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#l | chusotts he was elected a trustee. 5. R. Wolpe & Son Whclesale Distributors 1302 Seventh St. NW. Phone North 9988 Washington, D. C. Get This % DOLL & Send 10c with Coupon! J1.1 1"' FREE Recipe Book! @5 Send coupon for Free Recipe Book contain- ing over 200 tested recipes for deiicious foods enclose 10c a3 payment iease sond me prepaid the Lens Rag Doll ~ready to cut ana stuff. (i3 inches bigh). Puc X here for DOLL () Please send me, FREE and PREPAID, the Biue Ribbon Malt Extract Recipe Book. Put X bere for BOOK (] - PRESIDENT HOST TOFUND PLANNERS Ceolidge Endowment for | Scheol for Deaf Discussed % at Luncheon. ‘The White House will be the scene of | a reception and tea late this afternoon | given by President and Mrs. Coolidge | in honor of the men and women who | at a luncheon at the Mayflower Hotel | today discussed plans for raising an | endowment of $2,000,000, to be known | as the Coolidge Fund, for the Clarke § | School for the Deaf at Northampton, | Mass. | Mrs. Coolidge, then Grace Goodhue, taught at the Clarke School for two | years and it was during that period {'that she met Calvin Coolidge, a young { lawyer, who rcomed at a house on the | Clarke' School grounds. Since then the | President and Mrs. Coolidge have shown great_intercst in the school. Shortly after his election as Governor of Massa- e | Coolidge Fund had its origin while Mr. | Coolidge was Vice President. More Than Half Pledged. i Through support of President and Mrs. Coolidge and the efforts of the late Clarence W. Barron, publisher of | the Wall Street Journal, the Coolidge | Fund is being raised. While plans for raising the endowment were being dis- cussed at the luncheon today it was announced by Earle P, Charlton, suc- cessor to Mr. Barron as chairman of the fund, that more than half of the 1$2.000,000 has been given or pledged. Among those who have made gifts are: William Boyce Thompson and family, who gave $135,000; Mr. Barron, Mr. Charlton, Henry L. Doherty and Fred M Kirby, each $110,000; Andrew W. Mellon, $100,000; Cyrus H, K. Cur- tis, Edward S. Harkness, Willlam A. Paine, Frank Phillips and John J. Ras- kob, $50,000; Clarence Dillon and Ar- thar Curtiss James, $25,000; Edwin C. Jameson. George D. Pratt and Herbert L. Prait, earh $20,000: Mr. and Mrs. George F. Fuller, $11,000; Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. Graham. Robert L. Studley and Albert H Wiggin. $10,000; Mrs. Francis A. Kinnicutt and Frank H. Metcalf, $7,500: Howard Clark Davis, Jeremiah THE EVENING George F, Naphen and Adolph 8, Ochs. $5,000. Additional interest was given the gathering by the presence of Jeanie | Lippitt, now Mrs. Willlam B. Weeden | of Providence, F. I, who was the first deaf child in the country to be taught to read lips and speak after loss of heuln; and speech at the age of four. | Her plight and that of Mabel Hubbard, | later Mrs. Alexander Graham Bell, was responsible for founding of the Clarke School, the first in America to teach deaf children to speak and read the lips, thus departing from the method of teaching thcm to communicate by | signs. At the luncheon, the following spoke briefly: Mrs. Nathaniel Thayer of Boston, Mrs. Hugh Bancroft of Boston, daugh- ter of Mr. Barron; Mrs. Gilbert Gros- venor of Washington, daughter of Alexander Graham Bell, an early teacher at the school, whose invention of the telephone was an outcome of his work for the deaf; Miss Bessie N. Leonard, principal of Clarke School; Dr. Willlam A. Neilson, president of Smith College; George D. Pratt of New York, Earle P. Chariton of Fall River, Dr. Charles Wood of Washington and Dr. Gordon Berry of Worcester, Mass. Included among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Willilam H. Albers, Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Aldrich, Charles L. Allen, Henry W. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Bancroft, Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Berry, Mrs. Charles 8. Bird, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Bodell, Mr. John Crosby Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter S. Bucklin, Gen. and Mrs. John J. | Carty, Mr. and Mrs. Earle P. Charlton | and Mr. and Mrs. Eben S. Draper, Mr and Mrs. Joshua Evans, jr.; Mrs. Gibson Fahnestock, Mr. James A. Fayne, Mr. A. Lincoln Fechheimer, Miss Mabel C. Gage, Mrs. Solomon B. Griffin, Mr. W. H. Grimes, Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert H. Grosvenor, Mr. and Mrs. Melville Be:l Grosvenor, Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Highland, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hornblower, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Jameson, Mrs. Victor Kauf:mann, Miss Bessie N, Leonard, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lyman, Mr. Frank H. Meatcalf, Mr. and Mrs. Horace A. Moses, President William A. Nellson, Mrs. Ed- win B Parker, Mr. Frank Phillips, Mr. George D. Pratt, Mrs. John T. Pratt, Cuno H. Rudolph, Mr. and Mrs, John Skinner, Mrs. George Sprague, Mr. and Mrs, Frank W. Stearns, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Stone, Mrs. Henry A. Strong, Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Studley, Miss Eleanor Studley, W. P. Tidwell, Mrs. Nathaniel Thayer, Mr. and Mrs. Eliot Wadsworth, Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Warren, Mrs. Willlam Babcock Weeden, Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Wood, Dr. Frank A. Woods, Mrs. Willilam L. Wright. Albert H. Wiggin, Chase National Bank, New York City, Is treasurer of the fund. Pund headquarters are at room 810, Securities Building, 729 Fif- | jMilbank. Horace A. Moses Foundation, teenth street. STAR, WASHINGTON, AVIATION FRAUDS HIT IN RADIO ADDRESS Louis Rothschild Warns Against . Doubiful Schools and Stock- Promotion Schemes. Warning against stock promotion schemes and fraudulent flying schools which seek to exploit the public inter- est in aviation was sounded in a radio address from station WMAL last night by Louis Rothschild, director of the Better Business Bureau. The rapid growth of the aviation in- dustry, Rothschild said, has stirred a great public interest and there has been a tendency on the rt of a certain group to capitalize this interest. Fraudulent activities in aviation fall into two primary classifications, the flying school of doubtful value and the professional stock promotion using avi- ation merely as a vehicle to sell stock, D.. C, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 16, 1928. You know it is good NOTICE Republic ot Ireland Loans To all Holders of Bond Certifi cates evidencing subscriptions made in the United States to the “First National Loan of the Republic of Ireland” and the “Second External Loan of the Republic of Ireland”’: TAKE NOTICE that by an Order of the New York Supreme Court in and for New York County, dated August 6, 1928, and entered in an action in which Irish Free State, et al. are plaintiffs and Guaranty Safe Deposit Company, et al. are defendants, the time for filing claims with the undersigned Receivers has been extended to and including December 31, 1928, and that all holders of the above Bond Certificatesin order to participate in the distribution of the funds in the custody of the Court are required to file with the undersigned Receivers at their office No. 117 Liberty Street, New York City, the Bond Certificates owned by Rothschild said. He caution ition, he said, inst. Flower Market 1245 20th, Below N SPECIAL Friday and Saturday Pon-Pon Mums All Colors and Varieties 50c, 75¢, $1 Bunch ROSES 75¢, $1, $1.50 Dozen A Hosiery Wardrobe For Her Christmas Gift C()LOR harmony—the vital note in_style, and like everything Franchette special brand because exceptional quality. or all-silk chiffon, lisle Diamond Point Silk Stockings Silk Stockings $1.65 Chosen as Lansburgh & Bro.'s Two styies all silk, chiffon. picot tops— else the smart Modern's hose must harmonize with her cos- tume to effect a perfect and pleasing unity. Lansburgh & Bro. have assembled from nationally known manufacturers, hosicry of quality—all silk chiffon cr service weight in the author- itatively new 1929 colors, with heel fashions sanctioned by the world’s foremost style arbiters. AR A Exclusive witl of their Washington! F service weight, and lisle soles, lined tops. smart colors. 3 Hosiery—Street Floor Number 195 All 1k chifion, 4- inch lisle lined t $1.95 Silk Stockings $1.35 i Lansburgh’s in u 11 fashioned, 4-inch lisle tops in_ a variety of pairs for $4. Two-Point Heel Silk Stockings All-silk hose, chiffon weight, $1.95 ed the prospective student pilot to make a careful study of the school before en- rolling. Bargain sales _aviation tu- are to be cautioned them, together with proof that they are the person named as subscribers therein or the person or persons who may have and in case of loss or destruction of any certificate to furnish proof of such loss or destruction together with proof of title as above. the terms of said Order all holders of Bond Certificates who fail to file their Certificates and /or proofs on or before December 31, 1928, will be forever bar- red from participating in the distribu- tion of the funds now in the custody of the Court, Dated, New York, August 6, 1928, PETER J. BRADY, J. EDWARD MURPHY, JOHN L. BUCKLEY, Receivers. Forms may be obtained at the office o'f the Receivers, No.117 Liberty Street, ' New York City. Holders of Bond Certiffcates are urged to use the forms provided by the Receiv- 2rs as Bond Certificates 'and proofs of title must be filed together and failure to use the forms provided may result ir unnecessary delay. ‘The Receivers are not authorized tc make any payments until further order of the Court. 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