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Brunswick only and his Hotel Roosevelt (New York) * Orchestra Play Shes Funny That Way’ Other side: How About Me?” Brunswick Record No. 4132 Other new tunes out now on Brunswick “Me and the Man in the Moon” — fox trot. Arnold Johnson and His Paramount Hotel Orchestra, 4125 “Sweethearts on Parade”—fox trot. Abe Lyman’s California Orchestra. 4117 “I'm Sorry, Sally”— fox trot.. Ray- |- Miller and His Orchestra. 4108 “You're the Cream in My Coffee”— fox trot. Colonial Club Orchestra. 4118 2 Good selections on every Brunswick Record \Papatropes Radio Records Panatrope-Radiotas The {Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. Chicago New York Toronto BALTIMORE BRANCH 410-418 W, Lombard St. Phone Plaza 8112 | for bravery on the field. {and, when at the Geneva opium con- MWHITE SUCCEEDS SIDDY AS ENVOY Representative of Free State at Geneva Appointed Minister to U. S. By the Associated Press. i DUBLIN, Irish Free State, January 10.—Michacl MacWhite, who has rep- rosented the Irish Free State at! Geneva since 1922, has been appointed Minister to Washington to succeed Timothy Smiddy, recently transferred | h commissioner. t native of West is rega as having made cess with Ireland's interests at Geneva. He has had a varied and adventur- ous -career. He was a soldier in the fore the Worid enlisted in n Legion and in France and Africa. - commane 4 the last French unit that was left 11 Serbia and was decorated Aided U. S. Liberty Loans. Mr. MacWhite accompanicd _the French military mission to the United States and at the request of the Amer- ican Government lectured in behalf of one of the Liberty loans. The new Minister was a valued friend of Arthur Guiffith, the founder of the Free State, at whose request resented the Dail Eireann in s. Later he was made official rep- tive of the Free State at Geneva. nt to Paris when President Cos- med the Kellogg-Briand treaty cing war. Wife Ts Artist. As carly as 1923 Mr. MacWhite had strongly urged that the Irish Free State be represented at Washington ference, the United States was opposed by the world in seeking curtailment of production as the only means of the curbing the evils of the trade, he 2lone voted against the amendment which permitted reservations. He urged his colleagues not to disappoint the United THE EVENING end run. Performances will be held tomorrow afternoon and evening and Saturday afternoon. Next week. the cast will present a |new play by Percival Wilde, “Kings of Nomania.” Later in the season E. H. Sothern, who is vitally interested in the Junior Theater movement, will become a part of the cast for a single week end. He will be heard in recital. MISSING FLYERS ?OUND. NEWARK, N. J, January 10 (#).— Elinor Smith and Capt. William Lan- caster, who were feared lost yesterday when no word was received for several hours from the plane in which they were flying to New York from Phila- delphia, were located at the Delawanna Alrport last night, They had landed at noon. States and when the battle was lost and America had withdrawn, he ex- pressed the hope that another confer- ence would be held with America par- ticipating. : Mrs. MacWhite is Danish born. She is an artist and has given exhibitions of her paintings in Dublin. i AMUSEMENTS WARDMAN PARK—“Quality Street.” A capacity audience, composed largely of mothers, the guests of Mrs. James J. Davis, sponsoring the junior theater movement, was charmed by the artistic roduction of Sir James Barrie's *Qual- ty Street,” which opened at the Ward- man Park Theater yesterday after- noon. Ogle, Tinnin, Brown, Inc., the pro- ducers of the group of dramatic fenu which have been shown this Winter at the little theater on the hill, have announced 4 continuation of their series of plays especially suited for chil- dren. It is their hope to educate the young people of Washington to the “junior theater habit” and thus give to them the best in drama from the pens of such masters as Barrie and Shakespeare. Interest of the parents in encouraging this movement was so- licited by yesterday’s complimentary performance. Mrs. Clyde Kelly, Mrs. J. A. Van Orsdel and Miss Charlotte Wiggins of the Potomac School assisted Mrs. Davis in receiving the guest audi- ence. Hearty eppreciation of the work of the cast was expressed in the many curtain calls and encores given at the conclusion of each act by the distin- and social Washington were well represented. Among the prominent guests in the audience were Mme. Debuchi, wife of the Ambassador of Japan; Mme. Sze, ‘wife of the Chinese Minister, and Mamie Sze; Dr. and Mrs. Wu, special envoy from China; Mme. Prochnik, wife of the Minister of Austria; Brig. Gen. Au- gusto Villa, military attache of the Italian embassy; Senora Dona Maria de Iglesias, e of the naval attache of the Spa embassy; the counselor of the Norwegian legation and Mme. Sundh, Miss Jean Dean Coles, president Mount Vernon Seminary; Mrs. Thomas W. Sidwell of the Friends School, Miss Anne Wagner of the Colorama Day School, Mrs. Joseph Stoddard, Mr. and Mrs. David Blair, Mrs. Thomas C. Bradley, Mrs. Seward Hume Rathbun, Mrs. Fred A. Britten, Mrs. C. Willard Hayes, Mrs. Eugene Meyer and Mrs. Rive Lewis. Sarah Yearley and Walter Ferrell carry the principal Toles of “Quality Street” with skillful ease. Miss Yearley is a true Barrie type and lives the part of Phoebe Throssel, the young maid of “Quality Street,” who rebelled against being put on the highly re- spectable shelf of her community as one of its bevy of “old maids.” Leslie Kent is deligatful as Miss Susan, while Patty. the Throssel maid is _interpreted amusingly by Gordon Kilbourne. ‘The production should prove highly entertaining to young people as well as their elders when it opens officially tomorrow_afternoon for the usual week PAGE 19 ' ALWAYS DEAD TIRED? How sad! Sallow complexion, coated tongue, poor appetite, bad breath, pimply skin and always tired. What's wrong? You are poisoned. The bowels are clogged and liver inactive. Take this fa- mous prescription used constantly in place of calomel by men and women for 20 vears—Dr. Ed- wards’ Olive Tablets. They are | harmless yet very effective. A i compound of vegetable ingredi- ents and olive oil. They act easily upon the bowels, free the system of poison caused by faulty elimination and tone up liver. Be beautiful. Have rosy checks, clear eyes and youthful energy that make a success of life. Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tab- lets, nightly. Know them hy their olive color. 15c, 30c and 60c. Evening and Sunday Commander Byrd’s own narrative of the STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1929.° COMMUNITY CHEST BACKED BY CITIZENS Michigan Park Group to Hold Joint Session With Brook- land Residents. Unanimous approval of the commu- nity chest activities was registered by the Michigan Park Citizens' Association at its meeting in the Bunker Hill School last night. In order that its members might ob- tain a more comprehensive idea of the objectives of the newly established com- The True Story of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition is being told—detail by detail in he Shae munity chest, the association voted to hold a special joint meeting with the Brookland Citizens’ Association in the Brookland Masonic Temple Monday night, when a speaker from the chest will address the two citizens’ groups. Deciding an addition to the present Bunker Hill School would be more de- sirable than a new school in their com- | munity, the association voted to attempt ’ to persuade the Board of Education to approve of the addition The board has already approved of an additional school in the Michigan Park area as part of the proposed second five-year building program, it was reported. Protesting that the present bus serv- ice afforded by the Hyattsville line, which runs through Michigan avenue is insufficient, the citizens voted to re- quest additonal busses, or if necessary, an additonal bus line. momentous events—and the observations of Rus- sell Owen, The Star’s own special correspondent who is with the expedition—are printed exclusively in Washington in The Star. What a miracle is wrought—as the voices from behind this wall of ice are wirelessed directly into The Star office—and almost ‘“within the hour,” seated by your own comfortable fireside, you can read of the discoveries being made, the perils encountered, the hardships braved in this invasion into mystery. You cannot afford to miss a single issue of The Star these days guished house in which both official [ * MAVIS BOTTLING truly delicious. It’s absolutely pure—it’s Pasteurized. clean—sterilized. Every bottle is thoroughly COMPANY OF BALTIMORE 413 W. Conway Street, Baltimore, Md. 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