Evening Star Newspaper, July 12, 1933, Page 3

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THREE KIDNAPINGS | REMAIN MYSTERY Developments of Startling Nature Expected in Scat- tered Cases. (Continued From First Page.) kidnaping and has refrained from aid- ing the police, New York City detectives, State and Federal operatives. Ed, Dan and John, sr., steadily have relied on direct negotiations with the abductors. None of the 11 intermediaries named by the O'Connells yesterday have been located today. At Buffalo, Joseph J. Dicarlo, called No. 1 of that city’s police list of public enemies, said he had been asked to help in the search by Tommy Dyke, cne of the go-betweens named by the O'Connells last Monday. The Xid- napers rejected the first list of inter- mediaries. Woman and Son Missing. While officers of half a dozen branches of national and State law en- forcement agencies pushed a sweeping | <earch for O'Connell, police wer~ > find Mrs. Elbert Hackel ard ner 10- {ear-old son Robert, missing a week. According to the police record, Henry dams of Loudenville Heights, who, 2th his wife had custody of the boy, appealed to authorities to find the two. Mrs, Hackel, the police report said, asked Mrs. Adams to let her take Robert swimming. Eefore Mrs. Adams | consented the woman and th> boy dis- | appeared. AIDS IN O'CONNELL CASE. Buffalo’s Public Enemy No. 1 Leaves to Seek Kidnapers. BUFFALO, N. Y., July 12 (®.—Jo- seph J. Dicatlo, No. 1 on the Buffalo police commissioners list of public enemies, left the city early today with the intention of attempting to contact the kidnapers of John J. O'Connell, jr., of Albany. He did not say where he was going. Dicarlo told friends that Thomas Dyke, one of the intermediaries named | by the O'Connell family, had telephoned him from Albany asking his aid. Dicarlo said he had already been in touch with acquaintances in Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and upstate New ! York cities. i “I don't know who these kidnapers might be and I have had no contact with them. But I'll do all I can through | my friends in other cities to get in touch with them,” Dicarlo said after talking with Dyke. ASK POLICE TO WITHDRAW. Sons of Alton Banker Hope to Open Negotiations With Kidnapers. ALTON, Il July 12 ().—Hoping that the kidnapers wealthy 77-year-old banker and meat packer, might begin their negotiations today for ransom, members of the Luer | with police, riding horseback on his of August Luer, ' and detectives today. A man attem) to break into the Martin home in subur- ban Abington yesterday. Martin and several frlends maintained a vigil all last night in the event the stranger, who was seen near the estate twice after the attempted break, might return. Martin said he had received no threats and was inclined to discount the theory that the mysterious stranger in- tended a kidnapping. “It seems more like the work of a demented person,” Martin said. The Martins have one other child, Marjorie, aged 1. About noon yesterday Roosevelt Rob- inson, a servant, heard the bay, Peter, screaming in the garden. Running to the scene, the servant said he saw a man creeping menacingly toward the child. The stranger walked away at| Robinson's shout, but was seen again loitering at the rear of the house. Robinson said he then discovered the | }df.fihen door had been cut near the lock. FOUR HELD IN SEPARATE JAILS. Quartet are Suspected in Plot to Abduct Virginia Banker. NORFOLK, Va. July 12 (#)—Four men accused of plotting the adbuction of Cecil C. Vaughan, 3d, Franklin banker, {2 $100.000 ransom, remained | today in . e four widely separated jails | in which they were placed following their arrest in Southampion County Monday night and yesterday. The four, whose arsesi resulted from information received by police from one of the four who “talked” gave their names as Harve~ 7. Norfleet, 45-year- old painter, of Holland; John R. Wade, 43, of Suffolk, bowling alley proprietor; Jack Beale, 36-year-old mechanic, of Holland. and Clifton Henry Holland, 36, of Holland. John C. Parker, jr.. Franklin attorney, who has been named to assist Com- monwealth’s Attorney R. E. L. Watkins in the prosecution of the (‘ha\”zesl against the men. said today that Hol- | land has flatly denied any cornection | with th> casc, while the others have | said several things since their arrest which Mr. Parker believes will strengthen the State's case against them. Co-operated ith Officials. ‘The intended victim of the alleged abduction attempt, who is the head of a prominent banking firm in Franklin, and the son of the late Gen. C. C. Vaughan, jr., former State Senator and at one time Adjutant General of Vir- ginia, was adwsed of the suspected con- spiracy immediately after it became known to authorities. He co-operated estate nearby every day when it was learned that the kidnap attempt was to | be made when Vaughan was riding. : Late Monday afternoon officers | learned that the attempt was to be ! made that evening, and hurriedly went to the section of the estate where the attempt was understood to be made. Shortly after the officers arrived an automobile approached and when it was stopped by the officers, Norfleet, Beale and Wade wgre arrested. | | PHYSICIAN KIDNAPED. St. Paul Man Says He Was Drugged, Shot and Later Released. ST. PAUL, July 12 (#)—Dr. W. H. Hedberg was kidnaped, drugged, shot | had planned to mutilate him last night, he reported to Chief of Police T. E. family asked Alton police, county au- | thorities and the State highway patrol to drop their search for the abductors and withdraw from the case. At an early morning conference, Luer's three sons, Herman F., William J. and Carl A, decided that the with- drawal of the police was necessary to allow the kidnapers an opportunity to arrange for release of their father. Mayor Butler of Alton, directing the ! police 1nvestigation of the abduction, | would not comment on the request of | the brothers, but it was learned that he | and his associates had reached no de- cision on the plea of the family. Luer | is subjected to frequent violent heart | attacks, and the request was made by | the sons on the theory that as long as | the elder Luer is in the hands of the | kidnapers his life is in grave danger | because of his illness. ! Luer's sons expressed the hope that the first communication from the kid- napers would be a note bearing their father's signature and a few lines of | his handwriting. “Only by such a note would we be convinced that fath 11 alive,” Herman Luer said. or scarf pin—won't be satisfactory proofs that the kidnapers have him. You can take them from a dead man.” CLEVELAND GIRL SAFE. Writes Family She Is Well and Has! a Job. WILMINGTON, Ohio, July 12 (®#)— Marian Buckley, missing Cleveland co-ed, has written a letter to her family saying she is well and has a job with a good family, her mother, Mrs. H. M. | Buckley, ennounced here last night. Mrs. Buckley said that her daughter, for whom a wide search has been con- ducted in Ohio and Kentucky, sent the letter to her home in Cleveland and it Was opened by a neighbor, Mrs. Charles | Singletary, who had been instructed to forward mail to Mrs. Buckley. The postmark of the letter was ob- | scured. Mrs. Singletary notified Mrs. Buckley she was forwarding the letter to her by special delivery. Buckley, an assistant superintendent of Cleve- land schools and Mrs. Buckley had come to this town. where their daugh- ter formerly attended Wilmington Col- lege, in their search. The letter was the first definite word from the 18-year-old college student since she disappeared July 8 from her home in Cleveland after announcing she was going for a walk. CHILD UNDER GUARD. Son of Editor Protected by Police in Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA, July 12 (#).—The 4-year-old son of W. Thornton Mar- tin, associate editor of the Saturday Evening Post, is being guarded by police SPECIAL NOTICES. NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY acted by any one other than my- | D BENSON TURNER. 1813 | w i* T WILL debts contr Seif. RAYMON Columbia rd. n.w. _ ¢ BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ts controcted by any other elf. ROY RUDASILL, Capitol Heights ANY than Md. | 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY yts contracted by any one other than m 1" ‘JOHN WEIR. 4006 62nd st.. 1 :ESPONSIBLE FOR BILLS ted by any one other than myself. *H. WILLIAMS. 4515 7th n.w - TLL NOT PAY ANY BILLS MADE OTHER sself. (Signed) LEONARD W. 215 Wash. st.. Clarendon. Va. _1: Li NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY 15 contracted by any one ' other than sell. Charles A. Baker. 719 8th st, gW. T TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO m New York. Richmond. Boston. Pitts- all wav points:® special rates. DELIVERY ASSN. INC. 1317 NA. 14(0._Local moving_also. eh_and ONAL O aL H aks and paint your roof: Alco corking, paperhanging painting. Phone Capitol Heishts 374. CHAIRS FOR _RENT. SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PARTIES. banaues, 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. is one of the larg- est undertakers in the world. Complete funerals as_I s $65 up. 6 chapels. 12 parlors. 17 cars. hearses and ambulances, 25 undertakers and assistants. SLAG ROOFING —by practical roofers with a reputation for doing things right. Consult us for Te- pairs or new roofing. i lars; feel safe. ROOFING 933 VSt.N.W. COMPANY. NOrth 4423 Treasury Department Office of the Comptroller of the Curremcy Wnsh;n'n{gn. D. C. a: 193 Notice 13 hereby have_claim; given to_all persons who ey ims against “The Commercial stional Bank of Washington.” District of Columbia. that the same must be presented Robert Baldwin, Receiver, with the i proot thareo! within three months from or they may lowed. O'CONNOR. Comptrolier of the Currency. | consideration in his vacancy appoint- Dahill today. Dr. E. G. Engberg was j found in Hedberg's car after it had been knocked into a ditch by a train. | | Engberg is still unconscious. | D | an operation on Dr. Hedberg. but re-! | fused. the chief said in a statement. | ‘Then. he asserted, Dr. Engberg was drugged and placed in the Hedberg au- | tomobile, which was parked on a rail- | road right of way where a passing train hit _it. | Dr. Engberg was bleeding at the his ear and bearing other marks of a struggle, was found in a ditch a half | mile from where Dr. Engberg was found in_Hedberg's car. Dr. Edgberg was bleeding at the| mouth when a train crew found him, | but bore no other signs of injury. He | recovered consciousness today and told | of having been attacked and drugged. | probably with ether, after being lured from his home by a false call. i Dr. Hedberg told a similar story of having been lured from his home by a false call and seized by three men. LEGION POST APPOINTS CONVENTION DELEGATES George Washington Group Selects: Those to Attend Department Gathering in August. i Delegates and alternates to the fif-| teenth annual department convention | of the American Legion were elected last night at a meeting of George Washington Post, No. 1, at the post Those elected were: Delegates—Post | Comdr. Charles Demonet and Past and Howard S. Fisk. Alternates—Past | Comdr. Charles O. Shaw, Chaplain Howard E. Snyder, Dr. M. H. Darnall, Paul O. Tucker. Fisk was elected for i the fifteenth year. ! At a meeting of the delegates last night the following assignments were | made: Chairman of the delegation, Comdr. Demonet; representative on Convention Rules Committee, Murphy; Credentials Committee, Pisk; constitu- tional amendments and resolutions, Streater. The convention is to be held August 9. 10 and 11 at Central High School auditorium. BAR TO INDORSE JUDGE Lynchburg Meeting Planned on Corporation Court Vacancy. Special Dispatch to The Star. LYNCHBURG. Va., July 12.—The bar essociation here will meet tomorrow aft- crnoon to recommend an appointee to the bench of the Corporation Court, which was made vacant by the death of Judge F. P. Christian. The bar’s se- lection will be sent to Gov. Pollard for ment to the bench. clear Beer Mugs, if you send us the verdiet of your “Ice Box Jury.” Invite your friends. for a Taste Test. Ice a bottle of Royal Pilsen and any other LIGHT Beers, or Old Glory and c peting DARK brands. Pour contents of each into separal classes (remember which is which). ask your jury to taste . . then get the verdict! Mail the decision of the “Jury” to- xether with the bottle caps of ' the competing brands to . . . Abner Drury Brewery, Inc. Washington, D. C. | setts could give, 25 years. | Bower in Colorado, A. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1933. Law Moves Surely Against Kidnapers RETORTS “DEAD OR ALIVE” TO “MONEY OR DEATH” THREATS. Above is shown the perpetrators and suspects in some of the 18 notorlous kidnap cases during the last three years. | Upper left: Arthur Voungberg, who, along with Carl W. Pierce (top circle), is now serving a sentence of 32 years for In the court scene in the upper right are shown the two Buck broth- ers, Cyril and Kenneth, who kidnaped Peggy McMath from school in Harwichport, Mass. as they were arraigned at Provincetown, Mass. Kenneth Buck received the maximum sentence of 25 years, while Cyril was freed. In the center i circle is Willlam Craft, who, with a companion, attempted to force a Richmond capitalist to draw $7,500 from the bank as ransom money for the release of Davis and R. K. Robertson, held prisoners by kidnapers for 15 hours. | Pive suspects heid in connection with the Mary McElroy kidnaping at K: ito right they are: Walter H. McGee, Mrs. | the kidnaping of. Charles Boettcher, 2d, in Denver. s J. R. Gilbert and her husband, and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Johnson. Below: City, who are now awaiting trial. Left —A., P. and Wide World Photo. EW YORK, July 12—The slow majesty of the law, perplexed | at times by the speed of the crime, moves surely to crush;‘ the activities of kidnapers. Records of recent kidnapings show Engberg was selected to perform | decisive action by police authorities and | g oen; heavy punishments by courts. To the kidnapers’ threat “money or death,” law retorts ‘“dead or alive!” Records of 18 notorious kidnap cases during the last three years show 43 per- sons jailed for terms ranging from two years to life—mostly life—threc kidnap- ers dead, and about 10 suspects await- ing_trial. Kenneth Buck, who kidnaped Peggy McMath, got the maximum Massachu- | Delbono to jail for 42, and Wesley E. some others, have escaped—so far—but | Pritchett for 20 years, besides fines of there is no statute of limitations on, Get Life in Kansas City Case. Martin Deputy and William Werner, kidnapers of Nell Donnelly in Kansas City. are in Missouri Penitentiary for life, and Charles Mele, an accomplice, | is in for 35 years. Confessed kidnapers | of Mary McElroy of the same city are | awaiting trial. | Because they kidnaped Benjamin P. M. Taylor, Georg? Reed and Joe Pannell are in jail for seven years, the maximum State pen- alty at the time. Carl Pierce and Ar- Boettcher, 2d, in Denver, are serving 26 and 32 years, respectively. Their sen- | tence was imposed by a Federal Court. | Dowell Hargraves and John De Marco | were sent to jail for life because they | kidnaped James De Jute, jr, 12, of | Niles, Ohio. | Three kidnapings:in St. Paul, those of Morris Putnam. Leon Gleckman and Haskell Bohn, sent six persons to ja for 1 to 40 year sentences. Two sus- pects were killed by enemies, one pris- | $200,000 set as the price for his release, | oner died in prison, one is serving 25 vears and three suspects are still | club house, 1441 Rhode island avenue. | hunted. Leon U. Mason was sentenced to| three years in jail last week for trying | ton. D. C. = For kidnaping Mr. and Mrs. E. L.| (Zeke) Caress at Los Angeles, Joseph | L. Baillie was sentenced to life: Ray-‘ mond Wagner, 22 years to life, and Ralph Sheldon and Jesse Orsatti, 10 years to life. 1and later released by three men, who (Copyrighted. 1933, by the Associated Press) | yaye Sims to jail for 20 and 15 years, respectively, yesterday because = they held up a bank and kidnaped the cashier at Foreman, Ark. Five Sent to Sing Sing. , ‘The five men who kidnaped Ernest ig in New York last year are the in Sing Sing Penitentiary for periods {of 5 to 25 years. In Chicago John Pingera and Wil- liam Thomas were sent to the peni- tentiary for life for kidnaping Dr. and Mrs. Max Gecht for $2,000. The kidnaping of Fred Defilippi, Spring Valley, Ill, merchant, sent Mike Talarico, Joe Varsalina and Frank $5,000 each, and jailed Carlo Delbono and Victor Ciesielski for two years. In two notorious cases the kidnapers escaped, scot free. Police seek six men as the abductors of William Hamm of ‘SL Paul. Hamm was returned un- harmed for ransom. The other, a tragedy which changed the laws of the Nation. was the kidnap- ing and murder of Charles A. Lind- | bergh, jr [ Even from the sterile ground of that | unsuccessful man-hunt the law took its harvest. Gaston B. Means and Norman Whitaker were jailed for two y~ars for attempted extortion from Mrs. Evelyn Walsh McLean. Earlier. Means got 15 | years for a ransom conspiracy. | The death of the Lindbergh baby | placed kidnaping in the Federal law | codes and provided heavy jail terms | and fines for interstate kidnapers. ‘The Lindbergh kidnapers, as well as . their crime. The man-hunt. however, goes on quietly, relentlessly. Some day those kidnaper-killers may be brought to Jjudgment. $200,000 HELD PRICE FOR FACTOR'S RELEAS | thur Youngberg, who kidnaped Charles | Friends Claim Relatives Are Nego-| tiating With Kidnapers for His Return. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 12—Claims that (]| relatives had begun negotiations with | home of a friend at Crystal Lake in | the kidnapers of John Factor with | McHenry County. were made today by friends of the in- ternational speculator, abducted 11 days ago while returning home with friends from a road house. ‘The friends maintained that Factor's Comdsr. Wallace Streater, J. J. Murphy | to kidnap June Collier, 2, in Washing- | family was convinced the negotiations were genuine when a ring worn by the man was sent to them with instructions written by him rzgarding the handling of his brokerage accounts. Be tained by close associates of Factor, in a Loop hotel a local detective agency s the board of stratcgy main- | | | to have received the ring and the notes demanding the $200,000 ransom. Police said they believed Factor was being held in the chain-of-lakes region near Antioch, IIl. Following an anony- mous tip that Factor and his abductors | would meet with members of his family | Sheriff Tiffany of Lake County patrolled | the vicinity of Grass Lake, 4 miles| | from Antioch, during the early hours | of Tuesday. At the same time steps were taken to guard Factor’s second son, 7-year-old | Alvin, from abductors when a police | escort was requested to accompany the | youth to his mother's home after his | arrival in the city from the Summer | Railways of Britain burned 14,000,000 tons of coal in the last year. H REDUCED BRIEF PRICES BYRON S. ADAMS | I Never Di " Arkansas sent Cornelius Lefevers and is working on the case and is reported | reduced 2% was 57 more; now only 3¢ more than regular gasolines For years Betholine has commanded the highest pre- mium of any motor fuel. Why ? Because it is blended with Benzol. Because Benzol is the highest-priced ingredient used in any motor fuel. Because automotive engineers pronounce a Benzol Blend ideal for modern, high-compression motors. Because Betholine has convinced thousands of motorists that it is well worth 5¢ extra. Now the premium has been reduced 2¢ per gallon. Now you get Betholine for only three cents more than regular gasolines. Now this same famous Benzol Blend is, within easy reach of everyone who appreciates the wisdom of paying a little more to get the best that money can buy. Try a tankful of OLINE —at its new low price ENGINEERS ELEC JOHNSTON CHIEF Renamed by Group After Fight With “Progressive” Element. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 12.—Alvan- ley Johnston was re-elected grand chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gineers at the triennial convention of the brotherhood today over I. O. Enders of Columbus, Ohilo, the “progressive” candidate. The veteran administrative leader of the engineers received 503 votes against 3!§n:ot Enders. us Johnston won his struggle against the self-styled progressive group, which came t5 the convention with the avowed intention of unseating him on the ground that he had permitted the brotherhood to engage too freely in outside financial affairs. Defends Himself. Johnston defended himself vigorously in various debates on the floor, con- tending he had led the organization away from such ventures as rapidly as was reasonably possible after succeed- ing to the leadership in 1927. He now enters u his third term as leader of the erhood. Johnston is under indictment for mis- application of funds of the Standard Trust Bank of Cleveland which col- Long Asks Public To Buy His Paper, American Progress Promises to Give Fair Side of News and Is- sues of the Day. Huey Long, Louisiana Senator, is circularizing the public with an appeal for subscriptions to his newspaper, the American Progress, “to be pub- lished every week. giving the fair side of the news and the issues of the day.” The circular, in Senator Long’s best style, hits at the National Economy League and multi-millionaires. “Our first, last and principal fight,” he writes, “has been to spread the wealth of this land among all the people. In the land of too much to eat and wear and too many houses there is no ex- planation for our hungry, naked and homeless people, except the greed of the few whose wealth is moe than they can use.” While the paper now hes cXces in New Orleans, the Americau “rogress the near future, it is added. aper Alliance, Inc.) e Thatcher Dispensary in Edinburgh, Scotland, which has been opei~ted for 117 years, is to close &s the resii. of the death of Dr. Charles Thatcher, grandson of the founder, who carried on after the death of his father and grandfather. lapsed in 1931. That institution suc- | ceeded the Engineers’ National Bank. The brotherhood had nearly $200,000 worth of stock in the Standard Trust and deposits of about $1,800,000. Johnston and Enders were the only announced candidates for grand chief. ‘Washingtonian Gets Votes. Nevertheless three delegates voted for | G. W. Laughlin of Florence, S. C., na- tional legislative representative of the | brotherhood at Washington, and the same number wrote in the name of Carl | Rudolph of Cleveland, editor of the Brotherhood Journal. W. W. Royster of Glenwood, Minn., author of an engineers’ pension system, received one vote. The convention proceeded today to the nomiantion and election of other officers. U. S. MORTGAGE PROGRAM IS EXTENDED TO IOWA Plans Liquidating Farm Paper Held by Closed and Restricted Banks in State. By the Associated Press. Simultaneously in announcing a lower schedule of interest rates on loans by Federal Land Banks, the Farm Credit Administration today extended to Iowa the program for liquidating farm mort- gages held by closed and restricted banks. ‘The administration stated it would operate through the Omaha Land Bank in carrying out a plan for refinancing up to $35,715,000 in first mortgages on farms, held by 738 Iowa banks which are either closed or operating under some form of restriction. A special organization will be set up in the State Capitol in Des Moines next week to put the program into effect in co-operation with Iowa State banking j authorities. OMORROW we throw the | \ 4. 4.75x19 5.00x19 will be published from Washiagton in | (Copyriht. 1033, by North American News- | * A—-3 HOTEL LEAP VICTIM DIES OF HER INJURIES Miss Blanche Israel Succrmbs After Waging Ninc-Day Fight. Succumbing to injuries received when she leaped from the fifth floor hotel window, Miss Blanche Israel, 22, died last night in Emergency Hospital after waging a nine-day fight for her life. Hospital surgeons had amputated one of her legs and she had been given several blood tranfusions in the course of their efforts to save her. Dr. A. Magruder MacDonald, acting’ coroner, issued a certificate of suicide and police notified the young woman's relatives in_Greenwood, S. C. Ernest Morgan Headrick, an electri- cian, of Knoxville, who was registered at the hotel as Miss Israel’s husband, is being held at the District Jail on a white slave charge brought against him by the Department of Justice. SUES FOR $20,000 Declaring she was_ seriously injured when a taxicab in which she was rid- inz collided with another machine in 1921, Esther Shapiro of Philadelphfa yc ‘erday filed suit in District Supreme Court asking $20,000 dam.ages from the Independent Taxi Owners’ Association { and Raymond P. Myers of Clarendon, | Va.. owner of the cab. ‘The plaintiff, through Attorneys Al- | vin Newmyer and S. H. Feldman, said | the accident oocurred at Thirteenth street and Massachusetts avenue. CHECK these low prices (U. 8. PEERLESS) - .$5.60 . 6.05 6.55 50x21 5.50x19 | 5.25x18 doors wide in our new home—two floors, each with a complete kitchen to permit instant service. THE GRILL—(N. Y. style, where one may drop in for a snack) bar counter service. THE FIRST FLOOR DINING ROOM with table service and private booths, where speedy service add tc the enjoyment of the meal. THE MAIN DINING ROOM (second floor), where the exposure invites comforting breezes through multiple ceiling high windows. EVERY- _ THING TO MAKE FAMOUS EPSTEIN FOOD MORE EN- JOYABLE. Treat yourself and your palate to EPSTEIN cooking...you'll enjoy the economy, too. 14th and P Sts. N. W. 7th and Pa. Ave. S. E. S9th and H Sts. N. E. 14th and Col. Rd. N. W. 2250 Sk-rman Ave. N. W. FREE BEER (whether the order is_a_ sandwich or meal) — OPENING DAY, tomorrow. —to every patron The BOOTHS The GRILL THESE FIRMS ARE PARTICIPATING IN OUR GRAND OPENING Ottenberg’s Bakery 1243 7th St. N.W. "The Wash. Leading Hotel & Restaurant Supply House Victory Laundry 3700 Eastern Ave. N.E. Fairfax Farms Dairy 1620 Eye St. N.W. American Ice Company 1320 F St. N.W. Breakfasts Special Luncheons Regular Dinners Also ala carte 7am.tolam. 3606 Ga. Ave. N.W.* John Kalivretenos & Sons Vegetables, Girard St. N\W. The Carver Company Distributors, King’s Beer. P. V. Hough & Sons Butter, Western Market New Philadelphia Baking Co. 218 9th St. N.E. Hy Grade Food Products Baltimore, Md. London’s New Model Bakery, Pastries,

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