Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DERWOOD MILL DERWOOD, MD. 0 e o peices oaour Bishe wuality feeds Terms, Cash at the Mill Layi .00 MASH 20%.--. $2 Large Scratch___ $1'85 D:'l;::;u" wheat) $1 '65 (In 12-1b. Sacks) Located Between Rochville and Gaithersburg Phone—Gaithersburg 19-F-13 Don’t Neglect Minor Throat Irritation Don't take chances. Rub on soothing, Tarming Musterole. Reliel generally fol- 5. Musterole gets such marvelous results because it's NOT just & salve. It's & ter-irritant”—easing, warming, stim- ulating and penetrating—helpful in’ draw- ing out local congestion and pain. Used by millions for 30 years. Recom- mended by many doctors and nurses. All druggists’. In three strengths: Regular Strength,” Children’s (mild) and Extra ®trong. Avproved by Good Housekeeping. MUSTEROLE oras, M ments, eto, Lewest Rates Possible Unredesmed for Sale Take Any Bus Leaving 11th and Pa. Ave. Established 1090 RNING’S ‘»H’o”. Washingten Airport The Perfect Mechanical Laundry Maid Model A5 Compare These Features COLOR—White with black bands. TUB—15-gal. c ity. 3 COATS porcelei AGITATOR—One-piece cast aluminum, 'WRINGER—Mullins large bar. Release end lever reset. Adjustable pressure. Equipped With the Famous Norge Whirlator Transmission SEE_YOUR POOLING OF BRAINS ADVISED BY WELLS Washington Forum Audience Told Worid Salvation Lies in Knowledge. Creation of a great “world encyclo- pedia” or a universal brain organiza« tion is necessary if the world is to escape social dissolution and the possi- ble decay and extinction of the human species, H. G. Wells, world famous British author-philosopher, told a ca- pacity audience in Constitution Hall last night. “I glo not know any other way out for mankind than a vast, liberal reorgani- zation of our intellectual life,” Mr. Wells declared, addressing the first of & series of meetings of the Washington Forum. By the term “world encyclopedia,” Mr. Wells said, he did not mean pri~ marily a book or collection of books 50 much as a permanent, world-wide or- ganization which would keep in con=- stant contact with intellectual and sci- entific developments in every part of the world and which would collect, ar- range, digest and disseminate knowl- edge for the use of mankind. Such an organization would co-ordi- nate human thought and would create a common background of knowledge for the whole species. Its fund of or- ganized knowledge eventually would become the basis for a unified world education, literature and thought. Two-Fold Duties. The world encyclopedia, he ex- plained, would have to bé a “double based organization, collecting and di- gesting knowledge on the one hand and disseminating and publishing it on the other.” He predicted that in the not far distant future there will be available to students in every part of the world great, permanent libraries, recorded upon microfilm, of every document, book, paper, picture, map or diagram possessing permanent value. The Brit- ish Museum now is making great prog- ress in the recording of printed records on photographic film of microscopic size, he explained, and similar activi- ties are under way in other parts of the world. Requires “Liberal Editing.” He said he realized there would be need for some condensation and edit- ing of knowledge before it can be made useful. He said that it would be in- dispensable to make certain that such editing would be “what is called liberal”; that jealous guard would be maintained against any trace of propa- ganda or of nationalism, sectarianism or sectionalism. He said the question most frequently asked him during his American tour is whether, in case there should be another World War, the United States should take part. “I would not ask that a single American should shoulder a rifle for the British Empire or any other country as it exists today,” Mr. Wells said. “I think that instead of becom- ing involved in any conflict, the United States should take advantage of its opportunity to work on the still un- solved problems of civilization. So en- gaged, it would be justified in staying aloof as long as possible from the world confusion.” ‘War Lessons Unlearned. The time for an intellectual awaken- ing is ripe, Mr. Wells said, adding that the world failed to heed the lessons of the World War; the Nations all settled down within their national boundaries to enjoy all the good things they could wrest from the world; the threat of war looms daily “uglier and more menacing.” Consciousness of this menace in the mind of the world becomes constantly more apparent and is evidenced by the increasing number of proposals, such as the League of Nations, international arbitration, courts of international Justice and world socialism, which are advanced “to prevent men from de- stroying themselves.” There are many and varied experi- ments in progress, he said, pointing out that “Communism and Fascism have experimented with the seizure of power, but have produced no solution and can make no use of the power they have seized except to plunder and destroy.” May Avoid Disaster. Mr. Wells said he does not believe that world disaster is unavoidable. There is, he explained, a tendency to exaggerate “the staying powers of the warring nationalities.” He described NORGE DEALER LONG, LONG TRAIL TO FLORIDA, SOUTHERN STATES SPECIAL Daily to the Carolinas, Georgia, and to both coasts of Florida. Reclining- ::‘ mc:efiwl his on to Stizem.- and Miami. Sleeping, Lounge, and Dining Cars. Lv. Washington 1:50 PM. NEW YORK-FLORIDA LIMITED Daily to the Carolinas, Georgia, and to both coasts of Florida. Reclining- gt conchen, New York to Miami. WakingwotAl AN =0 EAST COAST ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL First trip December 9th One night out to W. Palm Beach and Miami. All Pullman—Club, Lounge, Sleeping, Dining Cars. NO h Lv. Washington 520 PM. o WEST COAST ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL First trip Decomber 9th One night out to Jacksonville, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Sarasota, Boannsz. Reclining-seat coaches, Washington to St. Petersburg. Sleeping, Lounge, Din- ing Cars. Lv. Washington 6:10 PM. this as “an age of confusion and an Avoid the hazards and congestion of the highways, and the long, tire- some, dangerous drive. Travel in safety and comfort via Seaboard. Ticket your automobile at low cost. Very low rail fares. For information and reservations, consult: Edward Plack, A.G.P.A, 714 14th St., N. W., Washingtos, D. C. Tel. National 0637-38. For Hunting and Fishing Information, write: Fishing Bureau, Pennsyle vania Station, New York. AIR LINE RAILWAY FOUR COMPLETELY AIR-CONDITIONED TRAINS DAILY, THE YEAR ROUND, TO THE SOUTH «=aseuring Comfort when traveling in the cold North and the warm South b THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, age of gangster opportunity.” Old and frightened nations and new and ob- streperous nations add to the con- fusion, with “shouts and screams of deflance.” He deplored suppression of thought in Germany, Italy and Russia, saying that “thought, like gunpowder, may be all the more violent for being confined and concentration camps may prove to be the austere training grounds of the new freedom.” In the middle of the last century, he said, all Europe thought the United States must break up into groups of warring States. This calamity was prevented by the railroad, the tele- graph' and the printing press. As they provided better communications, they became the binding forces which prevented dissolution of the United States. The same forces must bind the world states together, he said. There now is a movement for world control of aviation, he said. The threat of bombardment of helpless civil populations “is intolerable to the human mind,” he explained. “But world air control, we must realize, depends upon some world fed- eral government,” he said. “We are awakening to the knowledge also that a common federal control of world resources is the only guarantee of world peace.” Sees Education Lag. ‘The world's colleges, universities and educational systems, Mr. Wells said, have fallen behind human progress. “We are living in the 20th century, but our universities are not halfway out of the 15th century,” he said. “Education, for all practical purposes, is in the horse-and-carriage stage. The newest of our universities is just an- other carriage in which we take a short ride and get out.” “We must bring our universities and research organizations into a unified whole, linked with one another, and with the general intelligence of man- kind,” he said. The speaker was introduced by Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of George ‘Washington University. Despite the ordeal of a lecture tour which might wear out a younger man, Mr. Wells, now 71 years old, spoke strongly and clearly. At the close of his lecture he answered scores of writ- ten questions from members of his audience, but explained that he had “nothing to say about the Spanish war, or what I think of Franco, or even of the Duke of Windsor.” Ever watch the flames lick a frying. pan of fresh caught fish; hear the singing of a perking coffee pot? What flavor is packed into each mouthful of that fresh-from-the-stream fish! That’s real freshness—the same fresh- ness you get in A&P Coffee! Mouth- “ filling flavor; aroma that on to taste again! There’s , Planation of fragrance and flavor like that—the very finest’ coffees grown. And there’s one outstanding reason for the startling freshness of A&P $200,000 FORGERY PLOT AGAINST BANKS CHARGED 1One Arrested—Switching- of Sig- natures on Dormant Accounts Disclosed. By the Assoclatea Press. NEW YORK, Nov. 4—District At- torney Willlam Geoghan of Brooklyn said last night several New York banks had been robbed of $200,000 through withdrawals on forged sig- natures from dormant accounts. He said one suspect had been taken into custody in Concord, N. H, and indicated there were several other persons involved. Through dishonest bank clerks, Mr. Geoghan said, swindlers took ' from bank files the record cards on dor- mant accounts and replaced them with new cards bearing forged signa- tures. Then they copied the account rec- ords of deposits and withdrawals in new bankbooks and, since their signa- tures checked with those in the bank records, passed themselves off as the real depositors, the district attorney said. All but a féw dollars were with- drawn from each account, he added. o Wheels Grind Rails Down. Brazil's Central Railway must put in new rails because the steel in the wheels of the new electrified trains are much harder than the old’ rails and are shaving and grinding them down. V% cond: various alkalies, tant factories, it. It comes to tempts you only one ex- others are Red only in flavor. A&P COF D From @ MiDICAL JOURNAL: “The researches (of these doctors) led them 0 believe that colds result from n. To overcome this, they prescribe ARAB LEADER BANISHED El Fassi, Alleged Plotter, Exiled by France From Morocco. PARIS, Nov. 4 (#).—The French government yesterday ordered Allal El1 Fassi, chief of the Arab nationalist movement, banjshed from Morocco for leading an alleged revolutionary plot. El Fassi and three other Moslem leaders were arrested at Fez, French Morocco, on October 25, twc days after a riot of 1,000 Arabs at Khe- misset. P Albert Sarraut, French minister of state, ordered El Fassi taken to Libreville, French Equatorial Africa. —_— Roving Statue to Rest. After many vicissitudes and wan- derings in Dublin, Irish Free State, the equestrain statue of King George I is to find sanctuary on English soil. The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, in Birmingham, has agreed to provide for iv and to give Dublin a “work of art of similar value.” The statue has lain on the tennis court in the back garden of the Mansion House since 1928. It was first erected on Essex Bridge, in Dublin, in 1722 to commemorate the visit of George I. In 1753 it was moved to the front of the Mansion House, then _dumped in the garden during building alterations. Dublin’s two other equestrian statues of kings were blown up years ago. BECAUSE — . BUILDING UP YOUR ALKALINE RESERVE *HELPS YOU 1O RESIST COLDS Coffee. It is always freshly ground. Unlike many other coffees, which are ground weeks in advance at dis- A&P Coffee is not ground until the very minute you buy you with all its fine, fresh flavor sealed in the bean. Delicious Eight 0’Clock is one of A&P’s three distinctive blends. The Circle and Bokar. Each is of the finest quality—they differ Buy a pound today! FEE SERVICE *This low price for the world’s finest coffee is possible only because A&P buys, ships, blends, roasts and sells direct to you for such a small profit. 'FRESH BRINDING 16 THE SECRET OF A CUP OF GOOD COFFEE Iy A 4 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1937. i 1331 F Street, 1010 F Street, 1331 F Street, N.W. Jerony Fermoty CANDIES MAY NOW BE OBTAINED IN WASHINGTON N.W. N.W. For the convenience of candy lovers in Washington, two Fanny Farmer candy shops have been opened. Fanny Farmer candies are made fresh every day from the finest foods the world provides, blended by experts in the art of home cooking. Fanny Farmer extends a cordial invitation to call at these, your new stores. Try a box of these famous candies today. 1 pound box 60¢ 2 pound box $1.10 3 pound box $1.50 1010 F Street, N. W. / £