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Jkl si - ' T '~y r_JrM ■ 4 iNSS? ■ Wfw '• ~ Now— Qati sfy \bur "COFFEE HUNGER" with NESCAFE* T „ Ibis is coffee to Unger over! You see, Nescafe is all choice coffee, the very cream of coffees.. The rich. mellow kind of coffee that gives you a warm, good-to- pjSSSjSjra be-aUve feeling! Especially when you make it this way: Reeipe for Tastier Coffee HQQpI For each cup of coffee, put a teaspoonful of Nescafe MfeTj (more or less, depending on strength tvanted) and a mgUU/Qm coffee cupful of boiling water into your coffee maker. l£2E3|Si[ Cover for a moment to get extra aroma and flavor. VESBpPr 01*54 Tka MmN« Comp—y. he. When you're hungry fer -testier coffee, try Nescafe' 4 TMf SUNDAY STAS MAGAZINE. WASHINGTON. D. C-. NOVEMBER It. 1*56 ; Hill ■ ■ Wm I I 8 B B „ ■ . S v \ hU3 Pr h ,<v/ 8 HI Who Is This? By HELEN GIBLO A RELUCTANT member of Robin Hood’s band, the sorrowful boy above was all dressed up for a part in a play presented at his Northwest Washington elementary school in 1913. He had been forcibly shoved into the long underwear and then photo graphed in the yard of his Allison street home. Then his determined mother es corted him to West School, where she witnessed the be ginning—and the end—of her 10-year-old’s dramatic career. In his third year of high school, he transferred from Central to Rockville, where his family had moved. He played baseball and basket ball. His mother was an artist, better known as a writer of children’s stories for the old St. Nicholas Magazine, and for Country Gentleman. His father had been a well-known editor and columnist tor the Washington Post. The jour nalistic environment in his home influenced him when he decided to get a job rather than go on to college after graduating from Rockville High in 1922. He went to work for the Washington Post, first as a Who is this? Turn to page 23 copy boy, therr as a cub re porter. Seeing little future in the small assignments given him by the city room, he fol lowed his hunch that there was more opportunity in the newspaper’s advertising de partment and asked for a transfer. He remained there, about two years. In order to learn layout work, he enrolled in a two year night course at the Na tional Art School. He left the newspaper field, and became a copy writer and jack-of-all trades for an advertising agency. Within 10 years, he was steeped in the advertis ing business, and became a partner in his present firm. His interest in civic affairs developed steadily. He is a past president of the Wash ington Board of Trade and of the Washington Kiwanis Club, and vice president of the Boy Scout National Capital Area Council. This board member of the President’s Cup Regatta Committee also is a director of the Boys’ Club of Wash ington, the YMCA and the Washington Chapter of the American Red Cross. A resident of Chevy Chase, Md.. he is married and the father of four.