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14 FOURTH FESTIVAL OF MUSIC T0 OPEN Wide Response Given to Invi- tations Drawn by Mrs. Cool- idge—Concert Tomorrow. The fourth chamber music festival to be held in the Elizabsth Sprague | Coolidge Foundation auditorium at the Library of Congress, beginning tomor- row' and lasting through Wednesday night, promises to ‘have an unusually representative audience drawn by invi- tations issued by Mrs. Coolidge from all over the country. Many famous musicians and a num- ber of authoritative writers on music are in this list, as well as many whose names are internationally familiar as patrons of this art. The music division of the Library of Congress, Carl Engel, chief, announc-s th> following guests who have accepted | from out of town: Mr. and Mrs. Crosby Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Aldrich, Dr. G. Adolf Anderson, Albert Anderson, Richard Appel, Ugo Ara, Miss Helen Arthur, Mrs. George T. Ashton, Percy Lee Ath- erton. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bailly, John M. Barrett, Warren Bassett, Harold Bauer, Miss Marjon Bauer, Mme. Serge Bazavoff, Mrs. Tilde Beisner, Miss Louisa Bellinger, Mrs. Lalla R. Biays, Clarence C. Birchard, Mrs. Ignatius Bjorlee, Mrs. Edward H. Blanc, Miss L. P. Bliss, Charles H. Bochau, Miss Anna Bogue, Prof. and Mrs. Edwin Borchard, Franz C. Bornschein, Charles N. Boyd, Bertram. Henry and_Saul | Prant;” Mr. and Mrs. Jamos Crosby 'n and Wade R. Brown. Further Acceptances. Mr. and Mrs. Hartwill Cabell, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cahier, Miss Elsa Camp- bell, Dr. Willlam C. Carl, Mrs. Clyde M. Carr, Mrs. William Ellis Coale, Ethel Cave Cole, Miss Grace Collie Miss Dorothy Comstock, Mr. and M Charles Cooper, Richard Copley, F. C. Coppicus, Mrs. George Eustis Corcoran, Miss Elizabeth Coulson, Miss Louise Crawford, Miss Grace Cronkhite, Mrs. Matthew Cryder, Mrs. W. Bayard Cut- ting, Miss Minerva Daniels, Mrs. H. Maurice Darling. Mrs. George Parmly Day, Mr. and Mrs. Victor de Gomez. Carl Deis, Eric de Lamarter, Dr. and Mrs. Bertram de Young, George S. Dickinson, Dr. and Mrs. A. R. L. Dohme, Rev. C. W. Douglas, Olin Downes, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Dur- ham, Roscoe Dunn, Mrs. William Me-, Kee Dunn, Dr. Edward Durne) Arthur H. Egerton, Mr. and Mrs. Lud- wig Eisemann, Mr. and Mrs. William | Ellery, Clarence Evans, Mrs. Hoxie | Fairchild, Lynnwood Farnam, Mrs. W.| Rodman Fay, Mr. and Mrs. James W. Fesler, Mr. and ‘Mrs. Arthur Ficken- scher, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Flagler, Dr. H. T. Fleck, Mrs. Mark M. Foraroff, Alfred Frankenstein, Mr. and Mrs. James C. Freeman and Carl Friedberg. Additional Guests. Donald T. Gammons, Henry F. Gil- bert, Leopold Godowsky and Leopold Godowsky, _jr.; Wallace —Goodrich, Drothy Gordon. Mr. and Mrs. Jacques Gordon, Mrs. Olive Meade Green, Mrs. Edwin F. Greene, Mrs. Louis Gutman, Miss Minna Hager, Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Hale, Professor and Mrs. Clarence Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Hamlin, Walter Hancock, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Harnwell, John B. Hay- ward, Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Henssler, Miss Rebecca _ Hickok, Prof. and Mrs. Edward Burlington Hill, Mrs. Charles Hofer, Miss Rebecca W. Holmes, Miss Adelaide Hooker, Miss Barbara Hooker, Miss Rosalie Housman, Mrs. Charles P. Howland, Frederick P. Huber, Mrs. Adella P. Hughes, Mrs. Parkhurst Huguenin, Alfred Human, Ernest Hutcheson, Henry St. John Hyde, Lewis M. Isaacs, Werner Janssen, Mrs, Theresa Jellinghaus, Mrs. Edward L. Johnson, Miss Lorraine Johnson, Mrs. Arthur W. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Werner Josten, Henry Junge, Dr. Les- ser Kauffman, Dr. Edward Keffer, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Stillman Kelly, Miss Marion Kerby, Plerre V. R. Key, Dr. Otto Kinkilday, Miss Sally Kirby, Miss Marfanne Kneisel, Mr. and Mrs, Sey- mour Knowlton, Mr. and Mrs. Egon Kornstein, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Korts- chak, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kozze and Mr. and Mrs. A. Walter Kramer. Many Responses. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lacier, Miss Minnie C. LaDown, Miss Dorothy Law= ton, Miss Bess B. Lee, Mrs. Joseph Leidy, Miss Irene Lewisohn, Miss Mary Leonard, Gabriel Leonoff, Mrs. J. Lovell Little, Miss Florence Littlehales, Miss Lillian Littlehales, Dr. Karol Liszniew- ski, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Loesser, Otto Luening, Prof. and Mrs. Hamilton C. McDougall, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Ma- defra, jr.; Robert C. Mann, Miss Martha Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Boris Maruchess, Mrs. B. F. Maschal, Mr. and Mrs. Mau- rice Matteson, Alexander McCurdy, Mrs. Allan McLane, Dr. and Mrs. Stanleigh Meaker, Joachim Meyer, Dayton Millen, Mrs. Antonia S. Minor, Mr. and Mrs. Lfonroe, Mr. and Mrs. Nicola Gilbert Mon- GOOD HEALTH —and good teeth go hand in hand. You can’t neglect your teeth with- ing the consequences of success s in of Large, Comfort: Terms of Payment DR.FREIOT Phone National 0019 407 7th St. N.W. Mices. May Be Arranged Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the Mei Lan Fang, and Mrs. Mei. MRS. WILSON AN HONOR GUEST in Peiping. China, was a guest of honor at a tea given by China's foremost acior, THE SUNDAY former President, who has been v ng —Associated Press Photo. tague, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Morgen- thau, Mrs. Willlam J. Morrison, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Murray, Miss Kath- erine Nathanson, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Niles, Miss Helen Norton, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Norton, Mrs. Richard Noye, jr.; Bernard Ocko, Mrs. R. E. S. Olm- stead, Otto Ortman. Mrs. Lafayefte Page, Miss Emelyn Paige, Mrs. Alvia Parker, Mrs. Horatio Parker, Frank Pat- terson, Miss Augusta Peabody, Mrs. John C. Phillips, Gino Perara. Alfred Pochon, Mrs. Edwin W. Poe, Mr. and | Mrs. Benjamin Prince, Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Randall, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Reis, Miss Clare Reynolds, Miss Reynolds, Miss Elsa Richards, Lewis Richards, Mrs. F. L. W. Richardson, Mr. and Mrs. J. Albert Riker, Miss Emiline Roche, Mr. and Mrs. Lieff Rosanoff, Richard Ross, Miss Marion Rous and Alexander Russell. More Patrons Listed. Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Saenger, Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Salzedo, Mme. Olga Samaroff, Lazare Saminsky, Mrs. Frank- lyn Sanders, Miss Gertrude Sands, Mrs. Eugene Savidge, Charles P. Sawyer, Rosario Scalero, F. C. Schang, Mrs. M. Martha B. Schirmer, Mr, and Mrs. Rob- ert Schirmer, Adolf Schmid, Miss Helen Comfor: is yours if you use Cuticura TALCUM SMOOTH, pure, fragrant and deli- cately medicated, it absorbs exces- sive perspiration and keeps your skin cool and refreshed. Talcum 23c. Ointment 25c. and 30c. Soap 25c. Sample each free. Addruus: *“Cuticurs,” Dept. 19M, Malden, Mass. SEDAN PRICE! W. Schenck, Mrs. Edwin Schiffer, Mrs. | Sears, Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Shaw, | Mr, and Mrs. Nathaniel Shilkret, Mr. and Mrs. George Siemonn, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Slee, Prof. and Mrs. | Henry D. Sleeper, Miss Mary Sleeper, Miss Hayriet Sleeper, Wellington Sloane. Mrs. Besse Smith, Prof. and Mrs. Davil Stanley Smith, Prof. Harold D. Smith, Mrs. Wilson F. Smith. Nikolai Sokoloff, Mi Carola Spaeth, Miss Grace H. | Spofford, George Stevens, Mrs. Henry A, | Sumson, the Swastika Quartet, Mis. | | Donald Symington, Mrs. H. E. Talbott, | | Mrs. Thaw, Winthrop Tryon, Mr. and | Mrs. William J. Turner, Miss Lotta Van Buren, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Veiller, C. James Velie, Mrs. Stuart Voss, Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Wade, Mrs. Richard | Wadsworth, Richard Wagner, Dr. and | Mrs. James P. Warbasse, Richard War- | basse, Mr, and Mrs, Felix Warburg, Miss Gertrude Watson, Miss Miriam Weaver, | Mrs. C. A. Weyerhauser, Miss A. Lucile | Wheeler, Mrs. William B. Whelen, Emer- son Whithorne, Arthur Whiting, T. Carl ‘Whitmer, Mrs. Alfred Willial Miss | | Evelyn Cary Willilams, Mrs. Samuel | Winslow, Miss Katherine Wolff, Dr J. Fred Wolle, Mrs. Charles Wood, Miss Natalie Wuriitzer, Rembert ' Wurlitzer, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Wur- | litzer, Gaylord Yost, Mr. and Mrs. Au- gust Zanz Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel ! v . S==F. O, 8. FACTORY .STAR, JAU.S. DESTROYERS 10 BE REPLACED Navy Department Names Vessels Having Defec- tive Equipment. Names of the 34 destroyers to be placed out of commission, due-to de- | fective equipment, were announced yes- terday by the Navy Department, which, | at the same time, made public the names of a like number of similar craft, hitherto out of commission, which will replace the disabled craft. A number of Washingtonlans, in and out of the sexl'vlce, have served aboard these ves- sels. In a communication to the com- mander-in-chief of the Battle Fleet, Admiral Charles F. Hughes, chief of naval operations, said that the de- stroyers named are to be “placed out Zetlin, Theresa Armitage, Mrs. W. S. Bergland, Miss Florence Hier, Mr. and %n, Robert Zabriskie and F. D. Per- ns. ‘The opening program of the festival is at 8:45 o'clock tomorrow night, when the Coolidge 1929 prize composition, “Divertissement Grotesque,” by Joseph Huettle, will be given its first perform- ance anywhere. ‘This work, by a young Czechoslovak composer, is scored for piano, flute, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon. Works by | Franz Danzi, Ludwig van Beethoven and J. 8. Bach also are on this program. The performers will be Harold Bauer and Arthur Loesser, pianists, and the Barrere_ensemble of wind instruments. Tcu AND |DCK REPAIRIN Clocks Called For « Delivered - Guranteed S - MANTGL auu‘&dhu CLOCRS A Specalry b1%- 15" Shvear WASHINGTON, D. National 7280 | Nest bo Keithiy S ! Air - Cooled Pow E C., OCTOBER 6. of commission at San Diego, Calif., with a view to ultimate disposition by sale.”” These destroyers, the admiral announced, “will be replaced in de- stroyer squadrons, Battle Fleet, by de- stroyers of Squadrons 6 and 10.” Names of the ships to be decom- missioned, and which will be scrapped by the Navy, follow: McCawley, Moody, l-ll'enshlwt, Doyen, Percival, J. F. Burns, arragut, Zellin, Stoddert, Reno, Farquhar, Thompson, Kennedy, Paul Hamilton, ‘Yarbgrough, La Vallette, Sloat, Wood, Shirk, Kidder, Selfridge, Marcus, Mer- vine, Chase, Robert Smith, Mullany, Hull, MacDonough, Farenholt, Sumner, Corry and Melvin. Those destroyers, as well as those now to be placed in commission to fill the vacancies, were ed after officers and men in the naval service who achieved fame by reason of outstanding deeds. Names of the ships that will go into commission follow: Perry, Trever, Was- muth, Zane, Wickes, Philip, Evans, Buchanan, Aaron Ward, Claxton, Tatt- nall, Badger, Twiggs, Babbitt, Jacob Jones, Hamilton, Tarbell, Yarnall, Up- shur, Greer, Elliott, Roper, Rathburne, ‘Talbot, Waters, Dent, Dorsey, Chandler, Southard, Hovey, Long, Broome and Alden. The destroyers, when placed out of commission, are to be delivered to the commandant, Navy Yard, Mare Island, Calif., “at_such localion in the San fi:finclsco Bay area as he may desig- nate.” Somers, William Jones, | 1929— PART 1. PAUL KVALE TO RUN FOR FATHER’S SEAT man Announces Can- didacy. Paul ‘Kvale, son of the late Repre- sentative O. J. Kvale of Minnesota, will party and of the Democratic party for | the congressional seat made vacant by the death of his father. | The Democratic national committee | recelved word yesterday that C. B. | Johnson, who had been named for the | | | LYNCHBURG, Va., October 5.—The | | Democratic nomination, had with- drawn, so that the fight will be again | between the coalition and the regular ! Republican candidate. | The elder Kvale represented the sev- enth district from the time he defeated | Andrew J. Volstead in 1922. | __Volstead had beaten him in the 1920 | Harding landslide, . Kvale, running as | an independent and Volsted as the reg- ular Republican nominee, by 1,200 votes. ‘Two years later they were again pitted | against each other. Kvale had the Democratic and Farmer-Labor indorse- ments and won by 14,000. He was elected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth and the present Congress, always with S = NEW DISTINCTIVE HOMES ADJOINING EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL Exhibit Home 225 17th Street N.E. 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BURR SERVICE—346-348 PA. AVE. N.W. Son of Late Minnesota Conzren-’ be the candidate of the Phrmer-l.-borl the Democratic indorsement. Last year his mafority over his Republican competitor was over 28,03 election, is 34 years old. He is widely known in Washington, as he had been his father's secretary for years. The Minnesota primaries are on Oc- tober 9, the election is one week later— October 16. The election will be another test of strength — the Progressive coalition agaiust the regular Republicans of Minnesota. PLAN MISSION MEETING. | Virginia Society to Hold 54th An- Special Dispatch to The Star. fifty-fourth annual convention of the will be held October 15-18 at Stras- burg, the Christian Church there and ‘The son, who now comes up for | Pe; nual Convention October 15 to 18. | Virginia Christian Missionary Soclety & Walnut Springs Christian Church being é:l:t h&-u. The lene’t:l theme of the vention program “Perpetuating ntecost in Virginia.” Delegates elect- ed to represent the churches are to be entertained on the Harvard plan. ‘The annual report of Lynchburg Col- lege will be made by its president, Dr. J. T. T. Hundley, the morning of the 16th. Thursday night the am will be devoted to the college, at w] time | the glee club from the college will sing. | = RO E NN g NOW ~ Is the Time to Plant PEONIES Variety of Peorfie Bulbs for Sale 5016 Conduit Rd. N.W. Clev. 4676 FRAFIIIRY Improve and Recondition Your Home Now— Pay Out of Income Later! There are many homeowners who haven't the ready money to pay for home improvements and reconditioning, and for this reason have postponed their plans. Now payment plan, MEDIAT. only ON on .Y . ..without bill Security's casy monthly you can have the work done IM- cash payment. You have E b to pay for all the work, and that can be liquidated on monthly instaliments. 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