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Wait a New Home Qe Sherman Ave. & Columbia Rd. N.W. For SfTh c4y 11 <lw Cash and $22.50 Per Month $2,750 : Full Price -A ? TO INSPECT-Take any 11th sti Columbia road and walk one squar< northwest. Ket off at Columbia roa any Oth street car polng northwest, one square west. SHANNON 713 14th Si Look for Our Gree: I American Nj | A Bank's I depends more upon its mar ill strength. The American Bank h istered by officers who are a the needs of our customer Bank with consistent fidelity The protection of the or curitv that's stronger than I The Bank of Mu 11315'F : nnn?n?iKhnmnn???????????m?t MODERN COLLEGE MAN FALLING BEHIND MARK Less Useful Than Those of Fifty Years Ago, Says President Richmond. The modem college mail received the condemnation of President Charles Alexander Richmond of Union University, Schenectady, N". Y., during a speeoh at the annual banquet of the Washington alumni of that Institution, given at Rauscher's last night. The banquet took the nature of a farewell testimonial to Representative James If. Davidson of Wisconsin, president of the association. He leaves Congress March 4, after more than sixteen years' service. President Richmond declared the present-day college man was less useful than the ones of fifty years ago. and asserted that the colleges of today had made little gain in character. , Where Colleges Have Lost. "We have gained In a certain up-to-date smartness," he continued, "but we have not gained much in character, while in the sense of duty In personal responsi bility and initiative we have lost. The purpose of education is to develop personality and strengthen character, to form the minds and mold the spirits of young men In the image of the highest." The obligations of the college man. he said, are heavier than those of any other, and that the more highly educated a man is the most truiy democratic he becomes. President Taft received the praise of Representative C. C. Bowman of Pennsylvania, who declared the chief executive to be the "anchor which held this country from going too far along the path of radicalism." Mr. Bowman said 'engross was composed of a "remarkable lot of men." but that it has done "some very wicked work collectively." Others Among Speakers. Among the other speakers were Col. George c. Hazelton, Col. George Robin>on. chaplain, U. S. A., retired; William >F. I.?ewln. Rev. J. Harvey Dunham. C. \V. Need ham and Dr. Thomas R. Feath rvtonhaugh. all of this city. Others present were Mrs. C. A. RichLOTSOFBEAUTIFUL | NO DANDRUFF-25 I Hair Comine Out??If E W 7 Scalp Itches and Is Use "D; Within ten minutes after an application of Danderine you cannot find a single trace of Dandruff or a loose or falling hair and your i scalp will not itcn, but what will 1 please you most will be after a \ few weeks' use, when you will actually see new hair, fine and downy at first?yes?but really new hair?growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine will immediately double the beauty of your 1 hair. No difference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your . Advert . 9 You Will Have To Be QUICK! We have sold over a liAmAP ?r% fVt i r* uuiiuicu nv/mv.3 111 li no immediate neighborhood in the past year. It is lo- . cated right in the midst of one of the fashionable northwest's most desirable residential communities ?a $5,000 neighborhood. Six full rooms and bath. Colonial porches, all mod- j em conveniences?conve- I nient to three double- j track car lines. i eet car going northwest, get off at s east, or any 14th street car going d and walk three squares east, or get off at Columbia road and walk & LUCHS treet N, W, > n amid White Sign \ io n === I ^ lL-j ???: { t . . t itional Bank, i ; i?> ' Security |; : lagement than its monetary ::: i as a sound policy?admin- 1:1 , ctive executives?caring for :: ( s and the interests of the ;;; ] < > I tc is a benefit to both?a se- J locks?and safer than safes. ! ; i tual Advantage. j Street. ill' ::: i < mond, Edward D. Greenman, Mr. and i Mrs. Edmund B. Whlteomb, Mrs. Edgar i Brown, the Rev. Dr. J. H. Robinson, Mrs. George Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Ryan, Representative and Mrs. Joseph E. Ran sd ell. Col. John Van R. Hoff, William Wallace Childs. G. W. Z. Black, 1 Mrs. C. C. Bowman, Mrs. J. Harvey Dunham. Frank Tweedy, Mr. and Mrs. J. s. Cotton, E. Brown, H. C. Gauss and Mrs W. I- Tyson. WMEPWNS iiiwr nrrn nnnni rrrn n/\vLDttn uuivirLLitu; i i Make-up, Pay and Service Set ( Forth in Orders of War Department. ] Plans for the organization of the army reserve, provided in the last army appropriation act, are set forth in an order 1 made public at the War Department today. The reserve will be made up of soldiers furloughed to its ranks for the un- , expired portions of seven-year terms of ( enlistment; men who re-enlisted for re- j serve duty at the expiration of a sevenyear term of enlistment; or, who, being ( honorably discharged soldiers of the reg- , ular army, enlist for reserve duty. , All enlistments and re-enlistments will j be for a period of three years and will , be made by officers authorized by the . War Department to recruit for the army. \ Question of Pay. ' ; Soldiers in the army reserve not in active ] service will not be entitled to pay or allowances. But upon reporting for duty, i and being found physically fit for service, ( reservists are to receive a sum equal to ] $5 a month for each niontl during which \ they have belonged to 11.? reserve, as i well as the actual cost of transportation and subsistence from their homes to tlie places to which they art ordered. A bounty also is provided for all honorably 1 discharged soldiers who return to the ] colors in response to a presidential proclamation. ' Reservists during their term of service as such will not be permitted to enlist in 1 the navy, Marine Corps or organized mi- i litla and will not be permitted to leave i the country, except upon approval of the Secretary of War. i j jralTli CENT WINE" >ry, Brittle, Thin or Your Full of Dandruff? mderine." I hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect is amazing? your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of 1 abundance; an incomparable luster, softness and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine "rom any drug 1 store or toilet counter, and prove to yourself tonight?now?that your hair is as pretty and soft as any?that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment? that's all?you surely can have beautiful hnir and lots of it if you will just try a little Danderine. Uetnent i # HUERTAJ1 PEACE I Man of the Hour m Mexico, I Journalist Declares. IRON HAND WILL CONQUER I Governors Will Be Forced to Sup- i port New Regime, He Says. OPPOSES IT. S. INTERVENTION - - - - - c E. T. Oakley, London Correspond- ! t ent, Declares 250,000 Men Would ^ Be Needed by This Country. ^ t Provisional President Huerta is the man >f the hour in Mexico, and with Huerta ind Gen. Felix Diaz working together f Mexico will he blessed with peace within i. short time, according to 12. T. Oakley, j he Mexico City correspondent of the Don- g ion Times, and president of the British j ?lub in Mexico City, who passed through j j Washington yesterday en route to Mexico t ?ity. c Mr. Oakley said Huerta and Diaz are . rying hard to restore peace to the coun- , ry, and it is his firm belief that within t i short time everything will quiet down. , t The Mexican people, he continued, are t ired of revolutions with the accompanyng bloodshed. He believes the governors vlio have been opposing the new governneiit soon will fall into line and support , t. Mr. Oakley thinks that Zapata, one ( )f the most obstreperous ones, will be , orced to submit serenely to Huerta's j ron hand. ( Praises the Diplomats. ? Although !Mr. Oakley left Mexico City < ust before the recent battle broke there, < le lias been kept daily informed of the ( onditions. "American Ambassador Henry j !.ane Wilson and British Ambassador , ['"rancis W. Stronge? in fact, all of the i breign representatives?did excellent work 1 luring tlie recent battle in the capital," ' >aid Mr. Oakley. "When Mr. Wilson says } hat lie deprecates any idea of interven- < ion he speaks on behalf of not only every \merican. but every foreigner within the < Mexican boundaries. I "I have known President Huerta for ten i . ears. He is well educated and knows i onditions in his country* well. He is not i in ambitious man, but his sole idea is to ;ive peace back to his country." r Protection for Foreigners. t Mr. Oakley told of the good which at- , wued from the establishment of so-called i "defense houses" about a year ago. The houses are used to concentrate the forpigners during time of strife In the city. "Ail the governments represented have ( these houses. They are ordinary houses and usually near the embassies and lega- j tions. They are stocked with provisions . viilch would last through a siege of about ' a. month. All of the houses are equipped ' with rifles and ammunition supplied by t the Mexican government, which also gave t ts consent for their establishment. Al- c though the American defense houses have i some of the Mexican government's guns, t they have a large number of their own t )rought from the United States. ^ "The foreigners killed during the recent t nattles In the city, I believe from the information I have at hand, were victims of 1 iccidents. I believe the United States t should accept the explanation made to 1 Ambassador Wilson tiiat former I'resl- i lent Aladero and Vice President Suarez t were killed while an atteifcpt was being f made to rescue them." a Result of Intervention. \ Taking up tho matter of intervention by r the United States, Mr. Oakley said that ts soon as one American soldier came within the Mexican boundaries there would be 14,000,(XX) Mexican people ready ' :o fight against their northern neighbor. 5 'Why," he said, "it would take more " :han *250.000 men to make any impression t tt all on the republic's forces, it takes t ,'ery little to feed these Mexican soldiers while in the field, a corn cake and a few icars which they can pick from the cac;us plant. < "The one thing we want is peace, and ? :hen capital to advance the country's re- > t sources as well as for irrigation pur- r , loses," said Mr. Oakley in concluding. i ( DOL GOETHALSINDORSES j PLAN FOR OCEAN JETTY j ! r i Favors Commission to Investigate 1 ! ' Feasibility of Diverting Lab- ( rador Currents. J 1 1 ( Col. George W. Goethals, chairman of i i he Panama canal commission and chief j mgineer of the Panama canal, has added lis indorsement to those of others for a ,-ommission to be known as the Labrador :urrent and gulf stream commission ' which it is proposed to have investigate j he currents off the Grand Ranks of Newfoundland and report upon the best method which can be employed to create i sand deposit and other sediment to form a jetty. This jetty it is proposed to \ prevent the intermingling ot" the gulf stream and Labrador current until they ( each midocean. By this method it is believed icebergs j ivill be made a thing of the past, the t jllmate of eastern Canada will be made nuch warmer and the late sprngs in the northeastern I'nited States w.ll be a | thing of history. 1 Idea of C-. L. Riker. l The idea was originated by Carroll L. j Riker, a New York engineer, whose work . !ias lx-en mos ly with ocean engineering. , \ bill is now before the House naval af fairs committee, but it is said to be very > jnlikely that it will be rei>orted at this 1 session, owing to the stress of other bust- 1 less. However, Mr. Hiker said it will be | me of the first bills introduced at the t ickt session and he expects that sppedy ' Lotion then will be taken on the matter. ' The bill, which was introduced by Hep- , "sentative William Calder at the present tession, and will be reintroduced by him i it the next session, provides that the | ommission shall consist of an officer of i Che United States Navy and two other i >ersons to be appointed by the President. Have Indorsed Project. Brig. Gen. W. H. Bixby, U. S. A., diief of engineers; George P. Cooper, , >aval hydrographer; O. H. TUttmann, su>erlntendeii't of tlie coast and geodetic lurvey, and H. M. Smith, acting commissioner of the bureau of fisheries, have in- ' lorsed the bill. , The proposed jetty, or peninsula of < nnrf will fYtend "A*) miles Into thf> nr?an t will taper from about forty miles in width at the shore end to three at Its ?astern extremity, and will cover an area >f more than 1.0U0 square miles. Mr. R1ker estimates the cost of this work at KW.OOO.OUO. 1 ? * < Pickpocket Uses Parcel Post. 1 NASHVILLE. Tenn., March 1.?The ( parcel post was put to a new use 'by a 3t. Louis pickpocket when a poeketbook i . ortalnlng a check for $11,868.51 and notes 1 amounting to nearly $40i> was returned by this means to J. D. Mason, a cattle lealer of Jackson, Tenn. Mr. Mason was i robbed in St. Louis this week of the pocketbook and contents, but Immediately 1 stopped payment on the check. ThirtyBvo dollars in money taken from the i purse was kept by the thief, but the I papers were returned. NO VOTESFOR THEM Foes of Woman Suffrage Hold Big Mass Meeting. MOT A CURE FOR EVILS inti-Suffragists Claim They Are the True Progressives Among Women. An audience composed largely of those Praised to the extension of the franchise ' o women, but including a sufficient number 1 >f suffragists to bring forth a storm of ipplause when anything supporting their lairns was said, gathered in the Belasco rheater yesterday afternoon and listened o anti-suffragist speeches at a meeting | icld under the auspices of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. It was the largest attended anti-sufrage meeting Washington lias ever witlesscd, for long before Airs. Arthur jodge, president of the national antiuffrage organization, called the assemblage to order every seat in the theater lad been filled. The seats in the orchesra, boxes and mezzanine gallery were ecupied by anti-suffragists for the most art, but out-and-out suffragists predomilated in the balcony and gallery. Several j lines their continued applause threatened o force Mrs. Dodge to call for order so hat the speaker could continue. Not True Progressives. The speaker was Mrs. John Martin, vife of the commissioner of education >f New York city. Mrs. Martin underook to refute the claims of the suffragists rather than to advance those f the anti-suffragists. She called paricular attention to the suffragist ' ilaim that the granting of the franchise to women will procure the uplift >f the working woman and the eradi- ! ation of evils of politics. "It is a common thing nowadays to | lear an anti-suffragist called antl- i luated," said Mrs. Martin, "but such is lot the case. We are progressive, far Tiore progressive than the suffragists, it is because 1 am progressive that 1 im opposed to granting the franchise :o women." Mrs. Martin defined a progressive as >ne who advocates measures the purpose of which is to meet the special leeds of the time in which one lives. 3he declared that suffrage meets no eal need of the time. "Women, by fighting for the ballot, which is men's business," said the ipeaker, "are placing In the background heir true business, that of making nen. Hy fighting for the right to vote hey are selling their birthright for a ness of equality." Women Drafted to Service. Turning then to the sociological aspect >f the subject, Mrs. Martin gal<l: "Customarily, through the Ages, man las specialized on the getting of the llvng?woman has specialized on the rearng of the children; he has specialized on he state?she on the family. But, In our ime, stimulated by the extension of nia:hinery and the discovery of large natiral resources, man has come to overmiphasize the Importance of his part in he division of labor, J in has forced vomnn to leave her natural vocation to :om? and help him In his pursuit, "In the course of this process, women lave shown deplorable docility. They mve followed where man beckoned Into lis world, where they are always, of lecessity, at a disadvantage?have put heir necks under the yoke, calling it reedom; have accepted economic bondige, calling it economic independence, ind are now signifying their willingness, urthermore, to sell their birthright for a ness of politics. Her Labor Not an Asset. "It is true that women In Industry proluce a considerable part of the national ncome, hut In a lessening birth rate, In l lower national vitality and In a deerloratlon of Htoek her labor Is costing he nation more than the value of her iroduct. "We are often told that woman's his:ory Is one long record of wrong. But iome day It may be seen that forcing her >ut of the home Into competition with Tien, to be exploited by men. Is the great?st wrong which has ever been perperated upon her, for it is depriving her of ler reason for existence. "Today if you run your eye over the country you will And increasing thousands <>f its best women smiling because :hey are single and independent and irosperous; smiling because they are mmeless and childless; smiling because! :hey have cheated nature; smiling he- j ause they are helping to ruin the future ' if our nation and our race. "The superior woman's chances of re- ; naining single have increased many I :imes, hut the average woman s chances lave doubled in the last generation. And >ven if she marries the chances are one n ten that she will lie divorced within ten years. In Washington state the chance is one in six?in Kansas one in four, her mother's chance of divorce was one in thirty-four. If this continues in the same iv!iv in a few generations from now only occasional women of intlrm Intellect will marry at all. And they will remain married only long enough to establish a claim for alimony." Abhors Male Suffragists. Airs. Martin made the biggest hit with the anti-suffragist portion of the audience when she paid her respects to the male suffragist. "Recently an ardent male suffragist told ne lie wanted his wife to accompany him ;o the polls when lie voted," said Mrs. Vlartin. "A man like that," siie added, 'would want his wife at his side when le walked into a dentist's ofllce to have lis tooth pulled." Mrs. Martin spoke of the evils which lave resulted because women have enured tiie business world. She said that society by paying high salaries to its superior women lias enticed them from 'reproduction," and is taking from each feneration a large number of the best women and "setting them apart for sterlitv." "You could not run a chicken farm on .hat principle," she added, "if you took >ut the best liens every year and paid hem a salary to remain single or sent hem to college, or put them in feather .'aetories, manufacturing feathers for ither hens to wear. "When society pays a high salary to a nan the investment is a profitable one. iut when society pays a high salary to a woman it lias mortgaged its future to neet the indebtedness." Miss Lucy Price, a former newspaper woman and secretary of tlie Cleveland Auxiliary to the Ohio Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, also spoke of what she declared to be inconsistencies of the equal suffrage movement. "The advocates of suffrage, by asking for the ballot," said Miss Price, "are proclaiming themselves to be the equal of men. but at the same time they are, through their appeals for special legislation for women, acknowledging that they cannot work as hard or shoulder as many burdens as those with whom they would be placed on an equal footing. Would Make Her Partisan. "Woman has exerted an influence in the political world, but with the granting of the ballot this influence must pass, as she will then become a partisan." Miss Minnie Bronson, general secretary of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, declared that anti-suffragists are neither feeble minded nor social parasites, but that they oppose suffrage because they believe it to be progressive in name. only. She told of a recent suffrage meeting *he had attended at which the name of Mrs. Pankhurst, tho English suffragette, was applauded. She arraigned her as a 'half-Insane woman" and declared t'l luffragists had applauded her because the crimes she has committed. Miss Bronson said she had been tc. 1 Lo A | THIS IS yOU'VE realized j matter of % pre sen, perity to buy a home ing for rent month aft si now; "*3 ter of the cit We a rapidity of s These ho and bath?a ?terraced f Price, $200 C I <nH Phone Main 2345 suffragists that balloting would In no way ! | interfere with the duties of the home. " 'We can vote in ten minutes and then return to our homes," a leading suffragist once told me," said Miss Bronson. "She 1 declared it would take no more time to mark her ballot than to match a piece of silk. Now you can Just imagine what good the right to vote will he to a woman who plans to devote but ten minutes to 1 it. Imagine the kind of legislation which ' that type of woman will help make." i " ? < Vincent Astor, who is traveling alone i to Charleston, 8. C.. on hts yacht, was 1 forced to put into Norfolk. Va., out of , the storm. He wanted to go to the assistance of a stranded steamer, but learned that the crew had already been saved. THEBOOMER 1. * SETTLED yor some time now that it's t economy and future pre with the money you are wa. *er month, year after year. * 7 ? J0' an [HEN EW is one of the two high Dennsylvania Avenue)?an y (in full sight of the Capi re now selling the last of t ales has broken all previou mes are of the most improv 11 modern conveniences thr ront lawns. Matchless $4, $3,400== $ ;aslh and = To Get to ?phone Main 2345 for our FRE Capitol street car marked "Brool Streets," get off at Rhode Island a U street (Rhode Island avenue an A.NNON 713 14th S CLEANING UP BARBARY COAST. San Francisco Police Making War on Waterfront Dives. SAX FRANCISCO. March 1.?With an extra company of police on hand to carry out the edict, orders of the police commission restricting the notorious Barharv oast, effective today, \ver-> applied ''\a"tiy it midnight last night. No defiance was risible and gradually the crq.wd of sightseers that had assembled to witness the "funeral." as it. was termed on the "coast," melted away. Hereafter, the police say, there is to be ANG ? f4*m MAiLYCR- * L. \ TER-Vou^oy"4 HERE S WWRC ' Some POOR J ^ ^*==^1 HUSPAhD / & & 5lflifT H*wm5HIS jc 2>r ^jvijl WATCH Ano P"\ "I II CUFFLIMKS I / |g \ Q^jjf FfcR. BAIcl Uk II mO 1 jfPIL * r e i ?' 1 ^ v f i ?\ ^ ww iv t w v r rv ? i nc; ui>uy SHE one quest ton that artse to buy. And if you are a ritv of people of moderate m severed, at HIGH VIEW. 4 est points in all Washington d within a few minutes' ride tol, Library and Monument). he High View Homes. T< s selling records for the entii ed type. They contain six oughout. Spacious individi 000 values in every respect. 27BI If-jjjjgh View E Auto Service?or take a North eland" or "North Capitol and \V venue and walk one square east on d U street cross at North Capitol t. & LUC treet N.Wo Look for Oor Qm l a dividing line between tbe cafes of "Boi hernia" and their counterfeits, the dives, j The dance halls on Pacific street that won for that thoroughfare the sobriquet "Ter; rifio street" will l>e closed to slumming 'parties that include women. Only ihe : women regularly employed in these places, 'at stipulated salaries, will be ailo.ved inside, and the proprietors say tlieir revenue will he cut more than per cent. Promptly at midnight last night all woman visitors were requested to leave and most of tliein did. No more were allowed to enter. The strike at the Southern Transporta' tion Barge Building Company's plant at j Chesapeake City, Md., is over, the company having made terms with the strikers. iy H. T. Webster 1AM ^ ^ 1^ j ( G DAY*AND 1 i UL I 1 MOT A WORD Wk "" ] FROM Gto^tfj i j JESTION s /s where is it best tnong that reast maeans the question is (171 feet of the cen3 date the re District. full rooms lal porches ^er A /Ov tVCl rf-IU I rjnuuiiiiuiii HS m and White Sign TWO-BATTLESHIP PIAN UPHELD IN THE SENATE 11 l_ n _ x_ nouse upponerus rromise 10 Hold Up Appropriations, Rather Than Consent. Two battleships were voted into the naval appropriation hill 1>\ the Senate last night after a short discussion of the provision adopted by the House limiting the building program to one battleship. The two-battleship amendment, offered by the naval committee of the Senate, was adopted. ."Hi to 1<>. An amendment by Senator Brandegee providing for three ships was defeated, 1M to 4*. Opponents of Plan. Senators who voted against the twobattleship amendment were Bacon. Bristow. Burton. Hove, Johnston, Kern, La Follette, Lea. Met "umber, Myers, i"*ittman. i'omerene, Siiively, Smith of tleorgia. Smith of South ("arolfna and Thomas. The Senate also added to ilie six torpedo boat destroyers and four submarines authorized by the House one transport to eost not more than ll.SotMKXf and one supply ship to eost not more than *1, Llo.iHJO. tlie figures in both eases being exclusive of armor or armament. Tlie two battleships would cost not more than each, exclusive of armor or a rniament. Navy Yard to Build One. At the end of an extended debate it va* provided that one. of the battleships should he built in the government na\ y yard, after the Senate bad defeated ait amendment by Senator Oliver to provido hat the government build one ship on y in ease tlie eost did not amount to more than j.."?oo,iKM> over the rosi of building in The House voted one battleship after a I long struggle, and the one-battleship ad- I rocatett declare they will hold up the en- I tire appropriation bill rather titan accept I Senate amendments adding tlie second I ship. I ,"1 1 " 1 "rioe tntnl li n. i i:? mil its iu * ?*? _ propria tion of approximately * 1 dO.OQN.Wtfu To Stop Clocks for Wesley. I CHICAjGO. Milr< *i 1. Kvi-y Methodist fl pastor in the 1'nited Stales will atop Ins I church clock for tea minutes tomorrow in I honor of the name of John Wesley, I founder of Methodisrn. tlto anniversary of I S'hoee death falls oa lltivh -. If an ap- H l>ea! which was sent broadcast over tho I nation yesterday is observed. The Rev. M Joseph B. Hingeley of Evanaton. III., is H n clmrtte of the movement. H UOLRI.V MOTOR I IfI*V/llf JOlHMaS. HndSlH Covering Washington ? very hour I . a tin* hour froru !? a.m. to S B |Wfln| ; With enterts nine and ta- B s<. Rlllml !> < tours covering the city H IUyyU| government build Inn. business! nwTTTI i residential and historical mc HnaMaa tlon*. Arlington. Georgetown B Sooloc'eal I'ark and Xevv Yard. 10 a.m. and 1:10 p.m.. time. 3 hours. 33 miles, only 12.00. H [ ER>>0>ALLY COVOICTRO TOl'RS, I rovcrinif the Interior of the White House. Cap.- B ol. Congressional Library, Bureau of Printing H iiid Kiigrsriiig. C. S. Treasury, Army and Navy B iulldlng. Smithsoulan lustitution. National Uu* H euui. Corcoran Ait Gallery, I'au-American Baild- B ng. 10 a.m., 1 p.m.. time, 4 hours, only ?2.00. B Luxurious t? uasaenger touring cars; expert B ;uide-drlvers. Our lecturers are collage mca; ra- H Ineil. Intelligent. Finest aerrlee In America. II- B ustrated folders, tickets at leading hotels and H Icket Mgen-les. All Royal Blue Line cars start B from Ogram's Gift Store, Penaa. aea. and 11th B it. n.w. Phone Main 5400 for re serrations. H We will send our elegant new touting ears ta my hotel or resldenoe and return our tourists aftau the tour without charge if they will notify Uk Phone Main 3499. one-half boar befora atarttoR.