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6 BODY OF PATIENT - FOUND INCOUNTRY J. A. McKenzie, 70, Discov- ered After 19-Day Absence From Sanitarium. The body of John A. McKenzie, 70, who had been missing from the Wash- ington Sanitarium and Hospital, Ta- koma Park, Md, since September 11, was found yesterday afternoon on the McCormick-Goodhart estate, Riggs road, Chillum district, Prince Georges Coun- ty, Md. The body was identified by McKen- zie’s daughter, Miss Mary McKenzie, 124 Sixth street northeast. Charles Leizier, an employe on the estate, choping. trees, came upon the body in a clump of bushes. Natural Death. Following an investigation of the case yesterday by Deputy Sheriff Hervey H. Machen of Hyattsville, Justice of the Peace Israel B. Arnold of Brentwood, acting coroner for the district, issued a certificate of death from natural causes. ‘The body was removed to the funeral establishment of James T. Ryan of ‘Washington. The funeral was held this afternoon, the body being placed in Ab- bey Mausoleum. Mr. McKenzie was found about 2 miles from the sanitarium in which he had been undergoing tréatment for a nervous disorder. Scouts Aid Search. McKenzie, according to officials of the sanitarium, wandered away on the afternoon of September 11. When he did not return police were notified, and an intensive search of the woods sur- rounding the sanitarium was instituted. Later police were aided in their search by Boy Scouts of Washington and Montgomery County. Police depart- ments of the country were notified and a description of the missing man was sent out. A reward of $100 had been offered by Miss McKenzie for locating her father. Mr. McKenzie had been employed at the Capitol on the stenographic com- mittee. He was well known about the building and had served as secretary for former Representative Grosvenor. Mandarin Coats Not Stylish. PEKING (#).—Mandarin coats are no longer stylish in Peking. Since the Nationalists marched through the great gates of the walled city this ceremonial attire of Northern officials for centuries has come into disrepute among govern- THE EVENING WORSHIPERS WARNED AGAINST THIEVES This unusual sign on the dcor of the All-Hallows, Barking-by-the-Tower, | the oldest parish church in London (built 675 A.D..), warns against pickpockets. | It reads: “Not every one who enters this church is converted. Please watch your handbags, etc.” —Underwood Photo. the award of such medals would be an GOOD CONDUCT AWARDS |11, nee %o gona conduct, and improve PLANNED FOR ARMY MEN ™ morale and disclplulefr the service. Medals of Appropriate Design to Accuracy in Fitting CLAFLIN 922 14th St. Indicate Meritorious Service Pro- posed for Enlisted Men. Award of good conduct medals to enlisted men of the y, similar to those issued In the N: contemplat- ed by the War Department. According to the plan under consider- | bum ation, sych medals of appropriate de- signs, with accompanying ribbon, would be given to all enlisted men of the Armz who, upon completing three years of honorable service, were recommended by their commanding officers for ex- emplary behavior, efficiency and fidelity, as well as suitable bars or other device, to denote subsequent similar perjod of Hor Towelsand Whyte-Fox No.2 certainty do plav havoc with @\ Pimples and sore necks, just like Lucky Tiget wrecks Dan- druff and Scalp ailments. & WHYTE-FOX ment sympathizers and is no longer seen in the streets. honorable service. It is believed by the authorities that " Is your money working for you? Very few people can comfortably take the leisure side of life when their earning capacity dims on the wheels of time. More than thirty thousand letters are being sent to our savings depositors advising them that the semi-annual interest has been credited to their account. The total sum of interest credited is $190,022.87 Somebody is receiving the benefit of this vast amount. Regular deposits will soon represent a sizeable amount. Open an account with us now. Our savings depositors are requested to bring or send in thewr éassbaoks, so that the interest may be entered therein. 3% on Savings MERICAN SECURIT o2 T L ND TRUST COMPANY o 15th and Penna. Ave. Capital, $3.400,000 Surplus, $3,400,000 . BRANCHES: Central—7th and Mass. Ave. Southwest—7th and E Sts. S.W. Northeast—8th and H Sts. N.E. Northwest—1140 15th St. N.W. WASHINGTON'S LARGEST TRUST COMPANY STAR, WASHINGTON, BIRTHPLACE OF WAR WILL BE TORN DOWN “Plot House,” Where Ferdinand's Assassination Was Planned, to Be Razed. BELGRADE (#).—The Club Narodna | Obrana, Europe's most famous “plot house,” where plans for the assassina- tion of Archduke Ferdinand and his consort were perfected in 1914, will soon be torn down to make room for an office building. It was in this one-storied, crumbling shanty that some of the darkest political plots in history have been hatched. Under its roof final instructions were | given to Tchavrilovitch and Princip con- | cerning the crime which precipitated | | the World War. i From this clubhouse as a center most of the agitation azainst Austria- Hungary was carried on. Since the war it has been used as a headquarters for the dissemination of propaganda against Italy. Meanwhile the Serbian patriots have acquired a new building from which to conduct their activities. A tablet will be | | placed on the front of the office build- ing when it is erected, pointing out the historical significance of the site. SEEK NOISE CURE. Scientists Try to Prevent Clamor of City Streets. LONDON (#)—British scientists and | noted men in other fields have turned | | their attention to the elimination of | the nerve-racking clamor of city streets. | The booming. clanging, clashing, | whistiing, trumpeting, honking, clatter- | ing, buzzing and banging which goes on | in the streets night and day has become ' too much for them. | . Londoners who visit New York declare | they would not live in the American | i metropolis because of the din of the city. In fact, however, New Yorkers who come to' London 'say the same thing. London probably suffers from much more noise than New York. There Amazing Liquid are several reasons for it. London's streets are narrow and winding and the motorist’s view is dangerously blocked | at intersectior | -~ D. C, MONDAY, TURKEY TO USE RADIO. Stations to Aid Instruction in New Alphabet. ANGORA, Turkey (#).—Radio has become a factor of special importance in the consummation of the Turkish | revolution. | The minister of education ordered that the two transmitting stations in Angora and Constantinople should de- vote a large part of their programs to the teaching of the newly adopted Latin alphabet. They have also been instructed to give the public lectures against suicide, which has reached a high figure and threatens to undermine the nation’s | DON'T cut corns, fatal poisoning may follow. Remove them in amazing scientific way. One drop of this liquid deadens pain in 3 seconds. Then it acts to shrivel up and loosen corn so you peel it off. Doctors urge it for safety. Beware of imitations. Get the real “Gets-It” —for sale everywhere. “GETS-IT,” Incy Chicago, U.S. A, GETS-I Expressive loring—silk trimmings, superior character. Plaids, solid colors; Herringbones. A Special Choice of hundreds of Fall Top Coats—in a Impressive Assortment and | Values in Fall Top Coats You are inter- ested only in some one Coat—but to have that ONE Coat you will pre- fer means we carry a variety of hun- dreds—requiring a floor for their dis- play — equivalent in space to that usually given to a complete store. Here are Coats of foreign and do- mestic production —made up in in ported and Ameri- can weaves—Kknit- ted cloths, smooth cloths, rough fab- rics, including hand - loomed Harris Tweeds and the aristocrat of coatings— Llama fabrics. All of them shower-proofed. $29.50 $6§-00 | Some have set-in sleeves, others with raglan shoulders—and all with those refinements of tai- etc,—indicative of their Gray and Brown; dark Offering OCTOBER 1, 1928. variety of weaves and models and colors—made to our spe- cial specifications—and marked 52930 Reign of the Raincoat All-worsted gabar- $3500 dines, in Tan. Trench Coats of true military cut, with belt; safely rain-ptoof. $7.75, $10.00 & $20.00 Ninth at the Avenue KNOWN STORE — FOILS HOLD-UP he had the presence of mind to save|pockets, they tied him to IS ot with his money. | his head. Still believing . Browning ‘Was preparing for bed on | ge sum_ of maney some- Junkman Tosses Money Into Pmr got. in his yard when ane of Bis as- | % ransackéd hig home, but £ His Wares. sailants grahded him by the srm. As|fc 0thing. After searching more ¢ i Ihe a haif :hour they demanded of TOPEKA, Kans. (Special).—E. W.|p 13 where he kept his monsy. Browning, aged junk dealer of this city, | his mo: bank, he told them, and offered was overpowered by two men and tied | pile of te a check: They refused it and in a cot in his back yard recently, yet|. Unabi ing reached irto his | is other hand, grabbed and threw it into a Sy Sidney West , 14th & G Streets N, W. ACHIEVEMENT The “TAILORED FIFTY” Tailored by MESSRS, STEIN-BLOCH Exclusive is a fooa word often found in bad company. Our “Tailored Fifty" Suits are really exclusive—exclusive pattern &/\ designs, rich woclens custom-tailored with supreme excellence. And when it comes to a question of value-giving, you could go a long way without finding a suit that so successfully makes its price a secondary consideration, 50 DAV NV VN VAVAVA An old Maine woods recipe gives the finest baked-bean flavor known beans in the logging camps of the Maine woods. They bake them in the ground! The big round-bellied bean pot is filled with the flavor-rich ingredi- ents—Ilots of brown sugar, molasses and prime sugar-cured pork. Then it is put to bake all night long in the “bean hole”’-an oveninthe ground. This gives the finest baked-bean flavor known. A blend of forest fragrance, pungent wood smoke, fresh earthen oven. And now this same wonderful woods flavor is reproduced for your own table. In Bean Hole Beans! You'll be delighted with this new y achievement in flavor. It’s so differ- ent! Enjoy it today. Ask yourgrocer to send you 2 or 3 cans. Two sizes —medium and large. o . acup of molasses_~ Iy s hrow su a\l\up of brown su 2hi Bt e of sugar-cured Pa T o e & layerof beans