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Yorktown, Williamsburg and Jamestown Starting Point Yet to Be Decided. By the Aszociated Press. YORKTOWN, Va., Septemibpr 27 ‘With the return of C. A. Tufner; and | his party of United States Government | TREATY 100 YEARS OLD Indian Land Ceremony Will Be th-d»nt qu‘@hl, Miss. ~—The 100th anni of the signing, on Beptember 28, 1828, of the Daficing Rabbit Treaty, wherein three Indian nigtions: ceded ta the United States all their lands east of the Mississippi River, will be obsexved here tomorrow. It was near Columbus that the treaty was signed by representatives of the k, Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes. spot has béen marked By a boulder Berpard erected by Chtgflr. Daiighters of the American Revolution, of Columpus, i (B9 EEVINES engineers from the Shenandoah Na- | tlonal Park section, the survey for the | Colonial National Park road connecting | Yorktown, Williamsburg and James- | town was expected to be started at| once. ‘ 1 The starting place was to be *deter- | Mined at a conference in the near fu- CONFERENCE POLIY SOURHT BY BRTAI INTEREST REVIVED INSEA GRAVEYARDS 22 Salvage Operations to Re- cover Gold From Egypt Call Attention to Other Shoals. Salvage operations to recover 1d worth- milltons in the S. S. Egypt, sunk off France in a famous graveyard of the sea, revives interest in wrecks in other waters, _ Pointe du Raz, off which the Egypt Was sunk after a collision, is one of the most - dangerous headlands of France because ail ships coming south out of the English Channel bound for Bor- deaux, the Mediterranean, Africa or South America must clear its toothed and hungry rocks. innumerable vessels having been buried in its wastes. Small King Island, off the Australian coast, counts, to date, 40 ships brought to an untimely end on its the south end of Japan, where typhoons out of the Philippines sweep whole ! fleets to destruction. [its own peculiarities. pe Cod and Nantucket are most dangerous in a northeaster, 'hl:ntpc,m: howling wi;: tries to drive sl uropean expr !IIM steamers, coastwise steamers and fishing schooners onto [y shores that run at right angles to the direction of the gale. | Hatteras Has “Steepest Waves.” “Cape Hatteras, jutting far out into | the Atlantic, extends its shoal water still farther out. Northeasters blow- ing contrary to the flow of the Gulf Stream bulld up over these shoals the highest, steepest waves to be found along the coast. Jamming their noses into toppling walls of water, vessels and drift helpless onto New the begin to 1 “Each of the world’s worst waters has | da finally gave it up and went to Asia the other wav around the world. “Not the least of the dangers elimi- nated from graveyards of the sea, both abroad and in the United States, are | thote which were created not by Na- | ture, but by human beach scavengers. Nags Head, on the North Carolina, beaches, perpetuates the memory of the | lessional wreckers, who would hob- & horse with a lantern hung on‘ its neck. Captains or sailing vescels picking their way carefully through ngerous waters would sight the bob- bing light that looked like that of | another ship. Approach to the beacon | soon brought the vessel to grief and | the crew to death, perhaps, while the | wreckers paced to the beach to snatch up the cargo that the sea rolled out of the broken vessel. S SR | Steel Plant Contract Awarded. Rumors of an action against the Y | i p2 YOUNG PLAN FOES ACTIVE IN GERMANY |Government Likely to Be | By Hard Pressed to Resist Frontal Attack. Radio to The Star, 1 BERLIN, Germany, September 27. 'an by the German Government, wi i | jand should be adjusted to coincide L .. | have appeared in the Ir,dustrialist press, FITCHBURG, Mass. Septemiber 27 |q.q strongly denied by 1esponsible mem- (#).—The Simmonds Saw & Steel Co,, | Lers of the present cabinet. But the which last month snnounced it would‘?u"-‘_flm".fl,’ r;flv :‘r:!wmtlmnl nnomt; construct & new plant here at a cost | (< boming o Gorone Ll Peyments of 81,500,000, today announced it had | undoubtedly be one of the first sub-| awarded the contract to the Austin Co. |Jects debated upon the reopening of the of Cleveland, Ohio. In it'will be con. | ReIchStag October 13. N It i virtually. certain that the Com- Young plan, but it seems equally cer- | tain that the move will not be ac- | cepted. However, another effort to| induce the Government to initiate new negotiations, envisaging a reduction or moderation 'of Germdhy's reparations, will very likely be made and will have a great chance of finding a majority vote in the new Reichstag. The ground is already being pre- | pared for such action in the Indus- | trialist press. Bergwerk's Zeitung, in- | fluential organ of a big fron, coal and steel interest in the Ruhr, points out that the “gold valus of the German regarations has increased the burden | of German payments by at least 10| per cent.” They therefore think that the basis on which the Young plan | was concluded has materially changed | | | with the new world price level. As in the final anaigsie <termany must pay actually in géods every de- crease in the world’s commmodity prices or Increase in gold value means that Germany's “actual” payments are raised to the same extent. Though the Ger- man Government and Demoeratic par- ties do mot comsider the time appro- priate for such demands, the psycho- | logical attitude of the German people | might make it difficult even for the | ITALIANS CLOSE SCHOOLS ON ANTI-FASCIST CHARGE Further Step Takem in Nation- . alizing Former Austrian’’ Province., W Radio to The Star. ROME, Italy, September 27.—A fur ther step toward the Italianizdtion of Venezia Giulia, former Austrian prove ince, has becn accomplished with the closing of the Elementary School of St. James at Trieste after charges had been made that anti-national and anti- Fascist propaganda was" being spread | by the tezchers. In addition to these charges, the prefect of Trieste claims that several thousand lire were received by the au- thorities of this Slaw school from the same Jugoslav institutions which financed the terrorist movement through the region of Venezia Giulia. The principal of St. James School is a certain Andrea Ciok, whose brother, John Ciok, now residing in Jugoslavia, Snared 500 Ships. , | Diamond Shoal. “It is to Prance what the Goodwin | _ "GoodWin Sands, 8 miles long, 4 miles tare, at which Mr. Turner win meet 0.| Démands of Dominion "Show 8. Taylor of the Park Commission and ©. E. Peterson, the Iandscape archltelct. Today the engineers and commis- sloners had not decided whether the start would be made here, or at Wil- | or Jamestown. The road| the three towns on the Vir- | ia Peninsula is to be a part of the lonial National Park embracing the three, authorized by the last Congress following the Cramton bill. U. S. TO EQUIP CAVALRY WITH MACHINE GUNS | Plans have been made by the War Department for increasing the warseffi- clency of the Cavalry by the replace- ment of the machine rifles now used by air-cooled machihe guns in each troop and train. ‘The changé of arms was made on the y, | the demands of the dominions to be ‘weapons the present machine rifles, which are fired semi-automatic- . He explains that machine guhs may be removed and firing commenced within 30 seconds. “American Cavalry,” says Gen. Henry, *has since the Civil War always com- mobility with firepower. Now with the adoption of the additional ma- chine guns and the new armored cars réceives a tremendous increase in r that ‘will enable it to strike, | only quickly, but with telling effect, i .ZKBO AGHA BETTER - NEW YORK, September 27 (A — the 156-year-old Turk Wwhose gadding about town was rudely Interrupted when he was struck by an omobile Thursday night, is expected be out of bed by Moriday or Tues- 7, physiclans said today. Zaro slept from midnight until late and sized al a good ast when -he woke up. “LANSBURGH'S 7th, 8th and E Sts.—National 9800 No Connection With Any Other Store - Undoubtedly a Fashion Here’s The Coat ~For Little Ones An Excellent Value | and threats of the dominions are | significant in themselves and they | It is expected that Great Britain will New Spirit in Empire. By_Radlo to The LONDON, England, September: 27.— The government and leaders of the opposition are secking a common ground on British policy for the Indian Round- Table Conference in November. As this is written, it is impossible to say what the outcome will be, The demands demonstrate how momentous both the Indian Round-TFable and the Imperial Conference are for the empire. “New spirit Is Shown. Symptomatic of the new spirit are submitled at the Imperial Conference. abandon her present right to “disallow” dominion legislation. The dominion Parliaments have . been sovereign in practice and now are to be formally recognized as such. Henceforth Great Britain will be powerless, to interfere with the South African treatment of natives, for example. It will be unable to protect minorities such as the Southern Loyalists in Ireland. Henceforth Great Britain will be powerless to control- merchant shipping islation in the various dominions. Canada could legislate its own merchant marine flag to replace the Union Jack, if it" chose. 5 England Aects As Equal, The picture would not be complete 1f these associations of Jlm alone are remembered. An imperial supreme court will doubtless result from the conference, as will numerous other voluntary measures linking the various members of the commonwealth. The signifiance lies in that, with the ex- ception of Indis, Great Britain is really functioning as an equal rather. than as tor in the deliberations of the British commonwealth. (Copyright. 1930.) The Short Fur Coat of Lapin* Undoubtedly a Value 545 They're irresistible —these Hip length jackets—some wear them belted—others will wear them with a carefree air over a smart woolen frock. Nutria, sun-tan and rose beige. Sizes 14 to 20. *Rabbit. Furs—Second Floor $5.95 Trucurl chin- chilla coats and smart tweeds with berets, for boys —and de- tachable cape and bélted . styles for girls! All warmly lined. In navy blue, tan, brown and multi-colored effects. Sizes 2 to 6 years. Tots’ Wear—Fourth Floor Sands and the Lizard are to England, Nantasket Beach south of Boston, Nan- tucket Island, and Diamond Shoal off Cape Hatteras are to the United States and King Island is to Australia,” says a bulletin of the National' Geographic Society. “Nantucket is credited. with snaring 500 ships from the time of its settle- ment down to 1876, continues the bulletin. “Lighth buoys, light | shipe, better weather réport service, . [ creased use of motor power and now | radio direction finding have made the death corners of the sea less dangerous, but they still exact their toll. “ ‘Fur 12 nours we passed skeletons of what had once been ships,’ writes Mel- ville Ohater in a communication to the National Geographic Society describing 8 _motor trip llongb the hard beach of Hatteras Banks, ‘blanched victims of the sea and sand, their upstanding ribs resembling flles of gravestones, thelr forests of protruding spikes being the grisly grass of the desertlike expanse. At one point we counted 14 wrecks within 100 yards. Due to the enormous tonnage of steel hulls imbedded in the Diamond, there is & magnetic deviation of the compass amounting to 8 degrees.’ “Goodwin Sands, a tug_hlyln: Just beyond the mouth of the Thames, has long held the title of ‘ship swallower,’ LANSBURGH'S 7th, 8th and E Sts.—National 9800 wide, sprawls like a spider awaiting | its preyp:fl the coast from Deal, Eng- land. Awash at high tide, large areas | of the Goodwin Sands at low tide of- | fer a hard, dry.surface. Ships going | to or from London, to North England | ports, Belgium, Holland and Germany, gnve to pass close to the sands, which are studded with the bones of victims. | Worst of all ocean hagards, the Good- | win Sands logically became the scene |of the first triumphs of modern life “‘Recently this ship swallower changed its role and became the life saver of the crew @nd passengers of a ship of the air. An air liner encountered trouble over the English Channel, 1Its pilot, unable to make land, noticed that the Goodwin Sands had been left bare by the ebbing tide. Swooping down, he made a safe landing and by frantic signaling got his passengers, cargo and himself taken off in & boat before the returning tide overwhelmed his plane. 50 Days to Round Cape. “Steamships of today have much less trouble with Cape Horn than the old- time sailing ships that beat against the revailing westerly gales of the roar- rnz forties. With iced, with no sun to take bearings from, many a "“E' per lost his ship in the battle to make westing. One vessel, which tried for more than 50 days to round Cape Horn, No Connection With Any Other Store Compact—Ideal for Apartment Dwellers Domestic Junior Electric Machine $150 Domestic’'s newest creation! efficient Domestic Rotary sewing ma-. chine inclosed in a handsome two-tone walnut finished console cabinet that can play the part of a table when not sewing for you. A very libéral allowance will be or condition. Buy on.Our Budget Payment Plan Sewing Machine Department—Third Floor Copied From Expensive Lamps Chair Lamps With Shades $7.90 The popular overhang chair lamp—with refined Colonial bronze finished standard and tailored gold, green and rosewood. / Sewing An the Large Machine It has a Domestic friction air-cooled motor, full rotary bobbin, number ten- sion dial, and num- ber stitch dial, silk shade in rust, solidated the present Chicago plant and | m the two Pitchburg plants. 'ty On Sale Monday and unists will seize their first opportuni- to move a resolution denouncing the moderate parties not to support such |is wanted by the Italian police on in- a move. cendiary and_espionage charges. (Copyright, 1930, (Copyright. 1930.) Lamps—S8ixth Floor Tuesday 1316 1326 Seventh St NW. . Only EXTRA Values In This COLUMN 1 High-Neck 79c Of %00d substantial slin. 1 wrade ong sleeves, embroidery trimmee Porto Rican Gowns 34c Dainty Fand-em- broidered coat value of NEW Because the season. Of Fitted Waistlines col fronts; reg- sizes. Correct Longer Lengths Lavish Furred Crepe Slips Collars 54c Hemstitched tops: assorted dainty pastel ar sizes. BLACK! Blue! Fall Suits 79¢ Tong sleeve models. fast-color ~ wash _fab- ries: full ‘cut; sizes 3 u. to 8 year: "$1.50 Rayon Crepe and Satin Slips $1.19 with Coat, vest and ers; grays, double i in_an assort- ment’ of wanted light shades. " $1 Smocks 69¢ Plain - color _ broad- cloth _smocks. cretonne trimmed; ~rose, blue e 75% Linen 25% Cotton Fancy Pajamas. of crepe and prints; wide legs and tuek-in style $1 Extra Size Slins 69c Ruilt - up shonlder styles. hemstitched and handmade lace trim- med. $5 Extra-Size Part-Wool Blankets $2.95 Sateen bound. assorted color block plaids; 4%- pound weight. Pillowcases Size 42x36 Inches Woo! Blankets $1.00 70x80 double-bed size, assorted block plal weight about 2 pounds 89~ Picot-Top Grenadine Hose 49¢ Fall the price of ordinary cotton ones! Kaufman's—First Flo Women’s $3 and $3.50 Novelty Footwear 95 Velvets, Satins Suedes Patent her Black Calf Tan Calf and Tan Kid New shades. toe to top. Empire Sheets 9c Slight seconds of the famous Moh fana: " wide Size 72190 inches Partect. 25¢c Defender Percale Prints 17¢ 80 square Dress Prints, an assortment of clever new gesigns for Fall. 38 inches wide "29¢ Imvorted Broadcloth 19¢ High lustrous permanent finish &rade. in plain white and colors 89c Blue Bird Double-Bed Sheets 59¢ Perfect auality. 7280 inches: fin with wide hes High Heels Cuban Heels Low Heels oxfords. kinds. assortment, Keufman's—First Floor ke ished 25¢ Pillowcases 5¢ Six Bell Brand. per- fect auality: made j hems; en Shown ring Post. a damp cloth or mop removes all will hold for future delivery. $25 Seamless Brussels Rugs Wool Rugs, sizes 9x12 ft. and 814x1012 ft.: artistic designs and ‘17_50 colorings - 59¢ Oilcloth Covers For tables, 45-inch size; an -:mn‘zimnt of lt‘; | tractive, designs - ang i 39¢ " 48c Rayon | -Flat Crepe Sc Yoard wide, sl @ partel " shbde and guaranteed (ast colgr perfect aquality. .69 Satin - ‘Back Crepe $1.00 ‘40~ tin - back K W including, owns, 8 Rugs 41gu0-ft. size; narrow rooms, halls and porches' bordered 36 inches wide, tmuqml?lytnr es, AL general use ..... and perfeot quelity. Richly Furred Sleeves Green!, Brown! Boys’ $8.98 All-Wool 4-Pc. Suits . of full-cut and lined knick- tans browns; firm-woven mix- tures. Sizes 7 to 17 years. Kaufman's—First Floor Less Than Half Price Made of three-quarters white linen and one-quarter cotton ; strong, durable. Just think, a 75% linen sheet at le Slight imperfections. Also many styles in tan or black straps and Good, sturdy All sizes in tha $2.50 Felt-Base Broadcloth Broadcloth Tricolaine “Persian Pelt” Sizes 16 to 20, and 36 to 48 two pairs $€~ .66 and Perfect continued with the New Fall INC On Sale MONDAY and\ TUESDAY $2.95 Travel Print HARRY KAUF Frocks $9.39 Sizes 16 to 50. Because We Made 3 Remarkable Purchases '35 ¢:39xCoats In an Amazing Sale That Brings the Best Coat Values of the Season Some came from a manufacturer who was anxious to increase his account with us; others from one who bought his fine furs ahead of the season, before prices soared—the result, the biggest and best EVERY COAT A NEW STYLE Every Coat The Expensive FURS Red Fox Wolf Kit Fox Caracul Marmink Opnossum Skunk Chinese Wolf - French Beaver Lapin and Others $1.50 All-over Silk Chiffon and Service Weight Humming Bird Hose quality, but dis- numbers. Sold usual guarantee, shades. Pai 95¢ Sale Extraordinary! 5-Pc. Curtain Sets Dainty voiles, green. or backs. $1.25 Curtain Sets Rayon s than half Heavy tan j with suedin finishing with belted Sizes 7 to 10 years. belt and Raincoat S Rain- coat and beret of ette, in tan, 1 red’ and gr Sizes 6 to. 14, Boys’ $3 Admiral Coats $2.44 Navy blue—sizes 215 to 8 years. 'S Every rug in this sale has the new improved finish, perfectly smooth dust and soil. 5,000 yards 36-in. Fast-Color for long $1.59 1215¢ rich, lus- 124c color, vat dyed. flowered sunfast and tubfast voiles. figyred ravon trimmed. - 214 vards long, S4-inch green, gold and orchid. signs; guaranteed fast colos $2.95 leather- Percale Prints A brand new assortment of patterns, in medium, light and dark colorings. All fast Ruffled Curtains Regular $1.00 Quality Ruffled Valance 59¢ . Rose, blie, Valance, sides and tic & $1.505-Pc. Ruffled 79c valance, Rose, Blue, Al new Fall de- cream-colored ruffles of gold. embroidered and ile fabric, e lining, leather cuffs. $6.95 Jumper Dresses ets Of fancy suitings, - with 3] +98 separate broadcloth blouse: red. green and blue. Sizes 7 to 14 years.. Ideal for school wear. ie, een. Last Two Days of the Great Sale of Congoleum and Floortex Rugs : - 9x12-Ft. and 9x10Y%-Ft. Sizes 35 Choice Patterns, Including Three of the Congoleum Rugs in This Week’s Issue of the Saturday Eve- $8.95 $9.95 and $10.75 Values , needs no scrubbing— Select them NOW, pay a small deposit and we 59¢ Felt-Base Floor Covering 8light seconds of the high- Certal $1 Sheets Bleached Sheets, 81 inches: wide, 80 to 90 inches ssc Jong; to be hemmed, VIC -