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A—12 » TRIBUTES PLANNED What's Wha THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, b. C., WEDN} t and Where And sl there is a sensetional but happy ending. Dickle Moore, Alan i Dinehart, Raiph Bellamy, Ralph Mor- gan and Charles Grapewin have roles in the picture, which is based on a William Anthony McGuire story, direct- ed by John W. Considine, jr. The stage —and—who knows?—maybe long after that. Johnny Weissmuller, the famous swimmer and athlete, is “Tarzan"” and have suspected it, who was introduced to the screen by the famous singer, John McCormack—is the lady in the SWIM CLASSES AT Y. W. Maureen O'Sullivan—you never ‘would | Groups Meet Daily During Easter under the auspices of the Health Ed- ucation. Department between 2 and 4 o'clock daily. Miss Irene Richards is director of the Health Education Department, SLIP COVERS Three-pc._ suite and 5 straight, separate cushions: snap 1 tailored to your Béigian Linen ‘and Linene, $13.50. Write or aples L. ISHERWOOD, story. It is the purpose to run the| Featuring the Easter vacation, daily| patvia has placed quotas on all im- | Line. 5350. 1513 28th St SR rts. v will be luminant with “Col. Stoop- e y showings at the hours already fixed|“Learn to swim” meets are being held | po: Attractions Soon to Be Seen in Washington Theaters BY PRESBYTERIANS Dinner to Be Given April 13 in Honor of Patriots of Revolution. Presbyterians of the North and South are joining in a dinner at the May- flower April 13 to commemorate the services of Presbyterian patriots in the Colonial and Revolutionary Wars as a part of the Bicentennial Observance Among those who have accepted in- vitations are the moderator of the Gen- eral Assembly of the Pr v Church South, Dr. R. A. Dunn of Charlotte, N. C., and the corresponding officer for the Northern branch of the church, Rev. Lewis Seymour Mudge of Philadelphia. A number of prominent clergy and laymen of the United Pres- byterian Church also will attend. Dr. Dunn also will represent the Presbyterians of Mecklenburg County, N. C, who, in May, 1775, over a year before the Declaration of Independence, united in the historic Mecklenburg Declaration, calling upon the American colonists to cast off British allegiance. Dr. Mudge, the moderator of the North- ern church, comes by coincidence from Philadelphia, where the actual Declara- tion of Independence was adopted by the Continental Congress. Nine signers of the Declaration were Presbyterians, including Rev. Jobn Witherspoon, the only clergyman in that body. Descend- ants of a number of these will be among the dinner guests. High in Federal Service. Attorney General Mitchell heads the Nst of Presbyterians in high Federal posts who have accepted invitations Among divines Who will be present with delegations from historic churches of the revolutionary period will be Rev. U. V. Moldenhawer of the Old First urch, New York; Rev. George H. tussell of ‘the Second Presbyterian rch, New York; Rev. James M. oward of PFirst Church, Morristown, . J, and Rev. William Hiram Foulkes Bf the Old First Church of Newark, Long Island will send & number of delegationd and Philadelphia will be represented by visitors from the second, third, the Old Scots and Market Square, Germantown churches. ‘The Mercersburg, Pa., church, which furnished to American history one President, two mothers of Presidents and two mistresses of the White House, will send Rev. and Mrs. J. C. Rose, Dr. Boyd Edwards, headmaster of Mercers- burg Academy, and other members of the congregation. Pennsylvania has numerous churches of the Revolution- ary period, a number of which will be Tepresented at the dinner. Col. Russell Among Guests. Among other guests are: Col. Thomas H. Russell of Staunton (Va.) Military Academy; President L. Wilson Jarman of Mary Baldwin College, Staunton; Caleb C. Magruder, governor of the So- clety of Colonial Wars in the District of Columbia and a lineal descendant of Col. Ninian Beall, ruling elder of the Presbyterian Church in Maryland in the sixteenth century; Miss Henrletta Woods, direct descendant of Rev. Stephen Balch, first pastor of the Georgetown Presbyterian Church, and guests from other Revolutionary churches in Hyattsville, Predericksburg, Baltimore and elsewhere in this region. Guests are also coming from practically all the Presbyterian Churches in Wash- ington and vicinity. About 200 accept- ances have already been received. Y. W. GIRL RESERVES ENTERTAIN CHILDREN 800 Youngsters to Be Guests at Opening of “Pied Piper of Hamelin” Tomorrow. ‘The Y. W. C. A. Girl Reserves will have as their guests 500 children from Washington institutions at the opening performance of “The Pied Piper of lin” in Barker Hall tomorrow aft- ernoon at 2:30 o'clock. Friendship House, St. John's Orphan- age, Washington Home for Foundlings and eight or nine other organizations will be inciuded in the guest list. Later performances will be given Friday at 8:15 and Saturday at 2:30, when a special children’s matinee will be pre- sented. Tickets are available at the Y W.C A Ushers will be from the Junior High Bchool Girl Reserves throughout the city, including Doris Batson, Eloise Gerard, Mable Birch and Elizabeth Manning, from Paul Junior High; Mary Anastasi, Lorraine Bagman, Thelma Hodgkins, Helen Holland, Rose. Levin and Dorothy Taylor, from Jefferson Junior High; Louise Gorman, Lillian Young, Rebecca Martin and Annette "Totaro, from Powell Junior High; Ceal- lin Brook, Elsie Ricketts and Corris Titus, from Buchanan School. —_—— NEEDY TO GET FLOUR Family Welfare Agencies Notified by Chest Director. . Family welfare agencies of the Com- munity Chest were notified today by Elwood Street, Chest director, that flour ‘will be made available from the Gov- ernment wheat supply by the Red Cross, if needed, for the unfortunate in the District. Mr. Street said the matter probably ‘would be considered soon by the boards of the Associated Charities, the Cath- olic Charities and other family wel- fare groups. EIALSAIRSAR L LSRN WESTINGHOUSE Electric REFRIGERATORS Control preserves _food temperature. Saves as you buy it Easy Terms Arranged % MUDDIMAN ¢ 911 G St. Nat'l 0140-2622 Organized 1883 A SN SO S S N O 'DON'T SLEEP ON LEFT SIDE, GAS HURTS HEART | If you toss and can't sleep on | your right side or back, your UPPER | bowel may be full of gas. At bed- |time, drink warm water with a spoonful of simple glycerin, buck- thorn bark, saline compound (known as Adlerika) This washes out poisons which | cause peor sleep, nervousness, gas. | Get Adlerika today. In 2 hours you'll be rid of bowel poisons and will sleep good tonight. Peoples Drug Stores.—Advertisement. Subscribe Today It costs only about 1!, cents r day and 5 cents Sundays to K:vo ‘Washington's best newspi per delivered to you regular] PRI ICRCRC RO RSO I [ EE N Sk O ) UT one of the theaters devoted to what is called the legitimate coming week, due doubtless to the uncertainty that dominates Washington has a great many visitors in town at this time, and the theater is always popular with visitors. The talking picture palaces all will be aglow and, with but one exception—and that & big local hit—all will have new picture drama and bills of entertainment. * K K * Helen Hayes and “The Good Fairy.” Helen Haye: ur own Helen"” as Washington loves to call her—will bring to the National Theater next week, starting Monday evening, her new Ferenc Molnar play, a delightful comedy, “The Good | drama will be illuminated the| the New York booking offices—for |\ the senior and junior high schools, the vocational, grade and parochial schools. * x % x | “Jazz Bables” Sunday at the Gayety. AZZ BABIES,” a Columbia Circuit offering, promise merriment, with a host of pretty girls and amusing comedians, at the Gayety Burlesque Theater, on Ninth street. starting with & matinee on Sunday. Steve Milis and Bobby Vail will provide the comedy, assisted by a troupe containing Jean Williams, Dot Alexander, the Lopez Sisters, Milt Bronson, Lew Denny and Mabel White. * o % x ON THE SCREEN. “Love Parade” - Comes to Earle Saturday ¢“T'HE LOVE PARADE,” combining the talents of Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette MacDonald and Ernst Lubitsch, | 1s the offering announced for the War- ner Earle Theater Fair,” described as a mad and merry story of modern life | about a little movie theater usher. It starts with her din- ner with an Amer- ican man of busi- ness in a Budapest hotel and ends| with an old lawyer saying good-by to a pencil sharpener, between which in- cidents, and written in Molnar's fasci- nating style, there are innumerable diverting experiences. Miss Hayes has won new fame in this play and she is | supported by a superb cast selected by | Gilbert Milier, who sponsors the pro- duction. Helen Hayes. e S “Pied Piper of Hamelin” Staged by The Girl Reserves of the Y. W. C. A. THE Girl Reserves of the Young| Women's Christian Association, which boasts of 36 clubs with & mem- | bership of more than 3,000 girls, will present their annual operetta, “The Pled Piper of Hamelin,” Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week at the head- quarters building, Seventeenth and K streets northwest The Thursday performance, an invi- tation affair, will have for its audience | the children of the orphanages and | missions of the city, The performance Friday evening and the Saturday mati- | nee, at the usual hours, will welcome the general public and seats may be obtained at the Girl Reserves' office in | the Y. W. C. A. Building. The operetta is Joseph W. Clokey’s [ version, based upon the poem of Robert | Browning, the well remembered legend of the piper who piped all the rats out of the city, and when the burghers re- fused to phy him for it he piped away their children. The title Yole will be played by Jo Carter of the Arlington Hall School for Girls, and other roles | will be played by Morfudd Thomas, | Maxwell Galloway and Elizabeth Mayo, each of Central High School; Barbara Davis of the George Mason High, Vir- | ginia Evans of McKinley High and | Helen Foley of Eastern High. The Girl Reserves include pupils of | 11 Gude B (TRADE CUARANTEED 0 BLOOM Within a week or put forth leaves. be thriving lustily. you will have beautiful Summer and for years 3103 14th ST. N.W. every evening and Sunday morn- ing hone National 5000 snd the delivery will start immediate- ly. The Route Agent will collect 8t the end of each month. starting Saturday. Maurice Chevalier, who needs no ex- ploitation in Wash- ington, in the pic- ture is ssen as a young dcctor mad- ly in love with his wife, but—. His susceptibility to feminine charms and his profession combined get him into a lot of trou- ble that makes the story of the pic- ture. The stage entertainment will be headed by Robert Chisholm, the baritone star of hits like “Golden Dawn,” “Sweet Adeline” and “Nina Rosa,” who will sing a group of popu- lar melodies. Other acts will include Fay Adler and Teddy Bradford, a Broadway dancing team, which will be assisted by three fast steppers; CHff Crane, an eccentric dancing comedian from the “Vanities” and other enter- tainers of note. * ok % x “Beast of the City” And Jean Harlow at the Palace. “ ESTWARD, HI, HO,” from the New York Capitol Theater, along with the platinum blond of stage and screen, no less than Jean Harlow, will be the highlights of the stage show at Loew's Palace, starting next Friday. Miss Harlow will not only appear in person, but she will be the star of the screen feature, “The Beast of the City,” in which her stellar honors will be shared by Walter Huston. It is a bill which scintillates with other attractions as well, and ought to provide the Palace patrons with a merry week. *Ex A “Disorderly Conduct” Billed for Friday at the Fox. ¢¢])ISORDERLY CONDUCT,” with Sally Eilers and Spencer Tracy as its stars, will bring to the Fox Theater on Friday a picture story of an honest but ambitious motor cop who 1s demoted because he cannot be bribed and then commits a larceny to gét even Maurice Chevalier. ros. Co. Announces a Sale “Fertil-Potted” MARK) - Rosebushes Choice of 30 Leading Varieties Guaranteed to Bloom 75¢ to $3.00 According to ariety Selected These Roses Would Thrive Even in a Sand Pile so after planting (de- pending on the sun's warmth) your roses will In two more weeks they will A few more weeks and roses—this Spring and to come. on Sale at All Four stores Main Store 1212 F St. N.W. Other Stores at 1124 CONN. AVE, 5016 CONN. AVE. Member Florist Telegraph Delivery Association nagel and Bud,” from radio comedy; idea and the return of Phil Lampkin as conductor of the orchestra, * x x X “Young Bride” And Roxy Gang at Keith's. ANAGER MEAKIN of the Keith Theater hasn't lost his faith in “the good old days” apparently, for he is proclaiming the four outstanding members of the famous old Roxy Gang as his stellar attractions of his stage show and “Young Bride” featuring Helen Twelvetrees, Arline Judge and Eric Linden, formerly of the New York Theater Guild, as his screen feature. | 1t represents the first fruits of the com- | bined efforts of Radio Pictures and | Pathe. The favorites of the Roxy Gang announced by Mr. Meakin are John Grffin, Adelaide De Luca, Harold Clyde | Wright and Alice I there | are utill others to a fascinating vaudeville program for the stage. The | new show starts Saturday. * o % “Steady Company” Comes to Rialto Friday. “QTEADY COMPANY.' group of Hc highly admired Norman Foster a stellar roles screen story by Ea by Edward Ludwig Henry Armetta, famous Italian come- | dian; Zasu Pitts, J. Farrell M of Notre Dame-Knute Rockne fame Maurice Black and others. The fight scenes were supervised by Morris Cohan California’s chief match-maker. * % K “Final Edition” At Metropolitan Friday. §THE FINAL EDITION," picture, which purports to disclose how & newspaper story is secured, will be the screen feature at the Warne Metropolitan Theater, starting of this week. It tells of a sob who, angry at being “fired,” goes out and gets a murder story after the police had failed to get the facts. The prin- features & a C of “Front Page” fame, and Mae Clarke, with Bradley Page, Morgan Wallace, | Mary Doran and James Donlan in the cast. e “Tarzan, the Ape Man" Will Linger Longer at Columbia. the “Black and White” Fanchon-Marco | unless the demand changes it. Agricultural conditions in Ohile are mproving. cipal roies are played by Pat O'Brien, he | IN© one expected that “Tarzan, the| Ape Man,” now turning the crowds away at Loew's Columbia, would com-| plete its run in a week. And it didn't. | for it is to linger at least another week at the Young Women's Christian As- > | sociation, it was announced today. The groups include boys under 10 years of age, as well as girls, and are meeting Ice does not rob foods of natural moisture To be palatable—to retain their individual flavor and fresh. ness— your foods must not be deprived of their natural mois- ture while in the refrigerator. Because of its melting action, American Ice keeps fresh foods fresh and palatable: there is no drying out, no intermingling of food flavors. And remem- ber, there is always enough ice for all your beverages—when you take American Ice! GREAT NEws! PREMIER DUPLEX NOow $l|.95_0_ ! ’ (Reduced from $60) Yes, it's the same improved PREMIER DUPLEX announced recently. Not reduced in quality or shop-worn, but brand new, with 50% greacer suction than previous models ...motor-driven brush...ball bearing motor ...rubber-covered cord and many new features. 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