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14 SOCIETY SOCIETY. b tes Selected for Cabinet Dinner Parties| HE President and Mrs. Coolidge will be entertained at dinner Tuesday evening, November 27, by the Vice President and Mrs, : Dawes, which will be the first of #¢he series of annual entertainments by embers of the cabinet for the Chief g(e(’uflvt and First Lady of the Land. » The Secretary of State and Mrs. Kel- J¥eg will give their dinner party for r, and Mrs. Coolidge Tuesday evening, Tjecember 4, and the date for the din- er of Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Mndrew W. Melion, is Tuesday, Decem- r 11, *The Sccretary of War and Mrs. ight F. Davis will be hosts to Pre: mt and Mrs. Coolidge Tuesday eve- | ng, December 18. Secretary Davis fl now in St. Louls and will probably | t return until after election. Mrs. abroad and will not return mtil the latter part of November. SThe Attorney General and Mrs. John Sargent will entertain at dinner Thesday evening, January 8, for Presi- dfnt and Mrs. Coolidge. The Attorney | neral is in Ohio and will go from tfere to Ludlow, Vt., to join Mrs. Sar- gent over election day. They will come t¢ Washington November 7. "The Postmaster General and Mrs. New will be hosts in their charming suburban home, Hemlock Hedge, in Edgemoor, Ma., for the Chief Executive and First Lady of the Land Tuesday evening, January 15. Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Curtis to Chief Executive and First Lady of the Land. , versary of Cgechoslovak independence | yesterday. The military attache of the British embassy, Col. Pope-Hennessy, will go fo | New York today or tomorrow to meet | Dame Una Pope-Hennessy, who is ex- | pected to arrive in New York Wednes- day morning aboard the Tuscania from | England. The ship was due to arrive to- day, but has been delayed by gales. Mrs. Williams Phillips, wife of the United States Minister to Canada, has closed her Summer home at North Bev- erly, Mass.,, and will spend a few days in New York at the Weylin before join- | ing the Minister in the legation in Ot- | tawa. Miss Anne Robbins, daughter of As- | sistant Secretary of War Col. Charles | Burton Robbins, will return to Wash- ington this afternoon from a short visit in Philadelphia. Lord and Lady Allenby Leaving Washington Today. Field Marshal Lord Allenby and Lady Allenby will leave this afternoon for New York after spending the week end as guests of former United States Min- ister to Egypt and Mrs. Hampson Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Gary were hosts to a company of 75 at dinner last evening in the Chinese room of the Mayflower. Mr. and Mrs. Lyman B. Kendell en- tertained at dinner last evening in their ‘Dywight Wibur have planned their din- ner to the President and Mrs. Coolidge | for Tuesday evening, January 22. | sThe Secretary of the Interior, Mr. Roy O. West, has set the date for his| dner to the Chief Executive and Mrs. | soolidge, Tuesday, January 29, which | will be his first official entertainment | 1dr the President and his wife since | bpcoming a member of his cabinet. | The Secretary of Agriculture and Mr. | Jardine will be hosts to President and Mrs. Coolidge Tuesday evening, Febru- ary 5 The Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. ‘William Fairfleld Whiting would enter- tdin Tuesday, February 12, but it is net known definitely. Secretary Whit- ing will return this evening from Hol- yok2, Mass., where he joined Mrs. Whit- ing Saturday. Mrs. Whiting was called lrj Holyoke early Friday by th: death of her mother. | /The Secreiary of Labor and Mrs. | James J. Davis have selected Tuesday, Pebruary 19, for their entertainment of the Chief Executive and first lady of the land. President and Mrs. Coolidge are ex-| pected to attend the performance to- night of “Th= Kingdom of God"” from which the Columbian Women of George | Washington * University will benefit. | Miss é)tiel Barrymore, who is the star of the company, lunched with President and Mrs. Coolidge in the White House today. Ambassador of Turkey Celebrating Republic Day. The Ambassador of Turkey, Akmed| Mouhtar Bey, will give a reception from 4 to 7 o'clock this afternoon in the embassy, 1708 Massachusetts avenue, in celebraticn of the anniversary of the establishment of the Turkish Republic. THe Ambassador will have receiving with him Mme. Afifeh Bedy Bey, wife of the counselor of the embassy, and | Mme. Kadry Riza Bey, wife of the first secretary of the embassy. The Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Wilbur. will go to New York tomorrow, returning to the Capital Thursday evening. The Chief Justice and Mrs. William Howard Taft motored to Ripon Lodge, the estate of Mr. and Mrs. Wade H. Elis, in Virginia yesterday and took luncheon with them. In the-afternoon the Attorney General and & party of friends were guests of Mr, and Mrs. Ellis at the tea hour. 2 Representative Franklin W, Fort of New Jersey has -joined ‘Mrs. Fort in flWnshmgton and is with her &t the May- lower. Mrs. Adam Wyant, wife of Represent- ative Wyant, has returned to her apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel from a trip to her home in Greens- burg, Pa., where she went to attend the State convention of the D. A. R. . Wyant, treasurer general of the Ngtional Society, D. A. R, is in Wash- 1 n to take part in the ceremonies nding the laying of the corner sthne of Constitution Hall, the new DI A. R. building adjoining Memorial Centinental Hall, tomorrow afternoon. She will rejoin Representative Wyant alhelr home in Greensburg the latter 1 irt of the week and will return with n to Washington after election. he-charge d'affaires of Czechoslo- kia and Mme. Lipa have returned to v4 thbir apartment in the Highlands after | former home in Havana, Cuba, for the | man Park Hotel for a week's visit the country home, Kentsdale. Mrs, George Grant Mason, jr., is vis- iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ken- dall, before joining Mr. Mason in Cuba for the Winter. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Crensflaw enter- tained at luncheon at the Willard Tues- day, October 23, in honor of Dean G. R. E. MacDonald of St. James' Ca- thedral in Fresno, Calif. The other guests were Rev. Dr. C. Ernest Smith, Mrs. Francis Hugo Tait, Archdeacon Porter, Mrs. Joseph Morgan and Mrs. C. Leslie McCrea. Dean MacDonald left Washingten Fricay for California after attending the General Convention of the Episco- | pal Church. Rafael R. Govin, who made on her Winter home for some years, IS at the Weylin in New York after spending the Summer with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Schoonmaker, jr., at Kingston, | N. Y. Mrs. Govin will later go to her | Mrs. Wa Midcwinter. Mr. Jacob Gould Schurman, Ambas- sador to Germany, has arrived i Washington from New York and fs at | the Carlton for a few days. | —_ | Maj. Gen. Sir John Hanbury Wil-| liams will be the guest of honor at a luncheon ‘given by Mr. Alexander H. Phillips of Washington in the presi- dential suite of the Willard Wednesday. Mrs. Willlam McClellan Ritter was hostess at luncheon today in honor of Mrs. McClure Kelley, who before her marriage in the late Summer was Miss '(l'he(;gorla Catalani. Covers were laid or 12. Judge and Mrs. Ruth La Motte Hol- land have as their guest at the Ward- former’s brother, Mr. Paul Holland of Denver, Colo. Mrs. William North Sturtevant enter- tained at luncheon today at the Chevy Chase Club in compliment to Mrs. Jef- frey Parsons, who will sail shortly for a lengthy stay in Europe. Others in the company were Mrs. John Melton Hudgins, Mrs. Francis Winslow, Mrs, | Marshall Orme Exnicios, Mrs. Thomas Lee Hume, jr., Mrs. Stanley Carr, Mrs. George Summerlin, jr., Mrs. J. J. Whe- lan, Mrs. Leonard Bloch, Mrs. William Neal McCord, Miss Delight Arnold and her house guest, Mrs, Alexander Grant of Boston; Miss Anne Hill, Miss Dorothy Hill, Miss Charlotte Childress and Miss Kaiharine Dunlop. { Col. Robert M. Thompson has re- | turned to Washington from Philadel- | phia, where he spent the past two weeks, and will be at the Mayflower for a while before leaving for Florida. | i Mrs. Alfred J. Brousseau, president | general of the D. A. R., has arrived in Washington and is at the Willard, where she will pass the week. | Mrs. G. Funston Lucado of Lynch~i burgz, Va., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Blair Banister, in the latter’s apart- ment at the Mayflower. Mrs. Banister’s daughter, Miss Margaret Banister, Is nding the week with her aumt, Dr. Meta Glass, at Sweet Briar College in Virginia. ; Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Louvis of Lan-! eftending receptions in Philadelphia apd Baltimore celebrating the anni- I alk-Ower are happy feet feet Danube Gore Pumps This picturesque shoe fits beautijully. It can be had in a fine brown calf with a brown lizard ini an inlay of dull kid. $11 Wolfs Uuatk-Qver Shop || i | ll 929 ¥ Reupholster_ing 5-Piece Parlor Suites—Antiques 3-Piece Overstuffed Suites Dining Room Chairs caster, Ohio, motored to Washington from Jamaica, Long Island, to spend | lay, or in soft patent leather, with ¢ .00 Street Upholstered in Imitation and Genuine Leather, Tapestries, Mohair, Brocades and Velours Also Chair Caneing and Porch Rockers Splinted by Our Experts at the Now Prevailing Low Prices TWO DAYS ONLY i Write, Phone or Call Franklin 7483 Estimates and Samples siven Free Clay Armstrong Upholsterer 1235 10th St. N.W. { the bridegroom. THE EVENING DISTINGUISHED WEEK-END VISITOR STAR, WASHINGTO LADY ALLENBY, With Field Marshal Lord Allenby, wa: were given in their honor. last week with Mr. and ‘Mrs. William | a guest over the week end of former United | States Minister to Egypt and Mrs. Hampson Gary. Several brilliant functions Harris-Ewing Photo. Haynes before an improvised altar of Bacas at their home on Alaska avenue. | palms lighted by cathedral candles. Cards for Davis-Burton Wedding Are Issued. Mr. and Mrs. Elmon L. Burton have | issued invitations for the marriage of | their _daughter | M | “At Dawning.” was rendered by Carroll Dempsey. Preceding the ceremony, Miss Lilly ollart sang “I Love You Truly” and ‘The wedding music ‘The bride wore a gown of ivory satin Pauline Elizabeth, to | trimmed in lace and her veil of illu- Mr. Douglas M. Davis, Saturday, No-|sion was caught with orange blossoms. vember 10. The ceremony will taki place at 7 o'clock in the Sixth Pres terian Church of this city. ~Miss Bur ton will have her sister, Miss Marjoric | Burton, as maid of honor, and the | other attendants will be Miss Ruth Cole, Miss Ruth Coleman. Mrs. Howard War- en and Miss Charlotte Davis, sister of m The ushers selecte¢ are Mr. James | Lauderdale, Mr. John Sweeley, Howard Warrer and Mr. Henry Hiser. Mr. Davis will have his brother, Mi. Ernest Davis, as best man. Mrs. How- ard Warren entertained at a kitchen shower for Miss Burton last Saturdav | evening, and Miss Marjorie Burton gav~ a surprise pantry shower in her home Wednesday evening. Mrs. William F. Norris entertained at luncheon Friday Mrs. George R. Vaughan, the house guest of Mrs. Rich- ard V. Taylor, wife of Interstate Com- merce Commissioner Taylor, the lunch- eon following Mrs. Bertram Chester- man’s bridge party at Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. Richard V. Taylor, wife of Interstate Commerce Commissioner Taylor, entertained guests at luncheoa there Wednesday. The home of Mr. and Mrs. M. L.| Burton, 2506 Lloyd ave., Richmond, Va., | was the scene of the wedding Wednes- day, October 24, at 6:30 o'clock of their daughter, Grace Huff, to Mr. Wil- liam Bevin Coakley of Washington, son of Mr. and Mrs, R. P. Coakley of | King George, Va. The ceremony was | performed by the Rev. W. T. A; AUTUMN TWEEDS are the season’s smartest con- tribution to the tailored mode. Light weight, chicly correct, subtly toned like turning leaves, these tweed dresses are versatile frocks for sports, business and col- lege. Every Fall wardrobe worthy of note will include at least one tweed frock as a smart “standby Women’s and Misses’ Tweed Dresses in the tailored mode $16.75 t0 $59.50 “New Apparer Atwars” W, B. Moses & Sons F Street at 1lth Her flowers were a shower bouquet of bride’s roses and valley lillies. The atron of honor Mrs. George Russell, Edwards, sister of the bride, wore tea rose crepe satin and carried an arm bouquet of lavender chrysanthemums. The maid of honor, McLelland, wore nile green crepe satin Miss Mary E, and carried an arm bouquet of pink chrysanthemums. Little Miss Dorothy Edwards, niece of the bride, carried o, i, ot Weshingion , §r., of #nd Mr. W. B. Davic of Washington Was groomsman. Guesis from out_of town attending the wedding were: Mr. and lars. C. P. Roach, jr., and son, Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Jones, Miss Florence Coakley, Mr. Edwin Coakley, Mr. and Mrs. W. B, Davis and Miss Mary Hager, all of Washington; Mr. and Mrs. J. Thornton Coakley and daughter, Colonial Beach, Va.; Mrs. M. D. Burton and Mr. Davis Burton of Falls Church, Va. Immediately after the wedding Mr. and Mrs, Coakley left for a motor trip to New York and Canada. On their return_they will make their home at Falls Church, Va. Much entertaining has been done in honor of Mrs. Coakley. Miss Elizabeth Gary entertained at a bridge shower on October 12, Mrs. C. A. Lynch and Miss Mary McLelland gave a miscel- laneous shower October 17 and Mrs. W. W. Patterson entertained at a mis- cellaneous shower October 19. ington entertained at dinner last night in the crystal room at the Willard Hotel. Mrs. Hayes is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank 8. Hight of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Flaherty of Washington will be the guests of honor at a dinner in the crystal room at the Willard Hotel on Saturday, November 3. Covers will be laid for 15. Capt. William B. Van Auken and Mrs. Van Auken have returned from Paris and have opened a suite at the Fairfax for the Winter season. Mrs. Bernabe Sanchez of Havana, Cuba, and her daughters, Miss Gra- sialla Sanchez and Miss Anna Maria Sanchez, are now in Washington and will be at the Mayflower until Thurs- day. Mrs. Sanchez's younger daughter, Miss Anna Maria, will be at the Im- maculata Seminary this Winter. Mrs. J. W. Hardell will serve as one of | the hostesses of the ladies’ entertain- ment committee at the sixth annual convention of the American Institute of Steel Construction, Inc., to be held at the Edgewater Gulf Hotel, Biloxi, Miss., the week of November 12. Mr. Archibald C. V. Wells, who has returned after spending the Summer in the mountains of West Virginia, has taken possession of his new apartment at 1606 Twentieth street. Judge John W. H. Crim has arrived in" Washington_from Somerville, N. J., and is at the Carlton for several days. Mrs. Julius Young Talmadge of Athens, Ga., is spending a week at the Exclusive Furs for Little Money an remodel your old furs into ve models at & very nominal cos| Years of experience in repair- ing and remodeling furs insure one of only the best, and all our work is guaranteed. EANET & BACHER FURRIERS 1111 F N.W. For Halloween Little Buster 10-0z Pkg. Hulless Pop Corn 15¢ Pkg. MAGRUDER INC. Best Groceries Conn. Ave,, N Phones Decatur 4180, 4181 I and 18th Sts. . 4182, 4185, 4184, 41 , 418, Established 1875 WASHINGTON NTHUSIASTI tremendous n here this season leads us to believe that our Stock of Winter Coats for I omen and Misses is able in v ay. dress models. added each day. We Call and Deliver JuLius GARFINCKEL& Co. We solve your Parking Problem while shopping here by taking charge of your car. NDIVIDUAL youth-giving lines achieved by makers who excel in their art, characterize both sports and New F StrReer Corner oF I3™ Cleaners PARIS C buying and a umber of coats sold most remark- arrivals are e Phone Atlantic 23 WORLD'S LARGEST Don’t Worry Abeut Soil DRY CLEA —ask the Vogue Cleaners The World's Largest Cleaning Plant offers you unequaled facilities in the dry cleaning of your household goods and ap- parel. Individual depart- ments catering to the ut- most in service and re- sults. Prompt collection and delivery service. Dry cleaning adds longer wear, greater sani- tation and greatest satis- faction, A visit to our plant will convince you of our thorough work with the aid of the most modern equipment and expert knowledge. Call Miss Gray—Atlantic Rugs Blankets Draperies Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Apparel Including Ladies’ Fine Frocks, Fur Coats, Evening Dresses, Cloth Coats, - Men's Topcoats, Over- coats, Suiu, ete. 23—Personal Service Dept. D. €. MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1928. Mr. and Mrs. Davis Hayes of Wash-_ ‘Willard Hotel, having come to Wash~ ington to atiend a meeting of the na tional board of management, Daughters of the American Revolution next Wed- nesday. Mrs. Talmadge, who is a vice esident general, D. A. R, came to vashington from Allentown, Pa., where attended ihe Pennsylvania State conference, D. A, R. Before that she was in Boston to visit her son, Mr, Hurry ‘Talmadge, at the Harvard Medical School. Mrs. Talmadge will leave Washington Wednesday evening for New York, where she will be the guest of honor at a luncheon at the Waldorf-Astoria Thurs- day to be given in her honor by Mrs. F. D. Callan, president of the New York Daughters of 1812, who are holding a State meeting there this week. Dr. Henry Noble MacCracken. pres- ident of Vassar College, will be the guest of the Washington branch of the Vassar Alumnae Association at a luncheon at the Grace Dodge Hotel on Wednesday at 1:30 o'clock. Dg. Mac- Cracken comes to Washington to re-| ceive a decoration from the Polish | government that night. Miss Jessie M. Kelley, deputy gov- i ernor of the Iowa Soclety of Mayflower Descendants, who resides at Ames, | Iowa, is visiting with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. R. Kelley, agricultural engineer, United States Department of Agriculture, at 3707 Woodley road, Washington, D. C. Miss Kelley will leave Saturday for Gettysburg, where she will visit the battlefields before returning home via | Chicago. [ Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Harmon are at | the Wardman Park Hotel for a week | { While on their honeymoon. They will | leave the latter part of the week for | New York, from where they will sail | on the Roma on November .7, and en | route to Zurich, Switzerland, where | | they will make their home, they will | : travel through Spain and the Riviera, Before their marriage on October 20 Mrs. Harmon was Miss Miriam Hart, AVE MONEY On These Fine Fabrics 507 Antique Sunfast Damask, yd., $4.29 French Marquisette, yd... ... i8 | Sunfast Voile, yd...." | Rayon Taffeta, 45" width, yd. On the Second Ficor to | L34 t | McDEVITT’S | 11211 F St. N.-W. (2nd floor) M. 32115 This Evening 5 until 7:30 Broiled TENDERLOIN Steak Dinner 75¢ 1 Or Your Choice of Our | Rezular Menu | Columbia Road «418% § OPPOSITE AMBASSADOR Columbia 5042 &, SOCIETY. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Stillson Hart of Barrington and Chicago, Ill. Added to the list of patronesses and box holders for the sixth semi-annual Wardman Park Seddle Club Horse Show, to be given under the auspices of the Welfare amd Rocreational Associa- tion of Public Buildings and Grounds | at Rock Creek Park equitation field Sat~ urday, November 3, for the benefit of the Garfield Hospital Nursery Guild is | Mrs. B. B. Jones. Mrs. Jones will have several guests in her box. | As the last week before the contest | arrives Washington's smart riding set is preparing to participate in at least one of the 10 classes on Saturday. Add- ed to the list of those who have already signified their intenticn to enter are (Continued on Fifteenth Page.) ! A Hllloun Specialty Jack-O-Lantern Centerpieces 1407 H Street | Main 3707 il Club Chantecler I Now Open For Members and i } Their Guests f I Couvert Supper Dancing | (l Two Dollars Nightly, Including Saturday Sunday, From 10 P.M. Three Dollars No. 1 Thomas Circle Phone Robert North 3720 jor reservations — developed in gold or silver kid at $16.50. Also in brown crepe with gold piping and black crepe with silver pip- ing, $15. New shades in eve- ning hosiery at $195 and §2.95. RICH'S MARTIN COMPANY Twenty-three piece sets $3.75 , $3.50 lustre with a decoration $4.25 “Serving Washington Imported Tea Sets | Especially New and Interesting cent china in four distinctive floral decorations. Twenty-three pieces of all-over blue lustre with linings of tan. Twenty-three pieces; all-over blue | plum blossoms. Dulin & Marti}z Company 1215 F Street FHPUEEN | Eo o Bl L i IN | | i i | | | | | ! 2 | | The hand-painted Spanish pottery set above is especially interesting. H |18 Its 29 pieces enable the hostess to serve two tables of four. ! Decorations are green on a tawny brown field. | | Il $Q.50 | 1 Special ¢ 29 Pieces i Regularly §10 Gift Suggestions of translu- Twenty-three pieces; Japanese lustre bands with bright floral decorations. $5.75 Twenty-nine pieces of Austrian china in Black, Tan and Mother- of-Pearl lustre finish. . $9.50 A seven-piece Japanese set of 6 straight cups and teapot with wicker handle. of white g $1.00 1214-18 G Street of over for three-quarters a century” o T