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18 —— SO § : ¢ § : : Wisc ESeerehry and Mrs. Wilbur Have Relatives Visiting Them. HE President and Mrs. Coolidge returned to the White House this morning from Brule, Wis., where they spent the Summer months at Cedar Island Lodge. | The Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. ‘Wilbur have visiting them for about 10 idays their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Dwight Wilbur ©f California, who arrived yesterday shortly after the Secretary and Mrs. MWilbur returned from their Western wisit. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur have been Spending the Summer in New Jersey #nd Long Island and also spent a few | sdays with Mr. Wilbur's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Paist, | at Wayne, Pa. | Miss Edna Wilbur has returned to | Lyndsay, Calif, where she teaches. | She spent the early part of the Sum- | mer motoring in southern California, | Jater went on a camping tour with a | party of friends’ and in August went | to Stanford University to continue her studies for her master degree. SOCIETY “The Chief Executive and Mrs. Coolidge ‘ in Capital After Summer in | Capt. Ellis' ship, the U. S. 8. Arkansas, | was in port for 10 days, has returned to CIETY. onsin. & | Mrs. Paul Bastedo, who has been oc- | cupying an apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel during the Summer, left last evening for Old Point to join | Comdr. Bastedo. who is assigned to the {U. 8.'S. Texas the flagship of the United States Battle Fleet. Capt. J. V. Klemann, U. 8. N, who | has been stationed on the West Coast for a year, is in Washington on leave and is spending some time at the Ward- man Park Hotel to be mnear his son | John and the latter's grandmother, | Mrs. Miller, widow of the late Admiral Andrew Miller. | Mrs. Hayne Ellis, who has been spending some time at Old Point, where her apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel,_accompanied by her children. Capt. and Mrs. Ellis have leased their home, Woodley, to Mr. and Mrs. Patton, while Capt. Ellis is on sea duty. Judge John L. Sternhagen of the Board of Tax Appeals entertained a | party at luncheon on the Willard roof garden yesterday. Mr. W. Irving Glover, jr.; Mr. Thomas S | The Secretary of Commerce, Mr. Wil- | Glover, Mr. Amory Maddox, ~Mr. {Lflm Fairfield Whiting, was host at|Charles McKenney, jr., and Mr. Henry ncheon yesterday on t' Willard Roof. | Beale Gwynn returned yesterday from | . The counselor of the Mexican embassy ‘ #nd Senora Dona Maria Teresa de Castro-Leal are sailing today on the | President Roosevelt from New York for Europe. The secretary of the German embassy and Frau Lohmann have as their guest | in their home, at 3007 Porter street, | Frau Lohmann's brother, Dr. Fritz| Strube, a noted German lawyer of Ber- | lin, who will spend several weeks with them. The secretary to the President and Mrs. Everett Sanders returned to Wash- | ington this morning and have opened | their apartment at the Mayflower. Mrs. | Sanders’ niece, Miss Maxine Ellings- worth of Terre Haute, has accompanied | them to Washington and will be their guest for several weeks. Gov. Ralph O. Brewster of Maine has | Arrived in Washington and is at the| Carlton for a few days. | Maj. and Mrs. John R. Kahle, who have been visiting Mrs. Khale's parents, | Admiral and Mrs. George R. Clark, at the Wardman Park Hotel, left yesterday By motor for their home in New York. Maj. Arthur B. Owens, U. S. M. C., retired and Mrs. Owens entertained at dinner and cards Saturday evening in their country home The Hill at Greenock, Md., in honor of Capt. Thom- as A. Kearney, U. S. N, who was their house guest over the week end. The ather guests were Mr. and Mrs. R. Bennett Darnall, Capt. and Mrs. Charles M. Oman, Capt. and Mrs. Ray Spear, Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Donald B. Beary, Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Vincent H. Godfrey and Mrs. Elizabeth Wilson. . Caén. Kearney, who has been in com- mand of the U. 8. S. Oklahoma, has Been ordered to duty as captain of the yard at Mare Island, Calif. . Maj. Raymond E. Lee and Mrs. Lee arrived in Was] n today and cre ntg}’mng at the Fairfax, where they| will spend the Winter. Sizes from 11v; to 60 One of The New Tiercd Frocks in Black Satin to be Featured Tomorrow at $15 A Small Deposit Will Hold Your Coat Until Wanted | Georgetown, Rev. Father Gippirich offi- | motor trip to Canada, and upon their return_will be at home at Langley | Newport tomorrow for New York to |spend a few days and will return to Colorado Springs, where they have been , in camp for two months. Marriage of Miss Huber To Lieut. Wimsatt Today. The marriage of Miss Helen Huber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Huber of Pedro Miguel, Canal Zone, to Lieut. Robert W. Wimsatt, Aviation | Corps, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wim- satt of Washington, took place this morning in Trinity Parish House in | clating. The bride had as her maid of honor her sister, Miss Dorothy Wimsatt, and Mr. Willlam J. Hughes, jr., was the best man. Following a wedding breakfast in the Chinese room of the Mayflower Hotel, Lieut. Wimsatt and his bride left for a Fleld, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont will leave their villa, Belcourt, early next week to remain until after the election in No- vember. Mrs. James R. Mann is again in Washington and has opened her apart- ment in Meridian Mansions, at 2400 Sixteenth street, for the season. Mrs. Mann spent the Summer at Lenox, Mass., and made several short motor trips in New England. Mrs. James C. Pilling will close her | home at 2407 California street in a day | or two for the Winter and will sail{ shortly for Europe. She expects to spend four or five months in travel on the continent. Mrs, Robert F. Mackenzie has re- turned to Washington and opened her home on R street for the Winter. Mrs. Mackenzie had guests lunching infor- mul{ly with her yesterday on the Willard roof. THE EVENING take place next Spring. TO WED IN THE SPRINGTIME row evening in her home at Newport in honor of hervhouse guests, Lord and Lady Mountbatten. Gen. Vanderbilt is in New York and will rejoin Mrs. Van- derbllt Priday. Mrs. Duncan E. Cameron has rented | Cozy Nook, at Newport, for next Sum- | mer. Cards Announce | Rice-Melonson ‘Wedding. Cards have been received in Wash- | ington from Mrs. May Melonson of | Weymouth, Nova Scotia, announcing the marriage of her daughter Eunice Alberta to Dr. Joseph Nelson Rice, | professor of mathematics at the Cath- | olic_University, Tuesday, September 4, at Weymouth, Nova Scotia. | Dr. and Mrs. Rice will be at home | after October 15 at Thirteenth and Law- | rence streets, Brookland, D. C. Dr. | Rice 1s a graduate of Cambridge College, England, and is a native of Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Armentrout and their | daughters, Miss Betty Armentrout and Miss Margaret Armentrout, have mo- | tored to Staunton, Va., where they will spend several weeks visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waight Fuller, | Miss Phoebe W. Fuller and Mr. Robert W. Fuller, 3d, have returned to their home, on Ashmead place, after spending | the Summer on the coast of Maine. Miss | Fuller is now making a brief visit to | Charleston, 8. C. 1 Mrs. F. D. Claggett will entertain for dinner this evening on the Willard STAR. WASHINGTON, D. . WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1928.° SOEIETY. roof. There will be 10 guests in the party. i Mrs. Donald Grant and her daughter, Miss Marion Grant, of Wolfville, Nova Scotia, are at the Grace Dodge Hotel for an extended stay. Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Belknap of | Chicago will be at the Mayflower until the end of the week before returning | home. They arrived in New York Wed- | nesday, September 5, from Europe, where | they traveled in Scotland, Austria, Ger- | many, Switzerland and England during | the Summer months. i Mr. and Mrs. Aldrich Dudley of Mid- dleburg, Va., were hosts at luncheon yesterday on the Willard roof garden. Mrs. F. Louis Slade and Mrs. Stanley Resor of New York City are in Wash- ington for the day and are at the Mayflower. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Gibbs have ar- | rived in Washington from their home | 1 | Lucas of New York and Paris Beauty Salon Moved to 1007 Conn. Ave.—3rd Door South of Cafe St. Marks | | i Phone Franklin 7050 ! c/?—\"‘g\; Silk Stockings! MISS DONNA L. FORD, Daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Rowland H. Ford, whose marriage to Mr. Philip W. Dimon of New York City, son of the Rev. Pr. and Mrs. Jay Johnson Dimon, will —Harris & Ewing. cently sold her residence on S street and has moved to 1860 California street. Mr. Green Clay Goodloe, jr., has just returned from spending the Summer in a boys’ camp in Pennsylvania. Mrs. Maxim Karollk will close her villa at Newport in October and return to Washington to join Mr. Karolik, who is here to continue the process of be- coming a naturalized citizen. Mrs. George H. Calvert, jr., with her young daughters, Miss Eleanor Calvert and Miss Margaret Peyton - Calvert, have returned after spending the Sum- l}ll‘lelet the Baltimore Inn, at Cape May, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Scott Thropp re- turned to Washington yesterday and are at the Mayflower for a few days en route to visit Mrs. Thropp's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Richard Holland Wilmer, in Clarke County, Va. Mrs. Green Clay Goodloe has re- Paris Has Feminine ing Crepe Satin . with Velvet B shades and Autumn ton they are* more gracefu frocks have ever been aear . Miss Laura Wolcott Tuckerman, JE Gmuingham €o. 314-316 Seventh Street Given a Newer Touch to These SMART AUTUMN FROCKS « .. Cunningham gives them a temptingly low price . . . toadd to the joy of choosing them! ’15 Frocks that will attend Autumn’s smartest afternoon and semi-formal evening affairs . . . t . and Crepe Georgette combined modeled in glisten- lack, cocoa-pink wine, coppery ies of green, blue and tan ... I and youthfully flattering than v w o and show new ways to New Luxurious Fur Trimmed COATS In a Notable Collection of Three Groups Of Exquisite Fabrics in Distinctive Colorings and Styles! $59.75 569 & $79 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, is the house guest of Miss Margaret Daingerfield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Algernon Daingerfield, in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Daingerfleld en- tertained at a supper-dance last eve- ning for their daughter at the Turf and Field Club, at Belmont Park. Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt will enter- tain a large company at dinner tomor- STETSON SHOE SHOP Is Now Displaying New Fall Footwear Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street CADITOL FUR in Newark, N. J., and are at the Carlton for a short stay. ‘Women’s City Club to Have Dinner This Evening. Miss Helen Brown will be hostess at the dinner given this evening at 6:30 o'clock at the Women’s City Club by " (Continued on Nineteenth Page.) i FASHION INSTITUTION e Washington NewTorks Gold Stripe Does price in- terest you most? Do you buy silk stockings that are cheapest? If you want silk stockings that you know will wear vou will have to pay a little higher initial price. But what do you get? JHODP vty FURFFOR JTORE 'QOS G ’ '. OVERIS YEARS TO satisfy you in the selection of FURS Is Our chief concern Not merely the satisfaction that comes from knowing you've hought an attractive coat . . . but knowing that behind the sale of every CAPITOL FUR SHOP garment lies personal- ized service . . . expect work- manship and the finest pelts ob- tainable. Such is the service rendered to our patrons. A Deposit Reserves Your Selection “Charge Accounts Solicited” " THE CAPITOL FUR SHOP I If you buy Gold Stripes —you get garter run protection. The greatest strain is in the hem and the wonderful Gold Stripe won't let a run get oast it. You get the last word in fashion, pointed heels or square heels if you prefer. You get 32 smart shades to choose from. You get service weight or sheer chiffon weight. You get a low-priced repair service. You get free dye service. Yon get the size you want immediately. You get EVERYTHING GOOD that you can get in silk stockings! Are Gold Stripes worth $1.65 a pair_or more? We'll say so. Hundreds of Washington women and misses say so! If you haven't worn them try a pair out and vou'll say so, too. Square heel, $1.65 pair! Pointed heels are $1.95 pair! 3 pairs are five cents less each. Gold Stripe Shop—Street Floor And an Additional Shop for Convenicnce in Stoneleigh Court, 1013 Connecticut Ave. 1\ FASHION Pare y Warn: More Days To Buy Dining HOURS, 9 to 5:30 “Serving odn Early eAmerican Mahogany An authentic reproduction of the craftsmanship of | Every detail has been carefully followed in cre- ‘ ating this beautiful suite. Crotch mahogany in the paneling of the cabinet pieces further en- hances the simple elegance of its design. Dulin & Martin Company | 1214-18 G STREET Washington Suite of Ten Pieces Duncan Phyfe #395 Furniture Section—Second Floor PHONE MAIN 1294 Our Only Store | | No Uptown Branch | 1215 F STREET | for over three-quarters of a Century” ' nrice is $450. 0 give extra being doubly Fur A FASHION Parie Frock ion upper arm... shop presents light-weight woolens are buying them. jumper. Slate blue . A FASHION INSTITUTION Washington Newlork Wear the Smart College-going girls take a Glen Bogie along! Smart ...serviceable...warm... won't sag or stretch! Won't wrinkle, think of that! Business women wear a Glen Bogie...you'll look business like and exceed- ingly in the mode! It will wear and wear and wear. Ready in a twinkle if you get up the “last minute.” Golfers have a Glen Bogie. You'll never know real golfing comfort until you wear one. Then you'll INSTITUTION ngton Newlors The coat sketched is fine dark natural squirrel. . .the skins worked crosswise through the hips to give the coat the new swathed hip line. . .the collar is the stand- ing Queen Anne type...It is the last word in fashion. only $395 this week. Next Monday the Every Coat in the Sale ~is exceptional. If You Don’t Waste Money and you want a fur coat this Winter, select your coat now. We Can’t Duplicate many of the coats! That means that they will cost us more money! Pay a deposit—coat held—storage free until you want it in Novem- ber . . . pay balance in January. elleffs Washington with silken frocks this year: n” they yield to the smartest designs! The New Collection Includes Wool Georgette Covertine One piece with diagonal surplice closing and collarless...two-piece with plaited skirt and tiny crosswise tuckings on the . . . black-and-white. Sizes 331 to 42V} never be without it. Miss Bridgers —straight from the place where Glen Bogies are created is here this week to help you buy the right I} Glen Bogie for you! 1 and 2 piece style knitted Suits, $29.50 Coats to match, $39.50 Sports Shop—Fourth Floor FURS It is real value . . . it is A saving of $55. Every one was chosen value in the Summer sale. So you are safe by buying at once. Salon—Fourth Floor INSTITUTION Newlor The Little Women’s Shop —is where you find the last word in fash- for women larger than the miss through hips and shorter than usual... and shorter of arm. This Lightweight Woolen Frocks, $19.50 Not just cloth dresses! Oh, in no! The smartness The thin ...and smart women are ..woolens so thin and light woolens vie Crepe Glace Tweed red ... green .. . navy Second Floor