Evening Star Newspaper, October 15, 1930, Page 28

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fAMM 0DV TO LAY PLANS irginia Board Anticipates | “Hard” Season Because |0LD MOTOR VEHICLES 1 DECLARED NUISANCE M. & M. Association Asks Removal of Dilapidated Machines From Streets Near Police Stations. ‘The removal of dilapidated motor ve- Fly Paper Diet Brings Stuck-Up Feeling to Twins By che Associated Press. BELOIT, Wis.,, October 15.— An_accidental diet of fly paper yesterday landed Janet and Jan- ice Norem, 2-year-old twins, in the -Municipal Hospital here, Lured by sugar scattered over the fiy paper, the twins proceeded PLEA ASKS MORE HOSPTAL EXERTS U. S. Surgeons Told Trustees | Should Be Better Trained | the lives of his patien EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1830. sickness, but also-at regular intervals to have him make a check up on in- dividual health. Dr. Philip H. Kreuscher. of Chicago, vice president of the American College of Surgeons, in an address before the Kiwanis Club, attacked physiclans who split fees. He said the doctor who turns. over a patient to a man who may not be a good surgeon, merely becauge he will get part of the fee, is endangering $50,000 LEFT TO SON PRINCE & WHITELY RECEIVER PROTESTED Creditors Claim Smyth Should Be Denied Right to Settle Local Assets. Objection to the continuance of an ancillary bankruptey petition. 5 Senator Moses Visits New Mexico, CONCORD, N. H., October 15 (#).— United States Senator George Moses | yesterday left for New Mexico. He will | observe political developments in the | Bernard A. Smyth, former local man- ager of Prince & Whitely, the New York brokers who failed recently, as | ancillary receiver of the local assets of | Southwest. He is chairman of the | Republican Senatorial Campaign Com« | mittee. to lick up the mixture. Doctors at the hospital washed the youngsters' stomachs and outside of feeling a little stuck up, the hicles confiscated by the Police De- partment from streets adjacent to po- | i . precinct station houses is requested Will of Dr. Seager, Columbia Uni- versity, Remembers Other Kin. of Long Dry Spell. Men. i By the Associated Press. { RICHMOND, Va., Octobe? 15—Pre. ¥ailing drought conditions in Virginia will be considered by the State Drought | Qommission meeting here October 22, With & view to laying plans for Winter Telief. Ail members of the commission, as Well as many county relief chairmen, | ‘Wwere expected to attend the meeting called by Chairman Harry Flood Byrd, ‘who to have comprehensive re- m-u of conditions in every State. Ryrd Consults Hyde. During the past week Chairman Byrd has been in frequent communication with Secretary of Agriculture A. M. , chairman of the Naticnal Drought ction of Hyde, Relief Commission, in an effort to learn | terday with a social at the club house, Just what may be expected in the way of Federal aid. Reports reaching here in advance showed that the State is still unre- lieved by rain, and health experts’pre- dict a “hard Winter.” John R. Hutcheson, vice chairman of the commission, said Red Cross or- ganizations in every city and town in the State have been impressed with the idea that their sssistance may be nced- ed. A report of the Red Cro s activity was expected from Robert W. Angel, REV. LOUIS OTT, S. J, Recently named director of the Aloysian Club, social organization of 300 mem- bers, which opened its Fall season yes- at 47 1 street, Father Ott takes the place of Rev. John F. O’Hurley, who has been transferred from Washington to Poughkeepsie, N. Y. DAUGHERTY TRIAL SET of Maj. Henry G. Pratt, superintendent of police, by the Merchant and Manu- facturers' Association in a letter ad-| dressed to the police superintendent to- | day. The letter of the association, signed | by Edward D. Shaw, secretary, informed | Maj. Pratt of a recent action of the group condemning the practice of leav- ing these machines on the streets, often | ull night without lights, in violation of police regulations. | g ! SCOUTS HONOR EDITOR Boys Meet McRae's Body at Train Stops. CHICAGO, October 15 (#).—The guard of honor of 12 Eagle Scouts will meet the body of Milton A. McRae, founder of the Scripps-Howard Nes papers, at Chicago and several Mi igan cities en route b where burial will take place. | from California, here Mr. McRae died, to Detroit, | Mr. McRae was an original incor- board of governors of the merchants'| Germans Devise Electrical Attach- To Answer 58 Counts Upon raignment October 30. WASHINGTON , COURT HOUSE, Ar- porator and once president of the Boy Scouts of America. A Scout troop will escort the body from the Santa Fe sta- tion Friday morning (9:15 am.) to the Michigan Central train and other troops will meet the train at Kalamazoo, Bat- twins said they were all right. CHAIR FOR WINTER WARMS THE SITTER | ment to Make Seats More Comfortable. BERLIN, Octber 15 (N.AN.A.)— “Electric chairs for all” doesn't exactly | sound like a slogan for keeping German | fathers at home in the Winter evenings, but it An inventor has now devised an easy chair that can be plugged in all socket and have its unhol- stery permeated thereafter with a gent- | ly increasing warm glow until a really | luxurious Winter scat supports and en- folds the sitter. | There is, furthermore, a reading | lamp attachment to this wonderful chair which begins to function when | the chair has attained the right heat. | Whether the heat can be impercepti- | bly increased by German wives until the place is literally too hot to hold | the pater familias who talks or snores too much is not yet apparent. Some | such check upon the new luxury may | in time be considered a very necossary | adjuct. | By the Assoclated Press. PHILADELPHIA, October 15.—A rec- ommendation that boards of trustees | of hospitals be composed of persons | trained in hospital admihistration was | made yesterday by Dr. Paul Keller, a| director of Beth-Israel Hospital, New- | ark, N. J., in speaking at the twentieth annual Clinical Congress of the Amer- | ican College of Surgeons. “Hospital boards of trustees, on the whole, are not equipped as experts to give direction in the conduct of that | most important part of our communal life, the hospital,” Dr. Keller said. New Anesthetic Found. | An X-ray apparatus which eliminates the burns and shock to which phy: cians may expose themselves was de- scribed by Dr. Edward S. Blaine, ra- diologist of the Wesley Memorial Hos- pital, Chicago. Dr. Chauncey D. Leake, professor of pharmacology of the University of Cal- ifornia, described for the ninth annual Congress of Anesthetists an anesthetic which he said was expected to eliminate nausea. The anesthetic, he said, is a combination of ether and ethylene and in experiments has not irritated or de- pressed respiration. Assails Splitting of Fees. Dr. Arvin Abell of Louisville, Ky., in a radio address advised the public to NEW_YORK, October 15 (#).—Dr. Henry R. Seager, late professor of eco- nomics at Columbia University, named his son, Schuyler F. Seager, principal | legatee in his will filed for probate | yesterday. His son was bequeathed $50,000, real estate holdings, royalties on all books except one, and one-half of the resid- uary estate. brother, of Pasadena, Calif., received | $10,000; James H. and Laura S. Seager, | = uncle and aunt, of Lansing, Mich., a | life interest in one-fourth of the resid- uary estate; Schuyler F. and Rufus Seager, nephews, of Pasadena, life interests in one-eighth of the residue; Catherine _and _Marguerite Seager, nieces, of Pasadena, life interests in the remaining one-eighth of the residue, and Charles A. Gulick, a friend, of Berkley, Calif, royaities’ from the 'tes- tator’s book. "The Trust Problem.” Telephone National 5000 For immediate delivery of The Star to your home every evening and Sunday morning. ‘The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, at the rate of 14 cents per day and 5 cents | the firm is voiced in a petition filed in | ihe District Supreme Court by Attorney | Lawrence J. Heller on behalf of Ernest | fi Coblenzer and Lilllan Sommers, local | creditors. Smyth was recently named by the District Supreme Court in an {ancillary petition in bankruptcy and | the petitioners assert that-disinterested | persons should be named to wind up Schuyler F. Seager, a |the company’s local . Justice Jesse C. Adkins issued a rule airs. \J THE WORLD’S MOST FAMOUS LIPSTICK $|oo Natural color/ Real Estate Loans (D. C. Property: Only) 6% No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loans without the expense of remewing. $1,000 for $10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Association Established 1881 No greasy smear! Largest in Washington Assets Over $23,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BERRY, Presid Ue Creek, Jackson, Ann Arbor and | Detroit. Sunday. tion. head of the State organization. _EDWARD C.BALTZ, Sec: ©Ohio, October 15 (#).—Arraignment of | | call on the doctor not only in times of | Reports from the United States De- partment of Agriculture reaching here today said low water supplies on many of the Virginia farms are causing con- cern, and thai county agents reported that pastur>s and seeded grains have made little or no growth in the State. Prospects Further Reduced. The Federal Reserve Monthly Review sald that the severe drought had fur- ther reduced agricultural prospects for the season, and asserted there was no upward trend in prices for agricultural products in so far as the leading money crops of the fifth district are concerned, cotton prices continuing to decline and tobacco markets opening at or near rec- ord low levels. Statisticlans of the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service estimated that the State cotton crop on October 1 was 14,000 .bales below the production last Officials of the State Health Depart- ment have isued bulletins cautioning all to take precautions against pellagra | and other disenses that follow in the | wake of drought. Former Gov. Byrd was anxious to have all State agencles concentrate on all possible relief measures. Through efforts the Interstate Commerce n has authorized permission for the extending of the reduced freight rate period, should the railroad serving the State agrce Also he has sought to have the rates apply to all farmers' necessities in addition to feed shipped into the State, and the live stock ship- ments out of Virginia. Thes: matters wili be discussed in the meeting. Girl Student Falls to Death. GRANTS PASS, Oreg. October 15 {P).—Leta Whisman, Grants Pass senlor student, fell 200 feet to_her death in Hell Gate Canyon lhemherhhneeontheled{e Yo tal COAL Our low prices are for cash delivery only. | WIA.Egg...$14.60 ‘W. A. Stove, $15.30 Coke .......$10.75 Fairmont Egg $8.25 New River Egg. $11.00 Also fireplace and kindling wood. Al coals screened full weight gusranteed. B. J. WERNER 1937 Fifth St. NE. .~ -k North 0079 o435 SEE THIS VALUE FIRST! AT MOSES A %193 vALUE BOSCH RADIO $|39 Complete Installed. No Finance Charge And Your Old Radio Or Phonograph : DELIVERS 1°10 ™ -' ‘BALANCE IN 1 YEAR “The Best in Radio” at a g‘gce within reach of all e powerful Bosch seven- tube radio is engineered to Screen-@rid tubes, assuring highest degree of ex- cellence in the new type radio receiver, W. N. Moses & Sons Radio Studio—Lower Floor— Direct Entrance, 11th St. i i | Por Bible References, recording God's near here yesterday | Mal S. Daugherty, brother of Former | Attorney Genersl Harry M. Daugherty, on charges of’ misapplication of bank funds, falsification of statements and embezzlement, yesterday was tentatively set for October 30. Daugherty, former { president of the defunct Ohio State Bank, to which he admitted indebt- edness. of $77,000, is at liberty under $40,000 bond cigned by his brother and his' 97-year-old mother, Mrs. Jane Daugherty. He was indicted on 58 sep- arate counts by the grand jury Mon- ay e e e e o o o e o o 2] Are You Sick? {Are You Discouraged? Are You Financially Distressed? YOU NEED ‘GOD--MAN | A Devotional Manual for Daily Use By BLAIR SCOTT It reveals to you the spiritual law of God, under ‘which the Master met and overcame ll beliefs of the flesh and particularly those of SUPPLY AND HEALTH. (Pages 22, 23, 24) available SPIRITUAL SUPPLY, UN- LIMITED SUPPLY AND CON- TINUED SUPPLY, N - (Pages 121-131) | For Bible References, bestowing Christ’s | HEALING POWER ON ALL WHO BELIEVE. (Pages 111-113) Whatever your problem— THIS BOOK By the Grandson of Walter Scott Unveils your God-given heritage of Dominion Limp Cloth, $1.50 Ask for it at the Auditorium Disciples Convention, Oct. 14.23 DRDER BLANK: Send to Your Bookseller or FLEMING H. RE L. CO, ork. 158 Fifth Avenue, New Y. Please send me. Dostoaid — GOD and MAN, by Blair Scott, Name —— | Address —— $———enclosed — —— —cop— _Present the New Screen Grid Model RADIO In Range . . . selectivity power . . . performance . . . and lifelike Colorful Tone, the fihe_st radio ever built. Delivered Installed complete, with no finance charge. Showing of Atwater- Kent Victor Bosch Kenedy Philco General- Electric Stewart- Warner Extra liberal Trade-in Allowance on your Old Radio or Phonograph W. B. Moses & Sons Radio Studio-—-Lower Floor— Direct. Entrance, 11th St. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- | paper Alliance.) 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. W, B, Moses & Sons SINCE 1861—SIXTY-NINE YEARS OF PUBLIC CONFIDENCE F Street at Eleventh Jale of Famous ALLEN-A All Sizes All Full Fashioned October 13 to 20 20% Reduction o n All Colors “All Regular Stock Men’s and Women’s Hosiery Prices Regularly $1.95 . $1.65 . - po TR 1 125 2 ni 507781100 $1.00 ... .oini0 o 80c WOMEN'S The Colors Shell Ecstasy Bahama Squirrel Muscadine Brownleaf Mauve Beige Mauve Taupe Dark Gunmetal Light Gunmetal Special v $1.56 ..$1.32 \ The Styles Dulltone Picot Tops Sheer Service Sheer Chiffon Heavy Service Panelcurve Heel i $1.00 .....00.4.80¢ 60c. ... it 40e MEN’S The Colors The Styles Wool Grey Navy Black Brown Silk Clocks Stripes Solid Colors

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