Evening Star Newspaper, July 26, 1931, Page 42

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Army and Navy News Army. An unprecedented number of age re- M.remem.: among general officers of the y wil take place between September g , 1931, and April, 1932. During this seven-month period four major gen- erals and two brigadier generals will be placed on the retred list of the Army. The major generals retiring for age, with the date of their retirement in- dicated, are William Lassiter, Septem- ber 30, 1931; Hanson E. Ely, November 30, 1931; Fred W. Sladen, November 30, 1931, and Willlam R. Smith, April 30, 1932. The retiring brigadier Rea- erals are Henry G. Learnard, August 31, 1931, and Carl R. Darnall, December 31, 1931, Although the formal appointment made last week by the Secretary of ‘War of Brig. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois, now on duty as assistant chief of Air Corps, as chief of Air Corps with the rank of major general to succeed Maj. Gen. James E. Fechet upon the latter’s expiration of his four-year tour of duty on December 19, 1931, was expected. there ‘< considerable interest being taken in_the identity of the Army Alr Corps officer who will be selected to succeed Gen. Foulois when he assumes the duties of his.new office in Decem- ber. The selection of Gen. Foulois as the successor df Gen. Fechet has the approval of the Army and he is splen- didly equipped to perform the duties which he will assume next December. ‘The selection of Gen. Foulois’ suc- cessor will be confined to the list of eligible colonels and lieutenant colonels of the Air Corps. Although the latest Army list and directory confains the names of six Air Corps colonels, two of this rroup will be eliminated from con- sideration. The six officers, in the or: der of their relative rank, are Chalmers G. Hall. Theodore A. Baldwin, ir. Charles H. Danforth, James E. Fechet, Clarence C. Culver and Ira F. Fravel Gen. Fechet, whose permanent rank is colonel. but who holds the temporary rank of major general as chief of the Air Corps, of course, is eliminated, as is also Charles H. Danforth, who was appointed about a vear ago as assistant chief of the Air Corps with the tem- porary rank of brigadier general. This leaves but four officers on the list of colonels eligible for selection. There is commissioned in the Air Corps at the present time 21 lieutenant colonels, of which 3 are removed from consideration. ‘The first of this group of three is Lieut. Col. Frank P. Lahm, who by virtue of completing a four- year term as assistant chief of the Air Corps about a vear ago with the tem- porary rank of brigadier general. would not enter into the deliberations. The other two officers. bo'h brigadier gen- erals, are Benjamin D. Doulois, who, of course, is removed from considera- tion, and Henry C. Pratt. who is elim- inated as he is now on duty as assist- ant chief of the Air Corps. The elimination of these three offi- cers leaves 18 of the lieutenant col- | onels 2s eligible for selection to succeed Gen. Foulois. These officers, arranged in the order of their relative rank, are Rov C. Kirtland, Arthur G. Fisher, John H. Howard. John A. Paegalow, James A. Mars, Jacob W. S. Wuest, Gerald C. Brant, Archie W. Barry, Ira Longanecker, Frank M. Andrews. OSCAr | (Lo gorive 1ot of the Nav. Westover, Harry B. Clagett, Jacob E. Fickel, Rush B. Lincoln. Augustine W. Robins, Henrv H. Arnold. Barton K. Yount and William C. McChord Navy. The failure of the President to ap- prove ‘the report of the naval medical selection board, that convened at the Navy Department on June 23 for the purpos2 of recommending not more than seven officers of that corps for promo- tion to the rank of commander, is th reason for the appointment of another board that will meet at the Navy De- partment tomorrow morning. board that met in June consisted of | volumes Capt. Charles P. Kindleberger, Theodore W. Richards, Eugene J. Grow, Charles S. Butler, John M. Brister, Robert E. Hoyt, John F. Murphy, with Lieut. Comdr. John R. White as recorder. In due course of time the buard rendered its report, the report went through offi- cial channels to the President, who did not approve the report, and it was sent back to the Navy Department. This is the first time since the selection sys- tem was instituted in the Navy that the President has falled to approve the recommendations of a selection board. It is presumed that the unprecedented action of the President in failing to ap- prove the recommendations of a slec- tion board was because some eligible officer was not among those recommend- ed for promotion. As a result, another board will be convened at the Navy Department to- morrow to recommend the same number of officers of the Medical Corps for pro- motion to the rank of commander. The officers composing this board, none of whom was a member of the first board, are: Capts. William H. Bell, Percival S. Rossiter, Benjamin H. Dorsey, Har- old W. Smith, James E. Gill, Norman T. McLean and Isafc S. K. Reeves, with Lieut. Comdr. John Harper as recorder. The same list of lieutenant commanders eligible for promotion in rank as was submitted to the first board will be sub- mitted to the second board. The offi- cers on this list, arranged in their order on the list, are: Lieut. Comdr. Harry Shaw, Harry L. Brown, Condie K. Winn, Andre E. Lee, Heber Butts, Philip E. Garrison, Earle P. Huff, Martin Donel- son, Dow H. Casto, Clarence C. Kress, James A. Bass, Charles L. Beeching, William E. Findeisen, Arthur E. Bed- doe, Louis H. Roddis, Horace V. Corneit, Howard A. Tribou, Willlam B. Het- field, Thomas A. Fortesque, Willlam W. Hargrave, John Buckley, Charles S. Stephenson. Ruskin M. Lhamon, Ed- ward E. Woodland, Clarence W. Ross, Carleton I. Wood, Roscoe M. Water- house, Willlam W. Wickersham, William | H. Michael, Talmadge Wilson, Joel T. Boone (temporarily having the rank of captain while physician to the Presi- dent), Henry M. Stenhouse and Frederic L. Conklin. The board of officers of the Corps of | Professors of Mathematics, consisting | of Capts. Frank B. Littell, Paul J. Dash- | iell and Herbert L. Rice, which con- vened at the Navy Department on June 29 for the purpose of recommending one officer of that corps for promotion to | the rank of captain, recommended the | only other officer of the corps, Comdr. Theodore W. Johnson. The recommen- dation has been approved by the Pres- ident and Comdr. Johnson will be pro- | moted to the rank of captain on August | 1. 1931, as a result of the retirement on that date, for age, of Capt. Dashiell, | who r-ached the age of 64 vears on July 16. |~ With the retirement of Capt. Dashiell | only three professors of mathematics | will remain on the active list of the | Navy, Capts. Littell, Rice and Johnson. Capt. Littell will retire for age on March | 1. 1933; "Capt. Rice on January 1, {1934, and Capt. Johnson on July 1, 1936, | when the corps will become extinct on . the laws | now in force not authorizing any new | appointments to the corps. ! PUBLIC LIBRARY Diverting Voyages for Summer s Readers. | To those who must do their vacation voyaging at home the whole world is accessible through books. The Public ‘The Library calls attention to the following of around-the-world travels Chrysler Eight De Luxe Sedan, $1565 Five wire wheels standard; six wire wheels §33 extra | ventures, THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. JULY 26, 1931—PART FOUR. \ 1 and voyages by land and sea, today and y: On the High Seas. Vignettes of the Sea, by Felix Riesen- berg. 1926. G12.R447v. “Here is the hymanest book we have met for quite a‘while. A book to be picked up and reéad for 10 minutes or to be browsed right through from cover to cover all in one night. Excellent for artist, tramp or business man.” Bl Adams. John Cameron’s Odyssey, transcribed by Andrew Farrell. 1928. G12.C143. “There is the flavor of extremely salty seas in this book. Particularly vivid are the pictures of the old Pacific. Here are the South Sea Islands long before the colorful Frederick O'Brien discovered them, before Robert Louis Stevenson went to live at Vallima.” A. B.Maurice. Sea-lore, by 8. R. H. Rogers, 1920. G12.R63. “His pages are a lucky tub, into which you cannot dip without fishing up some Jjolly yarn about exploration, or whal- ing, or lost ships and lost treasures some interesting bit of information about sea customs and superstitions, or some out-of-the-way technicality. On the High Seas, by E. K. Chatterton. 1929. G12.C390. “Comdr. Chatterton's seagoing med- ley is good reading * * * for those who have tasted, in fact or imagination, the hazards of service in ships. What we have is episodes of life at sea through three centuries, assembled without much order or other bond of relation than the sea itself.”” Atlantic Circle, by Leonard Outhwaite. 1931. G26.0u8s. “At the end of June, 1929, Mr. and Mrs. Outhwaite set out from New York City in a small schooner, the Kinka- Jou, 71 feet on the water line, to cir- cumnavigate the Atlantic Ocean. In this book the author tells the full story of the voyage that, with various short or long stops. consumed a year, cov- ered 14000 miles and touched four continents.” Voyagers Unafraid, by I. W. Anthony. | 1930, G12.An88. Short accounts of the courageous, if somewhat foolhardy, adventurers who have crossed the Atlantic single-handed in small boats. Doubloons: the Story of Buried Treas- wre, by C. B. Driscoll. 1930. G13.D84. “There have been other books on buried and hidden treasure, but Dris- coll's is the giant to date. There re- mains only one chapter to complete it, one on the search for Inca treasure in the Andes. * * * Mr. Driscoll has flung open a door to the hall of imagination. He has written a pirate book which is rare because not infantile.” C.J. Finger. Around the World. A Landlubber's Log; Around the World as Sailor and Tramp, by Arthur Warner. 1930. G13.W24. “Mr. Warner possesses a sharp eye for characterization and description and exhibits a deep. unalloyed love of life. The result is a book that convinces the reader of its authenticity from the first page to the last. There is nothing over- drawn or overreached here. * * * ‘A Landlubber’s Log' is really an account of the actual realization of the dream of wandering that obsesses every adven— turous youth who has heard of the sea.” Herbert Gorman. Vagabond de Luxe, by John Marshall 1930. G12.M354v. ‘The gay account of a college boy's 70,000-mile journey around the world as a supertramp. His ups and downs, now in, now out of funds, now almost faced with starvation, now surrounded by luxury, cover many places and ad- starting with a hitch-hike across the Southwestern States, through civil war in China. to Soviet Russia and home as a scullion on a transatlantic liner. People and Places. by Douglas Goldring. 1929. G12.G565p. “Here is a record of a gallant attempt to plunge headforemost and completely, if for a very short time, into various not too visited places, and for the dura- tion of the visit to become as closely identified with the country as is al- Chrysler Six lowed to an ordinary mortal of British birth.” Louis Colman. The Bed-Book of Travel, by R. L. Wright. 1931. G.W93. “A very charming, vivacious and en- tertaining book, a full of sugges- tive ideas, astute observations, and es- pecially of whimsies. It is the whimsies that make it so entertal and render it _so suitable to read, a little at a time, when one is preparing for sleep.” Travelers of Other Days. A Selection of the Principal Voyages, ‘Trafiques and Discoveries of the English Nation, by Richard Hakluyt, set out . . . by Laurence Irving. 1927. G12H126pa. Annoyed by the accounts of the vo: ages of discovery made by the Span- ish, Portuguese and Italian travelers, Hakluyt sought to bring together storles of the voyages of the English seamen who had brought renown to Great Brit- ain. In these selections the rugged old English spelling has been retained, along with peculiarities of punctuation, which will be found of great assistance to any one wishing to read aloud from the rich | fare here provided. |The Travels of Marco Polo, the Vene- tian. 1928. G60.P766.E. “It is difficult to read Marco Polo as one reads historical facts. One reads him as one reads romance, as one would_ read, for instance, the ‘Eve of St; Mark |or the ‘Well at the World's End.’ From the introduction by John Mlsefleld,{ Travels and Adventures of Pero Tafur, | 1435-1439, tdlt‘t; by Malcolm Letts. 1926. G12.T134.E. Tafur was born in Cordova, Spain, about 1410 and set out on his travels through the Near East about 25 years later. He was remarkably well educated for & tradesman of the pre-Columbian period and, in spite of a somewhat stilted style, has warmth and color in his pictures of soclety as it emerged from the Middle Ages. MARINE CORPS NEWS | First Lieut. James D. Waller will be detached from the Quantico base on | August 1 to the Army’s Field Artillery School, Fort Sill, Okla. Capt. John Halla, former aide to the major general commandant. has been detached from the local Eighth street barracks to duty with the lst Brigade of Marfnes, Haitl, being scheduled to department from Hampton Roads via the U. 8. 8. Kittery approximately Au- st 5. EUMfa), Archie F. Howard will be de- tached from corps headquarters August 3 to the Army’s Command and General Staff School, Fort Leavenworth, Kans. Capt. Thomas E. Bourke was de- tached from Quantico yesterday corps headquarters. Kenneth F. Bubler has been ap- pointed a Marine gunner and assigned to duty at the air station base of the 1 Quantico base. | " Capt. Thomas E. Kendrick, now at the Norfolk navy yard, will be detached therefrom about August 15 to duty at the Quantico base. First Lieut. Prank Hanlon will be de- tached from the local vy yard on Au- gust 15 and thereafter is to be stationed at Quantico for duty. Lieut. Cummings. in charge of the post exchange of the local barracks of the navy yard, will also be detached to duty at Quantico. First Lieut. Harry E. Darr, one of the older commissioned officers in age in his grade will report at Quantico about August 15 for duty. Second Lieut. Michael M. Mahoney, heretofore assigned to duty at Annapo- lis, Md. has been ordered to duty at the Quantico base instead. The Marine detachment attached to Naval Hospital, this city, will begin an- nual practice and record target firing during the coming week at one of the nearby rifle ranges. First Sergt. Carl- ton, & veteran of the World War, who | saw action at the famed Chateau | Thiery scrap, is in charge of the M | rine detachment. The Veteran Marine Corps Legion will hold an excursion to Quantico via steamer City of Washington, 5:30 p.m. | tomorrow. Col M. @Wise, national commandant of the organization, will head the veterans. Sedan, $895 For Better Value—Get a Chrysler Investigate. Decide for yourself. Simple comparisons that anyone can easily make lead stfaight to this conclusion: That Chryslers —all Chryslers — have the advantage of smarter design; that Chryslers reflect more skill in engineer- ing, that Chryslers are built to more exacting limits ot precision; that Chry- slers are livelier in pick-up, smoother Executive Offices and Service 1612-22 U St. N.W. 614 A St. S.E. M. Raini d. ovee e ... rown Co Sandy Spring, Md. ‘ashéll Motor Company...Roekville, Md. Chrysler Six, 4 body styles, $885 to $935; at all speeds and easier, safer to control. Step into a Chrysler Six or a Chry- sler Eight and drive a few miles. You'll acquire new views .about performance, you'll discover new things about motor car pick-up, speed and;smoothness. You'll realize a new pleasure at the wheel of a car. You'll understand why we say, “Drive a Chrysler and enjoy the difference.” Chrysler “70”, 4 body styles, $1245 to $1295; Chrysler Eight De Luxe, 5 body styles, $1525 to $1585; Chrysler Imperial Eight, ¢ body styles, $2745 to $3145. All prices 'H. B. Leary, . b. factory; special equipment extra. Jr., & Bros. DISTRIBUTORS Salesrooms—1612-22 You St. N.W. and 10th and H Sts. N.E. nee Dysart. Woodstock. Economy Garage. ‘Lovettsville, Va. Winchester, Va. arrisonburg, Va. anaseas, V: t Roval, s E. W. Grant ! Fron Jas. A. Beall & Sons ... Anacostia, D. C. New and Used Car Salesrooms 1321-23 14th St. N.W. Skinker Bros. Motor Co.. Fredericksburg, Vs _Warrer v ichard Luray, Va. Charioitesville, Va. Wallach, J ead Serviee B Pike Motor Co. American Legion ‘The members of the local department of the American Legion have been in- vited through the department com- mander, Dr. B. C. MacNell, by Col. H. N. Cootes, commanding officer, Fort Myer, . to attend a review of stu- dents of 1 C. M. T. C, to be held on the post polo fleld at Fort Myer, Va., ‘Tuesday at 5 p. . ‘The Washington Boys’ Independent Band will be presented with colors on the polo fleld, Potomac Park, on Tues- day by department commander of the American Legion, Dr. B. C. MacNeil, and Department Comdr. Jennings of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, ‘The Department Convention Commit- tee of the American Legion was con- vened Wednesday at department head- quarters, 316 Shoreham Building, by Chairman Willlam N. Morrell and a Jjoint meeting was held with the South- east Business Men’s Association on Friday evening at Walker Hill Dairy Hall, ‘530 Seventh street southeast, in order to complete plans for the annual Department Convention of the Amer- ican Legion to be held August 5-7 at Buchanan School Auditorium, Thir- teenth and B streets southeast. A meeting of the Department Execu- tive Committee of the American Le- gion was called by Department Comdr. Dr. B, C. MacNeil, and held in the board room of the District Building Thursday evening. ‘The last date to apply for the Mich- igan soldiers’ bonus is December 31, 1931, according to word received at local American Legion headquarters. ~New claims filed on or before that date must be paid or disallowed before Decem- ber 31, 1932. Disalloweq claims may be reopened by submitthg new evi- dence which can be considered before December 31, 1931 National Comdr. Ralph T. O'Neil of the American Legion has called atten- tion to the five-year convertible term Government insurance policy which many veterans are carrying, and which | specifies that either it must be changed within five years to another form, at a higher premium, or that it will auto- matically become ordinary life insur- ance at a much higher rate of premium. Mr. O'Nell declared “in this time of depression a large number of veterans are unable to convert this policy be. cause of the additional premium in- volved, and it is only fair that he be allowed an extension of three to five years untii he is financially rehabili- tated.” He urged that the Legion press for early amendment to the War Risk In- surance Act (section 301), so that the sentence may be eliminated from the law which prevents the reconversion of the five-year term policy. He said it is necessary that this amendment be secured several months prior to July 2, 1932, so that all veterans may have ample time to reconvert. Four blocks of the Rue de Rivoll in Paris will be reproduced in Detroit next September, when the American Legion holds its thirteenth national convention there. An Art Committee has been working for months on the decorative scheme for the convention. Marine Corps Reserves With scarcely a month left before the 6th Marine Brigade, Washington's | Marine Reserve organization, leaves for camp, there remains a few vacan- cies in the medical detachment ©6f both the 23rd and 20th Marines. The medical troops comprising the above outfits are young men gathered from Washington "and nearby communities, Georgetown medical students, George Washington Medical School, a group from Georgetown Dental School, a good | representation from the local high schools and a nucleus of former serv-| ice men, former soldiers, sailors and | marines. The enlisted personnel comprising the | brigade medical detachment receives | instructions in first-aid, bandaging, | surgical technique and the care of the sick and offers opportunity for train- | ing at Virginia Beach from August 23 | to_September 6. The organization consists of 8 officers and 60 men. The brigade surgeon u{ Lieut. Comdr. Don 8. Knowlton, regi- .| units will report with their new guidons. |clerks, trumpeters and drummers, mental surgeon from the 20th Marines is_Lieut. Howard H. Strine; executive officer, Lieut. (Junior Grade) Philip A. Caulfield, and Lieut. (Junior Grade) Lester M. Lucas, dental officer. The first sergeant is Robert L. Jenkins, the regimental surgeon of the 23rd Marines is Lieut. Lyman B. Tibbetts. Execu- tive officer is Lieut. Willlam L. Schaffer. Lieut. (Junior Grade) A. Victor Cer- cell and Lieut. (Junior Grade) Martin J. Keane are dental officers. The first sergeant is James N. Shippee. The medi- cal troops will mess as a unit, but the medical detachment of the 20th Ma- | rines and the medical detachment of | the 23rd Marines will each run its own regimental field hospital and dispensary and train and maneuver as a unit. Any recruits wishing to affiliate with this organization can do so by report- ing to the 6th Marine Brigade Armory on Mont and Friday evenings at| 8 o'clock at 458 Indiana avenue. Col. ‘Julius 8. Turrlll, U. S. M. C, inspected the 6th Marine Brigade Ar- mory offices and rifie range at 458 Indiana avenue and 315 John Marshall place last Monday evening and ex- pressed appreciation of the appearance of the units, ‘The third voluntary Sunday morning formations will take place at Area “C,” Anacostia, today at 9:30 am. until noon. Company close-order drills will | be followed by brigade parade forma- tion at 11:30 a.m. All companies and Several recently discharged members of the Quantico Marine Band have joined the 6th Brigade Band. ‘There | are existing vacancies in the band in both the brass and reed sections. Marine Corps sharpshooters are join- ing the Brigade Rifie Range Detach- ment, which is in command of Capt. Francis R. Geracl. There are vacancles in the Brigade Medical Detachment and for cooks, Dead Wife's Ring to No. 2. When Miss Muriel Bruce becomes the bride of the Rev. Francis John Lys, aged 68, provost of Worcester College, | Oxford, England, she will receive the ring of the bridegroom’s first wife as | a wedding gift. Wife No. 1 of aged Rev. Lys died last September. She left | her $62500 estate to him and be- queathed: “My diamond ring to his wife should he marry after my death, as I hope he will” Youthful Miss BRITISH WAR WIDOWS FIND NEW HUSBANDS Half of Them Have Rewed Despite Surplus of Women in Islands. By Cable to The Sta LONDON, July 25.—The war widow in Great Britain seems to have found an ally in Cupid. For despite the fact that there are approximately 2,000,000 sur- plus females in these isles, fully 50 per cent of the war widows have remarried, and many of them have found spouses for the third time. In 1919 official statistics stated that there were more than 189487 war widows in Great Britain. Owing to deaths later of wounded or disabled service men pensions were pald by the state to 258,000 war widows. But ac- cording to the latest officlal returns only 140550 war widows are now re- ceiving pensions. ‘The ministry of pensions discontinues its allowances to & war widow on her remarrying, but the allowances for chil- grr;?h nr‘eh L‘()mu’n.‘l(t’d6 until each child es the age of 16. A capital nt of £200 is also handed to llahe v"lr;o' when she goes to the altar for the sec- ond time, At the present time the number of war widows receiving pensions is 140,- 550. 1In the view of some sociologists the war widows' marital chances have been improved because of the flightiness of s0 many spinsters. (Copyright, 1931.) Airship Cheap at Auction. Scrap prices prevailed at the auction sale of an airship, the property of the irship Development Co., Ltd., held re- cently at Cramlington, England. The ciaft was built in 1929, was 137 feet long and similar in type to the R-100. Several hundred people attended the sale. A 75-horsepower Rolls-Royce en= gine which cost $9,000 and had only seven hours’ flying, went for $67.50, and the $5.000 envelope brought only $62. The gondola, fitted with valuable in- struments, was sold for $10 to an engi- neer who planned to put it in his garden Bruce lives at Adelaide, Australia. as a plaything for his children. This is the reason why owners say - - "MY NEXT CAR WILL BE ANOTHER OLDSMOBILE” FOUR YEARS OF OLDSMOBILE Now . A\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\4 Titing Five Wire or Five Demountable W One-Piece Seamiess Fenders. ... Satety-Type Running Beards. : Chrome-Plated Headlamps—all models s Quistor . . . steel braced . . . Fisher Composite Bodles. Uphelstery Option—Mohair or Whipcerd .. Foot-Contrelled Headlight Dimmer . ... Fully Insulated Bodies Fully Enclosed Brakes G Rollor-Bearing, Worm-Type Steering . Nen-Glare Windshield : Counter-Weighted Crankshaft Piston Pins Pressure Lubricated. . 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