Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENIT NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D 0O, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31 1927, Plans for Beautification of Washington Gain Momentum Going Into New Year PLANNING OF CAPITAL MAKES FAST PROGRESS Proposals of ]792 and Lalc Su ggestions | of McMillan Commission Being Carried Out. NOTHER milestone of notable achievement progress on the plan of Washington origi nally drawn up in 1792 and modified by the McMillan Commission of 1901 was reached dur- ing the calendar year which is drawing t0 a close. Under the guidance of the National Commission Fine Arts, whose chairman. Char drew up the MeMillan Commission report many of the features of the plan te make Washington the model capital of the world moved forward to happy and advantageous conclusions. Col laborating with the National Capital Park and Planninz Commission, many phases of the plan moved through the pretiminar to the point where their 1eali 1 matter N ation becomes but 8} he tishmen accomp from the viewy Arts he tie Commits following The dr bounded Capitol grounds, B and Pennsylvania avenue last year, moved into the actuality when the foun: and the E 000 for purchase Jand. was passed by the House and awaits action hy the Senate. Mall evelopment. oved Govern triangle and the northwest arrived at vealm of hegun on N0 & many in_ the “ifteenth street wark was providing of the necessary B forward te plan itted and establishment of twe wavs on either side of the 1 composition ¥ st were m nument on the north the great I development conere < roa i i for ruction «f forward ze. and ad and modern 10 under end of the bridse to 2 traflic oved plans for ypments: emissy moved al Bri n Memor w the the Nationd handle north “he eommissi the followinz n ajor The new Erit ehusetts avenue near Obs ele. th Azvicult huilding, plans for the for ot « for the Un Fuiding ¥ ) deve rtment new civic cen- Columbia, a site » “.v Library of Con ipitol zrounds Asvelopment 1s consid the vear Memorial, avy an’ M Alhert plan and Un Monume ed by the ¢ ncluded the n Octe 1ina Mepw al, t Gallatin « and a1 for the 1-t eated the 1 pole, especially designed for Washin ton, to be installed by World veterans, was indorsed after consid- erable study Particula, attention was given dur ing the year, in conference with the National Capital Park and Planning Commission. to the plans for the de velopment of the nietropoldan area of Washinzton. Such great projects as the Fort Dupont carkway, the Shep herd Parkway, Fort’ Drive, Six teenth Street Heights development, the pioposed northern portal to the District of Columbia and the preserva tion of the Palisades of *he Fotomac and its islands were approved. Study was likewise given, in collaboration with the Rock Creek and totomac Parkway Commission, to the treat: ment of the proposed parkway and the treatment of both sides of the Potomac between the Key Bridge and e Long Bridge. O er uncompleted hoped to be completed in the near are water fron: development omac Park and Meridian Hill 1 pecial studies were made of 1l these areas duving the vear. The nmission worked unceasingly in be- | half of the establishment of the N ! tional Arboretum. which is finally t he inaugurated under an appropria tion of $300.000 for purchase of the land, carried in the first deficiency Lill, passed a few days ago by Con gress and signed by the President. Special attontion has been ziven by the commission to the approaching Licentennial lebrttion in 1932 of th hirth of George Washington, for which several projects are to be completed Amonz these are the Avlinzton Memo- rial Bridze. the Mount Vernon road way, Monument irdens fompletion. Wiakefield Memorial completion, and comnletion of work on many public huildinzs in the triangle Mount Vernon Boulevard. The commiss the Mount Ve for a “river r he ts the Potomac inzton and the home of President. One of the interesting developments of the year on the esthetic side of the growth of the city was the fisht made HARRIS SEWWNG th projects which future P jon has anproved plans @1 boulevard, pro 1" along the tween Wash the first vidin I"rllernllnll of (lflfi’ll\ €. Graham Lower: | secretary of the \Irrlluml! and rant, 3d, execu Associations’ and chairman of the Citizens' jamin T. Webster, secretary o ive officer of tl \d\lwry president of the Board of Trade; Martin A. Manufacturers’ \«m‘lnflm H 4. Odenthal Maj. Gen. Edgar Jadwin, chairman National Capital Park and Planning Commis: National Capital Park and Council. Planning Con Leese, president of the Chamber of Commerce; Gen. nd Manufacturers’ Association; Rudolph Jose, president of the City Club. the Board of Trade; Dorsey W. Hyde, jr. secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; Edward D. Shaw, secretary of the City Club. nission; 1927 LEADERS IN ARTISTIC, CIVIC AND COMMERCIAL ADVANCEMENT OF D. C. | | ! b | the str | pls | | \ | major chairman of the Fine Yaden, president of the Charles Moore, Janies Anton Stephan, president mmission to have the United ores Co. change “objection- ! plans for its structure now go up at urteenth and E streets After an apparent “defi” had been ven the co.imission by the cigar | stores company. the latter organiza-| tion agreed to modif the plans. At the ame time the commission re. newrd its recommendation that a Gov- ernment eon.mission be authorized to have supervisory jurisdiction over the | tvne of huildinzs constructed within | 20" feet of a Government reservation or Government.owned structure., William Green Wage Scales Maintaine by Organized Unions. COOLIDGE IS PROUD OF DEVELOPMENT CF NATION DURING 1927 (Continued from the public, 1wo the Mississippi greetings with and four appeals 1o of which dexlt with flood, and exchansed President Calles of Mexico incident 10 the opening of direct telephone gervice between the United States and Mexteo, besides sendinz a number of messages of condclence Mr. Cooldze’s wide silence is mot at all horne the frequency with which he made public speeches last year. Of the 23 2ddresses credited to him. all but 7 of them were prepared These seven Were more or less eXtempoOrancous. Because of the unusual inte throughout the country in the F dent’s attitude toward the next Re publican nomination, it is natural to mignal cut the speech he made early this month to the members of the Repablican national committee, in which he relterated hix “I don’t choose™ statement, @k beinz of the greatest siznificance The speech he made of the United Press | Jast April was highly important he cayse he went some lenzth S5 SeNiog ana’ dsfending the. policy ©f his administration in dealing with Mexico. Niearagua #nd the situatior in China, Addresses (ongress. s other addresses were before the of Obmervance Februiry American the annual Medical' Ax- dny repntation for out by st 03l the dinner Kew York t mexxion Washington's last; the Congress rihday rd par o wemnior bestowing upon Col Charles A herzh ibe Dist whed ¥l of the American ex Cometersy ind ng Cross Lindt raphic “the Wicker Me ond. 1 t Dk, hetore fl. ence Internatio edicnting [ the citimns ¢ mna) meen st . o " [ ve hix res for veloing Melary ilugen po Jart y n wh o wet forth plans 1 Yo byt he one Opening neg ment on 6 1 P he ' e yher b, pned | ppine ndependence wuesUon people of ¥b * The President set forth his reasons for not approving this act in such a clear and comprehensive manner that this message has since heen recognized as the definite Philippine policy of thi administration. | The President’s first appeal to the | people of the country for prompt and | generous contribution to the Red Cross relief fund for Mississippi flood suf. ferers was issued on April 22. This was followed two weeks later by an- other public appeal in which he em. phasized the grave situation brough: on by the flond and setting $10,000,000 1« the minimum amount to be col- lected for relief purposes Ag is the ann ustom of the Executive, Mr. Coolidge issued a public statement ealling upon the people to observe June 14 #s “Flag day.” and| one extending Christmas greetings to the public President Coolidge greeting to the American people which was printed throughout the land Clitstis bl S Dhile wakian s | Orie SOF e niost, fmpertant. I T in his greeting the| %ages will be maintained by President sald: *To cherisl peace “d\lml labor no matter what the e 10 e plentaous I mercy | Another is that management has in to have the real spirit of Chrisi.|2Ucceasful in eliminating to rariA extent the inefficiency of past y Mrs and practical economies have rx. Coniidge. who occupies the Cool- | Prousht about. Both management idge home in Northampton, Mana,, | labor have sought to climinate w wan stricken with influenm early last | 204 they have succeeded in a month and hecause of her age consid. **I7U8 WA erable alarm hax been feit for her re Wage Increases Seen. covery. There iz every reason to be o =2 that not only will labor maintain SCIENCE HAS ADVANCED .if: " imina™ ALONG BROAD LINES IN PAST 12 MONTHS fuctors which are Source of Gain. BY WILLIAM GREE! Presic "ONOMIC United stable in of cannof onditions States are character it will be as great or greater For several months du 1927 there was a slump, but this he credited almost entirely to Mississippi and other floods slackening in t} mobile industries. in 19 issued a brief is Yemira Goodhue, mother of contributions to this result In the first place, ng differently. They terms of high wages and low cos production, Recond, the inued from I,)::Mu-n!h has had atnce or Page.) the stimulating revival of the automobile | In the manufacture of the new car will rad i all lines dustry. 1t will have an eff community in the United The millions of doll [ pended fn food control will work ders in bringing ahout frec a showed Aenthw bition thiat from than Ameriea aleoholism hefore more prohi j tates PHYSICS. the mechanics of by the Swiss A new theory of atoms was enunclated phyxicist Schrodinger which in brief, holds that ctrons and other ight and Xaays 1927 Nobel prize for rded Jointly 1o Prof. Arthur Compon of the University of and Dr ¢TIt Wilkon of Universit England, for ’, Miller of n stated The conclusion that strange “element” supposed In much bodiex as the great cloy glowing gas in the star grou Orion, ix merely oxygen and nitre wans reached by 1 8. Howen Norman Bridge L Willlams of Amberst physics U " Cambrigge It Heyl of the U au of Standards annot o determination ufter three y work of the Newtonlan const Kravitation ax the fraction 6668 o hundred million: v ten scurate than the previoust e value radium The all over the € Cle iments earth 1s e Dayton Rehool of App land, Ohlo “a repent <how that the hothe ether Cibrating effects an the emulsion now Prof, R W Hopkine University 10 National Academy vhich e had per collaboration with Alf “x quantum,” the which modern physiciats suppone 1Rt and other tadintions consist e divided, was Indlcated by ments by Di. AL Dempster University of Chicago The wind velocity of the hur that wrecked Misml on Septem) 1926, wiaw determined an 132 m hour, which wiw decl on record by Menjamin ¢ Washington 1 . Weather Bure arifting thrang ound far Zl 1o wuch of u Waood wald, In yapidly 1 produc of ok of for e Lo Voo 1er clances work from the i W. D boratory Ca. b heen foun ght in thelr power 1o Kive cortain eubetances the quality of o riym e tube re Conlidge of o RADIO. The Internations) Conterence vevised governing 1o Heception of whort length nln found Inprove peviods of high sunspot #eUvity The experience of the 1. 8. 8 tery with s radin compass A Wtricane weather ndicated tha Itensity of statie muy he of o detecting i locating these d Gonis wlorms at w distunce Five meter wave experiment the General Electie Co. showed these short waves weem o shuduws much lke Hght Quaits plate was developed b ot Btane Madio s the world bnown e oanicronmmetor able Nve baliionth e | ieneral J i ther meas e of nn ammeter radle laboratory of 1 winn m 7 The e Cn velay invention of s Wertinghouse «ng aperstes on a billonth of clectiioal power was de wrid gl B ol whieh of tsted highly 1on ent thie wisk demonst The successiul process of fele by wire and radio, the develop of the Bell Laboratories under divection of e Herbert K fves, | ated on April 1 televox, an appuratus by wineh | Unilted Htates B telephone note of w tuntng fork 8 @ slandurd of vadio fregu used to extinguiah Hghits, start DOBKINE sEresment hetween p slectric f and operste auency standardw of different na ew, wos exiibited by e in thiee purts of 100,000 R, 1, Wanislay Station WGY at Bioh | e von mugnenie ship Carnegle was L oated on 100 kilowuit | overhauted prepmratory 1o a lengthy | (he world's Jasgest entifie eruise 1o beginenest year, | ube of that power Metal slyinks when iU I8 wegnctized, Mevndcasting upon can b e ther " tady wer vacnum i ow Cites Huge Expenditures in Flood Control Work as One a great | lines wage scales There are several making generous people are think are thinking in tin every he ex nebulium, horatory of Physics times “atom’ expert of ed the highest Kadel of the | dlegraph Auring using Power PREDICTED BY LABOR CHIEF Foresees d | l nt of American Federation of Labor. the such t be doubted that in 1928 prosperity than iring can the and a building and auto There arve good reasons for the be- jief that 1928 will be a banner year. that | organ- cost been | — The building program of the Govern. ment and various States, the plans for reclamation which we hope Congr will approve, also will add immeusur ably to the prosperity of Standard of Living Improved. In building up our American stand ard of living, which is purely Ameri can as compared with that of Euro pean countries, we have created in the lives of the people a desire for more things: that hring about comfort and happiness. The desire for hetter home comforts, lusuries, more abun dant life, means that they have been ikht to buy There Ix no honest demand for re- duction in wa The people wiil insist that no ehstacles shall be placed in the wuy of prosperity such as an tack on the wage system now in effect. People will demand that in Austry should find other means of re dncing prices than reducing wages. The more eicient manazement be comes (he lowsr prices can be without detriment to the wage standard, eurs been and aste mar lieve high 8 of t of intry Ford £ in won Col necessitating recalving hegun, ordinary ngths Drern the ! yets. ‘oxint | 13 ud of | » of| wen, | f 1l was to most operating directly alternating current ctron tuhes on house supply were developed PSYCHOLOGY. nited | inced | virs nt of | ver | Statisties from Maxsachusetts, the Newt Btute to round up Itx entive new generation of feebleminded In order (o develop them into useful citizenn, ve veal the great number of such chil dren now being wasted, Dr. Nell A Dayton of the Massachusetts Depart N of Mentil Diseases reported The experiment of caring for mental prtients in @ genevad hospital has been tried and found successful, and this thad of cara has many advantuges Thomaw 1 Heldt, of the Henry A Hospltal tn Detroit, reported Environment rather than heredity wan shown (o be the great cause of | inwanity, aecording to a 1hyear in ‘\.v,n.n ton of 2%,000 individunls, whao Aled on Cape ¢ reported by pay e hiatrint Americn y ue of that the | n fcane | | v 18, | o " oan au Dr. Lo Vernon Briggs, wyehlatrie Axsoctation dvocated adoption of Tawa to put the Prehiatiist in court b the position of Connmeling the legal authorities an to nity A disponal of mocial affenders YEAR SPEEDS. PROGRAM OF CITY DEVELOPMENT; CONGRESS PLEDGE FOR 28 entleth Page) laws » wik Kit wing 1 the e I Inas s hy that | cant | Continued fion Harvison Brand, Jr, and o be peo le's counsel, Ralph B Fleha The project for o model municipal center, o o Jocated wih of enn sylvanls avenue between Thivd and Hixth wireets and south of Indiana and Louislang avenues, received oo sidevable lmpetun during the yesr Just closed. The Distelot Commiseloner® Wave trapared & tentative plan for & him/area with pro Wave vision made for adequste housing and v the durda eney fre tons oy I (he past 60 years, BANNER YEAR FOR INDUSTRY BORAH WOULD RENEW EFFORTS TO LIMIT WORLD ARMAMENT Senator Refuses to Accept Breakdown at Geneva as Bar to Action. Cites Possible Horrors in Fu- ture Should War Again Engulf Nations. BY WILLIAM E. BORAH, United States Senator from ldaho N actual immediate resnlts the fail ure of the Geneva Conference is not necessarily immeasurable. But it is most unfortunate that some agreement was not reached If this failure he taken as the end of all effort_to bring about disarma ment, and it it is to b epted as the full duty of nati Rovern ments which had hoped for better | rexults, then tha breakdown at neva will amount to calamity nigh incalculable in its wi {and farreaching consequence the world ix to drop back into hopeless acquiescence in this frightful tendency to pile tax burdens upon the masses aiready overburdened for {the purpose of “maintaining great {military ~ establishments and hug. armaments, then Geneva will be ye membered, not as w disappointment but as a disaster Much Involved, should not be accepted as the of the effort to bring about a onable limitation of armaments That s a struggle in which too much is involved to be given over so easily ind %o complacently. It we are pa tient and persistent and wise in pro- riion to the seriousness of the task we shall not treat this as the end but as an incident In the great cause A great deal has heen sald, and 1 presume will be sald, ax to the re sponxibility for the failure to reach an agreement. It seems to me bet- ter, however, that we consider the future and what, if unvthing, prac tically poxsible can be done (o carry forward successfully the work which failed at Geneva. When we refle n o what it means i€ the aguin plunges forward In building up greal military estublishments and in He Says, It end co-ording activities, long been In need of new which need Congress has r These include Police Court, Women's Bureau, Municl Court; Juvenile Court, central police und five station, public utilities commission, TraMie Bu reau, Board of Public Welfare and District employment service he new municipal with the approval of Cong time, particularly because th Government desires (o tuke over entire triangle avea and (he pe Municipal Buflding 1x 10 hecome a section of & much lnrger hullding to house variouns independont establish ments in the Federal service. Theve are also a number of District ac tivitles temporarily housed in | quarters in thix (riankle avea for | WHICH new homes must be provided. Early Actlon Promised Early acti I Congress, authozing chame of the proposed site municipal center Marked prokress In o carvying for ward the school hullding program was provided for by Congress when it al lowed 10 the current approptlation vt n total of §2.794,260, wx compared {WHh 2,460,000 40 the previous vear, Incveans of approxtmately $345.000 The appropriation the facal year 1026 27 included $154.000 for the Park View School, which wis originally appropriated n 1905 wnd Driated for the facal year 1927 1t this in left out of the compatison the total for the facal vear 1927 heoomes A2296,000 and on this hasts the cuy vent law In an fnerease of $108,230 for sehoal buildings and krounds The biggest project underway at the present time v the McKinley High Hehool on T street northeast, (o cont upward of §2,260,000 The calendar vear fust ended also marked completton of Washington's new water supply system, which has heen undor constiuction for seveval veniw, al a cost of mote than $X,000,. L000. 10 vonminta af an additionsl con Ault nine miles lang from Great Falls to e Distiot e, paralleling and douhling the capacity of the old single ondult w new Aliation plant and PUmPing atation near Dalecariia lea quarters or meets rxw al this Federul the vent the for pur the fon of the various municipal | including some which have | wnized. | vented | veappro | ___SENATOR RORAH. creasing armaments, when we reflect what it would mean if a real naval race should be initiated between Great Britain and the United States, and particularly n view of the economic conditions which now obtain, we dare not desist from our efforts. Tax Burdel Cause of Suffering. There A nmation in the world today, even our own, but whose pev ple are suffering and sacrificing under the X burdens. In some countries that burden is great, so exacting and remorseless, that thousands and millions of paople ure deprived of the ordinury necessities of life, to say nothing of its comforts and pleasures Homes are impoverished. children un derfed and under bt out school. heense of the burdens of gov ernment. Eighty per cent of that bur- den comes (1 titures relative to armaments an. To add to this bu vet more heavily hacks of th enorgy and mtion rests is not en. (o bear down upon the bended people upon whose nce after all civili is 1o rechlessiy challenge civilization ftself. Those who believ in peace, who believe in disarmament who believe in economic snity and economic salvation, must gird them selves anew prevent the increase of armaments and the uphuilding of still greater military establishments ervoir and additional voirs in the northwest 1y Teser ot the storage sectior Many Streets Improved. Was one of very material proxress on the improvement of (he sreets of the National Capital, snd partieularly the main horoughfares of approach connecting with State highways. During the next few years | the aim of the Highway Depattment Wil be to fmprove many of the sec Mlary theroukhfares in various see ftons of the City (hat feed into these main arteries A total of Last vo S1302,600 b provided in the current approptiations for hih Lway wark inthe District, of which JRDREONImAtely SLAO000 i for paving under the kasoline tax fund Che deficiency appropriation bilt | passed just before Congress adjourned the Christmas recess included | for repairs to Chain Reidge, $40.000, | and for rent of temporary quarters for | municipal agencles that must move Jout of the triang 3000, and for [the care of chtldren under the Boavd of Public Welfare, $40.000 The P'ublic Welfare Hoard has fust Closed A st full year servive, Auring which the Gihson subcommittes nd the United States Bureau of B clency have made careful suiveys WokIng toward most ecient | nation” of Wil welfare activities. As w [part of this effart a cotification has been made for the flist thnwe of all wel fare legination applicabls o the Dis triet, which is to hecome a part of the new Distvict code \ Teale Burean Reorganieed, { An & vesult of studies made by the Qibwon subcommitios and the Rureau | of Eficlency, the TvaMo Hureau was | TOrouRIIY rearsantsed During the past year a Public Utit [ Wen Commission distinet (vom the Board of DIstrict Commissioners was sl up for the purpose of velleving the « N issloners of too many actiy iew, since they alao must serve on the Zoning Commission, and i ardey Jthat the public and the various pub U wtilities wis “anita e RIS AT Anow led; Lo bear Bivblem T B Wiinging expert WOl the various s — | into effect | 100,000 for repatrs to suburban roads Via promised by leaders | { | I IMPROVEMENTS MADE IN CITY’S APPEARANCE ew Buildings, Parks, Playgrounds and Recreation Centers Enhance D. C. cement made was in ecarrying 1 well t APID ad during the the National Ca : ward its ultimate goal ae the most magnificent and most autiful seat of government in all the world. While many pl vere laid down, which will not for a few years were material additions to ctures in the heautify pro- and addi‘ions to the park and sronund system, to be developed and put to practical usze as rapidl as funds will permit One of the outstanding {the development and which i | the expansion of the Capital its legal boundaries was the p: by the Marviand Legislature gession earlier in the ve of the law establishing the Maryland-N. Capital Park and Planning Dis trict, comprising the area in Mont gomery and Prince Georg Conunt mmediately adjacent to Wash wnd providing further for its dey ment, in accordance with improvement of the Na Traffic Thoroughfares. Assistance w en the Mar authorities in the preparation legislation hy the ationsl | Park and Planning Commission ! which commission the Marviand bod will co-operate in the development. 1l Commission also formu- duripg the year a system of traffic thorouzhfares for the regional ares. and laid out a plan for a system of regional parks including the Unper Potomac or Potomac Pali <ades Park. up to and including Great Falls. and a lower Po Park, to and including Fort W zton the Marviand side Mount Vernon, on the Vir well as the extension « i and Anacostia Park land Park and Planning Dis suggzestion has also heen Lieut. Col. U. §. Grant recent annual report. ating with ~ia and Marviand regional p1 pianning the Fed- eral Government. as its re. toke e of and develop the Upper Po- c Park as far as Great Falls s studies of the ty. the com mission has zathered a fund of formation which will be v le for use in connection with fut in the reg = them being a study of the r systems in and near the Dis of Columbia and a iy of the street ratiway svstems ed in suggestions fo certain tracks, rerouting The rommission co the District of Columhia Co ers in purting into effect 14 in the highwayr plan of the K the view to provision of better traffic facilities, elim: ion of u » and fills stment of the st and hichway system to park boun ries. etc. The commission acqui chase and gift w icres of I nlayground purposes the stem of so-called centers, D, he the commission. will ultim entire District of Colu purchased four sm. ed provide purely cilivies ’ I less there am features 1 fleated besord it its na lated a side, as + h mad 3d, n co-oper. st alua re pl aren wh on of da- plans of the setve the alse assistod In the for wideninz of R Federal building nue Triangle, and aspecially as they transit system nroper co-ordin: impartant proje Lec N also was prenar commission and sent to Co the ot nlans the the A plav after their acqy isi sl b considerabls work was done du % the vear in the developing hetwean Rock ¢ nsiderahle o w2 was de el Parks € heidle throueh it ow it i poss thenee through the parkway tomac Park, without going the city streets, Rridge on Parkway path completed o that ft hie aed Do A vidge his parkway Below the ¢ and a sub distance on eventuaily wil nsiderable nrovements in also was dane new was reted across Rock ( nnecticut Av ade was laid for 1 pass N th The wad ro Mount and o and grassed with flower of fact 1 was sai ng was dons by this offtce durl vear than ever bhe which eventually wi By the proposed fort cleaned up and imy Accessible. among Stanton asti Pennsylvania avenie and Alabama Avenue sontheast: Fart Steve Brightwood, where President 1 od under fra while the ity heing attached Wy (he Seuthern ¢ i othe Civil war: Fort De R Rock Creek Park. where & tota? 17 acies were claaned and B Bavard, 1t Porty sinth and Fessenden streets The new fleld house in the tou amp in East Botomac Park was com e And the surtounding area sen ally cleaned up and improved. mak INg 1L ane of the mast attractive tous 13 camps wnywhere (o be found The mematial to Gen. Meade, & con trBILon by the State of Penns vanta o the Fedor:l nment, (n the Ro e Ga and tor the ¥ ¥ At the garden o 48 movad and stored \ ocating Wan necossary the Meade pleted The Evicsson Memarial tomae Park, o the Arlington Memariat Kridke, whivh was dedivated and uiveled with & plaster model i Place, Was camplete Much improvement alse was done in the Anacostia tecreation conter th An Acostia Park. just enst of the Eleventh Street Mikdge A kalt wile ot POMAWAY WS campletesd along the sea Wall, and additional vecreation facilities Were fnstalled, theluding four tennis COUEEE, TG OF Clay Al Eve of coment ne base hall dmoend and cne feet ball geid The Alington Memorial Reidge Actans the Potomac frem the Linealn Memarial o Avingtan appsared above e watlwr Wue the few abulaeniay Sivil War drive, wved, and them be! Fort Davis, at r st was s of Qover Was completed n Weddica this rinad WhRich stod Was e X place heen determined. 1 1o do this i onder tha Memarial com \ears n Wast B new | Beauty. and = contrac exclusive bridge desizn for the ed from amonz a nu Red Cross Memorial. was nea ound the Park completed wor complet such as y This AMERICAN AVIATION EXPECTED TO LEAVE WORLD BEHIND IN 28 vear's experience of the year's is on a defl The foresish pse wh ther progress viation has been de- he ce have Kept Avers cering in re- experiment- ps which have many of its on Tadoras Me Corns Naval Aviation \dvances. 2% sand mow. as S expeviad Ak this o W e wa V1o De special perchar A temackaiie s N training planes he Lan Thase are | Aokt atoat. wih fa [oltties tor careying nearly 18 waacs cach Thase have heen sssigoad as components of 1he Uiited Ntates Seet Jand e expectad 1o sirengtien the naval faroes Admiral Maftett declares that foe the feal thme the Ristary of Nis [Burean 1t Chas sither tn pratuction o ready o production NghL st FACTAEY AIFOTAT e the Bve clasies | needea hely. REhting planes, ahses VAton nlanes comhined [ bombing planes, g i viner® L. Cearneds ANt \ complet viers Arwtoga Ranss