Evening Star Newspaper, December 6, 1934, Page 4

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A—4 % THE EVENING STAR,” WASHINGTON, D. €., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1934, flgflfii% II%WSIPEESAK e FREE GIFT IS YOURS AT OUR 2139-41 PA. AVE. N.W. STORE Embassies Hold Wall Around White House Tea ey : shiper of Other Days. Couzens’ Home Town Asksi Rival in G. 0. P. Row to BY GENEVIEVE FORBES HERRICK. Speak on Politics. home town of exhibited vester as part answer to Co comment that he didn't u why any one took the Id; *“seriously.” Borah also showed invitations from | Republican egrams com ing his demand of the Republican pa mand led to the now Fletcher, chairma National Commi The Michigan &£ was in a more genial mood than Tuesday when he said Borah h; done nothing but talk “for 40 3 Told of the invitation to th> Id: hoan to speak in Detroit, he said: hope he goes up and pans me.” ts Alone. , once so close red to dent campa during and spoke to each other, down at adjoining tables. C: joined Senators McNary of O the floor leader Davis of F sylvania, and Borah elected to sit alone. McNary has not entered the intra- is having tea at the White House. All properly swathed OHN BUCHAN, English author, [N J in the proper credentials from other day to present to Frances Perkins (not a member) the sorority’s annual award to the country’s most outstanding womamn. Which shows the British Embassy and from | that sorority gals, however much they our own State Department. Not that | he really needs an introduction. It's | the rule when a foreigner comes to | town. All plans to “meet the President” may be indicted for narrow campus political fights, can forget national party politics when they get out in the world. For Miss Perkins is a determined must channel through the foreigner's | Democrat, member of the New Deal own em| v or legation. H. G. Wells, ignorant the technique, or irked by | it body will ever know which it — disregarded formality. 1sed considerable consternation to the diplomats. e A g 23 £ (595 A Rosita Forbes, glamorous gal who travels and talks herself around the world, also neglected to get the O. K. of the British Embassy; drank a cup of tea with Mrs. Roosevelt, had a two- minute chat with President Roosevelt; hen went away and wrote so much about it that it had repercussions all around the town. So, you see, it's easier for Luke Mc- Gluke, the 100 per cent Am-mur-ican from Hickory Corners, to get to tea at party controversy. but it was evident | the White House, which is probably he had started efforts at rnx*.rxlxa;u)é the sword-crossing Republicans. Democrats Comment. Democrats, meanwhile, were en- Joying the squabble from the side- lines. “Let me know when the next round | comes off,” Senator B: ey, Dem: crat, of Kentu; asked a group newspaper men. “I'm having a the tears back.” sai The &peak in e signed by Cash Asher, secretary, and Don Wolfe, chairman, of the New Republican League. Borah has not decided whether he BABY’S WAILS BRING POLICE AND FIREMEN | Investigators Scale Ladder to Reach Room—DMother's Re- turn Soothes Child. and resorted to emergency measures, calling out both the Police and Fire Departments. The police took charge of the swell- ing crowd, while firemen raised a lad- der to the second-story v some debate among the var: represented. When they e window from which the seemed to come, firemen found Dolores Kravitz sobbing for her | “mama.” But it seems that about this time Mrs. E home, at 1452 Park road, o firemen, policemen and a | ering, all interested in a wi the Kravitz home. r’.<| soothing voice solved situation in| a trice and Park road settled down | for the night. | As Kra explained, he and his wife had gone jor walk “around the block” aft HOTEL MEN TO DINE 150 Will Attend Testimonial to} Hotel Greeters’ Head. One hu ed and fifty Wask hotel men w1 i Hamilton Hou given in honor of W international presid Greceters of America The Wa ngton Chapter will meet at the Willard Hotel at 8:30 p.m. and | Mr. Stead will address the group. £ thur J. Harnett, vresident of the Ho- tel Association of Wa Mark Wooding also USTOM Just the way it should be. Up From 12. She was 12 years old when her sister | got scarlet fever and her mother hiked off to the isolation hospital with the | child. So she went every day to | he State House at Madison, Wis., to be near her father, who was Speaker of the Assembly. She was 18 years old when her elected to Congress. She spent six months here. Had a bad case of hero-worship. Focused it on three: Gifford Pinchot, at the time, chief conservation champion: the clder La Follette, when senior Senator from her State; Louis Brandies, member of the Supreme Court. She was 20 when she wrote such a good report on the minimum wage | at the University of she was sent to the e to tell them about it. Katherine Lenroot is of the Children’s ing, with an easy way g. she plays no golf, a little She reads philosophy, but s “no deep knowledge” of it. Works for children. Discounts the theory that “everybody loves chil- dren, so there is no need for the Federal Government to bother about them.” Believes that senti- ment won't feed and clothe them. Politics Forgotten. A group of Chi O's (Chi Omega is a distinguished national college sorority) met at the White House the cabinet. And one of Chi Omega's most famous alumnae is Mabel Walker Willebrandt, resolute Republican, former member of President Hoover's little cabinet. Last year he rented a dress suit to attend the’ congressional reception at the White House. And made page one. This year he'll make page one. Not with what he wears, but with what he says. Everett Dirksen, Republican, Representative from Pekin, 11, is scheduled to carry the ball of oratory for the G. O. P. boys Tight frequently in the coming Congress. Able speakér, friendly, forthright. he is easily spotted by that crop of unruly hair standing straight up. He | started out as a baker; boasts he is “the only dough-pusher who ever got to Congress.” (Copyright. 1934, by North American Newspaper Alllance, Inc.) Leifur Magnusson to Speak. Leifur Magnusson, director of the local office of the International Labor Organization, will address the Capital City Forum tomorrow evening on the progress toward recovery as seen from Geneva. Magnusson spent three weeks during the past Summer at the Inter- national Labor Conference at Geneva. The group will meet at 709 G street at 8:15 pm. . Retreat Is Scheduled. Rev. Joseph V. Buckley, director of the retreat work in the District, will conduct a day of recollection at the Nazareth Social Service Center next Sunday. The first service will begin at 10:30 am. and will be followed by a second at 2:30 pm. and a holy hour at 4:30 pm. Mattresses ¢ Remade The Stein Bedding Co. 1004 Eye St. N.W. ME. 9490 (T R T [ LI XCEss ACl 4 Leads to serious flls, Mountain Valley Water taken in the proper quan- tit will e the .u..fln. min- restore your svstem to e Write or phone for Information and booklet, Mountain Valley Water From HOT SPRINGS, ARK. 1405 K N.W. Met. 1062 YOUR BEST INVESTMENT! 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