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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, DL FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1928. . BALLOU DISCUSSES NEEDS OF S[}HUULSI Outlines in Address Plans| for Increasing Facilities in Scutheast Washington. i i i \ | i Plans for the improvement of school facilities_at the Randie Highlands-Orr | Schools in southeast Wash.ngton were outlined for a group of residents of that ! community by Dr. Frank W. Ballou, | perintendent of schools, in his office | _ TOY which time Dr. Ballou si instead of locating a cent to the Orr Build- ted, the addi- | AMERICAN RED CROSS Official Relief Organization of the Government Please enroll the undersigned Name ..oovevences Name .... Address ... DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CHAPTER MEMBERSHIP ANNUAL DUES ‘ Annual 51 l | l | | { | [Contributing! Sustalning | Supporting | Additional [ $25 | Donations | | i 310 | | Only 50c of each to National, balance to your chapter for its growing normal needs. All Major Disaster Contributions are spent therefor and deficlencles, if any, paid from diminishing Red Cross Reserve Funds. Deductible from income subject Roll Call Headquarters, 1342 G Street. 1o Federal Tax. Hence need of Membership incrcase from 4,540,211 to 5,000,000. Telephone Metropolitan 4425, MAKERS SEEK TO MAKE MISSISSIPPI PROBES THREE ARE MISSING AFTER YACHT BLAST Shark-Infested Waters Are | Searched When Two of Boat’s Crew Are Saved. By the Associated Press. MELBOURNE, Fla., December 7.— Search for three additional persons on board a yacht at the time of an explo- sion Wednesday night was continued today in the shark-infested waters near | Melbourne. Two_others, Edward Satinover and Leslie Royal, both of Jacksonville, were taken from the water yesterday. The In High Court | U. S. SUPREME COURT | " ADMITS D. C. WOMAN | Miss Margaret Lambie, Ovenms‘ Worker, Will Practice Before Highest Tribunal. Miss Margaret Lambie, 1661 Crescent | place, a graduate of Vassar and George | Washington University, yesterday was | admitted to practice before the Supreme | Court of the United States. Motion | for her admission to practice was made ‘b,v E. A. Harriman, local attorney, for- | mer professor at G. W. U. Miss Lambie, who .received her law | degree at the local university several years ago, is a member of the bars of the District and New York State. She | also has studied at the Academy of In- ternational law at The Hague. ecause no girl can have too much of it. And as there is much beauty in my hair I protect it with Conti Castile Soap Shampoo. Itdoes not dry the scalp and hair because it con- tains no alcohol. Coati Futile Soap Shampoo is made from Conti Castile Soap and I use it because it leaves the hair_soft and lustrous and I'm formorebeauty. CONT} CASTILE SOAP SHAMPAA FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY. at all drug and department stores During the war Miss Lambie was with the Atlantic Division of the Red | Cross, later was director of the Vas- | sar College relief unit overseas, where she had charge of eight recreation huts | at the Sevenay, France, hospital center, | and at the close of the war was direct- | ing the unit’s work with French refu- L e _ | gees at Verdun. At the last session of Congress Miss POWER NATIONALIZED. | tambie was counsel for six women's col- William Reynolds have not been found. | e M Momtinor Satinover and the missing trio were S i | Joxe, Suiely, Tiacciile and Wellesley— indloted by a Federal grand jury Mon. | Costa Rica Expects Eventual Gov-|on immigration legislation with. refer- ay in Jacksonville on a charge of | S | ence to foreign college professors. She otating e nANGBAL SEOR L oRt b ernment Exploitation. yas president of the Washington unit The explosion is believed to have re- | SAN JOST, i e Oterenny Servied [ sulted from: backfiring of the motor, |y - Costs Resy” wct December 7| League and head of the Vassar Col- | which ignited gas fumes in the ship's |, =" Co8® l‘,‘“:“ e o l}‘“ Gl s s T | gas tank. onalized and a national elec- . thghgonfli{fe?g;mimcek:,adr,sfln‘{mi;i?; 12| *“Distress flares were sent up after the [(ricity service"council created by the that colored persons eligible for grang | CXPIosion and four Coast Guard cutters | EPPrinent s Lhe Sole agency author- jury service were not called, but instead | 12C°d, o the scene. Roval said one of | 2 ETEL, Cates-BoREr toncesslons S ) e ! 24| the cutters passed within 150 feet of f Jury was selected from a white list. | ot “f Ers DAL apparently did :dn’:'shen:élt:);géizazgm‘:&I:cy;!rhogeve_r, racts already in Both colored lawyers face disbarment | | ! yers sba [ ot & | Dolores Del Rio, fil not see him. force. These will be respected until b b roceedings fr i ssippi | p ings from practice in Mississippi | today. He was attended in his last hour | 50¢ they expire. The plan is gradually to|by Father Sanchez Moreno, family priest | courts and also charges of conspiracy | spiracy | | make the government the eventual sole | of the Del Rios, who came from Madrid | | isnmgle sale of Federal offices in the | | catar xploiter of el and water pow when the iling e be erected at the Ran- 1ds Building. the need of facilities in the JURY PICKING CHARGE Not Called for Service, Attorneys Allege, Fol- lowing Indictment. former, unable to swim, saved himself P 1 | by clinging all night to a keg. He was = rescued by a fishing smack. Royal, an expert swimmer, struck out for the | shore, several miles away, and was |lifted from the water by a boat crew § last night as he was nearing the point of exhaustion. He was in the hospital | today suffering from the effects of ex- posure. Willlam Sutton, Johnny Koch and" ad, Colored Persons lou advocated the location of the pr poscd annex at the newer and larger of the two school houses rather than at the 26-ycar-old Orr Building. Lacking au- thority to accept the school superin- tendent’s suggestion, the five represent- atives of the citizen groups invited Dr. | Ballou to explain his views at a meet- ing of the residents yesterday's group Tepresented. Dr. Ballou agreed to ad- dress them at 8 o'clock Monday night in thc Orr Building, Twenty-second and | Special Correspondence of The Star. Trout streets. NEW YORK, December 7.—The The five citizen representatives who | American Institute of Toy Makers is| Natl;uatus. lhedtoy mnl;ers :re anPfor with Dr. Ballou at_his invitation 5 7 e | complicated and expensive toys. Psy- dis i et/ iation [ holding its solemn annual session here | COTPLCates, ANG, CHEEIT (TN con 1 today. The only convention more| ciitant in child psychology for New serious than this one is that of the|york's blue book homes, are all for sim- American Pre rists' Association. | pricity. - Mrs. Scott, summoned to ex- a notoriously lugubrious ing. It|Dert the juvenile wing of one of the might be supposed that making pierrots. | apove establishments, always scraps the jumping jacks and clowns would induce | park avenue toys, clears out a big room certain vagaries and whimsies, and|and turns the children loose with a |that the president of the handful of primitive toys. would at least turn a handspring before | However, there is a division of opin- starting his addr ion among the psychologists. Miss Caro- is all wrong. The toy maker | iine Pratt, founder and present head of their distinguished predecess | the Town and Country School, one of Nurenburg—are entirely free from all|the leading experimental schools of occupational ailments. 4 America, is by no means alarmed about There is a big drift toward industrial | the complicated toys. Miss Pratt was toys. The work of making juvenile |asked today whether, in her opinion, America steam shovel-conscious IS a|the complicated rigs now being supplied mighty serious business. Adult stand-[to children tended to check initiative ards in houses, automobiles, furniture and deadened the creative instinct. and machinery are constantly rising.| It depends s great deal on the In-| and the toy makers must offer critical| dividual child and the age and cir- youth a snappy line of goods. | cumstances \.;nderidwmch it 1‘5 iven = - | these toys, he said. “My main criti- Want Demountable Toys. cism of amusements for children is that The big department stores have made | they are directed too much to teaching an epochal discovery on their own ac- | children how to work and not enough to count. They have learned that there | teaching them how to play.” is a big demand among youngsters for | W, Ogden Coleman, president of the toys that can be taken to picces.| Toy Manufacturers of the United Parents also have discovered that these | States, said the trade faced an obstacle devices are a protection to the family |in the fact that “because of the inten- clock. Hence, there are all sorts of |sity of modern life and the great con- complicated little machines, cquipped | centration on infusing learning into the with minfature monkey wrenches and | youngsters the play age of children is screwdrivers, so they may be quickly | much lower than it was 10 or 15 years taken apart and—perhaps—reassembled. | ago.” Miss Pratt was asked whether The merchants are doing a rushing|this was her observation. business. | “Ido not see any reason why, with in- . The psychologists are now taking a | telligent education, the play age hand in the national toy argument, and ' shouldn't last until about 90,” she said. Womay’s Wortn e Money Back Ka. 1005 Penna. Ave. .Serious Conclave Studies Means of Produc- ing Best Sellers That Can Be Taken Apart. By the Associated Press. MISS MARGARET LAMBIE. JACKSON, Miss., December 1. Members of the Hinds County Board of Supervisors have been summoned by | attorneys for S. D. Redmond and S. R. | Redmond, colored lawyers of Jackson, to furnish information next Monday concerning the drawing of the gran Jury which recently indictdd the two for attempted false pretense, court officials announced yesterday. many of them are no help to the toy | makers Del Rio Dies in Berlin. BERLIN, December 7 (#).—Jaime | Martinez Del Rio, former husband of | past nry El- > High- wing number of pis- only flesh diet is fi e committee of the association. The annex which the residents of the southeast Wi ington community are seeking for their school will be included in the sccond five-year build- ing program, which authorities are pre- paring for presentation at the current session of Congr BAXTER SEMINARY SEEKS $15,000 FUND Unnamed Donor Makes Generous Offer to Aid Tennessee College in Effecting Extension. par T NS CHAS SCHWARTZ & SON “Lock for the ‘Gold’ Schwartz Clock” Baxter Seminary, secondary college, at Baxter, Tenn,, where hundreds of young men and women have received education at a cash cost of from $100 10 $150 a year, has launched a cam- paign for $15,000 for extensions to the school. An unnamed donor has offered to match, dollar for dollar, small subscrip- tions up to the $15,000 required. Funds can be contributed for equipment, en- dowment or enlargements. Baxter, a church institution, is locat- &d on the Cumberland Plateau of Ten- nessee. Its students pay $2 a month tuition and $14 board, an amount far ‘below the actual cost of maintenance, according to President Upperman, in charge of the fund campaign. Donations to the $15,000 extension fund, it is announced, may be directed {o President Harry L. Upperman, Bax- We Invite Charge Accounts er Seminary, Baxter, Tenn. z Buy on the Budget Plan {TWO TAKEN AS OWNERS OF HIGH-GRADE LIQUOR Milton E. Aul and Baltimore Man Arrested for Alleged Volstead Act Violation. Police yesterday arrested Milton Ed- ward Aul of the 1400 block, Whittier treet, and Carroll Chase Sturgis, of Baltimore, alleged joint owners of what police describe as 13 cases of cham- pagne, 14 quarts of scented whisky, 8 bottles of old whisky, 4 bottles of ver- mouth, 1 bottle of Canadian whisky end two gallons of wine, which were Beized. The men were each charged with transporting and possession and were released under $1,000 bond each for gheir appearance in Police Court today. en were arrested by Lieut. Ed- gvard “J. Kelly and Detective Joseph galdmn and Thomas Sweeney, of the Open Evenings Pay Schwartz Until Xmas Next Year Will Your Wife Receive a ‘Perfect’ Diamond This Christmas? ERTAINLY you are not going to say you can not afford to give her that ring this year. She knows YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD WITH US and that you can pay in small weekly or monthly sums—NEXT YEAR. Never has our stock been more co'mplete, so step in and select that PERFECT diamond—the one you have promised so long. Choose From These Pay Next Year 5100 3> B0 Y35 150 3500 $1,000 The House of Chas. Schwartz & Son is known as “Wash- ington’s Home of PERF Diamonds.” Our stock this year is more complete than ever. Fiery, blue-white, PERFECT gems in distinctively different mountings. Designs that you will not find anywhere else in the city. Pay Weekly or Monthly—Next Year 1724 Penna. Ave. Pay as You Get Paid No Interest or Extra Charges “Tune in" on WMAL Saturday, 7:30 to 8 p.m., I want to introduce you to the “Budget Boys.” WINTER Starts December 21st It's Almost Here 3 Months’ Cold Weather to Follow We're Ready With HUNDREDS of $35 and %40 OVERCOATS Two-Pants Suits—Silk Lined Tuxedos Gifts That Really Like Choosing gifts for men is made easy at this popular store. You will delight in choosing his gifts from our large stock. Use our convenient easy terms. Leather Wallets and Pipes Wallets, $1.95 $3.50 to $15 Pipes $3.50 to $5 Up Genuine leather wallets are sure to please. Every smoker delights in a stylish pipe. Lighters $1, $5 to $50 All the best makes of lighters. Leather finish, silver finish, mother of pearl and even those set with watches. Scair Pins and Cuff Links $2.50 to $50 up Green, white or plain solid gold or platinum finish cuff links. Solid gold scarf pins in plain design or set with birth- stonzs, Birthstone Initial Emblem etective Bureau homicide squad, and eadquarters Detective Paul Jones, as he pair was loading the alleged pre- var liquors into an automobile near fenth and O streets. ¢ betectives said the haul was the first #high-grade liquor” that has been seized | ere in several years. MENIOU VICTOR IN SUIT | OF THEATRICAL AGENT $creen Actor Denies Engaging Man Dinner Rings $35, $68.50 to $500 Our $35 to $68.50 din- ner rings are selling very rapidly. Other designs at $100, $200 to $500. Con- venient terms arranged. Flexible BRACELETS $27.50, $50 to $300 Bar Pins Wedding Rings $15 to $175 What could be nicer than a diamond set brace- let, bar pin or wedding ring? Open an account [ and use our convenient 3 payment plan. Vanity Cases $3, $5to $50 Gruen—Hamilton—Elgin WATCHES 31 a Week Styles for Men and Women The watches this year are more attractive than ever before. Never have we shown a more complete assortment. Gruens at $22.50 to $300; Hamiltons, $35 to $175; Elgins, $19 to $200; other watches as low as $12.75. The City’s Most Complete Stock of Fully Guaranteed Watches as Manager to Obtain In- crease in Pay. - the Associated Press NEW YORK, December 7.—Adolphe @enjou, screen hero, emerged victorious 3 00 suit filed i 1927, by John v a theatrical agent, who clai * amount as due him, for @erving as Menjou's manager. i McKeon said the actor had agreed 'to pay him 10 per cent of his salary if fthe agent could obtain a more lucra- give contract for Menjou's screcn work. McKeon induced the Famous Players- Lasky Corporation to double Menjou's alary, he testified, but Menjou_paid Frim on1y 10,000 snstead of $12:500 Menjou fold the court he never had #ngaged McKeon, but had paid the gent $10.000 in the belief that he had n instrumental in obtaining the sal- ry_increase. Justice Sherman ruled hat no contract with the agent.cx- Bsted, and dismissed the suit. ACTS ON IM'MIGRAZI'ION. fPortugal Tries to Divert Brazil Flow to Colonies. LISBON, Portugal, December 7 (). — Eusmp(s are being made to stem the RIN newer styles. Prices from $7.50 to $25 and up. Take your choice, $1 a week. Parker, Schafer, Wahl and Waterman You could not select a finer gift for men or women than one of these practical, useful fountain pens or pencils. Prices $2.75 to $15.00. ow of Portuguese emigration to Brazil nd other couhtrics in South America nd divert it to Portuguese colonics in frica Officers of the first Jrere yesterday order onscripts performing ilitary 0 the the South service, instructing hardships which merican immigrant must undergo and xplaining the facilities offered by the overnment to immigrants in Angola, ortuguese West Africa military region to confer with their prescribed them as A Vast Assortment of Styles and Colors With Models for Young Men 17 to 90 Beautiful, dependable SETH THOMAS Clocks at $12.50 to $25. Those with Westminster chimes at $45 to $90. Complete chests of “1847” Rogers sil- verware at $23.75 to $49.75. TERMS OF $1 a WEEK. Our stores are filled with pleasing gifts at most popular prices. Use our terms and pay next year. CHAS SCHWARTZ & SON DPerfect Diamond's 708 7th Street N.W. 709 14th Street N.W. !éflllllllllllllllll:S\'IE:||l||!|||||IIIIIl!f\\'l}.llllllllllfllllllI!:\\'!F.:m|I|||l|Illllllfi\'l;.fllflllllllllIlllll{\\'!rfll T TS A |||HI|IIII|ll!§\'l/f"-||||||l“llllm!.\\'fi-fl|1||||l||||||fll!i\ S P e R ' ”* Enclose the Back Porch Now See Us for— WINDOW FRAMES i Windows from $2.20 Up Fmall Orders Given Careful Attention No Delivery Charses J. Frank Kelly, Inc. Lumber and Millwork du Pont Paint ~ Hardware 1 Building Supplies Coal 2101 Ga. Ave. North 1343 UL L Gifts Men Like! Where Women Like to Shop Underwear Caps Knit Vests Sweaters Gloves TOILET SETS $1S to $145 All sets this year are more attractive than ever and we are selling more than ever before. See our complete line tomorrow. Pay Weekly Singles $4.25 Twins $9.00 Hats Handkfs. Pajamas Robes Jewelry Shirts Ties Hose Belts Mufflers POPULAR PRICES OF COURSE Made by R. Wallace & Son This 26-plece set of silver is well made, pure silver and gua satisfactory ~service. An extra value, complete service for six peo- ple for only $11.85. $1 a Week - Eem—— ( e —