Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
-y e - 3 TR AR i il N s S RO 5 NANKING MENACED | INNEW OUTBREAK , War Is Imminent as Troops ! Prepare for Attack on City. Br the Associated Press. CANTON, China, March 23.—De-| velopments in the military situation | here today were taken by observers to| mean that those now directing the | city’s affalrs planned to take over the ity in favor of the Nanking govern- | ment. Their superiors, and the city's | nominal officials, are at Nanking attend- iz the Kuomintang congress. | There were heavy troop movements over the city and artillery was stationed on the hill within its confines. Gen. Hwang Shao-Siung, Governor of Kwangsi and leader of the Kwangsi clique, unexvectedlv arrived and indi d that he would oppose any pro- | Nanking activities. The situation has resulted in some uneasiness and the | money market has become upset. Busi- | noss IS at a standstill. | Resentment at Nanking's detention of | Marshal Li Chai-Sum, Governor of Can- | 1on. is growing. | A message to the French consul here | from the Lazarist Bishop Dumond. at | Jianchowki, dated March 20, says {hat all missions in Southern Kiangsi have | been burned and pillaged and the mis- | sionaries have fled to the hills. i Attempts of the American and French eonsuls to communicate with Bishops | O'Shea and Dumond have been fruitless, | the telegraph lines being severed, appar- ently inside the Kiangsi border. CONSERVATIVES SEE WAR. Power Is Voted Nanking to Enforce Its Decrees. NANKING, China, March 23 (#). The Kuomintang Party Congress this afternoon adopted a resolution granting | the government the power “to do what it sees fit if the Hankow generals con- tinue to disregard Nanking's orders.” There were heated discussions, the ! Conservatives opposing the measure. saving “if it is passed it means war." Ths measure was adopted overwhelm- irgiy. TROOPS MENACE HANKOW. Canture of City Is Objective of Nation- alist Forces. | LONDON, March 23 (#).—The Ex- pross today says that fighting has begun on the Hunan-Kiangsi border in China | ! between the Kwangsi opponents of the Nanking government and the old 4th Army, which is now supporting Presi- | gent Chiang Kai-Shek. The city of Hankow was said to be m:onaced. ‘Troops of both sides were cancentrating nesr it, and its capture CHARLES THOMAS. -—Star Staff Photo. ORATOR PRIZE GOES T0 DUNBAR SENIOR Charles Thomas, 16, to Com- pete in Star Area Finals April 25. | | The third of the 11 *“district” win- !ners in The Star's area of the Sixth | National Oratorical Contest was de- termined in the Dunbar High School finals yesterday afternoon when Charles Thomas, 16-year-old senior, won the decision of a board of three judges with a_ brilliant delivery of his speech on “Lincoln, and the Constitution.” By virtue of his victory, young Thomas wins one of the 11 “district” awards of $100 and the right to com- pete in The Star area finals on April 25. Thomas Delivery Easy. Charles Thomas, the Dunbar High School champion, won his laurels with a type of oratory that was character- ized by ease of delivery and a con- vincing earnestness that could com. mand only admiration. Speaking ol | i | i “Lincoln and the Constitution,” Thomas | swept from & conversational opentngl on through a gradually rising key, re- lieved at intervals with changes in in-| flection, to a powerful climax that| seemed to leave his audience breathless. | Thomas was finished speaking and ha actually turned toward his seat on the stage before the sudlence stirred in | the tense silence in which his oratory | had thrust it. A few seconds of that continued silence and then thunderous | it THE FTERTNG STARS WASHINGTON, .= .7 SATTRDAY. MARCH 923. 19929, PREDICTS TALKIES - WILL HELP STAGE End of Melodrama in Theaters. That the legitimate stage would be | infinitely benefitted rather than wholly | destroyed by the talking movie was the { optimistic prediction of Theresa Hei- | burn, executive director of the New York Theater Guild, in a lecture de- | livered last evening on “Why the The- ater>” under the auspices of the Amer- ican Association of University Women, Introduced by Miss Sybil Baker, di- i ector of tho Community Institute, as {“the reigning spirit, the Dea ex- Machina™ of the Theater Guild, Miss Helburn proved an engaging speaker. | Her forecest of the fortunes of the legitimate theater in relation to the | “alkie” was developed in a supple- mentary discourse after the large audi- | ence had displayed a marked unwilling- ness to allow her to retire at the end of her formal talk on the modern theater as illustrated by the experiences,of the { guild | As ihe first motion pictures usurped {the popularity of the ‘“ten, twent’, | thirt’ " melodrames of an earlier day, so the present “talkies” will rid the { stage today of melodrama and *sheer story” plays. Miss Helburn believe | The process thus will not be so much it will be a purging of its cheaper ! qualities. What will be left. after the ilslklefl have ccme into their strength, she expects, is a residue of | fundity and courage. Thus, Miss Hel- ! burn believes, that if 70 of the 80 | legitimate theaters in New York at pres- | ent become “talkie” palaces. the re- | maining 10 will have a clear way for | the presentation of genuinely artistic | theater material for the audiences that will aJways want to have it. Sounds Calls for Actors. ‘The movies, with their enormous | financial resources and popular appeal, pushed theaters into second place as entertainment, Miss Helburn sald. Now { | the movies, with the new technique of | {sound and voice reproduction, are des- perate with compesition, sending out rantic S O S's to the legitimate stage or actors and methods of production. It was her opinion, Miss Helburn said, that actors won. from the stage by the blandishments and fabulous money of- fers of the “talkies” would eventually return to the stage itself. Developing a thesis that “the theater. even in its highest form, is an impure art” the speaker traced the channel§ through which & play must go before it | reaches its ultimate bid for appreciation. | New York Guild Official Sees destruction of the legitimate stage as; full | NEW YORK CITY.—Al opened the Ringling Circus Thurs- Smith day night. But Longworth and Charley Curtis won't -be far be- hind him: they are rehearsing for theirs. Mr. Coolidge is still here in town; don’t seem to be able to strike anything. Mr. Hoover ought to put him on Southern flood relief; turn about is fair play. And. by the way, aeroplanes have done some great and dangerous work down there, A Mexican revolution is organized in the morning, and the retreat starts in the afternoon: and they capture every town they retreat through. That's why they like to start as near Mexico City as possible, and then have more town to retreat through. fect which the author himself confessed | he had not suspected existed in the role. The third medium, the scenic artist. | jealous of the effect of his handiwork { the settings ang the lighting, the stage hands and the property ‘men-—these, ‘too, contribute perplexities. ‘The actor {usually wants lots of light on himself and (he stage: (he scenic astist com- plains that too much lighi cuts his | colors. Expense in this phase of pro- duction is very important, Miss He burn stated. | As to the fourth factor, the audience, | Miss Helburn stated unequivpeally that the future of the theater rested with the spectators themselves. An audience can make a play decent or indecent. !the speaker pointed out, and moral prejudice differs with communities. What one community accepts, another may reject. Audiences can turn comedy into tragedy and iragedy into comedy, the speaker said. “John Ferguson,” play- ing to successive audiences of “provin- theaters which will be devoted to the cial” out-of-towners, when, because of | * production of fine drama, with all its | 5 theater.tie-up, it was practically the | | subtlety, delicacy, sophistication, pro-|only attraction open, won a paradoxical | : reputation for jollity and lightness. | Word-of-mouth ‘advertising—the most { valuable of all kinds-—propagandized ing stuff. Since the primary function {of the theater is to eniértain, according to Miss Helburn's conclusion, *“John Ferguson” satisfied a legitim: dra- matic end. It was caused by the audi- | ence’s interpretation, not 1- | thor's intention. But the audience rules. If “Why the theater?” it is “‘be; cause of the audience,” In brief. 1 Mrs. E. G. Nourse announced that e final talk of this series on modern | art movement, presented by the Amer- jcan Association of University Women, would be given on April 26 by Miss Elizabeth Shannon of Baltimore on | “Modern Art in Interfor Decorating | and Design.” ‘ NEW CHEST TRUSTEES | TO MEET WEDNESDAY Officers for Ensuing Year Will | St. John Irvine’s play as hugely amus- | JUNGLE PICTURES SHOW MIGRATIONS [Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson Exhibit East African Films at Auditorium. pictures of the animal took place last Summer in Africa were shown {before members of the National Geographic Society last evening at the Washington Auditorium by Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson. se migrations are annual, but ther conditions, which were as freak- | ish last Summer in Africa as they have | been this Winter in Europe, rsulted in | a migration of zebras and gnus which | took five days to pass the Johnsons' tent. Photographers were able to take reels of this phenomenon. In films that summarized their annual ! explorations with & camera for years in Alrica, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson showed ofher close-ups of animals, in- | cluding antics of the leaping impallah, |the gerenek, which has been nick- | named the “giraffe antelope” and is | one of the Tarest African animals, as well as the more familiar elephant, | zebra, rhino and lon. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson described their | ! adventures in filming the pictures, COLUMBIA PLAYERS REVIVE OLD DRAMA ‘Plesem “Ten Nights in a Barroom" " With All Its Ancient, Pic- turesque Features. | | Last night at the Wilson Auditorium the Columbia Players turned back the pages to the gay nineties and gave a | highly satisfled audience a glimpse of | melodrama_as the older generation | knew it. They hissed the villain and cheered the hero and cracked peanut shells with a vengeance. The play was that classic, “Ten Nights [in a Bar Room.” the “Uncle Tom's Cabin” of the temperance movement, and the directing of Aurora Poston brought out all the old hokum of the 10-20-30 days in A manner amusingly reminiscent. The settings in black and white suc- cessfully suggested the old woodcuts the costumes, with one or two ex- captions, carried out the scheme. The bar was especially convincing. The acting was uniformly good and of the caliver that won the one-act tournament_for the Columbia Plavers and gave them their chance to tread the professional boards at the Nationa) next week. nine | T'e: was the immediate objective of the Na- tionalists, while their opponents were | seeking to occupy Kiangsi Province to | applause rolled up out of the audi- torium to pay tribute to efforts well i | Other forms of art, such &s painting, Be Elected a‘ | “Ten Nights in a Bar Ryom” will be music and sculpture, represent the di- | repeated tonight at the Wilson Audi- rect impulse of the artist, immediately | Session, | torium at Eleventh and Harvard streets. transmissable to the spectator, she pointed out. Drama, on the contrary,| Newly-elected members of the board | threaten Nanking. NANKING, China, March 23 (#).— Government authorities issued vigorous cenials today of reported fighting at Hwangmel of the Hupeh-Anwei border. ade. | Miss Clara Shippen, speaking on the| “Personalities in the Constitution,” | captured second place with an oratory that ran in fairly high key and yet| retained inflection. Her gestures were | | few and she called upon them only to {lend emphasis to some of the points | she stressed. | Young Thomas, the Dunbar cham pion, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer H. Thomas of 4420 Douglas street, | Kenilworth, D. C. He is one of the| outstanding students of his school. | holding the presidency of the senior class and the Dunbar chapter of the National High School Homor Society. He is a member of the school's ‘debate | club, its German Club and its Rex Club | and he is majoring in biology. Fol-. TROTSKY IS BARRED FROM GERMAN SOIL C:binet Foresees Difficulty in Ex-! pelling Him Should His Presence Prove Objectionable. is subject to four different media of of trustees of the Community Chest | Health Week Program Set, | cast either “for type” or “against type.” treatment from the time it leaves the author’s brain and hand: The actor. the director, the scenic artist and finally the audience. | The appropriate casting of actors in | dramatic roles was not easy, the lec- turer said. ‘The usual method was to will hold their first annual mu(lnz‘NThe %fl&enu} t;{nuln‘: observance of % , | Negro National Health week will be Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the | (870, FAGONE FHealth week will be United States Chamber of Commerce tomorrow afternoon at Columbia Lodge, Building. 1615 H street. Officers. for | No. 85, home. 301 Rhode Island avenue. the coming year will be elected. | Speakers will be Drs. T. Edward Jones Reports of officers for the period since | 8ssistant surgeon at Freedmen's Hos- the launching of the chest movement |Pital: William J. Howard and Charles The latter method she explained as be- | will be read and plans for the coming | B- Fisher. A ing the system of selecting actors for | year will be considered. | Miss 1. K. Pinckney, chairman of certain specifications with a cautious | * Trystees composing this year's board | Nesro Health week. is arranging a spe- view to the normal exaggeration Dro- | were elected by ballots mailed out to (1l musical program. The public is vided by make-up, footlights, dramatic |the various contributors and by ap- | nVited. gesture, and so forth. Thus, Wishing | pointment of the officials of the various once a player for the role of a florid. | pgencies, Each agency names two ggmb“';' m;nbsh' chose one :ho had | members of the board and 57, repre- en endowed by nature with these very | centing t qualifications. ‘Yet the characterlsation | o .ne_the contributors, are elected. was a failure, because the augmenta- More than 60 students appeared in a style show at University of California at Los Angeles, By the Associated Press. BERLIN, March 23.—Members of the German cabinet have agreed not to ad- mit Leon Trotsky, one-time Soviet| leader, who now is in exile at Constan- tinople. Authoritative sources yesterday disclosed that the matter had been dis- cussed by the ministers, but not at a formal cabinet meeting. H Chancellor Hermann Mueller objects | to admission of Trotsky because, irre- | spactive of the question of diplomatic relations with -the Soviet Union, the! gc ernment of the Reich might find i 1'521f unable to expel him, once ad: mitted, should his presence become ob- icctionable. Prussia has been favorably disposed toward granting Trotsky domictle there, and if it continued f: vorable to his sojourn the Reich gov- ernment would be unable to expel him. | President Paul Loebe of the Reichs- tag, who had publicly committed him- | #-1f to admission of Trotsky, has been | disappointed in his attempts to win over | Chancellor Mueller. SLAV EDITOR KILLED. 1 Zagreb Publicist Waylaid by As:| sassin Near Home, ZAGREB, Jugoslavia, March 23 (#)— | Toni Schiegel, prominent publicist and | | editor of Novosti, was shot and killed | J=st night by an unidentified person | ¥ho waylaid him outside his home. The suthorities ascribed the murder to po- | Jitical motives. to become editor f t gency. Avala 1 SPECIAL NOTICI BE RESPONSIBLE POR ANY WILL NOT 5 other than those contracted by myself. UEL A. BUSEY, 437 13th st. s.e. _ 25° 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY c-ots contracted by any one other than vs, R. F._DELANEY. 24! 23 ave. se. ! 3 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY cebte contracted by any one other than mself. - Signed, EDWARD F. JACKSON. ou_st. n.w.. Wash., D. C. 2 | HANGING—] $200 TP IF ou_have the paper. Phone LE PREUX & ROBBINS. Liu._0017. or Col. 3583. _ 33°_ ARE_YOU MOVING ELSEWH OUR | iransportation system will serve you beiter. Large fieet of vans constantly operating be- iween all n_cities. Main 9220 lowing the contest meeting yesterday he said he planned to bank the $100 | award he won for his education, which | he means to carry on either at Howard | University or at some' New England institution. Other contestants on the Dunbar | program included Lemuel Brown, son | of Joseph Brown, 1736 Oregon avenue, ' who spoke on “Lincoln and the Consti- | tution”; Carolyn Holloman, daughter of Rev. J. L. S. Holloman, 403 P street, who spoke on “Personalities in the.Con- | stitution,” and John Manigaulte, ward | of William F. French, with whom he lives, while studying here at 1958 Sec- ond street. Miss Shippen Is the daugh- ter of Mrs. Maude Shippen, 1717 T street. o | The judges of the Dunbar finals were | Leonard Z. Johnson, professor of Eng- |lish at Howard University; Mrs. Corahe F. Cook, former member of the Dis- | trict of Columbia Board of Education, | and Charles E. Burch, professor of English at Howard. J. Newton Hill, in. structor in English and dramatics Dunbar, and chairman of that school’s | faculty contest committee, was largely | responsible for the coaching of the' contestants and consequently for the showing each made in the meet. Like in most of the oratory contests music had its part at Dunbar's finals. Louise Wesley played.the “Nocturne in B Flat” as a piano solo. W. L. Smith, principal of the school, presided over the contest, o FILM AIRMAN KILLED. Second Escapes by Parachute as Plane Crashes in California. LOS ANGELES, March 23 (#).—Phil Jones, mechanic, was killed and Al Wil- son, noted flm stunt fiyer, escaped death by leaping with his parachute when a large bombing plane they were using in flimirg a motion picture near Van Nuys, Cal, went into a tail spin and crashed yesterday afternoon. J:;\es' body was found in the mangled ship. \\\\\\x\s\\s&\\w&\\\\“\\\m\m | District Men Com;ninioned. | _Commissions in the Reserve Corps of % tion of effect provided by the stage it- self, in addition to the gentleman's nat- | ural equipment, painted the character in too violent colors. Director’s Influence Tremendous. ‘The influence 'of the director, Miss Helburn ssid, was tremendous. Once suppressed in his functions, an almost mechanical “holder of the book,” he has become a figure of major impor- tance in. the success or failure of any play. Citing the work of Philip Moeller in “bringing out” values in a small role assigned to the chagrined Lynn Fon- tanne, the director had caused to be “read into” the part subsurface emo- tional values which, meeting the more obvious comic currents, produced an ef- ——————————— 93 Unusual and Distinetive 3-Room Apartments At Popular Rentals At 2601 Calvert Street Facing south and overlooking the Million-dollar Bridge and Rock Creek Valley. MANAGED BY WARDMAN Manager at 2401 Calvert St S i da ettt iatssatiihdetdegesatatasitatadtatatades Wm Go behind th and get [ARTISTS WIN APPLAUSE | |~ AT HOWARD CONCERT Violinist and Harpist Present Un- usual Ensemble Program at The La Salle Washington’s Newest Downtown Apartments | University. Members of the faculty and student body of Howard University enjoved an unusual musical treat Thursday eve- | ning, when Charlotte De Volt, violinist, | and Artiss De Volt. harpist. gave an en- | semble program. These two instruments | are rarely heard in ensemble works and | Loth performers showed sympathetic | | inderstanding and thorough musician- | ship. The audience gave special applause to the performances of Boccherini's “Minuet,” Charpentier's “Melodie” and “By the Brook,” written by Boisdefire. | Among the more setious numbers Salnt- Saens’ “Fantaisie, Opus 124,” and Schu- ber(’s “Ave Maria,” as arranged for vio- lin by Wilhelmj, were well done. Aa unusual arrangement of the spiritual “Deep River” was effectively presented and well received. Located at corner Conn. Ave. and L. St. N.W', Equipped with Frigidaire included in rent. 1 room, kitchen, entrance hall, bath.....$47.50 2 rooms, non-housekeeping, bath—Conn. Avew framtages o, Lot dusmiassiid SIS0 3 rooms, kitchen, bath, 3 exposures. .... 4 rooms, kitchen, 2 baths (2 bedrooms) . .$135.00 This Building Is Within 3 Squares of Government Buildings Wardman’s 2 £ 1437 K St. N, one Mail Burch Successor Named. Femel William Wells. a graduate of the | Army Flying School at Brooks Field, | will succeed W. T. Burch as ad- | NENES ministrative officer at Hoover Field, it | was announced today. Mr. Burch re- | med to join the new Curtiss Flying Service as information chief at the New | | York office. > ‘“‘\mmmm There is yet an opportunity for you to select an apartment in Davenport Terrace 4800 block Connecticut Ave. “More Than a Place to Live” }ji;h-n point along Connecticnt Ave. Surrounded by spacious, well kept lawns, 2001 16th St. N.W. Exceptionally attractive apartments of three out- side rooms, reception hall, bath and large kitchen. Reasonable Rentals The Argonne 16th and Columbia Road N.W. Four rooms, kitchen, bath and reception room, south: ern exposure. Reasonable ATLARALRLLTLENATERRAURSARASS AR ANNNSNNNN Y, Lowest rents along Conn. Ave. $45.00 for One Room, Kitchen, Bath $60.00 for Two Rooms, Kitchen, Bath $80.00 for Three Rooms, Kitchen, Bath Frigidaire Is Included in the Rent Managed by Wardman Mrs. Griffith, Manager; Miss Cook, Assistant Clev. 1912 IEEALARLLALALAALALRLLALRARALRARAUR NN R S L L C R R TR T e e TR e e We Are Now Able to Offer You An Apartment in THE BOULEVARD (2121 New York Ave.) 1926 Ford 1927 Ford 1926 Ford 1926 Ford . 1927 Chevrolet Coach HILL & TIBBITS Open_Sunda: 301 Fos Downtown Washington's largest and finest apartment building. $52.50 for one room, kitcheén, bath. $60.50 for two rooms, kitchen, bath. Large rooms, with paneled walls. Each apartment equipped with a Murphy bed and Frigidaire. 5402 Connecticut Ave. Most Desirable Apt. in the City large rooms. dineti ception hall, large i 8 $60.00 PER MONTH Also one for $62.50 available April 1 Also llrrf 1 room. dinette-kitchen. all and bath. all southern . $47.50 per month. Ava Potomac Park, Public Golf Course, Lincoln Memorial, Auditorium and numerous public buildings nearby. MANAGED BY WARDMAN Main 6850 Manager, Mrs. Jackman OSCAR H. ROBE OWNER-MANAGER Cleveland 1970 IBAATALALLL1LATARALARRARARRAAL L BRSNS T T R NOTICE New and very modern apartment-hotel opposite Walter Reed Hospital THE DAHLIA 7019 Georgia Avenue, Northwest 1 room and bath (bachelor apt.) 2 rooms, kitchen, bath and sun parlor.. 3 rooms, kitchen and bath.......... .o ge 3 rooms, kitchen, bath and sun parlor.... FRIGIDAIRE IN EVERY APARTME! FURNISHED APARTMENTS AVAILABLE Hotel service—cafeteria, barber shop, beauty perlor, tailor shop, etc., located on premises. Members of the Operation Build- ers Awn, of e e e e G S S See Resident Manager in Apt. No. 101, or b | . | Jreuninger & Sons | Investment Bldg. Main 6140 I —_— is door the facts e n the Army have been issued by the War | i | Yor Annapolis Academy every week day at | 0819 Eighth street, as a first lieutenant 0 a.m.: lesving Annapolis Academy 4:30 of Engineers: to Willlam J. O'Donnell, | would like passengers. Call FI. 8907 | jr. 4801 Blagden avenue, as a second | licutenant of Inantry; to Cooper B.| Rhodes, 543 Connecticut avenue, as a | second lieutenant of Engineers, and to | ANY | George M. Hebbard, 1714 Lanier place, | @3- Las a second leutenant, Chemical War- | fare Service. 2101 Connecticut Avgnue VILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANV ts contracted by any one other than ms- JESSE E. PORTER. 2316 F st. 1.W. 25° 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE F debts contracted by any one other than . M. 1L, Baliston, Va. | BE RESPNOSIBI ANY 1 e contracted for- After ihis. date. other | Apartments of than by myself. CH. s W. I’AX'I';ZNv The_ Cumberland Apt CEMENT WORK —CE Distinction in Washington’s most exclusive building MENT WALKS, STEPS, | MANSIONS 3000 Conn. Ave. Suites Now Available in Center and rth Buildings Twenty-Four Hour Service Valet Shop, Garage, Dining Room carpenters and builders, | 3 per cent e rib | § quipment: sav r sh plain, corrugated and doubl strips. brass thresholds. addles and spring | bronze channel bar. cailking compound. in- | cludin » guns ACCURATE METAL WEATHER STRIP. CO. 1111 Good Hope Rd. SE.__ Atlantic 1315 ROOF WORK of any nature promptly and g T4 Seven and nine rooms and three baths with enclosed porches. FEach apartment has a servant’s room and ¢apably_looked after by ik , e e . GO TR cnrfer Shops .ln Direct Connection | bath. EGor'FAINTING. an acing Beautiful Rock- Creek Park f§ | | g sra P b2 Roofini 119 sra St SW 1 Room, kitch S | KOONS Soohoe ™ 110 3ua 8™ |1 e | Valet Service 5 Rooms, kitchen and bath, $60 to $80 month Also Larger Apartments We Invite You to Inspect These ANTED | of furniture to or from Richmond ano -To haul van loads of New York. Phila., Boston. points Bouth. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co | ! | . H. L. RUST | __1313 You St._ Norih 3343. | FLOORS ieisped_cieated, hished. Unusual Suites | SO bine work. R E. NASH. FL ViCE. " COLOMBIA 211 | Office : ; COMPANY 3000 Connecticut Ave. N.-W. Telephone Adams 4800 . Wardman Mm;agement ! T T AT Planned and Executed —with fine discrimination and| skill. That's N. C. P. Print- The National Capital Press i 1005 15th St. N.W. Main 8100 1210-1212 D 8t. N.W.__Phone Main 650 learn the full measure of advantage you may gain by living in this home in Burleith! Inspect this home your- self, don’t just ride by— get out of your car, go into the home, see its beautiful finish, learn of its splendid construction and inspect the hundred unusual modern appli- ances which we install in homes—appliances which make g a joy—and which remove the un- pleasant mechanics of domestic routine. Then inquire who your neigh- bors are, who your chil- Iren will play with, We'll bet you'll move here be- cause the facts that have earned Burleith the name --*“The most successful community of reasonably priced homes in Wash- ington,” are obvious. Grasp this opportunity! 3603 R Street N.W. THIS Nome contatns @ fine rocms—3 are led bath— mantel, b basement tubs. Completely equipped Litchen—bot-water heat- This one chance remains! Inspect this home Sunday! it in ideally vely $10,950. landsenped lot. SAMPLE HOMES OPEN TODAY 763 Princeton St. NW., just east of Ga. Ave. 5308 Illinois Ave. N.\W., just east of Ga. Ave. 1731 Upshur St. N.W., just west of 16th St. - 1204 Hemlock St. N.W., near 16th St. 1108 E St. N.E., just south Maryland Ave. 1018 Third St. N.E., just north K. 1926 Fourth St. N.E., cars pass door. 317 You St. N.E,, cars at corner. 19 Evarts St. N.E. REMEMBER THESE FACTS! 6, 7 and 8 ROOM HOUSES All Houses Open for Inspection All Houses Sold on Monthly Payments Force Your House to Pay for Itself—You Can Easily. Rent Second Floor for Enough to Make Monthly Payments Cut This Ad Out and Visit Property or Phone Main 908 for Auto to Inspect Expertenced AdvertisersPreferT heStar-