Evening Star Newspaper, October 20, 1935, Page 42

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"D-8 Parent-Teacher Movement To Be Insti Qessions Are to be Held in N. E. A. Building Next Thursday—Dr. Ruhland to Give Address. HE parent-teacher movement will be the theme of the Par- ent-Teacher Institute to be next Thursday from 10 to 12 and and 1 to 3 o'clock. Dr. George C. Ruhland, health offi- cer of the District of Columbia, will be the chief speaker at the morning eession, discussing his plans for the District and indicating co-operation which may be given by the Parent- Teacher Association. Mrs. A. C. Watkins, education sec- retary of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, will lead dis- cussion at both morning and after- noon sessions. B. E. Bayh, director of health and physical education, will speak on the aims and needs of his department. Dr. Frances Moon Butts, state parliamen- tarian, will discuss parliamentary law. Open discussion will be held at both sessions on committee work and gen- eral topics. Mrs. L. B. Castell, president, District ot Columbia Congress of Parents and Teachers, will preside. H. D. Cooke. The association met October 15. Dr. Mitchell Dreese of George Washing- ton University spoke on “Character Education,” and W. Elwood Baker gave a talk on “Aims and Ideals.” Mrs. W. A. Moyer sang. Brookland-Noyes. An executive meeting was held last Monday afternoon when plans were completed for a luncheon November 6 at Brookland School. The membership drive will open to- morrow night under the supervision of Mrs. Dorothy Preseton. Hine Junior High. The association was addressed by | the principal, teachers, and a guest &peaker, Mrs. L. B. Castell. Mrs. F. C. Calcote was elected president and Mrs. H. C. Spielman secretary. They were installed by a past president, Mrs. J. S. Davis. Taft Junior High. Back to school night will be ob- served Tuesday at 8 p.m. Refresh- ments will be served. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday will be bundle days for student aid. A dance and bingo party will be | held November 16. Mrs. O. B. Vogel was appointed fifth vice president to succeed Mrs. C. O. Arthur. The following chair- men have been appointed: Character Education and Study Group, Mrs. Samuel F. Hildebrand; Receiving Home and Juvenile Court, Mrs. Charles R. Allen; Radio, Mrs. E. H. Post; Buildings and Grounds, J. K. Lawson. On Mr. Lawson's committee are Henry Baker, jr.; Henry Evans, Nathan Gammon, Donald Kester, J. 'T. Oliver, Ralph Thrasher. Mr. Ed- ward Wolf was appointed a member of the Finance Committee. Congress Heights. Mrs. W. G. Chandler presided at the October meeting. A joint meeting of the pre-school and school-age groups of Parent- Education was held Thursday, under the direction of Mrs. Bertha Eldred and Mrs. A. E. Wilson. John Burroughs, Miss Mary E. Draney, principal, and second vice president, addressed the last meeting. Henry I. Quinn, member of the Board of Education, spoke on “Physi- cal Education.” Miss Kathryn Logan gave a reading. Central High. ‘The association will meet tomorrow | at 8 pm. Dr. Harvey A. Smith, prin- cipal, and Lieut. Dorr, instructor of cadets, will be the speakers. Selec- tions will be played by the Central High School Band. Stanton. An executive board meeting was held at the home of the president last Monday, when committee chairmen | ‘were appointed and a program planned | for a meeting to be held tomorrow | night. | held in the N. E. A. Building | tute Theme | dress. Miss Herron, music chairman, | had charge of the program. Oyster. Mrs. Edward Lewis, president, pre- | sided at the last meeting. Hostesses | during the social were the sixth grade | mothers. | The P.-T. A. luncheon will be held | November 6, 12 to 1 pm. The next regular meeting will be November 11. Powell Elementary, The association met Monday with Mrs. Joseph Zucker, president, in the chair. Mrs. Esther Brunauer of the | American Association of University | | Women, spoke on “Child Education for | | International Understanding.” Frances | | Kressin, Roosevelt High School stu- | | dent, played piano solos. Following are the officers for the | year: Mrs. Joseph Zucker, president; | Louis Kalichstein, first vice president; | Miss Virginia O'Neil, second vice| president; Mrs. Louis Kalichstein, re- cording secretary; Mrs. Stanley Willis, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. | David Borden, treasurer, Buchanan. A committee, under the supervision | | of the president, Mrs. George Stilwell, | | met Tuesday to discuss plans for the | children’s luncheon October 24. Miss C. Dulin, principal, gave a report of last year's entertainments. A social evening has been plahned | | for Friday. Mrs. Reeda Walton is | song leader, Kenilworth, | The association met with Mrs. Alma | Hudson, president, presiding. Guest speakers were Mr. Eldridge from Traf- | fic Bureau; Capt. Groves from Elev- enth precinct, and Officer A. Moore, the subject of the evening being “Safety.” An athletic meeting was held Octo- | ber 10, with speakers from the Rose- dale Playground. Girls have organized | a schlag team, and the boys a soccer | team. Plans are being made by Mrs. Comer, music teacher, for a glee club for pu-| | pils in the fourth, fifth and sixth| | grades. | Stuart Junior High. Members of the Executive Board are as follows: Mrs. H. N. Stull, president; | | Mrs. R. S. Franklin, first vice presi-| dent; Mrs. L. B. Berryman, second | vice president: Thomas F. Ferry, sec- | retary; Walter S. Griest, treasurer, | and R. W. Strawbridge, principal.| Standing Committees: Mrs. Ralph | Frame, program; Mrs. Maude Meyer, | | membership; + Mrs. L. H. Magruder, publicity; Mrs. W. T. Wilkinson, finance and budget; Mrs. R. S. Frank- lin, publications; Mrs. F. A. Chalkley, hospitality; Mrs. C. H. Freed, philan- | thropic: Mrs. Kathryn J. Noel, student aid; Mrs. Alfred Grosskurth, Receiving |Home; Mrs. Suter Reichenbach, Juvenile Court; Miss Gladys Clarkson, | room representatives, and Miss Caro- line Getty, health. ‘Wheatley. Co-operating with parents | teachers, appropriate exercises were {held for “Prevention of Fire Week” | | and “Education Week” in all grades. | A Halloween party has been planned | by Mrs. H. Haun, ways and means chairman. | The P. T. A. Home Economic Group, | | directed by Miss K. E. Bresnahan, met Thursday. and | Bryan. | | Miss A. M. Cook. principal. and | Mrs. L. T. Brandenburg, president, | met with the Executive Qommittee | October 10 to discuss plans for the coming year. Committee chairmen were appointed as follows: Mrs. George P. Barse, ways and means: Mrs. Ed- ward J. Kaiser, student aid: Mrs. W. E. Lawrence, membership: Grady H. | Leonard, hospitality; Mrs. Forest White, grade mothers, and Mrs. John | Bullough, publicity. The monthly meeting will be held | Tuesday evening. | ‘Woodridge. | Home and schools relationships was discussed by Miss C. F. Barnard at a meeting of the association Thursday | afternoon. A piano selection was | | long. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., OCTOBER 20, 1935—PART TWO, Mrs. Freeman Wiess was elected cor- responding secretary. Miss Bumpus’ room won the first party. Raymond. District Commissioner Melvin C. Hazen addressed the association last Monday in the interest of public school education in Washington. Tenor solos were rendered by Edwin Singer, accompanied by Mr. Riley, and violin and accordion solos by Arsenio Relon, accompanied by Mrs. Ralon. The Nomthating Committee chair- man reporteq: Carl H. Edmonston for president; Mrs. Harvey W. Haun, first vice president; S. H. Marks, treasurer; Herbert” A. Via, secretary. Eliot Junior High. The association met October 9, when the year's program, “The Health Prob- | lem in Washington—What Parents and Teachers Can Do About It,” was| presented. Mrs. Agnes Kinnear, prin- | cipal, welcomed the members. Dr. Joseph A. Murphy, physician in charge of District of Columbia public schools, | ‘was guest speaker. The following officers were elected: Mrs. Charles Deck, president; Mrs. R. H. Hillsinger, first vice president; M Agnes Kinnear, second vice president Mrs. Norman Hodkinson, secretary; Mrs. Harry Shilling, historian; George | M. Green, treasurer. | The Glee Club, under the leadership | of its director, Miss Hannah Bonell, | entertained. McKinley High. The membership chairman is cir- | culating letters relative to P.-T. A. work among parents of pupils. Gordon Junior High. Back to school night followed a| short business meeting October 8. The executive meeting will be held | October 29. The next regular meet- ing will be November 12. Powell Junior High. The association was host to patrons of the school and other friends in the community on October 9 at a house- warming for the newly completed | boys' gymnasium. At a business meeting Mrs. John W. | Edwards, past president, was presented with a past president’s pin by Mrs. Prentiss D. Sale, jr. Lester T. Walter, principal, spoke. Baneroft. A meeting was held Tuesday when | the faculty was presented and Miss | A. Grace Lind, principal, spoke. Mrs. Francis L. Goodwin, chairman | of membership, D. C. Congress of Parents and Teachers, spoke on “The Modern Parent Knows the School.” A Halloween luncheon is being planned for November 1 for the school. Mrs. J. D. Townes will have charge. West School. The association will hold its initial | meeting in the auditorium tomorrow | night at 8 o'clock. In order to give parents an opportunity to view some | of the work of the pupils and to per- | mit conferences with the teachers, the class rooms will be open from 7:30 to 8 o'clock. Tunnel to Link Nations. | ARIS, October 19.—After 60 years of discussion and negotiations, the final plans for the construction of a tunnel under Mont Blanc are now re- ceiving consideration. The revised plans provide for the construction of one tunnel somewhat wider than each | of the two tunnels first contemplated, to carry two parallel streams of trn!—‘ fic on the same lines as the Antwerp | Tunnel under the Scheldt. The two spiral sections have been given up and the tunnel will run in a straight line from the French side of the Alps to the Italian side. The total length of the new road between Chamonix, on the French side of the frontier, to Entreves, on the Italian side, would be just over 11! miles. The tunnel itself, cut through the | sheer granite of the Alps, which rise at certain points to a height of about 6,500 feet, would be abeut 7': miles It would reach its summit| at a distance of about 4': miles from its entrance on the French side, and the stecper gradient would be from Chamonix to the summit. It is estimated that the job would be completed in about four years' time and employ between 3,000 and 4.000 men on the French and Italian sides of the tunnel. — Mementoes Bought Out IN PROOF. that conditions are bet- ter throughout the country, a dealer in Indian curlos. whose store Miami’s Big Schedule to Begin Soon Novetnber to Launch $1,000,000 Program of Sports. TAMI, Fla, October 19— M Miami's million dollar sports program will open early next month. The long list of Winter events includes a number of major golf tournaments, horse racing, international polo, foot ball, regattas, aguatic competition and many other attractions. Early visitors to Miami may take advantage of the Florida hunting and trapping season which opens Novem- ber 20. In the high pine land and marshy sawgrass country of the Everglades, the nimrod can find a wide variety of fowl and beast. The hunting and trapping season is on from November 20 through December 31 for quail, squirrel, wild turkey, brant, coot, duck, geese, snipe, marsh hen, deer, coon, bear, skunk, muskrat, possum, mink, civet cat and panther. Expert guides and hunting dogs are available. Hunting and trapping li- censes can be obtained at the Dade County Court House and special water- fowl permits at the new Federal building. Dog racing, most popular of all night sports during the season, will open about December 1, continuing through April. Close to one thousand greynounds will chase the mechanical bunnies at no less than three kennel clubs in the Greater Miami area. IAMI'S annual ali-American air maneuvers have been scheduled for December 12, 13 and 14. Scores of racing and civilan fivers will at- tend and the largest group of mili- tary planes to ever invade the South is expected, the city aviation de- partment reported. Horse racing, one of Miami's trump Winter sports cards, opens at Tropical Park in Coral Gables. December 16, and continues through January 14. The Miami Jockey Club at Hialeah Park open January 16 and closes with the annual Florida Derby, March 9. Tropical Park reopens March 10 and | continues through April 4. The city’s three major professional golf tournaments include the Miami Biltmore open at the Biltmore Coun- try Club in December, the Miami open at the Miami Springs course, January 3-5, and the international four-ball matches at the Miami Coun- try Club in February. A number of lesser matches for professionals, amateurs for men and women will be played on Greater Miami courses throughout the season. International polo will open at Flamingo Field, Miami Beach, Christ- mas day. New Year will be cele- brated by the annual Orange Bowl Festival, featuring an intersectional foot ball game between the University of Miami and some Northern team vet to be sclected. Greater Miami's boat racing and | yachting program has seven major events on tne schedule. These in- clude the third annual international Miami to Nassau sailboat races, February 11, and the Miami Yacht Club's eighth annual Sir Thomas Lipton Cup race, March 12. Other events on the Winter pro- gram include the Miami Beach pro- fessional tennis championships, Feb- ruary 14, swimming and diving tour- naments at the Biltmore pools, horse- back riding, archery, deep sea fish- ing, speedboating, aquaplaning, bowl- ing on the green, jai alai at Biscayne Fronton and shuffieboard. Trail Popularizes Desert. JATER, the only essential lacking to make the recently completed Telescope Peak Trail in Death Valley National Monument a popular at- { traction, has now been located within half a mile of the routes and close to the famous Telescope Notch. With the completion of Telescope | Peak Trail there is made accessible to visitors one of the finest views of The Traveler’s Notebook By Jacques ORTUNATE, indeed, is the trav- eler who on his journeys catches a glimpse of a sea ser- F pent, for sclence says they do not exist. Yet they have been seen and by reputable globe trotters «t that—Rudyard Kipling, and the late Lord Northcliff and ship’s officers, for instance. But alas, the monsters have been like the fisherman’s prize catch— they got away. Jean Chiappe, famous prefect of Paris who was deposed by the Stavisky scandal, has collected sea serpent lore for years. He sits on the fence, saying they have existed actually or in im- agination for four or five centuries. In Columbus’ time, the men who went down to the sea in ships feared the broad Atlantic was little more than & mass of monsters with a bit of ocean around the edges. Admittedly, they exaggerated somewhat. But if they brought their less flagrant myths to the enlightened twentieth century, they woud find ready listeners. The | sea serpent controversy which raged last year proved the public was at least intrigued by the idea, science to the contrary notwithstanding. "[HE savants' last great bout with | the eye-witnesses began in the Fall of 1933. A strange animal ap- peared in Loch Ness, near Inverness, Scotland. In a short time, accounts of its temperamental antics were | tickling the world. Moving picture expeditions were dis- patched to Loch Ness. They emerged with pictures at which the skeptics scoffed. London was inclined to be- lieve the creature looked like the trunk of a tree. Then came “absolute proof,” at least for some. Arthur Grant, a veterinary | | student of Edinburgh, reported that he | ‘[llmost collided with a strange, hulk- | | ing beast while motor cycling along | | the lochside early one moonlight, Jan- uary morning. He was almost upon the black object when he realized he was looking at something no man in | his right mind should see. A small, eel-like head on a long neck turned in his direction. Large oval eyes glanced | | at_him. i It leaped across the road in two | bounds, its hefty body glistening in | the moonlight. Grant distinctly saw two front flippers. Two ridges ran | | down the back. Then came a tail, 5| or 6 feet long. It was blunted. " With a great splash the animal dis- | appeared into the water. up everywhere—off the coast of | | GEA SERPENTS then began bobbing | | | France, in the Caribbean and the Pa- | cific. One off Vancouver, B. C., had already been named—Amy Cadboro- saurus. She had been cavorting in the Juan de Fuca and Georgia Straits for a decade or more, and had a tre- mendous fan following. She was af- fectionately known in the region as “Amiable Amy.” She reappeared and added to the hubbub. Amiable though she might have been, at close range she was terrifying. | | A hunter’s sworn affidavit attests her bloodthirsty - disposition. C. B. An- | drews, a Bedwell Harbor, B. C., nim- | rod, put this on the official document: | He and another chap were duck hunt- | ing in a row boat. He saw a huge eel- | like creature indistinctly under the | water, and as his companion rowed to retrieve a wounded duck struggling on | the water, the “thing” darted to the | | surface. Up popped a head 2 feet wide | |and 3 feet long. It looked like a | | horse, but was earless and without | | nostrils. Twelve feet of neck stretched | | behind. Nor was that all. Forty more feet of body, about 2 feet thick. were | gracefully arched in and out of the water beyond. | Amy darted for the duck and | snatched it almost from under the bow | of the boat. The bird was held mo- | mentarily in. his fishlike teeth, then | gulped it down whole. A pointed tongue darted across its lips. Belliger- ent gulls swooped down, wheeling | and crying about the monster. Amy | snapped at them viciously. So the | | story goes. | | The hunters hastily rowed ashore, | calling excitedly to other Bedwell | harborites. A score or more came, among them Justice of the Peace G. F. | Parkyn. About 40 yards off shore, | | | Amy broke the surface of the water g again, and with head erect, glided Futrelle, Jr. creased the haunting suspicion of hoax. Out of ante-bellum memories came a tale and the denoument of the Silver Lake monster that set New York State agog in 1855. Some strange thing had appeared in the lake, located in Wyoming County, and as the story of the mystery spread, thousands jour- neyed to the resort-to see it. It had a captivating way of rising from the depths at strategic times, then would pique the curiosity by vanishing again. The show went on for weeks, until a skeptical person was bold enough to shoot it. The thing collapsed and was captured, and a Barnumesque gag ex- ploded. The large monster was a huge, inflated sack of rubber, manipulated by wires. The writer asked if perhaps the Loch Ness creature was not a publicity hoax to attract tourists. UT testimony for the sea monster theory grew. It was then that a | ship’s officer revealed the log of the Cunard liner Mauretania bore a picture of a creature, born, as it were, to the specifications of fifteenth century tales. Modern liners would hardly squeeze down its gullet, but its fang- like teeth, its flat, brutish nose, glaring | | eyes end droopy whiskers gave it a | terrible appearance. The picture was | drawn by Senior First Officer | Moughtin, and alongside is the entry he made January 30, 1934: “Sighted sea monster. Headed S.W. 1:20 pm.” | “The ship was off St. Eustatius| Island in the Caribbean,” Moughtin | later explained to newspaper reporters: “I sighted it off the starboard bow. At first I thought it was a whale or a whistling grampus, but soon saw it was loo large. Its head was six feef, out of water. I could see at least 45 feet of the body, which was about two feet thick. It must have been 65 feet over all. It was a shiny black. “I have no doubt that this was a sea serpent of the type written about for hunareds of years. It may have been the offspring of the one reported off Queenstown by Sir Arthur Rostron on July 11, 1907, when he was chief offi- cer of the Campania.” S LATE as November, 1934, the monster controversy raged. The Jast important round seems to have been won by science in that month when Dr. W. A. Clemens, director of the biological station at Naniano, British Columbia, identified a sea monster found on Henry Island as a basking or wax-nose shark. These fish Dr. Clemens explained, grow to be 36 feet long, and their skulls are | so soft that they lose their shape when | out of the water. sters ‘The strange mon- washed up on the shores of | France in 193¢ were identified as | basking sharks. The sharks hardly fit the detailed descriptions of the creatures reported seen. Perhaps they are waiting for an auspicious time to reappear. All has been quiet on the sea serpent front this year. SCRIBBLINGS: New York City's proposed $40.000.000 exposition for 1939 will be its first since the Crystal Palace Fair of 1853-54. Melbourne, Fla., is known as the Midway City. It is halfway between Jacksonville and Miami. Only one variety of fish thrives in | South America’s Lake Titicaca. Ef-| forts to introduce sea-level fish have falled. They can’t stand the altitude —12,000 feet above the ocean. English is taught in the schools of Finland and American travelers find it helpful. Petra—the “rose-red city half as old as time"—in the *Trans-Jordon, is approached through the Sik, a two- mile-long gorge of rock varying from 40 to 10 feet wide. The walls are 100 to 500 feet high. The ruined city was carved from living rock, which, colored red, purple and yellow, catch the rays of the rising and sink- ing sun to present an amazingly spectacular beauty. The superliner Normandie will dis- appear from the Atlantic during the Winter. Plans call for her resuming her trips early next March. Movie Stars Di ring Film Notables Turn From Europe to By the Assoclated Press. l IOLLYWOOD. October 19.—War thing else in South America— is turning vacation - bent leading to the Southern continent. “Plying down to Rio” is more today It is promising to become a favorite pastime of the stars. ing himself on his present trip, what with fan mobs assaulting him at every South American capitals, but the movie tribe in general is not averse South America, from all reports, is just the place to find it this was the cry a few years ago of stars with time on their hands. Janeiro, the gay capitals of the South- ern republics.” to make pictures, and a few to Paris. But when it's vacation time, to the southlands. __ Rosita_Moreno, Jose Mojica and Latin Scenes South America. talk in Europe—and some- | movie stars to the air and sea lanes than the title of a successful movie. Clark Gable may not be enjoy- stop, according to dispatches from to a little enthusiastic adulation, and “Paris, London and the Riviera"— Today it's “Buenos Aires, Rio de OVIE stars still travel to London more and more are looking up routes 3 ATTRACTIVE VACATIONS On superb new "SANTA" Ships of Grace Line (all out- | side rooms with private bath) 1.FASCINATING GUATEMALA PLUS 7 OTHER INTERESTING PORTS---Five delightful Cruises, sailing from New York, Oct. 26, Nov. 9, 23, Dec. 7, 21--- visiting “ Barranquilla and Cartagena, South America, Panama, Salvador and sparkling Havana, (24 days), sight- | seeing included, also meals and | hotel during 31-day visit in Guatemala---$375 and up from | New York---An ideal vacation. 2.CIRCLE TOURS TO CALI- FORNIA--See California and en- joy the charm of Spanish Central America en route. Visiting South America, Panama, Salvador, Guate- mala, Mazatlan---Go by steamer and return by rail with choice of 8 attractive routes, or go by rail and return by steamer--- Frequent departures--- 18 days or longer--- Cost, including rail and steamer transportation, also stateroom and meals on steamer--- $340 and up. 3. CIRCLE TOURS TO MEXICO--- A charming sea voyage via Bar- ranquilla and Cartagena (S.A.), Panama, Salvador, Guatemala to Mazatlan --- Then an interesting tour through Mexico, featuring visits to Guadalajara and Mexico City~-Return by rail via St. Louis 27 days---Cost, including rail and steamer transportation, also stateroom and meals on steamer ---$250 and up. AMERICAN EXPRESS Travel Service | | | i 1414 F St. N.W., Willard Hotel Bidg | Washington, D. C. Phone National 1076-1258 American Express Travelers Cheques Always Protect Your Funds STEAMSHIPS. _ % RESORTS. ST. CLOUD, FLA. ernment Clerk owning home in rida. convenient to all cities of Ramon Novarro are all familiar with the kind of reception a movie per- sonage is given down there. Myrna Loy, who some months ago sailed down to Rio on her vacation tour, brought back glowing praise for the trip and the people. Personal appearances, combined with sightseeing, are paying the way for some of the stars. Lupe Velez is down there now, and Johnny Weis- muller, as soon as he finishes his |latest Tarzan picture, plans to join her. John Boles, if he can ever get away from film assignments long enough, has » South American tour in prospect—if talking were traveling, John has been there several times al- ready. ROEALIND RUSSELL, the rising star, is set for a slow “tramp | freighter” trip to Rio de Janeiro. | It's for a complete rest, minus social | obligations. | For those whose time is more lim- ited, the airplane is the solution, as in Clark Gable's case. Clarence Brown, the director, will be flying | when he finishes his current picture. | Will Rogers was probably the first major star who went South purely for the visit, minus the personal 3 L TR Q“EEN fr Also Regular Trips to BERMUDA Enjoy the t Fail season twice weekl Monarch of and the Queen of Bermuda. Also low all-expense trip rates, including v bath aboard “p ROUND TRIP Including Private Bath a 9DAYS $82.504p 12DAYS $1024 Ask your TRAVEL AGENT or Furness Bermuda Line 34 Whitehall St. (where Broadway begins), New York | “Lacquer ... jade . «e silks . . . cloisonné’— as the Chinese shop signs reads * Jefferson Junior. ‘The association will meet tomorrow at 8 pm., with Mrs. Henry Grattan | Doyle as guest speaker. Curtis-Hyde-Addison. The association met in the Curtis st and within 4 blocks of beautiful lake. can accommodate limited number re- tired employes or others at reasonable rates. ADDRESS: SAINT played by Mrs. C. E. Channing. | 15 located at Montezuma Castle Na- The association appropriated $40 | tional Monument, Ariz, reports that | A for playground equipment and for | within 90_ days a collection of rare materials for use of children irl lower | 0/d Navajo rugs that had been on | sale since 1930 have been sold. The | customers, according to this report, | were from all parts of the country. dazzling desert and sparkling skies. Below lies the famous valley itself, scarred with deep canyons and ridges, In another direction lie Panamint | vene for sanity, or, at least, re- | Valley, Searles Lake and mile after |straint. It explained. The strange | mile of the High Sierras. Four States | things were squids, octopi or overgrown are visible from the 11,000-foot | seais. magnified by imagination. smoothly away. They saw it. 'CIENCE thought it time to inter- ALL EUROPE iz e /0L, Jorhezon (AT | W. F. LAWRENCE, CLOUD, FLA. STEAMSHIPS. grades. Mrs. R. Lyon announced the school luncheon will be held October 24. Bchool last Monday, with the new president, Mrs. Leo Thomas, in the | chair. Plans for a school luncheon in | Nevember were discussed. | Phoebe Hearst. A meeting will be held tomorrow at 8 pm. Dr. Thomas Gosling, a repre= sentative of the Red Cross, will be | guest speaker, and Philip Wright, cell- | ist, accompanied by Miss Marian | Johnson, will furnish the entertain- | ment. The following are officers: Mrs. | Carroll Johnson, president; Mrs. Jul- | fan Hammack, first vice president; | Miss Sarah Holland, second vice presi- | dent; Mrs. Samuel Richards, treas- | urer: Mrs, Newton Lovewell, recording secretary; Mrs. Henry Huff, corre- sponding secretary; Mrs. Charles Mil- ler, historian. The annual card party will be held &t the school November 4 at 8 p.m. Edmonds-Kingsman-Maury. At a “get acquainted meeting” of the association last Monday night guests included Mrs. L. B. Castell, president, D. C. Congress; Mrs. C. C. Mullady, State treasurer; Mrs. W. C. Ruediger and Mrs. Florence Cornell. A membership drive is being con. ducted by Mrs. Annie McColley, chairman. Amidon-Fairbrother-Rossell. '$16.50 | Two persons in a room Langdon, At the last meeting Mrs. Lewis second grade teacher, led the singing. Furthermore, this dealer says that sales of Indian goods of all sort at Montezuma Castle to date this year exceed all other years since 1929. elevation. RESORTS. l‘wl}lDA. | Letters poured in on editors, and in- RESORTS, RESORTS, NEW YORK. "~ RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. PENN POST HOTEL in the heart of New York City S.W. Cor. 8th Ave. & 31st St. CLEAN MODERN ROOMS Single, $1.50 up Double, $2.50 up ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. Cook's Sons. Manogement HarrisonCook Manager Armistice Day All-Expense Week-End ot Atlantic City’s Distinctive Hotel ROOM-BATH-MEALS ' THESE FEATURES : INCLUDED Per i lameus * Admission 1o 1 person ™ Sigel Pier. Just ocross Sooae * ‘Chair_Ride v to Monday (006" or caclesed. At the TRAYMORE clear autumn air —is putting sparkle in people’s eyes, vigor in their stride; is 'DIRECT TO SCOE-DAND IRELAND You ‘can almost smell the heather as you step across the gangplank. Go Anchor Line and your visit in Scotland starts the minute you are aboard ship. Eight glorious days=— with congenial people, ex- cellent food, courteous service — and at a cost within the means of all. NEW YORK TO GLASGOW via Londonderry or Belfast s Sailind Dec. 14—T.5.5. CALEDONIA ROUND TRIP RATES Third class, $144.50; Tourist class, $193; First class $272 vp. Al rates, plus tax Smart vacationists are outwitting winter 'ROMA OCTOBER 25 Cruise to the Mediterranean | Holy Land—Egypt FirstClass $485up Tourist $285 up Libson, Gibraltar. Al- thens), at Azores. N ermo. Phaleron (4 rt Said, Genoa. NOV. 2 * NOV. 30 * DEC.28 | Only gyro-stabilized liner.To Gibreltar, Noples, French Riviera and Genoa. REX NOV. 16 * DEC.14 ¢ JAN.7 te Gibraltar, Napl French Riviera and Genoe. Applyto Travel Agent or 624 Fifth Acenue. New York City. ITALIAN LINE It's not far to the Orient nowa- days. 10 days direct to Yokohama ... Empress of Asia or Empress of Russia. Or via Honolulu in 3 days more...Empress of Japan or Empress of Canada. From Cali- fornia, meet an Empress at Hono- lulu. Round trip to Yokohama: $499 up, First Class; $280 up, Tourist Class; low-cost Third Class. From Vancouver and Vic- toria to Yokohama, Kobe, Naga- saki, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Manila. Orient fares include pas- sage to and from Seattle. '§ HAWAII Only 5 days to Honolulu and world-famous Waikiki Beach. Go on the Pacific’s largest, fastest liner, the Empress of Japan . ..ot the Empress of Canada. One-way to Honolulu: $110 up, FirstClass; $85, Tourist Class ; low-cost Third | Frida 1 1723 Walnut Street, Philadelphia e fostalile Aavsagt o Niagais f‘%sgikAA%E Or Your Own Travel Agent of the Canadian Austra i |4 First, Cabin, and Third Class. é g | Frequent sailings from Vancouver TinErarv] Halloween Special’| Sail south on In? AUSTRALIA All-Expense CRUISE oon aft'noen Supper . to Tuesday (Cocktall Lounge). The Seaside _ PENNSYLVANIA AVE. AND BEACH Write for Bookle! and Llow Weekly Rates’ £ 7 NICKERBOCKER] A meeting was held October 8, Mrs. R. V. Strout, the new president, pre- siding. Mrs. William Riley gave a brief talk. The attendance prizes were won by Miss Towner, Amidon; Miss Bogan, Fairbrother, and Miss O'Nell,‘ 11 J Blow-Pierce-Webb. = At a meeting held October 10, pre- sided over by Mrs. G. F. Brown, Miss | Catharine Watkins, director of Kin- | dergartens, was guest speaker. Mrs. | Shugrue, principal, gave a short ad- RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. in Miami this year. They have found that, by coming now and taking ad- vantage of low seasonal rates, they can spend a full winter here at much lower proportionate cost than that of a short stay later. Families especially, find they can close Northern homes and live here at actual savings through fuel and heavy clothing economies. The Season Begins November 1 There's plenty to keep you busy. The million-dollar sports parade is already on. Golf, Tennis, Fishing, Riding, and Surf Bathing are at mid-season best. Children may register in school on arrival. So pack your bags, dismiss your winter worries, and set sail for Miami, Flocida June in Miami’s golden sunshine. Department A-7 Chicago Information Office =180 N. Michigan Ave. MIAMI o WHERE . THE « SUN . IS « WAITING . FOR . YOU « enhancing the keen enjoyment Class. Ot go more leisurely on the of the Traymore's delightful luxuries. You'll like it here now! You'll like the atmos- phere of quiet relaxation, or of gay good times in the Strato- sphere Room high above the . You'll especially like the —and the reasonable rates, Rates from $5 European—with meals $8 BENNETT E. TOUSLEY General Manager Accommodations for 150,000 visitors as- sure competitive rates to all. 200 hoe tels from $2 to $10, 10,000 apartments, “ready_to live in.” from $200 to $750 for 6 months season, or . at special prices by week or month: and 5,000 furnished homes. For rates and detailed information write: CHAMBER OF CoMMERCE NEW ZEALAND Very low fares. Sail on the spa-* | cious Aorangi or Niagara to the continent of sports and good times. From Vancouver and Vic- toria to Honolulu, Suva, Auck- land, and Sydney. Connections at Honolulu from California ports. Round trip to Sydney: $574 up, First Class; $393 up, Cabin Class; $276 up, Third Class. Ask for literature on all-expense tours in Australia and New Zealand. © Folders - Maps - Information on any Cana Pacific service, from your travel agemt . . . or C. E. Phelps, General Agent, 14th and New York Ave. N.W,, Wash, D. C. National 4235. ATLANTIC CITY e e e PR T R G PO sy gy ATLANTIC CITY ~, For the pleasure of an Autumn visit—fashion- able Boardwalk location — unusual comfort features — famous cuisine — attractively low rates for both American and European plans. GOLF + HORSEBACK RIDING « ROLLER CHAIRING INDOOR SEA WATER SWIMMING POOL - Phone Atiantic City 5.4141=WM. HAMILTON, General Maneger From Baltimore Friday, Oct. 25 six days-%40 All-Expense Tours all season to Miami; Florida points. Regular sailings Balto. to Florida every Tuesday, Friday. ®Folder. Apply Travel Bureau, 1416 H St N.W. ‘Washington « or Tourist Agents. MERCHANTS & MINERS LINE SRS R T R R R R Rl BT 6 .M. Dalborough lenhe ATLANTIC CITY Facing Ocean and Park VERY ATTRACTIVE ws(wmum Ownership Manage Joslah White & Sons Compan; IDEAL SHORT OCEAN TRIP

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