ROOSEVELTDELAYSi
INSPECTION TRIP
Rain Causes Him to Spend
Day at Farm—Works
on rax Return,
jr. kussull young,
htaff Correspondent ol The Star.
WARM SPRINGS, Ga., March 15.—
After a dismal, rainy Sunday, made
all the more so because he was forced
to spend most of his day laboring
over his Income tax to get it into the
mail before the deadline, President
Roosevelt today slept late, and then
enjoyed an hour or so in the glass
covered swimming pool at the Warm
Springs Foundation before going to
his large farm on the slopes of Pine
Mountain to spend the remainder of
the day.
Mr. Roosevelt had planned to motor
over Pine Mountain today to inspect
the Pine Mountain Resettlement proj
ect, and to go from there to Chipley,
about 10 miles distant, to inspect a
C. C. C. camp. The rain of yesterday,
■which continued throughout the night,
made the dirt roads in this section
soft and dangerously slippery for
motoring. Moreover, there was a
wintry chill in the air and the Presi
dent thought it w'ould be unwise to
have the inhabitants of the valley
resettlement stand on the soggy
ground, out in the cold air during his
inspection trip. However, he will
make this journey to the valley re
settlement project before he returns
to Washington.
President Roosevelt did not leave
his little cottage home yesterday. It
was a dreary, gloomy Sunday for him.
First of all, the skies were overcast
and there were intermittent rains.
Within the seclusion of the little cot
tage the President was struggling
throughout the greater part of the
day with his income tax returns.
This was the first time in the four
years that he has been President that
Mr. Roosevelt has made out his in
come tax returns himself. He makes
no secret of the fact that he is not
so good at figures, and according to
reports of his struggles yesterday, it is
doubtful if he mil ever try doing it
again by himself. The President has
been assisted in previous years while
occupying the White House by ex
perts from the executive oflice and
, the Treasury Department, but when
approached on the subject a few days
before leaving Washington for his
Warm Springs vacation, the President,
who was absorbed in other and more
important matters said there was no
hurry and that he would make it out
himself when he got to Warm Springs.
-•
AGREEMENT REACHED
British Will Open Gulf of Aden
Ports to Ethiopia.
ADDIS ABABA, March 15 UP).—The
Italian viceregal administration of
Ethiopia and authorities of British
Somaliland yesterday reached an
agreement opening the British ports
of Seila and Berbera, on the Gulf of
Aden, to goods destined for the Ethi
opian Empire.
Goods unloaded at either port will
be permitted passage along two cara
van routes to Diredawa, Ethiopian city
on the Djibouti-Addis Ababa railway,
and then will be shipped to the interior
by rail or by the flanking truck high
way now under construction to Addis
Ababa.
Authorities said the agreement
would relieve pressure on Djibouti,
French Somaliland, which is greatly
congested.
Families raising silkworms in Japan i
now number 1,857,664.
LOST.
BOSTON BULL. 2 years old; 1 white and 1
dark eye and ear; disappeared Friday.
Reward. Columbia 6746.
BRIEF CASE—Black leather, with name
Stanley H. Oettis: numerous personal pa
pers. Finder please return. Reward. 726
Bhoreham Bldg. Natl. H.'CJO._
CAT, Targe, wh.te, missing from 702 North
Carolina ave. ^.e., since Thursday night.
Reward___
DOG small, black and tan Welsh terrier;
Rollingwood district. Chevy Chase. Call
Emerson 7376.____
HANDBAG—Lost March 13 on 4:30 Penn
sylvania New York train arriving Union
Station 8:n5 p.m . brown leather, en
velope handbag. Contains important papers.
Reward. 3508 Prospect ave. West 0816.
POCKETBOOK—-Dark blue leather, in
Peoples Drug Store telephone booth, Chevy
Chase. Generous reward. Please call
Kensington 279-J. __
PURSE—Black (man's); containing $54,
Irish Sweepstake tickets, driver’s permit
and other receipts. Reward. Col. 6054-J.
PURSE, lady's, black suede, containing
glasses and personal effects, but no money,
on Good Hope rd.. between Waldorf ana
Washington. Reward. Miss Dorothy Wil
non, 1436 Fairmont st, n.w, Adams 6730. *
WRIST WATCH, lady’s, initials "eTr!” on
back. Reward. Call Decatur 0264-J. 16*
SPECIAL NOTICES.
I WILL NO-LONGEhTbe" RESPONSIBLE
for any debts except those contracted for
by myself on and after March 8. 1937.
JAMES Jt. HUNTER. 228 Hamilton st._n.w.«
THERE WILL BE A MEETING OF THE
STOCKHOLDERS OF THE CORCORAN
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA at its office. 604
11th St. N.W. on Monday. April 6. 1937.
for the purpose ot electing nine directors
for the ensuing year, and for such other
business as may properly come before the
meeting. Polls open at 12 M. and close at
1 PM.
___F. H RIDGWAY. Secretary._
A SPECIAL MEETING OF THE STOCK
holders of the Home Building Association
will be held at the office of the associa
tion. 2006 Pennsylvania ave. n.w.. Tues
day. March 23 1937. at 7:30 o'clock p.m..
to act on a proposed amendment to the
constitution relative to the examination of
titles to property offered as security for
loans, and to the duties of the attorney.
FRED L. VOGT. President.
JAMES M. WOODWARD. Secretary._
FULL AND PART LOADS WANTED' TO
all points within 2.000 miles. Return-load
rates Padded vans. National 1460. NATL.
DELIVERY ASSOC.. INC., 1317 N. Y. ave.
AUCTION SALE—FURNITURE OF EVERY
description co be sold for storage charges
cn Thursday. March 18, at 10 a.m.. in our
warehouse. 420 10th st. n.w.. first floor,
consisting oi living room suites, bed room
suites, dining suites, dressers, tables, chairs,
beds, linens dishes, books, rugs. etc.
UNITED STATES STORAGE_COMPANY.
DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART
loads to and fioir. Balto.. Phila and New
Yqjk. Freauent trips to other Eastern
cities. "Dependable Service Since 1896.’’
THE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE
CO. Phone Decatur 2500.__
THE BRICKFORD COMPANY IS NOW
under my individual proprietorship. JOHN
W. FORD. JR. __16*
I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR
any debts contracted by any one but my
self. HOWARD B. THOMAS, formerly of
Cedar st., Decatur Heights. Md. 10»
FIRE ESCAPES
DESIGNED AND INSTALLED TO
MEET DISTRICT REQUIREMENTS.
FRED S. GICHNER IRON WORKS,
1214 24th St._N.W._West 2420.
FIRE ESCAPES.
Our free engineering service will save you
money. National 3766. DUPONT IRON
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cats, hearses, twenty-live undertakers and
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i
Snow Removal Under Way
Workmen cleaning the steps of the Capitol, one of many
groups engaged in snow removal today. —Star Staff Photo.
£. P. KIMBALL, 53,
ORGANIST, ISDEAD
Mormon Missionary, Also
Secretary of D. C. Rotary,
Succumbs.
Edward P. Kimball, 53, organist
and missionary of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Sixteenth street and Columbia road, j
E. P. Kimball
died today at his
residence in the
church building
after a three
week illness.
For the last
two years, Mr.
Kimball has been
secretary of the
Washington Ro
tary Club. A na
tive of Salt Lake
City, Utah, Mr.
Kimball studied
music in Ger
many and New
York. Before
coming here in
1933 to become organist of the church,
he was head organist of the Mormon
Tabernacle in Salt Lake City, where
he had served 25 years.
He was away from the tabernacle
in 1931, serving as president of the
German-Austrian Mission of the
church, this work keeping him in
Austria and Germany.
Mr. Kimball is survived by his
Widow, Mrs. Hazel B. Kimball; a son,
Edward B. Kimball; a daughter, Mrs.
Marion K. Corbett, and two grand
children, all of this city; his father,
A. H. Kimball, Salt Lake City; two
sisters, Mrs. Fern K. Thomas, Salt
Lake City, and Mrs. Alta K. Ham
mer, San Francisco, and two brothers,
Clisbee and Ernest Kimball, both of
Salt Lake City.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. tomorrow' in the Sixteenth street
church. Samuel R. Carpenter, presi
dent of the Washington branch of
the church, will have charge of the
services. Burial will be in Salt Lake
City.
WHITE CHOCOLATES
Imported Cocoa to Be Avoided in
Germany.
Berlin confectionery lovers are tak
ing to white chocolates, introduced
recently to take the place of ordinary
chocolates to avoid the necessity of
importing cocoa.
The new substance, called “Galak,”
has appeared in bars and in the form
of bonbons with cream or chocolate
centers. It is advertised as “the white
tid-bit with full milk and sugar—very
nourishing and nice.”
-•
HIGH-FLYING DOG
—
Collie Is Veteran Flyer of 1,000
Hours.
CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. 04*).—
“Skipper,” a cross-breed collie and
St. Bernard dog, is a veteran flyer.
In three and a half years the dog,
belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Ace Corbin,
aviation enthusiasts, has spent 1,000
hours in the air. Corbin estimates
“Skipper” has traveled 100,000 miles
and says the animal likes nothing
better than sticking Its head out of the
cockpit window into the rushing wind.
EMPLOYER OUTTALKED
Constant Conversation Wins for
Sit-Down Strikers.
DES MOINES, Iowa iJP).—Seven
girl employes of a potato chip manu
facturing firm called a sit-down strike
in protest against the dismissal of one
of their co-workers, Edna Austin, be
cause she "talked too much.”
The seven strikers showed their dis
regard for Miss Austin’s offense by
carrying on a continuous conversa
tion with police sent to guard the
plant.
Two and a half hours later com
pany officials kgreed to reinstate Miss
Austin, and the strike ended.
PROFESSOR AT G. W.
TO GO TO SCOTLAND
Dr. Churchill to Exchange ’Posi
tions for Semester With
William Burn.
Dr. George Morton Churchill, pro
fessor of history at George Washington
University, will go to St. Andrews
University, Scotland, as exchange pro
Dr. Churchill.
lessor lor the nrst
semester of the
next academic
year, it was an
nounced today.
At the same time
Prof. William
Burn of St. An
drews will come
here in Dr.
Churchill's place.
Dr. Churchill
will sail from New
York in August,
and at the famous
Scottish institu
tion will lecture
on American.
Canadian and English history.
While teaching here Prof. Burn
plans to avail himself of material on
Caribbean history on which he is now
doing research.
Dr. Churchill has been a member of
the faculty at George Washington
since 1920, when he came from the
Library of Congress. His special field
is English constitutional history, and
he organized and is teaching one of
the first formal courses in Canadian
history ever given in an American
university.
He is married and has three chil
dren. The family home is at 505 River
road, Bethesda.
Fourteen schools are under con
struction in Tokio, Japan.
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CONVICTED SLAYER
Los Angeles Woman Begins
Fourth Day of Strange
Sleep.
E.v the Associated Press.
LOS ANGELES, March 15.—Helen
Wills Love, convicted husband slayer
who boasted "I can make myself die
whenever I want to,” began the fourth
day of a strange sleep today, insens
ible to pain or sound.
For a second time, her trance-like
condition prevented her from being
taken to court for sentence. Her
conviction carries a penalty of from
seven years to life in prison.
The 31-year-old woman was con
victed of slaying Harry A. Love last
New Year eve at a beach club, where
he went with his socially prominent
mother.
Since she slipped into the coma last
Thursday night, all organic functions
of her body have ceased, aside from
breathing and blood circulation.
“She is suffering from a catatonic
condition, a form of stupor brought
on by extreme mental strain,” said
Dr. Benjamin Blank, county jail phy
sician. He continued administering
intravenous solutions of glucose and
normal saline.
‘‘It is impossible to say just what
the outcome may be,” he added.
Ammonia fumes and pin pricks,
usually of avail in "sham” cases, have
failed to arouse her. Her brother,
Harry Wills, said she once before ex
perienced a similar coma without ap
parent ill effect. He said soft music
had aroused her on the nrevions nrra.
sion.
MOSElREICHGUT, 65,
LONG ILL, SUCCUMBS
Retired Merchant Was Active in
Jewish Welfare Work—Rites
Held Yesterday.
Moses Reichgut, 65, of 1300 Spring
road, retired merchant, who was active
in Jewish welfare work, died Saturday
in Garfield Hospital after a long
illness. Funeral services were held
yesterday in the Bernard Danzansky
chapel, 3501 Fourteenth street, with
Rabbi Harry Sil
verstone officiat
ing. Burial was in
the cemetery of
Tjfereth Israel
Congregation.
Mr. Reichgut,
formerly in the
men’s clothing
business in the
1500 block of Sev
enth street, re
tired about six
years ago. He was
one of the found
ers of the Hebrew
Home for the
Aged and served
Moses Reichrut.
its ucoouici ivi many jcaio, uc
also had served as executive secretary
of Tifereth Israel Congregation. Re
cently he had been executive secretary
of the Hebrew Free Loan Association.
Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Leah
Reichgut; three sons, Sylvan, Daniel
and Joseph Reichgut, and a daugh
ter, Mrs. Joseph Kronman, all of this
city; two sisters, Mrs. Bernard Dan
zansky, this city, and Mrs. Rebecca
Sodden, Baltimore, and two grand
children.
Cotton Mills Have Surplus.
Russia's cotton crop last season
of 2,132,000 tons was more than its
textile mills could handle.
NOUSE APPROVES
ART GALLERY BILL
Passes Measure Providing
for Construction of
Mellon Building.
Tive House by unanimous consent
today approved without debate the
Keller bill providing for construction
and maintenance of the National Gal
lery of Art, Andrew W. Mellon’s $65,
000,000 gift to the Nation.
The bill provides for construction
of the building at an estimated cost
of $10,000,000 on the Mall site be
tween Seventh and Fourth streets,
Constitution avenue and the north
Mall drive. This building would house
the Mellon art collection, representing
works of art acquired from the Her
mitage Gallery in Russia.
The original cost of the collection
was about $35,000,000 and its present
value is estimated at $50,000,000. The
bill also authorizes an endowment
fund of $5,000,000, primarily for com
pensation of the principal officers of
the gallery, including a director, as
sistant director, secretary and chief
curator.
This art gallery, to be placed under
the Smithsonian Institution and to
be maintained and administered by a
bureau in the Smithsonian, under di
rection of a board of trustees com
posed of the Chief Justice of the
United States, the Secretary of State,
Secretary of the Treasury, secretary of
the Smithsonian Institution and five
general trustees. These general
trustees are to be private citizens
chosen by the regents of the Smith
i sonian Institution, subject to the ap
proval of the donor.
Meanwhile Chairman Keller of the
House Committee on the Library in
troduced a bill similar to the one
introduced in the Senate last week
by Senator Walsh, Democrat, of Mas
sachusetts.
This authorizes the Smithsonian
Gallery of Art Building to be erected
in the Mall between Twelfth and
Fourteenth streets at an estimated
cost of $4,800,000 The new Smith
sonian Building would supplement the
National Gallery of Art, which is Mel
lon's gift, and would be devoted par
ticularly to contemporary art.
DYKSTRA ACCEPTS
WISCONSIN U. POST
Cincinnati Manager to Have
^?9r-to-Y»ar University
Contract st $15,000.
By the Associated Press.
CHICAGO. March 15.—Clarence A.
Dykstra, city manager of Cincinnati,
said yesterday he would accept the
presidency of the University of Wis
consin. John M. Callahan, chairman
of the university Executive Commit
tee, said at the same time Dykstra’s
appointment would be recommended
to the Board of Regents Thursday.
Dykstra conferred with Callahan
and the other members of the Execu
tive Committee—Harold Wilkie, presi
dent of the Board of Regents, and
Clough Gates—throughout the morn
ing at Dykstra’s quarters in a down
town hotel.
Callahan said Dykstra agreed to a
year-to-year contract at $15,000 an
nually, and signed a “memorandum”
to that effect.
I LAWYERS’ BRIEFS
RUSH PRINTING
BYRON S. ADAMS
The Ides of March
“Beware the Ides of March,” was the soothsayer’s warning
to Caesar. Our warning is—Don’t let your supply of
Marlow’* Famous Reading Anthracite
—run too low. March weather is variable and colds are
easily caught from sudden changes of temperatures. Call
NA. 0311 for prompt, dependable service.
79 Year* of Good Coal Service
Marlow Coal Co.
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is the ideal furnace regulator
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YANRII OR MNITIIA. 2 Jot «S<
Man Seeks Return
Of Fine Imposed at
Hearing in Hotel
Special Dispatch to The Star.
MARTINSBURG, W. Va.,
March 15.—Justice of the Peace
C. W. Shipper of Hedgesville dis
trict was named defendant in a
suit filed here yesterday by Lester
Secrist of the county, seeking re
turn of a. fine imposed upon him
by Shipper cn the ground that
the hearing was conducted at a
local hotel, which Is outside of
Shipper's district. The amount
of the fine is $15.60.
Secrlst also alleges in his suit
that the receipt given him by
Shipper upon payment of the fine
was not the standard one pre
scribed by the State.
FAMILY OF 7 KILLED
Automobile Misses Bridge, Goes
Into River.
SHIOCTON, Wis., March 15 (/P).—
A family of seven perished when an
automobile missed a bridge and
crashed through the ice of the Wolf
River last night.
The victims were Clarence Nichols,
35, Oshkosh, automobile parts dealer;
his wife, Cora, 32, and their children,
Gilbert, 9; Elmer, 7; Silby, 5; Joan, 3,
and Melvin, 10 months.
Authorities said they were unable
to determine the cause of the acci
dent. A witness traveling behind the
Nichols car said it was moving slowly.
-•
JAIL KEY USED 24 YEARS
Sheriff, Back in Office, Employs
It Again.
GALENA, Mo. (/P).—Sheriff I. H.
Coin, who returned to office in Janu
ary after a "vacation" of more than
20 years, again is using a key that he
made for the jail door 24 years ago.
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SESSION ISOLOSED
BV SECRETARIES
School Group Association
Hears Sir Willmott Lewis
and Senator Lee.
Aoout 200 members of the National
Association of School Secretaries, con
cluding a two-day convention yester
day at the Mayflower Hotel, heard
talks by several Washingtonians prom
inent in education and allied fields and
heartily backed their national presi
dent, Miss Louise H. Henderson of,
Philadelphia, who asked substantial
salary raises for secretaries and their
inclusion with teachers in retirement
laws.
Miss Henderson’s request for a
higher professional status and im
proved working conditions for secre
taries was favored in talks by two guest
speakers, Sir Willmott Lewis, Wash
ington correspondent of the London
Times, and Senator Lee of Oklahoma.
Sir Willmott described the move
ment toward group action as “one of
the mo6t important trends of modern
times,” but warned against "some re
formists who would assure us freedom
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and then proceed by taking away
our personal liberties.”
“It Is commonly felt, however,” he
said, “that without security there can
not be any freedom.”
Other speakers at the luncheon
meeting included Dr. Frank W. Ballou,
superintendent of schools, and Mrs.
Henry Grattan Doyle, president of th*
Washington Board of Educacion.
-—•-——
Course in Lip Reading.
Oklahoma A. and M. College ha3
established courses in lip reading to
enable persons v;ith impaired hearing
to understand what is said in classes.
SEE LS
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