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b INPROVED SCHOOL LIGHTING PLANNED Gas System May Be Repair- ed Until Buildings Can Be Electrified. NIGHT PUPILS SUFFER Dr. Ballou Insists Evening Class-! vooms Be Safe for Eyes of Students. = appliances in the pub- will be improved and mod- pending installation of ele it plans of the special com- ppointed recently Ballou, are car- tricity several years or longer to electrify all of the schoolkon classes or by community tlons, it is the intention of the com- mittes to recommend to the superin- tendent that the present lighting fa- vilities be improved. The committee, headed by Walter Patterson 3 £ hools, has Sive s us 1 just surve liti in the schools and make it report to eved the super- ttee's T fntendent will follow the com preparin Tdlou It ndati 138 been S desire for Worked btained dings h ve appropriate me Jurpose. out to rif Night Classrooms First. committes has tentatively agreed to recommend that classrooms sed for night schools be t equip- @ wit clights. It is proposed to consideration to those h are used by the com- department and eiv center It is not the intention of the com- mittee to urge that entire buildings be mmittee will recom the rooms actually and corridors and vith electric tions are t only classes lighting extended to other parts of the build- ings. During its investigation of lighting ons the committee discovered in a number of buildings where zas is used t n is inade- principa the out- te appliances in use. In some in- was found i « will be open_ between ock p.m. The trans. 3 before sald Teanty g s the tanght at our Tatest methods: even- Mon- Toston Beauty Shop have o hnown Elaine Re: O F st nw., il he pleases r patrons ut new locatlon, o General contractor in steam heat. Unfinished contracts ERMILE, AND TAVE YOU SANITARY CONVENT tliat country 1 on Get o toflats and keptic 1E prices tanks. o gton to Haitimore, Phil y. nd New York cf AND STORAGE CO., "7 High-Class Printing Racked up with rompt Sersice The Million Dollar Printing Plant (SMITI'S TRANSFER The National Capital Press! 12101212 D st n.w. tizzs Puts HEAT in Heating.” Quickls install_ VAPOR We Cure i WATER PLANTS hat | = are 1007 performers. Re- Heating [} "', Prformers. | Be- Riggs prices ou both Heating and’ Plumbing are right. Troubles. The Biggs Engineering Co. WARREN W. BIGGS, President. 1810 T4t ____Tel. Frank S17. HIGH GRAD] that meets the most ex- | NOT HIGH ciing demand. PRICED THE SERVICE SHOP, BYRON S ADAMS. el NEW FLOORS MAD of old ones NTER, 1th Bt ouT also new floors laid. it. Main 1457, Nignt, Lyon One-pipe Heaters ¥uel Savers, Inexpen: Quickly Installed. Stoves, Ranges & Furnaces Corrugated Garage Metal Lyon, Conklin & Co,, Inc, _ 930 E St. K.W. Floor Scraping Scraped and finished. T inlabed,, For oo Your ol timate, I. ; READY TO MOVE, A Chinese-American _restaurant at ner of Pennsylvania ave. and 434 st. n.w. Wil move to s.w. cor. of the same strects, or opposite side of 4% st. Will open for business ou or about De 1022 On_wecond_floor, ME LOw. 28 To My Friends and Patrons I am no longer connected with the Becker Paint Co. in ang eapacity. CHARLES E. HODGKIN. 260 No More Leaky Roof Let me apply one coat of Liquid Asbestos | Reofing Cement to any klnd of roof. T guaran: tee sume. Also sold in bulk, $1 buckets. del, in D C. " Estiiate free LARK, 1314 Pa. ave. s.e. Linc. 4219. Tin Roofs—Slag | Roofs REPAIRED AND PAINTED. Call Main 760, Wash. Loand 60. Grafton&Son,Inc., T4 Heating and Roofing Experts 53 Fears, Heating Plants Repaired Let us put your furnace, stoves or hea piant in perfect condition %o you will get the beat possible from your coal R. K. FERGUSON, Inc, @tove Dept. 1114 9th st. Ph. M. 2490-281. Shedd Sells Radiante Fire - Splendid Gi 706 10th B roas. Fires place Fixtures, etc. You Should Not Trifle ©r delay 1t your roof needs repairing. We are experienced roof repairers and are always gvailable. IRONCLAD, Roofing, 1416 F st. n.w. Company, Phoe Main 14, at it will take a at night for organiza- | equipment be | l“gl ! Mercury Here To Drop to 26 A temperature of 26 degrees, the lowest of the winter here, is expected to be reached tonight, according to the locul forecaster at the weather bureau. No snow is expected, although a few flakes fell this morning about 10 o'clock, and a small flurry was { officially noted at 7 o'clock last night by the weather bureau. Yes. it is going to be cold tonight,” declared the forecaster. “It will be cold through Sunday, maybe warm- ing up again Monday.” A stiff northwest wind was pre vailing today at Philadelphia, where hundreds of Washingtonians went to | i the Army-Navy foot ball game. Fair and cold weather prevailed there, the weather bureau said. with the i ther- { under 10 degrees. —_—— | jure clogged with sediment, which has been “accumulating for twenty-five years or more, thus reducing the flow of gas and dimming the lights in the rooms. mometer showin, Pipes to Be Cleaned. The committee will recommend that these congested pipes be blown as isoon as possible and new and up-to- date fixtures installed until electric lights are provided. At Business High School the com- | of the electric lights in the rooms in the front of the building is consid- { erably greater than those in the {rooms in the rear, although 150 watt lamps are u 1 rooms. An in- igation r {is due to the {bulbs in the |in use longer than those in the front and the candle power had been re- duced through usage which resulted in the lamps thro cllowish light. that ct that the r ms had the me t all electric lights In the interest of economy the com- e school huildings, especially | mittee will recommend that the old | night classes | lAmps. although still useful. be re-{ S, \lllm\uxlx Placed by new glob. and that the old one be used basement and other study purposes. It is essential, a member of the committee pointed . that the classrooms be well lighted for the sake of the eves of the night school pupil EARLY MORNING B BANDIT CETS TOTAL OF $3750 Armed Man, With _Accomplice, Robs Two Men at Gasoline Service Station. An urmed bandit appeared at the gasoline service station of the Mer- chants’ Transfer and Storage Com- pany, 3d .and B streets southwe aboyt 4 o'clock this moerning and held up Edward Estes, night manager, and robbed him of § He then turned his attention to James Williams, Herndon, Va. who happened to ap- pear just after Estes had been robbed, and relieved him of §30. An accomplice of the bandit was seated in an automobile parked near- by. the police were told, and when the two men had been robbed, the armed man boarded the automobile and was driven away. Police of "the fourth preci quickly on the scene. and Fbtes and Williams furnished description of the robber. tes said the bandit displayed a weapon, demanding his cash, realizing it would be useless for him to put up a fight, he permitted search of his pockets. “But he didn’t get it all.” the man- ager said. “He overlooked $130 1 had in another pocke Williams appeared on the scene at the wrong time. Estes had been re- lieved of his money. and the bandit. satisfied the latter would be unable to summon aid before he could “pull off another trick” and make a geta- way, robbed the second man. ThP waiting automobile, the engine running. &ped north on 3d street after the two men had been robbed. Reinald Werrenrath Recital. “Canned music” has accomplished many wonders for the betterment of a world that sadly needs betterment, but nothing that is more worthy of special remembrance than its intro- duction to a very wide public of sing- ing artists, who, perhaps. might have had to wait vears for the recognition they now receive when they most de- serve it. Reinald Werrenrath, one of the most charming baritones that Wash- ington has ever listened to. may not {be one of these; but it is certain that i even before his appearance in public here his singing records made him a ! household favorite and added largely {to his list of admirers who are al- ways ready and anxious to welcome his coming and to testify their un- mistakable delight in his singing and in his_songs. Mr. Werrenrath, at his recital in the City Club baalroom last evening, had evidence of this, and he also realized that no matter low beautiful his pro- gram may have been as originally planned, there was an unmistakable undercurrent of desire to hear him in his record songs that occupy a favorite position in every record al- bum in Washington. It was this that forced him to sing the “Pagliacci” pro- Jogue as an encore, and to win for him. perhaps. the most enthusiastic demonstration of the evening, unless it were that given when he sang the beautiful song, “Duna.” by Josephine Phillips. His ofterings started with the clas- even with Giordani’s exquisite and familiar “Garo mio ben,” which received due acknowledgement: but it was with “Over the Hills and Far Away,” the quaint group of arrange- ments by Deems Taylor—“The Rivals,” “A song for Lovers” and “The Messen ger"—along with “I Saw a Lad in Khaki, SSmilin' . Through,” Arthur Fenn's ~Sun and Moon.” the beautiful “Duna’ !and “On the Road to Mandalay” that he won the hearts of his audience, that apparently would have been con- tented, even delighted, to sit and listen until morning. It was a charming concert, and the singer’s rich, beautiful voice was ap- parently at its best, even in the soft- est. highest notes that made some wonder_if they were tenor or fal- setto. The singer also won much of his favor with a gracious and charm- ing_personality and a generous dis- position to please. D. S. M. FOR COL. CANNON. Lieut. Col. Walter B. Cannon, Of- | ficers’ Reserve Corps, of Cambridge, Mass., has been awarded the distin- guished service medal by President Harding for exceptionally meritorious and vaiuable service as director of physiological research for the Ameri- can expeditionary forces in France. The citation says that his services in organizing, instructing and directing Work of Shock téams in hospitals at the front “reflected professional skill and judgment of the highest order and Tesulted in saving many lives. TO JOIN GENERAL STAFF. Col. Willlam K. Naylor, infantry, has been relieved frog duty- at the Army War College, Washington bar- racks, and assigned to the War De- partment general staff as assistant chief of staff. TO BE RETIRED. Maj. Guy R. Doane, finance depart- ment at Fort Sam Houston, Tex., has been ordered to his home to await re- tirement, Degrees Tonight| mittee learned that the candle power Which are not used for t THE Snapshets. SETS HIS WIFE RIGHT OF PRONUNCIATION l SPENDS TWENTY MINUTES THROUGH GLOSSARY, ARRREVIATIONS APPEALING Inc, IN LITTLE MATTER ADDENDA AND KEY TO NOVEMBER 25, 1922 —By GLUYAS WILLIANS. |GTFICERS ORDERED SAYS WELL IP SHE DOESNT BELEVE HIM SHE'LL § BIUEVE THE DICTIONARY ANVWAY TELLS HER TO WAIT A MINUTE NOW, HE ISNT THROUGH WITH THIS OLD DKTIONARY YET IN VAIN HUNT DECLARES DICTIONARY 18 CUT OF DATE ANY- WAY AND HELL LOOK T UP AT THE OF ~ TICE TOMORROW. PORTRAIT OF A MAN TO THE DICTIONARY SLOCAS wiuans of coal dust in the mine | similar to the fatal ex- the Domolite mine near m, Ala, last Wednesday, may be neutralized, if not entirely prevented. by two positive methods. experts of the United States bureau of mines declared toda The first method of preventing coal dust explosions most generally Explosi atmosphere, in plosion Birming m contact with an open flame or an electric spark. | Shale Dust Preventative. | Another method of neutralizing the | effect of a coal-dust-laden atmos- phere is by mixing with the coal dust | an inert, non-explosive dust, such as shale dust. A scattering of shale dust or any heavy. Inert rock dust over the coal dust will accomplish | practically the same results as wet- ting down the mine by lessening the proportion of coal dust per cubic foot of_air. I Pure coal dust ftself, the bureau found in _the course of a series of tests at Pittsburgh, is very difficult to wet down, but when mixed with shale dust it absorbs water readily. Use of exhaust steam in coal mines as a factor in settling the explosive coal dust mixture has also .been LASKER AND ASSOCIATES CITED BY JUSTICE HITZ Must Show Cause Why The Should Not Show Accounts to Receivers. Justice Hitz of the District Su- preme Court yesterday cited Albert D. Lasker and his associates on the United States Shipping Board to show cause on December 5 why they should {not show the receivers of the Downey ipbuilding Corporation of Arling- ton, N. Y., how the company's claim | for $7,000,000 had been wiped out and a_bill for $500,000 due the Shipping Board presented to the receivers. The court’s order is based on a pe- tition in mandamus filed by William G. Coxe, Ernest Allen and William F. Purdy, receivers, in_ which they say they spent thousands of dollars in costs and expenses in connection with the presentation of their claim before the claims commission of the hoard and took 4,000 pages of testi- mony in support of it. The claim; was argued and submitted last July. The receivers declare they were notified their claim had been disal- lowed and a counterclaim of $500,000 approved by the commission, but de- spite their efforts they have been unable to see a copy of the report| and finding of the commission and they have been denied the right to | i lig | see how the determination was reached. Attorneys Cadwallader, Wicker- sham & Taft, Butler & Kratz and Guy H. Johnson appear for the re- ceivers. PLAN PAN-AMERICAN MASS. Pan-American Thanksgiving serv- IICP will be celebrated Thursday ning at 10 o'clock in St. Pa!flcksi { Chireh. Solemn high mass will_ be said by Rt Rev. C. F. Thomas, rector S Y R rehy the sermon will be | | preached by Ret. Dr. Patrick J. Healy of Catholic _University, and Archbishop Michael J. Curley of Bal- timore will preside. Members of the Latin-American diplomatic corps will attend and be guests of Mgr. Thomas at lunch after the services. —_— GOES TO MILITIA DUTY. Lieut. Col. John W. Page of the War Department general gtaff. has been as- gned to duty in the militia bureau, War Department. 1029 Vermont Ave. N.W. Exclusively for physicians, surgeons and dentists. A Few Suites Still Available J. Edward Thomas 208 Southern Building Frmklln 7!42 Simple Methods Prevent Loss Of Life in Mine Explosions | stroying the tipple over the moufh ;ber I, found eflicacious in explosion pre- g vention. Detective Bureau and Many Pre- Deep Mines Ventilated. . All deep coal mines, except per-| Cincts Complete Red Cross haps a few strip mines which !unl along the coal seam on the side of hill, are ventilated by huge fans which’ pump into the mine quantities | of air to keep circulation through| The the mine comstant. This current ol air. howe. 1o hiot strong enough | the police department, to keep down the dust prevalent in|cincts and bure the atmosphere, and it requires some |to the last member in the sixth an Enlistment. jtwo: eighth, forty u-mh forty-one out of nine venth, thirty-three out of forty- Tho > figures were a dust-laden atmosphere beyond. Korce Far Reachin, The force of a mine dust explosion. however, goes frequently many times ! Policeman L. 1. H. wards, beyond the actually dust impregnated |to Inspector Shelby’s office. air. as was proven in the Dolomite { handling this end of the disaster, when a flame shot up from ! Fi the mine mouth. igniting and de- |department will be announced Decy of the mine and Killing several men | fire dej ! duties and Safety week work, | muke a personal panies between now and the used the Dolomite disaster. Mine dust explosions have caused fatalities reaching into the thous ands, the worst of which was the ex- | plosion of Monongah, W. 358 miners were killed. c p 30th, BILL TO REGULATE BANKS. A bill to regulate and contrel in- corporated co-operative banks,- sav- ings and investment institutions oper- ating under declarations of trust_in the District was introduced yesterday by Representative Smith of Idaho. He explained that this legislative action was desirable in order that there might be uniform legislation to adequately protect the-public invest- Planning for Annual Show. A. Watson, secretary, an attractive list of special premi for the annual dog show to be January 26 and 27 fng In such Tnstitutions. upon the attractiveness of the pre- mium list.” declared Secretary Wat son. *This list should contain many D. C. STUDENT WINS HONOR. J. Carnan Goodwin, son of Assist- ant Secretary of Interior and Mrs. Francis M, Goodwin, a student at Harvard University, has been award- | comper 10, and mo grisas con oo ed one of the four scholarships | granted annually by the institution | for high scholastic standing, accord- ing to word received here today from Cambridge, Mass. pe large entry. is the best show one of countr: in desirable prizes, although cups, si plate, cut glass and other prizes m the list an attractive one. NN, BEAUTIFUL, LARGE, NEW HOME Size 44x38 feet 3722 Huntington Street, Chevy Chase Large Lot—80-foot Front e Light brick construction with slate roof-18-inch granite foun- ation. 1st floor—Six lovely rooms, breakfast alcove and 3 baths (magnificent stone fireplace in living room), handsome front and side porches, back porch. 2nd_ floor—Two large rooms, storeroom and bath. Built-in gtone garage; large cellar or basement with stationary wash trays; instantaneous water heater; servant's toilet; hot- water heat. All other modern convenience: No more beautiful home anywhere for the money—$19,000 Liberal terms. Owner needs money and must sell. Open Sunday 10 am. to 5:30 p.m. GEORGE A. TALBOTT 325 John Marshall Place Main 1988 50% REDUCTION In Cash Payment To effect a quick sale of the remaining two Bungalows No. 6316 and No. 6324 9th Street N.W. The terms have been reduced to $500 cash, balance $70 monthly. Act quickly. Be one of the lucky purchasers. Come out Sunday prepared to buy. Tomorrow may be too late. DESCRIPTION: 5 rooms and. fully tiled bath, hardwood floors and trim, reception hall, fireplace, attic, servant’s toilet, tubs and coal bin in cellar, gas nnd electricity, two porches; lot sodded front and rear, 150 feet deep to 15-foot alley. TO REACH PROPERTY: Take 9th Street car to Sheridan Street, one block east to bungalows. MORGAN E. MORGAN & CO. 1407 New York Ave. NW. Phone Frankiin 1320 Evenings and Sundays, Franklin 1686-J and West 503-W EXCLUSIVE AGENTS POLICEWOMEN EXCEED 100 PER CENT GOAL “One Hundred Per Cent Ciub” composed of pre- | Were to be us that hawe enrolled \"" out of sixty-ni Ve heripl EA FOR PREMIUM LIST. Members of the Washington Ken- | nel Club have been asked by Charles to respond with at the Coliseum. “The success of any show depe al prizes if we are to hav. It is our dutv to con- vince the fancy that the Washington cepted after that date, it is declared. ash is regarded as one of the mosi i | i ! i i I 1 it of | nual + % al reports of the dn e in the fire {the disre em R. Pierce, chief clerk of the p. Ttment, in charge of the statis- |turbing features i entertains the ums | held e al the De- ac- Iver nake AR S s sy i persons of Tw on the part of bootlegzer: he about the results d he will again ta his_cabinet, TO WEAR UNIFORM ~ n o THIRTEEN REASONS ARE URGED FOR THIRTEEN-CENT U. S. STAMF ONCE EACH MONTH Existing orders which permit Army officers in this city not sta- tioned at post to wear civillan attire while on duty have just been modifled s0 as to provide that the officers must wear their uniforms on duty at least one day during each month. No reason is given for the rew order, but it has been suggest- ed that it Is to insure that the uni- forms shall alwavs be immediately available and presentable, and that the wearer may be reminded of his military status. It is intimated that many officers had packed their uniforms away in moth-proof re- ceptacles in cold storage, with the idea that they would not be needed until the next war. PRESIDENT T0 ACT INDRY LAW CRISIS iExecutive Deeply Concerned | Over Bootlegging Reports From Many Sections. Because of the growing dis all stations of life Voistead enforcement act the tration is determined to tuks tie action to bring it more generally respected. ard by | of the adminis- | ome dras- hout a more string- {ent enforcement of the law and to make | Thirteen reasons why a 13-cent stamp should be issued by the govern- ment were contained in a petition re- celved today by Postmaster General Work from members of the American history class of the Shepherd College State Normal School, at Shepherds- town, W. Va. “The entire history of the United States is bound up with the number ‘13" the students declared, protest- ing the recent abandonment of the 13- cent stamp. The thirteen reasons for its retention follow: 1. America was discovered on the eve of the 13th of the month. 2. The original republic consisted of thirteen colonies. 3. The first official flag had thirteen stripes and thirteen stars. 4. Our national emblem, the Ameri- can eagle, requires thirteen letters to spell it; also does our motto, “E Pluri- bus Unum. 5. The first word to pass over the Atlantic cable was sent on the 13th day of the month. 6. Our silver quarter Is written all over with thirteen. Around the head of liberty are thirteen stars. The eagle bears an olive branch with thir- teen leaves in one claw and thirteen thunderbolts in the other. On his breast is a shield bearing thirteen | bars and from his beak is a ribbon bearing the mofto with thirteer. let- ters. ers and it takes thi spell “quarter dollar. 7. There are thirteen letters in John Paul_Jones' name. 8. There were thirteen ships in the first Am rican Navy. Perry's victory on Lake Erie was | woh oLt 1At Aay et the rmonth: 10. The Stars and Stripes were rais- ed over Fort Sumter on the 13th day i,.r the month. ach wing has thirteen feath- | en letters to| 1 11. Gen. Pershing reached France on June, 13, 1917. 12. The thirteenth amendment tc our Constitution freed the country of slavery. 13. It would not cost any more t¢ make a thirteen-cent stamp than any other one. —_-— e 1S DECLARED GUILTY. Colored Barber Convicted of Ten- dering Insult to White Woman. James Gawthney, a voung colored barber, working in a shop near the base ball park, charged with assault- 1 ing Miss Edna Barry, Clark Griffith of the American League base convicted by a jury in United branch of Police Cou terda October 10 last, Gawthne; Miss Barry at a mail box near the ball park as she was mailing and handed her a letter addressed t her which was insulting. The letter The defendant de secretary Washing! ball club, w {nied he intended to insult the youns | woman. = Miss Barry refused to ac- | cept th or 10 talk to Gwatl ney. diately reported attempt. fo the poli Gawthn, her and went to his barber s by attempted to destroy the letter. The torn fragz ments” were a4 together by | police, showing what its conten were. James Pugh represented the defe S| ant, and Ralph Given, assistant distr attorney, pros | this effect | When announceinent to s made offi at the White House | e yesterday afternoon, it was ex- | plaied that the pronibition situation | seriou: an hour at the ca day and that it and mean: looked upon by th ing disrespect fo the United States, dis of curbing wha siden the ( ment. o Whie attitude of the toward condition that is o be undein the m e nation has developed tion that is deemed fi and me: 1g than the ave zgine President Deeply Concerned. If facts in the ) mad would be to ands ature > sums the gove nforce the ma . the ex ohibition lav it t he and h appalled by d for the | garding the law nted out that ct that it i raft Charges Serious. stated fhat the highest r Prohibition nes, but it is unde se fears the prohibi Tt was omm tood that th at the office i Lso will be in Pr ident has Before the public_appeal, most dis. as a grow- | nstitution of | at least that portion | jof it known as the eighteerth amend- | | considered al of | a revelation, it to ap- to nment law for the binet ad- t of working in and about the mine |tician Work for the firemen, said today. [not only the so-called Tootlegger, but mouth. A great increase in the Red Cross mem- [persons of the highest ¢ persons Coal that will pass through 100-|bership is expected by that time, for iwho would not for an think mesh screens (100 wires to the linear | the firemen will have gone through {of violating any other law of the na- {inch) s accepted representing | another. pay day. Chief Watson, who are the lawbreakers in mine dust—the explosive dust which |though engulfed with departmenf s case. President card and re- oner machin- has ken down t it is inadequate to cope with the serious and grave isituation that has developed. Ability to corrupt | «ed hope that wringing | issues any been intimated, | e up the matter with | probably at next Tues: £ ussed for miore than | binet meeting vester- | n between Connecticut, Mas Over seventy under construc homes of brick and tile, front; or if desired, we will substannal manner that has Middaugh & in use, which is also probably the L IR ¥ > |artificial measure to lessen its ex- 8 g 2 rom dete that the cheapest, is by wetting down the|plosive. quality, - When & coal ear |TCll call of the District Chapter, Ameri- | government will enforce roof, walls and floor of the mine pa s by the dust is raised andCan Red Cross, received another the law “ways and ge by sprinkling water on the ed into the atmosphere many jber yesterday afternoon. the wom: ,-”"“ situation wa A times a day. iven i , e o2 sess; H dust which has settled, | In evers | VR8T aften minea |MUTeRU With a total detai of eighteen | i coal mining operation. it had been |with methane. the chemical CH{, an | Women. Miss H. C. Scofeld, in charge of proven by tests conducted at the | explosive gas in itself, when lulh)u«l,!lle drive there, not only enrolled ever. 2 3 i 0] fla . & 1 res = ol S Pittsburgh experimental mine, there v an open flame, and the result-lone. but collected $38. vl e ling dust-gas mixture. besides hav-| mye other members of the club are H are reieased quantities of this fine{ing tremendous burning qualities, e by given ! {dust into the air. When the coal has a bursting effect equal to a poor | Headquarters detective bureau, and the : in law rev B i T {dust content in the atmosphere|grade of black powder. Ventilation ;frst. second. sixth, seventh, ninth and ;! It was explained, though. | INCREASING reaches a certain proportion, which ' brattices in mine dust explosions are 14:(\*" Pr‘e}l‘ . The “m'n"'”m.;mr sit- | i -'umumnl:n legislation will bvl' varies in some mines, according to usually torn to pieces by the force UAtion in the “pl hird, forty- sought. nor wil 1y effort ventilation, this mixture will explode |of the explosion, and the flame fol- |S¢ven out of a seventy-for ment act. l —of this general commun with terrific force when brought in'lows beyond the brattices into the jPolicemen: fifth, fifty-seven out of sixt for the | manency. Their Individuality manency of Value. is Intown enforcement ag: ., known to , I ng much concern to the gov- | Washington) to Kennedy lernm \ltht)u;:h President F ding . is | known to be greatly concerned about what the ’dnn tration has seen fit ing menace, he | Entirely New Operation Home Values Without Competition Close to 14th St. Cars Nowhere in such a location can be found homes priced as low as these 1204 to 1236 Ingraham Street N.W. To Inspect Take 9th or 14th St. Car to Ingraham St. Several Already Sold Six Rooms and Bath Lots 149 Feet Paved Alley g, | Canvenient to \ Surrounded by Washington’s Containing seven million feet of six miles of improved streets. nues (Woodley Rd.). Over three mi homes from $15,000 to tion. Wooded villa sites, lots and finished with lots from 50 to 115 feet 1899. Park Office, 32d and Cathedra! Ave. (Woodley Rd.) Builder—Exclusive Agent—Owner. Woodward Building, 15th and H Sts. Main 6935 Booklet mailed on reque~t Extra Large Porches Churches and Beautiful Rock Creek Park Open, Lighted Daily and Sunday Until 9 PM. 'D. J. DUNIGAN 1321 New York Ave. NW. finest residential section. forest-covered land, with Includes what rem;uns of “The Triangle of Increasing Values” sachusetts and Cathedral ave- illion feet of land sold. $200,000 built and build your honie in the same characterized our work since Shannon, Inc. I VALUE ity is assurance ehough to any person contemplating home ownership of Per- further assurance of Per- That ‘they are Unique and Distinctive is admitted even by those who attempt to compete. Volume enables us TO PRICE RIGHT. WASHINGTON’S MOST CONVENIENT SUBURB THE SHANNON & LUCH Suburb 14th Street Terrace All Detached Homes TO INSPECT Take 14th Street car (recognized the best service in Qtrerl or drive out 16th Qtreet and through Colorado Avenue to Kennedy Street. Deep to Wide Stores, Schools Plnone Mzm 1267