Evening Star Newspaper, February 7, 1937, Page 21

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150 ARE ADVANCED IN MARINE CORPS 65 Captains and 85 First Lieutenants Win Promotions. President Roosevelt yesterday after- noon approved the findings of & Ma- rine Corps Selection Board that recom= mended the promotion of 65 captains and 85 first lieutenants, after Secre- tary Swanson had indorsed it. Two of the new majors and five of the new captains are on duty in the District, while 16 of the new majors and 22 o° the new captains are serv- ing at Quantico, Va. First Licut. Robert Hugh Williams, who was among ‘he Washingtonians selected, is one of the aides to Maj. Gen. Thomas Holcomb, commandant of the Marine Corps. ‘The list of names will be sent shortly by President Roosevelt to the Senate #s his nominations for confirmation. The captains ou duty in Washing- ton, chosen for promotion are Clar- ence Rodney Frederick Schneider, while those on duty at Quantico are Chesley George Stevens, Christian Frank Schilt, prom- {nent aviator; Walter Aloysius Wacht- ler, Ivan W. Miller. James Stanley Monahan, Augustus William Cockrell, James Marcman Smith. Ernest Ed- ward Linsert, Lewis Albert Hohn, Ran- dolph McCall Pate. James Marshall McHugh, George Joseph O'Shea, Wil- liam Montgomery Mitchell, Evans Fordyce Carlson, Swanson and Good, ir. Lieutenants Here Promoted. George The first lieutenants, on duty in| the National Capital, picked for ad- vancement. are Paul Dwight Sher- man, Russell Lloyd, Ernest Walter Fry, jr, and Lewis Cheatham Hud- on, jr., while those serving at Quan- tico are Harry Cox Lang, Orin Kirk- patrick Press'ey, Randall Mamre Vic- tory, Carson Abel Roberts, Richard Jacobs McPherson, Chester Robinson | O'Donnell, Cor- | Allen, Clarence Joseph nelius Peter Van Ness, Lewis Richard Tyler, Peter Alexander McDonald, Paul Wesley Russell, Charles Harold Hayes, Wright Carney Taylor, August Larson, Henry Talmage Elrod. Edward Bruce Carney, Austin Roger Brunelli, Lufher Samuel Moore, Charles Reed Jones, Clifford Henry Shuey, John Henry Cook, jr. and Edward James Dillon. First Lieut. Nelson Kenyon Brown, on duty at Fort Belvoir, Va., was also selected for advancement. The board has been in session at the Navy Department under the presi dency of Col. William P. Upshur since January 18 and has just completed its labors. In addition to the above named, these captains were selected for pro- motion to majors: Edwin Mehlinger, on duty at Newport, R. I.. Donald Spicer. Augusta, Ga.; Sherman Lloyd Zea, Portsmouth, N. H.; Frank Per- cival Snow, Parris Island, S. C.; Walter Willlam Wensinger, U. S. S. New Mexico; Lawson Harry McPher- son Sanderson, San Diego, Calif.; Ja- cob Frank Plachta, San Diego;Har- old Ellett Rosecrans, U. S. S. Port- land; Leo Sullivan, San Diego.; Hayne Davis Boyden, Montgomery, Ala.; Franklin Garrett Cowie, San Diego; William Elmore Maxwell, U. S. S. New Orleans; Ronald Aubry Boone, Shanghai, China; Willlam Baynard Onley, Norfolk, Va.; James Hershel Strother, U. S. S. Tennessee; Joe Nelson Smith, Pasadena, Calif.; Louis Eugene Marie, jr., Paris, France; John Albert Bemis, Peiping, China; John Crawford McQueen, U. S. S. Quincy; Howard Nathaniel Kenyon, Philadel- phia, Pa.: William Wallace Davies, U. S. S. Oklahoma; Vernon Edgar Me- gee, Montgomery, Ala.; Orin Hu- bert Wheeler, U. S. S. Saratoga; Wil- liam Oscar Brice, Montgomery, Ala.; Francis Marion Wulbern, U. S. S. Tuscaloosa: Edwin Allen Pollock, Norfolk; Lucian Cary Whitaker, Guam; John Curling Donehoo, jr., U. S. S. Nevada; Raymond Paul Coffman, San Diego; Rupert Riley Deese, San Diego; James Profit Rise- ley, Fort Riley, Kans.; Harry Ed- ward Dunkelberger, Hawaii; Clayton Charles Jerome, Bogota, Colombia; Charles Campbell Brown, Shanghai; Eugene Hayden Price, Lyman Gano Miller, U. S. S. Arkan- sas; James Austin Stuart, U. S. S. mouth, N. H.; William Willard Orr, Philadelphia; Gregon Albert Williams, | San Diego; Lawrence Raymond Kline, U. S. S. Chicago; William Winches- | ter Paca, Hawaii; Shelton Cornell Zern, Shanghai; John Edward Curry, U. S. S. Houston; Richard Malcolm Cutts. Guam; Frank Doudet Weir, San Diego, and Merrill Barber Twin- ing, Fort Benning, Ga. Promoted to Captains. First lieutenants chosen for promo- tion to captdin include: Francis Jo- seph Cunningham, San Diego: Ber- nard Hope Kirk, San Diego; Richard Potts Ross, jr., U. S. S. Colorado; Otho Christopher Ledbeter, Olongapo, P. L; | Deane Carroll Roberts, Pensacola, Fla.; Albert Ferdinand Moe, San Diego; James Vincent Bradley, jr., U. S. S. Mississippi; Joseph Howard Berry, U. S. S. Pennsylvania; Huffman, San Diego; John Bunn Hill, Shanghai; James Raymond Hester, U. S. 8. Nevada; William Frederick Parks, U. S. S. Lexington; William Arthur Willis, Pensacola; John Stanley Holm- berg, Pensacola; John Frederick Stamm, Guantanamo, Cuba; John ‘Wehle, San Diego; James Phillips Berkeley, Fort Monmouth, N. J.; Wil- liam Putnam Battell, Philadelphia; Edson Laurence Lyman, Fort Sill, Okla.; Archibald D. Abel, San Diego; George Harlon Cloud, Shanghai; Charles Edward Shepard, jr, San Diego; Michael McGinniss Mahoney, New York, N. Y. ‘Thomas Brandenburgh Hughes, Fort Bill; Frank Gilbert Wagner, jr., San Diego; Paul Moret, San Diego; Harold ‘W. Bauer, San Diego; William Bag- garley McKean, U. S. S. Texas; Fred Dale Bedns, Fort Benning; Glen Gal- loway JHerndon, San Diego; Wallace Martin Greene, jr., Guam; Francis Hubert Williams, U. S. S. California; ‘William Bassett Steiner, San Diego; Frank Mills Reinecke, Parris Island; John Malcolm Davis, U. 8. S. West Virginia; Walfried Halton Fromhold, Ban Diego; James Taylor Wilbur, Mare Island, Calif.; Donald McPherrin Wel- ler, San Diego; Samuel Sylvester Yea- ton, Bremerton, Wash.; Edward Alex- ander Montgomery, San Diego; Edgar Oliver Price, U. S. S. New York; Robert Edward Hill, U. S. S. Henderson; James Michael Daly, San Diego; Ron- - ald Dean Salmon, San Diego; Mar- cellus Jones Howard, San Diego; Don- ovan Dorr Sult, Fort Sill; Norman Hussa, Fort Benning; Robert Lee Mc- Kee, San Diego; Edmund Burke Games, San Diego; Albert James Kel= ler, Fort Monmouth, N. J.; Harry Stanley Leon, Fort Monmouth; Wayne Horace Adams, U. S. S. Maryland; Wallace and Merlin | Monroe Samuel | Franklin, | San Diego; | Zebulon Corbin | Hopkins, Virgin Islands; Wilfred John; Scene at Paris as Mrs. F. Wilkenson Bunker became the bride of Augusto Rosso, former Italian Ambassador at Washington and now Ambassador at Moscow, January 28, in the Italian consulate. Mrs. Bunker is @ Washington society matron and f to right in photo: Vittorio Cerrutti, Italian Ambassador at Paris; William Bullitt, American Ambassador at Paris. ‘'ormer resident of Denver. Left Signor Rosso, Mrs. Bunker and —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. WOMEN'S COUNGIL PLANS PEACE DAY Mrs. Roosevelt and Senator Nye | to Be Among Speakers on February 15. The Women's Council of the Wash- ington Federation of Churches is spon= | soring a “peace day,” Monday, Feb- | ruary 15, at the Washington Hotel, | at which Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt | will speak. Senator Nye of North Dakota will | address the morning session at 10:45. ! Mrs. Roosevelt and Miss Josephine | Schain, chairmen of the National Committee on-the Cause and Cure of War, will make addresses following 1| o'clock luncheon. Mrs. William L. Darby is general chairman. Sponsors for the luncheon are: Mrs. Harper Sibley, Mrs. E. V. Pugh, Mrs. F. E. Edgington, Mrs. Joy Elmer Mor- gan, Mrs. H Kendrick, Mrs. W. O. | Tufts, Mrs. George A. Ross, Mrs. J.| Claude Keiper, Mrs Wallace Streeter, | Mrs. Wilbur La Roe. Mrs. T. J. Hower- | ton, Mrs. H. C. Briscoe, Mrs. Arthur | Briscoe and others. S BELL FREED ON BOND IN TRAFFIC DEATH CASE | assessments: Hearing to Be Held Tomorrow for Motorist Accused of Manslaughter. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ARLINGTON, Va. February 6.— Gordon A. Bell, 43, yesterday was re- leased on bond of $1,500 pending s hearing before Judge B. M. Hedrick | in Palice Court at 11:30 a.m. Monday on a charge of manslaughter growing out of the death early last week of | Mrs. James P, Cooley. | Mrs. Cooley died as a result of & | brain hemorrhage a few hours after | she allegedly had been struck by Bell's ! car at Wilson boulevard and Hudson | street late last Monday night. Also injured in the accident was Mrs. Gol- den Dagger, who is recovering at her home, 343 Clarendon avenue. Both women were taken to George- town Hospital and treated for minor injuries. Upon returning home Mrs. Cooley lapsed into a coma from which she never recovered. Dr. W. C. Wel- burn, county coroner, said death re- sulted from the hemorrhage. | Edward Hanna Forney, jr, U. 8. §. Pensacola; Howard Reid Huff, Ports- | Arkansas; John Alexander White, U. S. S. Ranger; Samuel Gibbs Taxis, San Diego, and Harold Isidor Larson, Pensacola. That Splitting “MORNING AFTER" HEAD ENDS IN ONEHOUR This Simple Way ’Whenever you have overindulged in food or drink, do this quick, and that “morning after’” head will be gone before you realize it. Simply mix.1/5 of a glass of Pluto Water with 4/5 of a glass of hot water. Drink—and excess poisons in the in- testinal tract will be carried away in one hour, or less. When this happens, your head will clear, your stomach will settle, your energy will return. Pluto Water is a non-habit-forming saline mineral water—bottled at fa- mous French Lick Springs, Indiana. Get either the 25c¢ or 50c size, which contains three times as much, from your druggist. Have a bottlehandy.An effectiveway toend a “morningafter”head. WATER Y WhenNature Won't — Pluto Will ASSESSMENT DUE Improvements. RIVERDALE, Md,, February 6 (Spe- cial). —Property owners on Lincoln and Monroe streeis here are about to be assessed for the new street which has been completed in front of their properties, and the council has named the following committee to make the Treasurer Harry C. Weeks, Clerk R. P. Carruthers, Victor Self of Lincoln avenue and L. J. Kelly of Monroe avenye. The Council directed the assessment be set as of March 1, 1937, BAYLISS FILES IN ALEXANDRIA COUNCIL | Architectural Engineer One of Seven Candidates for 3 Vacan- cies—R. L. Ruffner in Race. Bv a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va,, February 6.— David E. Bayliss, jr, active in civic and fraternal affairs of Alexandria, has announced his candidacy for a seat on the City Council, subject to the primary April 6. An architectural engineer by pro- fession, young Bayliss has for some REMARKABLE ECONOMY PROVED AGAINI time been associated with his father, a prominent contractor of the ecity. | | He is a graduate of the Alexander | | Riverdale to Fix Levy for Street | High School and of the University of Virginia. | “Also in the race, having filed his | candidacy yesterday, is Richard L. | Ruffner, making a total of seven can- didates in the race for the three va- cancies on the Touncil. Two of the incumbents have filed their candida- cles with Armistead L. Boothe, chair- man of the Alexandria Demccratic Committee. They are Mayor E. C. | Davison and A. Slater Lamond, 'SALE OF ART TO AID '"""FLOOD RELIEF FUNDS | Silent Bids to Be Taken During Display to Insure Fairness in Purchasing. Red Cross flood relief funds are to be augmented by a sale of work by local artists, held under the auspices | of the Arts Club of Washington from ’Th‘Jl‘Sd through Wednesday. Feb- Fourteenth and F streets. etchings, drawings, block prints, small sculpture and craft work will com- pose tha display. Silent bids for the works will be left by visitors to in- sure fairness in purchasing. FEBRUARY MUSSOLINT'S SON MARRIED IN ROME Il Duce in Throng to See Ceremony—Hitler Wires “Best Wishes.” B the Associated Press. ROME, February 6.—Premier Musso- lint’s eldest son, Vittorio, and his Milanese sweetheart were married to- day at St. Joseph's Church while papa looked on with beaming pleasure, There was drizzling rain and mist, but crowds gathered, nevertheless, to cheer the 20-year-old Vittorio and blond Orsola Buvoli, 22-year-old daughter of a modest family. 1 Duce and his wife, Donna Rachele, attended the nuptial mass and the marriage service, performed by the Rev. Giovanale Pascucci, pastor of the church, which is not far from the Mussolini home. Hundreds View Ceremony. Several hundred persons, including high Italian officials, viewed the wed- ding ceremony. Approximately 1,000 stood outside to see the party come and go. Vittorio's fellow officers in the air | force formed an arch of swords for the church. From there, in accordance with Roman custom, they went to St. Peter's Cathedral to be received by Msgr. Kaas. There another crowd cheered them. ‘The bride’s father, Giuseppe Buvoll, had not yet reached Italy on a trip from Buenos Aires, but other members of her family attended the services. King Wires Best Wishes. Orsola wore a long-sieeved gown, | tight fitting at the neck and with a long train. The groom, a flyer in the Ethiopian war, was garbed in his uni- form of a lieutenant in the air corps. ruary 17, at Julius Garfinckel & Co., | Paintings, both oil and water color; | ‘Telegrams of best wishes came to {the young couple from King Victor | Emmanuel, Reichsfuehrer Adolph | Hitler and King Boris of Bulgaria. \ The couple planned to return to | Rom= after an Itaiian tour. Vittorio and his bride planned to go later to the United States, where | he will study the motion picture in- dustry preparatory to trying produc- tion himself in Italy, WU P.-T.A. PLAY SET Brentwood Boy Patrol Will Give | Performance. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. MOUNT RAINIER. Md, February | 6—"A Day Court” will be the title of a play to be given by members of the Brent- wood Boy Patrol before the Mount Brentwood School Monday Mrs. Philip C.. Dorr, club in the night. session. The program for the evening is under the direction of Miss Nalley and Mrs. Christine Mills, teachers in the schools here. the newly married couple as they left | in Brentwood Traffic | | Rainier-Brentwood P.-T. A. meeting | president, will preside at a business | 1937—PART ON Justice Department Is Puzzled | By Motto, Nearly Century Old| BY the Assoclated Press. ‘The Justice Department has a puzzle on its hands that is aimost 100 years old. Since the middle of the nineteenth century, it has had an official motto, but even Attorney General Cummings can't say exactly what it means. It reads: “Qui pro domina justitia sequitor.” Cummings won't even attempt to translate it. i One translation, widely accepted but | liberal, makes it read, “Who prosecutes | on behalf of justice” Even that translation is disputed. | Researchers have brought to light a | story of the motto's origin, which takes | it back to the court of Queen Elizabeth. Lord Treasurer Burleigh, the story | goes, introduced Queen Elizabeth’s new | attorney general, Lord Coke, to her as follows: “Madame, here is your attorney gen- eral, who sues on behalf of our lady, the Queen.” Now Lord Burleigh, either from mis- chief or perchance a touch of pedantry, delivered the last part of the sentence in Latin and the Queen, who greatly loved a good pun, was not caught napping. “Oh, no.” she said, “that wasn't right,” she repeated the Latin phrase, | but changed it just enough to mean “our lady justice” instead of “our lady, | the Queen.” | Roscoe Pound. dean of the Harvard Law School, to whom Justice officials | | recently appealed for advice, said that | the motto was taken from the come | mencement of a pleading by the at- | torney general at common law. Until the reign of Charles II, he said, ail pleadings were in Latin. Usually the attorney general would begin: i | “Now comes So and So, attorney | general, who prosecutes on behalf of | our lord, the King.” | In the reign of Queen Elizabeth. of course, Pounds adds, it would be “Our lady, the Queen.” Her change in the phraselogy, he contends, would make the attorney general say he was IF FEET HURT WEAR AIRFLOW Regul s2 VALUE SPECIAL 1 Only A PARR for Limited, FOOT RELIEF Greatest Invention for Foot Sufferers of Modern Times Pain Instantly Briogs quick rellef 1 mea Carchen. . metacarsel pains, burning eallouses, bunions. swollen anklies and tired, aching feet. -’ TRY AT OUR RISK ¥ WEEK—Money back If not satisfied. We pav ostage it cash accompanies order or C.0.D. $1 plus postage. SEND TODAY your name and ad- @ress’ and size shoe sou wear. Order a_pair today—Why suffer’ AIRFLOW ARC! ZUR | €0.. "B-1609 Fectory Bldy., Kansas City, M | | ty Tuberculosis prosecuting on behalf of “our lady, ihe truth.” Several Justice Department attor- neys disagree with Pound. One said that “domina” could mean only “the sovereign power, or the people”; an- other, that it meant “our lady justice.” “In any event,” one attorney said, “like much other Latin of that period, if it wasn't bad Latin, it certainly was inaccurate. CLINIC IN CLARENDON TO BE HELD WEDNESDAY By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. ARLINGTON, Va,, February 6.—The monthly chest clinic for Arlington County will be held at the Clarendon Health Center, 1119 North Hudson street, from 10:30 am. to 1 pm. Wednesday. Dr. H. A. Latane of the Alexandria Hospital will be the clin- ician. The clinics, supported by funds de- rived from the annual Christmas seal sale, are held several times a year un- der supervision of the Arlington Coun- Association. It was announced yesterday that 2,500 follow- up cards had been sent to residents of the county in an effort to enlarge the fund from the seal sale. R 5 GIRL UNABLE TO SAVE BOY, 18, FROM BLAZE Garland Archer Trapped by Fire in Store at Martins- ville. By the Assoclated Press, MARTINSVILLE, Va,, February 6 — An 18-year-old boy was burned to death here today in a fire that de- stroyed a small frame grocery store. The boy, Garland Archer, was overs come and trapped by the fire despite the heroic efforts of Gladys Bell, 23, to save him. Miss Bell managed to drag the un- conscious Archer to a rear window. | However, neighbors were unable to lift him through before they were driven back by sweeping flames. The young | woman escaped by a ladder, but suf- fered slight burns. Germans Stay at Home. Switzerland notes comparatively few Germans among its foreign visitors this Winter, GARDEN DREER'S soox for 1937, Write for Free Copy HENRY A. DREER 705 Dreer Bldg. Phila.. Ps. THREE GLORIOUS DAYS IN NEW YORK OVER LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY New York's at its best right now - the peak of the season. All new plays. The smart shops. The colorful Terrace Restaurant where Abe Lyman and his Cali- fornians entertain nightly. The Hotel New Yorker's 43 stories and 2500 rooms make it Manhattan's largest hotel. Its outstanding comfort and luxury, make it Manhattan’s most popular. Rates from $3.00 a day. Direct tunnel connection to Pennsylvania Station g , HOTEL NEW YORKER | 341h STREET AT 8th AVENUE NEW YORK, N. Y. Ralph Hitz, President * F. L. Andrews, Manager Uowt Utre neaz” | It’s your turn next! Whether you plan to buy your new car now or later. .. step in and drive out in a 1937 Hudson or Terra- plane with Selective Automatic Shift. See what it means to shift gears with a flick a lift of a toe . . . with- out a gear shift lever or ever needing to of a finger . ... FOR THE push a clutch pedal. There’s no need to tell those thousands who have already tried it . . . they know tomorrow’s way of driving is here today! No need to describe its magic ease to more than 100,000 Hudson and Terraplane owners...they'vealreadydriven morethan a billion miles without a gear shift lever. If you have friends or family with you when you come in to try this new way to drive . . . so much the better! With three sitting in front, you can really appreciate that clear front floor . . . no gear shift and brake levers in the way . . . nothing to Front Floor Clear! stumble over. The car does all the work of gear shift- Terraplanes: inches of front seat Interior luxury that wheeling.” And nothing new to learn. Se lective Automatic Shift is optional at small extra cost on all 1937 Hudson and Terra- plane models. .. not available on any other popular cars. Of course, conventional gear shift lever is supplied if desired. Drive a No. 1 CAR! Discover, too, all these other No. 1 ad- vancements in the 1937 Hudsons and No. 1 in size and roominess . . . 117-inch wheelbase in Terraplane, 122 and 129- inch wheelbases in Hudson. With 55 full comfort for three ... inches wider than any other popular car. says “fine car” in up- holstery . . . fittings . . . instrument panel. No. 1 power . . . ranging from 96 to 122 horsepower. No. 1 safety, too . . . with body all of steel and exclusive Duo-Automatic Hydraulic Brakes. And proof of endur- ance, performance and economy no other 1937 cars can give you. Extra cars are here, so everyone can go this new way. There’s no obliga- 1423 Irving St. NW. LOS ANGELES, CALIF.: Hudson Eight ~52.71 miles per gallon! Terraplane— 22 miles per gallon! These are the official gasoline mileage figures es- tablished by Hudson and Terraplane in the 1937 Los Angéles-Yosemite Econ- omy Run, certified by the American Automobile Association, nunder whose POTOMAC MOTOR SALES 1206 New Hampshire Ave, N.W. National 7077 RICE MOTOR CO. Columbia 10324 supervision the test was held. Hudson beat all other Eights by more than 2 miles per gallon. Terraplane had the best gasoline mileage of all leading low priced cars. This annual classic was run over a twisting, mountainous, 352-mile course. Each car carried five passengers and baggage—with no coasting allowed. MODERATE PRICE Figp HUDSON & TERRAPLANE SALES CORP. (Wholesale), 1707 14th St. N.W., Washington, D. C. NEW YORK AVE. MOTOR CO. 606 New York Ave. N.W. Metropolitan 8929 SCHULTZE MOTOR CO. 1496 H St. N.E. Lincoln 6265 i FLEMING MOTOR CORP. Kalorama Rd. and Champlain St. Columbia 1020 MORGAN & ALLEN Cottage City, Md. Greenwood 1257 ing for you, but you control every shift. No reaching or bending . . . no pulling at a hand gear lever. Yet there’s no “free TRY THIS 1622 14th St. N.W. COLUMBIA MOTOR SALES, INC. driving tion . . . though we'd like it if you'd tell your friends what you discover. Come in today . . . it’s your turn next. o.l CAR or 10W PRICE FIELD WASHINGTON MOTOR SALES CO., INC, Operated by Call Carl, Inc., District 2785 623-25 H St. N.W. HYDRAULIC HILL-HOLD (An optional extra on oll models) Keeps yourcar from rolling backwards when Decatur 1734 EDWARD H. CASHELL, INC. Rockville 213 Rockville Md. ) Waldort, Mé ] MORELAND MOTOR CO. Brandywine HOWLAND Ma. 1 10-F-3 MOTOR Laurel Falls Churceh, T. BOONE Va. Falls Church 17 4 stopped on up-grades.

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