Evening Star Newspaper, November 19, 1922, Page 21

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’ Selig C. Brez, W. W. RADIO WILJ CARRY SAFETY MESSAGES Each Day Next Week Air Fans Will Hear Call: “Don’t Get Hurt!” DARR TO NAME SPEAKERS Ellipse Chosen for Memorial Exer- cises to Children Who Died in Accidents. The air in and around Washington w!ll be heavily charged with appeals to men, women and children to help reduce the death toll from accidents during Safety week, November 26 to Deceraber 2. Representatives of a number of large radio broadcasting stations at- tended a meeting at the bureau of standards yesterday afternoon and agreed to send rorth the message, “Don’t get hurt!” every day next week. The police group of the Safety week organization also met yesterday in the District building, and, at the sug- sestion of Maj. Sulllvan, decided to naint white lines on the streets at all downtown intersections as a reminder to the pedestrian that he should al- Ways cross at corners. Exercises on Ellipse. The Safety week committee an- nounced last night that the memorial exercises in memory of the ninety- seven children killed in accidents of 1l kinds last year would be held on the E noon, November 26, the opening day of Safety week. A A temporary shaft designed by Ap- pleton P. Clark, jr., will form the background for the ceremony. It will be a silent sentinel, calling the atten- tion of those who gather around the Tllipse to the fact that many boys and girls are killed every year In accidents. Commissioner Rudolph is oxpected to be the presiding officer at the excrcises. Statlons Take Assigninents. AL the radio conference vesterday station WTAY, Woodward and Loth- rop, agreed to usgo Its uppartus every week day from 11:1 30 in the morning and _frem 2 to in_the oon. From §:05 to 8:20 at night 1 safety addresses probably will Station broadeast Continental from S. Naval . C._will to 8:15 p.m. Monday, Tuesday nesday, Thursday and Friday. Speakers for the broadcasting of safety addresses will be chosen by Charies W. Darr, chairman of the speakers’ committee. Mr. Darr is organizing a band of 400 men and women to deliver addresses throughout the city during Safety week. Air Station. broadcust from 8 Wed- Four-Minute Speakers. Following are those who have agreed to be four-minute speakers: Mrs. Thomas E. Sidwell, Mrs How L. Hodgkins. Mrs. Arthur Ramedy, Forrester, Mrs. Ethel Jessie Lee Webb, Mrs. ane, Mrs. Charles Rich- . Eugenia E. Rollins, Mrs. Leftwic! nelair, Mrs. William M. Gude, Mrs. Maud Howell Smith, Mrs. Wallace _Streater, Mrs. Charles H. Fred, Mrs. Abram Simon. M McDonald Thompson, Mrs. W 3 Chamberlin. Mrs. Gilbert H. Gros- venor, Dr. Laura S. Brennon. Dr. Edith Cook, Dr. A. Francis Foye, Mrs. Ray- mond Morgan, Mrs. Susie Root TRhodes, Mrs. Clara Sears Taylor, Mrs. Nanette Paul, Miss Cora Rigby. Mrs. L. Ransome, Mrs. Lyman Kebler, Mrs. Louis Bauer. Mrs. Richard Fay Jackson, Miss Elizabeth Poe, Mrs. Thomas E. Robertson, Mrs. George W. Kernodle, Mrs. Breman, Mrs. Anna Hendley, Mrs. Alice A." Allen, Mrs. Mary Warfleld, Mrs. Nina E. Allender, Miss Anna Richardson, Miss Clara B. Noyes, Miss Mary Stewart, Miss Ethel Bagley, Mrs. Mildred Kelley, Mrs. John T. Erwin, Mrs. Maurice F. Talty, Mrs. Philip N. Moore, Dr. Cora Smith King, Mrs. Marle Moore Forrest, Mrs. James Longstreet, Mrs. H. H. King, \Irs. Kate T. Abrams, Mrs. Florence oddard, Mrs. T. H. Printoys, Miss rtrude McNally, Mrs, Arthur Powell Davis, Miss _Lida ¢Hafford, Jrs. Minnle E. Keves, Miss Eliza- beth Snowden, Mrs. Edith Comp- ‘on Paul, Mrs. B. G. Cox, Mrs. Francis F. Keyes, Mrs. Margaret Jacobson, Maj. Julia C. Stimson, Mrs. Leach S. flighbee, Mrs. Gertrude Martin, Mrs. Basil Manly, Miss Bertina Shaugh- nessy, Miss Katherine Holmes, Mrs. Virginia White Spael. Mrs. Lyman Swormstedt, Mrs. A. Waller, Mrs. E. T.. Morgan, Mrs. Ellis Yost, Miss Ethel Smith, Mrs. Minnie Keppinger. Miss Ruth White, Mrs. Powell Clayton, Mrs. §. C. Cissel, Mrs. William Hamil- ton Bayly, Miss Gertrude McArthur, Mrs. C. C. Marbury, Mrs. J. W. Friz- 7ell, Mrs. Josephine L. Jacobs, Mrs. A. . Clancy, Mrs. Hortense T. Fuller, rs. Giles Scott Rafter, Mrs. Thomas Mrs. Sarah E. Deeds, Calver, Mrs. Mary E._ Stetson, Mrs. S GGutelius, Mrs. Eugene H. Pitcher, Mrs. Charles P. Keyser, Mra. Alex- ander Wolf, Mrs. A. K. Wine, Miss Jannie T. Daniel, Mrs. Arthur McDon- ald, Grace Porter Hopkins, Mrs. M. Parker. Mrs. Lucy R. Swanton, Mrs. Alex Wolf, Mrs. Minnie Ulman, Mrs. Nefib_Hekimian, Miss Sophie B. Kent, Mre. I L. Goldhelm, Mrs. I Green- baum, Mrs. Edgar Brown. Mrs. Ne- ligh, Mrs. William B. Hardy, Mrs. Sylvanus Stokes Mrs. W. J. Levarre, Mrs. Daisy M. McClintock, Mrs. A. L. Goodacre, Mrs. H. A. Driscoll, Mrs. J. Hlarry Cunningham, Mrs. R. D. Barre, Mrs. A. Julian Brylawskli, Mrs. Fulton Brylawski, Mrs. Mark Lansburgh, Mrs. Sol Herzog, Miss Maud Fell- jreimer, Mrs. David Pressler, |Navy Will Sound se at 3 o'clock Sunday aher—] i Louis Pacific Deeps by New Echo Device SAN FBANCISCO, Calif,, Novem- ber 18.—Preparations were being made today aboard two United States destroyers here for an ex- tensive tour to chart the Pacific’s bottom with a new type of sound- iug device which operates on the principle of the speed of sound. A sound is sent from the apparatus to the bottom of the ocean and echoes back to the ship. The elapsed time is a measure of depth. By this method an attempt will be made to ascertain the depth of Neros Deep in the south Pacific. Nero Deep is a hole in the floor of the ocean, believed by many to be the opening of a tunnel connect- ing the Indlan and the Pacific oceans. The deep has frustrated efforts up to 25,000 fathoms of.ca- ble to reach its bottom. —_— H. De Lacy. Louis A. Dent, Fayette B. Dow, William J. Dow, Arthur P. Drury, T. Howard Duckett, H. Rozier Dulany, George Edelin, Bertrand Emerson, jr.; Frederick A. Fenning, ! Abner Ferguson, Stanley H. Fischer, Ralph B. Fleharty, Charles L. Frailey, F. Gwynn Gardiner, John U. Gardiner, W. Gwynn Gardiner, George Gert- man, Harvey Given, Henry H. Glassie, Carl J. F. Graff, Byron Graham, Sam- uel Cusack, Walter B. Guy, Henry W. Hagerty. William R. Harr, S. Mec- Comas Hawken, Samuel V. Hayden, Henry Hegarty. Ivan Heideman, Law- rence Heller, Emanuel Hewlett, Isaac R. Hitt, George P. Hoover, R. R. Hor- ner, Reginald S. Huldekoper, Tracy Jeffords, Carter B. Keene, Maj. J. Miller Kenyea. Harry M. Keyser, Har- v G. Kimball, Lawrence Kroen- igsberger, George H. Lamar, Charles C. Lancaster, Willlam Leahy, 1. H. Linton, Thomas mes T. Lloyd, George MacDonald, ~Crandall Mackey, BI e Mallan, M. F. Mangan, P. H. Marshall, Guy Mason, Leonard Ma- ither, G. Percy McGlue, Eugene Mc- Glue. Eugene McLachlen, Martin J. McNamara, James William McNelil, Robert McNeill, Charles V. Meehan, Charles Merrilat, J. V. Morgan, H. B Moulton, Percy 'T. Myers, Raymond Neudecker, Alvin Newmyer, Mathew W. O'Brien, Roger (“Donneil, Daniel O'Donoughue, George W. James O'Leary, Jamgs A Ottenberg, ~ Stanton C. Peelle, Fountain Peyton, Walter Plumley, George Prevost, James Proctor, James I. Pugh, Joseph A. Rafferty, Fred B. Rhodes,’ “James Rogers, Maurice Rosenberg, Thomas Ruflin, I.P. Ryan, Joseph Salmon, Francis 'P. Sheehy, Vincent Sheehy, W. H. Sholes, Charles Shreve, John Lewis Smith, Edward Staftord, Mark Stearman, Frederick Stohlman, Reeves Strickland, George Sullivan, Joseph Sullivan, William C. Sullivan. Conrad Syme, Joseph L. Tepper, Maj. Charles J. Tittman, James 'A. Toomey, Vincent Toomey, Brainard rner, jr.; Coulter Wells, C. Albes ite, Andrew Wilson, Har- vey Winfield. Frank Wissner, Alex- ander Wolf, Eugene Young, John H. Zabel, Mrs.' Harry Gauss, Miss Laura M. Garrett, Mrs., Edgar Allen, Mrs. Lisle S. Lipscomb, Miss Sophle P. Casey, Mrs. Catherine E. Nagle, Mrs. John ' Spencer Bukey, Miss Emma Strider. Mrs. Hiram Snyder, Miss Tlara B. Moore, Miss Fanny W_.H. Weeks, Mrs. Jason Waterman, Mrs. Goodwin D. Ellsworth. Mrs. J. Me- Donald Stewart, Mra_Harry T. Guss, Mrs. Richard E. Claughton, Miss Marle H. Adams, Mrs. Lenora Mc Call Courts, Mrs. R. ' Augustus Heaton, Mrs. George G. Martin, Mrs. Sylvanus E. Johnson, Mrs. Wil- liam Adkins, Mrs. Mahlon A. Winter, 1 Mrs. Edward B. Olney, Miss Effie L. Henry, Mrs. Henry Churchill Cook, Miss Ethelwyn Bassett Hall, Mrs. J. Edson Briggd, Mrs. Bertha M. Rob- bins, Mrs. J. D. Croissant, Mrs. Ida J. Kinsell, Mrs. Katherine T. Gerald, Mrs. Frederick William Clemons, Mrs. Charles W. Brown, Mrs. Charles Bow- ker, Miss Alice B. Sanger, Mrs. Caro- line Hill Marshall, Mrs. Noble New- port Potts, Mrs. Margaret M. Berry, Mrs. Tracy L. Jeffords, Mrs. F. W. von Dachenhausen., Mrs. Redwood Vandergrift, Mrs. Blanche Tyler Bos- ton, Mrs. Amos G. Draper,” Mrs. Robert W.. Morse, Mrs, Charles W. { Richardson, Mrs. James P. Hart, Mrs. Henry B. Polkinhorn, Miss Caroline F. Smith, Mrs, James M. Webb, Mrs. George E. Chadsey, Mrs. Frank F. Greenawait, Miss Mary S. Smith, Mrs. Florie H. Barr, Mrs. F. A. St. Clair, Miss Mary Jane Willlams, Miss Har- riet Belle Walker, Miss Margaret V. McCabe, Mrs. Louis A. Abbott, Miss Bertha 'Frances Wolfe, \Judge Mary O'Toole, Judge Katharine Sellers, Mrs. Borden Harriman, Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey and Miss Mabel Boardman. ‘WAR DEPARTMENT TO AID. A score or more of War Department bureau chiefs met yesterday after- noon in the Munitions building and discuseed the part their offices will play in the Safety Week program. Although no definite action was taken as to the manner in which the War Department will join in the campaign, Capt. Charles Hoover, who presided at the meeting, left no douht that it would be a big pa: Not only will the War Departmefft have at least one fmpressive float in the parade, but it will provide speakers, distribute pamphlets and see that “Don’t Get Hurt” posters are pasted oln every automobile in its jurisdio- tion. One suggestion for a float was a complete radlo outfit set up on an Army truck actually receiving mes- sages from an airplane flying high overhead. Another suggestion was that Army nurses, dressed in_full uniform, appear in a “safety first” pageant in the procession. PROF. KERLIN TO RECEIVE TESTIMONIAL BENEFIT Educator Who Protested Against Executions of Colored Men Coming Here. A testimonial benefit for Prof. Robert T. Kerlin by the colored people Mrs. | of the District will be given in John \dolph Kahn, Charles W. Darr, Sam- | Wesley A. M. E. Z. Church, 14th and el Herrick, H. Winship Wheatley, Thomas H. Patterson. Raymond B. Dickey, Thomas- J. Donovan, Fred Rice, Lo A. Rover, Frank Weller, An- thony Barrett, Arthar E. Seymour. pr. Riley D. Moore, Sefton Darr, Judge Robert F. Mattingly, Judge Jjohn T. McMahon, Judge M. M. Doyle, ‘Thomas F. Cullen, Maj. Sullivan, Frank Sebring, Ralph Given, George P. Harlow, Joseph A. Burkart, Col. R, N. Harper, Joseph Morgan, Hugh Obear, Jesse Adkins, H. Prescott Gat-. jey, Henry 1. Quinn, Walter A. John- aton, Waiter C. Balderston, Caleb W. 0°Connor, John Walsh, Claude N. Ben- nett, John McCarron, Charles J. Stockman, Joseph P. Schick, Paul F. Grove, S. M. Johnson, William, 8. Tor- bett, John B. Colpoys, Judge R. H. Terrell, Thomas T. Jones, John E. Collins, Bdward F. Maher, Paul V. Keyser, isaac C. Foster, William F. Walte, John A. Rickinson, W. J. Doyle, I. V. Connolly, William Bacon, Judge Meehan, George C. Shinn, Frank J. flogan, Roger J. Whiteford, William Henry White, Judge A. L. Sinclair, . A. Barker, V;V E. Ryan and Bert- rand Emerson, jr. Others are James J_O'Leary, Wil- liam S. Shelby, Judge Milton Stras- George 'E. Hunter, C. R._Ev- :H‘:'udm O'Toole, Judge Sellers, Mjss Edna Sheehy, Miss M. Louis Darr, Mra. Van Winkle, Mrs. John Shanahan, E. S. Bailey, Chapin B. Bauman, A. H. Bell, Howard Boyvd, Bride, Fulton Brylawskl, C. C. Calhoun, C. C. Carlin, "VK. Carlin, Edmund Carrington, noch A. Chase, Charles W. Clagett, ©. Edward Clark, Ri Joo inggold Hart, seph A. Rafferty, Francis de 8. Ryan, Herbert Pillon, Willlam E. Zimmer- man, Felix C. Pallos, Mrs. George A. Ricker. Mrs. Anita Politzer, MTs. Sara Grogan, Mrs. Gertrude Leonard, Dean Emma’ Gillette, Austin Morrill Chamberlain, James A. Cobb, ¥red G. Coldron, Edward F. Colladay, W. A Cosmbe, Paul B. Cromelin, William, Corcoran streets northwest, row. An announcement last night from Shelby J. Davidson, executive secre- tary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, sald Prof. Kerlin, wso is teaching at the State Normal School, West Chester, Pa., “made a great sacrifice for right when in 1918, during the Elaine, Ark. raco riots he - protested to the governor of the state that the execution of those colored men con- victed of ‘rioting’ would be ‘judicial murder” For his stand on the ques- tion, it is alleged, he was dismissed from the Virginia Military Institute and was so damaged by viclous articles that appeared against him that the white south closed its doors to him. Prof. Kerlin is suing the in- stitution for $50,000.” 7 The principal part of the program omorrow will be a lecture on “Dreams and Dreamers,” entertain and Miss Estelle E. will give several solos. COMMANDER AS GUEST. Legion Post to Entertain Head of National Body. Vincent B. Costello Post will en- tertain National Commander Alvin Owsley of the American Legion No- vember 29 at the New Ebbitt Hotel at 8 o'clock p.m. Commander Franklin will read his report for the year and Com: der- elect Dr. Walter F. Sullivan will take office at this meeting. Refreshments will be served and a musical program 1s being arranged. The committee tomor- Finkney will be the new vice commander of the t, E. J. Lefferts, Richard A. and Thomas D Walsh, g arangements for the affair | H BIDSU. 5. FAREWELL Apostolic Delegate, Sail- ing to Become Cardinal, Praises Nation. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 1S.—A prayer that the United States may retain its ideals and inspire the world with its moral leadership was the farewell of Archbishop Bonzano, apostolic delegate to the United States, on his departure for Italy to- day aboard the steamship Providence. {He will soon be made a cardinal. A large delegation of clergy and laity {bade him goodbye at the ‘pler, Cardi- inal Dougherty and Archbishop Hayes |being umong " them. Archbishop Bonzano sald he was leaving the United States with mingled feelings of joy and sadness and, while happy to return home to fulfill future dutles, he was aware of the sad necessity of severing friendly associations, with which ke had been -abundantly blessed during his official career in this country. Praises U. S. Catholle: “I am_ taking with me vivid and lasting _impresgiona of the strong. livelv faith and fervent, practical piety of the splendid Catholic people of America,” he said, “anc in a spirit of grateful recollection I shall cher- ish and highly value the memory of the kindly, courteous, helpful atti- tude so graciously and generously manifested by esteemed American citizens of diverse religious and ra- clal expressions. “If 1 may, I shall take the liberty to express my personal conviction, formed after a fairly extensive and varied experience with men and con- ditions, in this country, that there has surely been in recent years a study and progressive realization of the sublime national ideals of justice, liberty and equality. Hopes U. §. Will Lead. “In the sincere promotion of free- dom of worship, In a generous pro- vision of educational advantage, in a fairly successful effort for sound and sane legisiation, in a firm de- sire”to maintain right, order and peaceful government the United States has revealed remarkable capacity for self-government and has reached -a high degree of attainment In soclal i progress, prosperity and happiness. “It is my parting wish and shall al- ways be my earnest prayer that the United States, in accordance with the designs of an all-wise Providence, may Tetain undimmed the vision of its glorious ideals and ever strive for their realization and thus increase the excellence and luster of the soul of the -nation and provide inspiring moral leadership for the rest of the world.” IPICK WASHINGTON FORU.D.C. MEETING Convention Will Be Held Here Next Year—Mrs. Hatton Extends Invitation. By the Associated Press. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., November 18. —The 1922 convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy came to an official close here tonight after ‘Washington had been selected for the meeting next year. The invitation on behalf of the chapter at the national capital was extended by Mrs. Walter E. Hatton. A large number of delegates will leave Birmingham tomorrow morn: ing for Montgomery to visit the Con- federate shrines at the first capital of the southern states. Special trips will be made to the home of Jeffer- son Davis, president of the Confed- erate government, and to the Alabama state capitol, which housed the south- ern officials’ during the early period of the war. Members of the convention at their session today pledged themselves to raise $30,000 for completion of the ! monument to Jefferson Davis at his | birthplace in Fairview, Ky. Money will be raised by the individual chap- ters, as well as by the general or- ganization. Mrs. Frank Macon, acting in behalf of the Stone Mountain Memorial As- soclation, received pledges today for the project near Atlanta. The convention today dispatched a message of condolence to the widow of Gen. Luke E. Wright, who died in Memphis yesterday. —_ THREE FOUND SLAIN ON TENNESSEE FARM Feud Blamed for Murder of Aged Man, His Son and the Lat- ter’s Wife at Home. CHATFTANOOGA, Tenn., November 15.—Jesse Rector, an aged farmer; his son, York Rector, and the latter's wife, were found murdered at their ! mountain home, near Pikeville, Tenn., early this morning. The three bodies were in a badly mutilated condition, having been mangled by loads from a shotgun, evidently fired at close jrange. The body of Mrs. Rector was found in bed, and. it is thought, she was killed while asleep. York Rector was discovered on the floor, near the yard, near the house. It is said that the tragedy is the outcome of a feud. DIES AT THE AGE OF 84. James H. Hendrix, Civil War Vet- eran, Buried in Arlington. James H. Hendrix. 2 veteran of the Friday at his residence, avenue northwest. T ices will be held. to: at 10:30 from the mortuary chapel of A. J. Scheppert’s undertaking es- tablishment, Rev. H. Evaul, pastor of Iowa Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, officiating. will be in Arlington’ cemetery with funeral serv- .| military honors. Mr. Hendrix was a native of Shrewsbury, Pa., and was educated at York, Pa. For a number of years he was a merchant in Shrewsbury, and served as postmaster of it town for several years. He came to ‘Washington in 1886 to accept a posi- tion' with the census bureau, where he remained until 1339, when he was transferred to the publication divi- sion of the Department of Agricul- ture, but retired in 1919, completing a public service covering a period of thirty-three years. He served through the four years of the civil war in the 87th Pennsylvania Volun- teer Infantry, and was & member of the Union Veterans' Union, the 6th Army Corps and the G. A. R. He also was a member of Mount Vernon Lodge and York Encampment, Inde- pendent Order of Odd Fellows. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dora J. Mrs. E. L Heathecote of Shrewsbury, Pa., and a stepdaughter, M. Holloway - Sl Easiuis o ~ 'BONZANG, LEAVING, [SCH0LS AND COLEGES Dbed, and the body of the father in the| civil war, eighty-four years old, died|for mechanical engineering students 4700 Georgia |last week by Prof. Weschler, head of rrow morning | mainly for the advancement of tech- The interment|son is chalrman; STAR, WASHIN (Continued from Twentieth Page.) Students are wstill guessing as to the results. Prof. Elizabeth C. Harris started contract cases with the fresh- man class Friday. Prof. Roscoe J. C. Dorsey has completed his course In anclent .and Roman jurisprudence Wwith the post-graduate class, He has been called abroad, but will return (l.u first of the year to finish his work with the post-graduates. The honorary' dean, Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey, will begin, her lec- tures on laws relating to élvic and soclal service with the post-graduate class next week, This embraces lawa relating to dependent and delinquent children and to the general subject of crimes and punishments. The Oliver Wendell Holmes Chap- ter, Sigma Nu Phi Legal Fraternity, gave its opening dance at the Blue Triangle Friday evening, with Theo- dore F. Glangrande of the class of ‘24 as chairman. The alumni sssociation has ar- ranged for a theater benefit party at the President Theater Monday eve- ning, November 27, for the alumni association and its friends, the proceeds to be applied to the endow- ment fund. The play to be given is the great New York success, “Abie's Irish Rose.” Pauline M. Floyd is chairman of the alumni assoclation. Mrs. Winifred Mason Huck, elected as a congresswoman at large from Illinois, is a daughter of the late Benator Willlam E." Mason, who was for some time a favorite lecturer at the Washington College of Law, Mrs, Huck's sister, Ruth Mason Hall, grad- uated from the Washington College of Law in the class of 1901. CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY. Very Rev. Willlam J. Kerby, pro- fessor of sociology, spoke to the stu- dent body assembled in McMahon | Hall Wednesday. His topic was “The University as the Interpreter of the Student’s Ideals, His Aspirations, His Morals and His Conduct.” Dr. Kerby pointed out that the pubiic opinion of the student body has the greatest part to do with the formation of the char- acter of the individual student, es- pecially that of the newcomer whose advent Inevitably concurs with the formation of new friendships which, of necessity, must come from the en- tire student body. ‘The third annual meeting of the American Catholic Historical Assocla- tion, of which Prof. Peter Gullday, professor of church history, is na- tional secretary, will be held in union with the American Historical Assocla- tion at New Haven during the Christ. mas week. The Catholc Association, which was founded to supplement the work of the American Historical As- sociation, has for its object the study of general church history. Among the Catholic University pro- fessors who will read papers at the New Haven meeting are: Rev. Dr. John Cartwright, “St. Bernard and the Papacy”; Rev. Dr. J. J. Rolbiecki, “Dante’s Views on the Sovereignty of the State”; Rev. Dr. Patrick Browne, “The Tercentenary of Mary Ward,” and Rev. Dr. Ignatius A. Smith, O. P., “The Historical Implication in the ‘Writings of St. Thomas Aquinas,” Among the recent publications of the professors of the Catholic Univer- sity is the second volume of “A Ge eral History of the Christian FEra, from 1517 to 1922, by Rev. Dr. Nicho- las A. Weber of the Marist College and ausociate professor of history in the university. It Is a work of over 700 pages and Is published at the Univer- sity by the Cathollc Education Press. Dr. Leo Stock, assoclate professor of American history, is engaged on a valuable work, “A History of the Political Relations Between the United States and the Vatican prior to 1870." One of the most important medie- val manuscripts, a great choir book, written in the fourteenth century, has been placed in the hands of Bishop Shahan for transmission to Pope Pius, as the gift of a schol- arly American priest. This manuscript was long used for the recitation of the breviary and contains several hundred beautiful and unusual letters that make it like a little encyclopedia of medieval historical lettering. Friday, December 8, Rev. Godfrey Schilling, O. F. M., who has been until recently the superior of the cis- can Monastery in Brookland, will celebrate the golden jubilee of the beginning of his monastic life. Father Godfrey, who is in his 68th year, en- tered the monastery at the age of seventeen. He is a familiar figure to all the thousands who come annually to make pilgrimages at Mount St. Sepulchre. A high mass will be cele- brated at 9 a.m. on that morning, All the ceremonies will be marked by simplicity and impressiveness. ‘The preparations for the production of “The Lion and the Mouse"” by the Catholic University Dramatfc As- sociation have progressed so rapidly that it has been decided to advance the opening night from December 2 to Monday, November 27. Mr. Robert- son, director of the association,/lis well pleased with the progress of his charges and reports scenes, decora- tions, costumes, etc., as ready. The students of the university were entertained Thursday evening by a smoke-talk given in the university gymnasium, by the officers of Wash- ington Council, Knights of Colum- bus. Grand Knight Sullivan, Dr. Wil- kinson, and the lecturer, F. C. Pow- derly, addressed the students. The Cathollc University unit of the i Catholic_Students’ Mission Crusade will participate this morning in the spiritual conventlon of local units at the Franciscan Monastery in Brook- land. : This morning at 11 o'clock, on Kil- lion Field, the junior grid warriors are taking on the sophomores. This is the second contest of a series of like games to be played in_inter- class circles. Last Sunday the juniors and the seniors held a scrappy exhi- bition, the game ending in a tie. John W. Crolly, LL. D, '15, now en- gaged in the practice of law, was a visitor at ‘the university last week and presented to the law library a set of the Missouri Reports, totaling 373 volumes. The law library now contains complete sets of thirty-six of the forty-eight states of the Union, most of them being gifts of friends of the Law School in various parts of the country. Dean Mec- Loughlin hopes to secure the missing twelve state reports within a short time. The Dod-Noon Club at a meeting Monday evening in the reception room of Gibbons Hall pledged eleven new members to the society. Those pledged were all upper classmen, the rules of the Inter-Club Council at the university requiring six months’ residence for admission. Several first-year men will be admitted some time after February. Messrs. Doyle, Hatton and Kerrigan addressed the club. The Dynamie Socity was organized the department. Its purpose is nical knowledge among its members and it is hoped to affiliate it with the student section of the American As- sociation of Engineers. Earl Samp- T. A. Cox, vice chairman; P. A. Connors, correspond- ing secretary, and ‘W. T. Gallagher, treasurer. AMERICAN UNIVERSITY. Dr. Alles Hrdlicka, professor of an- thropology, has returned from his trip to South America and Europe and will begin -his lectures Friday afternoon. Dr. Hrdlicka, as secretary of the Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists, went to Brazil last August to assist in organizing the Twentieth International Congress of Americanists. He also was chairman of the organization. After the close of the congress he went to Europe to examine the finds which have been made of remains of early man -ince 1912. He went to Pertugal, ®ain, France, Germany, Bohemia,Moravia and England, exam- ining all specimens and sites. Some new and important discoveries were made gling additional evidence of the antiquity of man. He was especiall: ted the Rhodesian lkgll, o= N, D. C, NOVEMBER 19, 1922—PART L1~ - low the genus homo as we know him today. The University of Prague, founded in 1348, gave Dr. Hrdlicka a medal in recognition of his'work as an an- thropologist. The American Psycho-Legal Society held {its second regular meeting in the university Tuesday evening to consider the report of the special re- search fund committee, which was adopted. It was voted to hold open meetings for the benefit of the public this month or néxt at a place to be later designated. A lecture series is in progress of prepgration, the pro- gram for which will be announced in due time. The formal inaugural exerciges of the American University will be held in the D. A. R. Continental Hall at 4:30 p.m. December 15, at which time Dr. Lucius Clark, the new chancellor of the university, will be officlally in- stalled. The exercises will be pre- ceded by a meeting of the board of trustees in the morning, and dn the evening a banquet will be held at Rauscher's. A reception and dinner were re- cently given to Chancellor Clark and Mrs. Clark by Bishop and Mrs, Mc- Dowell at the bishop’s residence on Wyoming.avenue. All Methodist min- | isters and their wives of the Wash- | ington district were present. The Real Issue. E From the New York Sun. | “Mamma! Mamma! The baby just swallowed my nickel?” “Quick, Willie; run for tne doctor!” “Gee whiz! Ain't you got another nickel?" Matelasse Blouses 100 new jacket ef- fect; Black, Navy, Brown, Silver and Gold Actual §3 31£ = - ?mmmmmmmmmmimflmmmimmmmmmnmmmm:mmm «éwm.mnmm R T full sweep and dura- Special in Plush Coats Deep, heavy pile, with real fur collar— mofldmdhmle.flurntlmgflt; HENRY STRASBURGER DIES Former Washington Business Man Succumbs in Augusta, Ga. Henry Strasburger, a former resi- dent and business man of this city, s dead at the home of his daughter, rs. Jules Heymann, in Augusta, Ga. He was eighty-twc years old. The funeral will be held from the Union station tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock. Mr. Strasburger was a native of Germany, coming to this country at the age of ten years. He was a life member of Acacia Lodge, F. A. A. M., and one of the oldest members of the Washington Hebrew Congrega- tion of this city. 3 —_— TABLET IS UNVEILED TO COL. F. A. BARTON Memorial at Cornell for Former Commandant and Professor of Military Science. A memorial tablet to the memory of Col. Frank Arthur Barton, command- ant and professor of military science and tactics at Cornell. University, was unveiléd at Ithaca, N, Y., the seat of the university, at exercises held in drill hall this week. President Farrand accepted the tablet on behalf of the university. Col. Barton died in 1921. After a& career during the Indian troubles in the west, he was detailed by the War Department to hig alma mater. In 1’ (it IR it T T 1917 he was T3turned at his own re- quest. — Col. Barton was born here in 1369 and educated in the local schools. He was graduiated from Cornell with the class of 1891. He was the son of ‘William H. Barton, for thirty-seven years law clerk in the Department of Justice. A brother and sister, Dr. Wiifred i’l‘- Barton and Mre. Isaac Gans, live ere. WILSON CLUB SMOKER. Justice Siddons and Col. Graves Principal Speakers. Justice Frederick L. Siddons and Col. John Temple Graves were the principal speakers at the annual smoker and dinner of the Woodrow Wilson Club of the National Univer- sity Law School, 719 13th street, last | night. Henry P. Thomas, president of the club, introduced Conrad H. Syme, the toastmaster. Speeches also were delivered by Hugh Frampton of the graduating class, Thomas Patterson. member of the faculty and Prof. T. B. Boone, also of tbe law school, More than 100 members were present. HURT IN TRAFFIC CRASH. Motor Cycle Policeman Badly Cut; and Bruised—Autoist Held. Motor Cycle Policeman L. D. Red- man of the Georgetown precinct, was injured last night in a collision’ with an automobile owned and operated -Beautiful Cloth Coats with luxurious fur collars -- Exclusive ‘models—excellently well designed and tailored by makers of high reputation for the character and class of their production. We have made one lot of the many styles — for your. choice at the unusual price of Made up in the high-grade cloths that are most popu- lar this season. Bolivias Velours T A A Special in Coney Fur Coats Not the cheap kind that tear and rip—but a reinforced Coney Fur, that is firm and strong —carefully made; silk lined. Full sweep ‘M big collars. $50 —ee = ~wl|ite_ rings; heavy covering; strong frames. Normandys Mannish Weaves —With Collars of Beaverette, Selliine, Moufflon, Raccoon— z Big, wrappy models—and others of more form-fitting types—but all of them approved styles—found only in Coats of really high-grade—which means that you'll pay, under usual conditions, from $5 to $10 more. That’s why we say “Greatest Coat Sale of the Season”—here or anywhere else. - All Sizes for Ladies and Misses VRN O LJ i by Willlam C. Gray, 1021 34th street northwest. man was riding his motor_cycle east on M street, and when at the intersection of 33d and M streets the automobile collided with his machine, throwing him tc the ground. He was taken to George- town University Hospital and later ‘\:',a:‘l" home at 3544 11th street north- He sustained donsiderablie shock. cuts about the face and hands and several painful bruises. His condi- tion is not serious. Gray, the owner and operator of the automobile, was arrested and charged with colliding. He was released upon putting up $10 collateral. GIRL SWALLOWS POISON. Miss Margaret Shumaker May Die; Act Laid to Despondency. Miss Margaret Shumaker, twenty- one years old, employed in the United States Treasury Department. in a fit of despondency last night at 9 o'clock, while in her rooms at 1218 H street northeast, swallowed a small vial of poison and was found a short time later by roomers in the house. She was hurried to the Casualty Hospital. where her condition was reported seriou, with only a slight chance for recovery. Friends of the young woman say she has been ill for some time and re- cently underwent u major operation. from which ghe has not recovered. She has been despondent and melan- choly for the past ten days, friends informed the police. Umbrellas Wood handles, with 79c Worth $150 ... T Lt

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