Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
1 R AR NO BLANE S FXED N DEATHOF THO Coroner’s Jury Verdict in Old Dominion Accident—An- other Hurt. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va., September 14.— After hearing the testimony of four night made possible through the co- | operation of the Chesapeake and Po- | witnesses a coroner's jury from Ar- lington county, summoned by Dr. B. H. Swain, coroner, Arlington county, gave a verdict that “Austin Johnson and Stockton Kelly came to their deafhs by being struack by car No. 44 of the Washington and Old Dominion Railway Company, operated by W. H. Dodson.” The jury added: “The jury yecobmmends that proper signal or warning’ sign be placed at grade crogsing: The jury was composed of Willlam Kicystauber, foreman; J. D. East, J. . Jackson, H. T. Piowman, W. B. Fauntleroy and L. E. Tull Condition of Boy Critical. condition of John L. Crawford, thirteen vears old, also a victim of the accident, is reported to be critical today. The lad i8 suffering from con- on of the brain. and but little opes are held for his recovery. His Lrother, James F. Crawford, seventeen rs old, who sustained a broken rbone and a broken leg, is re- »d somewhat improved today. boys are sons of Mr. and Mrs. {MANY “RADIO PARTIES” PLANNED HERE TONIGHT Recelving Set Owners Extend In- ' vitations to Friends for l Fight Returns. “Como over to my house tonight and 'hear the fight,” is the invitation be- {ing extended to friends through the city today by enthusiastic radio re- ceiving set owners. “Radlo partics” have been arranged and in some instances printed Invi- |mnnns have beon sent out announc- | d informal din- |ner.party,” eto. Every one seems to realize that ]\\'a!hingmn will have ringside scats the big event in New York to ing a “radio fight at tomac and. the American Telephone and Telegraph companies. ‘The fight will be picked up by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company at the ringside and wsent by long distance wires of the Bell system to the Chesapeake and Poto- mac Telephone Company broadcast- ing etation WCAFP from where it will {be broadcast. | At the Sylvan Theater the Tele- {phone Company has installed loud- speakers, which will repeat word for {word, the ringside account as given by the announcer at the ringside in! New York. The program will start at 30 pn. and terminate with the i DOUBLE NURDER YEARUASOLED !Slayer of Pastor and Choir THE EVENING FOSTER PERMITTED 10 ADDRESS LNON Hlinois Federation Session Hears Alleged Radical After Parliamentary Fight. 5 By the Associated Press. DECATUR, Ill; September 14.—Wil- llam Z. Foster was recognized by President John H. Walker and was given the floor to defend himself us the first speaker in the Illinois Fed- eration of Labor convention {morning. Support from the International office of the American Federation of Labor arrived at the state federation con- vention, to join in the attack on Fos- program, including “amalgamation” vote on both proposals come tomorrow. Speaking as the personal represent- ative of President Samuel Gompers of {the federation, Vice President Matt Woll of Chicago, who is also inter- national president of the Typographi- cal Union, yesterday denounced the roflical léader as “Mr. Imposte whoss “hole purpose is to destro the leadership of the American Fed- cration of Labor.” & Speaks All Afternoon. Mr. Woll's speech consumed the en- tire afternoon, thus depriving Mr. “oster of the promised opportunity to will likely this | {ter, and the undefeated part of his| and redognition of soviet Russia. A | e exon ] ES TTA e 3o el (N DRY LAW FUTILE |Repeal of Prohibition Amend- ment Practically Impossible, Says Dr. Cherrington. $100 3 rrying Firearms Without Permits. Fined Ca By the Associated Press. MONTREAL, September 14.—R. E. Stuart, George Stuart and Willlam David of Alexandria, Va. who were arrested here yesterday on a charge ! of being in possession of firearms! ; By the Associated Press. without permits, were fined $100 and| (GOLUMBUS, Ohio, September 14— |costs each, ‘with the alternative of s " {Practical impossibility of the repeal |three months’ Imprisonment. {of pronibition In America was de- Police say pistols, a number rail- {way track rocket flares for stopping {tralns and some ammunition were {found in their automdbile as they were leaving the cit general secretary of the World League Against Alccholism, to be a fact in | controvertible, fn his address last night at the national convention of {the Woman’s Christian Tcmperance APPEAL TO CIVIC PRIDE | ; To lMPROVE cEMETERY‘nr the prohibition of the beverage Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. liquor traffic, and strikes at the heart LANHAM, Md., September 14.—Ap-|of free government. Adopted by Large Majority. ! “No other amendment to_the Con stitution ever received such a large majority as the elghteenth amend- ment,” he asserted. “It was submit- ted by a larger majority in Congress than any other. It was ratified by the two houses of each of forty-six of the forty-eight states, and favor- able action was taken in one house The attack on the elghteenyy amend- ment and the Volstead law, he as- i serted, goes deeper than the question |pealing to civic pride to improve the jappearance of Whitfield cemeter: ihere, a committee, of which A. D. Harvey is chairman, has launched a {campaign for funds. | Harvey gtates that the cemetery, jcentrally located, has been an eye- sore and’ urges contributions toward i of each of the two remaining states, | 1ts upkeep and beautification. 150 ninety-four of the possible ninet: i {six state legislative bodies to which K. T. COMMANDER {it was submitted, Just as every other i 3 o A e official approval, H junanimous vote amendment was submitted, gave it . some of them by |J. Brad. Beverley, Jr., Heads Win-| “Repeal of the elghteenth amend- FRIDAY, SEPT |speak on “amalgamation,: for which | ment is impossible g0 long as thirteen MBER 14, 1923. TWO ARE CLEARED ! OF BOOTLEG CHAR.GEESPEGIAI- IRAFHG lnry Agents ceeded T heir Power in Seiz- ing Truck. 4 Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md. Two men from Washington, September 14.— charged with illegal transportation and posses- {sion of intoxicating liquors, were freed s 0 s 5| | AW FOR “BATTLE” {Military Police Patrol for Ma- | rine Maneuvers at New Market. | vesterday by Commissioner Supplee, fol- | lowing announcement by the to_convict. ‘The men, Russell Slater on the Columbia pike. near ifired by the agents. former sergeant of the Regiment, Maryland National Guard, stopped the alleged bootleg car by punc- turing its tires with riot gun builets. Found in the truck, according agents, were fifty cases of illegal beer. Assistant District Attorney Morton Fisher sald that in view of a recent rul- (ing agents excexded their powers i scizing and scarching the vehicle. |HUSBAND KILLED; HOME govern- | Ment that its evidence was insufficient | Srecial Christian Schweitzer and wero armested September. ndy clared by Dr. Ernest H, Cherrington, | Springs, following a fusillade of bullets Andrew Mettee, a 104th Medfcal ; 10 ket will in Dispateh to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., September 14.— The state highway commission has promulgated special traffic regula- tons on all state roads for a dis- ance of ten miles from New Market iin all directions for next Thursday, ! September 20, when the reproduction of the civil war battle of New Mar- be enacted by the United | States marines and cadets of the | Virginia Military Institute ’ Military police are to be stationed along the Valley pike and other state | in the New Muarket area to other traffic. roads direct automobile and gns also are to be crected, intende {BURNED; CHILD NOW BORN | (. nsie isitors i he rign: dirce. Special Dispateh to The Star, | CUMBERLAND, M —Msr. Agnes Wilson, whose husband, | Levi ‘Wilson, was killed in b- struck Dby a Baltimore freight train on Hog 1 six months ago, and. with all |by fire August 29 when @’ garage ad- |3oining was burned, leaving the fam- 1ily of seven destitute, gave birth to a daughter at the Salvation Arm Home yesterday. The family sists of the mother and nine two of whom are married. September 14. ae avout and Ohlo con- | hildren, She and | ¢ i | tion !wllhln the “battle’ No car will be allowed to stop police. Already accidents are occurring on home, | 1. ghe; ralley pike, which, Tte contents, was destroyed | the Shenandosh Valley pf because of its excellent condition, has become a speedway for local and non-resident motorists, As the daily “battle” program of the marines un- folds the nuinber of tourists in- ses and doctors and hospitals are i | | zone, except at!pg voints’ designated by the military | |m IS EREEEREREE N B . L] = ZisPALAISROVAL® 3 G and 1ith Sts. A. Lisner, Pres. argain asement The makers have ® co-operated—uwith the ® m ©object of introducing - w the Autumn-Winter, 4 8 1923-24 : Dresses E and Coats —at a price to prove irresistible. purpose he was recognized before ad- | chester Order. |states are against repeal, for to| Jjournment at noon. : : the children have been cared for by o 5 hange the Constitution requires the | s ; & o prepared for emergency cas Yes- “His organization,” Mr. Woll con- |Special Dispatch to The Star. {aMirmative vote of both houses of the | the Salvation Army since they werey '/ P 5o B0 e nurt tn smash- tinued, “was formed to create minor-, WINCHESTER, Va. September 14.— | Ic&islature in thirty-six states. |re o r hom 3 | Singer. at New Brunswick, e men e 3 ; ichat g e g 4 s W on law | Volunta contributions for the|ups on the historic pike, four o utaining AN WY Sag8 NS iiten) bt T e - coor s {J. Brad, Beverley, r, a promlnenl‘xrp’;’:_:)'l‘;}'nfkbt D the probibitlon 1AW | distressed family are being collected | them being from Pittsburgh, Pa., but s | Young business man, has been elected A ki lar govern- it S Fre and Conduetor L. M. N. J., May Never Be Known ends of this impostor. Where does e e tuted mthoricy. for | With which to establish a home for |none was fatally injur S Mr. Foster get his money and what|cminent commander of Winchester the liquor fc them. Commandery, No. 12, Knights Temp- ! Motorman Dedson was does he do with m ces know that to amend | Tony of Motorm: s ocs he ith §t7 Y. t te § e 5 faation Coecret ha succeeding Willlam B. Wagner 2 CONGREGATION INCREASED 1 nstitution is a hopeless task. cffect that he was driving His organization is of a secret char- |lar, our states never ratified the known as a combination pas- | go,.ia) pispaten to The Star. acter, intended to destroy, and to| Among other officers elected was the NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., September e bonr s i B ot 2. L 5C0 PER CENT BY MOVIES James ¥. Crawford of Potomac, Ar- Hunty. train_that struck the wutomo- EASTERN SHORE FARMER DROWNS IN CHESAPEAKE twelfth amenGment, five states never | nger and baggage car and felt-the conelder proposals for his enrich- | Rev. ratified the thirteenth, four states| npact: that the automobile rolled ment.” never ratified the fifteenth, six states bout forty feet after being hit; that applied the emergency brakes, but ¢ impact foiled them. Because of threate attitude of the crowd embled after the accident, he de- ed, he was compelied to get back 1to the car. Others to testify were onductor L. M. Hinton, Alan P. Hume «nd H. B. Hansborough. NMundrcds at Aecident Seenc. 1 hundred persons yesterday went to the scene of the cident at Clifford avenue, St. Elmo, gton county, and. viewed the € of the disaster and gazed upon o - wrecked machine, which was arown on the west side of the rail- 1d track. The throng of curious ntinued visit the place until rnoo: to t in. of twisted iron and steel remained of the small| touring car, aplan, a groc unty Johnson boy's body was badly the head being literally de- itated. Kelly died a few minut tter he reached the Alexandria Hos- pital. Immediately after the accident a number of persons passing begun the ork of rescue. It was recalled that John Crawford, only thirteen years old, pleaded with the re uers to get e others out, who were more seri- sly_hurt than himself. Praise for ino pluck of the vouth, who today is in a dying condition at the hospital, was heard on all sides The that struck the boys was bound for Washington. It left the ington and Old Dominion sta- in Alexandria u few minutes o'clock, and it was dbout 2:15 when the fatal accldent occur- which belonged to Frank r. of Potomac, Arling- tion a dangerous one, the vi drivers of vehicles being ed by houses on both sides of Chase. fter an automobile Hollway and be- liguor, was staged terday afternoon on North Wash- ton gtrcet, when Policeman Durrer d three shots at the fleeing car and third shot knock: the tire and off of the machine, crippling it. officer told the court today that the seat of the car ining alf-gallon ppC d be corn Automobi A thrilling r: driven by John €d to contalr a to in summing up the accused for the action nd Hollway furn- 1d in the sum of $500. Fol- plea for mercy made b: binson Moncure, represen ay, Judge Duvall sald he not impose ony fine on the of operating an automobile in less manner while under' the of liquor, but would revoke er's permit for a period of one th «d be held the grand jury ling to Policem: at the corne and followed » arrest the nd St however, W of Franklin slowly, and occupant’ at Asaph streets. he stated, pro- hington street at a speed and the few that thoroughfare to the edge of on to close ially, the off ot In the er. This, p him rate id, e Searc the failed to then going at ¢ miles an he fired ailed, S fired air to however, e machine ibout fo he de and ot of xt e ftire third « the rin he red, thix_shot Dt the tire, knocking Before the car finally aid, it was badly erip- s phoi ot u in the gust, to ofiicer. This i ¥ years, show, that there has of typhoid in the there has been onlk 10id_ fover in the t of last Novem- iod of ten months there a case of scarlet fever or Jipbtherio during the month of Au- was fever of s ¢ of ty during the according to the oid » month he was free 14.—It s just a year ago today that {grand commander, formerly of Rich- Durrer he | and | the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall, rector of the Episcopal Church of St. John the Evangelist, and Mrs. Eleanor {Reinhardt Mills, his favorite choir singer, were shot to death and their | bodies placed side by eide beneath an | apple tree on the Phillips’ farm, just | outside the city limits. During the year that has gone not one forward step has been taken 100k~ ing to a satisfactory solution of the crime. New Brunswick has had many theories: the townspeople are still strong in making accusations in vari- ous directions, but the authorities im that today they have no more ngible clue to the perpetrators of the double murder than on the morn- ing the bodies were discovered. The apple tree, however, long has ceased to exist. It was literally torn {to pieces, bit by bit, by the souvenir {hunters. The Phillips farm is again the trysting place of New Brunswick lovers, all memory of the crime seem ing to have disappeared from those who, like the rector and the singer, set out nightly to meet their loves in the dark seclusion of the abandoned | homestead. Authorities Still Hope. New Bruaswick is convinced at last that the Hall-Mills killing is a murder | which will not out. They have writ- ten it down among the unsolved my: teries of the metropolitan district Yet the murder was not a city affair. {1t involved two promjnent persons in a small town—persofls whose every- day life and associates should have been known to every one in the place. | Despite this fact, no compeiling mo- [tive apparently ever could be traced by the authorities to the doors of {those who from time to time were | suspected of the deed. | The state and county authorities {would not admit today that they had glven up hope. “The case is not dead; something may yet turn up to unlock the riddle. If we could only get one ayenue of approach to the mystery open the whole case would stand revealed in a little while. The naturhl places to look for motives have given us ing on which we could proceed. Mrs. Frances Noel Stevens Hall, wealthy widow of the slain rector, is in Europ where she went just as soon as the authorities granted her permission to leave the country. Mrs. Hall employed counsel for herself immediately after the shooting and was examined sev authorities. When a* special grand jJury was considering the case sh demanded that she be given a hear. ling. At all times Mrs. {herself a woman of tremendous poise {and self-possession. She insisted from ithe first that she knew nothing of Ithe love affair between #ier husband jand the wife of the sexton of the i chureh, Husband Still in Town. | James Mills, the sexton, says thaf | some persons still suspect him’ of hav | ing had a hand in the crime, but he !is such a mild-mannered man, so sub. I'missive in spirit, that the authorities | never \have elieved that he could | have committed such a cold erime. { Certainly he did not have the means | to hire paid assassins, no matter how | cheaply Iife is held in and about New York ecity. Mills still goes dutfes as janitor of a nearby school, {and rails at the police and prosec: { tors for the manner in which he sa: | they “botched” the whole affair. ! Henry Stevens, brother of Mrs. i Hall, is also in Europe with his wife, Hits Recognition. Denunciation of the proposal for |- recognition of soviet Russia was sim- | ilar in tone, Mr. Woll declared, recog- | mition was “not merely an exchange | of courtesies, but would make United States government responsible | | chartered in 1512 as campment, the | campment vears before formation of the imond, to be prelate. ! The'local commandery the oldest y. having been | ‘Winchester En- No.l,” by the Grand En- at Philadelphia. or ten Virginia historical | states oth- | al times by -the | Hall proved | out his | for enforcement of all trade agree- ments entered into with Russia by American capital”’ Such action as proposed, he said. was playing into the hands of capitalism and paving the way for war with Russia, to en- force some capitalists’ arrangements. ONE UNION DEFEATED. Metal Polishers Oppose Idea of Amalgamation. CINCI; Overwhelming defeat of the one big union principle, as sponsored by radi- labor lead was recorded at the { Sesslon last night at the International ‘?"{HM Polishers’ Union in convention ere. The vote on the proposition showed and that 122 opposed it. requesting the release of all remain- ing war-time prisoners. WILL ATTEND MEETING ing as Revresentative of the Dis- trict Utilities Commission. The Public Utilities Commission has decided to send E. V. Fisher, its chief accountant, to the fifth annual conven- tion of the American Gas Association, o be held in Atlantic City next month, in the belief that he will be able to obtain valuable information ou public utility bookkeeping. The subject of how the depr account should be handled has been 1one of the most troublesome questions that has arisen here sin {of the utilities commission. { _This question will be dissucced at the convention, and will afford the lo- cal commission a opportunity to find {out how this matter is handled by { companies “elsewhere. ! | ROCKVILLE. | ROCKVILLE, Md | (Specialy.—Mr. and i Nicholson of Travilah, | daughter, Miss Sarah Rebecca Nichol- {®on. and Lloyd Lester Cave of Wash. . Clifton F. this county |in Washington last week. They ex- Ipect to make thelr home at Chevy | Chuse, Md., where they are bullding a i hom . . | Miss Edith Serita Schoonmuker ana I(‘lar&nre‘ ‘W. Gosnell, both of Washing- ton, were married here Wednesday evening by Rev. S. J. Goode, pastor of the Christian Church, the cere- imony taking place in the church in {the pres { Rockville friends of the couple. Democrats to Meet. The democratic state central mittees for Montgomery and Fred- | erick counties will meet in Baltimore next Thursday and nominate a candi- jdate for associate judge of the sixth Commandery of Virginia, at never ratified the sixteenth, twelve naver ratificd the seventcenth and twelve states have not ratl nineteenth. Yet nobody eve tions any of these, which re adopted Just as was the eighteenth The convention which closed to- ed to meet in Chicago in ques- NATI, Ohlo, September 14.— | | that 14 favored the idea In principle | The delegatcs passed a resolution | OF GAS ASSOCIATION: E. V. Fisher, Chief Accountant, Go- ave announced the marriage of their | | ington. The ceremony was performed | nce of a few Washington and | | mond, in 1822, BALTIMORE, Md, September ing to the pastor, the Rev. Harry P. 14— -d the|The showing of motion pictures de- picting Bible stories at the Wilkens Avenue Methodist Church South dur- ing the summer months has increased the congregation 500 per cent, accord- By the Assoclated Press. CAPE CHARLES, Va, September 14. —Sterling Nottingham, fifty-one, one of the best known farmers on the eastern shore of Virginia, was drowned vesterday while bathing in Chesapea bout six miles by Jow Cap The body was recovered | 4| Girts' s2.50 Dresses $1.98 Flne qualits ginghams, faxt e Bew fall Rizes 7 10 14 years. Cinderella Dresses $1.00 Bluck sateen ty models and gloghame, with or without pan- ties. Bizes 2 to 6 years. 1316 TO 1324 The Grand Finale—The Last Day Of This Sale—All Men’s Suits % < fie ation | the creation | A sale worth attending and values worth while. About 200 suits left in this sale and practically every one can be worn this fall and winter. Styles.and colors for the snappy and conservative dresser in both lots and no charge for alterations. Sizes 32 to 46. i but it is sald they planned their trip|judicial circuit, composed of the two {long before the murders were com- ! counties. It is understood that Judge i mitted. Willie Stevens, the “fire-buff,” | Robert B. Peter of Rockville, will be jstill city. | visits the fire house daily and {runs after the apparatus at every | {alarm. “Willie,” a simple soul If ever | | there was one, was questioned sharply | ! by the prosecution at one time, for | the crime had some of the earmark: of the cunning of a half wit. | 1In the last analysis, however, it ap- | peared to be one in which the motive lof jealousy and revenge played the | major rol | The manner in which the two bodies fw | his companion in illlcit love and in { death, rhowed %the calculating pre- !'cislon with which ‘the murderer or | unanimously named to succeed him- self. 1t is understood that Harry L. Wil- | lard will be the republican candidate | are made to give service. i A great collection of suits that Every one has |for county commissioner from the hird collection district to succeed iClagett C. Hilton. He Is said to be the | | choice of the republican central com- {mittee for the county, which will {make the nomination, and it is said {he is willing to make the fight. Two | years ago he was his par: candi- ere lald side by side, with the rec- jdate for sheriff and came within about | Neither | tor » arm thrown over the shoulder of |4 hundred votes of winning. Championship Ball Game. | The attendance record for base ball com all forms of communicable dis- { murderers had gone about their work, | in Montgomery county is expected eptember 12 this ipated 126 school \small children school Foulks says that this spe- clal work placed a avy burden on the department, but he adds the de- jartmen. was able to meet the situ- @ion without delay or confusion. twenty-eight deaths ths in the city dur nionth, according to the re- for the first | Iunw of the minister's calling cards { was propped up against the heel of {one of his shoes. A single bullet In | the head had ended his life. There were three bullet wounds, an inch apart, in the head 6f Mrs. Mills. Her throat also was badly siashed. The shooting was the work of an_expert marksman. No trace of the pistol ever was found. Clifford. Hayes, whom the authori- ties blunderingly arrested on the istrength of an unbelievable confes {sion by Raymond Schneider that to be broken tomorrow afternoon, ! when_Rockville and Boyds play a | game at Boyds, which will decide the i championship of the Montgomery {County League. The two teams are now tied for | irst “place, cach having won 20 and| lost 4 games, and the game on Satur- ldly will bring the season to a close. | Rockville was in the lead until | Wednesday afternoon, when it lost the second game of a double-header with Bethesda, * The drive for funds for the Japanese of the colored man found | Hayes had shot the couple by mis- | earthquake sufferers, which is being in the river street identified as that of C vesterday _off orge T. Pri . who lived 2 South Columbus street. The dentification was made by his som, Charles Preston, s Washington let- ter carrier. RSERRRE S B CARLOADS OF HARDTACK FOR JAPANESE RELIEF Special Dispateh to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., September 14— Two solid cars of Army hardtack, the regulation food, were donated to the American Red Cross by L Bluford of this city, and they have started on their way to San Francisco, The food wag donated for the relief of the suf- ' fevers in Japan. AMr. Bluford bought the hardtack when Army supplies were sold, and, in order to prove the real condition of the hardtack, it was inspected by the state and federal officers and 126855 packed in the. OFEImAL cate 04 pacl n 2 ' 4ons, and was Hermetically-sealeds _ s ; take, goes about his daily work, re- | was later in the day|spected by his friends and towns- :gomery County Chapter of the Red people. Schnefder is in the reforma- tory as a result of his false testimony. | His wayward sweetheart, Pearl Bal | mer, + Shepherd, in Newark. Quiet reigns today in New Bruns. wick and Jersey justice, for once at least, seems to have missed it mark. WARD TRIAL PROGRESS. WHITE PLAINS, N, Y., September 14.—The eighth, ninth and tepth ten- tative jurors were chosen In two hours this morning for the trial of | Walter 8, Ward, the millionaire bak- er's son, for the murder of Clarence Peters, ex-marine. Mrs, Ward was in the courtroom !again today. She greeted the prison- er with a smile and took a seat be- {hind him. Later Ward handed her a letter he had just received. She read it and passed it on to Ward's ?ruhsr Ralph. It was rw;ruvdv the etter was from George ‘ard, tather of the prisomer, conducted in this county by the Mont- i(‘.ro. under the direction of the sec- etary, Mrs. J. Somerville Dawson, is progressing satisfactorily and it is is in the House of the Good ,believed that more than the coucty's | {allotment of $1,100 will be raised. | | The Rockville branch has alone so far raised §325. The campaign closes Saturday. A license has been issued by the clerk of the circult court here for the marriage of Miss Anna A. Flem- ing and Everett E. Geller, both of Washington. Election Supervisors Meet. The supervisors of elections for the county—Laurason B. Riggs, Norman.| Wootton and Frank Dwyer—met here yesterday afternoon, and, after or- ganizsing as a boafd of canvassers by electing Mr. Riggs chairman and Mr. Wootton secretary, canvassed the votes cast at Monday's democratic and_ republican primary elections in the county. The officlal count increased the leads of P. Hicks Ray, for one of the demo- cratic nominations for judge of the orpbans’' court over James P. Gatl from ten as- shown by the ung urns to seventy-nine, but other changes of - two pairs of lined pants, and the coats are made in numerous models. Sizes 8 to 18. 50c, 59¢ and 69c Valuesin Saturday’s Bargain Sale, 4 ‘Women'’s Outing Flannel Bloomers........ Women’s Flowered Crepe Bloomers....... i# Women's Embroidery Flounce Petticoats | Women's Muslin Drawers ‘Women's Embroidered Envelopes. { Elastic Waist Bandeaux... Muslin Brassieres. { (jingham or Percale Aprons.... Women's Full-cut Crepe Gowns. { Infants’ Muslin Gertrudes ‘|E Infants’ Ruben Style Shirts 11E§ Infants’ Knit Bands............. { Girls', 2 to 12, Knicker Drawers... Baby Carriage Pillowcases....... { Pink or Bllglebfilocgl Baby Blankets. { Women's Fabric Gloves. l!—lnd;. Imported White Batiste. $0c White Turkish Towels. .. { Women’s Heather Mixed Hose. Onyx Lisle Hose, Dublwear. Guest Size Huck Towels. { Striped Ontln‘rFllml Featherproof Ticking . { Yard-wide Storm Serge. ‘Women's Gauze Vests. . Opaque Window Shades. ¢ Y‘r:-wlde ‘White Organdy. { White India Linen. ¢ Women’s Union Suits, all sizes Imported Mechanical Toys.. 3 ‘Women's Gabardine Dress Skirts. ‘Men’s Knit Ties. . included at the price. 7TH ST.. NW. A Sensational Purchase and Sale Extraordinary! 300 Dresses!: 8 to 12 Years Bloomers 25¢ Girls® hatiste or _crepe bloomers, _elastic waist or knee Fall cut Five strles in fine grade batiste. full “length; ali fulleot sizes. Worth 98c. pink R RO S ANENENERENENENEOREEE é |m Poiret Twills. All-wool Poiret Twill Spanish Silk Lace Heavy Silk Crepe Georgette & Silk Offering at the start of a new scason the most wonderful selection of styles, models, materials and trimmings we've ever gathered at one time. The styles are so numerous that we do not feel able to describe them, but we feel certain that for value there will be nothing in the city to surpass or even equal this lot. 16 to 44, and extra size Lace Dresses On Sale 9 A.M., Saturday! A Hoét of Charming Styles in New Fall Millinery Hats of silk velvet, brocades, felts, tinsel cloths,", suedine and combinations, trimmed with stylish '§ ornaments, ribbons and pretty embroidered ef- fects. Large and small shapes in black, oakwood, beaver, brown, pearl, red, ‘etc. guarantee to please you in this line at $2.95. Wonderful Quality, Style, Service and Value in These Boys’ & Girls’ Solid Leather School Shoes The 'styles that the youngsters feel proud to wear on the opening days of school, in black, mahogany or brown, made on the natural growing foot form, many with low rubber heels; smaller sizes with epring beels. Childvem's sizes 8% to 111;; Misses’ sizes 11% to 2; Boys’ sizes 9 in the emall to 6 ju the larger Doy We could almost All sizes for women and misses, up to 52. See Window Display! O SR 0 ST £ R VR L L AL 2GS0 VRS SO Ve S0 S S AL T VAl Nk, Y S S B | I FEEESNEEN DEANSENGEEREN/ One of the manydresses —of Satin Canton, Can- ton Crepe, ® Crepe de = Chine, Char- meuse, Knit- LE R EEEREREEENEEREENENNNLRBENRNERERRERBSERHNNHERIN] m ted Fabrics, Misses’ Sizes, 16 to 20. Women's sizes, 36 to 44. Extra sizes, 42 to 52. AN ENEINIIAAAEAN Wool Ve- lour, Sue- dene, Plaid p Back, Striped .~ Velour and . Sports fab- rics, famasneEman fany have la‘rge Fur Collars EEE R EREESEEENRERDNE] LN} ‘U< ) - ¥s £ & nearly - all are lined. H garment. On $ale Tomorrow—Palais Royal-Basement.