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THE EVEN TAYLOR IDENTIFIED “HACK” CASE Rum Truck Driver Says Po- liceman Stopped Him on Bladensburg Road. Joseph Bowlding, colored. Street southeast, driver of a rum-run- ning truck, took the stand tod: trial of Edward M. Taylor, sus police officer. accused of liquor from the truck. and hesitated for some time at the Police Trial Board proceedirigs before identifying Taylor, who sat a few feet away. as the man 1406 C | Why the Constitutional Amendment For D. C. National Representation Is Permissive been asked why the national representation to the District of Columbia “ form; asks, through this amendment, that Congress be empowered to admit it to citizenship status. The answer to this question is that the amendment s | worded in permissive rather than | mandatory form so as to reduce (o a | minimum opposition to its passage. | "1t became evident in 1916, when a mandatory amendment was rejected by | the Senate District committee, that Con- gress would not tavor a provis | directly and immediately giving this | status and this representation to the | District. It was then and is now held | that to empower Congress to admit the The question has from time to time|right and o constitutional | the national viewpoint as a cure of amendment proposed for the grant of | not made in mandatory |t why, in short, the District only | ex and Not Mandatory power, and (2) solely from | national impotency, irrespective of the time when for the District's benefit he new constitutional power shall be ereised. “The advocates of S. J. Res.. 133 vigorously contend that the residents of i the District are now entitled in popula- tion, in resources, in literacy, in public spirit and in loyal Americanism to re- ceive this right and power, and since they cannot enjoy it except as the re- sult of constitutional amendment mak- ‘mg the exclusive legislation clause of the Constitution consistent with the en- | joymant of this right and power, the | Constitution should be at once amended as proposed in the joint resolution, in order that prompt justice may be done to the Americans of the District. Constitution should be quickly amend- in a police uniform who stopped the | District to partial Statehood for limited | ¢q as proposed. and the power granted truck the morning of December 16. Bowlding gave testimony similar to that developed before the Gibson sub- committee of the House District com- mittee, asserting that he was bringing in & load of liquor from Philadelphia and came along Bladensburg road, down Maryland avenue to Fourteenth street at 5 o'clock in the morning. While it was still dark. he said, a police officer in a dark groen roadster or coupe, stopped the truck and. using & flashlight, told him to show him where the liquor was stored in a spe- cial secret compartment of the truck. Three Others Testify. Bowlding said he refused at first to open the compartment. but upon beivg | told that if he had any regard for hisj future and family he should open the | compartment. he did so. Five cans “that smelled like alcohol.” Bowlding told ihe trial board. were taken from the tiuc George Jacobson. Jack Rubin and Louis Butler, who are charge with con- spiracy to violate the national prohibi- tion laws and are accused of being the {055, {0 the Pederal courts Withoh £0- | owners of $3,000 worth of liquor said t have been involved in the Bowldin: truck episode, each took the w stand, but declined to give his addre: on the grounds that this might tend to incriminate him. They were supported this position by their counsel, E. R Iy, who said these men had right to decline to testify and it was for each man to decide if he was likely to be incriminated by the questioning The trial board ruled at the opening of the hearing that six character wit- o mnesses for Taylor would be sufficient | and several others who were on hand were excused. Attorney Joseph Solo- mon_appeared for T: ant District Attorney Thomas prosecut- ed the case. Dr. Eugene Barr testified that he treated Taylor about December 15 for ® sprained ankle, but found he did not have a fracture. Taylor hobbled in and out of his office, the doctor said. ex- plaining that the injured member was wrapped with adhesive tape. On close examination Mr. Thomas elicited from the witness that it would not be impos- sible for Taylor to operate an automo- bile with his disability. Police Surgeon Testifies. Dr. Daniel L. Borden, police surgeon, next took the stand and said that he remembered the treatment given Tay- lor only through the records and identi- fied his handwriting on one cZ the cards used in his treatment of police officers. Dr. Borden said that he certainly saw ‘Taylor and made the diagnosis, but ex- plained that 30 or 40 officers a day come for treatment. Dr. Barr and Borden were permitted o take the stand out of order o they could attend to other business. . GETS RUMANIAN HONOR. Col. Carroll Wins Tribute for Services to Queen. The Order of the Star of Rumania and the grade of commander have been conferred upon Col. John Haydock Car- roll, who was official host to Queen| Marie on behalf of the railroads which | conducted her tour of this country, according to an official notification by the Rumanian Minister. { The decree confirming the decora- | tion was fssued by the late King Ferdinand on July 16, 1927, before his death. tablished in 1877 by King Charles. Col. Carroll is assistant to the presi- dent of the Northern Pacific Railway general attorney for the Burlington and for the Baltimore & Ohio| ¢ | sentation to which they are entitled as " |1t may not surrender } | constitutional amendment. WILL NUT i Rpai " WILLIAY ¥ Sith 5 1) 'y | great American principles s | in our representative Republic, subject UNEVER BIsAFPOf vl e BYRON S, ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY High wiage. bus mith’s S non fon Jign oriced ke i of gurn Transfer & Sm;.;'g‘é Stop Roof You We Leaks P Coarany Fuiity for J00% eatsfactory | s pecullar dmpotency but desire 10 Leintiig i vice The National Caplf 200F WORK al Press —of By B “rd stieet o w M ki | already given to Congress the power | to admit to full Statehood all the | territory of the United States except | the District of Columbia. | purposes is the logical and natural | o Congress should, they urge, be exer- procedure, since the Constitution has| cised at once. Relieve Shame of National Impotency. | “Your committee are convinced that, In 1922 the |irrespective of the present fitness or un- | amendment in non-mandatory shape— | fitness of District residents to enjoy the | identical with the amendment now | pending—was a | District committee. {the mandatory form e | “That committee in its report favor- |ing the adoption of the amendment | stated: | This resolution thus proposes: (1) A the new constitutional power for Congres (2) a new right and power for re dents of the District, | when Congress in its discretion exercise its new constitutional power. New Power for Congress. “1. The new constitutional power for Congress which is sought is the power [to grant national voting representation |to residents of the District in House, |Senate and electoral college. with ac- {cess to the Federal courts, without de- | clusive legislation over the seat of gov- ernment_given by section 8. article I, {of the Constitution; without making a IState of the District, and without | eranting to residents of the District any other privileges, powers and at- | tributes of citizens of a State than those specifically enumerated “2. The privilege. rizht and power to be enjoved by residents of the District, when the amendment shall have been ratified and when the new power of Congress shall have been exercised. is voting participation by -the District residents on American principles in the National Government which taxes them. makes all laws for them and sends | them and their sons to war: and access {like that of citizens of a State to the | Federal courts, their relation to %hich |is now. the United States Supreme | Court has said, on a lower plane than that of aliens. | “Ratification of the proposed consti- | tutional amendment will thus cure the impotency of Congress to grant tional representation to any part of the territory belonging to the United States | constituting the seat of government of {the United States, and will tend to | participate on American principles in | the National Government. " Curing Twofold Impotency. both impotencies should be.cured, that of Ccngress at once, and that of the District at the fitting time in the future in the judgment of Congress. We agree that Congress should not be impotent to grant national representa- | | | i- | Ametican. to be enjoved |government, hall | Nation, the seat of the National Gov- Amer‘can right to be granted by Con- pproved by the Senate | gress when it exercises its new constitu- which had rejected | tiona” power, this joint resolution should ars earlier. [be promptly passed by two-thirds of Congress and the proposed constitu- tional amendment ratified by three- fourths of the States, in order to relieve Nation of the shame of impotency when it pleases. the evil of un- totally nonrepresentative at the very heart of the to cure, na- | by extending this power to the District | cuteat ) | Tells Round Table Insects’ Lives| | fitness in the near future, logically M-‘ | 1 | cure the impotency of the District to | “Your committee are convinced that | | ernment {of fitness of District residents for na- { tional representation, or despair of such fects only the future date to be fi: when Congress shall wisely and just exercise this power. It has no logical tendency to delay the ratification of the amendment ftself. Congress should not ‘lack the power to Americanize the Dis- trict, no matter how long its judgment may impel it to delay the actual exer- cise of this power when secured. National honor is touched by impo- tency of the National Government to grant national representation to any well-populated, intelligent, resourceful, American community. Co gress should by constitutional amendment have this power, for reasons affecting solely the national prestige and irrespective of any immediate obligation to the people of the District. While proof of present fitness of the District in population and resources for national representation fs, it thus appears, not an indispensable prerequisite of adoption and ratification of the proposed amendment, the dem- onstration of that fitness naturally in- vigorates and strengthens amendment advocac DR.SHOWALTER URGES MONUMENT TO ANTS Are Models for Humans to Follow. “Study the ant and be wise, for ants live a life that far surpasses any life, according to social standards of hu- mans,” declared Dr. W. J. Showalter, associate editor of the National Geo- graphic Magazine, in an address at a luncheon of the Washington Round Conviction of present lack | d. | F streets. tion to any group of Americans qualified | Table in the University Club yesterday. under the usual tests for such repre- |“We can find more about the ant than sentation. And we agree that the Dis- | Solomon in all his wisdom ever dreamed trict people should mot be impotent to |of.” he said. participate like other Americans in the | Every ant is careful of his responsi- national councils after demonstration of | bility as a part of the State, Dr Sho- fitness in population, resources, and | Walter continued. No scientist ever has other American attributes, provided | found a group of ants that failed to such representation can be secured |live up to their responsibility and no withcut destroying or impairing the | sclentist has ever found an anthill in power of exclusive legislation in the | Which the ants were not good house- District now possessed by Congress. We | keepers, he said, adding: “The ant has are ccnvinced that adoption of S. J.|®et a good example and we ought to Res. 133 and ratification of the con- |bulld a monument to him." stitutional amendment proposed by it | The speake: also described an out- will result in curing both fmpotencies, | ftanding spirit of self-sacrifice shown without disturbing in the least the ex- | by the ants, some of which fill them- clusive legislative power of Congress in | Selves with a kind of honey and remain the District, {idle for the remainder of their lives to | feed hungry ants with the honey as the four days. The order was es-| “one M 1560 We sce no reason whatever why Congress should not approve this grant | to itcelf of a new constitutional power, extending its existing powers on logical and equitable lines, without committing Congress as to when or how it shall | exercise this power. Rourding Out Powers of Congress. “Under the power to admit new | States and to regulate territory belong- ing to the United States Congress now | has the power to admit to representa- | tion in Congress and the electoral col- | lege the people of all the territory be- | longing to the United States except the District constituting the seat of govern- | ment of the United States. | “The constitutional provision giving | | Congress the power of exclusive legisia- | j tion in the seat of Government deprives | | Congress of the power to admit the seat | {9 Government to representation in Con- gress and the electoral college throuzh the statehood gate, since full statehood | for the District would dextroy tiic_ex- clusive power of legislation in the Dis- trict bestowed upon Congress by the Constitution. The courts have held that Congress may not even delegate this| constitutional power, must less can | | Congress destroy 1t ur surrender it com- | pletely. | *“The problem 15 to find a way to give the people of the District the repre- | national Americans in Congress und the | electoral college, with access to the Fed- {eral courts, without depriving Corgress of the exclusive legislative control of the | District, which the Constitution Im- | poses upon it and which, the courts say, | it specific | h rmonizing Two Principles. | “The pending resolution (8. J. Res 1133) solves this problem of empowering | | Congress not to admit the District 1o | statehood, which would dertroy its pow- | er of exclusive legislation, but to grant | 10 District residents representation like ‘Uml of citizens of a State In Congress und the electoral college (With nccess to jm». Federal courts) and no other pow- [ers and attributes of statehiood than those specifically enumerated. This so- Jution of the problem Nermonizes two First, thit | W lmitations and conditions uniforn.ly { applied, all national Americans ought | v have the opportunity w participate in their Nationsl Governiasnt, and second, the principle luid down by the fofefa- thers ws u natonal necessity that the | Nation, through Congress, thould have | exclusive control of the Nation’s Caypital i “No reason appears why Congress | | thould not approve the proposition W | grant sself this new, wholesome power, | logieully und equitably rounding out the | existing eorresponding constitutional | pwer which 1L now possesses In Tespect 1 every fool of territory belonging o the United § s except the district | cons ment_of | the Uy t of Co- | the Distr | lumbia. 1t | Congress 1s Empowered, Not Directed, | “Adoption of the constitutional | amendment winle 1L arms | with new power does not Congress as W when 1t shall | this power, and Uik smendment may thus be Tavored both by those who urge mmnediave exercise of Lhe power a8 {soon as the constitutional amendment |35 ratinied and also by those who wish | 1 relieve Congress from the shame of postpone exercise of the power until latter desire it Dr. E. M. Ellison, president of the Round Table, presided. 'FAILS IN ATTEMPT TO CHEAT GALLOWS Murderer Takes Poison on Eve of Hanging—Deputies Help Him to Scaffold. By the Associated Press. DERIDDER, La. March 10.—Joe Genna, youthful murderer, made empty gesture of deflance 'in his cell here Thursday night when he swallowed a dozen polson tablets in an attempt to avold death on the gallows. Yesterday he mounted the scaffold in the Beaure- gard Parish Jail and paid with his life as the State had ordained The execution of Genna at 12:54 p.m preceded that of Molton Brasseaux, his convicted comrade in the murder of .J. J. Brevelle, Deridder taxicab driver | Brasseaux mounted the scaffold at 1:17 pm. Relatives claimed both bodies. Genna, Il from the poison, required | assistance of deputy sheriffs to walk to the deagh chamber. He stood to maka his statement of repentance and express willingness to die Brasseaux walked alone, but between two officers, to the scaffold. He also expressed repentance and his readiness to_di ‘The men were sentenced to hang for luring Brevelle to the outskirts of the city August 28, 1926, ‘They admitted beating and stabbing him to death after robbing him In New Orleans, Matt Seminary, who was to hang yesterday In the Orleans Parish Prison for the murder of Lilllan Doyle and Ralph Bturdy, received from Gov_ 0. H. Bimpson a midnight reprieve to allow & review of his case. His new execution date was set for April 20, POLICEMAN IS INJURED AS HE RESCUES KITTEN Caussin Hurt in Climb to Treetop After Frightened Feline. The behavior of a kitlen yesterday put Pollceman Marcel Caussin of the fourteenth precinet on the sick list today Yesterday morning the kitten climbed to the top of a high tree in front of 4236 McKinley street, and while perched in the topmost branches began walling for help. Al day long 1t kept up Ms plaintive pleading. The com- munity became wlarmed. The police were notified and Caunsin wis assigned 1o the tack of restoring pence. He started up the tree, 1L was rough going. He slipped seversl tmes, Finally b renched the kitten and started down Bub the return o earth was evew hard- er than the upward climb, “Mr. Cuussin,” the police report reads, “apratned his wrist getting out of the tree® He wus given medical altention At Geargetown Hospital Life Sentence for Ex-Priest. iHnr Distriet s better fitted, In thelr “r{;)hbn., w0 enjoy natlonsl representa- tion “Adoption of the amendment. fs thils urged (1) from the viewpoint of justice 1o the people of the District on the wround they ure now fitted o enjoy and W meel Whe responsivilities of this BANTA ANA, Callf, March 10 () Phillip A Goodwin, former priest of the American Cathol yonterday was sentenced o e imprisonment in Folsom Penltentlary for the murder of J. 0. Patterson, Los Angeles bond hroker, MYSTERY SHROUDS HENDERSHOT CASE Hospital Authorities Refuse to Reveal Circumstances of Inventor’s lliness. An apparently impenetrable cloud of | mystery continued today to surround | the circumstances that led to the re- moval of Lester J. Hendershot, in- ventor of the fuelless motor, in which Col. Charles A. Lindbergh is sald to have taken an interest, from the office of a patent attorney in the Washing- ton Loan & Trust Bullding to Emer- gency Hospital, last Tuesday. The inventor remained at the hos- pital today, and hospital authorities re- fused to reveal any of the circum- stances, rendered more dramatic by the mysterious behavior of Col. Lindbergh | early last week when he turned around at Scott Field and flew back to Wash- ington, remaining .in _seclusion here | throughout the day when Hendershot is supposed to have been injured. Police Not Advised. Police of the third precinct, who maintain an hourly watch on accident cases brought into Emergency Hospital, have recefved no report and said that the hospital authoritics were under no obligation to furnish such a report. Police of the third precinct were continuing an_investigation this morn- iug into the report that Hendershots injuries were caused by an_explosion or an electric shock in the Washington Loan & Trust Building. at Ninth and Lack of reports in the case leads po- lice to suspect that Hendershot may be the victim of illness rather than of any injuries caused by experiments with {his_“fuel-less motor.” He is believed Ito have been in Washington prepaca- [tory to opening negotiations with the { Patent Office in an effort to secure a patent on his invention. | Left. With Lanphler. | ~ Although no_ definite connection can | be established between Col. Lindbergh's sudden and mysterious return to Wash- ington, necessitating a sleepless night in the air, and Hendershot's presence here, some foundation is given such an assumption by the fact that the trans- atlantic fiyer left the Capital the next day accompanied by Ma). Thomas Lan- phier, commandant_of Selfridge Field. and his attorney. Henry Breckinridge. both of whom have been associated closely with Hendershot in tests of ihe new motor, 'D. C. MAN CONVICTED " AS CHURCH ROBBER Baltimore Women Tell Court of Missing Burses When Stranger Sat Near Them at Worship. Speetal Dispateh to The Star BALTIMORE. March 10.—David Mc- Candlish of Washington, convicted on 10 charges of robbery in churches, wus sentenced to 10 vears in the peniten- tiary yesterday by Judge Owens .r Criminal Court A number of women testified that a strange man would sit in @ pew beside them or behind them. When they re- turned trom the communion rail they would find their pocketbook, left wt their seat, had disappeared. McCand- lish was arrested after a robbery Febru- ary 20 in St. Alphonsus Catholic Church. Police said in McCandlish’s apart- ment in Washington they found wom- en’s apparel and a list of churches. McCandlish has been arrested her several times for thefts, and is well known to the police. | BLADENSBURG SCHOOL |, SITE TRANSFERRED $15,000 Is Consideration for Ma-| gruder Tract Between Defense | Highway and Landover Road. | Speciul Dispateh to The Star., | BLADENSBURG, Md, March 10.— | Building of a high and graded school in | Bladensburg district was virtually as- sured yesterday when a deed to 12.87 | acres of land between the Defense | Highway and the Landover road, was given by Willlam P. Magruder and his wife, Dorothy W. Magruder, to the Prince George's County board of edu- | cation. The consideration was $15,000 | and a check for this amount was handed the grantors by Nicholas Orem, county superintendent of schools. The rded is known as “Rope Walk and adjoin§ Parthenon, one of the historic places of Maryland, lo- cated a hundred yards south of the De- fense Highway just outside the corpor- ate limits of Bladensburg, ‘The last session of the Maryland leg- islature passed an act appropriating $30.000 for an elementary school in Bladensburg at the junction of the Ed- monston road and the Defense High- way. This school was not built, and there remains $15000 with which to begin the new school building. Should the present Bladensburg school bring a price satisfactory to the school au- thorities it will be abandoned and the money obtained will be applied to the $15.000 available, and the legislature ot 1929 will be asked to authorize the sale of bonds for whatever amount is re- quired to complete the new school. The present Bladensburg school cost $23, 000, and, 1t is estimated, the land 1s worth at least $17,000. The new school would contain 12 or 14 rooms and would be used for both an elementary and high school. Comdr. T. G. Ellyson, Lient. Comdr. Hugo Schmidt and Lieut. Rogers 8 Ransenhousen were declared ofclally dead yesterday by the Navy Depart- ment, The three officers disappeared In an amphiblan plane February 27, while fiying from Hampton Roads, Va., to Annapolis, Md. Col. A. M. Harvey Dies. TOPEKA, Kuns, March 10 (4. —Col, M. H ., prominent Kansas attor ney and former lleutenant governor, died here yesterday of heart disease. He was a veteran of the Spanish-American and the World Wars, DO YOU WANT TO SELL? We have n number of buyers for houses - all sections of the city; also for business and investment properties. 1 your price i vight we can help you WALTER A. BROWN 1400H = M.1683 Money to loan In any amount Re> Ne o Auove: Liquor machine which came 1o a halt after a chase of several miles up Pennsylvania avenue southeast, when it crashed into the stonewall about the Congressional Library Grounds. Its two occupants were captured. Below: Stone pillar dislodged by the crash. The electric light post was snap- ped off. __(Star_Staff_Photos.) | Comfcrier Parish HESSE INDORSED BY CITIZENS' BODY ! Brightwood Adopts Resolu tion Expressing Confidence in Police Chief. Confidence in Maj. Edwin B. Hesse, superintendent of police, was expressed last night in a resolution unanimously adopted at a meeting of the Brightwood Citizens Association in_ Holy Hali, 8 Geoy avenue Elmer Johnson stated in the resolu- tion that “we believe Maj. Hess> to be an henest, efficient, courteous and oblig- ing ofbicial and that we know him to be a man of excelient habits and good character and always ready to enforce the laws. We believe he has done more | to clean up vice in the District of Columbia than has any man who has held the position of chief of police.” In conclusion the resolution stated that “we express to the District Com- missioniers and others interested iu the recent charges against Maj. Hesse's character and habits, t we becliove nim to be just the contrary to the charges made and we hope that the persons Tesponsible for these charges will be dealt with severely and punished to the fullest extent possible.” Street Measure Approved. ‘The association went on record as favoring the Senate bill to vacate all streets and alleys, except Fourteenth and Aspen streets, within the bounded by Sixteenth street, Alas avenue, Fern and Aspen streets and Georgia avenue, for the purpose of ex- tending and widening Fourteenth street | from Montague street northward to the southern terminus of the Walter Reed Hospital grounds at Dahlia street. Pres- ident Charles W. Ray informed the meeting that this would close Thir- teenth, Fifteenth, Dahlia, Dogwood and Elder strects and would eventually pro- vide a thoroughfare to the Maryland | border, which was greatly desired by the residents In that section along the District line. John Clagett Proctor was appointed the assoclation’s representative on the committee for Memorial day exercises | at Battle Ground Cemetery. Charles S. Walters was elected to membership in the association. Action on Merger Indorsed. The association indorsed the ac ties of the public utilities committee o the Federation of Citizens’ Associations vefore the District Public Utilities Com- | SIXTEENTH STREET and COLUMBIA ROAD NORTHWEST RELIABIL[TY_(N‘HM as an fnvestment, Argonne The signed lease this year, but in living made, first to prese as Insurance against dissatisfaction and vacancy in ¥ RESPONSIBILITY—0perated areful and effic mits no shifting of responsibility regarding any complaint estion tending to increase the convenience or contentment caling with the responsible interests Sugy occupants, In this building direct de means direct results. PERMANENCE—Each proved conditions characteristics of The Argonne and stay, we continue to improve with time as the only sound method of maintaining an investment DUNIGAN-BUILT FOUR AND FIVE BEDROOM PETWORT In ! \HIBIT Open and Li 3915 lllinois Ave. Two-car Brick Ga Seven Rooms ened Back Porches 20401, Front Beautiful Lawn Shrubbery & Hedgo ve & worked for and valued reputation, sec car of our ownership has meant im- . Gabriel’s Parish "OPTOMETRIST ELECTED. Tr. Lewis H. Kraskin Named f Beta Sigma Kapp Dr with offie clected to membership section of the Beta Sigma Kappa Fra- ternity, according to anno the board of regents. Dr. Ki chosen for this honor at the conc! of the board in Chicago last Dece The Beta Sigma which 1s in- ternational in s edwith the American ssociation and its me only to to_optometrt mission in the present car merg ing. ‘The extension of New Hampsh nue from its present tel road was ur Thirteenth rect Farragut street, orgla avesue to lllinois paving of the roadway tracks on Kennedy from latin ue and tween the not a speculation is interested not only in a up to the letter of every promise Ly S 1o come. by the owner, iis nt management per- repair or direc regarding both excellence of 1ts service H HOMES HOMES hted Until 9 PM, 4101 N. H. Ave. Nine Rooms Two Baths Large Garage Six Roomy Closets Spacious Lawn Well Landscaped D. J. DUNIGAN, Ine. Main 1267 1319 N, Y, Ave. SLAYER'S PENALTY ;\Court Sentences Reuben lTaylor for Murder—Other Criminals Get Long Terms. vlor, colored, was ses ry for life today Coy in Crimina! i Taylor had been indj-*- i for murder in the first degree i counection with the th of Eugenc J also eolored, No- ber 12, bu jury had returned & record of of violence T T heard read in court, Henry Jackson, eolored, was gi term of 15 years in the penitentia a charge of brea Roste G mitted tiat both colored, v in the peniter of j e he had o and not a gun st Wa . Creel residence, 1 He was 72 years of Born in Wilmingion, Del til transferred here in 1913. He was for 32 years a member of the Colf Council. Royal Acanum, of New Yo ity. y his widow: Margaret R. Wright Howard R. Buckey Funeral services will the residence Monday after o'clock. Rev. Charles T. W tor of St. Alban’s Episcop: officiate. Interment will be in Con- gressional Cemetery. % 0% o% .0, X EXIXTEE Y INSPECT TONIGHT OR SUNDAY $100 CASH Monthly Payments You Can Buy One of These Homes for the Rent You Are Now Paying Why Not Come Out? UP-TO-DATE HOUSES 1210 Hemlock St. N.W., near 16th St. 1018 Third St. N.E., just north K 18 Evarts St. N.E., near N. Cap. St. 310 T St. N.E,, cars pass door 1630 Gales St. N.E., near 15th & H Sts. 1121 Fifth St. N.E,, just north L St. 15th and Lawrence Sts. N.E. 1362 K St. S.E., just south Pa. Ave. cars INSPECT TONIGHT Open, Lighted and Heated Until 9 P.M. H. R. HOWENSTEIN CO,, 1311 H St. NW. % el edradeedrod Dol aradiaied OWN YOUR OWN APARTMENT The Parkway 100 3220 Connecticut Ave. Corner of Macomb 206% % 0% 4% 4% %0 ¢ %% 4% %8s o8, XAXTXIXGXIXEXTRXTXINTNTN L I %o % o IXTXT 0 . 2, XL 2, " oQoodealeafodraleadeedesdeate CO-OPERATIVE The outstanding features of The PARKWAY which have attracted many purchasers are: ig- L Large Fu Garage in Buildin, Pe roke Tubds Show Pedestal One-Pi Sinks Large Closet Dacions, irg il Heat vinator Electric Re eration r Switehdo Serv- with Ope proof Const rément Hote i Radio Hardwood Floors ece Service istallation Al INVESTIGATE THE CO-OPERATIVE FORM OF HOME OWNERSHIPY AND TURN YOUR MONTHLY ORLIGATION TO PAY FOR A PLACE » LIVE FROM A LOSS INTO AN ASSET, Arthur M. Suit Exclusive Representative Cloveland 764 The Parkway presents every Swwday a concert through Ntation WRHE commencing at the time WRC t":n\nlplflr.t the Church Nevvice and continning wntil 1:00 I =y