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" A4 % NEWLY BLIND NEED D OF FRIENDS lr{iel'li'gent Understanding Rather Than Patronizing Care Is Vital to Victims. Bl land Medi here reprinted. BY HILBERT F. DAY, M. D. Early this January my brother sud- dently became ccmpletely blind. Im- mediately many questions arose. How should his friends and family approach this new problem? What hope for an independent life, could be held out for him and how could he be helped to rise above this tragedy? A _man endowed with bravery and intelligence naturally would begin im- mediately to plan for a future, and my question was how could I help to pre- pare for it. In seeking advice I consulted Miss Lugy Wright, connected with the so- cnfi ethics department at Harvard, and formerly 11 years with the Commission for the Blind in Massachusetts. Miss ‘Wright subsequently wrote me a letter. Facts Prove True. Some of the facts she mentioned in her letter immediately proved true. For instance, the desire of my brothw to talk understandingly with somebodsy about his new handicap; also, the an. noyance he felt at peopie, who thought that to make him hear they had to shout at him, when actually his hear- 1n€‘ was more acute than formerly. Following Miss Wright's advice he was made happier and was able to bravely and cheerfully face the future. I believe there are many doctors, §0- eial workers and lay people who may be hels in their attitude toward those who have become suddenly blind by resding Miss Wright's letter, and, therefore with her permission, the let- ter may be published. It appears here, in "m men faced with sudden blind- ness have curfosity about the way out and et to work at once (when they have faced the fact and believe they cannot be cured) to fight for their own independence. Others have to be con- vinced even that they can tell time by their own watch (having the crystal re- movetl and touching the hands or; later, by getting a watch with the hours in- dicated by raised points) and convinced that by maintenance of order, as on the table by the bedside or throughout the toom (placement of chairs, etc.), they can master that area by touch |nf sense of direction. “/Sense of Freedom Needed. “The good nurse or friend -helps in- dependence to come about simply and naturally, takes it for —or, if it 1t in s matter- way and with a t touch. The great thing is to help patient to THE EVENING STAR., WASHINGTON, D. C., Parks Resplendent With Dogwood Blossoms A SCENE FROM V.AN NESS STREET DISPLAY. Beautiful dogwood Mrs. Randolph Unsworth cf New Orleans. t @ sense of comparative freedom in gnm about and waiting on himself as soon as poesible. mental life of the handicapped indi- vidual—to imagine what is significant and what insignificant to him. Building the Blind. people differ. arm and let the guide keep & ead; others like to be guided by a touch on the elbow from a guide at the left; others like much independence—barely touching elbows and the following with a cane or by their own observations the variation in footing—unexpected thresh- olds and curbstones. Hardly any blind person likes to be guided from behind as we tend to do. He wants you in front of him in going.through a door, not behind him. “In going into a new room the seeing rson may help the blind man orient Rimsel!, by inconspicious guidance: e.g., placing his hand upon theback or arm of a chair that would suit him, and let- ting him. know indirectly, if possible, who else is in the room. If no one is there he may like to explore it a little for what you take in at a glance. I speak in detail because I have seen de- voted children so solicitous that they scarcely let their parent (a six-foot gi- ant, wno lost his sight in a dynamite explosicn) touch foot to floor—really make 8 scene every time he moved Whatever will make the individual feel most free, least conspicuous, most near- ly like a seeing person in all that mat- ter, is most nearly right, I am sure. Clerical Service Is Tried. “In reading and writing, clerical serv- ice (ever. if it comes from those nearest and dearest) is best given at regular times with full regard to independent 2nd private action of the blind indi- vidual Not to be able to read your own letters or read over what you your- #el’ have written, not to be able to hear from the newspaper what you choose, these are trials to active minds, met rtly by clerical service, partly (for cee who learn Braille easily) by the use of Praille. But ordinarily Braille serve: those who have begun finger reading in youth “In reading aloud it is best not to in- tersperse your own comments, or in- terpretations, but to act as an unspoiled medium of transmission. Happiness for the blind. in so far as it depends on cthers, seems to depend on how far they can trust each friend to transmit “the thing as he sees it” and not to “tem- pe: the wind to the shorn lamb” or de- ceive in matters large or small “It is hard for friends to realize that s newly blind person is not less, but probably more discriminating than ever —sometimes so hard that they speak about the individual in his presence as though he were deaf, foreign speaking, or a child. So great is cur sense of barrier when the give and take of glances is ruled out! “An intellectual blind woman who minded being blind more than any one I have known made the following notes for me for the families of blinded sol- lers “‘Cultivate the faculty of clear and exact description 'so that the blinded will be able to visualize what you are seeing. “ ‘Instead of minimizing difficulties more can be gained by saying frankly, “You will find this at first extremely difficult; you will get terribly tired over your first attempts and you may feel utterly discouraged: but take it frcm me, every one goes through the same experience, and if you stiek to it you will be surprised at your own progress.” “‘Remember the difficul lay in Penbroke Park, 3535 Van Ness street. Below: | —Star Staff Photos. From the Front Row Reviews and News of Washington's Theaters. “A Modern Virgin” st the Shubert-Belasco. ’I‘Rfltl‘s a young lady up at the Shubert-Belasco this week wh: by every Teason of everything shoul be heard from in a great big way in . the future an- nals of the the- ater, Margaret Sullavan is the name. And she bears the whole of Elmer Harris’ which was pre- sented last might, on her young and ex- ceedingly ca- & shouiders. 1f; in fact, the calloused Broad- way boulevards don’t melt be- fore this de- lightfully re- freshing young actress, then Mo- hammed ‘will never come to the mountain—nor the mountain to Mo- hammed. For Miss Sullavan is en- dowed with some of the handsomest features seen here recently; she is an adept exponent of the modern school of being natural on the stage, and she suggests that, with a slight tempering of over-ebulliency in the first act, she should just about hit the moon by the time this youth- fully flippant play arrives in staid Manhattan. Mr. Harris has clothed her with a comedy that fits her to perfection. The first part of it is fairly out- landish and needs tightening in 1ts drematurgical veins. But as it flows along—and particularly as Miss Sul- lavan flows along—it becomes a trifls continually more Margaret Sull recognized. I am sure, that the handi- | capped individual wishes to have asked of him, all possible things that have | usually ‘been asked—just as before. An | active’ blind man once told me with | humcr what a trial he found it to have | a place made for him in the street | car: “There is nothing the matter with | my legs!’ he observed. I try personally | never to pass a blind person I know | without letting him know that I am passing and telling him any little thing I think he might miss and like to know. | “By way of fllustration of individual | differences in beginning the battle for | independence, T might add: One man I know who became suddenly blind through accident as a young man, and more than once attempted suicide as a result, says that hearing some verses of Edmund Vance Cook’s ‘How Did You Die?’ was the first thing that made him sit up and take notice. This man was however, also stimulated by overhear- ing some one say, 'I's a pity he didn't die?” His fighting blood was stirred. A less educated man who was resolved on suicide sald that the beginning of his effort_came when he took in his hands a fine basket made by another blind man, and said to himself, ‘I could do that’ “If the patient believes that some one, somehow, could restore his sight, or some fraction of it, he is usually |not ready to receive such help as may come to him through other blind peo- ple and their resources. One man puts it, ‘I had to fall down flat in this re- £pect before any one could help me up.’ “When & blind man becomes inter- ested in how other sightless people do or have done, a blind person, in my opinion, gives the most convincing an- swer. Just having in his acquaintance another person who is living out his| life happily and usefully, taking the guidance of touch and sound as a mat- ter of course, is reassuring in itself. “Are you blind? You speak up just as gnn as anybody!' commented a newly lind woman incredilously to a de- light{ul home teacher who had not seen seen childhood | “It is. however, easier to suggest, as | I have done, what may well be congid- | ered by the seeing friends of the indi- | ¥idual than to ssy what is best for your | brother. I don't know, but I ‘guess’: | “1, That 1t is best to make sur> that | he has every opportunity to talk over | the facts of his condition when he is | ity of suf- ficient physical exercise for mcet blind- ed men, and urge use of tics (Swedish without apparatus) five min- time many times a day when Poastol wj{un. beginning 1t should be ready. 2. ‘That It is probably best to re- mind him that people losing their sight at all periods along the Sy w0 on living happy, useful I metimes pursuing their own previpus interests, sometimes absurd, and would probably explode and vanish into thin air if the genial Miss Sullavan didn’t hang onto it. Miss Sullavan has something of the . heroine of “Strictly Dishonor- able” about her—and so, has the play. Revolt in the desert of a prig= gish home, where “millions” mean convents for a young.girl whose emotions cry out for more substan- tial blessings—such things and a central figure more theatrical than otherwise make up the backbone of Mr. Harris' theme. It isn't really much of a play. But it has its re- deeming features—or rather Miss Sullavan Tedeems it all oyer the place. Teddy Simpson—the lady of the play—is the raison d'etre for the “plot.” A rebellious creature, who lives with a crabbish aunt, she calls up odd men on crossed wires and finally gets a real “find” in Novelist Hazzard, with whom she believes she is in love. Fleeing to a camp with him in the heart of Westchester, she forces him into her arms just as his wife drops in with a lawyer. Almost immediately thereafter she is set upoh by an oscaged convict, fights a skillful duel with him and disposes of him, etc., to the delight of three wily gentlemen, including her flance, who had framed this little plot for her benefit. The upshot of the mat- ter is that she finds she really has loved her dull dance all the time— or rather she finds that she loves him after she marries him in a fit of having nothing better to do. Other than Miss Sullavan the cast presents a problem. Apart from a mildly satisfactory lormance on the part of Pauiine Denton there doesn't seem to be anything. In fact, one might go so far as to say that a pin or worse should be stuck in most of the male element. E. DE 8. MELCHER. acquiring new interests. ‘3. That it is best to have something rather immediate to look forward to, like a visit in the East if he is able. “4. That it is best to begin, as soon as possible, working out with him some long run plan which may lead to a recognized place of usefulness in the economic world, preferably with familiar surroundings and backgrounds. “5. That it is necessary to realize that some find at least a part of their way out through interest in less fortu- nate blind people. Others need months or years to reconcile themselves to con- tact with others similarly handicapped but having little else in common. 6. That if your brother's man friends understand, they wid help keep him from becoming a listener by taking for | granted his participation in discussions and his joining them in walking, driv- ing, concerts, plays, etc. “With time and right feeling on all sides, and the bringing in of answers to questions as they arise in the mind of the patient, even blindness falls into its lace. :w and immediacy compel his atten- tion and interest in a way that offers an unrivaled challenge to his spirit.” (Copyright, 1931.) . D. C. Men Commissioned. Commissions in the Reserve Corps of the Army have been issued by the War Department to Macon G. Williams, 3432 Connecticut avenue, as a second lieu- ten-nt of Engineers: to Bryan Coe, 103 Sixth street ncrtheast, as a s2cond lieu- tenant in the Quartermdster Corps, and to Harold L. Jenkins, Chevy Chase, Md., as a second lieutenant in the Chemical Warfare Service. Removal of Horse Trough for Gasoline Station Stirs Town By the Associated Prezs. KAUKAUNA. Wis, May 5.— There is still plenty of kick left, even If it is more or less of & horseless age. The last horse-watering trough in the ecity was removed the other day, but its removal was followed by a vigorous protest of some citizens, who have peti- tioned the City Council to put it k. back. The trough was removed to make way for a gas filling sta- tion. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY Meeting, Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae Club, Washington Golf and Country Club, 8 pm. Bingo party. benefit Columbia Review. No. 3, 781 Tweifth strest southeast, 8 | pm. Dance, Carroll Council, Knights of Columbus, Knights of Columbus Hall, |9 pm. Meeting, Writers' Rendezvous, Thom- son School, 8 p.m. Card party, Bell Club, St. James' | Catholic Church, Thirty-seventh street and Rhode Island avenue northeast, 8 pm. Meeting, Washington Cat Club, 1442 Fairmont street, 8 p.m. Card | Church, Thirtsenth street and Virginia | avepue ‘southeast, 8:30 p.m. Meeting, Business Women’s Counefl, Church of the Covenant, 8 p.m. Meeting, North Cleveland Park Citi- |8 pm. Banquet, Washington Medical and | pm. FUTURE. Luncheon, Medical Society of the District of Columbia, Mayflower Hotel, tomorrow, 12:30 p.m. Reception, American Law Institute, Mayflower Hotel, tomorrow, 9:30 p.m. Meeting, Women's Board, | Washington University Hospita | flower Hotel, tomorzow, 1030 Meeting, American Judicature Society, Mayflower Hotel, tomorrow, 2:30 p.m. | tel, tomorrow, 12:30 p. | card party. ‘benefit Holy Name | Church, 916 Eleventh street northeast, tomorrow, 8:45 p.m. | Luncheon, Lambda Chi Alpha Alum- | ni_Association, Houston Hotel, tomor- | row, 12:30 p.m. | Musical feitival, Divisions 1 to 13, | Public Schools of ‘the District. Prancis | 3chool Auditortum, tomorsow, 1 p.m. ‘The Ferguson mazer, a beautiful bowl of silver and maple wood, made in _ | Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1576, was sold at auction | $30.000. in London recently for arty, benefit St. Thomas' | | zens' Association, 3923 Windom pl.u'l | Surgical Society, Mayflower Hotel, 7:30 | | Luncheon, Lions Club, Mayflower Ho- | TUESDAY, ASK LAW SCHOOLS 10 TEACH ETHICS U. S. Bar Committee Men Pass New Requirement for Students. Despite strenuous opposition of ap- proximately all leading Jaw schools, the Executive Committee of the American Bar Assoclation today advocated that a ccmpulsory course in professional | cthics be made a part of the curriculum of all law schools and that examination on this subject be required for admis- sion to the bar in all States. | The committee convened here this| morning at the Mayflower Hotel and will conclude its sessions late tomorrow on the eve of the annual meeting of |the American Law Institute. Regis- tration of delegates to institute meeting was under way today at the Mayflower. The committee, with Charles A. Bos- ton of New York City, president of the American Bar Assoctation, presiding, | also notified the French Steamship Co. that the association's name should not be used in conjunction with the com- pany’s advertised European tour this | Summer for members of the American bar. In a resolution the steamship line was informed that in no way has the assoclation approved the tour, which, according to advertisements sent to its | members, promises among the chief at- tractions a lecture course en route. Representative James M. Beck of Penn- | sylvania and other prominent lawyers | |are listed by the company as speakers. | | Favor Co-operation, Better co-operation between the Bar | | Association and the American Law In- |stitute was urged in a resolution | adopted by the committee. | he fight for the adoption of com- pulsory legal ethics course is of long | standing and in December, 1930, the Executive Committee called a meeting | of representatives of all law schools throughout the United States. Consid- erable opposition developed at the meet- ing. attended by deans of Yale, Har- vard, Northwestern, Illinois, Tulane and other universities. Committee members explained today that after an investigation it was as- certained that when a law school had such a course that the percentage of | young mwyers graduating from this in- stitute who committed unethical acts had bécome negligible. | _The schools contended they were skeptical of the value of such a course; that professional ethics were taught as | & part of other courses and lprnred to have satisfactory results and that such a course would not aid materially the standard of the schools. | Required of Schools. By approving of the ecompulsory | course, each school will be required to adopt it, according to committee, or be | classed as not up to the standard re- quired by the association. It was pointed out that the assoclation maintained an officlal who investigates and reports to | the association the character and stand- | ard of each law institute. From these | reports, the association rates the schools on its approved list. |, Most of the State bar associations, according to committee members, have | approved the compulsory ethics exami- | nation. | Besides Mr. Boston, other members of | the committee in attendance are John |H. Voorhcss of Sioux Falls, 8. Dak.; Willlam P. McCracken of Washington; Jeflerson Chandler -of Los Angeles; | Thomas W. Davis of Wilmington. N. C.; | Earl W. Evans, Wichita, Kans.; Will B. Greenough of Providence, R. | | | Clarence E. Martin of Martins- jville, W. Va.; Judge Orie Phillips of Albuquerque, N. Mex.; -Bruce Sanborn |of St. Paul, Minn.; Henry Upson Sims of Birmingham, : Guy A. Thompson of St. Louis, and Edgar B. Tolman, | editor in chief of the association's jour- | nal, of Chicago. ERS SUE TO ENTER LABOR FIGHT The labor dispute involving the Inter- | national Union of Operating Engineers, | | which has been pending more than a | year in the District Supreme Court, and | which was marked some weeks ago by a street. horsewhipping of a supervisor by & young married woman, flared up again today with the filing of an intervening petition by four other members of the un_}o]:\r. h At oug! torney Harry S. Barger the petition to be made parties to the | | controversy was filed by William I. Green, Oxon Hill, Md.:. Robert Ely, 4937 Conduit road: Walter O. Cox, 1251 C street southeast, and Jesse L. Bray, 1418 C street northeast. They make the accuSation that Ar- thur M. Huddell, general president of the International Union, and a group | of supervisors are seeking to disrupt the organization. They tell the court that | before Huddell took charge there were ‘I).OW ‘members, but through his meth- |ods the membership has been reduced | | to0 39,000. The interviewers also charge | that Charles P. Haury, the local super- | visor who was whipped by the irate wife | of & suspended member, allows himself 18125 a week in addition to two office | assistants costing $75 weekly. [UNION ME | O. Railroad. leaving Union Station at | the Masonic Temple in Baltimore will MAY 5, 1931. Music and Musicians Reviews and News of Capital's Programs. Series of Concerts Feature Music Week Tonight. HE first of a series of organ recitals presented by the Dis- trict of Columbia Chapter of the American Guild of Or- ganists will be given tonight at the Church of the Epiphany, G street northwest, by Edith B. Athey, organist of Hamline Methodist Church. Miss Athey's program will include the fol- “Dialogue,” . by Louls Cleram- bault; chorale, “‘O Sacred Head, Once Wound- ed”; “Toccal and Fugue,” by ; Phillip James' “Medita- tion 2 Sainte Clotilde” and many other in- teresting works. Miss Athey, one one of the most prominent of the local organists and recently elected president of the Alumnae Club of the Mu Phi Epsilon Musical Sorority, is a member of the American Gulld of Organists and of the District of Columbia Federation of Music Clubs. She is also a notable teacher of the organ and of the pi- ano, ‘a coach for solo and ensemble and has played in many recitals of importance during the past few years, Miss Athey's recital tonight is the first of a series of four which are being presented at this church by the foremost organists of the ecity. Next week Conrad Bernier will be the artist, and following him will be Lyman 8. McCrary and Charlotte Klein. who will appear in the final recital. = Tonight's concerts, which are be- ing especially featured in Music week, include a recital by Louls and Ruby Potter at the Shoreham Hotel, the special program of Latin Ameri- can music at the Pan-American Union and_the concert being given at the National City Christian Church under the direction of Mec- Call Lanham. Musical Instruments on Display in Fox Lobby. FOR the benefit of Washington's music students and instructors, , as well as music lovers, and in ob- servance of National Music Week, the Fox Theater is displaying in its lobby during this week a valuable collection of musical instruments, made by American and European ‘manufacturers since the seventeenth ce Edith B. Athey, ntury. The collection includes a harpsi- chord of the seventeenth century, g German clavichord of the eighteenth century, ‘an old French barrel organ which some street singer strapped over his back and played a century ago, a worn old hand organ, & double bank organ, several unusual square nos—one made in 1798—and a p piano. These specimens will be of especial educational value to stu- dents of stringed and reed instru- ‘ment. They are lent by Mr. Hugo MASONS WILL VISIT BALTIMORE LODGE Special Train to Carry Washing- ton Party, Headed by Louis J. Raebach. Louis J. Raebach, master, and the members of Samuel Gompers Lodge, No. 45, and a large number of members of other Masonic_Lodges have arranged to journey to Baltimcre tomorrow eve- ning to pay a visit to St. John's Lodge, No. 34, of that city. made in a special train over the B. & 6:45 c'clock_and returning after the meeting in Baitimore. Transportation of the entire party from the station to be special taxicabs. Stl.,y John's Lodge of Baltimore visited Samuel Gompers Lodge in a body re- | cently, the meeting being one of the largest ever held here in Masonic cir- cles. They will confer & degree tomor- row evening, after which there will be entertainment and refreshments. Wor- shipful Master Raebach has invited all Master Masons in_the District to join the party going to Baltimore, which will include the grand master of Masons in the District of Columbia. COURT ADMITS ZAMORA Philippine Commissioner's Nephew 0. K.’d by Supreme Body. Manuel Guevara Zamora, nephew and secretary of Pedro Guevara, resi- dent commissioner from the Philippines, was admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court yeflurd;{!_ He was admitted on the motion of uncle, who also is a lawyer. Senor Zamora is a graduate of the | National University Law School in| Washington and passed the District bar | examination in 1928. The trip will be | —Special Group of— | Suits & Topcoats‘ It may by its very unexpected- | ‘ Of the Same Quality that * Last Year Was Priced Up to $45 $ "This Low Price in Effect for a Limited Time Only Sidney: West, 14th & G Sts. EUGENE C. GOTT, President ‘Worch, honorary collaborator of musical instruments at the National Museum. Planists’ Club Presents Two Young Artists. S!COND in the series of concerts offered by the Wi Plan- ists’ Club at the Columl Christ ., Hesselbach, prominent amon; plano instructors, presented Florence Cockerille in a debut recital. Miss Cockerille had much in her playing that was commendable, especially & certain poetic style that came out prominently in the Chopin “Noc- turne in F Minor.” Other composi- tions by Chopin were the “E-flat Minor Polonaise” and the “E Minor Valse.” Preceding this. the young artist gave a fair reading of a “Prelude and Pugue (E Minor)" and “Sonata, Opus 2, No. 1" by Bee- thoven. The closing number was Mendelssohn’s “Capriccio Brillante, Opus 22" Helene Finnacom, pupil of La Salle Spler, shared the honors with Miss Cockerille. Her program included, besides the inevitable Bach and Beethoven, “The Lark” by Bala- kirew: Chopin's “Mazurka in a Flat, 59, No. 2.” and the “Fantaisie Impromptu.” the “Barcarolle Vene- zia” and “Etude Heroique" of Les- chetizky and two movements from Mozart's “A Major Concerto.” Miss Finnacom displayed a marked native talent and played with a consistent sincerity that was quite refreshing. Now and then her boldness of attack was a bit overpowering. but future develooment will undoubtedl? mod- erate this outburst of enthusiasm. The occasion was made particu- larly auspicious by the presence of Mrs. Herbert Hoover, attended by one of the White House aides, and Mrs. Eugene Byrnes. president of the Pri. day Morning Music Club, made a short address of encouraging renmarks cul’ tbhe participating members of the ub. ‘The series of concerts will be con- tinued on Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday even to which the public are cordially invited. W. H. N. @he Foening Htar TARIF CONPLANT * NADE T0 HODVER Motor Manufacturers Charge Discrimination by Small Countries. | | | | | | By the Associated Press. | American motor manufacturers to- | day urged President Hoover to make strong representations against indirect teriff diseriminations against American | motor vehicles undertaken by some | smaller countries recently. | On behalf of the Board of Directors of the National Automobile Chamber of | Commerce, Roy D. Chaplin said that several nations have resorted to prac- tices, which have discriminated directly against American machines. | Quota systems have been imposed, | he said, under which dealers in Ameri- | can cars have been zeriously hampered. | Internal taxes have been levied, which | work hardships on the types of cars, which are made in the United States. Chapin said that in 1929, the banner | year of American export trade, 1.000,000 | motors of American design, ‘were de- | livered to 100 countries of the world, | & trade which was equal to the total | sales for the year in 28 States of the | Union. | . _The future market of the Automobile | industry, Chapin said, should insure profitable employment for millions for | years to come. DOCTOR IS ACQUITTED | Dr. Benjamin H. Smart, Rhode Island {avenue near Second street northeast, | was acquitted yesterday afternoon by a jury in Criminal Division 1 of a charge of performing a criminal operation on a young colored girl. The indictment has been pending for three years. The physician denied the charge and in- sisted that he acted in accordance with medical ethics and procedure. ADVERTISENENTS B ol ¢ REcEIVED HERE A quick way to recover something lost—or find the loser of something found—is through a Star Classified Advertisement The “Lost and Found” column of The Star is the first place the interested parties look for a clue. You can leave copy at any of the following Branch Offices—for prompt insertion: Northwest 11th and Park rd.—Arm- strong’s Pharmacy. 14th and P sts.—Day’s Pharmacy. 1135 14th st. — Marty’s Cigar & Magazine Store. 17th and Que sts.—Ken- ner’s Pharmacy. 15th and U sts—G. O. Brock. 2901 Georgia ave.—Har- vard Drug Store. 2912 14th st.—Colliflower Art & Gift Co. 3401 14th st.—Bronaugh’s Pharmacy. 14th and Buchanan sts.— Hohberger's Pharmacy. 14th st. and Colorado ave, —O’Donnell’'s Pharmacy. 3209 Mount Pleasant st.— Mount Pleasant Cigar and News Shop. 1773 Columbia rd.—The Billy Shop. 2162 California st.—Co- lodny Brothers. Wardman Park Pharmacy. N. Y, N. J. aves. and M st. —Sanitary Pharmacy. 1st and K sts.—Duncan’s Pharmacy. 7th and K sts.—Golden- berg’s (time clerk’s desk). 7th and O sts—Lincoln Drug Store. 7th st. and R. L ave—J. French Simpson. 11th and M sts—L. H. Forster’s Pharmacy. 8th and U sts—M. H. Hunton’s Pharmacy. Ga. ave. and Upshur st.— Petworth Pharmacy. 221 Upshur st.—Monck's Pharmacy. 5916 Ga. ave.—Brightwood Pharmacy. Ga. ave. and Kennedy st. man Ave. Pharmacy. 6224 3rd st.— Stewart’s Pharmacy. 1905 Mass. ave.— Dupont Pharmacy. 18th and Fla, ave.—Bern- stein’s Drug Store. Fla. ave. and 1st st—N, Reiskin. North Capitol st. and R. I. ave. — Parker’s Phar- macy. 1742 Pa. ave—J. Louls Krick. 21st and G sts.—Quigley’s Pharmacy. 25th st. and Pa. ave.— Herbst's Pharmacy. 3315 Conn. ave.—Joll's Newsstand. 5500 Conn. ave. —Circle Con- fectionery Store. Wisconsin ave. and Macomb st—Harry C. Taft. 4231 Wisconsin ave. — Morgan Bros’ Phar- macy. Takoma Park, 359 Cedar st. —Mattingly Bros.' Phar- macy. ¥ There's One Near You Georgetown 30th and P sts.—Morgan Bros.’ Pharmacy. 30th and M sts.—Brace's Pharmacy. 3411 M. st. — Moske Pharmacy. y’g 2072 Wisconsin ave— Haney’s. Wisconsin ave. and O st.— Donahue’s Pharmacy. 35th and O sts.—Sugar’s Drug Store. 5104 Conduit rd.—Modern Drug Store. Northeast 208 Mass. ave.— Capitol Towers Pharmacy. 4th and H sts.— Home Drug Store. 907 H st.—Garren’s Music Store. 12th and Md. ave. ett’s Pharmacy. 7th and Md. ave.—Louis F. Bradley. North Capitol and Eye— Kenealy’s Pharmacy. 20th and R. I ave.—Col- lins’ Pharmacy, Wood- ridge. 3500 12th st.—Brookland Pharmacy, Brookland. 4th and R. L ave.—John G. Biggs’ Pharmacy. Chesapeake Junction—Dr, F. L. Wight, jr. ~Luck- Southwest 10th st. and Va. ave.— Herbert's Pharmacy. 316 41 st.—Harris’ Drug Store. 4!, and L sts.—Columbia Pharmacy. Southeast 3rd and Pa. ave.—0'Don- nell’s Drug Store. 8th and Eye sts.—F. P. Weller's Pharmacy. 11th and Pa. ave. —Fealy’s Pharmacy. 1907 Nichols ave., Anacostia — Healy’s Drug Store. 13th and East Capitol sts. — Lincoln Park Pharmacy. 2204 Minnesota ave.— Twining City Drug Store.