Evening Star Newspaper, September 6, 1925, Page 38

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: D. C, SEPTEMBER 6, 1925—PART 3 etc. New York:|Conference on Christian Politics, ship Industrial Education.| Wholesale Distribution of Fresh D. D, author of “Canon Sheehan| HAC-C632. Douglas, P. H. American Apprentice- | Phillips, R. C., and Fraser, Samuel. . of Doneraile,” - | y Longmans, Green & Co. Economics and Citizenship, Birm- [ 1921, HFB-D74. Fruits _and Vegetables. 1922. | REVI E‘WS OF N EW BOOKS THE MAN CHRIST JESUS; A Life| ingham, England, 1924. The Pro-|Filene, A. L., #hd Kline, Burton. A| HES3-P54. of Christ. By W. J. Dawson, au- ceedings of the C. O. P. E. C. Merchant’s Horizon. HF-F475m. |Spurr, J. E., and Wormser, F. E., eds. | * thor of “The Autobiography of a H-C763. Fitch, J. A. The Causes of Industrial The Marketing of Metals and Min- i Mind,” etc. New York: The Cen-|Fry, C. L. Census Analysis of Middle | Ugrest. #F83-F353, ernls. HEI-Sps. i tury Company. Atlantic Villages. HB83-F94. Florehce, P. 8. Economics of Fatigue | Warren, G. ¥., and Pearson, F_A The Scientific Study . RT U El ™) ) L] TRS MUSINGS AND | Giddings, F. H and Unrest. HF Fé667e. The Agricultural Situ; & 583~ | IDA GILBERT. AIXHES. gan. Then, on another day, Tallor Ida Clyde Clarke, author of “The | 'HOMANCE OF A GHRUNHORN, | of Tuman Society. Fr-Gatos Frankel, L. K., and_Bunzel, Bessle.| W53, S e ———- {THE MILL OF MANY WINDOWS. Tidd is home again—a strange Tidd,| Little Democracy,” etc. Krontis-| By Maurice Chideckel. Boston:|Lindeman, E. C. Social Discovery. Health of the Worker. HFK- - | ByJ Fletcher, author of “The | With a glint in his eye, before which plece by Frank Godwin, illustra- The Roxburgh Publishing Com H-L643s. F856h. Should Be First Concern of Copber Box,” eic. New York:|# completely subdued woman sings| tions by Ethel Boston. Philadel.!| pany, Inc. Marshall, L. C. The Story of Human | Harrison, 8. M. Public Employment George H. Doran Compan low and steps lightly. Colonial days, | phia: The John C. Winston Com- PRESIDENT WITHERSPOON; A Bi-| Progress. HAC-M35. N Offices. HFW-H24p, i ROMANCE of Amer r 2l SRS anan E. Yy ography. By Varnum Lansing| Miller, H. A. Races, Nations and|Hogue, R. W. ed. British Labor Reduction Advocates, ROMANCE of American busl | land, working havoe with the peace of VERY bright and sprightly book] Collins. - Two volumes. Princetort| Classes, F-Mé1 Speaks. HF#5-H§7, ness. Here is a great indus- | oics s - - & i saina i T e e o rea INtue | colonial ladies. And there are love- in support of the author's con.| _ Princeton University National Institute of Social Sciences. | International Labor Office. Industrial A K makings and elopements of elaborate | G DTG Bl s obn WA Towsrd Peoples. Hiss-| — Tife in Sovipt Russis 1917.192 <ALA. sight and efficiency of the |, oo 4o iy tention that “housekeeping for the| EDUCATION IN EAST AFRI A Good 'oward Peoples. fe ig a, 7-1923. A.A. A. Heads Say. fainers hnd ‘sons of u single | eSLUre, according to the ways of the | Government is a Joint job for men and| Study of East, Central and South| —N216g. : | HFs4-Ins g - family has become a power in wealth | fpo (it the veal UsOeRs 1D Liat 011 women, just as housekeeping in the| Africa by the Second African Edu-| Park, R. B, and Burgess, E. W. In.|Johnsen, J. I comp. Selected Arti- and in its sequence of influence. It | e YUT SOTRESOR OO The mat. | Bome is, and that Uncle Sam needs| cation Commission, Under the Aus-| troduction to the sles on Child Labor. Ref. HFM- The burden of excise taxes pliced| gands as a pattern of many simi ke ull, atter all? i€ it |some feminine advice In running his[ Dices of the Phelps-Stokes Fun, ology. . L on the motorists of this country | jnorir, (8 F THEIRE O ntey, It be. |lef, blunges ahead with great gusto pgachelor establishment op Capitol Co-operation with the International . A. Community Ethics. | Johnston, G. A. International Social should be taken into considerntion in | comes as well the background of a |20d in & farcical humor that is rre-) gy~ snq, like the good housewife, Education Board. New York: 9c. Progress. HFL-J64i. any program designed to reduce NA-|romance wherein a younger generation | ol this author’ takes as her first theme [ Phelps-Stokey Fund Ross, 1. A. Roads to Soctal' Peace.|Lubln, Isador. Miners Wages and tional taxation in the next Congress. \CHptE IR LIRS to change the | AN AFFAIR OF HONOR., By Stephen | that of economy. The chief point for| EFFECTIVE "REGULATION OF: H-R736r. _the Cost of HFS-L962m. This declaration comes from the | oiq order fnto a new and hetter one. 1t| McKenna, author of “To-Morrow | her to establish here is the fact of| PUBLIC UTILITIES. By John|Sims, N. L. R. Michelbacher, G. F., and Nial, T. M. American Automobile Association in |l "story of struggle—first, between| and To-Morrow,” ete. Boston: Lit-| wastefulness in the Government house- Bauer, Ph.D., Public lity Con: piu 31588, . ) Workmen's Compensation Insur- a statement calling attention o the lahe father and soma friendly strug. | tle, Brown & €o. keeping. This done in no time at all,| sultant, New York City, etc. ¢ | Sorokin, P. A. The Sociology of| ance. HFK-M5s. fact that there are four times as many | gla, wherein the son hopes to social R. McKENNA this time projects | Mrs. Clarke goes on in brisk and com York: The Macmillan Compan: Rev . H-So67. Morley, Felix. Unemployment Rellef persons paying taxes on automobiles | b io n oo Hhe S e inets which a comedy of the newspaper.|petent fashion to do away with the| THE DRAMA YEAR BOOK, 1924.[Swinburne, James. Population and| in Great Britain. HFW-Ms2. and parts as there are persons PAY-| hag hitherto been held as a dynastic | The real business is that of getting |extravagance in any number of places| Edited by Joseph Lawren. New| _the Social Problem. HD-Sw66 National Industrial Conference Board. ing income taxes. The A. A. A. calls | fon of the family itself. Again, |the Oxford Post up on its feet and|where it is obvious and outstanding. | .. York: Joseph Lawren. ms, J. M. Principles of Social ! The Cost of Living in the United on the owners of the 17,591,581 motor |t is a strugzle between the father and |into the full tide of popular circula-| And so on, in a vein of good nature | READINGS LITERATURE. By chology.. 1922. H-W617p. _ States. HFS-Nz17co. vehicles istered in the United | uon united on the one hand and the |Hon. The ways and means of doing|and laughter, the author urges the| Ernest Hanes and Martha Jane Mc- Political Economy. e o oronosioard, States to line up solidly behind the ' forces of organized labor under the |this are discussed by a group of un-|advantage of a better co-operation be-| Co¥, Instructor in English, Univer- Wages, Hours and Employment in movement to obtain a repeal of the | i quence of ors on the other,|dergraduates, friends of the editor, at | tween men and women, not only in sity High School of the University | Belloc, Hilaire. Economics for Helen. American Manufacturing Indus- motor excise tax in the very near| among the ators, working in se.|a dinner of convivial turn. One thing |the housekeeping of the Government, of Chicago. New York: The Mac- 3 _ 1914-January, 1924. tuture R A ina inserupulous | becomes clear—in this day and age|but in public matters generally where | . millan Company rt, E. L. Internal Improvements| 2i7wh. >l The total excise tux paid by Motor- | young woman. who. as. confidential | nothing short of a whale of a sensa- | the two sorts of outlook and mental| THE SKYROCKET; A Novel. By . tate Debt in Ohio. HC892- | National Industrial Conference Board. Th N foide ists on ¢ and parts the fiscal glork in the business itself and as the | tion will turn the trick. They then!habit would blend to a greater effi- Adela” Rogers St. Johns. New 6. Wages and Hours in American In- ere 1s a correctly year ending June 30, 1 it is p promised wife of its young master, and there stage the sensation—a duel, |clency in many directions. Mrs. York: Cosmopolitan Book Corpora- llrlu;k'lngsh “BS Industrial Owner- Re;inuls;r_\‘u dlls “d.g‘.\:rm e signed Champion ed out, was §122,742 . This as an altogether fine point of 4 an affair of honor, based upon an|Clarke wins through her spirit of fair- | _tion. | ship. HC-B794i snick, Louis, and Carris, L. is_equivs R THelor | (e apersion cust upon the character of | ness. noc claiming Al the virtaes in | THE COCKTAIL BOOK; A Sideboard Litney. | Amemes: and Bolan T e Cheupations, Spn;k Pit{:gkfor Said vehicl or, motorists puid | apd: 1o foment trouble. . The story | Queen Elizabeth. Pursuant to the|life for women, not declaiming against| Manual for Gentlemen. New Re-| HCG5-B7S = Coataiied = 5 guginc. Mskesute you in 1 <. State | {urns in its industrial aspect upon the | carefully laid plan, they the next|the men. Indeed, she has much to say vised Edition. Boston C. Page | Rye, R. T. Principles of Economics. | Selekman, B. M. Employes' Repre- getgenuine Champions and munici Aoty W dhe rasilk ~anal Mevof morning set out in due form to sat-|to the women themselves about cer-| & Co. HC-BY e on s BhialWeodis HEE with the double-ribbed Pointing to the expected surplus of | workers. In its love theme it turns | ISy the code. Almost at once the | tain of their obstructive attitudes and | THERE YOU ARE! By F. Hugh|Carnegie Endowment for Interna-| Sedds. 8 illi 000,000 for the fiscal vear 1926, | woo© ™y o ie B0 %N the one who | aDbearance of the police takes the|declarations. Much to say to them,| Herbert. Frontispiece by J. M.| tional Peace. Economic and Social | Selekman, B. M. Sharing Manage- sillimanite core. omas P. Henry, president of the |it able to do s much In the wa matter out of the hands of its pro-|too, in an urge for their greater| Clifton. New York: The Macaulay History of the World War; Out-| ment With the Workers. HFS3- B e A. A, declares that the special|creating trouble for othe: The | moters, imposing an entirely new lind | earnestness about vital public ques. Company line of Plan. European Series.| Sedish. L % BA 5 P X imposed on motorists as a cliss | ghows what a handful of fanatics, of conduct upon them. There is mno|tions, for their greater zeal in prepar-| THE SNOW ROL. By y| <HC-C216 Selekman, B. M., and Van Kleeck, 75“' C°’ R GO NN can be removed without risking a|gcrupulous in effect, whatever they | trouble at all about the publicity,|ing themselves for many public activi.| Sinclair Dragg, author of Carver. The my of Hu-| Mary. ' Employes' Representation c. Champions are fully deficit in Federal finances may be in intent, are able to do in|though its nature is of differént cast|ties through a better understanding| the Silent North g York:| man Energy. HC-CZbec 3 __in Coal Mines. HFS§3-Sedc. 4uaranteed. Buy them from “our times as man persons are | circumventing the best of Industrial than that proposed. panding gen-|of them. A finely sound outlook upon ED{T‘%‘%“UIP “'l_“ D“";‘fl:h F. B. Spain Today. HC40- “m‘,‘x';?;,"jr‘:;:f" My Life for Labor. your local dealer. ted in the repeal of the e 18 and in creating disunion be sly, the comedy admits two per-|a subject that is clearly in the open, / . YEAR BOOK OF )3: = ¥ - . re interested in reducing in-| {\veen the two essential parts of in.| s and other un-| calling for attention and demanding 4| THE INTERNATIONAL. IN | Droppers, Garrett. Outlines of Eco- | United States Bureau of Labor Sta- R ion Soerk Ty Co y d e ey e LB R g asecn Du.ie of that Dight's| hearias (T.‘yffx?m A iGE, | nomic History in_the Nineteenth :Efilnl;p\.l"?’ie(hod; of Procuring and wu;;\.g;(oun entitled to taX-|ploved. The story follows life in an | Planning for e recrudescence of the RIED EV o o OLUN INIVERSITY, 1924, “entury. 60. o1 g Statistical Information. , Ont. London, should first con- | exeellent parallelism that 1s far| Oxford Post. A light and laughable BURIED EVIDENCE. By Mrs. Wil-| L. Kandel, M. A., Franklin, " Fabian. Plain Talks on| _ 1923. HF$3-Un34. 2 Paris g sider the motc of the country.|enough away from life to create the|to-do, carried easily forward by the Professor of Education, Teach Economics. HC-F855p. United States Children’s Bureau who are now overwheimed with Fed- | filusion of romance. Good building | Practiced hand of Mr. McKenna WDATH 8 & ot ¥ 1< College, Columbia University. | George, Henry. Progress and Po Work of Children on Tr eral, State and munieipal tax zoes into it besides. A substantial| NUMEROUS TREASURE. By Rob.|IN©)V YORK and Spain and South| New York: The MacMillan Com-| erty; an Abridgment of the Il Beult Eaame: in it tune of more than $5 E e U ik At A T SRR | | ar; Eaatie, - Gtthr fhr Rl America contribute to one or an-| _ pany nomic Principles. HC . w Jersey. HFM-Un3sW. “The motor icle exclse ta BhTE ot The reenie Called Peter ate’ New Yok |other of the threads that underlie (THE CREATIVE SPIRIT; An Inquiry | Gruber, Josef, ed Production essentially ur Iven as CLOTHES MAKE THE PIRAT G. P. Putnam'’s Sons. this tale of mystery. Rich man, poor Into American Life. By HC58-G92 _ X measure ft was unsound to base the CLOTHES MAKE THE PIRATE. OBERT writer of noy.|Man. beggarman, thief, native and| Walter Brown, author of “The|Pasvolsky, Leo, and Moulton, H. G.| American Engineering Council. TIn- tax on the assumption that the auto- Lol . - SR T | e . ree indulgence | #1l€N: frauds and = pretenders—the Writers' Art,” etc. New York:| Russian Debts ussian Recon- dustrial Coal. HECO-Am3s. mobile luxury. Ninety per ce :_"‘” etc. New York iheohaBcels the Iiee InOuimencoj Whols. Whatnob ‘of dkkEibig dop Harper & Bros. | struction. HC: Goldenweiser, E. A., and Truesdell, L. . e used more or less for | p o, ¢ adven. | 1o follow & sudden reloase from ik, | Vicked day comes together in this| THE MEANING OF LITERATURE, | Persons, W. M, and others, eds. The| " E. Farm Tenancy in the United ‘while more than 60 | J HE prime business of this adven-|lo follow a release from Jrk-|story for the sustained mystification| By Geo prau, Profes Problem of Business Forecasting. fates. HES3.G567 f the total y ger car ture is that of makiing the meek. | S0Ime ’)‘ e ’." ”"\_ - f“‘ ““‘I"";» of the reader. Human greed, operat-| nglish, Western State Nor HC33-P436. Jones, W D., and Whittlesey, D. S. mileage is strictly for busir use. | est of souls over into the boldest of |I<ke the man who, kept from food.|ing primarily through the medium of | School, Kalamazoo, Mic T North America. HCS1- An Introduction to Economic Geog- “Realizine that a tax on transpor-|bad men. Now, a certain kind of wite | falls upon it savagely when it is finally | hjgckmail, is the controlling motive York: Charles Scribner’ s ~ tation the greatest impediment to!can turn any kind of man into m}:u;i b'elv““’ m;:“ like the lg;::. hm;‘fle: here. The method set to meet this JVashington: Brentano Strachey, J. S. Economics of the business improvement, Conzress re.|coward. Taflor Tidd had that Kind of | held by weather atress, who rushes|end involves murder of peculiarly[THE PLEASURE BUYERS. By Ar Hour. it : | moved the tax on the steam railroads Wife. = One advantage, however, ac-|Wildly out into the belated sunllght:|subtie process, occult demonstrations, thur Somers Roche, author of “A | Swenson, R. J. The National Gov-|# as well as the tax on telephone and | crued to Tidd from the habit sub. | ltke- th vhxp et anre | Psychic appearances, abduction and More Honorable Man,” ete. N ernment and Business. HC WA, telegraph messages, the only excep: on wroug upon him by his s ‘{““ ot ";‘“ S. | impersonation, with no end of the York: The ” ‘ompany Tugwell, R. G., ed. The Trend of | S tion being in the case of the auto terful spouse, for behind it he was | &nd who, when freedom comes, rlots in | cruder arts-of iving and spying thrown | THE RIDDLE OF THREE-WAY Economics. HC-T814t 3 The mobile, the motor bus and the mot.r | left in peace to dream his great dream, | Words and phrases to \_‘ the o :"f’l Il along the way. To offset this CREEK. By Ridgwell Cullum, au Labor. Advan, s N al truc hich was quite a_ world away from |bictures of his mind. ow ““hv‘“, of secret and open villainy, a thor of of the Speed 5 o g Specia And yet the greatest portion of the meek tenor of daily doings. | Keable the sex side of the manand |pleasing romance of modern cast way : George 1. Babson, R. W. Recent Labor Prog- |} Six the freight handled by the rallroads, In these s t outfarings of :m-‘ s ”: re il‘r’ ol d '-": @n | threads its vicissitous but finally tri- Doran Company | ress. HF%3-B 11r. | is also handled by trucks while the Spbirit Tidd was invariably the bold ‘['lit",";' Lapiol (;'_“", ,fi"“‘)‘ "‘"“ umphant coutse. A somewhat hectic | PROFESSOR. anley Johnson.|Clark, D. W. Child Labor and the | ! motor bus has fast developed into a | Duccaneer. the scourge of the seven | talking about It and writing about it;| adventure, which strains the reader’s| New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co. | . Social Conscience. HFM-Codc p Zigantic agency of mnuss transporta Seas. the mighty murauder before |he can't hold himself away from cre-|sense. of 'propriety and proportion Conferance o Linemplayent, Mast “The C Has Gone Nash” tion. Motor vehicles nnually Whom ships fled in panic—birds of {@ling certain situations in this rela-|even while it delights the credulous gton, D. C. 1921. Committee on e LCountry Has Gone ash s " I zied light, helpless under the |tion; nor from wading around in them | jgyer of terrifyl: itals, that 1I sasonal Operatio 1 the Con- £ six times as many passer as the | frenzied f - chely 4 S = 1 ho do . ying recitals, that lives asonal Operation he Con hery, is more value for your mone artistic Steam railroads. The. diserimination SWooping wing of their invincible en.|UP to the neck. He no doubt calls his | inside of all of us. The distinction of struction Industries. Seasonal Op- | f L , s gur moneymore arhisc work realism. Writers are likely heauty—more comfort—more satisfaction and_more en- o oA otor bus and truck is | emy of the upper Then, upon one e i |the story rests wholly upon the au-| ion in the Construction Indus- 2ea g B b ol s imbelievable day. Tidd had hix chance | When they are either specially dull or | thor's acquired facility of Story-telling. | . Recent accessions at the Public et joyment in a Nash than most folks imagine. That's why d tool The e commonly dir And the question Library and lists of recommended | ¢ § 3. P i v we “Drive a Nash, then decid B\l sutonioklls ofmer and took it. The inconspicuous little | Uncommonly 3 Cowdrick, E. S. Manpower in Indus- Nash, then decide Crne Ctax e Wiseriminatory in its| man had mysteriously disappeared. | that these writers raise is not one of BOOKS RECEIVED. reading will appear in this column| try. HF53-CS3m ¢ o “ ) wrality nor of art, though they claim | v sl ity each Sunday = = effect on both an trument of com- An incident, this, promptly obscured | morality - INDIAN LEGENDS, Being a Choice ey | et ont ok com (he sudden reappearance upon the | one or the other for their motive ard B A n h 4 merce and a commodity. The product | bY the sudden reappegrance hpon the | 2110, 19 L dier all, only a gues- Collection of the Best Legends and Social Sciences. £ C e’?no S on son Woodrow. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons. of no cther basic industry is similarly & Stori < 2 e 4 : Phyea T e Pederl Government. | Hiruiings us never Were bafore up and | on of kood taxte or bud tasteZyust | i 8,a0'%, W Fapovse: s | Beker-Crothers. Hayes, and tiuanut, || AUTO REPAIRING : SALES_SERVICE ““The automobile owner today is the | down the coast not far from Boston :l;lr \\hwlliw‘ rfl;" ux':c:n:e:;‘}?:nlr:'t;‘us“:g Showing How the Young Indian of fi“-}il 31‘1'0),1»|m: f Citizenship. ALL MAKES . g —L : . d individus ‘America, | town. So the story went, growing | Privacy, like brushing @ 4 | 3 B173p. _ALL MAKES much money from him as possib get on their feet, till a paralyzed coast |is Mr. Keable with a story of thel ¥ t7 s OO TAR 2 Psychology. H-Bé3de T. J. CAMFIELD 1423-25-27 L St. N.W. LEON S HURLEY, Wanazi is pot unusual for him to pay as many | Waited. daily for' the terror to-leave | White man among the islands of the THE CHAPLAIN OF ST. ., | BoEardus, E Fundamentals of Ather e Main 7228 E - HURLEY, Manager ot soven different kinds of taxes. such ' the sea and take to the land for plun- | Pacific. Opening with a chant of S LAIN 0] . CATHER- Social Psychology. H-B634f. o West 2007 Col. 2619 e o sclte tax. State license fee. | der, and murder, and kidnaping, and | Walt Whitman. “I think T could turn h By Herman J. Heuser, | Coblentz. 8. A. The Decline of Ma gasoline tax, personal property tax,;arson—indeed, for the full bag of buc- | and live with the mnmal\)s, Mr. l\(»aé City personal property tax, State|caneer tricks. A most prodigious to-|ble projects his romance, not ip thi driver’s license and a State r - at_quiets Gt e | SUAIL OF, Shis SmonsungsmE L e o fhe. I Whitman amplifies very nobly, but in “The motorist is paying far too|taxes. There are approximately A St e heavy a share of the operating ex-|000.000 income taxpayers. There are | fePEIShIs SEaIne tHE B allience, penses of the Government. He is un-{ more than four times that number | =&A%8, & N AR 1 the. Intat questionably the largest income tax-| who now pay special taxes on trans- “;‘ i muefi‘n g b Eomth ey payer in the country. If it is the de- | portation. Surely the latter group is|of beau rair e B gl b # re of Congress to so distribute tax | large emough to justify consideration | More eating, sleeping, < e reduction as to benefit the largest pos- | for it and strong enough to demand | dalliance. Then the same all over sible number of people, this relief | that American motorists be relieved of | 483in- $. i o should begin with the automotive | what is admittedly a ¢ disability.” | UNCLE SAM NEEDS A WIFE. By “Sixty Years of Satisfactory Service” “It Certainly is a Smart-looking Car” That’s what everyone has to say who has In these latest Ford cars, the longer, seen the latest Ford cars. lower lines of the chassis and all-steel That such attractive motor cars icould bodies, the increased roominess, the be offered without the slightest increase greater riding comfort and the many in prices, seemed incredible to a public convenient new features are advantages long familiar with Ford values. which are widely welcomed. Yet enthusiasm for the smart new ap- Closed cars now shown in color are un- pearance can never supersede the fact usually pleasing; new and finer uphol- that it is the quality of materials and stery gives an artistic harmony to the workmanship that has made the Ford cars. Bright nickeled radiators feature the world’s leading automobile value. the closed cars and nickeled headlamp New beauty has not crowded out tradi- rims are on all types. The fenders are tional Ford reliability. larger and longer, and the running In every part of the Ford car quality is boards are wider. being steadily improved. And the high Sy i . 5 standard set is maintained uniformly by Comfort is increased by the cars’ lower ceaseless testing, inspections and checks. center of gravity, by the low, deep, wide UPON A FIRM FOUNDATION The S yolume of Ford output de- / nany athr refmements that conrbu mands absolute accuracy of every work- o g,u b e:; Serementy g dconfl;l by ing part. The steady flow of production 4 AR ey e e o i R R : ey Shedl ety is dependent upon parts fitting together Here is the ideal car for a woman’s per- With an organization and service built upon perfectly; inaccuracies would interrupt sonal use—good-looking, trustworthy, 11 years of conscientious dealing with the peo- and delay assembly. And to this preci- easy to handle and inexpensive to main- % : sion must be largely credited the uni- tain." Here, too, is a practical car for any ple of Washington, the Penn Oil Company has formly fine performance and freedom family—that every member of the family grown to be the largest company of its kind in from trouble of all Ford cars. can enjoy. Washington. The absolute confidence of the g i ' buying public of this city in the products of the : T B ’333 Fordor%e:::n ’23 Penn Oil Company is your assurance that these 520 mramLon= products are the best obtainable and that you — get what you ask for. PENN OIL CO. DETROIT, MICH. ) 133 Pennsylvania Avenue N. W. : SEE'YOUR NEAREST AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER Stations Everywhere in Washington

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