Evening Star Newspaper, December 31, 1923, Page 22

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WOMAN’S .PAGE. White-Fur Trimming Takes Lead BY ANNE RY If one were to wrlln‘ an account of the way in which dressmakers have trimmed frocks for the winter 1923-192¢ in two words, those two words would have to bo white fur. It all began quite early in the sea- son—when the little black velvet frock trimmed with white ermine or white rabbit began making itself distinetly noticdable. It had its ori- gin In Paris, but the idea was soon adopted by American dressmakers, who found that thé white fur-trim- med black frock pleased the taste of the Amerfcan woman as well as it _had the French. Then there were little black velvet coats trimmed with rather diminutive white fur collars, and sometimes cuffs, too, but these did not appeal in America as often “s they did in Paris. But the white fur trimming was soon translated from the black vel- vet frock to the frock of other colors—from velvet to other fabrics. And the result pleased. he blossomed out as one of the most -xnl:lnv of midwinter modes. It d_will be worn where winter winds blow strong and cold as well as in the southland, where the white fur will be used to trim cloth and knitted materials of light weight, No fine points of distinction are drawn between ermine and rabbit— the ¥rench lapin—when it comes to this white fur trimming. White balls of fur, which are used as pendants from the pockets, are really smarter than tails of fur as trimming. fur-trimmed sport frock has TTENHOUSE, Not the least important detail of this frock is the white chiffon hand- Kerchief which floats from the pocket, In days to come when this fad for decorative handkerchiefs has become E nt history we may be amused to think that we e could have thought .the device clever. For, of course, such handkerchiefs are purely vrnamental. (Copyright, 1923.) - Salt Codfish Chowder. Brown together one-fourth 2 pound of diced salt pork and three onlons. dd_water to cover and a stalk of chopped. IS Temoved. As to the chowder and stew gently for half an hour, and until most of the water is absorbed. keep from burn- ht potatoes, diced; some arge plece of butter and t of heated milk. Crumb into the chowder*two large water bis- cuits just before serving. BEDTIME STORIES Danny Returns to Nanny. Selfishuess is always prono think of self_and self alone. —Nanny Meadow Mouse™ Danny Meadow Mouse had been sce’ ing so much that was new and won- derful and had been having so many adventures that he hardly gave ight. Yes, did _ TJIAT BIG URS THIS D HUMME MAN-BIRD MORNING, 1 needn’t worry about her.” He didn't once think that she might be worry- ing about him. Then one day Danny discovered Hummer the Hummingbird darting ower to flower. Hummer spied saw that hh: man-bird of |I|ls morning,” squeakéd Hum- “I think it was getting ready A “great fear swept over Danny. Perhaps that great man-bird was making ready to fly back up north. The mere thought of being left be- hind made Danny feel actually sick. Unt. that moment it hadn't popped into his head that that man-bird would not stay right where he had left it locked up in a shed. | shut up in a shed. until most of the salt | YthOW CLOTH F‘ROCK TRIK‘M.ED /WITH WHITE CHIFFON HAN DKFRCHIEF' FALLS FROM.THE . POCKET. By Thornton W. Burgesa “Are you Sure' it was my man- bird?” cried Danny. o,” squeaked Hummer as he dart- ed about. “No, Danny, I'm not sure it was your man-bird. It may have been another man-bird. They all look alike to me. But it was being taken out of the shed. and 1 remembered that you had told me that the great man-bird -which brought you down here to the Sunny South had been T thought at once that this might be the one. Were there any other man-birds around? < “T don’t know,” replied Danny mis. erably. “I don believe so, but I don’t know. Where was it you saw this_man-bird this morning, Hum- mer Before Hummer could reply a Merry Little Breeze brought to him a sound that Danny knew only too well. It was the noise that great man-bird always made when fying, or just be- fore starting to fly. . It was not loud now, for it was some distance away. Danny didn't even wait to say good- bye to Hummer. He started straight in the direction of that sound. For the first time since Nanny had parted from him Danny knew in what direc- tion that great man-bird lay. “Don’t fly away without me. Please don't fly away without me,” Danny kept saying over and over under his breath, just as if the great man-bird could.héar him. And he ran and ran and ran and ran in the direction from which that noise was coming. But after a while that noise stop- ped. Danny didn’t stop, however. He kept right on. Only now and then did he stop, and this was merely to get his breath and rest. So it was that late that afternoon he came to the shed in_ which that man-bird was kept. Perhaps you can guess how anxiously he waited for a chance to slip into that shed unscen. Would the great man-bird -be there. It was. ' It had only been wheeled out to try the engine. It had not been fiylng at al. en it had been wheeled back and locked up for the Danny scrambled up int he squeaked. , gray person rushed from the little cupboard d nearly khuck ed him over. It was Nanny. she cried. “I thought I nev never would see you again (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) When We Go Shopping ,BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. On “Keeping Stocked Up.” It is a matter of economy efliciency to take advantage of a- sonal sales. Reliable stores offer these sales at stated times to avoid carrying over a heavy stock to the next season. Some of these are the regular “Januaiy white sales” the February furniture sales and the usual offering of suits and dresses at the end of the season. The housewife who looks ahead and purchases her years supply of household linen and muslin at this time s applylng good business methods to her housekeping. Thrift is as much a matter of spending as it is of saving. True economy isn't in going with- out, always a morale-destroying process—or in _ buying fewer cheaper things than we ought. * True economy ‘lies in the directions of buying the right clothes and sup- plies at the right time. When we buy so as to: obtain full value for every cent expended, when we figure out our expenses in relation to our income and hold to that schedule, when we buy with a foresighted pro- vision for the future—that is thrift. It is not thrift to wait until the family supply of household linen, underwear and the like is worn thin and_the supply run down until everything has to be replaced at onge. No good business man allows his stook to run completely out, but keeps systematic account 6f it and regularly replaces, it so that an even level of supply may be always on hand. t) st. the and or allow for them in her budget. To wait until everything has “go through” before getting new, and then have to buy in unusual quan- tities, makes too great a strain on the budget. ‘ It costs much less to get a few things as the months go by than it does to make good t neglact of several years. (18 easier to find 36 a year than $25,” said one shopper who has learned the value of foresight in Mr buyin; d is easy, once the habit is acquired, to foreses the wear and tear on supplies, and to replen- ish at the psychological time. The woman who fails to do this no doubt thinks she {s economizing,* but is near-sighted—she but not the pound.” a dozen napkind, = Tew towels now aad then make no great drain on the famlly treasury. It is walting!men until ‘they Are_all run out, and. then . having to Teplace them in quanti- 4 ecessary look after the leakages in other depart- ments of the home, wearing appa: .draperies, chins, kitchen ' utensi etc. Did you ever stop to think how much time is wasted in the average home in using -0ld tools that ought {o be discarded—tho saucepan that is made to “do” after plastering up a pinhole or two, the carpet sweeper you alwgys have to “fix” before it can be used, and so on through a familiar 1ist of superannuated ar- ticles? It is thrift to renew these things when the yearly Illal I-rn closing out on stocks of the P Seasons. One cannot OAly buy betier. at tho .sales, but it is distinctly a matter ' of thrift to sufply one's ne for a year hence. A 1 i Last nite atter suppir pop started to wawk: up-and ‘down setting room with his chest out, faking big breaths to_push {t out even ferther and saying, Well, I-got up erly and took' my exercizés this morning and I still feel the effects of it. So do.1, ma sed. I.lost half an hour sleep listening to you counting out loud in frunt of the looking glass, and Ive bin yawning all day as a result, she sed. Well wy dident you .tell count to myself? pop sed. I was ‘too, sleepy, ma sed, and pop, sed, Wat you should of done Was to et up and exercize With me. Not me, Ive got too mutch respect for my sleep, ma sed. ‘Well look™ at me, feeling fit as a flddle and strong as a horse jest be- cause I started the day erly with ex- ercize insted of starting it late all doged up with too mutch sleep, pop And he started to wawk up and down agen saying, Jest look\at me, I feel like a 4 yeer old, I could go out rite now and do & nited werk In the flelds. O goodnlss, that reminds ‘me, ma sed. The carpenter left our ladder out in the yard ware enybody can wawk rite in the gate and wawk off with it, so I wish you'd go and carry it down the cellar now that you dont know wat to do with all your excess energies, she sed. Nuthing rloln‘, my days werk Is me to of feeling as strong as a horse d_all that sort of bizniss sed, and pop sed, Its the principle of the thing that I object to, .I could carry the ladder down with one finger the way I feel, its just the principle of the thing. at principle? ma sed, and pop Theres no use going into long explinations over it. And he quick sat down and got behind the sport- ing page and ma sed, Hee hee, and Kepp o Imbroldering imbrotders. CUT-OUT A Party Invitation. “Hers is a letter for you, David, in a little envelope,” sald the hurse, handing the crippled boy his share of the mall, “Come to my New Year dinner to- morrow-at 1 o'clock,” read David on the card inside the envelope. “Who is Benjamin® Barnes? I dom't know anybody by that name.” “Yes, 1 do!” cried Peggy, who had received an invitation too..*He was the fat boy who played Santa Claus in the Christmas celebration.” “I'remember now. We called him Fatty Barnes” Then David's face clouded. “Do you think we'll be well enough to go?" he asked the ni “Yes, indeed,” she apswered. bundle you up good and warm, We'll start the New Year right by ietting ,go out for your New Year din- S LR Walnut Wafers. Bedt one egg lightly, then add to it one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, half a cupful of chopped walnuts and enough flour to roll the mixture thin. Cut the dough into fancy shapes and fry them in deep, hot vegotable fat. Do not allow . them become 100 brow: Wisen he wafers are: dons. vem them from the fat, sprinkle powde: sugar and cinnamon over them Ind rve crisp and hot. BEAUTY CHATS Keep the Neck Young. Don’t ever, if you'can help it, let the neck grow old. You needn’t have. an old-looking neck, if you -are care- ful, until lonj qur you have m-d sixty. Two things make the neck,beauti- ful—the color.of the skin and the firmness of 'the flesh. If you wear thing dark against your 28 a'coat ocollar or a fur, with d-nllnq cream, olive oil, cheap ‘White mineral oil or even lard. Wipe off with a soft cloth and look at ‘the extraordinary amount of black that comes away with the oil. Soap ‘nd wmr vfll not uku off all this, neck attractive to L'::ll l( thl skin Il not kept l’ne re. tight or very. stiff collars:you will}®ary. rud the neck until the skin s tough and yellow and-until it s thin and scraggy' looking. .. Don't, wear collars | tof be up to your chin.if you are more Ahan eightgen .years old; only. the very young can stand them, If your neck 1s so ugly’you must eover it up, Wwear something.light in color and soft’in. texture which will roll softly - round ‘the ‘throat; and open & littde way:.‘in”front.” “Thus you can conceal ‘the neok .-but maké m face look younger by.the more.youth- ful style collar. . - Always the - neck when uudlymn‘mnwm;hu ‘water and soap, rub-it: with warm oocoa. butter-and bind ioouly with skin for five mlnll o ‘tollet water or to wu‘:z' s B (4 Should ‘be tven feeaseniny | 70 Beat_five. aggs until they_are light, then’,add to ‘them ,one-foufth pound of raiainy, one-fourth pousid of figs (portance of the spinal column. jcentral structure of the body. {as we have seen, combined with a | FLOWERING DOGWOOD—CORNUS FLORIDA. It is unnecessary to introduce the flowering dogwood to residents of eastern North America, it being im- possible for those living in country districts to overlook the abundant white bloom of this most showy of our native trees, and impossible for those living in town to overlook the specimens.in parks or the many ex- cellent pictures of this bloom in our magazines. Of interest will be a. picture of this tree in its winter habit, for it is a tree of peculiar beauty now as well s in spring, possessing a graceful- ness of line and curve, and a certain wild picturesqueness. To quote Julia Rogers: “The tree has a picturesque waywardness of habit in the woods: it croughes in the shadows of tall trees, and leans out to reach. the sun- shine that sifts through the forest ecover.” It is a bushy tree fifteen to thirty feet high, growing equally well in the shade of larxer trees or in the open. The bark is reddish-brown, broken into small squares like an Why Do Our Relatives Rile Us? | DorothyDix | alligator's skin. The leaves are three to five inches long, two to three wide, elliptical, dark green above, paler beneath, in the autumn turning a brilliant scarlet. The well-known flowers appear in early spring be- fore the leaves, and are followed by an abundance of bright scarlet dec- orative berries about a half inch long. They remain-on the tree into the win- ter, and are a favorite of many birds. It is a freguent tree In the District. ‘The tree illustrated is at Soldiers' Home, where there are many others. The following will interest resi- dents of Washington. It is taken from Mattoon and Albertis’ “Fores Trees of the District of Columbia™; “The dogwood, with its masses of early spring flowers, its. dark-red autumn foliage and ‘its bright red berries, is probably our most orna- mental native tree. It is rapidly dis- appearing as the city grow h original abundance of it may be noted in Rock Creek Park. Its beauty in spring and fall causes its ruthless destruction. It deserves the protec- tion of every resident and visitor to the Natfonal Capital.” Enumerates Causes of Family « Discord Haider to Live With Our Families Than With Other People Because We Are Either Too Much Alike or Too Completely Different “or Fail to Be as Polite to Each Other as to the Merest Stranger. WOMAN wants to know why it is that we find it harder to get’along with our families than we do with other people, and why our own blood-and-kin rile us more than anybody else on earth. Probably the main reason why we find it so difficult to live in peace and harmony with those who are really near and dear to us is because we are too much alike, We have inherited the same traits of character, and when these come in collision there is a resounding crash, and the nolse of wrecked tempers and exploding wrath. Father, an iron-willed, tyrannical gentleman, who has ruled ‘his little world like a despot, cannot get along with John, who is of the same fiber, and equally determined to have his own way and do as he pleases. Father and John may have a very sincere affection for each other and admire each other's good qualities, but tifey can never be together an hour without getting into a fight over something. Mother is a born manager, one of the ladies who honestly believe, with the famous Frenchman, that she could have saved the Almighty from making some mortifying mistakes if she had been consulted at the creation. Mary is mother’s own daughter in her perfect bellef that she knows exactly how to run the univers ‘What wonder, then, that they clash over|. every gown and hat that is bought; over every man that comes to see Mary; over everywhere that Mary goes? . Sometimes the reason that we can't get along with our own people is because we are so entirely different from them. Often and often children are changelings, and those of-our own flesh have no tie of spiritual kinship with us. ‘The tather who is a,hard-headed, practical business man has nothing in common with the son who i & quivering bunch of nerves and sensibilities; = There is one stracture of the body that may be regarded as the found tion for everything else. It has more to do than any other with determin- ing on tate of health and one's | physical age. i The importance of the spine in its relation to the general make-up of an Andividual has been recognized from the earliest times. When our forefathers referred to the value of “backbone,” speaking in a moral and rlychalotlul sense, they expressed heir recognition of the supreme 4_-:- e same {dea is brought home to us today by & clever humorist and cartoots some of whose Work appears unde the significant title “Are You One of Spineless Creatures?” Speak- ing In cither the moral or physical nse, these expressions mean simply that without backbone one does Aot amount to much. The spine in the dominating and t is the supporting structure. It glves stability, and at the same time flex- ibility, to the éntire body. From the purely mechanical standpoint it is a marvel of adaptability. Do you realize that in_ practically every “effort you make the spine is involved? Do yoy appreciate the fact that in lifting a piano or carrying a trunk,it s this marvelously strong, yet exquisitely copstructed and flex- ible spinal column that bears the | brunt of the burden? When you have seen the Arabian acrobat hold on his shoulders, i pyramid style, the entire troupe of his fellow acrobats, or when you have seen the strong man of the circus lift a horse clear of the ground, you have had a graphic illustration of the strength possibilities of the spine. And yet this degree of strength i flexibility which is nothing short of marvelous. But what has the spine to do with )nulh and Wwith age? Simply this: hen your spine becomes «ld you becoms old. So long as you can Keep your spine young you may remain young. As we advance in years the spine naturally tends tq become~hent and stiffened. It does not ma bow arly or late in life this coud elops, but as soon as the spine taken on these signs of age you may know that you are old. Your problem, therefore, shou!d be keep the spine strong and straight d flexible. to an Side-Closing Overblouse. Adapted to any figure on which it is worn: is the popular, jacquette blous: a pleasing version 6f which Is illus. trated. Made of a wool eponge or jer- FEATURES A THREE DAYS’ COUGH IS YOUR DANGER SIGNAL| ™ Ghronic coughs and persistent colds lead 1o, verlous uag trouble, You ean stop them now.with Creomulsion, an emulsified creo- sote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a new medical discovery with twofold action; it soothes and heals the iufiamed membranes and kills the germ. i Of all known druks, creosote fs recog- nized by the medical fraternity as the greatest bealing ageney for the treatment | of chronic coughs and colds and’ other forms of throat and lung troubles, Creo- | mulsion contains, In addition to creosote, othier healing elements which soothe and beal the inflamed membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the cre- osote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, atiacks the seat of the trouble and destroys the germs that lead to consumption. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of chronic coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, catarrhal bron. chitis and other forms of throat and lung nd is excellent for building up| fter colds or the flu., Money refunded if any cough or cold, no matter of how long standing, is not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Creomulsion Co., Atlants, Ga. — We Are Ever Ready to Serve You —np matter whether it {s but one room or the entire house you want painted or papered. Newest designs in wall paper. Moderats charges. CORNELL WWALL PAPER CO. of the Stieff Piano is undisputed and its VALUE is known by those who_appreciate quality. We fuvits you to h 2ome of our own meke, but siightly sed. E sey, it would be a splendid garment for the business girl to wear on told days. Of course, this style would also be attractive made of a silk crepe or charmeuse. The pattern cuts in sizes 16 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. For the 36-inch size, 2% yards of 36-inch material with one yard of 22-inch contrasting is re- quired. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in postage stamps only. Orders should be ad- rexsed to The Washington Star Pa tern Bureau, 22 East 15th street, New Please write name and ad- “Just Hats” By Vyvyan. Newest in Combs. For the head that is not yet bobbed, who is a _dreamer of dreams, and who counts wealth in terms of beauty,{and doesn't intend to be, there are instead” of dollars. Mother, who was a beauty and a belle in her day, with scores of lovers sighing at her feet, has looked forward to reliving her triumphs in her [Pall ornaments. Sometimes they are daughter. And when daughter grows.up to be a big, sturdy, young person who wants to go into business and who loathes society, what wonder that. they gel on each other's nerves P Vvflzn you hear parents speak bitterly of what a disdppointment children are, and how ungrateful, it merely means that their children are different from them. John insists on being a doctor or a lawyer instead of going inte the hardware business father has been building up for him for twenty years. Mary wants to marry a poor young man, instead of the nice, séttled rich widower mother has picked out for her. Other people find John brilliant and talented. Father calls him a fool to his face because he won't do father's way. Other women are sympathetic with Mary’s romance, and her willingness to sacrifice.riches for love. pearls and a limousine away for Often the rensca we cannot It infuriates mother to seo er throwing an establishment and t along with our own families i ke a mirror in which we see. our own faults in_ lll (heh\ Fltharl lack of n.nihmon that has kept him from mfl& mother's shiftlessness and wastefulness that have ept the family brothar‘. brutal temper; sister's sharp tongue that cuts like a two- yword—the: irritate us, and we find them harder to forgive than we these lovely combs with the large g anything of |. 'o\llfl such defects in other people because we know llll.t. we are, ourselves, | - es, prone to. Jlllt. these weakne these fundamental reasons why it is hard “to gbt along with Besid elatives, there are a thousand minor causes of disco Prinoipal o Jolitencss in the tamily circle, for most mgle ke good clothes, and ahpuld be worn only rincipal ones is the lack of gfil that good manners are the benefit of company. One of ‘the It is an amasing but true thing that practically: the only people 'ho ever sa: hounho 4. “mean, insulting, wounding things to us’are those of our own 4 s’rmumm listen to us with apparent interest, and laugh at our joko.. Our ' friends compliment our new. and cars. If our °casual acquaintances do mot like our taste or respect our judgment,” they ;.., silent about it. “1t 18 our families that stab our'vanity:to the quick by .vawning in our faces, and asking usif we are going to tell that old'story over again;,who bluntl: ridiculous. as old sheep masquerading as there 18 nothing ‘0 L are’ rearing our children, and tell us the. home esr. 2 in hard to get al vlth' ‘our tamiites 1 s Frs tites 15 criticize the way we 'a ‘would rather dl. tl till_another nnnn why lt s l-nor.u.v inform us that our new hat is ten years too young for us, and’tha spring lamb ple gives o! hn'a‘lkngl q'mlnaln“ muu 1s rldht, fer in: ‘2:! average m can rl-o up or sit down, t of by e or ahe Aid it oF IMn‘Q Qo 1t end" belng 1 advise w berty ana ‘happiness. M.h reasons, to these who do mt ofi-rwlu intertere wi advinc th.t ,'. hfl it dimeéul nut uuy uu he pursult " DIX. and hly, -Eoudr’m- ' whole' ini of fvory, sometimes of tortolse, some- tl.mu of jet and sometimes in glitter- rhinestones. they may bt ‘brilliantly ooy e e A Dowl In 8] “Water. Sotd Direct From Factory BRANCH WAREROOMS 1108 F St. N. W. BOYD SHORTHAND IN 20 Indiyidual mm tion. 1342 N. $0DAY BUSINESS COLLECE. 30 DAYS sad Evg, Classes. Register Now World War Veterans Free NATIONAL SCHOOL FINE & APPLIED ART FELIX MAHONY, Director. nm- 1760 Conn. Avé. and M “Study. Art With a Purmc” Day and Evening Classes Children’s Saturday Class Our 8- Month Professional Fundamental Coune fih you | to accept a position in In- terior Decoration, Costume; Design, Color, Poster, and Commercial Drawing. Next Session' Begins Jany. 2! National University Law School 55th Year (Classes 6:30 to 8:30 P.M.) College of Fifimce and Business Administration (Classes 4:45 to 6:30 P.M.) Winter Terms Begin Jan. 2d, 1924. Secretary’s Office Now Open for Registration. For. Catalogs Apply National University 816-818-820 13th St. N.W. Phones M. 6617, Fr. 2909 Schools of Art, Science and Religion | Ethies, Education, Psychology, G e o S :dl s !Dlplolnlty.lnrhprudence. " Government, Business 1 Adminlstrntlon e oy Sy S Constif Law, International Law, Con- sula; icipal Governme: t’ Bank. -‘.n--fil( lfl"l Iiflfll Burvey l( \fi 'l! East, Jllll'(lfl-‘..‘ Roman Law, Pol Winter Term Begins January 2ud REGISTER NOW CeutrllOfiu,lfllFSLNW ) et i) | 30-DA I venfent location. P i p GIRLS” DAY SCHOOL oA Grades I 16 VIL Gunstop Hall, 1906 Florida Ave. Tolopkions North 8178. ___Fronoh, Rhythm and Art tnciued. A World of Difference in the Course STENOGRAPHIC SCHOO, Shorthand, Poach “Typisg. Man £816 , Touc Bahool,*Positions guarentesd sraduate ACE INSTITUTE Accountancy and Auptomot the Instiate are ound everyehr J’ o stocative boutions (2 Husiness. { |ernwl and early-ovening classes are svailable. Telephone Main 8260 for Balktin Transportation Building, 17th and H Streets, N. W. Washiagtor MUSICAL INSTRUGTION. Washington Conservatory of Music 1408 X T, Ave.. at Dupont Circle. Mata 7854 Vialin, Piano, Voi nm». (% Book. Gt the children’starteR dn | PIANG, SAXOPHONE; BANJO Rag, Jam, Popniar Musle in 20 lessoss. Ires desmons it you buy timstruments bers. 182 G w. M Express service to E: principal ey o including Majestic, FBest shin. Highes: % 1;.‘“:{1 :nm'lon and 50 14 cabin shi - Ing attractive low rates. ok announcrs new winter schedule to Florida Four Days Only Baltimore to Miami | Fare, including berth Girculars may be had at Star Offies HOLIDAY OUTINGS —TO0— NORFOLK VIRGINIA BEACH Vi Pnloma: River Chesapeake Bay Modern Steel Palace Steamers Daily at 6:30 P.M. New York-Boston ALL-WATER City Ticket Office, Woodward Building, 731 15th St. N.W Norfolk & Washington Steamboat Co. FLORIDA BY SEA BALTIMORE EASTERN VIRGINIA ix rail to Baiti TRound Triv $57.23 taterooms have ickets good to 6 r.m. I more, thence stesmer One’ Way $3L.71 included. Steamer Tuesd Try the New S.S. ALLEGHANY Automobiles. Carsied—Open cars oo all steamers. Open and closed cars on 8. € “*Alleghany.” ants and Miners TRANSPORTATION COMPANY 1208 F st. n.w., Wash. B/ Naw golf course. Tennis— /4 bashing—hshing—seiling. The NEW COLQNIAL Fireproof—faces tropic gardens, el el el Booking Office: 2 West 45th S¢., N.Y. Phone: Murray Hill 4411 Por Hterstare and stesmer MUNSON S‘rsAMsluP N_MOVISG TO OR York and all New Bu n. TRANSPORT MOV ON ) STORA(,E COMPANY} 27 905-9 Fla. Ave, SEPARATE ROOMS, $1 Local and Léng-Distance MOVING. By Carctul Men. ’ACKING BY EXPERTS. STORAG Estimate cheerfully given ind_planos Con 0 Pa. ave mepxom Ml'I'H’S FIREPROOF TORAGE LARGEST FAMILY MOVERS IN D.C. LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE. ' i CRATE AND PACK BY EXPERTS 1313 YOU STREET, N. W. PHONE NORTH 3343 LET US MOVE YOUR FUR- niture; unlimited facilities, low- est rates; always open. Phone Main INS, District Express CB e e

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