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“FLYING BOUDOR” HERE TOMORROW Mrs. Thaden and Mrs. Mar- salis, Who Broke Endurance | Mark, to Get Honors. Flying in their famous plane, the Flying Boudoir, in which they re-} cently remained aloft 196 heurs, estab- lishing a world airplane refueling en- durance record for women, Mrs. Louise McPhetridge Thaden and Mrs. Frances Harrell Marsalis will arrive at Washing- | ton-Hoover Afrport at 10:30 am. to- morrow to receive four days of honors in the Capital. The endurance plane will be accom- panied by the refueling plane, manned by Stuart Reiss and John Runger, the original refueling crew, which made pos- sible the eight-day flight over Long Island. The woman champions will conclude their visit to the Capital Sun- day afternoon with a demonstration of refueling over the Potomac River. To Welcome Visitors. On their arrival at the airport the woman flyers will be met by a welcom- ing committee, headed by John S. Wynne. manager of the airport; Mrs. Jack Stearns Gray, air pioneer, who will act as hostess to them during their stay, and Miss Irene Juno of Air Pro- motion Service, which is arranging de- tails for the visit. A police escort will lead the party to the Fox Theater, where a newsreel is to be made. They will be at the Fox at about 11 o'clock and then will be taken to the Carlton Hotel, where they are to register.at aviation headquarters at 11:30 am. At 12:30 the woman flyers are to be received at the White House by Presi- dent Hoover, in the presence of Federal and civil aviation leaders. The White House reception will be followed by a luncheon in honor of the visitors by the Aero Club of Washing- ton Chapter cf the National Aeronautic Association, at 1 o'clock in the palm room of the Willard Hotel. This will be the first Juncheon given by the club in honor of women. A reception will fol- low the luncheon. Luncheon reserva- tions may be made at the headquarters of the National Aeronautic Association, Dupont Circle. To Be Tea Guests. ‘Tcmogrow at 4:30 p.m. Mrs. Thaden end Mrs. Marsalis will be guests of Mrs. Wilter Tuckerman at a tea at the National Woman's Country Club. They and John P. Victory, secretary of ths National Aeronautic Association, will be guests of honor at a dinner at the Club Rossdhu at 7 p.m. temorrow. The din- ner will be followed by open house. One of the chief social events ar- ranged for the visitors will be an avia- tion dinner Saturday night at the Club Rossdhu, with aviation leaders of the Capital present. U. S. EMPLOYMENT AIDS DESCRIBED . Hines, Speaking Instead of Secretary Doak, Tells of Federal Facilities. Lewis G. Hines, director of the United States Employment Service for Penn- sylvania, was principal speaker this aft- ernoon before the twentieth annual convention of the International- Asso- ciation of Public' Employment Services at the Washington Hotel. Mr. Hines, who discussed Federal methods of as- sisting the job-hunter, filled the place on the program assigned to Secretary of Labor Doak, when the Secretary was prevented from filling the engagement. The meeting, which opened yesterday with approximately 50 delegates in at- tendance from the United States and Canada. will close Friday. Mr. Hines was to be followed by Wil- liam H. Stead, executive secretary of the Tri-City Employment Stabilization Committee of Minneapolfs, Minn. Other speakers on today's program were Leisur Magnusson, director of the Washington office, International Labor Organization, and R. A. Rigg, director or the Employment Service of Canada. Mr. Magnusson's subject was the in- ternational attitude toward the con- trol of fee-charging employment agencies. HURLEY TO USE PLANE ‘War Secretary to Fly to Chicago for Speech Tomorrow. Secretary of War Hurley plans to leave by plane from Bolling Field this afternoon for Chicago, where he is to make a political speech tomorrow. Mr. Hurley planned to leave imme- diately after addressing the Soroptimist Club at the Willard Hotel. He has leased a pfivate plane for the trip. ‘Tomorrow's Republican mbeting in Chicago is the only meeting scheduled this week on Mr. Hurley's program, it was sald at the Wnr Department. ROAD TO SEEK LOAN New Haven Line to Ask R. F. C. for 8700,000 to Hire 400 Men. BOSTON, September 21 (#).—Presi- dent J. J. Pelley of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad announced yesterday that the road would soon ap- Ply to the Reconstruction Finance Cor poration for a “work” loan of $700,000. The money, he said, would be used in repairing locomotives and freight cars for future requirements and will give employment to 400 additional men. N 4 565 T0 everynight Reclining Seat Coaches Pre- Cooled for com= fort. Lunch and porter service. Coaches open 10 !i\! Leave 1235 B&O THE EVENING STAR, WAS: |GIRL GIVEN 90-DAY JAIL TERM FOR ASSAULT ON POLICEMAN Thelma Thornton, 18, Attacked Him as He Attempted to Arrest Her as Training School Fugitive, Says O’Neal. Thelma Thornton, 18, who escaped “Not very much,” the woman replied. last June from the National Training|“We really haven't the facilities to han- School on Bladensburg road, today wis‘ dle her.” ‘Then she explained the sentenced to 90 days in jail for assault| had beaten her once. She added that on a policeman and dicorderly conduct. The girl was convicted by Police Court Judge Gus A. Schuldt after Policeman J. E. O'Neal testified she attacked him when he attempted to arrest her as a fugitive from the training school. e assault occurred, he said, outside of Police Court yesterday, where she| had appeared as a_witness for her| brother, accused of affray. Miss Thorn- ton slapped him several times and kicked him on the shin, O'Neal said, during a running battle on D street be- tween Fifth and Sixth. ‘The officer called for help and with the assistance of another policeman succeeded in quieting the girl tem- porarily. But when the patrol wagon arrived Miss Thornton again hecame violent and it required four officers to put her in it. She fainted when led into court from her cell today. | Ar official from the training schdol | appeared in court and was asked by the Jjudge if she wanted Miss Thornton sent back to the institution where she had been committed for turning in a false fire alarm. | STIMSON PREPARES WAY FOR D. A. R. PARIS TRIP Ambassador Walter E. Edge at Paris has been instructed by Secretary of State Stimson to notify the French gov- ernment of the pilgrimage to France which the Daughters of the American Revolution will make next month for the purpose of unveiling a tablet listing | the names of Frenchmen who gave their lives for this country at Yorktown. Officers, members and famiiies of the D. A. R. will leave New York on Oc- tober 4, salling on the Champlain. In | a letter to Mrs. Russell William Magna, national president general, Secretary | Stimson said the forthcoming trip “should be a potent factor in welding more firmly the bonds of traditional {riendship existing between France and the United States.” O Tunney Reaches Paris. PARIS, September 21 (#).—Gene | ‘Tunney, the former heavyweight cham- | pion, arrived yesterday and went almost | immediately to the bedside of his wife, who is ill in the American Hospital after a mastold operation. Physicians | said Mrs. Tunney was much improvi upon several Thornton had wrecked the furniture in her roont and kicked a window out of her machine as well as ‘breaking the windshield of the House of Detention car. M add road southeast. other occasions Miss Thornton in the 16 ve her W block of Gom Store Hous: 7 AM. to S DU PONT PAINTS, STAINS, VARNISHES & “pDuco” QuIcK DRYING LACQUERS & ENAMELS fWe SCREEN, PORCH & ROOF PAINTS “BARRELED SUNLIGHT” | James Cannon, 1INGTON, D. v 21, .1982. BISHOP CANNON’S SON BURIED IN ARLINGTON Dr. W. B. Cannon, 38, Died Sun- day in Veterans’ Hospital at Hampton, Va. Dr. W. B. Cannon, 38, son of Bishop jr., of 'the Methodist Episcopal Church South, was buried in &irl | Arlington National Cemetery this morn- ing. He died Sunday at the Hampton, Va., Veterans’ Hospital, where he was a surgeon. Bishop Cannon, who was in Towa when informed of his sons death, reached here for the services, which were conducted by Dr. Willlant A. Shel- ton, pastor of Mount Vernon Place Methodist Church. Dr. Cannon was born in Farmville, S P.M.; We Have PAINTS . .for Every Purpose Saturdays, 1 P.M. .+ . both for Exterior and Interior finishes . . . all of the better grades of paints, of course, as we handle nothing else. . Il gladly tell you which fin- ish is best adapted for your purpose. fAIl the nationally advertised paint products are available here . . . and you are certain to realize substantial savings, made possible by our— Specially Low Prices HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS—GL/ 1334 New York Ave.—Phone NAt. 1703 THEY’RE MILDER THEY TASTE BETTER \ OU would be astonished too, if you could see this ma- chine that turns out 750 Chesterfields a minute . . .and Va., and was 8, uate of Duke Uni- versity. He recelved his mdsm degree at the University of Virgjnia. Besides his widow, the !nnner Mm Ernestine Jacobs of Carthage, Mo., and an 8-yepr-old daughter, Lura Virginia Cannon, he is survived by four brothers, Edward and David of this city; B, M. Cannon, El Monte, Calif., and Dr. James Cannon, 3d, Duke University, and two| sisters, Mrs. H. C. Stockham, Birming- ham, Ala., and Mrs, Lura Stevens, Nor- folk, Va. A newly invented English protection against smash-and-grab rzids ejects ammonia gas, explodes a smoke bomb and starts 8 whistle which shrieks so loudly that it can be heard over half a mile away. were married tober 17, 1930, gagement as organist at the ORGANIST’S WIFE SUES Former Washington Man Defend- ant jn Beno Djvorce Action. Otto F. Beck of New York, former theater organist here, has been sued for divorce in Reno, Nev., according to an Assoclated Press dispatch received here ‘today. His wife, Mrs. Ellen C. Beck, charged non-support and cruelty in the suit g en- ANCIENT VILLAGE FOUND | Bemains of Indian Tribe Uneov-‘ ‘ered in Npbraska. | Remains of an Indian village, believed centuries old, have been unearthed at Fullerton, Nebr. quantity of seed axes and indluM that the MM dmended large- ly upon agriculture. - “When I call at a house st Kilburn for the Tent the tenants lly throw me down the steps and I have to keep voli | & room on the ground floor to retreat Theater, Fourteenth street and Park 1 mw .~ munea nlnndlunl in & Willisden, road. a very simple physical cause— CONSTIPATION! DOCTORS KNOW that ragged nerves and bad tempers often mean one thing. . . constipation! To correct this evil in a natural way they advise Fleischmann’s Y east, every one as near perfect as cigarettes can be made. But please bear this in mind. It is what happens before the tobacco goes into this machine that matters most. Rolling and packaging are important, but not nearly as important as the selection, blending and treatment of the tobacco. That’s why we keep telling you about the tobaccos used in RE you afraid? You have every right to be . .. Your husband isn't just irritable. He's sick! Doctors say that irritability fre- quently hasa um&“ physical cause « - . Constipation. We aren't leading healthy lives—not enough exercise —t0o much heavy food—daily neg- lect of important body habits. You knaw what happens, Our systems are weakened—and refuse to throw ‘off their accumulated ‘waste matter regularly. Actually, the intestines have be- come stagnant. Poisons form— seep into the blood — circulate through the body, leading to head- es—upset stomach—unpleasant breath—a persistent “tired”” feeling. That morning grouch. Don't neglect this condition SPECIAL Dresses, $1.00 6 for 80c Don’t Forget Our Laundry Service 4"/ i INT}QTINFQ = it’s too easily corrected. Doctors recommend—fresh yeast! What Fresh Yeast does Eaten daily, Fleischmann’s Yeast attacks and softens the clogging wastes in the intestines. same time it actually ° strengthens the muscles that help to eliminate these residues. At the “‘tones” and Thus disturbing body poisons are gently cuned away. Sound slee] Bac bealthy digestion—a smile! returns. Eeute picks up. comes yout ful energy—a You can get Fleischmann’s Yeast —rich in vitamins B, G and D—at grocers, restaurants and soda foun- tains and label. Why not get a supply today? directions are on the Chesterfields. They’re fine, mild, and pure tobaccos. We tell you about ageing and curing the tobaccos. . . about blending and cross-blending them . . . because they are things that count. Chesterfields are milder. They taste better. Prove it for yourself . . . Just try a package. Chesterfield Radio Program—Every night ex- cept Sunday, Columbia coast-to-coast Network. 932, Lic2¥TY « Myzas Tosacco O