Evening Star Newspaper, October 23, 1929, Page 4

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It pledges a lighting ser- wice that satisfies. o, Sold by office supply and electrical de. "H. G. McFADDIN&CO..Inc..22 Warren St Established 1874 "MERALITE MIND TO EYES \/ Copsright 1920 T.&B. M¢. Co, Are YOU Radiator Conscious? Tuttle & Bailey Furniture for Radiators satisfies the artistic sense, keeps walls and curtains clean; humidifies “desert-dry” Winter air. Offered in a wide variety of styles and prices Guaranteed against loss of heat. Send coupon for booklet or phane Potomac 2436, GEORGF. TERRELL 10-23-20 Connecticut Ave.. shington, D. € ar 8ir: Please send me booklet “New Artistry in Radiator Conceal- ment. Name INORRIS DIRECTS | COALTION ATTACK ! Assails Chemical Duties in | Proposed Tariff Schedules as Senate Fight Opens. | By the Associated Press. { The flow of debate continued at flond | tide in the Senate today as the veteran | | George Norris took up the assault of the Republican mdependent-Democratic | | conlition againet the rate schedules in | the tarifr bill | Directing his onslaught specifically at the chemical dutics, the Nebraskan with all the force his vears cf senatorial training have placed at his command, asserted the tariff on calcium carbide | was effected to “protect the power | trust.” | His statement was made as the Sen- | ate engaged in a general round of dis- | cussion and after it had developed that | certain domestic carbide companies had | gone to Canada to obtain cheaper | primarily in the manufacture of acety- | lene gas. Hits Carbide Rates. The present import rate on calcium carbide is 1 cent a pound, and while | the finance committee majority first recommended a reduction to 15 cent, it | has proposed now to keep it at 1 cent. | Protesting against a reduction. Sen- | ator Goff. Republican, of West Virginia, | sald if the tariff was sufficiently high, | those companies which have opened | plants in Canada would be forced to | come back to the United States and employ American labor. He pointed out there were several carbide plants in this country, located in Michigan. New York, Towa, Minne- sota, West Virginia, Virginia and Ala- bama, and said it cost about $25 a ton more to produce the chemical here than Lns!:urnpt enator Vandenberg, Republican, of Michigan, contending for an “adequate tariff,” sald the carbide plant at Sault | Ste. Marie, Mich., paid nearly half of the city's taxes and a large portion of the city's population depended on the plgril;.ls success, till maintaining the advantage which | enabled it to override the: adminiotra: | ticn In the formulation of the admin- | istrative sections of the measure, the | Democratic - Independent Republican | coalition found its first opportunity for applying in practical fashion its funda- mental tenet of increased protection for agriculture. Coalition Ranks Augmented. In the first test of strength in voting on the rate schedules the coalition found its ranks augmonted by five Re- | publicans not assocated with the inde- pendent group, as contrasted with the defection of but two Democratic mem- bers. Senators Jones of Washington, assistant majority leader; Couzens of Michigan, a majority member of the finance committee, and Robinson of Indiana were included in those voting with the coalition. Wagner and Cope- land of New York voted against their Democratic colleagues. The vote came late yesterday on a Democratic proposal to cut the duty on medicinal tannic acid from 20 cents, the present figure, to 18 cents per | pound. The close of debate saw another ac- cusation of filibustering and attempting to delay a final vote on the bill. This came from Senator Reed of Pennsyl- vania, & Republican, and drew from Harrison, Democrat, of Miscissippi the assertion” that Reed's appointment to the delegation which will represent America at the London naval confer- ence had gone to the Pennsylvania | Senator’s head. Reed “Will Fix Blame. Reed declared that, “even at the ex- pense of a little personal vituperation. | e intended to point out each day just where, in his opinion, responsibility for impeding the bill rests. 5 Taking cognizance of published Te- | ports that President Hoover will oppose extending the tariff debate into the regular se should the measure not | e finally disposed of before the close of the special session, Senator Robinson of Arkal the minority leader, issued | a statement last night asserting that it | was not within the Chief Executive’s | province to forbid such a course. In a general assault on the schedule preceding__the votes yesterday, both | Senators King and La Follette depicted | the big chemical corporations of the | Nation as a powerful giant that needed no_additional tariff protection. Senator Kean, Republican, of New Jersey, in his maiden speech in the Senate, pleaded for adequate protection to the chemical and dyestuffs industry, contending Germany had revived her production to a point thai was threat- ening to capture the American market La Follette claimed the “big three” | chemical corporations—E. 1. du Pont de Nemours, Allied Chemical & Dye and Union Carbide & Carbon—with | net earnings last year of $122,000.000 and combined ts of more than a billion dollars, would be the chief bene- ficiaries of the rate increases proposed. | | Scores Hoover Statement. | At one point in his speech Senator La Follette referred to President Hoo- ver's message to Congress on the tariff as a “weasel-worded statement.” CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Card party will be given tonight 3:30, under the auspices of the Sodal- | ity of Holy Name Church at Holy Name Hall, 916 Eleventh street northeast. Burnside, No. 4, Woman's_ Relief Corps meets tonight at G.sA. R. Hall, 8 o'clock. | Initistion ceremonies will be held by !the Virginia Dare Council, No. 32 | | Daughters of America, tonight, at 808 I street. A dance will be given tonight by the | Young Men’s Club of St. Paul's Church at the church suditorium, V street be- tween Fourteenth and Fifteenth streets Committee in charge, J .L. Hall, chair- man; John and Morris Meenchan and | J. Hoyle Nevin. A card party for the benefit of St Gabriel's Church will be given tonight 8:30 at St. Gabriel Hall, Grant Circle | and Webster streets. FUTURE. Temple committee of Gavel Chapter. No. 20, Order of the Eastern Star, will give a card party tomorrow night, 8 o'clock, at the home of Mrs. Florence Lippard, 1615 East Capitol street. Woman's Benefit Association will give a 500 card party tomorrow night, 8:30, at the clubhouse, 1750 Massachusetts avenue. Chi Alpha Sigma Sorority Mu Chap- ter will have a bridge party at the Hamilton Hotel, November 7, for the benefit of the Palestine emergency fund. District of Columbia Dietetic Associa- tion will meet in the Red Cross Audi- torium tomorrow _evening, 8 o'clock. | Speakers will be C. O. Ornsteain, who | will_talk on “Vitamizing the Athlete”; | J. T, Howard, of the Maddux Hotel; | Russell A, Conn, Hamilton Hotel man- | ager, and Maj. H. C. Maddux, president of the Maddux hotel chain. | “The Slabtown Convention” will be | played by the industrial department of | | Washington Federation of Women to- | morrow night at Trinity Baptist | Church, Thirteenth street between Q i and R streets, 8t. Cecelia Guild of St. Monica's Episcopal 1 will give its annual » Cha P liCWeen Trolle in the Parish Hal, ¢ 5 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, O DARING FLYER AND PLANE IN : X W. F. Diteman of Billings, Mont. (Ieft), and his nla~~ {he Golden Hind, a low-winged monoplane, with which power, a big cost factor in the produc- | off frem Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, yesterday, for London, England. The man on the right is unidentified. Diteman, tion of the chemical. which is used | who is 40 years old, named his fragile craft after a staunch g alleon of Sir Francis Drake, whom he regards as a forcbear. LONE PILOT UNSEEN SINGE TAKING OFF Urban F. Diteman, Jr., Due to Reach London Early This Afternoon. ___(Continued from First Page.) gasoline aboard; conservative estimate, 25 hours, “Many thanks, ye Newfoundlenders, and I apologize for 50 many impromptu lies. Drake did not bring me here nor to London, albeit I am a descendant. Sorry if I hurt any one's feelings. I meant no harm. “P. S.—Many thanks. from me. During the three weeks Diteman was here since his flight from Frederickton, New Brunswick, he told residents he was tracing other descendants from Sir Francis Drake, who he claimed was his ancestor. Fairly favorable weather was forecast on both sides of the Atlantic for the period of the flight. The weather at the takeoff was fine, but a fog settled down on the Newfoundland Coast by mid-afternoon and by night the sky was overcast. A northeast wind was blowing. Dr. James H. Kimball, transatlantic flying weather expert of the New York ‘Weather Bureau, said that Diteman would encounter little danger if he flew You will hear at low altitude, but that in high alti-| tude there was danger of ice forming on the wings. Cabled dispatches from Belfast, Nor- | thern Ierland, described weather con- d’’ions along the Irish Coast as moder- ately good. The plane Diteman is flying is a two- seater open cockpit type which he pur- chased in Kansas City some months ago while _there selling & shipment of cat- tle. He had it altered for the ocean fiight, so he could install a 165-gallon fuel tank in place of the 25-gallon tank with which it was fitted. It has a wing spread of 32 feet, 6 inches. The cruis- ing speed is 95 miles an hour. Diteman's wife, who is from Billings, Mont., apparently was the only other person who knew of his plans to at- tempt the ocean flight. At her home in Billings she said: “The ship was bought and altered with the crossing in view,” adding that her husband had been flying about 2'% vears since becoming interested in avia- tion in Portland. Oreg., where his par- ents now live. He is the third fiyer to attempt a solo fight eastward across the Atlantic. Col. Cha:les A. Lindbergh made tl only successful crossing. H. C. Ma Donald, a Canadian, was lost a year ago in an attempt to fly from Harbor Grace to London. e South Capital and L streets southwest, tomorrow evening. 8 o’clock. James E. Walker Post, No. 26, American, Leglon, will meet tomorrow night, 9 o'clock. Adoption of a new constitution and by-laws to come before meeting. Other important business. Mtiss Mabel Thurston, teacher of the Everygirls' Bible Class, will give the first of a series of six lectures on “Parables of Jesus” tomorrow evening at the Church of the Convent, Eigh- teenth and N streets, 7 o'clock. Alpha Delta_Phi luncheon will be held Friday, 12:30 p.m., at the Hotel Gordon. Ways and means Loyalty Chapter, No. 32, hold a rummage sale tomorrow, Fri- day and Saturday at 2130 Pennsyl- vania avenue. Mrs. H. G. Schmecht, chairman. committee of “Evolution” will be the subject for discussion by the Study Class of the United Lodge of Theosophists tomorrow cvening at 8:15 o'clock in the Hill Building, Seventeenth and I streets. Rev. G. O. Bullock, pastor of the Third Baptist Church, will preach a special sermon at the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church tomorrow night, 8 o'clock. “Elisha and Naaman” will be his subject. Proceeds for benefit of the church, All interested in a home for widows and orphans of all wars are invited to meet at the Grand Army Hall, 1412 Pennsylvania avenue, fifth floor, to- morrow night, 8 o'clock. Ladies' Auxiliary Hotel Greeters of America, Chapter 31, are giving a Halloween dance Friday night at the Lee House, Mrs, Weston B. Jones, jr., Our low prices are for cash delivery only. W. A. Egg..$14.60 W. A. Stove, $15.35 W. A, Nut. . .$14.75 W. A. Pea...$10.40 Coke ........$10.75 Fairmont Egg....$8.35 New River Egg, SllM‘ Also Buckwheat; soft coals; fireplace kindling vood. Allour coals are screened and full weight guaranteed B. J. WERNER District 8944 923 New York Av. 1937 Sth St. N 0. E. 8, will | and | CTOBER 23, 1929. UNANNOUNCED ATLANTIC HOP he took —Associated Press Photo. SYMPHONY CONCERT AUDIENCE [Tells Auditors to Stay Away! When They Hiss Modern i Composition. | Conductor Reserves Right to: Select Numbers to Be Pre- | sented at Recitals. ‘ By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, October 23.—A fash- ionabl> audience at Carncgie Hall was rebuked by Leopeld Stokowski, conduc- tor of the Philadelphia Symphony | Orchestra, last night for hissing a | modernistic composition. | The piece was Arnold Schoenberg’s latest composition, a set of “variations.” | | At its conclusion there was some mild | applause but considerable more hissing. | When the demonstration had di>d | down, Mr. Stokowski told members of | | the audience, all season subscribers to | the orchestra's concerts, that if th-y did not like his programs they might brttor stay away. He added that as long as he is eon- | ductor of an orchestra he intends to | perform “the greatest music of th> past and the best music of the present.” | Critics describ>d the composition as | “nothing startling” and declared much other music of the moment is mor2 discordant. noisy and inexplicable. It ;t';il'wfllten by the Vienna composer in OPOLD STOKOWSKI. U. S. PHONOGRAPH MUSIC WINS PUBLIC IN FRANCE Shopkeepers Paid to Run Records, ‘Which Are Then Bought, Agent Tells Commerce Department. | By the Assoctated Press. American_phonograph records are so popular in France that in the outlying | cities and towns shops which dispense them are regularly able to give concerts ance. An American trade agont, Te- porting to the Commerce Department Jon this phenomenon, says that the | thrifty French are willing o pay two or | three francs for_the privilege of hear- ing the new stuff run through the ma- | chine, buying afterward. “The larger phonograph shops evi- | dently do ot “think it dignified for | them to give free concerts with their records,” the observer reports. “Their method is to let the public take the | initiative in the purchase.” ° Only one phonograph shop in all the | country, and that was naturally in Paris, tried the American system off finance depart- | turning the music on free, the report; COL.EBY TO BE REFIRED. Cavalry Officer at Fort Bliss Has 32 Years of Service. Lieut. Col. Charles McH:. Eby, 7th Cavalry, at Fort Bliss, Tex., will be re- tired November 18 on his own applica- tion after more than 32 years' service; Lieut. Col. Walter D. Smith, Field Ar- tillery, has been transferred from Fort Hoyle, Md., to Fort Leavenworth, Kans.; Maj. George Z. Ecke ment, from Fort Sill, Okla., to Aber- | added, and the proprietor found it i 17th’ Infantry, from Fort Des Moines. | Towa, to Fort Benning, Ga.; Capt. Orlo H. Quinn, Air Corps, from Riverside, | Calif, to San Antonlo Tex.: Capt Harry S. Farish. finance department from Erooklyn. N. Y., to Fort Wayn~. Mich.; Chaplein Albert K. Mathews from Fort Meade. 8. Dak. to Hawali, | and Chaplain Jacob D. Hockman, frem Hawali to Fort Meade. | | any_competitors in_the free field e — . | :AMBM&ADOR-’»g ‘ DINING ROOM CLUB BREAKFASTS SPECIAL $1.00 LUNCHEON TABLE D'HOTE DINNER $2.00 Also A La Carte — No Cover Charge. | DINNER MUSIC HOTXEL } | | | | TEMPTING MENUS EXCELLENT CUISINE TABLE D'HOTE or A LA CARTE FOURTEENTH AND K STREETS |Kidney Trouble! ~—1Is real trouble—it is the root of many serious diseases—High Blood | Pressure, Diabetes, Bright's Disease. 1t is said that few people reach the age of 40 with sound kidneys. Do you suffer from headache, backache, unusual thirst or any of the obscure symptoms that point to Kidney ‘Trouble? 1If so, hasten to repair damage with Nature's own kidney agent, Mountain Valley Water from Hot Springs, Arkansas. Physiclans everywhere prescribe this natural mineral water as an aid in the pre- vention and treatment of all kidney disorders. It has aided thousands back to health. You use it here at home just as you would at Hot Springs, Ark. Phone or write for bocklet. Met. 1062. ! Mgflnfii'nnvualley Water NO PAYMENTS FOR MONTHS Order Before Dec. 31, 1929 e W N Bulid Now,While Labor and | Material Costs Are Lower SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. 06 10th St Main 9637 WASHINGTON Sum Souh o Susmen, Bt Semaar . Stmawe (). Wond O, Sareges O Star 10.33.20 and charge admission to the perform- | deen, Md.; Capt. Nathaniel L. Simmons, | creased sales, but to date hadn't had | OTENAN REVEALED PXCELLENT LYER Wife in Montana Confident| Husband Will Succeed in Atlantic Hop. | By the Associated Pres: | BILLINGS, Mont., October 23.—After | | a_sleepless night Mrs. U. F. Diteman, | | whose husband_yesterday roared away | ! from Newfoundland on an ocean-span- | | ning attempt, waited eagerly today for | | news of the little plans and again ex- | pressed confidence in her husband’s | | ablity to “make it.” | |~ Throughout the night she stood stead- | fastly confident, reiterating the lone | aviator was no novice in flying and had | { already come through supreme tests in | fiying. | | "“Mrs. Diteman wes hoarse from an all- ! night vigil at a jangling telephone. | Everybody, it seemed, telephoned a word | of good cheer and messenger boys called | ! incrssantly with telegrams. As all this | was going on her two sons, Jack, 7. and | | Eddie, 4, slept the decp sleep of un-| | troubled youth. A neighbor woman | came early in the evening and stayed all | night to help answer the many calls. Defied Weather. f As the day wore on more information | regarding Diteman’s avility as a fiyer | became known. It was revealed instead | of being “green” at the game he had 200 hours solo. September 16 he flew to Billings from Dearborn, Mich., in the | face of the most adverse weather and warnings at the Ford Field not to at- | tempt the trip. He shoved off over Lake Michigan when that great body of water was enshrouded by an impene- trable fog. Over South Dakota he en- countered a blinding rainstorm, but Diteman pushed on and fought h:s way through unfalteringly to Billings. | On_a recent flight between Missoula | and Billings a Montata gale whipped his ship mercilessly and he was forced to land in the sheiter of a high moun tain. He negotiated this hazardous de- ’ scent without damage to his plane. Diteman had been preparing for the | Atlantic hop' since last Summer, Mrs. Diteman said. He would not have at-| tempted it. she declared, had he not | been positive of accomplishment. The | projected flight was kept secret between | Diteman and_his wife, because they did | not want a failure to be known. } Expects Word Today. “He has never undertaken anything | without succceding,” his wife sald sim- ply. “I expect to have word from him that he has arrived in London about 11 | o'clock this morning.” His plane, Mrs. Diteman said, is well cquipped for the flight and he has made | {a thorough study of alrships, ocean | routes and technical information to for- | tify him for the trip. A compass on his | plane is identical with the one that | safely guided Col. Charles A. Lindbergh jover the Atlantic in his memorable | crossing. | Flying companions and his instructor are inclined to give him a “fighting i chance.” Bob Johnson, Missoula, his in- | structor, said Diteman had studied with him for nine months but was surprised | at his former pupil's bid for fame. | | RELATIVES ARE CONFIDENT. | | s | Parents of Diteman, on Atlantic Flight, Fully Expect Success, PORTLAND, Oreg., October 23 (#).— ‘While a brother-in-law maintained a vigil in A newspaper office here today. the sister and aged parents of Urban F. Engraved Cards - and &fl‘\tl’oncry produced by Brewood, bear the intinite charm that Washington’s most distin- suish:d residents prefer <onslant[y. + Orders executed on short notice when necessary. + ‘Brewaen gravers am{j?afilmm 6i1-12th St. N.w. Diteman, jr,, Billings, Mont., eattleman and avistor, who 18 um%nh flight across the Atlantic, to sleep and awaited reports of the - ress of the adventurer. Warren A. Erwin, the brother-in-law, maintained an attitude of confidence. . “When we hear that Urban has suc- ceeded—and I sure that will be the news—then we'll sleep,” declared Ur- ban F. Diteman, sr, the fiyer's father. Mr. and Mrs. Diteman, sr., were not ad- vised of their son's flight until last night, Erwin having planned to keep the news from them until today, when the best—or the worst—news was ex- pected. The parents became s;:rlcloun how- ever, when they discove: that Urban had had his residence telephone dis- connected, and the news was finally given them. Informed of her son's adventure, Mrs. Diteman said, “I have all the confidence in the world in my boy. God controls the heavens as surely as he does the land and Urban is going to win. Of that I feel certain” ‘The father admitted somewhat gruffiy that “it was a foolish thing to do. but | now that Urban has started I know he’ll finish.” FOUR IN FAMILY KILLED WHEN TRAIN HITS AUTO Three Others Are Injured in Acci- dent While Returning From Birthday Party. By the Associated Pre PADUCAH, Ky., October 23 —Four members of one family, returning from | a birthday party, were killed and threc other members injured when their auto- mobile was struck by an Illinios Central train near here Sunday. HALLOWEEN BONFIRES BARRED BY POLICE Burning of Leaves on Streets Also ‘Will Not Be Permitted, Says Maj. Pratt. Halloween bonfires and the burning of leaves on the city thoroughfares will not be tolerated by the police, Maj. Henry G. Pratt. superintendent of police, havirg notified members of the force to strictly enforce the regus- hmom against such dangerous prac- ces. In a message to the force yesterday Maj. Pratt called attention to the fact that the Autumn season is at hand and that the streets are littered with fallen leaves, which, he gaid, a great temptation to some persons to start fires. Maj. Pratt quoted the section of the law making the starting of such an offense. It provides: “That it shall not be lawful for any person or persons within the limits of the District of Columbia to kindle or set on fire, or be present, aiding, con- senting, or causing it to be done in any street, avenue, road or highway, alley, open ground or lot, any box, barrel, straw, shavings or other combustible, between the setting and rising of the sun.” British manufacturers have formed an organization having the purpose of pushing British-made goods at the Leipzig, Germany, fair. SUPERIOR GARAGES IN ALL MATERIALS Those killed were: John Fleming, 30, baggage man for a local taxicab com: pany; his wife, Rupert, 8; s ‘son, Jesse Eugene, 3 s "Those injured were Robert, 6, broken Frederica, 28: a son. | TIN ROOFS PORCHES BUILT WE_ BUILD. REBUILD. REMODEL. BEPAIR ANYIHE AND GIVE leg and probable internal injuries; Wil- ' liam, 4, head cuts and loss of several teeth, and John, 3, cut and bruised. Doctors said Robert may not live and that William had a chance to recover. A Norwegian electric company is planning the erection of six power sta- tions in Iceland to generate a total of 900,000 horsepower. [=] M 'l v ENCLOSE YOUR PORCH Repair Before Winter! e | i | Yo Seb | oo 2. 85¢ v i I_?f ! H 'i"‘M“: - IO:‘:.; ! :‘-:“fimt | { aqually lawsr «F recksugaddyn | P— THE BANK THAT MAKES YOU A h o | Sheet Metal Sava money on your Ga rage Material complete. Get our estimate. 05 pe: Complete Stock of Shingles, etec. 3 Convenient Branches MAIN OFFICE-6™ & C.Sts. SW. 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America for $645, and even more. he purchase as one single of these beautifully con- structed grands from the Aeolian Co. ¢ Not only do you get our guarantee but the strongest manufacturer's warranty obtainable from the Aeolian Co. d pianos of this grade are being sold all over See it tomorrow... Extrfiordinary Anniversary Special in Traded-in Upright Pianos They must be sold to make room for new stock arriving daily 50 Upright Pianos at $50 Each- Name Your Own Terms O. J. De Moll & Co. Pianos—Radios—Victrolas—Furniture Twelfth and G Streets N.W. DeMoll’s Greatest Piano Value A Brand-New BABY GRAND Made by the Aeolian Co. . . .a guaran- teed $645 value . .. Sale price ... 5435 $25 Delivers It $15 Monthly Pays the Balance Twelve dealers operating over 100 stores in

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