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PROOF OF MEXIGAN - RADICALISM ASKED La Guardia Resolution Calls on State Department to Explain News Reports. Congress will ask the State Depart- ment gome pointed questions about the Assoclated Press dispatch of No- vember 17, recounting governmental eoncern that communistic tendencies In Mexico wmight Interfere with the existing pleasan: Latin American re- | chairman of the committee, presidink. | he ! | broad jump record of the world for Iations, if u resolution introduced in the House yesterday by Representa- tive La Guardia, Republican, of New York, is adopted. The dispatc: already has roused controversy in several guarters. Now Mr. La Guardia, “if not incompatible with public interests,” would lke to have the State Department explain the origin of the storys. 'He a whether department officlals asked press associations to send out a story concerning Mexican conditions, wheth- er the sources of information were to be held secret, and whether the depart- ment had accurate information about Bolshevist activities in Mexico. Questions in Detail. The La Guardia questlons In detail follow: “Did the State Department, through any of its officers, on or about the 16th day of November, 1926, re- quest or suggest to the representa- tives of the Assoctated Press, United Press and the International News Service to send a statement or news item to their respective members concerning internal conditions in Mexico and alleged relations between Mexico and Russia? “D'd the Department of State, through any of its officials, on or about the 16th day of November, make any statement to the represen- tatives of the Associated Press, United ,Press and International News Service concerning Mexico and request said news assoclations not to reveal the source of information? “Did the State Department have in its possession on or about the 16th day of November any authentic, ac- curate or reliable information con- cerning bdlshevistic activities in the republic of Mexico? Asks if Data Were at Hand. “Did the State Department have in its possession on or about the 16th day of November, 1826, any authentic, accurate or reliable information rela- tive to Mexico's atttude toward Nicaragua and Mexican activities in Central America detrimental to the interest of the United Stafes?"’ If the fixst and second questions are answered in the affirmative, Mr. Kel- logg is asked to furnish the name and official title of the' person who made such statements. Speaking in New York last Thurs- day before the convention of the As- sociation of Life Insurance Presidents, Kent Codper, general manager of The Associated Press, said: “On November 17 . the Associated Press distributed a news dispatch. re- porting the deep eoncern with which responsible officials of the State De- partment regard ‘the specter of a Mexican-fostered bolshevist hegemony Interven ng between the United States and the Panama Canal.’ “At the same time, il transmitted a s!:}efi\ehn.t ifl Secretary mflo" in whic racterized the situation in Ni ks as one ‘which has in- vited further interference f out- side sourtes.’ The game disj re- counted the State De ad- vices respecting the shipment of arms and ammunition from Mexico to Nic- aragus. Charge of Propaganda. “With the publication of the dis patch referred to,.the Siate Depart ment was publicly attacked as having h directed against the present government in Mexico. ‘Various accounts of a confidential con- ference between Assistant Secretary Olds and newspaper men were pub- lished in support of the attack. Co- incidentally, the Associated Press was attacked on & charge of having lent itself to the dissemination of inspired propaganda, and the various ac- counts of Mr, Olds’ conversation with the newspaper correspondents were submitted in proof of this charge. “It {s worthy of attention that the Associated Press dispatch in ‘question 4id not gcontain the varlous state- ments attrjbuted to Mr. Olds, It only re] hat Government officials . chay with the conduct of foreign elal were concerned over their reports that communistic tendencles were being thrust into American-Mex- ican relations, 4 ““This came to the Associated Press in the ysual course of news gathering in Washington from sources which it ;mu a rl(ltdt 10 ua-a are v:lu l‘l:l- o1 and correctly represen! e \'iz:d of the Government. There was no reason to question the truth of the information lrtn-mm.d and investi- gation has developed none.” During the last 10 years the num- ber of married women in manufac turing and mechanical industry has ncreased 41 per cent, SHOWING WASHINGTON REAL MAN ANNIVERSARY COMMITTEE'S AIM Campaign to Throw True Light on Char- ; acter Begun—Queen Marie’s ! Tribute Paid to Mother. { Intensive vivification of early Amer-{or a statesman through Lis. interes {ican history, particularly as it applies o ¢ Washington, is planned « pext five years by the na- to committee Lo commemorate Washington's 200th birthday anni- | versary in 1932. The first national meetin, at the Cosmos 1b yesterday {Col. John A. Stewart of New waus held with York, | Most of the members today motored | to Fredericksburg, Va., with the Ru- | manian Minister and his u.ughter, {who placed % wreath on the tomb of | Mary Washington, mother of the first President. Queen Marie had intended to deposit this wreath, but was unable | to do so because of the abrupt termi- [ nation of her American visit. | Luncheon wus served the party at the Fredericksburg Country Club, after which they visited Kenmore, the home of Washington’s sister. “Make America the host of the world in 1982, was the slogan adopt- ed by the committee. Both national and international celebrations are | planned and President Coolidge may be asked to issue a proclamation to the various nations inviting them to participate 1n the observance, . Washington Stjill Unknown. But in the meantime, said Col. Stewart, the first essential is to show the United States and the world just who Washington was. The great Virginian, says the committee chair- man, still is largely an unknown fig- ure, even in his own country. Generations of schoolboys, sickened at the cold statue of a man presented to them in their text books, came to regard him as a sort of sissy, it was declared. The revolt from this at- titude has resulted in something even more obnoxious—pictures of him as a rake, gambler and tippler. The efforts of the committee will be directed to correcting both these impressions. They wish to show Washington as one of the greatest men who ever lived, but still a thor- oughly human being, a great states- man and soldier who was not afraid to soil his shirt in a wrestling match. The basic step in this direction will be to obtain svery scrap of available data on his life. Negotiations will be opened soon with the governments of Great Britain, France and Holland to permit a search of their archives, under the direction of native scholars, for such papers as dea] with Wash- ington. ere is probably a vast quantity of these, Col. Stewart be- lieves, which never have seen the I'light and which will throw invaluable sidelights on the history of the American Revolution and Washing- ton’s two terms as Presidemt. 20,00p Papers Believed Written. Steps also will be taken for a more thorough search of American archives, which must be rich in Washingtoniana that has never come into the hands of 'historians. It is likely, Col. Stewart holds, that Wash- ington must have issued at least 20,000 Army orders, executive orders, official letters, state papers and S0 forth, only about 2,000 of which ever have been published. The rest of them still are packed away some- where,, waiting, for the competent | historian with interest to “examine’ them. . Many of them, Col, Stewart says, doubtless will proye purely rou- tine papers; -Hit others will be full of suggestions, character hints and isolated facts from which sa better picture of Washington and a more accurate story of his times can be built up. A third step will be to obtain access to the family records of several Vir- nia families which are rich in Wash- ngton lore. At least one of these families already has consented to allow qualified studeénts 16 examine its_papers. e fourth and most promising is to obtain the cO| tion county _historical socleties al lover the United States but ticularly in the original colonies These socletles will be asked tr prepare purely local histories to be taught in the schools during stated terms, in which particular stress will be placed on any contact Washington niay have had with local dignitarie The general traveled widely and ca ried on a great deal of correspondence with acqualntances throughout the colonles, ‘Would Create New Interest. The committes believes, Col. Stewart says, that this not only will bring to light much buried data o ‘Washington but will create a new in terest in early American history. Boys and girls will get a better perspective on Princeton and Brandywine through the telescope of the skirmish happened in thelr own county. The committee b3 ihes studies to present a broader Wash- ington. There was hardly s Jine of human ‘endeavor in which the man wus not interested, acecording to Col. Stewart, and In not a few of these lines he was a prominent figure. He would have had an enviable place in history if he had never been a general step of The Chrlstmos Stove in agriculture, mechanics and sports. Some interesting sidelights Washington's lif vealed to the committee Washington o e ork, 4 great- ndson of the I's brother. He them from his grandfather, who her talic about tiem Jittle boy. , for Instance, ! gra L eot hud heard his held the { more than a century, this r i{said. Also he was the chan wrestler of Virginfa and once, he was a colonel under Braddock, challenged & private soldier to a match when he heard that thie man dis- puted Lis championship. but did not dare issue a challenge because of the difference in rank. Olymple Games Sought. These two incidents were brought out.in the discussion of a proposal to bring the 1932 Olympic games to the United States. It would be a worthy mem to a great ll:llfin and sportsman, the committee hel The committee will work to have each State pass legislation authorizing the functioning of a State comimittee in preparation for the celebration. It {s not desired to concentrate the ob- servance in any one locality, but to have local observances everywhere in the United States. In his address Col. Stewart stress- ed that one of the most fitting possible memorials to Washington in the Capi- tal would be a great natfonal univer- sity. particularly devoted to historical , together with an academy of diplomacy, where men planning diplomatic and consular careers could have the advantage of a course of study calculated to promote interna- tional good will. He would have this conducted on the same plan as are the naval and military academies, with the students appointed by mem- rs of Congress and by the Presi- ative t. Members of the committee, of which Col. Stewart is chairman, are Barron G. Collier, Albert S8haw, John McE. Bowman and Thomas Hastings of New York; Hugh J. Flemming of S8an Francisco and Ira Nelson Morris of Chicago, —_— FOG WRECKS TRAINS . AND HOLDS UP SHIPS; WIND BLOWS IT AWAY (Continued from First Poge.) danger point. Ranchers in the plains States were warned to protect their livestock from the weather. In Western Wisconsin several towns were dark last night through inability to repair broken electric power lines, and water supplies, g:lmped by electricity, were in grave er. big cities. official reading at 1 am. was 3 de- grees below zero. half a hundred fam- ilies were driven to the streets by fires, most of which were attributed to overheated furnaces and stoves. In the 18 hours ending at midnight, fire alarms_were answered. OQutside Minneapolis a locomotive stalled in the drifts, and passengers struggled a mile afoot to shelter, One of the Coast Guardsmen, laboring to free a car ferrv stranded on the rocks off Milwaukee, collapsed before the icy wind and water. 14 Dead in Storm. 'Bight persons were dead in the wake of the Northwest's storm, four deaths were counted in the plains States and two men were frozen to death in the heart of the corn belt. ‘At Woonsocket, S. Dak.. Old Man Winter played policeman,. and thwarted the plans of thieves who broke into two stores. After failing to find any loot in a-safe the robbers found their automobile radiator frozen and were forced to flee afoot. Throughout the entire Western por- tion of the United States the snowfall was unseasonably extensive, both as to depth. as much as 10 feet in some places, and as to area eovered. 1In wegtern Canada the blizzard, which began Sunday night. was cailed the worst since 1907, and Alaskans were alarmed for the safety of residents of the Aleutian Islands, where even the three radio stations have not been heard from since the blizzard began. e — 4 The Courant of Haarlem, Hoitand has been, published as a newspape' almost uninterruptedly for 270 year ‘'GROSNER’S on | W. Lanier | ere was much suffering in the | At Chicago, where an un- | WATERWAYS BILL IS BEFORE SENATE Strict Limitation Rules to Be | Enforced to Prevent Long Filibuster. Frow d the long-impend- | ing row over distribution of rivers and! harbors money today as the $60,000,000 | bill finally became the order of busi-| ness under an agreement reached at the last session | The agreement appeared to have the Senate in an ironclad arrangement {to force a vote on the controversialf subject before the Christmas holidays. Beginning - Monday, debate will be limited to one hour for each member | for discussgion of the bill and 30 min- utes upon any amendment. After 3 yelock Tuesday no Senator can speak more than once or longer than! 15 minutes on the bill or any amend-. ment, an unusually strong rule for ihe Senate to accept, but one which it is believed will forestall a filibuster. Big Items at Stake. Two main issues stand out-—the St. Lawrence River-tidewater project and the Lakes-to-Gulf waterway dispute. The bill, however, as passed by the House also touches projects in vir- tually every section of the country and(is filled with fighting possibilities. In addition, the Senate commerce committee added the following proj- ects to the measure Hackensack River, N. J., §1,6! 00; Intracoastal Waterway from Beaufort Inlet, N. C., to the Cape Fer River, $6,000,000; Glveston Channel, Tex., $621,000, and Little Caillou Bayou, La., $85,000. Missouri River Project Cut. The committee also increased by $6,- 500,000 the allotment for a power, flood control and firrigation survey, and, where the House voted to permit im- provement of the Missouri River from Kansas City to Sioux City at a total cost of $50,000,000, the committee de- cided to limit this to $12,000,000. Great Lakes States, with the excep- tion of Illinois, are waging war on the provision for a 9-foot ehannel 200 feet wide in the Illinois River from Utica, 11, to the mouth of the river, at a cost of $3,500,000. Opponents con- tend this will further lower the lakes level and hinder navigation. The proposal for an appropriation for a survey of a canal across New York State connecting Lake Erie and Lake Ontario with the Hudson River also is a target which promises to draw considerable fire. th The Senate fo Associ; By |CITIZENS REQUEST " BETTER LIGHTING Sixteenth Street Highlands Group to Seek Abatement of Smoke Nuisance. Resolutions ‘were adopted by the Sixteenth Street Highlands Citizens’ Association, meeting in the Sixth Presbyterian Church, Sixteenth and Kennedy streets,’last night, request- ing the Commissioners to provide a more adequate lightlng system on streets of the association’s territory and to erect lights in all of the al- leys. The Commisgloners will also be J to lay u sidewalk on the west eenth street Jefferson and Kennedy streets, to provide center parking and shrub bery on a number of streets. An ef fort will be made to have owners of eertaln apartment houses in the community curtail to some extent the lssuing of heavy black smeks from chimneys. The practice is nuisance and menace to heglth, was said, and will be ried” to the Commissioners for relief if the own- ers are unwilling to have it stgpped, Jt was voted to meet heredfter on the first Monday in each month fn stead of the second Monda tephen H. Talkes, president of the tion, presided. . Army - Sergeants Retired. Staff Sergt. Henry Blumhagen, 34th Infantry, at Fort Eustis, Va.,'and First Sergt. Joseph Staton, 2ith In- fantry, at Nogales. Ariz, have been placed on the retired list of the Army on’ thelr own applications. Itach of these soldjers has had more than 30 years' active military mervice, 1325 F 8T. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LEGTURE IS GIVEN Frank Bell of Philadelphia Speaks at First Church and Keith’s Theater. A lecture on Christian Science was delivered last evening In First Church of Christ, Scientist, by Frank Bell, C. 8. B, of Philadelphia. Mr. Bell is a member of the board of Jectureship of the mother church, the First Church of Christ, Seien in Boston. e was introduced by Miss Sophie Siebert, second reader of First Churcl under whose auspices the lecture given. A repeat lecture was delvered by Mr. Bell in Keith’s Theater at noon today. The lecturer said in part: “Christian Science has been ac- cused of undly emphasizing the heal- ing of disease, whereas the prime pur- pose of religion is to save from sin. A sufficient answer, to a Christian, should be the gospel record of Jesu: who by both his example and his spe- cific command to his followers identi. fied the healing of the sick with the religion of Christianity. “Sin Is Mental.” “Promotion of mere physical ease would not of itself be worthy of re- ligion. What the critic possibly has failed to see is that true Christian healing is identical with the destruc- tion of sin. They cannot be sepa- rated. “What is sin? In the first place it is mental. Back of sinful act always is sinful thought. Mere restraint of sinful deeds leaves sin untouched. Jesus has said that thinking adultery is committing adultery. Theréfore the sin of adultery remains until every adulterous thought is destroyed. “In the second place, sin is not only a matter of thinking, but of erroneous thinking., If St. Paul's statement to Timothy {8 correct, that the inspira- tion of all Scripture is to the end ‘that the man of God may be perfect,’ then whatever would stand in the way of realization. of perfection is sin. If it is true, as according to St. John, that ‘now are we the sons of God,’ even though that fact ‘doth not t ap- pear,’ then the sense of things that would hide that appearance i{s a sin- ful sense. S “Sin includes every thought or con- cept that heips to make up the sum total of a physical sense of existence in which imperfection reigns, The truth about real man is that he now lives, moves and has his being in God, as the Blble declares. Therefore, man now lives, moves and has his being in spirit, not in matter. If one says, My whole sense of things denies that, then the answer is that one says, my whole sense of things denies the reality of being the more completely sinful is such sense of things “St. John writes in the éecond chapter of his first epistle: ‘My little children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. * * * Love Groce’s, 11th not, the world, neither the things that are in the world. ® * For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, :;)d the lust of the eyes ¢ * ¢ s not lust thereof; but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.’ “Iis Due to Beliefs.” “The gospel record is that the sin- less Nazarene smote ‘with the rod of his mouth, the suggestions of the sight of the eyes and the hearing of the ears, such as today would trmpt you and me to believe that ‘all that is in the world,’ is ‘of the Father’; in other words, that God's creation is material. Christian Science makes it clear that socalled material things are but objectified thought or sense; that this material sense of things is false, and that it is this mistaken sense, not God's creation, which needs to be corected in order to accomplish the ends of salvation. “*All that s in the world’ is in truth ‘not of the Father,’ as St. John has said. The sinfulness of material belief is, manifestly, its enmity against God. If material things are real, God made them or He 1s not the only creator. If God made material things, He must have made the bad things as well as the good things. Would a God who made bad things be a good GoA? Is it any wonder that the beloved Son of God should refuse to base his judgment on what the eyes saw and the ears heard? “The disciple of materialism may say, I cannot deny that which my eyes plainly see and my ears clearly hear. The answer is: Then you must accept responsibility for maintaining an impudent accusation against God. You may choose to try to ignore this responsibility, but you cannot avoid paying the price. The practice of Christian Science, now verified by the accumulated proof of half a century of active operation, demonstrates that the ills of the flesh are due to the be- liefs of the flesh, to a false sense of life in matter and apart from spirit. In the proportion that the Christian of today learns to master the sinful sense of reality in aught that is not of the nature of God, is Christian healing achieved. “It is not true that one cannot deny the evidence of the material senses. He who says he cannot means only that, as yet, he will not. Whosoever will may come. There is a way out. It is the way of the great Way- shower, who was without sin because He was without belief in the reality. of anything that would deny that man is now the complete son of God; the Way-shower, who from the stand- point of His, utter repudiation of the sight of the eyes and the hearing of the ears, could say with absolute con- viction to men and women of His time, men and women like you and ;'ne‘ “"he kingdom of God is within ou, AN L Lieut. Coe on Retired List First Lieut. Willlam C. Coe, Coast Artillery Corps, has been placed on the retired list of, the Army on ac- count of disability incident to 'the service. He is from New York and was graduated from the Military Acad- emy in July, 1920. He has been sta- tioned recently at Fort Monroe, Va. gl Greenland ranch, Calif., has ob- served the maximum recorded tem- perature, 134 degrees Fahrenheit, says the Dearborn Independent. . The Gifts That Make Boys !{appy~Réuopably Priced Union Hardware Ball-Bearing { Roller Skates Stanley Tool Chests, $10.50 $15.50, $20.50 ‘Tree Holders With s ;5=2 Ives Transformers, $2.95 Standard Track, 25¢ Complete Electric Train, $6 Up . Air Rifles 93¢ to 73 . Westinghouse Toasters, Stoves, Irons, Heaters, Heating Pads Mca:da Tree Lights 2-Cord : Lead 3 1 ’-'—7'2 This is the train your toy wants for Christ- 7 7 0-Gauge Track, 12V2c 77 7 the Father, but is of the world. . And the world passeth away, and t‘he: OLD PACT REVEALS ITALIAN MORTGAGE UPON ALL ALBANIA (Continued from First Page.) ;of the Italian Credit Bank, and organ- izer of the enterprise, Premier Musso- Un! will use the whole power of the Italan government, if necessary, to collect the sums due. Thus Italy ap- parently will be soon in a position to admirister Albanian finances. Jugoslavia's present bitterness is perhaps explained In part by the prob- ability that because of the circum- stances above stated, she must re- {nounce the coveted Valona railway concession, which, in Italian hands, will be an economic sword plunged into the vitals of the Balkans. JUGOSLAVIA FEARS PACT. BELGRADE, December 14 (®).—. new Orientation in Jugoslavia's fo: eign policy is believed to be im- minent owing to the fact that the ministers at Rome, Paris, Angora and Tirana, Albania, have been summoned home for a conference. Just what will be discussed is left to speculation, but it is declared Jugoslavia is.trying for a new diplo- matic position in the Balkans to off- set what is regarded as her “isola- tion” growing out of the recent ar- rangement of a treaty between Italy and Albania. RUMANIA TO OFFER AID. Is Willing to Mediate Italy-Jugoslavia Dispute. BUCHAREST, Rumania, December 14 (#).—Rumania is planning to offer its good services as mediator between Italy and Jugoslavia in the con- troversy over the Italo-Albanian treaty. This was announced in dip- lomatic circles and also published in | the newspapers, without eliciting any denial from the government. Rumania will propose a Balkan pact, similar to the Locarno pact. This is rather a delicate situation, owing to the fact that Rumania last September concluded a' treaty of friendship with Italy while she was a meémber of the little entente, in which Jugoslavia is prominent, and the disruption of which, reports say, is threatened by the Italo-Albanian accord. The Rumanian minister at Bel- grade, Theodore Emandi, has been requested by the forelgn office here, the announcement asserts, to present this viewpoint to the Jugoslavian cabinet. Rumania is desirous of avoiding a new orlentation in the foreign policy of Belgrade, which might place the two countries In two different political camps. Rumania’s main aim, it is declared, is to save the “little entente” at all costs. -A NEW LLOYD GEORGE BANISPRONOUNCED Lord. Grey Assails His Lead- ership at Banquet of Asquith Liberals. By the Associated Press. LONDO! December 14.—A new ban aga! Lloyd George was pro nounced by Viscount Grey last night addressing 300 Asquithian Liberalsa a dinner given in honor of Viviar Phillips, the chief Asquithlan organ izer. There was no move made, how ever, toward new leadership. Lord Grey had been mentioned a- likely to succeed the Earl of Oxford and Asquith as the leader of that sec tion of the Liberal party, but an ap peal had been made by prominent Liberals against embarrassing the party by undue emphasis on the dis sensions within the ranks. Hence, Lord Grey at the outset denied there was any question of new leadership, but neither he nor Mr. Philllps took the slightest care to conceal their impatience with Lloyd George and his colleagues. It was impossible, sald Lord Grey, to pass a sponge over past differences; it was equally impossible to keep step with Lloyd George, and ft was un- wholesome and altogether unprece-- dented that one man in the party should be in sole control of an enor- mous fund for his own political pur- po: . or any political party to be under the financial control of one man or a number of rich men, who dictate the policy,” he declared, “is the nega- tlon of all democratic principles.” Denouncing Lloyd George's policy toward the recent general strike and with regard to China, Lord Grey finally announced that the Asquithfan Liberals would stand outside of any financial negotiations with Lloyd George. Ingram Back Home. Spectal Dispatch to The Star. CLARENDON, Va., December 14.— William J. Ingram, supervisor of Ar- lington district, who has been confined to a Wilmington (Del.) hospital since October 14 as a result of injuries re- ceived in an elevator at the Dupont Hotel at that place, returned to his home in Aurora Heights yesterday afternoon. He was accompanied by Mzs. Ingram and Prof. Fletcher Kemp, county superintendent of schools, who :el‘e with him at the time of the acci- ent. % The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair—it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. 9! $ $5,000 $100.00 l. 8200.00 Loans ed WM:. a”“. day ‘or two after filing R o escep- tions. MORRIS PLAN notes are usually~ 1 s be given of rom 3 20 12 months. MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W. “Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit* SOL HERZOG Home of the Budget Plan Probably it is because they are so stylish! 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