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A—4 P THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1930. bt B HONOR 70 BE PAID REVOLUTION'S DEAD ’ MEMORIAL i C. A. R. to Visit Alexandrla! for Tribute to Unknown Sol- | dier of War for Freedom. The Children of the American Revo- lution today prepared to pay homage @t the Tomb of the Unknown Soldter @f the Revolution, in the church yard of the old Presbyterian meeting house in Alexandria. ssembling at the Red Cross head- quirters, where the society has been in session here this week, the young patriots were to reach the tomb in late afternoon for their program There they were being greeted by John B. Gordon, chairman of the na- tional committee for the restoratiop of the old meet} 5 Col. Julian lains of the Army . chief of chap- was invited to deliver the invocation, and Assoclate Justice Josiah A. Van Orsdel of the Court of Appeals was orator of the day. Mississippi Gives Wreath, A wreath, the gift of the Mississippi societies, is being laid on the tomb by Cornelia Keeton, Lvdia Darrah Society, and Nina Elizabeth Markette, Newell- Walton Society, and a trowel, with its handle made of walnut from Mount Vernon, is a gift planned by Mrs. Percy Quinn, national president of the soctety. | A gr niece of George Eleanor Washington br t from 1y Band pre- pared a musical program for the rtseeing trip will be made to-| spots in Alexandria before the | delegates return to Washington. A small American girl giving inter- pretations of Japanese dances and a Washington boy presenting his marion- ettes in plays of his own writing were features of a program at an entertain- ment for the soclety last night Applaud Young Dancer. A large group of parents and small children composed the audience which enthusiastically_applauded the dancing | of 10-year-old Collis Allen, daughter of | Maj. H. O. Allen, U. S. A, who has, recently returned from a two-year resi- dence in Japan. The dancing was followed by. the | marionette show offered by Theodore Tiller, 11, member of the Army and Navy Society, D. C, C. A. R, assisted | by Jessie Thurston and Barry M\llllKln jr., schoolmates at Central High A playlet, “From the Depths of Pu- jiyama,” dedicated to the former Setsu Matsudaira, daughter of the last | Ambassador from Japan, and now the | Princess Chichibu, received spontaneous appreciation from the audience. The | little Japanese marionettes in the piece were dressed by Mme, Sawada, wife of the former counselor of the Japanese embassy, and the scenery was designed | and painted by Tiller and Maclain Lusby. A string quartet consisting of Sara Rosey, Edith Bothkin, Assa Inazawa and Helen von Ston Deg, members of the intergrade orchestra furnished music. Mrs. Lawrence H. Quirollo, national viee president of the soclety, gave a travel talk. Memorial Placed. National officers and members of the C. A. R. participated in exercises at Washington Cathedral yesterday after- noon, placing a stone in the wall of the north transept in memory of their former national president, Mrs. Rhett Goode of Allblml Mrs. PFr Dubols, honorary na- tional pruldfllt Mrs. James Harper, State director; Mrs. Clayto! president of the District of Columbia Chapter; Jane Cox, bearer of the trowel, and Elwood A. Cobey, jr., spread the mortar with a special trowel, decorated with the national colors, and assisted with the actual setting of the stone. The program included an invocation by Mrs. Edwin F. Brooks, State chap- lain; salute to the flag led by Graeme Smallwood, jr.; a recitation, “Our Flag of Liberty,” by Sidney Hayward; mfl,— ings by Mrs. Quin and & memorial lddre&s by_the Right Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washington, THE WEATHER District of Columbia—Cloudy, not so cool tonight; tomorrow fair; slightly warmer; variable winds, becoming moderate southwest. Maryland—Cloudy, preceded by occa- sional light rain this afternoon or early tonight; not quite so cool tonight; to- morrow fair; slightly warmer; moderate northeast winds, shifting to west tomorrow. Virginia—Cloudy, not so cool tonight; preceded by rain this afternoon or to- night and in southeast portion tomor- row; slightly warmer; moderate north- east winds, shifting to West tomorrow. West Virginia—Partly cloudy, slightly colder in west portion tonight; tomor- Tow fair, colder. Record for 24 Honn. Thermomol»rA pm., pm., ; 12 midnight, 43; 4 lm 42 B am, 14 noon, 54. Barometer—4 pm. 3039; 8 pm., 30.36; 12 midnight, 30.30; 4 am,, 30.25; 8 a.m, 30.20; noon, 30.11. Highest temperature, 54, occurred at noon today; lowest temperature, 42, occurred at 4 am. today. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 54; lowest, 42. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) ‘Today— Low tide, 6:10 a.m. and 6:46 Ppm.; high tide,'11:48 a.m. ‘Tomorrow—Low tide, 7 a.m., and 7:36 pm. high tide, 12:23 am. and 12:38 pm. The Sun and Moon. Today—Sun rose 5:28 am.; 6:47 pm. Tomorrow—Sun rises 5:27 am.; sun gets 6:48 pm. Moon sets 8:49 a.m. Weather in Various Cities. sun sets a Ei g ] 8 2 g 15°M0T & U e g 0wy Stations, e gepiaysas p -e ey gsep 2 velang Columbia, $. C. Denver, Colo. x-m.s City, uo‘ 30.10 Los Angeles, v York, N.Y. Oktanoma’ Sicy: 3018 Qmam, Nebr... 50.08 Philadelphia Phoenix, Ariz Pittsburgh, Py Bortland, Me or Bait Lake Gty zo 0 Ban _Antonio. 8 San Diego, Calif :nnu nels Lous, Scene at Mount St. honor of their late president, al president; Right Rev E. Quinn, national presi STONE In the group, left to right, are: PLACED IN CATHEDRAL DENY CITIZENSHIP 10 COMMUNISTS 'U. S. Court of Appeals Up- | for th holds Decision of Federal Body in Pittsburgh. By the Assoclated Press. PHILADELPHIA, April 18.— The { United States Circuit Court of Appeals third circuit ruled yesterday against the admittance of Communists to American citizenship. The decision upheld the revocation of | the citizenship of John Tapolcsanyi, & member of the Communist party, by the Pederal Court in Pittsburgh. The ap- pellate _court, composed of _Circuit Judges Victor B. Woolley and J. War- ren Davis and District Judge Albert W. Johnsen of Scranton, took the position that the principles of the Communist party were so “incompatible” with the Constitution of the United States that one of its adherents could not be faith- ful to both ‘Tapolesanyl is a Hungarian and has been in this country 17 years. He con ducts a barber shop in Herminie, Pa.; is married and has three children. |SIXTEENTH ST. HIGHLANDS Alban yesterday as Children of the American Revolution gathered to lay a memori 1 Rhett Goode. Freeman, Bishop of Washington: R Mrs. Fred T. Du Bois, honor Berkley, cathedral ver the mortar. f Photo Sldehghts on D. A. R. The number of living real daughters of the American Revolution is rapidly decreasing, Mrs. Benjamin L. Purcell as chairman of the real daughters com- mittee Teported al yesterday after- noon's session. She stated that there |are now only mnine living real daugh- ters. They are: Mrs. Annie K. Gregory of the Conrad Weiser Chapter, Penn- sylvania; Mrs. Adalia C. Hatch of the Deborah’ Sampson Chapter, Massachu- setts; Mrs. Francis W. B. Holbrook of New York; Mrs, Caroline P. Randall of the Samuel Ashley Chapter, New Hamp- shire; Mrs. Angelina Avery of Wili- mantic, Conn.; Mrs. Mary Pool Newson and Miss Sara Pool of the Nancy Hart Chapter, Georgia; Mrs. Maria S. Al- lan, New Lexington, Ohio, and Mrs. Helen M. Barrett of Michigan, The president general, accompanied by the delegates to the congress, made the annual pilgrimage to Arlington this afternoon to place a wreath on the tomb of the American Unknown Soldier, Mrs. Stephen Abbot is chair- man of the arrangements for the pil- grimage and is assisted by Mrs. William C. Barnes, vice chairman; Mrs. Willlam H. Cudworth, Mrs. Donald Macrae, jr.; Mrs. Boyce Ficklen and Mrs. W. Z. Stuart. Mrs. Charles Herbert Catroll of Con- cord, N. H., State regent, told the con- gress that one chapter in her State has one member 91 years old and another 97 years old. The Texas society is sending 26 girls through school under the student loan fund, Mrs. James A. Roundtree of Paris, Tex., hld the conxreu in her report. ndol,ph Ooyle son of Maj, and Mrs. Randolph Coyle, sent a check for $25 for the “sunshine ventilighter” in Con- stitution Hall in memory of his grand- mother, the late Mrs. Rheet Goode of Alabama. Mrs. Goode was for many years chaplain general of the society. The Maj. L'Enfant Chapter, District of Columbia, Mrs. Albert N. Baggs, regent, was a $25 donor to the venti- h Mrs. John M. Slaton, ‘Wife of the former Governor of Georgia, is one of the best dressed women at the congress. She was the honor guest at a dinner last night of the Georgia delegation. Mrs. Herbert Fay Gaffney is State re- gent of Georgia, and Mrs. Bun Wylle is State regent-elect. ‘The Pennsylvania delegation enter- tained at luncheon yesterday in honor of Mrs. Anthony Wayne Cook and Mrs. John Brown Herron, formerly vice president general. In interested page from Louisiana is the daughter-in-| of Mrs. Mafthew Brewster, Mrs, W. Rogers Brewster. Miss Ethel Smith of Amherst, Mass,, member of the Mary Mattoon Chapter, wears 29 ancestor bars on her ribbon insignia. Mrs. Henry Lyne of the Colorado delegation gave a tea yesterday at her home in honor of the delegation. | | Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley, wife of the Secretary of War, entertalned at tea yesterday in honor of Mrs. Frank Ham- {lton Marshall, State regent of Okla- hema, and the Oklahoma delegates. Miss Jessie Dell, United States Civil Service commissioner, will entertain to- night in_honor of Mrs. Julius I. Tal- madge, former vice president general, from Georgia; Mrs. Herbert Fox Gaff- ney, State regent; Mrs. John D. Pope, vice State regent, and the Georgla dele- gates to the thirty-ninth Continental | Congress. ‘Three sisters met hE|E for. the lhm. ninth congress of the N. Mrs. George Buntin, Fort linnmm Chapter, from Terre Haute, Ind, and Mis. Mary E. N. Borden, Col. Timothy Bigelow Chapter, Worcester, Mass., are sts of Mrs. W. E. Gillmore, wife . Gen. W. E. Gillmore, U. 8. A, Washington, who_is delegate from the Piqua Chapter, Ol The Colorado delegation to the con- ference with cfficers, Mrs, John Camp- bell, honorary vice president general, of Denver, and State regent. Mrs. . Thomas Boyd of Denver had a dele- gation luncheon at 1 o'clock at Rauscher’s yesterday. They will have their own table at the banquet tomor- | réw evening at the New Willard Hotel The State meeting was held in the New Jersey room of Continental Memorial | Hall Wednesday with a full representa- tion of delegates. Dr. L. S. Rowe, director general of the Pan-American Union, received the delegates vesterday afternoon in the Union Bullding. HELD FOR éRAND JURY Servant Accused of Forging Name of Employer to Checks, Cecelia Mary Bungay, 39-year-old colored servant of 1529 Church street, was bound over to the grand jury, when arraigned in Police Court today on & charge of forging her employer'’s name to 26 checks. The woman, who worked for Mrs Mary Page Hufty of 1606 Seventeenth street, is said to have gained more than $275 by forgery. Her arrest followed a complaint made by Mrs. Hufty to De- tective Sergts. Ira E. Keck and B. W. Thompson. GIVES UP IN DRY CASE New York Man Indicted in Al- leged Jamaica Ginger Plot. NEW YORK, April 18 (#).—Abraham Michaels, indicted in Covington, Ky., with 15 others for alleged conspiracy to ship 20,000 gallons of jamaica ginger to that State for use in violation of the Federal prohibition laws, surrendered here yesterday. Appearing at the office of Assistant United States Attorney Joseph F. Sharp, accompanied by his attorney, Charles F. Wahle, he denied the charge. A Bank —doing sM4LL things BIG The Morris Plan ? Just a simple sensible way to borrow money for personal uses Come in— You'll like us and the way we do things Morris Plan Bank Under Supervision U. S. Treasury Loaning Hundreds to Thousands SUICDE BEUEVEI] DUE T LOVE RIFT | Yale Graduate’s Body Found‘ Hanging After Engagement | Is Broken by Girl. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 18—A four-page | | letter from a young woman break her engagement to marry today was belleved by the police cause of the suicide of John Douglas, 24-year-old Yale graduate and son of Dr. John | Rindlaub, pioneer physician of Fargo. N. Dak. His body was found yesterday hang- ing from a length of electric wire sus- pended from & steam pipe on the ceil- ing of his room at the West Side Y. M. C. A. Douglas, after graduating from Fargo | | High School in 1924, entered Andover | Academy. He won & scholarship to | Yale and helped pay his way through | the school by outside work. He gradu- | ated with the class of 1929 and for | the last two weeks had been emploved | |as a real estate salesman. He had taken the name of his mother, Mae Bruce Douglas, after his parents were divorced in 1912, His mother died two Yyears ago. Kansas has finished about half of its gmjecwd 8,690-mile system of state ighways. HORSE SHOW SCHEDULED Event Listed for Saturday at 14th and 16th Streets, North of Montague Street. The Sixteenth Street Highlands Horse Show will take place Saturday after- noon at 2 o'clock at a ring located be- tween Fourteenth and Sixteenth streets, one block north of Montague street. There will be seven classes, including saddle horses and ponies, best rider un- der 16 years. Saddle horses novice, sad- dle horses open, 4-year-olds and under, suitable to become hunters, to be shown in hands. Hack and hunters, 4 jumps 81, feet. Green hunters, 3-year-olds, touch and out, four jumps, 4 feet. Prizes and ribbons will be given in all classes. Louis C. Leith and Otto Furr of Mid- dleburg, Va., have been invited to act as judges. SALVATION ARMY PLANS GOLDEN JUBILEE FETES Celebration Begins Tomorrow Be- fore Departure of Commissioner and Mrs. McIntyre. Prior to the departure of Commis- sioner and Mrs. Willlam A. McIntyre, in command of the Southern territory of the Salvation Army, for a new post at | Chizago, the Golden Jubilee Congress of the Salvation Army will be held for sev- eral 2ays, beginning tomorrow and cul- miating in & public Salvation rally Sunday night at 7:30 &t 606 E street. Plans for the congress are being made by Maj. James Asher, divisional com- mander. A large demonstration of young people has been arranged for tomorrow night at which Commisisoner McIntyre will preside and will be the principal speaker. It will be followed by an Easter pageant. il stk S Eight Die in Collision in Spain. VALENCIA, Spain, April 18 ().— Eight members of a holiday party were killed yesterday and 16 injured in a READY TO GIVE YOU EASTER SERVICE! collision between their auto-bus and a freight train near the village of Sama- grell, between Sagunto and Valencia. READY TO GIVE YOU EASTER SERVICE! The Avenue at 7th Now ... A Modern Shoe For This Cement Age . . . Exclusively at Saks! Fitting by Experts Sizes 6 to 13 Widths AAA t0 E foot AT AT ore flfir Shoe thats Different” ND the aches that assail your arches! End that depressing 5 o’clock fatigue! Fit your feet to cope with the punishment of ce- ment sidewalks—hard, unyielding surfaces! 0O0T-JOY Shoes are built to meet the foot problems of thi modern era. They give your feet balanced sup- port...enable you to tread perfectly from toe to heel (as Nature in- tended). BESIDES which, they are smart shoes; stylish, good-looking... as our new models will quickly prove. Won't you come in and be in- troduced to a new idea of foot ease? $10Q to $12 Saks—First Floor His Confirmation and Easter Suit: KARLTON JR. BLUE CHEVIOT With Coat, Vest and 2 Golf Knickers *14.95 YOU could not pick more wisely, for Karlton Jr, brings Blue Cheviot of higher grade than this price il Qs D or herringhone wea e. Sin- gle and double breasted models. Sizes 7 to 18, White Shirts and Blouses . White Silk Shirts. White Ties........ White Gabardine Knickers . $2 Golf Hose . veee.50c81 Caps ... ceee. 3150 Saks—Second Floor $1-81.50 8495 ..35¢:50c “PREPSTER?” 2 - Trouser Suits — styled just right for the Prepster age *22.50 E age that clothing that “Prepster” age between boyhood and manhood. Saks “Prepster” Suits are styled expressly for the lad of 13 to 18. They are man- nish, vet youthful. And their fabrics are right: Tweeds, new Grays and Tans, Blue Cheviots. Alterations, if necessary, in time for Easter Saks—Second Floor calls for EASTER GIFTS are appreciated most when they are practical ! Give Men These: Hand-tailored s Neckwear. . .$1.00 to "$5.00 Tie-and-Handkerchief Sets ....$3.00 Belts and Belt S $1.00 to $7.00 .$1.00 to $2.50 -0 $6.95 .$2.95 to $10.00 $1.00 to $5.00 Handkerchiefs, plain, fancy initialed. .35¢ to $1.00 $2.00 to $10.00 Braces...... Swoater Sets Brief Cases. nd Luggage. .$10.90 to $40.00 in and Fancy !l 95 to $5.00 ..$750 Rayon Union Suits. ......$2.00 and $3.00 Saks—First Florst specialists s l 'NTIL the gong sounds at 6 o'clock Saturday this store will be ready to take splendid care of every FEaster re- quirement. W e have the salespeo- ple, facilities and assortments. The Avenue at 7th Great Easter Selections! CHOOSE THESE KNOWN VALUES . . . IN SAKS TWO-TROUSER SUITS! NO speculation at Saks ... know that this great cloth- 8 ing service is built on qual- 5 ity and style! R your Easter choosing, Suit . . . from rich, hand- some Silver Greys to sprightly, salt-and-pepper Tweedss; from dignified fabric is . . . Saks quality! Alterations, if necessary, in time for Easter Saks—Third Floor no wondering about quality or style ... you we are ready with every outstanding type of Spring fi Blues to golden-hued Tans. Every stitch, every inch of TOPRCOAT VALUES! SAKS TWEEDS! SAKS FLEECES! $29.50 THE great all-around Topcoat is the Tweed . . . and we have it in superb quality, in the G and Tans that blend happily with every shade of suit. And in raglan and plain shoulder models, BUT another great favorite is the soft, easy-draping “Saks Fleece,” in Oxfor : Cam- bridge Greys. It is guaranteed for two years’ service, LUXURIOUS TOPCOATS OF 100% CAMEL’S HAIR OR LLAMA! WE handle only the genuine 100% fabrics. $39 50 And Saks style adds the final touch of distinetion, Single breasted and double . . . in Silver Grey, Tan and Blue. Saks—Third Floor THE “SAKS SNAP” ) NTRODUCING the new rollback brim, with the elightly higher crown, the “Saks Snap” is the per- fect Sg{m‘ hat. Its colors are n;ht. too. and-flanged, silk-lined, it is a great buy at $5. “Honor Seal” Hats, $7.50 Stetsons, $8.50-$10 Saks—First Floor NEW!