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T is getting hotter and hotter in politics—and in temperature. The first thing you know somebody will be elected! Which reminds us that the purchasers of 47,000, +00 pints of The Velvet Kind Ice Cream last year voted it was the coolest, smoothest, most delicious ice cream they ever tasted. The climax, as it were. SouthernDairies I WE HELP with many a business prob- lem. We'll gladly listen to yours, RY CLEANIN G imples i AT WOODRUFF'S is of it Tess Light Spring Nature's wasning—hel natureclear your eomplexioaand paint red rosea in your pal sallow ch_oks. Truly wonderful remts follow torough colon cleansing. Take =—Nature's l{ 0t tive organs. Then watch the transformation. tead of mere laxatives. S Mild, safe, purely vegetable~ BINGHAM FEARS END OF YALEDRAMA President of Association Per- turbed by Dismissal of , Edgar M. Wooley. BY LEMUEL F. PARTON. NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 21.— aduites have reversed In their poration, in the dismis- . dramatic standing for classical e corporation for in- historical Pierce Baker, Ly poration as head [of the drama department, is devoted 0 highly specialized modern technique, and modern pls e given under his | @ivection. Thus the Aedipus Tyrranus | the ~boards with modern -, with the students standing ing ¥ sduced under Woole “Troilus and Cr Twelfth Aiglon” and “Coriolanus,” Dbeing given tonight. president of . sald which today he still was receiv from alumni stating their intentions ' canceling subscriptions to the $: Wooley. Carl ary of the Yal ere were not more withdrawals of Tdentity Is Unknown. No information was obtainable as to the identity of protesting alumni or amounts nceled. Bingham, who is a son of United States Senator Hi- ram Bingham of Connecticut, sald he feared the dismissal of Wooley would result In the abandonment of the Dra- matic Association, founded 30 years ago. ‘Wooley has been dramatie coach at aker was rd in 1924, when the new drama department was established by a gift of $1,000,000 from Edward 8. Harkness, oil magnate, whose attorney, Samuel H. Fisher, is a member of the Yale Corporation. Prof. Baker did not find a place for Wooley in his department, and the latter continued his dramatic coach- ing as an extra-curricula activity. He was, however, given a place on the English faculty It was his dismissal from this posi- tion which brought forth the protests. Thus, with the faculty standing with the students, the issue i3 drawn be- tween the business and academic ele- ments of the college. Bingham, a mem- ber of the class of 1928, defines it as such. States Students’ Position. “There are many students,” he said, “who do not believe that a bigger Yale is necessarily a better Yale. We have said nothing and done nothing in disparagement of Prof. Baker's ex- cellent work, but we believe the dis- missal of Mr. Wooley is a blow to one of the most valuable cultural enter- prises of the college. The students themsetves have been sufficiently in- terested in the great classical drama to support the Dramatic Association, and Mr. Wooley has contributed fine scholarship and technical ability. His -| place on the faculty was assigned him ALLEN'S | to give him the place of dlgnity to which his work entitled him, and we protest when, without explanation, this is taken from him.” In a statement published in the program of the play folanus,” which Walter Hampden will attend tonight, with a view to jpassible New York production, the Dramatic Asso- clation said the corporation postponed the “investigation” of Wooley “until the campaign was nearly completed,” Petition Presented. “As a result of a mass meeting held in Lampson Hall,” the statement con- tinues, “a petition signed by 1,200 un- THE EVENING < STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1927. Watchman Proves Wealthy Linguist And Fine Musician By the Assoclated Press. WILKES-BARRE, Pa., June 21 —The death last night of Valen- tine Kozlakiewicz, 62, night watch- man at a theater here for years, v he not only was vas an accomplished entist and linguist, st and chemist of note. He left an estate valued at $100,- 000. Kozlakiewicz was a graduate of the Unlversity of Cracow and came to America 45 years ago. Ile organist of a ‘prominent Detroit church and laid the foundation of his fortune by investing h ings in copper mines. He c | His | re A 'RELIGIOUS TOLERANCE, URGED BY COPELAND Delivers Address at Allegheny Col- lege Commemorating Letter From Jefferson to President. By the Associated Press. | MEADVILLE, Pa., June 21 m:m} ing for religious tolerance, United tates Senator Royal 8. Copeland of New York, in an add day declared the time h e v true American should re-dedi- cate himself to the tolerant spirit of our country.” Senator Copeland’s speech was de- livered in connection with the pre- entation to Allegheny College of a bronze tablet commemorating a_ letter written in 1824 by Thomas Jefferson to Timothy Alden, first president of the college. The letter commented upon a library then being developed | at Allegheny. “The dodtrines of Thomas Jeffer- son,” Senator Copeland said, “are fought over, praised and condemned. exalted and belittled, just as if he were a living American statesman. “One inscription on his tomb said of Jefferson that he was the author of the statute of Virginia for religious freedom. To my mind this rivals in importance every other achievement of Thomas Jefferson. His great fight for religious toleration in Virginia paved the for similar contests in other States. Today this guarantee of iiberty is written into the constitution | of every state.” e MATRIMONIAL TROUBLES OF ARCHITECT CONTINUE Wife of Frank L. Wright, Noted in Profession, Denies Proposals Received. By the Associated P: b | , June 21.--Mir| ht, wife of Frank Lloyd Wright, intervationally known archi- tect, last night de-lared she had not | received any propo: band to settle their matrimonial troub les, reported to have he-n forward to her from Madison, Wis., yesterd Attorneys for Mrs, Wright at Madi- son announced that peace terms had been proposed and “orwaided to her here following a conference “with the architect and his counsel, in the Wis consin city. Mrs. Wright declared that sha would grant her husband a divesce ! on only one consideration—absolute ' renunciation of Olga Milanoff, Monte- negrin dancer, who lived for some time at the Wright estate at Spring Green, Wis,,-and who was often man. tioned in litigation concerning the ‘Wrights' affairs, “That situation must be straight. ened out, and it will not be straight- ened out by his marrying Olga Milan- off,” said Mrs. Wright, “He must promise not to marry her, the divorce to be annulled if he breaks his prom- s come “when Is from her hus- [ A 7727 2 77, 7 2 This $21.45 Three-door Refrigerator Less $5.00 Allowance for Your Old Refrigerator $16.45 ® $1.00 Dslivers It 3-Piece Long Bed-Davenport Suite 5109 $5.00 Delivers This Suite This_suit> comprises an Arm- chair, Rocker und long Bed-Daven- port. The Bed-Davenport iy readily and instantiy converted into a com- fortable bed whenever desire Covered in fAgured velour. an extra room. 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Chicago & North AN EA“A“ Western Railway NAT (\\E8 215 Pennsyivania Bidg. - Philadelphia, Pa., or RA\WN‘# Canadian Nat'l Rys. - B 505 Fifth Ave. sizy Now York, N. ¥, poration ‘did not see its way clear to offer him anew a university appoint- ment in the light of the experiences of the past four years and of the recurrent difficulties durinz that pe- riod.' Is the corporation to be the judge of who shall teach at Yale? A department of professors who know Mr. Wooley personally, who want his services, are apparently not qualified to select Yale teachers. Instead a body of detached men must, for po- litical reasons, do this choosing. Can such a dangerous precedent be estab- lished? At Yale, an institution of learning, where ideals are supposedjy high, where fine men are supposedly doing their best to guide young men, can such a violation of principle be tolerated?"" Wooley has gone to Boston, where he will serve as assistant director of the Boston Repertory Association. (Copyright, 1027.) Ordered to Active Duty. Maj. Samuel G. Green, Ordnance Department reserve, of Cherrydale, Va., has been ordered to activeé duty in training in the office of the Assist- Reception Arranged for Retiring Langley Junior High Principal. A reception in honor of Henry W. Draper, retiring principal of the Lang- ley Junior High School, on T street northeast, who is succeeding Ben Murch as supervising principal of the first division, has been arranged for Friday night, from 8 to 10 o'clock, by the Parent-Teacher Association of the Langley Junior High School and the North Capitol Citizens' Assoclation. Mr. Draper has been principal of that school since it was erected three and a half years ago, and has heen connected for more than 30 years with the Washington public schools. The reception is in charge of a com- mittee, with Mrs, Julla Lawless rep- resenting the citizens’ association and Miss A. R. Kinnear representing the teachers, Gets Reserve Commission. Augustus W. 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