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•‘Saved my Life A GU-mm! hr GAS-HEARTBURN" When exoeae auouk add causes painful, eufloeat tu eas, soar stomach and heartburn. doctor* usually ■naita the fart ad acting medicines known for arm peomatte relief—medlrtneallketboaetn Bell-ana Tablets. No laxative. BeM-ans brines comfort In a jilfT or return bonis to ua for double money back. Q BELL-ANS for Add Indigestion 25 e WANTED SALESWOMEN Experienced in Women's Apparel Previous Washington af filiation preferred. Ap plicants interviewed by appointment only. Phone Mr. Selby at NA. 2735. Jean Matou Connecticut Avenue ot M raaaaTO 2020 M ST., N. W. WHY NOT? It costs no more to park at the Capital Garage New York Avenue between 13th end 14th THIS MAKES SENSE! i You'll breeze into your office with new zest! Your co workers will envy your en ergy! Your boss w ill eye you with new appreciation! When? After sou’ve stopped at a Hot Shoppe for break fast. Why? Because sou can't help but feci like a mil lion after you’ve enjoyed crisp bacon, fresh eggs, warm toast and delicious coffee in a bright, cheerful Hot Shoppe dining room. Get off to a good start tomorrow morn ing. Head for a Hot Shoppe for breakfast! Hot Shoppes Breakfast 50c All Hot Shoppes ore open for breakfast except in Cherrydale. Hot Shoppes Famous Drive-in Restaurant* LOST. BEAGLE HOUND. black, white. tan; an swers to mme ' Driver”, vie. Lyon Villaae Reward CH. 5876 BILLFOLD, black leather; lost tn Sears. Roebuck, on Wis. ave. n.w . Saturday. ‘"Andedson." Reward. Call VI. 3815. St. white Persian, male; vicinity Pour Corners. Si! Spa . Md . Saturday; child* pet Reward Call SH. 8146 after 5 30 pun —® DOG, boxer, male. 1 yr. old, fawn colored. black face, white on chest; reward Call FRIENDSHIP HOSPITAL or WO 4367 —8 EYEGLASSES, llaht shell frame; In May Sower Optical Co. case ; Farrarut Park. 17th and K , Mon afternoon. Reward. KA. 4316 FOUNTAIN PEN. Silver. 25 years old sentimental value. Reward. Call wo 8013. —T FOX TERRIER, white and tan. male; Lake Jackson, Va., September 4 Call DI 86»« GLASSES, pr. pink rimmed eye (lasses, ldlt in Silver Sprim shoppins area last week. Call SH. 7830 —8 MONEY, folded, at 30th st. and Pa. ave. S.f. Call VI. 8003. o¥e FER.MGHT BAG. left In automobile be tween 46th st. and Dupont Circle, LU 1365» RING, fan shaped. 3 diamonds on either side of ruoy Reward. WO. 8784. —8 ! klXGS. 2. sold weddtnr band and lade •addlement rina; lost in Senate erfflee fel *%* U**rti rtw,r<1 NO. 2193^ or Yalta Pact Defended By Byrnes; Says Reds Hade Mockery of If ty Associated Press SEATTLE. Sept. 7.—James F. Byrnes told the lawyers of America last night the “greatest danger In the world today is the danger of continued aggression on the part of the Soviet Union.” The former Secretary of State, addressing the American Bar Asso ciation Convention, accused Russia of “violating nearly all” the agree ments concerning Eastern Europe. But, he told the delegates, “as long as men confer with their prob lems, even if their language is pro fane. there is always hope of agree ment.” He said America was united in its opposition to aggression, but: "It does not help us to move to ward a mare peaceful world to speak or act in terms that .might give out the false impression that we are only concerned with an all out power struggle with Soviet Russia." Say* People Want No War. Mr. Byrnes said he did not agree with people who contend “we can not build one world but must have two worlds. I do not abandon hope . . . before this we have seen governments change policies. “We can be certain the people of Russia, like the people of the United States, do not want war.” Referring to acts before the war’s end, and specifically to the Yalta agreement, Mr. Byrnes said: “There is nothing wrong with this Yalta agreement—the trouble was that the Soviet government later made a mockery of that agreement.” He asserted the Soviets found these war agreements “such obstacles that they had to violate nearly all of them" in pursuit of their expan sion policies in Eastern Europe. Doubts They Were Gifts. It has been these violations, Mr. Byrnes said, which have made up the basis of the protests sent to Moscow by the western powers. "If the agreements were conces sions or gifts by Churchill and Roosevelt to the Soviets, it is rather peculiar that the Soviets had to violate them,’’ he declared. Mr. Byrnes noted that except in one European area today “Soviet control does not extend beyond the lines its armies occupied." That area, he explained, is the German territory east of the Elbe which had j been assigned to the Russians at | Yalta. "No one of our military chiefs' had any idea 'at the time of Yalta) I that we would reach Berlin before the Soviets did.” he said. "Later, I when our troops withdrew to our zone we were simply complying with our agreement. While pos-1 sibly our representatives, civilian and military, should have spelled out in more details our right of ac cess to Berlin, it is not true that; our present difficulties in Berlin are due to the fact that our rights were not more meticulously defined.” , “Underestimated Patton.” The Yalta arrangement con cerning Prague. Mr. Byrnes con tinued. “appears to have been ex clusively a military decision." It j was “generally assumed" that! Prague would be reached first by, the Russians but “we underesti-1 mated the prowess of Gen. Patton,” he said. The reason why the United States complied with a Soviet mili tary request not to move forward toward Prague was “to avoid col lisions between American forces! from the West and Soviet forces from the East,” he explained. “The Yalta agreements,” Mr. Byrnes declared, "must be appraised in the context of the circumstances under which they were made. For example, there was the agreement regarding Poland. It was not a question of what we would let the Russians do, but what we could get the Russians to do.” Again, in conceding that major postwar criticism has centered on the Yalta agreements giving Russia areas in the Far East, Mr. Byrnes said: "To be fair in passing upon the wisdom of those agreements we must consider the circumstances as they were appraised by our military leaders at the time and not the cir cumstances as they developed after the Nazi collapse." Mr. Byrnes concluded with three main suggested conditions for a German peace treaty. They were that, Germany should be enabled to develop peacetime industries but should be kept demilitarized for at least a generation: the Ruhr in dustries should be supervised by Germany's immediate neighbors, and Russia should be allowed rep arations from current German pro duction as compensation for fac tories originally assigned to Russia but later kept in Germany. Although he admitted the agree ments reached with Russia during the war "were not perfect," Mr. Byrnes added: I “It is a grotesque distortion to picture these agreements on our part as the naive action of President Roosevelt trying to play the part of Santa Claus." A realistic conclusion, he argued, is that the war agreements gave the Soviet Union very little that it was not in a position to take with out agreement. Mr. Byrnes insisted the United States must continue a bi-partisan foreign policy and that the leaders of the party out of power must be advised before policies are deter mined. "Our bi-partisan policy is opposed by the naive Mr. Wallace." he said. “It is also opposed by the Commu nists who realize it prevents them, even in an election year from divid ing America. But that policy is sup ported by the overwhelming major ity of Americans. ’ Nagasaki Spurs Hunt For Rats by Releasing 30 With Metal Collars By th« Aijociot#d Pr»»s NAGASAKI. Sept. 7.—Rats have been running roughshod over Nagasaki, but now the citizens are running after the rats. To spur the race, city fathers caught 30 rats and collared them with shiny metal. Then the rats were tinned loose. Each collared rat will be worth 1.000 yen to its captor. To make sure the metal col lar is not the only quarry the city officials offered a lottery ticket for each uncollared rat. The lottery prize is 500 yen. LOST WAU.ET. tan. pltskln. loft Sat. on or near K ft and Vermont ave : personal papers valuable to owner or.la; reward; no auestions asked H CHAPMAN ROSE. 1520 33rd St. n.w., DU. 898T. —S AS JULIANA BECAME QUEEN OF THE NETHERLANDS — Princess Juliana, who succeeded her mother as Queen of the Netherlands, is shown on the dias in New Church, Amsterdam, yester day as she toojc the oath of fidelity to the constitution. The oath was administered by Dr. R. Kraneberg (foreground), president of the States-General. Queen Juliana’s husband, Prince Bern hard, is sitting at right of the new Queen. European royalty watched the formal Investiture of Queen'Juliana yesterday. Pictured (left to right) front row: Princess Irene, daughter of Juliana; former Queen Wilhelmina, now Do wager Princess of the Netherlands; Princess Armgard, mother of Prince Bernhard, now Prince of the Netherlands, and Princess Beatrix, daughter of Juliana. Left to right, rear: Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf and Princess Louise of Sweden, Princess Margaret Rose of England and Prince Axel of Denmark. * —AP Wirephotos via radio from London. Bar Association Gets Several Resolutions Against Communism By the Associated Press SEATTLE. Sept. 7—The Resolu tions Committee of the American Bar Association convention here re ceived several proposals yesterday denouncing Communism. Max Chopnick of New York pre sented a resolution for a special committee on measures to combat Communism. Edwin M. Ottenbourg of New York proposed that any attorney “pub licly or secretly" aiding the Com munist movement should be ex cluded from the bar association. Robert B. Bolger of Philadelphia suggested that the bar association start a campaign to educate citizens on the principles of the bill of rights. Dispute Over Housing. A controversy over public housing support was brought to light when Horace Russell of Chicago intro duced a resolution asking that the management of the American Bar Association Journal be told to stop ■supporting the “public housing lobby." Mr. Russell's resolution recited editorial support which he said the Journal had given to the Taft-Ellen der-Wagner housing bill. It called for the bar association to take a stand for “private home-ownership < and private ownership of rental, housing.” Hawaii Statehood Favored. Other resolutions submitted In-1 eluded support for Statehood for Hawaii by J. Russell Cades of Hono lulu; establishment of a system of! "little assemblies” in each of the, United Nations to discuss interna-1 tional problems, by Dorothy Frooksj of New York and a declaration in behalf of the preservation of democ racy by Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas, former House Judiciary Com mittee chairman. Nine lawyers were nominated for the association's house of delegates. Five will be elected. The nominees are Alfred J. Schweppe. Seattle, for- j mer dean of the University of Wash-! mg Law School; Charles E. Lane, Wyoming; John Kirkland Clark, New York; Frederick M. Miller. Iowa; Julian Skinner, Alabama; Dean C. Davis, Vermont; Charles M. Lyman, Connecticut; A. W Dobyns, Arkansas, and R. G. Storey, Texas. Greek Troops Capture Peaks Near Yugoslavia |y the Associated Press ATHENS, Sept. 7.—The general staff said today that Greek troops American Beauty ELECTRIC IRON Adjustable-automatic with Thermoscope DOWN Nothing To Pay Until Noxt November 1st . . . L. P. Steuart & Bro. make it worth your while to replace your old heating equipment now. Pay no money down . . . nothing to pay 'til November 1st . . . then payments as low as $11.02 per I month. IF YOU REPLACE Year OM Heating Equipment NOW with FLUID HEAT Economy Oil Burner V Extra Futl Oil Tanks Installed an ant-day natice. Prated yanrttlf against fuel ail emergencies. Budget pay ments! L. P. STEUART & BRO., Inc. 138 12th St. N. E. Lincoln 4300 have captured the highest peak in the Kaimatchalan Mountains, al most on the Yugoslav frontier. Five other peaks of the range, ail more than a mile high, were taken also. The communique said 60 Commu nist guerrillas were killed in the Vitsi triangle in the extreme north. On« unit of rebels struck the army from behind and lost 48 when it re treated. Another counterattack was beaten back on another front and 12 more guerrillas were slain. ENDORSED By GOOD HOUSEKEEPING 6MQ3CB aluminum combination windows '/• First cost la last cost with Alum sties! You save money, time and warping. Once _ trouble— »roni»«d b y^')\ no wor ries about splitting, rotting, or AiumaticR are up, they re up lor gooxl—your good! TAKE 3 YEARS TO PAY Call lor m FREE Demonstration PERMANENT STORM WINDOW CO. 735 Eleventh St., N.W. ST. 5394 2 D. C. Men Arrested On Assault Charge In Prince Georges Two District men were arrested by/ Prince Georges County police yesterday on charges of attempting to rape a 43-year-old Washington mother of four children. The men, Paul Courtney Puggit, 31, a refrigerator Installation man of the 1100 block of Sixth street S.W., and Prank P. Cowens, 41, a cab driver of the 3300 block of Al der place N.E., are held without bond in the Marlboro Jail. Cowens also is charged with transporting a wcman for immoral purposes. According to Prince Georges County Detective John W. Siddall the victim, a resident of Southwest Washington, was left unclothed and severely beaten near Bock road, Oxon Hill, abont 3 am. yesterday. She walked about two miles to a house where she obtained a slip and then continued about two miles more to another house, where she got other clothing and called police. Her eye had been blackened and her body was cut and bruised, Mr. Siddall said. She told police two men plicked her up at her home about 6 pm. Sunday on the pretense of taking her to see Fuggit’s ill mother. De spite her protests, she reported, they went to a Kenilworth tavern where they had several drinks and then to an unoccupied new house in Cheverly where Fuggit had in stalled a lefrigerator. She said she was assaulted in this house. About 10 p.m. Sunday the three went to a tavern on Livingston road at Oxen Hill, but the woman denied going in, the detective said. The next she could recall was being beaten and left on the side of a road, he added. Greeks Blow Up Red Ship ATHENS, Sept. 7 (A*).—A Greek destroyer blew up a 300-ton motor-1 ship yesterday • while it was trying to unload mines and war material for Communist guerrillas in the Peloponnesus. The port of Buffalo, N. 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