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CATHOLICS MARCH T0 ANNUAL RALLY Students’ Mission Crusade Is Addressed by Auxil- iary Bishop. With several hundred members of | the Catholic faith from lay and re- ligious life participating, a solemn | procession in downtown Washington, | Mat- | climaxed by benediction at St thew's Church, marked the observance yesterday of the feast of Christ the King. The occasion was the sixth annual rally of the Catholic Students’ Mis- sion Crusade. and at the church many received awards for service in the cause of the missions in the past year. Most Rev. John M. pastor of St. Gabriel's Church and Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore, was the | presiding prelate. The sermon was | preached by Rev. Mark Kennedy of the Franciscan Order The procession, presenting sharp contrast between the quiet garb n( the religious and the bright uniforms | of other groups, started from Jackson place and followed a route over I street, Seventeenth street, Connecti- cut avenue and Rhode Island avenue to the church. It was the first time the march was held outside grounds of Catholic University. Units in Procession. The participating units included the ! band of the St. John's College cadcts American Legion, Holy Comforter and Legion Drum Corps, Order of St. Au- | gustin, Atonement Friars, Society of St. Joseph. congregation of the Sacred Heart, Christian Brothers, Francis- cans, Oblates of Mary Immaculate, Dominicans, Paulists. Capuchins, Car- melites. Xaverians, Marists. Missionary Servants of the Most Holy Trinity, ‘Trinitarians, Viatorians, congregation of Holy Cross. Conventuals, Redemp- torists, Jesuits, Knights of the Holy Sepulcher, Notre Dame Academy, Im- maculata Seminary. Gonzaga High School, St. Anthony’s High School, St Cecilia’s Academy. Sacred Academy. St. Rose Technical School, Holy Trinity High School, Providence Hospital nurses, Georgetown Hospital nurses, St. Patrick’s Academy. Immac- | ulate Conception Academy Vaeth veteran unit Bishop McNamara felicitated demonstrators at the church, and Father Kennedy emphasized the necessity for pressing forward in the mission field Awards Are Made. Father Marcellus of the Capuchin College, Hermen, Pa., was awarded an erchbishop’s cross. The awards which the students re- ecived were in two clas Jewels and archbishop medals The first were received by Ruth Deck. Holy Trinity High School: Agnes Naughten, Isabel Nauzhten. Yorraine Langlois, Nancy Brear. St Anthony’s High School: Elizabeth Bymns, St. Patrick's Academy; Mary Flynn, St. Cecilia’s Academy: King and Margaret McGlynn, Vaeth Unit: Mary Spates, McNamara Unit; Charles Fugitt, Edna Evans, Jean Ogle, Mary Elizabeth Brady, Bridget Ann O'Flynn, Virginia Woodward, | Sacred Heart Academy: Wilhelmina Horstkamp, St. Rose’s Technical School: Mary Elizabeth Lyons, Im- maculate Conception Academy; Mar- tha Drennan, Immaculate Seminary; Margaret McCloud, Holy Cross Academy; Antoinette Brem, Notre Dame Academy, and Rose Ruppert, Bacred Heart Academy. Archbishop medals were received hy Ellen O'Donoghue. Immaculata Sem nary; Ann Baker, St. Anthony’'s Hwh Bchool; Mary Pauls, Sacred Heart Academy: Nellie McCormick, Vaeth Unit; John Curtin, jr., McNamara Unit; Patricia McCracken. Holy Trin- ity; Cecelia Beaver, St. Rose's Trch- nical School; Jean Keiler, St. Cecilia’s | Academy, and Irene Lusby, Holy Cross the MRS. HOOVER URGES NEIGHBORLINESS Girl Scout Week Message Asks Members to Let All Know Idealism. Iv_(he Assoclated Press. PALO ALTO, Calif.. October 28.—In @ Girl Scout week message Mrs. Her- ] bert Hoover urged America’s younger generation yesterday to be ‘“good neighbors.” Neighborly herself, Mrs. Hoover etressed that phase of Girl Scout ectivities. “Being good neighbors has always been one of the emphasized qualities of Scouts—good neighbors individual- 1v, good neighbors in the family, good neighbors in the community and good neighbors among nations,” she said. “Doubtless that is the most im- portant factor connected with Girl Beout week. It is a time when the girls try definitely to have their neighbors learn more about them; learn that they are ever ready to be useful, friendly. cheerful, and also ready for fun when sterner duty does not call. “To let the neighbors, in city or country, know the Girl Scout better, end to encourage the girls to know themselves better, is the reason for Girl Scout week. Royal ITALIAN CHOCOLATE A soft whipped cream filling with plenty of fine vanilla, and heavily coated with Loft delicious, velvety smooth Bitter Sweet Chocolate. One of our best numbers. The Folks will love them Shios B 8. NE 800 3th 5t. N.W. 3102 14th St 214 $p STORES—one near you R T ST S i the | Heart | —paladin | Joseph | distinguished | | 1 McNamara, | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Review Marchers in Feast Day Parade Thousands of Catholics yesterday took part in the services at St. Matthew's Church in celebration of the feast of Christ, the King. Somerville, grand marshal; Rev. _auxiliary bishop of Baltimore. A parade preceded the services in the church, reviewed by, James Buckey, pastor of St. Matthews, left to right: H. P. Most Rev. John McNamara, —Dnden\nud Photo. and Sur"cons to At | By te Amocisten eracs: SAN FRANCISCO. October 23.—A mass attack on disease and death on three principal fronts—automobile ac- | cidents. industrial casualties and can- | cer—was plotted here today by 2.000 | and the | fellows of the American College of | thousands of people still | from tuberculosis in this country and | Surgeons. Although the organization's twenty- | fifth clinical congress is to cover al-| most all the year's scientific advances in the profession, these three have been singled out for special attention By consolidating the fleld forces of surgery against the costly toll from this “fateful trinity” physicians hope ‘ to attain an impetus which will check the rising curve. Failure of the public to co-operate | in health campaigns was said today by Dr. C. Jeft Miller, professor of gyvnecology at Tulane University School of Medicine, to have attributed much to the suffering and premature death “which is widespread in the United States.” Have Increased Life Span. He declared medical science | has tack Death Aml Disease on Three Fronts Draft Campaign Against Automobile Accidents, Industrial Casualties and Cancer at San Francisco Session. | school children lose more than 1.500,- 000 days because of sickness? “Why should 13,000 people die an- | nually of diphthteria in the United | States, der 10 years? 11,000 of them children un- Whose fault is it that | die annually thousands of typhoid fever?” The fault. he said, is largely that of the public. due to their indiffer- ence and unwillingness to co-operate. Make Friend of Doctor. Dr. Richard R. Smith of Blodgett Memorial Hospital. Mich., urged the citizen who wants to | keep well to “select a family doctor of the old-fashioned type but with modern training and ideas and atick to him.” He said the patient should make a friend of his doctor and that close, prolonged contact is of prime importance 1f the patient is to receive good service. Dr. E. Payne Palmer, staff president t St. Joseph's Hospital, Ariz,, has given the convention a new {set of 10 commandments to be urged Grend Rapids, | Phoenix, | Talmadge Offered $1,000 to Prove Navy Day ‘Racket’ By tha Assoctated Press ATLANTA, October 23.—Gov. Eugene Talmadge vesterday was offered $1.000 for his “favorite™ charity if he can show “Navy day is a racket.” The offer was made by Nelson Macy, president of the Navy League of the United States, in a telegram to the Atlanta Consti- tution from Hot Springs. Ark. Talmadge declined to issue a \ Navy day proclamation and made the general statement that “spe- cial” days constituted “some kind of a racket.” WORKERS ARE ATTACKED | Colored Man Stabbed and An- other Beaten at Galveston. GALVESTON, Tex, October 28 (#) —One colored worker was wounded with a knife and another was beaten here yesterday in connection with the strike of the International Longshore- men’s Association. The wounded man, Ennis King. was taken to a hospital. | The other, Booker Washington, released after treatment The Galveston Wharf Co. employed them. offered a reward of $1.000 for arrest and conviction of was proved its value by more than trebling upon the individual who would avoid each of their assailants. | the life span of the average citizen | in the last four centuries and has | added six years to that span in the last two decades, “yet people still ob- | ject to being | smallpox and typhoid.” They will not, he said, take advantage of diphtheria | and scarlet fever tests or methods of protecting against them. “Whose fault is it.” he asks, “that | the United States wage earners lose | 2.500.000 workmz days each year and | life-shortening habits. They are: “Avoid alcoholism. ex- cessive use of tobacco, sexual excesses and indiscretions, anger. ambition, - vaccinated against | arice, attempts to avoid parenthood. | | gluttony. uncleanliness and vanit; | In explanation Dr. Palmer stated | emotional states may often be an im- | | portant factor in disease. This 15 the first congress of the American college to be held west of the Mississippi River. COAST GUARDSMAN'S‘ 'DEATH IS MYSTERY Rodents Believed to Have At- | tacked Body After He Killed Him- self or Died of Exposure. By the Associated Press. GREENSBORO, N. C., October 28.— | Sheriff Joe Phipps abandoned a multi- lation murder theory and said today he was convinced Walter S. Costello, 27, whose nude body was found in a ravine near here, had been attacked by rodents after he either killed him- self or died of exposure, - late Saturday. It was not until hours | later that Costello’s Coast Guard uni- form was found in a tree 150 yards | away. HOLD HAIR HOURS=S A.M. %0 7P. A fisherman discovered the body | | Lieut. E. C. Whitfield. attached to| the cutter Dione, was ordered to leave | Norfolk today to investigate the case for the Coast Guard Cc«tel]o had been transferred from ' New Orleans to Boston, effective October 24, and was on his way to the New England city. A bus ticket from New Orleans to Boston was in his wallet. Sherift Phipps said Costello, appar= ently crazed and famished after wan- dering in the woods for several days, must have inflicted an incision that } was found under his left armpit, and | posibly emasculated himself. No | weapon was found on the scene. and his tongue severed. His body bore numerous superficial wounds. Phy- sicians Wednesday night. —— Brazil Buys Coffee. Brazil will acquire 4,000,000 bags of domestic coffee and store it. THAT LINE are surely becoming bald. Do something now==TODAY==to keep yourhmbnawhceitohwldbe...touvoywrhur...otto pawnewhntonthcthmudb-ldm “Do what?” you ask. 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NETS PROFIT Finance Director Tells In- vestment Bankers of Transactions. By the Associated Press. WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va, October 28—A Government spokesman told investment bankers yesterday that the Public Works Ad- ministration has netted $2,520,567 profit in the resale of municipal and railroad bonds. With private capital resuming its normal function, Benton, P. W. A. finance director, “the need for a Federal agency such as P. W. A. is becoming less impera- tive capital can once more fully meet the demands upon it, we shall be glad to return the entire task to your hands.” In his address before the Inv ment Bankers' Association of America Benton disclosed that $151334,562 in municipal bonds brought a premium of $1629.818 and $67.776.500 in rail- | road securities a profit of $890,749. Absorbed When Burden. These transfers represented 60 per cent of such bonds purchased by P. W. A, Benton said. He explained that P. W. A. had absorbed thd se- on the market or unsalable, to finance employment-creating projects. Benton explained that about $100,- which {000.000 of the bonds had been sold to {the public, with the remainder held by the Reconstruction Finance Corp., | “which will, so far as we know, con- | tinue the orderly liquidation of bonds purchased from P. W. A" that | He also disclosed Secretary Ickes had hastened sale of many mu- | nicipal issues to prevent cities from | trying to avold paying their debts to the Federal Government. Ickes once | dismissed a P. W. A. State engineer for saying loans on non-Federal proj- ects need not be repaid, and Benton |said every effort was being made to {avold defaults. Marked Improvement Seen. Lewis P. Mansfield of the Prudential | Insurance Co. of America, Newark {N. J., urged at a forum of the con- | vention on municipal finance that | | with the current improvement in | their finances States and municipali- | ties turn their attention to paying off some of their $20.000,000.000 of gross debt, up 16 per cent since 1929. He explamrd that marked improvement e So easy, SO tastys makes fish almosta ™ FREE! Recipe booklet, Dishes.’ Gloucester, to preserve the| IN BOND RESALE added Philip M.| | “When the time comes that private | berta Campbell Lawson of Tulsa, | | curities when they were either a drug | jand with severa] MOXDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1935. had occurred in recent months in the credit ratings of American cities, noting especially the cases of Chicago and Detroit. Of the $20,000,000.000 gross debt, he said between 3 and § per cent was in default. David M. Wood, New York lawyer, warned the Municipal Finance Forum that an effort will probably be made at the next session of Congress to amend the municipal bankruptey act to require the Federal Court to ap- prove a readjustment plan for a bank- rupt municipality without the consent of the holders of a majority of the outstanding claims. He warned cred- itors to be on their guard against such an effort. “FRIENDSHIP GIFTS” TO ROGERS FUND ASKED Women and Children Urged to| Contribute to Memorial for Humorist. By th Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 28.—Mrs. Ro- Okla., president of the General Fed- | eration of Women's Clubs, last night called upon the women and children of the United States to campaign for “friendship contributions” to the Will Rogers memorial fund. Mrs. Lawson is chairman of the Na- tional Women's Committee of the Will | Rogers Memorial Commission. | “Women in every city are organizing | to tell Will Rogers’ friends that they | may contribute through their local banks and many newspapers to a fund which will be used for Will Rogers memorials of an educational, char-| itable and humanitarian nature,” she | said. NAMED AS SOLOIST NEW YORK, October 28 (£).—Miss | Agnes Davis, daughter of Col. W. A. Davis, U. S. A, and a native of Colo- | rado Springs, Colo, has been an- nounced as soloist with the New York | Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra at its concerts November 28, 29, 30 and December 1 The soprano, who has sung in opera orchestras in the past, will appear for the first time in Carnegie Hall in Alban Berg’s “Lulu” | suite. If You Suffer With ‘ Kidney Trouble Headache, backache. unusual thirst are umpioms that point to kidner trou For over 30 vears’ phrsi restorative. 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