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SO CIETY. SOCIETY The Chief Executive and First Lady of . the Land Have Guests for Easter W HE President and Mrs. Hoover are entertaining in the White House over Sunday Mr.and Mrs. James Rippén and Mrs. Edgar Rickard and her daughter, Peggy Rickard, all of New York. The President was obliged' to post- pone, owing to the weather, his brief fishing trip which he had expected to make today. Secretary Stimson Joins Mrs, Stimson for Easter. ‘The Secretary of State, Mr. Henry L. Stimson, is in New York, where he went to spend Easter with Mrs. Stim- son. The Secretary will return the first of the week, but Mrs. Stimson is not expected to come to Washington for several weeks. ‘The Attorney General and Mrs. Wil- liam De Witt Mitchell will be joined Saturday, April 6, by their son, Mr. Bancroft Mitchell, who will arrive from the Harvard School of Business Admin- istration. Nobil de Martino, wife of the Ambas- sador of Italy, will entertain at tea this | dfternoon for which she has issued ‘The Ambassador of Germany and Frau von Prittwitz and Gaffron are ex- pected to return to Washington tomor- Tow from a short vacation in the South. Senator and Mrs. Royal S. Copeland will entertain at a dinner dance this evening at the Wardman Park Hotel in honor of their son, Mr. Royal S. Cope- lend, jr. Representative and Mrs. James M. Beck, accompanied by their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. S. Pinkney Tuck. and their smail son, S. Pinkney, ., came to Washington yesterday from ew York, where Mr. Tuck arrived earlier in the week from Turkey, where he is secretary of the United States embassy in Constantinople. Mr. and Mrs. Tuck will remain with Representa- tive and Mrs. Beck through April. The counselor of the Bolivian lega- tion and Senora de Boyd will enter- tain at the dinner-dance at the Ward- man Park Hotel this evening. ~There will be about 24 guests. Col. and Mrs. George C. Thorpe and the Federal trade commissioner and Mrs. Charles H. March, the latter the zister of Mrs. Thorpe, have issued cards for an Easter Sunday tea tomorrow afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock, in the home of Commissioner and Mrs. March, at 2209 Massachusetts avenue. Col. and Mrs. Hugh D. Wise of Princeton, N. J.,, are at the Carlton for a few days, accompanied by their sons, Mr. Hugh D. Wise, jr, and Mr. John ‘Wise, and Mr. Haskett Derby. Judge and Mrs. Rush La Motte Hol- land left yesterday by motor for Lynchburg, Va., where they will pass the week end as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harper. Judge and Mrs. Holland will return to the Wardman Park Hotel Monday. Mrs. Robert~ Lansing has gone to New York to remain over Easter. She has taken up 1esidence in her new home ,at 1328 Sixteenth street, having sold her former house, on Eighteenth street. Miss Finney and Mr. Allen Married at Noon Today. Mrs. Mary L. Finney announces the marriage of her daughter Ruth to Mr. Robert Sharon Allen, formerly of Ken- tucky, today at noon in All Souls’ Uni- tarian Church, Rev. U. G. B. Pierce officiating, in the presence of a small company. The bride wore a simply made gown of white chiffon and carried a shower bouguet of white roses. An informal wedding breakfast followed in the home of Miss Cora Rigby on Hillyer place. * Mr. and Mrs. Allen will be at home after April 8 in Hammond Court, at Thirtieth and Q streets, where they have taken an apartment. 2 ‘The marriage of Miss Roberta Marian ‘Hodgson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hodgson, to Mr. George Ells- h Johnson of Harrington, Del., will e place this evening at 8 o'clock, in the Old First Presbyterian Church, on John Marshall place, and will be fol- jowed by a reception in the home of t};utflde's parents, at 2118 Eightéenth H Former United States Minister to Switzerland and Mrs. Hampson Gary have gone to Old Point Comfort, where they will spend Easter, at the Cham- berlin-Vanderbilt. , Mr. and Mrs. McClure Kelley will en- tertain at a buffet supper this evening in honor of Mile. Helene Hellmann, daughter of the French consul general in San Francisco and Mme. Heilmann, who is the house guest of Lieut. and Mrs. Elliott B. Strauss. \ Miss Helen Stoutemeyer will be host- ess at a dinner dance this evening in the Kenwood Club in honor of Miss Ruth Ashford, whose marriage with Mr, Arthur Reymond will take place Thurs- day evening. Miss Stoutemeyer will be ‘one of the bridesmaids. . Mrs. Charles M. Oman went yester- day to New York, and is at the Weylin Hotel, at Madison avenue and Fifty- fourth street. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Conger Baldwin have given up -their house at 1825 M street and are moving. ioday to the house at 2122 Bancroft place. i Mrs. Arthur O'Brien and daughter, Miss Caroline Roebling, are in New York, where they are staying at the ‘Ambassador Hotel. Princess Margaret Boncom| i, who | City. ce the has been at the Mayflower er T last night edrly Winter, left Washington eek End. Ransley over Easter and will then visit in New York for a week. Dr. and Mrs, Willlam B. Mason are spending the Easter vacation at- the Chamberlin-Vanderbilt Hotel at Old Point Comfort. Mr. and Mrs. Theodor G. Lurman, jr., of Baltimore, who are spending Easter in Weshington, are staying at ?‘e M.IyflmAml!I‘oum. Lurman was former] a Dut wnmnzton. oif i, Enga, t of Miss Flynn To n{? Zalesak Announced. Dr. and Mrs, J. A. Flynn announce the engagement of their daughter Mary Louise to Mr. Willlam A. Zalesak of this city. The wedding will take place in the early Summer., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Robb will have as their guest in their home in Edge- moor Miss Jeanne Willemier of Amsterdam, Holland, who has been passing the Winter in Canada. Miss Willenmier will arrlve here today and remain through next week. Dr. and Mrs. Macpherson 012m will entertain at dinner this evehing at_the Chevy Chase Club. Dr. and Mrs. Crichton will have as their guests over the week end Mr. and l#rs‘i Samuel McFetridge of Ventnor, Mr. Frederic McKee and his daughter, Miss Amo McKee, will be hosts at the dinner dance this ev-ning at the Ward- man Park Hotel. Mrs. John Thomas Erwin has re- turned from her home in Virginia, where she was called several weeks ago on account of the serious illness and death of her mother, Mrs, Benjamin klin Gravely, which occurred March . Mrs. Gravely was well known in Washington, having spent several ‘Winters here with her son-in-law and daughter, Prof. John Thomas Erwin, head of the mathematics department of the George Washington University, and Mrs, Erwin. Mrs. Glenn Stewart and her sister, Mrs. Winfield Campbell, arrived in ‘Washington yesterday and will be at the Mayflower until tomorrow, when they will leave for Mrs. Stewart’s home, Cape Centaur, on the Eastern Shore of Mary- land. Mrs. Stewart and Mrs. Campbell motored here from Miami, stopping over in Alken and at Hot Springs. Mrs. Stewart will return to Washington in about a week. Miss Katherine R. Yetter of New York is at the Grace Dodge Hotel for Easter. Distinguished Patrons For Music Club Concert. Mrs, Willlam De Witt Mitchell, wife of the Attorney General, heads the list of patronesses for the District of Columbia Federation of Music Clubs’ golden hour concert to feature family ensemble group work, which will be given in the coneert hall of the Interior Department Building Saturday evening, April 6, at 8:20 o'clock. Other pa- tronesses are Mrs. Porter H. Dale, Mrs. Burton K. Wheeler, Mrs. Wilbur John Carr, Mrs. Charles Denby, Mrs. Gilbert H. Grosvenor, Mrs. Walter Bruce Howe, Mrs. John Jay O’Connor, Mrs. Edgar Stillman Kelley, president of the Na- tional Federation, and Mrs. Joseph M. sw{m-rd, president of the District Fed- eration. Mrs. William H. Taft has shown her interest in the million-dollar fellow- ship fund which the American Asso- ciation of University Women is raising to endow research fellowships for wom- en by taking tickets for the benefit per- formance of “Coquette,” which the ‘Washington branch of the organization is sponsoring Monday, April 23, in Poli’s large number of sold, among those who will attend the performance being Mrs. Alvin 8 Miss Jessie Dell, Miss Elizabeth Dean, Miss Louise Crouse, Miss Mar- guerite Donelly, Mrs. Henry Draper, Dr. Jane Sherzer, Mrs. Merle Thorpe, Mrs. Josiah Van Orsdel, Miss Carlotta Veitenheimer, Mrs. Luke Wilson, Mrs. A. J. Ziegler, jr.; Mrs. Charles Le Fevre, Mrs. Howard Le Roy, Mrs. Ed- mund Hogan, Mrs. Jarrett White, Mrs. R. T. McIntire, Mrs, Paul Shorb, Mrs. Alan Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Fenning and Mr. and Mrs, Alexander Wylie. Mrs. Leander McCormick Goodhart will also be present at the benefit, as will Mrs. W. F. McDowell, Mrs. Laura B. McCutcheon, Mr. and Mrs. Fay Hol- brook, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hawley, Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Taber, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Moulton, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Cald- well, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. r. and Mrs. P. M. Anderson, Chancellor and Mrs. L. O. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Herrick, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Nourse, Mr, and Mrs. Victor Whitlock, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sher- man, Mr.-and Mrs. J. Crane, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. McGuire, Dr. and Mrs. Lindsay, Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Gardiner and Mr. P. H. Frohman, Mrs, Thomas H. Carter, Mrs. John James Walsh, Mrs. John E. Carmack and Mrs, Peter Sheridan Garrett will receive at the opening of the new club in the historical house at 1425 V street northwest Monday #fternoon. Miss Maria C, Kine of Pyeng-Yang, Kores, is spending Easter at the Grace Dodge Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Norman F. Brown of Pittsburgh are 'x:llnt a few days in Washington at Mayflower with their daughter, Miss Nancy Brown, who came here from Miss Spence’s School in New York for her Spring holiday. Mr. and Mrs, Brown’s guests at luncheon yester- day at the hotel included Mrs. A, C. Morck of Oil City, Pa., and her son and daughter, Willlam and Augusta Morck, and Miss Catherine Black, also of Oil Miss Vong Mai Nyi of Boston. Shanghal, China, is at the Grace Dodge Hotel for the Easter season. + \ Mrs. Joseph Richardson Baker of 2032 Belmont road northwest,. wife of the assistant solicitor of the State Department. ¢ ~—Clinedinst Photo. Skeleton Believed Buried About 2650 B. C. Is Excavated Expedition Finds R.elic in Excavations on Site of Ur of Chaldees. By the Associated Press. LONDON, March 30.—The skeleton of a man who was supposed to have lived about 2650 B. C., has been dis- covered by the joint expedition of the British Museum and the University of Pennsylvania in extavations on the site of Ur of the Chaldees. The human relic was found in the last grave of an ancient cemetery. The grave is described as the richest of its period yet brought to light. - The skeleton was thought to.be that of a man because of the number of copper weapons placed at the head and along the side of the wooden coffin in which lay the crumbling bones. Among the wnfim were three of the largest spears that the cemetery has produced. A number of copper vessels, a copper tray made to imitate basketwork and piled with bowls and vases of nove forms were heaped nearby. The ancient skeleton was richly adorned, Six gold fillets erowned the head. Around the neck ‘were e strings of beads of gold, colored stone, agate, carnelian, jaspar, chalcedony and sard—stones which are rarely found before the time of Sargon of Akkad, early Babylonian King. On the wrists were four heavy gold bangles and four bangles of silver. Gold rings adorned the fingers. Close by lay two engraved cylindrical seals of lapis lazuli caped with gold. From one of the strings of beads hung a gold amulet in the form of a standing goat, ex- quisitely modeled, a real gem of minia- ture sculpture. ‘The_ excavators also found on the rubbish heap, in which the graves are set some 200 tablets written in one of the oldest forms of writing known in Mesopotamia. EXPLOSIVE BOMBS HELD. 87 Tons Arrive Too Late for Break- ing Up Missouri- River Ice Gorge. By the Associated Press. BISMARCK, N. Dak, March 30.— What is to be done with 37 tons of high explosive bombs, which arrived here yesterday too late to be of any use in breaking the huge ice gorge in the Missouri River south of -here, was a problem confronting Capt. Earl C..Wert, ordinance officer in .charge. The bombs-had been ordered here to be dropped frora bombing pl: the tons of ice jammed in a stretch of river near Huff earlier in the _ Cllers ’l}:ded D '35 | ‘surprised how beau- ook, tiful we can your_ choker 1 Very: Reasonable " Estimates on Coats * [t [c———]o[c———=]0] 15 Boys in Blue, Civil War Group, To Meet in Parley Wiil "'Decjde at Detroit Meeting Whether Unit ‘Shall Disband. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, March 30.—Fifteen of the “Boys in’ Blue,” all that are left of the pride of ‘Detroit in Civil War days, ars to meet April 13 to decide whether they shal meet: again. Dissension has arisen in the ranks, 65 years and more after Gettysburg and Antietam,cand threatens the con- tined existence- of Detroit post of the Grand Army of the Republic. Some of the members, the youngest of whom is 84, think they are too old and say it is too difficult to-get out to meetings. Even - the .commander, John L. Hinman, stanch leader- 6f those who favor continuing the post, admits thers are difficulties.” Not many of the boys ever are able to attend meetings. Seldom are more.- than four or. five present, sometimes only two. The post finds it el | hard to pay rent for the meeting place. As the.lines are drawn now, three members favor disbanding. Forty years ago, the post’s roll was a blue book of Detroit, -but the leaders have passed and only 1 or 2 of the 15 members who survive are actively engaged in business. TAKEN ON FAST RIDE. 1,241 Prisoners Transferred to New | :Cpok County Jail. CHICAGO, March 30 (#).—One thou- sand two hundred and forty-one pris- oners spent their first night in Cook County’s new jail last night, after being transferred through crowded downtown streets lined with patrolmen, in busses traveling 50 miles an hour, from the old jail. ¢ e transfer was carried out with machine-like precision, and there were no attempted escapes. The prisoners treated their: fast ride'as a relief from their dreary imprisonment, laughing and singing - throughout _the GLAZED SASH All Sizes—All Kinds . Lowest Prices GEO.”M. BARKER CO. " Hlmb.'!'«:ng.xl'“'oll 649-651IN.-Y.. Ave. 1528 7tk LW, " BY BBLE LEAGLE Third Annizal Easter Even- tide. Program to Be at Sylvan Theater. - The third aiffiual - Easter eventide Grounds, tomorrow from 5 to 6 p.m. Music will be furnished by the United Band. Master Richard Babeock, Boy. Scouts, will sound assem- bly, Dr. Henry B. Wooding, pastor of Ecl Prubyu'rhn! Church, Harding : = mm‘m.‘ the mlh president of organi- zation, will* introduce 'Representative John ‘M. Nelson of ‘Wisconsin as the presiding officer. A flag ceremony will be given by Boy and Girl Scouts under direction of Col. E. L. Mattice. A, pledge will be led by Col. Mattice. Braille Bible reading wiil be given by Master Edmund Brownin, of the Maryland School for the Blind. Merritt L. Smith, former president of the District of Columbia Christian Endeavor Union, will lead the audience in Bible feading. A hymn will be re- cited in the silent lunme by Miss Verma Brassell of Gallaudet College, and will be interpreted by Miss Eliza- beth Peet, dean of women's department, Gallaudet College. ‘The principal address will be deliv- ered by Dr. John H. Clifford, chaplain, United States Marine Corps. The bene- diction will be given by Dr. Gove C. Johnson, pastor of the National Memo- rial Baptist Church. SAYS PAIR AI.JMITS‘THEFT. Sheriff Claims Pittsburgh Youths Confessed Looting Store. COLUMBIA, 8. C, March 30 (. — Two youths, who gave their home as Pittsburgh, confessed last night to a -hold-up of a chain grocery store here yesterday mamlnr. 'y made their confession to Sheriff Alex Heise, who said they told him they had _spent all their money and wanted to obtain enough to continue their way to Pennsylvania from Florida. ‘They gave their names as Lloyd Moore and Vernon M. Blum. Moore said he had attended the University of Pitts- burgh and Blum said he had been a student at Carnegie Tech for a year. Both gave their ages 21 years. A chain store was selected, Sheriff Heise said they told him, because “it wouldn't hurt anybody much.” They got $80. WOMAN DIES IN CRASH. Officers Charge Liquor Found in Other Auto After Arrest. GREENVILLE, 8. C.,, March 30 (#).— Mrs. Ella G. Lewis, 61, of Johnstown, Pa., was killed instantly and Mrs. Hat- tie Wolf Shaffer’of Pittsburgh, Pa., was injured this afternoon when their a: tomobile was in collision on the Green- ville-Asheville highway with another machine. James Southern, alleged driver of the other car, was held in the county jail here last night. Officers said he was driving on the left side of the road, and they had removed liquor from his automobile, Southern was captured by bystanders. Prank 8. Lewis, husband of the dead woman, escaped with minor-injuries. Meets Next in Charlottesville. ing y University of Virginia at Charlottesville for its annual convention next year. TOOTHACHE When you want quick relief; whenyou wantyourtoothache to vanish instantly — insist that your druggist gives you J LF_EY TOOTHACH Attractive Apartment (Near Sheridan Circle) Apt. 42 2222 Que 'Street N.W. Five rooms,. kitchen, two baths, unfurnished. Formerly rented for $140 per month, re- duced last Fall to $125. Pres- ent “lease expires October 1. ‘Will: lease -until that date for © ‘$115 per month. Available im- mediately. . For further infor- mation phone Potomac 3616, ‘elme from -tinkling 't know just why. ‘The church, though wly changed in the meaning older children of the family, the “grown- with it for some mysterious and, to us, altogéther insufficient reason. We un- ups,” uni hesitatingly ci r:nom as of our fixed p at _the best. It was a m}:i og it thntl which we rel D 00w was beginnin, mi; look ‘into it. .Slowly we began to see that character and personality that self-evidently the best life has Whenever there is a soul no lonfer dazzled or blinded by the glare of the world’s prizes and all of life—called “Christ-like” by common con- attainment even for those possessed by an “inferiority complex” or the self-satisfaction of supermen—in the inflated language of popular cliques and groups today—and thatssuch a life finds its most hopeful conditions now, as in the days Christ walked the earth, in the school he organized, the rommunity he founded, the fellowship he created-—his Church— that there is a t; sent—possible o in them His risen and glorified if He could be found or if they personal experience: “What the Church at its best, is leadi ACCUSED OF MURDER | IN MOONSHINE RAID Warrant Out for Deputy Sheriff for Fatal Shooting at Alleged Rum Plant. By the Associated Pre: PENSACOLA, . Fla, March 30—A warrant charging Barney Wiggins, Baldwin County, Ala., deputy sheriff, with second degree murder in conmec- tion with the fatal shooting of Monroe Foster, following a liquor raid in Escam- bia County, Flaj, several days ago, was issued here last night by County Solici- tor Willlam Fisher. Issuance of the warrant followed an | investigation into the shooting, which occurred after a moonshine raid in which Wiggins and prohibition agents from the Mobile office participated. Foster dled in Baldwin County after being shot in Florida at a spot not far from the State line. A question of jurisdiction of the new Jones bill will probably be applied in this case. Under State laws prohibition violations were only misdemeanors- in Florida, though they were held as SAVE MONEY ON STORAGE [ FIRE - PROOF AGENTS ALLIED VAN LINES LONG DISTANCE MOVERS CRATE AND PACK BY EXPERTS BY DR. CHARLES WOOD, Former Pastor of the Church of the Covenant.. ROUGHT up in the country, as many of us doubtless were, first Kreuim of a church, m the little white box of a bullding with a thin bell on a knoll above the village. from the minister of the unattractive church, though retaining the same buildlns ble amount of fun an which we were told would be short enough conviction - was forced upen us that the change, of which we ha approved, was really, to our perplexed amaze- | | ment, “all to the good.” The church was now seen in a different angle. If our friends were getting so much ht'be that individuals of our supposed perspicacity should Eround or a gymnasium could give us something we felt we must ave; 50 the church could offer us help in building the kind of a He himself said to those groping after Him, half wondering for their pains, “Come and see.” Proof by trial, verification in he world needs most today,” it was lately said by a clear-eyed cbserver of life, “is saints.” Mount of Transfiguration and Transformation. % SOCIET ostly unfavorable, All the boys and site, of the of it when one or two rossed off these curious religious no further 1:::;:“(:&1 Vb‘e‘s‘:e to l;l u! et the greatest possi- thrills out of a life, startling” discovery when the ! suspiciously dis- they thought worth while, and uctantly confessed to curselves g to seem worth while to us, it | | just as certainly as ever a play- in our lofiiest moments were to promise. urements, half convinced body are’ made divinely visible. would have only their trouble “Christ-like Christians,” ng those who will toward that “felonies in Alabama. The Jones law | provides that dry law infractions are felonies in every State, the county solic- itor said. If hte Jones bill is invoked, he asserted, it may be decided that the | officer who shot Foster had the law on his side. If not, and it is ruled that | the old Alabama law was in force, the | officer was still within his rights, but if the Florida interpretation holds, the | officer who shot Foster can be prose- cuted for murder. | R ALy A new ladder can be collapsed into a | unit no longer than a stepladder of | 6 rungs, but can provide 12 rungs| when extended. % | At 7:30 SEVEN 1313 U ST. PHONE NORTH 3343 | Y. The Charch at Its Worst and Best | 4SPECIAL EASTER SERVICES PLANNED First Congregational Church Program of Worship Is Arranged. ‘There will be four special Easter services at the First Congregational Church, Tenth and G_streets, tomor- row. The minister, Dr. Jason Noble Pierce, will preach at both the 9 and 11 o'clock services on the theme “The Joy of Christ's Resurrection.” The motion picture, “The King of | Kings,” will be shown at 4 and 8 o'clock, and Dr. Pierce will speak at both serv- ices; his subject at 4 p.m. being “The Stone Rolled Away.” and his subject at 8 p.m. being “Our Risen Lord.” All departments of the Sunday School will meet at 10 o'clock. The Christian Endeavor societies meet at 6:30 p.m. Dr. J. Stanley Durkee, formerly of Washington and now minister of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. where he succeeded Newell Dwight Hillis in Beecher's pulpit, will speak Thursday night. The church supper at 6 p.m. Thursday will be followed by ihe prayer meeting at 6:45 p.m. Dr. Durkee will speak at 7:45 p.m. in the church auditorium on “Love Tri- umphant,” and his address will be illustrated by the photoplay “Glorious Betsy.” ‘There will be an entertainment Fri- day night at 8 o'clock at the church, | featuring the pictures “The Black Pi- rate,” a Pathe cartoon. “Sunday on the Farm,” and “The Junior Year.” FRESH CUT FLOWERS Potted Plants at Reasonable Prices CORSAGES A SPECIALTY PEOPLES FLOWER SHOP 81 S ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. & La. Ave. NW. 61st Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money Loaned to Members on Easy Monthly Payments James P. Shea James E. Connelly dent Secretdry Presiden WARDMAN PARK HOTEL EASTER DINNER DANCE Saturday Evening, March 30th P. M. Featiiring the All Famous M. C. A. Orchestra ACES “ALL ELEVEN OF THEM” Special - Entertainment—Couvert $1.00. “Diner Parfait,” $2.50, Including Couvert. Call Oscar, Columbia 2000, for Reservations. You to Let Us Estimate ' _ On Your Y YN Open Until 5 P.M. April'1 &2 Payday Routine Your . Payday ‘routine shoutd B .always. inchide' a. trip -to ‘the bank. | It’s the savings depositor who banks: ‘before he spends. tha ; achieves econoric' freedom. . One;Dollar iban Totwers- 3700 Massachusetts Avenue S Miss Helen | Hardenbergh has gone Atlantic City. to visit Miss Elizabeth i Sy HOSENVIIV:_ m&mkm( li'v‘ing-:;ccommbdi-‘ or.more ‘will’ y;:u with" Columbia’s .y 3 i | et : “Blossom Time”- In Washington —just the season when you'll dine at Blossom All the Seasonable. Delicacies | and - Substautials . That Whet Map Showing = Locations of Nurseries on * Inside of “Front: Cover " Our Spring Catalogue —as illustrated above has been mailed. If you did not receive your copy, tele- phone-NORTH 7000 or write and ask us " “Apartments of smaller: size, from $125 up. e . Feto: furnished suites; with: or without' hotel service. e skl !nqecflontluuhu-flmmnun. ; =1 e