Evening Star Newspaper, February 15, 1929, Page 5

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STUNTS FEATURED AT PRESS SUPPER Annual Party of Women’s Organization Takes Form of Valentine Celebration. ‘The Women's National Press Club gave its annual “stunt supper” last night in the ballroom of the Willard Hotel, with & large number of well known women as guests. The party took the form of & Valentine celebration, with valentines for each guest of the club presented by “Mother Goose” children at the direc- tion of Dan Cupid. N Marie Manning Gasch, the " played the of Dan Cupid, her “children” pre- senting valentines to nearly all of the honor guests, who were Mrs. Frank B. Kellogg, Mrs. Willlam M. Jardine, Mrs. William Fairfield Whiting and Mrs. James J. Davis, wives of cabinet offi- cers; Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, wife of the Speaker of the House; Mrs. Peter Goelet Gerry, president of the Con- gressional Club: Mrs. Porter H. Dale, newly eiccted president of the Con- onal Club; Mrs. Edward Everett ter of the Vice President-elect Charles Curtis: Representative th Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts, Representative Florence P. Kahn of California, Representative Katharine Langley of Kentucky, Mrs. Sanders, wife of the secretary to the President; Representative-elect Ruth Hanna McCormick, Mrs. Marietta Min- nigerode Andrews, Mrs. Frank Barrows Freyer, Mrs. Duncan Phillips and Mrs. Elmer Schlesinger. Valentine Text Recited. Mrs. Longworth was presented with a valentine by Margaret Poe Hart, who recited the text before presenting it. Other nursery children delivered valen- tines to Representative-elect McCor- mick, Assistant Attorney General Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, vice chairman of the Republican na- tional committee; Mrs. Peter Goelet Gerry, retiring president of the Con- gressional Club, and Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, president of the Women’s Democratic Club. An extra of the club “organ,” ‘Women's Press Club Whoopee, was de- iivered by two of the club “newsboys,” Margaret Hart and Jackie Martin. ‘The front page bore the program for the entertainment after the supper. ‘The first number was Marie Gasch and Gourley Edwards in their Valentine spe- ialty, “A Visit From Olympus,” assisted an all-star cast. - Next came Jack rtin and Margaret Hart, the terpsi- chore twins, “straight from a six month's run at Loew’s Imperial Ballet in BBB,Ed > ial arrangement with John W. Mi solini,” Ruth Jones and Cathe- rine Turlington with the original Welsh cast “appeared for the first time on any American stage in the play by P. Vir- lus Maro, entitled ‘The Vestal Vigi- in which a meeting of a “super- patriotic” organization was shown in Everett | son, daughter of Representative Nel- son; Miss Manie Hatzman, Mrs. Mar- garet B. Downing, Mrs. William Thom- son of Phoenix, Ariz; Mrs. John A. Hull, wife of the judge advocate gen- eral of the Army; Frau von Lewinski, wife of the German consul general in New York; Miss Annette Hull, daughter of the late Representative and Mrs. Hull of Jowa; Mrs. Joseph Snyder Noel, Miss Kathleen Noel, Miss Hazel Grant Edgar, Mrs. Eldridge Jordan, Mrs. Joseph H. Himes, wife of for- mer Representative Himes of Ohio; Mrs James M. Haley, Miss Gourley Edwards, Mrs. Kate Trenholm Abrams, Miss Frances Osburn, Miss Juliette Stebbins, Miss Corinne FPrager, Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Mrs. Frank L. Bacon of New York, Mrs. Gretchen Smith, Miss Dorothy E. Greene, Mrs. Frederick H. Brooke, Mrs. Lindsey Walker, Mrs. Bulkey S. Griffin, Miss Margaret Germond, Mrs. Charles Astryke, Miss Alice Whitton, Mrs. Marie Manning Gasch, Mrs. Harriett Barrett, Miss Mary Dunn, Mrs. Anne Hard, Miss Guest, Mrs. Archbold, Mrs. Harrington, |Mrs. Wadsworth of New York, Miss | Margaret Poe Hart, Mrs. Charles H. | Harris, daughter-in-law of the late Sen- | ator Harris of ‘Tennessee; Miss Jean- {nette Hume, Miss Elizabeth Poe Hart, Mrs. Grace Porter Hopkins, Mrs Henry | T. Rainey, wife of Representative Rainey of Illinois; Mrs. David D. Cald- { well, Mrs. Albert N. Baggs, Mrs. Nell Ray Harrington, Mrs. Daniel Le Roy ; Dresser, Miss Anabelle Matthews, Miss Kathleen Duggan, Mrs. Alice Rogers Hager, Mrs. Sam Bell, Miss Mildred Ladner. Miss Alice Hutchins Drake, Miss Mary Hornaday, Mrs. James P. {Hornaday, Miss Lucia Hanna Hadley, | Miss Josephine Hemphill, Mrs. John Bennett, Mrs. Charles Swingle, Miss | Dorothy Fletcher Howerth, Miss Frances ! Benjamin Johnston HELLO, FOLKS: THE EVENING Mrs. Sallle Burch, Miss Joy Webster, Mrs. Gladys Moon Jones, Miss Helen Critchett, Miss Ruth Eleanor Jones, Mrs. John Paul Jones, Mrs. Lee Somers, Miss Gittings, Miss Blanche Joyce, Mrs. D. L. James, Mrs. Margaret Keating, wife of former Representative Keating; Mrs. C. Willlam Ramsey, wife of Rep- resentative Ramsey of Iowa; Mrs. Theo- dore Shuey, Mrs. Charles Kappler, Miss Bettie Larimore, Mrs. Frederick W. Dal- linger, wife of Representative Dallinger; Mrs, L. D. Carman, Mrs. J. H. Dallinger, Mrs. Violet K. Libby, Mrs. Willlam P. Kent, Mrs. Catherine Lewis, Mrs. Mar- garet C. Richardson, Miss Sue Mc- Namara, -Miss Emma Perly Lincoln, Mrs. Sidney F. Taliaferro, wife of the District Commissioner; Mrs. Mason Nicholson and Mrs. Genevieve Park- hurst of New York, Miss Maud Mac- Dougall, Mrs. James S. Parker, wife of Representative Parker of New York; Mrs. John Allan Dougherty, Miss Wini- fred Mallon, Miss Cecelia Martin, Mrs. Philip Martin, Mrs. Peggy Daw- son, Miss E. Lydia Martin, Miss Gertrude M. Marsden, Mrs. Mark Thistlewaite, Mrs. John D. Fitz- gerald, Miss Regina Marsden, Miss Gladys T. Montgomery, Mrs. Ernest Smith, Mrs. Ralph Mulligan, Miss Elisabeth Ellicott Poe, Mrs. Alfred J. Brosseau, president general, D. A. R.; Mrs. Lowell F. Hobart, candidate for | president general; Mrs. William Sher- man Walker, Mrs. Rigdon, Mrs. Vylla Poe Wilson, Mrs. Sallle V. H. | Pickett, Mrs. Arthur H. Vandenberg, wife of Senator Vandenberg of Michi- gan; Mrs. Miles Poindexter, wife of former United States Ambassador to Peru; Lieut. Mina Van Winkle, chief of the Woman’s Bureau, Metropolitan Police; Mrs. Edna M. Colman, Mrs. Charles B. Tebbs, Miss Dorothy Smith, Miss Virginia W. Price, Mrs. Harry B. Gauss, Mrs. Rhett Goode, chaplain gen- “Pipe” these two memos— 1—F.inal O'coats. Reductions — Suits and 5 here and evicted 10 nuns, charged with | punished if they violated the religiow leading & community life in the school. | laws again. Convents are prohibited in the Mexican constitution. e Tt T e clon , Sal 18 e an er nuns belonged fo the Order of the Incarnate | The Salvation Army now works i Word. 82 different countries and colonies an¢ They were warned they would be' has over 2,300 officers and cadets. STAR, WASHINGTON, 1929. eral of the D. A. R.; Mrs. Harold Dut- ton, Miss Cora Rigby, Miss Mary Ran- dolph, Miss Ruth Fessler, Mrs. Robert Armstrong, Miss Corinne Rich, Miss Flora McDonald, Miss Aida Rainey, Miss Isabell F. Story, Mrs. Story, Miss Vir- ginia Stephens, Mrs. Royal S. Copeland, wife of Senator Copeland; Mrs. Adam M. Wyant of Pennsylvania, Mrs. George Farnum, wife of the Assistant Attorney General; Mrs. Lily Shepard, Miss Kate Colt, Miss Ethel M. Smith, Miss Eliza- beth Eastman, Mrs. W. M. Galvin, Mrs. D. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, o e e Wrwritnasen” e | MEXICO CLOSES CONVENT Maynard Barnes, Mrs. Constance Southworth, Miss Dorothy R\ 4 Ten Nuns, Charged With Leading Miss Ruth Van Deman, Miss O'Brien, Miss Clara Willlamson, M Community Life, Evicted. CO CITY, February 15 (#)— Vella Winner, Mrs. Barbara Giles, Mmy. MEXT The department of interior has closed Mary Brush Wiillams, Mrs, Gilsor. Gardner, Mrs. Charles Edward Russell | {he Gatholic school “Jeanne Chezard” Mrs. Elna H. Wharton, Mrs. J. Sidney ‘atis, Mrs. Jessie R. Hildebrand and Mrs. Ruth Hill Zimmerman. A World-Wide Army. ur Esophag‘us . EFOREyourfoodreaches >4 the esophagus or upper g stomach passage, saliva should prepare it for the stomach. The mere act of swallowing suffices to shoot it into the upper end of the stomach. Time — one tenth of a second. Wheatsworth brings to the stomach the digestive mouth iuices that make natural foods so complete- ly digestible. These vital juices are released by the palatable natural flavor. Sample this flavor and the sustaining quali- ties of a breakfast on Wheatsworth Rt g oo 100% Whole Wheat CEREAL Sound health is contained in this funda- mental food, balanced by Nature in Her own outdoor laboratory with sunshine, rain, and rich earth as Her chemists. Ask for it at your grocer — or \\\\\,I/// ?f«l\\\i SunshineSodaCrackers are laden with energy value—100 calories in every four crackers. — e Send for FREE TRIAL SAMPLE to Wheatsworth, Ine, Tompkins Square Station, New York, N. Y. —_— e e Made by the Make b Cereal X —~ gt THE CARPEL CO., INC 2155 Queen Chapel Road N. E. 2—The Budget Boys and “me” cre back on WMAL Wednesday, 7:30 P.M. ’M %'fi graphic detail. “Through the courtesy of the keeper of the Zoo,” Gourley Edwards and Mil- dred Brown, ‘the incomparable du bunnies’, visited the party,” and Mas garet Keating, in private life Mrs, Ed- ward Keating, told what she would do “If I Were President.” Marie Gasch and Gourley Edwards, the “Two Black Crows,” then appeared and a note on the program read: “This is not a talk- ing picture.” The finale was the all- star cast in a medley of mirth and mu- sic, “50,000,000 Women - Can’t Be ‘Wrong.” ‘The ladies of the ensemble included Evelyn Condon, Katharine Lewis, Kate Scott Brooks, Katharine'Brooks, Betty Larimore, Nell Ray Clark, Corinne Violet Libby, Margaret Ger- mond, May Craig, Mary MacCracken Jones and Isabel Kinnear Griffin. “Costumes by Proxy,” although Mrs. John Mullvane designed those for Mar- tin and Hart, Terpsichore Twins, and their Wooden Soldier assistants; “Wigs by Herr Suit, shoes by Philly Sole, Stiff Piano used exclusively, life-time hats by Cafritz, and stockings from Lotta Runs.” ‘The committee for the party included Hazel Grant Edgar, chairman; Mary MacCracken Jones, skits and skittles; Dorothy E. Greene, props; Gladys Montgomery, wardrobe mistress; Roberta V. Bradshaw, critic and K. P, and Gourley Edwards, Pooh Bah. Officers of Club. ‘The officers of the club are Sallie V. H. Pickett, soclety editor of The Eve- ning Star; Ruth Eleanor Jones, society editor of the Times; Kate Scott Brooks of the Chicago Tribune, Margaret Keat- ing of Labor, Robert V. Bradshaw, Con- solidated Press, and Elisabeth Ellicott Poe, Washington Post. The members and their guests at the party were: Mrs. N. E. Allender, Mrs. George T. Odell, Miss Eileen Solomon, Miss Helen W. Atwater, Mrs. Alvin Dodd, Miss Mary Lindsey, Miss Harlean FIN AL : ‘ Gold Medal 4 Del aonte REDUCTIONS " PEAS Ceresota : Sweet and Tender All Thirty-flve ancl FLOUR Fort_y Dollas 5.1b.Bag } 12-1b, Bag§ 24-lb. Bag cans 47c OVERCOATS ; Encore Macaroni 24c{52¢{81.01 $2 1 .75 and Spaghetti A&P sunnytield Flour 5-1b. Bag § 12-1b. Bag } 24-lb. Bag All $45 to $55 Overcoats. ......$29 All $60 and $65 Overcoats. . ....$39 Modern women prefer to buy at AGP Stores, be- causeA&Pkeepsahead of the trend in quality with the new foods and what is still more important to most every woman - - - ahead in ey VALUE MY GIVING ! FRESH PRODUCE 22¢ { Iceberg Lettuce . . . .Baa Te 35¢ | Crisp Celery . . o Janbi anst 9P Tender Chuck Roast. .. 25¢ | Fresh Tomatoes . . . .. 15¢ Fancy Rib Roast. . . . w. 33¢{ Tender Spinach . . . 3 s 25¢ Oysters sunduas pr. 30¢ o 60c { Fresh Green Kale. . 4 u..25¢ Representative Kelly of Pennsylvania; Mrs. Harry K. Daugherty, wife of the assistant solicitor of the Treasury De- partment; Miss Katharine Brooks, Mrs. George Mesta, Mrs. George Maurice Morris, Mrs. John Hampton Howell, Mrs. Mildred Kolb Schulze, Mrs. Kate Scott Brooks, Miss Grace Burton, niece of Senator Theodore E. Burton of Ohio; Mrs. Russell B, Harrison of Omaha, daughter-in-law of the late President Benjamin Harrison; Mrs. Samuel A. Kimberly, Miss Mildred Brown, Mrs. Myrtle W. Buckles, Mrs. John McElroy, Dr. Frances Foye, Mrs. Arthur Nyman, Mrs. K. P. McElroy, Miss Mary I Thompson, Mrs. Evelyn C. Condon, Mrs. Harley Peyton Wilson, Mrs, Enalls ‘Waggaman, Mrs. Eleanor T. Cronin, Mrs. Edward B. Clark, Mrs. Edward G. Lowry, Mrs. Ernest B. Bicknell, Miss Elizabeth May Craig, Miss Eleanor Nel- SEE US FOR LUMBER MILLWORK PAINT HARDWARE BUILDING SUPPLIES COAL Whatever Your Needs Talk With Us First! Small Orders Given Careful Attention No Delivery Charge J F;ank Kelly, Inc. 2101 Georgia Ave. N. 1343 Lumber—Millwork—Du _ Pont _Paints Coal — Hardware — Building Supolies _§ Give Your Child Enough Vitamins For Good Health SCOTT’S EMULSION Is the Agreeable Way To Obtain the Benefits of [ Cod-liver Oil & Vitamins MEAT MARKETS Pork Roast Kiies Ducklings gieonve. 1. Loin or Rib Lb. 400 Thirty-five dollar and forty dollar SUITS BUY ON THE BUDGET PLAN Pay a fourth cash, the balance in 10 weekly, or 5 half-monthly payments. No interest. No extra charges. Lowest cash prices. 75 Extra Pants To Match $5 Thin Skin, Juicy ORANGES Medium Size Med. Large Size pos. 23¢ 33¢ 4 Oranges FREE With Each Dozen Purchased - Alaskan Pink SALMON | “The King of Food Fish” 3 3 Cans 490 - Uneeda Biscuits 2 pkgs. 9@ PURE LARD 2 bs. 25¢ (Bulk Only) Cigarettes Chesterfield Lucky Strike Old Gold—Camel Piedmont #.23e Carton of 10 $1.15 | | | 0

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