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1T A—4 * ‘RIGHT TO ENGAGE [ . INPOLITICS ASKED Montgomery Civic Body Asks | " Privilege for U. S. Workers | in County. BY HOWARD M. BAGGETT, Staft Correspondent of The 8¢ BETHESDA. Md, October 13.—Pres- ident Hoover and the United States Civil Service Commission were asked in 8 resolution adopted unanimously by | the Montgomery County Civic Federa- | tion, at a meeting at the Bethesda: School last night, to allow civil service ; employes permanently residing in Mont- gomery County to become randidn(es‘ for and hold office in the county and | to participate in campaigns for election to such office. The resolution was recommended for adoption by J. Bond Smith, chairman of the Committer on Legisiation and Legal Action, and is similar to a reso- lution introduced at the September meeting of the federation by W. B. Horne of the Somerset Citizens' Asso- clation. The request was based on the statements that Montgomery County | bas practically all of the benefits of municipal government President Hoover recently issued an executive order extending the privilege now sought here to residents of Arling- { ton County, Va Horse Race Plan Vetoed. Efforts of officials of the Rockville Fair Association to obtain permission for pari-mutuel betting on horse races at the annual Rockville Fair were at- tacked in another resolution. unani- mously adopted by the federation. In-| troduced bv Dr. L. M. Christie of the Committee on Internal County Im- provements, the resolution was adopted without discussion. It set forth that it 48 the opinion of the federation that| betting on races or any form of gam- bling, especially at the fair, would be & distinct and serious injury to Mont- menwy; County and contrary to the de- sires of the overwhelming majority. Approximately 125 delegates and alternates to the federation were pres- ent. which was one of the largest held in some time. It was the first meet- ing of the new federation year and delegates and alternates from 38 of the 41 member civic bodies were certified end seated. Of the three remaining bodies, it was stated that at least two have not yet met to elect their dele- gates. Nominating Committee Elected. A Nominating Committee of seven members was elected. This committee will nominate officers for the new vear and make its announcement at least nine days prior to the November meet- ing. when the election will be held. Fourteen men were nominated for the committee and those elected were E. H. Bogley. Priendship Heights Citi- zens' Association; J. H. Welsh, Leland Citizens' Association: W. B. Horne, Somerset, Citizens'_Association: R. E. Bondy. Edgemoor Citizens' Association Dr. George L. Edmonds, Rockville Chamber of Commerce; Col. Thomas Hampton, Bethesda Chamber of Com- meree, and W. I. Cleveland, Kensing- ton Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Bogley received the highest num- ber of votes and was named to call a meeting of the committee, which, he announced, would be held Saturday night at 8 o'clock in Col. Hampton's office in the Bethesda County Building. Sligo School Site Opposed. Purchase of what is known as_the “Montgomery avenue site in Sligo Valley Parkway by the County Com- missioners as a site for the consolidated eenior high schcol for the eastern suburban district of the county was protested in a resclution Introduced by A. C. Warthen for the Kensington Board of Trade. The resolution was referred to the committee on schools. The Beard of Education, the super- visor of county schools and the County Commissioners are requested by the resolution to furnish the federation and taxpayers and citizens of thc county with a complete and comprehensive re- port of the data, information and facts 8nd circumstances considered by them and each of them in arriving at the decision to purchase the site. Report Distribution Ordered. Copies of the report of the Subcom- mittee of the Committee on Legislation and Legal Action ‘with regard to a charter form of government for Mont- | gomery County were recommended dis- tributed to members in compliance with a report of this committee adopted some time ago by J. Bond Smith, chairman of the General Commuttee. This was ordered done followinz a report by Mr. | Smith that it was the judgment of the ccmmittee that there’ has not beea sufficient discussion of the subject throughout the eounty to require fur- ther report A digest. of the activities of the Fed- eration will be mailed to any members ‘wishing them to be paid for by the | member or the civic body they repre- | sent under a resolution introduced h\'i Frederick P. Lee of the Edgemoor Citi- sens’ Association and adopted. Progress on Booklet Reported. O. M. Kile, chairman of the Com- | mittee on Publicity, reported on the | rogress of the bookiet being published y Greater Montgomery County, Inc. A resolution was adopted, recommending | member bodies of the Federation make | contributions to the project to a total amount of approximately $500, and giving the Publicity Committee of the | Federation authority to solicit such contributions, Revision of the by-laws to allow the | naming by the president of the chair- man of standing committees was rec- ommended by E. H. Bogley in & report 8s chairman of the Committee on Con- stitution and By-laws. This matter was ordered held over. Stephen James, president, presided as the meeting opened. but gave way to Frederick P. Lee, vice president, during the gession to aitend another meeting Maf. R. B. Lawrence, first secretary of | the federation, was a guest at the meet- ng. LEGATION SECRETARY’S Former Husband Ordered to Pay Mme. Popovici $9,500—Will Beek New Trial. Mme. Marian Popovici, wife of the secretary of the Rumanian legation, residing at the Shorcham Hotel, today was awarded a judgment for $9.500 against her former husband, Romayne M. Waldron, from whom she was di- vorced December 21, 1926. The claim was based on an agreement made two days after the divorce decree was signed, in which Waldron agreed to pay the sum mentioned in lieu of past and future alimony. ‘The judgment was granted by Justice Peyton Gordon after a jury had been sworn and counsel for both sides had asked for a directed verdict. This ac- tion automatically took the case from the jury. ‘Waldron did not appear, but Attor- riey Austin P. Canfield, for him, offered in~ defense the divorce decree and urged & lack of consideration for the THE EVENING MED SOCIETY WOMAN HERE. MRS. ALICE PIKE BARNEY, D Wealthy Artist, Who Gath-| ered Celebrities at Her Sa- | lon, Expires at 70 Years. IES Neighborhood House Donor | Once Set Capital Agog With Escapades. Mrs. Alice Pike Barney, 70, famous | in Washington for her extraordinary so- | cial salon and her artistic accomplish- ments, died suddenly in Hollywood, Calif,, last night while attending a con- cert ' istinguished by her assoclation with ler and Carolus Durand in the study of art, Mrs. Barney was inter- nationally known through exhibitions of her paintings in New York, Washington, | Paris and London. She also achieved | special exhibition in the Paris Salon| America contest in and a second and the London Academy. Her por-|work, “False Values,” won a drama trait of Natalie Barney, her daughter, | prize in the Arts Club of Washington was purchased by the French govern- | competition. ~She also wrcte “The ment. and a sketch of James McNeill | Opium Pipe.” “The Dream of Queen Whistler from her hand is widely fa- | Elizabet Luna, the Man in the | mous. Alice Roosevelt Longworth and | Moon,” "Weman,” “Some Years Hence George Bernard Shaw were among the | “Call of the Allies,” “War,” “Driven” subject of her other portrais. | and “Legitimate Lovers.” In Washington Mrs. Barne: " salon characterized as distinctly by lib- Startles Capital. eralism as was the house of the late| On several occasions social Washing- | Mrs. John B. Henderson, a social con- | ton was thoroughly startled by the es- | temporary, marked by ultra-conserva- | capades of Mrs. Barney and her daugh- | tism and glorification of past manners ter, Natali. At one . ‘e the mother and customs. + | executed & nude, reclining statue ot the | daughter, and once it appeared on the Established Salon Here. lawn of ‘the Barney home. Police in- Mrs, Barney, the daughter of & Cin- sisted that it be covered with a tar- cinnati theater owner and distiller, mar- | paulin until it could be removed. ried Albert Clifford Barney, a banker, MRS. ALICE PIKE BARNEY. later When | 1o STAR, TWO CHILDREN DIE IN BLAZING HOME Father, Mother, Uncle Also Burned in Berkeley Springs Fire. 8pecial Dispatch to The Star. BERKLEY SPRINGS, W. Va, Octo- ber 13.—Freeing themselves from the grasp of an uncle who was trying to | carry them from their burning bed room, Edwerd Walter Huyett, 5 years old, and Norma Jean, 4, were fatally burned as they dashed blindly back into the fiames yesterday afternoon. Their home was destroyed by the fire. | which was attributed to the explosion of oil, which their uncle, Charles Huyett, was pouring into a cooking stove. Funerals Tomorrow, ‘They were the children of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Huyett and will be buried at Marvinsburg, W. Vi tomorrow morning. ‘The uncle, who rushed with the mother upstairs to rescue the children, was badly burned about the face and arms and suffered a probable fracture of a wrist in falling from the upstairs Ron-h. The mother is in a Martinsburg ospital with a sible shoulder frac- ture and bad ly burns. The fracture was sustained when she jumped from the upper porch with the intention of taking the children from the hands of the uncle to safety. Betore the uncle could drop the chil- dren, one of whom he had taken from ia sick bed. one of them squirmed out of his arms, and in his eifort to retrieve it, the other one brike away from where he had placed JL between his s. blindly rushed back WASHINGTON, he was 60 she was married to Christian | when she was 17 years old. In 1914 he died, leaving her an estate of $5,000,000. She immediately came to this city to establish her social regime in a Massa- chusetts avenue home. Artists. state: men, the socially select and intellec- tuals of alll classes were entertained there. She extended her activities into philanthropy, playwriting and plans for the beautification of Washington, It was at the suggestion of Mrs. Barney that an outdoor theater' was built by the United States Government on the Monument Grounds, and she bestowed upon it the name of Sylvan Theater. Neighborhood House, a group of four buildings on N street southwest, was created for settlement work through her beneficence. The first six performances presented at the Sylvan Theater were the pro ucts of Mrs. Barney'’s pen. Her plav, “The Lighthouse,” was awarded the first prize in the Drama League of RAILWAY TERMINAL APPEAL PRONISED Alexandria Line Will Go to High Court to Stop Re- moval of Tracks. Special Dispateh to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va. October 13— Stating that officials of the Mount. Ver- non, Alexandria & Washington Rail- way will go before the United States Supreme Court if their injunction pro- hibiting the remova! of tracks in Wash- fngton by th2 Government i3 mot sus- tained, J. William May, chairman of the joint Chamber of Commerce Com- mittee attempting to solve the Virginia rail situation, outlined the work of his committee before the Alexandria Chamber of Commerce last night. During a general discussion of the problem Alfred Thompson brought out the fact that the decision of the Public Utilities Commission in _refusing to grant permission for the Virginia lines to cross Pennsylvania avenue at Four- teenth street because of congested traf- fic there is debatable. He pointed out the fact that Virginia persons will have to cross the Avenue if their car line is abandoned a4 the increased bus and motor car trsJic on the ave- nue will equal the j@oposed increase in car traffic. Transfer is Studied. H. E. Norris asked if it would not be possible for arrangements to be made with the Washington Rallway & Elec- tric Co. whereby passengers of the Virginia lines might be transferred at some point between the Highway Bridge and the Avenue. ‘The attitude of the Public Utilities Commission in leaving the solving of this problem entirely up to the railways was criticized by President Frank W. Noxon. He stated that the District had taken no steps at all in the way of traffic surveys or otherwise in an at- tempt to solve the problem of the Vir- ginia lines. Following his report on the recent meeting at Quantico, Va., in the interest of procuring a widening and straighten- ing of United States Highway No. 1 from Alexandria to Fredericksburg. Va. Dan S. Hollenga stated that already a large number of people of the section concerned have granted free rights of ways over their property to the Virginia Highway Commission for the proposed work. Blueprints Supplied. W. T. Van Orman, vice president of the International Zeppelin Transport Corporation, will be here again this week in the interest of the proposed establishment of & Zeppelin base by the Goodyear Zeppelin Corporation at Hyb- la Valley. Blueprints d figures on a rail siding into the valley have been supplied the corporation by the Rich- mond, Fredericksburg & Potomac Rail- way, Mr. Hollenga said. The Goodyear corporation has also asked for data on double electric service and underground telephone connections into the site of the proposed .base. In connection with the recent report of the survey of schools here, the busi- ness manager stated that a special The children |into the smoke and fire. The uncle tumbled from the porch when a rail- 4 . |ing gave way, without the children, and m\&f."s‘:xl‘:? d'uxr-:;'n;nll‘r'\‘g pl\ 5 E?fll‘&‘v«j he wlds found on the ground after roll- Tige HRELHIE: st eatd fo iMNves7e. [LOE. ‘GONDL & (bank, T e Bodies o marked: “What will 1 do with ycws (he Shycren = were sorch, hud. You are 5o clever.” This characteristic | niog tngetner in & cormer, Lo o hud of extreme facllity was evident in every 900 1OBEIARE 0 B, CORCT, vett, was arawing and pastel Mrs. Barney did.|jountown at his business at the time | Among her exhibitions at Corcoran Art | 30%ntO%n 8, A asks” of emimtrt pessons. done. in |7ushed home. He was burned wnd cut pastel. The quality. of theatricality |A00ut the face and arme i tVng fo Sometimes evident in her personal con- |[Or¢e his way into the burning tome in e Chernans . inmeritea through |3 effort o rescue the burning children et A N i crited oh i The uncle thought he hed emtirely theater. likewise was often noticeable | CXtinguished the =flames before he . e ¢ |started to replenish the in the products of her artistic Imagl- | {,ve tank. Either some blaze remained Mrs. Barney was the mother of Nat- |undetected or the heat from the stove alie " Clifford” Barney. lLaura Clifford |ignited the ‘oil, causing the explosion s e 4 which within a few minutes had ig- Barney (Mme. Hippolite Dryfus) and|jieq'the concrete-block-inclosed home. _|shutting off escape from the flames through the inside staircase. Mother Is Summoned. | The uncle summoned the mother as Enown. to be detrimental to the educa- | 3000 ‘48 he ssw ths fire started and tion of the youth of Alexandria” before | the¥ TORTEREr WEOG SO S e rest- it attempts to build a new $300,000 high | i and then oreca thely way o e e 3 upstairs porc when the interior es- | Convention Records Broken. D s i ed | Alexandria has broken all records in| "The home was destroved. It had been Virginia and other States, as far as|occupied only a few months by the obtaining conventions for next year.|Huyeits. The family came here from Mr. Hollenga said, in explaining the | Hagerstown, Md. and also formerly reason why the chamber had decided to | lived in Martinsburg and York, Pa ask only State conventions here from | The mother's condition today was re- now on. Effort is now being made by | ported serious. The uncle will recover the chamber to have organiztions| The children were the only two in coming here arrange their dat or- the family der .éc two or more conventions may | not be here on the same day, he said. | The question of a suitable auditorium | for the conventions was put by Judge | Howard W. Smith. who stated that if | the armory is to be used it should be reconditioned. It was stated that the | American Legion has been granted use | of the auditorium in the new Masonic | Memorial for its convention. and that | 'the Virginia Public Service Co.'s audi- torium would probably be used by other | organizations. TRUCK DRIVER KILLED | NEAR LEONARDTOWN D. C. Man Crushed When Machine Turns Over as He Tries to Avoid Hitting Buggy. Hemmick, 26-year-old artist. He obtained a divorce on the grounds of desertion. 2 | School Committee of the chamber had asked the Alexandria School Board to have corrected “certain things that are Special Dispatch to The Star. LEONARDTOWN, Md., October 13.— | Bernard Mattingly, 34 years old, was xilled at 6:30 o'clock last night when a truck he was driving overturned | miles south of Leonardtown, erushing him beneath it Mattingly worked for the Bond Bread | Co. of Washington and delivered bread caily in Southern Maryland. Magis- | trate Harry Wise of Pearson and Dr. | . A. Brown and Dr. P. G. Bean viewed | the body and deemed an inquest un- necessary. It is believed that Mattingly. | in turning out of the road to avoid a horse and buggy, swerved too far and the truck toppled over. He had a fractured skull and both legs were broken. He died instantly. He was on his way to Washington when the accident occurred. Robert Dement, occupant of the buggy, was uninjured, despite the fact that his vehicle lost & wheel when sideswiped by_the truck. . Mattingly was & former resident of | St, Marys County, but resided in Wash- ington. He is survived by his wife and | two small children and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Mattingly of near Leonardtown, and three brothers and five sisters. i A QUAL AT A NE DROP PULLMAN FIGHT | tive val | Commercial Travelers Withdraw | Surcharge Complaint. The United Commercial Travelers have given up their fight on Pullman | surcharges. The Interstate Commerce Commission today dismissed the complaint of the | organization against surcharges on Pull~ !man sleeping car tickets and discon- |tinued its investigation. | The order said the organization had | notified the commission on August 5 that it was no longer interested in the | proceeding and was willing to have the complaint dismissed. | must be a Kuppenheimer cause they have s i’ORKTOWN SURR DESCENDANT Mrs. M. de Clare Berry, Great-Granddaughter of Wash- ington’s Aide, Is Asked to Attend Sesquicentennial. Only four generations separate Mrs. M. de Clare Berry of 2115 P streeb from her distinguished ancestor, Maj. Wil- liam Overton-Callis, friend cf Gen. ‘Washington and Gen. Lafayette, an offi- cer in the Continental Army at the time of the surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown. Mrs. Berry, thmugehethe distinction of her ancestors, has n invited by the Governor of Virginia, as well as the commonwealth of Virginia, to attend the sesquicentennial celebration this week at Yorktown as zn honor guest. One of Mrs, Berry's most treasured family traditions is the story of her dis- tinguished great-grandfather’s reply to Benedict Arnold. agreement. Canfield will file a motion for a new trial. Mme. Popovici was represented bv’ Attorney Robert E. Lynch, who eon- tended the divorce decree did not bar her ni}n to recover. “While at Hampton Roads,” she said, “my great-grandfather was given. the duty of negotiating an exchange of pris- oners with the British. He boarded a British warship, where the prisoners were held, and during the negotiations ENDER OFFICER’S INVITED TO FETE he spied the face of Benedict Arnold. It was shortly after Arnold's treason. “With a sneer, Arnold said to my grandfather, ‘And what would you allow me, sir, if my exchange couid be ar- jow you, sir.” said Maj. Overton- Callis, “T would have the leg in which | you were wounded in the gallant action {at Saratoga cut off and buried with | highest military honors. Then, sir, I'd have you hanged as high as Hayman. | This is what I'd give you, sir, if you ever fell in my hands.” In addition to her relationship to the | American Revolutionary heroes, MTrs. Berry also claims relationship to the | defeated British Gen. Cornwallis. | A direct ancestor was Affra Cornwal- | tis, @ sister of Thomas Cornwallis, one of the forbears of Charles, Marquis of Cornwallis, who surrendered to the American Army- at Yorktown in 1781. Mrs. Berry will leave for Yorktown on Thursday to remain throughout the period of the celebration. B Other handcrafted 1325 F Advised of the danger, he | D 0., HOUNDTRIALS OPEN WITH DERBY STAKE [Horse Show Precedes Annual Field Tests at Leesburg. Notables Attend. TUESDAY, Special Dispatch to The Star. LEESBURG, Va., October 13.—The opening yesterday of the week of the tenth annual foxhound trial of the | Virginia Fox Hunters' Association was 'marked by ideal fox-hunting weather, clear and cool, with plenty of, October sunshine to mellow the crispness of the alr. The morning was devoted to the registration of members and the distri- bution of official badges. The roster | of arrival shows some of the prominent | sporting folk of the East, among them ibelng J. M. B. Lewis, president of the | association; Dr. Foy Vann of Norfolk, | secretary of the association; Miss Joyce | Hansel, Washington: Miss Anna Hed- rick, Clarendon; Miss Nancy Hanna, | Washington; H. D. Wells, Lynchburg; | Jefferson C. Phillips, Hampton, Va.; W. |B. Keys, Richmond; Dr. and Mrs. J. | Wyatt Davis, Lynchburg; Lester Karow, | Savannah, Ga, and Willlam Skinker, |master of foxhounds, fox hound trials. | Hounds Arriving. | Hounds in the Derby Stake started out this morning at 6 o'clock. J. M. B. Lewls has entered & number of these: |the well known Goodloe hounds of Afton, Va. ure here; Walter Johnson lof base bail fame has entered & aum- Iber for the triuls, us ulso has Manley | Carter, Orange, Va. J. M. Bland, Washington, and local hound owners from the Leesburg Hunt Club, the Middleburg Hunt Club, Piedmont Hunt Club and the Orange Hunts are con- tributing entries. Equally noted are those who will ride behind the hounds, and horses have been arriving for several days from New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chi- cago, Washington and Baltimore. e judges include Dr. F. A. Sinclair, Newport News, Va.; Jeferson C. Phil lips, Hampton, Va.; Jack Carpenter Greenwood, Va.: R. V. Martindale, Am- herst, Va.;' J. E. Keyser, Flinthill, Va,, and Clagett C. Dorsey of Glenarm, Md Judges for the horse show yesterday afternoon, which was given as a com pliment to the guests of the Associa tion of the Loudoun Hunt, were D. M, Waller and J. North Fletcher, both of Warrenton, Va. f Some of the best horseflesh in Vir ginia was seen at the show, which was | attended by one of the largest crowds | in_recent years. OCTOBER 1 when Robert Maddox, whip of the Mi dleburg hounds, was thrown while tak- ing & jump on MacCerthy Moore, a horse belonging to Riticor Bros. He was knocked unconscious for a short while. Horse Show Summaries. Bummary of the horse show follows: Half-bred yearling—First, Aunt Polly, Paul Adams; second, Entry, E. L. Red- mon, Middleburg; thjrd, Try Me, Roy Payne. Half-bred 2-year old—First, Gray Dawn, James Dizerega, Lsesburg; sec- ond, Repulse Junior, E. A. Miller, Lees- burg; third, Roy Payne. Road hacks—First, Alf, Frost Ander- son, The Plains; second, Erse, Hunton third, Bernice, Wil- Plains. Handy Redmon, Middleburg; second, Sally Al- ley, Riticor Brothers, Oatland: Keyser, Plinthill, Va unters—FPirst, Mainspring, E. L. Redmon; second, Whiskalex, R. E. McConnell, New York City; third Louise, E. L. Redmon. Hunters, judged on ability to follow hounds—First, Reflexable, H. M. and C. M. Crouch, Aldie; second, Kernel, Miss Shearer, Orange; third, Doron, Miss Shearer. Touch and out—First, Dancing Pat Charles_Castleman, Leesburg; second, Louise, E. L. Redmon; third, Doc, E. A. Miller, jr. Lightweight hunters—First, Whis- kalex, R. E. McConnell; second, Main- spring; third. Sally Alley, Riticor Bros. Open to all—First. Mainspring, E. Redmon: second, Louise, E. L. Redmo third, Follow Me, W. E. Mitchell. hl;nplun hunter—Mainspring, E. L. n. —. third, | SENATE FAGTIONS |Some Regulars Talk of Let- ting Democrats Organize Next Session, By the Assaciated Pres | Republicans almost surely will organ- ize the new Senate, but, there is a lot of private bickering about it at the Capt- tol. Barring any deaths before December 7 the line-up is expected to be 48 Re publicans, 47 Democrats and 1 Parmer- Labor. | Because of this close division it is pos- ble, of course, for the Republicans or even one or two Republicans to throw the organization to the Democrats by simply not voting. Some of the Republican regulars who | recall the coalition last session of the Democrats and Republican independents are intimating they would be just as willing that the Democrats assume re- sponsibility for the next Senate. Borah, Norris Would Lose. Also, if they give control to the Demo- crats, these regulars would see Senators THREATEN CONTROL Relations and Judiciary Com- mittees, respectively, There are counter threats from the independent group, although neither Senator Borah nor Senator Norris seem interested. Some of this faction are intimating they will seek to reject Se ator Moses of New Hampshire as Presi- dent pro tem. Senator Moses is ready to meet this by & retaliatory vote to eject from their | chairmanships any Republicans who desert him. | Senator Moses stirred the ire of some {of the independents when he referred to them in their coalition with the ?-T.ocrau last year as “‘sons of the wild jackass.” Urges New England Biea, Now, the outspoken New Hampshire | Senator s counpuor]-‘mz with ‘a tion that the New England group form a bloc similar to that of gflmb— licans from the Northwest, and with it gain the balance of power next session. But after all the threats and counter threats have passed—very quietly and bencath the surafce—it is expected that bygones will be forgotten on Decem- ber 7, as each Republican votes to re- tain control by his party and to re- tain his hold on important committee posts and the patronage that goes with hem, The present Senate line-up is 47 Republicans, 47 Democrats and one Farmer-Labor, but a Republican suc- cessor to the late Senator Morrow of New Jersey is likely to be named. TInvestigations recently made by s rmingham, England, committee among 1,439 children between the ages of 8 and 14 years showed that only 30 'Bl Bettlement, of the unemployed on ag- | Borah of Idaho and Norris of Nebraska, | had never seen a mi - s 4 ovie, while 780 went ricultural Jand in Germany is proceed- | two of the leaders of the coalition, losc | to movie theaters once a week, 184 ing slowly. Mainspring, brown gelding belonging | i to E. L. Redmon of Middicburg judged the champion hunter of Show and as such was awarded a silver | cup, 30 inches high, which was pre sented by friends @s a memorial t James C. Causey, late president of the: association. This will be held one year | by the winner. It was won last year| was the | by R. O. Hall of Keswick, Va,, with his ' ; horse Keswick. | Dancing Pat, chestnut gelding, owned | * and ridden by Charles Castleman of | Leesburg. in a spectacular perform- | ance, won the touch-and-out class Louise and Mainspring. owned by E. L.! Redmon, won second and third in this class. One accident marred the show I We don’t ask you to spend, we urge you to save ITY SUIT W PRICE When the sort of men who study ues overwhelm- ingly favor a certain suit, there ason. These men like Champions_be- tyle, give re an unmistakable value at the new low p;iu that we offer them. KUPPENHEIMER CHAMPION WORSTEDS 550 suits $27.75 to $75 GCROSNEIRY STREET [QUALITY by KUPPENHEIMER| o s A Super of trimming and their chairmanships of the important twice a week and 1 five times a week. lative finish, Effort b Superior Tailors at Fashion Park | Top Coats Wonderfully modeled and made, to the minutest detail In Camels Hair—Dblue, gray and natural. In West of England Cloth—gray and tan. In Tweeds—of the famous smart mixture. This price is dollars below what comparable value would have cost six months ago. And ‘Parktown Another special of these famous tailor make— $39 Fashion Park production; true to the reputation Also Suits s in mode and The Mode—F at Eleventh Pigskin Gloves Genuine Pigskin; London madet with the big bone buttons and the natural mottled color— $2.85 e ot