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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1930. . PEODOIBDE l[AfiUE El}l]NDMIC [DR. FAIRCHILD TO GET HIGHEST AVERTIING S 2 e e wav s e Seventh and F Sts. Men—Come Here for TROUSERS Here you will find thousands of pairs of spe- cial trousers. Our stock includes all materials, pat- terns, colors and sizes. When you need trousers to fill out that odd suit, come to Eiseman'’s. Prices start at Home of Smith 95 & E FASHION SHOP e | Group Two Formerly Up to $50 3 4 = | miltary Judge Gives Group Sentences | of 15 Years Each. | Other Groups Reduced in Proportion Tas Srnart 5’!028 0O _1—4 Years! i Group One -Formerly Up to $40 = |1n the north are whispered about Rio Jeneiro every day and Communists are persistently reported to have captured . towns in the State of Parahyba, but no news of the conditions in the North » 7,udpa,m¢u- Y tor Luis Salas Romo, Carlos Vicuna Fuentes, Luis Sanchez and Pedro Leon | Ugalde all have been given 15 _years and 1 day in prison and disqualified as citizens. 801-Ninbk.. CONFERENCE ENDS Delegates Frank in Admis- sions That Results Were Not Remarkable. By the Associated Press. GENEVA, November 28.—The second | conference of the League of Natlons for concerted economic action of mem- $ ber nations closed today with its dele- %) | sates frank in. their admission that its results were not remarkable. Chairman H. Colijn of Holland, sum- marizing the work in which representa- | that the one ray of hope surviving the conference wak in the promise of the governments to seek tariff reduction by means of bilateral negotiations. He saild the conference had abandoned comes Winter. (Continued From First Page.) revolutionary leaders, and especially of Oswaldo Aranha, whose organizing genius and driving force made the rev- olution a success. It would undoubtedly be better for Brazil were Senor Aranha provisional President, but an effort in that direction would have robbed the revolutios movement of the idealistic feature which made it triumphant—that of avenging the defeat of Dr. Vargas, who had n defrauded of a victo: for the national presidency by the ma- chinations of Washington Luis, deposed | President. J Aranha Deprived of Leadership. ‘The success of the revolt deprived BSenhor Aranha of his leadership, and, alt h he is Dr. Vargas' chief assist- ant, subordinate ition as minis- multilateral convention. rising tariff walls and start a move- today, “but after three years tariff necessity of Teduction, but nobody has forts for tariff reduction along bilateral air this morning. And |one. 1t this effort fails it wil be dis- will_turn_protectionist. T in the repercussions which will follow will then be turned loose and the re- job! the world.” 4 Better Values SEEK TO GOVER UP D. J. Kaufman ter’ of interior and Justice makes his executive nature. Although the pro- hope for tariff reduction through a “The economic conference of 1927 agreed that the time had come to halt ment in the.other direction.” said the chairman in closing the 12-day sessions . tl':at s the name 0{ ONE€ | conditions in general are just as bad of the popular num- ybody has agreed upon the done anything to live up to his belief. bers the .B“dflet Boys e e o e Touan “ . and "me put on the lines. The responsibility of countries which_made this decision is a grave astrous to the whole of Europe because around the corner— |the few remaining free-trade countries Get e disaster will be not so much in losing these free markets but rather ready—dress warm— | hronshont Burope. ' The. tarit paa ¢ Ty i sions which have been held in check ol e on the sult will be economic warfare all over g S BRAZILIAN CENSORS 5 OMINOUS FACTuRS n " USE THE POPULAR assistance one of advisory rather than visional government has been in power KAUFMAN BUDGET PLAN for nearly a month, it has taken no 2 finite measures toward solving any —pay just %4 in cash—balanee | {150 TUmEL B s o e i in 10 weekly or semi-morithly | from office and studying how to move 4 ¥ | when 1t finally decides to malke & move. payments. Probably the most serious of tye 2 problems facing the provisional govern- ment is that of sectional strife. There is strife between Rio Janeiro and all the outside country. There is strife be- tween the state of Sao Paulo, which has hitherto been the keystone state, and-all the rest of the country, which is determined that Sao Paulo’s predom- inance shall cease. There is strife be- tween the Southern states, which par- ticipated in the revolution, and those of the North, which felt that they have not received a just share of the spoils. There is friction, which may develop into'strife, betwe:n the state of Minas Geraes and Rio Grande do Sul, the people of Minas Geraes feeling that they are entitled to a larger share in the provisional government they helped to establish. The attitude of the provisional gov- ernment toward its very critical finan- clal and currency probiem is that of a person with a serious toothache post- gmlnx the inevitable visit to the dentist. ly prolonging the moratorium two weeks at a time and forbidding remit- tances from Brazil the government 1s simply bullding up a lack of confidence both at home and abroad and is piling up the remittances, which will tear h the exchange market like an avalanche when the embargo is even- tually lifted, as it must be at some time in the future. Fall of Milreis Predicted. i When the Chicagy Daily News cor- respondent left Rio Janeiro, $50,000,000 were awaiting remittance to New York |and a good many millions to London. While it is true that a free operation of the exchange market at present would depress the milreis every day, two-way movements of remittances would tend to balance each other. With almost no gold left in the country, { with- coffee and other exports mov- ing far below normal, it is difficult | to_see how the milreis can avoid from | falling when the present artificial re- Bat Your Apple in Ten Jitgo | strictions are removed. Aithough there was no trace of com- | munism in the revolutionary movement, & threat of communism is now one of For Our Famous = | the most serious probiems facing the DOUBLEWEAR SUITS OVERCOATS [ = | provisional government. Unemploy- | ment is increasing rapidly and l)’t yls ! not likely to be retarded until such | time as the provisional government can restore the confidence of employers and until the economic situation im- | proves sufficlently to make it profit- le for cattle breeders, agriculturists and coffee growers to renew their for- | mer activities. While every one con- | nected with the provisional govern- ment stoutly denies any danger of com- the fact remains that 162 | ve been stood up against {walls and shot in Rio Janeiro on charges of being Communists and that ’I special section has been created in the police department under the com- | mand of a capiain for the suppres- sion .of communism. Stories of wild Communist outbreaks or explanation of such reports is al- lowed to appear in the newspapers. Rumors undoubtedly exaggerate the situation, but the provisional govern- ment must resign itself to this result s | long as it maintains a censorship by ' which it keeps the truth from the people. (Copyright. 1930.) CHILEAN PLOTTERS TO PRISON. 1 CONCEPCION, Chile, November 28 | P).—Gen. Pelix Urcullu, militazy judge | !in the investigation of an attempted |.ubvenlvl movement here in Septem- ber, has d sentence on the prin- . ! cipals in conspiracy. Former Gen. Enrique Bravo, lnrmer| Col. Marmaduke Grove, former Sena-| Other figures in the air were given lesser sentences. P Louisiana’s leading hen produced 264 eggs in 334 dazs lach year. . - tives of 26 states participated, decllnfl*mlety announces. ' HORTICULTURAL AWARDIN U.S. Botanist and Agricultural Ex- plorer Named for White Medal. Mass4chusetts Society, Old- est of Its Kind in America, Bestows Prize. Dr. David Fairchild, botanist and agriculture explorer now attached to the office of Foreign Plant Introduction of the Department of Agriculture, has been awarded the George Robert White medal, the highest horticultural award in America, the National Geographic The award has been bestowed upon Dr. Fairchild by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, which is described as the oldest and most distinguished soclety of its kind in the United States. Research Covers 33 Years. Thirty-three years ago, Dr. Fairchild organized the work in the Departmsnt of Agriculture which, crystallized in the Office of Foreign Plant Introduction, has introduced into the United States | more than 80,000 separate speci:s and varieties of useful plants. In 1906, after eight years of exploration, he resumed charge of the office and is now attach<d to it as a special agricultural explorer, with offices in Washington and a Winter home in Cocoanut Grove, Fla., where in the large Federal Plant Introduction Garden and in his own private garden he experiments with the many useful exotic tropical plants, shrubs, trees and flowers he collects on his pligrimages to distant parts of the world. As a young graduate of the Kansas State Agricultural College, Dr. Fair- child was called upon by Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson to organize the work of forejgn plant introduction. His first work in that field was as an explorer attached to the expeditions of Barbour Lathrop. Since then, under his supervision or with his co-opera- tion, more than 30 expeditions have been sent out. Plant Introductions Listed. Among the plant introductions made by these groups were the dry-land elm, brought by Mayer from China, now thriving from Louisiana to the Ca- nadian border; superior varieties of the Chinese and Japanese persimmons, once a curlosity, now frequent on Americans market stalls; the popular sorts of the 1 avocado (alligator pear), which Popence found after two years' search among the mountains of Guatemala; the pistache nut of the Levant and the soy bean of the Orient, now grown on 3,- 000,000 acres of land all over the United States. ‘The Office of Foreign Plant Introduc- tion under Dr. Fairchild’s direction has accumulated the most extensive col- lection of original field descriptions of useful crop plants in existence, the largest seed collection of economic plant species and the greatest collection of phn;gtrlnhl of useful plants in the world. Of ‘the plahts- which he personally collected, one of the most important is probably the Feterita sorghum from the Sudan, an important grain and forage crvfi for Arizona and California, several million dollars’ worth of which are now being grown annually. He also brought in the Perslan Gulf dates from Bagdad, and the tung oil tree introduction from China, whose nuts furnish the “wood ofl” of the paint and varnisk industry. Oriental Bamboo Established. ‘The National aphic Soclety, of which Dr. Fairchild is a trustee, credits him with having been largely responsi- ble for the establishment in this country of .groves of the Oriental bamboo. Dr. Fairchild also is a medalist of the French Societe d'Acclimatation, a member of numerous botanical and other learned societles in this country and abroad, and he has written “The Book of Monsters,” contributed many tech- nical papers to scientific periodicals, and is author of the recent book, “Ex- ploring for Plants.” His quest for new plants has led him through the Dutch East Indies and the South Sea Isles, into Siam, New Guinea and Ceylon, along the border- land of the Persian Gulf, and has ex- tended in southern latitudes to the in- teriors of New Zealand and Australia. Has Married 4,000 Couples ELIZABETH CITY, N. C.' (#).—The Rev. E. F. Sawyer has officiated at 4,000 weddings. He has been tying knots more than 40 years. > » 7th St. N.W. Loudoun Women Tear Down Advertising Matter in Beau- tifying Campaign. Special Dispatch to The Star. MIDDLEBURG, Va., November 28.— With a vision of keeping Virginia's natural beauty and & purpose of pro- tecting and cleaning up Loudoun County in order to save as far as ‘)osslble its trees and shrubs, particu- iarly on the roadscides, and to use every effort to get rid of roadside nuisances, such as billboards, adver- tisements in general and trash dumps, “the County Conservation Committee” has been organized in Loudoun County. ‘Working about a month, this ergani- zation, which is compo-ed ofr\“ D. C. Sands, chairman; Mrs. Spenter Il ley, secretary; Mrs. Henry Frost, Mr Adelaide Massey, Mrs. Moncure Lyon, Mrs. Nannie Fred, Miss Charlotte No- land and Mrs. Henry Fairfax, have removed more than 1,500 billboards and signs. They have found in their DR. DAVID FAIRCHILD. work that 1,000 of these signs were Northwest by air with a passenger, ex- press and freight line across the lakes | the committee decided at its last meet- bet'keen Cleveland, Detroit and Mil- | waukee. erected by people who had not been given permission te do so. Realizing that a number of signs are erected without permistion and de- termining to be rid of such nuisances, Airline Over Lakes in View. The East is to be linked with the ing, which was held at the home of Mrs. Spencer Ilisley, in Middleburg, It is a tribute to her financial judgment as well as her style judgment when they say, “You just know sl;e wears them.” For McCallum hosiery launders and wears as well as it looks .= . which is really a tremendous claim for its wear- ing and laundering qualities, M Callum Silk Hosiery *you JUST KENOW SHE WEARS THEM” All the new winter shades $1. Allsilk chiffon hosiery with reinforced French heels and toes in Chiffon Picot, non- run garter top. Shadow, Walnut, Sun- brown, Saratoga, Burnt Sugar and Gun- metal are the newest popular shades. In lovely Christmas packages RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street ONT MIS S CHANCE " Your opportunity—never given before and perhaps never again —to easily and conveniently own something you have always wanted and needed... HE REMINGTON PORTABLE TYPEWRITER “The World’s Finest Portable” [ NATIONALLY ADVERTISED. CASH PRICE ‘1 weekly Immediate delivery For the home, for the student, for the business man and woman, the Remington is the outstanding portable typewriter. Now easily ilable to everybody. All brand new machines, direct from the factory. And in colors if you wish. Don’t delay. Select yours today. UARANTEED BY REMINGTON RAND IN World’s largest manufacturer of office appliances Look for the Schwarts Gold Clock on Seventh Street Listen in Tonight Station WMAL 10P.M. Chas. Schwartz & Son Founded 1888 Radio Follies 709 14th St. N.W. Falls Church Turn Where Mrs. Special Dispatch to Th FALLS CHURCH, Va. The curve of the Lee Highway opposite | tions to his head and face. The Falls Church, where Mrs. Elizabeth f W. Converse of Washington and her companion, Mrs. Drake of Kansas City, met death several months ago, was the scene of a similar, though less severe, accident yesterday, when a car | tration card or driver's license in owned by Theodore Matthews of Wash- ington dashed against the same tele- phone pole hit by Mrs. Converse with such force that the heav: broken off at the base. e CAT WAS badly wrecked, but the occupants es- caped serious injury. The accident was investigated by Deputy Sheriff Paul Hermann. i e b et sk ow, [N HEAD-ON COLLISION' signs ldv!rm a particular gasoline s S ON ROADS REMOVED 555552 S5 s s s v . AUTO BREAKS POLE lowing Crash on Highway Near Colesville. COLESVILLE, Md., November 28— A head-on collision between two auto- mobiles on the Colesville pike about 2 miles north of here late yesterday in- iund one of the drivers and overturned is machine, which caught fire and was completely destroyed. The man who was hurt is Frank Harris of Spencerville. He was taken to the Montgomery County General Hospital at Sandy Spring by George M. J n, in front of whose home the accident occurred, and treated by Dr. J. W. Bird for a broken nose and lacera= AT DEATH CURVE| Converse Died, Scene of Accident. ovember 28.— Earl Bailey, colored, 28 years old, of Colesville, driver of the other car, was arrested by Montgomery County police from the Silver Spring substation and charged with driving while under the influence of liquor and having no regis- posses= sion. He is being held for $500 bond. Harris was thrown clear of the wreck- mby the force of the collision. The dy Spring Volunteer Fire Depart- pole was | ment was summoned to extinguish the fire, .but when the firemen arrived the automobile had been almost entirely consumed. Although badly dam: , Bailey's machine did not catch fire, Bailey was uninjured. Oxford Gray % ‘ and Blue OVERCOATS -7 luxuriously lined 30 They’re Meltons. The rich-textured sort That are gonu‘dly Quite expensive. (Which is only one reason Why you should See them). British Tubular styles And the blve | Velvet Collar Town Coats Featured here At $30™ Are faultless reproductions Of imported coats from Saville Row. The new long University Coats Are great favorites With young men. Thirty dollars is a Most modest price For such Distinguished Overcoats. And ; There's a grand choice Of others At $25, $35, $45. Two Trouser Suits Tool Bond Ten Peyment Service costs nothing extra Our regular cash prices are not changed. Pay $10 when you buy — the balance in ten weekly payments