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PRESIDENT OF D. A. R. PLEADS FOR ENFORCEMENT OF ALE LAWS Urges Americans to Uphold Spirit of Constitution’s Founders and Banish Socialistic Trend: From Schools. _(Continned from First Page.) | day answer for us this question and have a very definite effect upon the naiianal life of our day and time. “Let it he understood that we can not pick and choose from among the Inws those we will oher and those we Il nullify in personal conduct. sed upon a nation-wide survey con ad th ar term of aeti e opiniom at the peaple of 2 will never vepeal the eighteenth amendmen: Nor do T thin should. I am rather, steaafast that as Daughters of the American Revolution we should nledge onrselves not on'y to do what soever we can te prevent the repeal of the amendment but to do our ut nost b nrecept and example to aid and As in itz observance and fts anforeament.” T"owa Territory of the Union and those of chapters which have heen founded in distant and foreign lands.” Turning to the subject of Ame and eolleges. Mrs, eTared that there should not he high 2. eallage or university thiaz country that neglects to offer an nspirt ably presented, prascribed course of study in citizenship and gov ernment “The enemies of our =he continued an schools Cook da a in my seh 1= institutions.” “have alwave recrnited | their ranks from among those ignn. rant of tha true meaning of the prin ciples of justice. liberty and equa under law. tha cardinal tanets of natfonal confession of political faith As Daughters of the American It Iution 1t is our high privilese to servs As sentries, guarding the nat Against such peril from within National Life at Stake. “The time is h: searchingly If business s education ‘and governme stand indefinitely the remitting assaults that Inose thinking and thinly Marine Attention® i when eall o'clack sovnded the and the cates rose to greet the neoming national officers. A minute rier the stirring strains of fite and drum, plaved by the € couts Corps rrom Mount Holyoke from the rear of the auditorium and wo color nearers started down the isle. one holding aloft the National amblem and the other the blue and white of the Daughters of the Ameri clallstic teachings in the schoois anc | van Revolfion. They were followed colleges of the country. 17 a0 | v two columns of prefty pages, all to shield our young people from (hese | dressed in white, and finally by the false lights, if we fafl 1n warn tien: | National officers. Mrs. ook was ac against these will-o'the wi we ovded a tremendons ovation as she neglecting onv duties as parents and | stepped to the platform, escorted by elders responsible for the ed: her personal pages. character bail and citizens! our children r "he responsihility is onre 1o insisi | tn see tn that the college schools faithfully present the history and zovernment in the Stater and incul hoth a ence for truth proper nnder standing and appreciation of the h destiny w which the Repuhlic to inquire | industry ition wver Opens rere was a hrief national officers found places nd then. with # sharp rap of the zavel, Mre. Cook dectared the thirty. fifth Continental o =5 in session Rhett ie. the chaplain gen | read a passage from the Serip . : e and led In praver. Mrs. John ounded. Proponents of Miller Horton, national ehairman of ;l"::;‘""p‘flro alert and nd,r'n('] ;|HJ | the committes on the correst use of = to make our schools and the | the fi the salnte to the text honks of hisiory read by and Wihiiam Tyier Dage read “The school children of the country vehiel American Creed,” of which he is for .propaganda in support of Following the singing o’ pestilential theories pangled Ranner” greet “The purpose of such deliberai wresented by Lieut. Col. J misrepresentation is to distort inten-| {yaniiin Bell. Enzineer Commission tionally the traditions of Americ er. on benalf of the District govern herolsm and patriotism. tn make mont 4 : mockery and derision of the high mo tive and purposes of the patriots. At this juncture in our national life we would do well 10 heed the admonition of Gen. Washington to his officers upon the eve of one of the great pivotal crises of the Revolutionary War: 'Put none but Americans on guard” Let that he the watchword Tet that be the test for those who are to choose text hooks for the in struction of our school children. * * ** At Crossroads of Enforcement. “In America we are at roads as to law the i | facts o and a ze Harvey F. Remington, presi- ns of the Ameri greetings from th Orsdel. dren of president of the Chil American Revolution. from that s ; Brig. Gen. George Rich ards for the Sons of the Revolution Frank . Cross for the American Legion. and zreetings from the honor. ary presidents general of the Daugh |ters of the American Revolution present at this session. Refore Mrs. Cook spoke. Edvthe M Bro twn selections on the h tie address she played again. Mrs. Margaret K. Bar- nett reported for the committee on credentials; Mrs. Frank W. Mondell | for the committee on program; and Mrs. John Trigz Moss for the com earch our hearts and ask our-| mittes on standing ruies. Following ‘Do our lives exemplify the this. the session adjourned and we of our lips” We must to the site af the proposed Constitu fact squarely. We must tlon Hall. which was dedicated with | that the actlons of each| appropriate ceremonies the cross enforcement.” Mrs Cook continued. “Th can he no negative conduct in relation to this great issue. for all conduct Is positive We are either for or we are against Jaw observance and law enforcement! Let us selves, professions face this understand PERSONALITIES AT THE D. A. R. CONGRESS BY ALICE ROGERS HAGER. | the American [nitarian Association |and the Groton Historical Society. Mrs. Rhett Goode. chaplain general | 3 i of the national seciety. comes from | x;::':ILi"hf;mlSdh:enhassL?Jr;;i ;ug.m;r Mebile, Ala. 1If one person can be| gaie for vice president general from said to he In two places at the same | pa1® foF B Do Sruow Sepeel | Auetes can@ifate for yis piedl e R e eiietions aea con. |dent general, this time from Maine, : - is Mrs. Benjamin Glazier Willey Cush- cerned. In spite of duties requiring | M % Brndamin CCRaler, A 18 & that she be here for a great deal of e ot her time each vear, her Alabama e ol clubs insist upon her retaining of- | atory 5 T fices in them. even during absences. | R h“"' Nicd And there is no small list of these of - | mecving st UGE fices. She is president of the Parson | four year Ao o Orphan Asylum in Mobile and mana the superintending | ger of the Mobile Infirmary. president el of the Woman's Auxiliary-of the Mo A hile Preshytery, for 18 vears the head ifications _ for of her church society, and for two ! fons CteRiS ears president of the Alabama Fed ration of Woman's Clubs. She has long been an officer In the Colonial Dames, and in the D. A. R. has held every chapter and State position pos sihle before becoming a vice president | zeneral of the national, and at the end of that term the spiritual adviser to the society. She is honorary State re gent of Alabama and honorary life | hairman and organizer of the Red | in the same State, having been | the first woman in the South to volun- teer for that service in 1917. Mrs. BEdwin'Clarke Gregory of Salis bury, N. C.. delegate, is well known in Washington, being the daughter of enator Overman and granddaughter of former Senator of qu. such being as a teacher and as a mother both. She has been ac- tive for ye: in civic work. and in church and social clubs. and she be longs to the May- flower descend- ants. Her D.A. R. connections have included such posi- tons as those of State recording secreta State vice regent, State regent, national vice chairman of| historical and literary reciprocity and national chairman of the preservation of historic spots. Her husband is a | surgeon on "the staff of the Maine | General Hospital. In the ranks of the modern Amer- Who -3 ican Army, among the women who | have followed their husbands’' careers under the flag, none is more gen- erally loved and respected than Mrs. Eli Helmick, wife of the inspec tor general. He Was not always an officer with stars [on his shoulders, | however, and in Mrs. Helmick's gray hair is testi- monial of davs spent on the fron- tier that was not &0 different, excent in location, from the frontier of the Revolution, in days in the heat of the Philippines and Cuba, and 1 MRS HELMICK. the frozen lands of Alaska. She was born in Charleston, §. C., a daughter of the Clarkes of Rhode Island, founders, with Roger Wil- liams, of the Baptist Church of America and of Brown University. She has written much, her first book having been published in 1%83, and she tells very amusingly how she took over “Jimmy Harbord's" lob as correspondent for leading papers in cott. This is Mrs. Warren's eight. | the North and West swhen “Jimmy” centh congress, her %<t one he. | received his commisslon out of the N i HEMIBE. ol corner | Tanks of “Lieut. Eli Helmick's” first stone of the Memaorial She | compan. Tn the great wa Mrs. s seyed vement of the Maolly | Helmick had charge of all the hous- Starke Chapler in New Hampshire, | ing for the war workers who came and ia just retiring a< State regent, |10 Washington in such thousands. Outside of the society she is a past | first under the War Department and director of the New England Associate | then with the Housing Commission. Alliance; ex-president of the Man.|Before that, she had heen secretary chester Federation of Woman's Clubs; | and treasurer of the San Antonio a past State chairman of the woman's | Army Red Cross. division of the Republican committee | But the work she regards most of New Hampshire, and, in suffrage | highly from the point of interest and days, vice president of her State Anti. | results was the school in the mour- Suffrage Association. Her member. | talns of Tennessee. for which she <hips include the Colonial Dames, the | raised the funds and which she man- Massachusetts Horticultural Society, | 18€d from its foundaltion for her col- —' | lege sorority, Pi Beta Phi. Some of | her short stories are written around | the mountain people as she saw them in the carrying out of this project. She is at present regent of the Army A Ny c°“-1nA'rdR:\‘U Chapter of the District D. | “"One of the musicians of the con- signed to Last Resting Place. | o, (" \fias Tida Turner. who sang at NEW YORK. April 19 (®.—K.|the vesper service on Sunday after- Farine, “the missing link” of the|noor and who makes her home in cireus side show, was buried vester- | Cumberland, Md., i a pupil of Fred- day in St. Michael's Cemete al- | erick Foster Snow and of Adelin Fer- though she had jasked orally 1o be | min. Her opera training was under cremated, in absence of a written’| Barron Barthold of New York, and MRS. CUSHMAN, merfield man, later chief ju: in his State. Mrs. | Gregory has added ! her own laurels to these of her di tinguished family, as she has been a viee president general of the “vaughters,” and nas heen active politically, serving as vice chairman of the Democratic national commit- tee in her county. She is a member of the Colonial Dames. Some bits of colonial history come to light with the names of the dele- zates. There is. for example. George [1. Warren of Manchester, N. H.. whose great-grandfather, Sam- el Hale of Maine, carried the mail between the provinces and Philadel- phia all through the Revolutionary War, braving the dangers of the wilderness roads. with their Indians and red coats, that the connecting link should noi be destroyed. On the other side. she recalls reverberations of the hatile of Bunker Hill. through her grandmother, Matfida Prescott, a near descendant of Col. Willlam Pr MRS, GREGORY. s the Hall. “MISSING LINK” BURIED. Mass., sounded | |of servi experience | * THE "EVENING HARRIS EWING- Upper, left to right: Mrs, Fi Iain general. Spence, vice president general BLANTON DEMANDS FENNING IMPEACHING IN FORMAL CHARGES (Continued from feet inches tall 55 years old, weighing 225 pounds who for four vears had not missed a day from sickness, and concerning physical giant, & fied there was no better force. and that said trarily refused to grant the matter, requested by Congress. I charge that on March said Frederick A. Fenning wron removed from office Dr. Edward Com stock Wilson as medical inspector of schools for the selfish and wrongful purpose of putting in his place an old friend of Dr. William A. White, and who is 73 years of age, simply because when said White and Fen- ning_were under fire in a congres- sional investigation in 1906 this now 73-year-old doctor sympathized with them. Questions Relations With White. “T cha1ze that the said Frederick A Fenning and Dr. William A. White are Jjointly interested in certain financial investmenis together, and that their relation is such that neither can render to the public that quality ce to which the public is man on the Fenning arbi 8 hearing on \ member of 1926 entitled. “I charge that the said Frederick A Fenning has made deliberate ai- tempt to deceive Congress when in red statement he denied the ns' Bureau in- spectos Ladd Stickney, filed with the bureau an Apr . 1924, wherein Dr. Stickney charged that said Fenning ‘constantly opposes the transfer of his wards from St. Eliza- Hospital," and 1 charge that for over three rs said Fenning has re- fused to turn over io Mrs. K Lee, the legal guardian of the person and estate of her son, Roley Lee, and that said Fenning has already received in his fees and commissions the sum of $1. 7 from the estate of said Role Lee, who was shell-shocked in F% Blanton's Resolution. ‘With the impeachment proceedings Mr. Blanton introduced a resolution as follows: “That the committee on the judici- ary be, and it is hereby directed to inquire and report wheth of this House is necessary conce the alleged official misconduct of Frederick A. Fenning, a Commissioner of the District of Columbia, and said committee on the judiciary is in all things hereby fully authorized and empowered to Investigate all acts of misconduct and report to the House whether, in their opinion, the said Frederick A. Fenning has been guilty of any acts which in the contempla tion of the Constitntion. the statute laws and the precedenis of Congress are high crimes and misdemeanors requiring the interposition of the con- stitutional powers of this House and for which he should he impeached. “That this committee is hereby au- thorized and empowered to send for persons and papers., to administer oaths, to employ, if necessary, an additional clerk, and to appoint and send a subcommitiee whenever and wherever necessary to take necessary testimony for the use of said commit- tee or subcommittee, which shall have the saine power in respect to obtain- ing testimony as exercised and is hereby given to said committee on the judiciary. That the expenses incurred hy this investigation shall be paid out of the contingent fund of the House, upon the vouchers of the chairmen of said committee. approved by the clerk _of this Hou COAL Our low prices are for cash deliveries dur- ing April only. Call Main 8944 —and let us fill yout hin now. W. A. Egg..$14.75 W. A. Stove. 15.10 W. A. Nut.. 14.90 W. A. Pea.. 12.00 Also soft coals and eoke B. J. WERNER 923 New York Ave. N.W. request. C' freaks and perform. | she has taken ieadin eys attended (he Siamese woman's fu- | famens operas as 1| neral. She died of inffuenza. phisto and Martha. 1937 5th St. N.E. nklin FLower, left to right: Mrs. Logan S. Mrs. Alexan fully | | controlled STAR, WASHINGTO BACHRACH Shumay, corresponding secretary gi llentine, vice president general. ler Ennis Patton, vice president g 'DRY LAW NEVER H SAYS PRESIDENT OF W. C. T. U. [Mrs. Baale Blames Patrona Propaganda for Troub On Andrews whom all of his brother officers testi- | (Continned from First Page.) | were opposed to drinking by ble, to he carried home or put to wd by others, was not only no dis- | grace. but a proper ending of a mid- | night spree. 2. The liquor traffic practically | dominated the politieal life of town, city. State and Natlon. Its heavy [hand was felt in elections. members | of city councils. members of the police | force, prosecuting attorneys. judges on the bench. members of Legis {latures, members of Congress, and it | insisted nupon being consulted even on the matter of presidential nomina tions. No town or city ordinance. no State or congressional legislation which could possibly affect in any way the moral betterment of the com | munity. the diminution of the sale of Intoxicants or of opportunities for gambling in any of its forms, or re strictions upon red lizht districts, could be considered or adopted with out the active and usi v success ful opposition of the liquor traffie, act |tng through some agent or attorney of the State or Natlonal Liquor I | ers’ Assoclation. | Waged™ Personal Battles. | “For 30 years I personally waged | battle after battle with them in town. | city. State and Nation. The traffic had at its command all the forces of the | underworld, with every ward heeler linked with men higher up in an ascending scale until the slimy trail led to the office of the boss of the city or State. The graft and corrup- | tion in connection with prohibition | enforcement of today, concerning | which so much clamor is raised by | the opponents of the prohibition law is hut a drop in the bucket compared | | with the graft and corruption which | prevailed everywhere in the old | saloon days. . “To those, opponents of prohibition | who are denouncing it hecause of the | corruption and graft in connection with the bootlegging traffic, we would command a study of the horrible con ditions in pre-prohibition days “3. In those davs the saloon was the rendezvous, the harboring place. | the recruiting station, of vice and | crime. Its allies were the gambling house and the brothel. Its hack par- lors and its wine rooms were the ave nues to debauchery and ruin of mul-| tiplied thousands of women and girls. The transit from the saloon to the house of ill fame was easy, intoxicants could be found there when the saloon was closed. Nine-tenths of the saloons were beer saloons. the most of them by the great breweries. They were absolutely lawless. They obeyed no restriction. The brewers paid for police protection, and if some violations were too flagrant, the fines were pald, but the lawlessness con- tinued. The greater part of the drunk- enness was beer drunkenness. “My college days were spent at a Methodist College in Virginla, and a Presbyierian_College _at_Princetan. Small Grand As Easy to Own as Any of the Inferior Makes. We Will Gladly Show You How HOMER L. KITT CO. 1330 G St. Everything Musical rs. Amos Fries, chairman, national publicity commi: | places, and although the law of Vir-| | minors or my drunken classmates to their rooms | | and | that a | prohibition | ha | hoth States had | tion of the country, the South. which N nARR( B (M eneral; Mrs, Anth n; Mrs. eneral. AD FAIR TRIAL, tensively annually througheut t he had seen more drunken people the Strand in | e <aw in the ['nited States in a ye In conclusion Rishop The estions made to more effective enforcement law are naturally somewhat hut there are very few out st sec\) of vari of 1 ze. Leakage and Spread of No Action Taken Testimony. les. that te secy the work certain things: First effective enforcement he committed thote t the prohibition law is a law, that it_can and should be forced as effectively other la of a similar character. such as nareotic dru ete.; second. it is also insisted adequate salaries should he paid secure such men ms are qualified enforce so important and difficult law: third. that men are necessary force the law in any country section should of money force the he authorities of hoth institution the stu dents, but there were saloons in hoth ginia forbade the sale to students, of liquor to| 1 helped ecarry them to bed. They disgustingly drunk, on bought through a runner of aloons, and there was far more drunkenness among the young people among the college students in those days than there is today “The question before your commit tee is at the bottom. the question of the return of the saloon. We are told | rose by any other name w smell as sweet. and a saloon by any other name will smell the same. The foul odor that hangs around the word “saloon” was caused by just one thing, namely. the sale of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes. The lawlessness of the trafic compelled the adoption Nationai Prohibition Bishop Cannon described ages by which the cause of pro hibition was promoted and the pro hibition laws enacted. beginninz with the local option laws in various com munities and ending with nation-wide were heer the and put drunk, properly to fourth. that appropriate whatever may be necessary law: fifth. that to ipon the violators of the law Treasury Department considers it vital fmportance to have men and money | the income tax law. which is pu revenue measure, it is certainly hibition law.’ The session resolved itself into a hattle wite between Mrs. Nauor of the vari | her Senator Reed read a which was prepared last vear by committee organized in the of prohibition enforcement forth what that as conditions resulting from the p hibition law. Senater {ored ta have Mrs. Boole express setti Government dispensaries o liquor i heen tried in South Carolina and Virginia in the past. he sald. and in proved failures. “The men who appear here urginz modification of the Volstead act did nat protest against the saloon in the old * declared Bishop Cannon. referring ¥ ne to Senator Bruce . “The lawlessness of the liquor traffic in the wet States and its 'd of the laws of the dry States ught national prohibition. Speaking for the people in my sec- forth by to were correct. Mrs would decline to answer, national W. ", T 17, at its convent in Detroit had adopted a policy which the organization pledged its to stand back of the authorities law enforcement and that the sta never come before her organizati and, therefore. she would confine h self to the policy adopted by her ganization. Senator agreed that qaid Boole should be what she thought of some other organization. Senator Reed also endeavored have Mrs. Roole say whether it a more terrible situation to have al hol manufactured throughont the country is dry. | say that they will not sur render now to the liquor traffic. “Senator Bruce has declared on the fioor of the Senate that the people of wealth will have their liquor, C'on stitution or no Constitution. That statement is consistent, for the liquor people have always violated the law. “The Ten Commandments are re- peatedly violated, vet no one has made a demand for their repeal. Thou- sands violate the income tax law but no one has asked to have that law repealed hecause of those viola- tions. No matter If thousands or even millions say they will disregard the prohibition law, that is no reason for repealing it or modifying it. Bishop Cannon insisted that con ditions were becoming better in New Jersey and other wet States hecause of prohibition. L h eld of Oklaho not think M required to in outside of the homes in regular ¢ tilleries. Mrs. Boole said she did not thi fwo conditions set forth hy Sena Reed heciuse from her experience prohibition work she that stills are not usually operated homes where there are children he had traveled ex- 813 14th Street N.W. Phone Main 941-2 All Goods Marked Down - 25% The E. F. Brooks Company (Established Over 50 Years) Ouver $200,000.00 Worth of ARTISTIC & DESIRABLE LIGHTING FIXTURES FLOOR & TABLE LAMPS ANDIRONS & FIRE SETS SMOKERS' SETS and ARTICLES of ART & DECORATION Sale Effective Until Further Notice 22 2T L PR T Tl 7 Z T2 T 2T \ N N N i N \ N \ \ \ N \ N § N N N N N N N N N \ \ N N N N N T T D FE 2 P e e 77 7 0 Wayne Cook, president general; Mrs. Rhett Goode, Chap- Thomas W. his country and in foreign lands and that on indon in one day than ar cannon said e the | proximately ed. he entire number wha do not insist upon | mo: re must whe helieve good en- ws the act. the income tax law, that 1o a whatever number of en- section of the schonld be provided for that the Government amount en- more stringent penalties should be inflicted If the of sufficient ta enforce effectively v a of equal importance ta enforce the pro st half hour of the morning of Roole and Senator Reed of Missouri, who cross-examined statement a interest ng | committee regarded ro- Reed endeav an opinion as to whether the conditions | the statement referred Roole sald she because the fon in elf in te- ment referred to by Senator Reed had on. er- or- ma rs. say of the statement to was co in stills in homes the pres- | ence of children than to have it made lis nk she would have decided between the tor in was satisfied in WALSH, IN SENATE, FLAYS MUSSOLINI Scores “Bellicose Bluster” as Threat to “Feeble, War- Wern Neighbors.” By the Associated Press The policies and aspirations of Pre mier Museolini again came under at tack here today in the Senate. Approval of the Italian war deht settlement, declared Senaror Walsh, Democrat, Montana, would “simply assfst Mussolini. supreme dictator, to arrange bis finances so that he may | precipitate another war, or bluster | about until the fear of such purpose | fe general, strenzthening hiz position | at home through concessions wrung | from feeble, war-worn neighbors that vield to thebdread of a renewal of the carnage of which they have such ghastly memories.” ! “His Tripoli speech,” the Montana | Senator continued. “bristles with bel- | licose bluster. The Kaiser rat tled his saber more ominously. He usually brandished his sword against imaginary enemies about to, or yearn ing to, invade the Fatherland. Mus solini’s bugle blast to con quest, 1o attack, not defense. Sees No Improvement. “If there any reasonahle grounds for helleving that the peliti cal, economic and indusirial condi tione in Ttaly would materially improved hy approving the settlement I should he powerfully persuaded to indorse it without anv eritical analy sis to ascertain whether it measured up fully to the tests said to have been applied to Italy's capacity to| pay. But 1 am convinced we have no such assurance.” Senator Walsh declared that if the “IInited States desires to do something for the people of Ttaly as distinguished from the government of Italy, let it pull dewn the tariff wall erected in 1422 10 the rates of the Underwood Simmons act as to the commodities of greatest value and amount imported from that country.’ The McCumber tariff. he argued cost Italian exporters $4,300.000 in the 1924 fiscal vear. or “almost as much as Italy will pav annually. should this hill hecome law. for the next five vears.” Plan Called Misunderstood. “The nature of the transaction for which our approval is asked by the pending bill I not fuliv appreciated from the aesertion thal the present worth of the payments to he made by Italy amounts to 26 per cent, ap of the deht.” Senator Walsh continued. “Our Government is paying 41, per cent interest on the loaned to Italy. amounting to $2.042.000,000, on which it pays inter {est at 1.1 per cent, an annual loss to never is a call were us of something more than $64.000,000 1f we shall succeed in refunding our debt at 313 per cent, as some sanguine | financiers sav we shall, the American taxpayer will put up annually $43.000..| 000 mere for the money loaned to} Italy than she returns for the use of it. @ loss in the aggregate runnin into billions.” | If this loss is borne by all the people of the United States, each his ratable share, it lays upon Montana on the hasie of its present population the staggering burden of over $§250. 000 a year. Were the payvment to be made directly out of the State treas- ury no one would defend it, but the | load carried by the people just the ! same. the money being collected by the Government at the customhouses | and through the income-tax machin ery, the immediate taxpaver then col lecting it of the uitimate consumer. directly or indirectly in the added | | price demanded for the wares the | former sells. It must mot he for gotten. either, that over one-third of the great sum loaned to Ttaly. some | $800.000.000, was advanced after the | armistice. “Pied Piper” to Be Radioed. The “Pied Piper of Hamelin." Brown { ing's classic poem. will be presented | in opera form as the Eveready hour | program. which will be broadcast to | morrow night by WEAF and its net ! werk of radio stations. MeCormick Medical Collega Graduate Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist Phone Main 771 409410 MeLachlen Bide. 10th and G Sts. N.W. Glasees Fitted Eres Examined | Papering—Painting—Awnings There is no job you want dane too sman for us to handle. Awninge carefulls mace and reconditioned. ¥atimates cheerfully given—reasonable prices. PAPER CO. Main 5373-53' ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 643 Louisiana Ave. N.W. S6th issue of stock now open for subscription. Shares of stock, $1.00 each, payable monthly. Five per cent interest paid on stock withdrawn. James E. Connelly, President James F. Shca, Secretary ‘Bacillus Acidophilus Milk For intestinal disorders ok hysielan about 1t TFrepared by the NATIONAL VACCINE AND ANTITOXEN INSTITUTE 1515 U St. NNW. NEW HOME R.SPFARE Ca, UNDERTAKERS Founded 1872 | 1623 Conn. Ave. | Branch 4209 8th St. N.W. I (Petworth) | Phone Potomac 4600 ’ ATMUS R. SPEARE | f W, CLYDE J. NICHOLS 8= D.J.Kaufman Inc. 1005 Pa. Ave. . THE EXTRA PAIR DouBLES THE WEAR