Evening Star Newspaper, July 12, 1925, Page 35

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SOCIETY. Seaside and Mountain Resorts Are Attractive To Chevy Chase Folk Many Spending Vacation Period Out City— House Guests Entertain- ed—Personal Mention. . ot Clarence Hall and and Virginia ester and Bre Poland Springs, Mr. and their children, William left Saturday for Manc tom:Woods, N. H., Me:, Mrs children, Wil Mrs #s and her Robert and Mary Catherine, have returned to their home | on McKinley street, after spending several weeks at The Plains, Va., where they were house guests of Mrs, Wa parents, Mr. and Mrs. John A rs Wolf. Mr. and Mrs. Fred week for a_motol ) to Mrs. H. Lowe entertain: bers of her club at lu bridge Monday at her hon Chase parkway. Mr. and Mrs are spend wood Forest, ) Mr. and their son left this week for where they will Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Gott tertained members of tt club at bridge and supper Saturday evening at their home in Chevy Chase Apart ment Mrs. §. Kidder and her children of Terre Haute, Ind., are house guests of Mrs. Kidder's brother and si inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. der, on Hesketh street. Miss Bertha Gruver of Purcellville, Va., is the house guest of hi fnlaw and sister, Mr. and lMam G. Irvin, at their home ninth street Miss Elizabeth Adkins, da r Mr. and Mrs. James Adkins, left Thursday for Washington, Va., where she will spend the Summer visiting friends. Mr. and Mrs. Frank children and Mr. and Mr: Wilson and children left 1 Ocean City, N. J., where they spend several weeks Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Brawner of Rittenhouse street are motoring foi several weeks through the New land States and Canada | Mr. Arthur D. Kidder has returned | to his home on Hesketh street r i spending a month in Texas on busi-| ness. Mrs. g left this sconsin i the mem eon and » on Chevy Willlams at Sher Nathan B k end ock and ng street ity, N. J ral weeks, hal en. of West I Atlant bend sev HARRIS S EWINO- : Thirty r of Stetson and E. Percival st week for will MRS. MAX GEOR o versity and the gro Mullowney, her | daughter, C: ine, and her mother Mrs. Catherine Thomas, e returned | heir home on Connecticut avenue | al weeks in As-| Alexander R. after spending sev bury Park, N. J | Miss Amy Selby and Miss Anne King, who have been house guests of Miss Virginia Loftin, daughter of Com mander and Mrs, H. E. Loftin of For- Hills, N. Y., formerly of Chevy Chase, have returned to their homes » Chevy Chase Mr. and Mrs. Raphael Semmes and family will 1 Wednesday for Vent- | N. J., where they will spend sev-| al months Mr. Paul | -y NEW YORK, July doubt that this will be one of greatest, if not the greatest polo se son ever known in this country. Nev- ana | €F before has the smart set manifested such an interest in the game, and hard practice on the private flelds of the big the nor Pitcher, son of Mr. Mrs. E. H. Pitcher, left Wednesday | for Andover, N. H., where he estates on Long Island and at the &pend the Summer a = 37 it iand PMr. and Mre. Bynum Hinton enter- [€OUDLY clubs is a daily occurrence; tained members of their club at bridge \vo105™t; ‘this country last Fall, it and supper Thursday evening at their | 1 &1e5 10t T home on Ingomar street s ot Lioia ss Elizabeth. Wagner, daughter of |35 & slump am S canalt Mrs. George B. Wagner of | iqte W& street, has gone to Milwau- | gHOWE a8 Wa where she will be the house {01 (T VI nd aunt, Mr. and |30 &% veral months. | o, ip ilcox and , nd kee, Wis. guest of her Mrs. Carl Haysen, f Mr, nd Mrs. Frank P their son, Charles, nawha st are spending_several w 0 Ty N. Y., and New Yor | M and Mrs. or e and their daughters, Helen, Dorot and Margaret, ne, are spend ing severa Atlantic City, N.J Rev and Ju ow all that ed that before t e fome record i the point of | W laying. The | cames at sure to prove u Already aborate d Dby the members tates Pol Association to honor the vietqrious Army polo team on its re- turn fram England—where it won two games from the British army four—at {a big dinner to be given in the Bilt- {more Hotel July 17. Among the guests lexr be Gen. Pershing and f the Army and Navy | , besides many well known from all parts of the country. | executive committee consists of chairman; J. Ford M © Cowdin, Maj. L.| ifer | A Bear | F. Burke, A. M Jul g h Coonely, W. Cam- Va. 2 C. Groome, W, an | Averell Devereaux = Mil- ac- i hurn, Col D. P. Rogers, ¥ [R. E. Talbot and were 1 events ns have of the United and Mrs. Henry Teller Cocke amily are spending the month of at Avon-by-the-Sea, N. J Mrs. Ray Teele entertained members of the linen committee the Chevy Chase Chapter, Y © at a picnic on Tu her Spri Md George North. nephew rs. Alexander Wylie of J is spenc th of M. T. ( Mr. and Mrs Tabor. their nephews. {ntosh Hite, a Hite of Chev. the week end ¢ Alvin V. home on the Potomac. the stree at the C e - CHL] Conspicuous in Society Annals. Mrs. Adelaide Fairbanks of New| An event of more than ordinary York City 18 the house guest of Mr.|interest to the Long Island set was and Mrs. William W. Bride at their |the opening of the Sands Point Ca- home in Edgemoor. isino, the newest assembly place for Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kline returned [the North Shore folks. Sands Point this week from their wedding trip, and |i8 one of the most famous spots on will take possession of their new |the island, for the estates there are home on Primrose street in the early [ranked among the garden spots of Fal the world. Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont's UNIVERSITY STUDENTS MARRIED Before her recent marriage, Miss Ruth Winifred Devoe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvord Calvin Devoe. The bride graduated from George is a law student there. New York Boasts Prospect Of “Greatest Polo Season” SOCiety Deepl_\' Interested. and Hard practice Is Dail_v Recm‘dANotes cf' Conspicuous Events——-personal MentionA 11.—There is nn‘ intensity | low the days be-|a great is changed | tion there are several portable bath-| dow Brook |went abroad immediately after their | { wedding, on November 29 been | Cathedral THE SUNDAY NISON PRENTICE, Washington Uni- with its velvety lawns, arching trees and flowers dnd shrubs from almost every clime. This bit of Eden has been created only within the last few vears, as Sands Point originally was merely a lighthouse site surrounded by a few cottages of fishermen. The Casino, which is a community affair, was opened with a brilliant series of entertainments. One of the features is a handsome clubhouse of Italian design In stucco and bright-| ened with gay-colored awnings. Be- it is a fine stretch of beach and line of bathhouses. In addi- houses, giving a continental the stretch of sand. Mr. and Mrs. Aymar Johnson, who ast, in the of St. John the Divine, have returned and will spend part of the Summer at Islip, Long Island, where Mr. Johnson's mother, Mrs. Bradish Johnson, has a large estate. The wedding of Mrs. Johnson, who was Miss Marian K. Hoffman, was one of the most brilliant of last sea- son and was attended by several hun- dred prominent persons. A large re- ception followed at the Ambassador Hotel Mrs. Johnson is a daughter of Mrs. Charles Frederick Hoffman of this city and Blickling Hall, Norfolk, Eng- land. The Hoffman estate, divided among the members of the Hol’fmnn{ family, is one of the largest in the city. Mr. Johnson belongs to a family for generations identified with the history of New York. His father was one of the sons of the late Bradish John son, whose town house was at the corner of Fifth avenue and Twenty- first street, afterward the Lotus Club. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson will be a great addition to the smart set in New York and will undoubtedly en- tertain much. Another Honeymoon Couple at Home. Another honeymoon couple just re- turned from abroad are Mr. and Mrs STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JULY 12, James Hazen Ripley, who were mar- ried early in the Spring and went abroad immediately after the cere- mony. While in France they visited Mr. Ripley's mother, Mrs. Charles R. Scott, who now lives in Paris, and his brother-in-law and Count_and Countess Pierre de Viel Castel. Mrs Scott is a sister of the late James B. Hyde, for years president of the Equi- table Insurance Co., and an aunt of James Hazen Hyde. Mrs. Ripley was Marguerite Doubleday, daughter New Home in Jersey Baker is at her estate at Holmwood, near Lenox, in the Rerkshi where she is . doing much ente; Ing: She gave a large dinner there a few days ago for 85 guests, who were entertained by negro singers from New Y The decora- tions were most elabo; The estate overlooks Laurel Lake. his is the first real entertaining Mrs. Baker has done in the last year, cither here, in the Berkshire at ‘the Vanderbilt mp in the Adirondac or at Palm ch Mrs. Willlam K. Vanderbilt, 2d, has returned from Europe with her daugh- ter Consuela and is at Newport, where they have been joined by Miss Muriel Vanderbilt, anta Barbara and Pebble her mother’s stay abroad. Mrs. Raymond te. By teach during Quiet Wedding Noted. The wedding of Miss Honor Leem. ing of 6 East Ninth street and New Canaan, Conn., daughter of the late Col. and Mrs. Woodruff Leeming, to Mr. Mortimer Banks of New York and Noroton, Conn., took place today in the chancel of St. Thomas' Church. The wedding was quiet and was at tended only by members of both families and a few intimate friends. Miss Leeming, who is a grand- daughter of the late Edward Tasker Howard of Brooklyn, was given a by her brother, E. Howard Leeming. The best man was Mr: Henry W Banks, 3d, and the ushers John F Patterson, Charles C. Mickle and Gregory N. Camp. Mr. Banks is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Banks, Jr., of Noroton, nd is a graduate of Williams College, class of 1921 Mr. L;land Harrison ‘And His Bride Back From Honeymoon Tnp‘m Summer as well as Win which Mr. and Mrs. Harrisc | present receiving their friends and in . | viting them into the old-fashioned Assistant Secretary of State | garden to sip some cooling drink and .17 [to enjoy a semblance of country life and Mrs. Anne C}\urcl’nllim the heart of the city. Coleman Were Quietly The Assistant Secretary hopes, how- Jon to take up again the thread Married June 27. . MRS. EDWARD J. REILLY, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Charles McGuire, and before her i June 18, Miss Beatrice McG % is now living at New Brunswick, N. J. made it ideal by eymooning, as he expects to sail ope, with Mrs. Harrison, the "k in August. But the plans the State Department officia this Summer very prone to go awry, as, r instance when Mr. Kellogg went to Minnes did not anticipa’ T <h premier Count Alexander Sehzylenski, and so various contingen- cies a Mr. and Mrs. Harri; still hope to sail, but they have vet secured their reservations, nor are they sure how long they will be per mitted to enjoy this happy outing They, expect, however, to return in Septémber, and will then t a per | manent home for the Winter Were it fect of one mers that decade, been visibly here of the State, Mr. L bride, forme not ‘for the depressir of the most torrid Sum e Capital has known in a activity would have quickened by the return Assistant Secretary of nd Harrison, with his Mrs. Anne Churel Coleman, d hter of Mr. B. Dawson Coleman’ of De Lancey place, Philadelphia. The wedding, which was a very quiet one, took place at the Dawson, the beautiful home of Mr. and Mrs. B. Dawson Coleman, in ment " Bryn Mawr, at noon on June 27, was | ]!‘P\Vl’llb £ s ceong followed by’ a breakfast and general |the State Department by reception in De Lancey place, to which | Evans Hughes, Mr. Harrison only a small company of near rela. |Dave been known the tives and friends were invited. | Asaistant Secretaryof After the briefest of holidays follow- | Mr. Joseph Grew would ing the wedding Mr. Harrison and his |First . _— bride returned to Washington, and | Wright ecretary. But as are passing the month in one of the | the foreign s now regulated comfortabl and charming of Mr. Grew is the ndersecretary of home at recently leased by | State d the other two are desig- Mrs. Jam er of |na sistants, Mr. Harrison being u ation ¢ Charles would Second have J &, heen Butler office 1925—PAR a two weeks ago he | : the coming of the | State, just as | 2. was moved up the line to be attache in the same embassy. That was early in 1908 and his next mission was as second secretary to the lega- tion in Peking. Since then he has made the grade in the usual way, having served at several of the South | American countries, in London and | other continental posts. He w: tached to the American emba: Paris during the Versailles -c ence and won his spurs in tremendous battles waged while the League of Nations was in forming. The retiring Secretary of State, Mr. Hughes, had the honor of wit- nessing, during hls reorganizing of the foreign service, the removal of the assistant secretaries from political domination into that of the trained Dbody of men In the diplomatic wing All three, Mr. Grew, Mr. Harrison and Mr. Wright, are “career” men and began at the foot of the ladder and have laborlousl~ and zealously worked upward When the social world reconvenes | Mrs. Leland Harrison will receive a cordial welcome into the inner execu- tive = he is of a charming pres- ence and has been trained to the| amenities since her early youth. She | will make a notable addition to the | group in the State Department and | will in a way round out the circle, for until June 27 MY. Harrison was | the sole bachelor in the higher rank | of the foreign office officials, as the | term goes in the corps. Annual Dinner Dance Given by D. A. R. Chapter | Thursday evening, July 2, Abigail Hartman Rice Chapter, D. A. R., of which Mrs. Jasper M. Beall is regent, held its annual dinner dance at the Congressional Country Club through the courtesy of its vice regent, Mrs. | Frank Morrison. The members, es corts and guests included many of the | pital City's younger set, and they were seated at an attractively deco. rated banquet table in one of the club’s private dining rooms. The lat ter part of the evening was given over to dancing. 1 Miss Cilgnne;' ;f London | Recent Guest in Capital | Lieut. and Mrs. John R. Vance have had as a guest, at 1261 New Hamp- shire avenue, Miss Sadie Gilfinney of London, who stopped here en route to | New York from St. Petersburg, Fla., | where she spent the Winter and Spring. She sailed from New York last week. Mrs. Vance was on a \'F‘u to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Belton D.| | Clarke, at Lexington, C., when | Miss Gilfinney joined her there for | a visit and they came on to Wash ington together The House W P 608 to 6i4 SOCIETY. i Protect Your Hands. Don’t wear out the vouth looks of you ds by work them unprote see very young g and in s with hands like those ‘middle-aged women. It is parti sad to se a young girl who ha ready work all the youth out ¢ | hands, espec able In nine cases out of ten If vou do housework prot | hands with gloves There | many cheap patented washi rangements that even laundry can be done with rubber gloves you have to do some rubbin smear our hands thickly with er or lard and on the 80 that they soak up th | finish the work If you must scrub, wear gloves or buy long-handled sc | brushes. Buy Is with an arra ment at the side for wringi mop; you can mop up an enti | without once putting your | water. Dishwashing can be | using " long-handl | rubber gloves. 1If v in a wire rack and sc i |dry themselves. Protect your han and dusting by w gloves. Special gloves com | dening, o leather or cottc |can be worn. If you take | your car, as so many womer | days, protect your hands witt | gloves; and for washing and | very ‘dirty Jjobs use ruk epair jobs must be dor In such t thickl High School Romance | cases sn with vaseli vork bare finished 7 d befy | hands fir If you must | when ‘vou have . | hands with oil or MRS. ALBERT C. REED, | them Married June 20, to a sweetheart of her high school days, and before mar- riage Miss Margaret Burton. Mrs. E. K.—There seems t { natural tendency with some have rough skin on their = g2 e Yo can help the conditior ; ; sibly overcome it entir Miss Lothrop Entertains e ohe | method, which i to use a In Honor of House Guest‘,.-. ery time you bathe. Salt Miss Blanche E. Lothrop was hostess | also helpful, but at a supper party last evening, enter-|need for scrubhing # taining on the roof of the Hotel|course a full daily bath i Powhatan in compliment to her house | Such people guest, Miss Ida E. Flack of Phila delphia, who is spending the week end | here | Is Given Commission. Carl C. Leighty, Wardma Hotel, has been com | War Departmen in the Field Ar Corps of the Visiting in California. Miss Mary Louise Cockerille, daugh ter of Dr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Cockerille, 3649 Thirteenth street, has | gone to Los Angeles, Calif., where she will visit relatives and friends llery, Officers Army Announcement Miss Agnes Blu Royal, T Every man’s house is his castle until he makes an assignment—then it’s his wife’ r Ap P Frank Rese Nouveau Hat and Gown Shop ally so when it is avoid hand 6 Closcd all'day on S ELEVENTH Si’. July and August. of Courtesy Two Unusual Events Featured for Monday Twentieth s mellow | the senior of Mr. Wright. Like his old brick the many | associates as aides to Mr. Kellog, dited to Ber robe, and it | Mr. F son’s appointment to suc has figured in local history for more [ceed the lamented A. Adee than a century. It was once the resi- |nearly half a century one of dence of Willlam Wirt to mentors of the St merate its occups since 1831 | was non-politic: would be a synopsis of social and |Harvard In 1907 Harriso diplomatic _ history resentative | once entered the diplomatic ser William Kent of nia bought |and was appointed by President the old place from the Ravs of Mont- | Roosevelt as private secretary to the gomery County, and it was M Kent | Ambassador to Japan, Mr. who added the roomy sun parlor and | O'Brien, and within a few 0 DE MOLL PIANO CO. ANOTHER SALE the ats months USED § UPRIGHT for | Thomas | NCW Sln( Dresses —being selections from our own Stock and recent advantageous purchases—which include new Fall models in Satin. 315 Needless to say they justly deserve much higher marking. The new modes for Fall are in tempting [alc——la|c———|a|——=|n[la|—=|0[c——=|a|——=u] bilipsbo’m W | fl | Mr. O. C. Merrill of Mel te is probably the most beautiful, e e || Let Us Make Your Present Fur Coat Into a NEW Coat of Advance Winter Fashion Mr. turned tc parkway 1 Miracl, saks’ expert furriers ev;dence-—-flares. gode(s. Circular flounces- apron fronts, straightline, jabots—prints, solid color and impressive combinations. Women's and Misses’ Sizes Second Floor PIANOS At 9 o’Clock Tomorrow Morning spending severa in Norfolk on b Roger Bear Bearc of F son Lewis i Hazard Imont B. H Robert Kel S, Ke liam Blum am Blum of ding the amp Roosevelt Mrs. Normarn dau « spending Charlottetown Canada. Mr the first of Miss Mildr of Mrs. W stregt, is spendin, Clevaland, Ohio, house guest of Hawley Mise Antoinet idgewood son of Mr 2 Used upright pianos go on sale at the astonish- ingly low price of $94.50. Making a Radical Clearance of Practical Co ats Grouped for Choosing at 322 Which is half and less the original prices s like this can be wrought by designers, while our own are tra in the détails of workmanship from which will come to vou a Coat of beauty—a New Coat in effect, a Coat of Advanced Style. 5 The tuate the derness of the slinouette cutaway on. ned known months at | wiell ince Edward Island, X will join Many makes are, represented. 7 Our stylists have gathered a number of the finest Winter Fur Coat models These are now on view, and from them you may select that coat which yours is to look like when finished. Or you may prefer a collar of this coat, the flare of that model, or the sleeve of an- other. Your own ingenuity in designing will be ably supplemented by the skill of the very competent hands that are a part of our organization. Get in early if you want a good piano at a big sav- ing—every instrument in the lot is a bargain at this, special price. the Summer where she is Mr. and Mrs. A. in the | H. Keane, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Keane of | Military road, sailed Monday on t steamship De Grasse for Eurone H|‘| the British Isles, where she will spend T the Summer | fikoxen smart: (i of sa They’'ll sell in a hurry, so don’t delay—BE ON HAND F O R FIRST CHOICE. And if desired, YOU MAY ARRANGE TO 2 Circular Hares are most guit- ed to yoluth. Constantinople’ which dates to the sixteenth | century, now is used as a museum | and storehouse for national treasur old impe palace. | f We send no work outside. All remod- eling, repairing, etc., is done in our own workrooms, and no change 18 too small, nor is any transformation too great, to give us pleasure in the performing. If new skins are necessary, we have them and the selecting and matching can be done by you, yourself. back Chair Caneing Porch Rockers Splinted Low Price. Quick Service. NUF-CED Clay Armstrong 1233 10th St. NW. ' Franklin 7483 On your vacation you'll need them—with It will pay you to bring your coat in, Aot i moall BEAL ROW Decatse - the coming of the first keen days of Autumn Pay Only $10 Down and $8 Per Month you'll appreciate them. | B [ 8 b [l [t [a [ e8| e [0 |0 ——]0] Prices Are Lower in Summer The new front fullness is as popuiar in furs as it 18 fabrics Including Twills, Satins and other fine weaves—some trimmed with fur. Unusually clever in effect are the new collars. SAKS FUR CO. Furs Exclusively for Over a Third of a Century 610 Twelfth—Just Above F iI———|olc———lalc————jo|——|al n ©O'J DeMOLL I o(@ | Washingtons AEOLIAN HALL ~ Twelfth and G Streews 0 Women's and Misses’ Sizes Third Floor fl | | | | | | | E—:D[EEIEEE:—:EI:—:—:E‘ I———la|——=|pl———a}ja]——=—=ol——=|a[c—==n

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