Evening Star Newspaper, October 24, 1927, Page 13

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week at Neattle, W in producing the monster pastry. WORLD'S 1 A ng of th A modest tor This sh. shows some as the apple was leveled off with garden rakes, MAYOR WALKER BECOMES RED! in his Indian bonnet surrounded by ¢ Hall, just after the ceremony In which he was made the steps of Cit Chief Mary Rider of the tribe, SKIN CHIEF. New York's mayor hieftains of the Blackfeet tribe on Wide World .PPhotos. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, spectacle to gladden the heart of 12 feet in diameter, in celebration of nds of flour and 100 pounds of sugar numerous cooks wh had “a finger g P Wide ! FRIENDS GREE to the scene of hi Penitentiary, ' CARROLL T York. NEW YORK. Earl Carroll, returning show producing career after his release from Atlanta is_shown here with his wife just after stepping off the of his’stage associates were on “hand to A. Copyright by P. Photos ¢..-MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 GRAYSON PLANE FORCED BACK AFTER GOOD START OVER ATLANTIC. shadows the transatlantic flight project of Mrs. Frances Grayson in her amphibian monoplane Dawn, w was forced back by en; Grayson being w ¢ from the be: at Old Orchard, Me. PACIFIC COAST friends that his reputation as § 'RONG BOY DEMONSTRATES POWERFUL MOLARS. n Francisco's strongest son was well deserved, By way of convincing his Young Abrahams loads about 20 of them in a street car and pulls it through the streets by a stout strap gripped in his teeth. Every- body who saw the stunt secmed to be uunlm‘t‘d. Wide World Photos. Mme. Lilly Dillenz, the Viennese actress, photographed in flying togs at Horta, Azores, as she awaits favorable weather to complete her flight to the United States as a passenger in the Juniiers plane. Wide World Photos. Charles Levine for transatlant re trouble after flying several hundred miles over the Atlantic. hed in a final check-up of the load carried by the plane the day before the take off yester- Copyright by Underwood & Underwood. ARRIVE WITH GIANT PLANE MODEL. and Edmond Chagniard arriving on the steamship Aquitania with a model of the huge 40-ton plane they iVull'e commissioned to design by service. reserve, are provided in the design. Disappointment again hich This shows Mrs. Alexander Katreli (at left) Seven motors, with two in ssociated Press Photo. CITIZENS I WAR ONREFUSE DUMPS Associations in East Wash- ington Vigorously Condemn Two Near Cemetery. Al of the citizens’ associations of the eastern part of the District will join vigorously in the movement, recently tnitiated by the Lincoln Park Citizens’ Association, to demand that the trict Commissioners stop the burning of city refuse on the dumps near Ben- ning and the Congressional Cemetery, it was indicated today. Within the Jast few days reports have been re- celved by officers of the Lincoln Park Association that the smoke and dis- sgreeable odor from the two dumps has been noticed as far west as the Capitol. Joseph Gammell, president, and Wil Mam A. Carlin, secretary, of the Lin- ,eoln Park Association have already | “ yeceived word from officers of the Boutheast, Northeast and Trinidad sociations promising co-operation. These and other citizens’ bodies in the vicinity of the Anacostia River x cted to have representatives pr #t the mext meeting of the Lincoln | Park Association on the evening of | November 8, when steps are to be taken for the o tion of a_ joint | committee, representing all of * the eitizens’ bodies east of the Capitol, to wait upon the Commissione; Ti Northe is expe Although protests h sgainst the smoke and odor from the burning of refuse in that part of the .city for 4 residents insis that con getting we rather than better. At the la ing of the Lincoln niembers suggested that the thr trict Commissioners be invit epend 2 night in any house near one of the dumps and see for themselves | what the conditions It claimed that even during the i days of last Summer many re were compelled to slecp with windows tightly closed PARTY BACKS KEMAL. People’s Group Stresses Protection | re their of Repubiic. i 24 of | are pres October ‘ o of the party has adopted a new prozram, which the zeneral prineiples recognition of the republic as th ent and future form of governime the party co wered duty | to protect it all danzers. | The program ulates that the rexident general of the party is! fustapha Kemal, its founder, and con- | fers on him the sole grerogative of @peaking in the pm ‘s name. ! Mis Schellmg to Talk on Opera. | Miss Julia Schelling as a lecturer on music Lo the faculty of the Reminary, will deliver & series of le-ture the Jordan studio, at 4 o'cloek this Jectures, open to the public, a puspices of the Washington National | Opera Association. “Carmen” will he the subject of the lecture this after- Swon' ihb'ectures will ‘be given each ' Monday and Thursday afternoon, widely known | and a member | National Park the second of arand opera in G street north- | on 12 | Total Membership in U. S. and | has exceeded the | will Cldest Working Printer, Aged %4, Dead in St. Louis By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, Mo., October 24— Maj. Philip F. Coghlan, the old- est working printer in the United States, died hnre yesterday of heart of the . where he h v for 44 ¥ awarded gold medal by the National Graphic Arts Exposition last August as the oldest working printer in the coun- try. Both his employers and the typographical union offered to re- tire him on pension 20 years ago, but_he refused, saying: “Work keeps me going. He was a past commander of the G. A. R. in Missouri. MORE THAN MILLION IN'Y. M. C. A. RANKS the compo. St Louis 1 been a Canada Now 1,005,714, Is Re- port to Annual Council. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO. October first time the total membership of the Young Men’s Christian Associa- tion in the United States and Canada m ark, the -port_of the general hoard > National Council of the Y. M. . of the United States, revealed today. The present membership is 1.00; The 24—For the report, presented at the fourth annual meeting of the council, also showed that the operating expendi of the more than 1,600 i 161,000 Jast 10 yvears ago. The totni net property of the association have more than doubled in the past 10 years. The total value of net property and funds at the present time was given as £205.184,000, compared with $101,710, 000 10 vears a The gross prop- erty was | 30,640,000, The council, legislative body of the is_composed of 3751 members. David W. Teachout of] Cleveland is its president. i Joint Penal Code Sought. ! BERLIN, October 24 (), inary nesotiations for the dr of a joint penal code for nd Austria by parliamen sentatives of the two co begun at Berli Leen reached that the work of this Austro-German commission is to be | reported step by step to the parlia- mentary committees on punitive law of the respective countries, and they | then decide on the question of | Austro-German co-operation, i vear. and $21,- and funds - Prelim- wing up | any ry repre- | ntries have | Bridge to Be Dynamited. The War D rtment has approvel | application of the Susquehanna ‘o. and the Philadelphia Elec- tric Power Co. for permission to dyna- mite a bridge over the Susquehanna at Conowingo, Md., upon completion of the new bl’ld§e under ,:onflructxq;n nearby, = ¥ By | cludes RESCUING INJURED IN THE RICHMOND FOOT BALL CRASH. at Tate Field, during the University of Mary of the lllmn'(l were reported today in a serious condition. Relief workers searching the wrecked stands immediately after the c nd-Virginia Military Institute foot ball game, in which more than 100 spectators were injured. |W. C. T. U. OF DISTRICT TO CONVENE TOMORROW Convention to Be Held at Calvary Baptist Church—Low- man to Speak. . The fifty-third annual convention of | the District Christian Temperance Union will con- 10 o'clock tomo; Calvary H vene at and 0w morning Baptist Church, with th K presi \v.. - Pollc president, . Mc 1te) msur Abernethy, pastor of the make an address. Dr. F. Bride will give th8 principal address of the afternoon session. A demon- stration on world work will be given at 8:30 p.m., under auspices of the | temperance and mission department. Mrs, Ethel H. Reed, accompanied by cello, will sing following the demon ation. Wednesday's an address by Church, wili | . Scot{ Me- Seymour of Tr i place 3 1. M ite o the prohibition commissioner, will introduce platform guests, OIl recently discovered in Victoria, Australia, has been found to not be 18 paying Quantitie Dr. Straton Holds Healing Service Over Class of 30; Claims One Cure ! “ighth | chy program in-| By the Associated Press, NEW YORK, October 24.—Rev., Dr, John Straton prayed over and anoint- ®d 30 men, women and children in of Columbia “,,m",‘« Alvary Baptist Church last night in | Jemonstration of his belle that the promise of healing through iz on of hunds applies in the h ¥ Of the [ him, said ihe service » that had knelt before straton at the end of n suffering from intly. the group one wi 3 cured i a littls lame gi of s nts for Dr. Straton’s mins- | trations mbled in a_ small ante- room at the conclusion of the evening service and sought, through invoca- tion of prayer, to free themselves of |a wide variety of afflictions. Pra oud for divine interven- tion for release from the bondage of | rer , one pretty bob-haired girl, ttering, stood as in a traton and the rayed and anointed her \\huh relates ll\P curing ()( ills h\ the church elders through application of prayer and anointment with oil. After a period of prayer, the pastor and elders placgd ka hands on those kneeling before them, one at time, sach was anointed and divine help was asked to free the person of his af- | fiction. “Gogd, In his holy book, says he will heal you if you have faith,” Dr. Stra- |ton told the group. “Stand on that promise. Do not let the devil fool vou, for he is the father of every lie in the world and the originator of all to discourage you. but stand on the evil. He will try Do not let him, piwmise of God. Man Badly Injured by Train John Zukasski, 48 years old, Edge- (Wood Md., employe of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, was struck by one of the company's trains between Point of Rocks and Dickersons, Md., early ast night and serfously injured. He was brought to the city and taken to | Emergency Hospital, where it was und he was suffering from a broken (arm, fractures of several ribs and in- juries to his scalp. An improvement |in the patient’s condition v ported this morning, and ph: say he may recover, —_ Uruguay has fixed the minimum Vi < v S :n‘g:’ .or .pglz;;i‘c‘(v:\ nr& labfm at 542,\ 0 | Bay State sh Some Baltimore Sun Photo. GOV. TRUMBULL TAKES HIS FIRST SOLO FLIGHT Executive Performs “Figure Eights,” Banks and Glides Successfully. By the Associated Press. HARTFORD, Conn., October 2 Gov. John H. Trumbull of Connecticut made his first solo flight yesterday. He made three separate flights and was in the air nearly half an hour. During . that time he successtully red the plane th hts” and thr and banks in a 1 to do credit to an experienced a his instructor, Lieut. H. Copeland, said last night. Long known as the “flying gover- nor” because of his frequent use, as a passenger, of any airplane to trans- port him from various points in the State and several times beyond the borders, Gov. Trumbull has steadily shown an increasing interest in flying and all matters pertaining to a He began a course in flying las ter. Woman Found Dead in Bed. Daisy Lindsey, colored, 38 years old, was found dead in bed in her home at 1218 Thirteenth street, about 8:30 o'clock yesterday morning. Her death gesulted (rggl aR attack of pneumonia, . {a coughing concer Son’s Loss of Gems And Now Hunts Boy By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 24.—A mother who has made restitution for a parcel of gems which her son lost almost a year ago yesterday asked police of the missing persons bureau to find her boy, who went away last December to until Stewart told police William, 15 m«w - st year after heing intrusted by h!s employer with the delivery of some jewelry to a firm in Maiden lane. Later he wrote his mother telling her that he had lost the package in the subway and that he feared no one would belleve his story. He said he would work hard and earn the value of the lost gems before he would return. Mrs. Stewart has saved enough to pay the jeweler, who says he beligves William to be honest and will not prosecute him if he comes home. PRESIDENT STARTS FUNDS FOR BOYS’ CLUB Contribution Inaugurates Local Campaign for $125,000 Needed to Replace Dilapidated Clubhouse. A check from President Coolidge to- day started off the $125,000 campaign of the Boys' Club of Washington. The Chief Executive is honorary president of the Boys' Club Federation, and while in Massachusetts had opportu- nity to observe Boys' Club work first hand. k R. Jelleff, director general of the campaign, wiil address various committees on the progress of the campaign at the City Club tomorrow. The object of the drive is to replace the present dilapidated structure of the Boys® Club, at Third and C streets, with a new building containing an auditorium, four shops, four group and class rooms, a library, two game rooms, offices and a_bowling alley. Preparations for the campaign have been in progress for the past two or three weeks at headquarters in the 1National P uilding, in rge of Fr Thomson, secre- tary of the Boys' Club. STAGE HECKLERS HELD. - | Anti-Semite Demonstrators Ejected From Budapest Theater. BUDAPEST, Hungary, October 24 (P.—Many police and scores of anti-Semite demonstrators were in- jured at the last two performanc of the historical drama, “High Lady or, Mary Theresa,” at the National Theater. The demonstrators, who kept up were ejected and arrested in big batches. Two hundred of them were held. The drama was written by brew dramatist, Desider Sz deserted from th€ Hungar and lived in exile in Paris. tional Theater {3 the most conserva- tive anti-Semitic institution in Hun- gary, which even debars Franz Hol- aar's plays because he is a Hebrew. " army Mother Makes Good | COLLEGE FORESEE FREE OF RESTRAINT University Where Students Can Get Most Fun Out of Life Depicted. By the Associated Press, CHICAGO, 1I., October 24.—A col- lege without examinations; no credits obtained by present sterotyped methe od; routine banished except that self- imposed; & place where the student may get the most fun/out of life. Such is the universtiy of the future in the mind of President Max Mason, who has.just completed two years as head of the University of Chicago. Opportunity rather than compulsion is the keynote of President Mason's ideal educational institution. “We hooting at a system that will do v with credits and present ex- amination methods and make out of this a research institution in which students are stimulated to work out things for themselves,” he said. Suggests School Method. “Our idea i3 that the first two years in college should be given our to gen- eral education. At the end of that period the student may call himself an educated v nows enough for general purpos: on he should hegin to specialize.” The president of the great Chicago insti- tution advocated departmental guid- ance in the last two yvears rather than the :r‘nls‘ml guidance of the deans in progress made T wlem \l.uon |"fl‘rrm| !n the “hnnnl courses,” which are being tried in many universities. Under such a system the student is placed on his own initlative. Should be “Greatest Fun in World.” “College should he the greatest fun in the world,” he declared. “Learning things should be pure jov. The American _idea of college life 1s+a colorful idea, but it has almost sub- merged the real purpose, which is learning to use the tools of thought. “Tn working problems out for them- selves. in actually using methods and tools instead of reading about them. the students will lose all fear of ex- amination time, even if it is kept in part as a sort of a check upon the unfit. We do not fear what we know. We know things when we use them.” lln- : Py | PLANS $4,000 000 BRIDGE |U. S. Firm Asks Permit for St Clair River Structure. SARNIA, Ontario, October 24 (#).— An application for permission to con struct a bridge across the St. Clair River between Sarnia and Port Huron has been submitted to the city coun cil by representative of Stranahan. Harris & Catis Co.. investment bankers of Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland. The proposal, the fourth received by the council, provides for an expend- iture of $4,000,000, the company de. claring itself willing to post a bond up to $100,000, The other proposals were submitted by John L. Harrington, ew York bridge engineer; Maynard Smith. Port Huron financier, and the Port Huron & Sarnia Ferry Co. The city coun- cil is expected to select one of the pro- posaly by November & «

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