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MKINLEY CADETS ~ WINDRILL MEDAL Sergt. Philip Tarr of Com- pany |, Business, Also Awarded Honors. Maneuvering with precision as the twenty-first unit to take the field, Com- pany B of McKinley High School, com- manded by Cadet Capt. George O. Weber, the forty-second annual company com- petitive drills of the Washington High School Cadet Corps in the Griffith Sta- dium, to give Tech its first drill vic- tory in nine years. At the same time, Company B's per- centage of 96.1, higher by nearly two | points than its nearest competitor, marked McKinley cadet’s first competi- tive drill participation since the school moved into its new building at Second and T streets northeast. Second honors were taken by Com- pany C of Central, under Cadet Capt. David L. Krupshaw, with an average of 94.4. Its officers included Pirst Lieut David Sachs and Second Lieut. Ralph ‘Williams. Western Company Is Third. Company L of Western, under com- mand of a substitute captain, Cadet Capt. Louis Lucas of Western's Com- pany G, took third honors with a per- centage of 94.3, a bare one-tenth of one per cent below second place. Cadet Capt. Minor Jameson, regular com- mander of Company L, was stricken with appendicitis Sunday night, and when convinced he would be unable to take his men inio the drills, he asked his chum, Cadet Capt. Lucas, to take command for him. The regular leutenants were in the ranks, how- ever, and were ' First Lieut. Roland If’l'lv!lyn!y and Second Lieut. Harold | By virtue of his victory, Cadet Capt. Weber received the famous diamond- studded Allison Naylor Medal, whlrhi was pinned upon his breast following the review that ended the drills, by Secretary of War Good. Becretary Good, who watched the last eompany drill and who reviewed the young troopers, also pinned the gold medal which is awarded annually to the best drilled non-commissioned officer of the entire corps, upon the breast of Sergt. Philip Tarr of Company I of Business High School. Central First on Field. Begun at 8:30 o'clock Monday morn- | ing when all of the companies were | drenched in the cold downpour of rain | which fell upon the fleld throughout | the day, the forty-second annual drills were launched by companies of Central igh School. Continuing yesterday at 8:30 o'clock, the drills included the bids of Business and McKinley High Schools, while the final four companies to take | the fleld late yesterday included one | company from each of the five schools. Company L of Western, third honors winner, was the final unit to take the feld in the two-day maneuvers. After Company L had made its at- tempt to capture the flag, the entire brigade passed around the field in re- view before the Secretary of War and | school officials, including: Dr. Charles | P. Carusi, president of the Board of | Education; Dr. Frank W. Ballou, super- l:::ndent of Azh:cl:. Eup'l:len E. Kra- , first assistant superintendent in charge of high schools and cadet af- 'U-'”: l:d l.\eu’t, Col. v’hll’fia M. Craigle, | . 8. A., professor of m acien tary ce With the.companies drawn up, Mr. Kramer summoned Paul Wilner of Cen- tral, adjutant of the second regiment. | Instructions between the two and with a smart about-face, Adjt. Wil- ner strode toward the standing troops. Finally, the cadet swayed toward Mc- Kinley's companies, walked briskly to h stands went wild. A procedure was followed in announcing the second and third place ‘winners. Personnel of Company B. ‘The of McKinley Bchool's winning Company B tncll?d’:a, with its officers, Cadet Capt. Weber, Pirst Lieut. Siegrist and Second Lieut, Yuen, the following: Sergts. Donald Voshall, Robert Flan- ders, lass Hedrick, Henry Kroll, Henry M ick and Benson Taylor. Oorpls. James Echols, Hugh Emmons, Richard Mellen, Pred Sandberg, Francis Stocking and Thomas Zepp. Pvis. Charles Armstrong, Earl Balder- David Brown, , H Chick, Mason Cohill, Colachicco, Charles Criss, Ralph Donnelly, Douglas Edwards, Rob- ert Francis, Upton Gulick, Gordon Had- low, Mason Hart, Robert Hart, Warren Hayes, William Heine, Robert Hilder, Daniel Hudson, Herbert James, Powell Jones, Charles Kurz, Steven Lankford, Oharles Lederer, Raymond Leisinger, Marvin Mason, Frank Meanke, James Meyers, Prank Murphy, Donald Prince, Jack Rhodes, Willard Rice, Allan Ross, Harvey Schmidt, Charles Sullivan, Louis ‘Thibadeau, Maurice Tschantre, John Waters, Leland Willis and Chester n. Members of Central's second place winning Company C are: Sergts. Rich- ard Pinkel, Howard Turner, William Carpenter, David Williams, William Berlinsky, Jack Kassan; Corpls. John Wiley, Henry Gibbs, Ambrose Sisler, Howell Nash, Claude Smith, Roberi ; Pvts. William Bernstein, Burroughs, James Burrus, Archie de Ladurantaye, James Duncan, Gilbert Elefsiades, Arthur Embrey, Jack Fel- stein, Robert Fleharty, Aaron Goldman, Daniel Goodman, Everett Gordon, Frank Hand, William Hendrix, George Her- furth, Daniel Johnson, Robert Kauf- man, Stephen Lee, John Ludlum, Wil- liam McKay, James McMahon, Roland Morisette, John Pryor, Fred Rhodes, | Leo Schloss, Aaron Schwartz, William | Sherman, Charles Shuffle, Joseph | Smithdeal, _Arthur Stein, William | Thompson. Elicott Valentine, William | ‘Walcott, Burton Whipp. Western High School, Company L, winner of third place, include: Sergts Robert Lamasune, Francis Shoemaker, William _Sheldon, Kelsey Saint, John Jester, Pinckney Harmon; Corpls. Ed- ward Bready, Francis Case, Alan Clarke, Walter Clarkson, Stephan Holderness, 1 Murphy; Pvis. Oscar Adams, Herden Anderson, Carrol Baker, Howard Baker, Stanley Ball, Walter Bird, Allan | Burpand, Stephan Capps, Andrew Con- | 1yn, Keith Covert, Horrace Drury, Les- | lie Emeny, Ralph Evans, John Garnett, Arthur Greenwood, | y, James Keith, Thomas Kimmel, John Latimer, Frank McAlwee, | Henry Merwin, Robert Mitchell, Charles | Rice, Thomas Rolins, Henry Schouerd. Roy Spiiman, Daniel Springston, Allen Stewart, Caldwell Tyler, Robert Wilcox, Robert Willing. | CRAB YLELD PROMISES i RECORD FOR 20 YEARS | Catches in Maryland Waters Run- ning High, State Conservation Commissioner Reports. 1 Dispateh to The BALTIMORE, May 22.—The biggest yield of soft and hard crabs in 20 years is promised this season in Maryland waters if catches keep pace with the esent trend, according to Swepson rle, State conservation commissioner. More than 500 soft crabs were taken from 11 vards of shore front in the West River scction last week. “Hard crabs sold in Washington last Baturday for $2 a barrel.” Earle said, “and as the season advances soft erabs will be more plentiful in the upper Waters of Uhe bay yesterday won first place in | | | yesterday. medal given annually to the best-drilled non-commissioned officer. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C. WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1929, | MCRACKEN GIVEN FAREWELL DINNER Retiring Air Chief, About to Leave for Paris, Promises D. C. Airport Aid. William P. MacCracken, jir., retiring air chief of the Department of Com- merce, whose achievements in the cause of aviation has just won for him recog- nition as one of the Nation's 12 leading “air minds,” received additional honors last night for his efforts to give the National Capital “the world's finest air- port.” About to leave for an air congress in Paris, Mr. MacCracken was the guest of honor at ‘a testimonial farewell dinner at the Willard Hotel, under auspices of the aviation committee of the Washing- ton Board of Trade. Two hundred rep- | resentative citizens were present. per: Company B of McKinley High which won first place in the high school corps competitive drill, completed late ' geronautical work. —Star Staff Photos. [ | | MR. SHURE'S NEW QUINTET. \I A composition which has melodious material that is skilifully handled was | given its premiere performance at the home of Edward C. Potter when the Washington Composers’ Club held a meeting there last night. The work is & quintet for plano and strings writ- ten by R. Dean Shure, well known choir director and organist of Washington. Not since his study of chamber music form a number of years ago in Ger- many has Mr. Shure written anything | for this exacting type of musical compo- sition, He has confined most of his ef- forts to works for large choruses, organ and piano suites. Therefore, his ability to interweave his themes and counter themes cleverly for the instruments of a string quartet, also making the piano part an interdependent part and not solo obbligato as some writers who write chiefly for piano or organ are inclined to do, came as a particularly pleasant | rprite. Mr. Shure was the recipient | of heartiest congratulations from all his confreres as well as other guests surpassed by his followers, and the “Finale in B Flat.” by Cesar Franck, | supplied a refreshing vigor Mrs. Potter seemed a little tired, but her volce is always clear and sweet. She sang the familiar “I Know That My Redeemer Liveth” and “I Will Ex tol Thee, O Lord,” by Costa, with sim- plicity and charm. Both Mr. and Mrs. Potter are intelli- gent musicans; a triffie more vitalit and range of contrast in their inter- pretations would have given the recita: more interest. . RIVERDALE PUPILS T0 HAVE FIELD MEET Special Athletic Program Provided Because Scarlet Fever Interfered With Part at Marlboro. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. RIVERDALE, Md., May 22.—Hoping to allay disappointment among the boys | Tleana’s Husbhand | Not to Be Spaniard, i But Man Near Home . Authority Says Princess Is More Interested in See- ing Brother Wed. By the Associated Press. BUCHAREST, Rumania, May 22.— When 20-year-old Princess Ileana, youngest daughter of ‘Queen Marie, seeks a husband it will be a man whose home is near her own Rumania, so that occasional visits to mother and former home and fireside may be pos- sible, | And, for the present at least, she is | far more interested in securing a wife for her brother, Prince Nicholas, six years her senfor, than a husband for herself. A highest palace authority said the Airport National Problem. Assistant Secretary MacCracken, re- sponding to oral and wrilten tribute§ | given him by prominent members of the board, declared the establishment of an adequate airport in Washington to be “a national problem.” and he pledged his continued aid toward furtherance of the project He characterized the movement for airports as the most important activity | of the present in the world of aviation development, and complimented such organizations as the local trade body for | their drives to make the country “air | minded.” “In the movement for airports it is | essential to have the support of the citi- | gress thinks they should bear the ex- pense.” A feature of the dinner was the show- ing of slow “movies” of pigeons in flight, | disclosing peculiar wing movements of | value in the study of aerodynamcs. The | plctures, photographed at the rate of | | 3,200 exposures per second, were exhibit ed by C. Francis Jenkins of Washing ton television inventor and aviation en- | thusiast. Mr. Jenkins predicted that | television scenes soon will be radioed | from airplanes in flight. | Laudatory speeches on Mr. MacCrack- | en’s services for aviation also were made by Col. A. B. Barber of the U. S. Cham- | ber of Commerce; John J. Esch, mem- ber of the aviation commiltee of the local Board of Trade, and Frederic Wil- liam Wile, news correspondent. Law- rence W. Williams, chairman of the | board’s aviation commitiee, presided. Invited Guests. The invited guests were: Senator | Bingham of Conuecticut, president Na- | tional Aeronautic Association; Repre- sentative Simmouns of Nebraska, chair- man subcommittee on the District of Columbia of the House appropriations committee; Commissioner Proctor L. | Dougherty, Walter H. Newton, secretary to the President; George Akerson, sec- | retary to the President: Clarence M. Young, director of aeronautics, Depart- ment of Commérce; Col. A. B. Barber, manager transportation and communi- | cation department, United States Chamber of Commerce; Maj. D. A Davison, Assistant Engineer Commis- sloner; A. T. Stewart, assistant manager transportation and communication de- partment, Unlied State Chamber of | Commerce; J. F. Victory, secretary na- tional advisory committee for aero- | nautics; Ernest L. Jones, chief Informa- tion Division, Aeronautics Branch. De- partment of Commerce; Dr. C. Francis Jenkins, Frederick R. Neely, general manager National Aeronautic’ Associa- tion; Lieut. Walter Hinton, E. J. Mur- | phy, president Board of Trade: George | Plitt, first vice president Board of | Trade; George W. Offutt, second vice president Board of Trade: Lawrence E. Williams, chairman aviation committe president Washington Real _Estate Board; Samuel J. Prescott, Frederic William Wile, John J. Esch, vice chair- man _aviation committee: Robert E.| Funkhouser, president United States Air | Lines, Edward F. Colladay. Jesse C. Adkins, Ralph Bangs, Frank | N. Chase, Arthur Carr, G. Fenton Cramer, E. Jackson Emrich, W. W. Everett. George B. Farquhar, C. E. Fries, W. Gerald French, George W. Gil- ligan, George V. Graham, E. C. Graham, Moultrie Hitt, M. E. Huston, Har- old D. XKrafft, John D. Leonard.| Paul Lesh, Clarence A. Miller, George Miller, Warwick Montgomery, Macelroy | Henry W. Offutf, | K. Reynolds, John Saul, Charles M.| Saxelby, R. P. Schulze, A. K. Shipe, Don | W. Slauson, James E. Smith. Odell S Smith, Ernest W. Spink. Waldo Tastet, Waverly Taylor, G. O. Totten, jr., and | J. H. Verkouteren. PRINCE GEORGES POLICE | LOCATE MISSING TRUNK Receptacle Believed Stolen in St. —— TRE A 5 POLLARD TO ADDRESS WOMEN IN ARLINGTON Candidate for Governor Will Speak at Organized Voters’ Meeting in Clarendon. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. CLARENDON, Va., May 22.—Princi- pal among the speakers scheduled ta address the Organized Women Voters of Arlington County at their meeting this afternoon in the auditorium of the Jefferson district Firemen's Hall is John Garland Pollard, one of the Demo- | cratic candidates for governor 'and for- mer attorney general of the State. At & late hour today Pollard was the only candidate who had definitely ac- cepted the invitation of the organiza- tion to address it. but it was still hoped that other candidates and tenta- tive candidates would appear. A defi- nite acceptance had been received from Jessie Dell of the United States Civil Service Commission. The speeches were to follow a lunch. | eon served by the ladies of the Calvary Louis Contained Clothing and Dry Goods. Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., May 22.—- | A large trunk containing wearing ap- | parel and dry goods, said to have been stolen from St. Louis department. stores, has been recovered by Prince Georges County police in the residence of John Schonlee, near Silver Hill. Te trunk was found as a result of information received from the chief of police of St. Louis, who wrote Sheriff | Charles S. Early it had been dispatched | from that place by William Murphy, 4000 block of Olive street, St. Lous. Murphy, according to the St. Louis authorities, confessed to over 100 bur- glarles. He sent the stolen goods to relatives, police say. Schonlee, accord- ing to police, is Murphy's father-in-law. He had not opened the trunk and was Methodist Protestant Church of Aurora | Hills. o ) e Quality, Low Prices and Service At This Reliable Lumber House Hl-u:-ber Millwork v Building Paint Suppl Coal Small Orders G| 1 Attention J. Frank ‘leell;:"lnc. 2101 Georgia Ave. N. 1343 Lumber. rk—Du Pont ts Conl—Hardware—Building plies zens. Your board has done much to create airport sentiment in Washington | and the Federal authorities are appre- | | ciative of this. The Government can- | not create this sentiment. ‘ | | Aid for Best Promised. “I am of the opinion that Washing- | ton should have an airport worthy of | the position of the Nation and of its | great Capital. I promise you my aid in | the future to bring about creation here | of the best and finest alrport in the | | world.” \ Mr. MacCracken shifted all credid for | | accomplishments of his department in | the field of civil aviation to President | Hoover, under whose regime as Com- | merce ‘Secretary the department’s air | section was established, and to his as- | sociates in the department. He said | | that all but two bureaus of the de- | | partment are interested officially in Robert. J. Cottrell, executive Washing- ton Board of Trade: Ben T. Webster, | not aware of its contents, the sheriff | says. ! o, ALL SALES Record Smashed |~ The air secretary was presented with the cause of & model airport in the Nation’s Capital, the Washington Board of Trade, representing 3,200 of the leading citizens of the community, gratefully presents to Willlam P. Mac- Cracken, jr. Assistant Secretary of | Commerce "for aeronautics, this small | token of s esteem.” President’'s Murphy’s Tribute. ‘The presentation was made by E. J. Murphy, president of the board, who said “the splendid co-operation of Fed- eral officials has made our efforts for an airport one of the most quickly realized projects in the history of the | organization.” Mr. MacCracken, he de- | clared, was largely responsible for the factlity with which the goal is being attained. Senator Bingham of Connecticut, chairman of the congressional joint commission investigating airport ‘sites for Washington, praised the civic inter- ests of the city for their unselfish enlist- ment in the airport cause. He said he had heard no objection voiced by any taxpayer to the airport plan, even though the taxpayers might have to bear the cost of the project. “The taxpayers” the Senator said, | “realize they need an airport here and | they are willing to Lower, left: Capt. George O. Weber of Company B receives from Secretary of War Good the prized Allison-Naylor | ° Medal, emblematic of victory. Right: Sergt. Philip Tarr of Company I of Business recelves from Secretary Good the gold | ¢ | S. | “In tribute to his distinguished serv- | i % p ‘Sce to American civil aeronautics and | | his generous courtesy and assistance in 4 | i Automatic! i SN CI@Q,,., . Odorless! ' last night. | and girls of the Riverdale School caused bers of 1 Stri tet— | ticipate in the annual fleld day for B e o g uartet . | subirban Prince Georges County schools Feldman and Richard Lorleberg—with 8t Marlboro, Saturday, because of the LaSalle Spier at the piano, Mr. Potter | local epidemic of scarlet fever, Supt explained before its presentation that | of Schools Nicholas Orem has arranged Mr. Shure was inspired by the pictures | {0 have & special athletic meet staged of three of the famous muses which | ;: dg\e school later, it was announced o f C , | today. Are depicted In the Library, of Songress | “More than a acore of puplls at the lo- parts, each one dedicated to a different | Cal school are reported ill with the dis- muse. Of the nine muses, goddesses |€ase, and several meetings have been of the liberal arts (originally said to \mgg;ed because of the prevalence of have been nymphs of inspiring foun- s. R TN T RS et fa DR opEinte }P]nr. William Burdick, director of the ’ | Playground Athetic League, has agreed for giving inspiration to composers), |y, ’siage a special athletic meet among the students at their school when the epidemic is over, Supt. Orem announced. Mr. Shure chose Melpomere, the Tragic Muse, for the first movement: Erato, | muse of lyric and erotic poetry, for | the second, and Terpsichore, the Dance Muse, for the third. In the first, the inevitability of great forces clashing to dramatic tragedy was admirably sug gested in phrases that built with virility and. non-saccharine melody to & bril- | liant climax. The second movement ‘was less unusual, but very pretty. The third seemed to combine both the syn- copating lilt of the lightest dance music themes with, a sacred organ undertone. | Hr‘flhth; latter mrmedbeen Orlental it | might have suggested ancient dance 2 rituals of pagan worship. The order of | WINCHESTER, Va., May 22.—Hand- the three movements might have been | ley High School pupils surprised veteran reversed to advantage and ended on |Triflemen vesterday afternoon in shoot- the dignity of the tragic movement | ing matches between five local teams at rather than on the piquant frivolity of | Rouss Park, when they recorded the the last theme in the dance movemnt. |NIgh score in a driving rain, being the Another unusually ambitious compo- | ©nly team left to shoot when the down- sition, one which has weathered several Pour started. Handley scored 575 out previous performances, even in New |Of & possible 750, Edwin Smith and York, was sanother feature of the eve- | Glenn Seabright tieing for high with ning. It was a sonata for violin and | 122-150. plona by La Salle Spler and was | _Miss Mary Capper of the Girls' Ath- played by Sylvia Leni the famous letic Association, topped the women's little violinist, who is a native of Wash- | class. Shooting rapid fire she accounted ington, and Mr. Spler. This work was for 103 out of 120. given first performance & year sgo &t & meeting of this club. The perform- ance last night showed that it is a| work which is even more welcome after | equent hearings. It has maturity in le and authority; it shows adroit use of varied technical effects and while modern in many respects, it has some lovely moments of melody. The droll littie theme given to the violin | == . = RIFLE MATCH WON IN WINCHESTER RAIN High School Pupils Surprise Vet- erans by Bcoring 575 Out of Possible 750. Special Dispatch to The Star. SHOT IN MOUTH. Capitol Heights Photographer in Grave Condition at Hospital. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. CAPITOL HEIGHTS, Md., May 22— | for pizzicato interpretation lingers in | Robert P. Sternberg, 33-year-old photog- the memory pleasantly and persistently. | rapher, whom police vesterday reported The evening opened with a vocal | shot himself through the mouth at his quartet’s singing of Dr. Alexander | residence here, was today said to be Hennemann's setting of the poem,|in a critical condition at Casualty Hos- “Refuge,” which is being sung quite a pital. The man had been despondent bit at the present time. It was sung by ' for some time. the Washington Quartet, composed by Mrs. Pred Rice, Edna Jones, Nason Willis and Roland Comley. Optician—Optometrist 922 14th St. N.W. E. Round Elvina Neal Rowe, popular voung' ablished 1889 Trip Atlantic City written by the host of the evening, Mr. Sunday, May 26 Potter, entitled “There Is No Night.”| It is a sympathetic setting of & charm- | H.F. Also Thursday, May 30 SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN ing verse. Via Delaware River Bridge Standard Time, ceere 1200 AM THE POTTER ORGAN RECITAL. One of a series of organ recitals, un- der the auspices of the American Guild of Organists, was given last night at Calvary Bapiist Church by Louls Pot- ter, fellow of the guild, assisted by Ruby Potter, lyric soprano. Mr. Potter evidently has a predilec- tlon for modern French music, since, aside from some short Bach and Handel, he had four selections of that | school on his program. The fact that a composition is in modern idiom and difficult to under- stand is inclined to lead an audience | to regard it with undeserved awe. Mr. | Potter merits gratitude for giving the opportunity to_his audlence to com- | pare these different composers, The ! first, & symphony by Vierne, was char- | acteristic of its composer, the famous | blind organist. The next two short pleces by a cotemporary Belgian, De | Maleingreau, had individual = quality. | There was Elizabethan delicacy in the | “Pastorale” and a_contrasting depth of | feeling in_“The Tumult in the Prae- | torium.” The prelude to “The Blessed | Demozal” (arranged by Polmer Chris- ) sigi ot Db s ng 35 00 Leaves Washington . “This quintet was played by the mem- | by their not being permitted to par- | “ | y_for lg it Con- Buy Good FURNITURE on CREDIT For sixty-three years we have been demonstrating that GOOD FURNITURE can be sold at low prices and on dignified, easy CREDIT. Credit here is a simple charge account. No Notes—No Interest. Peter Grogan & Soms :k. GROGAN'S 817-823 Scventh St.N.W. Homefurnishers Since 1866 princess had no intention of m.rrymz‘ the Prince of Asturias, eldest son of | King Alphonso of Spain, in whose company she was seen frequently dur- | ing a recent visit to that country. Her desire, the authority said, is to marry a man living close to Rumania. The authority aiso denounced Euro- pean court gossip that a recent trip to Sweden concerned a possible marriage with & Swedish prince. It was said instead she went to_Stockholm to find a bride for Prince Nicholas, who, like King Boris of Bulgaria and King Zogu of Albania, is experiencing difficulty in arranging a suitable marriage. 4-H Clubs Organize Federation. FREDERICK, Md., May 22 (Special) —Comprising & membership of more than 200 girls, members of 4-H Clubs of Frederick recently organized a Fred- erick_County Federation. 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