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THE EVENING STAR ASHINGTON CHURCH TO SHUN DUKE'S MARRIAGE Officiating Pastor Accused of “invading™ Province of Another Bishop. ssocinted Press June 4—Rev. R. Ander- son Jar intrepid viear of Darling- ton, who came from England to marry his “King"—Edward, Duke of Wind sor—was accused today of “invading the province of another bishop without authority of his superiors. As a the Anglican Church *takes no cognizance” of the religion: ceremony yesterday uniting the duk and the former Mrs. Wallis Warfield, ssserted the Rey. Prebendary F. An- ® c the church’s rural For two reasons, Mr. Jardine, the »or man’s parson.” did not repre- the Church of England, Mr. Car- explained ceremony without the sanction of his | [ Fact Revealed in Suit by Widow for Share in ‘ $70,000,000. B the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, June 4.—The spectacle of one of the country's richest men | leading an old mule into the bottom | | 1ands of a Texas river and walloping | | it on the head with a club in a vain search for petroleum may seem pretty silly, but it's in the record. The man was Col. Edward H. R Green, son of Hetty Green, the finan- cier, and the story is part of the pro- ceedings to determine if his widow, | Mabel Harlow Green, has a right to | share in his $70,000.000 estate. Surrogate Harry' E. Owen of Essex | County, N. Y., has the record, a mil- | { lion words of biographical data, fan- | tastic, mirthful, sometimes dull, a wel- | ter of eccentricities, vainglorious hopes | |'and mad antics, yet withal an honest ;armnm of & man who, with equal | | | | | | phy, base ball and children, science \Clubbing Mule to Find Texas Oil Futile Feat of Millionaire Green he offered and performed the | BUSto liked astronomy, riches, philoso-| COL. EDWARD H. R. GREEN. CONGRESS CLASH SEENOVERPOWER | Divergent Measures Intro- Recommendations. | | B the Associated Press | Differences between Senate and | House proposals to apply T. V. A | principles nationally aroused expecta- tions today of a congressional dispute that may extend into the 1938 session. Senator Norris, Independent, of | Nebraska and Representative Mans- field, Democrat, of Texas introduced divergent measures which each con- tended fulfilled recommendations for regional and national planning of public works recommended by Presi- dent Roosevelt. Representative Rankin, Democrat, of Mississippi, introduced in the House today a duplicate of the Norris Senate bill The President himself took neither side. Some of his advisers read into his message yesterday a willingness | | 1 |duced Following President’s |» | & Vast super-power system, | cerned because of contracts to of regional plans be undertaken by | the President in co-operation with a committee on which each authority would be represented. ! It quickly became evident that the power issue would be dominant in | congressional debate. | Philip H. Gadsden, chairman of the | Committee of Utility Executives, called | the Norris program one “to T. V. A.-ize | the Nation | “The four-year record of T. V. A, | tself,” he said, “is the only ‘yard- | stick’ by which we can judge the effect of this program. In view of | that record, the inevitable conclusion is that this is a scheme to create | blanketing | the Nation, owned by the Govern- ment and controlled by politicians.” Tennessee Valley Authority officials | welcomed meanwhile Senator Norris' | propoeal to make it more difficult for private utilities to obtain in- | Junctions against public power projects. Norris seeks to check the issuance ot injunctions by district courts against the T. V. A. or similar pro- posed regional authorities. His bill would require persons seek- ! ing such injunctions to post a bond large enough to compensate the au- thority affected, and the municipal or farm organizations concerned, for | any resulting loss. Municipalities and farm co-operatives might be con- use | Federal power. ! | conserve soil, mineral and forest re- | sources, relieve unemployment and erosion. Regional Planning Data Roosevelt Program Gives Congress Last Word on Projects to Be Constructed, Acting Upon Presidential Recommendations. The why and the how of re- gional planning, as envisioned in legislation proposed in Congress to carry out President Roosevelt’s rec- ommendations, are outlined below, B3 the Associnted Press | Y YHAT are the purposes of ning? The stated policy is to| navigation improvement, flood con- trol and reclamation, to strengthen regional and national plan- develop and co-ordinate projects for commerce and national defense, to promote the general welfare. What about electric power? Federal power projects designed to spread the use and reduce the ocost | of electricity would multiply. Who would do the planning? [ Federal boards or agencies, in co- 000,000 could profitably be spent sach r: How wouid plans be integrated na- tionally? This would be left to the President, | under instruction to give due regard to local requirements and conditions Would the regional authorities have any standards to measure by in planning? Yes, the bills stipulate, for example, that they must consider present and future conservation of water for power and irrigation, prudent husbandry of national resources for recreation and protection of wild game and preven- tion of waste by dust storms and soil How about division of costs? States and communities would be expected to pay their share where benefited and would be compensated where they lose. How would employment be affected? Used as Business Tonic. !Power Commission the last word on rates. | | Could utilities obtain injunctions to | restrain the carrying out of power plans? | "Yes, 1t they post a bond sumcient | to cover losses that might be caused | the Government and the community, in event an injunction was granted and later annulled. CONCERT TONIGHT Spectal Dispatch to Tke Star | _ KENSINGTON, Md., June 4 -The | Kensington National Symphony Or- chestra, assisted by the music section of the Woman's Community Club of Kensington, will present a program of American folk music tonight at 8:15 o'clock in the school The concert is for the benefit of the sustaining fund of the orchestra and for the transportation of the school children to the students' series of concerts in Washington Richmond Fete Coins Sought. By the Associated Press | Senator Harry Flood Byrd of Vir- ginia asked congressional Authoriza- tion today for coining of 50,000 50-cent pieces to commemorate the | founding of Richmond, Va, in 1737 The bill provides the coins be issued and brass bands, yachting and musical first automobile fo Texas, to be fol- to let the legislative branches fight | operation with State and local of- cond, he invaded a province un- | Shows, | der another bishop without the per- on of either the Bishop of Dur- 1 whose diocese he is licensed 1o | Around the colonel’s grave at Bellows | called & horseless carriage. r the Bishop of Fulham, who th administration on the continent.” ‘indsor of (Continued From First Page.) #ocial equals Some of heavy wa Bdward” his messages. printed in firm pencil strokes despite the Pxpress, were T King. Sofia, Bulgaria We thank 3 both for your good wishes. David " Italian Ambassador sincerely Edward rete London: We for your Paris: Our sincere and all concerned g our stay in wedding. Edward.” ph blanks he used paper bearing I rampant over his two ~n in a flower-decorated center of their private car e ate hors d'oeuvres, veal peas, potatoes, pastry, cut- cheese, SPEEDING ACROSS EUROPE. AROARD THE WINDSOR HONEY- MOON EXPRESS, June 4 (# —The v hes a d and barred pull- clicked a o the Duke as toward a Southern Austria as any newlyweds on an ra, Windsor looked ree months of acy in the gray. thirteenth eonburg Castle with side ned new-found happi- and Duchess of they sped across ed honeymoon stol his bride at The strea express headed Simplon-Orient Trieste, Italy planned to con- h to Wasserleonburg rg. leased from Wind- Count, Paul Muenster, for es amid Alpine lakes peaks near the Yugoslav border Greeted by Tourists. Milan, a throng of tourists— American women with a scat- lish travelers—shouted Wally! Wally!” until the window, waved, then brought his bride to his side »se on the honeymoon coach were today until after it had across Switzerland. It reached ne at 6:28 am. It was ex- d they would reach their honey- late this evening twenty-six three m. and refrain ward came to pieces of uding 183 trunks, had on ahead by truck and train fairviand"” castle from Chatean de Cande where vesterday his blue-eyved duchess express at Laroche- France, a few midnight in a fAurr and under the watch men and detect = whe the Migennes, ter of excitement eves of police- ves after a hurried from the Touraine Chateau were married. Duke Helps With Luggage. Windsor, wearing a gray, striped e carnation gaily apel, hurried into the green, yellow and biue pullman ey he heels of her grace, the duchess, | en suddenly reappeared and, Iike a dutiful husband, helped to take the luggage aboard. One item was & wicker basket of lunch A dozen handbags were stacked in AT u of his slim, The duchess’ R suit of navy of flowered traveling costume was blue woc with blouse print in blue and white, quickly substituted for her wedding gown of “W: s blue” silk Just before the train pulled away, Windsor bade farewell to his chauf- {eur, George Ladbrooke Good-by, Ladbrooke! See you in Austria | Then he turned to the French of- finals and thanked them for holding e train for him and assisting his rding Compartment Rose Decorated. “Merci, merci bien,” he said, smiling Re-entering the car, where he and his bride occupied a rose-decorated compartment of bed room and bath, Windsor was heard to remark to the duchess in the vein of any solicitous, reassuring bridegroom: Yes, I have the tickets.” The train then pulled out to the southe The couple had been delayed on their motor trip because their chauffeur lost the way from Monts. The new duchess led their hurried stride along the plat- form, her head down and her lips compressed The duke followed closely, smiling and waving good-by. He was hatless and his hair was ruffied. The train pulled into the yards just as they ar- rived The other passengers on the waiting train were required to stay aboard while the duke and duchess entrained. | Their view of the proceedings was | further veiled by another train which pulled up, shutting off their view of the platferm. WINDSOR MAY DROP TITLE. LONDON, June 4 (&) —British sources considered it likely today their abdicated monarch, Edward of ‘Windsor, might drop the title of “Royal Highness” which his brother-successor, King George VI, denied his American- born bride of vesterday. b} to the others. | spirited accom- | the former | took Wallis Warfleld to minutes af- | These contained part of the | fashion-setting | | Some time when frost next first Fall, touches it may be, the trees | Falls, Vt. the surrogate will decide | whether Mrs. Green has the right to | contest the will, executed in March, 1908, and leaving everything to the colonel's sister, Mrs. Matthew Astor | Wilks. | But before determining whether the | evidence favors the widow's claim that | her husband was a resident of Texas— a fact which might invalidate a pre- nuptial agreement she signed, giving {her an annuity of $18,000 and no further interest in the fortune—or that he was legally domiciled in New York or Massachusetts, the surrogate through the eyes of scores of witnesses | who knew the colonel. He will see Green's many facets. He will see the good | great hulk of a man—he once weighed | Houston 315 pounds—in many moods from voung manhood to the time when death overcame him close to his 68th birthday anniversary, a year ago. There was the colonel, for example, suffering from rheumatism, making tremendous efforts to walk on crutches, And there was the colonel at the throttle of a locomotive of the Texas | Midland Railroad at Terreil, Tex.: or in his private car, No. 999, star-gazing at his own telescope, meditating on the infinity of the night, or in his study pondering on the subtleties of the schoolmen of the middie ages, the later clarities of Kant and Spinoza | There was the other side of the colonel—the man, whom a witness | called the sparkplug of hometown entertainments, who turned up in Terrell, and presto, there was a brass band and a base ball team the day after his arrival He hit the mule over the head, this | same witness testified. and would drill for oil where expired. He drilled, but no oil And said he the mule there was the coionel who brought the ] | il | N The New Achievement of the spotting and perspiratio White Tan Single or Double Brea NOT CONNECTED WIT ongo Suits 25 HE New Congo Suits this season are an in the Dupont Laboratories. Treated with "Airdex" it is water repellent and resistent to a Cloth which is not only Beautiful, Lustrous and Silky but it is COOL and shape retaining. We know of no other Summer Suit that will grve you so much pleasure and sat sfaction as these New IMPROVED CONGO SUITS. We are Headquarters for these fine suits . . . We recommend them and stand back of them Grey LEWIS & TH°S. SALTZ INCORPORATED 1409 G STREET N. W. lowed, according to his orders, mules and mechanics in case of acci- | dent. The automobile the Texans It ran away and caused same minor havoc, but there were no damage sults. The colonel settled on the spot for a total of $1.500. The colonel in his early 30s at Terrell in & swivel chair, crossing his legs on a desk in the bank, spitting on the floor and remarking “if I did this in New York, they would throw me out on my head.” Aud the colonel taking over an old whaling vessel, bringing it ashore to be | enshrined as a permanent tribute to the old New England industry. There is the picture, too, of the colonel in 1905 at age of 37, driving his automobile in & 50-mile race at Dallas against Howard R. Hughes of tather of Howard Hughes, the airplane racer and movie pro- ducer, And the colonel, who, in later years, ! carried around a pocketful of dia- monds, jiggling them as ordinary men | do odd coins: going off to the country with $3.000 in cash and one of his 30 ‘trunks of stamps and coins ‘The colonel with his special chair at the office downtown, and the colonel with his rare books and autographed | editions and his hoard of first edition bank notes. his houseboat that ran aground and his yacht, the costliest in the world in 1917, that sank in shal- low water The colonel who bought two air- planes, but flew only in a dirigible; the colonel who spent $6.000.000 on his Massachusetts estate at South Dart- mouth, but couldn't beat the north- east rainstorms so that he had to keep a supply of Turkish towels on hand to pack around the window frames. The colonel in his littie electric au- tomobile, the colonel who did his | visiting with friends at the curbside and who went shopping and called the | | storekeepers to serve him at the curb because it was hard for him to walk M\Dd Improved Great Fabric Chemists n. They have perfected French Blue sted & Sports Models H SALTZ BROS. INC. CLORAD CHRAD CARAD CARAD CORAD C_LRA O CAHRAD by | it out and to accept whatever compro- | mise may result. Members of Congress noted that | | Senator Robinson, the Democratic | leader, did not mention this legisla- | tion in A list on which he said final | | action would be desirable at this | | session. | Regional Groups Advocated. Norris advocated establishment of | regional groups closely patterned after | the Tennessee Valley Authority | Mansfield, however, acting as chair- | | man of the important Rivers and Harbors Committee, offered a bill more in line with the wishes of some cabinet members, and drafted with the aid of administration experts | Mansfield would set up regional | agencies, each to be administered by | a director and & policy forming com mittee. While the Tennessee Valley | | Authority would not be disturbed, | { operation of Federal power projects | in other areas would be left to sep- arate power authorities appointed at the discretion of the President. "here may be several changes, Mansfield said. His committee ex- pects to consider the bill early next week Norris would give each of his pro- posed “conservation authorities” the right to fix electric rates. Mansfield would let the Power Commission in Washington have the final word on rates Mansfield's greater control Executive or | | bill allot | the also would of planning to to the National Re- sources Board, if that is made a | permanent Government agency, as | contemplated in the administration’s Government reorganization program. | Norris suggested that co-ordination | “on our book Budget-Charge Plan. 1005-07 Penna. Ave. Summer Crispy tailored to Lorraine Gabardines Beau Geste Linens _ Ceylono Silk Suits “Radio FJoe” WMAL Tues. 6:30 Be § Sport S Real comfort in these air-conditioned Whites. grey and 1005-07 Penna. Ave. | Wire -‘Mt;s.h Test | “How Come Beau Geste Sudan Cloths hod in Cool Comfort! Pedwin 36 Summer Show style and Pedwins— and whites—senuine moceasing and sandals R On Age of Eggs Given by 4. A. A. If White Is Clear and Holds Around Yolk, It’s Safe to Eat. By the Assoclated Press. The Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration advised the public today how to make sure the seven-tenths of An egg it eats per capita daily hasn't been around too much Requisite equipment ix & square of vire net with holes about big enough to put a pencil through The directions say to break the egg and place the meat gently on the net “If the yolk stands up round like a ball, if the white is clear and holds firmly around the yolk,” the A. A. A said, “then it is an excellent egg 1If the white is thin and slithers through, the A. A A. continued, it is not so good It left to the imagination the case of the egg that goes through yolk ' and all, BEAUTIFUL WOMEN USE ENSEMBLE PURPOSE CREAM $.50, $1.00, $3.00 All Drug and Dept. St-res A 32 . ——~30,000 Happy Budget Ac- count Friends and Customers Answer—they like our friendly, Kaufman So will you! how it works—buy your needs and pay: Here's 1744 Pa. 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Those less urgent would be held in readiness “for prompt ac- tion whenever necessary to prevent or abate business depression.’” Could the Government sell power generated? Yes, under instruction to give pref- | erence to municipalities and co-oper- | atives. In rural areas the sale could be direct to farmers At what rates? The Senate bill would leave rates to the respective regional authorities, under instruction to make them as low as economically feasible The House bill would give the Federal TheYoumg s Shop 1319-21 F STREET STETSON HATS CONGO . ..Is a suit vou'll certainly want to see and try on. Woven of Dupont Spun Rayon, it is definitely a cool Summer Suit. Dress- than weight wool. ier feather- It cleans beautifully and easily and re- tains its shape. In new Summer colors and classic white. Charge 1t—30 Days Or Use Our Deferved Payment Plan Protect Against Hot Vericool E By Weather the | to the Virginia Capital Bicentennial Commission, Inc., at par. 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