Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
—16 ® PHI BETA KAPPA GIVES: PAGEANT Celebrates at College of Wil- liam and Mary Birth SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED Maryland Boy Included in List to Yale Freshmen. NEW HAVEN, Conn., October 16 (#) —The awards of prize scholarships to freshmen, announced at Yale Uni- ;’:rslty yesterday, included the follow- g: | _New York Yale Club scholarship— | Walter A. Marting, Dallas, Tex. Holmes Mallory Memorial scholarship —Dexter MacArthur Thompson, St. Paul, Minn. THE EV \DISPLAY ORCHIDS WORTH MLLION Growers’ Exhibits Opened t0 | women's Bar Association, Judge Kath- Public After Notables G _STAR, WASH WOMAN’S BAR HONORS Judge Sellers and Dr. Wold Speak at Dinner Meeting of As- sociation. ‘Two distinguished members of the | ryn Sellers of the Juvenile Court and Dr. Emma Wold, a delegate at the Hague Conference on Codification of 3TON, DISTINGUISHED MEMBERS | D. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 193 WASHINGTON’'S FINEST MEN'S WEAR STORE RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street International Law, were honored last night by the association at a dinner meeting. Judge Sellers, recently returned from the Child Welfare Conference in Peru, recounted some of the work accom- plished at the conference. Dr. Wold John Speed Murphy Memorial schol- arship—Richard K. Slabaugh, Colum- bus, Ohio. University R‘lum] scholarship—S. G. By the Associated Pres | Walke, Pikesville, Mo.; Hugh T. Cun- WILLIAMSBURG, Va., October 16.— | ningham, Tulsa, Okla., and Harry M. Before a background of green campus ' Day, Baker, Oreg. and huge oaks, 200 students of the lege of William and Mary in a pageant | last night depicted the visit of Aeneas | to Haces as told in the sixth book of the | great Latin poet Virgil's “Aeneid.” | It was the contribution of America’s oldest collegiats fraternity, Alpha Chap ter of _Pln Beta Kappa to the Wnrld-l wide bimillennium observance of Vir- Visit Arlington, Mount Vernon and Alexandria—Place Wreath on Tomb. of Virgil. View Them. Since price is in style—Be sure quality is included The first Fall exhibition of the *| American Orchid Soclety opened at the Willard Hotel this afternoon with ap- | felated important features of the Hague proximately $10,000- in gold and silver | Conference, principally discussing the medals and trophies to be awarded: to | diplomatic situation between this coun- exhibits from a dozen States and from | Y, And Mexico and the statts of mas England. Miss Mary Connelly, president of the The exhibits are valued at more than | association, presided. §1,000,000 and come from some of the 5 a2 most ‘famous estates in the country PHOI&?S GAIN RAPIDLY In addition there will be a collection of 50 rare hybrid orchids in full bloom —— Europe Leads U. 8. 8 to 4 1-2 Per Cent in Installations. Col- | ———— gil's birth and anniversary. The*pageant was written by Dr. A. P. Wagener of the faculty, based on John Dryden’s English translation. \ At times the college campus glowed with the red of the roaring inferno as Aencas descended into Hades, and at in- tervals became dark in the quiet of the | dead as the pageant took an audience, including many distinguished linguists, threugh the scenes of the epic poem Outstanding in the cast were Miss Jean Upsall of Watseka, Ill., as Sibyl; Mau- rice Berkwitz of Brookline, Mass., by Albert C. Burrage of Boston, for- mer president of the society. Mrs. Herbert Hoover attended the members of the families of cabinet offi- | Telephones 4te being installed in cials and_diplomatic corps and 2,500 | Europe faster than in the United guests. The exhibition will be opened | States. afternoon. day said American telephone installa- The presidents of 27 garden and |tions are increasing 41> per cent a Following @ brief business session at | horticultural clubs of the National Cap- | year. as against 8 per cent in Europe. Rochelie, N. Y., a5 Queen Dido. ; mitee. They are: O. J. Schuster of | while less than one-half of those in P. ¢ Cli 'Day, | bers of the National Assoclation of | the Arlington County Garden Club; |North America, has doubled in 10 years, ageant Climax of Day, Gardeners, now in convention here, | Mrs. Leon M. Grant, Bethesda Commu- | while that of North America has in- The pageant last night came as a| went on a sight-seeing tour of the prin- Burleith Garden: Club; Mrs. F. Baker | 21,000,000. : yesterday with an ad The Aenid | {o the Arlington National Cemetery, | Weaver, Chevy Chase, D. C. Garden — 8s a National Poem.” by Dr. Charles | Mount Vernon and to the Masonic Me. | Club; Mrs. G. F. Dunlop, Chevy Chase, Knapp of the ancient languages de- | moriul to George Washington at Alex- rtment of Colu University. the Garden Club of the Forest, Glen- M an a thousand students an ‘At the ale, Md.; Mrs. Lloyd B. Wight, George- Visitors heard Dr. Knapp explain the | in *Arlington the dcteomon momon et | town Garden Glub: Prof, W K. Ballued, spiritual as well gs intellectual fitness | place g wreath. . F. Drandstedt, Piney Branch 'Ro uled for this afternoon and a dinner |3Pd Garden OClub; B. F. Reynlods, | tonight will conciude the convention. ( Jr» Potomac Palisades Landscape | Tonight the gardeners will attend the 1 | dving in the agd of Augustus, the | most glorified period of imperial Rome, | and_choosing as his hero Aeneas, the | : Hane, Rockville Garden Club; E mythical ancestor of the Roman people, | °Tohid show at the Willard Hotel. c. n : Plans to establish a garden of thou- Fowell, Takoma Horticultural Jirgil was adapted as the national poet | ands of ‘eres on ihe baandagy Jnpuc | Glubi L M. Clarke, Woodridgo Garden - Club; Aubrey B. Carter, Montgomery | man born of his own day and genera- | L¥CeD the United States and Canada as [ Subyrban Garden Giub: M. A H tion, but in spirit Virgil lived some | 8 memorial to the century of peace be- | Ghilcott, Fairfax Garden Club; Joseph | m Loy | tween the two countries were perfected gt i Heg |1ast night at a dinner of the assocl- | mnd G Sonsts el Capital Dahlia The celebration at the College of | William and Mary, the second oldest (3HO% In the Willard, National Capital Federation of Garden college in the United States, followed e Frincipal speaker, Donald J.|Clubs; Miss Margaret C. Lancaster, several held at other schools in Vir- | Crighton of Convent, N. J. chairman | National Council of State Garden Club ginia. Oscar M. Voorhees, general sec- Of the association's International Peace | Federations; Miss Mary Staebler, Sandy retary of the United Chapters of Phi|Garden Committee, announced more |Spring Horticultural Society: Mrs. Beta Kappa, wrote officers of Alpha | than 50 national and international or- | Louis 8. Scott, Alexandria Garden Club; Chapter that the William and Mary | 8anizations in this country and Canada | Mrs. Mary Bayly, Society of Little Gar- plans for the observance were the most | Nad volunteered co-operation. He sald | dens; Mrs. John Otto Johnson, garden elaborate coming to his attention. | an endowment fund of $5,000,000 would | section of the Twentieth Century Club; g el 0L ) TS 2 | be_established for planting and main- | O. A. C. Oehmler, the Florists’ Club B it ool Chapter Founded in 1776. | tenance of the garden, to be presented | of Washington: Dr. P. L. Ricker, Wild- TRICO Covers hide naked radiators. Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa |to the two governments as a mutual | flower Preservation Society: Knowles Brotest Srapeties and walls Jrom Qie was founded here December 5, 1776, | property on completion. Ryerson, American Horticultural So- || 0ty sap for themociver by savines Mrs. Mary Sinton Leitch of Norfolk,| “The international peace garden,” |clety; Dr. Earl B White, regional vice in cleaning bills and health. Write Va., wrote the poetic prologue and epi- | Crighton declared, “will be-supported | president American Peony Society, and |} of phone for free estimate. logue for the pageant delivered by in so far as possible by the men, women | Dr. Earl W. Sheets, regional vice presi- (|| Trico Radiator Furniture Roma, & symbolic personification, acted | and children of the United States and | dent of the American Iris Society, | by Miss Page Johnson of Danville, Va. | Canada. In order to serve its purpose | Assisting Prof. Davis Lumsden of the 706 Chandler Bldg. An unusual feature of the presentation | as a constant reminder of the amity | Department of Agriculture, in making NATIONAL 6703 was the singing of two odes by the | that exists between these two great na- |the awards, which will include the gold spirlts in Elysium; the first ode, in | tions, the peace memorial must live in |medal of the Royal Horticultural | English, was written by Dr. E. M.|the minds and hearts of their peoples. | Society of London. England, will be Gwathmey of the college English fac- | Opportunity will be given every school | the following nationally known judges ulty; the second, the “German Saecu- | child to contribute a few pennies |of orchids: Clement Moore of Hacken- lare” of Horace, was sung in the original | toward the founding of the garden.” |sack, N. J.; Dr. George Moore, director Latin. Other speakers at the dinner were [of the Missouri Botanic Gardens, St. Theme music, espectally composed by | Col. Hugh A. Rose of Walland, Ontario, | Louis, M . G. Manda, South Georgs M. Small, professor of music at | of the Canadian International Peace |Orange, N. Edward Roehrs, Ruther- William and Mary, was p.ayed through- | Garden Committee, who presented the | ford, N. J.. W. M. Wicks of Wilmington, out the presentation by the college or- | Canadian view of the peace garden; |Del. and James I'Anson of Greystone, chestra and band. * |Mrs. J. Willis Martin, honorary presi- | Palisades, N. Y. Miss Althea Hunt, director of dra-|dent of the Garden Club of America; | The exhibition will remain open until matics, directed the pageant. Assisting | Mrs. J. A. Wilson, president of the |10 o'clock tonight, and from 9 a.m. to her, Mrs. Mary T. Pyle of Richmond | National Council of Women of Canada: |10 pm. tomorrow and Saturday. directed sczne one; Miss Mildred Matier | Mrs. Earl W. Chafee of the General| The 500 delegates attending the con- of Norfolk, scene two; Miss Margurite | pederation of Women's Clubs; Mrs. | vention of the National Association of Wynne-Roberts, scene four, and George | william K. du Pont of the American | Gardeners will be guests of the Orchid E. Gregory, scene five. Orchid Society and John Scheepers of | Soclety tonight. Wasaingtonians in Cast. the Horticultural Soclety of New York. PP A MEXICAN GENERAL FREE Besides Miss Upsall and Maurice ‘Berkwitz in the leading roles, Sibyl and Aeneas, other characters included An- MEXICO CITY, October 16 (#).—Gen. Claudio Fox, former military commander of the State of Oaxaca, has been cleared JUGOSLAVIA PLANS WORK chisew, father of Aeneas, played by by the Supreme Military Court of Edgar Weigand of Elmhurst, N. Y.. Wayne ' Shoemaker of Muncy, Pa, | zLCqGRADE. Jugoslavia, October 16 playing Palinurus; Martin Jurow of | (0o wa:;mulz.yi ?Sr"fim‘&'?'r‘.‘n:’.‘g 3 | Brooklyn, W. Y., Charon, and Marshall land rcad construction to cost $36,000,- | charges of participation in the Escobar lé;lsxfl 1. ‘Brow of . Motorun. Va, |000. American, French and German | revclution. The court ordered that Gen s N N O O we |DIds already have been received. Fox be reinstated to good standing in D e Pftyos; William B, | The work is to be paid for with 15- | the Mexican Army. Kaufman of Brookline, Mass., Ixion, |Jear treasury bills at 7 per cent, the — and Charles McCurdié, Washington, |XSSue price to be not under 92. ° The D. C., Phiegizs. Evelyn Kohlmorgan of | Bovernment reserves the right to repay b # Tod D. G, Phiegias. Evclyn Kohlmorgaty of | the bills three years after completion Subscribe Today inia _Jones, Williamsburg, ~Evadne; [ Of the work of to convert them into It costs only about 1% cents atherine Hasseltyne of Washington, FERIS. per day and 5 cents Sundays to == | have gton’s best newspa- per_delivered to you regularly every evening and Sunday morn- g ‘Telephone National 5000 and the delivery <ill start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- D. C., Antiope; Rhoda Pratt. Dedham, the destruction of Troy, and closed lect at the cnd of each month. brought from' Great Britain this week formal opening of the exhibition with By the Associated Press. to the general public at 5 o'clock this| A Commerce Department report to- Aencas, and Patruchia Clarke of New | tne willard Hotel this morning, mem- | ital Were members of a reception com- | The total of European telephones, nity Garden Club: Miss W. F. Rhode, | creased by one-half, from 14,000,000 to climax to a program that began early | cipal places of interest in the Capital— Md., Garden Club; Mrs. E. C. Carlson, partment of Columbia University. andria. e ! it a Hyattsville * Hortlcultural Club; P. yirgl, for the work of writing the | Another busiiess session was sched- and Garden Club; Mrs. George F. THIS IS THE SUIT [~ Let the Trico Estimator tell you how very little it will cost to cover THESE ARE THE TOPCOATS TO WEAR WITH IT Lower Prices—Bigger Values ... and - Hart Schaffner & Marx fine tailoring / You Will Enjoy Tonight’s DINNER 75¢ 5t 9 Soup or Fruit Cocktall Broiled Blue Fish New Fdll . New Fall BUSINESS SUITS TOPCOATS 35 - Values Previous to This Season, $40 and $45 Roast Spring Lamb Chicken Stew, Family Stzle ol Mass., Ariadne; Elizabeth Hugo, Wil- kinsburg, Pa., Leodamia; Estelle Fore- | with an impressive tribute to Marcellus, man, Brookline, Mass., Iphigenia, and |the young heir of the Emperor Augusta, Patruchia Clarke of New Rochelie, N.|whose premature death shocked the ¥., Dido, respectively. Roman _ world shortly before Vergil In addition to the cast of speaking | wrote the lines. characters, there were more than 125 Miss Hunt and Dr. Wagener worked other students participating in the roles | out the set scheme. The scenery was of Certeurus, the Gorgons, the Furies, | constructed at the college. Miss Eieanor Craighill, professor of art, was art ad- the judges of the dead and the other spirits and mythological inhabitants of | viser, and Miss Lilllam A. Cummings, professor of home economics, designed ades. The story opened as Aeneas finally | the costumes. Doyle Smeeman of Can- brought his band of followers to Italy, | ton, Ohio, managed the stage for the after eight years of wandering after | production. RESTAURANT 516 N. Capitol St. Single-breasted box coats with plain or belted backs, English styled Raglan coats . . . all with deep yoke silk linings . . . High- lands Scotch tweeds, smart look- ing cheviots and herringbones. Single and double breasted suits for all types of men in dusk blue, briar brown and elephant grey . . . Hard finished worsteds, Scotch tweeds and cheviots, two- trouser and four-piece golf suits. TSON SHOES | i Tam Toris: Of course, if your Fall and Winter svits and gowns are originals or reproductions from Chanel, Agnes, Patou or the foremost coutu- Chilly These L) Mornings? riers of Paris you naturally must have shoes to match. Be consistent] The Stetson foreign staff has sent us every smart model that is authentic That’s a reminder to fill the old fuel bin with AGNEW SUPERIOR HARD COAL. dom to avoid the rush style for daytime wear . .. our own designers Ultra smart hand lasted shoes that make walking a pleasure and add 100% to your appearance have interpreted and refined them ... now, for you, a foot from Paris, on a suave, gracious American last. Models for bottomless purses offered at prices pleasing to those who keep strict budgets. It’s wis- by ordering this cleaner, longer-burning fuel TO- STYLE 2055 The latest Pari- sion version of the vogue for svede — black ©r brown, trim- med with brown kid or potent leather. DAY—you’re going to need it. aristocratic silk lined Snap Brim Hat at $ $ JOHN P. AGNEW & COMPANY, Inc. 728 14™ STREET, N.W. Phone : NATIONAL 3068 The “Scottie,” a Tough Scotch Grain Brogue Briar Brown Is the Newest Black or Fall Shade Brown Suede Make Your Purchases on Our Extended Payment Plan THE STETSON SHOE SHOP ! of Washington Owned and operated by The Stetscn Shoe Ca., Inc. 1311 F Street Washington, D. C. Look for the Agnew Markers scattered throughout every ton of AGNEW SUPERIOR HARD COAL —then you will know you are getting the genuine Free Parking at the Capital Garage While Shopping Here A