Evening Star Newspaper, December 30, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BACHELOR TMENTS I=Nl5!llol¥ THE MADISON 1739 ‘Eye Street Delightful Location 1and2 r“;ll and bath, nt Mana, District 8548, .‘" . L.W.GROOMES 1719 Eve Street National 1768 SPECIAL NOTICES. ENTH STREET BAVINGS BANK—THE annual meeting of the stockholders of this bank, for the election of directors and such other business as may Dro) fore the meeting, will be hel 3 o'clock p.m. on Tuesday. 1931 JOHN M. DE_MARCO, Cashier. NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE annual meeting of the stockholders of the Columbia Realty & will_be hel {ugh other, business as may properly come el fore said meeting. . JEssE H. MITGHELL. President. THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOCK- holders of the Atlantic Building Company, orporated. will be held at the office of 3, 119 South Fairfax st, Alex- andria, on Thursday, January 13, 1931, at 11 o'clock am. This meeting is for the glection "of oficers and business transac- ons. ATLANTIC BUILDING COMPANY. INC. M. PARKER, Jr., Presi€ent, RNDON. VA.. DECEMBER , \> notify the public tuae 'L o 15 10 longer one of the firni Operating s Il fr the town of Herndon, in Fairfax sunty, Va. known as_the Owens Milling Y FTRENARY, Sr. W. M. McNAIR, SFICE OF, THE FIREMENS INSURANCE Jompany of Washington and Georsetow h st. end Louisiana ave. n.w. The stock- iders of the Firemen's Insurance Company " Washington and Georgeiown will meef e Sffice on Monday, January 5, 1931, purpose of electing thirteen directors for ing vear. Polls open from 11 . ALBERT W. HOWARD. Secreta FFICE OF W. W. on. chiropodists. 13th e open 8:30 a.m. to contin! 4 THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOOK- holders of the Washington Railway & Eiec- tric Company, for the purpose of electing a Board of Diréctors to serve for the ensuing year and to transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting, will "G stlcets orthwest, Washingegn. D. G and_C streets northwest, Wa 5 . n Saturday, January 11, 1931, at 12 o'clock n. X In connection therewith, the books for the rhe";llnle of hnlln'e December 31, x’o:w : . | generally. ISTEROL HELD KEY TOTUBERCULOSIS Tubercle Bacilli Believed to Take Vital Alcohol From Human Cells. (Contipued From First Page) the year 1989, for then he will be closest to the sun. His own year, the time he t | takes to swing around the sun, is 247 years, 8 months and about 10 days. His mass, which may indicate closely how his size compares with earth, , | ranges between about three-tenths more to three-twentieths less than earth's. m. f | Pluto’s mean distance from the sun is approximately 3,679,000,000 miles. Petroleum has been produced at the University of Minnesota by use of elec- tricity, by ultraviolet radiation and by alpha radiation, the latter being the discharge of helium particles by radio- active elements. Explaining the significance of this work, Dr. S. C. Lind, director of the School of €hemistry, said it is possible that petroleum is created in the earth's crust by emanations from mildly radio- active rocks which are distributed quite He said he prefers the usual tkeory that heat produced petroleum. Alpha-Ray Petroleum, The alpha-ray petroleum would be made from ineri, inorganic substances rather than the organic, that is, plant and animal substances. He quoted cal- culations of other scientists to show that the amount of petroleum in the petrolia fleld of Texas is not too great to be accounted for by the alpha-ray hy- Ppothesis. . He said Minnesota studies have sug- gested for the first time “direct means of building up heavier hydrocarbon molecules from lighter, ones in con- trast with the generally known proc- ess of breaking down heavy to light ones by thermal means, as illustrated by cracking.” An advance in long-range weather predicting was reported by Dr. Dins- more Alter of the University of Kansas. By analyzing the rainfall records of 91 years of the British Isles he published test predictions of semi-annual rainfall. d-| This was done several years ago and ital stock of $3,400.000, payable January | , to the stockholders of record 1831, to of rec tra dividend of 2 per cent on said cal le‘il{:;l. "Il;:hle to pl:ld stockholders e same date. The annual meeting of the stockholders of sald now checks upon the accuracy of those predictions have led to corrections in Lhem:nethod that promise still closer results. “Sampling Public Opinion.” “Sampling public opinion” through r | polls similar to those conducted by the Literary Digest might be a valuable aid y. | to democracy if taken over by the Gov- N ‘The fed 30 'CORCORAN THOM, President. FREDERICK P. H. SIDDONS, de29,30.31 Secretary. OTICE 18 _HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE usl meeting of the stocknolders of the ny for the election ensuing vear ernment, it was suggested by Walter P. Willcox of Cornell University. He said such polls “exemplify a novel and valuable method of measuring both public opinion at a given moment upon any simple question in which the citi- zen is deeply interested and the changes in that opinion during a period of time. If this sampling method should be re- fined and extended and perhaps taken over by the Government, it might aid in h | the maintenance and extension of demo- 13 - . e N *1631. 8t 10:45 o'clock il be open ‘from 11 o'clock OB CRAMPION, Secretary. THE ANNUAL - MEETING OF THE ST« holders of W. T. Galliner & Bro. Inc. for the election of trustees for the ensuing year and for the transaction of such er busi- ness as may DI’TH! ‘come before said meet- ing. will be held at the office of the cor- poration st 30th and K 'sts. nw., Washing- ten, D. C., at 3:30 p.m.. L P C. EMERY GALLTHER, Becretary. ANNUAL, MEETING OF iders of the Real e e Distiet of THE STOCK- Estate Title Insurance Columbis. for the pur- trustecs of the com- ng year is to be held at the company. 503 E st. n.w.. on fanusry 13. 1931, at 1 o'clock p.m. open at 2 o'clock and closed for transter of 1931, to Janu- ive. CHARLES , ‘Secretary. THE DEPARTMENTAL BANK, “Your Bank,' 1726 Pennsylvania Ave; N.W. THE HOLDERS . y, January 13, 1931, S Bock for the election of ‘direc: tors for the ensuinig year and for such other business as may properly come tefore sald T J. T. EXNICIOS, PLesident. L. A. ROSAFY, Secretary. cratic institutions.” Belief in evolution does not neces- sarily imply disbelief in religion, Dr. Robert A. Millikan, famous physicist, told the association last night. “Neither evolution nor evolutionists have in general been atheistic—Darwin least of all,” he declared in an address on the occasion of his retirement as president of the association. The theory of evolution, he sald, tended merely to with the universe” and to turn atten- tion away from the idea of a being that :;u wmge mue?endem the uni- an t mo as one might wind up a clock. Raises “Heat Death” Doubt. Evolution also raised doubts about the theory that the universe will .wme to an end through “heat death” when all the heat and energy of the suns and planets have been radiated away into space beyond recovery, Dr. Milli- kan declared. * Instead, it tends to help ;uggo.n u;:ul:euet t.h‘:; new energy and re g created out in space "?l";?: that which llhlmL ® new energy, he said, is being formed in space among the distant stars, and is falling upon the earth in the form of radiation of “cosmic rays that are similar in principle to the fi ANNUAL MEETING OF THE BHARE- et the Washington Savings K, Tor tion of directors ar.d the action of such other busines as may prop: before the meeting, will be held Tuesdey, January . Polls fo remain at the banking house on 13, 1931, at 1 o'clock_p. open until 1 p.m. isfer books will be 2”\)'04‘ bztmh dJl.e‘:ul‘J’l ’d!a’“' to January 14, F ates included. J. D. LEONAR| Vice President. § WilL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY @ebts other than those contracted by myself. 407 11th Bt. N.W. 30* IN ADDITION TO COST on it-top table, painted floral by the late Henry Rosenberg. after March, 1929, or lead to locating this -E. Star_office. OUR_REPUTATION COMES FROM OARE- ful handling, “on-time’ arrival and low costs on moving household goods from points within 1,000 miles. Just one and we will IATI?OHAL DELIV- nal . . 3 des it $0mh" and E sts. nw.. informacion ‘that” will table Address Box T, BUIT. FOR banquets, weddings and 10c up Der day each: new chairs. TES RAGE CO. 101 st._n.w. _Metropolitan 1844, Mol Wide, Long-Distance. Movine 5 % = Movine. O WANTED - RETURN LOADS CHICAGO . 5 GINGINNATH o NEW YORK: it o STATES STORAGE CO., INC. 418 10th 8t N.W. Met. 1645. REMINDING YOU —that mothing mars the comfort of our home like a_ I roof. Why not tignt and cozy 8! rd Bt. B.W. 03 id Curtains on your roll- ters at our factory: any size up to 36°x§ larger sizes in proportion. No phone orders. | THE SHADE FACTORY 3417_Conn. machin NASH FLOOR CO.. 1016 30th st. Wes - Lons-distance movia ou %fii‘i’l Transfer & Storage | Company. (I, '.111 Va S'l'llur.‘h — W SHADES 80c i 10 Sicdos shades DropOFIsRAtely Driced. NATIONAL SHADE SHOP 1213 Eye Street N. .. Furniture Repairing, %%, Upholstering, " Chair Caneing CLAY ARMSTRONG 1235 10th St. N.W. litan 2062 lfi“h’?fi’l ml'lv'irhklfll lnlul’m low é_flnung Craftsmen... are-at your service for result-getting publicity Lfl'!iz National Capital Press mll!"b “ -,. Phone Nations! 0680, Bring alits B ¥ 1 | 2nergy that is rays given off = = by radium, but far more g. It is hard to picture just how this process takes place in the cold reaches among the stars, “but acceptable and demonstrable facts do not, in this twentleth century, seem to be disposed to wait on suitable mechanical pictures,” he said. “Indeed, not modern physies thrown the purely mechanistic view of the universe root and branch out of its house?” . Experiments just recently made on Pike's Peak that revealed the enormous emptiness of space were offered in sup- port of his theory by Dr. Millikan. He said these proved that the cosmic rays enter the earth’s atmosphere in a man- ner to indicate they have not passed through any appreciable amount of matter on the way from their place of origin to the earth. ‘This helps to prove, in Dr. Millikan's belief, that th= cosmic rays cannot origi- nate even in the outer atmosphere that surrounds the stars, but must originate in space so empty that they do not go through matter anywhere near as thick even as the earth’s atmosphere, The cosmic rays may be formed out of hydrogen, which is known to be fairly plentiful in interstellar space, and the hydrogen may be replenished by radiant leaking out from the stars, Dr. Millikan said. Will Rogers Says: HOLLYWOOD, Calif.—You just 8ot two more days now, Patriots, to sell your stock and charge it off on your income tax and then buy it back Friday. ‘Too bad the old farmer or sala- ried man hasn't got any out like that. We ought to have a stock exchange for land and houses and lots, so we could run ‘em up and down (for_no_reason at all), like you can wheat and corn and everything else. Get up in the mornin, the paper, see what your vacant lot is worth, sell it and charge it off. ‘Then buy it back, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. through all the intricate maneuvers of academy. NEW EXHIBITS AT Upper: Dr. Paul Brockett, pictured at the exhibition of the National Academy of Sciences, demonstrating model of the gigantic wind tunnel at Lang- ley Field, Va., where new types of planes are tested by scientists of the National Lower: Model airplane with its controls extended outside the case being put a real plane by Dr. K. Brown of the —Underwood Photos. Dr. Hrdlicka Tells Observations BY THOMAS R. HENRY. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. CLEVELAND, December 30.—Approx- mately 500 cases of “quadruped pro- gression” in human infants were re- | ported to the American Association for | the Advancement of Science, meeting here today, by Dr: Ales Hrdlicka of the United States National Muscum. In thase cases a child, usually start- ing between the seventh and eleventh months, walks and runs on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, with a sort of loping gait similar to that of a dog, the behavior being decidedly dif- fent from the “creeping” common to the human infan Starting about three years ago with four cases he personally observed, Dr. Hrdlicka has been receiving case re- ports ever since, and today appealed for more instances seen by parents or nurses. Most of the cases are reported from the United States, but some letters have been received from Germany, Aus- tria and England. Superior to Fellows in Strength. ‘These children who seem to revert to the progression of young animals, Dr.| Hrdlicka said, usually are superior to their fellows in strength of arms and legs and in endurance, soon begin to walk like others, and are thoroughly normal. But even after they have started to walk on two legs they drop gu:k to all fours when they are in a urry, In this Dr. Hrdlicka has found an explanation of strange dreams often re- ported by adults, in which, finding themselves in a desperate situation, they ran on all fours to escape. Those who have these dreams, he believes, either were ‘“quadruped children” or had structural tendencies in this direc- tion which never became overt. He also has received significant re- ports of babies who sleep hunched up on their knees and elbows with the face down, apparently about as uncomfort- able a sleeping position as could be found, but presumably the most com- fortable of all for these particular children. The same sleeping posture is noted in some animals. Sometimes, he reported, the very young children go so rapidly on all fours that parents say they must “run” to catch them. Some will start walking, not creeping, on the hands and knees, progress from this to both hands and one foot, and then, as they got stronger, to both feet and both hands. He has received several reports of running on all fours backward like a crab, and of little “siddling” motions of quadruped walkers such as are particularly notice- able in kittens and puppies learning to walk. Approximately six boys to four girls walk on all fours, and 85 per cent of them either are first or second chil- dren. There is some evidence that the trait runs in familie: ‘Tuberculosis Student Reports. Isolation from the fatty substances of human tubercle bacilli 8 a highly complex acid which is “the specific| cellular stimulant which causes the | formation of tubercular tissue” was re- ported today by Dr. R. J. Anderson of Yale University, working on a_project | sponsored by the National Tub#fculosis | Association. | He also reported notable progress in | SAY: IT WITH YIOWE. Corsages and Shoulder Bouquets That Are Masterpieces of the PROGRESSION ON ALL FOURS BY HUMAN BABIES IS STUDIED Meeting in Cleveland, Results of |stance turns out to be a snow-white | tion of tubercular tissue in the absence | tecatl. Science Association. of Children. analyzing the mysterious stable com- bination of sugars, extracted from the bacteria, which has been found highly toxic when injected into tuberculous animals and non-toxic when injected into normal animals. The purified sub- powder, containing several of the rarer :a'l‘e‘dm two of which have been iden- ‘The discovery of the acid, which has been named phthioic acid, because of its evident' close relationship with phthisis, or tuberculosis, came through the discovery that all the fats obtained from the tubercle bacillus had a com- mon_biological effect. When injected into healthy animals they caused a great increase of monocytes, epithelioid celis and giant cells, and led to the forma- of any tubercle bacilll. It was evident that these fats had a common property responsible for these effects. Unknown Acids Brought Out. Further reduction brought out two| hitherto unknown acids. The first, | called tuberculostearic acid, was shown | to have no effect as a cell stimulant, | while the companion phthioic acid a very specific effect. Attacking the problem of tuberculosis from the chemical front, Dr. Anderson explained, has shown that the fats, which form from 20 to 40 per cent of the total composition of different strains of tubercule and related bacilli, are much more complex than the fats of plants or animals. “At present,” he said, “it appears to be impossible to assign any rational con- stitutional formulas to any of the bacil- lary lipoids.” He sald that “one or more additional acids analogous to phthioic acid may be found.” ‘The still birth of one of the strangest human monsters ever known to science was reported by Dr. R. A. Muttkowski and Leo’ E. Buss of the University of ‘This child had two heads and brains, two hearts, two stomachs, three arms, two legs and two complete spines, but only onme pelvis. ' The attending physician, it was explained, accidently | broke one of the spines birth, s0 | that the monster was born “half dead.” | The other half was alive, however, and breathed several times. ¢ | Ancient Civilization Evidenced. Evidence of an ancient Maya civili- ation long before the Aztecs in Central Mexico was presented to the anthro- pological section by Benjamin L. Whort of the Social Science Research Council. About 40 miles south of Mexico City, he said, there is an isolated village where the Aztec language is still spoken, and which is. the site of a ruined temple to the Aztec god Tepoz- He found that on the walls were carved not only known Aztec cal- | endar signs but, parallel with them, signs known to represent the sam thing which were used by the May: 1,000 years earlier. This discovery, he said, adds sub- stance to the tales of an ancient king- dom of Xochicalco, to which the sur- rounding country was tributary, but| which eventually was incorporated in the Aztec empire. The growth of the living nerve at| last has been seen under tge micro- scope, it was announced by Dr. Carl C. Speidel of the University of Virginia i we make Club Centerpieces from $2.50, 1407 H Street 3 Doors West of 14th St. National 4905 ACADEMY OF SCIENCES THEATER STORMED, 47 STUDENTS HELD Annual Class Smoker of New York City College Ends in Rioting. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, December 30.—After a march up Broadway 200 sophomore students of City College stormed the Rivolli Theater at Forty-ninth street early today and 47 of them landed in Jail. Climaxing the annual class smoker, the collegians thronged into the lobby of the Rivoli and rushed the doormen. Into the auditorium they swarmed, bat- tling among themselves and patrons for seats and throwing the audience inw; turmoil. Chemical bombs and ammonia | were hurled. Answering a riot call, police blockaded the doorways and ordered the lights turned on. While most of the students fled at the first sign of intervention, encugh were captured to fill two patrol wagons backed up to the main entrance. Meanwhile reports spread that & duplication of the Paramount Theater robbery had occurred, and a great crowd gathered in front of the theater. This was augmented by the departures of affronted patrons. ‘The prisoners were charged with dis- | orderly conduct, and rather than rouse | their parents at such an unseemly hour | to raise bail they remained in custody. GIVES UP TO POLICE Colored Man Leaving Walter Reed Faces Bay State Term. Robert Benjamin Taylor, colored, 36 years old, World War veteran, was dis- charged from Walter Reed Hospital yes- terday, having been under treatment for wounds received in France, and surren- dered to Frank Lanagan of the Massa- chusetts State police force, ‘Taylor, according to information re- ceived from the Massachusetts police, had served 9 years of a 10-year sen- tence for receiving stolen goods and was paroled. He is alleged &0 have left the State in violation of the terms of his parole and to have gone to California, later coming here. PR E. G. Connette Expires. LOCKPORT. N. Y., December 30 (#). | —Edward G. Connette, 70, died here to- day. He was former president of the International Railway Co., and of the United Gas & Electric Co. of New York. Medical School. He was able to observe | the tiny nerve sprouts as they grew, | extended their processes and formed a | network of fibers in the transparent tail fins of frog tadpoles. Individual sprouts, | he said, have been watched for as long | as 50 days. | ‘The strange phenomenon by which | the weight of a metal changes when subjected to enormous pressures but recovers almost completely when the strain is removed was described by Peter | I. Wold and Earle M. Bigsbee of Union College. The losses in weight in one experiment amounted to one part in 130,000, but even this minute change was_greater than could be accounted for by errors in weighing or by changes in the amount of gasses. The apparent demonstration that weight and mass do not remain constant may have impor- tant bearings on the classical theory of gravitation, Foundation D. C., TUESDAY, DECKMBER 30, 1930. DESCRIBES TESTS WITH LIVING CELLS California U. Dean Holds It Is Possible for Life to Lie~ Dormant Million Years. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, December 30.— Dean Charles B. Lipman of the Univer- sity of California today described to the Botanical Society of America the na- ture of his experiments that convinced him it is possible for life to remain dormant millions of years. The report, delivered before the bot- anists’ meeting in connection with the convention of the American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science, carried forward previously announced conclusions based on the finding of 1iving organisms in the interior of an- thracite coal from deep mines in Wales and Pennsylvania. Dean Lipman’'s paper also described the laboratory tests which he believes prove the micro-organisms he has been studying have been in the coal since it was formed and couid not have pene- trated it in recent times or have come from outside contamination. Organisms Are Within. Belief of the California scientist that the organisms have been in the coal since it was formed from rotting vege- tation of coal age swamps is founded chiefly on unsuccessful attempts he mm,ie to force such organisms into the coal. In the grinding up of the coal and at all times in the experimental steps, he said, the samples were shielded from contamination. Scrubbing with soap and water, rinsing in distilled water, submerging in superoxol, hydrogen peroxide, in alcohol and sterilizing in an oven at temperatures of 315 to 334 de- grees Farenhelt were precautions taken | has his to make sure, Dr. Lipman related, that thg organisms did not come from out- side sources. Grow in Pairs. Concerning the type of organisms which he found after taking these pre- cautions, Dr. Lipman 'said: “Most of them were short bacilll or cocco-bacilli and egg-shaped coccus forms varying considerable in size and shape, even in pure cultures. The tendency among all of them to occur in pairs was very marked. The colonies they produced on agar media at the first streaking were usually small and beadlike. Some of them were yellow to yellowish brown, others white, but in ‘thin layers of growth a distinctly blue color was always visible.” Dean Lipman sald, “I believe it is quite possible for a cell like a spore to ::nmm in a state of suspended anima- His studies warrant, he said, the be- lief the micro-organisms that he has made to resume animated life and mul- tiply are descendants directly from cells “dormant in the anthracite from the time of its formation.” which geologists calculate is from 15,000,000 to 200,000,- 000 years. BISHOP WILL DISCUSS UNEMPLOYMENT ISSUE The unemployment situation will be the theme of a sermon by Right Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washing- | ton, at a festival morning prayer service on Mount St. Alban New Year day. Four services are scheduled at the Cathedral. The festival service will take place at 11 o'clock and will be broadcast. Other gérvices include cele- bration of the holy communion at 7: and 9:30 and evening prayer at 4 o’clock. ‘The festival service will be conducted by Very Rev. G. C. F. Bratenahl, dean of Washington, in the Bethlehem Chapel. The public is invited. Music at the service is to include ap- propriate hymns and anthems. TSAVE 509, ON NEW AND REMODELED FUR COATS The remodeled Fur Coats have been cleaned, azed and relined s Sy lining. 29'75 BRAND NEW FUR GOATS fa all the season's mewest models -75 and all sizes. A Saall Deposit will Reserve Any Cont Rapta Juckets and Byenios Wre $20.75 and $075 :. Weur Money Back in 3 Days Not Satisied rker’s Fur Shop OR 95 years the growth of the King organization has been built upon one solid foundation—satisfac- tion for all of our customers all the time. That is why your telephone call to us will bring you prompt, courteous delivery of just the right sizes of our clean, h e a t-packed an- thracite—the fuel that gives you never failing com- fort, S T PO WILLIAM KING & SON ESTABLISHED 1835 COAL MERCHANTS Main Office 1151 16th Street Georgetown BANIET T0HONE THO ANBASSADORS tion to Fete Claudel and Vo_n Prittwitz und Gaffron. M. Paul Claudel, Ambassador from France, and the German Ambassador, Herr Friedrich von Prittwitz und Gafr- quet of the Modern Language Associ- |ation_of America tonight in the Wil- lazd Hotel. The association is meeting here for a three-day convention under the aus- pices of George Washington Univer- sity in conjunction with American Uni- versity, ~ Georgetown University and Catholic University. Prof, Colbert Searles of the Univer- sity of Minnesota will be the speaker at_the banquet, The George Washington Universit Men's Glee Club will sing and the; be a program of bass solos by C! Trowbridge Tittmann, Dr. Marvin Welcomes Delegates. Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of George Washington University, wel- jcomed the delegates to Washington at a dinner in the hotel last night. He urged the members of the asso- clation .to think of their activity in terms of its wider significance, “of the priceless heritage that is the scholar's who understands proportion and place in the field which he is privileged to serve.” Dr. Marvin traced the development of the integration of knowledge through various periods of history, from the early days when culture was restricted by national boundaries to the present era of international interchange of ideas. Referring to language differences, he said: #“There are as many languages as there are individual speakers. Each one own selection of words, uses some of them in special meanings or with individual limitations of mean- ing, has his own intonations or pe- y will arles Modern Language Associa-| ron, will be guests of honor at a ban- | A—-3 culiarities of pronunciation or special colorings of particular sounds, but all Jf these individualisms are subject to a proper leveling influence by wilat the individual is daily hearing and by the aecessity of making himself understood by those about him.” ‘The regular sessions of the conven- tion are being taken up with the read- ing of scholarly papers dealing with ;'lnrlous problems of language instruc- on. The convention is presided over by | Prof. Frederick Tupper of the Univer~ | sity of Verraont, president of the asso- | clation. The meeting will close Wed- | nesday. *® NEW TRUSTEE NAMED | Trust Company to Aid in Handling $250,000 Hogan Sutati | Justice Jesse C. Adkins has appointed the American Security & Trust Co. as | co-trustee with George C. Gertman of the $250,000 estate of John J. Hogan. |In a bill filed by James M. Green, Ella | Hogan and George C. Gertman, trus- | tees, the court was asked to relieve Mr. | Green from his duties as trustee of the | estate, which involves valuable realty | holdings in Washington and Red Bank, |N. J,, in order that he might give his | whole attention to his personal business | Mr. Gertman and the trust company | are directed to adminisicr the estate under the supervision of the court. S WING'S % TOWNCLUB e g COFFEE | | | | | “THE COPFEE CLASSIC" | Regular Delivery Over 100,000 families read The Star every day. The great ma- | Jjority have the paper delivered | regularly every evening and Sia- | day morning at a cost of 114 | cents daily and 5 cents Suday. If you are not takiry advan- | | tage ‘of this regules service at | this low rate, telephene National 5000 now and service will start tomorrow. You have never seen crammed hard coal. bring a full supply. Marlow 811 E St. N.W. 1310 F YOU’LL WONDER where those “cold spots,” those heating annoyances. have vanished to when you try Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite. a cleaner,. more heat- Your ‘phone call will Coal Co. NAtional 0311 Favors, Souveni Noise-makers .a n d special entertainment. Dancing till the wee hours to music by owe - Nevins Shore- ham Orchestra, di- rected by Paul Fidel- man. For New Year’s Week we present Albert and Adelaide Glorias, international dance stars, together with Yvonne Da Vees from the Silver Slipper Club of New York, Eight Dollars Plate OREHAM CONNECTICUT AVE. af CALVERT Phone Robert Kehl for Reservations—Adams 0700 WASHINGTON’S FINEST MEN'S WEAR STORE RALEIGH HABERDASHER Street DELIVERY Guaranteed BEFORE on all Dress Clothes selected before 5 o’clock tomorrow Mot 100 ORERIENE, . THE FULL DRESS . . $50 Full Dress Coat, Dinner Jacket and Trousers, $90 Young Me n's Tuxedo $35 By Ham Schaffner & Marx Park Your Car at the Capi btedly Washington's Best Value! Garage AT OUR EXPENSE | o

Other pages from this issue: