Evening Star Newspaper, January 20, 1928, Page 4

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4= BOYHITBYAUTO DIES OF INJURIES Howard Richards 88th Victim of Traffic Accidents in Dis- trict During 1927. e were told th anion were at 8:30 o'cloc] ) T r driven by ears old. of | and about lapse. An ing omobile | of No. 8| d lamp | ht. i 8| the | 1d set fire to & curtain as aj 1t of one of them hurling a lighted | a ing assaulted ¥ | wh the latter was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct. Traffic Policeman Hurt, erbuck of the | i ric lamp fell 10:30 o | ed for injuries condition be- | ed advisable | Simons was arrest- the police to answer n liqu He pleaded February 10. | ss Katie Bien, 20 ¥ 1d, | jer place. sustained sev i 1 sterday afternoon, when an which the automobile of 2959 Upton street, figured on Eighteenth street be- tween Pennsylvania avenue and H street. Police reported that she walk- | ed against the side of the car, Miss Bien was treated at Emergency Hos-| pital for a possible fracture of the| skull and lacerations of the head. A collision betwee: a car of the Washington Railway & Electric Co., in charge of rman H. R. Nichols, and the obile of Herbert E. Hecht, 50 old, 705 Sixth street, occurred 10:30 o'clock last night at Dela- ware avenue and D strect northeast He. ing from a la n of as treated at Casualty Hos- Hit-pnd-Bun ‘Accident, ear-old Luther Washington, colored, Alabama ave outhe: was the victim of a hit-: dent on the roadway near his ho y last evening. Sergt. Dent of the eleventh | precinet took the boy to Casualty Hos- pital, where he was treated for injuries %o tis head and knee. er persons injured in traffic acci- esterday were George H. Harvey, e old, 446 K street; Mrs. B. M Bchwartz, 21 years old, 1827 Th seventh street; Mrs. Lottie J. Milier, 60 vears o oy Apartments, and Henry uckner, colored, 4 rs old, 759 Gresham street. OUSTING OF SMITH CREATES PROBLEM report of leaders in [ that he ® e cony D It is not necessary to have had an Ac- count at this Bank 1o Borrow, Lasy to Pay! Morady | Ve 12 Lo Mot $120 $10.00 | $150 $15.00 $240 $20.00 | 300 $25.00 I $300 $20.60 | 8540 $45.00 | $1,200 $100.00 | $6,000 $560.00 THE MORRIS | PLAN BANK Uner Bugervieion U. & 1408 H STKEET, N, Ticasury W, 1 | vesterday of Frank L. Smith of Illinois | operation in Europe's “great experiment THE FEVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JA JARY 20, 1928, MAUDE ROYDEN, BRITISH PULPIT ORATOR, SPEAKS HERE TONIGHT Church Women Aroused by Her Views on Smoking and Marriage. Appearance in District Spon- sored by League for Peace and Freedom. Maude Royden, TLondon's mnoted woman preacher, whose reported fond- ness for cigarettes and advocacy of companionate marriages led to can- Automobile from which Aaron Raum was hurled when it was struck by a | piece of apparatus responding to a blaze produced when a lighted lamp was thrown in an argument. prompted the new move of Vare is not known If the plan works out, Gov. Fisher will be called upon to appoint a Senator until nest January, and in the mean- time there will be nominations and elections of two United States Senators from Pennsylvania, as Senator David A. Reed's term expires this year. MRS. CATT ADMITS CAUSE OF WAR IS STILL A MYSTERY| u~d_from First Page.) committee on the cause and cure of war to address a letter to President Coolidge, recommending the reopening of negotiations looking toward adher- ence of this country to the World Court. “There has always been a mystery about what stopped the World Court in this country,” Mrs. Catt said today. “The machinery suddenly went dead. Mavbe we can start it again.” The other resolution in the confer- ence’s program opposed both the pro- posed increased expenditure for naval armament and any withdrawal of the President’s right to alter the naval pro- gram should circumstances warrant it. Fecling was expressed that the Wil- bur naval construction program is in elf an expression of lack of confi- dence in the State Department’s new- ly launched peace campaign, as ex- pressed in the renunciation of bi-lateral war treaties negotiations with France d the advocacy instead of a multi- eral treaty with France, Great Brit- n. Germany, Italy and Japan. The permanent committee on the Cause and Cure of War, met at the Hotel Washington today and decided to hold a fourth annual conference in Washington next January. A successor to Mrs. Catt, who declared her inten- tion from resigning the chairmanship, will be selected in April. China Situation Viewed. China was declared a “dangerous breeding ground for a clash of economic interests,” by Dr. J. Leighton Stuart, president of Yenching University, Pe- king, who addressed the banquet last night. He urged that Americans either refrain from asking special pro- tection in China, or “remain away un- til conditions stabilize.” China, he warned, might become “a terrible menace to peace if goaded to resentment by unjust aggression.” Phoebe Y. Hoh of Nanking, ex- pressed the conviction, which she said is held by thc modern Chinese, that the United States’ policy is mot aggres- ¥ sive. ! nnie Smith, Labor member of the Brit, Parliament, urged America’s co- 1 peace.” “The British commonwealith of na- tions,” he said, “in committing itself to the principle of self-government for India and all the dominions, has em- barked upon a very great adventure. 1f all the dominions and Great Britain can build up a basis of teamwork, we shall have made the greatest example seen of how peace can be main- | tained.” el e Fairfax Milkmen Elect. Special Dispateh 10 The Star FAIRFAX, Va, January 20.— The Fairfax unit of the Maryland-Virginia Milk Producers' Association held annual meeting Wednes Blake was elected president, Iden vice president and J. W secretary-treasurer. B, B. Iden cd director o Tepresent t confirmation by the | ion at the annual meet- | Md., which will Xt two weeks this | ARBITRATION PACT WITH COMPULSORY CLAUSE IS URGED __. (Continued from First Page) _ tensible object of the committee is to provide an executive body to regulate the general progress of the conference. Its_exact purpose is veiled in mystery although the American delegation said the committee could not Pass upon new subjects proposed for the agenda nor suppress questions already slated for consideration. Dr. James Brown Scott, president of the American Institute of International Law, was the only American fo accept vice | any nomination, he becoming chairman of the committee on private international law. Other committee chairmen elected were: Pan-American Union, Enrique Olaya, Colombia; communications, Sampaio Correa, Brazil: intellectual co-operatios Gonzalo Zalcumbide, Ecuador: priv International law, Victor Maurtua, Peru social problems, Aristides Agero, Cuba, and economic problems, Salvador Ur- bina, Mexico. Ambassador Morrow, it was stated today, will return to the conference after a visit to his post at Mexico City. He is going to Mexico Monday to attend | to matters pending there before his de- | parture for the conference. It was an- nounced he would return here as soon as possible, Women to Present Plan. Mr Hughes informed Xepresemalh‘osl of the National Women's Party of America, who are advocating an equal rights-for-women treaty, that he held | no objection to their putting it before a plenary session of the conference. Mr. Hughes complimented the mem- | bers of the women's committee on the | progress they have already made and | said that while the task is a large one, | it is not hopeless. Miss Doris Stevens, chairman of the women, will remain in Havana for the | duration of the conference. | Mrs. Clarence M. Smith and Mrs. | Valentine Winters, other members, pre- sented an outline of the party's alms. They suggested the United States dele- | gation support the proposal for an equal rights treaty to be incorporated in the | projected code of international law of | the Americas. i Porto Rico Asks Liberty. A Porto Rican petition to all Latin American countries to display solidarity with Porto Rican independence move- ments was recetved yesterday. Bearing the signatures of R. Barcelo, president of the Porto Rican Senate, and Jose Tous, vice president of the Chamber, the message purports to be a copy of & telegram sent to President Coolidge in Washington and transmit- ted to the Pan-American Congress as an appeal to countries of common lan- guage, origin and traditions. Porto Rico, it was added, feels hu- miliated for the inferior condition in which she is held despite the hopes raised by the Paris treaty and the promises never fulfilled for a govern- ment which would give Porto Rico the exercise of its own sovereignty in inter- national matters, and which would al- low that country to solve its present economic problems. Marriage Licenses. George L. 1 3 Simmons and Mathilla B. Pal- cellation of lectures she had planned | to make in Chicago and Boston before branches of the Woman's Home Mis- sionary Society, will speak here tonight at 8 o'clock at All Souls’ Unitarfan Church, The local lecture, on “England and | America—Can They Be Friends?” will | be given under auspices of the Interna~ tional League for Peace and Freedom, of which Miss Royden is a British | member. Pierce Refuses Comment. Rev. U. G. B. Pierce, pastor of All Souls' Church, said today that the church has no connection with the lec- ture, beyond allowing use of Pierce Hall by the league. Dr. Pierce refuse comment on Miss Rovden's “ideas he expressed regret that he would not be able to hear her address tonight. It was said at league headquarters | that Miss Rovden would arrive here this afternoon and sta ith a friend.” | She would be “too tired” to grant an interview, it was added. Miss Royden is 51 years old and head of Guild House, Londo Assoclated Press dispatches from New York upon her arrival in this country quoted her as saying she liked to smoke cigarettes because they rest her nerves. Other dispatches said she admitted taking a drink now and then. She has dis- cussed companionate marriage in sev- eral of her sermons. Interviews Arouse Women. News of the interviews in New York so aroused members of the Methodist “niscopal Woman'’s Home Missionary Socfety in Chicago and Boston that MAUDE ROYDEN. q | routed out of New York in the morning, ARWAL TO SHE DAY CROSSIG LS McCracken Reveals Plan to | Make Better Schedule by Lighting Route. Frank and A Walter J. and Jo d R By the Associated Pregs, Within a few months the Govern- ment plans to save one business day over the transcontinental air mail route. W. P. MacCracken, jr., Assistant Sec- retary of Commerce for Acronautics, ex- lained the program today in announc- The following hirths have been reported to the Heaith Deprtment hilip and Tran ae L and Jeannetie M Leonard A, H. and Gertr Frnest and G Ellerto Radio Board Considered. The advisability of eon life of the Federal Padio which expires March 1 y in e merchan decided to ¢« ers for hat. Births Reported. The ot 44 hours: o twin wirl fibege il rein, iirl, Maviiia, hov. © W i mifier. by 13 Bewele, Poma bay, T 07 Alien e Wik mittee, slon mem! we Orndorft argaret Crann. girl . and A and Roe M. stewart, e ing that F. C. Hingsburg, chief of air- ways, had been sent out on an inspec- tion of the western end of the trans- continental route, preparatory to organ- izing the campaign for complete lighting of the route from New York to San Francisco. At present the air mail must be with the result that the planes fly all day, through the succecdlgg nixhty!nd then through most of the succeeding day. With the lighting completed, the machines will leave the terminals at night, continue through the next day | and night, and complete their trip on | the dawn of the second day. | The result of this will be to get most of the flying done at night and enable the saving of a full business day. Capt “inesburg plans to get all of the light- 1 nT installed by June 30 next. There vill then be 247 rotating electric bea- ons, 460 gas beacons and 112 lighted ntermediate flelds along the route. Supplementing the lighting, there will be weather observers stationed | every 60 miles, remying weather reports | and’ predictions by radio. for having Miss Royden address branches of the organization in those cities. In reply Miss Royden was quoted as saying she did not “care a button” whether she smoked in this country or | not, and that she could not see that the’ question had any religious impor- tance. Mrs. Hanna Clothier Hull of Swarth- more, Pa., national chairman of the peace league, will preside tonight Dorothy Detzer, executive secretary of the American section of the league, will they refused to go through with plans| make a “collection appeal.” The Argonne SIXTEENTH and COLUMBIA ROAD NORTHWEST We submit for your consideration some of the important features connected with this apartment building which have enabled us to satisfy the most exacting homeseckers. 1. Location in residential hub of N.W. . Convenient to bus and car lines. . Large, modern, fireproof building. . Spacious light and airy rooms. Arartments freshly decorated yearly. . Rentals moderate and reasonable. Service prompt, quiet and courteous. Garages and servant accommodations. Continuous phone and elevator service. 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