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SOCIET™Z. Society Will Be Attracted | InNumbers to Horse Show| Annual Event to Be Held at Locust Valley Next| Month—Many Dinners and Other Fetes Arranged. ] | | NEW YORK, September o7 the debut of the Autumn sea: ith { dahlias in profusion, and gardeners n comes | whose nagnes are used to express © smariest out-of-town herse show | great attainments on both sides of | the year, the exhibition which |the Atlantic were in close rivalry. | will be held at the Piping Rock Club One of the features was the Spanish At Locust Valiey, Long Island, October | tea garden, surrounded by an acre ¢ D and 11, T annual event has be- | flowers, and under the care of society come a signal for, the gathering of | women., The proceeds were given to UNDAY STAR WASHINGTO SEPTEMBER formed at 8 o'clock by Rev. James H. Straughn, pastor of the Rhode Island Avenue Methodist Protestant Church. | The house was effectively decorated with palms, ferns, Autumn leaves and | baskets of cut flowers. Miss Ger- trude and Miss Ispey, playing the violin, 1if; long friends of the bride, gave a pri grom of music, including “O Promise Me" and “At Dawning,” preceding the ceremony. The bride was given in marriage by her stepfather, and wore a gown of taffeta and lace. The bodice, made on straight lines X of duchess lace trimmed in pearls, and the skirt was made in tlers of taffeta pedals with silver peco edges made on a foundation of georgette and two flounces of duch- css lace at the bottom. Her veil of georgotte was edged in duchess lace, and had a high effect at the back of the head and fell in cascades over the shoulders and train. It was held in place with a bandeau of pearls and orange blossoms, and she carried a Wefigil_rlgs. (Continued from Sixth Page.) Myers, Mr. Adolph A. Daly and Mr. J. William Folk served as ushers. Preceding the ceremony Miss Elea- nor Kearney. «ccompanied by Mrs. Shera Montgomery at the organ, sang “I Love You Truly” and “At Dawn- ing." After the ceremony a reception for intimate friends was helq in _the home of the bride. Mrs. George Nash, mother of the bride, who wore a gown of gray crepe, and Mrs. Rosella Wilson, mother of the bridegroom, dressed in a gown of beaded orchid crepe, received thé wedding party. Mr. and Mr4g Wilson are, well known in this city, and both enlisted in the naval forces during the World War. After a trip to Bermuda they will be at home at 3221 Thirteenth 28 | ~1924—-PAR SOCIETY. played the wedding music and Mrs |and ot Richard H. Peake sang preceding the | mony ceremony. which The bride was given in marriage | walked. by her brother, Mr. Kdgar Winn, and | After the reception Lieut. and Mrs. was attended by her sister, Miss| Kern left for a wedding trip through Delores Winn, as mald of honor. Her | the North, and later will be at home bridesmaids were Miss Virginia Har-|in Annapolis, Md.. to which city the din and Miss Catherine Pett and | former has been transferred for duty | little Mise Mary Gray Wilicox was | from the U New York. flower girl. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Iverett Kern | YOURT HEKOY. Ensign John T. Waldhauser was | of Washington, parents of the bride- | AOMENET L 0 L g e best man fpr Lieut. Kern, and the groom, went to Norfolk for the wed- |, 'glica“it. The old chum wiclded % ushers werc Lieut. Leighton Wood, | ding, accompanied by Mr. Miles S.|jmife aigorousls for a time and then Lieut. Richard H. Shubert, Lieut |Kern, Mirs Alice Kern, Mr. Wells B. | prone the silence: Charles W. Gray, jr.; Lieut. John B.| Kern and Mr. Edward Kern and Dr.| -y, ked he, Heath, Lieut. Frank L. McLaury, En- | and Mrs. C. C. Williams. Others from | what T »%irk? sign Adelbart Converse and KEnsign |out of town at the wedding included | “No.' Henry Eccles, all of ‘the United | Midshipman Willis Kern of Annapolis! I think States Navy. They were in uniform, | and Mr. and M Wyatt Wolffe and “the turkey.” Winifred Va of the cere- | Mi Wolffe under | Countsy bride | the conclusion crossed their swords, Lieut. Kern and his P b After Many Years. | ¥rom the Louistille Courisr-Journ “Well, well, Tom, we haven't for 20 years. If y remember, t our last meeting discussed half a | young turkey. Let's try the same met “do you know this is the other half of the foremost families on Long Island and is cspecially dear to the hearts charity, while the blooms on display | were distributed each day among the street. shower bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. | Mrs. Raymond Towers, causin of the bride, was matron of honor, and wore a gown of nile green georgette heavily beaded in silver beads, a bandeau of silver leaves in the hair, and she carried a bouquet of pink roses. Mr. Ellsworth Virnstein, a cousin of the bride, was best man. Mrs. Robert A. Gibb, mother of the bride, wore a beaded gown of apricot | georgette, and Mrs. Dalsy V. Martin, mother of the bridegroom, Wi | gowned in ecru lace over pink satin. ‘ Following the reception, Mr. and *Mrs. Martin left for a wedding trip| to Cuba. Mrs. Martin's traveling cos- | tume was a tailored taupe gown,; with a small velvet hat to match. | The Church of the Nativity, at Fourteenth street and Massachusetts avenue southeast, was the scene of the wedding Tuesday at noon of Miss Florence Lillian Fuchs, daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fuchs of 1741 T trect northwest, and Mr. Stephen Halstead Farrell. The ceremony was performed by Rev. C. K. P! Cogs- well, assistant rector of the church, and ‘was attended only by the mem- bers of immediate milies and a few intimate friends. Mrs. Herbert Noyes Harvey was matron of honor for her sister, and i Mr. Harvey acted as best man. The bride was becomingly gowned | In a traveling costume of dark gray | mbroidered georgetts over black satin, trimmed in fur, and wore a|,,Of thelr return Mr. and Mrs. Mar Z 2 = GorEREe UGLet B b e tin will be at home at 2822 Twent the hunting set. which includes many of the most prominent society folk on this continent. There is al- ways a series of dinners and other entertainments, and this year will he no exception. If present indica- | Moore, Miss Mary Merrill, Miss Betty tions form criterion there will | poster, Miss Helen Jenkins, Miss be a more brilliant calendar of af- e. Miss Emilie Bushnell, tairs than ever. There also will be | Iy Lawton, Miss Janice Jef- an unusual number of house parties. Mary Moore Remick, A long list of thoroughbred entries | y Dora -hkiss, Miss Malerie has been offered by the members of [ Yernam. A Prudence Hussey and the ultra-exclusive North Shore col- | Nfigs Betty Carey. for the classes, which will FiRchhY M M aan | “Charies €. Clagett of this city and Fvelrn smbrace saddle horses and hunters, ! beside the special pony classes for | Still another tribute was paid to | i Akers of Mt. Rainier, Md. children. The two awards that will [Pomona when the Nassau County | Lawrencs Johnson and Victoria Ausbr Horticultural Society raised the cur- | ¢lemon U"dmes and Mary I, Phanes poor children in the various institu- tion; As waitresses in the Spanish tea garden were such well known folk Miss Betty Graham, Miss Mary 'MBROKS &© G STREET BETWEEN II™g 2™ Flannel Frocks For Wintry Days MISS ROS! Whose parents, Rubin, have announced her engage- ment to Mr. Klias Weinstein. " : o g Marriage Licenses. | atarriage ticenses tave besm tssued to e | rorto ho most keenly contested are the Slemark Piping Rock Challenge Cup for the |tain on its annual dahlia show at | R W champion saddle horse, won last year | (ilen Cov & Island. The exhibi- | ituwert 1t by Miss Janey Mackay's Cherokee | tion began day and continucd | Princess and the Meadowbrook Chal- | through with competitor: leng captured by Thomas Hitih- |seeking t of prizes offered | vock's Cavalier. There are several |by prominent women of the North | both of Covington, Va novelty events scheduled, among | Shore colony. The largest award was | Aesander I them being contests to test the skill | made by ) J. P. Morgan for the | lieburt, of the society horsewomen. | best table decoration. The dazzling | List of OMcers. { display presented in this particular g = <how i< Har. |Part of the program aroused much | cack and George K. Iahys as viee |@Wards were Mrs. S. W. Rossiter, Mrx. | esidents. Frederie P. Moote is |Andrew Fletcher, Mrs. Arthur Gibb, | rer and S, Bryce Wing secra. | MTS. George ¥. Baker and Mra. Fran- | Db the ' . are | ces L. Hine. 3 L b e ,An ensakement which has brouht i or |about a shower of congratulation . Sy ey, Sparks, Mortimer | from the younger set Is that of Miss John S Phipps Tierbert L. | Dolores Carrillo de Albornoz to Mr. Pratt, " Georze . Builock, Samucl |T. Walter Danie Duke. Miss Carrillo Willets. Joseph P. Grace and others |4 Albornoz is a daughter of Mr. of_equal prominence. jEeehe CoceilioRTERIDDEaYE Of 2T X st r lsaac Newton was sitting on While the preparation for the horse | Sixty-second street. She the ground and looking at the tree. show is claiming a big share of ut-|uate of the Lenox School, and her |y ," ;opia"sell on his head. and from tention. a greater part of the North |debut. which was made two years aKo. {jy.,¢" ho discovered gravitation. Just| Shore colonists. as the owners of vast | Was the signal for much entertaining. | injni, childre she added, “isn't estates in that section are Known, 33 she has a host of friends. Mr. | derful? found time to attend the county fair | Duke is the son of Mr. and The smart boy ven at the estats of Mre. Robert | Thomas Wylie Duke of Raleigh, N seem Impressed. “Y acon, at Westh Long Island, |and is a graduate of the Universily | yp. “And if he had been sitting in Thursday afternoon. 1t was hled in the | of Virginia. He served as an officer | school looking at his books e nterest of charity. the funds being |in the Air Service during the World | wouldn't have discovered anything. tiarned over to Westbury Neighbor- | War. The date of the wedding has hood House and the Nassau Counts | Dot been announced. Hospital. Members of the younger Fetes for Miss Manson. set e eopecially intersted. and | ne Junior League members are ielped n every way at the sale of |, [TiC, SRS RN SeSREE0, Ant I, of Camp Mea. of Chicago, 111 and Zelma C. Lockhart, and Mary H. Bennett and Lotiie M. Tinsley. i Vi Tope and Blanche W. Hampson. Lorenzer Lyons of South Washington, Va and Marie ton of this city | nd Mary E. Pease, bath of or plain. Your most particular fancy will A pretty home wedding took place Tuesday evening in the presence of | a large company of relatives and friends when Miss Loraine Elizabeth Watt was married to Mr. Alfred Ver- non Martin. The ceremony was per- w1 Perking acd Jennie B Landover, Md. Alonzo W. <. voun o | be pleased in this large assortment of stunning Fields and Ella M. Slaughter. Boy Saw the Moral. From the McKendree Review. The teacher was trying press on the children how ant had been the discovery law of gravitation. flannel frocks. Many are straight of line, some adhere to the tunic mode. but all of them are Fiarr Mack l to im- import- of the fod, charming. In Women's and Misses sizes. A WIDE SELECTION OF MODELS Yet the Prices Are Moderate 15 and 525 Mrs. Harvey work black satin trim- | SeVenth street northeast. i : ey AY or somber of hue, stnped. checked at home after October 15 at 1826 Ver- | took place Saturday evening, o Church (Disciples) in Norfolk. Va. Mr. Alexander C. Winn, on Colonial 91 The comfort of a Fur Coat, med in orange, with a hat to match. i Mr. and Mrs. Farrell left for a short ‘The marriage of Miss Len Q‘P(C;'fl' non street northwest. ber 20. The cerecmony was performed by the pastor, Rev. Dr. R. JI. field. and was followed by a reception avenue, Norfolk. Mrs. D. C. Macon at the Price of a Cloth Coat. q Many exceptional Fur Coat bargains stay at Atlantic They will be Lieut. Everett Dean Kern, at 8 o'clock in the First Christian in the home of the bride's father, 36th Anniversary Sale did not he pined in our 36th Anniversary sale. ovelties, cake. candie and toys. They ments ons w for children. Unique decor: ployed, and the ve ty green lawns and Fall tinted shrubbery of grounds resembled fair grounds in England of the pe- riod when ruffs and patches were tire also staged a number of amuse- | a| ments for Miss Margaret Sloane Man- son, whose engagement to Mr. Clinton Elliott, 2d, has just been announced | Miss Manson is the daughter of Mr. | {and Mrs. John Alexander Manson of S Hast Sixty-second street. She is a | graduate of the Spence School and a Saks Fur o, | prominent member of the Junior | League, where she has been active in | charity work. Her family is one of gathering | (he oldest in the c AS a member | of Mrs.|of the Mayflower Society Miss Man- Robert ton, Mrs. George Whitne, n can trace her lineage back Mrs. Clare . Pell, Mrs. . Penn { glder William Brewster. She made Smith, jr.: Mrs. A. Ludiow Kramer. |per debut last year and is a devotee Mrs. flerbert L. Pratr. Mrs. Frederic | of oytdoor sports Sharpless. Mrs. Willlams W. Cocks, | N, Elliott is the son of Mr. and M . s rt Inglehart and Mrs. | zfre. Clinton Elliott of 417 Park ave- | am Park nue. The late Alfred Bishop Louns- | With the arrival of the annual{perry one of the board of governors | dahlia shows marked Dby beautiful { o5 the New York Stock change for | biooms comes the mews of 4 mOve- | many years, was his_grandfather. | ment besun by a number of well |nyring the war Mr. Elliott was an | known women for preservation of | (gicer in the Air Service wildflowers, natural scenery along | the roadsides and additional shrub- | bery in the counties near New York City, where the bare sp the eye. This call was sounded a recent meeting of the Garden Club of Orange Dutchess Counties and | it fashionable Tuxedo George William Doug! »f the Garden Club, Mrs. W. L. Law V.. chairman of the tee for restriction of advertising, was he speaker. As a result of the meetin made apparent that paign is underway to guard the cheery Christmas greens which are disappearing from the woods in many parts of the State at a rate which threatens extinction. The club mem- bers also pledged themselves to cru- sade against picnic vandals on the | edges of the showplaces of West- | chester, who lcave an unsightly lit- | i i | style Promoters of Events. Arrangements tor the were uader the airection . it was | a social cam- ter in the roadways. 1 On the club roster are Mrs. Pier- pont James D. Roose- | velt Satterlee. Mre. He Van_Sinderon, Mrs. Morris tutherford, Mrs. Birney Fellowes, Ars. W. M. V. Hofman, Mrs. Richard Delafield, Mr: ‘huyler Schieffelin, | the Misses Stillman, Mrs. Herbert G. | Pell, M Morgan Hamilton, Mrs. | Frederic Foster Carey and Wi Fatrchild. Society at Daklia ‘Show. With bevies of society matrons and debutantes intent upon_its succ the tenth annual show of the Amer an Dahlia Society opened at the 71st giment Armory here Tuesday and ended In triumph Thursday evening. The best variety of bloom was named after Miss Margaret Wilson, daughter of the late President Wilson. The entire floor space of the armory was devoted to the display of the flowers and presented scene of natural heauty which set a mark for charm even in this city, where attractive- iess is cultivated to the highest degree From nd sign. Soft weaves that with desirable silk. They are_charming priced at $89.50. Other Coats from famous and i zardens on Long sure you that you will be zed at the Franklin Sq. Hotel Coffee Shoppe Entrance on Corner. 14th and K Sts. TiE LOUVRE ‘ 1115 1117 F STREET Won’t you review our special display of Fur-Trimmed Coats - $89.50 We present them as of exceptional value— from both the viewpoint of materials and de- court comfort; and with luxurious collars and cuffs and bandings of the better sort of Furs. Elegantly lined Coats — temptingly $49.50 to $200 (f [J7ueriers For over A THIRD OF A century T X 610 Twelfth St.—Just Above F 1217 Conn. Ave. A She From Paris—just received, new fashions carefully selected with due comsideration for the taste of the American woman well in mind. For every occasion there are wunusual Frocks, Coats, Ensemble Costumes, Gowns, Sports Apparel. Hats PERSIA ST W TR0 S N AT AR T T e i . FURNITURE OF THE BETTER KIND FURNITURE Made to order, in your selection of Tapestry or Velour. We will sell ten (10) suites at this price in order to keep our large force of workmen busy. This is our regular $185.00 suite, made with loose spring comfy cushions; outside of davenport covered in same material, same as arm and wing chair. An early selec- tion is advisable, as 10 only will be sold at this price. STANDARD ' 2810-12 14th St. Let us Teup- holster or repeir that old suite. UPHOLSTERY STORE The Largest Nll.mxhnurerl of Overstuffed Furniture in Col. 4038 THREE-PIECE SUITE OVERSTUFFED Come in and see our Bed Dav- enports and Dav- enport Suites, “The Twain Shall Meet”’ In one of his mistaken moments Kipling wrote: “The Eost is East and the West is West, And never the twoin shall meet.” As a matter of fact, economically, industrially, politically and financially, East and West are meet- ing as never before. The whole world goes to Persia, Turkey, China and Caucasia for its best rugs—those rugs which never fail to give tone, color, harmony, and dignity to a home. We have selected a large assortment of the finest Oriental and Chinese rugs made and are offering them to our Washington patrons at prices that are unusually attractive. Oriental RugCompany (Everything in Oriental and Chinese Rugs) - 1414 H St. NW. ¥ D.C. Tel. Franklin 6725 V. DEDEIAN, N. VARTANIAN, (Copyright, 1024.) Wedding Gaft Sug’g’estions PPROPRIATE as these offerings are for wedding gift purposes. their interest is not confined thereto for. with the social season opening. table and decorative appointments com mand attention. Candlesticks, pair....$10.00 Flower Vases ....... $6.75 Mayonnaise Sets....$10.00 Sugar and Cream Sets Coasters (6in case).. $6.00 Demi-Tasse Sets (1> doz. cased) .......$27.75 Sherbet Sets (1% doz. cased) $12.00 SHEFFIELD REPRODUCTION SILVER PLATE Sugar and Cream Set ' | Double Vegetable (plain) ..t $5.85 Dish.... .. Sugar and Cream Set - Colonial Water (hammered) ...... $6.35 | .. Pitcher ........... $7.85 Pepper and Salt +Tea - Set (5 pieces, Shakers. .. .$1.25 p: hammered) .....$34.85 Gravy Boat and Casserole (Pyrex Mrayihaie oo ootle o lined) up *In Sterling silver we have com- plete lines of Fairfax, Mary Chilton, Wentworth, Pantheon, Lady Con- stance, Princess Mary, Mount Ver- non, William and Mary and ‘other || preferred patterns. GOLDSMITHa(0 1205 F Street WASHINGTON'S JEWELRY GIFT STORE SINCE 1873