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A—4 »a Christmas Eve Atfack Admitted by Prisoner, Counfy Police Say Man Knocked Out in Fight In Riverdale Home Is Linked to Earlier Crime A 32-year-old colored man who was knocked unconscious by a Riv- erdale (Md) housewife while he fought with her husband Monday has confessed to the criminal assault of an 18-year-old Washington girl last Christmas eve, Prince Georges County police said today. ‘The man, Frank Haywood, 32, Lakeland, Md.,, is held at the county police station in Hyattsville, but no charges had been placed against him this morning. Police said they will conclude their investigation be- fore bringing charges. Police said Haywood admitted that he forced his way into a parked car on a lonely College Park road and assaulted the Washington girl while he held off her 19-year-old Fort Meade soldier companion with a pis- tol. Police said the alleged attacker threatened to kill the girl if the sol- dier intervened. Connection with the Christmas eve assault was established, police | said, when it was learned that Hay- | wood's clothing matched bits of | cloth found at the scene of the | attack. | Haywood was arrested by County Policeman Edwin Thompson at the | home of Fred S. Lippert, Riverdale, Monday. Police said he forced his | way into the home, made advances toward Mrs. Lippert, then engaged | in a fight with her husband. While | the two were on the floor, Mrs. Lip- pert struck Haywood over the head with a chair and called police. Inventor of La Mont Boiler Is Buried in Arlington Lt. Comdr. Walter Douglas La Mont, U. 8. N,, retired, inventor of the much-discussed La Mont boiler which is said to have been adopted by the Germea Navy, was buried | with full mili- tary honors yes- terday in Ar- lington National Cemetery. Comdr. La Mont's death came Monday in New York at the age of 52, and followed a life- time devoted to the development of a new prin- ciple in steam naval boiler en- OComdr. La Mont. gineering, which precipitated a ma- Jor controversy in the Navy Depart- ment two years ago. At that time it was charged by Columnist Jay Franklin and others | that high naval “bureaucrats” were | obstructing the installation of the | new-type La Mont boiler empldying high-pressure steam. The then Secretary of Navy,| Charles Edison, stated that boilers in use in the United States Navy have been demonstrated to be su- perior to the La Mont type after ex- tensive tests. British Aerial Offensive Begun in Mediferranean B the Associated Press. LONDON, Jan. 22.—British bomb- ers in the Mediterranean basin are lashing out with a hr.vy offensive, the Alr Ministry nev" service re- ported today, appareatly designed to circumvent a possible Axis thrust | against Malta or Axis attempts to strengthen retreating armies in| Libya. | The weight of the attacks on| Bicilian air bases was marked by a | 10-hour raid Tuesday night when | wave after wave of Wellington bombers swept in from the sea and blasted at the Catania airdrome. ‘The news service said pilots re- ported many direct hits on runways and buildings, and claimed numer- PURCHASES DIVISION Deuglas MacKeachie PRODUCTION DIVISION W. H. Harrison THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D; C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1942, THE PRESIDENT CHAIRMAN Benald M. Nelson WAR PRODUCTION BOARD STATISTICS DIVISION Stacy May MATERIALS DIVISION William L. Batt WAR PRODUCTION LINE-UP—This chart indicates the organi- zation of the new War Production Board as announced yesterday by Chairman Donald M. Nelson. The war production chief revealed establishment of a new, seventh division—fleld serv- . War Production Board |NF°IMAT|6N DIVISION Robert W. Horton DIVISION OF INDUSTRY OPERATIONS ). 5. Knowhsen LAsor DivisioN | | € Sidney Hillman IVILIAN SUPPLY DIVISION Leon Henderson FIELD SERVICE Unmamed ice—which he said would compare in importance with the six major divisions originally set up. He did not immediately an- nounce who would head the Field Service Division. —A. P. Wirephoto. D. C. Woman Is Tried On Jewelry Larceny Charges in New York Daughter of U. S. Official Accused; Names of D, C. Socialites Brought In Names of Washingtonians promi- nent in social and public life were figuring today in the trial in New York City of Mrs. Margaret Boyle, 2426 Tracy place N.-W., charged with the’ larceny of $41,000 from a New York jeweler. Mentioned in the course of testi- mony so far have been Mrs. Roose- | velt, her son, James, and Mrs. J. | Hamilton Lewis, widow of the former Illinois Senator. Mrs. Boyle, identified by authori- tles as daughter of the late and soclally prominent Judge C. C. Mc- Chord, former member of the Inter- state Commerce Commission, is ac- cused of obtaining the valuables on memorandum from Jack Blauweiss, New York jeweler, according to the Associated Press. Mrs. Mildred C. Fleming, of 2011 Wyoming avenue N.W. testified yesterday that she had been Wash- ington representative for Mr. Blau- weissand that she was present when he agreed to turn over a number of pieces of jewelry to Mrs. Boyle for sale on a commission basis. ‘Was to Get $1,000 Commission. On March 14, Mrs. Fleming testi- fied, the defendant obtained jewelry from her valued at $14,725, saying she expected to attend & tea given by Mrs. Lewis, at which Mrs. Roose- velt was expected to be a guest. Mrs. Boyle was to receive a $1,000 commission on a $6875 diamond sapphire clip if she sold it, the Associated Press quoted Mrs. Flem- ing as having testified, adding that it always was understood that any unsold jewelry would be returned to Mr. Blauweiss. ‘Two days later, Mrs. Fleming said Mrs. Boyle paid her $950 for a cock- tail ring which was among the valuables she had obtained, repre- senting that the ring had been sold to Mrs. Lewis. ‘Was Accused of Pawning Gems. The witness testified that at an- other time Mrs. Boyle informed her to be purchased by James Roosevelt. Mrs. Fleming said that a platinum bracelet and a platinum emerald ring vajued at $10,000 were turned over to Mrs. Boyle on her claim that she expected to sell them to Bernard Baruch. Mrs. Boyle was indicted in:- New that a $4,200 star sapphire clip was | W. H. HARRISON, v J. L. O’BRIAN, Legal Division. R. W. HORTON, Information. J. S. KNOWLSON, D. C. MacKEACHIE, Production Division. Industry Operations. Purchases. STACY MAY, Progress. These men were named to key posts in the new War Pro- duction Board announced yesterday. Sidney Hillman, labor head, and Leon Henderson, civilian supply head, production work veterans, also are in the new group. —A. P. Photos. Nazi Diplo matic.Transfer List - Causes Perturbation Here Germans Want to Trade Harmless American Professional Men for Well-Known Agents By HELEN LOMBARD. The exchange of diplomats stranded in belligerent countries | seems a fairly simple proposition. It is not so easy, however, for the State Department is trying to ar- range the simultaneous transfer of & ‘number of American ministers of the gospel, doctors and news- papermen who wanted to linger i‘n Axis captials as long as the Ameri- can diplomatic missions remained. The Nazi government has agreed to let the American citizens come home and has no objection to the list which has been transmitted to the Berlin Foreign Office by the courtesy of Swiss officials. The list which has reached our State Department is causing our Gov- garian or foreign, could attend these conferences unless he printed a line or two of George Earle's com~ muniques. In spite of Nazi pressure on the Bulgarian government, Minister Earle’s conferences continued to be a popular Sofia entertainment. ‘When Bulgaria actually joined the fight on the side of Nazi Germany, Mr. Earle was immediately put into confinement. King Boris evidently had a healthy respect for the Amer- ican Minister’s resourcefulness, how- ever, for he sped him out of Bul- garia on the royal train before he could organize a conference from | “jail.” (The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Child Safety Discussions Arranged for Tomorrow A meeting of representatives of groups interested in promoting child traffic safety has been called by the District Recreation Department for 4 pm. tomorrow at Rossell School, Ninth and E streets 8.W. A radio broadcast on the subject will be made over radio station WWDC at 7 pm. Groups to be represented at the conference include the police de- partment, department of vehicles and traffic, motor clubs, citizens’ associations, Junior Board of Com- ferce, schools, parent-teacher as- sociations and the recreation depart- ment. The group will discuss child traffic safety, a suggested year- round program. * The broadcast will be Priday and present Milo Christiansen, acting co-ordinator of the recreation de- partment; Inspector Arthur E. Miller of the Metropolitan Police; son, sasistant superintendent of schools. Committee Reporis Bill Making Tire Theft a Felony Bills authorizing the District Alley Dwelling Authority to borrow money from public or private sources to continue its $15,000,000 low-rent housing p and making the | [ theft of lufifile t] tubes, and of accessor l,im during the war, were placed on the House calendar today. _ N Each measure was accompanied by a report from the District Com- mittee urging its passage. The committee approved the two bills last week after public hearings. The maximum penalty for a felony —a charge that would face a thief of automobile tires and accessories— is 10 years’ imprisonment. | Will Disposes of Flag MARTINSBURG, W. Va., Jan. 22 () —The will of J. W. S. Boyd, ad- he possessed be given to Lee Chapel at Washington and Lee University or the Confederate Museum at Rich- in the Conferedate army. mitted to probate in Martinsburg, | requested that a Confederate flag mond, Va. His father was an officer | Nelson Decentralizing War Production With Field Service Setup Offices to iiave Authority To Make Decisions, Reducing Deiays By the Associated Press. Washington awoke today to the realization that Donald M. Nelson is giving the war production job back to the whole country. Mr. Nelson’s announcement that he in- tended to establish a field service as a seventh and new major divi- sion of the War Production Board which he heads was regarded here as a step toward decentralizing the ‘war _effort. Officials said such s move, send- ing W. P. B. men into the indus- trial centers of the country where the battle of the assembly lines is being fought, would short-cut a great part of the delays caused by paper work and letter-writing and by the necessity of calling manu- facturers here to discuss production and conversion problems. Mr. Nelson said he had not yet decided “how much responsibility will be here and how much out in the fleld.” However, the high place accorded the proposed fleld service in his organization scheme was taken as clear indication that he intended to delegate to it a good share of the decision-making power heretofore reserved for his own of- fice alone. ‘ ‘To Rank with 6 Other Divisions. ‘The field division will compare in importance, Mr. Nelson said, with the six major divisions' of the W. P. B. set up by him yesterday, when he abolished the Office of Produc- tion Management — production, purchases, materials, labor, civilian supply and industrial organization. The fleld offices will handle Mot only the job of bringing small plants all over the country into the mili- tary arsenal, but will advise con- tractors on priorities, allocations of material “or anything else that per- tains to getting the job done,” Mr. ;lel.wn told newspapermen yester- | day. | Mr. Nelson's theory of decentral- | izing control is getting its first big | | test in Detroit, where Ernest Kanz- | | ler, veteran automobile production | | man, is being sent with a staff to | achieve the total conversion of the | motor industry to arms production. ;flr. Kanzler will have only a deputy ere. “Production isn't done back here— | it is done there in Detroit,” Nelson explained. 50 or 80 Kanslers. “If there are other industries that have a location in a certain place, I see no reason why the branch chief shouldn't go right out to the place where he can do it the quickest without having to bring men back and forth to Washington and argue There will be a counterpart of Mr. Kanzler in every im it indus- | try, Mr. Nelson said, he esti- | mated their number at 50 or 60. Such ‘ndustry branch chiefs will | report to the mew Divigian of Indus- trial fon, created by Mr. | Nelson yesterday to dife¢t the eon-, version job on a Nat wide scale and to absorb the Priorities Division of O. P. M. The division is headed by James 8. Knowlson, president of Stewart-Warner Corp. Not all the industry chieftains will have as much power as Mr. Nelson vested in Mr. Kanzler—“All the authority that I've got”—because not all of them will need it, Mr. Nelson sald. Mr. is authorized to move tools and machines from one motor company to another, if neces- | sary to get maximum arms output. Knudsen to Play Separate Role. | William S. Knudsen and Sidney Hillman, erstwhile co-directors of the now defunct O. P. M., will con- | tinue to play important though sep- arate roles. Mr. Nelson said he wanted them added to the new War Production | Board, and his wish was viewed as Maij. Trapnel! Cited for D. S, G For Burninig Bridges Behind Him Hero of Philippines Action ‘Well Known In Capital An Army officer known to the Nation's Cspital as & crack polo player when he was stationed at Fort Myer and as star halfback in his days at West Point was back in the limelight today as hero of an action against the Japanese in the Philip- pines. He is Maj. Thomas J, H. (Trap) Trapnell, 39, cavalryman whom Gen. Douglas MacArthur last night cited for the Distinguished Service Cross for literally burning his bridges be- hind him on December 22 at Rosario in La Union Province. The War Department announced Maj. Trapnell remained ‘ween hostile forces and his own retiring troops and set fire to a truck on a bridge. He stayed there until the bridge was burning, then left in a scout car, picking up wounded soldiers on his way out. “With complete disregard of his personal safety,” the communique said, “Maj. Trapnell delayed the hostile advance and set an inspiring | examble to his entire regiment.” Friends Are Not Surprised. To relatives and friends in Wash- | ington and other Eastern cities, this was little more than would be ex- pected of “Trap” Trapnell, because o e MAJ. TRAPNELL. —A. P. Photo. part time to coaching an Army foot~ ball team. His rise in the Army was rapid, first lieutenant in February, 1933; captain in 1737, while at Fort Myer, and major since January, 1941. At Fort Myer, captained the horse show teams of 1937 and 1938, and in the latter year was sent to Fort Stotsenburg in the Philippines. At Newport, R. 1., his wife, Mrs. ‘Al“u Snow Trapnell, not only was they “knew him when"—when he | P’ eased to learn her husband was a was & star athlete famous for hiai{’:m'vk;“t more 5o to learn where he fghting spirit at Episcopal High ™ **™VIng: School, Alexandria; when he starred | “I'm thrilled and proud, of on the gridiron at West Point, and | course,” she said, “but the greatest when, as & cavalry officer, he per- |relief is to hear of him and know formed on the polo fleld at Fort | Where he is. I hadn’t heard from Myer during his tour of duty thege, | him since the war broke out.” e i T oy Y., Maj TRy P | A cousin, Lt. Comdr. F. M. Trap- e et osk of his youth in | neil, 1727 Hoban rosd NW. sta- - ancisco and | yoneq at the Naval Air Station at Baltimore were listed as his homes, | | Anacostia, commented of his kins- flzwgwh::n’ years he was well| ;man, “He was the kind of 4 fel- about the thing.” ‘Senate approval of his appointment Hi aster A, R. Hoxton curlow who would do a thing like Episcopal High School termed him “a leader in this school.” The major starred in football, basket ball and track at 1. | Football, with three letters; four | years of lacrosse, with the last as captain, and rifie and pistol shoot- ing were his athletic specialties at| West Point. Maj. Trapnell won other honors, too—class president | and Y. M. C. A. president for three | years, honor committeeman and so | on. And on the Sabbath, he taught & Sunday school class. On graduation from West Point he was appointed a second lieutenant in the cavalry. His first assignment was in California, where he devoted | that.” The naval officer has not seen his cousin for a long time. I come back to Washington, he goes awdy, and vice versa,” said Comdr. Trapnell. “I was in Hono- lulu and Seattie when he was at Fort Myer.” Mrs. Thomas B. Trapnell, an aunt of the hero and herself the widow of a major, termed the for- mer football star “a very fine man.” She was gratified to learn of his winning the Distinguished Service Cross. Mrs. Trapnell is now em- ployed in the Office of the Judge Advocate General at the War De- partment here and makes her home in Falls Church, Va. tantamount to command, in view of the sweeping powers granted him by | President Roosevelt. | Mr, Knudsen, now waiting for| as the Army’s Director of Production with the rank of lieutenant general, will expedite production for the Army, working with William H. Har- | rison, head of the W. P. B. Produc- tion Division. A similar preduction | director will be appointed for the Navy. y Mr. Hillman, chief of the Labor | Division under W. P. B. as he was in O. P. M., has jurisdiction over every war labor problem except disputes, and it has been predicted that his task will become increasingly im- portant as labor shortages begin to be felt with the growth of arms out- put and the withdrawa! of men from industry for military service. Nazis Fire Across Strait LONDON, Jan. 22 (#).—German | long-range guns fired across the Strait of Dover today for three hours from their positions on the Nazi- held French coast. Nazi Announcer Puts Italians in Malaya; Is His Face Red! B the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Jan. 21—Na- tlonal Broadcasting Co.’s listen- ing post last night reported the following embarrassing moment for the snnouncer of the Berlin zadio’s “News in English” pro- gram “In the course of heavy fight- ing in Malaya,” said, the Ger- man announcer, “the Italians lost considerable ground * * ¢ er—I beg ‘pardon, the Aus- tralians lost the ground!” WANTED 1340 PONTIAC WILL PAY HIGH PRICE FLOOD PONTIAC 4221 Conn. Ave. WOodley 8400 Oidest Pontiac Dealer in D. C. York last summer after Mr. Blau- weiss had charged her with pawn- ing some of the jewelry at a frac- ous Axis aircraft were destroyed on the ground. Meanwhile, with an improvement ernment some perturbation. Berlin is demanding in exchange for harmless American professional British Bombers Atfack in the weather in North Africa, Royal Air Force heavy and medium bombers were harassing Axis lines of communication with forces seek- ing to dig in west of El Agheila. England Plans Uniform Post-War Production Great Britain expects a vast ex- tension of standardization after the war, according to the British Btandards Institution of London. Standard definitions and descrip- tions will be applied to textiles. It is probable that household textiles will be standardized to do away with wasteful production of sizes of bed sheets, blankets and towels. Missing Persons Those having information concerning persons reported missing should communicate with the Public Relations Squad of the Police Department, Na- tional 4000. Walter Clyde Davis, 17, 5 feet 10 inches, 160 pounds, gray eyes, blond hair, wearing black trousers, high top boots, navy blue short overcoat, missing from 501 Sixth street SE. since yesterday. He may try to Join the Navy. Bernard McClellem, 15, 5 feet 7 inches, 130 pounds, blue eyes, brown hair, wearing dark green topcoat, green trousers, plaid shirt, red sweater, blue cap with red stripes and dark brown shoes, carrying brown leather suitcase, missing from 1825 M street N.E. since yesterday. Willie Mae Holmes, 27, 5 feet 3 inches, 115 pounds, brown eyes and hair, wearing red velvet dress, black fur coat, black turban, missing from 26 I street N.W. since yesterday. Eugene Richard Johnston, 12, looks older, blue eves, light hair, wearing long gray trousers, brown tweed reversible overcoat, brown shoes, red corduroy cap and white scarf, missing from 3612 T street N.W. since yesterday. Robert Thomas Lewis, 24, colored, 8 feet 6 inches, 140 pounds, brown eyes, black hair, bad teeth, wearing light brown trousers, leather jacket, tan shoes, missing from 1546 Eighth street N.W. since Saturday. Ben Ervin, 48, colored, 5 feet 11 inches, 180 pounds, dark eyes, black hair, brown skin, wearing work tion of its value instead of selling it, as she had promised. Her father died in 1936, and Mrs. Boyle gave up her Washington resi- dence. Last summer she rented the home at Tracy place. Navy Airman’s Rites Set For Arlington Cemetery James E. Letellier, 33, Navy chief machinist’s nmte, aviation pilot, who was killed in an airplane crash Friday in Texas, will be buried at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Arlington Na- tional Cemetery. Killed with Mr. Letellier, who had been stationed at the Anacostia Naval Alr Station for the last year and a half, was his brother Paul, stationed at Camp Berkeley, Tex. Both brothers were on their way to the West Coast after attending fu- neral services for a third brother, Grover, at Perry, OKla. A native of Waldron, Ark, Mr. Letellier was graduated from high school in Denver, Colo,, and joined the Navy in 1927. Surviving him here are his widow, Mrs. Minnje Letellier, and 7-year- old daughter, Anniea Belle, of 13 Capstan Green S.W. Living in Perry, Okla,, are his father, Prosper; another brother, Amel, and a sister, Miss Selma Letellier. A brother, Wayne, and a sister, Mrs. Cal Powell, live in Yuma, Ariz., and an- other sister, Mrs. N. J. Hiller, in Salinas, Calif. Editor in Chattanooga Lauds Censorship Rules BY the Associated Press. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn, Jan. 22. —Assistant Executive Editor - Hunt Clement, jr., of the Chattanooga Times said today that under regu- lations laid down by the director of censorship “American publications will remain the freest in the world.” In an address before the Rotary Club, Mr. Clement said wartime censorship regulations-were drawn with the idea of conveying “very little information o6f value to the enemy” and at the same time not' infringing “on the essentials of &’ free press.” “It ought to be extremely gratify=: ing that nowhere in the code is there any loosely-worded warning: clothes, missing from 314 Fourth street N.W. since Tuesday. { R 4 against publication of any material calculated to lower civilian morale,” he said. 2/ men a number of well-known Nazl agents. It would be simple enough to prevent these gentlemen from written information back with them, but there is no way to prevent the verbal transmission of United States secrets when these agents reach Berlin. Just how Washington is going to work out an exchange quota on these human commodities is still a puzzle. One Nazi agent should be worth to Berlin what three Ameri- can businessmen are to Washing- ton, but the Nazis won't see it that way. Italians & Problem Too. The Itslian transfer question also presents a difficulty because there are more American citizens who want to come home than there are Italians who want to go back to Italy. Rumania is holding fast to the American diplomatic personnel and will not hear of their leaving Bucharest until the Rumanians rive in Portugal. The late American Minister, Mr. Franklin Mott Gun- ther, who died while on duty, was given a private funeral. None of the Rumanian dignitaries with whom he had been in contact dared attend. His widow, who has been detained in Bucharest, received purely per- sonal messages of sympathy from Premier Antonescu and the Foreign Minister. The Hungarian government per- mitted the American mission to leave Budapest on the personal guarantee of Minister Herbert Clai- borne Pel that none of its mem- bers would leave Lisbon before the shipload of Axis diplomats arrived in Portugal. King Boris Speeds Earle. Handsome was the gesture of King Boris of Bulgaria, who put the royal train at the disposal of the Amer- ican diplomats right after the dec- laration of war. It is rumored that the gracious adieu of his majesty was tinged with a desire to rid Sofia of the disurbing presence of the Amer- ican Minister, Mr. George Earle. The former Governor of Pennsyl- vania, in addition to becoming in- valved in such incidents as sing- ing “Tipperary” in the cafes of Sofia and hurling a bottle at a pro- testing Nazi officer, found other ways of annoying the Axis. He held regular press conferences at which he dispensed forbidden news along with sundry delicacies :nhf.h:’ 'fi“ X: matie pouch, m-mm Northwest Reich in Force BY the Associated Press. LONDON, Jan. 22.—British bomb- ers carried out a raid in force on| Northern Germany last night, the Air Ministry announced today. { At the same time, it was said | authoritatively that an enemy bomb- i er was destroyed off the east coast of England last night. | The Air Ministry said the British bombers attacked the ports of Bre- men and Emden, airdromes in Hol- land and docks at Boulogne. Six British planes were acknowl- edged missing. Nazis Claim Two Sinkings. BERLIN, Jan. 22 (Official Broad- cast) (#)—German bombers sank a 6,000-ton merchant ship and a 600- ton collier off the northwest coast of Scotland and damaged a fairly large | merchant ship off the southwest | from the United States actually ar- ] coast of England yesterday, the high command said today. “Bomber aircraft scored several direct hits on targets of military importance on one of the islands off the Shetlands,” the high command reported. A British raid on the coastal dis- trict of Northwest Germany last night was acknowledged. Residential quarters were declared bombed, but he high command said there were no civilian casualties and “no mili- tary damage was done.” Five of the attacking planes were reported shot down. The British were declared to have lost a total of 36 planes in Euro- pean and Mediterranean fighting from January 11 to 20 while German losses “in operations against Great nm;ur' in that period were listed at 1 Theft of Six Tires Reported in District Reports of tire thefts continued today. Col. John W. Meehan told || Qur annual big clearance and your opportunity to buy a fine new or used piano at a real reduction! On sale is _ practically every new and used piano in eur store—the finest stock in the city— dozens of grands, spinets, consoles and small uprights of such makes as Knabe,- Waurlitzer, Fischer, Weber, Estey, Chickering, Steinway VERY'EASY TERMS CALL REPI (used), Starr, Krell, Lancas- ter, Vollmer, Baldwin, Stieff, Minipiano _and others—all priced down to where they will move quickly. If you are at all interested in a piano don’t fail to come in during this event—we promise you that it will be well worth your while as seldom before have we been able to offer so many bargains at one time. PIANOS IN T UBLIC 6212 ERY SPECIALS > S Ten o 1EA i LiPToN’s, TEA 3545 FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES ' Try shopping ot Magru- der's, today, vl usual groceries cost no more then everyday necessities. % NEW et CALIFORNIA WHITE BAKER'S n“z CHOCOLATE L2232 17e pkg. cake be % g Juicy FLORIDA H Mushreems | GARROTS | ORANGES |7.:: B Mamiss Ib. ‘9: bun. 6e 9 o 356 5 especial this season. DAIRY & CHEESE DEP GORGONZOLA | KAUKAUNA- ARGENTINE CHEESE end creckers. FRESH QUALITY MEATS MAGRUDER'S SMOKED HAMS =t FREE PARKING AT-REAR OF SMOKED TONGUES LOBSTERS tiads EACH STORE, 1133 18th ST. N.W.