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24 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, CHURCHMEN HONOR DR, LEWIS OHERN Cathelic University Mission House Rector Observes His Twenty-fifth Anniversary. Dr. Lewis K. O'Hern, rector of the Apostolic Mission House at the Catholic University of America, observed his twenty-fifth anniversar doctor of laws conferred upon him by Little Rock College, Little Rock, Ark., | “for nguished service.” Dr. O'Hern div and doctor of canon law, which were conferred by Pope Pius X at lhv! O'Hern’s post-graduate close of Dr. s courses in Rome in 1912 nt celebrated yesterday was tion of Father O'Hern by ernard J. McQuaide at Roch- N. Y., December 19, 1903. Father a farmer's son, born and r Olean, N. Y. and one of priests, and one, Col. E. P. O'Hern, U. S A, chief ordnance officer of the A E. F. in France, is now commandant at the Presidio in San Francisco. He became rector ot the Apostolic Mission House in 1921 He reccived congratulatory messages from Cerdinal Dougherty, Archbishop Curley, Bishop McNamara, Bishop Char- trand of Indianapolis, Bishop Schrembs of Cleveland, and meny other high dignitari>s of the Catholic Church. Most Rev. Piotro Fumasoni-Blondi, apostoiic delegate; Right Rev. Thomas J. Shohan, rector_emeritus, and Right Rev. James Hugh Ryan, rector of Cath- olic University, with a number of other prelat d anniver: Erothers Assist in Mass. was said in the chapel of the on House at 10:30 a.m n followed. The sermon was preached by Very Rev. Joseph Mc- Sorley, superior general of the Paulist Fathers. Very Rev. John J. Burke, general secretary of the National Cath- olic Welfare Conference, was toastmaster at the Juncheon. Father O'Hern was assisted in the celebration of the mass by his brothers, Right Rev. John Francis O'Hern, apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Rochester, N. Y., and Rev. Thomas K. J. O'Hern, pastor of St. Bartholo- mew's Church, Buffalo. The fourth priest brother, Rev. Denis O'Hern, Who was rector of St. Elizabeth’s Church, Sharon, Pa., died in 1911. Three cousins, also priests, were present as were more than a dozen lay members of his family from distant cities. AUTO ENGULFED, 3 DIE. Woman and Two Young Children Drown Near Fort Worth, FORT WORTH, Tex., December 17 #).—Mrs. John Janacek and her two hildren—Alfred, 5, and Joe, 2—were ‘rowned last night when waters from ‘e swollen Big Fossil Creek, near here, -ashed the Janacek automobile from 1e roadbed and engulfed it. Mr. Jana- *k escaped unharmed. SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at_and_Sailings From New York. ARRIVED YESTERDAY. “lamares—Port Limon. Tis—HAVI® .......... a heoniWest Tnd "West Indies cruise. 1ti—Cabe Haltlen . DUE TOMORROW. lgaris—Liverpool ata Cecelia—Cal conia—Liverpool anekahda—Londo; rania—Southampton”", Jn—Bermuda . —secem e g0 ' rerican Legion—Bieno: ‘mpic—Southampton erican Shipper—Lond 2quibo- araiso avana son—Cristobal . DUE WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19. “sidente Wilson—Trieste. skerie—Cape Haiti .. DUE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20. “iathan—Southampton . issa—St. John's. chess of Bedford—] onso XIT—Coruna tapan—Santa Mar ‘muda—Hamilton . DUE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21. gustus —Geron . 2 umbus—Bremerhiaven ...l D U Amsterdum-—Rolterdain: Decomber 11 ssident Harding—Bremerhaven December 12 DUE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, ‘ador—San _ Francisc -November 22 \owis—Honolulu . November 15 DUE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23. ana—Vera Cruz. . December 16 tores—Port Limon. December 15 DUE MONDAY, DECEMBER 24. srican Shipper—London. .. ... December 14 iania—Liverpool ...... December 15 ifornia—San Francisco December 8 ‘onia—Southampton ... December 14 >ttningholm—Gothenbur, December 14 —London embor 15 i Hamburg December 14 ntwerp . December 14 + Juai n_Juan December 19 nsylvania—Glasgow December 15 idyck—Buenos Ayres December 1 OUTGOING STEAMERS. SAILING TODAY. is—Plymouth and Havre. senland—World cruise. SAILING TOMORROW. ance—West Indies cruise. ra, Man Ceara, |Mefanham, t Indian cruise. vr Ha Kingston, Cristobal, Carta. ena, Puerto Colombia and_Santa ta. »ublic—Cobh, Plymouth, Cherbourg and remerhayven. a—San Juan, La Guayra, Puerto Cabello, uracao and Maracaibo. sa—Kinzston n Sebastien Elcano—Barcelona. t Victoria—Hamilton saval—Grenada, Trinidad and George- » SAILING THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, conia—West Indies cruise. ent Polk—World cruise. Maria—Cristobal, Cailao and Val- araiso. ttgart—Cherbourg and-Bremerhaven. amo—San Juan and Santo Domingo City. xico—Havana, Progreso and Vera Cruz. ierican Farmer—London. * 1azone—San Jusn and La Guayra, rea—Cape Haitl, Port de Paix, Gonaives nd St. Marc nargo—Nassau. rmpic—Cherbourg and Southampton. aguaya—Nassau vorita—Kingston. SAILING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22. onfa—Cobh and Liverpool, rania_Plymouth, Havre and London. isia—Oran, Piraeus, Salonica, Constanti- iople, Halfa, Alexandria_and 'Marseille. ert Ballin—Oherbours, Southampton and amburg, ngolia—iavana, Cristobal and San Fran- 180, fto Rio Juan. lamares—Havana, ~ Cristobal Kingston, and Port Limon. vives—Santiago. Puerto = Cas- “flla, Tels, Puerto Barrios and Belize, oney— Ha' nnekahda—Plymouth, Boulogne and Lon- on srmuda—Hamilton. srissa—St. John's and Halifax. tuania_—Copen and Danzig. tfonso X111—Corunna uron—Puerto Plata. San Pedro de Macoris and Santo Domingo City, sla—Pucrto Castilla and Tela. - SAILING MONDAY, DECEMBER 2489 ‘uon—rm au Prince and Cristobal .. yesterday, and in this connection” had the degree of had the degrees of doctor of | laymen, participated in the | DR. LEWIS K. O'HE! NON-RECOGNITION STAND PRASED National Civic Federation Survey Shows Opinion In- dorses U. S. Attitude. By the Associated Press. ’ NEW YORK, December 17.—The Na- tional Civic Federation made public last night a letter from its acting president, Matthew Woll, to President Coolidge, stating that the cross-section of Ameri- can opinion taken by the federation | had revealed a “whole-hearted and un- | qualified” indorsement of the Govern- ment’s policy of non-recognition of | Soviet Russia. Attached to the letter was a list of representative citizens who, with more than 5,000 others, Mr. Woll said, d signed a statement approving the fed- eration’s opposition to recognition until the Soviet regime should have ceased its subversive activities in the United States. Other conditions of recognition men- tioned in the statement thus approved were compensation to Americans for property expropriated by the Soviet, payment of the imperial external loans held by Americans, and demonstration ~ | may not be a licensed pilot with a well Tells Them to Take Children to Reliable Field for Thrill of Ride. Lady Heath Praises Amer- ica’s System of Avia- tion Routes. Mothers of the “air-minde® younger generation” are urged by Miss Amelia | Earhart not to forbid children tb go near | the airport, but rather to go with them |and supervise that longed-for first | flight as a safeguard against the sort | of accidents which occur when “John- ny” slips off to take a forbidden ride with some older “buddy,” who may or inspected plane. Miss Earhart, in an informal talk be- fore the ladies of the Congressional Club at their weekly tea hour, stressed the necessity for parents to recognize the fact that the children of this gen- eration look upon the airplane much as thelr parents did the automobile, and naturally are eager to fly. “Don’t make it a forbidden pleasure for your child if you can possibly give him the opportunity to satisfy that universal craving to ‘see what it's like." Accompany him some day to a reliable flying field and take him for a ride with a reliable pilot. This may save him from a fatal crash when some chance acquaintance, who may be reck- less and thoroughly unreliable, casually offers him a thrill,” she sald. Lady Mary Heath, who also addressed the club, declared that the whole world had its eyes turned upon America, where aviation was first cradled and where “today you have the most per- fectly mapped-out air routes on the face of the globe—your air mail service.” Lady Heath declared it was for the | women of the world to instill into the | minds of their children the proper fly- ing psychology—impressing them with the fact that air transportation was the safest, most economical and fastest means of travel. She illustrated cach point from her own experiences. LADY HEATH. ?&#&#&V&%&#&%fi%&fi&%&%&% Henderson’s—Standard of Quality for Over 50 Years gOur Displays of Fine Furniture that the Soviet government was “fit to associate with civilized nations.” “The insistent clamor of certain groups for recognition of the Russian Soviet regime by the United States,” wrote Mr. Woll, “has led the National Civic Federation to sound public opin- jon in all parts of the country upon this issue. “The response to that inquiry is a wholehearted and unqualified indorse- ment of the policy steadfastly main- tained by yourself, by Presidents Hard- ing and Wilson, and by Secretaries of State Kellogg, Hughes and Colby.” ‘The list of indorsers of the federa- tion's opposition to recognition included Elihu Root, honorary president of the federation; John W. Davis, Cardinal Dougherty, Bishop William T. Manning of New York, William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, and persons prominent in many pro- soLip fessions 12{! busln:ies. MAHOGANY TRAIN ACCIDENT FATAL. SMOKING CABINETS WAKE FOREST, N. C., De 17 (#).—One man was killed mm‘:’ rear $11.75 to $43 of a local drug store was demolished yesterday when the southbound Florida Limited, New York to Florida, train of the Seaboard Air Line, jumped the tracks here. The accident occurred when the loco- motive struck an automobile driven by Charlie Lyman of Wake Forest, killing him instantly. The engine was derailed and crashed into the rear of the brick store. Engineer J. Y. Brown and his fireman were uninjured, but W. E. Burchett, a e man, was slightly hurt when he leaped from his car. None of the passengers was. injured RN NN RN SN RN ENECReER s and they were transferred to another train and sent on to their destinations. In small towns and large; when colds, grip, and influenza reach epidemic pro- portions; when the schools are closi when people are painstakingly avoiding crowded gatherings— practically every druggist’s stock of GROVE'S BROMO QUININE is cleaned out. The insistent demm}i‘d f:;):“ GROVE'S reaches such vol- ume that stores telegraph for express and air-mail gshipments gfix our manu- facturing laboratories, What a pity that many people need e so drastic a warning as an —for those desiring holiday gifts combining beauty, utility and permanent worth. {{We show four whole floors of DISTINCTIVE FURNITURE, with a multitude of selections at POPULAR PRICES. For instance: Gen. Mahgany Magazine Stands, $10 to $35 Gen. Mahogany Footstools, $7.50 to $32 Solid Mah. and Wal. End Tables, $10 to $35 Gen. Mah. Smoking Stands, $4 to $14.50 Gen. Mah. or Wal. Tea Wagons, $38 to $75 Gen. Mah. or Wal. Priscilla Sewing Cabinets . .$9.75 and $10.50 Gen. Mah. Cane Wing Chairs, $19.75 to $39 Gen. Mah, Satinwood and Dec. Tiit- Top Tables ...... vevnen..$18 to $57 Gen. Mah, or Walnut Sewing Tables ........ s SR UERR $22 to $45 Solid Mah. Spinet Desks, $46 to $110 Gift Lam$s and Shades—Beautiful Mirrors. JAMES B. HENDERSON Fine Furniture, Laces, Upholstering, Paperhanging, Painting 1108 G Street—Phones e B e e e A s s S e S e e 7675 676 Quick relief for COLDS An amazing fact about epidemics make them take care of their colds promptly and vigorously! How much saner and safer, to take GROVE'S BROMO QUININE whenever the onset of any cold is felt, in epidemic time or not. Mildly laxative, the tiny tablets clean the digestive tract and rid the system of accumu- lated poisons. The tonic benefits build up the body’s defenses. Thus the cold is frequently nipped while it merely threatens. Cr it is thrown off quickly. ... There are two precau- tions: First, immediate treatment, Second, the right treatment. That is why it is important 2 to emphasize GROVE'S, when asking for lemic to GROVE'S BROMO QUININE. Price 30c. GROVE’S BROMO QUININE LAXATIVE TABLETS MISS' EARHART URGES MOTHERS NOT TO HAMPER AIR-MINDEDNESS A Offer Innumerable Suggestions = =3 BANDITS ROB BATH HOUSE. Masked Men Get $3,500—Five Ar- rests Follow. PHILADELPHIA, December 17 (#).— Five robbers, wearing masks, invaded a Russian bathhouse at 317 Monroe street yesterday, while 200 patrons were in the place, and looted the safe of :iggs in cash and jewelry valued at ‘Two hours later police ralded a house on South Fifth street and, after a run- ning pistol battle on the roof, arrested five men on suspicion. One of the pris- oners was Samuel “Shorty” Feldman, , recently released on bail in connection with the shooting to death of Hughle McLoom and Daniel O'Leary, alleged gangsters, whose slaying brought about the special grand jury investigation of bootleggers and their rackets. All were held without bail, charged with “hold- up at point of gun and robbery.” Most of the bathhouse patrons were | sleeping when the robbers entered the office on the first floor, and Abe Kratch- man, the proprietor, was on an upper floor. For Happy Holidays Silk Dresses !|l Dry Cleaned | and Hand Pressed | $1.49 and Up | | | We can make your dresses look exquisite for your added enjoy- ment of the Christmas and New Year Season. We call for and deliver. DISTRICT CLEANERS : and Dyers Inc. | " Frankiin 2406-2407 Main Office, 630 G Street 1734 Conn. Ave. 811 Vt. Ave. 123 B St. S.E. 505 C St. N.E.J D. ¢, MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1928. Special Sale! Portable Phonographs Formerly $14.75—Two Models 9.85 Ea. —A new shipment of Portable Phonographs, just ar- rived in_time for Christmas giving. Two well known models—Regal and Outing—with 9-inch turn tables cov- ered with green felt, nickel-plated attachments, United motor, speed regulator and needle cup. They are cov- ered with leatherette, will carry 10 records and are com- plete with locking device. —Carryola Master Portables, former- ly sold for (left). Spccialszis{{'...S.k.e.t.c.l.lf(.l ove §14.75 Kann's—Fourth Floor. s tas Pt eed eSS T St S S G £ o S e e e —A Name That Makes the “Dollar” Hosiery Gift Universally Acceptable! —*“Blue Crane” is one of the best knowa and most desirable brands of Silk Hose in Wash- ington. It comes in two weights—service and chiffon—and makes the most acceptable hosiery gifts you can buy at, or near, a Dollar. All shades in sizes 874 to 10 are available at this store. —12X—Medium Service Weight with short lisle welts, lisle heels and toes. Seamless feet, mock seam up the back. —15X—AlL-Silk Chiffon, silk to the top, inter- lined for extra wear, Seamléss feet, mock seam up the back. My Dream Baby Regular $8.50 Size $5.95 —An adorable bady doll, ; 22 inches tall and pret- tily dressed in a pink or blue costume with bon- net to match, shoes and stockings. Doll Carriages ~ $4.95 —Closely - woven fiber carriage with adjustable hood, 8in. rubber tired wheels, and reclining back. Finished in cafe, cocoa, cream or fawn, and suitable for an 18- inch doll. Desk Blackboard $4.95 —The “Litho Plate” blackboard — a five-sec- tion cabinet, desk model, with educational charts —2 in colors—and chalk tray. The frame is fin- ished in natural oak, while the desk part is on green. 20-In. Teddy Bears $1.49 —Imported teddy bears, full jointed, and made of brown plush. They squeak when squeezed, and have a bow around the neck. China Tea Sets $1.95 —22-Pc. Sets- of white china with red or gilt decorated borders — 6 cups, 6 saucers, 6 plates, a creamer, sugar and tea pot, neatly boxed. Fourth Floor. KANN'S|