Evening Star Newspaper, March 19, 1931, Page 3

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, M~RCH 19, 1931. MISS MCORMICK SCORES IN SHOW Takes Two First, a Second and Third Place at Riding and Hunt Club. ‘Winning two firsts and a second and a third place, Miss Katrina McCormick took top honors among the feminine participants in the March show of the Riding and Hunt Club, held last night in the club ring at Twenty-second and ®. streets. Other leading point winners were Mrs. Robert Guggenheim and Mrs. William Hill. Miss McCormick scored most of her points while riding the 5-year-old hunt- er, Clifton Chief. She took the cup in| the club members’ hunter class and in the hack and hunter event, placing third in the open jumping. Riding Mrs. Medill McCormick's Evangeline, she also placed second in the de- butante saddle class. Red Skin and Question Mark Score. | Red Skin r»4 Question Mark, the ‘mounts owned and ridden by Mrs. Gug- genheim and Mrs. Hill, respectively, were the other entries repeatedly placed in the ribbons. Mrs. Hill rode Ques- tion Mark to second rating in the club member's class, took third in the hack and hunter and with Mrs. Guggen- heim's Red Skin shared second honors in the pair jumping. Red Skin, in ad- dition to the second in this difficult class, took & red ribbon in the hack and hunter. The other classes were marked by the victories of Miss Celeste McNeal on Harjett Lee in the debutante saddle class, R. P. Counselman on Murad in the handy hunters, Lieut. Noble on Black Cat in the exciting polo bending race and Lieut. Rogers on Garcon in the open jumping. First place in the pair jumping went to Lieut. Holbrook | on Miss Klibourne and Lisut. Knight on | Sir Knight. The Summaries. The summary of the classes follos Class 1, club members' hunters—First, Clifton Chief, owned by Medill Mec- Cormick, Miss Katrina McCormick up; “ gecond, Question Mark, Mrs. William Hill; third, Ashley, Charles D. Drayton. | Class 2, debutante class—First, Har- riett Lee, owned by Mr. Vernon Owen, Miss Celeste McNeal up; second, Evan- geline, owned by Mrs. Medill McCor- mick,” Miss Katrina McCormick up; | third, Smoky Bill, Miss Margene: Mus- “Elm 3, handy hunters—First, Murad, | owned by Fairfax Oyster, R. P. Coun- | selman up; second, entry, Lieut. Hol-| brook up; third, Gold Foyle, Percy Nie- ] d. Class 4, pair jumping—First. Miss Klibourne, Lieut.” Holbrook, and Sir Knight, Lieut. Knight; second. Ques- tion Mark, Mrs. William Hill, and Red skin, Mrs. Robert Guggenheim; third, Flash, Lieut Noble, and Skipaway, Lieut. Bugher. Class 5, hack and hunter—First, Clifton Chief, Miss Katrina McCormick; second, Red Skin, Mrs. Robert Guggenheim; third, Question Mark, Mrs. Willlam Hill. Class €, polo bending race—First, Black Cat, Lieut. Noble; second, Red Knight, Lieut. Bennett; third, Bar- racuda, Lieut. Rogers. Class 7, open jumping—FPirst, Garcon, Lieut. Rogers; second. Bean Beetle, ! owned py Miss Barty Couzens. Robert Robie; . third, Clifton Chief, Miss Katrina McCormick. KOEHLER TO RECEIVE ESTATE OF MOTHER Will Filed in New York Surro-| gate's Court Disposes of About $75,000. Robert Portner Koehler of the Port- ner Apartments Ffteenth and U streets, receives the entire estafe of approximately $75,000, under. the will of his mother, Mrs. Alma M. Portner, which was filed in Surrogates Court at New York yesterday. Koehler will receive one-half of the estate immediately and the remainder when he is 30. Mrs. Portner died in Baltimore, March 3. Twenty radio broadcasting stations | have been established in Buenos Aires, t: SPECIAL NOTICES. ¥ WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY Aebts contracted by any one other than my self. ¢ AUGUST HURLEBAUS, __Route 10. Rethesda. Md. T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY bills other than those contracted by myself P. D. SCROGGINS. 4024 22nd st. ne. __19° PONSIBLE POR ANY contracted by myself. 15th n.w PAPERHANGING — ROOMS and up if_you have the paper. samples. Call Col. 3588. 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ebts_except those I contract myseif. JOHN W. JONES. Jr.. 1201 Columbia rd. n.w. WANTED—_LOADS TO AND FROM PITTS- BURGH, NEW YORK CITY. MASSACHUS. 3 and and West ED, 32 Will bring 210 AGENT ALLIED We also pack and ship by FT_VANS. anywhere. SMITH'S TRANSFBR & STORAGE CO. 1313 You St. NW. Phone North 3342-3343 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR BILLS uniess ‘contructed for by myself. EARL P. WIGGS. Ray rd.. Takoma Park. D. C._2i* WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD to or from New 'York, Richmond. ioston, Pittsburgh and all way ‘Doints- special rates NATJONAL DELIVERY ABSN. INC. 1317 N._ Y. ave. Nat. 1460. Local moving aiso. DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP. Notice is hereby -iven of the dissolutior effective as of March 15, 1931, of the part- nership heretofore conducted by the under- signed under *he name of THE AUTO GLASS | BHOP at 622 K st. n.w.. Washington, D. C. All persons having claims against said part- nership are hereby warned to present the same prompily to Earl Huichison at the above address. The busines of the pari- same address, under the same name, by Earl EARL F_HUTCHISON. (Seal) N o () _(Beal) 190 | S SCRAPED AND FINISHED: FLOORS GEGRGER a0, P ooy | 1016 20th st West 1071 . OR PART LOADS FOR THE es_and points en route ork March 21 jo : \ivesscesas.March 31 To or from New York April 7 t0_10 AMERICAN STORAGE AND TRANSFER CO. Adams 1450, Go After the Spging —business with result-bringing i ? e | % AR g The National Capital Press| 1210-1212 D St. N.W.__ Phone_National 0650 ROOF WORK =0t any nature promptly and eapably looked fter by practical roofers. Call us up Roofing 119 3rd 8t B.W N Company ___ Distriet 0933 ALLIED VAN LINE BERVICE. Nation-Wide Long-Distance Moviog. WANTED RETURN LOADS From NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA 24 23rd b 25th ! i Zoih Bars " onds 10 Baltimore, Phindels R 'S STORAGE CO., INC. u Sth 8t. NW. . Met 1845, Furnace. and Pipe Repairs Parts for every furhacs heating systems installed llvhc‘l’u ice, ROI HEATING 595 Flor " Painting and Papering Very Low Prices. Pirst-Class Work Guaranteed. Ruckers, Nat’L 0333 1210 H 8t Twenty Years in Same Store. THE VITAL THREE ing, heating and tinnine . . . yo i iy, We 'l ‘be our service eventually s of practical, sensible advice. | Highway Commission_desiring to Robbery Suspect ALTON SWAN. BANDIT QUIZ WAITS EX-MCRORY AIDE Former Assistant Manager Coming Here to Face Third Suspect. Investigation of Alton Swan's alleged | connection with the $1,200 hold-up at McCrory's Five and Ten Cént Store, 416 Seventh street, last August 7, was being delayed by headquarters detectives to- day pending the arrival here of Earl Flory, former assistant manager of the store, who recently was transferrsd to Aiken, S. C. Flory, one of the two employes robbed by the quartet of bandits has been noti- fied of Swan's apprehension and is ex- pected in the Capital shortly to view the third suspect arrested in the dar- ing_daylight hold. which was staged 2s Flory and Harvey W. Smith, 21 old messenger, wer to deposit the day Second National Bank. Swan, who is 33 years old. has a lengthy police record in Baltimore. where he was captured Tuesday night by Detective Sergt. Thomas Nally and two Baltimore detectives, it was learned today. Outstanding on his record, po- lice say. is a five-year penitentiary term Which he served for holding up and robbing a Baltimore chain grocery with the aid of an accomplice. Say Series Planned in Prison. It was while confined in prison, de- tectives say, that Swan met John Irv- ing, one of the two men convicted in the McCrory hold-up, and planned a series of robberie: the McCrory “job.” Machlinskey, the other men convicted, are now serving five-year terms. Swan, they hall from Baltimore. The latest suspect is the victim of a violation of the underworld code, police say. Detectives declared that following the arrest and conviction of Irving and Machlinskey, through trac ing the ownership of the automobile | used in the holdup to Irving, the two prisoners “squealed” on Swan and & fourth man, still at large. | Seized on Bench Warrant. | | On the strength of information ob- tained from the first pair, an_indict- | ment was obtained against Swan a short time after the hold-up. He was taken into custody at 225 South Castle | street in Baltimore, where he made his home with his wife. on a bench war- rant_sworn to by Chief Justice Alfred C. Wheat of the District Supreme Court. Swan, protesting tnnocence to the crime, was lodged in a cell at the first precinct station after being returned from Baltimore yesterday afternoon by Sergt. Nally. until Flory arrives to view him. receipts at the STATE T0 ASK VOIDING OF ROAD INJUNCTION Woman Who Halted Grading on Lee Highway Not Entitled to Relief, Says Attorney. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ARLINGTON COUNTY COURT HOUSE, Va., March 19.—Through its ' attorney, Charles Pickett, the Virginia State Highway Commission will, on Sat- urday, appear before Judge Walter T. McCarthy, who is holding court at Fairfax, to ask that the injunction granted yesterday to Mrs. Virginia M. Van Every. stopping_the grading for the Lee Highway through the Van Every property in Arlington County, be citsolved. Pickett stated today that, while he has not yet had an opportunity to read the bill ‘of complaint, he 1s breparing to ask the dissolution of the injunection on the grounds that it was improvi- dently awarded and that the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief askcd He also will file an answering cross bill in which the State will ask that| an alleged agreement between the Van Every family and the National Boule- vard Association, to grant a free right of way for the boulevard through the property, be enforced and a deed | signed and delivered to the State. Arrangements were made today be- tween defense counsel and the court for the matter to come up on Saturday, the settle the matter as quickly as pessible in | order that the grading work will no longer be delaved. ’ While operations have been stopped on the Van Every property, the State forces are continuing upon adjoining land where. at the present time, the route s being cut through a forest. Prof. William Shakespeare, aged 81, is an English singer, composer and con- ductor. NAVAL OFFICERS Td VBVE'W"Ii'AUGI-ilr:I' 3 | BY ENLISTED MAN IN AIR COURSE leaving the store He will be held there | SEEN BACK OF PACT Naval Parity for Italy Believ- ed Accepted by France in Exchange for Land Force. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. 1t is believed in usually well informed diplomatic circles here that the impor-' tant Prench concession to Italy of pari'y | in 8-inch-gun cruisers was obtained only after the British accepted the French claim to a “two-power standard” in land forces. According to reliable information the | Prench yielded that parity only after cnlisting in advance British support on this question at the coming general dis- armament conference at Geneva. It is | asserted that during the protracted con- lx versations at Geneva and Paris the | French delegates convinced the British that the only way to settle the Franco- Ttalian naval dispute was to accept their thesis c¢f a “two-power standard on land.” Basis for Argument. They based their argument cn the following facts: | For many years the British have claimed the right to have a navy su- perior to any possible combination of forccs in the Mediterranean. They i | maintain that the Mediterranean is th> | life nerve of the British Empire, and that wjthout absolute control of 'com- | munications between Australia and Eng- |land by way of the Suez Canal and | | Gib:altar, the very exist>nce of Great | Britain_would be endangered. | The French have conceded that point | to the British and have not oppoged the British two-power standard in the Medi- | torranean. They now ask the British | to ccncede the same thing to them in | regard to land forces The PFrench maintain they are as anxious as any other nation to preserve peace in Europe. They admit that the other principal powers in Europe have the same aim, but poifit out that there is a difference in the methods of or- | ganizing that peace. The French say | that the final settlement of Europe must be based on the sanctity of the treaties signed after the World War by all the European combatants. The Germans and the Italians, on the other hand, | have repeatedly stated.they cannot con- ceive a permanent peace in Europe as long as those treaties are not revised. This difference of opinion may lead sooner or later to a clash, and this the | French want to avoid. French Involve Treaties. To the Frencl t is said, the main- tenance of the y of Versailles is & matter of life and death, just as much |as it is to the British to have the se- | curity of their lines of communications with the empire. The French maintain |that in order to preserve the peace | treaties intact they must have an army superior at any time to the combined | Italo-German forces. The British, ac- | French demand and to support the Like | Prench point of view whenever neces- | royal owner. | sary. | Plausible as the French arguments may seem, the feeling here is that this | question may create -a serious situation at the next general disarmament con- ference. The British claim to a two- power naval standard does not invclve any international treaties nor territarial | readjustments, while the French claim does. (Copyright, 1931.) MORROW PHONES STIMSON. Informs Secretary U. S. Signature to| Pact Will Not Be Necessary. A transatlantic telephone conversa- | tion brought Secretary Stimson assur- | ances yesterday that satisfactory prog- | ress was being made in Europe toward | completing the Franco-Italian naval accord. The Secretary talked for more than 15 minutes with Charles G. Dawes, Ambassador to Great Britain and Sena- tor Dwight W. Morrow of New Jersey. | After the conversation the Secretary said 1t appeared that American partici- pation on a committee to draft the Franco-Italian settlement would be un- ! necessary. | “Suggestions presented to the British | foreign office for the Secretary by Dawes | | and Morrow were believed here to have | eliminated necessity of such action. | It was_considered possible that the final draft might necessitate only the | signatures of France and Italy. The quéstion of British signature is still one | for determination. | "While the use of the transatlantic | telephone was not unprecedented so far | as Stimson’s talking with representatives abroad was concerned, the length of the conversation was unusual. The call | was placed in Lgndon by Senator Morrow. - FARRELL SEES STEADY GAIN IN WORLD TRADE By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, March 19.—Signs are apparent of a steady though gradual improvement in world trade, James A. Farrell. president of the United States Steel Corporation and chairman ! of the National Foreign Trade Council, | said today in issuing a call for the eighteenth National Foreign Trade Con- vention, | The meetings will be held in New York, May 27, 28 and 29. “There are idications,” Mr. Farrell said, “that the world-wide depression in business, with which we have been dealing for several months, is subsid- ing and that the upturn is beginning.' “Our commerce confronts a situation which merits the considc-ation of all concerned in forefgn trade. It is a time for thorough examination of eco- | nomic conditions, ‘and for practial demonstration of that spirit and habit of co-operation that so signally marke American foreign trade practice.” | Savings deposited in savings banks and in the savings departments of State and national bank in the United State are approaching the $30,000,000,- 000 mark. P. I. Gunn, Instrument Expert, to Be Professor at Ana- costia School to His *“‘Bosses.” Navy officer-pilots in Capital, including all ranks from the | Navy Department and other posts in this area, are going to school under an enlisted man at the Anacostia Naval Air Station. ‘When course of instruction Jn aircraft in- struments to keep naval aviators on limited flying duty in training and conversant with improvements in the standard service instruments, the Navy Department decided that Chief Avia- tion Pilot Phillip I. Gunn, on duty at the Anacostia station, was eminently qualified to conduct the course. o furnish sn estimate on any work you Beed. 25 e Budset payments, of course. 3. c 411V SHOODD o ALy Day, Dec. 2700—Evenings. Clev. 0819 . Gunn was given a plane for instruc- tion purposes and all officers in this area who rank as aviation pilots were directed to report to him for instruc- tion. The course got under way ye: terday afternoon and fhe one-man the National it was decided to put in a | school probably will be kept continu- ously active from now on. The course which Gunn is giving is similar to the course in aircraft in- ctruments given at the aviation train- ing base at Pensacola, Fla., but is more advanced in character. The course includes five hours of work, in- tersprrsed with lectures and flight training, and covers all the standard service types of instruments and one or two types of special instruments being developed for future use. Gunn is regarded as one of the most capable pilots in the Navy and has ' taken part in a number of important | flight missions while on duty at the Anacostia station. There are four chief aviation pllots on duty at the local sta- tion, one of them being Harold I. June, pilot of Rear Admiral Richard Fvelyn gylr(i 2 plane on its flight to the South | Pole. ARMY CONCESSION | | secretary of the club Prince to Seek» Recfprd AFTER NEW LONG-DISTANCE FLIGHT MARK. Prince Jean Ghica of Rumania (right) as he was met yesterday by Prince Dimitri Dimaniesco of the Rumanian Legation. G UM - CHEWING Rumanian prince, who prefors flying an air- plane to the honor to which his rank entitles him, will begin a new air adventure, which he hopes will bring a new world record to his country with the christening of his_scarlet-cabin plane King Carol IT at Washington-Hoover Airport this aft- ernoon at 3 o'clock. Following the chritening, the 30- year-old royal airman, Prince Jean Ghica of the royal houses of Cantacu- zene and Ghica, will fly his plane to New York, where it is to be crated for shipment to Europe. Prince Ghica hopes to begin his at- tempted flight about Ap:il 28, when he will leave Bucharest on an attempted non-stop flight to Cape Town. Africa a distance of 5800 miles. If the flight succeeds, the record for non-stop air distance, now held by Dieudonne Coste and Maurice Bellonte of France, will go to Rumania. Bought Plane in West. —Associated Pres Society for the Promotion of Aviation in Rumania and has been subjected to intensive flight testing by the prince. The plane was flown across the United States by Chica. His arrival in the Capital was delayed a day by bad weather over the Alleghenies, which forced him down at Moundsville, W. Va., Tuesday afternoon. Taking off from Moundsville yesterday afternoon, the prince arrived at the local airport ahead of the welcoming party from the Rumanian legation. Takes to Air Again. That the party might not be em- barrassed the prince took off again and circled the Capital while the diplo- matic r-presentatives of his country hastered from the legation to the field Frederic Nano, charge d'affaires ad interim, and members of the legation staff escorted the prince to the Shore- ham Hotel, where he spent the night, His visit to the Capital has been in- formal and the christening this after- Photo. | BifuE DISEUSSES 0. . LEGISLATIN Tells Bar Association of Dif- ficulties of Obtaining Ac- tion by Congress. | The difficulty of securing legislative | action for the District of Columbia in | Congress was explained by Corporation | Counsel William W. Bride at a me:t- | ing of the Federal Bar Association last | night_at the University Club. After | congressional committees have spent | protracted periods of study and in- | vestigation on District measures, the | bills come up and it takes practically unanimous consent to get any of them through, he said. He pointed out that at the first ses- sion of the last Congress 3 kours and 40 minutes wer: devoted to District mat- ters on the floor, and less than 2! hours in the second session. These | figures do not include the time -sp:nt on appropriation bills. Praises Work of Committees. Mr. Bride said: “Of, course, it fs| well known that th> District of Co.um- bia must depend upon Congress not only for national legislation, but for all legislation needed for municipal admin- Istration, directly related to tae District of Co- lumbia, inc.uding th> subzommitt es on appropriations of both Houses, have worked long and earnestly to improve conditions here, and the hearings before | these committees as well as th: investi- gation by the members of the commit- tees have been most “Congress is affairs of the Nation and the world taat the committees” find it difficult to get time on the floor for consideration of the matters uron which they have done | a great deal of work. Ind:ed, it is re- | markable, in view of the smail amount | of time actually devoted on_the floor to District matt-rs, that we have been | as ‘successful as we have bn in the | last year, and we have every reason to clieve, with the continued assistance | and co-operation of the fri'nds of th= District_in Congress, we will be able to | NI DELICIOUS CHOCOLATE | elly with turreted fortifications and 23 The commitices of Congress ||| obtain general legislation which will make unnecessary repeated impositions nn(the time of that body in minor matters.” Urges Power for Commissioners. * Mr. Bride argued that these minor | matters should be left in the hands of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia. i Speaking on “The Work of the Cor- poration Counsel’s Office,” William A. Roberts, one of Mr. Bride's assistants, pointed’out that the corporation coun- sel, with his 11 assistants, is called on to decide questions on the law involving matters ranging from weed cutting to public utility mergers and diplomatic immunity of the representatives of other natiors, The District is better off nowadays, however, than when Francis Scott Key in 1819 received an annuak salary of $60 as corporation attorney. By 1869 there was still only one attorney and he received $2,000 per annum, BEVERLY HILLS, Calit.—Right in the midst of all this depression and starvation, why -one old -boy hasn't had it so bad. He has been © measuring six thousand - college girls. He com- pares ‘em with co-eds fifty years ago. - 1 didn't know any . one ever thought of measuring one fifty vears ago, and from what our elderly wom- en led us to be- lieve, we didn't think they would have allowed it. Well, this fellow finds that the press ent ones are higher, wider, and thicker, (he don't say if its head, or body). And these he says have more lung capacity, well we knew that. Maybe because of the stren- uous life ‘at a. female college, the parents only pick out the big dumb ones. More Ancient Art Excavated. NAPLES, Italy, March 19 (#).—Ex- cavators near the town of Presto have reported discovery of several ancient Greek houses and small temples con- taining works of art. The buildings form a small walled towers almost intact. SPRING FOOTWEAR FROM FRENCH, SHRINER & URNER An inspection of these Fine Shoes in our Show Window or in our Shoe Department will demonstrate why French, Shriner & Urner Shoes are referred to as “America’s Finest Shoes for Gentlemen.” Only the most select leathers are used after slow, careful tanning. Then hand workmanship by skilled crafismen over VITAMINS B & G For Sale at All Fannie May Shops ONLY 1010 E St. NN\W.—1354 F St. N. 1406 N. Y. Ave.—1704 Pa. Ave. 2305 14th St. N.W. | noon is without formal ceremonies. Prince Ghica purchased his plane on one of which was!cording to reliable information, are . the Pacific Coast, where it was built in Irving and Henry | willing to vield in principle to this an American aviation plant, with altera- tions to suit ths requirements of its The plane is equipped with a berth, complete radio apparatus and extra fuel and oil tanks for long- range operation. It will carry a crew of three on the Bucharesi-Cape Town flight. Lieut. O. Oculla of Rumania will act as co-pilot and Maj. Emil Ionescu as navigator. On his arrival here yesterday after- noon the prince explained that he and Oculla will take six-hour turns at the controls during the flight. The plane was purchased with funds raised by the 6-LETTER WORD BEATS SPELLING CHAMPION Alicia Mooney, 14, Three Times | Titleholder, Loses to Boy ‘ on “Fennel.” I Miss Alicia Mooney, who, though only 14 years old, has three times been champion of the Capital City Spelling Club, last night stumbled on the word, “fennel.” and yielded her | championship to Willard B. Smith of | Highland Park, Va. Of all the participants in the con- test at the Mount Pleasant Branch Library only Miss Mooney and Smith were left when the former was asked tospell “fennel.” an aromatic herb. She spelled “phenyl.” a chemical substance, and lost her title when Smith, a new- comer in the club, spelled the word | correctly. | The next free-for-all contest will be | held at the library on April 15, two | days before the club gces to Balti- | more to compete in its fifth annual | contest with the Waverly Spelling Club of that city. Those who wish to enter the next | contest, officials said, may obtain a | list of words and other information ! from J. S. Haverly, Clarendon, Va, | PAIN? SLOAN'’S Liniment HOT MEATS ’ as well as cold cuts , GULDENS Atthe - first If your child has a running nose or a hacking cough, don’t delay. Use | Mistol. Put some up the nose with the | special Mistol dropper that comes in | the bottle. Also use as a gargle. Mistol | clears the head. Dries up excessive | secretion. Soothes inflammation and | soreness. Checksinfection.Whatrelief! | Get a bottle today, at any drug store. | Mistol Don't forget Or our phone ADE Sy, W. STOKES SAMMONS No More Soiled Window Shades to Spoil the At- tractiveness of the Home The marvelous sunproof washable du Pont TONTINE Window Shade Cloth makes it possible for housewives to have spick-and-span window shades at all times —THEY'RE WASHABLE. We make Win- P S —Send your soiled TONTINE Shades * *~* to our laundry for a REAL bath! il Heat ~ long-demonstyated the most economical form of automatic heat.. . . Acs low as $295.00 Automatic Heating Corp. 1719 Conn.Ave. North 0627 THE INFORMATION HOME FURNISHED BY DULIN & MARTIN Open Daily and Sunday From 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. At 403 Elm St Chevy Chase, Md., contains complete information about the following new-home de- velopments of Shannon & Luchs, Inc. Wrenwood Rittenhouse St. and Broad Branch Road. Prices, $11,750 to $12,450. The Forest Section of Chevy Chase Prices, $14.750 to $28,500. Massachusetts Avenue Park Prices, $30,000 and More. To reach: Drive out Connecticut avenue to Bradley lane, turn LEFT two squares (along the grounds of the Chevy Chase Club) to Maple avenue, then follow our signs. HANNON: & LUCH custom lasts, SI0 s1250 S|4 515 Exclusive W ashington Agency SALTZ BROTHERS 1341 F ST. N.W. N N A SMART HOMBURG HAT FOR SPRING We illustrate here from an actual photo- graph one of the Smart New Homburg Hats for Spring. Always a Gentleman’s Choice and quite distinctive in the midst of $7 $8 $10 Hand Felted by Schoble Our “Windsor” Hats Comprise the Same Smart Models at $5 SALTZ BROTHERS 1341 F St. N.W. Flowering Shrubs at 29c apiece 7 Assorted Shrubs—$1.69 Hydrangea P. G. Althea Spiraea Van Houttei Bush Honeysuckle Forsythia Coralberry Mock Orange Specifications: 1. Four to five feet in nursery row. 2. Three to four years old. Properly pruned ready for planting. Grown in our own nursery. Dug fresh daily (not cold storage), . Three to five main branches. 7. Complete healthy root systems. These Shrubs Usually Sell at T5¢ to $1.00 Apiece , 8. 4. 5. On Sale at These Prices March 20th to 28th Only; at Our Norbeck Nurseries, Norbeck, Md. or THE HOME FLOWER MARKET 1503 Connecticut Avenue Dupont Circle : 5 PHONE NORTH 7000

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