Evening Star Newspaper, March 5, 1929, Page 19

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- DAY SCHOOL ] 10th Year Limited classes insure scademic progress and cultural development. Conveyance furnished. Small Residence Department . Stanwood Cobb ! Also Conducts at Eliot, Maine { MAST COVE CAMP |, Kalt-water Bathing—Fxpert Child Care { Isyour letterhead . up to the quality of your product or service? N Let us design and engrave one that is ‘BREW®D Engravers and Stationers 611 Twelfth Street A DISTINCTIVE CAR Special Fleetwood five-passenger closed body. Black oil finish. Beau- tiful upholstery. Every needed ac- cessory. Chassis is of late model, thoroughly up to date. =New Tires truly wonderful motor. Original cost 27 Our price today is 32, Terms available. PACKARD—WA Seventeenth at K " We Can Save You Money on New Spring Window Shad And we “‘tailor” make them to precisely fit your windows. Now is the time to leave an_order. Our factory prices save you the middle man’s profit. An estimate won't obligate *** Phone Main 3211 We make drapes and slip covers VITT’S importers and Jobbers W. (2nd Floor) M. 3 Portner Cafe 15th St. Bet. Uand V Table d’hote Dinner = S Until 7:30 Dine at the Portner this evenins. ot licis . B'.(-t.*.:‘. ¢ rolls, = your faverite F. A. COOKE, Manager Phone North 1420 Desirable Apartments Reasonably Priegd Portner Apts. SHITH LAYSCOLF DURNG INAEURAL {On Seventh | Course When Hoover ! Was Given Oath. | By the Assoclated Press. PALM BEACH, Fla, March 5.—As | Herbert Hoover took the oath that made | him President of the United States, his opponent in the November election, Al- | ffed E. Smith, former New York Gov- ernor, swung a well timed driver ‘against a gutta percha pellet on the seventh tee of the Everglades Golf Club here, watched the sphere go sailing down the | fairway—and chuckled. Mr. Smith awakened late yesterday morning at his hotel, where he and | Mrs. Smith and a party of friends have | been for nearly & month. After break- fast, he and three members of his par- | ty motored to the golf course. | " At just about 12:45 o'clock, as Pres- ident "Hoover raised his hand to take | the oath, Mr. Smith made his drive | and smiled happily as William F. Ken- | ny of New York congratulated him on | the stroke. “ Last night at 11:55 o'clock, the Smith | party boarded the private car of Mr. Kenny and left for the North. A brief stop will be made at Wash- ington tomorrow morning, another at a point in Delaware and Mr. Smith will arrive back on the sidewalks of New York about 10 o'clock. Mr. Smith did not send a telegram o congratulations to President Hoover to- day. He contemplated such action this morning, “but since I saw Mr. Hoover | less than two weeks ago and personally exterrded my congratulations and felici- | tations, I did not care to bother him | with & telegram,” he said. N XA CONNECTICUT MAN CUT BY BAYONET | Member of Gov. Trumbull's Guard Is Hurt—Many Women Faint. Wounded slightly by & bayonet in the military guard for Gov. Trumbull of Connecticut, Dr. W. Nugent of New Ha- ven provided the first military casualty of inauguration today, while many other persons fainted, and some were hurt by falling. Dr. Nugent was hurt when with the Connecticut Guard on Third street wait- ing for the inaugural parade to start. His cut land was tréated at Providence Hospital. Annie Rooney, 50 years old, of Hamp- ton, Va., was injured when knocked down by a bicycle at Tenth and I streets about noon. She was treated at Emer- gency Hospital for a cut over the eye. ‘Three-year-old Randall Crain of 5309 Eighth street fell down and cut his head while waiting for the inaugural parade at Thirteenth street and Penn- sylvania avenue. He was treated at Emergency Hospital. Miss Loretta Siefert of East Liberty, Pa., who came to march in a girls’ brigade representing the Pittsburgh Military Institute, fainted at Fifth and C streets and fell, striking her head the curb. At Providence Hos- pital, where she was treated, it was said she had a slight concussion of the brain, but not serious, and she might be able. to return home tonight. ‘Thirty-nine cases had been received, mostly women who had fainted, at the Capitol Grounds field hospital tent, set upl by the inaugural emergency com- mittee. . Burchell’s i Bouquet Coffee Quality Superb . .. 40c s N. W. Burchell 817-19 Fourteenth St. EEX] J’é'fi_‘vi.’ £l Luncheon 11:45 Until 2:15 YOD‘R selection from a variety of tempting Plate Luncheons — each an appetizing delight— Homemade Pies and Pastries Homemade Ice Creams Delicious Wafl Food and Service Unsurpassed Columbia Road 4 18% OPPOSITE AMBASSADOR, Columbia 5042 FREPFPRERErESs ¥ FRFFPEORSE % ot o DR. HECKMAN. TO ADDRESS PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS Assistant Professor of Fine Arts, Columbia U. College, Scheduled for Talk to Educators. Dr. Albert W. Heckman, assistant professor of fine arts at the Teachers’ College of Columbia University, will ad- dress the teachers and officers of the public schools here Thursday on an as yet unannounced subject pertaining to the fine arts. The lecture is designed to interest instructors in the arts depart- ment, but other teachers are urged to hear it also. Dr, Heckman will speak first to the teachers and officers of the colored schools at a meeting in Dunbar High School at 3:45 o'clock Thursday after- noon. The lecture will be repeated for the instructors in the white schools at the - Central High School at 8 o'clock the same night. Fomer-—Police Chief Sent to Jail, DANVILLE, Tll, March 5 (#).—Hezzie Byrne, former chief of police of John- son. City, Ill, was semtenced to six months in jail yesterday and fined $1,000 by Federal Judge Walter Lind- , in conection with the Williamson ty, 111, liquor conspiracy case. Arlie Boswell, former prosecurton, and a num- ber of other ex-officials of the county previously were sentenced. \ + TFall From Toy Auto Fatal. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., March 5 (#).—Dewey Clarence Engiand, 3, was killed instantly here yesterday when he fell from a chair on a toy ;‘uwmgbllt The axle plerced the child’s Notice the Smart Strap effect Lido Sand Kid The shade of this shoe is adorable. The model is cool looking and Springlike. bracelet buckle strap it gives the foot unusual attractiveness. You wi fitting and comfortable on a pair of the very smartest new Spring footwear. With its new 11 find this shoe so well you will forget you have $12.50 Wolfs Watx-Cer Shop 929 F Street Tee of Florida THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D.” €. TUESDAY,” MARCH 5, 1929." SOCIETY !__(Continued From Eighteenth Page) { of ¥ at the Club Chantecler supper | dance last night. | Mrs. Frank Hall Davis of Wilming- {ton, Del, Republican committeewoman from Delaware, and vice chairman of Kent County committee, entertained at dinner at the Willard last night before the ball. Among the guests were Mrs. Clayton Douglass Buck, wife of Gov. Buck of Delaware; Mrs. Henry Hazel, { wife of the lieutenant governor: Ms. | Robert P. Graham, Miss Bess Bullock, | field, Mrs. Kate Rono, Mrs. Mary Money, Mrs. Bess Groves, Mrs. Harry C. | Tchudy, Mrs. Wilbur D. Burton, Mrs. Annie Moore, Mrs. Ruth Hall, Mrs. { Wilbur Clark. Mrs. Lena Messick, Miss B. Butz, Mrs. Jennie Deakyne, Mrs. Megan, Miss Oakley, Miss Clayton, Mrs. Eldridge, Mrs. Morgan, Mrs. Houch, Mrs. Scitt, Mrs. Walton, Mrs. Brewer, Mrs. Vanscriber, Miss Milliken and Mrs. Shorb. Towa State Society Reception Tonight. ‘The Governor of Towa and Mrs. John ball which the Iowa State Society will glve in the ballroom of the United States Chamber of Commerce Building, on H street at Connecticut avenue, this evening. The arty is a farewell to the Assistant Secretary of War, Col. Charles Burton Robbins, who will be assisted in receiving by members of the Iowa dele- gation in Congress and the officers of the soclety, inciuding Mr. Karl S. Hofl- man, first vice president; Mrs. Willlam Fitch Kelley, second vice president; Mrs. F. Dickinson Letts, third vice pre: | Mr. Karl D. Loos, fourth vice pres i Mr. Harry E. Hull, Mrs. Lilly Belle Lockwood and Miss Gertrude M. Louis, secretary-treasurer, who form the com- mittee or arrangements for the party. Mrs, Kelley will entertain at dinner before the ball, her guests being asked to meet the governor and Mrs. Ham- mill. ‘The pages of the House of Represen- tatives will give a dance this evening in the Wardman Park Saddle Club. The table named for John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the United States, is sponsored by Mrs. Robert W. Imbrie, for the Mi-Careme victory breakfast for the benefit of Monticello, Thursday. at 12 o'clock, in the Willard Hotel. Mrs. Larz Anderson of Wash- ington and Massachusetts, Mr. John Storer and Miss Storer and Mrs. and Mrs. Charles J. Bell and her guest, will also be at that table. Mrs. Whitney Hoff of Paris, who is now visiting in Washington, has made a generous donation to the Monticello fund. Mrs. Conrad Becker will enter- tain & number of guests at the break- fast, and Mrs. John W. Pole and Miss Clara McQuown are additional sub- scribers. Final reservations’ are now being made at the Willard Social Bureau. Mr. Charles H. Johnston was host to a company of 10 at the Club Chantecler supper dance last night. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Bolte motored from their home in Pelham, N. Y., to attend the inauguration and afe stay- ing at the Grace Dodge Hotel for about a week. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Bugbee of Bos- ton, Mass,, are at the Carlton for a few days. Miss Marcia L. Patterson of Sweet Briar College, Va., is at the Grace Dodge Hotel, having come to Washington for the inauguration. Mrs, Edward A. Jones of Pittsfield, Mass,, is stopping at the Hay-Adams House during the inauguration. Mr. and Mrs. A. B, Cahill have arrived in Washington from their home in San The Spring Ensemble costumes. this attractively L WELVE: T Mr. B. F. Dawes entertained a party | | Mrs. Joseph Hillis, Mrs. Martha Scho- | Hammill will attend the reception and | Charles Wright, all of Massachusetts, | Brothers ---compels your attention at this season. Your fur coat must be discarded and re- placed by this smart costume of lighter weight. These ensembles are really four They service you as a two- piece dress—a two-piece suit—a three= piece costume and their coats may be worn separately with other frocks. collection tweeds, also soft grey and warm beige and tan toned coverts, They are most TiE LOUVRE 1115 1117 F STREET A Revue 2 Authentic modes, in exceptional values— mark The Louvre’s display of Francisco on & tour of the East mdI are stopping at the Carlton, i Miss Eleanor M. Jones and Miss Natalle O. Jones of Goucher College, Baltimore, are at the Grace Dodge Hotel, having come for the week end and the inauguration. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hoag of St. Louis, Mo, are at the Carlton for a brief stay. Last Lecture of Series By Dr. Anspacher Tomorrow. Dr. Louis K. Anspacher, in the final talk of his series in the Willard Hotel tomorrow morning at 11:15 o'clock, will speak on “The Russian Revolution in the Light of Russian Literature,” for according to Dr. Anspacher, the history of one is the history of the other. Cen- sorship in Russia in the early days was so stringent that fiction and the novel were the only means of expressing criti- cism of existing conditions, and for that reason Russian literature is the most highly political of modern times. The Russians do not believe very much in “Art for Art's Sake,” and their whole literature is devoted to art of humani- ty's sake. Dr. Anspacher will show how the Russian mind was slowly prepared in this way for many of the things that happened after Borsh Litovsk in 1917. There will be many subscription { luncheons following the lecture, Well known Washington women are subscribing to the Mount Holyoke- Vassar scholarship fund joint benefit which is being arranged by local com- | mittees representing the alumnae as: | clations of the two colleges, which will take place Friday night and Saturday afternoon, March 15 and 16, in Poli's Theater, when the New York Theater Guild present “The Doctor’s Dilemma,” by Bernard Shaw, and “John | Ferguson,” by St. John Ervine. These two performances have been taken over by the local groups from the serfes of three plays to be given here by the New York Theater Guild for a week, beginning Monday night, under Mrs. Wilson Greene's management. Among those who have already sub- scribed for the Mount Holyoke-Vassar Grosvenor, Mrs. John B. Larner, Mrs. Ormsby McCammon, Mrs. J. J. Myers, Mrs. Carl A. Droop, Mrs. David L. Wing, Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, Mrs. Thomas W. Sidwell and Mrs. Frederic E. Farrington. Boxes for these two performances are in the hands of a joint cnmmlm‘el headed by Mrs. Walter L. Clark, chair- man, of the Mount Holyoke Alumnae | Association, and Mrs. Mason M. Patrick, ice chairman, of the Vassar Alumnae Association. Tickets are in charge of Miss Margaret Barber, for Vassar, and Mrs. Willlam C. Gordon, for Mount Holyoke. Mr. Carl Robertson Kurtz was host to a small party at the Club Chantecler | supper dance last night. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Knudsen of Mil- waukee, Wis,, are at the Carlton for everal days. MUSIC IN TOWN BY SWANEE Syncopators In are brilliant colored priced. H IR T EEN 1 | benefit performances are Mrs. Gilbert ||| N. J, is stopping at the Hay-Adams House during the inauguration. Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Thorsen of New York City are passing some time at the Carlton. Mr. R. Latham Luke of London, Eng- land, is at the Grace Dodge Hotel, hav- ing come to attend the inaugural cere- monies, * Mr. and Mrs. George W. Booth of Orange, N. J. are at the Carlton for a short sta MISSING AUTOS LAID TO INAUGURAL TRAFFIC| Seventeen Machines Disappear. Five Recovered—One Moved by Police to Clear Street. The press of trafic due to inaugural crowds was held partially responsible for the 17 automobiles reported as miss- ing yesterday. One of the owners, Representative England of West Virginia, found later the police had moved his machine, parked on New Jersey avenue between B and C streets, to clear the avenue for marchers. Elmer E. Metz, Manassas, Va.,, and Charles R. Murphy, Hyattsville, Md., ‘were among visitors who reported miss- ing automobiles. . Five of the 17 cars had been iecovered today. This number included the one belonging to Mr. Met: DEFEAT IS AVERTED. | Four Votes in House Save Govern- | ment of South Africa. CAPE_TOWN, South Africa, March 5 (#).—Four votes only saved the gov- | ernment from defeat in the House of | Assembly yesterday on a vote in con- nection with the German trade treaty || passed by the House a few days ago. The speaker disallowed the motion of Gen. Smuts, the opposition leader, for | an adjournment of the House in order || to discuss the government’s refusal to | submit the treaty to the Senate, but allowed a vote on a labor motion that the resolution ratifying the treaty should be sent to the upper house. Spring Drapery and Slip Cover Materials are Arriving Every facility for making Slip Covers and Draperies to order. Our shops also specialize in Up]’mlstering and Refin;shing Furniture Five hundred delegates attended the Protestant foreign missions conference in_Detrof Chokers Remodeled We have pleased thousands of cus- tomers. You will be $ surprised how beau- tiful we can make your choker look. We use the best of findings. Very Reasonable Estimates n Coats New England Furriers Benjamin Sherman. . 18<“12th S ki Sbeciai Antique Sale Furniture and 3 Days, Beginning Tuesday, March 5-6-7 GEORGE W. Wa.rhi'nglon’: Center of Supply Rare Old Furniture —Fireside chairs, dining room pieces, crystal chandeliers, davenport tables, sofas, paintings and ornaments. North 332 "REYNOLDS Look for yellow brick residence building at 1742 M Street N.W. Works of Art North 332 - PYTHON ( encln Line Automobile Rally esoeoceoe Mere “trips” are tame beside the dizzy prospect of getting into the 12-day contest through France open to a]l comers circles France and ends in Deauville at the height of the seasor for the winning car.-:-Rules and scoring by the Auto- mobile Club de France.-:-Shore entertainment... Pumps and Straps STERD T e - Women's Sho 1207 F St.w tarts from Paris on May 25th Grand prize....the French Line cup Estimates cheerfully submitted on request JAMES B. HENDERSON Fine Furniture, Laces, Upholstering, Paperhanging, Painting 1108 G Street———Phones 77 7676 [T [ [ | T T I New Spring Frocks Fashion is making wide departures for the season ahead—adapting new weaves; adopting new designs—creating conceits that you will ap- praise as most artistic; and developing concep- tions that are most different. You are to feel at perfect liberty to make in- spection—no obligation is incurred in that—but you will realize the advantage that is yours in va- riety, value and economy. Frocks for street, sports and afternoon wear, . $16.50 1o $125.00 [ L B bl New Hats —of charmingly new modes—in street and sports types. Felt, Balibuntl, Baku, Paris Menie and Baku and Felt combinations. $5.00 to $22.50 in charge of the Raymond-Whitcomb Co; 3 Official Sailings: Y ey Ile de France...May 10 Paris...May 15 Paris..Rheims...Verdun...St. Mihiel...Naney.. Strasbourg...Besancon. -:- Annecy...Aix-les i Grenoble. .. Avignon ...Tarascon... Nimes...Carcassonne...Toulouse... Tours...Deauville. ink of such a trip! as owner-driver...or take your chauffeur and sign on as passenger.-:- Carry the family if you like and score on each. Send for booklet of particulars Information. from any authorized French Line Agent or write direct to Chandler Bldg., 1429 Eye St., Washington., + cellently cut. THE WOMAN'S SHOP OF RALEIGH HABERDASHER The Epitome of Chic PAULINA ENSEMBLES It is an ensemble season and this is an ensemble shop —so it is but natural that you may notice many of the best dressed women and misses in Washington selecting Paulina Ensembles. SKETCHED—a charming wool jersey ensemble in a soft beige tone with modernistic design on the blouse and clever modernistic patch pockets. $39.75 Others up to $89.75 The Knox Hat, $15 THE WOMAN'S SHOP OF Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street Tremendous Response Featured the Announcement of our 16th ANNIVERSARY SALE Eager shoppers crowded our store all day Friday and Saturday securing great values in this big sale. For tomorrow, new styles have been added, so selections are most complete. Shop now for Easter and save on your Spring outfit. Sale Now In Full Swing MAIN FLOOR ECONOMY DEPARTMENT! Stunning Spring Dresses Every frock in this group is brand $Q).16 new. Lovely georgette prints, printed crepes, flat crepes, chiffons, Every new shade and style is here. Frocks that are well worth double this Anniversary price, Anniversary Feature! ! Newest Spring Dresses, Coats, Suits and Ensembles AMAZING VALUES ... All Sizes in the Lot Every garment in this group $ I 3.16 is an extraordinary valte. All are fashioned of fine quality ma- terials and in the smartest ON THE SECOND FLOOR Exclusive New Frocks, Coats, Suits and Ensembles Spring shades and styles, Re- Two Outstanding Groups $2316 ¢ $34.16 originals...but priced extremely low during this sale. A choice selection for misses and women. One-of-a-kind models, . .replicas of original Paris fashions. You can’t imagine such un- usual quality for so little money. We urge you to see the garments in these groups. Every new material—color and style for chic misses and womern. CHILDREN'S DEPT~ENTIRE THIRD FLOOR Girls’ New Girls’ New Spring Spring Coats Silk Dresses 56069816 | $6.16 Kashas, tweeds, and broad- Beautiful frocks for girls cloths. ..all fuuyTllmed and ex- from 2 104 years, Of crepe hrow scarfs ; _ and belted models in every de chine and flat crepe. Chic new color. Sizes from 2 to new styles...unusual values 14 years. for this salé.

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