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- MEDICAL COURSE FORG. U. ALUMNI Surgeon General Parran Is Among Prominent Physi- cians to Lecture. With Surgeon General Thomas Parran of the U. S. Public Health Bervice and other prominent physi- cians listed as lecturers, the Georgt town University School of Medicine will conduct & week's extension course, beginning tomorrow, exclu- sively for local and visiting alumni. Rev. David V. McCauley, 8. J., re- gent and dean, announced last night that one of the features will be a mé - coming” dinner Thursday evening at the Shoreham Hotel. . It will be an in- : formal affair. This is the first year that the Georgetown school has under- taken such a course and the response from lo- cal alumni has been wide. More than 150 physi- cians and surgeons are expected to register tomorrow. In making the announcement, Father McCauley said the course was complimentary, not even a registration fee being required. 50 Lectures Arranged. More than 50 lectures and clinics have been arranged in courses deal- ing with medicine, surgery, obstetrics, gynecology and pediatrics. Some of the clinics will be held at Georgetown University Hospital, while others are scheduled at the Gallinger Municipal Hospital, Children’s and the Episco- pal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospitals. Very Rev. Arthur A. O'Leary, 8.J., president of Georgetown University, will address a luncheon conference to- morrow at the medical school, fol- lowing the opening morning session. ‘The extension course is under the di- rection of the school’s executive fac- ulty. Dr. Parran, who was appointed sur- geon general early in the year, is a graduate of the Georegtown Medical School. He is widely known as an authority on social and other com- municable diseases and is scheduled for an address on that subject Fri- day at a luncheon at Gallinger Hos- pital, following a conference on medi- cine at which Dr. Wallace M. Yater, professor of medicine at Georgetown, will preside. Dr. Wall to Preside. Each morning and afternoon will be devoted to lectures and clinics. Dr. Joseph 8. Wall will preside at a ses- sion devoted ‘Tuesday afternoon at the Children’s Hospital. Dr. James A. Cahill of the Georgetown faculty will have charge of a special surgical conference and clinic Tuesday morning at Georgetown Hospital. Others who will preside at special sessions are Dr. Joseph J. Mundell, ob- stetrics; Dr. Leon A. Martel, gynecol- ogy, and Dr. James N. Creear, who will conduct an ophthalmological clinic ‘Thursday afternoon at the Episcopal Hospital. The dinner was changed from Sat- tirday to Thursday evening so as not to interfere with the golf tournament which will be a feature of the enter- tainment Saturday at the links of the Georgetown Preparatory School on the Rockville pike. While no formal pro- gram has been prepared, prominent officials of the university will attend the dinner. Alumni were requested to register at the Medical School on Reservoir road tomorrow morning at 9 o’clock. There will be an address of welcome by the dean. SOCIETY ON CRUISE « Parran. Bouthern Maryland Group Has Luncheon at Owings Home. Sgecial Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, September 12 —Mem- bers of the Southern Maryland So- ciety left here today for a trip cruise on Chesapeake Bay and the Choptank River. They ate luncheon at the home of Irving Owings after docking at Fair Haven, Anne Arundel County. Presi- dent of the society, composed of several hundred Southern Maryland residents, is M. Hampton Magruder of Upper Marlboro, collector of internal revenue for the State, 10,000 IN PARADE Royal Family Witnesses Demon- stration in The Hague. THE HAGUE, September 12 (#)— Amid scenes of wild enthusiasm 10,- 000 members of Netherlands provin- cial corporations paraded on the Noordeinde today before the royal palace, where Queen Wilhelmina, her daughter, the Princess Juliana, and the latter’s flance, Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld, watched from a balcony. Newest reports in court circles said Julisna and Bernhard probably would be married in December. Mercury Slumps To 60 Degrees as Nudists Convene Coastwide Convention Is “Serious’’~Delegates to Stay 3 Weeks. By the Aseociated Press. SAN JOSE, Calif., September 12.— Cloudy skies and & 60-degree tempera- ture greeted nudist delegates who be- gan arriving here today for a coast- wide convention which, leaders said, 1s going to be “as serious to nudists as an Elks’' convention is to Elks.” George Spray, president of the Alma Elysium Foundation Nudist Colony, said he expected 300 delegates from Galifornia, Oregon, Washington and olorado by tomorrow for the three weeks’ session. He said the convention’s purpose is to discuss standardization of colony operation, membership qualifications, fees, education and child welfare, and health building programs. “This is as serious to nudists as an Elks' convention is to Elks,” said Spray. “Cameras have been banned from our 112-acre colony, and be- cause we don't want to offend non- mmhar'l’, the general public will be to children’s diseases | A Smart for costume for beach wear. The patent leather. BLACK CULTDEATH LADTOTZONTRAL Dayton Dean’s Confession of Murder Plot Recounted Before Jury. By 'ne Associated Press. DETROIT, September 12.—Dayton Dean's version of the Black Legion killing of Charles A. Poole was re- counted in Circuit Court today es | the trial of 12 men charged with the crime got under way just four months from the time the young W. P. A. worker died under a fusillade of pistol shots. Prosecutor Duncan C. McCrea told the jury the State would show the defendants plotted at a meeting in Findlater Hall to kill Poole, then abducted him and took him to a lonely country road where Dean, a pistol in each hand, shot him to death, McCrea’s statement of the State’s charge followed closely the confes- sion of Dean, who has pleaded guilty. | The prosecutor - pictured “Colonel” Harvey Davis, one of the defendants, as the leader of the plot. Plot Laid to Wife-Beating. He said the plot originated when Herschell Gill and Lowell Rushing, among the defendants, appealed to the Black Legion to “discipline” Poole, a non-member, for beating his wife. On that accusation, since proven false, GROWING FEET * need ALL LEATHER provided THE_SUNDAY STAR, the Beach SIMONE SIMON, French cinema star, who recently made her Hollywood debut, keeps up the French reputation for smartness with this smart shorts are of mellow sailcloth, the brassiere is a white bandana and the sandals are of red —Wide World Photo. Poole's death. day in a ditch. last words: mistake.” Jury Sees Findlater Hall. ‘The 12 defendants, shackled | | Moynihan, | companied them. to stress that fact. The dingy basement room in which | the State charges the group congre- gated to plan the conspiracy that led | to exposure of the terroristic night | riding society is small, and McCrea | and Chester P. O'Hara, assistant at- torney general, indicated they planned They said it would have been im- WASHINGTON, DEFENSE MAPPED | FORMAXWELL GIRL Counsel to Decide in Few Days Whether to Request Change of Venue. By the Assoctated Press. RICHMOND, Va., September 12.— M. J. Fulton, member of Edith Max- well's counsel, said after a confer- ence here today with her brother and another defense attorney, that a de- cision would be reached next week on whether a change of venue would be asked for the young school teacher’s McCrea charged that Davis ordered This decision, he asserted, was rati- fled by the defendants. at a subsequent meeting, Poole was lured there and then taken to the suburban road, where his body was found the next e prosecutor said_the initial plan for “straightening out” Poole was to hang him, but that the car containing the rope did not arrive and Poole was shot to death as he gasped out his “Gentlemen, there must be some in | pairs, were taken to Findlater Hall | before the formal opening of the trial. The jury, Circuit Judge Joseph A. McCrea and others ac- new trial for the killing of her father. “We feel we would *be fully justi- fled in asking a change of venue,” Fulton said, “but we mined definitely what taki He conferred with Earl Maxwell bf New York, brother of the Wise County &irl who awaits in the Lee County Jail the outcome of her attorneys’ ef- forts to free her, and A. T. Dotson, another member of the defense force. The State Supreme Court ordered 8 new trial Friday In s divided de- cision that held the evidence insuf- ficient to sustain the first-degree murder verdict of the Wise County Jury last November, carrying a 25-year Pprison sentence. Fulton said Charles Henry Smith of Alexandria, who joined in arguing Miss Maxwell's appeal before the Su- preme Court in June, would come to Richmond probably Tuesday for a ® happening. a political club, and that they did not “kill him,” which Dean said greeted the charge. a fatal accident occurred. possible for any one there the night of the meeting not to know what was Several of the defend- ants contend the meeting was that of hear any accusation made against Poole or the shouts of “hang him," Toy Cars Re-enact Fatal Crash. Toy cars were used at an inquest at Driffield, England, to illustrate how Brings You the Best a Radio Can Get 10-DAY FREE TRIAL WORLD WIDE MODELS $29.95 up S.HARRIS €O. 2900 14th St. N. W. OPEN NITES COL. 0100 by by __‘ RED GOOSE § Snoppy ALL LEATHER MODELS FOR SCHOOL WEAR Juvenile Shoe Store 936 “F" ST, N.W. Next to Metropolitan Theatre-Wash. D. C. 3 D. C, SEPTEMBER :13,--1936—PART ONE. new conference on the defense plans. The Richmond attorney said the first step would be to ask the moun- tain school teacher’s release to bail Wise County Circuit Court. . A. W. Skeen, the trial judge, twice has refused Miss Maxwell free- CUPID’S “RUSH” STARTS Business Brisk for Upper Marl- boro Marriage License Clerk. 6pectal Dispateh to The Star UPPER MARLBORO, Md., Septem- ber 12—The Fall “rush” has started at the office of Prince Georges Coun- Heights, and Alice-Bond Jackson, 20, Washington; Carroll O." Carrick, 23, Washington, and Texie Marie Orr, 20, Martinsburg, W. Va.; Charles A. Ap- pleby, 26, Syracuse, N, Y., and Anne Mabel Lofregren, 31, of Alexandria, Minn.; Leonard Eel, jr, 28, of Ber- wyn, and Myrtle Bramblett, 28, of Branchville; Francis M. Burch, 26, and Virginia Rose Parker, 22, both of Richmond, Va.; Paul W. Conklin, 26, of Washington, and Sylvia Lee Heaton, 24, of Forestville; Harold William Proctor, 22, and Frances Elizabeth Dey, 18, both of Virginia; Herman E. Nicholson, 29, and Alma E. Nicholson, 28, both of Washing- ton; Ellsworth W. Dwyer, 20, and Loretta M. Boswell Dwyer, 20, both of Bowie; Alan J. Blanchard, 24, of ‘Washington, and Sarah E. Pranklin, 21, of Hyattsville; James. P. Carbon, 36, and Dorothy D. Rowe, 35, both of Predericksburg, Va.; Donald Hiner ‘Vandender, 23, of Slaty Fork, W. Va,, and Hazel Marie Seannion, 23, of Misgo, W. Va.; Leonidas P. Wheat, 60, and Mary A. Waldron, 45, both of ‘ashington; George Emanuel Fowler, 20, and_ Hester Bell Cox, 19, both of ! Oxen Hill, Md., and Charles K. Chap-+ man, 27, of Washington, and Jessie: Johnson, 29, of Huntington, W, Va. Wi Post to Install Officers. [ Vincent B. Costello Post, No. 15," American Legion, will install new ofe ficers at & meeting at 8:30 p.m. Tues day at the Broadmoor Apartments, Dancing will foilow the buriness ses- | sion, —— Austria’s tire trade is thriving. JE HIGY ‘INCORPORATED- 'OUR PLUMBER’ BEDROOMS EPARTMENTS MEETING ROOMS RESTAURANTS LOBBIES BARBER SHOP \ WASHINGTON'S MODERN HOTEL ANNOUNCES COMPLETION OF A MONUMENTAL ACHIEVEMENT IN WEATHER a la Carte . ... Eschewing Mere Cooling for the Sound Principles of Year 'Round Conditioning The Mayflower Now Boasts Science'’s Latest Benefaction in Human Comfort . . . Today and Every Day, We Will Do Something About the Weather . . . Bedrooms, Apartments, Restaurants and All Public Assembly Rooms Will Respond to a Master Hand of Thermometer Control +..Summer and Winter Temperatures Will Not Only Be Regulated to Desired Levels, But This Model Installation Assures the Proper Degree of Humidity, Ventilation With Fresh Air and Continuous Filtration . . . We invite Your Inspection and Enjoyment of Still Another Triumph by Washington's Inter- nationally Famous Hotel That Has Never Known Compromise With Quality. AY WHEN TELEVISION BECOMES. ? R. L. POLLIO, Manager A SERVICEABLE ~REALI OWER 1V, WE WILL HAVE T »