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—A—4 %% BODY OF COVILLE - TOBE CREMATED Services for Noted Scientist| at Geographical Society Building Today. Funeral services for Dr. Frederick Vernon Coville, 69, noted scientist, who died Saturday at his home, 1836 California street, are being held this | afternoon in Explorers Hall, adminis. tration building of the National Geo- | graphic Society, Sixteenth and M streets. Rev. Dr. U. G. B. Plerce, pas- tor of All Souls’ Unitarian Church, is officiating. The body will be cremat- ed and the ashes sent to Oxford, N. Y., former home of *he Coville famil; Wallace Honorary Pallbearer. Secretary of Agriculture Wallace and many other persons of promi- nence are included in the list of hon orary pallbearers, as follows: Officers, trustees and staff memhers‘ of the society, including Dr. Gilbert| Grosvenor, president; Dr. John Oliver La Gorce, vice presi ; George W.| Hutchison, secretary; Robert V.| Fleming, treasurer; Dr. C. Hart Mer-| riam, Dr. Lyman J. Briggs, Dr. George R. Putnam, Dr. Alexander Wetmore, | Dr. J. Howard Gore, Elisha Hanson, Maj. Gen. Oscar Westover, Herbert A.| Poole, Thomas W. McKnew, J. R.| Hildebrand. Melville B. Grosvenor, McFall Kerbey, Franklin L. Fisher, Frederick Simpich and A. H. Bum- stead. Other honorary pallbearers include Dr. Charles G. Abbot, secretary, Smithsonian Institution; Dr. Phillip S. Smith, Geological Survey; James | T. Jardine, Forestry Service; Dr. John C. Merriam, president, Carnegie Institution; Walter Pratt, president, Equitable Co-operative Building As-| sociation; Harry G. Meem, president, | Washington Loan & Trust Co.; Dr.| G. H. Marvin, president, George Washington University; Dr. Willlam | P. Willoughby, president, Washington Sanitary Improvement Co.: Dr. Ray- rhond S. Pearson, Dr. Robert W. Baker, Dr. William J. Humphreys, president, Cosmos *Club; Dr. O. E. ‘Weinzer, president, Washington Acad- Way, president, Arts Club; Dr. William Mann, director, Zoo, and E. P. Phillip, National Museum. {Others are members of his lunch mess, all scientists of the Agricul- ture Department: Carl S. Scofield, G. N. Collins, William R. Maxson, ‘T. H. Kearney, J. H. Kempton, Harry 8. Edwards, Lester H. Dewey, Edgar Brown and Stephen Hastings. Active Pallbearer List. Active pallbearers will be Leonard C. Roy, E. John Long, Frederick C. Vosburgh, B. Anthony Stewart, Ed- win L. Wisherd, Gerard F. Hubbard, ‘W. Robert Moore and Dr. Maynard Owen Williams, all of the National Geographic Magazine staff. Dr. Coville, who had been botanist st the Agriculture Department since 1893, was widely known in the field of science. He had been prominently identified with many scientific, finan- cial and other organizations, having been president of a number of them. His scientific writings were widely known. . Power Executive Dies. BIRMINGHAM, Ala, January 1\ P).—Reuben Alexander Mitchell, 84, senior vice president of the Alabama Power Co., died last night at his home here of a lingering illness. Mitchell, a pioneer in establishment of electric utilities in Alabama, was for 20 years & member of the State Democratic ! Executive Committee. | THE EVENING Freed of Theft Charge Louis Gorelick’s children as they greeted him when re turned to his home in New York after being cleared of accusa- tion made by Joseph Rose, relief recipient, that he had stolen $250,000 in jewels belonging to Rose. in a Jersey City safe deposit box allegedly rented by Rose under another name. The diamonds were found —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. FIGHTON . C. C. POST Tennesseean Seeks ment as Truck Interests In- By the Assoctated Press. X A behind-the-scenes battle for the | Other members of the commission, interstate job now held by former Judge Hugh | M. Tate of Knoxville, Tenn., came | to light today. Tate's seven-year term expired De- | employed by the commission as chief cember 31, but, in accordance with the | of jts Bureau of Motor Carriers. new I C. C. act, he will hold office . until his successor is selected and v qualified. emy of Science; Lewis Laston Honey- | appointment. The largest heating exhibit ever assembled SPENCER Automatic A Magazine Feed Heater stokes itself but needs no motors—no blowers. Burns lowest cost anthracite cleanly — odor- lessly. There is the right size Spencer for every home and building. Complying with all District regulations, Spencer is especially suitable for heat- ing apartment houses and other large buildings at lowest cost. Complete Demonstration At Anthracite Industries Exhibit and for further details see Noland Co., Inc. Ist & K Sts. N.E. Telephone: NA. 0050 EATER President Roosevelt has given no indication of whether he expects to reappoint Tate or the other commis- OF TATE HEVEALED\ sioner whose term has expired, Joseph B. Eastman of Boston. Uncertainty over Tate’s position arose from opposition to his candidacy by Senator McKellar of Tennessee. Eastman is an independent, Tate a Republican. may be given to a Democrat, as six Reappoint- | dorse Another Candidate. commerce commissioner's | the legal maximum for any one party, | are Democrats. | recently called on McKellar to indorse | John L Rogers of Knoxville, now Bitterweed, poisonous range plant, kills sheep, but does not affect cattle. He is a candidate for re- | Neither appointment | A group of motor truck interests | STAR, WASHINGTON, EDUCATORS HEAR PARRAN TONIGHT |Surgeon General of Health Service to Speak at Joint Session. Dr. Thomas Parran, jr. surgeon general of the Public Health Service, will be among the speakers tonight at | ' a joint session of the Southern Wom- an's Educational Alliance and the Graduate Nurses' Association of the | District of Columbia, opening a three- day annual meeting of the S. W. E. A. board of trustees. How nursing needs of the heavily underprivileged rural areas can be more adequately met will be the subject of a panel discussion at to- night's session, with Mary E. De Laskey, chairman of the public health division of the Graduate Nurses’ Asso- | ciation, 1n charge. The meeting will | be held at 8 o'clock in the assembly hall of the American Red Cross uilding, though headquarters for the | conference will be established later at | the Mayflower Hotel. | Other members of the panel will | include O. Latham Haicher, presi-| dent of the S. W. E. A: Naomi Deutsch, dircctor public health nurs- ing, Children's Bureau; Annabelle | Petersen, assistant director, pubhc‘ | health nursing, American Red Cross; | Marie R. Turner, county superintend- |ent of schools in Breathitt County, | Ky.; Kathryn McHale, general direc- tor, American Association of Univer- sity Women; Eugenia Spalding, in-| | structor in nursing education, Catho- | lic University, and Pearl Mclver, sen- |ior public health nursing consultant, Public Health Service. | Business of the alliance will be dis- | cussed tomorrow and Wednesday, and | | Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will speak Quickly checked without *‘dosing” } PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS in Washington D. C., MONDAY, briefly at & tea at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at the American Association of Uni- versity Women headquarters. -—— Deaths Reported. William P. Crawford. 92. 8t. Elizabeth's Hospital Catherine T. Geddes. 84 1312 North Carolina avenue northeast Moses A. Robinson, 75. 1715 Rhode Island avenue. Ezza J. Garrett. 7T4. 3800 Fourteenth street. Sue M. Gill, 73. Emergency Hospital. Fannie E. Wilson. 71, Gallinger Hosbital. Frederick V. Coville. 70, 1836 California street, Fannie Ecker. 70. Providence Hospital. Edward J. Jennemann, 66, Soldiers’ Home 0spital Harriett L. Lewis. @ Charles E. Sauife, 6 1 Rhode Island . 1636 Thirtieth ‘avenue. Virginia A, Brett, street Henry G. Hanford. 62. 3706 Military road. Anna V. Woodward. 62, 3511 Davenport street. Joseph Jaffe. 50. Sibley Hospital. Ida Adams. 55. Gallinger Hospital. Douglas Miller. 56. Garfleld Hospital, Ellen Thompson. Providence Hospital. Elizabeth Stone. 51. Sibley Hospital. Raymond H. Brown. 51,1615 Thirty-Afth street, Percy Fisher. 40. Georgetown Hospital, Marshall Taylor, 42. 2650 Wisconsin ave- nue. JANUARY 1], 09 Kansas avenue. | oy 1937. Leonard E. Sundwall. alias Carlson. 42, Georgetown Hos| . John A. Richmond, 38, Casualty Hospital. Laray Nack. 6. 24 Emerson street, Infant Kenneth Dalton. Children’s Hos- Gallinger Hospital. 2100 N street 408 Twenty-first . Gallinger Hospl! linger Hospital. 26 Eye street, er " Hosital, 822 Pourth street. inger Hospital. Teet. Mary Garner. 26. 1 Theresa Fenwich. 24 Births Reperted. Herbert-Gladys Haynes. boy. Malvern-Theima Buscher, boy. milla Morphet, gir] E Louise Stafford. boy. Paul-Jane Hawkins. girl. v ) John-Evelyn Jones, boy. Louis-Telula Beck. ir.. boy. Gregory-Willie Conliffe boy. James-Virginia Gibbs, boy. Airplanes Sow Poppies. California’s State flower, the golden | i Apricots poppy, is being sown by airplanes, the project being backed by various clvic bodies. COLONIAL A binful of clean, good, long-burning Colonial enables you to make your own climate. Look up “Colonial Coal” in yellow section of your telephone book. PARTIAL LIST OF EXHIBITORS Come and see—in actual operation—new inventions that have revo- lutionized old ideas of heating in hundreds of thousands of homes. EXHIBIT AT 1132 CONNECTICUT AVE., N. W, Admission Would you like to know how you can get all of the advantages of automatic heat by a simple, inexpensive addition to your present heater? Then see what modern thermostats can do to save you time and money. See how engineering skill makes it possible to modernize your own heater. See automatic an- thracite burners that feed fuel from a closed bin to the fire, remove the ashes, and require no attention all season! It’s all here—and more! Here is a complete display of the amazing inventions that make automatic anthracite heat so easy to own and so surprisingly economical. .H»MTHEhkgtln ™~ 4 Free! This exhibit is especially timely now because of the current widespread interest in smoke abatement. Anthracite can not produce smoke. It gives clean and smokeless heat in any equip- ment, no matter how inexpensive. See for yourself how thousands upon thou- sands of homes are now enjoying automatic heat at the lowest possible cost—with anthracite. Be sure and register your name and address at the show and receive—free—a copy of the interest- ing book,“A Man’s Castle.” Come any day or evening this week. 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