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THE - SUNDAY STAR., WASHINGTUN, D. C., OCTOBER 14, 1928—PART 1. ) ASEMENT GARAGE | - PROPOSAL STUDIED | LAYING CORNER Zoning Commission Delays Action on Rule for Apartments. The Zoning Commission will give fur- #her study to the suggestion for a new | fegulation to permit garages ir the | basements of apartment houses before submitting the proposition to publiz hearing. After announcing decisions early ) ferday on 18 specific applications for changes in zoning. the commission con- tinued in executive session during the afternoon to go over eartain broad roning problems. including the question | of garages in apartment houses. Maj. Donald A. Davison. executive of the commission. was in- structed to draft a tentative am-nd- ment on the subject of garages In apartment houses. to be given futther deliberation at a future executive meei- ! Ing before it is decided to have a pvb- lie_hearing. The commission decided also yester- day afternoon not to consider al this time making any change in the present rule which specifies the number of A stories permitted in each height area. Rev. John B. Frazicr, refired For example, in the 90-foot height arca 000 edifice to be erected at Twent the limit allowed is ecight stories, and the suggestion before the commission was that the number of stories be elimi- nated. leaving the height limited in terms of feet only. Set-Back Rule rpreted. The commission worked out an inter- pretation of the existing rule permit- | ting set-backs on high buildings. The text of the rult was not changed, the commission's only purpose being 15 de- fine more clearly the conditions under | which buildings may be erected with set-backs. The application to change the prop- erty west of Thirty-fith street between § and T strects from residential to first commercial, which was opposed by school authorities on the ground it would bring business development 100 | elose to several school buildings. was furned down by the commission. ol semar e commission granted an crease & ety 3. from 90 to 110 feet in the height limit | BIRMINGHAM, Ala. October 13— of A part of Emergency Hospital on |Mrs. Nancy Rochell. wite of a promi- New York avenue befween Seventeent : ey o and Eighteenth streets to permit con. "on¢ Birmingham business man. wa struction of a sun parlor or top of the found shot to death and Clyde A. building. Other decisions were reached Vaughan, Birmingham policeman, seri- by the commission as follows: ously wounded iIn an automobile in Wi sl ,f.,mz‘.,?':'ommm'flr':f:{ | Mountain Brooks Estates, one of Bir- 110-foot height limit, of 1821 to lflzfl‘mh\lhlm's most exclusive rosidential 1 el e ¢ a0 1o | Sections. early today. pplication increase from 90 to | & - BB Rpba D 110-foot. helght limit property from |y Ristol belleved to have, belonged fo 1722 to 1726 L, street. granted. | of its chambers empticd. by Td Patillo, Avplication to change from residen- | trafic officer, who was attracted by tial to first commercial 1118 Thirteenth | tne shooting. ' Patillo said Vaughan was SRS yenied, slumped over the steering wheel af Height Tncrease Denied. tempting to start the car when he ar- Application to raise helght limit from | Fived and that Mre. Rochells body was 80 to 110 feet on property from 1521 {umpied for to 1527 and 1520 to 1526 K street, | VRUSHAN'S i denied. 1 Application to increase from 90 to 110 feet the height limit, 726 Fifteenth | g street. granted. Application to change from residen- tial to first commercial property from 1011 to 1013 C street southwest, denied Application to change from residen- tial to first commercial 23¢ C street northeast, denied. Application to change from residen- tial to first commercial 1605 Irving street. denied. Application to raise the height limit from 40 to 60 feet and to change from A restricted to C area residential prop- erty on the east side of Georgia ave- = s P e o e L Vaughan Recently Suspended. Anplication to change from A area to | Vaughan only recently had been su B restricted property between W and | pended by the Birmingham police de- Calvert streets and Thirty-ninth and | partment following an altercation with Fortieth streets, denied. a fellow officer guring the State feir Application to change from A re- here. He is 36 years old, married and stricted to C area and to raise the | had been a member of the police force height limit from 40 to 60 feet on the ' five years. residential property east of Connecticut Mrs. Rochell, who was 26 years old, avenue, betwesn Chesapeake and Dav- s survived by three small children— enport streets was granted. Raymond. jr.. 7: Juanita, 5. and Ra- Application to change from A re- stricted to A semi-restricted the resi- | H. J, Edell of Birmingham, in addition dential propertv on the south side of to her husband. Raymond R. Rocheil, Fverett street, between Reno road and | proprictor of a soft-drink company. Thirty-sixth street was denied. | " Mr. Rochell said that he had been Application to change from residen- aware of the acquaintance of his wife tial io first commercial property east ' with Vaughan. Mrs. Vaughan, In- of Alaska avenue near Twelfth street formed of the shooting. hurried to her was denied. husband’s bedside at the hospital. Application to chenge from B re- | corner of Eighteenth and M streets Application to change from C to D é LEGION POST PLANS stricted to A restricted residential prop- northeast was granted. office! chies -secol WOMAN 1S KILLED. MAN FOUND SHOT Body of Mother of Three Discovered in Auto With Dying ex-Policeman. in seat by Slizht Chance to Recover. Vaughan was sent to a hospital here it was said he had shaht chance | to recover. Police had been searching for Mrs. | Rochell at the request of her husband | when she failed to return home after going shopping _yesterday - aftcrnoon Late last night the Rochell car, which Mrs. Rochell had driven. parked on a downtown s t. Patillo said_that when ho reached the scene of the shooting. M. C. Ham- ilton of North Birmingham was stand- | Ing near the car with the pisiol in his hand, and stated that he had taken it from Vaughan. area and to raise the height from 60 to 90 feet on the residential property 3t the northeast corer of Norih Gap- tol street and e Island avenue SURPRISE TUESDAY erty in the vicinity of New York ave- R TR nue ':;d Bladensburg road northeast. | Appouncoment Follows Special gran Application to change from residen- . i A tial 1o first. commercisi the nortnwest, Mock Court-Martial of Gen Frank T. Hines. e 3 - ART OF NEAR EAST | reonkt Shinet sicector of the niied Is BEING D'sPLAYE States Veterans' Bureau, at its last meeting. as the initial event in a series of entertainment programs at meetings of Industrial Exhibition and Sale Held to Raise Quota of $6.000. American Legion. another surprise event is planned for the meeting next Tuesday_night. | "'Paul V. Colling, post commander. at the last meeting ordered a speeial mock court martial of Gen. Hines on charges | of “singing in a manner unbecoming an officer and with having been A. W. | ©.L. for more than a year." A lerge display and sale of Near | “rhe court, including Mai. Gen. Amos East industrial art pleces is being held | o Pries and Harlan Wood. department at 1405 F street northwest under the | commander of the District of Colum- suspices of the Near East Relief #nd pja Department of the American Legion the American Priends of Greece S0- | Servn. at judse advocate. and Gapt. ciety, with Miss Nancy Emhardt. daugh- | Charles O. Shaw. counsel for the do- ter of Dr. Willlam C. Emhardt, execu- | fense. found Gen. Hines guilty and sen- tive of the eommittee on ecclesiastical | tenced him to 60 days on stable police relations of the Episcopal Church, in|quty. The sentence was commuted, Enlisted Have repaid $56,- deposits with the Government was 260. This is a slight K number of depositors in 1927. 22,793, ‘?nd a marked increass ovsr th» num- | br of depositors in 1926, 10.196. It iz | noted that during 1916-1929, including charge. however, next morning by the post com- and the bazaar of Jerusalem with its | charge, gates and visitors to the General Con- | #6.000. the following denominationsl | Since 1872, man of the woman's committee: Con- | ment C. H. Lambdin and 15. 1872 euthorizing deposits by Mrs. Edwin Dinwiddie, woman's com- | 195 M. Pollock: private schools, Miss Sarah | Regular Army. the World War, th> number of soldicr hunting will begin in this section Tues- depo=itors reached 351,09 October 30, and Big Spring. November | including tha Werld War, the totai The exhibit includes a glimpse of = mander. Shoe Lane in Athens, with exquisite | The program for the meeting Tues- embroideries; the street called Stralght | day night is being kept a. secret, but in Damascus with its Oriental rugs, | much fun is promised by those in potteries | . The Washington national headquar- | fers of the Near East Relief has ex- | $56,466,72 DEPOSITED tended a general invitation to the dele- | 'BY SOLDIERS IN FUND veption of the Episcopal Chureh. 0 further the campaign work in | Washington of the Neas Bast Relief 1o | 1,864.103 Men Taize its quota to the national fund of | Availed Selves of Law ehairmen have been appointed: Seventh Day Adventists, Dr. B. F.| i Bryan: Bantist. Dr. Henry W. O. Mill- | That l‘";‘-'"Sfif'“-‘hd""Rl\;‘O.‘a- s ington and Mrs. W, G. . | class, are thrifty is shown by - £t v G. Waldo, chair- | class, are thrifty is shown by & Hale- gregetional. Dr. J. N. Plerce; Methodist | ment. 5aying that since the act of May Episcopal, Di . Clarence E. Corkran: Methodist Pro- | “oldi 864,493 enlisted men have de- testant, Dr. R. Y. Nicholson: Presby- | posited terian, Dr. Freeley Rohrer: Protsstant of $36.46. Episcopal. Rev. J. J. Queally; Lutheran, | the depositors have b mittee: Reformed. Dr. J. D. Buhrer: | “erest of $3,591,019.6o. United Bethren. Dr. S. B. Daughert During ths 55 year Disciples. Dr. H. B. Smith: Woman's | tion, the soldiers' dzposi: Christian Tempersnce Union, Mrs. N. | been popul Van Gundy of the National Episcopal Sehool | LEESBURG. Va.. October 13.—Fox dav. when the Loudoun Hunt Club will| The number of depositors repaid cur- meet at Virts Corner at 8 a.m. | ing the past fiscal year reached 19,132 Other meets announced are Sniders|a decreass over the 27,633 repaid Gate, October 23 at 8 a.m.. Lessburg, |1 During the four y 1916-1 € David M. MeDonald is master of | posits ropeid. including fox hanmes and H. T. Atwell is hun‘s- | intarest, reached the hizi m2n. The Lemdoun Hunt Club was ' znv four-year period with organized last vear. 20778 $ ¥ was found | STONE OF CHURCH 0O of Navy chapiains, 1ying the cornc nd and P streets by the Treshyterians of ' TWO EX-SOLDIERS. ENEMIES stenc of the Ch F THE PILGRIMS h of the Pilzrims, a $350, the South. Siaff Photo. | = IN FRANCE. MEET HERE AGAIN| Police Guard ;t B Recall Battle in France. - | | church. He sald he would conduct my | soldiers—one an Ameri- can, the other a_German—who stood 10 years agn in France face to face. throwing shells and gas and flames at erach other. came fare to face in Fmergency Hespital. For the first time they learned there that they were op- ponents in the great world conflict, in th> same soctor. Here's how it came about, M. A. Rai Park Folice, signed to v who wa \ Two enemy v of the United States was one of A group as- tch over George Bongers, ¢ in the Emergency Hos- pital. charged with the murder of his wife. Eight hours a day beside a bed grew monotonous and con- versations were started on aimost every subject with patients in the room Thore came a new one, Eugene Thicle. 32. 1440 Fairmont street, his heel frac- tured as a result of a fail from a scaf- fold. Talks With New Patients. Looking for a new fi~ld of canversa- tion. Rainey asked him if he was hurt | badiv. Thicle responded in broken English. which Rainey immediately recognized as German, he beileved. “Germen, aren't .vou?" ask ol an f | " the German ro “Were you in the war?" | “¥es" ‘was the reply Then it was found that at the tim~ outfit, Company E, 1st Gas DROPS O CHARCE IN OBREGON DEATH ied. Mexican Supreme Court Withdraws Conspiracy | Count. mona, 7 months— and her mother, Mrs. | | By the Associated Press MEXICO CITY. October 13.—The chargs of conspiracy againat Jose de {Leon Toral. the mother superior Con- | eepeion Acevedo de Ia Lata and 11 oth- | ers held in connection with the assessi- |nation of Gen. Alvardo Obregon, was today ordered withdrawn by the Su- perlor Court of the federal district. Toral, who killed Gen. Obregon, re- mains under the charge of murder. Charged With Complicity. | Mother Concepclon is held under a | charge of “compiicity” in the death of the President-elect and that charge is also still entered against several of the other defendants. Some of the | satter, ‘who are not believed to have been connected with the Kkilling of the George Washington Post of the Gen. Obregon. are held under charges | orzanizations since This refers ons_which of Deputics Obregon political of damage to property to dynamite bomb exp! took place in the Chambr building and in the headquarters. | Others Held With Nun, | Those held with the mothr superior on charges of complicity in the assassi- nation _are Carlo Castro Balda, Miss Maria Elena Manzano. Eulogio Gonzales Arzola and Jorge Fe The personality of that the charges which they must fa in court refer io earlier plans to kill Obregon and not necessarily to the actual assassination by Toral A sister of Mother Concepcion, Miss Joefina_Aceveda de la Liata, is among those held on the property-damage count. | Arzola, Maria Manzano, Castro Balda, { Eduardo Zozaya. Miss Lamor Rubio and | her sister, Miss Margarita Rubio; Mrs. | Esperanza Arjona de Cisneros, ond her Anna Maria Cisneros | | daungter, Miss | Arjona. 58.19, which includes accrued in- of its authoriza- has always ar with enlisted meon of the During _th= past fiscal year the number of soldi>5 who made creas> over the in! 0, ND MRS, > just sitting | raander Galardo. | curred over the question of absolute | Others in that list are Gonzales Gronarn W | dside of Patient in! Hospital and Injured. German \ and Flame Regiment. 1st Division. was throwing gas and seorching fire acrose No Man's Land, Thicle, a member of th> 63d Prussian Guards. was sending over a volume of machine gun bullets Rainc» was on Hill 306 and Thiele of Hill 104, Thiel> went out of the pic- o thera en September 18 with a shell- torn ride. and still retains shrapnel there, while Rainey stuck around mak- ing # hoo for his German opponents till September 23. 1918, when a shell siruck him in his right leg. breaking the leg and ankle. Converse for Hours. “And T haven't seen a_German sol- dier since that day unti! T was detailed o the hospital; or rather, I haven't seen any one who would admit that he_was a Germa For hours the two conversed of the places they knew in the vieinity of Montfancon, France, and of the condis tions they faced then. ‘Both admitted that life’is qulet now compared with those strenuous days on the front, and Thiele told Rainey, the latter said, that the German troops that were thrown into that section in an effort to'stem the tide of advance. then in progress, wers afrald of their American oppo- nents: they did not want to go in for what ~they believed then, and later found out to be a fact, certain defeat. Policeman Rainey lives at 5817 East Capitol street DEATHS DECREED N BALKAN FEUD Macedonian ~ Autonomist | Farty Leader Pronounces | Sentence cn Rival Faction. | By the Accociated Pracs SOFIA. Bulgaria, October 13.—The bitterness of the Balkan feud between two powerful Macedonian factions grew | more violent today. Ivan Michailoff, |leader of the Macedonian Autonomist Revolutionary party. pronounced the | “death sentence” upon all supporters |of the late Gen. Alex Protogueroff. as- sassinated leader of the rival Mace- donirn group. This drastic action by Michafloff | followed an attack on the leader of | | his forces at Petritch by two Bulgarian officers, who in turn were slain by a | punitive expedition sent out by Mi- | | chatlofr. | | The deadly feud which has been sepa- rating the Macedonlan revolutionary | 1924 has been In- | creasing i violence ever since _the | assacsination fn Sofia on July 7 of Gen. | Protogeuroff.. Frequent reports of | | clashes have been received as the con- tending parties engaged in reprisals | |and_counter-reprisals. | The latest news, October 5, said that | 123 followers of Protogueroff had been | (hanged in a forest just outside the | | town of Kustenjil The split among the Macedonlans oc- autonomy for Macedonia or the incor- poration of its parts now divided among Jugoslavia, Greece and Bulgaria as a federal state in one of these countries, presumably Jugoslavia, which rules the greater part of the historic district. . The biological station of the Soviet Academy of Science has started an in- estigation of the finding of vast num- !bers of dead fish along the Crimean coast following the entire absence of fish in that vicinity ‘during the past ! season. | them. The command to stop was dis- | Special Dispatch to The Star. | of public TEGMAIER, golden wedding anniversary yesterday at the home of their #12,230 <} ¢avghter, Mrs. Felix J, McDonald, 619 Fifteenth sireet northeast. ~slar Staff Photo. ]n[ the towns which contributed them. | committee in charge. PLGHNS'CHURGH MOTEER oF LésT. oF czams DIES IN CASTLE IN DENMARK LAYS CORNER STONE comer erovess wre 5. = | lieved to End That Son l still Lived. Chaplain Frazier, Retired, Officiates at Ceremony for | o Presbyterian Edifice. jSister of Queen Alexandra T Was 81—Daughters Pres- ent as End Comes. | | i | | The corner stone of the Church of the | Pilgrims. Twenty-second and P streets, | which is being built with money given | by thousands of Presbyterians in the South, was laid yesterday with Chief Chaplain John B. Frazier, U. §. N.. re- tired. 3 minister of another faith, of- Russia, who. before sha became the fictating. | wife of a Romanoff and the mother of Chaplain Frazier conducted servicesat {the last Czar. was Princess Dagmar the church of Rev. Andrew Reid Bird |of Denmark. died at Hvidore Castle at while the pastor of the new church |7 gelock last night. The princess had toured the South raising money for the ' peen failing for weeks and she lapsed project. The new church, when om- |into unconsclousness several hours be- pleted. will have cost $350.000, and be a | fo unconsclou national shrine of the denomination. Gifts Mostly Small Ones. dre From the section bounded by Texas ; - | Duchess Xenia orida. Miss v 3 : i h went to make up the sum w"hlmnress court, were present at the ich the church is being built. On the |deathbed. A Russian clergyman Leonid pews and other church furniture and | KOItief. was with the princess the cquipment will be inscribed the names | SreAter part of the day. The former empress, aware that her and into the corner stone yesterday aft- | end was coming, had during the past ernoon were placed the names of all | week taken sorrowful leave of several those who gave, supplemented with the | old retainers who had followed her from names of their children and grandchil- | Russia. Like her sister, Queen Alexan- dren. | dria of England, she lived to a ripe Dr. Bird yesterday told of the strug- | old age, having passed her eighty-first gle it was to bring about his dream | birthday. but in strong contrast to the of a church for Presbyterians of the! happler fate of her sister. she spent Nation in the Capital. “We started,” | the closing vears of her life sad and he said, “with nothing but a small —- 2 wooden building and 100 folding seats, | to bring our teachings to cosmopolitan | Washington. Then came the war and | we did manage to enlarge our building | and make it more imposing. | gregation at best, however, was mainly a drifting one. We did as much we could for the soldiers and sailors, Special Dispatch to The Star. who flooded the city during the war.| ORANGE, Va.. October 13—All is in Chaplain Frazier noticed our work and | came to me one day and after a talk | we worked out the plan for a national | By the Associated Press. COPENHAGEN, Denmark, 13.—The former FEmpress Mari> of October Her daughter. the Grand Duchess Olga. with her husband and two chil- her_second daughter. the Grand ORANGE SET FOR FAIR. Flaborate Display of Home Farm Products to Be Shown. and the Orange County Fair, which will in- clude this year an elaborate display of farm and home products and a great live stock and poultry exhibition. Lucio W. Hill of Locust Dale, Madison County, iz president of the fair associ- services while I worked on my plan So 1 packed my bag and took to the road. swinging throughout the South. to get the money for the church that fs ROINE up now. Program is Varied. The program of the corner stone lay- | ing. which was held at § o'clock yesters | day afternoon. was as follows: Processional hymn, invocation by Rev. | Wallace Radcliffe, pastor emeritus of - the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, representing the Presbyteran | Church North, Scripture rcading from the Old Testament by Rev. C. E. Haw- | thorne of Wallace Memorial Presby- | terian Church, representing the United | Presbyterian Church; Scripture reading | from the New Testament by Rev. James H. Taylor of Central Presbyterian | Church, representing the Presbyterian Church’ South: solo. “How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings,” by Mrs. Walter K.| Wilson: prayer, led by Rev. S. A. Mc-i | | | 19, inclusive. pen a ud_qct Charye Acct. 1005 Pa. Ave. N.W. [¢] B Murray, missionary to the Kongo: fd- dress by Rev. Harris E. Kirk of Frank- lin Street Presbyterian Church, Balti- more. moderator of the General As s*mbly of the Presbyterian Church of the United States; corner stone laying by Dr. Frazier: prayer of thanksgiving and consecration by Rev. Frank T. Mc- | Faden of the First Pr terian Church, Winchester, Va.: solo, “Open the Gates | of the Temple.” by Mrs. Wilson, and| benediction by Rev. W. L. Darby, rep- | resenting the Pederation of Churches | | of the District | The inscription on the corner stone | | will "be: “Jesus, Christus. Via, Veri- | tas, Vita, Salvator, Dominus, A.D. MCMXXVIIL" | PEN WOMEN HOLD | TREASURE HUNT| Miss Emily Davis Finds Mystery Casket in Quest at Mrs. C. C. Calhoun's Estate. Miss Emily C. Davis, & member of the District branch of the League of Ameri- can Pen Women, was the finder of the mystery casket, chief prize in a treasure hunt staged yesterday afternoon by the League of American Pen Women at the country estate of Mrs. C. C. Calhoun, Braemar Forest, Chevy Chase, Md. The directions for finding the casker were in poetic form and Miss Davis' skill in following them led her to a =ave in which the casket nad been placed by the second sccretary of the Persian legation. The casket was a unique Chingse box. Insid> were a string of amber beads, a silver filigree and lapis lazuli and a silver and black cigarotte case. The Riding and Hunt Club staged a paper chase over & course of 7 miles on horseback. It was won by Miss Alida Robinson. Her prize was a gold bar pin in the form of a stirrup. The chase was led by Ennalls Waggerman, jr.. and Roland Dawson. A troop of Boy Scouts aided in the treasure hunt by directing the search- ers. A group of children under Miss Evelyn Davis gave an impersonation of Robin Hood and his merry men, and a group of students from the Marjorie Webster studio gave the chief enter- tainment feature at the reception and tea held in the Rossdhu House, home of Mrs. Calhoun. Mme. Orlano. impersonating an Oriental princess, opened the cover of A huge leather chest which had been carried into the room by two men representing Nubian slaves. When the chest was opened Miss Bernice Smith, leader of the dance, stepped out Mrs. Calhoun was chairman of the D. J. KAUFMAN Founder of the Business, who will be here to give you the “Glad Hand.” $20.00 Imported French Trench Coats $15-75 Absolutely Water-tight Snappy, New Collar-Attached and CO”R r'tO'M I'C'\ Shirts $1.85 3 for . SHOT BY U. S. PATROL. PORT DOVER, Ont., October 13 (#) —Fired upon in a pursuit by a United States patrol boat when he falled to obey an order to stop his gasoline launch, Louls Douichaw of Erle, Pa. today was in a serious condition’ from h!lltlet wounds in a hospital at Simeoe. nt. Douichaw and a companion were in | A launch a few miles from Erie when the government boat tried to overtake 525 regarded and the pursuit craft opened fire. The launch, however, escaped and the injured man returned to Port Dover carly today. He is expected to recover. New Effects in Fall Caps $1.95 Worth ANl of $2.50 . Democratic Women Organize. CULPEPER. Va., October 13.—A Democratic Woman's Club was organ- ized here this week at a largely af- tended meeting, addressed by Charles M. Waite, Democratic County chair- man. Officers were elected and vice presidents appointed for each voting precinct in the county. A membership committee was put to work and plans made for having a woman speaker ad- "lrr‘s; the club early in the coming week. $5.00 All-Wool Knitted Vests $3.95 Shades of Gray and Brown with her son Vessili, | PRINCESS DAGMAR. lonely after the tragedy which depr her of her son. the late czar and family. She maintained to the last a pathetic belief that they had not been killed but were only exiled to Siberia. She waited ever patiently for their return. This hope was thaught to have pro- longed her gradually declining life. A Russian priest led the members of | the royal family in prayers in the death chamber. A representative of the royal | Life Guards of Denmark, a regiment in | | which the princess had taken great in- | | terest. brought a bouquet of white | | chrysanthemums, which were played at | the bedside. Many Danish sympathizers gathered outside the castle }DANZIG SERVICE PLANNED | Telephone Talke to Cost $50.25 for | Three Minutes, ! Transatlantic telephone service will be | extended tomorrow to Danzig. one cf | ved his | the world, it was announced yesterday | by C. T. Clagett, general commercial | representative of the Chesapeake & Po- | tomac Telephone Co. |~ The rate from the District to Danzig will be the same as to Germany. $50.25 tional minute, P e OLD FRIENDS MEET 31 years ago D. J. Kauf- man founded this business, which from a modest be- ginning is now the fastest- growing men's clot}iing business in town. This splendid and ever i“ercas;ng success we owe to you and to the loyalty of thousands of other good friends and customers— and it is for you that we are going to give this 5th Ann“al Hal’ve$' H ome Festival — Applcs. cigars. pretzels, smokes and many other good things have been planned for you. our friends. Come help us celebrate. We want to renew “old friendships” and make new ones. We want to Shake your ha“d and make vou feel at home. RADIO JOE. A Harvest Home Festlval Where We Have Gathered a Cro;S uf Old-Fashioned Values 1,500 Thirty-Five and Forty Dollar Two-Trouser Suits “Sharp“ Topcoats Warm Wooly O‘Coats Silk-Lined Tuxedos $29.75 1,500 pieces of bright, new, sparkling merchandise, especially made and especially priced for this looked-for event. Months ago we worked this out with our manufacturers and made ‘em “come across.” “Buy'em on the Kaufman Budget Plan” IARDINE COMPARES PARTY FARM DEAS Secretary Points to Increase in Prices 6f Products Under Present Administration. By the Associated Press GATE CITY. Va.. October 13.—W. M Jardine, Secretary of Azriculture in the cabinet of President Coolidge. and John G. Anderson of Bristol addressed a gathering of Scott County voters here this afternoon. At the outset. Secretary Jardine an- nounced his intention of dealing with issues of the presidential campaign di- rect. He declared that his address w3 not of the “back-patting. electioneer- inz variety,” but one in which he pro- posted to aquaint his audience with the agricultural situation in national pol- itics. Delving into material which he s2id was taken from official records in Washington. the Secre‘ary challenged investization of the facts #®Declaring he was a farmer him- self, and tnerefore he believed he was qualified to judge farm problems, the speaker compared the records of both nleor parties on the agricultural ques- tion. In defense of the Republican admin- istration of the last eight years, the Secretary pointed to the increase in prices of farm products and contrasted this period with the Democratic regime prior to that time. He declared that the {ariff and other measures in the charge of the agri- cultural department were cntitled to all credit for advanced prices. He at- tempted to show that the agricultural sections had prospered during the last eight years in contrast with “the free list” of Wilson's administration. Sccretary Jardine discussed at length Tammany Hall and its attitude on agri- culture, asserting that Tammany Hall had opposed practically every measure tending to relieve the farmers. He readiness for the opening Tuesday of | the smallest autonomous territories in | €ited as example of this apposition the tariff. the Pederal Land Bank, Federal intermediate credit system and the Capper Volstead act. To let the audicnce “think with the actors” during a storm sesne in a Lon- ation. The fair will continue to October | for 3 minutes and $16.75 for each add{- | don thriller a wind machine iz turned on those sitting an the main finar, Fifth Annual Budget Plan 1724 Pa. Ave. N.W. A JOSEPH D. KAUFMAN who is “carrying on” in Dad's foot- steps. He'll be looking for you, too! " Super-Quality Topcoats $19.75 Loose-Body Models Silk Trimmed Hand-Tailored New Fall Neckwear $1.50 Specially Priced $2.00 Imported Washable Fabrie Gloves $1.39 Dozens of Wool and Silk Fancy Hose 69c 3 for $2.00 Lyon Village Meeting. Special Dispatch to The Star LYON VILLAGE, October 13.—The October meeting of the Citizens’ As- rociation will be held Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in the office of Lyon & Fitch on the Lee Highway. A program improvements will be dis- cussed. A petition, asking Robert Anderson. president, to call a special zession to consider ths condition of streets and sidewalks has been pree sented to him, Meet “Beau Geste” (Bo-Gest), the Blue-Blooded Style Merchandise Exclusively at Our TWO STORES Beau Geste Beau Geste (The Shirt) $2 Beau Geste (The Suit) $45 Beau Geste (The Tie) (The Hat) $2 $6 Money's Worth or Money Back