Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1925, Page 24

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THE EVENING SUB ROSA SIR, PARDON ME BUT 1 \WONDER BY MIMI \@YoU WOULD TE 30 KIND A3 TO COME. OVER AND ST WITH MY LITTLE BEATRICE \HILE T TAKE A DiP N s L T ? I SHoULD Say I wouLDd!!! YOU SEE SHES ONLY NEVER GET OVER 1T Dutiful Dorothy. ANYTHING HAPPEWMED It's a dark day, indeed, when you find that you have a Dutiful Dorothy among your friends, She may be a nice, quiet, unas- suming young person, whom you'd never suspected of any bad habits and it may just suddenly dawn on ! you with a dreadful shock that she's e D. D Once, or! you ARE SO WIND SR however, you realize that vou will see her weak- mess in every little thing she does Dorothy goes through life on the firm principle that all good people do their duty. No matter how unpleas- | ant the task, no matter how disagree- able its performance may be for her- self and for other people, she plods | sturdily on, deiermined that the day | of judgment shall not find her duties undone If you are a guest in Dorothy’s H YEARS OID AN T WOULD STAR, WASHINGTO KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES—Yes, There’s a Limit. THREE aFRAD ! NICE IF TO THE LITTLE DARLING!! aw! THATS NOTHIN' — Tt <oME DOWN AN’ WATCH EQR EVERY \ AFTER NOON IF Yoo JUST Sey ™ D. C., SATURDAY Now BEATRICE DEAR, DONT BE MAN I3 GoWNG TO ST Wi MAMA'S PRECIOUS WHILE SHE TARKES & SwWimM— AUGUST 22 BY POP- MOMAND’ 1925, Our Children—B Angelo Patri Nine Years 0ld. | at washing his face and seems to | think himself atused at the sugges A boy of 9 is a very interesting and | tion that he remove the black rim very troublesome youngste, He 13| from his finger nalls. His stockings much like & tadpole, half way toward | gre discolored with the mud of the his goal. He may turn out to be a|playfield and his buttons are torn out | big toad and he may be just a toad.|py ‘their roots. The toes of his shoes | That's the interesting thing about | gve bemt up and scuffed to distress him. watching him shed his worn-out | ffe looks and he behaves like a garments of body and mind Young brigand. Instead of the quiescent He slams the doors behind him { child who took what was given him | when he closes them at all. He for and thought it great good luck, he | zets to say please and thank you | suddenly becomes a loudly-questioning | Ixcuse me is like pulling out one of creature who shouts why and what | his teeth, which by the way, are un | for and who said €0 and g0 on away | even in growth and appear too big for from here. his mouth. He never walks when he | Instead of being the good child Who | cun run; never speaks softly when he sat still in the classroom and said his | can shout; never stays in when he c | tables and: wrote his numbers and go out; never misses a chance for fun read in his turn, he becomes over- Tie is § years old. Carefree and grow | night, it seems, in the changing from | ing He will never be so happ receptive | house, you are made aware of how neglectful you have been hitherto in the matter of your duty. Your hostess points gently, but firmly, that would be perfectly easy for one of the servants to mend that hole in your skirt for you—still it would be better for your character if you stayed in the house that afternoon and did it yourself he tells you that matter very much whether you ge down to breakiast on time or not but it's moie less a duty to early, and so you have to appear at | 8 a.m. to your intense disgus: Dorothy likes to dance her her sense of what done \low her much time to that out to you | although it DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Should a Boy Have the Use of His Father’s Car? Shall He Marry the Living Skeleton or the Plump and Friendly Tady? it really doesn': M DIX ed for my mount of money to ar. He says that 1 am a boy 20 years oid, and for the last six vears have father. I have plenty to eat and wear, and a moderate spend. but my father will not allow me the use of his 1 for me to run around with the car will lead me into eport wre so many things she | trouble. Do vou not think that I should be allewed to use the car sty she really hasn't | once every week? My father and I have agreed to abide by your decis tim nonsense that is part | JIMMIE. t—but must be to devote delightful Sl rob of he There to do for all the Thood hen, too, she is her duty to tell you ¢ about yourself earnestly tha your own b ther pa$ you compli science won't 1 vou frankly action in such niy. I think that you should have the use of the car once a week, if not twice a week, provided that you take out nice girls and boys in it, and go to nice places. In these days every young chap wants a car just as his she’d much | day wanted a horse and buggy ients, but her | more and no less. —she must | Your father will remember how he liked to take his girl buggy riding, thinks of | and how the giris smiled their sweetest on the young man who had a good ich a mat- | looking “ri Well, it is the same way with the boy with a car The automobile is no more wicked than the side-bar bugg is in no more danger of going to destruction at 35 miles an hour than father ‘e1s a: B. Yet a lot of people who thought it was all right for a boy to { have a buggy feel that there is some sort of a menace to his morals in an automobile, which is all nonsense. T thi your father ould let you have the car, for it does add to a i hoy’s pepulartty to have a chine to take his friends about in. But I think that you should promisé your father that you will have no booze parties in it, and that you will not use it as « bus to haul about wild boys and girls to thew orgles, and that vou will not park it anywhere that you would not be willing to take vour sister always Answer. Certs Dple; s only i t thir 1 res you | doing it for father in his and it means precisely the same thing. no h hat she and s e vour ter. You ¢ omforta s.and m she inderstand, D her own age unde what an is—and she or dear, why 't fond ar un- | but the Of course, duty, one shouldn der people, and she doe i time out of all have our sense of but we that we miortable and | It is because hoys so misuse cars, because there are so many frightful accidents where drunken drivers maim and kill themselves and their passengers, that fathers are afraid to trust their boys with their cars, and that automobiles are sometimes called “devil wagon: the | And promise him Jimm not to pick up any of those painted,girls ho stand afonz the sireet and call out to good-looking young chaps in cars tose | “Say, sweetle, won't you give us a ride?” They are the kind of passengers A4 | that make a boy step on the gas and speed down to perdition. Ii isn't the use of the car that hurts. It's the abuse of it. DOROTHY duty is a natter wt inter- her people’s happiness and personal ere w t 5 DIX and my mother doesn't allow Now most voung men do not relish fter they are engaged to a girl, as in my case. I his Sunumer, but my mother made everything so un ske my e ement. simply because she says she cannot ana I don't want to hurt her. 1y T should give up the man zood husband, just AR MISS without her n idea, » be ma pleasant that T 1 live without me Do you feel t and who would 1 to keep me with h DIX me to 5o out the HOME NOTES RY JENNY WREN I love and who loves me, because my mother wants DISCOURAGED, would oyment an ummer wanes, and catch and hoid tor W a Lit of the garden's gavety —its srowing th ers—you may ach! ter e sunl Your moiher is evidently a very selfish ove vours, and you would be ve She had her own life. She didn’t company. She got married, and had her and it is unthinkable that she wants of a woman's life. Answer: 1 should vho puts hi h to let her s: E at home to bear her mothe own home and husband and chiidren. ! to deprive you of the richest experienc say not own happine: If. If your mother really loved you, she would not want to keep you from | making a good marriage in which you have every chance of happiness. She Would urge you to do the thing that is best for vourself, without reference to herself. But, if she is going to tag you all the days of her life, you have small chance of happin Certainiy, any man will resent it. for no man in the { world wants to have to drag his mother-in-law with him to every place he | takes his wife The only way to fight selfishness is wiih selfishness—if standing up for one’s rights can be called selfishne; So my advice to you is to ignore your mother s protests and go on and mar our man. Probably she will be as pleased as Punch over it afterward. We gain nothing by sacrificing ourselves | to selfish people. They never thank us or appreciate what we have done, | and they are never satisfied. DOROTHY DIX. DEAR MIss DIX I am a middleaged widower, and 1 cannot be happy without & wife. Now, there are two middle-aged women I can get. One is rich, but has no friendly ways, and looks like a living skeleton. The other ‘oman is poor, but fleshy and good-looking, with a mild and smiling and | friendly face, and she is a good housekeeper. I think @ middle-aged woman looks much better when she 1s fleshy. Which one should I marry. I earn a good salary arranging a window zarden like this at one end of the sunroom A wooden panei, 13 inches high across the end of the room. hides the pots, tubs and Loxes, and a of I linoleum on the floor Pprotects it from earth and water, The plants that will thrive indoors are many—potted bulbs. daht ram bler roses, azaleas, fuschius and ivy vines—and if you can provide a large enough container a water lily will prove a source of delight Copyright. 1925.) | Above all, in choosing a wife pick out one with a friendly face, because | a triendly face is the reflex of a sweet disposition. It is only the women who MOTHERS are tender and loving and gentle and Kind and sympathetic who have AND THEIR CHILDREN. 0. N. H O. N. H., that I shall give your Otherwise vou would be swamped a man with sense Answer: I want to state right her address to no stout. middle-aged widows. with proposals from women who would like to marry enough to prefer a plump lady to a bag of bones. In answer to your quest the stout. good-natured woman, because the very fact that she is stout shows that she is a good housekeeper and loves to eat, and will set a good table, and that she takes life easily. Slimness in a middle-aged woman is artistic, but in the great majority of cases it indicates that she is either dyspeptic or a | worrier, and neither one is comfortable to live with. flower viece | friendly face: (Copyright. 1925.) DOROTHY DIX. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY \\'lLLl.i\)l BRADY, M. D. Children’s Own Washstand. the veterinar: | We Should Sneer. 5l subject T have never read|entific mination that the pup had ur column.” writes @ cor-|no worms, but only a distemper which “is convulsions or Spasms, | cleared up in two days. Although I {or whatever other name you have for | know nothing about dogs, the alacrity O A et children have. You don't|with which the amateur dog expert e hat children have convulsions. | diagnosed “worms” by a mere pecp at o you? Then will you kindly, or in @ the pup's gums struck me as remark- Sneering way, tell us your ideas about |ably like the ubiquitous neighborhood ithem?" And the correspondent oes | gossip's diagnosis of “worms” in ail | oMo describe a case, what this and|ing children—only we were so fond of | o octor said or did or didn’t do at|the pup that we hesitated to inflict the one time or another, and so on. |alleged worm medicine on him. The ways had in the back of my | neighborhood gossip can spot “worms" | fancy to buy a little farm|in an ailing child by a mere glance at ! ut bevond anywhere, to retire|the face or a sniff of the breath. The {2 ive the simple life after I've lost |facial sign which leads to so much |and e ‘But mow I can see Il have cruel mistreatment of ailing children o get 4 rather large farm, one With a|is particularly “white lines beside the rming little washstand for | 4 50 % 78q"5, "one cornelr, to which | mouth,” especially with flushed cheeks cut off the legs of a small | 302°F€ SRS U ntervals and have a|»nd bright eves and any restless ng it low enough for the| 4" g eer ¢ enough from simple twitching. Or add a peculiar heavy or hild. Paint or enamel with [#006 TR0 7oy that they won't think | sweetish odor on the breath, and you the desired color. On it [ FOS Y00 JE0 "0 them. There will|have practically condemned the child sunbonnet lady, a flower or |5 A%, R plenty of things and condl-|to such maltreatment. ¢ physician was consult- | “One [about in yo { respondent, ther Says the kiddies table, mak smallest two coats, paste a some other —. and the boy | | fon T would unhesitatingly advise you to espouse ician determined by sci- | ; e i e THE LIHHTS L0100 - a//orm.m/f! A raLm oo Pia | Now that all o’ th' authorities have greed that Mr. Bryan wuz a good an’ reat man, but that “he wuz not allus ‘rh!hL will somebody please trot out, or dig up, some national cl ~ter that is, or wuz, aflus right? | 'Next t'a sick fat man, nothin’ kin | upset a home quickern’ an inexperi | enced hired girl i (Copyright. John F 1 i Dille Co.) Chbeying Orde:s o | 1 once hired out to Hiram nd drew two bucks a d and he re. ! marked, “Now get this stralght—my | word vou must obey. I've hired about | a thousand guys since first I came to * | <« Haight, | | town, and they were all too blooming | | wise, they turned my orders down. I am the man who pays the mon. and | properly expect that I will see the| | chores 1l done just as I shall direct n the man who digs the cash, and | say to y 70, feed the cow wdust mash.’ that’s what I'd have | you do. T am the man who has to dig | the kopeck and the groat, and if I bid | | you paint a pig or fumigate a goat, I | want to see vou go your way without | | protesting wheeze; It is your province | to obey and mine to spring decrees.” | He gave me orders oftentimes which | seemed to me absurd; I felt I was | committing crimes when I obeyed his word; and ever and anon I rose. in | indignation strong, prepared to seize | him by the nose and show where he was wrong. But soon my bitter wrath I'd quell, reflecting, in my heart, “The | | blamed old chump is doing well—he | | must_be rather smart. He the wealth In bars and bricks, his credit is | sublime, and I, who would denounce | his tricks, am busted all the time. | Perhaps his methods are correct and mine. show lack of brains: so it were wiser, I expect, to do as he ordains.” | It was the wisdom of a sage that| made me thus obey; for soon he came | and ralsed my wage by 50 cents a day. | Cottage Pie. ! Have ready a well ofled baking dish Line this with hot mashed potatoes. Add a layer of any desired meat such | a8 roast beef or roast lamb or chicken cut in cubes. Moistegwith gravy and add a top layer of MMshed potatoes. ! Place in the oven until well heated through. JUCATIONAL. 2 Course for men of am- Electrical S0y nd fmited tme. Over 4,000 men trained. Condensed course in Theoretical and Practical Electrical Engineering “cudes | the closely related subjects of Mathematics and Mechanical Drawing taught by experts. Students con struct motors. install wiring, test elec- frical machiners. L» Ope Year Course complate Established in 1893, Prepare for_your profession in the most_ interesting city in the world. Free catalog. BLISYELECTRICALECROOL Ve 210 Takom Washington, D. C. National University Law School ESTABLISHED 1879 Fifty-Seventh Year Begins Oct. 1, 1925 Three-year courses leading to LL. B. and J. D. Post-grad- nate courses leading to LL. M.; M.P. L.and D.C. L. CLASSES BEGIN 6:30 P.M. Secretary’s Office, 818 13th Tel. M. 6617 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. PIANO, SAXOPHONE, BANJO Rag. Jazz. Popular Music in 20 lesson: Free lessons if you buy_instruments h Send for free booklet. Christensen Schor 1395 € et nw _ Main 1278, Easy terms. _MOVING, PACKING & STORAGE. $FORAGE FOR FURNITURE AND PIANOS. WESCHLER'S Pa. ave. n.w. Phone Main 1282 Main 9539 ‘cut_out.” Beneath this | ¥ Hote to sneer at, enough to keep | ittle stand an enameled pail of the | HONT 00l in s ‘schedule filled up for as| same color or a harmonizing ane|MY SMEETE ot 1 the simple life. {long @ r " makes a substantial waste basket. [I°9% T8 0 night erect a sign beside i % Marsie Eane |1 supp frangers| OUe &reen pepper, one grapefruit, the towel and wash cloth at a arning passing t th at 8iine rond warning b = lone head romaine, three tomatoes. convenient hclp,;(hl ;md ;]n» r»mldxe'n“hm the frightful spect ({e in 3 omll‘elr‘clmk the pepper in bolling water, cool ::(,‘I”di‘np ht in keeping their room ‘in|Ciq { Ciugt old Dr. Drady doing hisl Have resdy the ! land cut in shreds. { % morning sneer: kindly refrai n s | iojesting the dpo:(Siredded omaine end therhilos o s g the d0¢ | the grapefruit. Cut the tomatoes in tor with irrimv}l‘n:gel;:u._;rk’ until he i g are The salad should be ar- recovers from the seizure. -, | ranged on a bed of lettuce and served Children sometimes have COUVE| with French dressing. Considerable sions, fits or spasms. T make FHS S0 originality may be displaved i the mission freely and by FlF S rom any | Manner of arranging this salad. One without influence or duress o SV | way is to form a sort of mound with quarter. 1 £o even furCr A ilaren | triangular sections, one of grapefruit, mit that bables and olCel CTIEM one of shredded pepper, one of shred Yo mnc’eée‘;ded romaine and another of quarter at while a child who | €0 tomatoes has worms he 5. but the coin-| cidence is insignificant, because 9| Ciidren out of 10 who have worms| ; Sever have any spasms, and § out of| This is an attractive variation of By ave spasms have no worms. | old-fashioned codfish hash. Have ready Sheaking of worms—and leaving the | shredded salt codfish souked just long o out spasms for another day— |enough to remove the excess salt. e Acquisition of the menagerie | Separate the whites and yolks of two o TeCoup as Irish as Paddy’s pig, but |eggs and stir the beaten yolks into P\ htonio. This Antonio’ had |two cups of hot mashed potato. Whip B Arrived at his new home when | the potato and egg mixture well and e eur dog expert looked at his|then fold in the stiffly beaten egi e temarked that they looked pale | whites and brown the puff in the oven. £nd opined the pup had werms and T Leek Toast. even dispensed the medicaments for the treatment of the alleged infesta- Clean and trim the leeks and cook When quite tion.. But the pup seemed to keep pretiy well, thank you, without the in boiling hot water. soft drain and serve on hot tomst After a time the pup languished, and with a dressing of melted butter. Chiffonade Salad. (Copy When pleasures pall n my mind And social calls 1 shirk, In Fact when I am bored I find It rests me some to work. RA* ey as that once in a & Codfish Puff. treatment. Jacobs Transfer, Inc., North 9500—9501 NATIONAL CAPITAL STORAG® & MOVING Co. Soag el st e g Moving, EXPERT PACKERS & SHIPPERS. Moderate Rates. Good Work. Free Estimatss LONG DISTANCE MOVERS I'TH’'S o FIRE-PROOF TORAG CRATE AND PACK BY EXPERTS 1313 YOU STREET, N.W. PHONE NORTH 3343 MOVING STORAGE KRIEGS{? XPRESS PACKING SHIPPING SI6 EVE STNW WAIN 2010 l | ered Wild- Flowers, Rescued From Hillsides Being Leveled for Home tes, Make Miss Emily of Most Unusual and Beautiful. NO. XIX. When the steam shovels of a build- ing crew attack any strip of virgin hillside about Washington one of the y visitors s likely to be Miss mily Dinwiddle, welfare worker St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, with the mis- sfon of rescuing any rare patches of | wild flowers or ferns in the path of the excavators. Miss Dinwiddie is a wild flower enthusiast, but she will not take anything which has a rhance of surviving in its native haunts. The result of Miss Dinwiddie's work has been one of the most remarkable gardens In Washington around the walls of 3027 Q street makes her home. The entire space is probably less than 200 square feet, but it contains thousands of speci- mens and scores of species. Some of them practically are extinct locally, except as she has preserved them Many botanists visit the property to study specimens Cultivates Poisonous Bud. Among the flowers which she is trying to make prosper under culti vation are the crowperma, or polson, whose root contains one of the most deadly poisons in the vegetable world (it bears white lily-like flow- ers in the Spring): the celandine, an American flower of the poppy famil | which bears multitudes of yellow flow- | ers and exudes a yellow juice which | contains oplum: the meadow rue, cov- in Spring with small white blooms: the vellow slipper orchid, from one clump of which she obtained blossoms this Spring, and the wild at | the jewel where she | fly | | one ‘teacher to the other, an aggres | again | sive, noisy, inattentive bundle of mis- | And what shall vou do with him? | chief, done up in wrinkled blouse and | yeed him well and never make fun crumpled Jacket, who scorns a gold |of his appetite. Wash his brulses | star and hoots at the boy who stands | and don't make a fuss over then first in his class. | Buy stout, cheap ciothes that fit him Instead of an obedient child, trot-|and remember they are to be cheap ting off to bring a glass of water for | as he will outgrow them swiftly. Bu some thirsty adult, placing a chair for | more and buy them cheap. Keep hin Gram, going to the door to see wWho is|in balls and bats; throw in a few there, anc whispering the news 10| good stories for his quiet hour before mother, he turrs out to be a young|heq; have a confidential chat with him rowdy, who refuses to do anything | each night before he retires so that until at least the third order and|you know in what direction he is that delivered with threatening em-|heading and guide right | phasis. | Try to refrain from nagging h Instead of the meek, though Wig- |while you direct him in thoughtf gling child, who submitted to the |mannerly ways so foreign to his sta. washrag and the brush, staying clean | of growth, yet essential to his hapy for a few hours at a time and enjoy- | ness in the next stage. Remember ing a fresh blouse and pretty socks.|he is in a stage of unsettled growth he becomes a frowsy child, who balks | and the power of the next stage, adol | | escence, depends upon the gro | this healthy young animal And hear his prayers every eveninz He is_very little inside vet Mr. Patri will give person inquiries_ from parents and teache cate ‘and development of children Tim in care of this paper. enclosing stamy addressed envelope for reply (Copyright. 19 Dinwiddie’s Garden One th markable example in nature of the resurrection of the dead Besides preserving native wild flow- ers, Miss Dinwiddie is interested in| introducing into the United States wild flowers from Scandinavia, Wales and England. She already has planted a number of these around her Sum- mer home in the Virginia mountains and expects them to take root ana spread, ginger, whose round, vellow blossoms | lle perfectly . flat on the ground and | look like miniature sleeping pigs. | Among the most showy of the wild | flowers which she has cultivated is| weed. which bears many blossoms similar to the vellow slinper, but with brown spots. It grows about | two feet high. She has a collection of white, yellow and purple violets, | Lall found in local woods, but some of | which now are very rare. She has | | been able to make the delicate pansy | violet prosper by studying its require ments of soil and moisture. She has | collected and transplanted such curi- | ositles as the gold thread and ever- | green, ‘with long, very thin roots|| | which look very much like strands of | | fine gold wire. i Miss Dinwiddie specializes in ferns | and orchids. Of the former she has | about 40 varieties, some of them rare. | | The fern list inciudes such varieties | as the rattlesnake fern, the sensi-| tive, ostrich, cinnamon, interrupted, | | Christmas, maidenhalir, walking. nur ple clfff brake and fringed ferns. Holly Fern One Species. the holly, has e it appear almost | exactly like a small holly bush. It however, a true fern. Another is | ! the resurréction fern. This peculiar | species will dry up during long dry | spells and apparently becomes com- | pletely dead. The leaves and stalk are | brittle. The roots show no signs of | life. But once the plant is soaked | ! with water it comes to quite perhaps Enthusiasm star severance wins it. he race, but per 4700 9ih St. N.W. (Corner 9th and Crittenden) I} A four-bedroom semi:detached Colonial corner he | of immediate appeal. Exceptional glassed and screened sleeping porch entire width of house. Built-in Shower. Lavatory in basement and innumerable other inted and refinished through ne garage features. Newly papered. pa out. Vacant One of her ferns, | leaves which ma Open all Day Sunday for Inspection Thos. E. Jarrell Realtor. Washington Savings Bank Building INVEST ONLY IN GREATER WASHINGTON REAL Main 766 ESTATE i Some of the Special Shapiro “Superior” Features: ® The unusual the rooms. The artistic fixtures. The handsome hard- wood floors. The substantial construction. Clothes closet on first floor. The outside pantry with built-in refrigerator that can be iced without com- ing into the house. The enamel sink and drain board. The Detroit Jewel gas range. The built-in dresser, The French doors that lead to the breakfast porch. The master bedroom across entire front of the house. The tiled bath with built-in fixtures and show- er and noiseless toilet flush. The practical sleeping porch. The hot-water heating equipment, with instan- taneous heater. The laundry tubs. The large back yard with green sod. size of steel kitchen Open for | The Wonder of t Realty Men When real estate men throw up their hands—and yield the palm of superiority—you can be sure YOU are getting value beyond the ordinary. That’s the case with these New Shapiro “Superior” Homes —that will be offered tomorrow for the first time—in Petworth—Seventh Place Six Rooms and Tiled Bath, With Shower Seventh Place is a wide street, between Seventh and Eighth Streets—leading from Farragut St. N.W. Its advantages for residence are many—out of the bustle of the thoroughfare—safe for the children—a real restricted home neighborhood. They cannot be approached at the price. You’re not speculating when you buy one of them—YOU’RE INVESTING—and every year you live in one of these homes you’ll cash in dividends of contentment and immunity from the usual expenses of upkeep. The Price Is Sensational $8 9 50 gJJY and the terms are less than With Built-in you are now paying in rent Garage, $9,250 The secret of the superiority of Shapiro “Superior” Homes is the consistency with which they are built—the best material always—only skilled craftsmen. Motor down Farragut Street to Seventh Place—or take Georgia Avenue or Four- teenth St. cars to Farragut—and it’s only a short walk. Or phone for our free auto service. nspection from 9 AM.to10 P.M. Every Day and Sunday REALTORS 1 BUILDERS e Sample house furnished courtesy Peerless Furniture Co. 919 15th Street N.W. Franklin 1140

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