Evening Star Newspaper, May 16, 1925, Page 8

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S SOC OCIETY IETY Governors of Three States Guests of President at an Informal White President and Mrs. Cool had dining at the White last evening Cov ter of Main Gov inkle of Virginia and Gov Hardee of Florida. Gov. and Mrs. Trinkle took a party Mount Vernon this morning to a 1 the Governor reception, the party from the table w nd his famous met Mrs Bre HE COrRe so_frequent With Gov. a Gov. Hardee, Gov George Hope and George Cole Scott of Richmond At Legation Dinn The Minister of d Sl Dr host at dinner t ests have be an Mestrovic Serbia the Pavichich reet My sculptor sked n well Mrs. Thor Was where Senator and will returr rom Kentucky tend the Derby o went to Mrs. Thec Dou wife of the Assistant Navy, returped morning afte b in Florida The Minister attend Norwegian day celebration wt will by the members the Society ever at Dodge Mme independenc be the the giver wegian s Grace Hotel Wroblews! of the Po. cises Jose Po. Interna whe ho he here for of Wome; ced statue of Kosciu! Many phine lish dele tional C the te Par the international council also were present. Charles C. Glover rmal the ds will guests Mr. d > will be the host ner this even which Mrs Dows Mr. and Mrs. i er's number 18 M tertain at for her nd Mr have weddi jr din’ wce will s evening and yper hter-in-law, Hudgins, ed from Horace Mace! buffet s son and dat John Mel ntl trip. Trac delightfully evening in the gard on Thirtieth street. lights and la in the garden ng. supper guests at small tables and Mrs, hosts at ing at the pliment to the I who their s n Dows will entertain at arranged dance this of her home Varied colored o placed Mr a ed to the Capt Charles Husse will & h Thoma nd Mrs. Hart. 0. \dall H. Hagner will at dinner this evening s Locke, wife of Locke. who is making fore sailing for Europe Mrs. Bayard entertained a company at luncheon today at her home on H street. Mme. Grouitch, wife of the former Minister of tk Serbs, Croats and svenes, is sailing today aboard the George to n Dr. Grouitch, se. She will be the guest of Swaything, at ampton 2 and with Dr, Grouitch 1 return to th home, in Serbia, in the early Summe! Miss Ruth Donaldson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Golden Donaldson, has as her house guest Miss Josephine Flood of New York Mrs . Dennis today fo% William will legve 1ccompanied h: Nel- Mrs. Jack | s at:luncheon today at the Hotel Roo veit in compliment to Mrs. Philip H Torrey and ladies of the Corps. Among her guests wil Curtis D. Wilbur, Mrs. Pi Wwilliam C. H ck, Mrs, I A. n 7. Balderston, Meade . Selden B. . W. W Mrs. - Hyden, John F. nderson, Benjamin Soule Gant ward Pierce wyer, Mrs. R. J. Villiam Laird Dunlop, W. Medaris, N R. C Mrs. George W. McHenry, Mrs. L Brown, Mrs. Robert Gordon Hunt Mrs. Margaret Haywood. i Kilmartin, Julia Gleaves Was hostess tc pany of 20 at supper ning in the quarters of her parents Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Samuel R Gleaves, at the Washington Barracks, and later took her guests to the dance giv in the Offic Club at the barracks. ast eve. Mr. and W entertain at dinner this evening in the their guests numb Howard will t the Mayflower Jeflerson room ng 28 Mrs. F ssachus Ir. 1601 and & Lewis and erick E avenue their children will leave Washington | home in will re- June 15 for their Summer the White Mountains. They turn in October. National Capital Horse Show Has Fine List of Boxholders Resident lematic ¢ circles will be well represented am vhe hoxholders at the forthcoming Na tional Capital Horse Show. Among those who have reserved box are: The President and M slidge, the ¥rench Ambassador and Mme. Daesch- ner, the Hungarian M and Countess Szechenyi, Mr. Willlam du Pont, Mr. John H. Store 4 son-Johnson, Gen. J an, Mr. and Mrs, and Mrs. James Par Blodgett and Maj. : Gaillard, Col. Thompson Sylvanus s, Mr. and Mrs. Leiter, Mr. and Mrs. Ord Pres. . Tracy Dows, Mr. William n. John J. Pershing, Com- missioner and Mrs. Cuno H. Rudolph, Mr. Nathaniel H. Luttrell, Mrs. Ed ward C. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Houghton, Mrs. H. R. Govin, Mr, and Mrs. Walter Tuckerman, Mrs. Horace McFarland, Mr. and Mrs. George Hewitt Myers, Mrs. Charles Boughton Wood and Mrs. Harley C. Gage. ociety as well as the dip A very pretty wedding took place Saturday evening, May 9, at the home of the bride’s grapdmother, Mrs. R. H. Gunnell, 1707 Lamont street, when Miss Caroline Virginia Young, daugh- ter of Mrs. J. Milton Young, and Mr. Jesse Mowbrey Hadley were united in marriage by Dr. J. J. Muir. The bride entered the drawing room on the arm of her uncle, Comdr. John 3. Gunnell, U. S. N., a8 the stringed ind | a the auts | when Nis give. | will Mr. | he danc- | South- | s and the Army and Navy | s | Agriculture. House Dinner. | orchestra_ hidden behind a flower-be- | decked screen played the wedding march from “Lohengrin,” her only at- tendant being her young sister, Janet. | Mr. James C. Park, jr., of Fiorenc B and New ork City, acted a ¢ man for Mr. Hadley. | e ceremony was performed under canopy of snowt and g interminzled - with pink snapdrag: [ and Columbia roses, which formed the lecoration throughout the house, an usle being formed by standards filled with flowers and connected with white tin ribbun bride gown was of ivory satin lly_embroidered in pearls and seads, the bodice being trim med with a bertha of rose point lace Her tulle veil was held by a coronet f rose point and orange blossoms and she carried a shower of bride roses and valley lilie The litte maid « honor wore a daingy creation of French voile, lac immed and embroidered, and car- d pink sweet peas. The orchest played the evening and a be: Juffet supper was & heme K throughout Hpoint- cved. the color ind white being con: s going-away costume an_ensemble suit of gold char- meen trimmed with baby fox and a becoming lace hat matching in color After an sive wedding trip nd Mrs. will be at home July ! town guests were pres mong them a i Mu warthmore College, a member. Timber £ Colorado tment at the May will be for several of ziris from ~vhich Re B. and Mrs taken whe 1v | flower months and Mrs. Cordell are among thos ten-week visit in Hull is a conference in | Representative of Tennessee iling today for a resentative world A program of *) and Melody” 1l be given in the baliroom of Mayflower Hotel this evening for the benefit of the Wakefield Manor fund. Miss Helen Gerrer, violinist, and Miss F Russell, pianist, will play. Miss Wilson will give a monologuc Flora McGill Keefer s Janet Richards will talk on current topics. ushe at the concert will Vir Selden, chairman; Sise Je Mr n abeth h Sutherland. I . Clyde Brown of Woodside s Charles McAllister M of Harapton, McAllister is e during her vi sville, Md., wher: llister was rector 1 Church for =several spending some | with friends in Hya! | the Rev. Mr. Mc | Pinkney Memoria years. Mr. Thomas G. pence announces the engagement of his sistes Nena Hodges Spence, to Mr Sl - | Miller. t | Miss Cecile Matheson of Great Britain, convener of the trades of dustrial committee of the { Woman's Council of Great Britain, {s |leaving Washington to travel. She | has been appointed as the official rep. | resentative of this committee in the United States, and is remaining on | this side to lecture on industrial prob- | lems. | | Mr. and Mrs. amily will make the next y where airfax Harrison and their residence for at the Mavflower Hotel, they have taken an apartment. B. E. Haney of 2900 Connecticut eune enter- tained at dinner at the Mayflower | Thursday evening, covers being laid for fourteen Guests were Senator [and Mrs. Wesley L. Jones. former | Senator Mrs. George E. Chamber- n, Senator and Mrs. Charles L. Me- and Mrs. Charles C. Hart, | Mo Jack Underwood, Mr. and Mrs. rold urfe,” Mr: | L. Whitman and Mr. John & | | | nd Mrs Commander aney. Mr. and Mrs. James M. Beck sailed for Ttaly to be gome through | ummer, returning to their home shington in the Autumn. | Mrs.“Laura A. Bradley left yester- |day afternoon for an extended visit |in the West. She will spend some time in Minneapolis, then go on to the Pacific coat, where she will t in ittle, Portland, gene and San Francisco, returning to Washington about November 1. . and Mrs. Robert Rausch, 3715 | Military road, Washington, left Balti- e on the Merchants and Miners ship Alleghany. May 14 for onville, Fla. Jocelyn street, t 2 o'clock. Rtuth Brewster Chapter Hosts to D. A. R. Officials. Frank Briggs, recording secre- general, N. 8. D. A. R., and Mrs. M. Beaver: State regent, will guests of honor at a breakfast to be given by the Ruth Brewster Chap- ter, D. A. R., Mrs. Frank Greenwalt, |regent, at the Washington Golf and | Country Club, Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. Unique features of entertain- ment will mark the affair, and bridge and mah-jong will follow. | Mr. Chester Morrill, associate coun- |sel of the War Finance Corporation, {will be the guest of honor and | speaker at the College Women's Club | tea, Monday from 4 to 6 p.m., at the clubhouse, 182 2 Mr. Mor- was until chief of the and Stockyards Administra- United St Department of His subject will be s From Hoof to Hotel.” Mrs. Clyde W. Warburton, chair- man of the press committee, will be hostess at the tea. Mrs. Willlam C. | Van Vleck will. preside at the tea table and will be assisted by Mrs. A. | C. Dillman and Miss Arline Dufour. i v Mr. George Cole,Scott of Rich- mond is in_Washington from ‘“Bally- shannon,” his Virginia plantation, a guest at the Mayflower. Mrs. H. J. Hensman of Great Britain is speaking on girls’ work in connection with the Girls’ Friendly Society of Great Britain, with whose headquarters she is connected and of whose official organ she is the editor. Mrs. Hensman has left Washington for a speaking tour through Canada. She will be in Toronto, Hamilton, Lm‘l(lun. Ontario; Ottawa and Mont- real. tion, t A May dance will be given this evening at the Government hotels in L-M building recreation hall. Mr. and Mrs. Max Surth, who were at Wardman Park Hotel for a few days, stopping in Washingtop en route from Hot Springs, Va., to New York. i California’s timber resources valued at. $750,000,000. are Fraternity | Miss | I | MR of Mr, and Mrs, ROOSEVELT PRIZES - GIVEN WITH PRAISE Coolidge Lauds Pinchot, i Grinnell and Miss Berry in Awarding Medals. In the presence of a distinguished gathering in the east room of the White House vesterday afterngon, {President Coolidge presented RoBse: {velt medals to Giffora Pinchot, Go |ernor of Pennsylvania: George Bird rinnell, publi of New York, and ss Martha Berry of Georgia, select- by the Roosevelt Memorial Asso- ciation for distinguished service. Gov. Pinchot was selected for dis- zuished service in the promotion |of conservation: Mr. Grinnell, for the {promotion of outdoor life, and Miss {Berry, founder of the Berry schools {in the South Appalachian Mountains, {for her service in behalf of the wel fare of women and children. Praise for Pinchot. | In presenting the medals President Icoolidge said: “Gov. Pinchot, to you has been awarded the medal for dis- tinguished service in behalf of the |conservation of natural resources. No {American who s familiar with the history of the great movement in- augurated by such men as John Muir, dward Bowers and Secretary {John W. Noble and later sponsored by President Roosevelt, for the pres- ervation of our forests, our water- power and oui mineral wealth, will question the justice of this award. In the development of a policy which became one of the most significant of M sevelt's administration, you were from first to last his counselor land helper. To his vision and his ledge and prac- xperience which were essential. |You have preached your gospel jeloquently and, in office and out of {office, have put it into action with an effectiveness which has rightly won bu the gratitude of your fellow Americans, of which this medal is the symbol."”” Grinnell’s Work Cited. “Mr. Grinnell, I am struck by the fact that this year I have the pleas- ure of presenting these Roosevelt medals to three pioneers. You and Miss Berry and Gov. Pinchot have all been trail blazers. In the case of [ Miss Berry and Mr. Pinchot, however, |it is true only in a figurative sense. But you were with Gen. Custer in the Black Hills and with Col. Ludlow in the Yellowstone. You lived among the Indians; you became a member of the Blackfoot tribe. Your studies of their language and customs are au- thoritative. Few have done so much as you, none has done more, to pre- serve vast areas of picturesque wilder- ness for the eyes of posterity in the | simple majesty in which you and your I fellow pioneers first beheld them. In | the Yellowstone Park you prevented therefore, the natural beauty. the exploitation and, destruction of the The Glacier National Park is p culiarly vour monument. As editor for 35 years of a journal devoted to outdoor life, you have done a note- worthy service in bringing to the men and women of a hurried and harried age the relaxation and revitalization which _comes from contact with na- ture. Iam glad to have a part in the public recognition which your self- effacing and effective life has won.” Pride in Miss Berry. “Miss Berry, T know that the gen- tlemen who have been awarded the other two medals will not misunde stand me when I say that, greatly as Theodore Roosevelt would be grati- fied if he could see a distinction bear- ing his name bestowed upon these old friends, he would yet be most stirred to see this Roosevelt medal bestowed upon you. He believed in you and vour work, and it was characteristic of him that, belleving in you, he should have upheld your hands and done what he could to win you friends. In building out of nothing a great educational institution for the children of the mountains you have contributed to your time one of its most creative achievements. Because of you thousands have been released from the bondage of ignorance and countless other thousands in the gen- erations to come with walk, not In darkness, but in light. You have built your school by faith—faith in your vision, faith in God, who alone can make visions substantial. gew are privileged to recelve so clear an answer to their petitions as you have received. Your achievement brings the mystery and beauty of divine glidance closer to us all. This medal will be a testimony to you that your fellow Americans are proud of you and wish you well in your labors.” James R. Garfield, former Secretary of Interior and president of the Roose- velt-Memorial Association, In preseat- | MOWBREY HADLEY, | Formerly Miss Carolyn Virginia Young, a bride of May 9.'She is the daughter {of God, unwavering in faith, indomit- Milton Young. ing the three distinguished Americans Coolidge described their ice in the following man the medal for in behalf of the welfare of women and children, Mr. President, 1 have the honor to present the name of one who, seeing a great need, turned from the pleasant places in which her lines were cast, to bring light and op. portunity to children who but for her would have walked all their lives in the shadow: a seer, whose visions were born in human sympathy and given substance by the magical touch of faith; a builder, who builds on rock: an educator, who trains equally the head and the hand, the spirit and the heart: a lover of mankind and servant distinguished able in resolution, creating beauty where she goes, scarce knowing that she creates it, so natural an expres- sion it is of the abundance within— Martha Berry.” Fought to Save Beauty. ‘For the medal for distinguished service in the promotion of outdoor life, Mr. President, I have the honor to present the name of one who, having discovered the stupendous beauty of the American wilderness half - cen- tury ago, while it was still the In- dian's and the solitary pioneer's, has dreamed and labored and fought that the majestic gMandeur which he had known might remain unimpaired and uncontaminated for the generations to come; a protagonist in the struggle for the conservation of wild life; and in terpreter of the open world; a wise and potent vicar of the red gods—George Bird Grinnell.” 'or the medal for distinguished service in behalf of the conservation of our natural resources, Mr. Presi- dent, I have the honor to present a name linked more closely than, any except Theodore Roosevelt's alone with the conception and development of the most constructive policy of an administration rich in achievements at home and in the world without; a lover of trees and deep woods, whose vislon became statesmanship, creating forests and establishing laws: a prophet and a teacher. clear-minded and eloquent; a crusader whose | courage and integrity have ever been equal to his vision, and whose realistic mind has followed hard at the heels of his joyous and enthusiastic spirit— Gifford Pinchot.” Coolidge and Party on Cruise, President and Mrs. Coolidge invited Attorney General Sargent and Mrs. Sargent, Senator Watson of Indiana and Mrs. Watson, Senator du Pont of Delaware and Mrs. du Pont, Senator Underwood of Alabama and Mrs. Underwood and former Postmaster General Hays to accompany them to- day on a week end cruise on the May- flower. Learn Costume Designing Millinery—Dressmaking Very low tuition. Ask for Catalogue LlVlNGSTONE ACADEMY 1517 R. 1. Ave. N.W. Franklin 7475 Patterns cut to measure VERY pleasant s u g gestion— the twelve-mile ride on the WASH- INGTON-B A L TI- MORE BOULE- VARD—and the exquisite beauty and unsurpassed cuisine of-— (Chafteau %girmd . Cover charge at Dinner 6 to 9:30. A Chateau-pre- pared Southern fried chicken or broiled steak dinner at $2.75. Call “Robert” — Be; 169-170 for rRuerva:im PLANS OUTLINED FOR HOME COMING Society of Natives Proposes Celebration in Washington, Opening June 15. J Tentative plans for the celebration of @ home-coming for Washingtonians during the week of June 15 were out lined at the final Spring meeting of the Society of Natives in tne Wash- ington Club last gight, and John Clagett Proctor, president of the soclety, was appointed chairman of a committee to make arrangements. Mr. Proctor said that support of the home-coming movement has al- ready been assured by members of the Board of Trade and the Wash: ington Chamber of Commerce ‘and stated that the society hopes for the -operation of the various civic asso- ctations n Washington, in order that he week may be a big success. The society voted to hold a picnic in Rock Creek Park during the home-coming week. Music Feature of Program. Following the short business session, Mrs, Zell Weaver Oatley, chairman of the entertainment committee, in troduced members of the In-Com-Co Double Quartet, who rendered an ex- tensive program of music. The quartet is made up of members of the In-Com-Co Club, which is composed of employes of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Members of the double quartet are follows: ivat tenors, Clarence Lewis and H. . Brown; second tenors, Elmer Beach and B. A. Bartoo; first basses, Charles F. Smith® and Willlam A. Maidens, and second basses, J. Paul Kelley and Harry J. Barnholt. Vocal solos were rendered by Ross Farrar and Mr. rown while piano solos were Played by Robert S. Feuerstein, who wak also accompanist for the singers. The program inet with enthusiastic applause. A $6 bill printed in 1776 was ex- hibited to the members of the so ciety by Dr. S. S. Adams, who also read several paragraphs from the old National Intelligencer of Septem. ber 1, 1814, Tribute to Memory of G. W. Evans. A resolution of regret at the death of Capt. George W. Evans was adopt- ed and the secretary, Emma Bright was instructed to send a let ter to the widow, Mrs. Evans, express. ing the sincere sympathy of the so- ciety. New members were enrolled at the meeting, s follows: Miss Katherine May Brooks, Miss Julia A. Kupfer, Miss Eihel Holtzelaw Gawler, Walter A. Gawler, Mrs. Lillie F. Lamb car ney, Miss Pauline M. Floyd, Willlam A. Heine, Mrs. Catherine Davis Trilby, Mrs. Frank L. Browne and Robert W. Savage. Deaths R;.pprted. The following_deaths have been reported o the Health Department in the last 24 hours 30. 820 K st we. mon,, 57, Burlingion Hotel. n, 53, F:m!r'enc{_l (owpital: 80, Emergen ospital. . U S. Naval Hospital. Tom Surotehik, Barnett Levy, Chas. J, Thor Jacob Parrish Nellie | Verona T ish, ¥4, ¢ Elizabeih's Hosoi, rahberger. 33, Emergenc ¢ 1T monthis, Children’s Hosb lorence Siloas, 7 1023 8rd st Harrig. 30, 1211 Montello ave. n.e. « H. Palmer, 60, Home for Aged, Blye Plains, Cealous Brooks, 31, Walter Reed Hospt. Louise_ Dorsey, 45, iger, Hospital. Sallie Brown, 58, 1543 9th st. Govenor Davis. 76, Fresdmeii's Hospital. Margnreto J. Allen, 86, 2111 12th st. Amanda Hall. 70, Geogetown Univ, Homt. Suse A Richardion. 48, 18134 i1th st Edward Moarnfan, 1, Children t Benjamin months, Froedmen's Hogpital inia Garter. 14 days. 448 Q = Francis H. Gaskins, 1 hour. 1219 25th st Infant of Charles ‘and Elsie Dudley. 13 hours. Freedmen's Hospital. 0 Infant of Hary and Gladys Allstock. 8 hours. Columbia Hospt. Human life is a bridge: upon a leis- urely survey of it you find that it con- sists of three-score and ten different arches, 19z DANCE AND REVUE Two Score Pupils of Miss Gladyse Wilbur to Participate. Gladyse Wilbur will present her fifth annual revue and dance at the New Willard Hotel tomight, with pupils of the Dupont Studio in solo and group dances. & Miss Wilbur will give three dances of her own creation, in addition to the performances of her pupils, all of whom will give numbers arranged by her. The two score pupils participat ing will give many types of dances, ranging from classic and minuet to jazz and acrobatic. The program will &lso include a circus sketch and others called “A Flapper's Dream,” “Old-Fashioned Misses” and “Artists and Models.” Pupfls in the revue wil include Dorothy Slarrow, Lillian Boxer, Rose Friedman, Doris Mullan, Agnes Dea- ton, Shirley Rosenburg, Lilllan Lutz, Dorothy Suntag, Virginia Hunter, Gladys Allen, Maria Carballo, Lor-| raine Mauct, Norma Abernathy, Ellen Lypthen, John Smith, Lorraine Bran- ston, Grace Virnstein, Catherine Gar ner, Mgrgaret Houser, Alice Jones, Helen Jacobs, Ella Owen, Elaine Grieg, Dorit Murphy, Larry Lynch, Esther Lipshutz, Linda Cheely, Vir- ginla Ballard, Virginia Miller,” Sara Stockton, Harriot Neoonan, Mary Kaminsky, Edith Symthe, Florence | Carballo, Nancy Woodward, Eugenie Le Merle, Orme Libbey, Pete Oliver, Edgar Iingle, Margaret Armstrong and Dorothy Kelley. Frank Armstrong will act as host. Following the revue guests will join in dancing. Miss Sarah Becker will be acocmpanist. BinhsiReported. The following_births have been reported to the Health Department in the last 24 hoyra = William N. and Alethia Purds. boy Clifford W. and Lillian M. Hail. bo; Clarence A’ and Bessic J. Brooke, b Herbert D and Ruth A. Alexander, oy. Lancelot W. and Mirtle*I. Bartley, boy. Eimer T and Marian A. Cummins, girl. Howard P. and Mary K. Wrenn, gir Charles G. and Rosemary T. Harrington, il William C. and Marie £ William . and Frances A. Gallagher, boy Peyton and Anna McIntosh, boy Joel P. and Ora E. Moore, girl Herbert W. and. Virginia ¥oung Robert B. and Alice Pittman. boy Lewis C. and ‘Helen Leigh. toy Roy F. and Beulah V. Peiers, girl Eugene and Effie Duffen, girl Dwyer, girl Marriage Licenses. “ ‘rxrnnl.'!‘ licenses have been issued to the e e e o vl 08 ‘ Abner 8. Clark, jr, and Eilsie A. Feu- sahrens. o . 7 V. Bodler of this cliy sad Frances A iheny ¥, Bodier James W. Berry of Reedvill Gussie J. Williams of Prince ] Md, William A. Zellers, jr., Bethesda, Md., and i - TR, ey O e 9,08 L Sl Clalh DAL, Ralph F. adon and Hilda B_Slemz Kenneth 'W. Clark and Houri Z. Murphy. Ed A. Windear of this city and Lillian A Dock of Ros e, Md. ‘Audley B. Cook of Saginaw, Mich., and Esther M. Cook of this cit; Wild Rice (Why-Not Brand) 1-Pound Carton..75¢ Magruder. Inc. Best Groceries Ave. and K S tablished 1875 Conn. ; REMODELED Expert advice of Zir- kin designers and exact- ness of execution com- bine with moderate prices to satisty. FRRRRRRNRN R APARTMENTS THE NEW WEBSTER 4403 14th St. N.W. b Apartments in high-{ ing in_exclusive nelgh ‘Apartment "containe 3. 4 rooms and ‘bath. bujltin tubs and show- ers. All ‘outside rooms. On"14th Street car and bus line. Rent from $56 to $77.50 Representative on Premizes SSVINIISASEN | The Velvet Kind ICE CREAM Temperature May 14 ATLANTIC CITY NEW YORK - WASHINGTO HOLLYWQOD 12.DAY WATER AND LAND TOUR OF FLORIDA Terminating at 7 7 Z 7 (B(l e Sea' The miracle city of FLOR- IDA, where mature joins hands with the progress of man. Gen. Goethals personally supervising the ‘wonderful deep water harbor’ under construction at Hollywood. Round Trip Including 2 77 7 First Tour All Expenses Starts May 22 Second Tour 69 AU Reservations Must Be In May 17 and May 24, Respectively 8-DAY RAILROAD SIGHTSEEING TOUR 9 MAY 20th our next rail an JOAN D.PAYS 15T OF BRDAL TOUR Substantial Check as Gift to| His Granddaughter, Recent Bride. By the Associated Press NEW YORK, May 16.—A substan- tial check from John D. Rockefeller i8 to pay the expenses of the four- month European honeymoon of his | 21-year-old granddaughter. ! This most apt present of the hun dreds she received is arried in her handbag by Mrs. David Meriwether Milton, who was Abby Rockefeller un til last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Milton were up be. times foday in getting ready to sail on | the liner Paris. Since their ma age | they have made their headquarters in An apartment in the Central Park district which friends have loaned them. Address Known to Few. Only a few most intimate associates have known the address, and to a series of taps on a ertain door these friends, with whom “Dave” and “Babs” used to dance and ride, were admitted for a farewell party last night. rtment that the TONIGHT Starting at 7:30 P.M. Music by Wardman Park Hotel Orchestra Evening Supper _dancing Every Evening, Ten to Twelve < % and PRESERVES. ateness. promptly. 119 3rd St. S.W. | murder | considered | and i they For Reservations, Columbia 2000 ROTEC-TIN is more than an ordinary paint. combination of the old-fashioned red oxide of iron and pure linseed oil. Mixed in our plant—and applied as we apply it with a handbrush—it really PROTECTS Twenty-five Years of Success PLEA FOR CHAPMAN Stay of Execution Sought, Pending ing Appeal. HARTFORD, Conn., May 16 () A reprieve will be sought of Gov. Trumbull next week for Gerald Chap. man, under sentence of death for the of a New Britain policeman his assistant counsel, Nathan O. Friedman, announced tod: The stay would be pending a deci- sion by the Supreme Court of errors of an 1 on Chapman’s convic ion. Chapnfan’s appeal will not be until October, with possibility of ber or in N been fixed by Judge Newell J as the date for Chapman's execution. { bridal pajr fled in a taxicab after their kefeller home nging for three the house together Park the newl from one t ‘making friend ed for Paris, for whicl wedding "at the “Babs herself taxicabs to e in Central made a quick shift another, eluding me An $800 suite was re Miltons' trip on registered Steven V. Hammond room of the suite has twc twin beds and one dress a the principal rmchairs ta Bride Expresses Gratitude. e bride is quoted mented on grand as follows “It was just lik us what we nee are both poor. fr. Milton has nd the | an Dinner Dance Wardman Park Bote! Dress Requested Rusty Roofs Soon Leak Taken in time, our Protec-Tin Roof Paint will prolong their eflicielncy indefinitely It's a We give a three-year guarantee with every PRO- TECTIN job we execute. Our estimate will surprise you with its moder- Phone us—Main 933—and we'll come Koons Roofing Company Phone Main 933 s —that is the business sighteceing ‘tour _starts, oA e T CRTIEE “hata uting 8 water Open E; Evening Until 71 e "Phone Us at Once upn Y - s in 347 Will or Living Trust Choose Yours GORDON’S EASY TERMS Courteous Service Convenient Location VICTOR PORTABLE ONLY $3O “West End’s Music Center” S. GORDON’S MUSIC and SPORT SHOP 1710 Pa. Ave. N.W. OPEN EVENIN Making Property More Productive ment of the Union Trust Company. Let us explain how, as your Trustee under assure your beneficiaries or yourself the meximum income consistent with the ab- solute safety of the source from which it is drawn—while relieving them, or you, of TODAY Out Every Friday of the Trust Depart- Agreement, we can every care incident to efficient manage- TRUST CO. OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA oowo EDWARD J. STELLWAGEN PRESIDENT

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