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Evening star du lieu suivant : Washington, District of Columbia • 55

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Evening stari
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Washington, District of Columbia
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Numerous Club Events For Saturday Include Benefit for Finns Activities Scheduled to Reach Crescendo Among Organizations March 9 By FRANCES LIDE, Women's Club Editor. Whatever the reason, Saturday, March 9, stands out on the club calendar as one of the busiest days of the season. The Professional Club has selected the date for a "Finnish planned for the benefit of Finnish civilian relief. The Bar Association of the District has set its annual banquet for that evening. The local Greensboro College Alumnae Club will entertain the day at a large tea for members of the College Glee Club to be her for the week end.

Local alumnae of both Vassar and Wellesley will entertain at a luncheon for Miss Mildred H. McAfee, president and a Vassar alumna. The Children of the American Revolution of the District will hold their annual State convention at Pierce Hall. the poor club National Press Club chose March 9 for Its annual stunt party, which means, of course, that the club reporters will be pretty busy the club scene and taking proper care of their stunt party guests. There are several other scheduled events not recalled at the moment.

At any rate, small consolation to realize that Saturday is usually one of the dullest days of the week, so far as club news is concerned. The date for the Wellesley-Vassar luncheon has a definite connection with the Press Club dinner. Miss McAfee was invited as an to the latter distinct honor the alumnae group decided to make her week end visit to Washington an even more memorable occasion. Guests will include hirs. Charles Evans Hughes, a Wellesley alumna, and Mrs.

Henry Morgenthau, a Vassar alumna. The affair will be held at the Mayflower Hotel. Elaborate Program Planned For Finnish Benefit Members of the Professional to be confused with tne Fress uiuo an elaborate program for their Finnish benefit party, to be held from 4 to 7 pm. at the Y. W.

C. A. The idea of a was inspired by the traditional Finnish fondness for coffee and cake, it was explained by the Committee on Arrangements, headed by Mrs. H. Trendley Dean.

The Finnish Minister, Mr. Hjalmar J. Procope, is expected to attend, as are the Secretary of the Legation and Mme. Solanko. Capt.

Tauno Veikko Karvonen, Assistant Military Attache, also is to be a guest and other members of the diplomatic corps in Washington have indicated interest in the plans. A musical program will be given appropriately by the Finnish pianist, Renio Luoma. who will play from the works of Finland's beloved Jean Sibelius. Other musical features will be a group of Ukrainian songs by Miss Marusia Kissel, New England radio and concert singer, and Miss Mary Mandrick, local soprano The singers, who will appear in costume, will be accompanied by Thomas Cromchack, pianist. A sale of homemade cakes and candy will be held in connection with the benefit and there also will be a fortune teller's booth.

The coffee cake will be reinforced by pecan wafers, Swedish rings and other delicacies. Assisting Mrs. Dean with ments are Mrs. Theodore Carpin, Miss Alice M. Miller, Mrs.

Juanita Dewberry, Miss Margaret Coin and Miss Wanda Johnson. Mrs. Nell V. Smith is the president. Voluntary contributions to be taken dining the afternoon will be devoted, in full, to Finnish relief as all expenses are being assumed by the Y.

W. C. A. and local and nearby business firms. Three Speakers to Address Women's Bar Dinner.

Three speakers will be presented by the Women's Bar Association of the District at their annual dinner Saturday at the Mayflower: Miss Mary N. Winslow, United States representative on the Inter-American Commission of Women; Justice James W. Morris of the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia, and Miss Helen Hironimus, superintendent-designate of the new Federal reformatory for women at Dallas, Tex. Judge Fay Bentley of the Juvenile Court is in charge of dinner rangements and will serve as toastmistress. Mrs.

Helena D. Reed is the association president. With a membership of more than 800 local women lawyers, this association is one of the largest of its kind in the United States. It is an unusually diversified group, also, as many of the women attorneys from other States who accept positions in the Federal service here become associates of the organization. Voteless League To Present Skit With Stepfather: A Grim Drama Presenting the Pitiful Plight of Little is the title of the skit members of the Voteless District League of Women Voters will present at the annual spring luncheon in honor of Mrs.

Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mrs. Roosevelt also will talk at the luncheon, which will be held Friday at the Willard Hotel. Each of the six departments will present an act in the skit, dramatizihg legislation and questions in which it is particularly interested.

The titles of the acts are: Mother Old Woman and High School "The and Mrs. Henry Moore has written the opening and the closing scenes of the production, and Mrs. Charles Putnam, teacher of dramatics in the Maret School, is directing the cast. Both are members of the District League. Plumley to Address Republican Women Representative Charles A.

Plumley of Vermont will speak or. before the League of Republican Women of the District at the monthly meeting at 2:30 pm. tomorrow. Nominations from the floor for officers to be elected in April also will be made at thi6 meeting. Mrs.

Arthur H. Vandenburg, wife of the Senator from Michigan, will be guest of honor at the weekly tea Wednesday. Mrs. John Roland Kinzer, Mrs. Robert Fleming Rich, Mrs.

Carl Casey and Mrs. jCharles W. Fairfax will alternate at the tea table. Dr. Regis Boyle will at 3:30 pm.

before the tea. Tourists spent over $12,000,000 in Hawaii last year. President Is Guest Phi Delta Beta Chapter Entertains Miss Mildred Bergeron, international president of Phi Delta Delta, legal fraternity, was a guest of Beta Chapter at the Washington College of Law at its forum dinner last night at the clubhouse of the American Association of University Women. Miss Bergeron has been making a visitation of the Washington chapters of the fraternity. Guest of honor and speaker was Miss Helen Hironimus, a non-resident member of the chapter, who recently was appointed superintendent of the new Federal Reformatory for Women to open next summer at Dallas Tex.

Miss Hironimus, who for 10 years was assistant superintendent of the Federal Reformatory at Alderson, W. spoke on penology. She is a graduate of the Washington College of Law. Among members and guests of the fraternity attending were Dean Grace Hays Riley of Washington College of Law, Judge Mary Vashti Burr Whittington, past international president of Phi Delta Delta; Catherine L. Vaux, international third vice president; Alice Barry Freer, international recorQer; Helen B.

Arthur, professor of law at Washington College of Law; Ruth M. Hildebrand, president of the alumnae chapter; Irene V. Wright, president of Alpha Lambda Chapter, National University, and Ardis Blackburn Caufman, president of Zeta Chapter, George Washington University. Mrs. Marie Allen was chairman of the committee which arranged the dinner.

Ambassador to Speak Dr. Hu Shih, Chinese Ambassador, will be guest speaker of the Twentieth Century Club at its monthly meeting Thursday at 11 am. at the Y. W. C.

A. His subject will be Transformation in Modern Miss Mary Winslow, United States representative on the Inter-American Commission of Women, who will be among the speakers at the annual banquet of the Bar Association Saturday. Underwood Photo. Election of Officers Slated Tomorrow by Arlington Club The Arlington Club will elect officers and appoint delegates to the State convention at Old Point Comfort and to the Fourth District Institute in Herndon at its meeting tomorrow in the parish hall of the Arlington Methodist Church. The program hour will feature an address by Julian C.

Houseman, public relations supervisor of the State Division of Motor Vehicles in Richmond, who will be presented by Mrs. M. B. Payne, American citizenship chairman. The speaker will talk on As chairman of the Nominating Committee also Mrs.

Payne will present the following slate of officers: President, Mrs. James Head; first vice president. Mrs. Payne; second vice president, Mrs. R.

E. Royall; recording secretary, Mrs. George Simpson; corresponding secretary, Mrs. C. P.

Cake, and treasurer, Mrs. D. W. Pond. Officers and committee chairmen, with the exception of the historian, will make annual reports.

The club history will be read in June by Mrs. G. A. ColUer. Mrs.

Simpson is chairman of the luncheon tomorrow. Guest Night Planned By Club Tuesday The Marietta Park Club will hold its annual program at the City Club Tuesday at 8:30 p.m., with Mrs. Saidie Orr Dunbar, president of the Genefal Federation of Clubs, and Mrs. Ernest H. Daniel, District Federation president, as honor guests.

Presidents of neighboring clubs also have been invited. A program on Scotland will be presented. Moving pictures will be shown by Mrs. Gladys B. Middlemiss and Miss Maxwell Galloway will sing Scotch songs, accompanied by Mrs.

Mary leant Couch. Miss Helen Hironimus, superintendent-designate of the new Federal reformatory for women at Dallas, who addressed Beta Chapter of Phi Delta Delta legal fraternity for women last night. Miss Hironimus also is to be a guest speaker of the Bar Association Saturday. Glee Club to Give Concert Greensboro Alumnae and Carolina Society Sponsors The Washington chapter of the Greensboro College Alumnae Association will entertain with a tea Saturday from 3:30 to 5:30 pm. at the Admiral Club in honor of the Greensboro (N.

College Glee Club which will appear lenten concert next Sunday morning at the Francis Asbury Methodist Church. This will be the third appearance in Washington of the glee club, which is now on a tour of North Carolina and Virginia. The program here is being sponsored jointly by the local Greensboro alumnae and the North Carolina Society of Washington. Miss Celeste Horne of this city is a member of the club and will be in Washington both for the tea and concert. About 150 invitations have been sent to alumnae and friends of the college and about 100 invitations to local high school graduates.

Mrs. Franz Richey, president of the Washington chapter of the Alumnae Association, will head the receiving line, assisted by Walter Vassar, director of the glee club, and Mrs. Vassar; Dr. Robin Gould, pastor of the Francis Asbury Metho dist Qhurch, and Mrs. Gould; Fred W.

Morrison, president of the North Carolina State Society, and Mrs. Morrison. Alternating at the punch bowls will be Miss Euneta Pratt. Miss Katherine Rohrer, Miss Zilla Winn, Mrs. Will Ingram, Mrs.

Joe King and Mrs. Levi Pittman. They will be assisted by Miss Evelyn Lyles, Miss Marian Foreman and Miss Ruth Burnette. Those presiding at the coffee table include Miss Mary Dixon Hines and Miss Ethel Herring. Others assisting in receiving will be Mrs.

Hudson D. Baines, Mrs. G. Cooper Grizzard, Mrs. E.

S. Hedrick. Mrs. H. W.

Stewart, Mrs. Eva Evans i Hocutt, Miss Elizabeth Winn and M'ss Dolly Callahan. Officers of the Washington chapter are Mrs. Richey, president; Mrs. W.

Lloyd Horne, vice president; Miss Winn, secretary; Mrs. Hocutt, treasurer; Miss Hines, program chairman; Mrs. Stewart, ways and means, and Miss Herring, publicity. The committee in charge of arrangements includes Mrs. Horne, Mrs.

Harry James Eckstein and Mrs. Pittman. Miss Mildred H. McAfee, president of Wellesley College, who voill be entertained jointly by the local Wellesley and Vassar Alumnae Associations at a luncheon Saturday at the Mayflower. Photo.

G. A. R. Will Enter Music Program In Gontest A musical program, presented by the Gov. Thomas Welles Society, Children of the American Revolution, at a meeting yesterday, is to be entered in the National C.

A. R. contest for American music programs. The meeting was held at the home of Miss Barbara Mace in Chevy Chase. Arranged by Alice Waldron, the program included a piano solo by Ruth Dean and a vocal quintet by Barbara Hamblin, Maryjo Franklin, Alice Waldron, John EUdridge and Keith Taylor.

Grahame Smallwood gave an accordian solo and accompanied a vocal trio composed by Constance Hartman, EHeanor Smallwood and John Fetty. Miss Miriam Leetch gave a piano solo, Miss Rosemary Endicott, a song, and Margaret James and Elizabeth Smallwood, a duet, accompanied by John Fetty with the mandolin and Walter Nones the guitar. Incidents from the lives of several composers were given by Mary Louise Hall, Grahame Smallwood and Eugenia Jacobs. Mrs. Carl H.

Giroux, state senior president, was a guest. Miss Marguerite Johnson, junior president of Capt. Jacob Martin Society, C. A. entertained yesterday at a luncheon in honor of Mrs.

George L. Palmer, senior president. After the luncheon, which took place at the Highlands, Mrs. Palmer was presented with a C. A.

senior pin for the work she has done in founding the organization. Mrs. Giroux was invited to be among the guests of honor. Robert Mason De Shazo, junior state president; Mrs. Robert M.

De Shazo and mothers of the members of the society were also guests of honor at the luncheon. Guest at Fort Myer Capt. and Mrs. L. R.

Dewey of Fort Myer, have as their house guest Mrs. father, Mr. H. L. Powers, of Red Bank N.

J. Future Meetings of Clubs Announced Civic and Study Clubs American Association of University 1:30 p.m., study and practice writing group; 4 p.m., tea. Branch business meeting; 7:15 p.m. music appreciation group; 7:30 p.m., bridge class. Tuesday, 11 personality problems; 8 p.m., open meeting on consumer problems.

Speaker, Saul Nelson. Wednesday, 12:30 p.m., luncheon; 7:30 p.m„ French language group. Thursday, 11 a.m., Martha MacLear poetry group; 8 p.m., evening of films. Speaker, Maurice H. Thatcher.

Friday, 7:45 p.m., bridge. Saturday, 12 French conversation group; 1:30 Arts Committee trip to Baltimore Museum of Art; 6:30 p.m., junior group mixed bridge dinner. Voteless D. C. League of Women 12:15 child welfare luncheon meeting, at Y.

W. C. A. Tuesday, 2 p.m., economic welfare study group, with Mrs. H.

P. Becknell, 3052 street N.W. Speaker, Dr. Eric Englund, "Tax Laws as Trade Barriers." Wednesday, 2 p.m„ foreign policy study group at 3602 Albemarle street N.W. Speakers, Miss Mary Youngman, "United States Interests in the Far and Mrs.

C. L. Cushman, "Major Courses of Action Open to the United States in the Far Thursday, 10:30 government and its operation, with Mrs. Joseph Low, 6630 Sixteenth street N.W. Discussion of the Seal bill.

Friday, 2 educatior and child welfare joint meeting, with Mrs. B. Wood, 6013 Western avenue N.W. Twentieth Century 2 international outlook section at Y. W.

C. A. Speaker, Mrs. Lydia Van Hagen van Zandt, Currents of Wednesday, 10 am. to 12 Red Cross surgical dressings unit at chapter house, 1730 street N.W.

Thursday, 11 at Y. W. C. A. Speaker, Ambassador Hu Shih, Transformation in Modem Delphian Society, Kappa Sigma 10:30 at Mount Pleasant Library.

Discussion of folk stmg in art music of Middle Ages. Excelsior Literary at the Taft House. Community Clubs Club of Chevy Chase, Md. 11 social section business meeting; 8:30 drama section. "Play by Denis Connell.

Tuesday, 1 French section. Thursday, 10:30 membership committee, with Mrs. F. E. Shoemaker, 9 West Leland street, Md.

Friday, 1 German section. Marietta Park 8:30 annual guest night at City Club, Program on Scotland. Silver Spring 10:30 art department visit to Arts and Crafts Shop and Smithsonian Institution. Wednesday, 1:15 executive meeting; 2 general meeting. Speaker, Mrs.

Dorothy Kurtz. Takoma Park 12:30 luncheon meeting at Town Hall. Speaker, Dr. Elmer Louis Kayser, Wednesday, 10 choral group rehearsal at 107 Tulip avenue. Thursday, 12:30 Government study group with Mrs.

D. V. Sandlfer, 406 Kingsbury drive. Silver Spring. Speaker, Mrs.

George Robertson, "How the Social Security Law Arlington in Parish. Hall, Arlington Mbthodist Church. Speaker, Julian C. Houseman, Petworth 2 visiting nurse group, 5331 Georgia avenue N.W.; Thursday, 12 noon, luncheon meeting in social Hall of Petworth Methodist Church, Grant Circle. Also food sale; 1, business meeting; 2:30 book review.

Reviewer, Mrs. Theodore Tiller, 2d, Chip Off My Woman's Club of 12 noon, social section dessert bridge at clubhouse. Tuesday, 12:30 pm, international relations group luncheon and program. Illustrated slide lecture on Peru. Thursday, consumers relation group luncheon meeting with Mrs.

Jacob W. Bulger. Business, Professional Clubs Montgomery County Soroptimist 8 benefit bridge and style show at Kenwood Golf and Country Club. Business 8 p.m., at Covenant-First Presbyterian Church. Speaker, Mrs.

John N. Waters, "Mexican Fiesta and illustrated. Pilot 6 business and dinner meeting at Ivy Terrace, 1634 Connecticut avehue N.W. Speaker, Mrs. Olive G.

Faircloth. Miscellaneous Clubs National Democratic 1 luncheon. Speaker, Mrs. Thomas F. McAllister, Fight for Democracy in Thursday, 7:30 dinner.

Speaker, Lothrop Stoddard, Central Europe Looks to League of Republican 11 a.m., board meeting; 2:30 p.m., at the Mayflower Hotel. Speaker, Representative Charles A. Plumley, Wednesday, 3:30, book review by Dr. Regis Boyle, followed by tea. Arts 7 pm, dinner; 8:15 pm, discussion of stories and novels by Lewis Lofton Moneyway.

Thursday, 7 pm, dinner; 8:15 pm, piano recital by Henry Field. District of Columbia League of American 4 pm. to 6 pm, art tea. Tomorrow, 8 pm, radio program. Speakers.

Mary Mason and Lula Gabel Gelse. Tuesday, 8 pm, drama meeting. Wednesday, 3 pm. to 6 pm, book review tea. Daughters of the United States 1 pm, at the Army and Navy Club.

Current Comment Club of 8 pm, with Mrs. William Dudley. Speaker, J. F. Buckley.

Curley tpm, with Miss Mary Higgins, 314 Second street NJ5. Thursday, 7:30 pm, of at the Oblate Scholasticste, 391 Michigan avenue NJ5. Sunshine and Community SocietyTomorrow, 1:30 pm, at the GillBert, 3460 Sixteenth street. Musical program. 2 p.m., at Jewish Community Center.

Wednesday, 2 Hadassah Institute. Speaker, Irving Levitas, Analysis of the American Jewish Sisterhood of the Washington Hebrew in vestry rooms of the temple. Speaker, Miss Edith Stem, Importance and Fun of Being Washington Cultus with Mrs. Clifford K. Berryman.

Phi Delta Delta 4 to 6 tea with Mrs. Robert Elliott Freer, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Honor guest, Mrs. Mildred Pack Bergeron, international president. Beta Sigma 8 Eta Chapter, with Miss Peggy Kennedy, 1631 Euclid street N.W.

Wednesday, 8 p.m., Epsilon Chapter, at the Lee House. Thursday, 8 Kappa Chapter, at home of Gretchen Giddings and Alpha Williamson, Park Lane Apartments. Alliance of All 11 in Pierce Hall. Speaker, Mary Haworth, "Being a Problem Columnist." Auxiliary to District of Columbia Medical 11 am. Speaker, Dr.

V. M. Hoge. Junior Guild of American 8 in the residence halL Oneact play. womens American 8:15 at Jewish Community Center.

Social hour, refreshments and dancing following meeting. Daughters of the American 8 Emily Nelson Chapter, with Mrs. Wendell Calhoun, 8402 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. Speaker, Mrs. Claude A.

Cook; 8:30 Abigail Hartman Rice Chapter, with Miss Marion Fulton, 1500 Thirteenth street N.W. Speaker, Mrs. Cook. Wednesday, 8 Frances 8cott Chapter, benefit card party at Chapter House, 1732 Massachusetts avenue N.W. Thursday, 8 Junior American Committee, at Mayflower Hotel.

Guest speakers, Mrs, Philip Sidney Smith, Mrs. Lyman B. Swormstedt and Martin Fri day, 10:30 Entertainment Committee, Memorial Continental Hall. P. E.

O. evening, Chapter with Mrs. Caroline B. Stephen, 1615 Hobart street N.W., election of officers. Wednesday, 12:30 reciprocity luncheon at Woodward Lothrop Tearoom.

Hostess, Chapter O. Musical program. Friday, 2 Chapter with Mrs. J. W.

Bobbins, 1220 Emerson street N.W. Miss Jewell Glass Hunts Hidden Mineral Wealth With Wars Stopping Imports of Vital Materials, Research Takes On Added Importance By GBKTCHEN SMITH. Searching for minerals, necessary in the Industrial life of the Nation, Is the dally occupation of Miss Jewell Glass, assistant mineralogist with the Division of Petrology of the United States Geological Survey, and the only woman on the Investigating staff of the division. It is not In mines, but beneath her microscope, that Miss Glass, a young woman with closely cropped dark hair, seeks for a solution to a problem which has embarrassed United States slnoe the beginning of wars in the Orient and Europe. Until the outbreak of hostilities abroad, Miss Olass explained that much of her work included analysis of rocks and stones and the soils in which they are found, for the purpose of assisting engineers.

proper-construction of roads, bridges or other engineering she explained, so much upon the quality of rock deposits, or the stone After several years of interesting research, in which a well-defined volcanic crater was discovered beneath the surface of the plains near Jackson, through an ore analysis made by Miss Olass, she was assigned the Important work of investigating These, she states', are minerals essential to the economic life of the Nation and for the manufacture of articles of national defense. Important Minerals Shot Off by War. With war breaking throughout the world and nations concentrating their own resources for home consumption. former important mineral imports from other countries have been curtailed, said Miss Glass. use more tin than any nation in the she explained, "and yet we only produce 1 per cent of our needs.

Most of it has come from the Far East, the Malay Peninsula and from Hainan, taken over by the Other minerals essential in manufacturing, found only in limited quantities in the United States, said Miss Olass, are nickel, manganese, chromium, mercury, antimony and tungsten. "Most of our nickel has come from she pointed out. it must all go to England to be used by Great Britain. The she continued, also stopped exports of chromium from Rhodesia, where the greatest mines are found. China is the greatest producer of antimony and tungsten, both necessary for war implements and munitions.

The war in she continued, seriously crippled our Miss Glass contends that to really understand the economic history of the world one should have a thorough knowledge of rocks, ore and the minerals therein. Mineral Prompt Wan. soon as one nation controls a strategic mineral," she declared, is going to be war. Nations claim they light for ideals, traditions, freedom or some other line they really are lighting for minerals. -Why does Russia want Finland? of its great nickel supply.

And why is Sweden threatened? For Its iron As mineral Imports from Europe and Asia have been seriously curtailed, Uncle Sam must look to his own resources. Miss Glass explained. With the hope of finding sufficient minerals within the country's borders to help in an emergency, the Geological stall of petrologists is conducting an intensive research into all mineral ore deposits in the country. recover and utilize from great volumes of rocks small amounts of ore, which sometimes yield small quantities of these strategic Miss Glass said. even search the dumps.

It is our business to find where it is and how much there is and also to study mining methods and the development of lean ore-bearing While nature has been stingy with the United States in certain minerals, it has placed one of the few rutile mines in existence not far from the Capital. Paradoxically, rutile, found in one of the few great nations still at peace, is used principally for warfare smokescreens, although it is used also for welding purposes, the mineralogist explained. is found is Roseland, Nelson County, she added, I understand the miners there are working night and day Started for Career In Teaching. Miss Glass, who is a graduate of George Washington University and a member of the Columbian Women and the Phi Delta Gamma Sorority, had planned to major in botany and to teach school, she said. Mineralogy was one of her subjects at the university, she explained, and she became so interested she decided to make it her life work.

After re PERMANENTS The New Spring Coiffure $10.00 Value including Other Individually Styled Wavet, tv $10 HAIR, SCALP and SKIN Laduu and Gentlemen Treated Our 30-ywr-old service sad special equipment enable ns to relieve itchy scalps, excessive drynees or olliness, dandruff, falling hair, alopecia, as weU as to restore freshness and loveUnsss to weatherbeaten skins resulting from exposure to sun, wind and cold. Special Course, 6 Scalp Treat- I MA ments, including two shampoos IV Mr. Cmim, Mmnmgmr. Ph.no f.r appointment for fra. examination today Ramrod: IS I better pad tnUmai trmted.

Slribr m9. I TrMTrwhNMt, $1.00. MARGARET E. SCHEETZE, Inc. 1145 Conn.

Skin land Scalp Specialists NA. 2626 4 Me tfofHo.tr. Nik Tear to lutout. I 9:30 PM. MISS JEWELL GLASS.

Staff Photo. ceiving three fellowships from three different universities in one year, she decided to accept an appointment from the Geological Survey in the division of petrology. One of few women to become a member of the Mineralogical Society of America, the Club of Washington and the Geophysical Union, Miss Glass believes mineralogy as a profession has much to offer to women. the world becoming more and more she concluded, will be an increasing demand for Nurses Association Meets Tomorrow The first regular meeting of the District of Columbia Graduate Association will be held in the auditorium of the United States Public Health Building, Nineteenth street and Constitution avenue N.W., at 8 pm. tomorrow.

Dr. Harry Dowling, pneumonia consultant of the District Health Department, will give an illustrated lecture on Newest Treatments for Pneumonia." Entertainment will be furnished by the Student Glee Club of St. Hospital. in Trip The Arts Committee of the Washington branch of the American Association of University Women, announces a trip for club members and their friends Saturday to the Baltimore Museum of Art to see the exhibit, in the Many well-designed and inexpensive new objects for the house will be exhibited, and in addition exclusive new objects in glass, furniture, silver and china. The group will leave the clubhouse-at 1:30 pm.

by special buses. Mrs. A. Remington Kellogg Will have charge of the group. WHERE TO DINE.

COLLINGWOOD MT. VERNON MEMORIAL HIGHWAY Overlooking the Potomac Luncheon Ton Dinner NOON TO Phone Temple SOSO HELP YOURSELF AT THE A Regular Feature am Our 65c ami 75c DINNERS GREENWAY INK! 2915 Connecticut Avenue Collier 3nn 18th dk Columbia Rd. N.W. Old Fashioned Chicken Short- cake II Roast Young Turkey Other Dinners, Serves 1S-S Banquets, Recaptions, Dinners, Teas and Weddings HI Call Us for Estimates flj Cel. Phene ALez.

0 Luncheon, 55c to 1.00 Dinner Doily, 85c and 1.00 HellSey Golden Brown Maryland Fried UlllIlKER Steaks, Chops, Seafood Featured on Our Menu for Soaday Dinner IbcUCbt freth ssa imirta. 12 JO to I JO 75c, 85c, 51.00 WZ IVY.

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Années disponibles:
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