The Weather Washington Area—Partly cloudy, windy and mild; possibly a few show- ers in the morning; highest tempera- ture around 60 degrees; cooler at night. Sunday—Fair and cooler. Mary- land and Virginia—Considerable cloudiness, windy and mild with a few scattered showers; highest 50 to 60 in the west and in the 60s in the east portion. Cooler at night. Sunday—Fair and cooler. (Details on Page 14.) (Beg. 0.6, Pet. Off) post FINAL 28,401 Phone NA. 8-4200 right 10954 The Weabursion Post Company SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 1954 WTOP-AM (1500) FM (96.3) TV (CH. 9) FIVE CENTS - —, 18 DIE IN ANNAPOLIS CRASH Background Of Paper’s Purchase Disclosed Officials Relate Negotiations of The Washington Post And Times-Herald By Edward T. Folliard Stat Rep excitement Wednesday's rter The from news- paper drama — purchase by The Washington Post of the Times-Herald — had abated to the point yesterday where officials of the some of the background. Not until a few hours before the purchase was announced was there any intimation var the negotiations were progress Yet the exploratory phase of | the transaction had begun. six weeks before. It began when a mutual friend | Eugene Meyer, chairman of the board of The Washington Post, and Col. Robert R. McCormick, editor and publisher of the Chi-, cago Tribune and the Washing-| ton Times-Herald, brought up the possibilities—and advan- tages—of negotiations looking to a sale. * The actual announcement on Wednesday, stunning though it was to many, could hardly have of been a great surprise to vet-| erans in the publishing field. These men, noting a trend in the newspaper world, had con- cluded long ago that if a morn-| ing newspaper here in Wash-' ington was to hold a strong economic position, it would have to buy the other paper Washington, with a city pop- ulation of 853,000, had four newspapers, two afternoon and two morning Baltimore, with a population of 949,708, had only three news- papers, two afternoon and one morning Philadelphia, tion of 2,074,605, only three newspapers, afternoon and one morning Chicago, the second largest city, with a population of 5,495.- 364, had four newspapers though its potential reading public is six times as large as Washington's. With the two purchase by The! Post of the Times-Herald, and the publication of a much’ larger newspaper with the best features of each, the news- paper situation in Washington See PURCHASE, P. 11, Col. 1 flowing enlarged | paper had time to disclose) st. | The explosion occurred with a popula- hkewise had. ‘inch high pressure main in the tobacco, fees Volunteer Extra Hours Police Work Tough In Second Precinct (Seventh of a Series) By S. L. Fishbein Stat Reporter There are no green pastures for policemen in the Second Precinct, the most crime-ridden in Washing- ton “When you come here to police, you poe | eight hours a day,” says Capt. WE WICKEDEST John E. Winters, who | has spent the last 2 | of his 23 years on the force fighting the gruel- ing battle against crime in the Second Precinct. “We're not 100 percent perfect,” says Winters of himself and his 141 policemen assigned to cover the 14%-mile area in which more murders, robberies, as- saults, liquor and prostitution violations occur an- See PRECINCT, P. 8, Col. 1 Adds $50 Million to House Cuts : Senate Group Votes Bill To Reduce Excise Taxes __ i\Carthy said Defense Secretary line. By Robert C. Albright Stafl Reporter The Senate Finance Committee on Friday approved ap- proximately 912 million dollars in excise tax reductions pre- viously passed by the House, plus more than 50 million dol- ‘lars in exemptions the House didn’t think of. , One entirely new concession'| Gas Blast In SE. Sends ee gy nem ge Fire 50 Feet The committee voted to retain ‘A spectacular explosion iM sp. present 20 percent admis- the Southeast section of the sion tax on this kind of enter- mission from the admissions itax. Some 70 percent of all’ ‘movie houses are in this group. Horse and dog racing tracks, ipermitting betting, receiv ed less city sent gas flames leaping—50-tainment For most other events. the admission rate was cut to 10 percent. In general, the Senate unit voted to follow the lines of the House excise tax bill in reduc- es on furs, jewelry, lug- feet into the air Friday night. No injuries were reported but the blast. which came in the midst of the evening rush hour, backed traffic up for miles in the area around the S. Capitol ing tax bridge. gage, sporting goods, tele- as Phone bills and other items riow taxed above ten percent, to a flat ten percent rate. But steeper taxes on liquor, gasoline and automo- 1200 Block of Stevens rd. se biles, scheduled to drop auto- The cause is unknown but! matically on April 1, would be Joe Porter, foreman of the gas extended for another year, also company crew on the_ job,'as in the House bill. theorized that a wrench might!) The Treasury would retain) have struck a spark, igniting ap proximately $1,077,000, the gas. The flame burned for from these axtensions, but this one hour before pressure was revenue would be almost com reduced and the leak plugged. pletely offset, by the loss from Police evacuated résidents the new general reduction in of 16 homes in the Barry excises. Farms housing development; The Administration, which) where the blast occurred. See TAX, Page 2, Column 5 workmen from the Washing- ten-Gas—Light—Co._were—mak-. ing a new connection on a two ~e Workers Blame ‘Overoptimism’ Red Cross Drive, Lagging | Percent, Dips Below 1953 Level for Ist Time The Red Cross fund drive has failed for the first time to equal collection percentages of last year. \ “Metropotitan’ area report: Thursday showed 47.1 percent Just a Few Miles Ago Many advertised in today’s Washington Post and Times Hera! 4 were the of the used cars cla sifted section 1953 these atest thing in ; lovee ‘ re JUST a tew mies ago beauties (on showroom their were with placards proclaiming modern ret nements— au- tomatic transmissions one-piece windshields, power brakes, power steering } igh goimes and every But now ‘S54 models are on the showroom compression en- feature the latest a few miles later floors. You bury still-modern *S3s and save hundreds of dol- lars' Turn now to see the great ran the bargains in today’s Washington Past and Times-Herald c! lassified columrss, of the $1,463,500 goal had beenjers to relate the end reached. Tt was I percent be- ey thes ree, $665:28:22: ividuals they contact hind the same stage of the 1953 se said hed Cross was 2 campaign. Lechannel...through....which...every Workers blamed “over op- person was given the rare Op- timism” for the leveling off. portunity to give aid in disas- Faced with a goal nearly $70,- | ters 000 less than last year’s, work-| “The Red Cross steps in when ‘ers may not have canvassed SO local resources cannot cope |thoroughly at the beginning of with catastrophe. Its service |March when the official drive gives us a chance to help— |started, staffmen said. hus carrying out De Phen | Postmaster General Arthur principles of the highest or- \E. Summerfield, Government |der” he said. division chairman, sparked a (Qther luncheon report luncheon in the United ojyded Sereen and States Chamber of Commerce star Celeste Holm: with his prediction that Fed-| \weKay, Interior Secretary; eral workers would take mrs Oveta C. Hobby, Health, “quick action” to boost their Education and Welfare Secre- total. tary; True D. Morse, Agricul- He presided at the “Govern- |tyre Undersecretary; Edward). ment.day” scoring session. T. Wailes. Assistant Secretary So far Federal workers have of state: Harrison Hobart, As- contributed $290,266 or 44.7 per- scictant Secretary of Labor: Al-| cent of their quota to area cof-|pert J. Robertson, Assistant | fers. Postmaster General; Samuel| Alexandria still led percent-iSpencer, President of the agewise the 10 competing di-|Board of District Commission- visions ‘percent. Other quota percent-| tional Red Cross President. ‘ages were: the District, city,; The program was, highlighted | |56.9; District, residential, 55.5;\by a musical skit narrated by | Arlington, 53.5; general busi-| Saundra Cavanaugh, 10, of 2001 |ness, 47.7; Prince William, 36.9;' 16th st. ‘Prince Georges, 32.7: guests in- Television Douglas Mont-' dents from Miller Junior High | gomery, 27.5 and Fairfax, 25.1'School sang under the direc-| Philip Young, Civil Service|tion ‘of Mrs. Ernestine White, | Commissioner, urged campaign- their music teacher. ) ' accom- with $22,980 or 65.6\ers and Ellsworth Bunker, Na-| Dut nw. Twenty-five stu-| ‘McCarthy Yank Fliers Indiets Democrats Adlai Is Target Treason in Reply To Miami Speech MILWAUKEE. March 19 (U.P) Wis.., As Senator Charges | Run Flak to Aid Freneh Civilian Pilots Brave Red Fire To Drop Supplies To Dien Bien Phu HANOI. (Saturday), March — Senator 20 (.P).—American civilian Joseph R. McCarthy tonight pilots have braved Commu- ‘outlined a 20-count /ment for treason” ithe Democratic Party and. ac- icused Adlai E. Stevenson of Dien Bien Phu, ‘using “Communist methods’”’ ‘in attacking him. The Wisconsin 'rose from a sick bed to deliver within defenses of Dien Bien Phu in| There | were signs the showdown Com-| his munist assault on the isolated and French bastion was a radio answer to Stevenson's recent speech at Miami criti- \cizing “McCarthyism.” | McCarthy dwelt on troubles with the Army ‘the White House, accusing un- specified forces of trying “to divert the exposure of Com- munists in a personal fight be- me Answering.the military, Mc- iCharles E. 'Thursday “what I have often said, namely, that some- one in the Pentagon knew about |exposed them.” Wilson said not a single about. | But MeCarthy said tunately they were moved until our committee “unfor- not Ill with a sore throat and The fever, McCarthy Stevenson of a hand troubles with the Army McCarthy drew tainly miss the moral support’ of the Jate Sen..Robert A. Taft. Replying charge that only one Commu- nist had been uncovered, Mc- Carthy named 20 Amendment Communists” he said were uncovered. said these were picked at “ran- 'dom” and that many more have Pilots appeared before his and other|Tecentty committees. “indict-'nist anti-aircraft fire to air- against lift supplies to the embat- tled of it was dis- French defenders closed today. | to Stevenson’s fire “Fifth | are a who trained by Chinese veterans of He | Korea. The disclosure was made as Republican red siege troops dug trenches. 100 yards of the main northwest Indo-China. near at hand. Kirk Patrick, who heads a team of 24 United States civ-} tween the Administration and ilian pilots flying under con- tract for Mai. Gen. Claire Chen- nault's Civil Air Transport Air- told newsmen American Wilson confirmed | pilots first flew over Dien Bien s0' Phu Thursday He said the United States civ- ilian pilots dropped ammunition | each and every Com-| and barbed wire to the defend- munist we exposed before We'ers of the besieged French strongpoint. Patrick specified, however, 'voted by the group exempts all|\Communist had been uncov-|that no American pilots were | ‘movie houses and theaters ered in the military that the being used in- connection. with charging less that 60 cents ad-| services didn’t already know airdrops of troop reinforce- ments to Dien Bien Phu. The American civilians were re-'understood to be flying C-119 brought before'“Flying Boxcars” on loan from the United States Air Force French crews and technicians who arrived in his loudest Indo-China recently “COE=+. the Americans made _ their runs to Dien Bien Phu over the most accurate anti-aircraft sent up by. the Commu nists since the war started Red rebels manning the guns reported to have been The United States arrived in from | headquarters civilian Indo-China HongKong of Chennault's He then proceeded to list his| PTivate airline under private 20-count “indictment” ben Democrats, ranging from against CoMmtract to fly C-119’s for the French. About 10 of the planes ecognition of Russia in 1933\4™¢ on loan from the American to the Yalta conference an Stevenson's actions while help-| ing formulate policy in Italy. “Tonight I shall place before the indict- the greatest of all juries, American people, an iment of 20 counts, picked at ‘random, tutes criminal stupidity—or at worst treason,” States Communist Party 1953 to contend that Stevenson used “Communist methods” this attack which at best consti-' McCarthy said.! McCarthy cited a pamphlet} he said was a record of the na-| tional conference of the United! in in He quoted from the pamphict! that i\Carthyism is objectively a tstruggie against the -policies -of... Administra- the Republican — He said the report. advised. Communists to intervene in any dispute between McCarthy and President Eisenhower. di- recting their “sharpest fire” at McCarthy while being careful not to praise Mr. Eisenhower Stevenson had deplored the methods of “McCarthyism”, but the Senator said the pamphlet outlined the Com munist method of fighting him by direct attacks on him, by defending his “victims” and by criticizing “witch-hunting in- vestigations.” McCarthy conceded “while the meaning is the same this is not the exact language used by Adlai.” But he said it was the a of the Communist arty.’ “the struggle against Mc- Mec arthy listed these counts “indictment.” That Gen. Douglas in his ] Mac- ‘Yalu River bridges when Chi- inese Communists were pour- 'Arthur advocated bombing the ing across in the Korean War. the “order was manded from Washington.” counter- | “How many Americans died’ ‘because that order was coun- | termanded no one will ever) know; of it, na one can question,” ‘MéCarthy said. | 2. That in 1943 Stevenson Horse Sense See McCARTHY, page 2, col. 6 Keep Wel! that many died because d Air Force\ Fiery Car Leaves A Flaming Path A flaming chain reaction started Friday night when a car-driven by Richard David, 22, a Bethesda Naval Hospital Seaman, struck a stopped cab in the 2700 block of East-West high- way The rear of the caught fire. The driver, Wil- liam Redfern, 24, of 8105 Carroll ave., Silver Spring, jumped out. The cab, left in gear, careened of the read-..and...ae+oss-ibree.. lawns, setting grass fires and’ knocking down “sap lings. It narrowly missed a house. It swerved hack to ‘the road. sideswiped a parked truck, and continued on 130 more feet where it was stopped by a telephone pole. Total distance traveled more than 650 feet. Miss Jeanette of 3323 16th st senger in fered a cab Branin, 20, nw., a pas- David's car, suf- brain concussion D. C. Works Bill Change Barred. Pg. 13 LAWRENCE KITCHEN gets 642 to 20 years in fatal beating of aged hotel man Page 3. American-piloted planes ° accused carried in his were serviced by United States to the United Nat re ‘Boxear’ Wreckage Strewn Over Wide Area | Plane Left Bolling En Route to N. Y.; Big Craft May Have Exploded in Mid-Air An Air Force C-119 “Fly. ing Boxcar’ crashed and burned about 15 miles south of Annapolis Friday night, ‘killing all 18 persons aboard ‘Bodies were strewn over a quarter-mile area The big plane crashed near Shadyside, Md., a short time after it took off from Bolling Air Force Base at 10:12 p.m., ‘a Bolling spokesman said By Jim McoNamara—The Washington Post and Times-Herald The Challenger Arrives Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas arrives at Union Station to board a special car ing party to Cumberland. Led by Justice Douglas, taking the C. & O. canal hik- who challenged two Washington Post editors to take the hike, the party will start early Saturday down the 189-mile tow- path. (See other pictures and story on Page 13.) TO OUR READERS Many home delivered subscribers who fotmerly re- ceived both The Times-Herald and The Washington Post may now be receiving two copies of the Wash- ington Post and Times-Herald. This duplication will be eliminated as soon as route lists can be checked and reorganized. Subscribers, of course, will not be vaagt20 for eee copies inadvertently delivered. Ry the A United States proposed Friday The Russia a concrete the to plan to further peaceful development and use of atomic energy.” The plan was handed to Sov jet Ambassador Georgi N. Za roubin of State John Foster five minute of- fice A State an nouncement said also that Rus sia has given the United States “certain proposals’ on atomic problems, and that these are under study. Presumably the Soviet proposals are for some kind of international agreement to ban atomic weapons The plan given to Zaroubin is a detailed program for carry- ing out the proposal President Eisenhower made in an address ions last Dec by Secretary Dulles in a meeting in Dulles’ Department wax Others Injured socia ted Press 8 for an international atomic energy agency The basic proposal are That the United States, Russia, and other atomic pow Inctuding Britain France, should set up ternational atomic agency 2. Each of the powers would make contributions from stockpiles of uranium other atomic materials pool under this agency 3. The agency would be sponsible for storing and safe guarding this material, pre venting surprise seizure by a bandit nation bent upon atomic war 4 provisions of the ers, an in- energy its and to re The agency would be. au- to the unteer single piece of ttre) MOU.” Reds Get A ControtPlan— co and: from T The twin-engined child cargo carrier Ardmore, Okla.. and attached 744th Troop Carrier Squadron, had stopped at Maxwell Air. Force Base. Montgomery; Ala... and was F air- b ise d at ‘en route to Mitchel Air Force Base, Long Island, N. Y Walter Lewis, a first-aid man with the Seventh District Vol- Rescue Squad, based near West River. Anne Arun- \del County, said the largest the flaming | wreckage was no warger than a car “We found 14 complete bod- les strewn over a quarter-mile area,” said Lewis, “and thére are more in the wreckage.” Lewis said the plane tore through a tree and landed in a plowed field. “It must have ploded before it hit he said The Air Force said th beng h Bolli Was on a plane pre rx the plane, Ng. at POUL ne SU DAaSSe! set down = ae) The and took on Bolling Bolling said the crew of and 12 passengers Victims were mediately The crash of Josh Pad = 4 al mable let off erg at had Carrytil plane was Names of available ,ix the not iy) was on the farm one-quarter mile othian, near Route 7% Firemen and police said wreck- age littered an field The crash was reported about Dp. m James { Washin who lives Mrs low fore the crash The engines were a driving rainstorm. the dys told him. They explosion and saw dy, open 1] uili , tr g ton nane rmormer nev yy Ais heard the rman Yr. and Aly ouse ust be neat Paddy over ther i ' in Pad heard an a fire in the thorized to mobilize the world’s, woods atomic experts to develop the uses of atomic energy for elec trical power in areas of the world and for other peaceful purposes power-starved tags hod ie For: e ott ers Three with Air The ere ind Pntification said, apparently personne! 1T00-Foot Ladder F alls With 3 on ft As Flames Sweep Rooming House \ ladde: 100-foot mobile fire bugkled with two firefighters and a vic- tim clinging from the rungs Friday night as a basement fire swept four floors Up a stairwell at 1447 Massachusetts ave. nw In critical condition from burns and smoke inhalation was August Lieberman, 72. given artificial respiration in his third-floor room and sup- plied with oxygen en route to Emergency Hospital. Firemen said he apparentiy had stopped breathing and was revived be fore being carried from the truck and collapsed _|house Amusements Camera Gir! Churches Classified Columnists Comics Crossword District Line | Editorials Financial 38, |Ha tlo | Horoscope a —h— VOW? 21 21) Sokolsky Sports Weather ‘Women 19 35, 36 ' iO residents and three firefighters injured in rescue operations were taken ta hospitals. None of these was beNeved seriously hurt. The victim on the ladder was C. Hubbard, 53, a printer, who had just moved into the fourth-story rooming’ house. He was being carried to safety by Pvt. F. E. Hughes, aide to |Battalion Chief C. P. Pool, and Three ‘other other fireman. ‘ Hospitalized along with Lie- berman and the three men on the ladder were about 50, suffering smoke in halation; Thomas Freeman, 83 burns to the face and head, and Pvt. Patrick O'Hara, 32. of 2022 Oliver st., Hyattsville, another fireman O'Hara, Hughes, 37. of 2002 Ravenswood st., Hyattsvile, and Chamberlain, 35, of 5727 N. 4th st.. Arlington, were X-rayed at the hospital. Freeman was ad mitted to Casualty Hospital All others went to Emergency The fooming house, oh an elevated and narrow portion of Massachusetts ave. in front of the old German Embassy, forced fire trucks to park paral- lel to the burning building and made maneuvering of the lad- der extremely difficult. The first alarm for the fire was turned in at 7:01 p. m., the second at 7:04. The fire board said 12 pieces of equipment were dispatched. Hughes, the top man on the) John Connors 14! John Henry Chamberlain, an. ladder, said he heard Hubbard) *\yelling from the smoke-filled| room, “Help' C: get Hiughes direction Hul Jumped the short gap and clung to the fireman shoulder Hubbard climbed point below Hughes. the fi: said, and was going down, rung by rung where Chamberlain waited a few feet to re- » him inis point swayed and buckled the men against the building, 10 feet with the rungs Firefighters rushed to prop t der with short other comrades lifted the men from the ladder to safety Before being taken in an am- bulance to the hospital, Hub- bard said: “I smelled smoke and opened my door. I couldn't do anything; it was in the stairs, I opened the window and yelled for about five minutes. Then they came and the fireman told me to jump on his back. I See FIRE, Page 2, Col. 4 i me At bard io a eman tn below the ladder ow ig of the about SCTapil ide coming tO rest above tl | trio #lingi ment tne ory ’ " = sh on 1, if arr lad. ladders while Pd Spe ROS 7S SS I 2 - .) hes MOTOS EY RP TAR AS THE WASHINGTON POST and ‘TIMES-HERALD | 15s ays, ware cON tee . me : od 25S OOP REL SES ELIAS pe eer. Dulles Reassures , On ‘New Look’ Risks - United Press Reporter . ‘Seeretary of State John Foster Dulles said Friday the Administration's “New Look” ‘military policy does not mean ithis country is “committed” to |massive retaliation but only ‘that it must have “capacity”! \for it. “It is not our intention to! turn every local war into a gen-| a eral war,” he told a full-dress| ee ||hearing of the Senate Foreign) \Relations Committee on the new By the United Press military strategy. State Department Security| Dulles also said the North At-| Chief Scott McLeod has told lantic Treaty “.does not alter’ a Congressional committee he the constitutional responsibili-| has found fewer security risks/ties of the President and the: in the Department than he ex-|Congress’ in declaring war. pected. He said in ratifying the treaty He also testified he knows|the United States recognized of no prosecutions resulting\that an attack on Europe is from security investigations of|“vital to the interests” of this employes of the State Depart-|country. In case of such attack, | ment since the Eisenhower Ad-/he said the President could act ministration took office. immediately and confer with McLeod's remarks were made ‘Congress later.” at a secret session of a House; He added this does not mean’ Appropriations Subcommittee |Congress “is deprived of the! Tuesday and made public Fri-'responsibility to declare war.” day. | Dulles replied to critics, chief-| McLeod asked for—and re-ly Democrats, who have sug- ceived—committee approval of gested that the “New Look” polli- a request to spend an addi-icy of “massive retaliation” tional $900,000 to speed up se-'means either an all-out war to curity investigations of State combat any aggression, or no Department employes. war atall. , | He said the $900,000 would) He said he thought there has| be used to pay 100 Civil Sery-|been much misunderstanding of! ice Commission investigators his January 12 statement that to help complete the check by the Administration had decided June 30 as requested by Presi-/to depend “primarily upon a dent Eisenhower. igreat capacity to retaliate in-' Rep. Prince H. Preston, Jr./stantly by means an at places of (D-Ga.) asked McLeod whether our own choosing.” “vou found fewer or more peo-| Dulles said it “seems to have ple with subversive tendencies} been assumed that--we--are than you expected to find when |committed” to take “massive | you assumed the position.” retaliation in event of attack “I think I have found fewer|but “that is not the case.” , | than I expected to find,” . McLeod replied. | Gets Extra Fands | Few Loyalty Risks Found, Says M’Leod OF StS roe we a ie te eet cent Rael th a Ee WUT, CATA ees ee sa a ' | Arm Pr ou ; : T | Of Steve | ns, ; - me McCarthy Hits Democrats on 20 Issues MeCARTHY—Fr. Pg. I mander, testified in Washing-\the victory .. .," MeCa ton he believed the enemy said. Ridgway Says ,bring Communists helped formulate postwar pol- icy in Italy which was “to into the there could have been defeated “How many American be if he had been turned “loose.” died because this great Ge “Ask yourselves, my friends, eral was instructed not to win By John G--Norris Stall Reporter General Matthew B. Ridg- 'way, Army Chief of Staff, said |\Friday the National will be | “deeply proud” of Army Secre- tary Robert T. Stevens “when ithe full story of unfolding ‘events becomes known.” His mention of Stevens in} a National Press Club lunch- ,eon address brought prolonged | applause from the packed meet- ing. Further applause followed |Ridgway’s declaration that the Army is proud of its “high- principled” Secretary and of his “integrity, courage and de- votion to duty.” _ The General did not mention | Senator Joseph R. McCarthy '(R-Wis.) by name, but his ref.- erence to Stevens obviously re- lated to the latter’s controversy with McCarthy. A recent Army report charged that the Wis- \consin Senator and the chief counsel of his investigatin committee tried to pressure it Into preferential treatment of Pvt. G. David Schine, Cohn’s jfriend and former committee | consultant. Prominent Counsel Selected - ~ ; | In a counter ast, cCar- I gr Army-McCarthy Inquiry |thy and Cohn charged thar any Army tried to use Schine as a “hostage” in “blackmai % By Murrey Marder - Stall Repor the committee to shift its in vestigation of communism in the Army to the other armed forces. Most of Ridgway’s prepared Speech was devoted to theme that future wars “will finally be won on the ground.” The Washington Post and Times-Herald Another Spring Training Casualty Paul Slayton, 10-year-old student at the Shepherd School joined the long list of spring training casualties when a bouncing ball struck him on the forehead during a base- ball game on the school playground yesterday. Mrs. Bo ter A man “of national promi- (R-Mass.) who is up for -reelec- nence” has been tentatively tion this year—told the Asso- selected to serve as counsel for|ciated Press in an interview) the Senate investigation of the Friday that McCarthy's own battle between the Army and'subcommittee has promised to Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-\investigate the matter fully Wis.) “and I hope and pray we won't: Should war with Russia come, Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R- S. D.),|8et into that.” : |he said, atomic weapons might who will serve as acting chair-|_ Senator Estes Kefauver (D-| “strike a balance.” man of the McCarthy Senate|Tenn.) who has urged that the | Permanent Investigating Sub-/Armed Services Group take! committee for the inquiry, and °Ver the inquiry because the | Italian ' government ‘Communist, said the action ; gi |spiracy.” the | and to’ bring the Communist leader. Togliatti, back from Moscow.” , 3. That the Democrats recog- nized Russia in 1933 and that’ Whittaker Chambers, a former —_———— -_— -_— _ - _ 7 - ~ == ae ee — ne tee ee ’ . > * . | momo ATWOOD “laid the United States open ||| to espionage.” 4. That in 1943, when Ste- i'venson was a special assistant in the Navy Department, mem- bers of the “Communist con- spiracy” were allowed to act as radio operators on either commercial or naval vessels. | 5. That in 1948, Lauchlin Currie, who he said was named under oath as a Communist spy, arranged for Earl Browder, then head of the Communist Party in this country, to confer with the State Department on China policy. 6. The “deliberate betrayal” of guerilla leader Milhailovich in Yugoslavia in favor of Tito during the year. He said the result was a Communist Yugo- slavia. 7. “The secret Army direc tive which authorized’ the granting of commissions in the United States Army to mem- bers of the Communist con- McCarthy did not ee eee ne mene Ee eas sss sasess eS eaeeeeeenenint I oa a = — ee STROOCK RABBIT’S HAIR elaborate. 8. An order to destroy the files on a member of the mili- tary “where the files showed he was a Communist.” | 9. The handing to Russia of United States currency plates “with no cogtrol over the amount of ~“American-backed a TT Stroock blending skill takes rab- bit’s hair, fine Australian wool and llama fur to weave one of the most luxurious sports coatings you have ever tried on. Its distinctive honey- oatmeal colour blends well with Sen. John L. McClellan (Ark.), ranking Democrat, agreed late Friday on the man they want to head the special investiga- tive staff. No final agreement has been reached on the candidate, it was emphasized, and the man himself has not yet indicated whether he will accept the post. The investigation, which is certain to be explosive in na- ture, will probably generate so much heat on both sides that the counsel who conducts if |will need a high national repu- ‘tation to ride out the storm. | Mundt said Friday that “over 50 to 60 names” had been suggested to him, and “I'd say thata third of the Senators hav@ suggested names. But this is one place Where we want the job to seek the man—and not the man to seek the job. McClellan said he had re- ceived “between 30 and 40 ap- plications” for jobs on the spe- cial staff that is to be hired, which probably will be com- posed of one or two lawyers and about three investigators. There was speculation Fri- day that an effort may be made to. have McCarthy step com- pletely off the Subcommittee for this investigation, to lend greater impartiality to its find- ings. | As matters now stand, Mc- |Carthy will be in the role of ran accuser, prosecutor, witness. and possibly, a member of the | jury. In the clash, the Army has |}accused McCarthy and the Sub- Rep. John J. Rooney (D-N. Y.) observed that under a law pre- viously passed_by Congress it WHY NOT? is a felony for anyone belong- DO YOUR OWN HAULING ‘ing to the Communist -Party to take employment with the |'Federal Government. | “How many people, if any,| have you prosecuted under this law to date?” Rooney asked. “We have no prosecuting function, Congressman Roo- ney,” McLeod replied. He said he would ascertain from the Attorney General whether there have been any prosecu- tions. Rooney said he took this ‘answer to mean there have been none. _———— Rates by Hour, Day, or Week Pi msrican Trailer Con nee M sameeess 4930 WISCONSIN AVE. WO. 6-3231 enjoy the privilege of saying to us, q Please Charge ha : Your charge account ts most cordially solicited here. We will be privileged to open one for you now, and you willeenjoy the convenience and prestige it affords. Please come in, it’s slack time, again! Time to choose yours for golfing, gardening, relaxing. A comprehensive assortment to choose from. Priced from 14.95 committee’s regular chief coun- set, Roy Bf Conn, or TZ pressure, and Cohn of making threats,..to .get-.special .treat- ment for Pvt. G. David Shine. | former Subcommittee consult jant. McCarthy, in turn, has ac- cused the Army of trying to “blackmail” the Subcommittee |into shifting its Red hunts away ifrom the Army. Both sides jhave flatly denied each other's }accusations. An unsuccessful attempt was made to have the Senate Services Committee ico nduct the investigation ‘Chairman Leverett Saltonstall Conia & Ban Brown, Ld. Importers and Retailers of Fine Menswear 812 14th St. N.W. RE. 7-1396 Max Gershen Before You Rent—SEE ROSEMARY VILLAGE We Invite Comparison—We Can Afford to 1-BEDROOM TERRACE APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM SIMPLEX and DUPLEX APARTMENTS 3 BEDROOM SOLD OUT tl APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED ii BEAUTIFUL SETTING ADJACENT TO ROCK CREEK PARK | In the Heart of Silver Spring TREMENDOUS ROOMS DESIGNED FOR FAMILY LIVING Closet Space H Private Front and Rear Entrances YOUR.-HOME-IN--VACATION.-LAND Free and Exclusively Yours Beautiful Hollywood Type Swimming and Wading Pools Ultra-modern Bath House Canopied Observation Deck Fully Equipped Deck Lifeguards on Duty Barbecue Fireplaces Picnic Tables Beautiful Landscaping Protected Children’s Abundant Parking Space Indoor Recreation & Nursery Roor Washers & Dryers or Use Your Own Washer Small Pets Welcome IDEALLY LOCATED FOR SCHOOLS, PLACES OF WORSHIP AND SHOPPING All Designed With Children in Mind Free Private Bus Service to Capital Transit & Silver Spring Shopping model Apt. by ROSSLER FURNITURE MODERN, INC. FRT | i Hi Hill hAhal ‘i ’ ; * i Kitchens Dining Room—Full Size Famuly-Size: Unequaled Bedroon oe . Daol« , + Rem oe ty s0t8 §t. ar, ¢ > East-West snvenience the ROSEMA D hw 4 hwy. direct to project signs portation take bus or marked Ga. & Alaska ave. to terminal. For —_ th ’ iotn &s 1929 EAST-WEST HIGHWAY , Call JU. 8-1170 or JU. 8-4313 Open Every Day, 10 to 5 \ $ ; uled to report for work at The| ii Was rescued by ladder from a the Communist side. | bard’s window, were rescued by iu. iii from home, and the two rescued itt were not identified: 5 ih Hit ii} occupied a } went out the fire escape hit} . : i} right in after him currency which they could print.” TAX—From Page I 10. That men, women and children were Senate Group Favors Cuts = jv oes 11. A loan of 90 million dol- istrongly supported the $1.400. lars “to the Communist-con- |000,000 general tax revision bill! McCarthy Subcommittee would be “investigating itself,” said he will ask Saltonstall to send | a staff member to that. investi- gation—which will be held in public, FIRE—From Page I Fire Ladder Falls With 3 started going down and it fell. [ couldn't get off either way.” Hubbard, formerly ployed by the had moved to trolled government in Poland \which passed the House Friday, Here ve In Pace? et Bb remained strangely silent on in Aorea. ftoorcut~off—the-interior that an item is not to be con- 20. That escape ® apt and filled the sidered sold (for tax purposes) Fleet, =o . ae ontiie prior to April 1, unless posses- reeman and his brother,| sion is had’ before that date. James Korean Gen. former com. [ees + Van J. M. STEIN & CO. CUSTOM TAILORS 1416 For Hond Boned English ond H St. N.W. Domestic Shoes of Distinction Stanley, 80, have operated Where theater, or railway rooming house at the address tickets are purchased before _- ©» mare The . ase : : aeiiatl ta Ail Mle a April 1 for subsequent use, the se caste & purchasers would be eligible 1400 M st. nw. Thomas Free ° man suffered burns of the hands for refunds equal to the actual rate reduction. | and face while holding shut a | fire door separating two sec tions of the house. Walls of the Red Loses Passport hall were charred and the door burned, but flames were con- LONDON {~The govern- fined to the 1447 side of. the! ment announced today that it house. had refused to renew the ex- J. C, Fisher, 77, was removed! pired British passport of Alan from a second-floor window at, Winnington, correspondent for the rear of the house and car- the London Daily Worker who ried down a ladder, Connors reported the Korean war from GLA * Close to top floor window. Two of three Nave! sisters named McKelvey, living in the third floor beneath Hub- —_——— Research CORRECTION “In our ad yesterday the féllow- ing items should -have read . . $6 Odd Golf IRONS 1.99 $8 Odd Golf WOODS 2.99 -FOGEL'S 10th & D Sts. Open Saturday 9 to 7 Laboratory Bellevue. Bolling Field ONLY LEFT @ Full Basement ® Plastered Walls @ Fir Lumber Throughout © High, level lots, over- looking the Potomac ladder... One...sister.-was. away Fred Cunningham, 53. second-floor who room, Fisher; whovoectpied ‘a Troon’ the rear of the house. said opened his door, smelled | sméke and saw the blaze rush in he NO ‘79 “IT slammed .the door yelled ‘Fire!’ I couldn't -see much but I finally found the window. I pushed out the screen and saw # was too hich* a jump. Then the firemen came.” and a % ey * 2 _ ‘ er PRS SE oe eae Shopping Center Ceramic Tile Bath Crosley Shelvedor Refrigerator New Grade School —— SSMANOR © 3 BEDROOMS @ ALL BRICK @ FULL BASEMENT HOMES @ > ai & . te ~~ ; ~~ 3 een Kae > , Pas » * ° . . . "oe 3 ee | » oh . bes” wt. wee * am Sy er ¢ z ——— BRwr FS . , go > —— gn eee . : DOWN PAYMENT 30 YEAR LOANS 13,000 Per Month Includes Everything © Paved Streets (40-f. wide) end Sidewalks #® Large Lots Completely sodded ond landscaped — FEATURES © 3é64in. Full-size Range ® New Giant Food Store Now Open in Glass- manor ® All City Utilities ‘94 Pontiac ONLY 2 2 LEFT only $250 Down 30-Year Loan BEDROOMS SEMI-DETACHED | $72.50 Per Month includes Everything = $2537 (Company Official Car) 4-Door, Radio, Heater 8 Station Wagons to Choese From—Various Models WANTED USED CARS—HIGH CASH OR TRADE PRICE FLOOD PONTIAC New-Car Guarantee Direct Pontiac Dealer 4221 Connecticut Ave. @ WO, 6-8400 Oldest Pontiac Dealer This Area LO. 7-8686 OPEN SUNDAY, MONDAY AND DAILY, 10 TO 6 a Mal RD - Builders of Glassmanor DIRECTIONS TO REACH. Siralcht out South Capitel — St. one bleck over D. C.-Maryland line te GLASSMANOR. Come in main entrance and fellew sign te model homes. Only 17 minetes by BUS from llth and Pennsyivania UCTION CO. . ene Evenings, LO. 7-9038 | oe if THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES HERALD” ’Saturdiy; Merch 20/:805sisscsccinviiiennwne Banker Back, Vows To Repay $170,000 | i Most are Children Farmhouse Blaze Kills PARKERSBURG, W. Va. March 19 \”.—At least six per- sons and possibly eight were burned to death in a fire which destroyed a frame farmhouse between here and St. Mary's today. Six of the eight were children. A! Five bodies and part of a sixth have been recovered from the gutted four-room home owned by Albert A. Tuttle. ‘mysterious 6 in Family | CLIO, Ala., March 19 ®.— | ' This town’s. one. banker, his . 12-day fadeout ended, vowed Friday to repay “every penny” of the citizen's vanished savings, but would not say what has happened to the money. Royall Reynolds, 40, bitterly denied that he had made off ' with some $85,000 cash from his unchartered Merchants’ Ex- change. He was “shocked,” he said, to return home and find he had been formally charged’ with embezzlement. The only portion of the total, $170,000 to $175,000 claimed by depositors Known to be intact was $81,800 in an Atlanta bank. Reynolds brought back the exchange s < ¥ ‘ ’ b . EA Oe: Se AP SMa — ke < & See dy aot. _ ke aR oe 4 ge PO ay ine Se - re 7 a, ak = |Alienation Suit Award Ts $55,000 ° | Lawrence FE. Kitchen, 43-year- old short-order cook, Friday re- Katine ; “eiv ly -Lo-20-year sentenc | “A District Court Jury Friday! °°¥4 9 S7:\ bn = “ — ~~ for second-degree miirder -in ‘returned a $55,000 judgment : Boal mn wail the fatal beating of Leo Y\ \against Reva * Peckelis, also- lp . ; ; Hysan, 71. i|\known as Reva Walker, in a ‘ ; estile ahha ait sa Ghee Although Kitchen was not — oe ee scheduled to be sentenced Fri- affections of Charlies E. Law- day, he appeared before Dis- rencson, 29, from his wife, trict Court Judge Walter M Ruth. 29. mene while se a .. argued for a new tria Although the $100,000 suit When the judge denied the against Mrs. Walker was filed motion. Kitchen declared in 1951, she was not served with “Il want to tell the truth. The the compaint until 1952, when reason | didn’t tell the truth Attorney Albert Brick filed an before was because I had a answer to the suit. record and no one would be However, when the case went) lieve me.” to trial before Judge Richmond Sobbing violently and shak- B. Keech, neither Mrs. Walker ing with emotion, Kitchen said nor an attorney was present for he invited Hysan to his room the defense. in the Edison Hotel annex on Brick said he had withdrawn January 8, 1951. from the case and did not know According to Kitchen, Hysan where Mrs. Walker is at the grabbed at him and he struck present time. Kitchen Gets 6 4 ~ - 1p nn melting tip ti tarts —abod > a ee ee gt a . aot dele Bh TAS NS SS SPSL OA xe eee pete to 20 Years For Beating Man to Death the elderly hotel clerk. Kitchen demonstarted by striking his fist against his palm Kitchen said the old man apologized to him. Vehemently denying that he ever choked Hysan, Kitchen said he left the hotel room following the inci- dent. After Kitchen told his story, Judge Bastian imposed sen- tence. Kitchen and his attor- ney, James J. Laughlin, asked that the defendant be given’ a lie-detector test Kitchen was convicted on March 4. An earlier conviction for first-degree murder in May, 1951 was reversed by the United States Court of Appeals and a new trial was ordered be- cause Judge Burnita S. Mat- thews’ charge to the first jury was faulty Assistant Untted States At- torney Thomas Flannery pros ecuted Kitchen in the last trial. missing records, According to Mrs Lawrenc- pm—RALEIGH HABERDASHER, 1310 F ST. son, Mrs. Walker began alienat- ing her husband's affections in May, 1951. Last November Mrs. Walker, 41, was given a suspended sen- of 3041 Sedgewick st. nw., and Mrs. Walter tence of a $200 fine by Munici- Stokes (right), of Philadelphia. They are pal Court Judge Milton §& getting a preview of the exhibit which Kronheim, Jr., after she was Tuttle said eight persons were pyt accountants had not fin-' maa house and did not get iched checking them and it was 7° 7 ’ > . . He listed the eight as: os eae if they ‘were com) W. ld W est Exhibit Opens at Library of Congress os Royt Tuttle, 3, his son; (Reynolds took an overdose ) elen Hoce, 23, a stpdaughter,’ o¢ sleeping medicine, Dr. J. S. and her two children, Sandra| jackson said Friday, after Kay, 4, and a 6-month-old baby promising to pay off all de- old West, Verner W. Clapp, chief assistant whose name and sex were not positors in full. But the phy-, Librarian of Congress; Mrs. L. M. Pettis opens Friday and runs through June 30. found guilty of illegally assist. learned: Mrs. Ir bat 1 din? —_— —— + Mrs. irene Starcher,|sicijan said Reynolds didn’t " ing in placing a baby for adop- 19, another stepdaughter, and Starcher, l-week-old, and Olla pg gg tls gaye ing a -—que a Visthe Tek an ten to be his biggest depositor. She NEW YORK, March 19 #*.—,600 of her jewels, here for safe-: Last Monday, Herman told Guervitz. tion from burns. Reynolds and his wife, Sue, ing from the $243,500 bankroll torney William Esbitt said Her- nervous after a 20-hour drive G, reen Gets in the town of 840 were indi- their honeymoon. Nagler, and put most of the burg and, while looking for a By Norman Driscoll—The Washington Post and Times-Heraid > A branding iron of “The Wild and Woolly as seen in the current issue of West” is examined by three lovers of the and featured in Raleigh's new Se | WS ’ eat : ~, swallow a lethal dose and suf- tion. At the time, Mrs. Walker her two children, — Holly fered no critical effects the As- R , i ; B ‘id : Mi e Qs lived at 3404 University lane, Starcher, 2, and Amber, Row sociated ea! Runaway bridegroom Missing $30,000 Mra. Lowrentepn was repre eynolds’ aunt, Mrs. Vela - : ’ WITS. Ls . Ray Bailey, 6, a nephew. him” Sein was disclosed sented by Attorney Maurice A Puttle’s wife, 43-year-old. , B | ae Camden Clark filed a court claim in Atlanta! *°%er! authorities sale today | keeping. his bride and FBI agents in | — mden-Clark Hospital in)warch 7 for $75,661.94 against that $30,000 in cash was miss-| Assistant United States At- New York that he had been | arkersburg in critical condi- ~doing business es the Clio'a runaway bridegroom. took:man checked into a Broadway-from-Palm Beach. (where they S rin shirt = Merchants’ Exchange.” — : 7 - r y Most of the other depositors from his 67-year-old wife on hotel March 8 with a Kathleen were married) to Fredericks- 5-20 y ears Selection but most stores and firms here jiam Herman, 49, said he left in her name. Esbitt said they followed. operate on such a small scale + Come Early, Avoid the Rush that the loss of $1,000 would his bride of one day in .Freder- were given a suite with two' Mrs. Herman later asked to RUCKER LUMBER mean a calamity for most of icksburg, Va, March 4 and bedrooms and a connecting withdraw the complaint, but ; 1320 Wilson Riva.” JAckson 4-1234 | them. -brought the money, plus $59,-| door. the authorities said no. For Murder | ‘Ther , | viduals and small businesses| The bridegroom, Percy Wil- money in safe deposit boxes garage, thought he was being } | | Everett D | Green, 63, pro- testing his innocence, was sen- tenced in Distroct Court Friday |to serve 5 to 20 years imprison- — for second-degree mur- der in the suffocation death of Miss Bettie Brown, 83. Convicted by a jury February 10 = of arson and murder ty charges, Green was sentenced J a3 iby Judge Charles F. Me- | Laughlin. ‘ | “IT want to say as I have isaid all the time—I am inno- cent; | have been framed Green said with emotional voice just —— before sentence was passed. :. The elderly man was con- victed of setting fire to his home at 3115 Massachusetts ave. nw., last May 26. Miss Brown, a semi-invalid who roomed at the house, was found in her first-floor bedroom Claiming he never hurt Miss Brown, Green declared false evidence was produced “They were out to get me,” he said However, Judge McLaughlin said the jury “rendered a ver- dict under the evidence and under the instruction of the law given the jury. The judge sentenced Green first to serve one to three years for arson. Green turned and smiled wryly and then the judge imposed the second-de- gree murder penalty. The sen- tences are to run concurrently At a coroner's inquest, Green admitted writing a letter ‘stat- ing Miss Brown had died about an hour before she actually The Chateau, one. of the most died. The letter, to a friend of nn LL SS—_Brown, contained money 3 popular shoes in all America! for flowers. Strap with slender platform, | raceful walking heel. Navy calf ar Mack potent Mute Blames $3 Million or black patent Fire-on Boys SOMERVILLE, Mass., March 19 ».—Small boys playing with matches may have touched off a three-million-dollar fire that destroyed a soft drinks plant and ruined or damaged 35 homes, police said today. Inspectors from the State Fire Marshall's office began a neighborhood search for the boys whom a deaf mute saw tossing lighted matches last night in the rear of the Cott Bottling Co. plant The mute, Frank Bosse, wrote a note for police saying that while looking out his window at dusk he noticed four” or’ five weet boys striking matches and See throwing them into the air Bosse and his wife were among 35 homeless today as a result of the fire which roared through the bottling plant and Copley destroyed .a— three-story. tene:-.} coltlar-—barret-cuffs-3414-16%--32--te ment and five other homes , Twenty-four persons, inctud- 35 Sussex, French cuftts, 1442 to 16, ing 21 firemen, were injured, 32 to 35. at the a | Madrillon’ dp From the “‘Ladies Home Journal,” Smart American collection of | Copley Collar Washington, Silver Spring & PARKington, Arlington oN The Coolie, airy mesh pump trimmed with sleek navy calf .. a delight to live in all spring and summer long! ..... J 1.95 suits and tailored ensembles, the low-heeled strap, etched with white. Brown, red or black calfskin .. Our distinctively different pastel shades for Spring ARROW’S FINE NEW TEX WEAVE SHIRTS *5 A new —look.for Spring. The Lido, pretty sling pump in gleaming black patent or pol- ished navy calf, touched with white-at-the vamp... L195. The Contour, extension sole suit pump with highriding vamp, sling back, walking heel. Black or red calf | 1.95 The Rendezvous, strapling sandal for gala occasions with graceful low heel, thin platform sole. Black patent 12.95 Tex... Weave shirts. tailored by Arrow in a new fabric random. white featuring threads on grounds of grey, tan or blue Mee [e) foo Oooo Ooo RED CROSS SHOES Expect something more than just “pretty shoes.” For discovering Red Cross* shoes is a new and wonderful experience. No sooner have you tried on a pair than you feel —suddenly—poised, lovely, sure of yourself. Yes, you know you're well-dressed in shoes that pay such beautiful compliments to your costume and you. Suddenly, too, Sussex Collar "|| RALEIGH SHISK ERD scot HABERDASHER | WASHINGTON’S FINEST MEN'S STORE 1310 F ST.) NA. 8-9540 you know how personally a shoe can fit, because Red Cross* shoes are Fit-tested over the “twin” of your own foot, to walk almost magically. Exclusive with us! Shoe Salon, Third Floor, Washington; Street Floor, ATTY SANTA FE $1.8 Silver Spring; Second Floor, PARKington OoR— *This product hay no connection whatever with the American National Red Cross ” et ea Toke: Sut a ae | THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD ery 7 UGS RE A MOY IN ME th Be ON 9G TD / are, « (SST SA a ig? ea EG Sa a eee ae ¢ sf i INT RR Fae! SM “i A vuep - — * . P< oe a - RP Pel My RPP MAPA Ph Re ere KH ATT Py _— aye a % . ff ‘ turday, Mare , 195 . : ~ ” e “* * s J ' ist restinte | occasio was one for gram ety > are o Jobless Rise Listed; - zim ne tr enti, Ando preciation for the return of friend Katims, who will t Budapest Quartet Gets Warm Welcome i Be Roisman, Jac Gorodetz- back with them again ne ky, Boris Kroyt, and Mischa . eek. e ° ie Mor eC Indu str 1es Hit = | , By Paul Hume | But to speak of mystery and be viewed, as it was placed on Ts Fn Bn dn Anche Baas as Aad Ande as aaah wre = ell tn a &: A : Ps AED ; “ | Scat the gene iecereien Pee yrs great wonders of music’ is to the program, before the G'} tt a Pa By the Associated Press the fall and spring homecom-|*Peak of the G Minor Quintet. Minor. For, at least from the . . ae 6 . : , In its intimacy, it often seems | stand int of one who has just [#2 S i U. 8. Survey Shows | “the Labor Department. Te- | ing appearances of the Buda- ‘ % Kassan- te n ' to speak heard the G Minor, nothing ‘ported Friday that unemploy- Meas wont prot wel PENEAAOR, bn Shiods‘ ieisheee pano “to ts, cai, for the moment, | °¢ Ee / 7g y, ‘ment, which was largely con- | ; |matter. ) a Farms Ignore} ised io's ter siecea insur ry gress Friday night to beain iter sendmeat more tousaig| the atest Tet sean et | watcnbesee oe iD tries in early winter, still is annual March-April programs.|than in the successive adagios.|the C Minor Quintet opened TO BOTH MILITARY AND C ! ” , And the spontaneous, pro; The C . ; 41 «$10 Exeventu St., N.W. Telephone: NAtional 8-187! Sur pluses, age Ponctie pec te ene | longed applause which saa Minor Quintet should the evening. Thus, the entire 1 > ess. Sheeseietna ene the quartet when it went 2) Beg e pny rey orn ed Custom Taitored | e partment s eau stage is something that comes Tet us P lant M ore prea ong ee, ae : Be only for this rare group of men Back On The Golden Standard fod 4 Wrinkle Resistant ' who plays the beautiful Whit- show employment conditions — re You'll be saving money wearin es , . ? By the Associated Press in them, moved 40 major labor a ton strediverius instruments : : il Ba FX Dacron* & W ool for us. @ suit thet meets your budget The Agriculture Department|™arket areas to classifications The program could not have requirements. individually styled reported Friday that its sure |! sreater a Bema ewer ge | been more familiar, nor could: or for moet ye from Poe oy 1% . Spring and Summer ind f |_ at Said virtually alt the : it easily have been of more ORG HMPOFIOG---TOOTIES: _ENOFKSKIN, ifs > ve | Suits plant a relatively large total|“adversely-affected employ- tropical worsteds, dacron and wool = AS, reed Katims as the guest violist, as ae fae bri e : ' ‘ , acreage to crops this year de-, ment conditions between mid- he has often been, the quartet ‘\- SOrics. 7 FE * NOW $ 50 spite surpluses of many com- Te ee ' played two of Mozart's string ‘ $48.95 to $75 2 ~~ 7 , modities. note of opti , ‘ | quintets, beginning a series in Worth $20 te $30 More + Sd ptimism. It said that lwhich the Budapest will (After Merch 31et—€00) The survey showed that employment, while still declin- = | . . Secs oe a4 7 by the yard in o far whol 1ay plant ing, is doing so at a slower plete the entire cycle. fen ie (Fabrics sold awe — Le apgeen Panic age tstangg rate in the auto, farm, machin- __ The opening program, how- Oath NG AS es Piece Goods Department) much more corn—one of the roar Agee & ernioon id lever, held two of the special Ot | surplus crops—than the gov-|"¥, Sicrs “ ee worn ae | ‘gems, the quintets in minor 4 7 *Dupont's Polyester Fiber ernment had recommended un-| Pees iy — or: as 7 keys. K.-406 in C Minor. and : der an allotment program. |cariiest and hardest by” the , 'that miracle in music, the G || 733 13th St. N.W. RE. 7-9360 Sars The Department Cmpnensee.! vistas’ rast ye) ‘Me| «Baseball Vs. Beer | vinor, K. 516 Next to Telephone Bldg Pe however, that when the survey The ." SOOT NERS, | —— = was made some farmers had) . Po Census Bureau; Sen. Johnson (D.Colo.) at- ' not yet been notified of their|comni ©: Unemployed was 3) tends a hearing of the Sen- corn-planting shares. pe acd ry eae The Em-| ate Judiciary Subcommittee For 16 crops covered in its|POyment Security Bureau's) to testify in support of a report, the department fore-|"J4March survey Friday re-| pil to make beer and liquor cast total planting of 282 mil-| Ported declining employment) interests owning baseball lion acres, or 11 million more i major production centers for) clubs subject to the nation’s than were planted in 1953. ! = steel, nonferrous metals,| antitrust laws. The indicated corn acreage ordnance materials, shipbuild- is only 366,000 acres below last |1"8. electronics and electrical ip ft year. The Department had rec-|°dipment, tires and tubes, and Syitland Man Files textiles. ommended a cut of about 10 Trade and construction em-| William. A. Neuman, 4901| million acres. coo cot ee WASHINGTON, CHEVY CHASE ALEXANDRIA A cut of over a tenth in po-); chet. tato acreage was indicated. Po- in almost all areas surveyed.| o.tate broker, has filed as can- : The Bureau said this reflected ; tato prices have been sharply, normal winter slack. didate in the Democratic pri-| ge ell an, le were in-|. 12 other job developments, mar election for the posts of | Po i ay on peso evarley. flax.|2,.SPokesman for the Associa-|Prince Georges County Com-| seed, rice, sorghums. dry beans “0% .0f American Railroads missioner and member of the , - s g . . . : and peas, soy beans, peanuts the downward trend in railroad State Central Committee. | and hay. er te ena may be leveling el 0 | He said the association has ¥ P ad ots no precise figures on railroad CORRECTION! ‘jobs at the moment, but he said ® ] Si T ae = signs that the month- . y-mont increase in wunem it LX ovuns ployment that has been going The automatic washing machine on ever since the shooting advertised by S t Ik stopped in Korea may be ap- uppor e a an end. | n Janesville, Wis., the : AVON, Conn., March 19 @.|Chevrolet auto plant and the Home Appliance Co. ye Fisher Body Works have be- Republicans in six Connecti-| oun work on an overtime basis 1021 H Street N.E. cut communities showed over- because of increased produc- in yesterday's Washington Post-' whelming support of President tion schedules, the United ,, anit cheat 6 Eisenhower today in what some | Press reported.] ed pote hc. teams party leaders regard as a con-| | test for party leadership be-/ Wiggins Appointed | 00 tween the President and Sen:;— J. Russell Wiggins, managing | 199 Joseph R. McCarthy. editor of The Washington Post' _ An unusual resolution affirm- and Times-Herald, has been ap-| ing Mr. Eisenhower rather than | pointed a member of the Mary-. instead of 119.00 McCarthy as their “choice” for land Press Association’s educa-

ia 4 , if - three temptations: By the Associated Press . The House Appropriations | | Committee Friday- recommend. | Left: Black cotton broadcloth ed restoration of 215 million | blouse clasped with trompe |’oeil dollars of the 300 million Con-| | . a gress cut last year from the) ua , ' foomomnes _— BE nk roses..5.00 Veterans’ Administration budg-| 7 et ¥ ) | : ) ERE With it, the rose print on black The money is for veterans | Pe ee compensation and pension pay-| fee and white skirt, cotton clasped ments. The new allotment) ih. Pek % with black patent. 9.95 boosts to $2,461,291,000 the total | Be a ' available for this purpose for : the fiscal year ending June 30.| Center: Galey and Lord plaid and The committee also ye he sted plain gingham. Blouse, 6.95 ar. additional seven million! : tie. ; , for payments to beneficiaries plan your spring eu Little girl bloomers, 5.00 of servicemen who die while , : - acre pred! ~ see 120 wardrobe in our teak Right: Swish brown and white ays after their discharge. pes gion Its action was embodied in an MATERNITY SHOP eS tweed acetate suit sizzling with omnibus bill appropriating tak white waffle pique .. . to wear $394,521,596 to more than a doz- ory d th th er Federal agencies to supple- You'll put this on for your morning shop- he _ Spring and summer with the — —— eens. ping tour... wear it with pride to a “little ‘greatest of poise. 17.95 fiscal year. The amount ap-’ lunch’. . . look cool and collected the after- Junior sizes 7 to 15 -einae ol eens Wi eget noon through. Cotten gingnem SOP, mod- | W&L—Junior Miss Apparel, 4th Floor The committee approved the’ erate checks of blue or red on white, caught also Chevy Chase and Alexandiie use . $900,°00 = available! at the throat with china silk scarf. Dark Be State Department funds to com-| , ; plete a paces investigation navy adjustable skirt of combed Egyptian of department employes. cotton. Sizes 10 to 18. 10.95 It added 19% million dollars to the 55 million previously appropriated to the Maritime W&L—Maternity Shop, hme | Administration for ship oper- ++. also Chevy Chase and Alexandria ‘4. ating subsidies, and boosted by ' tern Aves. Ol. 4.760% ? Hii lexondrio, 6! oshingron St Ki §-1000 - ~rrry »¢ . myer ' : } ’ ‘- _ . a a 4 >; a 55 million the 475 million pro-| ——— Tatil cad Pedi 14.20 w @ tee Dh on « eet cop ot Other Weekdors 9:30 to 6 MROPEDICL AEE vided last year for the Federal- 3 ; 3 : hte re — aa gishway program. ; Weshingtor, 10th, 11 FOG Sn. Dt. 7-5300 ’ a “THE WASHING TON POST did "TIME SHER ALD” Saturday March 20; 19540 ~lumn.) THE QUESTION: What's your system in pick. horses? Asked of race fans. THE ANSWERS: Mousey Garner, comedian, 110 Aspen st. nw.: Here's how pick a horse. a go to the track and atch ‘em run especially watch the tim- ing on all horses. The timing’s the most important thing. Then |! put my money on a horse that has good tim- ing. I will take a chance on a good long shot once in a while. Mrs. Gladys Quinlan, recep- ———.. ... Thanks! For Your Response to Our Selling-Out Sale of Clothing! We've Small Lots, Broken Sizes Remaining! Best Bargains You've Seen in Many Years! SUITS © TOPCOATS © SPORT COATS SLACKS © TUXEDOS SHOES © HATS SPORT SHIRTS e OTHER _ FURNISHINGS a i F STREET 1341 F STREET, N.W. Peeeoeosooseooooeoos: Teceive its charter at morning ‘which is only « oceasionally, I usually choose a horse just by a hunch or else by the past rec- ord of the horse. I do not have an un usual system si | for picking them. Of course, when ] win, which is seldom, I am very happy. George Dixon, columnist, 1317 |: |H st. nw.: Horse-picking can be reduced to an exact science After ‘studying all the form ‘sheets assidu- ‘ously, make win bets on ‘every horse in the race except the last one. Then bet with a friend that the last horse will not show up for the race. A more thrifty way, of course, is to kill your- self. : Mrs. Myrl Snyder, national | advertising order clerk, 4338 River rd. nw.: | I love to go to) the races. How-| ever, I. don't get the chance) very often. On| the occasions| when I do go,| I just pick a) horse at ran- dom and hope for the best. | Sometimes I'm lucky and the) horse wins, but I don’t have a| special formula. Alice McCarthy, secretary, ‘1515 Van Buren st. nw. I choose a horse by the jockey, for one thing, by the percent- age of races he has won. Also by the horse itself. I con- sider the horse's trainer, its owner, and I consider how . the horse has run before. I think it’s a good system. David Sentner, bureau chief, '1825 Summit pt: nw:: You have ‘to know a horse to be able to ipick a winner. You see, the horses decide among them- iselves before the race which jone of them is going to win p= race. You have to be in- ‘troduced to a horse by an- lother horse and have him tell ‘you who's going to win. Catholic War Veterans ‘Hear Mass Thursday The Catholic War Veterans \of the District and its women’s | Auxiliaries will honor the Blessed Virgin on the Feast t of | Her Annunciation by attending mass at the Church of Our) Lady Queen of Peace, 4000 Ely | place se. at 7:45 p. m. Thursday. The Rev. Martin Hyland. Auxiliary Department Chap-| lain, will preach, and the Rev.) James H. Brooks, Department) ‘Chaplain, will celebrate the _mass. | Troop to Get Charter | Boy Scout Troop 551, spon-| ‘sored by the Men’s Guild of| St. Luke's Episcopal Church, | 15th and Church sts. nw., will) prayer at 1l a. m. Sunday. Your Child Can Learn to Play This Plan also available for GUITAR TRUMPET CLARINET VIOLIN TROMBONE DRUMS Phone, come in, or mail coupon for full informa. . tion and talent test without obli- Zation, ACCORDION: before you buy cana . «| Coexistence Inquiring Camera Girl | By Dale Chesnut “(The Washington Post and; tionist; 2025 1 st. nw.: When 1. Times-Heraid will pay $5 for 0 to the track ry timely, interesting ques- n submitted and used in this By Stevenson fenemies, he said, can learn to get along when the alternative | ‘est obstacle to peaceful coexist- Held Possible CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March, 19 (UP).—Adilai Stevenson said: Friday night. “peaceful coexist-| | ence” is possible between the Communist world and the free | world. Even the most fanatical | is self-destruction. In the final of three Godkin lectures at Harvard University, Stevenson said there was no ‘immediate. “solution”. to the East-West power struggle, but ‘our problems may fade away|’ with time and cease to have im- portance that they now seem to have.” “It is doubtful whether in all history two ways of life as dif- ferent and as opposed as the Communist way to our way of life have ever come into con- tact with one another at so many different points without engaging in mortal conflict,” he said. Stevenson admitted the great- ence is “the Soviet belief in the inevitability of conflict between the Communist and non-Com- ‘munist worlds.” i —_ - made to order for your home, smart.in_so many ways... _for coolness, comfort, protection, distinction AWNINGS Now's the time to have attractive awnings made to order for your home. They’re exactingly cut, care- fully tailored. Available in a variety of broad and narrow stripes and solid colors. We also make them for hotels, apartments, office buildings. Call District 7-7-5300 for an estimator . . . no obligation to you. W&L—Manufacturing Division, 7th Floor a few smart tips to wise housekeepers... DAILY LABOR-SAVERS seal leaks, mend most anything with fast-drying sure-sticking ‘Tight ].00 You really can’t afford to be without “Tight . ... because you'll find so many uses for if around the house. It's an amazing sealing compound that sticks to most anything, seals leaks and cracks, mends broken household items of all kinds. Use it on glass, china, metal, wood, plastic, linoleum, rubber and paper. Eco- nomical, easy to use. Apply Tight sparingly and press surfaces “tight” for just a minute and the job is done. W&L—Housewares, Ist Fl., North Building , also Chevy Chase and Alexandria Spatter-Prufe safety lid an instrument With our Musical Aptitude Test and) Beginners —-Lesson--Plan where. we! furnish the instrument WITHOUT | CHARGE, parents can be absolutely’ sure..that..their..youngster has musical | talent before making an investment in a musical instrument. Here's what your youngster receives: Dr. Maddy Talent Test. Use of Instrument, which you take home between lessons Private lessons by professional in- structors. (No class lessons) Band and Ensemble Training with| other pupils. The complete cost is only $2 for the Weekly PRIVATE lessons plus small enrollment fees. | ' Please give me all the details of your Talent Test, for which you LEND the instrument, ADDRESS.... PHON 1330 G Street N.W. REpublic 7-6212 a. “KITT’S Musie Studios. 2621 Mt. Vernon Ave., Alex. King 8-8686 A ek AS shields you from flying grease, keeps stove clean 1.00 Spatter-Prufe is ansamazing double- duty cover for your frying pan. It's constructed in two layers... with an air-conditioned space in be- tween. Special designed louvers let steamy moisture out so that food fries.deliciously crisp. At the same time it keeps spatter in... to pro- | tect you and help keep your kitchen cleaner. Made of aluminum, Spatter- Prufe comes apart with a twist fo: easy cleaning. For skillets-up to 11” W&L—Housewares, Ist Fl., North Building .. also Chevy Chase and Alexandria Chevy Chase, Wisconsin G Western Aves. OL. 4-7600 to 9. Other Weekdays 9.30 to 6 Weshingtop, 10th, 11th, F & G Sts. DI, 7-5300 Thursdays and Fridays 12:30 ’ 5 t Enterprise “no-clamp” food chopper works on any flat surface 6.95 Here is a new idea in food choppers. The Enterprise ‘‘no-clamp’’ chopper requires no Clamping, works on any flat surface. Rubber suction feet on base hold it firmly in place without scratching -or-marring. .lt. cuts raw meat, cooked meat, vegetables, baby foods,. fruits. Does not mash. Easy to use and clean. Has retinned, large capacity hopper.eBase in white, red or yellow enamel. Deluxe model with chrome base, 9.95 . W&lL—Housewares, Ist Fl., North Building . also Chevy Chase and Alexandria you can refinish floors quickly, easily with Havazip-and-Havalac team HAVAZIP cuts through old shellac, varnish or wax in minutes to reveal original floor beauty. Comes ready to use. Makes costly sanding unnecessary. quart, 1.19 ', gallon, 1.98 gallon, 3.59 HAVALAC adds a beautiful, protective finish to floors to complete job. It brushes on easily, dries in 30 minutes quart, 2.39 gallon, 6.95 W&l—Housewares, Ist Floor, North Building «.. also Chevy Chase and Alexandria remove paint and varnish quickly with fast-acting Liquisan Stripper 19 ~-et Liquisan do that tough job of Sanding for you... like magic. It removes old finishes in & matter of minutes, leaves surface clean and ready for refinishing. It removes varnish, paint, enamel or shellac from all wood or metal surfaces. It will not injure or discolor surfaces, and is harmless to your hands. Easy to use. Just paint on with a brush. lt softens finish in minutes, Then clean off with rag, putty knife or stee! wool. W&L-—Housewares, Ist Fl., North Building . also Chevy Chase and Alexandria Alexondric, 615 N. Woshington St. Ki. §-1000 Tino at Thursdoys ond Fridoys 12:30 to 9, Other Weekdoys 9: tes A , Doily 9:30 to 6, Except Thursdoys 12:30 te? 4 ’ ; q 5 owen AS HENG TON» POST! -and © TIMES' HERALD” Saturday! March’ 20; 195 °° Unit Probes ‘Errors’ 11-Cent Tax Paid In Hydrogen Blast - armen pe ei CERI Ls . 5. yi OF FRR ES FS ry 53 R an ah Re bate ae 18 Lome a —————D R “d A I D ] S| Di Bi PI F One flight of Bearcats caugh eds Again Delay Showdown at Dien Bien Fhu Fortress a convoy of 55 Russian-mad ‘Molotov supply trucks sever ; | ‘miles north of Dien Bien Phi HANOI, March 19 ®%.—Com-\French pilot of the American;showdown assault in the siege|forward foxholes and bunkers ong MONTGOMERY, Ala., | munist besiegers of Dien Bien'helicopter took out a load of rounding out its fourth week. (could hear the scrape and oo hs pom yee ig March 19 (#.—An unhappy (Phu ignored a French request casualties. | Foreign legionnaires pushed thump of rebel shovels and with ‘eanhees ” " citizen whose State in- (for a Bg Po 26 gre the A C-47 hospital plane marked 200 yards out Pong es picks g Pincay or mn trenches, : ome tax amounted to just |Woun ay and rained with red crosses which landed fortress early Friday and found across the narrow no-man’s y . a | st Ald Sought By Russell Brines Most of France’s 200 combat Associated Press Reporter Rep. W. Sterling Cole (R- N.Y.) said Friday a Congres- f q ; tw 5 a . “ . ’ 11 cents is paying it -the shells around a Sikorski héli-earlier on one. of the shell-'the.. unisits had “ahaa ila | ‘wounded and returned to Hanoi two northern outposts overrun planes in Indo-China swarmed! The Armenian Relief Society sional investigation will be Another Wounded Terrorists , copter dipping down on a test pocked runways took aboard 35 doned, at least for the moment, hard way. mission of mercy. | - He sent the State-Reve- + Braving the barrage which With 20 ‘shell holes in its wings in the first mass ‘assauit. ‘in relays over Dien Bien Phu. 1737 Wiseonsin “ave.” nw., wi nue Department a check (had knocked out both landing and fuselage. But in other -sectors of the They poured explosives, napalm conduct rummage sales until for 3 cents, the first quar- ‘pushed to determine ‘whether ‘avoidable errors were made strips of the embattled fortress For the fourth day the Red tense perimeter the Franco-Viet and machine-gun slugs into the April 1 to buy food for terly installment. in northwest Indo-China, the command held up the expected|' Nam troops crouched in the Red positions. ‘needy of the Near East. during the monster hydrogen blast in the Pacific March 1. Cole said the Senate-House ‘Atomic Energy Committee, |\iwhich he heads, has begun ‘questioning Atomic Energy CAIRO, March 19 ®—Three| Commission (AEC) officials in Egyptians, aided by a small | closed sessions. boy, shot and killed one British| The chairman added the na- officer and wounded another|ture of the testimony would today in a new wave of terror-| determine how much of it ism which began early this,might be made public later. month in the Suez Canal Zone.| Two committee members, The attack raised the total Reps. Melvin Price (D-Ill.) and of British casualties in the\James E. Van Zandt (R-Pa.), Canal Zone in March to three| Thursday called for a full-scale killed, six wounded and two) Probe to learn why the 315 per- missing. sons subjected to unexpected The British Embassy an- radiation exposure were ail- nounced that three gunmen|!Owed close enough to the attacked the two officers today| last zone to be endangered. ‘at the British married families| _@® Tokyo, Ambassador John hospital at El Ballah, midway | ™- ‘Allison said the United between Ismailia and Port Said. | 5tates will make “just compen- The boy whipped back the sation” if a joint investigation cloak of one of the gunmen to “nds 23 Japanese fishermen permit the attacker to fire aq Were innocently injured by the machinegun he was carrying, | blast. Allison told the Japanese the Embassy said. Foreign Office the United Maj. W. R. Burnhill, a Royal|5tates is ready to offer “the Medical Corps officer, was greatest Possible degree of as- shot twice through the stomach S!Stance.” Dr. John J. Morton, and died. A captain who was director of the United States with him suffered a shoulder “tom Bomb Casualty Commis- jaend: sion at Hiroshima, visited the injured fishermen today. He told newsmen the victims “will recover completely in about one month.”) Van Zandt said the probe should include questioning of naval officers in command of the task force, as well as scien- I S] k tists. Cole said in a separate inter- ni la cup view that the committee would pursue the inquiry fully. WARSAW, Poland, March 19; The blast, reportedly three (e—Boleslaw Bierut, 64, pre- or four times greater than ex- mier of Poland since 1952, has pected, spilled nuclear dust given up the post to be first) well beyond the hazard zone secretary of the United Polish| which had been drawn. Its Workers’ (Communist) Party, it! power has been estimated at Was announced today. between 600 and 700 times that Bierut, also a former presi-|of the Hiroshima atom bomb, dent, has been Poland's No 1 which killed 60,000 persons. a since World War ll.| Twenty-three Japanese fish- osef Cyrankiewicz, former ¢rmen. 80 miles away and out- vice premier, was nominated cide the h premier by the party’s central |}, | azard zone, were bad- committee on Bierut’s recom- (Barger ye Ba -_ hg ee mendation. Cyrankiewicz held indicated S nS © the Diast the premiership from 1947 to ia bh fn Soviet submarine 1952. coul ave pierced through se- The central committee’s| “Ut Y Precautions for a better party secretariate elected | V4ntage porns. Hilary Minc, a trade expert|_,“ total of 28 American tech- well known to Western diplo- nicians and 264 natives, on sev- mats, and Zenon Nowak as first ©T@! islands more than 100 vice premiers. miles away, were exposed to In Vienna, where close watch ™ilder radiation. is kept on the Soviet satellite} 5¢”. John O. Pastore (D-R. 1.) orbit, the shakeup was seen as\2%d_ Rep. Chet Holifield (D- having come on orders of Calif.) Congressional observers Nikita Khrushchev, No. 2 man @t the test, reported Thursday in the Kremlin. night that the Americans and Western diplomats there said/"@tives are “normal, happy Bierut, son of Polish peasants, 20d in the best of spirits.” remained Poland’s No. 1 Com.| Slay Briton In Suez Zone Pole Premier Yields Post munist and will be in a position to keep a watchful eye on | PO Cyrankiewicz. | HES The diplomats said Bierut ex-|| : perienced what happened in| Flooring, Stepping, Rail, Posts Russia and in Hungary after | RUCKER LUMBER the death of Stalin—a separa- || tion of party and government | powers. || 1320 Wilsen Bivd. JAckson 4-1234 = : It’s Springtime — Time to. Redecorate PN Tt) Modern Trapunto Sectional Love Seat Goodyear Foam Rubber Pillows Custom Covered to Order, Special $189 This price usually quoted in muslin You save the ‘cost of the fabric It's livable: You literally sink into its luxurious comfort. It’s beautiful: Its classic simplicity blends so well with modern or period decor. At® our low price, this fine sectional love seat is truly a miracle value. Choose from an attractive va- riety of fabrics and colors. A priceless service that doesn't cost you a penny— our decorator service. Ask for it. Call NA, 80677 MAZOR WASHINGTON 911 Seventh St. N.W. -Open Monday and Thursday 9 to 9 Other Days, 9 to 6 SILVER SPRING 8715 Colesville Road Open Monday thru Friday 9:30 to 9:30 Saturday, 9 to 6 f é \"y@e' ~ ONO Spungen De 8 ee Hap 0 aol >> oe Se eee apy aap! a i et he be » ’ IN THE PUBLIC INTERES ~ - .. “ls . ss LAWSON’S BRINGS THIS EDITORIAL TO THE ATTENTION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Reprinted By Permission from March 13, 1954 Akron Beacon Journal From Cows To Consumers A man who sat through most of the hearings last week* on the proposed federal regulation of milk tells us he believes he has discovered what happened to the law of supply and demand. At least as far as milk is concerned, this man re- ports, the law has been-buried-undera-mountain_of regulations issued by the Department of Agriculture. These regulations implement the milk marketing laws passed by Congress in 1937 and amended a number of times since. To a simple city feller like our friend who kibitzed the hearings the bottle of milk in the refrigerator always had represented an easily understood operation of a farmer milking a cow and sending the milk to market through a distributor. Our friend had heard rumblings from time to time of unrest among dairy farmers but the milk always was in the refrigerator when he wanted some and he never worried too much about how it got there or what it cost. To his astonishment the milk marketing hearings revealed the milk business to be a highly complicated operation from the cow to the consumer. And, our friend observes, neither the cow nor the consumer was asked for an opinion during the hearings last week. . oS . ** hed laa ait - a , ee Sek ped ene SNM Nearly all of the hundreds of pages of testimony and exhibits that will be studied at Washington by high officials of the Department of Agriculture concern the problems of the farmers and the dealers, known in milk marketing language as “milk handlers.” io vedo . co - es This week-long discussion of local milk problems brings out two points worthy of comment. _ a 1 ope - \* , * i AhPerw a The federal disinterest in consumer opinions on milk puts in sharp focus the preoccupation of Congress and most of our other legislative bodies with the economic welfare of farmers over other groups of citizens. And the discussion illustrates the extent to which farmers will accept federal regulation of their opera- tions where they feel it will benefit their economic welfare. This point was of special interest to our friend, for he had long harbored the illusion that our hardy farmers were the last stronghold of free enter- = and the final bulwark against the onslaughts of ureaucrats seeking more control. ede of The federal milk marketing act and most of the other farm legislation that provides for loans, controls, sub- sidies and price supports came out of the bitter expe- rience of farmers in the depression of the 30s. Farm leaders took steps to see that the agricultural section of our economic life never again is put through the wringer as it was then. ? The milk legislation provides that a group of farm- ers may petition for federal control. This the Akron Milk Producers, Inc., has done. The application for a milk marketing order has been opposed by all the Akron milk handlers. The producers and handlers are small groups compared to the great mass of consumers, whose welfare will ultimately be affected by whatever comes from the demand for fderal milk control here. We would not presume to speculate on the final out- come of the local hearings on the milk situation. The farmers made an unsuccessful effort to have a federal order issued in 1949. Department of Agriculture offi- cials here forthe hearings last week said that applica- tion was rejected because the farmers failed to muster sufficient favorable votes in a referendum. It will be interesting, however, to see what the Washington approach to current application for an order will be in view of the stiff opposition voiced by the milk dealers and the “new climate” reported prevailing in the higher echelons of the Department of- Agriculture. This “new climate” is reported to be best illustrated by the decision to lower price supports on the huge surplus of butter to 57-cents a pound.-Secretary Ben- son made the decision that butter prices should come down and he is braving the wrath of aroused congress- men and farmers from dairy states in that action. It is our hope that when Secretary Benson considers the mass of testimony compiled at the local milk hear- ings he is surrounded by soft breezes of this “new climate” in the Department of Agriculture and takes a broad view of the entire situation including the wel- fare of producers, dealers and consumers. In bringing butter prices down he undoubtedly was thinking of stimulating consumer activity and we feel the same line of reasoning should be applied to the Akron milk situation. * Hearings referred to in this editorial were held in Akron the week of March 1, 1954. ~~ » 6 wit o- oN _* Re 0+" 4. ~*~ 7 THE LAWSON MILK COMPANY, AKRON, OHIO 9% : a aaa e= — b ; $7 58° $29.95 $19.95 "14% $7 9* Specially $ 88 Priced / 2 4 This is the better quality mattress Save $50 Save $33.95 Save $10.07 Save 55.07 Crosley Semi-Automatic gvoar- anteed by Bendix. Washes 15 has float-flush drain- ing, squeeze dries clothes ready to hang. Holds 8 Ibs ae 1953 apartment All-steel, white enamel cabinet it's a big, all-steel model Frigidaire with full quar- for dishes, groceries tinens. With drawer high. 26'' Wide smoatl kitchen! eine, two door wardrobe with rounded corners, brown enamel finish. Has hat shelf two keys. of a leading moker with resilient coils, thick padding, ACA tick ing. 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Sofa and lounge chair are $ 90 upholstered in smart modern designed damask and have balloon cushions. ‘a 202 wey w! = oe Sa: r hoo *he hia faaet of ‘ a ’ s ~ ; o Mo “$ NORTHEAST STORE BENNING RD. & MINNESOTA AVE. oa a.m.to g p.m. sn tines _— : ‘ | ) 6 7 cof a2 - oe . ab ‘Ar : nite ARLINGTON STORE \ os: 655 N. GLEBE RD. PARKINGTON pet cup. Add-boiling. water-and Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Daily—Free Parking instantly you have delicious, eco- nomical GILL’S. At leading gro- cers .... everywhere! Try new GILL'S Instant Coffee and Chicoy today! ' n | Be Thursdoys 12:30 to 9 p.m. NO MONEY DOWN! 9:30 to 6 p.m THE. WASHINGTON: POST ond “TIMES: HER xr" Saturday, March : 20, 1954 141 Policemen Find Work Ie nara In Crime-Ridden Second Preeinet _ PRECINCT—Fr. Pg. 1. annually ‘than anywhere ’ else in Washington. “But I know one thing,” edds the captain, “we try.” "The men don't complain about extra duty,” he said re- cently. “Often they'll volun- teer to work extra time to stay with a case. They know there's a job to do and they go out and do it.” Winters was referring to his uniformed men. The 16 plain- clothesmen assigned to the precinct are expected to work on a case as long as they're | needed. Winters strongly believes in the law enforcement axiom Which holds that the foot patrolman is the greatest —2- terrent to crime there is. In line with this axiom the Second Precinct is authorized to post two patrolmen on each of its 10 beats during all three 8- hour shifts in an effort to cope with the vast amount of crime | which may be expected there each year. Some beats in thé precinct are considered unsafe for a uni- formed policeman walking alone. Posting a double patrol re- quires 20 men for each-eight- hour shift. Captain Winters is able to muster an average of 12 men, so the more peaceful bor- deriine beats get only one man epch. This is still a great improve- ment. “When I first came here two-and-a-half years ago, there were some days when we couldn't find more than four or five men to put on the streets,” A. | says Winters, ; Opumum number.of 20 weuld To achieve the require an additional 40 patrol- men. : The city’s crime jungle multi- plies police problems in various ways. How much time shall the petrolman spend following known prostitutes or rounding up alley drunks or stopping alley knife fights? And how much time shall he spend making his. presence felt on the streets protecting the lives of honest merchants and citizens? Captain Winters feels his prime target is the thug who | preys primarily on the innocent victim. “Sure, those 1500 aggravated assaults we had in the last fiscal year look bad in the statistics— and they are bad,” he says. “But so many of those assaults are committed during an argument in the heat of passion with may- be a little Sneaky Pete thrown in—there’s nothing in the world _ a policeman can do to prevent those.” Capt. Winters. said he'd like it made clear that the Second Precinct situation is what It is not simply because of the fact that the Precinct population is largely Negro. “Anytime you have a con- eentration of “people - you're bound to have trouble—no matter who they are,” he says. He has found decent, hard- working, respectable people in the very worst of the alley slums as well as in the more habitable sections of the pre- cinct. He has found them shackled to their misery by lack of edu- cation and | frankly don't. care to improve - /K sts. nw. > ‘tie about other areas of crime) Precinct.” skill and family | ONE ROBBERY... situations. over which... they. have no control. { And he has found others who" their lives even means are available. Like the street loafers who coagulate in pestiferous knots on street corners day and when the Every 30 hours ONE MURDER... RRC \e\ \2\3\4) s\6 a T.8\9 0) anya a3 WA 5) 6 1) 1819) 10 f jy 22/ 2/24/ 25/26/27) je 29 50's; / \ Every 19 days CRIME CLOCK FOR THE WICKEDEST PRECINCT ONE PROSTITUTION OFFENSE... Reported every 26 hours ONE AGGRAVATED ASSAULT... night throughoypt the precinct. Before the employment situa- tion tightened here, Winters says, there were long lists of jobs for unskilled workers available at the United States | Employment service at 5th and’ “When we asked these guys) standing around outside why, they didn’t go in and apply,” | he adds, “we found they didn’t) want steady work. “They waited around for trucks that would drive by looking for men for a few hours’ work and they made police availability made pos- sure no social security or with- sible last July by the law pro- holding tax would be de-|viding extra appropriations to ducted.” |pay policemen for a sixth day's Winters sees no hope for, work each week -has- made these people and indeed. sees\crime somewhat more hazard- no hope for their offspring ous in the Second Precinct as it “unless we can get the kids out has throughout the city gener- of these alleys and slums, and ally. that atmosphere.” Capt. Winters said he’s sure A police captain can’t control the improved statistical picture the atmosphere in his pricinct —_ ves but where he can act, Winters says he will act. “There's not a dope pad in this precinct and I defy anyone to find a numbers headquarters here,” he said recently, adding:| Senator Frederick G. Payne “Show me one and I'll break (R.Me) Friday pressed for the door down myself and let , il the district attorney worry nousing redevelopment in the about the law later.’ Second Precinct to improve Winters is cautiously optimis- conditions ir “The W ickedest hours Every 5'2 in which his precinct is the The Senator. referring to the annual leader. The increased Series currently appearing in The Washington Post and Now Moms and — 'Times-Herald, quizzed John R \Searles, Jr., executive director ‘of the D. C. Redevelopment ONE DOPE Reported every 16 hours already noticeable in citywide statistics for the current fiscal year will hold true in his pre- cinct as well when the full year’s figures are in. “It's a tough one,” captain of his precinct, “but we try to train a maf to stay cool, use tact and get used to the pace.’ says the ONE LIQUOR OFFENS ONE HOUSE BREAKING... Every 12 hours Second Precinct Crime Rate During Year Ending June 30, 1953 “Once in awhile we get a hothead but that stuff doesn't go around here and when we find out about it we act fast,” he adds. For the most part, Winters is satisfied that the training sinks in. Sunday — A full page of text and pictures on Second Precinct schools. utes on improving the precinct.., The questioning occurred during Searles’ testimony be- fore the Senate Banking and Currency Committee on the Administration’s housing bill of 1954. Payne asked Searles if the precinct did include the worst area in the District and if so what action was under way by the RLA to reclaim it from the |Land Agency, for about 10 min- s HUB) 7thaD DOWNTOWN Ts fabrics boxy styles. skirts, two-tone suits, sharkskins, silks, novelty and boxy styles. Dads can protect the Entire Family with the (GEORGE WASHINGTON HEALTH PLAN) The plan that offers New Wonderful Protection for: e ACCIDENTS e CHILDBIRTH e SICKNESS Yes, payments will be made directly to you (or the doctor or the hospital, if you prefer) for Accidents, Sickness. . @ Hospital Room ® Doctor's Bill for Surgery @ Operating Room e LOSS OF INCOME . even Childbirth. Cash benefits for such costly expenses as: @ Medicines, X-Rays @ Special N jurse Expense @ Ambulance Expense You Owe It to Yourself and Your Family to Investigate This Protection TODAY DON’T DELAY .. You and your family may need this” protection tomorrow! 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Winston of Baltimore, presi- dent of the housing officials association. Winston said the bill “is not broad enough to encompass all the major facets of the housing problem.” is Va. Assembly Passed 719 of 1270 Bills ’ Of the 1270 bills iritroduced in Stanley and Said today. - Be Fn Ra Me Ba Po Mot Mr tn Po he Mo F> b sta Fe Rp ADAP TAL RICHMOND, March 19 (®— been signed into law by Gov. 398 others await the 1954 General Assembly bet- signing at the constructive ses ter than half—719—were sion March 31. passed, legislature officials [py the 1952 session 604 out of. 1093 bits: ‘Introduced were.” Of those passed, 32 ‘have passed. Mai BREED CHINCHILLA aT HOME Your hobby today ... retirement tomorrow N.C.B.A. ae Breeding Stock * nd large herds * young 1 nated pairs @ proven I red pairs @ pairs with babies @® single nales and females Hamilton Chinchilla SALES and SUPPLIES” VISITORS WELCOME 5201 Ga. Ave. — RA. 63953 Open 9-5. 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You'll find wash- able nylon toppers, all wool suede toppers, all wool fleeces, all wool checks and plaids, all wool novelty Plus gabardine coats, faille coats in fitted and Suits with pleated skirts, suits with two flannels, crepes, gabardines, twists and tweeds in fitted Juntos’ 9 to 15 * Misses’ 10 to 20 * Women’s 38 to 44 * Half Sizes 1612 to 2412 Cotton Pliase PANEL SLIPS $1.99 Lovely cotton panel plisse slips with beautiful nylon lacy trim. Full cut for comfortable wearing, 32 to 52, Rayons tels, some 7th & D STREETS N.W. 9:20 te 6 p.m. Thursdey 12:30 to F p.m. Exciting News checks and plaids. Slim and are sizes 24 to 38. SKIRTS. $3.99 and wools in pas- skirts, in swing pleated. ro Exciting News BLOUSES $1.99 Beautiful nylons, cottons, rayons in short and io sleeve styles. Both dressy _ tailored. Sizes DATS: SUITS-TOPPERS Pi at ’ ALL WOOL CAMPUS JACKETS $3.99 All wool campus jacke DRESSES $1.99 Darling Fairy Tale dresses ng for DOYS and giris >» in Cotton with pretty trim, tastners, white trim Gay and colorful piaids, green, blue and. wine prints and pastels. Sizes to 16. | to 14, Open Daily , NORTHEAST 10 a.m. to F p.m. BENNING ROAD & MINN. ts ID <) 32 6 Soh SE Shan Se TAC PAB OLMI YY 27 Me aT Po - ‘ , 4 - . t.” “ s - ~ a yee . , AOE. Some gery Tw. PIT IY PM PRET I OBE MR, THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES:HERAL Slot Addict Court Upholds 7 Tag phir Delay Gets 2 Years Conviction of i G Id. 1b GD voeren nt ssinome 0.06 Hits County Funds . In Prison | | | 0 Ef] CIgs | Downtown and Shirlington 9:30 : 6 Glin Slaying i. Northeast 9:30 to 9. Ki D - RARE Th eg ty ye OS RP Tl wD Saturday, March 20, 1954 *. Prince Georges County LEONARDTOWN. Md. March! A sol Z = + ‘ ‘ ; :; | IN iN, ol . A soldier who shot his budd asic : Stands to lose $60,000 if sched-| : a 0 y , ; , ; - Tested On 7i ee ‘uled increases in Maryland | !9 (Spb— A 28-year-old laun-jto death in a darkened Korean 2 wok ; i auto tag fees are postponed | dry truck driver with an “un|bunker when he mistook his’ ; for a year, County Engineer | controllable urage” to play/friend for a Com st/ infil- . TOPS FOR SPRING New Sedative oa W. Tayman said Fri! slot machines” drew a A trater was cishiied tena ot ’ , / : Tayman urged the County) Penitentiary term here today|negligent homicide, the United @ 100% VIRGIN WOOL the Maryland legislature. © (Mattingly, of Leonardtown,| 1. Ordered the case of a GI Sate tS ie | By Nate Haseltine | The Commissioners said they| pleaded guilty to three house-/who shot and wounded his ° : Be Wy > i ; Boucle To Pr Staft Reporter jwould take the proposal under! breaking and larceny” indict-|superior officer during a bin “a —), >. At the same time, the Mili- Psychopaths din to veto the delaying bill) passed by the recent session of| The defendant, Joseph Harry |tary Court: e . . ) ' Seen Aiding ‘Commissioners to go on record | for stealing $1765 worth of the|States Court of Military Ap- e 1D) Worthwhile results with a) advisement. against the postponement and/“one armed bandits and their/peals ruled yesterday. asked Gov. Theodore R. McKel-| wach contents. | see ‘on “yak juice” sent back to a Fi a . Se cal | Half of the money from State/™€™ts arraigned before ‘St. " Bang af new sedative which quiets se) tomobile tags is divided be-|Mary’s Circuit Court Judges nt aig ge oy Amponog f ne % ; %, verely excited mental patientS | s+ween Raltimore City and the’ J, Dudley Digges and Charles! tence. s year sen- Ma \ . - without further confusing them) Maryland counties. 'C. Marbury 2 Upheld the co ay f : | | . : nviction of are reported by Canadian doc-| Tne Increesjuled torgo into|, At his special request, Mat-/@nother soldier who was found . izZ, : “CHARGE IT” were. ‘effect next year, was one of the “ingly was permitted to spend |SUilty of deliberately aiming] * “\ The drug, a synthetic COm-| measures designed to help pay) his last few moments of free- 2" artillery piece at the rear, pound called ehlorpromazine,|for Maryland's ambitious 12-/S05",.” County Hospital where, ie the fighting in Koren. |@ was tested on 71 psychiatric aed | eutdishore gemee eee ‘is confined with the birth; 1” its decisions, the Court tients, ranging from late teen! postponing the increases unti]/°f their fourth child. _|Tuled that Pvt. Joseph A. Per- @ . 7 of more than four months. ifense plea outlining Matting-|;_ . ~~ green properly @ ae ae % ‘ lt S$ F eatherlight! | } h e fatal shooting of his Its use, reported Drs. H. E. ; | la Se eeeuhin kant machine | friend, Pvt. Bernard A. Owens, > a , ; Lehmann and G. E. Hanrahan! White Enters pose Pome in m4 oar where the | While they were on guard duty e The little coat that tops everything for spring. Dramatically of Verdun Protestant Hospital, | in Korea on March 16, 1953. styled with wide cuff ; Seinetten useneed 26 cabinets Of] machines are not legally handy | “pe -icio was nets & a yled wide cuffs to wear high or low, sparkling with ' | when he finishes his term at the | © : | Pin h ; ; Saal their symptoms, controlled the Va. Primary 'Maryland House of Correction, charged from the Army after on rhinestone clips; prettily flaring back. In spring's fashion symptoms of seven others to} =r , his appeal was filed. e ee OE colors—powder blue, petal pink, sun beige. Sizes 10 to 18. permit their discharge, lessened) y» waoyer white. former as- Police who testified Mattingly |. - The Military Court of Ap- Fame #)° Ne , the mental troubles of 27 pa-|.:., nao he | Save himself up after disposing | peals affirmed convicti f mee , All Three Stores 4 failed to help 12.” sistant general counsel for the of three emptied slot machines| Pfc ‘Thorwal ction of @ : en gee Regio? aw a“ * .q.| Office of Rent Stabilization and|oy a Jacksonville (Fla.) road-|o4° a “— $3. Christensen, bbe nie tenant report showed ian jfousing Expediter, Ne BA side said the machines were | charges of prov Ae. vielen t. saved from imminent psychotic ey i f ‘S\taken from two Leonardtown! ang aggravated Resaant = ) 4 | sacs ne aug on he re enc 9 eanishmente at month” |S gables NA LEADING THE SPRING PARADE maining..eight patients were vi Eeinis ‘s| The court decreed the two-| In a third ruling, the Mili-| | still under the drug treatment ; - Tenth District, Y¢4? term on one of the three | tary Appeals Court upheld con-’ when the report was prepared a subject to the |imdictments, specifying suspen-|viction of Pfc. John P. Niolu. t for the current Archives of; Democratic 0" Of a general sentence on/22, of Brooklyn, N. Y., of de- ia 4 ) a : ; Neurology and Psychiatry, an se Primary. the others on the condition liberately arming and aiming @ _. American Medical Association - White, a that Mattingly keep away from a 105-millimeter howitzer in an % a | ‘ , Ber publication. practicing at- slot machines upon his release effort to endanger United Na- * Chlorpromazine, the doctors torney in Fair-|from prison. ‘lions troops in Korea in 1951. noted, “ise@#? unique value in fax County and i nee } 3 a. the symptomatic control of al-; a resident of| y 4 . 66 33 most any kind of severe excite-| White McLean, is the) \ CHARGE IT ment.” ‘first candidate to announce for- The sedative is given by in-)/mally his intention of seeking Your Husband Would Have a Fit... jection into the muscles. It the seat held by Republican produced in some of the pa-|Rep. Joel T. Broyhill. a tients some unpleasant side ef-| A native of Norfolk, White 1s fects, but they were “of minor|a sraddaate of the University of significance,” the doctors said. | Virginia and of the Harvard) Its particular value, they | Law School. He has lived in the | said, is its ability to make|mearby Virginia area since thrashing and raving patients 1944. He is-a member of the calm and emenable to reason. |Fairfax County Democratic) Executive Committee. ® Newest Dressy Styles ® Smart Casuals ® Popular 2-Piece © Versatile Coat Styles Always fashion’s pet, navy leads the spring parade yeor after year. See this charming collection of new styles and fabrics with attractive novelty trims in sizes for all. 9 to 15; 12 to 20; 1642 to 2412. | ody All Three Stores f ” Sheer Nylon Blouses > he dy “CHARGE IT” 299 ar ~ . | ; a See a s «4 e © 4 ero cereal ye Be Miracle nylon blouses exquisitely trimmed with lace or eeoeeeeeoneoooenooeoeose eeee ee © © be ee . woe oe 144, embroidery. Perky little Peter Pan collars, sophis- —— A j | “ at: > fe 2. ticated mandarin necklines, or daring plunging styles. , ry —— ay ? i de! az el: é Vibe “Sh White, pink, bive, lilac In sizes 32 to 38 and 40 te 44, 0 C/} ergs . 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Dunn, director; The Potomac Boxer Club will’ of the Inter-American Schools hold two free handling and Service, will leave Saturday for; grooming classes on three con-/ a five-week tour of Latin Amer- secutive Sundays, beginning ica to visit schools aided by the this Sunday. Service. One show will be held at) The school service, operated) 1 p. m. in the quonset hut near) by the American Council on) the dairy barn at Maryland Uni-' Education under contract with| versity. The second show will| the Department of State, has! be held at 2 p. m. at Fort Myer aided Latin American schools| on the parade grounds near the/j | since 1942. | Post Chapel. Caretta SSCS STS C CTC S TTT errrwrrreweewees ese + 2 Ps ~ r a ws Cy ae = < 4 LO OOOO EEE EEE EEE EE EE EE = = = = = = rl erm tt i i i i i + 2 = -_ = . * Flattering hose i group of topcoats in water-repellent rayon gab- spring ag "08 ry ardine. 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Only creer amer tye emer wen ; ‘ne © THRIFT AY Tthy th By SHIRLINGTON in the Shirlingto a0 Mieedinkas: te Phone NA. 8-9220 Goldenbe $ 5, fi DOWNTOWN [aRaameN SHIRLINGTON Hiiameaiieiad NORTHEAST [iiaabaniiaiote and Benning Rd, . i i ; ( | an o ¥ = a4 ee : - - EP -< 2a + SEE cc II ies A OPS eee eS a po ee Pa ees 2 cee a. ee COED FR Und Be % INS, Vice President and Managing Editor Editorial Page oa, Contributing Edit JOHN 6. HAYES, President WTOP Radio and Television . ’ . PHILIP L. GRAHAM, President and Publisher JOHN W AN. ...Vice President and General Meneger c. YSEN DONALD M. BERNARD. .cccccccceecececs we te AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER _. ee Responsibility On Taxes In supporting President Eisenhower on taxes, House Republicans showed a high degree of re- sponsibility that should redound to the credit of the Administration in future legislative battles. It may be that this vote broke the log jam that has been holding up the Eisenhower program. Certain- ly the victory has given the White House renewed confidence, and it has shown the GOP leadership at the Capitol that victories are possible when there is real party responsibility. The President and Secretary of the Treasury Humparey made a convincing argument that the income tax amendment proposed by the Demo- crats would have seriously upset Administration fiscal planning. Moreover, they persuaded doubt- ing Republicans—and a handful of Democrats— that there are other means to use against the re- cession. Indeed, the revenue measure passed by the House, if finally enacted, will have some effect itself in checking the downturn and in giving busi- ness increased elbow room in which to operate. The final battle, of course, has not yet been fought. A long struggle is ahead in the Senate. The Administration's best ally would be a spring upturn in business. A further decline would alter the whole tax outlook. The immediate job ahead, in any event, is for the Administration to invoke in the Senate the same sort of leadership that pre- vailed in the House. The New Look Isn’t New President Eisenhower himself has given the © definition of the “new look” in military affairs. It is, he said, simply “an attempt by intelligent people to keep abreast of the times.” The President used as an analogy the D-Day invasion of Normandy over which he presided. “What would two atomic bombs have done to the whole thing?” he asked. That puts succinctly the meaning of what is now being done. It is an attempt to fit strategy and requirements to the capabilities of the new weapons that have be- come available. Admiral Radford stressed the other day that the new look is less a radical change than a reappraisal of military methods that “would have been done no matter what Administration was in power,” and the President has lent his indorsement to this thought. What, then, is all the shouting about? Well, for one thing it arises from the earlier attempt by some political spokesmen to paint the new look as a revolutionary stroke devised entirely by the Repub- lican Administration. This was a hangover from the tactics of the campaign. For another thing, the criticism stems from the worries invited by Secre- tary Dulles in his January 12 speech about “mas- sive retaliatory power.” Mr. Dulles has now en- deavored to put to rest the fear that massive retalia- tion is an inflexible formula. Finally, the shouting derives from the attempts of some Democratic poli- ticians, including Governor Stevenson, to becloud the issue and portray the new look as something different from what it really is. Continual reassessment of strategy and require- ments is a cardinal principle of sound military doc- trine. Were it not for such reassessments the cross- bow and the flintlock rifle never would have been displaced. Much the same sort of reappraisal has been going on in Britain—and, incidentally, in NATO. Obviously the availability of more powerful and more versatile weapons ought to bring some savings in manpower, if only because of the changes in strategic and tactical deployment. Obviously, too, fewer soldiers ought to necessitate, say, fewer new jeeps. I it were necessary. to pay the huge cost of the new weapons and continue the old military forces without a change, the financial burden would be- come impossible. The real challenge is to see that the changes in the Army—and, indeed in all the services—are not frustrated by mere tradition. For the new look can work only if there is new follow- through on proper utilization of manpower. Hope For Foreign Service The State Department has selected an able and honorable group of men to advise it on “measures necessary to increase the effectiveness” of the Foreign Service. The committee headed by Presi- dent Henry M. Wriston of Brown University should have an easy time of meeting its May 1 deadline. The members of the committee who do not already know why the career men in the State Department are demoralized will not have much trouble finding out why. Undersecretary Walter Bedell Smith acknowledged recently that training ~ of special aptitudes for the Foreign Service, such as languages, has “reached a sort of all-time low” and that the service in general last year was “a little below rock bottom.” It will not take much work on the part of the committee to-go on from these basic facts to find that the reason for the trouble is that the service has become a political. football. rescued only if the Administration has the courage to resist the political corruptionists. The.appointment of the committee is an indica- tion that Secretary Dulles wants to make the effort. The Secretary did not hesitate to name as a mem- ber of the committee Norman Arfhour, who recently spoke out in public about the demoralization of the Foreign Service. Another indication of this desire on the Secretary's part was his appointment of Thruston B. Morton, a former Republican Cona- gressman who understands the problems of modern diplomacy, gs Acting Undersecretary for admin- istration. Also, Mr. McLeod has been shorn of some of his powers. We should not be surprised, therefore, if in the next few weeks the excessive attention which lately has been showered upon the Army is redirected to the State Department. When the original announcement was made that a committee to study the Foreign Service would be named, this newspaper said that the Administra- tion really did not need anyone to tell it why the Foreign Service is dispirited and demoralized. But in view of the clobbering which the department again may expect, the committee should be useful as an advance guard. At least, it should be able to marshal facts on what has happened and present arguments on why the leading world power must have a trained and expert body of skillful diplo- mats. | Diplomacy, like medicine and law, is a profes- ,% It can: be: SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 1954. —— sion that cannot be. learned overnight, and for the - United States to continue to undermine and even destroy its most accomplished practitioners would be to follow in the footsteps of Nazi Germany. The issue, as five distinguished Americans, Mr. Armour —ee them, recently said in a letter to the New rk Times, is whether we in America are “laying the foundations of a Foreign Service competent to serve a totalitarian government rather than the Government of the United States as we have heretofore known it.” Merit Choite For TV A Three compelling considerations ought to lead President Eisenhower to reappoint Gordon Clapp chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority. The first of these is that many people of the Valley plainly want Mr. Clapp continued in the job. Sixty thousand of them signed a petition to this effect, presented to the President on Tuesday. There was nothing political, in the usual sense of the term, about this ‘petition, and there is reason to believe that it reflects the overwhelming sentiment of Valley residents. The second consideration is that Mr. Clapp has demonstrated a superb grasp of a difficult, techni- cal assignment. He has had 21 years’ experience with the TVA and has served as its chairman since 1946. It is impossible to say this about Harry Car- baugh, the poultry dealer and chairman of the Tennessee GOP Finance Committee, who is re- portedly being considered to replace Mr. Clapp. In terms of qualification for this particular post, there is no comparison between the two men. Finally, the job ought to go to Mr. Clapp because the TVA, /preeminently among the independent agencies df the Federal Government, ought to be kept on a nonpartisan, nonpolitical basis. It is a regional operation divorced from Washington con- trol as it should be divorced from Washington politi- cal pressures. None of the major decisions to be taken by TVA authorities has any proper relation to national politics. Of all the experiments in- herited by the incumbent Administration from the New Deal, the TVA stands as the most conspicuous and least controversial success. Reappointment of Gordon Clapp will help to keep it that way—and will help at the same time to enhance the Adminis- tration's prestige. Independent ICC It is not hard to understand the White House desire to ease Chairman J. Monroe Johnson out of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Mr. Johnson is now 75 years of age—five years beyond the compulsory retirement agé for Government ém- ployes in ordinary circumstances. But a man in this position does not hold his office at the pleasure of the President. As an appointee of President Truman, confirmed by the Senate for a seven-year term after he had passed his seventieth birthday, he probably can sit tight until his term expires if he wants to. The Department of Justice is said to have given an opinion to Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams to the effect that Mr. Johnson can be required to resign. It would be interesting to see how this is reconciled with the forceful and clearcut opinion of the Supreme Court in the Humphrey case. Presi- dent Roosevelt had ousted Mr. Humphrey from the Federal Trade Commission in the early days of the New Deal because their minds ran in different chan- nels. The court said the FTC was an independent body of experts charged with quasi-judicial duties over which the President had no such control... Al- though Mr. Humphrey was dead when the decision was rendered, the Government had to pay his back salary to his heirs. The ICC is the same sort of quasi-judicial body as the FTC. It does not and should not bow to presi- dential control, If this issue is raised, Mr. Johnson is likely to feel it necessary to cling to his post as a means of asserting the independence of the ICC. Considering the President’s frequently ex- pressed regard for constitutional niceties, it is un- _ likely that he will attempt to dismiss the venerable ICC chairman in the face of the Humphrey decision, Gesture At Caracas Latter-day resentment of United States policy at the Caracas Conference seems to have found ex- pression in the virtually unanimous support of the Argentine resolution demanding an immediate end to “colonialism and foreign occupation” in the Americas and the Antarctic. The resolution, of course, was ostensibly directed against Great Brit- ain, France and the Netherlands, but there is not much doubt that the secondary purpose was to embarrass the United States. John Moors Cabot of the American delegation argued against the reso- lution on the very logical ground that the question © was outside the scope of the conference and be- longs properly to the United Nations. Obviously the United States could not approve such a resolution at the price of antagonizing three powers whose continued cooperation is so necessary to the continued efficacy of its policy in Europe. We suspect that most of the Latin-American dele- gates were not only fully aware of this, but also recognized the absurdity of the proposal in itself. However, since nothing can possibly come of the resolution, it afforded a safe and convenient means of expressing their disappointment at the negligible results of the Caracas Conference as respects eco- nomic problems. This disappointment is in some measure justified, in that Secretary Dulles left Caracas after the approval of the American resolu- tion on measures to cope with international com- munism. It remains for American officials to show, in the forthcoming economic talks in Washington, that while this country may not have solutions to all the economic troubles, it is concerned with the problems of its neighbors. mI FIRE OF LIBERTY The preservation of the sacred fire of liberty and the destiny of the republican model of gov- ernment are justly considered as deeply, and perhaps: finally staked, on the experiment entrusted to the American people.—George Washington. 3 ; al bd DS; SRT eee et ett 2s ONT FB AS . . F PAGE. 10... =o ay Tee SD < 4 . Z i — ° tc ~~ al 6. a! eo Me Mus tg Ae ee a, ws Rey - \ eae +> 2 PPP IIS LILLIE IL GEL ALATEST BILGE SB PE LILI TH PPV (NH TEE IT TD ae bas Oe YE SNe Oe Soar oy, epee SPO Vay ee Py eee a Ti itl ii t ie | | ‘i sasisess T 0 1 } ND ISS SO Sp I NAY SRT ED COR RS PLL ON PTE . > . 4 See Ts ocr e - rt 7 « Sect mw. 7 - , “ ae . he ' 2 A; . >> 3oe Ea . 4 : -° we ‘ Tie ; ‘oy it 2 Pe" , * Bt Louis Post-Dispatch Letters To The Editor “Mr. Nixon’s Reply” I noted with interest your editorial on March 15, entitled, “Mr. Nixon's. Reply.” I was surprised to note your charge that the Vice President's ad- dress was “melodramatic.” I am sure that the millions of Americans in the radio and television audience could ob- serve that the address was de- livered in a calm, factual and sober manner—much in con- trast to the political speech before a partisan audience which Mr. Stevenson delivered. There was no demagoguery in the Vice President’s careful appraisal of the McCarthy con- troversy such as that displayed by Mr. Stevenson. On the con- trary, the controversy was stripped of all emotional fac- tors and the basic views were outlined clearly and concisely. Your editorial also took is- sue with Mr. Nixon and his discussion of the Federal em- ployes released from the Fed- eral Government as part of the Eisenhower security program. Again, the Vice President's ap- proach was made without fan- fare or partisanship. He re- lated the number of individuals released, pointed up the differ- ent eategories, admitted some of the individuals may have been hired by the Eisenhower Administration and in so doing did exactly what you had been demanding of the Administra- tion for many weeks. Could it be that The Wash- ington Post is continuing to minimize the danger of inter- nal subversion in this country? Is it possible that The Wash- ington Post is far more inter- ested in stirring up a fight be- tween Senator McCarthy and the Eisenhower Administration than it is in assisting the Pres- ident in his efforts to clean out subversives, homosexuals, drunks and other incompetents and misfits from the Federal s@érvice? Are some af the edi- tors of The Washington Post still nursing the grudge against Mr. Nixon because of his role as a successful congressional investigator who exposed Alger Hiss? PATRICK J. Representative from Californie Editor’s Note: The answer. is no on all questions; and neither do we beat our wives. HILLINGS, Beauty And Sentiment As the Mr. Justice Douglas- Post editors hikers foregather at Cumberland this week to ‘commence their jaunt down the Potomac, to prove or disprove - the merits of a proposed.road . on the historical old canal, it is interesting to note that two of the most telling arguments against the proposal appeared in the Washington papers with- in the last several days. First was the lovely color picture of the canal on the front of The Washington Post editorial section for Sunday, March 14. Far too little ha#& been said about just the simple beauty of the place. Your pic- ture shows that one must go and see. We need beauty of natural scene for the same identical reasons we hire the best archi- tects to design a Capitol dome, and the best artists to paint and decorate its interior; for the identical reasons we plant trees and cultivate flower gar- dens in our yards. And when natural scenes are so beautiful they must or should be preserved, we ought not to spoil them, for the same reasons we would not put a brick foundry on the Capitol plaza or slabs of concrete in our front yards in place of gardens. The other item appearad in a Washington Daily News edi- torial for March 11, when the editorial writer quoted Ambas- sador Joseph C. Grew, testify- ing against the despoilation of : 4 . “ s.., Roosevelt Island by the pro- posed E st. bridge. “Sentiment,” said Mr. Grew, “saved Mount Vernon.” The more one thinks about that one word “sentiment,” the more he begins to realize its justification, alone, for preserv- ing the canal. Not solely be- cause George Washington cen- tered great peace-time dreams on the old canal, but for a multitude of sentiments, rang- ing all the way from the small girl's urge in plucking the first wild flower of spring, to the motivation of a son of Izaak Walton when he walks with the novice to pass along the skills of the master craftsman, as did Walton with his enlightened scholar 300 years ago in Eng- land. JOHN F. CLAGETT. Washington. Walking Parkway Aubrey Graves’ otherwise ex- cellent article in the March 14 issue, by giving considerable space to the recommendations in the Government's 1950 re- port on the C. & O. Canal with- out mentioning recent develop- ments in them, leaves the mis- leading impression that the Park Service favors turning the canal bed into a road all the way from Great Falls to Cumberland. True, the Park Service was joint author of that report, which recommended a road all the way. But the Park Service's views have changed, On February. 5, 1953, Mr. Harry T. Thompson, associate super- intendent of the Park Service, wrote me that “the Park Serv- ice has embraced the idea of developing the middle portion of the canal as a ‘walking’ park- way.” Recent oral assurances from him indicate no change in this regard. It is fairly important in this controversy for the public to understand clearly how the Government agency most close- ly concerned with the canal’s future stands on it. CONSTANT SOUTHWORTH., Washington, Murrow’s Fight Senator McCarthy's con- tinued attacks on _ people, especially those considered of the highest character, can mean only one thing—his political doom. One by one most of these attacks have been absorbed by these distinguished individuals with negligible counter. They are usually a complete denun- ciation of the charge either through the press, radio or television. Some may make a counter charge but, even so, the Senator seems always to get the last word. This situation is something akin to a bad disease. Let's say a disease we have not yet been able to cohtrol—it gradually takes its toll of the people it attacks. Some fight back and some may even regain their footing, but the damage has been done and, in any case, the scars will remain. The only good thing you can say about this disease is that, so far, children have. been «pared from direct contact. And, in studying its past methods and means, we may even expect that. This is a disease which was not cast upon us by Mother Nature or any geat be- ing, but by one mortal man who cockily cracks the whip on his germ-laden mule train. This is MeCarthyism, disease. Many dreaded diseases of the past have been licked and this one, though it’s riding the crest, shows encouraging signs of weakening. It dipped deeply into its bacteria bag of tricks hoping to contaminate a man like Edward R. Murrow, but it found Murrow immune. The trick was undoubtedly the last one in the bag. “To cast suspi- cions on the target as a carrier” is the battle cry, knowing full well that men like Murrow are not vulnerable. The wonder-drug for this one is near, and a man-like Ed Mur- row can lead the way... JIM SILMAN, Silver Spring, Md. ; the To Rebuild The State Department Perhaps the last opportunity to begin the process of rebuild- ing the State Department into a modern establishment for conducting the foreign affairs of the United States is at hand. It would be a great pity if this opportunity should be lost. No responsible observer would deny that the world’s major power, at this time of international crisis, needs in its Department of State— -which is-in facet America’s first . line of defense—the best of:- ficers..it..can...get....At..the..mo-. ment we do not have the best, and the’ present destruc- tive approach toward the State Department by official Wash- ington promises only further ruin—to the peril of every American. The present situation is one in which a harassed Secretary of State, ineffective, if not in- different, to administrative matters, has a loose control over a Department racked by years of accusation and ma- licious attack. An almost fatal millstone was hung about the neck of the Department last year in the form of Scott McLeod. However, against this ad- verse tide have been two favor- able developments. The first has been the removal of the personnel function from the se- curity activities of McLeod. The second, a positive step, has been the appointment by the Secretary of a citizens com- mittee on personnel. The danger is that this initi- ative will not be fully ex- ploited. There is a risk that the committee will not lift its sights to its real opportunities, and instead be content with a minor tinkering with existing procedures and organization. The committee should accept challenge and break ‘ through the net of details and consider a sweeping new pro- gram adapted to the twentieth century. A new service should be created, made up of the best of the present foreign service and the civil service, not only including the specialists in vari- ous aspects of foreign affairs but indeed based on the theory that a modern foreign estab- lishment must rest on the con- cept of specialization, whether it..be.a..South. Asian. regional specialist or one on economic development. The. new . service. should be administered on the theory that career development of the officers is a major ob- jective. Rather than the present willy-nilly practice of self-train- ing, the new service should em- phasize continuing in-service education—as does the military today. This reorganization would carefully preserve the best— and it is considerable—of the personne! existing in the pres- ent two services, and indeed ‘hese elements should be the foundation for the new service. There can be little doubt but that the public and the Con- gress would respond quickly and favorably to a broad and imaginative approach of this character. On the other hand, a mere manipulation of the present outdated, undernour- ished, and abused services will not touch the core of the prob- lem, but would leave the De- partment exposed to further public criticism, and finally would frustrate once again those Congressmen and Sena- tors—and they do exist—who wait and want to assist the Executive in the reform of this sort, so that. there can be a genuine prospect of a renais- sance of the State Department. JONATHAN T. HAROLD. ' Washington. _ nave their day. Still we wonder... +... t ’ ANS SEM HAE ELE LS LILI VSI ILI OEE LIE FE SMB LOGS LT TONES EEE Te ley BAe “Buyers” Market” nS RTS Has Its Pitfalls By Malvina Lindsay The buyers’ market is on the way at last, we are assured. Consumers are now to Haven't we been fooled time and again for more than.a decade. o-™ nes by such a promise? Just wait until the war was over, we were told in the early 1940s, and every- one with anything to sell would be kowtowing to us just as in the good old days. Butchers would again be waggish and accom- modating; waiters would be obsequious; plumbers would come instantly when the bathroom flooded; painters would arrive in the week, even possibly on the day promised. But what happened’? A postwar booml We still stood 10 deep at counters in a jungle contest for.attention. Dowagers were wondering what had gotten into peo- ple (“you can't get anybody to do anything for you any more, or to do it right”) and intimating that somebody, possibly in the White House or the State Department, was back of it all. Still we were told that a buyers’ market was just around the corner. Then came the Korean war. Shirts were still lost in the laundry; motor mechanics were still non- chalant about the “knocks” in our auto mobiles. But now things are really stabilizing, we are assured. The consumer will soon be king. Again we daydream. cw - WE SEE ourselves entering stores to be greeted graciously by glamorous hostesses in black crepe and rhinestones, and es- corted to counters or departments where smiling sales persons produce just the articles requested in the right sizes, colors, styling—and prices. We see ticket sellers courteous, hotel clerks amiable, grocery boys prompt, do mestics dependable, tailors and dressmak- ers delivering at the time promised. But suddenly we have a thought! What about this big sales promotion barrage that is to mark the advent of the buyers’ mar- ket? What about the march of the super- salesmen, the onslaught of the hucksters? We see déurselves at our doors relue- tantly admitting convincing young men with strange shaped boxes, out of which they produce electronic drawer openers, automatic turkey carvers, musical cock- tail glasses, electric banana peelers. We see our homes piling up with this mer- chandise on a basis of “only 17% cents a day,” while the residues of our pay checks shrink. — We see ourselves called from bed, Wath- tub, breakfast table, family crisis, to an- swer telephone’ calls ~ from” persuasive” voices that insist we trade our motor cars in for helicopters, take out insurance against hydrogen bombs, participate in radio quizzes and win trips to New York night clubs, tell what brand of underwear we are wearing and why. ow A WE SEE our mailboxes crammed with circulars, posters, pamplets, letters decep- tively marked “personal” enjoining us te buy this or that, or to save $100 by pre- senting an inclosed coupon as down pay- ment on a space ship. We see arriving, at inopportune moments, telegrams and spe- cial. delivery letters offering us the bar- gains of a lifetime. ‘ _ Then we see and hear the hucksters. On radio and television they come in with ever-increasing loudness on the commer- cials as they plead with us, or command us, to..keep.up.with. the.times and the crowd by opening our pocketbooks. Soon under their unctuous spell, we are rushing out to buy their suggested gifts for relatives and friends in observance of not only the ides of March, but of every other month, to celebrate April Fools’ day, the Sooner Rush into Oklahoma, the in- vention of the adhesive postage stamp,-the conquest of Mount Everest, the birthdays of Pocahontas, Hiawatha, Daniel Boone, Johnny Appleseed, Valentino, virtually everyone in the American legend. Or they implore us desperately to buy Piffle’s stuffed pea hors d'oeuvres, or Jinks’ phosphorescent § attention-getting necktie, or Minches’ combination toupe and Geiger counter, or to sign up for that first luxury cruise to the moon. For full particulars we must call Screech 9-3777. “That's Screech 9-3777. Now folks don't put this off! Call Screech 9-3777_ to- day! Be the first to call Screech 9-3777. Don't forget the number, Screech 9-3777. That's Screech—” We see ourselves in sudden fury throw- ing our newly purchased, but not paid for, set of gold-plated celluloid ash trays at radio or television set We wonder if the new buyers’. market is going to mean service or hucksterism. Maybe we'd-better.be stiffening.our. back---. bones. ~ Che Washington Yost — Registered in U. 8. Patent Office Cimesherald Published every day im the vear by The Washington Post Company The Associated Press is entitied exclusively to use for republication of all news dispatcties credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of repub- lication of all other matter herein are aiso reserved, 1515 L St. N.W.. Washineton 5. D. C. Telephone NAtiona! 8-4200 Offices of National Advertising Representatives Gawrer-Ferguson-Waiker Co — New York . 60 East 42nd St. Room 864 333 North Michigan Avenue . 1630 vardian Building William-Oliver Bide. Russ Building .. 9049 Emerson Ave, 14 Cockapur 6t, CARRIER DELIVERY Daily and Sunday Sunday,Only | Daily Only > week y Ab one week § 18 One week §& 3 emonth 1.7§:One month 65 One month i BY MAIL—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Deily and Sunday Sunday On! $23.40) One ¥ One vear 3. ear $7.80 v x months ae | Six months . ree months 5. Three months 1. 95 65! One n Fr : Miami Beach, Fia.— The Hai Winter Co. London. England— Joshua B. Powers. Lid. month i One month month Rates outside U. BS. A. furnished upon request Eatered at the Postoffice, Weshiagten, D. c. es second-class mail mat f 6 ooh, g ™® LFA RQ ELE BIN PN ER Ve PFE HAY . e Are LSS > > aye Se ¥ ime matin LD Gh Al Nake Woe ES See Se ke EGS EG eek IS TT - _~ . 7 ~ Sasarrn dan neunmT eter ED EE Ue SEIS TUN POST wie "TIMESRERALD™* : , " ' eer ; ‘ . ri ; Pye en * Mowh -¥ LORE sper Eee ss pommbandetinnteiien ) WASHING | | . Setnrdey, "20; Meee, ~~ nda) STM Set de Pet a e. n As P ee ae a ee ee ee : Hayes, president of WTOP,| ree mie exploratory Pis.,|Ine., and vice president of the! was over, lawyers for The Post Co., left for Chicago on Washington Post and the €hicea-:;---,~,—: cities . re ' the Capitol Limited. In “his go Tribune moved into the pic- brief case was a check made out |” ture and began laying the ,, him for $] 500.000. This was’ groundwork for the actual sale. | +},, down payment on” the Colonel McCormick knew Times-Herald that a long-drawn-out trans!- Haves met with the Chicago tionary period would have a Tribune officers the next morn- demoralizing effect on the sta ing—Wednesday. At 10:30 a. m.| and employes of the Times-|, telephone wire was opened Herald. He asked, therefore, | potween Publisher Graham's that” the “‘negotiations™and the’ Gmce and an anteroom of the transfer..of.the..ane..paper...t0. peard..coom.-in--the—Tribune. the other be carried out! Tower ~ “quickty.~ ae We , ! At noon last Sunday, officials Phas ye Ati pins connection with the profit- of The Post and the Chicago) ported at 12:15 p.m. that there sharing plan. Pp Tribune came together in 'theThad been a hitch Tt had been’ , pom World Center Building here! gjccover if : +e aw- specifically in the offices of the sigeate 12 he prey Bigeye. Cardinal Gives $5000 | E sribune § attorneys. ferred to The Post, thus giving) lo Georgetown Center A Representing Mr. Meyer at it ownership of the Times-| Francis Cardinal Spellman this meeting were Philip L.| Herald, was not available; it! has given $5000 to the George- K Graham, president and publish- , i. ’ i mainly in the Greater Wash-|erators, porters, drivers and. ington area. artists. Eighty-five firms seck- Some of the remainder of ing employés included depart- the non-voting stock is held! ment stores, hotels, insurance .by.21 executives of the NeWS-| companies-—and—-a—half—dozen aper company. In addition, a profit-sharing plan provides that 10 percent of the company’s earnings be- ‘fore taxes are contributed yearly to an employe profit- sharing fund. All emploves with five years’ service on The | ’ (Post are eligible. |_..The Post announces that em- T /ployes hired by the newspaper) Wil te given credit’ for” their?” -years..at..the. Times-Herald in. IT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF! ARE YOU CONSCIOUS? »e : was in a Chicago bank. Hayes town University “Medical Cen- er of The Washington Post;' reported to Graham that some-|ter, the Very Rev. Edward B. John W. Sweeterman, Vice| body had gone to the bank to Bunn, S. J., University presi-, president and general mana-| got it. dent, announced. ' | At 12:44 p.m. Hayes cusha| The gift will be used to pay) ‘on the telephone with the big for part of the cost of a new re-' isearch wing at Georgetown “news. | “Pye got it,” he told Gra-| University Hospital. OUR 2-LB. BROILED STUFFED MAINE LOBSTER SERVED EVERY DAY golden ar resiauran connecticut and Free Parking Luncheon, Cocktails, Dinner DE. 2-7440. Vommme\t SPEAKS FOR ITSELF Signal Depot Closing se dhe Abanohate?: 3 Sen. James H. Duff (R-Pa.) said he was informed Friday that the Army will close “the Baltimore Signal Corps Depot and transfer its activities else- where, chiefly to the new Signal | Corps Depot at Tobyhanna, Pa.) The information given Duff was! that about 2,600 employes will be affected, ——— ae + ee ee | —— Monthly Meeting NAACP join... join.. join | SUNDAY—4:30 P.M. JIMMY HICKS _ (Nationally Known Columnist) "The Negro’s Greatest Problem” LINCOLN CONGREGATIONAL TEMPLE WASHINGTON’S BIGGEST FIXER DOCUMENTARY ESPOSE BY MIKE STERN @. it RUE MAGATIINE ’ | ae oe NOW ON SALE > and Miss): director. | ~“' a “What do you mean, I neglect you, dear? ...T'll be home for dinner!” apers, Firms Offer Jobs To Old Times-Herald Help Federal Government agencies. The United States Employ- ment Service said it would set up a special registration for former Times-Herald employes. USES representatives will be in ithe Times-Herald building Mon- day night and all day Tuesday the New Deal, said that he had’ to accept applications. Job offers for advertising and editorial employes came from both local and out-of-town pub- lications. The Post and Times-Herald alerted its national advertising representative to be on the lookout for job opportunities for advertising salesmen, copy- writers and layout artists. Donald M. Bernard, adver- tising director of The Post and Times-Herald, said he had in hand Friday more job offers than displaced Times-Herald advertising employes. Positions offered were on newspapers as far west as California. An announcement to pub- lishers and managing editors throughout the country was sent by Publisher Graham over the teletype network of the Associated Press, the United Press and the International News Service. He asked the newspaper officials in all the 1900 United States daily papers to telegraph collect the em- ployment office at the Times. Herald any employment open- ings. The Post and Times-Herald also scheduled in issues of the newspaper and in trade pub lications advertisements _list- ing the variety of talents and skills of the displaced news- paper employes available to prospective employers. Job offers for editorial em- ployes had been received from two magazines as well as sev- eral newspapers outside Wash- ington. Among offers of help was one from Theodore A. Serrill, general manager of the Pennsylvania Newspaper Pub- lishers’ Association. The organ- ization onducts an employ- ment referral agency for its changes of control, was named Philip L. Graham, publisher of 364 member publications. Passenger Train Derailed; 18 Injured MON TMORENCI, Ind. ‘March 19 “—Seven cars of a New York Central passenger train were derailed late today! when the engine struck a truck. The truck driver was killed and about 18 train passengers in- jured, none seriously. nan oon i el eee tk — ws 7s . Accused of Red Links | | ' ’ ‘7.—Ex-Communists _ testified Friday that the sister-in-law of Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, her husband and former National Youth Administrator Aubrey Williams all had Com- munist ties. at one time. | All three of those named denied they had been Commu- nists or had been under the party’s influence at a stormy hearing before Sen. James O. Eastland (D-Miss.); sitting as a one-man Senate Internal Secu- rity Subcommittee. Witness Paul Crouch said Mrs. Virginia Durr, sister of Justice Black’s late wife, per- suaded Black to address the or- ganizational meeting of the Southern Conference for Hu- man Welfare in 1938. , The Conference later was ab- sorbed by the Southern Confer- ence Educational Fund which is being investigated by the ‘Senate Committee for alleged ‘Communist influence. Crouch did not call Mrs. Durr jan actual party member, but said she had “plotted” with ithe party. Another admitted ex-Red, John Butler; then testified ithat Williams, president of the Educational Fund and publish- er of a farm magazine, attended a “closed Communist meeting” in Nashvillg,..Tenn.,..in 1942. Later, Butler said, Williams was introduced to him as a Communist organizer. Williams, head of the now defunct National Youth Admin- istration in the early days of been head of the Educational Fund for six years and that its main purpose was fighting ra- cial discrimination. He angrily denied that he was or ever had been a Com- munist, but said he did sign the Stockholm peace pledge. He withdrew as a signatory, he said, when he found the move- ment was “dominated by the Reds.” Clifford Durr, Mrs. Durr’s husband, a former member of the Federal Communications Commission, who acted as counsel for Williams, was iden- tified by Crouch as a “former Red” during cross-examina- tion. Durr denied any such con- nection and demanded that either he or Crouch 0be charged with perjury. Truck Victim Settles Case For $31,250 A 63-year-old former laborer) ‘won a $31,250 out-of-court set- i}tlement Friday in a case stem- |ming from a pedestrian-truck 2 |accident last October 3. | William Attaway of 470 M st. sw, was struck by a truck belonging to the Washington Rag and Bag Co. at 4th and M sts. sw. His legs were frac- tured and a toe on his left foot), had to be amputated. Harry and Reuben Bonnett, attorneys for Attaway, re a settlement with insurance company representatives short- ly before the trial of the case was to begin in District Court Although there normally is a long wait for civil cases in the court, Attaway’'s action was moved up because of his finan- cial condition. F In Congress | TODAY Ss | Im recess until | Committees: None House | In recess until Mo i Committees: None / elleff's Shirlington, Silver S The French Room, Second Floor F Street and at ached |} ae 0 « r. rs Being Printed |. NEW..ORLEANS, March 19) SAUK CITY, Wis. March 19 7w—A weekly newspaper's press printed recall petitions today to put into action a Re- publican editor's call for pudiation of the “re- hysterical leadership” of Sen. Joseph Mc-| Carthy (R-Wis.) Leroy Gore, editor of the Sauk City Star, called for a recall vote yesterday to test “the fitness of Joseph McCar- thy to serve his nation, his party and the sovereign state’ of Wisconsin.’ He admitted in his editorial that it might be impossible to collect the more than 400,000 signatures needed for a special election. But Gore, who said the proposal “pained” him to make, said “If we could get 100,000 or so, the mere fact of protesting might do some good.” Gore said he counted on sup- port of most of the weekly edi- tors in the state. He said he had talked to 200 of them re- cently, and found few pro-Mc- Carthy. “Our decision to call upon the voters of Wisconsin to re pudiate the hysterical McCar thy leadership is no whim of the moment,” Gore wrote. “We have pondered, even prayed over it, for long dismal weeks as the genial Irishman we once greatly admired has showered increasing humiliation upon the party and the state to which we have so long been devoted.” Gore said he is a Republican of 30 years stand- ing and was a “friend” of Mc- Carthy. Gore wrote that the proposal would be silly if he didn’t think a recall campaign would be supported by the press of the state. “During the past few weeks we have talked to hundreds of Wisconsin. newsmen of both political persuasions,” he wrote. “They are sick of Sen. McCar thy’s blindness and deafness to his people.” Doctors’ Aide School Graduates Ist Class The first class, composed of 19 students, was graduated Friday night from the Capital School for Doctors’ Assistants 1612 Rhode Island ave. nw The special school, one of the few of its kind in the coun try, trains prospective em ployes to handle office prac tices and routine medical pro cedures for physician employ- ers The President's Appointment List President Eisenhower's schedule for Saturday: § m —Officers r @ of the Supreme Ahepa ; Dr . re a RPiret af ' Ne rk Times *r ' | Advisory Council lef the American-Ko- rean Foundation ——_- 9:30 a. m—barle Chettey ta of office as ssistant to WV Persons, deputy assistant to ti dent lil a ma - e ° B 1 Presi- m o —Officers o : a" 7 e +h Cc na F Pa ene » linner of ‘ ».* the St Gent will press an ¢ Freedom's Flame in p f the Republican Ofration es jae) = Aes ee . PON Be ee : ke N TERR PML Criti (ie baad) yo eye M ‘en we . —MeCarthy MILWAUKEE, Wis, March thy (R-Wis.) said Friday night he does not think that “Presi- dent Eisenhower is a critic of his investigative methods. He made this remark in tak- ing renewed issue with an As sociated Press story which said the Senator had challenged his critics—from Eisenhower down —to name any Communists they have exposed by their methods. Without specifically, has naming McCarthy Mr. _ Eisenhower deplored what he terms “methods that do not conform to the American sense of jus- tice and fair play.” He also has spoken in praise of Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens and Brig. Gen. Ralph Zwicker since they became involved in the controversy between Me- Carthy and Army represent: atives In a speech Wednesday at Chicago, McCarthy suggested that eritics of his methods be asked “where they ever ex- posed a Communist by their methods.” He also said: “I don't give a tinker’s dam how high or how long people in either the Re- publican or Democratic Party either party—are unhappy about our method.” John Chadwick, Press staffer, wrote a story which started McCarthy (R-Wis.) today challenged critics of his ted-hunting methods — from President Eisenhower down to name any Communists they have exposed.” McCarthy then telegraphed the Associated Press, with ®& copy to the White House, say- ing this lead was “completely untrue.” He said he did not mention President Eisenhower “even remotely in this section of the speech.” Chadwick said he believed his lead was fully justified, in view of the context and all the circumstances At a brief, informal news con- ference here Friday, McCarthy: told Chadwick of the wire he had sent to the \ssociated Press. He also confirmed that he had sent a copy to the White House, saving he wanted Mr. Eisenhower to know Chadwi told the Senator of his protest that the Associated carried a story ite gave McCarthy a Associated “Senator i. A copy 1 As the storv, he Senator scanned the told Chadwick that 10.didn‘t want _to—get in—an argument with him, saying: ‘You're too nice a guy.” McCarthy said, however, that he felt bbliged to send the telegram of protest be- cause it was “a mistake of such ’ Importance.” He added he did not see why the Associated Press wanted to argue about it. Chadwick asked McCarthy if he thought Mr. Eisenhower had been a critic of his investi- gative methods. McCarthy re- plied: “You may think Eisen. - hower is a critic of my investi- gating method. I don't think si) PnP OF OS OS OY ) ON ee Oe Ow” OL Lewis & Thos. 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EX ecutive 34343 | ali i. ie ee eS a ae ae Sap Sd SS i FRSA 2 OIF, ON DI ER EA E Bea eo ery) a > ST Dee SY, edd WPVM = Fe me oer oF} ’ > ee A 2 on hal BLM SX SR SSS, ‘19 oh —Sen. Joseph Ro MECH” sens ele WA SALN.Ge TQM ns R De SeTin tte Teds MES HBR: Ade Deve Soturdayy- March 205195 «>. sor mnysorrenann ne opn hon NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS! | * CBS * PHILCO * ADMIRAL % DEEPFREEZE « WESTINGHOUSE * WEBCOR % NORGE + * ZENITH * BENDIX * CROSLEY * RCA VICTOR x CAPEHART % RAYTHEON x possi = STEWART-WARNER & EMERSON * MAGNAVOX % MAGIC CHEF & FRIGIDAIRE x THOR * NEW 1953 WEBCOR 3-Speed Automatic PHONOGRAPH *(STEP-TABLE) ORIG, $168.50 BRAND-NEW 1954 . WESTINGHOUSE a 21” TV Is CONSOLE | 2 a Pe lilies BRAND-NEW 1954 CROSLEY __ Semi-Automatic WASHER ORIG. $199.95 +4 49° BRAND-NEW 1954 NEW NATIONALLY ADVERTISED Originally $299.95 FREEZERS _199 ee: $359.95 ( BRAND-NEW 1954 BENDIX 9.5 cu. ft. Retrigeraior }*239” | BRAND-NEW 1954 e = eau lt ORIG. $319.95 Bl ceases ¢ | NEW 1953 tis bs SS PHILCO V2-H.P. — amen: A 2) AIR CONDITIONER | SAVE 259 95 $60.00 BRAND-NEW 1954 WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC RANGE nch, 4 burner 199 95 ADMIRAL 21 inch - TV TABLE MODEL ‘© », BRAND 4 79°° NEW 1954 Brand New 1954 ZENITH 17"" TV ‘¥ 79° 1954 CBS COLUMBIA 21" TV 199°: BRAND.NEW 1954 CBS COLUMBIA 17-inch T¥ +4 =i NEW / 1953 NORGE Semi-Automatic WASHER ORIG. $229.95 ‘4 29°° FABLE MOOEL TABLE MODEL BRAND-NEW 1954 National Brand $379.95 NEW National Brand 34.H.P. ROOM AIR eee BRAND-NEW 1954 RAYTHEON 24” TV Console - REG. $459.95 ‘249° BRAND-NEW 1954 RCA Victor 17-inch TV 179 TABLE MODEL Brond New 1954 BENDIX CLOCK RADIO $2 4” me BRAND-NEW 1954 = MAGNAVOX CLOCK-RADIO 2595. 19°" . NEW 1954 ADMIRAL 17 inch TV 4 59° 95 Brand-New 1954. ZENITH TABLE MODEL New 1953 Westinghouse Electric DRYER ORIG. $199.95 +4 69° NEW 1954... PHILCO. 17" TV Radio-Phono Combination wai" TV NEW 1954 Westinghouse SHOP OUR COMPLETE FURNITURE CENTERS 1111 H Street N.E. Sth G E Sts. N.W. Alexandria 801 King Street (KI, 8-4110)... 0. ae fa al? baa 21" TV Console 1 as 49° NEW 1954 $139.95 NATIONAL BRAND ~ WRINGER | WASHER Sa By fom NEW 1953 PHILCO | ~~ ll AMsEM -\. ‘v8 RADIO 7&7 -°° =< - NEW 1954 %, ADMIRAL 2 “ry emer’ | CONSOLE | oy 49°: | : 3 — a NEW ] 953 “ORIG. $99.95 = wa CROSLEY 4 Refrigerator Pk mong eneape BRAND-NEW. 1954. THOR Semi-Automatic WASHER ‘4 69°° Downtown 816 F St. N.W. alent ie Wilson Blvd. & (LI, 17-1058) "fon Geer ‘HW! 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REFRIGERATOR REDUCED TO tb A PORTABLE (ue x at “ta *89 NEW 1954 EMERSON 17-inch TV MAGNAVOX 17 inch TV¥ 179° TABLE MODEL , : PRETEEN ORL LTS . ea al ea tn cust BAAR Migs erat Cla Res = PEELS IG RMB ENTE OL ETS BRL V ET RMT IRE Dy TLD par :* ; J.D ATS OTR aye pa Aes te teh te ptt ton ok eae Siete iia " ~~ s as - - - = - . - " waved vt a - * . - er ws “Pa eny ee ie Be) kh ee | Be a ey Oy 3 eee >) ELIE ILS OS Dee | ea ee a SP Bike oe eB iit ee “gee : Fl ONIe « ER ere iT ?, SPEEDO LENE TH AE eNO Ne et ~ Ohbe Wa TEP SENG BLY BIBI Dy RIT he A Sey ee oa Dae i, ae al SA Por , . Re AND a ~~) The SN PR Sey Pages Se a ae ee, Ae | a —— ERE SS * \ PGT we 5 SPORTS Obituaries SATURDAY, MARCH 1954 City Heads Plan New Handling of Aleoholies Camalier Proposes Future Center for Rehabilitation At Muirkirk, Md. By Don Olesen Staf’ Reporter City officials have com-| pleted a new plan to treat! and rehabilitate court-com-) mitted._.alcoholics, — District: Commissioner Renah _ F., Camalier announced Friday. If the full Board of Commis- sioners approves the plan, it will go in effect April 1, he said. | The Board is expected to act on| it Tuesday. | The new system would enable | the District, for the first time, to comply fully with an Act of Congress which allows Muni- | cipal Court judges to commit | chronic alcoholics for custody | and rehabilitation. This is how it would work: When a judge determined a man was a chronic alcoholic : o pone Meat Beef, Oratory Rare at Pre-Canal Hike Banquet him to District General Hospi-| 0, Works Bill . eee Changes jae Are Barred In House Representatives Required to Pass Or Reject Big Package Measure 7 f By Richard L. Lyons E Staff’ Reporter The House Rules Committe¢ | ‘Friday granted a closed rule i for the District public works hang ‘bill which means it cannot be fs ‘% | ‘amended when it comes up for . ee ae 4 \a. House vote Monday. ee a Sg | The House District Commit ; ‘tee asked for the rule for fear the whole program might be lost if the bill was open to amendment by every member of the Howse. The closed rule, if the House .. jadopts it, means the House greece must take the revenue bill as ROBERT ESTABROOK ‘it is or kilf it: or adopt the rare « «+ equipped for hike (action of sending it back to com- mittee. A closed rule is almost jautomatically granted for a tax bill, There would be no chance junder the rule to put back is Ys | By Jim McNamara—The Washington Post and Times-Herald THIS IS PART OF THE PARTY WHICH WILL HIKE THE C & O CANAL ROUTE. (OTHER PHOTO ON PAGE I.) tal for 10 days and diagnosis.) CUMBERLAND, Md., March'in the Cardinal Sports Cluh for Depending on the hospital's; 19—Fortified by a steak dinner those who prefer it to sleeping verdict, the alcoholic could be referred to the District Alcoh- olic Clinic for out-patient care or to newly arranged facilities at the city’s Occoquan Work- house for as long as 180 days. There, Donald Clemmer, Director of the Department of Corrections, has agreed to set aside special facilities for 25 alcoholics. The inmates, who would not be regarded as prisoners, would have their own special program of vocational training, guidance at the Cumberland Club, more than 40 hikers led by Supreme Court Justice Wil- liam O. Douglas, set alarm clocks tonight for early Satur- day. They are determined to start the 189 mile walk down the old C. and QO. canal toward Wash- ington before dawn, rain or shine. All indications pointed to continuation of the rain which fell in this area through- out Friday afternoon. The first day's goal of the Country under the stars A six-ton truck is loaded with most of the party's duffle and a motorized commissary, carry- ing bacon, eggs and other edi- bles will provide meals for those who do not want to cook their own. Both the oratory steak were rare at banquet. ) Sen. J. Glenn Beall (R-Md.),' toastmaster, predicted that by the time the hikers reached Washington they would be and beef tonight's William C. Walsh, former at- torney general of Maryland, told Douglas the people of Cumberland want a_ water- level route to Hancock so they can get down to Washington and Baltimore “without trav- eling over five mountains on U. S. Route 40 where the driv- ing is hazardous anytime and in winter almost impossible.” William A. Gunter, former state senator, said the question is “whether this long strip of land should be converted into a runway for goldplated Cad- such as Douglas and his fellow nature lovers. Gunter suggested a solution similar to that reached in 1832 when the CC. and O. Canal Co enjoined the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad from laying down its tracks west of Point of Rocks. A compromise agree- ment after two years of wran- gling provided for the erection “of a close fence of boards of sufficient elevation to prevent locomotive engines from alarm- ing horses or mules hauling the canal boats.” way. He suggested that “half the widened tow path be used exclusively by Douglas ‘and his pedestrians for a foot path, and that Congress also appro- priate money to erect from Cumberland to Washington a close fence of boards of such elevation to prevent any dis tractions of the pedestrians and that electric escalators be erected one mile apart to per- mit such pedestrians to ascend to the top of the high board fence and watch Beall and the rest of the world go by.” ithe bill the 40-billion-dollar gen- eral fund loan or to knock out the taxes on groceries and meals added by committee. By the group would walk is “one of the prettiest, most unique and picturesque in the world.” the same token, the rule would He said he hoped that its po-|would protect’ the increased tentialities for multiple recre- Federal payment and other ational development would not tayes the District Commission: be ruined by a road down the ors requested to finance their canal. fei! ' 305-million-dollar, 10-year build- Douglas joined Circuit Judge ing program. Henderson and Robert Esta- brook, editor of the editorial page of the Washington Post and Times-Herald, in one verse of a song the canal builders use to sing “Oh the old Potomac is rising Rep. Joseph P. O'Hara (- Minn.), chairman of the House District Subcommittee that held hearings on the bill, told the Rules Committee: “We want the ‘closed rule to get away from endless arguments and amend- ments.” | Fast action on the bill is need- ed so part of the program can »| De added to the city’s budget now before the Appropriations \Committee, O'Hara said. Rep. Howard W. Smith (- Va.), a member of both District ‘and Rules Committees, added: | “This bill was the best we could do. Our conclusion was that we should spread the tax \increase over everybody all jalong the line and make it as ‘little as we could to raise the money for what has got to be ‘done unless Washington is te become a third-rate city.” | “We think if we start fooling | around with this on the floor we'll lose the whole program,” said Smith. “We want to submit it to the House and say, ‘take itor leave it,’” There is ample room, Gunter and psychiatric help. Members of the Alcoholic Clinic staff would. visit the special units three times a week. The new procedure and fa-| cilities were agreed to in a con-| ference between court, correc- | tion, and health officials. 1, ‘ Until now,s judges have been LAW able to refer alcoholics at their: own request to the clinic for| out-patient care. But they have had no place to send them for long-term rehabilitation. I ke C Drunks did wind up at Occo-| 7} arper ase quan, but only on criminal charges. | At the same time, Camalier proposed that a future rehabil-| itation center for both alco-| holics and narcotic addicts be} Charges Also Asked set. up on 143 acres the city owns at Muirkirk, Md | Defense attorneys for sus- Details and cost of the pro)-| nended Police Lieut. H. H. Car- Douglas described his party said, for the projects of both|“as a little bigger than the Douglas, who wants a quiet Lewis and Clark expedition, and place to commune with nature, considerably better fed.” He and Beall, who favors the park-|said the area through which) Dougias-Washington Post and Times-Herald caravan will be Oldtown, Md., 22 miles away There lodging will be available And the whesky’s running short, We hardly think we'll get a drink Until we get to Williamsport. 3 Goldenberg Safecrackers Get Terms Judge Hands Out Sentences Totaling singing Hozannahs to the in- ventor of the wheel and would favor a scenic parkway from Cumberland to Washington. illacs in a Machine Age, or be reserved as a foot path for the pleasure of nature-loving pedes- itrians of the Paleolithic Age,”. + yers Seek Venue Change 4 Parents Found Dead; Pe Man Held Daughter Charged =_ Dope Charge A 35-yearold woman was)/right in a chair in a first-floor charged with the fatal stabbing TOO™. aT ; of ee father Friday erry Hartnett said Henderson’ muspect Described As First. Lieutenant gave police a bloodstained’ shortly after his body and that) butcher knife he found hidden. . Of ‘Catfish’ Turner A man described by police ‘of his wife were found in their|in his wife’s dress when he Northeast Washington home. |came upon her crying hysteri- as a lieutenant of Randolph (Catfish) Turner, convicted The dead were identified as °2l/y in the living room. drug law violator, Friday Was! ote sentenced to long prison. terms. | Dr. Murphy reported that ect haven't been determined, he per and Det. Seret. James Wingfield, 66, and his!yy.. penderson recently had orderéd held for grand jury’! Winni ; ah . Joseph. Gowasky, 54, of Brook-. action on narcotics possession’ inning the ‘women's pair tl-\1yn, received a total of seven to sii William said. but inexpensive cottage- wife, Lora, 83, of 1012 8th\been undergoing psychiatric |tle were Mrs. Herman Moe and 21 years imprisonment—five charges. } Opening Session Local Pairs | Take Bridge Event Titles | _ Championship honors in the} . ome ‘two opening events, men’s and| 16 to 48 Years to Trio otek racssaan — Friday went to} The three safecrackers who local players in the three-day) broke into the Goldenberg De- City of Washington Bridge partment Store last October 14 Championships at the Willard) and took $7304 Friday were ' ; ; ’ j Access to Papers Involving Conspiracy | ; ; | 2 BIG COMIC SECTIONS—21 pages in all; Readers now can follow all the former Times-Herald comics—Blondie, Li'l Abner, Dick Tracy, Orphan Annie and all the rest of them, plus, of course, the regular Post standbys—Dennis the Menace, Peanuts, Steve Canyon, Joe Palooka and the others. bribes. ’ $50 bond, and John Lawyer, 15. a junior at Woodrow Wil- son High School. | Judges included Sen. Olin! D. Johnston -(D-N. C.); Carl) Binker, District Governor of! Toastmasters International:' Mike Hunnicutt, radio station) WNBW; Ben H. Brown, Dep- — : “J type housing is contemplated. ;L. Taylor Friday asked Dis- sama lshoateineelat-Sieandannnte.tten House Group City officials also are consid-|trict Court for permission to," .. pital . ering shifting the District’s|see certain Government docu- Wingfield had been stabbed ' Cli dD Cc 5 nursery in Anacostia, near the | ments in the bribery-dope con- “four or five times” in the: ’ ps ad ® $s South Capitol st. bridge out tO! sniracy case involving the two upper chest, Deputy Coroner} Correction Sales Wahaih hdien «tie Ernest | Mrs: Roy H. Hackett with a to 15 for housebreaking, plus Muirkirk where center Inmates) men. Christopher J. Murphy re-| The Federati , a » tant amy {score of 168%, 3 points ahead *W° to six years for larceny. Fk | R who requested it could work, Myron G. Ehrlich and Joseph ported. Marks on Mrs Wing- C e omen of Fairfax Jerome Jackson, 37, of 201 57th of the runners-up Margaret , | Abraham (Jeff) Levine, 37, a ILIiL¢ equest probably for pay. : \Sitnick moved for permission) fjeld’s throat ind at d sh had ounty Citizens Associations | st. ne. They said he was ar-|_ rep Be - “\former 7th st. clothing sales-| Health Officer Dr. Daniel L.\to inspect statements by pos- ' ne Murphy eee yea. &. proposed rested there Thursday on q|Fisher and Kathleen McNutt.iman, received three to nine) The House A iati Seckinger and. Camalier plani ij. Gove ‘witnenses| een «(Strangled, Dr. Murphy|county tax hike be held to 10/"* es |~ Baltimore, -represented by\years for housebreaking and! , Se on Monday to visit the Muir- _ Reg pero ‘ ‘ae te said. ‘cents. A 15-cent boost has been Warrant for parole violation. | Mrs. Stanley Newman and Mrs./two to six years for theft, for Committe Friday clipped kirk property. ithe - ercelbee per ego relation The daughter, Mrs. Marion| recommended in the tentative; Narcotics squad detectives|Abraham Harrison, took third) 4 total of five to 15 years $112,851 off the District of A bill now is pending in Con-\¢, the charges against Carper Henderson, was charged with) 195455 budget. said they found an ounce of|position with 162'2. Fourth) Nicholas M. Napoli, 38, of Columbia’s $6.140.600 reauest gress which would allow the) ang Taylor. ; -homicide only in connection} The 10-cent boost, the Fed-|heroin valued at $1500 and 150)went to Mrs. J. A. Weber and'prookiyn, was sentenced to ; iniad , oe q Commissioners, if they wished,| Jn a series of motions filed| ith the death of her father,eration agreed Thursday, is heroin capsules, worth $225, in Marianne Bochand, and fifth serve four to 12 years—threé or funds to finish out the fis- to sell the property. The Sen-| with the court. the lawyers police reported. Justified to cover debt service his apartment. 3 to Mrs. Samuel E. Neely and to nine for housebreaking and C4! year. ate District Committee- is'\,} arta sane Bos Pe pe mana euage “oe iwas named co-defendant, and! elice--were not -called, how- eases i a ) ee Hyattsville Police Court, to Te-|in the third Carper was named ever, until the child's father jeponsoree firtaas Libhaee Gan Fame apes ne! ng Gow ashy, $500_of the $24,500 asked for its quest the Prince Georges’ Bar by himself. its local group, the W shington “stay out of jail” when he fin bar rt wage ecucation program. Association to study the matter) L Pp, ashington stay oes nh he Other cuts were $20,000 from | Bridge League. ishes this le‘~st prison term. the $140,000 sought for retire- sai ——__—___-— ment and relief funds: $8,351 | from the $708,351 asked by the Bill B . fire department for salaries ~ and $9,000 from the $1,209,000 Senate Gets Bill Boosting 3.227 6.0". per diem workers. FOUR SUNDAY SUPPLEMENTS—parADE Maga- . 7 ° ‘ The supplemental bill also zine, American Weekly, featuring this Sunday “Confessions | Oa | or istrict contained $34,541 for payment of Emmett Kelly” and the brand new, complete entertain- | of 11 parcels of land con- ment guide—The Show and TV-Radio Week ... all in the | | demned earlier by the Govern- Sunday Washington Post and Times-Herald. | A Federal-aid-for-highways|compared to $5,964,303 under ment on the Burke, Va., airport ‘bill that would increase grants|present law and $8,663,000 in site. Commerce Department of- PLUS SEVEN OTHER SECTIONS—wmain News— /to the District by 65 peroemt ~ House bill. 3 allied hay we chad we ys was , ‘lied for the two-year riod start- ‘irginia .wou get 7.386.-'no indication tha le site was re product of greatly expanded —" gathering facilities ing July 1, 1955, A a reported | 000 Ppa from the Senate bill being revived as the location more news services than any other newspaper in Wash- ; : eas 93 6 led ddit 1 Wash ington—Women’s Section. Local News, The Post's world fa- ‘to the Senate by its Public compared to $10,823, 4 now 0 | an additiona ashington oa r Pasig “tate Tin n is C Friday. and $15,374,000 from the House airport. mous Editorial Features Section, Sports, with Shirley Povich |“ — Fg sot ae $1.010.-| bill we Piped pose are faliete then a Ay A ea 000,000 in matched grants for, The District has been using $3644 H | Newspaper. . ‘the Nation-as a whole for each/its Federal grants to pay half $36: untec With Messenger lof the two years. Though far the cost of the East Capitol ‘below the 2.2 billions .a year Street bridge and connections - — ‘urged by Sen. Homer Fergu- : , y , ‘ . > > Look What You Now Get in the Big > | returned from work at 7 p.m. Sunday Post and Times-Herald The two former ranking of-| Henderson called the authori- e and..come .up..with recommen 'ticers were accused of conspir-.ties after finding Wingfield’s! dations. — . ing with local dope peddlers body in.a hall doorway of an) Nine justices discussed the and accepting protection upstairs bedroom and _ his problem in the judge's Mt. mother-in-law’s body sitting up- tainier law office at his request. | Controversy over the Prince|~~ Georges system of discretion- ary collateral was given impetus Y ot Q Be. : | ( n recently when 11 motorists) { t t were arrested on New Hamp-| e2ion ra Ol Ca 0 es shire ave. at the same time by the same officers, all for the same offense — driving on a Is Won bv Dawn Trotter shoulder of the road. | ' a However, collateral posted by) the motorists with various JP’s| Dawn Trotter, 17-year-old varied from $6.70 to $11.70. The Senior at Immaculata Semi- justices last night pointed out nary Friday night won the Dis- the law allowed them to use trict American Legion oratori- their discretion in setting thecal contest with a prepared collateral amount essay on “The Constitution, “T don’t see what all the fuss| Worth Having, Worth Defend- is about,” said Justice Virginia ing.” Crist. “Oftentimes there are| She is the daughter of Mrs. ©. Crist. “Oftentimes there are Emily Trotter, 3245 South Sixth extenuating circumstances to be st.. Arlington. She was considered when setting col- awarded a $100 defense bond lateral.” ‘and a gold medal along with The justices noted some traf-|the right to represent the Dis- fic violators shopped around by}trict in regional finals at Har- phone to see which justice risburg, Pa. March 29. would be most lenient in setting | collateral. State Sen. J. Raymond|a junior at Dunbar High ‘more; Dr. Chester L. Guthrie, Other winners in order and) ‘their awards: Inez Smith, 16, Fletcher sat in on the session|School, $75 bond and a silver! and declared the present JPjmedal; Alida Keefe, 16, a sen- system “is archaic.” ior at Academy of Notre Dame, f *. uty Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Rela- tions; Edwin D. Becker, De- partment of Commerce, Harold Chinn, professor of speech at Morgan State College, Balti- General Services Administra- tion and Rev. Neal N. Hern- don, Jr. of Wheaton, Md. — Dr. William B. Adams, de- The Washington Post AND Cimes BD erald ALL FOR ONLY 15 CENTS, OR 65c, MONTHLY, artment commander of the Teale, presented the awards. t DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR EVERY SUNDAY! me f - a son, it is still the biggest high- ‘way aid bill ever reported to the Senate. For the District it would mean $5,311,000 each year com- pared to $3,281,209 it will re- ceive this year under present law. The House has passed a highway bill authorizing %$,- 708,000 a year for the District in 1956-57. For Maryland the Senate bill would mean $9,724.000 a year with the Washington-Baltimore pkwy. Metropolitan police last The Senate bill would in- Might sent a lookout for a mar- crease aid in all categories. The ket messenger who failed to re- greatest percentage increase turn with $3644 97 he got from would be for the interstate svs- 4 bank for his employer tem, a 40,000-mile cross-coun- Police said Edward Robin, try network for which Congress 4701 Bladgen terrace nw., owner puts up 60 percent of the cost. of Robin’s Market at 2269 Sher- The . Senate Committee ear- Man ave. nw., reported he sent marked. 150 millions a year to the messenger, James W. How- ‘improve the interstate system, ard, 27, 1328 New Jersey ave. ‘compared to 25 millions in the nw., to the bank at 5:15 p.m. to present law nick tin the merow ’ ‘ it ted ee bY — ee ee PR eee e* SAARC MS a RRNA IN ERR RAR ARO AE NS TON PHO SE: thd TEM ESO ER AED Serres Merely 20,054. ABLE, EXPERIENCED, TALENTED MEN AND WOMEN AVAILABLE Many. former employes of the Washington Times-Herald are being absorbed into the new Washington Post and Times- Herald operation or have al- ready received offers of em- ployment elsewhere. Others are still available for job offers. The group includes a wide variety of skills—clerical and sales as well as professional and executive: writers, photog- raphers, commercial artists, typists, secretaries, account- ants, messengers, salesmen, editors, in fact, almost every type of ability which any em- ployer might require. The Washington Post Com- pany is offering termination payments to these men and women and is giving them first consideration for any addi- tional expansion of the person- nel of the newspaper. An employment assistance office has been set up to expedite the placement of people who cannot be absorbed into The Washington Post and Times- Herald. Newspapers all over the country as well as many local businesses have already wired and called to offer jobs, and The Post and Times-Her- ald thanks them for their promptness. Other potential employers are urged to wire, write or phone: Robert Thurston, Times-Herald Building, 1317 H St. N.W., Washington, D. C. Phone: REpublic 7-1234 Published by The Washington Post Company-Similar advertisements are being published in newspaper trade publications a? ’ i Ravenburg, 'M. Robbins, Charles P. Rivebhioes 77, Maurice Robbins, 52. infor who appraised many of Wash. mation executive in the Health, ‘ington’s great ‘mansions and Eduéathin am? Welfare-Depart- placed a value on everything ment, died Friday. He suffered from art objects and rare first , cocwwwws & heart attack editions to expensive lace table- + Wednesday clothes and a = es Mr. Robbins private rail ©} > lived at 8401 road car, died see Park Crest Thursday at a drive, Silver his home, 4008 & ee Spring. He was 10th st. ne, @ wee ield liaison offi- after a brief . cer in the Sec- iliness. retary’s Office Mr. Raven- of Publications burg, veteran and Reports. of 55 years He served in ; with the Secu-) Mr. Robbins re Federal Se- rity Storage curity Agency, the Social Se- Mr. Ravenburg Co., retired in curity Board, and the National 1938 as secretary of the firm.| Recovery Administration after But even after his retirement,'11 years in the American Fed- he kept working with Security eration of Labor headquarters. until his death. He helped form the Office Em- Among his appraising jobs ployves International Union were the Willard Hotel, the (AFL) and belonged to Local Madeira School for Girls, and No. 2 here the Dupont Circle mansion of Survivors are his wife, Edith. Eleanor Patterson along with and four sons, David, 19, and her private railroad car. Larry, 15, at the home, Walter A Washington native, Mr. of 2883 S. Abingdon, Arlington, Ravenburg joined Security and Paul, graduate student at while at old Central High'Columbia University, New School. York Surviving are his wife, Belva. Services will be at Goldberg's Lord Ravenburg:; one son, funeral home, 4217 9th st. nw. Lieut. Col. Ralph R. Raven- at 3 p. m. Sunday. Burial will burg, of Avondale; Md.; one! follow in National Memorial daughter, Mrs. Robert E. Doyle, Park. of 7305 Wildwood drive, Ta- echt | William R. Hawkins William Ronald Hawkins, an Ernest H., Elliot 8-year-old Warrenton (Va) boy, Funeral services for Ernest died Thursday of leukemia H. Elliot, 87, former Treasury in Memorial Hospital, New Department architect, will be York City. held at Hines funeral home, The child, son of Mr. and 2901 14th st. nw., at 3 p.m. Sat- Mrs. William B. Hawkins, had urday. Burial will be private. been ill with the incurable | Mr. Elliott died Wednesday blood disease for the past two lat Doctors Hospital after a long years ‘iliness. He lived at 3757 Mce- In addition to his parents, i\Kinley st. nw. he is survived by a brother | Surviving are one daughter, Richard, his ‘maternal grand- Miss Janet Elliot, of the Mc- mother, Della Gauthier, and ‘Kinley st. address, a teacher his paternal grandparents, Mr lat Macfariand Junior High and Mrs. George R. Hawkins School; a son, William S., of Graveside services will be held ‘San Diego, Calif., and two at 2 p. m. Sunday in Warren- |grandchildren. ton Cemetery. THE WISHING WEL! co | . Fiala © of Z onl i co} F -a| > 0 Calta a WaiCQa2-a m4 bo) Cl ool Ht on DO co] > or] © 89 a ee Fao : al > al ool > ol Oni Malta ey 14 oo! Chia] Bon} sw] S oo tx oof 02 on! PY bo] Fo oof PS co} O pol < or Beal O orl ae me) Z bol on on oe o »~ Z ma 4 Go) 4 bo) & 00] "U tet nol Fl on] e+ oo] Fl em > Z val | For key numbers count letters in first names. Substract 4 if number is 6 or mere. Add 3 if less than 6 Check key numbers. Checked letters form messages. Daily Crossword Puzzle ACROSS rERDAY'S ANSWER 46 PERMANENT RESIDENTS 47 JOEL CHAN DLER HARRIS NCLE mic ieoai-are z\°o)}So= ci" wale iaion = =) yo te es DAD Ss TO a) nd Ce Ce bee bes “lax ed bow clei |i = DOWN . a) Weill ; UGE LFGOENI Any DOWN Tee apaico® °° tan etna ' , Pd ay 4 NE W + =f > as AB EX DF NSIVE {7 PREDATORY BIRDS 39. EPOCH . 40 SCREEN 42 FORMER FIRST LAD =x c — ~ * Cr OS > meq O99 - _ 1e& OVA wec ' 9) + ad ‘yy . . Charieston Charlotte Chattanooga 1cA HAD w | ~ tami te aukee he a P! is t2 Mont zomers — ~- Gus Panknen, ‘Pop’ Poston Panera) services Panknen. custodi Appraiser, U. 8S. Welfare Custodian at |To Be Buried Dies Here. _ Aide, Is Dead Shrine, Dies On Saturday for Gus R.A tequiem mass for Edward an of the Clarence “Pop” Poston, 73, Thomas Jefferson Memorial Peoples Drug “Store employe, since its dedication 11 years Will be held at St. John’s Cath- ago, will be held in the Ft Myer. chapel Monday at 1 p.m. Burial in Arlington Na tional ceme- tery will fol- low Mr. Panknen M ton. He was 67. olic Church, Forest Glen, Md.., at 9 a. m. Saturday. Burial will be in Glenwood Cemetery Mr. Poston died of cancer Tuesday at Emergency Hos pital. He lived at 2002 Dayton st., Silver Spring, Md. For 23 years, he worked at the cigar counter of the store at 4917 Georgia ave., where he became known to everyone as “Pop.” | Surviving -are a daughter, r.Panknen | Mrs. Bernard E. McMahon, and one son, James M., both of the A native of Schlochow, Ger- Dayton ét. address; a sister, many, Mr. Panknen had lived Mrs. Albert Fisher, of 3727 in this cotntry since he was, Warren st. nw., and four grand- six years old. He was an Army children. veteran of three ice with the First —_ ES years’ serv: Division in in ‘Memoriam World War I and had been em- &ING ALICE ANN. In \ emery of my “are . al G ployed .by National Capital yes ago ay March 18, 1953 —— ANN ciead one eres DOL & G r Alice Ann Parks since Dec. 6, 1935, when fhere's not 9 dey dear Alice he came to work Died ANDERSON. HE BBE RT — rie] Bu on Weanes Gn ays 1954, “HERBERT JOHN. ANDERSC oN.) Sincer , hind -in of Het n- , be wo Vv ed son p Rock Creek Cemetery ACOSTA, FRANCIS JO | day, March is 954 ave ke “alls shure? } ng aa ACOs N , } . BOKOWSAIL, FRANK M edn esday. are | CHAMBERLIN. HARLI On Thursday March Mount Ali Hospital MOND CHAMBERI s' S Arlington ' > Ste W CUNNINGHAM JESSE Friday. Ma! 19, 195 DEAN WILLIAM March 18. 1954 DICKERSON FRNESY Thursday, M . Hos} DICKERSO ays cD ELLIOTT ERNEST Mat FAIRFAX, RON ar ?. RK | Sunday of tights ve March Crabb a LEE FISHE? Jar s Wal FISHER, ‘MINNIE — 18 at he t) GRIMES IAMES Va + »4 , hh ‘ GRIMAKE Crime A ‘HERBERT; EDNA W March 4O4 ELDNA , « pag betwen WILLIAM Min 2, A ner re newa AT as a guard Your Ov INE nether Theima M King : THAYER, LILLIE B. Im lovin ur 2 her anamo tne: LiiLie 8B way tnree 1951 nad in all her Ways, just to the end of her heart -_ _ rd, beautiful memory lett efiine LOVING DAUGHTERS. GRAND. ILD! te N AND GREAT~ .. 26tn ' PEARL LANE F Lane aia war I H R Nal oo, JAMES A., Marc] 2 a.23 & Interment F ‘ Re : i) e } 1 on Monday * Cedar Wii Cemetery ¥ pans Hi LEY HAM ee eg > HOWARD a SR. On Fri- 19. 1954 t his residence. 40 HO W ARI ) MecNEAL. OLIVE n Interment Newport ¥& REBECCA LEE (infant) ay March 18 £195 : Or , r Cemetery MFLLA rr ARE a eer Thursday, March J le. Pa } , 6 ister val A a v4 es + tae de ay tingly Puneral” .. , O'CONNOR, ARTHUR V Sudden'y } March 7 1954 t Ceme- SNEAD OLIFF, RAYMOND On Mardy 18 ‘ ° > < Ha nw RAY-« A | 1} , i. Re by e- ushand at [ 7 7 PANKNEN,. GUS RICHARD. Suddenly on "y " " VMVarc!i if 194 , €3ttS ANDOLP #4 I 01 PH PAIR YG Ax Ant F services rT Interment | Cemetery RAVENRI —— CHARLES < +, rddeniy, ' 18 Ar . 7 RAVENRUR( ROBINS, MAURICE : 1 —4 [OF SIMS, CLARENCE 20i8 1 2b wf ' ; j iji<@a@. mm Puneral services le. Ya. Danville, TURNER. Al ox E. On Priday March oe 6: eet tie poms, Loge Go Anpoencement ef Services by Chambers McFiwee, Rebert L. W. . Chambers Ce. Middleton Denna Chambers Ce. Jacob B ’ Vr Ri Rambery Cemetery Lots (EPAR WIL! CEMETERY: ~11 choles 6% we . we . etion: cen.~ A, cil 8 or in parts. Chambers Ce, Funeral! Design > BROS. CO., FLORISTS 3 NW NA $378 ~ ee % “Ae orl LF FER, Ne. GALT. ot 7s a c i fx ressive fiorai tr tu te "Bteies s TLL [AM "GALT KEYWOR rH f 40:2 \Gpen daily Bu ~ Pheen : {¢ : 630 tc 8 Vv toFy .. -, A. 8-0106 I. WILLIAM LEES SONS CO. CREMATORIUM &. @ “a invited Interment ov ington. Natione:--Ceme- RY NERAL DIRECTORS ‘err 4*>* ent Vo eK NCTA See ate | ‘453 WUE RE ORY R LER ROE GT? DS ara eB re AMY ont oy SP ON Fir ts yey orgs sper + ey < Rig Mi 4 h eo I P ie erivon ty . ; , ON ns arrtesh sagen tegration ener vege aatiianendlien syecmmabésy REAR ENR PSTN LE ERED OILS * : SORT YI ART IIA PTE I RR ii tila eg? COT eA ata ® pre sue ee LP RM Sok Se Sate ane. ee aT THE “WASHIN GTON POST and “TIMES-HERALD ‘hai March 20, 1954 : e E9 One On the Aisle ee. Me ee | The American University Coneert Directer Show Times For Saturday Pairieg Hayes, Managing Mi * races ‘“ : | IN CONSTITUTION HALL \ im , STAGE Sereous — “Tae Man etween.” / : Begase gos egy ere aye — Palace Hasa Wow i _eiese stage ne tome azole FS ER ET The, || NEXT MON——0:20 PM. Y Shubert— Belt et de Paris." at 2:30 3 a st ee eet ine eel te and 8.30 Pp. m | * a 4.30....8-2 Sitrcensin weet DE LOS ANGE! LES ¢ . emmwrnsty cy MS a re OV My ae aa come cocees tr ans-Lur— “The wrid One: a te. , 3 ) | us . “ 6 ° : 1 nn ee : Ambassader—"The FF a Pimper- 13 s6 24)? 30. TIT. 8 04. “32-007 7°) star or te Satrepetas Overs. 1g copie nig “ad Ti adia’ iam aor hak Sree vas” nh Pull Recital ae men ene Re, ‘Water’ * 11.90 Warner — Pe Ie Cinerama,.” at 2:30. Open 10:45 AM. Program sent Works of Glock 1:05, 3:15, 8:2 35, 9:40. 11:50 p. m. 7.36. 103 TRANS-LUX that HNW. Ravel Schubert, Rossini and Nin _— ; paid iiitos padignenedaieaal gp et 38. The Long, Lone Teale. DRIVE. INS ; - Tickets: 81.20, $1.80, $2.40, 63.08 By Richard es Coe . ARC Drive-In—"49th_ Man” 8:40, or Sint a : . 11 18 > m. “Half Breed.” 6 ‘s 10:00 , Hoyes Concert Bureau. 1108 G N.W, =e Pe we Fesrer, 1:00,- 3:15. 5» Z ; NA. 8-715] (Campbell's) “oN be Am gas hon iaitier Sines ar Airvert, et ey ar wer | J Steinway Piano , on jun,” 7 m or Song.’ | IGHT PEOPLE” is a beaut. Don't miss it. wL09, 3:18. 8.27. 7:36. 945, 11-45 8:50 p - ) ) : —— , , i one 6 Beltsville cn In ~-— “The Clown "| LAST TWO DAYS pee wa HIT!” —Loe The melodrama at ‘the Palace is notable on several counts: AM” 1:25, 3:05, 4:50, 6:35 6:45. 10:18 ~ Annie’ Oakley,” 8:4 , Ae , ' i | hrough March 28 It shows a dynamic American attitude towards Soviet com “Murder on Monday.” "Branch, Drive. In—“At War With the , ACADEMY. AWARD WINNER Matin + lay and S | 6:05. 8:00. 9:55 m. Ar $50 bp om Passage ees un. SMNIEM, NOt seer. 7 , etropelitan ‘The wpting Pimper- West elle oo >». m ; , ) Tennessee Williams’ It’s the best picture yet in CinemaScope—it would be good, Pes, | 3 40. 1:40. 3:40. 5:40, 7:40. 9:40; mittside Drive- in—'The Markeman.”| | . ‘ ‘ . . ‘ . “. 5 SS ' m W i for that matter in black and white flattie, but this time Cinema- 2. ee yea ee $:30. 9.14 p m_ “Below the Sahara, ; in the way, even has some solid effect. fae 5:00, 7:00, 9:00, 10:50 bp. m Mount Vernen Drive-In—"“All the, ro sry ‘ i od ee <5 as | Palace— a a gt "11:30. 1:30, Brothers Were Valiant.’ 5 go a swe sens ‘ 2 4 i. j - D | ear ; . 1145 dp. m “His Majesty O Keefe.” 5. | TECHMICOLOR It’s got a grand cast, smartly paced in its telling. | EEX. | Piz’ Hieh aig " 1:05. 4:25, 7:50 Seneet Detve-s in——“Star “Texas,” of ae | Dp Queen.” 2:35, 7 10:15 m. “Just for You,” 8 is| war Ni . - . : Ss : ‘ 2 7, ’ It also shows, for a change, that when it comes to making a : oe ae feteng Tenuate 2 Bee ais 30, nee Chet Drive-In— "Ambush at neatly civilized espionage movie, the British don’t have the x 2:0. 3.42. 5:17 652 830 10 ne > | eae, [ ae 718 >. m.! corner on the market. et a hivionhenalehe eae BODY (PLR And—it’s entertaining from fadein to fadeout. | ‘ | ) GARY You fadein on a Yank in today’s Berlin saying goodnight to ONTARIO “High Noon” 1:00, 4:25, 7:50, 11:1 7 . his fraulein. The Russos shanghai him into the eastern sector. ALA A WASHINGTON S FOREMO | og “African Queen” si and order The Washinetos His loud-mouthed pop, an axle-grease manufacturer of Toledo, Aubert Theatre ___2:35, 5:55, 9:20, 12:45 ‘Post guaranteed home delivery. Ohio, rushes to Berlin to tell the Army how to handle the job | port Iheate 1 an of getting him back. What pop learns about how well the Army ; : i os and the State Department handle their work ‘sobers him up + a a when he sees that to get sonny® ~~ | back will take the lives of two | ——— people who once fought Hitler) {NIGHT PEOPLE” Twentieth Cen- with everything at their com- from his own screen plas | | pepe . ‘ Tair: oo eth eee eT, ected ’ . Va ALL os } HUNDRED | HOUR HUNT’? *riGuing British suspense drama’ mand, including a pair of eyes| SUP%2y.Jonneon from 8. story. by But She’s Only Wearing ONE! War leith | ene Cone from now-empty sockets. And, ptraphed in Technigolored Cinema- ! UA SILVER FIRST , we fade out on the American| rit Mockrides’ Ai ihe Passe” °’ | “Red Garters” titles Rosemary Clooney's second movie, | WGurhna-Pentactey CATs ? SPRING 7 a officer who's had charge of the; — mpi THE CAST but maybe she’s given the one from her left gam to Guy Om nae fem oy , “Ra . poco eee case quietly looking down on) Feith, O'F*::: peoaecick erases: | Mitchell, her costar in the musical spoof of Western movies | oe Ret. F 2 @ ae the city with an expression of Hofty | Anita A ME. 8-1376 strength and pride. Miss _ “Peoie rior ite Gam at the Ontario. Speaking of gam, wait till you see Rita Gam OM ONE PRO C e ; Oster fait . ; ore rere wae on the cover of “The Show,” the entertainme Most of the credit for this) 7i6.2.°S Hobart ro. Br . e nment feature ; ™ rss. . widow Blushing TECHNICOLOR « | enormously engrossing film a Schindier...... °° Jil) Bemo making its bow with Sunday's editions of The Washington Annet n NOEL COWARD'S : TECHNICOLOR goes, I suspect, to Nunnally; Kat - Weaedas ianne Post and Times-Herald. Johnson, who produced and di-| ) rected his own screen play ee from a story by Jed leavete ond ‘while there’s casual romancing| French accent, all right, but Thomas Reed. Johnson's rapid-'. for Rita Gam, of the home and he’s from Patchogue, Long fire editing (and Dorothy ‘Ss all Twentieth Century-Fox office staff, and Anita Bjork,!1..4q and stumbled on tap! * Spencet’s) keeps up a snappierSeems to think it is, this is far|a mysterious blonde, there’s no dancing while at high school|“ pace than any melodrama I've and a the best of the tech- — = the mort sense... This led him from one’ Coe’s Six Best Bets of Current SMilgbharheod Films seen in a long time and his nidue. He omchngge uh LO FOCUS hateee about “Night Pecoic® thing to another, including the| “HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE,” three funny gold- “THE PROMOTER,” Alex Guinness in ar btew of dialogue is as crisp as apple- ‘is cr Myr ges WitnOws snag: You'll he _— By ete ©. |Coast Guard and the chorus of| diggers: Marilyn Monroe, Betty Grable and Lauren Bacall. of Arnold Bennett's Five Town stories. a jack. The characters, too, are a with the corners of the set ave a a iS ONC. Reatrice Lillie’s “Inside U.S.A.”"| “THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES.” revival of that stir- “THE BROKEN ARROW.” Jimmy Stewart, tries t roundly-imagined, full-blooded ana among his tricks you ll no- “TOM SAWYER” gets its|: - » There Valerie Bettis took ring tale of two WW-II veterans getting their civilian legs. between the white men and the Injuns. es to keep peace people about whom we are tice a neat use of sound: out on ian ten ' sileet him in hand and he joined a| “CEASE FIRE,” on the Korean front with a 3-D camera: this “WALKING MY BABY BACK HOME.” ble li told surprisingly little but a lake a motorboat putt-putts| Fst two periormances today, 3... Cole company for a sea-| reveals what you didn’t know about Korean topography. cal with fun from Donald O’Conn Set tae whom we get to know quickly. into the distance while two peo-| 10:30 a. m. and 2:30 matinee,| con at the Paris Lido .. . Paris STANLEY WARNER | or and Janet Leigh. This is swell writing. ple are speaking. Very trick. |at Roosevelt Auditorium, 13th|was IT to the guy from longuy-| | | Bee Apart from that contribution,, Gregory Peck’s lieutenant end Allison ota. fw. . This land and he ee four on THEATERS | m4 THEATERS | K-B THEATERS Johnson also is the first di- colonel is a grand guy and the 7 7" ..|there, studying and with M. TIME OF PERATURE ATTR: nN. 535 Sth St. S58 ; NAYLOR 22", 272 Aie. Ave. 38 rector who's had the experience actor relishes some dandy bit- production of Mark Twain's Petit's company So. when' ~ ACADEMY Ll. 3.9616 | Myon ' see FREE PARKING (U 2.4000 of two CinemaScope assign-|ing lines, telling off the politi-\classic comes from the Rose the troupe from Paree steamed AMBASSADO 18th & Col. Rd. | comp AGE, Per kor doves Sie nz : lez, Jon Hall in _IN CINEMASCOPE ! ments, his first being “How to = pre (Broderick Crawford)| Robison Cowen Children’s Stu- up the Narrows to meet the! Dsy!¢ Niven. star of re “Biue”’| | Charles “JUNCTION C CITY purnet | Cee Roy Pay wii Behr ‘ai BENEATH THE 1° etme f , ‘ ck ruel & , 1:00. 3 ¢ 4q s Gl (Technicplor at } +, Marry a Millonaire. He a — avon oo Bo = the oe dios, and today’s performances'press with its zeeses and in LGHTING PI ‘PIMPERNEL, SENATOR 295 Mim Aw we 1:00, 3:38, 6:30. 9:00. Pius GIANT (Technigplor) at 1:20. 3.28. $30 the wide-eyed cameras with) swers. You'll relish the part an + seine Z008C8, Patchogue's Reich was nicolor 35 9:45. | “a aaa Conia - a A skill. and while I don’t think it playing of Buddy Ebsen as the 4F® sponsored by the District within shoutin’ distance ¢ AVALONY? 2600 WALKING MY Mark Stevens-Dorothy Majone CAPITOL sight, Pv nhOOT, WHISTLE, PLUNK AND necessarily proves the gadget'colonel’s amusing sergeant and recreation department ... Next), 1. . | eid nrnhet 2 Ag 0°35, 4:20, sqosrene At ‘Buc hanon | | de e Jreland in “om "Man" tt! | | FLOWER — 82 flees an Friday nigfiht and at two per-| ‘HIND THE GN Randolph Scott. Doors | WILD STALLIO | reissue of ‘ ‘ sare eissu “NOOSE HANGS Free egy = : | open 12 30 m . wy Hc in” UL 95. 6:55, 9:55 : Y- ae Giant iformances Saturday, morning ; | . SAB or em ——— 3. 2406, ees is 3 "ARTOONS Lance aster in “TM CRIMSON Pi. 'and afternoon, the play will be ‘Tomorrow a AVE. GRAND |; HOLI * Gregory ~w soon Cameron HIGHLAND 2533 Po. Ave. 5.6 P Alan Ladd in “THE fron | ter | | Peck, 1:15, 5°05, 8:55 mas ‘MAJESTY | ROS nn. (oeleed Lu. 47311 MISTRESS” Technicolor) at 3:28 ‘repeated at American Univer- N i] | O'KEEFE.” Burt Lancaster, 3:10. 7:00. | “PIRATE § sv BMARINE” | | Wall Rogers Nar © in : sity’s Clendenin gymnasium as CHILDRED 3 . ‘ FRM the studio’s International The- ORI AHOMA. BEVERL Pree Parking. LI. 3-3300 | “yes Q i. A Ww. mieolor. at 45 4 . 84 an COLONY . Goorpte 4 ee Sw. AT | APACHE | ve. ’ chnieolo: 03. § hg stepber TAND A 0-1 . | SYLVAN NO. 7 9689 7 0. Plus GIANT CAR TOON SHOW! ACADEN 3.2200 |ater Month contribution to the so. “IT CAME FROM OL TER SPACE. +) | Edmund O'Brien-Audrey Totter || | et_: AC, E} 1Y AW "ARD | “Garleee 1:50 8:30 “MAN IN rue DARK” | _ 4703 Marlboro Pike, Md. ‘FES , ‘Tong. In orphanage, Pusan, “JUNGLE RAIDERS.’ Chapter’ No.7. Alien Rocky La JO. 8-515! Free Parking ISTIVAL ‘Korea ... There are two casts, ° | Also 3 Cartoons | “DESPERADOES OUTPOST” At Regular Prices Presenting « series of last year's | ene called the “Mark Twain pan CALVERT fre: Parking WO, 6-2345 | YORK 3641 Georgia Ave. N.W. Robert A et, Terry Moore, Award Winners! Ti b. hod today and Sunday v.. s . ‘BENEATH THE 12 MILE Phone 8A. 3.4777 n +Cast,” the other “Samuel Clem-| || Wf only | REEF.” Robert Wagner. Terry Moore Ye : : Sere Ee i108. 6.08 800 wat Uptown Bhow ing | “BENEATH THE 12. ||| GREATEST (silow” ON" canine Twai raged moony gy ~ _ waeeeesee |9'55. At 1-00 P M. Show Only—"FEAR-| The Fir eh ‘In Cine mascope MILE REEF” 10. 3 apes ES sOMANN Bes dhe natrenirg at Penge bone . A penrene : CENTRAL® ear Parking ME. 8- 2841 a Ory of “am usements. ase : r CINEM ASC OPE Mot SE Pr candy and balloons | Concert Bureau, 1108 G st. nw.| THE JUGGLER.” | Kirk | h Stereophonic Sound and Tech. APEX. 4813 Mass. Ave. WO 6460 FREE PARKING Ted A Hush McDermott | r. At is” 15. In are hnicolor, Stereophon t¢ Sound.| | | 2! wx us Walt ‘Disney Cines bh aScope I ded 5:05 ial ! MAS ’ | ALSO FOR CHILDREN ~ 2:30, 7:30 10:30 p.m y eee arin Richard Burton A ic Michels Ave. 6 Axon IN C CINE AS COPE! 3 we eg onte ones 9 sag AB Mat ua Si * we Mea KENNED ’ _, BROKEN ARROW samantha at ATLANT! NT x —_— ; “BENE TH “THe 12-MILE REEF” r .. | 1 ? 2 « st t, Je vandier. 2 choien! } rogram! icol t 1:20 25 | Fuppet bar onty tect “ ’ : Fit 7459.35. 3 00 P.M. SHOW ONLY | “SALUDOS. “AMIGOS 1:25. 3:40 7-35 . : Fa: Wishes,” to be given this morn-| is -3s ome at La MBO’ | ) | 3 SHOWS TODAY Bist B, voan Pontaine. 1 11 oo “THE | You've Seen the Others... ' | “FEARLESS FAGIN.’ 0. 9:25. “Dt 2:10, Dis , & pe cartoon, ing at 10, afternoon at 2, 1M) | NOW See the Best! ‘ PENN Pree Perk ‘ tl ?- ‘ite | 4:25. 6:30. 81 “lO: fa Oe oT, 0 PLUNK AND ‘BENEATH “TH ee : [Theater Lobby, 17 St. Mat ont leer.” Terry Moot SIDNEY LUST THEATRES CONGRESS °" 5%), -5* ** V¥-¥h 3 |thew’s Court, behind St. Mat- ig memaScope 1:35, 3:40, 5:40. 7:40. 9-40. | PREF PARKING “Ee 49790 ithew’s Cathedral on Rhode Is- “TIME r --——— Johnay Weissmuller in * ; > OF 0 R LIVES.’ ud At \ N ’ ‘ vf ( = ‘> Jam IN CINEM ASC OF E ! iland ave Phone reserva- ; 12.15. DOORS OPEN AT 11:30 HILLSIDE DRIVE- IN Mt Lt oe. “ Ty ne ra cnn ' rw MILE | Ba OL BL i KE a TURE | 6:15 seapnatheenta Seane ott British suspense | ' * rt erry | ’ “ 7 ‘ . 1s ¥. . nd 9 45 = ~ m y aq Trew te eee under the disection of Father) J | CinemaSco 5 5 EN 5S.) DOUBL Te cvewne .49.15..P 1s Wall. Disney Cinema8co 2:00, 3:80, 5°45. 7 Gilbert V. Hartke. ; - ae l eid ¢ ' nee com Monday? “GPNEVIEVE” . W ' 10:30 and Barbara Stanwyck res- ' ; LAR MERMAID, enc a ton Foster “ANNIE OAKLEY” at ; | ; | . 40 - 7 v | BRAND NEW 1953 com of Roland Petit's “The etropolitan Only Yj TAKOMA Fiinby Pin bis” Ni) | hor daria So wa __ DRIVE-IN THEATERS | TouiS _BERNHEIMER Osi end ¢ teatine Gao er ee Gass she || nl’ tenes Ste Sie asec | | BOCRVELLE — fev 2 pg nw ale Bangg Peppy = rose ra, Jeff Chandler 3:00 6:20, | ALLEN .. “9.3322 Reckville le, Mad. e onu ris ‘ ilhert Roland Ter: Visit ont go! . ers Count . ‘ ive. Rlealthfully Air Cenditionea __ es 9 “BENEATH THE 19 Theate Paris,” turns out, I was about Moore. “BENE vars! 12th & Newton Sis NE “ : 5-1800. “BENEATH THE EF.” CinemaScope, Stereophoni NOW oP IE ny NEWTON lA 64 0a to say, to be as French as Sen- ir | hig MILE REEF.’ * Robert War- yund (Technicolor) at 1, 3.2 20, 5:30 Donald tn IN ¢ INE M ASC OPE ator MacThing; but then, who} wt - uM BHOW O} ; “WALKING MY ‘pany “BACK. Home” ! ae = 9:30 | Ys 30 00 PM 8 NLY See tt for voursetf, the biceest and Technicol — — ober! Wa ; i : : nnice ot gne knows? ... Anyway, this young! bo! FOR MORE” Ca ra t} a y | Betsy Drake AT MATINEE, GALY Chap- | | Most _lite-like_sereen_ 3-8 —— fers. A and 9:00 p. m Fe at ure “BE NE ATH (most with Hydra-Matic) ee ee eS ee os ~ ||, we. oe [ee MILE nee , w y . PE Ea De ee AT EEN, , MOON IS BLUE” UPT WN WO, 6-5400 “BENEATH Betty Grab! uren Bacall SUNSET DRIVE-IN Leagburg. Pk. Te a 8 soniiitioas JACK HAWKINS Sensation of | oo 01 bd | MM MILE fn, Cin EF.’ “HOW TO M saree Bae A aati I . who He Bound ed over agner erry oore in nema- A . 4 sid , “ ‘ 2 : TE CRUEL SEA Scope, 1:20, 3:20. 8:20 25, 9:45 MILLIONAIRE” 2} aor Lees vou" : “(re a oe 2. JESSE. ie neor & 1. Ave. NE LEIGHTON ! CINEM ASCOPE Crosby. Jane Wyman. 8 Pp. m. plus LA. 63112 Cwt Cassct - Rote conve eno i cust oF Teemnense | “ sve ade ? “STAR OF TEXAS.” Mo “ ss aie ae A ee A ary 5 Wayne N { wes ma eg ~rromera s Art Cinema” DISTRICT THEATERS STEREOPHONI( 300 end Page Britain Sends Another AND HENRY J’S Great Motion Picture! J. Arthur Rank presents (with overdrive) 7 ees ’ ” LMBASSADOR NO. 17-3000 SOUND and | aabey Sunser— "SEAL Gh ‘HONDO” Bees Feo $338 Ooms] || HOWARD bers Spa 2:09 Noon recta iiee youreeit.” the pire ABC DRIVE-IN THEATRE 307 — is. Ave. EE Open 12:00 Noon r yoursell. ‘the bigrest_ and . VILLAGE _ Night Owl’, 8} Show Tonight. In r- most life-like screen in t! rea 7100 Indian Head Hwy. SE L 25 73 son . . HE RA VEN N UN 4.01 Family Nie —~ ALL At mn f how ancy Olson t] MORELAND—BUD HARRIS. -+} Richart Burto oi piu a ee ae “BOY THOM okLANOMA” ‘Color: shows TONIGHT GERS and Gt Revue, On Screen — : 45 an ¥ WAL rine He Sco Gra " Mary Castl j +“ =) 99 os anc i0 p.m G oe R gers “STAGE "” I ATE SHC W TONTT OOR 4°45. 8°04 etm ala ya || °WHITE FIRE.” THE ‘ROBE ; Doe CAPITOL PALACE LINCOLN 215 U St. Nw C INE MT ASC op E BRANCH DRIVE-IN VERNON ae ra eo aeke re Door Open 12:30 P = 800 B nch Ave. S Md. Rt. 5) RE. 6.6666 COLUMBIA ate Show ‘see "Ge Oe eggs greg a eg ene a Fe - IN CINEMASCOPE . Rca STEREOPHONIC r : Kiddies Tonite! Kiddies © 0 0 0 0 0 OOO Nee a || WILD aenstumesvmeiaeoomastat emma Dee : 3 AT Wan Witt THe ‘ARMY 6-30 o- THEE 12 ; REPUBLIC Bours Odes 1a58 Bee it tor yourself. the the b his st an v ; a ey z “Ts : Cartoon vis J =. mia TH TONIGHT J | a 4 nt TEREOP HONIC sour ; HYATTSVILLE rae Buitia . ry. ft as apie olor. _Stereophonic Bound : LAST 4 DAYS ; the most desperate inal Broadway Cast “BENEATH THE 12 fe och gti! ats scp rac PPPOE SEI 1433 You St NW. MILE REEF” AIRPORT ‘DRIVE. In . Arlington Arlington-Falls Church fom Open 12:30 P.M. Waciemidaios fehl 48100 Air Conditioned Ty ' OD! . »: % ' . = : - oe E : SCE OF LOVE CINEMASCOPE SOE MORE. A GUN. seer 4 STATE. ‘alte Cur, Ve. e '| LANGSTON?" * °°": STEREOPHONIC , SONG" Color). Joan Craw-/ | pean 3 jor: Doors Open 12:45 P.M rd at ‘ a x ‘ rt OF Lo FROM HOME ' s | On mae, Ww ce A iston -Gereen : SOLN iD t dus ed an = Sunday — es 5 } and | | - Humphrey 7 A 4. 6:50 “ROY FROM ‘OKI noma” and “RE WILSON 1730 Wi con Orde —_— - = ‘oe “+e 4 ** - th ‘ay ia Sup wr Treat rnin MOl NTAIN oe A 7 } w rift rey 1 rt A, r : j be at ; : } , Mean Vari cat ’ rere | W ROASTS anata nis Offi ’ MT. VERNON OPEN AIR FROM HOME.” Color | a er CARVER — 2405 Nichols Ave. SE nop Daeees | eer L oe Yer Rt. 1S0. of Alex SO. 8.6722 {. Kiddies Shor ~ . eos 4 : . oho bee : 4 a : we - o Frode Tonite? > - Fra TECHMICOLON DELUaE " 8h AX. OR rpianes and F coos eet | | Thrillers! “ALL THE BROTHERS WERE RICHARD BELLA NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEME i eWwi cour! : ; ournern Ro 5 WIDMARK: DARVI ram Raft in “MAN FROM carro.” | © _1|8:35 only! Plu “HIS MAJESTY lia a EE.” Burt Lan coc “WISE z i by Technics : | : vd een THE TALL TEXAN, KAYWOOD PL, 8699 fh verge at , “ P die Bhow 1 PM - ’ ” all wilares 12. years 20¢ Terry ae : Sun —* ROY FROM OKLAHOMA” passe ARLINGTON re a — “BENEATH THE 12 || . dado i SE PALACE mem || ALEX.- ARLINGTON. VA. MILE REEF” SUPER CHIEF DRIVE-IN BEST ‘ve mae oF OUR . On Indian Head Hwy., via Se. Capitel ee (Technicolor ) St. Bridge Gt Miles From District Line | HOW Open 10:08 (| REED : CINEMASCOPE onthe Winky Neygine Moser || BYRD CINEMA “aoe j Dean Ma ry I : ” 4 4 . "= ] > . + lie Derek “AMBUSH ‘ bre fo ae : PROM HOME,” in 2-D aid Techai- STR ROS ROME AP PoWAMAWh Chr” fieen Vater is | fina” et nbn Be anrercese | ? es ae aes S , n _ vans as “G . RT AND 7 Ki . _coiggto Stevens, “SAVAGE MUTINY” at 8 eat 15. 3:15 puls you in the Sead center of RICHMOND "ov 3 a at 1, 3. 5:10, 7: meena mes #18 Ben tern dee it for yourself. the piscest and) | MISPR-BEPHESDA 7431 's,A°* GLEBE 2150 Werk CAROL ; “EVES ‘Oe THE in NGLE’ , to 2626 , FREE aie © ms _ : = For a Guaranteed | hearh | CENTRE Lait otal Conte: aSilbert Roland Robert Wagner - Terry Moore BEST } YRAnS ‘Or ‘ol ® “ues F PER Fit “ ‘PaTn TUE 19 “BENEATH THE 12 he ; PEopLe! seashitadatte! Technicolor Sea er 7 MILE REEF” Appraisal (sight unseen) | SHIRLINGTON "S)'*'3 (Technicolor) | CINEMASCOPE ohn Archer Jane Nigh, “ Ate ieee mtg 1:20, 3:30, 5:30, 7:35. 9:40 : : ~ GREGORY te duoeas a Fn A cae CINEMASCOPE aor " aa G Rx... : James whi tmore. In on your present car E SHOW TOR PECK | VIRGINIA, ,% Yeoren Bs. STEREOPHONIC _sPROM HERE TO ETERNITY” see KI ( aaNet e ope- eophon ri ~ ™\ 351 Bi ae r: ‘ : . CRAWFORD | cinemascope-Stereophonic Sound 4 SOUND GEORGETOWN “gre With Stereophonic Sound y Lew's —————— nn ne 8100 Guy Maal son, Joan Weldon at 1:40. 3:50, 5:45. | 9:40 ae! Today—Doors Special , eet ’ aise Po matn . ‘ . — ’ : : ’ JU U pie ers "HOME I el | MGM'S Brilis nt ; _ a THEATERS ae * ge | JEROME KERN. OSC "AR Ri A iM MERSTEIN 2105 venesysroa % aoe N.W, KAISER-WILLYS | lanes Cookies ers. | | CIRCLE RE. 7-0 : . »* | eae __. | | | one atrendine Br res 5 eeiics | “SHOW BOAT” igh yar ete Ans A PARK ~ Southern Biscuit Co. with AVA GARDNER, KATH. | S00" Jenks production, ser COLUMBIA | bert Warnes rue pt MILQ RYN GRAYSON, HOWARD (20. 52°. CTY mM NEATH mr, “BENEATM RIG DOUBI E KEEL, WILLIAM WARFIELD, : ‘ , ; ants Quinn, at 2 55, a aaa JOE E. BROWN. $25, 10:00, Today onis FEATURE! | In Wonderful TECHNICOLORI a MATINEE TODAY: FAIRFAX x VA J Powell, Pariey Granger DOO ; FAIRFA v Edwird G. Robinson “s! TOWN GIRL” ‘Techni- Feature 1% 260.3 5 ssa 7 “ arit Seebe james mam” | || Lawte 'remmom” ot 330 6-45. 9-45 : 9:52 PM | | sangsoo ° REAT JES , . — G ; vans PARKING , “GREAT JESSE. ‘JAMES BRAID” 4 sales division 1515 14th St. WW. © AD. 2.1000 Sn re irSaaser-ze 5 ead . ‘ eters all WRC RT ree Napeete cmt heae rmre ras on “REM thy ’ tactile 4 : Phe ri Aes CRE RSI Foe su fy ee ~~" oe ‘ _ stale sheila ENGR Nee TR RYE PIAS MUR CAO ug aan ~ wy ee 6 ae: sari kee bl ate sR f° sy : . ‘ A OF 2 x ca” a pe oy ay te we Dvr ke oem Cite ve 4 bon MOMSEN rise SRP SENT Rig TPIT. WIKRE Pere QTR YE we cremains THE WASHINGTON POST ) ARS ESE ERE SIE EL EO ae VaR RES ee Pee LAD oct -~ BO ST Be Ep: eA “oe 2 et Beh POW OR POO AH yD ed CEPI PIS OID 8 OR OP BEF aT SED OL ote ae ra —_— and TIMES. HERALD eres Ee PB, +, ~ i a ee » te ae a —_—— eeghe-s ; oe af RAR OF) 4 Qe Fp gh bm a ee eras . 7. * * ned ? reer i Pd Sake a ALES is Se Ay eae 16 i March 20, 1954 ett - =e ~ ~ f ol % Sa ROY NE oe Se ae wien» 4 r, ah " yr DEGGIE GSE FPO TOO: ; *7- = : aa ~ Overseas Aid Week ~|}And Brighten-Life — The Rev. Maria K. Tate, di-| Bender, when a collection will churches will join with thou-) enn up for “The Bish on of children’s work of sands of others in the United Fund for the Victims of War.” Christ Congregational Church, States this Sunday in begin-| Five million dollars is the goal.| Silver Spring, and Miss Con-| ning a week of special eM-| wince Jewish communities) Stance, Sarr. editor — Child. phasis on needs for oversea?| are planning a collection for a mea yey " relief. he Passover Fund of the| SPeax Saturday at an interde-) soeeethied qakenote ai 5 i sorrihl The ot en Sunday, March, a Jewish Appeal. _nominational Leadership Train-| beautiful suburb of New York. But to him it was “a terrible 28, special erings will | In a statement Thursday, Dr. ‘ing School. > place,” and he didn’t like the people there: His house wasn't made in reasons to the “One| wy nn C. Fairfield, executive Miss Doris E. Smith of the very nice, either; in fact, the builder should have been sent Great Hour of Sharing” appeal. BS da of Church World Sixth Presbyterian Church,| to jail. And, just that morning, the toaster hadn't worked | of major Protestant and East-\Se-vice. underlined the impor-| “@Shington, will assist at the) at breakfast and, coming in on the train, he'd thought how ern Orthodox denominations |iance of generous giving Onis session, at the Second Presby-| sick and tired he was of riding it every day to and from for relief, rehabilitation and... — em Alexandria, nye He complained that he was just fed up with every- reconstruction in couftries : , 45 a.m. to p.m. ing. — = gr? + mg Aol- PR ay gg Em ygense He The program will center on| “You sound like you're sick of living,” I said. ore than eight milion dol- the work of the primary and) « , “y? commodities to agencies con-| Yes,” he replied promptly, “I'd just as soon lie down and 9 = Peed y apt Dep oP ducting overseas relief js | Junior departments of the | die. church school. ment of Chugch World Service Pemggeonny ——— gt The following session will be| That remark suggested the use of a little experiment. ak of the National Council of a ‘but! f food, a amen held a week from today at ‘Tll tell you what I want you to do,” I said. “Tomorrow Churches. ~- ribution of fo ep Trinity Methodist Church, | ae } sag you get up, cag: ay gp og i it is Alexandria. Church school | e ias ay you are going to live Ss you ere, trying | Ase on March 20 American)” leaders and parents are in-| to decide to get out of bed, tell yourself that it is the last g. vited. time you are ever going to lie in hat soft bed and that this | HEIGHTS BAPTIST. the as | grew older I was filled But even here I found myself is the last sleep you are ever gomg to wake from. Loe eon pce Atheros with erativade that I need not blessed, for a new sense of “Then go down. to breakfast and remember that it will be | .ZPIRMANY,, RPIRGDPAL . Bs.."): walk through life wearing red prayer began to unfold to me. your last. Ask your wife to give you all the things you like ‘Gur. Gecurity wings. But, I Was equally grate--Now there were not the best for that last breakfast. Don't read your newspaper as p, "S37 GONSPEOATIONA'S Faith of ful for her gentle lesson. times of telling Him what I cemaaa. aah” Ghee the you usually do, but talk to your wife, because you will never Leis aita Eunice Mother worked very hard needed but, rather, times of | FOUNDRY METHODIST and her tiny body wasn’t listening communion, of gather- ‘ernment’s release of its sur- | } N I T R ¢ ‘plus stocks, he said. : , the Rev Landover Hills Men's Baptist | have the chance again. Dr rederick Brown Harris. “Barring Our Own Door nearly so big as her heart. Yet ing strength, when my human Brotherhood at 8 p. m. Tuesday | On your way to the station, walk slowly and take a good I never heard her complain. In strength and courage seemed 1733 Eye St. N.W. ' Aifiliated With | French Church Unity School, Lee's Summit, Mo. 7) OBORGETOWN LUTHERAN. Wiscon. ‘at the parsonage chapel, 4418 look at that house of yours and your town. Look at your (sip are. Volta Di, DW: the SERVICE FRANCAIS 3d ave., Landover Hills, Bd.| Bergntors, tee, Sor thas last time. Un the rein recies Os i igor Apna er tae the would jubllantiy "h ceee months they told Eclise Francaise de Washington - | it’s your last ride to the city. Take a last glimpse of all these L METHODIST. the Rev. finish @ batch of ironing for her|me 1 could walk. Not walk Ann Sandefer. Minister JU. 45-0801 10:00 a. m.—Sunday School. things you dislike, because soon you will be through with au Temple St. Ichn ” PRES select Park Avenue clientele really, but take those first im- Lafayette Square | Confirmation for 106 them for geod and all. Mee Hoover. BNo Cross. and call to us to admire its portant few steps on the long Sunday, 11:00 a.m— mple = HL. Stein Schneider, Pasteur {{_. The Most. Rev. John M. Mc- He promised me he would try this unique experiment and a eur Le. mewonta: crisp freshness. road back to complete free- “LOVE ONE ANOTHER” ee Namara, Auxiliary Bishop of later he told of the results. | PRESBYTDRIAN. the Rev. Eric Ly Sometimes it was a close dom. As I had gotten to know | Dimanche a 4 heures Washington, will confirm 106} He didn’t even wait for the next day; he started at once a eo roe Congregational Congrrgattonal ‘shave when it came to scraping Him in my time of trial, I knew THE ROCK SPRING children at St. Joseph's Church,| imagining that very day was his last. He walked to Grand | mon tree td, Cebin Jona, Md. Chap-|together the money for my|Him now in thanksgiving. 2d and C sts. ne., at 4:30 p. m.| Central Station from my office; it was a cold, crisp day with i. CLEVELAND PARK 3400 Lowell Street N.W. Silver Spring i Leadership — Church — Events Ope gontoweng: anit woviteal will be held Sunday at 11 a. m. ‘unless otherwise pena ra BOULS’ up PAL. the “Down Hill, Uo ‘wi NAC M Change Point of View | Lenten Goldene Personal schemes of ee “— Faith _ By Ann Blyth. EAP I SE: REE: WHEN I was a very little girl} My glowing world a " I remember praying fervently | all about me. It seemed like the cath for a pair of red wings. After end of everything. several days of watching and At first I couldn't look at my cpu word Waiting 1 took ‘mother. When at last I raised ner, shaken ‘my head, I was startled. Those. : bead eos warm hazel eyes under her ching x ae Pini before my ct gy ny eating AB Rev John mother. “Have faith, my darling,” od mrempiiions 9 “| “Why?” 1 de said. “You'll walk.” et Disap- Mmanded. “Why TOGETHER my mother and | maton 6 Mic “5 | Dointments and don't I get red we SA oust Mr puilding bp “the wings?” I planned cheerful, busy days. te i Christ—the In a cast, with my head and ASE BAPTIS re feet toward the floor, my back (Waned” a a TSCOPAL | balanced wit Ann Blyth ~ |faised high, I concentrated on Sha # Anechute, her sensitive ’ ‘high school work, determined re f ‘Irish wit, an enormous respect to graduate with my studio 0.8, st f%: for a serious problem. Together class. we examined mine. “Faith, my| But still there were those PAPE urrce We Mara darling,” she told me, “is be-' long periods of just lying there.» lieving that God is very wise. The busy exciting worl aSRuuMBA [MBIGHTS, CHRISTE | Wiser than you. Somehow you known faded away and my life od A.B of Radiant Living. must be praying wron slowed down to little things. By-Norman Vincent Peale “ TECHNIQUE FOR- OVERCOMING DEPRESSION man consulted me who complained about everything. A Without question, he was one of the most depressed, discouraged and pessimistic persons I have ever met. He started out by telling me he came from Scarsdale, a ait? ps AUGTST o COTE larence ate ERA Counts Keeps BETHESD she P Gates. mother M the Revi nad. skillfully 4 SWhere Jesus RIST cs = on _ e “Biory of Jesus 7 STG tem Typxac he ev nine ef Wise | , dollar made available for surplus food distribution Unity would be multiplied at least - twenty times through the Gov- Dr. Crowley to Speak The Rev. Dale Crowley, radio A fain our Bergen, CHURCH “Gods Plan for! singing, dancing and dramatic; I took those steps, and then Sunday. snow underfoot. The walk made the blood run faster. It EV ANGETLIC AL LuTHEeRAN.ilessons but she never told me more. I graduated with my HOPE University 4 Marvyiand tt S010 NM. Little Falls Rd. PAUL R. HUNTER, yas MISS BERTHA COOK. Associate 9:30 and 11 AM—Cburch ‘Benoa 9:30 and 11:00 A “THE GREATEST OF THESE” 7:00 P._M.—Lenten Vesper Gervice _put color in his cheeks. He — at the bakery shop in the terminal for some CHRISTIAN LIGHT CHUBCH |. coffee cake and thought, “Why am I doing this? I won't ever Auditorium, ary inne co hoc r® of it. Instead she let me know class from a wheel chair. “the Copy set by Chirmt ‘constantly that faith’ was the;}-There were seven months in | OF DIVINE HEALING | eat this coffee cake.” Incidentally, it had been a long time =~ the Rev 7 Fourth Street NE. American Hall ‘Pranks ee i Read Krcush foundation for lasting joy, the and out of that wheel chair, LW PLACE MEMORIAL, chief cornerstone for building but every one was another step _ since he had taken anything home. He was too busy thinking THR ase essor at how badly he felt. Gettysburg Tahol logical ‘Beminary “The a whole life. forward. There was my first Wend Relisioc She dreamed dreams about swim. The preview of “Mildred On the way to Scarsdale, he looked out the window instead |, M4RV'%, YEMORIAL, MErHQoIS) of reading the evening paper and was fascinated by the twin- tut» my .wonderul future as an Pierce.” My first game of golf. aul Harris. “The Merci-|actress and at eight, nine and And then I made my first pic- kling lights of towns and villages. He really found that trip ten, I agg ooagy = = — since accident. a very pleasant one. Then, under a star-lit sky, along moon- | oe canes Pe pee im | the yt Only, — wet bathed streets he walked home, and from a block away he |«-*.) Po : - & quite the could see the lights in the windows of his house. Instead of i¢ in , Joseph O. Ensrud using his key when he reached his door, he rang the bell MONTGOMERY COUNTY, she would smile her wonderful same. I found within me an vin warm smile, put a pert new immense gratitude for simple When the door opened, there, in that golden light, was the {4 ‘ti. "Re john “einer sweetheart he had married 35 years before. Am; feather in my hat, and together things. An acute appreciation Keep we'd go to St. Boniface’s to of all I might have lost, all the “BAPTIST MEMO He told me, “I just grabbed her and gave her the biggest "the oa, i ee tAL. | pray things I had accepted uncon- kiss of our lives. Right then and there I determined I was |.E¥. * ix” “Peaber PRESBY- “JUST have faith, my dar- me 4 before. - ling,” she'd say cheerfully as ONE more difference, going to stop all my foolishness and he alive tomorrow and Bocnerts eet mT, Oe . we walked home in the fading I had grown up. At first I had the next day and as long as God would grant me. ‘Honey,’ | the Rev. g. light. “Something better will clung to my mother’s faith, I said to my wife, “we're going to have a wonderful time the e Crose—sin's rest of our lives.’ come.” And it did. It came so leaned on her, step by step as AN. the Rev “I know what you meant,” he told me, “when I looked up fast it was like riding a giant’ she showed me the way. Now, aan roller coaster clear to the top. I had found my own rock. Nor | that Bible passage you gave me, “Who hath called you out of BANEIN a | darkness into His marvelous light.’” - ‘ soe a We two looked out over the hs ong it too soon. t Pole world. efore I finished that first Changing your point of view, your attitude toward your Lean TH RAN the Rev.| At 13 1 was on Broadway as picture after my accident I was life, is often a wonderful technique for overcoming depres. of Indecision” *. “The Peril Paul Lukas’ daughter in “Watch|standing alone. My mother, sion. You ean recondition your mind by the realization of |%9S* § hina Sunter Fhe nat how wonderful everything is, even the commonplace things a | esto on ! _ which God has given us. Then the shadows of depression pass | =. re erent. ‘we away and the bright light of new understanding restores | masder. executive secret etary me crane - happiness. gciiem. of — the---National —-Councit of v ea pig PETE’ B EVANGELICAL wz ae ald Bra ¢. Rev 0 AM.—Chu 11:00 . M.—Worship and Bermon. Nursery and Kindergar Rev. Philip Gorden Scott, D.D. Minister W. L. Enderstredt, Minister of Education Marian McNabb Herrington, Minister of Music ’ Western and Mass. Aves. at the Circle 11:00 a.m. Mor ming eee. Sermon: “They Without Us.” Fred Sherman Bushm MEMORIAL BRETHREN EVANGELICAL UNITED the Paul &. nail | Deny Him Rey orn Spe her, of Philadelphia. Messages to all. y RB lgxandrie, The Le 7 HER AN ee United | Presbyterian WALLACE MEMORIAL CHURCH UNITED PRESBYTERIAN New Hampshire Avenve and Randolph St. N.W. Donald C. Irvin, D.D., Minister 9:30 a.m. _—~ gady Group. Judse Alfred Noyes, Juvenile Court Magistrate, atoomery County: im Problems. 9.30 and 11 00 8 urch 5:30 p.m. pa By High School Pellowshio. 7:00 p.m. High School Fellowship CONGREGATIONAL 10th & G Sts. N.W. Ministers en Carl Heath Kopf Charles W. Parker Minister of Music: Whitford L. Hall Orsanist: Marion B& Gibbons The Word of God From 9:45 A.M.—Church School for All Aces. Pulpit and Classroom | 11:00 A.M.—"THE FAITH OF LOIS AND EUNICE.” Dr. Kopf il 9:30 A.M.—Bible Scheel and | 5:00 TO 6 P.M.—Organ and Choir Broadcast. WCFM, 99.5 mg. Classes for all ages 6:00 P.M.—Youth Groups 11:00 A.M.—"Where Wrath and Love Meet” 1 John Baptist Baptist CHEVY CHASE — 567! Western Avenue N.W. 4:10 (The Lord's Supper) 7:00 _P.M.—Youth Dr. Edward O. Clark, Pastor; Rev. John W. Lange, Minister of Education and Adult Groups 9:45 A.M.—Sunday School 6:30 PM.—Young People’s Group 11:00 AM.—"WHERE JESUS WALKED: [V “IN THE TEMPLE COURT" Nursery for babies and young children 9:45-12:15 GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH Westminister Col- 9th St. end South Carolina Ave. SE. (at Penna. Ave.) lege Choir 8:00 P.M.—"What is There In It?” MARTIN F. CLOUGH, TH.D., Pastor Robert B. Hoover Assistant Pastor Matthew 16: 24-26 WEDNESDAY .7:30 P.M.—Adult Bible Class 8:15 P.M—Prayer Service. . 9:30 A.M.—Bible Schoo! 6:30 P.M.—Baptist Training Union 11:00 AM.—STUDIES IN REVELATION, CHAPTER 11 7:45 P.M.—"THE FAMILIAR STRANGER" 7:00 P.M.—Wed. Bible Study Classes—8:00 P.M.—Praise and Prayer Presbyterian FIRST ARLINGTON We Preach the Old Fashioned Gospel "George Mitoman Besuk tinier” Church School at 9:40 A.M. PETWORTH 7th & Randolph Streets N.W. vr ; Rev. S. Lewts Morgan; Jr. Pestor Broadcast Over WFAN (100.3 Mc) 11:00 AM. 11:00 AM—” THE CROSS—SIN’'S ETERNAL SYMBOL” 8:00 P.M.—" FAITH IN MAN” 11:00 . << The : vine Worship: Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.—Church Family Night Program $144 Massachusetts Avenue | 6:15 BRIGGS BAPTIST “Westmoreland Hills, ia. } Durmng s Wednesday Lenten Services at s P.M. CHAPLAIN JOHN H. CRAVEN, U. 8. N.. Acting Pastor 9:40 AM.—Sunday School, Classes for All Ages IN ARLINGTON 11:00 A.M.—Sermon: “THE MODEL PLAYER” | we. # 6:30 P.M.—Baptist Training Union HAR 7:30 P.M.—"THE FIGHT FOR FAITH” | Wednesday, 8:00 P.M.—Prayer and Bible Study fs Nursery for Little ARI- PET WwW PRIN B, APT} a? LUTHE no rmann En Paith in Hower | Upiver- harile eme on the Rhine.” At 14 I had din- beloved companion, was gone. ner at the White House. At 15 A little unsteadily I clung to I came to Hollywood and was my rock. given the coveted role of Joan| But I missed her. There was Crawford's daughter in..“Mil-. an aching emptiness. Until. it ‘dred Pierce.” Overnight life came to me, almost in a revela- was glamorous, exciting, com- tion, that she had not left me. pletely wonderful. She had prepared me for her Yes, we went up so fast that going as she had prepared me 6:45 anud Greek Orthodox =| ST. SOPHIA GREEK ORTHODOX 8th and L Streets N.W. Very Reverend Archmandrite Aimilianos Laloussis, Pastor Divine Liturgy 10-12 Noon Sundays and Holidays Spiritual Sricice First Sp piritual Science DALL Pe Pests? W. “TINDALL. Spirit a H ~ be. Mess 9 ua ealing ess eet! Sun.. Tues., Thur oPues eines Bevclestne’ Glasses Wed, 8 Pp M. Presbyterian Eckington Presbyterian N. Capitol, Florida Ave. & QO Sts. REV. HENRY B. WOODING, Minister 9: 0.45 A.M.—Bible School {11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship “The Crowd Around The Cross” soma Chase Circle W. Pail Lidwig, Mints per. a aera, Sie, eran its man, nister of Christian Eauest Mr "eis Dickensheets ~—-y & of Music _ : ure ool EXAGGERAT “ DR. LUDWIG 7:30 P.M.—Youth Groups 16th and W. Inglewood—Phone JA. 71-4456 Near Arlington Hospital Church School, 9:30 and 11:00 a. m. Two Services. 9:30 and 11:00 «a. m. : ee , Pastor “OUTLINES IN THEOLOGY: II. Minister of Musie I BELIEVE IN JESUS CHRIST” Follow ‘the lighted star on the bill to Trinity” Old Presbyterian Meeting House 321 S. Fairfax St. Alexandria, Va. 9 30 AM.—"“W Ene P.M.—Youth Group TRINITY the magazine Guideposts copy- by G depo 8:30 and il — Churrh of God CHURCH OF GOD 2407 Minn. Avenue S.F. P. H. McSwain, Minister. LU. 9:45 AM.—Sunday School 11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship 7:30 P.M—Evening Worship Y.P.E., Friday at 8:00 p.m. AUGUSTAN A V and New Hampshire N.W. Pastor Clarence L. Nelson Georgetown at 3!st & N Streets WEST WASHINGTON Rev. W. O. Kersey, pastor 9:45 AM.—Bible School. 7 P.M.—Training Union 11:00 AM.—“THE GRACE OF GOD” 8:00 P.M.—*“ENEMIES OF THE SOUL” Folks at Both Gervices First Baptist Church MEETING AT JEWISH COMMUNITY C , 16th vn a" Sts. NW. DURING CONSTRUCTION OF 7, NEW B mop 9:48 & 11 AM.—"SPEAKING FROM EXPERIENCE,” 6:00-8:00 P.M.—Evening Program, Baptist 5! dg 1628 Ve h St. NW. 8:00 P.M.—Chapel Program: “CONVERSION” One-act pley pre sented by Wigs and Cues, Dramatic Club. METROPOLITAN 6th and A Streets NE. Dr. J. Walter Carpenter, Pastor 4° C. Hatfield, Minister of Education 11:00 AM.—"FREEDOM IN 1-7377 Edward Hushes Pruden, Dwight oS Anderson, ters Pruden MORAVIAN CHURCH ~ Pastor Nelson Services held at 6:18 FM Pineene FOUNDRY METHODIST CHAPEL UL eLs or ns 1500 16th SL NW Pastor Lee iP it ot. IN. W HOLY “TRINITY 11:00 a pete th danhen. Shien. FALLS CHURCH son 8c. D. Secretary Eastern District Arh --Bivd. --and.- Woodlawn... Avs. Vespers at 8:00 b — ASHED — a PRED BON WEDNESDAY SERVICE. o 00 P.M, | GRACE LUTHERAN | The ey ea D. Bryden 4300 16th St. N.W. the N. Ocrter ‘Bitance Cloth- ek LUTHERAN. 4th and & . when we hit the first giant dip for everythi ] sts Vicar Pred Golke. “'O) ng else I'd met in peo ae zm eat * **lit shook my faith. But it didn’t Tie. — pa the Rev. Kenneth . af ‘shake my mother’s on that! Reaching out again for my . y Os room, 4 eaigpencea ee ee fey eee doviene 100d aed nian she. wy Bh agg o may s le would be b s i a T Believe 19 never walk again. ‘ery good, An ae Bla 5. ‘Paes: ’ — = ’ ALIST Tie AL ers | We had finished “Mildred sata. wherever I might ° “Ca ’|Pierce” and mother took a | The Saaihe 14 rey ew SA Pike. dean of | {h| group of us to Snow Valley, a ie eee be _ oe | York. to preach. in exchange gf Suipits | Spot in the San Bernardino piness—for they all stemmed ness of God with the Very Rev. Sayre oT a While my friends! from her inspired teaching. FSLEY METHODIST. the Rey ‘and I were tobogganing, gdnloy Lamu appearence Gna t They would become the flowers Subject at the tune deh of ON GREG A- ee «ange» gh ane et were of the mustard seed of faith TIONAL. the Rev "Ruschmeyer._ Sailing down the hard-packed \she had placed in my heart. Almas Temple Auditorium | ‘ers: ps: stor of t sp church now i icy hillside like snow birds.) on ay. rp 4 1315 K St N.W | he, Conqzogations! Chris tan Chure rehes then there was a crash and I . inspiring = » NW, Without. Us fel heart-warming story of the eae aos ens RESBYTERIAN, Miehian ell on my back with a thud. FOS TerKInG Pe, Wheaton M¢. ‘The Rev I didn’t ery out. The feeling) “Know Your Neighbor Club” of = | Zageheus 7...Men_of the Bible: was toe—big-for-that.-Invelun-,Atlanta, Ga., as told by Sarah Sun., Mar. 21, 11 A. M. | 'tarily, from long habit, my | Shtelds Pfeiffer. A demonstra- What is the relationship be- 1 Spiritualist spirit reached out for faith and tion of what + ams can do tween desire ane fulfill- |, : re~ yg en egy Fo y mal tals 84885 . ment? What is the exact PIRI ‘eae |, e hospita © GOCLOTS! prom method whereby Infinite “DIVINE TRUTH, INC. were Gave; my) Sek wee tee Mind responds to man’s Services Tue & Thursday. 8 p.m, | Oroken. \The Register and Tribune Syndicate), needs? Is life giving you m* PAULINE ae that for which you long? If Consultation by Appeta tment Only not, be sure to hear this-|! — Gi Is’ S fi I. .N W le | scientific analysis of the uni- ir 8 emt wna 8 ext ee peer responsiveness of the _Infinite Father to your 7 C } li — | 9 every need. n Catholic Oratorical Contest D se wow day Green The best speakers in 11 Cath-|third Annual Catholic Oratori- ouncer ‘olic high schools here will com- cal Contest next Monday, Tues- Church of Divine Truth and pete in the semi-finals of the|\day and Wednesday at 4 p. m. KENNETH G. PHIFER, Minister College of Mental Science ‘Girls’ Section of the Twenty-|in St. John’s Military High Bae SP wee Schoel—All Ages Office: 35 E Street N.W. ‘School, 1225 Vermont ave. nw. 00 A.M.—Church School Nursery Kindergarten, Primary and Junior Phone ST. 3-6981 Chis 11:00 A.M.—”WE CONFRONT THE CROSS” isi Church ‘of Christ |g the Bt school champlons ane Academy: Madge Iselinger LUTHER PLACE. Arlington Church of Christ | Trinity. in eathicls rinity High School, Patricia 17 . 20 North Irving St,, Arlington, Va. i a 3115 P St NW. Established 1780 MEMORIAL ae 6 Walker, Minister a, See Si _Taerees Tha First Presbota: a eee * alker . Atchison, St. Dominic's; Mau- ihe first Presbyterian Church tn Washington, D. C. Thomas Circle, 14th and N.. N.W. 00 AM —Bible Class for AD een Cleary St Patrick's: RUSSELL CARTWRIGHT STROUP, D.D., Minister Albert R. Burkhardt. Pastor 3 M. |] 11:00 A. M.— WORSHIP — eee ee ee 6:45 Kid.a-Semdew @choct ed interim +. “hurch Sche (5 P.M —Reguler Wor ships Mary been i Notre Dame 11:00 AM— THE [OY OF THE cross” (Nursery During All Services) dies Aa Academy; Yvonne Pitts, St. . te. we SERS Le 9:45 prey — Cecilia's; Claudia Steiner, 8p Sacret Heart Academy; Sheila PERIL y; GUNTON-TEMPLE Sixteen sn apd, Hewtes SECOND HAND RELIGION" McCormack, Mackin. High Reverend Eric Lindsay Cowall, B.A. BD.. Minister Dr. Carl C, Rasmussen School: Mary Ann McBrearty, : 9:45 A.M.—Church School Youth Meeti ngs at 5, 6 and 7.P.M. Immaculate Conception, and 11:00 A.M.—"AN HONEST FACING OF FACTS” June Moynihan, Immaculata Chancel Choir Nursery (Through Primary) During Service Seminary. THE NEW Y AVENUE PRESBYTERIAN Three finalists will be chosen ¥O and New York Ave., CHRIST’ Ministers: George M. Docherty, D.D. Aty | i . ; #'t- Stephen -H: Prussi ‘Dir: ct-Muste -- Wiltem Wartkt i f arnum) 7:45 PM—"WHEN SIN COL . 1 fe titam Watkins, Organist J, Victor Murtland LECTS ITS DEBTS” : 300 PM—ST JOMNS PASSION 2. THE — Gerhard B. Lenski Dr. Carpenter speaking Prederick T. Schmucker ‘to compete Sunday, March 28, . rty preaching at all services oo AS vw —— vreh ~ Executive Board at 3 p. Mm. 8306 11 A M.—Morning Worship Church of Brethren Church of Brethreit Dr. Doch ’ REST 9:00 P.M.—CONGREGATIONAL FELLOWSHIP: in PETER MARSHALL HALL LIFE AT ITS BES? 9:40 A.M.—Sunday Schocl—6:20 P.M.—Training Union 1795 Well Supervised Nurseries at all Services AM.—Church Scheel Washington City Church of the Brethren NATIONAL PRESBYTERIAN ‘CHURCH Evening Service Broadcast 8:00-9:00 P.M., WMAL 9:4 e ° . ‘ , Edward F. "Yost: Pastor FOURTH STREET AND NORTH CAROLINA AVE SE. Connecticut Avenue and N Street, N.W. ECOND ag Rp Wed. at 8 P.M. ane H. Ramsey, B. D. Minister SEULOND CHANCE | 9:45 AM.—Church School “4 Friendly Church with a Gospel Message” | E¢ward LR. Elson DD. Litt. LLD i ita hae Nursery during Ll Servic ° ve ADR escage ae tg OF A CHRISTIAN—}. MEEKNESS Harold E. Meyers, B.D. Theodore Schaefer us i ks Wednesday, 8 P.M. Le —_ Y ENING SNACK 9:00 and 11:00 A.M.—} . Morning Worsh 6:30 PM.-—GROUP MEETINGS—Children, Young People & Adults. National Baptist Memorial ; : CHRIST LUTHERAN a % 7:30 PM—‘PLANS OF GOD 00 and 11:00 A.M.—"WHEN YOU EN THURSDAY 8:00 P.M. LENTEN SERVICE: Rev. Richard W. March. 16th Street and Columbia Road N.W. Dr. Elson preaching sth 4 Gelletin Sts NW TA. 98-6718 | Morning Worship DR. EDWARD B. WILLINGHAM, Minister Broadcast ot 7:00 p. m oitt_ WOOK-AM 1340 & WPAN-PM 100.3 WENCI Lenten Service. Wednesday Rniversalist REV. DONALD M. LOUDERMILK, Assistant Minister 2:18—Chureh School , aon Se eam 8:45 and 1) A.M.—"THE MEANING OF SALVATION” 6:30 P M.—Sunday is Club. r 90 AM ‘ Ca To C Sixth in series: “Our Living Faith,” Dr. Willingham Buses N-2. L-2 Cars 40-42 Stop in front of the chureh FALLS CHURCH 5 AM —Sunday School : 9:40 AM—Bible School 6:45 P.M.—Training Fellowship CHURCH OF THE PILGRIMS LUTHERAN 8:00 P.M.—"THE WRATH OF GOD,” Dr. Willingham | ST. PAUL'S New Testament Study in “The Revelation.” Gift of the Presbyterians of the South “Objections To Christ's Claims” oes 4M —Chureh School to the Nation's Capital A 0 werenie Service (Nursery Will Be Open During All Services) Henry W. Snyde Pastor vies Free Parking for cars of those attending Bible School and Mornin On the Parkway at 23nd & P Sts 0.W shoo! aah wr nisters Andrew Reid Bird. D.D. James G. Graham. §.T.M. 9°00 ‘end -11-00° Services, VTP DARARIE OF THE Lenten Services FAITH LUTHERAN Arlington Bivd, Arlington, Ve Carl @. Mengering, Pastor 9:40 and 11:00—Church School 8:30 and 11:00 rape “~7 INTER nh he) ; a ie| ee eee | Vil iF | 8 P.M. ilate? Universalist UNIVERSALIST NATIONAL MEMORIAL CHURCH Corner 16th and § Streets N.W. REV. SETH R. BROOKS, D.D., Minister 10:00 A.M.—Church School—Adult Class. 11:00 A.M.—Worship “CAN YOU TELL WHAT YOU BELIEVE?’ at OFORGE Broad St, ‘Rt. 9:30 A.) M.—Church Sc Worship, 1636 Columbia Rd. N.W. Have ticket stamped in Churc from Center of Church 1] 00 A M— Christ as Pr reacher” Conference Room. CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Sth and H Streets N.W. | Dr. Clarence W. Cranford, Minister Chester H. Jones, Associate Minister Richard N. Hey, Dir. Ch. Educ; Thomas Moss, Organist Mr. Frank A. Heberlein, Minister of Music 9:00 and 11:15 AM—Worship Services, Dr- Cranford preaching “THE SHADOW OF A MOONLIT FIGURE” 10:00 A.M.—Church School 6:15 PM.—Yoeuth groups 7:30 P.M—Worship Service. Dr. Cranford preaching “THE LOOK THAT ENLIGHTENS” 8: 00 PM. —Services for the deai—Mr. Fraricis C. Higgins, leader Wednesday, March 24, 8:00 P.M.—Lenten Bible Series | by Dinner at 6:30 P.M. . Chester H Jones, presiding. 10:00 A.M.—Sunday Schoo! ae om : 11:00 AM.—"FRIENDSHIP WITH GOD” 6:15 P.M—Youth Groups 7:45 P.M.—"HOW GOD HANDLES SIN” Ministers: Sixt th Robt. N. Odcrter, Jr. “ar ont Tee aoe Se. Ned E. Richardson opal School, 9:45 A.M. . 11:00 A:M.—"STRANGE CLOTHING” I Peter 5:5, 6 P.M.—jJunior High Westminster Fellowship P.M.—Senior High Westminster Fellowship P.M.—Young oe ee aaegrenged Fellowship P.M.—Wednesday: “HOUR OF POWER” Motenates Primary 11 A.M, Nursery During Morning Service Lutheran Church Of The Reformation — —— === 212 EAST CAPITOL STREET Dr. Lawrence D. Folkemer, Pastor Dr. Oscar F. Blackwelder. eater Emeritus Tule Zabawa, Minister of Music . George Koehler, Organist 9:00 and 11:00 A M—"THE PERIL OF INDECISION,” Dr. Felkemer 10:00 A.M.—Graded Classes for all ages. Worship and classes for children. Nursery 9-12 8:00 P.M.—"WE BELIEVE IN THE HOLY SPIRIT.” Dr. Carl C. Rasmussen, Gettysburg Seminary Capitol Hill Noonday Lenten Services (Daily except Sat. from 12:10 to 12:30 p.m) © Monday, March 22, Rey, Paul Diehl, Trinity Methodist Tuesday and Wednesday, Dr. Edward G. Latch. MetrMolitan Meth Thursday and Friday, Dr. Cafi Heath Kopi, First Congregational LENTEN RETREAT SATURDAY, MARCH 27TH, 9 AM. TO 5 PM. EMMANUEL EPISCOPAL CHURCH 13th & V Streets SE s The inspired Father John Langtry Williams of the Diocese of Long Isiand will again conduct the Retreat. Father Williams will help many to find PEACE OF MIND AND SOUL with his meditations upon the Holy Communion. SCHEDULE: 9 a. m., Holy Communion. Breakfast. - Morning and after noon. meditations. Closing at 5 p.m. with of the Blessed Sacrament. Sponsored by AMERICAN CHURCH UNION (Washington Richmond Regi ALL AME WELCOME ona! Chapter} { ~ - ews Feat es » terry yy" « w fV AS se TORRONE A. aed a lee mryy + ‘S SPN a ee Js Mah 4 Dy ad “THE. WASHINGTON POST ad TIMES “ee ~ ¥en Vee RSS ITE LOOT Priee oh mali aay ae a as REPS PRE Sh Bs ft ee -HERALD RE RS AS i Sida, March 20, 1954 % 5 she oa SOO EY, FORE he +7 Rom mao W% bely die ae S| News of the Churches : By Kenneth Dole Guardian Carillon to Play |. yd | ‘H ymns of Area Churches The 25 church bells mounted on the roof of Guardian Federal Savings Association, Silver Spring, this Sunday: will. play the favorite hymns of St. Camillus Catholic Church. Each week, the Association will salute the faith of fa different religious organization in order! to “encourage a sense of re- ligious feeling and friengliness, among the partisans of differ- ent faiths.” The hymns selected by each congregation will be played by) the carillonic bells on Sundays at noon, 2, 4 and 6 p. m. Cal-| vary Lutheran and the Mont-| gomery County Jewish ~~ munity Center are next on the, schedule. Leo M. Bernstein, president! of the Association, hopes the program will encourage town that prays” and spread | religious tolerance. Previously,' the daily playing of the Lord's Prayer brought a “pleased re- sponse” from hundreds of near- by residents and business people, he said. The Army announced this week that all chaplains have been awarded a total of 508 decorations for wounds, de- votion to duly and heroism ir. the Korean Campaign. MISSION GETS START The new Greenbelt Mission of the Metropolitan Baptist: Church already has 100 mem- bers. Average attendance is 75 both for worship services and Sunday school classes. The Rev. Dr. William J. Crowder, Director of the Department of Missions and Evangelism of the District Baptist Conven- tion, is temporary pastor. John Stewart is Sunday school sup- perintendent and his wife is training school director. The Mission was started last fall and meets at Greenbelt Ele- mentary School... Spencer Miller, Jr.. who recently re- signed as Assistant Secretary of Labor in Charge of Interna- tional Affairs, will speak at a Family Night dinner next Tues- day at 6:30 pm. at George- town Presbyterian Church, THE YOUTHFUL Suffragan Bishop of the Episcopal Dio- cese of Virginia, the Right Rev. Robert Fisher Gibson Jr., will confirm a class of 11 adults and 25 young people at Christ Church, Alexandria, Sunday at 9:30 a.m. He also will preach at 11 am. ... Another youthful clergyman, the Rev. Robert S. Bilheimer of Lynbrook Long Island, who has many friends here, this” week Was’ appointed Associate General Secretary of the World Council 4 uv Islamic Center Work Resuming Work on the two wings of the Washington Islamic Center has resumed, Hassan Hosny, Second Secretary of the Egyptain Em- bassy and executive secretary) of the Washington Mosque! flay. Singe last fall, construction em the building at 2551 Massa- smusetts ave. nw., has consisted | mostly of interior work, pend-| ing-completion of detailted-in- the building; the first unit of|/®!ne Lenten services: a ture. terior plans, Hosny said. The Rev. Herbert E. Eberhardt “The HOUR of POWER” WMAL - SUNDAY - 10:00 P.M. Organ— Chimes—Violin Celesta- Piano Westminster College Male Quartet New Wilmington, Pa. Saturday, March 27th, 7:45 p.m. CENTRAL UNION MISSION 624 Indiana Avenue Dedication Owens Memorial Eiectronte Cerillon Musical Program illus Whitinger of Navy Band and Ovher —*§-10-70 Club”— Mission last year ence, and Dr. iqtto, Dr. Robert F. -_—-— of Churches. He is the first American to be named to such an influential executive posi- tion in the World Council. According to a Catholic Di- gest survey on mixed mar- riages, 75 percent of the people think married couples would be happier with the same religion, 22 percent feel it makes no difference, and 3 percent don’t know. CHURCHES AID MISSION According to Superintendent Herbert E. Eberhardt, 118 churches from 10 denomina- tions ‘took some part in the work of the Central Union Seven Washingtonians will take part in the twenty-second annual convention of the National Catholic Family Life Confer- ence ‘at New Orleans next week. They include Edward A. Hute, president of the confer- Helen E. Peix- Margaret Mealey, Martin Work and Sister Mary Janet : Riley Hughes of Georgetown. University’s School of Foreign Service will speak on “Sense and Censorship” at St. Peter Claver Center Monday at 8:30 p.m. Dr. Gerard A. Bour- beau, professor of mineralogy at Maryland University, will speak at the communion break- fast of the Third Order of St. Francis at Holy Name College Sunday at 10:15 a. m. A CABLEGRAM from Vatican this week gave Pope's “paternal Apostolic blessing” to the Most Rev. Bryan J. McEntegart, Rector of Catholic University, and the faculty and students. The blessing was prompted by the the the University’s anniversary mass for the Pope teacher-pupil conference for the primary, junior and inter- mediate departments of the Christ Lutheran Church School will be held Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in the parish hall ... The Board of Missions of the Bal- timore Conference of the Meth- odist Church cated $122,500 for A parent- sites for »/new churches and other expan- sion purposes. This was_ the. first allocation from the $800.- 000 obtained last fall in a church extension crusade. Open House At St. Luke’s Odenwald, | this week allo’ ~*~ bn tie i. 7 Oe, ~~ te _ Seen im ia a ese ene es ‘Two Meetings Arlington Unitarian Church Dedicates New Wing The Unitarian Church of Arlington dedi- cated its new $90,000 wing (at left above), | last Sunday at 11 a. m. at the Church, Ar- lington blvd. and S. Pershing drive. ) 2 New Yorkers to Address Epiphany’s Lenten Services The Rev. Dr. Ralph Sockman, of Christ Methodist Church,| New York, and the Very Rev. James A. Pike, Dean of New York's Cathedral of St. John the Divine, will preach next week at the noonday Lenten services of the Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G st. nw. Dr. Sockman, nationally known for his radio broadcasts, | Tuesday will speak Monday, and Wednesday. Because of his following - here, he will speak twice each day, at 11 a. m. and noon. Dean Pike, a former lawyer with the Security and Exchange Commission here and later a curate at St. John’s Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square, will speak at 5:30 p. m. Wednesady and at noon Thursday and Fri- day. Capitol Hill Services Capitol Hill noonday preach- ers will be the Rev. Paul Diehl, of Trinity Methodist Church, Monday, and the Rev. Dr. Ed- ward G. Latch, Metropolitan Memorial Methodist Church, Tuesday through Friday. The services are held atthe Lutheran Church of the Reformation, 212 E. Capitol st The only other Protestant church to hold regular midday services during Lent is St. John’s Episcopal Church, La- fayette Square. The Rev. Dr. C. Leslie Glenn, the minister, will preach at all services next week. On Thursday and Satur- day the eucharist will be cele- brated. Noon masses are being held tt each day through Lent by the following Catholic churches: 'St. Matthew's Cathedral, St. Patrick's, St. Stephen's, Immac- ‘ulate Conception, | Dominice’s. and St. ‘Masses Break Precedent | ; Slated Sunday The new St. and Calvert st. nw., an open house Sunday from 3 to 5 p. m. Luke’s Meth- Matthew's. Foundation, announced yester- Odist Church, Wisconsin ave.|Trinity, St. Patrick's, will hoid | Sustine's, For the first time in the his- } tory of the Archdiocese of Washington, afternoon and eve- ning masses are being said dur- = ling Lent in various downtown churches. These St. include St. Joseph's, Holy St. Au St. Alo- St. Peter's, ysius’, St. Mary’s, Conception and St. Stephen's. Various Protestant churches| Visitors will be taken through | are holding special Sunday eve- three-unit Refreshments proposed struc- will served. ' The building consists of a main floor with sanctuary seat- ing 450 persons, a_ chapel, lounge, and church offices. Classrooms for 650 pupils oc- cupy the second floor. The basement has a fellowship hall) seating 350, and a kitchen. Church services will start in the new building April 4 at) 8:45 and 11 a. m. "Spl Realization At the National City Christian Church, Thomas Circle, the preacher this Sunday at 7:45 p. m. will be the Rev. Dr. Samuel M. Shoe- maker, of Calvary Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh, nationally known author, preacher and ‘expert on personal counselling. The American University Chorus will sing. | The Rey. Dr. Carl C. Rasmus- Episcopal | * Immaculate ea! sen, professor at the Gettys- burg Theological Seminary, will | Dean Pike Dr. Sockman speak on “We Believe in the Holy Spirit” at Reformation Lutheran Church Sunday at 8 p.m. Services Set Wednesday At the Rock Spring Congre- gational Church, Arlington, the minister, the Rev. Paul R Hunter, will speak at 7 p. m. on “The Smiling Face.” Professors from the Virginia Theological Seminary, Alexan- dria, are giving Lenten lectures in the library of St. John’s Epis- copal Church, 821 16th st. nw.., each Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. The next speaker is the Rev. R. Lansing Hicks, who will talk on “The Christ of the Old and the New Testament.” A Lenten retreat will be con- ducted at Emmanuel Episcopal rect Church, 13th and V sts. se.., week from today from 9 a. to 5 p. m., by the Rev. Langtry Williams of St. drew’s Church, Astoria, Island. Special Wednesday Lenten services include: L LY THER PLACE MEM( IRIAI . Pa Alert R. Burkhardt. ST oT —— Ic the Right Rev. Me Pa O'Connor ecuber of “the National Shr ine of the pmoogsate Conceptior “His Home and FPOUNDARY METHODIST Bp Rev. Dr. E. Pearce ve. odist missionary to Chin O speak GEORGETOWN LUTHERAN Bp the Rev. Herbert E. Eberhardt. super tendent of the. Central Union Mis ssion to speak ALL SOUL'S pe maga EPISCOPAL, Dp. m.. th Rev. Quentin — he HUANG — of the Burma Rx to speak ST. ALBAN’S EPISCOPAL supper series. the Very Rev ‘yi Cathedral of St fine to ak WESTMORLAND CONGREGATION AT, m the Rev Dr. Philip Gordor Scott ‘The —_ os, of of People You Kn HAMLINE METHODIST & > Rev Dr useell ft Hicks School. Duke University gn paszorat counseling. a m John An- Evo m “How Can - 4° ‘ Dp o iT J the RAE Met h- 6°30 p Jes sus—Stories m the Divinity noted riter “Religion and A. @. E. Zion JOHN WESLEY A. M. E. ZION CHURCH ational Church of Zion Methodiom 14th and Corceran Sts. N.W B® Franklin Jackson, DD. Mini 8-00 A.M. Holy Communion A M Su lay - nn A +s Vv _— . - 6:00 P.M N ter Satterwhit Var K alente . g an aod 8:00 P.M.—Dr. Jackson Christian Science Christian Science ‘Hill Probes To Be Oxnam Long *) Lecture Topic Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam will discuss congressional ‘in- vestigating techniques next Friday at 8:15 p. m. at the fiftieth anniversary meeting of the. Joseph Priestley -‘Confer- ence, Arlington Unitarian Church The Bishep- of the Washing- ton Area of the Church will talk on: “Are the Procedures of the Investigating Committee a Threat to Free. dom?” The two-day meetin Saturday, will bring Unitarians from the District, northern Virginia, Maryland Delaware and Pennsylvania The group is named after Joseph Priestley, discoverer of oxygen and early Unitarian who emigrated from England to Pennsylvania in 1794. The Rev. Ross Allegw Weston of the Arlington church is president of the conference Other lectures next week in- clude: SLING iTON se AIR AR RL — unday Washing on irect ‘Coun 4 oO g. ending together Oo; the onist t . on i po e Ne ae ASI BURY ‘METHODIST "4 Ht RC H. Sur wil ta ar shouted a Jear a ope Africa "Ea t CHIST EPISCOPAT CHURCH Zist and © sts nv Dr. Ernest K. ! ’ a depa ner , 7’ t S ta — ‘Bd act Resea Py : MOUNT VERNON ] Or met CHURCH, FP ; 10 rn the ~ Wil , Bit b} W ASHING TON. SOCIETY day apnea} ETHICAL K ; ne Rode dena of Mary cpr'ies > er ana on Episcopal $82,000 will | to the sational “Builders” cam-’ Methodist « To Hear Talk By Sherrill The Presiding Bishop of the’ Protestant Episcopal Church. nomina tional workshops in ty’ Bovle the Right Rev. Henry Knox Sherrill of New York, will come to Washington Wedne sda y, March 31, to help the Dio- cesan “Build. campaign. The paign $442,000 church sion == Of exten- purposes which » ‘Bishop Sherrill \paign for $4,150,000, and the /rest—$360,000—will be used in ‘the diocese. Bishop Sherrill will speak at a luncheon at the Statler Hote! for parish chairmen and co- chairmen and the active clergy, and at a dinner at the Shore- ham Hotel for advance gifts potential donors, workers, and senior and junior wardens and their wives. The Right Rev. Angus Dun, Bishop of Washington, also Will help explain the significance of the enterprise The fottowing day, ~Aprit 1. 20 teams,of six members each will begin solicitation of 750 or more carefully sélected in- dividuals. Their names were suggested to Chairman Robert Lee O'Brien, Jr.. and his co- chairmen, Mrs. A. Lloyd Sym- ington and William Blum. Jr.. by parish chairmen and other sources General solicitation will signalized by two events Sunday, May 2, the tenth niversary of-Bishop Dun’s con- secration will be observed at Washington Cathedral. Next advance gifts he On an- Disciples of Christ HEAR THE REV. DR. SAMUEL M. SHOEMAKER NATIONAL CITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH i4th at at Tha: nas C irs gated March 21 oo : le A’ The public is cordially invited. Episroyal = Swami q Premananda Of India Sunday at TT a.m. “MYSTIC TEMPLE” iA Sunday Schoo! Also at 11:00 a.m. Public Class fn Philesosay ae RS Wednesday, March 24, GOLDEN LOTUS TeuPLE or r THE SELF-REALIZATION FELLOWSHIP (Non-Sectarian Church) Western Ave. near 49th Street N.W. (N-2 Bus to Chesapeake & 49th Sts.) ALL ARE WELCOME Hear Swami Each Thursday, 6:45 p.m. Radice Station WASH-FM, 97.1 Me. Christ, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES AND READING ROOMS IN GREATER WASHINGTON Branches of The Mother ChurcH, The First Church of Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts Golden Text: tthe work o SUBJECT OF LESSON SERMON MARCH “MATTER” Isaiah 40:8. The grass wit Ol Our God sha lls 21 hereth. t stana for ever. | r he flower ~ ———— ' Assemblies of God Assemblies of God TRINITY CHURCH 2:45 A.M ll vice. —Sunday School. oer A.M.—Worship. Wednesday, 8:00 P.M.—P 12th. and Rheade Island Ave. N.E. Rev. Herbert A. Nunley, tonsil 7:30 PM—Lvangelis Fri.. 8 P.M.—Young Peor rayer. @. THE REV. LENTEN NDAY, 7ANY 11:00 0-115; HARLES SDAY AND WE ~~ Fagnangh a 00 aU R OF CHRI ST } N *» lf ] + rma cerry i Awo ‘ O (DR. WEDNESDAY 2:00 NOON The Church of the Epiphany NOONDAY SERVICES he Rev. Ralph Sockman The Rev. Ralph Sockman DD D. METHODIST CHURC SOCKMAN WILL SPEAK AT DUPLICATE SERVIC ES at.11:00.A..M.. and. Noon) 5:30 p.m. The Very Rev. | THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, March : 12:30 P.M. The Very Rev. James A. Pike, 1.S.D. DEAN OF THE CATHEDRAL OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE, New York DUELL KEAN, Rector DNESDAY March 22, 23 and 24 D.D H, N. Y. City James A. Pike 25 ar id 26 Washington, D. C. @FIRST CHURCH Columbia Rd. & Euclid St. N.W. ECOND CHURCH 3160 Penna. Ave. $.E THIRD CHURCH 13th & L Sts. N.W. FOURTH. CHURCH 3505 16th St. N.W. FIFTH CHURCH 1238 3ist St. N.W. SIXTH CHURCH Hurst Hall, American Univ. Mass. & Neb. Aves. N.W. (Enter Hannay Gate) EVENTH CHURCH 1302 Rhode Island Ave. N.W. EIGHTH CHURCH 22nd & Jackson at R. 1 Ave. Saeed s ' oe ~ ‘Bisriples of Christ Disciples of Christ First Church, Alexandria, at 8; and First, Chevy Chage, at 5. CHURCHES HOURS OF SERVICES Sunday Morning Church Services and Sunday School at ll. Sunday Evening Services in First and Fifth Churches, Third and Four . Virginia © FIR ST CHURCH—ALEXAN +h DRIA 1709 Russel! Rd. FIRST CHURCH—ARLINGTO 6843 Little Falls Rd. SECOND CHURCH—ARL INGTON 3101 Arl. Bivd. at No. Highland &t. SOCIETY —FAIRPAX, Town Hall ss _— 7401 Conn. - Ae FIRST CHURCH—HYATTSVIL 6221 43rd Ave. FIRST C Flower Theater, Sun. 8722 Flower Ave., Wed. HRC} SIL‘ eaibweia Vashington and th Chetehon Washington ST. JOHN’S Lafayette Square The Rev. Leslie Glenn The Rev. Frank Wilson The Rev. Raymond Barnes Holy Communion at 8 and No te 2430 K St fear Wash N.W Cir ST. PAUL me 7 at AN ) A MV .] Ff ) AM. c 9 anda i ses Mon. th ra. Pri * e ! & l2 Wed : Ma! pefo re. ry enone Wis. & Mass ST. ALBAN’S ‘£2 The Rev. Robert & Trenbath, Rector y Communion f Service ng Prayer C. St. Thomas’ Church 18th 8 reet bet ween P& r Dupont Circie The Rev Har: ad Bend Sedgwi Rector ne | ly A, 8:00 AM.—Holy Commun! 11:00 AM.—Morning Sermon Nu 11:00 AM nday Scho 8:00 P.M EVENING SER\ I< Old-Fashioned Hy mn zing The Rector, pen House) W te ey e £ 15 1S p VW Ve aper Service 0 P M @°1 Trinity Church Piney Branch Rd. at Dahlia St. Nr WW. The aes Ray Ryland Rector Richard Gary tant Rector The Rev Assis ; L—Adw Ht + Class * ’ 7 “, ng prayer sermon CHURCH OF THE EPIPHANY 1317 G Street N.W. The Rev. Charles Duell Kean Rector The Rev. Asso ala AWM ial a tA _- ’ _— s Warren E. Mace iate Rector ea _ munion nm 4s be = Fi.ava Kear ] “The Reat Basis of our Security” ay 4 me ers People s ~ € =The “Yor rm 3 oF ‘ & Ati Ascension & St. Agnes 12th and Ave. N.W. Duncas Massachusetts Murchison hillips Christ Church, Georgetown Zist and O Streets N.W.. Since 1817 Rev. Jo ho R. Anschutz. D. D.. Rector 8 and as > A M.—Sun. School] 10:10 You Are Invited n iv “ Cathedral Avenue Tust Eat Q ola | s Ff Ly. : . _ rT te rR te ALL SOULS MEMORIAL CHURCH At PAA? Cr _ Wedneatae. March 24, 8: 00 P. M. cnecticut Avenue NW. arRT -? rma Road” and } bas ‘Saint Stephen and the asabaien ~ < tat r=) Day + Ue ~~ a ee * Educational Workshop Set if n Alexandria The third. of four interde' le apnea edtication, sponsored “the Alexandria Council of vee them will be held from 9:45 am. to 4 p.m. Saturday at Trinity Methodist Church, Alexandria. William L Inderstrodt, min _ister .of.education at the West- moreland Congregational Church, and Mrs. Indersodt, di- rector of children’s work for the Baltimore Conference of the Methodist Church, will be leaders. The workshop will deal with religious education for youth ‘outh counselors, teachers and| parents are invited. | The last of the workshops, designed for church school su- perintendents, pastors and di rectors of religious education, will be held a week from today at Christ Episcopal Church. day. the annual diocesan con- vention will be heid at St John's Church, Georgetown Solicitation will be launched the day after, and continue through the month A speakers’ bureau is being formed under the chairmanship of Maurice K. Heartfield. Divine Srieurce CHURCH OF THE HEALING CHRIST 27460 Sixteenth St NW GRACE L. FAU Minister 8U etapa 11°00 AM ~ oT © ~— * - = re THURSDAY, 8:00 PM. * n rare 2:30 to 1:00 PM poe Meditation Services 12:30 Lenten Washingtom Christian Lustitute CHRISTIAN INSTITUTE 1851 Columbia Road WN.W. Rev. William J. Allen, Minister Men of Manresa To Attend Mass More than 1000 members of the Men of Manresa will atteng their annual Communion mass at 8 a.m. Sunday in St. Patrick © hureh,.10th .and.G sts... NW... The Most Rev. Patrick A. Archbishop of -Wash- ington, will celebrate the mass, which will be followed by breakfast at the National Press Club. The Rev. Vincent Me- Corry, spiritual director of theologians at Woodstock Col- lege, Woodstock, Md., will be prineipal speaker. The Rev. Neil Gargan, director of the new retreat house to be built at Bel Alton, Md. will also speak. The Men of Manresa are for- mer retreatants at the Jesuit retreat house at Manresa, near Annapolis. Anitarian “Whilst you honor must remember ann in al) thing Pr and happ iness of Eliery C ALL SOULS’ CHURCH Sixteenth and net vase Streets N.W antiouity. you in religion as weress ts the law Me race.’ —Wiliam Worship 11:00 AM haere ed A DAVIES. d.D POWELL 2.45 AM Be HOOL r-4 ° proieeee DULT CLA Picture French Titles UNITARIAN CHURCH OF ARLINGTON Ari er Bivd, and So hing Drive Hour: with Schoo! of Religion 10:45 AM At The Church UNITARIAN CHURCH OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY Methodist Methodist Bishoo G. Bromie, District Superintendent Philip C Headquarters Methodist Building Oznam, DD. Edwards 100 Maryland Ave. N.E. L.D DD. and Asbury Smith. D.D _ PETWORTH rant Circle & N Ha RAL PH D SMITH 9:30 AM —{"} “h Sch : 00 AM.-— THE POWER PRAYER YOUTH FELLOWSHIP Wednesday — Dr Fred c. Reynol FRANCIS ASBURY 3146 16th Street N W Rev Charies F. Philips. DD 8:30 AM —Sundav School 9:45 A M.—Prettyman Bible Class for men. Honorable Cari Filto ttand C. K. Powell Teac re NW “Min ister re 31 Or 700 Pw. 8:00 P.M Minister ers — IN THE KING- DO rsery Sri Service 8:00 P.M THE NON-CONFPORM- Wed. 8:00 »p. m—tLe ten Service ELDBROOKE Wisconsin Ave at River Rd NW. Haskel R Deal DD Minicter ‘Take No 30 Car Friendship Hets) 9:30 A.M.—Churech School ey ay rans s ws - ' iD OU! IMPERATI 7:00 PM. —¥o Nur VE ith Pellowship sery During Service > BETHESDA, MD. Huntington Pky. and Georgetown Rd. MARION S&S MICHAEL Minister SELWYN KR. COCKRELL Associate Minister WORBEIY on ‘w: rei Gehow 5 er Fel lowshtp WAUGH THIRD AND A s NE HIRL A KESTER. Minister 9 45 4 M —€hureh Schoe PSUS A 6.30 PM R We Woodside Methodist Church 8750 Geerais AY Silver Spring A es Rev J MILTON Spm D.D Youth Fello Pp nesda v Even neg Lenten Service : K Min ’ 30 and 11:00 A M an ON School >: 30 end ] M Worship e yes for Children During eden Both Services) *c#eh a | AY} n =! WwW Ww’ HYATTSVILLE, FIRST 2 AR W. BEC Nursery Provided for Children nena re ease 1@ et Hamilt a patatee Educatior mm Street WARFIELD (RELI HNSON ¢ Parking in the Rear of the CRursch te agg Memorial ~~ = ET ’ iF GA Nebra } Mexico Av ] Nati onal Methodist Chareh nues UNION iward B. Lewis, 45 AM ‘ . 11:00 A M.—Worshi; We inesd Film and. Meditation [TH ficd-week Lent TR Visit Methodism’ s Histor ; Fist O4 Penns. Ave. NW: i's » Vhitaker, } finister of Music 7 Ff re hip 30 PM Pellowshio, MA OF HE! rn © Ser ' Mr 7 Wesley UMPHAN'T Lewts, Speaking i¢ Downtown Church CALVARY IS GRAV ORR Wednes: 7 p. m—Pasters Clas onvrenient to Bus ,ar » UMD) and Cer Lines a Road BREADY, Ministers Care : : ru rsery a area ‘ te fat? ar a : ‘ LEAT CHRISTIAN TEACHINGS" WESLEY Conn Ave and Jo C STANLEY LOW RR ae La ector of Music vn sc N Ww FLL. Minister Dire a: on x ur CHEVY — Rev a / . George L Nur ery Du ; 7 * CONGRESS HEIGHTS METHODIST Fifth Street and Alab Connor oOo ama Aven' o 65. Mini rong Service FOUNDRY Wednesday Evening Meetings at 8 include testimonies of healing, First Church, Arlington, and First Church, Hyattsville, at 8:15; Fairtaz Society first Wednesday each month. READING ROOMS Washington, D. C. 1532 Connecticut Ave. N.W. 1601 Eye Street N.W. (C. S. Bldg.) 14th & G Sts. N.W. (Colo. Bldg.) 14th & Park Road N.W. (Riggs Bank Bidg.) 2315 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. 1302 Rhode Island Ave. N.W. Minister RARRY L. BELL 1435 Park Road N N.W., “THE SECRET OF RADIANT LIVING National City Christian THOMAS CIRCLE 3. WARREN HASTINGS Minister RICHARD G. SMITH Associate Minister COLUMBIA HEIGHTS 10:50 AM > “RARI ; : .. ECAF = e Ha MT. “VERNON PLACE wanes gt AVE. a DR. AL BERT P. SHIR W. V. Moore, Assoc. a 108 N. Patrick St. Alexandria 5835 Little Falls Road, Arlington 1108 N. Irving St. Arlington Maryland 7401 Conn. Ave., Chevy Chase 6221 43rd Avenue, Hyattsville . 8616 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring All are cordially Invited to attend the services to visit the reading rqome, , 7 _— s ND & K ST. NW. Regular Guided ais Daily and Sunday Vir na yg ISTER KARL, HALVORSON -Choirmaster 9:45 A.M.—Church School 10:50 A.M.—Morning Worship “THE MYSTERIES OF GOD” Dr. Hastings 7:48 P.M.—Sunday Evening Lenten Service —_ . tf. Minister: R. Dean Shure, Min inia CHURCH OF ST. CLEMENT Ma ; sede ‘ “00. 9:30 and 11:00 ° : Tuesday, 6.30 D.m *vomily Night” s Program | = a as M.—"BETWEEN MEMORY AND HOPE" © Dr Albert P. Shiskey, “Visit Methodism’ 5 cvactadiies Church . ” Russell Rd. and Mason. Ave. ' Rev. ae et ue A " ar *Seduesday 10 AMA & 6 P.M. | 7 a ee ae me ee hee? ae en as a die ; ~ Pee ee ee ys Se NR Na - pete OW ‘ PR INT aS Ui! ee hg I Se RE hee RBI Hh OWIR Re IN THE WASHIN ON haw Ae {Po we Pkg Pe ae es Se ~ er 3 “ Bee eae IE So Pets ext pee es POST and TIMES-HERALD Saturday, March 20, 1954 ‘Sticku : Pair a. ha tak senaenirameminentinate Voice of 2" a = ] _ Broadway Gets $35 mg . & PIANOS ; | t. . —— eee eh rc rr __ |. $@ MONTHLY AND UP Sicsidionticicateettest Coffee Shop . "= &t Gara? > Sula na a 1 8 ius Hauling Charged” NEW ~YORK=Speaking ‘for! Police Friday were seeking:a , “Reese ae |= Listen. : ; eases om Myself. ! pair of agile stickup men in | > | . Mo meta I suppose in Europe a genu- the $35 holdup of a coffee shop ihe 4 i | _ “s . ory ool mh : ine, 14-kt. accredited member Of) which was almost thwarted by ae : io : Over 100 to choose STORY & CLARK c a royal family gets used to say- h ; ‘ ie | ) co gy es: GEORGE STECK © ing black is white and having |‘ e quick-thinking owner. | * . Rental or Se the subjects murmur, “You said; The case was one of three va Aine Mo monn ee Manel oe which occurred Thurs- | WASH NGTON POST and — | JORDA N S ainly is the ghostiest, Just a5)\ day night or early Friday. | Jane Case Joan Harrington Sheila Doyle , > oded and tome phn a In the coffee ‘ae stickup | South Dakota meoune” Rhode Island TIMES-H ERALD-WTOP Corner 13th & G Sts. N.W. 9332 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring a a . ° j ; tend not to notice he eoveneta Mrs. Geraldine McGill, 26, wife a sTerling 3-9400 JUniper 35-1105 embroidered on his sleeves. If) of owner Raymond McGill, told oss recess e Sean eo sean ern a ne —— they find this fun, and the sub-| detectives the two bandits en- ; | © ae ee jects agree, I don't mind at all , —but.J do think some liaison ex-|‘“"°? Mac's Coffee Shop, 1506, they cme here tat ‘the sem Thursday. ese pe om) on ~_ m 3 AROUND THE CORNER.. oesn't wor uite e same| Wh y insibe SX een 02 drive up infront ofthe shop, ‘—/ OR AROUND THE WORLD os Pehaee Christian of ompien Mrs. McGill said, she held up a oe Okay, his sister is a queen and| her hands. McGil) spotted the ‘ee 3 9 9 he looks like an absolute dar-|signal and drove his cab onto — o> ling, but this is not going to) the sidewalk to block the shop's ae i make me lose my journalistic) door. a The till looted of about $35, Os | 5 head to the point where if I see’ FOR AN INFORMED AMERICAN YOUTH — — = - — him walk into a plush rhumba) the bandits clambered over the joint with a flashy blonde on his hood of the cab and escaped. | arm I am going to write that) One of them was armed. | he took an ugly old aunt to high| Three holdup men early Fri-| tea at the Tuesday. afternoon ony _ $55 at gunpoint from! meeting of the Socrates Society.|Capital Transit bus driver| : , ; v In her diverting column the| Woodrow Gimbel, 36, of 507 | They Join Cherry Blossom Court All Vv other day Miss Elsa Maxwell Seward square-se., on Southern | ; saa i i noted that “because he is a ave. se., near 30th st. Gimbel’ Newest members of the royal family of the Cherry Blos- ed Van Lines and Security brother of the Queen of Greece,| said the money was taken from| som Festival, March 30 through April 4, are these six K . : : he is always written up as dining his wallet and a cash box. d princesses. ue NEXT packing for long distance moving, tete-a-tete with some charming) “ae Re >, Be 388 Ridge; Ses ea : actress, or dancing cheek-to-|Td. se., told police he was robbed . 4 ' : | : 60> fare cheek with a famous mannequin.|Of $50 Thursday night by wo Hennings Fights Chavez Ouster , ry wot Wie" vats ter Christian said, ‘I only wish I)men in the driveway alongsid : p knew these lovely girls. Unfor-| his home. | By the United Press | overseas removals tunately, I am not so lucky!” | In another case, the holdup) Senator Thomas C. Hennings,, The proposal is an amend- lof a frozen custard shop at I KNOW ELSA did not intend 902 Bladensburg rd. ne. P atl se (D-Mo.) urged the Senate ment to a Republican resolu- to cast -_ slur - me news-| frustrated when a customer | Friday to declare the 1952 New |tion, eo for debate Mon- paper profession wi is para-|walked into the store seconds| Mexico s j-| CAV, which would declare the & 1500 AM : 96 3 FM | graph, because some of her best\ after the bandit had pulled a| Se aes ae contest “no election.” This 5 “s ; | ® | > friends own newspapers, but of|gun from his pocket and de- aa, 8 res ag designed to block | would vacate the seat and clear j Pri ) if course she did, because it is|\manded all the money in the | Republican efforts to unseat|the way for New Mexico’s Re- #a..* Rohe sik Paina itil ik soe ae quite true that chroniclers of the | shop, senator Dennis Chavez (D-|publican governor to name a) nt a — lighter side of life have been) N. M)). ‘successor. Chayez defeated the! ) : reporting (or “writing up”) His) _ Hennings introduced a pro-|GOP candidate, retired Maj. | oN affiliated with the American Security & Trust Co. Royal Highness as getting! posal which would declare|Gen. Patrick J. Hurley, by 5000) Call NA. 84200, ask for Circulation, and order | 1140 15th St., N.W. Di. 7-4040 around with several ladies of Chavez “duly elected” and en-| votes in a balloting marked b r | : CARROLL y The Washington Post, guaranteed home delivery. A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR 64 YEARS notable pulchritude. e2[ titled to his Senate seat. iwidespread charges But not because he is a broth-! Ds OF RIGHTER'S . ioe side é rit Sg a Ctogemnce | er of the Queen of Greece.) [#f. . en, 32 ~ : srt oe ~ sure is re tyPe | if yoy follow the bung ) | a s to strangers, cause EMINI (Birthdays from May ° . : June 21)—Get together with companion in each instance he was no fur- brimming with enersy and force: take a trip to ace °o pieasure an you ther away from them (at a de-| tan talk out mutual problems in best sirable table in Pavillon) than possible atmosphere. to the sain of ail. . ; 5 I am from my typewriter, and July a1)—Use this day te let the Gel- , ; : en ula e your suice. oopera he was yakking away as if he with all about you qneerteny: do your had been formally introduced. | best to fulfill duties; give anks for a e | nee to do so. | LEO (Birthdays from July 22 to mus Owner Is Sued | Ve miesing. by. wit . nions. Be In Montgomery Crash og fo Eber aswell, “— A $55,000 suit was filed in MO we By RH BM. Montgomery County Circuit periences or inherited training, back- 7 . a wie ground, that solve problems now facing Court Friday against Rufus B. you. Pamily chats can bring good re- t ' “s sults in this respect. . Butts, owner of a day camp | "i,m, “(pirthdays from September 23| bus which crashed on Rock-|to October 22)—Spiritual matters await| ville pike last July 27, injur-| 22 abie to judse how to attain cher-| OF NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IV and APPLIANCES ing 11 persons and killing one.| ished ambitions in p. m. You can be | very damna t ooo ooo OOS OS om ie Gotever = - to November 21)-—Y | understand TIL 9 P.M. your current dilemmas more easily if) sd you search ont causes. seek secret ad-| antation ivice from others as to best way to | solve a rt } ’ - . . | : No- ;¥ rer ° b 1)— You've ecipes h warmest well tru Leetin f ind Be less de- LUNCHEONS & DINNERS | termined to cet your way: be kind ermin CAPRICORN (Birthdays from De-' 12-9 Dail |cember 22 to January 20)—Be careful y not to estrange those in od | gee of ; j power for best results in worldly con- ¥ ; Cocktail Lounge Open Sundays, Too siderations. Instead, think out how to + 50 Thor a*® gain esteem of others, add to assets a ( -* Washer AQUARI (Birthdays from January ariy a&. m. at- Semi-Auto: — r ; . follow with s T / ‘ ‘a ‘Retri er't't 9 or. good books, programs on radio and TV, | . model 4- 4 - N b 11 . s (Trade-n) magazines newspapers. 5 | oust (9. Co Py , PISC (Birthdays from February ,) me ESTING vy le 20 to March 20)—Problems are bul op- pree-W ES j Soa n portunities: proved by following hunch ) mACHIN . — —a— _— Brand a sample) , Was LO. 5-0799 The ty rm ner sbunale : gre 11 Wod \ TV conse : 10% ot ee a ee 5 hutomatl¢ $119 20 Minutes from D, C 1 si < ‘ » Ue t for properf relaxation ‘et 6 ssi0 this vitality is best $ poRTAsle $09.7: (Reposs® Route 97, 12 miles north of Silver | disposed of by taking part in sports. 1 Spring, out Georgia Ave. Extended (enjoying good books and entertainment) llieralter | via television, radio shows. This youns- Haltt CLOSED MONDAYS ster is so versatile that simost any leareer thet entices will sult his or her | talents. | atio Washer 939.95 N : {Be : ) ————— 199.95 Natio erator . utomatic . 939.95 © \ T . Ne 5 cl * (1953 $99 First the Auto Show! °1 9 ee nea a 429.95 | Co ass $139 it ee | si — | nal Brand Repos? Then the Flower Show! | : ) 389 TV ee nae 299.95 Bendix | ws National Bron automatic Washer . T | 7 T a. + an) a ee Washer $ 9 . (Fe Co b ' Gibso” - n er ossession) N ( ) \\ the | speed : «+ Refri ia $39 (Rep 9 : | ew) | ms \ TV , $99 | 299.95 Bendis DOG } ; _wpShER —s . putomatic — Washer. A vg Sp COM> ‘ consis oS a fer $449- rain. SHOW | 21 oi 9 ra 2 = b. g #t i - 29 ae — Rad Quantt! M With 1.000 Dogs of All Breeds | | ssi 999.99 National any ' * | | 7 “oiled ov" Console ie) cal | : ; NATIONAL GUARD | ns Ca erator ee all " IN: I, | ft. Rettig . , \ Choice DS ARMORY | ae en $149 te ; 7 b doeced pVERTISE : A os puny A Ml e?¢ 20th and East Capitol Sts. : — eee TV 0 ya 4 SUNDAY, MARCH 21st | wes jaie, wasnet | 17 RA y yg ) 00 ; : rors | | Black Beat | Yanks, 2-1, ‘Down 3 Times CGiardetlo™ TKOs Troy In Seventh NEW YORK, March 19 *.— On |-Hitter |<. MIAMI, Fla , March 19 #.— | second-ranking middleweight Pee Wee Reese's single scoring contender from Philadelphia, Billy Cox with two out in the Friday ht floored Willi ninth inning gave the Brooklyn *"®4Y "sent = toor nee Dodgers a 2-1 triumph over the Troy three times and handed New York Yankees before athe young Washingtonian sa crowd of 9032 here tonight. savage beating to win on tech- ae yen es, eek te nical knockout in 39 seconds pennant winners and the sixth Of the seventh round. setback in a row for the World Giardello, a 13-to-10 favorite, Champions weighed 159 to Troy’s 156%. he Yankees accounted for tne clever and hard-hitting only one hit off the combined _. offerings of Don Newcombe Giardello dropped the 21-year- and Joe Back. It was a homer old Troy twice in the first by Bob Cerv off Black to tie round and once in the second the score in the eighth inning.’ round with right-hand smashes. Newcombe allowed only two Each time the game youngster walks in the first six frames staggered to his feet at the Bob Wiesler started for the count of three, but was given Yanks and gave up a run in the mandatory eight count. the first on singles by Junior Troy, winner of his last seven Gilliam, Vic Marasco and Carl fights by knockouts, took a Furillo. He yielded only two brutal beating from then on more hits but was relieved by although he wasn't floored ur ts _ CY manager of each club and maybe a word or two from the ’ Wally Burnette in the seventh again. Referee Al Berl finally : all wore heroes’ wreaths for field managers. sini wate tim tian Gaia a ; , | e¢ : ts \after he issued three passes. stopped the slaughter after in the epic struggle. wet i | —- leew , Runnels yin fol straight hits e = . 'Br’klyn (N) 100 000001—2 7 1 Joey walloped Willie with eight ; w ry straight punches to the jaw I'M NOT too sure that The Post will forgive me for |2"4 Grove in one run. Sievers New Y'k (A) 000 000 010—1 1 6 something that happened at the first National Celebrities Golf Tournament at the Columbia Country Club. It happened that I covered t hat tournament for the Times- Herald and later on, we all went down to the Carlton Hotel. It seems a party had been arranged for the various celeb- rities but Bus Ham, the Post sports editor, had to rush to his office to “make up” the paper. Shirley also had to go to his office to write a column. Since I was through with my work, Shirley asked me if I'd be an official greeter along with the late Senator Robert A. Taft. Mr. Taft already was at the hotel when I got there. He was surrounded by mountains of buffet and, while a lion in the political arena, confessed himself a babe in the sports world. So I took over immediately. As soon as the sports celebri- ties came straggling in, I put them through the receiving line. Of course, as the even ing wore away, | personally signed all sorts of checks—acting, of course, for Messers. Ham and Povich. I TRUST AT THIS late date that all will be forgiven because, after all, the Celebrities has become a tradition in | Washington. So perhaps I owed The Post an indirect vote of thanks for letting me cut my political teeth with Mr. Taft. Of course, I'm happy to be with all of you and I hope we'll have the standout sports department in the country. we have a good start. I hope, too, that I think the Post-Times-Herald feels like the father who marries off his daughter when he’s told: “You're not losing a daughter, you're gaining a son.” Beene Rejoins Yanks Sain Ends Retirement For $30,000 MIAMI, Fla., March 19 #.— The New York Yankees, faced with the .need of a. reliable righthander, Friday received the glad tidings that Johnny Sain is coming out of retire- ment. Sain reported Petersburg training base where he telephoned General Manager George Weiss. He plans to start working out Saturday with rookies and injured players while most of) the team is in Miami for the Yankee-Brooklyn series. Because ‘of the sale of Vic Raschi to the St. Louis Cardi- nals and the retirement of Ewell Blackwell with a sore arm, the Yankees had made repeated efforts to lure Sain back into the fold. A final offer of $30,000, an increase of $8,000 over last season, is reported to have changed his mind. The Yankees, who have been suffering repeated reverses in ~ spring games, were elated over the news. to the Stephens Homers but Orioles Lose MESA, Ariz., March 19.—The Chicago Cubs jumped on south- paw Jim Post, pint-sized Balti- more rookie, for five runs in the eighth inning to thump the Ori- oles, 13-8, here Friday. The smallest crowd of the spring, 901 paid customers, watched the Cubs explode for all their runs in the last four innings off Post and his rookie teammate, Vachel Perkins, ‘after the veteran Lou Kretlow had hurled a sparkling two-hit- ter for the first four innings. It was only the second time a Cub had been able to win in 2 exhibition starts. The Orioles have now won 10 and lost three to pace the Arizona circuit. Big guns in the Cub attack were Ernie Banks, freshman shortstop, and first baseman Dee Fondy, who clouted two homers apiece. Centerfielder Bob Talbot, another Chicago rookie, and Vern Stephens, the Orioles’ 33-year-old third sacker, also hit for the circuit, Stephens’ blow being his first wallop out of the park since ‘he joined the new Orioles. La Salle eats Penn State, 69-54 Bradley Defeats USC, 74-72. Gains NCAA Finals KANSAS CITY, March 19 ® - The fighting Bradley Braves drove” back from an’ fi-point ‘of free throws. He sank both to put Bradley dhead, 74-70. - The Trojans raced back with ‘batted in two runs with a tre- mendous double. Stobbs |earned the unique honor of be- coming the only Washington ipitcher to hold a victory by | hurling great ball after a rocky ‘first inning when he was bumped for three runs. Stone did a great clutch job in the ninth when Cincinnati had the tying run on second base with only one out. Yost Scored Clincher Those are the facts for fu- ture baseball historians to ‘embroider. Actually the win- ining run came when Eddie Yost dashed home from third base in the sixth while the Cincinnati infield was concen-| ‘trating on running down Run-! nels between. first and second. The Nats got 11 hits to seven) for the National Leaguers. Harry Perkowski, who won 12; BRADENTON, games for the Redlegs last sea- ) son, got the loss. Herman mi ratte chap werningunaliiagen* ‘Wehmeier locked up. letics hit four home runs off The Nats went to work on Rookie Ben Johnson today to |Perkowski with plenty of vim' defeat the Milwaukee Braves, and base-hits in the first inning. | 10-6, in their exhibition base- Yost and Runnels singled and pa); game here. moved up into scoring position}; The American Leaguers on Sievers’ infield out. Mickey! started with a four-run splurge Vernon grounded out as Yost) after two were out in the first scored. Tom Umphilett (hero,| when Vic Power and Gus Zer: “ge class), drove in Run-\njial hit consecutive homers, —— _,| Don Bollweg doubled and Bill Gloom descended on the Nat/Renna hit another home run followers in the bottom half) of¢ johnson. when Stobbs was touched for; Bobby Shantz, the A's ace three runs. Connie Ryan was jefthander who was ailing last ‘safe on Runnels’ error and! season, allowed one run on |\Lloyd Merriman walked after| two hits in the five innings he \Grady Hatton fouled out./worked He and one of the stables with Shantz in Form A’sSmash 4. Homers, Beat Braves --—_—_—_—— Fla.. March THEY'RE READY—Laurel opens the Mary- land spring racing season this afternoon | 'BRerra: ’ —Burdette. in the 19-day meet is that owned by Walter | M. Jeffords. Two of Jeffords’ finest are | many entries Ferous (left) and Policeman's Day. . First Race Off at 1:45 P.M. ’ Laurel Opens Racing With Wide Open ’Cap By Walter Haight Btatl Reporter Beating the official spring gun by two days, the “interna- tional” Laure! Race Course opens the 1954 Maryland racing season today, the earliest date the sport ever has been offered at a major track in the East. Post time for the first race is *1:45 p. m. Yo Originally scheduled to open 2 ; . . on Monday, Laurel's inaugural Early Busses Added To Laurel Track Run “eekend through _ legislation which returned to the track the § day lost last fall when the plant £5 The Gray Line bus com- pany will begin an “early bird” bus schedule to the Laurel race course starting | Saturday at 10 a.m. and con- tinuing each day of the meet- ing. Buses will leave the ter- minal at 1010 I st. nw. Other j}was snowed under Washington (D. C.) tional was postponed. and the Interna- jrumors of a fit-horse shortage |went by the boards and with a ernized Laurel plant is ex- pected to draw 20,000 or more horse players and In Las Vegas, 2-1 iprogram was moved into the ¢ With an entry list so full that - star-spangled feature, the mod- {| ‘Charlie Harmon doubled in Ryan and Merriman came iscooting home on Bob Bor- ‘kowski’s single. Harmon, who ‘had moved to third, scored on Wally Post's sacrifice fly. | struck out five ‘and walked three. Phila. (A) 410 201 110—10 17 3 Milw. (N) 100 001 130— 6 91 | Shantz, Schieb (6) and Mur- ray, Robertson (6); B. Johnson, and 12:30 p. m. For $100,000 buses will leave at 11 o'clock |>Te4 ———§-;| John D. Schapiro a thorough lovers, regardless of a. threat of rain. With its gates wide open, nd Co., have a wide-open 35th running of the $10,000 added Capitol Han- deficit to claw their way into a goal by Jack Dunne but they the finals of the NCAA basket-| never got a chance for another y, ball chamionship tonight with NCAA Final on TV The final game of the NCAA basketball tournament Satur- day night (and Sunday morn- ing) will be televised by WNBW | ..ven points after three quar- £INCINNATI (Channel 4) at 12:15 a. m.. from ters and it wasn’t until midway G-Haiten, %, Kansas City. Bradley will play La Salle. -_— a 74-72 victory over Southern California. ; La Salle waltzed to a 69-54 vic. tory over a cold Penn State team and will meet Bradley in a nationally-televised final game Saturday night. ot. It was a heartbreaker for the sh ‘Trojans who made a brilliant ¢ recovery in the first quarter after falling behind by five points in the first five minutes. Southern California led by of the final period that the Braves were able to pull even. This time it was on two fine Bridges, os. ..... lay-ups by Dick Estergard. Es- tergard wound up as high point man for the winners with 21 but Roy Irvin of USC, was tops for the game with 23. G Se, Calif, 5 G 7 Bradieyv Petersen f Cower.! Thompson (4), Cole (6) and Cal- derone, Burris (6). W—Shantz. L—B. Johnson. Home runs — Philadelphia: Nats Regain Lead The Nats took back the lead at 43 in the second. Stobbs walked and Runnels singled.) ‘Beth came in on Siever’s tre- Speke Le taken te ae mendous double which hit the |™#©5*t center-field fence. | Quee In the sixth, Carlos Paula batted for Stobbs and doubled to center. Yost grounded to pz; . rs ‘ shortstop Rocky Bridges who White Sox W as 8-2 elected to try to get the flying ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. Paula at third. The latter, how- March 19 (AP)—The Chicago ever, beat the throw. Runnels white Sox took advantage of singled in Paula while Yost'five St. Louis Cardinal errors went to third. Sievers missed'tg hand the National League a third strike and Runnels |cjyph an. 8—2..defeat Friday. broke for second. Catcher|ceven of the runs were un- Frank Baldwin pegged the ball earned to second while Yost scam-| ‘The White Sox attack didn’t pered home. Eventually, Run-'),-~ for hits—there were 12 of nels was trapped but the rum iihem off the Redbird hurlers, counted. r " 7 inci | Inc : ee Vic Raschi Cincinnati narrowed the | ncluding ex:Yankee Vic Rasc ‘score to 6-4 in their sixth when | Chicago (A) 130 200 101—8 12 0 Merriman greeted Stone with | St. Louis(N) 002 000000—2 7 5 a triple and scored on a wild| pitch. In the ninth, - Post|jar; Raschi, Deal (3), White (7) doubled with one out. Bridges and Rand. Sarni (7). W—Harsh.- grounded to Yost who threw: man. L—Raschi. the ball over Vernon’s head. Post scored and Bridges took | second. Stone bore down thee! ‘and got pinc¢ch-batter Johnny | Temple to foul out while Joe) \Szekely, another substitute, | /missed a third strike to end the | game. | SIDEBARS—Clyde Vollmer 'must have had a drink from the fountain of youth ... the veteran outfielder made two | Sensational catches and on one | occasion trapped a man off Cards’ Errors Help Exhibition Baseball FRIDAYS. GAMES WASHINGTON 6 Cincinnati ! /Resten 7 Philadeiphia ‘N) Chie t. Leuls 1 Milwaukee { .. Baltimere 1 . New York ee 1 As on ' . to the jaw over Willies low Cleve. (A) 000 110 00x—2 1 right guard. Maglie, Liddle (4), Picone (8) It was Giardello’s third and Katt; Feller, Wynn (4), straight knockout win and his Narleski (7), Mossi (9) and fifth straight triumph. His rec- Hegan. ord is 49-10-5 with 17 KOs. Troy suffered his second de- ‘feat against 26 victories, 20 of them knockouts. His other loss was an eight round TKO to Holly Mims a year ago. Orioles Box Score Baltimere | A AL) Chieage (NL) B A 0 2 Talbot cf a — ~ M ison. 1b >On Unearned Runs OWwnw 4 0 0 0 Own ouurwows ON Warr HNAD Dickson Loses To Bosox, 7-6 CLEARWATER, Fia., March 19 ‘®—A pair of un- ‘earned. runs off relief Murry Dickson paved the way for the Boston Red Sox to chalk up a 7 to 6 victory over the Phila- deiphia Phillies in a game halted after six innings by rain. Two errors following Al Van Alstyne’s double allowed the Sox to erase a 6-5 deficit. Boston (A)... 003 022—7 & 1 Phila (N) 000 600—6 9 2 (Game called end of sixth, rain.) Parnell, Freeman (4) and Wil- + ber, Daley (2); Roberts, Dickson (5) and Sandlock. W—Freeman, L—Dickson. Home run—Boston, Olson. bd Wane Wer s = oo-~owr -? ooo ooo Tetals COCO; Ree WH Wh OUnRe rhe _ #| o-ocor~roouwcoweo 2 oeocooocor~ tephens in . ne soococoec}ooo~wnrerceorcesrr'sz Tetals 3 aRan fo! fourth bSing led for fifth 400 000 040— & 000 613 455-—15 uc. Wertz. Kokos. Mele. Len- phens. Dyck rondy (2 ona Raltimere (AL) Chieage (NL) R Ye UL herdt. Ste Miksis Btephens Fondy +4) r ’ , Rober! son 2B-—Roberison Wertz ais Stephens. Banke (2). F wr HBP —} W Mo . and Soar Exhibition Baseball SATURDAYS SCHEDULE I Detroit (A) ws. Besten (A) at Sara- ta. . Results WES? VIRGINIA HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT Class A-—Semilfinals Muliens 79 Stonewall Jackson 6 Beckley 69 Mersantewn I niversity Class B—“emifinals Piedment 45 Chester Pax 5 . Huntingten Vin NCAA BASKETBALL TOURNAY (semi nals) radiey 74 Se LaSalle 69 Fi Baltimere (A) ve. Chieage <(N) at sa. Aris Philadétphia (NSN) ve. Chteagee (AY at Fila > ve. New Yerk (N) af | Les Angeles ' ork (A) ve. Breekirea (NN) at ‘A) we. Pittebaergh (N) at 1 : nm (A) we. St. Lewule af Bt a (N) Fia. Califernia 7? ve Milwetkee at Penn State 54 Bradenien, eee Go Fast-Go Comfortably to the j , t f - Y RIDE FAST Bs TRAINS DIRECT 10 GRANDSTAND Manor, Pa., and two young Cali- fornians, Bud Holscher and Bob Rosburg Mayer launched his team with a birdie three on the first hole. The Floridian also birdied the third. Then Bolt took over, trimming a stroke off par at the fifth, seventh and eighth holes by running down long putts. Take Four-Ball Lead ‘scene of the Capitol. program conflicts with Laurel's opening, West Virginia sends two of its champions after the| Maryland ten grand — Mrs.) Cladys H. Fishback’s Colum-| cille and Jockey Willie Hartack. | Columcille Works Well Columcille, winner of $20,180 last year, worked well over the Hartack, second in the national saddle race behind Willie Shoemaker ‘In 1953, tops the Charles Town riders by a wide margin. At the ninth. Bolt canned a 20-footer for an. eagle and the team turned strokes under pan with equalling the best performance of the two-day- old tournament. On the back nine, Mayer was in command three seven a 29. nine-hole Others in the stake are R. C.!| Hanna's Candle Wood, C. E.| Baker's Giggle, Carol Stove! Stable’s The Pimpernel, Arthur! H. Bowen's Sweet Vermouth, | Fillipo Baldi’s Dinner Winner, Al Roberts’ Eatontown, H. A.’ Kimball’s« Algasir and Isador) Bieber's King Jolie. Reterning. Round Trip March 20 through April 10 Thril! to fine racing at Laurel— one of America’s most modern and beautiful race courses. Newly modernized Club House and Grandstand for your greater enjoyment. Eight races daily. Post time 1.45 PM. Daily Double closes 1.40 PM. BAS SPECIAL TRAINS —25 MINUTES TO GRANDSTAND . 12.05 PM; 12.30 PM 5:70 PM Lv. Weshingten leave race track and 5:50 PM Avoid highway delay; and hazards Go in comfort by fast B&O trains $120 |. Behind more than half the game, the Braves from Peoria, *Ill., grabbed the lead for good with a minute and 3 seconds left on a driving lay-up by Bob Carney. With 17 seconds left they got @ gift when Carney fell over a\=; stumbling Southern Cal player! in mid-court and drew a pair aula ‘File was Wit PCE Bridges STOLEN Bis DOUBLE AYS—Volimer te Vernen: a te Hatten te Ha ; est | Stroke lead. with four birdies. A three-way deadlock for sec-| Manley and Stranahan, first ond place included the only amateurs to play in this tour- amateur team in the field, Ho--"@ment, began to get in the *-\bart Manley of Savannah, Ga. air of the professionals as . ine Frank Stranahan of To- Fing.! Kileslien.f Estercard.c ; Utt.e os = a ee el i : Fer information Phone STerling 3-8100 . i> : 1 : o Grand National Choice ) ; LONDON, March 19 ‘|. 'Coneyburrow, Irish hunter who ia. 33 they went around today in 64) wi)| carry only 151 pounds, was to get up to within a stroke made the favorite at 81 today |} They were tied at 129 with Of the lead. Manley camelto win the Grand National Fred Haas, Jr., of New Orleans, through with the best shot of|Steeplechase to be run at Ain- and Art Wall, Jr. of Pocono’ See GOLF, Page 21, Col. 3. tree March 27. , ’ ’ 4 e@-oxec-~-cvec™ | “awete - = meter, 1. 4: Stene, 8: *. tobbs 345 | ‘(uatinen 2 OHIO y 7 A hs ad RRM Ax oe i ee pe” SCOR Can aan Pate ot lp SEN PRY AO aN eh Pes Meme ay aa a et IR th ce SD ian tree ee ? ‘oa an aes, Rs ce Bee wh oe ar aE te | ae ed ee ee ia Os oe ey Pea a a ee Se A cre A oe FR RRS THE WAS HINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD ay March 20, 1954 | i eventeen 3-Year-Olds ca for $100,000 1 Florida Derby Prize 7 ——S—‘ié~*@?! — BENNINGS % CONSENSUS ! GW NO ; Life Jacket ° Th OLD BONES o PADDOCK _ _- RATLBIRD | | k > Wi ims Oa i. : | Time for Pun Flic Ka Star . > orrelation a Threat\| | | |e es. | cere | eee Hartack in Life Jacket Wor th A Bit River Flows | ae IS a a “ween Derby to be run at a mile and an eighth at Gulfstream Park to- of its kind this winter—$100,000 guaranteed to the winner—and *Batcheller and others. ls ; - seas MIAMI, Fia., March 19 fh Sunlight Jess Zero Lad Bold Blue adh | pasty Sty Ber | Henry AB | MIAMI, Fla., March 19 (#.—Seventeen of the fastest 3-year-olds morrow. include such riders as Willie Shoemaker, Eddie Arcaro, Ted At- The role of favorite probab! Ten Entered ian” tee 4 4 ; : + ° . . rearo.on LVoyamo,. - Laurer. acing Selections | 'Tetrabasic, | Hope: ul’ Plicks oat Eagle Eve Flicka Star Eagle Rye Sand Fiv Andy Johnson River Flows Life Jacket a egy now in training were entered today in the $100,000-added Florida The Nation's leading jockeys are here, too, for the richest race kinson, Johnny Adams, Henry Moreno, Conn McCreary, el shared by Woodvale | Farm's Goyamo, with Arcaro| H Is up; Maine Chance Farm's Black) Bones Cac Metal, with John Heckmann;) Greentree Stable’s Maharajah, +1 mere Souay Ee ee ear ae with Atkinson, and Robert S 5 : . Ss. | Willie Hartack rode three! Greentree Stable’s Queen W arrenton s Lytie’s Correlation who was ‘- ; otal rs ~~ bring his meeting's three le ths back, By tenes brought here from California ' — to 37 ree iengths back, an aine Point Race | ‘init Seemer he Selections||How Paddock Rates Them ofa A Stable’ Red Flush was| hance: Parm's Fescinator big race. tory with’ Gale Parker up in) onOUu Bold Blue Hasty Mouse Farm's yy Last Helio Aspire Last Helio Mistemar = ‘| Shannon Gal LL lo | Last Hell ‘ Hopeful, a speedy little filly Elliott's Doll Last Hello Elliott's Doll Shannon Gal Ultra Smart litott oil | Elliott's Del \ P . Bit O’ Dream Elliotts Doll Aspire | Shan: Cal fe ' FIGHTING COCK | American Plock Flight Admiral imniaé—n of 15,666, won the first running Lonoke Filash ess Linthic | Pi light Agmirel American Pluck | Jess Linthicum | Jess Linthicum | American Phi ick Fighting Cock sad Chances Lonoke Flash — SOON, i Dake ot Gulfetream Patt today. varsity Thither Thither : GWENY G h ful. < eh hite Drift Queen Hopeful, carrying Fiaxen Mane Varsit White Drift farsity White Drift | Coreopsis Varsity Maabro 0} i CERISE REINE ‘ " Sweet Vermouth Sweet Vermoute Mr Paradise Cerise Reine King jolie . Seonen Brat Washington, turned in a sur-’ Adams, had a rough trip and ny Kot eae sou your -—sédd Sweet igri ==—=—~—~—~« " NGE | Fo ieee bittagad mga hago warbagelag: Stables Cher ao ‘ee . - t Sis was weet Sigri omely Colleen FOX CHALLENG Fox Chal O Pox Challenge Sweet Sigrid Pox Challenge | ae , = es 1eroKee se y Ballawood un Tony Ridge Runner Ballawood . Fox Challenge | Ballawood Bold Warrior Mere Bones a re Bones the featured $1,500°Hill Park) her second straight stakes vic- ere Bones Sizzie Thru Cariton Miss Little Gree Colony Page Sizzle Thru Bold Warrior King Pomp Little Greg € ») . : : Last Hello | Last Helo | Bit O' Dream and 1-2 choice w ith the crowd PLIGHT ADMIRAL se IGHnT ADMIRAL Ari eth 4 ic FI 4 : < + NY , ; of the mile-and-70-vards Floriia Four Chances ; Piehting Cock . | Arista Arista 4 HARLES TOWN, W. Va. ab. Helbo | Held "| ete \ 9—Tetrabasic, owned pon s Dream Busher s Beam White Drift Major Pomo W hite Drift o larch 1 le a —_—_—_——. coautiants ™ ioiieiite Se RoW by Mrs. Virginia McKenney of pounds and ridden by Johnny Cerise Reine Eato wu Cerise Reine Dinner Winner ts Brazen Brat Cerise Reime , yi iam! " pamine Ueet Ben tony mine three-fourths of a length for cone Page Dehra Dun Mere Bones Sizzle Thru | 7 > , » , > Mere Bones Mere Bones Colony Page Bola Wart Purse before a gathering of|tory. Queen Hopeful won the the none while a le neth: ge Aes early pace setter, was fourth in Joe W. Brown, New Orleans| ie tataiens AT CHARLES At " ‘came David Garland’s Publicity|the field of seven 3-year-old apartnnee, has a triple entry in OWN Laure Miss to garner show honors fillies, WARRENTON,..Va., March Gigantic and Bobby Brocato,| {—Mewtenta, mestimen,, Abbestae Quick WEATHER, CLEAR: TRACK, FAST. | 6 Arista (Blum) : May be good thine 106 4-1\ in the field of seven. Earl Hen- first and second respectively in| | News. FIRS . Soe. 1: 5 ’ Piieht Admiral iden One to beat J ’ derson's Cortina was the fo 8& @S@eeaeaeeeans 19.—Eugene Blackwell's Bones S THIN DIME. Prodigal Sen, Just T RACE— tt et ee ~~ ate pe Say (Teague) this §113 20-i' contention to the stretch, but a-~June Fete (no boy! Ss some class ] om hore : Cia ; site fale las ».1 | tires yadly } le las SiX- "Flows (“Yartack > Looks best place oe tee eee (ang Hill einai” sakek , red badly in tl last six igh Renda, —_ ; ' One to beat teenth and finished fifth i | Second lace finisher ets s— Out. Orange Fox. Gin . (Blum) H Congereus ; Sux rH RACE—Purse. S10 080 aftes: “The Capitel Handi- Sotmaggpaay gh np yee t iaththy Round Trip * a - - o . ; -* a 7 5S ' ’ ' ' ‘ ‘ ~ > oe 9 Pe perpetual chal- $25.000 a $12,000 for thin AP AT GULPSTREAM junight Jess (Hanford) . Figures with these | § tis) Classy mai Te ere 118 3-1\ hacked by the crowd and paid Plus Tax enge tro . co. . —Wiser Yet, Se ing Mimi, Foer- —" Ges aS veer ii : —— Nee ng TE Rs GR, ag Only s — have been | #4 $7500 for fourth. — z= ~ Ceainasetss) _. Better Fiorida races “i ia an ) i Madden) Could sort $26.60 for $2. He stepped the : : : t—Queia Finder. Men Mar. Ne Kei: Be hic adden) Could springs oarprise entered in the six-mile pair aus May need this 3 iret Heir. Lecked In. Fenity. : (Hew May need racing event, other race on the War- In Jockey Threats dicton earts Burs. Reush Night, Rid- Zuvder Zee itanford) Wel bred; trials artes renton Hunt's program, but = CALL AD. 2-6363, lw il rant 132 f) Ext. 653 sir (Bush Likes this track 116 12-1) seven furlongs in 1:32 flat over mane ~— (Lester) Worked fast “alt ri 108 is-lia fact track CAPITAL TRANSIT andie Wood (Balzaretti) c : "lorid 14 «630-1; ** pil The Pimperne! (Madden) tan wel ia bit 10-1 Ha tack rode the daily Sesesepepaeaees a6 J ~| r Mange, Abbera e C Clockers like him Sweet Vermouth (no boy! mm sti lorid % ; , no boy 2 races, Florida more are expected by Satur- = os vandiel. Hangover. World : ~ 15 : 20 3 Colur meilie (Hartack) Yonditioned at C. 7 13 12-1 double. He won with Goree G. >. p town (McKnight) n't recommend 20- inner Winner se mone). Trial oe. s 3 > ‘="-' Waugh. Sr.’s You First in tl . . ’ ~ . , Me + : c im BBs “ee ; 1e day's deadiine at 11am. | Kxy-Convict Ebeeh, tah, Materia ceezanr|* Pest Mie ine foes Tits | 3 kde L. Rice. tnt? sokeelonepets alia * . . In addition to the trophy, | | L ONG SHOT—DAILY DOU SLE first race annual awards made by Fred- escvenel, Gtp Gadeet. Qttenticn TIME FOR FUN and SCEZZANO ag San RAC mt ae Snot S-Feae-etee and up; claim- The winner stepped the ick. Pri } ° we THIRD KRACE—Purse, $3,000; maiden 2-year-old fillies; gun Font : Day's best bet 219 8-3ifuriones in :82 3/5 and RACES BY BUS r j ox Chalienge * Pasi neero factor 119 } mld = I ce Pleads Guilt | AP AT CHARLES TOWN v Ts o e rst and second i—Sevttnes, Harrys Bey. Lewis place finishers. The Warren- tiengs (16 , Last Helio (Hanford) Should handle these Ridge Runner (no boy) ill be right there 111 4-1} Warded $2 backers a $7.40 Sweet Sicrid ri ‘ rieat 114 1 | i Mill N ton Hunt also offers a cup in, MIAMI, Fla., March 19 (%). Ets dees: ° cs erty |t the ‘memory of Mary Converse Robert Hugh Lonsford, 46, an ae Bell Cd w-19 We we 2S oe — cS -_ —e— sawuwgwe ©& Post “Time 1:45 P.M. Buses Leave Regularly . 11:30 A.M, te 12:45 Elliott's Doll (Madden) Good race Florida tlean j 6-1 | esssrntecnl Keep Trvine cz) . ; ned at . 109 , mu u¢ i Bel Grand One, Bewline. ‘pire (‘Shuk) jas ciass; last good Jane's Error (Boulmeti«) Teps now Ballawood ‘(no ¥ > up V irs Lil 10-1i, . i Plamine oe he fer plenty spec i09 12-1| Takes Second Race ; . ; 1e! —? : “ } " " 5—Stimisen, Conalernation. Lechmel. | Cutting to the first member of €x-convict from Baitimore, | S—ilecdoe., Cleetbarel. "Bea Ge bi the Warrenton group to finish pleaded guilty today to four! Beund. Vera Calhoun ‘Balzs'tl waete speed Gulfst'm Z in a a e the course. charges of attempting to ex- Renda” — Teng SwEee Mich Bit o Dream see hee vod bets good figure Ulira Smart (Boulme i Cloc -—F recommend The entries: tort $6,000 from Jockeys Ted! wi ery Ber. Orense Fox. Black First race—Five miles over fair hant- Shannon Gal ‘(H man) ‘Conditioned New Orl'n nh» Trainer Shea 0 (no boy Bred 17 45 n ‘lose up ries Town 1} -_; "way, a $4.40 for $2 favorite ROUND TRIP , mint Foreign bred. trials go 17 1 Bold Warrior (Hewitt fo tyear 113 ¢ The supporting feature. the ing country. Te be ridden by th : Atkinson and Conn McCreary) ap. AT LINCOLN DOWNS |i Radiant _Peesy ‘Cox Closer if starts ii? | | Sizele Thru (Hartaci ‘Chance if res larpers Ferry Purse, w as won areporae y the ewne , ' e : : & ar —- = — Eg Lim . . 7° Senmer Titeabeth Athert family. by threatening them with 1- Nowtes ats ch Hithe Livetetiive , p-Zesey rr a atey 5 Kine yr Lik +} rack 1! 12-liby Carlis Sims’ Oneinamillion rs a t de ; j= t i ° : rrett entr igri eT rmegaivi 7 | Hee 1 i ; i " . . ; oP . ss se, Andrew prion’ Der-\death unless they tipped him) ,,;.~?esse Feast. Ariel Sweep, Brown.) QUeti RACK—Purse, $4,000; 4-year-elds and up; claim-| 9 Juldee ; Eugene Blackwell: Lesny. "Wesley Dennis; on winners at Hialeah. 3—JOE HASTE, Bhara, Blue ing; 6 furion, ne boy). From good s ’ T Croc last t r ; whicl Vas al | 7 a) Se ir , i | eeat BET—GUN TONY. - \ : x almost overlooked . ee Brace; First Fancy, Am 4+—Jack's Neen, Le Pilet. Adelan- | it > Petting A ec; Tamer, Wright Pattercea: The threats were made in. tade _ . _—__—__________|n the betting and returned 3 Trailway Buses Lacey” Frederick i brince Pe tint bts re : letters and telephone calls to| Sse Paseee, eaeebin, Depeerttes,, | | Horses to W atch oe ss tgs - Pi Di. 7-4200 “i ~ y Pe Abeut 6 miles. the two jockeys in February.| iPass. Nere's » Ag eink Han- |EENCOLN DOWNS ENTRIES CHARLES TOWN ENTRIES is eit ei Wisdom and Dubennet. Mrs. K wie- Lonsford was arrested by FBI se ee dedi aie tem MES wn t mi; 820 k, Sogeenem up; cl} At Laurel FIRST RACE—Orle and one ‘ourtt oC h arles 7 1201 New York Ave. N.W. , ool, A. G. Foote and Eleanor Lees; gage poe Rh pen enteg , [Strolling Ball i Laverne Wi | op L:AJOUE—Good last vear and has | | claim! a — a OTL oe 7 James P .Sinciair.. Post time, 2 ’ 8 Soruasy GU gh 1 | Sorority Argue ‘wee etliv , MARYLAND 7 LINE—Leek for® this "E aey \ pada ’ Se j ‘ j~] ail , ene te spring surprise first time out Restimu aiul , Las he C] » » tT ; 2-*%e: $2000; year-olds up; elm ; , oer at * } {oe > * ihe mild-mannered ex-Con-| 11), miles: $3,000;1:47% | tate Aud 5 Ariel Sweep 5! | gxsq. Wateb ont for this one. 2 wees Mate (vere e+) UbLOSCS Zz Oday FREE - e ; , in. . ’ ” hiz 17 Pepper Corn ' ¢ } ardne: 117 8-1 Native Dancer \vict also told Federal Judge) Deliberate (Korte) 690 386 270 tPieeting By .. 108 Junyie Feast JET JOY — Comes here epper | i. ! ” ' John W. Holland he would like | & Besest «Berry... 410 210) CHARLES TOWN. March 19. PARKING r Charles } ' i | occ ’ Chance } Dest Traces 10 ‘ ] +) , can " “ah AY ™ 82.300 lh Ben Re a In the second race, Hartack miles (10) 0 . came right back to triumph astride Sam Truppo’s Make Sn ee we > — o eo Pies Tax -_s hh bh bb ABABA AABAAA SS 6426644 4 AAAAAAAAAAAS _eTrreeeeeeeeeeeeeeeereeeee,e,e,,e,eeee,,eee”™ — - @-) , , Aebe Flerida sharp a6 & raster. worth. ‘tel. infty “Aamiral _(Wilsen ) 4.400 +My Ruthie Town race course’s , B skis 2 E ti lowing wp. Eves Ri St to wengy guilty ge ee CX-| Miss Pigtail, Revenue, Big, Marearte |*Pamion ’ ngienaay , “ve ch 4 akes ‘tortion case in Marylan Pa , Great Night, Phona-| 3—"s: iGardne! NM? 15-1| — , tron o i “I'd like to get them all over | vs aes " _ G i « ~ = : | . ; oReat me » es “\" + - rowed Spl ing meeting ends for Longchamps Pa 0 s! 4 ‘ °.* « >t ”” : " : lesa ale hi d nee 13 arpist ' ‘ Oalurday with at one time, he said. | ides Teweh (Areare) § é } . vi : In Great Britain | a eid, . The FBI said Lonsford ad-| ™**2 - i tho . = = oS in 40-1 \n attractive 8race getaw We provide earn f "~~ ” a ; 200 7 as a] J «< «< » : be ¢ ‘aw . * itted h iaeat ry loons Nlens (Burr) VE 3.4 . $2 "108 tone Pilot uD; ® ti? SECOND RACE—About four and one! program, is headed by the oo dinner guests with : sidithiesicde i v, ei a > . - - os hirltown and ae * Neen 08 Adelantado +t |) and up ch a ' % ing ot the $2500 Altoona Farm FREE PARKING { Native Dancer probably will fly driver, with mutilation or bod-| pany Ta: bot nem | 2 Beast iBhirey) ill 5-1; Purse from 6 P.M. to 1 A.M. at te England in July for the rich rhe ny of the public’s | the Capital Garage across ‘ing George VI and Queen support could fall either on the street from Elizabeth Stakes at Ascot if he $0 | Hedeebil [ptosis ee fig Teens, Longchamps is handicapped with “prohibi-- Holland ordered a pre-sen-|_ Lady Seong Hes Bi! ilies a ‘4-1; Which has compiled an impres- ive” wei , : n y Un asst iii 5-1,sive record here. * on Mrs i i : » Rigs gis Roguedhaniee mis cones R ep HQ0€V'S | terior Fighting Cock (4) = BA ed (Serids — + rrik. F Chamblin s itr alg =e —_ go Phage sven g paign for) passing on the Miami case. | “*F*t# (On0 ifs e000 1 234s tus = = hOPsIS 123). Helbo (6). White} 12 *Se ure (Beride) 111 edt ce ates sini yourself of this service. { the great grey galloper was Meanwhile, arrangements Fine Ville (Martin) 50 140 3.00! *Homat 5 fLu S| Dritt (6). en (13), Cerise Reine (12), |14 “Mighty Mite (Pernicola). 106 8-1; 20@, assigned top impost of mapped by Trainer Bill Win- were ordered for transfer of a ere pease) ee 4 te oss eas Ll mi 3-year-o! up Brazen ares oot . ‘- a ‘ THIRD RACE . and on sixt} 124 pounds RESTAURANTS ' re 50 | : . : ‘ ; 7—Sweet jerk (16) ep rving ile - , ear-olds ea tm: re ‘ are . or. frey who returned today to|the Maryland case here for, panade Anukitas Roy Prince and|Fran J: } ePuturesaue (10), Pox Challenge (9). Se ee SOU nd up;| Others named are Mrs. Ver Belmont Park after a b f di \¥ a - Hiiliggeeti eaa ‘ rie sposition. te a | Grover B " &—Mere Bones (12). Colony Page (7) Florida vacation. The Dancer,| Conviction on an extortion |z ciaimin ‘] . , — non i. Carter's High Rend: 7 furlongs: $3000. Time, 1:24 aRaintree 113 Pt Bold Warrior (6 2 Young Romance (Krat 110 66-1 rece rl oo oe “ye Tee (Smith). 5.50 4.00 3.30) aBishop Stables ine. “entry . ' Palumbc Mm isd WeEeees es ugene M. Alfred Vanderbilt’s sensational charge carries a maximum|mezel Clever (Lindbsee) cRed Head Stable and Vigilant St AT CHARLES TOWN lmitz’s Kathy Mendel, A. S. glamour colt, > Hadnt Orter (Baldwin : ' 1—Cepheus (16). Houlgate (8),.Res-| 9 *Biue arrives tomor- sentence of five years in pris- B = i — cialiming 106 + aiternoon wares: all DAILY DOUBLE PAID 383.39 Tayom sthae: ily harm in a similar deal in| 3—3 furlongs: $3000; 0:34%, Living Doll | ] l 3 AT LAUREL June, 1953, at Laurel Park Stacey _aiotes (S"leck) 27.30 16.40 10.10, *Tommy's M'ory iL ue ] ] —~Ea “ee mye (12), Bogie Man ers Cl oO & Whore . (Culmene) 17.20 10.80 | McBerzi)! River Fiows (9 Race Track, “aurel, Md. _ Wer (Barr) 5. of gn o Bhi eas ae. ‘inht Penny }—Last ] " E ar ’ Hi In D Re B fliott’s Doll (10), Soma. “oe Fiddier's Gi irl 6 ltown Olseau Bleu r Bob. faiterin investigation before Beimont iionas" $3000; apiece 20) Plight Ad- Datei Br Peatl Diver Bil Li: $3000: 4-year-olds up; elm Bue ih} wn re Li 1, Moore’s Wal-Dot-O. E. Russell’s 14th St. at New York Ave. NW. eline. uce, ea v uel ¢Mox Ik 0 Wer Stim 17 a os 1. 8h aie . . ; ) : bee row from his Maryland farm. on, a $5,000 fine or both. | Nancy and Mount Branace Sis0 ra Ner: Ja anid i - arty Mite (12). Lil Perry (8 on Family, Mrs. (¢ R. Lewis Mf. | 6 6 furlongs: $3200 . 2 10% | Ravioli Bit O Hope Roval Jacopo (16). Thin Dime (8) RAILBIRD LONG SHOT Mighty. Mrs \ irginia McKen- Buttevant (Atkinsen) i e" 4 te uth Hans son] . Leese Reck ‘Arcare) 3. 91%: $2200 year-olds up i wu CONQUERANT (30). Grand ‘One Ultra Smart, Third Race at ney s Tetratomic and Mrs Met Pilet (Burr) :' 4 79 Brother Harold pesemasctees I , A) (6) (4) Laurel. : e's Hele ere E GUARANTEE F . ‘ss... $70) {Brother Ma aJeor (Oh Feet Fak erimien (2), Cons David N. Lee’s Helen Maisel. W ly Apasay, a Brandy's Cast, Colonel Jett SaCcivmbes a 4 lc capetere, ees Creente. king Cameron *C’ck The Me hip a Pa iline Gross 6—C loudbu tet (16) Sandvar (12) . . - You NEVER LOSE Colonel Fru. aHeorter and Marion Newton Alt Nicod CB) Thin Dime (Packe: 111 GU _— ~— — / | aGreen Lane Stable-Robinson entry aVaierie ? mS i? an entry Helen bMaleel (14). Bich Ronda (8).| 7.° Da pnt SF tts sULFSTREAM ENTRIES ; NESS . 7 1 mile A& 70 vards $35 000. ] 42 5 : 5 "7 po inds a! wl nny c! lal ned. tte Lien ar * aises & on rodiga! nN ; ¢ , 115 1 ) . 4 aT id it , , A wap S BU } a (A } 0 2 0 <.30 i " i ' -. 5 Ju a ory ] ) ;.] : : A 1] * PPY ve! ] ; i ‘ oie rr. HORSE Wt JOCKEY OWNER opps Cherokee 1 one (Mereae) 3a0 79 cane Wer hy ary 198). OF i se Brnees thsael is 5.1) *Pourleafclover, 113*Amer-Ran 113| Year's guarantee includes loan a _ Adams Masty Meuse Farms Queen Careline (Atkinson) dreenagh Servis 12) ‘-1 ct . 106 * Fr mnan 11] ruc: : o- 1 .- Biack Metal ieckmanna Maine Chance Farm 3. “ener ‘ Wolf Gal Garb. T "iL ENCOL N DOWNS RESULTS AT LINCOLN DOWNS 12 Bob Nick Vahl ; || *Soakin' We 106 Tri: 1] re mpairs at repainte and re- an KR. MeLauchtia Joe W. Brown i i a e ar risong. | 00: 1:98%t jumiette (Clark 116 1| Wiser Ye 118: aanteet 7 onditioned! Guaranteed Red Red Rebia k Wall Mrs. KR. E. Hedge 5o- her Wp tgs! bor 144% | | longs; $2,200; 1:2 Livetetiive (15), Newton Hich 9) th is oNe > . Lasswell a Farm ; —lie miles 000: eid ext Pare nN I + *Frigate ¢Fernico!l - | Grass cSt) 6.20 6.60 “4.60 ‘Lal erne if - ary Weedvale zoom Dash O Light (Richmend) 9. ” 4.40 3.70) Blenville (Keene 13.00 9.20 My ’ Serreietion hris Se a ee re netu aPat Thom psen ane - ocen ad ee ——— eee ae a 8 ee hod sete nrvwusese®e of nnsarananas? 2@-3C Nero's Nermaid ~ ~~ ; ; ; sto re ret ie r? 7 5. Ruthie (1 Brownskin ({12) FOU a RACE—Sev: furlor a pe Avie yt 1 as ,. o- 113) “eee na Sh —* on Sy Brew Reo . nore reh) .. 4.00 20 | Milan Boy “(Smith 17.60 Jungle voast ; a: P wee $12 4-year-old i up: clain 9 1000 ear-old allot Mi . oemaker obert 58. 1 § tews Be ae oe aste a hana n ; *Ifallswell 108 Rit O' Bin 112] “~ . 2 ‘ata “Uvtie Pipetime, Tax Four, ‘Tiger Harris. ‘Blue Zoe 16) ma ‘Pernicola) Li bch. dee thoes ee ad -# } | Luscious Fruit, Rusty, Father Tiber.| prince Villon, Commodore Biue_ Brie -t ’ ” Adelantado (15 1) Fire i] i? — et + 10 agrin Perry 4 iPr ide of Judea, Castle Bell II. Some|candie Southern Cookn. Grand Eyp- a ne eee. | inn (tins vi + a} ae 13 Mon Mar 120) Bel Price Headley » ive miles: $3500: 1:45 | tan, Ra ly 1-00 "S icBezzil ( Hierapolis (10 usan a Arduini) ; 1 No R 120 Mat s tye 117 Joe W. Brown s- aie Biceke) on 11s Sas ts |x S00 6f0-$40| NePlus Fours” (i De. Moore (1 axtord § ) 14 G1 Bower Plate |’ 17Quie Pinder | 113 PACKAGE DELIVERY Cc. Dy Descentive (1 ssery) 15.00 620 34 ‘1 ! itkinsen Greentree Stable § Steady Jet : ' - Oxlin (Bohenke 0.20 6.n0 Irrisor if 50 GMC: new engine. walk- breore. Weodvale Farm .1 | Atom _ Age ’ mm | Net Joe ( Despirite) 7—GROVER B 2), Pipe of Peace n Va ew paint $895 Michi Ben entry. Woodvale Ta rm entr Cire re All My Heart. Assistance, > ae De Sal Egret. Laughing Fox, Do Se. I: ut) Ve ya a : . ‘ Lo ' 114 *We Onyv Pest time—4:50 p. m. (EST). ¥ Saas, See, meee Plight. Proc-! quick Deal. Tordar and Cookie K, ; i or Bill (Vasil) Gehl on ire sha Lady Os ne’ 108! PICK. uP TRUCKS ' DAILY DOUBLE rap {263.00 ~Trus 5) rack the Whip 1: Wise Bet iV aa} A 2-1) | Pirst Hei: 122 oe Ony. ; pick-up ~~ 3—7 furiongs: $2000; 1°: 5), Colymbus ; = to y AEA ee os . 1000; 4-year is up lov radio $895 pose Bull (Ussery) , 3.4 Pega se , “ . , Raider 1165 h WN , Lt ; even Pillars (Rehenke) . : i AT GULFSTREAM "1 PACT DOU - ot ae tate cked | 111 Ja. és 108 2 ‘CHEV. , n pick-ur Offi 7 l R 7 Ch t Cl | T Blue W. (Mehenna) 9.80 1--Fourleatclover (15). Frissonnante riongs. purse $15 Oi na Riddle 111*Laisses Pais 110) heafer $350" Ladolee. Mistambo. Moon Gay ' + (8 v ~~ ae Pp: claiming iS we ety: : 114°*Jack Ment sta 9G cla acing arts tor rartes own rexenty Womuntvoe, and Calan Mon Mar (22), Quiz Finder (7),| 1 *Harmitz (Ford) _.. 106 15-1/ DHearts B g°ort 113 st CHEV. pick-up 4-5 rlongs:; $2 oc ‘ e |. . Fm: Tie {Fare 2. 2 OF hag Ne th heate ; Cee-Yur (14 Pirst Ajir ria ert a i ‘ an ntrs ; Draw (DeSpirite) ! 3.20 2% ™- int arker und ley entr Copyright. 1954. Triangle Publications. Inc. lw iy horses catering the stretch, wore down the leaders Re-Gin (Spinale) 9.00 5." 4} = asnnesti 16) ‘ , So “yp BAe ds te 7 : phe PANEL TRUCKS WEATHER OUDY—TRACK FAST the drive and held True to Me safe. Latte =, always | Friend Jim (Behenko) ’ sas. ; Tittle Mone la Oe sit t ; e! +" pay ts $1200. For 3- forwardly placed, rallied in the late stages and just missed | | Mister Kaw a Limekiln aMiss ! ae ti Owner. G.| Dark Smalenae forced the pace to the stretch and weakened | Jett. Lanark. Geunt Cai. -Paula M 7 , Waugh, Sr. _.. hkained b - . Tue. 0. Sais. Slight) +Orest. Smoky Dav and “Tee ee. 5—~ PosT PRANDI sh tS? “Heneover . . -? r Hy . oe x ,Ae as ase i YT ae P $395 Jockey < . Pin. Odds aed RACE—Charies Town Course. Purse. $1500 or| sBishop Stables, inc airs (6) reruk ‘4 p “Holy Lass (Webb) - . . : eenr.e (Hartack) 4 7 2.70 | 3-vear-olds and up: silowances. Start good oo at 2:54%.) > furlongs: $2500, 0:59%s 6-Go ty ‘ eueaee 2° 2° * 4 Owner. Carlis Sims. Trained by same. Tim 20?; & he LAl Southerilee + 2, ic blue | Suffazon (DeSpirite) 9.80 3.60 27.60 Bia . Metal (5) : of te be 15-1 yadve Cape . ood 13 Stin rdner 8-4 | Bergerul 107 Tatarn 107; heater $595 Jockey Wet Post St ' in | Ji First (Perugini) 2.68 2 40 a" a ter Goods ° + Sti arenes) . + . Tu ; dae ; 1G ED ter Baggs oe: (P’ er) (ea a eS “ 9) 29.70 \° (Cermack ) 2.30 | ; U - . 0) ty cket ( . a 110 Quite Happ A P it . 3% Re signed Count Steel Peer +r 0? SIXTH FAC ; ¢ ‘ Pu e 137 rir, ip . ¥ aint $695 6—-5 furlongs: $2500: 0:59%, $2001 4-year-old ! , + ' ed : a 00 Crewn Derby (McKenna) 7.00 4.70 7.80 ] "] Loudoun } yar : 1 | Se 3 2? Remand "ANS 1.TON. ‘AND 1¥2-TON 70 Levely Dice (Keene) } 4.70 3 | « NO! G hil 1B y al 113 PR rest 113 , ; avelt Doreen a ‘ (Parker) Quarre) -ee..(Pord) Sussex Circle (Kratz) 1 10 +4 ~WNYvoOose-Iac © ee ee Ww CSWWH UN N ss —) ~ " Elvie H you FIRST, $7.40. $4 2. $3.00; LU LU MISS. $35 .<0,| /a-Stuart Little (C’w? $17.80: SOUTHERLEE $8.20 ow J (Behenke) 40 ’ am a 00 = ae os Seams. Relic's War I erps Open Lac rosse —nww re @-? Jaccone _ e 7 7—5 furlongs: $3500; :59*; 7 26 Ao; inst VW &l : » Bours re , iret, alwave.a forward Close a-C. B. Carter entry 4 f : —~ Season Aga B Bound (1 | the outside im the drive and nates up in ed resolutely on, “ONBINAMILLION, _ $61.40. 317.20. $6.80; MISS ULRICH. |Breommaker (DeS'te) 30.40 11.20 6.20 S 8 Sandva rdner +Y = Lu Lu Miss rushed up to take command briefly between | £9.80. $2.80, a-MR. SAWDEE. $4.20. Star Z_ ¢Serite? Shhh ih o>: Coathes Jack Faber -and- AL br eaiie in the stretch mas unable to resist the winner a eee ee el ge and rushed to within striking Cress Ring (‘Svyfrig) 1.80 vé -_ » , Beutheriee Leck com on: to tire; SSRs. Cat Closed willinaly ta lake comma 1 Ly beethe > Whim Andromecs Main TT inrversity b+ Bakicaue eres’ wesw hh daddy ) Ale N Bl OS stretch and weakened aradually in the late stages at “tae ah ng Lae. Be om a = the Speaker, Four Night Reval Duke MWeagy will fretd “thet r . : Vy S wie hea a st, S-year-oid# UD aN 2-TON TRUCKS - SROOND RAGE—Abeub. 442: furionss.....Purse. £1200. For ie a : aha, 87 furlongs... $2800. 1.28 _— band’s. 1954. lacrosse, we ‘Count +Parkery- aR Ee encase Speen ee anetes cag : ; - Ssear-0lds and te. etaliniae alt teed oO at 1 i! aE iate stretch bat cou vid “not wear down’ the winter Mr Wilfel (MeKenna) 58 O60 1680 7 00 of Mary . “ 14 Boch ve € mur ie ke : BU} Ne ; or iene: Tet wh ie "— re — reer rpenail body¥pe 2 Owner, 5. Truppo. Trained by G. V. Sipp. Time, 0:52 . Intention (Bohenke) 13.40-6.20 team Saturday meeting Wash- , SEVENTH | ‘a eiape mos tee th, Aa ‘ 25“ tires ..$129§ s SIXTH RAC oa w- furlongs Purse $1500 For 3- r~ | Ace Captain (Keene) 300 . nail tur " iy Sout : | Jockey Wat rest &. ‘ tr. olds and up owances Start good Off at 3°22 2 » b ~ : . : : ~ ° ) ce Park ane ip allow ‘ '. ’ : “4 bel fy (46 ’ ] : k) y Virgiala Mi Kenney. Trained by W. W. Smith rime 1:32 Py Doll F ‘De yp raed Dark Buster, ington & Let at Ct Le = l High Ro , ' ‘Bye An¢ tator II j . inters vii. Lepen inate : 3 aaa - . _ 2. Math» wlendal..i J imbo4 li ..* Sak Bahr a] ’ rae Jockey Wat Post St. *s ; Str. Fin. Odds" 41 .. miles: $2000° 1°48"; ' Faber is’ starting his twenty i ae a-_e \60° fF eae Si Tay ine. t si ae > om 2 1% 1* 4 ' . ; ait » = - i es Tens in? > . by Gee edad DP aed Re Rah EF ; ’ . ol ‘.. 2" ; j sie 30 Trenton Luck (Reberis) 13.20 5.00 3.20 fifth vear as coach while Rerkenire 3 : jes Cross 2 Roval ‘Fiddle Vag , still "wiaiived Duel De ik ; u Kist ‘(Behenke) 3.40 ” ae sited 5 I +14 S.'* $30 Bess a (Mave) de Heagy, is beginning his twenty-) 9 pamis , ¥ i oul ng ven iit) $600 & 5710 Baltimore Ave. 3m ) 4.50 ray Belle. No = Black Rover. first witTl the lerps. - een en ety - a ' . +t ao daly + 7 Rt. em i 7 pe I 2 Bow ni ing germ, Lift ' itelen Maisel (1 " ; Bouquet 1 +47 : ;' : 77 290 on ss) 4’ 4 ‘s & ‘ 23 : . . . , MAKE SWAY. $440. $3.00 $2.60: OUR FREEDOWN | TETRABASIC. $26.60. $10.00 +40; RED FLUSH. $11.40 $3.40: TAX MONEY. $7.00 . BEDOM, 64.60 $6 BO Rs. BLICITY MISS. $4.00 W _— Shoe “mh: ake a Bellfield Langston Make Sway took command soon after the start. held on Tetrabasic. asiways a forward factor took com! < wel) to the stretch and had to be pu! under extreme pressure proaching he stretch and held Dusen to hold Our Freedom safe in the drive rhe latter clesed Red ‘ command s0o0n er the - ~ ill Colf Club | ré side ‘ni Willinaly tm the late stages and just missed Tax Money) Tts:st the but was the best of the others Publi ii ‘lor if al . p! No 8 clo resolutely in the final quarter Miss rallied mildly in the drive B : d RB ‘field wan elected f in er | 3, ws : DAILY DOUBLE (9-%) PAID $16.60 ~ abe SEVENTH RACE—-One and -sixteenth miles Purse as rainal é 1OCl Boy ik 121 - ; . ~—n $1200. For 3-year-olds: claiming. Start good. Off at 3.50 MIAMI. Fla.. March 19 \*.— esident of the newly organ . ag a 4 THE BEST HOSPITAL-MEDICAL COVERAGE THIRD RACE—Charies Town Course. Purse. $1000. For vanes by J. W. Hechter. Trained by J. W. Hechter. Time : tint _ | presiaent : d ia © coe. . a? 4-vear-olds afd up: claiming Start good Off at 1:57.)1 Jockey Wilhe Shoemaket me | he . ee Golf Club last : *Leisurel; , In OUR we ! Oger. A. W. Williams Trained by A. A. Banks me. , ; } i 1 Vv Ize angston (st , Veter Pins 14 TORY! 22? Ho Jockey Wet.Post 1 P Sir. Fina Odds rowily escaped serious HU jur ti an McK 115 _ : Natural Bridge ‘H ¥ liz 3 ‘ " 3 ' $1.5 I Varble cra ‘ 4° 1% v / liz 1t5 115 115 115 115 115 115 115 115 Cortina Biind weeenusu 'o-I > a " Jockey Wet Post st . today when his mount bolted night. : | 13 Lue Ky Patt 1S ils 5-1 Includes Hospital-Surgical, Medical Care and “udoun tiie) 11 a4 2 00 while parading to the post in Other officers chosen were: | 14, °Sto ad Think ‘wel Ll Accident Benefits. Entire Family Protection 20 the third race at Gulfstream. Frank Walton, vice president; » *8| Shoemaker, the. Nation's lead "Ethel Funches, secretary, and ——» - -— rr RESERVE #00 ing rider last year with 485 win-| Dr. Robert E. Lee, treasurer, | Relax take a et ae E’. A TIME, $480. ners for a world’s record, was Ok ‘ Life insurance Co. Baa, “back to the stretch turn. closed | astride the favorite, Tims Own.|~ cy oe aE 5 GRAY LINE BUS to | avy | in the stretch. wore down Tide it si " . ti LUCKY LOUDOUN. $41.8 4 1.20, $6 80; , Ti ily “Laiter dispiaced Veloche approac h-} T he 2-V ear- old was fractious | $3.20. $2.40; TIRAWARUS su8 ' - uw ee w Ves && £& hb ne 4.350 Suits ] Veloc he Play ~ et OO gee Cralette Tigram Monastery (Brady! *? -_ CSO -Ie— 2 & > -- ever ~ eee We OS ~1ON eveu~ 1+. | Cunmarnw | 2629 Conn. Ave. N.W. ° oP the winner safe in| going to the post and bolted be- All " : 5] 25 ) LAURE Lucky Loudoun unhurried early closed willinely on the the Grive ome Cana Can relied mil idiy in the late stage ‘fore they reac hed the starting it costs is : Phone AD. 4 3645 outside to reach contention entering the stretch. wore down Please rush me the latest FREE DIRECT TO TRACK AND RETURN (Cast “Si ne é : stages but was no match for the winner. Tirawarus set a \. Finley. ‘Trained by same ae 4:08 . : ' luxury coaches, no standing: no parking | SERVE PLAN . ‘Bune “Piet (Br iale) 2 2) By,’ *s\the track and twisted his knee . : FOURTH RACE—Charies Town Coures. -yutee, $1200. For) « 1 $1 ein ieeaihaeh aint” Guaminites Mineatie seaitpidaeaieh chia Daily peuble closes 1:40 ED. TRIP $1 36 —~ 3 ' du |) “EARLY BIRD”! First 10 AM. 1 am interested in (check one) [) family group [© individual MASTER CL B ins 's.w. © Mca ites : i < ST. ADDRESS or R.F.D (webb: Ee CODES leaders eradualiy and outgamed Auld Sod the drive SIGHTS RACE—One and one-sixteenth miles. Purse. $1000 “ — Th | Shoemaker was thrown to Ye Comfortable, reserved seats in deluxe information on the low-cost RE Wiaa-ye.a ee ast pace to the stretch and tired gradually in the drive. | Jocke » Wa * ts St Buses leave res dar ¥, ‘ ror a ey (Arduini) " Oeeet, 5.4. "Goo per. fo tran - Lat ti . eo ot : f (plus tax) I understand there is no obliga- COmPpAS Servis) . Terre Not (Hartack) Lady Hered (Crea) 29 . NAME AGE nie America’s a ‘= Week! ; * apc $3.00; WISE MOKA. $5.80.) 50 : : : ee ‘ i ee . REL—Only Hed W wes Ram Hed. : ATE FUN. $8.00 00. “Beld on, wal of aa Saha ah ULFSTRE : > cITY STAT ARK CHALLEN 80 ear never ; Gulfstream—Acid Pin Ras io “Pun, far back . . Bey Dim, ate for the three furlong dash “ Migs, Arrive on Time—No Traffic Headaches in ’ : ‘ e A p wg en A ee gem Me gt RL BS Beate tS -olds and up; claiming. Start good. Off at 4.18. 8 Odds | and how it can « PLANS 2 ¥ oft 10 6 ! 4p 3g|but said later he wasn't hurt. om, Fee . _vJr. Trained ps Mitchell. Time. yd Drinks tora tion on my part in any way! qr m Leave 1010 Bye St KW. DI. 7.0600 —— — DES et FIV ARS AP ew oly oe SS ee _ ah H E.¥ WASHINGTON. BOS. and TIMES-HERALD - Saturday; March 20, 1954 ~ 7” pS a be ‘Gonzaga, St. Anthony s Win in Catholic Tourney sie 9 allen FFI Te Ww Oe Fr On RAE Dy Ee OR Oe OD VE _” By 101-63 s W. ane narews . Wins, Gains St Ann sin Playoffs | Semifinals Andrews Air Force Base de- piper gros ecng feated Air Research Develop- St. Anthony’s and Gonzaga, ment Center of Baltimore, 101-/:n. nistrict’s two entries in the 63, and won the Southern Divi- first annual Washington Catho- sion basketball championship|);.. invitation basketball tourna- of the Northeast Air Force Con- ment, scored surprise victor- ference at Andrews Friday); . night ies in the opening round at Andrews advances to the worse sh np ana Friday night Northeast Air Force playoffs to! ‘pill Cassidy scored 29 points| be played at Otis Air Force| and led St. Anthony’s to a 79-63. a ne oye North. win over Bishop England of! ndrews piays the North-| couth Carolina. Gonzaga had to ern champion in a best-of-three hit from the foul line in the game series for the right to ad- vance to the All-Air Force tour- ton, a. Prep, oo weren ney in Chicago in April. | Tournament cofavorite st. Ray Sonnenberg, former St.| Ann’s of New York breezed by Louis University star, and Benedictine of Richmond, 87-68.| Bobby Watson, an All-America in the first game The New at Kentucky, who play for- yorkers hardly pulled out the ward and guard for Andrews, 'throttie, using their ace Tommy’ won the local tourney’s most Kearns for slightly more than| a at fp gy somal half the game. Kearns scored | lee d seni. +» 24 points. Stauffer 3] The other tourney cofavorite, 16, West Catholic of Philadelphia, | * used its exceptional height to| 3 good advantage in a tight zone' defense and knocked off Mount iSt. Joseph’s of Baltimore, a a = 79-60. The Burrs outscored the Andrews AFp losers in every period. St. Anthony’s aawed its best game of the year as it handed the South Carolina Catholic champs their fourth loss in 29 games. Cassidy scored 15 points in the second period and added seven more in the third quar-| ter when the Tonies piled uP; their margin of victory. St. Anthony’s was behind, 17- '10, in the late minutes of the Eneochs.ec ‘ Knostman.e Stanley £ Teemay.ec ateon.e Sehlictman ; Heineman.« Newten.« Orwarsky.¢ a S| weowere-wses” = a $1 SSeo—-4e¥ziFnan | _—-—— = -~ oe — 1 Totals iftime scere: 50-31, Fort Belvoir Wins, 63-48, for MDW Crown Fort Belvoir defeated Vint Hill Farms, 68-48, and won the/ *' first period but spurted to a Military District of Washington| 9919 jead at the quarter. Cas- basketball tournament at Wal-'sidy’s brilliant performance in ter Reed Army Medical Center'the second quarter gave the) Friday night, Fort Belvoir ad-| Tonies ‘a 39-25 halftime advan-| vances to the All-Army tourna- tage. ment at Fort Lewis, Wash.| Before St. Anthony Coach| April 59 = Jack Bohne cleared the bench’ High scoring Dick Groat,'in the early minutes of the who missed the MDW tourney fourth quarter the Tonies had because of illness, will return their 15-point advantage and to Belvoir next week. Groat led their 15th win in 23 games. the Engineers to the All-Army Gonzaga, with hustling Ron- title last year. nie Bennett scoring 18 of his , Rewelr Viet Bu G 19 points in the first three + periods, held a 49-40 lead at the start of the fourth period. With more than seven min- sl ores to play, Gonzaga .began freezing the ball. The strategy _. seemed like it was going astray 48 when Scranton Prep pulled to within one point of Gonzaga, 50-49, and 342 minutes left to play. Heininger.f chm. Adams. Diddie.f Getshallf Byrd. Medlo Dennelly.¢ Selinsky.« Fountain.«c wAU ZSoectd a. ——SwWwisisesu— O-svennsu-—4 Langas.c B'gartner.s Daly. | wa Sounueeou™ | com =| re 4 eee er x 164 6 Tetals 1 alftime scere: 41-20. Fort Beiveir. Albright Stars en i+ i) Benedictine Siewers,f Micheli.f Kramer,.f Owings.c renn.c Geode.« Willlams.¢ Lare all.s Gleason s Kahwaky.¢ McGinnity, © St. Ann's Kearns,.f Kirwan,f Harrison,f Multhern.,f ne.¢ Klisewilet.c¢ fravers.se es i? ! ° Cunt 2e Hayes Jenkins Skate Leader LOS ANGELES, March 19 # World Champion Hayes Alan Jenkins, a calm perfectionist, and pixie-like Sherry Dorsey, a high school freshman, won ma- jor victories Friday in the Na- tional Figure Skating champion- ship. Jenkins, of Colorado Springs, Colo., won the school figures event for senior men and Miss Dorsey the same competition for junior ladies. Free skating finals in each division take place _ as ed Le ee | | 26 @ vere r0eh 00 se oanipaleliininitain — Seem ie ey oe x w _ =| Totals t. Anth’s Bis. Eng s covets 2| avons meat Finnegan.f Clair.c McMahon.c Eaton.é Jenes.« Walsh.c Kelly.« > 28 19 21 19 16 12 ant.c Peretio.c Sallivan.« Adele «£ Mitchell ¢ Facchina.«¢ | escenceeo~o.,4 0 TO [/S! exnqounenas -1 i _ 828i Apwmwase _ - 63 1878 16—63 Totals st. ntheny’'s Bichon England G °F FP Seranten 5 2 12 Kearney.f > 16 Gillard.f 1 Resnecy f Gensagca © — 68 for 130 68 By Jim MeoNamara PARDON ME—James Gleason of New York's St. Ann’s, bumps into Dick Wrenn, Richmond's Benedictine, driving in for a layup in the opening game of the Washing- | | at Ritchie GOLF—From Page 19 | Maver, Bolt Take Lead the round, a 20-foot eagle putt on the seventh. Haas and Wall, who were tied for the lead at the end of the first round, took a 67 to ay to drop into the second p place group. Julius Boros. former National Open champion from Mid Pines, N..C., and E..J. (Dutch) Harrison, the Ardmore, Okla veteran, dropped from a first- place tie to fifth place with a St. Louis Legalizes Beer at Ball Park ST. LOUIS, March 19 \*. The sale of beer at Busch Stadium will be legal this summer. Under the city’s 3.2 beer ordinance the beverage could be sold only where inter were street iors of establishments visible from the but the board of al- dermen today changed the law. Beer has been sold at the ball park and similar public places for years and the fact it was illegal wasn't discovered by city officials until recently. . LEADERS and Dick 7. 6L-—128 Bob Rosburg, Chicagce, 63, 66—129 amas. Jr New Orleans and Art . Pecene Maner., Pa sz. 63 *“Hebart Manley. Savannah. Ga and » Frank Stranahan. Telede, Ohie, 65. 64— “Jalles Beros. E. J. Harrison 130. Dave Deusias. Grossingers. N. ¥ TT Turnesa, Brierctiff, N. Y.. 64, Mid Pines. N. C.. Ardmore. Okla.. 62 «Can't Keep Up . Budge Quits Burkeme. Franklin, Mich Harbert. Northville. Mich... 1a! White Plains Gressingers, N Herman Barren. nd N. Al Resseclink, . 5 Abdalia.f : il Saturday. 2 10 Cesgrove.c Williams.c A (ee Tennis Tour The Washington Post and Times-Herald ton Catholic Invitation basketball tourney Coliseum Friday night. classy New Yorkers won handily, 87-68. St. Anthony’s and Gonzaga also won. /has surpassed ' bracket | Mich. State Breaks Hoya Relay Mark CLEVELAND, March 19 #.— Michigan's team ran the uni-' versity 2-mile relay in the fast- tonight, 7 minutes 39.3 seconds, to edge Fordham in Knights of Columbus teenth annual track meet. Miler John Ross of Michigan overcame a 10-yard Syracuse | lead at the halfway mark by) overtaking Bill Persichetty. On the last lap, Fordham’s Tom| Courtney put on a burst of) speed to take second, 3 yards! behind Michigan's Pete Gray The Michigan meet record| Was an even second under Georgetown University’s mark here three years ago and four- tenths of a second better than Pitt did last week. Olympic star Harrison Dil lard won the 45-yard high hur- the Cleveland athlete copped this event of the local meet. In outrunning Illinois’ Willard Thomson and Van Bru- ner, formerly of Michigan, Dil-| lard posted a fast 5.5 second | time. Veteran Mal Whitfield, smooth-striding former Ohio) State athlete, won the 600-yard | event easily in 1:124. The| Olympic star took over on the second lap to show the way to! Le Roy Ebert of lowa. Bob Richards Heads Garden Track Field The first 50 were the hardest for the Rev. Bob Richards, who will go for his fifty-first day night in the Knights of |\Columbus at Madison Square | |Garden. Already the Fiying The the great cor- inelius Warmerdam in the num- iber of 15-foot performances 50-43 although he is still shoot ‘ing for Wamrerdam’s world- record marks. | Richards is unbeaten in six |years of competition in the | |meet and he holds the meet irecords of 154, set two years In North-South Mrs. Noble Bows ,6and 4 PINEHURST, N. C., March 19 WF — Medalist 3 Pp of Waterford, Wis., played two, pemeier, John Peyton and Ed under par golf Friday to trim Kirk). Marjorie Burns of Greensboro, N. C.. 7 and 6, and lead the Awarded $25. 000 way to the quarterfinals of the ‘North and South amateur! . x , Her poe Saturday will) Sugar Ray Wins Suit 'be Mary Ann Downey of Balti- more who eliminated Greta Leone of Chicago, 5 and 4. i NEW YORK March 19 (AP) | NE , Mare wounding . out the —r A Supreme Court jury in a ver- Mrs. Helen Sigel Wil-|qict on record Friday awarded | son of Philadelphia will meet! $25,000 damages to former wel- ‘Barbara Romack of Sacra-|terweight champion ‘Sugar Ray’! ‘mento, Calif. ‘Robinson in a libel action Mrs. Wilson, one down to} | against the publishers of the | N Marjorie Lindsay Mc-|“Amsterdam News.” Millen of Decatur, Ill, at the| Basis of the action was Robin- turn, won 2-up. Miss Romack son's charge that on ‘eliminated Mrs. George Noble,|6, 1951, the paper “wickedly 6 and 4. and maliciously” carried a story ago. (Georgetown’s 2-mile relay Joyce Ziske!| ‘team is competing. tl is com- osed of Joe Stutka, oBb Lip- Dd. © a a = oy eis a t* Noewe Days By George E. Sokolsky p> who, the: report: says, est time of the indoor season; He enter’ | would He be accepted? None. | the| He would be four-| versive person.” dies—the ninth year in which) has | | | ’ ’ | NEW YORK, March 19 (#.—' pole vault over 15 feet Satur-| Parson | ‘under separate bonds of $500 I HAPPENED to see s re- port of a meeting at the YWCA in Yonkers, N. Y., which puzzles me no end. Dr. Ernest Kalibala of Uganda, was a former area specialist, what- ever they may be, for the United Nations trusteeship department, has been invited by the YWCA speech. According newspaper account, ally bawled out to he and the audience. To the audience. he said: ““If Jesus Christ came Yonkers, what church would In what church called a sub- Of the United States, Dr. Kalibala said that American money and arms are blocking world peace. Of American leadership, he said that there was a deficit of statesmen. “ .. You cannot get | peace by spending money and | to make a/| the | liter- | everybody, | | including the United States | to world | men without producing world | leaders.” Of Russia, he said: “There is a vacuum in Eu- | rope. Russia is there to fill it.’ Later he added, are here to stay. Nothing the ‘Communists | United States can do will wipe | them out. Russia has more to say in Asia than you have. solve that problem, is for more statement.” Of the Mau Maus, he said: “ .. the Mau Maus there are killing the white people, and that is the only thing pre- venting the world from for- getting Africa!” To | the need | THEN the “Yonkers Herald’ Statesman” added “Some among his hearers expressed a feeling of peni- tence, and asked what they might do as individuals to help the cause of world peace and the cause of freedom in Africa?’ What was there to be peni- tent about? Why do Ameri- cans enjoy listening to their country and their leaders be- ing berated by foreigners? When Dr. Kalibala said that our leaders today are “only Lawyer Held On Charge of Auto Theft John M. Holzworth, year-old attorney who has practiced the breadth of the continent, was confined Friday night to the limits of the Arlington County jail Holzworth was in the jail and $2000 after his preliminary hearing earlier in the-day be-| January | fore County Judge Paul D Brown on a charge of grand automobile. | Holzworth pleaded not guilty. | arrested | Middleburg, Va.., obtained by a representative of Al's Motors, larceny of an The attorney Thursday in on a warrant was Inc., ton. 3911 Wilson bivd., Arling a used car from the motor com- pany to obtain an appraisal, but failed to return it at the agreed time The car was recovered Middleburg. After ‘a Testimony Friday declared Holzworth on March 12 drove in hectic | a 66-) pretty much) military men,” he was critl- cizing President Eisenhower. ' In this news account, not one word appears to show that anyone arose to criticize this foreigners .bad manners. in attacking a country Which of- fered him its unrestricted hospitality. Those who contin- “we to say that our freedoms are being restricted have here an excellent example of a foreigner attacking our coun- try, our President and an au- dience in utter freedom, with- out either official restraint or the inhibitions of good man- ners, And some in the audi- ence expressed penitence! There is much of this going on in the United States, for- eigners coming here from all sorts of countries to exhort us to dislike our own coun- try, or to influence us to op- pose a position taken by an American administration and to favor the position adopted by some other country. For many years, the Indians have conducted such a propaganda in the United States. I re- ceive pamphlets, booklets, broadsides and all sorts of printed matter, some expen- sively gotten up, much of it telling how superior some country’s policy is to that of | the United States. I SUPPOSE in a free coun- try everything is possible, but I wonder whether, let us say, the British or the French would welcome an American traveling about their coun- try criticizing its government, it leaders or even its people? How much of this do we need to take to preserve our free institutions? Those who are anxious about our civil liberties are right. In a period of concern over infiltration and corrup- tion, it is possible to move into proscription and from that into an abandonment of civil rights. Those who fight Communists need to remem- ber that the only reason for opposition to them is that they are opposed to the dig- nity of man; that they elimi- nate human liberties from so- ciety; that they reduce man to a thing. If, in fighting them and their ideas, we are forced to adopt their concept of society, then they have conquered us spiritually if not physically. We accept their methods while opposing them. It is this problem which has caused a schism in our soci- ety. Vituperation, innuendo, insult offer no solution. This is nothing for small, bigoted minds, nor for those who hope to earn a dollar or a career out of our disturbances. It re- quires a broad study of the techniques employed by Rus- sia to destroy nations by infil- tration and the imitation of those methods by other na- tions. It requires the working out of a formula for the pro- tection of our country with- out of a formula for the pro- tection of our country with- out losing our right and lib- erties (Copyright 1954 King Features Syndicat Inc.) e : Criminal Justice In U.S. Studied BERKELEY, Calif. 7. —The American Bar Association has embarked on the first research hearing in Brown's court—dur- . NE Ws Washington, N Fia.. Tenn Alexander. St. Petersbure project Middiecef®l, Memphis is? in its history with @ comprehensive study at the Un- iversity of California on admin- istration of criminal justice in the United States The project,. which started last November 13, is expected to last five years. Three will be given to compiling data and two to formulating recommen- dations. \ Ford Foundation grant of $50,000 is financing the study. Arthur H. Sheery, professor of law and crimonology at Califor- nia, is research director. ary Lena Faulk, National|which falsely caused the im. ampion from Thomasville, pression that he had been defeated Barbara McIn-| “guilty of assault and battery. Toledo, Ohio, 1l-up, win-|on his wife.” ing which Commonwealth's At- torney William J. Hassan was among the - witnesses—Holz- worth was ordered held in $500 bond for grand jury action on ithe larceny charge Hassan immediately went be- fore County Circuit Court Judge William D. Medley and asked that Holzworth be given a sanity hearing. Medley set the hearing for 10 am. .Mon- day, and fixed bond at $2000. Holzworth said he is a mem- © Stipack.e ® Dersev.« 3. Omatliev.4 © Katchik« © Reddingteon « Sevin.ec ~~ % te “@ . Jenkins, 20 is favored to re Thernett.« peat his national senior -men‘s victory of last year, and Miss Tenley Albright, 18, Newton Center, Mass., already holds a commanding lead in her effort to repeat in the senior ladies di Snead. vision. LW. She was rated first by every B; ] S > rh judge in winning the the school ay or t or cs ee a Ontarte. figures division. Geers. Pa ring. Torente, Jenkins, a youthful veteran of 36 Pp and Glenn six world competitions and win-|* ) oints ly Jtamy Clark | ner of the 1954 event at Oslo. P a Ogden, “Chicago. and Earl Stewart Norway, also-was-rated tops by| Elgin Baylor, The W ashing-|? Sam. GieendRavtis: Mich all the judges. ‘ton Post and Times-Herald’s at Bef Mayfield, Chicopee, Mass His 17-year-old brother, David, | All-Metropolitan basketball cen-| ag Jimmy Demaret. ake placed second: Ron Robertson, |ter from Spingarn High, scored) %;, $¢_*fy4. *** “**™ : Long Beach, Calif., third: and| 36 points and led the Stonewall ike ‘couchal. Ripmmnraness. Hugh C. Graham jr., Tulsa,|A. C. to an 85-70 victory over | 49— Okla., last in a slim field of four. the D. C. All-Stars last night “Denotes amateer, Earlier, vivacious Miss Dorsey before a capacity crowd at A of Mercer Island. Wash., de-| Turner’s Arena. Shue Joins All-Stars feated Catherine Mashado, 17,| Baylor's brother, Kermit, the Pacific Coast champion from Was second high scorer for the For Trotters’ Series Los Angeles. with Mary Ann;winner with 16 points. Jim : sb Dorsey: Minneapeols,-Minn.,..no. Wexler,.former. Western. High Gene Shue, University relation to the winner in third player, topped the losers with Marylapd basketball star, ha place. 15 points been. named to the College All | Stonewall also prewStar team which opens an ex- er vious meeting by hibition tour through Canade Pellagrini Hurt G F D.< and the United States with th FORT PIERCE, Fla., March Harlem Globetrotters March 28 19 W.—Eddie Pellagrini, vet- Among other members of the eran utility infielder of the team are Cliff Hagen of Ken Pittsburgh ‘Pirates, was hit in tucky, Bob Leonard of Indiana the back of the neck with a and Toge Palazzi of Holy C ross. _thrown ball in an intra-squad Shue will also play in the East game today. But he escaped’ ——— os West’ Alt Star-game-at- Kansas serious injury. : ; 417 85 suet 2a. Sieenntine City, Mo., Monday. ch wuiewuwow-s “ I “ Furcel. Lement : Tuscon. Ariz... 66. 66— 0 - —_ 0 “ 3 i) 0 tt and Bill > 129 JACKSONVILLE, Fla., March ' Hawkins, El Paseo Tex. , ana -2 ‘#.—Don Budge, 38-year-old tire. ne, Towner, Canewees, - © former tennis great, is drop- ning the last hole to take the| This, he said, was untrue and Jerry Barber, la Canada. Cant ping off the professional tour match. \was intended to injure his repu- or, San Francisco, am next week, Promoter~ Jackic.>'©,, Meets, Mickey Wright, tation. Entering a general de- , White SS ae Kramer said Friday : San Diego, Calif., l-up winner/nial, the publisher said the The ~“Cuthteerear: redhead over Mrs. Maurice Glick, Balti-|news item complained of was Dee * ‘ aG' more. a fair and impartial report of) lasn't been able to keep UP| Dorothy Kirby, ee rumor that had reached the with tne younger players, Pan-| eran. defeated proportion .of common. know-| cho Segura, Dick Gonzales and! parttord Conn ledge.” Frank Sedgman, but Kramer play Mrs. May Murray Jones| “The publishers, the Powell- eae had not ty fired. |of Montpelier, Vt.. who de-|Savory Corporation, said there|ber of the bars of New York, rhe decision was made by|feated Mrs. H. W. Stone, Ware|was no intended malice and|Connecticut, New Jersey, and Budge without any pressure) shoals S. C., 3 and 2 that it later. had “restated that) Alaska from anyone,” Kramer said his; plaintiff did not bruise “When he came on the tour we! : —___—- d that h d leave in Maryland Risks the spring when his services wife” and that the rumors were | agreed that he could leave in | |were required by the Town’ W/ ° ° | " “a Sj National Rifle it oadawiile BI : 0 | KEN i UCKY 6 el hereon Tennis Club in New York. a new club where h s tl a . \ | cvoatie Said GS GE hak Crown Saturday B : ‘ oo. | ; . eats Quantico | Kentucky Straight Bourbon iets eal Fred 19 13 «SI rT mae yA Scranten Gentasa 20 1 09 oll and i 20 3 6—55 12° i A. Sam Ww. Va Themp+e Metbeurne, Austra-. Bob Toski. P| Livingsen, ane Atlanta vet-| Patty - Torza, 2-up, and will Kiamesha Inwood, ara Wes Y.. 66, N Kramer said he will not re- turn to action himself but would sign another high-rank- ing player to replace Budge. who plays his last match at Jackson, Miss., March 25. Up until Friday night, Budge had won only one and lost 48 While Kramer didn’t name the potential replacement, it was reported he will get Frank Kovacs of Oakland, Calif.: Carl Earn of Los Angeles, or Bobby Riggs of Miami-Beach: The University of Maryland's rifle team of DELAND, Fla., March 19.— against ~he Quantico Marines lost challengers from more than 150 their opening exhibition game, collegés and Universities Satur- 7-1, tothe Louisville Colonets;| dav in defense of the National Of the American Association title last year under the here Friday. ce Quantico’s lone run came in auspices of National Rifle the top of the eighth when Bob Poole, Steve Piskach and Ear! Huffman drew walks to fill the bases and Pickach scored when. Bill Dando was struck by a! pitched ball. Quantico 000 000 Olx-l 3 2 Louisville 210 010 3xx-7 10 2 Ratis—Thomas, Osenbaugh 4, and Uremovich: Wilson, Zon ner 4, Schroll 7, and Tully. competes won 102-77. Stars & Wexler fh t) a ~~ woeuvneuwst won the Association. More than- 1,000 individual oe will gather in, shoulder -to-shoulder matches ‘on ¥4 college campuses. Mary- land will compete on the Naval Academy range at Annapolis along with Navy, Georgetown, (George ...Washington, Catholic . U., Gettysburg, Lehigh and Bal- timore Junior College. ms. Wienstock.« - Gaskins.c 7 Cehen.s. | DC's George Davis. —————————— ee ae are Named Eastern Missouri Congressman Backs Busch | : Gloves Captain BEAR MOUNTAIN. March\~ 7 . Bigs Mae 5 19.—_-_ George Davis, scrappy After Day-Long Redskin Huddle aon W hae seas oe Rhy . Canada or D. C.—LeBaron Hasn't Made Up Mind Yet champions training here with the Eastern Golden Gloves Even after@ day-long huddle Friday, Redskin President squad, was named co-captain George P. Marshall and Quar of the Eastern team Friday Davis. who came into Washington Gloves via terback Eddie LeBaron hadn't decided whether Eddie would be doing his playing at Grif- Karsten Charges Errors in Johnson's Attack on Cards’ Base ball-Beer Ties Rep. Frank M. Karsten (D.,| gley, owner of the Chicago;Budweiser to be sold in his Mo.) came to the defense of Cubs, does not sell Wrigley pall park. This implication is August A. Busch, jr., Friday in| &"™ exclusively in his ball likewise unfounded in fact— replying to statements made|-——— ‘several other brands of beer by Sen. Edwin C. Johnson (D., Johnson Broadens ‘are sold at Busch Stadium. Colo.), who has attacked the : | Karsten also maintained that Budweiser-St. Louis Cardinal) Baseball Resolution the Colorado Sénator was not baseball-beer tieup. ee Gen, ee Friday, Sen. Edwin C. (correctly informed when he Karsten, St. Louis towns-| Johnson (D- Colo.) broadened quoted Budweiser distributors man of Busch, issued a news; Senate Joint Resolution 133 tO prove that “Mr. Busch has release saying Johnson was by introducing an amend- (increased his Budweiser sales in error en he charged! ment that would make any |!7 percent in his radio’ net- that the expense of operating) baseball club subject to anti- (work territory since he ac- the Cardinals is being charged, trust laws if owned or con- | quired the Cardinals.” off against the Federal tax) trolled by any corporation This increase in sales,” liability of the Anheuser-) engaged in commerce. ‘Karsten explained, “could not Busch brewery. | His original resolution ad- possibly have been due to ad-| Karsten said: “The brewery! mitted was aimed directly at |vertising. the Cardinal games and the baseball club each! the St. Louis Cardinals and ion radio in any territory in-| files a separate tax return so| Owner August A. Busch, Jr, | asmuch ° as the Cards’ games the expenses of one cannot| |were broadcast during the en-| yon eR Ce BASKETBALL e- be .charged off against the | jtire season last year by Grie-| plonships at Andrews Air Force Base, profits of. the other. ark, Sen. Johnson implies|sedieck Bros. Brewe A al HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL “By stating that Mr. Wri that Mr. Busch permits only| competing St. ‘Louls | tational teupns pasmest ot Bt ie Collpeum. the the rng eo FOR 19 YEARS ~ WASHINGTON’S FAVORITE BOURBON | 100 Proof and 93 Proof AVAILABLE It's no secret that Coach Curly Lambeau isn’t complete ly sold on the Redskins’ little man. But Marshall always has been high on LeBaron and still is Marshall and LeBaron have a lot of respect for each other and negotiatiéns were highly amicable. Marshall said, “lI can't tell whether my little lieutenant is strengthening or weakening. He's pretty good at hiding that ball, you know.” LeBaron, in Marshall's pres-| with md PINTS .. HAL PINTS MILSTONE’S MERCHANT ON THE AVENUE FOR 47 YEARS i! e Sipucr gies. 927 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W.10 4%" Fort George Meade, Md., team, was selected by his teammates to lead them into battle Monday night at Madi- son Square Garden in the twenty-seventh renewal of the series. fith Stadium or in Canada Also named as a co-captain. LeBaron admits that he has was Richard Hill, a middle- 4 _ More attractive financial weight representative from the Offer from a Canadian team. It Camp Lejeune, N. C. Marine Probably is Calgary, now base. coached by Larry Siemering, and LeBaron’'s tutor and close) friend at College of Pacific. Money isn't the only thingjence, said, “We've talked for) involved. in LeBacon’s deci- ‘several hours but haven't done| sion. He want's to make sure| much. I guess we will get back) he will have “opportunity” onto firing. broadsides at \ each East-West Golden Gloves ‘Redskin line coach last year T ‘What's on Today: the te he’ decides to ~ other."JACK WALSH. | n Dati te 6:20 FM. n vs PEW RSHING TON "POST aid” TIME SSRERAED™ ~ Saturday; Marohe20 1954 2. Spectacular Gas Explosion in Southeast—Giant Ladder Collapses at Northwest Fire 4. wo ¥ Eales tg i Bd “ GO Ks bei ge as ae ee 4 om Fae Sey 2 By Bob Burchette—The Washington Post and Times-Heraid . (SEE STORY ON PAGE 1.) ; : -™= By Charles Del Vecchix The Washingten Post and Times-Heraid An unidentified man, one of two rescued from third and fourth-story rooms of the brick rooming house, is carried to safety by firemen. Two women also were rescued. This man suffered from smoke inhalation, firemen said.. . e Near collapse, printer 0. C. Hubbard rests after he was carried to safety. Hubbard and two firemen were on the The scene at 1447 Massachusetts ave. nw., Friday night after a mobile fire truck ladder buckled as firemen were fighting giant ladder when it fell. They were scraped against the building as the ladder came to rest 10 feet from the pavement. a blaze in the building and evacuating occupants. Arrow indicates point of collapse. (Story on Page 1.) > RENEE REE ELORAEL IT PERE EN “xt 8d Cite tok eee: Prey et sexy % SP a a F DS »> 9 9 P ” - o CLASSIFIED Advertising PARIS ye CEE UIs engoarenas % e phihens SATURDAY. MARCH 2 - Se x 4h Se IA PRE AER BAR CE PAE TSA, A) rege A ed PREPARE KR gh OP er vw ghite Woes PS POON eR ay! CLASSIFIED Home. Improvement LEGAL NOTICES 4 nero axe Baialy) 1F ptcrneye NITED STATES D m Build T COU RT mR THE DISTRICT OF Cc OLUM.- 4 STA ving been the iaet it Tih day of March the inknown heirs next of kin of concerned ia ordered A.D. 1954 at Rolitha Awe hief Judge of said Court thie 12th day of March. A.D. 1054 y cot the Honorable ‘ Ati al N Zz URKART FRA : et of Witte for siumbia. Clerk OSEPH A. ASHI. Attorney . 723 Rend Ruildine ATES DISTRICT ne Sol Due grag RIPTAICE Comme Holding a Pr my e Cc ourt a Do z this 17th day of March that the unknown heirs at next of kin of Beatrice Berney ell others concerned, ; court on MONDAY, DAY OF APRIL, A. D 10:00 OCLOCK A. M cause why su mot be #@rant ted be published in La® Roperter and days before said the Honorebie 10 . ss, Chief Judge of of ch, Mar 27 "April 3 KLEIN rt Foeten. Attorneys 7il ith St. NW. : ~ 9 UNITED, 4 ATES bn ae aad COURT D olumbia Ho! ding ‘Proba' e Cc ; the deceased to exhipit the arn is , HOWARD c WRIGHT. chanan at nw Att THEODORE C OGSWELL ho of Wills for the Mistri of bia. Clerk o ie ay e Court Mar.29.27 April 3 GNITED 8 sal complaint Provided. : be Led a copy of this order be pub- M ATT THEW © fou HEEHAN Mar 20 > April 3 OFFICIAL NOTICES 5 VU. S&S TREASURY DEPARTMENT Office of Assistant Resional Com- Missioner 1 ol terec 3900 Mac mo + St dD Any person claiming an tin said prop- rty must file a cost bond $750. with the office of the Superior in Charge. leohol & Tobacco Tax. 104 M4 Ce Street. Baltimore 1. on or before April 19. 1954, wise the property will be forefited nd disposed of according to law AUIS iE CARLO. Assistant Re- gional! Commissioner SMENOWN EIRS OR t fillie Olin ay Create a ard fon of Insanitar istrict of Colum mbers of the Board have investi- —— into the sanitary condition of at the premises men- Th is building has been | result of such. investi- insanitary nger the health oce upants thereof | ' the igo A me is he ing in iy thes or of persons ay ana accordin eon demned days after a copy of this © rde * or i) TRUSTEES SALE OF VALUABLE been. cancelied. or um Within which raid, building or Dart) thereof Mai lr occupied | iy r has been ended by Special Order | 0 thi oard ARD FO H ONDEMNATION na Rey ee | Co ; L [ SO eanyY ns. 2. fLGEN- Mar i! 12.13.14.15.14.17.18.19.20 UNITED STATES TREASURY | DE. tant! _ missioner. Tobacco Ta ; fir , Dut Bis —— . oS ry 4964. by ‘ 1942 Pord 2-deer sedan, notes ae and ' = ister ed ‘ow? ser. Kent ' I UTS RS CARIO Reg MA ssioner 1954 , 20 Phe: er P i if dead are hereby) al of an un Atan?t ~As MARCH 9 ‘You. he exi istence n Lot 68. Beau are! icee "4 OR Me ade at ne D con ting of an ied acant said land e CAMALIER. |t » PRENTISS, Mar 18.19.20 BIDS AND PROPOSALS NOTICE dhe to DISTRI { z C oe aortic EY rumbd I wi AUCTION SALES ee shee: | a om and after fit! ren THOS. J. OWEN «& SON. is iil Commissioners. BIDS AND PROPOSALS col from Supervisor, Bond. Bee. Frecersensat 4% 406. 4 WA 88000, Ext yw, ter Mar 18. 19. 20, 22, 23, 24. i — Pp rity may t ee at the discretion t| GS SERVI M. | neral Servigss Buildine. | FP Stre N.W ash- ~~ ee then ubliely opened in ‘ °. 13 pon request to the ~ suing Office > sets of drawings and specifications will be supplied with- “ut charge to completé project. be returned. Not more than 2 ad- ditional sets of drawings and speci- fications may be obtained by gen- eral contractors i g00d condition within 15 y whe after the bids are s of- fered as payment must be made payabie to the order of the Treas- urer. U. § DANZ. aNeny & pe KEY. Attorneys pad igh 4 ert rke HE nr Hitt Lema HE DITRICT Sine Probate eee Acfministration Notice: Th ie (to y ol at the subscriber of the. : a has obtained of the of Columbia. Letters of Administration yy estate of Leo F. Wise District of Golumbia Pereone dece sed deceased having claime agcainet are herethy day of September. AD may by law he excluded benefit of Given apes my are 1954 ret Colonial Reach. Theedore Cogswell of will« for the Diet hia clerk March Va Reelster rict of Colum of the Probate Court. 4 on is that = given — day, 2 2 March 1949 Seriai No. S8RBA-2477 Ite auction by a auctioneer at Hyattevilie, d. held_by Genera! OV. OF DIST. oF COL... Ax’Y ENG : i licensed 5303 Baltimore ave. is”. @ ft 12° dia. terra cotta pipe sewer. Proposed forme. specns. and draw- obtainable upon deposit certified eneee for $50.00 of Taxes. [Df Contr. & Ro Procure ment Office, Rm. 4 : Pa Ave. NA 86000 xe. 23 4.17.18.19.20 . 5S HEREBY GIVEN THAT pu (Tel. - +e ae) at the Mattenel itan dD. C Inspector Chi lef r ere OF DIST. O OF | Co L, Dim Bid Soakte ch. 17. 1954 seAthD Froros ve be recd Ave 499 “- ? x until 2 PM Supervisor ocurement Rm 406 « 4 ore 86-6000, Ext. 2378) Mar.1i7. 18.19 20.32.23 8 Hill & St AS ST of Ptah NO 1222 sD ie «€6of 68 certain rust recorded. in 9296. Polio 156 et sea. t records of the District of Colu of the party undersigned | Public auction in front of the pr omises ON MON. DAY. THE ri fe peed OF ame 1954. AT K P. the following- PR AL Premises. situate in Columbia. and designated as being the North 15 feet on Third Street by «& depth of 70.50 feet ef Original Lot uare 498 Lot i2 now for purpores cf assessment and taxation as Lot re} vere 596 TERMS By virt J ay > the « Sold subject to «a prior 2 RA ADVANCE DECORATING In cash of $500.00 required veyancing. recording. etc chaiser’s cost Adjustments es of date of oale comp! — with thi n ty may be ad lvertise e ._ discretion SAM W ALLAN Trustees, | Mar 18.20.23 25.2 29 i d and of re- the trustees ASSERMAN. LANG Aactioneers E St. NW. TWo- at. 2 , BRI % ING a WELI WN PREMISES” No 345 AVE. 8W AS McLEAN Br virtue of a certain deed of srust euly~ recorded. tn- Li Polio 321 et sec. records of the District of Co} and at the request of the *eecured thereby the undersigned ae - ees wil) , Ld pu 4.i¢c auction front of es. ON FRI. DAY THE seTH” DAY OF MARCH A.D 1954 AT CLOCK the Me 2 AG. ; dl A land situate the is- and designated n : th e OBies nat She Surveror = ‘the Dis. ‘Olumbia in Liber 13 at etn + -15RMS oats. a oe ect..ta.« prior qd a? Ceposit of —— ancing. recoracing Cc forfeited be advert! discreti Lees JOSEPH WIT cate abi WILLIAM NEAL, Trustees. Mar.16 18.2023 25 THOS. J. OWEN & SON. Auctioncers e at Nw Titt TRURT ESS SA OF VALUABLE ST¢ rr BRICK + KNOWN 701 A of a certain | deed of trys t di recorded in Ni Folio 41 et as ft re ad ‘NO bli cti n ON MONDAY ‘Tie MARCH. AD. 1954 the follow premises situate in the District of Columbta and designated as and being part of original Lot 3 in being more particularly by metes ope. equnes of trus purposes of Desessment t ai (bulldine associa for approximately ther narticulare of whi ch. ‘will, announced at time of sale: the pur- chase price above said trust to , paid in cash. A deposit ef $500.00 ‘be ver- me e Mar.10.12.15.17,.28 6 AUCTION SALES er nee Cc ARPEFTRY aeF =| THOS. J. OWEN & BUN. — 435 Southern _Butldin PREMIS8 NO 820 FOURTH STREET NORTH- EAST By virtue of a certain deed of trust “uly recorded, in Liber N 8736. Poli lo 56 et seq. of the land records of the District of ColumBia. ani at the request the party secured thereby. the undersigned trustees will sell. at public auction mn front of the premises ©} THE 26T A following -described nd eromntoes situate in the titel Columbia said deed known for one taxation as Lot Sil IERMS Sold subject to o« prio ‘building association: deed or trust for approximately $3.017.7 a prior second deed of trust for ap- proximately $2 84. further par- “iculars of which announced at time of sale the purchase price above said trust to pe paid in ¢a deposit of $500 required. Con- veyancing A... 1 ete chaser’: ost: assessment in Square discretion D Cc of HOLMES HEIGLE Trustees. Srustene PATRICK FRANCIS ar.16.18.20 23.25 O8 J. OWEN & SON, — 43 Southern Butidin TRUSTEES SALE OP VALUABLE TWO-STORY RO BRICK DW a “ ey BEING KNOWN ry a NO. «1206 OR- Gy virtue of @ certain pe of t duly recorded in —_—— No. 8892. Folio 118 et sea the land | records of the District “ot Columbia. | and at the request of the party secured ther reel the undersigned trustees wil sell. at public suction trust Staples’ of “Trinidad.” in Liber $2 at Folio 48. Subject to covenants and restrictions of record "ERMS subject to a prior approximately | Particulars of be announced at time the purchase price above | Paid im cas $500.00 required vevancing. recording property sold t trustees may be advertised and re- th Giscretion of the PD HOLMES Surviving Trustee. Mar 16.18.20 23 25 , Taos. J ow EN & SON, Auctioneers TRUSTEES STORY ED Tw A B R te CKTEX OVER FRAME DWELLING BEING KNOWN AS PREMISES NO. 17 4T SALE OF VALUABLE Ry virtue of a certain deed Signed trustees will sell auction in front of the premises ON FRIDAY. THE 26TH DAY OF MARCH AD 1954 AT 1:30 o'Ccl P the following- cescribed land and premises. sit- iate the District of Columbia end designated as and being part of Original Lot in Square 816 bein mare particularily described i metes and bounds in said deed Sub) ect to and restric- tions OL rec TERMS Sold ‘subject to « prior ibuildine association) ary of trust for approximately $3.5 fur- ther particulars of hich will be announces at time of sale: the pur- ba enants Conveyancing recording. at purchaser's cost required etc otherwise deposit for- the property may be advertised and resold at the dis-/| cretion of the trustees DON BLAIR LLOYD A. KITE. | Trustees. Mar 16.18 20 23 25. — BUSINESS SERVICE A. A. PIPELINE CLEANERS clox ged sewers. sinks. drains enuroment, Om 24-hr service. 5 ST. 3-00853 for ADDITIONS. ALTERATIONS — porches, jalousi . enclosures’ sket s rk guar. No money sy. Day or ni he bS - Li? & } ADDITIONS. alterations. rooms attics finished..porches in-' closed: dormers: new work or re- | | Modeling. WA. 7-4948 A DEPENDABLE GENERAL CONTRACTOR Bath rooms, heating, kitchens, rée conversions. 22 recreation. —| SERVICE. Painting. decorating. remodeling Estimates without obligation. HU 2-8434 ALL TYPES Sage tata ROOMS. HEATING RM ist & ATTICS AND REC RMS Hnishea | Garages 7 1 Free estimates L. UTZ C UN. 4-1433 BUILT-IN CABINETS Renovatin additions rms.. gar al 1 H HY NSON new add es es pr ic ed a 73-4774, CAMERA REPAIRING ttics. porches. rec. old work... Anything JA ‘827 SRY. time Painting ' y , moe r\ reas.. terme, UN — 501: 22 CARPENTRY Repairs: reas, Free estimates. LU. 2-5036 CLOGGED DRAIN PIPES electrically azor-Kieened or no charge © ooter, RA. 6-8888 dav or night FLOOR “SANDING AND FINISHING. Rooms sen ed, approximate! y $10 L. DHA! NKING _ UN. 4-674} y .? a 4-4 so rms.. new an Mr. Smith CARP’TRY. er o- ‘ S' W YB ; c Senesal e c.a.3 reoling ing No yh 74th 206 te me Pree esti- 3988 Lh 3. ¢ PAINTING and apapering Wh char oF own work eae Lt 7848. TU. 2 FAINTING i PAPERING wore re ’ mates rAINTING—-Interior exterior anytime. HO. 20477. JO. 3 the home | PAINTING—C no ol in a an d Ci j residential craton pen velevine no drinkine honest work free est. AD. 4-6325 PAINTING bat xterior Experieuced NO 7.404 ras am First-class ork MR THOMPSON PAINTING Interior anc exterior rate experienced painter; seproutees Estimates free 2-597 Pa 6-11°28 interior and ANDERSON 4 and exterior Pree estimates. | Lf. 77-3789 r vr BRING rm nting. tabor ome | lastering Free ai LJ 3-0091. : PAPERING & pa nting. Interior, terior. Lt 932 Are BING. ne ? ~ >. Wall rm. JO ~ Water ‘proofing. ce- and repair work done. Free estimates. LI. 3-6263 PLUMBING A HEATING. Repairing | & remode 24-hr serv. NO. 7 ra Paper labor and ma &52 $17.9 2-1 23 PLASTERING res ment new REL PHOLSTERY, recty) ing. anti talk Work guar: FT SH CHILD AERATOR repairs, Work cuar. Exc mee Beer ra te. C Stone, Flagstone, Specializing in on ement retaining wells. Trees Removed & Trim’d| BLACK Many thanks.... » ++. to all those Washington area residents who have ex- pressed such confidence in thé selling power of the classi- fied columns in the big Washington Post and Times- Herald. inconvenienced by phone and production facilities. We apologize to the many persons who were a temporary congestion of our tele- Requests for space in both Saturday's and Sunday's editions of The Washington Post and Times-Herald were so heavy that we just did not have the space for all the advertise- ments submitted. We are confident that by next week-end these problems will have been solved. We look forward to being able to extend the best of service to all of our advertisers. The Washin oton Post and Times-Herald BUSINESS SERVICE 9 | PERSONALS HELP, MEN 15 “TAYLOR.’ ass EXPERT 7S Est . * Tax | Sh'd'y trim'’d. Yd. work. RE. 7 vee, TV REPAIRS, FREE ESTIMATE. Dey or night service ae -; tes. All . parts and chemeband 1 year. W ALSO ‘SPRCIALIZ ZE IN N A. %-4683 ALL. WOODY—HO . reliable reme Suns. & holid NURSERY. preschool chil fed yard with recreation facilities Ll. 55-3527 TYPING EXPERTLY DONE on elec typewriter. Call Irma. JO. 2-422 COL. Ghampoo. press & curl: 62 Scaip treatments. hair dying. -hafr bobbing a specialty. Skilled work AD AD. 2-28 81. ~-¥445 & repairing days. 8am to lilo m a” WASHING MACHINES — REPAIRED _All makes. Pree estimate. NO. 7-5558 WASH. MACH. REPAMRS. dryers. ironers Pree est Written guar Barry's Repair Shop NO. 7-5558 WANTED 1000 TELEVISIONS ONE THOUSAND | WE WILL BUY—SEI | MOTOR TRAVEL ING new Olds to Calif l or? Share exp. JU. 5-0821 EXPERIENCED driver Geliver vour car to an West Coast. Leave around April 1. Excellent references. TU. 2-0555 | INSTRUCTIONS 12 ABC SHORTHA 6 wks PLE SCHOOL, 50th yt NA. 8-3258. CANDY COURSE (white), and even Candy ores hive wt he or REPAIR YOUR TV SET 3-0039 smameodiately in the Putu t Look Fort Tt he O 1 Your Phone Book ‘1-YEAR GU ARANTEE LOST 10 —_—_—_—_—— BILLFOLD. brown. containing driv- er’s permit, airline eve card and ~-o4 New En roll Be Reet OT ] w i Comptometer School SHORT EES NG COURSES 238 MUNSEY BLDG stenog rourses NA. R234 cor. G & 12th «(Pat MODERN TRAINING in culture; all subjects taught proved for GI training evenin classes BEAUTY COLLEOER nw DI 4-1762 COLORED. Learn and. Radio and courses 34 wkiv HELP, MEN AGENT Old Line has opening man in Alexandria ence heipful but Must hav Oommission Inquire, “HOOT, 38 wre) : registration card. WC COCKER SPANIEL Cottage City. UN. 4-425 COCKER aa} ~~ blond ~4 nd Wie beauty Ap.- 3% . 1210 G Ve Reddish brown Franklin st. ne LA. 6-8749 after Troing , Sh TV Repair NA #5250 —o of wa Crest ort Mewate JE. 4-5542 All é Ss Answers to Rusty 5 Dp. m COCKER SPANIEL Riack female ans to Buttons vic. Prince st Reward TE 6-5902 sable and h 1952 tags: a mm after 6 pb FRAT. PIN—titiais E. B. B ward ToY Botton | TERRIER, marked bik ht n hame of Bu = ferson st. nw. TA PARAKEET Blue, white finder 12 RA Insurance debit Experi- wil train. re car. Salary plus Call Kl. 9-4033 2 for appoint- nd for Re- female a ‘ Vic 00 95-7360 Reward the Spring nd Lough.- WoO. 6-3902 = the | — between $3 and ment. APPLIANCE SALESMEN SERVICE a tan posed vic. of 16th W SE. LI FOUND 110A CATS—Male gnc female eee p00 vic. 600 & sory st. Own or £00 959 00 S Lee st coon) Kl. 9.3959 ; - e: black Owner or Vie f good COCKER ie a white; vic st good home Ki Has bie ™* TYPE aPANTEL Sota } COCKER-TYPE Hillcrest vicinity black and’ wner or Must be youn, aggressive taik and own late model car. Start- Ing salary $81 per week. plus com- missions on ail sales including trip commissions. All calls prescheduled No canvassing. Learn selline with a good substantial base pay No Previous selling experience neces- SPANIEL. alia. LU. 2-4685 | ALTERATIONS dressmaking Ln to fit? 2901 24th. N Ari. JA ALTERATIONS — Done immed 1 call and fit, Refs AD 2. 0592 ALTERATIONS—dressma k: rw on years experience. LI 4-607 31 BUSINESS SERV IC ES Mortgeare & cousiness loans uie | processed ollections ; Ari ~d ton eres Agency. Ja & of: 34 PUBLIC STENO SERVICE. Lett reports, forms. enve! accurately typed. LI. 7. 4-1567 Con’ venience Ask for Mr Or Phone RE Howe i 8086 for Appt. AUTO BODY and fender man. with experience top piece-work pa good working conditions and stenty! cf work. Apply in person. 714 O “AUTO MECHANICS Because of mpenegged bastnens, t we s ck- os ae Ra lareest Packard | cealeveaie work in light modern - ‘Top Salary and com- missions. Paid “vacation. hospitatli- zation and other company benefits ust sober. reliable and able to fusnigh _ relerepese MR CRANE Covington Motor Co. 7301 Wisc. Ave... Bethesda. Md AUTO MI "HANI werking conditions Applications are invited for n in the post f sionable the Gold n pen ; Loca! j 2 CONDITIONS OF SERVICE The ly Ary @ttaching to the post Ideal in many other company benefits neasure up to our standards work your earnings Contact George C " BENDALL, PONTIAC 1625 Prince Alex iTO Mt M f Secretary un Armon Suestions ef policy coming weet of his functions Va ‘HANIC Pref. G Sanerwqnses but not necessary) Excellent alary and bonus arrangement ~— qualified and energetic Man Paid ~e ations (;Toup I (2:00G working con¢ See Mr? “Bashan COAST IN- PONTIAC, CO., 407 Fila Avy NE.. informed of the progress transiating such decisions He is rticularly concerned with the eo-ordination . Government Business Leis! ative Assembiy: and responsi bie for for be ”* i mobile poe We have @ position open for an perienced high grade automobile Saiesman of good character. if vou have a good record of sales accom plishment and are reliable rou car ftarn from $8000 to $10.000 with one or Virginia's 4 irTyet -Pl ymoutn cel lent Law ne conditions surroundings * Dusiness is conducted aceoran te 1 eat lished raine , nished Apply Mr “ce or whict Aten R. B. CLARK MOTOR oo. ta eae der e 24 South Washington at Fa that its ae! Church Va AUTOMOBILE TITLE CLERK PERI ENCE NECESSARY LARY EN a. RATE } E rT Ons are Carried nee + ATIONS: Candidates ' “aon er A good academi- Gesree or . hic standard of ore fes4 (2? shoud preferah' v han ~ r L eale M ro SALESMEN: We #1! » email sales f in its con ssion,. A money ma Steeie. Aut« Fadensh Z ‘Auto gato Pinay Experienced and used College Park's OF ae re- ‘NELSON "STUD SEBAKER 7215 Baltimore Ave. ore a testimonials f which ther wish submit in’ support of their applica- tion: such copie will not re- Candidates may. »owever. | be requested to produce at a later date the originals of such testi- moniais. certificates. ete. Original | not sent un-/ & responsibility is! gutsteanding car values t Sistance given SR, Batind Peete to sell 2 very as- Attractive commis- insurance and made “ror Pihels 1g vi : GOVERNMENT NEEDS TY ee eZ ' abie to’ ex-| Automobile Salesman We have a = : on perenced € saleaman of r~ J et have a good re ment and are relalb opportunity nnen for ar °T ' ‘ Ta ore traneportation compensation. A Mr Ma ADDISON CHEVY ROL ET 14th and Florida Ave. NW A170 SALESMAN for used car jot ust be experienced. Excellent par plan. Apply it person, Tess “ ensbure iE R—Fri. and $30 =a Sat TONY'S BARBER SH ~ N. VA. PHONE HERNDO rniehect reryi RBE steady HERN BARBER. Saturday. $20 1650 Columbia rd. nw BARBER, for Saturday tee, steady $80 «guarantee. Apply 237 Pennsylvania ave. se BARBER. reliable. full or part time JU. 53-5375 or 8632 Flower ave BARBER—S65 wk. evar. 70% comm for a dependable man. 5504 3d nw BARBER WANT ED--Guaraniece and commission. Apply 628 E s BRICKLAYER ice st & Graham rd Palis R Church experienced mechanics only. Start immediately. JA 2-6699 + a Set NO "OTT $20 RA ey CAB DRIVERS DEL & RADIO CARS Will aie you in obtaining identi. fication card: 8 but few day BOB'S STUDK 131 15th St WE LI. 3.5102 CAB DRIVERS (Colored) oe to CARPENTERS and Carpenter ers; report ready for work Mw: morning. Springdale so dens division Ardmore Palmer her. and ra creoree Whithel d Chape CATALOGING TECHNICIANS Familiarity j Resueder with elec trical and physical characteristics of elec tronic maintenance parts essential. Experience in preparing Government descriptive patterns de sired. Excellent em- ployee benefits, CORVEY Engineering Co. ME. 8-6913 Collection Man not less than 1 experience year smal) } e) estab! ished firn 29 - DRAFTSMEN (2) Senior, mechanical draftemen must be expr'd. in general machine drafting and desi en Good salary and wor oot ditions bera benefits Write apply Personne! Dept DOUGHN ICA, ELLICOT DRIVERS (COLORED) Work and over LI oid For ge ences view ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS Positions fields are heavy 7 35 «(or Must | Call 3-5802 fo im military and : mechantsm ‘ ures, navigational radi contro} telemetering components and genera! Capabil ad.iiity bee vefits are answered promp 7 nce Proof of ¢itizer ship reo ERCO NGINEFRING & RESEARC H CORP RIVERI DALE AR WA aaat EXT jired FIFLD lonel eee ATIVE or na'iona man des red who p HiT nr HO Te: a... 8 benefit ni ‘ Ye MF RCIAT 59 = ; Wa, 266 WOODLEY OA GAs bel dnd AT rr NDANT- a wr. id! . perm t or ta PF Tooke Ford ' D. BENER JANITOR for ¢ men Arlington rT a ree ‘ rc ry V7 > - PAT Y¥ we INSERTERS WANTED To work Saturday. March irday, apy Apply te.Mr. Campbell, 3rd floor, 1S1F L St N.W, ready | te work, - vig tm 4 March 20 ig oe ning « UT CORP. OF AMER...) HELP, MEN 15 HELP, MEN 15 HELP, MEN 15 ROAD SERVICE MAN Leading automotive concern has opening for experienced call. man Must be courteous and Sependat’s. Evenine shift 3°30 p ii mid nigm. Good re ne salery many compens benefit Y “MR COLEMAN CALL CARL, INC. 851) OCOLESVILLE RD SILVER FPRING. MD ROUTE SALESMEN for rues and storage’ Permanent ry energetic men: good salary. _ 10 A.M ane 3 P.M 110 V ST SALES CAREER IMMEDIATE OPENING OLD LINE COMPANY of America’s leading office needs one more usy Washing > bel LAWYER | We are seeking a youne man with or experience 30 R16 Reuit ‘abie Life Insurance Co Inserters | Newspaper insert- ers needed this on morning and to- f oely mane Sa ie cae, Sea etc office sential experience education "Box 645. Washington Post tO Work 7 a.m. tO SAEs _Rnowtecre ICY 7 Bn to Mr. Pat- a 1490 N.Y ave SALESMEN W AN ITED terson or Mr. Parker, Appiy 604 9th Bt. NW Mail Room. 3d Floor The Washington Post and Times-Herald -| 1515 L Street, nw. omm. ATLAS RALFPSMEN RFAL FSTATE. tr mediate opening for one or two tep ranking salesm uainted with Northern Virginia omm basis Raliey he VU \ 9908 MC TE. 6-2442 a Bee our Barry ( ‘ Vernon A‘ KI 9-0078 TE &. sree SALESMEN Three men needed for Wash- ington area to call on in- quiries for hospitalization insurance; no canvassing; furnished just names and qualified leads daily addresses Investigator = Excellent opportunity an aggressive and able young man. vious experience necessary. Car essential. APPLY | , 1 PERSON COMMERCIAL FINANCE CO. It Rhode Island Ave. MOUNT RAINIER. MD. YOUN wT aT . AiN Many of our men are making over $150 to this we have a sensational bonus weekly. In addition not renewal plan. Car necessary. Aleo 2 men for nearby Vir- ginia area. See Mr. Schrei- between 9:30 12 ner and noon 2629 CONN AD. AVE 4.3645 NW. Reouire youn ¢ man between 20 and FALESMEN 50 With «a . ’ accountin nur siding perience tun . par-dea) APPLY IN Ft METROPOLITAN BLDG., SUPPLY CO. RSON APPLY HOT wy) PES ROOM 200. 1341 G I INOTY re posi ? , or OPERATOR er Conshohocker MAN | Viel ‘ With engin ering trai: ing needed mn e. 5 works _vacatio Write Box 648 for large e. MAINTE NANCE engineer an development Ar ease Howard 1913 MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Degree in mechanical encineering of eecnuivea- lent Croop. e orders for easily sold prod no experience necessary. ME Station attendant “i1ASS, Experienced Woodlawn bls i mar | Washington d SERVICE BRAT* in experience. Mini. vancement EAS TR 5s SERV 1 F CENTER 71: 20 Wis SHOE ~ weiw Rk ure perienced CANNON SHOE st.. Ale KI Ex ly shoes Stone 603 Kir 9548 ung ‘SHOE om EANEN 2 MANAGERS Good pa pieasant working condi tions Paid vacations. Advancement possibilities. Por details call Vater: KE. 8 0 1. to8 -64_.2 ~” SHOEMAKER—Good Wheaton Vaiet LO. §-4499 SHOE SALESMEN—Pair!y + teneed tor family Fah aiso part time ag oy heb CO: « for ng practices Excellent emr preferred. and all with salary 5 loye benefits salary 11447 Apoly Creorgia Are exper- ou home servi ce eo we now ing for experienced Ex A TEAC Ree. ae Vwryv \DAMS AGE NC y G st 1341 TELETYPE ATO OPER 4 ee s OR Anne 7-3938 606 E. S} awa See coe, TIME—W te | PATENT LAWYER wit! vear exnerience preter SEE MRS TI K . T I-TYPIS rT RPT HPrrm & me ee a7 . the & | an . | REAL ESTATE SALESMAN + , A vy FORT ON) iN + - aw GAS STATION MANAGE COUNTER eir| 7/4 Ahad UNIFOR} co * , Waival JAMO & LA e , otate age, experience, now empicyedad and Tart oY ¥ J iN vr PTIRNICHT . 4 ‘ RNIoHED references where salary received, REPLY TO POST-TIMES HERALD BOX NO. 65) on haw par — first time; ay for the) TEACHERS RE Experience heinful sary esting work Church W indow aitite rimmer ce an 2 a YOUNG MEN Bubsidiary of General Acceptance , ii hire 2 t retirement experience not neceseat? im person TYERS CRET . arer : 8512 Ga. Ave — orn vic iver Boring YOUNG MEN bide materialise eCcras Ex' WANTED - b & “ men interested te gucoeser uh ly bars me wager while + a CONTACT MRS OA BASE EXCHANGE 55-8900 EXT 83156 yo be A 4 Emp Ser ef ar . 4 ‘W ANTE D—ME N oH ’s RI' - but not nerese Good start or WORT N CO ' PAN OF : Potomac Emo >. qnoay o r Centinved. On ce Pace TO eer ae ae tamy . “sm wee pe eer APRN De Se Be Bye eS hie 3 TH RATA HES TS BCP TNS RE WOE OBR BERR 0 Nea ra Tak GPR TRI TU THUS yD RADIAN ro BG Seog Raed ee LSS CARAINCTON POST Ghd” TIMESSHERATD “SS ay, | ate aie ROOMS FURNISHED 24 ROOMS UNFURNISHED _ 26) APARTMENTS Cepnenee 34 N VIC.. 3210 rd. ol. ig lovely en My - an e rm... martly B, HO .2- 8949 ile" | ity eh apt. carpentry; nite clerica + typing: h; gentieman, WO. 6-5176.|GOLORED—i rm. share "bath wt iis Pk Goan cons se. 2-66 NDREWs IS.SUITT r TV SERVICEMAN—sIxX YEARS’ EX-| bath: pyt. home: Mon ry - 4 AND PERIENCE; REFERENCE. JU eck. JU. 9-2828,| ove kit cit. t fe chia, WA's _ DISTRIC T HOTS AREA WA. 7 © at $89 50 WINDOW washing. floor waxing. etc Wille Badger, CO. 55-6998 FOR THOSE JOBS you don't time to o call “The -Odd : ' w. Reservat Specialist”. No job too smail. ST. | usients Also ta Diate. ‘salist”. sents Also sa ndute HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS K SITUATIONS, WOMEN bide. and downtown. i\FIRST-CLASS SEC BETARY. 2 . 2. 70 l wee maTER ST. NW.. 1608—Pvt. ho..' under | off 16th Se. rm & pvt. bat oT! 35: 15 -years embas “sy €Xt chahee. hat. h.| ires | Refined girl. y Avallable..May Write ‘Boz Phat] Washinteon Post 2-2781 : wis. AVE. nr. Mt. Alito Hosp. 14. | front by 3 NURSE—FPond of chil- hw. Re exp nile ; . : Be aw or t \ * % , . hc Be oes de og ee oie . ethan VR NERHNO EN Ri DOIN NIN ead ry Sn diphnatniedeanaen SS as a rECErCOTRPEET=A on ee ers ees wane, Pa “ey irps ve] ne AS ae PEs Hh HELP, WOMEN 16 EXECUTIVE -SECY., $75 Excel. future. Immed ae BECY $3600 perience necessary 25 m OPENINGS. $60. $65 wk... imm ed EE MISS os OR MISS GRANT, 8ST. _ BOYD'S, COR. G & 12th ae TRAVEL, 18-26 SITUATIONS, MEN 19 YOUNG AN— White experi- enced in ibr.. millwork. Seoelation 6 APTS. UNFURNISHED ‘Dupont Circle Vic. WALK TO WORK | APARTMENTS FURNISHED 34)\ APARTMENTS PURNISHED 34 APTS. UNFURNISHED new Te ON. COR. ere oem, front | PRICE reduced. Liv.-bedrm. & am HIG RENTS? so ot bath | rm.. kit.. poreh: $62.50. Abe Sas | IGH . van! 5-0986. WHY PAY THEM? shiving rm. 361 af | We have ss _ ss * apts a’ while we st ban FE bedrme li¥. rm.. kit., ah are at 1421 Harvard St. NW le AD 4.353 0 beautiful y | low } t ' till have choice apts hath mo, $25 incl, uti ld wk TAKOMA PRK.—lLaree rm. for i pvt. home; ‘> big..bus. JU VIVI AWN LICVTET i¥ PAIN £iN/ 4 bod $30 5-0299 frt. private pvt frt lady ao eladian in a oa ; v , - Z r. r : | a) 5 a ie At DPR “7 ATE hs : EXTREME! ¥ LARGE! N nops air. i na TODD MEURILES “Al RMS NA. Ju 372} bist Vl EX ‘Qumey pi “Sod pl & - eple. All day Sat Te 24 ad hur apt rms OL... } a . s bath: hot RR ANDYVWINE — ee i’ ; Yaw hex frm s ve a. ° rhict iy —_ Bm grors. ry ~ . a to me acl NEW HAMPSHIRE NW ee and" be path: emi Livy Z. BS are Rit sae ra It. oe ANNAPOI Is RD. ith la! >, inine tile sot. .adase., amen cilities, “870 27 apt ps utration on’ 95, - nr’ 8th) Us. for rie - Laree. ‘clean room, | ARI, BLD Ty 250 floor trans- | ly ‘Gecor 2 . HO ~ 7352 | pvt eT . COLUMBIA RD.—Nr it 2 Daniaeen on gon sink. tt. Redes. a4 te S62 child, “ate? - -8854: Ra. shop. to og ‘24 & Twin ; co! ps and trans. AD. 4-0060 Aki ; tr ; | transp. Also other rms ». 6 a nev RD. NW ansien eo NE. | rt 2500 elev. $9 emp b] « : 20 m and ; Col f. ™ ne ane Dri port be im, mbuRGaDE sans cash aed- A. Sm! th Fri . | ot | Must he R ‘ » | DIXON hear gr NW. SRC Desirable comp ¥ , rit —~¢ se wiz deco ke ated » nesicgent M 1440 RHODE ISLAND AVE aye "Pirections. © Coplinn ot SF RA. 6-2692 NW. 5027 Ht 7 —New on in pyt.| FACING «a he CIRCLE- leth home y & bath utils et nw tn ‘ally * — a ’ 0 4th . " to ; ny 1 wit windows, nen center. Gl CERRY “CHECKER —wers experienced oniy. Nationa fil j gash te register, for fine mat rket; hour S| RA. -§99 9:30 to 6 Pri day and Saturday: Apply i727 Conn Sas man, time; : i apts furn.. 1- utliities New. dée rm ou 5 3620 Pt PONT c ™m wire ater dble private aa} EM "3.5 SITUATIONS, DOMESTIC 21) 2. 31453 1g Ana- te Box M -593, | ashingten. Post, or call JO. 1-1222 MAIR STYLIST— Male or female. for emart Conn. avé. shop: aiso man!- _curist. EM. 32-6075 Tues. thru Sat NSPECTOR-CLERK a an 2 White m.-7 p ™ , CHILLUM dry- perienced on 6-day week Mr Listran! CLEANERS RA 3-6668 MANICURIST—Sherat _Barbershop. CO. 5-20 NURSES NEEDED Bere AND OPERATING ROOM i 18 days vaca on. curity benefits $2670 ex- on Park Hotel 00 plus laundry of Pay differential for eve aogeumonts Tite, aptist Cc nah ion General — Down - town Please fines. Send detailed cubestanee and qualifications Salary $275 Box + M-60° Washington Post and) ‘Times-Heraid TYPIST ae a oe white girl for art-time work in Dr.'s office. Bo 7-0780 Arlington 5A. RECEPT.-TYPIST, $65 Jane Burch, 226 Bond Bg., 1404 NY » a experience | oy for oral cmareers office, r positl on s . Classic Shop. New Semee hire ave... Takoma JU. 58-7645. ‘Se Md SALES SLADIES FULL © OR PART TIME _ To sell direct to » cantomer on 6 money- basis. earn imited BS S72 eee i ECRETARY Por main office of large cohstruc- tion firm. Must good rts Aoplications also r “SEGY,, $350 MO. _gane Burch, 226 Bond Bs.. 1404 NY SECYS.—STENOS -TYPISTS Select positions: highest salaries FY GCy ON. ¥. Ave. ECY., college, backeround; major in chemistry, home geen. LJ biology $- day 8275. Pot Em An 2334 Wilson Bl ~ ATL JA SELECT POSITIONS D. TATELMAN 239 Woodward Bidg. i5th & H NW RE. 7.5979. _ RE. 7-0286 Spanish-English Secy. 35, RI al SEC’Y. oye. type, 81 NO, $315 up. Need osenes st Current epenings. ‘BOYD 5, COR. G & 12TH SHIRT FINISHER First- class shirt eperater. good salary, regular job Wagnon Dry Cleaners Branch Ave. SE.. Clinton, Md. Red 5-8990 ey ~ LAW STENO., $3,600 er 3 5 ewe At ae Vion opening. “BOYD'S D, "COR. G G & 12TH YPIST policy preparation. verage sypine attractive office of employees: liberal ES Lire INB_ Co. M S02. es EYE ST. NW. to type letters, but ) aa be wees | to do fill-in and . ters; high Ls tle switchboard ex-! might e peers: air-conditioned Nulidine: cash leave plan. other benefits. “Northwest location. Call HO. 2-2476 VARI-TYPIST OPY PR LEPARATION ~" & Experienced in page lay- ut, feduction planning, uling end makeup for offset printing; publica- tions. Excellent Starting salary” and company benetits. CORVEY ENGINEERING CO, ME, 86913 & N.—Prefer 6. 3 my FEEP3 Wirese 2 ath eS mt EXPERIENCED camera cil =I Apply Pg ROYAL RESTAU- re res!- dent erred, ee Orilh . ir DYER ss TER “WASH.’S BUSIEST JOB METROPOLITAN Ra x LOYMENT SGENCT, =, 906 10th St. Nw. ~“WANTED—WOM! EN- ART’ “WASH'S BUSIEST JOB MART” METROP OLITAN PLOYMENT AGERKT. Inc. oa 10th St. NW. Nr. N.Y. Ave. a it «¢ cple.; ; for empl. man; 4-2019. tchen privs. NY CTYPIST PERMANENT POSITIOD COMPANY BENEFITS HELP, MEN & WOMEN ee eee surround-| yoisis. Write Box 1018, Fost | 25 secys., | *} Perman-| Vo Call . ft 20d. Federal tion see “GRACE. DUNN -2 “ibe COL —DBile. “im sult. wee Foom. DU. 7-4175 L.—1010 “ei Bt NE. Front room ki LL 17 ——— WOMEN, Colored, Ready for work day or week Moore's Emp! 1316 You st. nw NO. 7-6 RUPHERS EMPL. AGENCY—Pienty of women on hand waiting for day york. Ref. investigated. HO. 2- 94 EXPERIENCED woman good get breakfa on; & ho no — HO GIRL. colored. desires neces LI. 7-6164 MAID weX Ky colored, wants |! 2 > H.W. week. RA, 3-993 NE is a wornan, feady i PRA 1316 You neat, experienced. | live in or out by Agcy ance do wnto 61 Api nx. bath wairing dist Doubie LI piate cook 9-83 wore gle. 3 rms.; warm, clean. ME 12? th WW. clean geht sf no rinkne Th ROCK CREEK ; NW : beautiful ft cook, gh. ing to @O away for summer; ref Li 77-3348 COL. woman wont part- —e morn ; work: 5-day wk.: ex el. ref and cartare AD. 4-006 3 OL. GIRL des. job cleanin ' COL. — pow NTOWN. i at {ror room to bath NR. HECHT CO. & BUS LINE rm. with pvt. emir... JA,.8 2411 14305 a.w care of children or cookit City ref EX 633 CoOL. woman wants part-time eve- — > work; 2 thru dinner $25 wk | car ref. AD. 2-0663 Situations, Men ds ae NT ST. NW... 132 4th. Clean attrac ae oma linen service. $5- } rms re ro SO & up COLORED —Lce furn bk -— . kit. $30 mo. 4 “ail spe n 530 3d St ROOMS FURNISHED ADAM HOUSE. 1501 Mass Best downtown values; clean, outside — sery.: free sher dl , abie. =i font y rat e: . a ) Ex’ 3-66.13 Hillis Nicely furn rm in lovely home for bus. lady. Cony | trep. min. to Pent, oF 6-6479 | ALEX.—Nicely furn in pvt home. $9 wk. OV. 3- 2498 ALTON Pi. NW.—Pine-par dio bsemt. rm.: pvt entr,> dik. - inen ANACOSTIA 2 men irn i eves. Parking $30 vic. OF ee ns siir ' sections Jo lnx u r vO —_—- RANDALL HOUSE a J- bay 24 ave. ! +e — aid | Fe — ‘Hotel 1509 om ST. NW Single and 4 oe and e tro subtle roome private bat iy ut Hi A NE we Teh ne ck radio, > rte —— itt DPOTch 7 50 a bus; nice priv JA 2-2607 after 5 weekdays ARL. Nicely furn. rm. in new hx Por empl. man. JA. 2-5 ARLINGTON— 1 de. drm , for man: 1 biock bus; unilimi phone. Prot estant home. JA 8 i - ~Ige. double: private — Pentagon and 8-4792 | be | Buckingham area. Nr kit | a. | WES LE EY HOTEL conv. ' OnD 1 VA. BUCHANAN &T. +! —— twin beds ? $40 mo:;- CAPITOL HILL | to an empl | poeee service. $30 per mo. € APITOL WIL L—Opp. House Office bik. Lib. Cong ves furn. rms ath. Use refrig for Li CATHEDRAL AVE. NW. bg & single rem 9-375 Hu. CH. fac 3. man, CH. CH., D. C.. 3832 McKinley st aony turn. single ; | men with semipvt ! 3-2913. nice oy “ww ’ i Staurar — ge leges. MR. BRODNAX ioe line; gentle OPPOSITE STATLER—Stndio priv.. $40: lady prefered Cc LEVEL AND PARK. nw iY rivate bh Man. re aso nable 1 SOL UMBIA | RD. 1834—$5.50 wk. se rms.; shwrs.; TV; men. AD. 4-4 30 CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY vas 2 pleasant se¢l. s, in ho rol. Wy bl x. .. & Military rd —Attr 2d fi. front rm.; pvt. home; $10 wk Refined, Piz woman EM 2-735! +: | CONN, A Sele water ; wit. pity 0" ty DL 7-6405. | ’ VE APT. 710—Corner rm “next bean” for empl. person AWW ‘i e cos 55-8105, ext. 710 Am... h ‘mn i¢ ‘ ol one D. 15] om furt shor: ; mel bat 1928 COL. 414 6th nw —Pleassnt, lee lege. “frt. rm = ime ( hristian home €or. “3545 on ry $0 50 - wk. EM. 2 56" 7 | COLOKED— 112 lenty of roo DE. 2-0056 COLORED yanenting % bath: ezi.. $12 dbi. CONN. AVE.—Larege room with | private. bath, | x HO. 2 “0006. Privileges DECATUR ST. NW.., | Ch l, nicely ae rm., cemipyt | COL. bath: near bus and car; ma $25 DUPONT CIRCLE OUR SPECIALTY. PRIVACY be see our tenants (I « _ oth. ingle man only. cheerful room, pew tled barn vefrig. 5-0060. } 2 DUPONT Cin CIRCLE... lee. lovely rm 9496. 1 9th- Clean sem !bsmt. . apt.; kit.; EAST C! bath cr et ‘ | Col PORE D. om _ sU vis. Good rene 1539—Apt. 4—Dovnle | " , couples DL 7-474 COL ORED—Db e rm n “tr frt. for) girl or ire ‘Ww th; ‘ss LK. | ~ : Dp aii adi indgday TI Loe )LORED, NW —Bisiele, clea oam. ¢lock-radio, neat: hor Veaees 13, BX. 3-662) | con.—o6 50. — rm. e Churc nil”. ta| Home privileges NO , — COLORED— Dbl. room. - leges. 516 Shephe nw next bath, $i0- wk. up. NO COLNE ear oan accepted 2011 FST.N.W. | ‘sec Rooms by day, week or month with-| (07 * in walking anenee of downtown. | Datly maid ser PRES PARKING FOR or QURsT | x EXECUTIVE. 3-04 ad ic — is 4 1.| pre “ , 1015 SRD = -— furn. . i 4 ¥ } gz rm next bath: Rarciee § ele. ean r “ ree TV on Pla 7-242 room Home ‘1A. ¢ 0493 COLORED. r abl, HU. 3-871 col .—Emp girl me in r™m " 1824: scle up. F EX. 3-95 5758—Ki cely TU. Men * $7 wk. GEORGIA AVE.. rms. Reas GROVETON—31¢ Hille mat ‘ar single doubie,_Meais—ma arranged. BO. 65-6744 $07—Attrac. ~ rooms location. . ' W., 1851, and nenyem Very nice peighoor hood: for Lie : s at door. NO Rm.. y be ‘ 71-0731 3-% iv 74 COLORED— 15 to | 2 rms. adj. DI | COL. Drives KENNEDY 8ST. NW.. 1409—Nicely nano ‘ ‘ . TA 1 furnished rm., next to bath. 2 ex- ures, 2 closets. 14th & 16th sts.) $35 mo.; ~ $020—Singie * pjewly deco $30. CO. 29-1593 6c.e. seundry | tor OK me } cor ORF p—! mt ink aii } rm ‘ ; —— 4 MADISON NW. , 1348 Dble. , mx. bath; re n Wy BnG 2 iris; ea.> -pyt.4 .t2.cal BA. 6-8792._ 2-way trans TA. $-8015 ‘COLORED Brook MASS. AVE. NW., 1800 —, Pront tivete home... single tms.. New. modern furnit re : » R COUNTER and steam table. White experienced. Mayflower Diner, 503 Rhode _ Isiand ave, ne. Closed Sun NATIONAL EMP 1108 16TH | ST. NW PUBLIC Wry — Rare opportunity generous profit-sharing asso pressive olfice. reception faci! _turnished. For appt.. DU. 7 Im in sales department: Cameron, OT. 4-6963, 11 a. who would Ifke to earn at 860 direct to customer on & no-money REAL ESTATE Experienced sales manager salesmen, to Mshed. reputable concern. terview and further JA. 2-464 JA. 5-7344 STEADY cqavs weekiy. 77-0852. — time “Wool presser: Good salary. for | Lies 5194. | OPPORTUNITY -Full or part time position per- manent. For appointment, call Mr m. to whsOF eves., 7 to 9. ial Se EMPLOYED PEOPLE wk. in their epare time caine | , acerme tion. | JA 2 c ; ASHBY | 5-$10 Kk, ; dotible rime Orie =) ‘ ‘ 4 MT. ty AS ANT SEC TION: fi ront wie room. next 0a i ; a Dbiock car DU 7 28 MT. PLEASANT. | Arge well-furr Sel. rm. 36 © ! 4-9779 MT “PLEAS. Tes es rm home privi.: exc. trans N ST. NW., 1728 Sele. rm., $6 wk cbie. with pvt N su. AVE. NW.. wir $8 w ~ VE nw [967 Frt rm man, nr. trnsp., reas. DU. 7-495) NEW HAMPSHIRE AVE. NE. VIC —— ; ca.i isT NW ie or 2 7 i j m.. pvt. home; cpie iris. TA -3473 g112 for ct Sat 4TH NW ] bye< rr ¢ rm. mal —_ ~ AD 2-814! ~| effec. m, rv Dt 13 COLORED Qa © ; iC on one D. ~ cot DRE ; hon near shes pe and movie a! cot OK D; |NW.—Newly decor. rm or rm. nd board with ex e} conv reasonable. D1 5) r OFF “Bin A &. I Ave Rm ns Al 18 COLORED PARK RD NW. Sivas or e.| roon nf win I ror emi eer $s a HELP, DOMESTIC cook. clean apt pans CARE n 3 nites wk. Pre?. middle- seed. no a3 ed. Ret . req. 2500 Qs CoO. §-7062. WHITE LADY to do lig ing wor References, peusired details, ‘ai JU. 8-1 Sleep nw ht housekeep- . Por eels eare Of fn-| Baer ck inne Mont = - a. 1§-$10. C rohan’ | COLORED 7.9868 | privis.. coed t in e rms run $8 wk. up. NO Ore NW... = Run. water rm. $6.25 RE ASONABLE RENT ALS in » ; maid service : sale COLORED. eft Wy yao 6300, ‘et 3050: Tb! ideé refined fror . 4-4813 per- Lae . L244 sitting and kly running Ainir . , _™..- Ritehen, pvt. bath | CLOCK -rac § util aad 246 ete ex 3 acto, ©, util. incl. JA. 4.] 712 i. EORGETOWN clear att z rooms "3 . ART. BLVD.: A . 2 bhedr hue at ' , a 6 100 ie HT WOOD— Nice 4-room NOM Tt - Porc! srw ‘KD “a “ ‘ FS — TH ST NE ite ; ; . : = 'm.. sfmi bath. $i5 wk ‘LL STH ST 6 4017 iPrreg.. SL0OVe CAPITAL BML vic. uke ? ; "ibel. un 1a H Si allie AVE NW.—Comb. } | {fA Te cely \ Win beds & kit. J front bedroom kite ' ‘NTH 4 = ! “we =e = _ si¢ nh, £@™!-bath ist St. gs AVE vw 6TH ‘T. NW. ' ¢ ite . nh ’ ret \ rym ry " ri hil sentabie fa CAFTTON HILL =) 5 4-024 x 52 ' ‘ ts. liv ItTH OA € Ont ee RD 7 ret wr : ya e €¢) res ge No < Kaise Reais ¥ RMS « rnarr ; Cpe bal a snepey HAMILTON iTT ba : DOWNTOWN , ~_vecroom avail if hy indowe ot ; ° re. , , we mal ages REFINED : ne for > : *’ . water apt. te ent and is; $8 COLORED a ae . — | ro , DREYFUSS” os Os ‘U tk CLIFFROURN . "6 OAKES NE. Z . ve cn ot ii wi b bat w i m™ : ’ COLORED ‘Wie rod arn CLIF . ~~’ ne PL ~~ $50 1 : : At 94970 CO are Ave NW , OLORI D Vernon ze . and as ave. 2 n and t r . S60 ; ‘ L ARIDGE WOTE! Pp . ath ava) ; PPh ne — { _—_ ‘ 7°. ba h af ented “NW . COLORED! , mn pvt. kit cit ‘&} path “t ' COLUMBIA RD 4 ROOMS With ee. cormitory $5 bs 4329- DAY < for NG MOTHER wl WHITE WOMAN, fant; ht housekeeping; workings coe 98-0741. 4 bum ‘Refs. & exp. EM. : ping & mal NNON & Ww CHS COL —Logan ‘ NA. _|_all home pri Jen. AVE. NW... 1442—) | COks 16th NW.—Att 7 03 ISLAND pkgs me tue d sh.; pyt. entr _pyt, home K.L. ave. ow, : ub rm. : = brituetes: $10. Di. 75183, fooler 2 ave. ne, | ige. for two: use rm., furn. Cook usually *« & adbis SOE 2-466 . twin 4 beams nr. tra ansp AD. 2-%238 25 2523 13th St. N.W.—$7-$12 BS rivs — 2-9469 COL., 2523 1 er 911 2 ee ae 2 dbis,, trt>| sale. Kit. = radu “DE 2-9469 | bed- bain pet rit tat a ALEX \ , ' ath with acd ~* bike rrr tha . vs H me fre oat Lf Ine . ”) ‘ 2 MISS© URI AVE. nw TEA rms., kit ] le indry fm ils and | shoppifig: adu : 6-33 | , 54 CONNEL TK i a AVE bat! _ ANC Ae = AGE Exce! Ss. Avail e hom ’ CAPITO OL HILL twit hboard canny q . quiet ads _ AVE. CATHEDRAL AVE NW orient r wit or withe . : . nd nh. fa re ' Pres ye. PB CONN vi oe Ap ; ; y CONN AVE e ~ 6554 vt PONT CIRCLE. = y dec 4 pt UPONT. IR. ms.; k CONN ige bsmt ta ("¢) CONN AVE Tifa 7 s Sf Tr ma EMERSON DUPONT. Cir hom t? ” al : vl ‘ST. Nw. Di A yg Lr MASS. AVE. Nw. so 14 Lith S81 34 NE j ° NICE iy } Ua CLEAN RY” ‘ $i: abi Ale, RA 4.90090 ™ Mi Nice | ° IPO} NT fp _~ . CIR “LE rm., dress closet anr ARLA Lust id me , Avail. im- and bach 7418 new re “go PENNSYLVANIA AVF. AW : : : wiy rede EMBASSY SECTION PARK LOC 5 ve ew alr ©e.egant apt Laur ly = 6TH NW. "2 Bo meais a ‘ = ‘T409 Sc) : s AD. 2 rs. TV. Bu aA Lar ; te Ae EMP! ; + ~ Len) PY TOWN ow 4 | SGL.. reas at Walk c oth NW 1410 ] LIvVt ON CLOSE IN e Doc JTIN KILPEN FERN 10 ASHMEAD Pr : ave.. Ove! COL r A G ORG BIA. “AVE . ~ , a - uti L: $10 GHROEGETOWN pa } econd.-f ST TET Aa et SY CHILDREN BOARDED CARE i pick-up. D M. 1 Py CHILD CARE LAMONT 8ST. NW r + wine ce } 1736. refrig ~ bed: 77-9489 or s! er Tm GEOR( ETO N. MOTHER give nice ‘ aa ite Li ho ent: “GEOKG ETOWN- Bedrm. and #45. ~4 GEORG PrOWN — Hie. bal - an ‘ ‘ ‘ 1 irse OT REE l) \ — ; : mF , ’ aiiy \ e¢ y \ ' , VACANCY IN NURSING HOM! , at ee lonthly ¢ eTiy Ther ‘ 7 - ‘ atf , ose y ana « eo oes APTS., FURN. or UNFURN. 33 33 CLIFTON ST. NW. ee 1434 Re Nato or $4 HAMILTON &T Pearm tee 3 ba h FRANKLIN &T.. Upt., pyt. & &® refrie - 1 HAMLTON ST NW FLKN. OR r - W a« ul tNFURN | 7 - 4 GALLATIN NW. 265 RALOKAMA A Dati ’ " “« IRVING sy \w KANSAS AVI a} ca 4 . AFNYO Nn hh i Welcome to Modern Sul , ’ id 2-Redroom and U1 -Monthh a nts Yi , VAISSOURI NW SECTION rE Rear — PLI ASANT } ay f COLORED ranst oe. cOotL it AINTER a PLEASANT SFCT \ 1? APARTMENTS FURNISHED 34 ADAM HOLSE 1 MT. PLEASANT AREA— 8 Wis Aye. § RAINIER ALEX ee ent. $85 ; $4 NATIONAL avail sei? ALEX —Smail apt living- share bath with | person or Cail Kl. AIRPORT —J everal ] “bedrn fee oc pal cy $16 m ne and Abingdon ad? apt . > zit - ¢, emp! ine uth i) ALEXANDRIA, downtown: rm.. bedroom. kitchen and Singh Galea etre tivo, "Pt s @s “ter. ‘ 9-11 sUurT shford | if vine ~ er Ho: nse pvt bath. bh i | t .y ’ 74223 . e . > Ro DU. Ji : : ca ust off Mt “ ; © dberirm “ST. 5 wlth "BS ieee, iyo incl; bus at oe NW.—Emp! adul ts beau. pryt. h housekeeping view: exc NW. SECT.—Bedrm bath; util. mot incl: | §-8606 | NW. SECT.—1 room. kit. bath : $47 50 mo CoO 5 REOG i Resa livrm.- ; tL. bath: $70 AD. 4 aa for appoinin ent Entire 2nd f omy furn kit. & $60 mo. CO BUILDING util DE. 2-0927 "ROCK CREEK NEAR CONN rh $125 UP 2411 20TH ST. NW. Na. ecm -. coLe emt A KD. 3 rm ro ath, S75. “Gentile” dec. CO. OAR NW., 1931—Liy BASEMENT. APT.. 3 rms snd bath: 9) 624 $i00 bedrm tile tiractively furn completely bedroom lae. r brand ne apte rececorated w furn..| ColLosep—t. and 2? SEF ANITOR LIss READY r¥ co COLORED- 1821 Office on des CLO me43 ie rat vk St SE. JO t COLORED— 1 PD) 540.9 SE. LJ conv. oars COL. —Ant , ; 4690 . Loc ATION—2 be irms i =. a priv. bath st ie yare cor! in : REDWOOD 6-6 8B mF PHERD aT NW... 220 : em -bath stilities corner at A sti ' eR ene hi] 2 7 a Carline he Kit ise | dinette new _ yard “Ont \d easy parking COLORED. me BT ie 6-58 rasonalh) BOL be c \ROr “oe AY < » CO1ORED Tamale Le lee. te - = a 8. msted » na ba a ae r a ; trar sD 8 erry ’ ' ; croup) ag Ane AVE. Secrms rm cony REd« . b ra 1-2 ’ é. 2R2 2s. THOMAS CIRCLE MASS 7 a ave 131—Com! f $92.5! ID 2.0 e 1000 Missiasipr y Sane ~ ST. NW... kit pvt fam ily: $75 WESON BLVD offic pvt TA 9. 445 340% pri y , »™ JA Ave. Nw ply rr rir i¥ oe chi 7 ‘ner ”Dn a ‘et 4 gy RI ig _ 2 - c utils ' Cc 530 34 st. nw EX bo me bath: res ei ' rm “duplex i prt “MASS AVE SE and bath $32 50 mo 48 8 ST NE ME. 8&-66049 a, Ap STH ST. N " apartment Te, , S416 ’ 1] f.1880 APTS., HOUSES TO SHARE 35 CTH ST. NE... ea: Gec, S$O.40 x pitn at feeuire at ax. -8 10TH ST. NE. 8it—Lovely ~ ae ‘a rm r rv n. 857. No chi .ftarris on ' $13— Attrac ent.. and dbedrm ‘ porch. All I?TH PA. SE. ’ iL. = BY. : SE.—BRedr.-liv. rm ’ ’ as ARLINGTON. dir it Ge vt 8.°R: ut Comr CARO! “HILLS SE I6TH ST. SF ’ fur $52.55 w» CONN z $50 opt avy Sa FOXRALL snare wi « = oniy Li ~~ om $94. ine} “uit Is JU ita ST NW 3556. Newton idio apt a are rms : ™ reh " . 3a i bath 353-5973 TRY ING NW.—Beaut iv.-bedrm » §. cit. bat 9 or, EM yard To auine STH AND COLUMBIA RD. itis. maid servi Kai ser “Real ty » &.9900 G FORGETOWN iaTh NW. oo patio wi apt | : - : ee sat —~ NC bath 7 = inc ISTH &T. NO.—Ar 71-2708 I6TH & HARVARD Women to share aiver ¢ Mi 60 GIRL TO SHARE APT. prt 2 WOMEN: wi share and nq * Tm S503 TH ST NW. ~~ ecorated very ATT. "hy APTS STA ic Two GIRLS © share mad NW nL | ? S43 each. TA COLORED Fide ‘hris AND KALORAMA— with pay sure ae drm e ‘ retired n j 4-1849 ais ONFURNIST ED NR. CONN ; rm.. be ' newly dec. ) 2-6422 firep! wuttis.: “SEAVER oth naeoe NW. 2 i. Apt Sibes bath -] sr? ha) rb. nD * . apt wit Christ reasouabie ~ —~ LV EFINED ly ’ share home with 4 s Church. Prefer one : So at Palls ,a ** 54 —Pri tr nm bus j rm 3 t " , prt € ac A ST ST. NE.. 1516—Redr n Fa! equipped kitchen. py en npl ved. 148 Chur SIDE APT. bath LAPT NICELY PURN 20 and Pa ave y adit ts ST. 3-019 $i aN OPPORTUNITY , vaiue aq \ LU RI INGTON Lots Cesired Rox 652 Wash Post and Times Herala Let Por lay ' " care M a ‘ ing af ee otner G Lins wee veryvtr iine ok cre Amr "Kennec ) ARLINGTON a 4 “— be as ov . er 1 64 2F rt Mr ARLINGTON ~$99.50 Al , Cc J. FULLER A 2.44) lA ARE, _ ee rose rrtent ty comp! eter ne Deawut Dae TAT RP RVI BELMONT S&T ATTRAC bag ATTRAC rive : ATTR ’ ran ¥ fic. rT ; 9.59 ; BELLEVIE } “ARDENS ID 227 BOI L, ING ree bed Pr " , venient . door. Adjacent | FIELD vir th days school pt Ch of , ext. MONT eT. NW... 1329. “Unusual iaré en ee) reornér genase tom ‘ buildir : Vt =— CAPITOI 2.f apt ene ss "BONS, 31 CARRIAGE ROUSE apartr nents J ac HILL rear tO apartment . * Ty FAST RIVERDALE. MD : bath with laund et surroundings ted: parking space, line bargain et ME 2. 5484 ed 7 Work ng co vel ly _ garden apartment develo "er several un us" ial bec room apt. incl. Ample is we \ 4 utilis. I \aUuB- and storage arenas Resident Manager 7-8698 Starner 7 ngres . J6un - “DON JHOF 4 Pa. ove. o¢. | AP Biadensd + Ap es. So Pimen. left i mile Ha SHANNON - LUCHS CO H NA. 868-2346, L bedrm.. $60, piw &. 14 rr“ Ts TOWERS eT Nw n B apart ent bullé- possess Tre ee $s” 500 up = “esiasases hewls deco F. SAUL-CO. RES MI [OR DU. +3442 NA #8-2108 eec.. apa- bath, hell Ca! i. ' ORGETOWN— Nes lv uMiet q rms fir ig “ee, Or fuse at tair price, je 258: ont «Ty TF RRA r. —Apt 10c next bt COLLEG| Ne ‘ec ae col 7 —— RO Pile , rr. ’ mit G4 oT or CO LOP. INC B ") CONGRESS RIGHTS 2 holas ave 2 becrms.. $2 floor Aweor C ; CONN AYE. J CRES( 7 ner ca TA 5.0222 ’ : DY i eT > per Sa! an GEORGETOWN mle eat? antt A» ay 1A44 “a * Kew 9.2741. R WALKER A A he- ‘ ‘ 4 Te on 4 ~4 t SALEN ST. SE r WAL Pe —— . edri pt. with liv. om : ai lern Suburbes iassmanor INEST GARDEN APTS ,) 2 Re droom Apts. and Unfurn. Monthl»-Yearly 8 BEGIN AT $75 MONTH. ALL UTILS. & SERVICES ust ce PARRY ore vi eekly = welcome barbecue ball "un felds, etc. MOVE IN wt Ate, ‘a APT l—2 rms.. Y in restaurant ME. 8-6900 aerecsrens Out D AWATTING ‘YOUR FURNTTU Bs rt ee South ae B23 i} a CE? rer SING ¥ TT Cie FOR TRANSIENT AND oEM! PERK MAMENT RESIDENTS ve Rates BA TURDAY GLOVER PK. —iewis decor. 2 rmé., * : enclosed sun porch, pvt. bath, empl. cp wo UGH = i gentiles 66-4277 7 ,’, . 7 e } , CORNER 18. reo raen STS. GS. ~~ pe Ga TH AND T eee One ar room aparimen nh neat development. Al ert ndi tian eer sc hools and c trans- $65.00 $80.00 RS POR INSPE iN 1Bt TION BSMT. APT OPEN MGR 19 ' s CO NA. 86-2190 rr CYT) > os WES! Wopr > E HILLS SIDE. OF wt OR FOsD H SF. AND OV Trt AND PWERY,. ~~ LOOK ‘ING BU ern ppertments im attractive ng home-li h and orf et treet soa MN month includes atilities P RENEAL ue tom - , mae rage space |$72.60 per 2900 1-3300 a ae An PL SE... Rage ore. cine r ! newi' ce iyi 44: 5 Southern are. se. JO & HItLsibl SF... 464° 1 bed- RD e? nette space, AS LOW As ~2./8 A DAY! Mode! RRAN = Y) NEW 5k [R eee HAMPSHIRE A , . ADOTI Pryivs >t a ve. avi ls Apartment Furnished | y ZOR ~~ Gentineel’ On Following ose ee | THE WASHINGTON POST pnd TIMES-HERALD _ Saturday, March 20, 1954 = “ - os ™ rn A Stop es -* ROPERS 6 A ere, ee ee Ae - Loe Peele — we . Ls < mes ee F tm + ae Ate g Prices et = a + : aM MA kk wt. A anda 2536 13TH ST. NW. Ww a N. PIERCE = ‘Z-reom. kit. dinette and bath in IDE-GARDENS| PLEASANT HILLS __ | sueire 2g, aft op,34 0, “sem Pouna wno tzve sme Wikis Gore wONseveny mus. | LEE GARDENS J suse SECTS ie om.| SN pare inn ee : t , dinette. kit. & bath Near m. Myer |—(COLe NE. Sect—-Api. contact mehr os fae es G ’ ALEXANDRIA Community of Garden Apts. Ari. bi ent $77 mo mpl cple. ; good transp. *D IN FT, MYER HGTS. 434] FIRST ST. NE. Sr. 3.3900.” ind IN MODERN SUBURBAN dressing rooms, a or el 701 N. WAYNE 8T., ARL inel. itis. Bet _jan M b . itor, 8.0463 G _SMITRY c LORED— TI , Heibrook Te a Rak ie ar et Saat ear, et ey Se a Ws c eat. an ot wat hool h : . e id = . 1914 NO. 15TH ST. ap. un a he ee png: eae Re w Glassmanor berm urine, Teor tecremm,, “i public transp. i0 min. D.C ong WE CAN NOW OFFER 3025 ONTARIO RD. NW. | Facd0,ber me, Call Wie a* BAUR ? ; , be vie Shirley hwy . APARTMENT 5 | Ni ARLINGTON, VA. h.-w . ent oa Adults pa 7 se se al) cele ¢ ye - I. Sey APT. $81.50) yrost attractive t-bedrm. ‘rw Consraucten i a lial dinette i* in 1401 Br oe he ea kh AREA'S FINEST GARDEN APTS. | Some Avail. now & Apr. }{1- Rd yal 18, —— i 8.0 lorge Se. 0m, ne Ginette, | nt oP as : 1g eer ~ Pend Darth “apartment a seml-prt. oa $65 mio. LT. ght You Too Can Enjoy Apt Living. | rR Resident yr ot kM 3 Sa te omer | ; ; . é 1-(OM AM -COnG. Mnih in. aps. 10 toe 4 no for ski ta {a map , ” soaneres, 208 1s. - ino fies $8 Otond 904-2 floors. e At Sensibie ‘Rentals PR TT i | Apply 800 Tenn.” Ave ~~ APPLY 1% PERSON OR apect see janttor on premises HOG K. cure for sé “EBEDRM.: APTS., $79.56-99.50 ares.” just, north et “the | foMafices eh, Iving quarters, $00. ROO’ Tenn.” Ave: Balke : " cate of bulidine Wife ma must ster CALI. FOR AP SMITHY CO., 811 15th at. & Husband to make r - Catholic Univ. and Soldiers’ ' and Su Inquire abo ' ile f 95 ST. 3-3300 . epe 2-BEDRM. APTS., $105.00 Rental 675.00 Welding utilities. . flexigle Feniel plan design ed! to it | nn MR BAR i A. “7600 4 FROST. .1-vedrm.-: » pte... thde. ol ae i ee KA dt eee i NW... ey" vour family's requirements 8 a Sey oC at te AE A ae Pe Piot $80 oF $75 on yeat i tease. HOt let Seer: ac: 3 laree front ”" ALL OTILITIES INCLUDED bedroom kit. bath and reception | BEAUTIFUL CLOSE SUNDA 2-096 “ eo eee res. fron Open daily inciuding weekends. 9-5 vell. See janitor or cali LI. 7-0921. | FURNISHED UNFURNISHED | LI 6-474 NEW HAMPSHIRE OTH ST. SE. 112—Two rms. kit.) DAILY wonteey | BRADLEY BLVD. | UNIVERSITY CITY APTS.| a carne "AND OL. Msi NE” Ino recency BERNSTEIN BROS. RTMENT bath, $62.50, im@luding | heat only.| WEEKLY AND . PARKHILL APTS. UPLA D | Pemt. apt... full bath tirely new GARDEN APA 1 NE. 384 MONTHLY YEARLY THE ALDON ¢ 1610 PARK RD. NW IN ‘THE CITY—SINGLE FARE — aay tor, ree come priv. bd. emj _L _ MOVF IN IMMEDIATELY | 7\ & $82. Occupancy ‘March i. $96 50 rt : ets or imm . AC i TEMPORARY ACCOMMODATIONS Occupancy Maren l 3: eet 12 ae ES TO DOWNTOWN lee - . ath. Pvt entrance Smail N ea dispinctive address Resident Manager 00 EXPRESS BUSES oy OS ‘O'T TRI child, utils. incl. LI r-2741 . | a watrine, YOUR FURNITURE |° o a h to tras, stores and PENTHOU oF AP" FIREPROOF BUI NGS | \ 5 E > 4 =1IN on | churches . REPR NMLDING A] ‘ T 1631 S ST NW, Rentals Bee t $75 Monthis @ Lee. new apts. designed for era-| l and 2 2 bedrooms Spacious apt. for high Govt. ape ) APARTMENTS ' 7 in at cious living cial or diplomat ir-| Nw. Taz owes aot 3157. : At + yg l-br. apt. with liv m..| including all Utils. & Services @A tew cheice 2-bedrm. apts. All Uti lities In nel uded cond 2 saroane ainpocal ! M lodern De Lu | a line PRA. 3-2847. . 4 23 per mo l . Directions: Get Re, Coates st. 2! she ’ ' COT . 1 BLOCK TO Br _bus Bath. AD. -0-0099. iv. mer L. to see 2- blocks over ne. turn left | @ $112.50 and up incl. all utils, AT RIGGS ROAD AND 7 : Cor pletely De rated NEAR SHOPPING CRN rer — WSL TES Benes soarms.. i 529—2 extra large rms..| at Audrey “ang oer signs : BEAUTIPU! OAK PARQUET JEFFERSON VILLAGE t. and bath: adults omiy:| kit * dinette bath. See janitor) to 210 Wint }e~- st 7-8100. 701 BRADLEY BL ners oun . Becreterial Pi OORS REDROOM e770 6M . incl. utils, JU. 9-6962 . atbow Pro “Txe, UNIVERSITY LANE = | tery "ang “sar slimmed 1 BEUROOM, $70 MO. APARTMENTS ms. kit A. 8-57 : — ar & bath: 875, incl. OPEN MON. THROTOG oi Ise. EX 3¥%2 Rooms, $77.50 | (Including Heat lot W b . ® Z Ooms Ms oan : 4Cine eat and Het Water) Deal a ——: excellent condition VERMONT SAT.. 9-5: SUN., Convenient Downtown Washington, | Washington Circle "AD 4 4! R soms. $R9_50 | TEN ANTS CAREFU! 1734 Arlington Blvd. NE. SPACIOUS {-bedrm.-unit “in TERRACE oa Sus ime | 2430 PENNA AVE. NW + | LLY G&LECTED Falis Church. Va. modern conv. apt. house (adults | oti } ae ' INCLUDES ALL UTILITIES oi 'F 2.5500 BM 3-36 632 heat an w. Call) REALLY! Near University of Maryland | me AND MASTER TV ANTENNA | UNIFORMED JANITORS Site irs a ST.. (563—6 lee. Fs; MODERN. GARDEN-TYPE WALK TO WORK % Mile to Langley Shopping Center | ENCLOSED EC = | Porter asiets, Cocuntper DUPLEX GARDEN APTS, | Bemzagecorateg: Peat fare pakcaspemniginamnomts TEMPLETON | | Other Btores at Pro SILVER SPRING CHILDREN'S PLAYGROUNDS | nn? DePenit Reauires Fr. 0 $6: y ; AKW . SE, 231, nr. Bol NEWLY REDECORATED Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5 P.M.| “When vou Move In” | $-Bedroom Apts. $115.75 oo, ~ hey i . ture right ts Blain Rh ap! Dally, 9-5; Sats, 9-1; Suns, 11-4 | , INCLUDING... UTILI rea.s_tinest-—Redecora n new. 6-cubie-foet Frietd-; cere. ra open -21 ays Cc " oa PLEASANT HILI S JANITOR. 2028 WN VERMONT ST | Garden apts. with best service and| ®/Te. All utilities included in rent, | we BURBANK ST. SE STARTING AT ver tie act, MR. BRO MGR. Li KENNEDY sT- NW. ite LIAO ARLINGTON. | aw te BL oe ae” a aes i ts . Me ' nette, | $72 50 | Plus Utilities 4-2802. 3435 BENNING RD. NE eae ae ne , a. churches and schools, incl. Md. U ROOM AND RATH storage facilit pe tor | ; j ae SOO AGG BAS SSS H. G. SMITHY CO : $49.50 TO $59.50 children. $625 on | INCLUDING UTILITIES | Od ACE =m oie rn id oo oF PF = . . 77 © for in to 9°. ’ . > iT. NW., 1372—3 rms., 4340 2nd ST. N.E. 811 18th st *. W 3-3: 1-Bedrm. Apts., from $77.50 + - | 6 MINS DRIVE TO D.C. VIA Light housekeeping apartments — NEW OPEN SOON ° 2-Bedrm.. Apts., from $90.00 TWO oe Te use Minn. ave GO PARK APTS., INC, IMPARE _garace, util. $80. TU. 2- | 2430 PENNA. AVE. NW. saan 38mm ae Riverdale. | M : — ae gil rong ent} Northeast Duplex Apts. | res. ma a ath 7 | GARDENS ) rO Bt CEDAR HILL BLE lic I and Soldiers Home 1259 RAUM &@T NO - oe el Ar i WES SLEY HALL | — | only; $79.50. RA. 3-050 im. Sth St. NW NA. 8-2100 : : a INEY BRAN as ees, etree, Hue: _ 53 WIN 6028 -ldth AVE... =" S| Zon men. er, wx s-rog,_| Many THRRAGE: 96, cheat | few Tecate Kilzalit'feaed| ene MENaGan WASH" arr | i335 Sawer's 38 Rents Reduced! ee | | Tr c vr? ms oa thea Extended and OPEN DAILY , | 1712 | er NF. F. SAUL COMPANY QUEENSTOWN | 1426 2ist ST. NW, 1 A.M-9 PM. Carillon House | ss} coming tie 925 18th Bt Nw URNE P Ist with 4 cheerful rms.. porch 1422 ] mm ‘ : ait ’ ; ib i | sap 1 bedrm., liv. rm.. Kitchenette 1; efficiencies. $82) WA. 7. _AP. 78568 ME. 8-5400 1415 K st. Nw condition, located on j , AT HI STORIC CEDAR MILL. Ru 4H. Bow and April | NY . livi a , C1 Di VAS | tures all ) secretaria! WA. 8722- JO kiteh and _ fh a 67 inette, bath. screened porch - ee ‘ HI Mofon S SMARTEST KEW APARTMENTS Catholic 3 ~ aaa conv, transp aad she. ~ ONE MONTH FREE! I! oni lus utiliti Ret . 7 oe 019 15th St. NW NA. 8-058; Mont COMPLETE l NO _ 249.1 r ed 966.50 RA 4.3579 ine. yd. children: ten. furn. gas, elec Ma ae SA J \ , KEYS ON PREMIA New Hampshire Ave. NA. 8-210 University Lane 1, consisting of lis 0 ' } tt 4 rm be 4- T, 7 mr j ippes t , : ocern b seboa r: 1 BEDRM. ........$73.50 APARTMENTS 2-STORY DUPLEX APTS. | 2500 WISCONSIN AVE NW. | It’ rcar porch s80 tnciuues hes NORTHEAS1 : ne. 5 colors. P HU. 3-5422 a v m. @'\2 ROOMS: heat. hot “TT % a aad c am - wat ’ ’ IY r ; _2 BEDRMS. ........$83.00! qureNns.. CHAPEL RD. AT ConUR “TER APTS” AVATI I ) SILVER SPRING, MD. Btutio ang i l-bedroom apartments. | ‘pire “ NEAR EASTERN HIGH AND | : pm ane park rte ex {si on antenne.off-strevt ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED CHILLUM RD |" Deteose Hwy. hlodeus Md Next) The Depend finest rental | sbartment buildings rpcentiy ‘coats CAPS = ECT 7 Aone ae schools, shopping center ba : the supu ted Decora WE HAVE several ' One-bed Dp Spacious apts. all with double ex- Laree spaciqus apt. with separate door: 20 min D. C. WA ban Refined atmosphere in jovely Inc. , me in SE Wasnt so “Oey serie P 205 3th «t room, Duster Apts posure and cross ventilation. Com- dinettes and twin-size bedroom wooded setting. Short walk from af-around sir conditioning. sec- KI. 9-438: 217 20h st. No. 3 lete shopping facilities adjacent with very large closets a BVILEE— i. bedrm. apis > . ~ . telephone porvies ackase CO "07. WALKER & DUNLOP 220 2ist St Noe } © kit bath >, bedrms bath ~- i oy INC Key on Premises | . 3. fs ’ BEDROOM oeee .$75.50 + . Nr rpoos ome ks “— CL HEAT nd Potomac valley 1-REDROO 713 for yours! wi NE | ; | M GARDEN APTS... liv CAT . — 2? BEDROOMS «¢.. $89.50 -LCOMI 1 2-300 > GAS. WATER. TRASH RE- —m. crowned aagiyiston, Suieund are a Re te eee tiled f beth, retrig 'B. F SAUL C O INCLUDING ALL UTILITIES LYON V ILLAGE APTS REE LAU! PA ' flee near ‘Pyitlaad,” mite. ‘Ben bee 925 15th St. NW NA. 8.2100 | Cc te sh e pro 1 bedrm WW. rm. 22x12 kitchen ' ioe 5¢ - | RENTS AS LOW AS $87.50 a 704 1 ] T THST 2 | Complete shopping center on J-| dinette, bath, ampie ante, storage REACH Oa. ave Por available stud! | 124 17TH ST. rw TNTAT ’ _811 15th st. NW eT. 3-3300 | Si. eithin walking distance te) locker; shopping. $m bereat G sie apartmenta, ; NOW AVAILABLE schools, direct express public) Pentagon is in. drive st Glen rd., left to Hale pi 1 and 2 rooms, living ay t ight) and right to , bed KENT VILLAGE transportation to downtown Bridge ‘Utilitie roper oo rams d righ MANAGEMENT ON PREMISES | | _kitehen and bath pe Biticlenciee ax. 20| OPEN DAILY AND SUN. | soos inp ON PROBERTIES | een Warns ave. 30. 8-308 mnt. 2-000 | WHERE TOwN |RHODES MANOR 06 ; JA 2-2979. Warne Ave 5-3010 132 wT NORTH R IONE “het 7-06! Eves. JA. 5-8119. | Y mn APT —_Nr Ves , > ST $-300 a s. fro ~y sta ++ «$89.80 Apply resident manager. 3301 Chil- BACHELOR APT.Nr. Dupont Cir- . 18 a as Section of NE: . rms kit... . Cc Y t |. tle; 1 rm., dressin / DI Aco maa Utilities Included in neat | Tam Road. AP. '7=2533 | pvt. entr. pvi. bath. heat | 1339 FORT STEVENS tile bath. tub and Re hy Bag, and ARLINGTON, VA Kent Vilage. Landover, M ) ight and gas furn $60 mo. JA. DRIVE NW. BO stove Private entrance ist | AP. 7-0168 BEY ¢ by ATHY CH) &-0002 1 floor; $37 50 SAN C. -lanl-le'al times ce SR aT. NW... $319: peificiency. Le 811 H. G. SMITH , oO. tments, avail ott 2 Dupont Circ! e. DU 1a4" mann COUNTRY MEET 1-BED! ~ = Weve - omer h 0714 : : ” NOW AN OPPORTUNI is SY -STORY MOD- ° age perm. | re ar EEnaoce T. ww Ct Sis einigience— $50. , AT BEAUTIFUL TO LIVE , Ll. f T apart ee build 1912 3RD ST. NE. a = . er . 4g . , ‘ 4. NE Ay SITcHEe 7 ns coM sine heat s hot water. NA. 8-0714.| BOCKVILLE—1. 2-bedroom apts -STREET PARKING and ARS. om . E No ‘ et e >] "a > . nm! , ans iS—Extra ize. i & 2- . dinet rn - | BELLE + IEW Including all utilities nit 7 Forrester st Prarr e * direct transp. Cc: ac . . } Rhode Island Plaza ack pore areata teen ai) . lune oe ' $8 HILDRE! ——e 1 BEDRM......---.-$105 | heat eh Mon turn and garbage disposal _ | REYFUSS BROS OPEN POR mi) NOW AVANLARLE Wits Tie Fin: | 2 BEDRMS..........$135 | forre Realty Go. i Only 20 Min. From TOR a ; IR - CONDITIONED UNITS /1625 & Lang —SSetey. OBt, FOr om- ‘8-7 POR ALL-YR . orth Capitol St. HO. 2-7209] 148 pores mother or eoule (day care ._ $786 ame —_— “ROUND COMPORT L. UTILITIES INCLUD 23 Downto nN, D. c. or children). WA. 17-3882 ISLAND AVE. Ww On Ne Al sttinsisenpemnancictigni ' endl 911 B8th Bi.—Mod. fea | DAdTm.. $62.50, incl at a, 1-BEDROOM UNITS | H. G. SMITHY C O.. M. APT Nw. | Beaut. Mt. Vernon Bivd. fireproof DIRECTIONS: Travel to 14th and sts. se. thence south 1 block 14¢? to Cedar at on 2 if) ~ Renta! off ay xt Open MON SUN 1424 Cedar ™m office il LIMITED AMOUNT OF FREE GARAGE SPACE AVAILABLE . Spacious apt for hi ~&e ffi- OPEN SAT. & & Sl UN. or diplo “is 7 — -F 3 toe ms ba’ elec 1] T i © 4 30 DV rit. inci parseee _pisposal dish ar - ~ i 00 | apis. in apt. bidg., all utile; reas. | eter. NA. 8-071 LOW AS $89.7 | 811 15th St. NW ST. 3-3300 $7]. 50 | 3 » 9.75 ; —_ —| SeIPLeY PARK ‘APTS. . WIDRICH COURTS, INC. | ‘met HEAT te WATER » Ren TAL SNCLODE ALL 1220 oN ST. Nw. 1 and 2-bedrm. apts. in lovely sr EFFICIENCIES “TBEDRM, APT oS Po pg at clean vs pepe bids Onin FOR 5 iss ap »P.. :; . NN ILD |-BEDR : | : a8. | FOR FURTHER INFORM-. APP! Attrac. effic. apt... conv. te public rm. tte. - . eo7 7t ' —_— BEDRM APT. 887.25 App! Anion, NH ve ne Mae Arr : Fa A a ee (Gricrnes WeLUDED) | | Pee wamotion 0 sth ot| Figuring Weeder 9 Mete| — SCHLOSBERG 6 3 rate mated de ae th . to bus. ¢ . velopment, on express bus line. near B a | ment SCHNIDER ) | Yen Baty Be ee fore 5th st. nw. ST 3-3300 levelop 25th s FOR TURTHER BE ORMATION — lay : ae FAI TIFUL LOCA TED IN THE RELLE HA VEN. ) V ; -™ ie Oe . | INTRY CLUB AREA. just off we wavur oF N l CC } STRATFORD PLAZA, #113 Univ | pt HORE ISLAND PLAZA : VIEW the lovely Betemec: laree reeme | 70! N. WAYNEP ay Or qraens se Se.; specious oa or oo’ ith & mnece ond Ave. NE. ._J0 4978: smartly Caniened cross-ventilation JA = ops, trans.; , , ps "ene 4 | fireproofe off-street parking, | Kes; _— -™ manager . § | - r : 5 cO- oO - ox 7 playgrounds. large shopping center “ " aw ~ . rated) vail $69.5 til VeT Oozing Potomac no industries. R_R. or TYLER GARDENS EFFICIENCY, $65 | ime OF Opp nuisances of, us stop in d Washin ton any kind: school locate X prem- UTILITIES INCLUDED - sEAre ALL MODE = ; oom Rn AENT:S RN SyFCREE DUPLEX APARTM EQUIPME : | i ises: excellent bus serv Li ss %~.18\ Aina} d St.—In Heart of | In « | Call s M ; | ARLINGTON’ [OS f | DOW? wh TOWN | iving rm. (12x18), dinette 399 W Broa VA. | onvenient Sess Circle area , NN & LUGHS iN\al VS MOST On Mt. Vernon Blvd. CH " ILS CHUR Modern elevater bide Bee . ; WALI oO WORK Sth st } t .. 47x10), bedroom..{11x13). | we 29810: or 3B. 328048 Manager, 1833 New Hampshire EMB! TION ——" 3081 Idaho! CONVENIENT APT.- One Mile South of TaNn ryr ST. ry }COLORED—A25 Fla. axe ne 2.rms.,, o< ee $70-$72 Bs . peeemetinternneiin bet. Ma nd Cathedra! ' 1 BLOCK FROM KEY BRIDGE Alexandria, Va. ) st : NV rhe : = 7 les as urnistved sey N i Automatic Washers and dryers tn) : eR ° 89- $93 , ae Highly _~ BA malatiner. | xevig, a= soa ge living room ‘teres viten-| $62: | ) 7 Xt we mt; pvt. locker rms Within rm! 5- exc ransp : ly ¢ “ ructe ireproof: mas- Rental Manager on Premises at y decorated. | marine cite ; i6th «ft ho N CHILDREN te =9 6 os facts : 1-bedroom . April | tenna, lagee utilities incl See janit ED— 4 enyon at. 1 2 Ae. en . walkin eater, 1 vik from "busline. ) WANT A CHANGE 1: elevator and switchboard serv- | agee rooms and Hours: Daily. 6:30 A.M. to 5 P of; | rooms bath henette.ar $5 e745 t & bath FOR THE BETTER? ice. Call EM. 3-6700 eq ; se dis-| ems * ted P 1” APT. LIKE NEW $60 : 4-4473 after Sal, a { ities lay-| South 8- | Pes: sec ‘ Heat ' . ; 4-4473 after 3:30 p 2725 30TH ST. 6B. ¥ > Scnoe = UPC ADrast 8001. 3° pepopretes Bee posident LU. 26100 FAKOMA PARR—2 bedrm HESAPEAKE GARDENS vanes TOWN © 3423 B st. se. (Duplex). | peo Nes, we ows new bidg. $87.50 plus utils. 8215 iden jocated ,*t ist and Chesa- ’ . Roanoke ave. JU. 9-5157 eake bik. from express | opping nearby. § minite 65 M ST. N.W *} g. je sther sections | COEDwED Tits oie we WW ine: | 1001 15th, Bi NW ten y fo Fen M ST. N. W. : 1159 Bladens aahe sen St. I , 1st YORK AVE. NW., 919-3 rms. | TAKOMA PR.—1-bedrm re shee: > us. ‘schools. and shopping. « ge ie COUNTRY MEET ; just completed nr. bus an : A pancy. with these featur aaa ihe S| ie ag fo tt et ely ane! BELLE VIEW |Pton uti closets, lge. 1i ; TAYLOR sT “Nw. 1366—1 bedrm. equippeq kitchen. w ro fu 7 + 9 PARKWOOD do8, incl. newt aiid Rot water. NA'| fale and chairs: southetn exposure QNLY 20 MIN. FROM |2 BEDRMS. . $ L cine ore on each r master ; RD FAW. We Mice, WERE ay aieae: torsar faciiver DOWNTOWN D.C. + Beer ir WNTOWN .. |cot-“acas- wave ll. . a PLUS FREE WASHING LI- y y Tt ‘TT © T WAL WORK Children welcome APARTMENTS | oo at ,® Zooming house TIES. for $100 per ae “FAcILI- ON BEAUTIFUL MT.| Rxstbex ROMRS. SMITH | OVERL OKING | THE GRANITE STA? COLORED: 4081 wn ions it r a I Lah, ’ ° ‘ ; a | WeNTe WeeIPANTS VIRGINIA + eel scent and’ all Well. furt:: 965) Chetapeake a ton tte hee VERNON BEVD. “ ROCK CREEK ' mo. Get key st S16 24 st. nw. See rental agent, in Apt. 104 1, 2, OR 3-BEDRM. APTS. | on mcr OT tans ton eaten ar ; per Mond thru ‘Friday 4 wy.. 2 biks. to Quinn st | THESE VALUES MUST BE SEEN "SETS SS"ERaSHES™ | RatiPicenT conRE 29>) GOLDMAN REALTY co, | RENTALS INCLUDE ALL’ | Sen} BR te ale: rent "sé PARK | 70 BE APPRECIATED \2p ST. NW. . 4 © . 7 : = : TLI ITLES cor Avr , , : TU. 23-6159 JUST OFF 16TH ST ' plus utilities a 8 ii THE LIV NG on M j ; I : | - ‘ Liv 1-Bedrm. Apts., $80-$84 ‘STHNW. ea : PRG i B LIVING 18 FAR eat 'M. T. BROYHILL & SONS THE DORFEN Seats ini ee dees fa) . / . . - lee ' 54 i108 ; | ST. NE. 1682 rms. 300 "Tl ws (aT § a. H he Belle H - @ Transp. at rour doo livine + lover. dinette. kitch inet he - A hy ITTe bath; 1 2 settled per- in the e reek ~ Bh ; } Tm., foyer, dinette, kitchen rmont. nD acs UTILITIES INCLUDED IN RENT | song, 960 mo oy = arbor Terrace, Country Club Area LONG BRANCH APTS. . D biks esata: churches any dressing closet, bath; 2 expos-| *** — e- ' a ae . bath. : _ i. - ” “4 = - m0 COLORED: 491 Naat , ‘ 7: aT, NW. S617 4rms. & Alexandria, Va. i :> + ROOMS. SwhEte e | bene 2 Re gen AL rm, a > — Gesigned for era res $8) * — ggg ag iy eS ST ras coLonne—: _ NW, F rt e ; ; Facilities. $77 and oe Per mo. inc! | @ few ene! ce 2-bedrm. apts. 29 able ey 1 go ayy hot =o Oo rag, ys, Cross , center, 11TH ST. 1 rma... __ki Dea apartmen +) path... Cone io Gapitel Arlington, Va. :, paren COLORED utils conv sho opping. echools Redroom livin rm fover (CoL.. 3427 ‘13th a Bac helor apt vs i. trans Office rear 8106 a ieeane 7 ine]. e)] ] : . 1 jarge rm ba , bu Piney . Navy ¥ 4d Bolling Field. 885. ine. utils. | Redo 797 = TEs. "Utilities switchboard services in- cc _>- 2742 oF Li. 6-4 4500 I + $70.75, $72.75, $75.75 | NEWLY DECORATED — ,ROrenty ane. cluded in rent. Resident manager -. . » ue and bath: screened poreh Avall- ONE MILE SOUTH OF ine in 1-fa ne. See janitor ! ROS. HERBERT HARVEY. INC 2 bed. other fur pvt; also bsmt, apt. HO: 2-819]. + SICHIGAN PR. nr. Catholic U.—3 | able Apri 1. $62.50 m | BARKLEY B ALEXANDRA, \ 912 17th | ~ 89) UNPURNI rms. and bath: $70, ail a incl. PRED" A SMITH ‘CO NA 68-6221 MAN aie ee |-# ae. 1- 1868 ‘SI RLEY DUKE | on L-2 and L-4 busline. direct NW location. DU, 4-718 o06-43 _2 empl. people. LA. 6-173 “+4113 17th St. NW. EX. 3 2489, | M sks on ait = “ing ARENOTON — APARTMENTS | 5 P) 5 aie Scan 95. Phi 3-2800 ' A » : , i an earm. apts. $85 a 4 OS : ri . : 3-2 ' Nm apf “hy. rm , .. 2 oe 'N I M To : / mo inch uding .utiliti ’ $1 AG 145 Tr , IKE ST. , i APARTMENT | ai n. bath. frt. och. Pulton _ > 4158 | | . BB001 | facilitie: One block “— shopp ew tas “Ero is. developmen’ . é 8-216 LI. 4-2038 e: A. ae. apt. with liv. rm. kit — on n qG , o ’ J 38) ~ _ SOME Live & RB Cony 1G PO. oO... Nw t i COLOR ED. 210. 55Th._-ST_-¥ PO ere PORCHES. i eo r Po } 5 Zi. ia m >. se 7! nat , 59" N utiee , NE. r mo To inspe S75 & $80 . niact Janitor liv. rm.. dinette, kit ‘OL 'D: 15 wrolir Tm. & 25 s ir seeeees $90 on wrerees sMiTHY co. plus utils. B. Leonard SE tet floor: 3 large rme.. front | “°™' see Lt. 42446 ] 10 Bll 15th St NW ST 3300 > ‘ 4th st sw. ME. &-1560 anda amas ioanall « Ll 6.47%4 sy Tm ic er cainette x en Z OM +4 +e cite bat bea $117.50 utils ; ra td. _tat Branch rd).{ Entrance at 8920 14th st nw nette,_kitchen; bath; $116 : sis tin a0 Bilver Spring. JU. 17-6771 : Blevator—Package Room ~ i rm over dr: COLORED." in , ma itcnen : } itl , = 500 VISTA DR : . | Per Mo., Incl. Utils 3510 on premises ; N st. 2 RGRB Lt ‘ 40 " ¢ °T ' MINNESOT TA AVE. 6E.—3 bed- PY < cot ORED - urn! ven ane h Excel. transportation Pile applies: | peatmen > . rms. living. rm.. dinin > WASHINGTON’'S FINEST ee | * } PHONE—JE. 2-1382 arge living room teh epee. ee. ie abyyeupent Bids. | ON a4 VERNON BLVD. bath; $104 +4 utils inc] -< - . ase emeriaa ae sit n Conn 293 Harvard Nw A n. and bus line: 15 minutes c Al ry A ND RI A, VA. : me and Pentagon \LEX NEWEST AND MOST MODERN GARDEN APTs. M. T. BROYHII SONS “KL 8-500 IN THE WASHINGTON AREA Seven: Day Weekend . # Lee Hwy. Ari a ae ii’ hii iw | ws ~ ‘ en paar ~ je , A SAFE. COMFORTABLE, HEALTHY, SUBURBAN 819 Sls 1 BEDROOM a 0 mir ; | HOR & A “SONS mo, JOHN y. Bow JOUMNDAI Ye — ’ enna. ave. se ~~ eae & ~ * ya Nw whe +h? he as ‘* »* aeae Pe ~ 1. eee “a oa nh and be : my : ese | ENVIRONMENT WITH ALL CITY CONVENIENCES ag decor 287 50. in . ond Fl. $67 pu PLEX Rt Dt CED AND neeec.- _ y outher . | 4 : beg C ALL RENTS INCLUDE UTILITIES | 9-8500 n ave. se. JO i aan | 4025 Ely pl. se —Bedroom. | 3 bhieli 2 EON WwW rd. 10 min 1-Bedrm., 2-Bedrm. and Studio Apts Bi aaa: Beh Tas Wetec Recta 200 MASS. AVE ial ai - oe ’ , ' ~~ Ree ters 7 Re) < een c ' s tadiinenaieeine NEWLY DECORATED , ‘ : A aie tt ‘ =) Available in 30 t6 60 Days at $67-/S0 6 ITS Here s everything you ve deconied ol i in fine apartment Desirabis effic and i-bedrm. apt 1. $76.5 ay. NOHOF & 5 Sone | i4 Penna COLORED in } y . 2 9 Bedroom Duplex Apts. living. and GO.” OE Satan Station ind Fl, $77.5 WABHINGTON’S FINEST Available New at $135 4a2$137.50 Nearly 800 spacious studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apart ACIIency S02. : | Air-Conditioned ey On premil COL, 502 Including the followina: ments; 3 modern, 9 story elevator buildings; parklike -Redroo: 79 cr i ES ALL OT I ITIES - Dore! GARBAGE DISPOSA!I PRIVATE ENTR AND PATIO grounds on the banks of the Potomac. a ’ EXCEPT TY LUXURY APT. o/ 0%4-FT. HOTPOINT REFPRG PICNIC AND PARK ARFA : sage, ie URS: 8:30 % M eee ads «all COLORED ae PLAYGROUND AREAS Elevaior and Switch board Service M N. THROUGH 1 } 925 150 ; NDR? tir ABUNDANCE OF CABINETS PRIVATE PARKING ARFAS , FI ea ( CALI 3 Ony'] SI INE Ss" rT 1M) JING POO! TENN ead | Res Mer on Pr em NA ? = mR RRS 3 a NOON Por family or corporation that I IN 4 ies — ff: 6s ‘Tr Lis oe, | i T . : “i = polneng tnd PE? rit. AND STORAGE GPACE LAUNDRY FACILITIES COURTS, SHUFFLEBOARD AND PLAYGROUNDS NO* H Mm. AG... OMS CO. MADE IN PERSON t Me . 2 N i Ll. DARK ' rt « nities rm. an@ path 1a coer Si. at BRE Ke " LAr IOV) arer2 : r T ' ; ave ‘ ) Aen BUS SERVICE TO D. C. AT DOOR ARE UNDER CONSTRUCTION ANI WILL ¢ | SES Seem St. ee ) + eS utils. included. Some furniture if a a roTre 1 a ~~ © oor ee Yh Pn an) | . . needed ) Cs . | ‘ at : ; > « : FAST TRANSP. TO PENTAG JON AND PLETE E THE RESC LIKE IMUSPMERE oiUtsk n Treen pRUE pI Ween Veh eee * 8 persons, sirma ane ST 2200. ‘AMES 1. DIXON A Senz-Ger Brick Coldiial. Just ‘ve ‘ 4 i. wf j i L ; itil a ¥ ’ r il i “‘«. , ec i Das ~" . DOWNTOWN -D..C. BY OUR OWN. POPULAR . ans | a bathe: ia o — heal. ita baths, Best borin fine ~ . . rn y . Ar. oy . = rors close mi i 2) : r ’ hhorhned With W lbiv Distance of New — , i» = Fe 24044 i 1 i ee one or two titentns with . wm wee - : - vi nin ¥ a King i’ s' ‘ Convenient tr A asnington; exce wen! us service and : ; BRANT NEW APARTMENTS TAD Y | unit clothes washer MEI PAR LABORA TOR I parking facilities. | s dryer and refrigerator ALL-DAY-EVERY-DAY 50: fe by 7 WC onigate hewrtone SAMPLE APT. OPEN ALL ~¥hM1.VAt - RENTS — TA - ; » private ° YTS AS LOW AS $75 adjoining bar: Directions: Out Lee hwy. (U0. 6. 29 or 211) 1 mile beyond Palls ™ "Dae: Church to our sien and apartments on left. (Opposite National ; . air-condi Memorial Gardens ) Mount Vernon Bivd. and Potomac River tioned Carillon House 7500 Wis- _— m consin ave nq@ commandin LURIA BROS. —e Alexandria, Va. ° KIna 8 Q B4R4 magnificent view of city en ; . Potomac River valley Planned 2300 WILSON BLVD for owner of building and never alae catibati tinea sapesand - ~ —$$_$__—_--— -- + ——- CTT TYT y oecupied Secretarial telephone 4545 CONNEC U i A\ E. service. garage. basement iaun- > dry ‘acilities and future publi ie ‘Apartment With a View: | WARWICK VILLAGE. HEAT AND AIR CONDITIONING ° cuset oamne ‘seaitabie transient eee seen nad erak'y jinconalccn dpc saad ine Call EM 2-a800 WITH INDIVIDUAL : THERMOSTATIC CONTROL IN FACH ROOM Visit Arlingt ons newest garden apartment de: Alexandria, Virginia - o roe vel lopment on S. Frederick St. at Columbia Pike, | | 24-Hour Secretarial Switchboard , ARLINGTON only 5 minutes from Pentagon. Choice 1 and 2 | 3BEDROOM HOMES | Master TV Antenn THE AR] CO & THE MARLO bedroom units. Ideal for children. FULL BASEMENT—WASHER and DRYER | GE Disposals in All Apa A a Avid ) oe eae enna ~ wer ; 1425 N. Nash St. 1990 N. Meade LARCHMONT GARDENS | $115 PER MONTH auf ere cgannaa oon ova id ait: Malan Ae ak ie ee ee el COLORED LARGE LIVING ROOMS CROSS- VENTILATION “ Bo close to Washington.” Only 12 minutes by bus fram or se these de |u l eo ir ul Her wou the utmost in Holmead A pts. » the project to the Pentagon Concourse and 12 minutes to dova- iS al natn nen je ‘anvenien nd view Featur . etna trom Fr . TWIN-SIZED BEDROOMS PLAYGROUND AREAS | town. D.C__1 Block from all schools. parochial schools. sh cok Rete gh St ah ah | ' ape 135 Holmead Pi. NW, . : ‘ AUNDRY FACILITIES Fast bus service is only 1 block. These fine homes are new. 2ms al Z Ly) ss | cious living reom with master TV antenr twin-sized bedroom NUMEROUS AND SPACIOUS CONVENIENT TO. TRANSPOR | disposer in each kitchen. Furnished mod nie Seah , oe Re Date oe br . CLOSETS TATION. SHOPPING AND | Michelbach is open daily and eves — Vi ities Inc with am closet space, kitchens equipped with full-sized FREE MASTER TV ANTENNA SCHOOLS | for free booklet about the: ta! “ ececines ait dtiaiads dain, teileed wasee at Conk Shad ve ’ TRECTIONS MAMMEDIATE OCCT! ey : room units available. IMMEDIATE © *CUPAN o%. continue te the AM ADT 5 GAR GE | SPACE Fr. $) c . Bedrm Ants $90 tn $92 7 1-Bedroom Apartments..........$87.90 TE. 6- 6912 | Bedroom .....$95 2Bedrooms .....$]] Efficiency Apts., $72.30 2-Bedroom Apartments..........$98.50 >PEN DAILY & EVES. TILL:'9 PM. Open Daily Between 10 A.M. and 8 P.M. Includes Al! Utilities ° ' RESIDENT MANAGER—EM. 2-2600 ‘a ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (Free Courtesy Car Service) Te inspect: Croes Memorial Bridge on Arlington Blvd te | 1429 N. Nash. st. "CHAR Resident woe. a Frederick St (No Obligations) _ H. G. SMITHY CO. po ys og eg pal megaman tsoutner Bide. . j Exclusive al M A . | sis LARCHMONT REALTY, INC... 'couontat mvvesment co. INC OF WASHINGTON D. ¢ oo Murphy 6 Snell Properties ie o 81) 15th Bt Nw, ST. 3-8300 mR me & : ee eg ee C- sved On EPL AO NS ox li oti. Bea @ RNA gM are oF ee 26 BO Sere eed » —s ~s 4 = . haan " . Malaise 8 Ge BME IOS REE CN ER SIS EE CA PTR PRE, ER PEN BE MIR BE ait THE WASHINGTON POST sd Se ey OP gh opr aden? 5 eli PRS REL RR MAE SONS PRE ETI SAA ee and TIMES-HERALD OR AP NL SON ae ee eg Setaidien, March 20, 1954 Spe >t? Lamy” 7 Pg TEM Byes ee big “eR RRO eR ee ee ce ek Ol aia aalled og ie a ee APTS. UNFURNISHED 4319 HUNT PL. NE. unt — D Brice unt ista st. nw. NA PRRRLANDS LOPMENT | ag ob BEST BUY. IN TOWN Brand-New Apts. Now Renting for amc and Future Occu 342 ens 8 $68 & $70 OOMS—$84.50 c. oa eid ALAS ER CHILDREN’S NURSERY SCHOOL} AND ENCLOSED PLAYGROUNDS nae 35 . at an 2425 Alabama Ave. SE. Ave i Convenient achools Shopping. | Snurenes an tra rta bes and APE on467 50) BEDROOM APT 771.50 and i ToS i ‘ha. SEE JANITOR ON PREMISES y > eas. ) | —@ ¥ms.. kit.. transp. Reas. Li. 4- o 4 £ ats. ne. Attractive apt ° bedrdm: liv. rm. dimette, kit t eT. $0 ¢ 1 wo tilities. Key. —~¥% pius ry Const. ave. ne. DREYFUSS | NE. kit. } Re ond te nd venetien ‘Blinds. wey — ood Lv i. 1 CO-OP. APTS. ALLS C home; nr. sho nice comm.; SALE 37 | uplex | 1-bedrm ing ater & trans.. yd... tee EVIRGINIA’ LOW DOWN PAYMENTS than nd vere bak dw EAE a FU RN AR ote é ccepted. JA. ja. 5 p10. nus-| nd bath ; in ex- bid 4- PFR MO. pays ins. utils. and Y es town 3 for alifie L linia JA. a ¥ STs. in nice cond., with 3 clusive switchboard, Go-op apt. resale. kitchen apd bath. et nw. = = Mr, Jones, HU r APARTMENTS WAI 38. cooperative apart | ment; downtown ofr Capitol Rit Quiet couple Give full sparticyiars | § Wri ashington rooms. 16th s 3- 7 T. 7-6405. COLORED LANDLORDS Rent your. apts hor all Mr. 5 0251 - s Rae MOVING AND STORAGE A&A-it VET yey ww" rent = "y ‘obe ere Ast te oe. or small LA. 6-9226 RAN mi VING. Any | 2-3910. CO. 6-0044 VERS. By an 1s | HU. 36 ANY MOV ING—Large or “gmail jobs. anytime. HO 32-9477, JO. 32-0799 movi an the. i laght Rad 70 1848 4 ANY MOV arr vt! Ee ar ga Joh anylime. HO. . 2-070". Ai VING by job or hour. rr "as, HO. 2-7331, CALL PATIL. Light, moving & h ing anytime. Aleo Sun. NO. 7-6 ALL LL SUNSET. Movin ta gu Ne rates. LI. 7 job or 053 37 | 23) haulin Txe3'aft- 22 FOR THAT QUICK MOVE call 19$0—Ligh! Weis: MOVING. . heavy hauling Laree or email jobs. Packing, crating. Reasona’'« L, U 4 5355. } HILLS TRANSFER, x a Any day. br.; em. or 6-: 3364 e. Sh. notice. A “FILLMAN MOVES ay TIME. with new van; 7 per hr. min Free. ret U 2-7272 LIGHT moving sand hauling. ‘by the hour or by. , ie. Wa 1041 MOVING— 24-hour othe hel: pa added k service. - Gaion iets B care- . 70 5 | 1} a 23 | USES FURNISHED 40 ’ A . 603; 5 rms fin. rec. rm.. fenced rd. JO. 2 367)! ALEX... Va.—S-tm., floor apt. with livin -bedrm.., rm., separate | n. full. bsmt. as / LEX. ier, 3-bedrm. brick, erochia} urn. eerie tton venisen ferences 80.—2- bedrm semidet.: we dec.: conv. to Pentagon and Nay kanes: $135. Call Sat. or Senda. 7 3-7313._ short- a mn lease; i 2-074. | arge attractive aite aths. full basement. built in Avajiebie March 15 $157 ¢ . bedrm homes. S124 ALLIED ri -6649 Eves OL RP DA — Beautiful 6-room. 2- oor garace. ree orra i wR, Outs 2-dedroom | bunselow; full bemt.. nice yard, WOWARD R. OCHAFER.. OL 2-8441., A.CHEVY ' RENTAL SPECIALIST rS Spring Valier, 3 bedrms., 2% baths, | 8 Rock Creek ey naar es ta rms full bem 5309 ‘Detached 3a and 4 i furnished. $150 To inspect. call ay JA ase. Md. 8 rm as $185 rm. $275 nacres 138 CALLEN “SHERWIN, INC. 241 Wisc. Ave GEO ORGETOW™ —This ouse ee double ish fireplac Sire 2 r \ everiooks | fences 77 9 . ’ uble liv amali dining rm.. wder rm er a 5 HU. 3-6897. a. mm fireplaces . ene din. ne area frevlage Spine ane washer and 1 $135 ne. ‘Beat > 6) HOUSES FURNISHED +2: . ington. su A ALEXANDRIA A miten tee hed 4 bedrme except) onally well a oo EM 3-4450 ; living, SE \T PLE AS ANT MD. S$ ss i = 5 aie "Seaweee siLvER SPRING. m. | ell-—3-be cK. Pleasant, ” path, range me 40) HOUSES UNFURNISHED __41/ BUSINESS PROPERTY SALE 48 “room bungalow. TWINBROOK = aeoeat AVE. for any | $-5016. | Rockville. Md. 3-bedroom j-bedroom ho tio convenient tra o-ana location for = midet mes, each with buik-tm cabinets, | Y uip.; washer: $100. = etl “REA Pig: ogley’ “4 fireplace nl utomatic washer BO Ug 9-06518 RA. 6-2 Available for immediate segeren? PETWORTH —! For details call PO | VIRGINIA—Nr. eS K wy achieve family happiness in | center heme fully Culmore Jobas-Manvile ; yr shopping Cape Cod: lease. Chil- POs., 00. . hear there. 2 bed- t e rm brick. rambler with ain rm. | oe lon KINSKY, REALTOR and full oe WiLL MB. OL. 6-7 $38, 1} Ww JLLIAMB. bei pe Proprietor =—= i ee aa BLK s prietor leaving town A —3 bedrooms. separate Call’ cor uckersville 53-F.11 | a rm.; redec.: Bendix: lige. cor. sigs tore om iat ven.) lot; schools nrby. $90. LO. 4-7 fices on next fl. apt. of 5 ¢f & | am. |™ WHEATON—2-bedrm : din, ba. on top fl. OWNER. JA 2. 6407 | | eb extra | MONEY- MAKER! 212 C st. nw: Bogiey s rm. apt. house; business and furn.; | LO. $-3434 ist Sanenarennl approx. $450 mo Mb rooms. income easily bath | $50 modern co ated reanenabie veniences Call otter 5. WA. 78329 Need cash. Owner i 4-5716 ' 4 ; 1:30 to FIVE-ROOM bungalow. hot-water oll Serenest RENT heat, bath, aluminal storm win- TsviL —y All or =, location on Baltimore | porch ’ priced right. you wont even he i] he } 110 ef) elors or working giris. mo. Call LUR sg ‘y ear Be) bedrms.. - $130. Avail. 5-9460. Several 2 houses. $100 mo EALTY CORP. x Alex. Bit awberry Hull peey 8st aed XAND Country Club. 2 area, | sem idet CEY R 48) cone INVEST. a A ofimost, ee ~oi.| J BNCHER et ¢ "938.000 | 4% GI loa renovated recently Tor Sosalls call | Mr ker | SALE, D. C., Nous 64 62) SALE . 64(SALE, D. C., HOUSES ve In one |G Somes | aun apt the urns from other apt. re tit fu Anon | will ~¥ the month- | v easonabie cas sh and «4 pom awe screened e enjo hall a. € Sree pm Aiden -2100. | room. eated 34 fi. | 3 cad by a Pl. Chase, 2 A onal To € : ‘Conn to Taste MY Circle, sn —y estern to Runnymede. ent te 3519 MERRYFIED & WOODS oo ds a5 tre ie The ey 64 with & Sun. 1 to $30, or one kitchen. | OL. 26501. See i Mr. Realtor TU. 2-1105. TENANTS PAY EVERYTHING: —- Re eaioas wn stown Bioneet Broker” “ Leo Kolb Co. "HILLCREST t, Sonpead *Waevid “Pt BUILDING - ant tenis, VeRO. cast Foo brick = hor st Ens AER A AD. 4-266, | deaths. ALL 1 Hy ee. ion. ay vesTo you, direct! 4-unit brick: two . “tiont ed Fire Pere’ ‘ ro hea —_. Bhenbelood for immediate two furnished A. A. CAROZZA CO, income. | B+} a, a. "F638 to GEORGETOWN A Bit of Earthly Paradise garden —_ bine :: pe Lv: 2- 6428 MT. PLEASANT 3 bdaths. basement: no vacancy: 2- Zoned for apts. or rooming Sees SUSIE V. WATWOOD 10 rooms, car garage. ond R. . at eter snd ™@ CHATEL, DE. 2- 1137, KI. 8- at ——- | dows and doors. Larse yard and a bacon NOR | shrubbery and trees, an acre of; > “modern bilildine. ewly decorate NO ection | Pent to one or two children. Please bring} iy ee $2 = g ' sq. Seu Call weekdays _ 80. | reference. $80 ESTATE TAKOMA PK. Se) rm. ¥ Bresiece. ¢ in| ' loc. reds. rent. heat 00 WHITESFLL REAL Bchool & kitchen | included, 18130. ¢ "call | ST. MES L Near Oakton. Va hone DU. 5-7220 4 sons. S | AN uti ~ iol Dike - & CO. ARLINGTON 528 -W— Jackson si We show 6-rm. bungalow with large and rear porches, oil to stores. schools and $135 mo. Open Sat. and Sun aver. noon or call OL. 4-5162 ARLINGTON FOREST—5239 N Car-| rms.. 4 ie us L-5. or phone Jebnsen. DIL. |_evenings ARL.—Lower of duplex. Kenmore at screened porch: ideal yard tor chil- ren; g@rage: all util. incl.. $125 mo.; immed o¢cup. JA 7-8653 0. —— Tenmaculate | ti) fi.; aD & ore | Suitable for all “topes “ol busines: 72 mo. EX. 3-567. | COMMERCIAL SIT 33 S G iA.—6 acres of) commercial ground within 2.9 miles) of Alex.: would make good loca-) tion for motel or any other busi-!| it AT YOUR CONVENIENCE like it WE WILL PLACE YOU IN A 3 } 2-BA HOME AT THE RIGHT PRICE 5-9100 MONROE DEVE! OPMENT CORP 134 No. Kings Hwy. Alexandria, Va HURRY—$99 MONTH 7-RM. DET.—REDECOR. Upper Georgia Ave. Lovely detached | 7 rm a with full one, and enc + -porenes 4 r he at one No lee Approx $05 N & GRAY, | 2-bedrm.' Come ay offic 9 dally & Po ~ TY. 2 Thomas Circle Nw. 5 MINS. TO PENTAGON brick heuse fenced-in ya Shopping Center $85 —, Rents: Ariingto UPPER CORN. AVE rms. 2 baths, OPEN SUN FIVE ROOMS | =) bath RTT 33 BARBER SHOP 1010 KING ST. chair shop Good following! | ' busi — for right ma in iia Center oceu and bath business and heense will sell also. WA. 7-3100 | ey porch: fenced yd & No Kensington sts. / . full aes nice lot; con- oppin renter high pos $150 mo. Thos JA 2-0074, JA. So. Nelson st. lay’ = teville Shope ~~ AREA—3 bed- ig 4 = bsmt gad attic ] Ag ~B915 =— “vail >. 3131. Eves.. DRY CLEANING—-Laundry conces- sion in large Va. apt. house. Owner iil and is desirous of selling Washington Post and Times- Heraid GROCERY & MEAT#—Golns bus ness in excellent NE. joc. Feaean-| ably priced. Owner LA. 6-1737 GROCERY STORE—Corner location with living quarters, eee ty fixtures. uepeenenre. a : ge. jot ‘ eink le Call JU. 9-4573. RA 6-478? } 54222. WALKER & DUNLOP, INC 6-RM. BRICK RAMBLER New parochial schoo! r rme rm... bedrme. fenced lot r. f r 35 per mo. JAMES ©. TIP- M. 2-1607 BETHESDA AREA—Pairway Hil) Nice, small 2-bedrm., liv. rn Convenientiy arranged firep! , rh knot! y ‘one < ui disposel. france: mm. 9 ®. OE EA PE PEE ade sa. sae meat mar.et for cutter: reas: — erat. 2 5723 Defore 7_P. HOTEL—Same operator tor 14 yrs. wants to retire: 26 rms ea outside en- landscaped lot. trees uits $21.950 Call JE. 3-820 la OUTSTANDING FALIS CHURCH AREA $108 MO Rambler new-house ndition “Tene! tan G—}3-bedroom Colo- asement earane. $135 ~— 3-bedroom rambier Penced yard. $110. BETHESDA-—2- bedroom brick Cape 1 bik. from Wisc OCEVILLE -4-bedroom Cape Cod , 410 6th MARKET twin coach’ bus into market. completely ready to roll. ll ell. Priced 538 3 at ul MORILE blinds converted ar bier ais deluxe GE epeores P pane . hwasher, Ben ~2-bedroom Colonia! a che 2-5441) Larchmont Realt JE. 4-3900 Eves OLD AND F just off Persh ing vw I a) 0°72 OC )} MY Dt Inc. Schoo! atsteiat Naval Hospital: rm., garage ol near NIH and rms. and den in basement nbout April 10. OL, 6-8130 DA-CHEVY CHASE NW BET RENTAL SPECI ALISTS are i — 3-dedrm., 1%- sambiet eu basement, 4 erlook in MALORA R CHRISTMAN. — _ Wise FEES +a — RENTAL SPECIALI! Ca Cod. from D. C. A bargain at T. CANNON, BROKER | Rappahannock Co Va n Grayson 2122 : WAREMOU SE ~ 50,600 sq Zoned | butane nue aya INC I JE. 2-2620 62923 | NR. RESEARCH CENTER Plan Reasonably priced for | NOL: pr sige en Ww. ticai ou! Ts WE. —) j — oer. porch. full bsemt. | 5-4 ve 2 OPEN oy Jefferson at Immediate poss.; LUI NCH ROOM isth and H sts 14 iges Park ; easdere brick, set with dish washer ar a der se ce bedr ms "MR WEINBERG. 9-1463 nso BLVD: Vs. Brick, °. lg bedruns iv rm lge heat "- very lee ’ f) aft Near sell quickly new eal uipment Will listen to quick ale ne TU. 2-4252 or Di -18 VALET SHOP—-Over 20 years: business: nice profits: owner Colonial, 2 bedroom and express bus. good Gesired: $1 onth ill FOR “SALE or Yor lease. Service sta- rn d.. good loc. with Apply to Bide. Md 4 Bedroo - ed brick with living room, huge lee full basement, Fenced yard rm 1-water ‘vd Garden plenty of flower } it trees. excellers garden Mak ke offer BRANDEN- BURG REALTY, JA. 20398 A rl. Tron Nanjamoy Unusual Opportunity Detached: 4 rooms basement io and »b partiy finished : and children Apply 4415 Southern ave -8 5 Near bank and postoffice Availabie immedistely complete with fixtures and air-conditioning nt: in active shopping te SO PMENT CORP Alex... Va. ——————_—_— TS BUS. OPP. OUT-OF-TOWN 56 ee , ATTENTION: Nursery Agents: Why your with Dis- Solicit orders Shrubs. Ornamentals Landsc goles and deal Office of epeciaity rin with fireplace. wor room x full sr in pasement: ava)! JO._9 ge PIVE RMS. and bath. : Relteville; couple with no dogs, $30 mo.; §-5464 COL _— « ° mi tre ° l refs chil VE a 212 ow tucky at e &E ee Bt tn ut 6rm aemed oc : coo venientiy lo- A Field. near larce shopping center. For further in- formation cali JO. 201451. —S—— nT 2 CONSTITUTION AVE. NE... _ o=s kitchen, bath, sto 3 (OLORED—NW | kit and bath. HO COLORED Hou apts. 450 to $100 mo $C RETY FALTY © CO. 1331 N St Nw D 4 41 Manager? Rose Bushes, Evergreens Gas h Ww. h. $1! 5 sery business EPLING. UN pay highest commissions on receipt OF 7 COL ORED—Mod. 2 bedrm. with rec. ewlv aeaue view rj Capito! —. § rooms lower floor. | library - 7 cow brick deco gor- & Potomac. $98 mo. 1353 Tatvert (Inspect By eppt.) sy Bri 12 rms compietely furnished: a livingroom. 1 m -+ ESTER NURSERIES NEW h elec. washer EVA DEPARTMENT . oll eksont be Sek ah Two ho- | tourist court) ro large | en, seutiitty room wit dr froner, ‘large yard are. immediately for Abingdon. Arl.. Va Call anaes KE 8-7124. No brokers WW .—Good AD. 4.3495 ES HOUSES FURN. or UNFUR. 42 PSS. smn a ARLINGTON — 1025 20th 8.—5 min. from. Pentagon..10 =. from. Can be used as ly house. Live in rent other for extra i fenced yard. TE 2186 bedrms COLORED; 181 Oath St. eondition: reasonable Tanee. Kill Devil MONEY TO LOAN Hills, S8A 2) A 3 Immediate service. Call WA - 6540 | NATION Ay Pt aenee i ts co 1014 K ith and EK REAL EST aT T TOANS 60 PAYMENTS TOO HIGH? Let us pay off sour first and sec- Harris & Ba - EAST-WEST HWY 4206 CHEVY CHASE. MD 2-story brick home in excellent cons @itioi; has 3 bedrooms , mo ay -year lease basis. —— today 6M 1113 17th 5” NW. EX. 3-2489 _ PAIRF ae —nambier. » Sans oll heat; Atera fay of, Route N80 SUBURBAN RENT FATBFAX aang $100 Mrs rela Ira’ c Chase Rockville ‘ DE 2-4101 my ‘Dunkirk : 8433 RE NTAL & S SPI {ALIS rs FOXHALL RD. NW , in 1423 Foxhall rd.—Vacant. 3-»b a ony .“ eal ie om. ame = ees gone. 28- “tt 3- rm. guest house; barn; 5 acres. rm.__di Ps r the. full; $22 135-ft. cnen vere: gare MALORA R. CHRISTMAN ac 33-7400, = Ex 4906 Wis. Ave. NW Wo. 6-292. 44 GEORGI A & MADISON | WANTED TO RENT $99 MONTH |\CONN. AVE. EXT. $3000 cows, ave Vacant, semi-det qutontal brick, 7 a rms.. bath. bert... h.- others. 1ST beautiful 60x 150 $ NATL. REALTY, : tees Circle. balance NW, R 7-3534, som 9 A . te acant so 5 Pp M. daily and Sunday. | GEORGETOWN—Outstandinge value: | MT. "PLEASANT | 3 bedrm or trap. ood ist-fil. plan: nice 40 | garden; me ios CHATEL, DE. 3. 1437 SILVER SPRING “AREA — Unturn. dRoncetown 1929 ts evailable at ten } | » o XCHANG JA. 7-5200 | 2419 ee iG oe HOME OWNERS We will help you te obtain money | to consolidate and pay off your outstanding Gobte | so you will have ’ obtain money me remodeling and modernization of your home will in many cases help rou reduce after to payments do your modernization When rou rovements to your home or cash for other pur woere and nd wou ee us to handle | ‘bbbe ina APEX ENG “NEERING. INC. {International Bidg. Suite 808 i319 F St. NW at | 2 bedrms and 1409 35th at be th. -be , 2-dbath Whitehaven Parkway. $130. eo eat AD 2-3100 nished or good NW —“« ane. James L ¢ : Co., ST. 3-7 r EM. _ $150. Call AD 23-3023 We've ‘GeitGED ¢ all —s March rent- s: have immediate need r un GEORGETOWN TOIT Wis Ave. Open| firn. Va_ rentals Fox Realty and . 2 bdrms. {twin si ret Bi 9.9217 20 Insurance, JA Unusual ‘charm an Gee os > COLORED, NW. — area : bath; private; co 5-2304 PROP. MANAGEMENT 44A NELLE LOWE CASSEL. REALTOR 1512 WISCONSIN av’ NW AD. 4-2118 Dixon 9290 all CASH IN ONE DAY—2d and 34 a TRUST LOANS. CALL EX 5-540, 3 roon WILL FINANCE or buy trust emp! epi rears confivential. RA. 3- 2312" ‘asu IN ONE DAY, 2ND FRU ST ‘So ans and notes purch. 3-7 a8 } KANSAS AVE. NW., 5310 house with garage near schools and easy transp after 7 Dd LANGLEY | PARK. bedrm a-path } bem. occ MR, EXT. moit§ bedrm. brick conv. schools and trans ’ $125. OL. 4-1983 “AVE. SE. ance CONFIDENTIAL @ND TRUST immediate » 9138 LOANS. CASH 1 DAY ME "$0624 | 3! cy GARAGES, SALE OR RENT 45 oe ctngt thins an 2 E SE.-S8 PER MONTH CONFIDENTIAL. 3-2313 MO SOL PT INANCE OR oN J TR : 1315—4 bedrms i : $100. LI. 6-193 BONTAGUE S STREET. five bedrooms. eee at: lor. $200 or 50222. WALKER & DUNLOP, INC: 1200 as. st. uw. NX. -3.bedrm. brk.. heat: bsmt.: cony. shops, | NO- p. FORESTVILLE, MD Sony. An- drews Fieid rambier | deree: kitehen,: Datie: oe Large ii $97 mo. RE. 5-5556 NO. FORESTVILLE, MD.--C: An . 2-bedrm rambler . patio extre large iot 6TH —tt PER 14TH *. T AIRMONT NW.-—$14 ra oN Sat s 3 ulil- in CA... irae: Rx Tt iat. water. spss eel, OFFICE, DESK SPACE RENT 46 Sects AREA | HEIGHT CORNER on MA AND SILV VER HILL : Nearby Marviands newest air-conditioned office bul) now ready fog_occupancy moon just om FOR TA - RENGDELING AND al arage an. RE. 7.0293 ois F i st & 2D TRUST UST LOANS. PErtE Pt ery hy e service, Reasonahie ratee Mrs LOUGHLIN, AD. 42240. DE 23-4487. 1750 Colambia Rd. Ww WIeTn? Tow as bus, my |. Prompt. ng > Its foea— Park) - d vou 2D. ; PURC HASED 18 WASHINGTON. HOU SING CORT Witt yInAnte or buy 2d trust nouiries confidential) RA 2313 MONEY oA EECOND TRUST buy od tr yet notes. D.C nd Reas. rates MORTGAGE & ORP : NA. 88-5839 FIRST a SECOND FRUBT LOANS BA TOW REALTY 1331 G NW. ME 8.2495 61 TRUST NOTES 2D TRUST NOTE, $3650 for $2400 ma Excel HU >. 3316 Chap aa Realty Co ar TRUST NOTES WANTED 61A 2ND TRUSTS wanted A a s ere a: oovrer. RA. 6-2 6 day _ eve. WiLL aur’ OR SELL 2D NOTES. MR. JAMES Di A TT SALE INVEST. PROPERTY TAKOMA PARK Duioseed 6 unfinished apt : U rentals pores $510 yearly wr -" 3.750 wi liberal financing availabie ; M DRAISNER 1025 Vermont Ave. NW.. NA. 8-8036 Eves.. HO. 2-7657 TRU st , NOTES 8 ree yourse f ar ve Managerr a j vyva 1200 smt 2) 351 PARKWOOD PL 22 hay om By. and bath: eas >t -water rage: excel. co $90 LINKINS co., } 7-868 818 N st nw DI ROCKVILLE AREA—¥ es, a a selection of 2 and homes. &75 to $115 bei U EL E BoGLEY & CO Eves. Mr Vilson Sth DOCTO 7 8U 'TABL = rm “~t oy OR'S Ot ‘ FOR DENTIST OR ry po Ya ce eFL, Wi NI ate CONDITIONED APT PLY RES Mi “2 ‘or ai’ we have & s, > $125 MO R 2 Realtors OL 913 tTth s' NW . bath : ay acres hag LE. mi bir! ran«ee re 0 mo. Li 23 \s. “ARLINGTON- 3-bedren. “detached in jal, separate di ning reer | and @ full Bsmt Large fence yard sumetiet ava) fable $127 50 per m LURIA BROS... JA. 7 -8500 Ist comm 38 heaton area, _te 1 ws bearm brk. ramb TH owas CLE * space availabie: |. also @ suite in this corivenient loca - tion “lowest. rental im town. Cali Ave 9 to 1-335 N.C CeITOL ST. 7 Farn Eycon tty + ggg | 485- if — anal tione } estadii shed rivate nd toilet. Wiscon- MD | SILVER SPRING AREA—2 and 3 bedrooms; rents from $95 to COMPANY. off! reatment rooms iver Sertas CARILLON HOUSE 250) sin ave. nw. EM. 2-8800 sublet room in ajflr- aa Conn. and L. ME WiLL. boone suite. 8-00 BUSINESS PROPERTY RENT 47 ST. NE.. pan ge me nm location ‘a’ Hu FLORENCE V. CIUF-| for any b evious business ond. *RA at Bto ance). * path.” powder rm. w THO- aM. ake eres : bsrnt - ° aemi es Minn. Ave. SE 0040. Eves.. JO. 9-9793. 3-Bedroom, 2 —- Colonial | First presentation of this most! sa) leable red-brick Colonial: deep as , Sere age e. rr a ot ame SHA} INON. & LUCH iS CO. | 5000 Conn. Ave. = KE. 7-1800. CHEVY CHASE, D. C L. HILIis brick and stone st fi and modern bric semidet LU. ¢ with dishwasher and disposal. Boor powder ice hed Call oe A. _9- 1463 7 it. | Baie | aun nee ack FINEST D. 4434 iy gree ag ST. NW. A LARGE FAMILY . be easily accommodated | this 6- bedr ’ y -ba hoen Brick and sem idetached (which means jess upkeep today kK. rut A brick rambler; FO | Wide center-hal with large rooms: powder room; 4 bedrooms, 2 t on 2d fi; 2 bedroom &, bath on 3d) f large closets throughout en pringdale, on ove shrubbery and 2-car earace. Vacant and ready to —F uy R oo tmmediately. For further mation cal Mrs. 6-8) EM. 2-9400 } Sit. 500—How would you like a spacious 4-bedr home near the circle, Dickinson. "Wo. PEN 2819 OTH ‘ST. NW. Pulton, left ¢ Out Wis. Ave iiton $683 MO.—$12,500! Convenient te Andrews ang Bollin e) -bedrms. brick, liv tchen. oe =, above price? This is a . ct quickiy 7 and . ~ on ly $3000 deun, Vennnt -$000, L, 176, F I LEY BILLINGS- Y possession REALTY CO.. EM. 2-2326 thi Pp CHEVY CHASE, D. C. to a | SACRIFICE—~Exe. . ww omnes transferred: semi-de rick home arranged ‘into storm windows = doors. new gas furnace. ep - ——. ~- aise back yd. pith An Good te ing. eee A Seer COREE women oa NEAR PENNA. AVE. SE. 4-year. 94 detached fetes Large hous W alker & Dunlop, Inc. | Realtors Uptown Office Ev 2- 6715) Se ing. this 4-bedem+-—Aooiritment Only! , “contains ne liv If you're interested in hux- din. rm oe — living. —_ nt ullt ee _ mm. , : 1-car garage cash deal over ist trust sci : ree Go Cou | ome . EM. 3-5600 ” Center. -_= pep into 2ini7-f. r. rm. firepl.. 17x party dining rm ern > the bed. basement with tion gas Sey Nice corner | ot. Substantial cash ap A. CAROZZA CO. 2412 Minn. Ave. 6.E LU. 4-0040 eves.. LU. 1-7775 . Cc. “Pen " Tambier on a ‘78x150- ft ~~ 3 bedrooms, 2 baths recreation: room, 2-car @arage. ded area. | venience The family wey love it. father espe- | 3 cial) at 3,750. Call LEGUM &| GERBER REALTY CO.. EM. 2.! eo tt 9pm CHEVY CHASE, D. C BLESSED SACRAMENT PARISH Spotiessliy clean. beautifully redec-' orated insatde and out easy to care) or cotonial WIth slate roof Huge master bedroom and 2 twin- size bedrooms, 1 off stair landing 1*a baths, on 2d fl.;: magazine- type kitchen. immense Screened living porch with awni ngs. Gas h Ww. heat. Wall-to-wall carpet! DE on entire ist fl a—ane other extras re mat ax 3 town el Own nf accept offer in t les A and built. in ga- Our finest list. rs 5 (EVES. MR. BLUME RA. 3-9450), Leo Bernstein & Co. 1415 K St. WW. ME. 8.5400 -old detached brick “Peseth pascmens = oe recrea- eat. Nice + eee anteat cash re- ._ A. CAROZZA CO. 2412 a Ave. 85E . 4-004 LU. 1-7778 OPEN SUN. 1-5 BRICK—6 ROOMS 6613 24TH PL., HYATTSVILLE Riggs Manor—Lewisdale Ares LU TOW! vé SUBURBAN. °PM. 2 9400. ~ CHEVY CHASE D.C. Agsecent to Wilson H | Alice Deal , igh ae and | | $15. 750 FOUR (4+ BEAUTIFUL | NIALS AVATLABLE. aes Spacious center-hali sag 4 pian, tiv Tm., separate-din. rm.. wder rm and all elec kit., including disposa) and dishwasher 3 bedrms & bath - B floor: full dry bsmt nice DIRECTIONS: Out Mich. Ave., turn left om Agar Rd. (route 410). past 2-bedroom apt araie entrance to room apt. on 2d detached residence level jot in close-in easy walking distance transportation on streetcar or bu is will not last. To iffape BUCHANAN t hal! colonial foeturing New — er bat as Moedrm finance to) No more precious hours wasted on u bis. purpose family room in ideal base- n eal home| IMMEDIATE POSSESSION | C. LOCATION lovely ultra-| rooms, 3% baths, usable at- heat. __.217_K_ St. NW. RE. 7-2137 INO CASH TO Gi rm., Just Mr.) W ~~ Beleghbor- NEAR PE NNA. AVE. S.E. | “ZFAMILY BARG BARGAIN This is an exceptional Sapertens ity ct. ME. 8-1143 ti i a” m. J. Wacky HA SALE, D. C._ HOUSES 64)SALE, D. C., HOUSES GRAHAM NW. COLORED—NORTHEAST Hat ONLY 93 DOWN $695 DOWN |. SRLY tears ’ city "ona will sacri lose-in, NE. 6 rms. full barmt fui semidet. brick large roome nother _~ Lng? inet v porches, beck a asemen odern thruont Call = sais sacrifice ew Call u ; be BSMT —FRONT PORCH-—BRICE | Stop — Jook = lala... to. the Pah howe *. » Wevely aa: ek wis et) $905 BOWN ront and n't lose SPRING ssaaaben “brick meme in orth lars oul heat, pot ats on my lovely front = a yards, gare me's A... 7 errific tow et only IST NATL REALTY RE. 7-353) Cal Day, Nite & Sun Colored Trade HOME AND INCOME S-room brick, soned ist commer- cial. suitable for any type smal) business or rooming house. in good) DOWN condition -- Pries for uick 1ST COMMERCIAL REDECO + . anes ..t enh aAD.: TOSST OF) — is @ large semidetached brick ; fi BRITT ased for hy ~ COLORED—CHAPEL $950 DOWN 3. ° rtunity to buy exc llow alue. itt w apiokea? 2 so ’ has many uses—ca used redecorated. gas heat plus many desirable extras, EL OAKS $2 B00 down. eves. HA. 2-7 ’ 302. let trust: LORED OVERLOOKING CITY IST NAT'L REALTY | RE. 7-3531, call day, nite & Sun. el. bun-| Colored, Income Property ra Ss. Di. “s S Seth Ae i co ants priced. and —~} MENT RP ate ssh Both eves. has |W. rn. Calomiris Inv. Corp. Realtors ed 9F, Nw, S lores ree. Sait | 442 Buc anan St. NW. = OPEN SUN. 24 “Row brick 6 basement. | Ree nai hborhood. hee yard, wee home ery clean. RED EHRLICH a eo Ace NW a? 3.04590. co | apm. to i J rv" | al M.. §NO.7 2h | 7 ove in with deposit gas bh sma!) By appt. only. Call | CAMPANELLA & CO. LO Ae 5 BDRMS.. 2 KI TTCHENS a — vy redec je hn ELLIS x : COL ORED WOODRIDGE $500 DOWN-—$13,500 sell this new! rms nice yard: e¢ves.. ITZ & CO., NO. oT . NE : Braoeh wwe oi i §-11 fea sherman Circle | Substantial 7- rm brick home 2 en-! losed s in| Must db), Dobrow or terms. | trade PRICE REDUCED ys: hac A & CO 34113 ves.. JU OLORED & EMERSON STS " “$9 95 DOWN Fh ed brick. concrete colonial es, 6 rm $15,895—$895 D TAKE OVE LARGE Gi LOAN ve mo. payme rm, B % rot ios 2 aris, WE. aay 27 Kearney COLO acti Lo | | Att this ee BLIT aw wt ae gs , 7827 colored) BOTH VACANT. OPEN SUN. | TO 6 Saturday By Ap petntment Only 1330 GALLATI S Lovely semi-det GI 1(C $500 down é' Ix. Bus 1 mod. and net a a | rar 7a « HO. 2-795 VACANT & MASS. AVE LY $395 DOWN Co! onial Prt me pried w ; TIN brick home in ex- , SE. — A-l ehea gas heat emt Hounen in . Ine. | yo this pind 2 TO 6 412 DELAFIELD PL. NW. Thie Colonial row brick is one of! the best buys in Petworth. 7 large rms. Full aqsemens. he - earace omens ONLY $395 DOWN & Bo Tae ina 6 FE —A-~1 = = d.. full Daemt.; A. John D. Neumann Pres... Ine. OLORED.. aT N al _NA 8-233) at nw 6 ige. me ted beth. oll h-wiu $12,500 $1250 dn. Suitable 2 femi! les vac. DU 17-4478. RA 6- | COLORED— 1844 L lew nthly parmente oD roe "betek automatic cas irme heat. Call owner. LI 7-6841 ceseowowss. | sure R THESE a MANY OTHERS CALL ‘BEATRICE M. REED Lk: | 5 Si NE. S75) t : | COLORED—- POSSESSION 4TH & IRVING ST. NW. _ CORNER BRiCe t SpectaGilar cut in Brice 1? Owner says sell for $795 down te res onel tie parts "Tot al ae onig DI Paks ‘de yh B. . Smal! monthly DU. 7 — TLL 9 P. M. parents to sell his house for thie OLOR prise. Call immediately Call i 6008 Reed St., NE oon grag 3620 Gentieman's Estate. —_ over th colin & LEVINE HO. 2 District line. 5 rms... , J e bath lot 120x200; fruit trees ‘and garéen. | artly finished bsmt.. ol] h.-w, erms arrange ed $7501 DOWN 6 RMS. SGEMIDET. BRI ONLY. .$90 .PER.MO. ‘ Will buy this modern brick home. | 3 full drms., large modern full Demt.. on this one CK we COLORED—VACANT DETACHED BRICK niy $395 Down qm & Bo ‘Garolina oe.: A-l shape; 6 & > full bemt. Priced right Inc hea Will consider S. j}HLIN—AD. 4-2240 —$1000 DOWN 1 Spotless -* rm ard, rm., JAMES 0050 r ae ae John D. Neumann Prop., "0 4 927 151 h St. NW * COLORED — : apts. 7th and De- | catur. 2-apt brick oo =. baths. $12.950 th JAMES ARR EE 3. 14h0 AD 4 BO50 $100 to $150 Dn. AND LOW MONTHLY PA APTS.. 3-4 SPECIAL $995 DOWN BEAUTIFUL WOODRIDGE | Fee. here it is. The bercain x t ener must leave to = net accent anrthinge Srthin | —t ~ the buy of the year. Call COHN & LEVINE HO. oan : . COL —Move in w ith $250 dn. ied -6650, pew cond. 6-rm. brk bth Gas heat. DI. 7-0830, RA YMENTS rms.. bath heat: ex- MR or Ll. 6-1610. Eves Colonial Investment Co. 923 15th St. NW. 2 ADAMS st NW. Colored—W hat a = $8 Dn. NE. sb 3 good, wrt homes. 6 rme.. gar newly L rh 4." Py } fv = 7730 COL.—i606 H St. BE 8 rms. 2 full baths brick and di stinction s which one could fee! ere fous to oF To ins Occupied by owner. tiy 3- “B60 tll 9 p CHEVY CHASE the Agar Rd. school, turn right at Signs and follow arrows. Sam See this center-hall Colonial brick on ige. lot in one of Washington's finest home areas. Den and lav. ao f) 3 bedrms 2 tiled baths rm frpl.: fenced iot For © see. OL. 2-7662. Mr. Her irn right a? (route 410). go Riggs Manor shopping center, oo wg ae follow arrows. Bi; itz & Co. "NO. 7.0195 NE. Branch 2225 Kearney 8t. OPEN, 1 TO 6 79TH AVE. N. FORESTVILLE rambler, equipped. Kit storm Windows and doors fenced Tear VETERANS buy all a! a D wil ithe a homes of e "oF 14x18 living room. fu . bath is } besemen | 2-3250 CHEVY CHASE, D. Cc 3706 Huntington “ NW. La rge Fami Com tely redecorated aa tier v7 —_ fioor. center hall rm modern kitchen a 7. Open Today for You CONVENIENCE FROM 11 A. M-DARK MR: RYAN ON PREMISES ‘HO. 2-4907) Tremod- | _ DIRECTIONS: Model house Delafte a at ne sat of $10,750, . 1%: § pe.Cod.brick..of-?- baths gerace Beau- rn ia iniu 7 , = ’ LI. 3-8205 mn Delafield st. to 2 ~ e home Frederick W. Berens. Saies inc 272} 722 L St. NW NWA 8 -5000. Laos “‘harmin c ) WwW $995 DOWN—S80 MO. 831 Marietta Pl. NW. i m , Vacant. 7-rm. dbrk. home, automat tached garage: small jot. « one of the most A good buy at $24 750.-Celi LBGUM EM & “wine owe co — P canvenien "CRROZIA CO. Minn. Ave Ae 4-0040 Only $13.250. Can't be beat OPEN UNTIL DARE 4)? Emerson v ‘ACANT- IMMED. fn 5E LU 1 T7775 | a | I FAMILY im * TT ranrrer ;7 , wee rere ving room. dining St » 7 — ne th = - oil heat po git Rrra} TF a Os A oie — « ‘ n - ey in ioning aes a. a pit Only $230 0 full price $13.250 Shon Lime °. a ss har wr anve CO. RA 6-2200 By es RA 3-4 1ST COMMERCTAL PROPERTY ‘a ; y | reet 6 rm re bt n 5] will carry your o : sa m 2? Minr eve eke NTT KR 24) AR ‘ LA 4- LU w40 mn Ave Eves Neh orRA NEWEST RIGGS PARK VALUE "THE SOUTHERNER™ lt by Maurice Lipnick “S15, 950 weal nol a rlable in summer—? io keep heat. Attic ventilating fan to carry off the heet. Brick and oncrete front porch to give shade. Enjoy cool Southern breezes. 241: Min SE 9 Ke 4-0040 LO. 7-3133 , ESTATE, “TA 96141 at pe 3 - e ouse ee ae ARF A aD > doctor's office * ot b Ine AM G roger per ¢? a ot ARNOLI EM. 3- n ven ; ign peacec Too r bedrooms, full dining fuze equipment heater 4 _— bath re I : + ames oe sys \ Fe > oe eu these larce ‘> eat in with al x'ra values weer in reaoms . , Piu 7 room ans road de hot-water ~7- : enc : ished ign ré p.enty @ i reation room. 40-galion .@n more fer you we jeave te see TERMS—CONVENTIONAL—-FPHA--VA Bus in sight of furnished model home. OPEN DAILY TIL 8 P. M. DIRECTIONS: Out Rises Ré. to $0. Dak to Insraham 6t. N.E ut MENSH & kota Ave. turn right 2 bikes. am St. §.E. and mode| home. wl ¢ CO. Otfics SID 1613 Eye &. NW. d large : + with? outside entrance and picture win- dow ic tlecations, nr. 9th and Madison ROLD G" FATON NO [covonrp _ Fe on * bed = Sunday | aaa ~ COLORED AT 4720 5TH ST 2 Baths, 2 +i. 16th clean CARR EX AD 4-8050 Be COLORED $500 DOWN | New nouces — 2 bedrms in bemt Very pen FRED eta 1018 Vermont Are. SW. ST. 3 0450. AFTER 8 PM. NO 7.0448. COLORED—? ORTHWEST 9TH AND GALLATIN Semi -det e ~ on Ba 1 eond. & rms... » kit wee and paid, "Call tee CEM. ‘REAL eet ty a . Call AD v ah RCH—GARAG _-PETWORTH SS: — 2 ENC his ac i — Bric pas MODEL. HOME or es cn” -1477 =DIBTINCTIVE HOME 2! FT. TAPESTRY B NW. mA. co OLORED , i rs Cry CAPE COD STYLE OPEN SUNDAY 706 Reed St. ‘just over D Bungalow all rms j andcablie roker® to Fastern urry STRAT RELY cath cal! en nite & Sun_ NTION- ‘ST. NW. ATT, c Z " . m 1232] a “RANDOL! 3 po oon 3% baths, Front reas . garage. term: FRED EHRLICH 018 Vermont AFTER 6 e ~~ Kenilworth right to Minn. Ave left to house Mr ¢-1964 “LYMAN INC., ST. 3-3520 H ST. NEAR Y ' | for professional 14 rms., 4 baths on terms with sma to respons ane Bn yt apni to COHEN _ME COLORED -—Nr om ito! at ti tourist nT .2094 Min im $-rm doen paye- bath, aute, 2 baths. aute, 6 rm bath & ay TU. Saher, RED led bath r reconaitior eed row brick eos 300 GI we ' > me A NE. & rms 1345 Good Hope LU. 2-5976 RED GI OR VETS TENNESSEE bor INC 4-4 0 ‘aa he 131 | | OLOR 133 INGRAHAM ‘ST. Nw utiful row or. ce featurin ; m™m rmin i. Vet and 5000 ver MR ’ _ -_- _ 0} TERLOCRING CITY | 6 larce rms fu and bath con- ed alls attr breakfast rm or small den. ” bed- rms _ 2 fire places. de- ‘cach. encotien "oanal ub- © WrPrit "year, q aotial” &T : Solr > . con oneD—2 224i 13th $794 DOWN UPPER PETWORTH Cape Cod 6 rooms. 2 rear poreses, nea Das wis REDECORATED crate . 2.077% $750 DX 50 DOV OWN én 83 $00 PER’ MO. : Wii y's 385 DOWN OPEN 1 SR SUN "Low what you ve been. . yme its. ; a7 beautify i NEW ms) er 4.4 - ~, i COLO ~ PEPE REAPI A V ygtn & wo"" ¥ peut gt me RE EIST POR TE VIP TA POR G2 lose Ar AY e> a 79 5 EON RT Py & Pe ey a pighy 4 Se ae Me ob be ee martes Th Ae ae poets Cee ROT RRR Py eee a LIAN MUG Sey ep) bm ating tune at PBL LPI LTV AO RD THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD sa - BD i grVurnsg we reser rep Rare tay 4 PAS masters RAE RUA >see * 4 Pea Up gg GA PrP er,” ~™. her as PRED FPG T Pe eae = Jad mye CVO IL POPP RAY POAT ~ Se ae eee ooh CED, jt'y ee Pye: Vea re AK " HPL E OE LESTER EN HOE a e a ay, i = bevel WORE Saturday, March 20, yng 2 Peer ae og 2. uy Pigs Ds “+ St Be ey at Mee EP RON Ras, ris ALL, D. C., HOUSES 64 4 mous a mpiccesins ace | 6TH "e EMERSON \w. ONLY $795 DOW & heat this colonial brick home: | ,. modern thrnveut basement & must sacri fice. y (payirents.: tsiti@pee HN & LEVINE “Tio. 2- 3620. ~ COLORED— Possession HOME AND i OME 4 Moderf co onial = k home is very wnueval. Has complete t fach floor with modern kitchens baths, ofl bot-water heat. an one ee comp dete ly Ay age for hase OHN & LEVINE HO 2:3620 POSSESSION ~~ COLORED- - WASHINGTON SALE, SUBURB, HOUSES RYLAND ~ ‘Bethesda Split Level Rambler 4 Bedrooms, Plus Study On large, beautifully lot: entrance hall, ve atKe separate ewaee mati - Bie sround-leve cma. rec rm. with Geentase. Under 40 Owner eri Washington ’ Call Eg SCHWAB. . 232-5800: OL. 2-1409. or OL 4-7693 BETHESDA—$2 ts OP Unusually at- onial Has rec maid's “parace Tas ES eves., BEART OF NF (DER ROOM EM. 2-2326 til BETHESDA NEW BRICK RAMBLERS $18,950, OPEN DAILY-—-1-DARK 3 BEDROOM§—2 TILED BATHS ALL GE KITCHEN, _ IN- CLUDING D18 HWASHER AND GARBAGE _DISFOS- ~ COLOREI $750 DOW N SHERMAN CIRCLE NW. peset barrsin of the vear at base ment. eae hot ALL OWNER RA. — biz ORED— 900 DO AST Wh @ 2 BATHS. 2 PORCHES | 6 fms... full bemt.. | AN oi pt an. {E. 8. 1080 TIL L 9 p.m. ~ COLORED A NLY $2500 CASH REQUIRED pe ROSEDALE AVE. DIRECTIONS: Out Wise ave. past Bank of Bethesda turn right = Rosedale to our Open Chevy Chase Realty Co. RRENTWOOD wor. > $1. 000 DOWN ; loan rica l arse arate din. rm. mod wood bath full be ranep mac eh p pu 7 4 i™M & ‘at 1¢ ’ bie 42462 "ATI aS “RE ALTY 1 BETHES DA NR. D. C Winning Rambler Handsome redwood panel- room. complete bedrooms 2 carport. Large giass wall to id bath poe COLORED — VACANT IOIS E ST. NE recreation garden si01e BAT. LA Pron YAR DD th bedroom iD Y NEW HOUSE CON FRE D EHRLICH Vermont Ave. NW '-0450 »APTER 8PM. NO 17-9448 COLORED——-WOODRIDGE Special. -Must Sell 72164 rH DOWN This rambler and maybe eae i-end tied communite “near wy ation and excelient chools rs Reeve oO *"t NELSON HUGHES Conn. Ave EM. 2-9696 BETHESDA NO. OF NAVAL HOSPITAL Charming brick with slate roof new - j ture window fully equip kit rm.. powder rm. on Ist fir.; 3 huge bedrms., 2 baths on 2d fir recreation rm., full bath in bright basement, with entrance at garden level Screened attached garace i jot 170-ft. deep. Price, $28,500. Among more costly homes. Office open Saturday ——- Sunday TO WV N 4S SU 7 Th R RA? N BURNT MILLS WTLLS—Lec rambier. shaded (i pease’ : picture wi n- n street in a set sast ST. NE PAYMENT oo bern Z-yT litz & - a Imn BaAaaid — house YA g. 6397 COLORED ediate ( off East in family- APT 7 BRICK ALLISON ST. NW EM $400 usual closets. | bath roughed-in gar: : JOUSES WANTED to BUY 65 A CASH BUYER id WIT SELL, YOUR HOME Qn ZERMS. Li. 6-2000 $1 \ASu | for poor | nome All sections a NA. 8.6397 31 Famb ler Porest or $17,950 DETACHED BRICK COLONIAL of three bedrooms with 22-ft. living room with fireplace, side porch, family-sised dining room fully equip. kit full basement with outside entrance one block to bus GL also PHA financing arranged REALTY a WA -5134 CHEVY. CHASE. story brick conventional tha Principals only. JU. 8B ~S aa hy ALL. CASH Md.? - &. oF BUDNEY HE. 4-3906, NA 8-6978 TSES WANTED cash. Immed. actio KINSKY ST 3- 5311 MMEDIATE Cc ASH in your ee for I house, tion room wit! rust. Reasonable down Can be carried completely for $150 monthiy OL. 2-1096 CHEVY CHASE. MD.—-4 large rms., 1% baths. det.. porch. garage. Nice yard. _— 500, $2500 down UN 2.89 8 TEVY CHASE. MD. $19,500 ,; OL fer your home nearby Md. Call us now for top rices. BOWER BROS. AP. 7-8400 TINGS urcentiy Seeded in SE Ma Free ap- | MICHAEL COUGHLIN 1-817 21 mS NEARBY MD. HOME “shoppin end J. VICTOR DICKEY. AP. 7 7-8080_ 4 st suburban transp. within 5 eaty walk drms.. 2 baths on f) ex level with many beautiful mm... 2-car ga- rage. truly ni family home in a spi —F location and neigh- borhood. F 3 EM 5504 Conn EVY CHASE, MD. 20 FE. LELAND ST Cc oe TRUE apy hy Bchoo! be RIGHEST CASH OFFER on property lot submitted to us 24 hours. MR DELLE. ST 3.352 0. JO inte 2 3- bedroom ~4 nearby ua SFE ibat nom al cash “2 st 36 r ST. 3-7368 3 clean ie ne carry \ ri ~/ & ahi KITT tert vi vy ONE SIDE P ON rHE OTHER POPU LAR ROLLINGWOOD HAMLET AREA. FEATURES IN- “LU FIRST FLOOR POW BEDROOMS Mary! and RROWN TR. REAL ESTATE 8.3000. If No Ans HE. 4-5343 SPOT CASH HOME. OR TRUST x & (1) RE AND ROOMS AND FLOOR. BASEMENT. RECREA TION ROOM AREA FIREPLACE AND ar ar cry Th N ‘ i ‘TE . 1643 8 ¢ 1 o% > ad! ~ OTHER THAN OPEN CALI MRS ; 88-4080 EVENINGS WEEKENDS, WO. 6-0724 Directions: Connecticut Avenue 2. Lehae Street, right te Prop- RUPE RT. MOHLER, JR. REALTOR 1223 Connecticut Avenue fe o., ST. 3-720 ; WILL BUY PROPERTY Brick or frame; white or col. Quick & Mit MI 220: eves. LA. 6-514. TH I. ary LE, SUBURB, HOUSES MARYLAND Montgomery County 4 VERLAWN ~-Exce) down payment rambler 2 as aged NTH and CHEVY CHASE VIEW Charming custom bullt brick Co- ionial tn immaculate condition. 3 win-size drms. wit uge closet side hall throush te kit financing landscaped ,5 vases La a Por Apr ft LA’ SDC O fh £8 4 hh BS ut HEVY CHASE, MD.—Between clubs just west of Conn. ave mai colonial, 2 2 ba den pow der “room rrnry +> > Y °S cc Immac. 4 bette brick home. contairz ul } \—~w and location W. a. WRIG HT. n he LEGU} & REALTY co ‘EM 2- c WAGE. MD. — ¢Kirk«te- ; high quality brick ne } p ‘M3 3500 are sire ‘ GERBER weet os) —— éunve ; 55! {« PARK $13 ‘eee BRICK CAPE COD of 4 bedrooms full basement entrance Alum storm windows and doors for Whole house with drive on side purchased with $1350 down PHA and conventions financing arranged also ie AL da ae. wae WA. 77-4458 ESTATES—$17.450: 6 brick rambter por many extra features loan: convenient terms. LO. 5 GARRETT PA ESTATES ...3-! a ish sher. dis ist home aref ul consi ideratix favorab le erice OL. » at this OL. 2- 6649 Eves Dae) "ALI [IED REALTY CORP ET} ‘a ¢ } ) : HESD A. he 18,30) _ x 0 t 1. E B od THs . , mpilete th ‘ee I risposal ; — NI a. BEI DROO MS — CONN “AVE. reem corner 925 N y RETHEPA . mS 26s , brick rambDier Rl . > FSTATES po nal full ame D ‘iis ; - ‘ " ! ‘ Gl 2 NEW RAMBI ERS A‘ REE ACH ¢& LENMONT. OP} Denley p! o4 Nay corner lot OPPOSITE BETHESDA COUNTRY ™™ >» ; ’ iw ¥ m s » Je Open Owner $2000 down till 10 p N Sun 74 view? Siti jated pay nente 5-0736 Kt NSINGTON $12.250—open Sun- day 1 to 5, @ rambier with onace 369 5 ese ramble irehouse » baths. 3 large bedrooms, sepa- Tate cininre POO, wi th wailed pana-. kit ~? 71 ri@ht te St ey OGLEY's . 4 . , KENSINGTON AREA ATTR ACTIVE 4- vr.- old clapboard rambler paint ed. whi J with green trim 3 twin-size bedr nice- size m with 2 th phan saane pict and dining ell: ige with breakfast nook; white picket- “taneed back- i with trees , th rough me o7 ay Monday and no hish press ire gales man will fo as DIREC TIONS Out aves ) ‘ox t “then 2 biks. »s “OUR Co farther ' Open Sign +: "wonderful ment Price me )- 2326 tis pm. ves NW Brick oupatel. bedrms wit f irepi. 923 15th St rm lo ce Walking distance to. under BUSH. OL. 4 ETHESDA gti Dk r this roarkline white, & Cod 4 bedroo 4 Rive iu “oe -3399 th raised firepince. electric ores Mago “SUSIE Ve WATWOOD — ' reh. special communtiy proud anc wner transterred. ssibie © RIGHT. oO! \ : Exe 2.6900 oO i ‘Thao eee te ais wera BS ™” ROCK CREEK FOREST CHEVY® CHASE, MD. Spacious 7-yearold brick home with a living room and fireplace. din- room with adjo . moder kitch aa ength closets and 2 reation r h Bryant gas heat. ry built-in ger n yard com and shopping makes this May be. buy f HG. SMITHY CO. Sill 15th St. NW. ST. 3.3300 ROCKVILLE completely and well furnished bungalow On ck possession. On JU. 89-1876 till 9 pb. m. ARKSIDE REALTY. ROSEMARY HILLS GREET Sree InN_A HOME YOUR OWN noe Cc hemlet c'o 8 i LANIER DR. ONLY $19,950 OPEN SAT. SUN., 1 TO 6 west on East-West pm, mile to Sundale Dr undale to to Laniet and right 8817 Northwest Realty Co. REALTORS OL. 4-6867 SILVER SPRING | Langley Shopping Area | }-bedrm brick sh oat pee Convenient location Term W OODMOOR-. “$17; 950 3-bedrm. brick rambier. Full patio in rear. Outdoor Pishpo Home in immaci j- md "condition Beautiful lot. Terms CAPE COD—$18,950 floor all fire. basement. Beautiful jot JAMES C. CONLEY 6 C 8710 Georgia Ave JU 54-5700 tu 9pm SPRING: Large brick. r-ha olonial in ale nei ~ berheed: 23x13 livin , a ign fireplace. big din o_o ant kitchen featuring built in breakfast ness 3 spacious bedrms. and Pp. m. ILVER SPRING _ Center-enirance 3. lonial , ——— ‘ vere spaciou = full basement with outside calrenen. stairway to full attic yard, wv must JU SILVER sPRING OPEN SUN..-14 3 BEDROOM BRICK GARAGE STOP! |! not positively sell. 9.7401 cs m™ma- new refrigerator. full . ares level fenced let and at features that I'm sure will de. ht you pegeciey since the price is only $17 may even go GI co ' DERECTIONS Out Georgia Ave oN -—<- left > 10010 SIDNEY sig ‘and our open oni al investment Company 923 FRING St. NW. » Baths nny All brick baths, for on! to GL. o ol . jocat ions. Terrific a pre in exeeliont | Cc t all i Lissdel “4 F SILVER “BPRING- BY $2500 DOW ASSUME G 6-room br ‘ek Colonial, ens Bales OWNER 1. TRUST Step neigh - finished ns. Price assume brick large, expansibie room, fireplace. din- Suchen with breakfast 2 blocks to schools. one biock 0 AGENCY MOOR it ‘ $-5555 daily and Sunday SIL VER SPRING VALUE Expe pandible Cape Cod in good neisth- borheod. close in. Recreation room. Lovely vard with Anchor fence Brick ince preced for quick Price $15.7 l 9- 2-story , Separate din. rm.; } close to schools and shopping $13,500. Owner, JU. 9-066! SPR.—By owner, 3-bedrm. brick colonial. $2500 down. assume GI mortgage. Price $16.500. LO. 4-0831 - base grounds andecaped and fenced _W.( C. & A.N. MILLER REAL opers of a Susine Valley ~- fully th bn. Tm kitch.. Myr. Zabreck. 526 TAKOMA PARK, , MD.— —White brick 5 storm doors and windows 220: close to churches. schools doors from trans.: oi] ft. 2-dr. GE refrig.; for sale by owner. JU. 5.0297 VIERS MILL, BY OWNER NO DOWN PAYMENT TO GI $9975 2-bedrm. bungalow: many extras: conv. trans., school. stores Must sell this weekend! No agents 4526 Bennion rd 2 Two SLY tamilined ki it. exce! DUY love ~ finished. bsmt... In cond throughout An ww = 3 custom-built home on LI EN SHERWIN 4241 “Wis Ave 3-4450 WESTMORELAND 1 HILLS White brick house on A wooded lot STANHOPE C ASE 7-6950 Res.. EL. 6 SILVER SPRING 3870 ec- WHEATON ria 3. oa “bric : con- age , ed with being uinton.. left | AREA WHEATC 67) SALE, SUBURB. HOUSES 67 SALE, SUBURB, HOUSES 67 ND — a 6-ROOM “oRIC nie Coto CORAL New-house conditio eenter-hall an, fall dining rm. ~““e~ 4 tile loor in bemt.. very large level let Gl or FHA financing ranued, Call Mrs. Cox or rLAs KE ALTY full bemt.. storm windows. venient school oes bus; $13.7 , LO. 4-808: WOOD ACRES 6012 COBALT ROAD 3-BEDRM.. 2-BATH COLONIAL OPEN SAT.-SUN., 1-5 P.M. Pirst fl. has liv. rm. with fireplace. lovely paneled den race, din lovely wooded lot elementary, parochia] high schools APPROVED PURCHASER ONLY Directions: Drive out Mass. ave. to Welborn dr.. right to Cobelt left to house OL. 2-2123 TILL. 9 P pees W. 7936 Wisconsin Ave ~ WOOD ACRES GI LOANS ARE NOW AVAILABLE ON NEW HOMES | | wooD ACRES CONSTR. CORP. 4- O° oO 6-8051 WoODsOS AREA bi rms.. a rambler. a $16.500; $1. own: no Agents. Owner, JU. 8-1330 WOODMOOR 4-BEDROOM CAPE COD = = Soe ' rm., firepl.. be i a has pairwen to 2d | Pull bemt lot. In Bt. biks from pub. school. Only $16.500 GRAHAM 6&6 CO., JU. 5.6010 It's So Easy to Get to So wonderful when you get there Newly dec. 2-bedrm. brick bungalow in Bethesda. Near davii¢ht $14,500 with terms to suit sinson Real Fstate Eves.. EM. 3-9317 BY OWNER—1~yr -old 2-bedrm. red |, Wood rambijer. $14,500. OL. 4-6215 CASH for Viers Mill homes in food comlition Mr 4.7017 I Je rhneon De You Like The Homes ‘Ghown HOUSE BEAUTIFUL Here is an exciting 3-bedrm. ram- bier in & group designed by Chas Goodman. Dramatic window walls. $14.950 with low down payment 2612 Henderson ave Wheaton LO. 5-1456 Sun 2-6 NEAR 4 CORNERS Brick rambler DREAM kitchen, large expansion attic, 25-year Gl joan. LEE FREW PLATT, JU. 9-7018 HAVE YOU SEEN THIS NEW MASTERPIECE OF MODERN LIVING BETHESDA—NEAR NIH OPEN DAILY 1-DARK 9911 Old Georgetown Rd. PACIOUS NEW BAusLES oe PAROE LEVE AR CE PAYM EXCLUSIVE WITH Webster Realty Co. WO. 6-8244. OL. 32-0447 of OL. 6-6993 10 ACRES LANHAM. approx. 4'4 acres clear bal. wooded. Good 2-bedrm ramb with log.burni = 7 a i bsmt Oil ea Abo mm 913.950. Reas GRACEN'? S OTT TODAY'S BEST BU ROCK VILLE—$/ 3-bedrm. rambler on el mee kit it YS ow 4 VL Im jlate ADDroximatety $95 PA _— 894" per: VOO D—$15, : 50 Cod. on ss kit ESTATES rambier on 3-bedrm a“ oS pe lee lot Seri40- “tile. bath. full bemt. Assume GI GARRETT PARE Large 3-bedrm. brick . lot ¥.- down. $85 at 8. and insurance ARD R. SCHAFER OL. 2: 5441 till 6 Dd. m DELIGHTFUL VIEW ¢ lose in Silver Spring. Almost 3-Dbedroom brick rambler beautiful sheded lot Price A 3, Call Jv -8010 ttl) § 7 ~ a l NTGOMERY INVESTMENT «& INSURANCE CO NEAR SCHOOLS. rambler, t JU daily and Sunday ‘til § pm 7 ™ 7 GOODMAN DESIGNED MODERN $13,900—$83 month. Scientifically planned for comfortable living on 1 level, in Wheaton dishwasher fireplace. LO. 5-3118 a tt-« Ivanhoe st NO CASH—GI- 4 BEDROOM POTENTIAL KENSINOGTON—Spotiess Cape Cod with expansible attic in choice lo- cation. Full basement. Only $12.- 950, subject to approval. Call Mr. Iby, NO. PREDERI Inc, _ CK W. BERENS What's So Wonderful About this home in Silver Sprin 3-bedrm. brick Colonial. exce) priced at $17.500. Side hall 21-ft. li with fireplace arate din lg kit master bedrm., lied bsmt bath. Terms to suit you Robinson Rea! Estate JU: -T+Tiit7 Eves, JU: 5-7784 | MODERN COLONIAL 2 bedroom 2-story masonry asbesto: home. fenced large lot little as S76 D FHA or conventional haaneine MAKE OFFER Priced at $9.700 10% GI ome — od CHAPMAN RE AL ¢ Mrs. Boniger. AP 7280 disposal, enhan ¢? lentiy with - i- Growing-Room Theat ts , what you will say when brick ‘Sane Cod. “The spacious liv ing Pm. features. a- lovely. picture window and paneled fireplace. that is an invitation to charming éve —_ at pees 2 serene on ist fi f Pull das ght walk- out bsmt the kind of a lot and you have dreamed been unable toa Located in convenie! ? make an appt LO. 17-9122 or 7-8837 _ JM BRITT LO until eee | VETS—NO DOWN PAYMENT | ‘No Cash Settlement Charges $13,650 h rete cipal PER iding P THREE BE DROOM ULL BASEMENT h IEW CERAMIC TILED BATH SPECTACULAR OFFER | Directions Mill rd signs to Drive out Geernie ave heaton City Ww “WHEATONAIRE” model OPEN SUNDAY, DAILY, 12 ‘TIL 6 T. N. LERNER & CO. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS . gr. 6408 GEORGIA AVE. ¥.W.. ‘ Interest ntrance ° MONTH Taxes and Insu BR rance CK RAMBLERS “DIN! NG AREA EQUIP. KIT HEN to Viers Mil! rd fo} Vie turn right e. le following direct onal 10 ‘TIL DARK TU. 32-1136. 9 AM TO > PM A im further information call James 916 “Ellsworth Drive leading to ter- By jimmy Hatlo athe dae \( , and junior rd. Robertson, sealer | LE, SUBURB, HOUSES "MARYLAND P] laying Peekaboo iind exquisite is this charming Oakview Elementary Schoo! shopping, churches portation. There's rm Kitchen with looking out to paneled day t den or 3d bedrm. Pull atti 0 EVES. wR “syuonte rr ste - Bern & Cx NW 8 - 540% ; RAMBLER ON ALM¢ ¢ I AC JRE Loc neon | —Bectric” ‘ritchen” with Oven basement bedrooms with out Mi NY sreseae A RY INVESTMENT & INSURANCE CO COUNTRY SPECIALS ‘ rm _bungal ow, 2 lots bed acre $tl.0u TO OWN A BEAUTIPFUI r IRNT ai To VI brick hall rooms for ILLAGE All practi center Lit gracious Bu . m PAYMENT $50 MONTH plus settlement all for qualifying veteran to this charming two-bedrm fully equipped kit. ted om corner shady lot satis ASSOCIATES 7 4 WA ill ¥ 9-002 Off! ce DOWN WA : Country Living In the heart of Bethesda. New 4. bedrn 2- PD GF r po ri home ter * -* ly wit h b |. Korzendorfer C OL. 4-8111 Ti - ortho: $9950 f l6xi4 with fire _ Inc woosee lot a old e. as 3 _nebago rd. OL. 2-82 61 ARMY MAP SERVICE BR CAPE. “Cop 8 ROOMS—2\% BATHS Could be used for rage. ige lo ca * families. Ga- = ~~ porch Altrac. aik to streetcar $24 500 TE NCHER W ALKER 2644 3-BEDRM. RAMBLER—Lee liv -dir rm. with aor and pine pane! ed wa) ‘ has sposai and ample eati ing space Pull Partitioned bsmt b screened (115x schools. mto Greentree t ldge pl rn Sern er. O} 2 A BARGAIN AT $47 500 your time will hen 3 mi right to hou: e 2-Car garage and an you mak use as location in a community of compatable homes Ol Co... ine. 4-8111 “Til 9 Stone and Brick Has Done the Trick! This lovely rambler nr. For- ME. 8-5400 — RAMBLER 3 bedroom : n ie tran: porta $14,950 S p ‘mm te brick front Ving , rrr " ' N¢ 71 IME or rent. le HA $ Cod. Lit lege eipans nehor fen 2) venier Ices 5-7739 s LEWISDALE Must se!! ne cit }-bedrm. bdrk ete Best offer RAINIER Si Sparkling brick Cape ¢ din. rm ed 7 s practically here tn COLES gar. VILLE FARM ESTATES M living be most enjoyable this brick and stone rarmbier — sit- pater 7. Sees ground ally beautifully’ _- - _* r all RE REALTY Cx = There are MT. RAINIFR We it) with 3 bedrooms fireplace _dinin « room Tee - are proud for your inapection rm. with firepl.. family basement twi — 9 size soarans bs : with fireplace dow overlooking —_ ; ‘Ope = WALKER & DUNLOP, INC Realtors. Uptown Office. EM. 2-6715 } h of dis stinctior owe hey as to MU “DY. . UN od Aski appreciate 4-5600 | + * NORTH vpese ‘ay! i" aa E bedro ambier TREES. Delightful Colon - j rm rm ining dishwasher 3 ; up; side porct an ot ki... ty acre price 5,9 Li iif 4 COMPANY 11158 Georgia , Silver Spring LO 7200 till mm brick wit) Tc x ¢ } hw 4 New cetached brie ver DC ww Msyvulr® 0 DU ¥ N . arge lern kitchen. 2 bed bath with roughed «i c rc 0 Vacant tile UN. 4-1166. WA. 17-6655 plumbing trance, gas heat Bu INN Y BROOK AREA Lovely 7 ad c YWITHEAST >t A Ty Jitt wi A Center Hall Rambler 3 Bedrs., 2 Baths S ore N SATY RDAY & DA 14 ERE Ts REA! VAL LUE! At only 930.950, have brick bi lovely Siigo Park. with an older TAKOMA PARK han TEMPLs HILLS AREA. bun e summer comfort sold today! DIR Bran Date Fieetwood., bear Fleetwood terrace ken on premises y \ Pi T> Leo i¥ ners ‘DD 1415 K St. NW POTT ee a at ae ei . y -9310 we tone ~~ — tar v¥ ra CAN T\AT WuUrIroo snr! $1600 DN WOODLAY\ sparkling 3-bedroom . ! lovely equipped kit ME 2 5400 } + as he 4 leve u shopping . TIN e 57739 ¥ 7 Sun Realty IF YOU RE and sroar & epe ~, ao 4 pee eee GE or ownir rentit phone & see for oniy $9850 r ‘this Ww) Cc ar port us now to yourself & vour fami your new home with re ‘ iderat or For a war t 4 ont ye OAK shace ‘ITS A GREAT its | Expecting? ve in r axe own that itt) dD) “his own wi inctudte at biks TO 4 BS thats our business Start living that's your pleasure & Pleasure 1} Whi be upon inspection. This 4 bedrm. br Cape “— has on ist fir.. and vour clothesline & minimum of work Ou -bedrm 3 ¥T.-old Ar m modera down payments. Pick \ NOW and call JA. 7 “bounce ng opportuni | MAYNARD -7000 te m i > that phon 7000 to ty MAGR F ves n ea RU sé & tlled bath JE 2a ith & workshop corner iot t M After € 27-9079 HA. 27-8052 $350 DOWN..8! Spr Nice 2-bedrn a) I THE OM RE Pair _& ver ne Area } neaiow. full Dsmt 77 s79 ew 2-446 no. JU n PARKSIDE » vi. Ce DOA \ r Ol ROBERT B. HALI he. oe to se) CO. OL. 2-3250 Prince Georges County OUES ¢ BELTSV NEW BUNGALOW lee. TH dsmt ILL ‘ $1500 gPOWK rm nu rs TNT, FT VPI AS LAN 6 iv. erly aaa r L10ns {) past Chev Statior right CGreenieat 519 Prince Ceores WEAVER. AP 585 CARBON & GRFY*' 6014 UN MR. AP DO. 4 OR ‘a ei me with : OU) is MILLER 2 a ep i r< near 2 ac of inves REALTOR WA 601! eft Toth P le {vr Sy") TAY GOHBY REAI Es © a gi) ay WILLO!l REDRM. BRK 8, re te ei a? 47 |SALE, suBURS, HOUSES _ 67 -operative mainte- atis. 2- 177 rr offer one of the area's best homes JAMES dbedrm Pull pe —— REALTY ate-no- steps between your warher see a onthiy payments and insurance =m Pg "2 PICTURE W ABOWS In this mod. Cape God, sire bedrms \ dp wWaik-in closets tiled bath. ita. KIM. — outside entr VA ap- pymts Prince Georges Realty Co. UN. 4-1166,. WA. 717-6655 BEST GI BUY One of the best 3 bedrms. 6 rm Colonial in ae HILLS Close to everything walis. full bemt.. fine me rm.. lige. side screened porch. beat- tiful shady cor. fenced lot. Perfect for anyw family y $12,500. with $650 , low mo. pyrmts Prince Georges Realty Co. Spacious end ; located nr Univ. Lane: Officer transferred im- mediately Call Mrs. Voigt HE ZX & co. UN +1 IF YOU $1000 two- Feces brick ‘a Besies. Valley nr Cheverly DON'T LIKE wood shingle with breeseway to rage. Will delight the Missus in Seat Pleasant THE WEATHER bad don't let it this delightful etached bungalow It's priced right! WAIT A MINUTE call UN appointment lovely homes we Gay or se - lot sed SA ed I may but Cheverly today ory 44260 or JO We evening M. SMILEY a*vaihea are ai your rar IN . ves.. JO 36547 OMS rambier price av- 39 Caled U! RE ATY m ion | see UN Lucky Break For a Lg. Family do you find a tf d home, just ofte Chilum to asphalttiie floor front porch. back yard ! See a wondertul om NW DOWN RAMBLER 1415 K St $1000 REDWOOD style 2. ‘eA Ma) California large wooded He pea Gl bo GRACEN T. SCOTT WA. 7-0461 Till 8 P. M MU ST MOVF! Brot ae: with terms to ae pathnak $750 down Hitt COX & CoO.. UN DREAM HOME —-Quality brick rambler. 4 huge cqutoped bnew th baseme on landecaned lot amens goes h conv I MUNDY $ 96 DOWN—$8U Oesieer ome suit your Call Biil 1526 dy MO Picture-Book Ran $10,950- Adorabte detached ; : | 1DieT $950 Down 2-bedrm rambdier earage. fully nestied rs) If vou Owner leave Washington chance two get T N lot m- . transferred March 21 a terrific bar- Good gain Yr 5 y ~— } Brand-New ey ow eo % ys yy 7 $950 Down 2 BEDR Picture window in din. rn fri gerator lge Dp . tremendous value! TO bungalow ns ee VETERANS in 2 big oe ~rchnes , naan ian nal lot with dandy! Lev vel il h frontage This is «a / ©. p™m * ‘ SE -dinetie, util £850 dn. 7390 8 BURBAN MD becrm liv. rm kit : i — fen cee. 82500. CHRONAKER RE. { IF YOU'RE and groanin. & * rm = bas JOHN Ow’ re?’ phone & only $9850 Carport you re tin e -1815 te y ourself & your family to select home wit great care & 10.300 thi time. Lae is equip. kit and spare tor powrder rr ’ your r shade ‘Irs A GREAT oak trees j >-1i in the right . = ght ’ = ce Thi« 3- bedrm . 2? vre tke On i et TY _ EAL : WAS HING TON S BEST LOCATED Sl B LAUGHING By MATTER Salo COLLEGE PARK PROPER best sé@ctiol e-bedrn brick nia. vacan'’ : t mod cl U , Rea COLLEGE rt A x Rea PARK PROPER K TY Ps $1} | O50 UN 254 ‘ ~ ty 4 , ‘est Height y Whe Captitai sat DUnTaIOWS ais on our ; give cetalis comm ub! ty LO ~~ JIM BRITT 4920 INDIAN HEAD HWY SE FORESTVILLE, MD. Open Sat weather, permitting 3400 Slst 3417 Oh AVE: wR al Detached liv. rm yp gas heat: need rd; epeer. aa have ms. toni rae to watch my calories.” ) “One good thing about ght’s date. I didn’t have, basements a coded ight to house, JOHN HOKES SALES 8-1581 c 44593 wR ON $500 DOWN 3-bedrm rambler everything -a srr. a var ve brick HO. 32-7987 VIRGINIA ~ - ge ee Shirley ica Stores <. KI ASBOC! ATED BROKERS ALEXAN] DRIA Oo 2212 Wilson . a $600 avy Pa toenee, Hi OL. 5574. os - vow Mi for gar- trees exclusive eo $26 “4 ean omy 4 , -§ ane a about to brag, but this three-bedroom red- | a- ts new in 3.6547 to see one of these serv- bright 3-bed-| Ar Mu ny NEED HERE AND SALE, eee noe 67 = SUBURB, HOUSES oe VIRGINIA ee nomy family size: more for yout money in th laree 3-bedrm. and en bric home in convenient Rosemont: repiace separate oversized $16,950 KI 98-8227 OO EERNDRIAS Lengthen Your Life Span th4s &2 fortable 3- bedroom 1D hie: ulf basemen tive ee lot 706 Mt. Vernon Ave. KI ALEXANDRIA VACANT AND CONVENIENT Big. beautiful. ali-brick Colonial; 3 bedrooms and 1% further information lington Realty Co. 2212 Wilson Biv JA. 7-9300 Office Seen 9to 9 EXANDRIA AREA So Pretty! So Unusual! ay, — with 3 bedrooms. baths, equip itehen. 4% Gi sevalabie. J. & H. Realty Co. SO. 8-8242 ZANDRIA WAITING FOR YOU” brick semi de- ‘e Jefferson Manor. ground level basement opening on to . fenced ms oe derfully convenient to snopPiag. and ig, ‘ransportation pine — wi —— ---- Front porch may purchase Arlington Realty ce open Y to 2212 Wiles on Bivd. JA ALEXANDRIA Co. Q :-9300 OP! N ‘ I Newly restored Ped era. house in Old section room with 4 terms aa down SUN lovely brick gereea 2 baths on 2d fico equipped kitchen stairs income criced ad and separate making complete apt. for purposes if desired jmmociats aaie Call sR HOOFF, INC. Ot | Alex. Ve ©-3445 isin _ ALEXANDRIA AREA HOUSE AND GARAGE $15 850 ist floor ke I TE rm 2nd floor ic exhaust from Pentagon Assume loan 8O. &-8658 ALEXANDRIA SSFLL-RD ARE iis A G99 Ahr ww 4k floor: Tare and neu bath let ar ft living dir tas yi ev er fookne pict uresque wooded Rita’s at wg WE 8 R ah eben he : ate © ou obbins ea + ore. 2018 Mt Vernon KI. 8.4000 oO “a ROUTH ROBBI has tablished her own rea! . tate co. is not associated with old firm wusine her na me ROUTH ROBBINS REAL ESTATE CORP KI. 8-4000 near ees. ALEXANI DRI LE HAVEN AREA Nice pam Cod with tect vard., 3 bedrms. with a 4th unfin. & compi. equipt. kitchen. incl. Bendix washer & garbage disposa! In this charming community near the Belle Haven Rant Club $12 650 ( LOW DOWN PAYMENT TO suUTT YOUR CONVENIENCE BROOKS REALTY CQ MULTIPLE “LISTING “REA KI. 86-0777 Eves. BO. 5- r- ~ ALEXANDRIA new brick Town neighborhood firep) ull-size “ dish washer | Demt. © 3 bedrms Spacious House & excellent lige. iiving ain r > garbage as fur and Ov Mechli ALEX OV 23%, ng VA 32328 vm feed M ey & 175 ‘PITT ST ) SO. 3-2 r » $93 monthis De vme BON IDE DF apacio . bedrms 9 uli ment. Ex ‘throughet ut. Only Kury style kitchen. haoeb ' porches. $99 mo. BONDED: REALTY. INC. 815 §s8 weelipsten s Palls Gh. ARL.—Duplex. live = free in this yo-k to-the- hs inute new 2-family flat rn sc aA oy d __ ARLINGT 4 BEDRMS. UNDER $ OPEN SAT RMS., BAT ah rm 13 ist FLOOR Lrepace and bookshe! ne corner < nat With ele« n Reasonabie Bivd. 1 Woodroe et, our sign end pa { DIREC TIONS blk [ ; turn open RATT TON MAON to to > SazTTy & REA! 1057 N. Glebe Rd A 14200 oy ith ones Basem ent Ex ier résidentia CHANCE OF A - : i try GI. Lar Drick colontai 1 Rec rm arta hu Idea! rr close-in wT 1s er ae | 2ulp Asking es , i i ngt on be rest Bhe pping Cire Re . , 1A 044, IG" are we home, tmost in "haan brick e. ie v7 a ARLINGTON "PASY LIVI} ONCE IN A WHILE 0 offer oh _ideal re Die eemapertal vr . °7 py CAR ‘TO IPE It’s ONL Y s 6 950 gion Re aity ( * ). PEN 9 TILL 9 Bivd.. Arl. JA 7.9208 So NO. . 25th ST. ‘¥ se aT ae 4911? nm Sunday, 1-6 $18,950 “saa ‘ rm. brick , ectontet b ~ Continued On Following Pace AGI Pete , 2 peak CRAIN ERD SE ey - ~ Foye ae 8 v — CO IEF DP) Be 2 THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD Win , PLT AIPORT &F she Selah epee ot) 4 9 Sond dee a pF ay Te" voWey ER ivid A ae yaz ras pe ae th Amt ty yink he a BER FEN EER, CEFF IE Re ee OE La He SP A RAL yg? PPP HIE? Saturday, March 20, 1954 ye,” ss Soa ee kt eee en ae ie ee on SE Re eo Ae ALEXANDRIA, VA. HOMES $ galow; part bemt. A ACRE. level lot. Ki. 9-4580. _ ARLINGTON cee -t OPEN“ TODAY, SUN: “2 “pituated on one Of the fx eayeniens residential sections of | he We offer this at-|. YOU PAY FOR THE HOME tem br residence at “ YOu OCcuPY’ -. > room if you must buy give wainscoating | a “On floor, den and half oath on floo b Arlington vivd, to 4755 LET ARE WwW: "JOHNSTON JE. ooo, io Mr. mere. | ARLINGTON RAMBLER ce a Brick; modern: full with i rec. scaped gt 8 ee and in order to eff $2000 REAL ESTATE, INC., ARL.—CLOSE IN} 3 Bdrs. $950 Down | bungalow ; ¢ JA. 54161 polntment, with wu $16,250 com brick *pacious ap ex- ciusive - raand ler w spacious eating area. 3 lg. bedrms. (one paneled for down can buy for Tou! iF 8-5400 ES : ALLDRIDOE. Le 4 $190 , Leo M. Bernstein & Co. 1415 K st. nw. ME. 8-5400 5 ey ARLINGTON OPEN 1 ‘TIL § UNBELIEVABLE! lonia e delay. EXCLUSIVE BELLE HAVEN 8 OLMI BLVD. $24,950 OPEN SUNDAY, 1-6 P.M. Custom - built Bee Re: 5 _bedrm Ad ae kitchen ull : Tree- studded ti ion. near gua. all schools | shopping. ONLY $3000 DOWN | Yu E AY Gtit Direct ions Out ‘Washi neton Bivd od N Illinois 8t.. right to our open | "Caney Real Estate | 330 Wilson Blvd JA. $-6161 | i ante = — —ReNprraramas A HUMDINGER | SPIC AND SPAN bric Kk. 3-bedroom | rambler FF croft Fore luxe kite = Choice family brick and rms S and an addi- sional “4th | rm. partially fin- ished, designed for a mu)- tiple ~ we as den. bed- po | absement ocation with schools, transportation con- a steal at $15.- INGTON REALTY CO. | PEN 9 ‘TILL 2 Wilson B® vd.. Ari LINGTON COUNTRY CLUB ! Custom-= This desirable, almost new English - style rambler individually des | architect contains ARL SEE IT TODAY! 22: Directions: Prem 14th st Bridge take Mt. Vernon Me- ia. 7- $300 HILLS iilt Rambler 7 Luxury | | ' right to open sign EXCLUSIVE do all-electric bedroom with Eirias eats wi! KING OF THE HILL This custom de luxe white ranch house on its hilitep site with panoramic view is screened Priced at ‘Geo. Mason Green Co. | Ex ive Agents 1A. 4.1400 | aati ING i+ yf BRICK RAMBLER—2 we a ae , “as expandibie ste ap. 0 aa Y REAL a arge wall room garage Unusually ESTAT and fireplace room. Large breakfast room and bath with private entrance. There are also 3 generous bedrooms; 2 full baths, den. and rear porreh which over- looks the Potomac. Large iol is well planted, and for those who like outdoor living there is a large. shei- brick pa INC ' ARLINGTON “SO LY A photograph would never do -rm it rambler on a cogner beautiful : r nonvet- er - can buy on favorable terms. it TODAY. cai rlin gton Realty Co. | PEN 9 TILL 9 2212 Wison Bivd., Ari. A: 77-9300} ARLINGTON PALLS CHURCH We RE FIRST TO 1 THE CURTAIN Prom it builder's workshop, a masterpiece 2 ‘petter picture then all the words this ad contains. so make your appointment to see it N The price is oniy $39.500, with $10,000 | cash required. Spring in the. Air $16,500 value offered dry basement; > 4300x130 Iot. Assume $15,500 4 percent trust Substantial cash required Com - lity of Len ly planned 77-9090. velba re Ml Wines Individual ly styled! Priced to sell. 2081 arene room, 21x12 master oe ee ther bedroom, 12x14, terrific ki te with most modern ine an 1 Hot Poin ve its I ty . at, + coe cash. Rea! _ this 2- 4 3 } , side porcn You will agree this is a rea! buy Bee j EXCLUSIVE WILL ROGERS IS QUOTED AS SAYIN “HE NEVER MET A MAN Sos DID NOT LIKE Call CAN YOUR FAMILY RE HAPPY Definitely Home ownersh ip pin Ens- FOLES Going t like our for calling attention fine home at such reasonabie price Only 500. There are 6 rms 3 bedrms.. 1% baths full La basement; it is 5. years old, brick Colonial, side porch Lot $0x100; gas ong hwe! heat, taxes $152.63 a year you can assume $31 200 first mviwe 5%, payable $77.55 monthly, the payment to after inspection, terested. in order apprecite the you will have we show you? appointment only. and it is exclusive with wus. | 2600 Central Ave.| ‘Braddock Hat's. convenientiy built earace id lattice fence insu eau- ty. All this for $16,950. Terms. Piease phone JA. 77-9090 to in- spect The Younger Set will go for this 2-year-old, 3- bedroom rambler on a gorgeous landscaped lot (160-ft moving out driveway, ranged kitchen, ea —_ Bendix exhaust fan. nee refrie¢. Assume $9100 ‘+ $62.75 or try Gl - our number Ww call for ppl at. ment to insp RELEASED A YEAR IN ADVAN o> neton's dream a offer re than any othe t thinking ovui de “oa, Boncwsiy lider has otvi ed and igned home for YOU. Rustic 1 or plan cer - 2 See iving room with | li entrance, with cheese dining room, r on "the ist i 3 bedrooms, i} bedrooms and has privat e bath and m< Sinden, daylight... Mid baseti.s ven! ent garage insulate 130; easy commiut- immediate u- ost com petitix ely | area. Shown by | by calling JA. T- CT TKI DUIN. ve 4 ‘Ty’ ] 4 CJ 6 P. } M. K powder floor > bat! cern Ri... a vey room eG Rea Deh a 9 | s and screens ; ided iv i fen - if “This heme Pf l Cc - : te Service, Inc. ee Hwy... off Glebe, JA. 7-9090 “ARLINGTON, ONCE EXCITING OLDER is from any Doi nt ine M. H BAI RRY Org. FSTABLISHED SINCE 1912 REALTY ADMINISTRATORS 2206 t Ver rnon Ave KI 9 -0078 TE. 6-2442 TE. 6-5760 THE OLD RELI I ABL E OFFICE at ty on } hot-w 2 RAT! garage €or ry cks to shops schools and bus * “TNA ATOR KTY i Jal i* ‘ =o iVir A l ret JE. 3-8118 _ 6878 _Lee ney. SALE, ee HOUSES 67 VIRGINIA e ws) “oy ETHER YOU PERT omnes St. at Cc 2300 Wilson Bivd ‘ TH | 838 8S. Washington 8&t JE. 3-9221 N. ARLINGTON-$22,500 Beca sold on : " ‘ae ‘of | is use of Ulness ape Lod must be 3 hea Ist floor. is one-yea k 1’ baths, | bedroom ixe equipped kitchen Rear screened porch. -Detached garace section of $30,000 ramt Bus, GI, FHA or and powder room Full basement with a... Ooms, Tr! i/@, Yawal ln* toilet. eve lers schoois ana financing. In a shoppin ye new conventiona! LIS1 ee ad MULTIPLE TED to N Quantico. Right Lee Highway to Quan- PIRECTIONS Out Washington Bivd to 22nd St. Left to OPEN HOUSE. OR tico, Left to 22nd 8t. CTT OPEN SATURDAY, & SU! TO 6 MAC LINDSEY IDAY, JA. 26090 JA. 7-221) DENNIS THE MENACE nN 7 We'll havta use a cantalope, | couldn't find Dad's ___ bowling | ball.’ SALE, SUBURB. HOUSES VIRGINIA N. ARLINGTON IDEAL FOR YOUNGER COUPLE $12,500 iis Convenientiy jiocated ‘s from bus and a few biocks beyond Hecht's Parkington ping center. A one-floor pian de- signed for easy housekeeping Also | 4 _ “ Rat lot, nicely landscaped. | to you. Garage. of course!| Call SA. 76161 to learn how $2500) down will sive you lew, Parker ‘Smith & Donnell- 7026 N. 16th ourt House Rd _—-_} 9. JA. 7- NORTH ARLINGTON GI—$750 DOWN | FHA—$3,050 DN. 3-bedroom brick Coloniat semide- tached with pe —— room, | and ird floor stor Pull! basement with toilet. “ie oo kiteh- | ocks to ' Brandywine. Rn 2 blocks to exhibit house. | Large Brick Rambler 2% baths. brick construction, center. stairway to expansibdie extra bedrooms. Front and rear patios. Storm windows and doors. 2 years old and in perfect condition. On an —— -fenced jot | us , Pull AC LINDSEY Fane x 1A. 2: 4-030), pen NON- GI $700 "DOWN 2-bath hom petac tn | Sacetens condition Detached “hob- shop in i a schoo ~ A, WA, shady rox 8680x150 w 7 , only "BONDED REALTY, INC. Palis Ch UTH ARLINGTON 7-2211 HILL TOP VALUE Bus and school — close-by and fa All-brick Co- oor equipped kitchen; low Se price of $17,500. See it TODAY Arlington Realty Co. 2212 Wilson Bivd 7-8300. Open 9 — Petes Rare BEVERLY HILLS 4 Twin Bedrooms LA 3¥2 (A NEW LISTING) Secluded on & quiet fay in a) lovely neighborhood of large homes, | this stone and brick Colonial has every desirable feature from paneled recreation room with fre.| place, to a guest bedroom and bath | on ist floor: priced at only 950; this 4- re residence can be purchased very serecable| terms and saounted in early April Shown by ot ae uu. MM ARSTELLER-McCABE Columbia Pines’! aw aped jot | JE. 43900 ,2212 '7 ROOMS | better construction J these brick ceneh. edrms cin ' ioe area, full English bsemt.; Situated on large Better better ‘es i vin G E fit values Aa n lie if ONL y ‘$I 16.950 Cor t Payments Less ‘Then Rent Out Columbia pike 7'% Balleys Crossroads right, follew arrow to model house ‘ AILY OPEN NOON, ‘TIL DARK Lar Directions chmo wh O48 nt Realty, Inc. Mode} Meme JE. 3-160 Fves FAIRFAX AREA t River Bile —tever brand- — 4.bedrm.. 2-bath. full-base- ment brick on nice gently sloping | lot } | f fine ome ee ae cash. Eves. Mr. Milier.| CR. 3-1728 ; Small Estate Worth going o home: 2 wae stul 30 minutes to Pen ized farmhouse — puse stone fireplace. paneled li-| ston ne corner fireplace, 2 lar ao bedr > baths, beautiful) kitchen Seapktast nook, dining rm miscellaneous outpulisings in- dine chicken house kshop srorewe space: > 950 for ry) secluded “acres, Moder “vine ty end WILL BE OPEN) © of e Time year old COR « in hi RETT Y } ‘ BUNGA! Ow ; > delight trees... Pine tor. grep, Beh 2015 sear? int Giaren gheplss 410.500 GI conjrects 1 $500 cown cons Arlingte n Realty C Co, FICE OPEN 9 TO WILSON BLVD yA ALLS CHURCH ARF $600 DOW N All Costs Included only | > - 9300) WILL GET IMMEDIATE POSSFSSION NE ' NEW Y ‘ 3-REDRM. BUNGALOW "ILE_B EN LOT WITH TREES M. R. REYNOLDS & CO. ya =e ot hm WIDE JE ¥ ai Ls ¢ be we 4. Co operative hou l-bedroom d Bane mt e ps ne» he or shop Ding cen ter an and shade principal _down payment rn Jk FALLS C HURCH "AREA $14,950 TREES! STREAM AND FENCE. This conveniently Cope Cod has all these plus living rm.. fireplace, separate dining fm.,/ a breath-taking kitchen, 2 bedrms full basement storm sas Se 4 mn Realt ‘FAULS rntndey. equip. w/bday om $11.950. Owner, Palls Church Ares a ; your terms; NEW — VACANT SMALL RAMBLER | 1 BATH Built we et Bente reraee | owner low monthly | payments | 67 | SALE, SUBURB. HOUSES — charming white 5-room/| 67 v lA JEFFERSON MANOR j va baths. picture | windows in bemt. Outside entrance storm winaows and doors. $16,500. | AL SMITH REALTY MULTIPLE LISTING REALTOR TE. 6.2967 KL 8-6 652 LORCOM LANE AREA IF YOU WANT | A Custom-Built Rambler fi ’ built-in “a5 ing room. t natural birch cabinets, dish washer Semmens disposal, choice of range -_ powder room and picture window onte a stone patio, at- tached brick siate roof, f hood? The the many many eqneting refinements to be explain Parkes Smith & Donne]! 2026 N. 16th Bt. at Court House Rd Realtors. ee - ms JA ‘7-6161) LYON “WILLAGE | TO PENTAGON DOWN ALL-BRK RAMBLERS Two baths. center hall plan tra large kitchen race. type ture unusually } Harpe ga- rage Trway to attic. For sale sta by owner- Suiier Day; 10-to® Lee Hwy from intersection of High- Oth so up hil! on Signs to Inc awe h 3165 amer & Baucghan, JA. 5-7381 LYON VIL LAGE Expert CLOSE IN Substantial brick Cape Cod garage living rr separate dining room and equipeed kitchen large expansion basement: tKy? > goce value for $16 See it toda ARLINGTON REALT OFFICE OPEN. 9 TO 9 2212 WILSON BLVD ne BATHS F 2-car searees , ieree! l-yr.old brick rambler McLEAN IF YOU DESIRE | A 3BEDRM. RAMBLER range, ° for the very reasonable der FHA, GI or conventiona! loan | Parker, Smith & Donne!! | 2026 N 16tp St. at Court Ho d Rea ltors. _ Open 9 to 9 _JA Wi oiei Fort Myer Area JUST $2,000 DOWN buys this spotless Perfect for that wants a handy ation NON } RI VD a , haga cowed brick aoe wood trees. hill top. city services. 200 ft $20. - 000 wher, BO. 88-8542. full info WY.—New 48-rt rambler FP. Steffer Vets—Less Than 5% ous 2-bedrm. brick Cape Cod. full base- ment, equ kitchen. screened porch, fenced Permanent stairway Fw ly finished attic. Full price JOHN ‘W. MULROY CO. 99 Hillwood Ave. JE “TYLER PARK Vets 5% Down 2-bedrm. brick Cape Cod. ful! m kitchen. screened po Permanent stairway 8 Pa tad finished attic. Full price JOHN W. MULROY CO. 99 Hillwood Ave Falis Church. Va 4.5000 “WESTOVER $14,950 are Rot. = fpmlar mith then all to Ny * 7 mver sine locs a- Arlington All n- panianane practicall v at your - 4001 r step. 2-bedroom brick colo base- If vou ‘room de- arage p.us recreation room macgment Good terms f non for ‘Is me your ne bee tached ¢ a 4 early and bring s rrTry v VR ae 500 mi-det ABN A $10 cute sem brick home basement “WM. t: WARFIF JA _7-1773 In FOUND One cute little 2-bedrm of trees. garden spot: priced un $10.000. For more information call Bop Shipley at JE. 3.8383 RAMBLER CLOSE IN ARLI INGTON This antique brick rambler > room | For only eso “with, te "REAL TY ASSOC RRES | 2334 Wilson Bivd. JA. 7-7700 IT’S NO PIPE DREAM 4 Bedrooms, 243 Ba ARLINGTON aa ns oy gegen EA! re WILLIAMSBURG AUTHENTIC 36-ft. porch. brick fir genter © hall 3 , € columns » bedrm ‘ eparate din! as 7-9300 i 4 ras Church, Va. | 5000 . VIRGINIA — COUNTRY CLUB HILLS Stone house in ate one area consisting al en lee liv. rm. din. ~ 9g 4 twin-size bedrms ee pees rec. rm. with eypiee. rm. and store ati ntohe tise 7-6950 Res ~ BELVEDERE "The Easy font ais med. 2% 6-3870 sreund level lot with view . Grand opportunity, the 2.950 Ar ington Realty C fice Open $ to 9 2212 Wilaon Bivd JA. 7-9300 4-BEDRM. HOMES ; fea SEA rm large li bDasements ARLINGTON LORCOM LANE ck on garage. Beautiful ARLINGTON LYON VILLAGE 4 bedrms. 2nd Son. arage 2 ha , ible ree ned porch $32.950 pri vate wooded 4% ist includ- ’ do B< rere lot wi trust anaes $132 ae a ing taxes and imsurance. | ARLINGTON COUNTRY CLUB HILLS Alnost feW rTrambier 3 bedrmes oe den b for 2 more bedrms uble arage maid's Sethe $59 750 FAIRFAX—RAM Pa | acre wooded BLER separate din- itchen, 10- $18.950 ree lot I, JA rT TT 7 s buh 74487 ER GROOM CO JA. 232-4487 a% Realtors $300 DOWN! ! | Lyndale Brick Ram! Diers brick ramblers old toda with any Rmaneine BETTER HUR aney Real Estate Wilson Bivd.. JA. 55-6161 ONLY T pmece deluxe out will new 2330 ' i nh Go. Cor ‘BRIG 3D netor \ JA. §& ae: TOOK || Price Reduced GI BRICK RAMBL As a 1154 condition $1500 cash excellent pos ——— with SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 409 BO STREET IN OLD PORT SECTION an attractive smal! home with an income on So floo ant lovely oid fi > from the second floor our entire first trust uy this and beat the high cost of liv terms. Phone Colorful | Peaturing extra-ige. liv and superb din while upstairs are and biack-tiled bath wo set off yo it 5O Yet Reason- Exc windbreak. 518 950 "MANNAS, REALTY Co. 2116 Wilson Biyd.. Arl,. JA. 8-2783 Curtis E. Martin, KI. 9-6700 sure you RSELY and Grive by os hel % cA ota . this “S-bedrm. brick rambler } berg, with “= JA. 5-4800 : 0 - per a — T rtin, Inc. these charming and 2-be ~ bun¢a ree and prese nt finan ing Total monthi rent To these or a rn. a "ONAS REALTY JA. 8-2100 JA. 7-2143 Super Colonial “Close in- ~—Convenient Impressive gem in hishiy desirable area near both public and is 2 Dt ie ing ht com with | with eating space baths Soemal™ ei fireplace separate huge kitchen priced $25.750 agree wie ci Arthur L. Walters Co. 241 9 Wilson Bivd we Va -5200. Open Eves. JA ~4141 GOT A GROUCH woh you con't ope n itable Then * | tere lovely 6- room Brey home? =” rm See and youl SU my nder $18 . Office Open 93 to 9 lson Bivd JA x Tr AICS ACT * s+ ; o " ale ist Se evaded © eq lipped Kit rOra ted vee rea bon comp ete) a dec ind- a, ty Cc v ‘BON DE “RE a L mee “available poma . oo were rE’ MEN \ ab “BIG FAMILY” "Cane Cod, spacious bedrooms and full baths basement with rec room. liv room with Gfreplace and mirror separate dinine room. large freeze: Streened rear porch. Located near ance of Arlington Hall. D. nd bg me ; near schools. shopping and bu pice vere on trees 8 barbecue reasonable cash DILLON "LAND CO. aa myeat 2 Ideal with 4 WE aae bt ree BES i J a ‘ot with Seamed evel ‘walk-in $23.950. ; 8-rm. brick colonial. 1) with recreation rm. At- | ’ i i | 430) Wilson Bivd. : CALL IT CHARM of only $3) a mo. because the $80} ing for good! Easy! -8631 Co Iner Colonia] S| i ' } ' ; , ' ' | Arlinet eOD : es Aliwars SALE, SUBURB. HOUSES: cee eo a 67) SALE, SUBURB, HOUSES VIRGINIA TOWN OF-FAIRPAX $1,000 DOWN $84 MONTH a 9-bedrm.. white bungalow on re B0x200 f {t. level lot; convenient seers ood. Move in with settic- ment. Total price. 97 BRICK RAMBLER VIRGINIA _ HAPPY LIVING The Colonel and his family have en- joyed this commerane k Wi. Go ; . and barbecue pil, foot, 3 | caio- huge corner beue screened porch! Brand eg, ae piace replace for recreation Nice level AN mt 950 with $3000 cash LY—$2.000 DOWN 9- Sarat "waite frame rambler with. carport %-acre level iot. House spic and span. Nice neighborhood Price, $11 EVES. MR \ we JA 86-5969 At m™ “R (ING cr 3-1203 "EXCLUSIVE Check uheee Se bedeoenee| i% baths attached screened porch—full ounce? constructed ‘ to a & and priced at cal? $22.9 BOMPONI O RI -ALTY 7793 Wilson Bivd $500 DOWN buys this purcha OR “ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Ane APPOINT- MENT TO 1 eat ei; cc MMC NY ri oC 78 N Glebe he "UA 5. 2968 The Good Earth no answer, 7 TT : NIT A modern kitchen with... dis- ctsh washer and bkfst 3 lg. dbedrs. 2 baths r ren TITS _ Leo 1416 8.5400 SH ME NO CA DQ. By ppointim ¢*¢ y tn q u50T va J /-$300 Most attractive rust ramp! ra on a wide, | ft | ren 0 RENS Jr TA. 8 FRE DERI a wv “BERENS COUNTRY CLUB ge be ESTATES r ‘ | af Ag ull wUrT w D ~ ic-style new brk = 3 pic. wit aians Wiino cos mit bsmt. * Cor of - buys: Go $18,880. “SEE AND You'LI GREE Arthur L. ie 0 + vr FR BRICK — } lace 0 LIVABLE war.ls lad ME ; er 8 ith gar VV 4lieTs —C 2419 Wilson give Arlington | 2 L. 7-5200.— Eves. JA wm with fir Va ly -eauinned kitchen. 2.4141 dining m i FIN AN( ED. GI A NO N Gl ‘Open Sunday 1-6 PEN SUNDAY a ‘ OPEN ~— Nortl Giebe tits J IVUSTN PA vv) i hk hee! L/S v¥ iv eee 3 2 recreation gas a.-' ass . neton, Ridge. open “Sign. CEOR SE ABSTING REAt TOR JA. 77-0141 UEEN BEE VU ; ; a FINES? IN MATERIALS AND CRAY payee New brick ramd deligiitful wooded sectior 7 My Ari nat m1 3 oversized , and . , r the ry GLASSED IN SUNROOM ™ Da’ S stentiat | “eesh required BECAME OTHE ae 4 L ’ a rif het Lee he right toe Od Deminten and follow directio OPEN 9 TILI 9 2212 Wilson Biyd.. Ar]. JA. 7-8300 than market ROUTH ROBBINS Realty Co., Inc. appreciate SEWELL REALTY CO. | Glebe Rd. Ari. JA. 7-0 r : ar ' Rea! lose in ection N Ww ILL ST YFARS FROM oe yay colonia: re THIS western erms. TO REACH St., Fight to Out 35th Lee Hiehwar S right to N GEOR H to large aliic : ar Detached Ast TA. $8585 Ev ss im: with tere; tited pan Phi basement with rm mens. location | | ' ' 67 SALE, SUBURB, HOUSES Huge wonderful at \ : -— LOOK ho gel own bedroom en rage le SPARK! SPOT! g car -a-Doo odle- Do SMALL CASH DOWN. Chance of a Ar CUSTOM BI TILED KITCHEN waist-hi : ; 2-car earace u $21.950 with «¢ llen* i i : ij] \ Edgewater 9-69.12. Pl erry? r wo & & SALE, SUBURB, HOUSES 67 "VIRGINIA VIRGINIA C-A-L-TF-O-R-N-L-A IRE BOOK HOUSE toh peorms rambier. i Practically Free ss es et * CHARGES ONLY $65 mo. .INCLUDI FAxBS AND INSURANCE, ‘this ‘root *' chen: and é ashington and good shopping. c “AL L QUICK. Arlin ingt on Realty © Or. m2 Wilson ‘Blvd. JA. 79900 ethin one ure... window am xin Isom. MA ANNAS RE RLTY Co. 116 Wiison Bivd.. Ari.. JA. 8-2783 ¥-4 ees HGTS. 0,000— Gl » down paymen; and 30 years to| i-detached. § rooms . Nonveterans mary with small down pay- ent : ENZOR REALTY CO. 1A. 2-1000 $1500 DOWN | & further. If vou = to me ur i. ng Different mm 7 Ol N AN ACRE OF LAND >-bedresm Tam- baths and basement. layout with center arge rooms. Call Mr. A. 54800 or eves, 7-6487 ANNON & LUCHS CO. ” 2085 Wilson Bivd. - CANDIED YAM Attractive Colonial-stvie rambler n bas | rance : 70x159 wooded —, ed ‘ lot ' * ot 00 n ASSUME en @ 00 to *) OAN. J. WESLEY BUC >.» Radio Bidg. Ar) go ym fireplace and quipped kitchen. Center- hall st Only $16.950. Call wus for nh vA information a) SI cep can we as sound as Ichabod’. n ours enjoyable in the ao 4-bedrm. white brick wonderfully located on tall oaks. bdDudd pproprite shrub y. Yeet s the refinements a construction ezectiqe = present owner ess ulres PRICE—-$23.500. WITH LENT TERMS Properties JA 55-8968 GI APPROVED 1-YEAR-OLD kiteh with enett excel. Par ors SUBURBAN- Gl 3-bedroom, all-brick masonry, 40-ff, full basement, Costens kitch- 1.925. $600 al = if &pD ‘ si | a MB "MILLS RE ALTY only $15 250 ANNANDALE. VA, JE. 2-0999 JE. 4-1877 PRE CUT, precimon engincered pomes, designed for ont rectien: from $1 504 to your lot —S ESS COLONIAI ~ ron he 1] Va ms ® Irec THAN Ar and ! ou {AN $2000 I 5 2033 Own It didn't all Land in Ireland goodly bit of that $16 a Wai ‘ere * Arlington Open . o V 4) wi q&* * ison Biv a 4) ) We're crowing about _ the } mar her infor rmati ion and appt. te oe 3 UBIVE WITH , Riche ards Ine. JA 5. 9387 a, eves JE. 3- 0377 V ‘ASH Fi NG7 TON BLVD. WHITE BRICK 4 BEDRMS 2 BATHS & Garage 930 ONV al PIED f% TT > | DAYS. +t - Realty , OFFICE ‘OPEN 9 To ° Wilson Bivd. JA. 7-9300 ” ia tive Brick House on % Acre D $17 cv1-F CONT RACTS. "ACC K neal < " 2-7140 SHA NIN Ra-raat! rnecreati “the 2035 Wi son Bivd BEST convenience—-larse Cape Cod s - — . ome ree. room with fireplace DIRI acl 7 ise __ wert rm. With Sreplace dining room fully equipp LT RAMBLER ALEX- becdrms.. 2 baths an nen ANDRIA AREA. wooded half acre sewing room now and save! Gee and vou will ac ee. Pr ces wil) se this sume ne! 8 offered to vets and non- , $ 3000 ‘aoa nandale Va “losed 7 rr nge refri te ~ nat ur PANEL ED marge oedr hot et- | finished’ ™e AGAR ASS vers gue TODAY See the your dreams and ‘uy will By appointment or OPEN -SUN. Directions: Over 14th my Shirley hwy Rid nr home of buy. : Bridge, : entrance, to Ar ad. to 6. left to 3130 | 2 “ ACRES lear level _ eras e« RrarTry land Ay cK scenery chwey ar $16.2: avs tial aw ‘ r Dr erson Realty me fr Opportunity al AT ~~? : rT} 4 Pentagon Wilson Blvd. ov per 7-9300 g to MONTHLY *PGIKiING Dricx rambier. ¢ hopping Stone » House 15 c 500 & 80 Secure & s\ one bouse } yi to schools, s price $15,800 4 BEDROOMS has liv..rm. witl T) Ry ‘ 4 tee y sad et LEVEL wr—with of a * lattic view recept on hall Paneliied kit< any ma coog in a @._, "eens room f. - ans gene : A ie ‘ “ co.oriu EX UNFINI ISHED ‘BEN: WITH FIR _BED! ROOMS, 3 BATHS —OPEN TERMS he Br ant Company 6878 Tie Highway JE. 3-81)8. 3 BED 8 l\% BA OND at an 7 aS ” RM 633 BO TE. 6-5043 eee ng bas b been tr ansiorred ~*~ GARDEN ‘OPEN SOLD SIGNS ver the place these ANC Oe aut Re are Gra 1A 2 1200 Beet A 5-796 AN TATKT $500 DOWN N Val RUCKER CO. es. & Sunday, JA. 86262, KE. 8-435] 0 left again slep si2¢ open house. ur ROU Realty Co., Inc. FHA FINANCED rs @ ; lala re Wr 309 Coll rar Fr wT Fil 2 din with % bath and oe rarace ft sereened por ch. Sewer anc water, paved at. nr bus stop. DIRECTIONS: From Alex 6 Rt ] approx 2 miles to ant S ; rr af 4 : ; 4 Call CHARLES rer FI ‘RTHER ‘INFORMATI OM. * i water §-6430 DO SPEND R RENT MONEY I NVEST IT! ste a - &.room to Fai colonial " r TO VETERANS OR cig asive with Giehe ley Bt Rd jeft rieht..te WN. 34th to nouse. ltt Be aRD REALTY OV "3-194 Fellowtne Pace? 4 -f Centineed On aD ' ttt % Tee OR RR Oe poo Sin orree J pes _ AO ITO LOE LIREBE MEY PAGEL CAL INDOOR Arete tbs oP & ¥ 2 Ny . ” ® , y »* ¥ will prs Meh vag THE ni tery Att COP OF en heberec ne meter 92 Pet By Dong ‘ hes Breer ey ae a Oe ee ee aon Be YP MOONE OE OY A HAN WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD Be HY ES Ye ROAM Pee a a) OP Peay Ww be Saturday, March 20, 1954 WES en / a vie LOGEC PERO CHAREST AE FS “3 SALE, SUBURB. HOUSES _ VIRGINIA LOOK 3S “COLONIAL BRICK HOME bier. carport 8.2 000 yet: year rm. @ twin-sise. bedroams Pirevines in TVing toom Separate cining room Pui) dry basement Level kh cr ren cae iamecuist . ‘T to b A sr ngton cond) tlio 380 r) “aA 7 CYTraT ' “FT OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO DARK ‘ | Realt t HO Out Lee } Utah 2045 and hws st open A 3 dale Cherr mf 4 ock to : ier er REALTY N. Glebe " . JA. 2- 4800 NC sa News Pil ms , IT TRUE living rm piace, family-siz equ upped bed vy pers nt ~ Dut P. KF N 1é I LUCHS CO. 55 Wilson B men t oul yA . SHA} ? NO a 3-Bedroom Br 2 "SENS onal ~—(|«SCLOSE-I Ranch style. wane bedroo x Cx 575 iv TTE? ITICART TATUTOC TNC! ’ i PII / JU 7 st Rroker 2300 Wilson Just TOKCT} WE WiLt B A REAL BUY IN’ AN to Sil. HOUBE. Center nan ent liv fam > 25 : b vee + Liss 67\SALE, SUBURB, HOUSES VIRGINIA WILL bulld on *i26 lot 3-bedrm. ram-_ A Touch of Spring ROUTH: ROBBINS! ! BUS CAl IPORNIA RAMBLER fireplace 67| LOTS FOR Seat 73 ROCK CREEK “C CREFK HILLS Belect your lot now, Bear the Park new » 2000 dn. Full price, | , JE. 2-3321 DOGS, PETS, KENNELS _76 Goo Ca PET D HOME ea eons ow FoR ane ee i Pw dog ee edine lack OL miniature; 8 weeks old. 4-7817 lorg window Planting box SB: Lone tih picture pre..y * war-att es ee tte eal ee Fay 5 aN pone “4 Ldw. i. “Tones & 0.5 Inc. CHEVY CHASED. —_ wo. 6-2300." wenn rs 1 OR SPECUI OR 13 miles from D Cc. in} aldo area. tract has| approved for | Tl ry ~* ’ 138 acres will accept | release Owner 3-6049 r "ORTON. 88-3360 or JO ACRr< a slave STRE Ax MOSTI LY ‘it y Co., Inc. | —™= ME PLUS SINESS me near , VEL CUBAN AND ES SUT D.C ON HARD gt RPACED ROAD NEAR TOTAL PRICE. $7 oy Down BALA NCE #60 Pé MO ERHOLDT REALTY > 72-8515 Res. Riverside 3-3200 WANTED BUILDERI lots near Ri es . p Be ee Zoned —— ail there. 81250 e TENCHER WALKER AD. 4-2644 COLORED } Beautiful half-acre pomesite just off Defense hwy.. half biock from modern colored school and bu: anguiar site with er 200 frontage on hard- surraeed rd water property desired, — BROOKE—Best ver 1 acre " erms or lee \ Croes WD leve! front SSOCIA TES _ RTIONAL Call. aP RG address: | $6.250 Wa beautiful view cash. JA. 86-2234 main highway in : ist sac- IN ARLIN¢ aTON | 6108 Center-ha!l! laree spacious kitchen cabings! 1005200. 2 off Leesburg Pike. 4 oy from Falis “er Mary J 13 ACRES dwell me . th ar 0 j dD. C.; $100 ~¥ Epo més, : x $2,000 & hom “AT Ty S10 000 or Pide i 4b S863 after 6.420 1” Pairfax 1} Cc - JA 660 pt. par tiy wooded for sale. > NICE a W. L ROACH oF aa Near: } hous Nice hools satisfactory owner any day JA “ACREAGE SALE MARYLAND LANHAM PARK — Excellent laree level lot 100x270 nerd -surtaced etreet. Gracen T. Scott. WA 461 G. COUNTY—Contee choice acreage bidg. site $25 mo 1° miles 75 e7Cc lan Bly 7-8500 CiLt D on you ot. S50 wo r in nearby Vir ng can be arranged with o. eakiast cx LN SALE, OUT-OF-TOWN 68 ATLANTHC 4 ‘ excel ‘ACO! rner a? ef “nan * 4 E Sat wu. Ns Se . -o- Troom er meting on tel Pi 1604. : ACRES WOODLAND (some tim- ~ ‘ani >) her ry mile 5 £0 rr? cor! es j ‘ and tee nh TO D.C. OR PENTAGON ~ nen RE AL ESTATE WANTED 69 ay A HANAN 15S $450 DC NEARLY-NEW 3 BEDROOM BU =‘ ow TILE B LARGE |! IVING. _EQUIPPE! - a's FREE CONS quik a Arnold Realt SPOT CASH them WANT HOt ROOM " . ‘ KITCHEN | TR £ ES “TMMEDATE. “POSSESSON WN v aN a) 4 WANT e146 a. MV. Dp REYN OTHS rrr . | 7 se WI! LSTON SHOPPING G CENTER JE JE. 2-8087 SRIATRITOTS a ee V4 V¥ iNdvd 8 pur CANNON, OWNER Kit property y Rappahannock Co... iche s Ga ULTATION. ‘top ; ur proper ME 88-6580 bome We 3 t Co that mi ro! .. J eeres . your a Vash Hi zh, - a 3-14 ~ tn. ac SEs sale reace Zam WATERFRONT, SALE RETIRE 735A WATERFRON HOME. U ALL CASH ¢ r Mad FARMS, LAND, SALE MARYLAND A. STOCK FARM, ing our enol ce of thesé 2 and semicet. homes _zaul >. ome with bsrr w- sanneneets fens ed. ‘yard: wit : <0 by Fa Seoeent al will refinance GI or huce 15 entrance anc ’ IDEAL ¢ ol nr Tw Y\A/ L/W VY iN Tis ACHE. + Call be too T. BRC “J 7 pay Lee ! ov re . ‘ a op herr Pee Se - * " a The Bon -~ .s caus aly ” PUL, has ea TO REAC sf Lee Hwr.. beyond rch to Rowe Drive, left new |} $ “ptocks to 2? ant Open Siren. rogdtton al Ri Y LAY ty 7.1000 ; 1. .. cose Out . Avie " . JA ON BUSY HIGHW ae Alexandria and > tan on stead v Hee ome? sion it land Priced $86, 900: 7-H. requ! red $38 00 CHARL!I ULMAN. IN ‘ in at Alex KI 9. 2422 naplmzed OV. 3-2215 Gundeys and Holidays, KI. & 4897 MAKE YOUR LANDLORD ‘aeeline” B pane Py ‘Der ING HIGH Y , STO Reasonable 6-3082 | A good 8 rm brick BOXER Male at stud: AKC regis- bwin full TA 7077 c FARMS, LAND, WANTED 72) Pron BAY OFFERS CHESAPEAKE BEACH.- 3 4Fotu. Dd. 7«rm. stone 00-ft Steck barn od Sah Quicz Poss: ' Less than 1 ie Block .from - bay Substantial cot lv go 0d . surrour furnished ; 6300 down, ix! oe tt-up ~ ge attrac- ide hing BOW! Us REA! TOR recer 2-186) MO ‘yimcrnta - fur ni 0 e vv NTRY HOME. inest bathing as brand new 2-bedrm ARM, hye poarere ind “home about cing big } AC RES ear Tears a. DICE iten! tneation i ' D nme conve nt WILD DUCK AND GOOSE SHOOTING ef Pi « ng ‘ rrice aa DOGS, PETS, KENNELS 76 qu BOXER PUPPY Pedigreed: not quite mo femaice. Perfect marking KI old §$-3852 ber re w 500 1780 dn.. 413) tered BRi 7 PU a we e estate mo. TE and guard. France e Poolevil T RENT CHECK TO NDEPENDENCE FARMS vse, T™ AT w! CHESTER ITHIN VIRGINIA LARGE AND MILES ‘SWELL. JA i _ ae wr: Os house ais 2 babies COG " 2 COCKER tong ARS. Rh months LOTS FOR SALE Ci 16 6 73 CoOL LIE Pt PPiES- Tr. color: males 218 ne nol cauwped Rite Rock Cres au rIRST cv R S loca ted ‘—*™ ~2100 = CAMP SP } ™ 2 oaks TOHN mom a re? mience? ONE MILE hivGaa cente : separate screene a shopping bed roont: shady si recreation room | ca ; asement. The sem gk t ’ jo is SOxn165 - wi i¢ , dscaped rees Ww “ASKING ONLY a 61 for the LO with only MALBEROO Parker Smith & Donne 6 WN. 16th St. at Court aan Red ealtors. Open § to 9. JA. 7-6161 stream at the rear $15.250. Phone JA. 7 reasona@le taeane ro DISTRICT in { MRO k AKER ee ee $4 KC oF COLUMBEA COLL PU PS— Mai es ane - ~se rE ' iw noi Hot srs $10 & $15 reise Serre _ females rh : * 4 nw 43: 4 River r . 100'x120 xk Park JU MMERCIAL “ overtook! ne “POG sat weathe 5.49 EM. 3.4978 bor, 16x77 LI. 6 ong syncs ad SE SUBS $1290 up 7-7128 ~Ree ndreful . 954° } KERRY BLUE—Male ! oO exce! pediereed A é and diack ~990 dp. Cc We ee weradge: LOVE BIRDS~—No kind and gentle meena. “TT rak > at ht Brees ers ail cok year d a pair. JO. §-9 MARY! AND CAD At stud imiature. crean : Suitaabie for cream or silver 0 2-7592 miniaty ire silver, ‘ a SHIPPING CRATES, all 72 SIAMESE sealpo papers | wie "HAIRED female. cae il race CO. POODLE . AKC South of at stud dogs, cats, etc low cost. RA. 6-3445 point ae healthy. | Riverside 3-2200 K—We offer * one ities “in n hern Wide | ntace. high elevation x: 4 arcroft. «| HORSES, LIVESTOCK HEREFORD : mort THREE, SALE, | ACCORDION — Crucia | pearl ass; ACCORDION. ABOING, MACHINE—Burroughs, ex- cel. ¢ JA. 7-9140 AFGHAN—AIi St ar dard T LI Open AIR - CONDITIONER. pac EATEN ES BARBY CARRIAGE Bany BABY FURN.—Passinette #15: bath- new. HO BABY erie RE (new): , " = tres Br aS SUITE, 4 pieces, el. ¢ 3-6393 a ~ week: ee 76A P- te pee. ‘with eifer alf old; also reerli ng - fetter ‘brown xn “white an oT48 ed Figg We ‘wing ‘SALE Wed. wer 24th, . took. Mkt at ere i q "YESH Cows. 5 ose oe ringing pangs caifhood vaccinated. D. a heife ad 4 i YOUNG MARE “POR SALE 5, or Work : or ride; $12 best offer LO 7.9025 MISCELLANEOUS 78 neil white new, student size. $150. HE. 4-3634 Brand new Hohner Li gg M. Sacrifice. EM. 2-2200, 120 b with case. acc... ond: reas. wool, siechet rug LI. 4-1294 ADR, A hol igs Sal mo ree electric Wir- from fuse ie i $29 All new % h <- io mode 2212 14th st. General Elec Special | ISON AIR CONDITIONER CLOSE-OUT nw These carry Admiral tioners units fully guaranteed. We GE Prigidaire. Mitchell and Gibson condi- ire «& Battery Co. AND H STS Ne Eves Til) Cargpier air 10th 71-90R. ton age season if sacrifice en ofr i ees aASses ed or USt (movable) GE summer lawn 2-7984 James dishwasher twin-fan rue iereen) sprayer (rotary- Wkdays after 6 pre 5. WA ob carr inge: igh ‘chair, patnineste res. sgle _bed with spes nd ma TA - 569 a autre RE cribs. $12 rriage $12.5 , $5.98 SHULMAN: 5 e. LI -665 ” are om 95; Free 5. ag ote “5 P inette, $20; pra livery $4.95: cariage strollers $5 95 3-66° SUITE 3 pe.. springs es Price reas. LI att $s) 9a . shuiman S "i981 and : 3-8524 ter solid pine i AE RE -7279 On SPrings & ut ensils > Sook! ne f Jt g ‘ 5 Ban ROOM SUITE—3 pi ees. springs ar < ote re LI ; rice | — DRM. aire tresses, Pri 5 Mm tr reas spr na LI ¥) up, Many einer fen to you, x 95 tems. LANGOHR , 4817 Setheeds. ave. BOXERS—Fawn KC. resonable — AKFAST SET Siscauee Brand new. Make offer AD. BRE AKFRONT. Mal $135. r } endale. so! cedar end tabi ~ col , puppies LU 3847 2-8883 . Chippe chest, 45 MATERIAL KING CO. NE. LU. 4-0800 LIC with F3 El BUILDIN CE WR 4002 MINN. AVE CAMERA—Leica mar Jens and accessories case. tripod, mechar ical tachments and complete set of fil- ters No dealer Cal E. 4-5654 CAMERA—New automatic Rolleiflex. P35 far ar, MX. Synch. case. $165 horse 2-2427 girls’, ladies’; Oc w m. misc. TA COMBINATION STROLLER ; riage twin size Perfect. LU. 2-5958. oer. cabinets. factory to you up all unpeinted items L os ig rae Wood Products, 4817 Beth ave. Open Thurs. 8; Sat. 6 OL 4-0100 DEEP FREEZE eS « red wender ~ $10; condition, JA elec. Coidsp $325. 22. 19 u. ft Must sel), ? ¥. Col dspot, excel. cond.; DINING | ft FC rer “IRONE K Re ‘ tery > 3 ELECTRIC LAWN” MOWER- ~Bat driv mis charger ag i 7 "367 4 MOTORS 2) lL with : b uf? and er . Ger Sif | ‘ _h ~ $6. I ‘hor 1¢@ EM s ut any 31-663" ll FOAM RUBBER—C shape 2145 F st. nw.. EX he) Tiare cu. ft 8 new rRer ZER c prog FRIGIDA Aue old, $115 exc d cor sectional sofa. drop . matching chair ith spring and and dresser, etc. Best 2-25 half price or les s Fr URNITU RE wanted ed . ae 1032 FURNITURE_| ne , zx? LE ARAN wt he f N ; ee 72 be r* DV TLITAT:* " 4 ‘ rliN\W 7 eh wi ava rrcr _ on of new bedro ry artot far = art modern fas for aagee terrris* te Wig oe 7. | 7 Tay 8 Ott , ** Fd Ade k & et ATL ae 7,7 oA FURNITURE and mabie : Leavy! ne PURNITURE map.e tabie With 1625 Fk rat md H pURNITU RE—Antique and beautiful old Empire bed mahogany moat bid abc e S20 it. Six f he Fariy ¢€ years oid painted and e es ; iD m 2-8201 - < of “modern crotch mye mahogany din . china ing rm cabinet. 08 mat tresses $55. and other i 2-9296. Bhown by appt FURN —Leather cherry ests leaf blond desk, aratture a | PRICE WINTER CLEARANCE | vepericaa Fr raityrs Exchange - | oP HS we EE leds ara. | SALE, "RN. home pans “ FUR JACKET — wala miscellaneous Mo GAS RANGES. il & TOVE AAS. cond: oO “HEATERS IS. as STOVE. HEATERS. See oil. con STOVE Tite HOT-W ATER — ER—Sultable for b iw 5 4° M s PIANOS—U sod VA. PIANOs— For PIANO complete al used and returned strumen prices corner of 9330 Md PLANO Ast. FOOL Pate 7-9114 r nF REFRIGERATORS ' cuar sue SINGE as.: oO incl. rugs, ete 92 hou Must sell. new wood 7ih NW ving. "Toit F AS £0 ce ecistered. ent Snape, 68-8244 2 woo ~" practica new, used coal, wood 1011 "th ees ood room 1ou | brand — Rosmead ! consider 892 ODEL TRAIN, HO ine: fur 3-6276 inshal) 925 G 9 ORG A N—Germa!: separate and iowe ba se uCce) ~J673 uprs low pri real in MART at Dia guar terms nas of use 10 MISCELLANEOUS ntents sehold used wen 5 dishes Ale items. | $.1802 i Revaire | fox. JV a inti begin er and CLOTHING— Worn befor iron iy new. exce)- See Repairs elec.) NA Repaire elec } at “nw NA new | . stand and _new cond ack “HO” | PIANOS WANTED gauged. 3 ¢t istom aft electronic complete origin al Tr . * | 14-FT or ir ying condit! on spin... € ces. JU values rand 3 struments visit 15 ith (just above the library) Ideal for rec 1ANOS— We have 7 20 G St rana, 12 ¥ } terms avVali Ci PIANOS—For rea! vi no ~aete up eh. it; + MR Myers with po tubing Bou mnt new jast J 7. PU} CH BOwl—! fronatene eas Sat. & 304 Small guarar Dp comp! te 2 } REFRIG shaton-—dk operating cond ood 2-4627 REFRIGERATOR—PFricicdaire. $100 ft , ft 100: 11 ey $200 Both prac izes rebuilt Ioshur St selection o usec plano prices 3 NW. RE 3002 REFR! GER. at ORS. es Fn ry REFRIGE nea" as Que St new RE FRIGERATORS guar A. ew Pho citais” oo t) } few s lightly from rents } in- at educe d JORDAN 8 ! n ba! ance in 77-6212 enony ra SD. new pianos es: Phone 8T ] cond.; Ww “ 46 29 91% Dn t wei for Ly 50-ft. well $14: LO 7 aq giass ak if tre m Rodman st , a cor.u. Fully -4781 ft EM “Tou freezer 8-3755. makes. up. 828 28. ‘- cu. $25 iF JO 200) all $45 3-08 SORSERSETD. | "0O0} = makes $45 ny 3 i. ¥ * also "ene: 49% $6.95 sa. yd. 95 5802 Geor and “SEVRES" PORCEL B) & gold. HO ER Se ‘¢ SI WING a at ON rer CENTER fensbu S00 e sit VER, STERLING SOFA & 3 CHAIR rec. room: very reas SOFA, fires tables, SOFA amps, ide and dinette set; Sleeps : qu “> Saie, fter ] - STE RI ING Gorha tumes JA. 8-4 piace So ea 20 9 $19.95 Shoppi rec amcit : ede like new ratty VASE— 615 ext 508 MAC mine Oecd meets 4905 Annapo) ng Center. Plated m y ; candelabr tea set. S, suitabie RA 2unge i chal reas. RA. 3- i918 SILVER —~ eo Aliso Daveno, $20. setting: used —— STORM WIN toval home 4 dem $1 50 a A ’ Sm) Seah Fe Aanr $24 ~2434 WASHING good cond ne WASHER—Bencix ser 0 cond i: exce - WASHER Thor cr SHA WASHING. i oe to HOURS of Arth ing $1 5 set of Sherid igue verware any cond rac and on r ; FURN. MACHINE $50. Mr i $125. TE WASHING MACHINE cond cost $140 sac ait 7-963 MACHU... Masiag. mos coe | a5 “8-431 MACHINES n ery ve are < irer aus lamps rv at } a: ng LU n R mos , 6 -S086 he hese $60 J \-auto Dt exc P ~ matic, excel 4 Mu rr ay SO . dan Call chairs. ol an o.d sil NO 31 Cai’ till 7 p. in 7 23-6677. 78) MISCELLANEOUS WANTED 79 of §-room ‘ver used opine. el 7 panes. Moi BOOKS al a8 A “ea GAS RANGES—Ail ss } Satan “Bast ia” in origi- \ ‘culy $200 cash EM FURNITURE. Apariment SAPANeet Lat ; condi- $ JO §31 for €-2447 -WrAReer (50, sell 5 -8936 table 4-7503 ong 2 antique ismps. OY. Sa MISCELLANEOUS WANTED 79 - AM INTERESTED m bervine ¢ Lodi “shat | ver atohons dining suites, office furnitore and refrigerators DU, 47-0513, Eves. RA. eunte * oT buy all bo Se ngest ehest| LN oF ane rem pare tanta uve me eto Sag. BA: 80) Pe ae a 1900 eS. women, children, dolls. oy | FVEN —Wanted any amount ‘Also | At Gran 8 d condition moval. Mr Spot cash Leeds. LI. ‘URN. WANTED—any a cunt: liv- ing room. bedrm.. Kit. JU.. 5-0313. | aire “as and elec. ranges in clean cond. | ¢ Furniture & Stove Co LI 4 Lone FURNITURE. Ode pieces entire re tents * vetting stoves china tiques j onda FURNITURE eo tp ANGE 210 7th St SE L 6-0588 Fou® We pay cash for old ry. den- tal goid. platinum. eliverware. A KAHN. INC... 62 yrs. at 935 F at PIANOS wanted + casty paid; any style. JU. § ~o cash pd Any style. Call anytime JU. 9 3039 19 PIANOS WANTED HIGHEST CASH PRICES | paid for good uprights spinets. stands’ prompt attentio ven to r call 2-7 or 116 COAL, FUEL OIL, WOOD 80 Ton $14. Superior 00 chairs. misc ee BOATS, PARTS, SERVICE 81 WOLVERINE Boat. 752 How- d. se, Apt. 4 L. BE Kinard dbriguets, tables ar BOATS—Used outboa moto FARM AND GARDEN BLUE GRASS SOD Green wich hitr TOP 19-ton ica Parms Nursery SOTL—4-ton load a. $24 I 7-277 4 i , i OP SOIL ' $12 for large Gump truck load of rich soll from Dairy farm, delivered in Va. Crescent 3-1475 FILd DIRT BO. TOPSOIL. BLU MANURE et ls0 346 NE STONE 7 nF SOIL—Ge de scape work. § -646 2 VERY good rich TOPSOTL for lawns and greenhouse very reasonable CAI 3 , ral ! | ¢ FARM MACHINERY ay - ® Internat each. OT AVIATION TAY LOR CRAFT D- nal $200 f) 4. ie Lop exce ! ' TRAILER— 1953 Crest ft modern ¢ * ‘4 ', e . Edece 90A co 235 7914 Geor PERSONAL LOANS ee ‘err D a by. F bs a Ave. Fim 5 “4400 ' EED QvICK PERSONAL. CALL LOA! NC YD LOAN? QUICK Pr: BSONAY ‘ ; 7 : Ti? E NiCHCH CHEVROLF1 Ba id BMvattsvill rad. | CHEVROLET—Late °: e ne ZUR riLee *“Ov rakes MG mY SHE! LIF F Ave aes tee hat a TA PARKWAY w. AD. 2 y til pane: Uriginai ad Excellent potiess inside r Tame on re- ‘PORD). 3540 2-4100 ORT cabin chassis 10 00x20 o-apeee rear | air eheate TRUCK SALE! "46 DODOCE 1-Ten Panel $132 ‘47 DODGE 8 Van S795 "47 INTER. Cac Rody rHeEY rane! CHEVROLET Pickup INTER Walk-in Metro PORD CHE, ‘A! CHE for 14 $595 \%,-Ton S615 iy-Ton $695 &795 Stake $795 1-Ten Pickyp $245 \%-Ton Panel $895 ‘se FORD FE Van $9985 ‘S51 FORD 12° Stake $1005 ; Mandell Truck Center 2241 Wicholas Ave. 5.€. LU. 4-4400 12° . ¢ FORD 823% REO R a for 1! 71) vase rs 14°R =) dy 2-speed ready for th $1695 st. Sat mt é 1950 capacity: hy upped 1331 51, tra cudic-inch er - per W ASHINGTON co. st I 3.7 se 91 « 3" 5-s 1331 Half ae Ei aos . AD, 2-0185. Open 9 to 9 - tires. way tpORD 2-0185. Open GMC. TRACZOR-~ ‘48, Tike new’ new motor ires et TRUCKS, SALE DODGE—’46 one-ton mechanical! ba 3. F2 dump. rear, e roughest goi (PORI Ps dump . thd 2-8p rot) at 3051 M st. 9 to 9 x in 200d | REO “48 Tractor draulic conne mn. wit REO WASH ON ‘ SE ctor. mode) ‘gine. air brake INC ton eet & cab 9.00x30 speed seapemnipes yy se 7, : cor io $42 5 REO ASHINGTON. Cc oy ‘INC I 3-7402 8.25% Niet . with Sth wheel and 93) AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 ae As es totem SALE Sa SO Oana ee | -in All| BUI LICK — 82 cm — oe! P y gso00 nae x a ivory flow. a ; E OLDS. | Hyattsville. Mad | $2 mperi ort Pully” “eau PS Ww tone paint B. ky JR. & Washington ‘ Crees Dea! 5320 Wise . _ A e SW STANLEY | CHRY SLER 53 Win TYE }.. €00r | tone Yo | HORN - c “OR Tt | “ond 995. LY <« \/ GND , + CMRY oe i heeee- =i & 'B LEARY Washington $120 Wisc c ROSL ' J a) US w ’ : : | 5600 Baltimore ave.. 7 B h Au 20 ng: only ) 3051} i. eed rear, : $1} AE gf. band Fk A AXE 5 oad BBM nw AD Roadmaster: RYTV¥) till — ower steering, power brakes H anc ang vit wm L. Deauliful metal JR. A ; S.. Uiagsi uc 8 \ Se x = Nee’ bet he » Hyatisvi ~ Riviera Dp. cyna car iy as 5600 Baltimore ave BLICK-— 53 Super cream body with dbiack & R &H.., r This COLL } ’ wo = i. lie. Mad wpe 1948 Was like " SN > fyattevillie, Md Bt 132! ruic “K—1959 Roadmaster ec : Dy na- 4 ye Rac tires JR. & Bn t LT BS, wi Sun 480 Oper i DE +4 195 sedan; ¢ nera exce co 60 6 Weekda 2 a Piredome v Beaut! ful BROS Tne . Automobile HO. 2-6012 ot al 1. Cond , ti. 5S or best offer MARV in ‘eM 2003 DE SOTO 52 Firedome V nt ma Ww ashington s NW i Prt Su table TICK Str in ‘RIVIERA. Ima v : oe nm cars WANT TO BUY—Late model car ay a not im portant clea AS . n or good rf 7612 2 Au TU 2-4) BR’ SOUTHERN BUYER Day oh Price a . A WESTERN BUYER has cash for nice cars. Gea. ave /0an cars nw ee Hughes ana |! e' us since new: f PEAKE MOTOR Albe: ’ t nw DE SOTO Radio & suiy : $2" “L1yiNOSTON MOTORS ~. 3 lorida «Ave »& 1949 eaver On & est Bt 1K Dryne- 49 super secanette . ‘ Aut ranmsis r *) y ca . & ~ _ ean, Ready yf B. LEARY, JR ; Washingions ‘ » to- Ful «9° must ee ARROW MOTORS 3212 R I. ave ealet re. AP Wis Ave. NW H sOTO—1951 C n ri me iat tom Bt = 1980 ‘ door & iper whit ide H iow Mi 9-480) jock 4-4128 immed | BUICK — Rit jers B20 all 5 HEm tire jeage 5056. CARS. NEEDED | IMMEDIATELY STOCK. HI PAID WITH NO HAGGLING FOR CARS HESE ‘Sl. OR GHEST ASH x 33 CAD.LLACS ‘33 OLDS 'S3 BUICKS 3. PONTIAC Reo ” ‘53 MERCI gn 53 FORDS CALL High Price Sam ¢ AR WHOLESALERS ST WANTED clean EX. ASK 9 v POR ser I) d give v0 ~ CARS used cars IMMEDIATELY prices . Tf o HOYLE sa al SALES 1717 AF RIGHT PAU! Motors cl ~~ ee £6 { ey ich DOL LAR For Your Car makes and models We need a! vou e will pay difference ear AT ui t 3051 A RK — a fa GS Sehere ' vi collars ly mmediate Motors 8.5571 4 BR IGHT 7809 paid low and o R yt] SEL r Ave. KN R300 h WAR 74 Ww oy * oe : o 51 models n ou sell your Pa odels ! your preset it off and efi be rou in cash. Bri KV VAY (F AD TULLE an See us ." 9299) ® Any car SPRING! ve PRit BI ick: = 47 Co a ‘ ADILI oo ES DE “SOTOR 4 -oOupe OF Hut Oo! Dt soTo ; sedan: Powe ' tra: eae >. SUNDAY "PEAKE MOTOR co . A EN $i. ‘700 c pos I AC ] 195 6) ‘ soo 1948 Sub ease pert. : nh FO ‘ > i ¢ ADDIL ac - a Yr Le Tr paying ' > x" CKDILEAC. "COU rs DE ' iv tone rerr a. aif with rear Premium sree ae VLE 82 } . * nei 3 speaker coee-eae i he ; AGA? | ari Own am. 44 DODGE P 7 ’ W lL» M own ' : LIVINGSTON "MOTORS ia ave. ne x 8 a Oe mout CADILLAC 4 TOR CO 49 Caronet (rverseas make PODGE x- ‘ ; . 6 JA > DODGE and ! Waa? ae 41% et f care 6a! . z* Piyrr , 4 OLMSTEAL > M Dodge © MOTO! DpOoODG! é ; + pnp t pDODG! Sonthern pont E. & Fie » he CAR To 00. Grady Bet nesee eeded mM coF f, * LOTOR o01.e@ Ar ( ADIT LAC wr . a v oO c th & Pia : we cece $219! ral “Bee { COY nA ey onvertibie THACKER M poh mileage < : YY LA , Gaii | _***. BF . Bt CADILLAC — 1953 tiful ent green heater cirect} 4-1400. ext Tudor $250 544 Vict oria 2-1 uoder 6.000 mi ord in trace I! Rih & \ T org Flor da ave Tf a car we CADILLAC 53 Coupe: 1600 mile thei vr. & b ower steering: easy eye i vour white sidewalls: $3895. RE ord) 2 at. et Victoria white sid ow De? V-8 convertid PRIVATE CAR OWNER fust = . © A , \ v Good 0 wie e@xceptio rr ‘ a . 1620 ‘49 to ‘53 . 5: | 4 No. | ‘Cor of N Gor CA , PEN SUNDAY ANTE RS ‘ oy R. I LJ AVE 6-2200 NO -SECREYTS HERE? WILL PAY UP TO Fords ‘ bevies foptiacs s Mercurys at L AD. 4-9882 BLASS & CLARK lorida Ave. Capito! and F} ve acyl SETTLE MEN ‘ CHEVROLET—1t9 Power Glide. 1 ‘ Ht VROLET + |) CHEVROLET FORD $ . ; . 2 . 7 it j = . i ia R R. 1. ave Be. FORD Any make Coeveotiss at QUEEN orid's iarge Chevro ‘et os 610 H st. ne Cusyaoist— 49 ¢ conc h. new Ruy irisman car deal- exce) acces nvertible op. 1951 1-1178 39 4-dr new moto! very. good 27-2193 —3i.7 J 51 and pric on y BTEAD foroR CO = 3 gest Oid smoovie nm 4 * + JE ¥ ‘ ‘AQ ~ustom wi TILL , chtnol ‘Tt colo cond a | CHEVROLET—19 2-« ear Dne c 5 £ NE FORD, v } wT ‘Bl " rida Ave NE. orida NE ) 31 CARS ¢~ SON Te FN BT RADE. WARM WE Bee or ; ear denet 7 Car Haine ‘% FAC T NOT LCOME & c0 ne hefore es W Rd s Wo rImnte — hte BEACH a FIC TION i? j { af Pi N Ty M « Hr VROLET— LD CASH arner ’ ey tor nee he > CHEVROLET—195) etat: . 4 : Une rT thre 7s ad WE W ANT Cc ARS RF. 144i Ar PONTIAS ae Wk WE'RE WOL 1991 Wis Tep Dellar Popular TRIANCIE > Sole R — Se ee AUTOMOBILE, SALE neton WE NERD ca trace. Fine NFS MO iw eon Va TY R Ro 4 ; Wash BUYING C ARS od FE een Ave. NW fer Makes and Ave. NE. DE Bes eis. % e. firi¢v ‘¢ RS EM Clean ‘Care { n ae » 2 or le ATI as ag r EN! exce : col . Ra wet «Lede. ; Oe ee +206 wt oo ; = o Al bot Fak en eara. ext 748. Sgt Gaim. CHEVROLE 1982 3.0142 Seal ce car Ne m ' 3) tar Crigt at ~~ ’ . . CHEVROLET 9 eda Radk A . . “n ee MOTO! _ “TREY 7 CHEVROLET ‘49 [rest FULL PRICE $395) " 9. Will sell for balan: mance eompans with or ~ ner ; . seat cove i} s Medels. OF NM ar re «G $95 o s aa 72-6302 SRD . 42 RE CHRYSLER AUSTINS— ne at $195 1953 $445. 50 heater, finish } SF Nemo ae 4a Open — 1948 th “» 1h Her cond special “de - J ixe new one owne IN ‘ ee andin it to 6. ik a > - Drnafiow very c Ope § sae . - oe MAN 01 sI rhe “ww CHRYSLER HUDSON phx " -_ $2295 : HUDSON xe 4-cdoor crive ean, Specia! cy rysoers ©) 4800 Wisconsin Open Sun 1 to & Chrysler ‘50. S| Ran Vernor Open r Or Z ~ wt DEON. oer tmousine a Y R ‘in Bank” “hinanced 320i L ‘st KV 0722. z ea. Tas > i _ HO r de it tulis, cap. poed ‘Pace Wimdeor aaa sightseeing or ew-car service Se can heater arc 2¢ Dealer Mai 3062 OGA | 7-58 aiis $1400 A). wo ‘Waeon Mainiine tu rs # Wo al w ROS.. tomo 20 me oe orer, Inc. BROS Auemodile HO. 29-6019 on, good 3-5 — ys 9 to 9 -6 8- pass. fu- thro - Cail Sik. -8 Spor's- 4-door $695 BROG.. Ine. Autamobiie 0 a-6012 wis V-8 conf. and ave, KE & H., exe. seynment, finance Green $1245 Largest TREW Ave. NE. Meadowbrook 4-d?. 065 Ave. NE. asf , ~ week- black fin. 9! A #-0943 one Pordomailc, “Cs le n 4 $1995. lity low l ave rdomatic $1,495 ality lew l Ave eRafnt £495. $5 RS, 3213 spark. ing biac 7 -~ 1699 H One down R. é & 3 ) Coupes $395 » amelie anon tame itemen COLO Ca” r a sw Le celivery ‘er re . hha tad “Radio n° one dor A , hi 6-1€99 - ecoe written AL EXANDAIA ave ei hee Alex. lub coupe; Ne@-car cote Continued From Preceding Pose SE BAI NEPA OR OE tied Sing ¢ - Mins a oa ee i ae Laie LLCS CPS TN aS ? a ‘ P 1 sone te “eet Wt tae low PF Oe i ee mee a bb we te ON ~ ' rr a - 7 — we . xy SpA wat - w a> 9 ’ mst can a ht ae et Li a TENA NER TO I Ee ROT. PY PTTL Sa eT SPEEDO TE NT A es et ee Ne Mae ary HL I SRR IE PEEL PRESENTE ree " . _ ‘nes PE ENR PAS EI ED, WARIS SR LEVER EL PAE EAPO NEELAM Fee gS ve hwtond ‘ fy / te ae ta : t Le PREP EA LN P ep Hala Hazy : COP AEH pe ty an Ptde Mewes, bit Peper esti S 9 Wa 2 8 Pepa Ay RISD PE QE » ) ‘THE WASHINGTOD AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 AUTOMOBILE SALE el dr.. A-1 condition OLDSMOBILE - macetiont selection JAGUAR — 198}, ull price, $345. $45) of all models. Buy with con agpeence convertible. Heater OW MOTORS. 3212 R | at wemeces'¢ Oldest Olds Ww. tires 1,000 miles. Special L. a4 ne. AP. 7-707". | ship. In ou BY of business e{i-atuminum RM eon NASH—'47 Ambassador club coupe IPOHANKA § Cr VICE, INC “ xactiy like| &. %. 85 down. Nw DI. 7.1003 Wise at 3 0800 : "til 10. $336 Wisc OLDSMOMILE = ‘Si, Super “98”. 4cr.,|_ BB. 7-1308 fonally clean. \eebmnenne— 3 oganvertinte. tifal mietaliic nm finish. new on ©- thin ckard O47 — k 4-door or suarantes._ mn Radi ater: qosmemniess priced for today only. $795 on College Park. a we Resa fully equipped. $1 LUSTINE OLDS | 1s! me Serie condi sie - dp iota emu Moree co a mee HURON aan mals sischore ave Mivatievitie wa.} y= LUSTING OLDS. oh O. 2-5310. te LL 5600 Baltimore ave., eneep. _# 4-8300 OLDSMOBILE—1953 Super ax LA SALLE eiss. dr, — 49 | at 4- club sedan. “pa” seeeees aa sedan. "sulsmane, Dock ard... ‘49.$525 er 6 30 whi trarsm ®*air.rondition $31 1s. PS. Howard St “hie “ADL 101 , Z heating ag tt me turn signals. power | Cony. R.aAh b od. Canary vellow 20 brakes wer steering custom) black top 201 a. NW. RE lounge iriterior: 1600 actual miles: | 7.0722 the last demonstrat or available fori sale: n t! tee. | “ sale! selling at $2495 MOTOR . . “ ' a rgeest Oldsmobile ‘Dealer 2000 Wilson bivd., Arl.. JA. 7-8400. : . ee ee DEO Patt 1b Tee! pet ak, Y 4 od and TIMES. HERALD -- Satienday, March 20, 1954 ~ AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 Coupe. otem. | PONTIAC 1948 Streamliner “8” 4 to dr.. Hydra.. R&H $495. Wash- ington's Oldest and Largest Dodge. Pope : Pg og ane ee OUTH—'51 Cambrider 4-door a ve Rn Heater, custom seat covers white>| 732. ~ : PLEMOUTE 1961. Srttywoes eray ma nee aeny-* tires original dark green fin- e-nes er — ort syste PONTIAC 2 0200 and immaculate, one-owner car eS Bae told from ai w baliy 9 _Boto. $i00.. LO. 5- “3647. 2 for tnoe le dies lo drive Lowest Ou AS terms LYMOUTH 39 Coupe, : ‘ ia Petz +e. pect for ms $195. 5 wl ver $-8003. 11325 Georsia ose so Went: on, Md. LO. 4.8097 5336 Wise. Ave be, get a Sf vt ~ ye 42" . ; ‘ ore. Seren reer ve eetieniathennann sy PE Ae GOI 9 25 DDR Te pre des aa Viwss a nO ace. fom sey Ly Bes a) ax} ~ N POST 97 8 mt oor, radio and i, hydramatic. runs ok. Mechanic's 6 | PAUL BROTHERS—-OLDS ed Car Pai Ellicott St + BV eee ~ ANTOMOBILE, SALE cCeutinued From in e AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 ee PLYMOUTH iate 1949 special <4 PONTIAC— 1983 Custom Catalina luxe club cou; A equipped, 43,0 2000 miles. Like new | RS, Qualit AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 ‘Plym. 04, $195 Dn. heater NASH — ‘4 yee ARR mi. Owner, $5 2023 Allen PL a ACRER MOTO a block Calvert bridge. 23) mijesee cars. 12th & BR. I ate.i ' a ave snhaiminnnininesitimeii eves. W tede green, exce ers. oe evewier s Outstandin = | Hyattsville, Ma 4800 Wisconsin 4.4708 Open Sun. 1) to 6 i Weekdays, 9 to 9 PLYMOUTH i i Dealer ” oe SPONTA | sae “Cranbrook adr | - SS RS PRES a diese ter: BAH CATALINA apes: | " | tires, luxurious custom in- i L $2395 | | % | Chieftain | REPOSSESSED rece iy Ba snonys yy neers!) 996,15 Fairfax Circle. Pairfax, CRescent 53-0700. Hydra.. Take over payments. All you need Black, is $94 10 and B. good paving record Sextet) Cale GOOD ADVICE! ie DISTR T "DISC COUNT | Sine & K ST. NW. / : Ne. 1. Never ber a used -— | witheut read testing it PONTIAC CATAL INA—' 54 Btar om , Get a recognised guar- gi eather nue W.-W. tires, dh antee 4 er Purchase f a rep- utable dealer. e concerned about whe ewned car originalls. REMEMBER: All the recen ditiening in the world will not make a G@ne used car out eof ene previewsly nesgiected. Dent camble. Buy a Country Cleb Used Car. are care traded trom the finest hemes in the Rethesda-Chevy Chase Coun- try Cled area. Ceuntry: Clab Used Cars cost ne more than erdinary used cars, Chevy Chase Chevrolet 7725 Wiscensin Arve. OL. 4-6100 te a — clean. al ‘ MERCURY —1952 "Monterey . and cream r and goa’ sorers like new bh ress - Terms LIVINGSTON 43 , a bie. | Mo rons c ‘O.. 123 Florida ave. ne ly eapd.. a . - $3,000 EX 2822 ; 22 whe i RY matic P. brakes ives 4800 mi. New cond by orig ewner. $2.000. After 6 AD. 2 35} coupe — and ‘50--@edans| mar ow mileace i "48 dan. One owner: ji NW. R , Bt PONTIAC These cars are out of this worid See Tom Terrett. FALLS CHURCH | , DE SOTO-PLYMOUTH. JE. 2-2300 53 sta. wacon. Merco- ultramatic . > OLDS—1949 attrac Cars Va. 1952 owner. Morons LA. 6-6530 series luxe c 2-door Canto cream inte yy ¥ $1195 izth & R. I * Col: ~ ieramatic FONTIAT a aes py rT , MERCURY 49 club coupe; 1 own-| auto w — 35-6600 Chieftain, $550 cash. JO Ext. 862.) QUEEN Fe salts, 2 2) 136 ‘91 OLDS “s:Doot Sed ery? consi, yaleg wih | Otddray Poupeme fs HOLIDAY $984.20 TOTAL REPOSSESSED satistactoril consider this; 2000 Wilson bivd., Ari one. best offer inancing ne cane | OLDSMORBILE DOLIOA T1885 Radio, heater, Hydra-Matic. white | Wallis, 2-tone finish. If you have Straepes. Original . owne coupe ~ %.27 w.-W. h nad dri lio finish. 4 i e overdriv ve nis ue, miueag r a good paying record. you ¢ v biack ae and re * eather interior) h appreciate chase this eres ls for Sw at 8-4929 meecURY- 1949 sport sedan; ing maculate condition, good tires, and seat } a real buy; 7,000 " 3! by calling Brewer Motor Co., Inc. 5 —'™ Sapam This DISTRIC T DISCOUNT Billi Wis. Ave NW wo 6- 1699 USTINE OLDS Lith and K Sts NW. INGSTON } Elie MERCURY (49 _\geaaeuy-*ty: tunis. 4 -FULL PRICE $395! ¢ dan. This car is out | " oe Mr -~50 8-cylinder ‘ oor sedan and H eg MOTOR ss owner. ir- est Oitemeurs pratt 7-84 bn + 2-Door Sedan sest covers. lustrous! A nice family car Neo 7 Brewer Motor Co.. Inc. 5i1} Wis. Ave. NW WoO. 6-1699 PLYMOUTH—1954 elu sedan Auto transmission two-ton extr ras $250 down, fnance celanes. 3-1615 PLYMOUTHS— ‘Sis. “S2s and “56<— s and Suburdans : inter — ior low price $675. rear seat speaker Terms ‘ 123 Fior- ? Ne. &. 4 123 Pia. ave ne. EX. 3- 2822 Ne. SALE: 54 Models: All of Our ‘54 Models Have Less Than 100 Miles the MERCURY — 1953 Monterey. -tone| + ream, W.-W, erc- | OLDSMOBILE< ‘52, Super “88” Holl- immac.| day coupe. tu-one green and beige. ** LUSTINE OLDS _2 | 5600 Baltimore ave. Hyattsville, Md enc Uny—issil ¢ convertible; 31 r & OLDS ‘49 convertible. baby “ x 123 Florida ave. PLYMOUTH— 1951 | Belvedere Hard- top Convertible. 2.tone finish. R& For Any of the Following Cars... 49 MERC. $695 | 47 Plym. . $195 Spert Coupe Res! share! 4-Dr. $5 Down. "49 Hudson $495 | '51 Ford .. $795 4-Dr. R.au. De luxe 4-Dr. BR.4A8. "48 Anglia . $295 $395 — Pack: $695 j THRIFTY AUTO SA -'50 Packard $595 2301 Benning Rd. N.E. ‘ul. 3- 2436 Open Evenings | ub ved Care” Pe LO RO LO PES aa LR ‘A6 PLYMOUTH $395 a ‘ Cenvertible. A l-owner car tn be PE splendid mechanical cendi- ’ tien. Has excellent tep: BR. & ; H A chance te eWR & COR- ee ; vertible at a low, lew price. Chevy Chase Chevrolet UP TO e ; Wisconsin Ave, © 6th and Fla. Ave. N.E. LI. 6-6464 © country Club Used Care” 3 CONVERTIBLES RIVIERA BUICKS f & Buick ... ‘53 Riviera . . $2595 © B so stupeBAKER . $1145 ‘ Sener : ' Super ardtep: > ace ' ; : tual miles; B.42H.; metal- 5 Convertible im sperty and 3 ssehee leather ; a — c clistening light Dive Anish OL. 4-6100 h rich d leath t! A black tep ever white ‘52 Riviera $1595 a reg ae - ‘53 Chevrolet $1895 Super 4-dr. sedan; 2-tone, gevernment empleye whe gave Be! Air 7300 miles sky ray over medium ° ; ; It has H ever- leather tnterter, r. and bh bine r. and h.. Dynafiow. Priced attractively brenze with a light tep $380 dewn at and w.-w. tires. Olds $1495 -~Matic, r. and 7275 Wiseensin Ave, “OR”: Hydra “440 OL. 44-6100 h.. light bive with a new P black tep. . : pome ¢ Chevrolet $1, 195 PS act alelallale $1 | wilatoetiec’ Green ‘S] $995 $1095 Buick Ford Fordomatic., De luxe ne r . Jet Diack with UTH—i954 4-door sedan Hy- Drive. ony other extras car; bie deal now. PEAKE MOTOR ©. hd - ave at Albemarie st. nw 2- CONVERTIBLE BARGAINS: NORTHWEST 1620 M St. N.W Di. 7-1162 7 . RE s Oldest and Largest Dod 52 Buick Plymouth Dealer. TREW MOTOR Beautiful light CO. 6th & Fia. Ave. NE. LI. 7- te mate - helstery. covers. Drive "52 Buick r is out of this world. | Murphy. FALLS CHURCH Bedan. Will sell for balance due fi. | SOTO-PLYMOUTH. JE. 2-2300 nance company with only $95 down OLDSM 3 OBIL de luxe Holl- | day coupe. ‘ E~—'S3. "98" x ont weyers $2495 5600 Baa ave. Hyattsville. Md. a ee ‘49 6-pass. cl + a ocket R. & h Hy Py atic “Home of Country Ciud Used Cars” MERCURY 1956 Station Waseo & h.. dark blue finish at only "$895 rewer Motor Co., Inc Ave. NW wo 6-1699 1949 4-dr. sedan. W.-# tailored seat covers, Tho . ane rums like | Merc. 1} $195 ‘Dn. 2-door Mercor ettic radio. heater. | owner, showroum condition BLASS CLARK. No. 1 Florida Ay NE AD. 4-9882 ~MERC 0 RY —1952 r Original upholstery like brand new. $650 or OL. 2-6149 1953 Super ti p — ‘53 CHEVROLET $1695 with power glide autematic transmission. n sperty and spetiess t-tene green finish This car fermer- ewnéed by Retired Navy has been garaged Of coarse, it has lew mileage, radie, heater & ether deluxe equipment. Chevy Chase Chevrole? 7725 Wisecensin Ave, OL. 4-6100 best Club Coupe, Servicemen Financed! Hyd drive. de luxe factory Mae Oe air-cond. heating host of other . ’ Cenvertible. Licht 50 Ford sreen Custom ‘0 oe Light ae top. ‘897 | bile Dealer. eater. w.w. tires. 9 fe Monterey. | JA #400 Only $ ong vw ures 2- OLDS MOBILE mi. ri ina t r.42 ’ . &. make — 51 Pontiac pa wes accepted Radio, heater, New black tep. Only sea 50 club sedan. R OL DSMOBILE vara Read master yo 4, ver tible 6 SOUTHEAST 1539 Pa. Ave. S.E. LI. 3-2400 OL DSMOBILE 8U PER—i953 * “Ba” : bie, far ~ Mer Omatic rac her wh Monterey. har rdtop & _ ) an heate upper erey < - Hydra Matic c vertible over $1000 redu Terms LIVINGSTON 123 Florida ave. ne range terior leat ron teria Light interior Immacu a . anes QQ , > tt ‘e400 Sate y tested; written at A MOTORS CO. Ex ce luxe 4 2-tone shoa! ‘ . -white top set off 51 Buick by W.-W. tires ci stom tounge. 2 green, new tone green interior super- range Thereashiy Hydra- or Selec tomatic tlened. “. na rear speaker cK-u bist ” Str aht ieht and many other acces , . ight green ew - w humerous to mention 1OW-M ii 48 Buick super conver- foreig car tible. New black tep. Radte. _POREIG +4 CARS heater. seat covers Alexandria Clean. Only ‘47 Buick OL DS—1953 series “On” i sed a delightful Super a and polar Beautiful tep. Fully recendi- ¥ onv't ‘ 6 wn 52 Mercury , Se RL > +a Beautiful licht ereen with leht _ tan ; Mercomatic drive. ra- @io and heater; thereuchly re- nen. 697 WASH—195 0 Ramble er conv. h ‘51 Pontiac Con v ertible R-e Beautiful viin de Cenvert.- medium screen Medium Super idie. FULL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE 18 FULL PRICE +*2795 Mercomatic drive. Super Air ive Si1es. Chevy Chase Chevrolet 7 OL ge 4e . 53 iginal light ereen finish Rat TA ae woe) tc This if an excep- tional! lean car inside and out One- owner 9 H. |. Brown 1545 Wilson Bivd OLDS—1948 Hvar - cor ertibie black L- aoor f Must sel aeaiers Bale abeve averace. : ym trans, Only , g 51 Pontiac, Inc. Ar! JA. 32-5557 aMati R.&AH 1949 body atyle doctor's orders 4-364) n Ww JU 9.8003 Wheat Md ‘32 ‘ST Ml $295. No he Your BUICK Dealer 1620 M St. N.W. 1539 Pa. Ave. S.E. Super 88 de luxe iday coupe Hydramatic aa and ater. power steering. poe brake we _ Slass med ether outees a‘ OLDS and $945 © and h., $445 sedanette; r. and Complete selection; fully equipped : Chevy Chase Chevrolet rezeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee 7225 Wiseensin Ave, ‘51 Dodge...........$945 OL. 4:61.00 Cerenet 4-dr.: metallic een h.. fluid dr. Feckaed $1995 Teder C eb Sedan; Ultra- * A ae $495 | 2-tene bive, | ‘S1 FORO Tuder A smart leeking in rich, deen blee finish another l-eowner car from a man whe it's ewnership we think veu ll bay low price, $755, 795 .. 22n Custemiine “8 4-dr. $ CHEV. Rel Alr, 2-dr. A deauty. MERC Monterey coupe. ‘50 Buick a Special 4-dr.; fF. It's DI. 7-1162 LI. 3-2400 Sunday ¢ ‘SA 7 “io ! written guarantee ALE XANDRIA. NASH mr ‘ PAUL BROT im . ttt 48 ‘53 De Soto $2195 “Firedome 8’ 4 - doer siecr.. aute. trans., biue ever light blee *.-¥ $1,295 4-dr., Hydra., and h Special ad w ‘tu 8 YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SAVE 3939 ee es ‘47 Jet biack, r. Mercury . .$1095 Club coupe; gray paint, o. d., equipped. $1395 Ford Fordematic; t- Victoria green ever h. ‘33 "50 CHEVROLET 4-door de luxe. itn Mer ng light e«rey finish Pri on this car.reduced.far neahent special. Waste no time te test drive this immaculate car. Only $795, $365 down $795 Servicemen all grades financed BRUNO MOTORS, Inc. 3rd and K ST. N.W. RE. 7-3890 r. and »., Hrdre tene, dark S. Riviera .$1445 cream, rf. Dyna... R.AH.; t-tene erey. A Complete Selection of BUICKS and other Makes STANLEY H. HORNER, Inc. BUICK DEALER : Florida Ave. N.E., 5th to 6th Sts. LI. 6-6464 CLOSED SUNDAYS LOWEST PRICES ANYWHERE BUY HERE WITH NEW CAR SECURITY Flooded with Trade-Ins on the New 1954 Chevrolet JUST A FEW LEFT 1953 FORDS Many others te choose from. Chevy Chase Chevrolet "25 Wiseensin Ave, ol 4.4100 os \JSED CARS Choice of colors and body stvles. NEW CAR TITLE NEW CAR GUARANTEE "$9 Buick 4-Dr Sedan. Radic heater Dynaflow. inal finish in *4T Ford Station heater ing bed $369 Radice and $789 and Orie new-car ats "53 CHEVROLET Twe-tone blue, t-deer. eauipped with de butten radie, Air Flew heater. outside mirror, turn signals, back-up lights, ete. Very low mileage. Like ew “tt alt respects aud Carries a2 Bday ner $1495 luxe push Saree Vagcon ‘ Full &-npass. capacity. Good 1111 18th St. H.W, 2017 Va. Ave. N.W, 3540 14th St. K.W. 5301 Wisconsin Ave. DI. 7-5800 Shep Our Indeer Showroom At Year Cenvenience One Bleck Beiew Zist and E Sts. N.W. ME. 8-2818 "53 Ford Cust. Ferder: eomatic., ¥.- new. cee SIO r. and h., Ford- plastic seat covers, tires, 2-teme biue; like New-car guarantee, “48 Cadillac > - $1095 . heater, Hy- tires; Like new threughout. *52 Studebaker $1195 Commander 4-dr, Radic, heat- er vdra-Matic. Immacelate inside and “out. New-car con- dition ‘52 Ford Fally new-c $695 equipped. Abse- ar condition. A teal ‘53 Nash $1595 Hardtop convertible heater. continental kit kiing twe-tene «grey finish; enly a few Bn Mee miles, "St Ford ..... . $695 Custom “8” YFerdoer radio. heater: Immaculate inside and eut. A real gleaming beauty. ‘50 Chevrolet . .$795 De luxe 4-dr radic. heater. S new white-wall tires; immae- viate cendition threacheut. ‘50 Nash $595 Ambassador 4-dr.: radie. heat- er and other extras; clean as a pin threugheut. ‘AT Cadillac. . ?- sedanette: radie. heater. Hydra-Matic: abselutely in perfect cendition threoucheost. $695 TIRE SALE 6:00x16 . .$14.95 6:70x15 $16.95 Plus Tez end Old Tire ‘53 Ford $1875 Custom “8 Ferder: beige. with w.-w. tires and matching cus- tem seat covers. ing. turn signals, wind«hield wash- . side mirrer and undercoat- Nem-eas, tithe and_«uar- ee. ‘52 Ford $1695 Victerta. Radice. heater. Ferde Matic, fender skirts and other equipment. Abselutely like ’ > 51-Dodge.. .. .$995 4-dr.: radie, heater and ether accessories: immaculate ene- owner car—in perfect condi- tien. ‘53 Sunbeam- Talbot .$1995 4i-dr Beautiful example ef English engineering § and AF A & speeds ward. Genuine all-leather terrier. turn signals. heater and other cuptomens. Driven onty 11,000 m ‘A9 Mercury .. .$795 Over- 4-dr Radie heater E ~~ Rs clean. I1- drive $1195 owner car, Eauipped with ‘52 Dodge. 1-ton’ express Ready te se ‘46 Pontiac Cenvertible coupe rood cenditien A for the summer. this bargain. ‘49 Kaiser equipped: meade te ce. $295 and levely ear Den't miss $395 clean and TU. 2-4100 “52-Ford ‘53 Ford $1495 Custem ciub coupe: beaautifal finish. eauipped with . turn signals and ether extras. Formerly ewned by dip- lematic efficial; low mileage. $1295 Custom Teder:. dark ereen fin- Suan te 208m. senal,.ovet~ drive | ewner low mileage very clean in and out. A real buy. ‘S2 Hudson . $1195 Wavsop fdr. sedan: ticht ereen finish. r. and h.. turn signals low mileace; ene ewner. This is a beauty. ‘49 Buick $795 Super convertible: Dynafiow, r and h. and practically w.-w. tires. Dlack finish top. A real black beauty ‘3! Ford $795 4-dr Original tebe "Ties finish Radice, heat er. mew seat covers. Goed tires. ‘51 Nash $995 Ambassador custem 4-dr. Ori. ginal dark ereen finish. Radic mentor. Hvydra-Matic. Tatlered ¢ te match Shewreom Sendiiten. Bed eauipped. ‘a9 Frazer $395 Manhattan 4-dr. Radie, heat- Overdrive. Original biack finish, turn signais. Good tires. Excellent cond, ‘50 Hudson. ke -dr —, finish Tatlered seat cevers mileage. 1 wn ame On request, Spetiess inside and a. , EM. 2-2617 Open Evenings “Til 9 P.M. ‘53 Ford Custem Ferder: Ferdomatic, r. an new-ear tithe; 25,000- mile guarantee. $1950 -33..Ford te _" tweo-tene h.. power ites and other $1950 ‘Pentae r. steering. W.-W, accessories, "50 Buick Special sedanetic Dvrnaflow, radie” and eater,” exeetient black finish: 10.000-mile cuar- ntee. $895 ‘a9 Nash Sp. Stateaman 4-dr nd geod mechanica! caenéilien. ‘51 Nash Statesman *-dr.: radic. heater. seat covers; excellent cendi- tien. Twe te cheese from. $725 ‘48 Hudson 4-dr. Commedere. . $375 "50 Olds $1045 “RR” de luxe club coupe and h.. Hydra-Matic: low mile- age; one owner, ‘48 Studebaker. $295 Commander convertible: r. and h.. overdrive. new black tep. ‘48 Ford Ferder Super de luxe $350 BRAKE herring "?:. Riveted Shoes—tlining—Laber Hydraulic Brakes Only car cuarantee Car Ne. 178 condition ’ ’ popuiar } iception ally mertanicalty e "S52 Plymouth. $1145 Cambridge 4-Door. Eadio and heater. Conservative biack finish in new-car condition Immaculate in- low mileage. new, Oo.R. Guaranteed Car No. 194. "52 Chevrolet. $1245 Stvietine Pe tov” 4-Dour. ; Radio and heater, power —- glide Like-new interior and ‘47 Pontiac_ Convertible. heater 4 cheese now at low ebb. cannot be Valoe Special 162A. 50 Pontiac $795 thieftain ~-baor Kako and heater Oricinal fin- ish like new, Very nrerier.” A ene-owner car. Tires nearty new... OK... temaranieed Lar No. 26 ‘St Mercury. $1147 and Delroasters Feonemircal over: Mriginal finish and very clean interior performer in You must ciate. OLR Car clean ‘46 Oldsmobile 7H" 4-Deer Sedan Radio ana heater hydramatic. d:00d original black finish \ popular car dition and at t.eod Value ‘$225 im top fon- a low price Special - Car (-uaranteed (Car 6. 147 ‘S| Hudson _. $695 Commodore "48 Anglia_ *.Deoor A . $239 very clean and meat little car Very ero nomicalily operated Will make a perfect second car for wife's shopping, ete Gieod Value Special Car No. 159A, rT Chevrolet _ 5? Plymouth _ $1469 De Lore 5-Pass. Defroster and poamen Warten. Radie and Prowerglide; ater All-metal bodr. 1 pass. seating, with larce convertible luggace space nm fear. 4 dual-purpose model ‘%- ear. (endition like new } t no extra cost threugheut. O.K. Guaran- Goaranteed Car teed Car No. 108 zi. OVER 100 CARS ON SALE! TELL US WHAT PAY- MENTS YOU CAN MAKE We'll .fTerms mechanicalls value special. $945 Coupe, heater bla¢ k refinish do everything possible to sel! on your 4th, No ‘payments until May ESTABLISHED 28 YEARS - ae PP NS hh ANE ea Ane aad a : 2 . y y oo ~~ : * : ; oH ae a oko 3 mene ee ee ethene nn ee Contineed arene — hewowrreare,” SAVE +. *900 BPpecial Car No "5! Chevrolet Relaire, “hardtop.” radie and heater. powerglide, « good car for women drivers IBS $1245 condition (;uaranteed 14; ‘48 Frazer $239 4-Deoor, Do rou reall, know Used Cars Below Cost value*’ Here one that somebody else paid the de- preciation on. Come in te. day and tet saving on and the interior sets « family of six. OLR. Guaran- teed Car No. 170 $545 OPEN MONDAY Q 5 THRU FRIDAY to Sat: 9 to 6) Closed Sun. value special “49 Studebaker Ves. this te the { hampien finish interior Fleetline 4-doeer er heater. .tThe_presious awner- s 45 * very finieky and gave this ear the that will ‘Arve.. ou. many. dollars... 0.K. (;uaranteed (Ca No 20a, 48 Chevrolet radie and fall price care etatlheht...cowpe,- ad new spotie« A tew need minor repairs you can do yourself in your spare time and Transportation and Mechanic SPECIALS save up to $500. ‘46 HUDSON Super “6” "42 PACKARD Convertible motor "46 CHEVROLET 4. Deor SIA No 46 BUICK Sw ner Diack "31 2- Deer 18! 48 KAISER 4-Door. Needs moter repairs, - ee ee 4- Deer heater Radia out heater 48 Cer We Radio and heater. Very sound Radic Car We CHEVROLET Sound, cheap transportation 4.Doer finish and heater 168A Car sound 2241 NICHOLS AVENUE S.E. PHONE LUDLOW 4-0010 Over 100.000 Square Feet Dedicated te Service and Sales Geog tes and $199 Car $139 Original $69 No $149- bn otherwise ficeiient Itere (,oed alue No. 199 and meter rrenem Cial. Car ‘47 Pontiac $369 Streamliner de luxe 4-door Radio and heater, oricinal finish in pew ; tron. exceptiona!’ terior Geod t of motor (,0ed cial, Car Ne ‘47 Nash “AO” K-nass equipped very "50 Otdsmobi le S069 . oa * 4-deer, ra- . Hydramatie i | attractive and thrill te er and driwir beantif Guaranteed Car’ reo ; 52 Dodge ( oronet he nter $1295 f{.deer, radio and custom erat covers, roune original attractive. Here is a huy that you cannot afford fo pase up fome in one make up your oo a< value special now mind, Car Neo spert where Car ‘oo. 190 ‘ 51 Ferd "50 Chrysler - fustomline ya, Fordor, racio and heater Fardo matic, very attractive Haw therne green. car like most reaeperts 4 outs — ng buy O.K. Guaranteed Car o! shopping 50.

Mh ees Ae reeics MD ee cee ee ST erenesaasntijm ans belgian ikem AA tae OTHE WASHINGTON, POST’ sd TIMES-HERALD Saturday, March 20, 1954 AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97 Sh MOBIL AUTOMOBILE SALE _97 eee AUTOMOBILE, SALE 97\A LE, SALE = PONT. ‘S3 CATALINA ‘Stes Geet 4 nie ee hace aie Wien bh ae fey Deve Bersg ae an | ‘53 CHRYSLER a $2095—$395 DN. | Senge ok” sore Fotis oiaé| AT HORNER’S CORNER fas ave. ir Wash : "49 ) "52 CHEVROLET [| xer xerser De Lane wpe | «49 HUDSON ‘41 Plymouth sparkling royal hit * SEL & . »3 4-4 sedan. with paint interior. ‘Hyara- Pee: ratio heat | STUDEBAKER—1951 4-door Sedan | Fie Mey i gin A HORNER a ce) : BUICK oo eee > ) “for only it Th : 4-dr. sedan, : Job for only W.-w. tires. $300 under miarket ¢ famous economy One owner. Convertible, Exceptional. Ee ote ‘today only. Uniess you| ™odel. Here's a hone " 4 beautital f A real beanty. . $1 145 Sapien ‘Goan does . 95 CARS to choose from. 3 custom seat covers, like new. * hE ile poazoon, finish with, matching de] 'Pags-Hushes Bylek, 62) Art, Hira "48 Pontiac $333 $595 : $2695 +4 2 defrosters and overdrive... It's im- site rates aa ik maculate throughout. An ‘out-| GET A BETTER USED CAR ie at $495 a ; about oor...) @ 48 ethers to choose: trom, fg R ve ne Rape ss ates , £2 PALMER FORD hints. : ost leon fi toe ‘ tthe aime hen Buick,» Ine. W ee re re, ws. 3 fie crrco ay 1 Cash. Trade or Terms. . #. | . Brovteriiic 1 Klopfer Motors..Inc... 3110. Hamilten.St., .WA.. 71-0908. . GMA “as Vf desired Ivd Art., Va. SO Geavanses. HERSON’S, 8th h and * Li ~— Mercury, Safe - Buy W. Hyatterviile, Md. other-e s., Ghowroo#h eopearance N CHEV _—_—_—_—_—- Convertible. R. & n. 7202 . are Rhode Island rom N.E. “4704 Rh te * Inland Ave. BE. ee, " MOTOR SALES pan Rost NW oniiiaiad AD. 4S. ie Sue aston. Hydra. ie Ll, 6- his 4 9 je ALL WA, 17-8777, Open "til 9 P.M, So cs Sua | i. WA. 1-8777.. Oven. 9PM. nw, wagon. Radio, heater. fs oy ‘S] Buick $] 095 1 | = aboat our ‘tamees ~ Eves. CN Rey ; al Looks and runs good. $495. BLASS | FP) y CLARK, No. 1 Florida ave. Special de luxe sport sedan. I] Open Daily “Ul 9 P.M. 9882. Incl. Sat. CIPCO' Guarantee. wu 9 AN ne. AD. 4- || Immaculate finish and condi- }) | Shee cation Foe Snes, te j) tion. Radio, heater, eustom ji) Li. 6-7202 COAST-IN PONTIAC : a 50 Buick - an | 50 PLYMOUTH cellent condition. Falls Church Deil t covers, etc. low mileage. ° | Super Convertible : Styled te be Soto-Piymouth, Lee Hwy. & Hill- i} owner. Real family car. |). 1600 Good Hope Ra. 8.E. | bedy, Black top, radio, heater, | most bdeautiful ! Special de laxe club coupe. | Prieed se you may buy. ) w.-w, tires, Dynafiew, numer- © makers say. New paint job. radie snd : 7 | i low-si beauty has th | heater, seat covers. odela.| Dest” ohh Kongan- Peck Ths |] MONTGOMERY-STUBBS | = ee | $1695 Bee 8 eld “eslinder smooth power: 745 "Bijson Biva. “Artiprtgn. Lincoln-Mercury Dealer ) COAST-IN PONTIAC ; . : - $ 3715 Biladensburs Rd. door, “6”. Radic if (PR HUDSON its OLD DOW] AS H., ra-Matic. Other extras. | DOWN | 30-day, new-car warranty cisss PRIVATE CAR s | 1510 R. |. Ave. NE. H. 1. hei: ‘Pontiac, Inc. Forder ’ ' 1545 Wilson Bivd., Atl. JA. 2-8587| OWNER 47 Ford CO. 5-8214 52 Ford .... $1295 PONTIAC. 32. Custom, Celgiing coupe.) We just don't talk 10% more! Do TT _ 4-Door Open 9 A.M.-9 P.M. |* SALE » er ‘LUS STINE oh | : a: We are ng | THE BE 47 PI mouth Custom @ tudor Baltimore ave. Hyattsville, Md. . ~ ) im ; New car warranty Z ai il roNaC sue euen wacom ie pode We par 1 Bhai 2 | ‘50 aa "3695 | p 52 OLDS “98" @ | NO MONEY DOWN cash. LA. 6-3954 | 4-Doer : oor 28. 5 P M th ,McKEE PONTIAC bo Pata 3.1027) 3 U W = A U "48 Studebaker ] '51.Chev. ... $1195 s1895 $28.35 Per Mon Sieh — a he ben . : 4724 Rhode Island Ave = ape —som. FULL PRICE -Deor | | "41 Dodge poe egy Ss . wytre, 1°50 Merc. Conv. $495 ses eMCNETL, STODEBAKER Has prepared a booklet to help and to | Meny more ee ‘SO OLDS “98” ne ser at se | we 49 Ford Sed... . $295 oe Bt aw ogg : 7) Gieee mitm | Ait from. Up to 20 months | 0 S 8 | tres. or Sees " . - A. ydra-matie. | guide you in used car purchasing. | pt Per. | ‘a nich te "49 Buick Sed... $295 $1145 ’ Motor Wholesalers | $995 |f Down payments start at $25 | meee. 1°48 Chev. Sed... $295 PALMER FORD | This is an unbiased and brilliantly Lh hy : eg VIRGINIA POHANKA ‘47 Pack. Sed... .$189 . ;' a. [556 Cham de| & 3110 Hamilton St. WA. 7-0906 . ra., SERVICE a | gepen., Biue indereeet. heater 3 W. Hyattsville Sa’ q written book that takes the gamble out | ; a —~~ + : MOTOR SALES Where “Service” "47 Nash Sed. — $189 ll of St udebaker's famed eneinger- es WA. 71-8777. Open ‘til 9 PM. . d r b in t —_ a = ~~ Ps 4 quate MEANS Something People Sie te Deal B ith PY, ear ' toms ee m_ | or.used ca uy 3: | | from c choose 711 N. Washington St. 1126 20th St. NW. pw, DI. 7-0114 aay Buber | pg ccea a abit a aad ‘ : mm ra seu han DI. 7-1003 GULF MOTORS : . aoverarive | i. City : We shall be glad to send you this : "SERVICE. Keay Ove 3a7IT 1638 Bladensburg Rd. NE. thidiits™, 33 Champion ena | . booklet without cost or obligation. | my a : = Where “Service” SS ra me matey wal pea furn Mit Charlie Says: MEANS Something You can drive today for © ; ; 1126 20th St. NW. =i CALL, STOP BY OR DROP A LINE TO | . | Di. 7-1003 ‘100 DOWN | | Haines Motor Co. | gy seh Amaeey, CHEVY CHASE CHEVROLET | R Mercury ‘i Ri) $335 i Ame ne HOME OF COUNTRY CLUB USED CARS ])| i overdrive. w.-®. RCADE SALE ON _” man LAR fee | | 7725 Wisconsin Ave. OL. 4.6100 |] 22 SE S070 , $1495. $200 : ‘93 Olds —__ P | 3'bomiee’” si20s sas HOME OF | TODAY'S SPECIAL Pane on TRUCKS ¢ aor bene mavertible. Pow- ‘6 aoa 5095 7 NEP CAR "49 Lincote. Cosmopolitan 0 _— OLDSMOBILES PO fears Tai: 9 sn O08... GUARANTEE ¥ tires jo, heater, elec- Pontiac $395 Buick —_$2195 ; IRV MARTIN’S ‘S2 OLDSMOBILE $1,695 BiG +53 “ss” Capes 2- 2.8 ‘S2 OLDSMOBILE $1,895 “eee Recket “98” 4-dr. sedan: Hudson. aig . $795 5 black finish: one owner-car: 4-door sedan. . folly equip, S0-day written ‘ Chevrolet _$895 © susrantee. Safety lested and a -Dr. R.42H. ¥ 2a a nS ee. % 26 - is ‘ g 0? Fed I ic rou. ress j COLONIAL |" f= —** | He CHEV. °485: Siydramptic. Leesa Kitest conainin. de. .. .$895 : $695 C. inspection, "Did: d 2-dr. Champion, RAN, & H, new dark biue sg Bi Sdn $1195 $100] & ‘52 Packard $1695 black, exceptionally nih. 46 Dodge . $325 € ‘a7 Dodge , $2959 2-Door Sedan, Eaulpped. OLDSMOBILE CO, ff) commun. Te cutt $695 1241 6th St. N.E. $s Many More to Choose From i ‘80 "Didsmobile $1095 $75 R. & H., sutematic thans. Pontiac . .$895 4-dr., special de lore, ba werk. “threush'D- rd Servicemen Welcome : FOR USED CARS mew 600, two-tone aren «= 449 Chev, . $545 ‘$2 Chevrolet — *eiaast $145 . . 4-Door Sedan. § Power eraben, Dynaflow, » : 3rd Anniversary Holiday “AA.” Hydra, § ‘51 Buick .. $1395 seca fahe _ * seamette (Jost off Fis. Ave.) 5 24 Months to Poy upheolst ¢ ry» ow. tires ‘50 Mercury $795 $95 Aute. trans. BR. 4 sanitized. #912. -Dr. Li. 7-9340 All Cars Guaranteed & i. Convertibie, B. aimee me. dale ome “= pF %3 Cevrclet $1008 3s|, USED CARS " $795 dr. “6 Mees: condition. prominent M.D. 30- tinted class. | nw 3o08. ‘52 Cadillac $3195 Washington's Largest Downtown Used Car Dealer pls. tl , Direct Factory Dodge and Plymouth Dealer ington s wnatown ar a ‘SO F : : $695 $95 : ‘SO OLDSMOBILE $895 FULL PRICE ; *. ae $5 $50 ; ARCADE BARRING & SONS Rocket “98” 4-dr. de luxe se- Open 9 to 9 All Week Silver Spring > Auto City, Inc. g-Dr. Fleetline, R. & H., New Used-Car Location 51 Plymouth ~$945 — : 48 Dodge . $645 Dr Door “62”. 2 4 a PONTIAC COMPANY ; ; nice ear you'll be proud : € Door. Sedan. re) : 5855 | 3600 Bladensburg, Rd NE. | JACK J. BLANK. Pres. 5800 Baltimore Ave. On Rt. 1, Wash.-Balt. Bivd. Hyattsville, Md. wa. #795, ; rankieetas, NA. 8-4455 3550" Open Sandars (Next te ..$1545 $245 4- ‘52 OLDSMOBILE $1,495 8 ing, wow,” nat WA. 7-6500 3640 14th St. NW. RA. 83-9670 UN. 4-3130 0 n 9 to 3 ‘s] OLDSMOBILE $1,295 : Cony. Super. B.48., Dy- =. 2 Fee oe ‘ mu | reer | 4RV” MARTIN MUST : a “Tour Authorized MG Dealer” f i FULL PRICE 185; . ena Wa work. Bring in the cash and drive ita Servicomen All Grades Financed TTTT So sS — ire, - Ad U:. SEES PNET SG ey es Mercomatic. 3460 14th N.W., Doe “ag "$1045 ti blue pS9-sou with asete blue tomie eye. 2-tone 4- ‘$2 Plymouth $1095... $75 and whe nfally eauloped low ss — anon : $ LL PRICE teriseriecyite sci ff ‘50 Pontiac... $895 f : f ci white, {aly _fecipned: edi on ; Clab_ coupe. lent condition; see and drive ; > | 7800 Georgia Ave.. 5. 5... Md. | aus : body. equipped fer sBr Ci Geonbeock '‘S4 Pontiac $2495 -ar.. . eaulpped, Chevrolet $545 C. inspection. sagt ~ This car ioticed ‘47 Sunbeam $795 | before you buy. #798. Pontiac eo ' Parkington Lot 2-dr.. —~ ee metal - low market Convertible, 4-Door “8” Hydramatic. Riviera Super 2-Deer, Two-tone green. Eapd. 3911 Wilson Blvd. ee. wPgdomait eo $285 a oe pom am 9g — $995 a f a $595 46 Chev. . $325 _ &-passenger. , ‘5? OLDSMOBILE $1595 8 Buick segs fe ‘$e PRICE 2 some 2] =| 050) FORD = ereen and white. ia | Buick ___ $695 7 ~ : JA. 2-4102 q BUY apesment, -dr.. Diack finish. low nee . runs excellent; « 3 Conv. ~ new top = | ’47 Dodge ...$395 ¢ ti tal . P mileage, other desirable -dr.. eautpped, light %-toh §=eepress, Continos. ismebis si19s $100 52 Dodge . .$1395 Bee, qrnet Cos | age BE ty #799. in trans- 3 me Hard top Crestiine. Needs work, BENDALL GOODWILL RECONDI- | = TIONED » ‘48 De Soto ..$545 | CAR ~ Convertible Radic, heater & - Reautifal new ereen metallic & = and custem interier te 4 . ateh. Car in excellent con- * dition throughout, ‘ 5 R © ‘48 Chevrolet .$425 t-deor. Fieetmaster. = Origine! black fin tr “in on new m Very good condition shroush- . out. Bey this ene tert ; 2806 Jefferson economy. E qu. Washington St, 161] King. St. 4- to a rors vest eae | OV. 3.1600 || aesseee’ 11 SLIGHTLY USED... BUT IN- BEAUTIFUL SHAPE... ymou verd. Nest to Howard Jeha- p>» Mot oes Wat whose $195 AH} OM 38-2706 1 Fe BESS OV...3-1060....|.] | | io Pee Ap peerreaee FRESHENED UP-RARING UP-READY TO GO = 4 : 4 - Door Sedan. Radio, Fleetiine 4-Deor Radice, gg hag Radic, heat- . ‘$1 Chrysler $1575 : heater. heater. Light gray finish. er. New tep. Radio, ) 49 Plymouth $595 |°50 Ponti $695 tone vole tins: | SQ Stude, .. $595 ymou ontiac .. = Powerful erformance. \ Special De Luxe 4-Deer Chieftain 4-Door 6-Cslin- . Luxe 4- Door Radio, heat- | Champion Regal De Luxe Heater. One ower. £49 Ford .... $545 ' 51 Ford ____ gggg 90 Chevrolet $695 | °50 Chevrolet $695 VE GOT 6 LOVELY MERCURY SISTERS De Luxe 4-Deer. Radic, heat. De Luxe %-Deor Sedan. Station Waseon—3 Seater. er. Black finish. Car ther- Sogn veseacmoned through- : ay perme. Be ty Original gray Heater. Original finish. | AND 3 BIG LINCOLN BROTH ERS r S48 Chrysler . $495 | | "52 Pontiac $1495 | 51 Ford “8” $895 Acreage bf hing Chieftain De Custem Forder. Radio, Door. Radio, heater, RBy- Eescetintes || etude ge | Gireintare| ESS 1 There’s Tremendous Savings In Our Prices!'54 xz" $2292 | anccneseharae lugs 2 3 ‘53 Pontiac $2295 53 Pontiac .$2095 Dodge . $1395 = o-Crtinder Chieftain De Hard Tep Diplomat. Re- Today's Best Buy > Custom Catalina. Radice, . ' . din, heater, asactematic beater, Hyrdra-Matic. Ta- transmission. Tutene at Olds. . i . tene chartreuse and ivory. Tinted siass. Many other steen finish, white-wall 2- Deor. Back. a Matching interior. extras, tires, Lew mileage. | ° e Many Other Late Model * eweom =|! BENDALL PONTIAC. Dat Fatry Daler NEW CAR TITLES iis: oli Ma Ouat Qicubnien | Home of Goodwill Reconditioned Cars | | i LINCOLN NEW CAR GUARANTEE WITH . | Lab: | D\ ALL ‘54 DEMONSTRATORS | “ita fmens peer 3 BIG LOCATIONS IN ALEXANDRIA Eee OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY a Oven 9 AM. to 9 P.M. 1 Open Evenings ‘til 9:30 | Dealer License 38 : | | . OL. 4-7400 | “4 > and a. Sten ex- 3 > cellent, See and drive this 5 & value, p Shaking Off Dollar Bills—For Bargain Hunters Sat. te 6 P.M. ~~. ” 2 » Se ES Le "Continued: ea yese «Continued on Following Page Continued on Following Pare Continued on Following Pare Continued on Following Fase ) > eee 8 eR ‘ . aw SEE OE oa" baa AP Sh Se A te rug ni Bers ap “-g nal . ~ ‘S1 HORNET CLUB COUPE equipped. O'D. Com alone traffic driving & very clean in every request. only $1296. Mallory ignition system, acing & head (fins) Drive away — b on new Mercury. A remarkable value. MONTGOMERY-STUBBS Lincotn-Mercury Dealer S715 Bladensbers Re. AP, Tete saving srerarive. i ete. A lexery car. ced you may bey. Teday's special. | MONTGOMERY-STUBBS Lincoln-Mercury Dealer S715 Bladensbure R4. A Good PE) _ Hudsons, 46's to ‘53's $245 up _ Call Cari Motors 7701 Wisconsin Ave. OL. 4-2121 (Bethesda) | — INDOOR SHOWROOM — Travel With a Built-in Bed! ‘51 NASH 4-dr. Statesmah. Sparkling biack finish. Eeutpped with Williams Chevrolet 1239. aqt- Wort. er. Sliver ‘nua Md. 11275 Gea. Ave. LO. heaten, Ma. 4-8097 10 DOWN And a Good Job 97 AUTOMOBILE, SALE Get aia for Spring Now! It's = Super Convertible from the Buick family ef 1949 n t for > Revtaiie « driving with an OK. | guaranteed and enly . $727 Williams Chevrolet » Agno Ponce. iw. ae” ane ong Md. 11875 Ga. Ave. Wh LO. 4-097 eaten, Md. Seeeeoeoe: . oa) : Many FE xtras. $1295 Martin Motors 4en4 Bounce i La.. Retheeda OL. 2- Pinel prominent Sliver 8 ness man. mer coy hl lew m ear. yeu may SAVE MONEY| $8 $5 .$5 "46 Pontiac . Redan. "41 Buick .:.. Convertible. '47 Ford Cenvertible. MONTGOMERY STUBBS Lincoln-Mercury Deeler See Irv Green's lot, tet at Sed é bargains. ‘49 CHEV. $395 FULL PRICE See Ire Green's tot. first at tr@ &2 K st. ow., for all bargains. ‘49 MERCURY " om $395 FULL PRICE oe Irv Green det xs. WW. RE. 7-2320 st. aw. fer all ~ iitirieel. | oi 50 NASH slashed to $299. Mest Be Seld Tedar’ First Come—First Served! SELLERS SALES & SERVICE S778. Raltimore Are. Riverdale, WA. 17-6000 LS >. qa) FORDS “V8" Ranch Wagons Selection of 30 Some Driven Only 5,000 Miles—Like New Cash, Trade or Terms WiLL BUY ANY OF THESE any "47 Frazer 30s Seer Saeea. * — eigen fe transportation. "47 Olds "76" 4-Deer. Black finish. Ra- dle. heater. Meter recently everhaaied. ‘42 Pentiac .. 8195 Sedanette. Badie. heater. Ex- cellent transportation. 8145 "40 Plymouth . De Luxe 4-Deer. Radice. heater, seat cevers. Geed transportea- *” LOGAN Motor Company 3540 14th St. N.W. TU. 2-4100 Eye" ME NORTHWEST — SOUTHEAST - - 1620 M St. N.W. — = Ave. S.E. DI. 7-1162 1. 3-2400 Buick... . .$2347 Super Riviera t-dr. Dy- naflew. Buick . $1397 Riviera Sedan. Dyna. Buick .... .$1447 Sedan ¢-Dr. Dynafilew. 1953 BUICKS | Supers—Roadmasters 4 TREMENDOUS REDUCTIONS ; Temple Motor Co. — 1912 Diagonal Rd., Alex. © OV. 3-5020 Irv Green 3rd & K St. NW. RE. 7-2320 BURROWS MOTOR CO. 900 M St. S.E. Li. 4-8300 51 Pontiac $195 Clwbd — R. and H., 53 Buick .. $395 rd ten. power steering, pow- er brakes, radie. weet 2 tene,. new car condition , $7345 CARS, INC. 155 FLA. AVE. N.E. EX. 3-9063 ‘33 Chevrolet ‘1695 Rel Air sperte coupe. Twe-tene egreen finish with matching upholstery. R. & H.. driven lees than 5000 miles. othe HORNET CLUS os mpiete. Mallory. i tgnitton ing cam, «pec. yn 9 (fine) owtn H power, ~ a duty front od ans racing, special rear end re ? enna Top Deal Now! 1954 DeSoto-Plymouth Company Cars New Car Title, Guar., Terms De Soto-Plymouth Dealer Wis. Ave. at Albemarle Open Sat.—Closed Sun. =. rec. el MR. HANDYMAN 1948 Statien Mechanically in tep condition from bump- er te bumper. Hae Radic and heater and defresters ether extras. Very fast t= ae gear, speed well in excess of 100 m.p.h. in high gear. Equ ing and very clean in every te spect, Drive away for only ‘1,295 BURROWS MOTOR CO. 900 M $t.$.£. LI. 4-8300 MURPHY’S BIG 2-DAY SALE Ford, 4-dr. ... Mercy The Sport King Miller Motor Co. 1510 R. |. Ave. NE. CO. 5-8214 t slene costae overt real bargain fer fer traffie driv- c Cost 40 Others to Choose From *1,595 GMAC terms. 2720 Good Hope Rd. S.E. Lish-Keefe Motors STOHLMAN CHEVROLET LU. 4-1509 IURR q | AAAA y oi uso Open 8 ‘nil 9 PM. Daily Open Sunday, 9 ‘ul 4 : an Lal = = - - - — GMAC LOW COST FINANCING "53 Pontiac ..$1995 | "53 Buick ... $2395 *.Deor Chieftain De Luxe, Ra- 4-doer Super Riviera. Radte die. Heater. Hydramatic. Lew Heater. Dynaflew, W.-W. tires, mileage, like new $ 95 power steering, E-Z eve glass. 53 Chevrolet 53 Ford 4-Deoer Belair. Radice, Heater, Powerstide, stone color, 8000 r. miles. 1 ewne ~ 3 $795 . inch finish, me ~ he ~ , 51 Ford Tedoer Eauipped Original biue finish, tires like new. t-deer eaulipped, t-tene screen. Lincoln . $895 Excellent condition. 4-Deer. Hvrdra-Matic. Radie. 5 Heater. Premiom w.-#. tires, 50 Olds original finish. Rane and “98” 4.Deer. Radio, Heater, looks like new. Hydramatic. New Seat Covers. YOU GET A BETTER USED CAR FROM HYATTSVILLE BUICK 4920 RHODE ISLAND AVE., HYATTSVILLE, MD. HYATTSVILLE AUTO & SUPPLY CO., INC. AP, 7T-9000 UN, 4-2750 OPEN 9 ‘TIL 9 Low Ee eee ee ee ear ALL IN ONE ‘53 Buick ‘53 Super Riviera hardtop; Dynafiow. ‘52 Buick .... .$1697 Super Riv. Sedan, Dyna. "50 Buick .. $997 Riviera sedan, Dynafiew. ‘52 ‘50 Buick $897 Buicks .$697 ; 49 Sedanetic. Dynaflow + lh and sedanetio: Dy- acteal naf "ot dexewae ‘A6 Buick ....$297 . $397 Sedan. "S51 $897 .$897 De luxe sedan. Dodge Meadewbroek Sedan. ‘5S! ‘52 Ford $1397 | | Custom convertible. Ford- 51 Ford $897 LU. 4-1509 eomatic. .$997 | ‘49 OLDS "a8" Tuder Custom. Mercury $997 Open 8 "til 9 PM. D iy , Sedan. Spen Sunday, 9 "til 51 Mercury .... $697 $997 | ‘SO sedan, Sedan. Hydra. ‘49 Oldsmobile, $697 is 48 Pack, $25 ‘50 Oldsmobile = $997 ae) . Sedan. = il De ilexe $5.00 to $165 | ‘50 Hudson “98” sedan; Hydra-Matic. COVINGTON ‘46 Oldsmobile, $297 ‘a7 Pontiac PLYMOUTH MOTOR C0 Sedan. t-dr. sedanetie: Rydre. CHEVROLET “a wa dn ae INDOOR DISPLAY~~ HUDSON one 2eeoavc 23200 |f EMERSON & ORME PONTIAC Area's Largest Pockord Deoler —_—) = i RICES SLASHED | TO RIBBONS! BUICK 60 Buick 3877 ‘AT Olds $347 FORD a et and the Famous | . ae dy ay be mag Reg HE — ann. Cestems radio. Butier-Bond. NO WAITING WE FINANCE WHAT WE ADVERTISE NO ONE... | BR EY Plan $876 cen mien, See 5 er, Hydra-Matic drive. meruommenen.cemserceet | HOUR DELIVERY SERVICEMEN WE SELL UNDERSELLS BENNING © “61 Olds $1295) 9" F tym. 62 Hen, J $783 matic drive. A one- <* “98” 4-Dr. Sedan. Whirlaway . A Sr ems Hydra-Matic drive: custom ra .$2397 _ have consolidated dept. with an a showroom for your scenvenience. Down "49 Mercury $25 -dr. sedan. "49 Chev. _ $25 $25 4-Dr. Sedan. Pack, 2.Dr. Sedan. Black. Buick _ $25 +Dr. Sedan. Pontiac $25 4-Dr, Sedan. ‘S1 Forder Radic, heater, ever- drive. beautifal t-tene gneen, 5? Buick ... $1595 Dyna- Riviera, Radice. Heater. lew Pewer Steering, w.-- tires. "51 Nash ‘a6 Buick nee Sedan. ‘51 Chevrolet .. Chev. ™ el. epe.. ; Chev., 2-dr. 60 Others to Choose From 2720 Good Hope Rd. S.E. 48 Mercury Sedan BEWARE of so-called “‘bar- gains’ and sale cars! “Peace of Mind” Guaranteed Used Cars usually cost hundreds pon TAYLOR less in the long run! PRICE REDUCTIONS UP Westies BALPH DILLON ERWIN FORD CO. Lee Hwy. & Chain Bridge Rd., Fairfax, Va. JE. 4-2863 Open Till 9 <= MY a BUTLER- We claim to bring you new car confidence because the facts justify it! @ Phil Lustine picks the very best of his trade-ins to become “Peace of Mind” cars @ Every car is 40-point reconditioned @ Every car is backed by Phi Lustine’s na- tronally famous written guarantee! And $50 more is alt you pay! Many satistied owners have saved hundreds of dollars thru this plan Ist new car confidence and “Peace of Mind’ worth a few cents a day? Over 200 1-Owner, Low-Mileage Cars Just Traded on the 1954 Chevrolet & Oldsmobile All “Peace of Mind” Guaranteed OS Plym. $1567|’51 Hud. %889|'49 Plym. $439 Cranbreok 4-Dr. Sedan. Sad- | Convertible ‘Sparkling Artec | Alluring Allendale creen. This brewn finish: castem ra- | screen | @@stem radie.| econemical moter car i« fully adie. Moe-Par air-condition heater eae many other useful | eauipped and ready to cive von WE ARE TRADING H-I-G-H MUST MAKE ROOM FOR TRADES ON ‘54 LINCOLNS & MERCURYS PLYMOUTH DODGE DODGE PLYMOUTH (2) Cranbroek 2-Dr. Sedan. Lax urieuws Burgundy finish; fally aa. eauipped and ready te give vou t-Dr. Celered in t-tene Gre- clan srey tep with = srer bettem. Fully equipped "49 Pont, 5697 Chieftain De Luxe 4-Dr die. ferced- air heating ing bargain seers 50 Olds $1195 any President. “on Convertible. Sparkling Will take eff 8800 ‘S] Mercury $] 395 $1095 Chester sreen finish. spank- ing new black tep. Whirlawar 1-Door Radio, heater, covers. Showroom clean. ydra-Matiec drive, custom ra- Studebaker $1295 $695 dio. de tuxe heater. white side- wall tires Champion 7%-Door Tutone gray and blue. Cliimatizer. white-wall tires, covers. Clean as a hound's tooth. Mercury $1395 $1045 finish. Fulle equipped. includ - ?-Door. Biue. Radio, heater, spotlight, ing Columbia rear end . 3889 covers. A beauty. Mercury $1295 $895 Radio, heater, covers. *-Door Blue. $2295 $1795 range radic. air-conditioned heater. economical gas-saving Like new. Chevrolet Rel Air 4-Door. Blue and white. Radio, heater. Only 10,000 mites many miles transpertation "61 Pont. $1195 Chieftain De Luxe ‘-Dr. Se- dan. Sparkling -teone bortscn blue over Grecian are Hy @ra-Matic. radie and ot lounge-type interior 02 Chev. *1089 4-Dr. Sedan. Appealing 7-tone green finish gets equipped and ready te rell, 59 S d Shannon creen exterier tude, °995/°50 Chev. 5689 , ey. Champion Starlite Coupe. Ap- pealing Geneva creen finish; Dr. Sedan. Custem radie. y luxe air-conditioned heater ae lexe heater. tailor-made A real barcain peat covers Sincere value’ 62 Willys *962)’50 Hud. Aere Sedan. Beautifal Oaford | Admiral bice 7-Dr. Sedan. Thi« mareen; custom radic. de luxe | sturdy car ts fully eauioped. heater A tempting barcain. 60 Olds %947 $699 Sedan 4-Dr. Sedan. Alluring sea creat De Lease “S8" 4-Der Beautiful Baltie erer Polly | creen exterior: custom radio. resin -tmetading Whitriawa+{ air conditioned heater een- Hvrdra-Matic drive. This recket economical! "St PLYMOUTR <4- Dove Sedan Black finish. R. Good eondition and « real buy. But- ler-Bonded. $59 Commander V-8 Sport 53 STUDEBAKER Coupe. New car guaran- tee and title. Only used by Com Full eauipment. Sells for $3761. or ge over on trade Commander v.88 Land "93 STUDEBAKER Critccr—-compeny Offi- cial Car. New car tithe and guarantee. Full eauip- ment. Sells fer S3107. Will take eff $800 or ge ever en tra ‘53 STUDEBAKER te hs Fg Dual rear. Leng wheel base. Selis for 82092. Wil take off 8700 or ce ever on trade. ———e 10 Down ‘46 ‘47 WAS NOW $1095 $595 Radio, heater. Black. Studebaker $895 $495 Champion 5-Passenger Coupe, Green. Radio, heater, covers, guafds. beauty. Nash $1295. $695 Statesman 4-Door. Rrewn and tan. Radio and heater. Very snazzy. Studebaker $1395 $795 ‘47 Commander V-8% 2-Door. Black. Over- ‘4b drive. Nylon upholstery. Lots of equip- 39 Radio. heater. Hydre-Matic ment. It's gorgeous. white tires. premium plastic 48 STUDE. ‘%-Ton Pickup seat covers and many other . ' . 9: zn i895 | |°50 Pontiac “6” $1295. $795] 11'S) pon «seer “135 Sedanette Green Hvdramatic drive. e DeLuxe 4-Door Sedan. hadio. Radin. heater, visor... chrome. w1eels, |. | Amma emer COMPANY OFFICIAL CARS signals. It's a dream, Studebaker......$1395....$795. Be SA NGS cases V-8 Commander 4-Door. Green. Radio, 954 MERCURY MONTEREY a: oon heater, overdrive, covers, white-wall tires. bie Gramby cray. Mercematic. power seats and steering. wb. tires. heater, radie. eff bath, wheel : covers, ¢ is, ot @ wenk lights. back 3) 295 $695 ‘ahis, ceaiiia chides a aeenel os 600. enile cuaran- Tan finish is spot- adio, heater, overdrive. $795 $495 co S300 ever on trade te help en dewn payment. New green. Heater, Selle fer S3386 1954 MERCURY CUSTOM ;.°" Pontiac “8” $895 $495 Streak 4-Door Tutone blue Hvdra- ra epewer Matic, radio, heater. dust like new. Olds $695 $395 curbs buffers, off bath, wheel cevers. grill guards, turn signals. glove and trunk lights, back-up lichts, Club Coupe. New biue paint. Covers, etc. Not a seratch on it. "SS STUDEBAKER Champion De Luxe 2-Door Sedan. Radio heater and g¢as-sayvi over- drive. Less than 1! actual miles. Just like new. Butiler- Bonded. $1695 "49 BUICK Super Convertible Beautiful emerald green with ‘51 Studebaker Champion 4-Door. ; ra tg We invite your inspec- Like new. "49 Olds $595 4-Dr Whirlaway ‘50 ‘S] Sedan Sutier- Bonded. "h1 NASH Statesman Super 2 door. Bedan. Redio and heater wher. very clean car that will give miles of low cost service at very low cost. Butier- Bonded ulate condition. $84 ’50 ‘31 NOW $195 $295 $195 $310 $79 $195 BUICK 4-Door PONTIAC Sedanette LINCOLN 4-Door ° MERCURY 4-Door PONTIAC COUPE everdrive "61 Hen. J 5449 ?-Deer. Finished in beauvtifal herizen blue. This sturdy me ter ear ts an ideal buy for the economy bevyer D3 Olds %2395 $ | 995 $1495 Super “88” 4-Dr. Sedan. Reae- Mercomatic, radio, tiful ony*t “Diack “top. maize Maseen.-tinial.> cream bettom;: custem radie. atr-tonditioned heater: saper $2495 $2195 oe Matie —— pewer Radio, heater. Like new. -. interior; $1095 $695 | $319 radic and Radio, heater, covers. PRA ae equlpped Deater; amaring priee: $1895 $1295 | town nd s 52 Olds $1695 Cosmopolitan 4-Door Black, Hvdra- Matic, radio, heater, full power. Hon- Super “S8" 4-Dr Redan estiy, it looks like new Pontiac “8” $1495 $1195 terauoise Whirlaway Hydra ®-Door Radio, heater. Tan finish. Matic drive. de luxe radie. Perfect shape. $895 $495 air-conditioned heater. Mercury Tan finish. New top. Club Convertible New tires. Radio, heater. It really looks like new. *S] ‘50 4 "48 CADILLAC “62” Sedanette. ‘53 1°52 heater and Monterey heater; covers: Olds “BB” ?-Door. Blue. nomical cas saving SROE i@ Ford %19\49 Old *-Dr. Sedan Aprealinge Teder Sedan ra grey finish: de luxe radia finish custem air-conditioned heater. A real *447/"49 Ford ‘589 Cieb Coupe. Lastrouws jet aes finish: de taxe radie. air ~L ish: completely equipped in- ditiened heater eluding radio and heater. A drive. sincere value. covers. This one exceptionally ciean Bonded. 15) +53 |'49 ner STUDEBAKER Champ! ~ Hepat ene "41 Pont. {-Dr ee _ oo ca Mercury {-Door Biack., Reautiful, "49 Lincoln Cosmopolitan 4-Deor less, Ford Tudor &-cvlinder visor. Good rubber "6 STU DEBAKER cmameten Sed Luxe 2-Door h ue Uv nderseat heater and Pi don ers. Most attractive econom| ca! car with the modern look. “BUT -BONDED.’ $595 BARGAIN COUNTER $25 DOWN Good, dependable cars that you can drive with pride. ‘40 Dodge $95 4-Deor Sedan. Black. Heater. ‘47 Frazer . $150 4-Door Sedan. Black. BR. & H. ‘50 Studebaker $495 . A. Cenvertible. Green. 6. D "48 Studebaker $395 Convertible. Green. O.D.. H.R. ‘46 Buick . $395 Super 4-dr. sedan. Black. R..H. ‘48 Nash .. $295 4-Deor “600.” Black. H. | LEED. BUTLER INCORPORATED 1121 21st St. N.W. DI.7-0114 “Washington's Largest and ingtons Largest ang 141 ‘50 Lincoln Nvdra. Matic A real beauty electric cleck, wunderceat 75.000-mile cuarantee Cempany efficial car. Less than 3000 miles. Sell for S7R18 pode se 8300 ever eon trade te help eon dewn parm 1954 LINCOLN CAPRI tric windows, power steering and radie and heater. w.s. washer ‘S] Biee and vrellew,. Power seat, elec- brake, w.b. tires. Company efficial ear. onl used br company president. Selle fer S1938. Will ce 8600 ever on trade te atte en down payment LIN COLN 2 : AS rome AUTO SALES 1600 Benning Rd. N.E. (At 15th & H Sts. N.E.) —— OUR GMAC FINANCING RATES are #0 low they alone save you many, many dollars! And were always happy to work out terms to suit your purse NO PAYMENTS UNTIL MAY 10th $600 Balt. Ave. In Fivatteville, Me miles above ae) Line oe Seute | ! P -2008 Aine INC. ) — , i, Ave. l@T ° d Ne, Breniwoed. Md. * 25,000 ' ; mile above District ‘Line or ears = L. UN. 4-505, 4600 Rhode wears | er oe Sere ees = ry J » = ~ ~ 5 ne Px cae « x . : he Y : : " ¢ Oe gen . . ’ : ’ eae So 4 R's wan “ . po a. > + 2 : : ace ote a - x a . . ‘ > . 4 % | . 2 oe SOUR oN nna ae ws, aS: EE Gee age ee eae Seay a She alw % . 5 , : ig eee on z-- foes x Law i : ‘ “ ‘ ws RF) hr a oe A y ie p é \ See ase 5 ghee sag ta 8 aes aaah nara es ’ ’ Pteey . yoy * “ “ see GO PT eS OR SS Ye ss OSE SS eae gee Ba eR ACS EES EeS ee. RN _ “ b ; Ayes Saye . _ ane - Prem sala a er 2S Ae Fear eh ios ae eg — a ae VRID Sipe toy waked Ay . ——— Tonight on Ghannel 7! Starting at 10 p.m. through 12 noon Sunday .. . ALL * STAR TELETHON 4 \ For the Benefit of the D. C. Society for Crippled Children , : oS ea be Par’ eee me : EILEEN BARTON ae, “S Master of Ceremonies ol For the Telethon Never before has there been such a ROBERT MONTGOMERY line-up of talent on one program! H Akst Ted Alexander’s Band All Morgan Beatty Constance Bennett Ralph Bogart Capt. Clay Boland, USN Don Boll Anne Brazinski Mary Lou Brewer Art Brown Bobby Brownell Mrs. Helen Faust Brunhouse Commissioner Renah Camalier The Cameron Valley Boys Leslie Caron Mary Caron Joyce Carr Cherry Blossom Princesses , Carole Con Bob Conforti Cris Connor Rita Constance Ruth Crane Micki Crooks Bob Daniels Harry M. Davidow Democrat Quartet Corky Devlin Bob Dini Donna Douglas Jean Dowling Leif Eid Marilyn Epsen The Esquires Mark Evans Bernie Faloney Eddie Fisher Doris Fleeson Milton Q. Ford Evelyn Freyman Sunny Gale Eddie Gallaher Rabbi Norman Gerstenfeld Jim Gibbons Warren Giese Bill Gold Felix Grant Monsignor Philip M. Hannan Chet Hanulak Frank Harden Congressman Owen Harris Holdup Twins Hoppity Skippity Inga John Irvine Allen Jeffreys Betty Jerome Special for the Kiddies on Sunday Morning! Three Live Elephants, Rolande the Great, Clowns, Juggling Acts, and Other Exciting Features of the Shrine Circus! Louis Jordan Junior League Marionette Show Congressman Charles J. Kersten and Family Nancy Kenyon Rev. Carl Kops Art Lamb Hugh Lee Hal Linden Trio Lloyd Lindrath Lions Club Boys Band Leonard Lyons Bill Malone Hazel Markel Micki Marlo Kay Marx Bill Mayhugh Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay The Metro Quartette Mike Mihalic Claire Milardy Wayne Millner Dick Modzelewski Robert Montgomery Ben Mitchell Morris Gene Nash Norma Parker Dan Piver Congressman Charles E Potter Congressman Prince H. Preston Congressman Percy Priest Congressman Winston Prouty The Ranch Gang Bryson Rash The Ravens Richard Rendell Carl Ritter Larry Roberts Rolando the Great Barney Ross Rabbi Henry Segal Lenny Sherman Jim Smiley James Smith Hadson Spencer Frank Stevens Jerry and Jimma Strong Jim Tatum Pick Temple Joe Tereshinski Terrapin Apache Dance Terrapin Balancers Terrapin Jugglers Bobby Ward Matthew Warren Virginia Warren Bobby Wayne Jackson Weaver Bills Wells Congressman Jack Westland Bill Whalen and His Dixie- land Band Les Williams and His Singers Congressman Frank Wilson BRYSON RASH The campaign to aid the D. C. Society for ildr Crippled Ch THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY... Becker's Leather Goods Company Cafrits Foundation Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Ca. Chestnut Farms Bank of Commerce and Savings Firemen’s Insurance Company Jelleff's, Inc. Howard & Hoffman Perpetual Building & Loan Association Shannon & Luchs Real Estate Sun Radio The Hecht Company The Hub Furniture Company en makes possible thé ¢clini¢s, therapy, and school which last year aided five hundred forty handicapped children. More are in need of help through these and allied services; parent counseling, lectures and li- brary services, and field work. Easter Seal returns alone cannot meet the needs of local crippled children. Send your check today to THE D. C. SOCIETY FOR CRIPPLED CHILDREN, INC. 1767 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C, PERE A Be Ry AN gl tL MEE PRI tat - t : : : ay Rose we Veep Ne ee GR bi Ase POO May Cae heer Mee Pty a 3 pee? c . _ ~~ a ny Bw * Sele tei SA ds Bh ak oe 4 Wael y Hone PS ed ee eee eT 0 * gt Ater< Feit ALLO BA uD Spit ison och ee uptuicaens “ he Shoe i v “ ~ ‘ : : r) _ sy »* 5 - igs “ - - s “" oe oor . ty 1K: Carrie Te iA . ri PONS EE is aay FRE OLAS RODS ODO PT LI OE RP FR IES ES PAIR R PA Y = inti os PEG er BPN TP Sat bos CMe Ps sre, seme av ae + Cie Pe ae > $4 \ ’ yp Oem, a = ' ‘ ” be A wonderful weekend ward- robe in cotton baby cord gone demure with bands of delicate lace! Pink, blue or grey in junior sizes 9 to 15. They whisk through tub- bing, need just the touch of an iron ! So young ! 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Casual Dresses, Third Floor, Washington; Second Floor, Silver Spring and P ARAington Washington,.Silver Spring & PARKington, Arlington | - ee 35 a ‘A is eR pS vrs 2% ORR MPO ey Bay oETE TGR MONO RIN @ % SERA) Sl of AUS an? ena SEZ PRD TS OIE MeN PERE OE NEE: Ricarenbaae , a ie a ae ee Se La NL , Aon 5 « My> SE AITITE RPE SES Th i FP odo ss vere ¥2 BAP VRRVEV tS osm RF PD OTR BE OE HONS we WE LET PP) ¥ ye sya ta) em Gos Bee NS) PP MV AEROS AS Fe De ioe i penile a2 NP RET NS BED LOM OLDS ONLI L TD OEP E Sai OLA ALD gy ot BPE ST eats ht at a gt eT ae ah gh aoa 5 Re es i Oe tent. ae, Bia WY BML : WAN WR hd yy PR ADIL ON oN RCL ap PE Sete TY: . ‘ " y is “ - ms . axy ge 4 wots ¥ - “ “one ey aie + , : or 1: hep ces hetted OX Sate he SPRL RE ibe fat had NOD done BR a AR AA) M pein Vlee B TRE PE Pot AYR 7 s we Bhi} Sina Ane PAAR ty" Me VS SN PA Shed aafie Wt Sy Aiod Aw tlh x Ke ep pe dette Feb h iid Y < rs Peeic wii granule wh hy Pwr sta 2 y Pens ete. gh A PAN SG Dong PTA ged ig DD GAR. i“ “~ The te fasten esl ty OC ehh, : BEFORE THE SPRING GERMAN—Maj. Gen. Paul Frailey Yount and Mary Stuart- Montague Price sample the popular Oys- Saturday, March 20, 1954 Page. 35 ies Topier re B y Marie McNair By Charles Del Vecchio—The Washington Post and Times-Herald by Capt. With the State Societies All This—and 50 Princesses, Too By Diane Woolley A PARADE and parties of all kinds, luncheons, two ball, receptions and a grand cor- onation—all this and 50 lovely princesses too, are combined in the. National Cherry Slossom Festival of 1954. The presentation of a 20- ton granite lantern, symbol! of the friendship of the Jap- anese people for America, will be presented to Govern- ment officials at a ceremony at the Tidal Basin on March 30. MRS. RICHARD M. NIX- ON is honorary chairman of the luncheon fashion show to be held at the Mayflower Hotel March 31. Gowns will be by California Fashion Creators. That same day there will be the Congressional recep- tion for the state and terri- torial princesses sponsored by the Conference of State Societies at National Arena. Floats, bands and march- ing units will do the rounds on.K st. nw. from 9th to 20th st. on Thursday, April 1. April 2 means the National Cherry Blossom Festival Ball at the Statler Hotel. Queen of the Festival will be chosen on this grand night by a spin of the Wheel of Fortune by the Chief Jus- tice of the United States, Earl Warren. -~- Volunteer Clerks Needed In Hospitals .. One of the big hospitals today is for clerks to relieve the nursing staff | of paperwork and cterical details that too often come | hard- | their | between the Nation's pressed nurses. and primary job of nursing pa- tients | Washington_is. about to in- stitute a program enable the hospitals to use volunteer clerks to ease this | The program will | problem. be sponsored by the Volun- teer Department, United Community Services, and the Department of Institu- tional Ministry, Federation of Churches. Mrs. Paul H. Byers, herself a graduate nurse with long experience in public health work, will head an orienta- tion program for volunteer ward secretaries at hospitals in the District and surroand- ing area. These volunteers will work entirely in a clerical capac- ity at desks in wards, operat- ing rooms, obstetric and psy- chiatry departments. No pre- vious Clerical or secretarial training will be necessary. The orientation course for the program begins Monday, March 22. The three training sessions that make up the course will be offered on suc- cessive Mondays at 1:30 p. m. and 6:30 p. m., with Mrs: Byers as instructor. Registra- tions will be handled by United Community Services, 1101 M St. n. w. * The Festival pageant will last two whole days—the coronation, an operetta with ballet, a choral group and in- dividual singers all at Jeffer- son Memorial. The West Virginia group will hold their.Cherry..Blos- som Ball in the Congressional Room of the Statler on April 3. A reception honoring the Maryland Cherry Blossom Princess, Ellen Marie John- son, will be held March 27 in the caucus room of the Sen- ate. Cliff Titus, president of the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce will be guest speaker at a reception and dinner to be held March 27 at the Mayflower Hotel. Deor prizes and dancing will be in- cluded in the evening. Connecticut staters will meet March 30 at the Raleigh Hotel at 8 p. m. The Four Belles of Trinity College will sing. An informal dance in the Terrace room of National Airport is scheduled for South Dakotans on March 26. 9p. m.is- the-time, TONIGHT: Illinois: St. Patrick's Dance, door prizes, dress optional, Dave McWilliams’ Orchestra, 10 p. m., Shoreham Hotel. Cloria Swanson To Be Here Tuesday Who could be a better representative of “Forever Young.” fashions than Glorta Swanson. whose name has meant glamorou for decades. show- fashions at Tuesday at She'll comment ata ing of “ageless” The Hecht Co noon and 3 p.m. “ . needs in that will | ters Rockefeller at the cocktail party given and Mrs. Allen I. Friday night's Spring German, Price before ..Treasurer....of Saturday's Events CLEAR THE TRACKS! the American Council of Railroad Women holds its spring meeting at the Shore- ham Hotel Saturday and Sunday. They will tour the White House Saturday moring, and the same day at lunch will hear Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest, the....United States, speak on “National Safety as it Pertains to Wom- en and the Railroads.” Also on the program will be a din- ner, and a panel discussior on what women can do to help railroads during the present period of eeonomic readjustment. CALLING all members of the Hunter College Alumnae Association. The D. C. Chap- ter will meet at 3 p. m. Sat- urday in the Washington Post and Times Herald Com- munity Room, 1515 L st. nw. Mary Hilton, chief of the re- search division of the Wom- en’s Bureau, Department of Labor. will discuss “Special Employment Problems . of Mature Women.” .. . Presi- dential Chapter, National Secretaries -Association,..will hold a luncheon-fashion show at 12:15 p. m. Saturday at the Kenwood Country C1 u b. Styles will be presented by Frank R. Jeleff, Inc. IT ISN’T the date that counts, it’s the spirit of the thing! That’s what the Sun- day Evening Club of the Na- tional Presbyterian Church decided about its St. Pat- rick’s Day dance, so mem- bers will celebrate the an- niversary of the saint from 8:30 p. m. to midnight Satur- day in the Church Hall. A five-piece band, eers, will play dances, Latin dances. for and variety Bonner Benefits Crippled THE SPRING ,GERMAN opened its fifth season Fri- day night with a ball for the benefit of the District Crip- pled Children’s Society. The Terrace banquet room of the Shoreham was packed with Washington Service set from midshipmen and cadets to generals and admirals. Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. Priest were the number one repre- sentatives of official Wash- ington. Mrs. Priest is the Treasurer of the United States. The ball was preceded by a cocktail party at the Army- Navy Town Club in honor of the sponsors. Mrs. Priest was wearing black at daughter Pat's re- quest. Pat had chosen to wear black, too. Mrs. Ernest Eden Norris was outstanding in form-fit- ting white crepe trimmed with wide bands of tiny crys tals. Her crisp gray hair was held in place by a white satin concoction trimmed with crystals and bird of paradise. Handsome Rear Adm. W. B. Ammon, very grand in his blues, came with Mrs. Am- mon, who wore a short gown of pink lace. Maj. Gen. Paul F. Yount stuck to civvies. Mrs. Yount wore a flowing chiffon gown of two shades of lilac. Mr. Priest and _ Ensign Frank Muller held an earnest conversation in a quiet cor- ner. Subject: Where to send daughter Pat to college. Tremendous platters of oysters Rockefeller went fast, as did myriad tiny sand- wiches. Women Hear Historian Gerald W. Johnson, histo- rian and news commentator, Friday told a workshop for wives of Democratic members of Congress that “it was the Republican Party's. misfortune. .to__be called to power when the situation was of a kind that it is not competent to handle.” He said: “The Re- publican Party is great when what is required is not think- ing, but only bulldog tenacity.” He compared the function served by the Republican Party to that of an automo- bile’s brakes and added that “the brakes have locked.” Esther Van Waggoner Tufty, Washington corre- spondent, recommended the wives when making television appearances to avoid over- dressing. “It's not good poli- tics to dress better than our constituents.” Other speakers were Chris- tine Sadler, director of the Washington bureau, McCall's Magazine, and Gladys Uhl, contributing editor to the Democratic Digest. The all- day program was arranged by Katie Louchheim, direc- tor of women’s affairs for the Democratic National Com- mittee, “MRS. JAMES HAMILTON “LEWIS, widow of the Tili- nois Senator, J...“Ham" ‘Lewis, is one a the few host- esses who give parties solely for their friends. Sounds strange, doesn't i t? But Mrs. Lewis has no axe to grind, has been a part @e4 Washing- ‘ ton for a nm noe oe long time, and guests whom she invites know they're there because she likes them. Yesterday at the Sul- grave Club she entertained at tea—with cocktails—as a farewell to her attractive nephew and niece, Rear Ad miral and Mrs. Edward Ewen who are leaving soon for a European assignment. _Ad- miral Ewen has been named Commander of air-and naval bases in the Northeast At- ‘lantic with headquarters at Naples. Admiral and Mrs. Ewen, who came from the West Coast, have stopped in Wash- ington several times before, so Mrs. Lewis’ friends—or many of them—were theirs too. And like “Gypsy” Lewis, they have a remark- able memory for names and faces. Mrs. Lewis wore black as she usually does—a gown of lace’ combined with’ chiffon and Mrs. Ewen deep violet taffeta had a flared skirt with an extended quilted yoke. YES—IT WAS a party for “old Washington.” There were Mrs. George Barnett, Mrs. Mason Gulick and Mrs. Buchanan Merryman talking together on the sofa; Mrs. Harry G. Meem and Pendle- ton Turner in a conversa- tional deux. Mrs. Wilson, wearing a close hat of blue cornflowers with a gray wool suit, came early, took her turn at the tea table and left. Woodrow Mount Vernon Students Take Beauty Prizes Never underestimate the power of a smile and person- ality, say the 72 girls in the beauty contest Friday night at Mount Vernon High School in Arlington, Va., because that’s what counted with those judges. Raven -haired,..dark-eyed Jean Rossie, sponsored by Key Club, won first prize in a contest that took more than perfect features to score. Second prize went to Suzanne Hall, sponsored by Levison’s. Darlene Thornton, sponsored by Bradshaw, won third prize. Following the beauty con- test, the contestants (all high school students) modeled spring fashions shown by par- | ticipating merchants. Other _ finalists, were Elaine Pryor, sponsored by Hayman’s; Betty Roberts, sponsored by Lady Lois: rion Cannon, The Betty Dance; sponsored by Lynn Lapsley, Lodge; Sara Moses, sponsored by Michelbach’s Furniture Co.; Mary Miller, sponsored by the Fort Hunt Pharmacy. The show was sponsored by the Senior Commercial and Distributed Education Clubs of the school. Proceeds of the contest and fashion show will be used by the clubs to buy something for the school. The Australian Ambassa- dAor...and..Lagy..Spender, just. back after more than three months at home, were stapped at every turn. Mme. Boheman, wife of the Swedish Ambassador, wore a fetching white hat, which looked like a shaggy chrys- anthemum, and Mrs. Meade Patrick’s white hat had a single rose perched on the wide brim. Justice and Mrs. Harold Burton were talking to Mrs. Emil Hurja and Gen. and Mrs. William D. Connor. Mr. and Mrs. Orme Wilson were there and in another group were Dr. Stanley Horn- beck and Emily and Nannie Chase. Saw former Representa- tive Charles Dewey, Mr. and Mrs. Bill MacCracken and their daughter, Nell, who didn’t go back to Spain after all, and is having a very good time right here. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bell Sweeney, the Bernard Galla- ghers, Mrs. Alex Legare, Mrs. Nathan Wyéth and Mrs. Ran- dall Hagner were of the cave- dweller set. THE BRITISH AMBASSA- DOR, Sir Roger Makins, had to admit there was anothe man in the room taller than he was. That was Mrs. Lewis’ grand nephew, six-foot-five Charles Carpenter, medical student at Johns Hopkins University, and son of Bishop and Mrs. .Charles Carpenter of South Carolina. Mrs. Stanley Reed, Mrs. James L. Houghteling, Mrs. Thomas Kinkaid. Mrs. Bur- net Maybank and Mrs. Mc- Ceney Werlich, were ladies, who after finishing their stint at the tea table, stayed around to see their friends. Then—Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam S. Culbertson were there and Leslie and Glade Biffle, Miss Virginia Parks and her nephew Jimmy; Mrs. George Holmes. Mrs. Austin Kautz, Lee Murphy and Mrs. Murphy, who was comparing her tittle white hat with upstanding red rose with Mrs. James Gilman's little white hat with upstand- ing brush. PARTY TIME: Mrsfi and Mrs. James Mur- ray will give a_ cocktail party this afternoon at their new penthouse apartment in the Westchester. The party also celebrates Mr. Murray's birthday and in- troduces the Murray's visitor from...Beverly....Hills,...Calil.—. . THE PANAMA AMBASSA- Mrs. Florence Frankly. “DOR and Senora “de Hetirte matte gave an informal cock- tail party on Thursday for Panama Senator Juan F. Par- dini and his bride, the for- mer Miss Martha Boyd of Panama. Senator Pardini was once Secretary of the Panama Embassy. here. His sister, the former Carlotta Pardini, is now Mrs. Charles Savarese of Washington. The visitors who are on their honeymoon, will go to New York early next week. On their way home, they'll stop off in Cuba to visit another sister of Senator Pardini. MRS. JESSE B. BENNETT was hostess. at luncheon on Thursday. The table was dec- orated with shamrocks flown from Ireland and presented to her’ by Mrs. John J. Hearne, wife of the Irish Ambassador. Among the guests were Senora de Ar drade, Senora de Valie, Mrs James Barrington, Senora de Pizarro, and Mrs. Melquiades Gamboa. AT A NOON CEREMONY yesterday at the Chilean Mil- itary Mission, Col. Jorge Na- varrete, Military Attache of the Chilean Embassy pre- sented a Chilean Military decoration to four U.S. Army officers. They were .Major Gen. Robert N. Young, Brig. Genfi John H. Michalis, Lieut. Col. Jose A. Muratti and Lieut. John E. Mora. AZALEA ROYALTY: Nine pretty azalea prin- cesses held court Friday at a tea given by Mrs. Richard Harless at the Washington Aviation Club. Azalea Queen, blue-cyed blonde Pat Priest, official- dom’s No. 1 contribution to the Christmas debs. was on hand, too, with mother. Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest, Treasurer of the United States The girls will rule at the In- ternational Azalea Court April 7-11 at the 100-acre Nor- folk Municipal Gardens in Norfolk, Va The azaleas should be at their peak then, plus the dogwood and other flowering shrubs and trees in the woodland acres Among the princesses who attended, other than Pat Priest who is representing the United States, were Pam- ela Smith of Great Britain. “pourg,” Portraits I AM indebted to you, dear ... Beyond my life to pay ... For all your love and comfort and... Your kindness every day . For your encourage- ment and faith ... Your thoughtfulness of me... And in moments of dis- tress . . . Your loyal in order, Ma- | Cannon School of spon- | sored by the Virginia Motor | the Novel- | square | Burst out in a sunburst top- per and wow the crowd. Kitten-soft rayon’ velvelour is white or pink or red or blue, and good in any shade. 10 to 16, 8.95 W&L—Teen-age Apparel, 4th Floor +.» also Chevy Chase and Alexandria a were TEENS! MEET BILL MAYHUGH Star of WMAL's “The Bill May- hugh Show” and “An Evening with Bill Mayhugh.” He's ev- erybody’s beau! Ajeet him in person! TEEN SPRING FASHION SHOW’ At the Hecht Co. Today! 11:30 a.m. 2nd FI., Washington Store WONDERFUL PRIZES—A Teena Paige dress, 2 “boy” away during the Washington show. shirts and a formal will be given At the Silver Spring and PARKington stores the same prizes will be given away at 2 p. m. GIFTS .. . cosmetic tokens at the Washington show! show! * Reg. Trade Mark FREE COKES* at the Washington THE HECHT CO. Teen Circle, Second Floor, Washington Washington, Silver Spring and PARKington, Arlington eo — Copyright. 1954. Field Enterprises. Inc. By James J. Metcalfe sympathy ...I could not ever pay you back... In dollars or in dimes... In diamonds or emeralds . Or words of happy times ... But this much I can promise, dear... My heart belongs to you . And you are in my every thought ... And everything 1 do All Richts Reserved eee we WOM EN = Bring the Family Together © Erta Oleaynoyan of Turkey, Marguerite. Boniver.. of .Ltaly, . Sara bore & of Luxem- Corry Speekinbrink of The Netherlands, Inge Soren- son of Denmark, Petra Uter mohlen of Norway, Carolyn Makins of Great Britain and Marie France Meltz of France. They will fiy to Norfolk by special plane on April 9, and Miss Priest's coronation will take place on April 10. Miss Priscilla Steele will serve as a handmaiden to the queen. Friday she modeled one of the Philip Robertson gowns that will be worn by the girls at the festival. DID YOU KNOW: That U. S. Ambassador to the Dominican Republic, Wil- liam T. Pheiffer, and Mrs. Frances Uihlein of Milwau- kee, widow of George Uih- lein, of Schlitz beer fame and fortune, will be married today at 6:30 at the Ever- glades Club in Palm Beach? After a big reception there they'll go to the embassy in Trujillo City. The bridegroom, original- ly from Texas, now calls New York his home. He served in Congress from that state from 1942 to ‘43 and then went into the Army. The bride isn't exactly a stranger to Washington, be- cause she was Ambassador Pheiffer's guest at President Eisenhower's inaugural fes- tivities. POSTPONED: The __tea...which..Walter Gone, Press Secretary of the German Embassy, and Mrs. Gone has planned for Sun- day has been postponed be- cause of illness in the family of the guest of honor, Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, grandson of the late Kaiser Wilhelm. The tea will be held when Prince Louis Ferdjnand can come to Washington. CALIFORNIA BOUND: Col-and Mrs. Walter Bryte, on their way to the West Coast, are stopping at Ghost Ranch Lodge in Tuscon, Ariz., before going to Nogales, Ariz., to visit the Herschel Williams, who used to live in Washington Mr. ‘Wittiams wrote the successful play, “Janie” and several others. Walter and Jeanie Bryte will arrive in Beverely Hills, Calif.. to spend May there, will take a house at Laguna Beach for June and July. They'll be in or near San Francisco for August and re- turn to Washington in Sep- tember. Making the trip with them is “Souffle” their minia- ture French poodle. CONGRATULATIONS TO: Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Elmer G. Carison on the birth of a son on March 16 at Univer- sity Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich. Colonel Carlson re- cently completed a four-year tour of duty in Washington, and is now enrolled at the University of Michigan, com- pleting postgraduate work for his master’s degree in business administration. “GRO-NUPS” for young lassies’ Spring and Easter occasions ,. the latest styles for active sports, dress-up parties, Sunday School! Gro-Nups are scientifically buiit to fit and wear wonderfully. All smallfry sizes are checked for accufacy by each Hahn store manager. 4.9% Sizes 6-8 5-% Sizes 8'2-3 nailhead-and-cutout-trimmed black patent, White or blue calf. red calf 6-3. 842-3. ‘ nyloy mesh with white calf‘or black patent, 642-8; 82:3 brown-and-white saddle, red rubber soles, Black and white, white rubber sole. 6 ‘2-3. 12‘-3. “3113 14th "Silver Spring, Md. 1207 F 7th & KX *4483 Conn, **Clarendon, Va. “Open 9:30 to 9 daily **Open 9:30 to 9 Mon., Thurs., Fri. FREE CUSTOMER PARKING AT ALL HAHN NEIGHBORHOOD STORES 4 RET PCE pee ere ie Fe tary Re OE! BROGAN AA, Ip.) ~ * : » * _— >* i im —) 2 PULP RS ween LOPS CBE PBR AE SEES ELEGANT EDT OIE NOR ae oa a he See ay Foe ae loath ~~ 2 it " ox Selah EERE NLL LSS PON, LER SIGN HN COPIES EOE SIRI CONEY STEEN ANIA OLLIE os ET egy ey pets NAS TOCA SRLS TRE BRIE SUF > a tek m Ps ers . 4 - ‘ ‘or Se ee PAE SFT BV OO RAPE WAALS BF EE RAKED FET DF Mer MER EF ry SPP wbrche A SI went Wey tree rer Apr Yites'y ig fata hen NR: LAR fp ek DADA SGPT OOA RS Vn GER’ » aber $4 oh PAD, GIR LD Sw gpa The tein Post.t OC Page 36 Saturday, March 20, 1954 Pr gags ‘ ® - - _ 7 o é oo van < *« b aoe Be ~ _ : . ur enw ~ in eames ON age 5 al Pa asta aie, AN ORCHID TO HER—Mrs. Douglas Mc- Kay, wife of the Secretary of the Interior, gets a corsage from Mrs. Ralph Tudor, wife of the Under Secretary of the Interior, observer. Reni Photo at a luncheon at the Woodner given by the wives of 22 top officials in the Interior De- partment. Mrs. Felix Wormser, wife of the Assistant Secretary of the Interior, is the Keep in Trim How Thin Is By Ida Jean Kain HOW THIN is too thin? While overweight is a burden and a threat to longevity, some enthusiastic dieters bent on streamlining, pare reserve of body fat ,is | needed. Many ducers down within eight or 10 pounds of what they ‘ consider Miss Kain their fashionable weight— and. insist - on -taking—..off those last few pounds of flesh! They've set their hearts on weighing a certain figure, and almost starve to reach it! That's a mistake. Aim at healthy normal weight for your structure »_» that is, the weight at which you'll have the most bounce, normal § strength, and look your best—regard- less of fashion dictates. Bear - in mind that you inherited your bones and your frame- work, and these must be con- sidered in your total weight. Let’s take some examples. Comedienne- Ethel Merman has more bounce to the ounce on the buxom side of streamlining than she would if she were thinner. This is also true of curvaceous Dorothy Shay. Vivacious Hildegarde, on the other hand, tells me that she has more verve when she’s close to her streamlined weight than she does when she gets a bit careless with calories. Joan Crawford's weight is streamlined at 130 pounds for 5 foot 4 inches—which is plump for movie standards. But..Joan .has..a. generous frame which calls for curves. TO GET the perfect pic- ture, think of overweight as referring to too large a stor- age of body fat. A heavy frame with big bones adds to your total weight but it is only excess fat on the frame that is a burden. It would be well if scales could meas- ure the amount of body fat, for the ratio of fat to body ‘Too Thin’ “ie he oe te | “On § Saturday’ § fsa WOMEN weight is the clue to healthy normal weight. Then, too, well-toned muscle contributes to a feel- ing of well being, but muscle weighs more than flabby fat. I recall that one time when I interviewed a. Guess-Your- Weight Man, he explained that people from New Eng- land states, where the cli- mate is conducive to phys- ical exercise, look as if they weighed less than they do, while many Southern women weigh lighter than they look. He was losing money the first day in a new section of the country, until he hit upon the plan of gallantly assist- ing milady in the direction of the scales by taking a firm See ake ed * a ee tangs 8. ,? DUCHESS ROYAL Jacketed for day it’s a suit to wear to work, doff the jacket and find a dress smart enough for dinner in town .. . No wonder Duchess Royal is such a favor- ite! Navy, grey or beige rayon and ace- tate; sizes 10 to 18. Jellett’'s Sports Shop—T hird Floor, F Street and at Shirlington, Saver Spring, Upper Conn. Ave. Gay as spring crocuses... \ our newest cotton batiste blouses by Adelaar Jewet neckitned.- batiste- with tucked..yoke.and cuffs; white, pink or blue in sizes 32 to 38. $6.95 Tucked, convertible collar’d batiste; white, maize or lime in sizes 40 to 44, Jelletf's Blouse Shop—T hird Floor, F Street and at $9.95 Bethesda, Shirlington, Silver Spring, Upper Conn. Ave. pan elleff's F Street Silver Spring Bethesda 4473 Connecticut Ave Shirlington A SUPPER meeting March 25 will begin a six-week pro- visional course for 18 pro- spective members of the Jun- Thompson Buchanan, Miss Anne Rogers Devereux, Mrs. Maurice K. Heartfield, Jr., Miss Mary Truxton Hill, Mrs. James Izard, Jr., Mrs. Curtis SIZES 12-20 4552 By SMART stitchery sizes the new silhouette, ac- cents the best features of your figure. Choose tissue faille or crepe. Later on, make it in cotton. Pattern 4552: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes inne Adams empha- ior League of Washington, Mrs. T. Perry Lippitt, Jr., president of the League, has announced. Mrs. Charles Runyon Ill, a past president, will speak after the supper which will be held at League headquarters, 1409 20th st. nw. New provisional members are Miss Grayson Beach, Mrs. Harvey Jones, Mrs. Dickson R. Loos, Mrs. Brenan Mce- Inerney, Miss Theres® Ma- thias, Miss Yardley Minnix, Mrs.-.-George .C....Pendleton, Mrs. Walter T. Skallerup, Jr., Miss Nancy Sullivan, Miss Elizabeth D. Walker, Mrs. George Y. Worthington III, | Mrs. K. Martin Worthy and Mrs. William E. Yost, Jr. Washington Stiver Spring PARKington Arlington Le z LAR: by Se \ The whirl of your skirt 1s as w-i-d-e as its petticoat! Fantasy'’s gay nylon taffeta camcan ruffled with contrast! pink, maize or red; small, medium and large. 4%s yards 39-inch fabric. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Washington Post Pattern Department, 243 West 17th st.. New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and | style number. | New! The tweedy look in Cotton Seersucker Saybury $8.95 Isn't it attractive? It’s the tash- ion look of the slub texture crisp with white. Gay and smart for at-home hours in rose or blue bow-tied under your chin, belted or not. Sizes 10 to 20. Jellef's Negligees—Fourth Floor F Street and at Shirlington, Silver Spring, Bethesda, Conn. wool cover coat ours alone 29-95 Exclusively ours, this free-swinging little cardigan coat, accented with rows of stitching on a new wool hopsacking. This is the coat that will top everything, go everywhere, spring and summer, in white, pink, blue, coral, beige, gold, navy, black. Fully lined, 8 to 20. Better Coats, Third Floor, Washington; Second Floor, Silver Spring and PARKington Call NA. 8-5100 for 24-Hr. Phone Service Top down All white or white with $5.95 W hite; $3.95 satin ribbon and under- All white or white with pink or blue; small, medium and $5.95 Fantasy's Cpring twirl of starchy nylon taffeta that whispers as smail, medium and large. you walk! Cotton batiste (lots of whirl in this!) trered with nylon scored with crinoline! large. diamonds ore_of one quelity . .. the fi end when this is considered, oats prices give @ greoter volve for your more —607 THIRTEENTH ST.— oo ‘ Jellett's Lingerie—Second Floor, F Street and at Bethesda, Ave. Shirlington, Silver Spring, Upper Conn. Ave. Ra Ree ie OS RY ps in ek ety Rye SPM IEA HE PW HE HL -w75—W—~”-- SE EP RE ENT y ions Re Ba GR 2 Fags ae THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD eer w: ry Pin. mea ae se SS ah os Sel Daria . ar Rey, yc aS ERR aR eng i Re en ns ee ne eri Saturday, March 20, 1954 LOR egg RAT TID all Oe. Ss ee es Sees * ‘ preeer , s . ETS DON LR ORE IIR EIEN TOO GANS Rs emer ae de hg tai Alon in inane POST eat a Se Lee ~ os VE ie ey WELL, it’s the only thing anyone is interested in so let's have at it again. In Edward R. Murrow’s sec- ond “See It Now” pro- gram devoted to Senator Jo- Radio & Television That Aroma of Decency Had Been Missing a While- ~By John Crosby~ this woman's rights. For the first time in a long time an American Senator began to act like an American (rather Saturday TV Highlights 1:30 p.m—WTOP-TV. Hedi Pope, European dancer, and Pola Nirenska of the Dance Workshop appear on “Ask' It than whatever McCarthy acts | like) and get damned angry about individuals who got pushed around. Basket. 3—WTTG. Pro Basketball: ‘New York vs. Boston. 4:15—WMAL-TV. “Monti- cello” tells the story of Thomas Jefferson's home, 8—WTOP.TYV. Jane, Fro- man fills in for Jackie Glea- son. 9—WNBW. Edward Ever- oe guests: - 1 SM AL TV. WoNTHE _ ett Horton; Rocky Graziano, Ebsen and Burns are Mar- Hoacine Khalfi vs. Cisco An- drade, 10-rounds. 10—WMAL-TYV. - Telethon for D.C. Crippled Children’s Association begins a 14-hour program with many headline names. 12:15 a.m.—WNBW. NCAA Basketball Championship in Kansas City. ~ IMPROV EMENTS ~ Spring has arrived on the; kitchen with Spring’s Here: Let’s Face It “ei Three in One! If you're buying chrome plated. metal furniture for your Paint is better than noni |home or business, be sure you for Tinihg bureau drawers. A’ check on quality of the chrome;: thorough coating of gloss enam~! warts the ‘Metal ‘Furniture: In: €1 not only reduces the danger) stitute, age delicate fabrics snagging on} wood splinters, but also pro- vides a hard slick surface which. ican be dusted easily. One warning is offered by’ DuPont experts—since paint | ‘will not dry on a waxed sur-! Enamel Is Best Lining for Drawers clay-tiled drain- face and some furniture makers | well as on the! boards, be sure to schedule it wax interiors of drawers, try schedule, which|fer immediately before house- mage | have to face it:|cleaning week. |@ test in an inconspicuous cor-| “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal; that they are ‘calendar as household means you'll seph R. Me- Carthy, the star witness Hume’s Music Selections was been pended from her job in the Army because she had been accused by McCarthy of be- ing a member of the Commu- nist Party. She denied this simply, earnestly, humbly. At the end of her testimony, Senator Symington said: “I may be sticking my neck out, but I believe you.” At the end of Ed Murrow’s program, I guess everyone did. It was impossible not to. Here was a woman who had been deprived of her job on the flimsiest pretext, who earnestly denied that she had ever been a Communist, who had to have the meaning of the word espionage explained to her, who could barely read (though that great phony Mc- Carthy had intimated she was stealing code secrets). I great- ly doubt whether Annie Lee Moss knows she has any rights. Yet, they were being so clearly violated in front of our very eyes that she won every heart. AND THEN there came a Annie Lee Moss, an earnest, hum- ble, scared Negro wom- an who had su S endowed by their creator with certain’ inalienable rights; that. among these are life, liberty and fhe pursuit of happiness.” Joe McCarthy would very probably like to imply (as he clearly implies | about the Fifth Amendment) | that that was Lenin, but it was written by Thomas Jefferson and it is the second paragraph of the written by | sky: Declaration of Independence. | When wrote it, Thomas Jefferson the phrase “pur- suit of happiness” meant simply the right to hold a job, the right to earn a living. THE AMERICAN PEOPLE fought a revolution to defend among other things, the right of Annie Lee Moss to earn a living and Senator Mc- Carthy now decided she has no such right. It’s about time McCarthy was labeled for what he is—a subversive who is trying to undermine the very cornerstone of our country. When Senator McClellan | Corsair; started to defend Annie Lee | Moss’ tor Symington said you,” the sweet clean aroma of decency filled the room— and the aroma of decency has been missing for a long time. The shocking thing about Senator McCarthy and right and when Sena- | “I believe | | weues rM 11:05 a. m.—WGMS. Leon- cavallo: Pagliacci, Act I. 2 p. m—WMAL. *Metro- politan Opera presents Verdi: Forza del Destino, with Mila- nov, Barbieri, Penno, Siepi, under Cleva. 2:05 p. m.—WGMS. Bach: 3d Brandenburg; Schumann: Piano Concerto; Tschaikow- Eugene Onegin, exerpt. 5:05 p. m.—WGMS. Berlioz: Sowande: African Suite. 7 p. m—WCFM. Cello Sonata. 8:30 p. m. — WGMS-FM. *Baltimore Symphony under Freccia plays: Tschaikowsky: Francesca da Rimini; Violin Concerto; Symphony No. 5. 11:05 p. m. — WGMS-FM. Bach: Adagio; Haydn: Noc- turne; Mozart: Flute and harp concerto. *Live broadcast. Carter: Saturday Radio Highlights 12:30 p.m—WRC and 10 p.m—WMAL. Easter Seal Parade of Stars with Danny Thomas, Dinah Shore, Frank Sinatra and Jane Russell. 1:55—WWDC. Baseball FEx- hibition: Washington Nats vs. St. Louis Cardinals. 2+WTOP. Radio premiere of “Charlotte's Web” is com- pleted. 3—WTOP. Inquiring Edi- tor Alfred Friendly visits Falls Church High to test students 4:30—-WTOP. Swami Nik- hilananda speaks on “The Universe as a Pure Being in the Ancient Asian World” on Man's Right to Knowledge. ij—WWDC. S. L. Fishbien Times Herald and Griffiths of the Evening Star quiz District Commissioner | Renah F. Camalier. 8:30—WCFM. Radio adap- tation of ers” from the BBC, FM STATIONS WRC-FM (93.9 me.)—5:30 a.m. te 1 a.m.) WWDC-FM (101.1 me.)—T a.m. te 2 a.m (96.3 me.)-——5:30 a.m. (96.7 me.)—8 om M (97.1 ayn F 30 aH 10 eM -_* me.)—5 p.m. (99.5 me.)—5 p.m. te I te 2) WGMS-FM (103.5 me.)—6:75 a.m. te midnig ht. to 9, pm | WARL- Fu (105.5 me.)—<5:90 om. to 8 wist. PM (106.3 me.)—7:30 o.m. te © the annual big cleaning. heaval. | Council of America: 1. Schedule the burden body into a couple of days " preferably one a day, may be retained 3. Send out all the ocneitaie] ) , one ) slipcovers and rugs ‘time, just before work begins iin the way, at the week \in progress. “Barchester Tow- | by Anthony Trollope, 4. 1f some remodeling is 1 order, such as modernizing the) of The Washington Post and | Harriet |g Trained announcers, producers, writers now in demand National Academy, of Broadcasting ft. 7934) 3338 oth Sireet N.W. Starts new term April > Enroll now ... DE. 2-5580 . Place ement Service But it need not be a messy Up-|household jobs by moving ap-|in 24 hours. | Here are some help-|pliances and cleaning materials|_~_.__ ful suggestions from the home) from chore to chore on.a cart! ‘arts department of the Tile or tray, or in a large basket. | of ‘work over a full week. Every- in the family will be a) wreck if too much is crowded 2. Do only 4 room at a time, so that isome semblance of family life WMAL, 630 Ke. or | | They won't be | nor will they gather new dirt while the session is 5. Save steps while doing, "¢' ‘© see if enamel will dry) Dollar Special Today Only Roast Stuffed Spring Chicken yy J ot Bey & Dinner Regular Saturday Specia! ~~ Starting Steak—2. RESTAURANT co STINS INC. 835 17% How Christian Science Heals “How Can a Book — ___ Bring Healing?” Sunday “ghgion 9:15 | 07.3 Mc. v. NW. Building a re Bookcase? NA. 8.3829 j . Open 1! to 10 PA uv Ait Conditioned Again Oven en Saturdays 's|) WASHINGTON’S BIGGEST FIXER DOCUMENTARY ESPOSE BY MIKE STERN o «TRU MAGALINE WOW ON SALE n Do IT WITH DAVIS! KNOTTY WHITE PINE PANELING 6", 8” and 10° Wide Random Lengths Economy Better Best Grade Grade Grade 10¢ bd. ft.15¢ bd. ft.17¢ bd. ff FREE DELIVERY Have pieces custom cut while you wait! Our custom | > ) millwork service . | simplifies your home wood-worke- Baltimore Lumber Co. © a ing and makes it look profes 1600 iin Vek dee $ . » just Dring dimensions elliny 5 Cites ye . and get read-to-assemble pieces nal OPEN SATURDAYS ‘TIL 4 P.M. immediately’ : te y om. WMAL. PM (107.8 me.)—@ a.m. te 12:80 annnnan MERTON wanna e p.m. Gas Water HEATERS J ‘ J ‘ J ‘ ] ‘ J ‘ ] ‘ rp —— os, ‘ weasers Parment @ 3 -cateinte de J ‘ J ‘ , ‘ ] ‘ about this horrible mess with the Army is that it is inde- cent. And Americans are not indecent people. (And when | I get called before a Congres- | wa, sional committee for that re- |WUST—1120 ke.—7 a.m. ews, a or i in sight.) | Programs printed here conform to information red wee Tac Bie meets furnished by stations at time of prabtication (100.3 me.)—S "om. point in this broadcast which is one of the greatest experi- ences television has ever of- fered. That came when Sen- ator McClellan began to rumble with indignation over the clear sername of a OTHER STANDARD STATIONS nm. | WRAX—IT°O ke-—-T a.m. te Peer Oven Setartare FR 4 P.M.0vees Pia General Millwork Co. PAINTS if a? FIBERGLASS ‘al ant tance ka Ee AWNINGS! Do |_ pane & —— Park OPEN SAT. & SUN. TIL 6PM. ® Pr FEI Jr - pm. | 5 om. | for all your lumber needs nm te ' WDON—1540 STOP WISHING FOR . eee FORMIcR , KITCHEN TOPS Ss = You can have a kitchen as beautiful and colorful | ‘SS as the ones in the magazines. —— ——————— E. A. GASCH & SON Est. 1915 WA. 7-3373 i Ke KS KS KL KL KE KL Ke Saturday Television Programs | WNW (NBC) 4 Saturday Redis Programs : WMAL (ABC) tations.,' Custom Made FACTORY TO YOU DOOR HOODS WINDOWS PATIOS WTTG (OuM) 5 WTOP Sak TERMITES SWARMING? Medi wre (NBC) AM 930 FM 93.9) Choice of Colors ine. for: ——— ' f We will cut to your measurements. 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CREDIT @ Free Estimates ® immediate Service Pe © Paris & Labder Guaranteed Phone: TU. 2-6362 >. sense ees eee eeaeaneaenaes 282. @ me eeaeaenseaesaenaeses Kensington, Md. ih heetitenieeeall . B. a be om, ane ree Lr Pe ae ae Pay hy Fey te sonia ad er aed Pe eR a8 Ha pre Pah eee a ed ee TL hes a FH oa 38 eee. POL, PISS LOO GW i pick He) ae ts OR ORO Pra PPSEILY Habe” iy Ry FUERA THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD \ ; LE PN I SE TS OS HE bi biktada POR Ae iy aA Cage me oie oa DOR yp W® oe Vie BA BE: Pfotyrws arama topes BAAD ER 9p FONG Be HO te Dray Sagara Regi PrP Mrigres. 4 we ee» ee igte ee ee a eee a RI Rn ie DLP TI 1 is EPR De NV Ta PSs HRs ELLIS REE S Se eb eey RGA Bay? vz SRNR IES LAI: * —— SpaydusBes . tua Aue tee: onde ithe BEAT Be BIZ! POY Aa air & a . Pein FED? VS Se i all dal oor BIBL DOORS WARP tae ri EG GaN gee ta Eee * Saturdhy, March 20, 1954 Pig Siete? A” Pins - Sd a pe tate Baan 0 FUSED AS RRC BE EON ie Ty © camreerdly ew York Stock Exchange Fx Prices -.. Expansion at. ‘Dairy Plant By 8S. Oliver Goodman Work is under way on a mil- |_ lion-dollar expansion program for the Washjngton plant of Southern _— Inc., it was learned yester- By the Associated Press Total’ ‘sales, 1,930,000 shares; previous da 2,020,000; year) ago 1, “years 1289,263: January 1 to date 94,917,877; 1953 to date 91,229, 877; 1952 to date 85,365,346. Satind'eame 83 pond] Dow-Jones Stocks NEW YORK, March 19 UP.— Open h Business Outlook Modest Rise ‘Pulls Stocks _ To New-Peak: ; $3 : 35 se FH : ethene a i **| stock market sent prices up to a new high level for the year, ‘in spite of late profit-taking. Eisen hower Shous Courage, . I f Not Politics, in By J. A. Livingston RESIDENT EISENHOWER'S talk on taxes took courage and it was good economics. On the surface, it doesn’t look like good politics. Not as good as the replies of three Democratic ane Foe Rep. Sam Rayburn, of Texas; Rep. Jere Cooper, o! of Tennessee, and Sen. Walter F.* Tax Plan | Armco Plans Big Outlay Armco Steel Corp., an- nounced it will spend $33,000, ee eae Ss et . : Krey, vice pres- | ident and local roads. 6 zone manager of the big ice cream firm, ex- pects comple- tion by the spring of 1955. a He added that 4s" capacity of the r local firm, a/: subsidiary of National Dairy |/ Products Corp., will be in- creased by 35 percent. The new construction is be- ing done by units, Krey ex- plained, so that current opera- tions will not be retarded at the M st. ne. plant. Some old unused structures have been razed. The project will include a new shipping platform, a new hardening room for ice cream, rebuilding of the processing room, modern ammonia com- pressors and boosters, and new equipment in the engineering department. Southern Dairies’ local plant, which dates back to 1898, serves an area of 75 to 100 miles around the District of Colum- bia. Krey said the present re- building program is the largest ever undertaken in the firm’s long history. STORE SALES: Washing- ton department stores in the week ended March 13 showed an improved trend, Down- town sales edged 1 percent higher than a year ago, while metropolitan area volume was unchanged. Other com- parisons, as reported yester- day by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, follow: George of Georgia. In an election year, re been easy for the Presi- nt to favor in per- exemp f¥ Every- 624 one would ben- od efit from that 4 | tw, we in 125 | io income brack- ets most of all. It would have checks along. the way. Just be-| vote appeal. fore the close, enough selling). The Prest- ent could Livingston was encountered to turn prices hav e used the recession as an ‘down from their best. The market started higher s'and continued on up into the| late afternoon with only minor} det it would tal income came to $852,869,000, ' 000 in 1954 to streamline opera- ‘their taxes to $500,431,000, or tions and reduce costs. Charles 59 percent. If all their income p ook. board chairman, and were taxed away, the Govern- W. W. Sebald |W. W. , president, said 438,000 more. That, out of a to- tal of $18,374,000,000 of per-000,000 in the years since sonal income taxes! /World War II in its moderniza- To get his $60,000 savings tion and expansion program. per $500,000 family, Reuther) makes improbable assumptions. Phone Expansion Cited He assumes that all of the tax-| Sixty-nine percent all payer’s income is derived from) neorteen anesielda Gee few tax- dividends, and very have telephones—a jump of payers derive most of their in-, come from dividends, let alone more than 22 percent since the end of World War Il. The all of it. He assumes a divi-| American Telephone & Tele- dend allowance of 15 percent, | ‘excuse. He could have said he hes aireaty been peg ag got , ‘graph Co.’ reported 50,372,972 ‘telephones in use as of last Today the basis for comput-|wanted to add to ee cut to 10 percent. ing new highs was changed to|power, Instead, he laid him- " pti Beran at Ps self open to attack by Walter. Nevertheless, what Reuther Dec 31, of which 41,353,483 e pre- Reuther, president of the Con- ‘says sounds good to persons|— re operated by its Bell Sys 953-54 base. The Asso-|... P looking for a nice easy way, “ere OPe y i} | Vious ] gress of Industrial Organiza-, f ing t It nds | tem. \. ciated Press average of 60\tions and the United Auto| out of paying taxes. sounds isn istocks yesterday gained 60 Workers. Reuther declared to|? lot better than . President Ream Sale Plan Dropped Eisenhower's asking people to Harry Blum, chairman of James E. Beam Distilling Co. \said all negotiations for sale a | _ ow ‘$1300, 8 Stilities, * 40,100; R — > ~ r rise STOCKS OID sonal Fri. Thurs. tions. 667 Bote - ee wae —_ - 3 2 a =33 *i¢t+i@eeetit WHAT RS = a3 ' (Hds.) Hien Low Close Che. | 45% 6% %+ % 109 18a 19. 719, | Deter ©. S Devt of Aaricuture Morte Kats v < s Advances | Declines 33S ¥3i3ty oe ” = Tetal issues .. 1954 highs 1954 lews - = tiethded oa~ ail ne wal ss 2155... J'a+ “e o, of J - + fey ‘Curtiss a & A3 ler H 2a er ~~ | CMIBsssy ov oe EEaBee oe - i: i, Dana aed te Dasstrom i Ba i. 2 > ao i * — a > | as 7 = SECM IVSSsasy ear eD tht Pereteaey 17 etn wmPr oe ee ‘se 3i%+ 8 % S9%.. ~ vee oc —Os wo Vntwe ww ss . SanBewtinaraewisiuiestat nec >: | al se bs ee ee —~ eee me ®& eee ae —— —s Ad ~$038 ON WSO -_—_ > ~ 2 ; ‘ «a ‘=. 7, 7" ~ = bef ~ BBEEatsers Bu> x Fe Stes aids os Su UB2BVSFS.3 yeang 3 > _— + os -_ = > i SIELoSS ae ors a3 gaoa- $F ~ 2. > . till 2 in Encaus T. 60a — ~ —— » " > a fer i Sek ab eb 35 5S os # Ps S2e= 3 Ste -- > ne o3t3"3 Lite +114: +14 - b> oe 33 F y4r> 7 — Bio.th oe ae = Sear + — o ee nN — 11% + ? Nash | Kelv .25¢ 253 \Nat Acme 2? FF s ses ost g Pe itor Rs ¥ 53 oe eee 2 —— -- oa - — ~ mn . ee bet 1 4 CO ee ae > & bueoseeee corectetwunedti-nweShhU2..wekBSSij0 zoeses eere re we Bioth'S2 cCorenttowaRull.anealtemueSBatu SE =8 we & * o let Stee] 3a \Nat 5 ei se ts 24+ \y oe oe ~ be -* _— “= whtern D. C. etre. Dd. C. altimere metre. echmend metso. ifth District S& J > — ~ ro va a SWwOh~) mm OI eee) net! =IS8E etiowstts aru — =e oF i) —_— ene — 5 4l\e+ a $ LOSS SHOWN: Capital Air- lines reported a net loss of $314,482 for January, compared | with a deficit of $189,713 in’ same 1953 month. Operating revenues for the month: wer $3,189,967, against $3,132,574 year ago. Capital flew 2,200. 000 revenue miles and cartied | tH 155,600 passengers in January, | against 2,100,000 revenue miles | and 145,700 passengers a year ago. IMPROVEMENT: Virginia Electric & Power Co. re- ported February net of $1,370,834, against $1,237,438 in same 1953 month. For the 12 months ended February 28, net income of $13,215,923 was equal to $1.82 a common . This compared with —- or $1.78 a share in previous 12-month act oy igelow §& POOR JANUARY: Retail Bin” £975 *2> sales in the Washington metro- | pocks ©) 1.40. politan area showed a gener- Bohn alum 1.40 ally lower trend in January as = ag compared with a year ago, th Commerce Department ported. Of 17 categories, only 5 ear 5 managed to show plus signs Bran ‘ee for the month. Percentage Briggs Mi abe changes in area retail sales prs#** o* ™ follow: ot > 4 Dividend Boosted Owens-Corning Fiberglas raised its dividend by declar- ing a quarterly of 25 cents a | Share, payable April 26 to stock of record April 5. Pre- viously it paid semi-annual dividends of 30 cents. j ~ os sr”) + irneld Con .5a irtloom irvin ind .40¢ hi Ou 1 rr he eevee on TALK is appealing. The rich ought not to be BELESEEYCtAtSs ESPnvat Le e a) oeopotes | SRSSaU - w we & @ } So vsstVTsee os pS. - aw +. ++144/i1 - oe Pdr . as Tack itens Cant 1 kvco Mig ee = eee ef a» 2a8 a vs Babbitt .20 Babcock&W 2b - —s aSS2EtSESR~ Bontt- sake SaBwoBoutuShulhscacthsnk oe i+tell FSET F FEES a oe = —— a7wouw A Nw a, oe = — Ye Norwich Ph i Hiohie & ss 2.20 Okla Cae 130 G&E Cp ibus Otis Elev 1.25e t> M&M 5S0e od 02 oe > F es 8 —_s n _) = ge bat} 3 > = re (Hds. 1 High Low Close Che. 15 1 ~~ ll ~trlitii+: — =2EAy ee ow » >. eee &eé seted ere > os 32 -—~ - oO — |FUtrol Fir ie: EE 7 *Fia P & L ins + Spizollans we 1b 7 i | Food — = ~ “~ . + = Pa = oe ~ - - lm cers ree PD a re FS = - a o 4 - 3% eS ad uw“ a Perr = : 3s ewewe Pe S8éer6 Chicago — Ian . ~ Chg 1 i Gl 4 pence. Le 256 Pac Pac one 2.20 ¢ Pac Lig. 2 3; ‘ American Stock List By the Associated Press sv eries Be re Total sales 580,000 shares; ton new seasonal pick.“ e vember | Am&FP 4.80387 ¢ ts a ago 798,750. soybean future since ¢ ” eambiveen ony amtat 3 S64 ; (Bids. High Low Close Cha. Bip, Derformance “ot soyoe Bt| Am Tob 3 ae 2 li% 11% adcnou ra .., crop wheat 25 : jstreng on news of ens Owens Low $s > “J? ter Hs oe ee BDLOPN OOK MORK VOM CONBBONUV HS HOSWDN UIDe@-~) CAGO. March 19 i’ have , Cur about ‘ week without ere, finally thew out © eer tt ° upside on ard of, Trade toda | roke Sut wit h a* Sane. , earns ne to more tha m. yoean we + ad ts 24\4+ a jcents at $116.40, a level equal|the Pennsylvania CIO conven-| wet Be ense, for foreign ae SECS SS high mark os18l> ition: laid, sor ether Geverument sorve| a+ 4 sl Toda rns had geet ge “This is the old, trickle-down jices. Yet the President has-a: eth ned teem tare Rad “4 : 118.70. g 1954 (theory. They want the banquet case. of the pane , — Pl toh. . B. oh Pi Pons ‘table high for the wealthy, so inn minated um sai 1 oP bon o;aen an e est 6 6SVeTaRe that a few crumbs can brush to buy controlling s - Raat — June 2, 1200. ‘off for the poor. We're in favor} THIS YEAR the total produc-| company has been a t N e industrial component of| .¢ the banquet table. But we/tion of goods and services is|past few weeks by Ben : the average was up 60 cents at)... cut the legs off so that/expected to be the second or|Maltz, Los Angeles and Chi a new high of $155.90, utilities| .verybody can eat at it.” third highest in history. If we|cago, but that the company were up 10 cents at a new high| ‘=. Cio wants the personal|can’t approach a balanced|had refused to grant an exter es ge — railroads de- exemption raised from $600 to) budget now, will we ever? sion of the »ption. >| Trading was brisk at 1,930,-|9800 the same as Sen. George) Maybe Eisenhower will have! watch Firm Head to Retire 000 shares. That 4th |Proposes. As against that, the to change his mind or his tax| G > Tucker shee te %|5 002,000 sh . prey ae tye bs ‘Administration has accepted|program. Maybe production eorge ’ an B ge director ‘| day. shares traded yester-| +1. 10 percent reduction in in-|will decline farther. Maybe <= ame see Watch C.. ‘come taxes, which became ef- he’ ll have to provide further ° I Rn age = — in| fective January 1. In addition,,Government props to consum-| the firm’ a oe Apet ai, | the qe? — a S poy, | the Administration has pro-jers and business. Even so, it’s 13, according to a proxy hee ee » = “three develop-|Posed some abatement in|questionable that personal ex-| ment. | \double taxation of dividends. ‘emptions ought to be raised. As 1949 Dro + | ments: st riled Reuther, He the President said, that’s a “so- Simjlar to 19 ®t 2. Passing of the period when| This on cial reform.” If personal ex-|_ The Business Bulletin of the ~ 3 *\it was necessary to sell stocks | * ut et's see how these two/emptions are raised, it will Cleveland Trust Co. me pee to raise cash for income tax) oposals affect two different/make it that much harder to EB ae Banseri a bate 5] Paymemne, the move by banks families, each where there is balance the budget after the Wile hey 1949.” s|to lower their interest charges|.” J ire ‘and two children. In|recession’s over. Once down,| erate © ‘s| congressional action on the tax|the, $2000-evear family, our|> dificult to get exemptions) gugar Price Increased 4 oe proposal would mean a $120 4 ' | Revere Sugar Refinery af bill. ‘cut. In the $500,000-a-year| ‘People will = = Sena. Boston has announced a gen- The best performing major | family, the President's pro- enough for bere personal sub. eral sugar price increase of 15 divisions today were the air- posal would cut taxes $60,000. sistence these Gays.._Nor is it |cents a hundred pounds, with crafts, motors, steels, and the /{jnder the CIO plan, the cut boosts of 25 and 35 cents a 100 railroads until late in the day| ld be $728 But the personal exemption 4a tee eattein tonee ae s|when their gains faded away. ‘wea isn't supposed to grant a free- fablet : ae aod aa Consolidated Vultee was the | and-clear minimum living ex-|‘ablets, confectioners an® pow day's most active issue up % | SUCH ope everyone. It merely) “°° at 24% with 47,300 shares establishes & minimum ati Jeb “Layoff “Moretorium” traded. It was followed by treated far better than the at vy Ler to particl-| A small New York company American Radiator up % at/ Poor. pate in the cost of Government. 16%, Chrysler up % vt 64%.| But Reuther’s statistics are| If it becomes necessary, as|has — at Se Mullins Mfg. up 1% at 26%,|full of flaws. Sure, the well-/an emergency measure, to low-| omg : ear Of Unempmy™ ~ and American Woolen up % |to-do taxpayer can afford to/er taxes, then the better way | y declaring go A he on * 9% |pay. But there aren't enough would be to reduce the ton | eee et jo ; bn r Seste ss of them to pay much. In 1950/rate at the very lowest level. | Barchoff, pres = T were only 842 taxpayers had incomes Then, later, when business is {Brass ~ ee o., — o-| better, th i ' of $500,000 or more. Their to-| er, the rate could be raised. urged businessmen all over the country to — his “cease- fire. proposal.” LN . Y. Bond Market By the Associated Press Total sales, $3,192,000; year ago, $3, 362,000. ___ (000s) High Low Close Che - se Sunbe ps es ese wl J 41% 41% a8 60 i 34 rth = superior = la | Suther % Swi & Co 28 iylv Ei Pd 2b sylv El cvpt 4.40 ym Gould .50 a Ay 3b uttiheBowe-o Mineuwtw~odt- ofan Se = wee +o ee we hed ee) 'B Ben e e Beng. B 'B PS ernere ~ ww Cd oo Rohorne ee ' = ae se? see @ ‘ee0 = eo Coe me w& IM SIRNA He pty - + Re vote | “fo mney whe a = Soa SpeSyys 2 ese a Mr — eS ed bt de ee is 4595 (| Airfieets i amage to At! Ref 3.25579 ust im the western great Au Ref 2.625066 a ve. ch&Me 4.5570 ~y 4s perp gher rye uncha on Ga 4095 enta : lower Lp 6 cule n \Eence 4 Senet undred pounds higher ; "eRe ‘ine 87 ae, 4 Saz0e4 on = »~e i . wo ee awtee {PST to 2? cents | L™ higher, RV UY COG eee b> So ep a b o~ — eaDo-w ad ee Ps e- — :*- = ow sy NRE VOPre BO 2 VB ---3142h0 ad ~ - £ > — ~ Drv ws ~ Oo ~ ee — 2 ere ww rist My 1 3= o-- | —— - ne oe oF n ~ aw =? > ee n . 10%. OMe + ve 6 1-166 1.1641 i 5 ‘ = wSS=SSL2sz “~ Pea S84 Seeseer wt Brow Janesry | Bri on neinee — i | Buey Brie We —— oe ~J) eewrwe ee @ et SS ha 2° PP 0. 2°.¢° 3? > 7? * — ol a $3 New a) au ~~ eee e | & + a Gen PrecE " G2 € n ~~ %& Gen Pub sv a fi node” - ~ . Men's wear stores Shoe stores Furniture stores vw te whe * ee eee ens So MIZPEA WSPIS—SRELS Ee Sed eves oovreeer Ss Reon 10e Gils -= &nNu~e "Oe or — Nw toto os ~@ RI — HOD PP ewNMDeLew'w-j 20 y VS DBNMNeH BD KSo “~ eenereee ee — > er _ =e eee & & SUSBestssy Ssyy tl ne ne aed re in Hi bl | Twin Coach .50 %s| Udylite 1 Ay Underwa BWR Iho ~ ir ne ~~ aH £u¢ 2 re s?* tn oe ww ~~ 8 RSRI ERO + + =e seuss Fost sd 3 et nt pt pe BD SeFLK * _- - e- 'Oonw woowo-i@ ? a ae 3 o se ae tee SBE 3F el el el ae eee F Syres Jack 1.50 Cal Pack } 56 nN 5 2 = ~ nA AD- ou ~ee x3 ore ~ ae soo - woe ee 333 .* ae Dev LS) — eeeweer ee *- bere ty Bree toe OW OODwW Iw ed wee be Stet tas FFs iv Ea “ FairchCam *| Fargo Olils | Fly ing +, # For lGeritybMieh Gle Ald Cl Ot Lak O&C Hazeltine .25¢€ Hy . . o , — ~ ~a ow ¥ -« -e —— | otis — ow oR DD ~J aS -- ve eae = So Stationery seeses STILL DROPPING: Capi-|% tal Transit Co. reported February net income of $47,- 605, off 16 percent from $57,- 100 a year ago. Operating rev- enues for the month totaled $2,089,256, down $161,186 or 7.2 pereent. The decrease came in the face of higher fares which For the fi effect January 31. For the first two {Cen Agu months this year, CTC net pos tee ," Pee ~>+ 1 a} - ~ Y & Se) Ren 4WNY aan Ar@o- i J ed an -s , Can Sow dn Pac .75¢e | Gannon M 3 acto to S28c0ts ~Inwor* = wo -<- Ve ie Ie Oe =S82h.0% > _ gar Se ee See BES j Pixie oer —_ wae a i. = r4 = ow =. w tm OLS ~TEnbI OO ND w > 4) . a . ee ee — at oe 7 oe - LS De oe we'w e's ' sw Suves vhice — al oo * - Fé Sane Sa as oe Tae ¥ —- s oo. ¥. ii¢te++?e!i+7% Pub Sv Ind 2 Publick Ind .62f Pullman 3a ~ o et. _ ~ rE - —U a &. ON) eed p4 —ey > @ Sw HMeewww ee ~~ NwHROWWwO eee eee _) ~_ 00 4 s —s 2000 f° a J oo oe = r= HOD DO— ABwWsDDBDOWMAS 1 2wov se —- ni oal 1 s $8% % Unit Fruit | 9 a ean eee US & 29% 23\— rs ad oe 3 oe ee eS — OBA OM WW” - ae 4B “e+ , | ~~ Onw~s “4 — 3 re Of] 2a Pure Ol prs Quak Oats 7 Quak St Oj Ned 2 23 i? ti. iy ere 109 — ~ - at is ae | ee Cash wheat L : 37% 4 a hone. Noy, — wu Me o 33 4 ree SEBaanwY’ BSS ese i J West Un 5560 - 6.15 = Bid. A— pore ASH GRAIN on Gare: ere 18 ais D0 orn vellow S336 = UE 4 itt s. Oats = riey aS men —— or ield seed per rer 10.50-11.00 #, top $7 '00-58.00 30-18 timothy 12.50-13.50; »* 23, =< 4% | ens we - a torte ~we-o —h— fsa ooecnees we Pas ww - z~ ~ — Suese BARA ISS ao t w _ ee Se eat NEW ISSUE Offered a: # spercoistieon NAGLER HELICOPTER Company, Inc. $] .00 ~_ weN ~~) owe eowwe IZE os -, w LS w ~~ & os * an y mets -109 he POI ® —— st - ae —ar “4 income totaled $54,159 as iene compared with $113,220 in igen Ne same 1953 period. ieee & as Ke NOTES: Surburban Trust Co. Cert rt teed J” nee declared regular quarterly ‘Champ Pap. 08 dividend of 30 cents a share, ‘Ghes ? Va? payable March 31 to stock of|(™ | record March 19... Security |chi regular Co., wastage Tend | ‘beh ces regular uarterly ividend |Chi Ot W pP $1.25 — share,” payable’ en Pak A ppeit 10-to--stock:.of...reeord |C® MSP&Pac ts April 5 Vulcan Machine Co. of Waynesboro, Pa., an-|¢ nounced ..the acquisition .of all) & assets of the Minnich Machine |chi Works of Landisville, Pa. & INSURANCE: Washington | , life insurance sales in Feb- |City Invest, 4 0% 10% 10%4— - b es kere Ty tal ruary totaled $9,829,000, off [Giy sir 140 2 15% 15% | noes fa 0% ¢ aia 2 percent from the same 1953 | © : 38 3%— 43% ‘ai month. Sales for the first two months of 1954 amounted _ to $18,537,000, off 1 percent from the same period last year. The Life Insurance Agency Management Asso- ciation announced that life insurance sales nationally in- creased 6 percent in eFbru- ary and 5 percent for the first two months. Cc EARNINGS: Curtis Publish- Ing Co. reported net income of $4,868,027 or 61 cents a share © for 1953, as compared with © 64,403,936 or 44 cents a share’ in 1952. Other earnings state- ments follow on a per-share | > basis: 12 Months Ended Decembe Brockway Motor Bruns. -Balk-C Cou. ~ oe Dw “ RSceVENsa + Ga IWR70—-—-a2oy “ef & Ol] 2b Gulf Ste Ut 1.20 * Hac k Wat 1.70 « Halliburton 1.80 > 2) ead s- 38 8 ye 3 3 ” se. -- ~3 - ed .* ree ~ R a 92. whi tom tor a - wu ; aleike red ciover n~ + : --e- ~es a. Oonuw 2 - ‘_e mt 4s 4s ts | New York Cotton Pancoast, on™ . sin | co ee NEW YORK. March 19 (“# —Cotton futures broke out of their narrow range today, paeea By “KE Browser Wemana tor’? new crop months. Final prices hed to 95 cents @ belie higher igh 455 3 Un Ciah PAL 2 +148 | van Norm < J - < : MONO we Kee = © > = ca a> Per Share Common Stock 33 - + 3 sro—e ee >- « (+e ~—rheu a -~] AOwW ws: a sSkegee wT -- 2 we ~ _ + sts A~tte We ~- 2 oe Phone or write for offering. circular C; J. BLIEDUNG: 915 Eye St. N.W. Washington 1, D.C. Phone NA. 68-7358 Open sheveeey fan 9 PM. a CE ih REE ale ¢ + geOxe i} zh i Pet pasha - be fee ee eee +F Ris 3 i + Lo Reo iP fare ebay fr bed oi—e— “NIN 3 3S reese Ne UW abe 353 rors ed «| May ee . see z _) ~~. 3 - SB EB La-aKcwnwas2aie RSu.K6S-—AR Saw 2+ oan A Cap 1.3 M4) ‘Robbins M Fs] x ote Ee £5 > 3 34.65 34.15 34.19 34.2) 34.19 iy 61 33.83 Midd! ing spot *Nomina! *Bid i¥ B LS] oe IP eS) — we . Be Iw PAP & HOI aD ae tate Os ee ‘_eoe & S2. = Pa _ RYSNSES - BSsns 2 ah - we >? 2. 2 swe 2 ae es es es Se ee AD Safeway St 2.40 Safe St cvpt 450 a Jos Lead 50e t Jos L&P We tL Sen F 2.50 it L San F pf 5 *% Reg Pap 1.50 ‘Sav Arms ib iScheniey Ind 2 ~~ - —~—FRe ee OWwww e ee — = ti - es - Webb & Knapn Woodley P WrightHar win -3 iz 5. L. HAMMERMAN ORGANIZATION, INC. Ben ry fang + i) * ) o-— —. —— oo ‘ el —, 9 .~ - Lh 22 O ~~) oe BNI OHwWA Chicago Livestock asain % ares 19 2020 ae 16 Park Avenue, Baltimore 1, Md. bo J * -_ 2 iL) ‘USDA & Ww so . 2 White Sew _ White Sew pf 2 wile son & Co Wise P Sv 1.10 Woodward Ir 2a Woolworth 2a 2 Worthington 2a Wrigley 3a Wyan Wor ale & Tow Ld REALTORS MORTGAGE BANKERS Ue ee > te oe 9 1 SSR ou BASred npeRnrererey fo ine 6d pe 50 70 ot 9e — 2 Oro Bese DwBwnr~- ee ‘Sis (Mortgage Loan Correspondent New York Life Insurance Co.) I -~ - ~ Rec eipts light het A clearal “CATTLE - classes in very we _ Seowa~ae Ve HOM — P-~jey 257 takes pleasure im announcing the election of ty 124 745 yr to A~i~we~ s Yngst Ss Dr la Zenith Rad 2a Zonite Pd 4" Rates of dividends in the foregningt are annual disburse mpemne pee ser last quarterly or serni-annua! laration. | Uniess otherwise coed. s cial or extra oe ideftids S not includ ~Also extra or extras nes stock a vidend. a4 $53 plus stock div e-~ Declared or so far . ayabie in stoe m estimated cash ae we: On ex-dividend or “a2. 3.8: Al 1.30b Al pf P&L Kaiser alser ¢ 2 2o2e2eon8? w 19.00 carrying @ com- few commercial steers fwe sales com mereis! th Oo * 2 I 31 % "3 ‘ a ie — euuv MR. CURT C. MACK _ oe --* a) Dec able - on. th . 2 23% rh a 2so--— Susi ren ee ee = a . SW. ewe ee ee & * — — -- _ Formerly Assistant Commissioner, in charge of all Mortgage Underwriting of the Federal Housing Administration, Washington, D. C. 2—~ ache eee a a a e e mnecott 1.25¢ . Bars wu nN apnwnmen b~Annual rate “ Soclares or paid in : Webi, - _ . 2 - o - BGHWNO (>) — J wv -_ > / ze . 3 33 ~hant a a "ee 7? lia $2.83 utility, 8.00@14 00 aA +> “-« ~ EFETE 8 Ee a 39 323 > 383 3323 ee ee ¥ * e | secunmistive issue Ay “in pid en . t neersoll-ltand Ca. re Corp. | fears. p~Paidt his year. oe gereted, C Commodity Index = wholesale ‘ries : wrsiahigd whole pay eee — - Pa — ait ~~ Ss Re ee a. = 83 — = es Saad - ee tii@e+tiiree r Z2BzRS33 As President of the Organization -- ’ Riaits £Sees: *“—- . q er & Fuller ...; Nine Months Ended Jangery 31 Cudah Ferien, sanind ag i3 ary, st Alreraft $1.74 $3.16 Curtiss nts » * Foxtons day 374. 13. week io sc ae Ae MP wits warrants. a apes: a ray assumed by such compani 2 + giS 11BH Ss Sewer rte od AS—Sanan sas FR5=3~ = ee eee evestus’ ™ Bo 333 3 5aS°3 average equals = t - - Venger a) ariel Ee eer were WK Gan Per FER mare 2 Geeks yoo Igoe we ples adh < be * inl age ee te ly rd UP a” RP eee 39 _ - op tt tenn DOM Brigg wigied wig? * nhabang ere Pima Nig Mae bees v8 - a ae Mock tea aes ; tore Ps eR ae ray ee PO Sierra pee Sree : . : - ; tien Sanne . —— ia go Be ay ee “Fee a Rp Th 08 AS BIL ae aS ETB AURL, PRBS PION geld Psd Gh ITA SAI, DAD GR PLD ORE RW! Cem RE Dg Se gt TREN, DURE! PSDP RA I BNF FR USE He EIS IE YN ah SOG i aatabinie THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD ~Saturday, March 20, 1954 ; wid e : , : ~ Pad ‘ pens eS KPT et hy ee ndtinens PWIA g h * at a $s Pri ont 2 DE ae Fe See ORS ie 8) WS WE IY LA an A Rete Oe PS ETE REY POR FARE Oy _ - - teed Your Horse Sense as At.108. Million 5.3%: santana: hist -posehnas-SumatT Sup: of a couple of kids on the farm would each of the first 1. The mother usually call. them. with which. sound? Coo Baa Moo Cluck 1. Which one of these cooking processes is most suggestive of prunes? Brewing Stewing Broiling Frying 3. A coroner is usually associated with which type of analysis? Inventory Investigation Inquiry ‘-Pamphiet.. report. of.. Chesa- peake & Potomac Telephone Co. showed the company spent $12,312,000 last year to install 132,000 tele- phones and to, improve and speed services| generally. New facilities constructed during the past eight years ag- | | ts BY. PAUL, HERRON. PPATICAN CITY, March 1 WE READ the other day that; single fate when a guest of the:mood for a dinner—Louisiana “Pope Pius XII made his Ethel Smith, the “Queen of hotel walked in with an African style — try the Continental the Hammond Organ” now at Lovebird who proceeded to Room of the Old New Orleans. the Harlequin Room of the give Ford an earful of advice. Seven-course dinners start at Sheraton-Carlton, hasn't bought about $2 and there's usually ‘Taquest a pair of shoes in about 10 piano music during dinner, oe Yt . “rs | years. | Red faces and red hair— courtesy of Les Williams. 4. aoe han Gaeer is most suggestive dt Seems that because the feet Publicity man for the Old New Juvenile Adolescent Senile Puerile )are highly important in organ er ragged gee oe 5. In which one of the following contests does the team with |Playing and usually spotlight- cngtis te a _ the stun- the lowest score rate as the winner? ed, shoe manufacturers are/ning brunette at the Sazerac Cross country §_ Bowling Swimming Tennis | S00ut ready to sell their soles — ne ng ges cco 6. This problem will test your general observation of farm (pun over) to get their aed = = 5 creatures and your ability to estimate their size or |*©** °" her tootsies. | . ; weight for you are to distinguish between the creatures| With this in mind we hustled) Regardless of tresses, she over to the Lee Lounge where does a fine job as featured that usually weigh less than 100 pounds when fully grown “r ae Jeff Craig is featured organist, vocalist at the club and with versus those which exceedthat 100-pound figure when ; ' ; - they are adults. Place a check mark under the approxi- |figuring we might pick up a 4m assist from specialty dancer mate figure for each creature listed at the left below. |couple of pairs of brogues—|Linda Baker puts on an excel- cheap. lent show. You deserve one point for each correct judgment: Under 100 pounds Over 100 pounds; Unfortunately, manufactur-| Incidentally, if you’re in the ——-— ers apparently .aren’t trying to sell men’s shoes and admitted- ly he doesn’t have the Ethel Smith type legs because _ his, ‘shoes aren't so hot and his Video Star ‘supply is definitely limited. | Packs Hotel Lovely Aletha Agee, WTTG-Du- mont TV star. and the Academy of Dance, furnish dance instruc- tions in all ballroom —s cw ALFRED’S ITALIAN-AMERICAN RESTAURANT Oven Noon “Til 2:00 A.M. DINNERS SERVED ‘TIL 2:00 A.M. Mixed drinks, wine and beer. Sige the cuest beek with name, address and birth and you will be remem- bered. ALFRED'S RESTAURANT 1724 CONN. AVE, | ' peasant women and holidaying Pope Appears itm Catholics kneeling on | the cobblestones 160 feet be- Tre . neath him. But the marks of First Time his illness showed clearly in ) RT ae ESO, el See Om ~Selesconis -DhOLagranhs. . icenainent ° nttcivimvebomeetathful in the square... Since: Ilhness” Las ony a SHatY Tiguie, * | dressed in a floor-length fur- 4°lined veassock: and white skull ~ Cap, but their roar of “Viva il . Papa” drowned out even the first public appearance in more pooming bells of St. Peter’s. than seven weeks today, stand- ren ing at an open window of the Vatican palace for 60 seconds to bestow his blessings on 50,000 Roman Catholics massed ‘in St. Peter's square. The Pontiffs pale face and thin fingers were invisible to the Italian Alpine soldiers, ow TWO SWEET things have just put in an appearance at Water Gate Inn. They're Cher- ry Blossom Pie (appropriate enough for this sé@ason) and’ Vanilla Chiffon Pie (tasty the! year round). | DID YOU KNOW THE HOME OF DIXIELAND JAZZ is Bobby Conway's Dixie Six and “Wild” Bill Whelan Every Wed., Thurs., Fri. & Sat. ~dances - for — og rae Jam Session Sundays end ad- \ 4.7 P.M. vanced stu- | Dinners from 5:30 P.M. dents at the State Society Dance Club's Fri- | “= day and * Saturday CELESTE HOLM Charlie Fisk | and his orchestra t ce Morrison rison, C. & P. president. Despite the large number of installations, number of tele- phones in service at the end of 1953 decreased by about 5000, bringing the total to 532,000. The decline, Morrison said, was “due in large measure to a cur- tailment of Government activi- ties.” There were 137,000 dis- connections. Morrison stressed that total taxes levied on telephone serv- ANSWERS ice are “disproportionately; 1. Baa (nanny goat). 2. Stewing. 3. Inquest. 4. Senile. high, placing an unfair burden 5. Cross country. 6. The Guernsey (cow) and Poland China on an essential service.” | (hog) weigh over 100 pounds. The other three are under Total 1953 operating taxes of} 100 pounds when grown. the company amounted to How to Keep Well $8,012,000, he said, and are the) By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien company’s second largest ex-| pense item, exceeded only by wages. | In addition, Federal excise taxes and other company taxes totaled $14,230,000 for the year) and averaged $58.78 per tele-- To the limit of space, ques-\largely by drugs that are in- phone customer. trons pertaining to the preven-\haled in a vapor leucalyptol’ The report emphasized that tion of disease will be answered.|and tincture of benzoin) or in| Cc , Casino Royal. night despite a slight improvement in Personal replies will be made\an aerosol mixture. The latter — Conover, dances at C. & P. earnings last year, the when a return stamped envelope | has a wide range of usefulness; who has recently changed the Burlington Hotel. The courses company's rate of return “was jis inclosed. Telephone inqutr-| because products such as peni-| working spots from radio sta-| %® free to those 2 who still low compared with the'ies not accepted. Dr. Van Del-|cillin can be incorporated Into tion WWDC to WEAM, has also apply 2 oo to re eat long-term, 1924-43, average of|len will not make diagnoses or|these mists, to produce a direct changed band engagements ao . enon a1 Se ies on 6.66 percent... .” The company|prescribe for individual dis-\effect upon the caustive from the Club Kavakos to the’ Seasie te by Barty ae aa applied for higher rates last) eases. | germs. Drugs also are availa-'Casino Royal. | Ster Orchestra. November. Public Utilities, ONE-O e ible to relieve bronchial spasm | ow Commission hearings on the ap-| ONE OF my friends has been) 444 to dry up secretions as the| _. re plication were started in Janu- rae ggecese. Mae a because | need arises. These products are| Richard has competition — wisi little to oe lh erg nigh’ of mags 2m ey — _ = - po Grih ele rake og og a’ be eer cough. I vowed some day to list |3F 7 ee station WWODC, gets consider- men or le pas y s . “eae x , hs “nao seienened as fellows: such remedies and after read-| INHALATIONS of 5 to 10 per ey help from Richard the Par 1958 1952 ing a recent article by Dr. A. Worth Hobby of Atlanta, this/C¢™t carbon dioxide with oxy-| : 849.962.5148 047. 794.39° is it gen are used now and then to| Last week Richard was left SS Oiziis 4.887 $1 A host of cough medicines| Stimulate breathing and help home because of cold weather are available to ease strain and | P@ture eliminate inflammatory and Milt was bemoaning hits #.900,116 lessen the reflex. These reme.| Products ee sy ER te | \dies act like aspirin in that | >ometimes CXyGeS 36 combined patties satay al eos a antirtes Meena ge Le ‘they help the symptom but not meets gy on ina cage necessarily the disease. Cough|“5U@¥y are reserved for pa-|> | medicines usually contain sub-|tients who are extremely weak \ THE NEW TICK TOCK stances that are absorbed/©® Whose bodily processes are through the wall of the stom-|4¢pressed through poisoning or Remodeled for Your DANCING NIGHTLY LOU ROSSI And His Quartette ) Dancing Wed. thru Saturday D Frank Grady & Orchestra ) 9:30-12:30 SPECIAL SUNDAY MA! JAMBOREE Buddy Rowell & Orchestra featuring GROGGY NEVER A COVER OR MINIMUM Small Adm. Fee New Leow Prices For Food & Drinks CAIRO BALLROOM 1615 Q St. N.W., Guernsey Minorca Beagle Poland China Plymouth Rock ADVERTISEMENT Score yourself as follows: 0-2, poor; 3-6, average; 7-8, su- perior; 9-10, very superior. Embassy Room HOTEL STATLER coo Take a deep breath — Willis ‘Conover presents The Orches- tra, Joe Timer musical direc- tor featuring arrangements by a vecne Bill Patts with "“sNorval Reid feand Joe Met- tee! That's not just a sentence Sits the com- j ) ) j , j for your dancing pleasure THE MERRY TONES S p.m—Tuwes., Sunday after jam sessions Reservations ME. 8-2897 3135 K Se NW. Under The Freeway ING ROOM ---8erving breakfast? luncheon and dinner COMING MONDAY Delici Food et N L The SAUTER-FINEGAN rman textaon os oo 92. PIFCE ORCHESTRA Complete Dinner frem $1.95. Prompt, Courteous Service. . Sueraton-Park Horer CONNECTICUT AVE. et WOODLEY R&D., N.W, COtwmbie §-2000 vd we "ae "ugg, ~ 4 A” - ta ; Phe A G00 tbat fa Have Your SUNDAY DINNER ' . Ss e Downtown SS l “A | Try O : ." Z pa ry Our Famous WS at a / Specialty WS e | Broiled Tenderloin NSS } RRM Italian-American ROMA. ses PLATTER HIS FAMOUS 3419 Connecticut Ave. N.W. revenues .. 5.429, 983 285 106 4 127 Net income 5.088.810 D. C. Securities Washing- of Phila- hanee 1B*« 84. 10 at 31 50 at 33's ns on brancn at “ Stock Exc ; 7 wr com ‘hk Bh 18%. i100 at i Yesterday's quotati Pot E 5 at B'« ; at i: Peoples. Drug Str Wash Gas com 55 , : a ; at 50 t Elec Pwr on. blood stream to the membranes |©°MeS necessary to pass a tube ses of the bronchial tree. This|@9d withdraw the sections Be’ 100 *"| sroup is known as expectorants, | trough suction. The same proc- com 28 at 20%.|Those that contain codein, opi-|®3S ‘bronchoscopy! also offers | “22s. . at 23%,/um, and pantopon depress the | Fit > ta og A inject drugs 5, 20 at 24. 40 at 24. —eough reflex and have a seda-|@rectly into the air passage- Ss Drug St com, 100 at 31%, 50/45 a rtact \ways. lodized oil or oil mixed 100 at 18%, 200 Saline expectorants liquefy | With a sulfonamide or an anti- ’ the thick mucus, making it easi- | Ne are utilized. ae Asked OT tO Dring up. This is done by) Cf course, the ideal remedy stimulating’ bronchial secre-|!S to eliminate the cause of tions which will dilute tenaci-| Cough. ;;ous inflammatory secretions.| on pay-: ‘**!|Ammonium chloride and po-|... _ 'tassium jodide are the héad-|S*7**es: ““**"tliners in this field. The nau-|——— \seant expectorants (ipecao,| }3s'emetine, tartar emetic, and| ALL COCKTAILS _ apomorphine) do the same and | . eit | Cc . in addition, have an emetic ac- AARON’S tion. Other remedies soothe the ‘inflamed membranes. Most of| ty. ee. ae opposite STATLER Gus ot 8 chien ORCHESTRA and SHOW BAND roli« & butter * PLUS * coffee or tea $] 75 EDITH DAHL Fiddling Around Many Other Delicious Platter Combinations and a Broadway Revue Hours. 4 P.M. jo Midnight . Piano Melodies by VIRGINIA PARKER Star of the Steinway from 6 till 10 NO PARKING PROBLEM DOWNTOWN ON SUNDAY EPTUNE f ROOM (ake ESTA RANT ™ ee J.ON's 20 4 20 2 40 «a People . .% ; } | s c Pwr com \ 18s. 60 at 13 at 18% Me (THE NEW TICK TOCK \ RIGGS ROAD AND UNIVERSITY LANE | BEER, WINE AND LIQUOR \ ON AND OFF SALE | Free Parking —~— — “IN PERSON i ~ ps plus tez Cover Charge Moke your meal away from home SHOWS ee hers Lie 1: 5S SMARTEST CARAGCE:! G special event. . : When panic A ington Gas Miscellaneous Ter RW Cop ist STOCKS Public Utility *Amer Tel & Ca Here you'll enjoy fine food, gay Se ad te el OO BOAR LOE MO LOO LON AMON MO LOW MON MON MO AM | WASHINGTC NAr/owac 8-7700 THIS SUNDAY Willis Conover Presents “THE’’ Orchestra fer -Dancing & Listening Whee 1 Dine... &| AMERICAN | 5 | ¢ Di ; R 514 19th Every dish prepered with home- All v a es ining oom St. N.W. style tastiness . mony favorites | and many new foods in wide selection... pleasant, leisurely atmosphere. Brook Farm 6501 Brookville Rd. a Ch. Ch., Md. OL. 2-8820 On the Potomac. Mt. Vernon Mem. Hwy., 8 m. so. of Alex. Delect Cedar Knol able luncheons and dinners in a cheerful, intimate atmosphere. Our meny is imaginative with succulent specialties. Hours 12-9. Closed Mon. $O. 5.5033 1307 E St. N.W. Ceres ME. 8.7468 aa Fas Ciro’s 1705 De Sales St. N.W. Italian, American, Continental cuisine. Superb Pizza. *pecializing in authentic Italian dishes. Private banquet rooms. ME. 8.1434 CO. 5.7287 Dodge Hote | North ctmosphere and prompt courteous YY a service, unexcelled in the nation’s capital. WGLt cum conv p National Bank Dn ‘--'|the oldtimers - belong to~ this! group including syrup of acacia, | licorice, glycerin, cane sugar, cough drops, and hot drinks. | The drawback to these prod-' gigs ) A | ucts is that they must be swal-| sa ee ‘lowed, but their effect does not a FD’S GRI LL go beyond the throat. As a re- avs sult, they have been replaced : ' We Are Back in N.E. Serving FINE FOOD at Popular Prices 1492 H ST. N.E. Open Sundays Eddie Sheehy 48882 SBR RSBEE AFTER THE RACES Visit FOGAN'S STEAK HOUSE Where All Steaks Are Cut To Order OPEN DAILY 12 Noon ‘til 2 A.M. Catering to Private Parties Dancing THAT WAKE MEFIGHTIN’MaD’|| FOGAN'S STEAK HOUSE New. Pla. 50 1b.| | : 2317 Calvert St, WLW. i (Opp. Shoreham Hote!) NO. 7-4779 . ser’ e rust Company mer & & Tr : Sa yiurTrhar I i r W 7T A N Ss i Uni I st Co a“ Wash Ls » FT Seavines Berk Bank of Bethesd J n & Sa zs Fire Insurance } emen s 1 40 I Na LOI i I ; ] \ Pee ' ‘ se Sc Tithe Insurance eRe: . Columbia 20 4 ' : Estate 20) Miscellaneous */ sartil ei com AMERICAN 2 7935 Wisc. Ave. Bethesda i _ _ ’ Grandma a FIRST, MY CAKE 2 FALLS WHILE IN’ — —_—-_ Best imperial! crab in erea Stecka, chops. Full course er @ le corte. Thompson Seafoo Air conditioned. Music by Muzak. Wakefield °*° ing white linens and condielight ) atmosphere, Moderdte prices. The Woodner a —_ Serves tender, tasty satisfying food in @ clean, ef tractive di wng room with spark! ng silver and gieam- You will be delighted with eur food service end Parking lot next door Fried chicken, steaks, spore-ribs. Park- ing. Recommended by Duncon Hines. ons 28 8 eB eee 3636 6th St. N.W. Dine In fhe beautiful Woodner Room. HY. 3.4400 Superior food by a femous chef. Fine es ond cocktails. Moderate prices. Daily 6-10. Sunday 1-10, Featuring Sizzling Stecks . . . with oll the fixin’s . . tastefully served . at modest prices . . . with your favorite drink from the bar. Ter 5M Corp *WdwdLothroo cor *WdwdsLothron n 2.900) (A fa «5 Wearle ‘sg 516 N. Capitol Distinctive dining, moderate prices. Charcoal y Facing Un. Sto. Pleaa broiled stecks with baked pototoes. Succulent | roast beef. Delicious ocech fresh seafoods Net your own live lobsters from cour | Neptune solt water tank. Open 7 a.m. till | every Gay. free parking. Dl. 7.3788, — 100 P paid in 1953. tPius | ¥, 1°3f's most exciting and thrilling performer Pies Extra Added Attraction dick havilland ‘Humor From Anothe Baltimore Markets F STEAKS: Juicy, thick. Fresh Ham ond Eggs. tender Sirloins. Form Open 24 hours for your Vermont & L NW convenience. 9) (USDA)—/ i March 1 pis. 15 ARABIAN i BALTIMOR [ATTLE Rec n* Complete Family Dinners from 12 to 2 & 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. doily Garden House Cocktail Lounge open daily except Sundoy Streets N.W NA. 8.5460 xr World PLUS A SMASH REVEE: 2 Shows Wightly incleding Sefday -— CROSS ROADS b eae ow ee p> | All .@25 ‘ | ; Desert inn in St. Matthew's Court Discover this chormir s Arabion Nights i behind Longfe! cw Bidg. RE. 7.1370. —— TH’ WATER TANK SPRINGS A } LEAK. THEN I FORGET AN’ LET TH’ COOKIES BURN...’ h dea woy CHINESE AMERICAN 1406 G St. N.W., ST. 3-6339 cori 11:4"e%4. ere< apitel end “E” 3) T Sponish, Mexican, American and Continental Cuisine, Dancing Thurs- oro day, Friday and Saturday. Dinners 5 P.M.-10 P.M. Cocktails i Conn. & M St. N.W. B5c Open daily till midnight Closed Sundays Evans Coffee Shop Approved by Duncan Hines Steoks, seafood, chicken. rooms availoble. Fan & Bill’s 1132 Connecticut Ave Lunc? 7 tations unchanged HOGS ceipts, 300; scatered offer- | Ss @il representative Weights barrows | i gilts most] 0 cents ' ay eon RE 8541 The finest dishes served omid cool, modernistie _ otmosphere. Full Course dinners from 1.25. Cockteil«. CONTINENTAL - Gung Ho BY 4770 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va average er sate ci sice 180-220 ie 2 Genuine hickory smoked spore ribs and borbecve beef Home style cooking; free parking; reasonabie prices. ve Americon 4 Rumbe mu ng 8:30. Excellent? cuisine, — wierarss @ eceo Party Ss per'iat Da Floor— 2nd Wasi 15th & New York Ave ngton Bidg. NW . Madrillon 4 Internationally famous with gourmets for plonk steaks, chops, ; seafood, rum pie and French cheesecoke. Luncheons from $1.10 FRENCH AiR CONDITIONED. EX. 3.3411. Open daily 12 te 11 a.m + Opposite Maytiower Hotel. Sundey i-p.m, to t}-p.m. Un oer | Garden Gate 1530 Wisc. Ave. Morvelous food served at Fireside tobles in an ‘Aux Trois Mousquetaires 4. 0 > + R f . +3 {eee eS ald .Geergetowns .House, Low. prices. Open.Sun....Closed.-Meon,., : . Dine in this 80-year-old morsion. Luncheon. dinner cocktoi!s. Stuffed baked shrimp. 2-ib rt Moine lobsters, steoks, chops Famous cheese cake *4 hours daily. Swit sandwiches 5&@!- Capsene Fronce:se iunch- eon trom $1.15. Dinnes from $2.15. . ee Tl ean. we oes Se $20 Conn... Ave, 19 50@19 heavis RE. 7-2619 Fruits and Vegetables : APPLIES. - VM ew kee Bert ana bexe . Lunch up 2 00-3.00 accordain = e cnecn, Bieaymans. 2\«-ineh -min Open 12:30-10 p.m, elicious 2 inch up. f ; Potomec, Md. The Charm of Old France OL. 2-9421 Cocktails, Ave. at ® Conn Normandy Farm Diner HUNGARIAN-VIENNESE B35 7h} NW Agcin open NA. 8.3839 the 7 ITALIAN NW inch uD : Sti -5 3 4 " t “ancy home j Ps an t . = a. Golden P Re-100s 4007 4 ] 4.00 made hot rolls Hamilton Arms Coffee House Delicious Southern cook ng with fresh home-made hot rolls. Salad Bowl. 1107 Connecticut Ave A Tredition of Food Since ; Harvey s NA. 8.2860 Steaks, Chops, Seafood ; 1252 4th French Fri Onions, Choice Liquers. Alr SOEUR Dee TOUS snct Condes. Boon pockins ln te cecstct ' Sw Herzog’s g Iron Gate Inn “ Nelson Miles. a eel LOUs | Open 75. Romes | service on ads fo jntain 4 disnes ana cof{iee town, = on Soturdeys Specializing in 3) Hungorion food, med- Free parking Cocktails, st Bet. M& NNW. AD. 32-9449 ‘Costin’s, Inc. “ . . , es? vrennese S. Pancy 8 pecial POTATOES Serve yourself ot the ces size A une sacks 60-70 cent tks Round Reds U shed ome waxed VEET POTATOES ; some Washed one in Fir 1858 ine ana “ ice and Tabies Dull st and waxed Ma Counter Ser’ The Coffee Shop OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY 1143 N. H. Ave Aldo Cafe ee 7.9510 Te a ten” a Livera Pizza complete dinners served in @ cozy atmosphere. Complete Bar. Parking in rear. for pizza and all your favorite Hellen 2s, @xcelien?t cocktai's. vsti s hes Fis *® wr lith & Moine Ave NA. 8.3385 ad chops, cocktails en ) . Goldens ’ Or oir ship's deck overlooks Potomac Free Porking Best sectood, stecks F The new management oq Umounces the opening of — GEORGETOWN’S { JUST DOUBLE-DARE ANYBODY DISTINCTIVE T' KNOCK IT OFF.// NEW RESTAURANT Serving nothing but the finest i 1314 | N.W ULTRY ME. 8-7736 Fomous Tenderloin Steck Dinner en brocheftte. wines, cocktails, Lasogna, Reviola, Spaghetti, JAPANESE ces Fine red farket steady on f ter offering satisfied emand fair ryers to g£00d ccu! lated supplies owl. Matiority of stock unsold dealers expected to clear at 25 heavy type hens moved late nursds -at 27 ‘TROTLERS AND PRYERS: ver 4° . . " 1734 N NW ME. 8.5179 “Just reol good food ‘The Laurel Brigade Inn Dine at this historic old desserts, French pastries Mayfair Open I! a. m. te Delicious omeous stable of Gen Summer Gorden Recommended by Duncan Hines. butterscatch rolis Conditioned mit Cocktails and highballs at Washington's most reuson- able prices Entertainment Until 1:30 A.M. No Cover Minimum or Tax. v ‘ olored fow e Some Air : Sukiyoki cooked ot your table delicious soke. Air conditioned KOSHER STYLE 708 WN. 5-646) . Cleon Bow! Ave. N_\W Jode 1018 Vi Sukiyaki Yes, Morket St.. Rowte 7. Leesburg, Va. EX. 3. 3 lbs. and fennetdiiien 8 cents few lower. Others & ea | C ‘ Leesburg, Va., Inn Farnous for good food Recommended by Duncan Hines. Approved by Homemode AAA mostly . Randolph, PARK ington, lien Open 7 doys o week modern atmosphere Arlington, Va. “Meal size” corned complete dinners for Holtzman & Platt beef sondwiches our specialty . . the entire family Raney's ap. 41 Cofe of All Nations 527 13th S&. NW isc. m Complete luncheons 65c $1.20. Cocktails 45c. C oted Sundoy Merry-Land Club |“ ‘° *“ $ a? modest prices Entertainment beginning oat 5:00 Dinner plotters from Bob Stickney at the piano. runge Intimate ond friendly Choice steaks Home of th 9c cocktall Sotyrdey matinee at 3:00. Open Sundays. 555 S. Wash. St NW Famous for Cheese Blintres. N. Y. Style Corned AD. 41456 Bee Open Roumonian Pastrami Cock toils. 7aemto2dam Dividend Actions NEW YORK, March Increased Owe Corn Fiber Unit Camden Fire Ins ; > lce bi & Can Tun ait exfords Ine Loan 8 A C Wh &t pf.87' 19 F 25¢ ° 5¢ ae 90¢ 75 ae thi aA ’ ee et et tet te : ’ ’ 1.50 40c 35c : ; J row ahetnwewer-- net! -® -® OO: 260 0 & VU Ws ews ee & > eee ere ee eeu Ld on ~~ Te a) em — ” SPAGHETTI @ RAVIOLI \ LASAGNA @ PIZZA | HUGE, DELICIOUS COCKTAILS ee i ihe) (GEORGETOWS ) (| Che Cown Gouse ._ LIVERA | ITALIAN KITCHEN _ || WISCONSIN AVE, AT “0” OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY LUNCHEON « DINNER «. SUPPER T3141. St. NW. ME. 8-7736 Clesed Mondars CLOSED MONDAYS Phone: DE. 2-344) x. Old Club Teahouse counter booths and din- ing tables. Open til 3 am AMBASSEACOCR eaagrill Dinner A trip to Gen } Olney Inn Washington + oO o Famous for Sovther: lunch A dinner noon | : p ; 4 Corners liver Spring . Stone House Inn ; 14th and K Sts. N.W. WA. 8-8510 ing. JU. 8.9700 eel 4 corn breed served in « delightful The 5 , Alexandria Greoter Washington s Famous Fam ly Resta 12 miles north Silver Spring. Rovte 97, Georgia Ave. ext u. 1 Penn Daw Restaurant °.> °;.\ | | ing chicken and country hom. Children's plates a speciolty. “ Hotel Harrington lith & E N.W. Virginia Lodge Restaurant ..... o yrenging any oy : A wotering, home ge Washington's club seatood etc Conditioned Lunch visitors. Ki. 9.4555 ken, stecks, seco food, lounge open daily & Sun LO. 5-0799. Closed Mondeoys 1 Highwoy, 2 miles south of Alex. American home cooking fectur- A family dining room. Once Geor vicken, steok rant Pork ng Air Club a “must” for D fried & smothered ct t ne rn Cockto 5. No Just right for downtown dinner & theater. Short wolk from Shubert ond” National. Refined Featuring Moryland Dine in cir conditioned comfort. femily etmosphere. Fried Chicken (oll you can ect) served Family Style. Prime Stecks. Ample free pork- ls, featuring piping het, freshly color ing. Recsonchie prices. 19th St of Famous world over tor meat end cheese blintzes E N.W tender dinner | PLM to 9 P.M. Childrens menu Free Dinner Parking. NEAR EASTERN Sheherazade Restaurant ~”’.'*” une Eastern dishes, porticulorly, of Syrio ond Lebonor Enjoy true near Eastern hospitelity end atmosphere. parties welcome. Di. 7.1410. Rich’s St. NW. Americen-Internetional Specictizing in cuthentic Near Also, best in American feeds, Three dining rooms, privete Es eee —— , MEXICAN Ern to’ “1735 F St. NW. RE. 7-9505. Por better Mexicon food in Washington es $ .. « Chicken, tacos, cholupos, Arrez con pollo, enchiledes, tamales, * ___—___s*PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH Water Gate Inn Potomac of F Luncheon, cocktoils, dinner. Open 11.30 Di. 7-9256 @.m. to 10 p. m. - Air Conditioning, SCANDINAVIAN | | New Smorgasbord eat he Refill your plete ™ offen os you wort. Rore Wines end Beers. & a “we Feige : Rin Hagges AED eh ge ‘ tars a ae ar ee ae ee ‘w ayy iF AK LAS Seprey eee SF Se ae Fey ‘ goa? wat aes vi : 2 ~~ ey, eG tv s a on Co halen AN diese ree 3 “7 if — Ny WAU Be. s 5 peers - a lentes ~ “ ow . oom ey a rt Bhed e ba ees t fo eh had 2 Pe ise) eed po ay ie 3 Sipe Mey Ay pale Sie F Sie NS Sayin kenge ee eitbeed eer se ees AoW eee sage le SPS yat Bg a - SR Spat AES =~ : Py €5hx vy leg + ean nee ee ee Oleg? aha Ae FOr REP BIR s We ge TOR pip > BI apt 0) Mb aagtes 8 DP PPA 0 we Mee Poe? ; oy = mons PiPy rte cy - os A ; be Se et - > Star *, — ents ‘ eS eS ae ae a Polen) Ra Mea an ee be eRe &* ae AS A EEE? ta? be PEN ha LIE IT SNE BS TS EE Bin 9 * : 7) aes FT PIS RSS rss “tye ' ' i > “> P24 ‘ 7 rs a ee ee pe s appese ubeey Gop oes . 5 40 THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD Saturday, March 20,1954 . “ Editor Sees McCarthy Aid To Enemies | ORPHAN ANNIE chosen oR ERAK RB: Kent [rope froma_search:for a fool-rare so willing te help the Com. —EE : , Stat Reporter (real system to make the: af-|imimtsts egret ag ar ge : " FS A CRAZY HUNCH=BUT IT's © If Sen. Joseph. R. McCarthy|fairs of men comfortably pre-|0! Mutual trust that hag TH’ ONLY ONE | GOT~THERE HE IS itogether and undermine the in » R-Wis:) is willing to run a-Te-| dictable..He called one Com- dividual. rights--thet. stand -in- NOW» MR. Caries te cee | lay race “with the baton of de-|munist and the other Fascist.\the way of absolute power for DETECTIVE “BUT WHO'S Guy? ceit and suspicion and mutual| “We sense that some of the | anybody,” he continued. distrust,” he either.is an un-|men who make the loudest | “In a relay race,> the first witting dupe or a conscious|noises against the Communist) man doesn’t need to cross the ally of his alleged adversaries, | short cut really believe, not in finish line himself; he needs Harlan Cleveland, executive|the democratic system the only pass the baton to another editor of the Reporter maga-|Communists are out to destroy,;man who starts running in the zine, said Friday. ‘but in that other shortcut—ab-' same direction. If McCarthy is Cleveland spoke at the sixth|solute certainty through au- willing to run with the baton annual conference of the Na-|thoritarian government,” he of deceit and suspicion and tional Civil Liberties Clearing) said. ‘mutual distrust, he is either an House at the Hotel 2400. The! “This is, in fact, the only rea unwitting dupe or a conscious conference concluded its two-jsonable way to explain why ally of his alleged adversaries, $ day session Friday afternoon. |Senator McCarthy and his Cleveland declared. : Meeps Cleveland said two kinds of|friends and imitators in Con-| He said the Communists are," : samignboacte apa ae short cuts had emerged in Eu-' gress and the Executive Branch well aware that the two ex-| BLONDIE By Chic Young Te aE ES tremes of the age a? : 'trum can accomplish more i : . + . \|they work together. The editor| >» 1M GOING SHOPPING, GREAT SCOTT- I DID pre teons S4 ~~ Arm - Nav - Air Force |said the effort of Communists DEAR--BE SURE AND THE ROAST? I aa oe CONE! | ‘to capture the leadership of ) TAKE THE ROAST OuT LIKE 4 L { |the anti-McCarthyism move-| OF THE OVEN AT FURNISHED FAMILY APARTMENTS ‘ment already is gn May OS 2 THREE OCLOCK ' , : down in the Daily Worker. e Sys . a psaph naa Aer Bg — other part of their task, he as- ee : iserted, is to strengthen the Low-cost de luxe suites in a setting most extreme forms of Me-! of lovely lawns, trees and flowers (Carthyism.*. — | cae i ' ' Cleveland said many sensible) 10 Minutes to Downtown, Near Virginia Side 14th St. Bridge persons would say they agreed Finest suburban development tn Ra ye wig a pe with at investigations of aoe pane wo gy We pe Me gD ‘children Free porking. Furnished in modern Communists and the loyalty = decor One or ae amram 0 Peete o eee and security program are try- ; ype ewe or thees qupeseres. ing to do, aithough they dis- ies op Madi agreed with the methods. These 7, * -_- Sree KS Reasonable Rates, Day, Wee persons, he said, would feel Saimicec: ee Se hs, Ss Cee SEND Also Available, Unfurnished Apartments 2? levervthing would ~be~ all -right4 ‘if the accused could confront)” 6; ee ee mre - FOR P Presidential Gardens ‘their accusers, if the presump-' RUSTY RILEY Hiustrate ition of innocence were main- Call TEmple 6-4400 ta aeemiake th ‘S$ PATTY PASSES THE L/BRARY DOOR JUST iN vatormation Mt. Vernon Ave. and Russell Rd., Alexandria, Va. ‘bullied ~ me rs waded. if ISN'T IT IBLE . macT snk REPT HES ~ ° RE Re, a3 [io OVERS ONE CONN LASE. 2 mses ine Di ithe rules of fair play were POSS LEGENDARY FIGU THAT 3 . } Office in John Adams Bidg. HARRY MADDEN, Managing Director ABs 4 ir play SMOKY E WILL RESORT iS WORSE THAN ss 6. ED OF F EON You ’ If these are the tests, how-|/ TO VIOLENCE IF YOU KEEP #1 COMMITTING PRACTICALLY KNOW WHY I'M HIDING a, Coveland aan. we = TURNING HIM DOWN 2 (— EVERY UNSOLVED CRIME... y/ OUT FROM SMOKY vestigating committees an e & | hh ) LOU! Federal loyalty program) ; ‘a3 = MOGT OF WHICH HE | ahd . ° “wheth der President Tru- ys . hae PROBABLY KNEW Live in Northwest? _ {iesveton'iinices TE mm PH By Harold Gray should get pretty low marks.” Philip Schiff, Washington representative of the National See our new, fabulous Jewish Welfare Board, acted ‘as chairman of the session. At! ——<—< ‘Cohen, National Program Di- ——S= ZY Milf i'rector for the Anti-Defamation | | t . 7 . fe . : Y Ny, & = | Gar en Su ermar et League of B'nai B'rith, spoke on \\, ‘ , , — / Yy yj, Pe “Promoting Freedom Through : : or h SAM iff l Yj ay oe the luncheon meeting Oscar I 1. TSS) Cape 1954, Kang Features Spada ste, be. * Workd nghts reverved Brig | Voluntary Organizations.” A |panel followed, in which rep-| ® | Fesentatives of voluntary or-|- ¥ | at 5925 Georgia Avenue essizations wits ‘an estimatea, HOPALONG CASSIDY imembership of 50,000,000 dis-' jcussed solutions to the secu-:-— , - , rity problem which would rec- citar ie se *” is rt ° ° ve, | osnize the dangers of com- YOU'D SETTER KEEP OuT OF TH | REAOY ! a ROLE R! @ From Wisconsin or Connecticut Ave. (one is Jarsers Of com YOUD SerTee KESP OUT OF THis , : : one liberties. Mary Alice Baldinger) ANO VOUR BAR-25 CROw> sections, cut thru the park via Military | js executive sectetary and Paul, ARE UNOS SUSPICION OF RUSTLING Sifton is chairman of the Clear- Road. . vate ing House. OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY | Alexandrian Listed Among P 5 Hechinger s Korean Dead = : Free Delivery © Phone Lincoln 7-9400 landria, Va, missing in Kores|\ \Since February, 1951, has been \ presumed dead by the Depart- \\\\ \ of De-; mond C. Greis,| SMILIN’ “JACK ing, Custer Spee -_— Distributed by K Delivery on orders over $3, may include other merchandise ; NORTHEAST NORTHWEST ANACOSTIA | sth 4&2 H Ste. 5975 Ge. Ave. 1995 Nichelse Ara, At Biadensbure R4. At Military R4 At Geed Hepe Rd. | | 36. husband of vauas opueon, va omvpes re ee ghway ° At Hillwoed Ave. Plenty Free Parking Near Seminary &é4. Mrs. Mary E. | as. e 9 | JACK, I'M HAVING THE TIME OH - OH SAY— THERE'S OH, NO--- ee ——E — . a . Pav OF MY LIFE! I'VE NEVER BEEN] | A MAN AT THE CORNER / SABLE--- ” Olk st, Fresk | AH, SABLE, WHAT A ) HAPPIER! TABLE WHO KEEP NOT dential Gar-j1ifet LET'S GET EL) i es : STARING AT US! AGAIN! dens, was an DRESSED AND T’LL y *) by a . ° . . a adviser to a TAKE MY LI'L A t hin . Republic of "BRIDE” DINING a ograp y Korea division AND DANCING! Major Greis He held the | ° Bronze Star for heroism fn action. > 9 t During World War II, Maj. te ar y eee Greis fought with the Eighty- third Division in both Europe and the Pacific. Before going to Korea, he was assigned to : the Military District -of- Wash-.4- +. Fes = ington for six years. " SSS? - 0. Fs vn ud Meet Rear Admiral Surviving, besides his wife, ~ Mews Protect Co, tu is a daughter, Judith, of the [3-20 ARTHUR A. AGETON echo As . : ) | - Eliminate A maMeeeee LETTER~ALMOGT] | LETTER GOT OPEN} SMBRRMUNNE 1] THANK YOU,BELLA LETTER Ja MRI) NOTHING BUTA BLANK \— () al age VERE 6 ANOTHER FORGOT. THANK | |/'D BETTER PASTE a BS Nl Row meaila Tonics SHEET OF PAPER INSIDE. = . cioetrically! fe eae eso: Vee BG == By Zack Mostey — Ly Clean! Fast! Easy! ALL NEW WASTE KING PULVERATOR ; . . . 7 S Ne M4, Kong Features Symdy ane le “ 1 AEA Se if SIM.) NEXT WEEK + DIANATY = == ; il ‘ Vi "THE LONE: RANGER” ' By Charles Flanders _ “HUSH-CUSHIONS!” | | = You. TWO. ARE WANTED : — BY (ur put THE BRITISH COINS INHERE AND THE SHERIFF'LL BE SURE HE'S eae tn BY THE LAW. COME OUT p | = ‘ GOT THE HIGHWAYMEN. THAT'LL LEAVE PEACEFUL, OR ILL Bae. 4 & | . = | or Te THE REAL CROOKS AND THE +! \ " ott | | REST OF THE CASH-- in Kann’s Downstairs ow Book Store—Washington Today, Sat., March 20th 2to 4 P.M. a7» | 4 “& | Wt r 4 ion mm Th Leer Ramg- Vx Drcorteared by Kong besrure Oy N BRINGING UP FATHER Admiral Ageton will autograph his new novel of the South Pacific “THE JUNGLE SEAS” 1 S SP CAN’T THINK | | WHyY-YES- Miss TERCUE- MR JIGGS I Wil BE HAPPY TO COME 4 ee | P — 1904, Rog Fearcees Syunde are Tae World ngru cowrved 7 lf you are unable to attend—Call DI. 7-7200 Pius Wastallation PP — . for your copy. Mail Orders Accepted. 3,75 stn it mow! | sin | EASY TERMS! > oe 3 rs we 0 Ko arrere’s 23 || Mehison& Keller, inc. | ; 1246 TAYLOR ST. N.W, | TAylor 9-8100 AS feed e-—- | ¢ ee sea aioe ® eee” ate: sane t+ wy ete ge pier ces - . — - e. eee pear aenerr ROE RE PE OA Ra CURT Mi * * at DID ie SS re viet ep te AO Legh 8 Poe ae > THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD DICK TRACY N. Y. Dockers Saturday, March 20, 1954 41 By Chester Gould | ‘ NO—-OH, NOf I—I WAS JUST ONE OF THE FIRST THINGS MUMBLING TO MYSELF, I } _ WE MUST LOOK FOR ARE | Cool Toward "GUESS ER YES—THAT'S PATHS. CAN YOU SEE ANY | Work Drive. |-—aa\e, Soe LL... oes eel NEW YORK, March 19 ®. A back-to-work movement on New York's strikebound piers lagged today despite Mayor Robert F. Wagner's guarantee of police protection for work- ing longshoremen. Heavy police details barred ) mass picketing along the water- » front, but New York Shipping } Association spokesmen said jonly about 1500 longshoremen | turned up for work, almost the isame force that manned the yipiers Thursday. ’| Solid police lines surrounded \trouble spots in the 14-day-old | wildeat strike and pickets were) . )i limited to 20 per pier in many) »sections. Police Commissioner, |Francis Adams said foot and| / )imounted patrolmen had orders) 7 ito break up any attempts at! | mass picketing. }| The Army reported that it » hired more than 800 dockers to } work military vessels at its } Brooklyn base and on Staten Island. Nine other piers in |Brooklyn, Manhattan and New ) Jersey also were worked, but most of the river waterfront > was idle. lll STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE ty BA $]q.10 luscious, red-ripe fresh Our Delectable, Delicious STRAWBERRY CREAM PIE frozen strawberries. One of our favorite desserts, rich and creamy, qa 5° 10-inch size ’ > 4, ~_—mMi“-” LL i i i i i i i a i i _. DD 4 LD DD DD DD De Did * f asf , ™~ \ | fr dys ON. a i ii. ww ~ MOON MULLINS SO 1 CAN SET, ¥ UNCLE OSCAR'S }\ PHOTO ON THE MANTLE ; WHERE IT “\ BELONGS, #7 — _— KAYO, RUN OVER DRUG Our Homemade Strawberry Ice Cream Hand-dipped RO° Egg & Baking Powder Biscuits dO vx: Just Heat 'n Eat ’Em Family Economy $4 -25 Half-galion__.___. “YUMMY” RUM BUNS i Att Doz. Both Baked in Individual Aluminum Foil Trays STEPHANSON’S Owned and Operated by the Original Owners James G. and Alice M. Stephanson 23rd and Pennsylvania Ave. S.E. BRENDA STARR By Dale Messick P4SssT, PESKY. DID YOU | YEP—ce CLUB! ) FIND OUT ABOUT a os HAVEN'T THE HEART TO TELL HER HE'S GOT ANOTHER GIRL, | | MDA to Hear Doctors FS | Dr. Tiffany Lawyer, head of| » neurology at eGorgetown Uni-| Viversity, and Alvin Chernay,| IAD ' eZ) G {EP =. oN <> —_ —— physical therapist at George-| yitown’s MD Clinic, are sched-| siuled to speak at the quarterly | the Washington/ —.. }| Chapter, Muscular Dystrophy) , | Associations, at 8 p.m. Monday. is LU. 4-3900 Open 8 a.m. te 8 p.m. Tues. thru Sun.—Closed Mon. )> The meeting will be held at = ‘the Goodwill Indusrties Build-| Covooooooooooooooooooosoooooooosooooosoooeee® j., 1218 New Hampshire ave.| jnw. | : —_ ~ LI“L ABNER TH’ HUNTIN’ SEASON OPENS ECON 7 » meeting of , , = - - - a ee a i a i i i i nnn nn i th hi hp ht he heen w ww = - - w ~ Hundreds were delighted at their good fortune in coming here last weekend... a visit will be well worth your while! PARKSIDE Ga rden-T ype APARTMENTS Montrose Ave. & Rockville Pike, 1 mile past the Naval Hospital in the loveliest part of Bethesda! CHILLUN/!-DON'T DO THIS T’YORE pAPPY —“CEPT IF HE GROWS HORNS JSS By Fred Lassne!! DURN YORE HIDE!!! IF YE DON'T STOP POKIN' ALONG, “JERSEY BELLE’ YE KNOW WHAR YE'LL END UP tt oe tn Wortd rights reserved By Alex Ratigno WE'LL REGISTER WHERE MODERN LUXURIES AND SUBURBAN BRN ATA HOTEL AND LIVING MEET... NEXT TO ROCK CREEK PARK IM READY NOW, A. KIRBY. EVENING FINOS SHARP ANO BUNCO "AT WORK” ON THEIR NM/GHT CLUB PLANS: GEE, MR. HASKIN, CERTAINLY, BABY. YOU YOU'LL REALLY DESERVE A BREAK... ANN STAR ME IN XS \\ Ay Wy ‘ij YOUR NEW ; we” : bd FLOOR SHOW } \ \ . WN ‘4 | o~ q f/ \(BUT THEY WOLD BE MAKING OTHER PLANS IF CRUSHER. Folks tell us Parkside Apartments are far more attractive than we can ever picture on paper. The elevation is one of the high- est in the area... picturesque now, cooler in Summer. And we've spared no expense in putting in trees, shrubs, bushes, even a rose garden! etuves Syndscate, Im, World rghts teverved Every building is styled differently on the ss Late outside... and the inside story is justas ait | good, The slick kitchens have everything ff Nose tee td ye el une ingore from a dishwasher and a garbage disposer on Dg Rmegg hw Be ge Bm ag to a refrigerator with freezer compartment and a deluxe gas range. We've even added ; , . ; . a new.twist.of our own..A “receiving . ae t 4 ; ’ pe ..tloset”.... (within...your... kitchen’s utility closet). opens.to the outside. We collect. trash from it daily; and you can receive milk deliveries, newspapers, anything you wish through it. We've tried not to overlook a single thing. Every apartment has a dining room, par- quet floors, an outlet for our RCA master television antenna, closet space in every room. - Every apartment has “through” ventilation ... and we’ve made provisions for air-conditioning should you wish it. Wide off-the-street parking bays ... 2 children’s playgrounds, laundry rooms with automatic washers and dryers .. you'll find everything you’ve been looking for at the Parkside Apartments. Come out this ide oho IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 1-BEDROOM 2-BEDROOM with ving room, dining room, modern 5 | 3 with kitchen and bath | tchen d bath | | i living including utilities. including utilities. $105 $120 ’ & — af ers , ee of es a typical dining room. Plenty of room for al] sorts of atrangements. And note the door leading right inte the kitohen|! : Nee 9 a ba Se e _ gm. ~ ee See a typical kitchen .. . includes a dish- washer and garbage disposal! Note the ample cupboards, the stainless steel sink and work surfaces in every kitchen! MODEL APARTMENT OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 te reach. Drive out Wisconsin Ave. (Rockvilie Pike) 1 mile past the Health Center and Naval Hospital. Turn right on Montrose Ave. to rental "I DON’T SUPPOSE YOU WANT jt TALK. TINOBOCY, CHAMP... | GASOLINE ALLEY — oe ae ys 4 Werrerza " ‘ i r | MBURG 4) CHIL! 5 \\ ty , ‘ oi mea : . et " \ Suc exe A\" AD LL | saw the swell \That isnt all we ; apartment you just / got, Skeex. We got, Corky. 4 have 2 roomer,0o. WELL, WHAT CANT DO FOR: You ? MR. CHAMPION Gramps decided the spare room shouldn't go to waste, so he moved in. glad to have him there for awhile. ' You ought to be WR’ it you are, but what) We .2 wondering is, is it wee OOrinanent ? ‘ALVIN: L-AUBINOE: Inc: Rental Agent @ 1515 19th 9 6 N.W. @ HU. 3.6025 offite. Or phone OLiver 7-9370 for further information. Pete slag hae Le te A WUE Tp wl pee Heyl ee ee Pete FRR he OAR PONE BM i8 7 : ‘ 7 “ oe pain Beas Nr itolonas Ment teeny GAN OL LO PEAR MEPL ILS LOOT EL IN PIE ress MEN BIE IS Wh Sos \ piper sone THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD SPIE ADI MAb Witney REP aCe te, asd ao am a Sele Mop" ane ts, oe lies FN LE Fail og! \ pt ee y 4 ie AS ae CS Pa caiRe I tei y Erg EES. oer Otees haan nai — EVN wR ye ha > > +s ‘ys Re peg oe ¥t .> 2) ote U iN ae ae Fae OF in Be 8 rs yy Ae AF Pa fae _ ew A Saturday, March 20, 1954 * TENG Sei ae — 3 we then on 4 ° Re gs vy . . - = — . . -* “ i cian wt POP AW DP ate a Me WES MEST RGF Lge oom ~e The DISTRICT LINE By BillGold i. Too Good.A Sees, RI RB ete sal For Verification OUR TOWN has long been a news and publication cen- | ter. Many a newsletter has its headquarters here. For an annual fee, the letters tell their subscribers what's go- ing on behind the scenes, and what's likely to happen tomorrow. There has been an in- teresting new development in this field in recent months. Two newsletters for children have been de- veloped, and both are do- ing very nicely, thank you. randywine st. nw., Woodley - 6-0066, sends out an interest- and educational weekly ing. letter to the child of your choice for $3.50 per year. Granny Guinn, RFD 2, Cul- | peper, Va., writes in a more | folksy and rural vein, but for $4 per half-year the kids also get a little surprise in- closure in each letter. The | April Ladies Home Journal | as an item about Granny | Guinn and her letter. What brings all this to | mind is the story which leads off a recent Capital Carousel letter. “It seems,” it says, “that a number of years ago | -ethere was this nice fashion- able apartment house in Washington in which some of the best people in town lived, including the family | of Harry S. Truman, who was then a Senator. “Every now and then the building would seem to shake some, and there was the funniest kind of noise, which sounded half way between a scrape and a swish.” There were lots of com- plaints about the noise and the rumbling and shaking, - the. newsletter. .goes..on. to . Say, and. the. out what was causing ‘this mysterious disturbance, and put a stop to it. Prowling the corridors, the first clew he uncovered was that the noise seemed to be confined to rainy after- noons. On clear days, there wasnt any. Then he narrowed his | search to the floor on which | the Truman apartment was located. And finally right to | that very door. Could a dignified United States Senator be responsi- ble for all this commotion? The apartment manager hesitated a moment, then knocked on the door. When it was opened, his mystery was solved. The Senator's little daughter, Margaret, loved to roller skate, And on rainy days, . when she couldn't go out to play, she had been roller skating in the apartment. A good newspaper man is supposed to verify such items before he prints them, but I'm afraid to ask Miss Mar- garet about this one. She might deny it. of.the.|....4a@ apartment house finally made ; up his mind he'd have to find JUDGE PARKER By Paul Nichols THANKS, TOM ./ TOM, TO SEE YOU AGAIN, ALAN 7 I CAME BECAUSE _2 NEEP YOUR ai Uli aby lp STEVE CANYON WHAT PISPOSIT! ON WAS MADE OF THIS 4 / WERE, THEN, IS YOUR WIRELESS TELEPHONE PROCEDURE FoR LEAVING THE FIELD...IT MUST BE TRANSMITTED IN YOUR VOICE! —ANY DEVIATION IN PHRASEOLOGY WILL BRING INTERCEPTORS AT ONCE THEIR GREED INDUCES THEM TO FLY THE HER MME. MULDOON, YOUR. \ GUT— ALTHOUGH THEY WILL CREW CONSISTS OF TWO PROBABLY BE UNABLE To AMERICANS —ONE OF WHOM \ AGAIN OBTAIN A PILOTS 1S WLL.. . WHAT OF THESE MEN POSITION IN THE UNITED STATES... ae a” ~ JOE PALOOKA mg THE JEZEK CASES IT WAS OPEN ANP SHUT..NO QUESTION ABOUT HIS GUILT‘... By Milt Caniff YOU WILL BE ESCORTED BACK To THIS FIELD SO THE SHIPMENT OF HEROIN MAY BE RECOVERED! OF COURSE, IF gy YOUR AIRCRAFT ATTEMPTS TO ESCAPE IT WILL BE SHOT DOWN !.. WE WOULD LIKE TO SALVAGE THE PLANE, BUT THE —— YA CAN'T HURRY ‘ER,,. SHORE HATE THOLO YA UP, I..I'VE GOT TO HAVE IT IT'S A LONG HELLO... YES... THIS IS BY TOMORROW, I'LL J | DISTANCE Jf THORNE...WHAT,..I'LL LEAVE COME BACK IN THE >" CALL, MR, AN NOW...OH,THIS (S BAO MORNING, i — NEWS ~ MYRTLE ' , MATTER INCE SAMPSON FED ME THAT MOTOR OIL. I HAVENT BEEN ABLE TO GET MY TAL TO STOP WAGGING / 1 © Kitchen Cabinets and Equipment © Porches Enclosed FHA Financing Up to 3 Years JU 8-9620 «0... LA. 6-3550 KENT IMPROVEMENT CO. 1419 East-West dense Silver Spring, Md. SS , o -_ pi - rsh . S ; ; rye Dec DED TO DONALD DUCK SHARE WITH YOU. ow | i, <<) 1 BABIEO ER ALL NITE... P GIVE-AWAYS ‘ NA yt age A LOTTA resh 0 Half- grown ~~ housebroken | 'F CAREFUL WATCHIN. — taste gives male kitten; $1 inclosed for % MIGHT TAKE A COUPLE a nice little lift Children’s Hospital (District MORE DAYS 70461 after 2 p.m.). Will de- liver beautiful young male cat (Oliver 2-8908). Affec- | tionate, intelligent part-shel- pis: tie female (UNion 42630). Healthy, affectionate, well- trained mother cat (Union 4-7215). TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS | Greetings to Rep. Errett P. Scrivner, Michael W. Straus and Harris E. Willingham. | Tomorrow's celebrants: Mrs. | @ Bathroom Remodeled © Complete Recreation =| | FrankS. Phillips, Gen. Robert | &. Beightler and Jack Gorrie. Rooms | os | SUCCESS STORY Olmstead'’s owner, J. Brahms,- got more gaslights | than he bargained for. « ; He reports that several Painting )| hundred District Liners || ealled te offer te sell him gaslights, and some offered them free, just so that the _ fixtures would have a home in Olmstead’s new Gaslight Koom. Anyhow, the poor guy | spent two days chasing all | over town looking at gas- lights, and I think it’s time | we let him up for air. P. S.: He offered to pay the “commission” of a $1 cigar, but I declined with thanks. I'm no fool. If I smoked it I might find myself lik- ing it enough te have to buy the second one. Bos" ame qt UM HUH..f[M GOING TO GIVE YOU | on ios ae ae : y x , / 3 atl: Lio. , 2 ALL OF THE LITTLE PAPER CUPS THAT SILLY QUICKIE DEPT. | > — | aon ay ey = DME CHOCOLATES SET INI... mvt J. Frank Kelley of 605 Jefferson st., Alexandria, re- ports: “She was only a me- teorologist’s daughter, but he could look right into her eyes and tell weather.” ov HERALD POSTSCRIPT The multi-million dollar | purchase of the Times-Her- ald had just been concluded. | Eugene Meyer, chairman of the board of this newspaper, stopped in our snack bar for | 3 . : a cup of tea. | 42-Inch Cabinet Sink by At the cashier's stand he | fished in his pockets for | “ ne some money—with no suc- | C, cess. | ® “I'm sorry,” he finally Complete with chrome faucet and strainer. explained to the cashier, Reg. $119.95 . : Two large storage compartments. Sturdy “but | don’t seem to have a steel throughout. Choice of right-hand | nickel. I just bought a No Money Down HERE,.DEAR. BE SURE YOU GET IN ALL THE CORNERS. Tt FEEL MISER Asie! I KNOW HOW YOU L KE TO UNE THEA UP. AND PRETEND THAT THEY RE pe SS € BOATS. 3-20 .or left-hand. drainboard. We do all our newspaper.” own installing with Webster's own licensed | Gales S Great Book a W atlina, TLOW PRICES Bath TILE Kitchen ALUMINUM and PLASTIC Amazing Prices & Terms CALL AND SEE sige school next September. lo De MTS MRM Scho! next September. To be eligible for September enroll OL. 4 2, 83 ment, pupils must be six years: > Oetober-1-of- th plumbers. Never any sub-contracting and | never any confusion. PHONE STerling 3-6100 TODAY Joun G. WeBsTER | KITCHEN SPECIALISTS | Tots to Register Chesterbrook Schoo! Kirby rd., Falls Church, ‘conduct registration April from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. children planning to enter. th MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE on your DRY CLEANING If You Don't Agree That ARISTO Dry Cleaning Is as Good as the BEST— Regardless of Price— ARISTO Will Refund Your Money in Full KITCHEN SPECIALISTS 627 F Street N.W. Opposite Hecht’s F Street Entrance ‘of age by this year. SPECIAL | Qc STUDS | 7: ? ff c | KNOTTY PINE ORY CLEANERS & OVERS a | : od... PANELING Beautiful, Dry 4 STORES ALL OVER TOWN “atch Our Windows Faculty Recital 19,000 SQUARE FEET | OFFICE SPACE ON ONE FLOOR AVAILABLE JUNE 1, 1954 ROBINSON LUMBER CO. e ik if dramas. | | 'LU..1-1200 ; 7 a Millions have read these of AAIAIISNAAAAARA SANA Terre NEW BUILDING UNDER CONSTRUCTION *WEEK-END SPECIAL* AT | they come alive in glorious FLOWERING SH RUBS 3400 Wisconsin Avenue N.W. Forsythia * Deutzia ae. Lilac %& Rose of Sharon | } 59.2 005 98° WISCONSIN AVE. AND NEWARK ST. 3 to 4 ft. | Sour Cherry Trees i = 98° | en Thumb GARDEN CENTER 11250 Ga. Ave., Wheaton, Md. LOckwood 5-4272 rettete “eet: OPEN DAILY & SUNDAY ‘TIL DARK y FORSYTHIA $40 pre-college University’s mu EGINNING next Sun- day the Washington is scheduled for 3 p.m. Sul Post presents, for readers day in the music auditorium on campus. Biggest Buy r Proved in Over The public is invited of ‘all “faiths, memorable REIN Open. 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Me, sh ll A ae Sen We 2 Ass: 2p eae ext ae Tact haainm 2 Pee Prey EA. OW GTA UR TSE CPLA * os A Bethan ame weds adie Lach p Be Pg ae eran oA ger Ra ‘ SE Se ee as oe ee a ~ FR SRT ESE Says AS, CF ed oe we a eae fae re PSS ey ok SER a pi Rt EE, TO ET Bk ee ee CRE TOE Be NI Np Pt yA WERE a Senne ae ee A Be 5 ” BE Sas DR he hy Ds Un PPAR BB PEP Me WOTTON UT Se EO RUA PER gid bap Ap REE IO Re RPT te ay LPG REF LR Se ASKER ied Hee MIM ey THE WASHINGTON POST and TIMES-HERALD _ Saturday, March 20, 1954 MARK TRAIL By Ed Dodd | THEY LOOK PRETTY GOOD, Yl We CAN TRY THEM ON OUR YI'M FOR /T...WELL SHOW THE] The Washington Merry -Go -Round > CHARLIE..WE MIGHT TRY NATIONAL TV SHOW ANO iF / FIRST ONE SUNDAY NIGHT, AND THESE TWO SHOWS’AND SEE || THEY'RE SUCCESSFUL, WE'LL A THEN WE CAN. TELL FROM THE | § ° ° WHAT HAPPENS ! ORDER THIRTEEN moRE! (ZZ FAN MAIL HOW GOOD THEY Are! Cc Ui ba S Break With R USStaiis he id ~ By Drew Pearson a ~ppoint by. .point.and..say, that, it. Ohie.-. Ayres, made. a SROPOR issu: | | ‘doesn’t help the little man in exactly one sentence long. He Interviewing President Ba-| , ymerousways,”. proclaimed said: “Would you. prefer. that... tista in Havana the other day Uncle Dan Reed at the GOP I noticed him scribble a desk!caucus. “For example, we have |memorandum to himself. It | assisted the farmer by enabling would you: prefer that I vote ‘was in short- ‘him to deduct soil-Conservation i A eg tnges SR 072 : ' , ' thand. “Short- ‘expenses. If we had given in ##4!mst and remain in Con- — | & Y mal , é | > i & ‘hand,” I told | |to all this pressure to increase gress?” HOPING TO SELL THEIR ANIMAL vy | 4 4 $ Tae | | |the President} dependency exemptions from| Speaker Martin quelled any FILMS, MARK AND BARNEY jon . ? a | enviously, “is $600 to $700, it would have A ' I follow the Republican leader- ship and vote for this bill, of | thi that ‘ afl weekly ( further uprising by threaten- ST something tha | |meant only a sm reekly tax EAN THEM Te hag Ag oy pa as a newspaper- "7? \savings to the average Ameri-|'"S ‘© Tesisn. ly YY man I always = || \can family, at a high cost to, “We're going. to win in No OF WILDLIFE UNLIMITED Mi wished I knew ‘ the financial stability of the vember,” he said. “I'm sure e — , parte as How did you Government.” of that. But if by any chance MARY WORTH By Ken Allen happen to learn ) Mocs hey of oo. rer age we ould coat, will not are 7 t ‘itasa soldier?” I umpnrey, the Clevelan in- as “it leader if th pct af DON’T PLAN TO SAME HERE, VIC! MRS. DEVORE -- - I'VE AHUNCH | eee devel lGuatriatiet, backed bim un. Bat ~ As inority eader < e ? S- LUNCH WITH ME, 1 COULD MERELY MAMA MAY STILL HAVE TO HELP PAPA ‘oped some of Pearson |GOP Congressman Paul Fino, jndicating that he intended BEEN TALKING TOMORRIE, 5 yy... HE HASN'T FOUND ANY 7 DARLING!--IM “4 rar a cow AND _-| | PAY THE GROCERY BILL: ‘the amazing story of the Presi-|of New York did not 4Gaee Quen seins to Gee DEAR ?.- WHAT'S NEW ALONG BOOKINGS I'D ACCEPT, MARSHA! CHASE THE CALF! 4 dent of Cuba, a mild-mannered | “Not many people in my dis-\| eader Charley Halleck of In- THE RIALTO? .+s HEADLINERS HAVE TO BE. _ . and most likable gentleman who |trict in the Bronx are interested giana the Speaker added: belies the fact that twice he has/in the 10 percent reduction The speakership has been taken control of Cuba by revo-|in the tax on fur coats provided), wonderful experience, but I lution. jin this bill, because they can't)am reaching the sunset af my Batista was the son of pov-jafford to buy fur coats,” de-| career” erty-stricken parents in the jclared Fino, “but they are interior of the island, and|family people who understand Read Drew Pearson's col- ‘went to work in the cane fields|the proposed $100 exemption) umn every day, including when he could barely wield a|for each dependent.” Sunday, in The Washington ‘cane knife. Later he got a job| Congresswoman Edith Rog-| Post. Hear him Sundays on - , . 4 ‘on the Cuban railroads as ajers of Massachusetts agreed; WTOP radio at lil } _* . . > ~~ a& Pet Off@e oo 1964 Pyubiame In py m. ‘conductor-brakeman, and at 50 did William Ayres of Akron,’ and WTOP-TY at 11:30 p. m. ‘ 2 = ‘the age of 20 enlisted in the) REX MORGAN Aa Sh Sena ab By Dal Curtis | "By, | But during these years, he) - y HOW A IT, \ THAT'S ASKING WAIT, RUTH / MAYBE spent almost every evening; D | y if! MEDICAL SCHOOL AND JIM? ‘ey Me” )A LOT OF JIM,| {| WHAT DR, MORGAN a > dened sean o if ourseltT: FEW PEOPLE UNDERSTAND THREE YEARS OF HOSPITAL ) | PRESENT YOU /DR. MORGAN! | \\ SUGGESTS... MAKES seg cereater er egg ANYTHING ABOUT LEPROSY, SS TRAINING I NEVER SAW | | BEFORE THE ~