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B—10 SOCIETY (Continued From Third Page) Johnson, Miss Margaret Shea, Miss Mary Cotherine Dorsch, Miss Regina Dorsch, Miss Sally Ritz Weller, Miss Eleanor Akers, Miss Olivia Boss, Miss Yetine Stcele, Miss Agatha Munhall, Miss Cherie ' Seaman, Miss Ymelda Chaver, Miss Ann_Bezch, Miss Cath- erine Eckert, Miss Mary Donohoe, Miss Nell Clements, Miss Catherine Toomey and Mrs. Marie Little. Mrs. E. Richard Gasch, regent Cdn- stitution Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, announces the following program for the February meeting of the chapter on Tuesday eve- ning, the 16th, at 8 o'clock, at Stone- Jeight Court. The guest speakers for the evening will be Comdr. and Mrs. Rendall Jacobs. Comdr. Jacobs was senior naval officer of the interior of China during the Chinese War of 1926 and 1927, and Mrs. Jacobs has for some time lived in China. They will tell of the life in China. Mrs. Aaron Newman will recite her poem of “America’s Prayer.” which she has recently writ- ten and dedicated to the National So- ciety, D. A. R. Music will be furnished by Mrs. J. Frank Rice, soloist. State chairman of music for the District of Columbia, Daughters of the American Revolution. Mrs. Rice will be accom- panied by Mrs. Walter Hicks, who will give piano solos. A forum tea will be held Wednesday afternoon at 4 oclock in the board Toom of the Young Women's Christian Association, Seventeenth and K streets northwest Dr. W. C. Johnstone, assistant pro- fessor of political science of George Washingion University, will be the guest of honor. Mrs. E. E. Danly will receive and those assisting will be Mrs. A. H. Bak- shian, Mrs. Allan Cozier, Miss Eliza- oeth Eastman, Miss Elizabeth Haney. Miss Saida L. Hartman, Miss Mary B Hayden. Mrs. Josephine P. January. Mrs. Frederick Shelton, Mrs, Wilder Spaulding. Miss Caroline Huston Thompson and Mrs. Luke I. Wilson. Miss Elizabeth G. Andrews of Talla- hassee, Fla, is at the Dodge for several days. Miss Andrews is director of per- sonnel in tke Florida State College for Women at Tallahasse2 and is in the Capital to attend the meetings of the | American College Personnel Association Mrs. Macon Ware of East Falls Church entertained at her home with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs George U. Davies, formerly Miss Mery Louise Dunn, of the faculty of Madison School, who was married during the Christmas holidays. The color scheme of red and white and the big valentine in which the gifts were presented | were appropriate to the season. Guésts | were Miss Virginia Taylor, Miss Eliza- | beth Glenn, Miss Verda Burn. Miss Nell | Burn. Mrs. Lester Powell. Mrs. Robert Garner, Mrs. Frank Carpenter, Mrs William True, Mrs. E. L. Brandon, Mrs Charles Brooks, Mrs. Ruby Douglas, Mrs. Charles Reed. Miss Ellen Ticer and Miss Dorothy Tallin The mothers of the first-grade pupils at Madison School were entertained at tea iast week by Mrs. George U. Davies. Mrs. Macon Ware presided at the tea table, assisted by Miss Virginia_Taylor, Miss' Elizabeth Glenn. Miss Dorothy Tallin and Mrs. Charles Reed. Little Misses Mary Anne Swing, Frances Bur- | ton and Anne Ware of the first grade, | dressed in red and white valentine cos- tumes, also assistcd | Hannah More Academy Graduates to Meet. The Hannah More Academy Society | of Graduates living in Washington show interest in the move to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the school. the oldest church school for girls in the United States. With the view of acquainting the former pupils in this city and other parts of the nearby country with the anniversary plans for June, Mrs. George N. Thomp- €on of 3717 S street northwest, chair- | man of the committee to interest girls who attended Hannah More, but are Schedules Daily W EW increased service makes not graduates, is perfecting the ar- rangements_here. The Washington Hannah More Club will be entertained at the home of Mrs.! Walter G. Dunlop the evening of March |8, when pictures of the school will be | shown and its history given. | Mrs. Charles L. Dasher, chairman of arrangements for thc annual benefit | card party to be given by Constitution | Chapter, D. C. D. A. R, Thursday at p.m at the Kennedy-Warren, | announces the following additional | names as patronesses and those making reservations: Mrs. David D. Caldwell, | vice president general; Miss Helen Har- | man. State regent: Miss Helen Brown, State chaplain; Miss Kathrina Harvey, State historian; Mrs. John M. Beavers, former vice president general; Mrs. Al- fred E. T. Hannsman, State treasurer; Mrs. Mallette R. Spengler, State cor- responding secretary; Mrs. Lovina E. | Opdike, Mrs. Walter Miles, Miss Marie | E. Neidlinger, Miss Louisiana Blackmar, | Mrs. Leonidas C. Dyer, Mrs. T. Hardy- | Seay and Clayton E. Emig. Mrs. Rob- | ert H. McNeill has charge of prizes and Miss Mae Helm tickets. Mrs. William Kearny Carr. president of the board of the Association for the Work for Poor Churches, is chairman of the Commitiee on Arrangements for the leciure to be given for this or- ganizaticn on Tuesday afternoon at the Mayflower by Miss Janct Richards Others on the committee are Frau Ru- dolf Leitner, Mrs. Willlam Johnson, Mrs. Robert Imbrie, Mrs. Henry John- son and Miss Margaret Loughran. The Ways and Means Committes of Joseph H. Milans' Lodge Chapter No. 41, 0. E. S. Mrs. Olive L. Bressler chairman and Mrs. Priscilla W. Hoke vice chairman. announces its annual dance and card party will be held at Almas Temnle Club House. Thirteenth and K streets northwest, Saturday. Feb- ruary 20. Cards at 8:30 o'clock and dancing at 9 o'clock Mrs. J. S. Griffith took a party of her friends in her car to Atlantic City for the week end. Among them were Miss Alice Whitaker, Miss Pearl Chine of Columbus. Ohio; Mrs. Gardner and Mrs. Von Schooke of Washington. The Wellesley Club will have a sup- per at 5 oclock Wednesday at the home of Miss Edna Spaulding. 3021 Q street northwest. Dean Coolidge of Wellesley and Dean Wheeler of Pine Manor will speak. All Wellesley vis- itors in the city will be warmly wel- comed. A dinner in honor of Dr. Thomas S Barclay, political scientist, writer and professor of political science at Stanford University. was given last night at the Racquet Club by Mr. James Maxwell Fassett, Special Assistant to the Attor- ney General. A group of writers, law- | vers and_economists were invited to| meet Dr. Barclay. FRED WARNER DIES Retired Auto Manufacturer Expires at Home in Florida. CLEARWATER, Fla.. February 15 (®). —Fred Warner, 66, retired automobile | manufacturer, died at his home on Dunedin Isles near here yestercay. For several years he was a member of the board of General Motors Corporation | and at one time was president of the Oakland division. For the last few years he had devoted most of his time to his real estate interests here. He is survived by his widow and_two sons. Burial will be at Beloi’, Wis., his birthplac Retired Banker Dead. MIAMI. Fla,, February 15 (4).—Alfred H. Scoville, 56. retired banker of Copake Falls, N. Y., died here yesterday. He retired in 1928 as vice president of the Union Trust Co. of Cleveland, Ohio. The | body was ‘sent to Norfolk, Va., for urial. Selected by spotlight at a telephone exhibition, & boy and a girl recently talked from London to Australia by telephone. To NCHESTER, VA. Atlantic Greyhound Lines by far the most con- venient, as well as the most practical and inexpensive travel way to Winchester . with through service on to Westerly and Southern points. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, New Ore Reduction Process Found BUREAU OF MINES EXPERTS FIND REVOLUTIONARY WAY TO EXTRACT MINERALS. erals can be separated from worthless rock by steam explos- ive, shattering without lzbor and expense of first pulverizing the entire ore, was announced here yester- day by Chief Engineer R. S. Dean of the United States Bureau of Mines Metallurgical Division, and his worker, John Gross, shown above with the new device. The announcement was made just prior to the departure of Mr. Dean for New York City, where he will detail the discovery before the American Insti- tute of Mining and Metallurgical Engi- neers tomorrow afternoon. The discovery is based on the prin- ciple that expandable substances can shatter a mineral in whose pores they have been impregnated, Mr. Dean and Mr. Gross said. The process as yet is in an experimen- tal stage, Bureau of Mines officials ex- plained, but it is believed by them it may have commercial feasibility. since theoretically the cost would be insignifi- cant. The work so far don: has becn accomplished with rather a crude ma- chine, but the results are considered en- couraging and worthy of further experi- mentation, it was said. 1t was emphasized that the Bureau DISCOVERY that valuable min- co- | of Mines will not engage in commercial | development of the process, but repre- | sentatives of mining companies to whom preliminary work hes been ex- plained have displayed considerable in- terest in it. The bureau is now plan- ning to conduct its experiments on a larger scale. Officials sald that should the tests with larger apparatus prove to be sat- | isfactory and the discovery be adopted by the mining industry, Tesults of & far-reaching nature might be realized. It is believed by them that the process might supplant the method of “ball” | milling, which is now widely employed for crushing some ores. Experiments thus far have been made with zinc and iron ores and the bulk of them utilized the expansive power of water when suddenly released from pressure at a temperature sufficiently | high to convert it to steam. | The ore, previously soaked in water, was placed in a cylinder 2 inches in diameter and 4 inches long, with a cover which could be released suddenly by a trigger. Upon heating the cylin- der, a pressure was produced by the steam and recorded on a gauge. Max- imum results were apparently affected by the time of soaking, the amount of Palais Royal—Furniture Dept. | has been tried by | iron ore with a solution of siiver nitrate water added and the amount of pres- sure used. Officials pointed out that from a cost standpoint, the method has great pos- sibilities. The fuel cost theoretically would be about 5 cents per ton of ore, if coal worth $2 per ton was used. Com- mercial application at such a low cost | would. of course, depend on the per- fection of the equipment. Effects of Explosive. It was explained that disruption of minerals may be brought about either by impregnating them with an ex- plosive or by allowing an_explosive to form within the mineral through chemical reactions. The latter method impregnating ap and subjecting this to acetylene, thus C: DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist Phone Nation: Furniture 10% to 50% OFF Regular 1932 PRICES Regular Charge REAL C/l€ LY ap? Is it cheap when it is merely low in price? Or is it cheap irrespective of price, when y ou get more for your money than you pay for? Nowa- days, it’s very hard to tell just what to do about buying furniture. We see SO many flaring headlines and monstrous size prices, announcing reductions and comparative values. We, at Palais Royal, believe that vou should have something to go by, something to depend upon to make BUY PAY. good quality is as it lasts); sure that \WHAT worth Je sure that furniture is YO WHAT YOU and is constructed to ast long (and to look well as long NO OTHER furni- 15, 1932. FEBRUARY l lmmm silver acetylide within the mineral. It resulted favorably in ex- heating. This method, as well as that by which water is used, depends on the existence in mineral cracks, cleavage !planes and pores that are not found rocks in which they occur. Iron ores from Woodward County, Alabama; iron ore jig tailings from the ploding & number of particles upon | Patrick Mine, Minnesota, and zinc ore from the Joplin, Misscuri, area were | It was said that the discovery ad- vances the possibility of utilizing mine products that have been discarded as wastes because of the relatively small mineral content. By ordinary methods, the mineral could not be extracted economically. Beneficial results also are seen in preventing stream pollution. Some methods of treating ore have required that it be pulverized, and the worthless rock powder has been disposed of fre- queany by dumping it in rivers, to the I among those tested. the streams. The explosive method of shattering then be utilized for road beds and other purposes. After 46 years as flutist for the Scot- tish Orchestra of Glasgow, Alfred Hal- detriment of the fish and beauty of | |at his brother’s home on information | would not affect the rock, and it could | TWO SUSPECTED BANK ROBBERS ARE CAPTURED ! s i |Lynchburg Man Caught When Car Collides With Farm Wagon. Third Is Sought. | By the Associated Press. TIFFIN, Ohio, February 15.—Seneca | County farmers, turned possemen for | the third time in two vears to protect | their bank rccounts, rested easier last | night after the capture of two of three the new Riegel Banking Co. yesterday of $1.475. A lone resident of Old Fort captured Tim Dooley, 24, of Lynchburg, Va. after his automobile was wrecked in a collision with a farm wagon. In his possession was found $465. Early yester- day the second suspect, Willis Kerlin, 20, of Fort Seneca, Ohio, was captured obtained from Dooley. A third man, known only as “Wild Bill,” escaped with more than $1,000 and is sought in Kentucky. turd-d men have confessed, authorities said. men accused of holding up and robbing | Both cap- | stead has resigned to join a radio Belgium orchestra. y pl will spend $250,000 for new ! milita; anes. ELEVENTH AND G STREETS N.W. | | | | 1 here you get style—and such value! lovely satins or gay silks, in plain or The New Pent House Pajamas 1 l One of those fortunate special pur- chases that our buyer made the other day—smart, new pajamas, of ~ printed effects. They have cowl or Eugenie necklines—many are bhias- cut—the jackets are in clever styvles —the models are flattering and the colors the most be- coming shades. —Are different and new and in hecom- ing, one-piece models, with deep capes 95 and wide trousers. Use them for bridge * or lounging. They look like dresses. Palais Royal—Third Floor There is still time to register for the first of our Series of Lessons On the Culbertson System of Contract Bridge by Mrs. John E. Wright and Mrs. Marian H. Barre Associate Instructors in Washington of the Culbertson Studios First Lesson, tomorrow, Tuesday, February 16 at 2 p. m. Admission to single Series of 6 lessons, ORDER OF CARABAO BANQUETS FEB. 27 Thirty-Second Annual Dinner of Officers Who Served in Philip- pines to Be at Willard. ‘The thirty-second annual dinner of the Military Order of Carabao will be held at the Willard Hotel Pebruary 27, it was announced today by Col. J. M. Heller, secretary of the organization. The order is composed of commissioned officers who served in the Philippine Islands between 1898 and 1906 and their descendants. Of special interest this year is the fact three American Army and Navy leaders at Shanghai are Carabaos, who served as junior officers in the Far East more than 30 years ago. They are: Vice | Admiral Montgomery M. Taylor, com- manding the Asiatic Fleet; Col. Richard Hooker, commanding the 4th Marine Regiment, and Col. Lorenzo Gasser, commanding the 31st Infantry. Manchester, England, has & serious irfluenza epidemic. k. PALAIS ROYAL TELEPHONE DISTRICT 4400 These values stand out in the Mid-Month Sale of Toiletries Djer-Kiss Face Power, P fume, ato originally Krank's Face Powder... Norida Creme Rouge, Sfc size. ool - Noxzema Cream, Leigh's Creams Woodbury's 25c Tube Cream .......... . Kleenex, white and colc 5 for $1 Roller Tissue and Holder, both . RO, 25¢ Bonnie B. Powder Puffs, e 25¢ Hand 35¢ owe 15¢ Dr. West's Tooth Brushes, each with dental 33c mirror $1 Magnifying Make-up Mir= rors i s AR o Hospital Cotton, 1 1b.... 39c $1 Wearever Hot-water Bot- tles and Fountainm Syringes s O Billy B. Van Pine Tree Soap, 15c size; 6 for ..59¢ Vion Toilet Soap, 4 for 29¢ Palais Royal—Main Floor A Free Ticket |—to see John Gilbert in “'\\c:l of Broadway” at |the Metropolitan this week with every purchase of Toilet Lux <. i i 89c Dozen Take advantage of this special price! Kotex 4 boxes for 88c 12 sanitary napkins to a box. lesson, 75¢ per person $3.00 per person Customers May make their purchases without the customary Down Payment. An added feature of this Great Februa:y event. At any time this is the pleasant and com- fortable means of reaching all important cities throughout the Middle and South At- lantic States, and all America. It gives you most modern busses . . . deep-cushioned re- clining chairs . . . Tropic Aire heat . . . every convenience and comfort. Back of it all is the dependability of At- lantic Greyhound Lines ... assuring you frequent time-saving schedules, dollar-saving fares. Take your next trip thisway . .. learn first hand the advantages offered. Palais Royal—Notion Dept. Main Floor ture is cheap at ANY price. Palais Royal sells ONLY quality mer- chandise. Shop around; where that furniture is featured. Palais Roval invites this compar- ison. If you use Palais Royal’s standards of low price and good quality, you will learn to know WHEN furniture is REALLY cheap. Gre PALAIS ROYAL Where dependable merchandise is always fairly priced 11th & G Sts. Telephone District 4400 ‘600D FURNITURE LOWER IN PRICE 0 everv- Check up on these 12 timely Specials Sanitary Needs and Notions Dress Shields Reg. 25c and 29c. Special, 21 These guaranteed shields come in regular or crescent shape. Assorted sizes. White or flesh. Our Budget Plan Easily arranges terms for those who have not charged at Palais Royal be- fore. “A modest First Payment—and then easy weekly or monthly amounts. Daily Departure Hours Westbound 8:00 AM. 12:30 P.M. 4:45 PM. 10:00 P.M. 2:30 AM. fares always low: Penela Hair Nets Reg. 10c ea. 21c Special, 3 for. Double-mesh, cap shape; guaranteed ; assorted browns, white, gray. Garment Bags Reg. §9c. 690 Special ... Made of bright flowered cretonnes of sturdy weight; holds 8 garments or more. WINST.-SALEM. 8.50 CH'L'ST’'N,W.Va. 9.25 BRISTOL ...... 9.70 KNOXVILLE ...12.50 ASHEVILLE ...12.50 CHATT’'NOOGA .15.00 NEW ORLEANS.27.00 JACKSONVILLE.20.00 WINCHESTER. .$2.50 NEW MARKET. 3.85 HARRIS’NBURG. 4.20 STAUNTON.... 4.70 LEXINGTON ... 5.40 NAT. BRIDGE.. 5.65 ROANOKE 5.95 10c Willsnap Fasteners; white, black; assorted sizes; 2 cards . 15¢ Door Bags with shoe, laundry and other pockets ...... 94C flesh; Ironing Pad and Cover, non- 6-yard piece......... 15¢ inflammable; regula- 9 Palais Royal—Main Floor tion size; both....... 49¢ STl A A %S ST O | 89c Sanitary Bloomers, with muslin top; assorted 54C sizes; flesh 47¢c 69c Sanitary Aprons, double Dixie Belle Sanitary Napkins, 4 to pack- age—2 for = 19c Sew-on Garters, of flesh-colored elas- fic, pair...... 19¢c Rayon E1l il astic, Y4-inch wide; UNION BUS DEPOT 1336 New York Ave. N.W. Phone: Metropolitan 1512 ATLANTIC GREYHOUND 5c rubberized silk, muslin top 59c Rubber Sheeting,