Evening Star Newspaper, February 4, 1923, Page 38

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rs. James Keith Marshall Norton enfertained at bridge followed by tea urday, afternoon at her home, cn nce sfreet. The guests were Mrs. hur Fierbert, Mrs. Milton French, Frederick G. Duvall, Mrs. Frank ‘Dillard, Mrs. Cora Jones Davis, Mgs. T'aomas B. Cochran, Mrs. Thomas , Mrs. Noel Garner, Mrs. George s Mrs. Jean Carter Bur- Newton Rust, Mrs. 1, Mrs. Thomas Franklin, Thomas, Miss Kathrin UHler, Miss Fanny Dixon, Miss Esther . Miss Elsic Snowden, Miss El- Fawcett and Miss Corinne Mil- n, iss Dorothy Wiley was the week guest of Mi in{Lorton, Miss Elizabeth Waddell of L spent the week cnd with her s. Redmond, in Del Ray. Mrs. John Crump have re- visit to the former's father, dgar L. Crump at the Wagar iss Dorothy Strickland has gome er home, in Roanoke, after a visit to [Mr. and Mrs. Charies F. Holden, in emont. r. and Mrs. refurncd to their home, in Chicago atter to Maj Mrs. Charies D. on South Asaph street. iss Annette Harper, who has been the guest of Miss Margaret Moncure <ing Street road, has returned to home, ‘in Con i icksburg, cele of Mr. and in Rosemont. man and her two David and Lewis, have returred r home, in Hatfleld, Mass, after & Wisit to her mother Mrs, Edward S. Tawcett, on Prince street. Roberta Wolford has returned er home In Richmond, after a visit and Mrs. Morris L. Horner, on Duke stre. Mrs. Stewart Brown, who visited her mother, Mrs. Martha Best, on Cameron strect, has returned to her home, in Righmond. Miss Virginia Lupton of Winchester was the week end guest of Mr. and 2rs. Noel Garner, on South St. Asaph street. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Watkins and their two sons. Willlam and Thomas. of 1 d, Ky. are the u of atking' mother, Mrs. ‘William Watkins, on North Columbus street Mrs. George R. Hill of Baltimove, Mrs. Allison Hodges of Richmond and Mrs John T. Lewis of Ashland, Va., have returned to their homes after a Yisit to Miss Collins McKay Jones, in Rosemont. Mrs. Charles W. Lampoh, formerly of this city, has gone to her home, at Claremont, Va., after a visit to friends here. Dr. Kate Waller Barrett is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Reese Scnick, in Roanoke. Mrs. Charles Skinker has returned to Rer home, in Delaplane, Va., after & visit to friends in Alexandria. Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Well and their daughter, Mrs. Irvin Diener, Lave returned from & visit to friends in New York c Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Lennon of Washington spent the week end with Mra. T. Wellington Ruse, on North Fairfax street. Mrs J. B McCarthy has returned to her home. fn Culpeper, after a visit to her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Price, on Prince Evelyn Pallant entertained evening to celebrate seventh birthday anniversary. The! Buests were Misses Ruth and Bar- bara Huntington. Ora and Evelyn Cox, Hazel Dobson, Virginia Turner, Jda Entwistle, Audrey Dobson, Lil- lian, Ruby and Audrey Clift, Ruth Brage., Margaret and Audrey Hicks, tuby Bradshaw, Teresa Crump, Edna Pallant, Lillian ‘Clift, Florencs Hicks, nufi)‘_chka, Masters Francis Bren- ner, George Crump, Marshall Studds, Clinton Studds, Frank Dobson. Marion Cragg, Francis and Wilmer Pallant. Miss Julia Duncan_is spending several weeks in New York city, Miss ; as returned from i . and Mrs. Albert C. Dunn, ir_Richmond Mrs. John Lewis has gone to her hone. in Richmond, after a visit to Mrs. Troth on North Columbus street. rs. Murray Bocock and Mrs. John Irving have returned to their homes, in Charlottesville, after a visit to Mrs. J. M. White, on King street. My. and Mrs. P. M. Yates of Phila. delphia and Mr, and Mrs. T. E. Bart- lf‘ll. of Baltimore have returned to their homes after being the guests of Jir.'and Mrs. E. M. Brant, in Rose- mont. Miss Annle Peugh has gone to her home in Hamilton, Vi after a visit 10 Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Yates. Mrs, W. C. Otley of Hamilton is th uest of her son and daughter-in-law, Mrs, D. E. Otley, in Rosemont. after C. y_of spent end with | Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. ltan Sehwarzmann Yost fs | st of Mi€s Nannie McCleary, in Tredericksburg. % Mrs. Clarence R. Howard has re- turmed to her home in Fredericksburg aftar a visit to her brother-in-law fr. and Mrs. Richard Gib- mont. Mrs. Louis Brownlow is at her home in Petersburg after a visit to friends here. Mrs. has returned Riner Whitlock > Mrs W, E. Williamson | i to F. Schlegel and | arrived from and will make their Braddock for several New York cit home at North Addington of Gate City, guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. A D . en route to; la, for the remainder of | the winter. { iles Frank Jobson has gone to her honie in Richmond after a visit to friends he . Springman has re- 1 a visit to her parents, AL Duvall. in Lorton. Randolph Davis is back t to her son-in-law and Ir. and Mrs. Herbert R. Mr. and Mrs. John Haislip and Miss LBl B e deins i GREENWICH VILLAGE ' TEA ROOM 0ld-Fashioned Southern Sunday Dinner 1731 H St N.W.—Tel. M. 2455 FACE DISHGURED ' WITH PIMPLES AndBlackheads.ltchedand Burned. Cuticura Heals. “For some time I was troubled with blackheads and pimples on my face. The pimples festered and be- came very sore. They were in thlotches all over my face, and itched and burned so that I scratched and ! irritated them. 1 did not like to go + in company because my face was 8o badly disfigured. 3 { began using Cuticura Sospand Ointment and after using two cakes gncmlcun Soap and one box of icura Ointment I was completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Ethel Cooper, Kehoe, Ky. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal- cum age all you need for all toilet uses. 'Bathe with Soap, soothe with Qintment, dust with Talcum, Sasuple Zaeh Proe by Madl. b Lab- oon Otntmment t nd o Toroem B, Soap shaves . Beatrice Waddell : Russell Walcott have | 0 Mildred Haislip have returned to their home in Lorton after a visit to relatives in town. Mrs. Frederick Parker Russell has issued invitations for bridge and tea Wednesday afternoon, February 7, in \her apartment at the Fairfax. Miss Elisa Crump is_the week end uest of friends In St urg, Va. &m Jam>s H. Reld of Crozet, Va., is visiting Mrs. Legh Wilber Reid, on Duke street. N Mr. and Mrs. T. Seddon Tallaferro have returned to their home in" Rock Spring, Wyo., after a visit to the lat- jter's father, Mr. G. William Ramsay, on Cameron street. Miss Carolyn Burgess is spending the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Burgess, at Reva, Culpeper county. Miss Virginia Gibboney of Wythe- ville is the guest of Mrs. John F. Tackett on South St. Asaph street. r. and Mrs. Herbert J. Rose an- inounce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Sara Lewis Rose, to Mr. Harold Wesley Hurlander of Cin- | cinnati. The wedding will take place Saturday, February 17. Mrs. John Barker Barrett of CIif- ton, Va., was the guest last week of hxr daughter, Miss Dorothy Haycock, on Duke street. Mrs. T. E. Killam has returned to her home in Norfolk after a visit to| Maj. and Mrs. Charles E. Perry on North Washington street. ! Miss Marle Curtls has returned to her home in Philadelphia after a visit to friends here. Tales of"WeII Known Folk In Social and Official Life (Continued from Eleventh Page.) fect was bewildering, as well as most colorful. That veteran of the field, the Duchess of Chartres, and of the roval Bourbon line, wore the long- tailed coat of dark green velvet, heav- ily embroidered, one of the costumes in which a horse-loving ancestor fol- lowed the hounds when Louis XV was reigning. The Marquise de Noallles, who Is the nephew flve times removed of the Marquise Lafayette, wife of the revered patriot, was gay in the finery of a country lord, with cocked hatand feather, and the elaborate velvet short clothes and high, embroidered boots. Princess Marguerite Murat, who s the granddaughter of that Prince Joachim Murat who found an asylum in Bordentown, N. J., wore a much- frilled habit of cloth and velvet, and a hat which was once the property of a great lady In the court of the grande monarque. The hunt was nat- urally somewhat impeded by all this anclent finery, but the breakfast which - followed might easily have been_the reproduction of a sceme in the Loire regions when Louls XIV reigned so gioriously In Versallles. Count de Vallon Lezanne, hereditary master of hounds, was host at the breakfast. One of the most enthusiastic gar- deners about London is Anna Pav- lowa, the renowned dancer, who re- cently has purchased a handsome villa and grounds at Golder's Green, one of the fashionable suburbs of the British capital. The villa is a low, rambling aftair, which half circles a Iplot of grass, into which the owner MISS LORETTA HEANY CUNNING- HAM, Schoolgirl daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Uylsses G. Cunningham, recently a hostess to a group of her young friends. crocuses begin to peep from the ground. Another bit of her planting 18 a deep fringe of Irls, every va- riety and shade, which is about a shailow pool in’ the back garden. Ha rgbut a few weeks in the year in which to enjoy her home, Paviowa has chosen those perennials which are at their best in July and August and, with the exceptions of the spring bulbs, the remainder of the planting is for effect all the year through and includes some famillar fir and jun pers {rom her old home in Russia and some cypresses from the viila of a friend on the Italian Riviera. There is the usual high brick wall sepa- rating the grounds from those ad- joining it, but it is covered with ivy und 50, too. the stone villa, which Mme. Paviowa modernized a little without disturbing its ancient con- tour. Golder's Green, which is a part of the royal heath of Hampstead, has leaped into popularity since the wofld war and is already filled with fine new mansions, though there are many cld houses like the one which Mme. Paviowa bought. The suburb lies due north six miles from the center of London. A courageous Oxford Don has just published an anthology of verse from English woman authors which he who retains her name of Blanche Shoemaker Carr, and Mrs. Payne Whitney, who uses her_full name of | Helen Hay Whitney. Mrs. Whitney began her. poetic career in Washing- | ton, and at a tender age. She was in her nineteenth year and the reigning belle of Washington soclety as daugh- ter of President Mc.’inley’s Secretary ot State, when she published her first sustained effort, “The Rose of Dawn,” illustrated by John La Farge, and which eqntinues to rank with the best fiterature of the South seas. Michael Strange has a wide vogue in Eng- land, and much of her verse has been translated into French and Italian. Mrs. Carr's poetry is exotic and tells principally of desert love and life in the orfent. A splendid and historic event of the late season In London, and for which preparations are already under way, will be the celebration df the elght eenth birthday of Lady Mary Rachel, cidest of the three daughters of the late Duke of Norfolk, premier duke and earl of the United Kingdom, and Its hereditary grand marshal. The present and sixteenth duke is but fif- teen, and, under the guardianship of kis mother, the Duchess of Norfolk, who was Lady Gwendolyn Maxwell, fifteenth Baroness of Herries. Lady Mary Rachel Fitzalan-Howard will be presented to Queen Mary in private audience, after which the birthday and debut festivities will be trans- ferred from the fine old mansion in (. James Square, London, to Arundel Castle, in Sussex. The house of Fitz- alan-Howard is the most extensive and powerful of the feudal Anglo- Saxon families now existing in Great Britain, and has at least twelve dis- itinet cadet branches bearing ftitles {of whict the next line is that of Suf- folk and Berkshire. The earls of Stef- ford, of Talbot and of Carlisle are branches of the Howards, as well as the barons of Maltravers, Clun, Os- waldestre and Fitzalan. Lady Mary Rachel, whose coming of age is rank- Jed in importance after such an event {in royalty, wifl be sixteenth Baroness {of Herrles and will Inherit a famous | country seat, Everingham Park, in Essex, and has, besides, a large pri- | vate fortune. She Las been educated |chiefly at home, though she spenut| some months in Paris and Rome | studying music and the continental | languages. On the heels of the violent protest which resounded to heaven about Gretna Green smithy, the goods roads ;association in England, is facing an- other almost as unlversal and vigor- |ous in Its contemplated demolition of jold Croyden Inn and the adjoining { Whitfleld Hospltal, which has bene- {fices which date back to 1596. Croy- den Inn {8 a well loved monument of | the past and antiquarians about Lon- |don do not see eye to,eye with the modern advocates: of wider and straighter roads leading into the great Britlsh metropolis. All in the {interests of safety and better facili- tles for motor travel, the town cou refaces with the opinlon that arpoie | cilors of Croyden wish to tear down Bt the first MIght has ever been 's|the inn and the hospital, for they Woman, not in any age, or any eace |both stand out at least twenty feet ot even excepting Sappho. Swest|from the street on each side and make singers and good moralists in verse, | & dangerous curve right in the heart he Erants, but always circling about | of suburban traffic. All in vain have in the lower ether, and only man, like | the town fathers promised to take the” eagle, has flown stralght o theidown the old inn stono by stone and sun. - Songlishwomen - Wil without | erect it in rural suroundings beyond doubt, be able to attend to this criti- the boundaries. as it should be and ciem. Meantime, three graces of!as all its traditions point. They prom- American verse have been presented ise also to erect @ nmew hospital with The Eegerly Awaited and Always Welcomed Rummage Sale Starts Tomorrow Morning! Details on Pages 10 and 11 of Today's Post. @ = 2 (S I s e Golden L BOTH SIDES OF T™ATK The Unexpected Again! W e Have Just Received Fresh Additions to the Sale of Spring Dresses Values Worth Up to*35 Our Annual February Furniture Sale v in Proj . Seo Page t Today's Pest. ) Women— Also Extra Sizes 421/, to 52Y, A Brand-New Shipment—Just Taken From Their Wrappings—on Sale Monday Rushed by express from the same makers of the beautiful Dresses that sold out so quickly last Mon- day.. Judging from the enthusiastic response to our last dress sale these will last no longer than a day or two—so be among the early comers for first choice. STYLES FOR EVERY OCCASION—FOR STREET, AFTER- NOON, EVENING AND PARTY WEAR THE BEAUTIFUL MATERIALS INCLUDE: Canton Crepe, Crepe de Chine, Panne Velvet, Combinations of Velvet and Canton, Taffeta, Chiffon Silk, Spanish Lace and Silk Combinations, Satin-Back Cantons, Tri- last autumn planted bulbs gathered from every part of the world and presented by admiring trouble, the lure o ing Pavlowa to take a hasty run over to London about the time the thousands of after so much ring is prompt- Naturall trang e ———————— writes under the to the public, as having accomplished the best that s offered today, and by no less authority than the poet laure. | revered monuments ate of Great Britain, Austin Dodson. These are Mrs. John Barrymore, who for the good roads committee to se- another route to widen and fm- at a deadloc name of Mrs. Alfred Wagstal Michael le: So the matter A Sale Tomorrow of Very Wonderful New Spring Dresses Lovely in Design—Exquisite in Quality For choice of new dresses that will cause you to wonder at the very low price we have marked them. Never has youthful de- signing been so beautiful- ly expressed for women and misses. There are styles for every demand in materials of the moment. Paisleys, canton crepes, crepe de chines, taffetas, Poiret twills, tricotines, severely simple or exceed- ingly smart, hand em- broidered or beaded mod- els; colors navy, brown, cocoa, black and combina- tions. For dresses you'll find charmingly different and exclusive in conception. They are indeed values ex- celling in every wey. Materials are the best— canton crepes, crepe de chines, taffetas, Paisleys, Poiret twills, tricotines, simply designed or with beautiful hand embroid- ery touches and beading. Colors moth, cinder, Lan- vin gresn, taupe, black, navy, brown. Sizes in- clude women’s, misses’ and stylish stouts. A dress sale bound to please the most critical. Elegance and Distinction in NewSpring Dresses They are perfect from a standpoint of dress designing and making. Models that are different, individual and very beautiful, made of paisley. flat crepe, canton crepe, taf- feta, crepe de chine, Poiret twill end tricotine. Models that are simply designed and models that are simply lovely with deading and dead work. $ Choice BEE the mew threepiece costumes of fancy roshanara with paisley waist. Also the many youthful models for women and misses, as well as gracefully designed stylish stouts. Newest colors, including Lanvin green, moth. cinder, navy, dbrown, taupe, bdlack. A visit here will reveal how wonderful these dresses at fifty dollars really are. Spring Hats, Special, Five-Ninety-Five Very Lovely Hats, $5.95 Of timbo, visca and mi- . lan braids, profusely trim- med with pastel flowers and wreaths of fruits and flowers. Also hats of paisley straw and hair- cloth tn tailored models with pleatings of gros- grain ribbon, beaded orna- ‘ments and handwork. Many New Shapes, $5.95 Seiected for their unus- wal becomingness. An ex- cellent assortment of youthful styles for women and misses as well as the very newest ideas for ma- trons. Al the new color combinations, variations and tints of rose, gray, samd, brown, pheasant, al- mond, copen, navy, black. the Whitfleld name and benefices at- tached. The antiquarians want the to remain just as they are on their present site and cotine, Poiret Twill, Glace Taffeta, Satins, Etc., Etc. Sizes 14, 16 and 20 years for Misses. Regular sizes, 36 to 46. Extra sizes, 421, to 5215. Popular Colors BLACK, NAVY, ROSE, CORNFLOWER, ORCHID, COCOA, BROWN, GRAY, SORRENTO, GREEN, AMERICAN BEAUTY, CANARY, BURNT ORANGE, BOBOLINK, NEW ROSE, TOAST AND CARAMEL. There are lovely Bouffant frocks, long waisted and straightline models, slim, vouthful styles, and dresses with panels and drapes. Trimmings of beads. silk, gold and woolen embroidery, fine tucks, silk braid, etc. And the sleeves may be long, medium or quite short, as you prefer. Supreme Values of the Season--the Result of a Purchase of a Maker’s Stock of Women’s Winter Coats Val Worth 9 e I Really, if any woman is planning to buy a Coat for now or next winter, sound economy and common sense dictate buying it in this sale—and securing a coat of splendid quality and correct style at a fraction of the intended selling price. Many Different Styles—the Maijority Trimmed With Fur Collar of Australian Opossum, Beaverette, Coney, Wolf, Caracul, or Raccoon Fur. All the Popular Fabrics for Selection. These beautiful Coats developed of Velour, Nor- mandy, Bolivia and Seal Plush Three-quarter and full length Coats in loose and belted models, with shawl, chin and cape collars. Colors of Black, Navy, Brown, Sorrento and Reindeer. Misses’ sizes, 16, 18 and 20. Regular sizes, 36 to 44, and extra sizes, 43 to 53, also “Stylish Stout” sizes, 44! to 5015. Goldenberg's—Second Floor. The Millinery Department Concentrates Its E nergies for Monday on an Important Sale of 500 Lovely New Spring Hats Charming N-E-W Spring Hats secured from a;'lNew Yeork designer at a price concession that . pegm;its-l‘ls_to offer millinery styles of the hour at much below their established worth. Inch}d"qd are.Hats of Timbo Braid, Baronet and Visca Hats, combinations of Silk and Straw, Changeable Taf- feta, Novelty Hair and other smart new materials. Styles-far misces, young women and matrons—adyance spring modes, all of them. Springtime colors of almond green, crushed berry, pearl gray, sand, Cleopatra and oakwood. 2 Goldenberg's—Second Floor.

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