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—PART i THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.” APRIL 12, 192 Judge Lynn Chapter met Tuesday|will be applied to further patriotic come quite favorable, while the vibra- senee of friendship is highly unselfl % 3 the Misses Ei-|activities. tions are stimulating and exhilarat-| ang there is no sacrifice that April Bride 335::[ xn:::h:e:ql:‘: :’(lreele Additional| Contributions were m‘allc to tne| | What TomorrowMeans to You \(nx. These ullznu denote (hll'i an)l'“e{; i e mis ror s ot P. Crom- | Chapter House Corporation, also to —_— orts made along conservative lines | ¥ nake f¢ g vard BY MARY BLAKE. will reap the success that they merit, | Who 18 considered by you a r 180 you hostesses were Mrs. t well and Miss Elsie Krey. Mrs. Harry | the State historic committee, B. Gaus, regent, presided. the placing of a marker on the World but there should not be created too ":;:r’m’:‘ s mn’{'l*;;:d ffif“}l‘fu"( Bl ‘Miss Virginia Price, chalrman of|War camp -site at American Univer- i much optimism, as the indications are | :FNELY exemplified in your family Columbia Chapter gave a card party | The kenior meeting wad followed the finance committee, gave a satis- [sity. A sum was also set aside for Aries. that hopes will be very high, and it|relationship, and you ire the es- ‘April 4, at the Capitol Park Hotel. Dur- ! by an informal dance. factory report on the benefit card|renovating the fence and bronze is better to go slowly than experi- < E c y e 1d who love you. ity en @ iss | marker on milestone No. 8, on the| Tomorrow’s planetary aspects aré|ence a disappointment thoss you love and 3 party %’,’;rs‘l‘mn TT: r‘:‘:";‘:u:: l:‘bc northwest boundary of the District at [on the whole rather more favorable|™ Any child brought into the world d‘:‘;l1:rbnf,\m:lwrer]!lgrr;fll:or‘r:u:A‘r\“iv::vq turned: over o the state committee | Pinehurst. This work fs in co-opera. | than adverse. In the morning how-|tomorrow will enfoy fairly normal |date are James Ias per. puslistier for the District room. in Memorial | tion with and under the direction of | ever, a sense.of disappointment and nealth during its early childhood, but |Seth Adwma, inventor; Henr: ~: All Continental Hall, the State historic committee. Report | dissatisfaction will be felt, which cun | will be subject to the ordinary aii- meral; T. E - e o Noaved] v I e aiye Crist was Voted| g ikefiela Memorial Association by |the force' of Charaster necessary to]and saveful sieiianes il avors man Mrs. Robbins moved that the|several of the chapter members. A[overcome these transitory feclings.|dire consequences, and there is no chapter place a brass plate on the|SUm was appropriated for the State|Toward noon the aspects assume a|reason why this =hild should not at- flag purchased years ago by the|flag and toward the fund for the Peale|very much more propitious charac-|tein physical normalcy. Tempera- intermission refreshments were f.’.fwdf‘ Mrs. George B. Ashby was in| The State Hixtoric committee met at 2 Sy Continental Hall, Thursday morning. £hesgs’ of arcAngernent Mra: Joseph H. Wheat, Btate Ristorien, Abigail Hartman Rice Chapter. D.|presided A. R. of which Mrs. Jasper B. Beall Is| Twenty-two historians, eight of- Tegent, met at the home of Miss Phoebe | ficers and vice chairmen responded Xnappen, Tuesday. The reports of the | to roll call. officers and chairmen of the various| Mrs. Faris, chairman of historic committees were accepted by the mem-|and literary reciprocity committee, made of contributions to the only be overcome by self-control and|ments of infancy. Regular nutrition | SCONOMIFt; Samuel H. Scusjer, scien- bership. The regent, Mrs. Beall, read [reported that three papers had been chapter In honor of Mrs. Donald Mc- | POTtrait of George Washington. | ter'and later oh In tho afternoon be- (mentally its character will be gen- n comprehensive report which she hadlfiled with her committee. ~“The Lean, former president-general. The | Flans were perfected for (he send-|_ —— | erous and kind-hearted, while its dis- ‘ presented to the State conference at Declaration of Independence,” by Mrs. flag Is to be placed in the museum | p¥ O % "O% OF SO A8 e Teland, position is inclined to be affectiona Bring In This Ad Before its recent meeting, A communication)MacGrath; “Customs and Manners of was also read by the regent from Mrs. | Dutch New York, ¢ Mrs. Webste Ellen Spencer Mussey, a former State|and “The First American Women regent, and founder and organizer of | by Eva Elizabeth Luke g the Washington College of Law. Asal-| Mrs. H. H. Thompson, vice chair- ready known, Mrs. Mussey has done |Man of historic spots committee, told very splendid work in her school, and [the committec a marker had been 15 naturally most desirous of interesting | Selected, subject to the approval of a1l young women in the study of law. | the trustees of American University, Mrs. Frank Morrison, as chairman |t0 be placed on the grounds marking of ways and means, reported to the|the site of Camp A n Univer- membership a substantial sum real- | Sity and Camp Leéach. of the D. A. R. Hall. Miss Louise Foster has been ap- pointed page for the annual congress and Mrs. Charles C. Haig and Mrs. Charles §. Schermerhorn have been appointed to the house committee. Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey was the guest of honor. She gave a talk on the history of the Washington Col- > 3 3 lege of Law, in which she has played | (% 0 1% Na(00 by, briveing (0BSEEE | eq (o mmemborship this child should be encouraged and | to prominent a part. The chapter||,"ghem o higher conception of the | The Euest of honor and speaker was |not discouraged. voted unanimously to support the en- |, iyjjeges and obligations of Ameri- [Frof. George Churchill of Maryland,| Is tomorro Vau criday aft- |It. however, will require careful Dokquen, SVisatitigton P'M"r;‘_ “",,'1, training along lines of conservative Mrs. | thought, 80 that in the ebulition of April 19 Among the matters brought to the n attentfon of the chapter by the regent | ®rnoon, with the regent. : . liam R. Talbott, presiding. Sh e m ident gen- o s comm e ampoo 50¢ cral k}’éfiéflé"im‘?fi.fe':} € Milftary | Loughborough gave a report of the |the moment it may not commlt itself | poo. . .. .. b State conference held in Baltimore, | t0 things which it cannot successfully 1 1 :!;’l"nr::‘:h;n:?}‘:fi o x]fl.:mflaru:;‘”r: March 17 and 18, and said that the |CAFFY out. It will be very fond of (= Hagr Dyelqg. ..$4.95 SvEiaR ity the ol State regent had complimented highly | reading and be rather inclined to lit- Hair Bobbin, 50c eaia B Tee b the remarkable growth of the chap-|e€rary efforts. When these signs as-| g. .. Bly ter. Three new applicants were elect- | Sert themselves the inclinations of | Marcelle Wave 75¢ Marcelle & Bob Curl. . §1 your birthday? If so, 1zed as result of the card party given | Mrs. Thompson also spoke of the dowment campaign of that college. | thisen Henta mbers | Who is professor of history In the|yoy have a great deal of perseverance. e at the Hotel Roosevelt in February,|4Zimuth stone. It is now the plan At the close of the business meet-- (o) | '”'u“l:,'d“"if:' e e i eie | George Washington University and |s grear deas of Enitey Am it it g MISS FLE the yroceeds of which are to be given | °f the historic spots committee to ing, Miss Josephine Huber sang. movement and literature regarding|historian for the D. A. R. Magazine. | vorsatile. You, however, are not in- Termicely, o Woadward, & Lotrop & for a scholarship as & living memorial ";‘ = f'“’ “j tion Iof the a‘m‘n‘)m"{ B camps in the District was distributed. | 7o ; h\;\r.vmll x-e?.fxx\x‘xe?uq‘? I)[)c lr;:]u- clined to be argumentative, nor are to Mrs. Ida Offutt Trenis, a former|Stone on its original site, No. torical novel as means of illustrating | yoy the fighting type, but usually B olanad The Colonial John Donclson Chapter| Miss Glassie, the chapter historian, niacs was entertained at its April meeting | presented a humorous paper on the = and honorary regent of the chapter, [Street. The marker will facts and securing the atmosphere of | seck the path of least resistance. You | == Garden Rose and whose work will always be an|there the latter part of April. by Mrs. D. W. Glassie and Miss Ada |quaint characteristics of Lord Stir-|early days. do not desist from any plan you may | piration to all who knew her. This| Mrs. Barber, chairman of the mile Cladsle st theiz ome: 19008 street: ling Gf Fevaationars: tinas _Among the guests were Mrs. A. K. |have in mind because of opposition, | Beauty Parlor report wa stioatly recetveaf slone. committes, rencrted’ th it Following the opening exercises the | The May meeting will be held at the | Keyes of New York, Mrs. Frank Wil- | but rather seek to secure the result | by the memb. pter voted | Mile stone on lker road s more reports of officers and committee |home of the vice regent, Mrs. Louls A. |Son. Mrs. Muncaster and Mrs. Morelle | in another way 1112 H Street N.W. {than two rods below the true line. o c 445 ! ¥ |s chair v 2 ns from | Proctor, in Takoma Park. ruce. You are quite reserved and rather| == Surveyors are to be sent to learn the chairmen were read, Returns in oma a o c: —_— e ne ceting 3 o icative. For this reason | = e et o fo el S. CLIFFORD P, GRANT, the recent benefit card party giver The next meeting will be on May 9, | uncommun | e p e s e e LA mmf"« ftplrll‘ll‘?‘ lm'; hefflv‘v‘:Tmnr-Ih} the_chapter added considerably to| The Colonel Tench Tilghman Chap-|at the Montgom Country Club, | you do not make friends readily, but mm""mm”” 2 ibstantial donation to be the State historian for the m which re to be used to mark _ & . Fashinaton s | Mrs. Barber asked that one member bership, submitted to the chapter the | WOTK on her committee. 2 hrld."mm ¥ e wom ot M. OUNveE f wing names for consideration Alrn '!N”” Lee Rus president | L. Grant. Mrs. Mary Ellen Blanchard McGuire|of the Wakefield Memorial Associa- he names | 1ion, Was present and gave an ac- A 3 3 J Katherine | 0unit of the work being done by that | Chapter, and spoke of the prepara- - . Miller | OTBaNization. tions in progress for the ball to be g e b Sy encer, were |, TWo excellent papers were read.|Eiven by the chapter in honor of the given to the members fot voting, and | -Sarah Franklin,” by Mrs. Harrison, |Pages of the 3ith Continental Con- ¢ Rame were unanimously accepted.|#d “The Forces and Events Which | &ress and of the president-general Miss Gertrude Walter, a guest of the | 1ead to the Framing of the Consti- | o the natio soclety, Mrs. Anthony evening, was presented by Miss Helen | tutlon” by Miss Ada Guitner of 1| Wayne Cook, April 21 at 8:30 p.m.. at B e s Beall, the regent, | Pluribus Unum Chapter. Rauscher's. William Bowie Clark presented Miss Ruth Van Reuter as| g — A will be chairman of the floor commit- & guest and prospective member. Miss | The Susan Riviere Hetzel Chapter's (tce, and the ball promises to be a Olive Prescott and Miss Helen Belt | March meeting was held at the resi-|very brilliant affair. Much business were congratulated by the members|dence of Mrs. Everard Robinson Todd. | was transacted. The treasurer gave Asithe Dages to Feprssint the Abigafl Todd and Mrs. Ryland Crews |a satisfactory report, and the name Hartman Rie bter at the Conti-|Bryant were hostes on that|of one new member was presented, nental Congress, which will convene | 0ccasion. The regent, Miss Withers,| Mre. Willlam T. Clerk, and elected this month. Entertainment was given | Presided. Miss Withers gave a talk | After adjournment refreshments were by Miss Kathryn Hawley, pianist ;cn various subjects of interest to thel served. Franklin2224. Expert Service. I pter treasury and the money |ter met with Mrs. Margaret Lough- | Rockville. those you make you hold, « ©. A. R—The last State executive | meeting of the year was held Thurs- | day morning at 10:30 o'clock at Me- morfal Continental Hall, the State | director, Mrs. Marvin Tyler, presid- | ing. After the recitation of the Americans’ creed, the roll'was called, and the minutes of the last meeting Tead by Mrs. George Bell, secretars Mrs. Volland, treasurer, read he + report, and asked that the account be audited. Mrs. Claughton was asked by Mrs. Tyler to a auditor. | Mrs. Edward Perkins announced that | she had received the name for a new | ty which she has forr the Harriet M. Lothrop Society. An- nouncement was also made by Mrs. | Bertha Robbins that Mrs. Leith had also received the e for her mew | society—the Licut. John Shaw Society. | A motion was made by Mrs. Holz- | berg, and seconded by Mrs. Claughton, that a certain sum be taken from the treasury fom the purpose of giving party to the visiting delegates during 1 conver April, was carried unanimously. It{ was decided to leave the decision as to what .manner of party it would be to Mrs. Tyler and Mrs. Berry. The State director he proposed changes in the State by-laws for the | consideration of the executive board, | after which she made a plea that al papers of new members should be placed in the hall within the next few A I have never before recorded for any reproducing instrument—ACow I have played my works for the AMPICO be- cause of its absolute faithfulness, and its capacity to preserve beautiful tone painting. It goes far behind any re- producing piano in these particulars, which a pianist must demand in con- sidering a perpetuation of his ArT—"" fh&h e QEnabe ‘?E:be The piano—without the touch of life-kindling fingers—is dead. The AMPICO works the miracle of life. The piano answers only imperfectly to the call of the soul for music when stumbling, awk- ward fingers falter over the keys. The AMPICO is the master of technique. Its hair-hung gradations of expression, more- over, are as many as the tempests and the e HMmily, Belsbh CAnpter met for | calms and the in-between cajoleries of artistic the Marc meeting ‘at the home of Py o 0 N Mrs.. Bertha Savage - Davis. -Mrs.| interpretation that in the mastery of the 1 l?s- Davis and Mrs. Sarah Sinclair were ters of Music delight unfailingly appreciative /zc[flmmno Joint hostesses. Mrs. Francis A Clair, chapter regent, presided. ears. Mrs. Walter W. Husband, ¢ . of the State committee on Amer Small wonder that the AMPICO is styled: 1zation, spoke in detail of the work of her committee. Mrs. Chadwick of Drexel Hills, Pa., was also a guest. | Mrs. St. Clair read her which she gave as regent a ference. The chapte ctive along all lines of D. A. R. work. Contribu- tions were made during the year to s various activities, the greatest contri- Co? bution belng made to the chapter re R R bt house, which amounted to $115 dollars Weeithink ot at the time the r was made. And would he not have been at least s Membership in the c steadily I increasing, and ch interest is manifested. THE ALL OF THE PIANO. Could KITT have pleased his Washington better had he chosen to recommend a lesscr plaver-interpreter than the charming AMPI- What 1s meant by “Exclusive Artisr®” . g ight- recreant to his trust had he been content to stop short of putting the KNABE on the top pimnacle of preference in pianos? Gov. Thomas Welles Society, Chil-| Ves. N of the A o lution.. ) V it i i i o & KITE'S. dipenisbiig ot ectmebtitoins’ 1 Giants of the Concert Stage who GO MANY confliting claims are being made concerning the so- ternoon at the home of the president, | doubles cvery customer’s guarantee of long- Mrs. Clayton E. Emig. The registrar, Audrey Belt, reported that papers had | been filed for 25 new members during the past month, closing the campaign for the mational prize ags were presented to a room In John Eaton School through Dorothy Cox and one 4n Rockville, Md.,, through Margaret Virginia England. Mrs. McMullen told storfes and Loulse Allen recited *Your Flag and My Flag.” The story of 2 scrap book made by one of the members and which had brought so much delight to little Betty Knapp at Walter Reed Hos- pital, was recelved with enthusiasm when it was stated that Betty would become a member of the Gov. Thomas Welles Socie It is an unusual co- jncident that therc are 17 of the Junior members whose father’ or mother were earlier members of the society. Mary Burce Mackall, Bugene Hawley, Audrey Belt and Virginia Glazebrook were clected delegates and Edmund Symonds, Louise Allen, Frances McNeill and Harry Ragland were named as alternates to the snational convention. At the recent silver tea, $25 was contributed for the national buflding fund. Those who served as hostesses on that oc- casion were Mrs. Hel Waldron, | Harry Davis, Mrs mund monds, Mrs, Willi Noel, Virginia Brooks, Mrs, . H. Le Goodwin 'D. Ellsworth, Sutton, Mrs. Mackall and Mrs er Bloedorn Margaret Davis or continuing satisfact rewrdexc/miwe{yfirt/zeA MPICO, and who cannot be heard on any so- for an accurate definition of the term. called reproducing piano. called “cxclusive” services of recording pianists, that it is time Many artists, whose playing may be heard through the medium of more than one reproducing piano, are widely heralded as “exclu- Chiapusso Rosenthal Brailowsky sive artists.” Actually, however, an artist is “exclusive’” when his Maier Borchard Ornstein recordings can be heard ONLY on @ single instrument. Pattison Gordon Nyiregyhazi Mirovitch Silber Hageman When an artist is listed as “exclusive” by T4¢ AMPICO Corpo- Souvaine Kreisler 4f,,,, Hilsberg ration, it means he has not made recordings at any time for any other Rachmaninoff = Miinz Levitzki Cooper Suskind Lamson instrument. and many others. The AMPICO stands absolutely supreme, not only as the perfect And P/fljing Popu]ar Music re-enacting instrument, but in the number and pre-eminence of the great pianists who record for it exclusively. The artists listed at the Vincent Lopez Ferdie Grofe J. Milton_Delcamp Adah Carroll Zez Confrey Paul hnge left have entrusted the perpetuation of their art to the one and only entertained branch at her home in Saturday evening. Alberta Warren reported that was the amount contributed through the recent card party for the national C. A, uild A C Fhmi Cietatvar | roooiten o America’s Fineat Plano Equipped with the Incomparable filed for Bertrand . Trenis, jr. lizabeth Barbour and Rosemary *Cockrell. * James Blaisdell was voted into membership. Alberta Warren, George McNeill and Elizabeth Eatom were elected delegates and Elizabeth ‘Ward, Prentiss ylor and Ruth instrument that can re-enact with absolute fidelity cvcry element of their masterful playing. = There is but one Genuine AMPICO 1t is obtainable in Washington only in these pianos: arker aternates o the‘Badonai | Your Eyes will tell you that the | O stelealina Sehin i) fun most beautiful case designs are de- | J. & C. FISCHER Momes Occupied by Presiden 1 3 | ~ e g 3Members of the soclety recently pro- veloped by Chickering. Your Ears ‘ KNABE marsuarL & wenoer,. CHICKERING Chapter, Rilider. whosa anspioss. the will confirm our claim that the ov. Thomas Welles Soclety was or- inized T8 vears “ugo. Those who Chickering is the sweetest tone i contributed to the program were I'rentiss_Taylor, Frances Synfonds, i ad Waterman, Edith Graham, Piano made mday' Helen Bloedorn and Margaret Booth. * Mrs. Emig, the presidert, sald, among other things, that while the members f Constitution Chapter had given eir children as members of the Lo S e 3 *turn 16 children had brought ~their mothers into that chapter, 6 of whom had since served #s regents of the chapter and others «s valued workers. The Gov. Thomas Welles Society has a membership during the past year has ansferred: 30 boys and girls into the s of the Americ Revolution and | rican I.-\.rllnmn‘ ney mbzi Though containing the Ampico, these fine pianos remain absolutely unchanged for playing by hand LB THE AMPICO CORPORATION NEW YORK