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SOCIETY. . Mrs. Brown Is Hostess At Luncheon Entertained Party at Thrifton Village Home on Wednesday. Mrs. Brown, wife of Dr. Thomas B. Brown of George Washington Univer- sity, was hostess at & charmingly ar- ranged luncheon followed by bridge at her home in Thrifton Village Wednes- day. The luncheon was given in compliment to Mrs. Henderson B. Honts of Cherrydale, who will leave soon to joi» her husband at their | future home in Marsnau, va. Guesis included Mrs. Hugh Reid, Mrs. Roy Knox, Mrs. E. F. Inbody, Mrs. Virgil Bouknight, Mrs. Lamar Harris and | Mrs. Eugene Tucker. Dr. Brown, with their Charles Brown, and daughter, Miss Eleanor Brown, are visiting Or. Brown's mother, Mrs. B. C. Brown, in Dansville, N. Y.. and will also visit a brother, Mr. Ned C. L. Brown, in| Scottsville, N. Y.. and Cornell Univer- sity at Ithaca, N. Y., before their re- turn home. son, Mr. The Minister of Finland and Mme. Jarnefelt with Capt. John Hudson of the United States Coast Guard Service, photo- gravhed at Cepe Henlopen, ne Diplomat and his wife are spending the Summer months. State Societies Cruise Minnesota, Wisconsi Combine in The Minnesota. Wisconsin and North Dakota State Societies, which are Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. H. W. Tur- ney of Oak Crest, Va., went on Thurs- day to Forest Hills, Long Island, to be the guests until Monday of the former’s | brother and sister-in-law, Lieut. and | Mrs. M. L. Turney. | Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thompson of Arlington Ridge road, Va., are spend- | ing this week at Sunken Gardens, near | Petersburg, Va. i Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Dietrich and daughter, Miss Zula Dietrich, left Friday for Charieston, S. C., to pass two weeks with Mrs. Dietrich’s father, Mr. H. H. Hendley. and her brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. | | | | Westmoreland. | | During their absence Mr. and Mrs. James Cappe of Cleveland, Ohio, will remain with another daughter, Miss | Winifred Dietrich, at their home in Ayrora Hills, Va. | “Mr. and Mrs. Lester R. Conley of | Arlington Ridge road, Va., left yester- day for Chicago to visit Mr. and Mrs. George Anderson at their home in Rogers Park. When they return, in about two weeks, Mrs. Anderson will accompany them for a few days visit to their home on Mount Vernon Boulevard, after which she will go to the Eastern Shore of Maryland for a visit. Mr. Conley is correspondent on the executive staff at the White House. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Erlanson of Aurora Hills have as a week end guest Miss Isabelle Craig of Pitisburgh, Pa., who arrived in Baltimore Thursday aboard the City of Hamburg from a six weeks' tour of several countries of Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Erlanson motored to Baltimore for Miss Craig. Mrs. Thomas Bailie of Clarendon, Va. announces the marriage of her daughter, Mrs. Mildred Pinkstaff, to Mr. Leon K. Turnburke, son of Mr.| and Mrs. E. C. Turnburke of Cherry- dale, Va., Wednesday, August 14, at the parsonage of the Clarendon Meth- cdist Episcopal Church, the Rev. John H. Pearson cfficiating at 7:30 o'clock | in the presence of the immediate fam- | ilies. Mr. Turnburke is employed in the | county auditor’s office, and Mrs. Turn- | burke is also employed at the court house. They will make their home in Clarendon. Mr. and Mrs. John Rasely of Oak Crest. Va. are on a motor trip through the New England States. They spent a few days at Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. with Mr. Rasely’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Rasely, and are now visiting rela- | tives in Boston and Cambridge, Mass They also expect to visit several of the watering places in that section before returning home around Sep-| tember 1. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Annis of Clarendon, Va. accompanied by the | latter's sister. Miss Marion Laycock of Crewe, Va, who has been their | guest for a month, left by motor Fri- day for Alton Bay, N. H. to spend | two weeks with Mr. Annis’ mother and sister, Mrs. Gertrude Annis and Miss Helen Annis. They will be joined the last week in August by Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Laycock, parents of Mrs. Annis, who will motor from their home in Crewe, Va., for a week's visit. Mrs. Roy P. Beckwith, Virginia Highlands, Va., with her small daugh- ter Patricia, is spending the week at Cape May, N. J. Another daughter, ‘Miss Peggy Beckwith, and her cousin, Miss Marion Davis of Clarendon, Va., are spending the week in New York City with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Faunce. Miss Cornelia Busick will join her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adrian F. Busick, at their home in McLean, Va., Tuesday, after a visit in Marion, Ohio, with her brother and sister-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Adrian F. Bu- sick, jr. Miss Busick, whose marriage Lo Mr. Gilman Baker Allen of Cleveland, Ohio, will take place September 3 in St. John's Episcopal Church at Mec- Lean, was feted extensively during her visit in Marion. Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Adams have returned to their home in Country! Club Hills, Va, from a six-week | Mediterranean cruise. They landed in New York Thursday aboard the | Hamburg-American line, and cnmei directly to their home in Country Club Hills. Miss Collis Allen, daughter of Maj. and Mrs. Hugh A. Allen of Aurora Hills, Va., is making a 10-day visit to | her cousin, Miss Dorothy Gammack, at Hampton, and Buckroe Beach, Va. | Tuesday Miss Allen, in company with her cousin, attended the reception and hop at the Officers’ Beach Club at Old Point Comfort, given in honor of the West Point Cadets who are spending the week there. Miss Frances and Miss Audrey Graninger of Veitch Summit, Va., are on a 10-day vacation in New Jersey. They made a short visit in Oaklyn with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Graninger, and then went to Atlantic City, where they are stcp- ping at the Belvidere Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Luckett and daughter, Miss Shirley Luckett, also of Veitch Summit, are leaving today for a week's stay at Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Hartung, with their son Robert and daughter Eleanor of Lyon Park, Va. lefl yes- terday for Binghamton, N. Y., where they were called on accollnt of an automobile accident to Mr. Hartung's brother and niece, Mr. William Har- tung and Miss Wilma Hartung, who formerly lived in Lyon Park. They will also visit Mr. Hartung’s mother in Cortland, N. Y., and expect o spend a few days with Mrs. Hartung's sister and her husband at Racky Point, Long Island, before their return home. Miss Barbara Skidmore, Aurora Hills, Va., went today to Roslyn, Long Island, for a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Beckley, former residents of Aurora Hills, holding their annual moonlight excur- sion on the new Wilson Line steamer City of Washington at 8:30 o'clock sharp on Saturday evening, August 24, will have as honored guests the famous Concordia Ccllege Band of Concordia | College, Moorhead, Minn. The boat will make a short stop at Marshall Hall to the ship's orchestra in the huge ball room on the observation deck dur- ing the entire cruise. Tickets, 60 cents, may be obtained from any of the respective State officers or at the ticket office on the | pier, Seventh and Water streets south- | west, or from the following officers: Minnesota—Mrs. Grace Merriam, Mr. Donald Larson, Mr. Gilbert Hyali, Miss Bede Johnson. Mrs. Percy M. Bailey, Mr. A. F. White, Mrs. O. W. There will be dancing | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. AUGUST 18, 1935—PART THREE. Family of District Official - ar Rehoboth Beach, where the n and North Dakota River Trip. | Menk. Mr. George Schoolmeester, Mrs. | Ina Cordell, Miss Lora Pederson, Miss | Gladys Schaefer. Miss Aleada Nelson | and Mr. Frank Barnes. Wisconsin—Dr. D. O. Kinsman, Dr. E. A. A. Dunn, Mrs. William Kittle, Mr. Percy Sackett, Miss Iva Grace | Prisk, Mr. Alfred F. Dees, Dr. August J. App, Mr. Henry J. Saunders, Dr. R. W. Pinto, Mr. William J. Wond- rowitz, Miss Pearl Thurber, Miss | Louise O. Evans, Miss Grace Eddy,| Miss Myrtle Starr, Miss Clara Opper, | 936 Woodward building; Mr. L. Leonard Holmes and Mr. Peter C. Van Nostrand. North Dakota—MTr. Sidney Wardwell, Mr. Robert Larson, Miss Lydia D. | Rabia and Mrs. L. B. Birdsell. Lo S | i ‘Twenty million flowering plants and | | shrubs are being planted along boule- vards and in squares of Moscow, Russia. | | (fi)ne-fiPieicé School -b}ess BY BARBARA BELL. T IS no news to anybody that l school is pretty close at hand.| The last days of vacation have a | way of speeding by with tantaliz- | ing swiftness, and before you know 1t | Susan will be back in the class room | learning—we hope—some of the things it seems necessary to know in this funny old world. Of course, none of last year's things will do. Sue has grown like a weed this Summer and no amount of alter- ing will give the dresses that were so becoming six months ago the style necessary for the child. Now is cer- tainly the time to get her things in order, for after school starts she will not have a minute to spare you for the exasperating fitting which, even though you know her measurements perfectly and the pattern is well cut, you should have. This dress is for those terribly try- ing years when the child is growing into gawky adolescence. And so we have taken great pains to give you a design that will be as flattering and as practical as possible. It is a one- plece dress, with buttons from neck to hem. Easy to get into, comfortanie and not too fitted to be becoming. Darts make the waistline trim, and the belt may be as gay as you please. Perhaps there will be several belts in the bureau drawer which will answer the purpose nicely. The collar is rather wide, round, and close about the base of the throat. Sleeves may be short or long. In either case they are simple and straight. There are two big patch pockets finished with flaps, which the young lady will prok- ably insist upon having. It is a very easy frock to make. Perhaps the daughter will like to help in its making. There are so many materials to choose from. Cottons, of course, cot- tons that look so much like wool that it is difficult to distinguish one from ¢ the other. Flannel in big, cross-bar checks is good, and thin wools, plaid- | ed or checked, are much liked for| young girls’ simple frocks. Velveteen | will be very good, the designs being | every bit as attractive as those done | in wool and silk this season. Blue, all ‘the russet shades, greens, very soft and becoming, and brown— all will be featured in the Fall clothes for children. Shades of dark red will be seen very often and are very nice for the fresh, vivid coloring of youth. Barbara Bell pattern No. 1736-B is designed in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years, Size 8 requires about 1!, yards of 54-inch material, with 1!, yards for contrasting collar, made of 39- inch material. Every Barbara Bell pattern includes an illustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand. Send for the Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Make yourself attractive, prac- tical and becoming clothes, selecting | Fort Belvoir by several friends. | change of station, | Osborne have been at Alban Towers designs from the 104 Barbara Bell well-planned, easy-to-make patterns. Interesting and exclusive fashions for little children and the difficult junior age; slenderizing, well-cut patterns for the mature figure; afternoon dresses for the most particular young women and matrons and other patterns for special occasions are all to be found in the Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Send fifteen cents for youf copy to- day. Address orders to The Evening Star. BARBARA BELL, ‘Washington Star. Inclose 25 cents in coins for pattern No. 1736-B. Size_.... T e R T SRR (Wrap coins securely in paper.) Ft. Belvoir Welcomes Officers 13th Engineers Return From Curtailed Trip to Mount Gretna. PORT BELVOIR, Va., August 17— The post this week welcomed the offi- cers of the 13th Engineers, who re- turned Wednesday and Thursday from Mount Gretns, Pa., where the regiment had been engaged in the Summer maneuvers. Although there is none of the dread infantile paraly- sis here, the officers were required to withdraw the regiment from Penn- sylvania because of the epidemic. The Engineers, who were to have spent a month at Mount Gretna, re- mained only a week. Col. and Mrs. John B. D. Matheson are spending the week end as guests of Lieut. C. H. Mason at West Point, N. Y., and are visiting their sons, Cadet David Matheson, who ‘is in his plebe year, and Cadet Donald Mathe- son, who is a third classman. Col. and Mrs. Matheson will return Mon- day evening to the post. Mrs. Matheson's mother, Mrs. Ed- ward Murphy of New York, is visiting the Mathesons here. Maj. Charles H. Cunningham left | Wednesday for New York to welcome Mrs. Cunningham upon her return Thursday from a two-month sojourn in England. Maj. and Mrs. Cunning~ ham will return to the post Sunday evening after spending & few days in New York. Mrs. Daniel Noce, wife of Maj. Noce, and their daughter, Miss Millie Noce, have spent the last 10 days visiting Mrs. Noce's sister, Mrs. Cavanaugh, at Fort Dupont, Del, and Mrs. Au- gustus Gurney, wife of Maj. Gurney, at Fort Monmouth, N. J. Maj. Douglas H. Gillette of the Corps of Engineers arrived Tuesday to join the post and has been assigned to quarters 54. Maf. Gillette will be & member of the staff of instructors | Mrs. | of the Engineer School here. Gillette, who is now at Seattle, Wash,, will join the major later. Mrs. children returned Wednesday after spending several days as guests of Maj. and Mrs. Russell M. Harrington of Washington at their Summer home on Chesapeake Bay near Annapolis. Capt. Chester K. Harding, jr., re- turned Tuesday from Vineyard Haven, Mass, where he had gone Friday with Mrs. Harding and their son, Chester Harding, 3d, to visit his par- ents, Gen. Chester K. Harding, re- tired, and Mrs. Harding. The young Mrs. Harding and her son are re- maining at Vineyard Haven for a longer visit. Mrs. Gano Fairbanks, wife of Capt. Fairbanks, and their daughter, Miss Lorena Pairbanks, left Monday for | their home at Fort Dupont, Del., after visiting Capt. and Mrs. Schilling several days. Capt. and Mrs. Homer Pettit and their little son David went to Byron, 1., Monday, where they will spend three weeks visiting Capt. Pettit's parents. Young Homer Pettit, jr, who has been visiting his grandpar- ents, will return to the post with Capt. and Mrs. Pettit. Mrs. Thomas Russell Howard, wife of Lieut. Howard, and their little son, Thomas Howard, jr., are at Rochester, Minn. Capt. Robert J. Hoffman went to Sea Girt, N. J, Friday, where Mrs. Hoffman and their little son, Bobbie, are visiting Mrs. Hoffman's sister, Mrs. James F. Norton, at her Sum- mer home. Capt. Hoffman will spend the week end there, while Mrs. Hoff- man and her son will remain at the resort until later in the month. Lieut. T. M. Osborne, C. E. and Mrs. Osborne, who returned recently from Honolulu were entertained at Dur- ing a leave of absence. pending a Lieut. and Mrs. Karl B. in Washington. Lieut. Osborne soon will begin a tour of duty at Fort Leavenworth, Kans. Lieut. John R. Wright, jr., son of Maj. and Mrs. Wright, went Tues- day to New York, where he stopped briefly before continuing on to Man- chester, N. H., where he now is visit- ing a classmate, Lieut. John Kemper. Lieut. Wright was graduated from West Point last June. He will re- turn to the post late next week. Mr. and Mrs. Claude M. Baker of Winnetka, Ill, and their daughter, Miss Betty Baker, were house guests of Lieut. and Mrs. Philip F. Kromer, jr.. last week end. Lieut. and Mrs. Edmund K. Daley entertained Lieut. Daley's brother, Mr. Don Daley, and Mr. Paul Nye and Mr. John Yount, all of St. Louis, Mo, a few ddys this week. Lieut. and Mrs. Reynolds J. Burt, jr. returned last Sunday after visit- ing Mrs. Burt's mother, Mrs. Charles Jefferson, at Delaware City, Del, and spending several days at Re- hoboth Beach, Del. Lieut. and Mrs. Henry G. Douglas and their two small children will leave Monday for New Haven, Conn., where Lieut. Douglas will be sta- tioned. \ Mrs. Stephen R. Hanmer was the guest of Maj. and Mrs. Emill W. Leard of Washington last Sunday. Mrs. Edward M. Markham, jr., and Mrs. Philip Kromer, jr, were the guests of Miss Susan Thomson of Rosemont, Va., at a dinner party last Saturday evening. Lieut. Robert Des Islets, C. E., and Mrs. Des Isiets left Monday for Ala- bama, where the leutenant will be associated with Auburn College. Lieut. and Mrs. Des Islets returned recently from Hawaii, and spent two weeks at the Officers’ Club, during which time they renewed old friendships emong officers and their families e, Mrs. Frederick G. Saint, wife of Lieut. Saint, returned to Fort Bel- voir Thursday after spending a few days at New York. D. C. MARINE OFFICERS IN NATIONAL AIR RACES Two Washington Marine Corps offi- cers, Capt. Thomas J. McQuade and Lieut. Roswell B. Burchard, jr., will participate in the National Air Races at Cleveland, Ohio, August 30 to Sep- tember 2, as members of Pighting Squadron 9M, United States Marine Corps. Capt. McQuade has been In the corps since 1925 and in aviation since 1927. His present title is that of en- gineering officer of Pighting Squadron 9M, Aircraft 1, Fleet Marine Force, Quantico, Va. The squadron to which both offi- cers belong has become nationally known for its ability to show the public the real use and purpose of fighting aircraft. James C. Marshall and her | Presidential Apartments. Mr. and Mrs. Lan have been abroad for the past sev- eraj weeks, are returning to Washing- ton the early part of this week. to her apartment in Wardman Park | Hotel from a visit in Pittsburgh with | relatives. | Mrs. Howard Nordlinger has been | visiting Mr. and Mrs. Louis Marks | and Mrs. Estelle Nordlinger in Read- ing, Pa. after a stay of several weeks |in Atlantic City. Miss Ruth Simon, daughter of Mr. |and Mrs. Morris Simon, is at Star |Lake in the Adrionadcks, spending two weeks, where she joins her cousins, | their two young sons, who are spend- ing the Summer in the mountains. Mrs. Sidney A. Wiseman is at Wild- wood, N. J, and will return home ‘Tuesday. Mrs. Sol Bloom has returned to her home in Charleston, W. Va. after a | visit here with relatives. Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Behrend of {B-mmore street had as their recent guests Mr. and Mrs. Kleberine, the latter formerly Miss Jean Behrend of Baltimore, who were guest artists {at the Hans Kindler concert last | Sunday night. Mrs. Howard Jaffee of Woodley Park Towers has been spending a week at Margate, N. J., with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brand of Wilmington, Del., who have a cottage there for the Summer. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Seidenmann | are on a motor trip to Maine, where | their son and daughter are at camp.. Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Gutman, the latter formerly Miss Elizabeth Kohner | of New York, have been spending a | week with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kohner of Belmont road. dren are in Atlantic City for a several | weeks' stay. | Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobi with their two daughters. Wilma-Janes and Gloria, motored to Long Beach, N. Y., | Thursday, where they have taken an apartment in the Fleetwood for a month. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lang returned to Washington by motor on Thursday, after spending a month at Long a short time with relatives in Ne York. Miss Julia A. Paul is visiting rela- tives in Far Rockaway, Long Island. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hahn have returned from a two weeks’ motor trip to Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Kaufmann have been at Wabanaki Lodge, Mon- mouth, Me. | Miss Frances Peist of Deal, N. J, |and New York spent several days here last week at the Shoreham vis- iting relatives and left yesterday for | her Summer home at Deal, to join her mother, Mrs. Irene Feist, and her sister Marjorie. They just returned | from a motor trip in Maine. The | wedding of Miss Feist and Marx S. Kaufmann of Baltimore, son of Dr. and Mrs. Harry M. Kaufmann, will | take place this Fall. Mr. and Mrs. William Levy have been spending the past week at the | Royal Palms, Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rothschild of 4106 Jenifer street have left for | several weeks’ vacation in the moun- | taln and lake region of New York at Syracuse at a convention. | Plans for the opening tea of Junior Hadassah, to be held at the Jewish Community Center Sunday, September 15, between the hours of 3 and 5, have already been started. A very interest- |ing program is being arranged. Miss Agnes Johnson, chairman, and Miss Katherine Witt, cochairman. Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund Silverberg left Washington Friday for Atlantic City. A novel inaugural luncheon will be held Wednesday, September 11, when Hadassah members and numerous Now Completely Air Cooled NATHAN SINROD, Manager . HAY-ADAMS HOUSE LAFAYETTE PARK AT I16™ & H STS. children, Jerry and Mary Jean. Europe—Other Interesting Items. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lansburgh, who | friends sail aboard the 8. 8. City of | State Publishing House is also prepar- Mrs. James Lansburgh has returned ' | Mr. and Mrs. Merryle S. Rukeyser and | Mr. and Mrs. David Wise and chil- Beach, N. Y., and en route home spent | | State following which they will be | I~ AIR COOLED AIR coOLED A'R__..COOLED ENJOY SUMMER DINING MRS. THOMAS OTT, Of Personal Note sburgh Back From | Washington for a cruise down the | historic Potomac. | ‘The cruise will start promptly at 12:30 oclock p.m.. From the moment the whistle blow: “all aboard” until the ship's re- | turn at 4 o'clock p.m. guests will | | be dined and entertained par ex- | cellence. | Mrs. Sidney A. Wiseman is chair- man of the Inaugural Luncheon, and has s capable committee assisting her. Mrs. I. E. Levinson is in charge | |of entertainment, and has promised | | many noveities and surprises in store for every one. | Mrs. Rachel Kossow is chairman | |of commissary. Mrs. Sarah Panitz, | | chairman of culinary, and Mrs. Mor- | ris Gewirz, chairman of service. | | The entire proceeds of the nflur{ | will be sent to the Hadassah Medical Organization. Tickets may be se- | cured from Mrs. Meyer Bernstein, | | Longfeliow Apartments, or from any | Hadassah member. | | The Woodmont Country Club has | | arranged for a dinner followed by dancing tonight at the club house near Bethesda, Md. Many parties will attend | Mr. and Mrs. David Prank returned | on Thursday to their apartment in| Woodley Park Towers from & six| weeks' trip to California. | Miss Virginia Michaels, secretary | | to Representative Dickstein of New | York, and Miss Gladys Waltjen, sec- | | retary to Representative Kennedy of | | Maryland, will sail from Baltimore | | Thursday, August 22, on the steamship | | Hamburg for an extended tour abroad, | visiting England, Prance, Switzer- | land and Italy, returning in Octdber. Dr. and Mrs. David Davis are re- ay from a motor trip Mr. and Mrs. Max Wertheimer and their two children are spending a few days in Atlantic City before go- ing to Chicago for a two weeks' visit. Mrs. Leo S. Schoenthal, who spent the past two months in Atlantic City visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Myron Hess, at their home in Marvin Gardens, has returned to her home on Garfield street. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Livingston, with their daughter Beverly, left Tuesday for Atlantic City to spend | several weeks. Mr. Alfred Stern motored to Atlantic City after a trip to Canada to join | his mother, Mrs. Louis Stern, who has been spending several weeks at the sea shore. & Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Luchs left by‘ motor Priday for Atlantic City and are at the Ambassador until Tuesday. | Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Levy and the latter's sister, Mrs. Otto Wolf, re-| turned yesterday from a 10 days’ trip | north through the Great Lakes and Duluth, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stephens are taking a motor trip north with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rothschild. ECONOMY GOVERNMENT ASKED BY NEW DEALER: | By the Associated Press | Representative Dies, Democrat, of | Texas, & New Deal supporter, told | House Democrats yesterday the time has come to return to ‘“economical government.” { “With & spirit of helpfulness toward the President,” he said, “I think that Congress, beginning at the next ses- | sion, must curtail all unnecessary expenditures and abolish many of the numerous bureaus, boards and com- missions that have grown up like mushrooms. “A bureaucratic government is as destructive of freedom as a financial oligarchy or a dictatorship.” Dies said his support of New Deal Policies had been given with the un- derstanding the measures were “tem- porary expedients” and that they were not to become permanent legislation. SOCIETY. Wife of the chief deputy marshal of the District of Columbia, photographed with their two Mr. and Mrs. Ott and_ their family make their home at the —Bachrach Photo. Jewish Dictionary Planned. Declared to be the first dictionary of the Jewish language ever compiled a work is being prepared for publica MISSISSIPPI 36 CLAIM OF HUEY LONG DENIED Joe Messina, Senator's Guard, Has as Good a Chance, Party Head Says. By the Associated Press. JACKSON, Miss., August 17.—“Huey Long hasn't any more chance of oh- taining Mississippi's vote in the 1936 Democratic Convention ior the presi- dential nomination than has Jos Mes- sina,” sald Louis Jiggitts, Democratic national committeeman, here today, (Messina is Long's bodyguard.) Long had elaimed that he would re- ceive Mississippi's vote over Roosevelt in the national convention next year. % “Long has no more chance of cap- turing the Mississippi delegation,” added Jiggitts, “than a snow ball has | in Huey's future domicile.” Edgar Williams, chairman of the State Democratic Executive Commit- tee, had previously predicted that Mississippi’s delegation would “un- questionably” go to Roosevelt. Wil- liams deseribed Long's claim of the Mississippi vote as “premature pop- ping off.” tion by the Institute of Jewish Prole- tarian Culture of the White Russian Academy of Sciences, according to a report from Moscow. It will be issued in three volumes and will contain 60,000 words. The White Russian ing to publish Jewish translations of the world's literary classics. Among the first to appear will be Shake- rain or shine. | speare’s “Othello” and “Romeo and Juliet” and Schiller's “Willlam Tell.” TRY OUR THRIFT SERVICE Piece Lady’s White Excluded A CLEANED Royal Palace Cleaners 7344 Georgia Ave. N.W., SOMETHING NEW We Thrift Clean Plain Dress___ _ 25c 1824 First St. NNW. 1609 T St. N.W. IN DRY CLEANING and Press a One- Without Pleats— ALL OTHER DE LUXE 39c 3714 Georgia Ave. N.W, CASH and CARRY S. KLEIN Alicays Undersells Tomorrow begins our ANNUAL SALE , of FUR-TRIMMED COATS * These Coats Are Regular $39.98 529.98 Values! Remember. a small deposit will re. serve any coat un- til wanted. Lap TRIMMED WITH Fitch, Wolf, Beaver, Kit Fox, Caracul, Skunk in Dyed Coney, Cross Fox, American A sale that demon- strates that our UN- DERSELLING pol- more than just an advertising slogan; Jacquarded patterns, smooth fabrics and Frise Wools . .. ALL LAVISHLY TRIM. MED WITH FUR. Black and V iey is some leading shades. Badger and Marmink , Brown, Burgundy, Wine /eronese Green and other Included are very smart velvets. e Sizes 12 to 20, 38 to ,_,, Klein's Guarantee Bond i , goes ‘n‘.'.'k."f&, ‘\his bond that &' I h levery sarment. Delightfully Air Cooled at SKLEIN