Evening Star Newspaper, March 10, 1928, Page 8

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R = SOC SOCIETY IETY | President Coolidge Will' Open the Ne Annex of the Corcoran Art HE Chief Executive will open the ] 12:15 o'clock, when they will be pre- g of the 'sented by the recently completed Corcoran Gallery of Art at 9 o'clock this evening. The wing will house the famous co Tection of the late Senator Will Clark. Mrs. Coolidge is not espected fo accompany the President to the opening Mrs. R. B. has been the #and Mrs. Coolidge, for New York. ol mpton. who The Post New will entertain, his evening in honor of t ing Ambassador Senora de Pueyrr ot and Brazilian Envoy Honors Dean of Diplomatic Corps. The Ambassador of Great Britain abella Howard were the he s at dinne f the Ambassador of Braz The other guests dor of Germany and nd Gaffron, Senator and uce, the Ministe! the Minis n Roy- Hugh Campbeil d H. Townsend. N Frod McCawley. Col Brig. x(‘-ch Mrs. B and Mr Senator and M Willard Hotel. 1 guests to the theater. Representative and Mrs. Sol Bloom 1 ner Thursday eve- honor of the Am- Ferrera at Representative_and Mrs. Linthicum _entertained at evening when their guests Minister of E;h,vp'.xnn‘c Ame. Sam rish Fr ate, Biidy: the M ster of China and affaires of the and Senora de d Mrs. William H T. H. Caraw: rd E Tv gs"Repr&;: e and Mrs. Allen T. Treadway, Repre- :‘nmtire and Mrs. Henry T. Rainey. Representative and Mr: Prear. Representative and § y. Representative William P. Cole. jr.. Representative and Mrs. Frederick N. Zi an. Representa- tive and Mrs. Goor;eFC P(-S:\ GRS?: Charles R. were Sam Representative Crisp, Representa A. Cooper, Repr Kahn, Representa Representative R. Walton Representative Stephe G Representative Theodore the chief of staff of the U States Army and Mrs. Summerall, the commandant of the Marine Corps and Mrs. John A. Lejeune, the Assista Secretary and Mrs, Wilbur J. Carr, As- sistant Secretary of State and Mrs. Prancis White, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Merrill. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sanders, Dr. and Mrs. James Hogan, Dr. and Mrs. G. Milton Linthicum. Commodore and Mrs. Richard O. Crisp, Mr. and Mrs. Seth H. Linthicum. Mr. and Mrs Hampton _Linthicum. Mr. and M ormer mayor and Jackson, Mr. and d T. Norton. Moore, Porter, Mary Mrs. i A Allen. Miss Salilie Hev Mr.-Jack C. Linthicum. “The table was cbiong shape, in the eenter of which was a sunken garden. ‘decorated with evergreens, roses and central fountain. Vocal and instrumental music was enjoved during the evening, Mr. Douglas McComas. the well known baritone singer of Itimore, ist- ing in the mus Representative and Mrs. Clyde Kelly entertained informally at dinner evening in room at Willard, precer y. ‘Washingt rd, where he s rank 8. High Mrs. Samuel Jordan Graham will en- dnesd: n honor den Bosch 2nd us and Be Mrs George H. Coomis The members of 1he be_received by Presdent New and Popular | FICTION \ You read them only once! Save money and rent \ The Book You Want | | When You Want It | \ \ \ WOMRATH'S LIBRARY 046 J1th St 1663 Cunn. Ave NW. W IPICN June Wartiett st U sou do not live newr o bronch, write | Sireet, | 21 West 45h Muil Order o0 ms Head Offir e Yol D [ he | K r. | Gu Gallery This Evening. !Dwight F. Da Mrs. E. R. Woodson entertained at a | bridge Juncheon today at the Columbia { Country Club in honor of Mrs. Watson |F. Coleman. The guests included Mrs. Harry R. Perry, Mr Berry, Mrs, Edward liard West, Mrs, Charles Macon W K ney Berry, Mr Richard _ Turner. Rasch, Mi | ard Boss, Mrs Laudick. M ward Yonkers. Mr: | Charles P. Kevser. M | 1ove and Mrs. W. W. § | Mrs. Charles do Vere Bfayton enter- tained at luncheon today in compliment to Mrs. Harrison W. Dc of Chestertown, Md. . Mrs Virgil Moor 'S ick A M Freder Walker Buel. Mrs. Ed- John Nicpold, Mrs. rs. Joseph Man- cott. Mrs. Dennett Hostess At Luncheon for Mrs. Dale. Fred Dennett entertained 94 at luncheon today in the Spa tio at the Carlton Hotel in honor | of Mrs. Dale, wife of Senator Porter Dale of Vermont and Mrs. Everett ders, wife of the secretar) President. The company was seated at able in the shape of a horse- S Dennett in re- ceiving the guests were Mrs. James J. Davis, wife of the Secre abor; Irs. Gerry. wife of Scnator Peter Geolet Gerry and president of the Con- jonal Club. The guests of honor, Dale, Mrs. Sanders and Mrs. Pat- Slemp, daughter of the sentative Florence Kahn. Rep- ive Katherine Langley and Mrs. Wise Slemp acted as co-hokt- Hart Fenn of Con- arry C. Ransleigh of . Edward W. Pou and Abernethy of North 1 ted. The decorations were ¢ Spring flowers and palms. The guests included Mrs. Frank B Willis of Ohio, Mrs. Charles S. Deneen of Tllinois, Mrs. Morris Sheppard of xas, Mrs. Charles L. McNary of . Mrs. Edward S. Broussard of Mrs. T. H. Caraway of Mrs. C. C. Dill of Washing- . Mrs. Thomas D. Schall of Minnesota, Mrs. G. P. Nye of North Dakota, Mrs. Carl Haydon of Arizona. Mrs. Frederick W. Dallinger. Mr: Lindley H. Hadley, Mrs. Charles C. <earns, Mrs. Louis T. McFadden, Mrs, 1y E. Campbell, Mrs. Fred 'S. Pur- nell, Mrs. Albert H. Vestal, Mrs. Wil- liam C. Wright. Mrs. Emnest R. Acker- man, Mrs. Clay Stone Briggs. Mrs. Samuel C. Major, Mrs. James O'Connor, Mrs. Harry C. Ransley, Mrs. Charles L. Abernethy, Mrs. Homer L. Lyon. s. Carroll B. Reece, Miss Clara Mrs. Adam M. Wyant, Mrs. B. Burtness. Mrs. Randolph rkins, Mrs. Sol Bloom. Mrs. Charles Brand, Mrs. Willlam Hull. Mrs. Henry R. Rathbone. Mrs. Thomas _Hall, Mrs. John H. Kerr, Mrs. George C. Peery, Mrs. Edward E. Eslick, Mr Frederick M. Davenport. Mrs. Henr Allen Cgoper, Mrs. Edward W. Pou, Mr; Ashton C. Shallenberger, Mrs. Finis of | Garrett, Mrs. William A. Oldfield, Mrs. Edward T. Taylor, Mrs. Leonidas C. Dyer. Mrs. J. Charles Linthicum, Mrs. Edward E. Browne, Mrs. Lewis Cramton, Mrs. James A. Freer, Mr Clyde Kelly, Mrs. Percy E. Quinn, Mr: Addison T. Smith, Mrs. Warren Irving Glover, Mrs. Harry K. Daugherty, Mrs Charles H. Robb, Mrs. Ralph Cameron, s. Shafroth of Colorado, Mrs. Nath- aniel B. Dial, Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, Mrs. Thomas W. Phillips, pr.; Mrs. John M. Baer, Mrs. Theodore T. Pickett, Mrs. James H. MacLafferty. Mrs. Victor Kauffmann, Mrs. Charles W. Richard son, Mrs. Peter A. Drury, Mrs. Delos A. Blodgett, Mrs. Charles G. Matthew: Mrs. Lucy Wilder Morris, Mrs. Francois Berger Moran, Mrs. Horace Macfarland, Mrs. E. A. Harriman, Mrs. Horatio Tap- Mrs. James L. Karrick, Mrs. H. L. Rust, Mrs. R. H. Lane, Mrs. F. K. Marsh, s. William G. Whee) Boniface, Mrs. Charles J. Kappler, ) Theodore Tiller, Mrs. Peyton Gore Mrs. Francis Williams of Kentucky, Mr: Bennett, daughter of Senator and Mrs. Dale, and Mrs. Patton Wise Slemp, who will be the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dennett, for a month. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Arney, for- mer pioneers of Idaho, now living in Spokane, Wash., who have been spend- ing the Winter at the Willard Hotel, will entertain a number of Western pioneers at the Idaho State Society third annual territorial day banquet at 2400 Sixteenth street this evening, given honor of the pioneers and com morating the sixty-fifth anniversary ecretary of War, Mr. “Georgia Knox | Clyde B. Asher, Mrs. Rich- | Rush Lincoln, Mrs, Louis | JTHE SEVENING. STAR. WA SHING ). Jos | ¢ s kd 4 ss \MOTHER WHO BEAT DAUGHTER JAILED \Refuses ot Pay $100 Fine, So Goes to Workhouse—Girl Asks Protection. By the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, Kans, March 10.— Placing her diamonds in custody of her husband, Mrs. Christine Woodside, 34, former snake charmer and llon tamer in a carnival, has elected to spend 100 .|days in the workhouse rather than pay a $100 fine imposed for spanking her 16-year-old daughter. Informed by Judge Fred R. White that he believed the spanking had been “unwarrantedly severe” and that she must pay $100 and costs or go to jail, Mrs. Woodside handed three diamond rings to her husband, C. R. Woodside, and with a smile left for a cell. She forbade Mr. Woodside, stepfather of the girl, Lorene Jones, to pay the fine. Admits Whipping. Arraigned in Judge White's court .| here last night following her arrest on a complaint charging assault, which was sworn to by Lorene, the mother ad- mitted whipping the girl Sunday with a coat hanger. She saild Lorene refused to give an account of a trip she made in the family automobile. Mrs. Woodside's arrest followed un- successful efforts of welfare officials to effect a reconciliation after Lorene left {her home to stay with her Sunday school teacher and the mother threat- ened to discipline the girl further should | she return, “Parents have a right to punish {their children, but they have no right [to be brutal” Judge White sald in Harms- Ewing With Senator Dill and Senator and M ington delegation in Congress at a MRS. CLARENCE C. DILL, . Wi Hmplufing sentence. | TNl not crawfish, judge,” repli sley L. Jones, will entertain the Wash- | Mrs. Woodside: “T'll xf, 10" jail e di and theater party tonight. | that will 'be as hard on Lorene as it | of the creation of Idaho Territory by | President Lincoln. Among the guests {of Mr. and Mrs. Arney will be Mr. Her- ey Lindley of Seattle, Wash., who is ident of the Columbia River Bacin League and heads the Columbia River ation now staying at the New Willard. Mr. Lindley is one of the real pioneers of the Northwest. | Mrs. Arney entertained at luncheon yesterday in the crystal room of the Willard Hotel for a number of her friends from the Northwestern States | and this city. Among the invited guests | were Mrs. William E. Borah, Mrs. Fred T. Dubois, Mrs. John H. Carroll, Mrs. Lindley Hadley. Mrs. Sam Hill. | William E. Humphre; Mrs. D. W ! Davis, Mrs. John L. Pettijohn, Mrs. {J. J. Underwood, Mrs. Richard Jones, Mrs. Elwood Mead. Mrs. R. M. Calkins of Chicago and Mrs. W. Lon Johnson, { | wife of the Lieutenant Governor of the | State of Washington. | Mrs. Henry Wells will entertain at tea in compliment to Mrs. Ames Cush- | man of St. Louis today .in the palm | | court of the Mayflower, when the other | members_of her_party will be Mrs, Charles Warren, Mrs. Victor Cushman, | Mrs. Walter Gordon. Mrs. A. C. Hodgson, | | Mrs. Breckenridge Long and Mr. and | | Mrs. Clifford Rosengarten of Philadel- | | phia and St. Lou: 3| Mrs Elizabeth Whiton of Toronto, | Canada. who is spending some time at ! the Grace Dodge Hotel, has been joined there by Mrs. Emily Smith of Spring- | c. | ville, N, Y. $ | _ Miss Janet Richards, who is now in | Boston, the guest'of Gov. and Mrs. A.T. | | Fuller 'in_their ‘town house, the old | | Draper mansion, on Beacon street. will speax this afternoon in the Fuller draw- | ing room for the benefit of one of Mrs. | Fuller's favorite ‘philanthropies. This | morning Miss Richards addressed *he Woman's Republican Club of Massa- | chusetts, on “Our Foreign Relations; | Is the United States Imperialistic?” | | Dr. and Mrs, H O. Mitchell of War- | ren, Pa., are making an extended stay | | at the Grace Dodge Hotel. | Colonial Dames Club ill Give Tea Monday. The Club of Colonial Dames will en- tertain at a “tea” Monday afternoon at . | 4 o'clock, when Dr. Boyd Carpenter will Ibe the guest of honor. Dr. Carpenter has spent many years in the Orlent and | will give a taik on “The Orfent and Its Future.” Miss Marjorle Lowe will give a group of songs. accompanied on the piano by Miss Minna Nieman. Col. and Mrs. Henry Smalley will at- | 1 {tend the banquet this evening given at 12400 Sixteenth street by the Idaho | | State Society in commemoration of the | | sixty fifth anniversary of the creation |of Idaho Territory by President Lin-| {coln. - Mrs. Smalley was formerly Miss | Anne Sonna of Boise, Idaho, and was If He’s a Realtor You are Every prof under which its with real estate. in Safe Hands sion has its code of ethics, members practice. So it is The Real Estate Board has a code of ethics —and before a man can practice as a Realtor he must adopt them for his own standard. In any matter of realty consult a REALTOR—and i you'll be on the safe side. Should a contention arise—the Board will act as referee. You'll find it p ays to consult a EALTO A Member o 21 f the Real K 01 tate Board Connecticut Avenue Apartments of Distinction Ready for Occupancy . October First ~ r——-&—( ( J "7 roums, B baths W oroon Inctuned O and apar Plans unid Avilabl T Reservations N ) 1001 15th Strect NJW, allo com nres CCUPLES entive frontage on Connecticut Avenue between Wyoming Avenue Kalorama Road, tment has thre and s rd the utmost in living fort and charm, Fach ow Being Made L. RUST COMPANY Main 8100 lone of the young girl hostesses In the | | T. C. Green of Bethesda, Md.; Mr. Al-| S will on me.” Protection Asked. Before the hearing opened Mrs. Woodside asked Lorene if she wanted | her to serve a sentence or pay a fine r | if she was convicted. Idaho Building at the St. Louis Expo- | sition. Mrs. Smalley’s father an carly Idaho ploneer. Everything Is ready for the leap year if S dance tonight at 9 oclock in the large| “T just want protection from your ballroom of the New Willard Hotel, | Cruelty.” the girl answered. Then she given by Franklin Lodge, No. 2, Knights | broke into tears and sobbed through- of Pythias, where dancing and surprises |Out _the trial. will continue until midnight. The grand | Mr. Woodside announced he would electrical display was installed today | abide by nis wife’s wish not to pay under the direction of the chairman of | the fine. but hoped to persuade Judge the display committee, Mr. Roy Wigley, | White to grant her a parole. The and at 3 oclock the general commit- judge said he had not considered a tee will make a final inspection of the | Parole. Mr. Woodside declared that ballroom | the mother ‘and daughter loved each At the meeting of the executive com- ! mittee last night Mr. F. D. Wallace Outside the home. was appointed chairman of the floor Faen committee and will be assisted by Mr. | Butler Bequests Revealed. bert Rouse, Mr. Charles Ruhel, Mr. Rob- | CHICAGO, March 10 (). —The will ert Frank, Mr. Roy Wigley and Mr. of the late Edward B. Butler, chairman Henry A. Retistatt, chancellor com- [Of the board of Butler Bros. wholesale mander of Franklin Lodge, No. 2. | houses, was filed for probate yesterday. The door will be under the direct su-| The widow, Mrs. Jane Butler, is be- pervision of Mr, D. W. Brown, while Queathed a trust fund of $750.000, the chairman of the welcoming rom-lnlx‘nm $600,000 15 distributed among mittee. Mr. Hugh Brown, will assist. | friends and relatives and $250,000 was “The card tables in the balcony will |given to charity. be in charge of the ladies of the Knights of Pythias, and prizes will be awarded. The Ohlo Girls' Club give & dance at the Denlee, 1519 R street, this evening trom 8:45 to 12 o'clock. The dance will be in honor of St. Patrick's day. All |4y Ohio people and their friends are in- vited Mrs. Albert R. Lowrle of Detroit, Mich., is at the Willard for a short stay. She arrived there today. Miss Marguerite Clement of Ver- sailles, France, is spending several days at the Grace Dodge Hotel en route to Virginia, where she will give a talk at the Foxcroft School. tive Funeral Franklin Ground squirrels are named “flicker- or Frankl tails" because of their habit of flicker- ing their short tails up and down when uttering their call notes. New England Furriers Benjamin_ Sherman, Prop. 618 12th St.—Franklin 6333 Chokers Made Bring in_vour out.of.date Searfe and we will remadel them 1n the latest styies Funeral Flowers Delivered Free— 807 14th Street N.W. Phone Franklin 51 other dearly and that the trouble lay ! Phone MUSIC SYLVIA LENT'S RECITAL. For some puzzling reason many Wash- ingtonians do not seem to realize that they have a really great artist in their midst and, as a resuit, the audience In the orchestra seats of the National ‘Theater yesterday was only about one- third of what it should have been In size to hear Sylvia Lent give her an- nual recital. Sylvia s young, it is true, being in her earllest twentles, but she has been called by some musicianly ad- mirers “a miniature Heifetz.” Her gift Is undeniable, and likewise obvious is her marvelous command of the tech- nique of her instrument. She is received with acclaim by large audiences every- where in the country, except in her home town—Washington. Shé has play= ed with practically severy large sym- phony orchestra of the East and Mid- dle West. Last week she returned from fresh triumphs in Minneapolis, where she played with the Minneapolis Sym- phony Orchestra, and early this week she made a hurried trip South for a successful concert in Georgia. Surely many of the music lovers of Washington are “asleep on the job” when they let slip an opportunity to hear this young artist, and theirs is the real loss. Sylvia Lent opened her unhackneyed and well arranged program with Tar- tinf’s “Sonata in G Minor.” She played it beautifully, with firm, broad sweeps of her bow and a lovely clear, ringing tone. More interesting, however, from point of view of novelty, was the “Con- certo Italiano,” by Mario Castelnuovo- ‘Tedesco, the Itallan modernist, pub- lished in 1924. This work is based upon Italian folk themes and has melodious- Another outstanding characteristic is the clever use of chromatic scales to carry one of the patterns of the com- position to a brilliant climax. The Arioso is very lovely, and the whole work invites the ear for another hear- ing. It may not be a great or markedly original addition to violin literature, but it is a very pleasing one. At its con- clusion the audience was particularly enthusiastic, and the little violinist was ! the recipient of a number of bouguets | of pink roses and much applause. She gave Wilhelmi's arrangement of Gluck's MARYLAND FOR SALE \ Historic Manor House Near Washingtow and Baltimore | over fine roads : house in 7 rooms: fine old Vooiwork: hoxwood hedges, Private park of 23 acres. inclosed by hizh fence Stevam of cl rout. " mar water, through fed by sprin; stacked with k. Several Swan and ntire property consista of 6.000 acres 1| o ‘inetimier Jand. on“east side ot Riue Tidin” Mountaine o’ bridie vatha and 10 miles of trout streams. Altitude from 600 to 1.800 feet Would make nunique and delightfnl || country” edtite” or'"Runting and_fisinz | With wonderful sites for separate | i) ! MISS HARLAN, Exclusive Agent 1207 19th Street Northwest We design l’lighly effec- Floral and make liveries on such orders. Emblems, Ffec Dc' Wreaths $4 up a2 n 10301 C & C Flower Stores Nominal Charge on Other Orders 804 17th St. N.W. Phove Franklin 10391 - AN ACHIEVEMENT In Corsets and Corselttes! K" stands for, Kann's— and the best style, quality and workmanship w combined into m and corselettes, tory sale offers numbers of “K" values, that will ¢ could have odern corsets An introduc- four special Garments— promptly be- come a “town-topic” among womien who kno —Rayon Satin Girdle— with ‘medallion trim. Side haok, eight-inch length, silk elastic sides.. $2.50 Bandeau to match, $1.00 atin Brocade Girdles, in twelve fourteen inch lengths—well stayed Yo monld the figure—silk elastic sides and support ery $3.00 to $5.00 W ~Corselettes of sk swami—honeless —semi step-in and side hook styles, and dainty, durable parments for the smaller ligure .. $3.50 ~—Corselettes of Licavy rayon with vem torced abdomen and gindle hack Lace-trimmed top and two-tone ribbon shout dev straps.. $5.00 satin, Second Floor The Busy Caorner Kanmf Penn. Ave. Bth and D “Melodie,” from “Orfeo ed Euridice,” as an encore, The second part of the program was opened with “Poeme,” by Ernes Chausson (1855-1899), a charming work, full of delicacy and, as the titie suggests, poetry. ‘There are lovely trills in this work, and the final pas- sage ending in a diminishing trill was one of the lovellest, ethereal bits of violin playing heard here in many moons. A group of short works fol- lowed, all of them “different” and very interesting. There was the comical “Old Bruin” of Cecil Burleigh, fol- lowed by the very modern “Piece en forme de Habanera,” by Ravel, and the equally modern “Sumare,” which was not so melodious, by Milhaud, an- other of “the six.” A particularly fascinating crooning “Samoan Lullaby,” by Tod Boyd, and the brilhant “Rondo,” by Vieuxtemps, completed the group with Burleigh's “Fairy Saliling, which Sylvia Lent has made her ow) as_the final encore. Miss Lent played the entire program without notes, and had as a sympa- thetic accompanist that artist at such work, Frank Bibb. H P. $100,000 Jackson Fund Sought. Andrew Johnson memorfal committee yesterday placed in the hands of a com- mittee the matter of raising $100,000, with which to make permanent the |house and site here Johnson, President of the United States, was born. The committee, composed of Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy under President Wilson; Judge Francis | D. Winston, Bertie County, and William J. Andrews, Raleigh, wiil appoint five others to be members, and will take care of a $50,000 campaign in the State and send representatives to Washington {0 press for a 50,000 Federal apprépri- ation. ness a dominant quality throughout. | [ “‘exquisite - simplicity” —simple inits approved silhouette, yet elegant RALEIGH, N. C., March 10 (#.—The | en| where Andrew {SCHOOL PUPILS VISITING ° AMARYLLIS SHOW TODAY Thousands of Children Inspecting Flower Display—Outsiders Ex- pected Tomorrow. Thousands of Washington school chil- dren today are visiting the fifteenth an- nual amaryllis show of the Department of Agricuiture in the greenhouses s Fourteenth and B sireete. .a extre force of expert gardsners was pressed into service to give lessons in botany 1 the children. More than 50 schools [ from the District and nearby Maryland and Virginia are listed for visits at the exhibition conservatory today. | "Practically all of the diplomatie eorps have already visited the show. sme ot | them several times, | “The show is to be freshened up to- night so as to be at its besi when large { out-of-town delegations arrive rere to- | morrow. A force of greenhouse em- | ployes will work all night putting the {new plants in the show and removing | those that have begun to wilt. | " In spite‘of the rain, several hundred persons were disappointed last night | when the greenhouses had to be closed | at 8:30 o'clock instead of 9 on account | of the explosion at the power house. 1Y. W. C. A. Concert | Elizabeth Somers Glee Club || Tuesday, Mar. 13, 8:15 P.M. || Barker Hall, 17th & K Sts. Admission 75 cents ERNA 1219 CONNECTICUT AvE~ RocK CREEK PAR \ - ESTATES - ONTEM crea one's ses datly The u mind mow is * K\per planned. Herdyon may a tract of land as vou require, imposed sategard your preciation becawe of the ness or unpleasat social time spent in hspectio '@ <18 iMposs ( ,?k} Yet the complexity business and social Vhere can 1 create a home for my family that will give them a quiet, rest- ful atmosphete and healthful air, but to which I can get inla few minutes from the office?™” Within the lstrict of Columbia, in a wooded tract of one hindred acres, truly Creek Park, eNsts the answer to your question. Here is where rou can incorporate in your home all of the orighal and unique details you have PLATION in a crowd ble, so is relaxation. of our life in- most question in every- a part of Rock have as large or small The restrictions proverty agains® Je- encroachment of busi- connections, A limited o will show you the home possibilitiey of Rock Creek Park Kstates. vh N wnd A \ Telephone Mai EDSON W. BRI( 1001 [ith St the L wlwia Rowd Ve an hspection Appaintment sGS COMPANY at N veet,

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