Evening Star Newspaper, July 19, 1929, Page 9

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3 THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1929. Office and Warehous: 1845 4th St. N.E. These Prices Prevail in Washi A New COMPLETE FOOD STORE Will Open Tomorrow on the Corner of WISCONSIN AVE. & FESSENDEN cr of Wisconsin Ave. and Fessenden Str o store is located on the ¢ ete, Lt he-minute fixtures both in f3t building, modern in every respect and equipped with up-to- the Meat and Grocery Departments. ABUNDANT PARKING SPACE Those who drive in the neighborhood of this store on their way home and have difficulty finding parking space while doing their grocery and meat buying will find this heautiful, new store an ideal place to shop. At all times there is an abundance of parking space around this store, and you will not imd it necessary to park your car several blocks away. FRESH MEATS FRUITS & VEGETABLES QUALITY GROCERIES Special This Week! LIBBY’S CORNED BEEF OUR FAMOUS GREEN BAG COFFEE i v 39¢ Special This Week! GORTON’S “Ready-to-Fry” CODFISH Week-End Special! SEALECT Or Van Camp’s MILK 25¢ tall tins 3 LAND O’LAKES America’s Finest Quality Butter! Tables of LIPTON'S TEA % 21¢ & 4lc Pound Special This Week! Special This Week! SILVER BRAND - HONEY DEW _ PEAS || pNEAPPLE with our patrons for geveral vears past. o lr'::" Al iRl e va"ml': %o | | best. When buving Honey Dew you get the ftoct np on thess qualtty Pess, and ab the same | | fnest favor of the full ripe Pineapple. This Gl S week we are offering the tall No. 1 tins at & very special price, : 3 Tins for 2 5c Half Pound Package No. 1 Tins 47c Seasonable Suggestions—Reasonably Priced ....1n 25¢ | Argo Red Salmon. ... sy Del Monte Peaches. .. ..tz tin 23¢ | Belle Isle Tuma. .... sasesni0le Colton Peaches............. %% 4" 15¢ |'Fancy CrabMeat.......cc......"309¢ Del Monte Figs....... ... N1 tn 25¢ | Kellogg's Corn Flakes........3 P 25¢ “Sanico” Pcanut Butter.........%r 23c¢ | Kellogg's Rice Krispies. .......2 Pk&~ 25¢ Tea Party Pickles..............% 23c | Post Toasties. . 3 pken. 25¢ Maiden Blush Apple Butter. ..... ™ 23¢ | Post Bran Flakes...... e Domestic Sardines . . ... .n 5S¢ | Royal Gelatine s sipkm. [ 5¢ Del Monte Sardines. ...... ..U 12¢ | Clicquot Ginger Ale..........2 Pt 29¢ Pink Salmon..................%"" 19c | National Ginger Ale. 25¢ Fancy “BING” CHERRIES 25¢ Fresh Iceberg PEAS LETTUCE 2 1. 29 fuy Eovooooo I k| Hed 10c Fresh LIMA BEANS 15¢ er Slice Grapefruit. . New Sweet Potatoes. . Fancy Cucumbers............. .ok 5¢ Home Grown Squash............."™ 5¢ IN Lb. Our Mecat Markets Offer Only the Finest Quality Government-Inspected Meats Possible to Obtain. Prime Rib Roast..............."™ 42c|Shoulder Lamb Roast...........™ 38¢ Hamburg Steak................"™ 30c|Breast of Lamb................" 20¢ Boiling Beef. . . - 22¢ |Select Pork Chops.............." 45¢ Shoulder Veal Chops. . ... - 35¢ [End Pork Chops. . .®- 38¢ Shoulder Vea! Roast............"™ 32c|Broiling Chickens.............."™ 49c Breast of Veal................." 30c|Sliced Dried Beef.............% ™ 20¢ Shoulder Lamb Cheps...........™ 42¢|Cooked Ham................% ™ 25¢ Week End Special! POT ROAST OF BEEF GOURAUD VICTORY INT%20 RECALLED French Officer Visiting U. S. Routed Outnumbering Arabs and Turks. By the Asregieted Press. PARIS, Yuly 19.—The visit of Gen. Henri Gouraud to the United States, | where he is attending celebrations in ! honor of the Rainbow Division, which he commended during the war, brings { back to mind the battle of Khan Meis- (seloun in July, 1920, when the general, then French high commissioner to Syria, defeated the Emir Feysul and pacified Syria for three years. Gen. Gourad has been advised that Feysul was advancing south from Pal- myra. He immediately set forth to the north and within a day's march of Homs his scouts and planes sighted the enemy, Inferior Only in Number, ‘How strong are they?” Gouraud asked one of the aviaters returning from a scouting flight. “I should judge about 40,000 men and 0,000 horses and camels,” replied the . tor. ‘Then the game is even, I have 10,000 | men here. We attack at dawn,” Gou- {Taud decided. By sunset the next day | the Arabs and ‘Turks were in full fiight | toward the north. Here s another slde to Gen. Gou- raud: When May day comes each year and | the Commuuists announce with great | gusto their preparations to disturb the | pesce of Paris the minister of the in- { terior and the prefect of police, fearing that the regular police forces will prove inadequate to maintain order, must call upon the army for assistance. They "OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT FINE MEN'S WEAR EISEMAN'S—7th & F TIGER it GINGER NONE BETTER ALE! A. G. HERRMANN 150 Tenth St. Southeast Phone Lincoln 1981-1982 turn to Gen. Gouraud, military gover- nor, and he makes the necessary ar- ments, i to variol Sirategical polnte of the ciy 10 T4rIou In Thickest Fighting. In active service lhmugy&mut the war in the thickest of the fighting, himself losing his right arm at the Dardanelles, Gouraud was loath to ceise French blood to flow and his successive May days are greater nightmares to him than those of his greatest pitched bat- tle against the enemy during the war. “Put three blank cartridges in your magazine,” he fnstrutced his officers on the first of May last. “Shoot those three blanks first only if absolutely nec- essary and you are attacked.” Then he hesitated for & moment. and a sad look came into his face. as he concluded: “Then, for God's sake, don't fire the others unless some one Is killed.” MRS. ALICE WRIGHT DIES AT RESIDENCE Wife of Former Supreme Court Justice Succumbs After Illness of Five Weeks. Mrs. Alice Willlams Wright, wife of Judge Daniel Thew Wright, former jus- tiee of the Supreme Court of the Dis- trict of Columbia, died at her residence in the Wardman Park Hotel yesterday afternoon after an iliness of five weeks. She was 62 years old. Mrs. Wright was a descendant of distinguished y American families. She was the ghter of William H. Williams. Her ancestors settled in this country on the Eastern Shore of Mary: land. Subsequently the family move to Riverside, near Cincinnati, Ohio, wnm; Mrs. Wright was born, October | . 1867, Her famlly, like that of her husband, Wwas prominent i Cinclunati dunnr' and for many years after the Civil War perlod. d Mrs. Wright amily 25 years | #go and have been soclally prominent | in this city. Judge Wright resigned as justice of the Supreme Court of the District in 1914 to resume the private | practice of law and nas gained wide recognition in the legal profession. Besides her husband, Mrs. Wright 1s survived by a son, Daniel Thew Wright, 3d. and thres daughters, Mrs. Gladys Wright Church, Mrs. Harry A. Kite and Mrs. Robert V. Fleming. Funeral services will be conducted at Wardman Park Hotel tomorrow morn- ing at 11 o'clock. Rev. Dr. Charles T. ‘Warner, rector of St. Alban's Episcopal Church, will officiate. Interment will be in Rock Creek Cemetery. PLAN NALLEUY RITES. | Interment to Be in Oak Wood Cem- etery Tomorrow. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. HIGHLAND PARK, Va., July 19. Funeral services for Mrs. Edith L. N | leuy, 41, who died at her home her | Announcing Improved Service 90 MINUTES | to New York Ships leave Washington Afr- port daily at 9:30 A. M. Fare, one way, $25.00; round trip, $40.00, For Reservations Call Metro. 0534, Washington-New York Airline | | | | i ERAND il i sTeEL cuv | HCOFFEE by '.‘;(»’u;"fl”i'l‘;‘y'v" ; it 100% Pure Coffee Both Are Delicious e Wednesday, will be held at Birch's un- dertaking establishment in Washington at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon by the | Rev. W. H. Hodges, pastor of the Mount Olivet M. E. Church. Burial will be in the Oak Wood Cemetery at Falls Church, Va. Mrs. Nalleuy was a native of Arling- ton County, the daughter of the late Jacob E. and Frances A. Birch. She is | survived by one sister, Mrs. W. Harry | Johnson, and two brothers, Clifton and | Oscar Birch. Qbhezfiffl aussleum tiful—Enduring—Convenient O ILITARY HIGHWAY BEYOND SOUTH GATE Op ite Arlin, Cemetery Your opportunity for inspection IS NOW. Vaults are selling rapidly, only a limited number remain. Open every day and Sunday. A more | fitting memorial for loved ones cannot | be obtained. ENTOMBMENT COSTS NO MORE | THAN UNDERGROUND BURIAL Cremation niches for urns eon- taining ashes can be purchased. Office 1000 Conn. Ave. Main 7897 Wants to Help Her Friends and Others MRS. E. DUPREE | “The only reason I have for giv- ing this statement is that I want to be of some help to others who are | suffiering as I suffered for years and | if those who read my statement are benefitted then I will feel as though I too have done my part in spread- | |ing_the good news about Miller's Herb Extract, which is the atest medicine I have ever used and I used | quite a lot of different remedies dur- | ing the years I was in poor health. |T was continually taking laxatives, | also medicine for the liver, but most | things seemed to upset me and I felt | worse than before I used them, everything I ate soured on the stom- | | ach, gas formed causing the stomach | | to swell and bloat, I was continually | | belching up a sour bile, had heart | burns, pains in the chest, headache: | dizzy spells and was so nervous and | restless that I was unable to rest or | | sleep well at night, in short I was| |in a general rundown condition. | About 2 months ago I made up my | | mind to give this medicine a trial| | and to say that Miller's Herb Extract | | has helped me would be a mild way | {to express the improvement in my| general health, as I feel better in| | every way than I ve for ‘years, stomach no longer troubles me, after . my former pains and aches are gone, | T rest well at night and do not get ‘up feeling tired and worm out as 1 did before using this medicine.” This statement was given a few days by Mrs. E. Dupree, 461 G St. N.W., who has resided in Washing- | ton for the past 9 years. llyl‘.!n':.d in need of this medi- | the C JURY WILL PROBE CONVENT DRY RAID Los Angeles Agents, Acting Without Search Warrant, Find Nothing. By the Associated Pray LOS ANGELES, Calif., July 19— Preparations for a grand jury investi- gation to fix responsibility for the “tip” which led District Attorney Buron Pitts’ prohibition agents to raild a Roman Catholic Convent in Belvedere, a suburb, | without a search warrant, were being made by the county prosecutor today. ‘The prolubition agents forced their way luto the convent on the night of July 13 after they had been refused admittance. They found no incrimi- naling evidence. Fitts announced Wed- nesday night that apologies had been made and damages tn the convent, pald for, and that no further raids wete to be made without search warrants, ‘The prosecutor announced-last night that at least four officers of his pro- hibition detail would be dismissed. The names of those to be discharged were not disclosed, but Fitts said Capt. Clyde Plummer, chief of the dry enforcement squad, would remain on the job. Constable Harry Tucker of Belvedere denied having had anything to do with the case, despite the fact that the tip was sald to have come from him. ‘Tucker sald he was of the opinion the information had been given by an un- identified person who previously had caused him to send one of his deputies to the same locality in search of a still. Isadore Dockweller, representing Bishop J. J. Cantwell, sald that as far | At as the Catholic Church was concerned | f the case was a closed incident. Bishop Cantwell had previously sent Senator Hiram Johnson of California a letter of protest under the impression that the Taid had been staged by Federal author- | & 1ties, LONG-TIME RESIDENT OF CAPITAL DIES AT 88/ %" Mrs. Leonora H. Freudenthal Was | Lo in Ford's Theater When Lincoln Was Shot. Mrs. Leonora H. Freudenthal, 88 years | old, for nearly 70 years a resident of | Washington, died at her home in the | Cairo Hotel, 1615 Q street, yesterday. | She had been in fafling health for nearly a year. Born in_ Brooklyn, N. Y., September 23, 1840, Mrs. Freudenthal was taken to Alexandria, Va., by her parents, and she later moved to Washington, several years before the Civil War, where she had remained. Mrs. Freudenthal was | one of the few survivors who were in the Ford Theater with President Lin- coln the night of his assassination. For the last 14 years she has lived at the Cairo Hotel, Surviving her are four daughters, Mrs. T. O. Varnell and Miss Mary Freu- denthal of Washington, with whom she lived, and Mrs. W. W. Tilkinson and Mrs. E. L. Dunbar of New York. Funeral services will be private at the Cairo Hotel at 2:30 tomorrow after- noon. TIntarment will be in Rock Creek Cemaetery. MRS. COOLIDGE TO SERVE AS CRUISER'S SPONSOR| Accepts Invitation of Becretary Adams to Christen Ship at Launching. By the Associated Press. Mrs. Calvin Coolidge has accepted an | invitation from Secretary Adams to be | sponsor for the new light cruiser North- ;:np;/gn when it is launched, Septem- T 27, ‘The ceremony will take place at the docks of the Bethlehem Shipbuilding | Corporation in Quincy, M Northampton, Mass.. e home of former President and Mrs. Coolidge. Births Reported. #'he following births have been reported fo Health Department in the last 24 hours ‘arey T. and Margaret David. bo 3. Grant A. and Elizabeth Roberts. boy. and Plorence V. Wyrick. boy. Alfred Re ‘Coradbo e Cozad, boy. Cecil R air Charles R. and_Eieanor Perry F. and Ethel C. C George M. nd Mabel Jones. bos. Thomas and Catherine Smith, boy. Deaths Reported. ‘The following deaths have been reported to the Heslth 'partment in the last 24 hours: Annie M. Dykes. 83, 512 7th st. ne. A, Valiant, 77, St. Elizabeth's | Hospital Cordelin Speich, 71, the La Salle Apart- ments. Peter Latterner. 56. 3115 34th st . 70, 615 Q st. Alice B % 08_Howard rd. x.e. . Jones,’ 63, St. Elizabeth's Hos- a Hall. 63. 2027 Massachusetts ave. Estelle Norris. 50. 408 3rd st. a.w. Henry Jackson. 43. Garfleld Hospital. jAlice’ White, 35, en route Emergency Hos- pital. Rhod Emergency Hospital, 10, 1228 4th st. poodle or ear, black 43 FOR LOST ANIMALS. apply League, 349 Maryland ave. s. LOST. BOSTON TRRRIER, small Strayed from 2931 Cathedrs Phone Ad: BREAST PIN. ROor hevs ‘Ghise return to 708 O st. n. female DD, ave. Reward 200 7th and Reward. with black b Black " Ghevnerd O st. betw, car July 17. w COLLTE_DoG, nose, white und, 5360 “Reward. Teddish brown. rparts: name No. 121 DINNER RING. bBlack cameo. oblong shabe. surrounded with diamond chips; lost on July 10. Reward. Phone North 4374. Hampton Courts, Apt. 106, s = o nswers o *'Nig . child’s ‘Wandered froi mp on _Call_Metropolitan 8559. glish bull Puvgy. white with brindle vicinity Oxford st.. ‘hev ‘hase. 'd for ieturn Telephone Wisconsin ENGLIBH BULLDOG, medium size, white and brindle. Strayed from_ 901 Rittenhouse st. Reéward. Phone Georeia_0090. -Double stone marten 'red Heart Church. Sunday. July it returned to 1343 xell’fl;l"lk 'GLASSES. brown shell. lefi in Dupont Gir- sday, July 18, at 4 p.m. Call - aLA A case. bet 5 F i it. Iin Co. on case. Hinaer piease Feniin'to Pama Enaveri. 215 P et n.w. West 1351, 20¢ — Valyable of envelope. 20° Ry Return’ PIN—Bowknot, near_8th and G sts. n. iy o d._Col. 6304-W. POCKETBOOK. brown; sum of Mark's meat night.’ Return_ to call_Adams 635 13t) Reward. _ |t material were collected, and 125 tons THE WEATHER District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia—Fair and cooler tonight; to- morrow fair and continued cool; gentle north and northeast winds. ‘West Virginia—Fair tonight and to- morrow; continued cool, followed by somewhat warmer weather tomorrow afternoon. Records for 24 Hours. ‘Thermometer—4 pm., 82; 8 pm, 74 12 midnight, 73; 4 am, 70; 8 am,, 70; noon, 74. Barometer—4 pm., 2980; 8 pm, 20.80; 12 midnight, 29.80; 4 a.m., 20.80; 8 a.m., '29.85: noon, 29.90. Highest, temperature, 86, occurred at 2:30 p.m. yesterdey. Lowest temperature, 68, occurred at 5 am. y. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 95; lowesi, 71. ‘Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) ‘Today Low tide, 0:32 a.m. and 1:15 pan.; high tide, 6:20 a.m. ‘Tomorrow--Low tide, 1 a.m. 2:01 p.m, high tide, 7:03 a.m. and 7:32 pm. The Sun and Moon. Tochy -Sun rose 4:57 a.m.; sun sets 731 pm. Tomorrow—Sun rises 4:58 am.; sun zets 7:30 pm, Moon rists 8:27 p.m.; sets 2:40 am. Condition of the Water. Great Falls—Slightly muddy. Harpers Ferry—Potomac clear and Shenandoah very muddy. ‘Weather in Various Cities. wTemperature. H Btations. Cloudy Claudy Clear 4 Pt.cloudy 328 Cloudy 06 Clear Clear Pt.clo 31 Pt.cloudy Hurcn, 8. Dak. 3 Indianapolis. Ind Jacksonville.Fla. Kansas City, Qmaha. Neb, Philadelphia.Pa Phy . AT Francisco. oufs (T am, Greenwich time, today.) Temperat London. England. Paris. France Vienna, Austria’. Berlin, German Glear Stockholm, Part clondy Gibraltar. Spain..... 74 Part cloudy Noon. Greenwich time. today.) H Horta (Faysl). Avores... 0 Partcloudy | Surrent observations.) i Hamilton, Bermuda...... 80 Part cloudy Havana, ' Cub Clear Colon, Canal Cloudy FOX IS IMPROVED. Movie andl;rnr, }nj;lr:d in Crn!h.: Is Recovering. By the Associated Press. MINEOLA, N. Y., July 19.—Marked | improvement was reported vesterday in | the condition of William Fox, New York movie producer, who was injured | Wednesday in an automobile accident | in which his chauffeur, Joseph Doyes, was Killed. Dr. Wilfred Post, attending physician | at the Nassau County Hospital, where | Mr. Fox was taken, said his patient! was resting comfortably. e 8 Zone .l 8 Flll;(nrel Threeinibs. ‘While working on a building in the ‘Walter Reed Hospital grounds yesterday afternoon Albert Burgess, 22 years old, | of 430 Luray place, fell to the ground. sustaining three fractured ribs and a slight scalp wound. He was treated by Maj. John Wallace of the hospital staff, then transferred to Emergency Hospital. pr s e ST Continue Church Carnival. ‘The carnival for the benefit of the buflding fund at St. Gabriel's Church, at Petworth, which has been in progress at Grant Circle and Webster street since July 8, will be held over tonight and tomorrow night, it was announced by the committee in charge. Marriage Licenses. C. Welch, 21, and Tavloria A. Dick, v. William 'A. Murphs. J. . 27. 'and_Evelyn M. 5: Re: nedi d.. and " “Russell. Pleasant. Md.: Rev. . Buckley. arle . and Virginia E. Tibbs. 19: Rev. C. C. Williams. Wililam E. Garretf. 22. and Margaret E. Redding. 20: Rev. Paul L. Norris Albert’ White. 43, and Ida Whitfleld, 48: Rer. W. D._Ji arvis Howard T_ Wills. 25 and Beatrice V. v. John W. Dowl 23. and Pauline Aein, 20: d Pearl A. Rowen, er. and Hattie Brooks. o0ks. Conner. 28, Chattanooga. Tenn., L. Keliv, 27, this city; Rev. Ed- ichardson. E_Plerson, 35, and Elsie E. Payne, min H M James 18} tingly. and Bertha R. Ber- Resnick. Expl;;ers‘ Find Palaces Dating Back to 700 B. C. Tigris River Excavations Reveal Ancient Assyrian Arts and Sculpture. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO. July 19.—University of Chicago scientists, excavating in the Tigris River area, have discovered the palaces of Sennacherib and Sargon. II, who, as stceessive Assyrian kings: con- quered Jerusalem 700 years before Christ, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Edward Chiera, who has returned from Iraq. Examples of Assyrian arts, painting. sculpture and architecture, regarded by officials of the university’s Oriental In- titute as priceless, were recovered by xpedition. Altogether 250 tons of are en route to the university, British officials at Bagdad and Mosul receiving half of the find. Included in the collection is a massive stone bull, which guarded the gates of Sennacherib’s palace. The piece meas- ures 17 by 20 feet and weighs 20 tons. Several pieces of frieze work, which once covered a corridor 100 feet long in the palace, and numerous slabs from the 6,000 square yards of stone reliets on the walls of the palace have been gathered. i oaks. Pe Prof. Chiera believes the site of mel“"’l’“'_ excavations covers scveral Assyrian vil- lages and work on the main ce and grounds alone will require perhaps sev- THOMAS C. BAKER DEAD. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star, VILLE, Va., July 19.— Thomas Chalkley Baker, proml.n:nl resie dent of this town and a civic leader, died 8t his home here last night. He Wwas 77 years of age. He was a native of Pennsylvania and a son of the late Har~ lan Baker and Hannah Eastburn Baker. He came to Loudoun County in 1871 and since that time had lived here with the exception of two years spent in California. Mr. Baker had Wéen pur- chasing agent for the West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co. of Tyron, Pa., for 27 years. He was a Knight ‘Templar. His first. wife, Elizabeth Bailev Brown of Loudoun County, died in 1908. He is survived by his second wife, Mazella Ethel Baker, to whom he had besn mar- ried six vears. He also is gn- ga;m\ter, Mrs, loun: . Va.. and four ndchildren. Funeral services will bogrl:eld Slud‘lrfl.y afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home, :;il‘h interment in Goose Creek Ceme- T PRU July 17, 1559, DAL Ber evidence o Plonda . RUELLA : ine devired William - AR5y mother of William °E.. of Jumes and Clara G ieaves other reluties nersl’ Bundaz.” Colesville. hd W Frneet " Jarvis 2273 Ga mis nw BANKE. JAMES. Deperte Tuesday, e 18D Ta5e e D. C, JAMES BANKS Departed at 21 at 2 pm. Remaine reating ot the Co. funeral pariors, 2 32 CHRISTY. IDA MA Saturdss, Cemeters. N. DURUS D. Suddenly on Th day. July 18.1929. DURUS D. COFFMAN. Funeral from ‘the residence of re. C. CStump of 813 D & Satlirday. July 20. sl 10 am Arhington National Cemetery IEONORA M. On Thurs- A& at hes recigence. Hotel wife of the late William deninei. Preu hel. Funessl brivete T se. on Interment Lel Chevs INIE_MAE LEWIS. mother . Bissell Fune funersl . July 1 Tox. RAY. WILLIAM STANLEY. Sud: 18. 1929. i STANLEY hom: at at Emergen Hospita TAM RAY. ““Interment ‘Corivaie) at ) DEN, LUCY A. On Thursday. July . 1029." at the residence of her sisti Mrs. Gotlelb Xan 4 Campbell Brentwood, Md. LUCY A. beloved wifs of F. B.' Snowden. aged 39. Punsral above address Saturday. July 30 p.m. Relstives and friends Intermént "Fort Lincoln Ceme- WHEELER. MORRIS. Entered into sternal 17. 1929." at 12:15. at his resi- Montelio ave. . MORRI! iate ®dith and Wilbur Wheeler. services will be held Sunday. July 2 pm. ‘st the Ebenerer and D e vited o attend Cemetery. WRIGHT. ALICE WILLIA On Thursday. July 18, 1320. At her residence. Wardman Park Hotel ALICE WILLIAMS WRIGHT. wife of Judge Daniel Thes Wright ~Fu- neral services will be held at her Iate resi- dence on Baturday, July 20, at 11 am, * In Memoriam. ASCHENBACH. GEORGE HENRY. ™ mad but loving remembr of our ‘dear hus- nd__father. GEORG] ACH. who ‘departed this life three ulv 19. 1936 TFE AND CHILDREN. * BUTLER. BFSSIE E. In loving remembrance of BESSIE E. BUTLI ed one %0 toda: THE FAMIL' 1 1, st Chureh. "4th Relatives and friends in- Inmerment at Pavne's 2 ER. July 19, 1928, Sacred to_the memors of nd mother. ELIZA CARTER, this life one year ago today, i 1t's lonely here without you. mother, And sad all along the was. For life is not the to us Since you passed awar If_griet could bring vou back again, It we could save with tears, We wonld not ke withcut vou. dear. For thix one lonely cear HUSBAND. JOHN. AND CHILDREN, LIL- LIAN. RE. MARLENA ~AND TAWRENCE. E JOHNSON. CERISTINE. In sad but loving Iemembrance of _my _dear daughter, CHRISTINE JOHNSON. who departed this Tife three vears agn todas. July 18, 1926, Rest. sweet resting. Her ‘soul we know God has blessed. MOTHER. * In memory of GEO. W. MATTHEWS. who died July 18, 1819. MATTHEWS. REV. REV. GEORGE 10 years ago to You were called: fear mot. You leaned your head on Jesus' breast and breathed vour lite out weetly there. Swest rest. 1o ; F: us so0 suddenls and heartbroken six years ago today. July 19, 1923, Every dar bring sweet memories, ‘ery memorv brings a tear. Deep within our hearts we cherish Thoughts of one we loved so desr MOTHER ANT) ALICE. SWANK. JAMES LAIDLAW. In loving mem= ory of my dear nephew. JAN W, aged 11 years. who departed this lifs so suddenly #ix years ago todar. Julv 19, 1923, AUNT ANNTE McCONCHIE. VOLLAND. JOHANNA A. In loving reme: brance of JOHANNA 'A. VOL! A departed thic life one year ago tod: July 19, 1928. Not dead to us who loved her, Not lost. but gone before. 8he lives ‘with us in_memory, And will forever more. DEVOTED HUSBAND AND CHILDREN. _FUNERAL DIKECTORS. V. L. SPEARE CO. Neither the successors of nor eonnected with the original W. R. Speare_ establish- St. NW. Dignified. Eficient Service. Servics hapel Quic! g1 P W, W. Deal & Co. i NE_____ LINCOLN 8200. Wm. H. Sardo & Co. Private Limousine Ambulance Maaer craper Lincoln 0524 JOHN R. WRIGHT co. _1337 10th St. N.W. __Phone North ¢ Succe=ding the original W. R. Speare Co, 1623 Connecticut Ave. Potomac 4600 §_years at 1208 H st.. 45 years at M0 ¥ st. Herbert B. Nevius Funeral Home 9% New York Ave. N.W. Main 2600 J. WILLIAM LEF SONS, FUNERAL DIRECTO! CREMATORIUN 332 PA. AVE_N.W. __NATIONAL 1388 ~ CHAS. S. ZURHORST 801 EAST CAPITOL ST. Phone Linealn 8332, Joseph F. Birch’s Sons (IBAAC BIRCH) 3034 M St. N.\V, Ehone west soo Frank Geier’s Sons Co, L sEvETs o1 N National 2473 TIMOTHY HANLON Puneral Director Private_Ambulanes 641 11 St. N.E. Linc, 5543 ___FUNERAL DESIGNS. GEO. C. SHAF! EXPRESS) FLORAL EMBLEMS AT MOD- IIA")I'E PRICES. TEL, NAT, 2416 & NAT. 0108 pen enings {4th & Eye and Sundays Artistic—expressive—inexpenstv: BLACKISTONE, 1407 H Beautiful Floral Designs $5 and up. Ao pALDATGRrT CEMETERIES. Cedar Hill Cemetery Where perpetual care means more than » promise. Columbia Gardens Cemetery. One miie west of Fort Myer, Va., overlooks River. ha dec A g! ‘N e. Grave sites, 320 up. larer don 1235. 3ya1e “GLENWOOD CEMETERY Ch lots and sites f tage $5 per mon!

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