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The regular twilight music hour will be held in the fourth-floor assembly room of the Y. W. C. A. at Seventeenth and K streets this afternoon at 5 o'clock. The program will be given by Gertrude Swarthout, soprano; Adessa Ehrhart, contraito; Kathleen Hillyer, contralto; Paul Edward Garber, tenor; Lester L. Spessard, baritone, and Jewell Downs, accompanist. Mrs. F. D. Will- son will be the hostess, assisted by Miss Saida L. Hartman of the Y. W. C. A. staff. ‘romorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock, the music supervisors of the junior high | schools of the city are invited to a meeting at the Y. W. C. A, Seventeenth and K streets, with representatives of the music and girl reserve departments to discuss plans for the annual folk song contest of the Junior High School Girl Reserve Clubs. Tea will be served | in the third-floor assembly room fol- lowing the meeting. ‘There will be a vesper hour service at the Elizabeth Somers residence this afternoon at 5:30, when Miss Marion Steele will be the leader and Dr. DeWitt Croissant, professor of English at| George Washington University, will be the speaker. Miss Agnes Reynolds will be_the hostess. The rooms registry committee will hold its January meeting on Tuesday, at 11:30 am., at the Administration Building, Seventeenth and K streets. Rhoda J. Milliken, sergeant of the ‘Women's Bureau, will lead the discus- sion on conditions and inspection of hotels in the District, and also will be the guest of honor at the luncheon in the tea room, following the meeting. Miss Faye Bentley, the director of school attendance and work permits of the public schools of the District of Columbia, will speak to the staff at its weekly meeting on Tuesday morning, on “The Present Child Labor Situation in the United States.” “There will be a meeting of the board of directors of the Y. W. C. A, at Seventeenth and K streets, January 17, at 10:30 am. Activities in the Administration Building, Seventeenth and K streets, during the week include: A luncheon for the council of social agents, to- morrow; the wives of the Y. M. C. A. secretaries will have lunch in the build- | ing, followed by a meeting in the third- floor assembly room, on Wednesday; the education section of the Twentieth Century Club will have a meeting in the fourth-floor assembly room at 11 am, followed by a luncheon at 12:30 pm., and on Friday, the Girl Reserves xdll have dinner in Barker Hall, at pm. Business and Proféssional Women’s Dept. The International Club will meet to- morrow at 8 pm. The evening will be spent in tooling leather. On Tuesday evening, the Amicitia, Hitika, K. G., Premiere, Tip Top and Wohelo Clubs will have supper to- gether at 6:15, and at 7 o'clock they are to have a lecture-recital, given by Miss Maud G. Sewall. A full descrip- tion of the program may be found on the music page of this paper. Every one interested in the presentation of Germen operas is invited to attend. The Blue Triangle Club will have supper at 6:30 p.m. January 17. At 7 o'clock, they will have the second of a series of talks pertaining to “The Business Girls.” This week, Miss Helen McCollam will address them on the “The Business Girl—Her Girl Reserves. The Adelphae Girl Reserve Club of Western High School will have a hobby meeting in Room 259, at 2:30 pm., tomorrow. The After-School Girl Reserve Club of Langley Junior High School will meet at 3:15 p.m. Tuesday. On Wednesday, at 2 pm., the Girl Reserve Club at the Dennison Voca- tional School will start a program of clog dancing and a toy symphony or- chestra. Miss Louise Alberts, of the health education department of the Y. W. C. A, will teach clog dancing, and Miss Imogene B. Ireland, director of music in the Y. W. C. A,, will direct the orchestra. The two Girl Reserve clubs at Jeffer- son Junior High School will make party favors and gifts at their meetings at 2:15 p.m., Wednesday. The Semper Fidelis Girl Reserve Club of McKinley High School will en- tertain new members of the club at tea, at 3 pm., Wednesday, in the Girl Re- serve clubrooms at Seventeenth and K. Thursday afternoon, the girls of Powell Junior High School Girl Re- serve Club will have & swimming party in the Y. W. C. A. pool at Seventeenth and K streets. The Girl Reserve Clubs at Langley and Macfarlend Junior High Schools will meet at the schools at 2:15 p.m. Thursday, and Les Camerades Pidelis Girl Reserve Clubs at Eastern High School will have soclal service meetings at 2:30 p.m. The Tri-Hi Girl Reserve Clula will have a swim- ming party at 3:30 p.m. Friday afternoon at 2:15 the three Girl Reserve Clubs at Stuart Junior High School will give an hour’s service to the Instructive Visiting Nurses’ Association. The Columbia Junior High School Girl Reserve Club will have a program at_the school at 2:15 pm. The three Girl Reserve Clubs at Hine Junior High School will make hand- kerchiefs to be sent to_the soldlers at | Walter Reed Hospital. The Bon Secour ‘? Girl Reserve Club of Central High School will meet in the Girl Reserve clubrooms at 3:15 p.m. | At 4:30 p.m. Friday there will be a party in the Girl Reserve clubrooms for all junior high school clubs and each school will take eight minutes of the program. Committees from each school will decorate their tables for the club supper, which will be served at 6 o'clock in Barker Hall of the Y. W.C. A, Seventeenth and K streets. ! Following the close of the first period of hobby groups for grade school Girl Reserves next Saturday morning at 10, the girls again will choose among such activities as handwork, ~dramatics, Jjournalism, first aid and home nursing. These groups will continue for another six-week period. All girls in the sixth, seventh or eighth grades are invited to come to the Girl Reserve clubrooms at Seventeenth and K streets to join in the program. Chapters. Officers for the Chevy Chase Chapter have been elected for 1929 as follows: President, Mrs. J. Craig Peacock; vice president, Mrs. DeC. Adams; corre- sponding secretary, Mrs. George W.| Tewis; recording secretary, Mrs. H. C.| Bnoke; treasurer, Miss Emma H. Heck. The Cleveland Park Chapter will meet tomorrow at 3 p.m. at the residence of | Mrs. Frank Hogan, 2320 Massachusetts | avenue, at which meeting there will be a speaker on the Community Chest. Officers for the year elected were: President, Mrs. P. H. Walker; vice resident, Mrs. Irving Saum; treasurer, R[YS. F. E. Cunningham; recording sec- | retary, Mrs, H. E. Merwin; correspond- | ing secretary, Miss S. A. Wallace. | The new officers for the DuPont! Chapter are: President, Mrs. George | Otis Smith; vice president, Miss chl White: secretary, pro tem. Miss Eliza- | beth H. Cole; treasurer, Mrs. George H. Markward; ways and means com- mittee chairman, Mrs. Mary S. Rice; membership committee chairman, Mrs. H. H. Kimball. Piney Branch Chapter elected the fol- Jowing officers for the new year: Presi- flent, Mrs. H. C. McNeil; vice president, Mrs. J. E. Fox; treasurer, Mrs. Thomas Holmes, and recording secretary, rs. George W. Harsch. Industrial Department. Lunch will be served at Price Wilhoite factory Tuesday at 12:30 pm. Mrs. W. L. Corbin of the industrial com- mittee will be in charge. The K. E. Y. Club will have a picnic arty at 6:30 pm. Wednesday in the hird floor assembly room of the Y. W. C. A. at Seventeenth and K treets. The Thursday Club will have a tea from 4:30 to 6 p.m. January 17, fol- lowed by bowling at 6:30. Health Education Department. A new term in the health education department starts February 11, but classes are meeting regularly now. Registration is open for the second term. Visitors are welcome in the balcony of the gymnasium during this month. Morning gymnasium classes meet Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 10 am. to 12. Evenings, visitors will find gymnastics Monday at &, Tuesday at 5 and Thursday at 7 and 8 p.m. Social dancing classes meet Mon- day at 7 and 8 pm.; clog and tap THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, JANUARY 13, 1929—PART b dancing Wednesday at 6 and 7 pm. Children’s dancing, stunts and gym- nastics Saturday morning at 10:30. Appointment for medical examina- tion should be made with the Health Education Office. . Monument to Wilson. POJAREVACZ, Jugolslavia (#)—A monument to President Wilson will soon be erected in this city. The gov- ornment selected Pojarevacz because it marks a turiing point in the country's history, the successful rebellion against Turkey in 1799. FIND STONE AGE RELICS. French Laborers Bare Valuable Cache in Sand. BAR-LE-DUC (#)—A remarkable collection of objects of archeological interest has been discovered by work- men carting sand near the Ornian River. These objects dated from the Stone Age to the Middle Ages. Two sharp piercing instruments in reindeer bone and stone weights perfo- rated for fishing nets were the oldest. There were also many picces of pottery Not Merely a Sale—But a Fashion Event Magnified by Extraordinary Value- Giving! Both Sides of Seventh at K Again! of the Bronze Age, an ax and a hatchet of Marnian epoch in Gaul with bits of pottery and an iron knife, frag- ments of vases and jars from the Gt Roman period and an iron sword of the Middle Ages. Former Kaiser Disgruntled. RREMEN (#).—The former Kaiser is disgruntled, says Bremen Volkszei- tung, because the two new steamers of the North German Lloyd were chris- tened Europa and Bremen instead of Wilhelm der Grosse and Friedrich der Grosse. GOLDENBERG'S Washingten’s Popular Shopping Center Post Office Located on Main Floor Near 8th Street Entrance CLAIMS TANK INVENTION. French Citizen Brings Suit for $600,000 Against State. LILLE (#).—A man who says he is the real inventor of the tanks during the World War has brought suit against the state for $600,000 damages for having communicated the plans of his invention &? England. M. Parisot de Rupt, who claims to have invented the war tanks, was managing editor of the “Political and Literary Annals” during the war. He has already protested to the ministry of war and the premier’s office, but having received no answer has now taken his grievance to court. Building Required 13 Years. CHICAGO (#).—Thirteen years elapsed before the Cook Country com- missioners planned for a new criminal | courts building and completed it. Nine of the years were taken up convincing the public the building was needed. Bond issues were beaten in 1916, '17 rn%gl before bonds were approved n . GREAT HALL PLANNED. BADEN-BADEN, Germany (®).— This internationally famous spa will soon have its own symphony concert house under the direction of Gerhart Hauptmann, novelist and dramatist. Hauptmann and Burgomaster Fleseler of Baden-Baden hold jointly the chair- manship of the assoclation charged with erecting the new building. American and other foriegn artists are frequently heard here during the concert season. Bring a Friend— Each Buy a Dress! There' Il be crowds—be here when the opening bell rings! 2,000 DRESSES Spring’s Newest and Smartest Fashions! There’s a Reason! New York dress manufac- turers are familiar with the tremendous volume of Gold- enberg’s dress sales, and they turn to us when they have anything extraordinary to offer. -Big buying and spot cash command conces- sions that are reflected in the marvelous values always featured in a Goldenberg “TWO for FIFTEEN” Dress Sale, the fame of which reaches all over the country. In this instance we secured two thousand Dresses—every one brand-new, iresh from the design- er’s hands and all with the breath and spirit of Spring! 200 Styles—2,000 Dresses! A mong Washington women Goldenberg’s “TWO for FIFTEEN” Dress Events are so widely and fav- orably known for their ex- traordinary values that the announcement of such a sale never fails to attract crowds. These are the finest dress values we've ever been able to gather in a single collection, and we expect them to be quickly snapped up by value-wise shoppers. Many customers will not stop at buying two dresses, but will want to choose four or six, when they see the marvelous values here tomorrow ! These are copies of the most ad- vanced Spring models, and every style is reproduced with fidelity to the more costly originals. =D Values Washington Women Have Learned to Expect from Goldenberg’s Famous “TWO-for-FIFTEEN” Dress Sales! A sale weeks in preparation—weeks of the most careful search of the markets—weeks of selecting the most unusual values we could find. That’s what makes this the great event it is! Dresses for Street Wear! Dresses for Sport Wear! Dresses for Afternoon Wear! Dresses for Evening Wear! Such a varied selection, such originality of style, such beautiful materials and colors, no woman can resist their charm! You may select two new Dresses—a tailored model for business or street wear—a charming style for dressy wear, because there are all types in the assortment. a hundred new and distinctive styles! Complete Range of Sizes Misses’ Sizes 14 to 20 Women's Sizes 34 to 48 A Galaxy of Smart Advance Spring Styles in Fashionable Materials: New Spring Prints! Fine Flat Crepe! Soft Georgette Crepe! Chitfon Taffeta! Beaded Georgette! Straightline, draped or flared, or circular models with More than {l 1ows of fine tucks, and styles with pleats, diagonally flounced skirts with side drapes, large girdles, shirred or crushed, large cape collars, scalloped or trimmed with fine lace godets and ruftles. New necklines, uneven hemlines, scarf throws, lace collars and cuffs, vestees, jabots, pipings of confrasting colors, large bows, pins, belts and fancy but- tons. There are one-piece models with straight lines that lend a slender appearance to the matronly woman. There are youthful two-piece models in both tailored and dress styles. In fact, a style for every need and every time of day or evening. Goldenberg's — Dress Department—Second Flgor. Charge Accounts In- vited, Spring’s New Colors! New Flowered Designs New Dotted Effects New Rainbow Prints New Blues—New Tans—New Greens—New Browns—Orchid— Purple—Pansy—Rose—Black—Navy—Middy. Every Wanted color! All Sizes— All Sizes— 14 to 20,