Evening Star Newspaper, January 13, 1923, Page 3

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All Practice Autosuggestion - | Unknowingly, Says ,Coue; !Automatic Treatment, However, Lacks Benefit of That Which Is Studied, Explains Famous Frenchman. BY EMILE COUE. Eighth of Coue serles. More articles written while here will follow later. AL Jourdain, the “Bourgeois gentil- homme,” “spoke prose without know- ing it In the same way we all prac- tice autosuggestion, but often with- out being conscious of it. To a cer- tain extent autosuggestion may be wutomatic—in the sense that it may not be inspired or guided by delib- crate reflection. But how much more potent a factor it must be in our lives when we have learned its mechanism and discovered how to make use of it for our own ends! “The act of breathing is automatic, yet we can modify at will our man- ner of breathing; we can improve our health by learning to breathe in a certain way and by doing regular breathing exercises. So it is with utosuggestion. Once we realize its orce and learn to control it we are the musters of our destinies, Let me give you an illustration of the automatic pri e of autosug- stion. A new-born baby, in its cradle, begins to ery. Immediately its mother or father takes it in her or hits arms, the infant stops crying and 15 replac in the cradle. Whereupon the erying begins over again, only to stop once more if the baby be lifted from its cradle. The operation may be repeated an almost unlimited number of times, always with the same result. The child—lacking con- ous thought—is automatically yracticing autosuggestion. It obtains the gratification of its unconscious desire to be taken into its mother's arms by crying. other hand—if left to cry alone in its cradle—its subconsclous mind will -ogister the fact, and the baby will neot take the trouble to cry, because it knows it will have no effect. Governed Subconsciously. d it is like that with every one, from hirth to death. We live by antosuggestion, we are governed by Jur subconscious mind. Happily. «re able to guide it by our ke everything else, howe ence of learned. 1t is a matter of educating one’s self up to the point where com- plete ¢ trol of the subconscious nd attained. That means self- mastery—and health. Prevention is better than cure. The tdea of xood health begets good health, and if by accident we are at- tacked by disease we are certain to have an infinitely greater chance of resisting and of rapldly throwing off the malady by practicing autosugges- tion than if we knew nothing of its principles. Have you not noticed this during epidemics? It is a well known fact that persons who, In such times, =o serenely about their business, not worrying for themselves and not giving thought to the epidemic except 10 tell themselves that they are sure not to catch the sickn e almost «lways immune and escape contagion. On the other hand, nervous people. frightened by the cases around them and allowing their thoughts to run constantly on the prevailing malady, are certain to fall ill, despite all their precautions. Amazing instances of the power of suggestion are recorded in the annals of the faculty of s Prof. Bouchet relates the following, among many others: An old lady, after undergoing a desperate surgical operation, was dying. Her son was due to_arrive from Indla two days| Jater. But, humanly speaking, it was tmpossible for her to live so long. The method of suggestion was resortcd to. She was told that she was better and that she would see her son on the morrow. The result was a complete success. A fortnight later the ol lady was still alive. And. from al point of view, that was miracle. After Eleven Operations. Equally miraculous, to all appear- ance, was the case of a man occupy- ing an important positi a few years ago. He suffering from _sinusit undergone eleven operations, but the terrible disease continued its ravages. He was in a horrible conditfon, physically and morally, Day and night, without intermission, the un- ortunate man tortured SPECTAL NOTICES. - 1 WILL NOT BE bills contracted by a HARRY L. TALTO a HIE STOCK- Plate Glass Tnsurance e City_of Washington, for the tees. will be leld at the off No. 918 F street m.w., Na- d flour front). on at 1:45 ans. u building . Junuary 1 WANTED—TO BRING A LOAD OF FUR- vashington from Daitimore. Phila- delphis_and New York city. SMITH'S TRANS- F'ER AND STORAGE Co.. INC. THR ANNUAL MEBTING OF THP STOCK- olders of the Laborers and Mechanics® Realty Company will be held at 12th street branch of Young Men's Christian Association, 181 . ‘ednesday evening, January to 8:30 pm. W, A. BO’ 3 Secretary. 'HE HOME BUILDING ASSOCIATION, OR- xanized 1883, pays 5 on your savings of Now 1 the s Waoiiward, and the transaction of such other may come before the meeting. ol FORD, President. H. S. HOUGH- N, Becretary. Better have Shadd attend to SHEDD g moui on zoie Sisehies 706 T0th 234 the work wil b dons pes & We Make a Specialty of RELIABLE PRINTING HIGH-GRADE—BUT NOT HIGH.PRICED ITHE SERVICE SHOP, BYRON S. ADAMS, PRINTER, " 512 11th 8¢ " How About Your Roof? 1s it in condition to stand winter's snow and rain. We will tell you. Phone today. R. K. FERGUSON, Inc. Roofing Dept., 1114 Oth st. Ph. M. 2460-2491. BEAUTIFUL FLOORS OLD FLOORS MADE NEW. . CALL MAIN 1457 OR FRANKLIN 6347, 18¢ FLOORS REFINISHED & POLISHED BY _ELECTRIC R, E. NASH, NORTH 7908 oV ROOF REPAIRS 120 A New Roof With a Brush Let me apply one cost of Liquid Asbestos oofing Cement to any kind of roof. I guaran- same. Also sold in bulk, $1 ickets, el. in D. C. SON_CLARK, 1314 1 rBE l&zflox PRfli Ifi :G DOLLAR —the kind i ”{rfl"l;!i\‘“ ! a-that gets \ —RESULTS! The National Capital Press 12101212 D st. n.w. “'Biggs Puts HEAT in Heating. Homes Can’t Be Happy Modern |—when they house uacomfortable >3 le, which s & big argument Heating | for vetter henting—BIGGS Vapor Pllnts- or Hot-Water heating preferably. The Biggs WARBEN W. BIGGS. President, 1310 14th st. mw. Tel. Frank. 337, uing ye business I H. 1t resisted, on the| itosuggestion has to be| clock | { | 'it_ became known ipreviously tested with negative re- {the things that are called miracles. | For, of course, there is no such thing | Arnsparager. ! man Arnsparager, of a purse hanging i3 { street, Seymour, Conn., her daughter, cruciating pains in the head, which prevented him from sleeping, His weakness was extreme. and his appetite non-existent. Most of the | time he remained helpless on & sofa. I confess that I had little hope of belng able to do anything for him. However, 1 took pains to convince him of the efficacy of suggestion, and though ~there seemed to be no amelioration during five or six sit- tings, I could see that the man, sick as he was, had gained absolute faith in the soundness of the theorles I had expounded %0 him. He told me he was daily directing his subconsclous mind to the ideu of healing his sickness. Then. one day he sald he believed that he felt a slight improvement, but was not quite sure. It was the truth, however, and the improvement con- tinued. "A complete cure followed rapidly. Today that man is perfectly healthy, able to work without fatigue, The discharges from the nose which occurred daily have ceased. 1 remembér another remarkable case of collective autosuggestion— | more or less “automat this tim It Lappened in the hospital service of Dr. Renaud in Paris. A new serum, an alleged cure for tuberculosis, had just been discovered. It was tested on the patients, Apparently as a re- sult of the injections all showed an immediate improvement. The cough- ing diminished, and other symptoms disuppeared, ‘and the general tongl | tion of all ‘began to be very satis. factory. Alas! Shortly afterward that” the famous serum from which the patient uncon- sciously hoped so much was nothing but an ordinary drug which had been sults. At once, with the fading away of their lllusions, the sick men and wpmen lost all the improvement gain- ed, and their old symptoms - od. an ymptoms reap. Miracles happen in our time, as they have done in the past. T mean as a miracle. The modern miracle is worked by pizadt autosuggestion, t wonderful force nxlrub‘?:d to us ‘f‘!:" nature, and which, if we will only | probe ‘its mysteries, shall make us all-powerful * within' the limits human possibiliti Fatality, fatal- IsSm shall lose their meaning—nay, they not exist, save in our erring ima, ation or It is we ourselves v\l\"l alone shall shape our destinies, rising always above the external cir: jumstances’ and _conditions which ‘om me to time may b v #cross our paths. Znentzewm (Copyright, 1923, United in, Canada and’ South of | ates, Great Brit- merica, by North ce and New York All pany). rights reserved. production full or in part expressly prohibited.) DROWNED AFTER MAKING HERWILL Body of Mrs. E. L. McPher- son Found Floating on Sur- face of Tidal Basin. Floating in the tidal basin, face downward, the body of Mrs. Eunice I. McPherson, fifty-four, of Hume Spring, Va., was found yesterday af- ternoon by Park Policeman Lloyd o i Discovery was first made by Police- | to the branch of a tree. Looking further, the policeman found a hat and coat neatly folded on the grass near the tree. He followed foot- prints to the sea walf and sighted the body floating near the flood gates. A portion of the clothes had been wet only shightly and Lleut Dean of the harbor precinct, who took the body to the morgue, announced that evidently it had been in the water for only a few hours. W. L. Washington of 1709 T street and W H. Ream of 103 2nd street northeast, assisted Policeman Arn- er in bringing the body to shore. A er from her daughter wa pinned to the woman's clothing. This | formed a basis of identification. Cards hearing the names of Senator Wadsworth, George B. Christian, sec- retary to the President, and Repre- sentative John D. Clarke were found in the clothing. Had Made Wil At the offices of Washington & Smith, Alexandria, Va., it was learned that Mrs. McPherson had made a will yesterday, attending to minute details of her estate. She is survived by irs. A. B. Nichol of 165 South Main who 'had written the letter. The Tusband of the daughter s a drafts- man cngaged in government service in Porto Rico. . Yesterday afternoon Mrs. McPher- son returned from Alexandria to the partment of Mrs. Annle E. Gilbert, at 607 4th street,’ where she had been vieiting since last Saturday. She placed several bank books in a suit- case in her room and announced she was going shopping. The deceased was the widow of James McPherson, an employe of the government printing office, who died about a year ago. Loneliness since her husband’s death 1s ascribed as the motive for the drowning. Mrs. Mamie Griffin of Delhi, N. Y., & sister of Mra. McPherson, and her daughter have been notified of the death by authori- An inquest will be h District morgue. ¢ 00 todsy at the (ATTEMPTED HOLD-UP FOILED BY NEAR-VICTIM Paul Miller Knocks Gun From Hand of Robber and Beats Him Off. ° Police today are attempting 'to trace principals in two hold-ups re- ported last night. Leo "Roscoe of 716 6th street was held up at 10:15 on 6th street be- tween Q and R streets by three col- ored.men. While one threatened him witlt a revolver the others went through his pockets, robbing him of $56. He told police at the eighth pre- oinct that two of his assailants had pistols, and furnished a description of the trio. In Rays woods at 1st and Ritten- house streets at 7 o'clock last night Paul Miller of 5907 Sligo Mill road ‘was accosted by a colored man with a revolver, who attempted to hold him up. Miller acted quickly, knock- ing the gun from the hand of the bandit, but in the mix-up which fol- lowed sustained a cut on his left arm. The man's description was given o the police. THE EVENING STARY, WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, \Christian Science Radically Different From Coue System Bedtime Stories. FEELS TOO WARM. REMEMBIRS HE HASNT TURNED OFF RADIATOR MEASURES DISTANCE WITH A SLEEPY EYE THE RADIATOR ALWAYS SEEMS TO KEEP RECEDING AS WILLIAMS. WONDERS WHY, NO MATTER HOW TAR TURNING OFF THE STEAM {C) Wheeler Syn. tne HOSPTAL DRVE GVEN BIgSTART Success Seen Certain for Garfield Fund at Enthusias- tic Dinner. CALLED AN INVESTMENT Clarence A. Aspinwall, Chairman, and Four Vice Chairmen, Ad- dress Campaign Workers. The Garfleld Hospital enlargement campaign is under way today, having been enthusiastically launched at the opening dinner held last night at the City Club. The spirit shown by the campaign workers who gathered for the dinner promises complete victory, in the opinion of Clarence A. Aspin- wall, chairman of the executive com- mittee, who presided last night. The after-dinner program opened with spirited singing under the lead- ership of Robert Lawrence, followed by speeches from the four vice chair- men, who analyzed the hospital ap-| peal from different viewpoints for the benefit of the campaign workers. “I was under the impression that a hospital is simply a charity,” said Vice Chairman John L. Weaver, “but when I came into this work I soon| learned that charity is only a part of the hospital's work, and that the building or enlarging of a hospital is not charity at all. When you ask any one for a subscription ‘you are simply offering him a splendld oppor- tunity to invest in a form of insur- ance by which he is able to provide hospital facilities that he himself may need at any time.” Important Undertaking. Vice Chairman Newbold Noyes said: “I belleve in this campalgn with ali my heart. It is as important an un- dertaking as any in which we have ever engaged. 1 feel sure that we can put it through to complete sue- | cess by continuing the confidence and enthusiasm that we are showing to- night” Mr. Noyes said that he looked to his division to bring in the largest total in the campaign and offered a wager of a memorial to that effect, which was shortly taken up by MMr. Weaver on behalf of his divisios Lively competition is therefore e pected between these two divisions. Vice Chairman G. Thomas Dunlop gave an unusually clear analysls of the obligation of the Individual toward the hospital. “When we go to the hospital” he said, “those of us who are able to do so, of course, pay our way and we then feel that we have met our obligation in full. But we are paying only for the actual service given us and have contributed nothing toward bullding or enlarging the structure in whicit that service is given and without which it could not be given. “If we were rendered a bill for what it actually costs to give us hospital service we should have to pay a great deal more than we do. The reason is that part of our bill is ordinarily paid through the gener- osity of those who have established the hospital and enlarged it from time to time. When we understand this, our natural desire is to help provide the facilities that we may need later o Nurses’ Home Plan. Laughter and instruction were com- man of the women's division, spoke briefly with especial enthusiasm over the plans for the new nurses’ home, which will provide sorely needed ac- commodations for Garfield's faithful nurses. Laughter nad instruction were com- bined in a two-act skit, in which the first act was named “How not to do it,” and the second act “How to do it.” It was given under the direction of Stanton C, Peelle. Mr, Howter Lose'm showed how not to ask for a sub- seription, and Mr. Howter Winaam illustrated the efiactive way of do- ing it The program was closed by Willlam Mather Lewis of the United States Chamber of Commerce, who was the speaker of the evening. He described the gathering of campaign workers as “probably the greatest group of sales- men that has ever been brought together in Washington,” and said that they are well able to, put through this_$500,000 undertaking for the good of Washing- ton. Discussing the hospital in a unique way, he said: “There are more patients treated in a year at Garfleld that there are au- tomobiles stolen or houses burned in ‘Washington ; yet most of us feel it wise to insure our car and our home, but fail to realize that we are more likely to have need of the hospital than of these other forms of insurance. For the hospital is a form of health insurance, and when we think of it that way we shall be no more willing to let others pay for it than to let them pay for our fire insurance.” ———e AUTO KILLS TWO BOYS. MACON, Ga., January 13.—Guy Jones, ten, and Robert Bruce, twelve, were killed when a bicycle that they were riding was struck by an automobile driven by W. A. Roush, local business man. lcLOAK FOUND IN i CITIZENS INDORSE SWEDEN THOUGHT 3,000 YEARS OLD | By the Associated Press LONDON, January 13.—Leading Eu- ropean archeologists express the opinion that a woolen garment dis- covered by peat cutters in Gerum Fen, near Skara, Sweden, is one of the oldest ever found in Europe. It of the peat, but the preserving qual- itles of the fen water kept it intact, sclentists believe, for about 3,000 years. The garment resembles a cloak. Although it is sald to be the first | complete garment ever found, the | British museum possesses several | pleces of cloth dating from even earlicr periods. (GENTRAL AMERICAN PARLEY NEAR CLOSE Conference Which Opened i Here December 4 Practical- ly Reaches Agreement. Members of the Central American { conference, which opened in Washing- ton December 4, under the chairmanship of Secretary Hughes, have practically come to an agreement on all the points | specifified in the American invitation to gather around the conference table here, and all the questions involved have been brought to a final stage so that work will be completed with the holding of & plenary session next week. At that time reports of subcommittees, which have been dealing with individ- ual agenda, as during the arms confer- ence here, will be passed upon. Al- though secondary points have not been definitely settled yet, it is understood, no opposition is expected to the tenta~ tive agreements. Substitute for Arbitration Court. | The Central American court of ar- | bitration has been replaced by a treaty of arbitration, which submits to a court similar to the Hague tribunal, to deal with differences among the nations ex- cept those affecting their soverelgnty. The conference also virtually agreed to reduction of armaments among the Central American states on the basis of area and population. (Guatemala, with the largest standing army now, agrees to cut from 9,000 to 6,000 men and the other Sountries will foilow pro- po! ly, exceptions bein; made during time of civil war. © 1907 Treaties Revised. Revision of the 1907 treaties has been completed and modifications re- | sarded as necessary have been adopt- ed. Redrafting of the treaty of peace and amity between the five Central American republics and of the ex- i tradition convention has been com- pleted, with modifications designed to make more effective the provisions for preventing international disputes. The matter of recognition of rev lutionary governments also has been given attention, and uniform action recommended when euch cases arise. e proposal to revive the interna- tional Central American bureau, es- tablished im 1907, has been dropped, although the Central American Peda- gogical Institute and agencles tend- ing to Central American unity of ac- tion have been retained. lay only a few feet under the surface | SEADOL PROGRAN Brookland Residents Approve | Teachers’ Salary Bill and | High School Removal. [FAvOR ARCHIVES BUILDING [Board of Trade Stand on Blue { Plains School Wins ‘! Approval. Support of the board of education's | extensive school program, including the teachers’ salary bill, and the lo- cation of McKinley Manual Training School at 2d and T streets northeast, as well as indorsement of the archives building plan of Senator Sheppard, was accorded in resolutions adopted at last night's meeting of the Brook- land Citizens' Assoclation in the Brookland Masonic Temple, The resolution for the archives building pointed to the hazard which the United States takes in housing invaluable records in various unsafe places throughout the city and in- dorses the plan for the building of a hall of records, as outlined by Sen- ator Sheppard. Site Is Indorsed. The resolution on the McKinley School site was brought before the association through the medium of a recommendation forwarded - the civic body by the Brookland Brother- hood. /The = site proposed by the board of education at 2d and T streets northeast, which was favored by the Brookland Brotherhood, also was in- dorsed by the association as being centrally and conveniently located for the majority of Washingtonians de- siring such training. In adopting a resolution advocating strict adherence to the program mapped out by the Board of Education for the betterment of the local schools system, the association went on record as favor. ing the inclusion in the District bill now pending in Congress of all items requested by the Board of Education, whether stricken out by the burcau of the budget or after the bill reached the Capitol. Compulsory _education and school census legislation got the stamp of approval in the resolution, as did the teachers' salary bill Teport of the Washington Board o Trade was read before the association This report included the €xpression of opposition to the location of the school for feeble-minded at Blue Plains. The association indersed the stand of the Board of Trade in a resolution unani- mously adopted, also taking the position that the site at Blue Plains is not the most advantageous mose ge location for this Fourth of July Program. The fact that January's bitin; winds were howling around the hajl last night didn’t prevent Dr. Red- 1923. i Charles E. Heitman, for Church, Explains| Mrs.Eddy’s Teachings; Recognize Only f Divine Will, Not That of Individual. | Because of the general interest in |ings are obtainable only by full anu the teachings of Dr. Emil Coue and | complete submission | Goa. to the will of Furthermore, the primal object jthe widespread discussion of the re-|of (reatment in Christian Science is {1ationship of his teachings to those|to improve the individual {of the Christian Science Church, the |and spiritually; while suggestive and ypnotic methods of mental healing Christian Science committee on pub-|psve 1o religious element, but look | lications, through Charles E. Heitman, has issued the following explanatory statement: “In compliance with a request for jmerely to the physical betterment. “In drawing a distinction between | the operation of Christian metaphys- ics, as taught and practiced by her and the various systems: of mental a statement as to the attitude of|therapy based on a belief in the pow- Christian Seclentists toward M. Coue|er of human will, Mrs, Eddy has stat- and his visit to America, 1 will say that while we sharply disagree with thig form of treatment, neverthe- lesy, we recognize it as a right of every one to employ the practitioner of his choice, therefore, we have no word of condemnation either for Dr. Coue or those who ,care to experi- | {ment with his system of healing. We ! lo object, however, to having his achings confused with those of Christian Science. Where Difference Lies. | “In way of explanation I will say | that the teachings and practice of | Christian Science, as set forth in the | writings of its discoverer and founder, | Mary Baker Eddy, aredirectly op-! posite to those employed by Dr. Coue. | The latter, as an example, is based | wholly upon the belief in minds| many, and the power of one mind over ' another, whereas _Christian Sclence teaches that there is but one ) mind, infinite and divine, called God, oven’ ‘that mind which, according to the Scriptures, as also in Christ Jesus.’ “Again, Christian Science does not heal by means of psychotherapy or autosuggestion; and no more does it | require, as is the case with the French | physician and hypnotist, the constant | repetition of specially formulated {phrases by those who turn to it for help. In fact, it specifically prohibits | the use of formulas and classifies all | farms' of suggestion as activities of | {the carnal mind of which sin and its resultant states, sickness and death, are effects. Christian Science logic- | ally holds. therefore, that since the| seeming cause of disease obtains in! the carnal mind which, as Paul tells | us, is the source of death and enmity | against God, its curc must come not, as Dr. Coue’teaches, through the en- forcement of the corporeal will, it- self a product of this mind, but from the natural operation of the correc- tive and curative power of divine mind in human consciousness before | which all phases of sin and disease yield as readi and inevitably as darkness gives way to light. “The Christian Scientist, striving to emulate the example of Christ Je- sus, earnestly prays, Not my avill, but |Thine, bo done; realizing that bie ed the case most clearly on p. 144 of Sclence and Health with Key to the riptures, ‘Human will-power is not Science. . Human will belongs to the so-called material senses, and its use is to be condemned. Willing the sick to recover is not the metaphysical practice of Christian Sclence.’” W. Ry. and ElL. and Cap. Tr. Co.,s bus lines now running Massachusetts Park 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 50 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. Main 6935 Booklet Mailed on request. Don’t Fail to Inspect These Homes ! motion creating the committes. Mr. Phelps was empowered to select his own committeemen. Announcement | was made that the intricacies of the { telephone would be demonstrated for {business men of Brookland and { housewives of the community at the next meeting of the organization, when a special exhibit will be given {by the telephone company. '$800,000 FOR PLAZA Carrying an appropriation of $800, 000 for the so-called government ho- tels for government clerks on the Unlon station plaza and other large 3 items of appropriations for local in- stitutions, the House late yesterday | lmsum the supply bill for independ- ent establishments, with a total ap- propriation of $496,285,771, An unsuccessful attempt was made by a number of democratic members, led by Representatives Jones and Back of Texas and Davis of Tennes- see, to cut down the Shipping Board items, particularly those relating to employment of attorneys. Mr. Davis sought unsuccesstully to have the bill rpcommitted with in- structions for 'a provision which would prohibit the Shipping Board from “sending out propaganda’ favor of legislation. An appropriation of $428,160,773 for the Veterans' Bureau and items total- ing $54.411,500 for the Shipping Board were the largest provisions in the bill. This bill includes $5,000 to prepare plans for remodeling the White House to do away with a “fire-trap” condition reported there by Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, superintendent of public buildings and grounds. Be- fore the bill was passed an item of $20,000 was included for extraordinary repairs to the White House. It also provides for the maintenance of the new White House police force. It carries $107,500 for additional employes for the Civil Service Com- | HOTEL N SUBPLY BIL, in mission, which is $17,500 in excess of the estimates. | mond Mayo, one of the leading pro- | gressive spirits of the organization, from presenting for consideration a project for a Fourth of July enter- tainment. Dr. Mayo spoke fluently enough to transfer the minds of the members to the perspiring days of July and advocated the initiation now of a project for & mammoth Fourth of July celebration. The association declded to put the matter in charge of a committes and to start in on plans at _the earliest possible date. C. B, Phelps was appointed chair- man of a special committee on en- tertainment by President E. W. Turner, following the passage of & Woodley Park Homes Built of the very best materials and finished to pleuetbomostdim-imhn(_lmyus—mnmm- We are now offering ich $§94 goes payment and $150 per these $22,000 homes on a month, paying on the principal ind charges, automatically as payments are Surely this is the opportunity that many people, now paying rent, have been waiting for. Visit our model furnished home at 2822 Con- necticut Avenue. Open daily from 9:30 until 5. Middaugh & Shannon, Inc. Builder—Exclusive Agent—Owner. Woodward Building, 15th & H Sts. Main 6935 Exhibit House 1208 Ingraham St. N.W. Best Location in the City Nearly All Sold One Block From 14th St. To inspect take any 9th street or 14th street car to Ingraham street. These Homes Contain £z 6 Large Rooms and Lots are 159 feet deep to 20-foot paved alley Our Terms Are Easy Your last opportunity to purchase a home in this first-class location for the low price they are selling for. Open for Inspection, Daily and Sunday, Until 9 P.M. D. J. DUNIGAN 1321 New hone Main 1267 At No Other Time In the history of real estate development has Washing- ton ever had as successful a suburb as is found in the . Shannon & Luchs Intown Suburb 14th Street Terrace And at no other time has the public ever had such a wide range of choice of individual distinctive Homes in one locality. These, to%ether with the price and terms upon which these Homes are so! d, have been the governing factors in the wonder- ful success of this—Washington’s most convenient suburb. You profit by the great volume of business done here. Why pay more? To inspect, take 14th Street car (finest service in Washing- ton) to either Jefferson or Kennedy Streets.. Our Sample Homes open every day until 9:30 P.M.

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