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. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. T, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1935. MANY ARE INJURED INAUTO CRASHES Several Are Seriously Hurt in Heavy Traffic Mark- ing Halloween. Three persons were seriously in- Jured early today in traffic accidents. Robert L. Millikin, 31, of 915 I street, a taxicab driver, and Charles Merkle, 18, of 1409 Monroe street northeast are in Emergency Hospital suffering from serious head injuries received at 2:30 am. when the taxi- cab collided on Highway Bridge with an automobile and then ran into a steel girder. Both may have skull fractures, it is said In addition, Millikin received a com- pound knee fracture and cuts, while Merkle suffered head cuts. The au- tomobile struck by the cab was driven by Mutt Schoenfeldt, 36, of 1408 Fif- teenth street, police said. Three Women Injured. Three young women were injured, one seriously, shortly after midnight when their automobile was in col- lision with a street car at Georgia avenue and Gallatin street. Regina V. Fogg, 20, of 1197 Massa- chusetts avenue, the driver, was the most seriously injured. She suffered shock, a compound foot fracture and numerous bruises. The others - jured were Patricia Bielaski, 19, of 1435 Harvard street, who suffered cuts and shock, and Irene Hoffert, 27, of Landover, Md., who received cuts on the eyelid and back of the ear. The automobile was badly damaged in the crash. The street car was operated by Motorman Bernard A. Barnes, 31, of 416 Ingraham street In another early morning accident, Robert Wallach, 24, of 1446 E street southeast, suffered an arm fractu and cuts when his automobile over- turned at Massachusetts avenue and | [ This Changing World |5 .- Nineteenth street southeast after he lost control. Paul Huls 21, of 1373 E street southeast, a passenger, re- ceived cuts. They were treated at Gallinger Hospital. Others Injured, Others hurt early today included: Doris Hendricks, of the Taft Hotel, who suffered cuts when a taxi- cab 1 which she was riding collided with an automobile at the north end | of Highway Bridge, and John T. Jones, 29, and Keller F. Newgent, 25, both of Rocky Mount, N. C.. who suf- fered cuts and bruises in an accident at College Park, Md. Jones also may have a foot fracture, it is said. They were both treated at Casualty Hos- pital. Mrs. Verna B. Clark, 24, of 254 Eighth street. suffered a nose fracture and cuts in a collision at 2 &m. at Seventh and H streets. Maxie Benner, 7. of 807 Fourth | decision concerning sanctions against and let him have those wells.” street southwest escaped with bruises last night when, according to police, he ran into the side of an automobile at Fourth and I s ts southwest. He was treated at Providence Hospital. Beveral others ured earlier yester- day returned home after being treated at hospitals. U. S. ENVOY INTERCEDES Beeks to Induce Spain to Delay Ban on Film. MADRID, November 1 (P).—Am- bassador Claude G. Bowers of the United States said today he will visit the foreign office tomorrow in an effort to postpone the government ultimatum giving the Paramount Pic- tures Corp. until Monday to with- draw “The Devil Is a Woman” from Bpain. The Spanish government, claiming the picture a libel on Spain, threatens to ban all Paramount films unless “The Devil Is a Woman” is removed. The company is understood to de- gire time to examine the film to see if it cannot be editec, " SPECIAL NOTICES T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any other than myself WILLIAM G. KING. 140 11th st. ne. 1% T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR debts contracted by any other than myself B F. FAIR. Sr.. 141% Parkwood pl. n 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY bills unless contra y myself. WIL- LIAM A. BARBER. 1 (st s w, 2% TREASURY DEPARTMENT UNITED Btates Customs Service, Wasnington. D. C., 2 Under the act of Con: 9. 1920, and 1931 d rity of director. | Bureau of Navigation an eamboat In- spection. dated October 2R 1935, on the application of Homer B~ Milard._ owner. the name of the gas vacht DOODLE II has been changed to KAYDET. The vessel was built in 1900, the official number is 9 R. LEWIS. MAS—RIGHT NOW IS THE TIME those old pictures reproduced for Christmas gifts Miniatures copies and enlarzements of superior quality have long en spec YMONSTON 'STUDIO. 2 F_ National 4900. NG AND REVISING MANUSCRIPTS. reparing speeches articles. reports LIT- ERARY SERVICE 635 F < n.w. Phone istrict ( . ED FOR HE. local cvery-day job as many units as required service and reasonable rates FOR SALE —ONE ESSEX COUPE. MODEL 199, engine No. 1 431, for charges. onNovember Ad: Weschler's Public Auction, 920 H st. n.w, WELDIT CO. * THE FOLLOWING CAR TO BE SOLD AT Weschler's Public Auction _on Saturday, November 14, Buick sedan, Wisconsin tags. 491746, left by. John J. Jankus e i, CALL CARL. INC. _ ALL BILLS AGAINST AMELIAT'S CON- {,fl:u:xfi::ivmsrlgrph.}mn GNeorzlaba'.'z - ]mu\t cfore JAMES W. BURNS. 1104 Georgia ave. nw.o —GREER'S FAMOUS HOME- ecured by calling Lin- MILDRED STEUART ) 5 LOADS AND PART to. Phila. and New Prequent trips to other Ea cities. “Dependable Seivice Since 1 THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STOI E CO.. phone Decatur ‘500 SPECIAL RETURN-LOAD RATES ON FULL and part loads to all points within 1.000 miles: padded vans: guaranteed service: local ‘moving also. Phone Natlonai 1460, NAT. DEL. ASSOC.. INC.. 1317 N. Y. ave, 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOP. debts contracted by anv other than myself WILLIAM H. TRATHEN. Landover. Md. :* § WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one other than myself. D! B. WEISIGER. 843 Press Blds. * THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SHARE- holders of the ' Equitable Co-operative Building Association will be held at_the office of the association. 915 F st. n.w.. ‘Wednesday. November 6. 1935. at o'clock p.m. Amendments to the constit: tion of the association will be offered. EDWARD L. McALEER. WA " Secretary. THE FOLLOWING CARS TO BE SOLD for storage at Eichberg's Auction Sales, 7 R st. n.W., Nov. it 1935: sedan. motor : Ford coach, Plymouth coach, roadster. motor motor : 5456 E No. 51670; Buick sedan. 1778404 Ford coach. motor No. A-13:X105; Buick sedan, m No. 2171601 " C. & M. GARAGE. 4 Kalorama_road FURNACES [:°0V%, e H‘lfls Estimates_on nlumr’nnu d heating. ‘erms. CARL ROBEY 5 Rock Creek Church rd. n.w. Phone Adams 7989, Apples—Sweet Cider ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM. Drive to Rockville. Md.. 2 blocks west of Court House, then 1 mile out road to Potomac. CHAMBERS gt of the Tar undertakers in the world, _Complete funerals as low as $75 up. 8ix chapels, twelve parlors, seventeen cats. hearses and ambulances, twenty-five undértakers and assistants. 1400 Chapin at. n.w. Columbla 0432, 517 1lth st @, Atlantic 6700. | | (104 Georgia ave. n.w.* | bristling with guns. Action on Northern Ethiopian A machine gun crew in action behind a pile of rocks as tanks in the background covered the rough ground, - —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto, by Joseph Caneva. i American Business—Minds of Geneva | Members BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. 6 ET'S give the little girl a big | hand.” This was in the mind last ‘Wednesday of President Roosevelt and Secretary Hull when | they reiterated their warning to Amer- | ican business men not to trade with | Italy. ! The League of Nations was meet- ing the next day. The League of { Nations was going to take the final Italy. Some of the members of that |international club were still worried about America’s attitude in case sanc- tions were applied seriously—that is to say, in case Italy was blockaded. % %k x Sir Samuel Hoare and Capt. Eden had told these timorous souls who were worried about America’s free- dom-of-the-seas policy that there was nothing to worry about. But there always are a number of Thomases at Geneva who shook their heads and said: ~“Well you never know what the United States s going to do.” And so, the President relieved theic minds. President Roosevelt has the back ing of 99 per cent of the American people in his policy to keep the coun- try out of a war and to endeavor to shorten the present Italo-Ethiopian war. He and the State Department are firmly convinced that the League and the League alone can do this | job. Hence, anything they could do to ‘streng!hen the hands of that body is being done—just a jump ahead of !the League so as not to appear that this country is following that organi= | zation. * x kX Of course there are quite a few who wonder whether under the present circumstances that co-operative policy with Geneva will not lead us into & | situation which is quite the opposite | of what the country desires. whether’ we won't stick our necks out far enough to get it into the noose. * ok ok Xk The world has not changed much since the last war. At that time the allies were most emphatic in telling the | world in general and the United States . |in particular that they had nothing | against the German people, who were, on the whole, a decent crowd, but \. | they were after the scalp of the Kai- ser and his imperialist-militarist ca- marilla. Well, they got the Kaiser, but in the end it was the German | nation which paid for the defeat. * x k x Now again it is said that no nation of the League, not even Great Britain, has any quarrel with the Italian peo- {ple. Their row is with Mussolint, the | dictator. Duff Cooper, the parliamen- | tarian secretary of the treasury, stated ithis in plain words. “Let it be under- | stood,” ‘said that important Britisa official. “that in condemning the ac- tion of the Italian government we have no hostile feeling whatsoever against the Italian people.” * x x % | _The question of war or peace in Europe depends entirely on how the |jury at Geneva is directed by the prosecuting attorney, Sir Samuel Hoare. Against whom will the verdict of the Society of Nations be directed? Against Italy, the trouble maker? Against Italy which wants to expand its boundaries in Africa, as Great Brit- ain and France have done it in the past? Or against Italy, which has suca a strong position in the Mediterra- nean? Has the League really at heart the fate of the Ethiopian people, or - |is Great Britain worried about her lines of communication with the em- pire and is alarmed at the possibility of a Franco-Italian naval co-operation as a sequel of the Mussolini-Laval agreement signed last January in Rome? * % k% ‘Why is the present conflict con- sidered primarily an Italian-British conflict? Let's recall the crude realities of the whole affair. Early last Summer neither the League nor any other nation had taken a single step against Mussolini, although he was pouring hundreds of thousands of men into Eritrea and the Somaliland. There was no doubt in anybody’s mind that thess men Roosevelt Aids League by Reiterating Warning to | waters of the Nile and the sea road | Col. Julian, the self-styled “Ameri- can Black Eagle,” has been honored | by Emperor Haile Selassie with the appointment as personal aide de camp to Ras Mulughueta, the Ethiopian f war minister and commander in chief | y of the Ethiopian forces in the field. Relieved. Before leaving Addis Ababa to as- sume this important job, Col. Julian | were not sent to East Africa for their told the newspaper men of the har- health. Nobody in Europe at that rowing experience he had had a few {time breathed a word of criticism | weeks earlier on the battle field, where against Il Duce. When Hawa Riate, he had been attacked at night by a | Selassie’s envoy at Geneva, tried to | pack of hyenas and escaped only by | get the members of the League excited | climbing up a tree. “I would have |over II Duce’s inevitable aggression |rather fought the whole of the Italian { he was told “for Heaven's sake don’t |army and air force than those nasty | bother us with this business. Go and | brutes.” | y : vith the Italians. | 5 — - E Pay Musscnini whatever ne wants for | =IO | the askaris you have killed at Ual Ual | Low Prices on | gheevar ‘ Surgical Fittings Elastic Knee Cap Ela-tic Anklet | = =5 o7 |= Crutches, | per pair ______ g ngle New York But when at the end of August the Elastic Truss____ British government quietly concen- | trated the battle fleet in the Medi- | terranean it did assuredly turn this| dispute into an Anglo-Italian qunrrel.: bdominal Although Mussolini’s controlled press | upport was spitting at Great Britain like angry tom cats, Il Duce was not threatening at that time the British | = empire. To the British naval concen- | tration in the Mediterranean, the| = Italian dictator replied by paunng[ = troops and airplanes into Libya, | Slol‘(‘ = where they were handy for an even 917 G St. N.W. = IS Shoulder BEage - o . $3.98 = Experienced Men and Women Fitters Gibson Surgical tunld invasion c!h Egyxpt. !;ome nlnd‘ London were rehearsing the Anglo- Tiian war, aver Lake Tana, tne Sl KEEP ROLLIN’ WITH NOLAN | DRIVE A 1934 Ford V-8 sedan until March 1, 1936 WITHOUT COST! SEE NOLAN TODAY He Has an Unusual Proposition for You If you are a careful, safe driver, take good care of a fine ear, do only a minimum amount of driving during the winter months, can store a car in a garage, and have a reputation for dependability, Nolan offers you the most sensational proposition ever made by an automobile dealer. The new 1936 Ford is bringing into our used car stock more 1934 Ford sedans than we have room for at present, but we know these 1934 Ford sedans will bring us a good sale price in the spring. We feel that instead of sacrificing these cars to dealers at less than whole- sale prices we can make a lot of friends by putting these cars at the disposal of reliable families until spring at a minimum depreciation cost. Come in today, this evening or Sunday. Ask for Mr. Kinder, manager of our storage warehouse department. He will explain the details of this unusual proposition. We have worked out this plan not only to relieve our present need of storage space but to build Good Will for this company. We would like very much to place one of these fine cars at the disposal of one person in each department of the Government, 2 Front Indorsed by American Col- lege of Surgeons as Meeting Standards. | proved at the annual congress. Figures | presented before the congress by Dr. | 1Georze Crile of Cleveland, chairman | of the Board of Regents of the Amer- NOW 1 EAT ican College of Surgeons, showed thnt‘ ONIONS an average of 1 out of every 17 persons | [§] [in the United States and Canada re- | Upset Stomach Goes GIVEN HIGH RATING | ceived hospital treatment during the | \" Jifly with Bell-ans. past year, «y» cLuB 1 opened | BELL-ANS _— F¥OR INMQIS‘I‘ION Married Couples’ Group Starts| gms Are Easy in With Halloween Party. “ FREmH Our Classes Nineteen Washington hospitals have been approved by the American College of Surgeons, which this week has been holding its twenty-fifth annual con- gress in San Francisco, it was learned here today. Approval means the hospitals have met with standard requirements ins dorsed by the surgeons’ organization. ‘The 19 approved hospitals are: Central Dispensary and Emergency Hospital, Children’s Hospital, Columbia Hospital, Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital, Episcopal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital, Freedmen'’s Hos- pital, Gallinger Hospital, Garfield Hos- pital, Georgetown University Hospital, George Washington University Hos- pital, National Homeopathic Hospital, Providence Hospital, St. Elizabeths Hospital, Sibley Hospital, Naval Hes- pital, Soldiers Home Hospital, Vet- erans Administration Hospital, Walter Reed Hospital and Washington Sani- tarium and Hospital. In all, 2,523 hospitals in the United States and Carfada were listed as ap- LAWYERS'’ BRIEFS RUSH PRINTING BYRON §. ADAMS 9 Nover Disanocsns” ld | An old-fashioned Halloween party GER"AN ’él'ms“‘u‘l' l‘to udents | last night marked the opening of the Central Y. M. C. A’s Married Couples SPA" lS“ s Club at 1716 G street. fasline Organized last November by E. A. | L N'“;zh" aat Drumm, secretary and educational di- lT AN # L rector of the “Y,” the club will gneet nves o on alternate Mondays throughout the Winter. C. H. McReynolds is chair- man of the club. Nature never made nor has man ever discovered a finer fuel than Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite. Enjoy the finest heat in town by phoning Marlow today and order- ing all you will need for this Winter. It's the saving way to satisfactory heating. Call NA. 0311 NOW. 77 Years of Good Coal Service Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 Soiled Window Shades Cleaned!—One Day Service \7017 may keep your window shades looking new end attrac- tive indefinitely, if you'll send them to our “Shade Laun- dry” for a thorough cleansing, We maintain a special department for the washing of window shades (providing they are washable) and to get you acquainted with the economy of using it, we offer one day Service, per shade and up, or we will Call for, WASH and deliver your window shades for the special price of, each. . . .. Ask for estimates on WASHABLE du Pont TONTINE Window Shades W. STOKES SAMMONS h. NEWS SERVICE Daily - WISV 9:55a.m. - 1:55p.m. - 3:55p.m. - 5:55p.m. b WILKINS