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R.C. C.RASMUSSEN ANNOUNCES TOPIC Luther Place Pastor Will Preach on “God’s Care for Each One.” “God's Care for Each One” will be the subject of the sermon by Dr. Carl C Rasmussen at 11 o'clock tomorrow at Luther Place Memorial Church. The Sunday school will give a children’s day am_at 9:45 am. pr%\‘e ‘Woman's Missionary Society will meet June 12 in the church parlors at 9 o'clock. Topic, “Missionary Educa- tion Through Activities.” Leader, Mrs. N. K. Gardner; hostesses, Mrs. Gates and Mrs. Garrott. The Rainbow Missionary Society will meet at the Evangeline Hotel. 1330 L street, June 13, at 8 o'clock. Hostesses, Miss Mary Gardner, Delores Fiete; lead- er, Mrs. N. K. Gardner. The Christian Endeavor Society will thold its annual banquet Tuesday at 6:30. Dr. Allen A. Stockdale, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will be the guest speaker. Dr. Rasmussen will also speak. Miss Myrtle Mohagen, president of the society, will be toast- mistress. A special program of music etc.. is under the direction of Charles ‘Whitten, director of the choir, and Miss Thelma Gunderson. Miss Ann Burger |DR. F. W. COLLIER TO TALK IN WESLEY M. E. CHURCH “Friendship Luncheon” of Wom- an’s Guild Will Be Given Tuesday Afternoon. Dr. Frank W. Collier of the Graduate School of American University will be the guest preacher at Wesley Method- ist Episcopal Church tomorrow at the 11 o'clock service. The pastor, Dr. J. Phelps Hand, is in Baltimore in af tendance at the annual conference. The annual “friendship luncheon” of the Woman's Guild will be given at 1 o'clock Tuesday. Luncheon will be pre- | ceded by meeting of the guild and the | Woman's Missionary Societ: The men of the church will serve a ! supper Thursday from 5:30 to 7:30 for | the benefit of the Swartzell Heme for | Children. ~ After supper a_program is to be given featuring a “Procession of Bank Holders,” when all who have the 1 cent per meal banks will deposit their savings in the chest. Music will be | furnished by a male quartet, directed \ by J. Benton Webb. EDUCATIONAL DAY * WILL BE OBSERVED | Program of Stories and Songs is chairman of the Banquet Committee. The guiet hour will be Thursday eve- ning in the cnapel. CHURCH TO OBSERVE CHILDREN’S DAY Will Be Given at Foun- dry Church. Dr. Frederick Brown WHarris, pastor and Rev. Eddy L. Ford, director of re- Iligious education, will return from the Program Is Announced for Albright | Balimore annual conference and par- | nate in the Educational day program tomorrow at 11 o'clock. Members of the |elementary division of the church school Memorial Evangelical Con- gregation. | at Foundry Methodist Episcopal Church, | THE 754 ETDEGRES FROM HOWARD L Graduates Urged. to “View With Increasing Pride Their Diverse Heritage.” Howard University late yesterday | conferred 254 degrees and awarded 24 | | commissions in the Reserve Corps of ! the Army at its sixty-fourth annual commencement in the university sta- | dium | During the exercises, Edwin R. Em- | bree. president of the Julius Rosenwald Fund, urged the graduates to “view | with ' increasing pride” their diverse | heritage—"the culture cf the East and of the West.” The West. Dr. Embree declared, has contributed mechanical edvance which | constitute “a means toward fuller liv- | ing.” The use of the highly developed | tools, he said, “have transformed the world to the end that any real lack of | food, clothing and shelter, and the | necessities of life, result from no lack | of abundance, but because of repudia- ! tion of the control of nature which science and mechanics have given us.” | Cites Philosophy of East. The East, he continued, developed a philosophy ef life which, despite the drudging labcr that results from a lack of scientifically developed tools, entails “an astonishing amount of enjoyment and-expressicn day by day.” He said that in his travels through the Orient, the South Seas and in Africa, he found | that evem the humblest peasants have “a much fuller realization of joyous | creaticn than the average worker in | Europe or North America.” Reminding the graduates of Howard University, the ou(fillndmr institution of higher learning for colored people, of their ancestry, Dr. them to have increasing pride in their | heritage and to acquaint themselves with the “special glories of Africa and Embree urged | {will give a program of stories, songs | (p e East, capitaliz ng their differences Children’s day will be observed to- morrow _at Albright Memorial Evan- gelical Church, at 10:30 o'clock, when the Children's day pageant. “Com- rades for Children's Day,” will be pre- sented by 200 children of the Sunday chool. One of the little girls of the children’s division will be crowned queen of childhood. The queen is chosen by the previous years queen and Bible readings, officers of the young | from people’s groups will be installed and | recognition given to the winners in the | one-act play tournament sponsored by |the Religious Education Committee: of | the church. Two brief addresses will: be made by Miss Bertle Backus and | Dr. Henry S. Jacoby. The pastor will | administer the rite of baptism to in- fants at this time. Rev. Charles F. Linger of Waverly e strictly Western pattern.” Honorary Degrees Conferred. The honorary degree of doctor of laws was conferred upon Oswald Gar- rison Villard of New York. In pre- senting the henor to Mr. Villard, Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, president of Howard, paid tribute to his advocacy of just and helpful treatment to men and women whatever their race. Mr. Vil- and her name is kept a secret until | Hills, Va., will preach at 8 p.m. on “He the moment of crowning. The Chil- | Giveth Songs in the Night.” dren’s day offering will be received and | a brief address given by the minister, Rev. George S. Schnabel. At 8 pm. the service will feature *The Month of Marriage.” During the evening nuptial music will be used. The sermon theme will be “That What God Hath Joined Together.” The Quarterly Conference of the church will convene Tuesday evening, with Rev. E. C. Bascom presiding. On ‘Wednesday evening the Evening Circle of the guild will meet in the church parlors. The annual brotherhood lawn fete will be held Thursday from 7 to 10:30 o'clock, on the church lawn, under the direction of the president, Edward ‘Turner. HOME BIBLE INSTITUTE TO HEAR DR. HAWTHORNE ‘Wallace Memorial Presbyterian Pastor Will Speak at Session Tomorrow at 3 P.M. i Dr. C. E. Hawthorne, pastor of the| Wallace Memorial United Presbyterian Church, will deliver the address at the | fifteenth ennual convocation of the | American Home Bible Institute, to be | held in the First Congregational | Church tomorrow at 3 pm. Harlan Randall, baritone soloist and choir di- Tector cf the Metropolitan Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church, will sing. Glenn W. Wagner, president of the institute, will present certificates to | those who have completed courses dur- | ing the past vear. ‘The annual fellowship dinner of the school will be held at the All States Ho- tel Saturday at 6:30. New officers will be installed. Dr. Harvev B. Smith, pas- tor cf the Columbia Heights Chri: Church. will deliver the address of the evening. | e | | A joint . supper meeting of the Fel- lowship Class of the church school and the McDowell Auxiliary of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society will be held |in the Letts Building at 6:30 Monday. The Woman’s Guild and the Home and Forei Missionary Societies will have an all-day meeting Tuesday, be- ginning at 10:45 am., with luncheon | served by the guild at 1 pm. A pro- gram has been arranged by the Woman's | Foreign Missionary Society at 11:30 |am. including sa dramatic presenta- tion, “Beneath the Sign of the Lan |Hwa.” under the direction of Mrs. B. T. Benson and Mrs. Ralph A. Jackson. The guest speaker will be Mrs. David W. Lum, a former missionary in India. There will be a junior choir parents’ meeting at the church Thursday at 3:15 p.m., followed by a party for the members of that choir. ‘The pastor will conduct the mid- week service Thursday. 3 . FORMER COLLEGE HEAD ANNOUNCED AS SPEAKER Rev. A. L. Maiden Will Address Morning Service at Hamline M. E. Church. Rev. Dr. Arthur Lee Maiden, former | president of Bridgewater College, Bridgewater, Conn., will be the speaker tomorrow morning at Hamline Meth- odist Episcopal Church. At 8 p.m. Rev. Page McK. Etchison, religious director | of the Y. M. C. A., will be the speaker. Midweek devctional meeting will be iheld Thursday night. The minister, | Rev. H. W. Burgan, is attending the | Baltimore Annual Conference of the | Methodist Episcopal Church, being held | {in Baltimore. Harry C. James and Bur- | ton J. Howard are the lay representa- tives at the conference. GUESTS TO BE HEARD COLUMBIA BI.BLE SCHOOL TO HOLD COMMENCEMENT Bixth Annual Affair to Be Cele- brated Wednesday—More Than 100 to Get Certificates. The Columbia Bible Training School | Brethren Speakers Tomorrow In- clude . C. Cubbage of Catholic U. Guest speakers will be at the Church | of the Brethren Yomorrow mornirg and | evening. At the morning service S. C | Cubbage, a teacher at the Catholic| | University, will speak. Jacob Replogle a student minister, will have charge of the evening service. lard is a grandson of Willlam Lloyd Garrison, “one of the first, ablest and ncblest of those who detested slavery and to whose efforts in behalf of the colored race as free men and women this institution is dedicated.” Music was provided by the Howard | University Orchestra under direction of Louis Vaughn Jones, and by the Musi cal Arts Society. The invocation was offered by Rev. Edward O. Clark of the Chevy Chase Baptist Church, and the benediction was pronounced by Rev. Willlam O. Carrington of the | John Wesiey A. M. E. Zion Church. Degrees were conferred as follows: College of Liberal Arts. Bachelor of arts, Magna Cum Laude —Ruth Ernestine Washington: bach- elor of arts, Cum Laude—Bostic J. Pranklin, Geneva Howard and Alethia T. Smith. Bachelor of arts—Alfred Percival Brent, Percy B. Brinkley, George O. Butler, William Edward Cheyney, Frank Greene Davis, Samuel Stanhope Dod- son, Edna Sarah Adora Elliott, Wana- = Silas Fletcher, Elizabeth Estelle Fry, Sylvester Raymond Hall, Mae Iris | ton Longfellow Lashley, Hattie Chris- tine Lawrence, Joseph Lawson, India King Lee, Leslie Dallas McClennon, Mabel Amelia Madden, Frank Curle Montero, William F. Moorhead, George Cranston Morris, Josephine Golden | Mortcn, Ellsworth James Parker, Eliza . Mae Petten, Walter Harrison Payton, jr.; Eugene Roberson, Leandre Valen- tine Roberts, Silas Pranklin Shelton, ir.; Bruce N. Smith, Mauretta Ver- onica Smith, Howard Alphonse Spriggs, Manuel Terrell, Samuel Wilbert Tucker, Walter Eugenc Wiley, Dwight Hillis ‘Wilson, Allan LeVaughn Woolridge and Violet Audrey Wright. Bachelor of science, Marie Lcuise Moss. Bachelor of science—Raymond Heze- kiah Baker, Donald Golden Brandon, Alma Janice Brent, Herman R. Coote, Ruth Norris Edwards, John V. Gold- ing, Arthur A. Gray, John R. Hall, jr.; Benoit C. Isaac, Cleopatra F. Warren Kee. Peter Carlisle Kelly, jr.. Benson Doyle Mitchell, Eulalie Cum Laude— | Marguerite “ | Mitchell, Matthew Mitchell, George P.!ley Peaco, Clarence Idelbert Schanck, Willlam Bert Settle, Walter J. Leopold Simpson. Bachelor of science in commerce, Magna Cum Laude—Rietta May Hines. Bachelor of science in commerce- | John Cattell Claytor, Josephine Caro- lyne Davis, Francis Irving Green, Virgil College of Education. will celebrate its sixth annual com-| Eleven children were consecrated last mencement next Wednesday evening. Dr. John C. Copenhaver, pastor of Epworth Methodist Episcopal Church | Philagathi class will give a lawn fete | cum South, will give the address come. Rev. Clifford H. Jope, pastor of Ninth Street Christian Church, wil! give the commencement address. Dr John E. Briggs, pastor of Fifth Bap- tist Church; Benjamin J. Brooks, chair- man of the board of trustees of the #chool; Lyman S. McCrary and Mar- Jjory League will participate in the pro- gram Eltie Wade Stone, president of tk &chool, will present more than 100 ce tificates to students who have finishec nine-month courses, PASTOR SUBSTITUTED Two Preach Tomorrow at Bright- wood Park M. E. Church. In the absence htwood Park Metho rch, who 15 atten conference in Baltimore, Rev. Milo J Williams. one of Br.ghtwood Park's cal preachers. will occupy the pulpit at ck ow. Rev. Edward Still cher of the Bright ch, will speak at the of wel- of the of Episcopal the annual Circle No. Mond, *ing with ) Fifth street home of Miss I avenue The evening will meet { Mrs. Louise Saxton The Cole Class ‘Wednesday evening jce Thurs of the minister, PLANS OBSERVANCE OF CHILDREN'S DAY will meet Delta Clas meat Tuesday The Downs Bible Class also evening at the home of 5113 Seventh street Clib vAl meet T serv- charge Coale Rev Metropolitan Baptist Church to' Rev. Henry Teller Cocke to Prench L Hcld Special Prog Temo: m At the Metropolitan Baptist Ch tomorrow morning, Children’s da: be obscrved. The pastor, Dr Compton Ball. will speak on “Childrer and Grown-Ups.” gram will feature thc The pastor will Worth While,” Specia rendered by the choir. The Ladies' Aid thfll‘-E‘dflv at 10 a.m will be served st noon % pm. for discussion of the lesson Hickox will lead the meeting wil cvening s music will be leadership of the pactor study group will aiter the prayer service, The B. A U 1| his subject tomorro John ' festival A Father's day pro- | iety will meet | Fublic luncheon | Thursday st|Swi's Aips 6 of e the Bible school teachers meet have been found 7,500 feet & Miss A'ma | carno . Praver and coffee arross the frontier when the | cum and praise service will follow under the continue the class 2.000 feet | Sunday by the pastor as part of thc| Children’s day service. On June 16 thc on the church lawn at 7 p.m The pastor is attending general con- ference at Hershey. Pa. ROOSEVELT E}ETS DEGREE President Honored by Rutgers Uni- g versity in Absentia. NEW BRUNSWICK, P, 1h N June 10 President Roosevelt today received e honorary degree of doctor of laws absentia at the 167th commencement University, »sident had accepted an in- | ation to come to Rutgers to receive e, but pressure of duties made ary for him to remain at the capital The degree of doctor of laws was con- fcrred also upon John Gabbert Eowman, chancellor’ of the University of Pitts- burgh OSTEOPATHS TO MEET Dr. Chester D. Swope of Wash- in i ton Is Delegate. Dr. Chester D. Swope of Washington will hate a place in the House of Dele- gates of the American Osteopathic As- cociation when it meets in Milwaukee the week of July 24 for its thirty- 1 annual convention The work of the House of Delegates has to do with the business, legis tive and research affairs of the asso- c he dent and _trustees elected by it. The president this is Dr. Victor W. Purdy of Mil- That city first entertained the convention in 1902, HOLY FEAéT IS TOPIC at All S Church. Rev, Henry Teller Cocke, rector of | All Saints’ Episcopal Church, will have “The Feast of the Holy Trinity” for There will communion at this se There will be holy communion at am The Sunday school t Glen Echo, Juns nts’ e ) 30 picnic will be held ) Avalanche Victims Found. Wiih the meliing of the snow cn th 13 avalanche victi The 13 were smuggli 1gar alanche swept them from a pass and buried them under snowgice and rock be'ow. Seard¥ for the re- maining seven is being continued. Bachelor of arts in education, summa cum laude—Charles Sumner Lofton; { bachelor of arts in education, ;magna laude, Valerie Ethelyn' 'Parks; | bachelor of arts in education. ‘cum ude—Aileen N. Diggs. James Edward | | Harrison, jr.; Ella Louise Murphy, Ber- | | pard Hemilton Nelson, Mary Lorraine | Robbins, Hattie Lee Upshaw. | Bachelor of arts in education—Ros- | ina B. Lacy Adams, Alonzo James| Aden. Louise Cornish Albert, Louise Paulette” Alcxander, Daisy Beairice Al- | len, Daniel James Bailey, Edgar Beanum. Vivian Kern Blackburn, Mar- tha Rowena Bogan, Mary Virginia| Brawner, Maude Evelyn Brown, Bea- trice Bowen Butcher, Nellie Louise Butcher, Clara Tarqueenia Chase, Nel- ka Alexander Chase, Zelmera Church, Maxie Casalene Cooper, Lillyan Edwina Crichlow. Gladys Duncan Cunningham, Raymond Ambrose Diggs. Emily Mc- | Call Dyson, Helen Rebecca Eagles. | Grace Louise Evans, Marion Elizabeth Ferrebce. Una Jackson Fletcher, Edith Mary Flinn, Edna Georgia Gaither. | Dorothy Evelyn Greene, Evelyn Golden | Hammond, Gecrge Lisman Handy, | Alleen Priscilla Harris, John' Henry | Harris, Maude Lomax Harris, Margaret Elizabeth Headen, Hellena Bickford | Mines, Elsie Louise Hogan, Ethel Evans | Holland, Robert N. Hough, Clyde Evans Howard, Dorothy Audrey Howard, Ev-! clyn L. Hunton, Gladys Beryl Isaacs, Anna M. Jackson, Thelma Lucille Jar- | mon. Kate Andrus Jenkins. Clarence Donnelly Johnson, Ellen Peebles John- | son, James R. Johnson, jr.; Elsie Cabell Jones Virginia Jones, _Julia Ernestine Lamb, Frank Pepper Laney, jr.; Gladys Evelyn Maul- din, Etelka McGaha, John Walter Mc- Koy, Ruth E. Moses, Edwin Constan- | tine' Myers, Rosa Stokes Netherland. | Cordell Lee Norman, Evelyn Fran Overton. Phyllis Ann Parker. Ad ude Parks, Virginia_ Straine Pe Thelma Gertrude Preyer. Royal cll_Puryear, Esther Elouise Rob- Florence Mary Shocklyn, Huitt L. Scott, Mirlam Hannali Shie qu. Bea- ice May Simms, Anita R. Smith, Le- ona Dodson Smith, Framees V. Taylor seraldine Thomas, Mattie Jonathan Florence Downing Trower, rguson Turner, Vivian Thomp- | . Beatrice 1. Walker, Ellen | Joseph Richard Whiting s Irene Wilson, Lucy Chiles Wil- on, James Collins Winfree and Ruth Sutton Weodson Bachelor of science in education magna cum laude—Marie Beatrice Clark; bachelor of Acience 4n educa- tion, cum laude—Gladys Marie Jack- son, Wilhelmina Smith, Mable Mar- zuaret Williams. Bachelor of selenge in education— Battis, Alice Pearl Berlow nita D. Beck, Doris Ianthe Mae cley, Cera Iouise Catlett, Carrie fels, Walter Adams Davis it Hattie Aun Gilliam, Charlotie | Prooke Gordon, Gladys Sofronia Har- Grace Johnson Hughes, Gladys| Elizabeth Jackson, Rubylene Anneta Kine, Margaret Wilson Koonce, Henry M. Letcher, M. Russell Lightfoot, Rosa E. Willlams Martin, Jane Evelyn Pey- | | | | | | | | inson | | | | B Davis-Hcpkins, Charles C. Jacobs, Mil- | H. Lucas, Richard Washington Vaughn. 1 EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, | | D. C., SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1933. Plan to Attend Banking Convention INSTITUTE WILL BE HELD IN CHICAGO NEXT WEEK. HE above delegates from the District of Columbia chapter plan to go to Chicago for the convention of the American Institute of Banking Standing, left to right—John M. Christy, Robert Poole, Paul J. Seitzer, James C. Dulin, jr.; G. Elmer! opening Sunday. Flather, Robert G. Whitton and William H. Laughlin. Seated—Willlam Russ. J. Earle McGeary, Anne C. Sullivan, Robert H. Lacey, | E. w. sehreiner. | ton, Elaine Anita Ridgeley, Robert B. | Stewart, _Rebecca Antoinette Tucker, Charles A. Ukkerd, jr. School of Music. Bachclor of music—Rosa _Louise | Burge, Grayce Louise Roberts, William Sherman Smith, Ethyl Beatrice Wise. | College of Applied Science. | Bachelor of science in architecture— James Alonzo Plater. Bachelor of science in eivil engineer- ing, Magna Cum Laude—William Fran- cis_ Newman, Jr. | Bachelor_of science in electrical en- | | gineering, Magna Cum Laude—William | Patrick Cannady, jr. Bachelor of sciénce in home econom- | ics—Jane E. Avant, Thada M. Green. Dorcus Ruth Penn, Flaxie Holcombe Pinkett, *Henri Mae Younge. School of Religion. Bachelor of divinity, Cum Laude— | Howard Andrew Bailey. Bachelor of :divinity—William Ed- ward Miller, John Francis Monroe. Bachelor 'of theology, Magna Cum Laude—Mary Elizabeth Richards. « Bachelor of theology—Alverta Ewell, | Mildred Elizabeth Greenleaf, Inez Wil- helmena Holmes, Louise Willlams John- | son, Leon Sinkler Penn, Prentice Thomas. | School of Law. Bachelor of laws, Cum Laude— | Thurgood Marshall. Bachelor of laws—Otho De Witt | Branson, Lorenzo Madeira Henderson, Oliver White Hill, Onette Waldo John- | son. Leslie Sterling Perry, Louis Ed- | ward unders, Henry Wadsworth Charles Wesley Williamson. College of Medicine. Doctor of medicine—Theodore R Anderson, Harrison C. Beldon, Hayes Joseph Burnett, jr.. Arthur Edward Cameron, Eustace Adolph Cann, Sim-| eon Clark Carson, Melvin Mason Chris- tian, William Alexander Cleland, Rus- sell ‘MacDonald Coleman, John Fran- | cis Collins, jr.; Edwin Thomas Cun- diff, Elmer Lorenzo Douglas. Maurice | B. K. FEdmead, Harold Hemingway! Foreman, Earl Francis Hawkins, J:lrm‘s‘ | Pranklin Henry, John Charles Jordan, | jr.; Edward Wendall Kelly, jr.; cliffe Mason, Percy Conrad May, Wil- liam Gaston Polk, Kline Armond Price, Albert George Rawlins, Ernest Wake- fleld Richards, Jacob Jay Saposnik. Thomas Claybourne Simmons. Richard Verden Sims, jr.. William Weldon Sol- omon, Stephen Ross Stanford, Elric Gordon Stewart, Arthur Harold Thomas, David Willis Utz, George Roosevelt Watkins, Charles Ignatics West, ir.; Everett Carlton White, Henry Wilson Williams, Raloh Clarke Wright, Wa: ner Richard Wright, jr.; Roy Spurgeon Wynn. 3 College of Dentistry. Doctor of dental surgery—Garey | Mackey Browne, John Joseph Bruce, Westanna O I Byrom, Joseph P.| Cheevers, Gorham C. Fletcher, Maxwell L. Gaines, William McNelva Gibson, | Antonio Maceo Heir, Ernest Rolfe Kim- brough. Ernest Julian Levin, Hugh‘ Kenneth Lloyd, Scott 8. McKnight, | Willlam Edward Merritt, James Wes- Smith, | Willlam Kenncth Willlams, Winston | C. L. Willoughby, Nansouke Yamashita. | 1 College of Pharmacy. Bachelor of science in pharmacy— Isaiah Adier Burton, Charles Louis Johnson, Moses Locatee Moody. | Pharmaceutical chemist—Gladys Ce- | | ola Ball, John Henry Jackson. Marvin | | Henry Jones, John Perry Mable, John Henry Owens, Linwood Miles Welch, ‘William McKinley Williams. | The Graduate Division. ‘ Master of arts—Dorothy Wright At- kinson, Flavius Josephus Bailey, Mil- dred Letitia Brown, Mary Egna Burke, | Caroline Clinton ' Calloway, Charles | Kenneth Coleman, Dorothy _ Evans Douglas, Pauline 'Adelaide Gaskins, George William Jackson, Gladys Evelyn Jackson, Edith Willlam Keys, Rolnnd‘ Calhoun McConnell, Agthie Lester Moore, Naomi Irene Morris, Mary Ade- laide Morton, Racul Peres, Walter Na- thaniel Ridley, Marle Louise Tayla: Mary Kathryn Wade, Qbziene Louisa Walker i Reginald Mathias Washington, Jua- nita Lee Williams, Dwight Hillis Wil- son. Master of science—Josephine Clarke Bailev, Lawrence Taft Burwell, Paul Lawrence Dunbar Elmore, Dudley Wil- fred Gill, John Wesley Greene, Ger- trude Mulligan,_ Helen. Corinne n Howard Sneed, Hubert Irma Leona Timus. Commissions as second lieutenants of Infantry, Officers’ Reserve Corps, Army of the United States, were awarded to Fred Leroy Allen, Danfel James Bailey, George Ogleton Butler, William Pat- rick Cannaday, jr.. Prank Greene Da- vis, Raymond Ambrose Diggs, Herman Wellington Douthit, Israel Edward El- liott, jr.. George Lisman Handy, Rob- ert Nathaniel Hough, Clyde Evans How- ard, Frank Pepper Laney, jr.; Benson Doyie Mitchell, Cordell Lee Norman, Herman Dubois Richards, Eugene Rob- erson, Leandre Valentine Roberts, Stanley Marlowe Smith, Robert Blaine Stewart, Leonard Earl Terrell, Samuel Wilbert’ Tucker, Clarence Buchanan Wheat, Gordon Martin Wilkins, Lucius Emerson Young. The following students of the School of Medicine were awarded interneships dmen’s Hospital for the year al J — Theodore R. Anderson Hayes Burnett, Eustace A. Cann Simeon C. Carson, Melvin M. Chris- tian, W. Alexander Cleland. Russell M Coleman, Maurice B. K. Edmead, James F. Henry, J. Charles Jordan, jr.; Joseph P. Kelly. Albert L. Laforest, Melvin W Mason, Henry A. McPherson, Kline A Price, Thomas C. Simmons, Richard V. Bims, ir.. Elric G. Stewart, George E. Watkine, Everett C. White, Henry W. Williams, Ralph C. Wright, Warner | R. Wright. | Dental—Gor] ham C. Fletcher. COLD WAVE IN BRAZIL Below-Freezing Temperature in Rio de Janeiro State. RIO DE JANEIRO, B (#).—A cold wave conti Central Brazil. Below freezing temperature was re- corded at Friburgg, Rio de Janeiro State. 1t was 2 dégrees gbove fr: Paulo. : " o | ployers and employe: | MAY CLOSE PLANTS Shutdown Is Threatened to! Avoid Provisions of Re- covery Measure. Constance C. Fogle and PROTESTONBL. | e wree District of Columbia—Partly cloudy, possibly local thundershowers tonight and tomorrow; not much change in temperature. Gentle variable winds. Maryland—Partly cloudy, possibly lo- cal thundershowers tonight and tomor- row: not h chanze in temperature. Virginia—Partly cloudy, possibly lo- cal thundershowers tonight and tomor- | row: slightly warmer in extre. e West portion tonight. West Virginia—Local thundershow- ers tonight or tomorrow; slightly warmer tonight in extreme East por- | tion. Br the Associated Pr A ‘The possibility of a shutdown of | hundreds of manufacturing plants to avoid operation under the labor sections of the industrial regulation bill as amended by the Senate was reported sterdey by the National Association of Manufacturers. At the offices of the association it was said that telegrams were pouring in cxpressing vigorous opposition to the measure and threatening to close. One, for instance, from a Midwestern manu- facturer, said he had been keeping his plant open to provide employment for 800 persons, but that he would close it rather than submit to the labor pro- visions of the act. Textile Leaders Hit Plan. Meanwhile, criticism came from cot- ton textile leaders who have been draft- ing a code of trade practices for the in- dustry. They asserted in a statement | that the action of the Senate in ac- cepting the Borah amendment to the anti-trust secticn made further discus- | sions with Federal officials impossible. The Borah amendment, accepted by Senator Wagner, who is in charge of | the bill. reads: | “That such code or codes shall not | permit combinations in restraint of | trade. price fixing or other monopolistic | practiges.” The statement of the textile men came after weeks of conferences be- | tween Northern and Southern manufac- | turers to agree upon a united program | for the industry and expressed the opinion that they were further advanced toward agreement than any other in- | dustry. | Individually. the 14 members of the committee expressed the opinion that the Borah amendment made trade prac- Lo tice egreements ineffective, if not im- possible. | Lund Issues Statement, Robert L. Lund of St. Louls, presi- dent of the Manufacturers’ Association, | said in a statement that the act as it | now stands, with the Borah amendment, “imposes the same or greater burdens | upon industry than the legislation orig- inally sent to Congress by President Roosevelt, and deprives industry of the supposed advantages it was to obtain in_return.” Lund sald the “manufacturers of the Nation are seriously concerned and worried over the action of the Senate in eliminating the amendment spon- sored by the Senate Finance Ccmmit- tee, which declared the act should not be ‘used to disturb the satisfactory re- | lationships now existing between em- [ Inferentially. he said. the Senate ex- pressed itself ‘as favoring changes in | the conditions as now existing, and it is to this section that manufacturers are objecting ‘ ACTOR'S SALARY $1.34, | ATTACHMENT REVEALS | Physician Pays $10.50 in Proceed- ing Against Harry Green, at Hollywood. B the Associated Press. HOLLYWOOD, June .10.—~A phy- cisian who had a bi'l of $75 against Harry Green, film comedian. attached Weather Outiook for June 12 to June 17. North and Middle Atlantic States— Possibly ceattered showers and thunder- | storms at beg'nning of week and again about Friday. Temperatures mostly normal or above. River Report. Potomac River clear and Shenandoah slightly muddy this morning. 4 Report for Last 24 Hours. (From Noon Yesterday to Noon Today.) ‘Temperature, Barometer, Degrees. .0 89 83 Yesterday— 4 pm. . 8 pm. . Midnight Today— 4 am. 8 am, (From noon yesterday to noon today.) Highest, 100, 3:15 p.m. yesterday. Year ago, 83. Lowest, 75, 5:30 am. today. Year ago, 58. Record Temperatures This Year. Highest, 100, on June 9. Lowest, 14, on February 9. Humidity for Last 24 Hours, | (From Noon Yesterday to Noon Today.) (From noon Fterd/ly to noon today.) Highest, 97. at 12:10 am. today. Lowest, 47, at 2:45 p.m. yesterday. Tide Tables. | (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) ‘Today. 9:35am. 3:48am. 10:09 p.m. 4:32pm. n and Moon. Rises. 4:42 ... 4:41 .10:25 pm. ‘Tomorrow. 10:31 a.m, 4:462.m. 11:07 p.m. 5:24pm. High 3 The Su Sets. 7:33 7:33 6:59 am. loon, today. Automobile lights must bé turned on | one-half hour after sunset. Precipitation. Monthly precipitation in the Capital (current month to date): Month. 1933. Average. Record. January .3.25 3.55 February 2.63 3.27 March 3.75 April May September October Novembe, . December 332 Weather in Various Cities. ‘Temperature. * g ey Stations. Mo SO w'e g0l we uau ey @ £ F 5 3 ] “* RwpIRITIE Glea Pt.cioudy ain 7 Pt.cloudy Cloudy Clondy tlaniz, Ga tlantic City pltimore. Md the actor's salary yesterday, but he got | only $134—and i cost him $10.50 to obtain the attachment. i Lik» most comedians, Green is certain | he is a good tragedian. He was 50 anx- | ious to play a tragic role in a De Mille picture that he offered to play for $1 a week. He worked one weck and two days, for which he received two salary checks, one of $1 and cne for 34 cents. These were at the studio treasurer's office when the attachment was made. Meantime, Green said, he had sent | the physician a check anyway. | DEPORTATION FACED IN TEXAS BY MEXICAN| B | Immigration Officials Hold Antonio | Gonzales Possibly Wanted | for Murder. By the Associated Press. | CORPUS CHRISTI. Tex.. June 10.— | Immigration officials here last night | were holding Antonio Gonzales for de- portation to Mexico, and also to turn | Thim over to Mexican authorities if they | St wish to prosecute him for the slaying [ two men in Tampico, Mex., in the Fall of 1928 Antonio Gonzales and his brother, Resendo Gonzale: were arrested at Pertland, Tex.. today as suspected vio- | lators of the immigration laws. | Tmmigration ofticers said both ad- | mitted that Antonio Gonzales shot and | killed Francisco and Manu=l Valdez, brothers, in a politieal brawl in his caloon on the outekirts of Tampico. Cool, Healthful in Hot Weather | £pokane, Wash. 0. | Tampe, Fa. .- am| | Was] B8 Belror: Gal H 8. Colo Mic 50, Tex veston. Tex napolis Jucksonville Kans. City, Mo. Lo: £ 008 New York, Ciklahoms Cil Omaha. Neb by Raleigh. N_ C. It Lake City an Antonio n Dieso. Cal n Francisco. 3 t. Louis, Mo 20, St. Paul Eeatcle, £ i Minn. Wash Cloudy Cloudy time, today.) m veather. (Noon, Greeniwic Temperature. W 0 loudy Stations Horta (Fay Pi.cloudy Cloudy Clear Cioudy Hava Colon, Lake Forest Homors Ickes. LAKE FOREST, Iil, June 10 (#).— Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes received the honorary deg ee of doctor of laws today at the fiity-ffth annual commencement address before 65 graduates %% A—9 HUEY LONG PROBE | WARDEN QUELLS WILL BE RESUMED, RIOT IN PRISON Committee Denies Rumors!Knocks Down Disobedient Inquiry Will Be Allowed Convict and Penitentiary to Die. Trouble Ends. By the Associated Press. the A‘;:;é’;!“ cl‘{;;. 5 o1 tatifee fnto | _ JEPPERSOX . Mo, J = Resumption of the Senate inquiry into | warden J. M. Sanders walked unex- the 1932 Loulsiana Demosratic sena-|peetedly h on a convict riot in_the torial primary. involving Senator Huey |pants shop at the Missouri penitentiary . today and quelled it personally. P. Long and his political machine, is [y 5o den was showing Bob Good, expected in Senate circles soon after | Salem, Mo., editor, about the prison Congress adjourns. | when he came upon a free-for-all fight In answer to rumors the investiga- | between a group of convicts and Guards !J. W. Willlams and Joe Cloren. The tion would be allowed to die where it | guards were wiclding clubs and the now stands, tommittee membors pri- |convicts had & club and several pairs ; . fon, | Of_scissors. vately said such was not the intention, |0 Sdlstors - but that pressing legislative matiers|gaicers said I shouted to the con- hd forced holding the inestigation in | victs to st down.” One started to get v ral weel lup ‘and I knocked him down with my T e e fet. " Within a few minutes it was Connally to Be Chairman. {all over, with Anderson (a convict), who Retirement of Senator Bratton, Demo- | 1Ad been hit on the head by one of the crat, of New Mexico, from the Senate | SU2: rds, lying unconseious on the floor, . said the outbreak starf at the close of the session will elevate| The warden sai e Senator_Connally, Democrat, of Texas, | %Pcn Guard Willlams attempted to dis to the chairmanship of the special cam- | cipline Harold Anderson, Kensas City paign committee which has conducted | [0Pbery convict, who 5 known as a the inquiry. By “bad actor.” Other prisoners came to Anderson’s aid. inches in | Informally, committee members have | discussed returning to Louisiana for in- | quiry into, or specific hearings on,| specific charges supported by specific | evidence, instead of the generalities | they feel have been brought forward so_far. Under consideration also is a sugges- | tion that a meeting be held in Wash- | ington to hear Seymour Weiss. New Orleans hotel man, who declined to give | | the committee financia] information in | hearings in New Orleans. | | Meanwhile petitions asking that Long i be ousted. urging ccntinuation of the inquiry, opposing it and praising Long, pour into the Senate by tclegraph and ! mail from Louisianans. They ae re- ferred on receipt to the Judiclary and Campaigns Committee. Would Limit Inquiry. Informally expressing their opinions in private, a majority of the Scnate’s special Campaign Funds Investigating Committee held to the view that the | renewed probe should confine its in-| uiry to the defeat of former Senator roussard, seeking renomination, by Senator Jehn H. Overton. In their opinion, the previous inquiry, | involving Senator Long, took in “too | much background” of Long’s past his- tory and was of insufficient merit to| warrant action to unseat either Over-| ton or Long. Long’s support of Overton, his, enemies have charged, made Overton unfit for the office. This contention they have presented, along with a host of accusations against Long, centering principally around his actions as Gov-| ernor and Senator, before the primary. Petition Report Keady. Committee members felt this line of | inquiry would be too general and would bring up subjects beyond the Senate's Jurisdiction. Meanwhile the Judiciary Committee | was to meet today to consider a report from a subcommittee on whether a petition from former Gov. John M. Parker, asking that Long be ousted, was | receivable and printable. A report prepared by Senator King, | Democrat, of Utah, chairman of the! subcommitee, is understood to hold that | it was receivable and could be published | if formal action on it were taken by | the Senate, so long as no malice was involved in its publication. Long raised this point when the petition, with its many charges against | him, was presented some weeks ago and referred to the committee for determina- | tion. | . MACDONALD YOUTH'S | EXTRADITION PROBLEM, U. 8. Desires to Hold Nashville, Prisoner, Wanted in Michigan in Mother's Death. | | | | | By the Associated Press. NASHVILLE, Tenn., June 10.—Legal complications threatened today (o delay removal of 17-year-old Balfe MacDonald to his home at Flint, Mich.. Guard Cloren was treated for a scis- sors wound and Williams was slightly injured. “Even if they had gotten out of the factory.” Deputy Warden Tom Scott said, “the prisoners couldn’t have gone any place. since all the walls were maned. I believe they intended to start a general riot before making a break for the walls.” About 225 men were working in the factory at the time. The four known leaders of the disturbance were placed in solitary confinement. ARGENTINE TO HAVE HUGE ROAD NETWORK Engineers Report in Italy on Sur- vey Made for Building of Pleasure Highways. By the Associated Press. MILAN, Italy, June 10.—A huge project for supplying Argentina with a network of highways exclusively for pleasure automobiles, was revealed today with the arrival from Buenos Aires of two engineers employed by Senator Piero Puricelli, a millionaire road builder. The engineers have been in Argen- tina for some weeks talking to officials and surveying the ground with a view to determining possibilities for such roads, which are known as autostrade. Puricelli received the engineers’ re- ports today. On,them he wiil make & definite proposal to the Argentine gov- ernment, the total cost of which may total some tens of millions of dollars. Puricelli is known as the father of the autostrade, having built all of Italy’s roads used only by pleasure cars, including the famous* Milan-to-Lakes, the Rome-to-Sea and the Naples-to- Pompeii roads. CONVICTED IN SLAYING California Prisoner May Die for Killing of Former D. @ Man. MARTINEZ, Calif., June 10 (#).— Den Brossch, alias Harris. 32, returned here after his capture in Phoenix, Aris., was_convicted last night of the murder of Harry L. Whited, Crcckett jeweler, the morning of December 3, 1932. The verdict made no recommendation for leniency and under the law the death sentence is mandatory. Whited, who formeriy resided in Washington. D. C., was found dead in his store with his throat slashed and head cruched. PAY INCREASE GRANTED veral Tho:unnd Timber Workers Given Raise. TACOMA, Wash., June 10 (#).—A 10 | per cent wege incroase for the several 9ito answer a charge of killing his | thousand cmployes of the Weyerhaeuser mother. ! The United States Government had prior jurisdiction over the youth and |his 16-year-old _companion, William Terwilliger of Flint, because thcy Pleaded guilty to attempting to extort | money from Nashville merchants. and | their attorney gave notice of resisi- asioe of extradition as a “precautionary step. Meanwhile. the two remained in jail here. MacDonald was sullen under | confinement, said he was innocent of | the slaying and declared he had left home because of arguments with his mother. County Presecutor A. J. Transue, who cam> here from Flint with a corps of officers, said he would scek the youth's Temoval “as soon as possible” and added Federal authorities had indicated no objection would be interposed if MacDonald and Terwilliger waived ex- tradition. Jack Norman. Nashville attorney em- ployed by MacDoneld's reistives, ex- plained he was waiting for the arrival of lawyers from Flint before final de- cision as to whether the move to res'st | extradition would be followed up. Tei- | williger, he went on. denied ever telli officers MacDonald had admitted stri: ing his mother. | LYNCH VICTIM FOUND | Boyette Szcond of Pair Taken From ' Tennessee Jail and Slain. HUNTSVILLE, Tenn., June 10 (%) — The bul'et-scarred body of Jerome Boyette, who with Harvey W:nchester, a fellow priscner, was taken from the | Ecott County Jail Thursday night by | armed men, was found Iate yesterday 40 feet from the place the bullet-pierced body of Winchester had been found carlier. Both were white prisoners and held in_jail on_murder cha:ges PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION PAYS 5% Assets Over $30,000,000 Surplus, $1,250,000 Cor. 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY. Presldent FDWARD €. BALTZ, Sccretary Timber Co. in Washington was an- rounced yesterday by F. R. Titcomb, general manager cf the company. The minimum wage in the company's extensive operations on the Willapa Harbor at Vale, Longview, Everett and elsewhere in both mills end camps will be $2.40. 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