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r 1y SOCIETY) President and Mrs. Coolidge Guests at Dinner Tonight of Speaker and Mrs. Longworth. HE President and Mrs. Coolidge will be the guests in whose honor the Speaker of the House of Representatives and Mrs. Longworth will entertain at dinner this evening. Mrs. Coolidge will attend the New York Symphony concert this after noon and will have with her several guests. Belgian Ambassador and Baroness de Cartier Guests. The Ambassador of Belgium and Baroness de Cartier were the rank- ing guests at the musical which Miss Martha Codman gave last eve- ning in her home on Decatur place. Other guests included the counselor of the British embassy and Mrs. Henry Getty Chilton, Maj. Gen. -and Mrs. George Barnett, Rear Admiral and Mrs. Albert Gleaves, Col. and Mrs. George C. Thorpe, Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin B. Laughlin, Mrs. James Car- roll Frazier, Mrs. Maude Howe Elliott, Miss Anne Randolph, Miss Mary Randolph, the Misses Ticknor of Boston, Sir A. Maurice Low, Mr. Lynch Luquer and Mr. Harris Brown. The program was given by Mr. Maxim Karolik, tenor, formerly of the Petrograd O) accompanied by Mr. Charles T. Ferry, who also played several piano solos which were his own compositions. The Secretary of War and Mrs. Dwight F. Da will be the honor guests at dinner this evening of the Assistant Secretary of War and Mrs. F. Trubee Davison. The Minister of China, Mr. ‘Sao-Ke ‘Alfred Sze, was the ranking guest at the dinner which Mrs. John B. Hen- derson gave last evening in compli- ment to the Swami Yogananda. Others in ‘the company were the chief of naval operations and Mrs. Edward W. Eberle, the Norwegian Minister on Special Mission and Mme. Gade, As- sistant Secretary of State and Mrs. Robert E. Olds, the German consul eneral in New York and Frau von Lewinski, the Engineer Commissioner of the District and Mrs. J. Franklin Bell, former Gov. and_ Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, Baron and Baroness von Below, Count and Countess de Benque, Mr. and Mrs. Gist Blair, Mrs. Stephen B. Elkins, Mrs. Marshall Field and the counselor of the Nether- lands legation, Jonkheer van Asch van Wyck. The Rinister of Guatemala ana Benora de Sanchez Latour were hosts g::erd.y afternoon at tea to . Gen. Lloyd M. Brett, Brig. Wil- liam J. Nicolson and Brig. Gen. Wil- liam C. Brown, who yesterday were Ppromoted from the rank of colonel. The Minister of Greece and Mme. Bimopoulos entertained at dinner last evening, when their guests were the Ambassador of Belgium and Baroness de Cartier, Senator and Mrs. David A. Reed, the Assistant Secretary of State and Mrs. Leland Harrison, the first secretary of the French embassy, M. Jules Henry; the coynselor of the Rumanian legation, Mr. Radu T. Dju- wara: the assistant military attache of the British embassy, Maj. W. H. 8. Alston; Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont, Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Glover, jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mitchell, Mrs. Frank Crawford Letts, Miss Mabel Mrs. W. Harry Brown, Walter Denegre, Mrs. James Carcoll Frazer, Mrs. Guy . Norman, Mr. Cleveland Perkins, former Rep- resantative John Philip Hill, and Mr. Angelo Anninos, counselor of the Greek legation. Senator Sheppard of Texas enter- tained at dinner last night at the Willard, where he had six guests. Senator and Mrs. Claude A. Swanson went to Atlantic City today and will be absent until Faster. Mrs. Sanford, wife of Mr. Justice Sanford, will entertain a small ofgn- pany at tea this afternoon. Mrs. Frederic McCormick-Goodhart entertained a company of 16 at luncheon today in her country home at Langley Park, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont enter- talned at_luncheon today in compli- ment to Lord and Lady Strathcona, who are spending a few days with Mrs. J. Borden Harriman on their way from California_to New York. Lord and Lady Strathcona will sail shortly for their home in England. Mrs. Gideon A. Lyon, who is spend- ing several weeks in the South, was among’ the guests at dinner last eve- ning of Mrs. Arthur B. Barrett, who entertained in her studio home, Dream Harbor, fer her house guests, Mr. and Mrs. William K. Kavanaugh of St. Louts., Arts Club Plays Preceded By Dinner Parties. The plays to be given tonight and repeated” tomorrow night are “A Mornjng Call,” by Will Hutchins; “Between the Soup and Savour: by Gertrude Jennings, and ‘“‘Meet the Missus,” by Kenyon Nicholson. Those who will appear in the three plays are Mr. Willard Miller, Mr. James Otis Porter and Miss Betty Ridsdale; Mrs. Belle Howell Bohn, Miss Lulu G Adams and Miss Harriet Murphy; Mrs. Grace Peters Johnson, Mr. Denis E. Connell and Miss Anne Ives. Mr. Beverley H. Harris will enter- tain a party of 12, having among his guests Brig. Gen. John A. Hull, Miss Hull, Mme. von Lewinski, Mrs. Mar- garet B. Downing and Mr. and Mrs. Warren AKkers. . Mrs. Maud Howell Smith, chairman of the dramatic committee of the Arts Club, will have Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Leighton, Mrs. Trueman Palmer and Mrs. Anna Byrd Howell, her mother, as her guests at dinner at the club tonight preceding the presentation of three one-act plays by the Arts Club Players. Mrs. Elizabeth Northrup will likewise have guests at dinner, including Representative and Mrs. John R. Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gasch. Mr. Wallace Thompson was the honor guest at the regular luncheon of the Women's tional Press Club today at the Women's University Club, 1634 I street, when he gave a talk on Nicaragua and Mexico. Mrs. Pugh and Mrs. Ray enter- tained at a luncheon at the Grace Dodge Hotel today in honor of Mrs. Alfred H. Kirchhofer, the wife of the retiring president of the Press Club. Following the luncheon, tables for bridge were placed in the lounge. The guests included Mrs. Grean Mrs. Wooten, Mrs. Kent, Mrs. Gai fleld; Mrs. Parker, Mrs. Priest, Mrs. Foote, Mrs. Campbell, Mrs. Hawes and Mrs. J. L. Bray. Mr. and Mrs., Kirchhofer are leav- ing for Buffalo, where Mr. Kirchhofer is to be managing edltor of the Buf. falo News. Mr. and Mrs. James B. Reynolds entertained a dinner party of 50 In the patio at the Carlton Hotel last evening. Among their guests were Justice and Mrs. Harlan F. Stone, the A beautiful example kid with delicately blen styles in shoes to order. Our custom department designs exclusive W, D. Moses & Sons Established 1861 F Street and Eleventh Main 3770 of artistry in Parchment ded darker trim. NEIGHBORS Who Meet With Your Standards q"HB new co-operative spart- ment building at 1661 Cres- cent Place—in a8 meighborhood of exclusiveness, dignity and qulet, attracts people of means and refinement, = References and other necessary information from prospective sesidents are handled carefully and thorough y the most desi acceptable, assuring to residents, neighbors of highest standing and responsibility, ‘THE _EVENING ST | SAILED MARCH 5 RS. VOIGT, \e M Wife of Representative Edward Voi from New York, Saturday, home at Sheboygan, Wis., in July. for a Mediterranean trip. They will return to their WASHINGTON, irie: d_ delegates attending the Triennial Convention of the Episcopal Church in America, which comes to the National Capital in October, 1928. Dr. Charles Moore, chairman of the Fine Arts Commission here, and author of numbers of valuable books on George Washington, will be the first speaker in the course, his subject for Friday morning being “Gen. George Washington at Home,” on which occasion he will be introduced by the Rev. Roland Cotton Smith, D. D. Among those sponsoring the course are Mrs. Archibald Hopkins, Mrs. George Tully Vaughan, Mrs. Benjamin Rush Logle, Mrs. Robert Chew, Mre. R. W. Hynson and Mrs. Harry Hurtt. Mrs. Grace Berry is chairman of the committee of "tickets for both courses and single lecture tickets may | b= had at thne Willard Friday morn g as well as at the office of Epiphany scopal Church, 1317 G street. Dr. Curt L. Heymann has given up his apartment at Wardman Park Hotel and will be at the Ambassador in New York until he sails next week for Naples. Ha will spend several months in Palermo and Taormina, Miss Catherine Sipple of St. Louls, who s visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lambert, was the guest of honor at luncheon today by Mr. Lambert's bili L) C TN ELEVENTH ST Twinkle-Toe Chic! Of course! Just one glance reveals that! of Wisconsin, with whom she sailed Attorney General, Mr. John G. Sar- gent; the Secretary of the Interior Dr. Hubert Work: the Minister of Guatemala and Senora de Sanchez Latour, -Representative and Mrs. James S. Parker, Representative A. Platt_Andrew and the chairman of the Republican national committee and Mrs. Butler, Mrs. William B. Hornblower of New York has taken one of the residential suites at the Wardman Park Hotel for the early Spring. She has as her guest Miss S. J. Eldredge of Charles- ton, 8. C. Wednesday: array. N\ 47 WZENZ 4N 24N 24N 22 ZZ; AN 0 Y 3 A2 %"\ 2, OB ) X \' 2z =2 N O - have returned straps, quarter, Brothers a Distinctive Group of Newly Arrived SPRING COATS NQUESTIONABLY the touch of a true w artiste may be_discerned in this modish Such careful blendin fabric and style! One will surely discover here precisely the coat destined for favorite place in Madame’s Spring wardrobe! TWELVE THIRTEEN F N X% NN :\\jt: N\ v, :Q\'Iif-' IE IVE NE NE ROM the days of Cleopatra and of the Ancient Greeks, SANDALS vogue. Always the most graceful, the most picturesque, the most truly femi- nine of slippers—and now Fashion again proclaims them for Spring. Model pictured in Patent Leather with gray bark calf cunningly with openings on vamp and Also Parchment Kid Miss Sallle Hews Phillips, daughter of the Rev. Z. Barney Phillips, D. D, and Mrs. Phillins of Epiphany Church, will act as chairman of the committee of this season’s debutantes who will serve as ushers for the Four Events Course of illustrated Lenten lectures to be given in the Willard ballroom, beginning Friday morning of this week, March 11, at 11 o’clock. The course has been planned by a com- mittes of prominent Washington women in ald of the fund now being raised in the Episcopal churches in the city for the expenses of mission- - $8:50 PARCHMENT KID Rose Blush Calf Trim The “Twinkle Toe” fairly sparkles with gayety with its chic squared toe and concave Cuban heel. Its charming bow cleverly con- ceals a front gore. All sizes and widths. Presenting of hue and W3 N3 :Q\‘V.’ NZ SNUZ U n WNZRN 2NN 17, \\177] IVE IS o N2 NIZNIZN| VE NECIVERC NZ Ve N2 N\ 77 7 W7 LS Y% again and again to interlocked mother, Mrs. Wilton J. Lambert, who | shosn. D. C. TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1927 entertained a company of young peo- ple at the Club St. Mark's. Mrs. Samuel Burleigh Milton, her son, Mr. Chalmers Seymour McCon- nell, and her sister, Mrs. Daisy Sey- mour Fronheiser, have sailed from Baltimore for Florida to be gone about three weeks. Miss Janet Fish was the guest of Mrs. Archibald Hopkins, president of the board of lady managers of the Home for Incurables, yesterday after- noon at the home. After an inspec- tion of the home. ‘ca was served. Mr. and Mre. C. W. Dismer sailpd Saturday fqr Cuba, and after three weeks will return by the way of Florida. Mr. ard Mrs. W. S. Groesbeck Fowler have come from New York and_taken an_apartment at 1302 (Continued on Fifteenth, Page.) “Chokers at $5.00 Made From Your Own Material New Fox Scarfs on Sale—Cheap Collars for Spring Coats. FURRIER WOL 32-34 Fla. Ave. N.W. HOURS, 8:45 to 5:30 SOCTETY.” Established Over 50 Years New Effects in Slip Cover Materials —embracing Imported and Domestic Linens, Chintzes and Cretonnes—in a wealth of distinctive Spring designs flOur shop facilities, on the premises, enable us to give personal supervision to your Slip Cover orders. TAsk us for estimat James B. HENDERsON Fine Furnitare, Laces, Upholstering, Paperhanging, Painting 1108 G Street—Phones Mk 1% Lowest Prices. | N PHONE ‘MAIN 1294 Dulin & Martin Company 1215-17 ¥ STREET Exactly as illustrated, in Denim or your own cover........._,‘$160. : 6081 614 1214-18 G STREET reminiscent of Colonial days Typifies the many distinc- tive Colonial pieces we have re-created to add a touch of individuality to the room decorated according to the artist’s conception of Early American. bilipsborn ELEVENTH ST. Wednesday—Style and Value Are Paramount in These SPRING (0ATS! A* Two Very Low Prices $ | o / 2 it == =, 304011 ! == 2, ) In the Coat Shops—W ednesday Here is real value—the prices are the very lowest ' possible—the quality is above reproach—what a sur- prise they will be to those who think a Spring coat I must be expensive. Coats That Introduce Every I New Style Feature That l 33 Paris Proclaims “Smart” I proclaimed by Paris finds smart preference —as do nobby checks, plaids and mixtures as well as other smart colorings. Belted or straight models with unusual pockets, fine silk linings, cuffs that are conventional or dif- - The vogue for “Black and White” so l with “Calico Kid” straps—at fourteen-fifty. Many others, twenty-two fifty, The attrattive location and the high character of the building at 1661 Crescent Place are sufficient in themselyes to indicate the type of tenants who will live there. ferent, contrasting facings and bindings and tuckings are some of the latest features. - 43| sir-fifty to \CRESCENT 4" PLACE, The building is now ready for inspection and Apartinents are seady for occupancy, You are jnvited to make s visit, Our agent on the premises will extend you cvery courtesy, For Floor Plans, Descriptive Bookles, Esc Address TERRY B, SIMMS Seles Manager CoOperative Apartment Division T WARREN A These Materials: These Furs: ' I Ombre Plaids. Monkey. e Fancy Mixtures. Lapin | g Plain Camefines. ~ * ~ Wolverine. o Tweeds. Squirrel Paws. 5 Kasha. Vicuna, Twills. Cali. Erminette. : 77 s N AN P SHEEY RO £y Zi 23 v S 3 0 t%‘ LN 1207 F “Where fashions make their debut” 2 N2 \ T4 DR e Adams 9900 N \ N