Evening Star Newspaper, January 20, 1924, Page 3

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'French Submarine VOETOGNED.C. VOICE IN CONGRESS Federation Indorses Jones Resolution, Defeating Limited Suffrage. “ONE-MAN” CARS Reduced Fare for School Children | Given Backing. HIT Advocates of national representation for citizens of the District won their fight in the Federation of Citizens' As- «ociations last night, and a report of the law and legislation committee in- dorsing joint Senate resolution No. 15, introduced by Senator Jones of Wash- tngton, was adopted. Theefirst effort of the supporters of the resolution to secure its in- dorsement failed when William MecK. Clayton succeeded in having an amendment ‘hed to the report which would have put the federation on record as favoring local self gov- ernment as well nationul repre- sentation. 1t was recommitted to the law and legislation committee by a vote of twenty to Xteen, and imme- diately favorably reported out by the committee, minus the objectionabie amendment. A roll 11 showed the federation to be thirty-three to elght in favor of national representation. Blow At One-Man Cars. Acting on the recommendation of the public utilities committe the federation struck a blow at the one- man cars by opposing the use Sstreet cars having a crew less th # conductor and a motorman; proved the plan to have Electric Power Company E monthly bills at one tim v d of scattering them over three different period went on record as favoring red d street-car fares for school children. and gave the cor ittee au- SPECIAL NOTICES. HERRMANN NUFACTURING and diamond established “27 | now At 811 E . 20d floor. We d_weddiog_rings. 20% | BOOKS AT A NOM- hag consideral a | 1 n CHAS | Seweler . Marlow modernize old Jewelry WILL KEEP YOUR nal cost per week: i erience 1n bovkkeep! FRUIT TR:ES, ANl kinds shrubbere trimmed 4 with real wanure. Variezat T. A. Herrell & Son, Gardeners, Linc. 9640, TOATMEAL “vines, [ e ALCINE ATT. 1147 Connacticut ave NOT MARE YOU water heater antouintic? d. See demonstra WANTED T0 BRING A siture from New York. T terms if “de- | N Y MERLY FORM *s. lias exclu wilI rem: dnesdsy and Friday even: LETTERS A for a Paul J. erfved by but 8 stopped. Musical Dirde arrick, President Ti REPAIR WORK, BY E Simbert | 21e { alterations. Porches i i PERT. AND STO. D e o 'ants Matched to l £ CALLS, INTENDED are heing e and 1 wish it EPH SCHWALZ, PHON MADE TO MEASURE, OVER 4.000 SAMPLES, LINCOLN PANTS M. NG €O, . Col. 3798-3. _ 1484 Newton 85 N.W. RI'ECIAL RATES—HUFFALO TO WASHING ton. Ted Bull Transit Co. ) 2. SEND YOUR KIDDIES T0 THE CHILD ouse and kindereurfon 1702 Col. e ANSUAL HEPORT Washingion. 1. ¢ The undersigned. ieing 1 a1l of the hoard of froxtecs of Barker Co. 8 corporation of 1 Columbia, do_herebs certir 1 ock o said company s o twenty-five thousand dollars, folly “paid. and that said ineumbran cured by square 44 ¥ 19, the Geo, Dist At the capitnl ! Xpenses amd an - lars, se- of trist on lote S0 and 822 in ashington. D, ( FLORA R, WELCE WM. P TULLOCH, 3. SHULMAN District of Columbin, »s, Shulman. scoreiars . do make o and facts stated in the s port and certifieate of th Co.. a corporation, are irm Subweribed and sworn to day of January 3 (Seal.) President. thut tie Geo. M. the matters g omnal re. M. Rarker | KERFOOT, Notars Puil’ RODUCTS COR REPORT OF THE RADIT poration for the Distr year ending 1 Fapital stor ared thousnid Fhirty eight o ot Iars and five o 6 05) Lias heen paid in. ane that autstanding debix represanted br Difls payable are four thoncand fee undeed dollars 1#4.500 GEORGE 8. SILSRE: Prexident: .. ( STALLINGS, Trustea: £ HORNEL. Truster DISTRICT OF COLUMP lngs. Treasurer of the am Products ( poration of the District f (olumbia, being duly sworn. deposes nud says that the above | tement i% true 1o the best of his kio and_belier 1 is one iun M. of whicl Gundred six dollars sand A, s Lo C. Stal STALLIN Treasurer. v before me this 19th | dresses. THE MEMBERS | FIRE 1% DISTRICT on_of nine 19) the enwui At the office of the compa: stroet northwest, on MONBAY, J i 4. Polls open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The following is_a report of the operations of Amount of prem $60,253.85; cash on hand. $2.9 Wasiin, i { | 1 | { | 22 invested | ity real es- paid_during the 4 to_policy hold- WILLIAM A. Tosnes ! 2 divide | ng the year, ON. Secretary | T INERY i SMART MILLINERY SHOP. | Splendid location. Plentr room for kindred | lies. Gig opportunits for one with $4.500 | easli. Owner will remain two weeks to intro- duce her customers to purchaser. Address Box | 223-A. Star office REED FURNITURE, Repaired, painted. uphoistered, chair can- ing. The 'Wickercraft, 1402 8 st. n.w. Ph. Potomac 1524, 200 sale of thre | Tais growing apathy on a half mil- iment is essential to its preservation { unanimous !tional judge ‘jumped from land Hemry E. jmeeting of attorneys would be bene- 8. itended to those with whom the indi- Hits U.S.Ship With | ‘Dummy’ Torpedo| By the Associated Press. CHERBOURG, France, January 19.—A high-speed dummy torpedo from the French submarine Am- phitrite struck the bow of the Colorado several days ago, it was revealed today The Colorado, which is on a cruise of European waters, salled for Villefranche today after fare- well visits by the authorities and by the commandant of the French submarine. The submarine commander call- ed personally to repeat his ex- cuses. He offered to send divers to exanine the Colorado's plates, but the Amerlcan captain assured him no harm had been done. Y e thority to take steps to affect the ce tokens for 20 cents on the street cars. The federation also adopted the re- Port of its public celebration commit- tee gidorsing the proposed armory memorial for service mem to be financed on_ the 60-40 plan: admitted the Manor Park Citizens' Assoclation to membership and i 2 o 5 P and indorsed Thrift Willlam Henr. White, chairman of the law and leg ation committee, In urging the adoption of the report in- dorsing national representation char- acterized as. despotic the District's Present form of government. He also read excerpts from a story appearing In a current issue of a national week- Iy ridiculing the District’'s present Voteless condition Calis Condition Dospotic., “IL is despotism.” sajd Mr. “There is no kinder "word for it. Wherever people have no voice in making, executing and interpreting their laws. there is despotism. Wher- ever the government is not respon- sible to the government there is despotism. “Indeed, one may well imagine an enlightened despotism doing more hram than a cruel one, for the peo- ple may be quick to throw off the latter while the former lulls them to a fancied security, takes away their nitis in public affairs and_in- uuces a helpless apathy more diffi- cult to overcome than t ranny by a people trained to self- Eevernment. White. lion people the most Lody pol is to my mind serious conditions e, It is one of in our & Soft of politicul sleeping sickness and anlike many such disease, is highly contagious. “If a knowledge of the whole peo- ple of the principle of self-govern- s it is, then certainly it is scarcely less important that the people be pro- ficiént in its operation, and how can we be proficient in that whichéwe may not practice. Rexolution *Too. Timid." “The only objection 1 have to the resolution s its timidity. It should demand for more—self government in local affairs as well as representation in national aff Shortly after the report recom- mending the indorsement of national representation was presented Dele- gate Clayton introduced the amend- ment designed to kill it. A protracted discussion followed. wuxing warm sporadically. Clayton then offered to withdraw ~‘the amendment. but consent was not forth- coming, and the report, with the mendment went back to the com- mittee on the ballot to recommit. mong those who took a leading part : the discussion were Jesse C. Suter, Clayton Emig, J. G. Yaden, William B. Wes and ‘Mr. Clayton Opposcd With Amendme the outset of the meeting the n_went on record as opposed proposed 2-cent gasoline tax automobile reciprocity bill with the amendment to continue the personal Property tax on machines. Tne ed pay for policemen and firemen and a day off a week for the former was indorsed upon recom- mendation of the fire and police com- mittee. The federation also approved the establishment of magistrate ccurts and the appointment of two Iditional police court judges Police Court Judge Gus Schuldt told the federation of the need for addi- . pointing out that the by the Police Court 28,000 to 56,000 in ten B . | At cdera to th cases handled Years. Other actions of the federation in- cluded the commendation of Presi- lent Coolidge for personally placing a wreath on the statue of Andrew | Jackson, and the adoption of a letter of regret over the loss of Edward F. Colladay as a delegate to the federa- tion. VETERAN LAWYERS | v THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. LET HIRAM DO TALKING, COOLIDGE BACKERS’ PLAN (Continued_front First Page.) “something- in the air’ in New York which will contribute to the aim of the dead-lockers. * % % % ew York is taking to the con- vention with ardor and enthusiasm and making eaborate plans tow ‘show the delegates the time of their life.” The city expects to raise $500.000 for the ‘“proper” entertainment of the delegates and alternates and the thousands visitors expected o be in New York during convention week. It is expected that the double lure of “gay New York® and a national convention will bring scores of thousands of visitors to the cit The hotels are planning to take care of the crowds and wishdut profiteering. The placing of reserva- tions will be handled by the hotel men’s association, which controls about 40.000 rodms, aside from the her caravan- not in the accommodations of saries and apartment association 5 ok x The democratic national commit- tee, out of the $205,000 check hand- ed in by New York for the priv lege of entertaining the conven- tion, has already paid off the “dead horse” deficit of 1920 and feels on easy street, with a balance of more than $20.000 as a “bank roll” to start the campaign. The gentlemanly haf-passers will now go around among the faithful and “shake ‘em down” for the big war fund, which will be needed. * xTx % Upham, the treasure of the republio&n national conmmit- mittee, when he wat in town a few days ago, said that “collec- tions are good” with the republi cans, and that he expects to ob- tain all money needful for the proper expenses of the presiden- tial campaign. In presidential vears, the national committee has 1o “whack up”, to a certain extent, with _the congressional campaign comufittee, and often is called upon by state committees when Fred W SPEAK ON ETHICS i Justice Stafford and Attomeyi Henry E. Davis Address * Barristers Here. Wendell Phillips Stafford Davis, respectively, the senior justice of the District Supreme Court and the senior active practie- tioner of law in the District, address- ed the barristers at the duncheon meeting of the organization yester- day at the Cosmos Club. lthies formed the basis of both ad- Justice Stafford said that a Justice ficial to the individual because of the broadening influence it would have upon him and spoke of the in- fluence thus engendered being ex- viduals came into contact. Mr. Davis gave a resume of the history of law in the District and in the natlon, citing instances to back his contentions. He declared that the District bar was recognized the best in the country, and quoted the late J. J. Darlington's idea as typical of the one entertained generally in the profession — that -Washington pre- sented opportunity to follow law be- cause of its §itugtion as the National Capital and becfuse of the numerous facilities offered sattorneys here. —_—— Flowers for All Oceasions. Consult Gude, flower headquarters, WEST END ELEC. SHOP Tor the WETTRIL ridto aecessories, elec- tric fixtures and applin Get our estimates on Sxtures: house wiring and Edison Mazda Open until 9 p. WANTED _A VANLOA B FROM NEW YORK CITY. FROM WORCESTER FROM BOSTON .......0. FROM PITTSBURGH W FROM ALTOONA o= FEB. 2 WEEKLY SERVICE FOR SMALL LOTS TO AND FROM BOSTON AND INTI POINTS. THB BIG 4 TRANSFER COMPANY, Iy 1125 14th ST. N.W. MAIN 2159, Leave the Roof to Us —We'll make it as good as nmew for tle. IRON Roofing Ww. ) Company. Phone Maia 4. EXPERT WATCH AND JEWELRY . REPAIRING E_GOOD SERVICE 15 YEARS 0] LORENZ JEWELRY CO. __508 9th ST. N.W. _ MAIN 8637 YOU'LL APPRECIATE —the ‘promptness with which we do Auto Repairing. Prices ‘extra reasonable. R. McReynolds & Son ecialists in Paioting, Slip €overs and Tops, S L Y P O Maln 72280 1121 5th 1212 F.—Advertisement. LAWYERS PAY TRIBUTE . TO MARYLAND JUDGES Retiring Justices of Seventh Cir- cuit Honor Guests at Ban- quet in City Club. About eighty members of the bat of southern Maryland paid tribute to the retiring judges of the seventh judicial circuit, “composed of St Marys, Charles, Calvert and Prince Georges counties, at the City Club, where an elaborate banquet was given in their " Boch of the retir Each of the retiring judges, Chier Justice John P. Briscoe and Assoeies Justice B. Harris Camalier and Fille more Beall was presented with a sil. ver bread tray upon which was in- scribed: “A token of affection from the members of the bar of southern Maryland.” . James C. Rogers of Hyattsvilie was toastmaster, ‘Among the prominent guests were the newly elected judges, Chief Jus. tice W. Mitchell Diggs of Charles county ‘and Associate Justices W. M Locker and Joseph C. Mattingly of St. Maryas and Prince Georges coun. ties, respectively. Addresses were made by Gen. L. Allison Wilmer of Leonardtown, who responded for St, Marys county; Ferdinand C. Cooksey of La Plata, for the Charles county bar: John B. Gray of Prince Fred- erick, for Calvert county, and by for. mer Judge T. Van Clagett of Upper Marlbero for Prince Georges county. the latter “go broke.” * %k % % Républican politicians are look- ing forward with interest to Sen- ator Hiram W. Johrson's foray into Massachusetts to seek dele- gates in the President's own state. The Coolidge managers have “peaten him to it” in the game of rustling delegates in the other man's territory by setting up elaborate campaign machinery in California. : The latest development in the fight in favor of ‘the tax reduc- tion bill is the creation of a “cti- zens' national committee” which is to, be nation-wide in scope. wWith a personnel of distinguished men and women. It is non-partisan, and its personnel will work di- rectly on Congress, exhorting sen- ators and representatives to drop politics in consideration +of the bill and give them tax reduction. Maj. Gen. John F. O'Ryan of New York heads the committee. An important feature of the commit- tee's plans is an intensive cam- paign of publicity among the vot- ers to educate them on the subject 8o that they tan start a backfire on their senators and representa- tives in Congress. ‘It is the understanding'in of- ficlal and congressional circles that President Coolidge is not going to insist upon the adoption of the Mellon tax reduction plan absolutely in all its probesed pro- vistons, but “will listen to the voice of reason” in the matter of suggested amendments. The democratic national committee, which is supporting the Garner plan, denies the claim of the re- publicans that lower surtaxes will release money for investment'in industrial enterprises. That claim is regarded as one of the mainstays of the argument for the Mellon plan. The repub- licans and démocrats in Congress are now Ih a controversy over whether “it will” and “it won't,” while the public is getting im- patient and clamoring for action, GRAPE JUICE SELLER FREED. CHICAGO, January 19.—Russel 'Scott, also known as Russell Sher- man, who was arrested here in con- nectfon with actlvities as a seller of grapejuice, in which one kind of grapejuice was supposed to have been substitutéd for another, was dis- charged today when no complainants appeared im court. LA Miss Marie L Della-Selva has been appointed custodian of the Wederal building in New Haven, Conn. Bill Asks $50,000 For House b Confidence that Congress will au- | | thorize purchase for $50.000 of the | largest privately owned collection of | | Lincoin relics from Capt. Osborn H Oldroyd, is expressed by Repre- sentative Henry R. Rathbone of Il- Hlinols, whose parents were intimate ltriends of the martyred President and Mrs. Lincoln, and who yester- day ‘introduced a bill for such pur- lchase by the government The house opposite Ford's Theater, in which President Lincoln died, and which is now the property of the United S es government. purchased some years ago for $30,000, now ouses “the Oldroyd collection. n discussing his bill Representa- tive Rathbone calls attention that in the Oldroy collection, which num- bers some 3,000 pieces, are a number | which link ‘the career of the great Illinoisan to the modest house : law office at Springfield, which occupied before he began momentous trip to Washington. T collector himself, now in his ght. second yvear, was the proprietor of book store and newsstand in field from 1X83 to 1893, after which he came to Washington to devote the remainder of his life to the collection of Lincoln mementoes. The Oldroyd house was known as the Peterson boarding house, and was.a resort of actors Booth himself had beken a frequent visitor there and had acted many times in Ford's Theater. In the collcction are such intimate objects a¥ the cook stove which stood in the Lincoln kitchen in Springfield, a half dozen chalrs from the home there, including the great emanci- pator's favorite rocking chair; an old pigeon-hole desk which he used when, he first begian housekeeping, a wheel from the Lincoln famiiy car- riage, and a l6ng wooden settee from Lincoln front porch, ecspecially tructed for the owner that he might dispose his six feet 'four inches of height on it without inconvenience, it he so desired. Furniture He Sold. Then there are three pieces of fur- niture which Lincoln sold to three Rockwell sisters when he closed his house to come to Washington, in- cluding a walnut stand and a long, old-fashioned haircloth sofa. The large and well worn office chair, which was Abraham Lincoln's fa vorite in his Springfield office and in which he sat to write his fiest inau- gural address is aiso in the Oldrovd collection, presented to the present owner by Willlam H. Herndon, Lin- coln's one-time law partner. ~ The walnut cradle in which the Lincoln children were rocked to sleep has a special place in the cramped little room. The wide range of the Oldroyd col- lection is seen in the presence of a set of soldering tools, even to the stove, used in opening and closing {the leaden casing surrounding Lin- coln's coffin at Springfield, when Gov. Fifer directed an _investigation to set at rest rumors that the body had been stolen. 7 Capt. Oldroyd las in ‘his collection every biography ever written on Lincoln, but comparatively few books { which belonged to Illnols’ greatest citizen. He recalls that though the former Springfleld lawyer became one of the best read men in_world ANY BOOK Supplied Book Pearlman’s %o 933 G Only Free Lectures Free Lectures All Who Are Suffering —from any acute or chronic ailment from which they have been unable to obtain relief will find it to their advantage .to attend one of the free lec- tures of Joe Shelby Riley America’s Foremost Drugiess Physician Au!tl;lormo' Can:fnel;:n. Unil:s or the Mastery isease, the Science and Practice of Chiro- practic and Allied Sciences, President of the Riley School of Chiropractic with Alfied Sciences. Now Located at the Riley Building, 1232 14th St. N.W. Free Lectures '1:30 P.M. Week Days at Above Address 8 PM. Sunday, Wednesday and i formerly RATHBONE CONFIDENT CONGRESS|TWO GALLONS PURE RYE WILL BUY OLDROYD COLLECTION| Martyred President Gathered in | william ¢ ) their books rather than buy C. Fernald Says Botanic Gar- | w ate |serv, |first pub! tion buil > Lwill Ay {ve gt by skl Al diaitiind | Gal | temporarily Nati has | { bailding ncar the the con by it squ; tan to SEIZED IN POLICE RAID| | Home Visited in South Washington Also Yields Twenty-Four Gal- lons of Corn Liquor. South Washington yesterday yield- ed up two full gallons of pure, bot- {tled in bond, genuine ryve whisky, | according to police of the fourth history, he owned comparatively few |precinct. who raided the home of books of his own. | George Jason, 1246 Carroliburg street Lincoln’s three law partners, | In addition to the two gallons of real | Herndon. John T. Stewart | Whisk and Stephen T. Logan, were all men | says Capt. | of more wealth than he' 34 Oldroyd. “They possessed an exten. | Sarah Jason was also arrested. as| sive iibrary and advised him to use | Was William Jackson, a thirteen- | his own. | year-old boy. who was charged with His writings are evidence of the ex- | Selling and illegal possession. Marked tent to which he availed himself of |money used in a sale is alleged to Shels: affer ve beew found on his person, Jason | Henry Ford ade an offer for the as charged with illegal possession Oldroyd collection a year ago, but the |and Sarah with both selling and owner refused it when he learned |illegal pussession that the automdbile manufacturer | Cabt. Ira Sheets, proposed to transport it to Detroit. | Holmes and Private. & His agreement to sell his c u«-u.;:j:fif Exactict Detettive Tall to the government instead is due to , ” his advanced age and his need of an outBwest, eatller in the atternonn. assured income during the remaining | €XPerienced a cleaning up b vears of his life. This would be pro- ' of the allevs and streets east o vided by the $50.000 which Represent- | S{Fect. when ten arrests on i | tive Rathbone's bill provides. o e e al TiHudisana here regaid ithe Inteo- | was packed ‘for a time during the duction of the bill to purchase the \;l::f,:‘_",,’:‘h;fi“;,.»l';,"}!.-!r:‘ A Jldrovd collection by Representative | RyoroGR5 I, gt0R TEHasEd Gu Dond: Rathbone as particularly appropriate, | 5,7 Gg.q as his father and mother were en- gaged to be married and were in the s H box with President Lincoln at Ford's | The Canadian government has en- ! Theater on the night the great leader |Eaged women as customs officers at was shot by John Wilkes Booth. [border points. to prevent eumgching The =enior Rathbone, then a mn;nr“" American_goods. in the army, was stabbed and severe- = 1y wounded bv Booth whe: he en- deavored to seize the assassin. Rep- rescntative Rathbone's mother. then Miss Harris. the daughter of United States Senator Ira Harris of New York. was an intimate friend of Mrs. Lincoln. She spent the entire night in an adjoining room watching over Mrs. Lincoln until the death of the President the next morning. If the collection is finally pur- ¢ed by the govermment and the louse which holds it is rehabilitat- ed, it is likely that the United States government will requeet that the Il- linois Historical Society return the bed in which Lincoln died, that it may again be placed in the room it | ocoupled on that fateful night and | the entire setting restored. mit; Purchas;z of Relics of il th put | mo: Here. | e to corn liguor were Lieut. William Ogle and Varney, took §! h a The Rare Book Shop 723 Seventeenth St. Maia 1201 Highest Prices Paid —for entire Libraries or ingle Volumes, Prints, En- gravings and Autograph Let- ters. Representative will call. CASH PAID and purchases removed promptly. % Z = ANTHRACITE COAL — COKE — BITUMINOUS P-E-A Buy These COKE FUELS-— BRIQUETS THeating Bills BITUMINOUS 2= Also Prompt Delivery on the Best Grades of Run-of-Mine and Prepared Anthracite Marlow Coal Co. 811 E Street N.W. Main 311 65 Years of Faithful, Efficient Service COAL % CoAL T T R ANTHRACITE COAL — COKE — BITUMINOUS % 77, BARGAINS . - $500 CASH Open and- Lighted Until 8 O'Clock P.M. § \ W \ 7 Z % 7 (Just North Md. Ave. N.E.) 218 11th St. N.E. (Just North Lincoin Park) Arranged for Two Families If Desired 123 and 125 4th St. N.E (Just East U. S. Capitol) Inspect Today Friday at 1467 Rhode Isiand Ave. NW. Free Consultation Free Demonstration H.R.HOWENSTEIN INCORPORATED 1311 H STREET NORTHWEST |Botanic garden and for a new con- | !beautify the National Capital and to |provide for adequate housing of the government's Fernald of Maine, mitte bill to carry out the recommenda- next ten years to carry o |After we have obtained the authori- !zation for such a program. then we Senator Ferna | in favor of the pronosal to erect In the Mall a building for the National - i Capitol, and turn growmg houses, havi »unds The old conserva many plants of gre weep of the cite of the garden will be retained as part of the garden, but the bulld- ings will be on the jand it is now proposed, to acquire. & g The bills wuthorize . the . expendi- ture of §805,000 for the construction cf the new conservatory and growing houses and $200,000 for acquiring tha land’ destined to become .parf of the garden. TR ROADS TO CUT RATES. DENVER, January 19 (Specigl) The Union Pacific. Rock Island, Bur- lington, Santa Fe and Missouri Pa- cific railroads shortly wHl announce substantial reductions of Colorado | freight rates on manufactured com- | modities. according to H.'M: Adams. vice president in charge of trafic of the first-named road. The reductions will not extend to live stock or agri- cultural products den and Gallery Bills First Move. ’assage of two bills by the Sen- last week providing for & greater atory for the garden is only the | step in the movement to further | Announcement MAIL AVE 5 PERSON Ix Has returned to Wash, Weshington and Wiskes to Friends and Patrons That Le bas taken full management former businass at 706 13th STREET N.W. Specializing in HAIR COLORING Permanent Hair Waving HAIR GooOps Phone Franklin 5384 activities,” chairman lc buildings and said yesterday. Senator of the | grounds com- We' will begin work very soon on ki of the President for the expendi- 000,000 annually for the! a federal | ding program in Washington. | buildings are to t. decide which constructed fi | pressed himself | which is now housed | and inadequately in the | History building. Congress | provided a site for the other buildings of ! which lery of Art. ural e OU'R modern hullding, equipment, and cxperienced MEN annure Jou really antistactory erv. e Smithsonian Institution, trols the National Galiery Site Purchase Proposed. nder the terms of the bills passed the Senate and sent to the House is proposed to purchase two ares to th sputheast Af the close a part of Canal strect this area over to the Bo- rden. It is proposed also a new conservatory and for which designs | e alteady been prepared and sub. ted to the public buildings and | committee and polishing day and night. alled for and delivered onywhere at any time. EXPERIENCED mechanics and moderh cquipment for fe- pairing. rebuilding and lu- brication. FILLING wtation timen. Free xervice, TIRE and tube repairing. STORAGE and special marage wervice to meet your indi- vidual requirements, ROAIL wervice upon call NEVER closed. Always available. Sheridan Garage, Inc. 2516 Q Street N.W. .. (@ Btreet Bridge) Telephone West 24 CARS ilable at all rank case e 3 erect ry, which houses| at age and great | i in such a state of disrepair would require rebuilding to| in shape, It is said. Further- | it is wrongly located at pres with referencp to the Grant morial and térrupts the free arkway from the Capitol the Washington Monument and | Lincoln Memorial. The present | at any ue. t it it Te. Massachusetts Park An exclusively residential section of detached homes. 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 Ave., Massachusetts Ave. and Woodley Road (Cathedral Ave:) Over five million feet of land sold. Over 150 homes from $15,000 to $200,000 built and under con- struction. Actual improvements and home values exceed 5,450,000. Wooded villa sites. lots and central and side hall omes, with lots from 50 to 115 feet front—Park Office, 32d nd Cathedral Ave. (Woodley Road). MIDDAUGH & SHANNON, INC. Wogtmerd Sl Johand H S ANSELL, BISHOP & TURNER, Inc. Washington’s Leading VICTROLA H-O-U-S-E The Most Sensational Event of Our History! GREATEST SAL OF STRICTLY NEW, and High- Grade Used Instruments Ever Held in Washington Notice Both Consgle and Upright Models in this SALE! SAVE FROM * On Your Puarchase 15 to THINK OF IT! And you are not limited in vour selection, for*we have on hand BRAND NEW EDISONS, COLUMBIAS and BRUNSWICKS that we are sacrificing in this sale along with the HIGH- GRADE USED INSTRUMENTS. Practically any make on the market. E LOWEST 'SPECIAL NOTICE TERMS . DUCTIONS that e il mou IN THE be able to make exchanges or CITY accept any instruments in trade ZEVERY SALE MUST BE Open Evenings Until 10 O’Clock FINAL!

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