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THE * SUNDAY ‘STAR, WASHINGTON, MISSA. . FLETCHER DIES AT HONE HERE World Famous Ethnologist Succumbs Following Stroke of Paralysis. teher, whose col Miss Alice world-famous et lections of first hand history of music, died F her home, 214 Ist On February 6 she with the grip, fered a str which she never recovered Funeral Serevic ham it Cunning e melodies made enriched ¥ night at southeast taken il India permanently the id street was ke of paralysis, from Funeral gerv o'clock fh idence. H th be Dr. W ihe Na l Walter Fuke 5 H. Hol Gallery chief ¢ ethnology J. R, Sw Hewitt 1 ethnol r. Walter Hougl > » National Museum, 5. The body to be Dr w. of the Myer Qureau Tird Wlared, and wro memor Record of Act Hor papers for the fean ethnology, not the Omaha tribal mel mental source books system for loaning of roney to aid Tndians to wuild homes for themselve w_speciai agent to allot the ribe in 1883 and 1584, and late pointment allotted the Nez 5 tribes, reservation was thrown njured Dlayed W ities. ireau « lie She devised ¢ land She was and owship thropological Socie and a member « Tnstitute of Ame fellow of the American for the ement president of American Socfety fiss Fletcher was dian Story and Sol America,” published ous papers on ts in public of American ethno &anizations. Associat ons of t and of SPECTAL NOTICES. VICTORTA LOUISE AU FOUME NG "o i Hob o ANY [ and delive; nw. North VHITE CHINA SAL ; also new impol ANY TIECES B S at lowest prices. gen from 10 RMA Y Se STE YER._ T _WILL, THIS 18 T0 CERTIF responsible for any Di than myself. JULIAN th st. x.w This 1s to gnation of Mrs. s secretars treasurer of R. K. and the appointment of Mr. A. Cook as treasurer and Mr. T. T. Walker s tecretary of said firm. Changes effective of April 1, 19 THE holders of Citizens’ Equitable Asociation will be held Mondas, 5088 M st. n.w.. for the eclection of offcers and directora and such otlier husiness a¢ mar rightly come by this meet be open from 7:30 p.m. t time the 50th series of st tion will be opened. R. Ruilding April 9, at TUTORING AND Jege entrance board in’ American_histors, clent English and an. of several years' Box 166 H, histors, by perience. CART general o alterati store fixtures, ga 00 LOAD OF furniture from Phi Baltimora to Washi FER_AND STORA N C. Tornado and Windstorm Tnsurance Cosf more In the Largest American Tns. Co ‘The Home Insurance Co. of N. Y Costs 1o than your dails newspaper. $2 per thousand for 3 sears on city and suburban bidgs. and cont $3.75 per_thousand for 3 vears on farm hufldings and contents GEO. W TLINKINS & SONS, Genera] Tnsurance Agents, 1719 K Instruction Free. fove Be: frames, lowest . 100 v, . 1410 F st + ggs Pu There’s This Advantage Heating | ieitiag Hepaios anet sniatls Repairs & [t st " nton st et Plants. better prices than condition ants. | Bl ey e The Biggs Engineering Co. WARR W. BIGGS. President, 1310 14th st. n.w. Tel. Frank. 317. YOUR Paperhanging Painting and Decorating- SHOULD RE DONE BY EXPERTS, FRI Gordon & 3031 M st. nw. ASPHALT Phone West 3198. 8¢ ASBESTOS g and water. work, reasonable prices. free. ROOFING E. __Line. o, Roof Leaks Let us examine and repatr your “roof. are expericoced and guarantee tsery job. IRONCLAD Jtas. 14160 New Autos for Old Repainting, as we do the job, gives you a car that's practical- 1y new &s far as looks go. R. McReynolds & Son Epecialists in Painting, Slip Covers and Tops. 14251425 L ST. N.W. Main 7228, Have Pretty Floors Your old floors d d up new or new hard- 0 DR, Btrister e Kight, Frankiin e Rucker Electric Co, FLECIRIC CONTRACTING AND REPAIRIN OLD HOUSES WIRED WITHOUT DAMA; 22 1210 H ST..N.W. We 11e 1 at and following this suf- | mall sums of and | Omaha | Imington and | i ton, their own hats for the | AT Tn Hoating.™ | You'll 0. K. our| U.S.toHave 78 Cities of 100,000 Souls by July 1 of the have a population of 100,000 more July 1 this vear, according to the estimates of the census bureau There were sixty-eight in 1920, the 1923 estimates for which were published yesterday. Of the ten additional cities. Flint, Mich., made the most rapid growth, its esti- mate heing 11 which ranks it as sixty-first city' in population. is estimated at 112,571, in_ sixty-sixth rank, as seventieth Seventy-eight country will cities Jiow 10 citles the other 1 into class follo: . N. Y. seventy-third, 103.- Mass., seventy-fourth, ilsa, Okla., seventy-fifth, acoma, Wash., seventy- 1: Oklahoma__City, Venty-seventh, 101,150, Jacksonville, Fla., seventy- eighth, 100,046 HUGHES PRAISES .. BOY SCOUTS \Lauds Aid During. Arms Par-| ley—Flags Presented to 42 Troops. of State Hughes yester- extended to the Boy Washington the thanks of iited States government for vices as aides during the con- iitation of armament Secretary expressed this appre- tion in an address which featured impressive ceremonies at Continental rial Hall, attending the presen- forty-two large American 1 scout troops by the of the republic committee of the Daughters 100n Scouts of the U their se; nee on 1 ry i 1ist | Revol | The flags were presented in recog- {nition of the patriotism displayed by { the boys in serving gratuitiousiy dur- three-month period of delib- The which took the portico of the were witnessed by a large { place bu on ajcrowd of men, women and children. i Praises American Youth. | © the arms conference | servie ry Hughes declared ithat the scouts owed to the dis- !tinguished guests of the United States government the sort of outh | America and the type of n which the country support of its aditions and Jaintenance of its ideals. “It is an inspiration to tired ¢ ito look upon*our American boys,” the cabinet officer said. here are those who would make us believe that the boys and girls of today are not what children used to by but I contend that to look upon a group of boys nd girls at pi and work is ample proof of their wholesomeness. T am heartily in favor «f any organization which aims to maintain this standard of whole nness and I therefore ap- prove of the wor being done by the Boy Seouts. Urges Boys to Be True. Mr. Hughe: urged the boys to | be loyal to the flag, the institutions | which it represent: brotherhoot and to democracy he advised {hem to practice patriotism, not merely by saluting the colors, but in their da lives. Huston Thompson, president of the executive council of the Disfrict Boy »uts, formally accepted the flags on behalf of the Boy Scout organiza- tion. He outlined the growth of the organization and emphasized its patriotic purposes. The presentation representatives of chapters of the D. A. R. and of individuals making personal gifts of flags, some of them in memory of world war heroes, wae preceded by a number of selections by the District Boy Scouts’ drum { and bugle corp Then, in turn, the troops sent their color- d to receive the cov- as the troop numbers Mrs. Frank F. Gree x-sta regent and chairman of the children's and sons of the re- public committee, who presided throughout the program. Many Chapters Included. Chapters for which flags were turned over to scout troops were: American, Ann Hill, American Lib- rty, Army and Navy, Col. John Don- elson, Columbia, Constitution, Con- tinental, L othy Hancock, Eleanor [ Wilson, Frances Scott, Katherine : Montgomery, Keystone, Livingstone Manor, Luch Holcomb, Magruder, Martha Washington, MAry Washing- Mary Bartlett, Monticello, Our ag, Patriots’ Memorial, Ruth Brew- arah Franklin, Susan Riviere | Hetzel, Telles de Rochambeau, Thir- ! tee, Colonies, Thomas - Marshall, { Wendell Wolfe, Mary Desha and Vie- |- tory. to er will call cials of the flags by forty-two i { ete Flags were presented as personal gifts by Mrs. Galus M. Brumbaugh, past state regent; Mrs. Amos G. | Draper and Mrs. Frank Meyer. Mrs. A. Howard Clark presented one in behalf of the members at large of trict D. A. R Some Given as Memorials. Seven of the forty-two flags were | presented -in memory of _deceased ! heroes of the world war. Mrs. Larz Anderson handed one to_ Troop 38 { a morial to Lieut. Edward T. | Comeg aviator killed in action | September 18, 1918, the only Wash- ston Boy Scout to lose his life in the war, she pointed out. Lieut. | Comegys, she said, founded Troop 39. By Comegys,” the officer's mother, Mrs. Anderson, i accompanied ot | Miss Mabel T. Boardman handed a ! flag to Troop 100 in memory of Lieut. Waulker Blaine Beale, who fell in the i St. Mihiel sector, September 18, 1918, while a member of the 310th Regi- iment, 78th Division. Troop 38 received a flag from Conti- {nental Dames Chapter in memory of {W. Granville Guss, son of the chap- jter's regent, and who died Novem- | ber 13, 1922, One for “Unknown.” Mrs. Lisle S. Lipscomb gave to {Troop 27 a flag in memory of Pri- vate Willlam W. Galliher of the United States ambulanee service |overseas; Mrs. William L West, in meniory of the unknown soldler, to {Troop 63; Mrs. Willlam B. West, in memory of Lieut. David Putnam, ace,” killed in action September 19 1918, to Troop 78; Miss Lilllan Cheno- :K.T’{“hornwn, to Troop 4107 Ge0rEe e procession o 2 by Nrs; William B, Hardy. stats 1o gent of tho District D. A. R. The staffs of the flags bore m plates suitably inscribed. e SCOUTS “HELL IDEAS.” Dr. Shepherd Says They Are Prod- uct of Imagination. Imagination has been a pri factor In the geresis of “hell" jabe and beliefs, common to_almost all re- ligions, Df. 'W. Thomas Shepherd, presi- dent of Columbia University School, de- clared in the course of an address be- fore the Philosophical Soclety at the Public Library vesterday afternoon. “Credulity has also been an important factor,” Dr. Shepherd ~declared. “It seems probable that religious doctrines of future punishment impel the imag- ination to paint such a place.” of the American | SECRETARY Every ucout iroop in the city wi Revolution at Continental Hall. Th some of the ARRESTALLEGED THEF IN CHURGH Detectives Charge Colored | Man With Taking Money From Employer. While announcing a hymn to be sung In the choir of the Asbury M E. Church, 11th and K street, Edgar Lewis, colored, of 1304 Riggs street, ¢ the dairy product es- Commissioner James street and Pennsyl- was arrested Thursday night by headquarters detectives in- vestigating the mystery of small profits resultant from a large volume an employe af tablishment of F. Oyster, 9th vania avenue of business. Detectives Muilen and Murphy. Waldron and Sweeney, Who were as- signed the case by Inspector (:r':\nl, also arrested Carroll Downs, a !\.Au}- er, residing at Lenah, Loudoun coun- ty, Va. to be held for investigation on charges of collusion with Lewis o swindle the latter's employer. Po lice declared that both men fldmll?rd complicity in robbing the firm. Downs turned over $3,000 in cash to the mer- chant -and canceled a bill for $700 in payment of at least a portion of ll.le Money he is sald to have obtained as a result of the alleged collusion with the colored man. The $3.000 was in the form of a check, which was cash- ed &t @ Virginia bank by Inspector Grant yesterday afteroon. After the cash was in hand Downs was re- leased, without any charge other than that of being held.for investiga- tion being lodged against him. Lewis was in the welghing depart- ment of the @yster concern. It is charged that the swindle has been perpetrated during the past two years. According to alleged admissions made to the poilce, Lewis did the welghing of the butter, frequently using tubs of the dealer's butter to increase | Weight of incoming shipments, and at times even failing to do, this. Downs, it is stated, denled complic- ity in the alleged swindie until after police learned from relatives in Vir- Finia that they had not supplied him Wwith creamery butter to be dlsposnd‘ ¢ in this city. O rwing . the recovery of the| mouey and the release of Downs. the Virginian thanked the detectives for | courtesy displayed in the handling of | the case and returned home. { JUSSERAND DEFENDS OCCUPATION OF RUHR Only Chance to Collect Reparations, He Declares—Denies Militarism. NEW YORK, April —Occupation of the Ruhr valley is France's last and only chance to collect just repara- tion for the damage wrought by Ger- many during the war, Jules Jusse- rand, French ambassador to the United States, decldred today at a Juncheon tendered him by the Feder- ation de LAlllance Francaise of the Tnited States and Canada, to cele- brate the organization's twenty-first birthday and the ambassador's com- pletion of twenty vears service in Washington. Afor four years the Germans have paid us nothing,” M. Jusserand sald, | The occupation is our only ‘chance.” | Denying the contention that France is militaristically inclined, M. Jusse- rand quoted statistics -to show that the French army budget has decreased from 36,000,000,000 francs in 1918 to 4,000,000,000 francs in 1922. Bloquent tributes to the ambassador were paid by Bainbridge Colby, for- mer Secretary of State, and John W. Davis, former Uhited - States ambas- sador to the court of St. James. Mr. Davis said that M. Jusserand was largely responsible for the cor- dial feeling which exists between the United States and France. The am- bassador, he declared, had succeeded in interpreting France to America in 2 way that America could understand &nd he had truthfully pictured Amer- fcan thought and feeling to his own country. BOMB BLAST IN EXCHANGE Vienna Brokers Had Left Mart Before Exploihm. . VIENNA, April 7.—A bomb_exploded in the vestibule of the Stock Exchange last night- after trading .hours. Little damage was done and on one Was injured. It Is - theught the explosion was intended a mark of sympathy with the anti-Jewish manifestations at —_- HUGHES SPEAKS AT SCOUT FLAG .PRESENTATION. ‘ presented an American flag yesterday by the Daughters of the American the principal speaker. Secretary of State w couts whose troops were honored. GOVERNOR RITCHIE TO BE HONOR GUEST D. C. Chamber of Commerce Plans Interesting Program for April Meeting. GOV, RITCHIE, Gov. Ritchie of Maryland will be the giiest of houor at the April meet- ing of the Washington Chamber of Commerce to be held at the New Wil lard Hotel Tuesday night, April 17, a cording to an announcement of Isaac Gans, president of the chamber. It has been designated as Maryland night and members of the Maryland delega- tion in Congress have been invited to attend. It Is the first time that a governor has appeared before the local chamber, President Gans announced. Gov. Ritchle will speak. The Baltimore and Ohio Glee Club of Baltimore. numbering forty mem- bers, will sing, and Willlam Tyler Page, erk of the House of Represen- tatives, and a member of the chamber, will recite “The American’s Creed.” The president of the Maryland So- clety and the commissioners of the District of Columbia also have been invited to be present. The purpose of the meeting, said Mr. Gans, s to es- tablish closer relations between the busine: men of the city and the of- ficials of the neighbor state. NEWSBOY ASKS $20,000. Sues for Damages for Injuries From Falling Radiators. Bernard A. Hawkins, eleven years old. 2 newsboy, yesterday filed suit through his father, Andrew J. Hawkins, In_the District Supreme Court to recover §20,- 000 damages from Arthur J. Tholl and the District of Columbla for alleged personal injury. It is charged that Tholl piled a quan- tity of radiators on the parking space of O street between 4th and 5th streets porthwest and one of them fell on the boy and injured his leg and rendered him unable to sell his papers for a long time. Negligence is alleged against the District of Columbia in permitting the radiators to be stacked on the parking space. Attorneys Robert I Miller and ltam P. Wendell appear for the bo STOCK CLEARANCE OF B-0-OK-S CHILDREN’S AND NON-FICTION $ooad PRICES 1t Will Pay You to Attend This Sale PEARLMAN'S BOOK SHOP 933 G St. N.W. 005 * and G Sts. Character Portraits $20.00 Doz. *NDERNOOD When It’s Painting Paperhanging Think of Taylor 2333 18th N.W. Col. 1077 DYSPEPSIA HEARTBURN Relief in ten minutes with a dose of HERNDON'S INDIGESTINE All Drig Stores 35¢ a Bottle The Rare Book Shop 723 Seventeenth St. misa ‘10" Highest Prices Paid —for entire : Libraries ' _or Single_ Volumes, Prints, En- gravings and Autograph Let- ters. epresentative will call. CASH PAID and purchases removed promptly. D. -C., APRIL 8, 1923—PART 1. Department. tacked by National Council War. warfare. bureau placing the amount at cents. Cause of Difference. from two facts: “The bureau of efficien the Rosa plan of estimati ment expenditures, bases its ¢ department. He ix shown above with expenditures, including in the full estimated cost self-supporting departments, the Post Office and than offset by eipts, Panama Canal appropriation. LAY OUT PROGRAM FOR MAYORS’ VISIT | Three-Day Stay of Governor and| City Heads of Massachusetts | to Be Well Filled. $1.000,000,000, greatly percentage of each item. reducing chart does not include in bors or the Panama Canal items. tween the two cha The tentative program for a three- Phe day visit to Washington May 4, 5 and 6 of Gov. Cox of Massachusetts, thirty-nine mayors and other dis- tinguished citizens of the Bay state was made public last night by the ‘ Massachusetts Society. i Arriving from Boston on the fed- eral express Friday, May 4. the dele. gation will parade from Union sta- | tion to the Lincoln Memorial, headed by a mounted escort and a sixty-piece band At the memorial tree-planting exercises will take place along one of the approaches to the shrine, where American white elms, a deciduous tree familiar to Massachusetts, will be planted and registered with the American Tree A fation. 4 lunch- eon will follow, given by prominent Washingtonians in honor of the Ruests. A reception. entertainment and ball will take place that evening | at the New Willard. President Harding will receive the and members of the Massachu- E Sooiety at 1 o'clock Saturday at | the White House and at 2:30 the party | will witness a drill by cavalry at Fort | Myer. Sightseeing and viewing of motion pictures taken of the party while here will occupy Sunday Arrangements are in charge of the Massachusetts Society, of which Fred- erick Dallinger is president, George L. fLain, vice president, and George | HeTnan ‘secretary. A number of com- | mittees are busily engaged with the| details. : —_— Order Potted Plants Now. Plants for the flower garden. home- Erown. Gudey'1212 F.—Advertise- ment: ALLEGE TRADE WRONGS. Federal Commission Files Second Cincinnati Complaint. expenditures. it consists entirely of the Panama Canal bond issue. is doubly inconsistent in this clusion and retirement pay in its 32.7 cent for war expenditures. “A_third government the Treasury Department, recently has for 1922. Tts figures give 2414 the expenditure for the War is its figures for national defens ceed th by 4.3%." Cost of War Shown. Edward Clifford, assistant tary of the Treasur: fore the Assoc Bar in New York city stated “During 19 other public d able against ordinary receipts $407,000.000, or over ons $254,000.000, or 0%, et 7% lic debt, sinking fund. Veterans' reau and pensions, one-half—54.6% to be exact, | total expenditures. ably be little reduction in these bursements during the next years.” bureau * of efficiency chart graphically the cost of war a method of settling international putes. the_National Council ternational disputes.” Defense ‘of the chart gecently Jssued by tha bureau of efliciency and at- the War Department as misrepresenting the relative amount of taxes spent for national defense and past wars was made in a state- ment. made public yesterday by the for Prevention of The counell criticizes a budget bureau chart, showing a greatly re- duced expenditure of tax funds for The ¢ouncil peints out that there cxists a difference of 53.1 cents in the two estimates of how many cents out of every dollar paid in taxes in 1924 will go toward national defense and past warfare costs, the emcxegfi cents and the budget bureau at 32.7 “The difference between these two estimates,” the council declares, arises following' g govern- leu: tions upon net expenditures for each | The bureau of the bud- get bases its estimates upon the gros: its total of virtually | such as expenses more such as the By the use of gross expenditures the denominator is enlarged by over the “Contrary to the charge of the War Department the bureau of efficiency its arm; expenditures either the river and har “The second point of difference be- rts concerns the inclusion of the public debt in war bureau of the budget chart excludes the public debt and the interest on it from expendi- tures for war in spite of the fact that with the exception bond issues for the war purposes, and ex nce it does include pensions pe department, also | given out expenditure per- centages based on actual expenditures al art- ment and the Navy Department, that ex bureau of efficiency figures secre- | , in a speech be- | tion of the Customs on March 24| the sinking fund and t retirements charge- | took $423,000,000, or about 11% of govern- ment expenditures, the Veterans' Bu- | and %. Thus ! these four items, interest on the pub- | Bu 4 | f | 1 r s { i which are due en- | tirely to past wars, constituted over | of the There will prob- few s dis. “The Rosa chart and the present show The present chart is issued by for Prevention of War as an argument against war as an accepted method of settling in- The Federal Trade Commission for the second time in recent weeks issued a complaint vesterday alleging Interfer- ence with the sale of products manu- | favtured by Proctor & Gamble of Cin- cinnati. INSURE Against Fire and Boiler Explesions With J. Leo Kolb The Ohio Wholesale G: A e e O olesale Grocers” Assoc 1 ENTIO tion and the Peet Brothers' Manufac- | AT IE N turing Company are defendants in the | action, and are charged with influencing dealers to discontinue purchasing soaps nd other products of the Proctor & Gamble Company through various co- operative methods, e Main 8108 38 ;814 weekly: wits . 50 per cent more. e 4001 4th St. N.W. Center entrance hall plan, contains 8 large, bright rooms, steam heat, electricit Priced for immediate sale. Lee Crandall, Jr., & Co., 1 1423 New York Ave. Main 717 RRE V| DT e —the opening of our new Real Estate Offices in the Phillips Building, Fifteenth at K St. April Sth. Our Loan Department is completely equipped to handle all phases of Real Estate First Mortgage business and greatly expands our ability to render helpful service to our clients. It shall be our steadfast purpose to cement the warm friendship which exists between us and our customers, through whose confidence and co-operation the expansion of our business has been made possible: To every one of them we extend a cordial invitation to visit our new offices at the first opportunity. Our constant endéavor shall be to maintain the close contact and helpful relations which have already been established with the owners of Phillips First Mortgages—securities which have never caused a dollar’s loss to any one who has invested in them. = Remember Our New Address WILLIAM S. PHILLIPS ] First Mortgage Investments d 15th and K Sts. .W. ain 4600 room, Rooms Like Mother Used to Keep Northeast Corner—4th & Shepherd i “Stag Hotel, 608 9th | 1050 | Toom, tolist, Wower and lavaiory. $10:'3 13 | BUREAU TAX CHART Prevention of War Organiza- tion Takes Issue With War Statement of the ownership, mana; cire t : 3 gement, circulation, et ;‘ll:’:d:;)\!enr‘nlr;x‘ Star, published dally, and The Sunday Star. publis y morning, at Washington, 1. C. v ac o) R soriieE £to C., required by act of Congre Editor, Theodore W. Noyes, Washin, 2 ot r . Noyaes, gton, D. managing_edtto Rudelph Kauffmann, Washington. D. C.; business manager, Fleming N 0ld, Washington, D. C.; publisher, The livening Star Newspape oml:)lrf), l-‘rank B. Noyes, president, Washington, D. C @ hvllnerlfv T]\P()dnrc‘W. Noyes and Frank B. Noyes, trustees for fhe helrs of the late Crosby 8. Noyes; Frank A. Richardson, trustce for Mary B. Adams; Frank B. Noves and Newbold Noves, trustees K:iu’;YmB .\;;,\'l'l. Theodore W. Noyes, Rudolph Kauffmann, Vieto o Rn'n eale R Howard, Jessie K. Kauffman, Fleming Newbold Prafe Adams Howard, Loulse K. Simpson, John Crayke Simpson Prnaauffmann, Jessie C. Kauffman, R. M. Kauffmann. Samuel H W 'h‘“mlllhv Abranda oves Pomeroy and bold N . All addresses K“fi“?:.' - C.. except Miranda Noyes Pomeroy, eenwich, Con: e cbn"tmudrh’;r::)l"“' Jnortgagees and other security holders, hold o 3 b other b SO of total amount of bonds, mortgages or oth s . Circulation Figures. Vi e number of copies of each issue of th ublica 1 distributed through the mall erwise to paid subscribers ducing the six months ended Ma:-hsfl’l),r ]nlherwi:e to paid subsc n'bu s during Average Net Circulation Daily. Sunday. . ..90,864 es given for Net Paid Circulation Net Unpaid Circulatio service, etc.) 803 Total Average Net Circulation. (Signed) 24188 EWBOLD, Business Manage day of April, 1 LMER F. YC X FLEMI Sworn to and subscribed T i before me this 7th Desirable second floor offices, single or en suite, suitable for any purposes Building 1205—1213 Connecticut Ave. Apply to Randall H. Hagner and Company 1207 Conn. Ave. Telephone Fr. 4366 FOR RENT Tompki:s Building Fourteenth and Monroe Sts. N.W. The most desirable first floor showroom space in the heart of Washington’s newest business district. Six hundred seventy-one square feet to one thousand sixty-five square feet, with large show windows and base- ments. Apply to Randall H. Hagner and Company 1207 Connecticut Avenue Northwest Phone Franklin 4366 WANTED HOUSES FOR SALE List Your Property With Us For Quick Results N. L. SANSBURY CO., Inc. “Everything in Real Estate” 1418 Eye St. N.W. Phone Main 5904 Members Washington Real Estate Board Get Your Home at Cost Enroll in the Jefferson Park Home-Building Club Limited to 8 Members HESE first 8 homes will be built at cost, mind you! Pay no speculative builder’s profit— no agent's commission— have no experience of financ- ing second trusts—no paint- ing or up-keep cost. No lots have a frontage less than 60 feet; protective building restrictions, unusual value and environment. Jeffer- son Park home sites includes sewerage, water, electricity, sidewalks, streets and concrete gutters. Drive out today from Highway?® Bridge, or call Main 6594 for the com- pany’s motor car. Only 10 minutes to the development on Mt. Vernon Boule- vard, between Wash- ington and Alexan- dria. This Club plan will providg sou a $9.000 home for $1,500 Cash, and the balance in easy payments. Jefferson Park, with its high altitude, fronting on Mt. Vernon Boulevard, consists of beautiful rolling country with first growth trees and is a wonderful setting for the® finest homes. Get a Free Copy of Our Booklet “Like a Mediterranean Slope.” It will answer most of your inquiries concerning Jefferson Park, but you will want to motor out and see for yourself. Office at 1518 K Street Open all day Sunday and agent on property GATEWOOD S. BENNETT 1518 K Street N.W. FOR CLUB PLAN de- tails, phone Main Call on