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POLICE HEAD HITS SCREENING CHARGE Maj. Brown Differs With Jus- tice Proctor on Numbers Racket Protection. Maj. Ernest W. Brown, superintend- ent of police, today challenged the contention of District Court Justice James M. Proctor that the chief figures in the numbers game are protected from arrest by the “little fellows,” usually runners. Brown pointed to the arrests and conviction of Sam Beard and his 12 associates and of Dutch Irwin and five colleagues on gambling charges as evi- dence the “big shots” are being appre- hended. He said: “Under the circumstances, I think we have the gambling situation pretty well in hand. To strengthen our hand we need the passage of the gaming bill pending in Congress now.” Provision of Proposed Law. Present law requires police to pro- duce in court as witnesses for the Statg one or more persons who made a play with the alleged gambler, Brown said. The pending legislation, passed twice by the Senate but rejected by the House, would permit the Govern- ment to rest its case on exhibits of policy slips and gambling parapher- nalia. Maj. Brown questioned Justice Proctor's application of the definition “little fellow” to the runner, who col- Jects the bets and makes 10 per cent on the winnings of his clientele. “A 10-cent bet might seem pretty small,” Brown said, “but that doesn’t mean that the man handling 10-cent bets is a small operator. When the runner is brought into court, he is usually charged with having accepted one bet and there is one witness, the bettor, against him. “But the runner probably accepted a hundred or more other 10-cent bets during the day. Nothing is said about that in court. The emphasis is on the one 10-cent gamble, a fact which dis- torts the situation so that the runner seems like small potatoes.” Open Drive on Racket. Police opened a major drive on the numbers racket last July 28, resulting in vigorous activity which centered around a search for the culprits in the shooting of Joseph E. O'Brien, a crime believed motivated by a gang- sters’ quarrel. : The attention of the special investi- gation squad headed by Capt. George Little, in charge of gambling law enforcement, however, was soon di- verted by campaigns against pinball machines and claw machines. Police made an average of two raids & month on suspected numbers divi- sion headquarters last year, and when their campaign was most intensive discovered two boys, one 5 and an- other 1, acting as go-between for bettor and runner. — | Benefit Church Party Tonight. MOUNT RAINIER, Md., March 5 '(Special) —The first of a series of six benefit parties will be held tonight at 8 o'clock in the St. James’ Church here, under the auspices of the men of the parish. Arrangements are in charge of P. S. Luckett, W. K. Wer- sick, A. C. Rolfes, H. F. Larkin. D. Buckley, J. Hastings, J. Morhiser, Wil- liam Sullivan and Phil Ryan. FOUND. £UM OF MONEY. Southeast section. Lincoln 4527-J. Call LOST. BILLFOLD. with currency and_bapers. corr‘\’mumclt: Ekern, Hotel Dodge. Re- ward. e diamond from dia- in’front of Quarte in front of 1622 Rhode Island ave. n.w., between 8 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.. on Tues- 4 h 2. If found and returned to Charles E. Hood. 710 14th st. n.w.. liberal reward will be pald. terrier. 7 4th st = “green harness: .’ Thursday p.m. e. black. strayed 'last Sunda m JKeuka lane. Bethesda. Md. 1rox Wis- art Scotty. answers to “Nick Rewatd. Cleveland 1692, PO ERRIER _small brown with collar. Answers to “Pete” Lost Tuesday after- noon. se. Reward. Sth st. se. HANDBAG_Black. lady's: contained pa- ers valuable to owner: n nsburgh's. Reward ntapms - YT MEDAL—Athletic medal. Ne: championship pole ~vault Chase bus_or downtown shoppir Feb. Reward. Cleveland ¢ PUPPY—White. wire-haired. black spot_near tail: female. st_n.w.__ Georeia RING, man’s yel mond setting. North center; v gold; nitialed on black Reward. Ran- ‘male, black. 9 months. answers Gvicinity Wesichester Apts. Geor- - one lady’s new shoe. a 1907 N st. n.w. North 541 WAT gold. small. ol fob: on 15th st. near H Reward. to Real Estate Dept Nat. Savings & Trust ‘Bld:{. 15th and N. Y. ave. nw. Met. 106 = WEDDING_ RING. Dplain vellow “A.L" "Reward Return to SI11 n.%.._2nd floor. B ‘WRIST WATCH —Lady's. Westfield: ini- tialed “H. E. F.”: between Chevy Chase Circle. Chevy Chase School or Lake bus: about Feb. 5. Reward. Cleveland ¢ ‘WRIST WATCH. di Generous reward. nings. Georgia 445 SPECIAL NOTICE! O e R VN ) ave feed of cie Tecicerat = airs. LECTRIC SHOP ON WHEELS or_prompt service. District 6171 DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART [CK 1931 SEDAN. MODEL 857 MOTOR 93720—Will sell at auction for stor- and repairs at EICHBERG'S GARA 27 R st n.W., Saturday, March 6, 1937 m. k pr Dictures " re 5 or smal) ¥ st. n.w. Specialist in fine copying for Sver Shiyencs NAtional $900 0 CHAMBERS s ene of the largest undertakers in 4 world, Complete funerals as low as $75 up. 8ix chapels. twelve parlors, seventeen cars. hearses. twenty-five undertakers and assistan| bulances now only $3_ 1400 i, Solmbi . 517 11th COSTS ONLY $15. $1,000 heft rates reduced. Pri- Burglary and t wate residences. covering Jewelry. furs. ‘watches. silverware. cloth money, etc. Bend postal or phone for Dle. 1036 Woodward Bullding. _Natl. 0340. ¢ LONG-DISTANCE MOVING. Return-load rates to North Oarolina March 17-18. returning March 20. poin en route: aiso Philadelphia, New York, o eveland. innat! and _the est: insured carriers. one responsibility: free estimates. VANPORTATI HOUSE _CORP.. 2801 Georgia ave. Phone Adams 3377: night. Cleveland 5646. LONG-DISTANCE MOVING. All points, 2.000 miles. full and part s. NAT. DEL. ASSOC.. INC. fonal s«m Padded vans. 1317 N. ¥. ave. SLAG ROOFING. Place ir order with this reli- able ‘G’ ana ‘Take the tnvestatent Being _“‘Approved Roofprs” for The Barrett Gompany assires Taieriale:skiiled BorEmasship. bus: ness integrity. it. get the best. Gl up. ‘While 're af Consult u:M;mlv.' KOONS 353raw. North 4423. > 933 V 8t. N.W. | of THE EVENING Girl Is Lured to Her Death By Fascination for Trains Marjorie Longley Torn From Side of Chum as She Walks Tracks. One of the speeding passenger trains which so often had thrilled 14-year-old Marjorie Longley as they thundered by hurled her to her death late yes- terday. ‘Thes Paul Junior High School stu- dent and a chum, Evelyn Byers, 13, were “walking the rails” of the Balti- more & Ohio Railroad tracks at Terra Cotta when they saw a north-bound train approaching. The girls were unaware that a south-bound express from Cumber- land, Md., was speeding down the track behind them at more than 70 miles an hour. Waves. to Engineer. Marjorie, the only child of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Longley, 607 Quackenbos street, was waving gayly to the en- gineer of the north-bound train, a witness said, when the other engine hurled her from the tracks. Evelyn, who lives at 612 Quintana place, near Marjorie’s home, and is the dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Byers, was on a side track, within a few feet of her chum, when the acci- dent occurred. Evelyn told police she did not know on “walking .the rails” at the time or waving to the trainmen. She sald Marjorie had a fondness for trains, and they sometimes walked along the tracks to watch the engines and cars whirl by. The two girls had gone for a walk after school. Evelyn said it was the farthest they had ever hiked down the tracks. The accident occurred at a point about two miles from the girls’ homes, near the Farragut street north- east overpass and a mile north of the | Bates road crossing. At the bates crossing last Priday one man was killed and another fa- tally injured when a train demolished their sedan. The train which killed the girl yesterday was brought to & halt near the same crossing. An in- quest will e held in the Bates road deaths at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow, but Coroner A. Magruder MacDonald de- clared the girl's death “accidental.” Girls Sighted on Tracks. Safety signals guarded the halted train from possible collision from the rear while police interviewed the en- gineer. The officers said the engineer estimated his speed at about “75 miles an hour” at the time he sighted the ! girls on the tracks. | Cumberland, said he applied his brakes and sounded the whistle. Witnesses said the whistles of both trains seemed to be blowing. The two trains passed each other near the point where Marjorie was struck, and this circumstance appar- ently prevented either from hearing the train coming up behind them. Evelyn was taken to No. 12 precinct station, where she sobbed out the story of the accident before her par- ents came to take her home. whether Marjorie was concentrating | The engineer, Jacob Schroder of | EVELYN BYERS, Witness. Marjorie’s father, a lumber sales- man, today was confined to his bed in a serious condition, having suffersd a heart attack when he learned of his daughter’s death. The Rescue Squad, summoned last night when he col- lapsed at his home, found him un- conscious. He was revived with the aid of an oxygen tent and is now in the care of the family physician. Sabotage 1C_0ntinued From First Page) bench the Kingsland explosion orig- inated. During the long hearings that fol- | lowed, the American side unfolded a detective novel-like story of German espionage. It was alleged a German agent maintained a “‘germ laboratory” in nearby Montgomery County, Md.; | that stevedores in Baltimore were bribed to inoculate live stock with anthrax germs before shipment to France; that such articles as pencils and perfume bottles were used by spies | to secrete combustible chemicals, and that a German agent in South Amer- | ica received the Iron Cross for poison- | ing mules shipped to the allies. There was also introduced in evi- dence a magazine, on the pages of which was a secret message, capable of being read only when the pages were heated. Justice Owen J. Roberts, acting as | umpire, again ruled in Germany’s ‘hvor in 1933, holding, among other things, that the evidence did not prove that the workman in the Kingsland plant was a German agent and that the secret writing in the magazine was “not authentic.” i Perjured Evidence Charged. The cases were reopened again a year ago, when the American Govern- ment offered an affidavit by James Larkin, Irish labor leader, alleging knowledge of German espionage in this country at the time of the explo- sions. Several months later the United States also charged that Germany had introduced “perjured” evidence. Under the recently proposed settle- ments, the brief filed today asserts, Germany would consent to payment of the $22,000,000, with the under- standing that this agreement would not be taken as an admission of guilt in the sabotage cases. Germany’s sole object under this plan, the brief charges, is to terminate the long- drawn-out litigation with money “be- longing to others” and at no cost to the German government. The payment of the balance of the Teparations money to the railroad, foundry and insurance firms would leave no German funds in this coun- try available for payment of the Standard Oil, Singer, International Harvester and other claims, it is ex- plained. These claims, the brief states, have been “duly proved and established” and remain partly un- paid. The Mixed Claims Commis- sion has no authority to take the re- maining money and pay claims “al- he | ready rejected three times,” it is de- clared. Move to Dismiss Made. ‘The German agent before the com- mission, Ier. Richard Paulig, has failed to ratify the proposed settlement, the brief says, and has moved to dismiss the foundry concern’s claim on the ground that it should have been pre- sented through a Canadian commis- sion. Signing the brief, besides Morris, ts | were Frank L. Polk, former Assistant Secretary ot State, and Ralph M. Carson, associate of Polk. The award holders summarized their arguments thus: “1. Petitioners are entitled to inter- vene as a matter of right to protect their pecuniary interest in & fund ear- marked for payment of their awards against impairment by threatened ac- tion clearly in excess of the commis- sion’s jurisdiction and by further de- lays in the determination of the sabotage claims. “2. As a matter of discretionn the petitioners should be allowed to inter- vene to prevent an assignment by Germany at & time when Germany is mn'llvmt. from the international point ew. “3. The consent of the United States & § to such intervention is fixed by the direction of the State Department to the American agent, dated November 18, 1936, and is not subject to excep- tion or dimuniticm by the agent acting personally. “4. The arguments vention contained in the American agent's brief dated January 14, 1937, and in the statements and objections | of certain sabotage claimants dated | November 16, 1936, are without merit.” The Standard Oil, International Harvester, Singer and allied claims are based on property seizures by the im- | perial German government during the King (Continued From First Page.) front” for the Western World,. | mier King replied: “It will be very interesting if the President proceeds on those lines. I |do not, of course, know what the President plans to bring up.” Avoids Neutrality Question. Mr. King sought to steer clear of any discussion that might involve an American domestic question and therefore passed over the neutrality problem other than to refer to Iua own attitude expressed recently ’in an address to the Canadian Parlia- ment. He pointed out that he came helre at the invitation of Mr. Roose- velt. “I wish the relations between all the nations of the world were like what they are between the United States and Canada,” said the prime minister. “It would be abetter world if they were.” His only comment regarding discus- sion with the President of the St. Lawrence waterway treaty, which the Senate refused to ratify in 1934, was: “If the President includes every- thing relating to the hemisphere, we will get to that.” Premier King did not know defi- nitely when he will leave Washington for & week of rest at an undetermined place on the Atlantic Coast. Discussing the visit of the prime minister, the President said at his press conference today that they would talk about a variety of subjects. King will arrive at the White House late in the afternoon and will be re~ ceived informally by the President, after which tea will be served. The President has arranged for them to dine alone and afterward to confer in his study. King will leave the White House some time during the forenoon tomor- Tow to become a guest at the Canadian Le::il?:r here. in the day the Canadian Minister held & press conference at the Canadian Legation. This is not Mr. King’s first visit to the White House during the Roosevelt administration. He was a house guest more than a year ago, and he and the President are understood to have formed a warm personal friendship. Premier King said he had been in- vited by the Chiet Executive to “talk over matters of mutual interest to the Uriited States and Canada.” Officials were silent on what these matters were, but there was snecula-: tion that Mr. Roosevelt had de... nined to press the St. Lawrence treaty issue at this session and wished by personal conversations to determine the Can- adian attitude. Observers believed trade policies and the international situation in general also would be discussed. London Women Tattooed. Young women of London aré cele- brating the coronation by having the royal monogram tattooed on their shoulderss Pre- | the highest level since October, 1929, | that the mills wili obtain the benefit against inter- | STAR, WASHINGTO STEEL PRICES RISE AFTER PAY BOOSTS Increased Cost of Raw Ma- terials Also Big Factor in Advance. BY the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, March - 5.—United States Steel, two-billion-dollar giant of the booming steel industry, passed along to the consumer today the wage increase it granted employes three days ago. § William A. Irwin, president of the corporation whose employes on March 16 will receive a 10, per cent pay boost for a 40-hour week, said “sharp rises in suppiies and raw materials” also had their part in advancing prices $3 to $8 a ton, effective today. The epochal wage agreement signed Tuesday by Benjamin F. Fairless, president of Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp.—United States Steel's biggest subsidiary—reduced the -work week eight hours and provided time-and-a- half pay for overtime. One. discordant note sounded in the harmony that enveloped the industry: The meeting in Pittsburgh of partisans of the so-called “company unions” to discuss possibility of setting up a rival union to combat John L. Lewis’ Committee for Industrial Organiza- tion. Materials’ Increase Cited, Irvin, in making the announcement of the new prices, said that “although advances to labor in the matter of higher wages and shorter hours are a compelling factor, a price increase was inevitable due to the fact that quotations of scrap iron eonstituting 40 per cent of the make-up of steel have risen from $14.96 per ton to $19.88 since February 1, 1936. “This 32 per cent rise in the cost of this principal item of manufac- ture has been accompanied by in- creases of over 60 per cent in the cost ot copper, 50 per cent for lead and zinc, 20 per cent for refactories and corresponding increases in the cost of coal, limestone, etc.” Typical increases included stand- ard rails from $39 to $42.50 a ton and sheet bars from $34.50 to $37.50 « ton. Financial circles foresaw the an- nouncement as presaging & general increase throughout the industry, just as most producers fel! in line with the trend toward higher wages. ~ Upsurge Continues. ‘The upsurge in the industry, mount- ing steadily for months, was strongest in recent weeks, lifting operations to Observers had attributed this to ef- forts to place orders before the new prices were posted. Some sheet mills in the Pittsburgh district have backlogs which run as high as 20 weeks, sufficient to carry them through the second quarter. Some sizes are not obtainable in less than 15 weeks. Most of this business, steel men said, was taken on the basis of prices in effect at the time of shipment, so of the increases. Sheet price advances posted today ranged from $5 to $8 a ton. The new quotations bring the gen- eral level of steel prices slightly higher than prevailed in 1926. The basic labor rate in Pittsburgh then was 44 cents an hour; Tuesday's boost raises it to 522 cents. PAY BOOSTS ANNOUNCED. | States Embassy today transmitted to 0. FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1937 |TRADER CASE WAITS The 125 convicts on the Bibb County chain gang at Macon, Ga., worked only eight hours yesterday, instead of the usual dawn-to-dark schedule. week—4 hours on Saturday. consulting his watch. The county has ordered a Guard F. R. McCollum is shown 44-hour —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. La Guardia (Continued From First Page.) ernment toward the German govern- ment. It is our policy to conduct the official relation with other nations upon s basis of complete and mutual respect for the rights and sensibilities of each other.” U. S. EMBASSY REPORTS. Describes Attack on La Guardia in Berlin Press, BERLIN, March 5 (#).—The United Washington a full report on strictures against Mayor Fiorella La Guardia and “erime conditions” in New York appearing in Der Angriff, the news- paper of Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels, German minister of propaganda and public enlightenment. The embassy made no comment on its report, forwarded to the State De- partment. Der Angriff, which yesterday filled columns—as did other newspapers— with a stormy attack on Mayor La Guardia personally for his “Hall of Horrors” remark before a meeting of Jewish women, today ran a series of news photos intended to show New York and the United States as “the land of freedom—for all gangsters.” One picture showed a manacled prisoner, “bank robber No. 1" * * * | “who has not yet reached the stage of Mayor or Governor.” Another photograph purported to | —_— 1 depict the family of a New York Alabama Steel Firms Raise Wages | slayer “kneeling at the gates o(hsm;\ | Sing” to give thanks to “Jehovah an $3:500.008 Annually, ! his faithful servant, the Jew Gov. BIRMINGHAM, Ala, March 5| Lehman” for saving the kinsman (#).—Steel wage increases of approxi- | from the electric chair. mately $3,000,000 annually for 16,500 The newspaper said Gov. Herbert employes of the Tennessee Coal, Iron | Lehman, “La Guardia's bosom friend,” & Railroad Co. and the Woodward | had seen to it that the man, whom Iron Co. were announced here yes- | Angriff identified as a subway hold-up terday. | killer, “was allowed to remain alive.” Industrial circles waited expecunlly{ Der Angriff, in another place, as- for similar moves by other firms. sailed the “shilly shally” treatment of | Both announcements said a 40-hour | the La Guardia case by the Washing- | week would become effective with the | ton State Department, “which incites pay hike March 16. Time and & half | La Guardia to ever new insults and will be paid for overtime. | earmarks this (New York) as a State The T. C. I, United States Steel | in which 12,000,00 humans have no subsidiary and largest Southern steel | other liberty except that of dying | maker, increased wages by a minimum | silently of hunger in the gutter.” of 7 cents per hour, with some workers | The new Nazi press outburst against given a flat 10 per cent hike. Approx- imately 15,000 are affected, not includ- ing coal miners, whose contract ex- pires March 31. Woodward, & merchant iron con- cern, announced & boost of 7 cents La Guardia resulted from his sugges- tion before the Jewish women’s meet- ing in New York Wednesday that the 1939 New York World Fair have a “Hall of Horrors,” the chief figure in which would be “that brownshirted per hour for employes paid less than 70 cents per hour. Others will be in- creased 10 per cent. As in the case of T. C. I, coal miners were not included. The raise affected approximately 1,200 persons, Salaried employes of both concerns shared in the raise. In industrial quarters some believed the move would create a minimum of 2,000 additional jobs in various plants and operations. PAINTERS' SUPPLIES °%5 PAINTS—LEAD—BRUSHES MUTH & & NA. 6386 Special Shaving ' Offer This Week Only 25 Double-Edge Blades 1 Large Tube Shaving Cream 1 Bottle After-Shaving Lotion 1 Can Talcum Total List Value fioc w o 35C 3 for $1.00 NONE DELIVERED The Gibson Co. 917 G St. N.W. Col. Brooks Reassigned. Lieut. Col. John B. Brooks, Army Air Corps, now on duty as a member of the general staff, has been appoint- ed as commandant of the Air Corps Primary Flying School, Randolph Field, Tex. Col. Brooks will be re- lieved of duty in the office of the chief of staff about August 17. CORRECTION Ad of Sport Center, 8th & D Sts. N.W., on Sport Page, this issue, should read $8.50 Famous Unstrung Tennis Rackets $4.95 instead of AMERICAN COMFORT AT AMERICAN PRICES $8.50 Fa:n'ln Freshly Strung Tennis Rackets WASHINGTON MAR. 10* MANHATTAN=—MAR. 24th President Roosevelt March 17th President Harding March Sist fling Every Wednesday st Noon A Entiand France.Germany *The March 10th saill WASHINGTON is umffii %o take you to the Grand National at Alntree on March 10th. 2 {ng from Southampton March 25th. Ask your local travel agent Company’s Office. 743 14th St. N.W. Tel. NAtional 2690. United States Lines fanatic” who, he said, was menacing world peace. A formal German protest followed in Washington, and Secretary of State Hull yesterday made an informal ex- pression of regret. La Guardia “besmirched” the United States rather than Der Fuehrer, Hit- ler’s own paper Voelkischer Beobachter bitingly observed, for in a well-gov- erned state such agitation would be confined “either to an aslyum or a penitentiary.” Other journals ssid the Washington Government would not be able to “gloss over” this incident by pointing out the Government has no control over the speeches of an individual. If laws permit an individual to en- danger friendly “relations with a foreign country, then a decided altera- tion of such conditions would seem imperative,” Why take a chance when Tt will save you money? Skillful expert service = ready at all times. = = FERGUSON } = = ==3831Ga. Ave. COL. 0567 L SEE US BEFORE YOU CLOSE ANY DEAL On_a New De Soto or Plymouth MID-CITY AUTO CO. Washington’s Oldest t De Soto_and Plymouth Dealer 1711 14th St. N.W. CUSTOM-MADE | ocmomnnt y | Window Shades Venetian Blinds Kieeblatt’s Shade Shop 1100 H St. N.E. Linc. 0879 TOP HONORS AGAIN NOW I EAT CHEESE Upset Stomach Goes in Jiffy with Bell-ans BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION REPORT ON AUTOPSY Funeral Services for Woman Ac- cused of Slaying Husband Will Be Held Today. BY the Associated Press. SALISBURY, Md., March 5.—Final disposition of the Eastern Shore's celebrated “Trader Case” depended today upon an autopsy report expected to establish definitely whether Mrs. Jeannette B. Trader was poisoned. The 37-year-old mother of three children, who was charged with the murder of her husband, died-in a hospital here Wednesday and prose- cuting officials ordered a post-mortem examination and inquest to “avoid any possible criticism” in connection with her death. The inquest was postponed indefi- nitely until a Baltimore laboratory reports to the coroner’s jury results of an analysis of Mrs. Trader’s vital organs. Funeral services for Mrs. Trader will be held today. She will be buried in the Presbyterian cemetery at Stock- ton, where she and her husband lived. Her grave will adjoin that of Clarence J. Trader, for whose slaying January }4 she was indicted by a special grand jury. Featured by Rob't L. Ripley LAWYERS' BRIEFS SH PRINTING B.Y RON S.' ADA.M_S SNovwr £ Come In and See “BOZ0O" The Mind-Reading Dog Today and Tomorrow 12:00—1:00—7 80 Monday and Tuesday 12:00 and 4:00 SEARS.ROEBUCK AND £0. 4 911 BLADENSBURG ROAD N.E. turday Luncheon Special ‘ Cateteria Only 50 LOTOS LANTERN Chicken Pattie Beverage 733 17th St. N.W. Steel Drops to 40 in workers’ hours. An equally sydden But not in pflce—onl% this changing weather, so be prepared drop is common in with a good supply of Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite That better Pennsylvania hard coal that will keep your home comfortable today and every day. 79 Years of Good Coal Service Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 There’s a decided drop in heat attention when you install a Reading Automatic Heat Control. PUBLIC AUCTION By Catalogue TOMORROW AT 1 P.M. l;l"lpn fingron Benjamin 8. Bell. Auctioneer An assemblage of exceptionally fine French and English Period Furniture, Silver and Art Objects, Oriental Rugs, China, Glassware, Valuable Oil Paintings, Etc., Etc. On Exhibition Each Day Until Time of Sale q ; S Fucars INC. Phone 122 |3“I Sf- "- § METROPOLITAN 2241 \ N - LATEST PUBLISHED REPORTS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA HEALTH DEPARTMENT s9s AWARD THOMPSON'S HIGHEST GENERAL RATING ON PASTEURIZED,RAW AND CERTIFIED MILK of any D.C.dairy hompson's Dairy DECATUR 1400 j;aduquo ©) me 0% INDEPENDENTD.C. DAIRY