Evening Star Newspaper, March 11, 1933, 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)

THE EVENING ' STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, MARCH .11, 1933 132 DIETN QUAKE; 4000 ARE INJURED Property Damage Reaches Tens of Millions in 100 California Towns. (Contiaued From First Page) severe than the first, the initial con- vulsion, which did the major part of the damage, was actually most severe. Additional heavy shocks caused bricks already loosened to fall. Reports of a tidal wave, actually in evidence or threatened caused wide- spread alarm, but were totally without foundation. Long Beach was calm this morning, operating under semi-martial law. Oc- casional quakes after midnight did not increase the damage and the weary peo- ple, grown accustomed to the continued tremors, took them as they came \‘lh- out gttending excitement. For the most part the streets were abandoned in the early morning hours, thousands huddling under blankets on their lawns, in vacant lots and in parks, all before big fires. While many water mains were broken, there were only scattered re- ports of water shortages. Relief Agencies at Work. The State Social Welfare Society, under instructions from Gov. James Rolph, jr., joined with the Red Crossy Salvation Army and other Long Beach agencies in caring for those in need of food and shelter. Gov. Rolph, with the aid of State officials, assumed personal charge of re- lief work today. Four thousand Marines and sailors from the United States Fleet, stationed at San Pedro, were en- gaged in relief work. Pierce Williams, field representative for the Reconstruc- tion Finance Corporation, arrived by plane from San -Francisco last night and said he would co-operate with re- lief agencies. Although earth shocks were frequent during the night, sport events and en- tertainments went forward almost as usual. A fight at the Hollywood Arena was held as scheduled. Theaters in Los Angeles and Hollywood remained open. Wire and telephone communications from the East to Southern California were disrupted. Telephone wires from Los Angeles to the southern end of the city and Long Beach, on the coast, were broken The telephone company was flooded with long-distance calls from Eastern relatives of Los Angeles residents and was more than four hours behind in putting through calls to Los Angeles. Rich Section Damaged. The earthquakes shook part of the richest section of California, an area 200 miles long and some 30 miles wide. More than 2,000,000 persons live in this area, which includes the heart of the motion picture industry, the great citrus beit and the home of the wealthy in Beverly Hills, Pasadena, Hollywood, San Marino and Altadena. Long Beach, made independently wealthy by its oil royalties, is perbaps the best known seashore city and mecca of Summer visitors in all California. It is by far the largest, but business for many years has outstripped the Summer vacation seasonal lure. To the westward are the rich Do- minguez and Torrance cil fielcs and the largest oil storage plants and oil re- fineries in the world, in the region north of Long Beach and surrounding Los Angeles harbor. ‘The area thus tossed about on Mother Earth's bosom embraces all the things that have made California a lure to the world for climati> advantages, Sum; mer vacationing. oil and orange l‘lchr‘s.i property speculation, the movies and the growing industries. This region is marked by river courses | that converge on both sides of Long Beach. Both streams, usually dry in Summer. were named by the Spanish Conquisitadors as rivers of the earth- quakes. They flow into what the In- dians called the Bay of the Earthquakes Back of Long Beach there are some rolling hills, of low elevation, and in the western section of the triangle there is a series of hills from San Pedro. To the west of these hills there was little damage. Over the vast petroleum pools there was heavier damage. Quake Death List (Continued From First Page.) Rae Jane Boyer, 7768 Marvista boulevard, Edna Greena Mayer, street. ———— Hayes. H. Lobee, 37, 5965 Pacific boulevard. Lottie Martyne, 30, 6500 Pacific boule- | vard. Francisco Navarette, Watts. Albert Olsen, 2913 Liberty street, South Gate. Manuel Reves, 17, 10600 Hickory street, Watts. Alberto Rivas of 10622 Hickory street, Mrs. Slaughter, Obellflower. Mrs. Ralph W. Swenson, 39, 3462 Walnut street. Frank Tobias, boulevard William C. Van Noy, strect, Walnut Park Mrs. Marie Herrington, 40, killed near Compton Mrs. B. W. Simpson. Compton. Margaret Simpson, 16, her daughter. Other Districts. William O. John, 63, Pacoima. Antonio Docharne, mechanic, Los An- geles. Irene Henrickson, Los Angeles. Mrs, M. J. Corbin, 468 Roman street, Wilmington. Mrs. —— Moore. 60, Hermosa Beach. Carl Morton, Santa Monica police- man, killed in air crash en route to Long Beach. H. Fred Porter. Santa Monica-Chi- cago sportsman, killed in same crash. Charles Towne, airport manager, also killed in crash J. W. Murray, 20, sailor, U. S. 8. Marblehead, San Pedro. Earl Adamson, Santa Ana. Jack Ellison, 2501 Ivy street, Oakland, at Santa Ana. Mrs. Jack Ellison, same address. Virginia Pollard, 16, Garden Grove. Henry Massey, Norwalk. Monroe D. Buxton, Norwalk. Ira Wharton, Long Beach. Taru K. Igarashi, Long Beach. Arthur Walsh, Long Beach. =~ _SFPECL IOTICES. ___ _ WANTED A RETURN LOAD_TO PHILAC 12¢ 2, 6418 Seveill 35, 1832 Crenshaw; 2432 Flower delphia or vicinity. leaving Tuesday. at 420 24th st n.e, gt Pl L FOR PROMPT. EFFICIENT AND REASON- able clectrical repair service. call the Electric Shop on Wheels, Inc. anc a complete shop Will be brought o your door. Wis. 4521 NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN THAT NO person other than myselt. Henry J. Gompers. 35 authorized to make contracts or collec- tions in the name of Gompers' Monumental Works or Gompers’ Granite Works NRY J. GOMPERS. P TO PROVIDENCE. R 1. TO NEW YORK ... . . TO NEWARK NEW JERSEY SMITH'S TRANSFER & STO) MARCH RAGE CO.. 4 You St. N.W. First Pictures Sho'wiljpg Damage Wrought by Death-Dealing.. California Quake Upper: An idea of the extent of the earthquake in California is given by this telephoto of a wrecked store_ at Florence and Compton avenues, Los Angeles. | Lower: Wreckage of a Long Beach | apartment and store, where three per- | sons were killed, is shown by the tele- photo. SCIENTISTS MAP CALIFORNIA RIFTS Three Great Earthquake “Fault” Zones Are Sur- veyed by Society. | | By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, March 11.—Three great earthquake faults, or rifts, in California, one of which may have been responsible for the Southern Califor- | nia quake, are mapped by the Seismolog- ical Society of America. | They are in the San Andreas, a 600- mile rift, and two shorter ones, the El- sinore and San Jacinto rifts. | The San Andreas fault extends from | Mendocino County, on the Northern: California Coast, south into Mexico. It | runs through the Pacific Ocean from | Point Delgardo to Point Arena; thence | down from Fort Ross, Tomales Bay, Bolinas Bay, San Francisco and through | the Santa Cruz Mountains down the | westerly slopes of the Coast Range back | of Santa Barbara; through Elizabeth | Lake, Palmdale, and the north side of | the Sierra Madre, 25 miles northeast of | Los Angeles; through the San Bernar- dino Range; across the desert; through Salton Sea in the Imperial Valley and into Lower California, Mexico. Important Shock Source. The Elsinore fault, credited as an im- portant scurce of shocks, extemds southeastwardly in a practically straight line along the eastern base of the Santa Ana Mountains from near Pomona to the Santa Margarita River, at least a distance of more than 50 miles. The San Jacinto fault is an impor- tant zone of crust dislocation extending | southeastwardly along the western front | of the San Jacinto Mountains probably | well into Lower California, a distance of | 200 miles. | “Los Angeles, according to the map.” | the Seismological Society report says,| “is situated in a maze of dead faults, | It is probable that those short faults, the valley plains from the mountains are likewise shown as dead on the map. It is probable that these short faults, which have been located by geologic studies of the strata or by drill records, are inactive. They have no exoression in the topography. Others, which are| to be traced in the topography, are po- tentielly active, though no movements have been recorded in them during his- toric time.” Shocks Along the Coast. The report says an active short rift through Inglewood is shown because of a quake at that point in 1920, and that “west of Los Angeles, the coast, where it trends east and west, is also defined by a rift, known as the Santa Monica fault. which extends eastward along the base of the mountains (through I-{ol’lywood) around the Los Angelesi plain.” Certain shocks felt at points along | the southern coast between the Santa Barbara region and the San Diego re- gion “seem surely to have been gener- ated at sea.” the report savs, “and con- sequent!v a vague term. the San Pedro submarine fault zone, is employed.” » RY SALE DURING MARCH— romium bronze {rame: o 7. $70 valuei THOMAS E CLARKE. INC. e. LL ANNIVER: Shower door. ! standard size $39_instalied. 3407 Conn. sve E_MOVING BETWEE! ‘Service since 1806." Co. 1117 B LONG-! Eastern poirts. vidson's Transfer & Stor: Nat. 09 R CU TATRS ¥ CHAIRS RENT, SUTTABLE YOUTH PROVES HERO Rail Worker Stands at Post to Save Others. ' LOS ANGELES, March 11 (P— When death and disaster struck FOR FOR BRIDGE PARTIES. banquets, weddings and meetings, 10c up per day each: new chairs. Also invalid rolling chairs for rent or sale. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO. 418 10th Metropolitan 1844, GOOD ROOF WORK —1is always assured when wi - - ATE e get your or- | assurance for KOON: rellable work. FING Call us up. St v 933 V 8t. N.W. North 4423 ©of good reputation your best * h; Southern California many were heroer. Forrest Brinkerhoff, ycung switcl board operator at the Dominguez sub- station of the Pacific Electric Railway, when the first shock came stood at his post to throw the switch that would save the lives cf many at the cost of is own life. Searchers found his in the ruins of the building, crushed By masonry. Telephoto showing ruins and scattering debris on the sidewalk. o j‘Long Beach Janitor Dodges; of a Long Beach hotel, the front of which has been neatly removed, revealing the inside A. P. Photos. AGENCIES MOBILIZE FOR QUAKE RELIEF California Governor Consid- | ers Declaring State of Emergency. e By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, March 11.—Gov. James Rolph, jr., was to essume per- sonal charge of earthquake relief work today. Aiding him was Finance Direc- tor Rolland Vandegrift and Eric Cullen- ward, deputy director of public works. The United States fleet, stationed -at San Pedro, lost no time in eng2ging in relief work. Four thousand Marines and sailors, with officers, were immedi- ately sent ashore in Long Beach and San Pedro to assist in hospitalization, housing, feeding and sanitation meas- ures. From Wazshington came announce- ment that full forces of American re- lief agencies would be placed into action in the earthquake area. The Army, Navy and Public Health Service were ordered to take whatever steps might be necessary to protect human life and property. Admiral Richard H. Leigh, com- mander in chief of the United States fleet, indicated the Navy had the situ- ation under control and that no help would be needed. The Governor, before leaving Sacra- mento, announced he was considering declaring a state of emergency. This would necessitate calling of the State Emergency Relief Council into action and would make $15,000 immediately available. Pierce_Willlams, field representative for the Reconstruction Finance Corpo- ration, arrived by plane late last night from San Prancisco and said he would co-operate with the relief agencies es- tablished. GIRL DIES OF FRIGHT Night of Terror Proves Fatal to Child on Coast. LOS ANGELES, March 11 (#).— After spending a right in terror, 11- year-old Irene Hendrickson got out of her bed this morning just as the twen- tieth earthquake shock was recorded in Los Angeles and fell dead from fright. “What is that, mother, another earth- gulkfi" the girl asked, then fell to the T. oo Physicians said death was due to the severe tax the girl's fright had placed upon her | By the Assoctated Press. | Long Beach—At least 65 believed | dead and 1,000 injured. The city ap- | parently nearest the quake’s epicenter. Hospitals filled. Major store and office | buildings damaged in some degree and many small structures collapsed. United States sailors and Marines aided police | and American Legionnaires in patrol- ling streets. Los Angeles—Five dead, estimated injured 3,000. Southern end of city | hardest hit. Cracks appeared in new 28-story City Hall. Several downtown streets strewn with fallen debris. Few old buildings collapsed. Compton—Thirteen dead, 150 in- jured. Several brick buildings fell. Huntington Park—Twelve dead. A | small community with a large business district. Many buildings damaged. High school burned. Watts—Four dead. Several buildings down. S Santa Ana—Three dead, scores in- jured. Numerous buildings destroyed. Major Earthquakes Since Turn of Century By the Associated Press. 1902—St. Plerre, Martinique, quake and eruption of Mount Pelee; 30,000 lives lost. 1906—Mount Vesuvius, eruption; 200 lives lost. 1906—San Francisco, loss of 452 lives; | $350,000,000 property loss. | 1906—Valparaiso, Chile, loss of 1,500 lives; $100,000,000 property destruction. 1907—Kingston, Jamaica, 1,000 per- sons killed. 1908—Sicily and Calabria, 76,483 lives it quake and Tost. 1912—Turkey, 3,000 lives lost. 1915—Central Italy, 29,978 persons killed; 372 communes damaged, several large cities completely wiped out. 1917—Guatemala, 2,500 persons killed. 1919—Java, 5,100 killed; 31 villages destroyed. 1920—Mexico, 3,000 lives lost. 1920—China, 200,000 lives lost; 10 c";!iu destroyed in area of 300 square miles. 1923—Persia, 4,600 lives lost. 1923—Japan, Tokio, Yokohama and vicinity; 99,331 persons killed. 1927—Japan (northern part of Kioto), 3,274 lives lost. 1928—Dutch East Indies, 1,200 lives lost. 1920—Persia, 2,000 lives lost; 700 buildings destroyed. 1920—New York to Newfoundland, slight mockwf:lt: tidal wave drowned 1,475 killed. B 1929—Managus, Nicaragua, 1,000 dead. Upper: This telephoto, taken after the first severe shock, shows an auto- damaged by falling brick from roof of the Southwest Building, occupied by the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. v of Long Beach, where many are reported dead. mobile badly formerl Arr TERROR AND RUSH PCTURED INQUAKE vi Bricks—High Naval Officers Flee. By the Associated Press. LON GBEACH, Calif.. March 11.—A story of how he dodged falling bricks and ran for his life was told today by C. A. Williams, janitor of the Ideal Laundry on Anaheim Boulevard, the section of Long Beach hardest hit by the earthquake. “I was in the boiler Toom.” said Wil- liams, “when it struck. A table and several bags of laundry rushed at me as I dashed for the exit. They prob- ably helped me get out. Then I dodged falling brick as I went to the street.” Mrs. Naomi Ellers, bookkeeper for the laundry, was killed when she ran from the office of the building. She was crushed under an avalanche of brick. Had she remained in her office, | she would have lived, for the office was the only room in the building which remained intact Williams said had the quake struck half an hour earlier it would have | caught 20 women at work. San Pedro—Two dead. Buildings| damaged. | Artesia—Four dead. | Bellflower—Three dead. | Wilmington, Hermosa Beach. Nor- | walk, Garden Grove and Walnut Park— One dead in each. Hollywood, Pasadena, Ventura, River- side, San Bernardino, Santa Monica, | Beverly Hills and other suburbs were | severely jolted, and there was damage in some of these. The quake was felt as far south as Tiajuana, Mexico, and far north as San Jose. Rail Fare Cut Rejected. ATLANTA, March 11 (#)—The Louisville & Nashville Railroad has | been denfed permission to reduce pas- | senger fares from the present 4 cents ' a mile to 2 cents a mile in day coaches | and 3 cents per mile in Pullman cars, | by the Georgia Public Service Com- mission. District’s Herces in the World War Compiled by Sergt. L. E. Jacckel. 8 recorded in the official citation, Amos A. Fries, brigadier gen- eral, United States Army, was awarded the Distinguished serv- ice Medal for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services | in a position of great responsibility. As chief of the Chem- ical Warfare Serv- ice, he was charged with the important task of training and equipping our troops for a form of warfare in which the Ameri- can Army had had no experience prior to the World War. Both in sectiring proper defensive measures _against gas, and in devel- oping new methods for its use as an thereby rendering val- rican Expedi- Holiday Saves Many. “Only the fact that the banking holiday had slowed business almost to stand limited the number in the laundry,” he stated. “‘We searched through what was left of the building and couldn't find Mrs. Ellers and then I saw a piece of h(‘rkdrtss showing through the pile of rick. “Her husband, a driver for the com- pany had just brought his truck in at the rear and also escaped. “It was awful. They took a butcher from that grocery store a half block down the street and a fellow running a lunch counter up east got caught, | besides several others. The Villa Riviera, a 16-story hotel, where most of the high ranking officers of the Navy reside, swayed violently but suffered no more than a few cracks and fallen plaster. Admiral Richard H. Leigh, com- mander in chief of the United States | Fleet, after rushing down the stairway with most of the other 400 occupants and out into the street, returned to his suite around midnight in disdain of the succeeding shocks, which continued through the night. Tells of Race Down Stairs. George Kingrea, assistant manager of the Villa Riviera, one of the tallest | apartment buildings in Southern Cali- | fornia, painted a picture of the hurried exit of the naval officers when the first shock came. “The elevator stopped and everybody rushed down the steirs and out into the street. The bellboy stuck right on the job and went through the rooms, clearing them of people.” As he spoke another sharp tremor rocked the concrete reinforced struc- ture. “That's the way it was, only worse. I wanted to get out of here but couldn’t and I wasn't sure but what the end was at hand. I didn't see how the building could stand. Those outside said the tower must have swayed sev- eral feet, When we did get out in the street we saw a two-story apartment of brick across from the Pacific Coast Club with the front completely broken away. Fortunately, it went before any of the occupants could dash out the doorway and as & result their lives were spared.” KNEW “QUAIEE” OVERDUE Southern Californians Greatly Sur- prised Despite Scientific Data. LOS ANGELES, March 11 () .— More than 2,000,000 persons in South- | ern California had known for years that an earthquake was “overdue” by scientific estimate. They had been told to expect one sooner, or later. When it came most of them were astonished. Girl Baby Is Born As Temblors Shake California Hospital | | By the Associated Press. | COMPTON, Calif., March 11.— While the family residence was being destroyed by the earth- queke, a girl baby was born to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Van Winkle 1 | at a Compton hospital. The mother was moved from the home at the time of the first pronounced tremor, and with the destruction of the residence the remainder of the family moved into a tent on a vacant lot for the night. Dr. A. M. Firkins, dentist, was operating on a patient in his second-ficor office in a downtown building. The building collapsed and when the masonry was pulled away he was dead, but his patient, an unidentified woman, the dental apron and towel still across her shoulders, walked oud of the wreckage, apparently only slightly injured. INUTE | Dr_Fordney is a famovs university ht by the police of ronted with particularly b This problem has been taken fro case- book covering hundreds of criminal investi- gation Try_vour wits on it! It takes but ONE E to read! Every fact and every necessary to_its solution are in_the story itself—and there is only one answer. How good a detective are you? | Class Day. | | BY H. A. RIPLEY. “Gentlemen,” said Prof. Fordney to his class, “this is Capt. David Silver- " man, an intelligence officer during the | World War. I've asked him to relate | to you some of his interesting experi- ences.” } “How do_you do, | fellows. I know the professor has’ been teaching you | chaps the value of observation in/ crime detection. Perhaps this inci- dent_will illustrate just how important observation is in any sort of intel- ligence work. “One morning while sitting in my headquarters in France near an airdrome an aid rushed in with a dispatch that two airplanes had just | left the field. The first one that took ‘ofl carried a spy conveying valuable information to the enemy! “I hurriedly determined to down both | planes, if necessary, to get the fellow, | as I suspected the nature of the in- | formation the spy possessed. | “Grabbing a pair of field glasses, I | saw two planes overhead, exactly alike. | While at about the same altitude, sev- | eral hundred yards separated them. | “I issued orders to a nearby anti- | aircraft battery to train its guns on the plane which I knew carried the spy! Seeing the game was up, he signaled his intention of landing, so I called the battery off. “As the professor would say, ‘Quickly, now! How did I know which plane carried the spy? “A neat problem in deduction, boys, I can modestly say that the quickness of my observation probably saved thou- sands of lives.” HOW DID CAPT. SILVERMAN KNOW_WHICH PLANE CARRIED THE SPY? The above problem was sent to the professor by David Silverman, Chicago, for class day. Perhaps you have one TREMORS RECALL D. . MAN'S ADVICE Carnegie Institution Expert Warned Californians to Build Carefully. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, March 11.—Warn- ing to Southern California architects and engineers that they should prepare for strong ¢-rthquzkes was sounded in August, 1925, by Harry O. Wood, re- search associate in seismology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington and vice president of the Seismological Socl:ety of America, it was recalled last night. Wood's warning was issued shortly after the Santa Barbara earthquake of June, 1925. He pointed out that the total energy of the Santa Barbara tremor, which took 11 lives and caused damage to the extent of $10.000,000, was small. The damage wzs due chiefly though not wholly, he said, {0 poor or unsuitable buildings “In the century and a half since California has been occupied by Euro- 5 shocks as strcng if nos 0 destruc earthquake have occusres and 1n Sou ern California alone there have been two or three major chocks,” Wood said. Indians Terrified. In 1769 a shock strong enough to terrify Indians and members of the Portola Expedition in czmp near the site of Santa Ana, 36 mi from Lcs Angeles, wes recorded. In the late Autumn of 1812 a destructive shock, or perhaps two cr more, Wood said, des troyed missions at Purissima, San Juan Capistrane, at Santa ¥) age at the Missions of San Buenaven- ture, San Francisco and San Gabri In 1857, Wood said, much of South entral and Southern California was shaken by a great earthquake, “p ably the strongest that has occurred in since the com- “It is reasonable, “to look upon shocks like those of 1812 and 1856, and probably 1769 also, as relieving shocks; t is, shocks due to great widespread rock strain grad- ually accumulated during a long time which finally is relieved * * *. Strong local shocks which precede such greater shocks may reasonably be viewed as evidence of strain thus accumulated and not yet relieved. Predictions Avoided. Wood concluded: “Seismologists cannot make definite predictions; but it is surely the wiser conclusion to expect in Southern Cali- fornia the continued occurrence of local strong earthquakes untii the regional rock strain finds relief through the occurrence of a general strong shock, after which a term of relative immunity may be expected. “Even if no great earthquake occurs as the climax of the series, the happen- ing of local strong shocks is inevitable as long as rock strain is unrelieved. _ ROOSEVELT SPEEDS AID TO QUAKE AREA: CASH IS AUTHORIZED ntinued From First Page.) time in days, the President was awakened to be informed of the extent of the quake. He i issued orders that the resources of Gov= ernment be put behind relief work and told Gov. James Rolph, jr. in a per- sonal message that “if there is anything needed that the Government can do wire me at once.” As this message was sent, T. Early, a secretary to the sident, began issuing his chief's orde: He notified the Army and Navy to do all they could and advise Washington if they needed reinforcements. He also advised Ferry K. Heath, As- sistant Secretary of the Treasury in charge of the Public Health Service. to see that that agency was ready to give all possible assistance in enforcing sani- tary measures necessary to prevent the gpread of disease in the afflicted area. The Navy's hospital ship, Relief, with 31 officers and 365 men and a sizable supply of medical equipment, was or- dered to take a hand in the work as speedily as possible. The United States fighting fleet. man- ned by crews experienced in relief and policing work. found itself on the scene when the disaster broke. Although part of the fleet was four hours away, in San Diego. 39 vessels already were at San Pedro and Long Beach. in the quake area, ready to send men and medical stores on the stricken shore. At San Pedro were 26 ships, includ- ing 9 battleships, a half dozen heavy cruisers and 5 light cruisers, in addi- tion to the hospital ship. The Pennsyl- vania, flagship of the fleet, commanded by Admiral Richard H. Leigh, was among the ships there, enabling Leil to take immediate action. A destroyer ephen land miscellaneous vessels. such as oil tankers and mine sweepers, completed the San Pedro section. Although a considerable number of officers and bluejackets had to be kept on board to man the vessels, the other thousands were available to give their service. CAPITOL TAGS STOLEN Police Hunt Thief Who Took New York Representative's Number. Pclice today were seeking a fast- working thief who stole a congressional automobile tag from Representative James J. Lanzetta of New York before the latter had it put on his car The tag, No. 70, was taken from the inside of the car. The theft was re- ported to police by Marshall C. Picker- ing, in charge of the minority office at the House Office Building. DINE at The Dodge Hotel food. excellent Delicious service. Dinner served from 5:30 to 8 p.m. daily. Sunday, 12 m. to 3 pm. and 5:30 to 8 pm. Music Saturdays and Sundays from 6 to 8 p.m. DINNERS, $1.00 and Ul No Tipping Where One Dollar is $1 l With No Tips | We offer you the best qual- | ity of food we can pur- | | chase; skilled preparation | and service; with no extra fees for tipping in the res- taurant or in the check room. N. Capitol & E Sts. N.W. National 53160 you would like the professor to give his students. If so, send it to him in care of this paper. (For Solution See Page A-7.) AMPLE PARKING SPACE

Other pages from this issue: