Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BY HER MOTHER, ANNE AUSTIN. ECAUSE T felt that it would be of great help to me as edi- tor of a woman's magazine— the People’s Popular Month- ly, published at Des Moines, Towa—1I enrolled, in mid-June of 1919, for a two-weck Spe in the Univew of Tow Housewives, teachers and college, students attend- ed the lectures on dietetics, interior decorating and dressmaking. Of course, 1 took Elizabeth with me, and it was her own choice that she should attend all lectures with me. From the lowa City public library she found books enough to keep her contented, if the lectures did not in- terest her, but soon I realized that she was listening far more than she was veading. In the class on textiles, she worked out her own color chart, learn- ing the reasons why certain shades were suitable for her and why others were not—a bit of information which she put to practical use when we were selecting materials for her schoof dresses in September. But it wus the course in dietetics | ich ed her breathless atten- ton. While listening, fascinated, to a lecturo on vitamines, illustrated A plgs in varving stages n, she Legan to make | margin of the lecture She listd the four classes rbohydrates, minerals, pro- fats--and beneath each classification she listed ‘the principal foods for supplying each. us with Miss Eloise Vest of the psy- chology department, for Dr. Seashore happened to be unavailable that day. Miss Vest permitted me to stay in the room, at a distance from her desk, while she gave the child her test. I was nervous and excited. Of Interested in Vitamines. | e our w guinea 'r about theiry fved with food She i she forgot she be perfs Raising her hand excitedly, s tracted the attention of the lecturer, who 1 sted the audience to Iy, eye 1 may go out.” the lectur- W2 S surprised, and a little in- MOTHER, ON SRADUATION DAY. sught Elizabeth was un- usually clever, but I trembled before the mysteries’ of science. Elizabeth seemed fo be taking a keen delizht in the new game, for she laughed frequently, and showed not a_trace of nervousness. The test went on and on; the kindly lecturer, who had made the appointment for us, hovered near, almost as anxlous about the verdict as I was. “She's gone way past her age,” he whispered to me. “Those are the 10-vear-old tests they are giving her now.” | "My heart leaped. 1 could have ! ! wept with relief that she was doing But It T were ¥oU. | el Finally 1 was summoned to B soflie Aetruge 1001 L TINELy L e sty 0 ke lettuce, | Mins Vest's side, and her e e e s full of efcited, happy tea oy osy. | 100ked up at me. ey il ot o o eaayi | “She is the most wonderful child 1 ke ab animated Aiisteation | Love cver examined. she began after i e o Oma sho had sent beth to the cam- - pus to play. “I know you will he Watches Anne’s Diet. proud to learn that she has made the 1l no more trouble in getting | highest record of u beth to cat lettuce, for she pre. |1 find her mental « i it for herself. In fact, all my |and 1 month. She pa hlems “ted with her diet were s in the 12-year group, too, but lved. Shs consclen- d one or two in the § and 10. Iy checked her own meals, to see | Her vocabulary, 5,580 words, is that correct of the normal 11-year-old child.” they contained the of carhohydrates, minel fats ana proteins. Home Town E ed. witched my plates as 7 .| There is not space here to describe | 1 1 soon found my- | the mental tests that she passed, but | tificaliy, if to staet that the tests | a aaily lee an index of the innate ability—his actual liber—and are not examina add that I | 4 number of much-needed |} i sense of the word, of | uired in school or by under her stern supervision, | t tenee, a child who tests 1 don't want ELIZABETH'S to go out,” re from her t in her xcitement just wanted to know would happen to me if T didn’t < of lettuce and spinach. I 1 Am I going to get - like those guinea pigs? tell me some more foods vitamines?"” Tooked question ing course, I th startled, then with entire s carefully as if nz o te srown-up. I remember her gratefully lettuce is an important t. it is not absolutely neces- plenty of celery. to- ch, beet tops and other wbles. to e eve shall alway “Wih sary, if you eat matdes, spi gTeen vege T should try T aon't he mediate da Th of “How that edge ion. ind that her own health continued to | knov be perfect | One day ved t > lecturer, man ~to Elizabeth, subject of househe much { the mormal in abili though, for some rcason, she never go to school a day in her lite. | hat night, the Associated Press flashed the first report on the dis |ery of a new prodigy, and 1 w proudest mother in all the world fears that T had that she should be “held Nick” in school were dispelled once and forever. Miss Vest told me that her mental age entitled her to be {in the fifth grade, and that I should s she rath story to read It w almost im reproduction ol fair : Al The lecturer, who ha racted to the busy little seri what she had mished at the I writing. the cor rectness of the nd’ punctua- | ahow her to, advance tion and the “tion. | she wished. Bulishes ] \he protested | \yithin a few days we S Jodked * Eveno “md fithat zabeth’s feat had Ho 3 1o Sears and 9 lcrented a small sensation in Des S N Reporters hesieged us for in- o i) | s, but I would not permit them o Hant e to qu abeth. T did not want e ey ey her to, have her head turned by flat . : tery. She had no iden that she had done anything more important than shyly an the the sp s went home THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. The Normal Child. Almost any mother is sure that her baby is far “smarter’ than her neigh- bor's baby, but it oftén happens that mothers are puzzled as to the actual extent of their baby’s superiority, and it will be some comfort for them to have some definite standards by which to measure this. x weeks, or thereabouts, most will smile voluntarily. I know before I go any further that there ure hundreds of mothers who will chal- lenge this statement and a re me that it happened much sooner in their households. Perhaps they are right. A smile is an elusive thing and ea; ily mistake At four or five months the baby will hold his wabbly head up and struggle to sit up. is too ear to prop him up in his'c his b is too weak. He should never be urged to sit up at any time. Hy this time_he will smile réadily, will take an object in his hands and will fol- low anything bright with his ey If he is very, very bright he will want to grasp the object. By six months he will he at hold his back e for short periods. He will grasp at any object within reach and will undoubtedly let it drop, to "m'mlding there is some willing pe: n to pick it up for him again. At one year of age he will have discovered his hands and feet, having many times : process of “viewing” his fingers. will be crawling, perhaps, even try- ing to walk, and he will have five or six monosylla tongue's end, all very much like “da . . . ma bye,” etc. Ie will know his and especially his mother and s quite up to normal he will have six teeth and will weigh around 21_pounds. A If at one year of age the baby is still unable to walk, talk, sit with back erect, or is without signs of teeth, one can be sure that he is a backward child and that his diet and general care needs improvement and correction. - SUMMERTIME BY D. C. PFATTIE. Black-Eyed Susan. If there is one August itself it san., The bec balms, to be sure, e glorions now all around Wash. ington; but black-eyed susans, harc peasant types that they are, are still the queens of the cighth month. They belong, of course, to the great composite family, the commonest of all flowering pl family that by ‘eptember will rinate wood and 214 with its brilliant display of tel goldenrod, joe-pye weed, iron- weed and sunflower. But all thes come heralded by black-eyed susans countryfied, gay, even gaudy, but ever flower that means the black-eyed lovahle Linnacus, who has won the enmity people by giving Latin names called the blackeyed susan irta—Rudbeckia after h 4 Olaf Rudbeck. Though Linnaeus was the father of botany and though Rudbeck never accomplished anvthing to compare with his pupil’s work, still he gave to the youthful aeus, in an ag when botany was considered a use. less, even a blasphemot i it pried into the mysteries of cr the first help that the future of botany ever received. “While Rud- heckias bloom,” wrote Linnaeus to his one-time preceptor, “your name will ever shine.” MOTHERS AND THFIR CHILDREN. wise old Tinted Dresses. = i IE Gez! ¥ D Tk T BusT ) WouLON TCHA T WeLL, MLt T SATURDAY, THE THRILL THAT COMES ONCE IN A LIFETIME. Lamr.'. YA Kid "FoLp 'ER RIGHT uP 1N A WAD AN CARRY ‘ER I YER POCKET AM' 1T Do’ T HURT 'ER A TALL, AN' YA KIM WASH'ER | EV'RY YEAR AN SHE'S GooD AS NEW. SHE SET ME BACK- 10 Bucks ! GoT 'er upP To CHI-CAWGO AUGUST - 14, 1926. 10 voLLARS' wHew! You'RE A SPORT,GENE, DERNED IF YA HAINT | | NEVER HEAR OF A CAGE CosTies' MORE N A DOLLAR AN A HALF EVERYDAY QUESTIONS Answered by DR. S. PARKES CADMAN Chicago, 111. Why does the Salvation Army ap- peal to emotional excitement instead ¢ calm reasoning in advancing the claims of religion Answer—Because the emotions are the chief sources of religious change and betterment. Do you suppose this organization, which has won universal approval for its mission, could have been produced by science, philosophy or any other pursuit dependent upon calm reasoning? Study the arm: hardships, its persecutions, tories, its world-wide spread in t last 50 years. You will be convinced, I think, that its founder, Gen. William Booth; his greatly gifted wife, Kath- erine Booth; their son, the present general; his sister, our gwn Command- er Booth, and all those who aid them beginnings, its its vie- | have rightly gauged the deepest needs outcast, the sad and Modern Chri ligious records of the sinful, th the poverty stricken. tianity has no finer than those made by the ration Army. s seeming extravagance conce diviner wisdom than that v academi i tain a studied pol 1 am a young man in the middle | 1 have a college education | twenties. which has resulted = in giving me I have shunmed great extent, espe- that of women.. None defect whose what is Answ ance, ceeded work? can it 1 does asmuct tion an, | useless | distur If yo { larly of Paul there ey ir Neith | wholly | ways’in 1t emphasi Do chance. with m something God v not he | creation o the divine attitude d tells to some things that happened and waited for the r creation nor not exclusively, in it? is the the 1 er— is exactly how blam used to argue in the Middle Ages. We follow different one question with anothe lines today and what do in_the What u mean by onstruction is a “defect?” lled? I so, Moreove be evil? criti quandary s we are parts of that d our very crticisms outbreaks resembling vol ance: ) defect’ can His wor the adverse us in th y of man, Mars Hill speech. us that God closed N his fullnes: histo nt. The; “becomin; and d forward the fact of past or pr n state of ror, tragedy Iso is moving estin This ized use your micros Give your Life is made up ¢ great and the infinitely ich between their If the work is not good, And if good, son for destroying it? TFor in- of His if God u thinking more particu- refer y ibed by St. are al- kne: cope telescope of treme ONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY they meet s Is it how Iy, of . in- but anic He A his time. ever Well, good-by, Mr. Podger, T yvou'll m ain next year, unkers' De- to a to be |’ you comes to town- (Cavyright. 19 rood-by! s0 a the little, Protection From Sun. —By WEBSTER. "spose | s me pitty bad, but I'll come | When we'll catch them at got away from us this time—'member to come to see me it Miss Caroline Manning. Miss Caroline Manning, industrial supervisor of the Women's Bureau of the Department of Labor, who comes from Northfleld, Minn., took her first diploma, an A. B., at Carlton College in 1898, and_her master of arts in English at Radcliffe in 1906. Her knowledge of Chaucer and his kindred | spirits, however, does not seem to have handicapped her in her inten- sive dealing with the industrial move- ment of modern times. It was after teaching in a Minne- sota high school for some years that Miss Manning went to Radcliffe, and later found her interests swinging to the side of conditions under which women were forced to earn their daily bread. In 1907 she took a fellowship at the Women's Educational and In- dustrial Union in Boston, and began one of the most courageous of indi- vidial investigations. Her fellowship was gaid for out of private means and she was not registered at the union. In this way she remained a private person, which was most important to the work she undertook. The commit- tee supervising her study wanted data for legislative hearings that would re- sult in new and better laws for wom- en wage earner: so Caroline Man- ning became a factory hand. Not In one factory or in one trade, but in every manner of industry did she make her way as an unskilled lab- orer. She had to wear old clothes, re. frain from baths, keep the dirt under her finger nails and take all manner of abuse to gain her end. She tried particularly to put herself in the awkward situations that come to un-_ Women Who Have Important Tasks in Government Service BY ALICE ROGERS HAGER skilled women, such as absence, tardi- a dozen others, in order to discover how they would be treated under similar situations. So she went, for two years, through shoe, cigar, dressmakis partment When s weary that she could no lon hard tasks of the factory woma experimented with employment: agen- cies and loan sharks, turning these findings over to the Legal Aid Soctety In 1918 she left this work to make a tenement house inspection in Ph delphia for the city board of he: living meanwhile at the college set tlement, so that she could help with their social servies From the ame year, was called to the Bureau of Women and Children of the Minnesota State Department of Labor, where ducted investigations Dl ploying women and children in_Minneapol It was in she chiefly 1918 that she came to Washing inve wtor for the Children areau. In 1920 she trans- ferred to the Women's Bureau, where she is mow supervising field surveys but still keeping in close contact with the field work itself. Her supervision covers the planning of State surveys, routing of the wi slection of the firms to be investigated, the makin of contacts and co-operation. with the interested State sgencies and organi zations. She collaborated with Miss gnes Pef sistant director of the bures eport on “The Share of Wage Earning Women in Family Support,” based on a study made in anchester, H., in 19 EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet ‘The Right Food Is the Best Medicine Regularity in Feeding Hours. A child who s blessed with good food habits is generally an amiable child. The “don’t wants” often start with “I don’t want my milk”; “I don't spinach”; “I don’t want the whole w] * Then follows, “I don't want my bath now £o to bed.” If this state of mind is coupled with “I want a lollypop” want an ice eream cone,’ t interval; throughout the day, the youngster’s digestion and disposition are both apt to be pretty bad. The parents of such an offspring about the seventh year begin to say, “I can't imagine getting into Buster. He is so stubborn. And. though he's always nibbling, he never seems ‘to grow well.” Upon investigation it gonerally | comes out that this state of things has come about so gradually that the really sinful parents cannot seo they | are to blame. At 2 yvears Buster sat at the table and was provided with dabs of food from father’s dinner in addition to his own food. “A little taste of sponge ake will never hurt him 'S mother. “A bite of my candy will never hurt him.” she always thinks, and between his feeding times she deliberately cultivates his taste for candy and spoils his appetite and up- sets his digestion. From the very er's breast the | taught regularity | every two hours on the dot. |to the four-hour periods as the young | man grows. And if he yells his head Yoff, no breast feeding of a few sucks should be given to quiet him to sleep. His mother should be sure he is clean and dr; that nothing is hurting him, that he is not thirsty for some cool water which has been boiled first. It may be given from a spoon right from the beginning. And also make sure that the baby is getting enough nourishment. The baby spe- clalist is the one to give advice about the time of even the breast feedings and whether or not the haby is thriv ing properly. But the mother must watch the clock and see that the feed- | ings are given to the minute. Then ctificial feedings are to he given again the baby specialist will tell the first meal at moth- oung baby can be First the feedings Then on the mother how to modify milk to resemble her own. ven a five-month-old baby who is | started on one artificial feeding a day, “I don’t want to | supplementing the breast nursing, can be taught to take the milk from a cup. This method has the advar of teaching the child to finish his meal at once and not dwaddle over a bottle while the milk gets cold. From the cup feedings it is also easier to teach the child to take other food when he is old_enough. The cup is easier to care for than a nipple and bottle. However, if th nother does give the baby a bettle th youngster should be taught to finish its bottle and not play with it. And no sucking on the nipple when the bottle is empty. To give a baby a rubber pacifier is deliberately hurt it. A pacitier causes mouth breathing and that causes adenoids. A lesser evil is that the shape of the mouth is A well nourished baby, fed proper intervals does not need any *“pacifi tion” between feedings. He is healthy and contented W. M.—Are ¢ No. H. G. F.—Is butter a nec for children? Ans. valuable food for It con tains vitamin A. which is essential to growth. If children each get a quart of whole mill the butter ration can be cut d L serving about three time f it is a question of money, and a butter substitute is used at the other meals. Do not ent down on the milk supply. ams fattening? v food Butter is a very ders desiring personal answers to thetr tions should send solf addrossed. stamped envelope to Dinah Day. care of The Star Quick Pies. The busy housewife will find it a great time saver to cook a supply of lemon, cocoanut and butterscotch ple filling and seal it hot. \When unex- pected guests arrive tay . instead of worr re baked, mix some pa bake it, then fill it with the prepared filling, make a meringue for the top. return to the oven, and brown. You will be pleased with the quick results, When making pie try, mix enough lard, flour and salt to make four pies. Take out enough for one or two pies and put the other in the ice box. Tt will always be ready by adding just a little water, and it will make even better pie crust because it cold. clally young but the better type of girl appeals | to me, to which kind I myself do not seem to appeal. My shyness is further accentuated by the fact that my hair is getting very thin. I seem to be happy only when in the forests of my native State or on some long hike across the countryside. My social awkwardne is something thgt has given me the utmost_concern. | What would vou advise me to do in order to overcome the defects which I have mentioned above? Answer—The first thing to do is to divert a considerable portion of your attention from yourself to something external. At present you are too much occupied with your own affairs and in | danger of becoming a superior person of a rather stodgy sort. This by way of diagnosis, not criticlsm. To be frank, vour letter reveals a likable fellow. But yvou_owe it to everybody to be soclable, Be a good mixer. Talk to everybody you meet, and you will find that the humblest man or woman has something to tell you which is bene- fictal. s One reason why you'do not appeal to the better type of girl is not because your hair is getting thin, but because you are in danger of being bald headed inside; stupid, ine although so resolutely highbrow. Don’t ask the next fair maiden you meet for an opinfon on Einstein's theory or Spengler's relationship to Schopenhauer. Question her about the latest fashion in bobbed hair, or if she is very shrewd, the chances of the Democratic party in the next Presidential election Come off your pedestal, he human, adapt yourself to social demands and the world has a welcome for you. pass an examination creditably, as any child might do. She did not see an, of the newspaper storie that were written about her, a precaution against conceit which 1 have followed to this day. xth year was to jus that Miss Vest had predicted —and more. promoted to him proudl, 't bell 1 be immensely child. Have you lity tested?” inswered. T had jinet-Simon tests the When working in the garden in | Summer most women wear light col- ored straw garden hats. Line the | crown of such a hat with dark blue | | silik and_there wns be no more of | the usual fatigue, dizziness or head- ches that take so much of the en-| joyment from gardening. The blue silk cuts off certain injurious and penetrating rays from the sun. Few things surp: an hour of a omy for pu r mere words phrases in their proper place. from atoms to suns and That's one wi to forget in_the Creator’s plan. Did you ever hear of the occulist | who made improvements in the mech- | ism of the hum. eyve? He asserted °d the elumsiness of the orig- in and that, apart from the rawback that nobody could | e with it, it was an admirable invention. (Copyright. fy all or her APARTMENTS 1—2—3 ROOMS Kitchen and Bath whose (Continued in Tomo: name 1 Wppointment have for row’ For Winter Geraniums. If you would like your geraniums 1926.) to furnish Winter blossoms, make cut- P tings in August or September. Old growth is best for the cuttings. Pull them from the main plant instead of cutting them. Set them in a pot of thin soil and sand mixed. Keep slight- 1y moist and in the shade until they start to grow. They will then bloom all Winter. ‘Women are now classed among the best scenario writers of the world. Frances Marion, June Mathias and Anita Loos are probably the best adapters of screen stories among the feminine group. Fine Peaches From Virginia, $1.50 Bushel Delivered by Parcel Post Send check, money order or cash to Grassland Orchards of a girl's white Summer we trimmed with colored em- that looks dingy ¢ after being worn and w ber of times. These white frock: be tinted in an ccru dye, which them a soft, rich tint, and which tones up the embrodery. They then look i0st like new and are good for lots ore_wear. Large, airy, light rooms, spa- cious closets—unique patio court arrangement. See them today! VERY REASONABLE RENT For better or worse not lving on her But ther 4 o'clock in the afl noon it was unmade, the covers tur » | over the foot. A red r I've had fun since yvou told me about— | ch, was lying as u about it six weeks aj I've got | | table by the pillow. He strong. Maggie can tell you ‘that,” mechanically, uninterestedly. she went on, smil and 1 feel s And then he heard he ble woman, was not quite like > had known for the t That Stella had alw too delicate, alw Why, if she had all of a sudden, shouldn't of some help to him? He Is § n the mid d her come down the big hall to- She looked up coolly, she came through the king Those Women Up. Hiram <ley held and. 1o ustomed toward thoush te fow te did not price sell th his fa Why Stelja the' t were bottom morn! how M up h i 5 old enough to face thing: head | the 10 years. been too too ill for s0 much Apply—Resident Mgr.. Apt. 106 2131 O Street N.W. slump to almost nothing. He spends all his time boot- 2 and crapshooting in the alley back there. And the colored people are nearly all gone. Why, Hiram, there’s a big field herg for a really wod Jaundr D She stopped for breath, her ‘eyes shining, the lovely color coming and going in her soft, firm cheel le of the starting of the Expert Laundry came then fast and furiously from ‘her excited. 1 s. How on in high sch tended % the clothes and deliver- they were all beautl: ctric washer to impress s fact that thy . down to rock 8 sed in the ngth | brightl drawr Went her | dgorway Ser it hool. | “Oh. You home, Hi? the news of [to phone vou to have 1nd the car to |town tonight ot a| “What for?” he said i \at he surlily let e r him all indignation with | ¥ had been filled to And then: * an't you wake up to thin are vou letting me have this - help?” him. Her fr let him go on v through and as 1 was goin dinner dow RthtRthththth Rt tRthththth R ththththth o Open at 8:30 A.M. Daily 5 What You Need —what every salaried man and woman needs—to get on in the world, is a SAVINGS ACCOUNT. QReady money means readiness for Opportunity, when it comes your way, and a savings account offers the best means of accumulat- ing it. QOur Savings Dept. facilities are at your service. OPEN UNTIL 5:15 P.M. MONDAY, AUGUST 16 Every facility for taking care of the Checking Accounts of busi- ness men and others. Your account will be appreciated. voice ully done. had had for years the basement, beeau time to be washing v work to do and a nerv {wait on, was working beautifully. Stella and Irene did the finest ntiest things. Irene was so capa- ble. so capable, She was going to make the finest business woman in the world! “And you for me bt 1 knew blooming the front : house and stalked venge- Know East Boston, Mass. It God succeeded in the construction of His work, why are there so many Willie Willis ROBERT QUILLEN e house- door_of his | Wh us invalid to burden without | Stella stood v flushed | until he seemed | then stretched ou “Come!” she said br He held back. ay! What d he shouted with an she comman “Of co Many employers of indolent youths would be surprised to note how, given proper surroundings, the same boys | can ‘work fast.' Whew! 1 4 smell! having Wi done lately. only think clothe washed Always They ma wear BY looked abot cend the be Iyir r, of cou . dear.” Stella st enthusfasti hool use of it.” s corner near the stairs where ves had been nailed up, on which bottles and boxes stood and a bit of a place for writing down notes “We didn’t want you to know,” 1 they went up the ntil we iwere rather ire we ing to make a suc- cess of it Why, I had the worst time trying to hold n in the morn- inks down on my pillow until you got out of the room! There were Maggie and Irene having all the fun While T was having to play possum!” They all went downtown to dinner that night. They went in the car. Stella had some money for gasoline, Irene and Stella, however, planned to manage better and have time for good cozy little dinners at home after [=ma ully quiet. in some .\‘ml on her bed with | 1 candy boxes. Well, |you—in time. Come. et up and make a little [~ He felt all at once resistant; followed. her. Irene {out into the hall, down the ing | rough the kitchen, down the kill, as | bhasement odors of steam her slim, |and tarch ass hi | quives s with ing pungency. | At the door of the laundry Stella | halted and nodded her head toward | the va uds of steam in which | Maggie could be distinguished going about. There were clothes every- | where—surely not all Markley" “This is what I have to say, Hi dear,” Stella said. and suddenly 5 face quivered and her filled w3 Markley felt foollshly com- [tears. “I might ve” Known vyou After all, why wake her from | would think just what you did. I at ha f har dream? She was only voung | wasn't any use at all to vou after |this. But, of course, this was a spe once. He could bear the load by him- [we—we began to be prosperou clal day. oof. hesguessed. But Stelli—mow, ' She laid her hand on his agm. W . (The End) 4 3% 4% “on on Time Accounts Deposits stairs ed to by ight her Snvinp & vou going?" he asked : Sunday, August 15 Lv. Washington. .. ¢ Ar. AMlantic City. 10000 Returning Lv. Atlantic City. Lv. Philadelphia é (Standard Time) Tickets on Sale Commeneing Friday Similar Excursion August 29 nswered, 1. Her med in funny, { nners, was ‘close up agair let her cool lips | bruch his bristled cheek for an in-| stant before she broke away and ran | on_down Hiram forted 10th St. at Penna. Ave. John B. Cochran, Pres. 1111 Connecticut Ave. Bl L G L Thos. P. Hickman. V. P. & Cashier eye unswells l “Pug’s big brother is goin’ to finish