Evening Star Newspaper, October 11, 1926, Page 16

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v 5 3 - } ’ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON; D. O. MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1926. Stroudsburg, Pa., en route to Wash- ington. % Dr. and Mrs. Vernon Kellogg are among the notables arriving today in New York aboard the Belgenland. SOCIETY. 16 SOCIETY. the Holy Name at Birmingham, Mich., [ will visit his parents, Rear Admiral * and Miss Madeleine Couzens, daughter |and Mrs. George C. Remey, for few of Senator and Mrs. James Couzens, | day will be one of the bridesmaids. Mr. % " N 2 Dimancescd will be absent for several | M and «“"":“yl‘,(.:'q:‘v!f“i\::,.lrr:‘r'_”:;.i weeks, when he will rejoin his cousin, | 7o T+ ZEanulin Sehncider. veturned Mrs. Werner Lawton, Mr. and Mrs. C. Matthew Dick, Miss Delphine Heyl, Comdr. Lee and Mr. Gundry. Mrs. Tucker was before her marriage last year Miss Bessie McKeldin. “in their apartment in New York un- + Gettysburg. SOCIETY Gen. Dawes Heads Honorary Committee ™ for Sixth Annual \Y York on Armistice Day in New York. ICE PRESIDENT DAWES heads the honorary commit- tee for the sixth annual Victory ball to be held at the Waldorf-Astoria in New nber | red ne | World ice E s al Armi 0. Gen. Dawes ha #_keen interest in affecting the welfs War veterans. of the Other members of his ommittee are: Gen. John J. Pershing, Senator James W. Wadsworth, jr., «nd the Assistant Secretary of War, Mr. Hanford MacNider. Mnister of Finland In New York En Route to Capital. The Minister of Finland, Mr. Axel Teenard Astrom, is arriving in New York today aboard the Belgenland after having spent a vacation in Europe. He will come to Washington this evening or tomorrow. Allen T. guests at Representative and Mrs. Treadway have as their their home The Elms, Mass., Mr. and A Schoonmuaker of N and Mrs. Melvin Boston. The charge d'affaires of Belgium, Mr. Raoul Tilmont, entertained at luncheon yesterday at the Wardman Park Hotel for the members of the Pro-Arte Quartet, from Belgium, who | have been appearing on the program at the music festival in the chamber music auditorfum of the Library of Congress. The military attache of the French embassy, Gen. George A. L. Dumont, 18 holding a small informal reception at Wardman Park Hotel today in honor of his assistant, Maj. 1. Lom- | bard, who has just been promoted | from the rank of captain. His guests included the members of the French embassey staff and a number of offi- cers of the United States Army. Gen. Dumont was host to a smi company at dinner last evening. Mr. Geoffrey H. Thompson, secretary of the British embas: Mrs. Thompson, will arrive in Was ington about October 15, and will be located at the Fairfax, Massachusetts avenue at Twenty-first street north- west Willlam H. w York, and Mr. M. Johnson of Former Ambassador of Spain and Senora de Riano, who have been guests for some time of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Gould Jennings at Bell Aire, Newport, are en route to Washington. Mrs. Jack Hayes entertained a com- pany of 26 at breakfast yesterday in compliment to Mrs. Victor Kauffmann. Mr. and Mrs. John Crayke Simp- <on have with them as a guest in their apartment at 2636 Sixteenth street northwe: Robert M Stuart of Const Mich. Miss Margaret Sutherland, daugh- a: zuest Miss Betty Burkam of Dayton, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Paul E thelr daughter, Miss Johnson, have closed the Blue Ridge Summit, Pa. thelr home on Sixteenth str rest of the Autumn and Winter. Mr. and Mrs. Parker Defer Coming to Washington. Mr. and Mrs. John Scott Parker of 62 Gramercy Park, North N. Y., who vecently purchased a residence at the | corner of Connecticut avenue and Kirke street, in Chevy Chase, have de- cided not to open their house until later in the Winter, and will remain til after Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. George Ellery Crosby have left their home at Stony Windsor, Conn.. for Detroit, and are making the trip by motor. They reached Buffalo, N. Y nd will spend severa £oing to Toledo, Ohio, anc Detroit. They will return to Stony ofore November 1. Mr. and Mrs. he latter formerly Miss of this eity, Wushington Sep- rdon Stewart in - married tember 1. Mr. and Mrs. James Brown Scott, who have been abroad for some time, will arrive today in New York on the Belgenland. Maj. Gen. and Mrs, Harry A. Smith, who returned from Europe on the Rot- terdam, are at the Hotel Astor in New York before coming to their home in Washington. Mrs. Frank Anthony Mrs. Harry Anthony and daughter are at the Willard Hotel, having motored from their home, at Marshmont, N. Y. coming by way of Philadelphis Mr. and Mrs. Alfred An- entertained at dinner last eve- in their honor and Mr. and tho) ning The marriage of Miss Minerva M. Grimes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mordecai Grimes, to Mr. Clinton M. Rollins, son of M nd Mrs. Eugene Rolli will take place t ening at 8 ¢ at the home of the bride- 1104 E street southeast, Rev. f the Second Baptist 1o groom, Sllis C. Primm ¢*hurch officiati; __A reception_wili follow immediately Stockbridge, | Victory Ball on after the ceremony, after which Mr. Rollins and his bride will leave for a wedding trip. Mr. and M Plerce Riddle and their baby daughter are visiting rela- tives in Sparta, Ga. From there they will go to Fort Benning to visit Mrs. Riddle’s brother-in-law and sister, Capt. and Mrs. Llewellyn de Walle Tharp, who are stationed there. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Whitwell left yesterday for Atlantic City and will be at Haddon Hall for the remain- der of the week. Mrs. William R. Simpson has re- turned from a visit to her daughter in the West, and she also visited friends in Chicago and Pittsburgh. The marriage of Miss Martha Kath- erin Gibson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Gibson, and Mr. Wellington Miller of Pasadena, Calif., took 1 4:80 o'clock, Saturday after- noon, at Christ Church, Fourteenth and Meridian_streets northwest, the John Allen, Hudson officiating. Mr. Miller had as best man Mr. John Paul Gibson, brother of the bride, and Miss Ruth Jarvis attended her as maid of honor. Two flower girls were in the wedding party, Martha Bingham |- and Sarah Ruth Mohun The bride was given away by her father, and wore ivory white taffeta fashioned with a long waist bodice, with long lace sleeves and bertha, and the skirt made very full. Her hat of lace had a crown of taffeta, a large white rose showing at one si of the wide brim. She carried white rose- buds and lilies of the val Miss Jarvis wore a costume of blue taffeta, with a hat in the same mate- rial, and carried pink roses. The tlower girls were dressed, one in orchid and the other in yellow, and they carried lilies of the valley and roses. When Mr. and Mrs. Miller left for their trip to the Pacific Coast she wore a costume of blue velour for the coat and crepe Romaine for the dress, and a hat of tan to match the coat collar. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Harris will ar- rive in Washington some time this s e MISS BEATRICE McLEAN, Whose engagement to Lieut. Charles Godwin Moore, jr., is announced by Capt. and Mrs. Ridley McLean, the wedding to take place in November. Capt. and Mrs. Ridley McLean an- | nounce the engagement of the lat- ter's daughter, Miss Beatrice McLean. to Lieut. Charles Godwin Moore, jr.. son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Godwin Moore of Littleton, N. C..The wed- ding will take place about November 4. Mrs. Minnigerode Andrews will be at home tomorrow afternoon at & o'clock in her studio on Sixteenth street in honor of the Jefferson, Mad- ison and Monroe descendants who are returning to Monticello and are giv- ing certain valuable heirlooms which relate to the three Presidents, Jeffer: e b b +| The attache of the Rumanian lega- tion, Mr. D, dem Dimancesco, is leav- Mrs. C. C. Calhoun has visiting her |ing Washington this evening for De- troit, where he will attend the mar- riage of Miss Eleanor Mack, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mack, to Mr. James Torrance McMahon. The wed- ding will take place in the Chapel of [ FURS Why Worry Where to Go? o che ||| WE REMODEL AND STORE She has just come | ork—Reasonable Prices her daughter, Mrs. Peter Arthur Drury, jr., and her two children. The former Assistant Attorney Gen. eral and Mrs. A. Mitchell Palmer had as guests in their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel over the week | 1 end Mr. and Mrs. Franklin T. Mal lory of New York. Mrs. Mallory the former Molla Bjursted, who thi year regained her former woman tennis champion United States. FExcellent W from Hot Springs, where she again ||| Phone F. 0355‘.-;-.-: Qe usite Call for defeated Miss Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. (|} Palmer have just returned trom o ||| NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS . Benjamin_ Sherman. Prop. month's motor tour through the Ad 618 12th St. rondacks, Canada and Maine, spend- | ing a few weeks at their home in BHHL. RS SES ontWait for Your Feet to Hurt~ Don’t wait for your feet to hurt—or to break down and sentence you to years of suffering. Prevent this by choosing Arch Support Shoes now. Give your feet the support and freedom that they need. Made in Vici Kid, Patent week and will be at the Carlton Hotel until they leave for New York, to sail for Europe on October 23. Mrs. Harris w before her marriage on October 1, M Elizabeth Sutherland, daughter of the alien property custodian and Mrs. Howard Sutherland. Mr. and Mrs. Howard N. Tucker, jr., entertained at a dinner at the Dancing Every Nite | All of Us We all like to dance— we all like fun and It's snappy music. only natural that we like Swanee so much. Swanee | 9 o @ Syncopators Al Kamons, | dirvecting | i FLaRL ‘ || Step Out 13th || Tonite! and E Sts. Il il I i | ty 1 e ‘Ix‘l‘}‘”‘:“l T ! i oot | ” | cariton Hotel last evening, when their guests were Comdr. and Mrs. Glassford, GRELEEELOONT ,m[mv\l . that sick friend a basket of Autumn Flowers 1212 F St. N.W. Main 4278 W Irs. Mar: }uui’M WASHINGTON'S LEADING FLORIST “Say It With Flowers Say It With Ours!” P.s. Flowers Send BROS. GUDE & Three Stores for Your Comvenience 1102 Conn. 3103 14th St. N.W. Col. 3103 -'““‘JN[!!m‘l!lll-l\“‘\“ T \n i nlt”ln‘ Uil Interior Decorating Co. Has Moved to 818 17th St. Between H and | Experienced Decorators Fine Workmanship Efficient Service Best Ma Is at Reasonable Prices E Julius Lansburgh, President will be glad to greet you at the new place. Special prices for your home decorations for 10 days. This davenport is avail- able in numerous covers, in jacquard velours (new cut designs). If it pleases you to have the davenport in plain denim or your own cover. I ‘“HII"" 1} £150 €110 - DULINeMARTIN G2 1213~1217 ¥ Street - and 1214 101218 G Street. Hours: 8:45 to 5:30. BT i “.l"‘ g ij gull[l'm\u” Cushions in white down are available in this davenport for an additional charge of Accompany chairs in club and wing types cov- ered in mohair at....., Exnicios, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Van Devau {r. and Mrs. Stanley Carr, hester Snow and Decorations for the Autumn Wedding! Ave. Main 1102 Members of Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association 18 Smart and pleasing design— custom tailored . . . . . fine construction . . . . comfort —this Davenport in Mohair, $175 525 537.50 ——— . Colt, Tan Kid and Satin. Sizes 2% to 10, widths AAA to Ir. and < Extra Wide Models for Stout Women ARCH SUPPORT SHOES 726 SEVENTH STREET N.W. Featuring Washington’s First Exclusive Shoe Bargain Basement Z ’ A FASHION INSTITUTION “Waskengton Newlsh Tuesday—another great day in the Millinery Shop 300 New Trimmed Hats i O.oo The Smartest Modes of the Season Replicas of Stunning French Models Originals Designed by the Best American Milliners 3 o TRUL\' an unprecedented value-giving event, as those who came here Monday have already discovered. An important collection of distinctive individual hats for every occasion, for every type woman or miss, and to 1 complement every costume—presenting many features of interest to the women who recognize style and value. Every hat in this group was selected to conform with the smartest style dictates of the season and the Jelleff’s | standard of superior quality. Your hat is certainly here. Come in and see for yourself. ! Black satin hats in ingenious treatments. Metal elaborations. Lovely draped velvets. Lustrous tailored velours. The Agnes beret in new treatments. High crowns—cut brims. Fascinating trimming details. All Misses’ Sizes and Large Head Sizes i 22-24 inches! Mr. Wardman Park Hotel. i ‘Washington for Newport, where he! Millinery Shop—Street Floor Constantin Danlelopol, at lh(““oreng:lrm. — tss_Selma Munter Horchardt wi Mr. Charles Mason Remey has left | —>1i88_Selma Munter Horchardt w (Continued on Séventeenth Page ) JuLius GARFINCKEL& Co. WASHINGTON PARIS ‘ Many New Goods Have Just Reached Us Fashions of Individual Smartness for Women and Misses YOU will find a wide selection of fas- cinating new outfits for sports, street, traveling and dress wear here Now. TROM the many beautiful models of v important foreign and American de- signers, we choose those fashions that were so different and unusually smart. Dresses Hats Furs Sports Apparel Imported Accessories Coats F STReET CoRNER OF 13™ jdk%s A FASHION INSTITUTION Wash Naw! 9 %mdlz'nm INSTEAD OF gowmlz'ly HERE is a respectful atmo- sphere of informality to be noted in the conduct of this store. Though you will note the attention is prompt and efficient, you will be favorably impressed with the geni- ality of the sales force. Nothing is 3 too much trouble—your wishes are everything. We try and make your visit here one of pleasure—a trip to be enjoyed—not a duty to perform. And to this end we discard formal- ity in favor of respectful friendliness. JELLEFF'S—F Street. elleff s | A FASHION INSTITUTION Darw Waskington Newlord THis IS THE NEW FROCK MADEMOISELLE «#// CHOOSE for AFTERNOON, TEA o MATINEE RICH in its simpli- city it attains the note of chic and ele- gance Chanel inten- ded. Made of Frost Crepe set off with brilliant and pearl studded collar, poc- kets, and cuffs. $49.50 Other “Reproductions of PARIS ORIGINAL DAYTIME MODES 1394 to $110 Misses’ GOwN SALON— Tbird Floor

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