Evening Star Newspaper, March 23, 1929, Page 8

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o 8 socieTY. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. (. SATURDAY, Y fARCH 23, 1929.° Mrs. Hoover Expected to Attend Play at Wardman Park Little Theater This Afternoon. the afternoon a visit to the Little Theater at Wardman Park Hotel to see “Master Skylark.” The Secretary State and Mrs. Kel- logg wili entertain at dinner this even- ing in the Mayflower Hotel, where they are occupying an apartment through this month. ‘The Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Charles Francis Adams have purchased the house at 2221 R street, which was formerly occupied by Dr. and Mrs. Stephan Panaretoff when the former was Minister of Bulgaria. Mrs. Adams will join the Secretary today, after a short stay in New York. Distinguished Company Guests At the British Embassy. ‘The Ambassador of Great Britain and Lady Isabella Howard were hosts at/ dinner Thursday evening. having as their guests the Italian Ambassador and Nobil Donna Antoinette de Martino, the | Minister of Denmark, Mr. Constantin | Brun; the Minister of Bulgaria and Mme. Radewa, the Minister of the Irish Free State and Mrs. MacWhite, Mr. | Justice and Mrs. Harlan F <ke Stone, Senator Millard E. Tydings, Representa- | tive Ruth Hanna McCormick, the Un- dersecretary of State and Mrs. J. Reu- ben Clark, jr.; the Assistant Secretary of State and Mrs. Francis White, United States Ambassador to the Argentine and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, the president of George Washington University and | Mrs. Cloyd Heck Marvin, Mr. and Mrs. | Everett Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. Larz| Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Wilmott Lewis, | Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Oulahan, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Meyer, Sir Thomas Bazley, Miss Bazle, Sir Hubert Ogilvey, Mrs. Hackett, the second secretary and <. Torr, the second secretary, Mr..| Huxley, and Miss Gytha Stourton of the | embassy staff. | ‘The Ambassador of Peru, Dr. Her-| nan Velarde, will be the ranking guest | at dinner this evening of the Minister | of Costa Rica, Senor Quesada, who will entertain a company of 23 at the Chewy | Chase Club. ‘The Ambassador of Brazil, Senhor S. Gurgel do Amaral, was host at dinner Jast evening in honor of Senator de Mello Machado, who is spending a few days at the Mayflower on his way from Paris to his home in Rio de Janeiro. The other guests were Senator William E. Borah, Senator and Mrs. William H. King, Senator and Mrs. Henry Wilder Keyes, Senator and Mrs. Guy Despard Gofl, Senator Tasker L. Oddie, Senator Millard E. Tydings, Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director general of the Pan-American Union; Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Simonds, Mr. and Mrs. Frederic William Wile, Mr. and Mrs. William Hard, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hubert Johnson, Mrs. Henry F. Dimock, Mrs. James Carroll Frazer, Mrs. Franck C. Letts, Mrs. Elonzo Tyner and the first secretary of the embassy and Senhora do Alemida | and the second secretary of the em- bassy and Senhora de Mello. Mrs. William Howard Taft, wife of | the Chief Justice, atended the luncheon yesterday which Mrs, Gilbert H. Grosvenor gave in compliment to Mrs. Martin Johnson, who with her husband has hunted big game in Africa. Mr. Johnson gave a lecture last evening be- fore the National Geographic Soclety. Others in the company of 20 were Mrs. Harlan Piske Stone, Mrs. Charles J. Bell, Mrs. James R. Mann, Mrs. Grosvenor H. Backus and Mrs. Melville Grosvenor. The Minister of Uruguay and Mme. Varela will entertain a company at din- ner this evening in compliment to Gen. Guillermo Rupprecht, delegate from Uruguay to the Commission on Con- ciliation between Paraguay and Bolivia. ‘The guests will be other members of the commission. The Minister of Czechoslovakia and Mme. Veverka motored to Baltimore yesterday with the first secretary of the legation and Mme. Fiza and will return godny.t *e "1'3: "o attend a ‘meet- ing of Mary! Academy of o ences, where Dr. Fiza gave a lecture on Czechoslovakia. Mrs. Adam Wyant, wife of Repre- sentative Wyant, will go to New York on Monday. Mrs. Wyant will spend a short time there and will then return )u; aa]r apartment in the Wardman Park otel. Mrs. Kincheloe, wife of Representa- tive David H. Kincheloe, has canceled all social engagements for the next two ‘weeks on account of illness. Rear Admiral and Mrs. William W. Kimball will entertain at a tea this aft. ernoon. Mrs. Kimball will have receiv- ing with her Mrs. Spencer Gordon. Mrs. ‘Thomas P. Bayard, jr., wife of former Senator Bayard, and Mrs, Percival Mc- Ceney Werlich will be at the tea tables. fred P. Dennis entertained at dinner last evening in compliment to the Italian Ambassador and Nobil Donna Antoinette de Martino. Others in the company were the éounselor of the Bel- gian embassy, Mr. Robert Silvercruys; the commercial counselor of the British embassy and Lady Broderick, Mr. and Mrs. James B. Reynolds, Mrs. J. Borden Harriman and Mrs. James Teackle Den- nis and Mr. Alfred Jenkins Shriver of Baltimore. OCIETY RB. HOOVER it expected to in- | Spring blossoms and candles used as a clude in her engagements of | | Hull will come from Philadelphia to| | stay he was received by the President centerplece. Mrs. Helen Humphreys, Mrs. John Hansbury and Mrs. Willlam Sault as- | sisted the hostess in the dining room. The other guests were Mrs. Richard | | Yates, wife of the former Governor of | Missouri; Mrs. Rosco Patterson, wife of | the Senator from Missouri; Mrs. Lloyd Rea, Mrs. Theodore Alford, Mrs. George Porter, Mrs. Claud Porter, Mrs. Paul Wooten, Mrs. Thomlinson, Mrs. Claud | Williams, Mrs. Arthur Henning, Mrs. | Howard Hodgkin, Mrs. Eugene Andrews, Mrs. William W. Scott and Mrs. Otis J. Rodgers. Capt. and Mrs. W. E. Dalton are | spending the Easter holidays at Atlan- | tic City, at the Traymore Hotel. “ Miss Frances Gore and her fiance. | Mr. Eberhard Haynes, whose marriage will take place Wednesday, April 10.’ were entertained at dinner last eve- ning by Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Fowler, in their home, at 2101 Connecticut avenue. | The other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Gore, Miss Frances Hill, Miss Clara_Bolling, Mr. Louis F. Peake and | Mr. Harry R. Fowler. Mrs. Marthena Harrison Williams will have guests dining informally with her this evening at the Chevy Chase Club. Col. and Mrs. L. W. Cass will enter- | tain at dinner this evening at the Wardman Park Hotel. | The commissioner general of immi- | gration and Mrs. Harry E. Hull will be | joined at the Wardman Parls Tl next week by their son, Mr. Harris Hull. Mr. | pass Easter with his parents. Capt. Einar Paul Lundborg, the res- | cuer of Nobile, who has been stopping | at the Willard while in Washinzton, left | vesterday for Philadelphia. In #is brief and entertained at the Swedish lega- tion. Dr. A. Johnson, who is traveling with him, also was a guest at the Wil- lard. Maj. and Mrs. S. Bacon of New York City are at the Carlton for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Woodson and Miss Jean Woodson went last night to New York, where they will remain over Sunday. Mr. Daniel Thew Wright, jr., son of | Judge and Mrs. Daniel Thew Wright of the Wardman Park Hotel, will sail in May for Europe. Mr. Wright will pass some time in London and Paris. Maj. and Mrs. D. O. Elliott, Maj. and Mrs. M. Murray and Maj. and Mrs. T. J. Flynn will be among the group of hosts entertaining at dinner at the e Daughter of the Secretary of Commerce, staying for some time. ! NEW CABINET GIRL | MISS GERTRUDE LAMONT, Lamont, one of the most expert horsewomen at Hot Springs, | supper dance this evening at the Ward- man Park Hotel. Mrs. L. B. McConnell was hostess to a luncheon party of eight at the Willard yesterday. Mrs. Bruce Clark, Miss Clara A. Lutz |and Miss Gertrude Lutz left last Satur- day for Charleston, 8. C., by motor. They will visit in Florida before re- turning. Among those who have joined the Washington colony at the Edgewater Gulf Hotel, between Biloxi and Guif- port on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, are Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Carroll, 2029 Con- necticut avenue; Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Brown and Miss Irene Meserole. Gentlewomen's League Holding Card Party. The Gentlewomen's League, one of Washington's oldest benevolent socie- ties, gives its annual card party Thur: day, April 4, at 2:30 o'clock, at the Wil- lard Hotel in the Fairfax suite on the first floor. of the entertainment consists of Mrs. Karl Langenbeck, chairman; Miss Myra Hendley, Mrs. John W. Holcombe, Mrs. Fulton Lewis and Mrs. John Ritchie. This soclety was founded many years ago and has for its object the assistance of women in the disposal of the prod- ucts of their handiwork, which con- sists of the choicest delicacies of the kitchen to the most artistic needlework The work of the society has resulted in the keeping together of the home through fostering home industry. The first president of the society was Mrs. Rose Gouverneur Hoes, followed by Mrs. Charles Maubury, Mrs. Thomas Lockwood, and is at present presided over by Mrs. Richard Dean. Mr. George S. Wilson, director of public welfare of the District of Colum- bia will speak on the subject “Practical Work of the Child Welfare Depart- ment of the District of Columbia” be- fore the Federation of Women's Clubs at the Roosevelt Hotel Monday at 12 o'clock. Following the luncheon a musical pro- gram will be given by Miss Virginia Cureton, violinist, after which Miss chief ot the Children’s Bureau, United States Department of Labor, will review the “National Activities of the Child Mr. Robert Patterson Lamont, and Mrs. 2., where she is Louise Cecile to Mr. Henry Parmenter | Berry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. | Berry of this city, the marraige to take | place early in April. Miss Mary Thurston and Miss Isabel McMullon of Northampton, Mass., are passing some time at the Carlton. Miss Amo L. McKee, who has spent | the Winter with her sister, Mrs. Rich- | ard A. Summers at Tucson, Ariz, has| returned to Washington and joined her | father at his apartment at the Ward- man Park Hotel. Miss Anna Richards and Miss Maude | Richards entertained at a luncheon at | the Mayflower today. Mr. Fred Buchholz entertained at| luncheon yesterday in the Hotel Occi dental in honor of Capt. Arthur Prevost, | leader of the Belgian Band; Capt. Wil- | liam Stannard of the Army Band, Capt. | Taylor Branson of the Marine Band | Willard prior to the Army dance to be | held there on the evening of April 5. | Former Representative and Mrs. Prank Hamilton Punk have closed their | apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel and have gone South for a visit. | — | Lieut. and Mrs. E. F. Burkett of this | zi:y are at the Carlton for several ys. Mr. and Mrs. Percival Bradshaw Baldwin of South , N. J., and New York City, will be at the May- | flower over the Easter week end, prior to motoring to Atlantic' City. Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Horne of e Speedwriting New course beginning Mar. 12, 5 p.m. Open to Men and Women 40. Lessons, $20.00 Y. W.C. A, 17th & K Sts. | 6029 Third street northwest announce the engagement of their daughter, Col, Mons. “Ari; Mrs. Larz Anderson and the Misses ‘Tarwater of Tennessee will be the guests of honor at tea Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Slub of Colonial Dames, at 1302 New Hampshire avenue. Mrs. Anderson will give an illustrated talk and the Misses Tarwater will sing negro spirituals, Luncheon Parties for New Senatorial Hostess. Mrs. Charles P. Keyser entertained yesterday and today at luncheon for Mrs. Rosco Patterson, wife of the new Senator from Missouri; Mrs. J. W. Ly- man, from Kansas City, and Mrs. Lloyd Rea of New York City, her daughter. Yesterday Hawes, Mrs. L. C. Dyer, Mrs. John Cochran, Mrs. Edward Ellis, Mrs. Ed- ‘ward Hayes, Mrs. John Smithwick and Mrs. Hugh C. Smithwick. ‘The luncheon today was buffet style, and the table was beautifully set with HOLL'’S Dining Room and Cafeteria 1032 Conn. Ave. 514 19th N.W. The La Salle All States Hotel Phone Nat. 5448 Phone Main 3860 (4:30 to 7:30) $1 Dinner for 65¢ Mea Prime Rib of Beef au jus Stew Calf Liver With Onions or Bacen Vegetables Eat Sholl's Balanced Meals | the guests were Mrs. Harry ! ice—without the care a house. These Suites A few furnished Apart- ments available, with or without hotel accommoda- tions. Main 2100 Save the Balance /”~WARDMAN PARK HOTEL ; DINNER DANCE SEVEN ACES ORCHESTRA All Eleven of 'Em APPEARING NIGHTLY . Couvert. $1.00. — — “Diner Parfail,” $2.50. ineluding couve 3700 Massachusetts Avenue FFERS delightful suites in an exclusive en- vironment. You can live here in the luxury of perfect appointments and critically efficient serv- The 7-room suites are sumptuous in their spacious- ness and elegant fitting, 3 baths; immense porches, from which the view is enchanting. Cafe service if you desire. Garage in connection with the building—servants’ retiring rooms, laundry facilities—and constant office service. Others Beginning at $125.00 B. F. Saul Co. £ 7:830 to 1 A. M. umbia Recording Artists ALSO Albert and Mile. Adel GLORIA stocrats of the Ballroom™ Alse » 1a carte service. Near the Cathedral nd expense attending a from $175 up The resident manager will be glad to show them to you. 925 15th Street | after Easter. | of this city, Frida; | | m Welfare Department,” and Mr. Fred | Morrell of the United States Forestry and Liut. Charles Benter of the Navy |Service will give a short talk on the Eand. | work of that department. Mrs. John T. Murp ident of this city, now of Santa Fe, N. Mex,, is the guest for the season of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. O'Brien and ' daughter, Miss Helen O'Brien, of Chi- | cago, will be at the Hotel Washington during Miss O'Brien’s college vacation ‘ Miss Mary Hudd, at their home, 1408 | Thirty-first street northwest. Mrs. Murphy is important in the so- cial, political and woman’s club life in Santa Fe and is a member of the Board of Trade of that city. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wheeler Steven: of Brookline, Mass., announce the mar- | riage of their daughter, Mrs. Marian | Apthorp, to Dr. Richard Bruce King of | Boston, ton of Mr. William Bruce King | 0 a0 ponil copen enter- | ? *y, March 15, In Parls. | ined at a poets' ten Thursday. Mr. Mr. J. B. Evans will entertain at the Benjamin Musser, editor of Contem- I LET Us EXPLAIN WHY ! —a District Supreme Court Judge—Senators, Army and Navy Officers, Doctors, Lawyers and Merchants—54 substantial citizens own their apt. homes in 1661 CRESCENT PLACE Adjoining 2400 16th 8t. N.W. The Embassy Section of the City ONLY 3 PROPOSITIONS LEFT SEE THEM TODAY You will want to join 1,183 satisfied owners of Warren co-operative homes. ng room, kitchen, baths, spiral st ing eXpPeNnse............00n ....$145.55 Neo. 1. Duplex (2 floors), drawing room, coat closet, 4 bedrooms, 2 colored case—4 entranc Interest and ope No. 8. Foyer, drawing reem, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, dinette. Interest and operating expense....................$76.28 REALTORS AND BUILDERS ADAMS 9900 g 4 This Home, 4524 Cathedral avenue, is of distinctive French design—which has reigned a distinct favor- ite since the last half of the eighteenth century— and has been given wonderful treatment and a fit- ting site in The Garden Spot of Washington. % The Scene Is‘hangig | Nature is turning the corner into Spring at Wesley Beights —aunfolding her' multi-colored beauties that paint once more a charming background for Homes of distinctively distinguished designs —for which The Garden Spot of Washing- ton is widely famous — and wholly un- approached. Every season is picturesque here—but none excels the glory of awakening nature. N, A Inspect the Home illustrated above—4524 / Cathedral Avenue—the latest addition to the y triumphs of architectural effectiveness and practical homeyness. Open every day and evening—including Sunday— -from 10 am. to 9 p.m. ‘Motor out Massachusetts Avenue, crossing Wisconsin Avenue, turning left into Cathedral Avenue. W. C. and A. N. Miller « Owners and Developers 1119 Seventeenth Street Decatur 619 The committee in charge | | Katherine F. Lenroot, assistant to the | v, formerly a res- | her sisters, Mrs. Julia Hudd Dillon and | 0] ———=]a][———=[o[———=[o]——=lo}| SOCIETY; ynonry Verse, was guest of honor and read from his new book. Other Wash- ington poets read from their verses Mrs. Albert N. Baggs and Mrs. Harriet [ Olds “Henderson presided at ‘the tea table. ‘The Washington Alumnae of Lake Erie College, Painesville, Ohio, are giv- ing a card party at the Hotel Willard this evening at 8 o'clock. The president | of the branch is Miss Clara Brewer of 2814 Cathedral avenue, The committee | in charge of the card party consists of | Mrs. G. J. Fiebeger, Mrs. F. W. Ashley | |and Mrs. O. L. Veerhof. | LT. COL. S. T. MACKALL | SENT T0 SAN FRANCISCO. | Lieut. Col. Thorne Strayer Trans-| i terred From D. C. to Fort | Benning. Lieut. Col. Samuel T. Mackall, In- spector General’s Department, has been | transferred from the Army War College, this city, to San Francisco; Lieut. Col. Thorne Strayer, Infantry, from the War | Department to Fort Benning, Ga.; Maj Jesse I. Sloat, Medical Corps, from San Francisco to the West Point Military Academy; Maj. John Q. MacDonald. | Ordnance Department, from the Arsenal | at Rock Island, IIl, to the command to the ordnance depot at Pig Point, V: Maj. Joseph R. Cygon, Coast Artillery to Baltimore; Maj. Henry C. Davis, ji Ordnance Department, from the War | | Department, to Honolulu: Maj. John A. | Brooks, jr., Ordnance Department, from the War Department to Manila; Maj. Francis A. Englehart, Ordnance De- partment, from the Philippines to the War Department; First Lieut. Isaac | Davies, Air Corps, from Kansas City, Mo., to Bolling Field; First Lieut. Jo- seph F. Battley, Chemical Warfare | Service, from the War Department to | Hawail, and First Lieut. John W. Home- { wood, 12th Infantry, at Fort Washing- 1 ton, Md., to Honolulu. Marriage Licenses. | william Johnson. 16. and_Alice M | Simp: Rey, Benjamin H. Whitting | _ Wiilie Rodney. 22. and Maggie Eppes, 21 { Rev. Winston B. Hiil. | ac R. Fitzwater, 27, and Virginia X, { Flickinger, 22; Rev. John Copenhaver. | Edwin Morrison Mallory, Jjr., 25. Rich- mond, Va., and Helen Virginia Garber. 21 Va.: Ri Samuel Judson Porter altimore, and Julies G. Silverstos and Vea Wimes, 20; Rev. Ge Kuemmert. 39, Baltimore | Florence Dyer, 20, Baltimore; Rev. E. 16. am Hoffman James M. Grifith, 22, and Catherine Rosenbaum, 19; Rev. Carroll Maddox. | A letter addressed “The postmaster— |to be given to some girl—Cincinnati, Ohio,” has been sent to the dead letter | office_at Washington. | ‘5 Estimates We have pleased thousands of cus- tomers. You will be surprised how beau- tiful we can make your choker look. Very Reasonable on Coats New England Furriers Benjamin Sherman. Prop. 618 12th St. Franklin 6355 HE charm Like old to behold—satisfying t mn. hundred acres, truly a its confines. | lyric voice. Corps, from the University of Kansus‘s hospitality never fades. and candlelight, it ex- udes an atmosphere of dignified and traditional culture that is beautiful The spontaneity of hospitality is increased, happier in the giving when you know your home and its environment are appealing in their originality and beauty. Rock Creek Park Estates, a wooded park of one Creek Park, lends beauty and orig- inality to any home erected within Sixteenth St., which might be called L’Avenue Interna- tionale, because of the embassies lo- cated thereon, affords a direct com- munication with these Estates. They may also be approached through AMUSEMENTS | WARDMAN PARK—“Master Skylark.” Again the Ogle, Tinnin, Brown Play- ers score in their Junior Theater reper- tory at the Wardman Park Theater, this time with an artistic presentation of John Bennett's “Master Skylark,” a story of William Shakespeare’s “home- town folks” with a delightful young hero in the person of Nicholas Attwood of the Mildred Natwick presents this role with ease and charm, and is supported by a large, well-trained cast from which Henry Fonda, Gaston Carew, stands out, as does Kent Smith | in the dual role of Simon Attwood and John Smith, a smithy. We follow the career of young Nick from Stratford to Coventry and from Coventry to London Town, when his momentary rebellion against the stern- ness of his father caused him to run | away from home to see the Lord High Admiral's Players in the neighboring vil- lage, and the wil of Gaston Carew forced him to take the road to London to sing before the Queen. It is a fascinating tale, well told, and gives an interesting insight into the prejudice against the stage with which “Bill” Shakespeare had to contend when he chose a playwright's career in the sixteenth century. Costumes and settings are both artis- tic and gay. The play itself is a sort of mixture of Shakespearean and Bar- rie-esque atmosphere. Young Master viark and his gentle mother, Margaret Attwood (played by Yeslfe Kent), might have stepped from the pages of a Barrie novel, while the general tone of the scenes and the costuming are naturally reminiscent of Shakespeare's master- pleces, being a picture of the cotem- porary life of the great English bard who was the greatest interpreter of his own times. el TORAGE AGENTS ALLIED VAN LINES LONG DISTANCE MOVERS CRATE AND PACK BY EXPERTS 1313 UST. PHONE NORTH 3343 . YCHIC COUNCIL VOTES | TO MEET IN KENTUCKY By the Associated Press. | COLUMBIA, Mo, March 23.—Dr. (Max Meyer, ousted psychology profes- sor of the University of Missouri, was advised yesterday by wire that the | council of the Southern Society for Phi- ilmphy and Psychelogy had voted to change the place of its twenty-fourth annual meeting this year from the Uni- | versity of Missouri to Lexington, K seat of the University of Kentucky. Meyer, who was one of three Univer- |sity of Missouri faculty members dis- | missed this week by the executive board |of curators for a part in the circulation of sex questionnaires among studen | was to have been host to the convention, this year. ‘ The ousted professor sald that the representative society of professors and guests “did not care to meet at Colum- , Mo., after the action of the execu- tive board Wednesday.” He sald he had accepted an_invitation to attend the | meeting in Kentucky and deliver his address scheduled for delivery here, SEND EASTER FLOWERS To the Folks Back Home— THRU— | | of 1407:H:Sri¥n eMain 3707 have leaves 12:15 Washington Ticket MITTE - ESTATES - of gracious silver, roses highways o participate part of Rock improvement owners and d and buyers of Every house is custom-built and approved by a jury of architects You Enter the Estates at 16th St. and Kalmia Rd. Office on Property, 1603 Kadmia Road Telephone Main 5700 for an Inspection Appointment EDSON W. BRIGGS CO: Owners 1 THOUSAND-ONE FIFTEENTH STREET, AT K every A. M. to 8:00 P. M.—then 9:30 P. M. and 12:00 Midnight. P. M.) Baltimore stop—Union Bus Terminal, Liberty and Redwood Streets. Owned by Pennsylvania R. CK CREEK PAR the wooded drives of Rock Creek Park. The Estates’ broad paved intertwine with the city’s main arteries, and a twenty-minute ride brings you to the business center.. Permanent re- strictions are an advantage to you in every way. They protect your nat- ural background, your home and en- vironments, while restricting in mo sense the incorporation of your ideas in home building. sports activity is easily satisfied; tennis courts, bridle paths and a golf course are close by. Every city The Edson W. Briggs Company, Creek Park Estates, act as building and financial counsel to the builders within the Estates. To BALTIMORE- Express Motor Coaches hour on the hour, 8:00 (Noon motor couh. $125 one way Office and Waiting Room INTERNATIONAL TOURS 1421 Pennsylvania Ave. ‘2” (Next door to Childs Restaurant) . Telephone—Metropolitan 5314 round trip R. & Philadelphia Rapid Trensit Co. N TOURS themselves The desire for has been installed. evelopers of Rock homes and home sites

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