Evening Star Newspaper, January 21, 1935, Page 5

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PLACES RESERVED | FOR120AT BALL Roosevelt Fete Commmee Chairmen Meet at Wil- liams Home. Tables will be reserved for 1200 persons at the Shoreham Hotel, birthday ball for President Roosevelt, January 30, it was announced fol- | lowing a meeting of the committee | chairmen in charge yesterday at the home of Mrs. John R. Williams, chair- man of the ball ! In another ball room be a large number of tables. Headquarters of the Birthday Ball Committee in the Transportation Building. 825 Seventeenth street, will | be open all day and each evening this week | After the committee meeting yes-| terday Mrs. Willilams announced completion of several important com- mittees for the birthday ball. The Publicity Committee is headed by Mrs. Eleanor Medill Patterson and includes Mrs. Eugene MacLean, Mrs. Oliver Owen Kuhn, Mrs. Lowell Mellett and Miss Janet Richards. The committee on decorations headed by Mrs. Joseph Le comprises Mrs. James F. Curtis Kenna Elkins, Mrs, Henry Spencer and Mrs. John F. Wilkins. | Col. E. M. Watson, U. S. A.. Pres dent Roosevelt's military aide, will | be chairman of the Floor Committee, and the vice chairman of the Floor, Committee be Capt. Wilson Brown, U. S President Roose- | velt's naval aide Admiral Mark Bristol's Ticket Com- mittee includes seven vice chairmen, | Gen. Willlam E. Horton, Melvin D Hildreth, Mrs. Frederick H. Brooke. Mrs. Philip Coffin. Mrs. Frederick de Courcy Faust, Miss Anne Carter Greene and Mrs. Sidney A. Taliaferro. TEACHER PROMOTION HEARING AGAIN CALLED Board of Education to Hear Those | there will | unreserved | Opposed to Changes in Present System. Teachers in the District schools who have asked that a new system of pro- motions and ratings be adopted will be heard again late today by the Board of Education Teachers' Union and the Teachers’ Association evidence supporting the recommended hange has been submitted at two sessions Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent Stephen A. Kramer, assistant ntendent, are expected to pre- witnesses favoring the e set-up at today’s ing may be continued toni Before the teachers hearing, the board’s Committee on Legislation was the Franklin School to consider proposed measures to raise the standards of vocational schools and teachers’ cu"rgv: eting. nm.- TROOPS WIN ARGUMENT Four Wounded Comrades in Dispute. CASABLANCA, Morocco, January ). —. egalese soldier called out the troops yesterday to help him win an argum F as Soldier Calls o1 ished in the native quarter of Marrakech with 50 partici- pants. Gendarmes after several hours separated the belligerents. The soldier called the troops from | & nearby barracks when he found himself outnumbered. The troops came well armed to put down the “attack.” _EDUCATIONAL. ¢ FELIX MAHONY ART S§CHOOL Commercial Art. Interior, Decoras Das tion. 'Costume Desig and Nimke Coe_ Omiiens Sitordd: 1747R.1.Ave.Na. 2656 The Temple School SECRETARIAL TRAINING Beginners’ and Advanced Classes Day and Evening Sessions Day Classes forming every Monday Reviews, Principles, Pitman Shorthand January 28. Beginners’ Class Business English and Spelling. February 4, 7:45 P.M. 1420 K St. N.W., NATIONAL 3258 CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS. BEGIN BEFORE IT IS TOQ LATE! Junior Telephone Exams. TICAL. FILE AND GEN- The Civil Service h st. n.w. Met. PEABODY Conservatory of Music Balhmure. Md. D“n onmnnn :‘,:nr Color. ERAL cLFm‘r atory Schoo! 3 Desartment Biackhend, Sunt. 21 E. Mt. Vernon Place Phone Vernon lmm. 2nd TERM F5™5 Arranzements for admission now be- fng_made. New pupils received for private and class lessons. Openings Daily. St. NW. >\ Accountancy Pace Courses; B.C.S. and M C.S. Degrees. C.P.A. Preparation. Day and Even ing Classes: Coeducational. Send tor 28th Year Book. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY TMNSPOHTATION BLDG MET 2518 ~ BEGIN TODAY EF IT 1S TOO LATE! JUNIOR TELEPHONE OPERATOR EXAM CARD PUNCH MACHINE SPECIAL STATISTICAL. FILE AND GEN- ERAL CLERICAL. The Civil Seryice Prepar; atory School. 12th st. n.w. Met. 6337. ¢ e wounded, as the | children, victims in Detroit to the agony of the P rle, 8. Doris ree ent’s Juber of ~ufi; rers of 'm.x 'AMERICA REVEALED AS KAISER'S SAVIOR U. S. Senate Caused U. S. to Forestall Trial. the As State disclosed probably dramatic - ‘many States lled one of the most ever scheduled—the iser Wilhelm n( ponden ((‘ hither- cses the fact that tes Senate caused the nt to withdraw from efforts ilhelm before an interna- Goverr to bring tional jury. because of a comparatively p, called the *“irreconcil- President Wilson, the Sen- WashingtonCollegeofLaw Second Semester Begins February 4 New Classes Both Day and Evening 2000 G St. N.W. MEt. 4585 at they I e ball go to the Warm Si ‘Di!‘lomatic Correspondence Shows THE EVENING Victims Aid Paralysis Fight of infantile visited their littl ve suffered Committee id Richard Trent, 7 paralysis, Here is Albert Ba wille, 7. ntile paraly |ate rejected the treaty oL a Emp day. ACe sident Wilson, Col. E. M. House, and | idential | Secretary Lansing. Clemenceau Balfour tell the story cablegrams and not tween November, 1918, armistice, and Decembe! in confi 1919. SCOUT OFFICIAL DIES GLEN COVE. N —George Dupont Pratt, conservation commissioner York State. | monia He months. In 1915 servation ner Charles S. Whitman elected president of Forestry that office until last year. treasurer and one of of the Boy Scouts of America 65 of had been ill by Pratt the the vings that other children E receiving the pennies ‘18 of Versailles | The administration then did a quick and the one-time German r remains unmolested to this The 5 Foundation in Georgia - \\ ide World Phulu s exchanged be- | ust after the p 95 Januan‘ 21 (P) former New died yesterday of pneu- several appointed con- Gov was American Association in 1924 and held He was the fcunders STAR, WASHINGTON, JEWS 0 SELECT COUNCIL ON HOME Permanent Group to Aid Re- building of Palestine Proj- ect Is Sought. Plans for organizing a permanent council to accelerate the rebuilding of the Jewish National Home in Pales- tine today engaged attention of 1,500 delegates to a national conference for Palestine at the Mayflower Hotel. Opening with a session at Memorial | Continental Hall yesterday, the con- | ference included a banquet last night |at the Mayflower Hotel, and swung | into an afternoon session today at the ‘llulrl Committee meetings were held this morning. The new council to be organized here would be & long-range planning | | board to co-ordinate activities of more than a score Jewish organizations fa- | | voring rehabilitation of Palestine. | | Addressing the banquet last night, | Dr. Stephen S. Wise of New York | called upon Jewry to establish its own | | nation “in the very hour Nazi-ism de- . EISEMAN’S SEVENTH AND F * * SAVE §7 on a Fine All Wool SUIT Reduced from $25 Bargains in good Suits that have style and quality. A splendid se- lection of pleasing pat- terns. All sizes. HARGE IT- Nothing Down PAY $6 MONTHLY Starting in February D. C., MONDAY, clares Jews to be homeless, inferior, poisonous and parasitic.” Edward M. Warburg of New York, son of Felix M. Warburg, the interna- | tional banker, praised the progress of | Hebrew University in Palestine and | urged its financial support. Maurice Samuels, Palestinian author- ity, expressed hope that in rebuilding their homeland Jewish leaders would blend social co-operation and indi- vidualism. At the afternoon meeting Jews of every shade of opinion in other mat- ters affecting Jewish life, Zionists and non-Zionists demonstrated their unity with regard to the practical recon- struction of Palestine, as outstanding American Jewish leaders spoke on be- half of the enlarged plan of action. Secretary of the Interior Ickes de- clared the Jewish ploneers in*Pal- estine were “working for a new deal” in the same way as are the people of America. The conference was opened by Mor- ris Rothenberg, president of the Zion- ist Organization of America, Wwhich initiated the conference. Afternoon speakers, in addition to Secretary Ickes, included Dr. Cyrus Adler of Philadelphia, president of the Ameri- | can Jewish Committee; Bernard S. Deutsch, president of the American | Jewish Congress and the New York | Board of Aldermen: Alfred M. Cohen | of Cincinnati, international president M b oo 45m OFFICIAL 24-Hour Emerg JANUARY 21, 1935. ¥% A-S5 of B'nai B'rith; Prof. Louis Finkelstein of the Jewish Theological Seminary | | of New York, Rabbi Abraham Simon, | representing the Central Conference of American Rabbis; Max Silverstein, grand master of the Independent Or- der Brith Abraham; Judge William | M. Lewis of Philadelphia, grand mas- ter of Brith Sholo Dr. Chaim Greenberg, for Poale Zion-Zeire Zion, and Charles Edward Russell, chair- man of the Pro-Palestine Committee of America, DOG SAVES THREE Couple and Daughter Flee Flam-| ing House After Being Amuaed.i AMHERST, Mass., January 21 (®) | —Mr. and Mrs. William Deteau and | their 11-year-old daughter were saved from possible death by fire early yesterday morning when their dog, Peter, aroused them. The dog, a water spaniel, barked and jumped on the bed occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Deteau, disturbing the | former, who pushed the animal off the bed and commanded it to lic| down. The dog continued barking | however. Finally Deteau got up to investigate | and found the dining room in flames | He aroused the others. Harriet, i | nounced today. overlooking the Hudson, and pushing Hey over the cliff, but he caught on a ledge 15 feet below. The pair then were frightened away by an ap- proaching ambulance. The victim had no suspicion that his wife was implicated until the investigation resulted in the arrests WIFE HELD IN PLOT TO SLAY HUSBAND Woman Accused of Hiring Pair to Kill Mate So She Could Collect Insurance. $80, 000 LOST IN MAILS Bonds Shipped to Ecuador From New York Reported Missing. GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, January 21 #)—A mailbag containing bonds of the Ferrocarril Sur (Southern Rail- way), valued at $80,000, and shipped from New York, disappeared yester- day. Several railway officials were held under “preventive arrest.” GAS FATAL TOSIX NEW YORK, January 21 (# cing gas was blamed by police y terday for the deaths of six persons in a Brook. By the Associated Press. ALPINE, N. J, January 21.—Ad- mission that she hired two men to hurl her husband from a 300-foot cliff during a simulated robbery ha: been obtained from Mrs. Russell Hey, 32, Police Chief William McClain an- A $10000 insurance policy which she secretly took out on his life, end investments totaling about $13.000 furnished the motive, Chief McClain quoted her as saying. Mrs. F and the conspirators, Charles bus driver, and Edward Price, 18. a news dealer, are under arrest hcre. The two men also signed confessions the official stated. They told, he said. of Hey car October 30 at P HAn Anniversary two alleged co- Mucci, 26, a nclude three generations of Dominico Figueroa, a ing the Look d a brother oI the latter nd dead Ca”CARL FEATURE SERVICE “Put Your Car in Safe Hands" @ SERVICE ency Road Service 614 HSt. N.W. DIstrict 2775 “Whenever I gets all hot and bothered...I counts ten, while I checks my unbridled fury count I takes a drag And with each on an Old Gold. “Before you can say Lallapalooza, Jimmy is his old suave self again. “Fine tobacco soothes even the savage grouch. And my nose knows there’s no finer leaf than Old Gold leaf. If you fall light a smooth Old Gold. down and go ‘boom,’ It’s a great little Old Sqothie, a pep-er-upper and never a let-er-downer!” (Signed) The Connoisseur— JIMMY THE THROAT-EASE CIGARETTE (Schnozzle) DURANTE January 22nd to 3lst ONLY FOR A THOROUGH examination and tuning-up of your car we are featuring this SPECIAL—JANUARY 22nd to 31st ONLY. Every one of the 25 operations is performed carefully and correctly by a Call CARL specialist. (Gear grease and necessary new parts charged extra.) A. TUNE MOTOR, including the following: . Clean, test and adjust spark plugs. 2. Clean and respace distributor points. 3. Clean gas lines, filter and carburetor screen. . Adjust carbureter. Reset ignition timing with synchroscope. 6. Test compression on Weidenhoff Analyzer ELECTRICAL SYSTEM, including the following: . Adjust and focus headlights. Tighten all electrical connections. 9. Clean and grease battery terminals. and test and water battery. Clean commutators of starter and generator, Set generator charging rate Test ignition, licht and starter switches and ignition wiring GENERAL LUBRICATING AND OILING, including the following: 13. Lubricate differential, transmission and universal joints. 14. Lubricate all springs. 15. Lubricate door catches. lecks and hinges. 16. Lubricate steering mechanism and sector. 17. Lubricate speedometer cable. 18. Remove. clean, inspect, repack and adjust front wheel bearings. Lubricate fan, water pump and distributor, and tighten fan belt and witer pump. . GENERAL TIGHTENING.-UP, lowing: 20. Tighten all fenders and running boards. Tighten front and rear bumpers. Tighten engine mountings. 3. Tighten bedy bolts, floor boards, adjust door bumpers. Tighten spring shackles, steering arms and rods. Tighten rear axle nuts, lug bolts, and spring clips. 10. 3. 12. 19. the fol- including dash and cowl, and 24, 25. ROAD TEST CAR. Time allowance 112 days.

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