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4§ weE FINAL RITES HELD FOR DR. SUNMY Auto Accident Vietim Is Buried With Military and Masonic Honors. Funeral services for Dr. Benjamin W. Summy, 82 years old. who died Friday at Walter Reed Hoepital from injuries ststained in an automobile aecident last March, were held at 1:30 o'clock this afternoon in the Vermont Avenue Ohristian Church. Dr. B. H. Melton; pastor of the Ninth Street Christian Church, assisted by Rev. Earl Taggart of the Vermont Avenue Church, offfi- clated at the services, under military and Masonic auspices. Dr. Summy. who was born in Buffalo, N. Y. in 1848 came to this city at an early age, receiving his medical educa- tion at the old Columbian College, now George Washington, and later graduat- ing from the Georgetown Medical Schocl. Dr. Summy followed the med- ical profession for 50 years, retiring from active practice 10 vears ago. His carcer aleo included a brief period of military service in 1880, when he served in the adjutant general's office of the Regular Army. One of the oldest in- habitants of Washington, Dr. Summy was identified with many prominent civic and Masonic organizations. At the time of his death he was treasurcr of the Retired Federal Employes’ Asso- clation and was a member of the As- sociation of Oldest Inhabitants of the District of Columbia. | Dr. Summy is survived by his wifc, | Mre. Lulu Morgan Summy: two daugh- ters, Misses Katherine and Helen Sum- | my: a stepdaughter, Mrs. Victor C.| Thurston, and a stepson. H. F. Morgan. | Past masters of Stansbury Lodge, No. 24, F. A. A. M. were active pallbearers; Honorary pallbearers were elders of the Vermont Avenue Christian Church. Burial was in Arlington Cemetery. Dr. Summy's death was aecidental. according to the verdict of the coroner’s jury, returned today. R. J. McCarty, third precinet policeman, the driver of the automobile which struck the aged physician, was exonerated by the de- eision, which was returned after testi- mony was introduced to the effect that death was due to bronchisl-pneumonis and that the injuries were secondary. ey = VESSEL FREES SELF. Grounded Tampa Steamer Floats Off Dry Tortugas. KEY WEST, Fla., October 21 (#).— The steamer Otter Pool, out of Tamps: ran aground on Dry Tortugas, 80 miles west of here. yesterday, but was later able to float itself, advices received here ! last night said. The tug Warbler. which had started to its rescue, turned back into the har- bor after receiving & message from the temporarily stranded vessel. S rm Hesoiite Sumbure ‘Bdison—Piraeus DUR TODAT. American Merchant—London ‘mcon—Cristobal dani 1in— Qetoper 15 750 from McDonald, are to appear for ober ; trial in Judge Willlam C. Doran’s court. eric: i oro—Kingston ... DUE TOMDRROW. Boro_Velparatse o~ H Sacabi —Puerto Colombi ic—Southampt Huron—Puerto Maya—Puerto DUE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28 Munargo—Havana ... October 18 Pan-Americs—Buenos Aires October 3 Santa Cruz—Callao ... October & President Harding—Bremerniaven. October 16 DUE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24 Gragse—Havre . tun—La_Ceiba Bermuds —Bermuds ey minica—Port of Spain . DUE FRIDAY, OCTOBER garia—Southampton fiunnfl»ffllmburfl s olivar—Puerto Colombia DUE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26. ber 13 | several new witnesses. {and S. 8. Wylie, colored patrolmen, re- | The jury which heard the first trial 15| sion whether he must face formal 9| charges of malfeasance and inefficiency ober Qetober 28 | Developer's Association, a political or- | ganization. To Organize Police COMMANDANT MARY ALLEN Chief of the English women police, will organize a school for Turkish women police in Constantinople. —Assoclated Press Photo. LOSANGELESPOLE INQURY SPREADS 20 Officers Due to Appear| to Answer Charges of Bribery. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, October 21.—Action ! in the investigation of alleged police graft in Los Angeles developed on five fronts today, with more: than a score of policemen scheduled to appear in three Superior Court cases to answer to charges of extortion and bribery. Continuing its probe into charges of wholesale corruption brought by Harry D. McDonald, alias Westman, confessed boo . the grand jury will resume {ta deliberations wiht the questioning of | Detective Lieuts. Milo H. Ledbetter and W, E. Evans, accused of obtaining | Deputy District Attormey ~ William McKsay said McDonald alleged he gave the two officers $750 as & bribe to escape arrest when he was caught with several thousand dollars’ worth of stolen diamonds in his possession. A. T. McClanahan, C. N. Bradford cently indicted by the grand jury, are to enter pleas on charges of having ac- cepted weekly bribes of $25 from beot- leggers. ‘Judge Walton J. Wood will announce today the date for retrial of Leonard F. Sate, Hmrry M. I'lfllll and Onmll' L. Peterson, patrolmen alleged to have ac- ' Bribe of $600 from McDonald. failed to agree. Chief of Police James E. Davis prob- ably will hear from the police commis- on afdavits fled by the Los Angeles The commission heard th charges behind closed doors last week, and it was indicated that a report of its findings is ready. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, FORD AND- EDISON and' Inventor on Copy of Old Trian. (Continued From PFirst Page) and a small company, but a Nation- wide radio hook-up will make it possible for his words of tribute’ to be heard by millions. The President and his party arrived here on the: speeial train of the Bal- timore & Oho Railroad at 9:30. Mr. and Mrs. Ford and Mr. and Mrs. Bdi- son were at the station to extend a warm welcome: After & round of handshaking and exchanging of greetings, Mr. Ford, as host, took the lead and escorted the party across the platform to the train which conveved them to Old Smiths Creek Statlor, the entry post, so to speak, to Mr. Ford's early American village. This train ride, which was barely more than a mile in lengtu, WaS an unusual one. reproduction of the old “iron horse~ type of train of the Grand Trunk Rnflrmd.tupor, ];‘hxrh Mr. Edison as a youngster s newspapers, m: zines and fruits. e i Edison Acts as Vender. ‘While riding on the train Mr. Edison added to the amusement of the party by going through the motions of a train vender. He carried a large bas- ket of fruit, peanuts and package candy and in a most serfous manner offerea these wares for sale to all in the car. Every one, including the Presidexnt; dug down in their pockets and made pui- chases. Mr. Edisor’s next act was to run off & one-sheet train newspaper, such as he printed and sold when he was a train vendor. This little newspaper and a copy of the Detroit Free October 21, 1862—the electric jubilee anniversary date—were carried called out “Paper! Paper!” as he passed the coples to the smiling company. ‘This scene was re-enacted in the bag- gage car of the old train, which car had been built by Mr. Ford to reproduce exactly the old car on which Mr. Edi- son had served as & newsboy. In one end of the car was reproduced the crude little laboratory used by the boy Edlson for his experiments in those ays. Another interesting feature incident to the early life of Mr. Edison was the Old Smiths Creck Station. whicn is the station where Mr. Bdison, then & news vender, was thrown from a Grand Trunk train ductor because he had set the baggage car afire with one of his “dam fool" chemical experiments. It was recertiy purchased by Mr. Ford and transplany- ed_here. Mr. Ford's early American has been set up in an area known as Greenfield, and has been rec Institute of Technology. Both the President and Mrs. Hoover manifest the deepest interest in the varous objects Mr. Ford has collected in_creating this early village. Besides the original Edison labora- tory, the President and Mrs. Hoover saw the courthouse building in which Abraham Lincoln appeared frequently as & young lawyer in TIL: the original Clinton Inn, which was tiry ago; a Connecticut post office bullding erected originally in 1803: and a copy of Independence Hall in Phjla- delphia. They expressed amagement of all that Mr. Ford has cellected for his early village. Besides the buildings mentioned, the visitors were shown a forge such as wax used during the early days of the Republic; an ancient grist mill, log cabins and an especlally in- teresting building used as a village store before the Civil War. The group includes also &n old church, a black: smith shop of an early period and va: rious other buildings and objects of romantic interest. Detroit Hails President. The visit to Detroit was something of a reminder of the President's cam- paign days a year ago. The streets through which the President drove were thronged with cheering persons. No President. Rides With Host The train was « | sheet | of | light through the car by Mr. Edison, who | by an_irate con- | village | onstru by Mr. Ford as & part of the Edison | Logan County, | built in New England more than a cen- | Seeks Divorce ELINOR FAIR, Actress and wife of William Boyd, is seeking a divorce. Associated Pre in whose distriet Mr. Edison lives, is accompanying the party as far as Gin- cinnati. Speaker ~Longworth, whose home is in Cincinnati, will join the President’s party when it reaches that city and will continue with it as far as_Lousville. The President and Mrs. Hoover re- ceived an impressive ovation as their train pulled out of Union Station in Washington yesterday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock. Shortly after he arose this morning, ( at Willard, Ohio, the President passed withiz a_ few miles of Milan, where Thomas Edison was born. President Hoover will be the principal | speaker at a dinner tonight formally honoring Mr. Edison, to be held in | Greenfield’s Independence Hall, & repro- duction thay has been built by Mr. Ford in the histgrical village. The President’s address as' well as the remarks of se eral cthers will be broadcast over the largest radio hook-up ever attempted. Among them will be Prof. Einstem, speaking by means of radio and. teie- phone, from his laboratory in Berlin Prof. Einstein's speech, which will be in English, is cheduled for 8:26 p.m. Huge Party for Edison. Although _the ceremonies formally celebrated Edison’s perfection of the incandescent lamp, the celebration ac- autlly was a huge “party” arranged by Mr. Ford for his friend “Tom” Edison. Seemingly, no item of expense or effort had been spared by Ford to make the | tail. Bstimates of the c of the cele- bration run as high as 800,000, vif | tually all of which will be met by M. Ford. In his effort to achieve as much real- ism as possible in reproducing condi- | tions that existed 50 years ago, when | Bdison was working on the inoandescent lamp, Mr. Ford even had earth from New Jersey shipped to the Historical village to surround the original Edison laboratory, already part of the group of historical _structures making up the | community. “Henry's even got the New Jersey clay here,” Edison remarked yesterday du- ing a stroll about the village. Oxen |and horses also were in the village. | Seme 600 guests have been invited ta lthe dinner tonight. Edison to Dight Memcrial. | As an added feature of the ceremonies tonight, Mr. Edison, after returning | from the laberatory, where he will re- enact, the perfection of the lamp, will touch & button that will light a large beacon in East Orange, N. J. The | beacon is to stand as a perpetual monu- | ment to himself on the original site of is laboratory where the incandescent lamp was born. The beacon is a tribute to Edison by the Edison pioneers who worked with Im in the early days. The beacon is an enormous bulb, 17 feet high, inside of which are 600 in- | candescent lamps. | Among the noted guests who have accepted invitations to the ceremonies are Mme. Marie.Curie, co-discoverer of | radium: Orville Wright, Owen D. Young, “party” a complete success in every de- | | one seemed to mind the bad weather.|who will be toastmaster at the dinner: Everywere he was acclaimed in an en- | Charles G. Dawes, Ambassador to Great thusiastic manner. At noon the Presi- | Britain: Charles M. Schwab, fron mas- dent’s caravan of cars drew up to the|ier: john D. Rockefeller, jr.; Dr. Wil- steps of the city hall, where he and Mrs. Hoover were greeted by Gov. Green of Michigan and Mayor Lodge of De- troit and other State and municipal of- ficials. A huge crowd of citizens packed The President’s party hurried back to the Ford home for luncheon and a brief rest preparatory to a busy afternoon Patria—Palermo . O Guatemala—San Francisco ....September 3 DUE SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27. Qetober 19 Getover 18 Octover 17 'October 19 | October 18 | Qotober 20 | Qetover 13 October 15 | % | OCTOBER 8. October 18 | Qctober 18 October 12 | October 19 | October 17 0 | | luscania—soutnampton Vulcania—Trieste .... DUE MONDAY, erican Trader—London rgensfiord—Oslo Galifornia—8an Francisc Cameronia—Glasgow Cleveland—Hamburg Leviathan_Southemnton Nieuw Amsterdam-—Rotterdam Porto Rico--8an Juan ;.o n Loren anto Domiigo City. Oct nited 8 —Copenhagen Port Victoria Bermudn October 28 OUTGOING STEAMERS. SAILING TODAY. —8t_ Vincent, Las Palmas, Madeira. rs. Piraeus, Constantinople, Constanzs Marseille. rd—Barcelona Ju-—Santos. John's. North—8t SAILING TOMORROW. Buenaventura—Port au Prince and Cristobsl. nbu; tle—Capetown. o 4 | Sinala. Al and No jangu—Bahia. Cafifornian-_Facific Const. SAILING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 33. uitania—Cherbourg and Southampton. ort. Victoris—Bermuda. Resolute—Cherbourw, Southempton and Ham- | e Cherbourg and Bremer- a Zacapa Kingston, _ Cristobal, _Cartagens, Puerto Colombia and Santa Marts. Caracas—San Juan. La Guayrs, Puerto Cabello and Maracaibo Bridgetown—Puerto_Colombi Rousssillon — Vigo and Bordeaux. Biela—Buenos Aires. Katrina Luckenbachi—Pacific Coast Olancho—Porto Cortes. SAILING THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4. American Merchant—Lon Banta Barb Ha and _Valj 2150, Bremen-—Cherboury, Southampton amd Bre. merhaven. Coamo—8sn Juan and Sants Domiggo. Havana -Havana. Progreso. Vera Crui snd Tampico President Van Buren—Wor'd cruise. SAILING FRIDAY. OCTOBER Carmania—Piymoutn. Ravre snd London. August % Marn Ed; Bu ue—Puerto Colombis. igon—Piraeus d Atlantico — Montevideo and Buenol _Port_au Prince Prince —Rio de Janeiro, Montevides and Buenos Aires. SAILING SBATURDAY. OCTOBER 26. {a—Copenhagen and Danzis. Andania—Cobh_and Liverpool. Bermuds—Bermuda. Milwaukes~Cobh, Cherbours snd Bremer- haven. —Southampton, Boulogne and Brem- ven. Bantos, ha nce—san Nerissa—8t. Calamares Limor Tivives—Santiago. Tels and Puertg a: Ameriea—Plymauch, Cher Orizaba—Havana Albertic—Cobh_and Liverp Minnewasks—Cherbou Puerto Colomb! Celb, o d_Halif ohn's and Halifax Hevana. Cristobal and Port ngaton, Puerto Castills, rrioF. bours amd Bremer- ) ha London. SAILING MONDAY, OCTOBER 38. don | Cristobal, Callao and evening. One of the features of the program for this afternoon is an | inspection trip to the Rouge plant of HOOK-UP IS ARRANGED By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 21 —The Na- tional Broadcasting Co. last night an- nounced final arrangements which will | enable radio listeners in many coun- | tries to hear ceremonies tonight atl! Dearborn, Mich.. celebrating the golden | jubilee of Thomas Edison’s invention | of the electric light. | The words of President Hoover, Henry Pord, Mr. Edison. Owen D. Young and | Prof. Albert Einstein, the last-named | spraking from Berlin, will be broadcast | | over a Nation-wide hook-up and will | be sent by short-wave transmitters to! foreign shores. Graham McNamee and | Phillips Carlin, radio announcers, will | describe the scene as Edison builds a duplicate of the original electric light, working by lamplight in his original laboratory. transported to Dearborn by Henry Ford. Edis-n himself will play jon the old organ he kept at the end of the work bench, Prof. Einstein will speak into a tele- phone_transmitter in his home in Ber- lin. Prom there his words will travel by telephone and wireless to the United States. where they will be broadcast throughout the country and to foreign | | | i Also Complete Stock Shingles, ete. "3—Branches—3 MAIN OFFICE 6% &C Sts SW CAMP ME(GS-5™ & Fla Ave N E. BRIGHTWOOD-592! Ga Ave.N.W ! light anniversary. the Ford Co. and to the Ford airplane factory and airport. ‘The party will dine at 6:30 in the early American village. The dinner will be a banquet, as a part of the jubilee | celebration, and it will be held’ in “In- dependence Hall.” At the conclusion of this dinner Mr. Ford will lead the President and Mrs. Hoover and the other guests to Mr. Edison’s original Menlo Park labora- tory for what Mr. Ford has set down as the real celebration of the electric 1t will be during the gathering in this old structure that Mr. Edison will re-enact the invention of the incandescent lamp and other inci- dents of that great occasion. After this Mr. Hoover will make his address, With these ceremonies over, Mr. Hoo- e and Teturn to their train at the Dearborn Station. cinnati, where tomorrow morning the President will participate in the cere- monies at Eden Park celebrating the completion of the canalization of the Ohio River from the Mississippi to above Pittsburgh. The President’s visit in Cineinnati will be for not more than | five hours. will start on a boat ride down the Ohio River to Louisville. Representative Eaton of New Jersey, and practical ai @G> For each $60 or fraction borrowed you agree to de- posit $5 a month in an account, the proceeds of which may be used to cancel the note when due. Deposits may be made on aweekly, semi- no»il(v ° monthly besis ”s you prefer. MORRIS P EASY the great plaza in front of the city hall. | and his party soon will take their | At midnight the | train will start on its journey to Cin-| Early in the afternoon he | sk | liam Mayo, James W. Goor, Secretary of War; Adolph 8. Ochs, publisher of the New York Times; B. E. Crowley president of the New York Centrai: | Gen. W. W. Atterbury. president of the | Pennsylvania Railrond; L. PF. Loree president of the Delaware & Hudson, |and Daniel Willard, president of the Baltimore & Ohio, | | NOTABLES PAY TRIBUTE. | Hoover Heads Distinguished List of Those Honoring Edison. DETROIT, October 21 (#).—In a setting that contrasted early American Nation's notables came today to pay | tribute to Thomas A. Edison on the fiftieth anniversary of his perfection of the incandescent electric lamp. Most of the ceremonies were held in | the early American Village reconstruct- ed by Henry Ford at Dearborn, but throughout the city the picture of | Edison featured the decorations in honor of the inventor. | CHICAGO HONORS EDISON. CHICAGO, October 21 (#).—A civic celebration in honor of Thomas A. Edi- son and the fiftieth anniversary of his invention of the electric light will be held tonight in Grant Park. ‘The Edison invention itself will take a prominent part in the celebration. There will be an electric sign 500 feet long and electric chandeliers dangling in the sky from captive balloons. An electric gun will shoot letters of fire against the black background of the Y. ™ Forty loud speakers will bring to the crowds in the park the address of , President Hoover at Dearborn. THE BANK THAT MAKES YOU A LOAN WITH A SMILE The terms of Morris Plen Loans are simple nd feir—it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. Loans are pass- ed within a or two after filing application— with few excep- tions. TO PAY Monthly Depesit MORRIS PLAN notes are usually LAN Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W., Washington, D. C. « Character and Eaming Power Are the B is of Credit» life with the present, a groun of the | CHANGES U. S. Diplomatic Personnel Abroad Severely Dep|eted| Largely by Resignations. By the Associated Press. Recent resignations of several high | officials of the foreign service have severely depletcd the upper ranks of American diplomacy. While the State Department usually declines to comment on resignations, it was cstimated by well informed persons |in the department that more than 50 members of .the diplomatic personnel will have b#mn dropped from the lists for one or another reason before De- cember 31. Qutstanding in the recent resigna- tionis were those of six high officials of the foreign service to enter the banking or oil busincss. Reasons. Given for Resignations. The reason generally assigned for the resignations is the dissatisfaction of | members of the diplomatic personnel | with the present promotion system. Since mbst members of the foreign service enter the department at the age of 25, it is estimated that under the present system a diplomat would reach the age of 55 or 60 before attaining the ranks of consul general in the con- sular service or counselor of embassy in {the diplomatic service. | The most outstanding case at the | present time, in the opinion of some diplomatic officers, is the status of the | so-called “class of 1922, and those fol- | lowing it, whose members within seven vears have not been promoted beyond the rank of third secretary, with a salary of $4,000 annuaily. A ‘recent resignation which stirred considerable speculation in State De- partment circles, was that of Stokley Morgan of Arkansas, formerly chief of the important Latin American division of the department. Morgan ed to enter the banking business. Others Who Quit Serviee. Others were those of Thomas L. Daniels of St. Paul, formerly first secre- tary at Rome, to enter the vegetable oil business; John F. Martin of PFlorida, formerly charge d'affaires at La Paz, Bolivia, who resigned to enter the serv- ice of a well known oil company, and Myron A. Hofer of Cincinnati, assigned to the department, who resigned to enter the banking business. A delay, which causes considerable dissatisfaction in the diplomatic ranks whenever it occurs, comes when Con- gress holds up the promotion lists in favor of other legislation. The last pro- motion list was delayed at the Capitol for five months and the one previously was held up for a year. In these cases, the infrequent salary raises accorded y the lists are delayed until their confirmation. OHIO RIVER FLOTILLA NEARING CINCINNATI Fleet, Making Slow Progress, Is Greeted All Along Route by Cheering Throngs. By the Associated Press, CINCINNATI, Ohio. October 21.— Steaming proudiy down the Ohio amid | the jubilation of cities counting on a | rejuvenation of river traffic, the flotilla | cruising from Pittsburgh to Cairo. IL., | ta officially dedicate the stream’s $118,- 000,000 _improvement _projects drew | toward Cincinnati todsy. i The City of Cincinnati, Queen City, | Greater Pittsburgh and Tom Greene are expected to arrive here tonight in | time for a rousing reception for the| delegates they carry from Ohio, Penn- sylvania and West Virginia. Tomorrow morning President Hoover, coming here from the Edison celebration at Detroit, will dedicate the monument erected in Eden Park in celebration of years of work which have assured a 9- | foot stage in the Ohio the year around. | The President will procesd with the party as far as Louisville. The fleet progressed slowly yester- | day, but at almost every town and city | the banks were thronged with cheering ! spectators. Late in the evening three of the boats arrived at Huntington, W. Va., where the officials were given a big ovation and received greetings from both the city and State. MAN DIES IN LEAP. Young Law Employe Falls From 27th-Floor Office Window. NEW YORK, October 21 (#)—An| | employe of a Wall Street law firm died | last night in a fall from his office on | the twenty-seventh floor of an office | building. Police identified him from papers found in the shred of clothing that re- mained on the body as Frank Zueger, 24 years old, of Long Island City, as- sistant librarian for the law firm. His coat was found in the office not far from the open window through which | police believed he leaped to his death. The Honduran Congress has granted 2 concession of 5,000 acres of national land for the establishment of silk cul- ture. A YEAR AT LEAST Loss of volume, quality and distance are usually signs of worn-out vacuum tubes. Once a year they should be replaced by a new set of RCA Radiotrons. RADIOTRON *Radiotrons are the heart of your Radio Set” D. €. MONDAY, OCTOBER' 21, 1929. Pets in Hat Brooches. | Tadjiks to Have Republic. P ; Fashionable London women have s DUSHAMBEY, Tadjikistan, U. 8. 8. new fad in hat brooch models q‘Lfihelr R.. October 21 () —For the first time in | . Dogs are the most condpicuous,' long centuries, nearly 1,000,000 Tadjiks, the wearers having had made exact| sporigtes of Central Asis, aretohave an | eplicas o canine pet of the house. T te picked out 1n small diamonds | independent republic under the aegis of | on platinum or white gold. Others who | the Soviet Union, which hereafter will favor a parrot, a rabbit or a tortoise are | consist of seven allied republics hmndl 1so wearings models of their pets. | of six. S DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist G Sts. N.W. BARREL FULL OF INK Chilton sales are sweeping repidly toward high goal because the peo~ ple of America are no longer satis- fied with the old-style fountain pen, meagerly supplied with ink. Capacity! Chilton holds twiee the ink of the ordinary pen. 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