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Crime by b French Savant Sees h cwW cuisine. New Willard appointments. New Willard service. BY EMILE COUE. f Coffee Shop prices. Article V. | Leaving for a while the subject of physical health cures effected by autosuggestion, let us discuss the Irole of the lattér in relation to our | moral well being. “Train up a child| in the way he should go, and when he | is old he will not depart from it,” said | A genuine dinner delight 50— 6 to 8:30 P. M. | Table d’Hote Dinner THE Autosuggestion| Cure for Social Ills of World in Practice of His Method for Helping Physically Infirm. some time ago the papers were full of details of a daring train robbery. Immediately afterward there was a repetition of the orime perpetrated in exactly the same manner and within a fortnight five or six similar train assaults took place, the details of execution being identical in all cases. The epldemic was the result of sug- gestion. Epldemic in Paris. Only a week or so ago Parls had & EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1923. Coue Planning to Stamp Out I Snapshots. — s T (. S.BUYS 7BLOCKS | NEAR NAVY ANNEX Land Occupied by Tempo- rary Buildings Purchased at Saving of $180,000. 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief DELL-ANS 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Evervwhers Seven blocks of real estate Now oc- | [F—" cupled by temporary war-work build- ings, west of 17th street and north of the new Munitions and Navy annex buildings, have been purchased under an appropriation of $1,500,000 last vear. In this transaction a saving of between $180,000 and $200,000 was effected, which will be turned back Buy or Rent Dr. Coue’s Book On Self-Mastery Price.. . ..o - 3100 Rental....... 25c NEW WILLARD HOTEL nk S Hight, Managing Director the Man of Wisdom thousands of strange and striking illustration of vears ago: and His words are as true | the power nrl suggestion n‘:\ld kut':; Lot = | suggestion, the one provoking now as they were them. And What o4yt 'ang translating them into acts. into the Treasury, Representative Will R. Wood of Indiana told the House yesterday in presenting the, is such “training” if not the art of — limplanting a mass of suggestions in| |{the young, receptive mind? Thosej SOUR STOUNINLN, (- oo, o et e na 3 e 's whole GAS, BELCH]NG i:;:“;‘,:"sum depend the child's whole | shall have more to say on the One Dose of t of the rational and S\‘(cnuflc[ HERNDON’S INDIGESTINE ifor the moment I should like to insist Wil {upon the importance of suggestion ind autosuggestion for the society. | Moral health is essential to physical health and it is to the interest of the | \unity at large to improve the al health of its feebler elements | Granted the efficacy of autosugges- {tion in the accomplishment of this {task, it must be clear to all that the {new method opens up a magnificent |vista of possibilities in the direction {of social progress. H Curb to. Evil. ! 1t furnishes us the means of com- {bating victoriously the bad streaks in our nature, whether inherited or ac- {quired, and of developing our intelli- !gence; of curbing a wayward im- |agination; of adding ponderation to our judgment, modifying our men- tality, correcting our .moral weak- nesses. while curing our bodily ills. ts generalizataion must conduce to |individual and social reform, and the {time. may come when, freed of the levil suggestions which are so many poisons debilitating humanity both spiritually and physically, the world iwill have purged itself of all its mor- bid elements—the criminal classes— and embark upon a new and glorious | phase of fullest harmony. | e g, | W & all recognize the value of physi- EXCEPTIONAL VALUES ¢! culture. "it is not too much to] say that to its renascence in my own country and the consequent building up of a generation of robust, strong- limbed nfen; full of stamina and re- sistance, is due in a considerable measure our vietory in the great war. Well, psychic culture is equally nec- ary. 1t will teach us to think sim- sanely. It will teach us to alize that we .can be, and shoul:! be, ‘e masters of events, and not their {playthings. Psychic culture, through —_{the medium of suggestion and auto- FOR ANY |suggestion, corrects our moral de- formities just as physical culture cor- {rects our bodily defects. We cannot! e all hecome champions. but we can all GIVEN THAT THE |develop our personality the spir-| stocklolders of the | itual or moral domain, as we can all! v, fur the clecton of | increase our muscular force by ap- the ensuing sear and {propriate exercises. Nor business as may 2 i eoting, will be held at | Proves Check om Crime. | vany, S6th_and M 'sts _ 5 ‘ = s e Autosuggestion, then, 1 am per at 1045 ook 'WRSDAY: | suaded, is destined to be applied more i from 11 o'clock a.m. until more generally in_the world's efforts to stamp out crime. 1 have had occasion to try my method at | Naney upon a few boys of bad char- \cter, whose precocious criminal in- Stinets had led them to the reform- atory. I believe good results were! attained, but, unfortunately, I was unable to pursue the experiments over a long period, as the poor Youths, sent in batches, remained only a few weeks before being trans- ferred to the central stablishment in another town. However, the French authorities are quite in favor of a prolonge’ trial of my method being | made, and 1 hope to devote myself to {this task when I return to Europe may say, too, that I find great in- « hefore the | terest manifested here in America in} LLY €O, | this question of autosuggestion as aj iremedy against the growth of crime. Tt is a well known fact that crimel contagious. From time to time| “Very country has crime waves or epidemics to record, simply because | {the mind is influenced by suggestions, | [trom no matter what source, in ai imore or less degree, according to the! degree of sensitiveness or strength of Aracter of the individual. In France TOOVE [RGES NOREFUNDS WANTED- T0 NG ) Washingte hia il New York ciiy SMITICS TRANS. | ER AR STORAGE €O TN T EUILDING ASSOCIATION gan Pays 3% on Sour savings of a manth or more. Now is ave. nw. Wi T Linkins and W, K James M. Woodward, htan. treasurer STING OF nford Comy Give R 10 Minutes 35¢ BOTTLE At All Drug Stores TIRES On Time Payments Any Standard Make On Easy Payments No Advance in Prices lief in L St. N.W. Main 2469 Furni Lamps and Shades. attractive assort- and the prices are 1 find the m t to select from 714 13tk N SPECIAL NOTICES. T WILL NOT Bi NIBLE Nan wyself OSTMANN, RESPON D._CRAMPTON. Secrotary. NEW MASONIC HALL CORPORATION, D. ¢, Decemin The ting of the stockholders of this the clection of directore and ther business properls _and said meeting will be ren, 11th and R b day of Janu- Polix for elec- k pm. to President UTCHELL, OF THE fransaction 1 LUMER THE STOCK e & Dredging office in_Alex. anuary 18, 1922, at urpose of electing MEETING is the A. BONNET. THBE ANNUAL MEETING TOCK- olders of the National Trust | Comp for the vlection r | aneh v ay o 11 WILLIA i\ or-! £1.00 | t an | o | HoN Board of Trade Committee Pledges Support of Plea for | Americanization. ‘ " Fesidents. Richard E. Clay THE ANNUAL M Volders of the C; s affic secretary; TH 1ARE. " ny will be held | st. n.w.. Washington, lock a.m. on Tuesday, January | equally |at firet, the good ground would soon A maniac pricked a woman shopping in a dry goods tore, with a needle or a syringe, injectiig some liquid which caused a swelling of the part affected (usually the arm or hip). The papers published a few lines about it and the next day two or three other similar cases were re- corded. The number continued to grow till the victims were counted in scores, and not the least strange feature was that, while suggestion created the “prickers,” autosugges- tion created the vietims, numbers of women being led by sheer imagina- tion to believe themselves “priciked” and to feel the pain of a sudden jab Curiously enough, there was a sim lar epidemic in the time of Louis XV Another example of crime conta- glon is to be found in the “scalping” series in the seventeenth century, when for a certain period not a day passed without one or more women being shorn of their hair by mad- brained ruffians. Twenty years ago there was a similar epidemic. The cinema—the movies—again must be regarded in some respects as a school of crime by reason of the terrible effects of suggestidn on ili- balanced or unformed minds. And the the“craze of the Nick Carterstyle of story has been responsible for the wrecking of many young lives in my | country. i Good for Reformatories. The role of suggestion in provoking crime being thus demonstrated, it IS logical to assume that suggestion is effective as an arm agafnst crime. The idea is everything, since it carries the germ of action. There is vast scope for suggestion in re- formatories. It could be practiced collectively. Sown indiscriminately be discovered by its fruit. Then the good should be separated from the bad, for, by virtue of the eternal law of the contaglon of ideas, the sub- jects influenced by the suggestions would strengthen “each other, while the neighborhood of the refractory ones would tend to add to their re- sistance to good suggestions. To_people who ask if vice really can be conquered, I answer, emphati- cally, yes. By suggestion, long and oft-repeated, the character can be modified. A’ proof that education (or suggestion) does modify character is that the iystinet of self-preservation. | the strongest of all, can be overcome; | as witness the many acts of sublime and total self-sacrifice in favor of| others recorded by every epoch. i Could Rescue Criminals. Suggestion acts as a brake to bad instincts; that is its negative role. It has a positive part to play in act- ing as a propelling force for good impulses. Applied systematically sclentifically, there is no doubt that a large portion of the classes branded as “criminal” could be reclaimed and thousands of outcasts transformed into clean-thinking, clean-living and useful citizens = This is naturally especially true in regard to the young, with their keen, Vigorous imagination open to every impression. Surely it is the duty of those in authority to see that their imagination be fed with something | better than the germs of crime. The| susceptibility of youth is such that| it is easy (save in the fortunately! rare cases of wholiy bad,characters) | to create vivid images or ideas of good actions in their minds. Once inchored in the subconscious. those jdeas must inevitably develop and eventually exteriorize themselves in | acts ! (Copyris 1923, TUnited States. Great Britain, Canada and South America, North American Newspaper Alliance and New York World (Press Publishing Company). All rights reserved. Unlicenstd reproduction in full or In part expreasly probibited.) HOUSE COMMITTEE | They would also deny to it | freight j concurrent jurisdiction with I Charges in Impeachment | Case Found Unsupported by Evidence. I | demanded TRIES A DIFFERENT ARRANGEMENT OP TING™ ERS, AND SUDDENLY BLAST DORTRAIT OF A MAN WHISTLING DISTRICT LAWYERS ELECT MAJ. GORDON Other Officers Named at Courthouse Meeting—Juve- nile Court Discussed. Maj. Peyton Gordon, United States attorney, is the new president of the Bar Assoclation as the result of the election held last evening at the courthouse. Other officers elected were: Danfel W. O'Donoghue, vice president. and Milton Stras- burger, second vice president. George C. Gertman, eecretary, and W. W. Millan, treasurer, were re-elected. ew members of the hoard of direc- tors are Samuel McComas Hawken, B. H. Marshall, Walter C. Balderston and C. Clinton James. Chapin Brown, attorney for the Rent Commission, in a brief address out- lined the character of the office of president of the association before nominating Maj. Gordon to the post. “Now,” said Mr. Brown on the coi clusion of that subject, I have set a high level for any candidate for elec- tion to the executive office of this Bar Association to attain, and yet not too high for the candidate I am about to mention. “Mr. Gordon is a native-born resi- dent of this District. reared and edu- cated in our own public schools and a local university: has enjoyed a suc- cessful private practice of the law at our bar and_in our courts for many years: he has been called from time to time to assist in the administering of the public laws by various appoint- ments in the Department of Justice, and when the defense of his country his services, he enlisted in the world war and remained there ur til peace was declared and his country no longer needed military services, and he then retired with the honorable title of major. He is now conducting with marked ability the duties of the high office of United States attorney for the | District of Columbia by selection of the President and confirmation of the Senate.” The proposed extension of the juris- | diction of the Juvenile Court was dis- cussed at the meeting, and much oppo- sitfon was evidenced. The lawyers seem not to be in sympathy with the proposition to give that tribunal juris- diction in divorce matters, power to of nam the Di: trict Supreme Court in certain matter: first | SURPRISES HIMSELP WIT4 UNDER. SUDDEN A TREMENDOUS SHRILL. NOTORIETY DECIDES HE _(C) Wheeler Syn. inc. TO A NEWSBOY THE RICHES OF THE RUHR German Industrial Prosperity. What the French Expect to Find. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE When the French enter the valley of the Ruhr this week they will plunge into the heart of industrial rmany—a heart that is throbbing with prosperity almost on the pre- war scale. It is the great province of steel, iron, coal and coke, known as “Rhineland-Westphalia,” of which Essen is the capital. that constitutes the so-called “Ruhr-Revier” (Ruhr district) the French are seizing. Every factory, foundry and mill in the Ruhr for the past vear has been working at fullest capacity. Many of them have operated on three shifts of hands. With the co-operation of mines and state railroads, the gross output of German steel and iron in 1922 reached, roundly, 30,000,000 tons, which is slightly in excess of the pre-war peak production of 1913. In pig-iron alone Germany's production has outstripped pre-war figures by 40 per cent, while that of France has declined to G5 per cent. Even more symptomatfc of the thriving condition of the Ruhr and industrial Germany generally are fig- ures of the port of Hamburg. Ham- burg in 1922 far outdistanced both [of her principal rivals on the Kuro- pean continent, Rotterdam and Ant- werp. Ship arrivals for the first eleven months of last year totaled 9.902 at Hamburg, 08 at Antwerp and 7,746 at Rotterdam. They repre- sented increases over 1921 in numbers, respectively, of 1,794, 100 and 231. Germany's own need for ships to carry her own manufactured goods to the markets of the world is ex- emplified by her purchase from the allies since the treaty of Versailles of 491,567 tons of her surrendered shipping. That is roughly one-tenth of the pre-war German mercantile marine. Hugo Stinnes, the un- crowned king of German industry, rapidly is becoming the shipping czar of the country. His own lines of vessels are spreading over the face f all the se A new service of modern passenger ships and carriers has just been in- augurated to Japan and China. While all the world is more or less analytically discussing Ger- many’s capacity to pay reparations, it is interesting to recall a grandilo- quent tabulation of German national wealth issued at Berlin on the eve of the world war. It was compiled by the famous Dresdner Bank, one of the so-called four “D" banks of Ger- many, which comprise perhaps the most powerful money trust in Europe. The compilation was entitled “Ger- many's Economic Strength” and was cd_in honor of Emperor William silver jubllee in 1913. The pur- > of the publication was to demon- strate that the German empire was | the richest country in the world, bar- | many's ring only the United States. r- Economio Strength” was translated into virtually every mod- ern language and circulated broad- cast as categorical, statistical evi- dence of the fatherland’s financial and industrial might. As throughout are compared with cor- responding data in France and Great Britain, the obvious object was to show Germans and the world at large "G that they were the wealthiest peopie | lin Europe. __Here are some of the Germarn claims: (A1l figures in gold marks.) Germany's estimated national wealth . Great Britain tional weslth France's estimated wealth B German savings hank deposits.. French eavings bauk deposits. Rritish savings bank deposits. rman national revenue. estimated na- 000,000,000 national Estimated French coal suppl Estimated British coal supply German coal and lignite output 222, French coal and lignite outpnt.. 35,350,000 British coal and lignite output..268.677.000 rman plgiron and steel outpui 28,493,000 Tritish pigiron and steel ontput 16. French pigiron and steel output 7, rman copper consumption, an- nual ... 2 British copper consumption, an nual .. Rest of Europe sumption, annua’ rman cotton consumi ual . British ¢ Before We Move to 1310-1312 F St. the Dresdner Bank's flgures | independent offices appropriation bill. | In showing how savings are being | made in the cost of housing various government activities, Representative Wood said: “The superintendent of public buildings and grounds since our last appearance before you has taken control over the Patent Office, the In- | terior Department building, the Land Office building and the Penston Office building. 1 “This was a splendid piece of busi- ness. By reason of Lis taking over the Interior Department building alone it has resulted in a saving of $90,000 in one year, and a saving_in all the buildings, including the In- terior Department, has amounted to $118,787. This has been done very largely by reducing the overhead ex- pense. One of the principal items in this reduction is the getting rid of & whole lot of unnecessary watchmen.” Wallis Time IN 13TH CENTURY I France, nine o’clock in the morning was the dinner hour. € What- ever your hour to dine, it is our convenience to give you utmost service. Wallig’ “Washington’s Largest Restaurant” 12th and G Streets N. W. nual ..... . 3,384,430 French cotton consumption, an- oual . 945,815 ¢ Other statistical boasts of German wealth in 1913 wer (Al figures in gold marks.) Value of forestry resources, of which Lalf belongs to the state e o 10,000.000,000 | Aggregate annual vaive of ag- ] ricultural products. including only wheat. ~barley, cattle, i 10,000,000,000 | pigs and milk ..... Annual increase in’ we. 4,000,000,000 | wi v of Prussian state rail- i roads ..... 11,000,000,000 | Perhaps the French generalissimo, now become bill-collector-in-chief for France, Belglum and Italy, will have | L] a copy of “Deutschlands Wirtschaft. liche-Krafte,” in the inside pocket| of his horizon-blue tunic. He will| have to make due allowance for the! gavages of war upon Germany's| ®aunted national fortune, as the! | Dresdner Bank tabulated it in 1913 { But he will also not fail to call G many's attention to the fact that m of the wealth then listed was real, { immobile assets; that in many re-| spects the emergencies of a great war caused German wealth to expand, such as the development of her al- ready vast industrial plant. A con-| stabie sent to serve a writ of re- ! plevin usually knows just where to llay his hands. The super-constable now at work in the Ruhr was prob- ably well oriented before he set out | upon the greatest dunning expedition | in history. i (Copyright, 1823.) th aggregatc as<ets of more an Tue This is a_screened soft c of anthracite egg size, very hard, delivered clean without slack or dirt. WE ALSO OFFER COKE AT $16.50 Lump soft coal or coke c be delivered without Public Utility Application. John P. Agnew & Co. 728 14th St. N.W. W. Ry. and EL, and Cap. Tr. Co.,s bus lines now running Massachusetts 270,000,000.000 | Surrounded by Washington’s finest residential section. Containing seven million feet of forest-covered land, with | six miles of improved streets. Includes what remains of | “The Triangle of Increasing Values” between Connecticut, Massachusetts and Cathedral ave- nues (Woodley Rd.). Over four million feet of land sold. Over ninety homes from $15000 to $200.000 built and under construction. Wooded villa sites, lots and finished homes of brick and tile, with lots from 30 to 115 feet front; or if desired, we will build your home in the same substantial manner that has characterized our work since 1899. Park Office. 32d and Cathedral Ave. (\Woodley Rd.). Middaugh & Shannon, Inc. Builder—Exclusive Agent—Owner. Woodward Building, 15th and H Sts. Booklet Mailed on request. Main 6935 for the election of directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of such ‘other husiness” as_may come before the .meeting. J. . CRANFORD, President. H. S. HOUGH- retary NO-KOL 011, BURNER, USED territors; i \VANLOAD HESTELR i SERVICE O BALTIVON PHIA AND NEW Ty § TRANSFER COMPANY. 1% LT ST, N W MAIN odsy " She = , Lighting work wilt SHEDD 42t 700 10th ttend to r Plumbing, and Tinning B be done per: How About Your Roof? snow and rain. We will tell son Phone today T i R. K. FERGUSON, Inc. Rootiog Dept., 1114 9th st._Ph M. 240024 BEAUTIFUL FLOORS OLD FLOORS NADE NEWw. CALL MAIN 1457 OR FRA Kl.l.\"R,’(fl, 13+ FLOORS REFINISHED & POLISHED BY BLECTRIC HINE, N ST, NORTI so0 o N ?AIRS ROO ~Your Repair Bills Auto won't keep = T Tops. ta) oe a0 Ordor. | Eon Shone Wiy RS o, 82 R. McReynolds & Son Specialists in Painting, Slip Covers and Top n.w. Main 7228, A New Roof With a Brush Tet me apply one coat of Liquid Asbe Toofing Cement to any kind of rugf. ; xnl::: tee same. Also sold in bulk, $1 gal. in 5-gal, buckets, del. in D. C. Estimate free. MADI® SON CLARK, 1314 P e. s.e. Linc. 4219, sour _pocketbook ire, When we overhaul We're equipped o do Floors scraped or cleaned and finished. mate. Call Franklin THE MILLION, DOLLAR PRINTING PLANT ~~the kind Ztiat gots l “resoin The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D st. n.w. We Make & Specialty of RELIABLE PRINTING HIGH-GRADE—BUT NOT HIGH-PRICED THE SERVICE SHOP, BYRON S. ADAMS, Eiuren, Support by the Washington Board of Trade of efforts of public school authorities to obtain additional ap- propriations with which to extend the activities of the Americanization |olasses was assured Miss Maude Alton. principal of the O Street Amer- | \canization School, when she appeared { vesterday afternoon before the board “ommittee on American ideals at its { meeting in The Star building. The committee agreed to conduct a { campaign to enthuse the citizens of | Washington over the work of the | Americanization School, o thata con- certed plea to Congress for more money might be forcefully made. Representatives of the Board of Trade Wwill take up the matter of larger ap- propriations with the proper commit- tees of Congress. | " Miss Aiton outlined to the commit- tee the accomplishments of the classes, purpose of the work is to educate |aliens in American traditions and { principles and instill in them a spirit jof patriotism that will lead to their naturalization by the gourts into | faithful American_citizens. she emphasized that there are about 500 wliens in the District of Columbia | at the present time who have not been | naturalized—a_condition she described 4s “‘unhealthy.” Although about $25,000 a year is necessary to carry on the Americanization classes, the present ap- propriation bill so far provides only $12,- 000 for the work, she said. The committee on charities and cor- rections, which also met yesterday after- noon, decided to circulate among mem- bersof the Board of Trade a petition similar to that drawn up by the Monday Evening Club, opposing Blue_Plains as a site for the Home for the Feeble Minded. Indorsement of the Howard University drive for a $250,000 endowment fund the committee on public and private schools yesterday. This action was taken following an explanation of the drive by Dr. J. Stanley Durkee, president of the university, and Dr. Emmett J. Scott. Ernest L. Thurston, chalrman of the committee, presided. The committee on - militaiy and naval affairs, in co-operation with th chief of finance of the Army, has ar- ranged a course of practical talks on finance to be given in connection with the semi-monthly luncheons of the finance department. The first of these was give on Monday of this week, the subject being “Bank Organization.” John Poole, president of the Federai- ‘American National Bank, was the speaker. Brig. Gen. Kenzle W. Walker, chief of finance, presided, and the course was described and the speaker introduced by Frederick A. Fenning, chairman of the Board of Trad 3 ommittee. > pointing out that the sole| for a medical school was registered by.| The report of the House judiciary | committee on its investigation of the | impeachment charges brought against Attorney General Daugherty by Rep- resentative Keller, republican, Minne- sota, was submitted today to the| House by Chairman Volstead. Whether | | it will be called up for action by the | House has not yet been determined. ! The “high spots” of the report| are the resolution adopted yesterday { by the committee virtually dismiss- ing the charges as unsupported by evidence and the finding of the spe- | cial subcommittee, approvea by the | committee, that the House had =-- thority to punish Mr. Keller by Im- prisonment or otherwise for his re- fusal to obey a subpoena Issued after he had withdrawn from the case. May Force Appearance. The committee report said there | | was no “merit” to Mr. Keller’s claim | | that he was not obliged to respond’ | to the subpoena since it was served {on him while a representative in Con- gress, and added: i “Your committee is of the opinion | | that Mr. Keller was legally required | to obey said subpoena; that the House of Representatives ' possesses the power to cause him to be arrested and confined in prison untll he shall consent to testify, such confinement not to extend beyond the term of this Congress, and power to otherwise deal with him so as to compel obedi- ence to the summons.” Bitter Fight Feared. There was no suggestion as to how the Minnesota representative might be dealt with otherwise than by im- prisonment, nor was there any rec- ommendation that the Hodse take any action against him. Some committee- men favor the establishment of a precedent in this case, but it was a foregone conclusion that if the mat- ter wege taken up on the floor there would 'be a long and bitter fight against adopting the committee view as an established rule of the House. The entire report of the committee jcontained slightly less than a thou- sand words, and most of it was de- voted to a'recital of the events in the impeachment procecdings. There was no attempt to analyze the evi- dence submitted, the committee con- tenting itself with the publication of the names of the witnesses and the text of its resolution, holding that there had been found no ground “to believe that Mr. Daugherty had been guilty of any high crime or misde- meanor requiring the interposition of the impeachment powers of the House. Closing Out Men’s Shoes every pair of Stetson Shoes & French Shriner & Urner $ 4 35 Former prices, $12 and $12.50 Raleigh Haberdasher 1109-1111 Pennsylvania Avenue Is This the Home ~ You Are Looking For? It Is Another Success to Be Added to the Record-Breaking Sales in the Shannon & Luchs In Town Suburb 14th Street Terrace A completely detached home; big lot to paved 20-foot alley. Contains the S. & L. clubroom and private toilet on the main floor, besides a wonderful library, with big native stone fireplace and mantel and extended book- cases. derful closets, besides Three master bedrooms, and such won- an infant’s bedroom, especially designed and located. Separate fur- nace dustproof room, and something very dif- ferent in cellar finishing. Varied architectural designs. Twenty sold before completed. Easy Terms Why Put Off? To Inspect Take any 14th Street car_ (finest service in Washington) to Jefferson Street N.W. Sample Homes open until 9:30 every night. L Owners and Builders