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SMITH HELD VICTOR OVER LEGISLATURE Politicians Credit Governor With Forcing Assembly to Enact Laws Demanded. Y, N. Y., March 25.—Politi- clang are inclined to the view that Gov. Alfred E. Smith of New York came out best in his contest with hostile Republean majority in the lature on his recommendations e legislation. As a result ed that he will continue to be the leading figu n the na ional Democratic party for the next four yvears. It is said to be generally nceded that he must be consldered 1& Democratic presidential possi- lities four years hence, despite the defeat which he suffered at the hands of the Democratic National Con- vention last Summer Record of the Session. In the of the Legislature just close Smith® succeeded in ushing enactment a number the projects he proposed the ginning of the session January 1 was defeated upon several others. 1s held that he outgeneraled the publi pposition in several notal nsta The main re for b toris session Gov be- and It ed f the o the gube quipped & serviee undoubtedly closer acqua A number o attributed to in hi the State nders are an leadership, into his hands the Republicans credited to him are headed in pushing through reduction of the persona which. the Republicans beginning, but were forced to accept in the end. He won n his constitutional amendment for « $300,000,000 bond issue to eliminate zrade He was successful n securing a constitutional amend- ment to perr sue for per secured a providing and consolidation of ments. He defeated th enforcement of the | of Congr He secured firmation appoint the R, v ! Republic cby played which the The which are by his su: 25 per cent income opposed at He ent tmprovements. stitutional amendme for a modificd short ballot State depart- bill for State ohibition law the con- including Jlicans op- several rosed whon Recommendations Defeated. He lost an exccutive budget our-year terms for governor eated. He iled to place power control and developme State auspices. His suggestion bolition of the motion pictur orship commission was r, d to secure the restorat fused to limit the working hours of women industrial employment to 8 A sugges referendum or tbor amendment to the United States was recommendation for His proposal of water- t under for cen He fa the Constitution of the Jected Gov. Smith's supporters take the po- sition that of the measur which he mended, and which were lost, will ultimately go down to with the voters and will boomerang Lepub- lcan GEN. GREELY CELEBfiATES EIGHTY-FIRST BIRTHDAY Dines With Gen. Other Brainard, Only Survivor of Famous Polar Expedition. Gen. A Greely yesterday. He cele versary Ly dining last evening with en. D Brainard, retired, who e other survivor of the Greely arctic cxpedition of 1881 The original party under command of Lieut. ( bered 25, only 7 of whom ¢ the Schiey ief Brainard Licut. Greely’s right-hand man Shortly his return from the Arctic he was transferred to the Sig- nal Corps, with the rank of second lieutenant by special act of Congress, ie only instance of such promotion trom the runks for peace-time serv- ce until the recent promotion of Lieut. Ogden, the world fiyer. was 81 years old ted the anni- only ere re expedition was SPECIAL NOTICES QEATING. TINNING, 20 yeaes L000_satisfied customers INC. 1341 W st. oW 619. & 0O, WANIED T0 HAL i PART 1.0 o OR WASH,, « B OR WAY ATIONAL DE. F_ST. N.W. 4 IF YOU HAVE drugless system fo 603 R. 1. 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ROX We are as nes Bedell’s Factory PREPARE FOR RAINY WEATHER April is usually a rainy month—so have us_put _vour roof in leak-proof condition IRONCLAD JBestag i1zt sth o IT PAYS— £ To consult this big printing plant—be- fore sou place your order for printing. The National Capital Press 101212 D ST, NOW IS THE T THE TEWIN Co TIVOLI [iooine ana A AND Hear 1414 V st ms 1645, CARPET §2.0N0 » o N. 9160. PRINTING— HIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICK BYRON S. ADAMS, Fuivmes, PRACTICAL ROOFERS ~ready to serve you, and at moderate cost, too. Solid, durable work assured. Call us_up! KOONS ¢’y CUNPANY, N.W. 119 3rd st Phose Maiy 9 it is of | Re- | 1 $100.000,000 bond is- | was de- | & Annapolis | | | | | outh African Visit, Once Delayed, Will Start Tomotrrow. Heavy Social Duties to Be Dodged—Polo and Hunts Planned. BY HAYDEN CHURCH. LONDON, March 28.—Today, aboard |the battle cruiser Repulse, ~the | Prince of Wales will sail from Ports- mouth en route for South Africa, where he will make the fourth and last, 8o far as the immediate future Is erned, of his serles of imperial He will set foot in the Dark ent on April 4, when he arriv at Bathurst, in the Ganibla (West Africa), and wiil bring his tour to a July 22, when he rejoins the Renulse at Capetown His next port of call will be Mon- tevidio, where he begins his visit to South America, three of whose Ereat- est republics—Argentina, Uruguay and Chili—have invited him to be their guest. He will return to Ling- land in September, after months of strenuous but interesting and col- orful travel. | When he concludes his comprehen- | sive tour of South Africa. the heir| to the thr will have visited all| the principal portions of the great| empire over which he will one day | reign. s series of imperial tours | bhegan in 1819, when he paid his first | visit to Canada (and ineidentally | gave New York and Washington the | “once over™), and continued in 1920, {21 when Australia, New Zea- 1c wel- ambas- {1and and India gave enthusi | comes to the popular 3 sador of empire. rringe Again to For “When this serfes of tours has been | completed.” a prominent member of !the prince’s entourage told me just before he sailed for America last { Summer, “his royal highness will be- | gin to consider serfously the question of his marriage.” | H. M. S. Repulse, which will carry { the royal tourist this time, is the sis ter ship of the Remown. which was | used for the prince's previous tours She has been for some time in dry- dock at Portsmouth undergoing com- plete overhauling. Her commander | is Capt. H. W. W. Hope, C. B, D. . 0. The special suite in attendance upon the prince during his forthcoming tour will consist of six persons. These are Vice ‘Admiral Sir Lionel Halsey, the prince’s controller and treas- urer: Sir Godfrey Thomas, private | secretary; Capt. Dudley North, extra | equerry (who recently described his | post as that of “housekeeper” and his | special province as “looking after the groceries”); Maj. the Hon. Plers Legh and Lieut. W. D. C. Greenacre, | equerries in waiting, and Surg. Lieut | Comdr. H. E. Y. White, R medical | ! officer | | The cost of the tour far as the | miother country is concerned, will be | £15,000, as compared with the £20,000 {which represented the expense of sending the Prince to Australla. The original estimate for the forthcoming tour was £13,000, but Parliament re- | cently voted an additional £2.000, w was necessitated by the exte sion of the original travel program | to Uruguay and Chile Bitter opposition to the appropria tion of this additional sum. it will be remembered, was forthcoming from the “reds” in the House of Commons, self-appointed leader on this occasion, the fiery Mr. David Kirk- wood, after declaring that the prince was rich enough to pay his own ex- penses. said: "I am sorry for this iyoung man, that you should be trot- {ting him all over the world, making | a clown of him, taking him on show x ich whose i Tour Once Postponed. | Originally pla {same time last vear, the prince’s tour | of South Africa had to be postponed | {owing to the unexpected general elec | tion that was precipitated by the fall| |of the Smuts gove nment. Not quite |a auarter of a century, a short time| lin world history, has elapsed since | the war in South Africa ended in a| British victory over the burghers of | the Transvaal and the Orange Free| State, and uncertainty as to the re- | | ception awaiting him guring his tour | | of districts reputed to be “hotbeds of | | republicanism” might well have given | |pause to a prince with less pluck jthan is possessed by the heir to the | British_crown. But, although some | i parts of South Africa were admittedly | {“lukewarm” when the royal visit was | ifirst mooted, all the indications at| {present are that an enthusiastic re- iu‘rnion everywhere awaits the prince. All parts of the umnjon, in fact, proved so eager to welcome the heir to the throne that the main difficulty {of the advisory committee, represent- |ing all the provinces, which sat at Pretoria in December last, consisted in reconciling conflicting claims in al- locating the time at the disposal of the prince. | In the Orange Free State, which is | usually regarded as the stronghold of republican sentiment, there is stated to be “great dissatisfaction” hecause is proposed that the prince shall spend only six day in that |UNIFICATION VOTE REVIEW IS DENIED BY BISHOP CANDLER (Continued from First Page | ardson, put in the record a statement | that #he votes in his district had not questioned until Wednesday | morning, long after the vote, and | that if there was any responsibility | in the matter it lay with those who had questioned the votes too late. | Rev. M. L. Fearnow, elder of the Moorefield, W. Va., district, in a paper put into the record, showed that Mrs. | Richoreek, whose vote was question- ed, had been elected prior to his term of office, and therefore he was not responsible. Judge Newman, who is lay leader of the conference, and one of the out- standing unificationists, introduced {three signed statements from the | delegates in question showing that they had been members of the church for less than the six years required by church law for a delegate, as con- tonded by Judge Newman and Mr Millan in their protest. Demand Came From Floor. hop Candler, in his ruling con- cl-r:::llngpthe yea and nay vote on uni- feaiion, which had been questioned in three particulars by Judge Newman and Mr. Millan, sald that their state- ment of fact, upon which they had predicated their questions, “omits a particular point that ought to have been included in it. When the chair was about to submit to the conference the motion providing that the vote be taken by ballot, a member of lhc‘ body arose and inquired if the adop- | tion of the motion would preclude the right of one-fifth of the members to | demand 4 vote by yeas and nays, when the vote was taken, to which lnqulry‘ the chair replied that it would not. “The questions submitted,” con- | {tinued the bishop's ruling, “are not| questions of law, but of parliamentary procedure, and were decided by the chair when the matter of the vote was before the conference. From the ruling of the chair, Brother W. W. been |1a | fair | neither so | been made | schools in Alaska THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ., LES TO CONSIDER MARRIAGE ON RETURN FROM PRESENT TRIP PRINCE WAL or three of which are to be devoted to polo and other amuse- ments among the settlers, while Bloemfontein and Maseru (Basuto 1) are tc a couple of days. This, it is hardly to the Free State, which is anx- ious to prove to the prince that it is nti-British nor so violent- Iy republican-as it has been painted from the Transvaal “back- Boers has come & strong appeal the prince should visit them burghers complain that it has rranged that the prince hould visit any typical South African farm. The Boers, though they fought so hard agalnst the British, are now very keen on meeting the prince, and they propose, ceded to, to form a laager in the Transvaal wilds. Their petition is now being considered by the Premier of South Africa, Gen. Hertzog. Commenting on the itinerary of the trip at a luncheon in London recent- y. Vice Admiral Sir Lionel Halsey H. R. H.’s controller and treasurer, remarked: “During his fi the prince is going to the most un healthy pl all the world, the West Coast of Africa. where no mem- ber of the royal family has been heretofor He will go to Gambl Slerre Leone, the Gold Coast, Kumasi Lagos, and up far as Kano, northern Nigeria. It will be a str uous tour. but also a very important one, for which I venture to excellent results. The prince arrives at Capetown April 30, spends a few days there, and then malkes a comprehensive tour, by rail and motor car, of the Cape prov- ince. He will then tour the Orange Free State and Basutoland, and will visit lysmith, Natal (which re- cently celebrated the 25th anmiver- ary of its “relief”), on June 2. He will visit Colenso and the buttlefields, spend two days in Durban, and will then go through the Transvaal Swaziland, the Bechuanaland tectorate and Rhodesia, returning Capetown on July 22 province, have only claimed, is en veld that These not been st en- Pro to Social Events Limited. His relaxations while in South Africa will include quite a lot of polo playing and several big game shoots. He will have his first go at lions while the guest of Sir Abe Bailey the well known uth African magnate, at the latter’s farm at Colesberg nd should have won- derful sport later in the Transvaal, Where he will find himself in the world's greatest natural “zoo.” More complete details as to his hunting program will be given in a subse- quent article. The arrangements for the tour have with particular care in order to insure that the prince is not subjected to the ceaseless round of social and sporting functions which detracted somewhat m the enjoy ment of his visits elsewhere. Presumably as a result of medical advice, the tour has been so arranged that the Princé will take a rest fo at least 48 hours every week, the st perjods being either Saturday and Sunday or Sunday and Monday of each week. The plan visiting a center his royal highness shall arrive two days early, remain ing outside the center for a complete rest during that time (Copsright, 1825, in United States and Can- ada, by North American Newspaper Alliance. Al "rights Teserved.) . Millan took an appeal to the con- ference, and when the appeal was submitted to the conference the deci- sion of the chair was sustained by a vote of 149 to 128, and thereby be came the judgment of the body. The question being one of parliamentary procedure upon which the conference had the right to pass and upon which it rendered its judgment, the chair considers that he is not authorized to review the judgment rendered.” The appeal to the College of Bls- hops questioned the decision of the bishop, asking if a conference did not have the right to adopt its own procedure, as it had done in deciding previously to take a secret ballot on unification $50,000 WILL BE SPENT ON SCHOOLS IN ALASKA New Industrial and Vocational Teachirg Centers to Be Erected, Officials Announce. Expenditure of $50,000 in construc- tion of new industrial and vocational is to be made soon in line with a comprehensive school sys- tem for the native Eskimos and Indians of the Northern territory, the Interior Department announced today. Plans for the new constructions in- clude a $20,000 industrial school at Eklutina, in central Alaska, near An- chorage ; new buildings at White Moun- tain, in northwestern Alaska, at a cost of $20,000, and a new vocational train- ing building at Kanak; k, in south- western Alaska. Expansion of the proposed industrial education of the natives is expected to Ve readily accomplished through an act passed by the last Congress, authorizing the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of War to transfer to the Bu- reau of Education 4ny unoccupicd Gov- ernment buildings in Alaska. There are at present a number of abandoned mili- tary reservations that are available for school purposes. These, the department sald, may be used for establishment of vocational schoola if their wishes are ac-| month | predict | and | is that before| ALLEYS EVICTION LAW BEFORE COURT Arguments in Two Cases In-| volving Constitutional Status Are Presented. | i | Arguments in two cases involving the iaw passed by Congress in 1914 prohibit- ing the use of alleys for residential pur- | poses were heard in Police Court’ yester- | day before Judge Gus A. Schuldt The constitutionality of the law was attacked by Charles T. Clayton. repre- | nting Franklin P. Nash of 236 Bassett | ley, and by Ralph Cusick, representing Charlotte Lockwood « Jackson Hall alley J. J. McGarraghy, assistant tion counsel, prosecuted the cas: Government, and for more than an hour vesterday afternoon gave reasons why the legislation was constitutional Following the hearing Judge Schuidt asked that more briefs and memoranda be submitted to him in writing before Passing judgment. According to Mr. McGarraghy, this will be done the first part of next week corpori- | for the Briefs for The defense counsels their arguments that the premises represented by them were not in- jurious to the public welfare, that no unhealthy condition existed and the fact that Congress alleged them to be unhealthy did not make them so. They further stated that the property was being lawfully used ond that tenforcement of tne law would be the taking of property Congress {without due process of law. It wa {@lso stated that Congress should ip- | propriate money for owners of alley residences before they be forced to give them up. Mr. McGarraghy claimed that Con- | gress had Investigated the alley dwellings and had determined that they were Injurious in public health and safety. The fact that the aban- i donment of such houses as dwellings |4id not mean that they were being taken away from the owners, was |also brought out by Mr. McGarraghs j He suggested that they could be used for ages and store rooms, both {of which were badly neceded here. “The court here is bound by the de | termination of Congress,” he said {in closing fense. declared in Has Stormy Career. advisement 1 run since by Congress effect in 1918, the shortage caused until one vear after | the declaration of peace. 1In 1822 it was found that the housing shortag | still prevailed. Congress again posi- | poned the measure until July 1, 1923, | On that date certain property own- | ers filed injunction proceedings the District Commissioners before | Tudge Bailey. Judge Bailey granted | the injunction and the case was | taken by the District government to | the Court of Appeals The Court of Appeals refused to pass on the law, saving that the mat- ter should originate in Police Court The matter was then taken to the corporation counsel's office and in | turn to the assistant corporation | counsel's office. There for the past months it has been studied and arguments prepared Defense attorneys with Mr. McGarraghy to see on what parts they could agree. Certain | minor details were dropped from the true bill, which finally was brought into Police Court. According to Mr. McGarraghy, the question of the con- | stitutionality of the bill is the only decision to be reached GERMANY TO TAKE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL BALLOT TOMORROW | (Continued from The law now | | under ihad a long | s its in war | its | | adoption 1914 and ho postponement to met weekly | Prussia, has a big fight on h 1in trying to keep intact the Socialist | vote, which is menaced by the Com- {munists. He is expected, however, to | hold second place in the final count. | By virtue of his sturdy defense of |the Weimar constitution, and the in- |tellectual quality of his speeches, | | Prof. Willy Hellpach, the Democratic party’ nominee, has easily proven the outstanding figure among the |seven conter iing candidate: He is {little known, however, outside of his |home State of Baden, of which he is | premier, and he is presented by a {party which in the pas: has failed |to enthuse the German voter. He is | viewed as a political esthete and his mpaign has been free of the partisan ascerbities which have mark- |ed the propaganda launched for Jarres and Braun Dr. Hellpach may again be proposed by the Democrats for the second bal- loting on April 26 as joint candidate for the three liberal parties, as political experts are already convinced that Dr. Marx, the former chancellor, will be unavailable as a compromise standard bearer for the Democrats, Centrists and Socialists. Marx Fate in Doubt. Dr. Marx's position after the first ! balloting is still a matter of conjec- | ture and while he will receive the full | {vote of his party tomorrow there is grave doubt whether he can qualify las a rallving point for the German {liberal elements since his ill-starred adventure in Prussian politics. Premier Held of Bavaria is running as a “native son” and will probably Teceive the vote of his home state. Ernst Thaelmann, the Communists’ nominee, is expected to poll at least 2,000,000 votes, while Ludendorff, who has distinguished himself by not mak- ing a single campaign speech, may gather in the frayed remnants of Hitlers former Bavarian Fascist guard. Indications are, however, that the general will trail the other con- testants in the race. STARS AS BEER DRINKER. Jarres Drains Stein at Breath and Wins Votes. By Radio to The Star and Chicago Daily News. BERLIN, March 28.—Germany will turn out Sunday to vote for its next President without much chance of any one being elected. A second bal- lot April 26 probably will be neces- sary to decide the conflict. This has been the tamest election the writer ever witnessed. At the last Reichstag election more than 80 per cent of the voters cast ballots. It will be a great surprise if 70 per cent vote tomorrow. Generally the population seems in- different. The electoral campaign is hardly evident here in Berlin. There are almost no posters, and only a few fiy leaves litter the sidewalks. Communists, under their clever stage manager, Piscator, who man- ages the People’s Theater, have again arranged their Red revue, which travels from place to place giving satirical vaudeville entertainment. Their handbills mechanically satirize the opposition. The social Democrats are using the movies and large-scale magic lan- {terns. The Conservatives are more active in the provinces. On the farms the Conservative organizations are urging landowners to see that their workers and servants turn out to vote. The Conservative candidate, Herr Jarres, during the war, was an | Beverages Covered in 203 | obtained | who believe SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1925. Poured Into Sewer Here in Few Days! 5,547 Gallons Liquor| | Separate Cases—Kege, and Stills Included. Tnited States Marshal Edgar ( Snyder and deputies, together with ! representatives from the Prohibition Enforcement Unit of the Treasury | Department, destroyed during the | past few days 1,687 gallons of spirit- uous liquor, 3,118 gallons of cider and 742 gallons of beer and other bever- | ages seized by the prohibition en- forcement division of the Internal| Revenue Bureau and the Police De- | partment ! Included in the court libels cover- ing 203 separate cases under which these liquors were poured in the sewer, were large quantities of muti- lated copper stills, cofls and utensils, | medicated denatured alcohol, empty barrels, kegs and bottles. The barrels, kegs and bottles will be sold at public auctlon, the pro- ceeds going into Uncle Sam's Treas- ury; the medicated alcohol will be given to various Government depart- ments, and the copper, instead of being used for coils and stills for the making of contraband whisky, will become objects of useful art the hands of the veterans in the Govern- ment hospitals and schoals. KERENSKY IS DIVORCED. = i Wife Obtains Decree on Charge of | Desertion. By the Associated Press LENINGRAD, March 2§ It was re- aled today that Mme. Kerensky, wife of Alexander Kerensky, premier of the revolutionary government, which ded the czarist regime, a divorce in October, 1923, on the ground of desertion The decree was issued by the holy synod, the highest clerical body in Russia Mme. Tening: v suc Kerensky is now living in ad, while her former husband is editing an anti-Soviet newspaper in Prague, the Czechoslovakian capital - = | West Point Alternate Named. | Robert H. Booth, 104 West Under- | ood street, Chevy Chase, appointed second alternate West Point Military the sixth district has been to the ademy from of Maryland Belgium but no; d a large slice of France he follows the prince of peace, although campalgning with military formations and bands The super-patrioie. who nominated Ludendorff. and the super-patriots that Jarres is the best 1g for the triumph of Ludendorff, have somewhat weakened the Conservative forces by ting. Y campaigning in Cormany jsn't all pleasure. The cardidates have traveled much When Herr Jarres spoke at Munich a lady clad in na- tional costume offered him a quart- and-a-half stein of beer. The crowd held its breath Woud he fail? But the Conservative candidate proved he was a true patriot by drinking the contents at a single breath—an exploit that will gain him more Bavarian votes than any amount of talk (Copyright. 1925, by Chicago Daily News Co.) way of prepa Builders’ Opportunity We are offering a tract of ground in Brookland for sale. Contains about 40 lots for detached Houses. arrange Builders’ ILoans. Small Cash Payment quired, balance arranged on Can re- satisfactory terms. MCKEEVER-IGOSS [ezrmzm ey ) REALTORS 1415 K St. Main 4752 ARGONNE 16th and Col. Rd. Several very at- tractive apartments ranging from two rooms, kitchen, re- ception hall, bath and balcony to four rooms, kitchen, re- ception hall and bath. ARGONNE RESIDENT MANAGER ON PREMISES A Painting--Paperhangin, Homes, Clubs, Sckools, Office Buildings, Apartment Houses Harry W. Taylor e “NOTICE” To All Home Buyers We Hare under construction a new Home development that undoubtedlr fulfills 2 long cherished wish of the buying public to get 3 respectable home in & Tefined neighborhood within 15 minutes of the center of the city. and where there is not the environment of a limited breathing space, but where they are privileged at a nominal outlay to have and enjov an atmosphere of real Home convenience These and many other advantage await the purchasers of these Homes. Watch for the announcement. The price will be under $8.000 and the terms on a basis and with the thought of defeating the High Rent Problem. = Wait for this epportunity. Realtor and Builder | called {a 924 14th St WOMAN KIDNAPING! SUSPECT IS HELD With Infant in Arms !'s Ar-| rested in Union Station on Wire From Charleston. A 2l-year-old woman with a month-old baby boy was taken in custody by Detective Cullinane early teday as she walked into the Union Station rotunda from a train from Charleston, 8. C., to be held for in- vestigation in connection with a re- quest from that city describing an alleged kidnaper. The woman is known Marion Appell Williams, sailor at the Brooklyn Navy Yard The wire from South Carolina re- quested the arrest of Mrs. J isher, wife of an enlisted man in the Navy Fits Wired Description. The “description in the telegram. with the exeeption of the name, ac- cording to Inspector Grant, chief of detectives, tallied h the descrip- tion forwarded by J. J. Healy, chiet of Charleston detectives ‘The woman was taken to the House of Detention to be held, pending de- velopments in the police investigation regarding the name. Inspector Grant | wired of the detention to Chief Healy | asking for further instructions i view of the difference in the names Shortly after the woman's arrest “ecil Williams, sailor, on duty on the | U. 8. 8. Widgeon, called at police headquarters and inquired about his wife's arrest He said he had been married nearly four but that| he had no child Willfams said he and his wife had been visiting in Charleston, S. C., and he returned two weeks ago, he stated, | leaving his wife at the home of an Italian family His wife, he said, was very much in love with an infani of the Italian woman The mother of the child was em- ployed, he stated, and his wife had cared for the little one much of the time she was absent from the house at her place of employment ays She Answered Name. here as wife of a vears, Detective Cullinane sald that when he met the train he approached the woman answering the description as | she came into the Unlon Station and | to her: “Mrs. Fisher.” She| stopped and turned around, he said, | but upon learning he was a detective ied her name was sher. Her mother and a sister, who re- side in this city, visited her police headquarters this mornin 2010 Kalorama Road Attractive apartments of 3 and 5 rooms and bath New building, equipped with most modern applian E ceptional service. Elevator. Oil-heated building. Inciner- ators. Apartments equipped With refrigerators. One-half Llock from Conn. Ave Rentals Reduced Apartments as Low as $62.50 Per Month Moore & Hill, Inc. . 730 17th St. N.W. Phone Main 1174 A FINE SEMI-DETADCHED HOME N Beautiful Tracy Place First Floor— Large parior, light porch Second Floor— Four beautiful bathe. Third Floor— Two rooms, bath dining room attractive kitch breakfast bedrooms and 2 packing room and rooms. instantaneous 2-car built-in garage. Priced for Immediate Sale Call Mr. BURR WM. S. PHILLIPS 1432 K St. N.W. Main 4600 - We Offer You a Chance to Get This Bungalow 50 Cash—$75 Monthly Five minutes walk to Fonrteenth St. car line (extended) in the best Nort west residential section. 300-ft. ele- vation with marvelous views. Five rooms and bath, hot-water heat; hardwood floors throughout; _artistic fireplace and electric fixtures. Porches, Attic with space for two extra rooms. Lot 50x147, sodded and fenced. Two blocks to schools and stores. TERRELL & LITTLE, Inc. 1206 18th St. N.W. Main 3287 Evenings—Frank. 1686-J—Col. 68327 NOTICE The Reasonable Rentals Of These Splendid New APARTMENTS 23rd & N Streets NORTHWEST 3 Rooms & Bath $52.50 & $55 Now Being OCCUPIED Open for Inspection WArDMAN 1430 K Street Main 3830 | signed | ticaity PERU ASKS GUARANTEE OF TACNA-ARICA PEACE Wants Arbitrators to Maintain Order When Garrisons Are Withdrawn. ated P BUENOS Al M pateh from Lima to La Nacion says that a communicztior. has been sent to Washington by the Peruvian gov- ernment, requesting that the arbitra- tors provided for in the Tacna-Arlea award determine what shall be the guarantees for the propesed plebi- scite The note, according to the Lima dis- patch, demands that necessary meas- ures be taken for exercising the rights of Peru and for assuring the country’s safety, especially as re- gards neutr: tion of the disputed territories through withdrawal of the Chilean garrisons CLOSE OREGOI\i RAIL GASE SPRING VACATION | SUGGESTIONS Dixie ready d zaleas Honeysuckle mine, eic NORTHERN GOLFERS CAN BE ON SUNNY FAIRWAYS AT Wilmington, N. C., in 11 h.55 Charleston,S.C., inl13h.25 Ga., inl8h.15 Ga. in 15 h.55 m. Jacksonville, Fla., in21h. 05m. Via Atlantic Coast Line Through Trains Daily, Homoring Round - trip Winter Tourist Tickets Scledules and Informat. 1418 H St VW Washington, D. €. Phone Main 7800 flower sed for Ea Magnolia Yellow ] are al By t rch 28.—A dis- as I. C. C. Hears Final Pleas to Force Building of New Lines. Railroads wound up toda Interstate Commerce Cor argument in opposition to the demand of the State of Oregon that more than 400 miles of new lines be constructed through its central and eastern portions. After brief rejoinders by attorney resenting the State and localities inter- | 1. ¢ oy ested the issue was taken under con. | | C.chhone Peas sideration by the commission 1 full flavor | Maine Sugar Peas Little Darling, extra Fancy Peas Tender and Sweet rep- Conventivss Hotels Picked. Hotel mall he; r de nual convention ciation of Real dquarters have been ates attending the an- of the National Asso- Estate Boards. Hotel accommodation at the convention city will make it possible to care for prac- all guests in three large a hote Other hotels will as needed Magruder Inc. modern Conn. available Ave. § Buy in DURIETH At 36th and R Sts, N.W. Price, Only $8,500 Up OUR EASY. SAFE TERMS HANNON OME takes on an added meaning in LELAND. It is nct just like every one else’s, but an individual, distinctive, de- tached residence to be owned, occupied and en- joyed with a pardonable pride and satisfaction. You will find that people who appreciate the true worth of a good Home and study the future value of their investment are the ones who CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND As a community, it has much to offer you— concrete streets, cement sidewalks, gas, elec- tricity, water, sewerage, congenial neighbors, nearby schools, convenient stores and churches, surrounding fine homes and magnificent country clubs, two main boulevard routes into the City, two car lines and many other important qual- ities. Come to LELAND! Priced Under $10,000 10% Down and Small Monthly Payments Drive out Comnscticut through Bradley Lane and north one square to Leland Ave turs “&RY WARREN OWNERS & BUILDERS 925 15th St. M. 8770 Evenings—Cleve. It is Written and Decreed by the rigid law of supply and demand, that those desiring Eng- lish Village Homes must act now! But three of these unique dwell- ings remain available; all others are owned and occupied by Wash- ington’s leading families. Come out THIS SUNDAY'! Moderately Priced On Reasonable Terms Exhibit House—3411 Cleveland Ave. WARDMAN 1430 K Street Main 3830 “We House Ome-Tenth of Washington's Populaiion” 1 i {’ Drive thru Woodley Rd to 34th St then turnone square South.