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SATYRDAY, MAY 14, 1927. SOCIETY. MUSIC HONOR WAy | Masonic Cop Club s Organized Here; | % o B B o : BY 19-YEAR-OLDMRL| Sergt. Milton Smith Named President feminine fashion, has heen ecopled by men in Paris. Every up-fo the-minute | Rhode Islander Gets Scholarlhw‘ for Prowess in National Secretary and Mrs. Jardine Patronesses \\ GUEST AND Hbg | youth who runsan auto or motor cycle decorative f his be pinned La Fayette Lodge; Maj. E. B. Hesse. superintendent of police; Capt. M. IL | Parson of the Park Police, and Gratz | '/ Teplics E. Dunkum, grand master of Masons | °! "";, e in 1l in_the District. and birds. - The The Masonic Cop Club was or- ganized at a meeting in the Gavel Club rooms Tuesday night. when Sergt. Milton D. Smith was elected form of dog: are of gold for the Whippet Show Being Pianoforte Competition. By the Associated Press. PAWTUCKET, R. T, May \ .- president. Sergt. Smith, who was the organizer °F €1an of the club, is a past president of the Policemen’s Association, and of the | Circle Club of Master Masons, past The official name of the organiza- lgn Is the Masonic Club of Police ol the District of Columbia and the shiald adopted as the insignia has} Held Here Next Week. the word “Masoni¢” across the top|patron of Congress Chapter of thc HE Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs. Jardine have given their names as patrons of the National Whippet Derby, y 20 and at the American League Park. Dinner This Evening for Baron and Baroness de Cartier. The Ambassador of Belgium and Baroness de Cartier will be the guests in whose honor Mr. William Beale Hibbs will be host to a company at dinner, followed by dancing at the Montgomery Country Club. The Ambassador of Japan and Mme. Matsudaira will be hosts at dinner this evening in honor of the United Japan. Mr. Minister of Czechoslovakia, Mr. Zdenek Flerlinger, sailed this morn. ing on the Paris for Europe, where he will spend his vaeation. During his ihsence the counselor of the legation, Mr. Lipa, will act as charge d'affaires. The Minister of Albania, Mr. F Konitza, entertained at dinner last evening In honor of the retiring Min- ister of Lithuania, Mr. Kazys Bl kas. Among the other guests were the or of the Latvian legation. Mr. Z. Olins: the first secr y the Bulgarian legation, Mr. Stephen P. Bisseroff; Mr. Robert Kelley, chief of the tern European division of t: Prof. Albert H. wift T. Coleman have arrived in ashington and are at the Wi rd, | where they plan to remain several | days. Representative and Mrs. Clyde Kel'r have returned from a trip to Atlantic City and Philadelphia and will be at their home in Chevy Chase until the latter part of June, when, accomoa- nied by their children, they will go to Tocust Spring Farm, their Summer place in western Pennsylvania. Mr. A, Wa attache of the vptian legal ho has been pro- moted to a new post in Rumania. was tendered a b voyage dinner last evening by Mrs. F. Zumbruunn, in her home at Sixteenth ' street. The guests were limited to a few of the intimate friends of Mr. Wahabby. nt were: The Minister of za Davoud Khan Meffai: the Minister of Lithuania. Mr. Bizau: kas: the nounselgr of the Persian lesa- tion and Mme. Noury, secretary of the Bulgarian legation and Mme. Bisse- roff; Mme. Charles Phillippe Sovez, Dr. F. M. Moussa, secretary of the Fzyptian legation; Mr. Ashmed F. el 1 . attache of the Egyptian lega- Mrs. Bertha Martin, Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Ewell, Dr, and Mrs. Fen- ton Bradford, Mr. and Mrs. Carlton L. Moran, Miss Pearl Zumbrunn, Mrs Willam Williams. Miss Lilita Daw- son. Miss Frances Jones, Mr. Jim Yarborough and Mrs. Zumbrunn's brother. Watkins Ewell of Washing- ton and Lee University. Judge McKenzie Moss of the United States Court of Claims. was joined at the Wardman Park Hotel yesterday by Mrs. Moss, who has been visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.' and Mrs, Arthur Howe, jr.. in Philadelphia. Princess Cantacuzene and her daugh- ter, Princess Ida Cantacuzene, sailed today on the Paris for Europe. Prof. George MacCurdy, director of the prehistoric research jnstitute of Yale University, i3 the guest of Mr. and Mys. Campbell Forrester, who will entertain at dinner this evening in his honor. Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Chance left Washington vesterday for Richmond, Ind., where they were called by the death of Mrs. Wilfred Jessup, sister of Mrs. Chance on Thursday. Mrs. Jes- sup spent the Summer with Mrs. Chance' last year and has a number of friends in the Capital. Mr. and Mrs. Jessup were in Washington dur- ing the war, the former doing legal work for the Government. B Mrs. Allen Earle Peck, widow of Admiral Peck, will entertain at dinner this evening at the Club St. Mark's. du- | nd Mrs. Miss Carusi to Marry Maj. Lombardi This Afternoon. The marriage of Miss Helen Cassinm Carusl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Francis Carusj, to the assist- ant military attache of the French embassy, Maj. Emmanuel Lombard, will take place this afternoon at 4 o'clock, in St. Matthew’s Church, the Rev, Edward Buckey, officiating. small reception for relatives, wedding party and outof-town guests will follow the ceremony. Miss Frances Jennings Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Davis, will be married to Ensign Oliver Francis Naquin this evening at 8 o'clock 1., the Church of the Epiphany. Former Attorney General and Mrs. A. Mitchell Palmer, who are again at the Cariton Hotel after spending the late Winter and Spring at their home in Miami, have motored to their home at Stroudsburg, Pa., for the week end. Mrs. Hampson Gary is passing a few days at the Weylin Hotel in New York. Dr. David E. Mitchell entertained a small companv at dinner last ewening at the Little Tea House in Virginia in celebration of Mrs, Clarence Crittenden Calhoun’s birthday anniversary. Mrs. George Mesta left Washington vesterday for a week's visit in Pitts- burgh and will then return to her apartment at the Mayflower. Mr. and Mrs, Alexander Whitelaw of Scotland, have returned to the Carl- ton Hotel after a two week's stay at Hot Springs. They will visit friends 4n Buffalo and New York hefore safl- ing for Seotland. Mrs. Whitelaw is a niece of the late Lord Beaconsfield. former prime minister of England. Wilbur-Castleman Engagement Announced. Mrs. Willlam Nelson Wilbur of Warrenton has announced the en- magement of her daughter, Harriet Mason, to Mr. Charles Thyson Castle- man. The wedding will take place in June. Miss Wilbur is the daughter of the late Willlam N. Wilbur of Philadelphia. She was educated .t iss Chapin’s School in New York and is a member of the Junior League, Mr., Castléman is a son of the late John T. Castleman and Mrs. Castleman of Leesburg, Va., and has heen one of the masters at Stuyvesant hool for two years. Baroness Jean Van Hagen of Munich, Germany, arrived in Wash- ington today and is at the Willard for a short visit. Mr. and Mrs, David C. Howard of Charleston, W. Va., are at the Carl- ton Hotel for the week end. Mrs. Edward W. Lane and son ward, of Jacksonville, Fla., are pass- ing a few days at the Willard. Miss Margaret F. Washburn, head of the department of psychology at Vassar_College, is a guest at the Grace Dodge Hotel for a few days. Washington today and will pass a few days at the Ma. Miss Katherine Corbett and Miss | Marjorie Lynch were joint hostesses at a luncheon today at the Carlion Hotel for the senior cliss of the Georgetown Convent. Covers were laid for 16. Mrs. Lois Peirce-Hughes of New York is at the Grace Dodge Hotel, while attending the meetings of the | Zonta convention. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Penfieid of Albany. N have arrived at the Willard to remain over the week end Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Simpson of | Bridgeport, Conn.. are passing a few | days at the Carlton Hotel. Michigan Alumnae | Tea Tomorrow Afternoon. | Mrs. Herman Trum, past president. | and Mrs. Grace J. Landon, the pres ent president, assisted by the officers | mmittee chairmen of the Uni- | of Michigan Alumnae Associa- | tion of Washington. will give a tea to | University of Michigan women and guests tomorrow afternoon, from 3 to| 6 o'clock. in the home of Mrs. Trum | at 1232 Hamilton street. The guest | of honor will be Dr. Eliza Mosher, | formerly dean of women at the Uni:| versity of Michigan. Who is in the city attending medical conventions. | . Gertrude's Guild | The Ladies of have completed all arrangements fol their garden party at St. Gertrude's School of Arts and Crafts tomorrow afternoon, from 3 to 6 o'clock. and a warm welcome, delicious refreshments an interesting exhibition of the chil | dren’s handiwork and a delightful aft- | ernoon await the guests. The school | is located at Bunker Hill road and Fif- | teenth street northeast, Brookland,and at_the little brown-stone house on the side of the road at this,point St. John's College cadets will meet the visitors and conduct them through the grounds. Mme. Marie Zalipsky has planned | a group of Russian dance music for the musical at the residence of Mr. and Mrs, Walter R, Tuckerman, Edge. | woor Lane, Edgemoor, Md.. Tuesday | afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. Miss Eliza- beth Pyng, mezzo-soprano. has an in teresting group of songs, and Mr. Kurt Hetzel will play a few of his own piano arrangements of the old composers. The Grace Dodge Hotel entértained yesterday at luncheon a group of girls from Manassas High School. Miss Lulu Metz, a director of the College of Willlam and Mary. was interested in bringing the group from the home economics department to Washington. Following the luncheon a tour of the hotel was made, in order that the girls may see housekeeping on a large scale. . BEAUTY SAYS GIRLS - DO NOT NEED TO PET College Winner Also Holds Smok- ing and Drinking Not Essen- .tial to Pleasure. By the Associated Press. EUGENE, Oreg., May 14.—Girls need not smoke, drink nor pet to have a good time, says “Miss Eugene, title won by Miss' Reree Grayce Nel- son from a gPoup of 60 contestants for being the most beautiful girl in this -ity. Miss Nel- son is a sopho- more at the Uni- versity of Oregon, 20 years old, with la dark eyes xnl black bobbed r. “I on't approve of smoking, drink- ing or petting parties,” she says, “and no girl has to do these things In order to have a good time.” Mixs eiror Nelson's ambition is to do journalistic work. Her favor- ite studies are history and astronomy. . How They Hunt Turtles. Turtle huanters learn quickly that the only way to keep a big turtle alive and in good condition for the market is to put it on its back, the hard shell supplying a "foundation support for the heavy body, says the Adventure Magazine. If it were kept out of water for a considerable time the weight of the body, often reaching from 200 to 350 pounds, would have only the soft underportion of the shell for support and the body would he heavy enough to crush it and kill the turtle, The big turtles for shipment to city markets are caught at night after they have deposited their eggs in the | sand and start their return trip to the water. In some favored places hunters are able to capture 100 in one night. o Marriage Licenses. Marriage Ycenses have been issued to the followin Wiltrid Bowen of Gal 3 Yarwaod an |"x": E’L":c‘u‘.;"omq vo0d and Ro White and Rebekan B, Fips. and Virgie Randall. both | Gearge Grav and Mazora Owens Josenh X Mudd and ;r?;:h?m.“é" Koonce 3 = Baitoy g G."Hester of East Falls Church, Voo ©o¢! Cenneth C. hymas D, somb. Births Reported. The following_births have w the n - reparted how beer e Health Department in the past 24 ¥ G. und Ruth Walky 3 Sh(llm "5nd Mary 3 Sonmai boy. §len and Bernjce E. Martsolf. boy Ivie, I and Rdin 8 Burnbin eir Kl &, e Do Do 8 n snd: Cicitie Foweil, hog. " "' ary Spears.’ boy. ng Melissa wfll nd Loreiia nwal"’mf’im. e Flood, hoy. ! and Ada Green, hoy Georee 5 and, Lilian Gandiner. bay n s Washin i fomis G, and Luela” Herndon: (twing) Yo Deaths Reported. | The following deaths have ‘ :;:m'i""g Health wartment in b{fi: :ll‘h?fl:?‘l Nora M. Fanning. 44, 488 H at ow Emmett M. Key. 40, Garfie'd i Josepi Dowa, 51."0h routs Casalts. Hos: pital, Wil J. Bro o N diers' Hom wospital, 0 United States Sol Jul{{?’t iGl;llthr. 25. Georgetown Univer- o8 "Endres. 45. St. Eiisabeth's Hos- m iellie Stevens. 18. Stanton Park Hospital il Briggs, 00, 180 m%m 5%, 1062 3t gm0 10 sigvaile 4 4238 "8'Conmelt, ¢ davs, G Mr. and Mrs, ling of Trenton, dinand 'W. Roeb- . J., will arrive in ne, John A Tewis B4 Lioyd. 23, linger Hospital Rutl ricld H 4 Hittle “Ricmand LT Goorgg H. Lewis, 4 asualty Hoapital Miss A Covington. K, lnide Dougl: who remains (right) ere until Sunday. | | | | | | I her guest, Miss Marjorie McCoy of National honors in the biennial piano. forte competition of the National Fed. | eration of Music Clubs Chicaso | have just been won by 19-yeur old Rita Breault of this city. Two s ago Misa ault won the ht to represent Néy England in g this competition, | but wus harred § she was nthg le p | than Whew. mini ! mum age réyire / | ment of 18. 7 | This year e G | tried _again, oncy P! | | at more Barrying o\ Rhode_Island and % o ~ New England hon. 80702 ors. She has hern lecanll | awarded a scholarship“gounded Harold Baver, the "nnnng",im,m imesasiin. by Two thousand butterflies Yo | |have been collected in tropical\Eng | Africa were recently shipped from, Liverpool to America. Mounting. of" the specimens had taken 333 hours of spare time work, according to the collector, A. Lovering of Clevedon, £ngland. The collection, valued at $ also includes thousands of beetles, grasshoppers and other insects | thered by Lovering | “Old By the Associated Press. JOLIET, 1lL, May 14.—“0ld Charlie” Lindwall, the oldest prisoner in Joliet Penitentiary and possibly the oldest in the country, Thursday observed his| 98th birthday just as he had observed | every milestone since 1900 and as he | probably will observe every anniver-| sary until he receives the pardon of | death. | Lindwall, sentenced to the peniten- | tiary for life in 1900 for murder, which | he always denied committing, refused | a pardon a few years ago, maintaining | he was too oid to face the world. ! Charlie” Lindwall, in Joliet Prison 97 Years, Celebrates 98th Birthday| ‘At the time he was sentenced the court told him that his age alone had shved him from the gallows, Since then the judge and most of the jurors have died, but “Old Charlie," half biind feeble and bowed with his years, has clung tenaciously to life, serving his penalty with borrowed time over the allotted three score and ten. Today he putters around the prison yard with no guard molesting him and no prisoner intruding upon his dream- At chapel services and for the week- iy movie “Old Charlie” has a favored seat in the front row because of his years and failing sight. | Special Dispatch to The Star i T Community Shy on Blondes. 10S ANGELES. May 14.—A re markable scarcity of light-haired or | even titian charmers in' Glendale is reported by the Parent-Teacher Asso- | ciation of the Atwater and Glen Feliz Schools, which was unable recently to find any one-in either district equip- | ped by nature to play the principal | role in a benefit skit, entitled *Do Gentlemen Prefer Blonds?" The skit was given with its author, Mrs, Edgar Lompton, in the role, but she played in a blond wig. N LADY BAILEY IS HURT, BUT WILL.STILL FLY | Englishwoman Injured by Pro- rpeller Blade, Which Tore Off . Flying Helmet. By the Associated Pres: May 14.—The Honorable . wife of Sir Abe Bailey, | South American millionaire, plans to | continue her air- i plane flights after recovering from her recent accl- dent. She was pre- paring to make a flight_in her pri- vate De Haviland moth machine when a propeller blade tore off her flying helmet and injured the side of her head. Al- though badly in- jured, Lady Bailey walked away gamely and ¥ < drove ~ away in xBcly Barle her motor car. ’( v i | Lady Balley is a member of the London Aeroplane Club. Last Oc- tober she was -granted her pilot's license. o 1t is declared a fact that the full- blood negro in Africa never sneezes and it is said that their full-blood descendants in other parts of lhei world do not. 1 'Y. W. C. A. Cafeteria 614 E St. N.W. Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Every Day But Sundays and Holidays Sunday Dinner $1.50 Fish Canapes Cream of Mushroom Soup with French Bread Broiled Chicken Fresh Asparagus Macaroni Croguettes Lettuce and Roquefort Dressing Strawberry Shorteake Coffes Mousse Hot Rolls Potomac 338 Coffee Cean Rugs Last Longer pirt and dust have & erinding wea ng action injuring the fabric o 2 time a foot treads em_ Secicnce has not et X a household device capable af”entirely removing dirtwhich s Aoepls,_embedded The One Method oy which rugs can be completely cleansed involves a threefold overa tion—proner brushing. a thorough washing and electric dryine Pacili: ties for this treatment of rugs are jed in a unigue plant which thousands o ‘Washington religving the housewives of wearisome Iahor i You May Enjoy this service at a cost surprisingly low. Thres or four days from the time vour rugs leave your home they are returned unless vou wish them stored. ‘The: rotectad by that they ur ion. Repair and facilities supplement the cleaning service. SANITARY CARPET AND RUG CLEANING CO. New Fireproof Plant 106 Indiana Ave. ETETSTEGET RIS ETRGETE G E TR PETETETETET R Phones: Main 5257 and Main 3201 Michigan Has Long Days. Special Dispatch to The Star. DETROIT. May 14.—Because of Michigan's geographical length there are approximately 100 more hours of | Summer daylight in the extreme up~3 per peninsula than in Detroit. . Cng\z'Enni%Afir W WR'SM'HM Qvivnen. \‘.Q“k o B ey € Pao & ot o Qurare g R B q Al — and . : C.a.wfl X 5 AP V] VUL s Suviman e, !;v\q—\koo“ NNUW~ WM., Take your youngsters for a ride around the Tidal Basin ON THE SWAN BOAT and less fortunate children will bene- fit_through THE CHILD WELFARE SOCIETY (Tidal Basin, Foot 17th St.) Adults, 25¢ Children, 10¢ -~ am s e o q,r.uak‘l.— %m— Coolan w \o* o Wnis Somatiton i g Qg Rinpae 16¢),"i, y Sunday’s Star and kga‘%%ii&%iiii&i}iiii%&s‘%fi At709G St. N.W. Beginning 8 a.m. See The Hecht Co. advertisement in et et et e ettt et et et ot et it i Herald for details 1€ 2,000 Butterflies Arrive, | | From a West Wyinia Paper. Eastern Star and an incumbent sen for warden of Congress Lodge, F. A A. M. The club's degree team will conduct its first official function by conferrin the Master Mason degree on a number of candidates of Anacostia Lodz Monday, with R. B Jenkins, a master. with “Club of Police” helow - dis- tinguished by large capital letters so that fhe letters C O P stand out. Officers elegted in addition to ergt. Smith were: R. B. Jenkins. ark police force, vice president; P. Alley, White House force, master remonies; R. F. Selby, park po- ce force, secretary and treasurer: 28 dwin of the Metropolitan olice force, member of the execu- tive committee, and Rev. C.\N. Jar- rett of the Fifteenth Street Chris- tian'" Churgh, chaplain and an hon- srary mermber. Honorary members ele W. C. t Lodg! Anacostia Because— the safe deposit vaull jargest and entire 1 F edé‘r;fl-Americafi ] NATIONAL BANK cted Included ster of € v Joyous Climax! [ ~4HEN BUDD'S Ice L. Cream is served as ‘ dessert for your Sunday’s dinner, notice the exclamations of joy from your entire family. And J. Brown of Open Nepal Passenger Line, The Nepal (vernment Railway, the first passenges line in the Kingdom of Nepal, has, just been opened. It | is 24 miles long. extending from Rax- | terminug of the Bengal and | hwestern . Rallway, to Amle- | anj. It chits the traveling time 3 between the two places from three | its goodness is so health days to one.' For 8 miles the lin| ful, too? runs through the Bhaber Forest,| 4 - QP . which 18 the home of tigers, rhinoc- | 18th and Columbia R()ad roses and many other wild animais, | Malaria s so prevalent that land COL. 98 to be cleared for hadf a mile 706 on Wach side of the track to prevent :{‘qumud of the disease to passen- For Your Convenience _A new branch ot Budd's has opened at Connecticut Ave- nue and Macomb Street—to better serve you with our Ice Creams and Con fections. Others Must Be in Chicago. The deceased i survived by 10 chil- dren. 5 of Whom gre living DinnerWeek Days Five Thirty to Eight - Dinner Sundays Twelve to Two FiveThi to Eighrtl.y charges at moder MDDEEN CAF ‘ERIA FURS ARE SAFE, LAST LONGER, LOOK BETTER if properly cleaned angl then storéd for the warm season ¥ our dry COLD STORAGE where they will be guaranteed agains}.all risks. small cost is more than saved by the longer usefulness of the garment. Complete Price List Mailed on Request. Berurikp Srorage Company for over a third of a century providing SECURITY for ’ household goods, art objects, silverware, in storage, packing, moving, shipping. 1140 Fifteenth Street 4Y; Blocks North of the White House C. A. ASPINWALL, President. HKXZX — o AR R R R X R RTFTEET T TTW