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10 S0 ALEXANDRIA SOClETYl Mr. and Mrs. Richard Coke Marshall have returned from Orange; where Mrs. Marshall was one of t bridesmaids at the wedding of Mi M Ryland Lyne, daughter of M und Mrs. Oliver Lyne, of Willow ‘ove, near Orange, to Mr. Randolph Shepherdson Towne, son of Mr. a *. Towne of Willi ., which took place in the g st Church Saturday eve- ning. September 3. Rev. and Mrs. Percy and Miss Margery Arden e from Groton Point, Conn., spent last month r. and Mrs. Edward Stabler returned from a visit to their Zoppecn Stabler, in New Y Mrs. John “ihornton A Miss Lucy Lenox Ashtor ney S ) remain Foster Hall Hall are where have o) from where they sojourned for Rev. Dr. and N are back from Lexin Dr. Wallis was in ¢ morial Chapel during month . where e Me uir of Sy was the week end & brother and sister-inlaw, Mr. Charles Alexan. Swann Sinclair Mr, and Mrs, Thomas McGuire, Miss am McGuire, Miss Katherine Mec. e and Miss Charlotte McGuire st week for their home in Knox- after a visit to Mrs. Mc e and aunt, Mr. and Mrs Yates Cochran has \ spending the Summer ves in San Antonio, Tex.. Wolfson Miss and in 1 M and nd Mrs. . Conn. Edward Strother, Mr and Mr. and Mrs Cleveland, Ohio, and 16 rother of Purcell- were week end guests of Wd Mrs. R. L. Long h Roseberry is home from av r Lrother and sister-in-law Mr, and Mrs. Edward Roanoke. Rev. Dr visit to John Jayx in West Hartf Mr. and M Robert Strother Myron Bates of William Jackson M has returned from Orkney S where he spent his vacation, 1 the twenty-fifth anni Dr. Morton's installation sctor of Old Christ Church 2 Irene Man left last week Montgomery, A he will re- main a month with relative: wedding of Mi aughter of Mr. and Mr. Clarence t. Mary Rom: iday mor! ather T. E The bride w marriage by her father, nd wore gown of white satin and lace and a lace veil held by a wreath of orange arried a bouquet of | nd valley lilies. i ter of the bridegroom honor. and wore a| tin. The four Katherine and Mrs, W. Metzgar | n Cath- Mitchell ven in | gown of orchid of the bride, M | Marie Connor, Mi 1 and wore satin gowns in the colors of pink, blue, green and yellow. All the attendants wore hats and carried arm their gowns. Mr. John Ed- monds was best man for Mr. Metzg Following the ceremony, Drea as held at the home of the bride’s parents on King street, and later Mr. and Mrs. Metzgar left by motor 1or a visit to relatives in Ken- After October 1 they will be ne at their new residence, on the Lee-Jackson Highway. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edwards have left for their home in Cedar Rapids Jowa, after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Faunce. Mrs. Hugh A. Allen and her chil- dren are back from Buckroe Beach, where they had been for a month. Miss Fannie Carter has returned from a trip through the far West and a visit to her sister, Deaconess Lucy Carter, at Grand Lake, Colo. Lieut. Edwin Norris Coc U. N., and Mrs. Cochran, wi§’ hilfe re- cently returned from Pafama, were guests last week of the former’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Orlando H. Kirk, and left later for San Diego, Calif., where Lieut. Cochran has been ordered for duty. Miss Virgi harp of Berlin 1s the guest of Mrs. F. Ervin Ludwig. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Creighton of Mobile, Ala., are guests of the former’s Dbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Creighton. Mrs. J. Sidney Douglas has returned Mrs. Gharles C. Carlin, jr., are from a motor trip to Eagles Mere, Pa. Miss Roberta Schneider and Miss Elizabeth Schneider have been guests for the past week of Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor Lewis in Richmond. Myps. Arthur Marshall King and her two. children, Betty and_ Frank, are back from Woodberry Forest, Va., where they spent the latter part of the, Summer. Mr. and Mrs. William H. T. Brooke and their two children are with Mrs. Brooke's mother, Mrs. Edward H. Kemper, at her cottage at Ocean City, Md., to remain a month. Mr. Kemper speiit the week end with his family. Reév. and M Ernest M. Delaney 2% 7 7% 72222227, Nz period. Wear your when you want it. Muskrat Coats Self trimmed_and beautifully lined with silk. Our $165 and $195 coats re- duced to 2 7007000000 227 00 TN A charming, model that formerly sold for $265. Beau- tifully lined and perfectly tailored Caracul Coats Cocoa and large fox collar and cuffs; pretty silk lining. Formerly sold at $250 and $275... REMODELING AND REPAIRING (_)f Gr: - ¢ g Wallis | eptem: " bouquets to | - a wedding | Hall, U. S REDUCED for this week Fur Coats Pay for it in small ments over a long term *100 Silver Muskrat Coats *195 CIETY," THE ‘ | Chilean Ambassador Guest at Pan-American Luncheon (Continued_from Fourth Page) _ is expected to arrive in this country the middle of next week. [ The Minister of Poland, Mr. Clechanowski, is cxpected to arrive in New York Tuesday on the Olym- pic, having spent several months on leave in his home in Poland. Mme. Ciechanowskl will join him here later in the Autumn. . . § | The Minister of Venezuela, Senor | B - Dr. Don Carlos F. Grisanti, who re- i | |turned -arly in the week from Lake George, will be joined at the end of September by Senora de Grisanti and their daughter, Senorita Carmen Teresa Grisanti, who are still at Lake George. The Minister was accom- panied on his return by his two daugh- ters, Senorita Mary a Grisanti and Senorita A T sa Grisant, Th: Minister of Slam, Lieut. Gen Phya Vijitavongs, i arrive in| Washington Saturday from Gloucester, Mass., where he has occupied the Lay- | man cottage at Bass Rocks for the Summer. | The members of the legation staff, who were with him at Gloucester for | the season, will arrive in Washington | Frida | The charge d'affaires of Spain. Senor Don Mariano do Amoedo, and | the attache of the embassy, Senor Don | Ramon Padilla, will ret today fra New York, where they have been for s veral days. The charge d'affaires of Sweden, fr. P. V. G. Assarsson, who is at At-| ntic City for a brief vacation, will | return the middle of the week. MRS. CECIL A. BREWTON, Who, before_her marriage Wednes- day, August 21, was Miss Isabelle An- derson of 918 K street. and their two and Sarah Cary, are home from visits| to relatives in Bristol and Bedford | City, Va. | Mr. and M zene Simpson and SUNDAY STAR, WAS 111 Mr. and My rge W. ell motored | to Buckree Beach, Va. to be absent the coming week. Mrs. Albert Bryan is the guest of rs. Rosewell Miller in Millbrook, The consul general of Latvia in| New York., who is in charge of the | Latvian legation, and Mme. Lule, | who are at the Mayflower over Sun-; day, will go tomorrow to Hot Springs for ‘a rest of severul weeks. | Coleman Brown AR * announces the The newly appointed counselor of | the Swiss legation, M. Etienne Lardy, who will arrive with Mme, Lardy and their small daughter on the Duilio tomorrow, will come immediately to .shington, where they Lave taken | an apartment at the Wardman Park | Hotel. M. Lardy, who has h~'' an important post in the forein office at Bern for several years, had pre- viously represented his country at St. Petersburg and London. He will re place in the legation staff Mr. L. A. Girardet, retiring first secretary, who sailed yvesterday on the Leviathan to take up his dutfes in the co mercial A artment of the foreign office at Bern. ' in Upper Marlboro, | Saturday, August 13, by Rev. Francis McManus of the Marlboro Baptist Church. Mr. are living at 312 street, and have had Mrs. Bavol's Mrs. Spilman, as thelr guest eek. . and Mrs, nce the ma ughter, Dorothy lentina Smith, son of Whitman Rathbone S S Scptember 3. in Rockville, Mr. S the grandson of the late Dr. Kate Waller Barrett, and Mr. John B. Bar- rett; the bride’s stepfather, is his John Barker Barrett f the latter's The first secretary of the Brazilian | embassey and Senhora do Almeida will sail from France this week aboard .| the Paris and are ne ted to arrive in New York Tuesday, September 20.1| They will come to Washington shortly after their arrival. Another wedding which been announced is that of ) leen Nalls and Mr. Claude Ballenger, both of Alexandria. which took place Sunday, December 26, 1926. Mr. Bal- lenger left Tuesday for Lexington, The naval attache of the Ttalian embassy, Comdr. Lals, arrived in Washington Friday and will be at Wardman Park Hotel until Signora e e t the Virginia Military Institute. Miss Roberta Stuart is the guest of her nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Stuart, in Montross, West. moreland County. Mr. and Mrs. Al- bert Stuart Bolling and thefr young Gordon Stuart Bolling of lle, were guests last week their aunt, Miss Katherine H. on North Columbus street. Mrs. Hall, wife of Capt. John Leslie . N., was the guest of Mrs. Tackett, on South Asaph for several days last week. Hall formerly was Miss Virginia Beall Daingerfield of Alexandria. Capt. Hall is the eldest son of the dean of Willlam and Mary College and Mrs. J. Leslie Hall of Williams- burg, Va. Miss Margaret Chapman, principal of St. Agnes' School, arrived Tuesday from Maine, where she spent the Summer. The marriage of Miss Una Donald and Mr. Robert E. Miller, both of Alexandria, took place Wednesday, August 31, in the Baptist Temple, with the . pastor, Rev. Ryland T. Dodge, officiating. T‘ *A{‘l as at- tended by her sisték, il “Rebs Donald, and Mr. Roland Andrews was best man for Mr. Miller. After an informal reception at the home of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. Miller left for a wedding trip through the North. After September 15 they ‘will be at home at 303 North Patrick street. . Keys, Mrs, Oscar Miss Lynda_Carver, Miss Eddie Dickert and Miss Elizabeth King returned last week. They spent the Summer traveling in Europe. Mrs. Samuel B. Moore, Miss Ruby Thomas and Mrs. T. Franklin Dodd have returned from a two weeks' stay at Virginia Beach. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Norris are visit- ing relatives in Hackensack, N, J. Mr. J. Elmer Norris has gone to his home in Havana, Cuba, after a visit to rela- tives in Alexandria. s Rev. and Mrs. Percy L. Vernon are again at the parsonage of the First Baptist Church after spending a month in their cottage in Erie, On- tario, Canada. Miss Catherine Rhodes, who has been the guest of Mrs. Margaret Pul- man on Prince street, left last week to visit friends in Washington before re- S‘x;‘;nlng to her home in Hagerstown, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Limerick have veturned from'a trip to Virginia Beach and Newport News. Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Bostwick are spending a_week with relatives in Towanda, N. Y. 4 Mr. Dabney Click and Mrs. A. L Carver left by motor last week to be the guests of relatives in North Caro- lina. Mr. Click will visit in Salisbury and Mr Carver in Lexington. Mr. and Mrs. John Varney are home from a visit to relatives in Bristol, Pa. Miss Ruth Varney remained in Bristol for a longer visit. Miss Addle Lambert s the guest of her sister, Mrs. Blackwell, in Mont clair, N. J. Mr. ‘and Mrs. Charles Bonitz and Mr, and Mrs. Frank Bonitz of Quincy, Mass., were guests last week of Mrs. Willam Wood, sister of the Messrs. Bonitz. John F. street, M pay- coat Pictured above— The Gossardette Uplife Bandeau— Garter-bel: Panties The Gossardette is a two-piece foundation snrmem—uplifi ban- leau and garter belt. Detachable hose sup- porters are buttoned to belt beneath a pan- talette. It comes in tricot, crepe de chine, or Georgette, in your favorite color. Itisa complete foundation and undergarment. 71711thS¢. Next to Palais Royal 1308 G St. N.W. THE GOSSARD LINE OF REAUTY? “ YHAT INIMITABLE Tks H. W. Gossard Co., Chicago, San Francisco, New York, Adaata, Dallas, Sydney, London, Toroato, Buenos Aires Invites you to inspect the Gossard line of smart new garments. (Next Door to the City Club) Phone Franklin 2377 Mrs. Leon Meyer and her small daughter, Lois, of Houston, Tex., visit- ing Mrs. Meyer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Saks of 1750 Lanier place. | Lais comes from the Thousand Islands | street for the Winter and will move the middle of next month, They have | there next month. Comdr. Lais made leased the house at 2316 Nineteenth|n short visit to Signora Lais after HERE has been expert collaboration in the production of this Shoe for Autumn. The Ardmore represents advanced ideas in shape, developed with masterly crafts- price—in . ) Patent Leather Russian Calf Black Suede 510'50 —combined with contrasting trimmings—and in individual sizes. Arthur Burt Co. Paris 1343 F Street Washington London w SMARTNESS Gossard Foundation Wear “Like custom-made” says one woman to another, describing the appearance and feeling of being Gossard-corseted. From fashion port to fashion port Gossard artist-designers travel, studying the mode, studying women’s activities and tastes, studying the needs of certain kinds of supporting garments for certain kinds of wear—the need of a guiding support in youth, the necessity of a more definite figure aid as the figure matures. The young athletic co-ed, the dignified social hostess, the interested young busi- ness woman—all find their figure answer in the'many expressions of Gossard foun- dations. Noothergarmentscompare with Gossards —their superb individual designing, their perfect ability to blend figure and frock, their remarkable support- ing, caressing qualities. They are truly inimitably smart. - Ask your corsetiere to showyou the new Gossard Completes, Combinations, Clasp-arounds, Tedetites, Step-ins, Gossardettes, Gir- dles, Belts and Brassieres. NGTON, 'D. ‘¢, SEPTEMBER 11, 1927-PART o ' his arrival In New York last week and before coming to Washington. The secretary of the Polish legation, Mr. Leon Orlowski, is in New York, whire he will remain to meet the Minister, Mr. Clechanowski, on his a rival Tuesday. Mr. Orlowski will ac company the Minister to Washington and will sail in October to take up his duties in.the Polish foreign office to which he has been transferred. ‘The first secretary of the Canadian legation, Mr. Hume Wrong, will be joined by Mrs. Wrong in a fortnight. Mr. and Mrs. Wrong spent the late Summer in Canada. The military attache of the Italian embassy, Gen. Villa, will return to- morrow from Detroit, where he went, to attend the Gordon Bennett air races, The military attache of the British embassy, Col. Pope-Hennessy, Is again with thet members of the em- bassy staff at Manchester, Mass., after spending several days in Washington last week. He will not return here until the first of n | ‘The military attache of the Cuban embassy and Senora de Prieto re- turned to Washington yesterday from New York, where they arrived Friday aboard the Aquitania. The commercial secretary of the British embassy, Mr. Leander McCor- mick-Goodhart, who is in New York, will return tomorrow to his apartment in the Mayflower. The commercial secretary of the Canadian legation and Mrs. Merchant Mahoney returned to Washington Thursday from a vacation spent in their home in the Dominion. The secretary of the Netherlands legation, Baron van Boetzelaer, who spending _several da; Grace Dodge Hotel Washington, D. C. Arrangements made for resident guests during the Fall and Winter at special rates for month or more. Rooms with or without bath. Information sent on request. Excellent restaurant with club and a la carte service. Breakfast . ...25¢ to 75¢ Luncheon, 60c and $1.00 Dinner, $1.00 and $1.50 +A hotel with a “no tipping” service. Open to men and women North Capitol and E Streets. SOCIETY." Baroness van Boetzelaer at Watch Hill, R. L; will return the middle of the week. Baroness van Boetzelaer will not come to Washington until the late Autumn, The newly appointed attache of the Netherlands legation, M. L. A. H. Peters, and Mme. Peters are expected to arrive in this country early next month. ‘The newly appointed secretary of the Finnish legation, Dr. Nils Idman, is expected to arrive in Washington the first of October to take up his duties here. Dr. Idman will succeed M. Bruno Kivikoski, who is now on duty at the foreign office in Finland. The newly appointed secretary of PUR . to the $-INCH WELT '0 new stars—with all the traditional beauty and durability of BLUE MOON. And in price—phenomenal! The lowest that Blue Moon wearershave yetenjoyed. Know the luxury of “America’s most beauti- ful silk stockings’’ at prices unusually rare! College Calls ofor Charm ?@O/u'c CLOTHES largely make the girl in her first appearance at school. Coats and dresses take the leading part. Erlebacher presents a complete education in smart apparel for the most fastidious girl. Every fashion requirement is met in the smartest of youthful fall fashions. Classroom frocks of novelty woolens and crepe silks in one and two pieces. Primarily for service—for cam- pus—for town wear. Afternoon frocks—that present chic simplicity in their silhouette and a new originality in detail. In satins, crepes, velvets. Dance Frocks—the happiest choice of all! To carry one success- fully through proms, receptions, ball. Transparent velvets—taffetas'“' —satins—chiffons. DANCE FROCK, The Sports Ensemble $69.50 (8ketched above) A Goupy model of the smart velvet Jacket in rust color over a one- piece frock of tan will make the important in- troduction this fall—on the campus or in the classroom. A huge plaid taffeta ribbon of blend- ing shades tied on the side gives the latest note in daytime frocks. Dress has the double diagonal stitching across front with large flat pleats for skirt—finished with a belt—the touch par excellence — fashioned of velvet. Fitting || HATS The close-fitting hats in colors to match the wardrobe. Left—Blue felt with velvet rib- bon with effectively tied bow which drops over one side, $12.50. Right—Brown felt with velvet of darker shade giv- ing a swirl to the front of hat and tied high on crown. $12.50 the Rumanian legation, M. Vintila Petala, arrived on the lle de France last week, and has taken an apart- ment at the Wardman Park Hotel. M. Petala, who has been attached to the Rumanlan legation at Paris for the past five years, had previously represented his country at Rome. The attache of the Cuban embassy, Senor Don Cayetano de Quesada, has returned to Washington from Detroit, where he represented President Machado of Cuba at the convention of the United Spanish War Veterans. Mr. Szeming Sze and Mr. Deson Sze, sons of the Minister of China and Mme. Sze, sailed yesterday aboard the Leviathan to return to their schools in England. CHIFFON WEIGHT “LONGER WEAR IN EVERY PAIR " érlebacher “Jeminine ofpparel of Individuality TWELVETEN TWELVETWELVE F STREET T be extremely smart square scarf in blocks of brilliant colors to match any costume, $6.95 Crushable & 1 d flowers in all shades for sports wear. $1.95 $98.50 Of naive simplicity, with a dash of sophis- tication, Premet has given us a frock (sketched below) in pale orchid Gros de Sports Coat $125.00 Of a brown and tan novelty imported sports\ material with collar of beaver we find the most important piece of the college wardrobe. Other Coats from $39.50 up. Londre to dance merrily on! With fitted basque and bouffant skirt of uneven hemline and tier on tier of grad- vated tucks. Satim flowers in varfous shades drape gracefully from waist to hemline. Charming selections also from $39.50 up. AFTERNOON FROCK, $69.50 A copy of Lanvin at the right. This two- piece crepe back satin frock is foremost in autumn’s mode. Using satifr for the accor- dion pleated skirt and the crepe for the blouse. Self-trimmed but for the pastel pink tie on shoulder and vestee. Rhinestone ball pins offset both tie on shoulder and at belt line. Other models $39.50 up. Griebac “Jeminine oApparel of Individuality TWELVETEN TWELVETWELVE F STREET