Evening Star Newspaper, January 13, 1929, Page 85

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. REAL ESTATE o $8 0 SEMI DLT-‘\C) 1ED. “ructm new seml-detached brick home. bri ful vith incjosed 3 ast orch. covered front poren. clnlhes 't with mirtor door, Cedar closet. hi floors _throughout, built-in tub T-plece built-in” ice box. hot-wate ‘elect automatic heater, very 510 ASPEN ST. 1 :n w dbllx“m hme kl{érhnlnno;r has home., Fics 1'...'. z rb.w".'.,:m host 3 Beetodt ey’ Foony i Saif, Lafee lo eurien: ~ qull“mk cars. Wfll n‘l lvr $13,500. W. P. IRVIN, M in 3908, . 1410 O !t N.W. um b 39 after-6 P. EGLU‘\{BI RD.N.W., $4‘.00 Georgla ave. 6-room house on large % Opportunity to set good property at C. D. SAGER, Realtor. 93¢ 14th 8t N.W. Main_38. MT, PLEASANT. $9.750. Here fs another unusuallz good in_a modern b aidly located on street, within two ‘schibol and convenient: to line. The house and; - in- addhion, in- t and sleeping porch- ., electric- lights and oak 738 "1s" oy peautital condition; having been newly redecorated. and is equipped with metal weather strip- pingy scieens and awnings. Easy home buy * denice. Splenc residentia. of & pubilic 1path hus -nd Closed mun m:tn st N w. CHEVY 5310-5330 BROAD BRANCH ROAD. 10,500 New six-room and bath homes now being completed. This is just the home you have been looking for. Beautifully situated, about two blocks east of Conn. ave, Tight ‘at the entrance of Rock Creek Patk and 15 min- utes' ride from downtown. Your fnspection will convince you that these homes are well constructed in all re- spects. Lot 40x120 ft. on hard-surfaced Large rooms. tiled bath with shower, oak floors and stairs, porches front and back, garage. Go out Conn. ave. to Nebraska and tum right_to Broad Branch road. JACOBSON BROS,, NERS-BUILDERS. ow 1302 L St Wis. 2916, Masin 2126 UNUSUAL BARGAIN. " ‘ALMOST NEW 6-ROOM _BRICK cts);zshs%n HOUSE, 1201 TRINIDAD AVE. N.E. . Open for Inspection Any Time. Well_constructed 6-room and bath tapestry brick home with built-in garage, large front porch, screened sleeping and breakfast porches, hard- wood floors, etc. There is an extra ABK and gas range on second floor to provide for 2-apt. arrangement. “fhf Wome wad buill by B. H. 33 is comparatively new. and alley are both paved. See Any Broker or COOLEY BROS,, Room 1003, 1103 Vt. Ave. National 9240 F’l‘ACHED 'BRICK. e s, ntiy, h.-wh., Trim and hardwood floors through- . hall and linen closets, large, Not a dark spot in house; larse hrubs: guaranteed construction. paved street, $750 ea. 50 per mo. Bus line to center THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €. JANUARY 13, 1929—PART 6. SALE—HOUSES. 5-ROOM BUNGALOW. AT ST o My loo Tont hade ree Boltimbin: 0130 eveninas. Potomun 639475, WHY PAY RENT? SOUTHEAST, BRAND-NEW BRICK HOME, $100.00 cash, $50.00 per month. 5 rooms bath and built-in garage. ARTHUR LEWEY, 606, National 4254. HTS. Suite 1103 Vermont Ave. “CHILLUM C $10,250. Conveniently located suburban communits with all city improvements: a seven-room modern, detached exceptional large lot. fronting.'on Rittenhouse at. and extending back -to- avenue. Any reasonably terms accepted. CHAS. D. Matn_36 Chevy Chase Club. Beautiful Colonial. Located just one-half square from Chevy Chase Club. in: one of the most _ exclusive blocks 1 by many fine old trees lnl & pro- lulwn of planting. The ho s of the center-entrance-hall nlln obrn- ing to either side a very inviting first-floor - plan, - including an _im- mense living_room. colonial fireplace and mantel, wide concrete side porch. beautiful dining room. butler's pantry, kitchen and a_maid's room. The second floor has 5 bedrooms. 2 sleeping porches and 2 beautiful baths. Other features include a large attic, rear stairway, servant's bath and two-car garage. Owner has pur- chased in-town property and has .t rrducfd the price of this fine pelow. comparative prop- (tx lh this n!lthbor 10 HEDGES & MIDDLETON, Tnc,, 503. 1412 Eve St. N. DISTRICT HEIGHT Brand-new detached home of 8 lnree gind tiled batn.’ hardwood foors. lights, large lot and garage. Owner must sell at once. You will save ‘at least $1.500 {f'you act quickly. Call me for appointment to ‘inspect. ot cur. D::.’Cth 5t Ae, Bouth of Catholic iversity. Bl suud-r JomN £, ish Phons. 1700 Eye St. Ad. 5260. llent location on wids :venut "¢ room h-‘tfu.?-.f;l . lights, 2-car brick Tnspect and low, terms to suit, vou. uf & JAMES, INC.. 1226 14th St. N.W. North _962. New Homc. ust Complcted r o make & auick sale, 8. 3lolly detached borie of Co- ‘porches: of the rtheast, overlooking Rh.d! Isla: Ir l Tooms, tile b‘thv ‘C ( 'b o{ the luflu\l con- Ilfllcfl(fll tom 1 wan! i b e 45 Jake vou to see Tome n'-ru time that guits you it v Riain’ 4846, On New Hampshire Ave. Semi-Detached Brick. $10,950, - - e lin_vou, direct apnd alis " dkep rear . There are 8 ex- large | fooms. 4 sep- rooms. aiso a large screened- . tile “bath with d_shower, wide con- ith ‘ornamental \ \IlI)I )I l 1413 Eve St”N.W. _Reallor LOOKING, FOR A BARGA $7,950--5350 CASH. 560 M HLY. le KENNEDY SI NW. 3 , built-in b oo hot water hekts electtic I nroughous, real’ open, firepla # built-m ‘garage. 3 porcl X'BI'IKK of '“!h‘fl cars; na-r the new Fort Elocum Pack. T you to m *OPEN SUNDAY ALL DAY. WAPLE & JAMES, INC, uu 14th 8 arth 062, sunday ani Evenines. Ge el TO COLORED. $350 cash B - Jlghts: of p.’r bt Call clu eland. 1340-3. SEE THESE HOMES TODAY. Sample House. 812 Sheridan Bt. Open, Heated and Lighted Daily. 8 BUILT, 6 SOLD. Better get yours' NOW. omorrow may be too lite, Tndse | homes - represent REAL VALUE and must be seen o be ap- preciated. + They are SEMI-DETACHED. H Lot 25x162. NW. 8 LARGE ROOMS AND- BATH. Real open fireplace. Finest electric fixtures, Electric refrigeration. Garage on. rear of lat. Mahy other featurss of mert. -cm free . auto service. rvn obligation. ARTHUR LEWEY, Buite 608, 1103 Vermont Ave. National 4384. | “DOUGLASS SELECTED” Chevy Chase Home Buys. 6400 GEORGIA STREET. New colontal corner detached brick with long frontage on two streets in This exclusive section. Four bed- Tooms, two tile baths, open fireplace, Tre sun-pAriof. detached brick ga. " “Offered for immediate sale at 317300, Drive east from Conn. on Bhepherd to Georgia at. and 3905 OLIVER STREET. Bituated near Chevy Chase Circle, one block west of Connecticut ave, ‘A fine coloniai rge bedrooms. {wo Plied baths and Javatory, breakfast porch, large side porch,” every mod- ern facility. AN N 3628 VAN NESS ST. A distinctive design. stone and tim- bered stucco house With large covered Veranda, charmingly situated on & Jarge, well iandscaped site. The. in- Yerior is eaually pleastg and practi- Ghlly arranged with open fireplace: anels, oo ully earippad tied e, Drive east on Van Ness o biocks to home from Conn. OPEN -ALL: DAY. J E. DOUGLASS CO., Mnlmn-nulmeu _Met. 5678, o8 188 “new home ready | ARTHUR LEWEY, 1103 Vt. Ave, Suite 606. National 4254. NEW, SEMI-DETACHED. 8 Lar"e Rooms and Pantry. PENNA. AV! S.E. ‘This bnuul‘ul home, et wide (lot 5)(]2(1' containiig hudwwd floors through- in tub, ower, inclosed breakfast es, ironing board. 2-car Eatage: Baved Streels and other fentires. *1f vou are interested in buying a real home at Lt o }l surprise you. inspect lhl! ely ¥ can be arranged for an apart- EA FREEMAN. Quner and Builder. r_See_Your Broker. .\ REAIL. HOME FOR _SOME ONE. OWNER AND BUILDER —offers. this new beautiful home of brick and, stucco. reduced from $17,500 to 513,500, 1 . bath. showcr, porch ‘and Bitiated at 4123 Military n.w., 3 blocks west of Con- T SEE THIS IMMEDIATELY. ()\\\I R ON PREMIS v a5t necticut ave. PEASANTS FIND TOMBS OF OLD ROMAN GIANTS By the Associated Press. ROME, January 12—Peasants work- ing in a fleld at Monterotondo, near Rome, discovered the ruins of a sar- cophagus, which may turn out to be a relic of a village established for freed slaves in the reign of Nero. The ancient tomb, built of local travertine stone, contained the .skeleton of a glant. Nearby were two smaller tombs with skeletons, the size of whose jawbones, feet and hands indicated that Ilhe persons buried therein also must have been of unusual size. Archeologists recalled that besides the village of former slaves, Pliny wrote of a.villa of Seneca, which existed in'the same locality. , Bargain. $300 CASH, 362.50 PER’ MONTH, Fledant: detached oor modern "home with ke ot beaut/iuny landscaped: one sauare to scnools. cars. etc. OWwner 'must sell and will aceept the low sum ol $9,500. { SHOWALTER TY CO. 3 Ve e ez B V. 5463. ONLY : $12,000. DETACHED BRICK. Beautiful Colonial-type tapestry brick { home containing seven larze. well arranged rooms and inclosed sun parior. also brick: | modern” tiled bath 'with built-in _tub_and shower, hot-water heat. atiractive electrical fixtures., hardwood floors and trim through- out. “Built-in heated garage. Large lot. Beautiful landscape. g & restricted North: west section, overlooking a Government ark. ~ This price represents considerable loss "to ‘the owner. Call Adams 8217 for details. . 5 ¢ an Buy Th for $40 a Mo. ‘That's considerably less than the rent would be. and every monthiv Pavment. carries ‘with it a material reduction in the principal. besides all the carrving charges. It om Colonial brick home e: rull) designed for voung couplas Just starting to housekeeping. Hflh plenty of room and every modern convenience. 1750 L St. N.E Just off Bladensburg Boulevard. There are two bedrooms. tile bath, comblete kitchen, hardwood floors, large closets, electricity. factory of heating plants, nial fron porch. Price 1s a Bargain. AND THE TERMS ARE QNLY MONT] | s Home most satis- big Colo~ Open for' inspection every day and esgning. including Sunday : ine car leaving 15th 15th and K f res north or H: \Rl\\ A. KITE, Inc., 1019 15th ST. N.W. MAIN 4816, NR. 16th & H S, Ten rooms. two baths, hot-water heat, elec., double gar.; side loz; elegant home or for investment. AUSTIN M TWO REAL VALUES. $7,350. 537 Quincy St. N.-W. From 9 am. to 9 pm T CLEVELAND PARK- Semi-Detached Brick. 2 Baths— $11,750. Owner leaving the city is extremely anxious to dispose of this attractive semi-detached brick residence n. ave. Ti conveniences. arrenged Tooms generous side lot an rage. Ar1 Shtstanding home Duy that. s wel worth T jmmediate considetation. Favo HEDGES & MIDDL ETON, Inc., 1412 Eve St. N.W. _ Reditors. Fr. 8503. $5,950.00—N.W. modern. _semi-de. tached 3 3 wnhe-. hulli-in‘sarase ll!" 1 'l k. l\n iton st. v "cnufina o383, " N.E. BUNGALOW. . Bargains For Colored. fll!ll’d .!I. between 11th and Xllh—!lx r and b, heWw.h. elec, g8 ™ slx rooms and bath. lz\fl cash, $55 m COOPER. ll h S! M. 1332, WILL SACRIFICE U'\'USL’AL RESIDENCE. Magnificent limestone corner, buildine in the ediate vicinity ~of achuse renuend Dupont Slrele. havine: about fooms and 7 baths. Commanding a vaius: ‘ble corner with a front; bout 200 feet and wnulnlnr over. ‘square feet Taeally Oniy :sfn:sn AUSTIN M AD! ‘\ MS 1875. $/ 450, A BARGAIN. Certain conditions make it necessary for owner to sacrifice this beautiful home, Colo: style. transporiation. Georgla_2248_for nm.ner information. Read This Advertisement, You are overlooking an opportunity if you don’t Inspect this (IIIH’-M! home in Wash- ington’s best and most convenient residen- tial section: very high location, 1319 Kennedy St. N.W. 7 large rooms (4 bedrooms), also glass- inclosed back porehi i pertect condition throughout: colonial froat porch, beautiful rear yard, garage. Property now vacant. el low fog imnsatete ge carss 15 it OPEN SUNDAY ALL - WAPLE: & JAMES, 1\( 032 1226 14th St Nort __Sunday and I lvenlnn Cleveland 4944. 6-room brick, front and rear porches: 150-ft." lot: home recently redecorated; thoroughly modern: new x00f; paved street and alley; flowers, shrubbery, etc. A real'buy on rentai erms. OPEN FOR INSPECTION, $8,450. 1513 Neal St. N.E. ‘Well_constructed new -brick home with 7 large rooms (4 bedrooms), wide front porch, screened b: t th with show rage: kitchen and hafl An white ‘enamel ld(h Bani iul on An unusual buy at the low Bflll lll |INSPECT ANY TIME. Go 2 blocks north of 15th and H sts. n.e. on Biadensburg rd. and turn lett on Nea! st. W. H. HOJ N, OR ANY BROKER. Phone Main 2670, “FOR COLORE H SL Cars to 24th St ‘N.E. KINGMAN PARK. $6.175. QUISTANDING COLORED: DEVELOP- MENT HEO! BRICK. THOROUGHLY e BEVE HEFINED SURROUNDINGS, Near extensive- Government patk siready for, insuring future value; to be 5t nd" Anished like: hom d ~ $9,000; large, well proportioned roo porches, brick columns, cancrete step: ble rear porches, hardws D. SAGER, Main 36, WANTED TO BUY—HOUSES. WILL PAY ALL gm:;lc zx;ofi ha“o 8 1 ]fifiiul sonal i EARLE wrsr MANSON. 1103 \7:3’.'.0':&"{5: Frank. es._Cleve. 5054, ok VANTED- Yo EVT nly cash. Call or wrna st_n.w._ Pranklin L™ PAY CAS| Preferaoly m M P WE DES| 'ro PUR.CHA!I: A cash. several houses, stores an rtment, white or colored: aiso many lients 'to nuu chase pr. terms, REAL’ WaLTE TY Cf 1103 Vo e, Maln 4321 Eve. Bot. «n — SALE OR RENHOUSES. FOR COLORED__NEW 5-ROOM BUNGALOW, Do, st Hiecteic. Ment: Tazge ard: Bhone Hyattsyille' 438, Write 232 School st., Brent- EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE, WITH runummz wan! Phone Hyattsville 412-W. 15 FOR _COLORED -GLENDALE. Will you rent a 4 or 5 room bungaiow for $25 to $30 per month with the privilege of OLD HOUSES; Room 305, 307" 150 mn R | story Il the S8, 1938, thero sathers in the studio 3f Fadley Brattare o sioun consist: inE of his aweetheart, father, mother and sweetheart; Carol. Gould, and Relief. means of an’ {nvention whic B B oA S ley peojcets on Lo & gauze curtain the beginning of # murder which occurred two years previously, with seemingly real persons speak- their natural voices. Radley t what they have en shows them a famous ?flvrn for & movie: actress Who was um drowned a week before. While Brainard is explaining his invention, there is a com- motign in the hall: the Japaness valer opens the door and a gaunt. ‘bearded and razged man stageers into the room. He does not know “who, but he r-lh Phyliis by name. &'rd dubs mysterious siganker Vair Whitkie, ‘and e following e Same ETOup| Bresent fe projects ulx‘; ‘grevlnux evening's happenings in the s (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) INSTALLMENT VIL T'S the explanation.of all that €¢| “men have called ghosts,” went on Radley, blowing smoke at the white ceiling. “Events live in the éther just as they do in man's memory. No detail, no mat- ter how fleeting, is ever lost. Men said they had seen old deeds of vio- lence reacted, ‘haunting’ their original localities—and nobody believed the ghostly stories. Their stories were true. Men have seen what. they. thought to be the figures of the dead return ap- parently alive, and nobody believed their descriptions—until now. Under the right conditions, past action does return. I have learned how to create the right conditions, that's all.” He paused and looked at them with that querying smile that had so stirred Phyllis last night. It fired her resent- ment again instantly, But she quelled the impulse to speak. “But—but,” cried Miss Brainard eagerly, “you say these things, these events, these records—are—remain in she locality where the event occurred. How do you get them here?” 1 didn't say they remain where they occurred. I said they are recorded where they occur. I have learned to transport them.” “In those little bomb .things you showed us?” asked Carol. “In those little bomb things—some- times. To be as brief as I can about it, I began by speculating that, if radio sound can be made more perfectly audible by lmpll(y(n;bedevlces, things of low visibility could forced up into highly visible degrees by some means of concentration. The theory of vi- bration, more or less popularly under- stood, suggested first that there must be a method of reproduclng events recorded in the ether by—" “Getting down to their wave lengths!” supplied Carol irrepressibly. “Very well,” said Brainard. “I be- lieve that if I could find the means to capture the etheric record of an event I could devise a means of trans- porting it. But the primary capture was the thing. ‘First catch your event!” I spent two or three years experimenting —and then suddenly stumbled upon the thing I wanted. It was condensation I needed, conden- sation of the ether, with only a sec- ondary use of vibrations, So—I con- densed.” “Condensed what?” asked Mr. Nor- man, almost sharply, I condensed the air,” said Brainard. “You will say at once that people have been condensing air since the first days of power drilling, and discovered noth- ing they caught but air. And you doubtless know that there is such a thing as liquid air, alr compressed under a very high pressure, and lique- fled and frozen by ludden expansion into vacuum-protected ve “Of course we know wmr. liquid air is, Rad,” said John. “But liquid air isn't liquid ether.” “Quite so. But liquid air, by some law I do not pretend to explain, or even to state, contains what the ether is caid to perpetuate. If it does not contain liquid ether it contains the liquid event that occurred in the ether at the point of condensation and was retained at that point, no matter how much the mere air may have moved about.” “Liquid events! Liquid events!"” cried Coral. “Oh, Radley, this. is the greatest press stuff ever! A gorgeous story to fill a Sunday science section! But don't ask us to believe it!" “T have no notion of asking you to, my child,” Brainard replied. “You are merely trying not to believe it now.” “But, Rad!” exclaimed John. “Do you mean to say that you can—Iiquid- ize—produce—reproduce anything that has_happened—anywhere?" “How do you get it here?” demanded Miss Brainard “But if {t’s it, exhibit it, run it for us?” Carol. "Perhars frozen, how do you show asked it I jufit g0 on with my answer all in time,” Brainard told them. "Wlthoul discuss- ing the whys and wherefores, which I am frank to_admit I can’t make clear to myself, I have found out that air, condensed from & given locality, invariably contains a record of some event that has occurred in that locality. In frozen state the liquid air can be transported. By evaporating under car- tain conditions and to just the right density, the ‘liquid event,’ as you call it, becomes visible in the escaping es— and t only visible, but audible, too, o buying same? If interested call at the office or’ phone. Detached, Morrison st —8 rool next to cor. ms, bath, Ia; 1| Apply CARROLL. 918 G st. . OWNER LEAVING ] 6-room, 2-story brick dwell- ing, partly furnished if desired, with attic, cellar; concrete 2-car garage; glazed ,and screened slecpmp{ porch; hot-water heat; servant’s room, metal weather stripping; Burrows ' screens: awnings. $11,500. Phone Col. 1385, 1890 Ontario pl ¥ (,HLVY CHASE, MD. 8-room brick house, ?‘H large lot. one squgre nnl‘lh of Chevy' Chase Club, ‘west, of Con Owner leaving city. Wis. 3850-J. NEAR 17th & QUE STS. N.W. ~“Twa-story brick home of 9 rooms and 2 baths with mor improvements: locate o e tran, ‘T condition: gpace for garage: owner will sacrifice for '$8.500, which {5 much less than the assessed value. Call Mm;“‘ms ,TER_A. BROWN, 1400 H. CORNER BUNGALOW ; IN Brookland; 5 rooms, bath, garage; complete]y fumlshed will sacri- fice for $6,750. North 4980-J. CHEVY CHASE, D. ch g Detached Home. Just Off Conn. Ave. $10,000. Located just one-half sauare from Conn. ave.. this side of Ch Circle, this entirely detache home 'is undoubtedly one of ‘the low- est priced detached homes that has in this exclusive 'sub- mod and " equippe Screens dlnd unings. SIx splendidly o attract! emlil-ble tome S & MIDDLI 'M), .Tnc Renltors. __ yard, garage; fir: Phice towbn torms vou can 'M\rrd lad 3 APLE & JAMES, INC.. 1226 um St N.W. 1138 cox,uus A Rl 3 lovely rooms. 3 clo. sieeping beautiful oreh, eat: Mied® baihs. elass-in- | ra big sard, paved sl _@vmc PACKING & s’romm:. LUTELY PIREPRC R Honsehold Gnndsh PXIII'\ 3 T k( of rAoln Pltklfll lXIfl !!h{un":: .v;‘!xl‘l":l:l one _Main 6 ANTS & STORAGE co. 020-922 E st. Mavin ik " There is o Qi what ou save. W A Phone 460 the furniture, not the ference. Try It see ooks " Furnitu: ny.umue Md. & STORAGE 616 EVE ST.N.W. + MAIN 2010 Y — ——— 7 BTONG-DISTANCE MOVING Loads_or part loads to and from Baltimore, = Philadelphia. New York, Boston, Norfolk, Pittshurgh and points en route. DAVIDSOR THIT I SE NW CO., 1806 TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. Main 9220 to 9250 ~,4kil as you have reason to know! “But, Radley,” Phyllis found herself saying. drawn into speech in spite of herself, “why aren't events confused? There must have been hundreds of happenings—yes, thousands—in some localities!” “Exactly,” he returned, “But there are thousands—or at least very many— broadcast messages in our atmosphere "all the time, yet your radlo receiving set picks out one. That's where I use the law of vibration. I do control the selection of the event I want by setting up vibrations of the wave lengths of— or tuned to—that event.” “That requires a long stretch of the imagination, boy,” Mr., Norman com- mented. “You haven't begun to strefch your imagination yet, sir,” smiled Brainard. “Walt till you really begin to think what all this means.” “Then,” cried Coral, “you condensed the -air on the beach out here last night; and froze Rip in it! Was that what we saw?"” “You saw a scene that ‘occurred on the beach out here last night, as it was recorded in the ether, caught in liquid air that was condensed under vlbr-flom timed to get that scene” lpllined Radley carefully. “If I talk day 1 won't be able to make it lnuch clearer to you without telling you just how I set up the vibrations and how I combine condensation with timing. Those are my secrets.” “Did you know you were being con- densed, Rip?” asked Carol, turning sud- denly to the gentleman in the loung- wasn't,”._interruy ing robe. d Brainard. I made the condensal e ing.” this morn- | For & moment there was complete silence. Then Van Winkle laughed. “History while you wait!” he said. “I've had some strain put upon my credulity in the last 24 hours, but this is as hard to believe as something I know isn't sol” “‘But, Radley,” insisted -Phyllis,- “as you say, men have been making liquid air for 50 years. Why has nobody eyer discovered any hint of this?" “Nobody ever applied any tests for such a thing. Nobody ever experis mented with lights, with different densities, But remember, needles and wax were materials in mother's work- basket for centuries befare anybody ever thought of making phonograph records with them, The idea must pre- cede the experiment.” “But fl—oh we might as well accept what you but if you are condens- ing, freeflnl lnd transporting records, as you say, how can you prevent dis- tortion, confusion, upsetting, reversal-- l Llhmupult‘g t;nl ll.k:" that? d!vn when condense Jou might say.”. ‘Norman " 43480 Vg s | ard slowly, THE WCARMN—By Gardner Hunting (Copyright, 1928, by Public Ledger) BB 0N took out.a fresh cigar and settled back in his chair, "Distortion?” repeated Radley. “%¥hy should my event distort? Why dcesnt life distort? There are laws—like gravitation—that keep life right side up and preserve its proportions. You can't destroy that equilibrium or those proportions.” “T should think you would if any- thing could!" sajd Van Winkle. “But how do you limit your field?> How do you know how much to condense? How do you know when you get a complete record? .Carol fired at him swiftly. “It's rather technical,” replied Brain- “and it's a new technique, for which we have no terms. There is a unity in action that men have always recognized dramatically, but which they never realized was based upon a funda- mental physical law.” “Do you, a scientist, call any physical law. fundamental?” queried Mr. Nor- man. “How do you know you've reached the fundamental?” “Any law that works without variance is related to the fundamental,” returned Brainard impatiently. Then he took up his interrupted thought. “The unity of action is evidenced in the handling of any ‘liquid event' by a property I discovered, which is only comparable to tensile strength in-steel, say. Do you know what tensile strength is, Carol?” “Yes, it’s what makes anything hard to pull apart.” “Well, tensile strength—a cohesion inherent in the unity of the event—is what holds it together and causes it all to condense when any part of it is condensed. Like a fish, you can't cateh it at all without catching the whole of it. Does that sound too difficult? As to completeness, however, no event is ever complete in life, despite its unity. ‘There’s a pandox in that, but it's a paradox nobody ever seems to mind a theater. At the same time it's the explanation of why nobody is ever quite satisfied with drama, or fiction, or pic- tures, or any other parody of lite.” There seemed to Pyhllis to be a fallacy as well as a paradox here, But her mind was leaping ahead and run- ning into chaos again. “But it's going to create all sorts of abnormal con- ditlons, this invention of yours, Radley,” she said, “intolerable conditions!” “Oh, I don't know,” he answered. ‘Why' 2% ‘But Rad,”. interrupted Carol, “you say that when you release a scene it all escapes, no mater whether we see it all or not. Do you lose scenes like that? Can we look only once at any one scene?” Brainard smiled. “You can look as many times as you like at anything you like. I have only to set up my vibrator and condenser again and take the scene once more into captivity.” “Hah! Does it run away home when you let go of it—and then just wail around to be captured again?” asked ohn. Brainard did not laugh with the rest. “I can't make any positive statement about that,” he said slowly. “But what I think is that I ‘get only a copy, as I may say, of the original record each time I compress the air of its locality. I think the original im- ression in the ether remains just where t was made. " It is a sort of master record, from which the mere air takes its ever-repeated impressions, like photographic prints from a necnuve or like fmp" from & form of type in a printing press.” “Ho!" exclaimed Aunt Relief. Rad- ley, I think your brains are becoming addled. This is ridiculously plausible! But. you don't expect sane people Lo swallow it all, do you? I admit that you make some pretty convincing pic- ture: but if you could show us history, as you pretend, you'd—turn the world upside down!” p‘Mlybe shall,” returned Brainard quietly. “But look here, Mr. Bralmrd ” sald the Van Winkle again. “I wish you'd explain to me another thing. I don't know much about liquid air, but I know that very little of what you con- dense liquefies and that the nitrogen in it always evaporates faster than the oxygen. I should think part of. your liquid scene would get away from you while you condense or while you are waiting for the other part to mell down.” S “Ho—yes!"” crled Carol. “Your lead- ing man might be on doing his bit while the star was still in her dressing room!" “I'm indifferent to what happens to the nitrogen,” returned Brainard. “My actors stick to the oxyun—uka all sensible living creatures.” He smiled at Caroi. “And what I liquefy always contains my scene; maybe that's why 1t liquefies!” N?n Norman_rose from his chair. “well,” he said, “I've had all I can dl:est for a while, Radley. I'm going i You mak Mrs. Norman also rose. “You e me dreadfully uneasy, . Radley,” she told Rim. “Somehow it doesn’t seem— natural—or right. I1f you aren't fooling us! It's so fantastic—almost. farcical— in its dealing with—" 9 “I'm not fooling you, and it's all right, Mrs. Norman,” Brainard as- sured her. “And isn't every unfamiliar thing just as fantastic to us at first? ‘Think, for instance, that iron freezes at some 3,300 above zero, and air boils at 350 below. Those are well known, every- day facts to &cience, but they seem weird to ordinary folk.” Phyllis lingered behind as the others ‘moved toward the door. Radley turned toward her. “T thought you'd be glad, Phyl, that T've succeeded,” he said quickly, his eyes smoldering with anger. “Radley!” protested the girl. “Of course I'm glad for anything good that comes to you! But—if you see any ef- fect this has on me, you see that I'm frightened by it. That is, I'm fright- ened in the moments when I believe all you say. Then, like the others, I think you. are. flhylng an elaborate Jjoke on us. not a_joke.” *It certainly is not a joke to me to have it come between you and me as it has come lately—is coming now. Is that frank enough?” “It's not what I'm doing that is com- ing between you and me, Phyllis. It's the same thing that women always feel: jealousy of what interferes wxh monopoly of the men they love.” “Perhaps you're joking, Radley. We'll overlook that for the moment. The feeling ‘that is uppermost in me just now is that you are tampering with something' that is inconceivably | dangerous, if what you tell me is true. It's & sort of upsetting, defying of nat- ural laws.” “Nobody upsets of defles natural laws, Phyl, rest assured of that. I'm merely using some just discovered. “Well, we needn't quibble over exact statements—I mean that there is something terrible, something that— oh, what shall 1 say? Men have mis- used natural laws!"” g “We have to learn to use 'em. “But if you have—what you think you have, Rldle(, do you think you to use it without huring any- 9, “You have just been explaining to me mnt you are the first to be hurt,” he sal "You don't seem to care very much.‘ “Of ‘course T do—it the hurt is real. --: Phyllis studied him. He had never talked to her like this before. “This| s already changing you,” she said. nd I think I care a great deal more bout what 1t will do to you than whnt it is doing to me.” “Dq you? Well, Jet me face my own roblem. You.don't half realize what is is going to do for both of us.’ hat is 1t?” she asked. 1+ Year i Do{&unrezl ":uxlglenn with ris- Ing exc! en ave 8 wizard's WARA-AD, Aladdin’s lamp—that 4 gas ing to command the obedience of the world?” “That's what frightens me!” “I shall have not only a monopoly of a public necessity—entertainment, the greatest of all human necessities— but far more than that, I shall hold the world by something as inseparable from it as its shadow—its pas And still more,, I shall hold—-" he stopped, and laughed, and that repellent ques- tioning look again overspread his face —*I shall hold a weighty club, Phyl— over anybody who opposes me!” She stepped back from him invol- untarily. The passion that burned in his eyes was a thing utterly alien to the man she had loved. “Do you know, Radley,” she an- swered him, “that you are not the man you were? I've seen the sense of power growing in you; sometimes I've thrilled to it. But you are like—you are like a man who knows he is mis- using something, who refuses to admit it, even to himself, yet is instinctively defending and_justifying himself.” “Go to it,” he said, his lip curling. “I shall suffer plenty of criticism, I suppose—and censure naturally begins at_home.” “You are censuring yourself!” “Look here! What do you see in this that scares you? I knew you'd be startled, but I didn't think it was go- ing to pu! you in a panic. What is! wrong in it, if I do corner the show | market? Men have cornered things before.” The impulse was strong to turn away from him and end discussion with him till he should come to himself. He was anything but the lovable fellow he had been. But that was the fact. that held her. “I can't array my thoughf about it in- any_kind of order, Radley,” she said. “I am overwhelmed the moment I let my imagination begin to review the possibilities—and then utter skep- ticism is the only thing that comes; to help me out!” | He laughed briefly. Then he seemed | to think he could reassure her. “Well, there's” noth\ng in it that's going to hurt you,” he assured her. “It” will hurt me if it hurts you!” she cried. But the appeal did not touch him. “I can take care of myself,” he re- turned. She looked at him .an instant. He added nothing. She turned.and went out, and he did not follow her. But in the hall, Brainard's myste- tious guest waylaid her. His face was full of concern that seemed to be pri- marily for her. “You see what it means, too, Phyl- lis!” he exclaimed, his eyes studying! hers. Terror caught again at her heart. “What does it mean?” she cried. (Continued in Tumorrow's Star.) The Stella Clayton W. C. T. U. met at the home of the President, Mrs. Clayton, at 315 Thirteenth street north- ecast, December 18. The meeting was opened by singing “Joy to the World,” after which the devotions were led by Mrs. Nelson, who read the Christmas story from St. Luke. The minutes of the previous meeting were approved. ‘Three new members were added—Mrs. John Copenhaver, Mrs. George Lums- den and Mrs, Fannie Sharp. Mrs. Sharp, 85 years of age, and a regular attendant, is the mother of the trea urer,” Mrs. Biglow. The treasurer re- ported & balance on hand of $3.92. The Stella Clayton Loyal Temperance Legion, W. C. T. U, held its chrmmu party December 26 at 3 pm. in the Roscdale M. E. Church. After the opening exercises, the program was in- formal, the children reciting Christ- mas pieces. Ice cream and cake was served. Takoma Park Union held its Decem- ber meeting at the home of Mrs. Olson, Flower avenue, Dr. Kress, the president, presiding. The meeting was opened with the singing of several songs from the W. C. T. U. song book. Mrs. Chase con- ducted the devotional exercises, her subject being “Faith.” ‘The president anounced the quarterly convention January 16 at Eastern Presbyterian Church also the “victory day program” and banquet to be held on the same date. A meeting, at which Dr. Clinfon Howard of the Anti-Saloon League will speak, was announced for Community H-u Tekoms Park, January 16 at pm. By request, several members of the union volunteered to attend police court hearings of liquor cases the last Monday in January. Five captains were appointed to take charge of the “hold fast” and “go for- ward" programs which are being con- ducted by the District W. C. T. U. Takoma hopes to make a good showing. Mrs. Adamson, director of soldiers and sailors, reported two Christmas boxes had been sent to two Coast Guard stations in North Carolina. Sympathy for Mrs. Cooksie on the death of her husband was expressed by sending a bouquet of flowers by the flower mission director, Mrs. Guerier. Several appropriations were- made by request. Mrs, Meade and her two young daughters rendered selections on-piano, violin and cello. The Capitol Hill fon met Wednes- day at Waugh church. The meeting was opened by singing “It Is There to Stay.” The scripture lesson was read by Mrs. Singleton and prayer was of- fered by Mrs. Welch. “A New Year Wish" from the na- tlonal president was read by Mrs. Bix- er, A report was received from Mrs. Win- del showing how the union’s donation to Child Welfare was expended. The local president, Mrs, Bixler, gave an_executive report. Annual_donations were made to the Frances E. Willard, World Work and Lillian M. Stevens funds. An exhibit of the first records of Capitol Hill Union was made by the secretary, Mrs. Muffley. This union was organized May 1, 1887. A reading, “Dad Lost,” was given by Mrs, Fernsner. A visitor, Mrs. Florence Harrington | of Chautauqua, New York, spoke of “Why I Wear the White Ribbon."” and also told of the Frances E. Willard Home in Chautauqua. Prescription dispensation of lquor was reviewed by Mrs. William Muffley. Mrs. Dorsey, a former member, who has been living in Virginia, was wel- comed back. Cleveland Park Union will meet to- morrow at 2 p.m., at the home of Mrs. William Peters, 3400 Macomb street. The Emma Sanford Shelton Union met Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Mar- garet W. Shidy, 935 Shepherd street. The devotional was led by Mrs. Shidy, after the devotional she read a New poem. Prohibition and the best way of en- forcing it, was discussed by Mrs. Win- klehaus. Mrs. R. B_Lank told of Christmas gilts to 70 Walter Reed boys which consisted of portfolios. Mrs. Hannah Overstreet and Mrs Margaret W. snuy _were Joint hostesses. Chapin Union was enhrulned Janu- ary 2 at a luncheon by Mrs. T. A. Wil- | liams, at her home on Belmont street, with Miss Peekam assisting hostess. 1 Succceding the luhcheon, the meet- ing was called tor order by the presi- | dent, Mrs. Keys, and the business ses- slon ned_ with. devotional services condu bf'wm Wrig! , followed by of the.Jminutes of the pre- Army. The report of Brig. Gen. George B. Simonds, assistant chief of staff ‘and president of the United States Infantry Association, indicates that the recent. canvass of that association is over- whelmingly in favor of the passage of non-controversial legislation and is conspicuous for its silence on the =ub- ject of revision of the promotion list. On the subject of revision, which has reached the delicate point of discus- sion i the service, Gen. Simonds said “with regard to the revision of the pro- motion list many of the communica- tions express views for or against it. Among those favoring it different meth- ods are proposed. Many report only on the four principles, saying nothing abuot promotion-list revision. “The Infantry Council is confirmed in its view that there is so great a diversity of opinion in the service on this question that it is impossible for it to present anything like a composite view of an overwhelming majority of those affected.” ‘There are approximately 3,700 com- missioned officers in the -Infantry branch of the service, and more than 50 per cent of the Infantry officers have sent in' their views to the associa- tion. A summary of the promotion analysis _indicates the following: "(a) About 96 per cent in favor of promo- tion based on length of service; (b) about 94 per cent in favor of the ad- vancement of officers at the prescribed periods without rigid regard to the ous grades; (c) first, about 98 per cent in favor of the retirement of lieutenant colonels of 26 years' service in the grade of colonel, second, about 99 per cent in favor of voluntary retirement under the conditions there ‘stated. third, about 99 per cent in favor of the removal of the restrictions on the activities of retired officers, and (d) about 98 per cent opposed to reduction of the “hump” by enforced separations. There has been some opposition to the advancement of officers at the pre- scribed periods without rigid regard to the numbers that may result in the various grades, on the grounds that the application of this principle will result in top-heavy field grades and that con- siderable limitation on those grades is necessary. The view of Maj. Gen. Charles P. Summerall, chief of staff, on the promotion situation as set forth to Congress on April 21, 1928, in favor of promotion according to length of service, with the proposed restriction upon numbers in the grades of lieu- tenant colonel ard colonel, does not appear to have been changed. He evi- dently shares, or at least he does not depart from, the views expressed re- peatedly by both . Secretary of War Davis and his predecessor, Mr. Weeks, in opposition to the revision of the promotion list, although that is im- i plied rather than explicitly stated by Gen. Summerall. The latest remarks of the chief of staff on this question are as follows: “I believe the view of the officers of the Army in general is that we should have legislation embracing non-cotro- versial features. The revision of the promotion list is controversial. Much less than half of te World War officers want a revision, and’ the others do not want a revision. If we give promotion to officers according to length -of serv- ice it will minimize the effect of dis- parity due to muuh'm on the promotion list because -they will all go up from one grade together and attain their -ddmonll rank and some increase of pay.” ‘The War Department has accepted | the invitation of the Irish Free State to send the Army riding team to the government horse show that will be held at Dublin, Ireland, next August, llowing officers have been and the fol selected to compose the American team: numbers that may result in the vari- | ‘ ArmyandNavyNews Maj. Harry D.. Chamberlin and Capt. William B. Bradford, both Cavairy, and Lieut. Edwin Y. Argo, F. A In all probabilitv, the team will participate in Z4%er Luropean horse shows.and it will return to the United States in_time to take part in the new York Nationst Horse Show next November. Navy. In order that officers stationed on the Pacific Coast who will underso the post-graduaie course of instruction at the Naval Academy beginning aboul June 26, may have plen'y of time to send their families to the east coast before the fleet sails for the southern cruise, orders were issued by the Navy Department this week to more than 30 officers. Other officers will be ordered to take this course of instruction. Those who were ordered this week to take this post-graduate work are: Lieuts. Frederick S. Conner, Hallock G. Davis, Malcolm A. Deans, Clifton E. Denny, William H. Ferguson, Stephen R. Hall, John S. Harper, John H. Leppert, Ruthven E. Libby, Woodson V. Michaux, George E. Twinning and Charles. R. ‘Woodson. Lieuts, (J. G.) Arleigh A. Burke, Harry Burris, Charles C. Comp. Shirley Y. Cutler, Harold R. Demarest, Edward C. Forsyth, Edward" R.. Gardner, Joseph H. Garvin, Robert W. Haase, Lee R. Herring, James B. Hogle, Emory P. Hylant, Willlam J. McCafferty, Albert C. Murdaugh, Harold E. Parker, Thomas J. Raftery, Thomas C. Ragan, Max Schreiner, Herbert P. Sheldon, Douglas P. Stickley and Thomas H. Templeton. The retirement of Capt. Robert Hen= derson, lately in _command of the re- celving ship at Boston, Mass., to Re- come cffective March 12, will Tesult in the promotion of the following officers, if vacancies do not occur in the mean- time' to_advance their dates of promo- tion: Comdr. Benjamin Dutton, Jr.; Lieut. Comdr. Charles M. Cooke, jr., Lieut. Ward P. Davis and Lieut. (J. G.) G. R. Berner, jr.; Capt. Willam 8. McClintic, on duty in the Bureau of Naval Operations, has been designated as an aid on the staff of the grand marshal of the inaugural parade. Lieut. Comdr. Anton B. Anderson, who has been on duty on the U. S. 8. Mervige, will come to duty in the Bureau of Engineering. Lieut. Comdr. Harold E. Snow, gunnery officer of the U. S.-SB. New York, has been assigned to duty at the Washington Navy Yard. Lieut. Comdr. Frank H. Luckel, Asiatic com- munications officer, has been assigned to_duty in the naval communications office, Navy Department. The following - officers, all .com- manders, will"be assigned to the next course of instruction ‘at the' Naval War College: William A. Glassford, Robert A. Theobold, Frank A. Vraisted, Frank J. Fletcher, Edwin A. Wolleson and George W. Stmpson. Beginning March 28, the following junior line officers of the Navy will undergo aviation instruction at the naval air station, Pensacola, Fla. They are: "Lieuts. Robert L. Clmpbell lnd Richard F. Stout, and Bailey, Upton S. Brady, Bloomfleld M. Cornell, Lawrence H. Daspit, Howell J. Dyson, John Eldridge, jr., George K. Efiufi Jull"hrxx‘ g‘uarm Chnler P. erbe; Tner,” Charles son, Clmun! Maddox, Loren A. Maar,i Joseph N. Muyrphy, Hilford C. Owen, Paul H. . Ernest_J. Sabol, ‘Wayne T. Stukey, John S. Thach, Rok- ert C. Winters, Oddle W. Andtrlou Jesse Blackwell, James E. Cohn, Theo- dore O.. Dahl, Paul R. Drouilhet, Ed- ward H. Eckelmeyer, John L. Ewing, jr., Lester L. Geiger, Thomas J. Hamilton, Miles H. Hobbard, Jack S. Holtwick, Carl J. Pfingstag, Welton: D. mawm: George B. H. Stallings, Phillip ;une. Rlclufll W and Herbert c‘ vious meeting by the assistant secre- tary, Mrs. Wagne ‘The guests o( hanor were: Mrs. N. M. Pollack, and Mrs. George A. Ross, president and treasurer of the Districy W. C. T. U, who spoke, Mrs. Pollack telling of her "attendance at the National Convention of the W. C. T. U. held in Boston in Freemont Temple. Mrs. Ross spoke of the observance by. an all-day m¢ in’ Eastern Presby.. terlan church of the ninth anniversary of the adoption of the Eighteenth amendment, at which prominent lpelk ers will stress the desire of the W. C. that this meeting be made an tnsmnnoml one. The anniversary ob- servance will close with a Victory dAY banquet in the Hotel Roosevelt, 7 p. with the national president, Mrs. E! | Boole, present, and addresses by several prominent speakers, including Gale H. g‘(filker. author of the Stalker-Jones A rising vote of thanks was given Mrs. Pollack and Mrs. Ross for their entertaining talks. The new_directory of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union of the District of Columbia for 1020 is com- pleted and copies are in the hands of the officers and members of the 24 unions in Washington. Mrs. N. M. Pollock, District of Colum- bia president, has named the following members to serve on the courtesy com- mittee during the day meeting to be yheld in Eastern Pruhvlcrhn Church \ Wednesday: Mrs. S, W. Morris, Mrs. Charles Windle, Mrs. P. W. Keyes, Mrs. J. B. Kincer, Mrs. Warren Hadley, Mrs. Clyde H. Filley. ‘The pages will be Mrs. Carl Giles, Mrs. Horace Hampton and Mrs. M. D. Guerrier. During the morning session Mrs. James Alexander McDowell, national Legion, will give an address, as will Miss May Bell Harper, director of interna- tional relations department of the na- tional W. C. T. U. Mrs. T. T. Moore of North Capitol Union will léad the noon- tide prayer service, It is expected that many members of Congress from both the Senate and the House, with their wives, will attend the banquet to be gl\'en in Hotel Roosevelt the night of January 16 in honor of the Victory day celebration, which is being observed in all parts of the United States. The District of Columbia will have for its guest of honor Mrs. Ella A. Boole, national president of the W. C. T. U, whose headquarters are in Evanston, Il ‘There will be several other inent man and woman speakers to help cele- brate the ninth birthday anniversary of national prohibition. Floyd Williams, the singer, accompa- nied at_the pfno by Mrs. Floyd Wil liams, daughter of Attorney and Mrs. Irwin B, Linton, will sing. D. Robert Edwards, director of orchestra and vio- lin music in the junior department of the public schools, will give a violin solo. Banquet reservs from Mrs, George A. Ross, street, phone Columbia 4120. North Star Union neid its ‘mulry meeting at the home of Mrs. O. George, 7608 Alaska avenue. Mrs. E. ! Norwood presided. Mrs. P. 8. Browne read from the Epistle of James and led in prayer. wing. the reports. of standing committees attention was called the “Victory A January 16, including an -dn in Eastern Presbyterian Church and quet in Hotel Roosevelt at 7 p.m. n was also mentioned that the Cause and Cure for War Conference will be held at the Washington Hotel next week. Mrs. Charlés Riordon reported ha‘; :gst :H:I nll.;'klles had been deliv- €ere ie_hospital at Fourtee) a) Unsh&r streets for Christmas ll'vh m’ Mrs. Norwood reported that a hm hld been sent by the union te Walter Reed Hospital. It was, urged that members of this union meet at 10 a.m. tomorrow | at_the District Police Court to- att | sessions there in which violations of ph;;lrtbluon lclvlnwul be tried. s, P, introduced Miss Lorna W. Smith, Juvenlle Court_worker for the P!den of Churches,- who S merer gave & goupof, SN, president of the Ladles’ Union Veteran | dent, ghu “Minute Waltz, N Brinier gave s reading. S0 B Menelaus. "’A social hour followed, n which Mrs. George and her assistants served refreshments. THRE FflUND DEAD ~IN GAS FILLED ROG’I Hm and Two Women Believed to Have Perished New Year Eve. Police Investigating. By the Associated Press. January 12.—The bodies of two women and a man, be- lieved to have been dead since New Year eve, were found yesterday in & gas-filled apartment on the top floor of a house in the midtown section. An employe of a gas compal pairing a gas stove in a vacant apart- ment next to that of Miss Mamie Clark, 50, which was. the only cther apartment on the top floor, detected the odor of gu He calied a patrolman and' they roke into the apartment. They found the bodies of Miss Clark, Miss Nora O’Donnell, 40, who lived with her,.and Joseph Brendel, 38, all of New York. Three burners were open on the gas range in the kitchen and.two burners were open on.a.chandelier il the bsd- room. * Occupants of ‘the “house, none of whom had noticed the odor of gas, said they had not seen or heard the two ny, re- - | women since -New Year eve, when a ‘nny was held in the apartment. Po- lice were undecided whether the gas jets were opened: purposely or by ncct- nt. PO vale SIS ALLEGED OBSCENE BOOK IS SEIZED IN NEW YORK 800 Copies of “Well of ionellness," by Radcliffe Hall, Confiscated by Police. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 12.—Specula~ tion in literary circles as to the’attitude authorities here would take taward “The Well of Loneliness." a novel by Miss Radcliffe Hall, which was sup- pressed in England as obscene, ended yesterday when 800 copies of the sixth edition wete seized at the offices of the American g’bmhan vici-Friede. Donald Friede of the publishing firm said last night that John S. Sumner, sec- retary of the Society for the Suppres- slon of Vice, entered the office with four policemen and made the seizure on a warrant signed by Chief Mmzlstrl William McAcdoe. All copies of the bool at a department. wore also were ‘con- fiscated, he saii Fr!ede said that Sumner bought a copy of the novel a month ago and was told by the publishers they were ready to appear at any time in a test case, but that Sumner preferred, after wait- ing & month, to act without warning. :l‘erl,nnc on-the case will be held Jan- -HITS FARM RELIEF PLAN. _luilvly President Warns Against Reducing Freight Rates. OMAHA, Nebr, January 12 (#).— James E. Gorman, president of the Chicago, Rock mnnd & Pacific Rail- road, sounded a warning last M that should freight rates be redus ve farm relief, uluuroadxtnuuu e ma:“ vméumr {‘;oc h‘:‘lkfl‘l} iptcy.” He was est. of honor at a Greater Omaha Association dinner. " ‘Farm _relief,” ‘Mr. Gorman c:enmt be brought about b7 a lrelg:i reduction, as the railro NELV on the mvenuu nwn - inf m IanM '.hnhrm would benefit,” even

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