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SOCIETY." SOCIETY Secretary of Agriculture Jardine to Be Judge at Benefit Flower Show at Southampton Thursday. HE Secretary of Agriculture, Mr. Jardine, will be one of the judges at the annual flower show in Agawam Park, Thursdey and Friday, given under the directicn of the South- ampton Horticultural Society for the henefit of the Southampton Fresh Air Home for crippled children. The Sec- retary, who has a cottage on the Shinnecock Hills, was expected to re- turn to Washington this morning, but his ‘plans have been changed, and he will probably not be back in Wash- ington until the latter part of August. The Minister of Lithuania, Mr. Kazys Bizauskas, will return to Wash- ington the middle of the week after a motor trip in Pennsylvania and New York. The Minister of Venezuela and Senora de Grisanti were the guests/ of honor at dinner Saturday evening at the Ritz-Cariton Hotel in Phila- delphia given by the Venezuelan dele- gation to the Sesquicentennial Expo- sitfon in Philadelphia. Others in the company were the counselor of the legation, Senor Dr. Francisco Gerardo Yanes; the attache, Senor Dr. Ovidio Perez; the four daughters of the Min- ister, Senorita Carmen Teresa Gris- anti, Senorita Maria Louisa Grisanti, Senorita Margarita Grisanti and Senorita Ana Teresa Grisanti; and his niece, Senorita Graciela Machado; Rear Adjiral Magruder of the Phila- delphia Navy Yard, Mr.and Mrs. A, L. Sutton and Mr. Joseph R. Wilson. ington, Mr, James Dwight, Mr. Fran- cis Shaw Moore and Mr. E. D, Hackett. Miss Helen Blackistone will leave Washington Friday for Reno, Nev., to visit Dr. and Mrs. Charles Wilson West, the latter formerly Miss Mar- guerite Simpson of Washington. Miss Blackistone will go to San Francisco and Los Angeles for visits before re- turning to Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Blackistone of New York, brother and sister-in-law of Miss Blackistone, are spending some time at Hot Springs, Va., after being with Miss Blackistone and her mother, Mrs. Marle D. Blackistone, in their apartment on Sixteenth street for a week or 10 days. Amen-Dell Marriage Yesterday in New %hmpshlre. The marriage yesterday afternoon of Mrs. Marion Cleveland Dell, daugh- ter of Mrs. Thomas J. Preston, jr., and the late former President Grover Cleveland, to Mr. John Harlan Amen of New York is of no little interest in ‘Washington. The ceremony was per- formed 1n _the Summer home of Prof. and Mrs. Preston at Tamworth, N. H., the Rev. Dr. Pardee Erdman of Princeton officiating. The bride was given in marriage by Prof. Preston, and was attended by her sister, Mrs. William S. B. Bosanquet of Gainsford, England. Mr. Richard Folsom Cleve- land, brother of the bride, was best man. nator and Mrs. Jones in kane on Way to Seattle. Senator and Mrs. Wesley Jones are spending a week at the Davenport Hotel in Spokane, Wash.. while en route from Washington to their home in Seattle. They will return to Wash- ington immediately after election. The second secretary of the Brit- ish embassy, Mr. J. Balfour, return- ed to Washington this morning after spending the week end at White Sul- phur Springs, W. Va. Senor Don vetano de Quesada. at- tache of the Cuban embassy, returned to Washington this morning after spending several weeks in Cuba. Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Samuel War- ren Miller and Maj. and Mrs. Chester Paddock Mills of Washington are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clive Livin- ston Duval at Cleveland, Stockbridge, Mass. Mrs. Jackson, wife of Capt. John P. Jackson, U. 8. N., was the guest of honor at tea yesterday afternoon of Miss Mary D. Brooks of New York, who entertained on the Casino lawn at Hot Springs, Va. Mrs. Theodore Rooseveit, jr., and her son, Theodore Roosevelt, 3d, are at the Hotel Champlain, Bluepoint, N. Y., to be near Col. Roosevelt during his stay at the Plattsburg training camp. Mrs. Charles Boughton Wood has as her guests in her Summer home at Simsbury, Conn., her nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Hokan B. Steffan- son and Mr. Stephen Bjornstrom, who went there from Newport, where they are spending the Summer. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Garrett sailed Saturday for Europe. They will spend several months traveling in England and on the continent. In Venice they will be the house guests of the Prin- cess de Polignac. Mrs. Willlam Corcoran Eustis and Miss Helen Eustis are at the Red Lion Inn, in the Berkshires, for a several weeks' stay. Mrs. Samuel A. Kimberly went to New™York last -evening to meet her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Forman, on their arrival there this morning from England. Mr. and Mrs. Forman went to South America last Winter and from there to South Africa, re- turning by way of Italy, Spain and England. Mrs. Kimberly will spend several days with them in New York before going to_Larchmont, N. Y., to visit Mr. and Mrs. Wesley L. Oler, brother-in-law and sister of the late Mr. Kimberly, in their home, Larch- mont Manor House. Mrs. Mahlon Pitney, wife of the late assoclate justice of the Supreme Couirt, has taken the Arthur Curtiss James Cottage at Tarrvtown, N. Y., for the Summer. Her son, Mr. Mahlon Pit- ney, is spending ek at Nantucket. i Mrs. Willlam F. Dennis has re- turned from her home in Kentucky. and is at Atlantic City for the re- mainder of the Summer. Mr. Dennis will join her there later in the season. Mrs. John Stewart McLennan and || her daughte Mildred Tytus and Miss Vietoria Tytus, motored to Hayes Pond. Otis, from their home Ashintully at T gham, Mass., yes- terday, and entertained at a picnic || supper in the woods for their house guests, Miss Margaret Eustis of Wash W' NDOW SHADE dow. Save money-—se- cure our estimates of factory prices. Arnes W0 Rt | 21 F St. N.W. Main 3213 for Estimates || | 'REDUCED RATES WILSON LINE’S WILMINGTON- FERRY ALL PASSENGER CARS (Except Busses) Including Driver Additional Passengers 10c Each SHORTEST AND BEST ROUTE TO ATLANTIC CITY 20-Minute Schedules from both Wilmlngm\ Terminal and ‘ennsgrove. ~ Follow the Ferry Markers PENNSGROVE | Mr. Amen is the son of the late Dr. Harlan Page Amen, for many years principal of the Phillips Exeter Acad- emy of Exeter, N. H., and is practic- ing law in New York, where he and his bride will make their future home. Mrs. Victor Cushman is chairman of the committee on arrangements for a series of putting teas which will be given Monday afternoons at the Kebo Valley Golf Club at Bar Harbor, Me. The first tea will be given this afternoon, when the hostesses will be Mrs. Harold A. Howard and Mrs. Louis Ketterlinus. Others on the committee with Mrs. Cushman are Mrs. Thomas A. Claytor and Mrs. Thomas Bell Sweeney of Washington. Patronesses for the teas include Mrs. Chester P. Barnett, Mrs. Gist Blair, Mrs. A, Davis Ireland, Mrs. Marshall Langhorne, Mrs. Loul Mr. Paul Bleyden will go to New York Thursday to sall for Europe Saturday -on the Leviathan for an extended trip with Mr. Charles Sessler, noted bibliophile of Philadel- phia. During his absence Mrs. RBley- den will make a series of visits in New England, Canada, Atlantic City and New York. They will return to Washington early in September. Mrs. Dorothy Shumate, daughter of Mrs. Charles B. Leet, of Wash- ington was married Saturday to Lieut. Wililam Lawrence Scott, United States Army Air Service. The wedding took place at noon in the chapel at the League Island Navy Yard, Philadelphia—Lieut. Scott being temporarily on duty in Philadelphia— and afterward there was an informal breakfast at the quarters of Lieut. W. W. Orr, U. 8. M. C, and Mrs. Orr for the small company of relatives and close friends who witnessed the ceremony. Chaplain McNair, U. S. N.. of the navy yard officlated. The bride was attended by her sister, Mrs. O. W. Shumate, as matron of honor and there were two bridesmaids, Mrs Orr and Mrs. Frank Getty of New York, the latter formerly Miss Maxine Davis — P e Tx‘-‘;’il‘n‘i”” wzl%k verything up- umxufleg—msonsble Cates— fl;mre and see what we have to offer. Furnished or Unfurnished By the Day, Month or Year AR MRS. CHAMP CLARK, in the girdle, and had on a big orange- tinted Neapolitan hat. Mrs, Leet, the bride's mother, went to -Philadelphia for the wedding, as did Lieut. Scott’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Scott, of Erie, Pa. And there were a number of guests from Washington. |, After a fortnight's honeymoon. Lieut. Scott and his bride will return to Philadelphia. He will be on duty at the Sesquicentennial until Decem- ber, when he will return to Washing- | ton for station at Bolling Field. Washingtonians Motoring Through Rural Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Tierney and son, who are motoring through Vir ginia, are now at the Natural’Bridge Hotel for a short time. Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr., is at the Ambassador, Atlantic City. He is accompanied by Maj. O'Brien of Washington. Miss Catherin this week at No her parents. Miss Ruth Terrett was in Richmond over the week-end. Terrett will.spend Beach, Md., with Mrs. Charles T. M. Cutcheon of “hevy Shop Here in Comfort! OUR spacious departments, cooling fans, and usual splendid ven- tilating system make it ' possible for you to shop here without dis- comfort, even during the torrid weather, Tuesday—The Second Day John G. |- Chase ‘s leaving for an extended visit to Mr. Cutcheon's sister, Mrs. Lewis Ramsdell of Manistee, Mich. Mr, and Mrs. Madison L. Hill were hosts at dinner Saturday night on the ‘Willard roof, at which time they had six guests. Mr. Herbert Friedenwald of the Benedict _and his sister, Mrs. B. F. Bel- mont of New York City, and Mrs. R. K. riedenwald's sister, and Mrs. R. K. DeBold of the Jefferson, Washington, have just left Rainier National Park( Washington, after a stop there of sev- eral days while an a western tour. MAY BRING WIVES TO U. S. Alien Professors’ and Ministers’ Families Are Excmpted. Alien college professors and minis- ters who entered the United States be- fore July 1, 1924, will have until July 1, 1927, to bring in their wives and un- married children under 18, without re- gard to the immigration quotas. An order to that effect was {ssued to- day by the Tmmigration Bureau. Paris SOCIETW TRAFFIC RULE OPPOSED. Hotel Owners Protest Making 17th Street One Way. A protest against the proposal of by the District Traffic Council as to the advisability of creating additional one way streets and extending the au. tomatic traffic light system. Atop the Earle 1 FASHION INSTITUTION Washington Trafic Director M. O. Eldridge to make Seventeenth street a one way thoroughfare between H street and Rhode Island avenue, was flled with the District Commissioners today by Baer & Schloz, building constructors and owners of the Blackstone Hotel, 1016 Seventeenth street. ‘The Commissloners plan to consider the objection in connection with rec- ommendations expected to be made F U R S “‘Sophia Why Worry Where to Go? P 3wanee-in-the. WE REMODEL AND STORE| B, e o bl famous songs, Extellent Work—Reasonable Prices | and personalities. *hone F. 6355 and Ask Us to Call m’ \ v Fu NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS | Benjamin Sh ), Prop. W18 12th St. N-W. e WWachington's own i A Extra Salespeople During Pre-Inventory Week! EXTRA salespeople will be on hand to serve you quickly and efficiently all this week, and mer- chandise will be arranged to facili- tate your selections. of Our NewYork, JULY PRE-INVENTORY SALES Is to Be Devoted Particularly to the Clearance of Women’s Smart Summer Frocks! J DANCING EVERY NITE ” ' il KATE SMITH ? Widow of the one-time Speaker, who is the guest of Mrs. George E. Poe while awalting the arrival here of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James Thomson, from North Carolina. of Washington. Sixteen of Lieut. Scott's brother officers of the air ser- | Hoyle, were also in uniform. vice, in their white uniforms, were The bride wore a gown of ecru lace in attendance. Mr. Scott and his best | over georgette, with touches of orange man, Lieut Frank Dodd of Fort HE superlative degree in quality, style and workmanship and the lowest prices of the season for merchandise of this type characterize this unprecedented clearance offering. Original cost prices of the merchandise have been left out of consideration in the repricing of these frocks, because we wish to clear away our Summer stocks quickly. Every Washington woman owes it to herself to come in and see these dresses Tuesday. We do not recall when we have seen so splendid an array of smart, dan'raile styles, so m:nyy Jurius GARFINCKEL& Co. WASHINGTON PARIS Our Sale of Furs Offers The Finest Collection of High-type Furs Ever on Sale at This Store UR values were never so extraordinary nor our furs so beautiful as in this sale. E have planned extensively with our . noted furriers, who have created elab- orate novelties as well as many smart mod- els at very moderate prices especially for us. F STREET CORNER OF 13™ chests stands screens chairs mahogany. Decorating Antiques In order to provide display space for new acquisitions —our present collection of Antique Furniture is offered at— an illustration. . . Six-drawer Highboy or Chest, of Empire design, in Rich and warm in color, and with particu- larly pleasing brasses. Formerly priced at $125.00. Now LINcMARTING .. 1215~1217 F Street - q.nd 1214 101218 G Street Department Du of Interior | highboys secretaires cabinets tables PRICE Floor lovely fabrics, such @ wide choice of the accepted Summer colors in a clearance sale group! 175 Lovely All-Occasion Frocks A GROUP of the current style favorites, devel- oped in printed crepes, flat crepes, crepe de chine and georgette. Many straight- line models in beautifully- tailored effects, plenty of two-plece frocks showing ingenious pleatings and novel collar and cuff de- tails. Many the smart jabot styles and plenty of tunics, as well as the popular coat frocks. Smart combinations. White. Beige and tan. Rose and navy. Sizes 36 to 44 49.50 to 69.50 35'00 Frocks 96 Charming Afternoon Frocks TH.E sheer crepes that are so fashionable at this moment, chiffon, flow- ered and plain crepe Roma, all these fig- ure prominently in this se- lected group of dresses that are guitable for day- time and informal teatime wear, Elaboration in thess models shows a wide di- versity, but there is excel- lent use of crvstal and bugle beadings, metal, filet and self-colored laces, rib bon, embroideries, appli- ques, hand embroideries and self-fabric trim. Long, short and sleeveless effects. Frost crepe and _friska models also_included. Powder Blue, Flesh, Sunni, Palmetto, White, Titian, Chartreuse, Nile, Navy and Black. Sizes 36 to 44 prices. Regularly 3.95 Regularly 4.95 Regularly 4.95 Were 6.95' college girl. Regularly 2.95 Broken sizes. 25.00 to 35.00 5_00 Frocks l ~ ATHLETIC UNION SUITS MILANESE STEP-INS ¢ faffeta, 13.00. Right, mush- crepe de chine 15.00. | 0 3.25 Athletic Union Saits, in flesh color, the most popular shade for this type of undergarment. -42. MILANESE UNION SUITS Sizes 36: 3.95 Full-cut and Reinforced Union Suits, also in flesh only. Par- ticularly desirable for the travel wardrobe. GLOVE SILK GOWNS Sizes 36-42. 395 . Gowns designed especially for smaller women are available in sizes 16 and 17 in this group. Dainty net or Irish lace trimmings and nile, orchid and sunni colors. GLOVE SILK PAJAMAS B.75 Lovely things for the Summer vacationist or the school and Rose and peach color. Sizes 15 and 16. 1.95 A new group of milanese step-ins added to (ho;e on sale Mon- day. Full-cut and reinforced side-opening models. Pastel colorings. 39.50 to 59.50 25 00 Frocks 200 Particularly Lovely Frocks T'ROCKS for street, after- 2 noon and evening wear, developed in satin, flat crepe, georgette crepe, which affords you unlimit- ed range in your selections and makes it possible for you to meet every whim of the mode at a very low oost. Both long and short sleeve models in this group % that many of these frocks can be worn even on more formal occasions and, of course, sleeveless evening and dance frocks that make exocellent use of the sheer fabrics with lace elaboration. White, Navy, Green, Red, Pink, Black. Smart, subtle combinations. Sizes 36 to 46. ; 69.50 to 89.50 45.00 Frocks 60 Decidedly Distinctive Frocks. - 'WERED chiffons, arepe Ellzabeth and crepe Roma, plain chiffons, lustrous satin, frost crepe, crepe de chine and taffeta comprise this fabric range and the models are un- usually distinctive, offering only in rare instances du- plications of any particular style. Drawn work, hand embrolderies, appliques, evelet and cut work treat- ments give these frocks the air of elegance and aristocracy that is usually found In very costly mer- chandise, and style treat ments are unusually charming. Summer colorings, white and navy. Sizes 36 to 44 Left. Georg- ette” frock, 25.00. Right. Georgette All in'.the Womer’s Frocks Shop—Second: Floor—Taesday! The Grey Shops Contribute Extraordinary Values in Much-Needed Lingerie—Tuesday Superior Quality Glove Silk REPRICED just in time to be of great interest to every woman. An opportunity like this does not come often. The wise woman will stock up now for Fall at these low 650 Silk Underthings TAKEN from regular stock and reduced for clearance, 'hxesd@y—cl_:emiscs, gowns and step-ins—at really worth-while price concessions and at a time when you could hardly have too many undergarments. 285 CREPE UNDERGARMENTS up of tailored and lace-trimmed, styles, in Formerly 3.95 An interesting exceptionally attractive models. Pastel colors in this group, but the size range is naturally broken in each particular style, 685 GOWNS AND CHEMISES These undergarments are developed in crepe de chine, georgette Formerly 7.50-8.50 and radium silk and are trimmed with dainty laces, embroideries and tuckings. Gowns use pleats effectively. Pastel colorings. 150 SILK Regularly z.ssgligps' 2'45 ), and tub silk slips in tailored-and lace-trimmed styles and in all the desirable Summer colorings. Deep shadow hems and self shoulder straps. 485 250 SILK SLIPS . Were 5.90 Radium silk, crepe de chine or crepe-back models, some tai- fored, others trimmed with cream val laces and appliqued nets. Deep shadow hems 100 SILK SLIPS 685 Formerly 8.50-10.00 Crepe-back satin.and crepe de chine slips, in tailored ‘and lacy styles., Black, navy, flesh, pea All in the New Grey Shops—Second Floor—Tuesday!