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B 0 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, DE EMBCR 11, 1929 SHELBY ANDKELLY HEARING SOON DUE Charges Growing Out of Mc-; Pherson Death Inquiry Are Ready to Be Served. The charges being drawn up by the corporation counsel's office against In- | spector Willlam S. Shelby and Lieut. , Edward J. Kelly for their alleged bungling of the investigation of the| death of Mrs. Virginia McPherson last | Beptember 14 were expected to be served | i upon the two officers late today. Robert E. Lynch and Walter L. Fowler, the two assistant corporation attorne assigned to prosecute the case, have been busy for several days interviewing Witnesses and consulting Jaw books. Corporation Counsel Willlam W. Bride, to whom the prosecution staff will report before it completes its draw- ing up of the charges, said today he ex- pected the charges would follow along the line of the report that he and Maj. Donald A. Davison made to the Dis- trict Commissioners on the matter. He said he did not expect any charges not contained in the Bride-Davison report to be made, but that, on the contrary, he expected some of them to be omitted since the report alluded to carried no- tice that no testimony had been secured to back up some of the charges. Both Officers Transferred. Inspector Shelby, who was chief of | the Detective Bureau, and Lieut. Kelly, | who was head of the homicide squad, were transferred to other posts October 3, following receipt by the Commission- ers of a report by the July grand jury criticizing the_two for inefliciency in | handling the McPhereon investigation. | The men were transferred without a hearing, but when the October grand | jury returned an “ignoramus” in the McPherson death case, the Commission- ers adopted a_recommendation made by the Bride-Davison board that the men be given a public trial. This trial probably will be held Mon- day at the sixth precinct station, al- thought the date has not been definitely set. A special trial board will hear the case. It consists of Assistant Engi- neer Commissioner Layson E. Atkins, chairman; Capt. Herbert C. Whitehurs chief engineer of the District, and J. Gordon, District sanitary engineer. Allen Asked for Statement. Walter Fowler, assistant corporation | counsel, who will conduct the Shelby- | Kelly hearing. has requested former Po- liceman Robert J. Allen to appear at his office today to give information in re- gard to the charges, gleaned in his siingle-handed investigation into the ! McPherson case. Allen claims he will bring charges | against the two police officials at his | lecture in the Auditorium Sunday night ~_that will make “whitewash” impossible. He has also stated that he will appear at the trial, where Shelby faces 7 counts : and Kelly 18 of alleged dereliction of duty, to bear out his contention that important McPherson evidence was de- | stroyed. Fowler is holding a series of confer- ences with witnesses today. Reporters | | ¢ who covered the McPherson story also are being requested to appear. WOMAN FILES ACTION T0 SHARE BIG ESTATE| Report Says Claimant for Part of | $9,000,000 Sets Herself Up as “Only Legal Wife.” By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, December 11.— The Examiner says today that a peti- tion seeking a share in the $9,000,000 estate of the late W. H. Ochsner, archi- tect and former Stanford University in- structor, had been filed in Superior Court, here by Mrs. Prances A. Ochsner of La Crosse, Wis. Filing of the document, the paper as- serted, brought to light a secret Wi consin _ University romance of more than 25 years ago. Ochsner died in April, 1925, little known and possessed of only moderate means. But he owned extensive leases in the Kettleman hills oil field, which were developed soon afterward, making | him a posthumous millionaire. Claim- ants to the estate have since multiplied. Mrs, Ochsner declared herself to have been the architect’s first and, there- fore, “only legal wife.” Others in the contest for the fortune include Mrs, Hilda Carling Ochsner of San Francisco, to whom Ochsner ostensibly was m: ried when he died, and Mrs. Nancy Ochsner Baldy, who is pressing a civil claim on the ground that Ochsner con- cealed from her his vast ofl holdings. DR. MORGAN GIVEN HONOR BY DOCTORS| President of American Medical| Association Guest Tonight of D. C. Society. The Medical Society of the District | of Columbia will hold ‘a special meeting tonight at the society's headquarters, 1718 M street, in honor of Dr. William Gerry Morgan, president-elect of the American Medical Society. Dr. John A. Foote, president of the society, will preside and speakers will | include Rev. W. Coleman Nevils, presi- dent of Georgetown University; Dr. Cloyd H. Marvin, president of George Washington ~ University; Maj. Gen. Merritte W. Ireland, surgeon general of the Army; Maj. Julius I. Peyser, president of the District of Columbia Bar Association, and Dr. Henry Cook Macatee, delegate of the American Medical Association. Among the notable guests will be Dr. willlam S. Thaver of Baltimore, for- mer president of the American Medical Association; Commissioner Proctor L. Doughtery, Surgeon Gen. Hugh S. Cum- ming of the United States Public Health Service; Rear Admiral Charles E. Riges, surgeon general of the Navy: Edward J. Murphy, president of the Board of Trade; Gen. Anton Stephan, president of the Merchants and Manu- facturers' Association: Comdr. Joel T. Boone, Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, president of thé Washington Academy of Sciences: George C. Havenner, president of the Federation of Citizens' Associations, and Mrs. John A. Foote, president of the Woman’s Auxiliary of the Medical So- clety of the District of Columbia. The committee on arrangements con- * ists of Dr. Frank Leech, Dr. Wilfred M. Barton and Dr. Coursen B. Conklin EUCHARISTIC MEET. Congress Being Attended by 3,000 Delegates in Philippines. MANILA, December 11 (#).—The first | natfonal Eucharistic Congress in the Phillippines opened here today with ap- proximately 3,000 delegates attending. The conclave will continue until De- cember 15. The gathering attracted thousands of | persons from all parts of the islands Archbishop Michael J. O'Doherty of Manila, Auxiliary Archbishop William Finnenan and other dignitaries of the Roman Catholic Church received the delegates at the archbishop’s palace. A message was received from Cardi- nal Gasparri, papal secretary of state, expressing the pleasure of Pope Pius at “the holding the congress. Shipping men of Los Angeles Harbor have chosen Gladys O'Connell as this year's most attractive Pacific Ocean traveler. —Assoclated Press Photo. QUICK ACTION SEEN ONMERGER PLANS {Capper Believes Congress’ Consideration of Move Will Be Expedited. Chairman Capper of the Senate Dis- trict committee expressed the belief today that consideration of the new street railway merger plan by Congress will be expediate by reason of the fact that some of the questions raised when the matter was up last year are left for settlement between the utilities commission and the companies under the pending plan. ‘The Senator expressed this view in a statement issued just after he had in- troduced the new merger resolution, transmitted several days ago by the utilities commission. “The Public Utilities Commission has placed before this committee an in- telligent solution to the problem of street car merger in the District,” Sen- ator Capper said. *“The commission's plan, incorporated in a joint resolution, was introduced in the Senate by me today. The way now is open to re- sumption of discussion of this complex subject. “I believe the commission has pre- sented a plan that safeguards the in- terests of the public and the companies alike. It has my hearty approval. “Of course, it is imperative that both sides make certain concessions. With- cut compromise we never will have a merger. A little sacrifice now will mean great benefits in the future, “The important task is to obtain the approval of Congress to a fair and well defined merger agrecment. I will place this resolution before the District committee at its first meeting. I think that action on the resolution will be expedited by the fact that a number of vexing phases of the original unifica- tion plan, which have been eliminated in the agreement submitted by the commission, are to be settled between the commission and the companies, without respect to Congress.” P SUSPECT IDENTIFIED DETECTIVE DECLARES Man Who Confessed to Slaying Prof. A. H. Johnson Is Held to Have Been His Companion. By the Assoclated Press. ATLANTA, Ga., December 11.—Chief of Detectives A. Lamar Poole announced last night that E. L. Hardegree had been “positively identified” as the com- panion of Prof. Alexander Hamilton Johnson the night the teacher was slain, and that the case “would be ready for presentation to the grand jury Friday.” Doubt of the story told by Hardegree, a 38-year-old cigar maker, that he killed her brother, was expressed by Mrs. J. R. Wakefield, after she had confronted the self-accused slayer at police headquarters. J. W. Wikle of Athens, Ga., is held without bail on an indictment charging him with murder for the slaying of Prof. Johnson. John H. Hudson, assistant solicitor general, sald Wikle would remain in jail until tried in court, as nothing in Hardegree's confession contradicted evidence against the other man. Army Carries Own Water. WEST POINT, N. Y., December 11 (P).—The Army is to take no chances on sun-kissed water. The foot ball party will take half a freight car of its own spring variety when it leaves December 18 to play Stanford. Penny-in-the-slot machines were used in London coffee houses 100 years Start Paying Feb. 1st To Our Patrons Whatever you may purchase here now will be gladly charged to your account and no pay- ment required until February 1, 1930. You will find this a great convenience at Christmas time when there is always a demand upon you for an extra amount of ready cash. Come | | and see how many of your presents can be purchased from us. Select them now, while the lines are complete, and let us mark them for immediate or later delivery. GROGAN'S 817-823 Scventh St.N.W. POLAR FLIGHT TOLD | BY METEOROGRAPH |Instrument in Plane Traces Temperature Record From 27 Above to 15 Below. BY RUSSELL OWEN. By Radio to The Star and New York Timer. LITTLE AMERICA, Antarctica, De- cember 11.—An intcresting feature of the South Polar flight was the record cbtained by means of a meteorograph which was installed in the rear of the fuselage of the Floyd Bennett plane. A constant trace of temperature, pres- sure and humidity was recorded in in- delible ink from the start of the flight until the landing was made back at Little America. The instrument tsed was one of a type devised by Dr. Charles F. Marvin, chief of the United States Weather Bu- reau, a type which has been used vx- tensively throughout the United States in research of the upper air with Kkites. It was ane of two such instruments which have seen service here at the camp both with kites and with air- planes. The meteorograph was installed by William G. Haines and Henry Har- rison, the meteorologists of the expedi- tion, in the rear of the fuselage of the plane, behind the chart table, and was connected to the outside by a short pipe and a neck of heavy windproof mate- rial so that a strong forced stream of alr passed through the screening tube whenever the plane was in motion. Sufficient circulation and exposure was thus insured for the marking ele- ments. The temperature, pressure and humidity pens traced independently on the same record sheet, which winds about a slowly revolving drum contain- ing clockwork. Time Recorded With Altitude, Aside from the meteorological data obtained, the beauty of the record lies in that it gives a graphic picture of the flight at a glance. Exact figures must await the careful computation of the calibration tests which were made on each element prior to the flight. However, there are several features which stand out prominently and may be_described roughly. ‘The pressure trace shows the exact time of the take-off at 3:29 p.m. (10:29 New York time), the steady passage southward over the barrier at an alti- tude of about 2,000 feet, and at 8:18 p.m. the dive to within a few hundred feet of ine surface, which was made in order to drop mail and important pictures to the geological party. From this point the climb was sharp and steady, the elevation becoming more than 10,000 feet by 9:15 p.m. dur- ing the turbulent passage through the mountain peaks. Rise, Then Drop, in Temperature. ‘The temperature, which had risen steadily from 14 degrees above zero, Fahrenheit, at Little America, to 26 degrees as the dog teams were reached, had now fallen below the zero mark. The last boost of about 500 feet is shown as the plane was eased over the hump of the mountains to strike out over the level polar plateau to the south. The temperature continued to fall slowly until the Jlowest point reached on the flight, 15 degrees below zero, was recorded in the neighborhood of the Pole itself. With the decreasing load in the plane, the return over the plateau was made at a slightly higher altitude an additional rise of 500 feet was shown at 3:12 a.m., about 40 minutes out from the mountains. Relative Humidity Stayed Low. From the mountains a slow, steady descent was made until the big ship came to rest at the mountain base on the Barrier at 4:45 am. Here again the temperature was high, 23 degrees above zero on the surface and 27 a few hundred feet aloft. The relative humidity had remained low, but with frequent fluctuations dur- ing the course of the flight. At 5:57 am. the plane again took to the air, pulling up to 2,000 feet, and flew between this altitude and 3,500 feet the balance of the way into Little America, where the final landing was made at 10:09 a.m. In addition to the recorded data se- cured, Harold June made observations of sky and weather, and Comdr. Byrd determined the wind direction and ve- Holiday Shoppers Urgedto ‘Take Hom¢’ Small Purchases Since small packages are easily misplaced or lost in the rush of delivery work that comes in the Christmas holiday season, despite utmost exercise of care, seasonal shoppers are urged by Edward D. Shaw, secretary of the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Association, “to tote home your small pur- chases whenever possible.” The admonition, Mr. Shaw ex- plains, is prompted by an effort on the part of the association to decrease the number of mistakes and disappointments which usual- ly attend the closing days of every Christmas shopping season. A check of the downtown pe- destrian-traffic during the height of the shopping season in sev- eral of the larger cities showed that nearly 90 per cent of women d | ton, Miss Janet Houtz, Ord Preston, locity by means of a drift indicator at frequent intervals during the flight. The accuracy of this complete drift was def- initely proved by the perfect landfall- whith was made upon the return from the Pole. (Copyright, 1920.) By the New York Times Company and The 8t. Louis Post-Dispatch. - All rights for publication reserved through- out the world. England has an average of 4,000 di- | Lorces a year. £, 2.8.8 8.8 ¢ **:k**; u;:- Can Supply X verything to 1 Enclose Your % Back Porch We have all the necessa »* matertal, including window rames windows, Celotex. Sheetrock. paint and’ hardware, Small Orders Given Careful Delivery Charge J. Frank Kelly, Inc. Lumber — Mil Faints — Co; a Building Supplies Jook d ok de ek ek ok ok * : | * * * * * X * * " * * Interwoven I Socks NEW YORK Sunday, December 22 Special Through Train Direct to Penna. Station, 7th Avenue and 32d Street Leave Washington.........1 Arrive Newark (Market 8t) “""New York (Penna. Sta.) Returning, leave New York 5:1 Hudson Terminal 5:10 P.M.." Newark (Market Street) 5:38 P.M. ALL STEEL EQUIPMENT Pennsylvania Railroad 2:30 543 8:05 AM, AM AM PM Wi were carrying small bundles. This is nearly three times the average number during a normal shop- ping period, Mr. Shaw reports. VISITING NURSES | REPORT ACTIVITIES Increase Noted in Work for November Over Same Month Year Ago. Reports indicating an increase in ac- tivity were made yesterday at a meet- ing of the board of managers of the Instructive Visiting Nurse Society. It was revealed that representatives of the organization made 9,540 visits to a to- tal of 2,780 patients during November, an increase of 642 visits and 628 pa- tients over the same month last year. The service by districts was: Head- quarters office, Star Building, 1,503 pa- tients, 5,108 visits; Southeast, 1105 Pennsylvania avenue southeast, 297 pa- tients, 823 visits; Brightwood, 5331 Georgia avenue, 356 patiepts, 1,142 vis- its; Georgetown, 1523 Wis€onsin avenue, 322 patients, 60 visits; Anacostia, 2303 Nichols nue southeast, 302 pa- tients, 987 visits. Orthopedic Cases Reported. In addition, reports disclosed that 132 orthopedic cases had been carried dur- ing November and 290 home visits made to_such_patients Mrs. Charles Wilson, chairman of the supply committee, announced there had been much activity in getting supplies in order for the rush of Winter work. Mrs. Wilson said much aid had been re- ceived from the Red Cross. She made an appeal for additional workers to at- tend a meeting to be held Friday. Members Present. Those present were: Mrs. Whitman Cross, presiding: Dwight Clark, Mrs. Keith Merrill, Mrs. David Potter, Mrs. Frank E. Weeden, Miss Julia Mat- tis, Mrs. Leonard A. Block, Mrs. John M. Sternhagen, Mrs. Charles C. Glover, Mrs. John W. Davidge, Miss Virginia Hunt, Mrs. Charles F. Wilson, Miss Elizabeth Bryan, Mrs. Cresson Newbold, George Hewitt Myers, Charles W. Pimper, Radford Moses, Miss Cora Barry, Mrs. Charles B. Crawford, Mrs. George R. Lockwood, Mrs. J. Davis Brodhead. Mrs. George B. McClellan, Mrs. J. W. Turrentine, Mrs. Ord Pres- Mrs. G. Brown Miller and Miss Ger- trude H. Bowling, director. Going to Santo Domingo. By Cable to The Star. HAVANA, December 11.—Charles B. Curtis, counsel to the United States embassy here, will leave for Santo Domingo the latter part of the month to take over his new duties as United States Minister to Santo Domingo. et S Facial surgery, including the remodel- ing of injured noses, ears and lips, was known in Italy as long ago as 1456. SHOP EARLY i MAIL EARLY BUSINESS 5 OUND SCHWAB DECLARE Foresees Wholesome Expan- sion Without Artificial Trade Stimulation. By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, December 11.—Charles M. Schwab tapped on the chest of American industry last night and pro- nounced it sound. ‘The steel mag- nate, in an ad- dress broadcast by radio from the an- nual meeting of the Illinois Manu- facturers’ Associa- tion, cast a back- ward glance at the “Wall Sireet af- fair” and the sub- sequent confer- ences of President Hoover with the Nation's business leaders, and then looked forward toward a “whole- some expansion of Charles M. Schwab. business without the evils of artifi- cial stimulation.” Justifies Healthy Outlook. Mr. Schwab declared that steel's three biggest customers—the automo- bile, railroad and building industries— seemed to justify a healthy outlook. Besides the country’s normal growth, which he believed the stock market depression could not seriously retard, he saw in the replacement factor in these primary industries alone a very substantial market for themselves and for steel. “Industry generally, the machinery of production,” he said, “is better equip- {;d and more intelligently managed | at any time in the past. wing to long-continued good nil-‘ road service and the ability of manu- facturers to get their needs promptly filled and their products promptly dis- tributed, there are no disturbing stocks of goods or raw materials, and man- agement In the meanwhile has become | increasingly better able to adjust pro- duction to current demands. * * ¢ Maintain Buying Power. “Moreover—and this is the most im- portant aspect—there is today a greater and more widespread recognition on the part of all concerned, stockholders, management, labor and government, that our high standards of living con- stitute the bulwark of our prosperity and that the purchasing power of the people who buy our goods and services must be maintained.” Production of steel this year, Mr. Schwab said, will probably exceed the 1928 production by 10 per cent. . STATESMAN IS ILL. ROME, December 11 (#).—Tomasso Tittoni, former minister for foreign af. fairs, is gravely ill and the physicians :;: %! opinion that he may not live out ay. The former statesman, who has drop- | ped from political life in recent years, is being attended by several physicians, including Prof. Ettore Marchiafava, a | consulting physician to Pope Pius. The doctors issued a builetin at noon saying the patient’s condition was un- changed. He was stricken at 6 o'clock last night by a cerebral attack, result- ing in paralysis on the right side. WAAAADANAAD £ € % Lowest Prices! S 64 C. Sta SW S"&FlaAeNE 5021 Ga AveNW Out of Respect for Our Fellow Associate Mr. Charles Doors and Sash WINTERMAYDELAY BRICE CATE WORK |Arlington Memorial Span Granite Contractors Await Good Weather. Winter may delay the laying of | granite for the water gate steps nnd; parkway approach at the Washington end of Arlington Memorial Bridge, in the shadow of the Lincoln Memotial. Officials of the Natonal Construction Co. of Atlanta, Ga, which has the $368,000 job in hand, said today that it is necessary that Washington have good weather before the granite can be laid. Several carloads of granite now are on hand, stored at Twenty-sixth and B streets, on the banks of the Potomac River, waiting to be set into the water gate, where small boats can land, and the parkway approach, which will be a driveway for motorists coming down out of scenic Rock Creek Park. The recent cold snap delayed oper- ations somewhat and now there is a possibility that with continued cold weather no granite will be laid until the Spring. The officials explained that cold weather affects the concrete, on which the granite will be laid, and it is necessary that the weather be SOL HERZOG, Ine. Gifts. oo i ... for MEN Dressing Gowns Blanket Robes 55.85 1 0.00 Flannel Robes $ at... Silk Robes from... 12%,,°35 Sol— HERZOG —Ine. Cor 9th at ‘F’ McCormick Who Died Suddenly We Will Close Thursday Afternoon, December THE WASHINGTON WOODWORKING CO. @he Foening Star ADVERTISENENTS [ RECEIVED HERE Parker’s Pharmacy—N. Cap. & R. I. Ave. Is a Star Branch Office B ot Just think of the advantage 12, 1929 of placing your wants before practically everyone in and around Washington through a Classified Advertisement in The Star. It’s a section of the paper that is almost univer- nlly. read and therefore pro- ductive of prompt and satis- factory results. Copy .for The Star Classi- fied Section may be left at any of the Branch Offices—there’s one in your neighborhood. There are no fees in connec- tion with Branch Office serv- ice; only regular rates are charged. THE ABOVE SIGN s DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES 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 Corner” is Branch Office mild to insure proper laying and drying of the concrete. ‘The National Construction Co. has done some excavating work on the shore of the Potomac River, just north of Arlington Memorial Bridge, to get the land in shape for the laying of the | granite The contractor now is en- gaged in making wooden forms to Ee used in fashioning the water gate steps and the bridge plaza. Bandits Rob Paymaster. By Cable to The Star. POSARIO, Argentina, December 11.— Payroll bandits yesterday attacked Olindio Figueroa, paymaster for the Rosario Railroad, and escaped with 90,000 paper pesos. ‘While the recent annual automobile show in Paris was not so successful as usual, the motor-cycle exhibition, which immediately followed, eclipsed all pre- vious like events. * b DEDICATION EXERCISES 'AT NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE Mrs. Wilbur John Carr, president of | Neighborhood House, will preside at the | dedication exercises at the remodeled | crafts studios tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. The program will be held at the house, 470 N street southwest. Mrs. George Cyrus Thorpe will rt for the house committee and will light the birchbark fire. Commissioner Sid- ney F. Taliaferro has been asked to make a short talk. Elwood Street, Community Chest di- | rector, will make a short talk and Mrs. Shuman, regent of the Federal OCity ghflpler of the D. A. R, will present a ag. Mussolini’s title of “Duce” is & cor- | ruption of the Italian word “duca,” whlr'h means a duke, commander or chief.’ Think! 'Government Clerks — suppose you were in this fix—what’s paying the cost? This non-cancellable policy—planned especially and written exclusively for Government clerks—both men and women—will take ca: from illness or accident. re of any financial burden What’s more, it will pro- vide for compensation upon retirement—and leave a competency for your dependents after your death. Are you in a financial position to withstand a seige of enforced idleness due to casualty or sickness? Will your retirement pay be sufficient to live on comfortably ? Is the family provided for in case of your death? Vital questions, good people, that ought to be faced NOW—and. arrangements future. made that will insure the Here’s an unusual opportunity that is yours—at very small cost—and to make it easier still I will ar- range the premium payments on convenient terms, Read what the benefits are— No such insurance has ever been obtainable before —and you must be in the employ of the Government to get it. Temporary Total Disability. | $100.00 to $300.00 per month for sickness for unlimited time. $100.00 to $300.00 per month for acci- dents for unlimited time. Income at Age 70. A guaranteed month- ly income of $54.00 for SIXTY MONTHS and as much longer live, you p CANNOT outlive income, or FIVE THOUSAND IN CASH, MONEY THROWN AWAY, BUT SAVED. the Income in Case of Disability. If totally and per- manently disabled, physically or mentally before age 60, you will receive $250.00 per month for LIFE or will increase at age 70 by payment of $5,000.00 in CASH or additional monthly an- nuity of $54.00. Now fill out Guaranteed Pro- tection of Your Beneficiary. In event of your death before 70, FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS. In Case of Acci- dental Death. Ordinary accident, $10,000.00. Specia $15,000.00. F or Accidental Loss of Both Eyes, Both Hands, Hand and Foot, “Both Feet, a monthly income of $250.00 per month for LIFE and in ADDITION at age 70 $5,000.00 in CASH or an additional monthly annuity of $54.00. Hospital and Sur- gical Indemnity. Hospital expenses u to $300.00 a muII: will be paid for a period of six consecu- tive months. Reimbursement money actu ed for surgical o tion up to $1,500.00. this coupon for d. and mail it —and let me give you the full details, cost, etc. W. Werber, Division Manager, Federal Life Ins. Co. of Chic: Washington, D. C. Phone National 0978. I am interested in your Co: U. S. Government Employes. Business Address.. Date of Birth....... | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I | | L go, Il 707-9 District National Bank Bldg. mpany's Combined Endowment and Non-cancellable Life Income Policy, issued exclusive to «. Occupation. ..Home Address. Month.........Year...cooun B T S— | W. Werber District Manager District National Bank Bldg. National 0978