Evening Star Newspaper, September 29, 1926, Page 3

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Two Serious Thirsts at the World’s Series When Roger Hornsby's hard hitting Cardinals descend upon the Yankees in _the coming world's series battle, we'll not attempt to guarantee whose thirst for victory will finally be quenched, but here in Washington we'll guarantee that po thirst for a long, tall drink of water meed go unguenched in any home that takes clear, sparkling American Ice! American ICE Company HEAT Oil Burner, LABOR UNIONS HIT ~ RADICAL GROUPS Determined Fight Being Communist Propagandists. BY JAMES M. LYNCH. Special Dispateh to The St ROIT, Mich., September the general labor move- ment and official unions gather here fo preliminary to the American Federa- tion of Labor convention, which opens next w k, 1t grows more and more apparent that a determined fight will be waged this year to prevent mi resentation o: 1» movement by cal propagandists. Members ol e have heen extenstvely circularized by radical groups and a comprehensive mpaign {3 being carried forward to tnject issues intended to have ruptive effect on the present organiza- tion of the general movement. Among the active foes of trade unionism is the Trade Unlon Edues League, with headauarters in Chicago. onferences all large unlons 3 Waged by A. F. of L. Against of the international | dis- | THE EVENING Continues Thro Generally on the down grade since November, 1925, retail food prices in Washington today have mearly reached the average level of 1925 and well on their way to levels below | | that of last year, if the present trend continues. A steady upward move- ment in retail prices, which began in May, 1924, and continued through November, 1925, was stopped in that month, and although food prices fluc- tuated by small degrees throughout the Winter and early Spring, the re trogression from the peak of Novem- ber, 1925, has been clearly marked. Only within the past two months, ! however, has the downward trend be- { come most pronounced, the retail food st of the Bureau of Labor s showing a drop in mid-July of 3 per cent over mid-June, a down- ward trend ' that has continued | through August and Septemb The bureau obtains food pr | s from FOOD PRICES HERE MAY DROP . BELOW LEVELS OF LAST YEAR Downward Trend in Retail Quotations Since 3 Per Cent Decline in Mid-July ugh September. movement was definitely stopped and general downward movement begun, culminating in the 3 per cent drop be- tween June 15 and July 15. The index figure of food prices in | Washington for the yvear 1924 stood points above the 19 average, whilo the index for 1925 wi 164.6, or 64.6 points above the 1913 level. While the drop in prices not been rapid enough here to justi a prediction that the 1926 level wiil reach the 1924 level, if the retrogre: sion in food prices continues it ma approximate the level of last vea when prices as a whole were higher than in any vear since 1913, excepting the war vears and the peak vears of 1919 and 1920, The index for November, 1925, stood 5, dropping to 171.7 in Decem and slackening considerab since the beginning of the year Fluctuations Are Cited. Here is the v food prices have STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, Buzzard, Former Evangelist, Behind Bars | In New Chapter in Career of Petty Crime| su re Rel Ief {in a series of conferenc 1926. FARM AID BACKED BY HOOVER INWEST Secrétary Urges Inland Wa- terway Development to Cut Freight Rates. | By the Associated Press. PHOENIXVILLE, September 29.—Abe Bu rd, notorious mountain chicken thief, is again behind prison bars. His life has compri freedom, much of which W {in chicken and other petty thievery, land 43 vears spent in jail in repent- ance, study and evangelism. With two companions he was ar- rested yesterday in the hills of North Coventry township with a load of chickens, automobile tires wc. | other articles alleged to Nec | gathered during a’ might's [ neighboring farn His arrest brought to an end on of the longest stretches of freedom Abe had enjoved since he was a strip A of a boy. Each term in a cell has His plans for the development of a|gouyd him more determined than ever national system of inland walerways. | o reform and to go out into the world with particular stress on development| aq an evangelist to atone. Hi: of the upper Missouri River, held the | termination usually vanished quickly. attention of his audiences. The Sec-| ' Tn his vouth he was the leader of a retary is,understood to favor the de- velopment of Missouri River even he ond Sioux ity, lowa, the limit named in the present rivers and hars hors bill, which will come up before the Senate in the Winter session. MITCHELL, S. Dak., September 29 (). Development of watery portation was held yesterday b retary Hoover as an aid to fa of the Middle West. ars of By the Associated Press. nd OMAHA, Nebr., Septemb retary of Commerce lerbert Hooves here today, discussed with business leaders prob lems of vital interest to the Midwest, especially the inland waterway: raid A7/ FEEL LI L1 LI 2L LT e LA PHILLIPS . rmers wagon | nave been | 1601 Argonne Place |band of highwaymen that for vears | terrorized the Welsh mountain coun | try near Reading. |~ He spent much of his time In prison |in studw The Bible was one of his| favorite books. After his release in 1901, after having served seven he toured the State, lecturing on | “Ituin and Reformation r | 1ater he w: |ing chickens— | Three other periods of repentance were followed by fous terms be. | {hind the ba J. E. Kipp Is Dead. | CHICAC eptember 29 (#).—J. k. | Kipp, fourth vice president of the Order of Railway Telegraphers, o member during the war of the United States Railway Administration’s Board of Adjustment. and former general chairman of the telegraphers’ order in the New York Central System, died here yesterda (LI LI 1T L1 LA L EL T I L LN LA TERRACE ] Hot water Sure Relief 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Evervwhere Apartments For High-Class Colored Only 2nd & W Sts. N.W. The newest and most modern building in Washington Make Your Reservation NOW Only a Few Left Rents, $47.50 to $57.50 For further information see Representative on Premises, or | fluctuated in Washington since No- vember, 1925: Decrease of 1 per cent |in the month from November to De- | cember; Increase of less than half of | 1 per cent in the month from Decem- ber 15, 1925, to January 15, 1926; de- ent in the month The Iabor movement s | a score of retail stores in Washington in a crisix,” asserts a_“program” of [ on the fifteenth of every month, cor- proposals for the A. ¥. of L., issued | relates them and makes them public by this agency. where the em- | as the average price for the average { plovers are ‘attacking the workers'!siore. No attempt s made to secure | conditions of labor and standards of | prices from stores that cater only <0 8 In an addre: Mr. Hoover sald in- creased freight chargés arising from the war constitute *‘one of the under- lying causes” of the present difficul- tles of the farmers. could secure the lowered i1 NY. AVE mMAIN DV Just North of 16th and Col. Rd. Washington's Most Desirable Apt. House J. Dallas Grady 904 14th St. N.W. Main 6181 SPECIAL NOTICES. winch Forn Fomial and Ch GENERATORS ~EXCHANGED, ettt ntee i el CARTY. 1 all S ap N Iy VANS AVAILABLE FOLLOWS SPRINGEIELD MASS YORK (1TV. A IN OTHER CITIiES AS X O BOSTON PITISBURC PHE G 3 PIR NOTI ¥ at the closa of bi r1 ot ARLES PO v nas noldars of record at ber 30, 1926, hooks O/ toher BELL Presid CHARLES SIDDONS Seorata _ FREDFRICK I 11 and on Octobe the Ut po Tion t hts and frap i Railway o1 win & Tennal utder pe hess appre the trans from 't 926, 10 1 1 ilway Com act of L will on Ot SPECIAL I STO han Railw oftice ¢ hetd_at % . T ot of business on Octohe i A SPECIAL MEETING OF olders of (he o, ailway Company 14th gf the sompany. Washington, 1. ", ou O, 19 o'clock noon. ‘for 1l cting. and taking all “the estate NMEETING f the St ROONMS hrome ROBAINS. e T ¥ time, S6to A CIDER IN BARREL LOTS, APPLE €] Bl Va. S10 per barrel. Phone ES AND HOILE Grata Co., 14 planted, 746 10th st. ne. with oat or Samples LORD FoTsE | Washiigton o (U Phone Adams C;vc Us Your Next Order —tor Printing—and be assured of quality and promptng The National Capital Press 0.1 D ST. N.W. EVER DISAPPOINT " PRINTING IN A HURRY BYRON S. ADAMS High Grade. buf not high priced. R T80t Sireet MW, Martin Anderson, OPTOMETRIST, —tor 20 i ROE FULKERSON. g | S nacied s THE KINSMAN OPTICAL CO., AR VNP re hn wiil e £iad 0 RAWLING ABOUT HROWN LOAD OR PART wanted | eee and secve his wh H I pans. trsing with pots a e drip Js At troubls ia. We maka o s KQQN Roofiug Company. THE CE CAN AND Open todas. 1th &t nw i1 am 119 3rd L h ESE s 000 SRS CHIN hare s and gentlemen, | tion of Labor THINK OF YOUR ROOF NOW | Don’t wait until bad weat! Call us today. | JRONCLAD fosfns, &S| " An efficient and economical heating system costs very little more. [ WHY TAKF A CHANCE? | “PACE” VAPOR WATER HFATING 1240 Mh St N\ Frank 3834, “PACE HEATED 1S WELI ATED” o DO YOU NEED 4 NEW SHADES? 4y w0 « for Factory Prices on new Kol o 1 & R KLEEBLATT ' & Wauduw Shauee sud Sceeus. Povue L, 878 RTFAM [ “|ports of disorde PAPERED | A1} {to | | i Unfon | ot | Haugen | adjustment of American economic | living and trying to destroy trade | unions. nd agai i 'he tra ns, weakened by {eraft divisions top-heavy with an official bureaucracy which refuses to fight emplovers, have retreated almost under the employers’ unj Union Members. in terms that at one point express deep concern over the welfare of trade unionism and at another frank- Iy propose destructlon of the entire system in favor of the ‘one blg union,” this program purports to rep- resent views of a considerable group within the regular labor movement. Thus does this kind of propaganda glve concern to leaders of the A. F. of L. | The tmportance of radical attacks upon American labor should not be over fact is the communists will I . sympathizers in the fortheo; convention. he trade union i« soundly grounded upon v of purely economic union- lut this the general public does and--at least secn by the American vialistic ven- re in the investme: wealth a ad “in oy tures to get super-profit It i3 not easy to see the connection between that attack and the eague's further proposal that the A. I\ of L should “demand of the United States Gov ernment that it recognize the Sovie Union (the Russian government) and Jlish full diplomatic and com mercial relations with that country.” Bases Plea on Europe Report. de unions of ave sent delegations to investi mditions of labor in Russia, wogram’” sets forth, and the of L. is urged to accept the Sov witation to send an official deleg tion for an officially Russia in that capitalistic re- and suffering® there ally all tr the P, t may be refuted. Clting the great ad production by improv chinery and inereasing orkmanship. the league d: wbor has faled ,thus f of the nation's In this the il with the de policy of the A. 1% of I same paragraph the proposal is made that “all Wage movements should be ucted Jjointly by related trades Attempts to cut wages must be re { by a militant strike policy.” s the subtle approach of the gen. strike advocate 1 the cotamunist rikes and they'll 1 of communism! Bring on disouder nd we will reshape the future ac- ording to some plan that may occur us during the excitement! Th wage polic of the : 1 last year at the sntion,” which de- - reasing the buying of the worker's wages in pace with advancement in production and for a gradual reduction in worki hours &0 as to eftend emplo all hands, is condemned by wdical spokesmien as too conserva. \ces made n nent of ma efficiency of ures that to win a increased “program’’ lared wage Throw ' sten to prophets powe League Proposals Outlined. ¢ proposals made by the Tr: Educational League publi terfal include: tablishment of a Labor party. Nationalization of all largescale tndustry, such as mines, railroads, great mianufacturers and food-distrib: uting agencies, and the establishment “worke: control.” Placing cost of unemployment on employers by legislation _requiring compulsor ‘ment of trade union wages to all unemployed. Reduction of the Army and Navy and a fight against militarism and tmperialism. Higher surtaxes on the incomes of great corporations and multimil- lonaires. Relief for farmers through adop- tion of the principle of the McNary- bill and the appropriation of half a billion doliars to establish C i m | co-operative marketing. Union With Reds Advocated. The convention is urged to demn American “imperialism* and to oppuse participation in the League of Nations. At the me time it is pro- phsed that internatfonal affiliation of Inbor shall be advanced through in- dorsement by the convention of the Anglo-Russfan Trade Union Unijt League, which aims at the amalgama- tion of the Amsterdam International, Red International of Labor the American Federation of and the unions of South China, Ind and other A countr proposal, of the fnconsistent may _think League of Natlons. If it that this country should remain aloof from world problems of one sort, why should labor dash into entanglements having little or nothing to do with th and Rath whatev an o N &ial problems? There fsn't the elightest chance of adoption by the American Federa- onvention of any cha acteristic proposal of the Communis propagandist. Indeed, it is hardly - that the more radical of these will even be mentioned on the floor, much less debated. There fs the danger, however, that some misinformed persons and others, who belfeve it to their interest to mi: represent labor, will make use of this propaganda to injure the reputation of the sound labor movement. That is Why this writer believes it worth while to attribute the “program for bullding the trode unians™ to its true source. Policy of Union Cited. It has heen the polley nunion aders in the past to lgnore the ag tion of radicals until their machina actually become dangerous. th le: | Perhaps it wiil do no harm to look over their handiwork a little in ad- vanee of that point. Shaw Desmond, the ggritish writer onducted tour of | but in the | the syndicalist | m into | * | Carter says, received $10,000. con- | is_proper | {a limited clientelo or those waintain uniformly high or low prices, | |and the names of the stores are kept | secret. Several chain stores are {inciuded in the list of Washington | concerns which furnish figures for the burea. 65 Per Cent Higher Than In 1913. Fond prices at retail in Washington 1on August 15, the last complete figures | available and correlated, were 65 per | cent higher than the average price for { 1913, Only one city—Birmingham, | Ala.—ranked above Washington in | the percentage of increase since the pre-war year. For the month from July 15 to August 15, food prices here showed an increase of less than half of 1 per cent. Prices of food at retall in the Cap- ital reached their peak in 1920, for in june of that year an increase of 107.6 ibove the average price for 1913 was | reached. From that month. in 1920 lackened until the low mark bove 1813 prices was reached | in Aprll, 1924, Since then price { have been steadily on the upgrad until last svemb when the upw i dl |FORD ASKS RECOVERY | | OF CAR GIVEN “BARON” Specially Built Machine Believed Sold by “Krupp Heir” While in the West. By the Associated Press. WILMINGTON, Del., 29.—When Henr «d’ presents an wtutomobile to @ “baron” he wants that person to he a “real baron” and {not un impostor. It was learned last night that Mr. | {rora, through ary, has writ- | [ten fo the courts of this State ask-{ ing what may be done in his favor rning the restoration, or the \ent cash value, of the especial- nstructed touring car that he presented to “Baron G. Frederick E. {von Krupp, jr.” George R. Gabor, {who posed now is {in_the New orkhouse | | wwaiting trial on eha ! worthless checks while | Hotel in this city last Jul "'he automobile in_question was re- { ported sold by the “baron” at Albu- | Querque, N. Mex. | ptember guest at a | MIRS. LESLIE CARTER SUES | Claims to Be Co-author of “The‘ Shanghai Gesture.” LOS A ES, September 29 (). __Suit for $100,000 damages and an ac- counting of the profits from the New York stage success, “The Shanghai Gesture,” was filed in Federal Court here yesterday by Mrs. Leslle Car- ter, also known as Carcline Payton, against John Colton, the nction charg- < infringement of copyright. . e rter declares in the suit that «he and Colton wrote “The Shanghal Gesture” as a story and play in 1925 and that Colton as co-author later signed his title and interest to her In July, 1955, she charges she sent articles to Washington for copyright and discovered that Colton had closed « deal with Boni & Liveright for pub- licaton of the story. Colton, Mrs ! Praying Plants Reported. Sir Jagadis Base, a Hindu plant spe- cialist, tells of a “praying plant” that each evening prostrates itself about | the hour that the temple bells call the | people to 1 . The plant is like a | tree and twice the height of a man, It | is said. on labor subjects, writing a few vears before the recent general strike in that country, asserted there were only a few. hundred Communists in all Eng- land, but that thefr tivelessness and incurable optimism made them worth watching. They would, he said, at. tempt promotion of a general strike at the first opportunity, hoping thus to profit by the resulting disorder and | the injury done the conservative move- | ment. | " How true a prophecy this was we now know. The radical minority | failed to realize its wild dream of bar- ricades and Street massacres, coup detats and redistribution of wealth, it did do enormous damage to e unionism—the arch foe of revo- | | i | | g | { | i \ | | | 1 | PHONE MAIN 9427 THE BEST BUY LCAFRITZ LIFETIME HONES 142 &K © M.9080 OVER 1000 SOLD 300 More Under Constractior | Mass. crease of 2 per from January 15, 1926, to February 15, 1026; decrease of 2 per cent between February 15 and March 13; increase of 2 per cent in the month from March 15 to April 15; decrease of less than half of 1 per cent in the month from April 15 to May 15; decrease the same amount from May 15 to June 5; decrease of 3 per cent from June 15 to July 15; and increase of less than half of 1 per cent from July 15 to_August 15. In its schedule sent out to a score of Washington stores, the bureau se-: cures prices on the 15th of every month on 43 _different articles of food, from which an average is struck, representing the grand ave: rage price for Washington on that|the world, unlike our own have not date, Some stores may sell food articles at lower prices than others, according to the grade of the article, or speclal sales may reduce the price. But the general average is all that concerns the bureau In its work of secuxing an average price, and it does not take into account fluctuations in the price level as between stores. GIRL DIES AFTER LEAP FROM FOURTH STORY Tells Police She Was Forced to Jump to Elude Two Men. Homicide Charged. By the Assoclated Pre NEW YORK, September 20.—iss Dorothy Smith, a cloak model, who had told police’ she jumped from the window of a four-story apartment to escape from two men who are charged with having lured her there, died vesterday a fractured skull and internal "injuries. Miss Smith's jarents live fn ifolden, She made her fatal leap early Monday. As a result of the story she told police during periods of con- sclousness in_city hospital, two men, describing themselves as broker: were arrested on c| ed criminal assault. Tha two men were IFrancis Murphy, who lived in the apartment from which she leaped. and J. Fitzpatrick of the Hronx As she leaped from the window the gitl clasped a crucifix to breast. She was 23 y old IFollowing Miss Smith's death, po- lice sald, the charges against Murphy and Fitzpatrick, who are in Tombs | prison, were changed to homicide. BANDIT TRIO SENTENCED. Two Negroes Who Entered Boyce, Va., Bank Get 18 Years, One 15. {al Dispatch to The Star. BERRYVILLE, YV —Just eight days Spe three of the four negroes implicated were gentenced by Judge Frank B. Whiting in Circuit Court here Tues day, two to 18 years and one to 15 years in the e penitentiary. The other, James Lee, driver, was wound- ed by a West Virginia State officer and {3 In the Winchester Hospital. He | will be arraigned later. The Jast man, James Adams, alias Merton Smith, was apprehended by Deputy Sheriff W. W. Smallwood, jr., near Reedsville, Pa., Monday. (& BOOKS BOUGHT == ‘«Betag Whom In” or Phone Fr. 5éi0 BIG BOOK SHOP, 933 G St. N.W. — utomobiling Afteralonghard auto ride, your tired eyes will be wonderfully freshened by acleansing, sooth- ing wash with Elder Flower Eye Lotion. 75c per bottle (in- cluding eye cup) at drug stores. Mads by Goorge B. Bvams, Philadeiphia ELDER FLOWER EYE LOTION Several New Homes Already Completed t]lers to be stared n the next 30 days Watch Its Development Hedges & Middleton, Inc. REALTO 1412 Eye St. Frank. 9503 es of attempt- | her | . September 29, | aiter the hold-up of | the Bovce State Bank, thls county, | | | | son fon charges promised from .5 he said, “and_thereby restore an additional 6 to 12 cents per bushel on grain, we would add a very important percentage of the favmers’ profit, “It is generally agreed that the price of our farm products is deter- mined at those points on our seaboard or abroad where the competitive streams of exports come together. “Thus the price at the farm is the price made at this junction market, less the cost of transportation and handling_to this market. Ocean frelght charges have remained about the same as before the war because the standards of living of the rest of Apartments of one room, with built-in tub, shower and tion hall, etc. Price, $62 increased over pre-war times. Cites Greater Cost. “Railway rate Increases have forced the Midwest farmers to pay from 6 to 12 cents more per bushel in freight in order to get thelr products to mar- ket. Therefore the foreign farmers reach the world market at a lower cost in proportion than can our Mid- West farmer: “For instance. preswar a ton of South ota wheat cost $11.90 to reach Liverpool by the cheapest route. while a ton of Argentine wheat reached the same point for $7.23. ““Today the increased freight charges on this ton have moved the Argentine only $1.17 further from Liverpool, while they have moved the South Dakota farmer $4.08 further away. “I believe we can contribute great- Iy. to remedy this, situation by im- provement of our waterways.” Five Rooms, F Corner 15th an Also CHARITIES GET BIG SUM. YORK, September 20 (). and charity organizations hief beneflclaries under the Kate 8. Richardson, filed . which disposed of an estate of more than $1,500,000. Mrs, Richard. was the widow of Fdward W hardson of this eity. To the New York Hospital two-thirds of the residue of $387.4 in memory of the decedent’s fathe The National Child Welfare Assocks- tion, Inc., received $30,000, and the salvation Army, Inc., $30,000. NEW Tlospitals were the will of M vesterda 5 Or see Resident R R R EE TH You Can Buy One S A few of the delightful porch apartments left. Beautiful four-rocm apartments with porches, $100 Resident Manager William S. Phillips & Co., Inc. EM TONI dining alcove, kitchen, tile bath Murphy bed to 5 rooms, recep- .50 and Up § N N N N \ \ N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N \ N N N N \ N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N e e 2R 22 TWO DE LUXE SUITES Five Rno;nl, Foyer & Bath and oyer & Two Baths Wakefield Hall d V Streets N.W. Several Smaller Suites W H WEST COMPANY Founded 1894 916 Fifteenth Street.—Main 9900. Mgr.—Potomac 5524 B775 N S R N WY GHT of These Homes for the Rent You Are Now Paying Why Not‘ Highly Restricted Com- munity of Detached and Sem detached Brick Homes of Mod- erate Price. Michigan Avenue Boulevard at 12th Street For Information, Phone VAUGHN Monthly COAL! When Winter comes use our coal. But you do not have to wait until Winter to buy it. In fact, you will save by buying now. W. H. Hessick & Son Main Office, Yard and Trestles 14th and Water Sts. S.W. Opp: Bu. Eng. & Printing Fr. 8128 Fr. 7458 We Are Buil Desirable, Conv < K nd, Bath—Hot-wat Theae houns section, wii Call eatly ‘oncrete streets, cars pass first cholce. Co-Operative Apartments FOUR SPECIAL VALUES! A'l‘ that beauty Pleasant lying west of 16th St., on Iry Hobart _Sts, Creek Park—we have b homes Washington hon: and investors have been for. Many homes sold completion. LAST CHA buy in_this ultra_desira tion. For now, Mt. built Downtown o8 Two Rooms and Bath $5,050 Near 18th & Colum Rd. 8 Rooms, 2 Baths & Porch $15,000 Near 16th & Columbia Rd. 8 Rooms, 2 Baths & Porch $15,945 Cleveland Park Four Rooms and Bath $7,200 Each o Come o rick cons homes left is of all] venience. in Washington. aulek to get one. To Inspect, Phone— Sample Houses 9 AM. to 9 PM. Main 9770 925 Fifteenth Street Evenings, Adams 1243 Phone~ \{ Main 8949° one Come Out? $100 CASH Payments 3rd & 4th & T & U Sts. N.E. Overlooking the Site of the New $2,225,000 McKinley High School ng 72 New Homes at T enient Location— er Heat—Electrio L not 'way out in suburbe. but In a good, s the door. INCORPORATED @ 1311 H STREET NORTHWEST in Mt. block ing and overlooking Rock uflt the ne-lovers waiting hefore to ble sec- Pleasant i3 y. Demand will lues steadily upward. f the few structio 1701 Hobart St. N.W. 1724 Trving St. N.W. Open for inspection daily from "WAIN 500 'LEETH BROTHERS Ground Floor Offices or Stores Also rear room, about 25 ft. square, with eight win- dows, in new building in the downtown financial section. Low rentals from $75.00 to $175.00 per month. 1104 Vermont Ave. At L St. Large, light and roomy, very high ceilings. All im- provements, including ol heating. Apply on premises or J. W. Crampton 3548 Quebec St. Telephone 3454 COAL If you are in doubt as to the proper coal to use in the heating plant of your new (or old) house, we will gladly have our “IHeating Ad- visor” inspect yon plant and give vou helpful advice. There is no charge or obliga- tion for this service. . JOHN P. AGNEW & CO. 728 14th St. N.W, Main 3068 =X Is Your House Your HOME! If the house or apart- ment in which vou live were yonrs, what changes would you make? i Tepresent the difference between a house and a home. How to Build Your Dream Home — incorporating thosa individual touches and conveniences that you desire, AT THE LOW. EST POSSIBLE COST, and with every advice and cistance in the planning, financing _and construction, is unfolded in our booklet. Mailed without cost or obligation to any pro- spective home builder, upon request. &.W. Spink_ ‘BETTER HOMES Conftruction Company, 1030 Investment Bldg. Main 97 Tlomes Construction Co. Better 0 Investment Bldg. Please send me your booklet Nome eere———"" Addres8 " Seoeeseseey PP 0t 0000000000000000000000000000000000

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