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WOMEN IN TEARS AT HITLER SLIGHT: Thousands Disappointed When Chancellor Refuses Address at Session. By the Associated Press. NURNBERG, Germany, August 31.— Tears were shed today by thousands of enthusiastic Hitlerite women who Jearned on reaching Nurnberg for the Nazi convention that Chancelior Adolf Hitler would not make an address to them, as originally scheduled. | Moreover, the women were informed that there would be no sectional meet- ing for their auxiliavies among the many sectional gatherings for all trades, professions and organizations on this afternoon’s program. In honse to tearful questions of “why.” the women received only a shrug of the shoulders from each offi- cial to whom they applied. Presum- ably. the action was in line with a general policy which excluded women from all positions in connection with the management of the convention. Boys Not Neglected. The women® thought they were neg- lected, but no such complaint came from the thousands of boys here for, Young Rockefeller, Motoring to Dinner, Runs Short of Gas By the Associated Preas. . BOSTON, August 31—Gaso- line, on which his father and grandfather made millions, be- came & crying need to Winthrop Rockefeller Monday. Rockefeller took time off from his first day’s work in the Boston office of his family's concern to drive to Hull for a swim and dinner. As he was motoring with a Yale classmate, Bowen Carleton Tufte, through Hing- | ham, their big car began to sput- ter, backfired and finally died. A motorist came by with his girl and Tufts stcpped him. “Please, sir, this is Mr. Rocke- feller. Will you give us a push to a gasoline station?” The motorist did, the tank was filled and Rockefeller drove on. SCHOOL DISTRICTS’ ABOLITION PASSED Virginia Senate Approves Rust Bill in Modernizing THE EVENING STAR. WASHIN( JEW SLAYING LAID 10 NAZI FANATICS Lessing Hated by Hitlerites for Criticizing Wartime Germany. By Radio to The Btar. BERLIN, Germany, August 31.—The murder of Prof. Theodor Lessing, for- merly of Hanover, Prussia, by a sup- posed Nazi in the Czechoslovak town of Marienbad, seems to show that the fanaticism of German Chancellor Adolph Hitler's followers continues un- diminished. Prof. Lessing was a Jew and was particularly hated by the Nazis for his biting criticisms of Germany's partici- pation in the war, his ironical condem- nation of President Paul von Hinden- burg and his opposition to the Nazs. His books were placed on the blacklist and burned by Hitlerite students in the Spring. Prof. Lessing was_expelled from the ! By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. Hanover Technical Institute last year. Before the Nazis come to power, how- ever, this professor of philosophy man- aged to escape over the frontier—a rocedure which apparently failed to Movement. against Jews who become too intimate with Aryans, continues unabated. A Jewul:dmfir":m{" in the middle 30s was week through the streets of Kassel with his head semi-shaven. He was flanked on each side by a Wwoman, both of whom were wearing hats but whose heads also seemed :to have been shaven. Around the man’s The women were alleged to be man’s mistress and her mother. It is said that the crowd that followed him Wwas more curious than approving. Recently the Nazi authorities at Kas- sel have published lists of Aryan girls who associate intimately with Jews. Hitler Pleads Culture. “Our movement’ is the continuance of German eminence in art and cul- ture.” This is the gist of German Chancel- lor Adolf Hitler's speech delivered last night at the opening of the five-day biennal Nazi Party Convention in Nu- remberg. in answer to a greeting by Mayor Liebel of that city. “The time has now come.” Hitler stated, “when we must understand that we have to choose our own tradition.” (Copyright, 1933.) FINEST rh - ) fmm‘; TOP DB MAKE YHI‘ TEST Cover the left half of the above picture. NO SURE method of preventing Note how old the face baldness or re-growing hair was looks because the scalp . is bare. Then coverthe known thirty years ago. n right half and notice experimented with cure-all remedies how much younger the which usually did more harm than good. Now—a few old-fashioned men still use their scalps as experimental laboratories for patent remedies and barber-shop treatments. But modern-minded men have learned that baldness can be avoided and hair can be re- same face appears be- cause the scalp is covered with hair, p the party congress. RICHMOND, Va.. August 31.—A bill | save him from Nazi barbarism. grown, when proper specialized treatment is administered Of an_estimated 3.000.000 youthful Hitler followers, 60.000 of the best be-| haved were rewarded by a free trip to Nurnberg, where they encamped out- side the city in 180 camps Eighteen thousand of these boys al- ready have marched into the city and the rest are expected by Friday night for participation in a great week end pa- rade E zht large brick ovens were erected, each of which ean’ boil 1,100 gallons of soup with meat, making it possible to feed the entire Army of 60,000 boys | in 30 minutes. Future Propagandists. Chancellor Hitler believes that these boys will become Germany's best Nazi Ppropagahdists in the future. They are sleeping on straw in their camps, as do the 100,000 Nazi storm troopers bivouacked in another section outside Nurnberg. In these bivouacs military discipline obtains. Nurnberg looks like a beleaguered city, with army-like formaticns in evidence everywhere on the outskirts. This afternoon’s sectional meetings were closed to the press. Nazi LEADER WOUNDED. Tirolese, Hofer, Reaches Italy After Re- lease by Disguised Trio. INNSBRUCK, Austria, August 31 (#), =—Reporis from Bolzano, Italy, today #aid Franz Hofer, Tirolese Nazi leader, who was released vesterday from the Innsbruck jail by three Nazis disguised as members of the Fascist Home Guard, crossed the Italian border last night. He had a bullet wound in his right leg. apparently received when armed policemen along the route fired on the Nafils{' fleeing automobile. ofer prepared to go by airplane to Nurnberg, Germany. with l:-g com- panions to attend a National Socialist convention and to greet Chancellor Hit- ler of Germany H’INDENBl'RG HONORS GOERING. Generalcy in Standing Army Recogni- tion for Service. NURNBERG. Germany. August 31 (#P.—The newspaper Franckische Tages- zeitung said teday that President Paul von Hindenburg had appointed Reichs- minister Wilhelm Goering a general in the standing army in recognition of his service in the MHberation of Germany. Church Supper Labor Day. CAMP SPRINGS. Md. August 31 (Special). —The annual chicken supper of Bells Methodist Episcopal Church lvuil be served on Labor day from & 0 7 pm. EISEMAN’S SEVENTH AXD F IR A Open a Charge Account NOTHING DOWN Just Pay $7IN OCTOBER $7 INNOVEMBER $7 IN DECEMBER Suits of very fine worsted and other quality fabrics in the season’s newest and most preferred colors and patterns. All sizes and models. SPECIAL NOTICE We are keeping prices down despite rapidly rising costs. You owe it to your- self to shop Eiseman’s be- fore making any purchases. EISEMAN’S, 7th AND F ———————— by Senator John W. Rust abolishing | school districts in Fairfax County as | the first move toward modernizing the | tpe school system was passed by the Senate vesterday. ‘The House passed an ad- | ministration bill which will enable Fair- | fax County to secure the needed funds from the State literary fund. Since there was no opposition to either measure it was expected that the first bill would pass the House and the sec- | ond the Senate without difficulty. The bill passed in the Senate sets Fairfax County up as a single school district, with the exception of Hern- | don, which is to be considered a separ- ate district only as to representation | In one of his early works, “Die Untergang Der Edge an Geist,” Porf. Lessing curiously anticipated some of later conclusions of Oswald Spengler | Campaign Continued. The Nazi campaign against Aryans | who associate too closely with Jews or | Labor Day's Best Treat on_the school board. and the town of | Falls Church, which is eliminated al- together. All district school levies are abol- | ished by the measure and all district | obligations will become the obligations of the county as a single school district. | smpany in the world ! Porter and free pillow service make Great Eastern trave jovahic. WORLD'S FA| Expense tours to fit any pocketbook also LOW ONE-WAY RATES te RLD'S FAIR Rd.Trip $32.50 ‘Write, or phone NATIONAL 1721 or 9220. 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You are living through this revolution. It has aroused great enthusiasm and new hope among millions—yet it is already excit- ing resistance and the cynical pessimism of special interests! You cannot evade the issues, because they concern you intimately. But in the mass of conflicting opinion, in the deluge of daily reports, how can you tell clearly what is going on? What THIS WEEK’'S CONTENTS ARE AN APPROACHING CRISIS IN THE AMERICAN EXPERIMENT Arthur Crawford, Washington Correspondent Chicago Journal of Commerce, clearly defines the first great obstacle to the success of N.R. A. Planned economy faces the supreme test of adjusting pur- chasing power to production and prices. ABOUT BOOKS—AND THOSE WHO WRITE THEM Harold de Wolf Fuller, conducting a new column on current litera- ture, reviews crisply and with charm, the books you will want to read. “ARGUS” HAS HIS EYE ON HOLLYWOOD! He not only sees all, he hears all that is going on in the production of moving-pictures. You cannot afford not to be well-informed on America’s most distinctive contribution to the growtl of the dramatic art! . . DREAD WHITE GHOST THAT STRUCK THE CAVE-MEN DOWN. Oldest of diseases—Ileaving its corrosive marks on the skin of Egyptian mummies and on the bones of pre- historic cave-men—tuberculosit still a plague that puzzles science. Dr. Kendall Emerson tells how another battle against disease is being fought. THE DANGER OF ECONOMY AT WASHINGTON? “Diogenes,” with clear gaze on federal government, points out the danger of “practical” economy that destroys the constructive services of scientific experts. CHINA'S POPPY PARADISE —CITY OF LOST SOULS! At Macao, “across the way from China,” despairing Chinese go to dream away their lives in the Little Street of For- gotten Men. WHO IS TAKAMURA —THIS LIVING “OLD MASTER”? Greatest of living Japanese sculptors in wood, this octog genarian artist still creates masterpieces in the spirit of Michelangelo. is the part you are taking? What is going to happen to you? The new Literary Digest will keep you clearly informed and up to date. Thousands of periodicals are scanned each week by a highly skilled editorial staff in order that you may have a trenchant, accurate, and unbiased digest of the news. And, in addition, many original articles, numerous illustrations and other contributions by eminent journalists and influential men of affairs, bring you a keen interpretation of the significance of the news in all its aspects. The Literary Digest, too, is effecting a revolution . . . in news-reporting! OF REAL IMPORTANCE TO YOU DOES RELIGION NEED A NEW CODE OF MORALS? Dr. O. L. Hartman, veteran editor of Zion's Herald, believes the time is at hand to provide a new moral stimulus to support the spirit of the N.R. A. FROM THESE CHAMPIONS A TENNIS KING WILL BE CROWNED! GEN. HUGH S. JOHNSON Drawn for The Literary Digest by S. J. Woolf Fred Hawthorne, sports writer and tennis expert, reviews the parade of champions as it forms at Forest Hills to crown a new American champion. DE ’EM, COWBOY !I”—NEW BATTLE-CRY OF POLO! ‘When 20,000 spectators at Onwentsia cheered the victory of an All-Western team over an All-Eastern, a royal sport became popular! Oscar Howard explains to you the great game of “hockey on horse-back.” ON WHAT DO THESE OUR ATHLETES FEED? Some eat pie and smoke cigarettes on the day they smash world records. Is the severity of the training-table a useless hardship after all? MARCONI'S MICRO-WAVES OPEN NEW VISTAS FOR RADIO. Marconi calls the world’s attention to another great advance in scientific progress. Micro-waves, piercing moun- tains, may vastly increase the range of radio’s usefulness. WHAT’S HAPPENING TO BUSINESS? Endicott G. Rich, keen observer and commentator on business trends, opens a new page on the business of the week. Well supported by graphs and charts, this feature clearly pictures the current condition of trade and finance. ‘ AND—IN ADDITION: The new Literary Digest is rich with a great variety of news happenings and other original features. “The Spice of Life!”; drama; art; original car- toons., Profusely illustrated, it is edited in 8 modern manner that both entertains and informs! The Thrift Family “Yessir, Mary—I figure you'd save ot least 750 steps a day with one of those kifchen cabinets.” Nationally Advertised Stainless Porcelain Top KITCHEN Yesterday's Price Was ’22-95 ONE DAY ONLY! From stove to pantry to refrigerator to shelves to stove and back again. Unnecessary steps, every one of them. For here’s a kitchen cabinet to keep your staples, utensils, cutlery and bowls all in one con- venient and compact place. The stainless porcelain enamel sliding table top measures 25 x 40 in. A well ventilated metal drawer keeps bread fresh. 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