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S ANITAD O | RO I SRR F COLONIAL ANTHRACITE “Guaranteed No Siate. No Clinkers™ Ack the Man Who Uses It Ralph J. Moore Coal Co. 1406 N. Cap. St. Pot. 0970 Pot. 0871 TR . T T WE CAN RENT YOUR VACANT PROPERTY Thos. E. Jarrell Co. REALTORS 721 10th St N.W. National 0765 Voters’ Information Bureau ‘The League of Republican Organizations, under the direc- tion of the Republican State Commitiee in and for the Dis- trict of Columbia, is maintaining a Voters’ Information Bureau for the ngressional campaign, rooms 208-209, ‘Second National Bank Building, 1331 G Street Northwest. Information “and blanks fur- nished, notary service in aften- dance, hours 8:00 AM. to 10:00 P.M., telephone Metropolitan 1511. | over and the industry has settled down | | modern civilization, in the opinion of | 'posed amendments, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. AVATON INUSTRY 5 OVEN STUDY Manufacturers Discuss| Changes for Regulations Before U. _S. Parley. The carnival days of -aviation are | to work out its place in the affaiis of | the heads of nearly 50 of the Nation's | leading airplane and engine manufac- | turing companies, meeting today at the Carlton Hotel to consider several score amendments to the air commerce regu- lations and airworthiness requirements of the air commerce act in preparation for a meeting with Department of Com- | merce ofiicials tomorrow and Saturday. “In their consideration of the pro- which will affect the future of civil aeronautics pro- foundly,” said one of the leading membe:rs of the conference, “these representatives of the industry are demonstrating that the play days of aviation are over and that it now fis r settling down to the task of building for itself a place among the foremost industries.” Secretly Taken Up. At this morning's session, held under auspices of the airplane manufacturers’ section of the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce, the proposed amendments were taken up behind closed doors, one by one, for discussion and action. Upon the basis of the action taken today the | industry will_submit its recommenda- tions to the Department of Commerce on the regulations which will shape the growth of civil aeronautics in this country during the coming year. The work of whipping approximately 130 amendments into shape for consid- eration at today's session was handled by two committees, which worked dur- ing most of last night. tees took up the amendments from the angles of engincering and general policy. The Engineering Committee is com- posed of M. C. Bauman of the Inland Aviation Co.. Kansas City; Roy Miller of the Fairchild Aviation Corporation |and L. V. Kerber, Spartan Airplane Co., Tulsa, Okla., chairman. The commit- tee was assisted by Capt. Holden C. Richardson, former assistant chief of the Navy Bureau of Aercnautics, and Col. B. E. Clark of the Aviation Corpor- ation. Committee on Policy. ‘The Committee on Policy is composed | of J. Don Alexander, Alexander Aircraft Corp., Colorado Springs, Col., chair- man; R. B. C. Noorduyn, Bellanca Al Janitrol can be quickly installed in your present heating plant without any incon- venience to you. There is a Janitol for every type of furnace or boiler. Our heating engineers can give you an ac- curate estimate, based on years of experi- ence, of just what Automatic Gas Heat will cost. Call the House Heating Department, National 8280. ‘These commit- | ‘ plane Corporation, New Castle, Del., and C. G. Dietz, Aeronautical Corporation of America. In line with the general policy of cutting away all the non-essentials in the aviation industry, the manufac- turers went on record unanimously as {in favor of only one major aircraft | show im 1931. The following Executive Committee for the airplane manufacturers’ section was elected: Ralph Damon, chairman; Richard H. Depew, Farmingdale, Long Island; R. B. C. Noorduyn, Newcastle, | Del.; C. H. Chatfield, United Aircraft i& Transport Corp.; J. Don Alexander, Colorado Springs, Colo.; C. J. Brukner, Troy, Ohio; L. V. Kerber, Tulsa, Okla.; C. G. Paterson, Detroit, Mich, and L. D. Bell, Buffalo, N. Y. all afternoon and this evening. | manufacturers will meet with Depart- : partment of Commerce conference room | tomorrow morning. LEAPS TO DEATH | okt b | LOUISVILLE, Ky., September 25 (#). | manager of its headquarters in a down- | town hotel, jumped to her death today from the fifteenth floor of the hotel. | Her body landed almost on the car | tracks on Fourth street. She left a note, indicating suicide. 1S | . The session is expected to continue | ‘The | ment of Commerce officials in the De-| —Miss Belle Cochran, assistant secre-| y of the Lo Vi R | b e uisville Rotary Club and| 1 ied, with Brig. Gen, William 5. 1 ARMY SURGEONS N SESSION HERE Many Foreign Delegates Elected Honorary Mem- bers of Society. The nucleus of the Army Medical Corps, 200 prominent military sur~ geons, assembled this morning at the thirty-eighth annual convention of,the Association of Military Surgeons of the | United States at Wardman Park Hotel. A business meeting, featured by the election of foreign delegates to honorary membership, opened the morning pro- gram. A public meeting in the hotel auditorium followed. After invocation by C#hon Peter, of the Washington Cathedral, the meeting Wilmer, noted eye specialist presiding, to confer medals upon the honorary members from foreign nations, The newly elected honorary members were: Senor Don Juah B. Sacasa Minister of Nicaragua: Col. J. T. Clarki surgeon general of the Canadian Arm: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1930. Lieut. Col. Auguste Schneider of French Army, Maj. Pelipe Osamio of the Mexican Army, Capt. Susuke Hori- guchi, of the Japanese Army and Capt. Elizardo Castillenoe of the Cuban Army. Following the presentation of awards, resses were given by Maj. Gen. Herbert B. Crosby, Commissioner of the District of Columbia, and Gen. ‘Wilmer. Gen. Crosby, dispensing with a for- mal address of welcome, simply re- | viewed, in a humorous and personal vein. his experience with the Army Medical Corps in the Philippine cam- Ppaign. Gen. Wilmer, in delivering his an- nual report, principally confined his re- marks to tracing the progress of the association since its organisation in |1891. Originating from a mere hand- | tul of determined Army physicians, the | association numbers today 3,600 m!ii- | tary surgeons, the most extensive surgi- | cal organization in the world. To Maj. | Gen. M. W. Ireland, surgeon general of the United States Army, Gen. Wilmer | concluded, must be credited much of | the unusual progress of the association within the past five years. Other Surgeons Present. Besides Gen. Ireland, other noted surgeons attending the convention were | Rear Admiral C. E. Riggs, surgeon gen- ‘Prll of the Navy; Surg. Gen. Hugh S. Cumming, United States Public Health Service; Brig. Gen. Carl R. Darnall, | supervisor of the Walter Reed Medical Afternoon, follo a group thfim to President Hoover at the te House, the association is making an_extended tour of the city. ‘The association will reconvene tomor- row morning at the hotel, holding its final session Saturday afternoon. —s, CHURCH LIQUOR PARTY SENDS SIX TO JAIL Young Woman Among Prisoners at Paxton, Ill, Where Two Fled on Freight Train, By the Assoclated Press. PAXTON, Ill, September 25.—Five young men and a young woman were held in the Ford County Jail today on charges of “malice and mischief,” fol- lowing an alleged liquor party in a church near Ludlow early Sunday morn- ing. 5nerm Curtis said that a 19-year-old girl, arrested yesterday for disorderly conduct, related the facts to him. ‘Two young men reported to have been with her yesterday escaped from offi- cers by catching a freight train. They were captured when the train reached Danville. Officers sald the church had been broken into and the altar knocked over and damaged. The men, farm youths, living near Ludlow, range from 20 to 25 years old, the sheriff sald. 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