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SHEAFFER' PENS—PENCILS ifts for all Seasons and the Point Guarantes. UNCONDI- TIONALLY covers defectsand sccidents forever. Sl e Dispense with ‘*’"?'““:'" .I-y-hmu'u': $8.73 $15.00 Sheaffer’s Giftie Sets repres- V-4 SITR ent the phease “Gifts that # b Last.” Priced from $8 to $100 SHEAFFER’ PENS—PENCILS Last Minute Suggestion HARRY C. GROVE, INC. 1210 G Street N.W. |k | of Fredericksbur THE . EVENING -STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1922. Marriage Licenses. Marriage licenses have been issued to the following: Elmer ‘Erickson and Hattle Beunisdaffer, both of Berryville, Va. Walter R. Bleinkenship and Alice Zopp, both of Richmond, Va. Odis R. Rollins of Igo, and Mabel L. Henderson of Passpotansy, . Willlam C. Headley and Vi iams. Jumes B. Neal of Asberry, Ollie M. Armetror Va, and Juanita lla A. Tooms, both Alma M. Landgraf. gs and Christopher A. Perrle. Cohn and Catherine B. Dizon. s and Florence James, both of Bolden ‘and Dorothy Harrison. Herbert H. Bonson and Sara Bangon. George B. Speidel and Daisy M. Moser. Richard L, Siater of Newport News. Va., and Marian P. Robinson of Cumberiand, Md. Willlam T. Hopkins and Nina M. Zickfoose. Theodore B. Harris of this clty ‘and Naocy A. Keys of Virginia Highlands, Va. Paul H. Pearson and Virginia B. Havener. seArmond Williams of this city” and Emma einberg of Capitol Heights, Md. Creedy C. Sheppard and Morrie B. Beck. Silvester Woodland and Ada Dozler. Emanuel Coates and Nelile Butler. James Tolson Marlon Dj Laurance rter ., and Fletcher of this city. Augustus N. Corley and Mabel Z. Stevens. Dewey F. Bouknight and Marjorie M. Daw- Births Reported. The following births haye been reported to the health department in the last twesty-four ours: William M. and Virgie Balderston, boy. Harry B, and Nannie B. LaRue, girl. Roy and Carrle Jenkins, boy. George and erine Martin. boy. Harry W. Elizabeth C. Davis, girl. _— LOCAL ARTISTS AT SING. Misses Elizabeth and Mary Keyes on Sunday Program. ‘Washington will have an oppor- tunity Sunday night to hear two local artists, who have but recently joined the rapldly growing 1list of pro- fessionals from the capital, when Misses Elizabeth and Mary Keyes will feature the program at the concert to be held in the Central High School Auditorium, under the auspices of the Washington Community Music Asso- ciation. Other feature numbers on the pro- gram will be the Women's City Club chorus, under the direction of Mrs. John J. Stahl; a chorus of 200 chil- dren, prepared by Helen Burkhart, and a baritone solo by Robert Lawrence, with quartet. A brass quartet, from the Army Music School, will render selections especially arranged by W. C. White, principal of the school. 608 TO 614 i ki IRATRLETE In Underwear Satin Camisoles ............$1.00 Crepe de Chine Step-ins. . .$1.95 Satin Bloomers........ .e...$2.95 Crepe de Chine Chemise. . . ..$2.95 Neptunette Chemise. ........$1.95 Tailored Crepe de chine |——i—]o]lc——a]al—=o]—=a]ol——=]o]——=]o]——|c——]o[c——=[o[—=[o[c—=——jo][c—[0] Gowns .................$3.95 Daff Trimmed Crepe de chine - Gowns .......cccc.0e...$5.00 Radium Pajapas. $10.95 Radium Gowns. .o .. $10.00 Fine Silk Chemise. . .$5.00 Step-in Sets, each... ...$5.00 Step-in Sets, each. ...c......$2.95 In Scarfs Fiber Silk. ......coeece....$1.50 Ag’ain tomorrow-~ Choice of these Smart Frocks « —that circumstances have made possible to mark 513 —regardless of their higher intrinsic value Street and Afternoon Models gt T BY Way Of RGfiliI‘ldGl_‘-- SOmething for somebody you've forgotten In Blouses Tailored Dimity Waists. ... .. .$1.95 Handmade Dimity. . . Matelasse Jacquettes. Paisley Blouses. .. ... 5 Crepe de Chine Blouses. . Beaded Blouses......... Embroidered Blouses il Silk Blouses. Fine Silk Overblouses. . ....$10.00 . * Others up to $35.00 In Petticoats Jersey Petticoats. ... . Jersey Petticoats Jersey and Radium. Jersey, Radium and Char- TNEUSE ...........ccc.0..$5.00 Jersey and Radium. .. Regular and 7xtrn ‘sizes ?\lmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmu T T e T / lc——lojlc—=jal——joal——]oj——]o|—=o]——=lo] DPbilipshorn 11th ST. N.W. i il 2 £ £ M= Liilllls3e8 $6.95 Silk Hosiery Special E g Just in time—more of those exceptional values in i Pure Silk Hose—of perfect quality; some with lisle £ tops; all full fashioned. In all the wanted colors;and £ all sizes. Lisle T | fl fl fl | fl | i lfl k- fl | | fl | B "|at dinner last evening in compliment ‘Thomson was formerly Miss Genevieve Socicty (Continued from Elghth Page.) entertained a company of twenty-six to the ambassador of Great Britain and Lady Geddes. Mr. and Mrs. James Thomson of New Orleans will spend a portion of Christmas day in Washington on their way to Summit Point, W. Va., the former home of Mr. Thomson, where they will at| day of Mr. nd the wedding Wednes- Thomson’s sister, Mis Dorothy Thomson, and Mr. 'James Conger Breckinridge, grandson of Gen. John C. Breckinridge. Mra. Clark, daughter of Mrs. Champ Clark and the late former Speaker of the House of Representatives. =D =D Mr. and Mrs. Henri de Sibour will entertain at a large dinner at the Hamlilton Hotel on Janusry 15, taking their guests later to the second enter- tainment which the Old Dancing Class | will give that evening. Mr. John Homer Chase, a University of Pennsylvania senior, is spending the Christmas holidays with his mother, Mrs. W. Rapley. Senator and s, William M. rs. Calder left Washington yesterday for their home in Brooklyn, N. Y., where | they will spend Christmas. | erica Kemp, Miss Louise Goff, Miss Emily Earle, Miss Virginia Edwards, Miss Anna Montgomery, Miss Mary Mont- gomery, Miss Gladys Chapman Smith, Miss Catherine Weller, Miss Charlotte MacDo Miss Enid Sims, Miss Elizabeth Tur- ner and Miss Alice Mann. The secretary to the President and Mrs. George B. Christian, jr., will be the guests of honor at dinner this evening of the District Commissioner and Mrs. Cuno Rudoiph. Mr. and Mrs. Bates Warren will give a large dance at Rauscher's this even- | terday for the dinner ing for their daughter, Miss Dorothy 'the officers and their wives gave. They ' Warren, who was presented to society will return this afternoon. =) 3 =D Mrs. Minnegerode Andrews and Mrs. Wallace Radcliffe will be hostesses to- morrow afternoon to the ladies of the Louise Home and the Presbyterian Home for the Aged at the first per- formance of the community church pageant, “The Word and the Way."” which will be given at Central High! School, for the benefit of Washington | churches, under the direction of Mrs. Marle Moofe Forrest and Miss Bess Davis Schreiner. The National Lutheran Home for the Aged will be guests tomorrow after- noon of the Luther Place Memorial Church and among others who will at- tend this performance will be the Boys® Occupational Scheol at Takoma Park, who will be guests of the Men's Club of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church: the Church of the New Jerusalem will be host to the members of its Sunday School, and the Church of the Epiphany will_entertain a large group from the Epiphany Home, the Mothers’ Meeting and the candidates’ class for the Girls' Friendly Society, and the party will be n charge of Mrs. H. 1. Bolton, Mrs. Charles Y. Wheeler, Mrs. C. D. Davis and Miss Mary Wheeler. ‘The midshipmen of the United States Naval Academy will give a dance to- night in the small ballroom of the New Willard and will entertain 300 or 400 guests. Overseas Service League Giving Bemeit January 3. The overseas reunion to be held under the auspices of the Women's Overseas Service League at the Presi- dent Theater on Wednesday, January 3, when Elsle Janis will appear with the President Players in scenes from “Buddies,” is attracting a large num- ber of prominent war workers and members of the A. E. F. who had the pleasure of ‘hearing her overseas. Among _those who have taken boxes Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, Miss Mabel Boardman, Mrs. Herbert Hoo- ver. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Mrs. Wilfred Du Puy, Mrs. Joseph Leiter, the Countess Szechenyi, Miss Alice J. Clapp, Mr. Hibbs and Judge John Bar- ton Payne. Mrs. Coolidge heads the 1ist of pa- tronesses, among whom are Mrs. Hughes, Mrs. Weeks, Mrs. Denby, Mrs. Wallace, Mrs. Work, Mra. (George An- || drews, Princess Bibesco, Mrs. Charles Bell, Mrs. Montgomery Blalr, Mrs. W. J. Boardman, Mrs. J. C. Boyd, Princess Cantacuzene, Baroness de Cartier, Miss Alice J. Clapp., Mrs. Richard H. Townsend, Mrs. R. E. Coontz, Mrs. F. ‘Ward Denys, Mrs. Wilfred Du Puy, Mrs. Stephen Elkins, Mrs. Charles 8. Farnsworth, Mrs. James Freeman, Mrs. Cary T. Grayson, Mrs. Merritte W. Ireland, Mfs. Robert Johnston, Mrs. Joseph Leiter, Mrs. John A. Le- Jeune, Mrs. Walter 1. McCoy, Mrs. Charles B. McVay, Mrs. John C. Mer- riam, Mrs. Mason Patrick, Mrs. J. H. Reynolds, Mrs. John K Robison, Mrs. J. N. Speel, Mrs Sylvanus Stokes, jr.; Mrs. William Howard Taft, Mrs. Rab- ert Thompson, Mrs. Lawrence Town- send, Mrs. James W.*Wadsworth, jr., and Mrs. J. Mayhew Wainwright. Midshipman P. H. Hill Dunn and Midshipman Charles Carroll Dunn will spend their vacation with their moth- er. Mrs. Charles A. Dunn, in_her apartment on 16th street. Mr. Ashton Devereux will also be Mrs. Dunn's guest for the ‘holidays, his parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. Ryan Devereux, hav- ing closed their house, are spending the winter in Weisbaden. Mr. A. H. Dakin, jr., and W. S. Da- kin have arrived at the Lee House from Amherst College, Mass., to spend the Christmas holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Dakin. Dr. and Mrs. D. A. Weinberg of Baltimore arrived in Washington ‘to- day to be the guests for a few days of Mrs. Welinberg's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Friedlander, while en route for North Carolina, where they will spend the holiday season. ‘The alumni of the Carnegie Technical School dined and danced last evening at the Pierce Mill Tea House. ‘The Girl Scout Glee Club will usher in Christmas eve with the singing of Christmas carols at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the Pierce Mill Tea House. Members of the council will be host- esses for the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Cain, who left yesterday for Dallas, Tex., will return to their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel about the first of February. Mrs. George: D. Hope will go to New York today to spend Christmas and will go tq her former home, in Kansas City, for New Year, coming back to her apartment at Wardman Park Hotel in a fortnight. ] Miss Elizabeth Zolnay, a debutante of ]ast season, will give & dinner this evening in her fathers studio in honor of Miss Josephine Williford, who will be presented by her uncle and aunt, Mr. and, Mrs. Alfred Pem- broke Thom, next month. Miss Zol- nay’s guests will number about twenty-five and she will accompany them later to the dance which Mr. and Mrs. Bates Warren will give at Rauscher’s for their debutante daugh- ter, Miss Dorothy Warren. ] Mrs. Joseph . Davies entertained at luncheon today for her daughter, Miss Eleanor Davies, who i{s home from Vassar for the holidays. _The other guests were Miss Laura Bryn, Miss Béatrice Pitney, Miss Beatrice Beck, Princess Bertha Cantacusene, Miss Virginia McKenney, Miss Fred- Christmas Eve Dinner Dance Saturday Evening December 23 Starting at 7:30 Large Baliroom Wardman Pa('k Hotel Phone Columbia.2000, Dining Room, for reservation 3 3 2Or= 5 =OE = 3 I ) = 2 last week. Mr. and Mrs. Warren And‘ Minnje Outlaw, their daughter will receive in the re- o e e o P pamall ball] The following deathis have been reported to Christmas decorations, A seated sup- | the health department in e last twenty-four per will be served about midnight | bou and the guests will number between | four and five hundred. Mr. and Mrs. Warren and Miss War- ren will go to Florida the flist week | Pl in January to remain until February, when they will return to their apart- ment at 3029 Connecticut avenue. McKenney, Miss _Elizabeth Deaths Reported. T Vivian Yates, ces Bmith, 39. Emergency Hospital. Mary A. Webster, 85, Sibley Hospital. Charies C. Byrne, 31, 8t Elizabeth’s Hos- tal. Lott Flannery, h“' 2020 '54 ugall, Miss Zilla MacDougall, t. ton s 053 P Miss Virginia Edwards and Miss Frances Hampson were among those | | Theol going to Camp Humphreys, Va. ves- MUy wiiams, 5 months, 6350 Ga. ave. ance which | Y o iame. 24, Gallinger Hospital. Kate Minters, 56, 306 K st. s.w. Sarsh C. Carter, 46, 1812 20th wt. ' coaching staff. 1216 F St. N.W. " There’s No Store Like Jelleff’s For Last-Day Shopping! No other store that represents so many Fifth Avenue Shops. P. Centemeri—Kid Gloves In Washington at Jelleff’s! Mark Cross—Bags and Purses In Washington at Jelleff’s! Sorosis—Footwear Silk Underwear—Handmade Underwear—Silk Petticoats—Negliges—Blouses! Qualities in which you may place dependence—styles which you can buy with confidence—in this last day’s hurried shopping! YOU MEN DAVISON SEEKS COACH. “authoritfes istant coach at | Institute, as a successor to Hugh R | Gray, gridiron mentor, who has an- nounced his resignation effective at the end of the present colleglate year, | Younger played ms_of Davidson and V. e joining _the Gold Stripe—Silk Stockings In Washington at Jelleff’s! In Washington at Jelleff’s! Umbrellas—Neckwear—Hair Bands—Handkerchiefs for Men, Women and Children— who have put off buying gifts for your family or for your office .force—just tele- phone, if you wish, to our shopping desk and an expert shopper will shop for you, Providence Hospital. St. Panl’'s conrt. 0,'1114 Bladensburg rd, 7 month, 214 G Kt Dorotby A. Jnckson, 9,39 H st C., December e nes k” Younger, as- irginia Polytechnic foot ~ball P. 1. be- Virginia Gobblers the pack the purchase attractively and send by special messenger. Or if you come to the store there’ll be a man ‘ on the lookout for you to see that you are waited upon promptly. For Any One You've Forgotten ! a fine thing to do is to give Gold Stripe Silk Stocking -The Silk Stockings That WEAR! You couldn’t have done better had you thought of it earlier. $2.00 pur $2.75 Puir With mercerized garter hems. With all-silk garter hems. The silk in Gold Stripe is 100% pure, and the patented Gold Stripe protects them from the ruinous “runs” so often caused through cutting by the garter-clasp. All sizes and all colors for last-day buyers! NEW BEADED BAGS—Very beautiful late arrivals—drawstring and ® shell frame bags, $6.95, $10, $12.50, $16.50.- HANDBAGS — Smart shapes and all leathers — very special at $5.00 to $10.00. ; " “VANITY BOX $5.00 to $10.00. FOR THE DEBUTANTE—Hair Bands here in silver, gold or glittering with rhinestones, $1.50 to $18.50. ” with electric light; an attractive gift; Big fresh assortments on all tables. and fancy hand-embroidered initials. Men’s Handkerchiefs, 35¢, 50¢, 75¢ AInitial and plain hemstitched, in linens, of excellent quality. Nothing nicer for a man. FURS—A magnifi -4 Hudson Seal Coats, $295.00; Chokers, $12.50; Fox Scarfs, $25.00. megl:lDER\‘;JEAR—New arrivals—Silk Gowns, $3.95, $5.00; Chemise, $2.95 and $3.95. CORDUROY BOUDOIR ROBES—Many new styles, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00, $12.50. Colored and white linens—colored,and white embroideries—plain, script ificent gift! After-Christmas reductions now! Trim- SILK PETTICOATS—Radium and Jersey Silks, $5; also specials at $3.95 |} and $7.50. PHILIPPINE HANDMADE UNDERWEAR—$1.95 and $2.95—gowns | and chemise; beautifully embroidered. YOU SHOULDNT HESITATE ON Centemeri French Kid Gloves Gloves are always welcome in a woman’s wardrobe—and the Cente- meri stamp makes them doubly prized. - TWO SPECIAL CHRISTMAS VALUES! Gauntlet style—with strap wrists—pique sewn, $2.95 pair. Centemeri Long Gloves for street wear, in tans, browns and ¢_nya—nnd for evening wear in white, black and pastel shades, $4.50 to $9.00 pair. .