Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MEDIGAL SRVEY PURPOES BARE Dr. Carpenter Speaks at Meeting of Council of Social Agencies. An exetnsive survey by “the com- Inittee on the cost of medical care” to determine the actual average expendi- ture per family in the United States for medical attention, as well as to de- termine the general nature of diseases | most common in this country, was de- scribed by Dr. Niles Carpenter at the monthly meeting of the Washington Council of Social Agencies in the Y.‘ W. C. A. yesterday. Dr. Carpenter, who is the director of | the department of sociology, University of Buffalo, and assistant director of the committee on the cost of medical said the committee is making a ial study of diseases from many angles to find out the adequacy of medical care rendered persons in vari- ous walks of life. ‘The committee's work, he explained will include an extensive survey of the nature of diseases suffered in 10,000 families throughout the United States, With a view to finding a fair average. In connection with the general surve Dr. Carpenter said, the Instructive Visiting Nurses' Society is making a special_survey of 100 families in t city to obtain statistics on the local | situation. It is hoped the surveys and expe ments will bring about more adequa medical service, Dr. Carpenter ex plained. The committee is composed of lead- | ing physicians, scientists and others and has the financial backing of such organizations_as the Carnegie Corpo- ration, the Milbank Memorial Fund, the Russell Sage Foundation, the Twentleth Century Fund end other organizations. A resolution was adopted by the councl approving tentative plans for the establishment of a social service exchange, to act in an advistory capac- ity to the council and inform the public | generally regarding social service wor Miss Gertrude Bowling, Mrs, Charles A. Goldsmith and F. V. Thomson were named as a nominating committee to | name members for election to the exec- utive committee. The election of the new members of the committee will b2 held at the next meeting of the council. LARGE or SMALL The HOME FURNISHING | ARTIST MAKES CATHEDRAL GLASS { THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €, TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1929. 1 | { | i | Cathedral. aint. Lawrence B. Saint, authorily on the manufacture of rare stained glass, has | endertaken the task of furnishing the 183 stained glass windows for Washington Thoto shows Mr. Saint displaying the model of the first window. | | Left to right: Rev. C. G. Bratenahl, who is preparing the program of scenes to| | ishop James E. Freeman, Charles Hazelhurst, assistant to Mr. -—Underwood Photo. | FATHER OF 9 FOUND | GUILTY OF ASSAULT | £ One-Armed Justice Beaten After| Performing Wedding Ceremony of 16-Year-0ld Girl. A ol By the Associated Press. OLATHE, Kans., March 12.—A jury late yesterday deliberated 4 hours and found E. A. Conn, father of nine chil- dren, guilty of assault with intent to do great bodily harm for attacking the justice who married his 16-year-old daughter to a youth just 4 years older. {Conn and his wife took the verdict | calmly. Punishment to be inflicted on the Rosedale plasterer who admitted he beat judge George Folmer of Olathe, 65 years old and one-armed, will range from 6 months in jail to 5 years in prison. Untid Thursday, Conn will be free on bond, pending an expected ap- peal. Conn's defense was temporary insanity. | The defendant testified he was “crazy mad” when he learned of the marriage of his daughter, Elizabeth Anna, 16, to William L. Mashburn, 20. He admitted that he came to Olathe and unleashed the torrent within him with his fists. During the trial Conn's attorneys produced another girl, 14, married by Folmer to a youth of 16. g Stresemann Takes Holiday. GENEVA, March 12 (#).—Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann of Ger- many, serenely happy over the prospects of a vacation, took a train last night for | San Remo, where he expects to spend | three weeks. He said jocularly “I hope the reparation experts will conclude their work soon, but not so soon as to | interfere with my holiday.” In Albany Gov. Roosevelt will be a communicant at All Saints’ Protestant Episcopal Church. PARIS WOMAN SHARES IN P. M. LYDIG’S ESTATE | By the Assoclated Press. YORK, March 12—A will of HIGHLAND CITIZENS COMPLIMENT HESSE Association Adopts Resolution | o) “prilip Mesier Lyaig, who died in Commending Police Head and Re- | Nice, names Mile. Renee Chauchet of Paris the principal legatee, the filing of | grets He Has Decided to Resign. |the instrument in court yesterday dis- | closed. Tol. Lydig's will stated that another | The Sixteenth Street Highlands Citi- | Will would dispose of property owned by zens’ Association, which met last night |him in France. | in the Sixth Presbyterian Church,| Mlle. Chauchet, who is designated as unanimously adopted a resolution com- | mending Maj. Edwin B. Hesse, superin- tendent of police. Members expressed | their regret that illness caused Maj. | Hesse to resign. “ Edgar C. Snyder, United States mar- Ty [ shal, chairman of the committee on the proposed sunken gardens to be de- veloped in the abandoned Sixteenth street reservoir, reported that mem- bers of Congress who had been advised of the plan were favorably disposed. Destroyer Crew Quarantined. NEW LONDON, Conn., March 12 (®). —Lieut. Comdr. E. F. Stone, one of the Navy transatlantic fiyers of 1919, and| his crew were held by quarantine on board the Coast Guard destroyer Mona- han yesterday, a second case of menin- gitis ‘having developed among the crew in_a_month. DESSERT. GIVES 'EM QUICK ENERGY TO00 ~ ‘Washington. 12M. NESTLE's MILK CHOCOLATE | Richest in Cream/ “TDECAUSE o the sremen- dous purchasing power of our four great ssores e can buy for luss. The savings are passed on 80 our customers, Twe furniture factories of our oun belp us 1o eliminate ine between profits. And rug looms which we control in the Orient enable us o offer the outstande ing rug values that we do, BUDGET Finds its Solution at W. & J. Shoane B q0R the modest budget~phere are rugs and fur- miture, carpess, fabrics, and lawps of charm and t quality~great displays of moderasely marked home * furnishings. § For a more liberal budget there is a carefully chosen display of period reproductions \ smany of them made in our own factorses~~ and an extensive selection of the finest examples of Oriental rug weaving which appeal to those who desire more pretentious furnishings. § Every home Surnishing budger~large or small, can find its solutionat W. & J. Shoane. W. & J. SLOANE 709-711-713 TWELFTH STREET, N. W, Store Open From a.m. 10 5:30 p.m. Daily Including Saturday WASHINGTON, D. C Sloane Enlm:l Merchandise Carvies @nAssuranceofSatisfaction Transportation (o. Daily Express—Motor Coach Service Washington-Richmond Fare one way, $3.50; round trip, $6.00, limit 30 days For fully information, apply to any Washington Hotel, Mt. Vernon Railway Station (Penna. Ave. & 12th St.), or to A. CHESTER BROWN, General Agent 1202 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W. Telephone National 9711 a friend, 18 to receive the income from | the residue of the estate for life, the | money then going to Harvard Univers- | ity for a scholarship or scholarships in | international law in the name of the donor. Three cousins and several friends | in Europe also are named as bene- | ficiaries. No estimate of the amount | of the estate was given. | Col. Lydig was the former husband of Mrs. Rita de Acosta Lydig, who was | once the wife of the late W. E. D. Stokes. | Ll g A Meaux, France, priest hears con- fessions in 19 languages. o P. Lv. Washington (North Capitol and E Streets) 9:25 a.m,, 11:25 a.m., Serves Capitol Park, Continental, ton, Raleigh, Willard and Washington Hotels; also Mt. Vernon Railway Station (Pennsylvania Avenue and Twelfth Street). In Richmond, serves William Byrd, Jefferson, Rueger’s Richmond, and Murphy’s Hotels; also Bus Terminal (Fourth Street). Three hours and twenty minutes from Fourteenth and Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, to Broad and Davis Avenue, Richmond. Returning—Equally convenient express service from Richmond te 2:25 p.m., 4:25 p.m. Grace Dodge, Houston, Harring- — Smelters’ Pay Is Raised. & Refining Co. plant here will receive ' 25 cents a more EAST HELENA, Mont., March 12 (/). . Employes of the American Smelting!day by J. D. Rent at $1.00 Per Day —and Paint Up Your Car or Wicker Porch Furniture. Get a Professional Job at Home Paints and Lacquers FRIES, BEALL & SHARP 734 10th St. N.W. Main 1964 Aviators tell how they guard Steady Nerves Field check-up shows Tareytons big leader HEAD»WL\'DS to fight . . . cross currents to struggle with . . . air pockets to dodge™. . . i It takes steady merves to handle a speeding plane . . . nerves equal to any contingency . . . nerves without a tracs of jumpiness. Naturally, aviators take no chances. They keep themselves fit . . . clear- eyed and sure of hand. Yet, on the ground, you'll find them smoking con- stantly! How do they do it? A recent check-up at the country’s leading flying fields has answered the question. There investigators . . . mak- ing their rounds in search of the facts on cigarette preferences . . . found Tareytons by far the most popular cigarette . . . the cigarette fliers asked for most often. And when the fliers themselves were interviewed, the reason why cameout ... | “We simply must have steady nerves,” said the bird-men. “No ifs or ands about it. So we stick to Tareytons. .. exclusively. Smoke nothingelse. Smoke all we want when not in the air . . . but only Tareytons.” You may not need the steady hand of an aviator, but haven’t you felt a little bit ragged, sometimes, at the end of the day? A little bit “smoked out?” Then try this. .. Buy a week’s supply of Tareytons. Smoke as freely as you please . . . more than usual if you feel like it ... but, like the aviators, smoke only Tareytons « « . Do this for seven days . . . only a week . . . then check up on how you feel! That’s a fair enough test, isn’t it? Then why not try it as others have. Start today! AND THAT’S THAT! The head-winds he ran into over Ohio . . . the air pockets he hit over the Alleghe- nies . . . are soon forgotten once Air Mail Pilot Booth swoops down to & landing on the home field. “Give me a Tareyton. .. that’s the first thing I ask for when 1 come out of the clouds,” he said when asked about cigarettes. The photographer caught him in the act of lighting another Tareyton while ground men from the flying field unloaded the mail he had just brought through the night. 1. Humidor Package. 2. Heavy Foil. . 3. Quality Tobaccos. 4. Sealed Perfor- Reg. U. S. Pat. OB, Herbert AREYTON The twenly-five cent cigarette o + « nOW ]_5{: for twenty . . . Cork or plain © 1929, The Union Tobacco Co., New» York City ated Top. That’s why there’s no dry- ness. The heavy foil in Tareyton’s pack- age assures you a full-flavored smoke, > b “ANY MORE?” Pilot William Ulbrich makes sure all the mail is loaded before he calls for contact. ““A pilot hastohavesteady nerves,” Mr. Ulbrich told the photog- rapher. “That’s why I always smoke Tareytons. They keep me fit.” Heseems to be enjoying the last puff before speeding away. Everywhere, investigators have heard the same story from both men and women who ke-p a close watch on the condition of their nerves,