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NEWS OF THE CLUBS ‘Women’s City Club.—Tea time will be observed the clubhouse this after- noon from 4:30 to 6 o'clock. Members of the club are invited. Mrs. H. E. Geary and Mrs. Gladys Ball Middlemiss ‘will preside the tea tables. Mrs. Wil- liam R. Rhoades and Mrs. Ada Mills Payne will greet the guests. Guest priv- ileges. Rev. Earle Wilfley, D. D., will be honor guest and speaker at the meet- ing of the current events section, Tues- day afterncon at 5 o'clock. “The Crisis in_Palestine” will be the subject of the talk. Dr. Wilfley has recently returned from a visit through that country. Mrs. Grace Ross Chamberlin will present the speaker. All members are invited. Commissioner Jessie Dell, chairman of the business and professional section, announces a dinner for Wednesday at 6:30 o'clock. Women of the medical and nursing profession are the gue of honor and speakers. “Medical Night" will find among those present Miss J. Beatrice Bowman of the Navy: Maj. Julia C. Stimson of the Army, Dr. Mary O'Malley of St. Elizabath’s Hospital, Mrs. Mary A. Hickey, superintendent of nurses of the Veterans' Bureau; Miss | 10:15 Lucy Minnigerode, superintendent of | nurses, Public Health Service; Mrs. Ag- | nes H. Stewart, director of occurational | therapy, the Tuberculosis Hospital; Miss | Gertrude Bowling, director Instructive Visiting Nurse Society, and Dr. A. Fran- ces Foye. All club members are invited make reservations, especially those | associated with the medical and nurs- ing profession. Miss Dell will preside. | Dr. Wu, Chinese Minister to the United States, will be the honor guest and speaker at the forum luncheon, Saturday at 1 pm. Mme. Wu and Mrs. Burton K. Wheeler will also be guests. Dr. Wu, who spent much of his youth | in the United States when his father | was Minister, has recently returned | from a in Europe and will have in- | lcresting facts as a subject for the | t Mrs. Merritt O. Chance will pre- | side. Mrs. Laura A. Bradley is chair- | man of the committee arranging the | luncheon. Mrs. Leonard Shepard, sr. will ad- dress the drama unit section and mem- | bers of the club interested, at a meet- ing Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, on | the subject of Spanish drama. Miss | Gertrude Walter will read a play trans- lated from the Spanish. Mrs. Gladys Ball Middlemiss is chairman and will | preside at a short business meeting pre- ceding the talk. Wednesday evening | after the close of the club business meeting this section presented a one-act play “Orchid.” Taking the parts were C. Virginia Diedel, Margaret M. Gra- ham, Thelma Schmit and Elmer Atkin- | son The regular meeting of the board of | directors will be held Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. Mrs. John Allen Munson, chairman of the thimble section, reports many calls coming in for assistance and urges club members who have two hours to spare on Wednesdays, from 11 to 1 o'clock, to join the section as many days as possible to “sew for charity.” Mrs. Thomas, secretary of the section, reported a Thanksgiving basket sent to a needy family. Individual calls for garments have also been answered. Mrs. Mary H. Tighe is the latest new member. Mrs. Munson reports accept- ing the chairmanship for the selling of Christmas seals in the Washington Loan & Trust Bank, with Mrs. J. H. Thomas, Mrs. B. Kengla, Miss V. S. Benjamin and Mrs. Frances Wolfe, parliamentary section, Monday evening in the club house, at 7 o'clock. Mrs. A. J. McKelway, chairman of the child welfare committee, announces plans for an active program in con- Junction with other committees doing child welfare work. The program will be_announced shortly. Mrs. Gertrude Lyons, chairman of the educational music section and di- rector of the club chorus, announces a program of Christmas carols for the tea Sunday afternoon, December 22. Mrs. J. Edwin Reid, chairman of th: Monday auction and contract bridge scction, reports new members joining each week. and added interest in the instruction in contract bridge. Mrs. J. K. Freiot, chairman of the Contract Bridge Study Club, which meets Friday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock, invites club members interested in con- tract bridge to join the section. Pre- ceeding the playing, Mrs. Freiot gives a short lecture on the science of the game. Mrs. Mable Whitemarsh and Mrs. Lucy Fortune are hostesses at the meet- ings of the Tuesday evening free and easy auction section. Members of the club are invited to come in for an evening at cards. Instruction given when desired. At the business meeting Wednesday evening, a vote of protest was registered against the erection of a wharf by the Sun Ol Co., at Rosslyn, Va. An official protest will be sent to the National Park and Planning Commission. The protest was founded on the fact that the erection of such a wharf would | materially interfere with the program | of development of the Virginia side of | the Potomac. | tri American Association of University ‘Women.—Mrs. Dorothy Nichols will have charge of the club house for the | house committee during the month of | December. Miss Sara Abbott will be the hostess at the Monday tea, which Wil be followed by a branch meeting at 5 oclock. On Tuesday the first of a series of bridge luncheons is scheduled for 1 o'clock, with Mrs. Cloyd H. Marvin as hostess. At 11 am. on Tuesday Prof. L. K. Ragatz, a member of the faculty of George Washington Univer- sity, will speak to the international re- lations group on “The Background of the World Court.” This meeting is being sponsored by the League of Women Voters, the A. A. U. W. and the Y. W. C. A and will be held in the Y. W. C. A. Building, Seventeenth and K streets. The book review section will meet on Thursday at 11 am, when Miss Julia T. Macmillan will review “Qu=cn Eliza- beth.” by Katharine Anthony. A table for luncheon will be reserved for the group. Miss Ruth Kentzler will act as | hostess. On Thursday evening at 7| o'clock there will be a dinner in honor | of Dr. Kathryn McHale, the present | educational secretary and acting direc- tor of the American Association of Uni- versity Women, who will speak on “Na- tional Plans of the Association.” Be- fore assuming her duties Dr. McHale was professor of education at Goucher College. As the association is also one of the sponsors of the Washington | Child Research Center, the second speaker of the evening will be Dr. Mandel Sherman, director of the center, | who will tell of the possibilities of growth of the center. Reservations be- fore 9 pm. Wednesday. On Priday, at 1 o'clock, there will be 8 French conversation luncheon. The French classes, with Miss Elizabeth Carhart as leader, meet on Tuesday and Friday at 2:30 pm. In the evening, December 12 at 8 o'clock, the first meeting of the discussion group, under the leadership of Mr. Edward Linder- man of the New York School of Social Work, will be held. The topic for dis- cussion will be “Thc Social Implications to Mental Hygiene.” This group is limited in number, but there is one more vacancy. Any one wishing to avail herself of this opportunity, communi- cate with the chairman, Miss Martha MacLear, regarcing financial arrange- ments. Other study groups for the week are as follows: Monday at 2 p.m., advanced pre-school education, Neli Boyd Taylor, leader. Thursday at 8 p.m., beginning pre-school education, Miss Heinig, leader. Both these groups are held at the Washington Child Re- search Center, 1825 Columbia road. ‘The pre-adolescent group, with Dr. Kathryn McHale as leader, will meet at the club house, 1634 I street, on Wed- nesday at 9:45 am. All study groups are open to the general public and all except the Lin- corman group are without fee, ‘Twentieth - Century Club.—The busi- ness section of the club, Mrs. Louis A. J.| . The nature section will have an out- er, Mr. Walter Pratt, will talk on “Build- ing and Loan Assoclations as Institu- tions of Thrift and Self-help.” On Tuesday at 11 a.m., in Barker Hall, the music and art sections will meet to- gether to hear Miss Grace Lincoln Tem- ple, who will give an iliustrated lecture on “Christmas lmgrgnt:d by the Old Itallan Masters.” There will be inci- | dental music by a group of Friday Morning Music Club singers, under the | direction of Mrs. Frank Howard, with Miss Lucy Brickenstein at the piano. | Miss Katherine Riggs will give a group of harp solos. Members of the art and { music section and of the Twentieth | Century Club are invited to attend and | will have the privilege of bringing guests | with them. Luncheon will follow the | mesting. ‘Tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock the beginners' French class’ will be held at the home of Mrs. Charles J. Brand, 1661 Crescent place. |ing Wednesday. The trip will be through Arlington and the experimental farm, and the members will meet at the Fort Myer Station, Rosslyn, Va., at :15 am. The civic section of the Twentieth Century Club, Mrs. C. T. Watson, chair- man, will hold its next meeting at 12:30 p.m. Thursday, December 12, at the Y. . C. A. This section is planning to make visits in small groups to all the District institutions in the next two months, and on Thursday will have the pleasure of hearing Joseph Sanford, from the United States Bureau of Effi- ciency, speak on the standards of such institutions throughout the country in! order to have a basis of appraisal.” All members of the club are welcome to this meeting, but luncheon reservations must be made with the secretary, Mrs. Samuel G. Blythe, by Tuesday evening. Mrs. Richard Fay Jackson is general chairman of the committee which is arranging these visits, with Mrs. D. K. Shute, Mrs. Willoughby Chesley, Mrs. F. C. Schrader, Mrs.” W. W. Husband and Mrs. Arthur J. Collier as group chair- man. Chevy Chase Branch, League of American Pen Women, entertained at dinner at the Mayflower last Monday evening, with the Italian Ambassador as the guest of honor and heading a list of distinguished guests. Starting with the new year, the club will give a series of informal teas and book reviews, at which international celebrities will speak. Motion pictures will be used whenever possible in honor of the! speaker, and artists of reputation will furnish the music. Two new members are Miss Mary Bird Clayes and Mme. Louise Bruni, who recently came here from New York and is an artist of inter- national fame. Phil Sheridan Women's Relief Corps held its bi-monthly meeting Tuesday night, with Mrs. E. Helen Temple, president, in the chair. In the absence of Mrs. Amelia Failing, senior vice Mrs. G. B. Richardson, Mrs.! | Geoffrey Creyke, Mrs. J. T. Campbell, | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. .C, DECEMBER 8, 1929—PART FOUR. university Mrs. Grace Chamberlin an- nounced the name of Dean Elizabeth Peet as a new life member. Twenty- four new members were elected, includ- ing Mrs. Ernest Gillis, Mrs. W. E. Boyer, Loretta Cunningham, Alathea Lawton, Helen Martell, Fay Reeves, Rosalie Shaw, Helen L. Clark, Mrs. Don Sweet Knowlton, Misses Louise R. Hughes, Winnie Cox, Catherine Johnson, Louise | Moore, Eva Trusheim, Maude Aiton, Mrs. Lewis Alderman, Mrs. Earl W. Barnhardt Mrs. Florence V. Watkins, Miss Christine Heinig, Mrs. James Allen | Hicks, Mrs. Paul Nash and Miss Mar- garet Short Soroptimist Club of Washington, pre- | sided over by its president, Mrs. Harriet | Hawley Locher, held its regular lunch- | eon meeting Wednesday at the Lafay- | ette Hotel. Dr. De Witt Croissant of George | Washington University, who was the | guest of honor and speaker, gave a talk on “How to Get the Most Out of a Lit- | tle Reading.” Mrs. Caroline Stephen, past president of the Soroptimist Club, spoke in a humorous vein on her recent ! trip abroad. Guests in attendance were Alice Boss | of Washington, who was entertained by Mrs. May Lightfoot, and Mrs. Marie Winston, the guest of Mrs. Ruby Lee Minar. The annual election of officers of the | club will take place at their weekly luncheon on Wednesday, December 11, Lafayette Hotel, 1 p.m. Prince Georges County Federation of Women's Clubs.—Mrs. R. S. Allen, pres- ident of the county federation, has ap- | pointed Mrs, O. N. Eaton of Hyattsville chairman of the club institute, which is to be held during the Winter. The Chillum District Study Club will hold its regular meeting Tuesday, 8| p.m., in the Star Hall at Mount Rainier. Mrs, J. Enos Ray, the president, will be the hostess at this meeting. She extends an invitation to members of other clubs to attend. | The Women's Civic League of Mount Rainier, Md.—This club held its regu- lar monthly meeting December 3 at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. D. J. Orcutt, with the president, Mrs. C. P. Smith, presiding. The meeting opened with the Lord's Prayer. The salute to the flag was given, and “The Star Spangled Banner” was sung. ‘The secretary, Mrs. G. N. Speck @@ .n, | read the minutes of the Novemoer meeting. Mrs. F. P. Brown, the treas- urer, reported. Mrs. D. J. Orcutt, the director, re- ported on the semi-annual meeting held at Beltsville in November. She also read a “Christmas Message” written by Mrs. James H. Dorsey, State chairman of conservation for the Maryland Fed- eration of Women's Clubs, and indorsed by Mrs. John L. Alcock, State president. It will be sent to the leaders of women's organizations all over the country. The following members gave depart- mental reports: Mrs. Nelson Carr, American citizenship; Mrs. Jerry John- son, American home; Mrs. F. W. Caw- thorne, education; Mrs. W. N. Barnes, international relations; Mrs. T. J. Cam- field, public welfare. This being the annual meeting for president, Mrs. Caroline M." Gury acted in her stead. Miss Eleanor Marston acted as junior vice president. Mrs. Agnes Sibley and Mrs. Marion B. Parker filled the chairs of first and fourth col- orbearer, respectively. Mrs. Marie Bricker was elected to membership, and Mrs. Myrtle Ehlers, president of U. 8. Grant Circle, No. Mrs. Ella Wilson Southard, secreta: 1; & of U. S. Grant Circle, and Mrs. Lavinia Bashford, an officer in the Daughters of Union Veterans, were initiated into the order. The report of Mrs. Lida A. Oldroyd, chairman, indicated tbat the rummage sale had netted mnearly $40 to the treasury. Mrs. Addie W. Hickman, treasurer. is increasing the corps’ funds by her sale of Christmas cards. ‘The secretary, Mrs. Mabelle McDowell, read circular letter No. 1 from the National Press correspondent and de- partment general orders, No. 5. Mrs. Nan Slattery invited all present to attend the Christmas party to be given by the Daughters of Union Vet- erans of the Civil War on the evening of December 16 in their new hall, 1502 Fourteenth street. Mrs. Temple appointed as tellers Mrs. Isabel Bontz, Miss Emma HAyward and Mrs. Lavinia Bashford, and the elec- tion of officers for the ensuing year was held, with the following result: President, Mrs. Cora L. Manoly; senior vice president, Mrs. Margaret Bradt; Junior vice president, Mrs. Caroline M. Gury (re-elected); treasurer, Mrs. Ad- die W. Hickman (re-elected); chaplain, Mrs. Ella Wilson Southard; conductor, Mrs. E. Helen Temple; guard, Mrs. Emma Thomas; delegates to the de- partment convention, Mrs. Nan Slat- tery, Mrs. Olive Johnson, Mrs. Agnes Sibley, Mrs. Esther Lippold, Mrs. Hattie Canada and Miss Prances Taylor; al- ternates, Mrs. May Parker, Mrs. Emma Thomas, Miss Eleanor Marston, Mrs. Myrtle Ehlers, Mrs. Lavinia Bashford and Miss Marion Rhine. ‘The department president, Mrs. Char- lotte M. Cary, announced that her com- mittee would entertain the boys of Mount Alto Hospital on the evening of December 9 at 7 o'clock. The guests of honor were Department Comdr. Samuel G. Mawson, Assistant Adjt. Gen. Byron W. Bonney, Depart- ment Chaplain Theodore F. Brown. Col. O. H. Oldroyd and Comrade Convis Parker. Mrs. Schultz of Lincoln Corps was present. Burnside Corps, No. 4, Woman’s Re- liet Corps, held its regular meeting ‘Wednesday, November 27, with its pres- ident, Mrs. Delia L. O'Brien, presiding. Preceding the business of the meeting, the president requested the corps to rise in silent prayer out of respect to the late Secretary of War Good. The min- utes of the previous meeting were read by the secretary, Miss Jennie Hamilton, and were approved. The report of the treasurer, Mrs. Rose Pennell, showed a very substantial gain resulting from the recent card Enrty held b{ Burnside Corps under the direction of the enter- tainment committee, Mrs. Rose Pennell, Mrs. Cora Davis and Mrs. Alice Meade. A rising vote of thanks was given by the corps to this committee, as well as to all the members who had helped to make the card party such a success. The left-over prizes were sold to the members, which also netted a neat sum. The president announced the contin- ued {llness of Mrs. Stella Buxton. Ini- tiation services were held, when Mrs. Howarth and Miss Gillette were admit- ted to full membership of the order. The president spoke words of greeting to the new members, Mrs. Rosalie Shel- ton befittingly eulogized the late Sena- tor Warren, the last veteran of the Civil War in the Senate. On Wednesday, December 11, the an- nual election of officers will take place, and the president urged a full attend- ance. The meeting closed with the salute to the flag and the singing of “America.” The flags were furled to the strains of the “Star Spangled Ban- ner,” played by Miss Adelaide Foster. The Women's Alliance of All Souls’ Unitarian Church will meet Friday, De- cember 13, at 11 o'clock in Pierce Hall, Fifteenth and Harvard streets. Follow- ing the usual. business session, Mrs. Louis A. Bauer will speak and Dr. U. G. B. Plerce also will address the alliance. Luncheon served at 1 o'clock, Mrs. Knaebel, hostes: Columbian Women, George Washing- ton University.—At the December meet- ing, held Tuesday, interesting talks were heard from Miss Olive Dennis, service engineer of the Baltimore & Ohio Rail- road, and Miss Margaret Stevens, asso- ciate editor of the Baltimore & Ohio Magazine. Miss Dennis told of her work in increasing the provisions for the comfort of woman passengers, on the railroad. and Miss Stevens discussed the position of women in rail 8. ring the social hour preceding the meeting, members of the Women's Ath- the election of officers, Mrs, A. H. Dodge, chairman of the nominating committee, reported as follows: For president, Mrs. V. E. Carneal; vice presi- dent, Mrs. P. C. Smith; secretary, Mrs. G. N. Speckmann; treasurer, Mrs. F. P. Brown. These were all unanimously elected to the respective offices.. Mrs. Smith had previously requested to not beonconsldered a candidate for re-elec- Mrs. R. S. Allen, president of the county federation, was the guest of the afternoon, and she talked on federation work, stressing the importance of the State endowment fund. She compli- mented the Women’s Civic League on its splendid work since its reorganiza- tion in 1925, stating that it was rated second among the 21 clubs in the ca%r}llly:n t1ts nl.‘tfimpll.shmen's. e next meeting of the Civic Le: Wwill be held at the home of Mrs. “I;Sl):'e "B’;’l:! of Valley avenue, January 7 at Fopundation Fund commit the ‘General Federation ‘of Womror Clubs. * Mrs, “Faris and Mrs. Freq yaltl;e: :ere r‘f’"‘” to the conference lepartment of lic w held in the Raleigh, ' P olC Welfare, Voteless D. C. League of Women Vot- ¢ers.—Dr. Esther Caukin, national secre- tary of the international relations of the A. A. U. W., will introduce Dr. L. J. Ragatz, the speaker at the first of a serles of lectures sponsored by the league, the Y. W. C. A. and the A &, U. W. to be given Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the Y. W. C. A. Building, Seventeenth and K streets. “The Background of the World Court” will be the subject of the talk. Dr. Ragatz is professor of Euro- pean history at George Washington University. "An invitation to attend is extended to all membes e TS of these D. C. Chapter, American War Moth- ers, under the supervision of the chair- man of ways and means, Mrs, Wolcott Simmons, gave a very successful card party for the Christmas Welfare Fund Monday evening, adding a substantial amount to funds in the treasury. Thursday Mrs. Ellen MacDonnell and Mrs. Lucy Campbell, members of the Arlington National Cemetery committee, with other members of the chapter took part in the services for three members of the Polar Bear Division whose bodies Were returned from Russia this week. A “laurel wreath” was placed to honor the memory of the men of this division who gave their lives in service. Friday, December 13, at 8 pm., the chapter will hold a business meeting at the Hamilton Hotel, to which women Who are eligible for mem| . bership are Ohio Girls' Club of Washington hel | thefr monthly meeting at the Thoi Circle Club Friday evening, the presi- dent, Mrs. Ethel J. Hess, presiding, After a short business session a one-act play, under the direction of Miss Irene Neikirk, was produced, by the following club members: Misses Kathryn Kelly, Janice Kelly, Helen Joliff, Arista Hubep. Estelle Pittman, Jean 'Landis, Miss Dorothy Hennessy, Mrs. Roberta Lentz, Miss Phyliss Hawkins supplemented the dramatic program with a number of piano seletions, was decided at this meeting that a benefit card party be held on Decembes 12, at the Thomas Circle Club, to assist in aising funds for the Christmas char- lity. The next meeting will be held January 15, Washington Unit, Women’s Overseas Service League.—The December meet- ing of the unit will be held Tuesday at 8 o'clock in the Memorial to the Women of the World War, the building at 1730 E street in which the District Chapter of the Red Cross now has its head- quarters. Reports will be given on the card party on December 6 for the sery- ice fund of the unit, and the question of representation of the unit at the convention in_Paris next May will be discussed. Plans will be announced for the Christmas parties to be given at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, the Naval Hospital and at Fort Myer. At 9 o'clock the members of the unit and their friends will be addressed by E. C, Babcock, department commander of the Disabled American Veterans. He will discuss the problem presented by the 2,000 disabled “veterans in the District of Columbia. Woman'’s Club of Chevy Chase, Md.— ‘Tomorrow morning there will be two French classes in the Chevy Chase branch of the District of Columbia Pub- lic Library, the beginners at 10 a.m. and the advanced at 11 am. The beginners’ class meets again Wednesday at the same hour. Mrs. Winslow H. Herschell letic Association of the university acted as hostesses. Miss Elizabeth Cullen, president ot the Columbian Women, re- celved with the guests of honor. A profit of more than $200 from the treasure hunt recently held was an- ncunced by the finance committee. The Simon, chairman, will meet_tomorrow atthe Y. W.C. A at 2 pm. Tf $300 in hand will be turned over to the is the instructor. Tuesday at 10 a. the nature section will have the usual walk from Chevy Chase Circle, and at the same hour the December luncheon committee will meet at the home of its 3901 Ingomar street. The speaker will be Miss Annie M. Wilson, chairman of the fine arts committee in the Mont- gomery County Federation of ‘Women's Clubs. Wednesday the music section Chase Community Center in E. B. Brown School. At 1 o'clock the execu- tive board will meet for luncheon at the Village Inn, the hostesses being Mrs. R. Harvey Sargent, Mrs. W. Clark Dean and Mrs. Hoover Hanger. After lunch- eon the board will go to the home of Mrs. Sargent for a business meeting. Woman's Club of Befliesda.—Dr. Thomas H. Healy of the foreign service school of Georgetown University will be the guest speaker at the December meeting of the club, which will be held Tuesday at 2 pm. at the clubhouse. Dr. Healy, who comes at the invitation of the department of international rela-; tions, Mrs. Errett Wallace chairman, has recently returned from The Hague, | where he gave a course of lectures on| international law. | ‘The hostesses for tea Tuesday will be | Mrs. John B. Bennet, Mrs. Charles I. Corby. Mrs. C. F. Dickens, Mrs. Benja- min T. Elmore, Mrs. H. H. Glassie, Mrs. E. L. Montgomery, Mrs. G. Wady Imirie, Mrs. H. Latane Lewis, Mrs. E. B. Morris, | Mrs. John O'Shea, Mrs. Frederick A. Parkhurst, Mrs. John Reeside and Mrs. Errett Wallace, chairman. The president, Mrs..Gilbert H. Gros- venor, will preside at the meeting. Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey Tent, N 1, Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War, met on Monday evening, with the president, Miss Ellen S. Meyess, in the chair. Mrs. Meade acted as press correspondent in the absence of that officer. Visitors were Mrs. Kate P. Don- aldson of the Betsey Ross Tent of Jack- son, Mich.; Past Comdr. Houck of Cush- | ing Camp, Sons of Veterans, and Mr. McElroy, secretary of Harding Camp. John G. Bugbee and Theodore T. Mitchel were obligated and Miss Myrtle H. Palmer and Mrs. Alma A. Carroll were elected to membership. It was announced that the tent is invited to a card party to be held by Lincoln Camp, Sons of Veterans. on Friday, December 13, at its hall, 808 I street northwest. The following officers were elected for the year 1930: President, Mrs. Horne; senior vice president, Mrs. Eckard; jun- for vice president, Mrs. Lippold: treas- urer, Mrs, Rahn; members of the coun- cil, Mrs, Manoly, Mrs, Brodt and Mrs. Burke; and patriotic instructor, Mr: Fauth. The tent is moving to its new | hall at 1502 Fourteenth street north- west, where on December 16 it will hold its annual Christmas party for the vet- erans, members and friends. The usual basket of flowers will be sent to the Soldiers and Sallors’ Temporary Home to decorate their Christmas table, and baskets and flowers sent to the needy and sick. The chaplain, Mrs. Bugbee, conducted | the memorial exercise at the tomb of the Unknown Civil War Dead at Ar- lington on December 1, when a wreath was placed in honor of Mrs. Mary A. Hayward, the first honored member of the tent. Crittenton Wheel Club met on No- vember 21 with Mrs. Weber at her pretty suburban home on Cathedral avenue. Seventeen members and one guest were present. The usual business was trans- acted and new ideas were advanced for the pleasure and comfort of the moth- ers and babes. The next meeting will be held at Mrs. Hillman's, 1514 Varnum street, on December 12, League of American Pen Women of the District of Columbia.—At the ar- tists’ tea, which will be held at the studio in Stoneleigh Court this after- noon from 4 to 6 o'clock Miss Clara Hill, chairman, will present Mr. Henry K. Bush-Brown, Washington sculptor, who will speak on “The Artistic De- velopment of Washington.” Mrs. C. Leonard Chambers will preside at the tea table assisted by Mrs. Walter Miles, Mrs. Anne C. Manchester, Mrs. Turin Boone and a group of young girls, mem- bers of the student group. ‘The president, Mrs. E. Richard Gasch, has announced that the studio will be open every afternoon from 2 until 5:30 o'clock and tea will be served. The following hostesses will serve this week: Monday, Mrs. Eli A. Helmick: Tuesday, Mrs. Nelson D. Webster; Wed- nesday, Dr. Elnora C. Folkmar; Thurs- day, Mrs. Samuel Burleigh Milton; Friday. Mrs. Hugh Irish, and Saturday, Mrs, Ernest Wiggins. The Christmas sale of gglnll work of members opened last Tuesday and will continue through Saturday, December 21. The first sale made was a child’s book by Susie White McGowan, based on her story which won the Isabel Anderson contest prize two_years ago. ‘The playwriters’ group, under Mrs. Edith Ogden Heidel, has arranged an interesting program for Tuesday eve- ning, to which all members of the league are invited. “The Old Drama and the New” will he subject of a lecture by Prof. Willlam L. Corbin, who is librarian at the Smithsonian Insti- tution and lecturer in English at the American University. A one-act play, | “Joint Owners in Spain,” will be given by a cast from the Renshaw School of Speech under the direction of Jane Plummer Rice. This group held a meeting this past week to decide on rules for the $50 prize contest and to discuss further plans for the group's presentation of its members’ plays. The regular meeting of the round table, conducted by Miss Alice Heaven, will be held on Wednesday afternoon at 2:30. That evening the monthly book review program, under the chair- manship of Mrs. Lily R. Hunt, will take place. Mrs. Willlam Wolff Smith will review “The Immortal Lover,” a Robert Burns romance by John A. Steuart, and “A Crown for Carlotta,” by M. Henderson, The French class, conducted by Madame Felian Garzia, will hold its weekly meeting Thursday afternoon at 4:30, and the editing group, under Dr. Elnora Folk- mar, will holds its meeting that eve- ning at 8 o'clock. Much interest is being shown by writers and literary people of the Capi- tal in the revival of the Old English Coftce House by the Pen Women of the District -at their studio in Stone- leigh Court. The opening coffee house talk will take place next Friday after- noon at 4:30 o'clock when Mrs. William Wolff Smith, chairman, wiil present as the guest of honor and speaker, Princess Dur Ling of China, interna- tionally known authoress, who s com- ing down from New York for the occa- sion. Among the books she has writ- ten are: “Kow Tow,” “Two Years in the Forbidden City,” and “Old Buddha.” At the coffee house the princess will speak on_present-day conditions in China. The Princess is the daughter of Yu Keng who was one of the last Mandarins of the Manchu region and for many years a prominent figure in the government of China, having served as a cabinet officer and later as am- bassador to Japan and to Paris. Prin- cess Dur Ling was the first lady-is waiting to her majesty Tzu Hsi, Do ager Empress of China. While in the city she will be the guest of Capt. and Mrs. C. C. Calhoun at Rossdhu, their estate in Braemar Forest. These lit- erary symposiums will be open to the public. The hospitality committee, of which Mrs. Edward Nelson Dingley is chairman, will receive the guests and coffee will be served by the following members of the nudebm ngl‘;lve ?‘;ug’:f league; Eleanor Chambers, 3 B:lgnulée Green, Elizabeth Hahoff, Muriel Hazard, Janice Holland, Evelyn Marshall, Elizabeth McKelvey, Eliza- beth Miles, Suzanne Mullett, Diana Powell, Constance Robinson, Dorothy Shaffer and Margaret Wayland. Tick- ets are on sale at the studio, which 15 open ever yafternoon, and they may also be purchased at the door. Owing to the Christmas holidays the | poetry and music groups will not meet this “month and the fellowship tea fin]d French salon have also been can- celed. The Woman's Community . Club of | Kensington. — John Willlam Cooper, United States commissioner of the De- chairman, Mrs. Thomas L. Phillips, 6314 Meadow lane. At 11 a.m. the member- | money is to be devoted to the scholai- | Ship committee will meet with the' meeting will be under the auspices of ship fund, n'::'d With the_addition of chairman, Mrs. Jesse E. Swigart, 321 the equcationss committee of the Wom= tion of $150, the proceeds from a recent Communif Essex street. The art section ‘. will meet partment of Education, will the | speaker on Wednesday evening, Decem- as an additional gift of $500.|at 2:30 p.m. with Mrs. John Boyle, jr.,' ritt, chairman. Mrs. Ryan, principal of the Kensington Grammar School, has invited all the teachers of the county to hear Dr. Cooper. Mrs. George C. Shinn, president, presided. On account of the inclement - weather, Prof. Charles S. Richardson, head of the department of speaking at the University of Mary- land, was unable to address the club. Miss Annie Wilson, former director of art in the public schools of the District, gave an interesting talk on art. Mrs. David Grossnickle, soprano, sang a solo G. Cogswell. The Woman's Club of Kensington.— Harry H. Semmes read her well pre- pared paper on Walter Damrosch. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. I H. Linto Pctworth Woman’s Club.—The litera- ture section of the Petworth Woman's Club met November 11 with Mrs. James Chalmers, and 16 members attended. Mrs. Frederick Weihe gave a splendidly rendered dramatic reading from ‘“The Last: Duchess.” , Plans were discussed for the book review to be given at the Mount Pleasant Library in January. Mrs. L. H. Dewey, Mrs. J. W. Mee and Mrs. J. K. Utley were hostesses to the philanthropic section on November 19. Luncheon was served at Mrs. Dewey’s home, after which a meeting was held at Mrs. Mee’s, where sewing machines and materials were waiting. Blouses, dresses and Christmas stockings ‘ for Gospel Mission are in various stages of completion District of Columbia laws governing the dower and inheritance rights of women was the main topic of the civic section meeting in November. Mrs. L. O. Cooke gave many interesting events of current interest. Mrs. J. K. Utley told of her visit to a cotton mill in the South and some of the conditions affecting the health of the mill workers. Mrs. G. W. Stose and Miss Esther Mc- Devitt were hostesses to the section at this meeting. One new member was added to this section and 11 were present. Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, the monthly luncheon of the art section was held on the third instead of the fourth Thursday of November. Fifty- four members ‘and four guests were present. Mr. Keigorian of the rug de- partment of Dulin & Martin’s gave a very interesting talk on Oriental rugs and told how the locality from which a rug comes can be told by its pattern, and how to tell the quality of an Ori- ental rug. The section regretfully ac- cepted the resignation of the chairman, Mrs. Frederick Bourdon, due to her moving from the city. Mrs. L. T. Jones, the club president, announced the ap- pointment of Mrs. E. H. Jarvis as the new section chairman. The December meeting of this section will be moved forward to the 19th of the month due to the holiday season. Mrs. Lolitta Smith and Mrs. E. C. Magdeburger were joint hostesses to the music section on November 26 at the home of Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Eder Reed gave a paper on Bach and his compo- sitions. Part of the evening was spent in practicing chorus work. Mrs. Walter Conway, section chairman, wishes all members to note that the December meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Paul Woekel, 3923 Georgia avenue, which is a change from the year book. Mrs. Conway also asks that every sec- tion member will be present at this meeting as there is special work to be done. Council of Jewish Women.—The monthly board meeting of the Council of Jewish Women took place on Tues- day, December 3. The vice president, M. presided. Corre- spondence and the treasurer’s report were read. Plans for co-operation in the Community Chest drive were dis- cussed. Instructions regarding revi- sions to the constitution and by-laws of our national organization were given to local delegates to the triennial convention, to be held in January in California.” The program for the next meeting, to be held on Tuesday, was announced. Mr. Oscar Leonard and Representative Sfrovich of New York will be the speakers. A symposium by our social service workers will be given. Syracuse University Alumnae of Washington will hold their December meeting at the club house of the Amer- ican Association of University Women on Monday evening, December 9. Din- ner at 6 o'clock will be followed by a social hour. Capitol Hill History Club held its bi- monthly meeting Wednesday, November 27, at the home of Mrs. E. M. Wallace, Mrs. H. F. Patterson, the president, oc: cupied the chair. During the business session Mrs. T. F. Rorke gave a report of the federation meeting. The “For- mation of Three Kingdoms, Norway, Denmark and Sweden,” was the subject of a paper by Mrs. E. K. Foltz. A pa- per_on “Education” was given by Mrs. E. E. Stearns. The club will meet De- cember 11 with Mrs. Patterson. District of Columbia Home Economics Association, food and nutrition section, will meet on December 17 in the Red Cross Auditorium at 8 p.m. Dr. Paul Howe will speak on “Institutional Diets.” This is a joint meeting of the Dietetics Association and the nutrition section. On Tuesday the homemakers’ section will meet at the Bureau of Home Eco- nomics at 2:45 p.m. The members will be conducted through the bureau and shown the equipment used and experi- ments now in progress. All interested are cordially invited. Washington Cultus Club met with Mrs. J. Ramsay Nevitt on Tuesday. After the usual preliminaries—Iunch, social hour and business session—Mrs. William 8. Corby read a paper on “Eng- land of Today,” giving briefly a num- ber of news items, following the return of Premier Macdonald from the United States. Mrs. George W. Harris gave a resume of historic phases of “Ancient London,” which she has recently visited, and Mrs. Paris Brengle recounted her ad- ventures flying from London to Paris. Twenty-one members and qne guest— Mrs, Prederick A. Fenning—Were pres- ent. The next meeting will be with rs. Ralph P. Barnard, 1443 Euclid street, December 10. Loyalty Lodge, No. 4, Order of Shep- herds of Bethlehem, was called to or- der at the last meeting by Comdr. Growl. During the evening two tur- keys were voiced off, the winners being Mrs. Jessie Dement and Mrs. Effie Moore. The following visitors addressed the meeting: Supervising Deputy of Mary- land Flada M. Reagan and Deputies P. i C. Phythian, P. C. Bowles, P. C. Smith and P. C. Baker. P.C. Bowles being our outgoing as well as our incoming deputy was tendered a reception during the evening. District Sunshine and Community Society met with Mrs. Willlam Beahm on Emerson street Monday, December 2. Assisting were Mesdames Charles Baur, Harry C. James, George Laizusi and M. S. Danforth. The president, Mrs, James H. Underwood, opened the meeting. After the business was trans- acted the speaker, Mrs. Harry Prentiss of the Gospel Mission, was introduced and gave an interesting account of the work_ in_the Arthur School. Mrs. Charles Bair gave an enjoyable group of reading. Mrs. Edgar B. Meritt, president _ General Federation of Women's Clubs, was the guest of honor. The Washington Readers Club met at All Soul's Church on December 3, at 8 p.m. Mary R. Ruff acted as hostess and an interesting program was pre- sented, the following members con- tributing: Constance M. Goodman, Es- ther Marshman, Emily Frech Barnes and Margaret Lendner McMullen. Miss Lillian Chenoweth, a guest artist, sang, accompanied at the piano by Dr. Clifton P. Clark. The program was completed Fifty members attended the regular | meeting held last Monday at the Ma- | Misses Anita Brown, Marion Cox, | will rehearse at 10 o'clock in the Chevy| sonic Hall. and was accompanied by Mrs. Roberts‘ Mrs. John T. Willlams was hostess for | the regular meeting of the club. Mrs. | SYNOPSIS. After the death of her father. whose last years were clouded by poverty and disgrace, Rhodn McFariand calls herself Rhod ; Claire Cleveland, comes to Rhoda claiming fo have known her father. She says that he had certain papers belonging to her, and asks to have tl returned s that all her father' in her aj the trunk is . she a denjes any knowledge of the the ald of Babe Jennings, Rhods a’s 'hoy mate. Forbes retrieves the trunk, which stolen by Max and Claire. but, before he tell Rhoda of his fea 0€s to see named Forster, who is Max Lewis’ un who, according to Claire, had been M Farland’s enemy and is'the person respon- She tells him of the theft sible for the ads. of the trunk and of her meeting with Claire. H . and denounces Claire as a nd the cause of Mr. M land's disgrace. He even says tl not helieve Rhoda’s statement t! Rhoda McFarland. Then he goes away, leaving Rhoda to wonder what it is ail about. She hears a familiar voice—her uncle's! Max Lewls appears and offers her money to leave She has already called up her let Babe know where she is, cle M ‘mal unk. When Forbes recains consciousness, Rhoda Is bending over him. Approaching footsteps cause them to take refuge in a closet. TWENTY-FOURTH INSTALLMENT. HAT pause had a galvanic effect upon the pair in the closet. Martin's arm was still clasped around Rhoda and the embrace which had begun as a strictly utilitarian one had changed its quality a little as Martin shut the door. If the steps had gone by it's reasonably cer- tain that he would have kissed her, and she was aware, by the sixth sense of lovers, of this intention of his when the steps stopped outside the door. The con- sequence qf that awareness was that she broke sharply away from him and huddled back against the wall. Martin, a little chilled by her action, instead of following to a position beside her backed | away in the opposite direction. His po- sitlon was better than Rhoda’s since, if the door opened, he would be behind it. Why didn’t it open? The next mo- ment the click of a key supplied the answer. For some reason this closet was supposed to be kept locked. What sort of closet was it? Did they keep any- thing special shut up in here? It seem- ed ordinary enough. It was pitch dark now, of course, but there were clothes- hooks behind Martin; what felt like an overcoat hanging from one of them. And his right hand, reaching intg the corner, rested on a cane. That might come in handy, he thought, and he gripped it. ‘The door swung open, letting in quite a lot of light from the corridor, but cut- ting off everything but the inner face of the door. He heard a gasp from Rhoda and a man's voice. Conley's! There was a click of a switch and the closet light came on overhead. “So this is where you've got to, is it?” Conley said. “I had an idea you were still on the premises. Well, the old man will be glad we haven't lost you.” He added with a sudden accession of trucu- lence that brought another gasp from the girl. “Come out of there!” At that Martin shifted his grip on the cane, noting as he did so that its rubber-shod ferrule was heavily weight- ed, llnd kicked shut the closet door with a sla The ynexpected sound of that deor slammed to behind fiim must have frozen Conley for an instant, for he and Rhoda presented, as Martin first saw them, the effect of a tableau vivant, Rhoda backed flat agalnst the wall— only was it a wall or was that middle panel in it a door? Conley gripping her by one arm in the midst of his arrested attempt to haul her away. The next in- stant he turned, saw Martin, and jump- ed for him. Martin gripped the cane tighter and met the rush with a backhand stroke at the side of his assailant’s head. Thanks to the thick rubber cap, with which the ferrule was shod, the impact was prac- tically noiseless, but the big detective wilted and went down. Rhoda and Martin gazed at each other aghast across him. 5 a most active worker in the club, as a Christmas gift. The Columbia Heights Art Club had its first December meeting with Mr. | John E. Fowler, with Mrs. Arthur J. Seaton assisting. Mrs. De Witt C. Crois- eant opened the meeting and Mrs. M. A. Winter was chairman, Mrs. Josephine Griffiths gave an account of Afghan and Kyber Pass, having spent some time in the Far East. Mrs. Seaton recited sev- eral poems of India. ‘The guests were: Mrs. J. E. Noir, Miss Sutherland, Mrs. Rose Mulcaer, Mrs. Dixon Hallencraatz, Mrs. Nelson Web- ster, Mrs. Lane and Mrs. Charles G. Abbott. P. E. O. Sisterhood, Chapter H, held its December meeting at the home of Miss - Anna Slaughter, 1430 Rhode Island avenue, the president, Mrs. Car- lotta Zirkle, presiding. The next regular meeting of Chapter H will be held on January 7. The Argyle Study Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Clyde Filley, 1307 Delafleld place, on Tuesday, December 10, at 1 o'clock. Luncheon . will be served, after which Mrs. Stewart Car- penter will read a paper on “Progress in Methods of Cooking.” The League of Republican Wome: held its regular monthly meeting -Mon. day at the Washington Club. The presi dent, Mrs. Edward A. Harriman, pre- siding at the business meeting and Mrs. Charles Alger in charge of the “forum” which followed, introduced the speak- ers, Representative Edgar C. Ellis, whose topic was “Congressional Procedure,” while Mrs. Harry K. Daugherty dis- cussed pending legislation. Tea fol- lowed, the hostess being Miss McQuoen, and the table was presided over by Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, wife of the former Representative from Wyoming, and Mrs. J. W. Pole, wife of the controller of the currency. Reservations for the dinner tomorrow evening at 6:30 o'clock at the City Club, 1320 G street, are in char Mrs. Ed- ward Dixon Hays. ek = 25, OFF Genuine Automatic Winterfronts “Onc Sauare South of Penna. Ave. on 12th" by Alice Hutchins Drake, another guest ber 11, at the school auditorium. This an’s ty Club, Mrs. R. G. Mer- artist, who told the Christmas story. A feature of the evening was the presenta- i entertainment, to Ada Loulse Townsend, ) Dowgow STAR SERYICE ST 12th a 'S W A Block Bel S the Raleigh A Red-Headed Girl By Henx;y Kitchell Webster Copyright 1929, North American Newspaper Alliance snd Metropolitan Newspaper Bervice. “It's all right,” Martin said. “It's just another knockout, I guess. I must have caught him on the jaw, too. He'll start coming to in a minute and then we can beat it out of here.” “Yes,” Rhoda agreed, “that's what we' . I'm sure he’ll be all right in a minute. Rhoda, Martin noticed, was getting rather white. By way of diversion he asked, “Why do you suppose they keep this place locked up? There's nothing here but a couple of overcoats and this cane I hit him with.” “When he opened the door,” Rhoda sald, “he was coming straight toward me, as if he knew I'd be standing right here. But he didn't know, because he jumped when he saw me. Martin, I can't stand it like this. Let's do some- ing. Can't_we open the door?” He didn't answer instantly, or move. He was looking at the outlined panel in what appeared to be the wall béhid her. She swayed slightly and caught for sup- port at the nearest of the clothes-hooks: then uttered a cry of astonishment as she started to fall, not forward but back. The thing she was leaning against, was a door and it was swinging open behind her. Martin sprang over Conley and caught her. Without a word the two of them stood staring into the strange little chamber which the opened door re- vealed. ‘The first thing Martin did was to feach back and switch off the closet light, for there was plenty of light of a_ diffused sort, in that strange little chamber. It was as if they were stand- ing in the wings of a theater, Jooking out on a very shallow stage. It was higher than the floor they were stand- ing on, a flight of three steps leading up to it, and it had an opening like a small proscenium arch into an audience room, At their right, in the same wall with the proscenium arch, but before you went up the stairs, was a narrow door. The place was oddly furnished, to6, in a manner that suggested a stage set. It comprised one solid-looking black- oak, leather-seated chair in the mission style, more or less, a small square oak stool that evidently served the occu- pant to put his feet on, an oak table with a telephone of the new cradle type on it, and an ash-tray. The proscenium arch, which wasn't an arch but an ob- long opening, didn’t come clear to the floor of the stage. It stopped 30 inches above it, and it wasn't an opening since it was filled by an enormous sheet of plate glass. Rhoda, to Martin's consternatfon, sald, “I know what this is” walked boldly onto the stage and beckoned him imperatively to come. He was more deeply mystified after he had obeyed her gesture and stood beside her, for it seemed to him that the man she was gazing at—an old bird, who, Martin decided, was Forster— would see them as plainly as they saw him the moment he turned his head their way. He was sitting sidewise to his desk in a high-backed, leather- cushioned, swivel-chair, reading a doc- ument of some sort. “Isn't it great?” Rhoda whispered. “He can’t see us, no matter how hard he looks.” “How do you know he can't?” Martin had pitched the question low, but it wasn't voiceless, and she shot an apprehensive glance at the man in the swivel-chair. “I don't believe he can hear us, either,” she said, “but we'd better be careful. Why, I know be- I couldn't see through it at all. And there's glass on the front of it as well as on the back, so I don't believe he can hear.” It still seemed rather incredible, even after Martin knew how the trick was done. There was a thin screen of the- atrical gauze between the two plates of glass. You could see it was painted, since it wasn't equally transparent all over, and the strong. cross-lighting from just above the frame, which ac- counted, no doubt, for the curious fil- tered look of the light in the observa- tion post, would be enough to prevent anything being seen through it, unless there was a light back here. He checked his impulse to ask Rhoda what she'd been doing for hours and hours in the room they were looking into and what she meant by saying that Conley had always come in at the right time., What his mind fastened upon was her conclusion that Forster's bodyguard, stationed here, where his eye could command the whole room, was not able to hear what the actors in the scenes he watched were saying. If that were true, the converse was probably true also, that Forster wouldn't be able to hear any ordinary sounds. “He must be a timorous old rabbit of a rascal,” he remarked rather low, but in his natural voice. Rhoda was rather startled at this and admonished him to be careful, but she smiled in agreement with his char- acterization of Forster.” And when she saw that Martin's voice hadn't reached the old man's ears, she said in a tone that matched his: “He thought for a minute this afternoon that I'd come up to shoot him; made me take my hands out of my pockets. And Conley was in the room through that little door down there almost before I'd had time to do it. Only I don't see,” she added, “why he wouldn't want him to listen as well as look.” “I thinkI do,” Martin told her. “The old fellow lives in terror of physical vio~ lence, you see. They know that down- stairs. I imagine he's something of a crook. He must have to have lots of talks with people he’s afraid to be left alone with. Well, a spy who could hear everything they said would have a pretty good hold on the old man, if ever he wanted to use it. Blackmail, don’t you see? But he can watch from up here, ready to come in, if he sees anybody make a pass at him, aithout knowing what it's all about.” It still seemed queer to be talking this way about a man as plainly in their view and as near as Forster was and how he startled them both by a swift glance straight in their direction and a perceptible motion, of the head that must have been some sort of signal. ‘They both started back precipitately and Rhoda collided with the table, which moved with a protesting grunt much louder than their voices had been. “It's all right,” Rhoda said. “He didn’t hear.” “I think I heard something, though,” Martin said very quietly in her ear. Be- fore he had finished speaking he knew what the sound was. “Conley’s coming to down there in the closet. We'd bet- ter beat it out of here while we have a chance.” . (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) Cuts Cost of Stage Scenes, Austrian theaters are using an in- vention which greatly reduces the cost of stage scenes. All the drops and flies present a white background on which the scenic effects are projected from a magic lantern. So far as the audience is concerned the setting can- not be distinguished from one made in the ordinary way, and the actors can stand within two feet of the scenery without casting a shadow. A system was devised for adjusting the slides so that the lantern in the back wings need be only two feet in front of the cur- tain, the setting béing cast on the back- ground at a very sharp angle. ) i ‘Three thousand tons of bones were recently brought from -Russia to the United States to be converted into land fertilizers. cause I was in there—hours—this after- noon. This thing we're looking through is the picture over the fireplace. Con- ley must have been in here all the time Mr. Forster and I were talking. That's why he always came in at the right time. I thought he was listening, but he must have been watching instead. That's why there's an imitation fire in the grate instead of a real one. It's in this box.” She put her hand as she spoke on a wooden protuberance that was where the prompter’s box would have been if this had been a grand opera stage. “I thought,” she added, “that that picture looked sort of like stage scenery, but Car Washing, Polishing and Simonizing YOUR CAR slfi WASHED IN 15 MINUTES System Auto Laundries 1227 R St. N.W. 24-Hour Service Dodge Cars NEVER BEEN DRIVEN Displayed in Our Showroom Only New Dodge Brothers Sixes 2-Door Sedan . Coupe, De Luxe...... Standard Victoria .......... Roadster (6 wire wheels)....$1,020 4-Door Sedan, Standard..... 4-Door Sedan, De Luxe.....$1,065 Business Coupe ............. Sale Price Delivered $845 $995 $1,080 $1,130 $1,200 $1,080 $1,160 $1,160 $1,255 $895 $975 $975 New Dodge Brothers Seniors 5-Passenger Sedan. .. Landau Sedan ........... Standard Coupe . Roadster (6 wire wheels). 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