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VANDALS DEFACE T SOLDIER TOMB 6-Pound Piece Broken Off Memorial in Alex- andria. Vandals, seeking souvenirs, broke a 6-pound piece of marble from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier of the Revolution at the Old Presbyterian Meeting House in Alexandria, erected by Children of the American Revolu- tion, Mrs. John Morrison Kerr, cus- todian of the tomb, reported to the C. A. R. convention yesterday after- noon. The piece, stolen three weeks ago, has been replaced, she announced, but a thief-proof fence is needed to protect the shrine. Other committee reports made at the afternoon session yesterday were those on the Tamassee, 8. C, scholarship fund, the Wakefleld, me- morial fund and the national head- qQuarters’ fund. Continuance of the “holiday plan,” under which members of the C. A. R. contribute 10 cents on each of 10 annual holidays to building of a me- morial national headquarters in honorl of Mrs. Harriet M. Lothrop, C. A. R. founder, was recommended by the Fund Committee until the goal of | $25,000 is reached. Many children | work for their dimes in order to con- tribute, it was brought out. Received by Mrs. Roosevelt. Mrs. Koosevelt received the entire econventicn yesterday afternoon at the White House. Joan Marie Thomas, 4-year-old Washingtonian, and Terry Tjersland of Alexandria presented her with a large basket of Spring flowers. Both were dressed in Colonial cos- tumes. Last night saw youthful delegates regaled by fellow members at annual “stunt night” at District Red Cross chapter house. Frank Edward Taylor, young master of ceremonies, intro- duced a program of movies, music, reading, piano, vocal and violin num- bers; a play and impersonations, all executed by boys and girls of the or- ganization. A sightseeing tour of the Capital City, including ceremonies at statues of Revolutionary heroes at the Cape itol, is the high point in today's cone vention program for Children of the American Revolution. While juniors are being shown ‘Washington's points of interest, their | elders, the national officers were to | make their annual reports in District Red Cross chapter house. Guests at Luncheon. Following a morning session, oc- cupied chiefly with reading of minutes and junior officers’ reports of so- cieties, youngsters will be entertained at luncheon av Little Scout House, National Girl Scout headquarters, the original of which inspired John Howard Payne to write “Home, Sweet Home."” Boys and girls will don party clothes tonight for a reception and dance at the Washington Club, Seventeenth and K streets. Rear Admiral Ruscell R. Waesche, commandant of the United States Coast Guard, and Mrs, Nellie Tayloe Ross, director of the United States Mint and former Gov- ernor of Wyoming, will receive. Tomorrow's program calls for elec- tion of annual officers, presentation of | rizes, discussion of new business and | committee reports, culminating in the | C. A. R.s annual pilgrimage to Christ | Church, Alexandria, where George | Washington was a vestryman, the Tomb of the Unknown Revolutionary and Mount Vernon, where elected national officers will be installed under the C. A. R. elm tree according to tradition, adjourning the convention, J aill;reak (Continued From First Page.) Wilmington, Del. The prisoner said he had buried part of his loot on a farm near Wilmington Detective Sergt. Richard Cox said a girl companion of Sutton was arrested in Wilmington in a stolen car and Button sent word to her by Wilmington detectives that she might as well “talk.” Cox said Sutton told him he and the girl had a “symbol” between them in the shape of a gold lingerie clasp. The prisoner, it was said, produced the clasp from his sock and fixed it onto the note he sent to the girl to prove “good faith.” Sutton told deputies he wished to escape because he did not want to go back to Philadelphia. He said he would prefer to go.to Chester, Pa., where, he declared, he is wanted for robbery and other crimes Cox told Judge McMahon that Phil- eadelphia authorities had filed the first detainer for Sutton and therefore had first claim on the prisoner. Sut- ton was returned to the District Jail to await tomorrow’s hearing. W. C.T. U. WORKER JAILED California Woman Serves 3 Hours for Parking Violation. SAN DIEGO, Calif., April 21 (#).— Mrs. Laura McLurken, 59, State vice president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, prominent social and religious worker, was free today after serving three hours of a day's sentence in jail for violating sub- urban La Mesa's parking laws. Five Southern mountain girls from South Carolina South Carolina, by Children of THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1937. the American Revolution. Left to Naomi Cantrell, Emma Botts and Jessie Nelle Kimsey. D.A.R. (Continued From First Page.) Relief (Continued From First Pugg;) of Commerce of the United States, told the D. A. R. “The old conflict between science and religion,” she declared, “is over. But American proponents of religion and all foreign missionaries today must have scientific reasons for the things they believe.” Religlon today, she said, must be of international appeal to satisfy the intelligent demands of youth, which, | she said, was asking more and more | for “an interpretation of personal re- ligion and meaning and purposes of domestic life.” Will Visit White House, The 3,142 delegates, representing the Nation's 301,832 D. A. R. mem- bers, will go to the White House this afternoon to be received by Mrs. Roosevelt, and return to session at | Constitution Hall tonight to hear re- ports from the State regents. Meanwhile, the Congress turned its attention to a nation-wide drive to interest the young women of the country in joining the D. A. R. and in living up to its ideals of patriotism, A breakfast this morning for the affiliate organization of the Junior American Citizens followed closely an all-afternoon meeting yesterday of the Junior Membership Group, which at- tracted a large throng to the dis- cussion in the Pan-American Room at the Mayflower Hotel. Juniors Seek Information. “The juniors have decided to be well informed upon the problems and current issues of the day,” Mrs. Ralph E. Wisner, chairman of the citizens, told the congress today in her annual report. “The young girls invite D. A. R. members to speak who will inform them regarding D. A. R. committee work and the history of the organiza- tion, remembering always those noble women who founded the society and those who have followed in their foot- steps, giving of their spirit and their strength to enrich the society they love so well.” As part of its youth movement, the D. A. R. during the past year has | given aid to scores of needy children, the office of President General Mrs. William A. Becker reported today. Wonderful Success Seen. “Letters and reports sent me indi- cate the D. A. R. is achieving a won- derful success in befriending youth,” Mrs. Becker said. “I cherish dearly among my possessions many letters from boys and girls who have been aided in securing an education and in obtaining a proper start in life through our efforts.” The Junior American Citizen Clubs, Mrs. Wisner said, have increased by 177 to 1,726 during the past year, bringing the total membership to 60,102. In the interest of Americanism, the corresponding secretary general's office sent out for distribution 286,240 man- uals for citizenship, Mrs. William J. ‘Ward of Summit, N. J., national chair- man of the Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution Manual for Citizenship Committee, reported. Nurses Kept at Posts. Mrs. Smith H. Stebbins of Brook- lyn, N. Y., chairman of the D. A. R. Ellis Island Committee, reported that the society maintains one full-time graduate nurse, trained in social serv- ice, at Ellis Island and one at Angel Island, port of entry on the Pacific Coast, to aid the arriving foreigners in adjusting themselves to their new prospects, The report on the Student Loan Fund Committee, submitted by Mrs. Joseph G. Forney of Lancaster, Pa., its chairman, disclosed: The money available totals $358,962.40; 2,793 boys and girls have been educated to date, and 801 are now in school because of D. A. R. loans. Mrs. Martin L. Sigmon of Monti- cello, Ark., chairman of the Commit- tee on Correct Use of the Flag, re- ported: Approximately 98,000 flag codes and leaflets have been distributed, chiefly among school children. In all, 107,- 626 pieces of flag literature have been distributed. The committee distrib- uted during the past year 1,293 large flags and 11,767 small flags, and its members made 302 radio talks and prepared 1,753 other addresses and papers on flag history. Found His Forte. Joseph Hergesheimer broke into print with & recipe for stuffed cab- bage which he sold to & magazine under his wife's by-line. at $1,500,000,000, however, on the ground any smaller amount would mislead the Nation and necessitate a later request for additional funds. | Serious Job Problem. | The Works Progress Administra- tion said today unemployment would | continue to be a serious problem in | coming months and that even a high | tide of prosperity could not cut the | Toll of jobless below 4,000,000. | A report by Deputy Administrator | Aubrey Williams blamed changing | productivity and additions to the labor supply for the prospect. He urged an “integrated and perfected nrogram of insurance, public work and public assistance.” “Acceptance of even an optimis- tic forecast of 6,500,000 to 7,500,000 unemployed in 1937 presupposes near- ly as great a need for a Federal works program as in 1936,” Williams said. | “It is often said that an increase | in employment should produce a cor- | responding decline in the number of | persons receiving relief. “This statement overlooks the fact that not more than half the unem- ployed are receiving relief and that any increase in employment can be | supplied from a number of sources— the unemployed on relief, the experi- enced umemployed not on relief, new workers coming on the labor market and surplus workers.” Employment on the works program, | the report showed, dropped from peak of 3,839,000 in March, 1936, to | 2,884,000 on last February 20 ‘The | average W. P. A. monthly expenditure declined from $172,000,000 for March, 1936, to $148,000,000 for January, 1937, Educational Aid Bill. The first test of President Roosevelt's determination to hold down expendi« tures may come in the Senate th | week on the Harrison-Black educa- tional aid bill. The measure, which over a five-year period would give the States subsidies totaling $1,000,000,000, has strong sup- | port. Before the President's message, Senate leaders were forecasting its ap- proval despite mild administration op- position. | Senator Harrison, Democrat, of Mis- | sissippi said he was willing to reduce | the appropriations needed for the next | two years, but insisted on pressing the | measure | Mr. Roosevelt said at his press con- | ference late yesterday that the omis- | sion of estimates in the revised budget | for a low-cost housing program and aid for farm tenants did not mean they were eliminated. | The public works revolving fund, he | pointed out, contains between $100.- 000,000 and $150,000,000 of unobli- gated money, some of which might g0 | toward housing. Farm tenancy assistance might be | provided, he indicated, from part of the $75,000,000 usually set aside from | relief funds for farm rehabilitation, | Reduction Seen Unlikely. | Chairman Taylor of the House Ap- | propriations Committee said the relief 4 appropriation probably would be in- | cluded in the final deficiency bill, to be acted on later in the session. “I belleve we can hold it down to the $1,500,000,000,” he said, “but I don’t believe we can cut it or that the President would want us to.” In line with Mr. Roosevelt's asser- | tion that “an increase in appropria- | tions would, of course, nullify our ef- | forts to prevent a deficit in 1938 | Taylor said he had urged Appropria- | tion committeemen to use all their | powers to “ward off wholesale on- | slaughts to override the budget.” Railway Seeks Gold. Prospectors will be em>'yed by the South Manchuria Railway to hunt for 1 gold in Manchukuo. “he directors have decided to launch a complete in- vestigation into all the mineral re- sources of the country in connection with Manchukuo’s five-year plan. In- vestigation parties will take the field soon., —— provided scholarships at Tamassee School, | Mrs. Willard Steele. | were: | Harold Brooks Gardner, Mrs. Edwin | right: Lyrlene Cain, Edna Botts, D. A. R. Notes BIRTHDAY party for Mrs. William A. Becker, president general of the D. A. R, will be given by Mrs. J. Harris Baugh- man of Louisiana Thursday evening | at the Mayflower Hotel. There will ! be 130 guests. Mrs. George W. Cocheu of this city, vice chairman of the National Defense Committee, will entertain | members of the committee at dinner | | tonight at the Army and Navy Club | in honor of the chairman, Mrs, Vin- | ton Earl Sisson. Mrs. James J. Davis, wife of the | Senator from Pennsylvania, enter- | tained at tea for 600 D. A. R. women from Pennsylvania at her home yes- terday afternoon. Assisting Mrs. | Davis were Mrs. William Rich, Mrs. | Roy Kinzer, Mrs. Adam Wyant, Mrs. Chrarles Lea, Misses Julla Margaret and Katherine Rich, Jane and Jean Davis. Receiving with Mrs. Davis was Mrs. Harper D. Sheppard of Hanover, Pa.,, Pennsylvania State re- | gent. | The Reception Committee for the | president general’s reception last night at Constitution Hall was headed by Mrs. C. Edward Murray, chairman. The vice chairmen were Mrs. Thomas Enders, Mrs. J. Clarence Funk, Mrs. George E. Matthies, Mrs. John P.i Mosher, Mrs. John B. Schoeffel and | Other members | Mrs. James S. Ardern, Mrs. Herbert | Backus, Mrs. Charles Read Banks, | Mrs. John Lester Barr, Mrs. Nathaniel Beaman, Mrs. Raymond R. Bear, Mrs, Edward R. Burke, Mrs. Albert L. Calder, 2d.; Mrs. Norman Case, Mrs. | George W. Cocheu, Mrs. Paul L. Cort, | Mrs. William F. Dennis, Mrs. C. Robert | Duncan, Mrs. Samuel L. Earle, Mrs. C. Gregory, Mrs. Morgan Hand, Mrs. | William H. Hightower, Mrs. Livingston L. Hunter, Representative Virginia E. | Jenckes, Miss Mary E. Johnson, Mrs. Thaddeus M. Jones, Mrs. Prank Royer Keefer, Mrs. Alvin V. Lane, Mrs. Gra- ham Lawrence, Mrs. J. Hamilton Lewis, Mrs. John J. Mc8wain, Mrs. Le Roy Mark, Mrs. Thaddeus Merriman, Mrs. Frederick W. Millspaugh, Mrs. Daise Wood Mitchell, Mrs. Edmund P. Moody, Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs. Jesse W. Nicholson, Mrs. John H. Overton, Mrs. William F. Pearson, Mrs. F. P. | Pursel, Miss Janet Richards, Mrs. C. | Lloyd Ritter, Mrs. W. A. Rodenberg, Mrs. J. H. Rownd, Mrs. C. A. Swann Sinclair, Mrs. Horace Hatton Smith, Mrs. Frederick A. Strong, Mrs. David S. Busong, Mrs. John F. Weinmann, Mrs. Willam M. Whittington, Mrs. William F. Williamson and Mrs. Wil- liam Magee Wilson. The Irish Free State now has only 1 passenger automobile to every 70 people. | Bargains in Waedding Rings: 1, Badmermsas s dment ng rin .75, \\\\ ///, These are " worth ‘-mn.. (Platinum, White or Yellow' Gold). ARTHUR MARKEL Suite 210-211 918 F St Natl. 6251, NwW. Visit Our 2nd-Floor Dining Room Fresh Potomac Shad Roe, 85¢ BONED SHAD DINNER, $1 Special Sea Food LUNCHEON ! E St. N.wW. Raw Bar & Resta i »w CA 1011 “Home of Toms Cove 0 nt %) > 1 |’Is Nl l i, S N | avenue southeast DIES OF INJURIES INTWO ACCIDENTS Colored Man, 78, Is Fortieth to Lose Life in District This Year. Injuries suffered in two accidents, the first while he was crossing an in- tersection and the secopd a collision which occurred as he was being taken to a hospital, proved fatal last night to Joseph A. Bell, 78, colored, 1141 Twenty-third street. His death brought the 1837 traffic fatality list | for the District to 40—ten above the | mark for the same date last year. Bell was struck as he walked across | P street at Twenty-sixth. The driver, police said, was Paul Leon Courtneay, 17, of 483 I street. According to police, Horace L. Pril- | man, 32, colored janitor, 2700 Q street, who witnessed the mishap, volunteered to take Bell to Emergency Hospital in Courtneay’s car. At Twentieth and P | streets the machine collided with one driven by Maria de Francesco, 23, of 137 B street southeast. | Bell was transferred to a taxicab | and taken on to the hospital, where | he was pronounced dead a short time | later. He had a fractured skull and | internal injuries. Held Under $500 Bond. Courtneay was held under $500 bond, pending a coroner’s inquest today. Beatrice Shiflet, 21, of 4315 Nichols | avenue southeast, was injured seri- ously last night when she fell from an automobile in the driveway leading to her home. The driver, police said, was Vernon Dell, 19, of 4219 Nichols She was taken to Providence Hospital and treated for a possible fractured skull and cuts about the head. ‘Two D. A. R. delegates were slightly hurt yesterday when the taxicab in which they were riding collided with | another automobile at Fifteenth street and Constitution avenue. The victims, Mrs. Alta Baker, 66, Midland, Mich., and Mrs. Julia Sayre, 70, Flushing, Mich., were thrown for~ ward by the impact. A motorist took | them to Emergency, where they were | treated for cuts and bruises. Later they returned to the Ambassador Hotel, where they are staying. Cab Driver Is Named. The cab driver, police said, was Horace W. Cross, 27, of the 400 block of Ninth street, Warren W. ‘Wheaton, 43, of 4000 Cathedral avenue, was op- erating the other car. Motorcycle Officer D. L. Dobbs, fourth precinct, suffered possible in- | ternal injuries, head injuries and a possible fractured elbow last night when his machine skidded while he was chasing a speeding motorist on Fourteenth street southwest. He is in Emergency. | Melvin Sullivan, 16, of 414 Sixth | street, was injured slightly when hit | by an automobile as he walked across Fourth street at E. The driver, Harold | K. Melnicove, 22, of 2944 Bellevue | street, took him to Emergency. Sulli- | van was treated for bruises about the left leg and then sent home, ‘Wrestling Fans Battle. Champions of two wrestlers lined up in a Nairobi, South Africa, street after a close match and held a free- for-all, in which sticks, stones and knives were freely used, one man be- ing killed and many injured. Pepsodent Tooth Powders c© BECAUSE t Pepsoden’ — restores natur gently float al luster- — BECAUSE Ppepsodent P feeling clean ZED IS ® When there’s a better way, you can alone among ntains IRIUM NO horou OF IRIUM der leaves ¥ c.\awm‘l wholesome — Refres Program of the D.A.R. The White House Reception. Mrs. Roosevelt will receive mem- bers of the Continental Congress. 7 PM. Concert, 6:30 until 7: Navy Band Orchestra, Lieut. Charles Benter, leader. Assembly call. Entrance march: Navy Band Or- chesira. Entrance of the presi- dent general and the State regents escorted by the pages with State flags. | Invocation: Rev. Albert Joseph | McCartney, D.D,, Church of the Covenant, D. C. Music: Grace trumpeter. “Home on the Range “Carnival of Venice,” Herbert Clark State regents’ reports, interspersed with music. March: Navy Band Orchestra, Nominatfons. ‘The retiring of the colors. Exit march: Navy Band Orchestra, TOMORROW, 9:30 AM. Election of officers: Polls open at 8 o'clock; voting in Memorial Continental Hall. Organ recital, 9 until 9:30: Horace Smithey, organist. Assembly call. Entrance of the president general escorted by the pages. Congress called to order: general. Scripture general. The pledge of allegiance to the flag: Assemblage. | The National Anthem: Assemblage, Mrs. William Horsfall, leader. Reading of the minutes, the record- ing secretary general. Report of the Resolutions Commit- tee: Mrs. Robert J. Johnston, chairman. Supplemental report of Committee on Credentials: Miss Page Schwarzwaelder, chairman. Reports of national committees (con- tinued) : Caroline E. Holt Scholarship Fund, Miss Ruth Bradley Sheldon, | chairman. Filing and Lending Bureau, Mrs. Frederick G. Johnson, chair- man. Geneslogical Records, Dr. Jean Stephenson, chairman. Adams East, ---Guion Mrs. J. President. and prayer: Chaplain D. C. Family’s 4 Generations Attending D. A. R. Convention| Four generations of a Washington family are attending the annual D. A, R.-C. A. R. convention here. Great - grandmother, grandmother, mother and daughter posed for their | pictures today on the steps of Dis- trict Red Cross chapter house. | Great-grandmother is 78-year-old | Mrs. E. J. Cowen, who lives at 3228 | Water street; grandmother is Mrs. Gary Walters, hospitality chairman | for the D. A. R. convention, who lives | at 4501 Illinois avenue; mother is Mrs. Seymour Thomas and 4-year-old Joan Marie Thomas, who presented flowers to Mrs. Roosevelt at the White House yesterday afternoon, is daugh- | ter. Mother and daughter live at 2024 North Capitol street. “I've been with D. A. R. for over 40 years, and when I look at little | Joan here I can't help feeling a lot | of pride in the years of patriotic work | RIUM IRIUM SOAP. gh! ss " mouth hing! our responds instantly Oensus Records, Mrs. Lue R. Spencer, chairman, Girl Home-Makers, Mrs. Lester 8. Daniels, chairman. Music: The Madrigal Singers, Mrs, John Milton Syivester, director. “All Creatures Now Are Merry-minded” John Benet, “The Hebrew Children, Arr. Buchanan “Jesus Born in Bethles,” * Arr. Buchanan “Jeanie With the Light Brown Stephen Foster Report of Conservation Committee: Mrs. Avery Turner, chairman. Address: “Thy Woods and Templed Hills” (illustrated with motion pic- tures), F. A. Siicox, chief of the Forest Service, Announcements. Recess. 2 PM. Assembly call. Entrance march: Mrs. James Shera Montgomery, organiat, Entrance of the pages. Reports of natlonal committees (con- tinued) : Memorial Caroline Scott Harri- son Lialson, Mrs. Walter L. Tobey, chairman, Insignia, Mrs. Prank Howland Parcells, chairman. Transportation: Mrs. Fletcher Rutledge, chairman. Music: Phyllis Raymond, mezzo-s0- prano; Mrs. James Shera Mont- Anne —_— e e e, e e e Scholarship Students Attend Convention MISS DAINGERFIELD MAY GO ON CRUISE’ Feiress Plans West Indies Trip While Commission Debates Sanity. Frierds of Miss Mary Daingerfield, 56-year-old Alexandria heiress, said today she had left Washington on a | trip to Philadelphia, New York ang | possibly the West Indies to take a rest while a Sanity Commission in Alexan- |dria seeks to determine her mental status. | Meanwhile, Miss Daingerfield's at- | torneys, Leo Rover and Paul Delaney, are negotiating with the legal depart~ ment of the American Security & Trust Co. in an effort to obtain access for Miss Daingerfield to & safe deposit box in which she is said to have severat hundred thousand dollars It was said that Miss Daingerfield's home, Malvern, will be closed and shs will not return to Virginia again until authorities declare her sane, s e e Bicycle Mountain Climb. Beventy-one-year-old Sidney Jar- man recently rode on 8-year-old bie cycle to MacLear’s Beacon, the high- b est point on Table Mountain in Souta ONTIA —_— gomery, accompanist. “None But the Lonely Heart,” ‘Tchaikovsky “Who Is Sylvia”__ -Schubert “In the Silent Nigh Rachmaninoff Report of Committee on National Defense Through Patriotic Educa- tion: Mrs. Vinton Earl Sisson, chairman. Address: “Military Training as a Factor in Education,” Sveinbjorn Johnson. Music: Phyllis Raymond, mezzo-s0- prano; Mrs. James Shera Mont- gomery, accompanist. “When I Have Sung My pring : “Youth's Viewpoint, Ruth Rose Richardson. Address: “Democracy and Constitu- tional Government,” Judge John J. Parker. Announcements. Recess. " Miss we'll have in the family in years to come,” said great-grandmother Grandmother allowed she was worn out with being hospitable for the D. A. R. convention and mother said she was pretty tired answering ques- tions and looking after daughter. Joan Marie, not the least bit nerv- ous about presenting flowers to the First Lady, merely smiled and played with the buttons on her Colonial dress. - ‘ 01d Bibles Still Used. | AUSTIN, Tex. (#).—Family B)blu‘ brought into Texas 50 years ago are still in general use. Investigators for the Texas Old | Age Assistance Commission have been shown more than 100,000 such Bibles by persons seeking to qualify for old- | age pensions. | to your brush. So nates your mouth, your sense of tasl p Sixes & Eights IMMEDIATE DELIVERY| WE NEED USED CARS Flood Motor Co. Direct Factory Dealer 4221 Connecticut Ave. Clev. 8400 & Place Watch Repairs in Expert Hands For expert workman- ship and careful atten- tion—entrust your watch to our repair de- partment. CONVENIENT TERMS s MKt 1114 F ST. N.W. IRIUM SWINGS AMERICA 10 MODERNIZED TOOTH POWDER Pepsodent alone of tooth powders contains this thrilling scientific discovery for giving teeth amazing new luster! 3 L MUSICAL BARBERS! 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