Evening Star Newspaper, May 20, 1932, Page 6

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NYSTIG HESSAK MY ENTER VS Baba Arrives in New York. | Plans to End Silence of Seven Years. By the Associsted Press. NEW YORK, May 20.—Shri. Meher | Baba, whose disciples call him the| messiah, came from far-away India today to kindle “American materialism” | with the fires of Zoroastrianism. He was in the midst of a seven~year" silence and could not explain his cam- paign, but his secretary said he would go to Hollywood and might enter the| movies if that proved to be the best avenue of approach to the American | mind Surrounded by a retinue of followers | in Hindu dress, he stood on the deck of | the incoming Bremen and looked pro- | found while his aides spoke for him.| He is of swarthy complexion and has curly brown locks. His costume was a gray-and-white striped coat and gray trousers In a written statement entitled “My Message to America,” he proclaimed himself “cne with the infinite source of everything. This is the state of Christ- ousness. If people call me mesiah, r or redeemer, it does not affect | Pointed questions as to how the “mestiah” would unite all creeds and awaken the country to a new spiritual life—as he promised on his departure— brought vague answers. It appeared that through his prayers, meditation | and example America would in some mystical way undergo a spiritual ren- aissance. This was the “messiah's” secand visit to the United States. He discreetly looked over New York and Boston last Fall Baba, as his disciples call him, will break his silence in a few days and give his “original messag- to the world.” He may speak at a retreat at Harmon- on-Hudson, where he will stay a few days, or he may wait until he reaches California. Only then, it appeared, will his real mission begin | Lady Terrington, Dressmaker. Lady Terrington of London, England, has set up a dressmaking establishment | for women with modest incomes. : BARBARA STONE'S WILSON SHOE DEPARTMENT OUTVALUES EVERYONE IN WHITE SHOES EXACT COPIES OF EXPENSIVE NEW PARIS AND 5th AVENUE STYLES . 9%-8, AAA-C. To Break Silence INDIAN MESSIAH TO SPEAK AFTER SEVEN YEARS. Indian messiah, photographed on board the S. S. Bremen in New York City when he arrived in th I le: He Is said to D a' seven-year si break to deliver a ciples in this country mon, N. Y. REPRESENTS CHURCH Local Delegate to Eucharistic Con- probably at Har- A. P. Pho gress to Sail for Ireland. Mrs. Clara Bowers, Alabama Apart- ments, will represent the Church of the Immaculate Conception at the Eucha- ristic Congress to be held in Ireland in June, it has been announced. Mrs. Bow- ers will sail on June 13 from New York on the liner De Gr , with a party to be conducted by Rev. John K Cartwright $ 4 i WHITE KID WITH CUBAN HEEL . . . . 2%- BARBARA STONE llFll 1115 STREET, 1 terds > | apparently had no trace of the vanished BLACK - WHITE OR BLUE MESH WITH KID. 2%-8, AAA-C. A ACTION ON CHURCH | UNION IS DEFERRED | Plan Proposed to Combine Com- munity, Unitarian and Uni- versalist Congregations. | By the Associated Press. BUFFALO, N. Y. May 20—Rev. Richard E. €aields of Chicago, execu- tive secretary of the Community Church Workers of the United States, sald yesterday his organization would not at this time consider offers of the Unitarian and Universalist organiza- tions to unite in forming a fellowship | of liberal churches. He did not dis- | close his reasons for the assertion |~ The representatives of the Unitarian | and_Universalist Churches, Dr. Louls| | C. Cornish of Boston and Dr. Harold | Marshall of Boston, had been expected to present a definite plan for union | later in the Biennial Conference of the Community Church Workers being held here Rev. R. Carl Stoll, Amberst Community | was elected president | munity Church Workers iSPANISH F;OLICE SEEK | FUGITIVE SEA FLYER| Flight o caped From Prison Yesterday With 23 Others. m o Companion of Franco Es- By the Assoclated Press. CADIZ, Srain, May 20.—Pablo Rada, aviator, who flew the South Atlantic in 1926 with Maj. Ramon Franco, es- |cared from Port Santa Maria jail yes- | with 23 others. They used al 300-yard tunnel. Police were put on! guard throughout the country, but airman Meanwhile, Victoria Kent, director of Spanish prisons, offered her resignation | to the minister of justice. . Asks Federal Aid. ST. PAUL. May 20 (%).—Minnesota today appealed to Agriculture Secre- tary A. M. Hyde for help in combatting | grasshoppers. R. A. Trovatten, State agriculture commissioner, said financial aid was necessary due to lack of State funds for purchasing poison. Spring tourists in Italy have been more numerous than a year ago. WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIbaY, MAY. 20, 1932. HASTINGS TELLS TALE Happy Midshipmen STAR, ¢ Serves the Pope NOTED TENOR IN DRESS OF PAPAL CHAMBERLAIN. |With Exams Ended Seabury Quiz Brings Denial That | | He Received Payment for Services Rendered. Tecumseh Statue to | By the Associated Press. | Mark Joy. | NEW YORK, May 20.—State Senator | John A. Hastings had his long-sought | go.ia1 pispateh to The Star. | chance yesterday to confront the Hof-| ANN. = 4 stadter Investigating Committee at & , ° - .dM oizs.' . M % ";:’} public session and inferentially denied | 2" and twenty-two jubilant mid- | he was & “political contact man” be- | shipmen of the first class at the Naval | and | Academy, all of whom hope to ":: Stage Mimic Operation at | transpo Mayor Walker’s administration. diplomas 'y Senator Hastings, after waiving im- | Charles Francis Adams on June 2, yes- munity, explained that the block of | terday afternoon celebrated in front of | stock he was to have received from the | Bancroft Hall midshipman dormitory. | Equitable Bus Corporation was in ex- | Gathered around the statue Tecumseh, | change for stock he owned in another | god of 2.5, passing mark at the academy, concern, not in payment for his services | the first classmen marched from Ban- in obtaining a franchise from the city. | croft Hall as a unit, with one member | His explanation conflicted with the | of the class being borne on a stretcher | | testimony of officials of the Equitable | by eight classmates, all clad in the| jand its Ohio financiers seeking a snow-white garments of doctors. Reach- monopoly of surface transit facilities. | ing the statue the doctors removed the | They indicated he was to have been re- | sheet from the body on the stretcher paid for his efforts along that line with | and from all indications began to re- | a third of the common stock of the | move from his still form all the ailments Equitable and did get $125,000 in salary | which retarted him the last four years. over a period of years. | In all, seven textbooks were removed | xas sl % | by means of dangerous-looking “butcher” | Auto Strike Ended. | knives and the patient immediately re- | Pius XI at the Pope’s palace in Vatican ‘ MADRID, May 20 (#)—Taxicabs, gained his vitality and frisked around, | : £hortly to be carried back into Baneroft | o e MeCormack. | trucks and ‘uto busses resumed normai | Hall on the shoulders of classmates, all | nable of she caurctl) MqEEEN operations in Madrid today after a two- | happy that final examinations are | to the Pope’s quarters, afterward being |day strike. The authorities sald the |ended, and that midshipman days are | received in audience. —A. P. Photo, |strike was ended in virtually all the |soon to be replaced by rank as officers. provinces of Spain. | Tecumseh, former figurehead of the | from Secretary of JOHN McCORMACK, The Irish tenor, photographed in his uniform as private chamberlain to Pope | OF TRADING OF STOCK Honor God of Luck |:xer old United States ship Delaware, was “fed” many uring the course of examinations. The theory at the academy is that the bust of the old ‘warrior and sage will bring good | luck in iminations. | WARNS TAX DELINQUENCY | PENALTY NOT ABOLISHED Arlington Treasurer Declares Col- | lections Are Hampered by “False Impression. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ARLINGTON COUNTY COURT HOUSE, Va, May 20.—The collection ] |of delinquent 1931 taxes is being ham- pered by an impression that the Rust bill, which would have eliminated the June 15 penalty of 5 per cent, is now a law, Arlington County Treasurer harles T. Jesse said. Since Gov. Pol- lard failed to sign this bill, holding it to be unconstitutional, the penalty still exists, Jesse pointed out, and taxpayers can save it by prompt payment. William Poates Jackson a professor of theology at Oxford, England, was fined in court recently for embracing two young women in the street, the de- fense being that he had had a few drinks to which he was not accustomed. Blue Spruce, $1 1-Foot, Bunchy Red Crepe Myrtle Barberry, 10¢ MARYLAND NURSERY Edmonston (East Hyattsville) INJURED TWICE Man Breaks Arm. Faints and Frac- tures Sknll. HAMMOND, Ind., May 20 (#).—Oscar Swanson, 35, is the safely supervisor for a manufacturing plant Here. While making an inspection frip in | the plant he fell from a four-foot lad- der and broke his arm. On the,way to the company's first- aid station he fainted, fell and frac- tured his skull. He was taken to.a hospital safely in an ambulance. $5,250 1427 Ridge Pl S.E. Anacostia Modern brick home, in a re- stricted new house section, near a large park and all conveniences. Has two nice bedrooms and has been completely refinished. Very reasonable terms to a responsible purchaser. Open for inspection Saturday and Sunday afternoon. Union Finance Company Nat. 7936 916 Woodward Bldg. s = 1319-1321 F Street BOSTONIAN SHOES More than 3 Spring and Sum at $1 9.75 trousers to match . . . . either regular cut, knickers, or and these extras are only . . - N. W. Buy only the three pieces if you wish, but the extra trousers will double the life of the suit and the four pieces were formerly priced at $45. What bargains now! There are blue serges, tweeds, flannels and basket-weave worsteds; all the desirable col- ors, and remember the tropical weights for the hot months to come. St. Albans Straw Hats 1 .85 A fine sennit braid cushioned with a flexible insert that insures cool comfort, perfect fitting and safety. For Golf For Tennis * than flannel or duck. ° mer shirt drape. Every garment made s Yo ,100 This Label Insures Satisfaction For every suit there is an extra pair of “slacks.” 3 Coats of conventional cut or the new Devon- Linings resembling the finest silks, but much more durable. Hundreds of specially designed extra sizes for men of ANY unusual build . . . short or tall, stout or slender. by experienced without Striped FLAN-L-TEX Pants $2.25 is fitted by a master fitter and alterations are tailors extra charge. Stetson Hats Suits The finest woolens of both Spring and Summer weights. What a sale! .50 For Boating For Motoring R For Gardening or Any Outdoor Work Will wash like a sports shirt and will NOT shrink. This as- sures a permanent fit. Designed in the “slack” style; cooler

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