Evening Star Newspaper, April 21, 1929, Page 11

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AMERICAN EDITORS - GLOSE CONVENTION Harrison Is Re-Elected Presi- dent—1930 Meeting to Be Held in Capital. Follies of the day were held up as targets for satire by noted speakers at the annual dinner of the American So- ciety of Newspaper Editors, the closing event of a three-day annual convention held here, last night in the New Wil- lard Hotel, b After three days devoted to considera- tion of the technical problems of the newspaper business, culminating in the election of officers and the designation of the National Capital as the meeting place for the 1930 convention, the edi- [ tors and their guests last night laid aside all matters of serious import and dwelt lightly on the world events of th e dli. { At the annual elections held at the | elosing business session yesterday, Wal- ter M. Harrison, managing editor of the Daily Oklahoman and Oklahoma City Times, was re-elected president for the coming year. Othet officers elected were: Fred Ful- ler Shedd of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, first vice president; Paul Bel- lamy of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, second vice president; Edward S. Beck of the Chicago Tribune, treasurer, and Marvin H, Creager of the Milwaukee Journal, secretary. Five directors were named, including Beck, Bellamy, Harri- son, William P. Beazell of the New York World and Casper H. Yost of the St. . Louis Globe-Democrat. ! ‘Editors Visit Hoover. Earlier in the day the editors called on President Hoover and a number of them were luncheon guests of the Chief Executive at the White House. At the closing session a number of resolutions were adopted, including one expressing sorrow over the death of { Melville E. Stone, counsel of the As- sociated Press. The only approach to a serious note at last night’s banquet, which was at- tended by many Senators and Repre- sentatives and other Government offi- clals, was struck by David S. Ingalls, Assistant Secretary of the Navy for ‘Aeronautics, who lauded the newspa- pers of the country for their co-opera- tion in aiding the progress of avia- tion and pointed out that aviators in part Tepaid this debt by making “good copy for the editors.” _ Aeronautics in the United States could not have made the rapid pragress of the past few years, Secre- tary Ingalls said. had it not had the cordial co-operation of the press. “We who are engaged in furthering aeronautics in this country,” he con- tinued, “feel that if you gentlemen of the press will continue your support as you have in the past; if you will treat our unfortunate events fairly and in & spirit. of helpfulness, and if you will give .due .notice to our really sound achievements and progress, you will be doing & great service to aviation. Agains{ Subsidizing Aviation. etary Ingalls expressed- the be- “e?es;“ s{xbslfllzmg of aeronatutics by the Government, as is done in Europe. would be harmful rather than heipful in the long run. He said, however, that military aero- | Nation, nautics should be kept at a high point fficiency. o“‘gvlf.h v.ge diversity of development in military flying which has come about since the. close of the war,” he conc cluded, “you will realize that we must’ be much better organized wmpurg’tlve- 1y than we have been in the past. /Heiskell Makes Address. er Senator J. N. Heiskell of Ar{‘:ms editor of the Arkansas Ga- zette, devoted considerable atwnuor; in his address to the lighter aspects of national politics, prohibition and other s of the day. Lw;le-wdem Hoover, he pointed out, his enginegring career as a mem- ber of the Arkansas Geological Survey. “The ulterior and long-distance mo- tive of_this young engineer in examin- ing the physical formation of the South,” he said, “was to find if the soll of the solid South was really solid. He found some faults and later a land- slide.” Turn! to. prohibition, Mr. Heiskell '.edmn‘ut t.hgt “there are thousands and thousands of young people in this country today who never have seen & saloon and, on the other hand, there are thousands and thousands-of police- ‘men who may pass several snmo"ns day after day and yet never see one. Senator Allen Speaks. ! @ommenting on the development of 'hso radid, Senator Henry Allen of Kansas expressed the opinion that broadcasting has sounded the death Xknell of the orator. The necessity for a condensed expression which really constitutes a news summary, is appar- | ent, he said. During the past 10 years, he pointed out, people have come to notice more what the speaker says than the manner in which he says it. He sald that in his opinion the radio prob- ahly will have & profound effect on the future of the newspaper “though what this effect will be no one can say. Strickland Gillilan, humorist, con- cluded the program with an address. , TWO HELD FOR TRIAL. John Sramek and W. O. Turner Charged ‘With Housebreaking. John: Leo Sramek, 1700 block of Thirteenth .street southeast, and his alleged. accomplice, William O. Turner, colored, charged with housebreaking in connection with the theft of .a safe containing $100 and valuable papers from the Schlitz Distributing Co., were ‘held -under. $5,000 bond pending grand jury - action_yesterday. ~Judge Ralph * Given -in Police Court ordered the bonds set following the recommenda- #ion of Assistant United- States Attor- ney Irving Goldstein. Bramek, arrested Thursday by Head- quarters, Detective Sergt. Frank Alli- good, 1s said to have broken into the office of the Schiitz Co., 2800 block of Tenth street northeast, aided by an accomplice, and to have removed an iron safe containing money and _papers. .. FOR FARM AND GARDEN. e ———— STAR ROSES quality plants, 5 nha..iepu that u boun- ¥o o ! | Wehave qurown gardénatour offices to prove this, 0|yl are cordjally invited to come.duri; i rose Phn‘nm‘ ! | time,butden’tforgetthe delightthere | 8 in growing roses of your own. g | *} Send for our new catalog, the finest we | | have published in 30 years, and make | | your own chivice. Over 200 varieties | | offered=+23 shown'in natural colorsto help you select. This is planting time 1 | —sendforyourcatalogtodayeIt’s Free. " THE CONARD-PYLE CO. U RobertPyle,Pres. K& W Box176 .. West Grove, Pa. this photograph with President Hoover. of the Indianapolis Star. Few men now active in American public life recall that vivid day more than 27 years ago when Admiral Prince Henry of Prussia came to Washington with all the pomp and state defitting his royal bload and his special mission as good-will ambassador to the Amer- can Government and people from his brother, Emperor Wilhelm of Germany. Yet it was a gorgeous occesion, one that left its stamp on the news reports of that day, February 24, 1902. The Prince and his large. suite were in ‘Washington little more than 12 hours, arriving by sficm train in the morn- ing and leaving again for New York at midnight. An exchange of visits with President Roosevelt, calls upon the resident Ambassadors in Washington of. other great nations, visits to the House of Representatives and the Senate, and a state dinner at the White House made it a full day for the royal guest of the a “Regal Splendor.” “A scene of regal splendor, marked by ‘lavishness of glittering gold lace such as the historic old Pennsylvania station .at Sixth and B, streets has never known before” is the way a re- porter for The Star described the ar- rival of the royal party. The news writer was greatly impressed by the uniforms of Prince Henry's staff. Those of the American officers attached to his suite for the visit, including Rear Ad- miral Robley D. Evans and Adjt. Gen. Corbin, paled to insignificance in com- parison, he wrote, adding: “All the colors of the rainbow, in- tensified and multiplied, seemed to have been called into service by the court tailors in dressing out the sub- jeg* of the Imperial Kaiser.” 5 atforms and runways at the depot had been spread with carpet.for the royal guest, and Cavalry, Marines and squadrons of mounted police~led the string of carriages, all new and used for the first time that day, to the White House grounds. There the scarlet- coated Marine Band waited to pay musical honors while a battery of artillery boomed ‘in salute from behind the Executive Mansion. The visit was brief, President Roose- velt receiving his distinguished guest in the blue room and escorting him to an adjoining chamber for presentation to Mrs. Roosevelt and to Alice Roosevelt, now wife of Speaker Longworth of the House. Miss Roosevelt was to christen next day the Imperial yacht Meteor in a New Jersey shipyard as a further mark of the will toward friendship between the two nations that just 15 years later were to be at war. Von Tirpitz Was Visitor. Among . members of Prince Henry's staff the reporters made special note of Admiral Von Tirpitz, largely because of the full, black beard he wore, a beard that was to become known the wotld over later in the dark war days when German submarintes reached the eak of their effectiveness. In Wash- gton newspapers all carried Von Tirpitz’s picture then. Not much Is told in the old news ac- counts of the verbal exchanges between President Roosevelt and his guest at their meeting at the White House, or later at the German embassy, under formal guard of Americdn troops, where the President returned the call. The alert eye of the reporters marked, how- ever, that when the prince entered the ‘White House té begfiud with stiff military salutes by Col. Bingham and the group of Army and Navy aides awaiting him in the portico, he ex- changed with them “democratic hand- shakes, doing so with ‘ease and . During his visit to the Capitol that afternoon, Prince Henry sat & while in the House gallery to hear debate on the consular and diplomatic - bill. He was cheered and. applauded from. galleries —FOR FARM AND GARDEN. Special—Monday Only 16-in. Lawn Mower ( and 25-ft. Garden Hose and Nozzle A value you canuot duplicate anywhere in the city, A 16-inch guaranteed ball- lawn | mower with 4 blades and 8-inch | dm;e wheels; 25 !:.e:h %s-inch 2-ply. garden hose nozzle; all for $10. All positively first- class merchandise.. “This offer is for Monday only. .C. F. ARMIGER 916 N. Y. Av&N + . Feanklin | . “~.'THE NUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. POSE WITH PRESIDENT HOOVER. Four members of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, which concluded its meeting here yesterday, posed f Left to right: Dwight Marvin of the Troy (N. Y.) Record, Casper Yost of the St. Louis Globe Democrat, President Hoover, Oscar G. Follinger of the Fort Wayne (Ind.) News Sentinal and B, F. Lawrence | 8 500n as the salary is available. —Associated Press Photo. EXKAISER MOURNS ‘BROTHER'S DEATH Prince Henry of Prussia, Be- REGAL SPLENDOR MARKED VISIT OF PRINCE HENRY HERE IN 1902 Brief Stay of Former Kaiser's Brother in Washington Was Hailed as Gorgeous Occasion. and floor when he appeared and later out Seemg Him in a Year. met personally all the members of the % House. But it was during his subsequent visit to the Senate, to sit beside Presi- dent pro Tempore Frye, on the rostrum, that he got a real glimpse of the Ameri- can Congress in action. ‘The Senate greeted him in silence gut with Senators standing places. Then it settled back to tl bitter fight “the ‘youthful Senator from Texas, Mr. Bailey,” was making against the effort of the Republican majority Sel itchfork and McLaurin of South Carolina {rom voting on the pending Philippine bill. The pai~ had come to blows on the floor during the de- ceding Saturday and been contempt of the Senate. They were denisd the privilege of vot ing for that reason and the bill ulf mately went through by & narrow mar- gin over Democratic objections. That was the reason for Balley's dramatic fight and interest was so tense, the news reports say, “that even the entrance of a foreign prince, unwanted as it was, could hardly divert attention” . SIMMONS IS INVITED | T0 CONFER WITH BOARD Representative Asked to Assist in Framing of School Estimate By the Associated Press. BERLIN, April 20.—Prince Henry of Prussia, 66, only brother of the former Kalser, died today on his estate at Hemmelmark, near Kiel, without Hav- ing seen the exiled brother he loved so well for more than a year. Reports from Doorn described the ex- isel grief-stricken at the news of of his brother, who was the closest to him of-all his kinsmen. Every year Prince Henry had made it a point fo visit Holland and spend the whole month of February at Doorn, ar- riving in time for William’s birthday, This year was the first time he had been unable to come. He had intended to come in May. T Laryngal trouble. which, with pneu- monia that set in three days ago, proved to Prince Henry, was the same malady with which his father, the late Emperor Prederick ITI. was stricken. ‘The interment will be attended by & “| very small group of friends. Its place has not been announced. The question of whether the former- kaiser will attend the funeral of his brother was upon many lips tonight. By the “protection of the republic” law, William is barred from German soil under all circumstances, but some quar- ters thought it was not inconceivable that ke might request permission to enter in this exceptional case. Official circles, however, said they Were certain the former kaiser would not apply, for he did mot when his first wife was buried at -Potsdam. The last words of the prince were: “Give my love to my brother.” Among the many telegrams of con- || dolence were messages George of England and the former Crown Printe of Germany. e Man Is Injured in Crash. yder of 1022 Connecticut severely cut about the face and hands last night when his auto- || mobile overturned after being in col- || lision with a machine operated by Jo- sephine A. Downs, 502 H street north- || east, in front of 451 K street. 2 | Snyder was_treated at Sibley Hospital || and later removed to his home. FOR FARM AN! 1Judaism at the meeting. Rabbi Simon nd Dr. Lovell have been named vice chairmen of a committee to sponsor the | Los Angeles County has greater dairy fellowship movement her¢, Mr. Weller | production than any other county in Representative Simmons of Nebraska has been invited to sit with the Board of Education’s finance committee at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, when that group, under the chairmanship of Isaac Gans, frames the school estimate for the ‘The School Board Wednesday adopt- ed a resolution to the effect that while Representative Simmons often differed with the .school authorities on specific items of school expense, the board re- garded him as a friend of the District schools, as evidenced by reintroduction of his $10,000,000 school building bill. At the same time the board authorized its president, Charles F. Carusi, to in- vite Mr. Simmons to sit with its finance committee when the group prepared the it will seek passage for in the ssfon of Congre: FOR FARM AND GARDEN. £ Beautify Your Home at Sm EVERGREENS ‘These soon grow into handsome .trees worth many dollars. For $1.10 Postpaid Three to five-year trees are 10 to BOARD T0 EXAMINE * POST APPLIGANTS Public - School Business Manager for District. Approximately 35 applicants for‘the | | position: .of business manager, of the | public school system, who still remain under consideration by school and Dis- trict officials, will be interviewed in | person by Dr. Frank W."Ballou, super- iintendent of schools, and other schont | officials, and Maj. L. E. Atkins, U. 8, A, | Assistant Engineer Gommissioner of th< District _of Columbia, beginning at o | o'clock y afternoon. The joint ‘boatd of- school and Dis- trict officials will sit throughout the evening. if necessary: to_ hear each of the applicants still in the field, Dr. Bal- lou sald yes . The officials poi te recommendation to the Bpard by the school officials and more than a third of these were elimlnn:ud m a recent study of these letters, Dr. Ballou believed necessary in justice both to ap- .. The position of first assistant super- | intendent in charge of business affairs determine upon the proper person for | last Sunday. the position so that he can enter.office | Fellowship Meeting Will Be Ad-| years. the world’s principal religions, will be | test in 1927. been arranged . in ma the world in the interest of “fellowship | Philadelphia. of faith, league of neighbors and union| / of Bast and West.” The object is to at religious teachers of the several scheduled to deliver an _address on |ty this country. announced. California. MISS ANNA CANTRELL LAWS. S R R R iss ANNA C. LAWS R s o | 15 VICTIM OF STROK sald yesterday. Personal interviews | Washington Playwright ~Won with the remaining 25, however, arc mny Prizes With Drama- plicants and to the school system. + tic Works. of the school was provided for by the | Miss Anna Cantrell Laws, last session of Congress. The salary of | known amateur playright, died at her $5,000 will be available July 1, and ' the | residence in the Arts Club, 2017 I'street school and District officers intend to | Friday. She was stricken with paralysis At the time of her death she was engaged in writing a play. g of the shelf it section of (he clases | e N n 25 years. She TO DISCUSS FAITHS | 3z ity o i e She was in her sixties and would have been eligible for retirement within three Interested in play writing over a ltx;‘ w:::in'é'l' :hlrih won third prize in e ul ay contest and then 'IdA fellowship of faiths meeting, to be | wrote "OVercDm)';llySLl'.lc," which_took ' d f w \ " dressed by representatives of six of | second prize in the Arts Club play con- oved of Wilhelm, Dies With- Last year her “Cold held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Pirst| Light” won first prize, C o ngre gational Long a member of the Arts Club, Church, Tenth and | Miss Laws had served on several of its G streets. Rev. R. | committees. She was M. Lovell of the|Women's City Club, the English Speak- Mount Pleasant|ing Union, and was active in the Com- C o ngregational | munity Drama Guild. Church, will be| In addition to her other activities, Christianity’s|Miss Laws had devoted much time to spokesmen, while | the study of languages. others will discuss| ~ A native of Philadelphia, Miss Laws | datio: Buddhism Confuc- | was the daughter of the late Jesse A. T. lanism, Hinduism, | and Virginia C. Laws. Judaism and Mo- | by two brothers, Francis 8, and James hammadanism. W. Laws, attorneys; and ‘two sisters, The meeting has | Miss Eleanor Laws and Miss Bertha »by | Laws, all of Philadelphia. Charles Prederick |, Funeral services w Weller of Boston, | Bt. John's Episcopal Church, Sixteenth who has been pro- |and H streets, this afternoon at Mr. Weller. moting the sessions | 0'clock. Rev. Robert Johnston, rector, rts of | will officiate. Interment will & member of the She is survived 1 be conducted in (urflthel;. ‘gfn cause ofm{elhws}nprand Change in Name Is Asked. understanding among the people of the | Apraham Goldstein, 3217 Connecticut world along lines laid down by the | averiue, has asked the District Bupr:nus aiths. Cnvm;:e to c;‘nnxe hu;‘ ’snnme uzfl Al Rabbi Abram Simon of the Washing- | g pis ey T, Parents were fon - Hebrew Congregation Mas been Thel ‘Rames o Goldstera before. com FOR FARM AND GARDE! FOR FARM AND GARDEN. HOTEL MEN PLAN Visitors Stirs “More- ,: 1 business, a_plan to aécommodaf ‘the Spring season is being’ program calls for the securing of ad tal to ald in boosting business. Easter Crowds Increase. half of the association sal Easter the crowds and cherry blossom season. to the regular business. Hotel Association Plans. “But when the plans of the District of Columbia Hotel Association are per- fected they believe they will help with P it their organizat & ‘dressed by Representatives l;:ehrlod of yuPr‘s, m of Miss Laws’ first:| ing for the mz:c:ez fi% ?z ’&L .. i ys was “Fini I - of Six Creeds. Subsequently she wrote “A Gentleman | ciation. are as_folionss |- 2o 0 “President, Jefferson L. Ford, jr., Co- lonial Hotel; vice president, Russell A. Conn, Franklin Square Hotel; treas- urer, R. N. King, Portland Hotel, and secretary, Houston Harper, Hotel Houston. “The next meeting of the associa- tion will be held next Thursday a p.m. at the Hotel Hamilton.” “Hotel business in Washington is seasonal,” said Secretary Harper yes- terday, “and many persons do not un- derstand this. When they encounter some difficulty during this month of April in getting satisfactory accommo- a very different idea. BOY SAVED FROM CANAL. Youth Is Rescued by Man Who Sees Him Fall Into Water. canal, where it meets the River. FOR FARM AND GARDE! BIGGER BUSINESS Increasing Number of Capital In the wake of a reeurd-hruklnu( visifors who come to W in by, the recently, orga District. of Columbia Hotel Association, Hotel men estimated yesterday thet 10,000 school boys and girls came in parties on spe- ‘cial trains,, staying two to five days, around Easter, in addition to.'the countless number of adults that visited Washington recently. The ‘association’s ditional visitors for the National Capi- A statement issued yutem‘:y on be- “For - the last 20 days the’ hotels of Wi have done a record-break- ing . _Hotel men say that each succeeding get larger and larger and that the 1929 Easter was the greatest yet in the number of visitors. About 10,000 school boys and girls came in parties on spe- cial trains, staying two to five days. Thousands of others came by railroad, by automobile and bus for the Easter “The D. A. R. and several other con- ventions, returning tourists from Flori- da and the new Congress have added “The District of Columbia Hotel As- sociation already has nearly 20 hotels represented with about 4,000° rooms. ‘There are listed, in the telephone book 108 hotels in Washington, with more than 12,000 rooms. Perhaps .some of these the traveling man would not con- ider Lotels in the strict sense of the |Samuel Roth, Alleged to Haveo: ns, they exclaimed ~that they thought Washington should have more hotels. But if they could have seen many hotels during the Winter from 50 to 70 per cent filled, they would have Twelve-year-old Albert Day of 1425 Twenty-eighth street was rescued from the swirling waters of the Chesapeake 1 the foot of Twenty- ‘am| , Wl saw the boy fall from thelh.lg.h of the Potomac Davis, who delivers ice in the vicinity, dived under the water and brought the boy to the shore, where he was revived L9 1Y A CHILDREN HURT 2 INAUTO ACEIDENTS Boy in Serious Conditiony When School Busses Sideswipe. Special Dispatch to The Star. STAUNTDN, Va, April 20.—J Willis, 10, son of I. A. Willis, was sefi’ ously injured today when the sc bus in which he was riding was side- swiped by another bus here. o Louise Virginia Desper, 10, daughtee’s, of John W. Desper, of Newhope, was injured. Both were taken to the 'in ho;%‘mw . 30y e was driven by 8. W. Houff»<» 18; the second bus which was empts!/f was driven by Prances Shanner, 1877 Neither driver declared they knew’ ofn+ the accident until informed by the. children riding in the bus. 4y Struck by an automobile while at+ev tending a school fleld day at McDowell,;, today, Virginia, 9, and James, 5;:5 children of Luther Hammer of Crabea. bottom, Highland County, were broughti; to a hospital in Staunton. Examinses tion revealed that the lad’s injuries, were not serious and that the girl'd;, right leg was broken. Edward Simmons of South Branch, Pendleton County, W. Va., was driving the machine that_ hit the children. Pupils from all theilt schools in Highland County were at=*3 tending the field events, Detalls of how» the accident occurred have not beetius learned. 2 $10,000 BOND ASKED o FOR GEM THEFT SUSPECT -~ Been With Joshua Jubb Co. w Robbers, Goes to Jail. Py Alleged to have participated with four2# others in the robbery of the Joshua Jubb &= Co., from which jewelry valued at $7,000 was taken January 5, Samuel Roth was lodged in the District jail following & .. hearing_ before United States Commis-, "> sioner Needham C. Turnage. A two-day hearing before the coms ‘' missioner was climaxed late yesterday:, when bond for Roth’s release was fixed at $10,000. -A robbery charge against'® Joseph Phillips, brought before Turnage,>* was dismissed when witnesses failed to'" identify him, but he was immediately’’ rerrested by Detective Sergt. Thomas™> 3| F. Sweeney and held for Detroit police,"? who are said to want him on a charge/d of carrying a deadly weapon. Kl Phillips, Roth and three other men were arrested by Detroit police for com- o plieity in the robbery. Michigan au~i thorities allege that all of the men are”” safe crackers, and when arrested were .i. in an automobile containing safe-crack-v3 ing tools. s FUNERAL OF.MRS. CURRY: q Services to Bs Held Tomorrow for Former School Teacher. - Funeral services for Mrs. Nemgfi Tompkins Curry, 62 years old, forsi., merly a teacher in several of the coleny ored schools here, who died in Johns Hopkins University Hospital, Baltimore,"' % Priday, will be held at her residence.~ in this city, 419 Q street, tomorrow - afternoon at 2 o'clock. Interment willl . be- in Woodlawn Cemetery. 3 2 Mrs. Curry is said to have been the, first teacher of domestic science apr.o pointed by the Board of Education in,} this city. K She 1s survived by her husband Melville G. Curry; her mother, Mra. = Mary E. Arnold; a sister, Miss Laura. G. Arnold, and three brothers, Edward; by a ician from Eme Hospital physi ergency Charles W., and Dr. O. H. Arnoldi THE SEASON’S BIGGEST SALE Evergreens—Roses—Bulbs—Shrubs Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Rosebushes 55¢ each 3 for $7 50 Truly the season’s greatest offering of specially selected FREE—6 EVERGREENS, 3- to 5-year trees, above selection. FREE with'each order of $5.50 &over. THIS WEEK ONLY Selected, -6 yrs. Extra bushy, 110 1% ft. high COLORADO BLUE SPRUCE Each §1.10 Japanese Barberry Beautiful every month in the ye year-old plants.. Chinese Arborvitae deep green f (fleep sreen fol Bronze, pink, 1ave the leaves, Bronze, pink. lave o ches in dismeter, Lawn Equipment | COLUMBINE — They DELPHINIUM (Perennial Larkspur) PAINTED DAISY are much used in ! BELLADONNA—Light Turquoise b mfllllxlfl m‘gflg ery; blue, pink, range from ‘wmu d other col red; Pl ‘Gaillardia). This Large, pure white flow< and grows 2 feet RHODODENDRONS purple and blooms in May. ‘Grows well in shade or sun. 2 plan RHODODENDRONS (Max! ®fowers in July. 2 plants (1 to 1% 1t high) RHOPODENDRONS ¢ The plant thrives best in partial shs Culorado Blue Spruce and sphrkles in One of the most beautiful native 55, The flawer is reddish ts (one ft. hugh) 1or : Large plant with ters of pinkish _green flowering shrubs. ), ‘The shades from light to datk ‘blooms with great profusion in May. 'Or full sun 2 plants (one ft. high) for “The lue Spruce is in its foliage, W Ll gl ‘b“ Heavy foliage of a ri il Rurlient and yeu can 4 his truly marvelous culture directions. gxtea Dushy, 1 to 1% To. b A new group of Antirrhinums with extra larsr| Prong stems. . Saimon. Yellow, Whi o r owutitil cowe. $1.10 @ifterent colots . .- \IGORO SEED BRI (" 10 Ibs, per lb. ...... 30 lbs. or over, per Ib BONE MEAL 11b.. 100 Ibs. .. Mr. R. H. W. Ellsw scaping -service. . Through the co-operation of a famous nearby nursery we are again able to offer an unequaled selection of fine, healthy, 2-year-old rosebushes at these -popular prices. These plants are of unusual size and quality and, of course, well acclimated. Practically every desired variety awaits the choice of the early shopper, American Beauty cl Hadley Red Radiance Gardenis Etolle de Fratice - Silver Moon cl Paul Neyon _ Ophelia Lady Ashton Pink Killarney Lady Hilli Crusader Emily Gray - Sunburst Wm. R. Smith Columbia J. L. Mock for lawns, flowers and shrubbery S .vicieiecive PuEhmpenipupe ;B0 The. ; 100 lbs. : Washington Lawn Grass Sheep's. Head Brand Sheep MANURE ) Special Prices on Garden ..5¢ . Seeds, Garden Tools, Wire Fence and Gates ' LAND§SAPE. SERVICE h, formerly of the llndlclplnf de- $3.00 | partment of F. W. Bolgiano & Co., is now in charge of our Pink Radiance Lady Allee Starley © | selection. SHRUBS, 50c Each ‘Wm. Caroline Testant 3 for $1.40 Columbia Deutuia, pride of Rochester Deutsia, Lemoenei Clim! Purple Lilse D e T | Versem ementrem Hydranges P. G. irea Collosa Aibs 3 res Anthony Waerer irea Van rea Houtti vis B .$2.75 ¢ - Balderson Co., Inc. © 610Pa. Ave. NW. ' . Main 1499 evergreens, shrubs and bulbs—the cream of the stock from a neighboring nursery. Beautiful, hardy plants, well aged and rooted, and well suited to our climate. Here, at surprisingly low cost, is an opportunity for every home owner to beautify his grounds with the finest stock ob- tainable.- Be sure to come in and view this remarkable Gladiolus, Alice Tiplady Orange. .$1,00 | Giagiolus, Mons Liss, Lavender EVERGREENS

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