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4 AIRMEN T0 STAGE ‘CARNIVAL BATILES Army Air Corps to Assemble Its Crack Detachments Here This Week. One of the greatest demonstrations of military combat aviation ever held in the National Capital will feature the annual military exposition and carnival at Washington Barracks Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday. in addition to combat formation fly- ng by 66 Army planes of all types, there will be aerial “dog fights” between two of the greatest Army pursuit pilots | the country has produced. The Army Air Corps will bring to this city from all parts of the United States crack detachments from its pur- suit, bombardment and attack squad- Tons and yill stage an aerial demon- stration exceeding even that given by the Afr Corps during the recent na- tional air races in Cleveland, the great- est all-round flying show the country has seen. All 66 planes are to be in the alr at once eacn day. passing in review before the stands in formations of the vartous types. Full combat operations in which all types of planes will demonstrate their various functions in actual war- fare will be held. Sensational Combats. Perhaps the most sensational feature of the aerial program will be aerial combats between Lieut. James H. Doo- little and Capt. Frank O'D. Hunter, re- garded as two of the Nation's finest Army pursuit pilots Lieut. Doolittle was one of the indi- vidual stars of the Cleveland air races. He joined the mythical Caterpillar Club there, saving his life by resorting to his parachute, after he had torn the wings off his pursuit plane in a scream- ing vertical power dive. An hour later, not in the least daunted by his narrew escape, he repeated the dive in front of the grandstands, to open one of ‘he wildest exhibition of acrobatics seen during the 10 days of the races. Lieut. Doolittle was winner of the Schnieder Trophy Race, the world’s premier speed event, in 1925, when he flew 232 miles per hour over the in- ternational course at Baltimore, Md He is credited with being the first pilot to fiy the famous “outside loop,” a feat which had been considered impossible up to the time he performed it Capt. Hunter, who will be Lieut. Doolittle’s opponent in the aerfal dog fights, was one of this country's lead- ing aces during the World War. e was decorated time and again for achievements at the front which testify to remarkable courage and fighting ability. In one instance. when attacked at a disadvantage by five enemy pur- suit planes. he drove two of them down and routed the three others. Capt. Hunter is a “sccond degree” member of the Caterpillar Club, having resorted to the parachute twice to save his life. He has come through several crashes, one of which sent him to the hospital for several months. | Other Famous Pilots. In addition to Hunter and Doolittle. the Air Corps will send other famous pilots into the air this weck, among them, Lieut. Albert F. Hegenberger, one of the most noted navigation and instrument experts in the service: Lieut. Lester J. Maitland, who. with Hegenberger, made the first transpa- cific flight from the United States to Hawaii, and Maj. Ralph Royce, com- mandant of the First Pursuit Group, Selfridge Field, Mich. The Air Corps will put on a series of startling demonstrations of night flying during the exnosition. Purmit planes, outlined with electric lights, will go through aerfal acrobatics and there will be aerial combats between planes and between planes and anti- aircraft batteries. The climax of the night flving will be the simulated falling, in flames, of a pursuit ulnne.! a. stunt which has been carefully worked out by Army pilots. 3 Sergt. York's Feat. ‘The big feature of the ground ex- position will be the re-enactment of the routing by Sergt. Alvin M. York, Tennessee mountaineer, of a machine- gun battalion of the crack Prussian Quard and his capture, almost single- handed, of 36 enemy machine guns and ‘This will be a part of a . “Smashing Through the which all branches of the Army will participate. The Army will bring together at the exposition Sergt. York and all of the survivors of his heroic mission. culmi- nating in what the late Marshal Ferdi- nand Foch, allied commander-in-chief. referred to as “the greatest exploit of any private soldier in the allied armies.” ‘Those present at the great military show will be: Sergt. Harry M. Parsons. the man who sent York on his mission: Sergt. Bernard E. Eatly, who was in command of the patrol. Corpl. William B. Cutting. who was also wounded, and Pvts. Percy Beardsley, Joseph Ko- notski, Patrick J. Donohue and George W. Wills. ‘There will also be present at the show Capt. E. C. B. Danforth, York's com- pany commander; Maj. G. Edward Bux- ton, jr.. who was battalion commander of York's outfit; Lieut. Col. Richard ‘Wetherill, who was regimental com- mander of the 328th Infantry at the time, and Maj. Gen. George B. Duncan, commander of the 82d Division (York's division) in the Argonne. This will be the first time there has ever been a reunion of all these men. Program on the Alr. ‘The National Broadcasting Co. will put the first day's program on the air over a Nation-wide radio chain, and will bring to this city, as announcer, Floyd Gibbons, noted war correspondent and writer, who went all through the World War as a correspondent, losing an eye in the Argonne fighting. Gov. Harry F. Byrd of Virginia will fly to this city Thursdax to agsist in open= ing the exposition. Accompanied by his staff, he will fly here from Richmond in an Army tri-motored Fokker transport plane, He will be escorted to the re- ception tent by a troup of the 3rd Cavalry from Fort Myer. ‘Tickets for the military exposition and carnival, which is for the Army relief fund, will be on sale at the following places: General admission and reserved seats, New Willard, Mayflower and ‘Wardman Park Hotels and the Amer- ican Automobile Association: regular admission, the Army and Navy Club. Droop's music store, Thirteenth and G streets; the Peoples crug stores at Fourteenth street and Park road, Eight- eenth street and Columbia road, 5550 Connecticut avenue, Fifteenth and G streets, Seventh and E streets and Thirty-first and M streets, and at the Central Y. M. C. A, Seventeenth and G streets, Reaching ‘.79111 Year, Man Wins Foot Race, Clicks Heels Thrice Special Dispatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., September 28.—S. Ellis Maloy, retired Freder- ick County farmer and dairyman,- celebrated his seventy-ninth birth- day anniversary yesterday by win- ning a foot race against Nelsén McClung, seven-year-old son of a neighbor, who was celebrating his natal day. Maloy ~declared he felt “fit and fine" after the race, run over rather | { Members of Mrs. James E. Fechel carnival. Left to right: Mrs. D. B. Ne Robert A. Hale (on plane), Mrs. H. C. Davisdon. Center: The young women who will ish dishes as enchiladas and tamales, fiyers, who will participate in the show. t's “smokes” committee for the Army therwood, Mrs. T. D. Milling, Mrs. Ira Eaker, Capt. F. O'D. Hunter, Mrs. Dclos C. Emmons, Mrs. C. B. B. Bubb, Mrs. fka Van Dorsen, Mrs. Ralph Wooten and Mrs. serve those with a taste for such Span- Jorie Sherburne, Mrs. F. B. Hayne, Miss Lucille Swift, Miss Fannie Herr, Mrs. Richard Gayle and Miss Charlotte Gibner. Lower: Lieut. James H. Doolittle and Capt. Hunter, noted Army acrobatic HOWELL TO CONFER WITH DRY LEADERS| Advice on Drafting District En- forcement Bill to Be Sought From Bureau. ‘The advice of prohibition unit officials | will be sought by Senator Howell, Re- publican, of Nebraska, on details of the | local prohibition enforcement bill which he plans to prepare for consideration of ‘Congress at the regular session. The Nebraska Senator said yesterday | he has already discussed with prohibi- tion officials his intention of intro- ducing a bill and that they agreed with | him as to the advisability of such a | proposal. | The Senator was not yet prepared to | state what the provision of the bill | will be, adding that he will be guided by the suggestions he obtains from the prohibition authorities. When he first announced several days ago that he proposed to offer a local enforcement measure he explained that he had in mind a law for the District of Colum- bia that would correspond to the laws which nearly all States have enacted to supplement the national prohibition act One of the questions which Senator Howell has been considering is how | much information officers need in the District of Columbia to obtain search warrants in prohibition ca The Senator stated several days ago he understood evidenec of a sale is re- quired and he indicated that if that is the rule he felt it would hamper officers in enforcing prohibition. Chairman Capper of the Senate Dis- trict committee announced in the past week that he would be glad to give prompt consideration to any recom- mendations that are brought forward ll:’or strengthening dry law enforcement ere. $77.50 SMALL APARTMEN Living Room, 2 Bedrooms, Kitchen and Dinette or_Slight R 1l Alteration Bedi Living Rool room, large Dining Rqom, Kitchen and Breakfast Room ALL LARGE ROOMS SMALL CASH PAYMENT TOTAL Monthly Payment int, and Operating Montbly Savins.... Net Month!y Outlay * $77.50 Also? HOLLYWOOD SLAYERS MAY BE IDENTIFIED Hardware Man Recognizes Win- dow Weight Used by Gangsters- on Realty Official. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, September 28.—Po- | lice predicted today that the identity | of gangsters who' beat and shot David Antink to death near his Hollywood, Calif. home Thursday night would be | established soon by a hardware mer- chant who identified a window weight as one he had sold the day before it was used to strike down the realty com- pany secretary. ‘The merchant. whose identity was not revealed, told police he could identify | the purchasers, and was rushed to! headquarters to view photographs of suspects. Police are searching for Morrie Moll, known as. the “phantom gunman,” who was identified by Antink as one of five men who robbed him in 1923 of $38.300 in drug-store funds. They theorized the slaying was in revenge for Antink’s part in sending Elmer Dowdy and Granville Blair to prison for the rob- bery. Moll jumped $10,000 bond while being held for extradition in St. Paul, Minn., last Spring. Several of the dozen persons who witnessed the shooting of Antink were under guard today, police said. Their identity was kept secret. More than 2,000 people attended the funeral of John Kelly, the young me- chanic of Belfast, Ireland, who was killed during the motor race at Bally- stockart recently. The mourners gath- ered outside his father's home at 19 Distillery street, Belfast, where the serv- ices were held, and.every window blind ‘| hysterical, representatives of his firm | Tailor and Wll:e E.n(] |Lives When Ordered To Leave Apartment Couple, Wealthy Until Boom in Florida, Believ ed to Have Formed Pact. | Spectal Dispatch to The Star. | NEW YORK, September 28.—Not so many years ago Giuseppe Maroni, 44- year-old proprictor of a little tailor shop at 989 Fourth avenue, was reputed to be “wealthy. Neighbors who secretly pitied him whispered among themselves of the many shops and real estate hold- | ings he once had in Manhattan, of the fine motor cars in which he and his wif2 Elisa, 38, used to ride; the Florida real esate boom that finally wrecked | him So they were surprised when they leained that Maroni and nis wife had «#ft to right: Miss Rosa Miller, Miss Mar- | been found dead from gas about 4 p.m. today in the kitchen of the little two- | room apartment they occupied in the rear of the tailor shop. Maroni was l_\'\ng under the gas stove, his wife under the gas heater. Gas was flowing from all of the jets of both appliances. Sixteen policemen from two emergency squads worked in relays for more than two hours over the two victims before physicians said that Turther effort to revive them was useless. In the apartment the police found no notes but a significant memorandum. It was a notice dated Monday of last week evicting the Maronis from the apartment they had occupied at Sixth avenue and Fortieth street. Neighbors told the police last night Matoni and his wife kept riding back and forth around the neighborhood in a battered motor car, the last remnant of their former opulence. The police be- lieve that during that ride they made a suicide pact. —— CITIZEN GROUP PLANS PROTEST MEETING Trinidad Association to Discuss Road Assessment Tomor- row Night. ‘To formulate plans for a fight against the assessment for the widening of Benning road a meeting of the Trinidad Citizens' Association will be held to- morrow night at 8 o'clock at the Wheat- ley School, Montello avenue and Neal street northeast. George J. Cleary, president of the association, has extended an invita- tion to property owners, whether mem- bers of the organization or not, to attend the meetting, and authorize an attorney, which the association has en- gaged, to conduct a protest at the hearing to be conducted before the District Supreme Court on or about October 7. The legal service will be without cost to the property owners and other protestants, Mr. Cleary has announced. Fifteen hundred property owners of the section have been assessed $113,000 in the district was drawn as a sign of sympathy. One large, one small unfurnished apartment FOR RENT by owners unable to occupy same. the Abose Anytime ‘oday " or Evening M. & R. B. Warren 1661 Crescent Pl R v ot g1 SR B gy See T DR AT A Outfit, 51 Beautiful new enameled tub, white vitreous toilet outfit and enameled lavatory, com- plete with fittings.....................$5195 for the Benning road work, according Cleary. Save Money on This Beautiful New Bathroom (Others—up to $90.) Convenient Branches .MAIN OFFICE-6" & C.Sts. SW. CAMP MEIGS-51 & Fla. Ave.N. BRIGHTWOOD-592! Ga Ave.N. ST B SR S ASHNER FORTUNE 10 BE DISBURSED Death of Conditional Heir to $3,000,000 Ends Ques- tion of Inheritance. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, September 28.—Robert Randolph Ashner was drowned last week in a bath tub in Stuttgart, Ger- many, his death ending the question of whether “Brooklyn's most eligible bachelor,” who lived at 1002 Ditmas avenue, should inherit $3,000,000, which under his father’s will was to have gone to him at the age of 40, provided he was of “good moral habits,” and had “lawful living issue.” He was 30 years old. “His drowning was purely accidental,” his mother, Mrs. Sigmund Ashner, widow of ‘the Brooklyn investment broker, was quoted as having said in a telephone conversation from Germany to New York September 19. Mrs. Ash- ner had cabled her lawyer, Norman L. Marks of Lind & Marks, 10 East Fortieth street. Mr. Marks immediately called her by telephone, but found her sald. He sailed the following day on the France and will join Mrs. Ashner in Berlin where she took the body of her son. Fortune to Be Divided. The death of Mr. Ashner, as sole heir to the estate, will cause a’ dispersal of the $3,000,000." It is understood that under the will the widow, Mrs. Sigmund Ashner, who received a life annuity of 4512,000, will get .one-fourth of "the estate, a godron, Bertram Kink of Trona, Calif., who received $6.000 a year, 'will get a like share, and the remaining half of the estate will be divided among about 20 relatives. | Ashner, indulged by wealthy parents, | knew neither care nor responsibility when the will, opened after the death | of his father, in October of 1928, left | him only an'annuity of $4.000 a year | and no inheritance unless the trustees should judge his habits moral at 40. This appeared to sober him. The youth, | who had passed only a short time in | college, and who had shunned work, | took a modest job in a Brooklyn reai| estate office. | The clause in the will whereby Mr. | Ashner was to receive only the surplus | income of the inheritance if the trustees | judged that his character was good, but he was childless because of “failure of legal issue” brought him much notoriety. | Attending his dutles at the real estate marriage. “My father's will hasn't changed my attitude toward marriage at all.” he told reporters. He said that his in- lerest in women was casual and on one occasion sald, “My mother has always | been my sweetheart.” Son Not Spared in Will. ‘The will did not spare the feeling of the son. who was named as sole heir conditionally. It consisted of 32 pages and the testator's son was the subject | of many of them. Sigmund Ashner, who died in his 65th year, came to New York a poor boy from Germany. Entering the tobacco leaf business on the Manhattan water front, he built up nis wealth in that business and real estate activities with diligence and | labor, which seemed to him to con- trast strangely with the indolence of { his_son. The quieter activities of the son are said to have warmed his father's heart in the elder man’s last days. His will offered a last chance to the son should he fall of the estate when 40 years old. | Upon any occasion on which he could convince the trustees that he was “moral and competent,” he was to in- herit the principal forthwith. The will also increased his annuity to $12,000 should he not receive the inheritance on his 40th birthday. The trustees of the estate are Mrs. Ashner and the New York Life In- surance Co. Relatives, who received | | bequests and who are expected to be the chief beneficiaries among the 30| relatives mentioned, in addition to Mrs. Ashner and Mr. Fink, are Rosalle Friend Lazarus, Broadmoor Hotel, Manhattan; Victor Friend of the same address; Joseph Friend of Elmhurst, Long Island; Ben Ashner, a brother of the testator, Memphis, Tenn.; Harry Kober of 386 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, a nephe Charles Friend of Hallidan Court, 153d street, and Victoria Gronauer, a niece, of Memphis. [SCIENTIFIC EFFORTS CUT TRAFFIC DEATHS Automobile Chamber of Commerce Bulletin Shows Boston, San Francisco Success. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 28.—The de- crease of automobile accidents in Bos- ton, Mass., and San Prancisco, Calif., is credited to the scientific study and meeting of traffic problems in a bulletin of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce issued today. Motor fatalitics have decreased 30 per cent in San Francisco, the report says. due to an elaborate traffic survey and improved facilities and regulations. Boston, which already had a low rec- ord, is below last year for the first eight months of 1929, says the report, citing a similar trafic survey there. Pittsburgh was mentioned as a third major city which had launched a “fact- finding plus caution” traffic plan. S e Employment in Canada is the highest ever known there. ditioning, hundreds of h advantage of its remar If you anticipate any ments. | office, he refused to discuss a possible Ators described him as not being “an | | ploye of the railway almost 51t years. | Now . . . home owners can pay for home improvements on monthly payments Since the introduction of Security's time payment plan for home improvement and recon- cnflblflfl them to hnve ‘he work done immed;- ately and without any cash payment. ment work to your home, let this responsible corporation finance the cost on monthly pay- SENATE EXPECTED 10 CONFIRM BOARD Administration Leaders See Assurance of Farm Group Victory. By the Associated Press. t Confirmation of all members of the Federal Farm Board is looked for by ! administration leaders unless gome un- cted charge of a serious nature is lodged against any of the eight men named by President Hoover. Opposition on the floor of the Senate to Chairman Legge and possibly two or three other members of the board is considered inevitable. There is held to be no sign at present, however, of opposition based on past or present connections which might be construed as making any board member unfit to serve. | Administration leaders base their opinion that all will be confirmed upon assurances given them by various Sen- ators in what might be considered the opposition groups. Content to Rest. A number of prominent Democrats and Western independent Republicans have indicated that while they believe the board will prove ineffective, $hey are not disposed to vote against its confirmation, because they regard the difficulties to lie in the farm relle!' legislation rather than in the men | named to carry out its provisions. A number of Senators, on the other hand, both Republican and Democrat, have evinced a desire to confim the | board as soon as possible in the belief | that it has in view a constructive, long- range program for the relief of agri- culture that will be carried forward more rapidly once the board is in- trenched in office. Hearing Close Slated. Chairman McNary expects to close the agriculture committee hearings on the nominations Wednesday. The board members will be voted upon promptly by the committee, but McNary does not belleve Senate debate on confirmation can open before the following Monday or Tuesday. ‘The agriculture committee still must examine four commissioners, of whom Carl Williams of Oklahoma, who repre- sents cotton on the board, and Sam R. McKelvie of Nebraska, who speaks for wheat, apparently will be questioned at length. Williams will appear tomorrow. After he was appointed several Southern Sen- lout-and-out cotton man.” and Senators | Smith of South Cerolina, Heflin of | Alabama and Ransdell of Louisiana, all | Democrats, have indicat they will examine him closely. Willfams has been an official of the American Cotton Growers' Co-operative Exchange and the publisher of farm journals. Clese:Quiz' Expected. ‘The committee will question McKel- ! vie Tuesday. Coming to the board as | the representative of wheat, over whose | problems there has been much contro- versy, he also appears to be slated for close questioning from Senators in | whose States the wheat surplus has | presented a serious economic situation. ‘Willlams was indorsed by Oklahoma's Senators. one of whom—Thomas—is a | member of the Senate commitiee, but | McKelvie had no indorsement from | either Senator Norris, also a member of the committce, or Senator Howell. Chairman McNary believes the hear- ings can be finished Wednesday by examining both Willlam F. Schiiling of Minnesota, representing dairy products and C. C. Teague of California, repre. senting fruits and vegetables, TRAINMEN HONORED. “0l1d-Timers" of N. & W. Railroad| Given Insignia. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROANOKE, Va., September 28.—More than five centuries, 512 years, of acy tive raflway service were represented by 10 “old timers.” who met here in the office of President A. C. Needles gt the Norfolk & Western Railway Co. 0. They came to receive from President Needles, the gold, diamond-mounted in- signia of the Norfolk & Western Vet- erans’ Association, which is presented by the railway to members of that as- soclation who have given 50 or more years of active service to the Norfolk & Western Railway. Only one of the ten veterans present is now in active service, General Supt. James T. Carey, who has been an em- China has a new law placing the ad- ministration of highways under the minister of railways. SUPERIOR GARAGES IN ALL MATERIALS ROBERTO ORTIZ GRIS. —Star Staff Photo. HAWLEY'S BALLOON RECORD YET HOLDS Referee of Gordon Bennett Cup Race Won Laurels in 1910 Flight. 7 the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, September 28.—When Alan R. Hawley, as referee, started the balloons of six nations in the race for the Gordon Bennett Cup here today there were recollections of the dramatic race of 19 years ago, when he set an American record that has endured. With Augustus Post of New York as his aide, Hawley soared away from St. Louis in 1910 as pilot of the America II. Unheard from after several days, they became the objects of one of the greatest searches ever conducted in North America and appeared after hope bad been almost abandoned, to recount the dramatic story of their flight of 1,173 miles that ended on a mountai side in the isolated region of Quebec. The America II like the rest of the balloons in the race, soared north from St. Louis into Canada. Hawley and Post had traveled 1,173 miles when they were caught in a severr sno storm and heavy wind whick. threal ened to carry them to the coast of Lab- rador. They brought the balloon down 2fter much difficulty. basket and the next morning set out to reach civilization and report their safe landing. For eight days they struggled through the wilderness. a broken leg suffered by Hawley on the journey im- peding their progress. Finally they reached Chicoutimi, Quebec, on an im- provised raft and sent out word of their safety. Hawley and Post not only won the event, but set up the record that no balloon has since surpassed in America. Greens Fees Cut. Because of the great exodus of golf- jers from London in August, leading courses that gave reduced greens fees after 4:30 o'clock in the afternoo: They spent the night in the balloon | MEXICAN ARRIVES FOR ORATORY MEET Roberto Ortiz Gris _First to Come for International Contest in October. Advance rumblings of the oratorical combat which will be heard 'round the world on the night of October 26 in the finals of the Fourth International Or: torical Contest were heard here yes- terday, following the arrival of the } first of the nine forensic representatives of 21 nations who will compete in the | world finals in Constitution Hall. | Roberto Ortiz Gris, 18-year-old win- |ner of Mexico’s national oratorical . contest, is the first of the contenders [for the high school speaking champion- \ ship of the world to reach Washington and comes with the hope of repeating the victory his country’s spokesman won last year. Landed Last Tuesday. Young Ortiz Gris landed in New York last Tuesday with James Leonard Butsch, Washington's contender for the American champlonship last May, and the other American finalists who were returning from a three-month tour of | South America. The Mexican accom- panied the boys and girls from the United States on the tour and aided | them greatly in their study of Spanish as they trooped through one Spanish- speaking country after another. And it was during that three months to- gether that Roberto’s speaking abill was discovered, weighed and set down s “‘wonderful” by his American friends. | _Roberto is a diminutive fellow. He'd scarcely reach the shoulders of last | year’s victor but he has much of the same independence and Latin fire which characterized that speaker. | He is a fifth-vear secondary school student in the city of Oaxaca, in Oax- aca State and has one more year of high-school work before entering a Mexican university for study which will prepare him for a diplomatic career. As Roberto explained here yesterday in broken English which he has picked up only since his association during the Summer with the United States orators, the Mexican school system provides a six-year elementary-school course and A six-year high-school cours Hence his position in his school this vear cor- responds with that of an American high school senior. Not Homesick. | While in Washington, Roberto will stay with Mexican friends. He plans to spend his time “learning the American Capital, its people, its buildings, itself.” | as he put it. With no members of his | family here and known only by the family with which he is living, together with his deficiency in English. Roberto is far from homesick. He grasps his | opportunities as rare for: “To be in diplomacy. T must know English and French and my own lan- | Generally held in the Washington | Auditortum, the international contest finals this year will be staged in Con- stitution Hall opened since the last con- test by the Daughters of the American | Revolution. Nine contestants will ap- pear on the program which is not yet completed. The contenders will be an= nounced at later intervals by Randolph Leigh, director general of the oratorical contest. | Following the recent decree providing | higher import_duties on flour into Bo- livia, several flour mills are being con= structed there. The Bank that Makes You a Loan with a Smile THE L MORRIS PLA The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair —it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. TIN ROOFS PORCHES BUILT WE_BUILD. REBU REMODE! REPAIR ANYTHI AND TERMS ONEBRAKER CONSTRUCTION L, GIVE CG ome owners have taken kable features. 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Ave. & Upshur St. Is a Star Branch Office [ ReceivED HERE Stop wondering how you are going to supply that want and put a Classified Advertisement in The Star—and you will soon accomplish it. ABOVE SIGN s DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES “Around a Star Copy for The Star Classified Section may be left at any Star Branch Office — there’s one in your neighborhood, whether you live in town or the nearby sub~ urbs, No fees are charged Branch Office service; regular rates. X 311199 Je The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater volume of Classified ~ Advertising every day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best results. the Corne;" is Branch Office