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BIG BANK AID HIT INSENATE HEARING Traylor, Young and Dawes Mentioned in Glass Bill Opposition. By the Associated Press. Arguing staunchly against the G branch banking pian, John A. C: . Toll, liquidator of 138 closed Illinois State banks, asserted before the Sonate Banking Committee yesterday he was unwilling to_let “men like Traylor, 2 DAwes have control over Carroll, a heavy-set, light-haired lawyer who said he had been organizing and running banks for 20 years, used the financial troubles of Chicago as an argument against the extension of branch banking as proposed by Senator Glass, Democrat, of Virginia, in leg- islation now before the Senate. He charged the Chicago Clearing House Association and the Reconstruc- tion Corporation had aided the big banks of Chicago and let the little in- dependent institutions close by the score. It was while discussing the Chi- cago situation that he named Melvin A. Traylor, Charles G. Dawes and Owen D. Young. Warned Against Remarks. So far afield did the witness stray in discussing the purpose of the heari to record arguments on the provision in the Glass bill itting naticnal b: to cstablish S ide branches nd other commit- tec membe! d repeatedly to warn Carroll against spectacular re- marks about Chicago conditions. At one point Senator Bulkley, Demo- crat, of Ohio, seid he had been asked by Senator Glass to say the hearing was “irregular” because the bill was in possession of the Senate and no hear- ing had been authorized by the full committee Chairman Norbeck pointed out that no hearings had been held on the pres- ent phraseology, and that previous tes- timony had dealt only with a plan to permit branch banking only in_ those States where it is now permissible by State banks. Carroll was allowed to proceed, but ‘was _cautioned several times again to confine his remarks to branch banking. Supports Present Laws. “All right” Carroll shouted, “I have no axes to grind, but I represent 2,000,000 people in Chicago. My earnest | opinion, after 20 years of experience in banking, is that you have branch bank- ing now under the Feceral Reserve System. Do not let a monopoly get control of the Nation's banks. Keep control in Congress. There is nothing wrong with the banking laws now. They have not been administered for the peo- ple. They have been administered for the big bankers.” He said the “remedy is worse than the disease,” adding: “This is no time to tamper with the banking laws. Indeed, the whole bill is a sugar-coated proposition for branch | banking.” The Glass bill will be taken up again | in the Senate tomorrow. S NINE TRAINING CAMP STUDENTS VISIT CITY Educational Tour Group, Rewarded for Records, Expected to Visit President. Nine young students representing the Citizens' Military Training C2mps throughout the country are on an ed: cational tour in Washington as a re- ‘ward for their excellent records in camp last Summer. f They arrived yesterday from their re- spective homes and will conclude their stay in Washington tomorrow, when, it is expected, they will call on President Hoover at the White House. received by War Department officials yesterday. E At 10 am. today the group will be taken to Ann:polis to visit the United States Naval Academy. They will be the luncheon guests of the Military Order of the World War tomorrow. Their trip was sponsored by the Civilian Military Education Fund. The young men are Warren E. Winslow, Portland, M Stanley L. Brown, New Brighton, N. Y.; James O. McGovern, Baltimore; Robert Christie, Memphis; John S. Findlay, Cincinnati: Paul G. Ressler, Eau Claire, Wis.; William E. Smith, Van Buren, Ark.; Leonard R. Walk Las Animas, Colo., and Victor W. r, Los An- geles. COMMITTEES ARE NAMED BY COSMOPOLITAN CLUB Robert W. McChesney, New Presi- dent, Announced AppJintees for Next Year. Committees for the comin the Cosmopolitan Club organization were announced here last night by Robert W. McChesney, newly installed president. Committee Chairmen will be: Presi- dent McChesney, Executive Committee; W. H. McCarty, Membership: Dr. Joseph Elward, Classification; Harold S. Smith, Entertainment; Harry Hites, publicity; Lawrence E. Rubel, Forum; Henry S. Owens, Audit; James E. Divver, Special Relief; Roswel S. Wilkes, Sick Commit- tee: E .C. Gram. Attendance; Downham. Budget James E. Colli- Jower, Initizt Frank L. Hurd, Sep- ; William L. King, Civic ns, and Guy O. Dove, William H Michael D J. Groom, :. chzp- at arms Tud lude treasu lain; Lewis F end P. A. Da: treiter, sergea g’ leader Thief Gets Waste Paper. NEW YORK, Ja tried to park groun: terday keep: Bernard Reardon, & customer in the Westchester Trust Co. at Yonkers, saw the man use a :tick of wood with a nail in the end to fish into an empty teller’s Just some green wa:te paper. Marriage Licens €S. Del. ave. Euclid st d M re 5w, Rev ar R v E. Ar ev. H. W Rev 1. Chevy Chase. Md., and » 3505 16th st.: Rev ?. and Lillie A. Wil . Md. ajtimore. and Mabel thsr c.'T Murray John C_Ritter Mary J. Berezoski Benedict J. Hennema 1 Eugene, W. Grimles and _Margar on, Md.; Rev. e, of ‘Trvingt 40. 1840 R e Darby. 34, 1640 R. eir. E. Mattingly, 18, 5. both ave ave. They were | g vear in Rev. t L. An- may be a candidate for Senator | trying to develop for month: THE SUNDAY Scored a News Beat SCOOPED REPORTERS ON GOV. WHITE'S FUTURE PLANS. ISS NATALIE BALLIERE, 17-year-old junior at Hathaway Brown School, Cleveland, who scooped newspaper men when she went to Gov. George White of Ohio for a story for her school paper. told by the Governor that he will not ask for re-election in 1934 and She was the first to be The Governor told veteran State House reporters “It seems to me she was able to get something you fellows have been —A. P. Photo. JOHNSON TOHEAD COURT N SAMOA | Southeastern U. Law Profes-; sor Named Chief Justice | by Adams. Edward C. Johnson, 34-year-old law | professor of Southeastern University, has just been notified of his appoint- ment by Secretary of the Navy Adams as chief justice of the High Court of American Samoa, Uncle Sam’s tropical paradise in the South Seas. | At the famed port of Pago Pago, Chief Justice Johnson, on March 18, wiil don the robss of the islands’ su- preme judicial tribunal—from which there is no appeal. Even the United | States Supreme Court is without juris- diction over the insular court. Plans to Leave February 1. The new chief justice will succeed Justice H. P. Wood. Chief Justice Johnson will leave Washington about February 1 for the Pacific Coast, from which he will embark for the Samoan Islands on February 10. He will be ac- companied by Mrs. Johnson and their | infant daughter Sue, born December 28. Physicians have given permission {for the mother and baby to make th2 long voyage. | Neither Justice Johnson nor his wife have ever visited Samoa, although both have lived in the Orient. Both are looking forward eagerly to their new venture in Polynesia | Pago Pago, pronounced and some- | times spelled Pango Pango, furnished the locale for scenes in the popular | play “Rain.” The port, with a popu- | lation of a few thousand white and copper skinned inhabitants, is the cap- ital of the American group of Samoan isles, with a naval coaling base and headquarters of the American Naval Station. A naval governor presides over the islands. The island on which the port is located is called Tutuila. Pago Pago has the finest harbor in th2 Pacific, it is conceded. Associated With Firm. Justice Johnson has been associated with the law firm of Williams, Myers & Quiggle for the last four years. For- merly he was probation officer of the District of Columbia Juvenile Coury and at one time was purchasing agent of George Washington University. As professor of law at Southeastern Uni- versity, local Y. M. C. A. institution, he has lectured recently over the radio on legal topics. | He is a graduate of William and ‘M:Lrv College and George Washington | University and is president of the Wil- Yiam and Mary Alumni. He is a mem- | ber of the Barristers’ Club and is a re- | | serve officer in the military intelligence branch of the United States Army. Mrs. Johnson is the daughter of Col. T. E. Darby, chief of planning and training, surgeon general's office, United States of America. $22,500 DAMAGES ASKED Agnes Fleishell Defendant in Auto- mobile Accident Suit. | - Suit for 22,500 damages has been Supreme Court against a supervisor of the © ion Telegraph Co., by Mary | W. Schuckers, 60 M street, for injuries allegedly received when an automobile | in which she was a passenger was over- neti in a collision with the Fleishell car at Nevada avenue and Military road | January 18, 1932. ttorney William Wendell appears for | the plaintiff. A |w h Africa, there ¥S a year with Johannesberg, So on the average 111 lightning. “Murco,” that it dries quickly . . . modestly. 710 Twelfth St. N. W, good-looking, paint for every purpose will make gloom vanish in a jiffy. “Murco” is easy to use . . . and every color is priced Gets Samoan Post EDWARD C. JOHNS PLAY TOURNAMENT PLANS T0 BE LAID Judges to Be Chosen at Meet- ing of Committee Tues- day Afternoon. Plans for the annual one-act play tournament held here under direction of the Community Center Department will be made at a meeting of the Tour- nament Committee Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in the Community Center office, in the Franklin School Administration Build- ing, it was announced yesterday. Judges for the contest, which has been an annual affair since 1927, will be chosen at Tuesday’s meeting by the ommittee, which includes Prof. W. Hayes Yeager, president of the Drama Guild; Mrs. Marie Moore Foorest, Miss Bess Davis Schreiner and Gideon A. Lyon. These judges will serve in the preliminary contests and the judges of the finals will be the five dramatic critics of the daily newspapers of the Capital All drama groups have been urged to send their applications for entrance in the contest, and the necessary regis- tration information, to the Community Center Department. January 16 has been set as the deadline for receipt of the registration information. Groups are required to forward a copy of the piay to be submitted, the copy to be returned later. The tournament is open to all regularly organized groups in wa:mngton, nearby Virginia and Mary- land. Preliminary contests will take place at Eastern High School auditorium, Seventeentn and East Capitol streets, in the week-of February 13, and at Roosevelt High School auditorium, Thir- teenth and Webster streets, the week of February 20. The finals will be at McKinley High School auditorium, First and T streets northeast, on the evening of Wednesday, March 1 Admission fees will be asked to cove: the expenses of the tournament. Will Seek Red Cross Members. FAIRFAX, Va. January 7 (Special). The Fairfax County Red Cross is in receipt of & plea from national head- | quarters for increased enrollment. Each of the team captains have been asked to endeavor to secure 2! 3 Vere Going 3 Ty Have A “Colorful” Year The new year will usher in many “colorful” events . . . especially for Washington . . . but you can start right away making things brighter around your home! “Murco Magic’’ will do 1t! long-wearing EJ Murphy @ INCORPORATED NAtional 2477 dditionel mem- | STAR, WASHINGTON, 'BOARD OF TRADE | FETL FEBRUARY 4 Midwinter Dinner Will Be Stag Affair “Under the Hawaiian Rainbow.” In an Hawafian setting, the mid- | Winter dinner of the Washington Board of Trade will be held in the Willard Hotel Saturday night, February 4, it was announced at the trade body's headquarters yesterday. Strictly a stag affair, as it has been in years past, more than 750 members of the organization and guests are ex- pected to attend the function, according to Wallace Robinson, chairman of the Arrangements Committee. Plans for the dinner, the chairman announced, are being conducted on a | more elaborate scale than for any pre- vious like event. Outstanding profes- sional talent is being brought irom New York. The theme of the dinner will be “Under the Hawaiian Rainbow,” and the meal will be served in a setting | representing a coconut grove at Waikiki. The ball room will be decorat- ed with palms, hibiscus blossoms, gar- lands of flowers and orlental lanterns. To Be No Speeches. There will be no speechmaking. Aiding Mr. Robinson on the Arrange- ments Committee arg D. Randall Buck- ingham, F. George Clendaniel, A. K. Shipe, Raymond M. Florence, Dr. Joseph D. Rogers, Harry H. R. Helwig and Fred | A Smith. Other committees inciude: Advisory Committee—Harry H. R. Helwig, chairman; John T. Bardroff, Jerome F. Barnard, D. Randall Buck- ingham, Elmore T. Burdette, F. George Clendaniel, Robert J. Cottrell, Thomas L. Eagan, James B. Edmonds, William R. Ellis, Raymond M. Florence, Gran- ville Gude, Karl E. Jarrell, George Miller, Claude W. Owen, Henry S. Owens, J. Mitchell Owens, John Saul, Milton F. Schwab, A. K. Shipe, Fred A. Smith, J. Hawley Smith. Invitation Committee—Ben T. Web- ster, chairman; Joseph A. Burkart, W. P. Cox, Frank E. Cunningham, J. Harry Cunningham, Robert V. Fleming, C. J Gockeler, Frank P. Leetch, Charles W. Morris, Claude W. Owen, Odell 8 Smith Reception Committee—George W. Offutt, chairman; John T. Bardroff, E C. Brandenburg, Arthur Carr, E. F. Colladay, John Joy Edson, W. W. Everett, Robert V. Fleming, E. C. Grabam, Frank S. Hight, John H Hanna, Howard Moran, Charles W. Morris, Edgar Morris, E. J. Murphy, Theodore W. Noyes, Claude W. Owen, | George Plitt, John Saul, Ben T. Web- ster, Lloyd B. Wilson. Entertainment Committee—Granyille Gude, chairman; Hollis B. Fritts, first vice chairman; Herbert A. Poole, second vice chairman; T. Brooke Amiss, Charles A Appleby, E. J. Armstrong, Jerome F. Barnard, Frederick M. Bradley, L. Pierce Boteler, Thomas A. Cantwell, S. F. Colladay, L. Lee Combs, Thomas L. Eagan, Fred East, William R. Ellfs, Harry H. R. Helwig, George Miller, H. Glenn Phelps, William F. Raymond, Dr. J. D. Rogers, A. K. Shipe, Fred A. Smith. Dinner and Decorations. Dinner and Decorations Committee— Karl E. Jarrell, chairman; James B Edmunds, first vice chairman; J. Mitchell Owens, second vice chairman; George J. Adams, Robert F. Beresford, Charles T. Clagett, George A. Emmons, R. K. Ferguson, Diller B. Groff, Inspec- tor W. H. Harrison, Stephen E. Kramer, J. Stanley Long, Louis Lowe, Geory Plitt, John G. Scharf, Richard D. Stim son and John F. Webster. Ticket Committee—Milton F. Schwab, chairman; C. J. Waters, vice chairman; W. Herbert Gill, Paul F. Grove, John T. Meany, Preston W. Perkinson, Arthur Clarendon_Smith, Pred J. White and Henry A. Willard, 2d. Souvenir Committee—Henry S. Owens, chairman; Henry A. Willard, 2d., vice chairman; John T. Bardroff, Joseph A. Burkart, James B. Edmunds, Theodore M. Judd, C. N. Nichols, Max Walten, William H. Waters and A. J. Gumpert. Floor Committee—J. Hawley Smith, chairman; W. Crosdale Witts, first vice chairman; Charles H. Jerman, second vice chairman; James H. Costello, Fred D. Allen, Harry F. Allmond, Ralph H. Bangs. Wilbur N. Baughman, Inspector T. R. Bean, C. W. Clever, Lowry N. Coe, Charles F. Crane, F. E. Cunningham, Herbert L. Davis, Ralph Hauser, Carol |M. Farquhar, Clayton A. Ammann, + Odell S. Smith, T. Brooke Amiss, Edgar | Morris, C. 8. McConnell, Robert W. | Davis, George A. Emmons, Dr. Edwin H. Etz, George B. Farquhar, Lloyd F. | Gaines, George V. Graham, Harry C. Grove, Stephen E. Kramer, William H. Lanham, E. J. Leesnitzer, Dr. A. M. MacDonald, Le Roy Miller, Karl Plitt, Harry E. Mockbee, sr.; Charles W. Pimper, A. J. Sardo, Frank R. Strunk, E. C. Thomas, Alex R. Varela, J. Paul Ward, L. E. Willlams, A. Willige, Wil- liam E. Wise, Charles W. Smith, C. J. Mattimore, Avon M. Nevius, J. B. Evans, Ralph C. Boyd, Hulbert T. Bisselle, George F. Kindley, Richard J. Carr and Ross H. Snyder, Lights and Amplifiers Committee- EISEMAN'’S SEVENTH AND F ISUITS 18 NOTHING DOWN Just Pay $6 IN FEBRUARY $6 IN MARCH $6 IN APRIL Smart young men’s suits in a pleasing selec- tion of blues, greys, browns and tans. Both single and double breasted. All sizes. Every suit made of all-wool materials and guaranteed to wear sat- isfactorily. D. C. JANUARY 8, Chairman WALLACE B. ROBINSON. Herman F. Carl, chairman; Charles T. Clagett, vice chairman; L. Lee Combs, Raymond F. Florance, Paul F. Grove, C. Hayward Marshall, J. Paul Ward and Harry P. White. Printing Committee—Joseph C. Me- Garraghy, chairman; Ross H. Snyder, vice chairman; Robert J. Cottrell, Robert E Lee, Odell S. Smith and Wilmot W Trew. Publicity ~ Committee — George J Adams, chairman; E. M. Graham, first vice irman; Herbert W. Primm, sec- ond vice chairman: Curtis A. Hodges, Adelbert W. Lee, nk W. Lee, Luther W. Linkins, Preston W. Perkinson, Frank A. Sebring and George C. Shinn. Property Committee—Agthur Claren- don Smith, chairman; Harry Dean, vice chairman; Fred D. Allen, Hugh W. Barr, Donald L. Luxford and A. Willige ‘Transportation Committee—Edward S. Pardoe, chairman; W. Elkins Reed vice chairman; O. R. Evans, William W. Ross, Gilbert E. Stringer and Dwight K. Terry. 13 TO RECEIVE PRIZES IN TORPEDO PRACTICES Members of U. 8. S. Salt Lake City Crew Will Get First Awards of $15 Each. Pirst prizes of $15 each will awarded 13 men of torpedo control parties and torpedo crews of the U. S. S. Salt Lake City, commanded by Capt. Lewis Coxe, which won first place in battle torpedo practices for the heavy cruiser class during the competition year just closed. In making this announcement yes- terday, the Navy Department said Lieut. 'R. 1. F. Fravel. torpedo officer of the warship, would be given a letter of notification of merit Prizes of $10 each will be given tor- pedo crews of the U. S. S. Pensacola and of $5 each to those of the U. S. S. 1933—PART OXE. MARIE FYERS N SCH C1P {San Diego Squadron in Air Without Accident for 1,862 Hours. By the Assoclated Press. | The “soldiers of the sea”—the Ma- rines—have reached up into the air this time and brought down fresh laurels. The Herbert Schiff Memorial Trophy, | awarded annually to the naval squad- | ron with the highest record for safe | flying, has been won by the Marine Fighting Plane Squadron 10-M, sta- tioned at San Diego, Calif., with a total |of 1,862 hours in the air without ac- cident. This is_the first instance, ac- cording to a Navy Department an- nouncement’ yesterday, that the trophy _ has been won by a Marine squadron. The winners are a part of the West | Coast Expeditionary Force at the San Diego Naval Air Station, consisting of | 6 lleutenant pilots and 25 enlisted men, under the command of Capt. Vernon M. Guymon, U. S. M. C,, of Murray, Utah, who was awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French government for gallantry | in action during the World War. | The trophy will be presented to the | squadron by a representative of Secre- tary Adams on a date to be announced later. The prize for the previous fiscal | r went to the United States Naval | Reserve Aviation Base, Floyd Bennett Field, Brooklyn, N. Y. With the aim of stimulating more care in flying, the trophy was presented to the Navy in 1925 by members of the family of Lieut. Herbert Schiff, U. S N. R., aviator, killed at the Naval Air Station at Hampton Roads, Va., in July, 1924, | ILLUSTRATED LECTURE Transit Problems to Be Discussed | by Charles W. Eliot, 2d. | Transit problems in the Capital and | developments going forward here will be the subject of an illustrated lecture January 16 by Charles W. Eliot, 2d, di- | rector of planning of the National Capi- | tal Park and Planning Commission. | | Mr. Eliot, who is the grandson of the | former president of Harvard, will speak ‘ before the Harvard School of City | Planning, which is headed by Henry V. | Hubbard, who is a member of the com- | mission. SALE MONDAY ONLY 50c Dinner From 4 P.M. to 8 P.M. Half Grapefruit or Cream of Tomato Soup Chicken a la King in Pattie Shells Roast Prime Ribs of Beef Two Vegetables Salad Dessert Rolls Butter Coffee Augusta, which stood second and third, | respectively, in the competition. J. O. Richardson, whose address in Washington is given as 2708 Thirty- fifth place, commands the Augusta. Capt. | WALLIS’ CAFE 617 12th St. N.W. CHIROPRACTIC SOCIETY | TO HEAR KIGHTLINGER Eastern College President Head of National Congress D. C. Guest Thursday. The District Chiropractic Society will hold its annual banquet and meeting Thursday night at the Thomas Circle Club, 1326 Massachusetts avenue. Dr. C. M. Kightlinger, president of the Eastern Chiropractic College in New York City, and president of the National Chiropractic Congress, will be the guest speaker. He will discuss the functions of the ductless glands and the application of chiropractic there and Dr. L. C. Jacobs of New York also will be a guest. A memorial tablet to Dr. W. 5. Whit- man will be dedicated at ceremonies conducted by officers of the society. Dr. Frank T. Shyne, Dr. C. R. Smith and Dr. A. Sanders are members of the Arrangements Committee. . “Cosmetics Bar” Popular. PRAGUE, January T7.—The new “cosmetics bar” is achieving wide popu- larity, especially since one may sample the various new preparations at the bar. Prague men hope these centers for bottled beauty will eliminate some of the “running Tepairs” their ladies have become more and more addicted to in restaurants and other places. ANNIVERSARY SALE This Week Only Cleaning and Pressing Any Lady’s Dress, plain or pleated .... Any Lady’s Coat, plain or fur trimmed. . Any Man’s Suit. . . . Any Man’s Overcoat 90 Men’s or Ladies’ Hats Cleaned and Blocked, 35¢ Ties, 10c; 6 for 50c Expert 48-Hour Laundry Service Patronize Our Nearest Branch to You 814 14th St. N.W. 1631 17th St. N.\W. 1416 Park Road 1731 Columbia Road 1020 N. Capitol St. 3317 Conn. Ave. 5602 Conn. Ave. 1749 Penn. Ave. N.W. 2515 14th St. N.W. 2002 Georgia Ave. 3903 14th St. N.W. 4302 Georgia Ave. 3500 Georgia Ave. 5119 Georgia Ave. 3402 18th St. N.E. 2014 Nichols Ave. S.E, 914 R. I. Ave. N.E. 622 Tth St. S.W. 420 H St. N.E. 905 G St. N.W. 1122 Vermont Ave. N.W. 1500 Wisconsin Ave. Ty ARre HERE ! The new 1933 Hudson Super-Sixes The Bigger, Roomier Terraplanes 425 to 915 F. 0. B. Factory at Detroit And they Challenge the World for Beauty, Performance, Ruggedness and Economy What a.new thrill you are going to get when you see and drive these new Hudson- built cars! In our well-considered opinion, they repre- sent the finest motor-car values offered at anywhere near their prices by any manutac- turer in America. We can say this becanse we know all the other fine 1933 values. The whole industry has given its best. But Hudson—in the new Super-Six and in the roomier, has this year standard tread Terraplanes — far surpassed all its contempor- aries in genuine car-value. ‘With the Unit-built Terraplane, Hudson has sprung into unquestioned leadership in the low-price field. This great car, built on an principle, has out-performed entirely new every other stock-car in the world, regardless of price. There has never been a car like the Terra- plane before, because no other car has ever been built as it is built. The 1933 Hudson Super-Six—a big new car that bears one of the most famous names in motor car history—is going to bring joy to hundreds of thousands of motorists who know and respect what “Super-Six” stands for: beauty, power, reliability, economy. You may find some of our statements hard to believe until you have actually seen and driven these new Hudson-built cars. Please accept our invitation to do so of the addresses given below. today at any OSCAR COOLICAN Hudson-Essex Distributor *Built by HHUDSON> . . . 4 Label to be Proud of PACKARD WASHINGTON MOTOR CAR CO. Display Rooms, Connecticut at $ Clarendon Hudson-Essex C Dixie R E. Boswell Motor Co., DISTRIBUTORS OF PACKARD HUDSON ESSEX METROPOLITAN DEALERS Motor Co., 1419 Irving Street Schultze Motor Co., 1496 H Street N.E. McDe: Rogers-Biscoe Motors, 1218 Connecticut Ave. Saunders Motor Co., 3206 M Street TERRITORY DEALERS Clarendon, Va. Motor Corp., Charlottesville, Va. Tutwiler Motor Co., Harrisonburg, Va. Moncure Motor Quantico, Mt. Rainier. Md. Tutwiler Motor Co., Staunton, Va. Moreland Motor Hudson-Essex Sales Company, Prince Frederick, Md. Tysons Cross Reads Garage, Tysons Cross Roads, Va. Waidorf, Md. Boyer- Co., Annapolis Va. Ingalls Motor Mitchellvil Co.. Rockville, Md. Win hipley Sales, Inc. Capitol Heights, Md. Severn Motor Company, d. , Md. Brosius Bros. & Gormley, Shenandoah Motor Co., chester, Va,