Evening Star Newspaper, October 6, 1926, Page 6

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1 ARLNGTON ONTED " FOR GG DRNE MUSSOLINI WARNS | OF BATTLES AHEAD No Force in World Can Make E EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 19%6. ELBERT H. GARY, 80 ON FRIDAY, NOT YET READY TO QUIT JOBS {Steel Chairman Is Optimistic in Forecastipg Continued Interfederation Council Plan ington, by Frank G. Campbell, Ar- lington's member of the council. In indorsing the plan the meeting approved recommendations, of the local members of the council for mak- ing a sucgess of the drive in Arling- ton County, one of which provides for the appointment of a temporary membership committee to conatitute a clearing committee to act in con- | junction with the various citizens’ as- sociations of the county in the con- duct of the membership drive. The duty of the clearing committee will be to see that the associations are 1 gests that a prize be offered to the |/ winning team, to be paid for out of | the proceeds of new membershipe: or that the losing team be required to pay for a dinner for the winning team. in soliciting memberships. the let ter points out, drive members should not confine their activities to their own residential localities. “Let them tackle every individual they meet.” | the letter continues, “whether it hap pens to be in Arlington County, in | Washington _or in _Montgomery County. If he is not a®member of a citizens association take his dollar and | g If he wishes to In-|honors and in more, Col. John E. Army. retived, died Monday COL. BAXTER. RETIRED. BURIED IN ARLINGTON Army Officer. Who Died in Balti- more. Given Funeral With |+ Military Honors. Baxter, wes N the DEATH FROM LIQUOR BRINGS CONVICTION Saul Margulies Held Guilty of Manslaughter for Sale of Poison to Farmer. United States in Balti- | ied with military Arlington o The Star Dl MORE. October & Sanl Mar Prosperity in 1927. his application. dlcate on the application citizens’ association that he wants to | join, well and good: he will be assign- | ed to that association, but if he in-| dicates no preference, then at the |t | for 20 vears. In October. 1897, he was| His close of the drive the clearing coOm. | ,puferred to the Quartermaster |! mittee of the Civic Fede n el | Corps, and served contintously in that assign him to the proper citizens’ |y, ,nch until retived at his own request assoclutiof Explained at County Meeting. Him Deviate From Path, _Premier Reminds People. By the Associated Press * PERUGIA, Italy, Octoher 6. Pro- elaiming that Fascism stands for a new political system and that its ad- herents constitute a new genius of clvilization, Benito Mussolini, the Fagcist premier, after a lecture on | “Anclent Rome on the Sea” here ves- terday, spoke on what may he termed &n outline of the Fascist philosophy. { He was in a fighting mood and in brilliant phrases hurled defiance at hix adversaries Battles Still Ahead. “I am glad to pass from history to the ardent and living humanity of| Fascism when it i3 posses f o soul of which T am a part.” he said. ““The Fascist government has accomplished gIRantic prozress in all ficlds: we are atill on the breach as behooves lov anldiers whose duty it is to he ready for all battles “So long as nothing happens to me, nothing will happen to vou. Neither the petty insinuations of hypocrites nor the gestures, direct or indirect, of obstinate adversaries—nothing, no force in the world, can make me de- viate from my path “I am going to tell you something that will be pleasing to your dis- quieted spirits. In the fight which 1} am seeking I am not going to avoidy any obstacles of the opposition. which make me enly harder, more tenacious more irreconcilable. Has a Sacred Duty. "I have a duty to accomplish. I have orders to respect; I have taken upon myself an engagement to give material and moral grandeur to the Itslian people. That order, that supreme duty, wasnot given to me by petty lawmaking assemblies or by political circles, more or less clandes- tine. It was conferred upon meAand’ the heritage Is sacred by reason of all | the Fascists fallen in battle—by s or almost all the Itallan people, w has finally thrown off its states of civil minority in which it was held by inept or feeble governments. Today the Italian nation is regarded tran- quilly in the eyes of other peoples, be- cause it is felt that in Italy something has been accomplished of enormous interest, historical and political, to all states und all peoples. “We may be the bearers of a new | cal system, a new type of civ- |supplied with application curds, cam- | paign buttons ““as they may desire, | and are ready to pay for”: to lend all {ald possible to the assqciations in con- {duct of the campaign its comple- {tion to tabulate and report to the {Civic Federation the results achieved and to act as a clearing house in allocating unattached members to the citizens associations nearest to them. Letter to Be Sent Out. | Under the indorsement the secre- |tary is instructed to send all the citi- zens associations a copy of a letter formulated by the Interfederation Counil giving the plan in detail. President R. E. Plymale, who pre- sided, named the following for the clearing committee: Charles F. Kin- cheloe, Mrs. Catharine M. Rogers, Mrs. Claude S Semones and Hugh McGrath. The letter fo the citizens associa- tions suggests that each organization participating in the drive enlist the ald of every member and that the entire membership be divided into two competing teams. It further sug- blank the | Cemetery this afternoon. A native of nwond, N. 1. he was from the Military Academy ; 7, and served in the Sth Infantry | Uity last night leged head of a poison rum Baltimore, was convicted of by @ jury $in Ellicott gradnated | ring in in June | manslangh Unable to See How Ford Can | Get More Work Done in 5-Day Week. followed a two.da ate endeavored (o nvict him of murder in the first d gree for complicity in the death of Nelson Owens an Anne Arundel! Conn ty farmer. last January. \ motion for a new trial is being pre pared by defense counsel. Special Diepatch to The Star. which the CLARENDON, Va.. October 6.— Unanimous indorsement of the plan for the “organized citizenship” drive to he made simuitaneously in Wash ington. D. C.. Montgomery and Ar- lington Counties, in the “Greater Washington Movement,” November 13 to 20. was given by the Arlington County Civic Federation at its month- ly meeting at the courthouse last night. The action was taken following ex- planation of the plan as conceived by the Interfederation Council. re- ntly formed by the local federation, the Mongomery County Civic Feder- ation and the Federation of Citizens' Associations of the District of Co- itching and burning, doctors prescribe lumbia to co-ordinate the activities of all the civic organizations in the P Resinol The Oldest Domestic Electric Refrigeration Hin Octob 1915, while holding the | grade of colone! H is survived by Eltzabeth 1t Baxter. | timore, and by his Donald H. Connollv. wife of Maj | » 5 | Claims $10,000 for Injuries. | Mrs. Louise G. Thompson. 3741 Military road, today filed suit in the i . St , - COVH i Connolly, Corps of Ingin District Supreme Court to rpfmnI Lo Ll Rl $10,000 damages for alleged personal |yt "I injury from Irving Lubore, 2300 Eighteenth street, who Is said to own an automobile which collided with her {at Twelfth and I streets northwest May 12. Her husband. Horton ( hiswife iding in ughter Mrs Bal Mrs D ers he Associated Press EW YORK. October 6. Eibert H. | v At ) s as optimistic as ever. | His hirthday is Frida | The chairman of the United States | Steel Corporation believes growing | competition of foreign trade is a boon to business, that serious business slumps #re no longer necessary and that business conditions are very sat- isfactory. “The American people want prospy he said in an ifiterview, and will do their utmost to maintain i meo ! H. Nearly $14.000,000 will he spent hy one city alone in Japan for constri tion of electric car lines [RRITATING RASHES For quick, lasting reliel from Guatemalan Election Set. Twao degrees, one calling f | dential election December 3. 4 and 5 Thompson, also sued Mr. Lubore for |and the other re-establishing coii an additional $2,500 for loss of services | tutional zuarantees which were sus of his wife and the expense incident | pended several months ago, have been to her injuries. Attorneys J. Bond |issued by President Chacon. the ‘Smith and John k. Larsen appear for | Guatemalan legation was advised to the plaintiffs. |\|a\» by ecable, Takes Banker's Word. Mr. Gary based predictions for con- . Rt tinued prosperity largely upon reports ELBERT H.” GARY. m the sales managers of the Steel — Corporation’s varied subsidiaries and upon a statement of “one of the moat | Fat¢ for the benent of the consumer, prominen: bankers in tne world.” i w0 Lol that pilues conitions. snou contimue ood dug, | C0UId e estabilshed and maintained ing the rest of 198 and probably | Fewardiess of whether they are fair or through 19 i " Mr. Gary pronounced the Ford plan for a fiveday week “uneconomic.” nd he said he would require further 00f before he could be satisfied thai any man or any number of men can do as muck work in nve days of eight hours each as could be secured in six days of eight hours each.” Some of the most injurious compe- tition originates and is carried on in the United States, he said, in discuss- inz the development of foreign com. | petition. “Competition ought to exist at any OUTLINES MEANS 10 AID TUBERCULAR British Doctor Declares | Cured Patients Should Be | port Made by Party Chair- ization. Hiuman soricties do not de | Protected From Relapses. man in District. there is no order, discipline, work—if % st — there is lack of interest among those who command Not to Quit Offices. Reminded of his approaching birth- | qav, Mr. G said he realized it | would not be long hefore he would “be | off the hoards.” He explained. how ever, that he had no intention of re- signing from any of his numerous | | offices. “I want to he prepared for the in evitable,” he explainea. “and want others to be prepared aiso.” He will preside at the annual meat- ing of the American Iron and Steel 1n- stitute here on October 22, as usual. PRESIDENTHEARS OF G.0.P.CAMPAIGN Shows Keen Interest in Re- o President Coolidge is taking a keen interest in the campaign being con- ducted by the local Republican Jeaders in their efforts to get out the State votes temporarily resident here. This was manifested durlng a confer- | ence at the White House today be. tween the President and Samuel .J Prescott, chairman of the Republican | State committee of the District, who is in direct chargs of the campaign work here. The President w especially inter ested in those so.called doubtful States and inquired what was being done by the committee respecting these States. | Work of Committee Qutlined. After explaining in a general way just what the committee i doing in the way of ge the prospective voters fo register and to prepare for the balloting, Mr. Prescott informed | the President that much attention is | being given to the absentes voters | from” the so-called doubtful States. | | He added that unusual atrention is | | being given this vear to Maryiand,| and that Indiana, Ohio and New | York are receiving their shave of the commitiee’s help. { President Coolidze especially | well versed upon the subject of absentee voters and has always taken an interest in the work done by the | al Republicans. but evidentiy real- | s the fmportance of the full strength of the Republican bote heing cast at the coming elections. It ap- | peared evident that he is more than | ordinarily anxfous to see that every | Republican vote possible iz sent out o Washington in time for election day The consumptive man not only is himself a drag on the industry, but is | also a_ brake on the wheel of the industry of othe the Na tional Tuberculo: ssociation in annual convention at the May- flower Hotel today was told by Dr. P. C. Varrier-Jones of Cambridge, Fasciem Never Stronger. scisin as it marches toward the celebration of the fourth ni- | versary of the march on Rome, while it prepares to enter the fifth year of rule. It was never stronger, never more compact, more golid than today. | England, who has successfully experi “Thia strength of the veople is a | mented with the problem of caring for planet in the heaven of history, but |a patient after his discharge from a Rome is still a star fairly large in our | sanatorium_in such a manner as to horizon. prevent a pse. “We may bow many times, but our | Dr. Varrier-jones, leader of the soul cannot be bent. We may be | Papworth village settlement in Cam- forced to suspend our advance, but we | bridge, Which enables a tuberculosis shall resume it more rapidly, and |patient to earn a living without for Fascism will continue that march { ing him to match his strength against with method, energy and passion until | the entire world, declared “it is com all aims not yet attained have been | paratively ea patient realized.” through a cou ium treat- . I ment and at the end o leave him with BOY’S DEATH STIRS e R e el PARENTS TO SEEK SAFETY GUARANTEE | his living under undesirable condi- (Continued “from First “See I tions that the process restarts, his | resistence is lowered and he becomes { once more an unproductive unit. Will Hali Infection. Is there any method whereby this - jcollapse can be avoided? If we are i able to find it, a man and a wife and its children out of schoolifamily have a far greater chance of until the danzers complained of avelhyjlding up their resistance and thus remedicd, and oth Darents are | fortifying themselves against infec fraught with fear for the safety of | tion their little ones. | "It is sometimes supposed that a vaffic experts have asserted thatjyijlage settlement should accept only per campalgn of safety educa- | ses and further build up their 1d_motor- |y nce to the point of cure. This nol 1y idea of the usefulness of tion among both children a ists is the solution to this menacing | the village settlement. A village set tlement is A community of sub- problem. Children, properly impressed | standard workers who, owing to the with the need of ion in crossing | the streets and safexuarded by care- | ful observance of traffic signs by the |,y ent of iheir disease, cannot obtain motorists using those streets, should | epyployment in the outside world, but run but little risk, they have main:iypg, under the village settlement con- | tained. Such campaigns of education | giijons, can carn a respsciable wage have been frequent. {in the industries organized for their Statistics on Child conditions and are housed In premises Yet statistics in the office of Trafic Which are suitable for themselves and Director Eldridge, covering the six | their families.”” Under these condt months from January to July of this | t:ons, 1t weaker safd, a man will vear and thus including the second |1€arn “io lead the life of a consump- semester of the last school vear, show « and even enjoy that life.” that of a total of 36 pedestrians killed on the streets, a dozen were children of school age. And of 1087 injurcd during the same period not less than 217 were of school age The majority. however. were not thus killed or injured while on thetr way to or from school Most of them were hurt in front of their own homes. A brief inquiry discioses that four agencies are now at work on the prob. lems which grow out of such tra as that_enacied in front of the School Monday These- ngencies are the traffic di Yector's office, the Police Department the American Automobile Assocation &nd, finally, the public school svstem ‘on convenient terms Kelvir Qe ‘Worlds Standard proved life and acknowledged world’s standard? Page.) keeping is Inator will /\'ul? by Mail. The Presidént and Mrs. Coolidge | will follow their usual custom since heing residents ¢f the Capital and will their ballots by mafl. in 1924 1 allots were executed on the lawn In the rear of the White Touse several duys in advance of election day Experiments Are Described. ]f‘:','!']'."”‘:v""“'i:;*"':fi,”,',".,'f‘»',’."',,,"”l’.“.' Dr. Robert' Chambers and Dr. Paul Wivo thas) GURE Met0ITE B | Reznikoff of Cornell University Meds T Fins 2. Wt | cal’ Callege described tn the conven »/KIm. upon the cond) tion delicate experimenis by means | ditiors if kit {0f which it has been possible 10 b |cent hurricane ik (oMb serve the acion of a single germ of | Prescotr there is areat sl B tuberculosis upon a single BVing cell. | funds 1o carey on the worh e aoh Dr. Henry Sewall of Denver was|Cross fu 8oing in comnmrine Red elected prestdent of (he I ion, i1 e rawontc GebRE thai vesterday afternoon at a special meet- | peror. S G ine of the hoard of diveciors. Presi || 1o I K dent ‘Coolidge. Dr. William 1. Welsh | giare i it and Dr. Theobald Smith were chosen | grarial papy oy Abe iot look |as honorary vice presidents. Other | n4NCAL DEIP 10 assist them |officers elected were Dr. David Alex. | ander Stewart and Dr. zene x.[ Opfe. vice presidents; Dr. George H | Kober. secretary. and 1. B. Plat | treasurer; executive committee, b Linsly B Wiliame Do Jeee: or: | that both the Red Cross and the. to, per- el Dr. Alexander M. Forster. John | 2UlHOVities have performed a splen- en. { home There’s a convenient House- hold Budget Purchase Plan for those who desire to useit. This makes it as easy to own Kel- vinator as any other system of electric refrigeration for your home. The initial cost of a Kelvinator is low, too;—below that of any other system—size for size and quality for quality. Why, then, be satisfied with Yourown refrigerator—the one you are now using—can be Kelvinator-equipped. Thereare Kelvinator models for every standard refrigerator made. and | na for! in the venlize ihe DErsons Wi hay and {are in need of hosp nd niedical | | trestment. He «old ihe Presfleat ured Eldridge Making Survey Director Eldridge is making a Just phone us—or mail the coupon below—and we will gladly tell you how you can be enjoying this wonderful mod- anything but Kelvinator, the ern convenience within a very electric refrigeration of longest short time. KELVINATOR WASHINGTON SALES 11th and H Sts. A Factory Sales Branch B_’!ain 2278 Kelvinator Wash. Sales 11th and H Streets of Late Seuator Lodge. By the Aasociated Press BOSTON. October Sturgis Bizelow. 75 vears old. a well | nown Hoston physician for more han half 2 century, art Connoisseuy (au and lifelonz friend of the late | Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, died to- | K. Dr. William and Aiding officials whole ma ave for composed of 2 by D These Conveniently I.ocated Dealers Sell Kelvinator: J. Kent White, Alxandria, V: Virginia Elec. & Power Co., Fredericksburg, V Edward E. Nichols, Purcellville, Va. Dudley J. Hill, Culpeper, Va. Modern Plumbing and Heating Co., Orange, Va. I want more’informa tion about installing Kelvinator in my re- frigerator. | Police o loved akin re-enact, ones as in! ¢ 2 lun street, | ? = | . Wright Error Rectified. found . in the by pa- trons of the plice early this morning) Wllliam Pevton Wright, 1515 Ken with a severs knife wound in his| yon street. who. with his wife, Mre P 0 £ Slizabeth J. Wright. vesterday sought The patrons started the search i pe.migsion of the Districe Supreme finding the lunchroom apparent- | Court to adopt a child, was erroneaus deserted. |1y described in The Star as hein 4 33 oom tteos. vears old the parked car situation, the need for | Winslow. DIES AT BOSTON HOME | the school safety regulations | Interest any constructive suggestion Mrs. Lillie May Wimer, 60 vears old, District traffic authorities their serv- | ¢ leg resterday as a result of he- S N chool Official fairy comfortable night at safety committee V. Frye. colored. 18 vear oid, |*f “Buddiism and Immortality in in a fashion augurs well for a {noon. was formally charged with by firsi rank in Japanese and Chinese Al four agencies -are jment. He wis commander of the eherished goal. however, the cold fx Say Luncnroom Man's | american Oriental Society and s some ane ¥ sonal survey of areas surrounding | o Kingsbury. Dr. Alfred Henry, Dr. |44 Work and are to he commended achools, with particular reference to|¢ J. Hatfield and Prof. (. k. A - . - traffic signs of various types. and & 3 DR. W. S. BIGELOW. 75 the sort of measures necessary tol s impress motorists with the sravity of| MRS, WIMER IMPROVES Police are continuing their patrol ! e of intersections near school buildings, | Elevator Victim Who Loet Leg Has | Noted as Author. Physician and| the while awaiting with sympathetic Restful Night. Art Connoisseur and Was Friend that others may give for further pro tective steps. wife of John W. Wimer deputy pur Experts of the A. A. A. have offered | ch sent for the Distriet gou | cinment, who suffered the loss of he. | ices in diagnosing the cause of ! #chool accidents in seeking | ing ed 1 an elevator accident in means to obviate them 1 Apartments. Fourteenth and 1= reported 1o have b A:.d x:;hflr srh}:‘-w warfield Hosepital. Her condition ap J!fll\l- . concerned over the {peared muen mmproved this morning e was 2 deep student of Buddhis all its varied aspe; and it is bolleved she will recover. {and the Orent, and was the author schoo! principals appointed by Super- | 310 Kl ‘enue. the he ' 1911 he = i y | iper- |3 operator e vresented his' collection of tntendent Ballou. This |elevator, who was arrested ce | Oriental ireasures to the Boston Mu- committee is about its business | of the tenth prec nct vesterdav fier- Seum of Fine Aris. giving it theveby permanent, sa 1e solution of the lan unlicensed operator. His collateral the only other collection com- nearly stageering problem which con | was fixed at $100. parabie it. according to critics. fronte them " {being that of the Japanese govern toward the common zoal FOUND WITH LEG CUT. !imperial Order of the Rising Sun, a traffic safety that is “ch s | Japanese « ition: a member of Until one, or all of them. a the Asi Society of Japan, the remains tha v i | i oy s mains Wound "Was EElETaBioted, {itar orga He was a pr fury stalk W und s nflicted tound the Japanese life without w i character else’s clpals, a hefel] Fredd with childlike gedy Gre Sin P at 2 was basement Band Bigger Than the Town : Forest Grove. Mich population of only band of 44, pleces the fact that the farr surroun territ became inter In Forest Grove the entir town consists of five dwellings and “"T%"“ o with an o has a possible boys in AR \\ " Better \AJ\\ ‘l’\ - 0. ade er Electric Refrigeration ‘ B Poli g4y the wound was =elf.in. | chief of the foreign serviee divizion . flict It was dressed by Dr. Wil- | of the Bureau of Foreign and Dimes . and Sratteos was then taken to Commerce. Mr. Wright is a member O 1 d D i linger Hospital for mental ohserya | of that division, but ix not r:hle!%l the e est omesti1c [ liam Meiman of Emergency Hospital, | tic Commerce of the Department of “tion, division, a

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