Evening Star Newspaper, October 19, 1936, Page 5

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N THE EVENING STAR, SEVEN VIRG'N'ANS Landon and Knox Wives Chat ACCIDENT VIGTIMS \ Four Killed by Autos, Two Drown and One Perishes in Fire. BY the Associated Press. RICHMOND, October 19.—Two 8- year-old boys, & church woman and & man were week end victims of auto- mobile accidents in Virginia, while two other deaths were attributed to drown=- ing and one to fire. Mrs. B. C. Hurst, prominent church and club woman, died at Pulaski today of injuries suffered Friday night in an automobile accident in which her husband and daughter were hurt. Miss Louise Hurst, the daughter, was reported in grave condition. The bodies of Edward Corbin, 8, and Frank Gregory, about 35, were found beside an Augusta County road Saturday night, apparently the victims of a hit-and-run driver. ‘Warrenton Child Killed. Dr. Glenn C. Campbell, county coroner, and State police began an investigation on meager clues fur- nished by a man named Miller, who had been with Gregory and was in- jured. He expressed the belief all three were struck by a truck. William Earle Heflin, 8, died in & ‘Warrenton Hospital early yesterday of injuries received when hit Saturday by a car said to have been driven by Richard S. Alexandria of Washington, D.cC. The boy, reported struck while cross- ing the highway near Amissville, was taken to the hospital by & passing motorist. School Teacher Injured. Miss Mary Elizabeth Lucas, 25, Pem- broke school teacher, was in a critical condition at a Pearisburg hospital with & fractured skull, suffered when she was thrown from her car as it skidded and plunged over an embankment and struck a tree Saturday afternoon. Obadiah Dodson, 60-year-old bach- elor, lost his life when his home near Culpeper was destroyed by fire early Saturday. Coroner J. L. Stringfellow said he found evidences of an “oil can explosion.” Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. yesterday. R. F. and J. B. Carico, 47 and 48 year old first cousins, were drowned | Saturday near Fries when a canoe capsized in the flooded New River. Lee Brown, the third man in the canoe, saved himself by clinging to a ferry cable. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Meeting, Monday Evening Club, Y. W. C. A, Seventeenth and K streets, 6:30 pm. Dinner, Trinity College Alumni, May- flower Hotel, 7 pm. Meeting, Knight of Columbus, May- flower Hotel, 8 p.m. TOMORROW. Luncheon Civitan Club, Mayflower Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Luncheon, Optimists’ Club, Mayflower Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Luncheon, Women’s National Press Club, Willard Hotel, 1 p.m. Luncheon, Washington Credit Men's | Association, Raleigh Hotel, 12:30 p.m. | Luncheon, Better Business Bureau, | Raleigh Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Meeting, Tall Cedars of Lebanon, Raleigh Hotel, 7 p.m. Meeting, American Gold Star Mothers, Raleigh Hotel, 8 p.m. Meeting, Women’s Bar Association, | Mayflower Hotel, 8 p.m. Deaths l.?-eported. Tda Myller. Grace M. Parker, Robert A. Herron. Demtro Mamaxos, 70; Sibley Hospital 5 bton st. T Rerd Hospital. 7 South Caroling 4404 th st arfi ; nfant l‘o lwmum ‘and Sadie Henin. Bibiey o5} Infant to Jesse and Gladys Walden, Prov- 01 P st. Gallinger Hospital. I Desmonds ct. 5.W. linger Hospital. Gallinger Hospital. s. Gallinger Hospital, nfant Audrey Git Gallinger Hospital. nfant James How It'san Art!.%"% —and one we're especially good at! . . . Have your party slippers visit our Dye Studio and prepare for a joyous surprise. After a Hahn beauty treatment they'll be just perfect for Halloween parties with your new dress. Try it! HAHN [4-POINT .(Aw‘ B][Hu.l While-You-Wait Service, 14th & G Leave at Any Hahn Store or Phone Dlst, 5470 Mrs. Alf M. Landon, (left), wife of the Governor of Kansas and Republican presidential candidate, and Mrs. Frank Knozx, wife of the G. O. P. nominee for vice president, chatting in the executive mansion in Topeka, Kans., while their husbands dis- WASHINGTON, LABORPEACE PLAN PUSHED QUIETLY Lewis’ Latest Statement Gives Hope to Reconcilia- tion Leaders. BY the Associated Press. Behind the scenes labor leaders quietly are seeking.the basis for an agreement that would restore John L. Lewis and his associates to good stand- ing in the American Federation of Labor. Those seeking an end to labor's family row agree that the dove of peace sent out last week by the fed- eration’s Executive Council was not serlously hurt by Lewis’ shots and that further peace moves will be forth- coming. The United Mine Workers, Lewis’ union, and nine others were suspended from the federation September 5 for “insurrection.” Their Committee for Industrial Organization, formed to AS LITTLE AS P.- 0, tempt to bring all the workers in each big industry into one big union, was “rebellious,” the federation council found. The council is controlled by union leaders who think that workers generally should be organized by craft. Leaders on each side of this family quarrel already have held several in- formal conferences and others are ex- pected. Charles P. Howard, chairman of the International Typographical Union and secretary of the Lewis commit- tee, was seen last week talking at length with Matthew Woll, federation vice president. Neither would discuss the conversa- tion, but labor observers suggested it probably dealt with the split and the council’s peace move. Woll is a member of the council MONDAY, For the treatment of Kidney Trouble Physicians everywhere recommend the alkaline properties of Mountain Valley Mineral Water, direct from famous Hot Springs, Arkansas. A natural cor- rective. Deeply satisfying. Phone for descriptive booklet. n Valley Mineral Water 1405 K St. N.W. OCTOBER 19, 1936. committee, headed by George Har- rison, president of the Railway Clerks, named to negotiate peace terms with the Lewis faction. Appointment of this committee was suggested by the United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers at their an- nual convention several weeks ago. Max Zaritsky, president of this union, also is on the Lewis committee. Lewis retorted to the council’s peace move by questioning whether the council intended to restore his unions to good standing before the peace negotiations started. Coughs Relieved Right Away You want prompt relief. Hall's Expectorant quiets coughs due to colds amazingly quick. Soothes and heals irritated membranes. Special ingredients warm throat and chest and make you feel many times better. A cough, due to a cold, is Nature’s warning of danger ahead. Take no needless chances. Get a bottle of sooth- ing Hall's Expectorant today. Three sizes: 35¢—60¢—$1, at all drug stores. — PER WEEK ON MONTHLY BUDGET PLAN BRINGS the of cussed the general political situation. —Wide World Photo. CELANESE COMPANY RECOGNIZES UNION By the Associated Press. CUMBERLAND, Md,, October 19.— Officials of the Celanese Corporation of America and of the United Textile ‘Workers of America planned another series of conferences today, seeking to iron out the last of the differences between the two groups. An agreement in which the corpora- tion, which employs 9,000 persons in the manufacture of artificial silk, recognized the union was made public last night by William Kelley, second vice president of the union. The agreement was ‘reached at a series of meetings in New York. The newest meetings are to discuss seniority rights, wages, hours and working conditions. In return for recognition of the union, that group agreed to drop its | demand that the company deduct union dues from each employe’s pay. S e Births Reported. Ernest A. and Blanch D. McN. ?l:’udr and E(tl‘ll' Milburn. Alvin and Sidney Dixon.” bo: Lonnie and Gloua Scott. bos John and Dorothy Perry, Hethers A sha Mars B Macruder. William C. and Mary L. Thompson. Aloysius and Cecile E. Duringto Herman E. and Viola M. Harpe: Penn State Dry 0il Well Anticipated. HAYS, Kans. (#)—Willam D. Philip, rancher whose one big job has been raising cattle, staged a pub- lic celebration for a dry oil well he thinks he soon may have on his 4,100~ acre ranch. About 3,500 citizens were there, - Naval base extensions at Singapore, | Malaya, will cost $15,500,000. d "r"'”'" the wooq. ning, © Your” Faip d, ANTHRACITE COAL “Pennsylvania’s Finest Coal” Chilly Fall days are here, with their damp ond disagreeable evenings. A low fire will help to make your home more comfortable, especially when it is built with good old Penn State ANTHRACITE COAL. Stock up for the Winter NOW!! Phone your order this evening —we are open until 9 P.M. every week day. 714 13th St. N.W. 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