Evening Star Newspaper, September 19, 1930, Page 3

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THE. EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1930.° . JAHNCKE STATES VIEWS ON PEACE Tells Fidac Measures Need Have Nothing in Common With Pacifism. (Continued From First Page.) the principal business hew president, until next Tuesday, of the sessions, when the congress will convene at the | Culver Military Academy in Indiana on *the brief Western tour of the delegates. With this matter settled, the congress recessed into committee meetings. to pass on matters of common interest to Veterans of the allied nations. Mem- bers of the Peace Committee met with , Gen. Sir Ian Hamilton, British hero of the Gallopi campaign, as chairman. The chairmen of the other committees were: Constitution and Finance, M. Demets of France; War Victims, M. Randoux of France; Propaganda, Col. E. C. Heath of Great Britain. Reports of officers were submitted at Athe. morning session of the congress and were filed without reading. Lieut. Col. Fred W. Abbot of Great Britain, the international president, pointed out that his visits to 8 of the 10 countries composing the federation convinced him that the Fidac is growing in importance | During_ the | as a world organization, the laison of past year, he. declared, Fidac with the younger generation has | Bojsheviki Captivity Horrible Ordeal. | demonstrated that the organization has laid a firm foundation on which it is | “prepared to build a home of peace.” | Consider Junior Fidac. | ColAbbot in his report called upon | the Fidac to consider seriously the sub- fect of a junior Fidac, either as & sep- | arate organization or through afliation | of the youth of the land within the | existing ~ organization, “If we are to| continue the ideals and ideas for which | we fought, it is necessary that we find the intermediary which will carry them | into the future.” he said | There are still hundreds of unsettled roblems for the attention of the War Victims Committee, the report pointed out. Of major importance, it stated, was the problem of standarized rating for invalidity in the various allied coun- tries so that a uniform attribution m: be accorded to all allied ex-service men in their countri Another equall the report stated, important problem. is the question of tracing sickness, resulting from war service, directly to that service. Ex- isting vs do not fully cover this situ- | ation which, he declared, is one which | the Pidac should serfously consider. Before the session of the Fidac Auxil- fary, Princess Cantacuzene, president of the women, declared in her report that | it 18 an urgent duty for the women to “safeguard peace.” Create Union of Hearts. to do it is to create she declared. “To ine auxiliary has never ceased working.” She pointed out that the auxiliary has done effective work for the assist- ance of war orphans and a plan for the | constitution of the Interallied Associa- | tion of War Orphans was to be sub- | mitted for the vote of the Fidac Con- gress. Her report reviewed at length the various activities being conducted in the different countries on behalf of war orphans and victims. Following the return of delegates from | Alexandria this afternoon, they will be’ the guests of Secretary of War Hurley at a dinner at the Congressional Coun- try Club. The speakers, in addition to Secretary Hurley, will be Dr. Thomas H. Healy, assistant dean of the George- town University School of Foreign Serv- ice, who will discuss the part that the veterans can take in reaching interna- tional understanding, and Lady Edward Spencer-Churchill of Great Britain. The principal matter before the con- gress tomorrow will be the presentation of the Fidac awards to the represenia- tives of three universities selected be- cause of their excellence of courses | tending to promote international under- standing and good will. Col. Abbot will make the presentations on behalf of the jury of awards. Hoover Voices Appreciation. | Following the opening plenary ses-'| elon yesterday afternoon the delegates were received at the White House by | the President and Mrs. Hoover. 1 Mr. Hoover expressed his apprecia- | tion of the work-which Fidac was do- ing and voiced the hope that the con- ference here would be fruitful in friendly inspirations between the dele- gates and the countries they repre- sented. | The dinner last night at the Ward- man Park Hotel, when Gen. John J. Pershing was host to the veterans of 10 nations, was the gala affair of the | day. DISTINGUISHED POLISH WOMEN FIDAC DELEGATES War-Time Doctor Recalls Harrowing Bol- ARE AMONG shevik Captivity, Among the distinguished veterans in Washington to attend the eighth annual congress of “Fidac,” a federa- tion of veterans from 10 countries par- ticipating as allies in the World War, are two young Polish women, Mme. Marie Zaleska and Mme. Wanda Pel- czynska, whose youthful appearances would deny the fact that both had taken active participation in the great war. When the Russian empire collapsed and the Bolshevik reign of terror com- menced, Poland found herself faced with a worse situation than had prevailed at any time during the war. The Bol- shevik army was breaking through the Polish lines and threatening an occu- pation of the country. All available forces were concentrated upon the bor- der, where the casualties were severe. Among the wounded and dying, a young woman doctor, a girl scarcely out of her teens, moved silently and skillfully, tendering aid to those who lay wounded under fire on the battlefields. Marie Zaleska, who, at the ‘outbreak of the war had been a medical student in Warsaw, was one of a number of Polish women Whose services were accepted to serve with the combatant armies “of Poland. Mme. Zaleska, whose round girlish face and soft dark eyes convey the im- | pression of having seen only the happy and pleasant things of life, will tell you that the most terrible ordeal of her life was the 10 days when she was held captive by the Bolsheviks. “I had_been caring for the wounded in a_vilage on the frontier” she reminisced, “when the Bolsheviks en- tered the place and took me captive. At first T was accused of being & spy and was thrown into_prison to await exzcution. How was I treated? Hor- Tibly! “For five days I was givén noth- ing to eat except a plate of terrible soup of which it was impossible to swallow a mouthful. were horrible to their captives. Fortu- nately, I convinced them I was not a spy, and after 10 days I was permitted to leave. The first d I walked over 50 miles to get to our army. I was in a frightful condition when T arrived behind our lines.” After the war Mme. Zaleska con- tinued her medical studies, specializing in the diseases of children. For some time she was in charge of a children's tuberculosis hospitel in Warsaw. About eyes. six years ago Mme. Zaleska was mar- | ried and moved to Paris, where her nhusband, although Polish, sor at the University of Paris. Mme. | Zaleska has two small sons, who, dur- | ing her absence from home, are with | her mother in Poland. Captured Three Times. As the official. representative of the | Polish Leglonnaires, who saw active | service with combatant troops, Mme. | Wanda Pelczynska, also from Warsaw, | brings to Washington interesting mem- | oirs of her experiences in the war. Also | young and attractive, like her com-| patriot, Mme. Zaleska, Mme. Pelczyn- | ska suffered some_terrible experiences | during the war. When merely & slip | of = girl she organized a Woman's mes- | senger service for the Polish Army. | Taken prisoner three different times, | once by the Austrians, once by the | Germans, and later by the bolsheviki, | Mme. Pelczynska had a miraculous | escape from death. Captured by Germans, when she had broken through Narrowly Escaped Death as Spy. Mme. Zaldska paused a moment and | a distressed expression came into her | ‘The Bolsheviks | of my release | & profes- ; While Compatriot | their lines, she was condemned to death as A Spy. ner prison to await execution, her guard who was Polish by birth, took pity upon the young girl, whom he realized was going to her death, and whisperrd to her to run and make her escape. Mme. Pelczynska tells you she did not have to be told twice. “It was a miracle that my guard happened to be Polish,” she said. “That wes his only reason for letting me escape. ‘There was so much tumult and | confusion in the town at the time that | no one noticed me as I ran through the | streets.” | Heads Women's Paper. | Mme. Pelezynska, who is now married and the mother of two children, is the | 1 As she was being marched to | TARIFF AND HOOVER HELD CHIEF ISSUES Representative Wood De- clares in Broadcast Dry Issue Is Not General. The tariff and President Hoover's | administration are the big issues in the | | congressional campaign, Representative | Will R. Wood of Indiana, chairman of | the Republican Congressional Campaign | | Committee, said in a radio speech over the Nation-wide chain of the Columbia | Broadcasting System last night. | “There are collateral issues in this campaign, as there are in every cam- | paign,” he added. “In some localities the eighteenth amendment or the Vol- stead act is being agitated. These col- lateral questions are not questions be- tween the parties. In some spots Dem- ocrats are dry and in other spots sop- head of an important publication in Warsaw, a serious revue for women, containing plishments of women and women's or | ganizations throughout Europe. publication is written in French, as in that language it receives greater cireu- lation and reading throughout different | countries. | ““Polish women are taking an impor- | tant part in the after-war life of our | nation,” said Mme. Pelezynska. have women in practically every public service and in nearly all the profes- sions. The Polish Women's Police Bu- reau in Warsaw is doing splendid work among the poor and delinquent women and girls. Our judge of the Juvenile Court is also a woman “In recent years, our women have organized a society to protect the peas- ant women who make the centuries-old | embroidery work at Poland. Some un- scrupulous persons, wishing to exploit the peasant embroideries, brought in some machines into Poland and started to distribute these machines among the women. The society organized to pro- tect the famous old hand-embroidery work and persuaded the women not to use the machines, but to take up their handwork again. The Polish peasant women are now doing more beautiful hand-embroidery than ever.” Daughter of Famed Engineer. Mme. Pelczynska is the daughter of the famous Polish engineer, Joseph Filipowski, WRo many years ago con- structed the Porto Rican Railroad Mme. Pelczynska was but an infant at the time, so has no remembrance of her | first visit to the Western Hemisphere. This is the first visit of either of the Polish women to the United States. Mme. Mazarki Well Known. Mme. Julie de Mazarki, president of the Polish section of the auxiliary of the Fidac, has brought to the service of the federation years of training as an executive and a woman of business. Mme. Mazarki received her first experi- ence in public life when, during the | war, she organized in her home in Kiew | a canteen for soldiers, feeding many hundreds from the foods prepared at her own expense and in her own kitchens “Often,” recalled Mme. Mazarki, “I| have carried sacks of food out into the | streets where the bombs and shells were | falling on_ all sides.” After the war, Mme. Mazarki or- ganized a society for the woman work- | ers of Poland. The society known as the D'Z'wignia, has done much to be! ter the conditions of woman workers in her country. In addition, she has| been zealous in her work with both the | White Cross and the Red Cross, es- | tablishing chapters of the latter organi- the | zation throughout the eastern part of | jy Poland. the friendly understanding that gave the allies victory. “If the spirit of that understanding is kept alive,” Gen. Pershing said, “then | we have made the greatest step toward permanent international peace.” More to Say in Boston. Gen. Pershing spoke extemporaneous- ly. He promised Legionnaires he would have more to say to them in his speech at their Boston convention. Addresses also were made by Col.| Thad H. Brown, general counsel of the | Federal Radio Commission, and M. Joseph Granier, attached to the French | ministry of war and head of the French | Fidac, and Col. O. L. Bodenhamer, na- tional commander of the American | Legion : | Col. Brown paid tribute to the Un- known Soldiers of all the countries | represented at the conference. “Fidac's ideals are almost the same as those embodied In the American Constitu- tion,” he said. “It is the fruit of cen- Gen. Pershing was host and guest | turies of life and of thought in the | of honor also, if one interpreted in that | Old World and the New; and now the out that the veterans of Pidac had fought for justice and liberty. “Champlons of the right during the Great War,” he said, “you remain apos- tles of peace. ( He declared that people have tried to misconstrue the motives of the United States in entering the war and had suspected its unselfiish impulse. “Let impartial history be the judge,” he said. “No one would ever believe that you could be swayed by a vulgar ma- terialism.” The record of this country during the war and as a humanitarian Nation after the war, M. Granier stressed, bears witness that 150 years have not weakened in the American Nation the fmpulse of consclence toward that great ideal which unites the forces | of Pidac. Mr. Granier expressed gratitude also that “after the Committee of Assistance to the Devastated Regions presided over by the President, your great President Hoover, bad saved the children and the | aged, ‘you started in to raise from | their’ rutin our vilages and our dwell- ngs Comdr. Bodenhamer declared that proper international relations can be the activities and accom- | The | ping wet. This likewise is true of Re- | publicans.” | Fears Democratic House. | Mr. Wood said_election of a Demo- | | cratic House of Representatives would | mean that the hands of the President | would be tied, that he would be harassed | at every turn, that disorder would en- | sue | “Let us hope we may avoid this pos- | sible calamity,” he continued. “My ap- peal to you is to vote for Republican | candidates for Congress, support the ‘Prrsldrm. give him a chance to sus- ‘H\m the protective tariff principle and | avoid destructive foreign competition, i which would surely come with Demo- | eratic success.” Mr. Wood asserted that Mr. Hoover today is the “same man of courage, ido\'onnn and success that he was in | 1928 when he was elected President of | the United States.” | "T)’:AP Republican platform pledges of | | 1928, he added, “have been very large- {1y carried out. Every effort has been made to fulfill party promises. Presi= | | dent Hoover is entitled, under all the | rules of the game, to be supported in {1930 with a Republican Congress so that he may have a fair chance to| carry on and complete the fulfillment | of pledges made two years ago.” Blames Unemployment on Democrats. The tariff, Wood sald, “is to the| prosperity of our Government what | bread and butter is to the average houschold—a real necessity.” He added that lowering the tariff “always causes American labor, American industry and the American farmer to compete with foreign countries and always creates unemployment.” “These same Democratic leaders who | now rejoice becauSe of some unemploy- |ment in this country,” he continued, | | “are themselves largely responsible for | this condition, because of their attitude |in holding up and delaying the passage | of the last tariff bill for more than a [ yea | SHARTEL ASKS DIVORCE Possible Missouri G. 0. P. Guberna- torial Candidate Files Suit. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., September | torney general of Missouri, yesterday filed “suit _for divorce from his wife, Martha Wills Shartel. His petition charged incompatibility and abandon- ment and alleged Mrs. Shartel said she no longer loved him. He asked custody of their two daughters—Mary Jane, 11, | and Martha, 8—and said a property settlement had been agreed upon Shartel has been regarded in State po- | tical circles as a possible candidate for | Governor on the Republican ticket in TAXI DRIVERS ROBBED | Two Report They Were Held Up by Pair of Bandits. | A taxi_cab driver, Morris Greenfleld | o 4916 Seventh street, reported to po- | lice that two white men held him st | pistol point near Walter Reed Hospital | yesterday afternoon and took his day’s receipts, amounting to $15. | Two men took $7.75 from William H. | Tayman of 473 N street southwest in the 1700 block of R street early today, aceording to a police report. The men | hailed Tayman's cab at Ninth street Pennsylvania avenue about 2 a.m. and told him to drive them to Seventeenth and R streets, where they robbed him. DIVORCES HER HUSBAND RENO, Nev., September 19 (/). —Mrs. Estelle M. Campbell was granted a di- | vorce here yesterday from William Campbell of New York, noted metal- |toc come to Rumania and 19 (#).—Stratton Shartel, youthful at- | LOSS OF CROWN BROUGHT JOY TO CHILD KING OF RUMANIA Little Prince Michael Can Now Have Playmates In- stead of State Ministers. Princess Cantacuzene of] Fidac Auxiliary Tells of Education Problems. BY GRETCHEN SMITH. | The loss of a crown brought joy in- | stead of sorrow too little Prince Michael of Rumania, & close friend of the royal family of Rumania, Princess Alexan- | drine Cantacuzene, president of the Women's Avxiliary of the Fidac, here attending the congress, declared today. It was the greatest relief to Prince Michael when he found he no longer | had to attend public functions, which | he considered terribly boring. | “When I was leaving Rumania Princess Cantacuzene, “King Carol, who | is a_great admirer of the American people, asked me to bring to the Ameri- | King’ Whereupon Plerre replied, ‘Well, can people the message that he could | then, T won't play with you any longer. never forget work done in Rumania by | “Recently Michael sent Plerre this Americans during the war and that he | message, I am no longer King—you cordially invited the American people | can play with me now.' " see our | Princess Alexandrine was before her country.” o | marriage a daughter of the Palladz “Little Prince Michael,” continued the | family, one of the oldest families of princess, «is delighted to be just o child | Rumanian nobilty. again and no longer have to be an offi- | cial representative. He said to his | Hojped* Rumsninn: Girt fother, T am 8o glad T can play now | For 22 years Princess Cantacusene and not have to see ministers all day | a8 given untiring and devoted service long. I told you I would be so happy | ' education of Rumanian girls. “Most if the ministers could be children, but | of the young girls of the Rumanian as that was not possible, it is much bet- | ristocracy,” she sald, “were being sent R o e 40 B wikh Ty frlente’ |to schools of other nationalities— French, English, German and Austrian. Playmates of Royalty. ¥ I wanted our girls to be educated in Prince Michael’s closest playmates are | the traditions and ways of our own the three sons of Prince Brancovano |people, and for that reason I founded and his little cousin, Prince Pierre of | the National Orthodox Society for Ru- Jugoslavia. | manian Women. This society has estab- “When Queen Marie of Jugoslavia |lished schools for girls throughout visits in Rumania the two little children | Rumania, and these schools are working are so happy,” sald Princess Canta- | for cultural improvement of girls cuzene. | Rumania.’ The princess smiled as she recalled a The educational society, of which recent message to Prince Michael to his | Princess Cantacuzene has been presi- cousin. dent for 22 years, now supervises more “When he was King,” said the prin- | than 60 kindergartags besides advanced cess, “Michael had said to Pierre one | schools. More t ,n 3,500 children are day while they were playing, ‘You must | being educated in the kindergartens. Princess Cantacuzene, who is vice Fidac Has Double Meaning, English | president of the International Council of Women, and came to Washington Officer Declares Since the Fidac invasion of five years ago to attend a congress here | of that soclety, although an ardent | worker for advancement of peace, di | not wish to be known as a “pacifist Washington many persons have made inquiries as to what the letters in the word Fidac stand for. It is simply short for Fed- | as tnat word is commonly interpreted | in,this country. 3 eratlon Interallies Des Anciens | |are tolerant and generous, and that is Combattants. | one of the reasons they have attained Fred W. Abbot of PRINCESS CANTACUZEN! listen to me, Pierre, because T am the m a soldier of ideal peace,” she said, “but I don't understand peace | which will destroy principles of liberty be tolerant. I think American people Lieut. Col. | to great prosperity and success as a Great Britain, international pres- | | ot id ident, goes a bit further and says | and nationality. I think also we must the letters symbolize the follow- Boxer Ignores Offers. NEW YORK, September 10 (F).— | Qftered theatrical engagements and fights galore, Jimmy McLarnin, scrap- D—Devotlon o our widows and | | per, has packed up all of & sudden orphans, | and gone to Vancouver. The only ex- A—Affection for all those who | |planation his friends can assume deserve it. | based on the fact that he has had the C—Comradeship eternal and | |picture of a pretty girl in his watch strong amongst us, ex-allied sol- | |for a year or more, diers of the Great War. | ing: F—Fidelity to our dear coun- tries. I—Immortality to our dead. DAY SNITE ERVICE For Chevrolets Expert Mecha 610 H St. N.E. Call Linc. 10200 —Special Prices Saturday Treat! Beautiful $3.00 ROSES FILES DAMAGE ACTION George Block Claims Insurance Payment Was Insufficient. George S. Block, 600 block of Third street, filed suit in the District Supreme | Court for $90 additional payment under & workman's compensation policy. The suit was filed against Robert J. Hoage, deputy commissioner of the United States Employes Compensation Com- mission, and the Aetna Life Insurance Co. The plaintiff says that he met with an accident on March 21, 1929, | while in the employ of Arthur Curtin, | | which resulted in serious injuries to | himself. He claims damages over and | | above the sum which has been paid him by the commission. | e 1 Leaking Ship Is Safe. | LISBON, September 19 (#). — The | Itallan ship Santa Teresa, which wire- | |lessed for help after springing a leak | |north of Cabo da Roca, was safely | towed into port yesterday evening. | A tugboat, sent to her assistance, | brought her into drydock here. when ACUTE INDIGES- TION strikes you may be glad you were ready with Bell-ans. BELL-ANS _FOR INDIGESTION Four Rooms, Kitchen and Bath, $57.50 Cambria-Majestic 1324 Euclid Street N.W. ALONG WITH MARLOW COAL / . goes Marlow service and Marlow attention to | your INDIVIDUAL heating needs. bl You'll find the coal okay—it's the cleanest, most sparkling hard coal that America produces. So give us a | Chancc to 5h0w W"ly Mar]ow SCrViCe mflkes ‘uCh stanch friends. Phone us your order TODAY. | Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. NW. | = mous RUEN _with rown Guard NAtional 0311 A watch for every occasion. Nationally fa- watches with a reputa- tion for quality. A.Kahn Jne. 38 Years at 935 F St. way the tremendous ovation the com- | Constitution sends back ‘from the New mander of the American wartime forces | World to the Old the physical force | Tecelved from comrades in arms. It was | and political philosophy which, we be- | Permanently where the o g in the nature of a belated birthday | lieve, will help all mankind. Eoreigior | r%"l}’lixr:‘lrx‘::duér;&?&fi; N greeting. Gen. Pershing was 70 last The tombs of the Unknown Soldiers } be brought to see and to support the | established most effectively and most | Jurgist and former professor at Colum- bia_University. Campbell did not appear to contest the action. They married in New York Baturday. | He told the veterans they were in b array now, fighting to maintain SPECIAL NOTICES. all speak a universal language,” he de- clared, “the brotherhood of man.’ M. Granjer, in his address, pointed SPECIAL N WATERMELONS—BOAT CARLTON be at fish wharf next Saturday and 8 1 watermelons from Eastern nteed good. CHAIRS FOR RENT, SUITABLE FOR WI dings. parties, church suppers or festivals. from 10c to 30c per day each: new chalrs. UNITED ETATES STORAGE CO. 418 10t n. ABHING Shareholders' Mest hereby given Lh American ill be held at tor 9 Fourteenth sireet e. No. 61 purpose of voting upon any other matters Trcidental to the proposed consolidation of the two banks. A copy of the aforesaid sgreement executed by ing business f the bank for the transter of closed October 1 18, _ Dated September 18, 1930. MERCHANTS Sha Notice is_hei eall uf its direct snnrenolders of M ST COMPANY, bursuant to t the K g *Trst i ‘e, No o Wash: the Z0f day . for e ‘prpose.of s Nove whether ompany Ber bt wiatbington. 102 PWashinglon. Disirict of Rovistong ol the. Taws Shail be ratified and ine"Purhose of Columbia United State confirmed, and "fo upon any o ters ' incide Proposed’ consolidation of the s American National Bank of W inis company. A o agreement executed b Jor Tectors of the Federal-American Bank of Washington ar 3he directors of this company, providing for the consolidation, is on file at the main office £ this company, No. 1435 H street northwest, g\'nmxn“mn. D, C and may be inspected during business hours. “The books of the company for the trans- fer o stk wiu be closed October 1, 1930, 8t 12 o'clock noon, 'ROLFE E. BOLLING, President. 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