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4 /\J THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTC N, D. C, FRIDAY. MAY 19,1933, A—S CASH AID ASKED FOR JEWS IN REICH Rabbi Wise Declares Situa- tion Is “Challenge to Civilization.” NEW YORK, May 1§ (#)—Declaring the situation of Jews in Germany is “not a question of atrocities,” but is “a challenge to civilization,” Rabbi Jonah B. Wise called last night for the finan- cial support that will help them fight their battles “with the weapons of civ- ilized human beings.” Rabbi Wise, who recently visited Ger- many, reported on his observations. “The cold-blooded, publicly promul- gated plan to grind into the dust more than half a million men, women and children whose ancestry, interests and culture are rooted in the soil of Ger- many from before the crusades, in an unbroken line of descent, with an un- troken record of loyalty, is a ghastly spectacle for the contemplation of the world today,” he said, speaking at a dinner of the Central Synagogue. “It is not to be wondered that Jews have protested to the full extent of their powers. They do not do so simply be- cause their own are injured. They are moved by the fecling that civilization has reccived a shattering blow.” Relaying a request from German | Jewry for financial assistance, Rabbi Wise said “their request is simple.” GOERING TO VISIT ROME. German Leader to Exchange Views With Mussolini. ROME, May 19 (#)—A surprise visii to Rome is to be made by Capt. Her- mann Goering, speaker of the German Reichstag, to exchange views with Pre- mier Mussolini as a result of President Roosevelt’s disarmament message to the world and Chancellor Hitler's for- eign policy speech before the Reichstaz ‘Wednesday. Capt. Goering is expected to arrive either today or tomorrow morning by airplane. ‘The visit of Capt. Goering was con- sidered significant because the Fascist Gxn;:éd Council is meeting tomorrow night. FLYING TRIO ESCAPE MONOXIDE POISONING Bennett Grifin and Two Compan- fons Safe at Oklahoma City on Trip From Kansas City. By the Associated Press. OKLAHOMA CITY, May 19.—Ben- net Griffin, transatlantic fiyer, and two companions on a flight from Kansas City were recovering today from car- bon monoxide poisoning. Griffin_and Jack Story, vice presi- dent of the American Air Race Associa- tion, still were in serious condition, while Herschel Cathcard, Kansas City automobile dealer, was slightly ill. A displaced exhaust pipe lodged front of the fresh air intake to the p_ltI’oL‘n cockpit, Story said, was respon- sible. Griffin, who accompanied James Mat- tern, San Angelo, Tex., flyer, on_an attempted world flight last year, had been aiding Mattern in plans for an- other attempt at the globe circling record. P T A i WEST COAST AIR STATION NAMED MOFFETT FIELD Post at Sunnyvale, Calif., to Be Only Ome Exclusively Lighter-Than-Air Craft. By the Associated Press. Secretary of the Navy Swanson yes- terday named the Sunnyvale, Calif., Naval Air Station “Moffett Field” in honor of the late Rear Admiral William A. MofTett. As chief 8f the Bureau of Aeronau- tics, he brought about much of the de- velopment of the Naval air service. He Jost his life on the Akron. ‘When the Naval Air Station at Lake- hurst is closed by the Navy, Moffett Field will be the Navy’s only operating station devoted exclusively to lighter- than-air craft. The airship Macon will be sent to Moffett Field on completion of its tests. TEXAS RANCHERS SAVED FROM MEXICAN BANDITS Two Missing Since May 9, When They Trailed Stolen Horses Across International Border. By the Associated Press. ALPINE, Tex, May 19.— Assured two Texas ranchers captured by Mexi- can bandits were safe, American offi- cials today awaited their arrival at the border. The State Department at Washington has been advised the pair, Arthur Han- nold and John Rollins, had been res- | cued and were on their way from Ocampo to the United States under the | protection of the chief of immigration | at Villa Acuna, Mexican border town | across the Rio Grande from Del Rio, Tex. The time of their arrival at the border was uncertain, Hannold and Rollins have been miss- ing since May 9, when they entered Mexico on horseback to trail horses that had been stolen from the Hannold ranch. AMERICAN HEIRESS BRINGS PRINCE TO SEE PARENTS Hutton, for Barbara Woolworth's | Granddaughter, Arrives on Other Side of France as They Land. the Associated Press. PARIS, May 19.—Miss Barbara Hut- ton, granddaughter of the late F. W. | Woolworth, and her father reached | opposite ends of France today en route to a meeting to discuss her intemtion to_marry Prince Alexis Mdivani. Miss Hutton and Prince Alexis arrived in Marseille on the liner Chitral from | the Orient and entrained for Paris| shortly before noon. She sald, “I dont know anything about a marriage. Everything will be | settled in Paris tomorrow.” | Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn Hutton dis embarked from the Europa at Cher: bourg with their car. CANOPY RULE ENFORCED | By | Hotels and Other Establishments | Must Maj. John C. Gotwals, engineer com- missioner, announced yesterday the Dis- trict government would seek strict en- forcement of & new regulation adopted by the Commissioners Wednesday re- quiring hotels, department stoges and other establishments to obtain permits for placing of canoples over their en- trances during inclement weather. The permits will be effective for 48 hours only. A new permit will be re- quired each time the canopies are set up. The new ‘Tegulation requires also that permits be obtained for the plac- ing of permanent sockets in sidewalks or paved public parking spaces next to the curbs for the holding of canopy supports. Canopies erected over un- paved parking space may be permas wmently maintained, Have Permits. | of its regular soldiers to $18.25 a month | | forces. Meet at Stratford WIVES OF VICE PRESIDENTS AT LEE HOME. | i RS. THOMAS R. MARSHALL (! Woodrow Wilson, meets Mrs. J¢ left), wife of the Vice President under ohn N. Garner at Stratford, Va., when the wives of many Government officials paid a visit to the old home of Robert E. Lee, hero of the Confederacy. —A. P. Photo. LUTHERANS BEGIN TH CONFERENCE More Than 90 Evangelical ‘Ministers and Lay Dele- gates Present. More than 90 ministers and lay delegates are attending the forty- eighth annual conference of Atlantic | District of the Evangelical Synod of | North America, which convened last | night at Concordia Lutheran Church. ‘The principal speakers at this morn- ing’s session were Dr. Rufus Weaver, lecturer on philosophy of religion at | American University, who discussed “Rethinking Christianity,” and Dr. James Buhrer, pastor of the First Re- formed Church of Washington, speak- ing on the subject of “Vision.” Dr. S. D. Press, president of Eden Theological Seminary, addressed the opening session last night on the sub- ject of “Christ in the World's Need.” Dr, Press emphasized that only through a return to Christ can the world emerge from its present difficulties. The delegates were welcomed by H. F. Dunkhorst, president of Con- cordia_Church, and the response was given by Rev. F. C. Rueggeberg of Bal- timore, president of the Atlantic dis-| trict. Delegates are about equally d.lvided‘ between ministers and lay members of the church, and represent the States| of New York, New Jersey, Pennsyl-| vania, Maryland and Virginia. They will be in session through Monday. The conference this afternoon was to be occupied with the election of | officers for the Atlantic district and | the reports of various committees. KIWANIS CLUB MARKS 16TH ANNIVERSARY District, Virginia and Maryland Represented at Luncheon Ad- dressed by Endicott. The sixteenth anniversary of the presentation of a charter to the Kiwanis Club was celebrated at & luncheon at the Mayflower yesterday attended by members of District, Virginia and Mary- land Kiwanis Clubs. Carl E. Endicott, president of Ki- wanis International, spoke on “The Challenge of Kiwanis” Mr. Endicott congratulate the District club on its membership and its work for crippled children. After the meeting, club members ac- companied Mr. Endicott to Arlington Cemetery, where a wreath was lzia on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. S. A. R. SESSION SEEKS OUSTING OF COMMUNISTS Cincinnati Meeting Objects to Rus- sian Recognition Until Propa- ganda Is Stopped. By the Associated Press. CINCINNATI, May 19.—Exclusion of | alien Communists from the United | States and expulsion of those engaging | in communistic activities aimed at over- throw of the Government were urged in | a resolution adopted Wednesday by the | National Society of Sons of the Ameri- can Revolution. Opposition to Tecognition of Russia “until it abandons propaganda” was ex- ressed in another resolution The soclety, in the last session of its annual convention, also went on record as seeing ‘no economy on the part of the Government when it cuts the wages and then orBanizes a new force of men | to work in the forests at $30 a month.” | Other resolutions called for main- | tenance of immigration restrictions, with reductions of quotas, and exclu- ion of Russian products of enforced | abor, and reaffirmed opposition to fur- | ther reduction of the country's armed | ‘Arthur Milton McCrillis of Providence, | R. I, was elected president general of | the order, He succeeds F. W. Mills- paugh of Nashville, Tenn. F. B. Steele of Washington was made registrar general and was re-elected secretary general. G. F. Robertson of Baltimore was re-elected treasurer gen- eral, L. W. Statesbury of New York, chanellor; J. H. Cross of Pensacola, Fla., genealogist. and the Rev. George | P. Eastman of Summit, N. J., chaplain. | Births R-eii)rte(‘i. William M. and Rebecca Major. _ Albert_and_Olivia_Preeman,_boy FLYING ANTS (Termites) £10.000.000 Damage Annually k in Homes and Buildings ANTEED TREATMENTS boy. Cause to Woodworl YOUNG WOOD.IN, HEART VICTIM, IN HOSPITAL Son of Treasury Secretary Not in Serious Condition—Stricken After Flight to Join Wife. By the Associated Press. WINSLOW, Ariz., May 19.—Although reported by attending physicians to be not in a serious condition, William Woodin, jr., son of the Secretary of the United States Treasury, was confined to - | hospital today. The voung man suffered a heart attack yesterday shortly after an airplane in which he had flown from Tucson landed here. Woodin and his wife have lived on the desert near Tucson for the past four years, and are neighbors of Harold Bell Wright, the novelist. Woodin flew here to meet his wife, who has been visiting at the Grand Canyon. HEARS EXPRESS CHIEF J. H. Butler of New York Ad- dresses Luncheon Meeting—Out- ing Set for Next Month. An address by J. H. Butler, general manager of the Railway Express Agency of New York, marked the monthly luncheon meeting of the Washington ‘Transportation Club yesterday at the Raleigh Hotel. Mr. Butler presented an interesting sketch of the development of express service, touching on methods of deliv- ery from pioneering days down to the present time. ‘The club voted to hold its annual outing at Manor Club next month. New members elected include C. E. FOREIGN BEER NETS TREASURY 262,48 {Canada Tops Import List With 110,474 Gallons in April. | Customs officials were preparing to | turn over to the Treasury today a total | of $269,948 collected during April from | foreign brewers shipping beer into the United States. The Commerce Department said the Government had collected $1 for every gallon imported during the first month since beer was legalized. Its statistical division estimated the value of the total shipments at $230,901. | Canada_topped the import list, with | 110,474 gallons, valued at $99,175. Cuba was second with imports totaling 70,360, valued at $53,515. | Mexico supplied the United States | with 44,276 gallons of beer, valued at $48,566, and was immediately followed by Germany, imports from which coun- | try totaled 10,983 gallons, valued at | $8,078; Great Britain, 9,680 gallons, valued at $8,110, and Denmark, 6975 gallons, valued at $3,216. | Other recorded sources of beer im- | ported during’ the month were Czecho- slovakia. 65 gallons: France, 4,757 gal- Jons: Netherlands, 127 gallons; Norway, 1,775 gallons; Sweden, 440 gallons, Do- minican Republic, 5,505 gallons; Nether- lands East Indies, 169 gallons, and Japan, 4,362 gallons. | Malt liquors, principally beer, imported into this country during April, 1917, | totaled 213,155 gallons, valued at $156,- | 869, the department said. | ferent shape, from which it takes the | VAUCLAIN SCORNS COLLEGE MEN’S COMPLAINTS OF NO OPPORTUNITY | o Veteran Industrialist Also Lauds Spirit of Women in| Slump on 77th Birthday. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, May 19.—Samuel | M. Vauclain, veteran industrialist, ob- | served his 77th birthday anniversary | vesterday with a verbal bouquet to the | modern girl and an outspoken brickbat to any of her collegiate brothers who see no opportunity ahead. What college men lack is “that good. old pioneer spirit,” said Vauclain, who | spent nine hours at his job as chairman | of the board of directors of the Baldwin | Locomotive Works. | “I have no sympathy with young men | coming out of college who say there is | no place for them,” Vauclain declared. | “There is more opportunity for a hard worker now than there ever was before | —if he is satisfied to begin at the ginning and work his way to the to] Vauclain said if he were coming out | of college next month with no job wait- ing, “I'd squat out on some bit of ground | and raise enough to eat. I'd work—and pretty soon I'd have something. “Women today are standing the de- pression far better than the men. When it comes to the pioneer spirit, they've Tfie Pancake Motor. The design of the automobile motor | has been changed to an entirely dif- name of pancake. It has 12 cylinders opposed, placed in a horizontal instead of the usual vertical, or V-type, posi- tion, making the engine flat, and there- fore economical of space. The motor is | only 16 inches high and can be slung under a bus body. It develops 225 horsepower. % * % * % because of Schwart Only 33 9.’ Enjoy your favorite program with this won- derful set. It’s all elec- tric, requires mo bat- teries — has wonderful tone and dynamic speaker, It’s the marvel of auto radios!! CLO 708 S France, W. L. McDonald, E. H. Smith, Charles P. Hoch, J. C. Dawson, J. L. | Bauerband and George E. Keneipp. G Steel effects in plain tamous SCHLOSS SUITS SCHLOSS SUITS SCHLOSS SUITS New Sennit STRAW HATS All-Wool Pull-Over SWEATERS Were $3.50 1331 F Street Vacating Unnecessary—Free Inspection Terminix Co. of Washington 1102 National Press Bldg. Phone National 3783 Fabrics and Colors—Glen Plaids in Sale Extraordinary Our Stock of Fine Clothes, Hats and Furnishings must be sold New Spring Suits—Gr ys, Tans, Fawns, Brow and basket weaves—All th all variations SCHLOSS BROS & CO.ofBALTlMORE at tremendous reductions prices that we are confident you will never see again Sale Price, Sale Price, Sale Price, SCHLOSS TROPICAL SUITS made to sen st s20 ana 525 Sale Price, $1.65 Bought to Sell at $2.50 $1.95 made to sell at $30.00 and $35.00 made to sell at $35.00 and $40.00 made to sell at $40.00 and $45.00 New Genuine PANAMA Hats$4:' 95 Bought to Sell at $7.50 or Undershirts 2 9 c 3 for 85¢ SHORTS HUNDREDS of Chas. Schwartz & Son customers ate enjoying the popular pLIILEC O Transitone AUTOMOBILE RADIO LOOK FOR THE SCHWARTZ GOLD HOME OF PERFECT DIAMONDS | New Genuine Panama Hats Reyem SHIRTS Plain Color — Neat Stripes z Terms & Service COMPLETE and INSTALLED TO YOUR ANTENNA $4 Weekly Buys This Marvelous Radio CK ON SEVENTH ST. iizeSon eventh St. N. W. n, and the New Blue e Latest and Newest —all tailored by the $14.75 $16.85 $22.35 $13.85 $3 45 Bought to Sell at $5 sl .00 Neckties — Robes — Pajamas — Bathing Suits — Socks All at sacrifice reductions Why not look—it ccsts. you nothing 1331 F Street | g0t more of it than thelr grandmothers | had. Economically, the Nation is on the upgrade, Vauclain said. “Franklin D. Roosevelt is at the throt! track road to success.” It's Bond's /4? Birthday —so let’s all celebrate.' DEATH RECALLS MAINE CAPITAL MAN WEDS er Who Investigated Havana | Edgar Hilleary, Real Estate Oper- Harbor Tragedy Succumbs. | ator, and Bride in Virginia. | By the Associated Press. 1 Special Dispatch to The Star. PASSAIC, N. J,, May 19.—James W.| RICHMOND, Va, May 19.—Edgar Finnegan, 71, a deep sea diver who, with | Hilleary, 33, and divorced, of Wash- James Haggerty and Hans Lobson, in|ington, D. C, and Miss Viola Blum, 1898 were commissioned by the United | 33, of Chicago, TIl, were married here States Government to investigate the sinking of the Maine in Havana Harbor, | YSterday. They planned to spend a died yesterday at the home of Joseph 48y or two in this vicinity honey- Marchese, a son-in-law. | mooning. In taking out the license It was the findings of Haggerty, Lob- | Hilleary described himself as a real son and Finnegan that the sinking of | estate agent. He is a native of Locketts, the Maine was due to external causes. Va. His bride was born in Chicago, The Spanish-American War followed | the daughter of Henry and Elizabeth this verdict. Blum. I [ tle, and I think he is riding a one- \ o Iu)w! W mersa 7 $30 (uaiiy Cameron Worsteds \ $30 quairy Triple-Tex Twists \/ $30 ouuiy Sedan Silver Greys (M »*20 including two trousers \\ \ \ \\ \ Our Silver Anniversary deserves a real party! And here it'is!! We've planned to make it the most thrilling event of our lives —with a riot of record-breaking values. For the past two months, we’ve been piling up hundreds of yards of the finest woolens made in America. We got them at a price that represents a saving of thousands of dollars for us—and for you. The weavers of these costly topnotchers have worked with us ever since we started in business. So when we went to them and said, “Our 25th Birthday calls for a real present, how about it?”, they came through handsomely —to the tune of a 14 cut. Come on in, and get your share of it. You'll carry away suits that’ll make you wish we had a 25th Birthday Party every day. White Flannel Trousers —*4.00 Flannel Sports Coats—%9.00 Use our convenient Ten Payment Plan! No extra charg_e for this service. You simply pay $5 at purchase, and budget the balance over ten weeks. [l /‘ \ g )