiary.
Sutton was sentenced for the mur
ier of Allen B. Wilson, route agent
or the Washington Times-Herald.
New, More Powerful Atomic Pile
To Be Constructed at Oak Ridae
By *ho Associated Pros*
Plans for a new atomic chain re
actor pile at Oak Ridge “several
times more powerful” than the one
now operating at the Tennessee
plant were announced today by the
Atomic Energy Commission.
A member of the commission staff
said the pile will open new oppor
tunities to explore some of the
"many things about the atom that
still are a mystery to science.”
The plans were disclosed in an
announcement that the control of
the Clinton Atomic Laboratories at
Oak Ridge will be taken over by
the University of Chicago under a
four-year contract. Since July, 1945,
the laboratory has been operated by
the Monsanto Chemical Co.
Fourteen Southern universities,
including Catholic University, all of
them members of the Oak Ridge In
stitute of Nuclear Studies, will co
operate with the University of Chi
cago in research at the Clinton
Paroles for Four Aides
Of Al Capone Probed
By tho Associated Press
CHICAGO, Sept. 25.—More than
a dozen witnesses were summoned
to testily today as a congressional
subcommittee started an investiga
tion into the paroles from Federal
prison of four of one-time members
of Al Capone’s gang.
The four Chicago men, Paul Ric
ca, Philip d’Andrea, Charles Gioe
and Louis Campagna, were released
from Federal prison August 14 after
serving the minimum three years
and four months of 10-year sen
tences. They were convicted in
New York in 1944 on charges of
conspiring to extort more than $1,
000,000 from the motion picture
industry.
After their release, Representa
tive Busbey and Church, Illinois
Republicans, demanded an investi
gation.
Mr. Busbey, a member of the sub
committee, said he has made re
npfltpfi HpmfcnHc that th« Tsiof
Department disclose circumstances
which led the Federal Parole Board
to release the four men.
On the subcommittee’s roll of
witnesses were four men who were
freed and the names of 36 per
sons who were listed as having
made representations to the Parole
Board on their behalf. Mr. Busbey
said the subcommittee planned to
call all members of the parole
Board.
Strike in Finland Delayed
HELSINKI, Sept. 25 (^.—Fin
land’s Trade Union Congress yester
day postponed until Saturday a
threatened general strike in order
to give the government a chance to
make a new oiler of higher wages.
Informed sources said the govern
ment had proposed a general 10 per
cent increase which the Congress
rejected.
BERLITZ
SOth Tear—French. Spcniih, Italian, Ger
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the Berllta Method—.callable only at the
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8
Laboratories, the announcement
said.
It listed as a principal part of the
new program the “design and con
struction of a new high-flux reactor
several times more powerful than
the existing Oak Ridge pile, for
further studies and expanded re
search requiring intensities not now
available.”
The program includes a school for
the training of scholars and indus
trial personnel, to spread the “know
how” of producing and applying
atomic energy as widely as possible
throughout the Nation. There will
be "on-the-job” training for grad
uate students who will be given
credit toward advanced degrees.
The program brings to a total of
52 the universities sponsoring this
plan of expanding atomic knowl
edge. ,
The 14 Southern institutions al
lied with the Clinton project include
Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Au
burn); Duke, Emory University, At
lanta, Ga.; Georgia Tech, Louisiana
State, Tulane, the Universities of
Alabama, Kentucky, North Carolina,
Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia, and
Vanderbilt University.
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and Trust Service in a spacious building long |
dedicated to serving you.
• Checking Accounts • Savings Accounts I
• Special Checking Accounts
• Loans—Real Estate, Personal, Commercial
• Safe Deposit Vaults • Travelers’ Checks
• Banking By Mail • Every Trust Facility
We invite your use of our various services.
National Savings / Trust
Company
mnvct SAIKD,
IStk STREET AND NEW YORK AVENUE, N. W. (J)
Complete Banking and Trust Service
Mimby* Fsdirai Risfavi Systim • Miuasa Fidiral Diposit Insubancb Cssmia
HERE IS YOUR CHANCE ...
TO LEARN TO TEACH ,
BALLROOM DANCING
Fox Trot, Samba, Rumba, Waltz,
Tango and Jitter Bug
UNDER THE
Cl BILL
FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION
Call EX. 4100
Juan and Ethal Gantes, Directors
ARTHUR MURRAY
1106 Conn. Ave. Exo«. 4100
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