Evening Star Newspaper, March 17, 1929, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

1801 16th St. N.W. 3 rooms and bath to 6 rooms and 2 baths Frigidaire Resident Manager, North 576 Wardman Management N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N 7772720777777 172 022211 LHH12 1712121011101 CATHEDRAL MANSIONS ~ § 3000 Conn. Ave. Suites Now Available Center and North Buildings Twenty-Four Hour Service Valet 8hop, Garage. Dining Room Other Shops in Direct Connection Facing Beautiful Rock Creek Park 1 Room and bath.....$40 month 1 Room, kitchen bath, $50 month 2 Rooms, kitchen and bath, $60 to $80 month Also Larger Apartments We Invite You to Inspect These Unusual Suites 3000 Connecticut Ave. N.W, Telephone Adams 4800 i Wardman Management - ‘P Office: STOPS ROOF LEAKS Certainteed Roof Paint $1.50 gallon Gal. $3.75 3.50 345 Qt. ..$105 1.00 100 Outside White. g B 911 Floor Va 3.00 4-inch Brush Bristles Vuolcanized in Hard Rubber 9c Expert Paint Advice Free MUTH Quality Since 1865 710 13th St. N.W. One-Cent Sale All This Week Purchase one item at our regu- lar list price, not cut price, and get_another of the same for lc additional. Stock limited. We deliver in D. C. and nearby Md. The following list goes on sale Monday until sold out: 35¢ Woodbury's Shaving Cream, 2 for.... 30c Gibson Miik of Mag- nesia Tooth Paste, 2 for 25¢ Mavis Talcum 2 for. 15¢ Sulphur and Cream of Tartar Lozenges, 2 for 25¢ Glycerine, Rose Water and Benzoin, 2 for.... 60c Dr. Clark's Tooth Brush, 2 for 25¢ Calomel and Soda, 100’s, 2 for. “ee 15¢ Jergen Violet Glycerine Soap, 2 for.. 10c Sterno Canned Heat, 2 for 11c Limit 12 to Customer Gibson’s Drug Store 917.919 G St. N.W. ______SPECIAL NOTICES. 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY dsbt contracted by anv other than myself. JOHN G. MARSHALL. - ____5725 13th st. n.w. ¢ ARE YOU MOVING? OUR VANS WILL serve you better. Vans operating between all Eastern cities. ' Phone Metropolitan. 4095, MOVET €O.. INC.. 1110 New York Ave. n.w. CARPENTER - BUILDEI REMODELING. porches inclosed. by lows: 20 years' experience. Washi urban: good work. Atlantic 2821-J. 2 1 WILL N BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any other than mysel W. H. RILEY, Silver Spring. Md. 1! IP YOUR CLUB PLANS TO HAVE DANCE. banquet, or private parties let me show you my ure acts. which are different irom the others. Have good novelty singers. dancers, players, novelly orchestras. Have proven as special addition to programs. Call Dec._4701 for_appointments. 55 . ‘TOP SO LARGE OR SMALL QUANTI- ties delivered yards wraded, smail ex- cavating: reasonable. Main 923 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOI debts contracted by any other t ¥. G. WEISSMILLER. 1844 Pol. ave. se._ CEMENT WORK—CEMENT WALKS, STEPS. coping, garage floors, porches. NORTHEAST CONCRETE CO.. 27 Tth St. NE Lin. 500. ROOF REPAIRING, PAINTING, GUTTER- 101 lfinutln Je st prices. LATHAM ROOFING CO.. 1307 7th st. North 10114. 21* 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE POR ANY debts other than contracted over my written signature. (Signed) HENRY H. PFEIFFER. 1517 Wis, ave nw. Y THE SPRINGER SANITARIUM (DR. A. Springer. Mgr.)—Drink and drug diseases. «Near Towson.) Lutherville, Md. Phone Towson 96 or Franklin 915. o ARE YOU MOVING FELSEWHE] OUR iransportation system will serve you better. Large fleet of vans constantly operating be- tween all Eastern cities. Call Main 9220, DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. EXCAVATING AND HAULING -SMALL EX eavating hauling of any nature (yards graded or cleaned of debris). Main 923. if. 9% WANTED —To haul van loads of furniture to or from New York, Phila, Boston, Richmond and Doints South Smith’s Transier & Storage Co., 1313 You St Norih 3343 FLOORS Joe e ok R NASH, FLOOR SERVICE. COLUMBIA 211 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 8t. N W. Call Franklin 7433 _For_Estimates_snd_Samples. "A. D. Crawford, Formerly of d E. Kaplan & Crawford 1S NOW LOCATED AT 12th St. Garage, 1252 12th St. between M and N Crawford & Currie Your patronage solicited. Metropolitan 0521 DANCING, PEGGY O'BRIEN ‘ | THE ST XDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, T. €. MARCH 17. 1920-PART 1 | FEAR SCORES DEA N ALABANA FLOOD ‘Disease Stalks in Wake of | Water—20,000 Are Left | Homeless. (Continued From First Page.) _ workers, were inoculating against measles and typhoid. Gov. Graves, in broadcasting a second appeal for aid, today said $225,000 would be necessary for immediate relief. | The Red Cross In Washington informed refugees ] | ! i | i | the governor that three National dis- | ! aster relief workers had been ordered to Coffee County, and that local chapters | had been mobilized on an_emergency ! basis. The governor was unofficially in- [ formed that the relief fund today stood | at about- $10.000. Rescue Stories Plentiful. Stories of thrilling rescues and pitiful refugee conditions were plentiful today, as correspondents began to return to | Montgomery and Birmingham. Apparently most of the refugees escaped the rising flood waters without | anything but the clothing they wore. { Wire communications were so disrupted | that reports were lacking from many | business section of West Point, 1 falling there. | Confidence was expressed in the | Mississippi_River levees as the fore- | caster at Cairo, IIl, predicted a_crest of 51 to 52 feet there for next Thurs ld‘y' Predictions of fair weather for {the next few days lent an optimistic | tone to the outlook as the mighty river was | | communities known to be endangered | received waters from its tributaries, | by, the bigh water. | 'he first train from Flomaton, one | . |of the flooded towns, reached Mobile | Levee Blast Plot Fails. this afternoon. | Three sticks of dynamite were found J. S. Martin, Mobile, conductor of A embedded in the main St. Francis River the train; C. J. Brown, flagman, and | levee, 8 miles south of Marked Tre R. M. Nelson, jr., baggage master, told | Ark. Officials who discovered of having spent (Wo slecpless days and Mite while investigating the levee {wo nights in rescue work, taking scores | Not determine the motive, ~Enginecr of refugees into the coaches. | said the dykes of the St. Francis were holding satisfactorily. Cars Packed With Hungry. | “About 80 passengers on “Our cars were packed and jammed | ‘;agou“l‘“““ DVl e with people, many of them who had | Guarg patrol "boats to Mobile. not eaten for hours” said Martin. | O ‘We turned on the steam heat and, ... some of the people, although they had | Over the tracke -About 300 F to sit.upright all night. said they were | : Etanice e o e time. o iy, | Vater & short distance south of Pasca hours. In the midst of the flood. the crew said, lightning struck a store at Flo- maton and it was burned to the water {level. | It was impossible to determine, ac- cording to the trainmen, whether or | not there has been any loss of life in | Flomaton. They had been told bodies of 10 Negroes had been recovered at | Brewton, but they could not verify the | report. | uld nded Pas- Coast Two the tracks. About 200 feet of th Old Spanish Trail Highway. J. R. West, deputy sheriff at Brewton, sald officials had organized their forces to prevent pilfering as the floodwaters began to recede. Even Montgomery was apprehensive of belng cut off by floods as water rosc in outlying suburbs and residents were forced to higher ground. 2,000 HUDDLE IN CAMP. il frst-hand lll | the line south of Geneva, Al Nelson, who lives at Flomaton, said | 20 persons had sought refuge in his| home, which was situated a bit higher than some of the other houses. Water | kept rising slowly and as it crept higher and higher, they retreated to the attic, | | thinking_momentarily the rise would cease. /Finally they were compelled to chop a hole in the roof through | which they escaped, to be rescued | from their perch by & motor boat. Two Cry for Help, Disappear. At Brown's home in Flomaton Thurs- day night s cry was heard from a nearby home. where two men were seen trying to hang onto a porch. | Mrs. Brown pushed a skiff from her | {home in their direction. Nelther the | men or the boat have been seen, Brown | said. One home, which was at one time a | considerable distance from the rail- road track at Flomaton, now rests on the main line of the L. & N., washed there by the torrents that have swept through the avenue on which it was| situated, the crew reported. The train that brought the initial| information of the flood conditions at Flomaton left again for the stricken territory with supplies. It will proceed slowly as in two places | | the track is below two feet of water for distances of 1,000 feet in each case. Florida Town Is Hit. Another place seriously affected by high water was Caryville, Fla,, across . where hurried efforts were necessary to take the inhabitants to safety zones. Two hundred persons were rescued this morning. Motor boats took women and | children from the second-story win- dows of two hotels and others were saved by clinging to housetops and the tops of trees, ‘The Choctowhatchee River was.26 feet and rising 4 inches an_hour. Flood stage is 12 feet. The Weather Bureau at Atlanta forecast record heights for the streams in Southwest Georgia, although the Chattahoochee, which had flooded the THE WEATHER District of Columbia—Fair and| somewhat colder today; tomorrow fair with ‘rising temperature, Virginia * and Maryland—Fair and somewhat colder in east portion today tomorrow fair with rising temperature; diminjshing northwest winds. West Virginia—Generally fair with slowly rising temperature today; to- morrow fair and warmer. Records for 24 Hours, Thermometer—Midnight, 59; 2 62; 4 am, 62: 6 am, 61; 8 & m.. 63; 12 noon, 65; 2 p.m,, 5 pm., 57; 6 pm., 54 8 pm, 51; 10 pm., 43. g Highest- temperature, 66; lowest, 43. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 46; lowest, 33, Tide Tables, | (Purnished by United States Coast | and Geodetic Survey.) ~Low tide, 6:40 am. and 7: gh tide, 12:17 am. and 1243 | 1 { Today pm.; hi pm. Tomorrow—Low_tide, 7:46 am. and | 8:47 pm.; high tide, 1:18 a.m. and 1:48 | p.m. The Sun and Moon. Today—Sun rose 6:18 am.; 6:16 p Tomorrow—Sun rises 6:16 am.; sun | sets 6:17 p.m. Moon rises 9:21 am, Automobiles lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset. Weather in Various Cities. ~ Temperature.-, Precipi- Min. 1-vlon.t: Sat- Pri. Sat.p. urdav. night. 8p m. §p.m. e i ) sun sets) Asheville, N. C. Atlanta, Ga Atlantic City Baltimore. Birmingham. Bismarck. N. Dak | Des Moines, Tows. . Ml Minn.". Tex, 7 Mon Indianapolis. Little Rock. Ar Los Anzeles. Ci Louisyille, Ky Marquette, Mi { Memphis. T Miami, Fla Mobile. Ala New Orleans % New York. N _ North Platte.” Nebr Omaha, Nebr Philacelphia | Phoenix. Ariz Pittsburgh, Portlend, Me. 6 Portishd. Ores Salt_ Lake City, Utah St. Louis, Mo.\....... St. Paul. Minn 8an Antonio. San Diego. 8an Francisco. M alif Tex. .06 ‘1 cast a stage of 37 feet or higher. 4 | would exceed the flood which did great | Guardsmen Build Road So Cars May Take Refugees to Safety. i NATIONAL GUARD RELIEF CAMP, | CEMETERY HILL, Ala., March 16 (#). [ —Most of the 2,000 refugees from Elba and environs brought here by National Guardsmen tonight were huddled to- gether on a knoll without shelter and, in most cases, without adequate cloth- ing, while guardsmen pushed to com- pletion a temporary road over which | automobiles will take the flood vlclimsl to Troy. | A caravan of 100 cars was used In the work of removal, and 1t was esti- mated that all of the refugees would be in Troy in a short time. | While some of the guardsmen, who | are under the command of Col. W. E. | Parsons, were working on the road | others were engaged in pitching tents | in which shelter of a sort was given to the women and children, the aged and the sick. .Other guardsmen were as- | signed to the task of distributing ra- tions, while others assisted physicians and Red Cross workers in fighting dis- ease among the refugees. No person | was allowed to go to Troy until he had been innoculated. Several boats worked between this camp and Elba today, bringing in the stricken citizens of the flooded towns. | Other craft moved on to isolated groups | which had found refuge away from the town, carrying food and supplies to them. Around camp fires refugees stood in long lines waiting their turn for the two meals & day. { Guardsmen were of the opinion that | it will be several days before Elba is fit | for occupancy again, although the water | was going down steadily today. | Most of the food was dropped from | lanes. J. H. Hamm, a refugee, was slightly injured when a package from | the air struck him. GEORGIA 1S HOPEFUL. ATLANTA, Ga., March 16 (#)—Fair | weather forecasts for the week today | heartened towns and villages in South- | west Georgla, which for the past three | days have been overrun by waters de- | scribed by Weather Bureau officials as | exceeding all records. Rail and high- | way traffic was still disrupted, however, | and the crest was yet to be reached on | the lower portions of the rampant Flint ] and Chattahoochee Less apprehension was felt along the | latter, where a drop was noted during the night at West Point, but feverish preparation continued along the slower acting Flint for the deluge yet to come. | At Albany a rise of more than 4 feet | was noted since yesterday, and D. W.| Bronson, weather ~observer there, fore- | This property damage there in 1925, when the river reach 36.6 feet. Heeding the warning, & small army of workers: spent today bullding dikes | around the lowest Teaches of the city, | while factories and business houses along | the river front prepared for the crest, | which is expected Monday or Tuesdsy. | The Chattahoochee was highest Bufalua, Ala., just across the line, be- | ing estimated at 64 feet this morning. | This is the highest mark since the Har- | rison freshet in 1840. CLUBS TO HEAR SISSON. Frederick H. Sisson, vice president of | the Guarantee Trust Co., New York, and a financial publicity expert, will | be the principal speaker at a joint | meeting of the Washington Advertising Club, the Washington Bond Club and the District Bankers' Association to be | held in the ballroom of the National Press Club at 12:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. “The Business Outlook™ will be the subject of Mr. Sisson's talk. the dyna- | ns were caught there by water rising | is under goula, as is also about 5 miles of the | Above: View of a liquor-laden car which crashed into a pole at Twentieth | street and Benning road yesterday after the driver had sideswiped Motor Cycle | Policeman G. G. Newton, who, with Park Policeman E. E. Sarr, was pursuing ! the car. The driver was captured by the two officers after they had emptied | their pistols at the fleeing car, without the bullets taking effect. Left to right: Newton and Sarr. —Star’ Staff Photo. HUNDREDS DRVEN "2 Rivers Wreak Havoc Amid] Area of Alabama Rich Middle West Bared in Report. Farm Belt. Gl [Flyer's Simplé Story Tells of By the Associated Press. MONTGOMERY, Ala. March 16— Work of the airmen in the South Ala- | bama flooded districts was described to- 16.—Rapacious | day in the report of Lieut. R. C. Wris- ton, Regular Army Air Corps. His no- tation in the dispatch of “panels” re- By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, - March rivers were carrying on their attacks at | varying sectlons of the Middle West| fers to big pieces of blackboard dropped tonlght, while others streams reached so that refugees may write their needs thelr crest and gradually subsided. | to the fiyer. 3 ‘The situation in Iowa. took on @ |, Hi report on Geneva and Elba fol- more serfous aspect. Reports were re-| “Departed from Maxwell Field at 8 celved that hundreds of residents of amn. v’{_n Tr:y. DNPD;fl N;'rkuedtg i | yeast Troy Fair Grounds. oceede luv\\land territory had been forced to | ¥PREL GO AT ropped gunny sack evacuate thelr homes. The points|of food main panel station at Geneva. hardest hit were Waterloo, where the | Made no attempt comimunicate, as oth Ceder River was on a rampage; Clear | Dlanes pres Falls, Des Moines, Mason City and|Pose. Dropped panels east of main Keokuk. | panel station where large number of Rail traffic throughout the district People working. —Dropped panels also was seriously impaired by flooded road- at gnd of §nmson road. Water at Ge- beds and thousands of dollars damage | P€Va over 3 miles wide. Counted four (o farm lands was reported. Weather uu},mfi motors and nine skiffs. 4 Bureau officials predicted further rise Noticed many people isolated on of streams over most of the area to- |f00fs and upper bulldings of stores. night. Situation apparently much worse than e United States Weather Bureau |EIba. Estimate houses totally demol- puBtE Lous eere i Hissleaion and | graphs from all angles. Proceeded o ing no serfous danger was anticipated | EIb by water of Peu River. Pea River unless there were additional rains, The | Varies from 3 to 4 miles in width, bureau_predicted a-further rise in the | “Counted 11 farm houses isolated in e e et ‘that (here was o | deeD water between Geneva and Pera. formn g oo riennt e "0 Counted four farm houses isolated in The Iilinols River was out of .its|deep water between Pera and Pirkston banks over a large territory and siili |Counted six farm houses isolated in rising, but was causing no serious |deep water between Pinkston and point damage. The Pecatonica River passed |4 miles south of Elba. Two houses its crest and was receding. | isolated in deep water 2!, miles below “In the Freeport. Ill, district, it was Elba on west bank. Arrived at” Elba estimated that 40,000 acres were flooded | by the Pecatonica. | ing. The Government report said the| “Picked up message requesting by e and Meramec Rivers would rise |plane ‘Aspirin’ at Elba, Returned 1o considerably, but would not reach a|Maxwell Field, arriving 11:'35 am.” flood stage. WG Conditions along the Sugar and Rock Rivers in Northern Illinols were impro: New courses of University of Cali- ing as the streams crawled back toward | fornia extention division includes the their banks. stock market, travelers' French and z AL i problems of labor relations. SIX PRISONERS LASHED | AT JAIL WHIPPING POST/ Delaware Offcials “Laid Tt on| Well” as Small Crowd Watches. By the Associated Press. WILMINGTON, Del,, March 16.—Six prisoners went under the lash today in | the New Castle County workhouse. Four recelved 4 lashes and the others 20| Delivered to your work lashes each, Elmer J. Leach “laid it| Mixer Truck saves you Time, Worry, on well,” as the law directs, before & | Money and speeds up your work. small crowd In the workhouse yard. | R0y Halland. colored, who shot & man n a robbery last week, was the first to . be shackled to the whipping post. H«’M'l‘”"y Paving Company, Inc. was followed by James Pryor, an ac-|Phone West 1330 3117 K Street N.W. complice in the robbery and shooting, For Rent Al Kinds in any quantity ‘Bring Them i etropolit; The Big Book Shop 933 G St. N.W. Try Our Concrete Delivery Service STEEP PLAINS By the Associaled Press. MONTGOMERY, Ala, March 16.—| The flood sections of South Alabama are | on the coastal plain, ranging from a| few feet above sea level to 600 feet mlti- | tude, and the cause of the swift rise of | the streams which empty into the Gulf apparently was the terraced nature of | the river banks. All the water draining off the Alabama | plain falls into the Tombigee-Alabams watershed or the Choctawhatchee- Chattahoochee watershed, one of which is in the southwestern ocrner of the State and the other in the southeastern corner. The Elba and Geneva flood districts are in the Chockawhatchee watershed. CAUSE SWIFT | RISE OF ALABAMA STREAMS |Sharp Terraces of River Banks Pour Great| Volumes of Water Into Channels | The Pea River empties into the Choc-* and Grant Brown, both negroes. Daniel 2801 Conn. Ave. N.W. Jones, the only white man among the | 5ix, was next whipped. George D. But- ler' and John Edwards were next, with | Suitable for Doctor or Dentist 10 Rooms — 3 Baths — lashes | H.W.H.—Built-in Garag: $225 per month Hedges & Middleton, Inc. Realtors i tawhatchee at Geneva. The Brewton, Castleberry, Flomaton and Montgomery flood districts are in the Alabama-: Tombigee watershed, in the western half of the State. The rivers in the lowlands have myriad creek _tributaries, due to the pliable sofl and lack of high lands. With | ihree terraces to the average river, water gains momentum more rapidly as | it nears the sea, and hence may deluge ; communities one day and drain off th next. The usual excess of rainfall of the last week amounted to an avalanche of water, and the larger rivers will not re- cede as quickly as they usually do, ac- cording to the Weather Bureau. FRAME sTucco REMODELED :: REPAIRED BUILT :: ENCLOSED 20 MONTHS TO PAY REASONABLE PRICES ‘WE_RESUILD-REMODEL-REPAIR TELEPHONE MAIN 9427 present apparently for that pur- | | ished at over 100. Took aerial photo- | and noted that water gradually reced-: Concrete Ready Mixed in Transit | 'ESCOBAR REPORTED FLEEING TORREDN Rebel Leaders Claim Capture | of Aguascalientes l in Battle. take the city, despite official announce- ! ment by the government that the city had been occupled. Mis. Jose Gonzalo Escobar, wife of | the revolt leader, was reported to be in Juarez_today. United States immigra- tion officers sald she had not made ap- plication for entry into El Paso, &l- though she was reported to have been seen in_conference with them. Mexico | City advices yesterday said Mrs. Esco- bar left Torreon for Juarez with & | quantity of gold. | " Rebel leaders declared that duties on | imports to the Mexican zone occupied | by the revolutionists have not been in- | creased. Postal authorities in Juarez announced, however, postage for first- | class mail matter had been increased | from 10 cents to 20 cents, Mexican. | Mail.is being distributed to points as | far south as Torreon. Despite reports | from the interior that a shortage of | provisions, supplies and munitions is threatened, rebei officials in Juarez em- phaticaily declared no shortage was in prospect. | PILOTS WRECK TWO PLANES. | _(Continued From First Page) BROWNSVILLE, Tex., March 16 (). —Two of the four Waco sport planes | turned over to pilots of the Mexican federal government here yesterday were wrecked at Monterey, Mexico, late today | when they attempted to take off from the fleld there. The accident was wi nessed by Jimmie Mattern, local pilot. who returned here after a round-trip flight to Monterey with air mail. None of the flyérs was hurt. Lieut. Col. R. Fierro, chief of aviation for the Mexican army, and Capt. Luis | Farell, were the pilots who “cracked up,” Mattern said Farell's ship crashed into a tree | at the edge of the Monterey fleld. and { | Col. Fierro's craft nosed over in an {attempted takeoff. Both ships were | | damaged, Mattern reported. | The accidents occurred as the fonr | planes were taking off for Saltillo. | wMEre they were to join the advance | | against rebel forces at Torreon. After | seeing their comrades crash the other | {two pllots, Capt. Alberto Dieytz and ' | Lieut. Juan Carmona, decided to re- | | main at the field. i 'HIGHER LEVELS REACHED IN ONTARIO FLOOD AREA| Streams Swollen Affect Homes, as Heavy Rain and Snow L) | More | Increase Suffering. By the Associated Press, TORONTO, March 16.-—Heavy rain and snow throughout Southern Ontario last night and today sent swollen rivers and streams to higher levels. The Grand and Nith Rivers con- tinued to be the chief sources of dan- ger. Much damage was reported from Galt, Paris and Cayuga Reflooding occurred at Galt, and oc- | cupants of the buildings alongyhe river- front were suffering hardships owing to | | lack of fuel. ‘The rising of the Nith was responsible | I for the flooding of many homes. The | Grand continued to rise at Brantford. but the city is well protected by tis dyke system. Cayuga, where residents were serious- ly alarmed at the rapid rising of the Grand, reported the water had dropped four feet from the high mark recorded last night. Boats and wagons, how- ever, were used to effect rescues at some of the flooded homes. A 20-foot wall of ice had piled up in & narrow cut and dammed up the stream. | | i upe . 5 1928 Ford Model 5390 [l HILL & TIBBITTS | Open_Sundaxs and Evenings | 301 Foutieenth 81, YOU OUGHT TO Join! IT'S THE SIGN OF THE SALES—1835 14th St. N.W. SERVICE—1728 Kalorama Rd. Exerciser and Reducer See Window A splendid machine for home ex- ercise_and scientific weight reduc- tion. Come In for free demonstration. Reasonable in Price 10 Months to Pay Get It at GIBSON’S M1-19 G St. NW. 'l Tri-Motored All-Metal Aeroplane SALESMEN We still have openings fot three good men of REAL SALES EXPE- RIENCE. This is an excellent oppor- tunity to represent one of Washing- ton's largest public utilities, selling a nationally advertised appliance and for which there is a popular demand. We furnish you live leads and give every co-operation. Apply between 9 and 12 in the morning to MR. BROWN Washington Gas Light Company 419 Tenth Street N.W. We Are Now Able to Offer You An Apartment in THE BOULEVARD (2121 New York Ave.) Downtown Washington's largest and finest apartment building. $52.50 for one room, kitchen, bath. $60.50 for two rooms, kitchen, bath. Large rooms, with paneled walls. Fach apartment equipped. with a Murphy bed and Frigidaire. Potomac Park, Public Golf Course. Lincoln Memorial, Auditorium and numerous public buildings nearby. MANAGED BY WARDMAN Main 6850 | | g : Manager, Mrs. Jackman [Ee Your Opportunity To Fly in a FORD lc——=lojc——] Carrying 14 Passengers at One Trip 25 Miles for Only $5 B SEE BEAUTIFUL WASHINGTON FROM THE AIR B Tickets on Sale at Hoover Field International Airways, Inc 0) 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. OF NEW YORK 1215 CONNECTICUT AVE,, N.W. add to FOOTWEAR PRE-EMINENT THE IRRESISTIBLE DUO The MIRAMAR andthe MARTY, created Ly master cm/lamen for afur- noon and evening wear. The Miramar is a special apn'nf oxford of advanced Jnl'gn, that completes the perfect ensemble. The Marty is of R!f[lufrl Cloth, trimmed with crushed kid...a new and charming combination. Both designs are made in all the pastel shades. ‘The Miranmar NEW YORK BOSTON PARIS BUFFALO SOUTHAMPTON VI‘ASHIPKTI'ON, DC.

Other pages from this issue: