Evening Star Newspaper, July 11, 1926, Page 84

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SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.—GRAVURE SECTION—JULY 11, 1926. Apt. 102, 1120 Vermont Ave. — Mg duFouns ‘ — TAR SALVE INSTANTLY REMOVES B DANDRUFF : The 1926 graduating class of George Washin Hospital. ; q = e il ] A ; Graduating ) ¥ ; class of ANICURING Georgetown TREATMENTS, FACEANDSCALP Hospital. HAIR Photo by Tenschert & Flack. HUMAN NAIR GOODS “Say It With Flowers”, Do You Still Send Her 2 Graduating v Flowers. class . A suggestion to onallinger i | Him: Keep always Hospital, | fragrant that price: Photo by Tenschert & Flack. \ fi» less love with a beau- f/ . tiful bouquet from / Gude’s, on the anni- versary of her day of days. Graduating class of Sibley Gude Bros. Co. Graduating class of Homeopathic Hospital. i 3 o g‘:fl:fl!‘-kw : an!i‘lF St. 1102 C(‘a'r.m. Ave. 1 k. one Main 4278 Phone in 1102 Photo by Tenschert & Flack. Members Florists’ Telegraph Delivery” Ass'n. HONOR TO THE DEAD F—— The Egyptians, Greeks, Romans—pagans of antiquity For the living, men take forethought of their abode, —wrought their greatest works of art, their noblest considering the community, the outlook, the type of structures, as memorials to their dead. Today few monu- house, its construction, and especially the restrictions ments are touched by architect or sculptor. The artisan and supervision. For the dead they have.accepted con- has supplanted the artist, and cubic quantity takes prece- ditions of disorder and bad taste which they would not dence over fine quality of proportion or detail. tolerate in public or private developments. 01d Bladensburg Road O ; Consultation Office at the District Line No. 1332 G St. N.W. Orderly, peaceful, beautiful; a vast distant prospect, uplifting to’ the spirit; with dense forests and green hillsides near and far A VERITABLE GOD’S ACRE The erest of Fort Lincoln. The embodiment of an ideal: A wonderfully scenic and historic setting; carefully planned; broadly devel- A battleground of 1814, with oped; rigidly restricted; closely supervised and perpetually maintained—withal, reasonable in prices. earthworks of 1865. WHAT EVERY MAN OWES TO HIS FAMILY: To make a Will; to Carry Insurance ; to Own a Burial Plot. ‘The neglect of any one duty causes unnecessary suffering at the very time when burdens are most difficult to bear. T GO 4. C I

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