Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DENIES 1) S. CLERKS ARE UNDERWORKED Employes’ Federation Presi- dent Also Declares Their Pay Is Inadequate. Declaring “no greater fallacy s current in the public mind than that the Federal employe is overpaid, un- derworked and unworthy of his hire,” Luther C. Steward, president of the National Federation of Federal Em- ployes, announced last night that at the forthcoming convention of the federation at Boston in September “every effort will be made to place Government employment, so far as alaries are concerned, on a basis comparable to those in private in-| dus The movement in Federal worker, Mr. Steward said, would be preliminary to “an inten- sive campaign to put the facts con cerning Government personnel, em- ployment conditions and salaries be- fore the next Congress.” behalf of the Rlleges “Misinformation.” fuch misinformation,” said Mr. Steward, “has been disseminated con- cerning the people who work for the Government. Writers, politicians and demagogues all have tried to make capital by explaining to the public that the Government worker was drawing the very life blood out of the Nation s se statements have not been nllowed to go unanswered, yet once disseminated they go the rounds of the press, the rostrum and the po- litical soap box. Vo greater fallacy is current in the public mind than that the Federal em- ploye s overpaid, underworked and unworthy of his hire. Resignations from the Federal service have in- creased at a tremendous rate in re- cent months. The Government now is in competition with private industry for highly trained scientists, tech- nicians and experts in every line of endeavor. Duty of the Government. “Unless the Government can meet laries offered by private indus- o Ahat these scientists and ex- s may continue their research ac- tivitles, the Nation as a whole will suffer, and much of the good coming forth 'from the Government labora- tories will never see the %ight of day.” The statement calls attention to the *‘obvious erroneous charge” that there are from 150,000 to 200,000 superfluous emploves on the Government pay roll in Washington. It is pointed out that the official figures of the United States Civil Service Commission show that on April 30, 1925, there were siightly in excess of 65,000 employes in the Government service In Washington, while in the entire Nation and the island possessions there were less than 450,000 employes, a reduction of ap- proximately a half million from. the war peak five years ago. The average salary, according to the statement, is approximately $125 a month, while many of the employes in technical work and other exacting em- ployment receive even less than that. a5 SPECIAL NOTICES. LOAD OR PART LOAD FROM CUMBER. 1and or Vieinity o) Wasingion or Sy week of July' 6.° O.E. Hawes Exprese 7407 id WANTED A RETURN LOAD OF F ture from New Fork. EhsIoLls o By coSMITH'S TRANSFER AND' STOR: WANTED—LOAD OR PART LOAD OF FUR- niture from or to Richmond. Va.. New York. Philadelphia or Wilmington, Dei TRANSFER CO__ Franklin 5008, FURNITURE REPAIRING AND UPHOL- stering at your home: will £o anywhere. Ad- di D. Star office N OR P. ED TO HA TO OR_FROM NEW YO D. C. BOSTON. POINTS. ~ SPEC DELIVERY MAIN 1460 IWLL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE ¥O s contracted by any other than 2 $U0* SERGAASY Y, P, oo el HEREBY GIVEN THAT SAM- ewcorn and Charles Green. trading as Newcorn & Green. have this day sold. their business located at 1002 F st n.w. Wash- ington. D. C. to Mr. and Mrs Willlam Werner and Hereafter they will not be re: sponeible for any debis incurred by said business (Signed) SAMUEL NEWCORN CHARLES GREEN. {Sikned) _June 27755 e WE ANNOUNCE WITH DEEP SOREOW the death of the owner of the National Sor. tar Company, 'Mr.S. Dana Lincotn. who died on June 16. 1025, "1t is the fnieniion of the inistratrix. Mrs. Helen S. Chase. sister of Mr. Lincoln. Lo continue the business wn- Ger the same Management as heretofore up: U1 matters are mora definitely setiled. ot Which time & further announcement will Pe B TIONAL MORTAR COMPANY NATIONAL » MPAN D. C. CHESTERMAN. No. 1272 s ) F CORRENOY Washington. D. C.. May 11. 1925. Whereas, by satisfactory avidence pre- sented to the undersigned, it has been made to appear that “The Northwest National Bank of Washineton™ in the City of W: ington. in the District of Columbia. has co plied with all the provislons of the Statutes of the United States. required to be complied with before an association shall be author. 1zed to commence the business of Baniin Now. therefore. I E. W. Stearns Acti Comptroller of the Currency. do hereby ce v that “The Northwest National Bank of Washington™ in the City of Washington, in the District of Columbia, is authorized to commence the business of Banking as pro. vided in Section Fifty-one hundred and sixty- nine of the Revised Statutes of the United States. CONVERSION of Northwest Savin Bank of Washingion. D. C.. with & main office and one branch. located within ‘he limita of the City of (8eal.) Washington. District of Columbin, IN TESTIMONY WHERECF witness my hand and_Seal of this Eleventh day of May. 1925, E W. STEARNS. Acting Comptroller of the Currency. Don’t Roll and Toss —these warm nights. Have the mattress. box spring and pillows renovated and e real. sound sleen. For our_service. Main 3621 Be,dell's fa;tgry. $0:5 0 RE:N-E —for use in gases in the stomach and intestines ‘and unusual acidity “of stomagh, 0 at all ‘drug e g EXECUTI POSITION Open to high-grade man having th, following experience or qualification; Successful record as employe or o ficer of a business men's associatio newspaper or publicity training: wids acquaintance with loeal businesss 3 technical or practical automo. liarity with legls. The vacancy for which an_available man is sought is that of executive secretary of an or- anization of business men. None ut those with a successful record and the highest references will be con: sidered. Give full particulars in first letter. Address Box 2 Star of. 3 Produce Results 1 W [4 —Ahat are most gratifying to . of printing. st i HIGH GRADE., BUT NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS, EBNIss. EXPERT ROOF REPAIRING —by men with years of ex) . Give us'a trial—all Main TETTI0C Roofing 1121 5th n.w. moNCL Company Phove Main 14 There Are Many Things ~—you'll like about our printing besides the price. The National Capital Press = 1210-1212 D ST. X.W. ROOFING—BJ Koons ROUIGES, "l procedure BY FREDERIC. WILLIAM WILE. Staff Correspondent of The Star. CHICAGO, July 4.—Calvin Cool- idge told the American farmer last Winter that “the llon’s share” of the work - of rehabilitating agriculture must be done by the farmer himself. The bucolic brother is about to take the hint, and on a glgantic scale. Plans are approaching completion for the erection in Chicago of the “Amer- ican Agricultural Mart.” It is to be a vast temple of the farming in- dustry, rising on the banks of the Chicago River in the midst of other towering temples of business, for it is to be essentially a commercial en- terprise. The scheme carries out still another suggestion which Presi- dent Coolidge made to the farmers. It is highly and distinctly co-opera- tive in nature. Chicago has become a community of gigantic enterprises —=eigantic in concept and construc- tion. The American Agricultural Mart will be no exception to the rule. Flanking the murky river on fits southern side, just where magnifi- cent Michigan boulevard crosses to the north, the mart will occupy a full city block. It will be at least 16 stories In height and surmounted by a symbolicAl tower destined to add still another picturesquely mon- umental feature to Chicago’s sky- line. The purpose of the mart, as its name indicates, is primarily that of a market place for the farm and the farmer. It is to serve them in their dual capacity of buyers and sellers. Nothing that is not directly concern- ed with agriculture will have place beneath its capacious roof In every conceivable direction the mart will serve the needs of the tiller of the soil and of those who cater to them. So comprehensive in scope is the whole project that to listen to the enthusiasm of {ts sponsors is to imagine that the troubles of the American farmer soon will vanish, never to return. Will Cost $35,000,000. The American Agricultural Mart, which is to cost, according to present plans, something like $35,000,000, is to be open and ready for business not later than the year 1930. Financ- ing arrangements are assured. Pre- liminary construction work will be- gin as soon as titles to a few plots of required land along the river front can be cleared. The mart will have as next-door neighbors the two most striking buildings .in Chicago—the glittering white Wrigley pile and the massive Tribune Tower, which are just across the water. The site for the mart has been chosen because of the unique transportation facili- ties at hand. Dockage and whar already in use, will be the mart's water frontage, with the harbor of Chicago and the open waters of Lake Michigan less than half a mile away. On its land side the mart will have direct access to the lines of the INi- nois Central Railroad and its inter- locking connections South and West. Some day it will be possible for a wheat grower to ship his produce from his own flelds by rail to the mart, sell it there and ship it to Europe virtually in one operation. It was the late Henry P. Davison, war-time chairman of the American Red Cross and Morgan bank partner, who gave birth to the underlying idea of the Agricultural Mart. Its forerunner is the American Furniture Mart, opened here last year for the same general purposes—namely, to provide a basic industry with ways and means for facilitating intercourse between seller and buyer. It was Davison's theory that all American business some day would take such a trend. He saw kindred industries and interests consolidating and co- .| operating for common good. He said he couldn’t see why selling and buy- ing factors, also bound by a com- munity of interest, shouldn't ‘“get together” in as close and compact a form as feasible. Plan Many Marts. The young Chicago bankers who launched the Furniture Mart concede that they were specifically inspired by Davison's dream. The Agricultural Mart is merely their next step in working it out.” They have far.reach- ing plans for other industries besides turniture and agriculture. Some day they expect to dot Chicago with marts for automobiles, clothing, radio, print- ing, the building trades, and a variety of key businesses now conducted, as between buyer and seller, on more or less topsy-turvy lines. The farm people of the country have given the Agricultural Mart their unqualified blessing. They believe it is going to take them a long way toward the agricultural millennium, even though it doesn't actually bring it about. When Secretary Jardine was in Chicago in June and asked for his opinfon of the scheme, he said: “Fine!” He promised to boost it to the full extent of the Department of Agriculture’s ability. The great farm co-operative societies pledge their sup- port. The American Farm Bureau Federation, the National Grange and the other blg organizations which safeguard the general interests of agriculture greet the enterprise as a boon of immeasurable value to the whole farming industry. The farm press, a tremendous factor in Ameri- can agriculture, welcomes the scheme in unstinted terms. Practically all of these interests—the motive power be- hind the farm movement in the United States—will be concentrated at the mart and actually housed within it. There will thus be a centralization of these forces, such as has never before been attempted, and a unification of effort that may be of great influence upon agricultural development, espe- clally in a legislative sense. Demand “Balanced Tariff.” The Coolidge doctrine of self-help by and for the farmer is as much the mainspring of the project as the Davi- son idea from which it originally sprang. When the mart is a going concern, a couple of yvears hence, the American farmer will be in a position to help himself as he never was be- fore. His most conspicuous demand at this moment is for buying facilities that will give him a squarer deal than he’s now getting. That's why the farmer is clamoring for “a balanced tariff.” He feels that he has to pay for what he buys prices out of fair proportion to those he gets for what he sells. The mart deliberately aims to enable the farmer to buy his chief essentials, at least those he needs for actual working of his farm and har- vesting of his crops, under the most favorable possible conditions. To that end the enormous floor space “units” of the mart will be leased, exclusively for long terms, to industries that sup- ply the farmers’ needs. These will run the whole gamut from the finest motor-driven agricultural or electrical equipment of the nails the farmer needs to build a fence or the white lead with which to paint it. No purveyor of things the farmer has to have, whether it be a mighty corporation able to lease an entire floor of the mart, or a humble little business that can afford only the mini- mum “unit” of space, will be tolerated in the building except under certain strict and well fought-out conditions. These contemplate mainly plans for stabilizing prices and generally provid- ing order where now, in many direc- tions, chaos rules, when the farmer enters the market as a buyer of indis- pensable commodities. There are to be rigid rples governing display, offer, | pricing, sale and delivery of -everything |{CHICAGO AGRICULTURAL MART MAY BE FORERUNNER OF OTHERS Bankers Planning to Aid in Establishment of Buying andv Selling Centers for Main Industries. Farmers Expect Great Benefits. the farmer comes to Chicago ‘to buy. From A to Z these rules will have in mind the economic’ necessities of the farmer, while duly safeguarding the legitimate interests of the business- man who wants to trade with him. Time-Saving Essential. Time-saving is as essential to the farmer as to the hustling city man. The Agricultural Mart is conceived very conspicuously to be an econo- mizer of the farmer's time. Now- adays, when he comes to a buying market, he spends whole days and corresponding numbers of dollars in living costs while attending to his needs. At the mart the farmer will be able to accomplish in a day what at present it takes him a week to do, because about everything under the sun that is wanted on a farm will be assembled in one place. The ruralist will have before him there an em- barrassment of riches in the way of choice and assortment, and the rules of the .mart will guarantee him against highwaymanship. It's the Jesse Jameses of big business that the farmer today mostly fears. In his eyes they are usually manufactur- ers, and he’s been educated to belleve that many of them live in New Eng- land. The colossal dimensions of the building will permit facilities of a be- wildering. variety. Among them will be the world's biggest convention hall, to seat a maximum of 20,000 persons. The hall will be constructed so that it can be converted, as de- sired, into an assembly place to seat 2,000 or 5,000 or 10,000. When re- quired for other purposes than con- ventions the hall can be turned into a place for huge exhibits like the great dairy show or the live stock show, or some of the other big dis- plays which the agricultural industry holds from time to time. There'll even be room beneath the mart’s roof for a farmer’s hotel of a thousand rooms or more. A farmers’ club is provided for. The promoters of the mart are in receipt of innumerable suggestions for mak- | ing it a national agricultural commu nity center. Some of the proposals are fantastic, but every one with a practical smack is being considered. The various industries that are after the American farmer's money and as large a slice of the $16,000, 000,000 or $18,000,000,000 which our annual agricultural output is worth are quite as keen for the mart devel- opment as the farm people are. It's going to save them money, too. The American furniture trade after a year’s experience with their immense Chicago mart, the prototype of the Agricultural Mart, wonders how it ever managed to get along without s0 economic and sensible a form of co-operation. It has revolutionized the furniture trade. Agriculture may be on the verge of equally funda- mental changes. (Covyright. 1925.) $4.50 FEE HALTS SUIT OVER ROGERS’ HEIR Countess Salm Von Hoogstraeten Seeks to Legitimatize Her Son in Austria. By the Associated Press. N NEW YORK, July 7.—The service of papers on Countess. Salm von Hoogstraetea in a suit regarding the validating in Austria of her marriage today awaited payment of $4.50 proc- ess server's fee. Millicent Rogers, New York soclety girl, and granddaughter of Henry H. Rogers of the Standard Oil Company, married Count von Hoogstraeten se- cretely at the city hall in New York, on January 8, 1924. There was a honeymoon trip to Paris, and shortly the bride’'s father, Henry Hudleston Rogers, went abroad and brought her home. A son was born September 24, 1924. Tn behalf of Dr. Emil Kammerer, a Vienna lawyer, there have been filed in the County Court at Brooklyn sum- mons and complaint in a suit for $6,199 and costs. A copy of a power of attorney given by the countess to Kammerer is attached. Sheriff Biggs has notified Arthur J. Stern of Brooklyn, who represents the Vienna lawyer, that the papers will not be served until he gets his fee. Stern said the countess wanted the marriage validated in order to pro- tect her son. Validation was neces- sary in Austria because the count was divorced when he captured the hsir- ess. The count is on the continent somewhere playing tennis. ‘The countess is at her father’s home in Southampton. —_— Four Smallpox Cases Found. Special Dispatch to The Star. LYNCHBURG, Va., July 7.—Four new cases of smallpox have been found in the home of Ed Creasy, in Perkins Park, a Lynchburg suburb, in Camp- bell County, where there were already four other cases. Dr. H. P. Brown, county physician, says that none of the patients had ever been vaccinated, but one of them asserts that he had had the disease previously. A general vaccination is going on in the section. Roofs Are Like People They get sick—and need restoratives. But you don't wait till there’s worse trouble before you call the doctor. We're “Roof Doctors”—but like your personal physician —we look the “patient” over. Maybe it only needs advice— then we give it. But if it needs treatment we apply that with the skill of a life-long experience. It isn’t just a “job” with us —for we go into the con- dition of the roof thoroughly —repairing the damage al- ready done—and preventing costly spreading. Rose Service Is Economy Service e iy cone 2120-22 Georgia Avenue Phone North 2044 {U. S. LAND BANK PLAN Indians Ask Better Dry Enforcement; Lay Crimes to Rum GRAND JURY OPENS CLUB GRASH PROBE Calls 30 More Witnesses in Effort to Fix Blame for Pick- wick Club Disaster. By the Associated Press. ST. PAUL, Minn, July 7.—A petition signed by officers of two Chippewa Indian organizations, pleading for more stringent en- forcement of the eighteenth amendment among the Indians, has been forwarded to President Coolidge, the Governors and at- torneys general of Minnesota and Wisconsin, United States Senators Thomas D. Schall and Henrick Shipstead ‘and various Indian agents and other public officials, it was learned today. Bootleggers plying their trade among the Indians, in deflance of prohibition law and the treaty be- tween the Chippewa tribe and the United States, have caused ‘de- plorable” conditions on the reser- vations, the petition recites. Nine- ty per cent of the crimes among the Indians may be traced, to in- toxicants, the petition says. OBERHOLTZER TRIALS DELAYED TILL FALL Failure to Agree Upon First of Three to Face Jury Brings Court Adjournment. By the Associated Pre BOSTON, July 7.—The task of plac ing the blame for the collapse of the Pickwick Club Building early last Sat- urday on a gay crowd of “night-before the-fourth” revelers, with a loss of 43 lives, ussumed chief importance to- day when definite assurance had been recetved from the wrackers that the ruins had yielded the last of the dead. The county grand jury spent 16 hours examining the scene of the dis. aster and questioning witnesses, some of them survivors, and adjourned shortly before midnight to resume the inquiry today. Gov. Fuller announced that the State would lend all possible assistance and declared that if the county investiga- tion fafled to uncover facts, he would place the case in the hands of Attor- ney Generai Jay R. Benton. The grand jury has heard 15 wit nesses. Thirty more have been sum moned, and it was considered doubt ful If the task of examining all could be accomplished in time to return a finding today Purse Raised for Widows. Down in the Chinatown district, where the night life cgntered about the ill-fated ciub, they talked about the gay habitues whose battered bod les were being buried todoy. They re membered Willlam “Toots” Murray, against whom indictments were brought In connection with the bro mide gas bomb incident in the Rhode Island State Senate chamber a year ago. The boxing fraternity mourned for Frank Tillo and Neddo Flanagan, lo- cal ring favorites, while over at sta- tion 4 they were raising a purse for the relatives of Lieut. Inspector “Ben- ny” Alexander, who died while wait- ing for the man he was trailing to visit his accustomed haunt, and for the family of Patrolman Paul Hal- loran, detailed to guard the club. By the Associated Press. NOBLESVILLE, Ind., July 7 (#).- The trials of D. C. Stephenson, former grand dragon of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan: Earl Gentry and Earl Klinck, charged jointly with murder in con nection with the death of Madge Oberholtzer, Indianapolis girl, will not be held until October. After rival counsel failed to agree which of the trio shall be tried first, Judge Fred E. Hines adjourned the April term of the Hamilton County Circuit Court. Hines' action came after the judge had threatened to adjourn court un- less the agreement could be reached. A fey minutes after the judge’s de- cisive step Eph Inman, chief defense counsel, declared he had prepared a motion for change of venue. Judge Hines informed him the term had been adjourned. A venire of 100 men, called in the case of Gentry, who was scheduled to go to trial yesterday, was discharged. Defense counsel expressed surprise at the action of the court and were not prepared to say what their next move would be. With the opening of court, attor- neys for Gentry sald they were ready for trial. ‘William Remy, Marion County prosecutor, stated the prose- cution was not prepared to try Gentry. Judge Hines ruled that the State could choose who should be tried first, as all three of the defendants had asked immediate trials. TO BE URGED IN MEXICO Deputy Merla Will Also Offer Aid. Legislation Modeled American Laws. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 7.—Pedro Merla, Mexican deputy, announced today that on his return to Mexico City he would propose to his government the estab lishment with Mexican capital of five banks similar to the Federal Land Bank of Houston, Tex. Senor Merla, who is visiting in New York, said he considered the Federal land bank the last word in modern finance and banking, coming to this conclusion after careful study of financial institutions in the United States and Europe. Speaking of his investigation of American oil legislation, he said that | upon his return to Mexico he would present the draft of a federal ofl law which would include the best features of existing American legislation. on e $1,000,000 PRE-WAR DEBT FINALLY IS ADJUSTED International Harvester Co. Reaches Agreement With Ruma- nians on Obligations. By the Associated Prees. - BUCHAREST, Rumania, Jul The International Harvester Co. of Chicago has reached a settlement with its Rumanian debtors for about $1,- | teacher, EIGHT DROWNED AS BOATS CAPSIZE by Ralph W. Ince, motion picture pro- ducer, for the role of his bride. The girl's stepmother, Mrs. Joseph Bryce, who lives here, has received word of the announcement of the engag=ment in Los Angeles. Angeles by g sister of Anita A month ago Mrs. Ince obtained a judgment of $9,661 under a separa- tion agreement. Ince also has been a defendant in a $59,000 damage suit by his brother-in George Stewart, which was brought after a fight in Ince was divorced last week in Los|an automobile on thé way home from Stews dinner at a country inr Sunday School Picnic Ends in Tragedy When 27 Are Thrown Into Water. By the Associated Press. ST. THOMAS,” Ont., July 7.—The death toll in last night’s Sunday school picnic tragedy at Pinafore Lake, where two flat-bottom boats tied to gether carrying 27 children and a capsized, was put today at eight persons. The teacher, Mrs. Watts, and seven of her charges were drowned. Early today all but two bodies had been recovered. The dead are: Mrs. Watts, Edith Robertson, 8 years old; Murray || Barnes, 5; Frances Vidler, 9; Rowland Smith, 8;" Jean Robertson, 12; Alfred || Sutherland, 5: Jean Murray, 7. All| are from St. Thomas. | The accident occurred at dusk in|| full view of a crowd of 500 persons, in cluding the parents and friends of | the drowned children. When the craft capsized women | screamed and fainted and scores of | men jumped into the water fully clad || and swam to the spot where the chil- | dren had been thrown into the water. They succeeded in saving 20 children The picnic was a gathering of chil dren from the Sunday schools of three Anglican churches. DIRECTOR TO WED DANCER “ DAUGHTER OF DICTATOR || Ralph W. Ince, Divorced Last Week, Engaged to Lucilla Mendez, Screen Star. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 7.—Lucilla Men- | dez, dancing and screen star and daughter of the late Cipriano Castro, dictator_of Venezuela, has been cast T Rental Manager Wanted a man with experience and a car to " handle rentals in real estate office. Address Box 156-] BILL—JACK__RALP! SKILLED 000,000 pre-war accounts after several years' negotiations. The terms of the settlement are not announced, but it is understood that they are similar to those made by British, Swiss and Italian creditors, whereby the debts. were reduced to 35 Noted Archeologist Stricken. ROME, July 7 (#).—Prof. Giacomo Boni, eminent Italian archeologist, known for his excavations of ancient Roman ruins, is suffering from an apoplestic - stroke. His condition. is over seven yvears at 5 per cent. Visitors Marvel! $6,750 Semi-Detached F‘. Br"ck Hames i ens Ridge The unprecedented rapidity with which these attractive new dwellings have been sought and bought is pretty good proof of real worth. Especially when they offer such modern refine- ments as English front porches, oak floors, porcelain plumbing, enameled woodwork, rear service porches, screens throughout, electricity, hot- water heat, cement sidewalks, paved alleys, etc., ete. Easy Terms Fort Steb Open Till 9 P.M. — EXHIBIT HOUSE 612 Roxboro Place One square north of Rittenhouse Street between 5th and 7th. WARDMAN 1430 K Street Main 3830 “We House One-tenth of Washington's Population.” Coolingly Porous There’s a porous weave in these seasonable suits to give the body breathing space. Be cool in one of these Sidney West special Linen Suits $18.00 Pre-shrunk to launder well. In all sizes—regulars, shorts and stouts. Fitted to your figure with Capital Correctness at Sidney West’s. Sidney West 14th and G Stree'sv N.W. per cent and the payments extended PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS &5 Thivath S tw » d ‘Fhons Frankila 191 ‘ For Sale or Trade 30,000 Sq. Ft. Ground, corner | property. No restrictions; can | build row houses or apartment. 1 Excellent location near Western High School. For full informa- | | tion see Mr. Kiesecker. N. L. Sansbury Co. 1418 Eye St. NNW. Main 5904 \ | i 733 13th St. N.W. AYEAR TO PA The New Wonder Homes N L DURIEITH At 36th and R N.W. Sparklingly clean walls in KITCHENS and BATH- ROOMS are only possible where they are painted with waterproof paint in place of the usual papering. It is the modern sanitary method used in these wonderful homes. Values unequalled in the city are these inviting HOMES COMPLETE, with their six big rooms, bath, labor-saving features, etc., at but [l Our Safe $10’700 DON’T PUT OFF! Take the New Burlieth Bus and INSPECT THIS EVENING Sane Terms Members of the Operative Builders' Association of D. C 713-15 14th St. N.W. Main 23435 An Economical Way to Home Ownership HE Warren plan of Co-operative Ownership gives you opportunity to buy an apartment in a handsome new building downtown, to occupy it while buying it and to pay for it in monthly payments less than the rental of similar apart- ments. The co-operative feature makes this pos- sible. Come and see these fine apartment “1435 N Street N.W., Inc.” Co-operative Apartment Theéy have Murphy beds, dining alcoves with built-in china closets, built-in refrig- erator drains and refrigerators, incinera- tor—and other special features. First Payments as Low as $32() Monthly Payments as Low as $]19.50 Own Your Own Apartment Downtown! Come to see these l4th St. trolley to half a square west—or by 16th S, bus to N St and walk one and a half squares east. _Csl! at Office: 925 Fifteenth St. Phone Main 977 Evening Phone Mr. Dawson Clev. 2839.) apartments by N St and walk during July e Jugust puts +wRUUD 9% n vour home NOW—TODAY;QS down installs your RUUD 95—and you have a year to pay. Act quickly while the opportunity is here—during july and August only. Without interfering with'the summer vacation savings you can give the entire family all-year-round hot water comfort and convenience. Bee your Plumbing Dealer or the Gas Light Co. at once or come in for a demonstration. RUUD MANUFACTURING COMPANY Phone Main 6985