Evening Star Newspaper, February 1, 1930, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SCHOOL DIVISIONS -SHOW CONGESTION Most Modern and Most Neg- lected Buildings Found in Nos. 10 and 11. This is the seventh of a series of arti- les describing the physical aspects of Washington's public schools. As in the previous articles, there is mo attempt Rere to portray the school system’s faults fn an ezaogerated light. The two re vorters who visited each school bulding @re merely presenting the comditions as they saib them. The efohth article dealing with another School system division will appear to- morrow. Nowhere in the District of Columbia can stronger contrasts in school house accommodations be found than in the combined,tenth and eleventh divisions of colored elementary schools. The 21 school houses range from the up-to-the-minute John F. Cooke School, which was completed only sev- years ago and includes all the modernity typical of the new schools, to the tiny Chain Bridge School, which relies upon an old-time wooden pump for its water supply and lacks even an approximation of a sewerage system. Unsurpassed in Congestion. ‘There is the district centering about Tenth and U streets, formerly served by the old Garnet and the Patterson Schools, which gave way to the new Garnet-Patterson Junior High School. | that probably is surpassed in the mat- | ter or congestion by no region, although some may equal its unsavory and un- | fortunate record. Contrasting is the Reno section, where a four-room school is adequate without a single part-time or oversize class. | Congestion in terms which embrace | all the schools of these combined di- | visions is shown by the existence of 38 | part-time graded classes, 13 portables— all of which are set up in long-estab- lished neighborhoods—and 142 out of 235 classes of more than 35 pupils each, which school administrators and teachers unanimously declare the maxi- mum number that should be placed in any one class today. ‘The two divisions, further, have only three auditoriums, thus making the complete exercise of present-day edu- ca methods generally impossible. ‘These are at the Mott, the Cooke and the Cleveland Schools. A fourth audi- torium soon will be added to these, with the eomgll:nm of the 16-room and as- sembly hall addition to the Morgan School, recently transferred to the col- ored divisions from the white school units. th: bufldllng-by-hufldmg ducfi%t‘lflntc( s as seen by a reporter for e BB tortows: ! Cleveland. Cleveland School, Eighth and T streets—Twelve rooms, four portables, eight part-time classes; total enroll- ment, 821; total sittings, 652. There are 16 classes—6AB of 41; two S5AB's of 47 and 46, the tered in portable; three 4AB's of 48, 44 and 47, the last in a portable in which extra odd chairs are being used for overflow; 3AB of 38; two 3A's of 44 and 46, latter in portable; two part- time 2A's of 36 and 40; two part-time 1B’s of 38 and 42; three part-time 1A’s of 41, 37 and 48. Other class in port- able is a 2AB of 35. This portable is one of the oldest in the District, having among the first purchased in 1910 or 1811; it lacks ceiling; was so cold s i latter quar- y & reporter for The Star visited that many of its pupils were wearing to keep their feet warm, and is the same building in which the | ing sim! same reporter found a temperature of THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, lowed to remain any length of tune in that floor. Playground fairly ample. John F. Cook. John P. Cook, P street near North Capitol—Sixteen-room, new type build- ilar to the Brightwood and Ray- mond Schools, modern equip- more than 100 degrees when the mu- nicipal architect’s inspecting engineers examined all portables last Summer. Other part-time class is a 2B of 34. Principal's “office” is a corner of & cloak room: the suditorium is insuffi- clently lighted: hot-air heating plant is giving insufficient heat and the toilet rooms are badly lighted and were cold the day the reporter called. Play- ground, oecupied by the portables, is useless; children play in blockaded street. Harrison. Harrison School, Thirteenth and W streets—Eight class rooms, three port- ables, eight part-time classes; total en- rollment, 678: total sittings, 480 (323 in main bullding and 23 in portables). There are 14 oversize classes—two 5AB's of 47 and 43; a 4B of 42 in a portable; two 4A's of 42 and 39; a part-time 38 of 44 in a portable; a part-time 3A of 44 in a portable: another 3A of 44: a part-time 2B of 46; two part-time 2A's ©f 40 and 38; a part-time 1B of 45 and two part-time 1A's of 47 and 44. Two kindergartens of 42 and 37 alternate in use of same room. The portables are located on V strect between Thirteenth and Fourteenth, a block away. Despite large classes, regulation school furni- ture is provided for all by crowding class rooms. Toilet rooms are old- fashioned in equipment and design and are cold; virtually no playground. Girls have no play room and boys’ rooms is of ill lighted “vault” type; teachers’ Toom is inadequate, Mott. Mott School. Fourth and W streets— ‘Twenty-five class rooms in connected old and newer units of the building; two part-time classes; total enrollment, 1.048; total sittings, 1,060. There are 16 oversize classes—6B of 43; two 6A's of 38 and one of 39; a 5B of 46, in ‘Wwhich odd chairs are used for overflow; two 5A's of 41 and 40; 4B of 41; 3B of 42; 3AB of 39; two 3A's of 42 and 38; 1B of 44: 1AB of a5 and two part-time 1A’s of 45 and 44. Two kindergartens ©f 40 and 38 alternate in use of same room. There are two adequate carpen- ter shops, a good domestic science room and a good sewing room. There are toilet rooms in both buflding units: those in old wing are cold and damp and are equipped with old-fashioned facilities; those in new wing are mod- ern, better heated and lighted. Audito- rium is good. but needs new window %fl, P":mre hdlug;xod pupils’ lunch . ygroun: arge enough, but Deeds resurfacing. i Langston. Langston School, P street near North Capitol street—Eight rooms: total en- roliment, 350; total sittings, 326. There are three oversize classes—1AB of 50, 1A of 46, a 4A of 42. A kindergarten class of 49 and a pre-primer class of 27 alternate in use of same room. Toilet rooms are dark and have old-type equip- ment; the boys’ play room is cold; hot air heat insufficlent for upper floors teachers lack rest room, but have tiny | unheated toilet room; playground | scarcely adequate. | Slater. Slater School, P street near First (ad- Joining Langston)—Eight rooms; total enroliment, 300; total sittings, 347 ‘There are five oversize clastes—5B of 41, 4AB of 43, two 6A’s of 38 and 37, 3B of 40. Stcam heat good for uj floors; toilet and play rooms dark and cold; toilet fi ties teachers’ room all right. Twining. Twining School, Third street near d 4B of 45 *There are four “special” classes of vary- types with the following rolls: 25, 1 and 10. Only other ass is & 2K 35. Remaining c! room is used | ern construction; play rooms are simi- old-fashioned; ' if possessing ment or having space for it throughout, total enrollment, 789. There are 12 oversize and six e classes as fol- lows: Two 5B's of 38 and 42, 4A of 48, 4B of 46, two 3A's of 37 and 36, 2B of 42, a part-time 1A of 48, two part-time 1AB’s of 47 each, & part-time 1B of 42, and two part-time 2A's of 34 and 32, which come within “ideal maximum.” A kindergarten of 45 was found occupying a ground-floor room on the north side of the building, which never receives direct sunlight, while comparatively small class of normal college students is quartered in larger, southern exposure room. Domestic science and domestic art rooms good. Auditorium modern but with motion picture machine booth carrying fittings for projector which never has been given school. Sewing is taught in the room designed for manual training. School has modern toilet rooms with up-to-date fixtures. ‘Wormley. ‘Wormley School, Thirty-fourth and Prospect, streets—Eight rooms, total en- roliment, 288; total sittings, 310. Five over-size classes: 6B of 38, 4AB of 39, 3AB of 41, 2AB of 40, and 1A of 38. Building needs painting. Playrooms of ill-lighted “vault type,” tollet rooms similar with old-fashioned equipment. A brick wall surrounds building, leav- ing a uselessly narrow border of ground for play purposes. A lot adjoining school on east has been purchased to provide pluyfmund, but brick wall still | separates it from school.- Brick wall at rear is damaged on east end so that puplls are endangered by falling into low alley while at play. Garrison. Garrison School, Twelfth street near R—Sixteen rooms, six portables; total enrollment, 878; total sittings, 930 (680 in permanent building; 250 in port- ables). Seventeen over-size classes: 6B of 36 in main bullding, 6B of 37 in portable, 6B of 36 in main building, 5B of 37, two 5A’s of 42 and 38, the latter in portable; 4B of 45, which has to use three odd chairs at a table; two 4A’s of 39 and 37, latter in portable; 3B of 42, two 3A's of 45 and 42, 1B of 43, two 1A’s of 53, necessitating use of chairs borrowed from other rooms when there is full attendance (usual children's sic! nesses, however, make full attendance a The kindergarten has 48, 6A Other classes in portable are two 6A’s of 35 each, and 5AB of 32. Portable housing the 6B class of 37 has cracks between boards in corners through which daylight is easily visible; that q the 5AB class has simi- lar but less pronounced cracks, and both are inadequately warm when re- porter called. The portable housing 4AB was reported by its class to leak in rainy weather cr when a thaw takes place; such a condition, however, was not actually visible to the reporter. The main building is in two sections, built at different times; boys’ toilets, located in old building, are of old type, while girls’, in newer structure, are of mod- larly different; boys’ is small, cold and needs painting: girls’ is somewhat im- proved. Pupils are deprived entirely of playground as portables occupy all ailable space recess. Domestic science and art rooms are all right. Girls’ entrance to build- ing ?em on 4-foot plot of school ground which is unfenced from public vehicular alley so that, in reality, they walk down alley which is frequently (as it was w] reporter saw it) marked by puddies and ravines. ‘Wilson. ‘Wilson School, Seventeenth and Euclid streets—Eight class rooms, total enroliment, 304. As this is printed there are five over-size classes—6AB of 37, 6A5B of 37, 5A of 41, 2A of 41, 1A of 42. When reporter first visited this school two weeks it had two port- ables and two part. classes, TT: ture needs painting. ‘The portables, them, were'in bad state of repair and were s0 cold that pupils sat wearing Fegisiered 625 desrecs. temperatire 5 degrees; tempera mnwer floor in vicinity of pupils’ bodies naturally was lower. Morgan. Morgan School, California and V treets—Eight class room unit now ailable with an eight-room and as- sembly. hall addition nearing comple- tion. Three classes have just been moved here from the Wilson School unit, two of which are oversize—4AB of 45 and 3A of 36. Other class is a com- bination 4A3B of 34. The fourth grade and the combination grade classes were taken from the Wilson main building, while the low third grade was trans- ferred from one of the two portables. The class thus left in the second port- able was sent to the Wilson main build- ing to occupy one of the vacated rooms, while- the two part-time classes there were given separate classes for full- time instruction. Morgan's equipment is undergoing a general renovation and when completed the bull is ex- pected to be thoroughly lern. At present there are five empty class work is completed may leave some of the 16 rooms the school then will have, unoccupied, although administrators at present are struggling with problem of transferring puplls there from more congested sections. Bruce. Bruce School, Kenyon street and Sherman avenue.—Sixteen class rooms, six part-time classes, total enrollment, 796; total sittings, 781. Seventeen over- size classes; two 6 A's of 39 and 46; SAB of 38; 5A of 36; 4B of 41; 4A of 46 3B of 41; two 3A's of 38 and 37; 3B4A of 38; 2B of 4 2A’s of 42 and 38; pai three part-time 1A's of 42, 38 and 42. The kindergarten has 56. This bulld- ing also is in two units erected at dif- ferent times. Tollets in first wing are old fashioned while those in new wing are up-to-date in appointments. Dom- estic science room is good; uwlng now taught in regular class. Heat for build- good but principal's office, located over exposed entrance to building, is inadequately heated. * Sumner. Sumner School, Seventeenth and M streets.—Ten rooms and auditorium; total enroliment, 385; total sittings, 417. Seven oversize classes, 4A of 38; 3B4A of 40; 5B of 36; 4B5A of 45; 6A of 36; 6B of 41: 3A of 38. Small play room for girls; no play room for boys. Steam heat is good. Tollets are old type. Domestic science rdom is fairly good; manual training room is dark, so far as its daylight is concerned. There is a “first aid” or emergency room lacking equipment and a good principal's office. Magruder, Magruder School, Seventeenth and M streets (adjoins Sumner).—Eight rooms, four of which quarter school for col- ored crippled children with an enroll- ment of 35; total enrollment (not counting crippled school's pupils), 190. The six classes quartered in the second- floor four rooms include four on part- time schedule and two oversize as fol- lows: Part time, 1B of 35; two 1A's of 34 and 29, and 2A of 37; oversize, the in | last named part-time class and a 2B of 37. A special class of 18 completes the roll. Toilets are old fashioned and are reached by passing directly in front of furnace doors facing on corridors; coal was heaped in the corridors when the reporter visited this school; play- rooms are of “vault type,” ill lighted and cold; girls' play room used now for storage. Bullding needs painting. Play- ground seems adequate. Phillips. Phillips School, Twenty-seventh and N streets—Eight rooms; total enroll- ment, 288; total sittl oversize which were in use when reporter visited | ing galoshes in class. The temperature onh_; a rooms. Reorganization after structural | This Upper: Here's how the Garrison School meets its congestion with six portables. There’s not enough play- ground space left for a game of marbles and the pupils of the main building units (shown in background) and those in the portables, are obliged to play in the street. Lower: Another relic of bygone days which Washington school children still are using. Chain Bridge School pupils get water for their every use at this “community pump,” 60 feet or so from the ‘school house. They even have to “tote” the water used in the boilers and radiators of their heating plant. —Star Staft Photos. field street—One class room, total en- roliment, 25 in one class, including first to seventh grades. This school, al- though the building is generally mod- ern in construction, is thoroughly rural, serving the few children of that gen- eral suburban territory. There is one class room and one domestic science room on main floor and a manual train- ing room and a play room in the base- ment. There is no running water at this school and water for every purpose, including that for the heating boiler, is carried wooden pump on she front grounds. The tollets are of one of the oldest and most rural type known, devold of all sewer- age connections and lacking even septic tanks. Playground is ample but unde- veloped. Reno. Reno School, Howard and Fessenden streets—Four-room, wooden building, total enrollment, 133; total sittings, 177. No oversize or part-time classes, but each . graded class includes pupils of three grades. Hot-air heating system effective. No play rooms, toilets old- fashioned. Building has a carpenter shop and home economics room. Military Road. Military Road School (near Bright- wood)—Four class rooms, total enroll- ment, 145; total sittings, 160. Combined first and second grades have 43 pupils and combined fiftn and sixth have 41. Play rooms light and airy, tollets old type. Teachers' rest room used for sew- classes, room is literally jammed with varied furniture. Playground is adequate and despite small enrollment, has all kinds of play dev::lea mcm two see-saws, gymnastic ladder, s 3 slide and gymnastic bars. Montgomery. Montgomery School, Twenty-seventh and I streets—Eight rooms, total enroll- ment, 249; total sittings, 316. Three oversize classes, 1A of 4v, 2A of 37, 5AB of 37. Two bascment play rooms being painted when reporter cailed, they are of ihe “vault” type, but have slightly larger windows than most of that kind. Steam heat adequate, toilets old-fash- ioned, but have extra wash rooms. Stevens. Stevens School, Twenty-first and K streets—Eighteen regular class rooms, three stories; total enrollments, 660; total sittings, 714. Nine oversize classe: 8B of 38, 5A of 48, 5B of 36, 4B of 43, 2AB of 46, 2A of 48, two 1A’s of 37 and 48 and 1B of 48. Kindergarten has 54. Tollets old-fashioned and very badly ventilated; play rooms cold and small; old cl room furniture is stored in one awaiting removal from building. There is a good domestic sclence room and a fairly good manual training shop. bullding quarters the colored “open window” school. Heat is all right. Briggs. Briggs School, Twenty-second and E streets—Eight rooms, four part-time classes; total enroliment, 383; total sit- tings, 356, Six oversize c! part- time 1A of 42, part-time 1B of 45, part- time 2AB of 41, part-time 2A of 39, 4A ©of 39 and 3A of 36. Tollets old and very badly ventilated; one “vault type” play room of bad lighting, one play room, while virtually same type, better lighted and aired. There is a teachers’ room and an office. ADVERTISENENTS B retf REc Rock Creek Pharmacy Rock Creek Church Rd. and Ga. Ave. Is a Star Branch Office Leaving copy for the Classi- fied Branch Office in your neighbor- first can expect prompt responses, for The Star Classified Section is read regularly by practically every one in and around Wash- ington, There’s a Star Branch Office in nearly every neighborhood, rendering its service without THE ABOVE SIGN 18 DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES fee; * Star pails from an old-fdshioned | Ba; charged. The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater Classified = Advertising day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best resylts, v the Corner” is | Branch Office MKINLEY SENIORS RECEIVE DIPLOMAS Dr. H. Barrett Learned, Vice President, Education Board, Is Speaker. Eighty-nine puplls were awarded diplomas at the graduation exercises of McKinley High School last night. Dr. H. Barrett Learned, vice president of the Board of Education, presided and spoke briefly. The invocation was offered by Rev. | Godfrey Chobot, pastor of the Sixth Presbyterian Church. The Tech Sym- | phony Orchestra, under the direction of Dore Walten, played several numbers and Miss Lillle P. Bailey gave solos on the organ. Ameglio James Paglino delivered the valedictory. Those receiving honor cer- tificates were: Minnie Clipker, who completed the course in three years and who won a place in the national high school orchestra; Lucla Elms Pister, who graduated in three and a half | years; John Irving Loving and Ameglio iJBmPs Paglino. H. Dale Davis| as- sistant principal, presented the honor | certificates. = District Commissioner Proctor L. Dougherty was present and presented is son, Proctor Lambert Dougherty, Jr., with his diploma, but did not speak. Frank C. Daniel, cipal, pre- sented the following with diplomas: Girls—Marion Carolyn Almquist, Minnie Clipker, Rachel Rowena Clough, Frances Lorraine Doran, Lucia Fister, Margaret Anna Fox, Dixie Nel- lie Freeman, Emily Colbert Hallock, Mildred Louise Harris, Gladys Myrtle Haynes, Henrietta Mable Holm, Iantha Platte King, Mary Jane Klare, Eleanor Franz Lamond, Ruth Elizabeth Nalls, Anne Racoosin, Susan Bowden Ross, Helen Matilda Russell, Mary Hamilton Steele, Pearl Strickland and Elizabeth Nanatte Suter. Boys—Isadore Abramovitz, Alvin Rus- sel Barnett, Lawrence Edwin_Beall, Leslie Carl Bell, Willis Alton Benner, James Daniel Bradley, Willlam_Oliver Brown, William Palmer Bruin, Edward Giles Bucklin, Earl Frederick Buscher, John Louis Calomaris, Melville Ste- phenson Church, Roger Hampton Cope- land, John Cotton, James Alexander Crooks, Halford Goodwin Davis, Donald Kenneth Edwards, Harry Moore Ensor, Charles Francis Evans, Charles Horace Felton, Willard Edmund Fellner, Robert Lee Fillebrown, Charles Eldis Foster, Walter Brison Prye, jr.; Marcus George Gelger, Spiros John Gianaris, James nks Goodall, Edwin Montague Gore- ly, Dunbar Archie Goss, Douglas Wil- bur Hedrick, Reginald Plinny Hotch- kiss, Hubert Patrick Hoy, Harold James Ichilian, Robert Warden Keil, Ernest Winfield Kilton, Paul Bernard Krehbiel, ‘Warren Leigh Lawton, Sigmund George Lazer, John Irving Loving, Roy Rush Madden, Willlam Windeck Manville, John Henderson Mattern, John Fredrick Mattingley, Herman Palmer Medler, Martin Luther Melius, Percy Bailey Mettler, Charles Wells Miller, Robert Loren Miller, Randolph Louis More- land, Richard Francis Murphy, Philip Nachman, jr.; Paul Herman Otto, Ameglio James Paglino, Benjamin Par- son, John Rogers Payne, Warren Hardy Queen, Donald Hood Saunders, Leonard Smith, Walter Heath Smith, Edward Anderson Smoot, Norman Veitch Stevens, Myer Harold Stolar, John Metzger Stoy, Edwin Kemper Sullivan, Peter Eldridge Traver, John Wilcox Whiteside and Austin Willlam Patrick ‘Winston. . VIRGINIA TOBACCO OUTPUT INGREASES !Drop Shown in .Dintrict and Mary- land—Country as Whole Makes Gain. Tobacco manufactures increased in Virginia, but decreased in the District of Columbia and Maryland during 1929, as compared to 1928, the Internal Rev- enue Bureau disclosed in a report made public last night, showing a substantial gain for the Nation at large. The total tax on tobacco manufac- tures for this collection district, includ- ing Maryland and the District of Co- lumbia, fell from $172,192.37 for 1928 to_$135,004.74 in 1929, In Virginia the tax rose during the same period from $68,855,282.88 to $72,~ 667,068.10. For the country as a whole the gain was from $411,016,098.04 to $449,058,- 963.84. Increased smoking among women is reflected in the big gain in cigarette tax, which shows a gain over a period of six years, while cigars show a de- crease of more than 40 per cent during the same period. The_total tax on_cigarettes jumped NO MORE METERS TO CLICK AWAY YOUR DIMES See page A-3 EIVED HERE Section of The Star at the SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1930. (rom“lz“,!l:ii:g:.lfi in 1924 to $357,- 205,753.91 ). Cigarettes manufactured in this dis- trict fell off in tax from $266.25 in 1928 to $158.87 in 1929; cigars fell off, also, from $171,467.10 to $134,135.14. In Virginia, however, cigarettes jumped from $58,993,738.44 to $68,397.- 602.04 and cigars from $962260.89 to $1,057,051.33. —— Declarations Taken on Wax. BUDAPEST (#).—As one result of a visit to the United States by a superior officer of the metropolitan police, decla- rations by prisoners are hereafter to be taken on wax disks or rolls. The records will then be introduced in court as evi- dence. ! OFFICERS WILL RECEIVE ORDNANCE INSTRUCTION Group Will Start Another Phase of Post-Graduate Course at Navy Yard. About a dozen officers, who have had a year's special instruction at the Naval Academy and later some time at one of the large universities, will start another phase of their post-graduate course in a few days at the Washington Navy Yard in the naval gun.factory. Some of the officers have attendéd Columbia University in New York and some the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, Mich. The officers scheduled to come to the local navy yard will. be given special instruction in ordnance during a course that will take them to the naval sta- tion at Indian Head, Md. and to the naval proving grounds at Dahlgren, Va. The curriculum of this speetal post-graduate work calls for a time to be nt at some of the big civillan manufacturing plants, such as the Westinghouse and General Electric firms. The course here will range from one month to eight weeks. Similar classes were started in the Fall. Woobpwarp & LoTHROP 1880 GOLp; EN ANNIVERSARY Yoo 1930 Give Once for All—Washington Community Chest ‘The Washington of the Future Is Depicted in Our F Street Windows Woodward & Lothrop. . .with the co-operation of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission, The Fine Arts Com- mission, the Office of the Architect of the Treasury, the Municipal Architect’s Office, and men of national note . . . presents window exhibits depicting major portions of The Washington of the Future. With the con- struction planned, and much of it under way, L’Enfant's dreams are now crystallizing into a reality—Washington, Capital City of the world's greatest nation, is becoming the world’s most beautiful national capital. It is with pride—in this, our Golden Anniversary Year—we present this exhibit. This F Street Window Display is arranged as follo beginning with Number I Window at Eleventh and F No. 1 Window. «++e0....Model of the Federal Triangle No. 2 Window. .Model of the New Supreme Court Building No. 3 Window. ... Model of the Arlington Memorial Bridge No. ¢ Window....Model of the D. C. World War Memorial insures insertion in the available issue—and you only regular rates are _volume of every No. 5 Window ...........Model of the Monument Gardens No. 6 Window. No. 7 Window. Model of The Capitol Plaza Development «....Model of Great Falls Bridge No. 8 Window .....Upper and Lower Potomac River Parks A Brilliant Array of America’s F inest Oriental Rug Reproductions...Hundreds of New Karastans Our Largest Exhibit of Sizes and Ovriental Designs Woodward & Lothrop—just like hundreds and hundreds of smart g.eople everywhere—has always been enthusiastic about these wonder- | American-made reproductions of Oriental rugs, but never before has it had such a marvelous collection. The exhi feature of our Golden it is indeed a proud Anniversary Year . . . it brings the newer Karastans—(silky carpets produced on modern-day looms that have learned treasured secrets of Oriental weaving) . . . rugs that are classic furnishings in homes where good taste is the inevitable standard of gracious living. Compare the New Karastans with Real Orientals « o « experts find they compare in minute detail A Feature Group of 9x12 Karastans, $195 Included are Famous Karastan Copies of . The Ardebil Sarouks Kashans Ferahans Other Sizes 9x15 9x18 . 95212 ., 12«15 12518 13.6x15 13.6x18.2

Other pages from this issue: