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» HOLLYWOOD MOVIE LIFE FOUND TAME “Wild” Like Sunday School Picnic, Says Wile—City Gets Culture. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. pondent of The Star. , Calif., August 15.— ngeles, etted with money making, movie falne, real estate spec- ulation and population hunting, has gone 1 the “higher things” of. life. is the itinerant ast- erner pon arrival with tall tales s amazing develop- ment > Is_far more likely, as I was dmonished not to leave town ting the Hollywood Bowl. Hollywood sugg ted movies. Now- ‘adays it means music. In particular, it means the magnificent open-air evening concerts by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra in a vast nat ural amphither on the edge of Hollywood. There, four nights a week under the starlit heavens and palisaded by the encircling Sierras, 25,000 or 30,000 Los elans fore- gather to revel in Beethoven, Chopin, ‘Wagner, Liszt and 1 fore. gathered w ploneer o on the c Ethe! Leginska only directed the aplomb r Hollyweod Bowl—in so far as its ar tistic uses are concerned, the creation voman, Mrs. J. J. Carter—is n of the new Los Angeles. | al purposes for the and s n other harbor a &F0 the v been within the o very long. four in Los A own automobile. N Angeles seems for expansive city that one pel geles drives the thing dest of proc averdge atte &t Hollywood Bowl concerts, and that capacity—30,000-0dd—is commop 1 was among those present in the Bleacher ttharmonic artists pla crowd The crow when the arc lights far out on the bowl's periphery d on, 1s a sight more ence. com the at o the hen, in_the rn of the Bos. it be i , as up in some be heard throughout. that vast except the crickets on the hey twittered above 1 stood up once or twice to see if any- was irreverent enough to strike its flicker could easily 1 detect There was no us interruption of that kind. ilence Broods Over Spot. 5 whol 1'brooded a mag: mitted one m its natural acoustick he orchestra plays upon m which those seated in arthermost rows mu feet away. Up there the; were in the built for gen- Great mass rallies have ay Bugene Debs held forth in the bowl. He eddressed a mere handful of 7,000 or 8,000, a pretty good-sized audience un- der ordinary cond: but one that hardiy made a- d this modern d for the wife ing the the P 7 sub: inly supp illionaire, William 2 ake both ends meet. But within a couple of years Mrs. Carter had the bowl concerts not only on a s taining, but on a pic where they are today. on Los ‘Angeles’ readines an ed a winner. Angel being “lark, Jr., to Los | To ed con- ts. This Sum- ddition to Mlle Wood of London Leginska Pilgrim Play Produc When you Hollywood Bowl on one tu cre more al si Angeles st n.w ad Facial A AUG. 15. 1 o ais debis con- yself. EDWARD L ads £ vads 2 in. ™ Addione The autiful, Inc., s now located at 163 Connecticut ave. We @re furnishing some of the foremost homes bl 3 America. Your valued {hre to or from N ¥ Phila or B B4 S” TRANSFER & STORAGE CO, F. LE FOR_ANY myself. CARL ROOF? We'll tell you. . Call_us up. TRONCLADZ® 0 Liz1oman: ‘Acerial Photographic Service Contracts for Special Views invited. Pho- tographic crew in vicinity of Washington BRout August 20tn. ild Aqial Sutveys, ¢ Ine {1 #21 188 Bt NoW. Tel. Matn 6958, | {on Lumblest { Those who go in for it are the ex- every Summer. The natives call it “America’s Oberammergau.” It is splendidly staged, though not on the lavish scale of the original “Passion Play” near Munish, The natives (real and adopted) are almost as proud of the “Pilgrimage Play” as tHey are of the concerts in Hollywood Bowl, for play and music altke symbolize the new Los Angeles. When the city's immense public library, now springing injo existence, is built it is evident that the community will dedicate itself with intensive energy to_ finer arts than money-making. Monhey-making in Los Angeles cannot help going on. It is indigenous to the soil, like or- anges, or the climate, but it will go hand-in-hand, as never before, with higher ideals. The movies are still very much in the Los Angeles picture, as it were, even though they've had to make way for the older sister art of music. Hollywood is no longer big enough for the sprawling studio plants of the blg producing concerns. ~Another movie community, called Culver City, has grown up alongeide of it during the past two or three years, and some day may be the more impor- tant of the two. Four-fifths of all the motion pictures made annually in the United States are manufactured in Los Angeles (which includes Holly- wood and Culver City). The studios have a pay roll of nearly $1,500,000 a week, and ‘the films there produced are sold throughout the country for §750,000,000 a vear. A flea-bit of another $8,000,000 represents annual sales of Los Angeles movies to for- elen countries, Celebrated concerns like the Universal, United Artists, De Mille, Famous-Lasky Players, Metro Goldwyn-Mayer, Harold Lloyd and Charlie Chaplin organizations main- plants which in acreage compare t unfavorably with the biggest in- strial establishmenis in the East. No Shocks to Be Found. | chool | is no | serlous- | s “wild” as a Sund d hardly that. Ther working, or more or more business-like com-| anywhere in the world than the motion ‘picture colony in Los Angeles. 1 saw it by day and by sht. * No Main street {n the United States is less frivolous. ‘Working ‘hmu'< are long and arduous, and the Fairbankses and Pi the harder ckfords, who down to thel employed in mob | )-bed fraternity - days a week they're sent far location,” in order that a may be “shot” on mountain or on seashore, or in a forest e people are about as £ after an average dav | 1 life in the studios as brainworkers or anywhere are. That not for it at all. “on location” anual labore ns they're ception and not the rule. “Roughnecks” Going. As far as the higher-ups in the movie can control it, the oughnecks” and wild party hounds of both sexes are being weeded out of the, profession. Nowhere on Holly- wood boulevard or Sunset boulevard, a tenth s many leaming as main street of ar The e counted on] midwest town | of filmdom live | luxurious but quiet homes in Los s or in Hollywood. L they took’ part, on July 31, In sreat procession designed to usher Greater Movl * with Wili in car with ouglas Fairbanks Mary Pick- | ord, the great knights and ladies of | e screen, whose names are house- 10ld words, are seldom seen in public. hey have come to look upon them- elves as the responsible leaders of a sreat profession, and are comporting hemselves accordingiy. There's an atmosphere of fortune ind prosperity about Hollywood that aggers the imagination. You hear bout the $5.000, $10,000 and $25,000 veekly incomes that this star, that ctor, commands, and are left gasp- Even the publicity agents of the larger motion picture concerns receive 1y that dwarfs the salary of a cab- while President Coolldge’s of '$100,000 is, of course, the st bagatelle measured by the an- | earnings of Harold Lioyd or ickie Coogan. Jackie's mount to me and fortune has caused Ameri- can youth of the tenderer years to stream to Los Angeles, or rather to e led to Hollywood in droves, by elr mothers' apron strings. Today arly a thousand kiddies, aged any- vhere from 3 to 14, are regularly em- oyed in the movies. Young Stars Go to School. The State laws require Hollywood 0 maintain public schools for these voungsters, and at every one of the important studlos there are classes d teachers for them. One may rea sonably doubt whether the original three R's have much of a chance in so mammoth a ke-believe at- osphere of rouge and romance, but a serious attempt is made to ladle out | some elementary education to the calented tots who earn ahywhere from $75 to $250 a week apiece. Two of my cicerones at Hollywood were a pair of beautiful children— Jack and Maurice Murphy, Seattle boys, whose faces and names became nationaily celebrated through their acting In the “Peter Pan” film. The sons of a Washington State lawyer, the Murphy ilads broke into the movies wholly by accident. They were swimming on one of the Los Angeles | beaches a yvear or two ago, when a director, in search of juvenile talent, spled them. He liked their agility and their looks, and when he learned that Jack and Maurice, in addition to be- ing fine_swimmers, were all-around athletes, including the ability to ride horses, they were “signed up” with- out dela Jack is 13, Maurice 9. Maarrice is anyaccomplished pianist, and can write. He hasn't made up his mind whether he’ll stay in the movies, be a concert artist, or become ! a newspaper man. At present both of the boys are “on location,” with fancy contracts for indefinitely long engagements at their disposal. The | experts hope the Murphy kiddies will decide to continue to adorn the pro- fession In which they have made so brilliant a start. Their mother is in charge of them. They are regular kids, who hate to have their ears washed. It i3 not roses, roses all the way in the movies. Hollywood boulevard contains a stretch, occupied by the so- called “independent” producer: hich icknamed “Death Vaile: ing Exc]usivc an d Individual = Yet Reasonably | theory tha m stars of all magnitudes—from the | ¢ e | distributed today {water, Sclect You Home Site NOw!. Hedges & Middleton, Inc. REALTORS THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ‘C, CRASHES GREET D.C. GUARD N CAMP Motorists on Wild Machines . Create Terror as Local Engineers Arrive. BY WILLIAM J. WHEATLEY, Staff Correspondent. VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., August 15. — With a serles of motor cycle crashes, in which one of the machines went through a building; a collision betwesn the troop train and an auto- mobile; a shortage of food, which left some of the troops without lunch, the 21st ‘Regiment of Engineers and the ith Military Police Company, Na- onal Guard of the District of Colum- bia, arrived in camp here late this aft- erncon for a two-week period of ni- tensive training in the field. After making a precise getaway in true military style and arriving in Norfolk on schedule, the entire regi- ment stored its packs on the waiting special train and assisted in unload- ing the transport. Men Dive for Safety. Two motor cycles of the Headquar- ters and Service Company and one of the Military Police Company were manned and ordered to proceed to Virgivia_Beach over the road. Off with a flying start, the first went rashing down the dock, scaring all the military dignity out of a com- pany of engineers, as te men dived for v and the officers uncere- moniously sought the protecting cover of a steel storehouse wall on the a safe getaway was more valorous then a determined stand agalnst a metal steed. S A steel tool traler of the Engineers’ Regiment ended the rambunctious but none the less exciting movement. Simultaneously with the resounding crash came a_hoarse-voiced arder from afe point behind the steel buflding. forthwith relieving the driver. Another Cycle Starts. s the troops cautiously resought eir places, another motor cycle lit Iy jumped down the dock and intc i yard, wh it plowed the wall of a frame office 1ilding, stopping with its front whee! the desk of a cierk, as the other: the building sought the safety of the outside clearing, where they re mained until the motor equipment was weil clear of the railroad property Hungry soldiers must be fed, and a there was no provision for midnigh rations on board the transport -lasi night, a foraging expedition, secretly organized, netted it 100 box luncheons and they went to bed happy, as did the drowsy guard put over It. The responsible guard company, th military police, were put at the en ¢ the line, when the luncheons were and the supply it just as the head of that compan: reached the distributing point. It lef* them hungry on their train ride, with appetites whetted by the ride on salt and wondering if it paid te sleep on the job. ‘Two Hours on Way. After maneuvering all over Berkle; and touching on every siding, the spe cial traveled in re troop-train routine, making a journey of nearly 2 hours out of an ordinary 40-min. ute ride. As- {f the usual delays were not onough, while the train was back ing on the spur leading from the main ilne at Virginla Beach to the rifie range the troops were jarred out of their seats by a thud and sudden balt, and all clamored quickly off the n. An’ automobfle left parked too close the rallroad tracks w ek by fortunately with the on damage that of tearing the rear step from the parlor car which tached to the spectal. This was enough excitement to Al! the needs of any troops short of a to the trai ireal conflict, and they piled off their trai |Oebmann and the 12ist { Band, marching in camp, led by Col. John W. Englneer: to their campsite within 100 yards of the raflroad track and a quarter of & mile from the Atlantic Ocean. Quick work was made in unloading |the camp equipment from the cars and within a remarkably short time there came into being the tented city which arose in boom-town fashion, which will be their home for the next two weeks, while they are going through the training schedule, to fit The epithet pertains to the fact that a depressingly large number of the pictures “made” by the independents never survive “a first run,” and that many an aspiring actor or actress, and often enough a dlrector, falls by the wayside in consequence, with careers nipped prematurely and per- manently in the bud. The palatial cafeterias of Los Angeles, the finest and cheapest in the world, are filled with pretty waltresses who came to Hollywood to be Gloria Swansons and have ended up as disenchanted at- tendants In self-serving establish- ments down town. But there's the other side of the medal, too. Many a star of the screen, whose name {s nightly emblazoned in incandescents across the country, tri- umphed at Hollywood after heart- breaking months and years of rebuff and discouragement. Today, sweat ing and hoping as humble “extras and “supers” in the big studios, may be the Nazimovas and Valentinos of tomorrow. (Copyright. 1925.) The MAYFAIR 2115 C Street N.W. New, Modern, Fireproof APARTMENT Ready for Immediate Occupancy Resident 1 Room, Kitchen and Bath 2 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath Situated within & block and a half of the Potomac River and the Lincoln Memorial, and adjacent to the public recreation grounds for all outdoor sports. Far enough away from the hustle and bustle of the downtown section of the city to be quiet and peaceful, yet within fifteen minutes’ walk of the Shops, Clubs, Theaters and Business District. Convenient to Bus and all Government Bulldings. Perfect service will be our aim, and an inspection by you will mean a reservation. Car lines and AUGUST 16, 1925-PART 1. MAY SUCCEED HUSBAND IN SENATE Mrs. Rizpah Ladd, widow of the late mentioned as u_possible appointee to complete the unfinished term to Only one woman has ever received a Senate seat. March 4, 1927. Mrs. Rebecca M. Félton of Georgla. enator from North Dakot: them to take the field immediately in me of war or national emergency. Permanent mess shacks are on the d, and soon the evening meal was aming for the scores of hungry men whose appetites were increased ¢ carrying the heavy field packs in ‘hich the foldier carrfes his all whi n the fleld. Tents were arra 1 style that would do credit to an housewife and the officers’ tents rose on an even line ahead of the s shacks Healthful Camp. convenlences of a perma p site, such as running nowers ‘in buildings for the an, and sanitary drainage fac wssure & healthful camp. hortly before the supper hour the oops had completed their camp ta nd chores, the guard had been estab shed and the command was ready | or its first night at the Summer re- { rt, 8 miles away, to which there | s a general exodus | fi a Rest for them tonight and tomo: row, except & dress at retreat vill' it them for begin the har : "3 and the vicinity ctice waters land Aving the theory and of nding dquarte . where his s regiment o He tmmed!ately tion of the camp and expressed self as well pleased. The motor train which left Wa: ngton Friday morning, with seve tons of equipme: shortly after 1 o'clock in the charge| of Capt. S. Morgan, commanding the | i{emdquarters and Service Company. 1d Capt. E. H. Grove, camp quar lermaster, who came ahead of the train and had prepared the camp for | the reception of the troops. - | Other Arrivals. Mapgruder, wh weelk, reported in on, and Lieut. Georse sior Lieut. led thi camp the of the Maryland which Is composed of unies in the vicinity of W :nd which has been here month pericd of training, ut and boarded the special which brought the District 1o the camp. Maj. Gen. Anton Stephan, com- | wanding the 29th National Guard Di- | vision, composed of the Maryland, Virginia and District troops, and also commander of the District National marched train troops Guarg, is_expected to arrive in camp | M tomorrow” morning for a two-week | period of training, with the division taff. This stafft camp will be sep- irate and distinct from the camp of the 1215t Engineers and military po- lice which will be under command of Col. John W. Oehmann. —_— New Oil Burner Sells at Remarkably Low Price. A remarkable new burner which :osts only a few dollars, and which heats any stove or furnace just as well as a $400 or $500 oil burner, has been perfected by the International Heating Company, 119 South 1ith street, Dept. 454, St. Louls, Mo. This amazingly simple and sturdy device works without electricity or gas. It burns a cheap oll, gives one of the hottest, quickest and safest fires known, and can be easily slipped into the firebox of any stove or furnace by any one. The manufacturers want agents and offer a 30 days’ free trial to every one. Write them today.— Advertisement. Even the politiclan objects to being shaved with a razor that has a pull. Manager See Resldent Manager on Premises, or Swartzell, Rheem & Hensey Co. 1412 Eye St N.W. Franklin 9503 727 15th Street NW. fw CREDIT MEN TO EXPAND. Select L. M. Hewlett to Head Drive for New Members. In preparation for a drive next month Frank W. tion of Credit Men, has na 1. Hewlett chairman of bership committee. Mr. Hewlett has been active in the having | gat littie henefit includ- and enter- one of the charter | ably organ- | sailles deie ion ces, rk of * the served on several membership, s comr welfare ‘who She was membership ! White, president of the Washington Assocla ed Louts the mem- | {TRADE WAR MAY BE A BGON T0 DANZIG Polish-German Controversy May Bring Business to Free City. Correspondence of the Associated Proes. DANZIG, July 19.—The trade war betweon Poland and Germany now i\ progress may have one beneficent result, in the opinion of many Danzig business men, if it will mean the de- flection of Upper Silesian coal to the countries bordering upon the Baltic Sea which were formerly a part of the Russian empire. Such a deflec- tion would, in their opinion, prove an advantage to four interested groups: The Poles would have a promising new market in exchange for the Ger man; Danzig would gain. much new business as the shipping port; the Baltic countries could obtain the coal more cheaply than they can now buy English coal; Germany could dispose of her Ruhr coal without the inter- ference of Upper Silesian coal com- petition. 3 To effect such a fundamental trans- formation Danzig must improve its loading and unloading facilities. At present it can take care of 30,000 tons of coal a month, but it is said that the machinery for transshipment from rallway to ocean-gofng vessels is not as up-to-date and time-saving it should be. paign under way among the business men for remedying this situation and equipping Danzig properly Have No Goods of Own. The people of Danzig are the inno- cent victims of another phase of the rate war between Germany and Po- land. Goods of purely Danzig origin may go to Germany unmolested and in return foodstuffs and other articles intended purely for Danzig are per- mitted to come into the Free City ex- | empt. AS a matter of fact there are prac- tically no “goads of purely Danzi | origin,” consequently exempting that lclass of merchandise affords little | comfort to the Danzig business man. While foodstuffs may come from Germany into Danzig unaffected by the tariff war, the people of Danzi There are no cus- toms barriers between Danzig and Poland, the two having been insepar- linked by the treaty of Ver- in a customs union. Thus, | Danzig dealers find it more profitable gate in tri-state conventions of credit|to pass these German foodstuffs men at Roanoke, Richmond niore and W gton. - Mr. I is assistant treasurer and mej the board of the Grif poration SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at and_Sailings From New York Dalicht Saving Ttme, YESTERDAY Gothegb DUE TODAY t t, arrived in camp | Poncs. Westphaila . Stutt; Minn, Fort Al Caracas. . . Southampton, Aug. ;.. .Havana. Aug. . Puerto Ba- Kin STEAMERS, SAILED YESTERDAY. =3 Rotterdam-—R: ity of Eurek: Cabo Espartel—Cad: Adriatio—Liverpoo. = Leviathan—Southampion southern Cros—EBio de Ji Suftren—Havre i Cameronia—Liverpool Sameronia—Li Minnewaska. Orca—Hamburg . SAILING TUESDAY. President Wilson—Ponta Deigada. tania—Southampton U srda: §8332355853 TR R Rk ki Kiieizi Comayagus—~uerts C SAILING WEDNESDAY. —San Juan. sdor—Puerto Columbis. ixaolu—Xingeton Guiana—Trinidad Corsican Prince—M, Haiti—St. Thomas. 38323 OUURRE o ki $308 £33 Baltl- | wlett ber of Coal Cor-| o> to Poland, where they can obtain bet- ter prices for them. st s B | Ancient Bones Toughened. By the use of a new varnish valu- bones and remnants of prehis- mals may now be handled i RICH MILL OWNER KILLS , MAN; GIRL. HELD CAUSE Father Is Reported to Have Ob- jected to Attentions Paid Daugh- ter by Son of Minister. By the Associated Press. ROCKINGHAM, N. C., August 15.— W. B. Cole, wealthy cotton manufac- turer and president of the Hannah Picket Mill, was held in jail tonight without privilege of bail, on recom mendation of the coroner’s jury, fol lowing an inquest on the death of W. W, Ormond, electrician, who was shot and killed by Cole on one of the prin- cipal streets of Rockingham late to- y. Acording to testimony before the coroner's jury, Ormond was seated in his automobile on Main street, when | Cole approached the car and shot him Cole was taken immediately to his home in the suburbs, accompanied by a physiclan. He was arrested there. Cole has a family and has long been prominent in business, churech and social circles. No motive has been gned for his act, though it was re- ported tonight that he objected to at. tentions paid his daughter by Ormond. The latter was a son of Rev. A. L. Ormond, Methodist minister, former pastor in this town. He resides now at Nashville, N. C. The young man was unmarried. He had just arrived | here today. Believes Lightning Cured. Lightning is credited with having | effected a cure of paralysis in the arm | of Mrs. John Devinney of Beverly, Pa. Dmring a storm, while she was | g on the veranda, a -blinding sh came and the lightning for a | - seemed to piay upon Mrs. De. inney’s arm. Immediately after. | ward she found she could raise and | lower the arm, whereas for weeks it | had been useless. Girls act as pages in the Georgla ature. z top G 0 AR R e SRR danger of easy disintegration. |8 in | GemEr of bones ragile 25 to be i some “CLUB VENICIAN” Pat Carr and His ‘‘Venicians” Toll House Tavern Burnt Mills Road pper Dance Evers ¢ | The Argonne 16th & Columbia Rd. N.W. Very attractive apartments of two, three and four rooms, kitchen, reception hall, bath and balcony. Spacicas rooms, built-in fixtures, semi-hote! service. Location nnexcelled and rentals very rcasonable. Come in and visit these beau- tifn} apartment onits. The Argonne| 16th & Columbia Rd. N.W. at SRR LTS AT TG Demonstrate IEHTTRITFERHTA Cook With the Heat You Now Waste The cooking-top compartment of the Scott Gas Range confines the surplus heat from the cook- ing top burners, so that it can be utilized instead of passing off into the air or up the flue. ‘While using only two of its four cooking top burners the Deflected Heat warms the Oven sufficiently for most roasting and baking, and stores hot water for dishes and general household use. See demonstration. 1204 H Street NW. Phone Main 9437 hmmmmmmmmnmmmmmmnmmmmmwmmm Perfect HOT WATEF Service Ho;rnifl'n.:r mhflxflgyl;:t‘: Firm e faoest A i oo stream flows automatically. Hot water anywhere, an: time and as much as vou want, SPECIAL SALE $5.00 DOWN A year to pay the balance Pay $5.00 down and the heater is installed in your home. Come in and let us show you how- its works, what comfort it means in your home. Edgar Morris Sales Co., 1305 G Street N.W. Phone Main 1032-1033 Pitisburg AUTOMATIC GAS ~YATER HEATER! ) 2 ERRARRN YRR R SR Paying Garage Rent Parking in the Street Protect Your Car Phone Lin. 10-100 Washington Construction Co. 201 Fenton Court N. E. COLLECTION MAN. WANTED—A young man 28 or 30 years oid, who has had ex- perience in the collection of in- stalment accounts by mall. LTust be a_ hard worker, a master of detall, have some executive abil- ity and not lose his way in a large volume of work. Must be able to dictate his own letters, and experfence in shorthand and typewriting preferred. AddressBox 393-M, Star Office PAINT For Your Roof Certainteed Roof Paint One gallon covers 600 sq. feet. $1.75 gallon. No. 942 Black Carbon Paint —for the roof that is now in bad condition. One gallon covers 300 sq. feet. $150 gallon. Plastic Cement —for stoppinz holes in roof or guttering. 25¢ Ib. Brush for Applying Roof Paint, 79%¢ Expert Paint Advice Free MUTH Quality Since 1865 710 13th St. N.W. Wholesale Retail RERRRR R “Best Bilt” Pay Like Rent SRR RARRRRRNNRRFRNRRE AR ENRRNERERRREEREERRREEES The Hechinger Co | Rock-Bottom Priced | New Building Materials “From Foundation to Roof” ™ —Salvaged from our many | LUMBER—Ssacd jobs around Was 1th &0 jmmenee shipment y_camp lumiber from our Camp Hoia- ecking operation: aiso mew Jumber 2x3, 2x3, 2x4. 2x6. 2x8: | fiding’ and ' Yoth ‘new | ._can gave you money. S | Phoard: ! WALU BOARD—Frastnew 18 new fireproo! plaster ‘rsfi el Gt DOORS AND SASH—Bogh saivaced $3 and a) sash, w. h scrmens. 30 each. | hardware. $4.50 up. Camp Meigs CORRUGATED IR( BEAMS ) _lowest prices Jumber, doo k. at Complat sas_and ) o and gus: “hen sinks of all kind; D:_new new whits 3 up: black nized sewer and water pipe: both d used: hot-air _furnace, pur- # Hechinger Co. Main Office 5th & Fla. Ave. Northeast—6th & C Sts. Southwest G in the best section ONLY can’t do it! FOURTEEN YEARS SAVING YOU MONEY ON BUILDING MATERIAL HAVE ESTABLISHED THE GOOD WILL OF THIS COMPANY Your Lease Expires Sept. 1st. ET your husband to take you out and see these new detached bungalows—2 squares from the cars, stores and school, of Woodridge. You will marvel at their completeness and reasonableness. Just think of it! $6,500 $650 Down—$55 Monthly Where in the District can you rent a home of this size for $55 monthly. You Toke Rhode Island Ave. car to 16th St. N. E., walk north 2 blocks to houses on 16th at Irving N. E. } Representative On Property WASEEN OWNERS AND BUILDERS. 925 15th St.