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CONGRATULATIONS AFTER THE MATCH HAD ENDED. Helen W “haking bands with Mile. Lenglen. the French champion, across the net, n_girl, nd di¢ ills, the defeated Ameri The man in the foregro not referee the match: he was trying to keep back the photographers when the picture was snapped. EUROPE'S “FILM hAGE" ARKKIVES IN BOOTS. Lya de Putti. Ger- man moving picture star, who has been the toast of central Europe for the past two years, arriving in the United States aboard the steamship Minnewaska yesterday. She wears white Russian boots. ‘Wide World Photo. INWATERDISPUTE | Washington. sitors welcom ] } i 5 | 1l meet-) lu.dueé The past matrons of Electa Ch O. E. S.. will hold thelr a ting and di | Hotel | _The Psycho Club will meet at the Kellogg, in Note, Declares|®iayhouse, 8 oclock, to study psycho- u'r.n is as a method of cure for men- Plans Call for Reduction in |, .2nd rbysical Chicago Withdrawal. illnesses. Visitors | welcome. Mis E clety will meet at{ shing: . 1701 K street. | ippi ton ippi here for A series of Reception, rhanged by the the British emba madian prote: \gair sions from the Great Lakes in e and | Dunelng, 10: ( e : ‘eer| A meeting under the joint auspices | of the Lavrien's Ser\:u'n A.\’!‘fl"lfl“n"( vion with the Chicago santtary district | o€ the Diocess, of Washington ,_'."‘,,dé guestion was made public Yesterday |t will he held, 8 eelock, at 1326 By tledepartaiont. : | K street. Right Rev. Nathaniel Sey- While throwing wdditional light on | 1 car Thomas, Misstonars 1 ol { Young Men's ioly <0-§ : ¢ Chureh will g | Sixteenth und Allison streets, will ! serve o chicken dinner at 5:30 v'clock in the church hall. + settlement w g 8 o'cloc i last com B e . bund hall of the ch logg dated Novern ing_that tk ption nadian gov t water withdr it granted th g0 distric March by tk . declar- of the Ca the 10-year Ladies of Hamline M Afd ihe position of eich government up t0 | Wyoming, will s r Department would > -l Tnit N L Mrs. I serve November of kst year, there was no | ndication in » tha creased withdrawals | Souls’ Memorial Church tirmed.” On the con | liam <. Quinter chairman, contemplat in-{a turkey dinner 30 o'clock. s gros: cubic for Jeet rd Her Henrfetta Burwell of to {n Bureau, will speak flow | afternoon n of the Woman's per- | Home orelgn Missfonary So- feet per | clety ¢ . M. E. Zion Chureh, at John Wesley Church, Fourteenth and Corcoran streets, at 4 p.m. | Mre. Thomas G Whyte, assisted by | members of Continental Chapter, D. A, R. will glve a card party at the Women's City Club. Proceeds will be | donated to District Chapter hou: fund. k mate possible redu g Ly or before the expiration ol mit in 1935 to 4,167 cuble wacond. The sess an em- in Sep- note was in repl communication embe ved in dip omiat e that the Canadian nment might {ind it expedient thhold its consent to any fur- tmprovement projects in the Great Lakes for luck of definite as swances thut there would be a re duction In wiuter diversions from Lake Michigan. tmprovements “can not be contidently projected or e nomica rried out if diversions her rnett will conduct the | in Les: Truth, 8 o'clock, Unity Auditorium, 1326 T street. —_—_— not contemplate any increase in the from the watershed are permitted | total amount of water to be with- without mut thereto,” it | drawn. since the operatfons of the pointed out was drawn | Calument-Sag Channel must be regu- to @ permit lssued by the W lated to keep within th fctions partment in April a $1 of the March 3 permit. The permit dredging project by the Chl was construed to cover both the Calu: triet in t} ment and Chicago Rivers within the “If the Umits of diversion it fixed, he said. are is correct, it would app: In expressing its attitude as to other dicate that the sanitary district is|improvement works on the Great proceeding in expectation of continued ! Lakes, the Canadlan communication diversion,” the communication con-|said that increasing impairment of tinued. | lake levels, “due to the diversion from “The Canadian government is there- | Lake Michigan, ralses the question as fore compelled to conclude that to the extent to which the Canadian spite repeated no immediate | government would be. warranted in definite reductic been pro- | giving consideration to any further vided, and, furthermc that if the | improvements thereln until there is ibove interpretation of the permit of | an assurance of definite curtailment of the 3d of Ma is coufirmed, | such diversion.” Mr. Kellogg made the effect will 4 he to authorize | no answer to this part of the com- ater diversion than is now being | munication beyond stating that fore the March permit expired | gross flow may be reduced to 8,000 cuble feet per second and probably to £,700 cubic feet per second.” The sewage treatment program of the sanitary district,” he added, “has been wiranged 80 as to make it possi- ble to effect a_ reduction to a gro {flow of 4,15 i feet per second by Snch ind attention res )rt of this larg> expendi | | rotests, o has Kellogg reiterated in re- asons that prompted the partment to grant the March it, adding that no substantial re- duction in amount of diversion could ave been made immediately without iger to health, “if not to life.” He 150 declared that the dredgzing ope joans< on the Li Secreta the, ’ | nounced yesterd: t by P. & A. Photos Mrs. Ame Myers, 41 years old, recently selected as “the perfect mother” of New York City. She has two_children, and the “mother con- test” was conducted by the League of Mothers’ Clubs. Photo by Acme, ANOTHER “BATTLE OF A (] the American star, Helen Wills EIGHT DIOCESES GIVE FULL BUDGET QUOTAS | Episcopal Divisions Contribute All | Called for Under 1926 Esti- | mate of $4,212,370. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, February b.—Eight dioceses of the Protestant Episcopal Church have contributed their full quota toward the 1926 budget of $4,- 2 The Natlonal Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church an- that the response | had set unusual records In the church | glving. ! For the first time since the budget | system was adopted, the diocese of New York has met its full quota. Bishop Willlam T. Manning sald the full quota of $370,800 will be contrib- uted and an additional $250,000 has been pladged toward extinguishing the deficit of $1,400,000 reported to the | general convention last October. Other dioceses meeting their full quota were: Massachusetts, $250,200; Rhode Island, $69,300: Central $69,300; Western New York, ; Bethlebem, Pa., $42,300; Vir- 200, and Michigan, $72,00 Walrus Tusks Prized. Ivory carving is becoming a lost art among the Eskimos of Alaska, and the ornately carved walrus tusks are much prized by collectors. A genera- tion or =0 back the artisans who did this work were quite numerous, but they have gradually passed away, and ENTURY” IS STAGED ON THE COURTS AT CAN and Suzanne Lenglen, the French cham pion. | of Cuba suffice to satisty the climatic | North American species, hurry to the | wanes the vonng men have not learned to do it 'LOWERS FOR THE VICTOR. French tennis enthusiasts went half- way mad when their champion, Suzanne Lenglen, defeated Helen Wills at Cannes. This photograph, taken a few minutes after the mateh, shows Suzanne posed among some of her flowers. Photo by Acue OMAHA, NEBR., SNIPER AND HIS GUN. Frank Carter. confes sniper, who was finally captured after he had terrorized Omaha with two killings and a number of “blind shots” through window The photograph also <hows the .22-caliber pistol, with holster, used by Carter. Photo by Acme ixwmnf.- First in the foreground Miss Wills Bobolinks, Summer D. C. Residents, Winter Below Equator, Expert Finds Neither the widely advertised es- tates of Florida nor the sporty clime fiying such enormous distances twice each year. Among the few of the extended flight, the barn swallow and the bobolink are worthy of mention, especially the latter, as, though the barn allow occurs during the north- ern Winter months from the West In- dies southward, the hobolink with- draws wholly into the Chaco. The yellow-billed = cuckoo, cliff swallow, olive-backed thrush, nighthawk and Swalnson’s hawk are of more or less common _occurrence in the northern half of the region in question, but are nat found In abundance.” TACNA-ARICANS SCARCE. Peruvian Consul at Seattle Unable to Locate One. SEATTLE, Wash., February 25 (®). A free boat ride all the way to Peru offered. and not a single Tacna-Arican in this district! This is the predicament in which Eduardo Espanloso, Peruvian consul here, finds himself. Kspanloso, re- sponding to orders of the Peruvian government, has advertised “‘passage, official documents and all other facill- ties” to any patriot eligible to vote in the Tacna-Arica boundary dispute plebiscite, but so far no one has come forward to accept.the offer. “I knew it could not be,” Espanloso lamented. *There are but six Peruvi- ans in this district, and not one born in Tacna or in Arfea.” tastes of the familiar bobolink or the barn swallow, so common to the Na- tional Capital. After basking ir the ample sunshine of these parts dur- ing the Summer, they, along with & number of other seemingly frail palm groves of the Argentine and Uruguay. Then, when the season in the country of the tango they wing thousands of miles back to the United States and Canada for another season. | These rather astonishing facts were obtained by Dr. Alexander Wet- more, ornithologist and assistant sec- retary of the Smithsonian Institu- tion, Who recently returned from the southern countries of South America, where he was sent to gather first- hand information as to the status of migratory game and insectivorous birds, to throw more light on the migratory bird treaty hetween the United States and Canada. Dr. Wet- more personally observed the little chaps in the southern homes, and he has just completed an illustrated bulletin on the subject for the Smith- sonian Institution. “Though many birds from North America commonly go to the northern part of South America,” Dr. Wetmore explained, “only a relatively few .spe- cles pass below the Equator as far South as Paraguay, Uruguay, Argen- tina and Chile. However, these in- clude some of our best known birds. One who did not know their habits would hardly believe them capable of 4 smaller land species that perform this | COUNT SALM TAKES A Sixteenfoot propeller to be used on the Government's “mystery bomber.” the Cyelops, which is be. ing built at Bristol, Pa, The plane will travel 135 miles an hour and ; World Photo action photograph of the tennis match between Photo by Acm CONCERT IS ARRANGED BY ZIMMER HARP TRIO Unusual Program Will Be Given Tomorrow Night at First Con- gregational Church. | | The well known Zimmer Irio, composed Louise Harris and Gladys Crockford, assisted by Tom Willlams, Welsh baritone, will present an unusual pro- gram tomorrow night at 8 o'clock at the First Congregational Church. | The first number for harp duet, to | be played by Miss Harrls and Mi | Crockford, 1s entitled inter. 1s the work of John Thomas, harpist to Queen Victoria. It is arranged by | Van Vechten Rogers, a leading Amer- {ican harpist. In another group Miss Zimmer will play an impromptu writ- ten by Edmund Schuecker of the Leipzig Orchestra. Other of her spe- clal solo numbers will include Lia- doff’s “Music Box,” arranged for the { harp by Henrlette Renie, greatest liv- ing French harpist, and “Am Sprin- brunnen,” composed by Albert Zabel harp solofst to the last of the Czars of Russia. Mr. Williams, who was born at Clydach-cwn-Tawe, in South Wales, and has won many honors as a singer in the famous Welsh Kisteddfoden, will feature a group of his native folk songs, using the harp as accompani- ment. He also will sing the aria, “Zaza Plcola Zingara,” from the | opera “Zaza,” and Frederick Clay's “Sands o' Dee.” Nearly all constructlon work has been stopped in Santo Domingo by lack of publie funds. A ROLL THROU band of Millicent Rogers, “Standard Oil heiress,” left the cameraman was on hand, but no one was allowed to talk to the count. Harp | of Nellle Zimmer, | Mayflower THE PRINC keep the Prince of Wales at home. attending the races at Lingfield, near London. H THE STREETS OF CAPITAL. Private detectives at right and ly guarded, the hus ay afternoon. The Teft. Hotel by P. & A A broken collar-bone fail When this picture was taken he w The bone was broken 10 when the prince’s horse stumbled in jumping some time ago. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. The Big Sisters of the District will tomorrow, S pam., in rectory of atrick’s Church al Ladies of the will give a five hun- 3 W night at Pythian Temple for bepefit of R Hospital Bed Fund Assoc . Counci Arcanur ion Temple Chapter, No. 13, 0. E. S will give its annual dance Saturday at the City Club. Mrs. Lillle C. Eibel is in charge. Cards. The board of lady managers of the Baptist Flo: will give a silver tex t the hom The Stearns Bible class will meet tomorrow, 1 1 in Mount Vernon Place M. E. Church, Dr. K. B. Moo- maw in el A sermon in French will be given by Rev. J. Bruneau Sunday, at 4:45 p.m., in the chapel of tLe Convent of Work for Poor (hurches. Benediction will follow. The Loyal K Dble will meet 12:30 p.m. hts of the Round Ta- t lunchenn tomorre the Universi ub, The D. C. Chapter, American War Mothers, will meet tomorrow, 8 p.m at the Lee House. William Thomas Shepherd will the fourth of his annual series s on Phych, to the st nd_alumni of Columbia hool, tomorrow, 9 p.n ghti street. Topl the Animal at SHOW TO BE REPEATED. Cherrydale Firemen Will Music Fund for School. | Special Dispateh to The Star. CHERRYDALE, Va., February 2. —The minstrels of the Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department, ho scored such great success in two per- formances fo; the benefit of the de- partment last week, will repeat their how Saturday night in the auditori- m of the Washington and Lee High School, for the benefit of the music fund of the school. The auditorium 1 will seat 1,100, and the volunteer fire- men-minstrels say they expect to |an it Many new jokes are being worked up, it is announced, with officials and pupils of the school as targets, and Aid and with a school atmosphere will be introduced at the forthcoming show, which is to be under the direction of Harold M. Brown. Joe Reynolds as Slect. Reese O'Neil as Hall, ¥Fred Doe as Snowball and Hurst Handy as Rainbow will appear as end men and Miss Gladys Marcey will be seen in a little surprise spe- clalty act. His Plan Changed. From the Kansas Oity Star. “Where were you going?”’ we in- quired of the luckless man who had been knocked down and nearly ruined by a rushing motor car. “I thought I was out strollin feebly replled the victim, “but in re #ty T was going to the hospital.” Arcanum Tnt. | several new songs sparkling with wit | Copyright by U wood & 1 QUARTZTODOOM WHISTLEINRADI %00 Transmitter Additions Hold | Promise. Says Standards Bureau. After Tests. | titng for | ception is | Standards through small pleces of quartz to transmitters Although this application of piezo electric quartz plate is new and ha not vet had the advantage of longed trial under vz statement issued by {day declares that if stations were equipp {vice and the propes quency varfations ferer Considerable e 1 with the de use Al wor bheen ca ried on at station KDKA, Pittsburgl and other statlons whern the quart. |has been made a permanent installa |tion to keep the station on its as {signed frequency. ~TFurther researct | conducted by the Bureau « nd so successful have bureau ha 1artz plates | been the {announc will test stations which desir tage of the new di | The cost of one of the {auartz, it 1s understood, is 1 1 $50. Additional expense must be {1 curred in having the plate grour for the frequency the individ station. As compared with the uke of a fiv uency ter or frequency indlcato with visual indicating device, the | plezo oseillator has two important ad ntages, ageording to the bureau d con “Firs a particularly constar frequenc ndard, stnce when proj erly designed the frequency it delfve; depends only on mechanical constant (of the quariz plate. Second, the ind | cator is unaffected by amplitude or de gree of ation’ of the statfon '~ output. It indicates I rectly by the piteh or b DISTRICT NATIVE Mrs. Martha E. Hasselbach De. scendant of One of First Settlers Martha 1. Hasselbach, 8i | years great-granddaughter of Notley Young. one of the orlginal land owners of the District of Co- lumbia, dled of pneumonia in Provi dence Iospital Tuesd: She was a {lifelong resident of this city. Funeral | services were conducted at St. Joseph | Catholic Church today. Interment was in Prospect Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Hasselbach, who resided at 520 | F strcet northeast, was the widow of E. Max Hasselbach, who was for many years a well known newspaper correspondent. She leaves three sons, Clifton Leon O and Dr. Charles M. Hassel hach. A DIES. | s,