Evening Star Newspaper, January 13, 1929, Page 6

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,‘r"!il:‘ = KELLOGG DENIES THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. JANUARY 13/ 1929—PART T. = KIWANIANS TO HOLD |26 GRANDCHILDREN |HOLD-UP SUSPECTS HELD. SESSION TOMORROW, FIGHT $250,000 WILL *zopwusomeses | | two are believed by the county police ta have been responsible for several hol¢'- ups in the territory near Bladensbus Judge Gore fixed the bond of each & $500. | ~ Matthews and Kline were identified BERLIN REPORTS' Vi ews of Coolidge on Repara- tions Misinterpreted by . Press, Says Statement. |Kimball to Preside Over Capital District Convention in v X Alexandria. | Special Dispatch to The Star. | _ ALEXANDRIA, Va, January 12— District Gov. Harry F. Kimball of | Washington will preside over the Mid- | winter meeting of the Capital District of B i Py the Assoclated Press. | Secretary Kellog yesterday issued | £-*mal statement declaring that the | views of President Coolidge on the Ger- | man reparations question had been mi interpreted in an article in the Berliner Tageblatt published yesterday. staiement said: i “The Secretary of State telegraphed | the American Ambassador at Berlin that | an article i the Beliner Tageblatt is wighout any foundation. The President has given no indication of his views on | the task of the reparations expert com- | yalttee nor expressed any opinion on the angunt which should be determined as Gersany's total iné: 4n~sz, nor as to how many annual payments should be | made. He has not said anything from | which such inferences could be drawn.” | President Coolidge was represented | Friday as of the opinion that the essen- | tial question remaining to be settled at | the coming reparations conference was the final amount which Germany will be called upon to pay and that the total must be carefully worked out by the commission of experts to meet the de- mands of equity and justice. T, was given as his opinfon that if rermany’s financial condition is such that she can continue present yearly | payments of approximately 2,500,000.000 | earks, it must then be decided over how JoAg & period of time these payments | aré to continue. CIVIC BODY TO DISCUSS GARBAGE DISPOSAL | The | Montgomery Federation Meeting Tomerrow Night Will Be Held at Silver Spring. Epecial fNispatch to The Star. ROCFK.VILLE, Md., January 12.—The entire cuestion of garbage disposal for the suburban area of Montgomery County. according to announcement by the corresponding secretary, O. M. XKile, will be a special order of busi: Tess for the January meeting of the INTELLECTUAL “INVENTORY" Kiwanis International Ciubs here Mon- | day in George Mason Hotel. The meet- | ing_will open at 9:30 a.m. with Im- | mediate Past Gov. Robert W. Kime pre- siding. District Secretary Robert E. | Turner will present the past governor's | button and introduction of internation- | al and district officers will follow. The trustees will meet to select the | convention city and aate for the next | annual convention, as well as for their own meeting in October. Action on the | budget will be taken and an address on | the duties of the trustees and a discu: | sion will be led by Roe Fulkerson. The | presidents of the Capital district will meet with J. Randall Caton, jr., inter- national trustee, and secretaries will meet with Secretary George W. Taylor | presiding. Past District Gov. Russell S. | Perkinson will nceside over the meet- |ing of the committee cbairmen. The | Alexandria club will be host to the visi | tors at luncheon at 12:30 o'clock. E gene R. Woodson of Washington will make an address on “Voactional Guid- ance and Placement” at the afternoon jon. J. Randall Caton, jr., interna- trustee, also will talk. A speech ol iwanis Education” will be deliv- ered by Charles G. Evans of Dan- ville, Va. The committee of the American Philosophical Society which called on President-elect Hoover Friday and presented | ¢ him with an engrossed scroll congratulating him upon his election. The committee, left to right: Dr. Arthur P. Brubaker, emeritus professor of physiology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia; Dr. Whitman Cross, former geologist of the Geological Survey, Chevy Chase, Md.; Dr. Arthur W. Goodspeed, University of Pennsylvania; J. B. Lippincott, publisher, Philadelphia; Dr. Francis X. Dercum, president of the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia; Dr. Charles G. Dr. John A. Miller, vice president of Swarthmore College; Dr. Cyrus Adler, president of Dropsie College, Dr. Arthur L. Day, Carnegie Institute, Washington, and Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director- general, Pan-American Union, Washington. ;fggfi’:&’f“m in education and in A | ; | "How can these interests and thesé i members said for us at our bi-centenary | pranches of individualistic learning be celebration in 1 and as others of us | co-ordinated into one program with one have often emphasized: | common purpose—the promotion of all “‘The intertwining of philosophic | yseful knowledge? and humanistic interests in the Philo- | In selecting the committee to make sophical Society helps not merely in | this intellectual survey the society has | deepening our perspective in the fleld | attempted to cover "all branches of | of knowledge. It also serves to make | Jearning and all sections of the coun- | more clear the meaning of the develop- | try. Even England is represented on PLANNED TO AID EDUCATION {Future Program of Service Will Be Based?;‘,‘f’;‘d‘;; TR i ereate ooyl o, | ste committes” whichy iy iition 4o members already mentioned, includes: | zation such an organization serves as a | Dr. Arthur L. Day, director of the stabilizer and a means for helping to | geophysical laboratory, Carnegie Inst make more clear the relation between | tution; Dr. John H. Finley of the New man and his environment and the place | York Times; Dr. John A. Miller, vice of the individual in the scheme of|president of Swarthmore; Dr. Richard human organization. A. F. Penrose, jr., former president of ““The 200 years of history behind us | the Academy of Natural Sciences, Phila- | have seemed, perhaps, to make more | delphia: Prof. William Lyon Phelps of Special Dispatch to The Star. | cerns and other enterprises also are wide the gaps between our various de- | Yale; El Kirk Price, president of the PHILADELPHIA, January 12.—An members. They include Dr. Robert A.|partments in the scheme of knowledge. | Pennsylvania Museum, Philadelphi; “intellectual stocktaking,” international | Millikan, physicist of California Insti- | Before us lies an opportunity of pictur- | Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, president of the in scope, was announced today by Dr.|tute and winner of the Nobel prize in | ing, through synthesis of these divergent | Carnegie Foundation for the Advance- Francis K. Dercum, president of the|physics in 1923; Dr. Henry Fairfield | clements, a universe of nature and of all | ment of Teaching; Dr. Frank Schlesin- on Results of Philosophical Society’s Survey. Montgomery County Civic Federation to be held Monday evening in the au- ditorjum of the Takoma Park-Silver Spring High School. Proposed extensive amendments to/ the by-laws of the federation is an- other. matter of big importance sched- uled for the meeting, according to Sec- retary Kile, and the regular routine business will be transacted. A copy of the proposed amendments to the by- laws and information on the garbage question has been mailed to each dele- gate with a request from President A. B. Barber that they be carefully studied so that prompt action may be taken at Monday's meeting. School Has Improvements. Special Dispatch to The Star. Clifton School, after many attempts, has succeeded in having a cement bo: with drain pipe put under the pump to catch and carry away waste water. Both porches of the school have been imeograph and the first issue of the MW" “Hill Top News,” was publis] terday, Miss Ruby -Nichol, a member of the senior class, is editor in'chief. ‘The School League 'will meet next Thursday night. Prominent Mexican Honored. MEXICO CITY, January 12 (A).— Yernando Gonzalez Roa, Mexican dele- gate to the Pan-, can Arbitration Conference at Washington, has been appointed the Mexican representative on the Bolivian-Paraguayan conciliation committee. when less of its condition pe ot 2 Guaranteeing. The Trade Mark Satisfaction Your Telephone Directory Should Be Protected! | | TELEPHONE DIRECTORY. Tt is a valuable equipment in every office and often- times subjected to very rough usage and multilated long before it is out of date. American Philosophical Society, under | Osborn of the American Museum of | human life more wonderful than that | ger. director, Yale University labora- whose auspices the survey is being made. | Natural History, New York: Dr. Leo S.| which we have known and destined to | fory; Dr. Witmer Stone, executive cura- The first step in the survey already | Rowe, director general of the Pan-|give us ever-increasing joy of living.’ | tor of the Academy of Natural Sciences, has been taken by this oldest of Amer-| American Union: Dr. Charles L. Reese, | “With our opportunity thus clearly | Philadelphia, and Dr. Oswanld Veblen, ica's scientific societies—founded more | director of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & | defined, I have appointed a committee | exchange professor of mathematics, than 200 years ago. A mnational com-|Co., Wilmington, Del.; Dr. Elihu Thom- | on development of the soclety’s activ- | New College, Oxford, England. mittee on’ development has been ap-|son, consulting engineer of the General | ities. This committee has as objectives | The society originated in the Junto pointed by Dr. Dercum to make a survey | Electric Co.; Dr. Raymond Pear], direc- | the intellectual stock-taking necessary | established in Philadelphia by Benja- of the intellectual situation with a view | tor, Institute for Biological Research, | to the projection of a program of con- | min Franklin in 1727. Fifteen of to formulating “a future program of'Johns Hopkins; Dr. Harlow Shapley. |tinuing and expanding service of the members were signers of the Declara- service to all branches of learning.” [ulrecmr of Harvard Observatory. and | society and the final development of | tion of Independence and 18 members Committee members, numbering 42, Dr. James H. Breasted, egyptologist, ' that program.” helped frame the Constitution. Nine with Dr. Dercum as chairman, includes | University of Chicago. A definite course for the committee | Presidents of the United States, includ- five college presidents in addition tnj P Is Outlined. has not been worked out, according to | ing Washington, Jefferson, Woodrow N | Dr. Dercum, but tentatively, at least, it | Wilson and Herbert Hoover, have been | elected from the society’s membership. | Three other Presidents, | Roosevelt and Taft, became members | after _election. Twelve members of the society have been justices of the United States Su- preme Court and of these four have more than & score of others actually engaged in educational work. The col-| Cojncident with the announcement of | wiil endeavor to answer one general lege presidents are Dr. Frank Aydelotte, | the appointment of the committee, Dr. | question and three secondary questions, Swarthmore: Dr. William W. Campbell. | Dercum made public following | as follows: University of California; Dr. Livingston | statement sent to members of the| What today is the world's intellectual Farrand, Cornell; Dr. Cyrus Adler, | gociety: situation? Dropsie College, Philadelphia, and Dr.| ““The American Philosophical Society | Is there a drifting apart of the purely Edgar O. Lovett of Rice Institute, s taking stock of the intellectual situ- | sclentific interests and the humanistic Houston, Tex. ation with a view to formulating a fu- | interests? | been chief justices. All seven Ameri- Men prominent in science and one or | ture program of service to all branches | Is there a loss of prespective and of | ca who have won the Nob~l prize two flfi ted with large business con-'of learning. As one of our distinguished grasp of great princip] reason of ' have been members of th ciet: Announcing the Annual Sale of Fashionable “ARCH PRESERVER” Shoes for Women And every woman who has longed to test for herself— the world-famous superiori- ties of these unsurpassable shoes—will heed this call! “ARCH PRESERVER?” shoes have be- come such an important part of our busi- ness that, hereafter, they’ll be sold on our Main Floor. So, we're more anxious than ever to start the Spring season with new stocks. Hence, these two great sale groups: 7.85 $Q.75 Entire stocks NOT included — but large variety of styles and materials for every sort of wear. Included, also, at same prices—many splendid styles of very exclusive “CARLTON” shoes—regularly $10.50 to $16.50. Styles for street, dress, evening and southern wear. This cover shields not only the contents, but the binding as well and gives the book an attractive ap- pearance. Of course, it is good for indefinite service. Price, $1.65 STOClE(ET"'- 43 < PRODUCING STATIONERS DI E W - Rl » WW WASHINOGTON D-C Womezs Shi 1207 F St. Sale on Our Main Floor National 9176-7 Cleveland, | Late Mrs. Margaret Love, 96 Years 01d, of Lonaconing, Declared to Have Lacked Reasoning. Special Dispatch to The Star. CUMBERLAND, Md.,, January 12 A caveat was today flled to the will of Mrs, Margaret Love, who died at| Lonaconing November 2, by 26 chil- | dren of Isaac, James, John and William Love, deceased sons of Mrs, Love. Her estate totals $250,000. The petition sets forth that at the time the will was made Mrs. Love was an infirm person, 96 years old, and for two years had been a helpless invalid. It is alleged she was incapable of executing a valid will. All 26 grand- children were cut off with the excep- tion of Mrs. Annie Peebles, who was left $200. and Mrs. Margaret McKelvey, $100. ‘They, however, joined with the | others in the contest. LODGE OFFICERS INSTALL | Seat Pleasant Masons and !ntem} Star Hold Ceremonies. Special Dispatch to The Star. SEAT PLEASANT, Md. January 12. —Seat Pleasant Lodge, No. 218, A. F. and A. M., last night installed the fol. lowing officers: _Thurston G. Brown, worthy master; Floyd F. Martin, senior warden; H. Raymon Wilburn, jusior warden; Past Master E. F. Roberson, secretary; George W. Smith, treasurer; Frederick L. Wight, senior deacon; John A. Baden, junior deacon; H. W. Hotch- kiss, senior steward; Laurence E. Mc- Clung, junior steward: J. B. Lanham, tyler, and J. C. Blackwell, trustee for three years. Past Grand Matron of Maryland Mrs. Marie K. Tovey of Mount Rainier, as- sisted by Mrs. Marion Baden as grand marshal and Mrs. Lottle M. Smith as grand chaplain, has installed the fol- lowing officers of Seat Pleasant Chap- ter, No. 76, Order of the Eastern Star: Mrs. Ida L. Acuff, worthy matron; Charles Vaughn, worthy patron; Mrs. Leslie Moreland, associate matron; Mrs. Gladys Lanham, secretary; Mrs. Anna Lawrence, treasurer; Mrs. Bessie Schmidt, conductress; Mrs, Laura Vaughn, associate conductress; Mrs. Marion Baden, chaplain; Mrs. Grace L. Martin, marshal; Mrs. Irma Phillips, | organist; Mrs. Esther Wight, Adah; Mrs. Fannie Dunnington, Ruth; Mrs. Pansy Hargett, Esther; Mrs. Martha Kraft, Martha: Mrs. Hazel Kaldenbach, Electa; Mrs. Dora Bateman, warder, | and Laurence E. McClung, sentinel. PO Animal Trainer Di NEW YORK, January 12 (#).—Jack F. Appdale, well known as an animal trainer, died last night of heart disease after climbing to a balcony seat at Ma ison Square Garden to watch the fights. He was 56 years old. Appdale for many ' years trained animals for circuses. ard or_Alli- gator Calf. Tan_ Calf, reptile trim. Black or brown suede. Fashionable “Gaytees” turn-down collar. ity all-silk, sheer Even our most loyal hosiery will be amazed at this value! At all our stores.... 3 prs., $4.50 12.—On charges of highway robbery | by two negro victims as having been Alexander Matthews and Richard Kline, | the men who held them up on the both of Washington, yesterday were | Crain and Defense highways. The rob- held for action of the April grand jury | beries for Prince Georges County by Justice [ times and places and each of the vic- of the Peace H. W. Gore here. Worch Inventory Sale! Out They Go! Grands—Uprights No Carrying Charge: Absolutely Nothing were Players Terms to Suit Reserved committed at The | tims last nearly $200. Mere Fraction of Their True Worth Your Old Pianos Taken in Excange for Orthophonic Victrolas 1Mo G PIANOS Blaek 2,500 Prs. Women’s Galoshes Very Specially Priced $9.45 with brown suede. adjustable strap. Tan, Grey or Black tweed tops with Regular $3.50 qualities— even 2,500 pairs aren’t a lot, when the value is so big! At all our women'’s stores. largely regular or Dozens Brown, black blue or Bur- gundy suede. At our 7th St. & “Arcade” For the shoes in this Sale are HugoWorch Est. 1879 Kranich & Bach Pianos ForRent Emerson BeckerBros. separate Lots of Shoe Sales Going on, these Days! But none to equal this! Stores from our 86.50 stocks. Well made, trim-fitting shoes—in the height of fashion. of styles. Black or brown suede. Very Fine Quality All-Silk Hosiery PECIAL selling, unusually fine qual- chiffon hose. customers $1.55 7th & K 3212 14th “Women’s Shop,” 1207 F

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