Evening Star Newspaper, July 1, 1933, Page 4

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A—4 x3 VALLEY AUTHORITY GETS SHOALS WORK War Department Transfers Control of Federal Power to Tennessee Body. By the Associated Press. The War Depirtment last night transferred its cotrol of the Federall power and nitrogen plants at Muscle Shoals to the Tennessee Valley Au- thority, which is to handle the admin- istration’s program for developing the| Tennessee River basin area 1 The Authority is making an inven- tory of the property at Muscle Shoals. This has an estimated value of $150,- 000,000. In taking over the plant at| midnight the Authority assumed somie | 80 persons previously employed by the War Department | Used as Yardstick. ment, Dr. Arthur E. | Morgan, chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority, said Muscle Shoals would be used as a ‘‘yardstick to de-| termine the relative costs of public and private power operation based on a fair and_equitable method of co:. account- ing.” as well as for experiments in pro- | In a formal st Italian Air Fleet on Way to World’s Fair ducing fertilizer The authority’s power policy will be | adopted “as soon as possible,” Dr. Mor- | gan said. but cdded “because o its long range nature this undertaking does not depend on speed as in the case of na- tional emergency measures.” | The authority is not formulating any policies “until it knows where it stands | with regard to national and State leg- islation and its own relation to the| Federal structure. and what it is taking | over at Muscle Shoals and elsewhere | and until it can obtain scientific and other data which will help shape its | course,” Morgan said. i | No Decision on Exchange. He said there had been no decision by the authority on the offer of the! Swann Chemical Co. to exchange two power sites on the Hiwassee and Atlic- hucky Rivers in Tennessee for Approxi- mately $1.500.000 worth of power from the Muscle Shoals plant. 3 Morgan said as soon as the adminis- tration organization was perfected and | the position of the authority with re-‘ spect to other governmental agencies Was clearly defined, the authority would establish headquarters _near Muscle Shoals with a branch officc at or near Knoxville to facilitate supervision of the Cove Creek development plan. SEAPLANE CRASHES IN ARMADA FLIGHT; THREE MEN INJURED (Continued From First Page) guccess of the flight—considered b\:‘ Ttalians a major feat in aviation history | —and reporting that everything was; functioning perfectly. Fine weather, such as Gen Balbo | had been awaiting for weeks before giv-| ing the take-nff signal, prevailed over, the Alps. ! Route of Armada. An overnight stop was planned at Amsterdam and then the fivers will con- tinue to Londonderry, North Ireland. a distance of 650 miles. with the sub- sequent schedule as_follows: Londonderry to Reykjavik, 930 miles. Reykjavik to 1,500 miles. Cartwright to Shediac. 800 miles. Shediac to Montreal, 500 miles. Mont:eal to Chicago, 870 miles. The twenty-fifth ship is an alternate. 1t will fly as far as Revkjavik, it is Planned, and will continue to the| United States only if a regular plane drops out. FRENCH ESCORT GROUPS. Iceland, Cartwright, Labrador, Military Planes Accompany Armada, Along France's Frontier. STRASBOURG. France. July 1 M"’ = The Chicago-bound squadron of Ttalian | seaplanes was escorted along \h(‘} French frontier from a point near Basel, Switzerland. to Haguenau, France, to- dav by 20 French military planes. i The Italians wer= flying high when thev passed Strasbourg at 9:55 am.' (4:55 a.m., Eastern standard time). FELICITATES BALBO. Admiral King, Chief of Navy Flyers, Sends Best Wishes. | Bv the Associated Press | Best wishes of America’s naval air forces were extended today to Gen Balbo by Rear Admiral Ernest J. King., Chief of naval aeronautics “Gen. Balbo has already led one; squadron_of Italian planes across the, Atlantic,” King said. “All of navall aviation is confident that he will make this flight a success and congratulates him and the Italian air force on their courage and ability. Gen. Balbo and his crews and his planes will receive a: most cordial welcome.” STORM USE OF CREEK | AIDS D. C. TAXPAYERS Citizens Saved Thousands of Dol-. Jars in Water Sewer Construc- tion by Overflow. District taxpayers have been saved hundreds of thousands of dollars in; storm water sewer construction, by util- i7ing Rock Creek’s waters for the over flow, officials of the Office of Public, Buildings and Public Parks asserted ! yesterday. The office made public results of re- searches of the Geological Survey, In-| terior Department. made with gauges, set at Shemill drive and at the Q Street Bridge, in Rock Creck Park. Wide variation. n the flow of the water in the creek are shown in the studies, made by A. H. Horton, Geological Sur- vev aistrict engineer. The maximum flow showed 842 cubic feet of water per second on March 28, while the minimum flow was 2.3 cubic feet per second on August 29 of last year, as shown in the figures for the past 12 months The all-time low was five-tenths of & cubic foot per second. recorded at Sher- rill drive in October. 1930, when the drought of three years ago was at its height. Rock Creek serves as a storm sewer off-flow for Soapstone Valley. Broad Branch, Klingle Valley. Piney Branch and other contributing streams and val- leys. e L TUndergoes Eighteenth Operation. ; Tvan Mills, Quincy, Mass, sign painte:. recently underwent his eight- eenth eperation in 20 years. | Minute Mystery TE MYSTERY. Solution to CLASS DAY. (Sce Page A-3) Southey’s share was 7 cents and Foster's 1 cent. Put down that pencil; you don't need it! YOU CANNOT TEACH A MAN ANYTHING: YOU CAN ONLY HELP HIM TO FIND IT WITH- IN HIMSELF.—Galileo. (Copyright. 1933.) MINU I ! sleep here. |10 and I don’t go to sleep till 5. ! complaint must remain anonymous, as { would happen j not out. Pellegrini (left to right, inset). CAMP TERA PROVIDES HAVEN | FOR UNEMPLOYED WOMEN Project Sponsored by Mrs. Roosevelt and! Miss Perkins in Is Proving Success Special Dispatch to The Star. CAMP TERA, BEAR MOUNTAIN. N Y., July 1 (NANA)—"It's the ber- ries! Gee!" Antiquated slang. but heartfelt. A former nursemaid pays her tribute to Camp Tera, first of the conservation camps for girls and women. Thirty girls scramble out of the bus after her, unemployed women who at last have found a haven. Shyness and loudness mingle, curiosity and conde- scensicn. Smart-looking $9.75 tailored suits and trim hats, sleazy flowered chiffons trailing over teetering high heels. knickers and shorts, beach pa- jamas, and house dresses, all just off the Hudson River boat from New York City. They are diffident and eager. these girls, and all wary of institutionalism “Hand over my suit case, will you?” a tailored suit asks. *Maybe we're supposed to leave them here.” blue cotton shorts answers. - Oht Ample, efficient, smiling, the direc- tor of the conservation camp. Marion E. Tinker. calls out: “Come with me, girls.” | They disappear for registration and as- signment to cabins in Camp Tera, which was planned by Mrs. Roosevelt, wife of the President. and Miss Frances Per-| xins. United States Secretary of Labor, ! to bring health and happiness to vic- tims of the depression. Veterans Watch Newcomers. A group of “old-timers” sit on the steps in the sun, smoking and talking. | Some of them have been at the camp | since the beginning, two weeks ago.| They are brown and bright-eyed and | enthusiastic. Others. more recent, are peeling from their first sunburns. It is be rest period, after lunch and before wimming. A little factory girl yawns. “I can't 1t's too quiet. Lights out at Her a ruling forbids the mention of names to reporters. | A one-time dancer is talking. half in English, half in French. I tell you, there are some jobs now. For two years there were none, but now there are some. It's a sign.” A stenographer sniffs. “You can't get any kind of a Job. even washing dishes"—she laughs—"unless you come here.” Salesgirl Calls It Fun. A salesgirl objects. “That isn't work. Why, it's fun—and waiting on tables. . . for all we get. thal's not much—two hours a day work. If you had a cottage of your own you'd have to work harder than_that A Bav sulate now tr nothing at all “At our consulate.” the French dancer boasts, “people used to get as much as $200. Not now, of coursc.” she adds hastily. “probably never sgain. But soon there'll be something. You see.’ A langorous blond with much mas- cara up with a small dark girl 1 sure wish something to the show business. Don't we. honey?” The dark girl smiles sadly, At 19 deafness has eliminated her from the chorus, and dancing is the only.thing she knows how to do. The blond shakes her playfully. “Cheer up. We may be down. but we're Say. Mr. Feldman thought he t for the Chicago fair. but I'm a professional bicycle trick stuff—vaudeville Gosh it's fun. O, ian girl mutters: “At the con- want you to work for had me all here I am. rider, yknow. and State fairs well, gotta match?” “I'm & college girl” volunteers an Amazon. “Physical education. And now I haven’t any money to keep go- ing. Gee. girls—all they think about is how many classes they can cut. And me. I want| to go. I work my way through. Maybe next year I can find some one who'll help me. But it's swell here. Gee, the food they give you!" The blond laughed contentedly. | “When Mrs. Roosevelt was here we | had chicken.” she recalled. “Gosh. she's nice. Y'know,” she went on, “I was| sort of shy at first, but Mrs. Roosevelt asked me something and I No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loans without the ex- pense of renewing. $1.000 for $10 per month, including in- terest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportionate rates PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets Over $30,000,000 Surplus $1,250,000 James Berry, Pre Edward C Baltz, Se Membep of e District of Col Building Asseciation Cous ing three of the 24 planes go through a drill. | girls wandered THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, TALIAN flyers at Lake Ordetello, Italy, shortly before start of the trip to the United States. The fleet is under the leadership of Gen. Italo Balbo and Gen. Aldo D. C., SATURDAY, REVEILLE. SOUNDS STILLED AT STATION Economy Blows Taps as Great Lakes Naval Train- ing Base Passes On. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 1.—Once regarded as the largest of its kind in the world, the Great Lakes Naval Training Sta- tion, 33 miles north of Chicago, last night passed into the realm of bygone things. Taps sounded, even as it has sounded every night for exactly 22 years, but it was the last. and today held no promise of reveille, which for 22 years has awakened the Great Lakes station into activity. Spanish War Product. Product of the Spanish-American War, in that the naval resources of the Midwest were never fully realized until then, the station has led a pre- carious existence. measure by its dispstch of nearly 200.- 1000 of the “best men” into the World They are shown watch- —A. P. Photos. Bear Mountain up. ‘Then she told us about her ‘kids.’ Yeah, can you feature that? She called them' kids. No side at all—just like one of us.” Bell Rings for Swimming. A bell down by Lake Tiorati rang for swimming and corrective exercises. Out of log and screen cabins girls came. On a small wharf they lay on their backs and kicked their legs to one-two, | cne-two. Two colored girls were among | them. Pee Wee, from Trinidad, cut | capers. The others laughed. There | was no trace of race prejudice to be | seen. | These are girls from many walks of | | life leveled to one by their common | menace, unemployment. A young widow. caught in the Florida real estate slump. lost her $15.000 home and now spends her evenings learning short- hand. She knows tvping, but that isn't | enough these days. A former hotel clerk spoke of a trip | to Yellowstone last year. “My dear, I want to tell vou. the cabins here are palaces compared to the ones out West. | It's simply too good to be true.” She smiled happily out over the lovely lake | with its many small islands. “Heav- | enly.” ! Miss Tinker is as enthusiastic about | the girls as they are about the camp. | “The most marvelous thing.” she said, “is that we are finally finding the girls | employment. Already three have gotten | mont jcbs. We don't let them | a sure thing.” | Age Limit Raised. ! Since Mrs. Roosevelt’s visit consid- ' erable red tape has been cut. The age limit has been raised from 35 to 40, and girls whose fathers have par- tial employment are now eligible. “The girls are splendid in their co- operation.” praised Miss Tinker. “Very little friction, as few rules as possible, and practically no cliquing.” When asked if there was homesickness, she smiled sadly. “How could there be? These girls have no homes to return to.” The swimming period over, the | into the “play room™ in every manner of costume for a tap- | dancing lesson. New girls, conspicu- | ously pink and white in their abbrevi- ated clothes, sat shyly together around the walls. | “I'll say it's the berries,” one ex-| plained. ~“Why, do you know what they give us to_eat? "Me? Oh, what I do when I work? And I'd hate to tell you how long ago that's been. I take care of kids. I guess people aren't having them any more.” A salesgir]l, out of work for two| vears, speaks: “Things are different. You can feel it. And people are buy- | ing egain. My friend still has a job, and I know | The class is going through the ele- mentary routine of tap - dancing. “Brush, tap. step. brush, tap. step.” The nursegirl nudges the sal “Let’s do it. too?” Giggling, conscious. happy and awkward, join. ~ “Brush, tap, step, brush, step.” g0 unless it's | much r. | self- they | Dates Only on Sundays. “Wait till my boy friend sees me do g this. girl laughs, and stops. have dates here?” An old-timer nods. “Sure, what did vou think? Only on Sunday’s though.” Will it burn him up?” the sales- “Say, can you Camp Tera, Miss Tinker explained, is ' ¢ still in the experimental stage. It is the hope of Mrs. Roosevelt and Secretary Perkins that other camps will be estab- lished. The camp is financed by Fed- eral funds, the camp itself having been lent for the experiment by an insurance | it makes you sick. These rich | company. Five dollars a week, in this % @be Forning Htar ADVERTISENENTS l: RECEIVED HERE Rivcy o Bernstein’s Drug Store 18th & Fla. Is An Authorized Star Branch Office b them because The Star is one in and around Washington. fices are distributed throughout the city so that you You can locate it by the will find one near you. above sign. There are no fees in connection with the Branch | for girls who wait and hope for work.” tap, |9 OU will find an advertisement in the Classified Section of The Star the most direct way to sup- ply most any want which you may have. Certainly, if there is anybody in Washington who can supply It, this means will put you in touch with way. is sufficlent to give fresh air, food | and fun to one girl. Thirty-five cents a day supplies such | a menu as this: Breakfast—Apricots, oatmeal and milk. toast and coffee. Dinner—Baked Virginia ham, scal- loped potatoes, cabbage salad, apple whip, tea. Supper—Frankfurters, sauer- kraut, bread and butter, hot ginger bread, cocoa. The camp needs dress goods and clothes. “The girls,” Miss Tinker said, “come for the most part in their last remaining finery—for the boat trip. After they get here we have to dress them...bathing suits. shorts...camps shoes. . .everything. Many of them want | to make their own things, and all we are waiting for is some one who will do- nate the materials. Cigarettes are an- | other thing we can never get enough of. | “If funds hold out and enough en- thusiasm is shown, we hope to keep open all Winter...a year-around vacation Miss Tinker is called away by a girl who has had & wire from New York. “It's a job,” the camp director cried— as happy about it as the girl herself. (Copyright. 1933, by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc ) SIX PERSONS LYNCHED IN U. S. DURING 1933 Tuskegee Records Reveal Two Each in Louisiana and Tennessee and | i One Each in Georgia and Texas. By the Associated Press. TUSKEGEE. Ala. July 1—R. R Moton, prircipal of Tuskegee Institute said yesterday records compiled by his | school show six persons were lynched in the United States during the first | six_months of this year. This number is one more than the number lynched during the same period last year. Ten vears ago 15 persons were lynched during the first six hs of 1923. Two of the six persons lynched were whites. The States in which lynchings oc- curred and the number follow: Georgia, 1; Louisiana, 2; Tennessee, 2; Texas, 1. ADOPT WORKING CODE Lumber Dealers of Two Carolinas Will Act July 7. CHARLOTTE. N. C.. July 1 (#).—A code for operation under the national recovery act was approved at a meet- ing here yesterday of directors of the Carolina Retail Building Material & Lumber Dealers’ Association. Unanimously adopted by directors, the code will be presented to the lum- ber. building material and mill work | dealers of the two Carolinas at a gen- eral meeting here July 7. The code will have to be adopted by the industrv and approved by Government officials be- fore it goes into effect A minimum wage scale and maximum working hours were agreed upon today | but were not announced, pending the | July 7 meeting. Wedding Rings Long in Use. The wedding ring was in use among the ancient Hindus. The betrothal or | engagement ring was used in ancient Rome. y Vow is the Time 9 to Trim Shrubbery, Etc. Trimming of trees, shrubbers. etc.. executed by _experienced e artists. Have this work done now. Landscape Contractors Sodding. spraying. transplanting, soil revitalizing. Buy Nursery Stock direct from our nursery. HYATTSVILLE NURSERY OAKWOOD RD. Phone. CreenwooD 2274' e R R ey oy o L A Y e S S ety Ave. N.W. read by practically every These Branch Of- Office service; only regular rates are charged. War as seamen, its prospects neverthe- less were troubled before and after that conflict by rumors of its abandonment or curtailment, until the economy pro- gram of President Roosevelt cut it short. Tt was in 1916 that Roosevelt, then | Assistant Secretary of the Navy, spoke words almost prophetic in their import concerning the station. “In case of emergency,” he said, “the station is a most desirable one, but it seems they attempted too big a thing there right at the start. Unless the Navy is increased in size it will be im- possible to run it to full capacity.” ‘War came in two vears and Great Lakes made a proud record for itself. From this station, drawing recruits from as far east as Buffalo, N. Y.; as far west as Omaha, Nebr.: north as far as Fargo, N. Dak. and south as far as New Orleans, sailors went into active service and won Admiral S. Benson’s praise for Great Lakes as “sending the best men to the fleet.” Located by Congress. An act of Congress in 1902 located the station. work started in 1904 and dedication by former President William Howard Taft came on October 28, 1911. although the first recruits were received July 1, 1911. Four million dollars went ! into the building of it. to an excellence surpassing either Annapolis or West Point, in point of physical equipment Wartime added buildings and Jand to it. but land went back to the owneis afterward by proclamation of President Wilson and the buildings went with the | land. Great Lakes had all that went with the war—a spy scare. a siege of influenza and contract and pay roll scandals, but survived all with honor to the Navy. Rear Admiral Albert Ross superin- tended the building of Great Lakes, getting the soubriquet of “Czar of Great Lakes” for the meticulous way he en- forced Government rules and specifica- tions. The late Rear Admiral William A. MofTett, who went to his death with his crew in the giant dirigible Akron, was commander there in the period of the station's greatest service. and Ad- miral Wat T. Cluverius, survivor of the sinking of the battleship Maine, is there today, to superintend the closing of the post. Never in Bed for 135 Years. India’s oldest man. who was found re- cently by census takers, never went to bed 1n his first 135 years. When he felt tired he would sit down in a hard. wooden chair, take 40 winks and wake up fully refreshed. He savs he is 150 vears old, and the census superintendent of the Central Provinces, where the man lives, is sure he is at least 130. Justified beyond | JU DAYTON, Ohio (#).—A new experi- ment in housing now under way here entails a marked transformation in the economic and social life of home- seekers en’aged in it. Salient features of the plan, which already has placed 35 families on a rural tract 5 miles from Dayton, with crops and garden planted for the Sum- mer harvest, are these: Build Own Homes. The people build their own homes, thereby eliminating & major item in the cost of housing. Each family is lent funds to cover the cost of land, buildings, seed, live stock, tools and equipment, repaying the principal and interest in small weekly installments spread over a pe- | riod of years. The funds used to finance the first homestead unit, as it is called, and to | start 35 families on their self-support- | ing way came from the sale locally of | $37,000 in 15-year, 413 per cent “inde- | pendence bonds.” Some families already on relief rolls | are to be taken off as the result of the development. Plan Enlargement Sought. ‘The Unit Committee of the Council | of Social Agencies, which is directing | the experiment, has applied to the Fed- eral public works administration for a loan of $2,500,000 with which to buy | 50 farms of about 160 acres each and establish 49 more units within a year, | each unit taking care of 35 to 40 fam- ilies. Recelving & maximum loan of $1,071, | |each of the 1,750 or 2000 families | would settle upon a tract of about three |acres in a house constructed by its | | members, work part-time or full-time in factories, tend garden and engage in home crafts and arts. The homesteader occupies his land under a perpetual lease rather than by deed. a device intended to prevent | speculation in land and to prevent withholding of allotted land from use. | Taxes are levied upcn the unit as a {whole and apportioned among the {leasenolders according to the value of | | each piece of land. Electric Power Available. Electricity is avaflable to run the ooms, sewing machines and domestic ! machinery to eliminate drudgery. | Ralph Borsodi of New York is con- sulting economist for the project. Describing it is an experiment to de- centralize production, and give domestic | machinery & chance to free the worker from evils of the machine age. Borsodi says the plan aims at attaining the “economic inaependence, security and self-sufficiency” of the early “American home” without “duplicating with false romanticism the clumsy appliances of pioneer days.” | I Royalty Learns to Box. Since it has become known that the Prince of Wales and his two nephews Lord Lascelles and the Hon. Gerald Lascelles, have learned to box. bcth boys and girls of prominent London families are learning the art of pugilism at the request of their parents. The princess royal recently attended a box- | | ing exhibition in which Lady Marie ! Cambridge, the Queen’s grandniece, took part 1 % 4 Fresh Strawberry for the Fourth! “Farms” Furnished Jobless GIVEN MONEY FOR HOMES AND HAVE 15 YEARS TO PAY. |Senator Carries Passport for ‘“Any- | hasn’t decided yet himself. | YOUTH CRITICALLY HURT WHEN STRUCK BY AUTO Alphonso Calabrese, 20, Treated at Emergency Hospital for In- ternal Injuries. Alphonso Calabrese, 20, 128 D street southeast, was injured critically when | struck by an automobile at Twelfth and | Water streets today. Police said the car was driven without the owner’s con- | sent and are holding George L. Hynson, | 26, 600 block of H street southwest, on a charge of investigation. The car that police say Hynson was driving at the time of the accident be- longs to E. N. Snow, 2101 Connecticut | avenue. Snow had left the machine in | a garage in the 1200 block of Twentieth street. Calabrese, standing beside a parked |car at the time he was struck, was treated at Emergency Hospital for be- lieved fracture of the back and internal injuries. Division of Loan Under Dayton Unit Homestead Plan Here's how a maximum loan to a family under the Dayton unit homestead plan would be divided: Period Items. Loans. Years. 3. Well, pump, etc. . Barn and equip® ment . . 140.00 Farming ‘tools. 17.50 . Domestic chines equipment . Live stock ! Seeds. plants ‘and oqs s o Groceries and feed Total $1,071.63 Weekly installments on land and buildings, including interest, amortization of principal, taxes and maintenance of community property, $2.12. Installments ona | maximum loan the first year are | | $6.16; second year, $3.74; third { year, $3.06; next 12 years, $2.25. | M’ADOO HOPS OFF TODAY ON INDEFINITE JOURNEY 85.00 58.50 33.31 7985 Chip Taken From Lung. A chip of concrete was successfully removed from the lung of a 16-month- old girl at Parson, Kans. e Y 'Colliee Fan | .7 COLUMBIA RD.sf184ST. A mzmn and Cooles Today’s Dinner, 55c, where and Everywhere"—May Hit Europe or Asia. Armed with a passport which will | take him “anywhere and everywhere,” Senator William Gibbs McAdoo of Cali- fornia took off from Washington-Hoo- ver Airport this morning in his plane, Blue Streak, on the first leg of a va- cation that may find him “somewhere in_Europe or somewhere in Asia The former Democratic Treasury Secretary and one-time aspirant for the presidential nomination said with a smile he couldn't be too specific about where he planned to go, because he SWAT THE Use Star fly swatters to continue an aggressive war on the fly through- * out the season. The Star has for free distribution wire- handled fly swatters. i He plans to lunch with his family in Los Angeles tomorrow, if the flying c(lr)rlmmms across the country are favor- able. McAdoo told of his vacation hopes when asked about published reports that he was planning a “mysterious” trip to China and Philippines, provided he got the “word to go.” The Californian said there was nothing “mysterious” about his intended journey and that he had obtained an unusual passport only because he didn't know where he would g0 or when he would get a chance to *cCLOSED- At 1 o’Clock P.M. on Saturday During July and August the Offices of the Washington Gas Light Company 415 TENTH ST. N. W. Georgetown Gas Light Company 1339 WISCONSIN AVE. N. W. Will Be Closed on Saturday Afternoons at 1 P. M. A<k for one at the main office of The Star 11th and Pa. Ave. N.W. WASHINTGON’S NEWEST AND GREATEST SALT WATER COMMUNITY TO BUY A SUMMER HOMESITE at the lowest price ever offered o CHESAPEAKE BAY DRIVE DOWN AND SEE THIS DISTINCTIVE BAY SHORE COMMUNITY BUY NOW! > BUY NOW! BUY NOW! GOOD INVESTMENT RESTRICTED—DELIGHTFUL! UNUSUAL—OUTSTANDING! Not a Public Resort! DRIVE DOWN AND BRING THE WHILE PRICES ARE LOW WHILE CHOICE LOTS ARE STILL AVAILABLE ® ONE MILE OF WHITE SAND BATHING BEACH ® BEAUTIFUL COM- MUNITY PARK AND SURROUNDINGS ® ALL LOTS WOODED WITH WONDERFUL SHADE TREES ® MILES OF GOOD ROADS AND WONDERFUL VIEWS BECAUSE IT IS A FAMILY ALONG Motor Route—48 Miles—Out Penna. Ave. S. E., to Marlboro Pike, through Upper Marlboro—take Solomon Island route, turn right on concrete highway No. 416, then Route 2 through Prince Frederick—following signs to our entrance. Long Beach Incorporated §01-19 Metro. Bank Bldg. NAt. 8023 NAt. 6525

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