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THE EVENIN G STAR, WASHINGT( N, D. C., FRIDAY, JULY 15, 193 #¥¥ A3 EVICTED VETERANS CAMP ON LAWNS Vacant Houses Nailed Up After Being Restored to Owners by Police. Evicted yesterday from the eight privately-owned houses they occupied ‘without authority in the 2100 block New York avenue Wednesday night, nearly 150 bonus veterans from South- ern States camped on the front lawns of the dwellings last night, and today prepared to make their stay there a | permanent one. An order from Brig. Gen. Pelham D. | Glassford, chief of poli following a protest by the owner, M. Frank Rup- pert, to Commissioner Herbert B. Crosby yesterday, resulted in their being ordered out of the houses just before du The vetera eaded by I C. Schooler of Te: moved the mor than a score of beds and cots dona by residents of the neighborhood onto he front lawns. A cook stove, also given the bonus men, was set up, and breakfast served there this morning. The veterans have in store a quantity of food donated by neighbors. The eight houses, formerly by colored tenants, were vacant and advertised for rent when claimed by the Southern contingent of the B. E. F. The houses were open, accordin to Schooler, and none of the doors or | windows was forced. After they were ejected last night, however, H. H. Carter, agent for the property, had the dwellings securely nailed up. Capt. Edward Kelly, commandant of No. 3 precinct, said he expects to in- | duce the men to move away from their | encampment. on front lawns of these house the Boulevard | Apartment, o The men | had spent yesterday thoroughly clean- | ing the premises, scrubbing floors and washing _windows, as_well as cutting down tall weeds which had overgrown she ground surrounding the houses. CONGRESS EXTENDS BONUS TRAVEL TIME! New Resolution Fixing July 25 Limit on Return Home Privi- lege Awaits Signing. occupied Both branches of Congress completed | action e yester on a resolution ding untl 3 portunity | trans- to ' their ‘eVterans' Administra- por homes from the tion The original authority for making | these travel allowances to veterans will- | ing to return to their homes would have expired today. The new resolution, tending the time, needs only the Presi- dent’s signature. The new resolution also provides that the Veterans’ Administration may pro- vide for transportation by automobile as well as by railroad. CERTIFICATE ISSUED FOR B. E. F. DEATH, Baby Succumbed From Natural Causes, Officials Held, but Camp Doctor Still Faces Probe. A certificate of death from natural | causes was issued today in the rase of an infant daughter of a bonus marcher, who succumibed to an testinal infection at Childrens’ Hospital | yesterday. Police. however, are still holding for investigation the non-resi- dent physicians who treated her. { peunded his philosoph 1 Cross-section of the marc night. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. HE mind of the B. E. F. reasonings and rationalizatiol which are the ground of this w the ns ation of hundreds of minds whose e ngs flow in roughly parallel channels. And these thou- sands of minds cover the wide range from the highly original economic philosopher to the purely parrot-like ! creature of mass suggestion, from that of the man who would bring mankind a new gospel to that of the man who does not look beyond the immediate | uses of a few hundred dollars. i There are real thinkers among these men. Some of them have grappled e mncomprehensible question of e world as pro- ge professor and at appear to be highly what is foundly in the Mind.” xample, the man who, hours, sat wearily on front of the Librar: afternoon and ex- . He said: “It's a whirl in the minds of lots of these fellows. A whirl in the mind is about the most dangerous thing I know of. “Here's what I mean. A man clearly in his own mind just how why the bonus should be paid. He clearly that he is entitled to it. But he just cant express himself. He hasn't got the words to present the full fo of his thoughts to anybody else. Somebody argues with him. He knows where the point is missed, but he hasn't got the words to bring it out to rebut the argument. Take Maj Glassford—the speech he made the night we came in was good. The fel- lows recognized that he was a friend and a smart diplomat, but they also knew that he was on the other side, that something was missing. Each man knew what it was but he couldn't get it into words. “Now, when that happens there is a whirl in the mind. There is a lot of energy stirred up which should be given vent through words. Since the words are not available it becomes a pent-up energy. Test, dissatisfaction, feelings of rebel lion. I probably can put it in words better than most of them. I have had Sleepless for the curb in Congress yesterday sees and sees rs as they kept up their stea dy ressing itself in un- | taken the jobs and brought about all | folks, T figu: this destitution. “Yet 1 never heard of a tax even proposed on the automatic machine. Instead we continue to tax men. We tax the slave and let the master go. There would be 1) guestion of money | to pay the bonus if Congress would confiscate the wealth of these machines | — every machine in proportion to the amount of unemployment it causes. Instead these iron monsters are sacro- sanct from the tax gatherer. I am not proposing capital machine, but the machine itself. “Our form of government is good enough. Personally, I can't think that the form of government makes any difference whatsoever. If we should set up communism or absolute mor- archy tomorrow nobody would know the difference unless they read the newspapers. For a government is merely a wrapping around the psy- chology of a people. The psychology of the American people would not change—so the wrapping of government Would make 1o difference. ~We would be foolish to change “America has forgotten the great truth the one enduring thing abou’ national life is its culture—its ari, its music, its poetry, its science. There is no enduring value to the dollar. There is no enduring value in exchange of goods—but only making cf goods And only in the making of goods as culture is put into them—es this culture permeates down- vard from the artist to the carpenter, ‘om the poet to the bootblack. “A Return to Real Values.” “I have been in the hotel business most of my life. This is the only year since I was a small child that I haven't been able to make my way. But that is not the reason I'm here. The bonus is only a little thing. I joined this move- ment because I realized it is the only constructive movement in the country toward a return to real values. The veterans are the only ones who could put it over. They may not realize their aim in just my words—but that is the underlying philosophy. It's what the poor fellow feels but can't say. “This is fundamentally a for the overturning of superfici demand for freeing man from the tyranny of the machine.” Other sidelights on the mind of the B. E P to tax either labor or | Both are equally slaves of the | I propose taxing nothing | in the | Mind of the B. E. F. a Curious Enigma REAL THINKERS DISCOVERED AMONG BONUS MARCHERS. pace in an area reserved on the Capitol Plaza last —Underwood Photo. e, have raised enough food on that farm since the war to feed us for 200 years or more. And here we haven't a bit of it. I'm in the bread line in Washington and my wife—God knows what she’s doing. She's living wherever she can get a roof over her head. “God, when that policeman told me to move it made me burn—right through the soles of my feet I was burn- ing. But he’s just holding his job. It's not his fault “That farm was stolen from me. All that food for 200 years was stolen from me. The Government is to blame for letting it happen. I don't care about the bonus—it's only 2 per cent interest, as I figure it, on what was stolen from me. “All my old neighbors are in the same fix. Why only a month ago one of them took three pigs to the market and sold them—for 3 cents a pound. Then he tried to buy one of them back from a marketman. but the money he got from the three wasn't enough.” A “traflic_engineer” from California: “I think I know more than anybody about transporting citrus fruits—how to make up cargoes and so forth. I had it all fixed to go into business for myself— to open an office and to handle the transportation problems of the small grower. So I borrowed the first $750 on my bonus policy. Then my wife got appendicitis and I had to spend it all on the operation. Then I lost my job and haven't worked for a year. She and the two_children are living with her folks “I've got to get the bonus now—here’s | why—" | He took from a worn pocketbook a | tiny picture of a little girl and a piece {of pink writing paper torn along the creases. On it was scrawled in a child- ish hand: “Dear daddy. T am well. are. Your little pal.” That bit of paper is the man’s most prized possession. He obviously has taken it out and read it hundreds. per- haps thousands of times, on this long rek across the continent “That's what she always calls herse.f —daddy’s little pal’— he seid as his eves filled with tears. “—— —— them, I've got to get it.” |FUNERAL IS F.’LANNED 1 hope you al val- | ues, for restoring the dignity of life. | Woman Who Operated Millinery for 25 Years FOR MISS L. ANDRESEN “MARCH OF DEATH" | | | HALTED BY REDS Robertson Orders Men to Bil- lets When Radical Wing Invades Grounds. (Continued From First Page) the board’s authority after a detach- | ment of heavily-armed Marines had | been called to the Capitol by an order | emanating frcm a source yet unknown. Today's statement did not explain who ordered the Marines called out, and this | remained a mystery witn Vice President | Curtis denying responsibility. At the time the police head was per- sonally breaking up a crowd which had | gathered cn the Capitol grounds op- | posite the Congressional Library, where the left wing or Communist group | finally held a meeting after their parade. Gen. Glassford immediately answered by issuing a statement pointing out | that “the responsibility for law and order” in the District “has been placed | squarely upon my shoulders” and that as superintendent of Metropolitan Police “it became necessary in this emergency to take from the group known as the Capitol Police Board, the responsibility for maintaining law and order in the Capitol grounds ® * =" | The statement, writ'en with a pencil while seated in the sidecar of a police motor cycle on the Capitol Plaza, | follows: “The situation at the Capitol grounds bas been fraught with dangers during the past three days. A small group of less than 400 veterans from the West Coast recently arrived, has insisted jupon occupying the Capitol grounds until Congress adjourns “The situation has demanded the | uimost diplomacy in avoiding an issue over some unimportant regulations which would (1 as recruits the many | thousands of \~ rans not participating | in_this occupation. “There have been no disorders, no damage to property and no large con- gregations during the past three days, except of citizens attracted by the spectacle. Single Authority Needed. “With so many members of the Cap- | itol Building staff apparently aumnr-| ized to give orders and interpret the | regulations, it obviously was necessary for some one man to assume authority. | From 35 to 50 metropolitan police offi- cers have been on duty at the Capitol | at the request of the Capitol officials. A situation has been created on the Capitol grounds such that intolerance or & blunder would quickly affect the | situation in the entire District. where the responsibility for law and order has been placed squarely upon my shoulders. “For this reason it became necessary in this emergency to take from the | group known as the Capitol Police | Board the responsibility for maintain- | ing law and order in the Capitol Grounds and for enforcing such regu- lations pertaining to these grounds as would be possible without inviting vio- lence. “The Vice President told me in per- son that he did not desire violence.” The showdown on authority in the Capitol grounds came while the band of Communists paraded down Pennsylvania avenue, broke up below the Peace Monu- ment and formed a mass meeting on the steps of the Library of Congress to draf. |a committee for the presentation ci a petition asking that Congress not ac- journ until bonus and relief legislation is enacted. Robertson Goes Sleepless. | Robertson. who brought his band of California veterans into Washington only last Sunday after a strenu transcontinental trek, has had pract cally no sleep since he began the occu pation of the Capitol nearly four da ago. He collapsed late yesterday from overwork and was forced to spend most of the night resting. . As the siege of the Capitol continued earlier today, additional members of the so-called Bonus Expeditionary Force \ | by Admiral Butler. | walks fusal of police to permit them to parade on the Capitol plaza, hastily appointed a “rank and file” committee to deter- mine their next course of action. Led by Pace, a Detroit veteran, the men had successfully negotiated the block on | Pennsylvania avenue between John | Marshall place and Third street, where | several hundred “regular” veterans of | the k. E. F. are encamped. Police had | feared these veterans, who are not | affiliated with the Communists, would attempt to break up the parade with a barrage of bricks. Police officials, therefore, had the| small’ body of Communists heavily guarded and as the parade passed the B. E. F. camp motor cycle men rode between the Communists and the non- Communists almost fender to fender. Altogether, more than 50 police officers escorted the parade, including motor | cycle men, foot patrolmen, several auto | Joads of detectives, three police captains and Incpector Brown. Says Curtis Asked Help. The calling of the detachment of Marines brought considerable confusion | at tne Caprol late yesterday. Sixty | Marines, armed with 2-foot sections cf rubber hose in addition to side arms, | bayonets and riot sticks, arrived on the plaza shortly before 6 o'clock. They | were summoned after a number of wild rumors that radicals am'ng the bonus | imarchers intended to “stop” Congress | reflected in from adjourning | Admiral Henry V. Butler, command- | ant of the Washington Navy Yard, said he had sent the Marines &t the request of Vice President Curtis. Curtis, how- ever, issued a statement today denying he had caled out the detachment. He said he did not “see that the situation | warranted such action.” Admiral Butler, when told Curtis had denied calling out the Marines, re- iterated that “I sent the Marines at the request of the Vi-: President. I have | no further statement to make.” | Cites Letter of Several Days Ago. | Attaches in the cffice of Capitol Architect Lynn, attributed the sending of the Marincs to a misunderstanding It was said a “de- cision” was reached at a meeting of the Capitol Police Board that the Marines weer to relieve Metropolitan police. Vice President Curtis said: ‘I gave no orders that the Marines be brought to the Capitol. At the re- quest of the police board, I wrote a let- ter several days ago asking that the Marines b: held in readiness to rein- | force Capitol police in case of an emer- gency. I also requested the Army to send troops in case they were needed. | “Why the Marines were sent last night I do not know, except that a number of wild rumors were going ind. I don't see that the situation ranted such action ‘However, 1 did ask that the boys (bonus marchers) be kept on the side- | fT the Capitol grounds. Neither | Speaker Garner nor I have issued any permits to parace inside the Capitol ground: and for this reason I believe s Should be kept off the grounds hority in this matter rests with Gen lassford. superintendent of Metropoli- tan Police.” | Says Admiral Misunderstood. | At Lynn's office it was said Admiral Butler ‘misunderstood instructions and sent the Marines over instead of hold- ing them in readiness. When arines arrived, they were the marching vet- y two minutes, narched “right back to t Eighth and I streets Almost simultaneous with 1 on the Capitol grounds, ceived an order tha cleared. This also was ference with Sen- an, Connecticut thei; southeast their arri Gen. Gl the pla rescinded after a con District’s Heroes in the World War Compiled by Sergt. L. E. Jaeckel. S recorded in the official cita- tion, Harry Lee, colonel, United States Marine Corps, was award- ed the Distinguished Service Medal for exceptionally meri- torious and distinguished services in a position of great respcasibility. Ha: ing taken command of the 6th Regi- ment, United States Marine Corps, 2d Division, prior to the attack on the Bois - de - Belleau and Bouresches, he directed the opera- tion of his regi- ment with remark- able success during all in which it par- ticipated. His abil- ity as a tactical leader and his un- tiring energy were the brilliant accom- plishments of his command, whom he inspired by his own fearless leadership and devotion to duty under fire. Resi- dence at appointment, Washington, D. C. He now holgs the rank of brigadier gflnceml and is # atidfed at Paris Island, (Copyright, 19 CHURCH PLANS CARNIVAL Holy Comforter Bemefit to Be Opened by Parade July 25. Plans are going forward rapidly for the annual carnival of Holy Comforter Church, which will open with a George Washington Bicentennial parade Mon- day, July 25, in the church grounds at Fifteenth and East Capitol streets southeast. Rev. Edward J. A. Nestor, assistant pastor of the church, is gen- eral director of the carnival. The parade, which will mark the opening of the carnival, will begin at Seventeenth street and Massachusetts avenue southeast. terminating at the carnival site. Lieut. Col. William I Peak, superintendent of the District Jail, will be grand marsha Proceeds from the carnival will go toward the ion of a new church Chest Director to Speak. The work of St. Vincent's Home and School will be discussed by o Street, director of the C Chest. in'a radio talk over s fomorrow afternoon At The address i5 one in the series en- titled “Little Journeys to the Homes of Great vices.” REAL ESTATE_SERVICE SINCE 1906 || Business and Investment Property Sales and Exchanges A Personalized Service SHANNON & LUCHS, 1435 K St. N.W. A. 2315 DOLLAR EXPANSION DELAYS BANK ACT Conferees on Home Loan Discount Bill Deadlocked on Money Issue. The currency expansion amendmen. | 1ast nigkt deadlocked corgressional con- jlere?s on the administra ponsored | home loan discount tank bill, after an | agreement was reached on the measure The Senate representatives refused to | agree when House conferees attempted :m add to the Glass billion-dollar cur- | rency expansion rider the Goldsborough | dollar stabilization bill which passed the House several months ago. The partisan conferencs report will | be presented to the House today, and the House Confcrence Committee will ask for indorsement of its stand. The conferees agreed upon the terms of the House home loan discount bill, of the administration's economic ief program The House provision for 8 to 12 banks with capitalizaticn of at least $5,000,000 each was approved. Commercial banks were excluded from the provisions of tae bill | . The measure is designed to free credit | for home sbuilding by setting Lp a tem of parent banks for m stitutions similar to the Feder: System for ccmmercial banks. A technica will be held Aug g trades fair Germany, from T 3. Let registered tometrist aid 3 E tions consultati thout any n. 19 Years at 935 F Street in At & Ontasies e fine | very little schooling, but I have tried to Shop | educate myself arcund libraries and “A Negro who has a bootblack stand | joined the tireless Robertson's contin- on_ the campus of the University of | The child, Helen Anstine, 13-month- Kelier gent, apparently believing his campaign Dies at Home. old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dene Anstine, Who are billeted at the bonus camp at Fourteenth and B streets southwest, was treated by Dr. Alfonso Carsora of Las Vegas, Nev. who has been co-operating with health author- ities with a view to maintaining sani- tary conditions in the bonus camp According to Dr. A. Magruder Mac- economics has been my hobby. I took a course in economics under a Uni- versity of California professor. “Dollar” Meaningless. “Now. about the Government not being able to pay the bonus. Congress must be awful dumb not to see the noint—or misled by the pernicious dol- Donald, deputy coroner, who investi- [jar psychology with which American gated the case, the child’s parents re- | iqycation has been polluted for the past quested the inquiry which resulted in | goperation. There is no such word o %i‘;;gm;;v:r;;&‘ Dr. MacDonald | 55 gollar in scientific_economics, The S par vy was nothing ir-| °° insi i ree, Tegular in the treatrent prescribed by | Word has no intrinslc meantng. A4 the doctor and that he was licensed to practice in his home State. but mem- | They mean something. | education has been in terms of dollars |'a rosebush, a house—these are entities. | But our whole | bers of the homicide squad pointed out it is necessary to have a local license to_practice in the District of Columbia The homicide squad's investigation was turned over to the narcotic squad | today to determine if the non-resident | physician had prescribed any narcotics while practicing here. ! HYMNS, JOBLESS WEAPON Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, July 15—A “hymn- book” protest meeting against prohi- bition and unemployment is planned for 3 pm. Sunday in front of the White House by several thousand job- less travelers, who are converging on the Capital City, according to Henry W. Hayssen of Milwaukee, leader of the movement, who halted in Baltimore | Yyesterday, on his way to the Capital. Members of the new “army” have | been recruited from Milwaukee, Chi- cago, Detroit. Toledo, Cleveland, Buf- falo, Syracuse. Albany, New York and Philadelphia. Hayssen said All are | traveling by auto and are making their | expenses on the trip by selling pamphlets | containing a revised version of the | Twenty-third Psalm Every member of the group who at- tends the mass meeting Sunday will be asked to bring a Bible and hymn book. Communists will be barred from par- ticipating. ~_SPECIAL NOTICES. T, LOUIS H. SILBERG. ANNOUNCE THAT I ave withdrawn from the business Silberg Bros. at 615 Penna. ave. n.w.. city. LOUIS H._SILBERG _1se PAPERHANGING _ROOMS. 2 AND plus cost of paper; new samples. Call Rob: Bins. o1 Ysduoer ne St G WANT TO GIVE UP_APT. TO SAVE? Protest, couple can accommodate one or two ladies in_their house: no food; refined atmosphere. Phone West 1254, VACATIONISTS _THE DAVIDSON TRAN! FER & STORAGE CO. long-distance mo; Ing specialitia have daily’ motor exbress service handling trunks. baggage. baby car- riages. etc. tc all Jersev Shore points Call_Nattonal 0960 LETTERS, $125: 200. £1 Circulurs. notices. étc.. addressing. mailing. Ace Letter Service. District Nat. Bank Blde I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR AN debts contracted by ary one other than m: SEl DAVADYBTRIB o Lo G e 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS Coniracted by any_ one other than myself, THOMAS R JONES. Soldiers Home. " -+ GOING? WHERE? TELL US WHEN AND Well move your furniture and take mighty good care of it at low cost. A telephone | call will save vou time and trouble. NATL. | DELIVERY ASSOCIATION. phone Nat. 1460, THE_FOLLOWING CARS ARE TO BE SOLD at \wesohlers Public Auction on Saturday. Sty ath, 1932, Tor charges Cheyrolet coupe. N-6174. listed under Mr. John Thomas. Chevrolet sedan. S-2540, listed under Mrs. th Hawkins. Elizabeth Hawking. G o o 614 H St. N.W. WANTED—LOADS TO NEW YORK. TO PHILADELPHIA JULY 20 TO NORFOLK . cesss ....JULY 22 And all points’ North and West. ' AGENT VAN LINES. We also pack and ship by STEEL LIFT VANS anywhere SMITH'S TRANSFER & STORAGE CO., 1313 You St. N.W_ Phone North 3342-3343. “Don’t Hide Your Light ! —under a bushel® Tell the world about Jourselt and your business throush ‘the ald of N. C. P. (National Capital Press) Printing. 100 JULY 18 ~ * The National Capital Press FLA. AVE.. 3rd and NN.E Linc. s068 | As a result the profess | make it pessible. what I did coming across the counlll;y" e | —mere symbols—instead of real value. ons have been prostituted. Every profession has be- come a business Now Congress can't seem to see the | stinction between dollars v:nd real values. It can't see that it should be thinking in terms of houses and po- | tatoes instead of in terms of dollars. | And when the bonus question is trans- formed into such terms, it takes on a very different aspect. The duty of | Congress is to restore to the people real values, and to do this it is entirely | justified in juggling that mere symbcl, the dollar, in any way it wishes. “Now, when we talk of the condition of the country in terms of real values, the way becomes clear. The one pos- sible rcad to restore those real values to the pecple is relief, and then more relief—however money is juggled to Any one who saw would realize that—who heard mayors of cities make speeches that would have put them in jail as bolshe- viks a few yvears ago, who heard little | children at the railroad stations shout- ing to us wiping out the Capital. It shows how the spirit of the country is running— and Congress doesn't realize it. Man is a creature of his environment. He thinks according to his environment. The environment of the Congressman is one thing—that of the underdog an- other thing. So they can't understand each other's thinking. “Slaves to Machines.” “The Government claims it has no money to pay the bonus. If it hasn't, that's its own fault. The American people have become slaves to ma- chines—to automatic machines. That is the one fundamental element in the present situation. These machines have fabric desired THE SHADE 100% service. e[ i to appear again like new. ONE-DAY SERVICE is of new shades, all you have not to come back without | California_at Berkeley “I'm a business man. I made good | money out of blacking boots for the llege boys in good times when I could g-t 15 cents a shine. But last year their daddies didn't give them boys no money to spend and lots of them started shin- ing their own shoes in their rooms or didn't have them shined at all. So I just had to cut my price to 10 cents, and could hardly get by at that price. “All the boys goes home for the Sum- | mer. so there ain't hardly no business | at all and I hadn’t been able to lay by | any money over the Winter at 10 cents | a shine, so I couldn’t pay the rent any | longer. I figured if I could get the bonus right away I could keep my business until the boys got back. But now I guess my wife'll have to close up. “Do I think the Government can af- ford to pay the bonus? Yes, sir. I'm that's the way I reckons it. Every time they put up an argument against the bonus Mr. Patman’s got a better one for it—so T can't see no reason they can't pay it.” Indiana Farmer Speaks. A farmer from Indiana “Why don’t the papers print the truth | about us? They just print half the truth, and it looks worse than no truth at all. | “I'm from Indiana and I had a 181- | acre farm out there, but they took it away from me. What could I do with pork selling at 3 cents a pound and wheat at 23 cents a bushel? I and my RUSH PRINTING EXPERT SERVICE HIGH GRADE —NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAM§ Chairs FOR RENT OR SALE UNITED % STATES STORAGE CO, 418 10th Street Metropolitan 1843 'The Shade Shop Offers 100% Shade Service . .. Regardless of the size of window shade or the grade of shade SHOP is qualified to offer a complete A modern shade-washing department is maintained to servi your soiled du Pont TONTINE shades—thoroughly c?nnslng the: also offered our customers in the matter to do is to bring in your old rollers in the morning—we’ll attach new shades to them in time for you to carry them home with you the same day. A host of homemakers have already taken advantage of this feature of the COMPLETE SHADE SHOP SERVICE! Venetian Blinds for Home or Office lm 13th St. N.W. ® ‘W. STOKES SAMMONS only a dumb colored boy, folks says. but | Miss Laura Andresen. £6, a resident of Washingtor: for 42 years, died here Wednesday night. She was a native of Copenhagen. Denmark | Miss Andresen operated a maillinery | shop here from 1892 until her reiire- ment 25 years later. The shop was lo- | cated at 1136 Seventh ctreet. Funeral services wiil be held tomor- Tow at 2 pm. at 1101 Wobster street. L. she had lived th> home of her nephew, Andresen, with whom since her retirement. She is survived also by nephew, William A. Andresen: | nieces, Mrs. Ellen L. Stretch and Mrs. Ruth L. Mil'er, and a sister-in-law, | | Mrs. Olga M. Andresen. | ey } Ladies’ Aid to Serve Supper,” COLESVILLE. Md. July 15 (Spe- cial) —The Ladies” Aids of the Coles- | ville” charge will hold their annual chicken and ham supper Wednesday at |the Women's Christian Temperance | Union Hall here, beginning at 5 o'clock. Harry 7 Built by Dunigan « « . Built Right | Nine Built . . .2 Left | Invest ina ' Dunigan Home - Exhibit . Home 5413 Kansas Ave. On a Beautiful Boulevard With Two Baths, Dinette, || Recreation Room and the || Large Dunigan Kitchen. || 39250 | AND TERMS ‘ D. J. Dunigan, Inc. ,i‘l Tower Building NAtional 1265 another w0 In the of invasion will accomplish more than the tactics of Walter W. Waters, B. E. F. national commander. The men won a victory last night when they slept under bushes and trecs on the Capitol grounds. This morning officers “permitted” the weary marchers to sit on the coping around the Capitol | lawn to rest | The Communists, angry over the re- Picturesque South Country of France S —a perfumer named LUBIN owns acres of fields for the of distilling of flower purpose the most exotic flower essences. Here in Washington, Gude Bros. Company, Florists and Floral Decorators to the National Capital the forty-three years, maintains vast for past Hoce. Gildsnad greon houses for the growing and bringing into per- fragrant =and gorgeous flowers with which you may express fection sentiments, re- gardless of the time, the place or the oc- your casion. For decorative effects or for amy occasion you may plan, our experienced dec- orators are at your service. “Say It With Flowers” Four Flower Shops MAIN STORE 1212 F St. NW. Phone NAtional 4278 “Thompson’s has been a 1009, Independent Wash- ington Dairy for more than fifty years. “Thompson’s has always been owned and operated by the same Washington family. “Thompson’s has other dairy institution Washington or elsewhere. “You’re patronizing a r. home town industry and helping to give employ- ment to Washington work- ers, when your home served by Thompson’s Dairy. L never been connected with any in eal WASHINGTON OWNED & RATED OMPSON S DA [ A T U R I 4 0 O