Evening Star Newspaper, October 22, 1927, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

REMUS ATTORNEYS ' FIGHT FOR IS LIFE {Department Files Inspected for Evidence to Support | Charge Against Slain Wife. B, the Associated Press, + Access to Department of Justice Mies and testimony of prohibition ,ofiicials was_obtained vesterday by .counsel for George Remus, one-time bootleg king of Cincinnati, who re- cently shot his wife to death in that «city. While Charles Elston, attorney for ‘Remus, interpreted the developments as favorable to his client, who has entered a plea of Insanity in con- mection with the killing of his wife, ‘Carl E. Basler, an assistant prosecu- tor &t Cincinnati, held the visit to the Capital had produced nothing that would sustain Remus’ contention ‘that alleged -improper relations be- ‘tween his wife and Franklin L.| Dodge, former Justice Department dnvestigator, and “their scheming to deprive him of his fortune, had wreved upon his mind. Attorneys Visit New York. Eiston and_Basler left lite in the | @uy for New York, where the defense wounsel believes evidence can be ob- tained to strengthen the charge of | intimacy between Dodge and Mrs Temus and deposits by her of her hus- Pand’s funds in metropolitan banks. Two prohibition offic “om- ner Doran of the Prohibition au and James J. Britt, chief were interrogated by Elston Remus’ position regarding al of 1,800 barrels of whisky from a warchouse at Maysville, Ky. Over Busler's objection, Doran testi- | fied that at a hearing in shington in June, 1926, there was “indi that the views of Remus and his wife avere not in accord regarding removal of the spirits. Britt testified that at the same hearing he had observed Dodge and Mrs. Remus conferring &nd that Dodge had engaged in a col- Joquy with other interests represented at the meeting. Dodge was in the city yesterday for the purpose, he said, of protecting his own interests. He followed the two mttorneys to the Justice Department and Prohibition Bureau, but did not mitend the conferences at either place. | FOUR ARE INJURED | ; IN TRAFFIC MISHAPS | Wictims Knocked Down by Autos. 79-Year-0ld Man | Hurt. Clifford Oshorne, 14-years-old, 36 E egtreet southeast, was knocked down yesterday afternoon near North Capitol and H streets by the motor- | eycle of Clifton Thornton, 107 E street wsoutheast, and bruised about the bod: He was treated at Sibley Hospita! Elizabeth Tolliver, colored, 12-years- old, 714 Rhode Island avenue, was dnjuried yesferday afternoon when knocked down at Eighth and S streets by the automobile of Herbert Good- man, 402 B street noftheast. Phy- wicians at Freedmen’s Hospital ren- dered first aid. Theodore Ketchum, 79-years-old. Capitol Heights, Md., was knocked down near Fourteenth street and Maryland avenue yesterday afternoon by the automobile of J. W. Taylor, Merryfleld, Va. He was taken to ‘Emergency - Hospital, where ph picians said he was not seriously hur! Seven-year-old Louis Turner, color- | even though it may not be as com- Flying With Gen. Patrick e e BY MAJ. GEN. M. M. PATRICK. Chief of the Army Air Corps. The Parachute. Despite the hazards some airways | may offer in the event of a forced landing, we find comfort on our aerial jaunt in the thought that our oraft Is in top-notch shape and that there need be little fear of a mechanical breakdown. Every part of our plane was thoroughly inspected by expert mechanics before we left the fiying Inspection of aircraft in the | fiela. Army service precedes every flight. Not only are the parts of the plane | inspected for perfect adjustment and alignment, but they are also kept im- maculate, free from dirt and grease, pecause dirt on the parts produces ex- ive friction, which results in loss of speed. Thanks to the painstaking care which is exercised by airplane manu- facturers and the careful inspections which are made prior to flight, struc- tural failures In airplanes during flight are very rare. The probability of engine failure is being reduced year by year as new designs are per- fected, but in the event of such fail- nre a safe landing is usually possible with fairly open country below. For this reason it is advisabie to maintain an altitude sufficient to’ permit an v glide to an open field in which a safe landing is possible. Sometimes, though rarely, it becomes necessary for the pilot and his passengers to abandon the plane in midair, leaving it to fall unguided. This contingency was anticipated when, before entering the plane, we strapped our parachutes about us. The pilot usually can tell when the abandonment of the plane would be the safer path to earth for himself and his passengers, and he loses no time in spreading the warning. *Get out!” is a serious command in the air, and should be met by immediate compli- ance. Just as the captain of a ship at sea is the last to leave it after the command “Abandon ship!” is given, ‘the ethics of the air demand that the pilot stay by his controls until all pas sengers have taken to their para- chutes. Therefore, immediate response to his signal may save his life’as well as that of his passengers. Weight Not Burdensome. In our interest in the flight we may have almost forgotten this important part of our equipment, probably be- cause we have been sitting on it. Those who have had occasion to use it will pronounce it a valuable cushion, fortable as many others. It has saved the life of many a fiyer who faced cer- tain death unless he brought it into play. Let us notice how it is manipu- lated and the nature of its make-up. Although our parachute weighs about 40 pounds, we do not feel its weight as particularly burdensome, as it is strapped to our back. It is folded neatly in a compartment, go that when it is released no portion of the fabric or the ropes will become entangled and fail to respond. The parachute itself and the ropes are made of silk to give strength, together with light- ness of weight. An ordinary para- chute will support approximately 800 pounds. ‘When one has occasion to abandon a plane in midair and ‘“go over the side,” as the expression goes, the easiest and quickest means of depar- ture, especially if the plane be flying level, is in a headlong dive over the side. With the safety belt released, one foot on the seat and the other on the cowling, the dive should be made as far away from the plane as possi- ble. While in the act of jumping, the right hand should grasp the rip-cord ring handle, suspended from the har- ness and usually located at the left breast of the wearer. There should be no delay in pulling the rip-cord once the jumper is free of the air- plane. When it is pulled, the prongs which extend through grommets and tend to hold the container of the para- chute intact are withdrawn. Imme- ®d, 117 Reeves court, was knocked | diately the pack .carrier flies wide down near his home yesterday after- | open and out jumps the powerful lit- moon by an automobile driven iy |tle pilot chute, built like a small self- “Walter Brown, 1219 Half street south- | opening umbrella, drawing the main ‘west, and his right foot sprained. He was given first aid at Freed- amen’s Hospital. SPECIAL NOTICES. TLL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR any tr: b, a0y one ottier than gieires, MR AND MRS. G.H. SAULS- URY. 1318 Qiieen st. n. L7 SUTTLE AND LILA B, SUTTLE aving eold their grocery and meat busincss ocated at 3301 Rhode lsland ave. Mt. Rai mier, Md.. known as e Isiand Marks %o Ruby B. Harrison. clear of all encu Drance, creditors. if any, present their bills W. R. MARSHALL. 929 New York ave. n.w._on or before October 25. 1927. __* CARPENTER. JOBBING. ALTERATIONS, Dairs, porches: plans furnished. cott usgaiows: g00d work Atlmiic 282 4 i‘!':“' ESTATE MAN. EXPERIENCED. AGE . wi uilder or car,, sales broducer. available for other sala er: : ddress Box 231-D, Star office. o o AS RANGES REPAIRED. _"BOWERS." Sear 0161 at. “Phone Main 7004. - Shoo urs 8 to 10 a.m!_Drop postal. __ 24° KUICHEN PAINTED, $0 TO $156: ROOMS. re than one. $4: satistaction guaranteed. t._4105. 22% E CELEBRATED CIDER B, ‘open daily until Dece: : ehoice apries: ARREL WILL mber 20th: all cider bour “out Frederick TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOA! NEW YORK. SBURGH 7. D RICHMOND, Ok ANY NATIONA. 3 ¢ FROM & AT) E: PPLES "REASONABLE half-way between VANS AVAILABLE IN OTHER CITI} t FOLLOWS: e Kansas City, Mo, i WEEKLY VICE' FOR AND FROM BOSTON AN fTHE BIG 4 TRANSF) 1125 _14th St 3 in NOTICE OF RESPONSIBILT The public is hereby notified thai I. Charles H. Green. contractor residing at 3323 Sherman Avenue. Northwest. Waeh- ugton. D. C.. am css alone under own ' name. ES G my 3 3 Contractor.” 1 am not in partnership any person. I am not responsible for any debts, undertakings or n No _on Sbligate me in anv way Yiereby notified that T will not pay or other- s satisfy any obligation or debt not per- ed: October 61, 1027 - ctober OCHARLES H. GREEN. APPLES, SWEET CIDER At the Rockville Fruit Farm. one mile out Md.. on the r'_k.m 0 Pulo‘r'nnr f Rockville, §u1mm Winesaps, Black and York mperial, apples. e cider 1s made from MARGOT L. SHEPHERD —wishes to inform her customers she 1s | ain doing residential work and wi &lad 1o hear from them Make Weekly TriPs phing Wiimi TH'S THA: be YOUR ROOF +—whether it be tin or slag can be placed In first-clase ehape by Dplacing your order with ] % his {]‘“nbl« firm. If you have roof Sible, () i'"("c)‘oqu"' Roofing Main 933 Company 110 3rd St. S.W, PRINTED WORK /re. vm&em"ou;‘ngyg of “none fThe National Capital Press ‘"—u—"’l-fi'v"u‘vwhlnrmr'nh'? St BYRON S. ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY Experience and Expertness at 1s the roofing service we offer, Roof repairing. slag roofing. . Y onclad Roofing Co. *4& X! 39, North 27, i parachute after it. The rushing air current immediately inflates the main chute, and, although the jumper, espe- cially if it is his first attempt, may feel that ages have passed since he yanked the rip-cord, it is only a mat- ter of seconds before his headlong fall into space is interrupted, and he feels a welcome tug all about his body, bringing him right side up. His next Tilld EVENING AVERAGE MAN SEES MAYOR OF CHICAGO Thompson Doesn’t Shake Hands Like Roosevelt, Says Roy Gray. [ | iTON, STAR, WASHIN 'Nerves Near Breaking P Watch for Chance te Take Off, Junkers | Plane passenger Declares. By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, October ake from Amerlca’s “average mhan,” ex- emplified by Roy L. Gray of Fort| Madison, Lee County, Towa, the hand- | clasp of Mayor Thompson of Chicago fsn't much like the kind Roosevelt | had | “Your mayor shook hands with me,” | Gray said, writing his impression of | Chicago for the Herald and miner, whose guest he is while here, “and | 1 noticed he hasn't the firm grip Roosevelt had. Roosevelt pump- handled you. Your mayor grasps vour hand, wiggles is lightly, then| drops it. “He sald he was glad to meet me. | I sald I was glad to meet him. said I had heard considerable about him. He sald he was glad to hear | that. © He was smoking a cigar, but | it didn’t>look like a naverage nickle one. It was too flat.” The “average man,” awoke vester. day in a bed 40 stories street, but returned to his level eating an average breakf: ing the usual visit to Ch ters of interest under the escort a reporter for the Chicago Hearld and Examiner. | Only Average Interest. He displayed only average interest | In the world’s busiest corner, State and ) ving it remind- ed him of Saturday night in his home tomn, where he operates a clothing store, Gray ate an ave toast, eggs and coffee, and smoked the customary cigarette. le got an average shave and paid the average tip of 15 cents and conversed with the barber about the average topic, the nice Fall weather. Sauntering out to begin an active day, Gray first bought a picture post- card of the hotel where he slept and put a cross at his room on the fortieth floor before sending it home to his | family. “This is where 1 slept. Having a good time but wish you all were here,” | his average message said. The program he outlined for the day’s hosts was just the average, “I'd | like to drive arpund your park system, see the stockyards, if we have time, and I'want to see the municipal pier and that stadium where the Dempsey- Tunney fight was held. His tour of the city was done in an average automobile of a well known | average make. Calls On Mayor. Gray then called upon the mayor, and posed with William Hale Thomp- son for photographs, The average man continued his journey to the Board of Trade. He gazed into “the pit,” where thousands are made and lost at the flicker of an eyelash, “Gee. you can't hear yourselt think,” said Gray. “I'd rather have my little one-man store back in lowa and be sure of a bank balance at the end of the vear than risk any money on this game. I think you've got more suckers In Chicago than we have out our way.” Then back to his hotel for a dinner- steak, American fried potatoes, another good average smoke, A | little rest gave him_ energy for his | evening program, the theater and George White's Scandals. He said it was the first time in months he wasn't at home turning on the radio. “Well, I've sure had a fine time,’ Gray sald as he told his hosts- good night. “My feet hurt me bit, but I'll soak them in hot water. I see there’s a Bible in my room. I'll read myself to sleep.” DR. PIERCE HEARD BY REFORMED SYNOD Sermon at Mercersburg, Pa., Fol- lows Sessions When $100,000 Is il 23.— it breakfast, sensation is the most pleasant reali- zatlon that he is gliding to earth in safety. Do Not Lose Consciousness. There have been instances where the jumper failed to pull the release ring of his parachute until he had dropped more than a thousand feet. This shows that, contrary to popular Impression, one does not iose complete control of his muscles in making a jump of this sort, and that he can reach around for his release ring even after he has fallen a considerable dis- tance. It also explodes the once-popu- lar theory that a human being loses consclousness during a long fall. Like the planes themselves, the ut- most care is given to parachutes in the Army service. Every parachute is unfolded and refolded once a month and thoroughly examined to guard against disintegration of the fabric or cords. Once every six months para- chutes are taken aboard an airplane and actually tested. Dummies are used in making these tests. With con- stant care and proper handling, the parachutes, such as are used in the Army, will last six or seven years. Every parachute costs the Govern. ment approximately $360. Obviously, if a plane is flylng com- paratively low, it may at times be difficult to make a satisfactory jump. Experiments and tests have shown that a minimum of 200 feet in altitude is necessary in which to release the chute and enable it to function prop- erly. There was one Insfance where an aviator, jumping at a lower alti- tude from a disabled airplane, was saved by his parachute just as his feet ‘were about to touch the ground. | (Copyright. 1927.) [ o T | MOTHER AND SON HELD. | | Three-Month Probe of Slaying Ends in Arrest of Two. SYLVESTER, Ga., October 22 ) = After an investigation which covered | a period of three months, Mrs. Minnfe Brooks, 35, and her 14.year-old son Richard were taken into custody here yesterday by Sheriff J. N. Summer and placed in the Worth County jail on warrants charging the mother and son with the death of Charlton J. Houston. The body of Houston was found in a decomposed condition last July, in a patch of woods near the Brooks’ home, about a mile from here. Officers here have been making an investigation of Houston's death since the body was found. The dead man was a frequent caller at the home of Mrs. Brooks for a number of years, it is said. Corn Judging Team Fourth. Special Dispatch to The Star, FREDERICK, Md., October 21— Poolesville High School’s corn judging team finished fourth in the contests held in connection with the Frederick Fair here on Tuesday, officials an- nounced today. Clarksville High's team was first. Damascus, another Montgomery County high school team, | was 14th and Gaithersburg was 15th. Charles Scheel, Mt. Alry, had a per- fect score in judging white corn, Ralph Van Pelt, of Hyattsville Voted for Local Academy. MERCERSBURG, Pa., October 22.— A banquet Thursday night closed the annual meetings of the Potoma~ Synod of the Reformed Church. Rev. Dr. J. Noble Plerce of Washington preached the evening sermon. The synod voted $100,000 to the Mercers. burg Academy for a chair in Bible study and religion. Educativnal institutions and missfon- ary activities engaged the attention of the principal sessions Wednesday. President H. H. Apple of Franklin and Marshall College addressed the synod on the college’s place in Ameri- can education. Addresses also were made by Dr. William M. Irvine of Mercersburg Academy, Dr. Elmer R. oke of Catawba College, Salisbury . C., and Col. Howard Benchoff of Massanutten Academy, Woodstock, Va. All of these institutions are stronger financially and have better physical equipment than ever before and more than 2000 students are regularly enrolled, it was reported. Dr. Charles E. Schaeffer, secretary of the Board of Home Missions, spoke on the two present outstand- ing projects of the Board. The first is the Mission Church at Penn State College. Here there is a local mem- bership of 125 and a student mem- bership of several hundred. Dr. Schaeffer asked the synod to lend its heartiest support to this project. The second is the Reformed Church at Roanoke, Va. This is the only Re- formed Church in that section. Abe Martin Says: Th' Interstate Commerce Commis- sion has jest ordered a spuff com- pany t' stop price fixin’, so it haint likely it'll git around t' $15 shoe- makers much before th'middle o' next WAITING AT AZORES HARDEST PART OF FLIGHT. ACTRESS SAYS oint From Daily SATURDAY, 0.(‘TOT’.'ER' 2 3 a7 il i WIS ORI COURTRRACTEES :Chicago Judge Sees U. | Most Law-Ridden, Yet Most | McCARL VETOES PAYMENT. | | M the Mlicers and & ravern” Miss Dillenz. Viennese actress. with the | hut they make it impossible for us to | ’ 2 Ty D e 0 o uhich she hopes 10 | ot Doy e orke. { Lawless Nation. be the first woman to fiy the Atlantic. Tova Hative: ADa T asve-the oif o § By Cable to The Star and the North Amerl- | pore. But in spite of this I | = = can; Newspaper iAlllunce. Horta, where the sea swell made is| Dy the Assoc HORTA, Azores Islands, October —Waiting seems to me the hardest thing in the world. Waiting for the elements to let Comdr. Starke rest of us get off with the D-1230 on the longest overwater flight in our aerial voyage to New York, the hard- est of all waiting. Waiting is much more of a strain than risking one's life in a sporting event, even when one is full lurking dangers. While risking one's life on is at least master of one’s actions, but anding here marking time is agoniz- ng. INfie cannot take oft in the heavy ground swell now running in this part of the Atlantic. Not because of the danger to us—we would willingly risk that-—but because the D-1230 would smash a_pontoon trying to lift from the rough water the heavy weight we are ¢ ving. That would mean the end of our flight to New York. There- fore, we simply wait. Enjoying Stay at Islands. 1t is wonderful here in Horta. Th count is marvelous. We enjo: minute we spend here, and in ; the Hortensias are as glossy blue as the sky. The ocean, huge sapphire, s dotted with white- < as far us the eye can see. The aps are wonderful scenically, and the | possible for sen swell is T know when It from the wi man colony Nerves We go to | next Voleano Pic gather arou the s ning | merciful s My ner n F me,, “V and’ patier a walks into a trap and tries ave by the door it entered so one s good-natured tiful serious-looking bab at whose building we spoiling us with kindness. y_to look first of all at are those hateful white Thunders roll ashes. |angrier than the seas that hold us. | point on account of this well—dilem- “riends in New York are cabling nt arms. us to land, for that very now holding us here. now how a mouse CHIC ractices of Marcus Superior Court 1 of United feels County | making We are prisoners of the sea d yet the most law- | poke around the quaint old | town, admire the tender-eyed little | » judicial er donkeys that crowd the street. Every | which our country find and hospitable, | hale-hunters to the beau- The Ger 1 Cable Co., living, are not more insistently for cha | than it does for cha of at on the part of judges who administer t aw,"” Judge Kavanagh remarked addressing the Audit Bureau of vesterd and the Germ: in { Circulation Near Breakin bed hopefull Point. and rise the | the | co, where fleets of cloud: nd the crater. Again th ps all over nd the light- At the sight of the un- arf my impatience mounts, Cites Legal History. ing legal history, the veteran t recalled that in 190 | Missouri a man who had committed a erime nst a young girl was freec wfter his conviction | the preme noticed the w “the" been left of the th: out had {line of his indictment. Almost two decades later last the same the Mis absence are at the breaeking | question was presented to |souri court and it rulcd the lof the word immate Public {opinion, the judse concluded, had ¢ d the court’s procedure. While the rights of individuals wait you with wide open " Shall T laugh or like a | One thing T am sure of—my next flight across the ocean will be a non- stop flight in a single-motored plane. should not be abridged, he asserted, | criminal procedure should not be di rected to that end alone, but as well Copyright. 1§ | N, | should “purpose the | on of life by main e ma- | 027. by oW IS KILLED BY FUMES {Col. Joe Miller of 101 Ranch' Fame Found Dead in Garage. By the Associated Prese. PONCA CITY, Okla., October Col. Joe Miller, part owner of noted 101 Ranch near here, and the cldest of three brothers of wild West fame, was found dead in his garage here yester: He was 56 years old. : Col. Miller and his brothers were reared In the saddle on the ranch established by their father in 1879, The property extended into the famous Cherokee strip of Oklahoma and Included 110,000 acres. Miller's widow and infant son are in Grand Rapids, Mich. Col. Miller was a trusted frlend of the Ponca Indlans and was instru- mental in obtaining the Government reservation near here for them. He spoke the Ponca tongue fluently, His will is said to haveset aside a sum for the Indians to use for his fu- neral services, as they wished. The show man's death was at- tributed to asphyxiation. The motor of the car was running and the doors of the garage partly closed when the body was found. OFFICERS INSTALLED BY COUNTY GRANGE ' W. E. Hill of Shipping Board Ad-| dresses Gathering for Cere- monies at Floris, Va. Special Dispateh to The Star. FLORIS, Va., October 22.—Pomona Grange of Fairfax County installed officers last night, when addresses were made by W. N. Conwell of Penn- gylvania on “Putting Forth Efforts,” and W. E. Hill of South Dakota, a member of the United States Shipping Board, on relations of the Shipping | Board and American ships to the sale of American products abroad. The officers are’ Mark Turner, For- estville, master; Wilson McNair, Floris, overseer; R. Colton Lewis, Clinton, lecturer: Sidney Iollin, For- estville, steward; .D. W. Middles, Floris, assistant steward; Miss Anna Cornwell, Forestville, lady steward; H. B. Derr, Fairfax, chaplain; R. B. Nickell, Floris, treasurer; Miss Edith Rogers, Floris, secretary; A. Streight, Fairfax, gatekeeper; Della Cox, Falls Church, Ceres; Mrs. B. A. Johnson, Merrifield, Pomona; Mrs. A. C. Streight, Fairfax, Flora. The next meeting will be held in Jan- v, with Ploneer Grange as host. Nickell, master, presided. Success We have several choice locations for your business, factory or ware- house.. The proper location is a contributing factor to the success of an enter- prise. Consult Our BUSINESS PROPERTIES DEPARTMENT CAFRITZ M. 9080 14th & K Summer. (Copyrixht. 1927.) 5 Rooms and 5Rooms and 2 No. 1321 Connecticut Ave. T High, was second in the yellow contc Tyattsville's team was 6! R Very Desirable Apts. near Sheridan Circle and Q St. Bridge No. 2222 Q St. N'W ‘Apply Resident Manager Randall H. Hagner & Co. INCORPORATED Bath, $125.00 Baths, $140.00 N.W. Phone Main 9700 the | WILD WEST SHOWMAN Filipino Feet Call | | Filipino ! tion Arm; | members will footwea: About 1 | i | American | ball, " roa | slimmer at the heel. e | | | | O R 1321 3 C LOCATION ters, yet street at BUILDIN kitchenette and bath to six rooms and two baths; with large reception halls, all outside windows, built-in baths, entirely complete in every element SERVICE night or day through our own efficiently conducted service room, which also recelves and redelivers packages sent during occupants’ absence. Pay building, By the Associated Prees. a board of Army officers to have racial individuality that would be cramped by the wearing of regula- array themselves In been ordered to fit the scouts s which, due to tribal characteristics, are shorter and stubbler than the Randall H. Hagner & Co. Very Near Conn. Ave. The improvements now rent for nearly SIXTEENTH and COLUMBIA ROAD NORTHWEST the bullding—in short, a_happy combination of semi-hotel service with apartment space and privacy. having an additional advertisement, far better than this one. ountry’s | his de h added York was Mitchell named and of Chicago, tr urer. | nts elected were York, 8. R. Lat- | and David B plous techni Judge ident. I Davis of New of New York, Plum of New York. Police Hunt Missing Man, 60. Representatives of the Home Ser of the feet have been found by y shoes, so henceforth | of the Philippine Scouts ice to toper ng the past rd of special 6,000 pairs of shoes have oot He was last informed, at Hudson Hotel, A gown in Paris this seas he while “hick the extremity der acro : at the toe and L Apartments VERY REASONABLE RENTALS No. 1909 19th Street MODERN FIREPROOF BUILDING ELEVATOR SERVICE 2 Rooms and bath. .......$50.00 3 Rooms and bath........ 60.00 4 Rooms and bath........ 70.00 Apartments Open For Inspection Saturday and Sunday Incorporated Connecticut Ave. N.W. | | | | | | R o g 8 d ) ) = N 8 | IIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIlIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIilllllillll!]llllll% onsiderably over an acre of land Between Dupont Circle and Fla. Ave. 159, on the price asked, $425,000 L. W. GROOMES 1416 F St he gnne PHONE COLUMBIA 4630 Convenient to three main street car lines, two bus lines, churches, schools, markets and thea- located on high elevation in embassy district of upper 16th new residential hub of Northwest section. A modern, spacious, eight-story, fireproof struc- ture, containing 229 apartments of from one room, of convenience and finish. Service on phones and elevators is uninterrupted taroughout the 24 hours. Milk and ice delivered Individual servants’ rooms and garages are obtainable in us a visit, let cur resident manager take you through the and whether you rent or not, we shall be amply repald In tenato Titt uarters here “ontroller Gene arine Officer's Expenditure for Entertainment Rejected. Controller General McCarl had held b payment of 3 15an of wrine Corp: major to have been paid for nment of “foreign clvil | tary and naval officers Camp Samuel Nicholas and the Sesquicentenni. e he enterts during Exposition. In a decision rendere 1t M Maje s He ma A Major support erning the ral MeCarl s: re bmit care mea ents” out of a f ‘ontinguent N tioned t Unfurnished Ccnvenient 16th St. WARDMAN MANAGEMENT TWO ROOMS, KITCHEN AND BATH THE CHASTLETON HOTEL The low price —is not the SANSBURY only reason why these splendid homes are selling . o . ?X’@‘j Judge them 75 for 1_n|irsel” 5808 8th $7,950 | 731 Madison And U EAMY Toime | Open every day until 9 P.M, N. L. Sansbury CI, Inc. 1418 Eye St. N.W Main 5904 Apartments ly Located at “R” - Homes of Enduring Beauty of ideal location, attractive design, convenient floor plan, complete and modern equip- ment and artistic finish is achieved in these distinctive homes at the low price of 10,950 = With Large Screened Porches, $65.00 to $80.00 Por Month THREE ROOMS, KITCHEN AND BATH, $20.00 to $120.00 Per Month Over 1,000 Cafritz Lifetime Homes Built and Sold Unmatched in Value! In the Exclusive 16th Street Residential Section N.W., West of 14th Convenient to the Shopping Facilities at Park Road The superb combination 6 and 7 large rooms 1 and 2 tiled baths with built-in tub, shower and fixtures Large porches 1 and 2 car built-in garages Exquisite decoration Bright kitchens, com- pletely equipped; large MONTHLY PAYMENTS pantry LESS THAN RENT Open and Lighted Until 9 P.M. 14th ex CAFRITZ o Owners and Builders of Communities “A Cafritz Lifetime Home for Every Purse” FoR SALE MONTHLY PAYMENTS LIKE RENT 1210 Hemlock St. N.W. Beautiful Semi-detached Homes, Equipped with Every Modern Convenience. Four Sleeping Rooms. Drive Out 16th St., Past Walter Reed Hospital, and turn to right 15th & Lawrence Sts. N.E. A Semi-detached House at Row House Price— Four Bedrooms, Large Porches Ride Out R. I. Ave to 15th St. and Turn North to Lawrence St. 1621 Monroe St. N.E. Great Big Rooms—Lots of Light. Drive Out R. 1. Ave. to 17th and Go North to Monroe 3rd & T Sts. NE. Under the Shadow of the New McKinley High School, a Real Good House at a Very Low Price. 1630 Gales St. N.E. 1362 K St. SE. Six Rooms and Bath—_Hot-Water Heat—Electric Lights—Big Porches ONLY $52.90 PER MONTH SEE THEM TONIGHT Open Until 9 O’Clock P.M. EIN (O; INCORFPORATED 1311 H STREET NORTHWEST

Other pages from this issue: