Newspaper Page Text
Boy of 10 Killed by Cai While Returning From Visit With His Father A 10-year-old boy was run ovei and fatally injured here yester day. Victim of the accident, at Ala bama avenue and Frederick place S.E., was Lewis Scott, jr., colored, of 1839 Frederick place. The youngster had returned from his first day of classes at Bimey School to visit with his father, as he did every Monday. Lewis, jr., lives with his mother and grown sister Odessa, while Mr. Lewis .lives at Twelfth and N streets N.W. Accompanying his father to a bus stop, young Lewis then dashed across the street and was struck down by a car. Within seconds Police Pvt. Rob in H. Johnson of No. 11 precinct and Pvt, Edwin F. Goodall of No. 14 were on the scene in a police wagon. They charged Mrs. Julian B. Cown, 1353 Congress street S.E., driver of the car, with negligent homicide. She said she “never had a chance to avoid the boy. He ran right in front of me.’’ Woman Dies of Injuries Received in Aug. 31 Collision A 60 - year -old Washington woman died Sunday of injuries received in a two-car collision August 31 on Route 301 in King George County. Mrs. Camelia Lavezzo of 3023 Fifteenth street N.W., died in Mary Washington Hospital, Fred ericksburg. She was a passenger in a car headed toward Colonial Beach. Bom in Italy, Mrs. Lavezzo had lived in the District for about 40 years. She is survived by three daugh ters, Mrs. Louise Ghelmtni, 621 Galveston street S.E.; Miss An gelia Lavezzo and Mrs. Madeline Boyle, both of the Fifteenth street address; a son, Joseph Lavezzo, of Boston, and a sister, Mrs. Sofie Lavezzo, 3000 M Street N.W., and a brother, John Molinari, Union Cty, N. J. District Cab Driver Killed In Crash Near Richmond RICHMOND, Va„ Sept. 16 UP).— A Washington taxicab driver was killed and four other persons were injured in an accident on No. 1 highway 5 miles south of here yesterday. Killed was John William Banton, 32, colored, who formerly lived at 30 Bryant street N.W. He moved from that address about a month ago, and his present resi dence was not known there. D. C. Man Injured as Car Plunges Into Ravine ALTAVISTA, Va., Sept. 16 UP).— Paul A. Norton, 35, of Washing ton. was injured critically yester day when his car skidded on a wet highway and plunged into a deep ; ravine. The accident occurred on Route 29 about six miles south of here. Singer Pearl Bailey Beaten in Nightclub By the Associated Press FORT LEE, N. J., Sept. 16. Pearl Bailey, Negro singing come dienne, was beaten early yester day by an unidentified man as she was leaving Bill Miller’s Riviera, a swank night spot here. Nathan Allyn, acting Bergen County detective chief, quoted the entertainer as saying that the | man approached her in the lobby! of the night club, cursed at her.] grabbed her by the throat and beat her. Miss Bailey broke away but her ; assailant chased her to behind; the club’s stage where he kicked her and knocked her down. Others who were leaving the night spot came to her aid, but the man who beat Miss Bailey got away, Mr. Allyn said. Several patrons took part in the tussle, one of them going to the aid of the talented singer’s alleged as sailant, the acting chief added. The beating suffered by Miss Bailey forced her to cancel a week’s engagement, which was to have started yesterday at a Provi dence (R. I.) club, her .personal manager and attorney, Chauncey Olman, said in New York last night. Mr. Olman said Miss Bailey re ceived a possible concussion, bruises and cuts arid was under medical care at her home. She had gone to the night club to hear Frank Sinatra, a friend of hers, who is playing an engage ment there. Argentina Plans Autos A small sedan, a station wagon and a pick-up truck will be among the first motor vehicles to be turned out by Argentina’s infant automobile industry. EDUCATIONAL. "s I JARVIS SCHOOL BUREAU FREE Advisory Service Privet. School*—Simmer Came* S Dupont Circle AD. 6111 Either Yeu Make Good Or We Do Inquire about the 40th ANNIVERSARY Enrollment Plan. SAVE by reserving your seat now for the next Fall class. Date Cerncrle Count* 20S Carnecle Bid*. 14th A Penn*. At*. N.W. Washlnrton. D. C. DI. 4166 riease send doth AmUrarmry literature. S3 r lu. s. s. IWaff oh '\ <r * . VBlagoveshchensk 'y't ; «... j hAjOwbdtoyAj :huma4 ' t- Jr Ussuri R jfjf ’‘'' J '■ V HARBIN^3v -,X^ > t f .;.- ingchun/* ; A *Jchina GffSl Jt ;.' A# Jf/'c 0 y IfXMr fyA t-sis '■•O'VOSTOK S**' f LINE] Japan IRtN JLV • F KOREA ° Sco “‘ no japan fcJWr a J CHANGES RESULT FROM PARLEY—The Soviet Union and s China announced agreement in Moseow to prolong Russia’s lease * on Port Arthur in Manchuria until the two countries sign peace 3 1 treaties with Japan. They also agreed Russia would turn over to China fuU administration of the Changchun Railway in Manchuria by the end of this year. The railway runs eastward J across Manchuria from Manchouli to Snlfenho and southerly r | from Harbin to Dairen. The agreement ended top-level talks j! begun in Moscow August 17. ! Russians to Retain Port Arthur as Result Os Moscow Parley > By the Associated Press 1 MOSCOW. Sept. 16.—The Soviet 1 Union announced today that it is | handing back control of Man churia’s vital Changchun Railway to Communist China this year, but . that Russia will continue to use > the Manchurian naval base of Port ! Arthur—l9o miles west of Korea— until Japan signs a peace treaty : with the Communists. | The new agreement, announced ■ here by the Soviet news agency | Tass, came at the conclusion of ; top-level Soviet - Chinese talks 1 which have been going on here ’ since August 17. The Tass announcement in cluded four important points: 1. The new agreement on Port Arthur, which was occupied by . Soviet forces at the end of World . War n. Under the 30-year Rus . sian-Chinese treaty of friendship ; signed in Moscow on February 14, ii 1950, the Soviets agreed to get out of Port Arthur by the end of 1952. , In a note published today Red China’s Premier and Foreign Minister Chou En-lai asked the Soviets to stay because in the ab sence of the Japanese peace treaty with the Communist powers, “con ditions have arisen dangerous for peace and favorable for a reitera tion of Japanese aggression.” Economic Questions Discussed. 2. A communique said that “im portant political and economic questions concerning the rela tions” between the two countries were discussed. Under the 1950 pact Russia granted China S3OO million in credits toward the pur chase of materials and equipment from the Soviet Union. Western i observers had suggested that China probably was asking for additional aid because of her ex penses in the Korean war. I 3. Return of the Changchun 'railway by the end of 1952, as provided in the 1950 agreement. A separate communique said the railway would be returned to full Chinese administration by the end of this year, without any Russian payment of compensation for its use. A mixed Soviet-Chinese commission will handle details of the handover. 4. The absence of any reference to the port and rail center of Dairen, 25 miles east of Port Arthur. The 1950 treaty provided that the future of this city (and presumably of Russia’s rights there) would be considered after the signing of a Japanese peace treaty. The lack of any mention of Dairen apparently means the two nations are standing pat on this understanding. The city. 1 Spring Valley Store 49th end Mossochusett* Ave. N.W. OPEN NIGHTS r" except Saturday I 4 big floors of lifetime furniture —sensibly priced MafrfiCo. ■ ■ sumnwa* Smx* S* N.W. iMtaaau O 4 ( ■HBmOBDDa 40th A Aou. I>IM Nerth-.1l New Claims on U. S. Resources Indicated In Brookings Survey New commitments of American t resources may be necessary to 3 meet problems for the free world in the Far East and the Middle ' East, according to the sixth an -7 nual survey of United States for b eign policy by the Brookings a I Institution. t The survey. Just released, re . ports that situations of strength r have been built up in some im portant areas of American in j terest. But it adds that the very r success of such efforts has raised f new problems. 5 It notes three important gains: s (1) The free world has been knit more closely together into a work . ing alliance; (2) American in dustrial capacity and military ; power have increased, and (3) the r governmental machinery for con l ducting foreign affairs has been . improved. i But it points out that “serious , weaknesses in the position of the ; free world have developed in the . Far East and in the Middle East.” I “The need looms ahead,” the i report adds, “for possible new > commitments on the part of the United States, including possible additional claims on American re sources.” Kenneth Royall to Vote For Gen. Eisenhower By th* Associated Brass GREENSBORO. N. C., Sept. 16. —Kenneth Royall, former Secre | tary of the Army, said last night he intended to vote for Gen. 1 Eisenhower for President. Mr. Royall, Secretary of War from July, 1947, until April, 1949. said he had never before voted foi a Republican. Mr. Royall, a na tive of Goldsboro, N. C., was in terviewed as he took a recess from a legal conference here that brought him from his New York home. meanwhile, has been under Chi nese administration. The communique said the ne gotiations had been conducted by Prime Minister Stalin, Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky and Trade Minister P. N. Kumykin for the Soviets. The Changchun railway is the shortest rail route from central; Siberia to the Russian port of Vladivostok. It also extends south to Dairen and Port Arthur. Stalin gave a great banquet in the Kremlin last night to cele brate the end of the talks, the first such entertainment since his 1950 banquet in honor of Chinese Communist Leader Mao Tze-tung. 350 Police and G-Men Comb Scranton Area For Escaped Convicts By th* Associated Brass i SCRANTON, Pa., Sept. 16.—A force of 350 police and Federal I agents guarded all highways in this coal mining region today and an alerted citizenry kept watch for three “desperate and vicious” escaped convicts. Traffic in and out of Scranton, in Northeastern Pennsylvania, came under the scrutiny of State police and FBI agents at dozens of roadblocks. The three fugitive bank robbers, reported seen in this area yester day, escaped from a Federal pen itentiary at Lewisburg, Pa., a week ago. Scranton’s normal complement of four FBI agents was bolstered by a crew of 21 additional G-men 1 from Philadelphia and other cities. : Hundreds of local and State police participated in the hunt. Radio Screen Set Up. The FBI set up a command post! in the Federal Building and in stalled a special short wave radio for ready contact with agents and police throughout the Lackawanna Valley. The search has become one of the greatest manhunts in Penn-i sylvania’s history. The hunted men are Joseph Nolen, 26. and his brother, Bal lard, 22, both of Harlan County, Ky., and Elmer Schuer, 21, of Chicago. They were serving longj terms at Lewisburg, 75 miles from here, for bank robbery. Seen in Two Restaurants. The latest leads, shifting the manhunt to Scranton, placed the men in two restaurants, three miles apart. In both places the suspected men had ordered food, then left before they ate it. There hasn’t been a positive identification of the trio since Friday morning when, wielding shotguns, they held up a diner at Hamburg, near Reading, after spending the previous day and; part of the night in a suburban Philadelphia home. They kept the 1 family hostages but none was harmed. Although police say the men may have separated to avoid de tection, most telephoned tips have two or three of the fugitives to gether. Sugar Mill Automatic La Victoria, Venezuela, has a new, completely automatic sugar mill costing $5 million andi equipped with United States-pro-, duced machinery. I I/I mJ RESTAURANT j Rlrnrh Dakad Oyster*—. mm 3 >*•*»•» si.xß HI A TRUE GOURMET TREAT ROCK CORNISH mm game hen fm{ “WITH WILD RICE AND slpk ILACK CHERRY SAUCr FROG'S LEGS PROVENCALE %*A 3 ’50 (F LUNCHEON FROM 1.75 DINNER (ENTREES) FROM 2 50 COCKTAILS *£ ion h st. n.w. w National 9714 FStt j Free Parking j After t PM. *^jf^** EDUCATIONAL. EDUCATIONAL. EDUCATION** I GEORGETOHN UNIVERSITY UN SCHOOL I Announces the Second Year of the 1 GEORGETOWN CONTINUING LEGAL EDUCATION INSTITUTE I (OPEN TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE BAR) I SEPTEMBER 29, 1952 to JANUARY 16, 1953 1 I TRIAL PREPARATION STRATEGY AND TECHNIQUE: 2 Hours, Tuesday, 5:45 to 7:30 P.M. Professor Bolitha J. Lows, LLB., LL.M., LL.D., Chief HR Judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia. H I CORPORATE TAX LAW: 2 Hours, Monday, 5:45 to 7:30 P.M. Professor Albert E. Arent, A.8., LL.B., Partner, Berge, H Fox, Arent & Layne, Washington, D. C. H I FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS LAW: 2 Hours Wednndoy 5:45 to 730 P.M. Professor Williom J. Dempsey, 8.5., M.A,, Lt_6„ ■ Partner, Dempsey & Koplovitz, Washington, D. C. . 11 LABOR LAW: 2 Hours, Thursday, 5:45 to 7:30 P. M. Professor Walter Jaeger, 8.A., M.S., Ph.D., LLB., J.D H TRADE REGULATIONS: NON-GOVERNMENTAL'RIGHTS I 1 AND REMEDIES: 2 Hours, Thursday, 5:45 to 7:30 P.M. Professor Milton V. Freeman, A.8., LL.B., Partner, H Arnold, Fortas & Porter, Washington, D. C I FEDERAL JURISDICTION AND PARTIES: 2 Hours, Friday, 5:45 to 7:30 P.M. Professor William J. Hughes, A.8., LL.B , LLM I BASIC LEGAL ACCOUNTING: « ur *',. Frida^,s^ s 10 7:30 PM - Professor Henry W. Sweeney, C.P.A., LL.B., Senior I Portner, Henry W. Sweeney & Compony, 52 Wall Street, New York H ft All classes meet at 506 E St. N.W. Classes meet from 5:45 to 7:30 P.M. I —''FEES: SSO PER COURSE, $5 REGISTRATION FEE I I These courses are available not only to graduate students but to members of any Bar who are inter- MR I e^i C . ot,on ,' furt !: er '"formation contact the Registrar, Georgetown ■ I —NAt'onal 7061. Registration, 11 A.M. to l PM. or 2:30 P.M. to H ilNunn's Right to Navy Legal Post Challenged By Seaman's Lawyer A civilian lawyer for an appren | tice seaman yesterday challenged [‘the right of Rear Admiral Ira H. [ Nunn to hold office as Judge Ad i vocate General of the Navy. Attorney John A. Croghan of Alexandria contended that Ad , miral Nunn lacks the statutory , qualifications the new uniform s code of military justice requires i for holders of the office. The issue arose in an appeal in , behalf of Apprentice Seaman . Charles B. Wheeler, who was found guilty last March of being i 1 absent without leave and later escaping from the Naval Receive ing Station brig here last Septem [; ber, 1 Point Raised on Nomination. The complaint echoed state ments last May before a Senate Armed Services subcommittee, which considered the nomination ; of Admiral Nunn. Hie hearing . brought out that Admiral Nunn, » an Annapolis graduate, was gradu -1 a ted from Harvard Lay? School in , 1934 and passed the Massachusetts bar examinations. He was trans ferred to China before he had an . opportunity to be formally ad mitted to the bar. He was not admitted until October, 1949. Mr. Croghan noted that the code requires that appointees as Judge Advocate General of an j armed service must have been members of the bar at the time jof appointment and have had at least eight years of experience in Beauty youmake It;.. ■ Do you apply your make-up art fully ... achieve really ravishing results? You can with *Q-Tips\ ! These dainty cotton-tipped applicators (the famous, original ;l swabs) help you get smoother effects with the greatest of ease. I Hollywood film stars are constant users of ‘O-Tips’! (AVOID THIS* MAKB-UB MISTAKE* DO IT IIOHT WITH A ’Q-Tlßft' Smeared mascara. ZHBML. spotty or streaked VWJ3B eyeshadow ‘ Blend eye shadow ... ' ' v mpt mascara smudges I • with ‘Q-Tips’ 'Lipstick slips a ieemmsn fault—are you guiltrf l After lipstick is . v / *•. straighten aathnet . VjC mth Q-Tips- ’ Patcked-up polish /SJPK Puttingnneover old Utmost worn polish I / with ‘Qfipt ———— *js " l||l| So handy and neat for ae Sr M many jobs—for manicures and pedicures, applying skin I Oft Sale at AU • j. PEOPLES | DRUG STORES I ID. C. Attorney Appointed Sweet Brior Overseer i Charles H. Murchison, a Wash ington attorney, has been ap-; pointed to the board of overseers of Sweet Briar College, it was an . nounced today by board President Archibald G. Robertson of Rich -1 mond. Mr. Murchison, who lives at 2101 Connecticut avenue N.W., will con-; tinue an association with the col , lege begun when his two daughters, were students there. Both have ! graduated from Sweet Briar. 1 legal duties as commissioned! 1 officers. • “Unless all standards of excel-] lenoe and proficiency be disre-i garded by the United States Navy,” I he stated, “it is patent that! Admiral Nunn, lacking admission to the bar of the highest court in any State or territory or. to) the bar of a Federal court, was! In no sense qualified to perform any legal duties as a commissioned' officer before 1949.” Court Move Forecast. The attorney declared Admiral; Nunn lacks authority to appoint! a board to review Seaman) Wheeler’s case and to conduct any; appellate proceedings. He told! (reporters that if the Judge! Advocate General’s office rejects the contention he will take the! matter to the courts. Seaman Wheeler is confined at! the naval operating base in Norfolk, pending outcome of the| ! appeal. At the court martial last! i March, he was sentenced to be! discharged from tte service, forfeit! $25 a month for 10 months and ; be reduced to the grade of sea i man recruit. THE EVENING STAR, Washington, D. C. •• ■ TUZBDAK. SEPTEMBER 16, 1932 & ’ A* LIVINGSTON'S WINE AND LIQUOR STORE You Gat LOW CUT RATE PRICES on All Nationally Advertised Brands, by the Bottle or Cos*. (Imported BLACKBERRY M WINE mfm From Holland Pg|V HULZMANS Volume It’s Delicious R R R B W IB 1 'CAS? 1 W i Imported CHIANTI From Italy 65! $7.80 CASE ABARDINET CORDIALS Zreme De Menthe White or Green 60 proof Peach Liqueur g \ 60 Proof Cherry Liqueur B Finn iackberry Liqueur 52 Proof Anisette Liqueur 50 Proof i Spanish Sherry ; ENCANTO Amontillado T QQc Real ra I m Value Fifth 1 Imported French TABLE WINES BORDEAUX RED BORDEAUX WHITE isO IL • CHILEAN JL. RHSiING in the fill CCc GMd Fifth Buy We Reearve the Right to Limit Quantities A-9