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SOCIETY. Tales of Well Known Folk In Social and Official Life Roadside Gardcning and Improvement Engages Secretary Jardine— lection Attracts BY MARGARET B. DOWNING. The Secretary of Agriculture does net lack advisers frum all parts of the country about Improving the face of the land from the roadside. Dr. Jardine has, however, a practical mind, and he is ruminating at leisure about the many ideas offered him of scattering flower seed broadcast along country roads and in fields not under cultivation. The department has nat- urally many seeds to spare now that free distribution of them has been dis- continued. But the head of the De- partment of Agriculture is of the * opinion that old Mother Nature may be relied upon to take care of wild places herself, and that flowers grow in every inch where there are con- genial surroundings. However, Phila- delphia on several of its splendid country roads has demonstrated that an intelligent aid may be proffered the great, good Mother nature, by sow- ing strong, well prepared seeds along | the open thoroughfares. No one who has driven from Philadelphia to Val- ley Forge fail to be convinced of this. From the first touch of Spring until the Winter sets in, a stage of ice and snow, there is something in | bloom along boulevard. Giant | pussy willows grow at intervals and then” come every kind of dogwood, and the red-buds in fts various sorts, with clumps of the socalled weeds of Spring and Summer lustrous as to compare fa bly with garden flower: Dainty edgings of violets may be seen for miles on the way to Valley Forge, and when the is reached blaze of color eets the visftor from every point. There is a_finished look about this restraint of wild growth, which Dr. Jardine is studying with a view of vinz Potomac Park and of en- such planting along all well ountry thoroughfares. French Ambassador, M. Henri who. with Mme. Berenger, has recently sailed for Paris, the for. mer to conduct the war debt settle- ment_through the perilous waters of the French Senate. confidently hopes to return to Washington in the Au- tumn, Every one who met this de- lightful couple shares this hope and likewise that with the heavy respon sibility of the funding problem off his mind, M. Berenger will set about forming a fencing club, hi; ever since coming to V The American Capital lacks many of | the attractions which Paris offer even New World cities like Hav Buenos Aires. Both these municipa centers have well organized fencing clubs and give regular exhibitions. But fencing lapsed in popular favor with the. going of the cultured and gracious Russian Ambassador, Count Arthur in the wake of the Russ War. He was the patron of fencing, rented the quarters where the club met and frequently entertained its members. M. Berenger is skillful with the foils and he had much trouble finding any one in Washington who could keep him in . and this, of course, in the | v of the F 3 no other place was available. In ) York there is a flourishing fencing club, which gives annual tournaments &nd challenges members of the British and Canadian clubs to show their prowess. Since Joseph Pennell’s tions both in art and letters are to re- main in Washington, and the proper arrangement of them in the Library of Congress and in the National Mu- seum of Art is to be the labor of love of Mrs. Pennell. From the beginning of their married life his constant com- vanion and literary collaborator, Mrs. Pennell, who had gained a wide repu- tation as Elizabeth Robins, will be more or less a denizen of the, Capital during the next few years, and she will find scores of friends and admirers « of her talented husband. In the biog- vaphy published by Joseph Pennell, and in which his wife had so large a part. he always describes himself as an illustrator, but his fame will cover a much wider field, though his work in this line will form an invaluable contribution in the Library of Con- ss. where such treasures are He {s deemed one of the etchers this country has pro- and Washington Is to be con- tulated that the majority of were bequeathed to the Congres- sional Library. Mr. Pennell may be said to e the discoverer of the splen- did possibilities for art in the skyline of New York City, and his sketches for articles in magazines dealing with the mighty metropolitan city may be said to furnish the beginnings of this distinctive type of picture. He also wrote most enthusiastically of the deep cleft of Broadway cutting the eity across the sky and making one of the grandest urban views in the world, “one,” which he mentioned in his. autoblography, “as great in its way as the Grand Canyon of the Colo- rado, and which if offered in any Euro- pean city Americans would race across the ocean to visit.” chief produ: When Miss Mary Parsons of Charles. ton. S. C., ma r. William Means of Boston a fe ago, there hung from the portico of the old church, called locally the Goose Creek Chapel and situated on the Parsons property, a hatchment containing the Izzard and Parsons coat of arms. Time was when a_hatchment with the Washing- ton and Mason arms hung from the venerable church at Pohick, and again old Trinity in Georgetown owned one furnished by the Bealls and the Addi- ®ons, original proprietors of the ground on which it had been built. A hatchment is a rare possession now, but Fifth avenue had many displayed | Guides, Joseph peflnell CO]- Attention Here. Parsons property has not possessed parish rights for almost 50 years, but when the daughter of .the house elect- ed to open it and refurbish it for her nupttals, the Bishop of South Carolina readily granted permission and the old hatchment was brought forth and touched up for the occasion. A hatch- ment is only a square wooden board, hung cornerwise, covered with a blaze of heraldic design, always in vivid colors Mrs. Joseph T. Bowen ot Chicago, one of the leading soclal workers of the Middle States and the founder of the Juvenile Protective Association, which has performed seeming mira- for the youth of Chicago, has just published a charming book on her favorite theme, called “Growing Up With a City.” In this volume and in the most entertaining way Mrs. Bowen sketches her labors for reform during the past 30 years, when she began modestly in a Sun- ay school class in the slums. She has served on every important com- mittee devoted to the welfare of the city and especially of its younger circle. Her inimitable wit and keen appreciation of the droll make this social study one of the most impor- | tant utterances on the subject pub- lished in years. Any one can read it and derive benefit, while for the spe- clalist it opens wide vistas of experi- ment along reasonable lines. Mrs. Bowen is chairman of the Woman's World Fair, which has attracted at- tention to the Lake. city from every part of the universe wheré women are endeavoring tq improve their condi- tion and their dwn community. Mrs. Bowen comes from a distinguished family and is the sister of the late Reginald de Koven, being before her marriage to the late Joseph Tilton Bowen, a banker of Chicago, Louise de Koven. She began social work at the Dearborn Seminary, where she was educated, and was the first treas- urer of Hull House and was for many yvears associated with Jane Addams. She served during the World War as head of the women's division of the State Councll of Defense and is now on its board of the committee for national safety. Mrs. Lyman Delano of Tarrytown, \. Y., is acting as chairman of the World Camp for Girl Scouts and Girl which has been in session along the Hudson about 30 miles from the metropolis during the past month. Mrs. Delano has given much time to her duties of hostess, and she has taken the scouts and guides all about Tarrytown with its vivid remem- brances of the sage of Sunnyside, Washington Irving, whose gentle spirit seems to linger about the place. She also conducted an excursion of the visitors to the Catskills, the Rip Van Winkle country, and to the place where the legend of Sleepy Hollow was laid. This talented lady, who has been associated with the Girl Scouts since its inception and is now a mem- her of its international board of man- agement, was Miss Leila Burnett of | Boston, a graduate of Radcliffe and well known for her philanthropi spirit. She is the wife of Lyman Delano, one of the officials of the Southern Railroad and a member of the well known family of that name of New York and Massachusetts. Mr. and Mrs. Delano lived for some time at Newburgh, on the Hudson, but five years ago they purchased a hand- some estate outside of Tarrytown Both are frequent visitors to Was ington and are members of the Chevy Chase Country Club, and Mr. Delano is a charter member of the Racquet Club and has been for many years a member of the Metropolitan. Mrs. Chatfleld Taylor of Chicago has been occupying the home of her mother, Mrs. George Preston Blow, in Yorktown and this venerable mansion, one of the several owned by the Ma- son family in Tidewater, Va., is the identical house in which Lord Corn- wallis drew up the articles of surren- der to Gen. Washington. The British military leader had commandeered this house for his residence as the most spacious and elegant in the small village and it was here that the repre- sentatives of the Continental Army and that of the French Army of Alli- ance met him and his staff. The old house had fallen into ruin and the gardens were all but annihilated when Mrs. Blow purchased the property. She has restored everything with the same good judgment and regard for historic associations which marked the restoration of the older and more pre- tentious Mason mansion, Gunston Hall, on the Potomac, by Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hertle. These venerable domi- ciles and the adjacent community owe a heavy debt to these citizens of Chi- cago who have preserved two such on occasion before its churches even 50 vears back. In medieval times the hatchment displaying the armorial bearings were used only at funerals, but in the New World a more liberal construction was placed on its pur- poses and they were hung at weddings and at christenings, and in the case of the Pohick Church, when Gen. Washington and his lady attended di- vine service. The old church on the Shampoo BEAUTIFUL HAIR THIS WAY Hair that lies in fluffy softness about the face and neck; hair that is lustrous and lovely, seeming much more abundant than it really is—this is the way which actre: mous beauties have found. a way you, too, can find by simply n-mndg a pn:ka of Canthrox from ur dru 3 Y Fhis shim, very littl Dissolve @ hot water, This makes enough to 9o all ovér the hai d of just on the Aop. Be sure that every etrand is given the benefit of thi daintily perfumed, delightful prepa- ration. It removes evefy bit of ex- cess oil and dirt, and by ke . scalp healthy, you avoid dand One shampoo costs only thre: and you will never know really healthy and beautiful hair until you use it effort, THE SUNPAY STAR, WAS : JUNE GIRL GRADUATE MISS ANN BOWIE WATSON, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lesliec Watson, graduating from Georgetown Visitation Convent tomorrow. She will not make her debut for two seasons, but will, instead, pursue special studies. worthy links with the past as Mrs. RBlow has in Yorktown and the Louis Hertles at Gunston Hall. Mrs. Chat- field-Taylor, who was her mother's chief reliance in these labors in York- town, made a special study of colonial planting in garden borders with the result that the Blow home in York- town is a glorious vision from early Spring untib the first touch of Winter. Straw flowers were one of the treas. ures of the ladles in the late eight eenth century, for the: erved for Winter bouquets, and these are a mem- orable sighe in the border back of the old house where Cornwallis laid down his arms. To Mr. Richard T. Crane. 2d, at Westover-on-the-James, Virginia owes another heavy debt, in that he has re- stored and maintains the old estate in the same style as did Sir Richard Byrd, its first proprietor and for whom the renowned architect Sir Christopher Wrenn drew the plans for the mansion. Mr. Crane had an able assistant in his wife, who was before her marriage Miss Ellen Douglas Bruce, niece of the Maryland Senator, Willi Cabell Bruce. Mrs. Crane was reared at one of the Bruce's estates, that of Berry Hill, in Fairfax County, and she had a deep reverence for all the old mansions in that part of the Old Dominion and along the James and has been since her girthood an enthusiastic worker in the Society for the Preservation of Virginia An- tiquities. Mr. and Mrs. Crane were among the guests at the recent Bruce- Mellon nuptials, and they renewed their acquaintance with sgveral mem- bers of the Czechoslovaklan legation during their brief visit to Washington. Mr. Crane was the first Minister to Prague after the ancient land of hemia and its sister states, Moravi: and Slavonia, were admitted to the family of sovereign nations, and it fell to Mrs. Crane to act as a sort of house mother for the entire staff while a permanent legation was being sought. The Minister and his family, all the staff and clerks dwelt under one roof and most comfortably and happy until a suitable housp was re- modeled and furnished. Miss Anne Stuart Wortiey, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Wort- ley of that picturesque part of the Long Island coast known as the Tur- tle Bay section, is the latest to revolt from the rigora of a debutante season, and has selected instead a full col. legiate course at Bryn Mawr. Miss Wortley has been listed among the important members of New York so- ciety to make her bow during the Summer in Long Island and this com- ing Winter in New York City. But she, a serious-minded young girl, in- tends to carve out her niche in the literary wing. On the maternal side she is the granddaughter of that NOW!! doughty hero, Rear Admiral Winfield Schley, who was actually in command of the fleet which destroyed the Span- ish squadron off Santiago de Cuba in 898, and before this he was com- nder of the rellef expedition which rescued Gen. Greeley and his party in the Arctic reglons. On the paternal | side this interesting young student of |letters is the granddaughter of the | Earl of Wharncliffe, and she has fre- | quently been the guest of her grand- parents at Wortley Hall in Sheffield. Miss Virginia Schley married the Hon. Ralph Hontaga Stuart Wortley when her father was stationed in Washing- ton in the late 1880s. He was a younger sen of the Earl of Wharn. Cliffe, and had gone Into mercantile pursuits in New York City. At one time Mr. and Mrs. Wortley had a beautiful country seat near Pelham v, where Admiral and Mrs, v were frequently their guests. They moved to Long Island about 10 s ago. Mr. Paul Mayo has recently erected at Bear Creek, about 30 miles from Denver, a unique and substantial house, built right into the solid rock of the great mountain chain for a foundation. with the same gray gran- ite forming the greater part of the ma- terial. Mr. J. B. Benedict, the well known architect who has used the picturesque type of houses which dot the high peaks in the Tyrol, built the home, but he has given a decidedly American touch to many of its details. In general outline this house of rock ts L-shaped, squared by a wide Gothic tower which looks on the massive een during Tyrolese travel. The clois. ter effect is also rather alien, but once within the wide, carved doors the do- main of Uncle Sam is proclaimed. A Uving room, nearly 50 feet long and about 20 wide, has one deep recess oc- cupied by a wide chimneyplece, where nearly all through the Summer the spicy pine logs crack merrily and a softened electric globe sheds a radi- ance closely resembling daylight through vellow stained glass. Mr. Mayo spends half the year in this lofty retreat, which looks down on the west on the peaks near Denver, with the winding roads plainly visible for hundreds of miles. As this is a mall air route, there are beacons burn- ing through the night, and other fas- cinating glimps of the world's affairs, which apparently lie so remote, are af- forded by the glant lighthouses erect- ed on Pikes Peak and Mt. Evans. So calm and remote is Mr. Mayo's place that it strongly resembles houses of religlous retreat which are so often seen in the Tyrolese Alps. Sir Robert Houston, who died within the past month at his residence near Lakewood, was among the COATS & SUITS No Approvals—ALL SALES FINAL—No Exchanges Grlebacher “Jeminine Apparel of Individuality TWELVETEN TWELVETWELVE F STREET HINGTON. mountain in the familiar pose of many.| D. C, JUNE 1 926—PART 2. Society at Metropolis Enjoys Important Events Score of Weddings, Racing and Horse Shows Vie With Other Large Affairs At New London, Newport and Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, June_ §5.—June was ushered in with a score of weddings of importance and with racing, horse shows and other sporting events. All of which will feature the social pro- gram for the next few weeks, until the annual Yale-Harvard boat races at New London, Conn., Friday, June 25. After this society scatters to the var ous resorts — Newport, Bar Harbo Southampton, the Jersey coast, North Shore of Massachusetts, the White Mountains, Adirondacks, Thou- sand Islands, while many go abroad. The Newport season is getting un- der way much earlier than in recent years, due chiefly to the visit of the Crown Prince and Princess of Sweden, ——————— many opulent Britons who forsook the homeland and established themselves in this country with a view of avold: ing the enormous property taxes of England and likewise of relleving his estate from the heavy death taxes. He left a fortune valued at mauy mil- lions of pounds sterling, most of which will go to pet charitles and a few political celebrities in Great Britian. He had been an intimate friend of Lord Blirkerhead, and this astute lawyer and formerly lord chancellor of the realm, at one time was a considerable legatee under the fons of Houston's will. But they quarreled some flve years ago and so the famous statesman, known for so long as plain Frederick E. Smith, was not mentioned in the will at all. Sir Robert had married the widow of the ninth Lord Byron and had no children. He was also known in yachting circles as the owner of that palatial craft on which the late Joseph E. Pulitzer made so many voy- ages after he had lost his sight, and which the Briton purchased some 10 years ago. Sir Robert Houston, a well known publicist and philanthropist, was famillarily spoken of as the “pirate king” because of his black beard and rollicking gait and because he was prone to run his vacht into the deep recesses about Cornwall, made renowned in all the world By “The Pirates of Penzance.” He re- ceived but scant attention from the British press because of his change of domicile, though his vast fortune returns to his former home. Senor Francisco ernaggi, renowed artist from Argentina, is having quité a vogue in London this Spring as member of the group of so-called rebel” artists, who, under the special patronage of King Alfonso of Spair, and_the prime minister, Gen. Primo de Rivera, are bringing their work to the attention of foreign purchasers. There are but five or six accepted painters in this group. and all but Bernaggl are subjects of the Spanish king. The Argentina artist has, how- ever, already received recognition through his admirable canvas “April Sunshine,” which was shown at the internation _exhibition in Buenos Alres in 1923, where it received the first prize and was immediately pur- chased by the representatives of the Los Angeles' flourishing young insti- tute of art. Another of this group of separaiist painters, as they call themselves, since they hayve broken with- all the traditions of the Catalan school so long dominant in Spain, is yvoung Luis Ferra, whose beautiful studio in Majorca is so often visited by Americans studying in France and Italy. The artist purchased the pic- turesque old monastery at Vallde. mose, famous in letters as the place where George Sand and Chopin, the renowned musician, spent their so- called honeymoon. The old «¢hapel where the musiclan composed his won- derful nocturne, has often been painted by Ferra, one painting re- cently going to the National Academy in Warsaw, for Chopin, it will be re- membered, was a Pole. Hyde Park. who are going there on June 16, when they will be entertained extensively. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Curtiss James Most of the members of the Summer colony will be there for the event. The Breakers, Mrs. Vanderbilt's villa, will be opened this Summer, and will be occupled by her son and daugh- | ter-in-law, Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Corne- lus Vanderbilt, and their daughter, Miss Grace Vanderbilt. Mrs. Vander- bilt, the mother, went abroad with her daughter, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, and her son-in-law and daughter, the Count and Countess Laszlo Szechenyl. She is going abroad to attend the un- velling ceremonies at St. Nazalre, France, of the heroi atue commem- orating the ninth anniversary of the landing of American troops in France. The statue, that of a doughboy on the back of an eagle, with arms out- stretched and sword uplifted, stands on a rock promontory in St. Nazaire Harbor. Mrs. Vanderbiit's sister-in-law, Mrs. Hamilton McK. Twombly, who has not been in Newport for several sea- sons, wili open Vineland, her villa there. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Wide- ner are to return this Summer, after an _absence of several seasons, and will be with their son-dn-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. B. Widener. Mrs. Widener Leidy, the for- mer Fifi Widener, will be with them. Mr. and Mrs. Williams Burden will be at Oakwood, where they are to have the first outdoor swimming pool erected. Willlam K. Vanderbilt, who has been traveling in the West, and his wife, who has been abroad but is re- turning soon, will be at Ackwood farm, the estate of his father, the late Al- fred G. Vanderbilt. His mother, Mrs. Paul Fitz Simons, is now in South America, but will return during the Summer. Mr. and Mrs. Franeis Saxham E. Drury, the latter the former Miss Mabel Gerry, who were married last Fall and who later went abroad, are to spend the coming Summer with her father, Commodore Elbridge T. Gerry, at Seaverge. Miss Angelica Gerry will also be with them. Mrs. George Gren- ville Merrill of Stockbridge, Mass., this week made preparations to open the Dresser cottage, which she will oc- cupy this Summer with her children, the Misses Natalle and Marjorie and George Grenville Merrill, Jr. Society was well represented at the Dall-Roosevelt wedding, took place today in St. James’ Church at Hyde Park, N. Y. Special cars were attached to trains from this city to accommodate the many friends of the voung couple among the smart set here. After the ceremony a large re- ception was held at Springwood, the Roosevelt estate in Hyde Park. Miss Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, the bride, is the daughter of former As- sistant Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The bride- groom, Curtis Bean Dall, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Austin Dall of this city. The church in which the ceremony was performed has been the ®cene of other marriages in the Roose- velt family. The officiating clergyman was the Rev. Dr. Endicott Peabody, headmaster of Groton School, Groton, Mass., who married the parents of the bride on March 17, 1908. The maid of honor was Miss Kath- erine 8. Douglas, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Walter Douglas. The other at- tendants were Mrs. Dave Hennion Morris, jr., who before her recent mar- riage was Miss Alice G. Agnew; Miss Helen Douglas Robinson, daughter of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Theodore Douglas Robinson: Miss Dorothy E. Wilmerding, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert F. Wilmer- ding: Miss Mary cholson, daugh- ter of M 3. J. Nicholson; SOCIETY. Bride of Last Week MRS. ROY M. PERRY, Formerly Miss Genevieve McMahon of 1013 K street northeast. Miss Mary Gaillard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willam Eyre G. Galllard, and Miss Martha M. Ferguson, daugh- ter of Mrs. John C. Greenway of St. Paul, Minn. The late marked by Spring season has been the announcement of a number of important engagements. Two which were announced recently were of particular interest to the smart set here. One is that of Miss Alice Bentley, the other is the be- throthal of Miss Catherine Howard Wilcox. Miss Bentley, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schuyler Bent- ley, of Pelham, will become the bride of Capt. William C. M'Mahon, U. 8. A. in September. She is one of the mo: popular members of the younger set. Capt. M'Mahon, who is a graduate of ‘West Point, served in France during the war and later took part in the American relief administration in Russia. He now is an instructor at West Point. Miss Wilcox is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philips Tyler Barbour, of this city and Darien, She is en- gaged to Arthur M'Kinne Stires, son of the bishop of Long Island, Right Rev. Ernest M. Stires of Garden City and Mrs. Stires. Both Miss Wilcox and Mr. Stires have ties of kindred with several of the most exclusive familles of New York. Besides her Southern and England ancestry, Miss Wilcox is re- lated to the Van Epps, is a cousin of Princess Pignatelli and a great grand- daughter of Gen. Ambrose Wright of Virginia. Mr. Stires {s the third son of Bishop and Mrs. Stires. Their oldest son, Mr. Ernest Stires, married Miss Louise Homer, nained for her mother the famous singer; the second son, Mr. Hardwick Stires, married Miss Ellen Greenough of Boston. The youngest son, Mr. Milmore Stires, is at Cornell. Mr. Arthur Stires was for two years in the consular service in London and is now connected with the office of Mr. J. E. R. Carpenter, architect. ey Miss Booth Recovering. NEW YORK, June 5 (#).—Miss Evangeline Booth, commander of the Salvation Army, undoubtedly will re- cover from the attack of appendicitis from which she has been suffering at her home, near White Plains, N. Y., her physician said yesterday. He said her condition had improved greatly. Banquet for Holton-Arms Alumnae Interesting Event Mrs. Jessie Monn Holton enter- tained at a banquet Thursday evening in celebration of the twenty-fifth rc unfon of the alumnae of the Holton Arms School. The long tables were tastefully decorated with an arrange- ment of Spring flowers in tall blue vases and yellow candles alternateiy An orchestra played during dinner, and little Jackie Rogerson, who re cently performed for the President and Mrs. Coolidge, sang several sonis * and danced thes Charleston: Miss Elizabeth Howry sang two Germar songs, and Mrs. Katherine McClintock Ellis played two selections on the piano, giving “Nocturne for the Lef! ind Alone,” by Scriabine, and “The by A. Copland introduced the toastmistress, Emily Van Lear, '3 and the toastmaster was Mr. Richard Lamb. Those who made speeches ‘were Mrs. Alice Bliss Massey, Dr. U. G. B. Pierce, Mr. William Ballantyne Mrs. Alice Chase Raine, Mr. John Vance, Miss Katharine Wylle, Miss Lightfoot Jordan, Miss Frederika Hodder, Miss Jean Darrah, Mrs. Hol ton, Miss Loulse de Lane and Miss Mary Earle Hoxton, chairman of the alumnae committee. At the close of the evening the alma mater was sung. ‘Those who attended the dinner were the teachers of the Holton-Arms School, Miss Frederika Hodder. Miss Elizabeth Ross, Miss Ethel Ronald son, Miss Frances Ronaldson, Miss lon, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Simon Mrs. Harvey; the honor girls of the senior class, '26, Miss Sara Worthing ton, Miss Katherine Wilkins, Miss Florence Stokely, Miss Jane McDill Miss Alice Davis, Miss Louise Spencer, Miss Frances Lee, Miss Anne Wood, Miss Mary Burton, Miss Ellen Peele; friends of the school, Mr and Mrs. Archibald R. Hoxton, Di and Mrs Louis 8. Greene, Mr. and Mrs. Stokely, Mrs. Bohlen, Mr. Sco. field, Dr. and Mrs. Barry, Mre. Jones Mr. Jullus Garfinckel, Mr. John Massie, Dr. and Mrs. Plerce, Mrs Massey and Mr. Willlam Ballantyn The alumnae who atended the ban quet with their husbande were M. and Mrs. John Vance, Capt. and Mrs Kellogg, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lamb. Mr. and Mrs. Wotherspoon, Mr. and Mre. Beiz, Mr. and Mrs. vidson, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis and Mr. and Mrs John Remy. The alumnae who were present were Miss Helen Coolidge Miss Jean Darrah, Miss Mary Earle Hoxton, Miss Katharine Wylie, Miss Margaret Wylie, Miss Elizabeth Simms, Miss Sally McAdoo., Miss Cecll Jones, Miss Anna_ Southard Larner, Miss Laura Bryn, Miss Helen Carusi, Miss Margaret Johnson, Miss Mulliken, Mrs. Valle, Mrs. Stanton. Mrs. Lowe, Mrs. Hazell, Miss Eveline Gleaves, Miss Helen Gregory. Mis« Gretchen, Miss Alice Rice, Miss Sara Chambers, Miss Mary Happer, Miss Florence Worthington, Miss Sallie Ovenshine, Miss Amy Meek, Miss Katherine Baker, Miss Ethel Whit ford, Miss Marion Macfarline, Miss Leah DeMoll. Miss Violet Whelan Mies Harriette Adkins, Miss Sydney Neale, Miss Maud Mason, Miss Dor othy Hill, Niss Violet Spencer. Miss Elizabeth _ Stiles, Miss Charlotte Childress, Miss Norvell Munford, Miss Mudeline Bryant, Miss Margaret Pat terson, Miss Janet Patterson, Miss Elizabeth Parsons. Miss Dorinda Bakenhus, Miss Loulse Haughry. Miss Margaret Bates, Miss Katherine Hunt, Miss Edith Phillips and Miss Elizabeth Howry. G. 0. P. RALLY TOMORROW Montgomery County Pre-Campaign Meeting to Be in Takoma Park. There will be a rally of Republican voters of Montgomery County. Md.. tomorrow night in the Presbyterian Community Hall, Takoma Park, pre. paratory to the coming campaign. It will be held under the auspices of tha newly formed Republican Voters’ (‘lul of Montgomery County, of which W ter P. Plumley of Takoma Park president. Addresses will be made by Repre sentative Zihlman of Maryland and Representative Smith of Idaho. T business meeting will be followed b a musical and entertainment. program. e e e The HOU!Q of Quality = bilipsborn ELEVENTH ST. 608 to 614 Send for us to send for your Furs | | | !fl Weve Assembled a Group of Exquisite Summer Frocks-- that we sl}a‘ll place on sale tomorrow—Monday— at a surprisingly low price— 525 Their clever designing reflects the taste which inspired and the skill which has executed. Plain and Printed Georgettes, Flat Crepes, Combinations of Lace and Georgettes Strikingly original in color and trimming effects. Froc Women's and Misses’ sizes s for Commencement Daintily designed Gowns—expressly for the graduation ceremonies—both for those who par- ticipate and those who are guests. Very wide variety—artistically plain or elab- orately distinctive. ‘lsz;o *45