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Convention to Elect Four Men ‘ to Represent Capital Dio- cese at Denver. ites to the General Convention of the testant Episcopal Church in Denver next September were made at the opening business session of the thirty- sixth annual convention of the dio- cese of Washington today In the Church of the Epiphany 1 Out of the 10 clerygymen and 8| laymen placed in nomination, the | convention will elect four in each class | before it closes tomorrow afternoon. | ‘The clerical ncminees are Dr. Ze Bar- ney Phillips, Dr. Robert Johnston, D George F. Dudley, Rev. F. Metcalf, Re C. E. Smith, Rev. Clyde Brown, Rev. C. E. Crusoe, Rev. H. A. Griffith, Rev. M. F. Minnick and Rev. Joseph Wil- liams. Laymen nominated are H. T. Nelson, T. E. Robertzn, H. L. Rust, Busey H. Hc-ward, r. W. Sinclair Bowen, Melville urch, Arthur 8. Browne and Chatles F. Roberts. Nominationz also were made for the Btanding Committee, the ecclesiastical authority in the diocese in the ab:zence of the bishop and the Executive Com- | mittee. Bishop Freeman Speaks. Bght Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop Washingt<n, who is presiding at the wo day business sessions of the con- vention, delivered his annual address late yesterday, in which he sounded the key-note. At tonight's annual dinner, | Undersecretary of State Willlam R.| Castle will te the principal speaker. Thre election of delegates to the house of denuties at the Denver convention was the major issue before the local aiocesan boay. Bishop Freeman referred “without prejudice” to the Committee on Canons the whole question defining specifically the rights to seats in the Washington convention. Discussion developed wide. ly different views interpret.ng these rights under the constitution, o it was d ‘e settled | definitely before the balloting. I PFour clerical and four lay members of the Standing Committee also are to | be elected from the following persons | placed in nomination today: Dr. George H. S. Smith, Canon Nominations of clerical and lay dele- E. M. Thompson and clerical nomi- ymen. Clerical nominees for membership on the Executive Council are Dr. C. Ernest Smith, Rev. C. E. Buck, Dr. Robert Johnston, Dr. F. J. Bohanan, Dr. H. H. , Dr. Ze Barney Phillips, Rev. George Atkinson, Rev. M. B. MacBryde, Rev. F. A. Parsons, Rev. L. B. Pranck, Rev. H. A. Wolfe and Rev. F. Bland ‘Tucker. Laymen Nominated. hmeg nominated include Byron 8. Adams, §. J. C, Williams, H. L. Choate, Melville Chdrch. Fulton Lewis, E. L. Stock and P. Blair. There are 12 members be elected, six of each class. Before the convention was Bishop Freeman received re diocesan affairs not to_debate. H. T. Nelson, chairman of the Insur- ance Committee, explained the insur- ance operations under the national trustees, headed by J. Plerpont Morgan of New York and 14 prominent asso- ciates. He denied the church was “go- ing into the insurance business,” con- tending it insured only its own property. Owing to the lack of understanding on ihe part of some, he urged the min- isters not to guestion the integrity of the church insurance policies. i e No . change was Episcopal or bishop's fund, the amount Temaining st $130,033. The report of the Executive Council, which admittedly will lead to some de- bate, was ordered deferred until later in_the convention. Bishop Freeman in his speech last m'g:uuri. by and large, our parish | properties are in better physical condi- | tion today than they have ever been. Two splendid stone churches have been | built, the one at College Park to min- | irticularly to the student body of the University of Maryland, and | another at Siiver Spring to serve the | peogk of that ever-growing community. | “Both of these churches are distinct scquisitions to the diocese at large.| Al with this, the Diocesan Home for Children, formerly located in Anacostia, has erected three superb buildings of Colonial design, in Chevy Chase, and while a very considerable debt has been laid upon the property, there are evi- dences that this splendid institution is evoking a new spirit of generosity. The property on which these buildings stand, some nine and a half acres in exten was the gift of a distinguished phi anthropist, Mr. Edwin Gould of New York, and represents a value in itself of approximately $70,000. The buildings themselves and their equipment represent an outlay of some $210,000. It is safe to say these build- ings and their equipment constitute an asset to the diocese of incomparable value. The Episcopal Church Home for Aged Women on Wisconsin avenue is steadily advancing, and serving an ever- increasing number, and under wise leadership is decreasing its debts, while at the same time it increases the field of its usefulness. Many parish improve- ments could be recorded, showing debts liquidated or substantially reduced and their work expanded, and all this through the fice and labor of clergy and people Calis Yeah Notable. ‘The year 1930 in the story of the grea’. cathedral, and its allled institu- Uons, was the most no‘able in its his- tory. Last June a contract was given | for the erection of the structural parts of the north transept at a cost of nearly $1,200,000. This work is now well ad- | vanced, and the chap‘er hopes the work on the south transept may be provided | for and set forward at an early day. | It is now planned to house in those | portions of the Cathedral that are | structurally complete and to have them in readiness for the great Bicentennial rts on to lead | responsibilit; iew vl tne cave houses, mere “fronts” built against the yellow chalk cliffs at Cinq Mars, France, where Brig. Gen. | The cave houses, first built back in the days of the ! Romans. are built right up against the cliffs, their fronts being only four or five feet deep, and the interiors are carved from the chalk and sandstone of the cliffs. Robert H. Dunlap was killed in THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. WEDNESDAY. MAY 20. 1931 an avalanche yesterday. services of 1932. This will enable the Cathedral to take its escential place in the life of the community. “In this ccnnection, may I say that, while cathedrals are comparatively new in our diocesan system, I am confident | the Cathedral in Washington will not | in any wise against those interests that are distinctly ‘Were it to do so it would, militate larger s Capital must occupy a place peculiarly its cwn and altogether unique. Its very magnitude must render it im- mune to any petty devices and put it out of the range of competition with parish churches. It calls for large- ness and comprehensiveness of vision in its administration. It demands the highest and fullest expression of the prophetic note. 1 can conceive tha on cceasion its puipit may command in the large interests of church and State those high-minded Christian laymen in whom we recognize the prophetic Bift. Sees Task for Cathedral. “The cathedral here in the Nation's Capital must give impulse and direc- tion to those great moral and spiritual ideals that are indispensable to the life of the Republic. In this under- taking no single genius is adequate to th> task. I call upon both clergy and laity of this diocese to give me in this large undertaking their cordial and generous support and in turn I pledge them that I will make every effort to safeguard the cathedral from becoming in any sense a contender or competitor in that concern our parochial and diocesan life. “The Cathedral re not stand as the witness of those things that are narrow and mean insular. Its very po- sition renders it immune to the conceits and prejudices of men of little stature. It will contribute its necessary part to the life of Capital and Republic only in so far as it becomes a shrine for all those who worship God in spirit and in truth. We covet for it in the scheme of our life no place that emphasizes, the things that separate and divide us, but rather those things that make us one in aim and purpose. It is our hope that it may stand as the expression of a Nation’s spiritual ideals, clad in the beauty and majesty of that is best and noblest in the aspirations of art architecture and Christian experience. "The whole world is in the midst of a situation that must command the sym- pathetic understanding of the church and Jead it, so far as it/ y, to prove a willing and helpful t in effecting some reasonable sol of the prob- lems that are now bu our people. The unemployment situation\ bears di- rectly upon our common intsests. In the present instance it has more sevious than we have heretofore known. Its paralyzing touch is upon the whole world. At the nt time the eco- nomic and industrial situation is so ut- terly involved that it seems to defy all remedies looking to its solution. “Let us be reminded that widespread unemployment constitutes at once a challeng> and a menace; a challenge, in that it serves to give emphasis to our as sharers in a common misfortune; a menace, in that it engen- ders unrest and dissatisfaction among the toilers and a disposition to lose con fidence in the existing social and eco- nomic order. No one, no matter what his situation or his seeming security and independence, can afford to be in- different or unresponsive to the present situation. Selfish insularity or free- dom from assumed responsibility at such a time is a badge of shame and an evidence of disloyalty to the com- mon good. Nothing strains loyalty so much as idleness, with its tendency to morbid reflections, together with its ac- companying privations. It is an easy matter for us to find ourselves en-rap port with the existing social and eco- nomic order when our own situation is favorable and the means of subsistence guaranteed to us. Seeks to Ease Strain. Th> real test of loyalty comes when we are deprived of these things. While believe profoundly in the unity and lidarity of our people, we also believe very eflort should be made to ease the strain put upon them. not through the giving of a dole or the temporary leviztion of their needs through organ- ized charity, but by securing to them the means whereby. with self-respect, they can maintain themselves and their families and have the shadow dissl- pated that now falls across their hearth- stones. “It is inconceivable that the church as an institution should be callously in- different or coldly unresponsive to s situation that has in it elements of peril that affect for ill our politica social, industrial and religious institu tions. We cannot close our eyes to the CORRECTION The ELMHURST house, s hown in our Saturday ad- vertisement in the Real Estate Section of The Star, may be purchased for weekly payments as low as $17.00. This plan requires the purchaser to have a 25%, equity in house and lot. 911 Bladensburg Road N.E., Washingten, D. C. cost or obligation, Address City and State .....ccovvunn 1 own a lot for which I pai expect to build a home costing from $4,000 to $6,000 $6,000 to $10,000 send me a copy of “Homes Telephone. . . $10,000 to $18,000 fact that an experiment in Government is being made today that puts entirely out of its scheme and polity, religious institutions of every name. The fact that this experiment is made in a coun- try distant from us, does not render us immune to what may prove to be |its baleful and sinister influence. Al- ready its propaganda is world-wide. We re being frashly reminded today that ‘eternal vigilance is the price of liberty,” as well as the price of security. | “Propaganda that has as its main | point _of attack religious institutions, | and that seeks to create a world-wid> revolution cannot be regarded indiffer- ently or lightly. It is safe to affirm that no such world-wide movement to unsettle the Chrisiian faith of men and nations has ever been contemplated or prosecut>d in the centuries of Chris- ian development. To regard such an | attack without due regard for its grave | consegences, or to think of our situation | in America as being immune to its in- | fluence, s to pursu a course that may | issue in confusion and disaster. Assails Church Strife. “A passive recognition of the high claims of Christ at such a time as this | is wholly out of consonance with the demands of the hour. Many of us, un- | fortunately, in our fancied security | seem to regard the present critical | world situation as being so far removed | from cur doorstep and our local con- cerns and interests as to be unworthy of our reckoning. As I conceive fit, this is no time for internal strife or controversy in the church. It is a time for unity of action and a larger in- sistence upon those elemental truths that constitute the very groundwork of our faith. “While church and state here are unrelated, and wisely so, we may not forget that what the church stands for |and witnesses to is utterly indispensable to that form of civilization of which we are & part and to which we must adhere. An inarticulate expression of faith is of little value, and it is of less value today than ever before. If we believe in the supreme claims of Our Lord, if we believe that His church | occuples an indispensable place in the world, we must dare to be militant and aggressive. Petty personal or party conceits at such a time as the present work irreparable harm to the cause | we_represent. | “It may not be improper in this con- nection for me to humbly and loyally take my place beside the President of the United States in his recent utter- ance concerning the affect of increasing armaments. While recognizing growing suspicions that engender hatred and | produce confusion in the whole eco- | nomic_situation, the President is not appealing for a program of pnclflsm.; He is sanely and with statesmanlike vislon making evident that mounting taxes, the direct consequence of increas- ing armaments and their unrestricted | costs, are reflected in the critical eco- | nomic conditions that today are affiict- | ing_nations, small and great | “That the church must have a mind | and an expressed conviction on a ques- | tion of such momentous character as| this, is clearly obvious. While we are not of those who believe in the aban donment of an adequate constabulary on sea or land, we venture to ally our- selves with those sane statesmen, of whom the President is a conspicuous | leader, who believe that there is a firm | middle ground between pacifism on the | one hand and a belligerent and wildly | extravagant course on the other. | | “The Kellogg-Briand pact filled the | world with hope that better days were | ahead. It certainly is an anomalous | situation where foreign nations defi- | nitely plan for peace and then deliber- | ately set themselves to destroy it. Says the President. ‘International confidence cannot be builded upon fear, it must | be builded upon good will. The whole history of the world is filled with chap- ter after chapter of the failure to se- cure peace through either competitive arms or intimidation.’ “I heartily commend to my brethren, | clerical and lay. the solemn implica- tions of this statement. In the face | of all that I am saying, surely you will grant that the Christian Church has a large and grave responsibility as the exponent of Christian ideals and the interpretor of spirital values. It must, during these very critical times, ad- dress itself to its major responsibilities even though it may entail the aban- donment of many of its coveted prac- tices and conceits. Let us dare to be- lieve that, under God, it may be & determining factor in restoring the world’s order and peace You Are Judged by Your Appearance 22 stores to Keep Your Clothes Looking New Ladies’ and Gents’ Straw Felt Hats Cleaned and Blocked .. ...... Panamas, 75¢ Suits and Overcoats Cleaned and Pressed . . All Dresses and Coats Cleaned and Pressed Ties 10c—12 for $1 “STICK TO THE GOOSE TIIAT LAID THE GOLDEN EGG” | at Philadelphia, is the senior | ing officers of the Marine Co | Col. Bradman left Los Angeles on Ma: may prove a betrayal of our trusts and | th! GEN. R. H. DUNLAP’S BODY TAKEN FROM RUINS NEAR TOURS __ (Continued From First Page) the thick of the Meuse-Argonne offen- sive, in command of his outfit, and led him in the march to the Rhine, follow- ing the signing of the armistice. Was to Head Marine School. Death took him in a locality not far from the scenes of his wartime exploits. He was due to become a student in the Ecole de Guerre in Paris in the Fall and plans of his senior officers directed that he return, following this course, to head the Marine Corps Schools at Quantico, Va. Xis attendance at the Ecole de Guerre was primarily planned to observe the methods of instruction. A citation certificate was given him by Gen. Pershing for his outstanding services with the 17th Field Artillery in France, and the Navy Cross was bestowed upon him as regimental com- mander during the Meuse-Argonne campaign. For his servire in Nica ragua he was commended by Maj. Gen. Prank R. McCoy, U. 5. A, and was given the presidential medal of merit of Nicaragua. Bradman May Fill Vacaney. ‘The death of Gen. Dunlap creates a vacancy in the Marine Corps, which will be filled, in the opinion of service officers, by the pr on of Col. Pred- eric L. Bradman, commanding officer of the 2d Brigade of Martines in Nica- ragua, who did outstanding work in the recent Managua earthquake. Col. Louis M. Gulick, commanding | the Marine Barracks, of the Navy Yard | colcnel on the list. A selection board, which | met last year. composed of high rank- | , picked the names of & number of colonels d sirable for promotion in the event of | vacancies in the grade of brigadier gen- eral. Col. Bradman's name is believed to be on this list. which is kept secret 9, following a short leave of absence, for Manegua, to resume command ere. A selection board will meet early next month, at the direction of Maj. Ben H. Fuller, commandant of the Marine Corps, to make up a list of colonels suitable for promotion during the com- ing year. BODY TO BE SENT HOME. Cruiser Pittsburgh May Carry Remains To United States. PARIS, May 20 (#).—French Army | Engineers today recovered the body of Brig. Gen. Robert H. Dunlap, U.8.M.C,, who was buried alive in a Stone Age | cave by a landslide near Tours yes- terda; ‘They also recovered the body of Denis Briant, a farmer, and rescued Briant's wife, whose screams could be heard from the back of the cave, where she had taken refuge. These reports came by telephone to the American embassy from Maj. Rob- ert L. Walsh, whom Ambassador Edge sent down to Tours yesterday. The embassy notified Washington and sent an undertaker to Tours to bring the general's body here. It prob- ably will be sent home by steamer or on the cruiser Pittsburgh. which is due soon at Marseille on the way home from Manila. COUNTRY SUFFERS LOSS. Secretary Adams Issues Statement on Hearing of Accident. TACOMA, Wash., May 20 (#) —Secre- tary of the Navy Charles Prancis Adams sald today “the United States Marine Corps and the entire country suffers a great loss in the death of Brig. Gen Robert H. Dun]nr buried under a col- | lapsing wall while attempting to rescue & woman in Tours, France | Secretary Adams arrived in TFacoma | to inspect the Fort Lewis dirigible | mooring mast. | “Gen. Dunlap was one of the out- | standing officers of the Marine Corps,” the Secretary said. “He was known as | an officer of great ility and had a | splendid war record. He was one of the | staff of Admiral Sims in Lond and | later saw active service in France ) A large electrical power station is to | be buflt in Valparaiso, Chile. serve you 811 1ath S N.oW. 5602 Conm. Ave. nd 1631 13th St a N W. 1416 Park Rosd N W. 50¢ 75¢ $1 Ave. N. W. 420 B St N. E. 1122 Vermont Ave. v 49 Penn. Ave. N. W. 315 18th B N W. 2 Georgla Ave N. W. 5119 Georsla Ave. N. W. (GATHOLICS PLAN | meetings and_receptions, 905 G 5t. NW. Plant, 1343 So. Capitol St. ncomsin N. W, Stores in 33 Other Cities APOSTOLIC HOME Residence for Delegates to' Be Erected at 34th Street | and Massachusetts Ave. Plans are being drawn for construc- | ticn of a new home for the Catholic apostolic delegation to the United States on a site on Massachusetts ave- | nue east of Thirty-fourth street. The site has just been acquired for the pur- pose. It is estimated the cost of the home will approximate $500,000. ‘The new building will serve as an official housing for the apostolic dele- | gation, providing both office and resi- dential quarters for the staff. | The property, acquired from George H. Lamar as trustee for the Massa- chusetts Park Syndicate, through thz | agency of Norman Brown, is located | cpposite the grounds of the Naval Ob- | servatory and is near the British em- | bassy, along Washington's new embassy l Tow. Plans Being Drawn. | The new building, plans for which are being drawn by Frederick Vernon | Murphy, head of the School of Archi- tecture of Catholic University, will re- place the present housing of the apos- tolic delegation at 1811 Biltmore street. Acquisition of the site, containing nearly 60,000 square feet of land, is the | culmination of plans started last Spring | when Archbishop Michael J. Curley of | Baltimore and three other members of | the Cathoiic hierarchy in this country | “ were named as a_committee to select a site for the new delegation home. Serv- ing with Archbishop Curley were Arch- bishop John T. McNichols of Cincin- | nat{; Bishop Thomas J. Walsh of New- ark and Bishop Thomas C. O'Reilly of | Scranton, Pa. Modern in Style. Plans for the new building are to bp{ submitted at the annual meeting of the | American hierarchy to be held in No- | vember at Catholic University. | The site has & frontage of 150 feet on Massachusetts avenue. It runs 330 feet deep and has a frontage of about 170 feet on Fulton street. Discussing the preliminary drawings now being made, Mr. Murphy said today he anticipated that the structure would be of a modern expression of the Italian renaissance architectural style, with stone facades. It would contain quart- ers for chancery offices and housing for the Papal delegates and their sec- retarial staff, in addition to a chapel. HOOVER TO SPEAK BEFORE RED CROSS | Anniversary Speech Will Be Broad- cast by Major Radio Chains. ‘With President Hoover the principal speaker at the Washington celebration, the fiftieth birthday of the American Red Cross will be observed tomorrow in several thousand towns and citles throughout the country. i Speaking at a dinner in the Willard | Hotel, the President’s message will be | carried from coast to coast by the Co- | lumbla and National Broadcasting | chains. The Chief Executive's voice ill be heard at countless dinners, mass In addition. than 7,500,000 children of the more | Junior Red Cross will observe the event. Justice Hughes to Speak. | Other speakers will be Chief Justice | Charles Evans Hughes, Judge Max | Huber, president of the International | Committee of the Red Cross; Miss | Mabel T. Boardman, secretary, and Dr. John Barton Payne, chairman. Edith Derby, a granddaughter of | Theodore Roosevelt, will speak on “The | Junior Red Cross” at a celebration in | Mineola, N. Y. | The anniversary will be commemo- | rated by numerous programs in Ar- | kansas, now recovering from the| drought. The celebrations there also | will honor men and women who served | as voluntary Red Cross workers in the drought. in the Mississippi flood of 1927 | and in the World War. | Proclamations Issued. Proclamations calling attention to the golden jubilee have been issued by many governors. Half holidays will be de- clared in some communities. Numerous pageants, life saving demonstrations and nursing exhibits will be held. Among the more important celebra- tions will be those in Los Ange'es, Salt Lake City, Portland, Oreg.; St. Loui: Chicago, Houston, Tex.; Duluth, Minn.: Council Bluffs, Iowa; Oklahoma Cit: Rockford, Ill.; Philadelphia, Abilen Tex.; Atlantic City, Louisville, Wichita, Kans.; Columbia, 8. C.. Brooklyn, | Rochester, Providence, Syracuse, Lin. coln, Nebr.; Cheyenne, Wyo.; Fond du Lac, Wis., and San Antonio, Tex. |a revolver in his right hand. | note addressed to her. ustrator, ended Ralph Barton, il BARTON, ARTIST, TAKESHS LFE IMaid Finds Him With Wound | in Temple and Gun in Hand. [ | | | | NEW YORK, May 20 —Ralph Bar- ten, widely known illustrator, commit- ted suicide today in his East Fifty- seventh street home. When a maid reported for work this morning at Barton's pent house apart- ment she found her employer dead with & wound in the right temple and | Police pronounced the death suicidal. | Barton, who was 30 years old, suf-| fered a heart attack several months 2go, but apparently had recovered. | He was well known for his caricatures satirizing Americans and American life, which appeared in the New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Liberty and Harper's Bazaar. He also {llustrated books. Married Four Times. Barton had been married four times. Just a month ago his last wife, the fcrmer Germaine Marie Tailleferre, di- | vorced him in Paris, charging desertion. They had been married at Ridgefield, Conn., in 1926. | ‘The artist was born in 'ansas City and studied in Paris. As a cartoonist he reported the war in pictures for the British magazine Puck. He- {llustrated “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” and edition of Balzac's droll stories. One of his most striking creations was curtain of caricatures of celebrities, which he drew for the Chauve-Souris, Russian vaudeville troupe in 1922. PFrance once made him a chevalier of the Legion d'Honneur. Name Linked With Heiress. ‘The illustrator once was mentioned as a prospective husband of Miss Ruth Kresge, heiress of the 5 and 10 cent store magnate. But yesterday Miss Kresge sailed for Europe on the same liner with Rufus Clark Caulkins, dip- lomat, whom New York newspapers described her flance. Miss Kresge was quoted as saying they intended to be married some time after her mother joined them in Europe. A mald known only as “Mary,” who had been in Barton's employ for sev- eral years, entered the apartment with her pass key early today and found a It contained some money, all the cash available at the time, Barton wrote | On the bed, in pajamas, was Barton’s body. Beside him lay the revolver from which the shot had been fired into his temple. There was also an- other note, typewritten. It said that since boyhood Barton had suffered from Home of PERFECT Diamonds LOOK FOR THE SCHWARTZ GOLD CLOCK ON SEVENTH ST. A Genuine General Electric Made originally to sell for $24.00. NEVER BEFORE SUCH A LOW PRICE! NO WIND- ING...NO OILING...NOTHING TO GET OUT OF ORDER...time that is Three Guarantees You receive the guarantees in writing from the TEL! CHRON . . . THE GENERAL ELECTRIC CO....and CHAS. SCHWARTZ & SON. 43¢ delivers Mail and as always accurate to the 60th art of a second. TRY T FOR ONE WEEK AND RETURN IT IF YOU ARE NOT SATIS- FIED! No Winding the clock Phowe Orders filled as long limited supply " lasts. Sdivaitze-Son Home of Perfect Diamonds 708 7th St. N.W, FOUNDED 1#21 7705 14th st N.W. Yy - his life with a shot in the temple t He is shown here with his fourth wife, the former Germ: who secured a Paris divorce a month ago. an | RVE 10 DECREASE * NOIE UNDER WAY |Emergency Hospital Ambu-, lances Lead Way by Cur- tailing Use of Sirens. . . H A campaign to rid Washingten of all unnecessary noises, especial the | vicinity of hospitais and sanitariums, | Bot under way today at a conference, | between M. O. Eldridge, assistant di- | rector of traffic, and officials of Emer-* | gency Hospital The conference, held this mo: at Emergency. was an outgrowth of &, | meeting vesterday of the Executive | Committee of the hospital with Maj. Gen. He bert B. Crosby, District Com- mission~r; Inspector E. W. Brown of the Tra®> Bureau, and W. A Van | Duzer, newly appointed trafic director, o The “Less Noise” campaign is mot! vated principally from the standj t of the health of hospital and sani= | tarium patients. according to Dr. Harry | M. Kaufman, a member of the Emer-. gency Hospital Executive Committee, who ‘attended tcday’s meeting. Dr. Kaufman and B. B. Sandige, | superintendent of the hospital, called {on the public to assist by observing the. regulations. They said the hospital’s, own ambulance drivers wculd be in. structed to curtail as far as possible- the blowing of sirens to set an example. “Emergency Hospital, doing its great: volume of emergency work, rec only too well the criticisms of the pub-. lic from time to time of the noise & its own ambulances,” Dr. Kaufman “and is only too willing to curtail blowing of sirens 2s much as pos-.. oda 2 Marie Tailleferre, melancholy and that in recent years the melancholy had increased. Of late, | he wrote, he had been extremely nervous and the fear of insanity possessed him. It was becoming more and more diffi- cult for him to keep up with his work. He wrote that he was killing himself rather than risk insanity. Charlie Chaplin on his last visit to New York was a guest at the Barton apartment. Special! . Minstrel Show Planned. BAILEYS CROSS ROADS, Va., May 2) (Special) . —The Racketeers will pre- | sent & minstrel show Priday night in | the school for the benefit of the Baileys Cross Roads school faculty fund. Save Moey on All . of Your Building Needs Lumber—Millwork—Plumbing Get Our Estimate! On Your Entire List 3—Branches—3 MAIN OFFICE- I5™& H Sts. N.E, DOWNTOWN-62&C Sts. SW. BRIGHTWOOD-5925Ge. Ave.NW MILLER INSTITUTION INTERNATIONALE YOU'LL DANCE IN TUSSANAM BY NIGHT AMBROSIA A trimly delicate Sandel that will charm many o dancing partner. YOU'LL PLAY IN TUSSANAM BY DAY SUNSET A Cuban heeled T-sirap combining TUSSANAM with ZEPHYR MESH. :Cussanqm PRI RODIER'S Dyeable Summer Fabric Created exclusively for . . . I. MILLER SLIPPERS Whatever the occasion may be . . . what- ever the frock or_the color or the mood, you'll find that I. 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