Evening Star Newspaper, January 20, 1924, Page 36

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MME . ANTONIUS PIIP, Wife of the Minister of Esthonta THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTO! Who arrived here withh him at the close of e old yeax. Social Life of Capital Enlivened by Honor Paid To Members of Congress President and Mrs. Coolidge to Attend Reception Tendered Solons by Congressional Club. Week's Schedule of Hospitalities. SALLIE V. H. PICKETT. HE President and Mrs. Coolidge will give to the social life of the Capital this week the dignity and balance their appearance in public always lends, meeting almost the entire body of Congress at the annual reception in their honor at the Congressional Club tomorrow night, when the president and members of the club will be hosts. Both Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge have a particular pride in the Con- gressional Club, and especially does the mistress of the White House appreciate the highly important place it occupies in the lives of official women. Being non-political, both democrats and republicans will greet the honor guests. Thursday night the President and Mrs. Coolidge will give another of the series of state dinners, entertaining in honor of the Supreme Court. BINET members contributed more than their usual share to social life, the Secretary of War and Mrs. Weeks entertaining the Presi- dent and Mrs. Coolidge at dinner Thursday night, asking a number of important Masschusetts folk to meet them. The Secretary of State and Mrs. Hughes were several times entertained during the week, being guests of the minister and Mme. Elizalde Tuesday night. Thursday night they, in turn, entertained at dinner for the dean of the diplomatic corps, the ambassador of France and Mme. Jusserand. FITTING close to the week was the dance given last night by Mrs. Richard H. Townsend—who occupies in Washington’s social life a parallel position to that of the late Mrs. Astor in New York—when the cream of the various social sets, official, diplomatic and resident, were guests. Diplomatic days at home afforded society folk a mad rush Fri- day afternoon, and Tuesday afternoon the minister of Pirsia was host to some hundreds of guests, who gave the new legation a “house-warm- ing” and prepared it for the important rank the present minister has given it in the diplomatic corps. 'OMORROW night will bring a wealth of entertainment in diversified form, next in importance to the reception in honor of the President and Mrs. Coolidge, being the Washington Opera Company’s presentation of "Tal:s‘of Hoffman,” when such sponsors as the Spanish ambassador and Senora de Riano, the ambassador of Germany and Frau Wiedfeldt and almost the entire roster of the diplomatic corps and official society will carry it to success. MANY dinner parties will precede the reception at the Congressional Club and the opera, the Secretary of War and Mrs. Weeks being honor guests at the dinner party which Representative and Mrs. Allen C. Treadway will entertain, and Mrs. Henry F. Dimmock has on a dinner in honor of Sir Auckland Geddes, retiring ambassador of Great Britain. A NOTHER propitious event for Monday night is the dinner party the ambassador of Italy, Prince Caetani, is to entertain at the embassy in honor of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and Mrs. William Howard Taft. The minister of the Netherlands and Mme. de Graeff will give a dinner for the Secretary of State and Mrs. Hughes, and innumer- able supper parties are planned to follow the opera. THERE is the liveliest sort of interest shown in the card party and tea to be given in the ballrooms of the New Willard the afternoon of “ebruary 20 for the benefit of Russian refugees, when Mrs. Lansing and Mme. Ekengren have arranged not only for a card party, but a tea at 5 o'clock, when there will be a program of Russian song and dance. Of the various movements for Greck relicf nothing could be more fas- cinating than the tearbom established on H street, where one is sure to meet the very cream of Washington’s younger set. Mrs. R. H. Townsend Gives |Philippine Collegians Brilliant, Exclusive Ball] Honor Congress Members Mrs. Richard H. Townsend gave 2 ball that for brilliancy and ex- clusiveness has not been equalled in ‘Washington in many years past. Her more than 300 guests included the ambassadors, ministers and lesser éiplomats of the diplomatic corps, representatives-of the administration and of smart soclety in Washington, New York and Philadelphia. In the imposing company were the ambas- sador of Spain and Senora de Riano, the ambassador of Belglum and Baroness de Cartier, the ambassador of Brazil, Mr. Agusto Cochrane de Alencar, the ambassador of Greatl Britain, Sir Auckland Geddes, who previous to the ball was the guest at dinner of Mrs. Marshall Field; the ambassador of Italy, Prince Caetani, and others of the corps. Mrs. Townsend has discontinued the ball which she gave annually the night of Pebruary 12, and the splen- did event of Jast night replaced it One of the largest and most bril- liant events of last week was the reception and ball given at the Wil- lard Hotel by the Philippine Col- leglans of America, in honor of the Senate committee on territorfes and insular possessions and House com- mittee on insular affairs of the United States. The guests numbered about 800, including members of the con- gressional set, Army and Navy and resident society. The committee in charge of the affair included Mr. G. Umali, Mr. L. Capayas, Mr. S. Almiranez, Mr. P. de Leon and Mr. E. Cornejo. Georgetown University Hospital Theater Party The Georgetown University. Hos- pital will give its annual theater party Monday, February 4, at the National Theater, when the per- formance will be “Merton of the Moviey” - i Wife of Egypt‘s Envoy Thoroughly Familiar With Customs of U. S. All Attaches of Embassy Are Garbed in Conventional Style, Bringing None of Nile Picturesqueness With Them. s The coming of a minister from Egypt, In itself an epochal event, gathers additional Interest from the fact that Seifoullah Yousry Pasha and his staft mark the establishment of, the fiftieth separate independent nation holding friendly relations with the United States. Of these, thirteen are represented by ambassadors, thirty-three by ministers and four by a permanent charge d'affaires. The ancient land of the Nile is for the first time represented In the new world, and in the staff of the minister there has been added a new reli- gion to the many already in existence here, that of the Prophet Mohammed, one of the oldest and most powerful of existing creeds and possessing &8 many followers in the aggregate as the Christian faith. A Mohammedan priest, Mohammet Tamara {s a mem- ber of the minister's staff, and will administer religious consolation to the Kgyptians for the time being in the suite of rooms in the New Wil- lard where the legation has been established, but later, perhaps, in a separate edifice or part of one. The Egyptian minister has as & confrere already established in Washington, 8o far as following the prophet goes, the Persian minister, Mirza Hussein Khan Alal. Should diplomatic rela- tions be resumed with the new re- public of Turkey, & third envoy of the Mohammedan faith will be added to the diplomatic corps of Washing- ton. But supreme interest centers in the wife of the Egyptian minister, Prin- Zenab, niece of the former sultan khedive, but since 1922 known as Fouad I, King of Egypt. The princess is Fouad's nlece, the daugh- ter of one of his several brothers and one of the eighteen pripcesses of khedivial rank enumeratfd by the Almanach de Gotha and the British court circular. She was married to the distinguished diplomat, who was then an undersecretary of state un- der the khedivial government, and has in recent years accompanied him to London and Paris, whither his dutles on various international tri- bunals called him. Princess Zenab represents the new order for women of her faith, which was brought about by the upheaval caused in Constan- tinople and other capitals where the state religion was that of the Prophet Mohammed, by the collapse of the Turkish empire. She has been care- fully educated, and as Egypt was a protectorate of Great Britain in her youth, an English governess had a leading part in her instruction, and she knows not only the language and literature of Great Britain and in- cidentally of this country, but also the spirit which pervades ity femi- nine world. Princess Zenab will min- gle in the soclal life of Washington when household arrangements are completed and all preliminaries in- cldent to the coming of a new dip. iomatic household have been settled. At the present the minister is changing the suite which had been engaged for some months prior to his coming, with a view of securing far more space for his chancelry and more privacy and comfort for his family. He will as soon as spring opens select a home, possibly one with spaclous grounds, but in the meantime he will remain at the hotel until he is more familiar with the situation in Washington. . Princess Zenab and ' her young daughter, the Princess Loutsla, who is just Zollow-. MME. PETERSEN, wife of the new Danish Counselor Helmer- Petersen President and Mrs. Coolidge | ToEntertainSupremeCourt Stately Function in Honor of Members Is Program for Thursday Night — Capital's Social Calendar. The President and Mrs. Coolidge will entertaln at dinner Thursday night In honor of the Supreme Court, the affair being one of the most stately of the series of prescribed state functions. Postmaster General and Mrs. Harry S. New will entertain at dinner at the Hamilton Hotel February 8. Secretary and Mre. Hubert Work will be the guests of honor of Third Assistant Postmaster General and Mrs. Glover at _dinner Tuesday evening, February 5, at the Wardman Park Hotel. Senator and Mrs. Henry Wilder Keyes entertained informally at din- ner last evening at Meridian Man- sions, in compliment to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jackson of New Hampshire. Mrs. Marshall Field was hostess to a distinguished company of forty- four at dinner last evening, in her home on 16th street, when her guests included the ambassador of Spain and Senora de Riano, the retiring ambassador of Great Britain, Sir Auckland Geddes: the ambassador of Italy, Don Gelasio Caetanl Secretary of War and Mrs. Weeks. The company later attended the dance given by Mrs. Richard H. Townsend in her Massachusetts avenue home. Mrs. John Stewart McLennan en- tertained at dinner last evening, pre- ceding Mrs. Townsend's dance. Mrs, McLennan will entertain at dinner Wednesday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Newbold Morris of New York. Gen, and Mrs. Hanson E. Ely will entertain a company at dinner Feb- ruary 8. Mrs, Benjamin H. Warder gave a dinner, with dancing, last evening at Grasslands Coutry Club for her grand- son, Mr. Berjamin Thoron., Myrs. Adam M. Wyant will be hostess at luncheon tomorrow, entertaining in compliment to Mra. Victor Kauff- mann, who will sail shortly for an ex- tended trip abroad. Mrs. Charles P. Keyser will enter- tain at tea this afternoon from 5 to 7 o'clock at her residence, 1620 De- catur street, for her daughter, Miss Catherine eyser, in compliment to Miss Helen ~Winifred Humphreys, ———————————————————— Ing the Washington routine of leav- ing cards on all the officfal world and all the diplomatic corps of higher or equal rank who are prior resi- dents of the Capital. receive the visits in return and, perhaps, have some amenities on their own account. But until the minister has been received by the President and made his round of visits, nothing of a formal order will be announced. There are two other children in the minister's house- hold, & son Wahid, who is fifteen, and a tiny girl with flashing dark eyes, Nimet, who aged five. There ai 2 first, second and third secretary, besides a large staff of clerks and household retainers. But all of the latter are garbed in comventional wektern apparel, and the anticipa. tion that some of the picturesquene: of the Nile would be tran the banks of the Potomac is proving a disappointment. The minister is a graduate of Oxford, and holds ath- letic_as well as scholastic record: and he, his family and his staff speak English perfectly, and are prepared to ter into the ways of the western world with sympathy and under- and the | Miss? Mary Smithwick and guegt, Miss Catherine Mcl Penzacols, Fla. Mrs Keyser assf3ted by Mrs, Clevel ton: Mrs. John H. Sm Ot2 J. Rogers, Mrs. George batd and Mrs. Pratt, Miss Hendricks, Miss Catherir Mgs Anne Poliard, Miss E Ifield, Miss Harriet Mitchell Miss Sarah Major her house ne of will b New- Mre, Hul gin inks abeth and hwick, 2Mr. and Mrs. Chandler P. Anderson atertained a company of eighteen at | ginner last evening, their guests in- uding_the members of the United States-German mixed claims commis- #ton. Mrs. Willlam Laird Dunlop, ir., gave a tea party yesterday afternoon at Le Paradis for her niece, Miss Frances Powell Dunlop, . her other guests being Miss Janet Moffett, Mies Eu- genia_Lojeune, Miss Peggy West, Miss Dorothy Kimmell, Mr. Hunting- ton Turner,” Mr. Lewis Watson, Mr. {Francis Green, Mr. Heath Golds- borough and Mr. Robert Peter. The little cabinet will give its next dinner at the Hamilton Hotel the eve- ning of February 4. The cabinet also will entertain at dinner at the Hamil- ton on March 3 and April 7. |, Miss Elizabeth Hanna will be hostess at a dinner of about thirty | covers at the Hamilton Hotel March 1, which will be followed by a dance, | when about 200 additional guests will | be asked. Mrs. Bernard B. Jones will enter- tain at tea the Sunday afternoon of February $ from 5 to 7 o'clock in compliment to Mrs. G. Aubrey David- eon of San Diego, Calif., and Mrs. Mark B. Lewis of Los Angeles. Mr. Charles W. Fairfax entertained a company of twelve at luncheon yes- terday at the Willard Hotel in honor of Commissioner Cuno Rudolph. Mr. and Mrs. R, H. Govin will have 2 company of ten lunching with them today. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Norment will entertain at dinner this evening in compliment to Mme. Picclo, wife of the chief of the Itallan air service, who is visiting her brother-in-law, the charge d'affaires of Austria and Mme. Prochnik. There will be twelve guests in the company. Mrs. Richard B. Dear was hostess to a company of fifty at luncheon Wednesday, entertaining in her home, 1624 16th street, when she was as- sisted by her daughter, Mrs. Dear Patten; Mrs. D. R. Dear and Mrs. ‘Willlam Richard Dear. Mrs, Richard B, Dear recently re- turned from a visit to her nephew and niece, Maj. and Mrs. D. R. Dear, at Fort Eustis, Va, and was accom- panied on her return by Mrs. Dear. Dr. and Mrs. L. W. Eugster are en- tertaining at dinner Wednesday even- ing in compliment to Col. and Mrs. Arthur Winton Brown, who have just returned from the Canal Zone, and Commander and Mrs. Oscar Badger, who are just back from the orient. Dr. and Mrs. Macpherson Crichton entertained at dinner at the Chevy Chase Club last evening in homor of Mr, Gabriel Bie Ravndal, consul gen- eral of the United States at Constan- tinople. * The guests included Senator and Mrs. William H. King, Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Potter, Mrs. John Allen Daugherty and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Norris Rickey, Mr. A. H. Ryan entertained a party of twenty guests at Le Paradis for the sADper partye N, D. C, JANUARY 20, 1924—PART 2. Society Hostesses List Their “At Homes," Specifying Dates | Receptions and Other Social Features Chronicled for the Information of Society Wcrld. Mrs. Sutherland will receive to- morrow from 4 to 6 o'clock for the last time this season. Assisting her Wwiil be Mrs. Lawrence Phipps, Mrs. B. Carroll Reese, Mrs. Theodore Roose- velt, jr, Mrs. Wade H. Ellls, Mrs. Chauncey Parker and Mrs. James Brown Scott. Mrs. Sutherland enter- tained a small company at lunch and bridge Friday. Mrs. Kendrick and Miss Rosa Maye Kendrick, wife and daughter of Sen- ator John B. Kendrick of Wyoming, will be at home this afternoon in their apartment at Meridian Man- sions, Mrs. Dale, wife of Senator Porter H. Dale of Vermont, and Mrs. Fess, wife of Senator Simeon D. Fess of Ohio, will receive together Thursday afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock at 144 B street northeast. Mrs. Cooper, wife of Representative Henry Allan Cooper of Wisconsin, will be at home Wednesday afternoom at the Rochambeau, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Mrs. Wyant, wife of Representative Adam M. Wyant of Pennsylvania, wili be at home informally Tuesday after- noon, January 29, whey she will have receiving with her Mrs, Thomas S. Crago. Mrs. Lehlbach, wife of Represent- atlve Frederick R. Lehlbach of New Jersey, will recelve informally Tues- day afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock at 1801 16th street. Mrs. Phillips, wife of Representa- tive Thomas W. Phillips, jr., of Penn- sylvania, will not be at home Tues- day, but will receive Tuesday, Jan- vary 29, Mrs. Rush L. Holland, wife of As- sistant attorney general, and Mrs. W. Irving Glover, wire of the third assistant postmaster general, will be iat home in Mrs. Glover's apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel Wednes- da afternoon, January 30, from 4 1, 6 o'clock. Mrs. Stanton J. Peelle and her daughter, Miss Betty Byrne, will be at home at Meridian Mansion Friday afternoon, following the luncheon party at which Mrs. Peelle will en- tertain for her daughter. Mrs, Grayson, wife of Reaf Ad- miral Cary T. Grayson, will not be at home tomorrow afternoon, but will recelve the remaining Monday after- noons until Len Mrs. John A. Lejeune, wife of the commandant of the Marine Corps, will not be at home tomorrow, but will receive Monday, January 28, Col. and Mrs. Weston P. Chamber- lain will be at home at 1835 16th street northwest.from 4 to 6:30 o'clock this afternoon. Mme. Calderon and Misa Calderon will be at home this afternoon at 2021 Kalorama road, and their guest Mrs. Moore Lathrop, will be with them. Miss Mary Alsop Cryder will re. celve Sunday afternoons until Aprfl in her home at 2019 I street. Mrs. Watson Freeman Clark: and her daughter, Miss Charlotte Free- man Clark, will be at home Monday afternoon, ‘Webruary ¢ and 11. Mrs, B, A, Harriman will be at’ B T K Diplomatic Corps Members Prominent in Social Whirl Serics Of Bl’illi&l‘lt Dinner parties. Luncheons and Afternoon Reception s Mark the Season’s Gay Calendar. Dinner parties, luncheons and after- noons at home bring the diplomatic corps constantly in the ranks of those entertaining, and the Secretary of State and Mrs. Hughes are sched- | uled as guests of honor at a number of dinner parties. The ambaseador of Belgium and | Baroness de Cartler will have guests lunching with them today at the em- bassy. The retiring ambassador of Great Britain, Sir Auckland Geddes, will sall from New York Saturday for hir home in England, where he will join | Lady Geddes and their children. The | newly appointed ambassador, Sir Esme Howard, is expected to come t¢ this country early next month. Sir Auckland and Lady Geddes will be greatly missed, not only in the officlal and diplomatic circres, but by many members of resident circles, for they are among the most popular of the diplomatio representatives in Washington. 1 The minister of China, Mr. Sao- Ke Alfred Sze, will return today from ghlclgo. where he has been for a few ays. The minister of Hungary, Count Szechenyi, who arrived in Europe yesterday, will make a short visit in >aris before going to Hungary. He 1s expected to return to this country at the end of next month. Senora de Arcaya, wife of the min- ister of Venezuela, will be at home this afternoon from 4 to 7 o'clock. The minister of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, Dr. Ante Tresich Pav chich, will be hoat at dinner Wedne: day, February 20, when his guests will be asked to meet the Secretary of State and Mrs. Hughes. ‘The minister will go to New York Thursday to attend the meeting of the Jugoslav-American Soclety, which will be presided over by its president, Gen. Bliss. Dr. Pavichich will return at the end of the week. The ambassador of France and Mme. Jusserand will be guests of honor of the minister at dinner Thursday evening, January 31. The minister of Costa Rica, Sir Don J. Rafael Oreamuno, will be host 0 a company of twelve at luncheon today at the legation on Massachu- setls avenul The minister entertained at dinner last evening, when his guests num- bered ten. The minister of Csechoslovakia, Dr. Chvalkovsky, was host at din- ner last evening entertaining a com- pany of fifteen at the legation. His guests were the minister of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, Dr. Pavichich; the minister of Siam: Phya Burl Navarasth; the charge d'affaires of Greece and Mme. Tsam: dos, the secretary of the Greek le- gation, Mr. Diamantopoulos, and his sister, Mille. Nina Diamantopoulos; . and Mrs. Tom A. Williams, and ——— home at 1302 18th street this after- noon from 4 to 6 o'clock, and will have with her Mrs. John Q. Tfluoni nd Mrs, E. Hart Fenn of Connecti- cut. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin will recelve this afternoon from 4 to 6:30 o'clock at Graystone and will be assisted by the latter's mother and sister, Mrs. Delos A. Blodgett and Mrs. David St. Plerre Galllard, and! Mrs. Robert Clement Watson, who will preside at the tea table. Mrs. Frank Hight will be at home tomorrow afternoon, when she will have assisting her Mrs. George H. Moses, Mrs. Lyman B. Kendall. Mrs. Joseph Wall, Mrs. Victor Kauffmann ; and Mrs. Willlam Bowle Chipman. Mrs. C. C. Black and Miss Ethel Black will receive tomorrow after- noon from 4 to 8:30 o'clock in their home at 1870 Wyoming avenue. 2 Mrs. George 8. Duncan will be at home from 3 to b o'clock the third ‘Thursday of each month in her home at 2900 7th street. Mrs. Emory Land will not receive this afternoon. Mrs. Emerson Howe will be at home tomorrow afternoon after 4 o'clock at 1302 18th street, when she will have with her her daughter, Senora de Gonszales Prada, wife of the charge d'affaires of Peru. Mrs. Reeve Lewis will be at home informally this afternoon at her resi- dence, 2124 Bancroft street. Mrs. Wilton J. Lambert will be at home Friday afternoon after 5 o'clock at her residence 1038 Vermont avenue. Miss Ruth Stoddard will be at hom toformally = this fternoon after 9" olocky o 4 the staff of the Czechoslovak lega- tion. The charge Senor Don_O been joined by Sencra de ruys in their apartment @ man_Park Hotel, after : several months i The counselor bassy and Mme. de Laboulaye have issued invitations for dinner Mon- day evening, January 2§ visit of ¢ in Chile The counselor of the Norwegian le- gation and Mme. Steen gave a sup- per party Friday evening, entertain- ing a small company informally L'Aiglon. Mr. and Mme. Steen ha as their guests, Mr. and Mrs. F. Pirie of New York. A attache of the British frs. Charlton will en- tertain dinner Tuesday even Col. Mrs. Chariton also be hosts at dinner Saturday preceding the dance which th lors of the British embassy will give that evening at the Columbia Country Club. The naval attache of the Ttallan embassy and Contessa Sommati di Mombello will entertain informally at supper Tuesday evening in their home on 18th street. The secretary of the Japanese em- bassy, Mr. Elichi Kimura, has been promoted to counselor of the em- bassy, and on the departure of Mr. Sadao Saburi in March, will assume his duties. Mrs. Eric Buxton, wife of the com- merelal secretary of the British e bassy, will be at home Tuesday after- noon, January 29 in her apartment at the Highlands. of the Danish lega- onow Bojse pany of at’ the The secretary tion, Mr. A tained a col last evenin; Hotel. Benefit Card Party Plan of D. A. R. Chapter The Federal City Chapter, D. A. R., will give a benefit card party at the Hotel Hamilton Wednesday evening, January 30. Mrs. Malhon A. Winter, Mrs. Cope- land Jones, Mrs. Albert Aldous, Miss Kathleen Nalle, Mrs. Albert Fender- son, Mrs. E. K. Woodward, Miss Estelle Price, Mrs. George E. Chadsey and Mrs. Royal L. Shuman are among those who have alr engaget tables. Mrs. Mary K. Nalle is chairman of committee on arrangements. She assisted by Mrs. E. Chadset, R. L. Shuman Engagements to Wed Formally Made Public Gen. and Mrs Scriven announce the engagement of their daughter Kath- erine to Mr. Detlow Mainch Marthin- son of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dusenbury Shelden announced the engagement of their daughter Annette Alger to Mr., Stephen Theodofe Stackpole at a dinner which they gave Sunday evening in their home, “Deepland on Grosse Pointe shores, near De- troit. Miss Shelden is & granddaugh- ter of the late Senator Russell A. Alger, who also was_Secretary o War during the late President Wil- liam McKinley's administration. Mr. Stackpole now lives in Detroit, but formerly lived in Boston. He is a graduate of St. Paul’s, N. H,, and of Harvard University. Mr. and Mrs, Thomas M. Anderson announce the engagement of their daughter Nell Trabue to Mr. Samuel Stuart Spence. The wedding will take place quletly at the home of the bride January 81. Mrs. Louts D. Passano of Baltimore nnounced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Virginia D'Arcy Pas- sano, to Mr. Campbell R. Williams of this city, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Willlams. Miss Passano_ {s the granddaughter of the late Virginia D'Arcy and the late Herman von Kapft. No date has been set for the wedding. Monday Supper Club Will Dance Tomorrow Evening The fifth dance of the Monday Eve- ning_Supper Club tomorrow evening at the Hamilton Hotel will be fol- lowed by a latc supper after mid- night. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Alblon will entertain the stars In the Wash- ington Opera Company’s presentation of “Tales of Hoffman" earlier in the evening, at the Supper Club. Others who_will have guests with them at the Supper Club will be Mrs. Joseph Stoddard, Mrs. Pearl Moore Gray, Octavius Mendez, Mrs. Helen, Bay Hagoer and a_number 0f others. at Concord, , ] ) L2 L

Other pages from this issue: