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EAL RENT—DESK _SPACE. A'l' lwa: ‘m address, § c} w l ey, Slectrieity: mnn Eufiifln.i for manufacturing, etc. INDUSTRIAL PLANTS. ESTATE SALE—FARMS. | o AL R AR e ‘miles D. i $500. Ad- BEERTI e D . 40-ACRE m . HOUSE. 4.000-egg _incul 20 ‘miles from 5 | gation, 8 Eacrinice, 32. ACRE FRONTING 120 FEET ON State ?a-a ve of oaks in village at ND, sro electric rafiway station; $450. Address Box 4T7-E. Star office. 6 P) . our many indus- e Bouth ‘snd via’ Chesapeake Bay 10 all Darts of the world. In addition we hn\e five trunk lines of R. R. which give u outlet to all parts of the U. 8. We are also near the best gountry. With §ood Toads e n e vers irec ietory No. 1— New brick _ bulldl stories, Basement. Boor 32 Ti- 60 1t. second and third floors 60 n by 98 n heated by steam heat by 60-horsepower boller: elec. " elevator, with s capacity of .200 3 able. Factor: 2— tory brick bullding, one-hait of which 18 60 ft. by 160 and the other half 60 ft. by 100 rt " making floor space all on the ground floor of E This pmgeny is situated at Washington M. d_ Columbus. h 1K {0 Montgomery st Wit that 15 very convenienily located. no better location in this section for a {actory or any kind of bustnens ‘The price is reasonable for the I G fory brick build- & m This_property is nient) A woula ke, 8 Gesirable site for & smail factory of any kind. The price is in_easy feach of s company or individus] »ho would to start with a small capital "Gur Tist Includes all ‘of the Parthwhile lo- eations in the city and surrounding country, covering an area of the best industrial sec- tion. If you contemplate opening any kind of business it will pay you to get in touch With us and let us know your requirement We 'will put forth our very best efforts to make your most sanguine dreams come true. A. 'S. DONIPHAN & SON, 405 Doniphan_Bldg., Alexandria, Va o " Phone Alex. 840. fon and conveni- | R WE HAVE SOME BEAUTIFUL FRONTS ON salt water. 1 to 20 acres, easy terms of Pay- ool e et R R0 B e Hall, 10 ACRES, METAL ROOF, cement porch, S tanies poultry house, SpFIRK. small orchard. 25 hens, 200 chicks, in Cul- c ,m\(- $1,000, h and § x St. Mun com-.u. i ae” e B ;g:o-o‘}" "0 orkn of District line: $8.750 Teasonable terms. WALTERS. 239 Park ave., Takoma Park. Shepherd 3304 evenings 142 ACRES, IMPROVED WITH OLD HOUSE. | some outbujldings. fine land. well fenced anc 3 % “ood ron Tfies” of Frice. S50 00; T1.500 80 . H. ITCH- FOR —_EQUIPPED. GOING DAIRY farm 30 miles from Baltimore; 49 gals miik ily. "Adaress Box UTE. Siar o . 04 ACRES GOOD_LAND. stream HALRTCRET or s clearea. 4415 N ods § Fims “Shd. bath. Turnace heat: large e bank barn, 2 chicken houses. electric- ity, 50 fruit trees, O’Y% )blffl gravel road H!Il?; Caluml‘ll Dlle Ph Buliding "dmber at u 550 ‘Dar Fall THE SUNDAY WASHIN MARCH 6, 1 32— P AR SALE—LOTS. (Continued.) OWN _YOUR OWN HOME BUILD NOW. Materials are cheaper, iabor is cheaper -nd Drices are cheal is the nnumul lots m H’umvme Bms. mo. l down, $10 De 5. "2ANTZINGER._CO. Nat. 5371 945 x st Nw VALUABLE 07 ST 13t e -m 70 feet on rux m adicining the northwest T of 3tn an PR Ta o, Contalarse over. 13000 suare feet: improved by tw0. Inrge Brick dwellings Can be bought very cheap. Full commission to brokers. VERNON G_OWEN. Trustee, Eye 1431 HILLCREST —CORNER MD nlsmz LOTS, sewer and water included: excellent values American University Park—31,080; all im- proved Chevy Chase, D. C.—2 lots, to settle es- southern eXxpost excellent neigh- ANK M. DOYLE, Realtor __District 1960 - D) Sunday. FIRST COMMEBGIAL CORNER. 96 fect on Rhode Island ave ne. in one of the best outlying business centers be purchased at a price that will Thsure s #ood, investment, and profit, THOS. RRELL co oleaitors. _ National 07 Fos” NW. SEVERAL DESIRABLE IU‘I’LD G 5 LOT! and hom= sites in various sections of the t attractive prices and terms. O NcLACHLEN BA 'fipn, Estate Dept.. 10th lnd Real B ational 0430. "fnm sacrifice at $750; 63: 1!"' Corner lot S0 o = o"r:oksss'nzlc.n 40x Water and sewer in Crinee ‘at xoso WOODED, ALL SIZES, LOW PR ICE. IN N. Riltenhouse st., 3. 50- gl ,100 each. E. xyrmmcn. ecialist. NatEQast TASS T Be, MW Emerson iz ¥ 82 0ut ot town owner ‘offers 33,000 Ne- braska ave lot for 32,350 cash e Lot 11 0. 7Sk, 820t A Ten PARMS. COLNTRY PROPERTY, SERVICE stations. Send for 80-page illustrated cata- . details 5-room bungalow. attic, city gonveniences, double sarage, poultry bldes. 3 acres. Price, $4,750, $750_ ca: BRAY & MACGIORG! . Estab. l901__\{|nellnd N.J. BY E FARM ON LEE Highway 25 atnter Civive Tro Kev Brives: 00d state cultivation and fenced: new 5- Foom bungalow. all modery: hot-water heat stock and farming implements _included. Sacrifice price for quick sale. Terms. For further information phone Falls Church 8 am. to 4 p.m. ¢ “SALE—BUSINESS PROPERTTY. GAS STATION SITE: corner, 40xT0 ft. s.w. sts. n.e. _Price, $8,500. 706-708-710 O ST. 20,000 feet fioor [ corner 2nd and H OWNER, Met. 6151. OMMERCIAL, tors; sale or E MODFRN APT. De: 3 < rented at $150 munm for '£10,000 less than E SARVEY, Bhtrter ‘o, K. §150 1000 Vi, ve. TRUSTEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE DOWN- town business site with wide frontage on two very busy streets. To close will consider offer of only $9,500, Address Box 450-E. Star mucx STORE. 3 FLOO! IN APART- ments above. yard. garage. 11th st. near O. Terms. Write OWNER. 1812 Belmont rd. MARKET MEN, ATTENTION. 920 filh ST. N.W. ‘Adjoining New Market. An idesl location for your business. with large store and connecting gaTage for four ears. Most Teasonably priced at §17.500. CHAS. D. National 0036. o4 14ih St NW. 'T- 'USINESS PROPERTY. LOCATION FOR RENT: BEAUTY PARLOR §E Bazber atiop. 910 R 'L ave. ne. Coming focation. 525 8th ST. S.E._LARGE ST¢ 5?’):\ APty Teasonable Temial FOR RENT—_I710 20h ST NW. JUST OFF . Store and dweling n going Jo: petect, condition: . THOMAS . RECAR “Adams 1819, G%QOLII\F STATION Dean Ave. at 44th St. N.E. 6-Pump Filling Station and Assessories for lease, $75 per month. THOS. J. FISHER & CO., INC,, 738 15th St. N.W. Dist. 6830. S‘LE—INV!STHEN’I‘ PROPERTY. ouse. n NLY AVAILABLE Me._4300. D_SEVERAL _ ACRES. 4-ROOM r Baileys ‘Cross Roads, Virginia. small cash pavment. FARM, 107 ACRES, NEARBY i . "ba. residence: 2 barns, large poultry house, tenant house: valuable tim- ber: suitable for tobacco, poultry & dairy. I:rlczd very low, 37. No trades. Clev. POTOMAC RIVER COLONIAL tobacco and general farming. game preserve Description booklet. LEONARD SNIDER & CO.. La Plata, Md $45 ACRE POR 500-A. NEARBY MD.:. WIDE frontage on county rd. near 2 State rds. and prominent country’estates: Iarse dwell; ing; 3 tenant houses: 2 parns: 2 wells; 2 streams; about 5 mlles wire Tencing: con- sider part trade: ter 5149 acre for on State rd. near Clinton, Md.; §-rm. bungalow; 3$750 cash payment: trade. E. RYON CO.. 1216 N. Y. ave.. 3418 14th. DATRY FARM: MD.. BRICK HOUSE; 50_milch cows, test 90, dellvering to Wagh- R s ODERN DA FAR! 30O eaistered cows. Wil uermc‘el 5 DeSHAZO. 1130 14th. _Na. 5520 0-ACRE FARM NEAR CRMN HIGHWAY; good dwelling: large tobacco barn: ex- cellent soll ;nfl hulldlnls $4.750;_terms: cash. WILLIAMS, 3505 Rit- o - COUNTRY HOMES. 35,3508 acres: good seven-room house; sleeping porch; tenant house. Few miles from D. One of the few such places for sale north. Moderate terms. nd attractive 8-room ted near avove. On good i Smooth Nice " view. m 9-room hu\llt 'vears at cost of 10, Another "farge o4 * Colomal mansion worth _restoration, ~ Surrounded by splendid trees. Overlooks beautiful country. Land is mostly fine agri- tulfixrll xrnundl ties Dportuni Yille section and ciose to cement high- en by appointment with M. or R. D. LILLIE, 266 Carroll Takoma Park. D. C. Phone G 3,BRICK HOUSES, ¢ ROOMS. ONE WITH eyly decorated. Rented low at $52.80. Pricea™$1 150 Tor BoiE. Bee Leo ¥’ Haines: lawnr. Xnnnunu ma: Nat'l 7760, 75 FENTON ORTHEAST—$1,500 ;:n(. $18.50; luvnu city; B-room quire 75 Bryant st n.w. trust; brick. SALE OR IXCRANGI. $1,0003100 CASH, BALANCE LIKE RENT: one-rm. building, Takoms Park, Md. fac- jng Siige, Cresk. large lot, or trade. ME. 0218. . Easily kept ;mc f0F "apDrox. Gne-NAIL, CLEAR LOT AND CASH. r.hu“‘_‘ Bome, Iarge lot. nw. Address BEAUTIFOL HOME O ts h 3 e, ffi”‘ "fcun'r:" 1937 Toth u"n‘-"" North W $UTK 10 Getached, DoriBWest PrODOF. erson_0089, o v fl.‘a";“,m".’.... ) euu fi'm’"' WELL | acd the'ha il Stk o-nv.o'n -mm-i T *$140,000 . Jist Tenewe Sl’l‘-lr‘ ot income. ) ‘.’E; ) . National 4482. Roounl G AND BOARDING HODEE. 16 BED rooms. larre dining room. ased; 3-car ‘Illelln!mnmcfl ‘modern; good lnum. Apply el MASS. AVE TS _NEW SEMI-DETACH- 54 home Tooms. 2 baths and bullt-in : ocated only a few blocks ffom e Cathedia Aad bult by one of our best builders. Fost, unusual, pur et $13.850. with relmnl le ‘terms. Will “consider ex- ehlnl’g“ler lmill groverly H. C. BISCOE. —-RM MODERN class nelgn i1 chicken Gvwner. 868G FARM WITH GOOD 4-R. HOUSE g {?"culuvlum: 'S tenant houses:, 5 9 LARGE ROOMS. 2 BATHS: t eendmon nnu ‘Dupont of exchange sect & BISSRL AT Small Clest house: l°"n or screage any location. Address Box RANDON VILLAGE. VA onditlon’, ood 80x115 {t.: homes: 80x115 t rich sarage. bearing n' e Lin. 1142-W. EXCHAN GE. MAIN HIGHWAY: NEARBY mprovements:_trade equity for or Southern States. SUBURBAN. e Droperty neard e Rddress Box 53.D. St DESIRE VIRGINIA PROPERTY- MODERN. close to D. 10 8 rms.: will trade mod- e ok Nome 'with garage: one- trust: Selween: upper Uth and 16ih ste: valued 2t Sl Answer x NEW BUNGALOW FOR CLEAR LOTS northwest: attention _brokers. _G. CHACE. 415_Ct n.w._ Ga. s}n, EXCHANGE 16 LOTS, 20x100 FT.; and water: Bradbury Hetr. M you? E 00D, 1345"E Bt. colp at once. se. Lin- EXCHANGE adjoining Address APARTMENT _WAN. T T Ete, vale 321,000, clear. Rock Oreek. Reply with statement. Box 485-E. Star office = — —WAIEHO‘J!BS- SALE OR LEASE. FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE ON RAILROAD SIDING. Owners not having any further need will sacrifice large. practically new fireproof warehouse, containing over 20,000 sa. ft.| floor space. exclusive of roof that has ramp and also can be used for storage: has two Jarge offices with wash rooms: on a rail- road siding with large loading platform bullt on a lot 100x187 feet. Can be sold with or without adjoining lot, containing 18.750 ft. Within ten minutes from center of city by way of New York ave. 14th and K. CAFRITZ Dist. 9080 = e = '—WAREHOUSES. NEW YORK AVE. NE_3-STORY nmcx warehouse running mmum to N st. and contains about 15.000 sq of floor space Building is in excellent condition and. sit- uated on one of the most prominent bouie- vards lugxr; from Washington. H. WALKER, Blg Eree Catalog, Farms. re valley s 250 1 - llub."uw %oo‘zeu‘r?lmhnd'o‘-:;" “;‘ 3 rees; good 8-room house new 40x60 barn, other bidi 3 gty nnku; $11,800, inc! < horses, tor, machinery. crops: Sre tash: plotare. vfl 8 Brout's catalogue 000 bargains - Write, today. fred CBNCY, 142N Lona TA: Bide Philar Par TO CLOSE AN ESTATE Splendid_ 3i-acre farm. 30 miles from Yashington. DG 1n uonco,‘;.oym;g County. adapted for ike frontage nx shout . wor s, and wire fe jon. is unusually te ingly, tertlle farm offered at a bargain. ED. TOOLE, 2761 Brandywine st. INIA FARMS FOR SALE. We invite your atiention 10 & few of the m-l 7 bargains we ha < d property has ime. mal artaeal dnry or stock and is richly worth_ $10, farm Price for quick sale, $5,500. Easy et . 100 acres, 20 miles I!:t of Al!xlndr(l Va., on good road. This is part of an old colonial ‘estate and has the original house: oD, 5000 Temalr with beautiful m ‘main’ road to hou: Bulldings on' highest point of farm and the gatire | This practically ’ level, ~well Teams ‘and. well mear house. "All cleared tmber for frewood. This is ul te.“"Erice. 1.000 ¢ * Ane ununw?{hea land. located Second Erowth fimber. some. of large enough for railroad ties, and an, ‘Smost ynlimited amount, of ‘wood. is property is 25 The Tistoric clty of | Fredericksburg *and would make an ideal place to subdivide Into mall ferms or would make one of the best e preserve f'nn for aulck sale. $10 per S T & SOl o8 "Doriphan. Bid Alexandriar Va. " "‘Phon'e Alex. 840. RENT—FARMS. g NIARBY MARYLAND—40 ACRES. EXTRA free pasturage. 7-room bungalow. partly fur- nished; free fuel: low cash rent. 1336 N ¥. ave. n'w.. Room 203, second floor. . d mhes” trom § LOTS 403100, TUCKERMAN w, lots 40x100: MAD?’BON st. and MILMA] Cheap for cash. Georgia 000, COLONIAL BEACH, AL LOT suitable for modern hozel home or Alh?— tarium: elevated; 2 sq. from river, north of i water, ‘electricity. sewer installed: usual'business opportunity Address im- mediaicly, OWNER, 1101 Euclid st. n.y l BEAUTIFUL LOTS, 0\’m 63 FT. WIDE, corner; all improvements: close gg:w'&hue Cll;:: 5D")l"o gldldpou cf all three nl: 2 Stat omc only ress Box 491-E, NEAR 15th AND G A ovements ‘: ) . TO ALLEY. LA, GARVEY. District 5710, Roo o Vermont ‘ave._ s NEAR. 7 m <MD wx-m'rmn, UST reduc 472 sa. feet, 5,’; sold; only !lfl".’t hll:ezslt lln alue in the Clly IN GEORGETOWN 35 BY 1. AS- Sessed ot 33.088: willsell for dress OWNER, 1 ST.. NEAR ]xt st. bet Avoly E. B ADAMSON, today. 'Adams e 2 3600 Ad- A 099 National Press Building THREE ACRES OF LAN e lotg, adsolning & sundivision i Glencarlyn: 4 blocks from Lee Boulevard: $2.700. Ad dress Box 40-E. Star ofce. tl. 1680, | ACRES FOR SALE: 250 FEET FROM m\nm\ed State highuay, Seat Pleagant i 1 Capitol Heights 4. 106 Bnlumre 75 Al TA TTLE BE- )'mfl Cmnreniunll Cauntry Club. _Only 5380 Der mcre A bargain. Owner. Address Box 470-E._Star_office. LOT. ~ AMERICAN _UNIVERSITY yater and sewer: $1.200. X 06.D, Star omee, v 4930 DG, CHEVY CHASE, and M ind 2nd trusts available. Ried bids, Jots. Hyatioviie: sultable for bun: n R. al brokers. attention. LTO! 30 DON.. sL 5231 FOR SALE. ACREAGE FOR suanxvmxoflu. airport, cemeteries or public institutions: laree tracts near D_C. line. River 47 Colesvilie Pike. Livingsion rd. TON TO FIVE ACRES, RIVER rd 'hlch road 15 £0 b uni in N poss. ve. 5 s, State rd., nesr D. C. 0’8 acres in Huevie, CE NEAR BALTO. BLVD bargsin, _ only 34 T¥'CO. 338 N. ¥. e WAN‘I'!D—IIAL ES‘I‘A’I'I 1427 Eve CRIFICE . SALE—BUILDING &1 A enst, Bz DaLOING, ITE. |50 ver a and Erie 'H ts.; $350. Atlantic 3191-J. . D C % -conm 0" l5m square 28 c e Hation. A r::"aflnm.':"l”r:n Roo £ ec houses. Addreas Box 94-D, Star T AVE. AND Sth CHEV grade, sewer tran for office. to the| NEAR R ST ft. Trontage, improved u‘.nlul‘llblet 5 7o uses. v oda nnxy 42.500. nmp )u $ ool ds Hetgrs, . _or 1 VY CHASE. D. C. :sxua ELECTRIC AND nm. Bradbury Md.; che o for cash. " Lincoln 5 E SMALL ACREAG! rutesats: S5 sions 3 100 acres. R. D. Ga._3300. m'r~cm all improvements in: $800. assessed at $1.200; BaruainAddress Box 11-D. Brar ‘omee. < 31200 — BLAIR. SILVER SPRING. MD Within_ walking distence one fare and strset car sone: rapidly srowlng and scces- Washington community: conven- 151 ools and stores: all city jmproye- ; e ‘Shep. 33960 $5 CASH—$5 MONTH. Nearby Md, Beautiful lots directly on con- crete road. 20 minutes ride from city. on bus line; gas, elec.. city water, strictly white neighborhood. ~Materials are cheap buid your own home now. J. RIDLEY SHIELDS gyner, 1427 Eve at. niw. Met. 76 o Hyatts Te6-A CHEVY CHASE R CHEVY CHASE Circle—Lot. 55-foot 730 part cash and hlllnce nemnd Faitding ioan to responsible p: | R O [I()l \IIDDH TON, Member Washington Real Estate Box S i COLORED— 13 TOTS 31.00 a month, Admms” 2006 1l 'ATEBJ'IONT P’lofllfl SOUTH RIVER COTTAGE. 5 Tooms, bath: hot and cold water. freplace, screened porches: delightfully _cool. nm!t {ree from 5. Address T office. * NEAR ANNAPOL‘S §1,200 20 acres, 76 feet on waie 2,500 Address Box 476- - UNTRY )ME, ON BEAUTIFU - 281! River, H? miles from Annapolis, Md ‘Bungalow, 6 rooms. bath, servants’ quarters. laundry. !h!l‘lél’ (KIOI‘Abl! (Ilrlte'“n: Sb:::t(h tricity, running artesian water. iny and pier: will finance. JOHN H. FILLER, Abell Building, Baltimore. OPPORTUNITY FOR SUMMER HOME—4 Icts. 25x100 each. for $100 cash: close to l:h in belun!u"y veoded secuon of Her- -an 15! Southern ON'THE BAY NEAR ANNAPOLIS 5 SO0 house with bath, land with trees. fronting dlrecll! on_ wide, sandy beach. 14,350 G. WILLIAMS. 3505 Rittenhouse FURNISHED COTTAGE, 40x14 w-r r 25x100: bay Irnnl eleemcny water: $1.500: terms. © dress Box 357-E, ,Star SDEAL, SOUTH RIVER GOTTAGE bath, fireplace. sneenendc Jorcher. clectricity real bargain. Addre T office. FOR SALE—TWO LOTS NEAR COMMUNITY House at Woodland Beach, both $235. Phone Clarendon_814. LOCATED nest” develop- penke e ‘Address Bay Feam Washingion. flice. HOICE LOTS, 50x150 FT. EACH, AT ?‘m’ihoBelc)lv Md. Phone Clev. 9054-J. * WANTED—TO BUY SHACK place and screened b s =i S CTICH A _REAI RGAIN_PRACTICALLY NEW. Aoty Jarnished 4 1. bath, 2 showers. glassed front and rear porches, copper screened throughout, cozy fireplace, concrete . shrubbery: built for year-round use: located at Sylyan Shores. South River. For particulars call North 5114, or see OWNER on_premises Sunday. WITH FII Address Box 26 M M WASHINGTON. on Potomac, concrete road, over twelye hun- Gred feet sand beach; in’ Virginia. ng into Mount Vernon. Jremendous ber CLYDE C. DUNNING: e, 503150, price, 1. peake Beach. Md.all Lincoln 2481. |DRY 1SSUE SPLITS SOCIETY IN DETROIT Campaigns Are Launched | Daily for Supporters on Both Sides. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, March 5.—Society in De- T | troit, long dominated by two mnon-llv prominent women, has been split into two camps by the action of the two leaders in taking up the torch for and against the presemt prohibition law. Esch group, with its respective leader in the thick of the fight, is heading the active movement among Michigan women for and against the eighteenth amendment. Every day sees a cam- paign launched for the enlistment of more “names” in the city's social reg- ister to aid the respective causes. At the head of the prohibition forces, a leader in the campaing for retaining present prohibition laws is Mrs. Truman H. Newberry, long-time social leader and wife of a prominent Michigan resident. Heading the opposition camp —the Woman's Organization for Na- tional Prohibition Reform—is Mrs. Frederick M. Alger, socially prominent descendant of an old Detroit family. Mrs. Alger is the active chairman of the | Michigan branch of the women's or- ganization. Ally of Prohibition, Mrs. Newberry, for years actively allied with the Women’s Christian Tem- perance Union, began her campaign by allying herself with the allied forces for prohibition. greatly increasing the force of that organization. She opened her campaign several months after Mrs. Alger had begun her vigorous activity in the Women's Organization for Pro- hibition Reform. “Since it became evident that well known persons in Detroit were deter- mined to make an organized fight for the release of liquor, it seemed my duty to do what I could to help the other side, in line with my own convictions,” ! said Mrs. Newberry. Thereupon she be- gan a canvass of Detroit soclety lead- ers and presented publicly the names of prominent persons who, she said, had promised to assist her. Mrs. Alger, the leading figure in an organization ' claiming nearly 50,000 Michigan woman members, has been for several months the head of the women's movement seeking a referendum on the prohibition question. Other social lead- ers in Detroit, as well as in other Mich- igan cities, have rallied to her banner. “I admit it takes a good deal of cour- age to come out boldly to battle against ithe Constitution of our country,” she says, “but we must be bold if we are to save our young people.” One of Most Active. Under Mrs. Alger's leadership, the Women'’s Organization for National Pro- hibition Reform has become one of the most active socleties in Michigan. She maintains headquarters in a downtown Detroit office building, has a staff of assistants, and makes lengthy speaking tours in many parts of the State. She has enlisted the aid of society matrons and Junior League members to raise funds for her organization. A definite separation in the fourth | city’s soclal ranks has followed the cam- paigns of Mrs. Newberry and Mrs. Alger. Society functions in the exclu- sive Grosse Pointe farms section, De- troit suburb, where the principals re- side, are buzzing with plans and cam- paigns for both sides, and practically every soclally important woman is en- listed in one or the other group. WILL PAY CASH FOR 1 OR 2 ACRES OF land on_ water front near Fort Foot. sm.e o | Afldru& Box 52-D. Star amu ATER. LOT WANTED. TR0 Wash. Auditorium " stock. for_every do worth 3 co WAT! ucrrs A or those oY not want to ooa much t who want to be located in e nice com- ity Cwith restrictions. - All lots fronting directly on water, with hard beaches. Abun- . Preedom from mosnunou Less than an hour from Washington. Cottages hlve jarge liv- with _ fireplace, large screened d rooms, kitchen and bath. See ‘Sthoe. 3p20aeTe faem Souls e, S, 2% 34 100 modern hase ver: oo R Silana, house. and 3 ¢ 'St. Clement Bay. Scres with'two houses and farm build. Tachinery and stock on Chesapeake Tand Tevel and fertite. Carroll St.. Takoma Park. Ga. 3300. * PATUXENT RIVER. 30-acre farm, on deep water broken shoreline, private 'lt:n. point and covers. r: long, P peausitl On best Lower Patuxent fishing and oyster grounds; tobacco barn and {enant house: good road snd splendid yalue for price asked, §3.500. Address Box e. ~_ OUT-OF-TOWN REAL ESTATE. new Sta State highway, Shenandoah cash, balance terms. See this bargain. A. KING. Strasburg, Va. COUNTRY ESTATE. . JILL, PRINCE OF e e ovely pioden Zlectricity, path, springs. besu 10T high. elevation. delightful Summer or year-round home, fruit trecs, facing on new State cement highway; reasonable rent. For particulars see Nationel $862. REAL_ESTATE LOANS. ANY, Lonasy Decatur 2132, ,Husband Bode 1ite '| So Wife Can Get His $285,000 Insurance Note Says, “You Can Now Take Place in Society Where You Belong.” ¥, the Assoctated Press. CHICAGO, March 5.— Albért E. Shutz, 48, head of a millinery im; - ing firm, shot and killed hlmsexr ngn- day and left a note saying he was doing it so his wife could collect $285, 000 in insurance and return to her place in society. The body was found in the firm's offices, at 220 North Michigan avenue, after Mrs. Shutz became alarmed over his failure to come home to dinner and telephoned a business partner. ‘The note was addressed to Mrs. Shutz and said: “With that money you will be able to take your place in society where you belong. Do so without regret. I am doing this so you can be happy. I suppose some le will call me a quitter, but you know I wasn’t afrald wél‘xe, rr:]m' am :‘:rmu to die.” only request was that the be cremated. L mmmmwm.Auxm firsts, seconds. Co.. 1336 N. e :i‘ué‘i-‘:’{"‘(im Rew Jori ave. Nat_i1e MONEY TO LUAN. SMALL FUND FOR nrvmm LOGAN st. n.w MO . C. REAL ESTA' Call or write J. HopKiNs: it Pot. 2277. el sed. Church OONTTACTS PN Do househol . "Room 805, 1016 Ve ave o rure) mnl PR 3 500—] ‘wk. 1.000—Pay 34. 80 k. BOCDMAR 50 sxl Bond Bde. Nat "—1st, 2nd AND 3rd -mum Merreat uick service: reasonable. 3200, repay $1.50 Wk 4300, repay $2.50 wk Tepay $4:50 wi 2'300, repay $12.50 Wk $3.000. rep-yusuwk $3:308; Tepay $1750 wk _$4.000. repay $20.00 wx Above payments i include m&ln:lx;llt and ing terest_and can inged monthly an b monthly. Also lo:n. m Dearby Md, & Va. 3 3 «_-n_m_mm_m-_!___ ‘ o QUICK MONEY BRILARD JOMPTETE CTRANSAC TIONS. 'COURTEQUS SERVICE. F. WARING, 116 PAT. NW. NAT'L 9172 MONEY Up to $300.00 On_Household Goods and QUICK AND_COURTEODS SERVICE ™ AMERICAN FIDELITY LOAN CORPORATION, 107 Carroll St., Tak: Watkins Bld; 'a ol';ll:l:lkn MN?G Eflln 2057 CHAPTER LXX. ND now once lsnln. Judy was in the city. But this time she knew she would never go back. She and Stan were in & dead- Jock. She could not go forward to happiness—but she would never go back along that old road she had walk- ed with Stan. That of heartaches and ecstasy—that fool's paradise of & young girl's dreams, was barred forever. Now she knew that love was not a matter of starshine and romantic pas- s It was a thing of loyalty and warm deep respect. It was a thing of comradeship and passion, of sacrifice and renunciation. It was a thing of absence and loneliness . She had not left in sl: nl: %f he-dl::g pride and outrage, as she had run a that other time. Deliberately, almost coldly, she had walked out of the Car- ter house and gone up to a city hotel The next day she had sent a man for | her trunks and had them stored. She hunted for a small apartment— no easy task to find a place which Was suitable, for she had taken Side- | The dog_was a precious slip with her. 2 in her loneliness; companion now moreover he seemed a link to the past, | with Nick. Eventually she found a place where she could have him—out in the Marina | district, a pleasant three-room apart- | ment, where the windows gave her a glimpse of flashing blue bay and steamers _gliding into the harbor | through the Gate. It was the view which decided Judy. It seemed to bring her nearer to the thought of Nick. Along that blue path went the great white and gold steamers which reached China. Perhaps Nick's eyes would rest on that very boat she was watching now . . tion—but it brought ‘comfort. Made the Pacific seem not quite so wide. Very different this dwelling in the city from that other time, thanks to Madame’s generosity. She was To frightened and forlorn girl now. Se- cure and luxuriant . . . yet there were times when Judy thought wistfully, that that other girl she had been was the luckier of the two. At least she had been alive, even though she had fought desperately for life. Now Judy felt that she had passed into some strange country, where life was sus- pended and only the form of things remained. To wake in the morning and see the day stretch ahead like an endless des- ert . .. Why work when there was no need? It only kept some girl out of work . . . some girl who needed the support. Charity . . . Yes. She could give money, but that did not fill the empty days. A strange empty time . . . sometimes even Nick did not seem real. Mo- ments of panic—childish panic—when she closed her eyes and tried to recall his face and found that she could not o so. The mood would pass. She would sit up half the night writing to him | . ._. opening her heart. Perhaps because she was no longer under the same roof with Stan, Nick wrote more freely—more at length. They grew to know each other’s inner- | most minds very well, in those letters. perhaps more seachingly than personal contact might have accomplished. Letters from Summerfield were like letters from a lost world. Now and then Rosamond Curley wrote to her— cheerful, trivial gossip about the town she had once known, people she had grown up among. It was much like picking up a book she had read long ago and half forgotten. Not even the letter which came from Aunt Hetty's sister, telling of the peaceful death of the old lady, seemed really real. Aunt Hetty had raised an orphan girl long ago—a wistful, romantic, impulsive girl —a little dumb, Judy now thought. That had all been in another lifetime Surely there was little about this potsed and reserved young woman which recalled the Judy Denning of Summerfield. She got up later and later each | morning. Sometimes it was only Side- slip’s impatient whining to get out for his daily run which forced her out then. So easy to dream over the morn- ing paper in the sunny dinette; to sit listless, watching the ships slide along the blue space of water outside the window. Why struggle? . . . Why feel too deeply? Look how she had struggled for happiness—Look how she had suf- fered in this last year . . . Her mar- riage wrecked. Her baby dead. Her loved one snatched away to the other end of the world beyond her reach . . . Better to_drift and not feel too deeply . . . Mary came to see her and was shocked. Judy did not realize how thin and pale she had grown. “I was abso- lutely frightened!” Mary explained vig- orously that night to her husband, “she seemed to be all eyes, and there was an expression about her that just wrung my heart. As though she ex- pected someone to take a swing at her and she was too proud to duck!” But, Mary-like, she hid this apprehension under a bracing scolding. “You can’t let yourself go like this, Judy! You'll go to seed! You've got to rouse yourself. Get a system into your days and live up to it. Like the British consul on the tropical island, you know . . . Though he was the only white man, he always dressed for din- ner just to keep himself up to the mark. And you should have a maid; it isn’t good to live alone like this!” “All right,” said Judy meekly, “Tll dress for dinner! But not the mal Mary! 1 want to be alone. I d want anyone around, all the time Judy faithfully kept her word. She rose at an early hour and took Side- slip for a long, brisk walk over the hills. Her favorite course became the busy Italian district down near Fisher- man's wharf. For hours she would sit FARM AND GARDEN. Spite Wife A childish no- | By 'S N Ann Forester there, watching the fishing fleet come in, picturesque wet brown nets in the bottom of the launches. Watching the lumber boats, down from the Sound. Or feeling her heart following the great ocean liners as they cautiously nosed their way through the Gate. The Itallan fishermen became used to the exotic figure who came down to | sit on the wharf every day. Judy, in smart knit sports suits and small French hats was a queer contrast to these sufroundings. She became a voluntary recluse for the most part. Only when Mary came up to the city did she enjoy companion- ship. But there was system in her days. She ate at regular hours. She joined an athletic club and learned to |5wlm Three times a week she went by herself for half an hour swimming in the tank. And gliding through the | limpid pale green water, or floating on her back, looking up into the curved marble ceiling, Judy found her mind reverting to that swimming party at the old beach house. The thundering | terror of great waves breaking over her head—and Nick's strong brown arms . . . his steadying voice as—he pulled her out of the surf . . | How strange life was, she thnugm a | little sadly. Then, she had cared so | tremendously about Stan . . . Or no, |it was about the person she had thought Stan to be. Now she knew | that the Stan she had loved had never \runy existed. She had been a loving idolater, bowing down to an image which she created herself. Other women, seeing the pretty, smartly clothed girl so often at the | club, tried to be friendly. Judy was courteous but distant. She wanted no one. She had learned to distrust people. Mary gave her the gossip of Lock- wood. There was much talk of her departure. Among Mary's set, much criticism of Stan for his treatment and his_subsequent behavior. “Stan seems bent on burning himself up as quickly as possible,” Mary said one day, as they sat lunch in Judy's apartment. “He's almost con- stantly with Dart Towers in the day- time, and that hard-drinking country club set. And at night he's_mostly at Amy’s or Eunice He and Eunice are never alone—I think he's ultra care- ful about that . . . doesn't want to give you any loophole to reach him. But they dance together a great deal—and Fred Wilson watching—Judy, I tell you, some day that man will blow up! And when he does, heaven help the inno- cent bystander, because it will be a slaughter.” “You mean . . . he's jealous of Stan.” “I mean that Eunice is going to hang herself if¥ you give her enough rope. | And. the Lord knows, rope isn’t miss- | ing!” Then Mary abruptly changed the subject. “Saw another of your good friends the other day—Georgia de Haas. Stop- ped me on the street and asked about | you. Looking for information! Yet. oddly enough, she seemed to know your address. That woman has an uncanny | faculty for finding things out.” Eunice . . . Georgia . . . Stan . . . They seemed echoes of another life. It | seemed to Judy that she had been here | in this apartment by herself for a thou- sand years. Like—she thought a little desperately—a ship in a land-locked | harbor, idly rocking and rotting away. Would' anything ever happen again! But not even Judy's wildest dreams could guess what the future was crash- ing down upon her. (Tomorrow—A Surprising Visitor.) Disabled American Veterans Meetings This Week. ‘Tuesday, National Commander’s night, District Building. Wednesday, Department Execu- tive Committee, Transportation Building. Saturday, 1:30 p.m., Job Com- mittee. W. C. Sorrells spoke before the Job Committee February 27, emphasizing the necessity of getting the occupations of the men not yet gontacted as soon as possible. He advised that the contact men should determine what job each man was fitted, for then an application for that job could be sent to him, thereby saving the Civil Service Com- mission work and helping the D. A. V. Mrs. Noyes of the District of Colum- interchanged reports. National Comdr. E. Claude Babcock reported 54 contacts and 15 placements for the past week. Ree Chapter held a special session February 26 at the Soldiers, Sailors and Marines’ Club to consider the consti- tution and by-laws written by the Exec- utive Committee. This constitution gives the Executive Committee, which is composed of the elective officers and the Jjunior past commander, power to make contracts, expenditures and decisions on all action taken by the chapter, It was adopted. A resolution was unanimously adopted thanking John Arthur Shaw and assur- ing him that the chapter would support him in every way for his letter in the ‘Wednesday Evening Star on Veterans' preference. Mrs. O'Hara announced a card party, March 16, at the Hamilton Hotel. There will be tables for auction and contract bridge, 500 and pinochle. A wrestling match and an old-time dance are being planned. The regular meetings of this chapter are the first and third Fridays. It was decided that the third Pridays should FARM AND GARDEN. WANTED—MONEY. WANTED—$35.000 FOR STRAIGHT FIRST trust to replace amortising first recently given: property owner occupied apartment house. excellent condition, 100% full. Phone Natlonal 1571 fo iculars. . AUTO LOANS. S QR 903 N. Y. Ave. Met. 4631 AUCTION SALES—TOMORROW. MOVING—PACKING—STORAGE. ADAM A. WESCHLER & EON. Auctioneers. 915 E s'r (OTICE COLLATERAL AT AUCTION. By virtue of the powers of sale contained in"{no certain promissory notes made by an se: y in 0 1580500 cach: dated eyapie. on OF befre” six . and one of each of said notes now owned and held by each of the undersiened, default having been made in the payment of said notes, the undersigned ¥ill sell at public uction,’ at the officy X t ton. District of Columbla, on MONDAY. T SEVENTH DAY OF MARCH. 1932, AT TEN OCLOCK AM. the following colisters] posited _with and Dot o the “"above-described otes’ promisssory note si(n!d by Harr) Wll’dmm and Thomas P. $650,000. with in- e Tate of ed July 29, payal John L detsch Without. pecourse to. him, Cured by first deed of trust on lot numbered 119 in square numbered 375, in the eity of Washington, District of Columbia, with the improvements thereon known 85 the Print; craft Building, situaté on uth_side o street, fwnn betweep 9th and 10t the col may be adver! a At the Fiek 'and cost of the defaulting pur- chaser, after five days’ ndnll‘nment of such resale in some newspaper published in Wash- ington. D. C. er. details regarding col- leteea o e wm and examination of such col “Alt lication to & 1 e’ undersisned of o the suc: ither tioneer. mh2,3.4.8.6 Long Distance MOV—ING delphia, New ost Noftolk. "Fittshursh "a'n d points en route. Established 1896, DAVIDSON TRANSFER & S’I'OIAGE co | 117 W st N.W. HAtional 1460 Adtional Delivery SAssociation Inc. muchothAvd{vz .D.C. wvvrsr RATES LOCAL & LONG DISIANCE MOVING 10 EV[R EREENS 85¢ Order Now for Spring Delivery Field-Grown Stock, 250 Acres 85S¢ s Plants. FX"GLoVen s owori T Divesirion colors 3" praaty Boxwaon. "3 select o e s w o dlrons Pom EVERYTHING GUARANTEE The Fischer | Nursenee Chrysanthemums HARDY EXHIBITION Planting directions with each order HARDY BUTTON VARIETIES BROWN BETTY—, Yon e WHITE DOTY—white 8 PLANTS FOR $1.25 Doutle - Shasts’ Dulsies, ions. Dept. 11 Easton, Pa. ADD 25¢ FOR PACKING bia Chapter of the American Red Cross | MARINE CORPS NEWS Scheduled movements of naval trans- ports will conform to a semi-revised | schedule owing to emergencies arising jin the Far East, it was stated, although the regular schedule may in some in- stances not be changed. The Senior Marine Examining Bsard has passed Capt. Clifton B. Cates to the grade of major. Owing_to detachments of commis- sioned officers, the memberships of the senfor and junior boards have been | changed by order of Maj. Gen. Com- mandant Ben H. Fuller and are now constituted as follows: Col. Jultus S. Turrill, Col. Rush R. Wal- lace, Col. John C. Beaumont, Col. Doug: las C. McDougal, Col. James J. Meade, Col. Percy F. Archer, assistant quarter- master; Lieut. Col. Albert E. Randall, | Lieut. Comdr. Earl Richison, Medical Corps, U. S. N.. Lieut. Comdr. Earl C. Carr, Medical Corps, U. S. N., members, and Capt. Prank B. Goettge, U. S. Ma- rine Corps, recorder. Jun&or Marine Examining Board— . Gen. Dion Williams, president; Lleut Col. Charles R. Sanderson, as- sistant quartermaster; Maj. Robert L. Denig, Maj. David L. S. Brewster, Maj. Paul C. Marmion, assistant adjutant | and inspector; Maj. Harold C. Pierce, Maj. Harry K. Pickett. Maj. William H. Rupertus, Capt. Carl S. Schmidt, Lieut. Comdr. Earl Richison, Medical Corps, U. S. N; Lieut. Comdr. Earl C. Carr, Medical Corps, U. S. N, members, and Capt. Frank B. Goettge, recorder. Marine Retiring Board—Brig. Gen. Dion Williams, president; Col. Douglas | C. McDougal, Col. James J. Meade, Lieut. Comdr. Earl Richison, Medical Corps, U. S. N.; Lieut. Comdr. Earl C. Cnrr Medical Corp.s U. 8. N., members, and Capt. Prank B. Goettge, ‘recorder. Corps Reservists in the District of Co- | Jumbia are anxiously looking forward to the coming Summer, when they expect that the present Congress will have had | made ample provision for their annual training at one of the nearby beach camps. Instructions for the encamp- ments are stated to include small arm: instruction, sketching, map reading, sig nals, trench war building, etc. Brig. Gen. Harry Lee, commanding | the Parris Island, S. C., recruiting sta- tion, has sent 20 men to Norfolk for special instruction and later assignment to the detachments, respectively, aboard vessels of the Special Service Squadron. Marine Gunner Kennard F. Bubier, now stationed at Quantico. has been de- tached and assigned to duty with the | air service of the corps now on duty in Nicaragua. The following officers having passed the required examinations, respectively, have been promoted to the indicated grades: Capt. Norman E. True, Capt. Brady L. Vogt. First Lieut. Francis J. McQuillen, First Lieut. ‘Thomas A. Wornham, First Lieut. Thomas B. Jordan and Chief Q. M. Clerk Willis V. Harris. GOLP STATEMENT. NEW YORK, March 5 ().—The daily gold statement of the New York Federal Reserve Bank showed an in-| crease of $5,000 in the gold under ear- mark for foreign account. No EX‘DOI"A or lmporu were reported. PAB.IS BOU’ESE PRICES. PARIS, March 5 (#).—Three per cent rentes, 78 francs 80 centimes; 5 per cent loan, 100 francs 95 centimes; ex- change on London, 89 francs 19 cen- times. The dollar was quoted at 25 francs 41% centimes. POTATO MARKET. CHICAGO, March 5 (#) (United States Department of Agriculture) — Potatoes, 61 cars; on track, 216 cars; total United States shipments, 986 cars; dull, trading slow; sacked, per hundredvdxm Wisconsin round whites, No. 75280; unclassified, 6712a70; Idaho 'Russets, No. 1, 1358135. few fancy higher. SAFEWAY DIVIDENDS. Safeway Stores, Inc., has declared the | regular quarterly dividends of $1.25 on the common, $1.75 on the 7% preferred and $1.50 on the 6% preferred, all pay- able April 1 to stock of record March 18. be devoted to social affairs. Department Junior Vice Comdr. Werner spoke on “Employment,” and asked the chapter to co-operate with the Job Committee. Federal Chapter on March 8, in the board room of the District Building, will observe National Commande: night. E. Claude Babcock, national commander; A. W. Collins, regional | supply officer, Veterans' Administratio: R. C. Houlahan, Ralph Chambers, na- tional rehabilitation officer; H. B. Law- ton, contac: representative, and M. Mustang, adjudicator Veterans’ Admin- istration, will speak. ‘The proposed reduction of five per cent in the pay of the Irish Free State police is not to be enforced, but econ- omy is to be effected by other means. STEAMSHIPS. rese e TeIps: " 2043 w"“ wfl‘sfi Senior Marine Ex‘flunln: Board— | Brig. Gen. Dion Wilflams, president BERLIN POLICE FAIL INONLY TTSLAYINGS Rank Favorably With Widely 1 Known Units in London } 8204 Paris. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, March 5—Less well known |than the French Surete or Scotland Yard, Berlin's eriminal police depart ment has a record of solving all but 11 slayings here since 1928. This, in the world’s third largest city, ranks favor- ably with the more publicized London and Paris detective departments. Of the 11 unsolved cases, police said, the slayer was known in two cases, but the officers were unable to obtain evi- dence to convict. ‘Two of the 11 killings that thus far | have baffied the police were dismember- | ment cases, one of whose victims has | not been identified. In the series the absence of ‘“crimes passionelles” is \ | marked. | Body Widely Scattered. | One of the cases in the “unsolved” portfolio is that of the unidentified | man whose body was found in four | widely scattered places in the Land- wehr Canal. Police believe this slaying, | first evidence of which came to light in August, 1928, was the work of a person highly skilled in the use of | surgical instruments and suffering from | mental lapses, The other dismemberment case was that of 24-year-old Ilse Koenig, parts of whose body were found two weeks after she disappeared. The case which aroused the greatest furore was the slaying of Hilde Zeper- nick, 11, whose body was found in the | basement of an unfinished house. An aged man, residing in the neighborhood, was arersted. Police said they were satisfied he was the slayer. His family, showing signs of insanity in both the father’s and in the mother’s line, was brought into the case against him. Previous assaults were alleged, but the man was freed. ‘Woman Slain for Nickel. Berlin's cheapest unsolved slaying was that of Marie Groffe, slain by a robber for “two groschen,” about a nickel. The slaying of Ewald von Schale- panski, who dropped the “von” by day while driving his taxicab and reinsert- ed it in his name by night when he strode, fashionably clad, through Ber- lin's ‘hight life, attracted wide atten- on. He was slain_in December, 1929, and repercussions of the killing were heard in all quarters. Police said Schale- panski was a gigolo and was slain be- | cause of his escapades, but they were at a loss to name the slayer. | _All the modern detective methods play their part in the work of the crim- inal police, working under 15 division | chiefs, Microscopes, test tubes and re- ‘ions aid cameras in tracking down illers. Trade Trends By the Associated Press. Chain Stores—Sales ‘of the first 12 chain and mail order systems to report for February record a decrease of nearly 7 per cent from the dollar volume for the same month last year. This was regarded as a fair showing, in view of price reductions. Food Canning—An attempt to re- gain a substantial portion of the to- mato packing business for the East is seen in the recent move of several leading canners in New Jersey and neighboring States in lowering con- tract tomato prices and adoption of the grade plan for their purchases, For the first time in nearly 20 years, it 13 said, the prices offered to Eastern tomato growers are near a parity with prices being offered to growers’ in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Utah and other im- portant areas. Rubber.—The uncertain tone of the crude market for mary months has kept buyers out of the market, with the result that inventories have fallen to | levels far below what might be termed normal, according to reports in rubber manufacturing circles. Many of the manufacturers appear to feel that the recent drop in the prices of crude rub- ber to new low levels and the mark- down in tire prices by three large pro- ducers have eliminated a good deal of the improvement noted lately in trade sentiment. Shoes.—Trade circles hear that the Endicott Johnson Co. since the begin- ning of the current selling season, De- cember 1, has shipped about 20 per cent more shoes, measured in units, than a year ago, and 15 per cent more in dollar value. e An extremely small fraction of the sun’s total heat is received by the earth. STEAMSHIPS. a New a\.\l: u‘