Evening Star Newspaper, September 11, 1927, Page 49

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"SOCTETY .~ ‘Nuptial Ceremony Feature In Annapolis Miss Anna H. Iglehart Kenneth Noble, U. S. N.—Special Notes | of Naval ANNAPOLIS, Md., September 10.— The wedding of Miss Anna Hanson Igiehart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Iglehart, to Lieut. Ken- neth Noble, U. 8. son of Mr, and Mrs. M. H. Noble of Little Rive Conn., took place in St. Anne Church this evening at 7:30 o'clock The ceremony was performed by Rev. Edward D. Johnson, Anne’s. The bride, who entered the church on the arm of her father, wore a gown of white satin with a court train, a_veil of tulle, and carried a shower bouquet of roses and lilies of *the valley. The matron of honor, Mrs. Bromfield Bradford Nichol, wore A gown of green chiffon and carried a_bouquet of den flowers. The bridesmaids were Misses Virginia Turner and Mary Virginia Wilson of Baltimore, Misses Elizabeth Morgan and Eleanor Hepburn of Annapolis, Miss Mary Day Rouse of Easton, Md., and Miss Edith 1. Noble of Little River, Conn. Their gowns were of pink chiffon worn with pink shoes, and they carried pink roses and blue delphinfum. In their hair were .vhlmon bands with rhinestone trim- ming. + The best man was J. S. Crenshaw and the ushers were Lieuts. Donovan, jr; R. C. E. Olson, D. W. Eberle, A. M. Loker and W. B. Jackson. The cere- mony was followed by a small recep- tion at the Peggy Stewart Inn, after Which the bride and bridegroom left on a wedding trip. Chaplain and Mrs. W. N. Thomas &nd their young son are visiting rela- tives in Jackson, Miss, Mrs. John Wirt Randall, who has been spending some time with her daughter, Mrs. Bladen Lowndes, at Glen Elg, her country place in Howard County, has returned to An- napolis and opened her home in Ran- dall place. Her son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Elliott H. +Burwell, 'and son, John Wirt, have returned from Maine. Mr. and Mrs. George Turner are in Annapolis after an extensive trip through Canada. Capt. and Mrs. H. H. Dinger are at Carvel Hall, to remain until the house which they are building on King George street is_completed. Col. and Mrs. Julian Hatcher, U. S. A., ang their three children spent the week nd with Mrs. Hatcher's mother, Mrs. Robert Dashiell, on Gloucester street. Col. and Mrs. Hatcher recent. 1y returned from a four-month trip abroad. Mrs. James Alexander entertained Wednesday at luncheon in her Sum- aner home on South River in honor of Mrs. W. N. Richardson and her mother, Mrs. Clyde Gray West. Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. W. N. Rich- ardson, U. S. N., who have been &pend- ing the Summer at 11 Maryland ave- nue, moved last week into their new quarters on Bowyer road, Naval Academy. Mrs. Pope, wife of Capt. Ralph E. Pope, U. 8. N., is occupying an apart- ment at No. 8 Maryland avenue, where she will spend the Winter to be near her son, Midshipman Earle Pope, who is a member of the first class. Capt. Pope is_in command of the U. S. Crulser Memphis, Mrs. Bowie McCeney, who has been spending the Summer with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. George Turner, at Wardour, entertained at bridge Friday in honor of Mrs, Charles Carroll Dunn, formerly Miss Julia Valiant, who will leave shortly to join her husband, En- sign Dunn, ‘in Philadelphia. Thé Misses Stockett are at their rector of St. Distinctively Different Remember the ZIRKIN reputation for quality—bear in mind that almost half a century of adhering to the policy of FINE WORKMANSHIP and FUR SELECTIONS makes the garment you - select here one which assures you of the . fact that YOU HAVE RECEIVED VALUE! LOWER PRICES . . . prove themselves when you l take the time and make comparisons. September % SALE X of Fur-Trimmed CLOTH COATS We invite you to inspect these smartly hand-tailored gorments that truly ezpress both STYLE and quality. Re- member—every piece of FUR is personally selected. PRICES ARE NOW REDUCED! 50 Group Two . 375'00 Group Three 595'00 Group Four 512500 FUR SCARFS Every Conceivable Shade Group One .. Social World Becomes Bride of Licut. | Academy. home on Prince George street, after | spending several weeks at Blue Ridge Summit, Pa. Prof. and Mrs. C. L. Leiper have returned to Annapolis and opened | their house on Martin street for the Winter. Prof. and Mrs. Paul J. Kiefer and son have returned to Annapolis from a motor trip of two weeks through | the New England States and Ca i 3 . E. A. Morro ing Lieut. Comdr. |2 2. Morrow, have returned heir home in Washington, IIL t. and Mrs. Samuel Du Bois, and young son have arrived polis ‘and are ingwith s Sue Munford on Prince George street. They will later move into their new home at Wardour, which | they ~purchased from Mr. P. B. Cooper. Lieut. Du Bois has been as- ed to the department of modern languages at the Naval Academy. Miss Belle Irvine of Norfolk, Va., has been the guest of her niece, Mrs. Timberlake, wife of Lieut. Comdr. Julian Timberlake, in her apartment on Prince George street. | Mrs. Theodore W. Johnson, who has been spending several weeks at Long Beach, Long Island, has returned to Annapolis and has joined Comdr. | Johnson at the residence of Miss Sue Munford on Prince George Street. They will shortly move into their new home at Acton, Murray Hill, which is nearing completion. Comdr. and Mrs. Frank Rockwell and M Betty Rockwell have re- turned to their quarters on Upshur | road from a motor trip through the Shenandoah Valley. The Misses Conard, | Capt. and Mrs. Conard, tertained at a house party on Labor Day in their home on Porter road, al Academy. Their guests in- cluded several midshipmen now on | leave and Misses Margaret Harriman, | Josephine Tompkins and Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Brady of Washington. Mr. Edward N. Rich and son, Mr. Woodward Baldwin Rith, returned Saturday to their country home on the Severn River from a six-week trip to Europe. Rev. Edward D. Johnson, rector of St. Anne’s Church, Mrs. Johnson and their daughter, Miss Catherine John- son, have returned to the rectory on Duke of Gloucester street after spend- ing the Summer at their cottage at Turner, Me. | Nevett Steele and her daugh- s Laura Steele, have returned fro visit of a month to Mrs. Steele’s son-indaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Conrads Grove, in Detroit, | Mich. | Comdr. and Mrs. 8. S. Payne are spending several weeks at the Little Inn on Maryland avenue. Later they will occupy quarters on Upshur road, Naval Academy. Chaplain Sidney K. Evans, U. . N., has returned to his home on Porter road from a trip of two months abroad. While absent Chaplain Evans visited England, Scotland and Wales. Mrs. James S. Bowdoin and Miss | Elizabeth Nott have returned to their home, “Normanroyd,” on the Chesa- peake Bay, from a motor trip through the North. They were absent about a month. Mrs. H. W. B. Glover, who has been occupying one of the Terry apart- ments on Maryland avenue for sev- eral years, has left Annapolis and will spend the Winter with her daughter, Mrs. Selden, wife of Lieut. Taylor S. M. C., at Quantico, Va daughters of S. N., en- that to shop around Every occasion finds a new and be- coming mode—in our new arrivals in DRESSES Piquant types for the miss— smartly designed and tailored ideas for the woman of fashion as well as new con- ceptions for the matron—all types are included—every group o revelation in appro- priate style. School Girl and Inexpensive $ Models at. . 15 New Fall Ideas in Various 525 Pabrics....v.... Charming New Effects, ' _THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, the late Lieut, Comdr. Joseph S Will Broadcast From Air. During the Northwest radio show to be held in Minneapolis late this month Phillips Carlin of the National Broadcasting Co. will broadcast a de- scription of the city, while high aloft tz. ment to Mr. John Meares Galt of Norfolk, Va. . ¢, SEPTEMBER 11, 1927—PART Senora de Melendez Of Salvador Is Guest Of Son at Legation (Continued from Fourth Page.) Herr Drews had been invited to San Salvador by the government to teain an orchestra and a band to serve on official occasions. Before she had reached the stage of long skirts the then Senorita Palaclos was invited by the maestro to become the accom- panist of the orchestra. Since that introduction she has been one of the most beloved pianistes in her country and now leads all its other artists there in the professional sense. She has given recitals and concerts in cvery part of her own country and many of the other Latin American republics. Trained by a rigid classical scholar, Senora Melendez adheres strictly to classical music and she has a great love for the German masters. Her favorites are Beethoven and Chopin, but she does not exclude the renowned modern composers from her repertory. She has much admiration for De- bussey and others of his school, but Mendelssohn ranks high in her favor and after the master Teutons includ- ing Handel, Mozart and the immortal names assoclated with their work, she gives a place to Grieg. Music has «emade excellent progress in Salvador Daughter of Mrs. Ralph W. Crowell of Detroit, formerly of Washington, and Mrs. Crowell announces her engage- in an airplane. Allan McQuhae, the Atwater Kent star, and the Smith Brothers also will broadcast programs from the air. These' programs will be picked up from the plant by station WCCO and carried over the red net- work of the broadcasting company. and its composers have a wide vogue among the Latins, though they are but little known in this country, the Senora observed. But through the efforts of Dr. Rowe and Fr. Franklin Adgms in arranging the Pan-Ameri- can concerts, the {llustrious Latin- American composers are bhecoming known to Washington audiences. Among those Salvadoreans whom Senora de Melendez names as having produced difficult and worthy scores are W. Garcia, Miguel Pinto. and Felipe Soto. For many years, Senora de Melendez has been one of the teachers in golleges and schools who are preparing others to vecome teachers. Owing to her rheumatic troubles, she has given up all these various activities and she will try the best which this country has to bffer in the way of medical relief. e Three Seek Call Letters. Call letters for the following broad- casting stations have been requested of the Department of Commerce: KGHB, Radio Sales Co, Honolulu, Hawalii; WNBZ, Smith & Mace, Sara- nac Lake, N. Y., and WTFI instead of WKRBJ, by the Toccoa Falls Institute of Toccoa Falls, Ga. e A Our Annual Summer Sale of Fur Coats —offers Saks' clients the four-fold advantage —Most Favorable Prices —Widest Selection —Assurance of Quality and —Highest-class Workmanship FUR COATS FOR MISSES In addition to our regular stock, we are introducing a complete line of MISSES' FUR COATS In Sizes 12—13 fUltra-smart, snappy styles in all the pelts and clever combinations favored by the modish miss. 1 This innovation makes it possible to find a satisfactory fur coat that fits without alteration. SARS FUR CO. IN THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC FOR OVER THIRTY-NINE YEARS. 610 Twelfth St.—Just Above F—Phone Main 1647 of BARBER SHOP OPENED FOR CHINESE WOMEN Y. W. C. A. Sponsors Innovation to Meet Increasing Demand for Service in Shanghai. Correspondence of the Assoctated Press. SHANGHAL—A barber shop for Chinese women, the first of its kind in Shanghai, has been opened under the auspices of the Chinese Y. W. C. A. According to the announcement of the opening of the new ‘shop,” it has been made necessary ‘to meet the increasing demand on the part of Chinese women who have bobbed hair for woman barbers.” Two man barbers were retained when the shop first opened to train the woman harbers. They have since been replaced by women. Not only are Chinese women patron- izing the shop, but toreign women are finding it an excellent place to obtain barber service. OCYETY.' ART COLLECTION AS GIFF. Donation to College in Memory of Its President’s Wife. Correspondence of the Assoctated Press. STORRS, Conn.—Stadiums and dormitories may be the paramounty needs of some colleges, but the xift’ most needed by a sequestered agricul« tural school is a good collection of works of art, belleves President Charles L. Beach of the Connecticus Agricultural College. Contemplating a memorial in mem- ory of his wife, President Beach de-| cided upon a collection of paintings. with an endowment for their care. “Art is a character builder,” he says, “and young people are greatly" influenced by it. I realized how rare was their opportunity to enjoy it in pictures. I felt that they need art even more than students at city col- leges, who can go to museums.” — The tortoise lives on land, while the turtle lives fn the water. - WEDDING MUSIC BARRED TO ALL BUT CHURCHGOERS British Vicar Says Registry Office Is Place for Nuptials of Outsiders. Correspondence of the Assoclated Press. LEICESTER, England. — “Here Comes the Bride” and all other wed- ding marcies on the organ of St. Stephen's Church, Leicester, have been barred to bridal couples of the future unless they themselves are actual churchgoers. The registry office is the proper place for non-churchgoers' weddinge, says Rev. G. W. D. Brooks, its vicar, in the parish magazine. “For persons who never enter a church except to be married or * he says, “and for whom the holy marriage is the first and last and only sacrament they make use of, a church wedding is an unseemly - QB$57.so the ADVANCE SALE OF &‘WJMMM 365 75 NUSUAL and exclusive flare and straightline models shown in all new materials and colors. should see these wonderful coat values and we especially call your attention to the lavish use of fine furs, the skillful tailoring and fine silk linings. Each coat represents a su- preme value at the price and there are all sizes for Misses, Little Wo- men, Larger Women and extra sizes. THE WOMAN'S SPECIALTY SHOP f"aper Bros. & Co— 937-939 F St. NW. CO% $O5 ur. 2 You and 14 Established 1901 Announcement Extraordinary 26th Annual Sale of Hekimian’s Orientals at Pre-War Prices 1,000 Hekimian Quality Rugs Mostly Semi-Antiques. Unquestionably the greatest collection ever offered, from the modest Anatolian Mat to the Palace Carpets of every known weave. Terms—Cash; nothing sent on approval. Note: All rugs bearing Green Tags can be exchanged at prices paid within 10 years from date of purchase. NEJIB HEKIMIAN 1226 Connecticut Avenue Canadian Wolf Jap Fox Cashmere Twill L. Cunningham 314-316 7th. St. N.W. SALE OF NEW WINTER COATS Every cuat in this sale is brand new—all styled after the very smartest of newly arrived Paris Models—all leis- urely and carefully tailored before the season’s rush. It will pay you to make your selection now and we will store it without charge until the cold weather. Rich Furs Wolf Pointed Manchurian Wolf Caracul French Beaver Superior Fabrics Broadcloth Suede Fascinating Styles—Replicas of the Successes Shown at the Paris Openings ) Women Who Attend Our Sales Are Never Disappointed Distinctive Shades Filbert All Ladies’, Misses’ and Large Women's Sizes d Fi : and Fur Al 535 $20 to 3330 ¢ Endless Selection, 821 14th Street You ma; ect to see just EVERYTHING that is new among these fumf :;‘p they are poiitively the “last word” lqr Fall. Cl_'eve Back Satin of lustrous, heavy qulm{ . . . often using both sides of the material . . . fashions these frocks. BLACK is very prom- inent, and other new colors include Marron Glace (brown tones), ungle Green, Balsam Green, Tawny Birch, Napoleon Blue, Claret ed and Malaga Red.

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