Evening Star Newspaper, July 17, 1927, Page 4

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4 - CHANGE INBRITISH GOVERNMENT SEEN Demands of “Die Hards” at Geneva Expected to Be Opposed at Home. BY WILLIAM HARD. President Coolid Kellogg may be the unw of hastening a change of & in - Great Bri by the present join in a real tures on navies ma return to power government s pacific Liberal ernment, headed gay Macdonald, idge and Mr. half way in a c vetary ting means nt and rivalr: This is the ca gaging the atten here during this anxiety over the nlt red people here find it di nds of e that the o n the present Bri Geneva_represen « final judgment of the I State Departm have read evel dispatches sent back from can delegation at Gen ed and hew - tha Mr. Bridgeman, as vate citizen could are of make out just how he is going to jus ify ‘his policies to the British vote and taxpayers. _% Financial Aspect Noted. The financial aspect of the matter §s particularly noted. The British eonstantly say and sincerely feel that t is a great burden upon them to pay $160.000,000 2 year on their war debt to the American Treasury, Mr. Kellogg flattered himself that he was doing something for the British payer when he instructed our Mr. Gibson at Geneva to propose a low limit on future cruiser construction. et the British fir: admiralty, Mr. Brid an, arrivi , @eneva with a proposition for 600,000 ‘@ons of cruisers for the British Em- pire, and the financial consequences of this proposition for the British tax- payer would be as follow: The British now have 387,000 tons of cruisers. In order to go up to 600,000 tons they would have to build 213,000 new tons. Each new cruiser ton costs them some $1,250 in their shipyards. Therefore, in order to build 213,000 new cruiser tons they would have to spend $266, more than a quarter of a on construction expenses alone. And then would come ‘“upkeep.” New docking facilities. New repair- ing facilities. New annual pay for new officers and mew enlisted men. And so on. And so on. . Opposition at Home Expected. It is not thought here that any such program can ultimately com- mend itself to the financially distress- ed_British eiectorate. Even more important, however, is the total lack of confidence displayed by the present British government in the international peace agreements to whick J. Ramsay Macdonald and his great multitude. of followers are de- is pointed out here that Mr. Bridseman at Geneva, while refusing 0 scrap any naval vessels, is morally g&pplnx the League of Natlons and Locarno - treaties and the four- pewer Pacific Ocean pact, all of which mbod%ar to &he hearts of British rites _and of mo: i HlR st British What nation, it is ask i u%fl“?_ 1is asked, does Brit- nder the four-power pact Brit- ain'y possessions and the rights in the Pacific Ocean are guarantoed by the plighted faith of Japan, France -ala’ the United States. nder the Locarno treaties tles o “perpetual fraternity” were estahlishg #d bebween Britain, France, Italy, and ny. i er the covenant of the League of Nations France and Italy and Ger. many and Japan are debarred by spe- cific promise from committing any act of aggression upon the British Em- pire, |, Are all thess promises, all these Pledges, all these solemn engagements, 1Mow so worthless that Britain must have seventy cruisers to pursue bel. ligerent raiders upon her commerce? “Die Hard” Group Blamed. It is not believed here that the mags ©f the British people will ultimately answer that question in the affirma- tive. It is strongly suspected that in maval matters the present British government has been captured by that same little group of “die hard” reso- lute reactionaries who under Lloyd George vainly strove to smother the new “emerging Irich Free blood and who now under Mr. win are vainly striving to extinguish the British labor movement by re- pressive legislation such as was re- pealed by the British Parliament a century ago. People are wondering here if the “dle hard” performance at Geneva may not give the pacifistical Mr. Mac- donald his great chance to try to prove to the British elector: a the Baldwin government is tlonary and warlike abroad as it is at home and that the moment for a new government has now at length arrived. Awaiting that sooner or later s Washington ch again nation for the disappointments at credits those disapp Britishers who h: rarily in power a honest but pe mined to live sti Nelson. It has the high character will of the present I 8ir Esme Ho d, and it looks for- ward with c nty to better under- development, which s bound to come, hes no reses pen to be tempo- 4 who are perfectly ¢ wildly deter- e of Lord confidence in nd thorough good itish Ambassador, 2| S| h |Few of Conflict’s Most Wounded Victims Know Any Other Home. Dramatic Tales Shroud Tragedies That End in Wrecked Lives. left Smith lyin; h | somewhero in the Luneville sector | with his _left foot sho ved there three da at his elbow and gr ne eating away what the ad left. Then they went out him. gave him the Croix de Gu nt him home to have the rest leg chopped off an inch at a They acro: was wounded in the t leg in A rred to the three days later, than alive. 918, etcher ch more dead s October 21, 19 Cama to Hospital in 1919, He came to V r Reed Hosy I thr lest seve ever since, ne the end of stump of a I down as a vesult of the gang he gocs < i has another inch taken off. 1 seven or eight ten ¥ 3 of a dozen o the war who have taken or less permanent residen at Walter Reed. Most of them 10 other home, many of them haven't heen outside of a hospital since the and all of them eall it . ¢ are the unluckiest e, but pitiful becaus cheerfulest men on ear two of them have been bedridden for rs and several can't get out of wheel chairs. Many of them hobble about on two crutches, some use one, some have cancs and a few have both arms and hoth legs left. But_none of them is whole. When you ask them about it they will all fell vou that there is some- thing that won't leave them alone. There is some heritage of the war that keeps coming back to ho them and to make more cutting neces- sary. Some of them have had &s many operations as they have had birthdays, but nearly every ome is eternally hoping—hoping that the next will be the last. Isn't Worried About Leg. There is Jimmy Hoggin, for in- stance, who has spent more time at Walter Reed than anybody—ever since September, 1919. Corpl. James C. Hoggin, Company F, 3th Infantry, Fourth Division, lost a leg in the Meuse Argonne September 26, 1018. Ever since then he has been fighting to keep the other one. He will have his fifth bone graft before long, and if the graft fails the leg must go. And he isn’t worrying about it any more than he would if it were a tooth. An there is “Reds.” Reds says he s lucky because he just got rid of his second leg. The first came off three years ago, and the other one last Monday. It had been bothering him a lot, and he says he's glad to get rid of it. He had frozen feet, has been in 13 hospitals since the , and is glad of a chance to get outside. “Reds” is Daniel Martfelt, 138th Infantry. Operations are nothing in the lives of most of these men; they have been through worse experiences. Many of them have lost track of the num- ber of operations; others keep count' for the fun of it. Corpl. Clyde M. Hopper, Company C, 168th Infantry, 42d Division, kept count of his. He will have his thirty-eighth next month. Blocked Path of Shell. Hopper disputed the right-of-way with a shell at St. Mihiel September 14, 1918. Parts of the shell took up residence in his right arm, his left leg and his head. He spent several months in base hospitals in France and came to Walter Reed in June, 1919. He has been there ever since, off and on—two years out and seven years in. Every time he leaves the hospital the shell reasserts itself and he has to go back and have another piece taken out. He wears the wreck of his left foot in what he calls his tennis shoe. It looks like a tennis shoe, but it is the size of a snow shoe. Sergt. William Thomas Jeffrey, Company G, 23d Infantry, Second Di- vision, got the same sort of deal. A shell burst in his vicinity at Soissons July 18, 1918, broke his leg in two piaces and left a lot of pieces in his ankle. He has had 11 operations, but there is only one more plece of steel in his ankle, and when he gets rid of that he will be in pretty good shape, although he will have to walk with a stick. Sergt. Jeftrey knows a lot about the inside of hospitals. He was in the base hospital at Vichy, then he went to Brest and from there back to the United States. On this side he was in hospitals at Camp Stewart, Vi Jamp Dix, N. J.; Rahway, N. J.: Boston, Brooklyn, Camp Devens and Walter Reed. Three years altogether. He came back to Walter Reed last March. Wounds Not Only Trouble. It isn't always the wound causes the most trouble. Corp. Le: A. Boggs, Battery B, 313th Artillery, thought when they gave him a pair of crutches to take the place of a £ame leg he was at the end of his troubles. Boggs was in the Argonne, was wounded in the arm October 3, 1918, and in the leg two days later. besn't know yet what hit him; it n't a shell and he thinks it was a rock. He came to Walter Reed in December, 1918, and left a month later to be discharged at Camp Meade. Then, 18 months ago, something went wrong inside of him and he cams nack to Walter Reed. First it was appendicitis, and when he got over psons of that W UNLUCKIEST MEN '| ter Reed, but most of them of his kidneys bu He here until October, maybe { that one will be longer. Rosario Onteri country about 11 them have heen s He came over fr before this count went to France with the Fifth Di sion, Company K, 60th Infantry, was gassed in the Argonne. he got ba to the United after the w he has been in pitals five years suffering from the effects of the gas. He has been at Walter Reed five weeks. First Sergt. Leroy Hogan of the 1024 Machine Gunners, with the 26th Division, is about at the end of hi war. He was in the thick of the fight- ing for nine months, in the second bat- tle of the Marne, at C' au Thierry and in the Argonne, and he was gass- ed, shellshocked and wounded three times with shrapnel. Since the armi- stice—he was in the trenches on No- vember 11—he has spent four years In various hospitals, He was one of the first at Walter Reed, and came back several months ago for phy therapy treatments of his foot, which the shrapnel left as stiff as a piece of wood.: He says Walter Reed is the only hospital that has done anything to get the stiffness out of his foot and he expects it to be all right in a few months, Some Not So Lucky. But they are not all so lucky—if a man is lucky to be getting well after four years in hospitals. Carl Johnson has been in a bed at Walter Reed for three years. There is something wrong with his heart and he hasn't been able to get out of bed since the war ended. He was a sergeant of Company K, 26th Infantry, and hasn't a single relative in this country. The hospital is the only home he 8. Cecil Mole, 305th ¥Engineers, is lift- ed out of bed into a wheel chair every morning. He never gets out of the chair except to be lifted back into bed. He has osteomylitis in his foot and except for 13 days has been at Wal- ter Reed for two and one-half years. Gurney 1. Hightower is anothe “‘osteo’ patient. It started in his foot as the result of an injury and came back in his jaw. He was in the 20th Photo Section, Air Service. Wounded Saving Buddy. Sergt. Augustus A. Abernathy, 30th Division, went into a heavy m: gun fire to bring a_wounded com back to his lines. They gave him the D. S. C. for that. But he collected a load of shrapnel in his hip and was gassed as well, and he has spent five years In hospitals for that. He was in National nitorium, Johnson City, Tenn., for three years with tubercu- losis as a result of the gas and he has been operated upon twice. He is re- covering from his second operation at Walter Reed and expects to get out in another six months. There are about 1,000 men at Wal- stay a short time and leave. There is onl a handful of those who never 1 or if they leave usually come Some of them are not there now; a few of these are permanently cured and others will return, perhaps many times. Most of those there now have good chances of going away patched up well enough to get along. They have had their share of the war's hang-over. Women Keep Spirits Up. They have all had their share of hard luck, these ‘“permanent resi- dents.” They might be morose about their misfortunes, but they are not. et has been in this and a half of v entered the war, 1tes The Bank that Makes You hospitals. hos- | | Above—Three veterans Left to right—A. A. Abernath; Lower left—NMelbourne NE\ER LOSE CHEERY ASPECT OF LIFE THEY SUFFER HOPEFULLY FOR RECOVERY AT WALTER REED SEIPEL ho have spent many years at Walter Reed. Boggs and C. M. Hopper. Smith, who has Leen in the hospital since 1919. Lower right—Cecil Mole, who spends all his time in bed or in & wheel chair. They might turn to pitying them- selves, Lut they don’t. They are as cheerful, -go-lucky and philo- sophical v were 10 years ago when they went to France with their bodies intact 2 are two reasons for this. One is Miss Margaret H. Lowrer, field director of the Red Cross at the hospital, and the other is Mrs. Mabel D. Shackelford, recreational director. You can see what these two women are doing the minute they get with their bo; S w them all and ng with them and they see that they have their pleasures without too much attention from misguided sympathizers. Mrs, Shackelford provides entertainment, plenty of it, of all sorts, picnics, swimming, vaudeville, music and anything else available. There fsn't any “'poor fellow” stuff, either. These men don't need it. FUEYRREDON CONVERTED TO AIR MAIL ON TRIP Argentine Ambassador to Urge Home Government to Link Capitals by Plane. Ambassador Pueyrredon of Argen- tina has informed Postmaster General New that he was converted into an enthusiastic advocate of air mall dur- ing his recent transcontinental trip. ixperiences in expediting diplomatic correspondence by use of air mail be- tween the West Coast and East Coast re to'be embodied by Senor Pueyr- redon into a report to his government, ch will urge establishment of simi- lar lines to link the capitals of Argen- tine States, ‘When h “I would rt was in California, he said, rm informing hours it would be ands, never failing.” Whe Foening Fiar FAKE GERMAN BARON DEPORTED ON MAJESTIC George A. Gabor, Who Deceived Henry Ford, Posad as Member of Krupp Family. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 16.—George A. Gabor, who, posing as “Baron G. Frederick E. Krupp,” traveled across the United States last year victimiz- ing prominent persons in financial and soclal circles, was deported today on the liner Majestic, Claiming to be a member of the wealthy Krupp family of many, manufacturer of m £ bor ingratiated himseif into a num- ber of homes of wealthy Americans. He was_entertained by many, and while in Detroit was a guest of Henry Ford. After being taken on a tour through the Ford plant the manutzc- turer presented the bogus baron with an_automobile. Eventually word was received from Germany that no member of the Krupp family was traveling in the United States, and shortly afterward Gabor was_arrested at Albuquerque, N. Mex. He was then brought to Wilmington, Del., where h> was con- victed of passing a worthless check and sentenced to nine months in prison. Upon completion of his sen- tence he was ordered deported. BANKER KILLS SELF. MEMPHIS, Tenn., July 16 (P).— Peter (. Grant, prominent banker, killed himself at his country estate this afternoon. Mr. Grant, president of the Colum- bia Savings Bank a g bia Mortgage & Tr let through his heart. IIl health glven as the cause of his suicide, He was born in 1866 and vived by his widow and two da sur- hters, AOVERTISENENTS RIOTING CONTINUES IN VIENNA; RESIGNATION REPORTEL (Continued from First Page.) tion of automobiles filled with repub- lican defense troops flitting past now and then. Between midnight and early morn- ing comparative peace reigned, inter- rupted only at intervals by strong military detachments patroling _the The main work of quelling ing dewolves on the police, as the soldiers are assuming a_passive attitude. \Whenever the police suc- ceed in dispersing one crowd, another crowd forms farther on. Firing in Outlying Areas. Toward 1 o'clock this afternoon desultory’ firing was heard in the out lying districts. The government is bringing in loyal forces in which it places confidence. All hopes are centered on the dis- cussion which has been going on be- tween Chancellor Seipel and the Social Democratic leader, 1 Seitz, The discussion has as its object some change in the government. It is firmly believed that a coalition ernment with the Social Democ will he formed and that Police Ci Schober will be compelled to resign. Alluding to Schober, the Democrats assert that “his of the masses. Notwithstanding that the Social have requested no demon- stration, the trade unions are plan- ning a2 monster demonstration tomorrow. Americans Leave in Plane, 1 Democrs . Kufstein, Linz »nd other non-Tyrolean towns is noticeable, there to swell the ranks of the striking Social Democratic rail- ing from the Tyrol starting a countar Vienncs: Social movemen ke is reported Democrats. Th spreading in Styria. f A Lufthansa_airplane, which was held up in the Vienna airdome for sav- eral hours, was eventually permitted to take off for Munich, with Pilot Doldi and three passengers, two of them Americans, whose names could |no* be obtained. Another Lufthansa plane ha ived from Munich on schedul. 1 time, SEIPEL RESIG) ATION REPORTED Government Favoring Union With Germany Rumored Formed. PARIS, July 16 (#).—A Havas dis- patch from Belgrade says that it reported there today that C lor Secipel has resigned and that H Socialist ernment has been formed, the latter being favorable to union of Austria with A Budapest dispatch to Havas tier repor that provin wrban | are marching | columns on Vienna. One report that in the fight- ing in Vienna the troops suffered 80 killed and 100 wounded. Resistance 1inst the Communist movement has ha ian-Socialists being masters of the situation. Rioting Details Meager. Details of the riot in which 300,- 000 Socialists gained partial control of Vienna yesterday, set fire to the Palace of Justice, wrecked a police station and destroyed documents in the official archives were still very meager today. Communication by rail with the Austrian capital was interrupted and telephonic and telegraphic transmi; sion apparently was controlled by ti authorities. The only direct mess: received from Vienna during the day ated that the authorities had the situation in hand. The Austrian legation in Paris issued a communique which stated: “After vesterday's incidents at Vienna the government of Chancellor Seipel succeeded re-establishing order in the ca 1. Police have taken rigorous measures to prevent renewal of the manifestations and no incidents occurred today. The oppo- :ition leaders, on their side, are w« ing to restore calm. The strike is ex pectec to end shortly.” Results Difficult to Estimate. The c: alties as well as material damage in Vienna were difficult to estimate on the basis of the few me: sages, which have trickled through from the historic Austrian capital. The most authentic reports placed the dead at 12 and the injured at 119, not accounting for stray cases which may have been overlooked in the first count. The general strike order which was ued last night appeared to have had little influence on the situation, he height of the disorders already having been reached before the strike order was issued. Railroad traffic, however, appears to have been stopped to a great ex- tent, international express trains being halted at the frontier. The government, says the latest reports, has replied to a demand of the strikers that Chancellor Seipel resign and that Prefect of Police The New for } in | HEREV ways more pleasure derived from the trip if you have iots of good MUSIC. Schober be dismissed, with- an offer to reorganize the cabinet. Further Outbreaks Feared. Dispatches from frontier towns say that fears are entertained that an influx of workers and Socialist sympathizers from outside the capi- result in a fresh outbreak even if, as official dis- ndicate, order has been re- stored for the moment. Reports of negotiations between “hancellor Seipel and the leaders of the Socialist party are regarded here \s a favorable indication and a sign that the worst is over. ‘A Havas dispatch from Prague said that important cabinet changes were expected at Vienna, and added that members of the Republican As- sociation were assembling in several c preparatory to going to the apital. Advices from Budapest said that the communication between Budapest and various Austrian provinicial cities, which continued last night, although Vienna had been cut off, censed today. The railway adminis- tration in Budapest announced that Hungarian trains bound for Austria were being stopped at the frontier and would be turned to Budapest. Travelers Denied Entry. These same advices stated that travelers had been denied entry into Austria and that only foodstuffs were permitted to cross tha frontier. A Havas dispatch from Belgrade to- 1ight said the travelers arriving there by antomobile asserted that the situ- at Austria was still uncertain. said ‘that Belgrade men had learned from ound-about sources that all trains cept those carrying foodstuffs had cen stopped throughout Austria and t a central committee had been onstituted by the “insurgents” to direct the movement of transporta- | tion, WORKERS STOP TRAINS. Still in Power, Advices to Bucharest Say. BUCHAREST, July 18 (@) d here up to 5 0 oon from official sources | that Chancellor Seipel and his government are in control at Vienna. A general strike throughout the coun- try is to be enforced at midnight The workmen informed the govern- ment that no trains would be allowed to leave ths country. is reported that the Vienna s has gone over to the workmen, the government {s rushing burg divisions by au- ategic points in the Seipel are pouring into Bratis- he Jugoslav government isas. £ as indicated by Vienna advices number 200 dead and more than 400 wounded. Eyewitnesses reaching Bratislava that the battle in Vienna origi- nated when mounted police charged a demonstration of workmen. A young woman with an infant in her arms in the front line of the parade was killed by a saber stroke, and the in- fant was trampled under the horses’ hoofs. The workmen tore the mounted men from their horses, attacking them furiously; then gunfire opened on both sides. Workmen in the sub- urbs, learning of the rioting, rushed to the center of the city. They num- bered tens of thousands, armed with clubs, revolvers, hammers and iron bars. GERMAN ENVOY FLIES BACK. Takes Large Flag on Plane from Munich to Vienna. | MUNICH, Bavaria, July 18 (#).— Count Hugo Lerchenfeld-Koefering, | the German minister to Austria, who has been visiting a sick son here, is returning to Vienna by afrplane, de- spite warnings. The count says he Is going at his own risk as he is desirous of being at his post in this time of trouble. He is taking a large German flag along in the hope of impressing the demonstrators who are reported to have taken possession of the Vienna fiving field. The minister's wife is an American. She was Miss Ethel Wyman of New TROOPS REPORTED IN MUTINY. WARSAW, July 16 (#).—A Polish 2z here today from Vienna at during yesterday's riot- ing the greater part of the federal troops in Vienna refused to obey commands and turned over their arms to workers. i Only Ry drawing in troops from the provinces was it possible to gain| mastery of the situation, the flyer said, | adding that -the republican guards kept order well. ( Airplanes, he said, were being re- fused permission to leave the flying| fleld on the ground that they might | be needed to take foreign diplomats from the count IR you may go there’s al- A TRIP IN THE AUTOMOBILE— A PICNIC IN ROCK CREEK PARK— A TRIP DOWN RIVER IN THE MOTORBOAT— JUST THINK WHAT JOY THIS BRINGS TO THE FAMILY—ESPECIALLY TO THE CHILDREN. York. i 4 | "ITY HEADS APPROVE FRENZEL DISMISSAL “uspended Audit Clerk, Charged With Forging Refund Checks, Ordered Dropped. Dismissal from the District servi of Joseph W. Frenzel, chief of th audit of expenditure and income se tion the auditor's office, r mende ago by Aud Daniel J. Donovan, was approved yes terday by the Board of District Com missio ad been under suspension his arrest on a charge of forging vouchers for fraudulent re 1 real estate taxes. The date stroactive to July 12, ¥ report to the Com- A tor Donovan said “Mr. Frenzel has admitted that ho passed and approved certain forged vouchers, knowing them to be false anc forged, on the basis of which able from pub- t of Columbia. A fu submitted the auditor as tien now in progres MAY PROMOTE DEARING. Government Considering Him for Envoy to Cuba. s complete Dearing, former As- ed Maj. Gen. F Ambassador to Cuba. s secretar Ed o succeeded Gen. Havana, and in 09 Dearing was secretary v. He was afterward f the Latin American te Department and secretary of the embassy at Mexico City. Gen. Crowder Havana post an, Leonard Wood at 1906 and retirement from the September 1 During July and Aug. $5 Down A Year to Pay the Balance If you appreciate comfort and' economy in hot water service—call or phone Your Plumber—The Gas Co. R EDGAR MORRIS SALES Co. Factory Distributors 1305 G Street N. W. Main 1032-1033 Portable standing some day, somewhere, some- how, with his cou (Covyrigh PLUMBERS WILL HOLD EXCURSION TOMORROW Holy Name Society and Hospital i Group to Picnic This j/ 3 Week. Plumbers’ Local Union No. 5 will | hold its annual excursion to Chesa- peake Beach tomorrow with 2,500 per- Bons expected. The program_includes foot races, a tug of war, a base ball game, swimming and dancing. The first annual excur Holy Name Society of Holy Trinity Parish will be at the beach on Tues- day. The program includes a chariot race between married and single men. Joseph A. Kuhn is chairman of the arrangements committee. Earl P. Ready is in charge of publicity and Richard Tennyson of the District Playgrounds is in charge of sports. Three thousand persons are expect- #d to attend the annual outing of ths National Union Hospital Service As- mociation on Wednesday at the beach. Crawford Bennle is in charge of ar- a Loan with a Smile The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair —it is not neccessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. Easy to Pay VicTrROLA $25 Solves your problem for any occasion; two beautiful new models have just issued from the Victor Factory. They play all records; are light and compact. o, ECEIVED HERE Riverside Pharmacy 2134 New Ycrk Ave. N.W. Is a New Star Branch Office To insure good service to the patrons of the Star Classified section a Branch Office has been opened at the above address—where Classified Ads for The Star may be left. It is only one of the many Branch Offices in the city and nearby suburbs—all disnlaying the above sign—and rendering their services without fee; only regular rates are charged. The Star prints MORE Classified Ads. every day than all the other papers here combined. Everybody knows The Star ads bring RESULTS. “Around the Corner” is a Star Branch Office MORRIS PLAI For each $50 or fractionborrowed you agree to de- Dposit 1 per week in an Account, the fl’m“d" of which may be used to cancel the note when due. Deposits may be made on a weekly, semi- monthly or monthly basis as you prefer. Loans are pass- ed within a day or two after filing application— with few excep- tions. The model “2-60” shown in the lower corner is available in dark brown or dark blue finish and is priced at $40.00. 'You Are Invited to a Demonstration Droop’s Music House 1300 G Street MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year, though they may iven_for any period of from 3 t0 12 months. MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H St. N. W., Washington ““Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit" Y

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