Evening Star Newspaper, October 17, 1926, Page 64

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Society Folk B “ SOCIETY. e ackin City Reopening Their Homes House Guests Entertained—DBrief Visits to Other Cities Schedule&—ceneri} afld persoflal . Notes of Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hummnnd" 8nd their daughter, Miss Natalie Hammond. have closed their Summer home at Gloucester, Mass., and are Rgain in their house on Kalorama | road | Col. Edward Clifford went to New York Friday to meet Mrs. Clifford and their daughter. Miss Helen Clifford, o their arrival aboard the S. S. Pres fdent Harding, after spending the Summer in Europe. They stopped in | Princeton en route from New York and attended the Princeton-Navy game, his son. Mr. Lambert Clifford, being | a junior at Princeton | Col. and Mrs. Clifford and Miss Clifford, the latter debutante, reached Washington last evening from New YVork | Comdr. and Mrs. Charles Jonas | Leng sailed October 16 for an inde- pendent world's cruise. They are vis. itigg several countries of the southern hemisphere. olfe E. Bolling have | at the Wardman Park | latter's niece, Miss Anne| Stuart of Abingdon, Va. Miss | will go Wednesday to West- Stuart minster, Md., where she will be maid of honor at the wedding of Miss Mabel Weant and Mr. Walter Dana Rudy Wedresday, October 27. She will then | apend several weeks in Washington before going to New York for the Winter. Mre. Marshall Field has returned to Washington and is again in her home on Sirteenth street Mrs. W. Harry Brown, who was ex- pected in Waspington Friday, will re- Jnain in her Pittsburgh home unttl early this week Mrs. Larz Anderson is spending a &hort time in New York and will later jnin Mr. Anderson in their home at Brookline, Mass. Mrs. William Barton Eddison of Ardsley-on-the-Hudson, N. is at the Wardman Park Hotel for an ex- tended stay, coming to Washington to visit Ma nd Mrs. Clifford Lee Cor- bin. who are at the W man Park for the Autumn. Mrs. 1 home on s Ireland is again in her ixteenth street and will he Joined frequently through the Winter by er daughter, Miss Louise Ireland, is continuing her studies at Co- 1 University in New York. Volney 0. Cl as on Saturda children to join Lieut. in the Orient rk will leave with her two | Clark, U. sailir vember from 17. San Lowe Harriman, who is some time in Atlantic City, n Mrs. Harriman dn their apartment at the Wardman Park Ho- tel shortly. My, 3 N Renjamin Royall » left Washington Thursday nia. where the former will t San Diego. Lieut. Hol- and he o eombe has been an aide at the White | duty House irriage to Mrs. Hol. comhe ) Margaret Fahne- stock tonk place in Newport last Summer Lieut. and Mrs. Hol- rombe have closed their house on Massachusetts avenue. | ind Mrs Columbus_Healy o | o have taken ane of the resi- | dential suites at the Wardman Park | Hotel for the Winter. They have hem their small son, Edward William Sherman Walker of Wash,, has taken a residential a wnt at the Roosevelt tel. Mrs. Walker is organizing general of the D. A. R. national soclety. Eleanor Davies will return to- w from Asheville, N. C., where is heen visiting Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Patton Chesborough, parents of Miss Davies' fiance. Mr. T. P. Ches. | borough, jr. Miss Davies and M Chesborough will he married in Wash- ington November 11 v and Mre. George H. Brown of | Pittsburgh, have returned to their | apartment” in the Roosevelt Hotel. | after spending the Summer in Georgla and Maine | NMrs. George Joerns has returned | from a visit to her mother, Mrs. Gat tis, in Raleigh, I Mrs. Geoffrey is spending a | atives in Washing re starting for her home in ! nia. * She was the guest of Mr. | wand \Mrs. Frederick R._Robinson in ‘thelr home, Fall Hill, near Fredericks- burg. Va . for several weeks and will stop in Chicago to visit her aunt, Mr 0, B. Ta hefore going to San Fran- Flsco. Rowland of Waterbury 1 d to Washin, at the Wardman Park Ho- H. A. Meeks. Howard has visiting her nfece. Miss daughter of Mr. Tuckerman ~ of Herhert he Winter. kerman Wolcott Mrs and Santa Parbara and Mrs. John W. Belt and | their small son have returned to their home, 3009 O street for the Autumn and Winter seasons. Mr. Mrs. Charles Morgan, accompanied by Miss E. S. Fennessy and Mrs. E. M. Stadler of Scarsdale, N. Y., are at the Car 5 . daughter_of | Miss 113 at | daughter of Mr. Interest. Mrs. Lee Petit Warren, will'go to St. Louls, Mo., the latter part of the month for a visit with her grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Festus J. Wade Scullin was a debutante in Washing: ton last Winter. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Creed C. Ham- mond are ing@gheir new home at 1016 Sixteenth stréet, having just returned from a 10 visit in Philadelphia, Trenton and New York. Mrs. Ham- mond spent the Summer in Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte will arrive this afternoon from Hot Springs. and will be at the Carlton Hotel for an indefinite stay. Mrs. Loulse H. Levy, has returned after spending a short time in At- lantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Graff of 1424 Perry place have gone to New York for an extended stay. Mr. and_Mrs. Otto Wolf have re- turned to Washington after spending three weeks at Atlantic City. Many Capital Debutantes Listed for Special Honors (Continued from Fifth Page.) Mason, who will be presented at a tea Decémber 31, and Miss Francesca Stewart, daughter of Mrs. Lewlis Stewart. Miss Stewart and her mother have taken an apartment at 1213 Seventeenth street. No date has been set for her formal party. She was entertained at luncheon yester- day by Mrs. Robert Hinckley. Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Thomas Q. Ash- burn will entertain at a tea November Washington Barracks, when they will present their nlece, Miss Muriel Bliss. to society. Miss Bliss will come to Washington November 12 from her home in Boston. She is the daughter of Mr. Elmer Jared Bliss. December 30 a large dance will be given at Rauscher’s in compliment to Miss Bliss. Mrs. Nathaniel R. Dial, wife of former Senator Dial. will entertain at luncheon November 16 for her debutante daughter. Miss Fannie Dial, when the guests will be the buds of the season. Mrs. Copley Amory will be hostess luncheon November 23 for her daughter, Miss Katherine at debutante Amory. Judge and_Mrs. Charles Kerr will give a tea December 8, when they will introduce their daughter, Miss Margaret H. Kerr, to society. Elizabeth Fries, debutante @t Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Amos A. Fries, will have as her guests for a few days this week Lieut. and Mrs, Donald C. Hill, who will atiend the Soujourners’ dance with her Saturday evening at the Marine Barracks. Mrs. J. W. Joyes, wife of Brig. Gen. Joves, and her debutante daughter. Miss Georgiana Joyes, are spending the week-end at West Point. Mrs. David H. Blair, wife of the commissioner of internal revenue, will entertain the debutantes of the season for her daughter, Miss Ade- laide Douglass, November 20. Mise Dorothea Richards, daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Theodore Richards, United States Navy, who will be pre- sented at a tea dance December 18, at Rauscher's, has as her guest for few days Mrs. Stockton Reeves, wite of Ensign Reeves, who is en route to Paris Island. Mrs. George Leonard Smith, wife of Lieut. Comdr. Smith, will be hostess at luncheon November 18, when she will entertain the buds of the season for her daughter, Miss Eleanor Bryan Smith, Miss Smith will make her debut #t a tea dance at Rauscher's De- cember cisting her of New York, M of Philadelphla and Miss Young of New Hampshir be her hnn!t(uosm for seve T Har Whitford, and Mrs. Langdon Whitford, and Miss Geor- glana Joves. daughter of Rrig. Gen. and Mre. 1. W. Joves. will share hon- ors at a luncheon November be given by Mrs. Townsend Whelen, when the company will include the debutantes of the season Mrs. Whitford will entertain at luncheon December 2 for her de- butante daughter. 15, when she will have as- Miss Marjorie Buchanan Josephine Mustin Rebecca Stearns Mins A number of parties have been planned for Miss Elizabeth Gore, daughter of Tapt. and Mrs. Albert J. Gore. Mre. Edward Graves will be hostess at luncheon for her December 10, have when she will of w Velour, Felt and Velvet Hats Cleaned and Reblocked Velvet and Satin hats steamed and recovered on New Style Frames. Complete stock of frames —trimmings and mater- ials, reflecting the sea- son’s latest ieas in milli- nery. Ladies’ Capital Hat Shop 508 11th St. Main 8322 = & Your “Smart Furs at George | You will agree with hundreds there is distinc- |/ tion 1in our || some discriminate AND ALL find their particular i preference displayed in EANE i1 BACHER'S £ CREATIONS. 4 A Small Deposit Will Reserve anet & Bacher 1111 F Street ! mong the guests the debutantes of | the season. The guests will be seated at two tables, one for the buds and another for several close friends of Mrs. Graves. . Mrs. R. Winston Holt will be hostess at luncheon December 15 for Miss Gore. Mrs. John J. Hamilton will enfer- tain at luncheon November 3 for |her debutante daughter, Miss Nancy Hamilton. in compliment to Miss XHarrlel Huntress, a sister bud. Miss Allison Roebling, daughter of | Mrs. Arthur O'Brien, will be the honor guest at luncheon, November 2, of Mrs. Richard C. Marshall, wite of Maj. Gen. Marshall. § Miss Betty Ridsdale, debutante daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Percival Ridsdate, will return to Washington tomorrow from Princeton, where she | went to attend the Navy-Princeton foot ball game. Col. and Mrs. Edward Clifford will present their daughter, Miss Helen Clifford. to society at a tea Saturday, November 27. Miss Harriet' Huntress, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Huntress, who have come to Washington from Bos- ton to spend the Winter, will be among the season's debutantes. Mr. and Mrs. Huntress have many friends in Washington, where Mrs. Huntress made her debut, as Miss Gertrude Brown, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Sevellon Brown of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Huntress will ask a number of their old friends to their home, 2024 Hillyer place, for tea, when they will- introduce their daughter. Mrs. Huntress will entertain at luncheon, November 17, for her daughtér, when the guests will be the buds of the season. g Miss Helen Gatley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Prescott Gatley, who will make her debut this season, will be the honor guest at a luncheon to be given by Mrs. Arlon Z. Cush- man, December 9. . 2y Mr. Vincent Massey, Canadian Minister, Coming Next Month inued from Fifth Page.) kenzie King. He had previously been in the lower chamber of Legislature, representing Durham, in Ontario. Mr. and Mrs. Massey are ofggreat | social interest in that they both Welong to old and well established families of Toronto and London as well as being | endowed with worldly possessions. The future Minister's mother was Miss Anrie Vincent of Ottawa. The junior Mrs. Massey was Miss Alice Stuart Parkin, daughter of the late Sir George Parkin, a distinguished statesman of the conservative school of English politics and for some years | the secretary of the Rhodes Scholar- ship Fund. "The marriage took place in the Parkin home in London the Spring of 1915, and they have two sons, Lionel, 10 years old, and Hart, who is 8. Mr. and Mrs. Massey have one of the finest estates near Toronto, known as Batterwood Hall, and they have a wide acquaintance among Americans, many of whom are in business in the larger cities of Ontarlo, and are among those who maintain Summer homes in the*various resorts along the St Lawrence. They also have a handsome home in Ottawa and have been active in all the social affairs of the capital The coming of Mr. and Mrs. Massey | is of deep political import and is most advantageous in other ways. Both are keenly interested in the theater and devote much time to the improve- ment of the drama, especially where it relates to what {8 produced in the | playhouse at Hart Hall. a_splendid architectural group deemed one of the finest collegiate clubs in all of Canada. and which was the gift of his family to the University of Toronto. | The theater 1s as large as those run in the commercial sense, and the most accomplished of professionals tread its boards. Mrs. Massey takes an active interest in all that relates to the plays and the players, and, with her husband, she will give much thought during the coming season to effecting an interchange between Ca- nadian and American playwrights. Both have attempted acting them. selves, the Minister-designate showing particular talent. This is a family inheritance, as Mr. Massey's vounger brother, Raymond Massey, was a suc- cessful actor in London for some yvears and is now one of its most capable and successful producers and theater owners. | Another talent of this versatile en. | voy is architecture. He studied this | branch of the fine arts hoth in his | Canadian alma mater, St. Andrew's and at the University of Toronto and at Baliol College, Oxford, where he | took his degree in 1918. He drew the | plans for Simcoe Hall and worked on | the plans of the other two Collegiate | establishments, Burwash and Hart Halls, which the City of Toronto owes | to the generosity of the Massey family | During the World War Mr. Massey was In command of a school of mus- ketry, and he obtained the vank of colonel in 1916. Later he took over the secretariat of the war commlittees in Ottawa. A close personal friend of the Libetal premler, Mr. Mackenzie King, Mr. Massey has followed the for. tunes of his chief. leaving public when the King ministry was ret and returning to the call of his party Washington omen that MISS ADELE BLAINE MALLAN, Daughter of Mrs. Thomas F. Mallan and the late Dr. Mallan, who announces her engagement to Mr. Walter Henry Free of New York and Davenport, Towa. matic post the Canadiaf government |a has created. speculation as to the status of the Minister from the Dominion and whether he will maintain a closer re- lationship to the British embassy than have the envoys of other countries which are suzerain to Great Britain— the Irish Free State and the Egyp- tian kingdom. The government at Ot- tawa has been ably represented in Washington for the past five years by Mr. Merchant Mahoney, who has been the commissioner of external affairs and has fulfilled all the duties of a diplomatic official. Mf. and Mrs. Me:- chant Mahoney have been part of the social circle of the British embassy and have made scores of friends du ing their residence in Washington. Al- though ro official announcement has | been made, it is considered probable that Mr. Mahoney will give the new Minister the benefit of his knowledge of local affairs and will be a member of his staff as counselor of legation. Mr. and Mrs. Massey belong to mafy clubs in On the Toronto Country, Monday: TWELVE 3 ck cconomy while others to quality- § omen e seck style, as NET 1926-27 FUR Selection Moderate Prices™ XXX & XXX 020203 [ SLIE0E0RE L It Tastes Different. _ 18th and Columbia Road The High Grade THIRTEE! to accept the most important diplo- | the York Athletic, the Circle of Arts nd Lettel , and Mr. M to the University Club of 1 It is a subject of much interested jand to the Seville of London. "AIGLON to Order for Pianos Sold Direct from the Faetory We Invite you to Vi Warerooms 1340 G St. J. C. CONLIFF, : A New Showing * FUR-TRIMMED ~ Coars of a smartness truly exceptional + HESE newest of the new were chosen, painstakingly. That they so well embody the most . authentic modishness, and the truest beauty, is our reward. And yours, too, madame. fur coats. fiYou'll find a fur coat exactly to your taste, at Sal(s., and at Less than You Expected to pay. =" Your inspection is invited. SaKsFurCo. IN_ THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC FOR OVER THIRTY-EIGHT YEARS ‘ 610 Twe'fth St.—Just Above F—Phone Main 1647 § ! Your Dinner Cooked Meal Tickets Issued. Established 1842 assev belongs ew York GRILL Sc Isit Our N.W. ) Mgr. RO RO R DR SR A RO Individuality 1s Impressively ‘ Expressed in Saks Fur Co. COATS of Quality and Style flMorcover. they are juat as reasonably priced as ordinary < of th its el {will tober First Students Will Be Accep roliment for Credit Work Up Homer the enrolfnent the past few vears and that students be accepted for enrollment credit work up to and including Oc- The faculty Councilor, cation, Calva: Duffield, D. education of th “Y” RELIGIOUS SCHOOL HAS GOOD ATTENDANCE ted for En- | Tillery to October 25. The School of Religious Education is now beginning meeting being held Monday night at Calvary | Baptist Sunday school house. announces that that e Y. M. C. ighth year, A. the first J._Councilor is equal 25 director of Reformed Church: D. to 1s composed of Mr. religious edu- | Baptist Church, dean: | Rev. James D. Buhrer, T‘hRD. pastor | ev. director of religious | ological treasures. Washington Presby tery; Rev. George S. Duncan. Ph. D..| of St. Sophi professor of Egyptology. Ass ‘ SOCIETY. | religious | Rev. H. | Mark: work director, Y. M. D. Hayes. D. D.. pastor Lutheran Church: Mrs, | Renshaw B. | teacher Pen State ‘and George Washington Universi Lillian A. Shewmaker, A. M., cri :fifhel’. ‘Wilson Normal School: huilding of Solomon’s Temple, Judge J. W school is co-educational An open forum on ligious Problems” /Central Y. M. C. A. opened last Dean at Ham tary. | under for 35 vears of age and will ntil 7:45 on Wednesday evenings. The government has appropria 00.000 to repair Turkey’ J.+R.| A large part rriology | ago. Any $5, $7.50, $8.75 and $10 HAT in the House! Satins, Felts, Crochets, Metallics, Genuine Velours, 3 "DURRELL 1227 G Street held during the Winter from 7 o'cloc arch CHOICE = HOUSE! 7| ST. MARK’S MEN’S cLuB | HAS ANNUAL ELECTION | D. W. Gall Renamed President of ty: | the | w College Organization—Rector Attends Parish Meeting. The Men's Club of §t. Mark's parish H. Smith, B. D., authority on the nd | Thompson, LL. B. The! met at the parish hall, Third and A | streets southeast, Thursday night. Tha fodern Re-| meeting was called 1o order by the the ‘president and was opened with p Wednesda: P D prayar of | evening under the leadership of Wil- Knowles Cooper. general secre- The forum 1s for voung men | w. by Rev. rector. Officers were elected as follows Gall, John 1. Rrow 1 Estabrook, y-treasurer; R. ‘H. Beatt Frank Goodman and R. €, | Henry were elected members of the | executive committee or hoard of gov. ted ; ernors. e- | Talks were made by Henry T. Rlair, of | treasurer of the parish: David M. Leay William Henry FPettus, the b : Hull T, this sum will be devoted to the Mosque | chairman of the buflding committea, built nearly 2,000 years iand Rev. Mr. Masker, tant to the rector. former ass 95 Late Falland Early Winter Wear —PRICED TO LEAD I When we say “Priced to Lead in Val- ue” we mean every hat has been marked at a price that is Tower than offered elsewhere to conform with the Guilford pol- icy of giving Better Millinery Values. These are not Hats purchased for flash sale purposes, but clean, new stylish millinery which should he marked at much higher prices than Offering New Hats for ; —Brocades 1,500 ing the which we offer them to you. CUT HERE MONDAY, OCT. 18, 1926 O THIS COUPON IS WORTH Buy Any- Hat Marked $2.90 to $5 or More Present this coupon and re- ceive an additional reduction of ONE DOLLAR. 804 7th St. N.W. (7th Above I) —Satins—Velvets— —Felts—Velours— Fashion. and small hats—Beret $ VALUE— | —\Metals— Brand-new Hats, show- newest whims of Dame There are large hats s, Tams, | Pokes, Tur- bans—in black, colors and com- binations. $5.00 CUT HERE N.

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