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E EVENING STAR. WASHINGTO D. ONDAY, JUNE 23, 1930. DR. LYON OUTLINES TRADE CONDITIONS, U. S. Commercial Attache to Switzerland Addresses Delta Phi Epsilon. Americans must awake to the fact that trade and commerce in Europe are approaching solidarity, Charles E. Lyon, United States commercial attache to Switzerland, said last evening in an ad- dress at the sixth national convention banquet of Delta Phi Epsilon, the first Professional foreign service fraternity. Dr. Lyon, Prof. Alfred H. Hasg, di- rector of the research bureau of the United States Shipping Board; William F. Notz, dean of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown Univer- | sity, and Dr. Leo Drew O'Neil, director in the College of Business Administra- tion, Boston University, were speakers 8t the banquet, which was held in the Carlton Hotel. Conditions Must Be Studied. Foreign trade is crystalizing in Europe, Dr. Lyon said, adding that Englan and Germany are aware of the fact and | are studying the situation. Foreign service officers must study the condition in Europe, especially in the next few months, he said. In discussing the place held by foreign service officers in different countries, Dr. Lyon said that the terminology used in describing the officers, such as minister, secretary, consul and commercial agent, were misleading and that Americans. should avail themselves of the facilities offered by these agencies abrcad. Other speakers during the convention expressed the opinion that the United States is entering a trying period in respect to world trade, but that the Nation 1is established firmly in the markets of the world and would re- main so. Notz Is Elected President. ‘The convention observed the tenth anniversary of the founding of the fraternity. The Alpha Chapter of the Georgetown University School of For- elgn Service was host to the meeting. . Notz was elected president of the Delta Phi Epsilon at the conclusion of its sixth convention yesterday. Other officers of the fraternity, which has chapters in many parts of the coun- try, were chosen as follows: Harold Dot~ teren, chief of the District office, Bu- reau of Foreign and Dome:tic Com- merce, treasurer; Dr. Walter E. Jaeger, professor at the Univesity of Maryland general sec- assistant ision, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, | corresponding secretary. During the afternoon the delegates to the convention were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Notz at a reception in their home. Among other guests were n merous diplomatic representatives, cluding the Spanish Ambassador and Senora Padilla, the Norwegian Minister, Mr. Halvard H. Bachke, the Nicaraguan Minister and Mme. Sacasa, and the Ecuadorian Minister and Mme. Viteri. Los Angeles was chosen for the next convention; which will be held in 1932. JUAREZ MOB CRIES FOR LIFE OF TEXAN Blaying of Bartender by Youth Arouses Thousands—Prisoner Guarded by Troops. By the Assoclated Press. EL PASO, Tex, June 23.—Several thousand men and women, mostly bar- tenders, waiters and their relatives, yes- terday staged a demonstration in Juarez 838 a gesture to judicial offic’als in their | demand that J. H. “Jefl” Meers, an| American, should pay the maximum nalty in the killing of Antonio isconte, bartender, who was shot Wednesday night in a Juarez saloon. The maximum penalty for first-degree murder is life in prison. Plans were being made to smuggle Meers out of Juarez to Chihuahua City to vent possible violence. Federal had been guarding the Juarez Jall for several days. Meers, an El Paso youth, claimed he Visconte in the belief he was who shot Meers’ father in an sttempted hold-up in EIl Paso five years | ";nr- officers were ordered to pre- yent & destructive demonstration at cost. Only through the efforts of | Romero, & union leader, was a averted. APT. C. L. WALKER DIES| Was Attached to Coast Artillery| School at Fort Monroe. Clyde Le G. Walker, attached hm‘ Coast Artillery School at Fort | Monroe, Va., died at that post last Fri- | day, according to War Department ad- vices. Born at Fayetteville, W. Va,| September 18, 1893, Capt. Walker en- | tered the Army in August, 1917, as a second lieutenant in the Coast Artillery. | During the World War he served in the Signal Corps, and in 1923 was reas-| signed to the Coast Artillery. His widow, Mrs. Arline M. Walker, is at Fort Monroe. | SERVICE IS DOUBLED | | | i Capttal-to-New York Plane Line Is Expanded. Following a week of regular operation between the National Capital and New | York, Eastern Air Express today an- nounced a doubling of service on it | new passenger line. The first flight on the new schedule was made this morning by a 20-passenger Sikorsky biplane, with a tri-motored transport to follow on an afterncon run. | The full two-way schedule will begin tomorrow. Planes will leave Grand Central Air Terminal, New York. a 9:30 am. and 4 pm. standard time arriving at Hoover Field at 11:45 am | and 6:14 pm. Northbound, the plane: are scheduled to leave Hoover Field at 9 am. and 3:30 pm. arriving in New York 2 hours and 15 minutes later. FOR RENT Two Bed Rooms, Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bath and Reception Room. Electric Refrigeration. Reasonable Rental THE ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Road 2001 16th St. N.W. Exceptionally attractive apartments of three out- side rooms, reception hall, bath and large kitchen. Electric refrig- eration. Reasonable Rentals Dr. | | Bethlehem, for use in the injunction | the committee in arranging the pro- ;U DITORS EXAMINE BETHLEHEM STEEL Work Under Court Order Granted | Opponents of Merger With Youngstown Co. By the Assoclated Press. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohlo, June 23.—Be- | tween 30 and 40 auditors and appraisers | will begin today to investigate the | books and records of the Bethlehem | Steel Corporation to gather data de-| manded by opponents of the merger of | the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. with suit which will come to trial next Wed- nesday. The auditors will work under the di- | rection of Ernst & Ernst, and their work | will be limited by a journal entry signed today by Judge David G. Jenkins, which will protect trade secrets of Bethlehem from inquiry. . Judge Jenkins gave merger opponents | permission to make an audit of the Bethlehem books Friday. Counsel for Bethlehem came into court Saturday with a request that Ernst & Ernst be | barred from making the audit, however, | because this firm is also auditors for | the Republic Steel Corporation and other companies in which Cyrus S.| Eaton, chief opponent of the Bethlehem | merger, is the dominant stockholder. | The request was denied. Both sides made a compromise that the auditors should not inquire into| salaries and bonuses of Bethlehem, or | into lists of customers, contracts, costs | of steel products or other trade secrets not pertinent to the case, but that| Behlehem would have such information in court when the merger suit is tried. LT e S City Employes Plan Outing. | An excursion to Chesapeake Beach | on August 2 will be given by the City | Employes Associaiton in celebration of their thirteenth birthday. H George T. Bowman is chairman of | gram, which will include a beauty con- us; & swimming contest and a prize ‘wal The Prince of Wales launched the new giant Canadian Pacific liner Tt is a 40,000-ton vessel. which is fully expected to establish a new record for the Southampton-Quebec Atlantic crossing. This is the largest British ship to be launchedo since the Aquitania left the sli of instruction, Saturday piloted a plane STUDENT FLIES PL AS TEACHER FIXES LANDING GEAR Instructor Clings to Wing to Make Repairs in Air, Saving Both From Probable Death. By the Assoclated Press. ATLANTA, June 23.—A flying stu- dent, John Cramer, with but five hours | for the first time in his life while his teacher, F. W. Elmore, clung to a wing and repaired the landing gear to save them both from probable death. | Just after Elmore took the plane up | bystanders on the field saw the entire | right sectioh of the landing gear bresk | off and dangle by a slender suppor! Prolonged gesturing directed Elmore's mpress of Britain the other day at Clydebank. | T | | —P. & A. Photo. | ANE FIRST TIME attention to his plight and he met it by intrusting Cramer with the piloting | and crawling out on the wing for the dangerous repair job. Cramer kept the plane on an even keel while Elmere | used sirips from his shirt and pleces | of line from pockets of the ship to bind the gear in place. He then crawled back to the cockpit and made a safe | landing. | Candler Field experts said an attempt | to land the plane with the loose gear | would almost certainly have resulted | fatally. | BOY IS HURT BY BAT Nine-Year-Old Spectator of Game| Is Injured Seriously. While watching a base ball game be- tween the Mohawk and St. Joseph's teams on the Union Station Plaza Play- ground yesterday afternoon, Robert De- Filippis, 9 years old, of 1012 Third | street northeast, accidentally was struck by a bat thrown by one of the players and severely injured. Robert was not far from the home plate when he was struck. Dr. John Farrington of 302 K_street northeast. LUMBER Get Our Estimate On All Your Needs MILLWORK Complete Stock at All 3 Branches plaving with the St. Josep! team, gave first ald before the boy was taken to Casualty Hospital, | It was found at the hospital that e boy was suffering from concussion of the brain and lacerations of the scalp. He was detained for treatment and observation, BULOVA’S NEWEST sie et | Arkansa: “MISS AMERICA” 43730 Just as pictured... you see the HEALTH OFFICIALS | ALLAYTYPHUS FEAR Eight Cases of Fever, Onei Ending Fatally, Are Re- ported Near D. C. ! Eight cases of typhus fever, one of which resulted in the death of a man in Fairfax County, Va. have been re- ported to the United States Bureau of | Public Health in the last few days, but officials of the bureau stated today that there is no cause for uneasiness on the part of the public. The malady, which proved fatal in the case of Harry Gasson, 55 years old, an employe of the War Department, who lived at Seminary Hill, near Alex- andria, Va., is & mild form of the typhus’ disease, Dr. C. C. Plerce of the Public Health Bureau said today. Gas- son died May 25 after an illness of a week. Laboratory tests conducted here confirmed the diagnosis of his illness as_typhus, \ Dr. Plerce said that seven cases, five | in Maryland and’two in Virginia, in- cluding the Gasson case, had been re- ported to the bureau and that in none of six of the cases was the illness particularly serious. The form which is in evidence is much milder than the type which was prevalent in Poland and other countries during the World War, Dr. Plerce said. He added that the bureau’s interest in the disease was scientific, rather than in the nature of combatting a health hazzard. ‘The other Virginia case involved a family living near Fort Humphreys, Va. Five-year-old Clayton Shepherd, the son of Theodore Shepherd, a civilian worker at the Army post, Was report- ed to be recovering from the feyer. Dr. Pierce said there Was no reason for ap- prehension at the post, but it was understood that Col. Edward Schultz, the commandant, had ordered an in- vestigation as a precautionary measure. Dr. William C. Fowler, District health officer, sald that all the cases reported thus far were outside the jurisdiction of the District office and that he felt “absolutely no uneasiness” about the situation. The Public Health Service is endeav- oring to locate the carrier of the disease, being of the opinion that its origin is not the same as that of the typhus known in Europe. AMERICANS ENTERTAINED CHERBOURG, June 23 (#).—Senior officers of the American battleship di- vision on the midshipmen’s cruise today | were entertained at luncheon by the maritime prefect, Vice Admiral Basire. Samuel H. Wiley, American consul, and Fred H. Houck, vice consul, were among the guests. Rear Admiral Clu- verius accepted the toast of the French vice admiral as commander of the di- vision and invited the party to dinner Saturday on the United States ship| Italy's population is now estimated at | CREATION Your Neigbohood 4&SCO Store eeps Living Costs Down! In every one of the 45C0 Stores listed below you will find Highest Quality Foods and Table Needs in season, and will realize that 401 E. Capitol St. 739 N. Capitol St. 1719 N. Capitol St. 1779 Columbia Road N.W . 5008 Connecticut Ave. N.W. 5538 Connecticut Ave. N.W, 3325 Connecticut Ave. 1910 First St. N.W. 206 “G” St. N.-W. 4826 Georgia Ave. N.W. 6235-37 Georgia Ave. N.W. 804 “I1” St. N.E. 1348 Good Iope Road S.E. F12 R St NeW. 930 Touisiana Ave. N.W. 3107 “M?” St. N'W. 3180 Mt. Pleasant St. N.W. 2218 Nichols Ave. S.E. 1438 Park Road N.W. 500 Cider or White Distil Vinegar big bot. Imgrovu the Flavor of Salads! 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