Evening Star Newspaper, March 12, 1924, Page 3

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The True Story of "Woodrow Wilson By DAVID LAWRENCE. . CHAPTER XVII How Woodrow Wilkon Picked Hin Cabinet—o: Member He Never| Met Till Inauguration Day. selection of William Gibbs JeAdoo to be Secretary of the Treas- ury was due in no small measure to the splendid capacity which Mr. Me- Adoo had shown in the 1912 cam- paign. As vice chairman of the demoeratic national committee he was opposed by W. F. McCombs, who ©n account of ill health did many ir- responsible things, the course of the campaign being often threatened by internal friction. Mr. McAdoo was a plomat throughout, and twice offer- ed to efface himself if it would a: ist Mr. Wilson's political fortunes. Oddly enough, Mr. McAdoo did not see Mr. Wilson for many weeks after the election of 1912, These circum- ances gave rise to rumors that there had been a break, something, course, which the McCombs fac- tion was eagerly trying to bring about. Mr. McAdoo was one of the :w men in the New York financial district who had pronounced Wood- row Wilson safe and sane and had thrown his influence to the candidacy of Mr. Wilson in preconvention days. Mr. McAdoo had won attention the builder of the Hudson tunnels His readiness to cast his lot with “iov, Wilson was no small influence ! those days, when the New Jersey candidate needed all the friends he could get from the conservative arcus of the Empire state. Why Daniels Was Chowen. Josephus Daniels owed his appoint- ment as Secretary of the Navy to Wilson and Joseph R. Wilson, ther of the President-elect. The lutter had worked in democratic head- sarters with Mr. Daniels and became npressed with his executive ability znd judgment: There were, of course, many from North Carolina urging that Mr. Daniels, who had been na ) tional committeeman from that state for many. years, should be appointed in recognition of his services, but the deciding influence was entirely in the Wilson family. Later, when William Jennings Bryan learned that his old friend and supporter was to| ho in the cabinet, he was deeply zratified, and the Bryan faith in Wil- son promptly increased. Selecting William B. Wilson to. be Secretary of labor was largely the outgrowth of a desire to make good the promises given in the campaign 1o be friendly to labor. Congreds had just created the portfolio of Secretary of Labor, and the President- eloct felt that the recommendations the American Federation of Labor should be given serious weight. He was happy over the selection of Wil- Jiam B. Wilson, and always counted it as one of his best strokes. Secre- tary Wilson was a splendid colleague, #n honest, fair-minded, devoted | sriend. loyai to the ntih degree, sym pathetic, to be sure, with iabor’ . viewpoint., but by no means radical | in his views. He was often influ-/| ential in converting the labor leaders 10 & more conservative policy, for he | had their trust and confidence. Albert Sidney Burleson was a polit-| ical choice. The influence of Col. | ifouse in this appointment was evi- | dent. - Mr. Burleson, like Mr. Houston, | hailed from Texas, where Col. House knew them intimately. An Old-Faskioned Politictan. Postmaster General Burleson was a'} in Nirs., | | fcations were presented to Mr. Wil- | partmentalized as was that of Wood- | | question. i alleged {last minute to eliminate the name of of the members of Col. House's fam- ily and visited in Texas. His quali- son by Col. House. He was accepted | cn paper. so to speak, and was one | of the first to be decided on for the | cabinet. 1 An Outspoken Critic. | In later vears a coolness developed | between Woodrow Wilson and Frank- lin Lane. Mr. Wilson once said the! Secretary of the Interior was too! “vislonary” and, while he was the! sporsor of many good ideas, they did | not always seem possible of execu-| tion. Mr, Lane was outspoken. He frequently criticized things the ad-| ministration did and volunteered his | opinions on many matters outside the | Interior Department, all of which| was bound sooner or later to create | friction in a cabinet as sharply de- row Wilson. Mr. Wilson's greatest trouble in making up his cabinet developed in filling the portfolio of Attorney Gen- cral. Throughout the campaign he had made considerable use of the ar- guments of Louis D. Brandeis on government regulation of big busi- ness. Again and again the corre-| spondents accompanying Gov. \\'nr? son would hear from his lips words | of praise for the magnificent ar-| ticles written by Brandeis. some of ! which were paraphrased in the speeches of Mr. Wilson on the trust | His heart's desire was to] ppoint Mr. Brandeis Attorney Gen- ral, but he was afraid to do so be-| ause of the reputation Mr. Brandeis | ad as a radical. ] When he was. taken to task later| by a friend for not appointing Mr.| Brandels the President said: “In_the position of Attorney Gen- eral 1 simply could not appoint a radical—that i<, 1 could not appoint a known radical. The people must| have confidemce in the Department of Justice—they must Lave confi- dence in the Attorney Gemeral. He cannot be a person of the crusader type in public life. I have tremen- dous admiration for Mr. Brandeis and 1 know of his great mental capacity, but he just doesn’t fit in that particular place because he is| known all over the country as a crusader and it would shock the sen- ibilities of the public to appoint him | te that particular position i Wanted Brandeis in | Mr. Wilson's unwillingness to ap- point Mr. Brandeis as Attorney Gen-| eral led him to consider tentatively ! appointing Mr. Brandeis as Secretary of Commerce. He really wanted him at the cabinet table. Just about the time e was inclined to make the ap- pointment the Boston critics of Mr. Brandeis, who had fought many a| fight in New England against the railroads. and the conservative in- terests in both the democratic and republican parties came to the Presi dent-elect and told him he would lose | the support of the democratic or- ganization in Massachusetts if he nominated Mr. Brandeis to his, cab- inet. Mr. Wilson did not believe comments made about Mr. Brandeis' inconsistencies as a lawyer and sent Dudley Field ‘Malone, who was at that time a close friend of | Mr. Wilson, to New England as a sort of investigator. * While the re port of Mr. Malone was not u friendly to Mr. Brandels, the con- troversial aspect of the case was such as to cause Mr. Wilson at the ! | i inet. i i i Mr. Brandeis and choose another Sec- retary of Commerce, namely, William | €. Redfield of New York. In later| rs Mr. Wilson regretted his omis- | sicn of Mr. Brandeis from the cab- { Mr., | cases. | Nichols Shop Is Victim of Sys-| j apparel THE EVENING STAR, WA THE MINUTE THAT SEEMS A YEAR. SHINGTON | WHILE THE PAYING TELLER'S COLD CALCULATING STARE WANDERS. BACK. AND FORTH BETWEEN YOU AND YOUR.. CHECK , AND YoU BEGIN TO WONDER. WHETHER. YOU HAVE OVERDRAWN OR. WHETHER. YOU JUST LOOK CROOKED ©McClure Newspaper Syndicate tant attorney States, and when the rendered its opinion baeco comt was @ “good trust McReynolds issued a statement tearing hole in the decision. Wood- row Wilson, studying the trust ques- tion, read the McReynold's statement on the tobacco case and filed it in the back of his mind. The whole count find an Attorney neral who would | fit in with the Wilson specifications of what the head of the Department of Justice should be. But the choice inevitably turned to McReynolds, who | was already at‘work in the Depart- ment of Justice and was in a position | to carry forward the all-important New York. New Haven and Hartford | ailroad prosecution and the coal] Mr. McReynolds was a Ten- nessee democrat and qualified to take | up the work in the Department of | Justice. Mr. Wilson always held i James C. McReynolds in high esteem | as a lawyer and subsequently ap pointed him to the Supreme Court of the United States. (Copyright, 1924, by the George H. Doran Company in the United States. Canada. South America. World publication rights reserved by Current News Features, Incorporated.) general of the United Supreme Court saying the to. was scoured to (Tomorrow's chai In of wh: Mr. Wilson thought of his own eal act.) WOMEN’S GARB VAI.UED AT $900 TAKEN; SEEK TWO tematic Thefts, Inventory Discloses. i Police today had thrown out a dmg-f net for two well dressed colored men | wanted for systematically robbing the | Nichols Shop at 1223 Connecticut ave- | nue of almost $300 worth of women's | Detectives Cox and King were as-| MRS. SUSAN SINE TO MARK 100th! 'BIRTHDAY BY LISTENING TO RADIO| Marvels of Electricity, Telegraph, Telephone cmd’ Wireless All Evolved in Her Life—Eats Meat, Hears and Sees Well. Grow old along with me, The best is yet to be, The last of life, for which the i first | was made; Our times are in His hand, | Who saith “A whole I planned- | See all, nor be afraid.” ears old today Susan Sine of 725 Massachusetts nue northeast, tonight expects 1o} listen 1n on a radio for the first time. When she was born in Penns: vania, March 12, 1 . even the tele-! graph had never been heard of, :.mrl:‘ Benjamin Franklin's experimets with | One hurdred | the key and the kite and the lightning | were only of yesterday. It has taken just a century for Mrs. | Sine to pass the milestones of the | telegraph and the telephone and come to that latest of wonders the! radio. Lomg Ardent Saffragint, Two of her young cousins, Orus| Rader and Merlin Rader of Wood- | ridge, plan to sarprise her by bring- | ing their radio set to her home and| letting her “listen-in" as the loud speaker Lrings to her cars voices and | music from hundreds ard thousands | of miles away. | Keen and alert, the little white- | haired lady may not be so astounded, after all. for she has beeh_an ardeni | suffragist all her life an¥ believes! that her lifelopg habit of doing much | { ' | what was then a city of the far west There were tweive children, but all the rest are dead these many years, although one reached the age of eighty-two years andl another eighty- four years i i She was married to Xenophon Sine He died in 1886 In 1890 Mrs to Washington with hier daughter, Mrs. Mary L. Ross, who was employed in the Treasury De- partment. She built the house then in which today she celebrates her centennial Has Good Memery. When she was eighty ars old Mrs. Sine resolved not to lose her memory and set about resolutely to combat such a prdcess. She learned poems, many of them long ones— poems she can repeat to you today She seems in excelient heaith, with the exception of a curious affliction which she suffered about fourteen ago. Placing a hot-water bottle on hér shoulder to combat & fleeting pain, she burned not only the skin, which later healed, but also a nerve end, according to physicians. This pains her to thig duy. Mrs. Sine, although a suffragist and fricnd of the late Susan B. An- thony, is mot a militant one, she states. She has been a believer in woman's rights since she was seven years old. when she heard of a woman having to sell her home to came ears, .- D. G, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 19%4. —By GLUYAS WILLIAMS. |U, S, EMPLOYS 65,026 HERE, REPORT SHOWS Figures for December 31, 1923, Are Reduction of 52,735 Since Armistice. : | There were 65,025 employes in the federal civil service in the District of Columbla December 31, 1923, ac- cording to figures made public today by the Civil Service Commission, this being a reduction of 5 since the armistice. Civilian employes throughout the country number 544,671, as contrast- ed with the 917,760 on the rolls No- vember 11, 1918, The figures show that the number SIR PHILIP GIBBS R romance of the Ci o{TcmPhtion! --= Constantinople. | REX BEACH---His new mystery novel emchx on a Wall Street operator’s | | ! workers went on strike morning. bor are at a standstill. country estate. W. SOMERSET | MAUGHRM----The WomanWhoWould Not Take a Hint. osmopolitan . Roril On Sale S Real Values Predominate In Our New Subdivision = Columbia Park On 14th St. Car Line $7,950 Is the unusually low price asked for a distinctive English Type Home in the Northwest Secti’on. Deep lots. = == = m of federal employes, both in the Dis- trict and the country at large, is still much in excess of the. pre-war number. On Jnne 30, 1916, there were in the District 39,442 employes and 438,057 in the entire United States. Of the 65,025 civilian workers in the District, 38,253 are men and 2 772 women, according to the statis- tics. Outside the District the male employes number 426,233 and the ‘women 53,413, ‘The postal service includes 294,- 226 persona DOCK WORKERS STRIKE. HAMBURG, March 12.—The dock Yesterday All operations in the har- S Men who want praise don't deserve | it; men who deserve praise don't want it, and often go not get i WHEN YOU THINK S Estimates made on request. HARRY W. TAYLOR'CO. PAPERHANGING AND PAINTING 2333 18th Bt. FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 | LEETH BROTHERS Servies Charge Never Over 8180 Attractive New Stores Located Cor. 12th & Eye Sts. N.W. Open for Inspection Moderate Rentals Boss & Phelps 1417 K St. N.W. Phome Main 9300 ELLANS 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhers e 2y FOR RENT First Floor Office Near 15th and Eye Sts. N.W. Large office space, suitably arranged for Real Estate Broker or Investment Banker. Contains about 1,700 sq. feet. Now occupied by large Real Estate Firm, which has purchased its own building. A very reasonable rental can be arranged for responsible parties. " Further details on application by letter. 2 Massachusetts Park 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 $5,450,000. \Vooded villa homes. with lots from 50 to 115 and Cathedral Ave. (Woodley Road). sites, . home values exceed lots, central and side hall feet front. Park Office, 32d 1lhustrated book, with and names of purchasers. mailed on request. Middaugh & Shannon, Inc. Established 1899 Riggs-Semmes Bldg., Dupont Circle, Potomac 2200 Member Washington R eal Estate Board. L2227 e e O inet and made amends by appointing him to the Supreme Court of the United States. While it was not generally known, Mr. Wilson fre- divide with her late husband's strong figure—an old-fashioned demo- children. crat of the partisan kind, who had + & convincing way about him, which ¢ {85 she pleases has contributed to her | Concrete alleys. Open until 9 p.m. | signed to the case, and a description of | {iy ST, Ple i the suspects has been furnished to each | She eats meat twice a day, too ! This habit, she says, in defiance of on more than one occasion caused Jir. Wilson to follow him in oppo- sition to other advisers. Mr. Burleson ad begn chairmén of the demoeratic ! caucus in the House, and frequently + as Postmaster General busied himself about the lobbies of the Senate and, liouse, winning support for Mr. “'il': +on on various administration meas- ures. His activity in this respect later years aroused resentment. There can be no question that he did ¢ many things which the President could never have done for himself— | especially in lining up the democrats | in Congress. His persuasive argu-: ments won over many a wavering vote. Franklin K. Lane, who became one | of the conspicuous members of the ! ‘ilson cabinet. never met his chief) urtit inauguration day. Various! tales are told of how Mr. Lane hap- | pened to be chosen, among them | a story that he wrote a letter | Mr. Wilson urging that Walter | Fisher, Secretary of the Interior in the Taft cabinet, be permitted 1o ! vortinue in that office, and that Mr. Wilson was so impressed with Mr. | lLane's grasp of the problems of the| Interior Department that he became | “onvinced the Californian snould be| appointed. Mr. Lane was a progres- | sive, a great admirer of Theodore! Roosevelt, who had appointed him to | the Interstate Commerce Commis sion, and one of the few democrats' who had an opportunity to win na- | tional fame in Washington. { Tt so happened. however, Lane was an intimate friend n that Mr. | of one | TO ALL & yersons having any claim or claims agalnst the Almas Automobile Club "o present me for payment to LOUIS O. CARL, 'y, 625 H st. n.w., on or before Aprii v ALL KINDS OF SHRUBBERY. evergre forished 4 planted. Tawns put in f 5 order It SON, garden- n, soil. F. A. HERRELL & 26 10th st. n.e. Line. 9840. i PLANS—COMPLETE SETS FOR houses at reasouable rates. Address 60-P. off - HOLD ESSTTY . WE You need it. Our perfected silver and sold by un for 35 years. Call Main 916, +ay silver polish. Your name and address. 1€ il be deliversd promptiy c. Price, '33c. Tull size far. . HARRIS & CO., cor. 7th and R - A HO T RONS AND GRANDSONS OF ilose men who fought to save the Unlon in ! Warren G. Harding Camp, Sons of Veterans, U. 8. A.. Is making & drive for new members. If you are eligidle ‘zet “in_touch with Puet Commander GCOR- BIECH, Room 15, District buliding, s once. CADILLAC LIMOUSINE BODY wld to cover accrued storage charges. Meek ou, 622 6 n.w. MR, LUCIE F. TUCKER, formerly represent. ing_Bartram Motors Co., has severed connec- tlons with above, and is mow with Stewart's tiarage, Ford dealers, of this city. She will e pleased to have her former ¢lients call There. WARFIELD'S INCOME TAX BUREAU, INC., Will remain onen again Until 10 o'clock p.m. Every night this week. And also on Sunday nest. To accommodate -arpayers unable To get eflicient service elsewhere. Call_second floor, 1423 ¥ st. n.w. |This Million Dollar . Printing Plant s ready to execate your i every printing requirement IThe National Capital Press 12101212 D 8t. N.W. ICEAKY ROOFS —Call us in and have nus repal NOW-—‘‘experienced roofers’ availsble. IRONCLAD © e 8.7 { H i 120 r them aiwaya Roofing 1221 5th N.W. 'Compnay, Phuse Maln 14, i quently consulted Justice Brandeis! during the war and in reconstruc- tion days. He was an inconspicuous but_influential adviser. What Mr. Wilson liked about Mr. Redfieild was his knowledge of the tariff question. Although Mr. Red- field as a member of Congress had | attacked Mr. Wilson's candidacy in! the days prior to the Baltimore con- | form is also being sought, following the More spell right, she : vention. Woodrow Wilson forgave ' that opposition and accepted the estimate which so many people gave him of the business ability of William | . Redfield. During the campaign, at | a_Girt. Mr. Wilson had occasion to | confer frequently with Mr. Redfield | and found bim so familiar with the ! tariff question that he came to r spect his judgment on business que: gions very highly. Paimer Versus McReynolds. Ancther intimate friend of Mr.| Wifson who felt that.he should be! Attorney General was A. Mitchell | Palmer of Pennsylvania, the floor| leader of the Wilson forces in the | Baltimore convention. Mr. Wilson ' did not think Mr. Palmer was as| brilliant a lawver as James C. Mo Reynolds, whom he had fixed upon as_his choice for Attorney General. Mr. McReynolds owed his appoint- ment not to any political influence but his achievements. Mr. McRey- nolds had appeared in the federal courts under Judge William Howard | Taft, and when the latter became | President, Attorney General Wicker- | sham was in need of a special attor- ney general to prosecute the tobacco cases, President Taft suggested that , Mr. McReynolds had made a very| good impression upon him in early | days. Mr. Mckeynolds became assis SPECIAL NOTICES. WILL BE A SPECIAL MEETING OF | 96, 0. P. C. F. 1. A., Thursday, March 13, at7:30 p.m; 507 E si. nw. By order of the president. CHAS. F. O'BRIE: Hus. Agent, Local No. 96. 13% WANTED TO BRING A VAN LOA : Biture from New York, Philadeipla Sad Wik miogton, Del., to Washington. = SMITH' TRANSFER AND STORAGE CO. Let Us Paint Your Automobile By the sk glses procems. We aa: money. ~ A complete’ paint job—f fo new in 3 to 6 days. Phone l’:;rcll:?nfll":l‘- mates cheerfully give LAS " AU PAINTING SYSTEM, 2018 12th M‘x' tomac 101 Adams’ Impress On Your Printing 18 A GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION HIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS, Esisizh 12 11th 84 Bt —A Fora wrong. 5'3‘-*»’:3&..‘1.”’:.51‘ cnas saves the dollars, ll.\). trouble permanently— KOONS Zoorixe e you time stonw, Call us up! ! COMPANY. lrl:n'.m 8t. B.W. Roofs From Maln 833, SNOW AND ICE s Tiable roofing experts of 35 yew but you ca: up the old Te’ experience. Main 760, Wash. Loan & Can Sratton & S0 Inco T 1 CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS. _NEW_THOUGHT. JULIA SETON, M. D, Speaker, Will give a healing service at Christ Service Center, 509 11th st. n.w., Thursday evening, 8 o'clock. Come and bring" a friend. previnet. Among twelve dresses taken were two | valued at $100 each. { Police believe that the robbery was | done in piecemeal fashion, since the loss | has stretched more than six weeks. The | loss was @iscovered while an inventory | was in progress A man dressed in an aviator's uni- report by George W. Baker, 2021 Dum- | barton avenue, of a robbery from his home. Clothing valued at $100 Jewelry at $15 comprised the loot. B INDIAN CHIEFS JAILED IN WAMPUM BELT THEFT| Alleged to Have Stolen Famous | Relic of Red Men Valued. | at $25,000. By the Assoclated Press. ! MONTREAL, March 12.—Two chiefs of the Mohawk tribe, Sose Kentara- | tiron, cighty-five, and American | Horse, seventy-five, who live on the Caughnawaga Indian reserve, were sentenced to two months' imprison- ment_yesterday after they had been adjudged guilty of stealing the fa- and | | | arish priest of Caughnawaga. b The chiefs borrowed the belt, valued at more than $25,000, from the priest last fall, telling him they wanted to have its mystic signs read. They did not return it. gy s e R RO T ORCHESTRA CONCERT. By the Army Band Concert Orchiestra at the Officers’ Club, Washington barracks. at 8:30 p.m. tonight. P. W, Lewls, commanding; W. J. Stannard, band leader. Program: March, “Borussia... Overture, “Orpheus in ....Teike Hades,” Offenbach "Comedy King Specialties— (a) Char: Tom" K (b) Fox trot, “Memory’s Gar den” . ....Denni (¢) Humorous, “Bull Blues,” Frog Brown and Shrigley By the Army Band Saxophone Octet. & Valse, “Wedding of the Winds, Hall Violin solo, “Scene de Balle De Beriot Performed by Sergt. Robert W. Muller, assistant leader of the U. S. Military Academy Band; Technical Sergt. Ken- neth Watts at the piano. Intermezzo, “Just a Gem,” & Tobani h, “Flag of Victory.” eita = Von Blon “The Star Spangled Banner.” By the United States Marine Band Orchestra at marine racks, $:15 tonight. William H. Santelmann, leader; Taylor teristic, ...Telke .Thomas Paraphrase, ~Old Folks_at Home" . Busch For string instruments. Excerpts from “Eileén,” Herbert Walts, “Spirit of Flowers,” Von Blon Suite No. 1, “Arlesienne,” Bizet (a) Prelude, allegro decisio. (b) Minuetto, allegro giocoso. (c) Adagietto, adaigo. (d) Carillon, allegretto mod- erato. “Slavonic Dance, No. Marines’ Hymn, “The Montezuma. “ The Star Spangled Banner. many of the more modern rules as to the eating habits of human kind, has brought her down through the decades with eyesight almost un- dimmed and ears which will take in the radio sounds clearly. Enats Two Meals Daily. Sine, whose name people no than they Mrs. did that of her husxband—h! name was Xenophon—now eats but two meals a day. Beefsteak und chicken are her favorite meats. For breakfast. on this, night she will repeat that order, with the cereal left out. This is her usual diet, not just put on for her anniver- ry How does it feel to be 100 years old asked a mere child, in compari- son with the full century span back over which Ms. Sine looks toda Why, it came on so gradually, day y ¥, that it feels no different to be 100 Years old than any other age, she replied. One of Twelve Children. Mrs. Sine was born in Fannett: burg, Franklin county, Pa, 100 years ago today. according to her only daughter,” Miss Mira Sine, who lives with her. Her ancestors came to America years before William Penn did. They were on their way to Cin- cinnati, but stopped at Fannettsburg { mous Iroguois wampum belt from the | for eight years, finally going on to PREVENTION inflaenza and otler respi y germs taking hold of the weaken- GRIPPE You know that grij ailments are first | | i INQUEST IN GIRL’S DEATH. | | No Violence Against Miss Long Found, Say Officers. | _An inques: tito the death of Mi 1Eva Long, government clerk, whose |body was taken trom the Potomac . | river Sunday evening. is being held | this afternoon at the District morgue. Witnesses included Detectives Kel her 100th {1y and Scrivener of police headquar- |= walk east. i birthday anniversary. she had a lit- | ters, who investigated the case. Before { tle cereal, steak. bread and fruit. To- i entering the room, where the inquest was being held, they stated unoffi {cially that their investigation had re. !vealed no foundation for reports of | violence or assault upon the gir! be- | fore death. 3} | MEXICAN LOAN PROGRESS 1] —_— | Negotiating for $28,000,000, With ] Success in View. i MEXICO CIT March 12.—The ne |gotiations between the Mexican gov- | ernment and the Wolvin Line for a large loan to Mexico, reported to have been broken off, are said by El Uni-{ versal to be still in progress. The: paper, quoting representatives of the ! Wolvin Line, announces that $28,-; 000,000, the loan money, has arrived | in Mexico City. . { | ed body, but do you realize how true is the old adage ““An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure”? . SCOTTS EMULSION OF PURE VITAMIN-RICH COD-LIVER OIL prevent nourish and strengthen the weakness by its ability to system and keep resistance normal. Do not let grippe-weakness overtake take Scott’s Emulsion and keep Scott & Browne, and vital! . Bloomfield, N. J. Desirable Corner Store o 14th and Monroe Streets In the New TOMPKINS BUILDING Containing 1,315 Square Feet OR WILL DIVIDE INTO TWO STORES For Further Particulars Apply Randall H. Hagner & Company 1207 Connecticut Avenue. Main 9700 Sample Home, 7th and Ingraham Sts. N.W. Take 14th st. car marked Takoma to 7th and Ken- nedy and walk south or 9th == st. car to Ingraham st., D. J. Dunigan 1319 N. Y. Ave. Main 1267 e e 1717 R Street N.-W. New Fireproof, Five-Story, Elevator Building 1 Room, Kitchenette and Bath $42.50 and $45.00 Convenient Location APPLY Resident Manager on Premises Safe Milk for Babies O UR specxal Nursery Milk is produced in co-opera- tion with the eminent surgeon, DOCTOR J. THOS. KELLEY. It is nearer to Mothers’ milk than ordinary and merits the Health Department Rating of 99.06. FOR your children—for your table—for your cooking —vyou can trust every drop of milk we serve you. Purity is the keystone of our institution. To seek this purity at the source of milk supply—to guard it through every step of the wcy-—t’u's s our service to you. Just Telephone—West 183—For Dependable Delivery Service £ 1 Q@IVICI VI CI BT CI BB COCOCOCOLOFDECDLDE

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