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DAMAGED ZEPPELIN " ASKS SURFACEAD Requests Ship Follow Course After Vertical Control Is Injured. (Continued from First Page.) Los Angeles, or 770 feet. is 850 feet long. Four huge concrete and steel doots,. when moved aside on electric trucks, leave an opening 258 feet wide by 172 feet high for the air vessels to enter. The Graf Zeppelin is 116 feet high. Lifting gas, fuel and oil in great quantity have been shipped here for the Graf Zeppelin. In addition to 300.- 000 cubic feet of hydrogen, used for | lifting power, there are on hand 900,- | 000 cubic feet of a special domestic gas manufactured in Kentucky, which | will be available as a substitute for “blue gas,” the new fuel consumed by the Graf Zeppelin's motors. Two Masts Available. The airship accommodations here | also include two mooring masts, one of these is the high mast from which the Shenandoah broke loose in a storm in 1924, eventually to make her way back 1o the station partly disabled, only to break in two over Ohio a year later. Comdr. Charles E. Roendahl of the Los Angeles, a passenger aboard the Grat Zeppelin, survived the Shenan- doah disaster near Ava, Ohio, Septem- ber 4, 1925. As senior officer, he as- sumed charge at the disaster scene. The following March he became ex-| ecutive officer of the Los Angeles and | a month later relieved Capt. George W" Steele, jr., as commander. Capt. Steele was one of four Americans who made | the trip from Germany to Lakehurst! on the ZR-3. | Comdr. Rosendahl was a student aviator here in 1923 and rose rapidly. | His home is at Cleburne, Tex. Dr. Hugo Eckener, builder and com- mander of the Graf Zeppelin, is no! stranger at Lakehurst. for as com- mander of the ZR-3 he was one of the first to step from the control car on her arrival. WEATHER GROWS BETTER. Ship Making Between 75 and 85 Miles an Hour Early Today. NEW YORK, October 13 (#).—With her five 580-horsepower motors droning a steady song of power and speed, Graf Zeppelin, huge transatlantic liner, raced over the Atlantic today at between 75 and 85 miles an hour headed for Lake- hurst, N. J, via Bermuda. Advices of unfavorable weather to the north dictated that the airship pursue a circuitous course to the south. Hugo Eckener, commander and builder, hopes to land at the United States naval air station at Lakehurst at noon tomgyrow with his cargo of 20 ngers\#id mail from Friedrichs- fen, Germany, demonstrating that crossing the ocean by airship is no longer mere adventure but now is a commercial undertaking. Four years ago today Dr. Eckener saw the dawn as he approached the Island of Sao Miguel, the Azores, on the ZR-3, now the Los Angeles. At dawn this morning the Azores were well behind him as he directed the Graf Zeppelin, half again as large as the Los Angeles. Good Weather a Help. Good weather aided the airship in making up for time lost in buffeting headwinds over the Mediterranean after leaving Friedrichshafen, Germany, at 2 a.m. Eastern standard time, on Thurs- day. In swinging south to Madiera the dirigible entered a region of light variable winds which made passage easier. The dirigible escaped a disturb- ance north of the Azores by a course to the south along which favor- able trade winds might aid the 12- The hangar | THE _EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, = Jou.. heading in transatlantic flight.| —Associated Press Photo, | | Madeira, at 8:30 a.m. yesterday, 2,800 | miles over water lay ahead of the air- ship before Bermuda should be reached and then another 800 miles needed to be covered before the ship could be brought down at the Lakehurst air sta- tion. Message Is Picked Up. The last word from the airship yes- terday was picked up by the Chatham, Mass., station of the Radio Marine Cor- poration at 7 p.m. It read: “Three hundred and thirty miles west of Madeira. Altitude 1,400. Seventy-five miles per hour. Weather good. Heading | for Bermuda. Expect arrive Sunday continues. All well. ‘GRAF ZEPPELIN.” The time of sending was not given. An earlier message sent at 11 am., Eastern standard time, read: “Weather is warm and_Summerlike. Heading straight for Bermuda. If weather continues good we expect to ar- rive Sunday noon. Speed 85 miles per hour. Bag of mail dropped over Funchal, Madeira.” Advices from the Azores at 2 p.m. gave the position of the Graf Zeppelin as 37:48 north and 33:48 west, which would place her 276 miles west by south of Horta, the Azores. Passengers Are Airsick. One message picked up at the Azores said that the passengers, who include three Americans and a woman, were ex- ceedingly airsick. Lady Grace Drum- mond Hay, who hopes to be the first woman to cross the Atlantic by air from east to west, radioed her mother, Mrs. S. T. Lethbridge, in England, that she found the air voyage wonderfully interesting. The other passengers in- cluGe the commander of Dr. Eckener’s first transatlantic airship, Lieut. Comdr. Charles E. Rosendahl, U. 8. N. Reiner of Weehawken, N. J,, and Fred- erick Gilfillan, an American living in Switzerland. After the Graf Zeppelin headed over the Atlantic from Gibraltar reports of her steady progress came from several ships. The tanker Gymperic sighted her about 50 miles west of the Atlantic coast of Spanish Morocco at 2 a.m., and a few minutes later the steamship Virgilio saw her in the same locality. Four hours later the steamship Gloucester Castle saw the dirigible about 150 miles north- east of Madeira. The last advices yes- terday regarding a ship of the sea see- ing a sister of the air were from the steamship Euclid, which sighted the dirigible at 10:30 a.m. 60 miles west of Madeira headed west-northwest. NAVY SENDS REPORTS. noon, if weather Radios Weather Forecasts to Rosendahl Aboard Graf Zeppelin. The Navy ' Department announced today that it had compiled and dis- patched to Lieut. Comdr. Charles E. Rosendahl, . American naval officer aboard the Graf Zeppelin, weather re- ports at frequent intervals during the night and would continue to do so until the airship reached American The weather reports received from the ‘Weather Bureau along with those from WIng | ghores. . | naval sources and from ships in the I Lakehurst is reached by noon Sun- day the airship will have required 82! hours to complete the . transatlantic voyage. It is estimated that by taking a southerly route, the airship would have flown 5400 miles, some 4,000 of which will be over the Atlantic. After the craft passed Funchal, island of SPECIAL NOTICES. 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY bills contracted by any one other than my- self. LEWIS T. KNIGHT, 223 Beaton pl. ne. 19* ‘SPECIAL OCTOBER SALE OF CHOICE apples. Autumn Gold—Best Cider on Earth. n daily and Sunday untll January lst DER BARREL. Fred- IRATED_C] erick_Pike—Hour Out.” ‘THAT A SPE- of " th NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN cial meeting of the shareholders e under_ the charter nd tiie of e Ridws Wationdd" Bank of Wash ton, D. C.° | 8, ai 10| the purpose of voting on ing and confirming the d_into between the Board | Riggs, National Rank | . D._C. and the Board of tors of The Farmers and Mechanics’ National Bank of Washington, providing for a_consolidation of these two associations under the charter and title of - “The Ri National Bank of Washington. D. C." EORGE O. VASS, Vice President_and_Cashier. _ BEAUTIFY YOUR WALK OR GARDEN with white marble slabs, 10 in. by 20 in. 3 for si._Hechinger -Branches-3. ARE YOU MOVING ELSEWHERE? OUR transpoctation system Will serve you heiter. Large ieet of vans constantly operating be tween all Eastern_ cities. Call Main 9220. DAVIDSON_TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. FURNACES REPAIRED AND_ CLEANED; Teasonable prices. Call Col. 7317 day or night.AJAX ROOFING & HEATING CO._ I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY bills contracted by any one other than m: self. ~JAMES COURTNEY BRADY. 1415 Trinidad ave.me.___ _______ 13* APPLES AND PEARS AT ANDERSON'S OR- chard. Greenwood ave. near Carroll, Takoma Park. Md. Bring containers._ 13e THIS 1S TO NOTIFY OUR_ PATRONS, friends and the public that we have no agents and that nobody is authorized to solicit for the tatloring firm of Jack Bern- stein, Inc, 814 P st. n.w. except Jack Bernstein, bres., Louis E. Reed, treas., Julius Weinbers, secy. 5 o AFTER THIS DATE NOT RESPONSIBLE for any bills contracted by any one other than mysell. EDWARD C. CROGHAN, 125 10th st. n.e. APPLES, SWEET CIDER AT QUAINT ACRES Silver Spring and Colesville Pike. Only 5 miles_from the District 4 "I NEVER DISAPPOINT. BYRON S. ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY High grade, but not high priced. 512 '11th St. N.W. ROOFING—by Koons Siag Roofine. Tinning, Guttering. Repairs and Roof Painting. Thorough, sincere work always assured. We'll gladly estimate. Call us_up! 119 3rd Bt. S.W. Roofing Company WANTIED. To haul van loads of furniture to or from New York, Phila.. Boston, Richmond and points_south. IMITH'S TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. t North 3343 S 1313 You_Sf Fine and Original —printing is invariably asso- ciated with this Million-dollar printing plant. The National Capital Press 12101213 D St. N-W. _ Phone Main 650 MUSICAL INSTRUCTIO: Mrs. Isabel Garvin Shelley 1824 H St. N.W. TEACHER OF SING(‘ING N SIGHT READING 1. Primary and Adult Classes in Piano Inssruction & SRS Atlantic are summarized by Lieut. F. W. Reichelderfer, head of the Mete- orological Division of the Navy Depart- ment. The reports are being relayed by available stations on the Atlantic Coast to the dirigible. ESCAPED CONVICT SEEN IN ATLANTA Police Informed Fugitive Snlfieet- ed of Complicity in Robberies Was Recognized Twice. By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, Ga., October 13.—Roy Dickerson, who recently escaped from Kilby Prison, Montgomery, Ala., for the second time, and who is wanted here for alleged complicity in a series of rob- beries last week end during one of which E. H. Meek, grocery clerk, was mo wounded, was seen in Atlanta last Sun- day morning, and again yesterday, po- lice have learned. + 2 This information came from a man who said he had “played billiards with Dickerson in Mobile, Ala., years ago,” police said, refusing to further identify their informant. ‘The man told officers that he had entered into a brief conversation with the fugitive Sunday, while Dickerson sat in an automobile with a companion. Averring that he did not know until Wednesday that Dickerson was wanted by Atlanta authorities, the informant notified police that he had seen Dicker- | son again yesterday, this time near the | terminal station. | Detectives have expressed the belief | that the man who has been identified | as the man who killed Meek, is not in or | near Atlanta. | Veteran at Death’s Door Rushed Home on Special Train By the Associated Pres: NEW ORLEANS, October 13.— { | Frank Gilbert, 35-year-old World War veteran, yesterday probably took the last and most enjoyable train ride of his life. He was being borne home to his mother and child in Chicago in the care of his American comrades. They had found him dying in a hos- pital here from a lung infection and undertook to satisfy his one wish that he might die at home. ‘When the special train bearing the Board of Trade Post members pulled out of New Orleans, Gil- bert was aboard, so buoyed by the prospects of returning home the doctors believe he will survive the trip. “OIL HEATING AT ITS BEST” “ Get the facts about the Oil | O-Matic! How little it costs* to buy and to operate. ~Phone for our representative to call. OuomatiC OIL BURNER Ezclusive Washington Agents Domestic Service Corp. 1706 Connecticut Avenue Potomac 2018 i | . | dirigible in the hangar, but that as many Theaters Obser Minute of Prayer for Zeppelin Safety By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 13.—One minute of silent prayer for the safety and success of the Graf Zeppelin was observed by audi- ences and actors in virtually all Broadway theaters last night. A special service of prayer also was broadcast over radio station WOR on a wave length of 422.3 meters to permit it being picked up by the Zeppelin. NAVY WILL BAR PLANES WHILE DIRIGIBLE LANDS | Every Effort Being Made to Keep Fire Hazard for Airship at a Minimum. Assistant Secretary Warner of the Navy for Aeronautics announced yes- terday that no civilian airplanes would be permitted to land or take off from the naval air station at Lakehurst, N. J., when the German dirigible, the Graf Zeppelin, was preparing to land or whiie making her landing. He said that should any civilian plane land it would not be permitted to take off until the airship was in her hangar. It was not the intention, Secretary ‘Warner said, for the Navy to extend an invitation to the public to visit ths rsons as possible would be accom- :odtwd. He said that due to the fact the airship is filled with inflammable hydrogen every effort to prevent any mishap would be made. He said the “safety of the ship” was the first thing to be considered. FORMER MINISTER HELD ON MANN ACT CHARGE Woman’s Complaint Alleges He Performed Marriage Ceremony Himself Under Assumed Name. By the Associated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg., October 13.—Ar- thur C. Baer, former minister, was in jail here last night charged by the Gov- ernment with having violated the Mann act. His arrest and the filing of the formal charge followed ecomplaint by Irene Renois, whom he is said to have met in Milwaukee, Wis., where she was employed as a waltress. Baer's last charge as a pastor was in 1926, at Liv- ingston, Mont. Baer and Miss Renois are said to have traveled to Sioux Falls, S. Dak., where he is alleged to have obtained a license under the name of Ar- thur Clowe on June 30. Upon the woman’s insistent demand that they be married, Baer performed the ceremony himself, police said they learned, on July 11, at a Portland hotel. The mar- riage certificate is dated June 9, 1927, rts to cover a marriage at and purpol Pittsburgh, Pa. elizhinaty hearing for Baer has A prel been set for next Tuesday and he was remanded to jail in lieu of $2,500 bail. U. S. ATTACHE HONORED. Capt. T. W. Swett Decorated by Latvia and Lithuania. Capt. Trevor W. Swett, United States Infantry, who recently returned to the United States from service at Riga as military attache to Latvia and Lithuania, has been decorated by those governments with the third degree of the Order of the Grand Lithuanian Duke Gediminas and as a commander of the Latvian Order of the Three Stars. Both decorations have been received at_the State Department and will be held to await congressional authority for their delivery to Capt. Swett. it $300,000 Winnipeg Fire. WINNIPEG, Manitoba, October 13 (#).—A six-story building of the Do- minion Rubber Co., located in the heart of the wholesale district on Princess street, was destroyed by fire today, with a loss estimated at $300,000. Several adjoining buildings were damaged. w Whether you rent or whether you buy, You pay for the home you oceupy.” -Warren Investment Building 15thand K Since’ under Wardman management our stores and offices have rented fast but there are a number of de- sirable offices single and en suite for rent at a rate much lower per square foot than buildings of this type are being rented. Apply Rental Office in Lobby Main 2388 Inspect Our ' NEW HOME | 1220 13th St. N.W. LEETH BROS. DEMOCRATIC SHIFT | IN OKLAHOMA GIVES have held office since the State was ad- mitted to the Union, all are said to be | on the Smith band wagon. Johnston, the present Governcr, regarded as a | friend of the Klan, however, while speaking ostensibly for Smith, is doing | him little good, observers say. Indeed, they go so far as to say that he dis- tinctly is not aiding the Smith cause. Walton is in evidence as a_Smith sup- porter, and was on the Smith train when the Governor visited Oklahoma City and that, too, is no real help in Cil}cles where the anti-Smith sentiment exists. Address Held Disappointment. Gov. Smith’s address here in Okla- homa City was a disappointment to many of the Democrats. Whatever it's effect elsewhere, his attack on “bigotry™ in this State did not sit well. The Demo- crats would have rather had him make that speech in some other territory. They would rather have had him talk about - other issues and have had him lambast the Republican party and dis- cuss the ‘“scandals” of the Harding administration. The address left many of the voters sullent. Even Democratic supporters of Gov. Smith say that if the election had been held the day after his speech it would have gone against him by 30,000 to 40,000 votes. The Democrats complain bitterly about the so-called whispering against | their presidential candidate. They say that he is pictured as a drunkard, that | wild reports are circulated to the effect that if he is elected he will drag the | country into war, animated by a desire | to help the Catholics in other countries, and that the anti-Smith virus is being| inculcated even among the school chil- | dren. I heard a former member of the House tell how his own little niece came home with a report that she had been told at school Smith's election meant war. The Democrats complain, too, that the Republican campaign is a “gum shoe” campaign; that the Republicans are sending out woman agents for hosiery, corsets, lingerie, who tell the ‘women upon whom they call all manner of stories about Gov. Smith and urge the women to vote against him. Protestant Ministers Active. The Protestant ministers have been very active in their opposition to the election of Gov. Smith in this State. Many of them have urged his defeaf | from their pulpits and others have spoken at political meetings in various parts of the State. Most of them lay thelr opposition to Gov. Smith to his stand against the eighteenth amend- mers; and the Volstead act. They are | preaching an anti-Smith crusade, and it has not been without its effect. The Democrats themselves checked up on some 297 Protestant ministers and found | that all but 49 of them were opposing | the election of Smith. There are a great | many more Protestant ministers in ths | The Democratic organization has taken up the challenge. It is urging everywhere that it is un-American to oppose Gov. Smith because of his re- | ligion. It is fighting back vigorously and with some effect. Whatever the immediate effect of Gov. Smith's speech here on the voters, it has spurred the organization on, and helped to put life Apartments Available The Hig’hland “A Most Desirable Permanent Address” Conn. Ave. & Cal. St. One of Washington's exclusive Apartment Hotels offers ‘suites from 2 to 7 rooms, furnished and unfur- nished. Rentals Moderate Wnrflm-n Management North 1240 2101 Connecticut Avenue Apartments of Distinction in Washington’s most exclusive building Seven and nine rooms and three baths with enclosed porches. Each apartment has a servant’s room .and bath. Your Inspection Invited. H. L. RUST COMPANY 1001 15th St. N.W. D. C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1928, ! into & campaign Wwhich was languishing | on the part of the Democrats before the | governor came into the State, it is flld.’ | Religious Charges. | The organization has put out a pos- | ter which bears the caption: “Sec- | [lannn Poison Spreaders Exposed.” It | | charges the Republican party with fo- | | menting religious intolerance, assert- |ing that, in spite of denials, the source lof the sectarian slanders have been | | traced to the Republican party. The | | poster refers to the “whispering cam- | i paign” and asserts that “a strange‘ woman calls at homes to make known that if Smith is elected there will be | no free schools and free churches. | !Thls story is told to little children in | | Oklahoma City and elsewhere.” | |~ While the power of the Klan, as an | | organization, has materially declined in | | Oklahoma, Imperial Wizard Hiram |Evans is actively engaged, it is said,i |in trying to revive the organization here. He is sending a circular letteri linto_the State, using the candidacy | {of Gov. Smith as an argument for | building up again the Klan member- ship. Klansmen still hold several hun- dred offices under the State govern- ment. But they are keeping in the background, fearing, perhaps, to lose their places if they become too openly active. I was at a Democratic meet- ing here when a speaker declared that all office holders who are not support- ing Smith should be “turned out,” and the 'sentiment brought the greatest ap- plause of the meeting. It is clear that the Democrats feel they are being stabbed in the back by some of these office holders. Whispering Campaign. Not all the whispering campaign is against Smith in this State. Not by a jugfull. Democrats are doing their best to paint Mr. Hoover as pro-British, auti-German, etc. They are claiming he was baptized a Catholic. married a Catholic and was married by a Cathloic priest. And so the political war goes on. There is some attempt here and there to discuss economic issues in- volved in the campaign, waterpower, the tariff, the farm problem, but in the main the Democrats are engaged in defending Smith, asserting that a vote against him is regilious intolerance, and declaring that he would be unable to change the prohibition laws if elected and that he would enforce them far better than they have been enforced under Republican rule. The Democrats claim that labor generally will vote for Smith. They say there is 175000 Socialists in the State and the large numbers will sup- port Smith. However, this Socialist vote has in the past been cast for can- didates of its own, and this year Nor- man Thomas is their candidate for Bresident. La Follette received 41,000 votes in 1924 in Oklahoma, many of them Socialist votes. ~As in other States, the Democrats hope to corral much of the La Follette votes. Two' Other Votiug Groups. There are two other large groups of voters in the State who are being anxiously watched this year by both sides. One is the Indian vote and the other the negro vote. The fact that Senator Curtis of Kansas, the Repub- lican nominee for Vice President has In- dian blood in his veins is held to be a real aid to the Republicans. But some of the Democrats say that many of the members of the so-called Five Civilized Tribes will oppose the Republican ticket because Senator Curtis sponsored a bill which brought about the sale of their tribal lands, valued at hundreds . of millions of dollars. These Five Civiliz- ed Tribes the the Chicasaw, the Choctaw, the Creek, the Cherokee, and the Sem- inole tribes. They came to the old Indian Territory largely from Southern States, and have a traditional friend- ship for the South and Democracy, any- way, the Democrats insist. The other tribes, 26 in number, are inclined to support Curtis in large numbers. Evan Grocery Stores Churcl Drug Stores Schools Bus_ Lines Convenient to Street Cars Library Theaters Will Regers NEW HAVEN.—With this Zep- pelin 1,200 miles to the south of its true course and Al Smith, a Democratic can- didate, 800 miles south of his true course, and Hoo- ver going to New England, 100 miles mnorth of what should be his true course, it's a cinch, with such poor navi- gation all around, some of these are not going to reach their des- |day that under the direction of Dr. in Galveston on October 17 for re- { fueling and minor overhaul work. SETS UP TEST BASES. Naval Gravity Expedition Reports of Work on Run to Key West. The Naval Gravity Determination Ex- pedition, consisting of the submarine S-21 and Eagle boats Nos. 35 and 58 reported to the Navy Department to- F. A. Vening Meinesz it had established three gravity stations off the Atlantic coast during its run to Key West, Fla. The expedition left Key West late yesterday for Galveston via the Siggbee Deep in the western part of the Gulf of Mexico, where undersea soundings will be taken. The expedition will arrive ~ New Zealand is considering the addi- | tion of 800 miles to its 2,750 miles of subsidiary roads that have been de- | clared main highways. | B Venezuela Riot Rumored. WILLEMSTAD, Curacao, Dutch Wes! Indies, October 13 (#).—Reports have reached here of new anti-government demonstrations in Venezuela. The rumors had it that students staged a demonstration last week in Caracas, the capital, and that numerous arrests re- sulted. FOR SALE Nearly 90" on Eye St. Side and Rear Alley Priced at what adjoining property sold for L. W. GROOMES, 1416 F ARGONNE BEDROOM Rock Creck Park : Call On Us ' 16th Street and Columbia Road tination. But did you ever see as much ground covered and as many speeches made as these two vice presidential can- didates are mak- ing. It's out of all proportion to the position. One of them is going to get badly fooled. The one that is elected. e — among the Five Civilized Tribes, however, | there will be Republican votes, in all | likelihood. The Indian vote is placed at somewhere between 30,000 and 40,000. A great difficulty is to get this vote to the polls. The Indians have had the vote in Oklahoma ever since the State- hood bill was put through back in 1907. Large Colored Vote. The colored vote in this State is es- timated at 40,000, too. It has been Republican in the past. Today there are many Al Smith clubs among them. Two reasons are advanced for this swing to the Democratic candidate. The first is that they are siding with Gov. Smith against the Klan, the sec- ond is that many of the negroes are “wet” in sentiment. But Republican leaders profess the belief that old ties will hold them in line with the G. O. P. when election day rolls around. The anti-Smith organization is send- ing out thousands of samples of election ballots in an effort to instruct the anti- Smith Democrats in the gentle art of voting a split ballot. The anti-Smith Democrats are told just where to mark the ballots so they will vote for the Hoover electors and for such candi- dates as they desire for State office and for Congressman. Oklahoma has voted five times in presi- dential eleciions since it became a_State. Four times it has gone Democratic and once Republican. It went Republican in the Harding landslide of 1920 by about 28,000 votes. Normally, the past votes indicate, the Democratic majority in Oklahoma runs about 40,000. Presi- nt_Coolidge lost the State to John . Davis by less than 20,000 and in the same election La Follette polled 41,000 votes. La Follette had the So- cialist indorsement. Senator Curtis has made several campaign speeches in the State, where he is decidedly popular, and former Senator Robert L. Owen, Democrat, has taken the stump against Smith. The regular Democratic organization cannot say anything bad enough about Owen. It becomes almost inarticulate with rage when he is mentioned. The uviNg ROOM DINING H H g : H § H H H H E 5 H 5 5 s H = £ £ R00m H 15x17 16x17 13x17 Desirable Apartments Four rooms, kitchen and bath with southern exposure. Large, light. well arranged and newly decorated for each tenant, Semi-hotel service in_opera- tion 24 hours daily, with resi- dent manager constantly available. Main 8100 . Franklin 764-5-6 N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N A 7777770717777 1770717777077 0177 277 72772070775 | | @ 0| c————|o[c————]on|——a|——] (I INSPECT TONIGHT OR SUNDAY You Can Buy One of These Homes for the Rent You Are Now Paying 11 Sold—1 Left =$100 CASH Monthly Payments 16th STREET NORTHWEST 1204 Hemlock St. N.W. Drive out 16th St. past Walter Reed Hospital to Alaska Ave. and Hemlock St. N.W. and turn to right. ALL-NIGHT PARKING Need Not Bother You—Run Your Car Into a Warm Electric-Lighted Garage—Walk Upstairs Into Your Kitchen ‘1311 H STNW EEE@EEEE o] lole—oal—ja]———[a|——a|——] 00O OO Just Finished! A Charming Dutch Colonial Attractive Design—Large Rooms— 7 Rooms—2 Baths—on Plot 70x161 COME OUT TOMORROW! Drive out 16th St. to Alaska Ave.. to H —turni o inska Ave; to Hemlock St.—turning left on Cbreuringe’s Some Builders Have you chosen your bayshore site at GREENBURY POINT F NOT, you'll find it a pleasant drive this Sunday and you'll unquestionably be inter- ested in seeing the progress made at this se- lect water-front colony. With the eighteen-hole golf course well under construction and the yacht club rapidly taking shape, it is possible to visual- ize the many out-door pleasures that await POINT owners and their fortunate guests this coming Spring and Summer. Prices are reason- able and associations are of the best. Drive Down Sunday— \W - H WEST CO c;a‘:“!‘ f)itn nzll’i‘“!h"‘""&"l lo EXCLUSIVE AGENTS aoh - o e ey 1519 K Street N.W. 2 nt through the c¢ity and across the main Severn River bridne, turning Phone Main 9900 right at GREENBURY POINT sign. T 4800 Block Connecticut Ave. CONNECTICUT AVE. and DAVENPORT ST. 1 room, kitchen dnd bath t 3 rooms, kitc;en and bath $45 to $82.50 FRIGIDAIRE—GARAGE Apply Office, Apt. 104, 3511 Davenport St. Cleve. 1912 Wardman Management anummumnmnmumnm«mmmuumnmnmm«mmmflu A FEW MORE Desirable Apartments are Available at 2800 ONTARIO ROAD (Overlooking the Park) Large, spacious, outside rooms. Five Rooms and Bath AND Six Rooms and 2 Baths Most Modern Apartment as Yet Erected Equipped With Frigidaire and Newest Conveniences BLISS PROPERTIES Adams 8464 or Lincoln 1860 35 B Street N.W. Ample closet space The Chastleton Hotel Conveniently Located, 16th St. at R Wardman management. Delightful two-room, kitchen and bath unfur- nished apartments; large screened sleeping porches. Available for im- mediate occupancy, $55 per month and upward. Three rooms, kitchen and bath, unfurnished, $75 per month.