Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 82, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 2, 1921 Page: 2 of 12
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TWO
GALVESTON
TRIBUNE
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1921.
ZE
33
BIG EATERS GET
AMUSEMENTS
AMUSEMENTS
AMUSEMENTS
Dixie Theater No. 1
KIDNEY TROUBLE
I
Correct
\
Lines
Backache.
4
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8476,26
PMK687<
0,
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225
"2
C/B Corsets
assure you of correct lines and in
a
TODAY
TOMORROW
46A
4
Others down to as low as . .$1.50
PALACE
TODAY — TOMORROW
EDMUND F. COBB
TEXAS CITY NEWS
NEWS DE GALVESTON CLUBDOM
ETVgh•g
I fee Desert
OUT OF THE CHRISTIAN COLLEGE.
PERSONAL AND SOCIAL
West.
PROPONENTS ABANDON HOPE.
WILL GET NEW TRIAL.
CORNS
WOMEN WHO OVERWORK
ESS
EA
Henckel’s
FRENCH PAPERS UNITED.
0
Ef
628 23d St.
2115 Strand
Phone 703
Better and Bigger
1
t
d
Watch and Jewelry Repairing
i
1
Anita
J
A
OWNE
■■
nMMi
100 FEET FROM MARKET STREET
grace and durability are fea-
tures that have helped to make
these one of the popular corsets
of the day.
Lift Right Off
without Pain
Real Estate and
Investments
OFFERINGS OF TODAY
AT LOCAL THEATERS
were of a high order and were greatly
appreciated.
GALVESTON
PRODUCE CO.
life Insurance
Accident Insurance
Maj. and Mrs. George Derry Murphy
and little daughter, Nena, left on Sun-
2115
Market
Street
The Ladies’ auxiliary of the First
Evangelical Lutheran church will hold
election of officers at the meeting to
be held at 3:30 o’clock tomorrow aft-
ernoon in the parlors of the church.
The
Market
Street
Jeweler
I
Scorpion
A Rapid-Fire Story of the
America’s Fastest Rising
Film Star, Supported by •
VIDA JOHNSON
New- Way
Ambrosia
Galveston
Belle
Tidal Wave
Take Salts at First Sign of Blad-
der Irritation or
Eggs, Poultry, Fruits
and Vegetables
Jewelry remodeled into up-to-date pieces. All work done
in our own shop on the premises.
in the story of the bitter feud
arising between the cattlemen
and the sheepherders on the
slopes of the Rockies—-
ENTENTE REPLY
BEING FRAMED
CHAMP CLARK IS
CLAIMED BY DEATH
Mrs. W. S. Carter has returned from
Austin, where she visited her daugh-
ter, Miss Margaret Carter.
9
r
Rev. and Mrs. James Flemming Car-
ter left last evening for Dallas to visit
their son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
James Flemming Carter, Jr.
Crosby County Man Had Been Given
Long Term.
By Associated Press.
Austin, March 2.—Sam Cates, of Cros-
Three Days Starting Sunday
BARR TWINS
A Riot of Color.
Frank Wilcox & Co.
“Sssh—h” A New Comedy
AND FIVE OTHER BIG ACTS
8,8g
82
PHONE 368
Take 27th-^7th or 33rd Street Car.
Mrs. Alphonse Aloysius Arnold is vis-
iting in Houston, the guest of her sis-
ter, Mrs. Raymond McAshan.
The Oysters Are Fine at
Rogers’ Oyster Resort
35th and Boulevard
SEAFOODS AND CHICKEN
Fresh Crabs, Fish, Shrimp and Oysters
Well Prepared and Served in Various
Styles.
Housewives who specify STAR brand when
they order flour have better bread and bigger
loaves than those who carelessly order “flour.”
fl
I
/
Li
Mrs. John Lovejoy Herrman left Sat-
urday for San Francisco, Cal., after a
delightful visit as the guest of her
parents Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herrmann.
themselves for active Christian work.
Activities in the college, the train-
ing received, the fields to be occupied
and those already occupied are to be
in towns considered strategic centers.
There will be no collection and the
public is invited to see the pictures.
Ex-students of all colleges and univer-
sities will doubtless find something of
interest in the exhibition.
NOW PLAYING
The Debonair Lover
Thomas Meighan
— in —
The Frontier of the Stars
By Albert Payson Terhune
Also a new Comedy
“THE JANITOR”
Reports from the supervisors of the
two city playgrounds were read. Rob-
ert I. Cohen, Jr., and Miss Laura Hef-
fron were elected on the board of di-
rectors, and the resignation of Mrs,
O. L. Clarke from the board of direc-
tors was received.
addition,
The board of directors and advisory
board of the United Charities will meet
at 4 o’clock tomorrow afternoon at the
office of the president, Judge Street.
Miss Florida Cheesborough left last
evening for Kauffman, Tex., for a two-
weeks’ visit, as a guest of her uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Woodson Nash.
charge of. murder of J. W. Buron on
March 8, 1920, will get a new trial, the
court of criminal appeals having to-
day overruled the state’s motion for
TODAY AND TOMORROW
Owen Moore
—in— .
"The Chicken in
the Case”
Also
INTERNATIONAL NEWs
,"9
Phope 290
Columbia Oil Refg. Co. Bldg.
the court.
The court today affirmed the case of
Frank Taylor, from Smith county. Tay-
lor was convicted of the murder of
Jim Norris and given a term of 25 years
in the penitentiary.
gallery entertained not only at an an- rehearing. The case had been reversed
nual New Year’s house and at other , and remanded at a former session of
FOR KIDNEY TROUBLE, TAKE
HOBO
Kidney ^Bladder Remey
YOUR DRUGGIST SELLS IT
The annual art exhibit sponsored by
the Galveston Art league will be held
soon, according to decision made at the
meeting of the league yesterday aft-
ernoon. The study class of the league
will be held at 3:45 o’clock Tuesday
afternoon at the Ball high school, it
was announced.
[
are the secret of a
Gown’s success—
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fowler are enter-
taining Miss* Nola Lee of Winfield, La.
The Trinity Episcopal church Guild
will hold a Lenten tea and sale of
delicious home-made cakes, candy and
bread on Saturday afternoon from 2
until 6 o’clock, at Eaton chapel.
day evening for San Antonio after an
extended visit here with Mrs. Murphy's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Pabst.
21212203
-
Declare That German Reparations Pro-
posals Are Not Acceptable.
By Associated Press.
Paris, March 2.—Newspapers cf this
city are united in declaring that Ger-
many’s proposals, submitted to the su-
preme allied council in London yes-
terday, were unacceptable.
“Germany’s ludicrous offer” appears
to sum up the view of the majority of
journals in this city, and the remark
of Premier Lloyd-George, “We had bet-
ter adjourn quickly, or we will find we
owe them mcney,” finds immense fa-
vor
Premier Briand’s newspaper, the
Eclair, says:
“France hitherto has shown the ut-
most patience, and if Germany com-
pels her to do so, she will use her
strength remorselessly in full agree-
ment-with the allies.”
The Petit Parisien, which has the
widest circulation of any Paris news-
paper, says:
“Faced with the German proposals,
which insult the misery of the popu-
lations of our devastated regicns and
which mock all the allies, there is not
“Man may work from sun to sun, but
Woman’s work is never done.” In order
to keep the home neat and attractive,
the children well dressed and tidy,
women continually overdo and suffer in
silence, drifting along from .bad to
worse, knowing full well that they need
help to overcome the pains and aches
which daily make life a burden. Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a
medicine with specific value which
overcomes many of the worst forms of
female complaints, as the letters con-
stantly being published in this4 paper
will prove.
THIS AD AND 20c
Will Admit Any School Child to
Tuesday’s Matinee at 3 p. m.
By Associated Press.
Washington, March 2.—Hope of en-
actment at this session of the soldier
bonus bill was abandoned today by its
proponents.
ahy-~ 58
==
The regular meeting of the Commun-
ity players of the Galveston Community
club will be held at 7:30 o’clock this
evening in the clubrooms of the So-
ciety. The casts for the three one-act
plays will meet for rehearsal.
Uf HOOPING COUGH
W W No “cure”—but helps to re-
V w duce paroxysms of coughing
VICKS
W VAPORUE
Ch>er I 7 Million Jars Used Yearly
trying to keep duties down won him
the regard of the Democrats and his
speech of five®hours against the bill
was one of the notable addresses of shown and the pictures are so arranged
that congress. _ as to be 'practically self-explanatory.
Mr. Clark’s sincerity, friendship for I Mr. Christopher is sent out from the
opponents and adherents alike, his fair- । headquarters of the movement, at Dal-
ness as a presiding officer and hi las, and is spending one or two days
knowledge of history, his love of clean
anecdotes and humorous stories, and
The Mothers’ club of the Sam Hous-
ton school will hold a meeting at 3
o’clock tomorrow afternoon on the sec-
ond floor of the school building. J.
W. Hopkins, superintendent of schools
and Rabbi Henry Cohen will make
short addresses. Every meeting will
have a different subject of interest to
mothers to be discussed.
The Mothers’ club wants every moth-
er whose child attends the Sam Hous-
ton school to attend one of the meet-
ings within the next two months. The
class having the largest number of
mothers present will be awarded a
prize.
Pictures to Be Exhibited Tonight at
First Methodist Church.
Mr. Paul Christopher, who is tour-
♦ng the state in behalf of the Christian
education movement now under way
in the Methodist church, will be at the
First Methodist church tonight with
moving pictures showing a number of
phases of the life of the student in
some of the colleges conducted by the
Methodist church; the series of pictures
are entitled “Out of the Christian Col-
lege,” and cover numerous phases of
the experience of the young men and
women who are seeking to qualify
for even the most beau-
tiful costume needs the
foundation ‘of a cor-
rectly corseted figure e
A joint country fair and bazaar is
to be held by the Gleaners of the First
Methodist Episcopal church, South, and
the recently organized Young People’s
Missionary society soon, it was an-
nounced at the meeting of the Glean-
ers held yesterday afternoon. The date
and place are to be announced later.
Little Misses Dorothy Dalton Middle-
ton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
David Middleton, Jr., of this city, will
leave Friday to visit her aunt, Mrs.
Squire Earl Harvey of Houston.
The members of the Jolly Dozen club
were entertained with an informal
functions but gave informal weekly
luncheons at the Capital to which mem-
bers and others were invited. Gene-
vieve Clark, whose engagement • to
James M. Thompson, a New Orleans
newspaper editor, was announced in the
mmAk6
1:2622/4
Enaa—
Physically he was a giant of a man, by county, sentenced to 99 years in the
standing ovef six feet two inches in penitentiary on conviction of the
--------- -$
Magic! Drop a little "Freezone" on
an aching corn, instantly that corn
stops hurting, then shortly you lift it
right off with fingers. Doesn’t hurt
a bit.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient
to remoye every hard corn, soft corn,
or corn between the toes, and calluses.
The American men and women must
guard constantly against Kidney trou-
ble because we eat too . much and all-pur
food is rich. Our blood is filled with
uric acid which the kidneys strive to
filter out. They weaken from over-
work, become sluggish; the eliminative
tissues clog and the result is kidney
trouble, bladder weakness and a gen-
eral decline in health.
When your kidneys feel like lumps of
lead; your back hurts or the urine is
cloudy, full of sediment ‘or you are
obliged to seek relief two or three
times during the night; if you suffer
with sick headache or dizzy, nervous
spells, acid' stomach, or you -have rheu-
matism when the weather is bad, get
from your pharmacist about four
ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoon-
ful in a glass of water before break-
fast for a few days and your,kidneys
will then act fine. This famous, salts
is made from the acid of grapes and
lemon juice, combined with lithia, and
has been used for generations to flush
and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neu-
tralize the acids in the urine so it no
longer is a source of irritation, thus
ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in-,
jure, makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water beverage, and belongs in
evehy home, because nobody can make
a mistake by having a good kidney
flushing any time.
Beautiful examples of what a
corset should be are priced $8.50
The Women’s Missionary Society of
the Thirty-Third Street Methodist
church wil meet in business session at
3 o’clock tomorrow afternoon in the
parlors of the church.
Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Ladd entertained,
with a. card party and dinner-dance on
Tuesday evening at Gaido’s roof gar-
den cafe, which, was a very delightful
affair and enjoyed by about sixty
guests, in honor of the guests of the
host and hostess, their brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Harlan
of Taylorsville, Ill.
Tables were arranged for the game
of “500” which was the chief diversion
of the early part of the evennig. The
high score for the ladies was a pair
of hand embroidered sheets. This was
won by Miss Mae Ladd, daughter of
the host and hostess. The high score
for, the men was made by Mr. Harlan,
and the second high score by Mr. Rob-
ert E. Kinze, who received beautiful
neckties. Mrs. Samuel J. Williams won
the second high score prize, a Pyrex
baking dish.
Mrs. Armand Reifel drew the consola-
tion prize for the ladies, a pyrex baking
dish. Mr. James Murph drew the con-
solation prize for the men, a pair of
silk hose.
Mrs. Harlan was presented with a pair
of exquisitely embroidered sheets and
Mr. Harlan with a pair ofc silk hose as
souvenirs of the event.
Supper was served in the tea room,
the tables having es their floral cen-
terpieces vases filled with red roses
and ferns. A six-course menu was
served.
Dancing concluded the evening’s hos-
pitality.
Mr. and Mrs. William Cain will en-
tertain the “500” club of which they are
members on Thursday evening and on
Tuesday afternoon Mrs. W. B. Shearer
and Mrs. E. J. Tracey, will entertain
with a bridge hospitality in compli-
ment to Mr. and Mrs. Harlan.
Portable field houses on the beach
front, to be used for playhouses by
children, may be erected this summe:
if plans made by the Galveston Play-
ground association materialize. Gus
A. Amundsen, Jr., who is chairman of
the committee, will confer with mem-
bers of the Galveston Beach associa-
tion in regard to the matter.
El Norte Temple, Pythian Sisters,
will hold their regular meeting at 3
o’clock tomorrow afternoon in the
Knights of Pythias hall.
his marvelously retentive memory
ranked with his attributes of leader-
ship. He welded the minority into a
virtual Democratic unit when he was
minority leader, and after the ousting
of Cannon, which robbed the speaker-
ship of many of its powers, he divided
with majority leader Underwoord the
control of the Democrats in the house
and they formed a great working
team.
The Ladies’ auxiliary to the Master
Plumbers met yesterday afternoon at
3:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. George
Robinson, Jr. After the regular busi-
ness session, a social hour was en-
joyed by those present.
party yesterday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Roy B. Johns, 2206 Avenue
N. Mrs. Johns, who will leave soon
to reside in Shreveport was presented
with a silver sugar bowl by the mem-
bers of the club. Dainty refreshments
iwere served by the hostess during the
afternoon. Those present were: Mrs.
H. E. Baden, Mrs. R. J. Bissel, Mrs.
Gantz, Mbs. L. F. Courtliff, Mrs. G. H.
Fulford, Mrs. Jack Young and Mrs. P.
G. Maerckey of Shreveport.
• -----'
The West End Community club will
meet in regular session at 3 o’clock this
afternoon in the pavilion of the Morris
Lasker playground.
DIXIE THEATER NO. 1.
Owen Moore as Steve Perkins
who had no idea what would hap-
pen when he told his Aunt Sarah
he was married in “The Chicken
in the Case.” Also International
News.
PALACE THEATER
“The Desert Scorpion,” the story
of the long existing feud between
the cattlemen and the sheepherd-
ers on the slopes of the Rockies
with Edmund F. Cobb and Vida
Johnson.
QUEEN THEATER
Dorothy Gish in a story of spooks
crooks and the spirits of love.
Shivering with thrills. Shriek-
ing with laughter. “The Ghost
in the Garret.” Also new Gold-
wyn, comedy with Buddy Post on
same bill.
TREMONT THEATER
Thomas Meighan with Faire Bin-
ney in the story of a reckless
gangster and an invalid’s dreams,
“The Frontier of the Stars,” by
Albert Payson Terhune. Also
“The Janitor.” New comedy on
the same bill.
An uproarious seance of spooks
and crooks and the spirits of love
and fun. Shivering with thrills.
Shrieking with laughter.
Contiued from Page One.
Foreign Minister Sforza of Italy has
been insisting that the matter be giv-
en careful consideration before drastic
action was decided upon, basing his
stand on the ground that a deadlock
might mean economic disaster for all
Europe. In the meantime belief was
expressed in several quarters that the
Germans have not spoken their last
word relative to the reparations terms
fixed by the supreme council at Paris.
WHOLLY INADEQUATE.
This morning’s newspapers were
unanimous in declaring the German
offer of the equivalent of $7,500,000,-
000 in reparations was wholly inade-
quate.
“Impudent,” “ludicrous,” “fantastic,”
and"grotesque," were some of the ad-
jectives the principal newspapers use
in commenting on the German terms.
Even the pacifist Daily News confessed
it was at a loss to understand the Ger-
man mentality. ,
“The Germans,” the newspaper said,
“truly astonished the world by an ab-
surd offer, which was utterly inade-
quate and frankly unacceptable. Un-
less Dr. Simons retuns to realities it
is good-bye to a just settlement and
a solid European peace.”
“It is not easy to speak with pa-
tience of this combination of business
cunning-, chicanery and sheer impu-
dence,” asserted the London Times.
“Doubtless the German delegates are
armed with a whole series of succes-
sive schemes, each giving a little more
than its predecessor. But when her
bluff is called, she will abandon it.”
"Shadowy, ludicrous and ill-informed
as Dr. Simons’ speech may have been,”
said the Morning Post, “it served to
unite the allies. It was tragic because,
even now, Germany does not realize
her infamy.”
The Daily Telegraph declared no-
body was prepared for such a “fan-
tastic” offer and adds:
“Great Britain must support France
whether naval action or . economic
pressure should be decided upon.”
“No trace of loyalty or good faith,”
the Chronicle asserted, “appeared in the
offer, which was intended as an in-
vasion of the Versailles treaty.”
maximum comfort,
height and weighing a trifle more
than two hundred pounds.
Speaker Clark and Mrs. Champ
Clark, in the speaker’s bench in the
waning days of the sixty-third con-
gress, and Bennett Clark, parliamentar-
ian of the house at the speaker’s ap-
pointment, whom the speaker hoped to
have succeed to his seat in congress,
comprised the rest of the immediate
family.
Special to The Tribune.
Texas City, March 2.—The funeral
services of Mr. P. M. Betts, who died
Monday morning, were held at the fam-
ily residence Tuesday at 3 p. m. and the
remains were buried at the Lamarque
cemetery.
County Commissioner W. J. Stoner
was a business visitor Tuesday.
The Church of God has bought a
choice corner lot in West, End, the
southeast corner cn Seventh avenue. S
and Twelfth street, and plans to erect
a neat little church right away.
a single one of our young soldiers who,
if the nation should reauire it, will not
readily go and mount guard in the
Ruhr region.”
Jacques Rainville, the widely known
writer on foreign topics, says in
L’Action Francaise:
“It is the good fortune of France al-
ways to be able to count on the clumsi-
ness of the Germans. Their eternal
blunders save us from our own.”
Contiued from Page One.
The failure of his candidacy at Bal-
timore never ceased to be the disap-
pointment of Mr. Clark’s life. He ‘re-
fused nomination as vice president and
told the house on the eve of his defeat
that he preferred to remain as speak-
er.
His election to the speakership of
the house came in the Sixty-second con-
' gress, prior to the Baltimore conven-
tion, and it was by a united democracy
in recognition of the contest Mr. Clark
had made against the rule of 'Speaker
Joseph Cannon. Mr. Clark had served
■ in every congress since and including
the Fifty-third in 1893, except- the
Fifty-fourth when he was beaten.
Although Champ Clark was known
as a Missourian he was born in Ander-
son, Ky., on March 7, 1859. He was
christened James Beauchamp Clark,
but early in life he reduced this to
Champ Clark. His first work was
as a farm hand, clerk in a general
store, and on a country newspaper.
He was educated at Kentucky uni-
versity and Bethany college, and the
Cincinnati law school. For a short time
he was president of Marshall college,
and at 22, held the record of being the
youngest college president in the Unit-
ed. States. In 1875 he moved to Mis-
souri where he took up the study and
practice of law, and became prosecut-
ing attorney in Pike county. His next
step was into the Missouri' legislature
where he framed the Missouri railway
law, an antitrust statute, and an Aus-
tralian ballot law. He was permanent
chairman of the Democratic national
convention at St. Louis in 1904 and
headed the committee that notified Al-
ton B. Parker of his presidential nom-
ination.
He was first sent to the national
forum in 1893. Although then regard-
ed as “green,” his strength in the house
developed rapidly. When John Sharp
Williams left the house for the senate,
Representative Clark was’made minor-
ity leader by virtue of his seniority
on the ways and means committee,
which drafted the Payne-Aldrich tariff
act. His service on that committee in
The drill team of the Woman's Bene-
fit association of the Maccabees, No.
41, will meet at 7:30 ’oclock this eve-
ning at the home of the captain, Mrs.
George Harrison, 1801 Nineteenth
street. All members are urged to be
present on time.
A wedding of great interest, which
came as a surprise to the many friends
of the young couple, was that of Mr.
Claud Prentiss Mann and Miss Anno
Henrietta Cline, both of this city,
which was quietly solemnized on Tues-
day evening at 6:30 o’clock at the rec-
tory of Trinity Episcopal church, Rev.
Raimundo de Ovies, rector, officiating.
There was no one present to witness
the marriage ceremony except Mr. and
Mrs. William Lewis Mopdy III, the inti-
mate friends of the contracting parties.
The bride, who is one of Galveston’s
lovliest young girls, looked particular-
ly charming and attractive in her
traveling costume of brown duvetyne,
with brown hat and accessories to
match, and wore a corsage bouquet of
Columbia roses and lilies of the valley.
Immediately after the ceremony Mr.
and Mrs. Mann, Mr. and Mrs. William
Lewis Moody III and Mr. Shearn Moody
motored to Houston, the young couple
leaving for New Orleans and Chicago,
and their bridal party returning to
Galveston, late last evening.
The bride is the only daughter of
Dr. R. R. D. Cline of this city, a mem-
ber of the faculty of the medical de-
partment of the University of Texas.
She is a graduate of Baylor College,
Belton, Texas, and a former University
of Texas student, later graduating at
Columbia University, New York City,
coming back to Galveston last fall to
assume the duties of physical
instructor at the Young Women’s
Christian Association. She was born
and reared in Galveston, and is very
popular in social circles.
Mr. Mann is k prominent young stock
broker of this city, being a senior
member of the firm of C. P. Mann
and company, and during his residence
here has made a host of warm friends
in business circles. He is a son of
Mrs. W. B. Mann of Dallas.
On their return from their wedding
trip Mr. and Mrs. Mann will be at
home to their friends at their apart-
ment at the Pearce Wilder apartments.
They make lighter cake, rolls and biscuits,
more delicious pastry.
Because all STAR Flour is milled from se-
lected wheat by a special process.
Baking with it helps to economize, as well as to live bet-
ter. So—insist on one of these brands mentioned in this ad-
vertisement. Be sure to look for the STAR on the sack.
TEXAS STAR FLOUR MILLS
The Largest Wheat and Corn Products Factory in the Southwest
Daily Capacity 5000 Barrels
Established 1878 For sale by all first Galveston Texas
class Grocers _ ’
meneeomnzrmrmermemarremmmrermenmermmememesmmmemasrommmemmaammemmmmufimemmemmmmam-e
Miss Mary Wilkins of Galveston ar-
rived Tuesday morning from Austin,
where she is a student at the Univer-
sity of Texas, to be the guest of Mrs.
Lena Meredith, for the wedding of Miss
Margaret Wilkins and George Samuel
Parker, which will be solemnized at
the First Methodist church Wednesday
- night.—Houston Post.
One of the most interesting meetings
of the season was held last night by
the Temple society. There was a large
attendance of the membership and the
program was especially instructive as
well as interesting.
Mrs. William Zinn led a discussion cn
“The Origin and Development of the
Drama.” She traced the origin of the
drama to the Greeks and gave a re-
.view of its development throughout
the intervening years.
Dr. Henry Cohen reviewed the life
and work of Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise,
who was the organizer of the reform
movement in the United States and was
the founder cf the Union Hebrew col-
lege of Cincinnati, the school attend-
ed by all rabbis of the reformed branch
of Judaism.
Mrs. R. M. Martin gave a piano selec-
tion and Miss Eleanor Ephraim gave a
Vocal selection. Both musical numbers'
(Tre1BH™T" 1 T ■
A number of interesting events are
being planned this week at the Y. W.
C. A. headquarters as this is national
girls’ week at the association. All the
girls’ clubs of the local association are
1 meeting at 3:30 o’clock this afternoon
in the clubrooms and luncheon is to be
served on the beach.
On Thursday afternoon, a South
American tea will be held from 4 to 5
o’clock in the association parlors. The
tea will be served by girls dressed in
Brazilian costumes and an interesting
program of literary numbers and music
will be given. “The Fashion Revue”
will be presented by the club girls on
Saturday evening.
DOROTHY 24
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 82, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 2, 1921, newspaper, March 2, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579661/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.