Evening Star Newspaper, September 14, 1936, Page 4

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" A4 W 3 RLES ANNOUAGED " BY ROSE SOGETY Potomac Show Will Be Held in National Museum Oc- tober 10 and 11. The finest roses grown out of doors by members of the Potomac Rose So- ciety, Virginia Garden Club, Mary- land Rose Society and garden clubs or citizens’ associations in the District Maryland and Virginia will be gathered in the New National Museum October 10 and 11 to compete for the prizes of the annual Potomac Rose Show. Commercial classes are open only to greenhouse plants. “At the time of judging,” the com- mittee in charge of the show an- nounced today, “an exhibition rose should be in the most perfect phase of its possible beauty. The bloom should have an abundance of petals of good substance, gracefully arranged within & circular outline, half or three parts open and have a well-formed center. Buds will not qualify as blooms.” The amateur classes will number 18, commercial classes, 6, and nov- elty classes, 3. Awards will be made October 10, when the judging begins at 12:30 pm. However, the show committee will go over the ex- hibits the morning of October 11 and award honorable mention ribbons to the entries which have developed into outstanding blooms since the official Judging the previous day. The rules for the exhibition an- nounced by the committee, which re- quested that the correct name of all varieties of roses shown be given on the exhibit tag, are: 1. Out-of-door roses entered in amateur classes must be from plants grown by the exhibitor. This rule elso applies to single specimen com- mercial classes, but not to vases and baskets entered by florists which may either be selected or be grown by their exhibitor, 2. Bud vases for specimen blooms sre to be provided by the committee. Containers for other classes to be provided by the exhibitor. 3. Entries, after they are placed on the tables, are under control of the Show Committee, of which Dr. I. A. Gamble is chairman. Other members of the committee Include Dr. Whitman Cross, honorary president; Edna Randolph Regan, sec- retary; A. H. Hanson, executive sec- retary; L. L. Powers, treasurer; Col. W. H. England, first vice president; Mrs. Whitman Cross, second vice president; Granville Gude, B. Y. Mor- rison, Mrs. Lomax Tayloe, J. Wise Byrnes, Mrs. Herbert Hall W. R. Beattie and J. Morton Franklin, - Pope (Continued From First Page.) ening physical forces when he sald: *“We, ourself, are now so near our day of final reckoning.” The Pope celebrated mass in the private chapel before speaking and prayed his message would exert in- fluence throughout the world. He was assisted by two secretaries, who also accompanied him to ‘the throne room, where he spoke into a microphone placed directly in front of the throne chair. ‘The Holy Father seemed in a deter- mined mood, although his movements were slow. He had donned s white cassock, & mantle and red slippers. Speaking in a firm voice which was surprisingly strong for his age and his recent excessive weariness, the Holy Father said the Catholic religion is the *“one real obstacle in the way of those forces which have already given a sample and measure of themselves in subversive attacks of every kind and order from Russia to China, from Mexico to South America.” The Pope wondered if, in fact, it is not already too late, declaring the subversive forces of which he spoke, “once they have seduced and stirred up the masses, aim at nothing less than arming them and throwing them THE EVENING STAR WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1936, Blooms in Potomac Park Ernest L. McLean, Democrat, sought neither Townsend nor Union support. United States Representative Ralph ©. Brewster, Republican, a Townsend indorsee, sought re-election in the tal issues in this campaign is to fréé business and industry from the shackles of governmental dictation and management, thereby paving the ‘way to re-employment of our idle mil- third district sgainst Wallace .| lions. Mabee, Democrat, Gubernatorial Nominees Barrows | and Dubord had Independent opposi- 3 In the rose garden at the foot of Fourteenth street, members of the committee for the Potomac Rose Festival, to be held October 10 and 11 in the New National Museum, look over the September flowers. Left to right: L. L. Powers, treasurer; A. H, Hanson, ezecu- tive secretary; John L. Bishop, director; Col. W. H. England, first vice dent; Dr.J. A. Gamble, honorary president., madly against every form of institu- tion, human and divine. “And how can this awful consumma- tion fail to be inevitable—and that, in the most aggravated conditions and proportions—if, out of false calcula- tion and self-interest and because of ruinous rivals and egoistic pursuit of particular supremacy, those who have a duty in the matter do not hasten to repair that breach—if, indeed, it is not already too late?” With intense feeling, the pontift expressed his deep-felt horror at the “fratricidal war” in Spain. He de- clared, “It has been well said that the blood of a single man, shed by the hand of his brother, is more than enough for all time and for the whole earth; what is to be said when we are face to face with the stories of broth- ers killing brothers, which are daily being told?” The holy father expressed his deep admiration for the Spanish refugees and for their comrades suffering revo- lution, saying: “What splendid reparation is this of yours, beloved sons, which you have offered and continue to offer to that Divine Majesty, which in so many parts of the world, and even in Spain, by s0 many, is unrecognized, denied, blasphemed, rejected and in a thou- sand ways brutally offended.” Saying the Catholic Church is the bulwark against communism, the Pope exclaimed: “The Catholic press has been per- sistently suspected and increasingly hampered, while every freedom and favor, or at least complete toleration, has been shown to the press of those whose mission and purpose, it would seem, is to spread confusion among ideas and to mislead by falsifying facts * * * a press which does not hesitate to proclaim a new Christian- For & Complete Renovis- ing Service and AINTIN Consult this eld Wash- insten firm with 20 years' experience. & FERGUSON & 3831 Ga. Ave. COL 0567 By Pop;zlar Demand! LAUNDRY SHOWER EXTENDED TO SEPTEMBER 19TH PR Save ‘16 By buying before Sept. 15th Offer includes resident; Mrs. Whitman Cross, second vice esi= —Star Staff Photo. ity and a religion of new coinage.” It was believed the pontiff thus re- ferred to Nazi Germany. . Simultaneously with his attack on communism, the Pope exclaimed against “that general wave of im- morality which more and more is bresking down every restraint and law and which seems already to have quenched in so many souls every sense of modesty, dignity, conscience and responsibility, by reason of the grave scandals which are given and suffered.” Calling upon public suthorities to | sense their responsibilities in this mat- ter, the holy father declared: “Certainly a heavy and formidable responsibility lies on all those who, by reason of and in proportion to the public character of their office, fail to oppose these great evils with every remedy and barrier that s possible.” . Maine (Continued From First Page.) Townsend clubs worked hard for Rev. J. Clarence Leckemby, Independent. HENRY PICARD-broke par or tied it in 50 out of 54 tournaments—an all-time record. He says: *I find Camels a real aid to my digestion.Camels set me right! I smoke Jots. Camels never get on my nerves.” CAMELS . tion from Rev. Benjamin O. Bubar, who, in & quist campaign, favored the ‘fownsend plan and a return to State and national prohibition. LANDON LEAVES FOR HOME, Plans Eight Rear Platform Addresses En Route. SALEM, Mass.,, September 14 (#)— Predicting Republican victory in Maine, Gov, Alf M. Landon started out today upon & series of eight rear platform addresses ii New Hampshire, Massa- chusetts and New York, on the way home to Kansas. Wearied by his strenuous campaign- ing, the Republican nominee rested overnight at the home of Robert E. Choate, editor and publisher of the Boston Herald and Boston Traveler, near Danvers. “I deeply appreciate the warm and friendly welcome given me in Maine and throughout New England,” Landon said before he started his return from his first campaign foray into this sec- tion. “I feel certain Maine will repudiate the national administration in her election today and lead & victory march to Republican success in November and the restoration of constitutional government in America. “The people of Maine as of all New England believe one of the fundamen. “Victory will reward our cause in Maine today.” Gov. Landon drove to Danvers with Choate after attending church in Portland where he was the guest of Benator Frederick Hale. 5 STATES BALLOT TOMORROW. Democratic Senatorial Race Holds Bay State Interest. By the Associated Press. Voters of five States ballot tomorrow in State primaries. Following are some of the high lights of the con- Massachusetts—Much public inter- est centers on the contest for the Democratic senatorial - nomination. Candidates are Gov. James M. Curley, Mayor Robert E. Greenwood of Fitch burg, son-in-law of the retiring Dem= ocratic Senator Marcus A. Coolidge, and Thomss C, O'Brien, who is also Union party candidate for Vice Presie dent. O'Brien is not on the sena- torial ballot, but backers are con- ducting s . campaign for “write-in” votes. Republican candidates for the Senate are Henry Cabot Lodge, Jjr.; Alonzo B. Cook and Guy M. Gray. New Hampshire—Two former polit- ical allies, Gov, H. Styles Bridges, 38 years old, and the veteran ex-Senator George H. Moses are contesting for the Republican nomination to the Senate seat from which the Repub- lican Senator Henry W. 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