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N JULY REVENUE) === ‘fl__htantial Increase in Re- L. furns Is Revealed for’ First Seven Months. " Substantial gains in operating rev- ‘nues and net income are shown by the Ohesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. for the month of July and for the first seven months of this year, as compared to the similar periods last year, accord- ing to its report of operations just filed ‘with the Public Utllities Commission of the District. Operating revenues gained from $697,- 003 in July, 1930, to $747,453 in July, 1981, and from $5,036,880 for the seven months of 1930 to $5357,569 for the seven monthl of this year. rating income after deduct- fng Tashs ment Gmealloutite for the vt seven maonths of this year amounted to $1,824,065, as compared with $974,323 for a similar period in 1930. Balance Net Income. Bohnu net income in July was $168,- net income for the seven in ly were $57,113 as com- with $42,979 for the same month ast year. Taxes for the first seven months of this year amounted to $391,- 057, which was an increase of $61,853 over a similar period in 1930. Capital expenditures for new plant and equipment added to the company's system in the District of Columbia for making additions to plant for the 12 ending July 31 were $858,678. New Telephones. 'nm'e ‘were 172,762 telephones served ‘Washington switchboards at the M of m July 31, 4,282 having ldded to the system since Jan- Telephone users made 17,950, 000 ell!s during the month, which was an increase of 10.4 per cent over those made in July of last year. Insurance Sales Drop. Life insurance sales in this city dropped 7 per cent in July this year, as compared to July, 1930, to thly survey of the Life Insur- ance Sales Research Bureau of Hart- t Conn. month. Thirty-seven per cent of t.li companies m here reported gains for the month. Retail M Activity. “Some activity continues in retail trade,” according to the weekly review of business by R. G. Dunn & Co. ith the New now in most lines con- of orders in moderate vol- ‘There ‘ashington _clearing house figures f9r today, $3,387,272.84. ——— CZAR FOR OIL TRADE OBJECT OF CAMPAIGN By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Aum 22.—A move- ment has been sta on the part of certain Andependm?. oil interests for the apopintment of a “czar” as an adviser to the oil industry, under whose au- thority the regulation of oil output can be placed. The cam; was _disclosed in pam- phiets distributed in Wall Street, which former the Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, as a likely appointee. The pam) carTy a reprint of an editorial in the Boston Evening Tran- script, wi Ay The smw has been wholly lack- ing in centralized leadership, and the idea has been advanced that Col. Stew- art, whose unfortunate gontroversy with Jobn D. Rockefeller, jr., ousted him irom his high position in Standard Ofl, be called from his retirement anéd drafted to fill this important place. H would not be, it I asserted, a “cza after the movie and base ball fash- ion, but his position would be made 50 influential, by common consent, that his recommendations would be re- spected.” The pamphlet says the proposal was put before Gov. Clark of Wyoming. The comment of oil interests in New York was that Mr. Stewart probably would accept the post if it was offered, but at important oil almost certainly object, D|V|DENDS DECLARED NEW YORK, August 22 (#, Extra Pe- Pay Rate. riod. able Sep. 1 Bep. 15 Hidrs. of | record Aux. 2 Aug. 2! Company Automotive Gr Inti Proprietors Wks e 4 Initial World Radio Corp..10c Livuidation. Corp. .$6 Omilted. Merrimack Mfg pf $2.50 8 Due at this time Northern Mezico Pow & Devel pt. 117 Q@ Dueas Rate Changod. Bankery KU In CiA.80c @ Aus 28 Aug 235 Sep. 1 Aux. 20 Acushnet Mill Bep. 15 Aug. 20 companies would | ~Prev, High. 8% 112 P 23 157% 45% 183% 107 85% 118 KEa Llnlnl(ofllk ('l) 103% (80s) e een dend Rate. Add 00, High. Low. AhIHN Pwr&Pap pf. 1991 Low. 18% 11% 22% Am Chicle (13). Am Comcl Aleohol. Am Encaustic Tiling - Am Ice pf (8) Am International Am Locomotive (1) ‘Am Mch & Fdy 1.40 Am Mach & Metal: Am Rolling Mills. . T I T ISP ST P > 23:...-3.- Anaconda Cop (l“)a Armour of Del pf (7) ‘Armour of J11 (A) Associated Apparel .. AssoDry G (23%) .. Atch To&S Fe (10 Atlantic Refining (1) Auburn Auto (£4).... Autosale: Aviation Corp (De) Balto & Ohio (5).... Barnsdall Corp'n. Belding-Hemingw: Bendix Aviation (1) - 9 PReRAR anleanude 20% Bohn Alumn (1%). Borden Co (k3). Botany Con Min (A) Briggs MLg (11%). jgxs&Stratton (2), Brockway Mot Trk. Bklyn-Man Tran (4}, Bklyn Union Gas (5) Bruns Term & Rwy! Bucyrus-Erie cv pf. Budd (EG) Mfg.... Burrough A l('l!fi) Bush Term deb (7).. Butterick Co 23% Byers (A M) Co.. Calumet & Hecla.... Camp W&C Fdy (1).. Canada Dry GA (3).. Canadian Pacific 1% . Chi & Northwest (4). Chi Pneu Tool pf.... Chi R1& Pac (m2%) Chi Yellow Cab (l)..l”l Childs Company 4 Chrysler Corp (1) Clev & Pitts (3%) Coca-Cola (173%) . 4 Colonial Beacon Col Gas&Elec (2)... Col Graph cfs (56¢).. Columb Carbon (5).. Comel Credit A (3).. 4 Comel Cred pf B (3). Comel Inv Trust (2). % Comel Solvents (1).. 6% Comwith&Sou (40c). Conpolm-Natrn (1. Congolm-N . Consol Film pf (2).. Consol GasN Y (4).. ConsolRwys pt (6).. Container Corp (A).. Container Corp (B).. 4 ..........:!....... FIR SRR o @ 100 Cushmans pt (7) 9% Davison Chemical. .. 107% Delaware & Hud (3). 11% Denver & RG W pf.. 8% Dome Mines (1)..... 17% Doug Afrcraft(11%) 61% Drug Corp (4) 71 Dupont de Nem (4).. 118% Du Pont de N pf of ifoscunn TEBuunvuatbot cunsviiBii 9% Eaton Axle (1.6 34% Elec Auto L B SIS SN 8 Fairbanks M pf (7 4% Federal Screw Wki 36% Fid Ph Fire In(2.60). 56 Firestone T&R pf (6) 41 First Natl Strs (2%) 1 Fisk Rubber 1st pf.. 20% Foster Wheeler (2) 201 Fourth Nat Inv mSSe 11% Fox Film (A) (2%) Gardner Motor . Gen Asphalt (2) Gen Baking (2). 4 Gen Cable.... 7 Gen Cable (A) Gen Cigar pf (4) Gen Electric (1.80).. Gen Elec spec (80c) . Gen Food Corp (3).. Gen Gas&EL A(e20c) Gen Mills (3 Gen Motors l!) .. Gen Public Servic Gen Realty & Utll. .. Gen R & Ut pf (e6). . Gen Refractories (3) Gen Theatre Equip. . Gillette Saf Razor Glidden Co. Glidden Co pr pt (7). Gobel (Adolf) . Gold Dust (3%) Goodrich (BF)... Goodyear T & R (1). Granby Con Min (1). Grand 811 Strs (h1). Grant (WT) (1).... Great Northn pf(4). Grigsby Grunow. . . 1f Mobile & North Hahn Dept Stores. .. Hershey Choe (5)... Hollander Sons ... Houdaille Hershey . Houston Ofl. ... Houston Oil (new). Howe Sound (2). Hudson Motor (1) Hupp M indian Refiningft (ndust Rayon (4. nshares Del A r Shr(Md) (40c) interbore Rap Trans int Bus Machine(: int Carriers,Ltd Int Com! 86% Int Harvester (2%). Int Harvester pf <'l). Int Hydro 1 A (02) Int Match pf (4).... Int Nick of Can(40e) Int Paper & Pwr (A) Int Paper & Pwr C. . 3 Int Printg Ink pf (6) 70s Int Shee (3) i int Te! & Teleg (2) . EET T - T 3 O T T I TSP PPN are sold in ome hundred-share lste Prev. Close. Close. 5 114% 405, 113 504 5% 7% 14y WASHINGTON, D. €, SATURDAY, Prev. 1931~ figh. Low. | _ Dividend '80% 40% Johns-Manville (3) . 1280 116% Jones & Laugh DE(T) % Kansas City Sou (1), 40 Kan City Sou pf (4). 18 12 K’mann Dept Strs(1) 24% + 10% Kayser (3) & Co (1), 3% 1% Kelly-Bpring Tire 16% 84 Kelvinator Corp. 20 Kendall Co pf (6) Add u Ao- 18 _Kroger Grocery ( 656 Lambert Co (8). 45% Lehman Corp (3) 60% Ligg & Myers B (15). 36 -Loew's Inc (3 2% Loft Ine. 11% Lorrillard (P) Co. 90% Lorrillard () pt 3 25 LouGas&ElA (1%). McCall Corp (2% McKeespt T P(153% McKesson & Rob(1 McLellan Stores. Macy (RH)& Co(n3 Mallison & Co. ManhatElev mod gtd Saom & T T T =r 13 Manhat Elev gtd (7), 108 Manhattant Shirt(1) Marine Midld (1.20)., Marmon Motor Car. . Mathieson Alkili (2) 4 Melville Shoe (2) Miami Copper. . . Midland Steel (3). Minne & St Louls Missouri Pacific. Monsianto Chem (l“ Montgomery Ward. . Mullins Mfg. Mullins lfll BE (7). 2100 Murray Cor) 00 i SR at Cash Register at Dairy (2.60). at Pwr & Lt (1) ¥ Central (8), ...+ N Y Chi & StL (8)..s Y Chi & StL pf. NY N H & Hart (6),. NYNH&HDPI (). Noranda Mines... Norf & Westn (+12) - North Am Aviation., 56% Nor Amer(b10%stk) 13 884 Northern Cent (4.4 408 30% Northern Pacific (5). 7 Ohio Of1. mnibus C Pacific Gas & EI (2 5% Packard Motor (40¢) 1% Panhandle Pro&Ref. 19% Paramt-P(m1.62%p) 1 Pathe Exchang: Pathe Exchange (A). 2% Peerless Motor Car 28% Penney (J C) (2.40 1% Penn Dixie Cement 39% Penn Railroad (3 1834 Peopios GastChi)(8) Petm Corp of Am(1) 1 Phelps Dodge (1).. 44% Phillips-Jones pf (7) 4% Phillips Petroleum 1 Pierce Petroleum 155% Pitts FLaW & C pt(7), Prairie Oil & Gas. Prairie Pipe Line(3). 2% Pressed Steel Car. ... Proct & Gamb (2.40). Public Sve NJ(3.40). Public Svc NJ pf (5) Public Sve N J p1(7) Pullman Corp (4). .. % Punta Alegre Suga. 514 Pure Ofl Pure Ol pf (3). 12 Radio Corp.... 31% Radio Corp (B) (5).. 11% Radio-Keith-Orph A. 17% Raybestos-Man 1.60. 5 Real Silk Hosiery. 5% Remington-Kand. . 5 Reo Motor Car(40c). 10 Republic Steel. 11 Reynolds Metls(1%) 40% Reynolds Tob B (3) N ® PRUPNIN. T P TREAPY PRNW AN N - »3 23 10% Seaboard Ofl. 44% Sears Roebuck 4% Servel Inc. .. 4% Shell Union O! 10% Simmons Co. 5 Simms Petrol, 6% Sinclair Consol O! (3% Skelly o1 Skelly Of1 lflfi Sloss Sheffield Ste 17% Socony-Vacuum 1.6/ 7% South Port Rico Sug. 96% Sou P Rico Sug pf(8) 108 36 Southn Cal E4\(2) 67% Southn Pacific (6 » o - ITST P S P AT Stand Gas&El (3% Stand Gas&El pt (4). Stand Ol Cal (h2%). Stand O11 Exp pf (5). Stand Oil NJ (12) Stand Ol N Y (1.6 Starrett(LS) (12% Sterling Secur pf. Stewart Warner, Stone& Webster (m2). 14% Studebaker Co(1.20) % Superior Ofl Sweets ‘Texas Corp (2)...... 214 Tex Pacific Coal&Oil 20% Tex Gulf Sulphur(3) 7% Tex Pacific Land Tr. Thatcher Mfg Co. Thatcher Mg pf 3.60 Third Nat Inv(mé5c) Thompson (J R) (1). Tide Water Asso Oilf Timken Roller B(2). Tramsamerica (40¢). Transue & Will (1) 4 Tri-Contl Corp. .. Tri-Contl Corp pf ) 10 3% Truax Traer Coal Co 21% 9% Ulen & Co (1.60)...., 43% Union Carb & (2.60). Union Ofl of Cal (2). Union Pacific (10) .. Un Tank Car (1.60) 20% Unit Afrcraft. . 46 Unit Adrcraft pf (3). m Unit Am Bosc! . Unit Cigar Sto; ll'a Unit Corp (75 44% Unit Corp pf (3). 25% Unit Gas&lIm(1. 20) 5% U S Hoftman. 24% U S Indus Alcohol . 69% U S Leath pr pf (7) 17% U S Pipe&Fy 1st 1.2 10% U S Rubber 17 U S Rubber 1st p; 39% U S Smtg&Ref pf 314 8314 U 8 Steel Corpn (4). 136% U 8 Steel pf (7) United Stores ( 18 B 71% 383 Vulcan Detin (4). ... 508 26 8 Wabash RR.. ol 27% 21 Waldorf Sys (1%).. Walworth C Warn Bros Pictures. Warren Bros (2 West Pa El pf (7) Western Maryland. . Western Pacific pf. . Western Union (8). estinghse A B(2). esting EI&MIE (4) Wheeling Steel pf(6) Wilcox Ol) & Gas. Willys-Overland. Wilson & Co (A).... Woolworth (2.40) Worthi lm\ Pump. 5% Yellow 5 m Ylllo' '!‘rnck A(‘D »f. llll Yo 2 19 27 lumc«n (l) !l 'AUGUST , 22, 1931. | INSHARP SELLING :"."':If": us'f. 24 46% 60 5% % 5k 0% 4% 814 4 17 11 118\‘ 26% 46% 14% 49 118% uav/. 24 24 18% ] 52% 69% 47% 1 7% 100 4% 65% 66 107% 107% 16% 16% 16% 15% 22% 22% Ya Y 14% 15% 814 { first sight: Market Volume Remains Low and Decline Continues Orderly. BY GEORGE T. HUGHES. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, August 22—The cur- rent reaction was carried further in today's week end session of the stock market. As a rule losses were not large but they were sufficient to break the old resistance points and, in the case of the rails, to set up a number of new low records for the bear market. ‘The selling today was a continuation of that in evidence in the last hour on Priday. Part of it was professional at- tempts to depress prices and part of it was liquidation from traders who had bought in expectation of the normal Autumn recovery. The market had nothing to encourage it in the o'uulde rews except the hardening prices of crude ofl and gasoline and the indi- cations that the Oklahoma-Texas re- mmxm campaign ‘would be successful. was _expressed over bhe Bflflsh pcuck:ll lltultlon Prospects of wage reductions in the steel was another disturbing element and, most important of all, the sf de- cline in the bond market usettled sen- timent. Everything considered, the mar- ket did not do badly. Volume was low and the decline was orderly. New York Central and Pennsylvania were the features in the ratlroad group. Both sold at new low prices for the bear market, New York Central at the low- est since 1921 and Pennsyivania at the lowest since 1922. Atchison, Baltimore & Ohio, and Southern Pacific were off & point or more. Among the Mullfifl;n:h; pméul"‘e was strongest against American Can, Kodak and the highly specula- tive J. 1. Case. 'l'h.wukm.lmym American and out any probabl m shvnnh!md the tech- nlul :yawm General Motors fractionally lower and made better re- sistance. ‘The olls were relatively steady, espe- clally Bt:’ng:rd Oil att flnm.h, which res ndet confirmal the reports po Standard hat merger ne ou of New Jersey were under way. Both stocks were nemngt ‘;; m.nhm‘ li’the sune rice today, sugges! & combi- gmm is o upon the exth.lnle wul be on a for-share 0il, Texas Corporation and othfl‘ lo'll'- priced oil issues held around the pre- Vious close. Another merger report heard today was that Skelly Oil would go with Texas Corporation. Markets at a Glance NEW YORK, Ag&t 22 (#)—8tocks heavy; New York Central lowest in 10 years, Bonds irregular; rails improve. Curh easy; trading extremely lluuhh Foreign exchanges irregular; franc and reichsmark steady. oouon higher; firm cables, trade buying. Sugar holiday. Coffee holiday. Investment Rules BY GEORGE T. HUGHES. Whether the purchase of a home is investment or not is a matter of defini- tion, but no apology is needed for in- cluding a discussion of the subject in a series of articles devoted to the finan- cial problem of the wage earner or the salaried man. Prom the dollar-and-cents side there is not so much to choose betwesn cwn- ership and renting as there appears at True, one does not have to pay rent when he owns his own house, but he does have to pay taxes, inslglnce‘ and make repairs, besides allo¥ing for interest on the money used % | to buy the property. ‘There is another item on which there is no direct money cutlay, but which is a real expense nevertheless, and that is depreciation. If you don’t believe that try * | including in your income tax statement 42% 3% 21 % 18% 628 59% 40% lDS‘t 40 19% 17% 10% 28% 16% 15% 26% ; M‘fi w« 23 17% % 82 % 107% 107% 4 41 9 9 25% 26% 8 19 9 106% 107% 1% ° 1% 13 11 111% 111% 24 24 some time a report on the sale of a plece of real estate, either at a profit or a loss, without taking depreciation into account. The Internal Revenue Bureau will correct the mistake sooner or later. Then if you are contemplating moving drom a city apartment, where heating and water are included in the rent, to house where you have to pay for both, there is another liability to be charged up against home ownership. I remember when the Florida boom was st its height a distant relative whom I had not seen in years visited my house. He was living in one of the Florida towns which had had the phenomenal growth that was universal in that State at the time. He had built himself a house before the boom came. It was on the outskirts of the town when he built it, but the city grew up all around it. “I suppose you are pretty well to do now,” I said. “Oh, well,” he replied, “I have been offered $100,000 for my property.” I told him he ought to seil, suggesting he was paying a pretty stiff rent. “Rent!” was his startled reply, “I don’t pay any rent; I own it.” I tried to explain that if he took the in- terest on $100,000 at 6 per cent, added taxes, insurance and depreciation and dlvided it by 12 he would find a rather large remainder representing the equiva- lent of a monthly rental. To make the story complete, I ought to add that my relative didn’t sell. (Copyright. 1¢31) FIRST growing steadily. see no mohblli! J m—opln under these ckv{l;ut:lm tion whether the constructive will be pushed further, if the selling yesterday afternoon was primarily a drive against the recent leadership, the market should snap back rather impressively if the campal for further recovery is still intact. are inclined to belleve that for f.he uma being at least this campaign has been nba:-;dontd X':almuch as we_have re- cently sugges! trading commitments based solely on the evidence of renewed leadership, we would liquidate such com- mitments unless the market shows an immediate sharp rebound. mmmhu‘no be surprised if r{hemmeth:dm. mo{ teehnlul rally within the next few days, 'l\ht.he rmchn:aununedu dhnm gg:flmoedlnlmck unless it has bond market. The trena of bond quotl'-knl has not yet given us such a signal. Smith, Graham & Rockwell—The fundamentals contain little on which to base & hope for higher prices, but do contain much that gives reason to ex- pect the market to go lower. Rallies be small. Would sell when they .—We should sales are improving dapltc a slight falling off in gross receipts due to lower prices, I VIOLIN SHOP CALM SPOT NEW YORK (N.AN.A)—Paul Glae- sel’s violin shop in the Yorkville sec- tion is a sight for tired eyes and & tonic on frayed nerves. The roar of the elevated down the block fails to - tnle the quiet interior smelling ished wood, resin and sawdust, lnd Htre is no machine to suggest the age we live in. “You can't make violins with s ma- chine,” Glaesel said. “It's been tried, from > “Spruce and maple for bod- jes—and the best we can nowadays is only 10 years old. We get that from Bohemia. But Jfor m-mflfl ‘wood, ach. what wouldn't I give (Coppright. 1931, by North American News- First Mortgage Loans Lowest Rates of Interest and Commission Thomas J. Fisher & Company, Inc. MORTGAGE LOANS we w8 Tehas We make he COMMERCI NATIONAL BANK 14th and G Streets ng in All of Its Phases Money on Hand to Loan on 643 Indiana Ave. N.W. MORTGAGES ALL RISK IS ELIMI- NATED You can invest in our 6% FIRST MORTGAGES to any desired amount with every confidence that your money is safely secured by conservatively appraised cr a Third of a Century Without a tinuously Less May be improved Washington real estate; and with the further assurance that it will earn this liberal interest con- throughout term of the loan. the entire purchased in amounts from $250 up. B. F. SAUL CO. National 2100 THERE 925 15th St. NN\W. IS 'NO SUBSTITUTE FOR SAFETY FINANCIAL DA STANDS THIRD IN WHEAT SHIPMENTS By the Associated Press. OTTAWA, Ontario, Autun 22 —De- Tigorous ¢« -nd Adm‘e world factors Canada rac- tically nne~t.hfl'd of the 'Dfldl 'ht during the 12 months ended July 31, mmlnbnnurmo(sh- bushels of 'bel‘ lnd 6,701, 663 bu'rell of flour. This was the equivalent of 7 bushels actually exported, an increase of 72,370, o‘ls bushels over lho 1929-30 ctw year. A decrease was recorded, however, from the five-year -verue of 308,853,540 bushels. Shipments from the Pacific Coast ports _totaled usu,lu bushels, whue exports through A cluding rerouted mug amounted to 74,022,561 bushels. balance of the wheat nwvelnenv. umn(h United States ports. over on Ju!y 31 m- m sn 633 bushels, compared to 2 bushels in 1930 ,and 104,383, BULLS ARE ENCOURAGED BY ACTION OF MARKET Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, August 22.—The ability of the stock market to finish higher tor T" mmn the moo 000 some e 0, rise in broker's loans, the increase since early July, was lmerpreusd a of public participation, but this view. was maintained only by a minor- ity. Subsidence of rail stock liquidation has been constructive, but the continued of out-of-fown banks and liqui- | closing uewn in rail bonds are not calculated interest the public in the market. | STANDARD OIL MEN MEET ON MERGER California and New lm Company Heads Confer, ' With Action Possible. By the Associated Press. BSAN PRANCISCO, August 33.—The Standard Ofl Co. of California has an- nounced & conference i under tween executives of and the Standard Ol on a merger of the two Discussion had been two years on the proposed merger, company announced, but indieated sorhething definite m ‘come the conference ‘held ‘Tahoe. Reean action of the market is inter- | Co. preted either as liquidation taking under cover of strength in the onspund merchandising shares or as the building ly increasing short inter- up of a s Most brokers favor the latter view, to Q 't Jut up lhlru When a Glasgow pawnbroker wag asked why so many pawn shops in the Scotch city are quitting business, ewl:ln.d that mwm ment there was too much “putting” and not enough “taking.” - (1’. When something of value is lost—or found— you'll locate those interested through a Star Classified Adv. VERYBODY recognizes the fact that The Star @ is universally read—the Classified Section, with its interesting news, receiving its due share of attention. Thus you are sure of reaching those whom you wish to reach through The Star’s Classi- fied Section. For your convenience copy for The Star Classi- fied Section may be left at any of these authorized Branch Offices, There are no fees for Branch Office service; only regular rates are charged. In the Northwest 11th and 'Park ld.—Arn- strong’s Pharmac; 14th and P ltl.—l)ay‘ Pharmacy. 1135 14th Ci & Magazine Store. l‘nhl‘:;d Que m:x- ner’s Pharmacy. 15th and U sts—G. O. Brock. 2912 14th st.—Colliflower Art & Gift Co. 3401 14th st.— Bronaugh’s Pharmacy. 14th and Buchanan sts.— Hohberger’s Pharmacy. e Ty L ell’s . Mount Pleasant st.— Pleasant Cigar and News Shop. 111! colnmhh rd. — The Park: Y. nve. - Sanitary Ist uul K Sts. — Duncan’s Pharmaey. th and K _sts—Golden- b:::’s (time clerk’s ) 7th lnds O sts. — Lincoln Drug Store. th st. and R. L ave—J. French Simpson. 1ith and M sts.—L. H. Forster’s Pharmacy. In the Southwest 10th st. and Va. ave. — Herbert’s Pharmacy. 316 43% st. — Harris’ Drug Store. 9% and L sts.—Columbia Pharmacy. In the Northeast 208 Mass. ave. — Capitol Towers Pharmacy. 4th lml H sts. — Home 907 : st—Garren's Music Store. 12th and Md. ave—Luck- ett’s Pharmacy. 7th and Md. ave.-— Louis F. Bradley. North Capitol and Eye—Ken- ealy’s Phar- macy. 20th and R. L ave. — Collins® Pharmacy, Wi 3500 12th st. — Brookland Pharmacy, Brookland. 4th and %. L ave. Sth and U sts.—M. H. Hunton’s Pharmacy. Ga. ave. and Upshur st— !et-wotth Pharmacy. 221 Upshur st.— Monck’s Pharmacy. 5916 Ga. ave.—Brightwood Pharmacy. Reiskin. North Capitol st. and R. L. ave. — Parker’s Phar- macy. 1742 Pa. ave. — J. Louis Krick. 21st and G sts.—Quigley’s Pharmacy. Hgl st. a;: Pa. ave, — erbst’s Pharmacy. 3315 Conn. ave. — Joll’s Newsstand. Wisconsin ave. and Macomb st.—Harry C. Taft. 4231 Wisconsin ave—Mor- gan Bros.” . Takoma Park, 359 Cedar st. —Mattingly Bros.” Phar- macy. In Georgetown 30th lnd P sts—Morgan Bros.’ Pharmacy. 30th and M Pharmacy. 3411 M st.—Moskey’s Phar- macy. 2072 Wisconsin ave.— 35th and O sts.— llnl’c Drug Store. 5104 Mlflt rd. — Modern Drug Store. In the Southeast 3rd and Pa. ave—O’Don- Store.