Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1930, Page 3

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More Side Lines Cleaning rugs and carpets, ’fmhirlmg and moth-proof- i!ld urpiture and effects, writing insurance (espe- cially marine and transit, jewelry, all risk; baggage | and burglary), making in- ‘ventories and appraisals of household effects, and han- dling removals anywhere by motor van, “lift” van and | A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR38 YEARS CAASPINWALL . PRESIDENT FOR SALE DUNIGAN-BUILT Sample Home 422 Longfellow St. N.W. Open Until Sold Four bed rooms, big porches, tiled bath with shower, fully screened, clec- tric refrigeration, cedar closets, large yard, garage and many other features. Sold on Easy Payments o Relieve Colds Quickly! The minutes meeze or a sniffle warns you of a coming cold, put Mistol up your mose with the handy Mistol dropper; also gargle with it. Quickly you can feel it soothe the irritated membranes of nose and throat. It is pleasant, easy, and the approved scien- tific way used by doctors! Checks colds quickly! Get a bottle today at any drug store. Protect yourself! Misto Ate u.s.PaT. OFr Made by the Makers of Nujol GEEEE——— s SPECIAL NOTICES. itome tion 1930, 10 a.m.. a €13 G st n'w AR C. SNYDER. U. 8. Marshal in and for | District_of Col AN 0D VAN Lot i of small lois to and from New YOrk. RITY STORAGE COMPANY. 1140 Fif- Seenth sireet. Decatur 0443. WANT TO HAUL FULL OR RT_LOAD g0 or from New York. Richmond. Boston. ttsburgh and all way poinis: special rates ATIONAL DELIVERY ~ASSN.. INC.. 1317 ve._Nat._1460. _Local moving_aiso. et e’ 10 “Wide' Lo wmn_fi‘.‘:fm#n LOADS UNITED 'ATES STORAGE CO. §18 10th St. N.W. Metropolitan ] Wanted Loads From Eoliternis. Matne, Vermont, Plorida and ts South. To or From ‘:.uu'b’ a nn’:‘:“ixnmuflrc: Y Eas RED BALL TRANSIT CO. ] 2162 LOADS. ~NEW_YORK Hampihire, Asheville . Long-distance mov- Cineinnati, tern city. Company. North 3343 e, Y'hn'g‘g Van Line Service. RUSTY ROOFS —will s0on be LEAKY ROOPS if neg- Jected. Protec-Tin Roof Paint will save the tin and put things in & all us for years 10 come. Roofing 119 ard St 8 ‘Made fresh daily from selected apples un- ; E,m.‘f‘ufl'ufl“-‘n‘:".‘. B he Tinas. Apples—Sweet Cider Rockville Fn.:'lt Farm TR ot Fork Imperis BEL s Bk i 38 e Vi mile out on road to Potomac. Telephone & e “Gpen dally until 9 p.m.__ rinting Craftsmen are at yosr service for result-getting publicity Nafionnf Capital Press R ’ Dt N.W. Phone > | find Jowa jobs in road construction od | year in building merchant vessels to the | value of $50,000,000. Various Govern- %" | ment bureaus have hurried INATION MOBILIZES $1,000.000,000 FUND Cities, States'and U. S. Put Up Resources to Help Jobless in Crisis. (Continued From Pirst Page.) 000,000 for boulevards, with $145,000,- 000 additional expenditure by other agencies, official and ivate. San Francisco is to spend $143,000,000. Nearly all of America’s large citles, ‘where the concentration of great num- bers of persons presents a problem of unemployment, ®oth in good times and in r, have taken action to meas- ure their local situations. New York is conducting a systematic survey of her jobless. Twenty thou- sand names have been listed with emer- gency rellef measures taken to meet immediate needs. But beyond this the city has appropriated nearly $250,000 to pay additional labor in parks, giving work to 2,000 men three days a week. A Wall Street group is planning a pool of $150,000 a week to provide more jobs. The awarding of residential buliding contracts in New York City during Oc- tober averaged $1,924,400 a day—S$43: m more a day than during last Oc- . Chicago's projects which are now and which are soon to be include co struction of two “Century of Progress” buildings, the expenditure of nearly $200,000,000 by the Insull (public util- ities) companies for extensions and im- provements, the widening of streets and construction of 1,000 miles of new ones and extensive park work. An ef- fort is now being made to get an im- mediate Supreme Court decision under which the city hopes to begin the ex- penditure of $12,000,000 on its water system. Detroit Pushes Campaign. ‘While Mayor Frank Murphy’s Relief Committee has begun hunting jobs for 87,000 persons registered as unemployed in Detroit, the city has laid plans for carrying its contract program into the Winter months. Other Michigan cities, which, like Detroit, depend for their industrial life upon the automobile, have started “a job for ery man"” campaign and are extending their mu- nicipal jobs into the Winter. Grand Rapids, Mich.,, has been heartened by the announcement by furniture fac- tories of an increase in orders. Indianapolis, the twin cities of Min- nesota, Des Moines and Columbus, Ohio, are among cities in the Middle West where unemployment, it is stated, has not reached a point of unusual concern, although these cities, as well as most every other one in the country, plan to push public works and private construc- tion as palliatives. Boston has taken hold of the ques- tion of work with the commencement of school buildings and with the in- auguration of a $25,000,000 three-year program to eliminate grade crossings. Road Building Programs. Springfield and Worcester are two other Massachusetts cities which have mapped carefully what they believe will be a route around unemployment. Vermont and New Hampshire road building programs are being pushed as rapidly as possible. The South has perhaps fewer or- ganized unemployment relief programs than other sections. Virginia, how- ever, has gone ahead, not only in State construction work, but in a movement calculated to encourage business organ- izations to hasten any contemplated improvements. Unemployment and _drought are closely joined in relief measures in many areas of the South. In South Carolina a $65,000,000 hizhway program is being started in the expectation it will go far toward giving work to Carolinahs now unemployed. Nashville, Tenn., claims the best record ®in erica of cities in the 100,000 population class. Census figures show that city to have only 1 per cent unemployment. Florida to Tourists. Florida looks to its citrus fruit crop and to tourists to take up the unem- ployment slack there. Louisiana has only a nominal number of jobless; and Jackson, Miss., is experiencing a mild boom, due to oil. A $43,000,000 hydro- electric project in Arkansas awaits only Federal authorization before affording work for many hundreds. The entire South is taking steps to prevent a Winter influx of jobless from other parts of the country. = This senti- ment marks virtually all communities. It is evidenced by repeated statements of officials in Detroit, by ‘the cry of “Virginia jobs for Virginians” and by this statement of the State labor com- missioner of Iows “Iowa has been able to take care of its own laborers all Summer, virtually all unemployed being men who came here from outside. The prospect is for enough work to care for Iowa's own laborers throughout the Winter, but not outsiders.” Big Iowa Pipe Line. In Towa two pipe line companies plan an expenditure of $21,000,000 to construct natural gas and gasoline lines to 150 cities, absorbing 30,000 men who were employed during the Summer in road constructien. Other workers will costing $40,000,000, half of which will be paid out in wages. State governments, though further removed from the immediate conse- quences of unemployment than cities, have taken the lead in outlining definite programs for road work, for the ad- vancing of construction originally in- tended for Spring, and for maintenance. ‘The railroads likewise have been col tributors to programs of wol At Cheyenne, Wyo., the Union Pacific has under way a terminal enlargement project involving $1,600,000. The Boston & Maine Rallroad has new policy which will ¢ 200 additional men alon, . Chicago & Alton Rallroad announced the re-employment of 1,200 men at its Bloomington, Ili, shops. New Jersey Maps Policy. A definite program aiming at reduc- ing the numl of men without work has been outlined for New Jersey by the State Civil Service Commission. It in- volves 10 points, including the giving of overtime work, where such work is necessary, to extra employes; the limi ing of regular hourly or per diem work- ers to 40 hours a week, and the appor- tioning of new jobs to persons with de- pendents and without other means of support. ‘The Federal Government, whose re- lief measures must, by their very na- ture, be general, has, nevertheless, | afforded definite work for many tlou- sends. The Shipping Board will em- ploy approximately 20,000 men next ns for construction, including veterans’ hos- pitals, post offices, dams and improve- ments at Army reservations. The Gov- ernment has a $115,000,000 building program -at Washington, though this will be spread over a period of years. One of the major moves made by the Government to provide work was that of the Post Office Department in ranging to add nearly a quarter of a million temporary employes during the holidays. Unemployed to Be Registered. ASHLAND, Ky., October 30 (#)— Boydland County’s unemployment relief ‘'THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 193 IMRS. GILBRETH TURNS TRAINED MIND UPON JOBLESS PROBLEM Industrial Engineer Has La- bored . to Make Tasks Easier for Women. Comes at Hoover’s Call to Aid Col. Woods in His Relief Work. BY ARMISTEAD W. GILLIAM. Under the microscopelike mind of a woman who has taken a million pains and aches out of work in the past 20 years was squirming another problem of work, the germ of unemployment. ‘The woman is Dr. Lillian Moller Gil- breth of Montclair, N. J., head of the | woman’s division of President Hoover's | -Unemployment Committee, who has just | come to Washington to take charge of | her newest task under Col. Arthur Woods, chairman of the committee. The first-aid treatment advised for the Nation at large by Mrs. Gilbreth is wise buying. By wise buying, she explains, women must find out what needs o be done in the home, the community, the State and the Nation, buy the labor necessary to do it and have it done. Meanwhile, she advises them to continue buying wisely g{ the necessities and luxuries for the ome. Other Advice to Follow. ‘There will be other advice for the solution of the problem of scarcity of work, says Dr. Gilbreth, when she fur- ther examines the unemployment germ | try and finds some more vulnerable points. “Meanwhile,” she declared today, “I am organizing my office to act as a| clearing house for the women of the Nation to send their unemployment problems, in an effort to eliminate those sections which are not troubled with the problem and to learn more about those which undoubtediy are sorely tried.” Dr. Gilbreth believes unemployment can be consumed in the fires of indus- try and that the Nation can be put back into a prosperous, highly produc- tive, fast-consuming state, but she is under no illusions as to the magnitude of the task she and Col. Woods face. “Of course,” she declared, “the task of getting unemployed men and women into profitable employment is our first consideration. We've got to do it; that's all there is to it. When we find out more about this situation we’ll also find the solution of the problem—of that I'm sure. But most important, to my mind, is the finding, as the result of the pres- ent condition of the country, of a spe- cific means which we can use to prevent any further such occurrences.” Dr. Gilbreth is not merely charged with the problem of finding out the un- employment situation among members of her own sex. She sees a_bigger job cut out for her than that. Women, she finds, are large employers on their own account, can be useful in finding em- ployment for their men folks and can furnish valuable information and advice on the general employment situation. Blames Psychology in Part. “For one thing,” she says, “women can combat the psychology of the pres- ent condition. Personally, I believe DR. LILLIAN M. GILBRETH. much of the present trouble is due to the psychological effect of a series of conditions on the people at large. If women will pread the gospel of pros- perity, show how this country, even though it does have a little economic ‘tummyache,’ still can produce more, live better and surpass in many ways any nation on earth, it would help. There's nothing like a man sticking out his chest and feeling superior to the petty problems at hand.” Mrs. Gilbreth calls upon every wom- an's organization throughout the coun- to use her office as a clearing house for information and advice on the sit- uation. While this information is pass- jng through her office, she believes she and the rest of the Unemployment Com- mittee can get the employers and un- employed together in increasing num- bers and eventually solve the problem. A psychologist when she ended the first phase of her education at Brown University, Mrs. Gilbreth immediately started applying her well equipped mind to the work problems of her sex. For the past 20 years she has studied mo- tions, considered how to eliminate many of them, and has spread the gospel of taking energy out of work. Working with industry at one hand and the home at the other, she has evolved systems whereby the woman's task can be vastly | simplified. She knows, from long study, | just what kind of kitchen table is the right height for the most efficient use and the fewest backaches in the kitchen. She knows where the kitchen cabinet should be to save the most steps and yet not crowd the kitchen too much. She knows where to place every utensil in the most available and energy-saving place, and about all these things and many more in the home she has advised women throughout the country. Is Industrial Engineer. More recently she has studied indus- trial engineering and has set herself up as a consulting engineer on problems industrial and relating to the home. In factories, in stores and in homes she has put work under microscopic ex- amination, studying lost motion, wasted energy, improper methods of working, and evolved systems for eliminating the ordinary evils of work. % LEGGE MAKES PLEA FOR MARKETING AID Tells Boston Chamber of! Commerce Farm Success Will Help Manufacturers. By the Associated Press. BOSTON, October 30.—Alexander H. Legge, chairman of the Federal Farm Board, urged the success of the agricultural marketing act in & speech before the -Boston Chamber of Com- merce today. “New England manufacturers will | profit if the co-operative program being developed under the agricultural mar- keting act succeeds,” Legge sald. Begins With First Tariff. Mr. Legge described the history of business conditions in 1815 “seemingly very like the one we are now passing through,” when the first agitation for protective tariff for American industry resulted in an average duty of about 20 per cent. From this time on, he said, the farm “has become more and | more an industry producing raw ma- terials for factory consumption.” “The disparity between the income of those engaged in agricultural pursuits,’, he said, “and those engaged in many other industries seems to have widened through the years in which industry as a whole has become more and more highly organized The situation has become much more acute since the World War, probably for the reason that the almost totally unorganized agricultural producer was not so well able to meet the rapidly changing con- ditions. “The manufacturer knew at all times just what his costs were, and if goods could not be marketed at a price suffi- clent to cover the cost or better, he would cease prodfiction until conditions changed. Pleads for Support. “As against this, 6,500,000 farm fac- tories went on blindly producing what they thought their farm was best fitted to produce, paying no attention to ac- cumulated stocks or invemtories and | having practically no voice in the price | at which their commodities were sold. “Get busy and help up make the agricultural marketing act a success, and each and every one of you will benefit by an improvement "in the financial position of this large group, who will then be better customers for LYNCHBURG, Va., October 30 (Spe- cial) —Reassessment of realty here just completed shows an ugrente of $38,- 383,493 in values. This is an increase of slightly more than $7,000,000 over the 1925 assessment. LAUNCHES DRIVE " FOR REFUND CURB Garner Calls for Probe of Treasury’s Actions During Past 11 Years. By the Associated Press. A new drive to place tax refunds under adjudication of the courts has been launched bv Representative Gar- ner of Texas, tl.> Democratic leader of the House. Heartened by the prospect of Demo- cratic gains in Congress at the election. Garner in a statement last night again called for a congressional investigation of the manner in which the Treasury Department has returned to corpora- tions and individuals during the past 11 years a sum he placed at nearly $3,000,000,000. In the past his proposals for such | action, the minority leader pointed out, have been “promptly smothered by the Republican majority.” “It is incenceivable that we should | continue to grant these huge refunds except upon court decisions covering “With a decrease of $140,286,000 in collection of corporation and indi- vidual income taxes during the first nine months of this year, and a de- crease of more than $60,000,000 in cus- toms receipts, it is obvious that the burden of these refunds will become in- creasingly heavy upon the taxpayer. I consider their investigation o= of the important duties of the next Congress.” Garner called particular attention to a $246,917 refund recently ordered in favor of the Aluminum Co. of America, in which, he noted “the Mellons are interested.’ ‘This return he said brought that one concern’s total of refunds to $3,035,620. ALCOHOL RELEASED Germany Turns Over 51 Per Cent to Private Oil Concerns. BERLIN, October 30 (#).—The gov- ernment yesterday concluded an agree- ment whereby 51 per cent of the state motor alcohol monopoly will go to pri- vate oil companies, including Americans, British and Germans. Thus the government acted in pur- suance of its policy to support the Ger- man alcehol industry and also supple- mented its recent decree which required that motor fuel should contain at least 21 per cent of domestic distilled spirit. ‘The oil companies involved will sell in Germany only motor fuel containing an agreed percentage of German al- cohol. This percentage is expected to be raised next year to 3% per cent, and later to 4, the government thus hop- ing to assure a constant market for the German alcohol output. ton—Buy in Washington’ “HALLOWEEN FLOWERS GOBLIN Originality, Beauty, Economy, the Centerpieces and many other Gifts 0K, o5 insnt $1 000 Beautiful Columbia Roses of the $2.00 va- riety for, 51 .00 AR committee plans to conduct a registra- tion of all unemployed men and women in_the county on November 5 and 6. - Efforts be porary 14 FOR THE FESTIVAL trinity of ““urges” at Blackistone’s Spicy Carnations in manyrcolors, D TR $1_o_00 Violets —first of the bonch. ... $1.00 bunch...... 1407 H Street SIXTH OF PEOPLE SEENFACING NEED Wiliam Green Says Much Can Be Done by Whole- hearted Co-operation. Estimating that one-sixth of the Na- tion's population was “threatened with acute need” this Winter, William | Green, president of the American Fed- | eration of Labor, expressed confidence that unemployment, can be largely con- quered if wholehearted co-operation is obtained toward providing work. “If all groups join wholeheartedly in | the movement to provide jobs and re- lief, “unemployment can be largely con- quered.” Green said. “We must visual- ize the danger ahead and face the | problem.” 20,000 Assured Jobs. Meanwhile, employment for 20,000 coming year was assured today by the Shipping Board as a call went out for the women of the country to aid the President’s Emergency Committee on Employment in finding work for the heads of hungry families. Explaining that the Government placed the number of unemployed at 3,500,000, Green said “an increase of usual proportions” for the Winter months would bring the number “well over 5,000,000.” Including the families depending on these men and women, he added, “over 20,000,000 persons, or one-sixth of our entire population, are threatened with acute need from unemployment this Winter.” Increased 71 Per Cent. Green said last Winter the number out of work increased 71 per cent from October to January and doubled by February. “Business men, welfare groups, Gov- ernment -agencies, labor and all other groups the country over,” he asserted, “must concentrate on measures to pro- vide against unemployment in the next few months if we wish to avoid a sim- ilar increase this year.” P. R. R. TO ADD 600 MEN T0 CAR-BUILDING FORCE Order Calls for Construction of 1,500 Units, Costing Approxi- mately $5,000,000. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, October 30.—Gen. W. W. Atterbury, Pennsylvania Railroad Co., announced last night nearly 600 employes of the company, half of whom now are on furlough, would begin work within two weeks on the construction of new steel president of the | | Will Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.— This must have happened to thousands of school children all over our country, my three come dragging in last night from three different schools, and I immediately asked 'em if they had heard Bernara Shaw’s great speech over the radio that afternoon. They all said ‘“No, their teachers had ‘em listening to them.” Now here was perhaps the most brilliant and wittiest speech of our times, brought right to us by this great invention, yet teachers gave their own lectures instead of Shaw's. Even the newspapers only published extracts of it. But they published all their own editorials, they were improving on Shaw, too, so what good does it do to have a brilliant man tell you something? .GRANd JUfiY ABSOLVES men in the Nation's shipyards for the | DR. FREDERICK YATES Prominent Capital Physician Is Exonerated on Charge of Il- legal Narcotic Sale. Dr. Frederick Yates, who has been a practicing physician in this city for 26 years, has been exonerated by the District of Columbia grand jury on a charge of illegally selling narcotics. The charge was preferred by a Federal narcotic agent last October. Dr. Yates has been a resident of the city for 46 years and is prominent in local fraternal and civic affairs. He is a past grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias, past supreme representative of Almas Temple Shrine, and for many years was the physician for the Almas Temple drill team. He is a member of the District of Columbia Medical Society. Board of Trade, Elks and numerous other bodies. Miner Killed in Fall. WESTERNPORT, Md., October 30 (Special).—The body of a man who was later identified as Edward McKen- zie, a miner, was found under the West- ern Maryland Railrod Bridge at West Virginia Junction, one mile from here, Tuerday. An arm and a leg had been broken in the fall, but death evidently came from exposure. It is thought Mc- Kenzie was making his way home when the accident occurred. He was unmar- sled and is survived by several brothers V. M. I. ALUMNI MEETS AT LUNCHEON MONDAY Plans to Be Made for Smoker in Honor of 91st Anniversary of Lexington College. Association of Washington will meet at a luncheon Monday, 12:30 o'clock, the Army and Navy Club. Plans will be made for the annual smoker commemorating the ninety-firs anniversary of the founding of the Lexington, Va., College, which will be held the evening of November 11. It has been announced by Col. Harry . Cootes, Fort Myer commandant and resident of the local chapter, that en. John A. Lejeune, V. M. I. super- intendent, will be the guest of honor at the anniversary smoker. | HOSPIfAL PARTY GIVEN | St. Elizabeth's Patients Entertain- ed by Overseas League. A costume party is being given by the Wesen's Overseas League for the pa- tients of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. Mrs. H. B. Daniels is in charge of the ar- rangements, assisted by Miss Nell Paterson. Wnd Miss McKiever, presi- dent of the Washington Chapter of the Women's Oversea’s League. There will be old-fashioned square dances, assisted by music, which wil ibe furnished by patients of the hos- pital There will be refreshments of cidermill d doughnuts. blackness of this super- Marlow 811 E St. NW. DRIVER OF CAR IN CRASH IS SOUGHT BY POLICE Unidentified Motorist in Collision With Machine.of Dr. Gabler Near District Line. The Virginia Military Institute Alumni-+ By & Stait Correspondert of The Star. | SILVER SPRING, Md., October 30.— | Folice are searching today for the driv- er of the altomobile which was in col- lision last night with the car of Rev | Edward Gabler of 620 G street south- east, Washington, on Georgia svenus | just north of the District of >. No one wes injured | According to Montgomery County | Policeman Charles Barnes, Who inves- | tigated, the accident occurred as Mr. Gabler was proceeding north on Geor- | gia avenue and the other car going | south. Both machines were badly dam- | aged. While Barnes was en route to | the scene of the collision, the dfiver, of the south-bound car left without | ing his name. |U. OF C. PLANS REBURIAL CHICAGO. October 30 (#.—The | trustees of the University of Chicago | announced yesterday they planned to | places the ashes of the late Willlam Rainey Harper and the two men who | succeeded him.as president of the insti- | tution in the university chapel. ‘The plan depends upon permission of the first president’s heir. The sec- ond and third president o fthe uni- versity, respectively, were Henry Pratt | Judson and Ernest Dewitt Burton. Columbia SEE What You Are Getting! A glance will convince you that our Famous Reading Anthracite is ALL FUEL. There is no dust or foreign substance to conceal the shiny sized hard coal. Before October is history, call Marlow for a full supply. Then Winter will hold no terrors for you! Coal Co. NAtional 0311 k delivered in Cream Tops It costs no more “IT WHIPS” cars costing approximately $5,000,000. All of the cars will be built in the company’s own shops. The order calls for the immediate construction of 1,500 8514-foot steel cars of the gondola type with a capacity of 74 tons each. They are designed especially for transporting structural steel, pipe and open ship- ments of automobiles. | Construction of the cars will require 93,000,000 pounds of steel and steel NEW FUR CQATS /397 MONEY RESUND NOT Wise's Pasteurized Milk in Cream Top Bottles is rich with cream. It makes little bodies grow strong and sturdy. Builds healthy little men and women. Puts sparkle in their bright eyes that only healthy children enjoy. Rich Whole Milk with the Cream products. Governor Calls Jobless Conference. INDIANAPOLIS, October 30 (#).— Gov. Harry G. Leslie yesterday invited 164 Indiana bankers and business men to meet with him November 6 to discuss | plans for alleviating distress caused by \ unemployment. EDIF SAT\S ] d ED , Let The SHADE SHOP Launder Your Tontine Window Shades When your du Pont TONTINE window shades become soiled from constant use call us for an estimate on cleaning them. We operate a modern shade laundry in connection with our shade factory—a unique and distinctive service of which hundreds of home owners are taking advantage. THE COST iS SMALL—THE RESULTS LARGE Don't Forget the Address fi [om o o wew. | w. Or Our Phone Number Yigy | District 3324-3325 ' STOKES SAMMONS CONFIDENCE B2 CREATED and HELD - Conservative in time of prosperity and cautious in time of stress, this bank, for a period of more than forty years has built widespread confidence amon g the people of Washington. Confid e n c e— not only in this bank’s ability to successfully manage the millions intrusted to its care, but confidence in its ability to take care of every legitimate financial need of each individual customer. Lincoln National Bank 7th and D Sts. 17th and H Sts. left in for the Children or Thick,. Rich Cream for Breakfast Cereals and Coffee or Dainty Desserts. CHevy CHASE DAIRY 3204-08 N Street N.W.—'Phone WEST 0183 PLANT NOW Special Sale Gude’s Garden Shop ” - A. Gude Sons Company 747 Fourteenth Street N. W. District 5784 We offer the following first quality hardy bedding roses. - These are all hardy, vigorous field grown bushes, having three to seven stems and suit- able for Fall planting. K. A. Viktoria (white) Mrs. Hesry Morse (pink, yel- low glow) Lady Ashtown (glowing pink) Lady Ursula’(light pink Betty Uprichard (salmon pink) Duchess of Wellington (golden yellow) Etoile de Holland (dark red) The General (red) Ville de Paris (yellow) Ariel (apricot) You are invited to inspect our assortment of bulbs, for your Spring garden. We specialize in Rose, Peren- Bulb and Rock Gardens. Also general landscaping. KGI‘IWOOH Ogfifl f}IG oods and neighbors nnnding. Here you can build corporating your own i of sound and pructicl price of a speculative dreamed. Lane, continuing unds wto the left. 2400 Sixteenth Strigpt Why Not Have the Kind of a Home You Want? with a community of the class and character ou will select confidently; where neighbor- the total cost of site and home less than the opportunity to do it— are of assured l\iflh to your own ideals, in- deas, with the security 1 protection—and find built house lacking in those individual features of which you have Go west of Wisconsin Avenue on Bradley er the viaduct to the entrance to Kenwood, three short squares Kcnnedy-a mberlin Development Co. Columbia 7280

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