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—10 = SOCIETY LEADERS - WILLSELL SEALS ZSeveral Hundred Women to| Conduct Booths in Banks and Stores. PIRERTY ITeT Wed 50 Years COUPLE CELEBRATES GOLDEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY. ' _THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, IAVIATOR 1S HELD IN YACHT SLAYING Flyer Is Jailed as Materia! | Several hundred women prominent | in social and civic circles will sell | Christmas seals in the larger depart- | Z ment stores and banks, beginning to- | morrow, it was announced yesterday by | the Washigton Tuberculosis Asso- | ciation. | ‘The women, working in relay teams, + will conduct special booths and tables‘v as volunteers in the city-wide cam- paign to raise funds for the fight to prevent the spread of tuberculosis. Each woman will wear the light green cap bearing the red double-barred ~cross of the association. The names "of the team captains, who will work under direction of Mrs. Henri L. J. de Sibour, follow: List of Team Heads. Mrs. Joseph A. Fenton, at the Ameri- can Security & Trust Co.; Mrs. Fred- erick Siddons, American Security & ‘Trust, Seventh and Massachusetts ave- ~nue; Mrs. Richard S. Franklin, Ameri- =can Security & Trust Co. Eighth and H streets; Mrs. Wright Clark, Chevy Chase Savings Bank: Mrs. Frank A. | Simon, District National Bank; Mrs. | .Harold Burnside, Farmers and Me- 2chanics’ Bank; Mrs, Henry Berliner, | < Julius Garfinckel & Co.; Mrs. Wilhelm | * Krechting, Goldenberg’s; Mrs. Lucian | .; Mrs. Lawrence Koenigs- ~berger, Palais Royal; Mrs. Robert Stunz, Park Savings Bank; Mrs. Leo | May, Riggs Bank; Mrs. A. B. McManus, ~Riggs Bank, Eighteenth street and Co- +lumbia road; Mrs. John A. Munson, “Riggs Bank, Park road and Fourteenth “street; Mrs. Adella Heaven, Sears, Roe- buck & Co.; Mrs. David Frank, Second . National Bank, G street branch; Mrs. John Thompson, Shoreham Hotel; Mrs. SH. C. Wooley, Union Trust Co.; Mrs. «George Barse, Washington Mechanics’ % Savings Bank; Mrs. J. W. Peabody, ~Washington Tuberculosis Association; = Mrs. Peabody, Seventeenth and G street ~branch of Washington Loan & Trust; 2Mrs, Marshall Orme Exnicios, Wood- Zward & Lothrop. +_The second week of the drive ended ~yesterday with receipts of over $17,000 ZTeported. The campaign goal is $50,000. : Sale to Be Extended. = _The campaign is to be aided further ~this week by the placing of seals on “sale in stores of the Atlantic & Pacific “Tea Co., the American Stores Co. and | the Liggett Drug Co. . Senator Capper will discuss the seal =sale in a talk from Station WRC at =6 pm. Tuesday. -PARLEY T0 DISCUSS “BEACH PRESERVATION, ZAssociation Members From All At-| < lantic and Gulf Coast States Expected. Problems of interest to coast State and municipal government officials and | ‘water front property owners will be dis- cussed at the annual meeting of the ~American Shore and Beach Preserva- «tion Association, to be held at the Na- ~tional Research Council Building Wed- nesday. The public is invited. Members of the association from all s Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Coast ~ States are expected to attend and will make their headquarters at the Carlton = Hotel, it was announced here last night ~by J. Spencer Smith, president of the . association and head of the New Jersey .Ezm Board of Commerce and Naviga- “tion. - _ Among the speakers will be Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, chief engineer of the United States Army; Senators Barbour and Norbeck, L. H. Weir of the Na- tiona) Recreational Association; Capt. R. S. Patton, director of the United States «Coast and Geodetic Survey; Robert > Moses, president of the Long Island | State Park Commission; Frederic A.| “Delano, chairman of the Regional Plan | of New York and Its Environs, and Vic- tor Gelineau, director and chief engi- “neer of the New Jersey State Board of ;Commerce and Navigation. -REV. FELIX KIRSCH K. C. FORUM SPEAKER Church Authority Will Talk on “The Catholic Church and the Confessional.” Rev. Felix Kirsch will speak on “The | -Catholic Church and the Confessional” at St. Gabriel's Church tomorrow night ;at 8 o'clock in the fourth of a series of discourses sponsored by the Catholic Information Forum under the auspices of the Knights of Columbus. Rev. Kirsch is an authority on church matters. He organized a similar series of talks in Charleston, W. Va., last year, ;re‘ld was instrumental in the movement Te. _The concluding talk of the first se- xies will be given December 19 by Dr. George Johnson of Catholic University, who will speak on “The Church and the =Schools.” ‘The series will be resumed fter the holidays. e A © USE MACHINES SLOWLY ‘Japanese Retard Change to Help Unskilled Labor. Although Japan is familiar with mod- ern machinery and labor-saving devices, it is adopting the machine slowly in ~order not to throw out of work its large proportion of unskilled laborers, Charles C. Batchelder told the National Geo- gaphlc Soclety at a' lecture in the ‘ashington Auditorium Friday night. Mr. Batchelder also described Japa- | their son, George D. Williamson, 2404 |KIWANIS FURNACE | he said is badly needed. He urged the Witness Pending Probe of Guy’s Alibi. By the Associhted Press. LONG BEACH, Calif., December 10. . —Under technical arrest, pending in- MR. AND MRS. DIXON WILLIAMSON, Who will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary tonight at the home of L'Enfant square southeast. The couple, married in Lake Comfort, N. C., came to Washington about three years ago from their home in Scranton, N. C. Their five sons, all residents of this city, will attend the celebration. —=Star Staff Photos. WILL WARM NEEDY Salvation Army Quarters Can Care for 100 More Persons Through Gift. ‘Through the installation of a new furnace at the Salvation Army head- | quarters, 479 C street, the Kiwanis Club has created livable quarters for 100 more persons. Although the Salvation Army had space for the additional accomraoda- tions, Aheating facilities were lacking. Last week the Kiwanis Club voted to expend funds for equipment at the agency and a committee was appointed to investigate the needs. The furnace was purchased and placed in operation Friday. The War Department has loaned cots and bed- ding to fill the newly habitable section of the building. The Salvation Army | now has sleeping room for about 400 persons. In addition, the Kiwanis Club in- stalled an electric washing machine to take the place of an obsolete and broken one. Inmates of the shelter were obliged to do their washing by hand before. Following an inspection of the Army’s headquarters, Edwin F. Hill, | president of the Kiwanis Club, issued an appeal for reading material which people of Washington to remember the Salvation Army when about to dispose n: magazines, books and other liter- ature. H. J. DONNELLY TO SPEAK Horace J. Donnelly, solicitor of the Post Office Department, will speak at an academic assembly at the George- town - University School of Law tomor- row at 5:10 pm. Mr. Donnelly is one of a group of prominent legal officers of the Gov- ernment invited to deliver lectures be- fore the faculty and student body dur- ing the present year. He will tell about the intricate legal problems that come before the Post Office Department. A graduate of Georgetown Law School in 1908, Mr. Donnelly returned the fol- lowing year to obtain his master’s de- green in law. WILL GIVE CONCERT Jat Herod, 11, and Elajean Roen, 9, accomplished violinists, will play in a concert at Trinity College tomorrow night at 7 o'clock. They have just completed a tour of the States which had its inception last March after Jat was received here by President Hoover and later by Walter Damrosch. Jat, whose only instructor has been his 21-year-old sister Marjorie, will sail for Berlin soon. OPEN EVENINGS Hughes’ Pen Shop Thepickof | Santa’s pack! \\?‘ Waterman’s No. 94 is the ideal gift pen for a young business man or astudent. Snappy design. Medium length. Sets low in pocket. Perfectly ‘made point to suit the rccipient. In fr?" blue and wn. Comein Pen$5. Pencil$3 Set, in gift case, $8 ughes’ Pen Shop Natfonal Theater Blds. 1325 E St. N.W. Expert Pen Repairing ‘hese customs and social codes. His talk ‘was illustrated with lantern slides. Genuine Kryptok Lenses correct- ly ground to your individual requirements no matter how com- plicated your eyes may be. Absolute a curacy guaran- teed. A Gift Suggestion Wouldn't Mother or Dad be Christmas? Reserve a pair by making a deposit now. Appropriate Gift Card issued when deposit is made. STREET FLOOR. Invisible Bi-Focals Both far and near vision in the same lenses. This price in- cludzs scientific examination of your eyes by our expert optometrist. pleased with new glasses for Lanshurgh’s 7th, 8th and vestigation of William James (“Curly”) The day o nots is past mas giftisa “Good nigh for years to and carry good will expensively. P.iJsNee:Co: DEFERRED that says “Good morning’ ') t=1 while there is such practical gifts that suspect in the slaying Monday night of Capt. Walter Wanderwell. De Larm was detained as a material witness because of his knowledge of Guy's whereabouts early Monday night. |~ Authorities said they were attempting | to shatter Guy's story that he was at the Glendale home of Mr. and Mrs. De | Larm until 9 p.m. Monday. Police said Capt. Wanderwell was shot and killed aboard his yacht Carma between 9 p.m. and 9:15 pm. The De Larm home is | about 30 miles from the Long Beach | water front. Renew Quizzing Woman. Authorities renewed gquestioning of Mrs. Isabelle De Larm, the aviator's wife, who told police previously she knew Guy was at her home until 8 p.m. Monday and that she was uncer- tain whether he had departed later. Clarence Hunt, district attorney's al. Authorities quoted Mrs. De Larm as COMPANY'S 52 The Finest Gift Is Quality f gifts of trifling baubles and expensive what- . Today’s Christ- practical gift. One and t” to the recipient come. Only a gift of quality can really endure your message of and best wishes HERE is no need for anyone to give gifts of dubious quality an opportunity to purchase quality gifts so in- Here at the P. J. Nee Co. you @ FINE FU wj:m Jtreet et Gifts Purchased Now will be held for Christmas Delivery PAYMENTS MAY Tuesday morning, demanded a news- paper containing an account of the shoot circumstances in the slaying of Capt. | Wanderwell sent police searching to- | night for a bullet which killed a cat. | of the animal might be linked with the shooting of Wanderwell cropped out as police tested the alibi of Guy. 1 | he found his cat dead about 7 a.m. on ‘Tuesday, the morning following the killing. humed and dismembered but the bullet was not found. tives saying if they could prove the mis- deputy, yesterday {hwarted the attempts | sile which killed the cat was fired from |of Long Beach detectives to obtain a |the same revolver that ended Wander- | warrant by informing them they had | well’s life, they would possess a valuable | | Guy's alibi, Edward De Larm, Indian |iDsufficient evidence to bring Guy to clue in establishing the whereabouts of | airplanes in Brazil in the first six aviator, was held tonight in a cell near the one in which Guy is held as alsaying that Guy, sitting at breakfast | band nor Guy possessed a firearm as far sponding period of 1928. | the killer. will surpass your highest expectations. Gifts that combine utility and beauty. Gifts that are inexpensive enough . for the slimmest purse or fine enough for a king. Rare woods and metals wrought by genuine craftsmen, fine rugs and tapestries with the lure of the Old World and the Orient. name on your list for whom a gift cannot be purchased at the B ’ oxv= - as she knew. She and her husband | had supported Guy’s alibi. ing. | Hart said he went to Mrs. De Larm angrily after he found the cat’s body ! and was told by her the men were not | there. Probe Cat’s Death. A clue almost as extraordinary as the CUBA .. SOUTH Four Famous TRaiNs AFTERNOON—EVENING—NIGHT * 163 HOURS WASHINGTON to FLORIDA Via the Double Treck - Sea Level Roate WASHINGTON DAILY sl b R Lv.320P.M. Effective Dec. 15 The Tamiami Lv.3.35 P.M. dally untll Dec. 14 GEOLP IAMES, C.P e Street, N W, Ad . P.A., 1418 “N" . W. Ty BNl il A 118 e, 5.C Wa. ATIANTIC COAST LINE 7 Stonderd, Raltroad of e Sout Alibi Uncracked. | Despite the inability of detectives to crack Guy's alibi, they continued to | hold him, remarking “we convinced | we will have the case agal him com-~ | pleted within 24 hours.” Besides a new search of the yacht for clues, detectives brought two members of the crew, James Farris, navigator, and Eric W. Owen, to headquarters for questioning and instructed the Coast Guard to prevent any attempt to move the craft. Mrs. Aloha Wanderwell, the widow, | remained in seclusion today. Friends | said she was near collapse. PTG The possibility that the destruction Hart, & neighbor of De Larm, said ‘The body of the cat was ex- A search of the yard followed, detec- Miles flown by scheduled commercial &/ | months of this year totaled 658,428, Mrs. De Larm said neither her hus- | compared with 250,000 in the corre- nd Y EAR OF FINE FURNITURE DEALING IN WASHINGTON This Renaissance Bed Room Suite illus* trates the quality of the Christmas gift that endures and is remembered. The four major pieces are priced at $148, The four pieces are dresser, chest of dawers, vanity and bed. Perfectly matched burl-walnut veneers, beauti- fully carved scrollwork and decorations. Each drawer typifies the craftsmanship of the gntire suite with dustproof dove- tailed, quarter oak interiors and center glides. The additional pieces to com- plete the suite are priced as follows: Chair, $11.00; vanity bench, $11.00; bed- side stand, $12.50. The 52 years of service behind the P. J. Nee Co. qualifies it as one of the leading institutions of Washington. It has noted the buying habits of clients for over half a century and knows that they place quality above price. You will find authentic period reproductions or the most modern of modern furniture here. Oriental rugs, with their mystic designs, lie beside the newest patterns of America’s foremost designers. Home furnishings, bed coverings, lamps and-occasional pieces, everything that is necessary to make a house a “home.” J.Nee Co. will find an array of There isn’t a single E CONVENIENTLY ARRANGED AT NEE COMPANY