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0 D. . CHILDREN REHEARSE FOR PLAY Annual Spring Festival to Be Presented at Central High Next Saturday. ‘With rehearsals in almost daily prog- | yess, more than 500 school children | from the Community Centers will take | part in the annual Spring festival at| 8 o'clock Saturday afternoon in the! auditorium of the Central High School. It will be an elaboration of the legend “Rip Van Winkle,” under the direction | ©of Bess Dayis Schreiner. | There will be only three adults who | will have parts in the festival, aside, | of course, from the directors of the| various groups of children. Edward E. Muth will play the role of Rip Van Winkle; Beatrice Mullen will be Dame Van Winkle, and the prologue will be read by Maud Howell Smith. who is | widely known in connection with many | histrionic endeavors. A canine actor | in the part of a very friendly dog has | been engaged for the role of Schneider, Rip's inseparable companion. Have Important Roles. Three older children in important roles will be Betty Ballou, daughter of Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent | of schools of the District, as young Rip, son of the famous “dreamer:” Constance Kramer, daughter of As-! sistant Superintendent of Schools Stephen E. Kramer, who will appear as Judith, daughter of Rip Van Winkle, and Helen Foley, as Weather Witch Most of the performance will be in- terpretations of the story by dances. There will be a patriotic “surprise” at the close in homor of the Bicentennial season. Will Appear in Group Dances. All the lists of the different groups participating are not in, but the follow- ing are children who will appear in im- portant groups of dances in the early of the festival. In early Indian end dances, children from the East ashington Community Center, taking t under the direction of Miss Judy eth, will be: Irma Norwood, Nancy Lee Shantz, Charlotte Miles, Carrie Gross, Mary Katherine Phalen, Julia Phalen, Jean Congdon, Frances Jean Hall, Charlotte Hall, Ruth Hall Muriel Anderson, Anna Livesay, Mary Dyer, Carolyn Queen, Ellen White, Mary White, Murie} Hertz, Regina_ Proctor, Genevieve Daniel, Mary Payne, Jean Freeman, Dorothy Bowman, Anna Louise Sine, Josephine Sine, Marian Sine, Katherine Fisher, Elizabeth Garretson, Eleanore Hagerman, Virginia, Alice Mae Erisman, ‘:?ry Anne Fogel and Betty Lou Van- ver. Children of the Southeast Community Center, from Hine June High School and the Buchanan School group, under the direction of Miss Evelyn Davis, Miss Elizabeth Jenkins and Miss Sarah Bergling, who will participate in the mountain episodes, will be: “Little Men | of the Woods" Ruth Burks, Mary | Bailey, Catherine Bailey, Minetta Barnes, | Margaret Colin, Mary Colin, Betty Cochran, Margaret Devlin, Mary Duri- | soe, Mary Pisher, Mary Catherine Flei- shell, Pauline Fuller, Janet Guess, Betty Giles, Betty Hyde, Ruth Hullings, Bev- erley Hullings, Charlotte Lane, Theresa Lerer, Mary Lehrer, Doris McGrath, | Mary McGrail, Myra McCloskey, Joseph- ine Palmaris, e Smithson, “Tsabel Swann, Margaret Schwenk, Leslie Schafer, Lorraine Schafer, Pat Tenny- son, Elaine Vaughn, Mary Wilkerson, John Wilkerson, Bernice Willett. Spec ) Parts,.. Special dramatic pifts in this scene will be taken by Bylvia Berlin, Lorraine Coyle, Jacqueline Embrey, Alice d Kathleen Lawrence, Betty Smithdeal, Margaret Smithdeal, Winnifred Smith- deal, Beatrice Porter and Marian Zier. Tap group, Henry Hudson sailors— Evelyn Burgess, Theima Bamback, Madge Cox, Charlotté Cox, Marianne Clark, Doris Cutler, Dorothy Cady, Peggy Cooper, Evelyn Cutler, Nora Chap- men, Mary Darley, Ardith Harris, Elaine Harris, Eleanor Lang, Lawson Wilson, Mary Miller, Irene Morgan, Dorothy Nolan, Neita Sprakman, Thel- ma Segar and Margaret Williams. Buchanan group in mountain scene —Norval Allen, Betty Amer, Norma | Acton, Joe Acton, Filorence Acton, Natalie Bosserman, Catherine Beck, | Katherine Butler, Lillian Bane, Erma | Beahn, Dorothy Croson, Betty Dempsey, Audrey DeChard, Rose di Bartolo, Alta Dyer, Harriet Eudy, Barbara Ellebrooke, Carolyn Ferber, Efleen Prederick, Bar- bara Guptill, Virginia Grotz, Frances | Hironimus, Mary Howells, Virginia Ja- cobs, Dorothy King, Marie Lipske, Mar- garet Kerr, Betty Jean Kerr, Regina Maio, Faith Nichter, Eunice Nutwell, Constance Robertson, Ola Mae Spencer, Marion Willlams and Doris Young. { Nature Dance Groups. | ‘The nature dance groups, under the direction Of Alice Louise Hunter, will include sunbeams from the Raymond School, Columbia Heights Center— Jeanne Ayres, Joan Bell, Muriel Bla- lock, Beryle Cancelose, Goldie Coleman, Gloria Cone, Kathleen Clements, Mary Cozzo, Bety Delano, Mary Dear, Frances Denton, Jeanne Davey, Leslie Marie Earle, Margaret Evans, Virginia Ful- cher, Lenora Goldman, Beryl Gompers, Rhoda Hollander, Charlotte Knapp, Eva Elizabeth Kaiser, Edna Mae Marsh, Sarah Ann Marsh, Roberta Millar, Ruth Beed Morgan, Miriam Morgan, Amelia Reld, Frances Rich, Helen Rathwell, Pear! Silverman. Margaret Smith, Beverly Schlesinger, Rose Marie Wolcott, Barbara Wolcott, Dorothy Ann ‘Washington and Mary Louise Yeager. Groups from Powell Junior High, Columbia Heights Center: Dawn—June Baer, Ann Brand, Naomi Clifford, Miriam Edmundson, Margerite Flanni- gan. Barbara Healy, Leonabel Kuhn, Evelyn Pettit, Leticia Silva, Betty Styer. Birds—Betty Armes, Mary Baer, Doreen Durham, Doris Ferguson, Hope Harrison, Ruth Maye Snodgrass, Molly Sutton, Millicent Wolpoff. Morning Breezes—Phyllis Crotzer, Katherine Dorsey, Margaret Hodges, Ruth Miller, Harriet Nobles, Betty Phillips, Margaret Sieker and Jean Sutton From the Barnard School, McFarland | Community Center, the dewdrops are to be Gertrude Chap, Nellle Donohoe, Frances Stelle, Emily Duchesne, Doris Fortney, Betty Hutter, Bettv Ann Fejss- ner, Jenny Balderson, Betty Edmon- stom, Cerpline Waite. Jack Jerman, Mary Catherine Kluh, Marguerite Kluh, Marion Lyle, Mary Jane McCallum, | Betty Jean McDonald, Mary Alice | Naughten, Elsie Owens, Helen Marle Rezac and Edna Webb. { — | Warrenton. ‘WARRENTON. Va, March 12 (Spe- cial). —An exhibition of 150 reproduc- tions of famous paintings will be held in Warrenton High School Auditorium from March 21 to March 25 for the pupils and the public. The collection consists of the recognized masterpieces of art of all nations. Art Exhibit at WATCH REPAIRING BY EXPERTS The repair of your watch does not complete the trans- action between us, but estab- Hshes our obligation to fulfill our guarantee of service. All Parts Used in Our ir Department Are Genuine Material BURNSTINE’S 927 & St. N.W. DIAMONDS WATCHES BINCE 1866 jawarded at Speaker FAMOUS ARCHITECT TO LEC- TURE ON CATHEDRALS. CHARLES Z. KLAUDER. “Medieval and Renaissancg Cathe- drals” will be the subject of an illus- trated lecture next Friday afternoon in | the Chinese room of the Hotel May- flower by Charles Z. Klauder of Phila- delphia in the fourth of a series being given under the auspices of the District of Columbia section of the National| ‘Women's Committee for Washington | Cathedral. Mr. Klauder is one of the most rc-l nowned college and university architects |in the country and has designed a number of the most beautiful and fa- mous buildings on American universit campuses. He was the consulting arc itect in the building of the Harkness Memorial Dormitories at Yale Univer- sity and the executive architect Princeton University. He has been various times the gold medals of the American Institute of Architects and the Architectural League of New York and the grand prix of the Pan-American Congress of Architects. Mrs, Prank B. Noyes is chairman of the District section in charge of the lecture, which will begin at 5 pm. and will last for an hour. Sir Willmot Lewis, Washington correspondent of the London Times, will introduce the lec- turer. RAIL UNION HEADS 10 GATHER HERE Executives to Plan Congress Campaign and Fight for Pensions. Railroad labor is ready to scan the political horizon and chart its course for the forthcoming campaign. The Railway Labor Executives Asso- ciation, which includes the men wix head the 21 unions of organized rail workers, will gather here Tuesday for a three-day session in which plans will | be made to support congressional can- didates who are favorable to the cause of labor and to seek the defeat of those considered its enemies. This movement is non-partisan and the program contemplated is carried | out in every congressional election ‘What legislation, if any, the rail lead- ers will prepare to push in connection with the campaign involving candidates ~—_ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MARCH 13, 1932—PART ONE. CARDOZ0 TO BEGIN - DUTIES TOMORROW | Small Group of Friends Will See New Supreme Court Justice Take Oath. By the Associated Press Only the formalities of oath-taking | remain before Benjamin Nathan Car- | dozo of New York goes to his place on the Supreme Court bench tomorrow. The ceremonies will be solemn but simple. Cardozo will meet his colleagues just off the court chamber. A little | 8TOUp of friends will be present—a rare occurrence, for few outsiders have been inside the narrow quarters where the justices don their sombre black robes— |to hear him take the constitutional | cath. | A fellow New Yorker, the stately ‘Cme{ Justice Charles Evans Hughes, | wlll administer it, and Cardozo will take an oath to “support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.” There probably will be time for only a few brief words of congratulation be- fore noon, the hour for the ceremonious entrance into the court room. The justices will form in line with Hughes at their head and Cardozo in the rear. Words Pronounced Clearly. | They go in slowly. Everybody rises. | The clerk of the court, Charles Elmore | Cropley. and the other court attendants bow and speak. The justices nod and cpeak in return. Nimbie pages see that ) big leather-cushioned chair is in its place on the court dais. The court crier solemnly intones the formal ad- monishment for all who have business with the court to “draw nigh and give their attention for the court is now sit- ting." T some courts about all that can be distinguished of the crier’s announce- ment is the “oyez” but in the Supreme | Court each word is pronounced clearly. The justices seat themselves and the | audience sits. Cardoza, however, will not take his seat on the bench itself at first. He | will find a place by Cropley until the Chief Justice announces his appoint- ment as if it were news. Hughes will then direct Cropley to read the new member’s commission and with hand | upraised before the clerk, Cardozo will take the second or judicial oath. In it. he will swear to “administer | justice without respect to persons and | do equal right to the poor and to the rich Seating Capacity Small. The successor to Oliver Wendell simes will then take his seat at the streme left of the bench next to ustice Stone, and the business of the court will begin. Cardozo's first reaction as he looks out at the audience jammed into the emall semi-circular room—the old Sen- ate chamber—may be surprised at its smallness. Its comfortable seating capacity is not many more than a hundred. There |is a continuous coming and going at the door in front, the actual entrances and departures being hidden by a screen. The justices pay no attention to this, {nor do they heed the frequent and | quite audible click of another door— {only a few feet from the bench—lead- ing to the marshal’s office. Frank Questions Asked. It is unlikely, however, that Cardozo |--long a judge himself—will be sur- prised also at the frankness of the ques- tions asked by his fellow justices at times. The court is impatient with conventional oratory. If there is doubt whether a case belongs on the docket, an attorney does not get far with his carefully-prepared argument before he was not known in advance of the meet- ing. In one quarter it was suggested that it is still too early to discuss any definite measures. | ‘The association, howover, will make a | thorough study of the bills now pend- | ing to set up a national retirement insurance plan for raflroad workers out of a fund to be created by contribu- | tions of both employer and emplove. | Senator Wagner, Democrat, of N ‘York, and Representative Crosser, Dem- | ocrat, of Ohio, are sponsoring the le lation, which has for some years been under consideration by rallroad labor. ‘The pension fund itself would care for the cost of administration. Back- ers of this proposal, it is emphasized are desirous that it be sound from a practical standpoint, and the consider- | Rosenman, who has been legal adviser | ation to be given it at the forthcoming meeting is designed to establish if there are any weak links that need strength- ening. Many railroads have pension systems, which they themselves have created and maintain, but the workers take the atti- tude that these are not satisfactory, contending that they are held out as a gratuity rather than as a right. The bill provides that this national pension system be set up in order to promote and increase the safety and effiicency of interstate transportation service. BOY BURNED TO DEATH BY THREE COMPANIONS By the Assoclated Pr DALLAS, Tex., March street gamins who made a bl man torch of a 14-year-old newsboy because they objected to his presence at a dice game were sought yesterday by _police, assisted by newsboys Before his death at a hospital, the victim, Howard Day Moore, said the boys seized him and tied his kerosene on him, after which they ushed him against an electric heater n a vacant building used as a hangout by newsboys. His clothes burst into flames. His as- sailants untied his hands before fleeing. Established 34 Years hands | with strips of cloth. Then they poured | is interrupted “Why can't you get relief in the State courts?” is a frequent query. If that is not answered satisfactorily, the case is about over. |ROOSEVELT ADVISER WINS SUPREME COURT PLACE New York Senate Approves Rosen- man's Appointment—New Justice Is 36—Came From Texas. By the Associated Press. ALBANY, March 12.—Samuel I. to Gov. Roosevelt since he entered the chamber in 1929, yesterday ated to the Supreme Court bench. He was appointed by the Gov- ernor to fill the unexpired term of the te Justice George V. Mullan of the cial district, New York City. 1 was confirmed unanimously Senate. at 36, will be one of the mbers of the bench. He San_Antonio, Tex.; was om Columbia University, years in the Assembly of For three years he was drafting commissioner. T of Tammany Hall. | R | youn was b gradu: and se the Le legislati He is a men MAKE YOUR HOME MORE LIVABLE BY INSTALLING All Modern Improvements. 12 Months to Pay. Weatherproof Contracting Bond Bidz. Company Dis. 0014 Fight WINTER'S | . CHILLS and ILLS Ywith BUZZE’S __For Sale at All Neighborhood Drug Stores Price 35¢ per Box Established 34 Years Specials Monday and Tuesd ay Genuine Toric Glasses Far or Near Complete With Shell or Metal Frame Complete Outfit, With Case and Cleaner Included Genuine Toric KRYPTOK Invisible Bifocal Lenses First and best quality. Toric Kryptok Bifocal Lenses (one pair to see near and far). Best lenses made. Sold regularly $15. Special ' $7 .50 KAHN OPTICAL CO. 617 Seventh St."N.W. iween F and G Streets Going to Bagdad { S G. U. JESUIT TO TEACH IN ASIA. REV. J. EDWARD COFFEY, S. J, A new American Jesuit school will| open next Fall in ancient Bagdad, cap- jtal city of the newly created Asiatic state of Iraq. it was announced last night at Georgetown University, and will begin its work under the direction of a holding association incorporated under the laws of the District of Co- lumbia. Rev. J. Edward Coffey. S. J., of Georgetown University will be one of the American Jesuit teachers composing the faculty of the school. To reach Bagdad, which is familiar chiefly to Americans through the classic capers of Harun al Rashid, the Caliph of the “Arabian Nights,” Father Coffey first | must voyage to Beirut and thence by motor across the great Syrian Desert. | It was disclosed that Dr. Edmund A.| Walsh, S. J., vice president of George- | town, was largely instrumental in lay- ing the groundwork for the Jesuit school when he visited Iraq last Sum- mer. Father Coffey, who announced the plans for the new school in the Hoya, official student publication, returned to Georgetown last year after an absence of nearly five years in France. There he pursued advanced studies, chiefly at Lyons, Under treaty arrangements between Irag and the United States, the na- tionals of this country are given per- mission to maintain there educational, religious and philanthropic institutions and to teach in the English language. R — 'DISABLED VETERANS SEE MOUNT VERNON| Patients From Capifil Hospital Taken on Tour and Honored Later at Willard Dinner. Fifty World War veterans who are patients at Mount Alto Hospital were taken on a sightseeing trip to Mount | Vernon yesterday afternoon, after which they were entertained at a dinner given in_their honor at the Mayflower Hotel The committee which arranged th tour and the dinner was under the di. rection of Mrs. Laura V. Dann, assisted | by Miss Lillian Dann, Mrs. Amos A. | | Fries, Mrs. Clyde B. Stovall, Mr. Earl Gregory and Miss Agnes Brophy. | Musical entertainment was furnished by the orchestra of the United States | Marine Band, and several vocal selec- | tlons were rendered by Miss Dorothy | Skinner, accompanied by Miss Edith Reed at the piano. Mr. Clyde B. Stovall was toastmaster. | Among the guests of the veterans were Secretary of War and Mrs, Pat- rick J. Hurley, Senator and Mrs. Smith Brookhart, Representative Morgan Sanders of Texas, Admiral and Mrs. Charles E. Riggs, Col. J. Miller Kenyon, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Gans, Gen. Amos A. Pries, Col. Stephen R. Wood, Capt Watson B. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Tolson and Mr. Clyde B. Stovall. | FIRE FATAL TO THREE MONTREAL, Quebec, March 12 (). —Three small children tucked in bed for an afternoon nap perished when fire destroyed the home of John Hughes at Ville Lasalle, a Montreal suburb, yester- | day: | The victims were Kenneth Hughes, | | 2; Stanley Hughes, 8 months, and Al- | len Parker, 3, a cousin. | | . The mother, visiting at a neighbor's | | house, ran home when she saw her| | house burning, but was unable to enter. FEDERAL WORKERS ARRANGE BIE: DANCE Local Federation Affair on March 29 Expected to Attract 2,000. Between 1,500 and 2,000 persons are €xpected to attend a dance and card party in celebration of the George Washington Bicentennial March 29 at the Willard Hotel, under the auspices of the District of Columbia Federation of Federal Employes' Unions. Both the large and small ball rooms Wwill be used. The dance will be held in the large ball room, while bridge and five hundred will be played in the small ball room. Both ball rooms will be ap- propriately decorated. The officers of locals comprising the District Pederation wilt serve as hosts and hostesses. They will be attired in Colonial costumes. A special musical program will be provided by a section of the National Symphony Orchestra under the leader- ship of Sol Minster. Tne program will include patriotic and concert numbers. Wilfred Smith, tenor, will sing. Co-operation has been pledged by Sol Bloom, associate director of the United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission; Dr. George C. Havenner of the local Bicentennial Commission, and Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d, of the Office of Public Buildings and Public Parks. Posters announcing the affair will be placed in all the Government depart- ments. In addition, numerous out-of- town visitors are expected to attend. Arrangements will be completed by the Entertainment Committee com- posed of Sophie J. Bergner, chairman, Local No. 2; Rebekah K. Pedigo, Loc: No. 261; R. Benner, Local No. 250; Ada L. Simmons, Loeal No. 262, and Minnie D. Stevens, Local No. 105." Miss Pedigo will have charge of the ticket distribution, STORMS MOVIE GATES Salesman, Financed by 35 Friends, Seeks Character Roles. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., March 12 (®). —Financed by 35 of his college fratern- ity brothers, James M. Force, St. Louis insurance salesman and amateur actor, was here yesterday to storm the movies on a profit-sharing basis. Force is no Valentino, being pos- sessed of large hands, a thin face and prominent jawbones, but he said he thought he could play character parts like those made famous by Lon Chaney. His fraternity brothers are sending him $250 a month. If he succeeds, he sald, he has agreed to pay them $20 for every $1 they invested in him, He is a University of Utah graduate and has done amateur character work for years. © [SPECIAL Work- manship, Quality and Prices are the Talk of STEIN’S SHOE REPAIR CO. 627 E St. N.W. 2nd Shop from 7th St. |=n=n=fl=n=m | 0 Washington’s Oldest Seed Store, Est. 1869, | Announces bush Mrs. EVERGREENS Norway Spruce, 18 to 24 In., §1.25 ea. Kmerlian” Arborvitac, 2 13 3 foot, hese Barberry, 3 years old, 12 Bleh, 10 to bundle, SL !\ A SALE OF “Gold Seal Brand” 2-year-old Field Grown ROSEBUSHES ON SALE MONDAY AND TUESDAY. Guaranteed true to name—planting instructions rose. Each to prevent with each ed with wax drying. Etoile de France, Crimson . Victoria, Snowy W hite Killarney, Pink Mimne. Butterfly, Light Pink Aaron Ward, Yeltow Primrose Ophelia, Creamy W hite Radiance, Pink Radiance, Red Souw. de C. 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Ave. 7 Seeks Seat FORMER PENROSE SECRE- TARY IN CONGRESS RACE. LEIGHTON C. TAYLOR, Who was secretary to the late Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania, has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomi- nation for Congress in the York-Adam- Franklin district of Pennsylvania. Mr. Taylor, who at present practices law in Washington, is a graduate of George Washington University School of Law. FRANCE FAVORS CURBING POWERS OF PRESIDENT | Former Senator in North Dakotal Speech Says ‘“Autocratic Sway of Chief Executive Must End.” By the Associated Press. DEVILS LAKE, N. Dak., March 12. Former Senator J. I. France of Mary land, Republican presidential aspirant, advocated curbing powers of the Na- | tion's Chief Executive in an address | yesterday. Campaigning as & candidate in the North Dakota preference primary next | Tuesday, Prance sald: “The autocratic sway of the Chief Executive must end or our republic will vanish.” | He asserted a President should not veto congressional measures except on constitutional graunds. In world af- fairs he urged international co-opera- tion for mutual welfare along lines fol- | lowed by States of this Nation. An address on “Presidential Possi- bilities” will be delivered tomorrow night by Ray Tucker, Washington corres- pondent for the New York World- Telegram, before the Argo Lodge. | Maryland, North and South’ Carolina, H ] Virginia and the District of Columbia, comprising n all 35 B'nai B'rith lodges. | The conclave, for which an elaborate social al patriotic program has been i . celebration. 30 Candidates Will Be Ad-|, Joseph A. Wilner, past president o | Argo Lodge. is chairman of the Gon- : > A vention Com : s mitted at Meetings Which | lfaiior, Committee: Jullus Rels, co- Ray TUGkEI' Will Address. Reis; Hotel, Maurice Salomon; m, Nathan Plotnick: Entertainment, Ed- | ward Rosenblum: Hospitality, Morton Wilner; Women's Arrangement, Mrs. Maurice Bisgyer; Transportation, Nore | . Independent Order of B'nal Brrith. | Special Session Called. At the meeting of the Jewish fra-| BUENOS AIRES, March 12 (&) — ternity, to be held at the Jewish Com- | The government last night called an munity Center, 30 candidates will be extraordinary session of Congress for | Grand Lodge No. 5, scheduled for the | Willard Hotel March 20-22. | The Grand Lodge has jurisdiction | over members from Fiorida, Georgia, formed, will be held here as a part of the George Washington Bicentennial jand Sol Himmelfarb, treasurer. mitte chairmen are: Banquet man Luchs; Registration, Simon Hirsh- man, and Amity Club, Morris Cafrits. initiated into membership and plans March 28 to discuss the financial site discussed for the convention of District 'uation and the 1932 budget il the March | Lion Don’t be without Fresh Air just be- cause an ‘open window makes your of- fice or home feel like the hurricane deck. THIS EASY-TO-INSTALL MURPHY VENTILATOR IS DEADLY TO DRAFTS. . .but kind to fresh air! 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