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The famous new drink of Hollywood ew York: Berved for the first time in Wi THE F:B.L* HAVE DISCOVERED THIS CHEESE IS SO RICH YOU CAN WHIP IT! (Christ Child Society Is Told Boys’ Clubs Can Cut Crime Dr. Nolan Praises Guidance; National Convention Closes Praising the work of the Merrick Boys’ Club in its effort to reduce | juveniie delinquency in Washing- ton, Dr. James A. Nolan last night told more than 200 members and del- egates to the seventh biennial con- vention of the National Christ Child Society that the club was “a lamp of love and courage” to local youths. | Dr. Nolan, director of the Wash- ington Criminal Justice Associa- tion, was the principal speaker at the closing session of the three-day convention, held at the Mayflower Hotel. Pointing to an increasing national crime record among juveniles, based on statistics of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the speaker de- clared that since 1936 the per- centage of serious crimes committed | by youths under 21 had increased | potably. “In about 20 per cent of | the cases the defendants are crim- inals before they are citizens,” he THE, EVE~ING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1940. both for peace and for t! he benefac- | in the newly prepared Chapel of the | lecture on the Augustinian Order WED 59 YEARS —Mr. and Mrs. William C. White, 2116 Thirteenth street S.E., who celebrated their 59th wedding anniversary April 19. Mr, White, 81, retired from the navy yard, is a native Wash- ingtonian, and his wife, 79, is from Charles County, Md. They have one child. —Harris-Ewing Photo. cities and 3¢ branch organizations attended the convention. The 1942 conclave will be held at St. Paul, Minn,, the Board of Directors an- nounced. Engineering Students Meet Today at G. W. U. More than 100 student members C. U. to Mark May As Month of Prayer In response to the plea of Pope Plus XII that the month of May be dedicated to prayers for peace, Bishop Joseph M. Corrigan, rector of Catholic University, announced today that throughout the month — have ug of poor vision ACT TODAY! ((/xam[rzea there will be Adoration of the Most Blessed Bacrament in the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception from 8 am. until 8 pm. Students at the university, relig- fous and lay, will maintain a con- tinuous vigil throughout the day. Every hour prayers will be recited tors of the university. Benediction of the Most Blessed Sgcrament will be offered at 7:30 o'clock each eve- ning by a member of the university faculty or from the afiliated Houses of Study. The Adoration, the pray- ers and benediction will take place A-13 Blessed Sacrament in the Shrine. Lectur~ ~n Augustinians ‘The Very Rev. Denis J. Kavanagh, O. 8. A, superior of the Augustinian College at Catholic University, will tonight at 8 o'clock in Martin Ma- loney Chémical Laboratory on the university campus. The lecture is one of a series on Catholic orders. Germans now control four big airlings in Mexico. Add Color to the Home with Gay New Furniture! | said. of the American Society of Civil | “Criminal Culture” Offset. (o t t ficta Engineers from Catholic University, | Crime is not a matter of chance but of choice, Dr. Nolan asserted, and | the University of Maryland, Johns | the remedy is to create “a law-abid- | Hopkins and George Washington | ing culture” by means of organiza-| University will gather at the latter institution today for their regional g[( 1$8¢5 ON G redit! ions such as boys’ clubs to offset | the less-demanding ‘“criminal cul-| meeting. | ture.” Clubs develop personal in- Dean Frederick E. Feiker of the terests when intelligently directed | host university’s engineering school |and teach the boys proper conduct| was scheduled to welcome the dele- and responsibilities, he added. | gates. “Where we have failed most in our| Merle Thorpe, editor of. Nation’s drive on juvenile delinquency,” Dr.| Business, will speak at the dinner Nolan said, “is in securing the ap-|at 6 pm. at Wesley Hall, 1703 K proval of growing youths to our|street N.W. platform of ethics and standards of Development of honor- | able ideas and principles is made | attractive by boys’' club programs, a medium that promises to make | great strides in solving the delin- | quency problem, he stated. Mrs. Willlam Kittle, first presi- |dent of the Washington chapter of the National Federation of Settle~ ments, a leader in a legislative cam= paign for a minimum wage law for women in the District, enacted in 1937, and now a member of the wage board, reviewed results of the law on the earning power of 35000 non-skilled woman workers in its|- three-year existence. She cited sta- | tistics taken from a cross-section | survey made one year after passage | of the law to show that the level of Washington’s unskilled woman | | workers had been raised consider- | ably, thereby easing the load of so- B docr cial workers. Mrs. Kittle advocated{ ,,’pc automatically additional legislation along that line disconacts battery as a further social aid. | switch, Cannot “Legislate Morality.” | | Agreeing that laws were needed | to improve the economic condition | of poor families, Father Francis |Lyon, C. S. P, of old St. Mary's | Church, San Francisco, Calif., de- clared, however, that laws do not prevent crime. Regardless of the number of laws enacted, Father Lyon said, “we cannot build walls |strong enough to withstand the | ravages of human’ nature—sin and immorality. Regardless of legisla. tion, charity will always be with us. It is impossible, he warned, to “legis- $1ate morality into existence.” Father Lyon said the remedy would be found when the people of the world ‘sought to follow the example of the love and charity of Jesus Christ. The nearest approach to that principle, he declared, was in the type and kind of work done by the National Christ Child Soclety and its associated agencies. Other speakers on the program were Mrs. Arthur F. Mullen of Omaha, Nebr, presiding officer at the convention, and Mrs. Frederick | Murphy, a member of the board of | the Washington Christ Child Society, | who read four original poems, one | of which was in honor of Miss Mary V. Merrick, founder and permanent president of the organization. Mrs. Frederick E. Altemus of the Washington unit was toastmistress. Miss Mary O'Donoghue, accom- panied by Mrs. Cecilia O'Dae Krog= mann at the piano, sang several songs to add a musical note to the evening’s program. Sixty delegates representing 14 3 DIFFERENT TEMPTING WAYS 572 Seove RECIPE Casserele of Heinz Oven-Baked Beans— Cut 3 slices bacon into squares, then fry till crisp with 2 tbs. chopped onion and X cup chopped green pepper. Pour off excess fat. Add1cupchopped celery and 2 medium (18-o0z.) tins Heinz Oven-Baked Beans, Boston-style. Pour into casserole —sprinkle bits of raw bacon over top—bake in moderate oven (375°F.) 40 minutes. “THEY'RE DINING OUT TONIGHT, SIR. .o We were all out of COLLEGE INN tomato fuice COCKTAIL” A RICH bedroom grouping in the much favored 18th Century styling, of Honduras mahogany veneers on hardwoods. 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