Evening Star Newspaper, May 26, 1929, Page 3

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THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C MAY 26, 1929—PART 1. 3 If you are thinking of a New Apartment } Home don't fail to see ‘I those wonderful 5 and 6-Room Apts. 2800 Ontario Road None Better to Be Had Bliss Properties Vita Exerciser and Reducer A splendid mlchlne for home ex- ercise and scientific weight reduc- tion. Come in for free demonstration. Reasonable in Price 10 Months to Pay Get It at GIBSON’S 917-19 G St. N.W. NSO ) .Cool Sparkling| ICE— costs little 12 N JOURNALIST PARTY DUE TODAY European vlsnors, Carnegne Endowment Guests, Here ’ Until Thursday. ‘ | I { | | | i | A party of 12 European journalists, now in this country by invitation of the | division_of intercourse and education of the Carnegie Endowment for Inter- | national Peace, is expected to arrive {in Washington at 4 o'clock this after noon from New York for a four-day visit. Members of the party will stay at | the Mayflower Hotel while in the city. Their two-month tour of the country. | beginning in New York, will carry them ! through the country via the lower or Southern route, returning to New York | | on July 19. | ‘Accompanied by J. Edwin Young of | |the Carnegie Endowment staff, the! | journalists will go for an extended | | automobile tour of the city tomorrow | afternoon. Monday morning they will | h;e presented to President Hoover and | the Secretary of State, this to be fol- |lowed by a trip to the Capitol and a reception at the *National Press Club. Tuesday’s program calls for a trip to the United States Chamber of Com- merce, the Pan American Union, the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington | Monument. At noon they will hold | a press conference with the President, { followed by a luncheon in the Press Club as guests of the Overseas Writers. Wednesday morning will be spent in trip to Mount Vernon and the Tomb | of the Unknown Soldier. At 3 o'clock they will be received by the Right Rev James E. Freeman, Bishop of Wash. | ington, at the Washington Cathedral, | |and in the evening they will be the| | guests of the Endowment at a dinner in the Willard Hotel. They will at- | tend the Memorial day services at Ar- The purpose of the visit, as enunci- | ated by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the Endowment, is to “af- | ford representatives of the foreign press | the best possible opportunity to visit the United States, to meet representa- tive citiens, groups and organizations, !and to observe for themselves what We Want to Know HOW and WHY You Haven't Given —US—? a Trial Before A. G. BAKER NAMED CAMP LETTS HEAD Season to Open June 21, With Many Improvements Being Made for Boys. Arthur G. Baker,. graduate of the University of Illinois, and physical di- rector of the high schools in Champlain, T, has been appointed director of Camp Letts, the Summer resort for boys on the Rhodes River, near Annapoli conducted by the Washington Y. M. C. The camp will open for the season on June 21, according to an announce- ment by Leonard W. De Gt general secretary-elect of the Y. M. C. A. Many improvements are being made at the camp, it was stated. Baker completed a course in camp and playground management at the University of Illinois. He is thornuzhlv familiar with the local camp, h: served for several years assi . director of Camp Letts. He is not quite 130 yvears old. | Arrangements for opening the camp | will be discussed at a meeting of the | Y. M. C. A. camp committee at the City Cl\lb tomorrow afternoon at 12:30 o'clock. The committee consists of Col. P. M. Anderson, L. A. Snead and W. M. Guthrie. The improvement program calls for resurfacing of the roadway leading into the camp grounds, installa- tion of a new sewerage system and other work. ‘The camp, named for John C. Letts, its principal benefactor, embraces 217 acres of a wooded peninsula extending toward Chesapeake Bay in the mouth Poland, M. Casimir Smogorzew- |of the Rhodes River. Boys from 12 to skl ‘Warsaw Courier, Paris; Rumania, |18 years of age are admitted. There M. A. Corteanu, Bucharest; Spain, Julio | are a number of permanent camp build- Camba, Madrid, and reprelen!luve of | ings, two h!lches athletic fields, ete. American Express Co.. Robert S. Cauvin. Vegetables are suppllefl by a Y. M. C. ARTH!'R G BAKER. may be the more significant aspects| of present-day American life.” { The members of the party are: | Belgium, Georges Landov, editor of Matin: France, Georges Lechartier, Journal des Debats, Paris; Greece, Pedro Petridis, owner of Agon; Ital Leone Fumasone Biondi, Milan;; Sign Mirko Ardemagni, Il Popolo d'Italia, Milan; Signor Salvatore Cortesl, Asso- ciated Press, Rome: Jugoslavia, Dr. Paul Bremic Tatvia, Dr, Alfred Binlmans MODERNIZE Qour Home by the BERLY Pra~ Now is the time to have a sleeping porch built ; your screens put in perfect condition and the house painted. We are ready now to give vou immediate service to prepare you for the ot days of Summer. Take advantage of the Eberly Plan which makes it possible for you to completely recon- dition your home, spreading the payments over a period of years. NO READY CASH IS NECESSARY. Eberly trained mechanics will be assigned to do the work, which will assure you of perfect workmanship. A.-owned farm, adjoining the clmp‘ The camp program is designed to de- | 1 velop “skilled strength, knowledge of outdoors, practical Christianity and service to others.” CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL AT COMMUNITY CENTER Albert Jacobson Will Direct Program to Be Held Next Sunday. A children’s festival will be given the Jewish Community Center under the direction of Mrs. Albert Jacobson next Sunday night at 8 o'clock with children from the various i clubs afliated with the center com- prising the casts of the various events. Sylvia Sauber will give the openlng introduction. She will be followed by “Rose’s Ro- " impersonated by Bella Feld-| Rose Wertlieb. Evelyn Hillerson, | Mrs. at ! Annetta Honikman, Genrude Feldman, Rose Susser, Sigei Next on the program will be recita- | tions by Charlotte Goldberg, Doris Sil- | verberg, Geraldine Gosin, Fannie Gold- | | man and_Gertrude Edelson. | ™ Rose Susser and Jeane Sober will | | give a Bowery dance, following which | | will be a vocal duet, “Honey,” by Sylvia | Sauber and Lee Sigel. A recitation by Tillile Norwood will | be followed by a “Doll dance” by Mrs. Albert Jacobson, and a Russian song and dance by Shirley Levison. Gertrude Feldman will do_a solo dance and then will come the “Six Kazatkas,” impersonated by Jennie Yaffe, Tillie Gritz, Bella Feldman, | Jennie Yaffe and Lee | | e Sober, Rose Susser. “The Sailing Boat.” by the 16 danc- | ing sailors; a dance by the junior gobs, a naval march by the senior gobs and | ensemble by the entire company will | complete the first half of the evening's entertainment. Following intermission will come a | ballet by Adele and Marie Errara, Lor- | raine and Lenora Levenson, and the six ballerinas, Gertrude Edelson, Ger- trude Ostrow, Sophie Honikman, Fannie Goldman, Fannie Betman and Sarah Gross. The balance of the program will con- sist of a dance by Charlotte Goldberg and Doris Silverberg, a song and dance by Sylvia Sauber, “That Precious Little Thing Called Love,” by Lee Sigel and company; a dance by Sylvia Sauber, Mrs. Albert Jacobson and Gertrude Feldman; “Missionary Act” by Rose Susser and Rosalie Rubinton; “Don't Shore Dinners, $1-$1.50-52 Annetta Honiki and 2001 16th St. N.W. Exceptionally attractive apartments of three and four outside rooms, re- ception hall, bath and large kitchen. Electric refriger- ation. Reasonable Rentals ) g 2 & brick homes, priced the same like a home with plenty of separate garage, be sure and four of them. ONLY 2 LEFT DETACHED GARDEN HOMES North Woodridge 1st and Randolph Sts. N.E. We are offering for the first time new, detached, all- as a house in a row. If you vards, flowers, gardens and inspect these at once—only Be Like That,” by Shirley Levenson| and Gertrude Feldman, and the unny Wedding” by the entire | ensemble. GRAF MOTORS ARRIVE. 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