Evening Star Newspaper, November 10, 1926, Page 18

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18 SOCIETY SOCIETY. Mrs. Davis, Wife of the Secretary of War, Returning to Washington After Sev- eral Months Spent in Europe. HE Secretary of War, Mr. Dwight ¥. Davis, was unable to meet Mrs. Davis in New York this morning, having left w the Presi- dent for K . Davis ar- today, and is expected to come at once to Washington. The Secretar: 3 Curtis Dwight Wilbur will go to Nor- folk this evening to witness the Schnelder cup races tomorrow, and will return Friday. The Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur were the guests of honor at dinner last eve- ning of Bl . T. Porter Kane, U. S *., and Mrs, Kane, who enter- tained at 2400 Sixteenth street. Gen. and Mrs. Kane have given up their apartment in the Cairo and are es- tablished at 2400 Sixteenth street for the Winter. Mre. Smiddy Rejoins Her Family h Legation, _The \||n~lm of the Irish Free Dr. Timothy Smiddy, and their ighters, have been joined in their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel by Mrs. Smiddy, who spent some time in Dy visiting her son, Mr. Sars- fleld Smiddy. returning to Washington by way of I’hiladelph Mrs. Lee S. Overman na have arrived at th ken a suite for th: Senator and Senator and wards have reop at the Wardma will reiurn to daughter recups iliness, eral weeks hefore returning for the opening of Congre in December. d Goff, ad_and g0 In New Yorl shington and ars home, at 1606 New avenue, for the Winter. Senator o who spi arrived a few day Lave returned to W opening their Hampshire Summer itor Dencen of Illinois, who is at the Willard, where he ar- rived yesterday, entertained at dinner t night e Danlel F. Steck an apartment at ark Hotel for the Winter, Representative and Mrs. E. Hart Fenn, who came from their home at Wethersfield, Conn.,, and spent a short time in the Capital, have taken partment at 2400 Sixtenth street the Winter. They left Washing- ton today for Atlantic City and will be absent for a short time. Mrs tained tantes john Cr Simpson_enter- a group of this scason’s debu- at in her apart- ment at street in honor of Hamilton, daughter . John J. amilton. Other gue: I of them ¥ 4 Miss Barbara an Smith, ley, Katherine Helen Clifford Joves, Miss Whittord, Miss Olive T. Sherley, Eleanor Preston, ) kins, Miss Adelaide Dougla: »t Huntress and Miss Florence r. and Mrs. Charles Warren have hington for Santa Barbaira they been suddenly called serous illness of Mr father, Mr. Willlam H. Bli ¢ spending the Summer in Ber- h her son, Mr. John C. Wiley, -retary of the American em- Mrs. John M. Wiley arrived in Washington vesterday. She made a ghort visit in Florida and is now at 1yflower. Anne Scott, daughter of Mrs. Juxmm F. Hall and the late Maj. Guy T. S married this morning to lahan, j and was Mr. T Nathan Scott attended by Miss Ruth Weedon, Prederick Haas was best man, bride wore a gown of white gatin made with full skirt scalloped gnd hanging longer in the back than in the and the bodice was tight- fitting made with long tight Eleeves. e veil was ar- ranged in ¢ sct and ried orchids and gardenias. Mis attendant, wore powder blue chiffon with a velvet hat in the game shade and carried pink roses. A weddfug breakfast and receptic followed in the home of brother-in;law_and _sister, Mrs. Peter i Dunn, in Wesley Callahan will trip and after 1t_home_in_the and Mrs Late of Hepner's Master Ladies’ Hair Bobber Announces that he now located in his own shop- 3121 14th Street Latest style of Parisian Hair Bobbing to suit your individ al contour. Col. 2125 is ?m No Secret Why BETTIE FROCKS at $]5 Lead the Field ,sr(OP 1316 G St. CITY CLUB BLDG. . Warren’s | Schuyler Arms on Columbia road, where they have taken an apartment. Mrs. Alfred Duane Pell of New York, who is in Washington to present a collection of porcelains to the Smith- sonian institution, will stay at the Mayflower while in the city. The Chilean Ambassador to Lon- doh and Semora de Mathieu are among those arriving in New York today from Chile, and will be in New York the remainder of this week be- e coming to Washington for a visit. Senor Mathieu represented his zovernment in Washington for some years and has been in Chile almost iwelve months. They will sail for sngland later in the year. The retiring Chief of Staff, U. S. A., and Mrs. John L. Hines, will be the guests of honor at dinner this evening of Gen. and Mrs. Herbert B. Crosby, whose guests will remain to play bridge. Mrs. Crosby was hostess at bridge vesterday afternoon_in compliment to Mrs. James B. Erwin, of Passa- dena, Cal, who is visiting her parents, Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Ned B. Rehkopf, in their quarters at Wash- ington Barracks. Mr. and M Charles Carroll ill give a dance tonight lands Country Club for niece, Mlle. Elizabeth 1 Swinderen, who with her mother, Jime. van .smndmen is visiting Mr. nd Mrs. C. C. Glover in their home n K street. Mr. and Mrs. Glover, jr., will be ts to a company >t young people dinner {n their home, “Orchard Hill' ~ Massachusetts avenue, ~ex- ended, before the dance, when their ©+ guests are asked to meet Mlle. van Swinderen. Dimock will enter- ‘ain a company of 26 at dinner this \(-\mng in compliment to Mrs. Fred- rick S. Coolidge. Mrs. Dimock's son-in-law and {aughter, the second counselor of the Italian emt and_Signora Cata- lani, who have been detainad in Lon- don because of the illness of Signora Catalini, will not come to Washington until the end of December. They will be accompanied by Signor Catalani's ce, Signorina Theodoria Catalani, o spent a portion of last winter with them here. Mrs. Charles Lester Marlatt has sent out cards for Tuesday afternoon November 30, from 4 to-7 o'clock, at 521 Sixteenth street, when she will present Miss Florence Marlatt to society. Mrs. Blaine Li Mrs. Henry F. comb will present her daughter, Miss Llps\mnh to ciety at a tea, from 4:30 to 7 o'clock, Wednesday afternoon, November 24, at Wardman Park Hotel, where she will use the west lobby for the re- ception. Mrs. Frank H. Simonds returned to Washington for the season and St A Priced at $10 Inlays and tongue of a brand - new leather, Copper fortable. e Sy —as the main course of a de- liciously prepared DINNER A Special LUNCHEON 14th Street @ Y & ‘ Flouers for the Debutante and the Wedding GUD 1212 F St. N.W. Main 4278 3103 14th Wolf’s S S eSS “The Trudie” Patent, make this little Marsala Tan Calf- skin oxford doubly smart, just as Walk- Over personal fit makes it doubly com- 929 F St. N.W. Every room has a shower and tub bath. $3.50 a day upward Edmund J. Brennan, Manager THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1926. | Betrothal Announced | Lose parents, the Rev. Dr. \nung and Mrs. Young, announce her :n;u;gement to Mr. Thomas Yellot Canby. opened her charming old house at 3108 P street northwest, where Mr. Simonds will join her at the end of this week. Mr. Simonds has been abroad for some months attending the League of Natlons conference, and he also visited Germany. Miss Katherine Simonds, who is at Bryn Mawr, will join the family for each week end. Mr. Emmons S. Smith, jr., will en- tertain a small company at the thea- ter this evening, in compliment to Miss Leah de Moll and Lieut. Fre erick Railey, whose marriage take place Wednesday evening, November 17. Later the party will go to the Club St. Mark. Mrs. Paul Bastedo has returned from New York whe’e she has spent a week. Mr. T. A. Scott Thropp is at the Wardman Park Hotel for a brief stay, and will be joined a little later by Mrs. Scott Thropp and the children, who are at present in their country home at Boyce, Va. They will sail for Europe the latter part of the month and expeet to pass the Win- ter in Southern France. Mrs. William Laird Dunlop, jr., was hostess at supper last evening at the 1ton Club in honor of Miss Mary Jullien, daughter of Mr. and 's. Phillip Morrison Jullien. Others in the company of 18 included Mlle. strom and her guest, Mlle. Ham- burg: Miss Rosemary Griffin, Miss Ellen Wise Crenshaw, Miss Elizabeth Howry, Miss Hume, Miss Dunlop, Senor Victor Alfaro, Senor Luis Alfaro, Mr. Max Lyons, Mr. Ralph Kelley, Mr. William Bowle Clark, Mr. Alexander Hagner, Senor de Velarde, and Mr. Blaise de Sibour. Brown-Mattimore Wedding In St. Anthony’s Church. Miss Mary Elizabeth Mattimore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Henry Mattimore, and Mr. Clement Raphael Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Clement Brown of Grand Rapids, Mich., were married this morning. The ceremony was performed at 10 o'clock in St. Anthony’s Church, the p Pasquale di Paola, veR Shop : TR IR FM’FMWMW%M MR /// Meyer Goldman’s Music will make the meal even more enjo. able. Dail. WASHINGTON'S LEADING FLORIST Gorgeous “Mums” at Gude’s You beautiful chrysanthemums—the king of Autumn flowers—at Gude’s. Order a bouquet today! invited to see the display of unusual are BROS. CO. Three Stores for Your Convenience 1102 Conn. Ave. St. N.W. Main 1102 Col. 3103 Members of Fiorisis' Telegraph Delivery Association BN N N N A \ officiating. Autumn leaves and palms were banked in the sanctuary and white chrysanthemums were on the iltar, while the ends of the pews and the aisle were marked with white satin ribbons and white chrysanthe- mums. Dr. Leo Behrendt of the Catholic University played the wed- Jding rhusie, assisted by Miss Ida May Madigan and Miss Margaret O'Connor, who sang preceding the ceremony and luring the nuptial mass, and also by Miss Kathleen Harlow, violinist, who played several solos. The bride was escorted and given in marriage by her father and wore 1 gown of white bridal satin and Venetian lace trimmed with rhine- stones and seed pearls, made with houffant skirt and fitted bodice. Her tulle veil was edged with Venetian lace and was arranged in cap effect, finished with clusters of orange blos- soms, and she carried orchids and lilies of the valley. Miss Florence Brady Mattimore was maid of honor for her sister, and wore a flesh-color faille taffeta, trim- med with gold lace and made after the same period as that of the bride. She wore a Watteau hat to match the sown and carried an old-fashioned bouquet of butterfly roses. The brides- maids yere Miss Anne May Fitzmor- ss Louise Catherine Bishop, Miss Mary Sanford Howe, and Miss Gertrude Mary Dove. They were dressed alike in blue, orchid. peach and green, taffeta dresses made like that of the maid of honor, and their Watteau hats matched theri gowns. They all carried old-fashioned bou- quets of butterfly roses. Little Miss Hazel Ann Gannon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Gannon, was flower girl, wearing a dainty frock of yellow organdie and carrying a basket filled with Pernet roses and delphinium. Mr. Francis E. Smith of Brooklyn was best man and the ushers included Mr. Maurice E. Weschler, Mr. Paul A. Clifford, Mr. Willlam Connors, and Mr. J. Harold Mattimore, brother of the bride. A wedding breakfast and reception followed in the home of the bride’s parents at 700 Irving street north- east, when the house had a pretty ar- rangement of chrysanthemums, Au- tumn leaves and palms. Mrs. Mattl more, mother of the bride, was in platinum-color georgette heavily em- broidered in crystal beads and wore a hat of cloth, of silver. Mrs. Brown, mother of the bridegroom, wore tan georgette crepe trimmed with velvet, and a hat to match, Later in the morning Mr. and Mrs. Brown left for a wedding trip through New Jersey and New York, the bride traveling in a dress of platinum-shade brocade chiffon, a hat of silver cloth and a coat of platinum de panne velvet, trimmed with gray fox fur. After December 15, they will be at home at the Klingle, at 27 comb street. The bride is a gradu‘n(‘ of the Academy of Notre Dame in Washing- ton, and Mr. Brown is a graduate of the college of engineering of the Uni versity of Michigan in the class of 1924, and received the degree of me chanical engineer at the Catholic Uni- ELLEN DOROTHY PARR, Her engagement to Lieut. George Al- bert Harter, is announced by her mother, Mrs. Grace Parr. versity in 1926, and is now connected with the Bureau of Standards. Among the out-of-town guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Brown of Grand Rapids, parents of the bride- groom, and Mrs. Agnes Costello of Brooklyn, N. Y Col. and Mrs. Lawrence S. Carson, who have spent a month with Mrs. Kimberly, widow of Samuel A. Kim- berly, and her mother, Mrs. J. H. Draper, motored to Virginia last week to make a visit to Col. and Mrs. Ned Tignor at their place on the Wi- comico River, one of the most pictur- esque districts in “‘old Virginia.” They will return here the middle of the month to remain until they go to Stauntan, Va., to spend Th.\nkR giv- vith their son, Lawrence S. Car- . who is at’the military acad- emy There. ill later return to t at Fort Oglethorpe. Miss Florence Worthington has re- turned to her home on M husetts avenue after spending the Summer in Furope. She spent much time with her sister, Mrs. Roeber, in Paris, who was Miss Helen Worthington. ~Miss Worthington’s other brother-in-law and sister, Mr. apd Mrs. Charles W. Frafley, will spendl the Winter with her in the old Worthington home on Massachusetts avenue. - Miss Elizabeth Smith of Ports- mouth, V \\'HI arrive in Washing- ton to be the guest of Miss Maxey Mayo, in her home in Lyon Village, | ¢ "hanksgiving. Several affai | have already been arranged in Mi s honor, and one of the largest will be the dinner at which Miss Mayo will entertain Saturday The “Barney” Tie A smart conception of tan Russia calf with low heel at $11. Similar model dev reloped in black or tan Russia calf with lizard calf trimming and Cuban heel at $11. Beautiful Silk Hosiery, $1.95 to $2.95 ICHS — Proper Footwear F Street Edmonston at Ienth & Ce., Inc. NEW ADDRESS 612 1 HELP THE 3th St. CHILDREN TO HEALTH! Nothing is more important than the shoes they wear. Nervesare strained and children’s feet are sometimes de- formed by forcing them to wear im- proper footwear. It costs no more to get anatomically cor- rect shoes — expertly fitted—than any other good grade will cost. \/' ARrcH LIFT Sometimes a “correc- tive” shoe is needed if there is a tendency to “toe in” or the ankle or arch is weak. We fit the right shoe and remedy this com- plaint. Consult Us EDMONSTON & CO., Inc. 612 13th Street West Side—Bet. F & G Sts. ANDREW BETZ, Manager 'n!gh! after Thanksgiving. Before re- turning to her home Miss Smith will be the guest of friends in Baltimore, where she will go to attend one of the Thanksgiving balls at Johns Hopkins. of the National Homeopathic Hospi- tal, Mrs. Ross Thompson, president, have completed arrangements for two card parties to be given at Ward- man Park Hotel, Tuesday, November 23, for the benefit of the hospital. The first party will be held in the afternoon commencing at 2 o'clock, and the second, in the evening at § o'clock. Candies, homemade cake and aprons, will be on sale. The members of the women's board | SOCIE the rector, the Rev. John J. Queally, officiating at 8 o'clock. The church had a simple arrangement of yellow chrysanthemums and Autumn leaves and Mr. Ernest O. Palen sang, accom- anied by Mrs. Marie Little, organist. The bride was escorted and given in marriage by her father and was in a gown of white satin, her tulle veil held by a cap of rose point lace, and she carried a shower bouquet of white roses and lilles of the valley. Miss Irene Elizabeth Stinemetz was maid of honor and was in peach color i chiffon and carried pink roses. Miss Frances Work, Miss Catherine Ste- vens, Miss Hilda Fletcher, Miss Au- gusta Merriam, Miss Lois Pope and TY. Mr. Edwin Willlam Stiliwell was best man and the ushers included Mr. David M. Stephens, Mr. Wilton W. Conner, Mr. James Boyd Getz, brother of the bridegroom; Mrs. Charles Block, Mr. Ralph Little and Mr. Otho G. Wrenn. Following the ceremony a recep- tion was held in the home of Mr. and (Continued on Nineteenth PageJ Window Deconfions The marriage of Miss Mary Marga- ret Anderson, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Willlam Anderson of Moun. tain Lake Park, Ma., to Mr. Clarence Herman Getz took place last evening in the Church of the Transfiguration, een and orchid. ! to match their gowns. HOURS, 8:45 TO) 5:30 1215-17 F STREET The popularity of this type of furniture is a fine tribute to exquisite simplicity as the highest beauty. Unaffected, dignified, exquisite in its sincere ex- pression of simple grace and beauty, the furniture of Early American days has taken its sure and lasting place among the great furniture periods of history. Miss Billee Wellborn were bridesmalds and were dressed In similar costumes of georgette crepe in shades of yellow, They all carried vellow chrysanthemums tied with tulle l.unlmgh Interior Decorating Company New Loeation 818 17th Street N.W. Between H & 1 PHONE MAIN 1294 1214-18 G early AMERICAN urniture < Our display shows many careful reproductions of those designs now being exhibited in the Ameri- can Wing of the Metro- politan Museum. Dulin & Martin Company STREET t'-M"l--l-'k+-lv~H--l-+++vl«k'l--l'-l--I-+++-b+++-l~+-l-++-l--l-+-l;-l-++-l--l--l-~i--l--l~-l--l--l--l-'l--l-+m++++++++-H-+++l-‘ e i ks ~ W Diaranea S SUEEREN ey bbb bbb bbb bbb bbb bbb b bbb b dbdod b ddbd bbb ddddddddddddddd Fbddbibdbbbrdbbbddddddddddddddtbdb bbb dbdddd bbbttt 937-939 F St. NW. Youthfully Designed Buck Seal Coats of selected skins will be featured tomorrow at the exceedingly . beautiful and acceptable Mayer Bros. & Co. special price of 5150 HEY have mushroom collars and deep cuffs of contrastmg furs, such as skunk, jap mink, dyed and natural squirrel. Finest quality embroidered silk linings. Altogether they are the finest values this season has brought forth, and are new and de- cidedly different, with their youthful and clever design- ing so pleasing to the woman or miss who loves really smart fashions. Other Fur Coat Values || that are outstanding in this season of elegance are made of natural squirrel, panther, civet cat, raccoon and pony skin. 95, %185, *195 225, 395 Fur Coats make very holiday gifts and may be laid aside upon a deposit. Shop of Quality B bbbk PR R R R TR R o L e o o o o o o o o o o o o e e e s R R R el e e s R e b R e L S RS2

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