Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 170, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1927 — Page 2
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COOLIDGE EATS TURKEY, SPEAKS IN WRESTS Day’s Observance in Capital Is Far Cry From Time of Puritans. Du United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—Modern Americans, like the sturdy Puritans of old, ate turkey today, made merry and gave thanks. But there the resemblance to the first Thanksgiving day ended. The sturdy New England fathers, who primed their muskets and tramped miles to exchange greetings with the nearest neighbors, would not recognize the holiday now. • In those days they had no President and no radio. They could not, therefore, forsee that President Cooldige would be standing in the White House study last night, broadcasting to millions of Americans a proclamation of national gratitude for blessings bestowed. The President did not have to stir from his warm hearth to exchange felicitations with 120,000,000 “neighbors.” And Rob Roy, the Coolidge collie, stretched lazily at the President’s feet and once sneezed so lustily it was feared he may have registered on the microphone. In the Puritan days there was no American army. Therefore it was not necessary for the nation to provide its soldiers with $90,000 worth of turkey, as today. And no army band, such as planned to serenade the President at the White House this afternoon ever flayed to Puritan ears. This forenoon there were church services, which the President and Mrs. Coolidge attended with Mr. and Mrs. Franß Stearns of Boston. But even here there was indication of modernity, with the Thanksgiving sermon being preached in a downtown theater. Turkey—the bird that, makes all Thanksgiving one—was on the White House menu for dinner. M’ANDREW REFUSES TO REMAIN AT HIS TRIAL Packed Jury, Prejudiced Judge, Is Charged by Superintendent. Du United, Press CHICAGO, Nov. 24.—Chicago’s school board, which has been trying its school superintendent, William McAndrew, on charges of “pro-Brit-ish inclinations,” today wondered if it would be legal to continue the trial without presence of the defendant. McAndrews has complicated matters by deserting the hearings, saying he will not return until the board gets down to the business of the main charge against him. McAndrews said he was under trial before a “packed jury,” a prejudiced judge and characterized the hearings of the school board as a travesty on justice, following the statement he walked out of the school board rooms, deaf to pleas of his opponents that he remain. TEST FLIGHT IS FAST Local Pilot Wings to Detroit in Two Hours Fifty Minutes. Average speed of ninety-three miles an hour was made in a test flight between Indianapolis and Detroit Wednesday, when a ship piloted by Lieut. Everett Winings, Total flier, made the 265 miles in two hours and fifty minutes. The flight, with Andrew H. Hepburn. Travel Corporation manager, as pa&enger, was made with view of establisning passenger air service between Indianapolis and several larg ecities. The Indiana Aviation Corporation sponsored the flight in cooperation with the Travel Corporation of America. Regular week-end flights are planned preliminary to the intercity service.
TRAmis^ J Through the famous Blue Grass Section of Kentucky and the Mountain* of Tennessee Kg^alßilm Through Sleeping Cara Daily to Jacksonville (Open 9:00 p. m.) Lv. Indianapolis 2:55 a. m. Ar. Jacksonville 7:20 a. m. Ar. West Palm Beach (for'Palm Beach). 7:26 p. m. Ar. Miami 9:45 p. m. Beginning December 19 sleeping car will bo operated through to Miami. , Ponce DeLeon , Through Sleeping Cars Daily Lv. Indianapolis 3:20 p. m. Ar. Jacksonville 8:10 p. m. \ Ar. West Palm Beach (for Palm Beach) .6:59 a. m. Ar. Miami 9:30 a. m. Suwoneepjver Special Through Sleeping Cars Daily Lv. Indianapolis? 6:15 p. tn. Ar. Tampa 6:05 a. m. Ar. St. Petersburg 8:20 a. m. For detailed information oil any Ticket Agent or Big Four Route Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle, Phone Main 0330| Union Station, Phone Main 4567 H. D. LYONS J. N. LEMON District Passenger Agent Division Passenger Agent Southern Railway System Big Four Route 307 Merchants Bank Bldg. 112 Monument Circle Indianapolis, Ind. Phone Riley 3118 Indianapolis, Ind. Phone Main 0330 BIG FOUR ROUTE SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
These Fingers Don’t Need Thimbles; They’re Busy Building Cement Roads
ISBIM .- ~ .... . ■■■_... xfcc, -'Si ■■■
/ Miss Dorothy Cunningham
City News Told Briefly
FRIDAY EVENTS Chamber of Commerce Open Forum luncheon. Chamber of Commerce. Knights of Columbus luncheon, SpinksArms. . ... Exchange Club luncheon, Lincoln. Optimists’ Club luncheon, Claypool. Altruss Club luncheon. Lincoln. Delta Tau Delta luncheon. Board of Tr phi Delta Thea luncheon. Chamber of CO lndianapolls Federation of Community Civic Clubs meeting. Chamber of Commerce, 8 p. m. Isadore Krammen, 437 W. Twen-ty-Eighth St., told police thieves stole a turkey, goose and two ducks, valued at $lO, from his place. Veterans of Company H. 42d regiment, Spanish American troops, who knew that Bert Israel of Indianapolis served in the army as Thomas B.'McNearny are being sought by his widow, Mrs. Hettie Israel, 3901 Sheridan Rd., Apartment C 35, Chicago. i Increase in telephone rates for the Greentown Telephone Company has been asked in a petition filed with the public service commission by President Max F. Hosea. Field examiners for the Stete board of accounts will hear Governor Ed Jackson when they open their two-hay conference at the State house, Dec. 5. Other speakers will be Lawrence F. Orr, chief examiner; W. A. Dehority of Elwood, and Jesse E. Eshbaugh, former heads of the board. Sam and Louis Wides and S. C. Bodner have filed articles of incorporation with the Secretary of State for the Eastern Raw FufCompany of Indianapolis. Capitalization is SIO,OOO. Articles of incorporation were filed with the Secretary of State for the Columbus Herald, a daily and weekly newspaper. Incorporators are Michael A. Locke, Margaret E. R. Locke and J. George Rush. Capitalization is SIO,OOO common stock and SIO,OOO preferred stock. A petition signed by thirty-four residents of Medaryville, Ind., protesting against service of the Medaryville Telephone Company filed with the public service commission will be returned because of being
drafted improperly, according to J. Reid McClain, commission cecretary. Governor Ed Jackson today was holding up extradition papers for H. A. Teal from Lake County, wanted in Illinois on a confidence game charge, pending arrival of details of case. Federal civil service examinations for junior cartographic engineer, coast and geodestic survey; biochemist, associate chemist, assistant bacteriologist, associate pathologist, milk technologist, assistant chief marketing specialist and associate aquatic bioligist, have been announced by Henry M. Trimpe, secretary. A telegram to Floyd E. Williams, Gary, congratulating him on being mayor of one of the industrial centers of the. State, was sent by Governor Ed Jackson, Wednesday flight, when the mayor was given a Thanksgiving banquet by city officials.
FLOGGING CASE NEAR Jury Ponders Lash Charges in Alabama. Bu United Press
LUVEENE, Ala., Nov. 21—Shelby I Gregory, first of more than a score of defendants in the Crenshaw County masked flogging cases, probably will know his fate on a charge of kidnaping by tomorrow. The jury in Judge A. E. Gamble’s session of Circuit Court received the case last night and deliberated until 10 o’clock, when it retired. It resumed deliberation this morning, with indications that any verdict reached today would be sealed for opening tomorrow. The case grew out of Attorney General Charles C. McCall’s personal investigation of conditions in the county, which resulted in 102 indictments. Gregory, charged with participating in flogging of Annie Mae Simmons, Negress, testified McCall called him “a damned liar” when he denied the charge before the trial. Assistant Attorney General John J. Haynes, who summed up the State’s case, flayed “super-govern-ment’ and told the jury: “This thing of whipping has got to stop. No one but juries and courts can try people. No man or any set of men has the right to play judge, sheriff and jury in the woods." < : . PORTUGESE NIP PLOT Many Prominent Citizens Jailed as Conspiracy Fails. Bn United Press LISBON, Nov. 24.—The newspaper Seculo understands that many prominent Portuguese have been arrested in a plot aimed at the government dictatorship. Police have seized materials, the newspaper declared toeight, in the cities of Coimbra, Pombal, Aveiro and An^dia. Among those arrested, the newspaper said, were Camilio Valente, Domingos Lara, Dilfino Miranda, Carlos Craveiro, Rela Pereira and Silva Gandarez, prominent citizens. A few noncommissioned officers also have been taken into custody. BRIDGE PLANS PUSHED Bids on Prospect Borings to Be Opened Next Week. Bids on borings to determine the nature of the ground under the foundation of the proposed bridge across the Ohio river at Evansville will be opened soon after Nov. 29, John D. Williams, highway commission director, announced. No action on the method of financing the structure was taken at the session of the commission Wednesday, because of other busi-
SHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Man’s Work Easy for Miss Dorothy Cunningham, Even in Strike BY GLADYS CRAIG *'l can’t sew, but I can make concrete,” said Miss Dorothy Cunningham, of the Cunningham Construction Company, 1801 Kentucky Ave. During her business career. Miss Cunningham has built miles and ipiles of concrete roads all over Indiana. For years she was the superintendent of a construction gang, and the only woman on the Job. “How did you acquire the executive ability necessary to do a man’s work?” she was asked. Started In Home Work “By learning to do a woman’s work first,” was the somewhat startling answer. “Any woman who leams to manage a home successfully is fitted for business. “My mother died when I was about ten years old leaving me to keep house for the family and rear my baby brother. I always have had heavy responsibilities thrust upon me.” Her first experience in tne economic world was as a school teacher. “I got the lowest salary of any teacher in the county,” she said, her blue eyes twinkling with the Irish humor which is characteristic of her. Followed Brothers “School teaching starves you to the point where you are willing to take any kind of job. I ran a rental agency on the side to keep from starving. I’ve been kicked out of some of the best homes in town as a consequence.” In these days Miss Cunningham had nothing so unladylike as road building in mind. Her brothers had gone into the construction business, and they decided to rescue -* their sister from school teaching and give her a clerical position in their office. “They had more than they could supervise personally,” explained Miss Cunningham. “So one day they asked me if I could make two trips daily to watch a brick road that they were building out of Martinsville. The work was moving slowly, and they told me that if any profits were left at the finish I could have it. Fired Two, Did Both Jobs. “Well, when I looked the job over, I fired the superintendent and the timekeeper and filled both jobs myself. Instead of going down twice a day, I lived on the job. I had one strike which I settled by giving the men more money. “In three months the work was done, and the profits were such that my brothers thought it would be safer to take me into the firm.” This was the beginning of fifteen strenuous years of road building, during which time she lived right on the road. “I loved it,” she said. "I never lived in a tent. ,1 was always fortunate in finding a house near the road. In those days I built at night. We had our own lighting system, and I ran three shifts and kept time for all three. Adopts Son “I never had a bit of trouble in disciplining the men, although many trying problems came up.” Close confinement to business did hot prevent ample expression of the “maternal instinct.” “I’m just like an old settin’ hen,” she said. 'l’ve got to have something to look after.” So she adopted a fifteen year old boy and sent him through high school and college. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with honors. “That was the best investment I ever made,” she said. “And when he has no further need of me, I’ll find me another boy to rear, for I’ll never be left sitting in front of the fire talking to myself.”
VINCENNES OFFICER HIT BY AUTOMOBILE THIEF Policeman Clubbed With Own Revolver Following Chase. Bn United Press VINCENNES, Ind., Nov. 23.—John Horrall, 35, Vincennes, a motorcycle policeman, is suffering today from a severe scalp wound suffered in a battle with an automobile thief. Horrall gave chase to a stolen automobile on a downtown street Tuesday night and fired one shot at the thief. The bullet broke the windshield of the motor car and is believed to have Vounded the thief in the shoulder. The automobile stopped immediately the shot was fired and the thief jumped out. As Horrall’s motorcycle drew alongside the thief snatched the policeman’s revolver and struck him over the head with it, knocking him to the pavement. The fleeing man then abandoned the automobile, escaping on foot. Horrall, although in a dazed condition, notified headquarters. A fruitless search was made for the thief. TAFT TO SPEAK HERE Remus /Prosecutor to Talk on City Manager Plan. Nonpartisan ‘municipal government will be discussed by Charles P. Taft, Cincinnati prosecutor, about Jan. 1 at a state-wide meeting in the interest of city manager form in Hoosier cities. Taft took a prominent part in adoption of the city manager form at Cincinnati. He is prosecuting George Remus, former bootlqg king, charged with murdering his wife. Purpose of the Indiana gathering, sponsored by the City Manager League of Indianapolis, is to urge a model manager statute in the 1929 Legislature. Civic organizations will receive invitations to the meeting, said Claude H. Anderson, manager executive secretary. REFINANCE YOUR AUTO FAYments now on .easier terms. Confidential and / Quick. Capitol Loan Cos., 14154 E. Wash. St.—Advertisement.
SON OF KRESGE FACES PENALTY IN BOOZE CASE Scion of Millionaire Dry Is Halted by Customs Men, Liquor Seized. Bu United Press DETROIT, Nov. 24.—Howard C. Kresge, son of Sebastian S. Kresge, millionaire chain store magnate and prominent dry, today faced possible disciplinary action from the University of Michigan, where he is a student, as the result of customs officials finding eleven bottles of liquor in his expesive sport roadster. Returning from Windsor last night with two student companions, Janies Lewis of Toledo and Edward Neal of Ann Arbor, the millionaire’s son was stopped by customs officials when they discovered a bottle protruding from one of the student’s pockets. A search disclsed ten bottles of Scotch and one of champagne. The three youths did not have $55 cash necessary to pay the fine of $5 a bottle levied on all contraband liquor confiscated by customs officials. They were premitted to go, but Kresge was told to report Friday and pay the fine or lose his automobile, which was held. Mrs. Anna E. Kresge, divorced first wife of the millionaire and mother of Howard, said she did not believe the car belonged to her son. It was at a service station, she said, she understood, and Howard was at Ann Arobr. The machine bore Kresge’s license number. Kresge would face disciplinary action at the university for driving an automobile without a permit. Officials could not be reached there today for comment on the case.
DRIVER HEUTIN AUTOSMASHUP Arrested on Three Charges; Hits Police Car. John Beaty, 27, of 2015 N. Pennsylvania St., is held in city prison today on charges of drunkenness, operating a vehicle while under the influence of liquor-and driving past a traffic signal. His car collided with an automobile driven by Police Capt. Jesse McMurtry at Meridian and Sixteenth Sts. Wednesday night. R. V. Kemmer, 22, of 1703 N. Delaware St., and Don Milburn, 29, of 1305 N. Pennsylvania St., passengers in Beaty’s car, were arrested. A small amount of liquor was found in the car, police said. An automobile driven by Terry A. Rector, 28, Urbana, 111., crashed into the show window of Hook’s drug store, 301 W. Washington St., Wednesday night, when Rector lost control of his car and drove over the sidewalk. Rector told police that he was crowded over the curb. Joe Sering, 23, and his brother, Amos, 14, of Thorn town, were bruised Wednesday night when the automobile in which they were rifling skidded in front of 229 Kentucky Ave. and crashed into the iron girders of the elevation. Dale Perkins, 31, of the Loraine Hotel, driver, told police that his brakes failed to hold on the wet pavement. Others injured in traffic accidents were: Dora Larkin, 8, of 1800 Tibbs Ave.; Miss Bessie Davis, 21, of 1037 S. Capitol,Ave.; Mrs. Mary Burnes, 51, of 615 E. New York Mrs. Lizzie Corns, 55, of 2103 Fernway Ave.; Walter Elam, 35, of 1529 Kelly St.
QUITS; RECORD GOOD Ruckelshaus Lost Only One Case in 23 Months. City legal department records today show that in the year and eleven months John K. Ruckelshaus has been city attorney only one damage suit against the city has been lost. This cost the city a total of $450. Hundreds of thousands of dollars would have come out of taxpayers’ pockets if the city had lost instead of won these suits. Ruckelshaus late Wednesday asked Mayor L. Ert Slack to accept his resignation Dec. 1. Slack, in the process of weeding Republicans out of the legal department and replacing them with Democrats, had asked for Ruckelshous’s resignation Dec. 15. During his term Ruckelshaus has fought an average of a damage suit a day against the city. Slack is expected to appoint Edward B. Raub, Jr., son of Edward B. Raub, city councilman or some other young Democrat, Jo succeed Ruckelshaus.
SERVICES FOR WEADON Burial of Millinery Dealer to Be Held Friday Funeral services for George A. Weadon, 63, of 4623 Washington Blvd., who died Tuesday at Methodist Hospital, will be held Friday at 11 a. ih. at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, 25 W. Fall Creek Blvd* Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Weadon, who was vice president of Fahnley & McCrea Cos., wholesale millinery dealers, had lived in Indianapolis forty years. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Jennie A. Weadon; a daughter, Mrs. Jean Lloyd of Chicago; two brothers, Bruce Weadon of Indianapolis, and Frank Weadon of New York.
New Ship for Old Salt
(NEA Service. New York Bureau.) To-Captain E. L. Trant, veteran skipper of the White Star Line, has fallen the coveted command of the new Laurentic, the newest in trans-Atlantic liners. He and she are photoed here upon the completion of the Laurentic’s maiden voyage at New York.
City’s Leaders Urge Thanksgiving Spirit
Statement Is Issued by Priest, Rabbi and Minister. In a public statement today Monsignor Francis H. Gavisk, pastor of St. John’s Catholic Church; Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation and Earl R. Conder, Church Federation of Indianapolis president, commended a Thanksgiving statement of three nationally known religious leaders to Indianapolis citizens. "Representatives of the groups in our city, we approve this statement and commend it to every citizen of Indianapolis this Thanksgiving,” their announcement said. The statement issued by John F. Ryan, Henry Morgenthau and S. Parkes Cadman follows: “Thanksgiving is a day fraught with a national memories.--To many it brings a warmth that comes with no other national holiday. For it symbolizes the achievements, not of war, but of peace. It comes in the fullness of the year. It provokes a pause between the reapings and the sowings—a pause in which men sense the fruitlessness of life and feel that it is good. “The peril of the modern Thanksgiving lies in the very richness of the harvest, in our marvelous prosperity, in the temptation to smugness. We are prone to forget that only a people fit in spirit taste the real flavor of Thanksgiving. “Therefore, on Thanksgiving day we propose this toast to our future fortunes: “May each oncoming Thanksgiving find democracy more firmly intrenched as the spiritual core of our national being. May great and humble, Jew and Christian, Protestant and Catholic, believer and unbeliever, white and colored, early as well as newcomer to America, the man with the hoe, the "man with the tool, the man with the penmen of all races—deepen in intelligent and sympathetic understanding cf one another. “May our Nation gain strength of soul equal to meet the challenge of her unbelievable wealth. And may our people never grow luke-warm in their sense of indebtedness to the Almighty Giver of all good things.”
Little Green' Capsule Stops Rheumatic Agony Every once In a while a real discovery is made in medical history—one that benefits a host of unfortunate people. And now it’s the patient men and women who have long suffered the torturing rheumatic agony of pain racked, swollen Joints whose turn has come—who have drawn the prize. The fame of the little green capsule, because of Us canny power to speedily stop the terrible rheumatic pains that make life almost unbearable, is rapidly spreading all over America. You go about conquering your merciless rheumatic enemy in a different way —a knock-out way. Every hour the first day you take one little green capsule for just ten hours—then relief comes. / The second day, take one every two hours for 13 hours—Then take 4 little green capsules every day until every little twinge and every bit of tenderness is gone and your rheumatic troubles have ceased. The little green capsule now so much In demand from coast te coast must have a name so it is known in every worthwhile drug store in America a* Allenrhu Number 2. As is usual with successful remedies, there will probably be imitations so for your own protection insist on Alleurhu Number 2. , And please remember this—the little green Capsule must give you prompt relief —must give you abundant satisfaction —must free you from rheumntic distress or the price you pay ,for the first full bottle will be promptly refunded by any reputable druggist lu America.—Advertisement.
I PIANOS Mutin K ON THE CIRCLE ITOpeS I Records
ORYS DRAFTING 1928 PROGRAM Crusaders Say Prohibition to Be Vote Theme. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—Amerca’s dry crusaders yesterday began drafting a political program for 1928, tentatively outlining the work of the Anti-Saloon League in the approaching national, State and county elections. Concrete plans for the presidential campaign will be adopted at the convention of the League, which opens here Dec. 4. Already the League has been gathering the records of potential candidates for distribution to voters at a logical time. Plans also have been laid for getting out a big dry vote next election day if the presidential race is between wet and dry candidates. League leaders told the United Press today their organization would oppose vigorously the election of candidates, who were not avowedly drys. Party lines will be cast aside by league members and prohibition will be the election theme.
OCTOGENARIAN BURIED
Funeral services were held at the residence here at 11 a. m. and at 1 p. m. today at the Oaklandon Christian Church at Oaklandon, Ind., for Francis Marion Smith, 87, who died Tuesday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Hester Ogle, 746 N. Belmont Ave. Burial was in Oaklandon Cemetery.
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_NOV, 24, 1927
ASSERTS EIGHT COWS GAN PAY BILLSON FARM Peru Milk Company President Gives Figures for 80 Acres. y Bu United Press ! PERU, Ind., Nov. 24.—Eight good cows would pay the living expenses on an eighty-acre and all’ other products on the farm would be clear profit for the farmer, according to W. S. Mercer, an experienced farmer and president of the Sanitary Milk Company of Peru, which recently bought and is operating the Gipe Ice Cream Company in Wabash. “Eight cows, if they are good producers, on an eighty-acre farm should keep up the table, including sugar and coffee, and would pay all living expenses and taxes on the farm,” Mercer says. “This would leave the farmer’s oats, wheat, hogs, chickens, etc., almost a clear profit. The same ratio would work out with sixteen cows on 160 acres of farm land. It isn’t a good policy to go above, twenty cows, however, because of the milking time required. “Nearby farmers have begun to realize the profit in cows and having a steady cash income the year around. Miami County farmers are going in for more dairying and are well pleased with their profits. Milk production is the greatest salvation that has been offered the farmers,.” “Clover, alfalfa and soy beans are best for feed. More crops will be needed in Wabash-county to get the greatest milk production.”
RIDDLE, WORKS BOARD MEMBER, GETS HIS PAY, Judge Milner Issues Mandate After Counsel Agree. Mandate ordering City Controller Sterling Holt and City Treasurer Edward Ramsay to pay Charles Riddle, works board mebmer, his salary since Oct. 10, was issued Wednesday by Superior Judge Joseph M. Milner. The order was agreed on by attorneys. The pay was withheld on the ground that he was appointed by former Mayor John L. Duvall after the latter was convicted of violation of the corrupt practices act. Schuyler Haas, attorney for Riddle, said his client was a member of the board and had not resigned, agreeing to hold office.until Mayor L. Ert Slack appointed a successor. Local Man Sentenced Bu Times Sneeial SHEL3YVILLE, In*!., Nov. 24. Kirby Lay, Indianapolis, today is under sentence here to five days at the Staate farm on an auto theft conviction.
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Well Heated Rooms Rooms for Rent BEVILLE, N., 545; nice, warm front room; private family; garage. Ch. 7402-W. CAPITOL, N., 1102; steam heated modern rooms. Ran. 5016. Main 1934, COLLEGE, 1403; two lovely light rooms and bath; suitable for 2 or 4 men; garage optional. Riley 14X5. COLLEGE. 1539; attractive room; steam heat; large closets; suit. 2. LI. 8738. DELAWARE, N., 425; Apt. 3: cozy room; downtown apt.; home priv. Lin. 4716, HOOSIER INN; clean, warm-; special weekly rates. 440 Mass. Ave. ILL" N.. 811; nice, clean, warm, sleeping rooms; walking distance; >3 week. ILLINOIS. N., 1405'/ 2 ; 2 nice, warm rooms: private home. Main 2718. JEFFERSON. N„ 422; attractive room; modern, warm home. Ch. 1822. MERIDIAN, N.. 1152. Large front room; private bath: also clean sleeping room. Lin. 1671. MERIDIAN, furnished sleeping room; modem. MERIDIAN. N„ 2340; nice, warm front downstairs room. Modern. Har. 1583. NORTH, walking distance; suite rooms; priv. bath; for 4. Ra. 4016. Ma. 4934. WOODRUFF PL., 970 Middle Drive; dandy room for 1 or 2. Cherry 1418. 11TH, E.. 215; nicely furnished, warm rooms: modern. Lin. 4138. 16TH, W., 5062; pleasant warm rm.: men; twin beds; garage. Be. 3515. Be. 2504-Rl, Room for Rent With Board NORTH; lovely, large room; steamheated home; garage. He, 4919. RAYMOND, W., 340; more for home then wages to lady; exch. for housework. ST. JOSEPH, E., 232; 2 adjoining frt. rms.; private home; gentlemen. Lin. 1906. TEMPLE; nice warm rm.. mod., priv. home, ref., gd. meals. Ch. 2814. CHILDREN to room and board; mother’s care: $4 week. Ch. 1630. ATTRACTIVE front warm rm.; close in. priv. home. Lin. 9589. Rent Housekeeping Rooms CAPITOL. N.. 1131; attractive steam heated rm.. kitchenette, all turn. Rl. 2769—1407. COLLEGE, 2211; two nice warm r.-ns.; private entrance; modern. Hem. 3984. / HAMILTON, near Wash.; 5 rm., cottage; 3 rms., furn.: sls mo. Ch. 1424-J. MERIDIAN, N., 926; furn. light housekeeping: modern. MERIDIAN, N„ 534, front warm rm., mod., plenty hot water. Lin. 9551. NEW JERSEY. N.. 1029; 2 unfurn. rms., ht.. It., gas., wtr., auto space; *4.50. For a More Complete List See Today's Want Ads '
