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SOCIETY. SOCIETY President and Mrs. Coolidge Have as Guests at the White House Gen. and Mrs. Blethen of Seattle. HE President and Mrs. Coolidge | lished in an apartment in the tower have as guests at the White lof the Ritz, in New York. House for several days Gen. and Mrs. Clarence Brettun Blethen of Seattle, Wash,, who arrived there yesterday morning. Until the President and Mrs. Coolidge return from Massachusetts they will entertain themselves in various ways. Secretary and Mrs. Kellogg Ranking Guests at Dinner. The Secretary of State and Mrs. Kellogg will be guests at the dinner to be given tomorrow evening in | honor of the United States Ambas- sador to Italy and Mrs. Henry P.| Fletcher by the Assistant Secretary of State and Mrs. Leland Harrison. | There will be 14 guests in the com- pany. | The Assistant Secretary and Mrs. Harrison will entertain at luncheon Baturday. They will be hosts infor- | mally at dinner this evening. | ‘The Ambassador of Germany, Baron Maltzan, entertained at luncheon to- dey at the embassy In honor of Dr. | Moritz Bonn, who is in Washington for a short visit. Mrs. Ellison D. Smith, wife of Benator Smith of North Carolina, and their daughter, Miss Anna Smith, are kuests of Col. and Mrs. Roderick S. Carmichael at their home, 2511 CIliff- | bourne place. Miss Smith will be a student at King-Smith School this | season. | Miss Marion Carmichael, daughter | Col. and Mrs. Carmichael, s/ Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Atherton of Boston and Washington are guests at the Mayflower. Mrs. Glenn Stewart of Easton, Md., is In Washington for a short stay af the Mayflower. N The reception this afternoon at the ‘Willard Hotel and the luncheon to- morrow at the Carlton Hotel in honor of Mrs. Samuel Preston Davis, na- tional president of the United States Daughters of 1812, has been aban- doned because Mrs. Davis has been called to her home at Little Rock, Ark., ow to the f{llness of her daughter. She had been attending an executive board meeting at Indlanap- Its, Ind., and was expected in Wash- ington last night. Mrs. John Robert Waller has re- turned to Washington after spending the Summer at the Point at Harbor Springs, Mich Mrs. Waller will spend the Winter in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Thropp have returned to Washington and _will spend the early Winter at Wardman Park Hotel, where they have taken an apartment. were at the Greenbrier, at White Sul- phur Springs, for the Summer and later motored through Virginia, stop- ping at Lexington, Charlottesville and Richmond. They will not open their home at 1701 Twentieth street until the Spring. Mr. and Mrs. Thropp | AIDED NOEL HOUSE DANCE. HARRS 5 EVWINE MISS LILA TUCKERMAN AND SENOR DON PEDRO de SOTO DOMECQ, Two of the most attractive figures at the dance given Halloween night for the benefit of Noel House. Miss Tuckerman is the daughter and Mr. and Mrs. ‘Walcott Tuckerman. blue and gold cloth, and carried yellow chrysanthemums, was the best man and the ushers were The bridesmaids were Miss Annie {Maj. E. J. 8. Irvine, Mr. Richard Davenport of Roanoke, Va.; Miss|Shands of Washington, Mr. John Elizabeth St. Clair Hobbs of New | Augustine Smith of New Orleans, La., | York, Miss retta Whiting of | Mr. John Augustine Washington of | Berryville, Va.: Miss Miriam Talbot, | Charles Town, Mr. Harry Lee Bowen Winchester, Va.: Miss Laura Beck-|of Baltimore 'Mr. St. Clair Hobbs of Mr. Bassett Roberts of New York spending a few weeks with Major and | Mrs. Walthall at Fort Hamilton, N. Y. and will attend the Yale-West Point foot ball game at New Haven and the Notre Dame-West Polnt geme In New York. She will spend a week with her brother, Cadet Roderick C. Carmichael, jr., at West Point, before returning to Wash- ington about the middle of next month. ‘The attache of the British embassy and Mrs. Harold H. Sims have re- turned from a fortnight's visit to the former's parents in Canada and are in the house at 1800 Nineteenth street which they have leased from Mrs. Clark Munford. Miss Hadassah Hamilton Hellen Is in New York tc bid bon voyage to her sister, Miss Gwynn Hellen, who safled’ Saturda~ for Gautemala to spend the Winter with her uncle, Capt. Harry Martel Gwynn Former Finst Lady in Baltimore for Visit. Mrs. Thomas J. Preston, jr., is visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cleveland, in their home in Baltimore. Mrs. Pres. ton was before her marriage to Prof. Preston Mrs. Grover Cleveland, widow of the President. Mrs. Pres- ton, who is president of the Na- tional Needlework Guild, will speak ham H<‘1ff of Charles Town, Miss Re- becca Wihite Traphell, Miss Margaret Shirley, Miss Anne Catherine Alex- ander of Charles Town. They wore along old-fashioned lines, with tight bodices and full bouffant skirfs. They carried arm bbuquets of yellow chrysanthemums and delphinium. The flower girls were Miss Cather | ine Rutherford Packette of Cincinnati, niece of the bride, and Miss Sarah Brown of Charles Town, a_cousin of | the bride. They wore frocks of gold Affeta. and carried large baskets of ellow chrysanthemums. Little Syd- ney Magill Shirley was also a flower girl, wearing a frock of blue taffeta and carrying a small basket of biue gowns of blue and gold taffeta, made | New York, Mr. Henning Nelms and | Mr. Willlam Mackall of Washington. The ceremony was followed by a re- ception, after which Mr. Todd and his bride left for a wedding trip, Mrs. | Todd wearing a traveling costume of | Jungle green crepe meteor, green and ®old hat and a tan sport coat trimmed | in alligator skin. Mr. and Mrs. Todd | will be at home after January 1 at| 1779 Church street. | Among the out-of-town guests were | Mrs. Everard Robinson Todd, Mrs. | Elon St. Clair Hobbs and Mrs. Wil- | liam Morgan Hobbs of New York, Mr. | and Mrs, Henry Lyne of Denver, | of Winchester, George Carroll Todd, Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. John B. Henderson will enter- tain a company of young people this evening, the dinner to be followed by dancing. The German commissioner of the German-American Mixed Claims Com- mission and Frau Kisselbach were among the passengers aboard _the Deutschland, which arrived in New York this morning from Europe, | where they have spent a vacation in Germany. They will come to Wash- | ington later in the week. | Interstate Commerce Commissioner | and Mrs. Thomas F. Woodlock were | the guests in whose honor Mr. L. C. | Sprague of Salt Lake City entertained | at dinner at the Wardman Park Ho- tel last evening. The United States Ambassador to | Chile and Mrs. Willlam Miller Collier arrived in New York this morning aboard the Deutschland from Europe and the Ambassador is expected in Washington later in the week. Dr. and Mrs. Xavier Mayer of Stet- tin, Germany, who are passing a few days at the Willard, were hosts at dinner on Sunday night at the Wil- lard. They had five guests. | Sir Joseph Duveen, the noted art connofsseur, is at the Wardman Park Hotel for a brief stay. The secretary of the Costa Rican le- gation and Senora de Gonzalez have | as their guest Mme. Dorothy Schepens | of New York, radio soloist, of that | Miss D. Quincy Smith has returned | from a five-month trip to southern Europe, the Near East and northern | Africa, motoring through the Kabylie end Aures Mountains of Algeria, and travellng by caravan through the Mozabite country of the north Sahara. Mr. and Mrs. J ort New York are vis < 4402 Sixteenth street Mrs. Freder Albert Dille of Hotel Roosevelt left Saturday for Atlanta, | Ga., where she will visit Mrs. Frank L. Stanton, wife of the poet Frank L. Stanton. Mr. and Mrs. Dallet Wilson have re- | turned to Washington and have taken | one of the residential suites at the | Carlton for the Winter. Mrs. Wilson | spent the Summer abroad and became an enthusiastic flyer, making a_num- | ber of trips between France and Ger- many, as well as across the Channel. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stilson Hutch- s have returned to Washington for e Winter and are established at their residence, 1308 Sixteenth street. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Logan, who lived In Washington for several Winters, staying at the Willard Ho- tel, have given up their apartment in the Waldorf-Astoria and are estab- | {rad Goodwin officlating, assisted by for the Baltimore branch of the guild Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the Y. W. C. A. of Baltimore. The marriage of Miss Frances D. Packette, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam _ Bainbridge Packette of Charles Town, W. Va., and Mr. Au- gustine Jaquelin Todd, son of Mrs. Elizabeth Maglll Todd and the late Mr. Everard Robison Todd of this city, took place Saturday evening at 6 o'clock in the Zion Episcopal Church, Charles Town, the Rev. Con- the Rev. Austin Mitchell. The church was decorated with yellow chrysanthemums and blue and yellow dahlias. The bride wore a gown of white satin and velvet, fashioned with a close-fitting bodice, and a bouffant skirt, scalloped about the hemline. Her vell was of princess lace and was held by a coronet of pearls worn by her mother and grandmother at their weddings, and she carried roses and lilfes of the valley. Miss Cicely Fontaine Alexander was malid_of hono; L ring_a go of CAIRO HOTEL Que at Sixteenth Street L. R. Hawkins, Manager Telephone, North 2106 0 Famous for its service and for banquets, receptions and" dancer * Beautifol Ballroom will accommodate 200 couples. Rates, 9 to 12, $50.00; 9'to 1 $61 king facllities. ing Befreshments served if desired Under the Managem, Madduz. Marehall. Moss 8" Hattory. ic. The very best Molasses New Orleans— Per gallon ........$1.10 Porto Rico— No. 1, per gallon...$1.00 Porto Rico— No. 2, per gallon... 60c Magruder Inc. Best Groceries Conn. Ave., M and 18th Sts. Phone Main 4180 Established 1875 C. G. SLOAN & CO., Inc., Aucts. 7 Importer’s Sale of Magnificent Collection of 465 Oriental Rugs and Carpets In all sizes and weaves, including some extra large pieces At Public Auction Within Our Galleries 715 13th Street Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday November 1st, 2d, At3P. M To Cover Advances On View Up to Hour of Sale Each Day : The sise and variety of the above collection offers an wmusual opportunity to the Washington public to obtain high- grade merchandise at their own figures. Terms, cash. . G. SLOAN & OO, INC,, Aucts. 5 13th Street 3d and 4th, 1926 Each Day and Other Charges and vellow Fall flowers. | Thomas Hardy Tallaferro, Mr. and | D. U, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 71, 1926. Mrs. Harvey Wattles, Comdr. and Mrs. L. W. Jennings, Mrs. Woolsey Aspinwall, Mr. Cuthbert Train, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Perry Lippitt, Mr. Willlam H. Church, the Rev. and Mrs. James Henderson and Mr. and Mrs. gaorze B. Moulton, all of Washing- n. Mrs. R. H. Arnold of Greenwich, Conns accompanied by her sister, Mrs. A. E. Austin, and her daughter, Miss_Berenice Arnold, and her son, Mr. William Arnold, are at the Ward: man Park Hotel for the week. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold made their home at the hotel three years ago, later mov- ing to Greenwich. Mrs. Hugh Barclay has closed her home, Douglaston Manor, at Pulaski, N. Y., and s at the Biltmore Hotel, in New York, until she sails for Bra- zil to join Maj. Barclay, who is mili- tary attache of the United States embassy at Rio de Janeiro. Capt. and Mrs. James J. Raby, U. 8. N., are spending the week end at Carvell Hall. They attended the Navy-Michigan game at the Balti- more Stadium Saturday. Mrs. E. Richard Gasch has had as house guests for a week her siste: Mrs. F. G. Aulsbrook of Madison, N J., and Mrs. Murray, wife of Dr.| Francis Murray of New York City. | Mrs. Aulsbrook, who has just re- | turned from a Summer vacation In! Spain, motored to Washington to at- | tend the wedding of Miss Irene Gasch, whose marriage to Mr. James ‘W. Grant took place last Wednesday. Miss Loucile Bowle Roberts and Miss Marfan Kent Roberts, daugh- ters of Mrs. Alice Muriele Roberts of 1739 Irving street northwest, attend- ed the Navy-Michigan foot ball game in Baltimore last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thompson Seton_will have with them in their ntinued on_Twen rst_Pag UR TREAT!! TUESDAY, NOV 2nd In line with our general policy to fur- nish the finest food. we now serve The Famous Diplomat Coffee Free Coffee Tuesday. Nov. Znd. y Gse. | Lunch A Gar s A THE VALENCIA And exclusively lde- signed one-strap sli ‘esrn in golden Pbrov;’;l Kidskin with dainty cut-outs and baby Spanish heel. Perfect narrow heel fitting, §i4 STETSON SHOE SHOP 1305 F Street ===== Under Rdleigh Habevimber Manogement =uzmmzun' Colo.; Judge and Mrs. Robert Ward | Va.; Mr. and Mrs, | Presenting Extraordinary Values in the Newest Winter Coats for Women and Misses 50 *75 *95 At $50 ed shades and all sizes. You will find our standard of quality is maintained though the fprice is a very moderate one. Styles for sports and dress wear, self or fur trimmed, in the most want- A Shop of Individuality 1217 Connecticut Ave. Exclusive Fashions for Women Gowns, Wraps, Coats, Millinery and Novelties the Debutant: and the Main 4278 & Co. 4 to fine ess, we Al Flowers for Wedding GUD TAree Stores for Your Convenience 1212 F St. N.W. Members of 2 SIS S e Mayer Bros. 937939 F St. NW. thread silk exceedingly WASHINGTON'S LEADING FLORIST Gude’s “Mums” are the season’s vogue - For street wear or at the foot ball match or for all formal social occasions, Gude's chrysanthemums are the sea- son’s vogue. Specimen blooms — massive, brilliant, unique! BROS. CO. e 1102 Conn. Ave. 3103 14th St. NW. Main 1102 Col. 3103 ¢ Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association —____________—:_J_ R A e s o o o o oo & Co. 937-939 F St. N, SPECIAL 2,000 Pairs Spuntex Medium Weight and Chiffon Hose 3 Pairs for $2.75 ure welt of texture. Spuntex hoslery is fashioned to fit the ankle by an exclusive proc- and it will pay you to stock up with these excellent hose which fully guarantee, the New Shades in All Sizes - AREAREBANS RERSRRL 2L NS An unusudlly fine selection is ready in Venise. 4t $ 7 Lustrosa, Broadtail Cloth and Roulustra. Fur col- lars and cuffs of selected skins. New straightline and blouse- back models, with dolman, coat or wrappy sleeves. Newest col- ors in misses’ women's and larger sizes. l t @9"’ Elegant Winter C_oats of Ve'm'se. Lu._vtro.m. Mar- AL DT yelio and Broadtail Cloth, with luzuriously furred collars and cuffs of fox, beaver, wolf, squirrel and civet cat. Beautifully silk lined and interlined. Smartest colors, and all sizes for women and misses. Featuring Luxurious Fur Coats from $195 Up ) Maper Bros. & Co. 937.939 F St. N.W. Shop of Quality ol——o[——[0[c——bl————— [0l [B[——0] Natural Pony Buy Your Fur Coat Wit T PSS lol———lalc———la|——— ol —————[a|——=]a|c———lol——— o] ?bilipsbom 6081 614 ELEYENTH_SI Confidence HER A Confidence Merited Through a 22-Year Policy of Giving Style, Quality and Dependability Notable Groups Are Featured Selected Values - . . the kind that are seldom obtainable at these attractive prices '195 at $225% Genuine Mole (Scotch) Coats with eollars of Sitka Fox or Natural Squirrel. Truly rare values. at $150- A fine group of Northern 3uskrat Coats that are trimmed with crush collars of self- fur. Other Fur Coats Priced from $99.50 to $625.00 Incomparable Values at Pony, Marmink (Dyed Marmot), Sealine (Dyed Coney), Caracul, Muskrat, Caracul Paw and Kid, trimmed with contrasting Fur collars and cuffs or with self Fur. All are especially fine values at.....cccesevscscsconcacconmsncve at L9 Hudson Seal (Dyed Muskrat) Coats with natural and dyed Squirrel collar and cuffs are featured. at $169-% Coats of Caracul Paw in castor, cocoa and platinum shades trimmed with beautiful Fox collars. lo|c—=[o]—=2]p|]——=olc——c——]olce———]a]c———[o]———|0] Brown Fox Collar, §195.00 —