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DAY, 1933. 1981, the moving picture | tended was an EZyptisn dinner given by e decided fo let every. |the Minister from Egypt and Mime. WILL H. HAYS URGES i Hooner Samy. They bad el mative cunes| ECONOMIES FOR FILMS |, Prepeptios b somual presdents) which were new to us. e So it went with the Vice President|go,yy Savings in Distribution, and | here, Hays berely question, which Decentralization of Producer e ' Owned Theaters. APRIL 12, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Vice Presidential Dinner Table - = of the win Pregenting his i 3?5 R b e DOLLY GANN TELLS 74015 | OF SOGIAL DUTIES Natmm o Naanl Hostess for Vice President Must Attend Endless %, 0000, Official Affairs. Egzi £ T Ui (M-:mtg‘.fi.um“ tion for savings in film distribution, Hoovers.) decentralization of producer-owned anee Bl North Amricap News- | inqustry “is likewise an art” ave a part! mands vast 3 H Per tooth Per crown —_— Teeth S0 with aa. 82 Plates Repaired You Wait, $1.50 DR. LEHMAN This is the eleventh of a series m'm 20 Years 1 7th 8t. N.W. Across from sburs i of daily articles in which Mrs. Dolly ‘.&- Evenings Phone STerling 9867 Gann, sister of Charles Curtis, Vice - President in the Hoover administra- "0', nan Beautiful Hlif tion, is giving reminiscences of her interes: experiences in politics and society in Washington. 3¢ your Bair s dry, dull or lifeless you need | g Lo Moterme Hale Nl&um‘nlnlhi::i BY DOLLY GANN. oot oo s b e e The Vice President and his hostess juces & matural lustre and stimu- eyl scalp. Removes loose dan- | 7e confronted with a schedule of druff and keeps the hair in place. Not | social duties, ranging from formal din- sticky or greasy. Recommended for | ners to at-homes, and including an men, women and children. Praised | unforeseen number of meetings and by thousands of enthusiastic users. , 80 nearly continuous that Get a generous 50c bottle for 43¢ to- day at Peoples Drug Stores. LA MODERNE Hair Dressing piEd H i * (Cop: peper - i E i YOU SEE | HAVE CAMELS,TOO -~ i § T $2.93 Introducing one of this season’s most popular handbag creations, The Vanity ‘Bag. Fashioned in calf and patent leather. Fitted with inside zipper, Richmond Greyhound rates for FIRST CLASS TRAVEL with any others e pomag Ay g round trip fares . . . even “cut- rate” travel costs seem high by comparison. And, going by Rich- mond Greyhound there’s no guess work. You're sure of the finest modern coaches, dependable -through schedules, free- dom from delay and worry. Norfolk . cmme opre Petersburg . ... Disputants . .. .o WM o 1o - — ot — Providence wmemions: - Suffolk . —mconiome. Danwille o qeemome o Groensbot© . .o v e Union Bus 1336 New York Ave. N.W. Phone: Metropolitan 1512 RICHMOND GREYHOUND 7.70 the point of view. Experience and tra- dition answer in the affirmative. President must be relieved of routine obligations which would render insup- portable his already overburdened days, and so there has grown up the custom of regarding the Vice President as his social representative. Like any other duty, that of the Vice President could be shirked. My brother Charles might have said, “I don’t like 1t and I won't have it.” I might have echoed this. But we should not have liked that. If we had liked it, we should have chosen to do what should be_done. It is as guest rather than host that the Vice President most often repre- it ‘The Vice President’s first official en- tertainment at which acted as hostess was the reception to the dip- lomatic corps April 21, 1929. This is the first social obligation of every Vice Presiden § EREY % L ng%gggfg i E% to do the entertaining. The Presiden safety is of such vital concern that relet7-when & party relief?—when & and all has gone well man called on me sev- B i LiTh i YOU KNOW PERFECTLY WELL MY SKIN WAS WORSE THAN YOURS | 3 WEEKS AFTER 1 STARTED EATING FLEISCHMANN'S R YEAST The | of one we also submits the guest list to the Presi- dent. Perhaps my readers may be interest- ed in knowing what is served at a din- ner to the President. Here is the menu gave December 9, 1930: Chicken soup with noodles, hearts of celery, olives and salted nuts, lobster Newburg, with old-fashioned corn bread; broiled hearts of filet mignon 3 | were glad to find he could lay aside ham, with aspie; rts of endive, ro- maine, and lettuce, with well seasoned dressing; vanilla custard ice cream in coupe glasses; assorted cakes and an- cake. Coffee, and :dm ee, cigars , and then all was | other unusual entertainment we at- made ready for a moving pif Choosing s Movie. I had telephoned the White House to find what picture the President would like and learned that he had expressed a desire to see Will Rogers in “Light- nin’” Mr. Hoover laughed heartily at | the antics of the Oklahoma cowboy. We some of his cares even for a short time. After the picture he and Mrs. Hoover chatted with one after another guest rgh: while, then bade each one good- n 3 At our third dinner to the President, ' ol cture. = DINE AT OLnE Excellent in Food and Manners SENSIBLE PRICES Sunda; OLNEY FARM LNEY, Morning WooDWARD & WU™F anD G STRusTs Easter Gift Opportunity New Lowered Prices on LEATHER-BOUND CLASSICS 50C l';'au 75¢ Limp Leather (Sheepskin) Pocket-Size Classics. The Golden Tressury —Palgrave —France —Bocon ~Plato Christmas Tales —Dickens Hamlet, Tempest, Richard II —~Shakespeare —Browning —Tennyson —Longfellow —Dumas —Fronklin Best Poems Best Poems Best Poems The Black Tulip Essays Autobiography Bugenie Grandet Gulliver’s Travels Tales From Jopathan Wild Typee Imitation of Christ The Rubaiyat Selected Western Stories . Booxs, Arsix 33, Fmsr PLoos. $]60 were 198 Alligator-Grain Limp Lesther— with 23Y;-karat gold edges. Honore de Balzas Aaton Chekhov Bocosecio’s Decameron. Ralph Waldo Emerson Gustave Flaubert H. Rider Haggard Nathaniel Hawthorne Vietor Hugo Hearik Ibsen Rudyard Kipling Guy de Maupassent Bdgar Allsn Pos Shakespeare Robert Louis Stevenson ‘Tolstoi World's Great Romances THESE SHEER DRESSES ARE | ADORABLE . BUT IT'S NO USE-~| CANT WEAR THEM. il THOSE DREADFUL PIMPLE LEASE, SYLVIA, YOU'VE \ JUST GOT TO DO WHAT ,; SILLy, ims THIS SHIMMERY, 12 Miles Out Georsia Ave. LoTHROP Prone DisTricT 8300 YOU GET COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN CAMELS— WoobwARD & LOTHROP 0™ U™F anp G STrReeTs Puone Districr 5300 See the Pug Mill Used in the Making of Pottery and Dinnerware A Feature of the Exhibit ~ Here This Week 9:30 AM.t05:30 P.M, All this week, we are having s very inter the actus] making of fine American pottery and porcelsin. Six ‘-mm"fll J explsin each process and illustrate the various steps, which include five others besides the “Pug Mill.” Cuma, PIrre FLOOR. Gardeners—Take Notice . . . Tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday . . . Our First NARciIssus SHow Featuring Many of the Newer Englishand Dutch Originations See the beautiful blooms—and place your order for strong, healthy bulbs (to be delivered in September, at the proper time for planting). . This is our first Narcissus and Daffodil Show—and affords a wonderful opportunity for Washington gardeners to see, and own gardens. A flower of the “Fortune” variety ($50 for a single root) will be but one of the hundreds of blooms to be exhibited. Choose from 237 varieties, priced 10c to $50 a bulb. NOTE—The blooms exhibited will be ow sale Saturday afternoom. Specially Featured Groups 5| 50c - One dozen un-named bulbs Two bulbs each of Em- of choice varieties. A col- lection that will contsin : .Specwl Selling for Easter— BLOOMING FLOWERS Tulips peror, Empress, Cresset, Lucifer, Queen of the North, and Ornatus, Conspicuus, Dorothy B. Weymuss, White Queen, St. Olaf, Rugulosus Jonquil. 6-inch pens .. Hyacinths Pan, 3 blooms ......eceeenrsrnseosnas $138 Ferns Potted .......ccovanerascrscossomnscses S0 Blooming Azaleas Pansies 25540 Assorted colors; dozen ...... henen . RAMBLERS, $19§ Yellow Calfas B P )& | Lily-of-the-Valley