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A—4 - w» —_— TALKS SCHEDULED ~ ON CONSTITUTION Address by Marvel Tonight | Will Inaugurate Program Sponsored by Bar. A Constitution week program, spon- gored by the American Bar Association, will be inaugurated tonight at 6 o'clock with a radio address by the newly elected bar president, Josiah Marvel of Wilmington, Del., whose message on “The Spirit of the Constitution” will be broadeast from station WEAF, New York, ver the network of the Na- nal Broadeasting Co. O, Marvel will introduce his address by reading a letter from President Hoover indorsing the program of the bar association. Next Wednesday eve- ning, which is the anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution, Repre- gentative James M. Beck of Pennsylva- nia, former solicitor general of the United States and one of the outstand- ing authorities on the Constitution, will | broadeast a speech over the network of the Columbia system. ~Col. Thad Brown, general counsel of the Federal Radio Commission, will address the | Pidac delegates in New York on the| following evening, under the auspices of the bar committee. The address will | be delivered at the Wardi~~1 Park Hotel at & dinner at which = .n. Per- shing will preside. The otner speaker will be Col. Bodenhamer, national com- mander of the American Legion. Tilson Will Speak. Next Friday John Q. Tilson, majority leader of the House, will speak on the Constitution over a national network from New York City. on the program are Solicitor General ‘Thomas pDOnghauher. Charles Warren and Frank J. Hogan of this city. Local committees of the District Bar ‘Association are distributing thousands of copies of the Constitution and ob- servations made on it by American leaders, g)r:h:glnf %l’!slfident Hoover and former President Coolidge. . Clergymen have been asked to make special mention of the Constitution in their sermons Sunday, and hand books furnishing information and commen- taries will be furnished them upon re- uest. . The District of Columbia Bar Asso- ciation, of which J. Miller Kenyon is president, and the Federal Bar Asso- clation, of which William R. Vallance, mssistant solicitor of the State Depart- ment, is president, are actively engaged in preparations for Constitution week. Local Sponsers of Program. ‘The local sponsors of the program are the following: Chief Justice Alfred A. Wheat, Jus- tice Wendall P. Stafford, Justice Fred- erick L. Siddons, Justice William Hitz, Justice Jennings Bailey, Justice Jesse C. Adkins, Justice Oscar R. Luhring, Justice Joseph W. Cox, T. Scott Offutt, Leo Rover, Col. J. Miller Kenyon, Wil- liam W. Bride, J. Harry Covington, Dr. David Jayne Hill, John Joy Edson, Julius I Peyser, Wade H. Ellis, Thomas P. Littlepage, Charles Warren, George E. Hamilton, Frederic D. McKenney, John Spaulding Flannery, Dr. Herbert L. Wright, Col. U. 8. Grant, 3d, Willlam J. Hughes, John E. Laskey, John Lewis :m}fl’l. Joseph A. Burkart, Willlam C. Gann, Maurice D. Rosenberg, Manson, G. Thomas Dunlop, Roger J. Whiteford, E. A. Harriman, George C. Shinn, Sidney F. Taliaferro, Alvin L. Newmyer, Edward Clifford, Harlan ‘Wood, Dr. Hugh J. Fegan, Willlam P. MacCracken, jr.; Willlam R. Vallance gnd Col. Walter C. Clephane. The District of Columbia committee, of which F. Regis Noel is_chairman, consists of the following: William C. Charles 8. 3 , rt_F. Cogswell, Theodo: Cogswell, Paul B. Cromelin, F. Joseph Donohoe, Arthur P. Drury, Norman B. Frost, Clifford P. Grant, Harry A. Grant, George E. Hamilton, jr.; Prancis W. Hill, jr.; George D. Horning, jr.; ‘Woodson P. Houghton, William J. Hughes, jr.; Richmond Keech, E. Ru sell Kelly, Edmund L. Jones, John Larson, Bolitha J. Laws, George E. Mc- Neill, Frank P. Nesbit, David A. Pine, Rafferty, Henry Ravenel, Smith, Prederick Stohlman, H. Vandoren, Richard H. Wil- mer, T. Gillespie Walsh, Joseph C. Mc- Garraghy, Victor S. Mersch and Ken- meth N. Parkinson. Painting Called Safest Job. SPRINGFIELD, IIl, (#).—Painters fncur the least liability to fatal acci- dents, a survey of the hazards among occupational groups made by the Ili- nois State Department of Health has Tevealed. Liability is greatest for elec- tric linemen, oil and gas field rig build- {Program to Be Announced . | “International Good | pose is to weld together with bonds of evening Representative Other speakers expected to be| NGTO! Mary Coste, wife of Capt. Dieudonne Coste, surrounded by flowers in t and reading the congratulatory telegrams which began to it was learned her husband and Maurice Bellonte had safely Ianded at Curtiss Field, Long Island, after making a non-stop flight from Paris. —A. P. Photo. WORLD ALLIANCE SESSIONS PLANNED to Committeemen at Sunday Meeting. Speakers and program for the an- nual congress of the World Alliance for International Priendship Through the Churches, to be held here November 10, 11 and 12, will be announced at a pre- liminary meeting of national and local :ommitteemen Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the Willard Hotel. ‘The preliminary conference will be addressed by Fred B. Smith, chairman of the Executive Committee of the World Alliance and moderator of the Congregational Churches of America, and Harry N. Holmes, Linley V. Gordon and Charles Stelzle, members” of the National Committee. ;Iv'k‘lle] theme will be Clarence Aspinwall, chairman of the Jocal Comittee on Arrangements for the November congress, will preside at the Sunday meeting. Approximately 100 leaders in religious, social welfare and civic circles of Washington compose the local committee. ‘The World- Alliance movement is an outgréwth of the World War. Its pur- international friendship and under- standing all peoples of the earth, werk- ing chiefly through the agency of the churches. The annual congresses are held dur- ing the Armistice day period and at- tract large delegations of church lead- ers from all parts of the United States ar;d from a number of foreign coun- tries, ‘Woman Plants 6,000 Pines. FORT VALLEY, Ga. (P).—Georgia's first woman to engage in reforestation work is Mrs. Mattie Flournoy of Fort Valley. 8he has planted 6,000 lobiolly | pines on her farm this year in co- operation with the forestry department ers, explosive handlers and miners. Explosive Darts Again Permitted Spanish Toreros w Regulations Subject Horses Only to One Goring in Arena. MADRID (#).—Explosive darts can now be used again in bullfighting, after having been abolished by the former dictator, Gen. Primo de Rivera. Fireworks Spears Permitted. New government regulations for bull- fighting permit use of the “fireworks spears.” They are used only when a bull is very “cowardly” and is not suf- ficiently enraged at the men who are tormenting him, preparatory to the kill. Short spears with the metal barb carrying a sort of firecracker are stuck into the bull's shoulders. The gun- powder explodes in his flesh. That usually arouses the animal into a suf- ficlent frenzy to satisfy the crowd. Horses Given Slight Boon. ‘The new regulations, while harder on the bulls, give some relief to the old hacks of horses who totter into the ring to die on the bull's horns. Heretofore when a horse was ripped open by the horns it was sewed up and the horse was made to face other bulls, was sewed up again, and so on for as many times as_possible, until he died. It is now provided that when a horse is once gored he shall not be patched up and used again in the ring. The old regulations gave him no chance to live. The new ones do, if he can sur- vive one goring. SIAM TURNS TO GOLF BANGKOK (N.AN.A)—When the King of Siam presented a silver cup to the winner of Siam's first open golf championship (in which 10 Eng- lishmen, 1 Dane and 1 American com- peted) he expressed his hopes for the production of a Siamese Bobby Jones, with Siamese professionals playing tournaments in other countries. of the State College of Agriculture. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paper_Alliance.) OUR WASHINGTON by Joseph B. Himmelheber A Series of Drawings of Beautiful Washington in The Rotogravure Section of The Sunday Star . . . . LREADY the drawings of The Washington Cathedral and the Downtown Shopping Dis- trict have created wide comment. Next Sun- day in THE SUNDAY STAR there will be another study equally impressive, equally beautiful. Pos- sibly you will want to frame them or send them to a friend or relative. In any event look for this spe- cial feature. Order Your Copy of Next Sunday’s Star NOW! The Sunday St The Great Ne wspaper of The Nation’s Capital FLYERS T0 START GOOD WILL FLIGHT Coste and Bellonte Will Visit Larger Cities on Air Tour. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 12.—Dieu- donne Coste and Maurice Bellonte, French transatlantic fiyers, will start | Monday upon a 15,000-mile good will | tour across the country, during which they will fly over 100 cities in 30 States. Their itinerary will take them up New England to Boston, thence westward across the northern part of the country to Seattle, down the Pacific Coast and eastward over a Southern route, then up the Atlantic Coast back to New York. The flight is expected to require 25 days. To Visit Larger Cities. Stops will be made in 29 of the larger cities overnight or for lunch. The iy~ | ers plan to circle over the other places | on their route and drop messages of greeting, They will fly over State capi- tals wherever possible. The stopping places indicated are | Boston, Cleveland, Indlanapolis (for lunch), Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee (lunch), Minneapolis (Sunday stop- over), Omaha (lunch), Denver, Salt Lake, Boise (lunch), Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles (Sunday | stop-over), Phoenix (lunch), El Paso, | San Antonio, Oklahoma City (lunch), | Kansas City, St. Louls, Memphis | (lunch), New Orleans (Sunday stop- over), Pensacola (lunch), Atlanta, Win- ston Salem (lunch), Richmond, Balti- more (lunch), Philadelphia. Plane Propeller Cracked. Charles Hayden, chairman of the committee sponsoring the flight, said the itinerary chosen was not as exten- sive as that of Col. Charles A. Lind- bergh's flight in 1927 because of the limited time at the disposal of the French flyers and because it would en- tail too great a strain upon them. ‘The decision to begin the flight Mon- day was reached when it was found the propeller of their monoplane, the Ques- tion Mark, could be made serviceable. After discovery of a crack in it the fly- ers ordered & new one shipped from France. They later decided to use the cracked one until the new one arrives. Maj. George Whitten will be tour manager and fly in a Department of Commerce plane as an escort to the Question Mark. EINSTEIN URGES Fl;LK TO APPRECIATE SCIENCE | Voice Is Thrown Five Miles as He Opens Berlin Wireless Exhibit, Praising “Defined Curiosity.” BERLIN (N.AN.A).—“The source of all technical conquest is defined curi- osity,” said Prof. Einstein, when he opened the Berlin wireless exhibition and he said that users of radio service shou'< be ashamed if they never paused to consider the wonders of science at their disposal. The great hall of the exhibition has seven televisors, all working at once, and giving different programs, while the gentle voice of Einstein thundered all the way fgrom the Funkturm to the Alexanderplatz, a distance of five miles, his words being broadcast by the loudest amplifier ever constructed. That “defined curiosity” prompts many German listeners to tune in their sets to forelgn programs with rigid regularity. There are large numbers of Germans, in all positions in life, for | whom a talk from London means a cheap English lesson. They are passion- ately anxious to learn and to them the unfamiliar is most desirable. Sets capable of receiving distant sta- tions are in great demand among the German public. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paner Alliance.) 1904 Beacon to Be Relighted. ST. LOUIS, Md, (#).—An electric searchlight that was one of the mar- vels of the world’s fair in 1904 here is to be restored to service. The beacon, atop a building in University City, a ;ueburb, casts & 250,000,000-candlepower am. D. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1930. MARRIED 56 YEA Capt. Robert Dollar, merchant marine prince, and his wife at their San Rafael, Calif, home as they celebrated their fifty-sixth wedding anniversar~. They will soon sail for China, the thirty-sixth trip they have made to { ® Far East. VENDORS' LIGENSE | LIBERALIZING HIT Merchants & Manufacturers’ Governors Vote Protest to District Heads. A protest against the recent action of | the District Commissioners in liberal- | izing the licensed vendors' act was | voted yesterday by the board of gov- | ernors ‘of the Merchants and Manufac- | turers’ Association at the first meeting of the Fall season. | Edward D. Shaw, secretary, later addressed a letter to the Commissioners, in which he said that the new regula- tion would allow any kind of vehicle to take up a stand in the best residential neighborhoods and remain a whole day in a single block. The requirement that the vehicle move on every half hour, Shaw wrote, will be ineffective, since the vendor can move a few feet at & time and stay within the regulation. The new regu- lation excludes vendors, however, from arterial highways and boulevards. | Shaw held that the old regulations | were more desirable, since they desig- | nated certain stands in various parts of the city in which the vendors re- | main all day, but required them other- wllse to keep moving unless making a sale. The board also went on record against the proposed increase in the first-class mail rate from 2 to 21; cents an ounce on the ground that the present first- |class rate paid expenses, and the post office deficit was attributable to other | classes of mail. An expressicn was made in favor of the annual ‘“booster” outing next Spring, which was not held last year. | Shaw was authorized to represent the —P. & A. Photo. |jocal association at the annual conven- HEELS MATCH DRESS PARIS, (#).—Lame evening ensembles should be accompanied by slippers of the darkest color in the fabric, set off with lame heels and insets, according Good (redst an Asset * @onsolidate Vour Bills, Pay T hem Al and Kaep Your Credit Wanted Our ONE AND THE PRESS, in every sha Fall. well as conservative models, our windows. Tas LE A Big Clothing House Business— —and we told them that they could have it IF they met our exacting standards of tailoring and fabrics that have made DOUBLEWEAR SUITS FAMOUS ~—and IF they met a price that would allow us to announce this sensational offer! The Result:— Regular $40, $45, and $50 DOUBLEWEAR 2 PANTS SUITS ‘29 Beautiful hard finish materials that will HOLD de that is featured for Smart looking HOLLYWOOD STYLES as All sizes. See them in joB dhop tion of American Trade Association Executives at Niagara Falls, September to ide f aking specialist eas of one dressmaking specialist | Execu in metal brocades. ‘The same dressmaker puts heels of printed taffeta on slippers of plain color for wear with a dress of printed taffeta. e e e ——————————————————————————il Watch this $33 Diamond Nearly 1,500 American companies are now represented in Germany. 50c A Week Own the diamond of your dreams by starting with this brilliant stone at a moderate price. When you are ready you may trade it back to us at full value for a larger diamond. $125 &55 Ultra - modern square- Superb, flawless dia- set step mounting. Fice mond ‘in the modern diamonds. Pay only square mounting. Wear 32 @ week for this ring. it for only $I a week. ) Opposite Woodward and Lothrop 1004 F STREET N.W. 818 King St., Alexandria, Va. Sor HER70G s F Street at Q% * We Wouldn’t Be Wrong if We Called This a a I E BECAUSE when we can go out and get actual dupli- cates of suits we buy regularly (at prices from $10 to $20 under) it’s something to crow over <+ ++ REMEMBER that scores of them even have TWO PANTS. Regular $50, $45 & $40 One & 2-Pants Suits $28 Blue Serges, Hard-finish the New Fall Worsteds — in all the STETSON HATS season’s new shades and patterns. ‘All Sizes— No Charges for Al- terations. SOL HERZOG Inc. Originators of the Budget Buying Plan n Washington RALEIGH' HABERDASHER 1310 F Street . This is the only Store in Washington that sells Knox Hats for Men and Women. In colors to match every complexion, in sizes to fit every head, there is a hat “suitable for every occasion in the forty new styles we are showing in Knox hats for Autumn. FIFTH AVENUE “Special” THE BEVERLY 10 VOYAGEUR $750 RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street