Evening Star Newspaper, August 8, 1937, Page 10

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A—10 * @ard of Thanks. BECKTON, SAMUEL. The family of the | IstesSAMUEL BECKTON wish 1o express | thelr gratitude and thanks many friends for their sin slons of sympathy an services and beauti the ‘time of his deat MARTHA JOHNSON AND FAMILY BRENT, WILLIAM H. my ‘sincere thank: bors. friends. relatives, pastor members of St. Paul's A. M mifilsters. various fraterr tiofis and_emnloves of Tréasury Depa and tokens of sym cent iliness and at loved hu: d. WILLIA HIS DEVOTED WIFE. MAR to &re ral tr BROWN. IDA ONLY kind expre tributes at t JORNEON. ¢ express cistion t bors fo; begutifu of _our beloved d CARRIE BRANCH ROSE, SOLOMON H wishes to_thank the n relatives for the fower pathy expressed d BaL ot the deain SOLOMON H. ROSE SIKKEN. JANET M late JANET M ST press her gratitude a many friends fo sions of D beautify ness JOHNSON THE FAMILY Ada BNAPP. HENRY ing and tha ressions MRS, HENR TERS SWINSON. ED the late EDV BABBINGTON, MARY Providence BINGTON n.e.. beloved bington, anc dan of N Farre BENNETT, MARGARET Priday, August ¢ University Hosp TY BENNETT B Bennett and Alien B Yeates Beat:y BEATTY BLUMER, JOSEPH WALTER day. Augus . Hospital. JC 1343 Ken of Florence Y Earlo H. and W Edna_Bo; late residen 2:30 p.m vate pepe: DBraths. ARY VIRGINTA turday. August 7 NIA HAGLER of ave. e leaves loss & devoted husban one brother and man HAGLER ife on 1030 to mou eside Sp L Depa 1037 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, 3 ATUGUST 8, 1937—PART ONE. ed 1 MAR\ Montel o ety relatives the " BECUNINMEXICO nee. m Fu from . be- t ats. n . Va. Tues- day. August HAYDEN. ROBERTA Aug DE M. Or ROBERTA { Mr Mr Cemetery rangements by JAMES, GERMAIN, JR T Augus® 3. 19 GERMAIN Sudde! JAM JONES, LAWRENCE REN( N KELLY, ROSA l\lKh!'\ll\u K. EVELYN DAVIS - A 1. 19, I LIMERICK, JULIUS sat HAY Mr ) s. Grace H. W werence 1 pm nw 1E: Passed HDAVIS “Suicide” Found Cardenas Starts Division of | Estates—Urges Labor Not to Strike. By the Associated P MEXICO CITY August 7—Presi-| | dent Lazaro Cardenas today began breaking up Yucatan's great henequen estates and, at the same time, appealed | labor to refrain from strikes which | ight obstruct the agrarian program. | In a message sent from Yucatan to Labor Secretary Villalobos, which was considered of utmost importance in | view of the recent wave of strikes | harassing industry, President Cardenas | d | “We ask workers’ organizations of the country * * * for consistent co- that before calling new they seek agreements (with S T e MAIOR C. TYLOR DIES ACCOUNTANT SINCE 1906 affect the global plan being under- | taken in this zone." | | | Veteran Employe of Department | CHARLES BORD —Star Smfl P/m/(m Arrives With The statement Engineers. was issued as Gabino | Vazquez, head of the agrarian depart- ent, arrived in Yucatan with a corps | 100 engineers to start division of | henequen estates and carry out the President’s promise to give henequen workers the land they till Henequen is a fibrous plant used for twine, cordage and similar bindings Last year Yucatan’s plantations pro- duced one-third of the world's need r the fibrous plant, or half a million 400-pound bales. Cardenas, addressing cheering throngs of workers at Merida, did not | say how much of Yucatan's 250,000 acr nequen-growing land would b over to them under the of Justice Succumbs at Fair- mont Street Home. Major C. Taylor accountant in the Ju. died yesterday at h | mont street, afte | Born in Kentuck ice Depart home, 1328 Fa long illness Mr. Taylor came ™ work with a here in 1906 to take the Justice Department. He wa member of Central Camp No. of the Modern Woodmen of Amer Surviving him are his widow Flora Taylor; two sons, Albert Takoma Park, and Ralph A.; ter, Mrs. Lucille T. Rad broth Caleb Taylor, livi fornia; four sisters, and a | James R. Taylor of this city, R, of liffe; a in Cali- fed nephew ian plan, Conciliatory Tone. regarded as significant that while insisting on the neces- ng land to Yucatan's land- took a concilatory tone a commission of four henequen who called to see him last THE WEATHER I District of Columbia- continued warm and dershower late today; -Partly cloudy, 1 1 tomorrow partly YOUTH WHO LEFT SUICIDENOTE KELD Charles Bord 18. Disap- peared Tuesday—Says He Was Saved From River. | Congress Bord, 18, of Portsmouth dropped from sight here after leaving a suicide note Bridge, was arrested ves- | terday and booked for investigation when he was found loitering in the vicinity of Botanical Garden e youth was picked up by Po- liceman Spottswood Gravely of the fourth precinct. " At the police sta- tion, Bord refused to disclose his iden- first insisting he did not know ame. Continued questioning | brought the admission that he did re- | member something about *jumping off a bridge” and being rescued by a | colored man. Charles Va. who Tuesday on Highway | oline | of the Authors League of New |ERIC SCHULER, EMPLOYE |ALBERT CONNER RITES OF LIBRARY, DIES AT 47; Copyright Divis ried Law Books for Hughes When Messenger Boy. Eric Schuler 47 AT 10 A.M. TOMORROW in Fairfax, Va.—Prince Wil- lam County Native. an employe of the | Copyright Division of the Library of | died suddenly Fricay in St. | New York City. He Eigh'h street Gar Mehske Mrs. Car- Funeral man Conner, at his hom held at funeral home, Fou services for Albert Nor- 73, who died Pr: 1124 Tenth street, am iday 11l be Lee’s Luke's Hospital, w had lived here at 11 southeast. His widow Schuler, and his mother, von Schuler, survive Mr. Schuler was born in Flushing N October 23, 1889. When he was & boy and served as & messenger for the Bar Association of the City of New York, he carried law books for Charles Evans Hughes. For 10 years, Schuler tomorrow In 1 street and Mas- | sachusetts avenue northeast, in Fa Va A native of Prince W Va., Mr as a boy. National Burial will be fax, liam County, After graduating from the College of Pharmacy, in was secretary | 1393, | Conner, on’ Workes Car-| Lnn Pharmacist Will Be Buried | prother | Conner came to Washington | eral He cille m— he owned and pharmacies here. is survived by a daughter, Lu= E. Conner; a son, Norman H. and three sisters and a iving in Pairfax operated seve SINCE 1884 Thos. S. Sergeon Co. (Willson K. Huntemann, successor) Dignity Without Expense COMPLETE FUNERALS $100 and up FUNERAL DIRECTORS 1011 7th St. N.W. NA. 1090 York H. organized the Authors’ and Artists’ | | Committee of the Association Against || the Prohibition Amendment. In 1934, with the fight for repeal won, he joined the Library of Congress Funeral arrangements plete, but burial will Island are be incom- Long on | newspaper s RITES TOMORROW Dr. | a daugh- | | anna A search of his pockets uncovered a | clipping describing the “suicide” case, and then Bord told who he was He told police, they said had jumped from the bridge his life, “but the colored man NEW DISEASE PERILS AMERICAN TOBACCO that he| to end res- | cued me.” Police dragged the river for sev- | Carolina Plant Pathologist Re- eral hours Tuesday after discovery of ports Discovery of “Ruffle a note which said that Bord had R jumped from the bridge and wanted Leaf. his brother, Ned Bord, of 2100 Con- | By the Associated P RALEIGH, N August necticut avenue, notified. ls G. Lehman, plant pathologist of the { North Carolina State College Farm | Experiment Station, announced today | he had discovered in Wake County a tobacco disease never before reported | in the United States | The disease, which he termed | “ruffie leaf,” appears sir to a | plague known as “kroepoek,” which | | has done millions of dollars’ worth of | | damage to South African crops in the | FOR COL. BALTZELL Burial at Arlington at 3 P.M. Will Be With Full Military Honors. Col. George F. Baltzell last 20 years, Dr. Lehman said | He added he would make an imme- | who died Friday at his home in Mari- | diate study of the disease in an at-| Fla., will be buried in Arling- | tempt to determine whether it would ton National Cemetery at 3 p.m. to- | affect this State's $110,000,000 tobacco morrow with full military honors. The crop. funeral will be from the Fort Myer| “Ruffle leaf” gate. 62, U.S A the plant pathologist | said, is caused by a virus which may What About Price? Funerals cannot be sold in exactly the same manner as merchandise, since the chief item is the service. The family alone names the price, based entirely upon what they wish to pay, what type of service and merchandise they desire. However, we give positive assurance that when the family desires we are equipped to furnish funerals as low in prica as any establishment which advertises price. More impor- tant, though, our service is superior in every detail. WM. H. ARDO & CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 412 H St. N.E. Lincoln 0524 cloudy; gentle south. Maryland and cloudy, possibly followed by dershowers this afternoor partly cloudy, with local | ers in extr e west | West Virginia—Loca ‘m today and tomorrow; a thorough study in an (B S N TOs to avoid any decrease in and said the government land for communal farm was available at-a pay for process- copy BRITTLEBANK. JULITS. Suncas. 5 Honorary pallbearers | Gens. Edgar T. Conley eral, and Roderick L. Carmichael, re- tired: Brig. Gen. Charles D. Roberis tired, and Cols. Fred E. Johnston, red; Claude H. Mille, Infantry: | | Lawrence 8. Miller, retired; Edward S. Rothe, retired; Chalmers G. Hall retired, and Mervyn C. Buckey, re- tired One time commanding officer of the 26th Infantry at Fort McClellan, Ala., Col. Baltzell was to have been retired at the end of the month. In 1920 he % served in the office of the chief of Woman Accused of Telling Pu fantry in Washington, and the fol- pils, “Humans Came From lowing year attended the Army War | pra ecord Unfil 10 P.M. Saturdas Zollege | Monkeys,” Fights Charges sy Bl raiaayiion anmn; the World War he served | wmwm;:f‘;f‘"»‘m o for a time as inspector of the Dis- | Laura Elms Morris, 44-year Soana Cisnpuniciet deding school teacher, one of whose pu- said she taught that humans ame from monkeys,” spent today in the living room of her home reading poetry to her 9-year-old daughter. H The veteran teacher was dismissed | Low from her position at the white frame ‘,{j;i“ one-room school, 8 miles from town, on | charges by the Whiteley Township School Board that she disciplined pupils with a base ball bat and poker and was otherwise incompetent Evolution was injected into the mat- ter after Mrs. Morris invoked Penn- sylvania’s new teacher tenure law in| . Mon an effort to get her job back. At one| yeo: e public hearings into the School | Jan s charges Gene Jones testified ie, Ma gen- include adjutan have come this country on im- ported tobacco or may be a mutation | of some other virus. The disease, he stated, dwarfs plants, making them commercially usele: | to pro- Virginia — Par ocal thun- tomorrow nder: portior thundershow- slowly rising ing home. - 2901 14 services at grave si fiddleburs. v 11, at 11 a invited BURNETT. ROSA HOLLEY dav. Augu pital ROS wife of Edwar Mrs. Ophelia Holley She and many_fr the John T. at To World War Veterans, All Officers and Men of the U. S. Army and Navy and Others Interested ret | | | w. W | | Milburn T. ZIRKLE Co. CRAMBERS One of the FUNERAL DIRECTORS largest under- temperature, Ambulance Servics Shenandoah and Potomac Ferry late Revort Until takers in the world. 'EVOLUTION FACTOR IN TEACHER OUSTER MASSENBURG. WALTER Riv yesterday cloudy BL Harpers 510 C St. NE. Linc 5537 North 8tde of Stanton Cdar Hill Ha.a/um]lbm il Beau 4 Cmeterg ‘ Cemmunity Mausolenm. Columbarium l g Receiving Vaults. | | | | HE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT has five con- tracts with W. W. Chambers for Funeral Service. These include the Veterans' Bureau, Walter Reed Hos- pital, Bolling Plield, the Army Medical Center, the Army War College, Soldiers’ Home, the Naval Hospital, etc. will 'se hel Interment i day. A BUSH, WILLIAM C Priday. Aug These Government funerals. Chambers’ let the public know. the United States Funeral. a ract 1 ple BAyiiw. ANa el Contracts are for fine, complete it g x policy is and always has been to Every one is entitled to know that Government has chosen a Good ag0. AF Record Temperatures This Vear, yesterday. is survived by icvle A. Baltzell, of his widow, Marianna. Mrs. Think it over and think why Chambers was chosen W. W. Chambers will give the finest service possible. 'gn United States Government Puneral is a cheap funefal It is a good funeral . . . by Chambers, one ¢ the largest undertakers in e world. In case of death callé AREEN TALTAVULL | Meado CARTWRIGHT. EDBERT I N o FUNERAL RITES HELD FOR MRS. J. P. TARVIN Funeral serv Covington, Pryor Tarvin, at hei« home | atter a short | Mrs. Tarvin, widow of Judge Tarvin Covington, w at one time vice president of the United Daughters of the Confederacy Kentucky. Just ekl e ; before her death, she had completed e T SR e ) 2 1068 %0 | a genealogy of the Pryor, Belt and e, e Young families of Kentucky Greene County’s pioneer families and LA, JOIN . Bell ol Abaistan sl i Datuliss rr to Joseph B. Keenan, Assistant Attor- A denied all ney General The Finest FUNERAL SERVICE Regardle of the amouft you ean aford to speng you get the best in eviry W WARSEN TALTAVULL « Funeral Service Yead of expe ence nave taught us how to gzovide comfort and convenience s8d to d5'50 in a courteous understanding manner that fulfills every need %Lnder personal management of F"mnmsJ Collins. . WARREN Yaih & Onasta’ ste. K 'hore COlumbia 0432 TALTAVULL - sy Office FUNERAL HOME rdate, B17 Eleventh fit. S.E. Phone 3619 14th St. NW. Greenwood 1221 « Col. 0464 il . 3iggan The Sun and Moon. e s s were held yesterday 4 Ky. for Mrs. James 77, who died Thursday | 1954 Columbia road, illness today toda 7 CONNER, ALBERT N day. August 6, 19 1124 NER._beloved F. Cen Forman H avé ne Eers ou Monday P s tiver and MYERS e IYER CURTIE. JOHN 8, 19 a Va HERBERT _ "R R and ¢ tomobile one-half hour a MORAN. WILLIAM Precipjtation. hly precipitation = current of the Largest Undertakers in the World ANNA R es JA of one of Bervie home. Au her Octobe No Decembe 5 Weather in \1r|nuv Cities, of Sabnrban Home 918 Cleveland Ave. DORSEY i Riverdale. Md fer ot 1 in French Legion. 1ce 3 831 attalions ich included »m FINLEY. nationalities; one Polish, ian and one Spanis NANNIE LEF SINCE (1} FLOWERS OUPONT CIRCLE ATlantie 6700 0's Legion was d of four THOMAS N0.7000 | NIA. MOY Draths. WALLACE, E Moines. Towa O'BRYANT, WILLIAM rnmrn Tus 80 ANNTE year Understanding Old in_understanding. en- riched by the experience of four generations yet young’ in_ideas. for today we have the most modern n e facilities avail- enable us to cope every type of burial problem Complete Funerals, $100 Up Air Conditioned Lincoln Lincoln 0168 i PERRY. WILLIAM WILLIAMS, THOMAS Saturday of Maggie a THOMAS late Iate ices Louis: Mar M. M FLETCHER. LEMUFL 0 Rela- n- Pa In Memoriam. ALICE FLETCHER. LEMUFL RIDNEY. ANNTF ORVILLF GOVER MAUDE. 1y .A\'FV who oda her. ALICE . 301 East Copitol St. Ambuiance Torvice SCHOEFFEL. ALICE Br Mabe GIRARD JENKS he 4 e s ay ady Lo i b U passed awar. B2, HER DEVOTED CHILDREN. * dx EDWARD T. 1 o % m\- ARD, HARNEY FLETCHER. | ORVILLY Old G A and mind. left _behind - SEYMORE. LEUGINA AND CHILDREN. * For information that is honest, ! . e | Reference that is real 2 four . : Just ask your neighbor about FUNERAL DESIGNS : ; : = FI'OZIeI’ S The Funeral Home of Deal | GFO" (F:’ "§H§‘” 2 AT o e ol o pier Sujiseice qualiyiand revermosin : A The Climb to the Top ‘ MODERATE PRICES. PHON conducting beautiful funerals un- a | To make each Deal “perfect funeral” the NAT. 0108 Open Evenings SWENARTON excelled anywhere. ‘ P oo TUL G B overy detall. Undertakers for ool example of beauty and dignity which others now follow it has taken 26 ored U. 8. War Veterans. Als GUDE BROS. CO. R years of experience and re- - oo for the C. C. C. Camp N. P. 11, i | flort. Th ward = = — Company 1360. Washington, D. C. entless effor e re BURTON'S ,.w.”.’,‘:.l"m.a of Deal success has come Beautiful Funeral Sprays through revolutionizing AT. 7171 ad former methods, by in-| creasing service and lower- FUNERAL DIRECTORS. ing costs at the same time. jostph F. Birch’s Sons HAYCOCE. Manager $75 Phone We Be’ 1423034 M St N.W. The DEAL price for a §150 Funeral JOSEPH CHARLES. o Complete in JOSEPH belo Floral Pieces . Nationa) 4278 No Deserving Case Turned Away Parlors and Chapels Free Call NOrth 7795.7796 389 R. I. Ave. N.W. ENINGS NDAYS TAYLOR. MAJ CLAUDE ATA0 ur ; Another artistic creation by Mexico’s famous sculptor—8enor Dioniclo Rodriquez. Outstanding among his numerous contributions to the beauty of Cedar Hill Cemetery are the California Red Wood tree and Annie Laurie Wishing Chair. The new Japanese Bridge in- spired by an ancient masterpiece in a temple garden, joins lovely willow isle to the mainland. Frank Geier’s Sons Co. 12 Seventh St N W 2 € loders, Chavel ra National2473 .\ opipy V. L. SPEARE (0. Nefther the successor ey, 1008 H St. N. W J. W}lham Lee’s Sons Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Crematorium 4th #nd Mass. Ave NE CEMETERY John T. Rhines & Co. Boo 3d st s.w. MEt. 4220 LEADING COLORED FUNERAL DIRECTORS Funerals to Fit the Smallest Income JUSTICE JOSIAH Drive .directly out Pennsylvania Ave- nue S.E....Con- cert from Mauso- leum Tower every Sunday, 3 to § p.m, Senor Rodriquez achieves his natural wood effects with steel and concrete—symbols of permanence. (edar Hill WASHINGTON'S MOST BEAl'fiFI'L CEMETERY Lincoin 52( LOTS VAUX. GILBERT one or tion. phone Reasor numbe Box 100-K 3 Phone Lincoln 8200 LAl Y o}y\h Ce voutd in Yesson By TWO CHOICE LOT T tarest ves and friends Toterment Oak: Hil Comeiery: b Complete Yunerals From $75 to $500 and up X PRIVATE AMBULANCE SERVICE [

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