Evening Star Newspaper, June 4, 1935, Page 22

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B—6 CANCER DECLARED COMPLEX AILMENT| Authority Says It Is Not Single Disease With Single Cause. By the Associrted Press NEW YORK. June 4—Dr. James Ewing. one of the foremost cancer experts, vesterday warned that money 1= being wasted even in high scientific edreles by those who may think cancer | 15 a stngle disease for which a direct cure will be found Dr. Ewing spoke at a meeting of the American Soclety of Clinical Pathologists held at Memorial Hos- pital. He held that cancer is not a | single or a simple disease, but a generic term covering some still un- known universal property of tissue | cells | “If cancer is a single disease” he| said, “then one is justified in an-| nouncing a single cause and to wel- | come the recurring announcements of its discovery. A single cure is also a reasonable expectation, and thus we find a warm reception for a great number of remedies devised by all manner of persons, often under the patronage of men of large means.” THE EVENING P.-T. A. TO MEET Ben Murch Group to Be Enter- tained by Center Groups. The Ben Murch Parent-Teacher As- sociation, meeting at 2:30 p.m. today in Ben Murch auditorium, will be en- tertained by exhibitions and perform- ances of Chevy Chase Community Center groups. Included in the program are dance STAR, WASHINGTON, there will be an exhibition of carpen- try by the pupils of Kenneth Petrie. Miss Lois Elfeldt will demonstrate the work of the women’s physical edu- cation class and pupils of Mrs. L. B. David wil] play the piano. The pro- gram concludes with & performance by ‘thp drama group conducted by Mrs, lJnne Plummer Rice. Miss Baker to Speak. Miss Sibyl Baker, District play- ground supervisor, will talk on “A Six- | | year Playground Program for the Dis- | | numbers directed by Miss Ivy Randall | trict” tomorrow at 8 p.m., when the | given by 30 instructors. A benefit D. €, TUESDAY, CENTER WILL OPEN Dancing Instruction to Be Given at Buchanan School. The Southeast Community Center, under the direction of Mrs. W. M. Da- vis, officially will open tonight for the Summer season at the Buchanan School, Thirteenth and D streets southeast. Social dancing instructions will be and Mrs. Jeanette P. Tolford and a | Public School Association is scheduled | dance will also be held tonight fol- French play by the pupils of Mrs. Lida | to hold its final meeting of the sea- | lowing the dancing classes, the pro- Hanson, sell Parr will show their work, and Art classes taught by Rus- | son. be named at the session. | orchestra equipment. JUNE 4, 1935. | VETERANS’ BILL PASSED | { House Approves Pay for Volun-| teers in Philippine Insurrection. American volunteer soldiers who remained in service in the Philippine | Insurrection after the Spanish-Ameri- |can War would be entitled to more than a year's army pay under a bill by the House passed yesterday and sent to the Senate. | The measure would affect about 15,000 men who remained in the is- lands after 1899 It would provide the same pay and | travel allowances accorded those who | Officers for the coming year will | ceeds to help defray the expenses of | left the islands before the insurrec- | | tion, ® New Patterns ® Sanforized Shrunk ® Correctly *Taflored The HUB Furniture Co. TROUSERS 10 —Seersucker as developed by . Gayly and Lord. in immaculate white, small pin checks and narrow pencil stripes . . . Tail- ored by a tpecialitv maker of summer clothing wnn know how to put the correet “hang” in a summer ait. Single breasted and aports back model—San- forized shrunk which means they won't shrink in laundering. 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