Evening Star Newspaper, January 5, 1935, Page 10

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A—10 “CRIB T0 CROSS 1S PASTOR'S TOP Scenes From Feature Film, “John Wesley,” to Be Shown at Church. At Foundry M. E. Church tomorrow morning Dr. Frederick Brown Harris, minister, will have “From the Crib to the Cross” as his topic, and he will administer the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, assisted by other min- isters. Dramatic scenes from the fea- ture film, “John Wesley,” will be presented at 8 p.m. by Dr. James K. Shields of Newark, N. J. A series of lectures on “How to Ob- tain the Abundant Life” is being pre- sented in ithe Bolgiano Class for Men by Frank W. Collier, head of the department of philisophy of Amer- ican University. The class meets each Sunday at 9:45 am. Dr. Harris will conduct the midweek service at 8 pm. Thursday and will conduct the devotions at noon Friday, when the joint district quarterly meet- ing of the Woman's Home and For- eign Missionary Societies is held in Foundry Church. Miss Lucy Wang, president of Hwa Nan College, at Foochow, China, will be the guest speaker at the morning session at 10:45 o'clock. Mrs. John C. Shover and Mrs. Cornelia Kinsella, national and district secretaries of young peo- ple’s work, are also to be heard. Lunch will be served at the church at 12:30 o'clock, and the work of the Home Missionary Society will be presented at the afternoon session, the speakers being Mrs. Joy Elmer Morgan, Mrs. Frederick Brown Harris and Mrs. Milton Wagner, “ALL THINGS NEW” THEME OF SERMON Tomorrow's Program Given at All Souls’ Unitarian—Music Hour Planned. The minister of All Souls’ Unitarian Church, Ulysses G. B. Pierce, will| preach tomorrow morning on “All Things New.” In the church school at 9:45 the service in the senior de- partment will be conducted by F. H. Evans' class. Estelle Gates, soprano, will assist Lewis Corning Atwater, organist, in a program of Debussy music at 5 o'clock. This will be fol- lowed by an informal travel chat when Mrs. Leifur Magnusson will speak of her experiences in Iceland, which she visited last Summer. Sup- per will be served from 6 to 7 o'clock. At 6:45 the young people will meet under the direction of L'Allegro Club. The feature at the motion picture hour in Pierce Hall at 7:30 will be “Handy Andy,” with Will Rogers. ‘The Women's Alliance will hold a tea with book review and music, Mon- day at 3 pm. Mrs. Frank Bunker will review “Russia’s Iron Age,” by W. H. Chamberlain, and Canford Ferris will sing a group of Russian BONgs. Paul Heyl will pour., Monday at 8 p.m. Mrs. Georgette Ross Howard will continue her series of talks on cur- rent events, under the auspices of the Business and Professional Wom- en’s Club. The speaker before the ‘Women's Alliance on Friday at 11 o'clock will be Mrs. J. H. Dellinger, who will tell of recent experiences in Portugal and England. The feature at the foreign language cinema in Pierce Hall January 12 will be the German film, “Heideschulmeister, Uwe Karsten.” ANNUAL MEETING TO BE ON MONDAY | Luther Place Memorial Will Hold | Business Session for Con- gregation, Dr. Carl C. Rasmussen, pastor Lu- ther Place Memorial Church, will preach tomorrow morning on “Many Shall Come From the East and From the West.” The choir will sing. Harry Yeide will render the offertory solo. The annual congregational meeting will be held Monday evening in the church parlors. Dr. P. C. Chan, founder of a Christian hospital in Canton, China, and a Christian of note in his own country, will be the guest speaker at the Thursday evening service. The pastor will conduct the service, which begins at 7:50 p.m. The Men’s Fellowship will hold a special meeting of all officers, execu- tive committee and chairmen of the various committees Thursday evening following the prayer meeting. PLAN SPECIAL SERVICES Monthly Program at John Dick- son Memorial Home. John A. Smith of the Tuesday Eve- ning Christian Endeavor Society of Calvary Baptist Church, will conduct & meeting tomorrow at 3:30 o'clock at the John Dickson Memorial Home, 5000 Fourteenth street. Col. A. J. Brasted, chief of chaplains, U. S. A, | will be the speaker and the adult chorus of Calvary Baptist Sunday school will sing. Future meetings at the home will be: February 3, Rev. P. G. Murray, assistant pastor Calvary Baptist Church; March 3, former Gov. J. G. Pollard of Virginia; April 7, Rev. W. W. McIntyre, St. Paul Methodist Church; May 5, Dr. 8. B. Daugherty, pastor United Brethren Memorial Church; June 2, Rev. O. O. Dietz, pastor Brookland Baptist Church. “JOHN” IS TOPIC " Rev. R. Paul Schearrer to Con- tinue Apostle Series. Rev. R. Paul Schearrer, pastor of the Takoma Park Presbyterian Church, will preach tomorrow morn- ing on “The Christian Challenge” and in the evening on “John, a Son of Thunder and an Apostle of Love.” This will be the fourth sermon in the se- ries on “The Twelve Apostles,” which 1s being given un the first Sunday eve- ning of every month. Miss Mary Ashby and John E. Par- sons will ke in charge of the young people’s group meetings tomorrow evening. Dr. Charles E. Hill, dean of George Washington University, will address the Brotherhood Bible class at 9:45. The session will meet Monday eve- ning at the home of Elder Wallace Ashby, 7137 Seventh street. The trus- tees meet Tuesday evening in the church office. Mr. Schearrer will conduct the mid- week service Wednesday evening. Mrs. J. M. Aldrich and Mrs. | il The Senior Union will meet Monday evening at Takoma Park Presbyterian Church, with Hillman Harris presiding. The speakers will be Rita Lentz, Rob- ert Hurlburt and Preston Campbell, all presidents of Christian Endeavor societies. Elmer Stevenson will bring special music. The Intermediate Union will meet next Friday evening at Wallace Me- morial United Presbyterian Church. Donaid Frazier, Virginia Grove, Martha Jester and Hillman Harris will speak. Special solos will be given by Laing Sibbet and Elmer Stevenson. William Watkins, president of the union, will preside. The Christian Endeavor has charge of the evening young people’'s meet- ings at the Industrial Home for Chil- dren during January. These meetings are being plarmed by Bill Weitzel, missionary superintendent of the Senior Union. Tomorrow evening Hill- man Harris, former president of the District of Columbia Intermediate Christian Endeavor, will speak. The Intermediate Union will hold the annual banquet in February. Dr. Darrell C. Crain will bring the message at a “model Christian En- deavor meeting,” to be conducted to- morrow evening by the intermediates of Calvary Baptist Church. Missionary reports of the societies are to be sent to Bill Weitzel by Jan- uary 10. Recently elected officers of the Sher- wood Presbyterian C. E. are: Presi- dent, Eldridge Jones; vice president, Keith Lawson. Ivan Munch has resigned as vice president of the District of Columbia Union as his position has transferred him to New York. EPISCOPAL CHURCH PLANS MEMORIAL Former Rector of St. John’s to Be Remembered at Service Tomorrow. , A memorial service for Dr. Roland Cotton Smith, rector of St. John's Episcopal Church, Sixteenth and H streets, from 1902 to 1921, will be held tomorrow at 11 oclock. The me- | morial address will be given by Dr. Howard C. Robbins. Dr. Oliver J. Hart, the present rector, will pre- side. The sermon hymn will be “The King of Love My Shepherd Is.” The offertory anthem, “The Souls of the Righteous.” The closing prayer and benediction will be offered by Right Rev. Julius W. Atwood. The reces- sional hymn is ‘“Jerusalem the | Golden.” | Dr, Hart will preach on “The Mean- |ing of Epiphany” at the 7:45 p.m. | service, when there will be a special | choral Epiphany service. Dr. Vernon N. Ridgely to Preside at Calvary Methodist at Morn- ing Observance. Dr. Vernon N. Ridgely, minister of the -Calvary Methodist Church, will conduct the observance of the sacra- ment of the Lord’s supper at 11 a.m. tomorrow. At 8 p.m. he will preach on “New Men." The song service will be conducted by Louis A. Potter, organist and director of music. Miss Dorothy Potter will be in charge of the Young People’s League at 7 pm. The subject of “What Can Young People Do About Peace?” will be_continued. Dr. Ridgely will conduct the service Thursday evening. On January 13 Foundry Methodist Church and Dr. Ridgely will exchange pulpits in the interest of the annual Methodist union campaign for members. . The Mothers’ Class will meet Fri- day evening at the church, with Mrs. Earle, Mrs. Farrington, Mrs. Roney and Mrs. Riddle as hostesses. NEW YEAR SERVICE AT PETWORTH CHURCH Special Musical Program to Be Given—“The Open Door,” Theme of Sermon. A New Year service entitled “Open Doors” will be held at Petworth Methodist Episcopal Church, tomor- row evening. A special musical pro- gram will be the feature. The min- ister, Rev. R. L. Wood, will preach on “The Open Door.” Communion service will be held at 11 am. The choir will sing a com- munion anthem and Raymond Hart will sing the offertory solo. A group of new members will be received. The annual banquet of the Sunday School Board will be held Tuesday at 6 o'clock. Rev. John C. Millian, di- rector of religious education for the Baltimore Conference, will be the guest speaker. - Election of officers will be held. “CALL OF CHRIST” TOPIC Dr. Chesteen Smith to Preach at Metropolitan Church. “The Call of Christ for a New Day” will be the theme of Dr. Chesteen Smith at the Metropolitan Church tomorrow morning. At the young peoples’ service at 7 p.m. Lester L. Fansher of the District Epworth League will be the speaker. The January meeting of the official board has been changed to Tuesday evening. The week of prayer program will be observed at the church Wednesday and Friday evenings. —_— STEWARDSHIP IS TOPIC Dr. E. C. Berry to Give Two Ser- mons at Asbury M. E. At Francis Asbury M. E. Church South, “The Dimensions of Steward- ship” will be the subject of a sermon by Dr. E. C. Beery tomorrow at 11 am. At 8 p.m. he will speak on the “Springs of Stewardship.” All the services during January will be de- voted to this general subject. The Young People meet at 6:45 p.m. and all young people are invited. Allen H. Watson will present an organ recital at 7:40 pm. The Gamma Sigma Class will meet | Friday Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Edith Lakey, 1425 Locust road. Dr. Beery will conduct the prayer service Thursday at 8 pm., with & tewardahip. discussion of “S 'SACRAMENT SERVICE, WILL BE TOMORROW| Dr. Frederick Brown Harrir of the THE EVENING STAR, CHURCH BUILDING NINE YEARS OLD Hamline Anniversary Serv- ice to Be Conducted by Dr. J. S. Montgomery. The ninth anniversary of the dedi- cation of the present edifice of Ham- line Church, at Sixteenth and Allison streets, will be observed tomorrow and the following Surday, Dr. James S. Montgomery, chaplain of the House of Representatives, will be the guest preacher tomorrow at 11 o'clock. Spe- cial music will be furnished by the chorus choir, under the direction of John H. Marville, with Miss Edith B. Athey at the organ. In the evening the minister, Dr. H. W. Burgan, will preach. The choir will again furnish anniversary music. The church was dedicated January 3, 1926, by Rev, Bishop Willilam F. McDowell. Ground was formally broken for the building July 28, 1924, by the late President Calvin Coolidge. The present church is an amalgama- tion of the old Hamline Church at Ninth and P streets and the Iowa Avenue Church, Iowa avenue and Emerson street. The church is named for the late Bishop Leonidas Lent Hamline. Since the dedication the pastors have been Dr. Herson, Dr. Chesteen Smith and Dr. H. W. Burgan, The official board will meet Mon- day night. On Wednesday a rummage sale will be held by the Harriet T. Lipp Class. The church training night will ursday night. DR. RUFUS WEAVER First Baptist Minister Will Pre- sent Opening Subject Tomorrow. “The Relation of the Christian Re- ligion to Government,” the subject of Dr. Rufus W. Weaver at the First Baptist Church tomorrow morning, will be the first of a series of sermons during January on “Our National Life and Our Christian Faith.” In the eve- ning the service will be in charge of the Luther Rice Bible Class with Russell Elizey and Prof. Oscar Autritt ‘u speakers. A moving picture, “The Life of }christ and the Passion Play,” will be shown at the service next Thursday evening. This is based on pictures taken in the Holy Land, Egypt and Europe. The board of deacons will |meet at the church Monday evening. | The young men's class meets tomor- !Tow at 4:30. A business meeting of the Euzelian Class is Tuesday eve- ning at the home of Miss Florence Brown, 1419 Clifton street, and of Fidelis Class, Wednesday evening, at the home of Mrs. T. Edgar Petty, 2440 Sixteenth street. The. Luther Rice Bible Class will give a black-face variety show Friday evening at the church, EPIPHANY SERVICES IN GRACE LUTHERAN Officers of Church Council to Be Installed—Rev. G. E. Lenski to Preach. Services at Grace Lutheran Church | tomorrow will honor the church's rancient festival of Epiphany, com- ' memorating the appearing of Christ and the worship of the Wise Men. | The pastor, Rev. Gerhard E. Lenski, ! will preach on “The Worship of True Hearts.” ! Officers of the church council will | be installed as follows: Marvin Bum- 'garner, president; Ona R. Hoover, vice president; Earl S. Haislip, secre- tary; Noel B. Parks, treasurer; Louis Waple, sr., financial secretary; Wil- liam Lehmann, Frank McLane, Robert Handwerk, Frank Stutz, G. I. Ander- son. Holy communion will be cele- brated, The pastor will be assisted by Rev. R. G. Steinmeyer. The Brotherhood, under the leader- ship of LaFour Raymond, president. is inviticg members of the Sunday school and of the congregation with their friends to attend an illustrated lecture on the Monuments of Ancient Egypt, Wednesday, at 8 p.m,, in the church hall, by Dr. George S. Duncan of the American University. DR. 0. F. BLACKWELDER ANNOUNCES HIS TOPIC Church of Reformation Pastor Will Speak on “The Value of Tomorrow.” Dr. Oscar F. Blackwelder, pastor of the Church of the Reformation, will preach tomorrow at 11 o'clock on “The Value of Tomorrow.” He will begin at 8 p.m. a series of sermons entitled “The Need of Personal Power in a Changing World” when he preaches on “The Place of Power.” The other sermons in this series are as follows! January 13, “The Purpose of Power”’; January 20, “The Price of Power”; January 27, “The Perils of Power”: February 3, “The Permanence of Power,” and February 10, “The Perpetuation of Power.” The Council will meet Monday evening. —— ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN SERVICES ANNOUNCED “Modern Wise Men” and “First and Last” Are Topics of Dr. Henry W. Snyder. At St. Paul's Lutheran Church the pastor, Dr. Henry W. Snyder, will preach tomorrow morning on “Mod- ern Wise Men” and in the evening on “First and Last.” At the session of the Sunday school the pastor will install the officers, as follows: Lindley G. Schmidt, general superintendent; William H. Bauer, secretary; Margaret R. Fox, treasurer, and 15 assistant officers. The school will be addressed January 13 by s speaker from the Inner Mission So- ciety, On Wednesday evening following the prayer service the Church Council and the Women’s Missionary Society will hold their respective meetings. On mwnmx holy communion will l ! l will be held Januasy 16, SOCIETY President’s Mother Returns to New York After Making Holiday Visit With Her Son at the White House. RS. JAMES ROOSEVELT has returned to her home in New M York after visiting her son and daughter-in-law, the President and Mrs. Roosevelt, at the White House during the holiday season. Before leaving for, New York Mrs. Roosevelt went to the Capitol yesterday to hear her son make his annual address to Congress. Mr. and Mrs. James Roosevelt, son and daughter-in-law of the President and First Lady, have returned to their home in Boston, after spending the holidays at the White House. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Astor and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Edgell, who have been White House guests, have likewise re- turned to their respective homes, hav- | ing come to attend the White House reception Thursday. Ambassador of Japan In New York to Speak. ‘The Ambassador of Japan, M. Hi- rosi Saito, has gone to New York, where he will speak today before the Foreign Policy Association. The Ambassador and Mme. de La- boulaye entertained at a luncheon to- day in the embassy in honor of the commercial attache and Mme. Gar- reau-Dombasle, who arrived several days ago from New York to attend the White House reception. ‘The Minister of the Netherlands and Mme. van Haersma de With will en- tertain at dinner tonight in honor of the Undersecretary of State and Mrs. ‘William Phillips. The Minister of Venezuela and Se- nora de Arcaya will entertain at a dinner this evening for their daugh- ter, Senorita Isabella Arcaya, and their son, Senor Mariano Ar Representative and Mrs. Frank H. Buck have taken an apartment at 2120 Kalorama road, The Japanese Ambassador-at-large, S. Yosida, lands in New York today from the S. S. Washington and the new Minister of Finland to Washing- ton, E. Jarnefelt, is on the same ship. ‘The First Secretary of the Spanish embassy, Senor Don Luis de Olivares, who is spending the past four months in Europe, is expected to return to Washington today. ‘The military attache of the Span- ish Embassy, Maj. Jose Vidal, will en- tertain at luncheon today at the Westchester, in honor of Maj. Ramon Franco of the Spanish aviation corps. Maj. Franco is spending about & month in the United States. There were eight guests in the company. Thursday, January 10, Maj. Vidal will give a reception for Maj. Franco, when there will be about 75 guests in the company. The second secretary of the Span- ish embasy, Senor Don Ramon Pa- dillade Satrustegui, will sail shortly | for a vacation in his native land. Mrs. Emory S. Land and Mrs. Dwight Chester will not be at home Monday. Mr. Norman H. Davis, United States Ambassador at Large, arrives in New York on the Washington today, ac- companied by the delegation which has been engaged in naval consulta- tion in London with Great Britain and Japan, preliminary to next year's Naval Conference. In the group are Admiral William H. Standley, Lieut. Comdr. J. H. Duncan and Mr. Noel H. Field, legal adviser. Mr. Davis will come to Washington shortly after landing. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Jones have re- turned to the Mayflower from a visit to their home in Houston, Tex., where they spent the holidays. Miss Imogene Ficklen, debutante daughter of Mrs. Samuel Ficklen, was the guest ‘n whose honor Miss Joyce Valle entertained at luncheon today at the Shoreham Hotel. The guests included Miss Margaret Smith of Bal- timore, Miss Betty Angus, Miss Mar- jorie Dampman, Miss Randolph Rich- ardson and Miss Katherine Bentley. Mrs. Richard Ward Snowdon will have as guests over the week end at | her apartment in the Mendota Miss Mary Adair Jeffries of Wilmington, Del, and her son, Mr. W. Latimer Snowdon, also of Wilmington. Miss Elizabeth Howry will entertain at a dinner this evening before the dance the American Ambassador to Ttaly and Mrs. Leng will give for their debutante daughter, Miss Christine Long, at Grasslands. Dr. and Mrs. Constantine Brown will be the guests of honor of the International Ovtlook Section of the Twentieth Century Club Monday at 2:15 p.m., when Dr. Brown will speak on “Recent European Developments and Their Repercussions on the Pa- cific.” The assistant chief of the Division of Eastern European Affairs of the State Department and Mrs. Earl L. Packer entertained at tea yesterday afternoon for their house guest, Miss Antonia Brico, well-known orchestra conductor. Mrs. Packer and Miss Brico were classmates at the Univer- sity of California. Alternating at the tea table were Mme. Sokolowska, Mrs. Walton Ferris and Mrs. Frederick Lizesey. Among the guests were members of the Wash- ington Composers’ Club, of which Mrs. Packer’s brother, Mr. Louis Malone, is a member. Miss Brico will return tomorrow to New York to make fur- ther plans for the debut of the New York Women's Symphony January 23. The symphony was founded by Miss Brico. Mrs. Thomas J. Walsh and her son, Mr. Marcial Truffin of New York, are in Washington for a visit of about two weeks and are guests at the Mayflower. Mzs. Walsh is the widow of the late Senator Walsh. “Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kasehagen had as their house guests during the holi- days Miss Eleanor Duffy of the Car- negie Institute of Technology in Pitts- burgh, Mrs. Royston St. Noble of Barcelona, Spain; Mr. and Mrs. Ma- rion Jay Shuffer of Wilmington, N. cC., and Mr. Leo Kasehagen, 3d, also of the Carnegie Institute of Technology. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gale of Beatrice, Nebr., announce the engage- ment of their daughter Doris to Mr. Paul Henderson, jr., of Washington, son of Col. and Mrs. Paul Henderson. No date has been set for the wedding. Miss Gale arrived in Washington this week and is the guest of Col. and Mrs. Henderson in their home on Woodland drive. cago, Ii, are ton for a few days, and stay they are at Charl meeting of the Texas Society of Chi~ cago, to be held at the Morrison Hotel, in Chicago, on the evening of Janu- ary 10. Mr. Wilson will also be the speaker at the dinner of the Men's Club of the First Methodist Church of Evans- ton, IlL, on the evening of January 15. Col. Warren T. Hannum, U. 8. A, and Mrs. Hannum of New Orleans have come to Washington and will spend several days at the Martinique, where their daughter, Miss Charlotte Hannum, who is attending Vassar Col- lege this year, will join them. Dr. and Mme. Coutinho Hosts Te Famous Planist, Petri. Dr. and Mme. J. de Siquiera Cou- tinho, the latter a former pupil of/ the famous Dutch Pianist Egon Petri will be hosts to him upon his arrival in the Capital City today, to inau- gurate the Five Star Series of recitals Sunday night at 8:30 o'clock in the National Theater. ! Last year when Mr. Petri played | his first concert engagement in Balti- | more, he was in Washington with Dr. and Mme. Coutinho, and met a num- ber of important musicians of this| city, 8 number of whom went to Balti- | more and will be guests tonight at a dinner at the University Club to be given in Mr. Petri's honor by Miss Louise Green. Recent additions to the list of prom- inent Washingtonians who will attend | the concert Sunday night are Mrs. John J. O'Brien, Mrs. John Henry Dwight, Mrs. Da Prato, Miss Laura Earle, Miss Vigla Wildermuth, and Miss Louise Green. ‘The Five Star Series of recitals by world-famous artists, is presented here this season by the T. Arthur | Smith Concert Bureau. Miss June B. Nettleship, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Net- tleship has returned to Averett Col- lege, Danville, Va. Miss Nettleship was entertained at several parties in their home in Chevy Chase. Mr. and Mrs. George Ramsey Bready of Herndon, Va., had as their | guests during the holiday season, at | their home Edwardstone Farm, Mrs. William Spencer of Yokohama, Jap- an; Mr. Boyd Spencer of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Bready and their small daughter of Purcellville, Va. Mrs. Bready entertained at a bridge luncheon when her guests were Mrs. | Arthur Hyde Buell, Mrs. E. Barbour | Hutchison, Mrs. George F. Buell, Mrs David M. Aud, Mrs. Bentley Harrison, Mrs. Ruth Keyes, Mrs. Harold F. Weil- er, Mrs. Allen H. Kirk, Mrs. Russell | A. Lynn, and Mrs. Willlam Dawson. Miss Alice Bready and Miss Jean Bready entertained 50 of their friends WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1935. Miss Doris Gale, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Gale of Beatrice, Nebr., announce her engagement to Mr. Paul Hender- son, jr., of Wash- ington, son of Col. and Mrs. Paul Henderson. No date has been set for the wedding. Miss Gale arrived in Washington this week and is the guest of Col. and Mrs. Henderson in their home on Woodland drive. ~—Hessler-Henderson Photo. The January meeting of the Mount Holyoke Club of Washington will be held at the A. A. U. W., 1634 I street northwest, at 2:30 o'clock p.m. on Sat- urday, January 12. Mrs. Jeanne Bate- man’ will entertain the club members by reading a one-act Russian play. served at the end of the meeting. ship, Mrs. J. R. Hildebrand: Publicity, Miss Louise Blodget; Flower, ‘William C. Gordon. Mrs. Frederick W. Robinson was hostess to the members of the Fort- nightly Ciub-Wednesday afternoon in her home, in Herndon, Va, when Mrs. Marvin Perkins of Pleasant Val- ley, Va., made an address on “South America.” In addition to Mrs. Perkins’ address, members reviewed some current events, Mrs. Arthur Hyde Buell, Mrs. Robin- son, Mrs. Maurice K. Stroud, Henry Piggott, Mrs. Harry Brecken- ridge, Mrs. James Myres and Mrs. Harry B. Mitchell speaking. Mrs. J. L. Nachman gave an at- tractive party, entertaining with cards, at a buffet supper following the East- ern Star dance last Friday evening.| The sponsors of the Candlelight | Chamber Music Concerts met at the | home of Mrs. Jouett Shouse to discuss the plans for the second concert, which | will be given on January 14, at the | home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Frost. Among those interested in these mu- sicales are Mrs. William Phillips, Mrs. “ Richard C. Southgate, Harriet Wins- | low, Mr. and Mrs. Walravens, Mrs. Morris L. Cooke,, Mrs. Henry Erwin, Mrs. George Peek, Mrs. Howell Moor- head, the counselor of the Swiss Le- gation, Louis H. Micheli; Mrs. Lothrop Stoddard, Mrs. Eugene Meyer, Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, Mrs. Hans Kin- dler, Mrs. George Morris, Mrs. Vinton Chapin and Mrs. Donald Richberg. The program will include the Grieg Quintet for Strings and the Dvorak Quintet. In the latter Louis Potter will be at the piano. Miss Kathleen McGinnis and Mr. Bernard McGinnis of Falls Church were dinner guests Thursday evening | of Capt. and Mrs. John T. L. Donovan, | at their home, Donanhain, in Vienna, | Va. Miss McGinnis will leave Monday | | for Chestnut Hills, Pa. 1 Dr. Ralph D. Smith, pastor of the | Woodside Methodist Episcopal Church, and Mrs. Smith, held open house at the parsonage at Woodside, Md., New Year afternoon and evening. Ap- proximately 200 members of the con- gregation were received by Dr. and Mrs. Smith and members of the offi- cial board of the church. The par- sonage was gay with poinsettas, red candles and holly. Music was given by Mrs. Joseph Voskuil and Miss Mary Lehman, pianists; Mr. John Marsh, violinist, and by Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Randall, who sang. ‘Those who assisted in receiving were Mr. and Mrs. Victor Grotlisch, Mr. and Mrs. John Dolan, Mr. and Mrs, Garland Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Hendrick, Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Murray, Mr. Paul Lehman, Mr. A. L. Googins, Mr. Raymond Williams, Miss Madeline Stuart, Mr. Lowell Hendrick, Mr. and | Mrs. Wallace Shirley and Dr. Howard Dozier. Those who poured were Mrs. H. H. Howlett, Mrs. M. D. Belfield, Mrs. John Keele, Mrs. Paul Lehman, Mrs. Clyde Williams and Mrs. Walter Crossan, and those serving were Mrs. W. C. Folsom, Mrs. M. J. Dickinson, Mrs. B. F. Stiffier, Mrs. C. W. Hake, Mrs. B. B. McKay, Mrs. A. L. Googins, Mrs. Leroy Leasure, Mrs. F. W. Bud- decke, Mrs. Frank Loeffler and Mrs. Howard Dozier. e = Mr. Walter Lincoln Whittlesey, who has been spending some time with his family at their home, Robinscroft, in Fairfav, returned yesterday to resume his duties as professor of politics at Princeton University. «£arl Lindsay’s Re Held Over All This Weel Dancing T LORAINE ABBY BROWNE DANNY ROGE | Mrs. THE THEODORES America's ror:zul HELEN O'BRIEN HENRIETTA in her home, in Herndon, Va., Wed- nesday afternoon, when she had as guests Miss Elizabeth Leonhardt, Mrs. Allen H. Kirk, Mrs. Powell Summers, Mrs. Harry Bready, Mrs. Roscoe Crip- pen, Mrs. Annie Robey Walker, Mrs. Walter Carter, Mrs. Calvin Kidwell, Mrs. Harold F. Weiler, Mrs. Carlin ‘Wilson, Mrs. Nora Ellmore, Mrs. Allen Bradley, Mrs. E. M. Armfield, Mrs, Ruth Keyes and Mrs. Bentley Har- rison. High scores were made by Mrs. Summers and Mrs. Kirk. At the home of the regent, Mrs. Thomas Hardy Seay, on Quebec street, in Spring Valley Monday afternoon, Constitution Chapter D. A. R. will have its annual chapter party, a St. Distafl’s day tea, as has been the cus- tom of this chapter for many years. Assisting Mrs. Seay in entertaining will be the past regents, also the chap- ter officers, Mrs. Alfred L. Talbot, vice regent and chairman of Entertain- ment Committee; Mrs. Edward W. Raab, Mrs. Adelaide Smith Beard, C. C. Dimmette, Mrs. Lavina Opdycke, Miss Louisiana Blackmar, Mrs. Stuart E. Catling and Mrs. Charles P. Granfield. The guests will include national offi- cers and State officers of the D. A. R, | chairmen of State committees, regents of the District chapters and invited guests of the chapter members. The hours of receiving will be from 4:30 to 6:30 o'clock. Mr. John P. S. Harrison, who has been visiting Mr. Leland Harrison of the Department of State and Mrs. Harrison in Washington, has returned to the Westbury Hotel in New York where he has an apartment with his mother, Mrs. William Henry Harrison. Mrs. W. E. Sweet entertained at dinner last evening at the Carlton, when her guests numbered 11. Kenyon-Adams Wedding In New York Wednesday. The marriage of Miss Mildred Adams, daughter of Mr. Charles Francis Adams of Concord, Calif., and the late Mrs. Adams, to Mr. W. Houston Kenyon of New York, for- mer special assistant to the Attor- ney General, is of much interest here. The wedding took place Wednesday in the apartment of the bride’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brown, in New York, the Rev. Dr. Arthur L. Kinsolving, dean of the Garden City Cathedral, officiating in the pres- ence of only the members of the two families. The bride was attended by Mrs. Paul West, jr.,, daughter of Mr. John W. Davis, former American Ambas- sador at London, and Mr. Theodore S. Kenyon of Summit, N. J., was best man for his brother. The bride has made her home with Mr. and Mrs. Dinner and Supper Dancing of Hollywood @lorified Birls k by Popular Demand! Dinner Dances T7:45 to 10- eover mot :u-u. Supper Dances 10to2a m Corer. Saturday. $1.00 RS THE SIX HASSAN TROJANS Shorenam’s Owa Lyrie Tenor DANCING 74510 2 CONNECTICUT AVENUE AT CALVERT | S ——— O S RS [} The Executive Committee of the club | will be hostesses at tea, which will be | Committee chairmen who have been | appointed for the year are, Member- | Mrs. | Mrs. | SOCIETY | Brown for 10 years and has been ac- |tive as a correspondent and feature writer for various periodicals. She | recently returned from Spain, where she was gathering material for her writings and where she witnessed a portion of the recent revolution. The bridegroom is, besides being a practicing attorney in New York, al lecturer on law at New York Univer- sity. He is a graduate of Harvard College and of Harvard Law School in the class of 1924. He served in the World War as a Red Cross am- bulance driver on the Italian front and in 1925 was appointed assistant United States attorney at New York, later becoming special assistant to the Attorney General in prosecutions under the anti-trust laws, including the Teapot Dome and Salt Creek oil cases. Following a reception in the Cosmo- politan Club after the ceremony, Mr. Kenyon and his bride left for a wedding trip, and will make their home in New York after their return. Mrs, Horace Torbert and Miss Mil- dred Dean were hostesses at a | luncheon at the University Women's | | Club today in celebration of the | bimillennium of the poet Horace. | | Mrs. Torbert, as representing the | poetry and drama groups of the club, will present Miss Dean, the | head of the department of Latin in the District of Columbia high schools. Miss Dean will then intro- | | duce the guest speaker, Dr. Lester | | Born. who has recently come from | | Northwestern University to be the | head of the department of classical | studies at George Washington Um-‘ versity. Those members of the club interested in the classics and their guests will compose the group, which ‘is one of the first in the country to | celebrate this 1935 bimillennium. | | ““A number of new Horace transla- | | tions, as well as pageants and plays, | are being written this year under the | egis of the American Classical | League. Dr. Roy C. Flickinger of the | University of Towa is chairman for the league’s many Horace bimillennial ac- tivities, Mrs. Torbert is the author of | 1a festival play written for the Vergil bimillennium five years ago and given widely throughout the country. luncheon will start with the singing | of two of Horace's odes in the original Latin by Mrs. Earle McKelway, mezzo- scprano, Mrs. Allen Moore at the piano. ‘The seventeenth annual reunion of the Rainbow Division Veterans will | be held in Washington next July. In order to defray the expenses of this | meeting and to accomplish many spe- cial features for the reunion, the | Washington Chapter will have a‘ dance tonight at the Willard Hotel. The committee is under the direc- tion of Mr. Oscar A. Jackson, who has announced elaborate plans for the Rainbow dance. John Slaughter’s | broadcasting band will set the mu- | sical tempo and he will act as master | of ceremonies for the floor show.! Opening in a Few Days— Watch for Our Annouficement “THEHIDDENLIFE" - 15 SERMON TOPIC: Dr. G. G. Johnson’s Evening . Subject Continues Series. Dr. Gove G. Johnson, pastor of the National Raptist Memorial, will speak tomorrow morning on “The Hidden Life,” following which the Lord’s sup- per will be observed. At 8 p.m. he will speak on “The Reality of Evil and the Evil One,” in continuation of his series of sermons on “What Jesus Preached.” There will be special meetings Tues- | day to Priday at 8 p.m. in connection with the week of prayer, and Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon and eve- ning, at 3 and 8, there will be special - features of a Missionary conference in charge of Rev. A. J. Bowen, fleld secretary of the South African Gen- eral Mission, with addresses and prayer. The Pinkham Class will meet Tues- day at 7:30 p.m. for a business meet= ing. The Bible Study Class meets in the church parlor Thursday at 7 p.m. DOGS KILL 30,000 SHEEP IN SALT RIVER VALLEY Head of Arizona Wool Growers Estimates Loss at $180,- 000 in Four Months. By the Associated Press. PHOENIX, Ariz., January 5.—Packs of hungry dogs have killed 30,000 sheep in the Salt River Valley in four months, Jerrie W. Lee, secretary of the Arizona Wool Growers’ Association. reports. He estimated the loss to sheepmen at $180,000. “The dogs belong to Mexicans and Indians and are half starved.” Lee said. “They enter the pastures at night and literally tear the sheep to pieces. They eat little of the meat.” Lee estimated there are 500 of the “killer” dogs in the river bottoms. SAILS FOR SAAR Michigan U. Professor Believes Election Will Be Quiet. NEW YORK, January 5 (#)-—Prof. James Pollock of the University of Michigan, who will be a member of the election board presiding over the Saar plebiscite on January 13, sailed last night on the liner Europa. “If the regulations after the elec- tion are es thorough as those be- forehand, there is not likely to be any trouble,” Prof. Pollock said. He said he believed the election would be quiet because of the strict policing by the League of Nations. ——————ee Ernestine Gardner, one of Washing- ton's cleverest songsters, and Libby Rowland, another clever person, will share vocal honors and there will be a Phil Hayden Revue led by Betty Jane Mahan. Among the honor guests and patrons are Mrs. Henry Morgenthau, jr., wife of the Secretary of the Treas- ury; Mrs. Breckinridge Long, Mrs. Eleanor Patterson, Mrs. Chris Heurich, Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Gen. Henry J. Reilly. The District of Columbia League of American Pen Women will hold an informal at-home reception in their studio at the Burlington Hotel to- morrow evening at 8 o'clock, honor- ing their exhibiting artist, Mrs. Min- nie L. Briggs, who will preside at an exhibition of her own etchings. Mr. Robert Willett Cox, who spent the holidays with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. James Swart, in Claren- don, Va. will Teturn Sunday to his studies at the University of Syracuse. A card party will be given at the Women's City Club by the District of Columbia Chapter, Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America, on Wednesday at 2 o'clock. Among those who have made res- ervations are the national president, Mrs. Thaddeus M. Jones; Mrs. John K. Preiot, State president; Mrs. Wi liam Bonar Bell, State vice presiden Mrs. Howard L. Hodgkins, Mrs. George Madden Grimes, Mrs. James Henry Harper, Mrs. William Goff Sears, Miss Sophie Casey, Miss Kate M. Jaquette, Mrs. Redwood Vander- grift, Mrs. Charles V. Stiefel, Mrs. David H. Moore, Mrs. H. W. Petty, Mrs. John G. Christopher, Mrs. Charles E. Morganston, Mrs. Acheson Hassan, Mrs. E. J. Lang, Miss Laura Tracy and Mrs. Woodwa: Dudin &6 Martin Our New Location Will Soon Be Ready Telephone NAtional 1293

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