Evening Star Newspaper, April 15, 1931, Page 5

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ARTS COMMISSON CONSIDERS DESIENS Entrances to Capita! Will Be Designated by Markers With Landscaping. The Fine Arts Commission, at its imeeting today, took under consideration | the question of markers, to be set up at the entrances to the District of Colum- bia, under the program submitted by the Garden Club of America. ‘The commission is considering the suggestion to have stone markers, simi- lar to those denoting the surveys of, the Mason and Dixon line, or utilizing the form of the old District of Columbia marker, instead of the pylons pre- viously proposed. Under the new pro- gram the main entrance to the Na- tional Capital would be designated by stone markers with ample landscaping. Approve Fire Building Design. Commission approval was given the design submitted by A. L. Harris, muni- cipal architect, for the new Fire Depart- ment_ building, to be erected on Thir- teenth street near K street. This struc- ture will take the place of the Fire De- partment building in the triangle, oppo- site the new Department of Commerce Building. which will have to be removed due to the publiz program. Arthur Heaton submitted a further ptudy to the commission for the Na- tional Geographic Society’s new admin- istration building and this was given approval, with certain suggestions for modification. The commission likewise approved a design for a residence at 2706 Olive street, submitted by the building_in- spector's office of the District. This was made necessary under the Ship- stead-Luce act. Consider Indian Memorial, A model for & Chippewa Indian me- morial, to be erected near Cookstown, Minn.,' to commemorate the signing of the treaty of October 2, 1863, was con- sidered by the commission. The model of the memorial was viewed by the commission, and the sculptor, Carl Mose, will be requested to make some changes in the design. The commission to-k under advise- ment & program for placing an inscrip- tion on the Arlington Memorial Bridge. Details for this remain to be worked out and commission members said toda: that it has not been determined where this would be placed. Meet Rome Committee. A proposed inscription for the Leif Ericsson statue, to be erected in Ice- Jand, was given attention by the com- mission. ‘Tomorrow the commission will meet & representative committee from the American Academy in Rome; the Amer- ican Institute of Architects, the Ameri- can Sceiety of Landscape Architects, the National Sculpture Society and the National Mural Painters’ Sociel cerning the proposed exhibition of fine arts to be held here next year in con- Jjunction with the George Washington Bicentennial Celebration. It has been tentatively suggested that this exhibi- tion be held in the National Museum. GAR WOOD GETS SET Orders Spve;b;n; Put® Into Creek for Attempt at Record. MIAMI BEACH, Fla., April 15 (#).— Gar Wood said he believed wind and weather conditions today were suitable for his attack on the world motor boltl speed record of 103.49 miles an hour. He ordered his mechanics to make immediate preparations fors lowering his speedboat. Miss Americarf IX, into Indian Creek. scene of his proposed trial. The timing apparatus also was ordered set up. The wind. which since Saturday has blown acrcss the course, preventing his trial. switched today. The water was slightly rough, but Wood did not seem to think that this would bother him. LR Gt Berkeley Man Stricken. MARTINSBURG, W. Va. April 15 (Special).—George S. Hollida, 68, native of this county and member of a well | known Berkeley County famil suddenly at his home yesterday, the re- | #ult of a heart attack. Miss Helen Doherty Puzzled Over Car She Gave Alfonso Z ) Washington Debutante Also Decides She’ll Have to Call Off Trip to Spain. By the Associated Press Now Helen Lee Eames Doherty wants to know what's going to happen to the sports car she gave to the King of Spain A letter from the King's secretary in- formed Miss Doherty that the gayly decorated. radio-equipped auto arriv at the royal palace on Pebruary 1 and building expansion | con- | THE EVENING S TAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESD Washington's “400” and their sisters and their cousins and their aunts went to the Fox Theater last night to hear “Tosca,” and were probably regaled with more than they had expected { While the snarling of traffic and the great crowd of sidewalk onlookers re- tarded hundreds in the progress their seats, the opera, as per usual with the Metropolitan, started on time, with | a steady stream’ of late comers pour- |Ing into their seats for a good half | hour afterward. | With the stroke of 8:30 the flowered | curtain of the theater was raised and | the familiar Church of St. Andrea della | Valle came to the eye, while in the pit | Conductor Vincenzo Bellezza raised his {arm and Puccini’s mellow and familiar music began its evening’s run. Jeritza Predominates. Last night, as a matter of fact | belcnged to Jeritza—or rather after a { cloudy and lukewarm first act it be- {longed to her. One must admit that, | while Puccini had prepared a sump- tuous singing role, and Mr. Sardou had given more than an average dwmatic | opportunity, Mme. Jeritza was as much { Mme. Jeritza as she was Floria Tosca With her fair bobbed tresses streaming about her, her eyes shining with Brunhildian fire. this great actr more or less leveled all belore her cluding Mr. Lauri-Volpi, she rested rather precariously. 1t was a grand histrionic exhibit and an almost equally grand vocal one, ev if there were many present who wished for the days wh°n Tosca wore a hat in {the first act and more subdued ac- { couterments in the second and behaved a little less like a ladylike tiger. Per- sonally, how:ver, this obscryver found more in “Tosca” than ever before. In spite of the dramatics there was no trace of impairing of song and a blend- ing of fire and thunder with a true sense of the value of the music, which, | one must admit, is about all that could | be asked for. | Sings Aria Prone. ! To Jeritza alone belongs the honor of | being able to sing that most tremulous of arias, “Vissi d'Arte,” prone on the floor with her face more or less biting the Metropolitan’s dust. She sings and she sobs, and after awhile she sits up ‘lnd finishes the rest of it on her knees —and there bas nev:r been a qu stion | but that she has done it quite as effec- { tively s most of her predecessors. | receiv-d a small ovation from the audi- ence afterward for this—which was richly deserved, and curtain-call fol- lowed curtain-call for this atussque | beauty, who, one must remember, was | meking her operatic debut in Washing- ton. - | Assisting Jeritza in last night's f tivities—which was, of course, witnesscd | by a capacity house—was Lawrence Tib- | bett as one of opera’s most famous bad- | men, Scarpia. and Giacomo Lauri-Volpi |as Marlo Cavaredossi, Mr. Tibbett. while in excell'nt voice, seemed not | overfamiliar with the role—which rumor | hath it—he had never undertaken be- fore. While Mr. Lauri-Volpi scal:d to (he heights in at least one aria. and gave | proof that with a lady more of his own size he could be a highly presentable actor as well. The audience. however, seemed highly pleased with both of these gentlemen. And perhaps if the memory | of Maestro Scotti of the Metropolitan | forces in _the davs of, and prior to the days of Farrar, hadn't been still so po- | tently with us, Mr. Tibbétt’s perform- !ance as the scheming baron who m-ets {death at the hands of a bread knife, might have stood out more thrillingly. | Lesser Roles Effective. In the lesscr ranks of the operatic | roles, George Cehanovsky was & more than satisfactory Angelotti, and_ Louis | D'Angelo was an ably amusing Sacris- tgn. Nor must one forget the group choruses which wer> well arranged snd | well voiced and did their little ring- sround-the-rosy dance in the church with conventional but pleasing abandon. The scenic effects provided were, as a matter of fact. the only things the Metropolitan might have been more generous with. The setting for the first act positively breathed of a generation |or more service on the home boards while in the last an over-induced | draught from the wings played havoc with what should have been a serene and placidly blue sky. Thes> m disturbances, however detracted but little from the performance as a whole Since with Mme. Jeritza sweeping across the stage in her shimmering gowns, her jewels and the endless train | which’ Mr.” Tibbett and Mr. Lauri- Volpi had to vault over nimbly t.me and time again, there was liitle to be | thought of except, was there ever a more picturesque Tosca—or a blonde Tosca, whese halr in the eighteen-hun- dreds was miraculously cut short? | E. de 5. MELCHER. BRILLIANT OFFICIAL, DIPLOMATIC AND SOCIAL THRONG ADDS COLOR No other city in America can put up | 50 concretely brilliant an_audience as Washington, with its highest officials. its diplomats and its distinguished members of society. the diplomatic | corps alone lending a glamor not o be to | | fact {lack of lighting in the boxes except for She ! JERITZA, BOBBED-HAIRED TOSCA.} PREDOMINATES OPERA PREMIERE Interest in Performance Rivaled by Color- ful Throng chresenting All Elements. of Brilliant Capital Social Life. seen elsewhere, and interesting to relate, they were all at the opening perform- | ance of the Metropolitan Opera last | night. | The audience botween acts presented | a scene of surpassing brilliancy and artistic beauty. the arrangement of the grand stairway admitting of an unsur- passed show place for costumes and dis- tinguished persons. There is always a decrying note, and last night it was the that what should have been a gleaming circle of handsome women and men, rich gowns and jewels was thrown into’ shadow by the poor lighting or the first few on either side. Street Scene Interesting. The street taresting scene was almost as in- as that within the beautiful | theater, thousands of persons lingering in the vicinity to catch a glimpse of | the audience arriving in limousines or entering the theater, the boom of camera flashlights addine to the noise Even up to the end of the first act of the opera memb-rs of the audience were arriving and seeking their seats. | all owing to the traffic jam part of which was caused by those seeing the siehts outside the house | The Vice President and members of his family arrived under the glamour of camera lights, Mrs. Jacob 1eander Loose being their hostess. Others in the arty were Mrs. Sydney A. Cloman, Mr Edward Everett Gann and Gen. and | Mrs. Edward L, Logan of Boston. | Also arriving earlv were the Secretary | of War and Mrs. Patrick Jay Hurley, the latter, whose costume is always looked upon with unusual interest, be- ine enveloped in an opera coat of white t and white fur and wearing a gown of white satin. Hoover's Son Present. | ‘The White House box was occupied by Mr Allan H. Hoover, younger son of the President and Mrs. Hoover, and | their daughter-in-law. Mrs. Herbert | Hoover. jr., who bad with them Mr. and Mrs. Palmer Fuller, who with their voung son, George Fuller, arrived at the White House as guests yesterday Mrs, George Mesta, one of the guar- antors of the opera association. had | with her the Irich Minister and Mrs. | Michael MacWhite. Representative and | Mrs. Hamilton Fish and Lieut. Col Marco Penaroli of the Italian embassy. | The Ambassador of Germany and | Frau von Prittwitz und Gaffron had with them the new Ambassador of Bel- gium, M. Paul May, just arrived, who| for the first time met Washington so-| ciety as a body. Mme, Wu Wears Native Coat. Mme. Wu, wife of the Minister of | China, was the guest of Mrs. M. de! Clere Berry and wore a charming na- tive coat of eveen and gold brocade wilh jade jewelry. Mrs. James Dudley Mor- gan had & sts Col. and Mrs. Fitz- maurice Day, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Wyeth and the new British wing com- mander, the Hon. L. J. E. Twistleton. Wykeham-Fiennes. Mrs. Frencié T. 4. Junkin had with her Miss Rosalee Holiday of Baltimore, | Cant.; (Axnold Ruemann. husband of | Princeds Alwendria Victoria Schlecs- Hol‘fein, and with him the house t Mrs. Junkin, and Col. M. C.| Bu 4 Miss’ Alice Clapp entertained Hafis | Kindler. Mrs. Charies W. Richardson, | Mrs. Eugene Byrnes, Miss Jennie Stier | and Mr. Goodwin. | Among those occupying orchestra | ats were Justice and Mrs. Harlan | Fiske Stone, Mrs. William Howard Taft. | Mrs. Ricbard Aldrich, who had a party | of five with her; Mrs. Marshall Field, | who had a like number of guests: Mr Leander _ Goodhirt-McCor- Georg Thenault, assistant | ttache of the French embassy. and Mme. Thenault, and Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Pack Other Social Leaders Present. Others at the opera were: Miss Edna D. Howell and Miss Prances W. Todd, | Mrs. Robert Love Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. | James R. Mann, Dr. and Mrs. William A White, Representative and Mrs. Sol Bloom, Miss Vera Bloom, former Attor- ney General and Mrs. Palmer. Col. Raw- son Warren, U. S. A, and Mrs. Warren and Mrs. Horace Reynolds Shares; Mrs. Rhett Stuart. Miss Carolyn Stuart, Rev Mead Bolton MacBryde, Mrs. Robert Low Bacon Mrs. Frank B. Freyer, Mrs. | Patton Wise Slemp, who was called to | gton a few wecks ago by the ill- her mother Fred Den- Miss Mzrietta . Mr. Frank Mr. Harlan Mr. Bever- Harris, Mrs. Morris Sheppard, Ollie James, Mrs. Walter Bruce Mr. and Mrs. John W. Davidge, and Mrs. Samuel Jordan Gra- | Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sande and Mrs. Ennells Waggaman, Mis aman, Mr. and Mrs. Prederic Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey r; Miss Bina Day Deneen, | Secretary of War and Mrs.| ubce Davison, Mr. and F| Lammot Belin | Mrs. Lamont, wife of the Secretary | Commerce, was present, as was her daughter, Miss Gertrude Lamont, and | Mr. David Karrick. Mrs. Armistead Peter also attended as did Miss Bessie Hickey. Mrs. Edward Tierney, Miss! Joce! Hibbard. Mrs. Joseph Stoddard, Mis< Elizabsth Howry, Mr. and Mrs. | Reeve Hoover, Mrs. Jamcs Marwick Maj. military nett ley H Mrs Howe. dge Wagy was given a warm welcome by the King. | whose favorite topic of has long been the American automobile. Reading dispatches of the King's ab- dication the Washington debutante decided today that a trip she had plan- nec to make to Spain in May probably was off. Miss Doherty made the personal ac- quaintance of the former Spanish mon- arch when one of her friends was thrown from a horse in the royal park The King’s automobile passed and took the two girls back to their school ou-- .+ .. Save Money at Hechinger's on These "Complete Lines of Building Materials Plumbing Doors & Sash Roofing Hardware Wallboard Sheetmetal Get Our Estimate! Foi s H i H Lumber Millwork RRT— 5y R TN a4 v ST 8, 3—Branches—3 MAIN OFFICE-I15™6& H Sts. N.E DOWNTOWN-6%&C Sts. S.W. BRIGHTWOOD-5925Ga Ave. N.W. N S s AN 5 SR U conversation | mond! a Diamond Invest 50c a Week! Only a small investment is needed to bezin the attainment of fiery diamond! And you can ex- change this ring for its full value when you purchase a larger dia- this \mierfea’s Oldest Credit Jewelers {of the | passed AY, APRIL 15, 1931. HE Brookeville Academy, located at Brookeville, Md., Friday and Saturday of a tea, given by the Church S Olney. The proceeds will be used to convert the cld building community center. . —Star Staff Old Academy Again in Use is to be the scene rvice League of into a Photo. FAMOUS BfiOOKEVILLE BUILDING Maryland School Scene of First Prohibition Law in 1815 | When Rum Sale Was Banned. By a 8taff Correspondent of The Star. BROOKEVILLE, Md., April 15.—The old Brookeville Academy, whose austere stone walls first shut in the youth of the village almost a century and a quarter ago, is having its face washed, prepara- tory to becoming a community center. T urdy structure. which has stood with little repair since 1808, is being ren- cvated both inside and out by wom:n of the Church Service League of Olney. who plan to convert it into a center for the social and civic life of the Olney- Brookevill» section. Teas to Raise Funds. In order to obtain runds, a tea will be served there Friday and Saturday after- noons at 3 o'clock. Mrs. Fulton Lewis of Washington is to exhibit her collec- tion of pieccd and patch quilts and lec- ture on their history 2nd development It was for the benefit of the early students of this school, all of them long since dead, that the first prohibition law vicinity was enacted. That was in 1815, the same year the academy was incorporated. At the request .of one of he founders. the Maryland Legislature a law forbidding the sale of liquor within two miles of the school The academy was situated a block from the Caleb Bentley House, where President James Madison and his At- torney General refuge when the British burned ington in 1814. The house acr road from the Bentley home, a a day and a night as a reposit many of the official records Unitzd States Government, The old school has a wealt dition. It was established in when children were taught by tutors or not at all stantial farmers of conceived the idea of havin teacher for all their children this idea the school had its birf Trustees Appointed. first story of the present structu erected. Samuel employed as the first teacher. of seven trustees was their successors ent day to influence life of the community. trustees were the educ sey, Ignatius Waters, and David Newlin. They had entire control finances of the school, fixing charges and giving examination The tuition and method of sessment were in curlous con present-day practice. Thomas Ralph Hill, Mrs. John C. Fremont, Mrs. Thomas F. Walsh, Mrs. John Allan Dougherty. Mrs. James 8. Parker, Trenhélm Abrams, Mrs Mrs. Wade Martin, Dr. and Mrs. Walter Wells, Mr. and Mrs. George Ernest Walker, Mr. Mannix Walker, For this sum the boy was in reading, writing and arithmet an additional dollar ne would aught Englich grammar and keeping Mrs. Kate Franklin Ellis, | When ‘“geography. with the STANDARD MAKES!! MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS 7 to 9 Tube Sets Screen Grid Dynamic Speakers Floor Samples and Demonstrators with NEW SET GUARANTEES! Now everybody can afford a good Radio. Come early, these will go like “hot-cakes.” Quantity Limited— “First Come, First Served” 624 Pa. Ave. S. 1234 14th St. N. 3001 14th St. N. 3228 Ga. Ave. N. 2250 Sherman Ave. N. Richard Rush, E. Bumstead A board organized and ontinue to the pres- of BEING MADE INTO CIVIC CENTER| took Wash- oss the dormi- tory for academy stud nts, was used for ory for | the of of tra- a day private A group cf sub- the “neighborhood ng_one From th, A subscription was taken up and the ire was was ational The original | Thomas David, John H Riggs, Caleb Douglas, William H. Dor- Riggs the tuition . its st as- to The basic charge was $3 a quarter. instructed ic. For also be book- With more subjects included in the curriculum the price went up. use of Mrs. Edith Mae Penningtonj Will Make Capital Debut ‘ as Evangelist Sunday. | Vaudeville and Movie Playerl After Winning Contest, She j Conducts Revivals. Mrs. Edith Mae Pennington, who was adjudged the “most beautiful girl in America” in a national beauty contest in 1921 and thereby won a place in the | movies, will make her Washington | debut next Sunday, not as an actress, | but as an evangelist in the pulpit of | the Full-Gospel Tabernacle, North Cap- | itol and K streets { Tiring of the bright lights of vaude- | | ville and the Klieg lights of Hollywood, Mrs. Pennington renounced her atrical carecr several |tread the “sawdust trail” of a litte church in Oklahoma City. Following her conversion, she returned to her | _— the- years ago to | globes and maps.” was taught, it was $5. Mathematics and all branches of English” brought the tuition to $6. | Ten dollars for each quarter was the maximum charge. For this sum the boy was taught all the subjects named and “Latin and Greek or French” in addition. The original building was used until | 1869, when the trustees decided to modernize the schogl and eract a new building, part of which would be used as a dormitory. Accordingly, the old academy was sold and the new academy built half a mile distant. The old structur: was purchased by the Odd Fellows for $1,200 and used by that fraternity as a meet- ing_ house. The new school was much more pr tentious than the old. It, lik-wise, wa: constructed of stone, but contained 40 rooms. The boys, themselves, built a | gymnasium. This building remained in custody of the trustees until 1923, when it was sold and the procceds contributed toward the construction of a public school as part of the Montgomery County school system. Sums of Money Left. | A few hundred dollars of the monzy was retained, however, and & board of | i truste's continues to administer the | fund for the best interests of the village. Henry Howard, lifelong resident of Brookeville, is president of the board. which met not more than a month ago | to transact a minor routine matter. The purchaser of the new academy building was E. S. Alvord of Washing. ton, who has transformed it into a country home. | ‘The old academy did not remain long in possession of the Odd Fellows. Moved by s-ntiment, a group of alumni banded | together and purchased it. Some time {afterward it passed into the hands | |of the vestry of St. John's Episcopal }Chumh and the Church S:rvice League. | | It was renamed Memorial Hall as a re- minder that a President of the United States had sought refuge just around the corner. 1 G P.-T. A. Gives Play. BURTONSVILLE, Md. April 15 (Special).—“A Run f6r Her Money.” a | play will be given by the P.-T. A. of Burtonsville for the benefit of the Bur- tonsville School Tuesday night at the | Grange Hotel. price. necessities. Soup - HALF-POU Pound, 79¢ $1.00 Listerine S0c Ipana Tooth Paste Kotex ... Aside from being America Store, here you will find a complete selection of the newest toiletries, drugs, tobacco, sundries and home Park & Tilford Chocolate Almonds Regular $1.00 Value 25¢ Listerine Tooth Paste. . ... S0c Pepsodent Tooth Paste 50¢ Kolynos Tooth Paste. . ... 32¢, 3 for 89c PRIZE BEAUTY OF 21 TO FILL PULPIT IN TABERNACLE HERE MRS. EDITH MAE PENNINGTON. home in Pine Bluff, Ark. where she interested herself in a revival meeting. Eventually she entered the pulpit. and during the past several years she has conducted successful revivals in many | citles and towns of the \Southwest. Played With Stars. Rev. Harry L. Collier, pastor of the local church, heard of her work and arranged for her to make her first appearance in the East at the North Capitol street church. She will con- duct a revival campaign, which will be started Sunday and ended May 17. Mrs. Pennington played in a movie | starring Pola Negri and Antonio Mo - reno and made an extensive tour of | vaudeville houses In the South and West following her victory in the na- | contest, sponsored by the | tonal beat Louis Globe-Demcrat. Award Was The beauty prize was & surprise. Her picture had been sent to the judges by @n aunt, who acted against her niece’s wishes. 'The picture won for her sec- tional honors, with a cash prize of 31,000, and in the national finals she was picked by a jury of artists for the highest award, carrying the beauty title and $2.500 additicnal. The title is not to be confused with the “Miss America” title awarded in bathing beauty compe- titions. There were no bathing beauties in the St. Louis beauty show. Mrs. Pennington, then Miss Patter- son, was besinning a career as a school teachier at the time of the award. She was_induced by friends to give up teaching and accept the stage and mcvie offers which came to her. Some- what_reluctantly she did so. but_she was not satisfied. She turned her back on the movies and decided to devote her life to evangelism. Her success in this fieid has been remarkable, it is sa Surprise. SIG0D Dol A ADELLE ™ and Eye StreetsN.E. Served From 6 to 9 P.M. Chicken or Veal Cutlet 2 Vegetables - Hot Rolls - Coffee Dessert —_THREE SPECIALS Cashew Nuts Pound, 49 Regular $1.00 Value * A5 WOMENS SOCITY " S SESSON HERE New England Group Plants Elm at American U. for Bicentennial. | Mrs. J. Pinley Shepard of New York made the principal address this morn- |ing before more than 150 members of | the National Seciety. of New England Women, in annusl session at the Wash- ington 'Hotel. A\irs. Shepard gave a | report of the educational work ac- complished by the society during the | past year. A feature of this afternoon’s program | was the planting of an elm on the | campus at American University in honor |of the bicentennial of the birth of George Washington. | _Mrs. George Stowe of the New York | City Coiony of the society requested | the president of the American Tree As- | sociation, Crarles L. Pack, to make ar- rangements for planting the tree. The university campus was sclected because a landscaping program under wav there made an attractive site avail- able. Mrs. Willis A. Bryne of Hartford Conn., president general of the society, led the delegation | The visitors were welcomed on behalf {of the university by Dr. Lucius C. Clark chancellor. Mrs. Frank Robson of Elizabeth, N. J., led in singing “Amer- ica,” and a praver was offered by Mrs. Edwin P. Day. chaplain general Last night the society’s annual ban- ouet was held at the Washington Hotel Other speakers on today’s program were { Mrs. Edward A. Strong and Mrs. Bur- ton Lewis Maxfield, who reported on committee work Two business sessions will occupy the delegates tomorrow, and adjournment will be taken during the afternoon after the_installation_of officer: == $450 PIANO ' $10 DOWN | $2 WEEKLY | This is a Rebuilt Piano and we will | take it back at this price any time |in two years. STIEFF | CHAS. M. 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