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* THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1430 SOCIETY. RELIGION IS HELD A—-8 SOCIETY President and Mrs. Hoover Hastening SGCIETY. [ anizations will be represented ot the | N R AR LA Sxercises, i |N Do You Know How to Make Representatives of the National the Necessary | Woman's Party honored the anniversary Adjustments f, | gl n‘:,e %nh llesuu? B. An‘trllwny t"hO; A new cla; 1 ay e placing of a wreath on | | Statucs tn the Gaptiol of the three equal | Y.W.C. A, 17th and K Sts. | rights ploneers, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth | f |Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. |N pGonducted by @ Physician Spanking Sentence Imposed on Girl, 20, For Aiding Radicals By the Associated Press. NEWARK, N. J., February 15. TO LIVE IN CAPITAL | | | N § § \ \ N N N N § N N N \ \ N \ N N N N \ \ N \ N N N \ N N Return to White House Accompanied by Party HE President and Mrs. Hoover 0 and their guests, Mr. Justice and Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ritchie, will start North tonight after a brief vacation in Southern waters, where the President and Mrs. “Hoover indulged in their favorite sport of fishing. The Chief Executive and First Lady | of the Land will give the annual din- ner to the chiefs of foreign missions Thursday evening, the function having been postponed from Thursday of this week owing to the absence of the Presi- dent and Mrs. Hoover. The Vice President, Mr. Charles Cur- 4is, will be the guest in_whose honor Representative and Mrs. Fred A. Brit- ten will entertain at dinner this eve- ning. Retiring British Envoy and Lady Isabella Howard Guests. ‘The retiring Ambassador of Great Britain and Lady Isabella Howard went to the Canadian legation today to the guests of the Minister and Mrs. Massey during the remainder of their stay in Washington. ~The Italian Ambassador and Nobil Donna Antoinette de Martino will en- tertain at dinner this evening. ‘The Ambassador of Brazil, Mr. S. Gurgel do Amaral, entertained at dinner Jast evening at the embassy, the guests including the Italian Ambassador and Nobil Donna Antoinette de Martino, the Ambassador of Germany and Frau von Prittwitz und Gaffron, the Min- | ister of Switzerland and Mme. Peter. the United States Minister to Salvador and Mrs. Warren Delano Robbins, Brig. Gen. Charles L. McCawley, Rear Ad- amiral and Mrs. Andrew T. Long, the military attache of the French em- y. Brig. Gen. Raymond Casanave, fi Peter Augustus Jay, Mr. and Mrs. Alex B. Legare. Mrs. Reynolds Hitt, Mrs. Clarence Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene “Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Fleming Newbold. the commercial counselor of the Polish fegation and Mme. Wankowicz. and the second secretary of the embassy, Mr. Mauro de Freitas. ‘The Ambassador of Cuba and Senora de Ferrara will entertain at dinner | Judge and Mrs. Edwin Dixon Haves, | jay, February 23. in honor of the i‘l‘nn&éldor of France and Mme. Claudel. They will also entertain at dinner | Monday, February, 24. to celebrate the | Mrs. Charles H. Franklin, Mr. and Mrs. | Cuban _ revolution for independence ‘when the heads of the American diplo- matic missions will be guests. ‘The Ambassador and Senora de Fer- rara will be the honor guests at din- ner this evewing of Mr. and Mrs. George T. Marye. ‘The Secretary of War and Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley were the honor guests | at dinner last evening of Brig. Gen. and Mrs Ewing E. Booth. The other | guests were Representative and Mus. | Charles A. Eaton, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Briant H. Wells, Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Edward L. King, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. | Brown, Brig. Gen. George Van | Moseley. Brig. Gen. and Mrs. | uis Bash, Col. and Mrs. Charles gtoxmphrles. Col. and Mrs. John Preston, | Maj. and Mrs. Cleveland H. Bandholtz. | Maj. and Mrs. Albert S. Dabney, Col. | and Mrs. Charles Hamilton, Col. and | ‘Mrs. John Hurd, Maj. and Mrs. John T. H. O'Rear, Mr. and Mrs. George | S. Holmes, Maj. and Mrs. P. L. Thomas and Ma). and Mrs. Joseph E. Barzynski. The Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur were hosts at dinner last evening at the Mayflower, entertaining in the north room of the | hotel. Their guests included the Am- | ‘bassador of Chile and Senora de Davila, Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas, Sena- tor and Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson of In- diana, Senator and Mrs. Gerald P. Nye | of North Dakota, Senator David L. ‘Walsh of Massachusetts, Representative and Mrs. Daniel A. Reed of New York, Representative Florence P. Kahn of | California, the Assistant Secretary of | ‘War and Mrs. F. Trubec Davison. Mr. | and Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, Dr. and Mrs. | Dwight Locke Wilbur and Miss Mary Patten. ‘The Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur have as their guests at the Mayflower their gon and daughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. | Dwight Locke Wilbur of Rochester, | Minn. They arrived in Washington yes- terday morning and will remain here for 10 days. The Minister of Canada and Mrs. Massey will entertain about 150 guests at a musicale this evening at the lega- | ticn. Representative and Mrs. Fred S. Pur- | nell entertained a small company at dinner last evening in their home at the | Roosevelt Hotel, preceding the Friday | evening dancing class at the Willard | Hotel. Among others who entertained before the dance were Mrs. Ollie James, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sanders and Mr. Hal Williamson, who entertained a group of young people at the home of his brother-in-law and sister, Maj. and Mrs. Parker W. West, at Soldiers’ Home. Representative and Mrs. Clifton A. Woodrum of Virginia were guests at dinner Thursday evening of Mme. von Lewinski, who had other guests to meet them. Representative and Mrs. John Mc- Duffie will entertain at the dinner dance this evening in the gold room of the Wardman Park Hotel, when there will be 26 in the company. Mr. Randall Jones of Cedar City, Uteh, who is speaking under the auspices of the National Park Service, will address the Congressional Club Friday afternoon. February 21, on “The Colorful Canyons of the Southwest,” and will accompany the lecture with excellent pictures. This will include Zion National Park, Bryce Canyon and the north rim of the Grand Canyon. Perhaps nowhere in the world is there such marvelous natural coloring and formations as in this little-visited won- derland of the United States. Hostesses for tea to follow will be Representative Florence Kahn, Mrs. J. Banks Kuntz, Mrs. H. F. Kean, Mr:. Ciyde Kelley, Mrs. Bolivar E. Kemp, Mrs. Samuel A. Kendall, Mrs. John C. Ketcham, Mrs. Charles E. Kiefner, Mrs. David_Kincheloe, Mrs. William Kopp @nd Mrs. Paul J. Kvale. The United States Minister to Salvador | and Mrs. Warren Delano Robbins will be the honor guests at the weekly Juncheon of the Women's National Press Club Tuesday at the American Associa- tion of University Women. Surg. Gen. and Mrs. Cumming Hosts to Colleagues Tonight. ~Surg. Gen. and Mrs. Hugh S. Cumming | Harlan Fiske Stone| | preside at the tea tables. of Guests. | | F. Draper and Asst. Surg. Gen. and Mrs. | R. C. Williams. | Plans have been made for cards and | dancing. | Miss Lucy Minnigerode, superintend- | ent of nursing of the United States Pub- | |lic Health Service, is president of the | relief association, which was recently | organized. | Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Hanson E. Ely were honor guests at dinner last_eve- | ning in New York of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac | Hilliard of Louisville. | Mrs. Edward W. Eberle, widow of | Rear Admiral Eberle, who died at the| Naval Hospital in July, is receiving mes- | sages of condolence on the death of her mother, Mrs. Randolph Harrison, at| the home of her son, Mr. Thomas Ran- dolph Harrison, at Oakland, Calif, a| | few days ago. Mrs. John J. Knapp and | her sister, Mrs. Eberle, are both par- | | ticularly ‘well known in Washington | society. i Comdr. S. R. Shumaker was host to | a party last evening at the Club Chan- | tecler supper dance. . Mrs, Arthur W. Henning has just re- turned to her Washington home from | London, where she was with Mr. Hen- | ning, who is covering_the Naval Con- | ference in that city. While Mrs. Hen- | ning was in London there was a con- | | stant stream of entertainment for her | | and her husband. They are particular | | friends and were guests of the United | | States Ambassador and Mrs. Dawes. | | Mr. Henning will visit Paris, The Hague | | and other points of interest at the ! close of his London duties and before returning to Washington. | Mrs. Grosvenor H. Backus was hostess | to a company at luncheon today. enter- | taining at the National Woman's Coun- try Club, on the Bradley boulevard. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Lowe entertained a company last evening at the supper dance at the Club Chantecler. Maj. and Mrs. Samuel Burleigh Milton: entertained a company at bridge last | evening at their home, on Sixteenth | street northwest, in honor of the lat- | ter’s sister, Mrs. Daisy Seymour Fron- | heiser. There were seven tables of ! players, the guests including former Senator and Mrs. Thomas Sterling. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Woodson, Repre- sentative end Mrs. Royal C. Johnson, | Dr. and Mrs. Bolivar Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Vincenzo Di Girolamo, Capt. and Daniel Smith Gordon, Mrs. Timothy J. Campbell. Miss Margaretta Campbell, | Mr. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence | Anrys, Mrs. Pearl Hughes, Mrs. Eric | Greenieaf, Mr. and Mrs. Page Irving, | Mr. Seymour McConnell and Mrs. Daisy Seymour Fronheiser. Prize winners were Mrs. Roval Johnson, Mrs. Eugene Woodson, Mr. Sterling and Capt. Pranklin. Notable Women Sponsor Mrs. Keefer's Afternoon Recital. With a notable list of well known | patronesses and sponsors and a city- wide interest from both a musical and a civic angle, owing to the unusual rec- ognition accorded her in her home city, Mrs. Flora McGill Keefer will be heard in her second formal concert in Wash- ington at the Hotel Mayflower on the afternoon of Friday, April 4. - Mrs. Edward Everett Gann heads the list of well known patronesses, which ! includes Mrs. James J. Davis, Mrs Charles S. Deneen, Mrs. Charles L. McNary, Mrs. Carl R. Chindblom, Mrs. | Avery Coonley, Mrs. E. A. Harrinian, Mrs. Walter Bruce Howe, Mrs. George Mesta, Mrs. Eugene Meyer, Mrs. Adolph Cappar Miller, Mrs. Lawrence Town- send, Mrs. Charles Warren and other lovers and patrons of music in the Capital. Recently Mrs. Keefer was guest artis! at the exclusive Old Colony Club in New York, and ‘following her concer: appearance here will again be heard in recital in the Metropolis. Mrs. Gifford Pinchot will be the guest | of honor and will give an illustrated | travel talk at the Women's City Club ! this afternoon at 5 o'clock. Tea will be served at 4:30 o’clock. Mrs. Ethel Bag- ley will present Mrs. Pinchot, and mem- 1 bers of the membership committee wii! ! assist in receiving. _Mrs. Peter A | Drury, jr., and Mrs. Basil Manly will | MRS. AUBREY GILPIN LANSTON, Formerly Miss Frances Aileen Stewart, daughter of Mrs. John David Walker of N Vork, now making her home at Alban Towers, on Ma: New this c * NED N TRANIG ‘Gilligan, at Langdon School Dedication, Talks on Char- acter Education. Religious training should be the basis |of any plan of character education | which might be put into Washington's | public schools, and the two committees | now ‘framing a character education! | course should devise some means of | | making- religion the foundation of that course, Henry L. Gilligan, member of | the Board of Education, declared in an address at the dedication of the new Langdon School last night. Mr. Gilligan, himself a Pratestant, | | said that “character education which | does not take into account a religious | | training is no character education at ! | all” | “The greatest teacher of all flm!sfl'i he declared, “once said to seek first | the Kingdom of God and that all other things would be added unto you, and I believe that if we are to have a character education which is to pro- vide the things which make for better men and women we will have to place it upon a foundatoin of religion. I believe the citizens’' advisory commit- tee on character education, which was recently appointed by Dr. Carusi, ought to devise some means of incorporating a system of religious reading which would be acceptable to Protestant, ssachusetts avenue, ~ —Bachrach Photo. Chappaqua, N. Y. are at the Dodge Hotel for several d: Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hanna of Cleve- | land, Ohio, are at the Carlton for sev- eral days. Mrs. John Waters of Forty-fifth | Catholic and Jew alike.” | Wotld Appoint Clergy. | _Mr. Gilligan added that he meant to | propose that three clergymen, a Pro- | testant, a Catholic and a Jew, be ap- | pointed to the citizens' committee to | render the expert counsel of which tained at dinner at their home in Thir- teenth street last evening in honor of Miss Fannie Mae Huff. Dr. and Mrs, MacPherson Crichton of Washington spent a short time as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel 8. Mc- | Fetridge_at Bar, street left yesterday for St. Peters- | nernose gat, the Barclay, Rittenhouse burg, Fla, accompanied by Mrs. Nat | Keen and her fon, Mr. Robert Bond | Keen of Baltimore. They are motoring | and while in St. Petersburgs will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Creamer, who are relatives of Mrs. Keen. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Warner will en- tertain a party of 20 at the dinner dance in the gold room of the Ward- | man Park Hotel this evening. Mrs. C. W. Gosnell also will be hostess at the dinner dance at the hotel this evening. There will be eight in the party. Mrs. T. H. Caraway, president of the Arkansas Society of Washington, has | called a meeting of the State society for Saturday, March 1, at the La Fayette | Hotel at 8 o'clock. Except for a short | business meeting and the election of | officers, dancing and bridge will be the entire program. The wives of the mem- bers of the Arkansas delegation in Con- | gress will be in the receiving line. | Booklovers’ Hour at Y. W. C. A. Program for Monday. | One of the always popular events at | the Young Women’s Christian Associa- tion at Seventeenth and K streets is the hooklovers’ hour, which for a num- | ber of years has been conducted twice | each month on Monday evenings from 8 to 9 o'clock by Miss Alice Hutchins ! Drake, a well known writer and lecturer, | whose “Little Talks on Large Subjects" ' have endeared her to many audiences during the past 12 years in this city. The booklovers’ hour, which oceurs | on the first and third Mondays in each | month from October until June, is open | to the public, and during the period | in which Miss Drake has been a mem- | ber of the faculty of the Y. W. C. A.| department on_general education she | has given perhaps four hundred or more lectures on these Monday eve- nings. . Monday the Ohio Girls' Club will be the guests of the booklovers in honor of Miss Drake herself, whose grand- father, for many years special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, was a distinguished member of the Ohio bar, and whose father was an internationally known Ohioan. The subject for Monday evening will | be “Books We Are Glad We Have Read,” to be given by Miss Drake, .ol- lowed by a group of Negro dialect ! stories by Miss Helen Colhoun, a well | known dramatic reader of this city, Guests are always welcome at the Mon- | day booklover hour at the Young Wom- | en’s Christian Association. Mrs. Charles S. Hamilton, wife of | Col. Hamilton of Cathedral avenue, is | |, Mrs. W. E. Williams. who makes her | home during the Winter w | daughter, Heaton, Miss Mary Heaton, Mrs. John | L. Weaver, Mrs. I. P. Berthrong, Mrs. James Burns, Mrs. H. Clay Thompson, Mrs. Carrol Reggall, Mrs. Robert O. | Saunders, Mrs. Herbert Kerslake and | Mrs. John Roundtree. Mr. Robert Golden Donaldson and | his daughter, Mrs. Harold E. Irish, will | sail today from New York for a cruise | in the West Indies. his apartment, at th Hotel, in April. He will return to e Wardman Park Mr. Donaldson whs host, on Wednesday evening at a dinner at the Wardman Park Hotel, when his guests were the Ambassador of Chile and Senora de Davila, the secretary of the Bolivian legation and Senora de la Barra, the governor of the Federal Re- serve Board and Mrs. Roy A. Young, the controller of the currency and Mrs. John W. Pole, Representative and Mrs Fred A. Britten, Miss Britten, Repre- sentative and Mrs. Edgar R. Kiess, Mr, | and Mrs. Frederic Duncan McKenney, | Mme. Sanchez-Latour and Mr. Charles ! C. Concannon. | | Mrs. James Griswold Wentz will en tertain at a tea Monday afternoon at | her residence, 2841 McGill terrace, in | honor of Mrs. Edward Everett Genn, sister of the Vice President. ‘The Count and Countess Andre de Contades have returned from Washing- ton to New York and are in their apartment at the Barclay. They were guests of honor at,a luncheon which | the countess' brother-in-law, Mr. Ray- mond Patenotre of Paris and Phila- delphia, gave Friday afternoon. Gen. Edward L. Logan has arrived in Washington from Brookline, Mass., and is stopping at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Washburn of —_— = X Washburn of | ISRAEL SACK d/-vcn'n/f:fug n ‘Qjmm‘:(‘au | apolis is at the Mayflower for a week or leaving today for Winter Haven, Fla., where she will join her mother, Mrs. W. H. Fitch of Rockford, Ill, who mo- red to Florida from Washington in accompany her South. They plan to | motor to Miami Beach and along the | West Coast, returning to Washington March 15. Mrs. Dell Gilbert Sale is entertaining | | for her small daughter, Geraldine Dell, | this afternoon, at a theater party, fol- | lowed by a buffet supper, the occasion | being her ninth birthday anniversary. | The guests include Marjorie Morris, | Frances Perry, Mary Huddleston, Eliza- { beth Upchurch, Louise Spilman, Jacque- | line Blunt and Jack Morris of this city; | Cynthia Runser of East Orange, N. J, {and Jane Gilbert of New York City. ! The table decorations will be of Spring flowers, yellow candles and a Jack Horner pie in orchild and yellow tulips. Mrs. Charles T. Penn of Hawthorne street left on Friday night to visit her mother in Toronto, Canada. Miss Sue Needham of Scarsdale, N. Y., | has joined her mother, Mrs. T. J. Need- | ham, at the Carlton, where they will re- main over the week end. ety | Mrs. Frederick J. Moon of Indian- 10 days. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Snoddy enter- | RAPERIES Made to your individual and specifications! Let us you an estimate. MCcDEVITT The Dodge Hotel (Formerly Grace Dodge Hotel) SUNDAY DINNER 12:30 to 3:00—5:30 to 8:00 $1.50 ‘Crab Flake Cocktail taste | wive | or Welch Manhattan Cup or ‘omato Juice Cocktail T Chicken Gumbo a la Creole | Fred East and Willlam Raymond sang | cutter. Square, East, Philadelphia, before sail- ing for a cruise of the West Indies. KNIGHTS TEMPLAR HOSTS AT DANGE Mrs. Samuel T. Farmer, Wife of Commander of Columbia, Unit, Given Bouquet. The annual entertainment and dance of Columbia Commandery, No. 32, Knights Templar, was held last night at the Willard Hotel, with a members and guests in attendance. One feature was the presentation of a bouquet to Mrs. Samuel T. Farmer, wife of the commander of the Columbia unit, | by Charles F. Roberts, grand com- mander of District Knights Templar, on behalf of the Columbia Commandery. Short talks were made by Mr. Roberts and Mr. Farmer. The general committee in charge con- sisted of Samuel T. Farmer, commander: P. Raymond Boesch, chairman; William | Gutshall, vice chairman. The printing committee was com- posed of Castleman P. Boss, Timothy S. Newkirk and Raymond N. Babcock. The musical program included selec- tions by the Columbia Quartet, while a_duet, accompanied by Robert S. Thomas. Other features included a cornet solo by Arthur S. Whitcomb, accompanied by Herbert Erisman, and 2 reading on “How to Drive an Auto- mobile” Miss Florence Jane Adams. The Columbia Quartet was composed | of Francesco Della Lana, first tenor; William E. Braithwaite, second tenor; Fred J. Eden, baritone, and John C. Smith, bass, while John S. DeForest supplied the accompaniment. . STEAMERS IN COLLISION. Corbeil Sinks After Crash in Fog | With West Celin BRISTOL, England, February 15 (#). —The United States Shipping Board's steamer West Celina, 3,838 tons, col- lided in a fog last night with the small Bristol dredging steamer Corbeil off Avonmouth, The Corbeil sank, but its crew of five was rescued by the Avonmouth pilot by The West Celina was not dam- Wrong Tablets Fatal. (Special). — Believed to have taken mercurial tablets by mistake for soda tablets, Mrs. Amelia Linn, 63, widow of W. H. Linn, died at her home here last night. Mrs. Linn was found by her daughter, Lillian, a teacher, upon her return from school. She had not been in ill health and had been lone in her home all afternoon. She was a_sister of former Postmaster Charles W. Peters, also a former member of the Maryland gur\fie of Delegates. Five sisters also ve. f | school, WESTERNPORT, Md., February 15| Of they are capable in the matter of re- ligion as a basis of character training. He will make this proposal, he said today, to Dr. Charles F. Carusi, presi- dent of the Board of Education. The meeting at which Mr. Gilligan spoke marked the dedication of the Langdon School, at Twentieth and Franklin streets northeast, which was opened a little more than two weeks ago. Besides the School Board mem- ber, the meeting was addressed by Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent of schools; Seldon M. Ely, superivising principal of the fifth division, in which the Langdon is' located: Thomas J Llewellyn, president of the Rhode Is- land Avenue Citizens' Association, and Mrs. Giles Scott Rafter, president of the District of Columbia Congress of Par- ent-Teacher Associations. The meeting was opened when Albert L. Harris, municipal architect, pre- sented the keys of the building to Miss A. M. Sisson, principal of the school. Besides her new school's keys, Miss Sisson was presented with a life mem- bership in the National Education Asso- clation by Mr. Ely, who actéd for the teachers and old graduates of the and with many baskets of flowers. Sievers Presiding Cfficer. E. G. Sievers, chairman of the schools | committee of the Rhode Island Avenue Citizens’ Association, was presiding of cer, while Mrs. E. L. Norris, preside: of the Langdon Parent-Teacher Asso- | ciation, was general chairman in charge of the affair. i The meeting in the school's audi- torium was preceded by a dinner in the domestic science room, at which the | teachers and the speakers were guests. | The meal was prepared and served by the parent-teacher association mothers The_invocation was pronounced by | Rev. Raymond Barnes, rector of the community’s Episcopal Church, and the benediction by Rev. J. E. Mallor. pastor of St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in the same community. Music | was provided by a section of the Marine Band, and a general inspection of the building followed the close of the audi- tortum meeting. VICTIM OF STEPSON SHOWS IMPROVEMENT Shot through the shoulder Thursday | night by his 17-year-old stepson, Harry | Hazel, when he ‘is alleged to have ill- | treated the youth’s mother at their i apartment in the Rocksboro, 1717 R street, Harvey Lowe, 37 years -old, is| improving at Emergency Hospital today, | Dr. J. M. Baber, attending physician | declared. The man’s condition neces- | sitates constant supervision, however, | Dr. Baber said, and it will be four or five days before his condition can be definitely determined. e MARDI GRAS—NEW ORLEANS. February 27th-March 4th. Greatly reduced fares via Southern Railway. Four limited trains daily. City Ticket fMce, McPherson Square, Phones N: A vertisemen | | INCOLN B, Emil Ludwig A full-length life of the Great Emancipator, told in the same graphic manner as the author’s Life of Napoleon WM. BALLANTYNE & SONS POORERLIERS AND ]42] F St. OPENING Thursday, Feb. 20 14th Street Market 60 STANDS A Few Choice Stand Locations Remain Available —Spanking has become a serious menace to the young folk of the communistic movement locally. “I am going to hold you until tomorrow morning and have your father administer the cure by spanking you here publicly,” Judge Simandl yesterday told Miss Marie Staff, 20, of Newark, in Police Court. Miss Staff was arrested while distributing circu- lars on downtown streets adver- tising a demonstration. George Staff, the young wom- an’s father, arrived later with an expression of willingness to exe- cute sentence. Staff is a frail man and he told the court it would be impossible for him to spank his daughtér. She was ordered held for further action. SUFFRACE PONEER WL BE HONORED Women Prominent in Wash- ington Club Life Will Address Gathering at Y. W. C. A. Four woman speakers, prominent in club life in Washington, will top the | program celebrating the 110th anniver- | sary of the birthday of Susan B. An- thony, pioneer suffragist, at Barker Hall auditorium, Y. W. C. A., Seven. teenth and K streets, t noon at 3:30 q'clock. Miss Belle Sher- win, president of the National League of Women Voters; Miss Janet Rich- ards, lecturer; Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, chairman of the council of the National Woman's Party, and Mrs. Henry Grat- tan Doyle, president of the Voteless D. C. League of Women Voters, each will pay tribute to the character and work | of the American suffrage leader. Mrs. Anna E. Hendley, founder of the Anthony League, will preside. Per- sonal friends of Mrs. Anthony will be seated on the platform with the speak- ers. Dr. Ulysses G. B. Pierce will pro- nounce the invocation and Rev. William A. Kirkwood of New York the bene- diction. A brief musical program will be presented by Miss Gertrude Lyons, accompanied by Mrs. Margaret Bowie Grant. Girl Reserves will act as ushers. Mrs. Bertha Yoder Werthner, as- sisted by Mrs. Caroline Stephens and Miss Mildred Nash, will form the re- ception eommittee, . ‘Through the courtesy of Mrs. Prank- lin W. Fritchey, president of the Na- tional Housewives’ Alliance, Inc., of Baltimore, the program will be broad- cast from Baltimore. Many local or- Father Johns Medicine [{0) colds and coughs Over 75 Years of Success Used in 184 Hospitals and Institutions The Velvet ICE CREAM 2 WILL ADDRESS MASONS Chaplain Dickson to Discuss U. 8. Flag on Battlefields. Lieut. Col. Thomas J. Dickson, chap- lain, 6th Field Artillery, will give an | eve-witness narration of the pathway of the American flag on five great battle- fields in the World War before Benja- | min B. French Lodge in the Masonic | Temple, Thirteenth street and New | York avenue, Monday evening at 8 oclock. His subject will be “Where Masons Made History” and will close with battle flag homage to Washington, the Mason. Maj. Francis Scott Key-Smith, a vet. eran of the World War and a relative of the autkor of the national anthem, will recite “The Star Spangled Banner." Mayflower Art Company INC. is now located at 1405 KAY ST. N.W. TOWER BUILDING Greeting Cards and Stationery WHOLESALE and RETAIL Your Ancestry If you are interested in your fam- ily history, send 10 cents in stamps for our 168-page priced catalogue of over 4000 genealogical books. Goodspeed’s Book Shop Established 1898 7 Ashburton PL, Dept. C-8, Boston, Mass, | SPECIAL 20% DISCOUNT on all DRESSES CLEANED OR DYED Feb. 10th to 22nd, Inclusi FOOTER’S AMERICA’S BEST CLEANERS AND DYERS 1332 G St. N.W., Phone Dist. 2343 1784 Col. Rd. Phone Col. 0720 Delivery Service Switzerland expects an_expansion of both commercial and private aviation this year. AN \\?\\\Q&Wm"\\\\\\\ AMNMNTTNNNS. 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