Evening Star Newspaper, October 25, 1925, Page 50

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

6 Approach o Brings Many to City| Apartments Are Reserved for Those Establishing Homes in Capital—Other News of Society. Lieut. Comdr. Ralph McDowell, U. $. )L C., and Mrs. McDowell and their three children, the youngest son less than a week old, are guests in the home of Mrs. MeDowell's parents, Mr. and Mrs., Theodore W. Noyes, until the first of the year Henry ¥. Dimock has gone to M York to spend about 10 days. New Miss Rebekah Blaine Lipscomb, a or at Vassar, will spend the holl V& here with her mother, Mrs. May Blaine Lipscomb, at Wardman Park Hotel, where Mrs. Lipscomb is spend-: & the Winter. Miss Lipscomb will an attractive addition to the young- t. Mrs. Lipscomb is a native Shingtonian, and was the fourth ceneration of her family to be born in he old home on Capitol Hill, a daugn- ¢ the late Mr. Robert Gillesple lat M Robert G. > of the distinctive fig- gton soclety for many famous not only for ness and wit, but because of e in mus which she used untiringly for mo: han 30 years for the pleasure and happiness of those confined in hospi- " the almshouse and the jail. Mrs. omb has made her home in New York and Plainfield, N. J.. since her jnarriage, and this is her first Winter in her old home since the wedding. Former Governor of one of the Prov- \nrl‘eos of the Philippine Islands and Mrs. William F. Pack left Washing- ton Friday for New York, where they will sail for their home on the Isle of Pines. Mr. and Mrs, Edward David Hall have leased their house at 1702 Nine- {centh street to the Secretary of the vy and Mrs. Wilbur and are mov- ng to the Hotel Roosevelt, where, with their son, Mr. Moragne Hall, they hive taken an apartment for the Winter. Mr. and Mrs. E Xk‘,)('.n.nn‘ha‘ e iheir guest, in thelr home in Cleve land Park, Mrs. Elizabeth Wyatt Bourne, who has just returned from a several months' stay in Europe. am Dougald MacDougall Charlotte MacDougall are the guests of Mrs. Carlos de Heredias at Wheatleigh, her home at Lenox, Calhoun _was the guest nd Mrs. J. Wilmer Bunderton House lelphia, having attend the debut pa Miss S ley Gordg . Mr alhoun went where she will be at the Ritz for eral days, returning to Washington the middle of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Griffith of Gaithersburg are spending the ‘Win- ter with the latter’s sister, Mrs. S. . Fields, in her home in Rockville, Mrs. Griffith {s president of the Rockville ‘Women's Club. Dmners‘ Lnnchcons And Teas Featuring Society's Activities (Continued from Fifth Page.) her Mrs. Donald B. McLeod and Mrs. Reid S. Baker. AMiss Minnie Catherine Heider en- tertained 20 guests last evening at her home in Cleveland Park, in compli- ment to Miss Lilla Kathleen Smith- son, whose marriage to Mr. Alvin F. Hipsley will take place in November. The Rev. Meade Bolton MacBryde will entertain a small company in- formally at tea tomorrow afternoon in his apartment at the Cavendish in ~ompliment to his sister, Mrs. Robert James Davidson. he Rev. Mr. MacBryde was host at the supper dance last evening at \ardman Park Hotel for his niece, Miss Martha Bolton Davidson. Mrs. Henry Merle Spillan was host- ess to a company of 12 at a bridge Juncheon Tuesday in her apartment at the Embassy in honor of Mrs. Jerome Smith, a bride in August. Mme. Marie Zalipsky will entertain at tea Sunday afternoon, November 1, between 4 and 6, at her residence, 1620 T street morthwest, in honor of the members of the Zallpsky Musical Soclety. Mrs.y Mary V. Barbes will preside at the tea table. Mrs. Stephen B. Felker and Miss Beryl Roberts entertained at a bridge tea Wednesday afternoon in compli- | ment to their house guest, Mrs. Philip_Otterback of Chicago. Mrs. Fred W. Knight assisted the hostess and the company included Mrs. Wi liam Stokes, Miss Kitty Turner, Mrs. Charles K. West, Mrs. Harold Brein- ing, Miss Martha Smith, Mrs. Edgar Brauner, Mrs. Ralph Jackson, Mrs. Kate Pond, Miss Helen Moser, Miss Ruth Layhee, Miss Vivian Vestal, Miss Katherine McGill, Miss Lucy Witherspoon and Mrs. Edward Far- Ten. Miss Mildred Mansfleld was th honor guest at a box party at Keith's followed by & dance and supper, Thursday evening, the occaslon being n celebration of her birthday anni- versary. In the company were Miss reggy King, Miss Amy Padgett, Mr. Mason Chambalin, Mr. Phillip Schat- ‘er and Mr. Horace Woolf. il T Tiles and bricks for interior build- ing purposes can now be made from the residus of castor-ofl beans. The appearance of the new material is Iike polished stone, only it is not cold to the touch. Hemstitching Picot Edging Pleating Embroidery Braiding Beading Buttons flntonholes op Edge ooy Bs Shir ing Quick Service Good Workmanship 806 E Street N.W, _ | the occupational therapy SOCIETY. f Winter Mr. Daniel Thew Wright, 3d, who Is spending the week end with his parents, Judge and Mrs. Wright, at Wardman Park Hotel, will return to- morrow to New York, where he has taken a studio apactment for the Win- ter and where he will continue his musical studies. Mr. Charles M. Yeates of the Vet erans’ Bureau has gone to Phoenix, Ariz., where Mrs. Yeates will join him later in the Winter. Mrs. Laurie Wilson will go to New York tomorrow to meet her daughter, Mme. Perishin, wife of Dr. P, A. Per- ishin, who will arrive there by water from her home in Miami, Fla. Mme. Perishin will accompany her mother to Washington for a visit. She was formerly Miss Edith Wilson, and her marriage to Dr. Perishin, then at tached to the legation of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, took place about a year ago. Mrs. Wilson | from a motox Ridge Mountai returned last week trip through the Blue s and the Shenandoah Valley. She v her cousin, the | State commissioner, Mr. E. Warren Wall, in Richmond on her way home. Mrs. Logan, wife of Lieut. Daniel L. Logan, U. S. N., who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Bissell, in their home, at 2200 Nine. teenth street, will leave Washington this week for Honolulu, where she will join her husband. Mr. Van Ness Foster and Mr. David A. Turnure of New York have taken an apartment at the Anchorage for the Winter. Mr. Foster and Mr. Turnure are in Washington preparing for the United States diplomatic | service. Mrs. George Murray Smith and her daughter, Miss Smith, of Los Angeles, Calif., have arrived in Washington and taken an apartment at the Roosevelt. Judge and Mrs. L. Swig and Mr. and Mrs. Glickman of Taunton, Mass., have been the guests for a week of Miss Sarah Levy in her apartment in the Portner. Maj. and Mrs. V. I. Morrison have arrived in Washington from Santa Barbara, Calif., and have taken a suite in the Hotel Roosevelt. Mrs. Sam Roberts of 1507 Rhode Island avenue will spend the next two weeks with relatives in Roanoke, Va. Robert Peyton Black of At |1anta, s visiting her s, Mr. and Mrs. George Hamilton Browue, in r apartment in the Hotel | Mrs. Miss Lois Hayden Meek has |an apartment at Meridian Hill Fifteenth and Euclid streets west, for the Winter. north- Mrs. John F. Reeves and Miss Ruth Reeves of Dallas, Tex:, have taken an apartment in the Roosevelt for the Winter. Veterans' Handiwork i To Be Placed on Sale/| Under the « | Baldwin McCo |er v Unit, American Wom- Leglon, the fourth annual sale ! rticles made by ex-service men in | of St. Eiizabeth's Hospital, o Miss Cella A. Chapman is director, | will be held next month. The sale will open Monday, November 9, and continue for 10 days. All arrange- ments for this sale are in the hands of Mrs. Walter I. McCoy, president, and the executive committee of the unit, who, with members of the unit, will assist Miss Chapman and her aldes in selling the many beautiful and well made rugs, baskets, toys and weavings of all sorts. { Ball Will Be Given [ soctation, for which Admiral Cary T. | Grayson is chairman for the District, will be the beneficlary of the ball which will be given at the Mayflower Hotel Tuesday evening, December 29, and which will be called the Blue and the Gray ball. P The boxes will be named for famoits generals of the Civil War, both North and South, thus carrying out the idea of a union of the Blue and the Gray. During the evening a number of dances of the period of 1860 will be given, including the Virginia reel and quadrilles. | several days in New York. ! For Memorial Fund|| The Stone Mountain Memorial As- | | THE SUNDAY Couple Celebrate Golden Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. F. X. Boucher were hosts at a reception at their home on Columbia road last Tueeday evening, the occasion being the fiftieth anni- versary of their marriage. The draw- ing room was decorated with yellow chrysanthemums, ferns and palms, the color scheme of gold being used in dghting effects also. In the dining room, where a buffet supper was served, the table was most effective with its centerplece, a huge basket of yellow chrysarithemums tied with tulle, surrounded by tall yellow tapers. A stringed orchestra played through- out the evening. Recelving with Mr. and Mrs. Boucher were their children, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Pilling, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Stouténburgh, Mr. and Mrs. Milton J. Boucher, Mr. and Mrs, I Chapman Trewhella, Mr. Edward H. D. Boucher, and their grandchildren, Margaret Adele, Dorothy, Mae, Frank and James A., jr., Stoutenburgh. The out-oftown guests were Mrs. Carrfe Ing and Miss Ing, Mrs. Charles Hungerford, Mrs. Elmer Rigby, Miss Hungerford, Mrs. H. Falck, Miss Flor- ence Boucher and Mr. John D. Creney, all of Baltimore, and Mr. and Mrs, F. (l;l:la[mmn Trewhella of Washington, Miss Staples I; H:;ess At Women's City Club Miss Tlora Dell Staples of 1722 Massachusetts avenue entertained at bridge in compliment to Miss Ger- aldine Morey Thursday evening at the Women's City Club, when Miss Agnes Wren assisted her in recelving Among the guests were Miss Gita Triester, Mrs. Doris Salter Geiser Mrs. Patsy McNulty, Mrs. Mary Buckley, Mrs. Mary Clare Ahearn Mrs. Graco Goss, Mrs. Mary Lee Rutan, Miss Aleathea Basford, Miss Jeon Malcolm, Mrs. Charlotte Luber Rosenblatt, Miss Bernadine Brennan, Miss Felicia Lambert, Mrs. Henrletta Wolf, Mrs. Anne Madison, Miss Ruth MCcElroy, Miss Dorothy Ross and Miss Mabel Hiatt. Foreign Envoys Hosts At Variety of Affairs (Conlihued from Fifth Page) de Alfaro will be the honor guests at a buffet supper this evening of Col. and Mrs. George C. Thorpe. The Minister and Senora de Alfaro will entertain at a_buffet supper, fol lowed by a dance, Wednesday evening in the legation. ‘The Minister of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, Dr. Ante Tresich Pavichich, is back {n Washington after visiting friends for several days in New York The Minister of the Netherlands Jonkheer Dr. A. C. D. de Graeff, will Teturn this afternoon, after spending a few days in New York. The Minister of the Irish Free Mr. Timothy J S dy, ain’ in Washington, after spending The counselor of the Netherlands legation, Jonkheer Dr. H. van Asch van Wyck, who is passing a short vi cation in Canada, is expected to re- turn to Washington the middle of the week. The military attache of the Italian embassy, Col. Augusto Villa, will have as his guests in his apartment at ‘Wardman Park Hotel his brother and sister-inlaw, Conte and Contesss Villa. The third secretary of the Egyptian legation, Dr. Farag Mikhail Moussa and the second attache of the lega t Abu-el-Enein Salem Effend, arc ding the week end motoring in Mme, Vassileff of Art Enroll Today Now is the best time to begin your Christmas gifts’ of Hand Painted China and Parchment Shades Classes to suit you—Momings, afternoons, after office hours and evenings. 1006 F St. N.W. Main 8858 Furs Exclusively Your Fur Coat 610 Twelfth—Just above F \ —Can nowhere be bought with "such satisfaction as at Saks’! YIn point of value, styling, service, our fur coats more than maintain the tradi- tional superiority of Saks’ furs. TAs to prices—it is well known that Saks’ furs are built up to a standatd, not down to a price. A versatile showing of extra snappy Fur Coats designed ‘espe- cially for young Tadies. for Over 35 Years STAR, WASHINGTON D. C., OCTOBER 25, AIDS JUNIOR LEAGUE MRS. W LTAM J. FLATHER, JR., Who is chairman of the committee in charge of the Cabaret Ball, to be given by the Junior League December 4 at the Willard Hotel. Junior Hadassah Dance To Aid Palestine Fund The Junior Hadassah will give their first annual da 2 room of the Was nesday, Novembe s A night. As appea 1 coming from Palestine for funds with which to carry on the work, the Junior Hadassah will use the money from *his annual dance to meet their quota »f the amount pledged to be sent to Palestine, Under the chalrmanship of Miss Rebecca Rhoade, the president of the Tunior Hadassah, the committees are making arrangements to welcome all out-of-town Jewish boys and girls and help them spend an enjoyable eve- [ AremeAd\apter, No._lo. Plans Two Card Parties Areme Chapter, No. 10, will give a five hundred party at the Northeast Masonic Temple Wednesday and again on Thursday evening, at 9 o'clock. Mrs. Marie Plerce is chairman of the party, assisted by other members of the chapter, and she has many beauti- ful prizes which have been donated. | The public is invited. FIRST WITH THE NEW FASHIONS isSiold @ 1214 An Unusual F St. Monday Sale Fur-Trimmed Co Flare Models Mushroom Collars Straightline Circular Effects ats In Two Remarkable Price Groups .50 .50 Gold quality stressing with equal emphasis fashion-smartness and careful workmanship— luxurious fur collars, bands and cuffs—linked with a price surprising- ly under their regular worth. Materials Vivetta Arabia. Maline Pinpoints Colors include Bokara, Rust, Gracklehead, Pheasant, Blue, Lipstick and other shades, also Black. 1925—-PART 2. Card Party Planned By Political Women A bridge and five hundred party will be given by the District of Colum- bia branch of the Natlonal Woman's Party at national headquarters Wed nesday afternoon, November 4, at 2 o'clock. Following the card party tea will be served. Hostesses for the party include Mrs. C. C. Calhoun, Mrs. Emile Eecrliner, Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, Mrs. Apple- ton P. Clark, Miss Sheidon Jackson, Mrs. Richard Boeckel, Mrs. Andrew Stewart, Mrs. Legare O'Bear, Mrs. H. C. Easterday, aund Mrs. Nell Gravatt. ¢ n of branch, 1s in charge of the committee on arraRge ments, This is the first of a series of activ- ities planned by the District of Co lumbia branch of the Woman's Party as benefits for refinishing and furnish ing the dining room at the historic headquarters of the party on Capitol Hill. Miss Sara Grogan, at Woman's Party headquarters, is in charge of | reservations. . SOCIETY. Anrnouncing FHa'loweer Dinner Dance Wardmen Park FHotel Saturday Evening October 81, 1935 The Apparel Store of Quality Town there are women who Fmakcoflivingafincmmdmwhomquzliq is 2 law of life. . In this communii women are patrons , these discernin, tle- adherents of our gstmsh- ment. It is here that they center their purchases. of personal apparel. We realize that Benjamin Franklin was righe when he said, “Glass, china and reputations are casily cracked and never well mended.” _ 8o every transaction is guarded with the sword of truth and the armor of integrity under the banner of quality. When you visit our drawing-rooms you real- ize how beautiful and marvelous is the work of human hands. Here is the woven gold and the full flower of needlecraft and costume design. In this house the price of merchandise is nos what can be gotten for it nor what the may be expected to pay, but a correct valuation aaptziml of attire has done much This fair to make our " quality town. FErlebacher Exclusively Different TWELVE.TEN TWELVE.TWELVE P STREEY public the great appasel store of of America i h 1889 F STREET, N. W. HB giiomn Is Cordially Sxtended to All Washington Women to Visit this New Store Thursday, Friday and Saturday OU will be both surprised and delighted with the J large and varied essortment of correct new Fall Styles that will be shown—all at one low price. You will revel in the exquisite beauy of these perfectly made shoes and slippers. You will imme- diately recognize at the masterful merchandising metl character and quality of every peir and marvel hods that are bringing these shoes to the women of America at such a popular price. Seventy Styles Changing with the Vogue

Other pages from this issue: