Evening Star Newspaper, September 6, 1924, Page 8

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1924. porotay pixs LETTER Box | |[), S, FISH SOURCES NEAR EXHAUSTION Hoover Warns Steps Must Be Taken if Next Generation Is to Have Sea Food. restore the sturgeon, salmon. shad.| NEW WAY TO KEEP FRUIT. lobster, crab, oyster and clam and | s other litteral fisheries on the Atlantic | From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. coast. As a result of a long series of 3. To secure the: prevention of | icientific «xneriments it las heen pollution from sgources other than |{Gund i to preserve frult of alliy kind ra onths thout ships, both in coastal and inland |&iofts fOT, "l monthe without | en it immediately becomes as frosh waters. w | Pincapples from the West Indies, |as it was before packing. “4. To undertake the reinforcement |grapes from South Af) . 4 g | Grapes are preserved by placing the of stocks of game fish throughout the | from - California, if S |bunches in tins, into which sulphuric United States.” |new method, will arrive acid gas is pumped. When all air : just as fr. when picked. excluded the gas tube is with- * fruit. too, ; n be preserved drawn and the “dn:'k‘afi" %rll‘ led up. a manner that when water is The sulphuric aci the germs it e e ant cotmns of on arrival, ‘the fruit regains 4 | whic ack the grape skins, and original flavor and siz fruit until required obtained through them. The preserving apparatus and cheap. The fruit Is washed and packed into tin cans. A light sugar sirup is then added, and all air is cx- luded. The tins are then hemeti- | cally sealed and stored in refrigera- tors. On arrival at the port of desti- nation the frozen fruit is thawed out, 8 ODOR IS HELD SUFFICIENT FOR RAID SANS WARRANT ALSACE SKITTISH e Vestibule. Special D'spateh to The Star. Regained Province Has own BALTIMORE, September 6—The \(iews of French Proposals e of Law Changes. Can “Good But Lonely” Get Husband Without | Traveling With Fast Crowd?—Should Wid- ower Remarry for Children’s Sake? Dried such pplicd 1 its in vestibule of an apartment or roon ing house Is a pub’ic place and ma: be entered by prohibition agents who have not gone through the formality of obtaining a search war- rant, Uni States Commissioner Supplee has ruled. gents, 1 believe, have*as muen AR DOROTHY DIX: I was reared very carefully, and T thought that all I had to do was to be modest, ladylike, jolly and friendly, and Mr. Right would be on the job. I am 25 now, and I have been a good little girl. Men have come into my life, but when there were no kisses and midnight parties they didn't inger, but would ssy, “Wake up, little .girl” I have watched efiy, InHE olntes 56 irresponsible, little 17-year-old kids go out and make a sensible man look {,'(f],};: "L.,u:,‘,t_,r ”m."",',t::,l.r"o‘,'.,.r“ = |and act foolish, so I have come to the conclusion that that is what men making, 1a | doorito-aoor. lcan { want and that I am a 1900-year model and out of date Th persons Fave entrance This is the year 1924. Shall I continue to be a real nice girl or shall apartment ~ and i can)d I get into the game and, through paint, lipsticks and foolish talk, give the Aarerenc St ente debs a run? When the men ask what about a little party shall 1 go and Hithe commi An agent. in my | dance and flirt as all the other girls do? My instinct tells me that is the opinion, altc his the right to enter | Wrong way to go after a husband. But I long for a domestic life. I have the vestibule of a private home and, | tried the ood, little, stay-at-home way and I am 25, and if 1 continue this f he detects the odor of liquor, can | Way 1 will always be GOOD BUT LONELY. make a raid without a search war- rant.” ommissioner Supplee’s dictum was | d down in the case of Joseph elson, who occupies an apartment on the third floor of a South Eden street house. Nelson was held tor | trial on a charge of manufacture T land porsession of liquor after prohi- Hke | pition axents_testified they found a “ch i o pallon st and 4 aquantity ot X tigns s i and whisky in his apartment a German dialdct, but it is aln 'he agents said they did not discov- meaningless to the e: of @ Berliner}ep the’ stili until after they entered as is French In Lorraine a French |, vestibule of the house and smelt patois is widely spoken, but it is an|ne mash alien tongue to the Parisian. Wanted Own Tongue. | The independence of the people has | | is simple By the Associated Pre ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., September 6.—America is blindly, without re- gard to stability of the industry and without sense of responsibility to fu- ture generations, destroying the fish- eries, of its bays and adjacent coasts, Secrétary Hoover declared in an ad- dress here last night before the sixth annual convention of the United e tates Fisheries Association, The Sec- Answer: Perhaps, my dear, It is better to be 25 and good but lonely: | . ¢;ry aouerted that unless the con- and have vour own self-respect. than it is to be married to the kind of [ auented s : E 2 man who picks out his wife at wild parties and who mistakes the effects | 110070 18 romedied a constantly de- of hootleg liquor on his system for love. Drink makes many men amorous, | icted species wilh ultimately reach a and any woman can inveigle a gentleman who is pleasantly lit up to the [ POUNE 0 “XFaUS al Put the trouble is that when the effects of the liquor die out the 'S 10 Tecovers man’s affection also dics out, and the poor wife is left regretting her hargai stem the Wholesale ; Of course, if you Just want to have a good time for a little while there |2 the specles, Seeretary Hoover is no doubt that you can have more fun traveling with the fast crowd than [ [PePtnended, centratization of con the slow one. Theoretically, men admire the good, little, modest girl. |70l of i herice in mierette That is the kind of a girl they want their sisters to be and the kind they | SOTAnSSqnS 10 be created with con y But they prefer to play around withsthe girls who are not hr"’;;‘)‘fr:"‘gl““"'ffl"“fi;‘ll o States et varticular about what they do and who have no seruples with which to | Ajthoush tho United States ts “lit- wet-blanket” a party. land fisher| t a rate that promises the end in a generation,” Mr. Hoover ¢ added that “more has been ast three years in actual mpliskments than in the two gen- ons before.” These accomplish- | ments he summarized as follows irst. Co s enacted last win- ter federal lation controlling oil pollution of codstal waters by oil- | burning and oil-carrying ships. This measure was vital to the existence of |our fisheries and the protection of {cur shellfish. It is only a beginning at solution of the pollution problem. Treaty With Canada. Second We secured by negotia- tions with Canada, the Pacific Coast halibut treaty and the enactment of legislation, under which the two na- tions are now able to halt the de- pletion and destruction of the great fishery and to start its recuperation. Third. Congress, after three years of controversy, enacted the Alaskan salmon fisheries conservation bill, and we have today vigorously stopped de- struction and started the rejuvenation of these fisheries. Reports of dissatisfaction of Alsace over the s tion of French churches do not r or pro-French questions, emph; ze the out independence that both Alsatians and cording to a bu from the tional Gec aphic fety. “Living in a border-land, ple of Alsace and Lorr: veloped an independent spirit not unlike that of the Swiss, suys th®| bulletin, “They are admittc a mixture of both Gall and Alen stocks. Studies of head me ments have shown this. Bu Janguage them apart al separate little nations. 'l of the great majority of Al in parts iggested opera- aws relating to pro-German but rather ding spirit of is possessed by Lorraine Na- the peo- have de- wholesale destruction | But my long observation has been that worthwhile men seéldom marry the wild, wild women. They have had enough of the female rounders, and when they pick out a wife they want some girl who hasn't been kissed and pawed over by dozens of other men and whose main accomplishments are | moking and booze punishing. the girl who belongs to the midnight frolic crowd does ¥y a man of her own kind, and we see the results of these in the divorce scandals in the er. SN % shown itself in regard to the lan- ARMY DRIVERS SCORED. guage question under both Frene S n e | Maryland to Seek Damages for and German regimes.- Before | some more or less desultory efforts | Bridge Wreck. at the compulsory te & of French | in the schools of Alsace were com- bated, as were the intensive efforts to force the use of modern German after that . “So, t00, the his independ taining his It may be, Good But Lonely, that you are in the wrong environment t You need to go ay from home and meet strange men. Often a ort of pocketed in her own little circle and she has to break away ere people are not accustomed to her to make them realize how attractive she is. 1 don’t believe any girl is passed over just because she is good. God help the world if the time ever comes when men cease to admire modesty and purity in women DOROTHY DIX. . . . EAR DOROTHY DIX: I am a widower with two children. T lost my wife some years ago and have never remarried, though I am now only 38 years of age. Did I do wrong by staying unmarried all these years, or should I have got married again to give the children a mother? I felt that 1 had no right to burden any woman with some one else's children. Was this the right view to take? TILE Special D'spatei | BALTIMOR eptember 6. —Criti- jcizing Army officials for allowing | 3 | drivers of military trucks i | Kecuritp Storage Gompang Established 1890 as the Storage Department American Security and Trust Co 1140 Fifteenth Street (between L and M) high speed, Joh man of the State Roads has announced that the War Depart- ment will be asked for damages for |the York road bridge over the Gun- powder River, which collapsed Wed- sation has evidenced by insisting on re- own_ religion, whatever ‘the attitude of his sovereign country of the moment When France held Alsace and Lorraine before 18 nesday afternoon. priests and pastors opposed the teach- | T ing of French becduse of opposition | The collapse of the bridge was the 2 M esult of a speeding Army truck > the Frenc crature of the day. | [€SU X B e T ey fouy | crashing into one of the supporting themselves in opposition to the Ger- | SPans at the south end of the struc- man government over the suppres- |fUre. an by engineers f of his der according to sion of religious schools, and today | a t shows, accord Aielasins ilipIe InEint o e { Mr. Mackall. One man was killed and | Just as vigorously on retention of | three Were injured in the crash. their religious privileges. A safe depository for furs, clothing, rugs, tapestries, curtains in the Cold Storage Department; for silverware and valuables in the Safe Deposit Vaults; for paintings, pianos, art objects in the heated Art Rooms; for motor cars (dead storage) in the Answer: 1 imagine, T. J. L, that you have never come across a woman who appealed strongly to you or else you would have let her decide the question about whether she were willing to rear another woman's children or not. This being the case, you were wise to stay single, for marriage for anything but love is a losing game. ross-Roads Countries. “The geographical position of Al sace and Lorraine has largely dete ined their development and that of their people. The road well border since n days. The traffic urope farther north, has alwa barrier where it skirts Al Until recent even part-vear navigation was possible alonz this stretch of rive had a labyrinth of cours over a wide valley, and creating in | flood time a broad region of mora: The neighborhood of Strasburg af- forded the only good crossing place, and this fact contributed to the im- portance of that ¢ “The low, unh of the Rhine along Als border, together with the ture of the bench the river, condemned this strip of Alsace to almost desertion. land plain ¢ have been cro ¥ been the, complete Rhine- ettled. The thriving cit ce are situated in a zone from 10 to 12 miles inland from the Rhine in the parallel valley of the 111, or slightly westward along the Vosges foothills. Even Strasburg is not a true Rhine city. It was built on the Il where hte latter flows 2 or 3 miles west of the Rhine, in recent years the city has grown eastward until it touches the larger stream. City's Name Tells Story. “At Strasburg highways converge from across the Vosges hills, geo- graphical factors which helped to Toreordain the growth of an impor- tant city at this Rhine crossing. | Strasburg’s name itself tells the | E for it means ‘City of Roads.' “In’ addition to the plain along the | Rhine, Alsace includes the eastern slope of the Vosges. Along the foot- hills grapes grow to perfection and fthe region is one of the-important wine-producing countries of Europe. “Lorraine differs from Alsace both in environment and type of popula- gion. In fact, there is little to group | these two areas for political admin- istration save that together they al- | most completely fill the gap between Germany and France. Lorraine is a plateau, cooler than the lower Als tian plain, and given over, so far as 4ts agriculture is con argely to pastures and cattle-raising. The people, not so isolated from France as the Al , have somewhat| sloser affiliations with Latin culture. Many Textile Factories. “Industry has claimed considerable | areas of both Alsace and Lorraine | from their old paths of agriculture. Textile factories are concentrated chiefly in southern Alsace and in some of the Vosges valle The pre- dominant industry in Lorraine is metallurgy. Near the Luxemburg frontier are coal deposits and beds of iron ore, the latter the largest in Europe. ., “The coal is in the famous Saar Basin. Al about this region are con- centrated populations of miners and metal workers. Alsace has no iron or coal, but near Mulhausen it pos sesses potash deposits exceeded in | walue only v those of northern Ger- many. These two deposits constitute practically the world supply of this indispensable fertilizer ingredient.” DECLARES WALL S1:REET : FEARS LA FOLLETTE Stnator’s Manager Says Labor Day Speech Has Financial Inter- ¢ ests Quaking. By the Associated Press, CHICAGO, September 6.—John M. son, national manager of the La llette-Wheeler campaign. in a state- t to local managers yesterday, de ed that “Senator La Follette's ng speech, delivered on Labor 'Y to the American policy, has jhiken the monopoly system to its loundation.” “The reactionary press of the coun- has been uncertain what to say nder the circumstances lest it be- ray the anxiety existing in Wall reet,” the statement continued. ‘But hidden away in the financial olumns of the metropolitan press the financial papers, intended only for the eves of large investors, is to be found news of greatest sig- mificance. . “The stock market itself is reacting to. the La Follette speech. ‘First ecampaign shiver’ is the headline over the financial column in one of the papers. Wall street is. making the same campaign now that was made hen La Follette was elected gov- rnor, yet Wisconsin is one of the Fm ‘prosperous States in the country The statement closes with an appeal Jor funds. H Dr. Darby to Preach in Ballston. Rev. Dr. W. L. Darby, executive tary of the Washington Federa- of Churches, will preach tomor- ow morning at the Presbyterian urch, Ballston, Va, ‘ countries | Rhine, great | vears | im- | South of Strasburg the Rhine | sprawling | but | { Yy her husband. She was a sister of { e {$47,687 PROPERTY TAKEN | Dry Agents Report Seizure and | Destruction in Month. i ! RICHMOND, Va., September | Prohibition agents confiscated and « stroved property valued at $4 in August, according to their report | made today. There were 116 ar- rests made. e ROCKVILLE, ROCKVILLE, Md September 6 Special).—The county commissioners iave pussed an order giving the Ridgely Brown Camp of Confederate | Veterans of Montgomery County per- mission to hang a portrait of Col. Ridgely Brown in the circuit court room here, and on November 13, the anniversary of Col. Brown's birth, the portrait will be unveiled with cere- | mony. At the same time, a tablet in mem- ory of Col. Brown will be erected in the courtroom by the United Daugh- ters of the Confederacy of this county. A program is being arranged by a committee of which Miss May Sellman is chairman. Col. Brown, a resident of this| county, commanded the 1st Maryland Cavalry, Confederate army, and w. in the Civil War. Hi been in the possession of the Ridgely Brown Camp for many vears, and at the recent annual | meeting of the organization it was voted to present it to the count Licenses have been issued by the | clerk of the circuit court here for the | arriage of Albert Meigs Owen, and Miss Catherine Loor, ang Charles Roger Reeves and Miss Afina Marie Phillips, all of Washington; George Washington Romick of Washington and Miss Della Lomon of Hagerstown, Md., and Joseph D. 5ill and Miss Olga E. Galin, both of Washington. | Following a long illness, M Elizabeth C. Welsh, wife of James B. Welsh, died Thursday night at her home in Rockville. She is survived portrait Mrs. Edward E. Wel, nd Mrs. Lawrence W ‘ngton. The funeral will take place at 10 o'clock Monday morning from St. Mary's Catholic Church here. Mrs. W. H. Souder of Gaith- ersburg have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Lena Souder, to Roy B. Fahtney of Timberville, Va. The Rockville Volunteer Fire De- partment has decided to add an up-to- date hook-and-ladder truck to its equipment. Dr. Otis M. Linthicum, president of the organization, has ap- pointed the following committee: Frank H. Hoggins, chairman; J ‘W. Howes, William F. Disney, gar Reed and W. Stacey Belt. truck will cost $3,000. 15 GIRLS WILL COMPETE FOR CROWN OF BEAUTY By the Asscciated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., September. 6.—Fifteen girls emerged from the ordeal of selection by the judges after the bathers' revue yesterday, and from these Miss America of 1922 and 1923 will either meet her superior or ladd to her laurels by again winning the title in a field that shows a higher average of beauty than any pageant has produced heretofore. The choice for highest honors from each section of the country showed that those gaining first place won it by scoring perfectly in all the 15 points considered, with one exception, Miss Manhattan, who made but 14, | In the Middle Atlantic division the winners were — First, Philadelphia; second, Cape May; third, Newark. Southern division—First, Atlanta second, Washington; third, New Or. leans. Midwestern division—First, Chicago; second, Youngstown; third, Milwau- kee. Far Westetn divislon—First, Angeles; second, Santa Cruz; Oklahoma City. Miss America of 1924 will be an- nounced tonight, when the young lady adjudged the most beautiful girl in America wlill be crowned queen of the pageant. Revenue Collecton%tndy. Special Dispatch to The Star. . BALTIMORE, September 6.—About 75 deputy internal revenue collectors from all sections of Maryland and the District of Columbia are attending a special instruction school at the cus- tom house here.- Experts versed in the new internal revenue act and re- cent changes in income taxes are act- ing as instructors. h of this vicinity on of Wash- Los third, Do You Want a Home In Chevy Chase? QUINTER, THOMAS & CO. Main 8416 enerally speaking. it is provided—z of a wife, well 2 the widower must con Many men don't do this. I have frivolous g hearts. Such marriages a But there are plenty love and a mother's tenderness to these are b women never consider their stepchild Also vou have to consider yourse! about their business of life, and you Jonely old sman unless you have pro your old age. D know his own mind about love? Answer: He is just a thing tod. and wan AR M DIX: id, something else the next da: A girl attracts him because she has such a cute way with her, and the next week another girl has him going because she talks baby talk to he is sure he will die if he doesn’t get him, and the next month whose step matches his in the dance. The boy of 20 is honest in thinking that he is experiencing an passion, but he is just mistaken, and don't you put any faith | Wait until he is older and has seen more of the settled before you give him your little (Copyright, 1924.) | e e e $3,000,000 SECURITIES ARE REPORTED STOLEN Reputed Wealthy Ranchman Says Sait Case Taken From Car in Front of Bank. By the Associated Press. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Septem- ber 6.—Otto Meek, reputed wealthy ranch owner of Baker, Nev., report- ed to the police that negotiable secur- ities, which he said had a face value of more stolen from his automobile while it parked on Maine street here yes- terda. Meek said the securities belonged the Mammoth Land and Power Compa of Baker, Nev.,, with which company he is connected. He refused to state the present market value of the securities, but sald he was en route to New York to turn them over to brokers. He =aid he left the securities in a s case on the front seat of his auto- mobile and when he returned in about an hour the bag was gone. to — ANALYZES COFFEE COST. Chicago Official Claims Profit at 5 Cents a Cup. CHICAGO, September 6.—Announce- ment by the National Restaurant Owners’ convention here that coffee can no longer be sold for a nickel a cup drew fire yesterday from Joseph Rushkewicz, secretary to the city council high-cost-of-living committee. One pound of coffee; costing 25 to 30 cents a pound makes 30 cups of coffee, he said, adding that the cost per cup for all ingredients was: Coffee, 1 cent; cream, 1% cents; sugar, % cent, and labor, % cent. The total cost, he maintained, for 30 cups of coffee is 90 cents, and at a nickel a cup they bring $1.50, a profit of 60 cents. TIGER! TIGER!! None Better!!! The Ginger Ale With That Farewell Flavor In 10 and 16 oz Bottles Only Ask for It Refuse Substitutes (LLLIL 11772171 LI I I 2 LI H LA 2121272277777 No. 3945 CONNECTICUT AVENUE Corner Tilden St. APARTMENTS 2, 3 and 4 Rooms and Bath. Choice Suburban Location See Manager on Premises or THOMAS J. FISHER & CO., Inc. 738 15th St. Main 6830 | a good mark well the word provided—he makes a s his own in the woman he puts rls no older than their own | marry cold, selfish women, who had no of $ood, kind, sensible women who give a mother's their stepchildren, and who | them a home where they can grow up under their father's influence. Do you think a boy 20 years old is old enough to No, indeed, Jane, I don't. vith a kid's changeable tastes. and wild for another thing tomorrow than $3,000,000, had been | thing for a widower to remarry, | table choice der the interests of h ildren as the head of his hous seen plenty of widowers marry young. ughters, and I have seen men pity or sympathy for children in their ound to bring misery on all concerned. make for Such | ren an infliction. If. Children grow up quickly and go will find yourself a very forlorn and vided yourself with a companion for DOROTHY DIX. .« o JANT A boy of 20 has not come to himself. | He is crazy about ons nd tired of them both y. And it is the same way about love. the girl undying | in him. | world and his tastes are heart for keeps. DOROTHY DIX. | STINK BOMB IS HURLED | AT POLISH PRESIDENT} Explodes 30 Feet Away From | Car and Crowd Flees in Panic. By the Associated Press. | LEMBERG, Poland, September 6.— A bomb filled with some malodorous | substance was hurled at President | Wojciechowski yesterday as he was returning in his automobile from the | Inauguration ceremonics Wt the ex- | position. The bomb missed its target | and fell to the ground, exploding, when | the car was 30 yards away. There- fore the President was spared the full | force of the odor. | Nearby spectators fled in panic when | the bomb was thrown. When they had | recovered from their consternation they | seized one of the men implicated in | the attack on the President and the | police had difficulty in protecting him | from serious harm. The second mis- | creant escaped in the confusion. The incident is regarded as having been a tactless manifestation of hostil- ity, on the part of the President' political opponet: 7 L 2 L T 7 222727772, Fashionable Sheridan New modern fireproof 4 rooms and bath....... 5 rooms and 2 baths. .. H. L. RUST 912 15th Street N.W. For Plans and N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N /LLL11 11110071 711 I 2711 L1201 1111177 11 L1 LA 1112177 1 I II 17177722 10220 LIZIIILII T LTI 122277 IEE 111 1L 1 | should n | by, the APARTMENTS 2222 Que Street N.W. dumbwaiters, real kitchens and pantries. Unusually large rooms, well planned for comfort. .$80.00 and $85.00 ..$125.00 and $140.00 L LI L LLLL LI L L L L LS A S P L2227 2227 2 TP —_— LT T T T ey 2901 Connecticut Avenue Corner Cathedral Ave, NEW BUILDING APARTMENTS 9 One Room, K.itc‘;)enette and Bath to Six Rooms and Two Baths OPEN FOR INSPECTION Ready October 1st See THOMAS J. FISHER & CO., Inc. Fourth. Congress enacted the up- Mississippi fish and game refuge through which the streams of upper Mississippi will be pre- served for the breeding of the fish and game. Fifth. We have bringing about tween different tion of fisheries Further important steps which »w be taken were enumerated as follows: 1. To cultivate a sense of national ponsibility toward the fisheries and ntenance; to make conserva on of those priceless resour. oy part of the national instinct; to let| the whole country understand that we can no more overfish and expect to have seafood than we can outcutathe | growth of our forests and expect to have timber. To make I3 bill, had some success co-operation be- States for the prote vigorous attempt to JRREREERE IAGARA FALLS EXCURSIONS THURSDAYS September 11, 25 and October 9 Round 316.80 Trifi From Washington Tickets good in parlor or sleeping cars on_payment of usual charges for & occupied, iocluding harge. at City Ticket Office, Pennsylvania Bu ing, 613 14th St N.W.. and Union Station. g | % B TRAIN LEAVES Enstern St WASHINGTON The ideal Boute to Niagars Falls daylight "ride ~thro Valley. Proportionate fares from other point: P Fickets good for 16 daya ot Booklet sent upon uest to T.°BoyaG. B! A.. Philadeiphia Pénnsylvania R.R. Syste The Standard Railroad of the World o. 1 Circle Neighborhood . building. Elevator service, COMPANY Main 6888 T 2 L0 2 Reservations Main 6830 Vehicle Department; for luggage and for furniture and house- hold effects in Private Rooms or Space Storage. Packing and shipping by freight, express, motor van, parcel post, “Pool” cars (to Pacific Coast at reduced rates) and “Lift” vans (abroad). Marine and transit insurance. 4 Blocks North of the White House C. A. Aspinwall, President Consult Us About Shipments TO WASHINGTON We May Save You Freight ! i | T Have You Been Looking for a Real Bargain? If So, Here’s Your Chance to Get One 2 Sold—3 Left In Beautiful Massachusetts Ave. Park Near the Magnificent Cathedral 2707 to 2711 34th Place N.W. Must Be Sold at Once— | Price Greatly Reduced On This Group of Three Brand-New Residences These delightful and splendidly built brick and frame trim homes of distinct English type of architecture were designed by one of Washington's leading archi- tects, and they are situated in a neighborhood the character of which is already established. They contain nine rooms and three baths, double garage and are built on very large lots, 50 feet front by 122 feet depth to paved alleys. They contain every appointment necessary in a home of this type, combining the latest known modern appointments with many appealing charms and conveniences. DRIVE OUT MASSACHUSETTS AVE. TO 34th PLACE TURN RIGHT TO HOUSES Open for Inspection Daily From 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. Call Mr. Booth of ASHER FIREPROOFING CO. 815 15th St. " Fr.6820 Or Your Own Broker %MWWMMMMMMHMMMH&MHMWMMHMWM

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