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| e Pioneer Huts to Rose Bowers, Educational Expert’s Dream }Conference at Indianapolis to Take Up Live Stock Forecasting The farmer living his lonely life on the prairies of the Dakotas, the metal miner living in a shack on the side of €omo western mountain, and Fanchman herding his live stock over many square miles of territory in the west would all be better for a little training In art, according to George €. Nimmons, specialist in higher edu- catlon, attached to the bureau of edu- catfon. | “For the purpose of training these | pioneers of civilization @rts the bureau of cducation has | Just issued a circular which, it is | hoped, will go far toward prevention | of abandonment of farm life. ! Lands gardening, proper | ting of tre in pposition to COOLIDGE'S STAND ON SABBATH LIKED United Presbyterian Church Synod Also Asks Dry Act Be Enforced. A resolution commending President Coolidge for his stand on the observ- &nce of the Sabbath featured the final meeting of the Syr the Un North 2 morial Church yesterday Another resolution requ President to use diligence the Volst terian Church of t the Wallace Me- | sting the in seeing ad act is obeyed, w od. During a lengt] , Which preceded the pass > latter resolution partic was put on the necessi- | men in office who are in | favor of the eighteenth amendment. | _Election of members of the board ©f trustees of the synod and appoint- anent of other officers concluded the session, Those cted to the hoard of trus- | Rev. J. Howard Tate of | 3. H. D of N New | Tobert Rev Killaugh of k and Philadelphia. ASK $12,500 DAMAGES. B. E. Hinton and Wife Sue Capi- tal Traction Co. and District. Mrs. Louise Hinton 2nd her husband, Bynum | . Hinton. Mrs. Hinton acks $10,000 damages for injuries sustained when her auto- mobile, caught in a depression of the roadway adjoining the company" tracks on Connecticut avenue be- tween rant road and Albemar Street, carecned over an embankment, | he machine was demolished and Mrs. Hinton tained serious injury, she states. ligence in permitting the roadway to remain In a dangerous condition is all Mr. Hinton S 2,500 damages. He es of the auto- | mobile s and | the expense incident to her injuries. | Attorneys Wilton J. Lambert and Ru- | Yeatman appear for the | house and buildings, and a generally attractive appearance would the farm or the shack of the miner a the | much more attractive place to live in, the expert points out. been made owner only architecture problem. ~The importance training to the home is obvious, for the house itself, its furnishings and its immediate be artistic. character and stanaurd of tast lei home surroundings A man reflects his own THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 19 | | | Service. make for a three-day conference with ture | study " recent reporting and statistical oughly, the forec: Main topic include st ports, of fo timates and estimate: crops, including app! co. The fir of art of the conference s for accuracy, should e when |U. S. CROP ESTIMATORS | TO MEET STATE EXPERTS Leading federal and state crop es- timators and statisticians from the Inorthern and eastern states will meet | “There is scarcely a ranch or a.| farm that could not originaily have into an attractive and beautiful place without additional ex- pense,” Mr. Nimmons says, “had the possessed knowledge of and landscape gardening | sufficient to enable him to take ad- antage of his natural surroundings in the fine |and the possibilities of his building cials of the Department of Agricul- at Indianapolis October 22 improvements in_crop methods. Acreage measurement and crop con- ditlon reports will be discussed thor- department said in announcement today, as well as the |sion. 2 ting of live stock production. of the use of crop re- correlation casting methods, live stock es- of commerclal broom corn ttempt in the dicate the probable erations. ing the conferen ASK I. C. C. REHEARING. offi~ pealed by State. to| The state of Illinols and various com- munities along the line of the Illinols Central asked yesterday for reargument of the Illinois Central “cut-off” case be- fore the Interstate Commerce Commis- its The commission, will ruled recently that the was entitled cerned, nois _Central Edgewood, I, to Fulton, Ky. heard the The Hirsh Shoe Stores Have Made Saturday a Big Day for the Childrer Note These GREATER Values—Can You Beat Them? Growing Girls’ Tan, Colt Oxfords; nature shape la heels and perforation Slzes 2% to 8 Gun Metal and Patent English and rubber Children’s Patent Button With gray top, tops; patent collar— red top, 4 to 8 8% to 11 . Extra Special! “FIRST STEPS” For the little tots; feather Metal and Pat- in broad and F welts and rub- French toes. 5 ber heel, wing tips. Sizes 1 to 5% Sizes 9 to 13% for Boys Boys' Tan and Gun Metal Lace Shoes, bread and English toes. 9 to 13%. 52'45 $2.95 1 to 6. . $245 mouse top, white ‘top and dull High Lace Shoes, in tan, gun metal and patent colt; Eng- lish_and nature shape lasts; rubber heels and perforations. . $395 and Tan Patent Leather High Lace Shoes, nature shape; rubber heels; tip and plain toe. Sizes 2% to 8........ $3.95 Pumps; In patent with one strap and plain toes and . $395 Sizes 21 to 8 Gun Metal Dress leather, two buttons; rubber heels. Sizes 2% to S.. Misses’ and Children’s High Button and Lace Shoes, stitch downs: solid leather throughout; Goodyear welt; stitched wide extenslon soles and heels, in tan, gun metal and patent colt; button and lace. Stzes 5 to 8 ........ $1.95 Steen 8% to 11 ...... 9245 Stzes 113% t0 2 ...... $2.95 “Upper Seventh Street in Location—City-wide in Trade” Members Better Business Bureau MOUNT VERNON INSURED SAVINGS PLAN MOUNT VERNON SAVINGS BANK WASEITON, e —— F BANKING His Bank Balance $27.00 Wife Received $1,027.00 Henry Hagemann, 421 Seventh St. SW., was a decorator. Dra- peries and curtains in scores of Capital shops and homes testify to his skill. One day he was putting up the heavily shirred mauve draperies in the windows of the Mount Vernon Bank. “Mr. Hagemay said one of the bank officials, “why don't you open a Savings Account on our Insured Savings Plan?” Mr. Hagemann hesitated — he had always been so well and strong, he said. The word “In- sured” had never interested him. Then he was shown how, even at the age of 52, he could accumu- late in 120 months more than $1,000.00 for himself and from the beginning have the comfort of $1,000.00 life insurance protection for his wife. Like so many others, Henry Hagemann decided that here was one of the easiest ways of having insurance and saving money ever devised. His Insured Savings Account, No. 787, was opened. Every month he came in and deposited $2.30. A few months later Henry Hage- mann contracted typhoid fever and several days later he was dead. Gray-haired, home-Joving Mrs. Hagemann had very liftle property. His only son, a young man in the carly twenties, has a wife and two little children to support. The hospital and funeral bills ran into hundreds of dollars. And then a check for $1,027 with a_ letter of sympathy from the Mount Vernon Bank came into that stricken home! Was ever $9.30 a month better invested? The canceled check, the certifi- cate with “Deceased” in red ink across its face, the passbook with its record of those little monthly savings and Mrs. Hagemann's grateful letter are all in_the archives of the bank. Mrs. Hage- mann has opened a savings account here with part of the money. ‘What happened to Henry Hage- mann might happen to any one. Let us figure out the small amount you would have to save monthly at your age to have $1,000.00 pro- tection through Insured Savings. The Continental Assurance Com- pany of Chicago provides the in- surance feature of the plan. Drop in and talk it over, | field of live stock surveys was made by the department in ‘collecting data on pig production in an effort to in- pig_crop from information collected on breeding op- The possibility of extending this survey with regard to live stock and wool will be glven attention dur- Illinois Central Cut-Off Case Ap- over the protest of Iilinois and the communities oons to build the Edgewood “cut-off,” running from Only two of the commissioners out of eleven arguments in the previous case, today's petition sajd, and these itwo disagreed in their firtings. A re- hearing by the entire commission was | ax: sought. 14, 1920, and September 24, filed through TWO DIVORCES ASKED. Mrs. Missourl J. Early yesterday filed sult for a limited divirce from Sam- uel A, Early, a letter carrier. Wwere married In Baltimore November charges her 'husband Cruelty also is alleged in the petition O'Shea and Anna L. I Desertion also is alleged In a petl- tion filed by Mrs. Isabelle Penfold | nst: Percy Penfold, who is sup- | d to be at the general hospital | esno, Calif. They were mar-, Japuary 1921, and the wife | says her hushand left her October 15, | 1922, Attorney W. for the wife Do; 1at ried % GASOLINE CUT 2 CENTS. DETROIT, October 19.-—Announce- ment of a decrease of 2 cents a gal- lon in the price of gasoline, effective | of Fhey Hoove together when the deserted until wife her, lived 1 electricity nd the Wayco Oil Attorneys James A. dent compan increa: CLOTHES of EXTRAORDINARY QUAL at LESS THAN ORDINARY ~ PRICES. Today, everybody is careful to consider their clothing purchases. They insist upon Value and %uafity. All the more reason why you should first inspect our Fall Fashions before going elsewhere. The beautiful designs and materials we are showing, will instantly lease the most exacting men and women. he prices will prove a welcome surprise— they’re so exceptionally low! Talk about Value and Quality—here’s where you getas much as one can possibly give. And what's most attractive, is our unusually Easy Credit System. Doesn’t add a cent to the price of the garment but makes it so much easier to buy! You'll like our particular system im- mensely. Just choose what pleases you best and charge it. We will cheerfully arrange terms — anything you say, within reason. Fashion’s Fairest DRESSES Developed in a number of pleasing new style treat- ments, everyone of which has been accepted and ap- proved by the leading fashion authorities. Easy terms of payment=—only. 1ix HOOVER URGES ELECTRIC | POWER FOR FARMERS Experiments are to be promoted by | been done in M. Fuller appears | the Interior and Commerce depart. ments looking toward increased us | of electricity on farms, the A | Farm Bureau Federation | ised yesterday by Secretaries Work and Speaking at a luncheon of the fed- eration’s committee on the relation | agriculture, today, was made by the White Star Hoover said proposed super-powe systems would bring about gre d use of electricity c —within reason /) a8 - electr | chinery Secretary Work would tion of Mr. | Mrs. Ell Atilpgdnnuining Osr guarantes gives you the greatest protection. It you find you can get better quality elsewhers at the same price or the same quality for less— bring it back! Men’s Latest SUITS Fine suits that are the last word in Style, Quality of Materials and Expert Workmanship. In models to please every man—and at prices that represent a decided saving to you. $2 4.95 Ladies’ Suits $26.98 NewTopcoats $32.50 Stylish Coats 19.98 Fine 0’Coats 25.95 See our splewdid display of fur jackets— they're in be the rage. 3 reat demand now, and will Astrakkan, Caracul and famens Saif's Pile Fabrics. Easiest terms. Large As. sortment Stylish Stouts Suits, Coats, Dresses CLOTHING STORES 621 7th ST. N.W. 50 Stores in the US. T ater daily, f | would use the machinery of the Com. | merce Department to take a survey of the use of eléctricity by farmers in foreign countrtes and also to &s- | certain what experimental work had farm ma- said the Interior rtment belived increasing use of v on farms and on lamation iderably the migra- arm dwellers to cltles, projects Bell. who sces that the peo- 2 . are supplied with is be- af