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¢ :}lnned to remember the sixty-third * HOOVER IN TRIBUTE . + SWANTED—RETURN 1O, =% from New York, Philadelphia, Albany, . BUSY DAY AHEAD FOR MISS ISHBEL Foot Ball Game and Nursery Visit Are on Program for Today. By the Associated Press. THE Dealings Frank and Open, Says Premier By the Assoctated Press. NEW YORK, October 12.—The steno- graphic report of the speech of Prime Minister J. Ramsay Macdonald last night before the Council of Foreign a- tions at a dinner at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel follows: “It was a very kindly thought of NEW YORK, October 12.—Visits to!those responsible for the arrangement social welfare agencies, a surprise for her father's birthday and a foot ball game were on Ishbel Macdonald’s pro- gram today. Following the prompting of her pro- | ¥ fessional interest as a social worker in the London slums, she has devoted most of her sightseeing in New York to view- ing the working of child welfare organi- zations. Her first engagement today was a visit to the Manhattanville Day Nursery. ‘Then came a trip to the Seventy-ninth street branch of the Henry Street Set- tlement and lunchecn at the uptown headquarters of the settlement on Park avenue. To See Columbia Play. The afternoon was set aside for the Columbia-Wesleyan foot ball game. Miss Macdonald announced that she irthday of her father, J. Ramsay Mac- donald, with a “surprise,” but refused to divulge what it was to be. After sitting with the justices in Chil- dren’s Court, visiting the Industrial High Schol for Girls and the Psycho- Educational Clinic yesterday. she joined her father at two of the functions at ‘which he spoke. Before the luncheon given by the English-Speaking Union at the Hotel of these dinners to invite me to come and break bread with you at your table. “You were certainly not unknown to me, because for some time now I have reed a magazine for which you are nsible. both with pleasure and with profit. I refer to Foreign Affairs. And when I heard that the chairman, who is by my side at the present mo- ment, Mr. Root, was to take the chair the honor that you had done me by sending me your invitation was indeed crowned with a glorious pleasure, “Only for the first time have I met Mr. Root in the flesh. It is a very, very long time ago since I learned to respect him as one of the conspicuous workers in the cause of international peace. “And tonight, when I met him again sitting so bravely under his heavy load of years, what comes to my mind is ‘Simeon waiting on the steps of the temple for the Messaic appearance.’ My hope and my prayer, sir, is that you may feel in these days, when the cause of peace has been so substan- tially advanced, some of those feelings that must have animated Simeon on Tonight I am speaking to you, and I see you, but outside from one end of America to the other—and also, I am told, across| the Atlantic itself—I am addressing an | unseen audience who hear a voice but Astor she was presented the gold medal of the Walter Scott School for Crippled Children and elected an honorary mem- ber of the organization in recognition of her child welfare work. She Is Introduced. When at a reception and tea her father mentioned that he had once brought his wife to this country, and added, “And now I bring my daughter,” she rose and bowed in recognition of the applause. She was the dinner guest of Miss Irene Lewisohn, and then attended a dance given by Miss Lillian D. Wald at the Henry Street Settlement. At her request a radio was installed near the ballroom at the settlement, and she listened to her father’s speech, which was broadcast from the dinner of the Council on Foreign Relations, where he was guest of honor. TO REVOLUTION HERO Polish Soldier Cherished by Ameri- cans, Says Execu- tive. President Hoover yesterday paid tribute to Brig. Gen. Casimir Pulaski, the Polish patriot, the 150th anniversary of whose death while in the service of the Ameri- can Continental Army is being observed today, when he declared that Gen. Pulaski will always be cherished in the hearts of the American citizens and that their appreciation of his service in aiding American independence will never die. ‘This tribute was paid by the President in a cablegram sent to Ignacy Moscicki, President of Poland, in response to a cablegram ‘from the latter incident to the ceremonies in this country in observance of Piilaski sesquicentennial celebration. dahnrt.ly after the mnoon hour to- . President Hoover recelved Tytus wicz, the Polish Minister to this country, who called in the capacity of special Ambassador of his country, and presented a ission of countrymen who have come here as official repre- sentatives of the Polish government. Almost immediately following this reception, which was in the President’s office and informal, the President re- ceived a large grol citizens of Polish extraction, and posed with them for a group photograph in the rear grounds. LARGEST CIGAR PLANT. XKansas City to Be Site of $3,000,000 Factory. 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No Ground for Suspicion. “I have a feeling, sir, that that au- dience has already been addressed from the columns of innumerable newspapers that have recorded the heartening transactions of the last week. They have followed the course of the nego- tiations day by day, and every time that your President and myself have been able to renew the hope, to give them greater satisfaction as people watching for peace, they have cheered and cheered, and they have upheld us in our efforts. “There has been an odd voice or two, as you said, sir, who is out of har- mony with the general feelings of the world. I find there is still that old leaven of diplomacy left in some quar- ters, mostly remote beyond the seas, that if two statesmen get vogether, talking together, arranging things to- gether, come to agreements together, that there must he something sinister in their hearts. The only remark that I make to those people is this: That they are very much out of date. “Thefr suspicions do not arise be- cause they know, they arise because they are old-fashioned. They arise be- cause they had no conception of the new spirit that is making up its mind govern and dominate the world, The spirit of an open diplomacy, the spirit of men coming together, not for the purpose of dividing the world into alliances and groups, but for the pur- pose of their own agreements, helping the world to come to a general agree- ent that will be universal and not me- ticulous. That was the spirit that made Mr. Hoover and myself meet together and talk over affairs of mutual interest to our country. “I want to say quite definitely and clearly, I want the whole world to know it, and I say it without any re- serve and any withholding of any kind ‘whatever, that during the entire course of our conversations there has never been any idea whatever of an exclusive understanding between Great Britain and the United States. There has been nothing discussed which the two gov- ernments would not be happy to see dis- cussed on the same basis with all the powers in the werld. The understanding | we have beenstrying to establish will | always be incompiete and unsatisfactory | until it has become the common pos- session of all the nations on the face of the earth. Dealings in Open. “That fact, Mr. Chairman, was very well illustrated by the circumstances under which these conversations were inaugurated. When you sent Gen. Dawes to London ‘to represent you, he hurried up in the full light of day to meet me in my highland fastness. We met. We sat at a table together, cheek by jowl, as we say in Scotland, and an open window was at our shoulder, The sun shone in upon us. Crowds cf reporters were in the yards photograph- ing us through the glass, beholding our various transactions, noting our smiles; and, no doubt, noting our per- plexities; everything conducted in the glass house, with no secrecy, no cur- tains, no blinds; and from that day to this our negotiations have been con- ducted by men who wish to live the open life and have no desire to pursue the secret one. “We have not come together for the purpose of enthroning peace over the Atlantie. We have come together for the purpose of trying to enthrone peace all over the world. “In your reference to the working men of Lancashire, sir, you remind us that in those days of great trial in the United States those workingmen, bent down under poverty, their lives dark- ened by privation, felt the ideal of lib- erty, felt the ideal of justice so keenly, that they were prepared to go into a still deeper darkness in order that they might have no art or part in favor of a struggle which they regarded as one for human liberty and human righteous- ness in the world, “I have met the same thing since these negotiations began. When the government of which I am the head decided to postpone the building of two cruisers, because we declined to enter into a shipbuilding program of com- petition with other nations, it meant unfortunately that the work was open for some men and was closed to them. “I don’t know how many of you understand what that medns. I don't know how many of you understand what the stopping of a couple of pounds a week or of two pounds ten a week means—not the difference between pocket money that may be lavishly spent, but between an income that en- ables a family to be kept without the fear of incurring debt and who have nothing at all except what insurance they get from unemployment funds. But those men faced that and while they agpelled to us to find them fresh work. they passed resolutions begging us and praying us to go on with our work of disarmament. Moral Disarmament Urged. “The chairman was perfectly right when he said that what we had in mind was to effect moral disarma- ment first of all. We shall never be able to effect physical disarmament until we have succeeded in effecting moral disarmament. “And I venture to hope that the statement that was issued the other day on behalf of your President and myself, in the opening paragraph, has proclaimed between us a state of moral disarmament, “This is the problem of statesman- ship. On the one hand you get your moral disarmament. Sentiment is with you, piety is with you, resolutions that read fair and sound well, that are car- ried unanimously. But the moment you start to apply them for the T~ of transferring’ the mentalities hades and Scree: ROOFING—by Koons Slas Roofing. Tinnine ag Roof - Paintini pairs. Thoro! cere work by Let roofers. A Printing Service —oflarm: excepti a discriminating client r'l'h:'Nnional Capital nf:‘ru; AT D s ctica et of the peoples from a mentality of mil- itary security to a mentality of political security, then the poor statesman is be- set by & thousand and one exceedingly ntricate problems. “Now the task that lies in front of us is to go through that condition here. ‘We have declared no war can take place between us. We have declared more: and Great Britain, “But _we have declared something which I hope will protect us ‘against the spread of that fear and that sus- picion. We have said to each other, 50 far as our navies are concerned— the subject that we have been discuss- in particular—so far as our navies are concerned, there shall be parity be- tween us, so that neither of us will have any advantage over the other, so that we are in a state of absolute equi- is the effect of that? The chairs referred to why people fight. He was perfectly right. People don't it after they have got into war. People fight because something has happened; because a train of tances has happened which puts their nerves on edge, which makes them unhappy in their suspicions, which makes them feel unsafe and insecure, until, by a con- tinuation of that mentality, they' come to the conclusion—for God’'s sake, let us end it, whatever the price or the re- sult may be—and before we know where we are we are at war. ““There is no better way of preventing the development of that national frame of mind than to prevent competition in armaments, because by competing in armaments every nation knows that it has failed to get security. And when it has spent its nation's income, when it has frayed its nerves, then it knows that war is absolutely inevitable and that there is no cure for the conditions under which they have landed them- |'selves except the conflict of arms. For Mutual Confidence. “Limit the devolpment of arms, then what do you do? You compel your statesmen, you compel yourselves to trust to political security, the security of justice, the security of fair play, the security of rightness of position, the se- curing of arbitration, and every agree- ment made between nations consequent- ly to stop threatening each other by competitive development of arms means that those nations are driven more and more into the judicial frame of mind, into the frame of mind which finds se- curity in mutual confidence and in mu- good will. ‘The mind, however, is furnished always with old furniture that it is very difficult for you to turn out of your mind. You have the assumptions and fears that you have inherited and fur- nished it afresh with, as you do your own rooms and your own houses. For in- stance, in our case, our navy is the very life of our nation. We have ro- mance surrounding it. We are a people of the sea. We are a small island. Europe is at our doors for good or for ill. The lons of our empire have been thrown all over the face of the earth. ‘We have to import our food. A month's blockade, effectively carried out, would starve us all. “Great powers on the continent trust to.their land forces. Our land forces must always a secondary force in the event of any conflict. Great Brit- ain's navy is Great Britain itself. “As I said, we are a people of the sea, and the sea is our security and our safety. F: “Ah, my American friends, I that your imagination will enable you to see the affection, the real under- standable, human affection that is gathered around our ships of the sea when we look into the future and how hard it is to get the British le to feel security if the naval arm mited in any way whatever. “I put that in front of you, not as a final word, but as a plea for under- standing, a plea for patience, a plea for good will. In that way, the very fact that you show that patience and that good will enable us to change that part of the furniture of our mind and put in its place more modern, fairer, more comfortable and more substantial furniture for future use. Other Difficulty to Face. . “There is another difficulty that you and we have to face in common. You know t:! this lwu;ldh'.hzre is “t:e wise mal a rule he is a very un- wise man. And a very characteristic type of wise man is he who says that as you have never accomplished any- thing in certain directions, so you never will. He is the sort of man who, an hour before Bleriot flew the Channel would declare the Channel could never be flown, because at vari- ous times it had been unsuccessfully attempted, and that type of man comes in to bother us at the present time. He knows a little bit about history, he tells us. He tells us that in 1815 the holy alliance was formed for the pur- pose of securing the world forever in peace. And then he tells you little gossipy tales about this nation' and that. “He tells you how the holy alliance came to an end. He tells you how instead of armies vanishing armies grew. He tells you how even the holy alliance itself instead of securing peace paved the way for war. And he shakes his head and he says to Mr. Root and myself. ‘Ah, you young and unreli- able idealists.” “If the holy alliance does not sat- isfy you and initiate your faith, he will tell you delightful stories of the liberal dreams of democracy in the region of 1848. He will tell you, as one told me the other day, how Robert Owen came to the United States in 1845 and called a convention, and these are the words used—called a world convention to emancipate the human race from ignorance, poverty, division, sin and misery. And he will con- tinue the story down, down, down into an ever-deepening darkness of failures, and then the light of self-satisfaction will illuminate his face and he will turn to you and say: ‘Have I not proved an eternal positive by a finite neg- Aative?” “The fact of the matter is, if you take any great human cause that has triumphed for the benefit of the world, you will find that originally it comes down from the clear blue sky of idealism, down, down, down through experiment after experiment that has failed, until at last it touches the earth, and as soon as it touches the earth, by almost & magical transformation of its creative power it begins to grow up and up by physical means and by successive additions until at last it establishes itself as one of the great achievements of the intelligent human will. Pilgrim Fathers’ Example. “It was one of the Pilgrim fatheérs who said, ‘Let the government be as materials be’ That i§ what we have been trying to remember during the last seven days. We have been trying to amalgamate the two ingredients: Real creative action and an idea which is just and inspiring with practical ex- perience that enables us to apply that idea like practical business men. There has never been anything done worth d?mfi that hasn't been dreamed first of all. “l am told T am addressing some very successful business men. I am not a business man in t sense, but I venture to say that your experience is mine—no one has ever established a successful business without dreaming about it at the beginning. ' “Never has there been a good house built, never has there been a glori- ous cathedral built, but an architect came first of all and conceived the outlines of its beauties and put them in place. mason, the man who has been doing what your President and I have been trying to ince comes after the ithout the architect he can build nothing that is worthy. Our dreams of peace, our conceptions of human justice and human wisdowmn, upon the assumption that na- tions er or later must discover That we do not conceive, we cannot Great Britain can come States and of into conflict. So far, 80 §oody Dorition: o mink: competition of gk, of , of 1 o tlunnoluoul:l:v‘wennw-mn- with each other? We are not to build walls that exclude each other, but fight for the reasons that they give for [ call hope | Paris a little over a_year Speech Before Council of Foreign Relations Refers to Need of Moral Dis- armament and Attitude of Fairness by United States in our various crafts, in our various countries, build temples that will at- tract each other. Not until we dis- cover how democracy, how national en- lightenment, start from great flaring experiments, successfully conducted in good government, not until then are we pw'kfl to have peace on earth and good toward men. And only when ‘we apply those ideas are we building up on the earth the conditions of peace. “That problem remains to the states- man to devise in detail a set of political relations for the specific purgou of realizing the mogel condition which we 1 peace. The problem is, how to co-ordinate harmoniously and not in discordant . way _the different inte: ests of .the different nations. Wi dom, practicality in politics, con- sists in hlvlnz‘::he v&algnh:nd klil‘:)wlnt how to apply it, ant pe, sir, you will find some evidence that that kin of wisdom has been occupying us in the document which was published two dn; . ¢ Working tn Europe. “At the same time I am not going to leave it for you in that condition. We have been working in Europe, and I think we have been working with a considerable amount of success. We have been seeing to this, and this is of fundamental importance. The pub- lic opinion is demanding that those responsible for governments should not only take the risk of war which they take when they begin to build com- petitive armaments but they should take the risk of peace. “Public opinion in Europe today tells its political leaders that it knows there are risks in peace; that it knows that assumptions made between one nation and others that they are to conduct their affairs in sincerity and in justice do lay the believing nation open to a certain amount of risk. I will take it. I will take it. “I refuse to take that risk where I have to turn my eyes across the At- lantic to your building (as I have not done and declined to do. Where I have to build ship after ship in response to your building, what risk would I be taking? The risk that I should be taking would be this: That the Amer- other in the evolution of that program of unlimited bullding call a halt. The risk I would be taking is the risk of war. “If, on the other hand, I take the risk of believing in your word, I take | the risk of belleving in your continued friendship, I take the risk of assuming that you are men of your word, that you are a nation of honor, and that your honor consists largely in_fulfilling your obligation, what risk am Y taking? I am taking the risk of peace which is temporary and in the end I will get peace, security, certainty, and a con- peace to boot, “There is another event that has happened during the last year or so which is a great outstanding event, one of those foundation events upon which great structures of constitutions and institutions can be built. That is the signing of the pact of peace in . You signed that; we signed that, .l‘:d those people who are always telling us that there are certain things that must be withheld from arbitration, place their finger upon the foremost of those things when they say ‘national honor.’ Relies on National Honor, “I agree. National honor is a sort of t that is not of the nature of an arbitral affair. I agree. But we have both signed that pact. Now, is there any peace in national honor? Is there any conduct that is' more essentially an example of national honor than that when you and we sign a document that cer- tain things will happen that we should carry it out over our signature? How can any one talk about national honor and yet contemplate canceling of their signature to a pact just when it suits their purpose? “National honor prevents the United States and Great Britain and the other 50 nations that have signed it; national honor prevents them forever contem- plating arms as an element in their national policy. “I suppose so long as we are in office (I only limit it that because I can- not speak for other parties, but I know perfectly well that as regards other les the same feeling is there)—so long as this government is in office it will always regard its signature, the signature of its nation, to the pact of peace as a precious and sacred part of our national honor and will ob- serve it. “There is another step that has been taken in Europe which is of the great- est encouragement to those of us who are not only peace lovers but peace makers. At Geneva the other day Great Britain and its dominions signed what is_known as the optional clause. We Just Off North Capitol Near R. I. Avenue Six-room, three-room- deep home. Garage. $500 cash and small monthly payments. Higbie, Richardson & Franklin, Inc. 816 15th St. N.W. Nat. 2076 » Ga. 4415 FOR SALE Industrial Property Short Haul to Business Section ican people would at some point or | will recogn deserve to win our case. When people talk about little, pettifogging things, that now and again the most judicial of benches make mistakes, I know that that is true. I believe that if we were to arbitrate or send to arbitration na- tional causes for the next hundrad years there would be mistakes made; but bal- ance the mistakes on the one hand and put against them the loss-s, the destruc- tion, the criminality of war, and where does the balance lie? Human mistakes may be hard to bear by the victim of the mistake, but the sort of thing that has been going on, generation after generation, century after century, un- der the false impression that any.na- tion can get security from military force. altogether outbalances the evils of human mistakes, and if God makes us imperfect, as apparently he has done, I accept the imperfection of hu- man good will rather than the certain destruction and criminality of hurnan malice and wickedness as expressed in war. Parley in January. “And so, those thoughts being in mind, we have taken the very best steps d | to protect ourselves by proclaiming an enduring peace between us, but, my friends, two nations can not make the peace of the world, and so next Jan- uary, as the results of our conversations and agreements so far, we are sum- moning a five-power conference which will be representative of every large naval power and we hope that the five- power conference will enable us ta make complete agreements, not between our- selves, but between ourselves and them and then we shall have widened out the area of agreement, we shall have limited the area of comperitive build- ing, we shall hand over the results to the preparatory commission sitting at Geneva, the commission that is pre- paring the agreements and the agenda for the general conference in disarma- ment—at last, the_ general conference and disarmament I hope will be held with very fine prospects of a complete success. “Can then two nations engage in a better and a more laudable work than that? And that is the work that you and we have been engaged in during the Summer and the recent weeks. “Now, sir, there is something else that I should like to refer to, but again it is essential for the keeping of peace. I am sure that everybody who is inter- ested in foreign relations, at any rate occasionally, reads his Macaulay, and I am sure, therefore, that some of you ize a passage I am going to remind you of. You will remember what he writes about. Hardy rep- resented Great Britain, or England. Count Kounitz represented the empire. ‘The chief business of Hardy and Kounitz' says Lord Macaulay, ‘was to watch each other’s legs. Neither of them thought it consistent with the dignity of the crown which he served to advance toward the other faster than the other advanced toward him * “If, therefore, one of them inad- vertently stepped forward too quick, he went back to the door and the stately minuet began again. That is the old diplomacy. Needless to say, neither your President nor myse!f engaged in minuets. We did not try to maneuver each other into position or out of posi- tion. We tried, as I said, for no al- liances and no balances of power. We did not sit down to play a creeping | and a waiting game. We did not watch | each other as swordsmen watch each other or as prize fighters study the | faces of each other. We did not begin by offering little things, trying to best each other and then advance, step by | step, and stage by stage, as each one forced the othe; FOR RENT Two Bedrooms, Liv- ing Recom, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bath and Re- ception Room. Elec- tric Refrigeration— $137.50 per month. THE ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Rd. FOR RENT Three Bedrooms, Liv- ing Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bath and Re- ception Room. Elec- tric Refrigeration— 2001—16th St. SOMETHING NEW DETACHED HOMES AT ROW-HOUSE PRICES Lot 75x300 22,500 Sq. Ft. Railroad siding for 6 cars. Loading platform 10x260 ft. 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He told me what public opinion demanded of him, and 1 told him what public opinion demanded of me. “In_that sincerity, in that simplicity, | in that informality, we conducted our negotiations, and that is the reascn why in four brief days we came to con- clusions ‘that under the old diplomacy would have taken at least as many months to have achieved. “Sir, that is the prospect before us. There are the problems that we have to face. That is the road we have to walk. Neither of us can act alone. We must have enlightened public opinion | behind us; we must have champions— | champions in both countries. We must | have men and women who, at this moment, will not allow themselves to be led up side alleys that lead nowhere but end in cool descents. We must have public opinion which selects the essen- tial from the unessential, which sees that at the moment the great cause and problem in front of us is the cause of peace, made first of all as a politi- cal declaration, and then the cause of peace turned into a practice, program of agreements and details, and T believe we are going to get it on both sides of Atlantic. ‘And so when I look ahead I think, Mr. Chairman, both of us are justified in seeing the shining feet of the com- ing peacemakers coming over the kori- zon to gladden our hearts and to make us feel that all ousnlong efforts for peace have not been In vain, “If I might, throwing myself on your generosity, appeal to you, it would be that from now onward, until the work is done, you will stand steadfastly by those statesmen who are to have the very difficult job of disentangling the detailed problem of peacemaking, giv- ing us patience, giving us confidence, refusing to be influenced by those who take, maybe, temporary failures as a proof that success is impossible, cheer- ing us so that again and again and again we will return to our work, be- cause in the end it is hound to be suc- cessful. “Thank you so much for listening so patiently to me and giving me the op- portunity of coming and spending such a pleasant and profitable evening with you.” SOLD FOR $32,500 DUE TO FINANCIAL DIF- FICULTIES NOW OFFERED AT $26,500. ALL-BRICK HOME, 9 ROOMS, 3 BATHS, 2-CAR BRICK GARAGE, LARGE LOT, LOCATED AT 5124 CHEVY CHASE PARK- WAY, 72 BLOCK WEST OF CONN. AVE. OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY MOORE & HILL, Inc. ESTABLISHED 1900 730 17th ST. N.W. NATL. 1174 The Modern Way to Pay for Home Improvements 'OMEOWNERS can com- pletely recondition their homes on Security’s easy monthly payment a dignified plan, it enables you to have the work done NOW without any cash out- lay. The cost for all the work is budgeted under one bill, and that can be repaid in con- venient monthly sums. Engage any reliable contractor .::t0 execute the work, but IN- SIST that the financing be han- died through the... SECURITY FINANCE Phone District 3878 Investment Bldg. 15th & K Sts. PHILADELPHIA STYLE HOMES Detached Large Lots 4 Bedrooms 3 Porches—Garages _ Open Fireplaces Beautiful Finish sands of dollars less than other builders ask for same house. If you like a home with plenty of yard, flowers, gardens and separate garage, be sure and inspect. We Will Be Lookis for You This E Why Not Drive Out? Open and Lighted Until 9 0’Clock P.M. TEIN INCORPORATED 1311 H;STREET NORTHWEST Announcing a new rental schedule. .. gton’s foremost gs . . . Apartments of unusually pleasing room arrange- ment. Electric refrigeration, large porches, 24-hour telephone and eleva- tor service...Your inspection invited. Four rooms, recep: tion hall, screened porch, bath, end well equipped kitch- en; garage facilitics ABY needssun- shine every day. On dull, cold or wet days when you can't put baby outdoors, give c~-liver oil instead. It acts much like sunshine. Of co: the easy way is togive it in the form of Scott’s Emulsion. This creamdike preparation with the pleasant flavor is easy J Baby to swallow lnd.d'qat. Get a bottle today. : P4 &/ NNNNET 11 um SCOTTS EMULSION \ SUMMER SUNSHINE for BABIES Ve [ R\ NEWESTI 500 ROOMS Club Facilities SWIMMING PooL Hanp BaLL Court Complimentary fo Guests Heaurn Cuus MAIN DINING Room CAFETERIA RADIO IN EveRY RoOM +AMBASSADORs> - FOURTEENTH AND K STREETS RATES SINGLE oo With Bath . .. « Running Water . DOUBLE . Running Water . SUITE {2 Rooms] DALY MONTHLY $65.00 to $100.00 4s5.00f0 55.00 $3.00 to $5.00 2000 250 $80.00 fo $100.00 sgoote 7500 $4.00 to$6.00 30010 4.00 $6.00 to $8.00 $125.00 to $160.00 Capt. B. F. JOLLEY, General Manager 4707 Connecticut AVENUE THOROUGHLY modern apartment building . . . with every convenience to give you the utmost in comfort . . . yet only twenty minutes from the business center. % . . Ex- ceptional sunlight and air af- forded by choice location. . . . Apartments of two bedrooms with bath; large living room, porch, dining alcove and kitch- en, are now available. . . . We suggest your early inspection of the Sample Model Fur- nished Apartment, OPEN AND LIGHTED OF EVENING UNTIL 9:30 P.M—RENTING FOR NO- VEMBER 1ST OCCUPANCY—RESIDENT MANAGER IN THE BUILDING. For Reservations HARRY M. BRf.L 0 1106 Vermont Ave. DECATUR 4376+ 8 e e e B e RS Y < PO 2