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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1929. Sure Rel FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkes.Sold Everywhera T College Eyes Fxamined DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist one Main 7 Phy 21 409-410 MeLachlen Bidg. 10th and G Sts. N.W. FLAT TIRE? FRANKLIN 764 Formerly Main 500 LEETH BROS. Open Daily 8 AM.-11 PM TOWN HOUSE OF UNUSUAL DISTINCTION S L L for the family promi- nent in social and official life who re- quire a home that has, in addition to correct facilities for entertaining, an air of charm and indi- viduality that re- flects the good taste and position of the owner ... Qccupying one of the few re- maining sites in the fashionable Kalo- rama Heights sec- tion, this splendid home boasts an en- vironment second to none in the Nation's Capital. House is of brick construction with stone trim, ful- ly detached—of out- standing architece tural merit in both design and interior arrangement. Eleven rooms, five baths, first floor lavatory, back stairway, oil burner, garage for two cars . . . The price is considerably under any residence of similar character in this_exclusive section. For further information call Potomac 1372 on premises SPECIAL NOTICES. ‘THE SPRINGER SANITARIUM (DR. N. A. Sfirm[zr- Mgr.)—Drink and drug diseases. (Near Towson.) Lutherville, Md. Phone Towson 996 or Franklin 915, 2 ‘TO MEMBERS OF HUGUENOT 8O- ciety_of Washington, District of Columbia, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware—A meet- f your society will be held AKMtohe ne ers cordially invi y_order of the ex- ccutive committee. H. LATANE LEWIS, President. __ L TR A SR S RS OF BRICKLAYERS UNION, are reauested o be present Friday, 8, at 7:30, 423 G st. n.w. T TN _BY ORDER OF UNION. _ [ WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS congracted by anybody other than myself. ROMAN BISHOP, 604 Minnesota ave. n.e. 8% ARE YOU MOVING ELSEWHERE? OUR transportation system will serve you beiter. Large fieet of vans constantly operating be. tween ail ‘Eastern cities. Call Main 9230, DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. Planned and Executed —with fine discrimination and skill. That's N. C. P. Print- The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D St. N.W. _Phone Main 650. R-O-O-F-S Send for us when the Toof goes Wrong. No. 1, March * | of day.” b | persistent opposition to any reform.” § | the detailed thoroughness of his pres- | overviolent, using the word “malad- | ministration” /| phrases. | the fact that he is a stockholder in, as | Senator McKellar put it, “62 great cor- :_ this point, Senator Reed of Pennsyl- 2| not an officer of any corporation.” The 3| of Mr. Mellon is that about two years * | by the Treasury, according to the critics, & |t the future than to the past, has to &|As it is put, “The United States has {|any country. How come?” ;| past has been as wise as Mr. Mellon’s ;| Probably the direct subject of this & teriticism is the Federal Reserve Board. MELLON BELIEVED GUARDEDBY VOTES to Endanger Position, Writer Holds. BY MARK SULLIVAN. The opposition to Mr. Mellon remain- { ing in the Treasury is not enough to en- | danger him. If there should be a roll ¢ | call, the number of votes against con- firming Mr. Mellon readily might be as | little @s 10 out of the 96 Senators. | | The disposition not to interfere with | Mr. Mellon is increased by the common i | understanding that his remaining is in | | the nature of an honor for a compara- [ tively short time. The leading Repub- | lican newspapers in Mr. Mellon's State, | the Philadelphia Ledger, has stated that “he will retire within a year.” The newspaper allusions say Mr. Mellon's motive is one of understandable pride, that he wishes to complete his career by serving under three Presidents. 1In that case, as the Ledger puts it, he will have “equaled the length of serv- ice of another Pennsylvanian, Albert ! Gallatin, Secretary of #ge Treasury un- der Presidents Jefferson and Madiso! A natural reason for anticipation that Mr. Mellon's tenure will be compara- tively brief, is his age, which will be 75 on March 24. Hardly any man of that | age has ever been appointed initially to any cabinet post, especially to so ai duous a one as the Treasury has be- come. Vote Shows Trend of Feeling. The disposition not to interfere with | Mr. Mellon's continuing is overwhelm- ing. In the Senate last week, two of the principal criticisms of Mr. Mellon's administration were brought up by the two leading senatorial critics of him, | McKellar of Tennessee and Couzens of Michigan. In the end there was a vote which stated very roughly, was on the question of requiring a change in Treas- ury methods, which change is opposed by Mr. Mellon. The vote was only 16 Senators in favor of the change and 66 against it. . The net of the judgment of the im- partial is that, taken as a whole, Mr. Mellen's administration of the Treasury | deserves high approval. This view is| takcn by many who admit some of the criticisms. The criticisms of Mr. Mellon’s mcthod that were aired in the Senate last week began with the allegation by Senator McKellar that $3,500,000,000 of tax refunds have been made chiefly in {large sums and to large corporations without adequate review or adeguate publicity. McKellar argued that there should be “cpen hearings, where the claimants may come with their coun- sel and * * * where the Government may pass upon the claims in the light Senator Couzens charged that Mr. Mellon has practiced “long and Couzens Waxes Vehement. Senator Ccuzens, largely because of has in large part a con- cntation, At times he is perhaps vincing effect. and even stronger From all quarters there has come into the criticisms of Mr. Mellon porations.” Some of these corporations are very large, and in some Mr. Mellon is the most important stockholder. On vania has said, in Mr. Mellon's defense, that the latter is “not a director and old charge that Mr. Mellon had for many years an interest in a distillery was brought up again last week, to- gether with an explanation of the cir- cumstances by Senator Reed of Penn- sylvania. A further criticism sometimes made ago, due to lack of sufficient vigilance seriously improper conditions arose in several joint stock land banks in the West, resulting in several receiverships and the loss of large sums. A final criticism, looking rather more do with the present state of credit. more money than any other country, but has almost the highest interest 1{;!&5 of e nuendo meant to be implied is that this condition should not exist if the admin- istration of the country’s finances in the friends devotedly insist it has been. The question is raised what is and what ought to be Mr. Mellon’s relation to the Federal Reserve Board? In any event, the price of credit and the distri- bution of credit is certain to be a large question in the near future. LINDBERGH IS ENJOYING OBSCURITY IN MEXICO| Newspaper Men, Busy With Revolt| News, Keep Eyes on Flyer and His Fiancee, MEXICO CITY, March 6 (#).—Col. Charles A. Lindbergh is enjoying the relative obscurity into which the revolu- tion has thrown him. Since the beginning of the rebellion Sunday newspaper men here have been too busy with news of the revolt to do much more than keep & wary eye on him and his fiancee, Miss Anne Morrow. While the revolt has given him a breathing spell, he is known to be im- patient to get back to the United States. Rail communication with the States is cut off, while at Valbuena Field, it is sald, repairs on his airplane are still proceeding. Opposition Not Strong Enough | [ : | Many Already ~ Prominently| Known in Society Circles of U. S. Capital. SEVEN NOW ARE IN CIT Mrs. Stimson, Wife of Newl Secretary of State, to Ar- rive in Few Wzeks. Scven women of unusual grace and | charm, many of whom already are prominently known in the official social circles of the Capital have taken up! their duties as cabinet hostesses, joining Mrs. James J. Davis, the only cablnet" hostess remaining over in the Hoover | cabinet from the Coolidge administra- | tion. An eighth, Mrs. Henry Lewis Stim- | weeks hence, when her husband will | take over the reins of the State De- partment from Secretary Frank B.| Kellogg. Mr. Kellogg is remaining over in the Capital until Mr. Stimson ar- rives to take office, and, of course, the necessary entertainment for the State Department head will be undertaken by Mrs. Kellogg. | The new members of the cabinet | hostess circle are Mrs. William DeWitt | Mitchell, wife of the new Attorney | General; Mrs. Arthur M. Hyde, wife of | the new Secretary of Agriculture; Mrs. | Ray Lyman Wilbur, wife of the new Secretary of the Interior; Mrs. Walte Folger Brown, wife of the new Post: master General; Mrs. James William | Good, wife of the new Secretary ufi’ War; Mrs. Charles Francis Adams, wife of the new head of the Navy Depart- ment; Mrs. Robert Patterson Lamont, wife of the Commerce Department Sec- | retary, and Mrs. Stimson. Mr. Mellon has had no official hostes: :i;-llce the marriage of his daughtes sa. Mrs. Henry Lewis Stimson. Although Mrs. Stimson was not pres- ent at the stirring events of inauguration day, she was frequently recalled by many | who knew her. It is exactly 16 years since the Secretary of War (during the last two years of the Taft administra- tion) left Washington with his wife, but they have come so often during these intervening years that they arc well known in the official and resident set. Gov. Stimson and his wife spent many weeks in the Capital during the war period, for the Secretary of State after joining the reserves in the first flurry of preparedness in 1915, became an assistant judge-advocate in the Army, later a lieutenant colonel in the 306th Regiment and saw service in France. Mrs. Stimson was meantime prominent in Red Cross and other ac- tivities and was often in Washington consulting and aiding the large con- tingent resident from New York City. It was on an auspicious occasion, June 19, 1911, that Washington first met the gracious lady who is soon to society. President and Mrs. Taft were celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of their wedding and the wife of the Secretary of War was in the line of cabinet aides for the first time. Several thousand guests were present, and when the last passed before the distinguished celebrants, but two out of the 10 ladies who began the reception were present at | the end; Mrs. James S. Sherman, wife of the Vice President, and Mrs. Stimson. Happily rules have changed and only at the diplomatic reception will Mrs. Stim- son share with the First Lady the fa- tigue of these prolonged handshakings. Gov. and Mrs. Stimson in their. pri- vate affairs follow the simplest line and for many years it was their habit to spend their vacation horseback, fol- lowing the trails in Northern New York, Michigan and Wisconsin. ‘When the Secretary of State chosen by the new President gets to Washing- ton, he and Mrs. Stimson will find that the horse has been greatly restored to favor, for their grief and astonishment was often expressed when they arrived in the Capital in 1911 and found that the horse had gone out of fashion. | President Taft’s habit of using motor cars and Mrs. Taft's predilection of the same conveyance had caused horse- back riding to decline sharply, consid- ering it§ universal vogue during the Roosevelt regime. th Stimsons are inveterate riders, take*their morning canter and keep their string of favorite mounts at their country place in West- chester County. During their two years’ residence here from 1911 to 1913, Mr, and Mrs. Stimson lived at 1108 Six- teenth street, but they retained their New York City home and their retreat in the country. It is cons‘dered likely that they will maintain both establish- ments during their present sojourn. M;s. Stimson, before her marriage in 1890, was Miss Mabel Wellington White, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. White of New Haven, Conn. The former was a distinguished lawyer of his region and an exceedingly well educated and cultured gentleman. His daughter was educated entirely under his supervision, attending school near the family home in the first stages and then having private teachers until she had completed her studies. She is the type of the conservative New Englander with whom the Capital is so familiar; intellectual, well read, devoted to her husband and home end scrupulous in fulfilling every duty, yet little concerned with the various feminine movements which have made such a stir in the world. ‘With a well established social back- und and many years of experience exalted places, Mrs. Stimson will be- come the premier lady in Mrs. Hoover's boudoir cabinet under the happiest auspices. Mrs. Willlam DeWitt Mitchell. ‘Mrs. Mitchell has been in Washington 1925, when her husband play so important a role in international | - 2 a8 MRS. HENRY L. STIMSON. son, will arrive in the Capital a few | | years in Washington and are at present living at 84 Kalorama circle. Mrs. James William Good. ‘The Secretary of War and Mrs. Good have been living in Washington more or less regularly since 1921, when the for- mer resigned from Congress to practice law in Chicago. But he was soon as- signed to the Capital and established a home on Fifteenth street. Mrs. Good was, like her husband, a student at Coe College at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, her na- tive town, as it is her husband's. The marriage occurred soon after their grad- | uation, when the young bridegroom, | after finishing his law course in the | University of Michigan, hung out his| shingle and incidentally made a vigor- ous and successful ‘campaign to become | city attorney. He soon forged his way | to the front rank of good lawyers, and though many years younger, one of his rival lawyers in Cedar Rapids was the retléglg‘ Senator from Missouri, James . Reed, Mrs. Good is well known and much liked in Washington. She was an active member of the Congressional Club and of the Towa fety and has maintained her interest both since she became only an honorary member in the former. The Secretary of War and Mrs. Good have two sons—James Williams, jr., and Robert Edmund. - Mrs. Good was Miss Lucy Deacon and her marriage took place in her home in 1894, Mrs. Walter Folger Brown. Mrs. Brown, wife of the former As- sistant Secretary of Commerce, has lived at the Mayflower in Washington for the past three years, and she is an- other evidence of the fact that the feminine contingent of the new cabinet circle will be on terms of the utmost cordiality with the mistress of the White House. The new Postmaster General was very close to President Hoover in the Department of Com- merce, and it was popularly rumored that he was his choice as the next Sec- retary of that important section. Mrs. Brown belongs to a well known family of Cincinnati and was Miss Katherine Hafer. She is musical and bookish and has been an accepted member of the little cabinet group, standing out as @ gracious and accomplished hostess. Mrs. Charles Francis Adams. All those who have kept abreast of the times in yachting activities know of the new Secretary of the Navy and of his wife, who was Miss Frances Lover- ing of Taunton, Mass. When Mr. Adams was the skipper of the Resolute during those famous international tilts with Sir Thomas Lipton .his lady pre- sided with consummate grace over the social events of the stressful times, The home of Mr. and Mrs. Adams at 177 Gommonwealth avenue, Boston, has probably centered more -diverse social activity than any other in the ecity. The two sons are Charles Francis, jr., who will live in Washington with his parents, and Fanueil, who married Mrs. Suzanne Cleaver Root in 1927 and lives in Minot, Mass. Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur, The Secretary of the Interior, Dr. wilbur, supplies the medical element lacking since Dr. Hubert Work resigned from the cabinet last Summer. He is as distinguished a medico as he is a pedagogue, and his repute is almost evenly divided between the two voca- tlons. “As first lady of one of the busiest ~educational centers in the country. Mrs, Wilbur comes to Wash- ington” well prepared for her duties as hostess. She was Miss Marguerite May Blake of San Francisco, and she comes of a family well identified with the heal- MRS. ARTHUR M. HYDE. MRS. JAMES J. DAVIS. | | MRS. ROBERT PATTERSON LAMO! WIVES OF NEW CABINET MEMBERS, WOMEN OF UNUSUAL GRACE AND CHRAM, ARE JOINING MRS. JAMES J. DAVIS AS OFFICIAL HOSTESSES TO TAKE PLACES IN WASHINGTON'S SOCIAL LIFE MRS. WILLIAM D. MITCHELL. MRS. RAY LYMAN WILBUR. —Harris-Ewing Photos. ing art which her husband - follows and with other professional activ- ities - of California’'s leading city. There are three sons in this Wil- bur fmaily, all of whom will be visitors on occasions—Ray Lyman, jr.; Blake Colburn and Dwight Locke. The two daughters, Jessica and Lois, have been married for several years and reside in Palo Alto, the former as Mrs. James Ely and the latter as Mrs. Proctor Hopper. Mrs. Wilbur is a warm friend and has been a constant associate of Mrs. Hoover, and the fine home of the Pres dent on the campus of Leland Stanford is not a long walk from the home of the Secretary. Mrs. Wilbur is of in- tellectual trend, and will fit into the ideals of Mrs. Hoover in promoting worthy -activities among the younger coterie. The Wilbur daughters are ex- pected in Washington for a visit in the Spring. Mrs. Arthur M. Hyde. Gov. and Mrs. Hyde came to Wash- ington for the Coolidge inauguration, but their visits have been few ever since. But to the many Missourians living in Washington comes the roseate prophecy of their ability to keep up the record of other Secretaries of Agri- culture from the first Jerry Coleman, who was also a Missourian. Then there was David Franklin Houston, who was president of the Washington Uni- versity in St. Louis when he was in- vited into President Wilson’s cabinet. Mr. and Mrs. Hyde come from the fertile regions in the northern part of the State where it merges into deep rich soll of Iowa. They are what is called country-minded, loving farm life, its freedom from the artificial restraints of the city, but entirely in touch with the important affairs of the Nation and of the world. The Secretary attended schools in his section, and as Mrs. Hyde’s home town, Trenton, was not far distant from her husband’s, their school years, their friendship and later 1omance dates from their attendance at the Princeton Academy. Mrs. Hyde was Miss Hortense Cullers of Trenton, and the marriage occurred Jjust 25 years ago. There is one daughter, Caroline Cullers, who is at- tending the University of Missouri at Columbia, and who will continue her studies there for a time at least. She will be among the few young girls in the younger circle from cabinet | families,. this selection of President Coolidge’s showing a predilection for the fathers of sons, as he is, and not of daughters. Missourians who know Mrs. Hyde at home and during her four years at Jefferson City attest to her devotion {of her own vine and tree, and predict that the Hyde kitchen will be stocked from the preduce of the sev- eral farms and that it will keep up a | well established reputation for -‘ tronomic feasts ‘ without parallel in culinary history. Miss Hyde is about 18 | and is in her junior year at college. Mrs. Robert Patterson Lamont. Mrs. Lamont is a dominant figure in | soclal affairs at Forest Lake, III, belongs to that compact well established circle which is composed of third gen. eration Chicagoans. Her husband's family, both Pattersons and Lamonts, | have been dominant in Illinois political | professional circles, although the Secre tary has never figured before in the pub lic eye. He is known and revered in own particular group of constructive engineers and has been a friend of many years’ standing of the President. Since all the friends of the Chief Magistrate who have wives become Mrs. Hoover’s friends, also, Mrs. Lamont en- joys the advantage of knowing the First Lady and also of being on fa- miliar terms with the representatives & S & | of Chicago's inner set resident in Wash- n. There is one daughter, Gertrude, who has not yet been presented to society and will probably spend the Spring sea- son in Washington with her parents. | Mrs. Lamont was Miss Helen Gertrude | Trotter ‘of Chicago, and her home was in the exclusive Evanston district. Her {name may be found on subscription |lists for the best musical and social |events of the city and her home af | Forest Lake is an important one and impressively situated near the lake in a | garden of rare beauty. She is at pres- | ent in Europe, but will return in the next six weeks. |WILL HONOR MEMORY OF BISHOP WALPOLE | Services at Bethlehem Chapel To-| morrow in Tribute to Prelate Who Died in Edinburgh. | | A memorial service will be held at | 19:30 am. in Bethlehem Chapel of {mshinmn Cathedral for Right Rev. George H. S. Wapole, Bishop of Edin- | burgh, who died suddenly Tuesday a | his home in Edinburgh, Scotland. It | will be conducted by Right Rev. Philip | M. Rhinelander, canon of Washington | and warden of the College of Preachers. | "Bishop Walpole was well known in | Washington, having been here in 1926, | when he conducted a mission at Christ | Chureh, in Georgetown, and preached in many churches in the Diocese of | Washington. Beginning in 1890, Bish- | op Walpole was for several years a | professor at the General Theological | Seminary in New York City. He re- | turned to England to become vicar of | Lambeth Parish, London. He became | Bishop of Edinburgh in 1910. | Bishop Rhinelander was for many | years an intimate friend of the Bishop | of Edinburgh, the friendship beginning when Bishop Rhinelander was a stu- | dent at the General Theological Sem- | inary. WOLVES KILL DEER. Wholesale Slaughter Described by | Power Company Employe. SAULT STE. MARIE, Ontario, March 6 (#).—The wholesale killing or deer by wolves was described here today by John Findlay, inspector for a contract- ing company constructing the power transmission line from Michipicoten to the Soo. He said that dozens of car- casses are to be found in the bush. Deer congregate around the construction | camps at night and wolves can be heard | howling in the bush. 'Convalescents Col. James Bowie of Ken- tucky was the inventor of the Bbvwie knife, cute little toy for fancy assassination. We have given our name to a famous invention, too, but to an invention calcu- lated to help rather than hurt the world. The dis covery of the blend known as Wilkins Coffee came after many years of re- search and test. CARS 1926 Chevrolet 1927 Ford D iz} HILL & TIBBITTS Open Sunda: Evenings 301 Fourteenth St. from “flu” should build up strength Now is the vital time to keep system functioning normally YOU think you're all well from the “flu.”” Crazy to get out and back to the job again. You start out with a lot of pep in the morning. And by night you can hardly drag one foot after the other, let alone cat your dinner with relish. Often 2 period of weakness follows “flu” and that's the very time to watch yourself carefully. Don't let your system get slowed up or slug- gish. Keep it functioning normally with Nujol. Take a tablespoonful of Nujol every night. That’s not hard todo—and itdoes help tremendously. Physicians agree that, particularly when you've been sick, purging by laxatives and cathartics is not ad- visable. Many doctors are, therefore, prescribing Nujol, as in no case does it cause exhaustion or weakening of the system in any way. Nujol can't possibly uj you or disagree withP;:u. I isp::thxrmlcss as water. Just a pure natural sub- stance that keeps the system func- tioning as nature meant it to. Con- tains no drugs or medicines. Nujol climinates poisons and brings about better health. Start taking Nujol teday, and you'll soon losc that fecling of being half dead all the time. It is one simple way to regain strength and keep fit. e find Nujol 2 use- All kinds of peoi e ca. 3 ful part of their Full of pep again | People who've had other illnesses | besides *“flu,” or operations, find ||’ that it can be taken regularly with- out any upsetting effects. The reason | for this is that Nujol soothes and | heals while it does its work of re- | storing the system to regularity. Especially in winter when you cut down your exercise, and don't eat ;‘o I:nl;ch green foods, you really need ujol. Get a bottle of Nujol at your corner drugstore today. It's worth trying, isn't it? Made by the makers of Mistol. Advertisement. APARTMENT AT at Porter Street now '3ImlllIIlIINIII”\\YIE-‘IIHI"IIMIHIl!.i\'friilINIlIllmlIIII..K\VI}.!HIIIIlll!IllilIli.i\!fé'rliIHIlNllIlIINIIfNIéSIIIHIIIIIIIIHIER\VIEIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIL’\\%HHIIIHIIIHIIIIK\\WQ YOU CAN DESIGN YOUR OWN THE BROADMOOR Located on 5-Acre Site Overlooking Rock Creek: Park With 400-Foot Frontage on CONNECTICUT AVE. W Although the building is under construction, there is still time to make changes in the plans. You may want to alter partitions, positions of closets—details that mark the personally designed home from the apartment ready to move a5 Jiitie. into. Here you can have an apart- ment that expresses your individual- ity and taste. A feature of the loca- tion is that over 100 apartments have southern exposure. Plans are ready for your inspection. 11 Rogers Says: became Solicitor General. It was pointed to him that he was in the nature of things destined for a high place in officialdom, such having been the lot of the majority of incumbents in this office, held for four years by the former President and present Chief Justice, Willlam Howard Taft. The Attorney General and his wife cele- brated the twenty-fifth anniversary of their marriage soon after their arrival. They have two sons, Willlam P. and Bancroft Mitchell. Mrs. Mitchell is socially accomplished and has shown herself a gracious and understanding hostess in the little cabi- net. Born in St. Paul, she belongs! to the illustrious family of Ban- croft of Boston, which has so gener- ously given scholars, statesmen and soldiers to the Nation. She has al- ways kept up intercourse with her kin. dred and shows the marked intellectu- ality which is associated with the Ban- croft name. The Attorney General is the son of a former justice of the Supreme Court of Minnesota and in his early years of legal practice he was connected with a celebrated law firm, the head of which is the present Assocate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Plerce Butler. : Mrs. Mitchell has playc” ~ prominent role in social affairs of St. Paul, and she will fit neatly into the scheme of things as the hostess on whom will devolve the pleasant duty of entertain- ing the Supreme bench and the con- stant stream of distinguished members of the legal profession who come at all seasons to the Capital. The Attorney General and his family have been homekeepers since their early 2epairs our specialty. Call us uj Repairs our specialty | e up v Main 933 KOONS Hocts NS Compans ROOF REPATRING. Painting, Guttering, Spouting. REASONABLE P.RKCEE - AJA)%( Roofing 2038 18th ST. N.W. North 5314, Day or Night. ONLY ONE LEFT You Can Buy One of These Homes for the Rent You Are Now Paying. Why Not Come Out? $500 CASH BALANCE $60 MONTHLY, INCLUDING INTEREST 1108 E St. N.E. JUST SOUTH MD. AVE. 6 Rooms and Bath—Hot-Water Heat Electric Lights—Big Porches Very Large Lots to Wide Alley Fine Garage Stone Wall Around Parking Inspect Tonight Open and Lighted Until 9 O’Clock P.M. OWENSTEIN INCORPORATED Mr. Coolidge came into office ac- cidentally and we didn't expect any- thing. We just thought if this little, inoffensive fellow can keep some of the States from seceding we will all be thankful, But Hoover; here is just a few things we look to be settled not later than Satur- day: Farm re- lief. Now we have never had farm relief in all our history, but we look to him for it. Prohibition en - forcement—never had it since it was established, but we expect it from him. Pros- perity — millions never had it un- der Coolidge, never had it un- der anybody, but expect it under Hoover. And women think he will wash their dishes and look after their babies. Nothing short of Heaven will we accept under Hoover. Good luck to you, Hexb! ¥ A 5 VIANTED. To haul van lords of furniture to or from new Vork, Phila. Boston. Richmond and points_sout Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co., 1313 You St ___ North 3343 Furniture Repairing' Upholstering, Chair Caneing 3 shops—same location for 21 vears, which assures reliability and low price. Clay A. Armstrong Drop Postal 1235 10th St. N.W. Call Franklin 7483 For_Estimates_and_Samples. _ We Make Window Screens and Shades to Order Let us submit an estimate. All work | fully guaranteed. Factory prices save you money KLEEBLATT U2 &." Window Shades and Screens. __Phone Lin. 879 WE STOP ROOF LEAKS Roofing's our specialty Let us put your roof in An 8-Story, Fire-Proof Structure containing 182 Housekeeping Apts., from 1 Room, Kitchen and Bath to 6 Rooms, Kitchen and 2 Baths . Switchboard 200-Car Garage Incinerators Prices, $60 to $175 Per Month Ready for Occupancy October 1 FOR RESERVATIONS APPLY HARRY M. BRALOVE 1106 Vermt_ml Ave.—-:-Decatur 43778 25% Already Rented Porches Electric Refrigeration 3 Elevators E Phones North 26, North 37