Evening Star Newspaper, October 27, 1935, Page 3

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DELETION OF FILM BRINGS PROTEST Ohio Censors Purported to Have Acted on “Anti- Nazi” Grounds. By the Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio, October 26— Bharply varying opinions followed dis- closure today that the Ohio Censor | Board had deleted part of a newsreel, “March of Time,” on the purported ground that it was “anti-Nazi.” Ohio’s chief censor, E. L. Bowsher, said only a small portion of the film was cut and that it was “irrelevant.” Ben Z. Neustadt, Jewish editor, voiced objection to the censorship. “I felt,” he =aid, “the true facts, or those that come uncensored out of Germany, should be told.” Sought to Depict Progress. “The purpose of the film,” saild Bowsher, State director of education, - THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., OCTOBER 27, 1935—PART ONE. Tanks Clear the Way in Actual Fighting “was to depict the progress of the | Jews in Palestine. A small portion | dealing with Nazi activities in Ger- | many was incidental and had no bear- | ing on the picture. | “The censored part dealt chiefly| with gruesome detail that might result in race feeling.” | In New York, editors of the maga- | wine Time said there was no “valid | reason” for the aeletion. In a statement they said: “The *March of Time' narrative dealt with | the colonization of Palestine by the | Jews. In giving its audience proper background to appreciate this im- portant world movement, the editors included scenes of Nazi anti-Jewish activity—activity largely responsible for the migration of Jews from Ger- many to Palestine. Three Agreed to Cut. “It was this sequence with which the censors took issue, particularly Tanks are shown clearing the way for infantry during actual fighting al ong the Aduwa-Adigrat front in Northern Ethiopia. The first of the Italian tanks can be seen climbing over a stone wall, with Ethiopian defenses in th e background. —Copyright A. P. Wirephoto-Paramount News. This Changing World War Rome (Continued From First Page.) be made effective next Tuesday. It ETHIOPIANS GET DIVORCES EASILY Marriage Also Marked With Little Formality by Natives. By the Associated Press. ADDIS ABABA.—Marriage and di- vorce are simplicity itself in Ethiopia. ‘Take the case of Mrs. Anthropolis’ handsome young Ethiopian cook. Mrs. Anthropolis is the wife of a Greek bridge builder here. Last January the cook told her he had just been married and she gave him a fine new shamma, or toga, which is a most coveted present. In June, in a still more joyful mood, he annourced that he had been mar- ried agair and hinted that another new shamma would be appreciated. The change of wives, he explained, had been expensive. When the lady recovered from her surprise and had been told that mar- riages and divorces are very frequent here, she promised to give her servant the desired present if he kept his cur- rent wife six months. Walda Giorgis was satisfied, because he said he had an extra fine bride and was going to keep her a long time. Asks Time Be Cut. | But this month (October) he again appeared before his mistress and after | bowing-low, as age-old Ethiopian gal- lantry requires, begged her to reduce the six months period by half. “Why?” asked Mrs. Anthropolis. “That’s too long,” answered the son BIG WAR IN OFFING, SHEARER ASSERTS Navy Advocate Says It’s Due When Britain Can’t Keep Lid On. By the Associated Press. William B. Shearer, big Navy ad- vocate and once the central figure of & notable controversy, predicted yes- terday that the world is going to see another major war. How soon? “It depends upon how long Eng- land can keep the lid on,” he said. Withdrawn for months from the public eye, Shearer expressed his views in an interview in his Washington apartment, Target of senatorial investigators, Shearer has been accused of break- ing up the 1927 Geneva naval con- ference while in the employ of pri- vate shipyards. He denied that, de- fending his action as patriotic. He said he helped save the United States from a naval limitation treaty that would have left her far behind Great Britain. Sees Partition of Ethiopia. Speaking of the hostilities in Africa, A3 Somaliland. Prance, he said, will get greater security for her present vast African possessions—and a promise from Britain of protection against Germany. Looking into the future, Shearer asked these questions: Must' not England build up her military strength to protect her “backbone” through the Mediterran- esa, through which she is connected with her colonies? Germany May Arise. With Ethiopia partition=d, what s to prevent Germany becoming more aggressive in her demands? Does not the United States’ action in liberating the Philippines give India an example for a similar demand upon England? Does not the withdrawal of the United States from the Philippines leave Great Britain's embattlements at Singapore the sole Occidental de- fense against the Japanese slogan of “The Orient for the,Orientals?” Is not Communism a constant threat on all fronts? e Oldest Twins 94. Oldest twins in the English peerage, Dowager Countess of Lytton and Dow= ager Lady Loch recently celebrated their 94th birthday and disclosed that since parted by marriage over 70 years ago they have written to each other every day. FRENCH Are Easy in Shearer said Ethiopia will be divided | up without having a word to say| about it. [ England's share, he said, will be| security for Lake Tana, headwaters | of the Blue Nile; Italy will get a por- | tion of Ethiopia that will connect her | two African colonies of Eritrea nnd“ . e of George, “I've been married again.” All Ethiopians are not exactly like | this fascinating cook, with lithe body, | intelligent looking face, high forehead, thin lips and bush hair. Some keep their wives longer, but usually not very long. Marriages are recurrent and divorces easy. display little emotion. They are po- | lite and bow very low but otherwise | seem to be without feelings. Yet one sometimes meets a mother devotedly fondling a child and now and then a | father goes aiong the street holding | the hand of a little son or daughter. | Children are never carried in arms but Our Classes Limited ta 8 Students Starting GERMAN SPAN ISH November 1st ITALIAN 625 m. Famous Berlitz Conversational Method 66-Minute Sessions—Native Teachers Easy Payments—Enroll Now! | THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LAN 1115 Conn. Ave. F X Before Selling Investigate the Prices We Pay for OLD GOLD = . ee i ion” i | decided that an actual state of war America Finds “Key to European Situation” in | | deciaed et an Som o rehiopia | was announced the arms embargo be- | There are several different kinds of AND SILVER on the backs of their mothers or elder with the statement made by the edi- tors that ‘Hitler had brought more evil on the Jews than any man of this | generation, * * ** " Neustadt was a member of a com- mittee of four Jewish citizens here who reviewed the film last Wednesday. ‘The other three agreed to the elimi- nation. Bowsher was unable to say just how much of the film was cut, but he insisted it was ‘“only irrelevant portion.” Neustadt placed the length at be- tween 70 and 80 feet. At Cleveland & representative of the R-K-O Dis- tributing Corp. said the censors forced them to cut 150 feet of the film on the ground that it was “anti- Naz” FORCED TO CUT 150 FEET. R-K-O Man Says Ohio Ordered Deletion. CLEVELAND, October 26 representative of the R-K-O Distrib- Censors a small, | BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. HE famous “key to the Euro- | pean situation” is changing | pockets rapidly. At first it was in Italy's hands; then it went into the many | hands of the members of the League | of Nations; Germany held it for a | little while and finally it was passed on to the United States. e It depends on this country, says London, whether the dangerous naval sanctions will be applied against Italy. ®)—A| uting Corp. asserted today the Ohio | Board of Motion Picture Censors forced them to cut 150 feet of film from the current issue of the news reel, “The March of Time,” on the grounds that it was “anti-Naz.” The portions cut, the R-K-O man | said, showed members of the Nazi party in Germany burning books by Jewish authors and other Nazis chasing groups of Jews through the streets of German cities. The cuts were made in an episode entitled “The New Palestine,” in which the editors of the news reel had sought to show some of the causes ©of the Jewish migration to Palestine. Under the orders of the Ohio cen- sors, none of the parts forbidden may be shown in any theater in this State. —_— MISSING BOY HUNTED James Forsythe, 15, Absent From Home Two Weeks. Wgshmglon police yesterday were #sked to aid in finding James Forsythe, 15, reported missing from his home, at 473 H street southwest, for nearly two weeks. The boy, police said, was seen on October 14, when he got out of an! automobile at New York and Florida avenues and told some one he was going to automobile races somewhere in North Carolina. The boy's uncle, Harry Forsythe, asked police to aid in the search. The boy is described as having brown hair and eyes. He is 5 feet 4 inches tall and weighs 110 pounds. —_— SPECIAL NOTICES. IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT NOTIOE THE parmershlp phgiglofore existing between | this country will not challenge Brit-| of milk have a heat-giving power ONY CICHELLO and STIVALETT, 5 TR s i | ain's mission to enforce an economic engaged in the coal and ice business and trading under the name and style of CAPITAL ICE COMPANY has by mutual consent been dissolved and that from this date each of said partners will conduct 8 coal and ice business separately and as individuals. TONY CICHELLO, 12 Quincy Pl NE. H NICK ° STIVALETTI. _M0.26.20.31. 1703 North Capitol St WILL ANY ONE WITNESSING ACCIDENT ©on September 20 in street car at 9th and ou when passenker's hand went through window. communicate with JOHN E. JONES, 1244 Jackson st. n.. Decatur 4 OWNER-DRIVEN TRUCK. MOVE ANY- thing anywhere. anvtime: short or. long distance. $1 hour. Phone Columbia . UPHOLSTERING DONE IN YOUR _HOME Cushions_refilled. new springs, X Address Box 481:C. Star office CHRISTMAS—RIGHT NOW IS THE TIME to have those old pictures reproduced for Christmas _gifts. Miniatures. coples and enlargements of superior quality have long specialties of EDMONSTON STUDIO. Photographers 1333 P._National 4900, DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART E,.u to_and from Baito. Phila. and New Freauent trips to other “Dependable Service ince 1896 AVIDSON TRANSFER €O.. phone Decatur 2500. Fed ?TDRAOE ‘WANTED—RETURN LOADS FROM CHI- gaso Oct 20; Boston, Get, 30, To Chicago. 3 r art-load space avi $5 &nd_from Chicngo and New York. STATES STORAGE CO. 418 10th St_N.W. Phone Met. 1845, EPECTAL RETURN-LOAD RATES ON FULL and part loads to all points within 1.000 fles; padded vans: guaranteed service: lifll;. Em ‘moving also Phone Nationa! AT. DEL. ASSOC.. INC.. 1317 Eastern r_rent or sizes: re. London realizes, of course, that the action of the American Government is strictly limited by the neutrality act President Roosevelt went as far as he could, within the framework of that act to help the cause of peace in Europe. Since Congress did not permit him to apply an embargo on the aggressor nation he urged Amer- ica's business men to refrain from | trading with the belligerents—that means with Italy, since there is prac- tically no trade between this country i and Ethiopia. * ok ok % But what the British want this | Government to do, is to express its willingness to support the action of | the League. Of course, this cannot | be done blunty, but the President or | the State Department can put the reply to the latest communication of the Leagué of Nations in such a way as to leave no doubt in the mind of Mussolini that this country will do its utmost to cripple Italy's trade with the United States. Such a moral support would be extremely valuable to the British gov- ernment and would serve a twofold purpose: It might worry Mussolini and make him more nialleable and would bolster up British public opin- | fon. The main question raised by previous British governments in dis- | cussing the possibility of applying | naval sanctions against an offender | of the League has always been “What will the United States, with its tra-| | ditional freedom-of-the-seas policy, do/ if the British Navy were asked to | police the seas?” | | If the British can be assured that boycott on a League offender, one of | the main worries of Downing street | and Whitehall would be removed. | * * x * | Italy realizes this fully. And for this reason Italian diplomats in Rome have | hinted to our Ambassador there that it seems to them inconsistent with the | peace ideal of the American Nation | to encourage a blockade which, Mus- | solini says, will inevitably lead to & | catastrophic war. The key to the whole situation, Eu- | | rope admits, is in the pocket of the! Own Pocket on Navy Issue. ‘ United States Government. If America supports even indirectly the League, say the British and most of the League members, Italy will be compelled to bow to the decisions of Geneva. If America stands by the neutrality act as conceived by the American Con- gress and maintains a strictly neutral policy independent of the League ac- tions, says Mussolini, Great Britain will accept the compromise suggested a few days ago by Il Duce and a world war will be averted, temporarily, at least. _ * ok ox % | ‘What the future will bring nobody | knows. But the Italians are taking no | chances and are preparing for that | catastrophic eventuality—a war with Great Britain, The Island of Leros in the Dode- | canese has become one of Italy’s main fortresses in that region. he harbor of that island has been closed to all shipping. Two airplanes take off to meet the mail boats from Piraeus and only after a very careful inspec- tion are they allowed to proceed. A cruiser, seven destroyers, six subma- rines and about 50 aircraft of various types are continually patrolling Leros, Calymnos and the neighboring islands. The construction of roads is being rapidly pushed and the summits of the surrounding hills are being heav- 1ly fortified. * ok % % Europe is not at war, but the classi- cal gestures of “I don't want your dirty decoration any longer” have | already started. | Admiral Giuliano Pini, deputy chief | of staff of the Italian Navy, has just returned his medals to the British government. These were given him in appreciation of his helping defend British Somaliland against attacks by | Mullahs. * ok ox * The Germans introduced during the last “war the famous “Ersatz”; that | means that they wrapped hay in | tissue paper and called it cigarettes or mixed bran with a little berley’ and chicory and called it coffee. | The Italians have gone one better. | | In anticipation of a blockade they | are making wool out of milk. They say that the fibers of the by-products equal to that of wool. # ok Ex Germany has left the League of | Nations with flags flying. She paid | | on the day when her notice of with- | drawal expired—October 20—the round sum of $1,500,000, which repre- sents her total obligations and con- tributions in arrear. The managers of the Almost-All- | the-Nations Club at Geneva are very | finicky. If you don't pay all your dues before leaving they are likely| to get back at you some day when you least expect it. VANDENBERG SEES STRICT NEUTRALITY Michigan Senator Predicts Con- gress Will Enact Tighter Law Next January. By the Assoclated Press. DETROIT, October 26.—Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, Republican, of Michigan, declaring “this matter of FOREST HILLS GROUP TO HOLD BANQUET Opening of New Woodrow Wil- son High School to Be Cele- brated Tuesday. The Forest Hills Citizens’ Assocla- tion will hold a banquet at the Colum- | bia Country Club Tuesday at 7 p.m. | | to celebrate the opening of the new Woodrow Wilson High School, Mrs. | Leslie Wright, secretary, announced | paramount were dictated by some secret sym- pathy on the part of the administra- tion for one side or the other of those involved in the crisis. The neutrality act as passed by Congress does not permit the Chief Executive much latitude. Mr. Hull made it clear to the world that averything in the power of the ad- ministration has been done to curtail at least the present war. He re- minded the president of the Com- mittee of Co-ordination that after having ordered an embargo on arms and ammunition to the belligerent countries, President Roosevelt warned | travelling | American citizens against on belligerent ships—that is to say, Itahan—except on their own risk, and furthermore—and this was the most important step taken so far by the administration—he issued a statement “definitely warning Ameri- can citizens against transactions of any character with either of the pelligerent nations except at their own risk.” And to make this policy more defnite and unequivocal Mr. Hull informed Dr. Vasconcellos *hat ‘this policy with respect to trans- actions with the belligerents I now ceiterate and reaffirm Historical Consequences. The communication which the Secretary of State sent to the League of Nations has an historical conse- quence, because it sets forth the following principles which will be of importance in future international developments: (1) The United States is decided more than ever to keep out of war. (2) The United States will not allow itself to be drawn into any entanglements. (3) The United States has in the past and will insist in the future on its own independent course in dealing with international problems. (4) The United States is keepirg in mind its international obligations towards peace generally and under the Kellogg pact. ROME SPOKESMEN “GRATIFIED.” Note Held Nullification of World Unity on Sanctions. ROME, October (Sunday (#).—A government spokesman said today that Italy “cannot help but be gratified” | at Secretary Hull's reafirmation of United States neutrality in the Italo- Ethiopian conflict. ‘Well-informed circles held the ref- erence to America’s willingness to aid efforts for peace within limitations | under the Kellogg pact could not be interpreted as directed against Italy. Government circles welcomed the American communication as “an in- fluence which nullifies the importance of world solidarity” against Italy in regard to sanctions. GENEVA IS ENCOURAGED. League Officials See U. S. Stand Most to Be Expected. GENEVA, October 27 (Sunday) (). —League of Nations officials, read- ing reports of the reply by the United | States to the League in which Amer- | ican neutrality in the Italo-Ethiopian | dispute was reaffirmed, said today it | was the maximum to be expected from Washington and was, on the whole, “encouraging.” They said that while the United States’ attitude continued to be one| of rigid neutrality it was also one of | wishing to see war halted. The officials asserted they regarded | the reply as important moral support | of League efforts, even though the United States could not participate in sanctions. Home aquariums have become a craze in Singapore, Straits Settle- ments. E ——— D. C. Bar Examination School SHORT COURSE Starts No. Examination Embracing ( ist_for Dec. 1) Explanation and Corre- lation of Legal Principles; (2) Analysis came operative yesterday and that | economic sanctions would be levied | when the League Council orders them, | probably in early November. The government announced every- | thing was now prepared for the effec- tive operation of sanctions. A distinct feeling that many weeks | and months may elapse before peace can be secured in Ethiopia was appar- |ent in British official circles. It | brought an end to the week's bright | hopes that Premier Mussolini would grasp the olive branch held out to him by British statesmen, Britain Wants No Temporizing. Definitely branding as unacceptable Mussolini’s peace proposals, advanced in diplomatic channels through Pre- mier Pierre Laval of France, Britain | expects no temporizing, no delays, no weakening when the League Council meets October 31 to put the sanctions machinery into full operation. The treasury said financial penal- ties would apply to the government and residents of Italy and Italian ter- | ritory and to corporations incorporated under the laws of Italy or Italian ter- | ritory. ‘Thus, even nationals of Great | Britain who reside in Italian territory are affected ‘ Business with these persons or cor- | porations affected was prohibited if | it involves use of credit facilities. | Informed circles said the British 8oV nent had no of changing its attitude about sanctions while the Italo-Ethiopian conflict lasts. Won't Accept Dictated Terms. Further emphasizing the view that no peace terms dictated by Mussolini would be tolerated, these quarters said the British government felt none of the essential factors for satisfactory termination of the conflict had been met yet by Mussolini. Informed observers believe the League will listen to peace plans when Mussolini withdraws his troops from Ethiopia and announces his willing- ness to work out a settlement definitely within the framework of the proposals of the Committee of Five, which he rejected at Geneva some weeks ago. No major Italian territorial annex- ation in Ethiopia was envisioned in this plan, and it was understood the British government adieres closely to the view none should be permitted. FRENCH ACCEPTANCE LOOMS. = ntention Paris Expected to Yield to Sanctions | Application. PARIS, October 26 (#).—French acceptance of the early application of sanctions against Italy as unavoidable was indicafed tonight in official circles. The government's attitude was be- lieved in these circles to be indicated by an official announcement branding as “unfounded” reports that Premier Laval intended to ask a postponement of the application of sanctions by the League of Nations to enable him to continue his efforts to effect a con- ciliation of the Italo-Ethiopian dis- pute. It was indicated that now Laval had assured Great Britain that France would not block the application of these punishments. Great Britain it- self was expected in authoritative quarters to desire League action on the matter as soon as possible. LOANS 0 COLUMBIA OFFERS SAVE With Safety as- sured by our 28 years esta b- lished sound- ness, and in- AT REDUCED INTEREST If buying a home now, you can get first mortgage money as low as | conjugal obligations. The very modest | and genial Ethiopian, who takes care jof the writer's mules, looks like a ! | paragon of virtue and undoubtedly is, |but his marital @rrangements are [stnnge, | His wife's village is & hundred miles | | from Addis Ababa and she spends the | | rainy season there looking after a few | possessions she received from her | divorced husband. On departing this year she left her bright, 6-year-old son with his step- | father, the writer’s mule man, and | also brought a humble woman called ‘Tahuni, to his hut to take her place. | Bo Hapta lives with his stepson and | & hired wife during his regular wife’s | temporary absence. Must Hunt New Job. When Miriam, the mother, returns, | which will be soon, Tahuni will have | to hunt a similar position with an- ! other man whose spouse happens to be away. Ordinarily when a boy and girl | wish to marry, they call in their parents, elder relations and a sort of local official. They exchange pres- ents, with the most generosity usually coming from the groom, then eat, drink and revel. And that's all. They're married. When either party gets tired of the other, the same witnesses are | again assembled, all the common | property is scrupulously divided into | iwo equal parts, and they separate. They're divorced. | | The children all belong to the | father but when young the mother continues to look after them for which | she is paid. | Ethiopia is a land wnere children | are loved and neglscted. And none | of them is illegitimate. A man’s child | by his female slave or servant has the same lezal standing as his child by his wife. And he must pay for its sup- port. Yet no insult is more deadly for an Ethiopian than to have his paternity questioned. The child of a slave mother and free father is free, as well as the child of a slave father and free mother. All children, male or femala, may in- herit property. In cases of divorce the children all belong td' the father. Infant Mortality High. Infant mortality is very high. Con- sequently families are small. The 10 | brothers and sisters of the present | Emperor all died young. And that| was @ superior family. Among com- | mon people more children die than | are left. | | Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and | watches into MONEY at— A.Kahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET N HOMES LOANS LOW AS 5% sisters. Six-year-old Waletu carries 6-month-old Askall. Tiny black heads bob above the dirty shammas | by means of which babies are fas- tened to their bearers’ shoulders and tiny black eyes glisten. But you must not stare even at the prettiest child, for that would bring it misfortune. Only evil cyes stare and an evil eye | is fatal. | Few Go to School | Little boys and girls are brought up in the same way. Each wears a single | garment resembling a long, loose shirt. Of course, the children don't have to go to school for such institu- tions are exceedingly rare here, but they begin work early. That is those from working families. The upper | class Ethiopians scorn work. Tiny girls may oc seen all over the city, carrying heavy black jars of water on their backs while little boys carry guns or coats or other burdens for second-rate aristocrats. Real chiefs, of course, have droves of adult followers. Most young children, though pot bellied, are attractive. Their faces are round, their features fine and regular and their eyes bright. They are friendly and love to greet strangers with a military salute When saluted in return they are elated. Now all are playing at soldiering. Every child’s hair is trimmed in a most fantastic way, usually by means of old razor bladss. The scalp is shaved smooth with tufts or locks or crests or crowns of black fuzz left as a decoration. Most children seem to be wearing black-crested helmets. A ring of wooly hair is often left about a girl's head. Sometimes a stiff bris- tling bush mounts from the top of a shiny little plate. Sometimes a clus- ter of long locks is left and the locks are woven in fine braids with blue beads at the ends. Fond mothers vie with one another to make their chil- dren’s heads look most original. Jewelry ot every description. bridge- work, silver. No matter how o dilapidated " any of foreg ticles might be. you will b surprised at the cash by us (Licensed by U. 8. Govt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F St. NW. Phone NA. 5543—We Will Call. ea ces Daid Furnace Parts FOUNDATION T0 ROOF Be Wise—ANY MAKE WATCH Cleaned Regulated Adjusted Guaranteed One Year Trade Mark BRING THIS COUPON Monday and Tuesday Special Any shape crystal Any make spring, Your watch is taken com- pletely apart by a watch expert and cleaned with the latest modern elec- tric cleaning machine. fei On our records we have over 50.000 satisfied_customers. 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Our contacts are so extensive we have exceptional e Gl Atstes i ATES possible war is resting on the Amer- ican conscience like a dead weight,” RAGE 5% here—the same advantage is knowledge of unusual investment buys in any class of property. of Prior Bar Questions: (3) Written Examination Practice; (4) Review of Recent Court Decisions. sured by the yesterday. Federal Savings Apples—Sweet Cider ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM. Drive to Rockville. Md.. two blocks west g .g?':x‘rtb House, then one mile out road to EXTRA CASH. Any Government employe who wishes to increase their earnings 150 to" $200 & ear see Jim Chelini. Donohoe Chevrolet, IheT 550°M st nw. Ehone District 8300. APPLES for Halloween or Winter at “Calvert” Sound. fine quality apples. to keep for Winter. Great Falls rd. at Langley, Va.; 2 miles beyond Chain 'Bridge: look for mall, box “Calvert™ and sisn “Appleg on 3 . Sweet Cider—Apples. At Quaint Acres. Superior filtered cider from sound, clean apples. Open every day 7 a.m. 7_p.m. On the Silver Spring-Colesville pike (Route £9). only 5 miles from the District. IT'S OUR JOB —To make perfect reproductions of court exhibits. statistical charts. tables and re- ports, type and typewritten matter. patent drawings_for all foreign countries. etc. Let us give you a price on reproductions. Columbia Planograph Co., 50 L St. N.E. Metropolitan 4861, predicted in an interview with the Detroit News today that Congress would enact more stringent neutrality legislation next January. “Americans should be completely prohibited from traveling on belliger- ent ships at all, except if necessary to leave a war zone, because I do not believe it is possible for them to travel ‘at their own risk’"” he said. Senator Vandenberg said a “large group, led by Senator Borah, wanted the mandatory rule” against traveling on ships of belligerent nations passed last session when the embargo of arms shipments to belligerents was approved and the President was given discretionary power to warn Ameri- cans that they traveled on vessels of warring nations at their own risk. Concerning his views on the export to belligerents of materials other than “arms, ammunition and the imple- ments of war” under the ban now, Senator Vandenberg said he believed the trade should be on a “cash-and- carry basis.” L. A. Carruthers, president, has ten- | tatively been named chairman of a | committee to make arrangements for the formal dedication of the school early in January. Guests of honor at the banquet | will include Maj. Gen. Mason ‘M. Patrick, former Public Utilities Com- mission chairman; Mrs. Henry Grat- tan Doyle, president of the Board of Education; Supt. of Schools Ballou, Engineer Commissioner Dan I. 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