Evening Star Newspaper, June 11, 1935, Page 8

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EVENTSNUMEROUS FOR SHRINE LADIES Many Individual Parties Supplement Official Festivities. The social functions for the ladies of the Imperial Divan and the wives of the representatives of the Imperial Council of the Shrine will claim much of the spotlight during the week. In addition to the festivities arranged by the Entertalnment Committee of the nvention, headed by Mr. John C. oons, there will be numerous indi- Yidual parties for the visiting women. . The official program of entertain- ments for the ladies opened today with a brilliant luncheon at the Con- ressional Country Club for the wives !{ the officials and will close Thursday ith a garden party on the south lawn 6f the White House, with Mrs. Roose- Yelt hostess to the ladies of the Im- perial Divan and the wives of the ether officials of the Shrine. § Fashion Show Held. The more than 500 guests at the ncheon were seated at small tables ay with cut flowers and a handsome and-painted place card showing des- ert scenes was at each place. During the luncheon an orchestra played and {mmediately following there was a fashion show staged by Jelleff’s. At one of the tables was Mrs. Dana $. Williams, wife of the imperial po- tentate; Mrs. Robert S. Smith, wife €f the potentate of the District Shrine, and Mrs. Leonard P. Steuart, wife of the imperial potentate-elect. Mr. Granville Gude, chairman of the Ban- Quet Committee, arranged the func- tion for the ladies, assisted by Mrs. Smith, wife of the District potentate. The other official parties, especially for the women, will be a luncheon to- orrow at the Shoreham and a ncheon the following day at the Washington Hotel. 150 Assist as Hostesses. " Assisting the Entertainment Com- mittee as hostesses are 150 wives of local Bhriners, each one assigned to wives of representatives of visiting temples. The group includes Mrs. Ed- ward D. Anderson, Mrs. Stuart M. An- gelo, Mrs. C. Rogers Arundell, Mrs. Ray Babcock, Mrs. William W. Badg- ley, Mrs. Chester Arthur Baker, Mrs. Ormsby Mehon Ballauf, Mrs. Edward G. Baltz, Mrs. H. Clifford Bangs, Mrs. Ralph P. Bernard, Mrs. Frances Bas- eett, Mrs. Samuel H. Bates, Mrs. Sam- tel C. Beers, Mrs. Gaie Bennett, Mrs, Frank A. Birgfield, Mrs. Paul Ray- mond Boesch, Mrs. Reuben A. Bogley, Mrs. Gordon W. Bonnette, Mrs. John Cliver Bowen, Mrs. S. Russeil Bowen, Mrs. Jack Bowie, Mrs. Edward S. Brashears, Mrs. Ray Brengle, Mrs, Dwight Lyman Bromwell, Mrs. J. Lester Brooks, Mrs. Santley William Bell, Mrs. Johnston B. Campbell, Mrs, Edmund Otto Carl, Mrs. Louis Chris- tian Carl, Mrs. A. C. Case, Mrs. Charles Chester Caywood, Mrs. How- &rd F. Clark, Mrs. Arthur E. Cook, Mra. James Allen Councilor, Mrs. Geéorge Fenton Cramer, Mrs. Paul Cromelin, Mrs. Ara M. Daniels, Mrs, Afl.hur H. Deibert, Mrs. Willlam Ira Mrs. Richard Smith Doyle, Edwin C. Dutton, Mrs. Joha C. K, Mrs. Otto Englemann, Ronald l?. Ernst, Mrs. L Whi Estes, Mrs. John C. Evans, Mrs. Sam- vel T. Farmer, Mrs. Ross Parrar, Mrs. Howard P. Foley, Mrs. Robert Fowler, Mrs. Amos A. Pries, Mrs. Lloyd F. es, Mrs. E. Richsrd Gasch, Mrs, E. Ghiselli, Mrs. James Thomas ijbbs, Mrs. Charles A. Goldsmith, Vs, Edwin C, Graham, Mrs. Warren M. Grimes, Mrs. Ernest Frederick Oude, Mrs. Granville Gude, Mrs. Wil- liam F. Gude, Mrs Augustus Gum- rt, Mrs. Ernest Carlyn Guy, Mrs. filbert Hahn, Mrs. Alvin William $all, Mrs, Frederick L. Haller, Mrs. Harry Gabriel Hamlet, Mrs. Frank Hines, Mrs. James C. Hoyle, Mrs. Lyle ory Hutchinson, Mrs. Martin W. ng, Mrs. George ard Jack- ®on, Mrs. Henry W. Jaeger, Mrs. Karl Jarrell, Mrs. Thomas E. Jarrell, Mrs, van _Jones, Mrs. Howard T. Jones, Mrs. Frank E. Johnson, Mrs. Howard #Prancis Kane, Mrs, C. Pearl Keck, Mrs. J. Claude Keiper, Mrs. J. Frank elly, Mrs. John C.'Koons, Miss Edith oons, Mrs. A. F. Kreglow, Mrs. Noble p. Larner, Mrs. Ernest Cromwell, Mrs. J. Russell Leech, Mrs. Fenton F. Zeith, Mrs. I M. Lowenthal, E. Lewis, Mrs. Emil Loehl, Mrs. eharlu Long, Mrs. Frank Shellen- therger Long, Mrs. James T. McClen- ‘han, Mrs. John Elmer McClure, Mrs. ‘Ralph Howard McGarity, Mrs. George . McGinty, Mrs, Ross McIntire, Mrs. H. Macomber, Mrs, Guy Mason, rs. Macleod Maurice, Mrs. Joseph . Milans, Mrs. Allison N. Miller, Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs. William C. Miller, Mrs. William Montgomery, Mrs. Wil- liam N. Mooney, Mrs. Edgar Morris, Mrs. Arthur Neumaa, Mrs, Timothy Shaw Newkirk, Mrs. William J. B. Orr, Mrs, John C. Palmer, Mrs, Alvah Worrell Patterson, Mrs. James C. Petty, Mrs, J. Harry Phillips, Mrs. Mary W. Poppe, Mrs. Allen H. Potts, Mrs, Sam J. Prescott, Miss Edith Pyles, Mrs. J. Raymond Pyles, Mrs. William Quinter, Mrs. Wiliam F. Radcliff, Mrs. William F. Raymond, Mrs. Robert E. Rogar, Mrs. Edgar C. Rice, Mrs. Willlam Ristig, Mrs. Carl L. Ristine, Mrs. Charles F. Roberts, Mrs. Roy Lyman Sexton, Mrs, Charles D. Shackelford, Mrs. Herbert Schuyler Shepard, Mrs, Earl Shinn, Mrs. John Queen Slye, Mrs. Alan Bronson Smith, Mrs. Robert P. Smith, Mrs. Horace G. Smithy, Mrs. James A. Soper, Mrs. William W. Spaid, Mrs. R. Lee Spire, Mrs. Henry Stein, Mrs. L. P. Steuart, Mrs. Wiliam H. Stockett, jr.; Mrs. Milton Strasburger, ‘Tancill, jr., Mrs. Maurice Thatcher, Mrs. Needham C. rence F. Walker, ‘Waller, Mrs. Fred Andres Waters, Miss Ida Well, Mrs. Clarence Jay West, Mrs. Roger J. Whiteford, Mrs. Stanley D. Willis, Mrs. Allan Scott Wolfe, Mrs, James T. Wolfe, Mrs. Ralph McPherson, Mrs, Johnston Wimmerman, Mrs. F. A Palmer and Mrs. Allen Ernest Tate. Yesterday afternoon, Mrs. Williams, Mrs, Smith and Mrs. Steuart, were guests at a tea given by Mrs. William Montgomery, wife of the president of Acacia Life Insurance Co. e party was given in the of the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mont- gomery and about 100 women, includ- ing the ladies of the Imperial Divan, . Mrs. Mont- Suit, Miss Louis Bull and Mrs. William Peverill, Reserve Officers Parade. MINNEAPOLIS, June 11 (P—A opened the Department executive for Reserve of- ficers’ affairs, and Col. Edwin 8. mhmhmvnflmm-. & Mrs. | Here are recent excavations in Egypt which uncovered a 5,000~ year-old underground passage, run- ning beneath the second Pyramid and the Sphinx. It connects the cemeteries of Kheops and of King Chrephren—the latter builder of * the second Pyramid. Scientists of the University of Cairo discovered the subway, which contains many art treasures. Below: Some of the figures carved out of solid sandstone in the subterranean passage. They are said to t the wife and daughter of the priest of King Chrephren, —A. P. Photo. 0 Japén (Continued Prom First Page.) of the European bureau of the Jap- anese foreign office. the slaying, guarantees against a re- currence of such incidents and return of the slain sentry’s body, arms, equipment and two horses, protest at Harbin. This placed the scene of the slay- ing in Manchukuo, 200 meters from the border. It charged the Boviet cavalrymen with firing on a Japanese patrol, which was said to have re- turned the fire only after the Rus: sians ignored a command to with- draw. Buried in Manchukue. Manchukuan soil, Togo reported, and Dis equipment and horses’ confiscated; by the Japanese patrol. Eastern Manchukuo has been scene of several disputes in the M year, X The Japanese Army twice accused the Red Army of crossing the frontier. near Tungning late last month to cut timber in Manechukuan territory. The Tass official Russian news agency, which published news. of ¥he Soviet protest in Moscow, said the Russian note called attention to an “unprecedented violation of Soviet frontiers.” It said the protest de- manded the return of the Russian sentry if he were captured slive or restoration of his body if he were slain. Meanwhile, diplomatic and other non-Japanese quarters here pictured the Japanese Army as having com- pleted another enormous stride—the adding' of Hopei Province, China, to the vast realm it dominates. They see in North China & sub- jugation comparable to those which in 1931 lopped Manchuria from China and in 1933 added Jehol to Nippon's sphere of influence. These sources view it as the action of the army, with lukewarm backing from the Tokio government. “Purge” Credited to Army. ‘The official Japanese version cred- its the army merely with the “purg- ing of anti-Japanese elements” in North China. Tokio's official spokesmen insist the military authorities have carried out only local fneasures necessary to com- pel China to fulfill her obligations under the Tangku truce and the Boxer ernment sources say, wiil insure peace- Manchukuo in accordance with Jap- an's mission “tc maintain peace and order in East Asia in co-operation with her Asiatic neighbors.” Hopei’s precise destiny remains a matter of widespread speculation. The Toklo foreign office, while attempting to present as reassuring a picture as possible for world ihspection, concedes that China’s submission to the Japa- nese military demands has created an administrative and military vacuum n the province. ‘The situation results from the re- momumemp-mdmdflu Chinese Nationalist government elimination of other vestiges of Qfl influence of Generalissimo Chiang K‘;I:Shck and the Nanking authori- t Government spokesmen assert Tokio dHheShorttLine. - PENNA.AVE.ATTAST. PHONE DISTRICT 4224 one-way fares vese 8350 SKYLAND DRIVE A Grand Exemrsion frip via. 'Mfifi Round Trip, $3.00 1o o pents 12000 protocol. These measures, the gov- | ful relations among Japan, China and | Russia demanded punishment of the | military authorities responsible for | Togo insisted the affair be settled | in accordance with Japan's previous | The. fallen Russian was buried onf{ The boundary between Siberia. and [T ©1, SeF 8 O KO is not concerned with the measures taken to fill the Hopei vacuum. But non-Japanese sources .believe the | Japanese Army will dictate what ! regime shall govern the province and what Chinese troops, if any, shall | be stationed there, as well as in what | eas. Already the Japanese Army has ‘motified Gen. Shang Chen that he aill mot be permitted to post his | Chinese forces within a zone seven linking Peiping, Tientsin and Shan- baikwan. ‘The order; in strict adeordance with the provisions of the Boxer prow:ol., automatically bars Chinese from Peiping, capital of the anclent | Chinese empire, and Tientsin, China's | Northern commercial metropolis. Newspapers forecast that Hopel will | become a buffer state between China | proper and Manchukuo and pass un- | der the domination of the Japanese | military authorities, HO REPORTED RESIGNED. London Ts Informed Chincse War Minister Quits. LONDON, June 11 (#).—Dispatches from Peping to the Exchange Tele- graph (British) News Agency said today Gen. Ho Ying-ching had re- signed as Chinese minister of war be- | has been “humiliated” by Japan. The general was said to have sub- mitted his resignation after cabling Westinghouse Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek that he had communicated to the Japanese military authorities in North China word of China’s acceptance of the de- mands they presented affecting the Hopel Province area. JONES IS CONFIDENT R. ¥. C. Head Says He Is Con- vinced Country Will Recover. MINNEAPOLIS, June 11 (P .— Jesse Jones, chairman of the Recon- struction Pinance Corporation, .said here yesterday he is convinced “the country's lolnl to be all right.” ronszed from a week of fishing in Ontario, Jones slipped quietly into | Minneapolis for an informal visit with John W. Barton, regional manager of the R. F. C. in Minneapolis. He said he would return to Washington late toda Y. The R. F. C. chief dodged all ques- tions concerning the Supreme Court N. R. A. decision, but expressed con- fidence that the fact half of R. F. C.'s original loans have been repaid is proof of the Nation's stability. ————e Sunday Golf Opposed. Three hundred and thirty-five peti- tions, mainly from religious and youth | cause of shame over the way China | organizations, have been filed in pro- test against the proposal of Glasgow, Scotland, to permit Sunday golf on municipal courses. Complete Dinner for 4 with every one of these new Whole-Meal Electric Cookers 3 95 cmrprfeet .'m-mmuu. Cool, quick, efipmm. s your whole dinner at once, with no fussing over a hot stove. Between now and July 3 we offer Thufmyllul.ww with Every El l-nryun-lu-.th- Fl Tropical Riugarh lcmbm...fllundlrlfm Buttered Carrots Green Beans ATTACK ON MINERS IS LAID T0 POLICE American Civil Liberties Union Sends Charges to Gov. Earle. By the Assoclated Press. PHILADELPHIA, June 11.—Charges that State police practiced “third de- gree brutalities” on coal miners dur- ing the recently settled strike in the Wyoming Valley are made in a letter to Gov. Earle by the American Civil Liberties Union. The letter cites testimony the union said it gathered during an investiga- tion of reports of “lawlessness’ by State police. Testimony of 4¢ Cited. “Testimony of more than 40 wit- nesses * * * " the letter said, “proved beyond question that the State police ¢ * * had without provocation at- tacked and brutally assaulted numer- ous citizens, most of them mémbers of the United Anthracite )lmerl. some of them members of United Mine Workers, and 8 fgw not connected with either.” The letter asked that Qov Earle “move promptly to see that the rights of citizens of Luzerne County are pro- tected from lawless assaults, arrests and searches without warrants, and sides without bands. NESCO UNIVERSAL Many member stores ot the Electric Institute are offering FREE a complets meal for 4 persons with each Electric Cooker purchased before July 3rd. Phone the Electric Institute, ME. 2230 for o lst of electrical and depart- LMEMBER | WESTINGHOUSE that the State police desist forthwith Brutalities Held Substantiated. “Reports of third-degree brutalities by State police in their ‘ substations and barracks were substantiated by many witnesses,” the letter said. Coples of the letter were sent also to Maj. Lynn G. Adams, superintend- ent of State police, and to Mayor Charles N. Loveland of Wilkes-Barre, with a request for comment. The strike, called by the United Anthracite Miners in a battle for rec- ognition by coal operators in the val- ley, started early this year. It was settled last week. JOHNSON CONTINUES DEFENSE OF CODES Tells Mercantile Association No Revision of Constitution Needed fll Sustain New Deal. lvli-boehhlruu 4 NEW YORK, June 11.—No revision of the Constitution is needed to sus- tain the New Deal, only a return to the Constitution, Gen. Hugh 8. John- son, ome-time head of N. R. A, told members of the Central Mercantile Association at luncheon yesterday. “A great national issue is m'?‘i under our eyes,” he went on raised by the destruetion of the N. R. A and the threat to the whole New Deal which its enemies read into the opinion of the Supreme Court in LIQUOR CONTROL QUIZ S PLANNED House Committee May Hold o Hearings on New A, B. C. Measure, By the Associsted Press, ‘The House Ways and Means Com- mittee is expected to hold hearings on the administration’s recommendations for regulation of the liquor traffic, which went to the Capitol yesterday as a substitute for the Federal Alcohol Control Administration, knocked out | by the Supreme Court’s N. R. A. de- cision. Chairman Doughton of the commit- tee said the problem was much greater than had been anticipated. | All details of the new proposal were, closely guarded, but some who got a .brief review of it said privately it would do this: 1. Set up & new Federal Alcohol Con- trol Commission. 2. Vest that commission with power to administer the equivalent to the six old codes which controlled the liquor lndunry 3. Repeat in detall the major mpu- lations which were contained in the | six original codes, and thus give them | the sick chicken case. That issue | congressional ratification. will become clearer es the Summer advances.” With that set-up, plus the power granted Congress under the twenty- first — prohibition repealing — amend- ment to protect dry States, lawyers op the Ways and Means Committee were convinced the new plan would be con- stitutional. —_—— Airliner Forced Down. CHICAGO, June 11 (#)~-A T. W. A, airliner was forced down in a dense fog in the southern part of the Bound for the nunmlnl from New York, the ship was to have nosed over in landing, dam~ aging its two propellers and under- carriage. srtints s > Manchester Library Celebrates. Manchester, England, recently ob- served the 382d anniversary of its | public library, Tuning Fork Used By Key “Pitches” Old Folks Chorus By the Assoclated Press. MYERSVILLE, Md.,, June 10. —The tuning fork used by Fran- cie Scott Key, composer of “The Star Spangled Banner” in Mid~ dletown Valley barn services was used here yesterday to pitch the voices of singers ranging in age from 70 to 93 as the United Brethren Church held its annual “old folks day.” Mrs. Cyrus Flook of Myersville owns the fork. End cooking worries right now. An Electric Cooker will bring carefree hours to spend as you will. Place an entire meal in this kandy cookerin the morning, remain away from home all day and return at dinner time to a meal which is perfectly cooked and ready to serve. Electric Cookers will last for years and can be purchased for as little as $10 or $12. The cost of operation is very low. A complete meal, roast or chops, vegetables and dessert, may be cooked for only lc or 2c for current. When you buy an Electric Cocker you are buying greater convenience—many extra hours of leisure—better cooked foods— and cool cooking comfort for hot wgathar. POTOMAC &dfw POWER Cook your meals the modern way . . . preserve the de- licious full-flavor of the foods . .. enjoy cool cooklng com- fort, even in hot weather. Prepare a meal for six. Com- plete with large, heavy service aluminum cooking unit. The $12.95 roaster is like the model shown, but has plain Ask about the complimentary meal for four with every roaster BLECTRIC APPLIANCES, Frrre FLOOR. COMP. 'ewice WOODWARD & LOTHROP O™ II™F ozp G StreeTs Westinghouse Electric Roaster $| 2.95 ROASTERS AND COOKERS JC.HARDING - 517 10th St. N\W. SEE OUR DISPLAY OF ELECTRICAL MONTHS

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