Evening Star Newspaper, October 3, 1931, Page 3

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THE EVENING WISCONSIN VOTES | AT HOLSE PRIVARY Three Out for G. 0. P. Choice and Two for Democratic in First District. By the Assoclated Press. RACINE, Wis., October 3.—A choice of congressional nominees for the un- expired térm of the late Henry Allen | Cooper was being made today by voters of the first Wisconsin district in a spe- cial primary, which may have marked effect on the balance of powers in the House of Representatives State Senator George Blanchard, eonservative Republican; Thomas Amlie, | progressive Republican, and Thorwald ! M. Beck, conservative, sought the Re- publican’ nomination. Two Democrats, one Socialist and one Communist 8lso | are in the fleld. The election will be | held October 13. Hoover Stand Attacked. There are six vacancies to be filled in the House, which, unofficlally, has a membership of 215 Democrats and 213 Republicans and one Farmer-Labor Representative. These new totals re- sulted from the recount of votes in a Chicago district, where Stanley Kunz, Democratic incumbent, was unofficially declared winner over Peter C. Granata, Republican, who at first eppeared to be elected Amlie and his supporters. including Gov. Philip La Follette, Senator Robert M. La Follette and Senator John J Blaine, criticized during the campaign the Hoover administration’s attituce toward the tariff, unemployment and prohibition. First District is Conservative, | The Progressive candidate advocated modification of the prohibition laws; as | did all other candidates, with the ex- ception of Blanchard. The first district is normally Conserv- ative. President Coolidge- carried the five counties’ vote over Senator Robort M. La Follette, sr., in the 1924 presiden- tial campaign. President Hoover carried the district by a margin of 26,830 votes over Alfred E. Smith in 1928. TLLINOIS RECOUNT 1S UPSET. i Kunz, Democrat, Claims Victory, Which Would Realign House. CHICAGO, October 3 (#)—The re- eount of last November's election in Illi- nols’ eighth congressional district ended yesterday with the Democratic incum- nt claiming a victory which would shift the Tllinois delegation to a Demo- eratic majority and, temporarily at least, give the entire House of Representatives the same complexion. Stanley H. Kunz was declared by his | attorney to be the winrer in the re- count, 16,167 to 14,797. Peter C. Gra- nata, the Republican, who originally was declared the victor. has fought against the recount unsuccessfully in several courts. He charged it was illegal. Tae House of Rerresentatives will be asked to_decide. The present party membership in Congress, with six vacancies vet to be filled in special elections, is 214 Repub- licans., 214 Democrats and 1 Farmer- Laborite. Victory for Kunz would give the Democrats 215 and the Republicans 213, The Tllinols delegation to the next Congress now numbers 14 Republicans and 13 Democrats. The position would be exactly the reverse should the House decide for Kunz. Kunz charged fraud in the original count, which gave Granata the victory, 16,565 to 15.394. The eighth district is on Chicago's near South Side and in- cludes part of the “bloody twentieth” and other notoriously “tough” wards. COMPLIMENTS NAVY Governor of Virgin Islands Praised Work of Transfer. Gov. Paul M. Pearson of the Virgin Islands, in a letter made public wdayi by Secretary Adams, commended the Navy's co-operation in transferring the government to the Interior Department. The Governor lauded Capt. Waldo| |a jall sentence, at least. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.. BATURDAY, O( 'TOBER- 3, 1931. * A3 Alien Smuggling in U. S. Then Tribute Is Exa VI BY THOMAS R. HENRY. ‘The spider is merciless. The fee collected for bringing an alien into the United States—it some- a small part of what the sanctimonious- 1y camoufiaged “racket” expects to col- lect from its victim. Unless Uncle Sam rescues him he pays until he dies, pays to the last penny that can be ground out of his misery. The country of the min's dreams becomes a slave pen. His children are born In slavery. He is allowed just enough of his earn- ings to live. Everything else he must turn over, week after week, to the racket. Other- wise he will be exposed. The best he can expect is to be sent back to his cwn country. In many cases he fears This is the most significant fact that has come from Assistant Secretary Garsson's in- vestigation. That is why Secretary Doak is determined to bring the “rack- et” to justice. That thousands of aliens are here who do not belong here is incidental, in the Labor Secretary's eyes, to the fact that these scoundrels are taking the milk from infants and medicine from the sick—and superfi- clally are so pious and idealistic about it. Sometimes they even pose as cham- pions of the oppressed against the hard- hearted, hide-bound Government. But, Garsson insists, the worst injustice cf {which the Government ever was ac- cused in immigration matters appears insignificant indeed compared with the daily practices of the racketeers, as shown by the investigation. Inclined to Leniency. So the Department of Labor is in- clined to take the most tolerant view consistent with the enforcement of the law toward the victim. Every case must be decided on its merits. But, as Gars- son puts it. “the Secretary's the sort of man that hates to see anybody hurt.” Regardless of how an alien got here, if he has conducted himself like a good citizen, if there is reasonable senti- mental justification for his behavior, and especially if he has suffered from assured that the Labor Department will lean far over on the side of leniency. Means may even be found to keep the right sort of man in the United States. This investigation, Garsson insi not primarily a round-up of aliens. is not & new “red” drive. The Depart- ment of Labor is after bigger game radical. It is trying to crush the spider, in whose web these are the struggling, helpless flies. Living s hard in Southern and East- ern Europe, Garsson points out. Among the poor and ignorant the legend of a fabulous land to the west where every laborer lives like a king still circulates. No bargain seems too hard which will enable them to come here. A family will pledge all its resources to get one of its members into the new country. Only when the unfortunate is safely in the United States does he realize the hard terms of the payment and the inevitability of his fate. United States illegally naturally is loath to talk, and it is only upon his appre- hension that the true conditions of his affairs come out. A servant girl earn- ing $20 a week was paying $8 a week to the “racket” under threat of ex- posure. Garsson found a blind man from whom the gang was extorting regularly every cent he possibly could spare from his earnings. Saving of Lifetime Lost. One case reported to Secretary Doak is that of a family admitted legally more than 20 vears ago, who left one son in the old country. The chances are that means could have been found to admit the boy legally if the family had consulted a reputable attorney or come directly to the Department of Labor. Instead they went to an at- torney with far different principles. He engaged to have the boy smuggled in and the family paid $3,000. The scheme failed. The boy was caught and, be- cause of this, forever debarred from legal enirance. Later, wherr the boy's mother was dying. the case came di- rectly to Secretary Doak and arrange- ments were made to admit him under times runs as high as $5,000—is only | the forced tribute paying, he can be | S |apt to have been a than the poor laborer or the soap-box | The alien who has gotten into the| Foreigners Entering lllegally Pay as High as $5,000, cted Until They Die. Doak Set on Ending Racket. men on even terms it would not be so bad, but in the very nature of things this is not the case. He is accustomed to a lower wage scale. There are in- stances where aliens actually have been smuggled into the country with the | connivance of unscrupulous employers merely for the sake of obtaining low- priced labor. A striking case of this, Garsson says, recently was uncovered in the diamond- cutting industry. Diamond cutting is | & highly paid vocation, requiring years of lp?renflceshiv and a high degree of technical ability. Americans skilled in this trade—the number of jobs, of course, is very limited—have been able to demand high wages. It was found that one firm dealing in diamonds had | been able to secure workmen willing to accept something like a fourth of the American scale. It was still good pay— | but not for diamond cutters. This was |investigated at the instigation of the | union. Low-Priced Workers Smuggled. Now Belgium is a center of the dia- mond-cutting industry. Skilled men are engaged at a very low wage scale, com- pared to the American. It was found that the low-priced men then engaged by this New York firm had been smug- gled into the country merely to work for this low salary, which still was con- siderably better than they could get at home. Also the standard of living was higher. Garsson s convinced that similar conditions may be found in | other highly paid trades, once the in- vestigation gets around to them. at present, at least, there are compe- | tent American citizens for every job— |and plenty to spare. If the country | were prosperous a few extra laborers | might not make much difference. “'A great deal of work remains to be | done.” Garson said, “before this situa- |tion is entirely cleared up. We want |to find out just how far the ramifica- tions of the racket extend through the United States and FEurope and who are the real ‘higher-ups’ I hardly think that any new methods will be un- covered. About every possible trick | seems to have been exhausted.” The main result of the investigation, | he points out, is the conclusive evidence gathered that, as a rule, the alien illegally in the United States cannot be considered as an individual who has gotten here on his own initiative and by his own resources. He is far more Unwitting pawn in [the hands of a “big business"—the | bigness and evil of which is just be- ginning to be apparent. WILL FIéHT HABE;S WRIT DETROIT, October 3 (#).—Miles N. Culehan, assistant prosecutor, last night | ordered the police homicide squad to send a man to Toledo at once with a copy of the indictment charging Pete Licavoli with the murder of Gerald E. | Buckiey. | “With the indictment. Culehan said, | he hopes to frustrate any attempt to free Licavoli, reported arrested in To- | ledo last night, on a writ of habeas corpus. | | Stock Yards Strike fnds. | DENVER, Colo, October 3 (#).—A traders strike at the Denver Union tockyards ended yesterday when stock- ard “officials announced they would waive the 14-cent fee on reweighed lots | of cattle and assume the loss which | may result through failure to collect | the' fee. | Will Rogers EL PASO, Tex—These old big boys work fast and away ahead of time, big bankers are coming down | from New York daily to show Presi- | dent Hoover that the debt moratorium should be ex- tended maybe & year, maybe five Just | ILAMONT STRESSES SOUNDNESS OF U. S, ‘Elements of Recovery Are Seen by Morgan Partner in Relief Address. | By the Associated Press NEW YORK, October 3.—The “under- lying scundness of the American situa- tion” was stressed by Thomas W. La- m:nt, partner of J. P. Morgan & Co., in a speech discussing business and em- ployment, published today. “We have clearly in sight the elements of businss and industrial recovery,” he said. "It remains for the community to utilize these elements. Our pecple must regain confidence in themselves, in the underlying strength of our Amer- ican institutions. Dole Not U. S. Way, The dole, he continued, may be the method of mesting unemployment in some countries, “but it is not the Amer- ican way.” Time, he said, will cure some of the ills of ‘the current business depression, Ccncerning unemployment, he warned that unless, “through private efforts, we do our share to relieve the situation, we shall inevitably load all the burden upon the state.” This, he said, is a situation not to be desired. He criticized rum predict misfortunes happen.” Optimism surd while “now pessimism is being carried t¢ unreasoning and fantastic depths.” Soundness Ignored. “Many persons ignore completely the urderlying soundness of the American cituation. No country in the world is blessed with so many natural resources 82 ours. “There is no royal road to recovery, but in a state of unreasonable appr hension or fear it will never arrive. It is high time for us to take counsel not of our fears, but of our reason. Mr. Lamont spoke at a meeting of 250 financlers and business leaders, con- stituting the General Committee of the Emergency Unemployment Rellef Or- ganization. mongers who that never EXPRESS CONFIDENCE IN FARM MORTGAGES Midsouth Association Also Assures Investors There Will Be No “Dumping.” By the Associated Press. | MEMPHIS, Tenn., October 3.—Mem- bers of the Midsouth Farm Real Estate Association, meeting “here yesterday, expressed confidence in Midsouth Farm mortgages as good investments and a: surance that there would be no “dump- ing” of farms The meeting was called to study the possibility of co-operative effort in to unduly depress farm mortgages va ues. holding membership in the association hold nearly 80 per cent of the $100.- 000,000 now invested in farm land mortgages in the Midsouth. C. D. Moore, vice president of the assoclation, summed up the policy de- cided on yesterday as providing that “there will be no dumping of farms and no rental practices indulged in by members of the association which wiil be harmful to the communities in- volved.” ‘The association is composed of rep- resentatives of Federal joint stock land banks in the Memphis and St. Louis areas, farm loan companies here and the New York Farm Conference, which included 14 of the larger insurance companies. CONTRACTS TO AID 10,000 , | it clear that the buflding program in handling agricultural loans and to put ! a quietus on “gossip” which might tend | It was estimated that institutions | NAVY MAY SHELVE | AKRON SISTER SHIP |Chance to Slice $2,500,000 From Budget Studied as Economy Move. The possibility that plans to con- | struct a sister ship to the giant Navy dirigible Akron might be dismissed were seen here today as high naval officlals sought to pare $61,000,000 from the Navy Department's $401,000,000 budget. for the next fiscal year. A saving of $2,500,000 would be effected by forego- ing construction of the new dirigible. Plan to Ask $750,000,0 Proposals already advanced to re- | duce naval expenditures included the | placing on an inactive status of one- | ifth of the Nation's fighting vessels and curtailment of construction programs. Meanwhile Chairmen Hale of the | Senate Naval Committee and Britten of the last House Naval Committee were proceeding with their plans for spon- soring a $750,000,000 naval construc- tion ;mnlm before Congress, despite President Hoover's desire for drastic economy. Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, dele- gate to the London naval treaty, was back in the Capital today to confer with the two chairmen. He recently expressed an opinion that the national defense has been cut to a minimum. Cuts Prove Difficult. Secretary of the Navy Adams has made | progress would not be cut, but descril | the necessity for other curtailments as | “a very serious matter.” “We' have to consider everything in the Navy,” he asserted. | Another suggestion being considered |is the elimination of certain shore sta- tions. Na officials long have advo- |cated the elimination of certain East Coast navy yards, but have met a stone wall In the form of congressional oppo sition in attempts to shut down th: stations. | HUNTER KILLS FARMER | Mistaken for Bear, Man Is Slain by Accident on Own Land. | | PORT TOWNSEND, Wash., October | 3 (. —Mistaken for a bear while cut- ting huckleberry bushes, George Hack- | ford, about 60, was shot and wounded | | fatally on his Walker Mountain farm | between Quilcene and Brinnon yester- | day by Virgil S. Beale, one of a party of four Seattle hunters. | Beale told authorities he heard what | | he thought was a cub bear rustling | through the brush and fired one shot. At an inquest late yesterday a coroner’s | Jury decided the ‘shooting was acci- dental. | PEACE PARTY IN GOTHAM NEW YORK, October 3 (#).—Mayor Walker yesterday received at City Hall the “peace caravan” which left Holly~ | wood June 21 on a transcontinental tour | under the auspices of the Women's In- | ternational League for Peace and Free- | dom. New York was the 105th city vis- ited by the caravan. The mayor signed a petition for dis- - English Pomes in FOXALL | | ! Double-fronts, six and eight | rooms, with one, two and three baths, Bryant gas heat, maid's room, and garage. | Outstanding value at $11,350 | to $14,950. Visit our Fur- | nished Model Home at 4400 Volta Place, three short blocks south of Reservoir Youngest Pilot BOY, 11, MAKES SOLO FLIGHT AFTER SEVEN HOURS. SHORT SLES BN ASKED BY SENKTOR Hastings Urges Exchange to Fix Minimum Price | E for Securities. \ | By the iissociated Press. CHICAGO, October 3.—United States | | Senator Dantel O. Hastings of Dela- | ware made public last night a tele- | gram to the New York Stock Exchange | advocating a minimum price on securi- | | ties or the prohibition of short selling | for the rest of the year. ‘ | | | His message to Richard Whitney, | president of the exchange, read: | _“Exchange prices have fallen so un- | precedentedly low that our institutions and our millions of security-holding | JACK CHAPMA! Of East Moriches, Long Island, 11 yvears old. about to taks off from the Suffolk County Afrport. Riverhead, Long Is- land, on his first solo flight, after hav- ing had only seven and one-half hours in the air. His flight brought him the distinction of being the country's young- t pilot. —Wide World Photo. rmament presented to him by the 50 women ‘in the caravan, which will be submitted to President Hoover at the ;l’eld of the tour in Washington, Octo- r 10. citizens are being strained to the break- | | ing point and are in peril of destruc- | | tion. The overwhelming majority of | | listed stocks are selling at one-half or | less of their asset or liquidating value. In these distressful times cold-blooded short selling for profit by professional | gamblers who care nothing for our | country or its future is moral treason. | “The present alleged defenses of | | short selling are purely theoretical and | {not based on actual facts or actual | | trading and dwindle into insignificance ‘An the tragic situation which now con- | | fronts our country and the world. | | “The Stock Exchange need- a can of oxygen, not a can of poison. Evils that | cannot be regulated like war must be | outlawed. This is now obviously true | of bear practices. Therefore as you | cannot, by moral suasion or gentleman's agreement prevent their ruinious oper- ations, & minfmum price should be put on securities as was_successfully done | by the exchange in December, 1914, or short trading be absolutely prohibited for the balance of this year. | ‘Otherwise the exchange will be | mainly_responsible for what may be- | come ‘the greatest financial disaster in | | the history of America. There is no | time to lose. I have submitted this | suggestion to a number of important | | bankers in various parts of the coun- ! try and they are all in full accord with. —— NINA WILCOX PUTNAM'S SON HOME WITH RECORD 14-Year-Old Boy Sails From Lon- don to Los Angeles Alone and Publishes Paper. 37 the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, October 3.—John Francis Putnam, 14-year-old son of Nina Wilcox Putnam Ogle, magazine writer, has returned from London with a record of achievements that makes his mother smile, 2 The boy, who has been studying at Cannes and Grenoble, boarded a boat at Lcndon and made the trip to Los Angeles alone. Aboaid ship he became the chrmpion banana eater, published a four-page fllustrated newspaper daily and drew 35 full-page illustrations for his mother's next book. He arrived yesterday. The writer married Arthur James Ogle recently at Las Vegas, Nev. CITY NEWS m'hnmr, TODAY. Card party, benefit Good Will Chap- ter, No. 36, O. E. S., 2103 Rhode Island avenue northeast. 8:30 p.m. Dance. Beta Chi Sorority, Willard Hotel, 10 p.m Drama unit meeting, Women's Cit Club, 736 Jackson place, 7:30 p.m. % Meeting, League for the Larger Life, 1814 N streect, 8:15 pm. Reunion, an island in the Indian Ocean, belongs to France. 'Enjoy a Delightful Breakfast, |Luncheon, Dinner or Supper at| ’ 74th Year ILLUSTRATED EDITIONS $1.00 Each PAUL PEARLMAN 1711 G St. N.W. Westchester’s NEW Building OWEring Evergreens and aSunken Garden make a picture of beauty . . at W esichester Like giant sentinels, guarding the peaceful quiet and exclusiveness of West- chester, these gorgeous trees mark the approach . .. to an even more gor- geous sunken garden with its rustic stone walks, babbling waters, sweep- ing terraces and colorful blooms. A truly wonderful setting that creates an atmosphere of unusual beauty and refinement so typical of Westchester. SPRINGFIELD, Ill, October 3 (/).— | The State Highway Department will do | its bit toward plercing the walls of de- | pression during the coming nine months | by awarding $32.584,000 worth of high- | way contracts, Engineer Frank Sheets announced. He estimated that 10.000 men would | be given employment this Winter by‘ the “program, 3,000 on the highways | themselves and 7,000 to prepare the materials. About 24.000 would have Jjobs next Spring, he said. Evans, Governor of the Virgin Islands | under the naval regime, and & number of members of the Navy Medical Corps for their particular assistance. years. They didn't know which, but they were sure they should be can- caled entirely. In that way it would make it easier for them to collect the money that was owed them per- Mr. Hoover ought to told ‘Boys 1 will cancel half they f you will cancel half they owe you.” That would have checked their philanthropy. YOUR DREAM HOME is now ready for occupancy in beautiful WRENWOOD an outstanding achievement Rittenhouse Street and Broad Branch Road LOOK. GOLFERS. TOURNAMENT NOW GO- o Gaun prits o pNERT NOW GO | on top of Washington oad ,:tg: Chevy Chase, D. C. Something new and entirely different. Unique, smart and of unusual charm. bond. But savings of a lifetime had Resiyoost utl S/ been extorted from this poor family | Another man was smuggled in suc- cesstully, but was obliged to leave his wife and children in Canada, where they lived in the utmost destitution | while the husband paid more than $600 out of his emall salary to the racket. | | The family still is in, Canada. | The actual injury done the country | oy the presence of the ailen is not in- considerable, even in cases where there | can be no objection to the individual's personal character. If he were com-| peting for jobs with American work Actress’ Marriage Revealed. MONTREAL, Quebec. October 3 (#). ~—Madelaine Carroll, British moving picture star, was secretly married re- cently to Capt. Philip Astley, at Verona, Lake Como, Italy, the Montreal officers of the British film guild were informed yesterday. SPECIAL NOTICES. FOR . SUITABLE FOR weddings and : ew e WAVERLY TAYLOR e 1522 R Street Nat'l 1040 SO STORAG! St p.w._ Metropolitan IS __ . ... 'O_WHOM IT MAY CONCERN_NOT RE- spensible for_any bills contracted other than by myself_ WILLIAM C. PACHEO. 188 FORMERLY OF HEP! is_now located at 518 12th st. n.w THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHO! ers “of the Columbia Building Association will be held at the office of the association, 716 _1th st. n.w.. October 8. at 7 Dm. - ELECTRIC WIRING_LET US ESTIMATE your_ wiring requirements: prompf. efcient serv.ce. G. L. Davis, Nat. 3934. 410 Bond B“'fll HOME BARGAINS DETACHED HOUSES BIG PRICE REDUCTIONS 4009 20th St. N.E. 8 rooms. Lot 0 by 107 . 8 Tor— 4 detached. Bagular price; S111000." Now. djtear T T DRrler=sorehes’an 20th and Bunker Hill Road N.E. Juit finished. Detached, attraetive mes. Bix porches. #8.950 to. B iss hese 13224 lnld 6 Potomac Ave. S.E. Just eompleted Large porches. FURNACES —cleaned (including smoke pipe) and paint- ed for $3.50. repairs. parts for every furnace, steam and hot-water heatine. Robey Heat- | ing Co.. Inc.. Lin. 1440. 1395 Fla Step-down | Apartment : in a Park Bordering on | Wesley Heights, West ¢ h ester is park-breeze swept . . . de- new thrill in lightfully cool apartment ! and resttul. f Y 1'ving. than "thove. mege. by Living KIDWELL. 1314 E: W debts other myself. CHARLES F. itol st. Rooms ing aual An artistic in- novation for Washington . . . that lends a General Electric Refrigerators. LI ahip by STEEL SMITH'S TRANSFER & 1313 You St N.W__Phone : Besutiful mew homes 40-ft. parking. Bulli-ln sarase. One Just south Pa. Ave. 1737 Upshur Street N.W. 1'2 squares vest 16th Sireet. 8 rooms, General Electric refrigerator. ~Rediced $2,000. 1214 Hemlock Street N.W. . Raises home life of the modern- minded to its highest plane of comfort and convenience. ©Ont Ga ave.3 miles past. D. . | lcious flitered cide:, 40c per al containers Apples. 0= Per Bushel. WINETH FARMS (LIve miles from D C. line on Ga tiie doudle brick A rare combination of advantages 2 Stories 8 rooms. built-in garage: just east of 16th Bt and Alasks ¢ NW. Drive out l6th St and turn right on Alaska Ave. to Hemiock Bt. d then right 100 fest to house. Reanced $4.000. -3400 15th Street N.E. (Corner) Exhibition Apartments Furnished by W. & J. Sloane Av Purity of design and superiority of construction— % delightfully situated in a wooded tract of old oak trees making a distinctive and instantaneous appeal to particular people desiring the latest and very best in homes, Compare the exclusive location, the new conveniences, the unusual room sizes and the quiet environment of Westchester . . . compare these distinct advantages with any you may be privileged to consider elsewhere in Washington. We leave the decision with you . . . with pardonable pride. SMAN. Proprieto: Apples and Sweet Cider AT QUAINT ACRES Thousands of baskets of choice fruit st very low prices. Grimes Golden. Delicious, Stayman, Winesap. Old Fashioned Winesan, Special “school lunch size. in ' Sweet cider made on the lected ruit. no pr h Silver Sprin (Route Bemi-detached beautiful new home. just rorth of Lawrence Breet and Just south of Monrog Sireet: Busses Open snd Nehtes Reduced 13000 6403 to 6411 Third Street N.W. etached. Lots 41 by 110 to_alley. Btreet and thence east %o Third Street, or ears pass door. 4710 Chevy Chase Boulevard N.W. Just west Chevy Chi these B evy Chase Club 1'2 squares. A GENUINE BARGAIN—5308 Illinois Ave. N.W. lgflu:fi‘rll:ul‘!l’a. home on this beautiful wide avenue. Regular price, $8,950. 1117 Seventh St. N.E. €:toom and bath home on bie lot, and doublé 1218 Owen Place N.E. (i2th Bt and Florids Ave. NE. A perfect little Ccnvenient to fine churches, schools and the best Drive out Georgia Avenus to country clubs, New d, Rittenhouss ey Veral va; T left, eral ‘varieties farm from carefully s servative. | Drive out 1 firn right on Colesville bike Ontv § miles from the District APPLES, SWEET CIDER| / _Grimes Golden and Delicious apples. | Sweet cider made from clean. Rand-picked apple:. rive tos Rockville, Md., 2 blocks bevond Cgurt House, then one mile out Potomac rd. Rockville Fruit Farm Visit Our New Print Shop —Where we are better equipped than Tver to serve you with printing that tmpresses. . The National Capital Pres FLA. AVE. 3rd and N N.E._ Linc. 6060 FURNACE REPAIRS ~ EMOKE PIPESIMMEDIATE SERVICE. NAT'L 4370, VE. CLE._2823. PLUMBING WORK ON PAYMENTS ve Plood do the work now— Yy on the Budret Flan 3FLOODS v St. Day, Dec. 3700—Evt Real visible values at reasonable prices. Obtainable at $13,400 to $14,200 under a new . and most conveniént purchase plan. grounds. e Special bargain. ‘e out Wisconsin Ave. and just this side of Bra 1 nly or dley Lane turn w Anspect Now and Reserve for Immediate Occupancy Apartments from two rooms and bath to seven rooms and three baths. A dining room, drug store, food stores, and ga- rage right in the building. Mass. Ave. bus passes by the door. WESTCHESTER. CATHEDRAL AVE §_ »91 STREET Your wife is entitled to one of these homes that will lighten her duties, give her proper environment and finacial protection. . A pres “metal arage. only $eB5a house, lust no: Only sarage. Inspect Any Time—Open Till 9 P.M. .R.HOWEN INCORPORATED 131 " STREET NORTHWEST T — To Inspect: Turn right in Western Avenue from A Chevy Chase Circle two squares 1o Rittenhouse Street, right one square to Broad Branch Road. Don't put off SHANNON:& LUCHS E. i e B B B e e B e e e B k. Clev. 0615,

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