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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 3
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 3

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in in in in in in in in in in in 0 0 0 to ST. LOUIS POST- DISPATCH SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1959 ST. LOUIS POST- DISPATCH 3 A USE OF DOUBLE STANDARD VOTE TESTS FOUND IN ALABAMA AREAS Stiff Questions on Constitution Put to Negroes, Investigators for Rights Commission Report. WASHNGTON, Aug. 1 (AP)The Commission on Civil Rights made public yesterday testimony from four staff members which its staff director said shows "a consistent pattern of denial of equal protection of the laws as regards voting in six Alabama counties." Gordon M.

Tiffany made the comment in connection with publication of the transcript of the commission's hearings last December and January at Montgomery, into alleged denial of voting rights of Negroes. The counties are Macon, Barbour, Bullock, Dallas, Lowndes and Wilcox. All the hearing sessions were open to the press and public except one on Jan. 9 to hear the four staff members who had examined voting records in the involved counties. "The staff members testified that a double standard was used by some Alabama registrars when considering white and Negro applicants for voter the commission's summary of the testimony said.

testified that Negroes were required to copy lengthy articles of the United States Constitution and were often disqualified for minor mistakes that did not generally disqualify white applicants. They also testified that there was little uniformity in application of the registration laws and that some registrars were not familiar with the laws they were responsible for administering." The transcript was the first published material released by the commission. It is now planned that the commission's report to the President and Congress will be published by Sept. 9. NEGROES ASSIGNED IN LITTLE ROCK LITTLE ROCK, Aug.

1 (AP) Little Rock School Board has assigned six Negroes to once-white public high schools which the board intends to reopen in September, a board member said today. Fifty-five Negroes had registered for the fall term at Little Rock's three white high schools which were closed last year in the integration dispute. Three Negroes were assigned to Central High School and three to Hall High under the first use of an Arkansas pupil placement law. The board chose the pupil assignment system in order to obey a federal mandate for integration of the Little Rock school district and at the same time hold desegregation to a minimum. Mrs.

L. C. Bates, president of the Arkansas branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, charged the school board was not acting "in good faith" in making so few Negro assignments. "I'm sure we'll appeal this board action to the federal court," she said. Everett Tucker president of the school board, said he felt the board was proceeding in good faith in assigning the six Negroes.

During recent registration for fall classes, 49. Negroes signed up at Central High School, the storm center of the 1957 Little Rock integration crisis. The three assigned to Central for the 1959-60 school year Carlotta Walls. Jefferson Thomas and Elizabeth Eckford- were among the nine Negroes who integrated et Central under federal troop protection two years ago, Five Negroes had registered for Hall High, a modernistic school in the city's better residential district. Hall never has been integrated.

The school board assigned to Hall three Negroes who never have attended white schools. No Negroes were assigned to Tech High, which had only one Negro registration. The pupil placement law provides for assignment of students on the basis of such factors as educational aptitude, health and availability of transportation facilities. Race is not a factor. Two of the Negroes who integrated Central in 1957 registered Missouri Illinois Forecasts Missouri: Fair in northeast and partly cloudy in west and south tonight and tomorrow; widely scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers in southeast; a little cooler in northeast tonight; low tonight 1 in 60s in northeast to low 70s in southwest; high tomorrow in low 90s.

Illinois: Fair tonight; cooler over most sections; tomorrow fair and pleasant; low tonight 56 to 63 in north and in 60s in south; high tomorrow in 80s. Making Way for New U.S. Building Bulldozer clearing rubble office building. Scene is be in block bounded to attend the 2000-pupil school again. But the school board assigned Thelma Mothershed and Melba Patillo to the all-Negro Horace Mann High School for the fall term.

Two others of the original nine Negroes who attended Central have graduated, and the remaining two left Little Rock. Apparently the board's assignments, prepared yesterday for mailing, means the board will reject a plan offered recently by Gov. Orval E. Faubus, who shut the public high schools against integration last Sept. 12.

Faubus had suggested voluntary integration of Hall High and Horace Mann High, with Central and Tech to stay segregated for white students. Faubus could not be reached for comment on the board's assignment of the six Negroes. FORCED SALE TO NEGRO REVERSED SEATTLE, Aug. 1 (UPI)-A superior court judge ruled yesterday that a white couple could not be compelled to sell their home to Negroes. King County Judge James W.

Hodson said that a state law bearing on such matters was unconstitutional. The case vas believed the first of its kind in the nation. Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.

Jones said they had offered to buy the home of Coast Guard Comdr. John J. O'Meara and his wife for $18,000. Jones is a Negro mail carrier. O'Meara was being transferred to Washington, D.C.

Jones said O'Meara refused to sell. O'Meara said already had negotiated to sell for $17,250 to a neighbor in the all-white district. The state board against discrimination was called into the case and ruled that O'Meara must sell to Jones under a 1957 state law because 0'Meara carried an FHA-insured loan on the house. The law prohibited discrimination in public housing. Hodson ruled that the FHA loan in this case did not eliminate O'Meara's right to deal with anyone he chose.

"A individual acting in a private capacity," he said, "is perfectly free to discriminate as he chooses. "The mere existence of an FHA-insured mortgage on his house is far too tenuous a thread upon which to hang such a drastic invasion of his constitutional right to do as he pleases with his own property. The thumb of government rests too lightly upon the Attorneys for Jones said they would appeal to the state Supreme Court and if necessary to the United States Supreme Court. FIVE MEN GET FIVE YEARS EACH ON NARCOTICS CHARGE Five men were given five year prison sentences each after pleading guilty to narcotics conspiracy charges yesterday before United States District Judge George H. Moore.

They are Ernest Battle, 2600 block of Stoddard street; Arthur L. Cunningham, 700 block of North Beaumont street; Erwin Kent and his brother Leo, 1500 block of Cole street, and Elque Davis, 2300 block of Biddle street. They previously had entered not guilty pleas. They were among 14 persons indicted July 16 on charges of buying and selling heroin. from first buildings razed to make way back of Aberdeen Hotel, 1534 Market by Market and Sixteenth ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES IN U.S.

FOR AUGUST WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 (AP)The Weather Bureau said today its 30-day outlook for August calls for temperatures to average above seasonal normals over most of the nation. Temperatures are expected to be below normal, however, over the southeast and near normal over the southern plains, Ohio valley and Middle Atlantic states. Greatest unseasonal warmth is expected over the northern plains, the bureau said. Precipitation is expected to be subnormal over most of the great plains and middle Mississippi valley.

Above normal rainfall is indicated east of the Appalachians and south of New England as well as over the plateau states. In unspecified areas about normal amounts are indicated, the bureau reported. MRS. RAY HANNERS DIES: WAS UNDERCOVER AGENT Mrs. Ray Hanners, a St.

Louis housewife who served as an undercover agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, died of a cerebral yesterday at Normandy Osteopathic Hospital. She was 51 years old. Mrs. Hanners, woh lived at 1601 Vassier street, Normandy, worked for about 12 years as an undercover agent investigating Communist wartime activities in the St. Louis area.

Her identity was revealed in a 1954 trial of five St. Louis Communists, when she took the stand as a prosecuting witness. Surviving are her husband; a son, Donald; her mother, Mrs. Elvis Allen, a sister and a brother. Funeral services will be at 10 a.

m. Monday at the Clark undertaking establishment, 1125 Hodiamont avenue. TOWER GROVE PARK USED BY 425,000 LAST YEAR Tower Grove Park facilities were used by an estimated 000 persons last year, it was stated in the 1958 annual report which was yesterday. Of the visitors, 108,007 were picnickers, 85,910 played ball, 72,212 engaged in tennis, 8939 participated in square dances and the playgrounds were used by 24.896. Operating expenses totaled $26,816, or $2675 in excess of income, it was reported.

William S. Bedal is president of the board of commissioners, which includes Arthur Stockstrom, Fred J. Hoffmeister, David H. Nicholson, Emmet J. Layton, F.

W. Went and Mayor Raymond R. Tucker. MORTGAGE PLAN EXTENDED WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 (AP) -President Eisenhower signed a bill yesterday extending the voluntary home mortgage credit program until Sept.

30. Authority for the program otherwise would have expired yesterday. Royal Engagement Predicted. STOCKHOLM, Aug. 1 (AP)The newspaper Expressen said today a royal romance will soon result in engagement between 21 year -old Swedish princess Desiree and Greek crown prince Konstantin, 19.

Two-Man Space Capsule Being Designed by McDonnell Corp. A two-man space capsule is being designed by McDonnell Aircraft J. S. McDonnell president of the company, said yesterday. McDonnell currently is designing and building this country's first space capsule, a one-man vehicle, for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Discussing the larger space vehicle, McDonnell said: "It is inevitable that as space research continues, the United States will require two-man and, later, multi-crew space capsules. that time comes, we intend to have the design ideas worked out, ready to put into effect." McDonnell described work on DRIVER ROBBED OF $685 AFTER HE LEAVES BANK Owner of Kemoll's Restaurant Stopped in Alley by Two Masked Men. Vincent Camuglia, owner of Kemoll's Italian Restaurant, was robbed of $685 yesterday by two men who forced their way into his automobile. Camuglia was returning from a bank to the restaurant, 4201 North Grand boulevard. The robbers, both wearing rubber Halloween masks, forced him to accompany them for several blocks before releasing him.

Camuglia told police he had withdrawn the money from the North St. Louis Trust 4343 North Grand. He said he was driving through an alley and was waiting for a traffic break in the 3600 block of Carter avenue when a car bumped his car from the rear. The two men, one of whom was armed with a revolver, got in the front seat on either side of the restaurant owner. They told him it was a holdup and took the money, including $275 in coins and the rest in currency.

Abandoned Auto Found. Leaving their car in the alley, the men drove off with the restaurant owner. They let him out at Twentieth street and Obear avenue and continued east on Obear. Camuglia's late model Cadillac was found abandoned about two hours later at Von Phul and 1 John avenues. The car used by the robbers prior to the holdup had been stolen from the parking lot of the Drehmann-Harral undertaking establishment, 1905 Union boulevard, police said.

The license plate on the stolen automobile had been taken yesterday morning from Jules Summers, 4133 North Second street. Camuglia told police he often changes routes when returning from the bank, and yesterday was the first time he had used the alley. Louis Spencer, 4214 McPherson avenue, beaten and robbed of $110 early today in a vacant lot about 100 yards from the East St. Louis police station, he reported. Spencer, a clerk, told police he was about to get into his automobile in the 200 block of Missouri avenue when a man pulled him from the car and dragged him to the lot at Third street and Missouri.

The man, about 22 years old, kicked and beat him about the head and upper part of the body, Spencer said. During the struggle, he reported, the man took his wallet containing the money. The wallet was found later near the scene of the robbery. Pharmacy Robbed. An armed man robbed Joseph Schramel, a pharmacist, of $175 last night at the Arkin Pharmacy, 7175 Delmar boulevard, University City.

Police said three customers in the drug store were ordered to face the wall but were not robbed. Schramel said the man used the telephone several times and said he was waiting for a call. After asking for a bottle of lotion, he drew a ..38 caliber revolver from his waist and announced a holdup. Schramel said the man fled in an automobile. Dalton Boren, an attendant: at a Mars service station at 2929 Market street, was robbed of $35 last night, he reported to police.

He said the robber had been talking to another man and a woman in an automobile before he came into the establishment and drew a revolver. The robber took the money, ordered Boren into the storeroom and fled, the attendant said. Husband Sues Betty Hutton. SANTA MONICA, Aug. 1 (AP)-Betty Hutton's husband, Alan W.

Livingston, has crossfiled for divorce. Both allege mental cruelty, He entered a denial yesterday to the entertainer's charges in her suit filed 3. He said she is not entitled to any sum for support or maintenance because she earns more than $150,000 a year. McGraw Edison 10,000 cu. ft.

Dehumidifies DEHUMIDIFIER up $5838 Tipton 5840 Hampion 6725 W. Florissant Complete Twin Hollywood Bed spring mattress, Headboard, Inner. spring, and legs. TERMS WITH EAGLE STAMPS STEIN SIR A FRANKLIN FREE R.M.LANGENBERG KILLED IN AUTO CRASH IN ALASKA, Car Driven by St. Louis Youth Involved in Head- on Collision With Another.

Robert Merrill Langenberg, 18- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Langenberg, 7 Aberdeen place, was killed when his automobile collided head on with another car on a highway in Alaska, his parents were notified last night. occupants of the other automobile, Mr.

and Mrs. Augustus Buccholt of Bloomington, were seriously injured and are in a hospital at Juneau, Alaska. The youth's father, who is president of the Langenberg Hat said his son left St. Louis a week ago yesterday for a sixweek tour of Alaska. The youth, who would have entered his senior year at the Taylor school in Clayton next month, was traveling alone.

Alaska State Police said the accident occurred on the Haines cutoff the Alaska Highway, 70 miles north of Haines in British Columbia Thursday evening. They said the cars collided on a slight rise in the highway. Woman Injured July 25 Dies. Mrs. Linnie Cooper, 38 years old, 508 Washington street, Brooklyn, a community north of East St.

Louis, died yesterday at St. Mary's Hospital, East St. Louis, of injuries suffered July 25 in an automobile accident at the east end of Veterans' Memorial Bridge. East St. Louis police said Mrs.

Cooper was driving west when her automobile collided with an eastbound car driven by Gerhardt E. Pittman, 110 Sunset drive, Collinsville, a printer. Pittman has been placed under bond pending an inquest. Thomas Viviano, 2-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Gus Viviano, 603 Crawford street, Collinsville, suffered serious chest injuries last night when he was struck by an automobile in the 600 block of Staten street, Collinsville. The boy is in St. Mary's Hospital, East St. Louis. Lyndon D.

Darner, 19, of 2246 Delmar avenue, Granite City, driver of the automobile, told police he had pulled into the driveway of a restaurant parking lot to turn his car and was backing out of the driveway when the car struck the boy. Darner said he had looked in both directions but did not see the boy before hitting him. Driver Collapses and Dies. Daniel F. Harnish, a struc.

tural design engineer employed by the Army Corps of Engineers, collapsed and died yesterday afternoon as he was driving west on U.S. Highway 40 in Ladue. His wife, who was with him, took control of the car and avoided a collision with other cars. Mrs. Harnish told Ladue police her husband, who was 53 years old, suddenly slumped over the steering wheel when they were just west of McKnight road.

She said he had been in apparent good health and had not complained of illness. Mrs. Herschel Staley, 26, of 1275 Chambers street, was seriously injured when she was struck by an automobile in the 2000 block of North Fourteenth street yesterday. She suffered a fractured right arm, rib fractures and a head injury. The driver of the car, Donald Morris, 23, of 4857A Natural Bridge avenue, told police he was driving north on when Mrs.

Staley walked Fourteenth behind a parked automobile into the path of his car. Morris was booked suspect of careless driving. Mrs. Staley was booked suspected of careless walking. ALL GIRLS Sizes 10 to 22 LANE BRYANT DOWNTOWN and WESTROADS ZOYSIA URCHARD) 1000 pluge GARDENS for $10.00 Miles South 124 E.

BIG BEND of Manchester MANCHESTER RD. 5 of Miles Lindberg West Money Available FOR HOME LOANS I NORTHWESTERN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 5508 NAT. BRIDGE EV. 2-5336 Louis (20, Mo. FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY BY TAXI CAB Just have your Doctor phone DRUG CO.

Sutton Manchester 441 N. Kirkweed Rd. 8th Washington 8959 Riverview Blvd. 7th Locust 6150 Natural Bridge Rd. Killed ROBERT MERRILL LANGENBERG ST.

LOUIS LEADING CITIES OF ITS SIZE IN TRAFFIC SAFETY Special Post-Dispatch. CHICAGO, Aug. 1-St. Louis had the nation's best automobile safety record for cities of its size in the first six months of this year, the National Safety Council reported yesterday. The St.

Louis record was 2.4 deaths per 10,000 registered vehicles. Next lowest in the 000 to 1,000,000 population group was Cleveland, with 2.8." San Francisco was third with 3.0. country as a whole had 17,090 traffic deaths--a 5 per cent increase over the first half of last year. There were 3150 deaths in June, the sixth straight month in which there were more than last year, The largest cities having no traffic fatalities were Yonkers, N.Y. (183,200 population), Lincoln, Neb.

and Peoria, Ill. INJUNCTION ISSUED AGAINST INVESTMENT SERVICES, INC. A preliminary injunction against Investment Services, 2929 South Brentwood boulevard, was issued by United States District Judge George H. Moore yesterday: Complaints' against the firm have been filed by the Securities and Exchange Commisison. Tie complaints alleged that the firm was engaging in the fraudulent sale of securities not listed on a national exchange.

The company, headed by Arthur C. Costello, is restrained, from doing business until the case can be heard on its merits. The injunction took the place of a temporary restraining order issued earlier. The temporary order expired William W. Crowdus, appointd previously as receiver for Costello personally, was appointed yesterday to serve also as receiver for the firm.

NEW JOBLESS PAY CLAIMS SHOW DROP OF 460 IN WEEK The State Division of Employment Security received tial claims for unemployment compensation last week, fewer than the number filed the previous week, it was announced yesterday. There also was a decline in continued claims. A total of 394 were processed last week, compared with 11,560 the previous week. Both initial and continued claims were below the number filed in the corresponding week of 1958. The number of initial claims was 2997 and the number of continued claims 16,494 for the week a year ago, Miefer's Quality Est.

JEWELERS 1919 LAST DAYI 10th Anniversary SALES CLEARANCE Save to fine 5204 Graveis Ave. HU. 1-3240 States 38 Hampton Village PL. 2-1414 MILLWORK IS OUR SPECIALTY Consult a Specialist Schafer JE. 4230 W.

HAS Nor1 1-6868 Bilge IT! 5 B-GIRL SUSPECTS SEIZED I IN BAR RAIDS Arrested in Taverns in Vicinity of Sixth and Chestnut. EN CO the two man capsule as "a routine research and development project, the kind we are going ahead with at all times." He emphasized that there have been no contracts or orders for a capsule to take two men into space. NASA has ordered 12 one-man capsules from McDonnell to be used in the first manned flights into space. The first. of these will be launched into orbit 100 to 150 miles above the earth and returned to earth after three or four trips around the earth.

Longer manned satellite trips at greater heights will follow the first successful orbits. The first attempts at manned space travel are due in about 18 months. -By a Post -Dispatch Photographer. for new four-story federal street. New structure will and Walnut streets.

SURPLUS FOODS GIVEN TO 20 PCT. FEWER FAMILIES The number of families receiving government surplus foods decreased by 4433 in July, or about 20 per cent, it was reported yesterday to Comptroller John H. Poelker. Those receiving the commoddecerased reason of unemployment by 1705 and the number receiving the foods because they are on Missouri relief rolls decreased by 2728 in July. There were 5621 unemployed cases receiving surplus foods in July, compared with 7326 during June.

State welfare cases dropped to 11,807 from 14,535. The amount of commodities distributed was 170,400 pounds, compared with 221,950 in the previous month. The July total of 17,428 cases getting this aid include 41,000 persons. The most active month since the food distribution program was started was last December when there were 22,447 cases, including 54,755 persons, to whom 763,000 pounds of the commodities were distributed. FRANK C.

ESTATE IS INVENTORIED AT $555,071 The estate of Frank C. Landwehr, former St. Louis circuit judge, was valued at $555,071 in an inventory filed yesterday in probate court. Mr. Landwehr, who lived at 6254 Wydown boulevard, died May 10 at the age of 75.

Under terms of his will, filed earlier, the estate was placed in trust, providing a lifetime income for his sister, Miss Clara Landwehr, with whom he lived. On her death, $30,000 is to be distributed among relatives and employes and the Bar Association of St. Louis is to receive the rest for a headquarters meeting place for all lawyers and law groups of St. Louis. St.

Louis Union Trust Co. will be trustee of the fund. Principal assets in the estate are corporation stocks with current value of bonds and notes, $103,250, cash and insurance, $54,394, and real estate, $249,200. FUNERAL TO BE MONDAY FOR LEO T. MC LAUGHLIN Funeral services for Leo T.

McLaughlin, district manager of the National Biscuit Co. at Chicago and a former St. Louisan, will be at 9 a.m. Monday at the St. Louis Cathedral, 4431 Lindell boulevard, with burial in Calvary Cemetery, Mr.

McLaughlin, who was 63 years old, died Wednesday of a respiratory ailment at a in Chicago. He started with the company in St. Louis as a salesman 41 years ago and in 1941 was transferred to the Chicago office. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Gertrude McLaughlin; a son, Dr.

Leo C. McLaughlin of Chicago; two sisters, Mrs. H. L. Heining and Mrs.

Leo T. Matthews, and a brother, John M. McLaughlin, all of St. Louis. MAN RIDING IN FREIGHT CAR IS KILLED BY SHIFTING STEEL An unidentified man was found crushed to death today in an open freight car in railroad yards at Twenty-first and Gratiot streets.

He carried papers bearing the name Guy Patrick of Hammond, La. Police said the man apparently had been riding in the freight car and was killed when a load of sheet steel shifted, pinning him against one end. Near the man was a suitcase which contained letters written to Guy Patrick in care of the Missouri Penitentiary at JefferSOn City. Police records show that a Guy Patrick was sentenced to five years prison for armed robbery here in 1955. PLOESER WILL QUIT ENVOY POST ON SEPT.

14 ASUNCION, Aug. 1 (AP)-Wal-. ter Ploeser yesterday confirmed reports that he is retiring as United States ambassador to Paraguay. He said he plans to return to private business in St. Louis.

Ploeser told a news conference he will leave Asuncion Sept. 14. He has served as ambassador here two years. Five women suspected of being B-girls were arrested last night in taverns in the vicinity of Sixth and Chestnut streets. B-girls are tavern employes who solicit customers to buy drinks for them in violation of the rules of the State Liquor Department.

Members of the police liquor squad who made the arrests said they did not see the women actually solicit drinks, although they were mingling and drinking with patrons. The police said all the women, have been arrested before, suspected of prostitution. Two women were arrested in the Silver Leaf Bar, 513 Chestnut. One arrest was made in the Hitching Post Tavern, 510 Chestnut; one in the Downtown Buffet, 517 Pine street, and one in the Fairmount Inn, 511 Pine. Police said the woman arrested in the Downtown Buffet, when asked why she was drinking with a number of the male patrons, replied: "Well, you know how it is, fellows." The woman arrested in the Hitching Post Tavern was waiting on tables, police said.

All denied being girls. They were booked suspected of liquor law violations. Two girls were shot and killed on June 9, 1958, in a tavern at at 13 North Broadway. The girls were killed by Robert W. Sauer, who had bought drinks for them.

Tried for murder, he was adjudged insane by jury. The tavern has since been closed. A waitress was arrested last night in the Sunset Strip tavern, 3748 Delor street, by police liquor squad members who reported she was seen selling a drink to a minor, a 20-year old woman. The waitress gave her name as Patricia Ann Stelfox, 3100 block of Chippewa street. Police said she served a "screwdriver," a drink made of vodka and orange juice, to the woman, who was with a 21-year-old escort.

Miss Stelfox was booked suspected of selling liquor to a minor. She and the two customers are scheduled to appear in Police Court Tuesday. UNION (MO.) WOMAN KILLED IN AUTO CRASH IN IOWA Special the Post- Dispatch, KEOKUK, Aug. 1-Mrs. Clara Mueller, 70 years old, of Union, was killed Thursday when the automobile in which she was riding went off the and overturned, six miles north of here.

The car was driven by her nephew, Ray Kramer of Hous. ton, a student at the University of Iowa. Kramer, his wife and their 2-year-old daughter were injured. The accident occurred when Kramer tried to pass a car and swerved back to keep from colliding with another, then skidded and went off the road. Smart men buy CLIPPER CRAFT Werner SAVE $500 DIVIDEND CURRENT I Savings MAKE Insured to $10,000 THIS YOUR GOAL NORTHWESTERN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 5508 WAT.

BRIDGE EV. 2-5336 St. Louis 20, Mo. SAVE BY MAIL WITH INSURED SAFETY SAVE POSTAGE CURRENT DIVIDEND EARN DAY BY MAIL AND EARN MORE ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $10,000.00 PAID BOTH WAYS ACCOUNTS OPENED BY THE 101h DIVIDENDS FROM THE FIRST OF THE MONTH BE PRUDENT SAVE WITH RUDENTIAL SAVINGS LOAN ASSOCIATION 12 Forsyth Walk, Clayton, Mo. PA.

1-8765 FREE PARKING.

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