Evening Star Newspaper, March 21, 1930, Page 10

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JONT IS REZONED v nty Board of Supervisors | Makes Change at Spe- cial Meeting. BY LESTER N. INSKEEP, Stafl Correspondent of The Star. INGTON COUNTY COURT USE, Va., March 21.—By a single apparently unexpected move the d of Supesvisors of Arlington County day wiped out the precaution that been taken by the Zoning Commis- n for the protection of beautiful Po- Park by changing the zoning of county's water front from the h- ) to Rosslyn from “residential to “light industrial.” change was made hy the board a special meeting that had been d to consider the adoption of the ling ordinance, the final ndmuon ng been delayed, however, until the regular meeting, less than two s hence. is was one of two important alters- s that were made in the ordinance prAeupared by the Zoning Commission en J. Saville, special zoning engi- e A BEBE ST CERa D] The other was changing the ter- immediately north of the Key dge to “heavy industrial.” e motion for the first change was de by Supervisor E. C. Turnburke of shington district and opposed by pervisor B. M. Hedrick of Arlington jiistrict and Pred Gosnell, chairman of ¢ Zoning Commission. ledrick declared that the presence of the two airports should not any difference in the zoning, and the plan of the Zoning Commis- lign to encourage an apartment house velopment should not be discouraged. felt that an apartment house devel- ent at that point would be muc valuable than an industrial -de- opment, he declared. y this one change the board has le possible the establishment of in- ry not only opposite Washington's prized park but also along the Mount Vernon Boulevard. other change received the sup- of Hedrick and the opposition of nburke, Chairman Edward Duncan ing for both. Under the plans of zoning commission the property be- n the Key Bridge and the property ed by C. H. Greathouse had d as “light industrial” with the ex- on of a half of the Greathouse y which had been zoned“residen- B” in order to protect the first- residential district of Mackey Hill h adjoins it. Letter Submits Question. matter was first brought up in er from Greathouse in which he d that the entire tract of land ed by him be zoned either one way he other in its entirety. Hedrick h said that he believed Arlington o ?\‘;h?i“l;d ut.lg]l for industrial pur- only possible port by providing l.ndlll'.r; of a heavy nmfie -hn; several hundred feet from the bridge nd including the Greathouse prop- FE¥. It is upon a portion of this prop- that a permit has been granted the Oil Co. for the erection of a large il and gasoline e plant. Several residents of Mackey Hill, them Charles Garrels and H. L. arose to test against the , Kirby dec! that he IAFEEEELE pur- home the tion loth, commonwealth’s 0 finally put the ordinance o effect at the next meeting. the standing indebt- two schools which were annexed territory, and the ted to u:edcounty fund nt on roads in the is but one precinct left, he con- nded, the return of the entire amount $260,000 would be to give timt pre- Inct double the amount already ex- Gloth said that he believed the. plan the commission the legal one, and drick suggested that a new commis- on consisting of three lawyers be ap- Inted to consider the legal phase of question. He was voted down on It is held practically certain that legal will be taken by residents of the carrying ‘The board failed to take any action pon a request from Dr. Samuel M. P National ou "r:e merl:;w:‘l, l.h::lel 60-foot b requ long proposed pe boulevard. While Hedrick and Gos- 1l favored such a move, Duncan and irburke stated that they feared it puld work a hardship upon some small poperty owners. ‘3 Knickers J 4-Pc. Suits We kpew you'd expect it, so we've added this number t o the famous Camelot line. A regular suit of im- ported tweed, with the new bottle-shaped knickers thrown in for extra value, A Camelot Feature at district. Since | N Pollard Frees Man Who Up Body Hold for Bill To By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va., March 21.—Gov. John Garland Pollard today par- doned Thomas E. Cook, Suffolk col- ored undertaker, under a sentence of five years on conviction of digging up the corpse of a negro woman so that he might collect a bill alleged ‘to have been due him for the wom- an’s funeral. Cook was sentenced under the grave-robbing statute, which has a minimum penalty of five years. Judge J. L. McLemore, Commonwealth’s Attorney C. B. Goodwin, all members of the jury that heard the case and 900 residents of the city of Suffolk joined in recommendations for clem- ency. ‘The case was presented by a Suf- folk delegation headed by ex-Rep- resentative E. E. Holland. FARMER ENOS L OF S ANDWFE Shoots Mother of Five Chil- dren, Then Puts Bullet in Heart. Special Dispatch to The Star. SALISBURY, Md., March 21 —Harri- son Disharoon, farmer, shot his wife, the mother of his five children, and later The couple, both 44 years old, had been estranged since last Sadturday. Disharoon left a note saying he could | not bear so many troubles and was “go- ing to end it all.” Mrs. Disharoon with the children left their home near Salisbury Saturday and was residing with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Marvel, near Mardela on the west side of the county. She was in the living room with her mother when Disharoon, without warn- ing, fired upon her through the window. ‘The shots entered her arm and thigh and she died as she was being placed into an ambulance to be brought to Peninsula General Hospital here. Disharoon fled. Authorities later went to his farmhouse, broke down the door and found him lying with a shot wound in his heart. Authorities believe the double tragedy had been carefully planned. In the afternoon Disharoon had borrowed a sho_lggun from a neighbor, John Parker, e children range in age from 32 to 21 years. CLARENDON TO HEAR G. A. LYON ON JAPAN Special Dispatch to The Star. CLARENDON, Va., March 21.—The Creative Arts Club of Arlington County and guests will hear an illustrated lec- ture on Japan, to be delivered tonight by Gideon A. , associate editor of The Star, in Chamber of Commerce headquarters here. Mr. Lyon was a member of & up guests ‘of the g St b Vi y a, Manchuria and Korea. ‘The ‘talk will be illustrated with many. slides reproduced from pictures Mr, Lyon the trip. commission of the | the American Legion of the State of Virginia. BRADY BONB JRY PANEL ANNDUNCED Members for April Term of Court Selected in Prince % Georges. BY GEORGE PORTER, Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March 21. —Members of the jury panel for the April term of Prince Georges County Circuit Court, who will try Lawrence Le- roy Brady, Washington automobile me- chanic, for the Seat Pleasant bomb murder, unless the defense asks that the case be removed to another county, N eemh R, ‘Blanatord, t osep! 5 ndford, farmer and Grange worker orgmnm- wine, has been designated as forman of the grand jury which will hear the evi- dence collected by the local police and Baltimore detectives who investigated the bombing. Other Members. ‘The 22 other members of the grand jury will be sclected from the following list of 48 names, while those not drawn for grand jury service will constitute the petit jury for the first week of the court term: Daniel F. Shorter, Eugene Allen, George A. Wyvill, Columbus Richards, william D. Blandford, Charles L. Jen- kins, Jefferson Beall, J. Ernest Cook, Thomas M. Taylor, Albert R. Brown, Pinkney A. Earnshaw, Walter P. Snell- ing, Wilton R. Whittington, John E. Luers, Theron L. Duley, James A. Craw- ford, Joseph H. Austin, Charles D. HefI- ner, Wade H. Fowler, Henry T. Bald- win, Stewart B. Shaw, Bernard W. Toombs, Clarence J. Dorr, Roy L. Allen, Louis L. Cross, Willlem R. Dyer, Harry ‘T. Higby, Jullan White, Joscph L. Cross, John Smith, Richard Fulton, Arthur M. De Marr, Willlam H. Cusick, Jeremich J. Crowley, Rennell H. Willett, Samuel E. Thomas, Eugene A. Mattingly, Henry J. Forney, Rollins Reno, J. Barrows Waters, Francis_O. Abott, George S. Parker, Thomas D. Johns, Raymond W. Bellamy, James R. Ridgely, Thomas H. Waters and Reginald C. Taylor. Second Petit Jury. The following have been drawn for the second week’s petit jury: Wesley I. Bayne, James H. Hamilton, r.; Albert J. Moreland, Ernest A. Lo' ss, George T. Sellers, E. Hunt Bi 3 rles H. Pett, Stephen Brady, William Sauer, Edward H. Gar: ner, Willlam A. Shepherd, George H. Houser, rt C. Kraft, Paul Zier, George W. Morgan, Gershon P. Bick- ford, Orson H. Eaton, Baxter Denny, Harvey L. King, Edward Stamp, Ernest Teuber, George J. Schweppe, Abraham J. Henry, Charles A. McPherson and Henry S. Swann. VIRGINIA SCHOOLS WIN Special Dispatch to The Star.” LYNCHBURG, Va. March 21.—The Critic, the magazine published by the Glass High and Lee Junior High Schools, and the High Time, the weekly pub- lished by the Glass High School here, took first places in the Columbia Scho- lastic Press Association in New York last week. Both publications have hitherto won first prizes, but this was the first time that both took first honors in the classes in which they were entered. The hon- ors carry silver trophies. e Named for Legion Post. —Harry G. Breck Loudoun Post, No. 34, Leesburg, has just been appointed a member of the depart- ment of public affairs f OPEN BVENINGS AnnoL’: ORIGIRAL CUTRATE ~ 916 F St. N.W. * Carroll’s Do a’Busineu in Millions—Profits in Pennies $2.25 Pinaud’s 75c Yarley’s Soap, 47¢ New Cream The Enormous Crowds in Our Store Last Satarday Proved That Carroll's Do the Busi- ness, Because ‘of Sensational Pepsodent Tooth Paste 27¢ CarroLL CUTRATE, $1.00 American 50c La Blache Face Powder 59¢ 29¢ Beauty Hair Tonic Squibb’s Tooth Paste CAPPI TALC 14c Carrort CyTRATEY Sensational Value! Coty Face Powder and Sealed Bottle of 50c Jar of Jean La Salle Cleansing Cream With Other Purchases " 75¢ t Ayer’s FACE POWDER 55¢ BULK PERFUMES ardenia L $1 Tangee Lip Stick WOMAN DEMOCRATS PLAN CLUB BENEFIT Montgomery Organization Will Present “Immortal Songs” at ‘Wardman Park Theater. Spectal Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Wwoman's_Democratic Club of Mont= at Wardman ton, “Immortal Songs,” under the di- Md., March 21—The is presiding tonight k Theater, Washing- Catherine McEneany, Miss Helen Ryan, Miss Virginia Veath, Miss Helen Terneak and Miss Rosanne Roach. Music will be furnished by the Caro- linians, a section of Walter T. Holt's Dancing will and Mrs. Gustavus follow the ent tertainment. ————— gow, Scotland, recently tish d passes for sign When an interior decorator at GI proposed Has- Scot- legrees for decorators, an observer declared it lhmfl& gt:lude punctuation “Trom tie AVENUE o NINTH: surpassing Super-Value With Blues $38 two pairs of trousers "Long ago we established the the excellence of quality of woolens and work- manship which we designate for Super-Value—and it’s a pride to maintain that high standard. In Super-Value Blues come the dressy serges and unfinished worsteds — the suits ready for every occasion in the day’s wear —no matter how dressy. And with extra trousers to double the service. Single and ‘double breasted, with super linings and trimmings. In sizes to meet every requirement.’ Fancies, if you prefer—and these with two pairs of long trousers, or one long and one sports knickers. First Floor. o * Learbury College Clothes —FExclusively Here in Washington $35 and %40 Each Suit with two pairs of trousers There is no guess-work in the modeling of Learbury Suits. They are collegiate cut through intimate associa- tion with and careful interpretation by the men in the leading colleges of the country. Styles that can’t be counterfeited—and tailoring that tells of skill and clever adaptation. In all the new shades—of light, medium and dark tones. First-Floor o8 The Indispensable Topcoat —in the incomparable value o $20.50 Personal choice has full sway in the assembled variety —tweeds, cheviots, knitted cloths—in grays and browns, toned to the fashion. around service. trimmed and P-B tailored. Third Floor. The Parker Hat $5 We rest quite secure’ from competition in this remarkable Hat.. Gen- uine fur felt, masterfully blocked and richly trim- med. Curl or snap brims; welt, raw or bound edges -—and in all the wanted shades. b &4 Shower-proof, giving them all- Regular or raglan shoulders; silk y‘:I‘eck Oxfords $6 The man’s shoe that _lives up to an envi- able reputation for style, comfort and wear — far beyond that which the price suggests. Black and tan; in smart lasts; straight lace or blucher; with plain or fancy tips; rubber or leather heels; also sports. *Trade Mark Registered. ¢/ ANOWN Nothing is more important to ) 3 £ School Girls . Nothing is more im~ portant to any growing feet than orthopedically cor- rect-footwear, \ A C3l The School Girl —pictured here is a sport model in brown calf trimmed in beige. Stylish, youth- ful and of great- er comfort, $g8-50 Wolrs Watx-Cver Shop: 929 F Street “Parker Boy” Suits With 2 Pants $15 Sizes 8 to 18 We have succeeded in modeling Suits that are consistent with the ages of the wearers—but with unusual dis- tinctiveness that begets and encourages’ manliness. And especially strong values in this featured grade. Fancy Tweeds and Cheviots in plain blue; and both pairs of trousers are regular full-cut.plus 4’s. The boys’ll understand. : e “Prep” Suits Each With 2 Pairs of Trousers— both long orone long & one Knicker 52250 to %30 “Prep” designates a new type of fashion—catering to the ages between boyhood and manhood—13 to 20 years —with styles created especially for them. Ineither fancy tweeds and chev- iots or blue cheviots. Mannish without being mature; smart without being freakish. — s Shirts—plain white and, fancy—12 to 1414 or juniors 8 to 14—$1 to $1.95. Golf Hose—new patterns—50c and $1. Pull-over Sweaters—V or crew neck— $2.95, $3.50 and $3.95. Pajamas—oplain colors or fancy—$1.50. Caps, the new small shape for the little chaps; plain blue; gray or tan—$1.50 and $2.

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