Evening Star Newspaper, June 1, 1931, Page 11

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< - U. 5. EDITORS SCAN . MODERN ISSUES Morning Session Featured by Address of National President. BY the Assoclated Press. i ATLANTA, Ga, June 1.—Problems | presentéd to newspaper men by the| Tapid developments of modern lite came | under joint scrutiny of the Nation's | editors heré today. 1 Leéading editors were on tké program of the National Editorial Assoclation Convention for addresses on specific -oblems beginning as soon as welcom- | g formalities were out of the way ! this morning. | The ocutstanding business of the morning session was the annual address of the president, George B. Dolliver of | Battle Creek, Mich. ~Welcoming ad- | dresses were prepared by Secretary of | State George H. Carswell, representing Gov. L. G. Hardman; Robert F. Maddox, chairman of the Reception Committee, and Louis L. Morris, president of the | Georgla Press Association. | Dr. Willis A. Sutton of Atlanta, presi- | dent of the National Education Associa- | tion, was asked to discuss “The Two | N. E. A’s” which he called “America's | two greatest, educational institutions.” A featured speaker on the afternoon m was Fred Fuller Shedd, editor of the Philadelphia Fvening Bulletin, | who planned to discuss the mutual problems of newspapers and journalistic schools. 27 Firemen Burned Fighting Gasoline Blaze - ALL ENGINES OF OITY BATTLE FLAMES AT BALTIMORE PLANT. Last night Mr, Shedd discussed his | WENTY-SEVEN firemen were burned, most of them slightly, as fire destroyed 10 tanks of gasoline, bensol and subject informally, saying the prime need of newspapers is trained men and such men must come more and more from journalism schools. He advocated fixing the educational standards of Journalistic schools as high and as rigld a8 those of legal, medical and other professional schools. Mr. Shedd said the public taste news and editorials was rising rapidly, with interest turning to international affairs, science, literature and the arts. In medieval times men carried their own drinking eups about with them, perhaps because at feasts a man's enemy was likely to pass a cup of poison kerosene @t the plant of the Atlantic Refining Co. at Baltimore Saturday. Explosion after explosion oecurred before the flames were brought under control aftef thitee hours, Twelve alarms brought apparatus from all sec- ticns of the city. Photo shows & general view. —A. P, Photo. 319 SEIZED AS REDS BY PHILIPPINE POLICE Deny Raided Meeting Was Communistic—Six Carried Weapons. Suspects By the Assoclated Press. and nineteen alleged Communists were held here today for investigation in cotinection with a meeting police raided Saturday night. Among those held was Crisanto Evangelista, who previously had been arrested several times on sedition charges. All asserted the gathering was not communistic, but the annual con- gress of a labor organization. Prosecuting attorneys sald they did | evidence to disprove the claims of those | held and that, with the exception of six who were charged with possessing deadly weapons, no charges might be ke Remote districts among the moun- tains of Southern Venezuela, where it |is believed prehistoric animals and vegetation may still be found, are to MANILA, June 1.—Three hundred not know whether police had sufficient be visited by a European expedition. ...ARE YOU '—then tune in MORTON DOWNEY and TONY WONS on the Camel Quarter Hour Every night except Sunday at 6:45 p.m., Washington time over -the Columbia Broadcasting System N the street of a million lights called Broadway has risen a bright new star, Morton Downey. To shop girls and debu- tantes, to men and women of every age, of every walk in life, the silver magio of his lilting tenor has won for him at twenty-nine, the plaudits of the most critical city in the world. 2 When he sang on the great stage at the Paramount Theater, crowds stormed the doors to hear him. At a popular night club where he was featared, dancers stopped to listen, held by the spell of his song. Now Morton Downey brings his great gift to radio! Every night, except Sunday, he will thrill ‘America on the Camel Quarter Hour with a repertory of song over the Columbia Broadcasting System. o oo Still listenin®? ‘And the Master of Ceremonies—guess who + » « None other than Tony Wons, better known to radio listeners as the inimitable Tony of “Tony’s Scrap Book.” e o o 8till listenin®? And behind it all, the soft steady throb of drums, the croon of saxophones and the muted melodies of brass; the new Camel This unique program is pre- sented to you by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Manufac- Orchestra, directed by Jacques Renard. We turers of Camel Cigarettes. . think you'll like it. Tunc them fn tomight __ commsa. . . SCIENTISTS START EXPEDITION JULY 1182 Two-Year Crulse to Obtain |&ideey D. Lund, Specimens for Small U. 8. Museums. By the Associated Press. donia, the New Hebrides, Dutéh New Guiana, Borneo, Javi, Stmatrs, Siam, the Kongo and the Amason Rivers, will be the director. Five Sclences Present. Specimens will be collected for the Pield Museum, Chicag6; the Museum of Angeles, Amherst College and a number of other smaller museums which have not yet been selected. In the group will anthropologists, & foologist, an ornithologist, an ichtl ologist and- an oceanographer. Sound motion pictures—some of them in colors—will be made of natives and animals. There will also be painters and a seulptor in the party. ‘The expédition will travel on s 230- foot four-master schooner with an suxiliary motor. The equipment will also #lw an airplane, whose pilot has yet been selected. ‘The éxpedition will cost about $300,- 000 and is to be financed through John C. Fell & Co, New York bankers, by a group of millionaires, whose names are withheld. Expedition List. Among those who will make the trip are: Edwin B. Child, portrait and land- scape painter; his son, Sargent Child, sculptor, who was fofmerly with the National Museum in Washington; Her- man T. Beck, an anthropologist, repre« © 1931, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winsten-Salem, N. G MELS NO_ CGEARE X AFIEBR- [ASTE GARBISCH CHILD BORN NEW YORK, June 1 ‘M W. Qarbisch, the former Chrysler, daughter of Walter P. ler, automobile manufacturer, is e iter, born at lum. Garbisch, who was & star cen ;;1.; ball captain at West Pon::'::g ‘were l.“(mryllm" married January Ybaindeed There are HOMING PENNIES Perhaps you don’t believe there are any Homing Pennies. Perhaps you think that money just naturally has a habit of going places. And going and going and going . . . Well, if that’s your idea, it’s plain to us you’ve been trading in the wrong stores. There’s an A&P store as close to your house as we could ibly put it.. It’s selling the best food at prices that allow undreds of dollars in penny savings to find their way back to the homes of its customers every year. That's what we mean by Homing Pennies—the money you save, which returns home with you in your purse after shop- ping at A&P. And, once there, it’s the money that really stays at home—at YOUR home. It amounts to plenty, too; in fact, it’s many times greater than our own profit. The Great ATLANTIC & PACIFIC 7ea Co. ADMISSION FREE Mt. Rainier, Maryland ; 4900 Block Rhode Island Avenue (Extended) JUNE 1, 2, 3 UNDER THE BIG TENT 10 A. M. TO 10 P. M. * RAIN OR SHINE - A TP 0L . “A TRIP THROUGH THE FORD PLANT” THOUSANDS of people from all over the world visit the Ford plant every year. See what they see! Hear what they hear! You'll say this is an unusually entertaining and instructive picture. SEE ACTUAL FORD CAR SAWED IN TWO Women as well as men show great interest in this révelation of vital mechanieal parts that are seldom seen. Shows valves, pistons, eylinders — fuel, cooling, ignition and lubrication pystems — how the body, seats and upholstery are made — how the different layers of paint are put on. There's also a eut-away Ford truck chassis. Many things you have always wanted %0 know clearly explained. ALSO SEE «=First complete showing of all the new Ford cars in this vicinity. Includes the smart new De Luxe Bodies — Ford trucks and delivery cars. «—The Triplex shatter-proof glass windshield that will not fly when broken. o—How Rustless Steel exterior parts are made, from the sheet metal to the evergleaming finished products. ’ ==Why Ford steel-spoke wheels are so strong and sturdy — how the wheel is welded in one piece. —How the Houdaille double-acting hydraulic shock absorbers cushion against hard shocks and why they are ealled double-acting. —How the erankshaft and eamshaft are made — from the original steel bar to final machining and polishing. 2 { —And many other features which make this free show well worth your time. AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS

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