Evening Star Newspaper, November 6, 1929, Page 5

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‘DEEP LAVA STREAM TAKES MANY LIVES Guatemalan Volcano Wreaks Havoc as Natives Are Unable to Escape. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, November 6 —Stories of inhabitants fleeing from a 6-foot- high lava stream pouring from the vol- cano Santa Maria, with some of them dropping in their tracks, asphyxiated by sulphur gas, to be swallowed up by the molten rock, were received yester- day by Guatemalan Charge d’Affaires Julio Gomez Robles. His dispatches from Guatemala City said that the inhabitants of Mazate- nango and nearby towns were alarmed by underground rumblings on Saturday which were followed by #he eruption and earthquakes. The lava stream then swept over the countryside, de- stroying everything in its path, and overtaking many of the fleeing resi- dents. The whole volcanic zone of the department of Suchite Pequez suffered from the effects. Up to yesterday afternoon 50 bodies had been recovered, but many more per- sons were believed to have died and to {uve been cremated by the molten Tock. The rajp of ashes was sald to be con- tinuing and_covoring the whole de- MANY &Artmem and some of the neighboring rritory, dsstroying coffee and other crops. The government was rushing aid by every available means, includ- ing airplanes. Besides the casualties thousands of persons were rendered homeless and sought refuge in the villages and towns Just outside the volcanic zone. Hospi- tals in those communities were crowded with injured and by many suffering from the gases emitted by the volcano. 300 ESTIMATED DEAD. Extreme Heat Overcomes Many Fleeing To Safer Territory. GUATEMALA CITY, November 6 (#). ~—The volcanic eruption of Santa Maria which had dwindled Monday night broke out with renewed force early yesterday. It was estimated that nearly 300 had been killed and_ 200 injured, ut.hnrless_n only 37 bodies had been re- The extreme n extreme heat in the vicinity of the crater and lava streams msdye it impossible to determine with exactitude the mml'fisuu be done. It was Teported & bodies of persons caught in the flow yesterday could be still seen on the top of the moving streams of lava. A body of & man was seen on a tree branch hanging over one of the streams. His escape had apparently been cut off and he had died from the heat. pouring up from beneath. MAJORITY AT‘_FORD PLANT (right) as CARMEL MYERS (left) 4 JEAN DOUGLAS (right) as PAULINE STARKE (leFe) “DEAD RINGERS” FOR MOVIE STARS GERALDINE DE VORAK (loft) as “{THORA WAVERLY (leF2) MYRNA (right) Pictures $how comparisons that are some times so often and real in scenes at film colony that friends of both original and double can't tell them apart. De Vorak “more like Greta G arbo than Garbo.” as Loy CREVASSE PERILS SLOW DOG TEAMS Navigator of Byrd’s Advance Party Describes Trip Across Ice. BY JOE DE GANAHL, Navigator of the Advance Sledging Party of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition. By Radio to The Star and the New York Times. ON THE TRAIL AT 81 DEGREES SOUTH LATITUDE, November 3.— Under an overcast sky which cast ro shadows we retraced our steps through LINE UP AGAINST STRIKE Vote of Employes in Motor Assem- bly Industry Shows 158 Oppos- ing, 146 Favoring, Walkout. P AEXIOO OITY. New CITY, November 6.—A vote taken among employes of the Ford motor assembly plant here Monday the treacherous area of broken south of Department No. 3 today and camped 160 miles from Little America, with our mission completed and all our les behind us. The haze blotted out the broken fea- tures of the mountains of ice, but it did not hide the trail or the patches of blue light around which it would have been suicide to have attempted to travel for the first time on a day like this. But showed 158 against the strike now in progress while only 146 favo: ‘The strike organizers d e the leral District Arbitration Board &t the request of the plant management. All were forced to stop work when the strike was declared several the strike it will be declared 1l - - -y legal by the arbitra. The strike was called to support de- mands for recognition of reinstatement of a union offeial Gt we had tested every foot of the trail on our way south and we felt that we were comparatively safe in our own tra cks, We had considered delaying our re- turn_until the visibility Img’mved. but the fog, which had closed in an hour after we had found our way through the maze of crevasses on October 30, had not entirely disappeared and there was every indication of a prolonged period of poor visibility. Had we not found our way through to firm ice on the south side of the pressure when we did, we should still have been camped in the nest of hollow charged as an agitator, and over ques- tracts. Y CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. ‘TODAY. Liberty Union Review, W ’s Bene- B meen T R £ S | , 8 o'cl 3 . 1750 Massachusetts. sverer | —_— H The Bell Club, St. James Cath Church, Mount Rainier, Md., will :1!35 & card party in St. James Auditorium, ‘Thirty-seventh street and Rhode Island avenue, 8:30 o'clock. Hostesses, Mrs. Julia Wight and Mrs. Frances Schatz. There will be an acquaintance meet- &l& the Third Baptist Church, Fifth Q .u::"'f' &:x.égor the members and friends o urch, - ments will be served. g The Association of Oldest Inhabitants of the District of Columbia will hold its Tegular meeting at the Union Engine '?glil:i Nineteenth and H streets, 7:30 A card party, to be given under the auspices of the Sodality of Holyer:am: E:&u:t'u‘etb Holy Name v}’i“llll, 916 Elev- northeast 8:30 o'clock. . ATt ‘The West Virginia Soclety will meef this evening, ‘lrgo'clock. uymemwm:f ington Club, Seventh and K streets, Community Institute, second event: hreggl ;f"“' fi{) l;‘efif.‘c?g! ‘Tendencies :n Scul) " Wi eld at Central Au- ditorium, 8:30 o'clock. s District Council, Royal Ar meets at 8 o'clock 1h Pythian Temple. A planoforte recital will be recital wi t the Third Baptist Church, P and G , OITOW an da; 8:30 o'clock. i A dinner and bazaar for the bene- it of the Ladies Aid Society and Alpha Bible class, will be given at St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, Eighth . and B streets southwest tomorrow and Friday, 4:30 to 7:30 pm. The next meeting of the Brightwood Citizens’ Association will be hel"!'l"rldny. at old Brightwood School, 6100 Georgia avenue, 8 p.m. Miss Sybil er of the District Community Center will speak at the Park View Platoon School, P. T. A, tomorrow evening at 8o'clock. Bt. Gertrude’s Guild will have its next monthly meeting in the home of Mrs. Eva T. Kilkoff, 3323 Eighteenth street northwest, Friday afternoon, November 8, 3 o'clock. ‘The Chinese minister, Dr. Wu, will speak before the members of the ‘Twentieth Centry Club, on China, to- morrow noon, at Barker Hall, Y. W.C. A, Rummage sale at All Saints’ Episco- gl Church, 2026 Fourteenth street, morrow and Friday. A card party will be given by th National Review Womln'lg‘B!neflyt Aae- sociation, 1750 Massachusetts avenue, mar;ow evening, 8:30 o'clock. Public vited. h Kit Cll'xon,wWA R':u 0., No. 11, will ave n” tomorrow evening at 8 o'l in G. A. R. Hall. ‘The Curley Club will present a minstrel revue and dance Friday, No- vember 15, 8 pm., at St. Stephen's Hall, Twenty-fo , for the benefit of the archbishop’s scholar- ship fund. e Nine hours sleep, four hours off duty every day, and special inspectors for haycocks in the center of the disturbed areas. Crack Opened Under Sledges. In our first two camps south of the pressure area we heard an almost con- tinuous rumble of cracking ice. During the first night on the apparently solid Barrier to the south we awoke to find that a narrow crevasse had opened im- mediately under Walden's and Braath- en’s sledges. ‘There were many discussions over the pemmican on the remainder of the trip minutes S. as to the proper title for the aréa we had crossed. We finally decided upon “Chasm Pass.” Innumerable patches of blue light a few feet to right and left of our zigzag trail were the only indications of chasms today. The haycocks and jagged walls and peaks were merged 200 Crevasses in 2 Miles. Blue lines crossed and recrossed our trall where the dogs had broken through into narrow crevasses. ‘We paused once to look down. The Misses “Scotty” Featuring the new “Scotty” overlapping tougue — adding a delightfully sportive air—to a juvenile, shoe distinguished for quality. Rich, dark brown Lotus calf. Also ] at our other stores food and sleeping accommodations will be compulsory for all domestic servants in Germany if a bill to go before the ext German Parliament becomes a ", ‘The geologic rty of the Byrd Ex- 8 seven men, scien- and an experien ve set out over the 'm by the support arty for 200 miles, with supply depots id at 50-mile intervals, From the last depot_southward over the Barrier, the geological unit _will sledge another 200 miles to the Queen Maud Mountains, where they will undertake & survey solve problems of the Antarctic terrain. BY RUSSELL OWEN. By Radio to The Star and the New York Times. LITTLE AMERICA, Antarctica, No- vember 4—The Bryd geological party started this afternoon on their sledging journey of more than 400 miles to the Queen Maud Mountains at the edge of the polar plateau. They will be away three months and nearly a month will be spent in surveying and collect- ing geological data in this important and little known part of the Antarctic. ‘They will travel with light sledges for at least 100 miles and possibly 40 or 50 miles farther if the snowmobile has been able to haul their loads for- ward from the point where they were left on the former trip. ‘They also will meet the supporting g‘larty return and be able to obtain m them valuable information as to the deeply crevassed area over which they must travel before again reaching the solid Barrier. Dogs Wildly Excited at Start. ‘Team after team was harnessed after lunch to a.chorus of howls and barks, the dogs straining at their picket ropes, snapping at each other and plunging in their traces in mad excitement. When fantastic blue darkened into purple, then to black. A few yards more and another blue line appeared. Bursey's leader tried to jump, but the trace caught and he dropped in. We mngd and got him on safe ground again. ‘Walden counted 200 crevasses which crossed 2 miles of our trail through the heart of the disturbance. He did not attempt to count the open chasms everywhere to right and left, thowgh many of them were so close that we could see where the blue merged into with' the | black. ‘Tonight we are within an easy week’s march of Little America and a warm bunk. Chasm Pass seems very much like a dream. (Copyright, 1929, by the New York Times Co. and the Bt. Louls Post-Dispatch. All rights for publication ~reserved " throughout the Smart New Shoes for Modern Misses’ Sizes, 1% t02.....85 Junior Women’s, 214 10 7..$6,50 1207 F St. BYRD GEOLOGICAL PARTY STARTS 400-MILE TREK TO MOUNTAINS Scientists to Travel 200 Miles Over Route Charted by Supporting Group Who Laid Supply Depots. two could get near enough there was a momentary squabble and fight untii they were pulled apart. Getting ready to go on the trail is the best fun they know. The last litter of pups, little fellows, sniffed at the bigger dogs’ noses and were tolerated. They were like a lot of small boys wishing they could be grown up, too. When the last team was harnessed and every one in camp had shaken hands with the six men in the party and Comdr. Byrd had wished them good luck, team after team rushed down the slope to the inlet and out to the Bay, where they turned south to- ward the Barrier. Leader Shows Delight. ‘The leader of the party is Dr. Laur- ence M. Gould, geologist of the expe- light he felt at getting away at last to a place that should be a geologist's paradise. The others are Norman Vaughan, & powerfully built man muffied in a woollen parka under a windproof until he looked even bigger than he is; Eddie Goodale, tall, thin and serious; Fred Crockett, the youngest of the drivers, smiling a broad grin, goggles fastened over his green knitted helmet; Mike Thorne, lithe and hard and with re- markable stamina despite his smaller stature, and Jack O’Brien, with the trim lines of an athlete in his snugly fitting garb, wearing a shade over his eyes which made him resemble a jockey. They intend to travel about 20 miles a day, even though their loads are light, 50 as not to tire the dogs on the first stage of the journey. They expect to reach the mountains about the end of the month. Copyright, 1920 By The New York Times Company and Th St. Louls Post-Dispatch. All Tights for pube lication reserved throughout the world. . In connection with its centenary cele- bration next Summer, Montevideo, Uru- guay, will construct three new hotels, a lighthouse of granite or marble and ex- pensive illuminations. we are offering Prices range from dition, whose face reflected all the de- | To encourage early ARMS DELEGATES SAIL IN JANUARY White Star Liner Olympic Tentatively Chosen by the State Department. By the Associated Press. The American delegation to the Lon- don Arms Conference is now expected to sail for England on the White Star liner Olympic January 11. State Department officials who are preparing for the departure of the | American commission had expected the Leviathan, queen of the American mer- chant marine, could be used, but if present plans for the conference are followed, that ship would land the dele- gation in England three or four days too late for the first meeting. Tentative plans have already been made for the Japanese delegation to sall for England on the Olympic De- cember 20, since that commission will desire to confer with British officials be- fore the conference meets. The Jap- anese delegation expects to spend only a few days in Washington, en route to London, for conferences with President Hoover, Secretary Stimson, the chief American delegate, and other American officials. Both the Olympic and the French liner France sail for Europe January 11, and would land the American con- tingent in England in ample time for the conference. It is considered pos- sible that a large part of the Ameri- can _delegation, including advisory members and members of the staff, could sail on the United States liner Republic, which will arrive in English waters too long before the parley to be taken by the high ranking members of the American commission. “While holding to thelr natlve costume native women of India have adopted the fashion of wearing American silk hosiery. AN RN b 3 We Can Supply Everything to Enclose Your Back Porch We have ] the necessary ng window frames _windows, Celotex. Bheetrock. paint and hardware. Small Orders Given Careful Attentlon—No Delivery Charge J. Frank Kelly, Inc. 2101 Georgia Ave. N.1343 Lumber — Millwork — Du _Pont Paints — Coal — Hardware — Bullding Supplies vk ke dokokokok * * R 8.0.8.8.0.8.8.2.9.9 »* * %* * »* * of 100 Easy Chairs LAZY BOY—ROYAL EASY, Etc. We invite your in- spection of this mag- nificent display of Easy Chairs. You will find a mnice comfortable chair for Daddy or Mother that we will lay aside for Xmas delivery. No deposit is required until de- livery is made. Xmas shopping attractive values $15.00 to $150.00 0. J. DeMOLL & CO. Pianos—Radios—Victrolas—Furniture Twelfth and G Sts. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1929, 5 MOVIE ACTRESSES ] HAVE REAL DOUBLES Some Said to Look More Like Hollywood Originals Than Originals. By the Assoclated Press. HOLLYWOOD, November 6.—"“Even a cat may look at a king. And there being as yet no law against an extra's looking like a movie queen, many of them do. The studios, the streets of Hollywood, are decorated by scores of girls who, so far as facial appearance is con- cerned, might pass easily for those glittering screen celebrities whose looks are the envy of girls all over the world. And all, or most of these doubles are mere extras or chorus girls, many of them seen in more pictures than the stars they resemble, but unknown to movie fans. Hollywood's - most famous double— which does not in the instances here cited mean that the double substitutes for the star in her perilous movie ex- ploits—is Geraldine De Vorak. More Like Greta Garbo. Geraldine, as one wag puts it, is more like Greta Garbo than Garbo herself. An extra, she has served as “stand-in girl" for Greta, and recently received wide publicity because a fan magazine described the manner in which she had adopted all the mannerisms of the star, imitating Garbo's clothes, her walk, her expressions. For that realism, Geraldine stands foremost in the list of star dupli- cates, but there are others. On a single set of “The Vagabond King,” for instance, one day, could be seen Jean Douglas, an extra who be- comes a ‘“dead ringer” fer Pauline Starke with the aid of a brown wig, and Thora Waverly, who is frequently mis- taken for Myrna Loy. ‘With these two were Cecile Cameron, a girl whose resemblances to Gloria Swanson, from certain angles, is pro- nounced; Rae Murray, reminiscent of Alice Terry, and two others who bear much likeness to Anita Page and Vir- ginia Lee Corbin. But it avails them naught in movie prominence . . . most of them will be seen as ladies- in-waiting to the queen of the talkie. titian-haired girl named ‘Valda West, who strikes one as a blonde Anita Stewart, recently shared an apartment with Jeanne Buttner, a brunette Bessie Love, and Cortez Alley, who has “stood in” for Irene Bordoni. Mistakes Often Occur. And the movie choruses are filled with girls whose friends in all truth can tell them they “look like” various stars. Irene Thompson, a contract chorus girl, often is pointed out as Billie Dove, and Rosita Forshay, a New York chorus girl gone movie, resembles Dolores Costello. Beatrice Lillie is a famous star of the stage and more recently of the screen, but Josephine Bernhardt, a double for her, still steps in the chorus, Carmel Myers gets featured billing, while Jewel Richford, who photographs enough like her to be her sister, works beside Josephine, along with Ruth Metz- ger, who looks like Mary Astor, and Jean Morgan, who even has Betty Compson’s famous crooked smile. Carlotta King became known to the fans as the singing lead in “The Desert New Comfort for Those Who Wear FALSE TEETH No longet does any wearer of false teeth need to be uncomfortable. Pasteeth, a new. greatly improved powder, sprinkied oo ubper or lower plates, holds them firm and comfortable. N gooey, pasty taste or feeling, 2 t_ Fastee! ay at ples Drug s Or any other good drus store— Advertisement. Two G. 0.P. Senators Bear Name of Roscoe Conkling, 70s Leader ‘The Senate will have two Re- publican _Senators named after Senator Roscoe Conkling of New York, & Republican leader of 40 years ago, when Roscoe Cqnkling McCulloch of Ohio takes seat next week. Senator Patterson of Missouri also has the name Roscoe Conk- ling. Both Senator Patterson and Mr. McCulloch, who has been appointed to succeed the late Senator Burton of Ohilo, were born when the New York Re- publican leader, Roscoe Conkling, was at the height of his stormy career in the late seventies. Song,” which won her a long-term con- tract, but Janet Chandler, almost her duplicate, has only a chorus contract. Fannie Brice, too, is a household name now, but you probably never heard of Bee Lee, another of the stepper-kick- ers, who is just a shade prettier than Fannie. So they pass in review, these hum- bler movie workers, with their physical charms rivaling those of the stars. ‘There are scores of them. Did the stars simply get started first? Or do their doubles lack the fire, the person- ality—or the all-important voice—which would raise them from the ranks? ‘There’s a riddle. Meanwhile, “even a cat may look at a king,” and the extra girl may look like a quéen—for all the good it does either of them. SEIZE[)_L|0U6R ASSESSED. Florida Man, Awaiting Trial as Violator, Asked to Pay $10,200. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., November 6 (#).—The Government offered a new idea in prohibition law enforcement here yesterday. Jim Hysler, at whose home county officials recently seized 1,700 gallons of liquor, was asked to pay $10,200 Gov- ernment tax on the confiscated supply. Notice of the assessment was served on Hysler today, under the internal revenue law and calling for the $6 per gallon Federal liquor tax. Hysler is awaiting trial on charges of possessing the liquor. Continuous Post Bed 4 ft.6in.or 3 ft. 3 in. Wide A renl value. Splendidly made and finished. Our o policy is to sell only furniture of the better grades. Credit, of Course GROGAN'S Kiddies Nite . T “udio Y5 ere we 9° —h W‘" FolkSBuMd Boys . the aife . of lgd wme’ OY€ all f 2 an Kiddies: tonite ¢ r oM 25 with 817-823 Seventh St.N.W. “Homefurnishers Since 1866 Issued to Readers of the ‘SPEAKER PORTRAYS RED CROSS NEEDS Various Activities Outlined by Walter Davidson in Address to Citizens’ Body. The multiple phases of Red Cross activity, including organization, collec- tion of funds and distribution of re- lief, were discussed last night by Walter Davidson, assistant manager of the Eastern area, Americas Red Cross, be- fore the Devonshire Downs Citjgens’ As- sociation, meeting in the Hom€ for the Incurables, Thirty-eighth and’ Upton streets. Mr. Davidson sald one major dis- aster annually for the past seven years has taxed every resource of the na- tional organization. He urged the citi- zens to support the annual roll calls and to co-operate with the local chapter of the Red Cross. William J. Neale, first vice president, presided at the meeting. Four new members were admitted, Horace T. Jones, Anthony J. Barrett and Mr. and Mrs, Charles W. Hughes. CUBAN TARIFF STUDIED. HAVANA, November 6 (#).—Adequate protection for Cuban agricultural in- terests not specifically protected under present tarifts will be the basis of re- forms to be studied by alspecial tech= nical commission soon. Dr. Rafael Martinez Ortiz, secretary of state, said yesterday that Cuban agricultural interests are not accordea necessary tariff protection. He saia reforms were greatly needed ana would be promulgated, which means that many farm products now enter- ing Cuba free of duty or with small tariff charges will then be forced to pay_higher rate: HOTEL SWIMMING POOL Swim for health and pleasure in heated, filtered water puri- fled by Ultra-Violet Rays. 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