Evening Star Newspaper, January 24, 1929, Page 19

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SOCIETY Continued Fror Eighteenth Page.) se contribute to the progflm " Friday ernoon, February 2: he assoclate mcmbnr! of the club ve & luncheon today in the clubhouse, company remaining through the rnoon to play bridge. Among the stesses are Mrs. B. Magruder Wing- 1d, Miss Margaret Mansfield, Miss prothy Kurtz, Miss Anne Parks Wood- iss Fannie May Trimble, Miss llh Williams and Miss Olive Mec- intic, Miss Blanche Wingo is chairman of iate members this season and they Il give a dance in the clubhouse, | pnday evenmg Frbruar\ 11, for which cial music h: en arranged. rs. Audrey L\'nn Clarke and Mrs. rry W. West are leaving today for jSouth American cruise. r. and Mrs. Thomas Elmore Austin, | 0 have just completed their wedding | D, were given a shower last evening the home of the bridegroom's mother, s. Anna Eulala Austin, at 1726 P eet northwest. The house had a| etty arrangement of pink and green, orchestra played for dancing, and [buffet supper was served. IMrs. Austin was before her marriage iss Dorothy Miller of Washington, and ong the guests at the party were and Mrs. ver, the latter mother the bride: Miss Elizabeth Austin and iss Della Austin, sisters of the bride- oom; Miss Alice Crawford, Miss Irene rris, Miss Clara Putz, Miss Margaret onroe, Miss Ida Lawlor, Miss Jean- e Sandoz, Miss Cordia Hunter, Miss orence Eiken, Miss Daite Dailey, Mr. ul Johnson, Mr. Julian Smith, Mr. py Crosson, Mr. Claude Cash, Mr. bbert Barto, Mr. Morris CrunE Mr, d Mrs. Edward D. Powell, Mr. and and Mr. and Mrs, 'The marriage Miss Helen Miller jieseking, daughter of Mrs. Grace M. leseking, to Mr. Virgil Franklin purne took place yesterday afternoon 4 o'clock, in the home of the bride's other, at 1922 Biltmore street, the Kafka’ == KAFKA We need merchandise and ex One Group of DRESSES $[*.00 These dressesare below cost, but we must clear them out. Broken sizes, but wonderful values. Discontinuing all Silk Hosiery Hosiery mostly 842, a few 9, 915 89c¢ wear. $1.65 and $1.75 Finery Silk All Under- 1/ wear at 2 Off and more YOUTHFYL'APPAREL FOR EVERYWOMAY > TRUE ECONOMY comes, not from a buyer’s mistake nor a manufacturer’s loss, but from the efficient co-ordination of retail units on a successful plane. Msmw are the direct result facturing and efficient distribution by s the manufacturer of his own Factories product thru his own stores *JEANNINE~ SELLING OUT ENTIRE the room Drastic Reductions THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, 'D. C. THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1929 | Rev. J. L. Kilkenny, officiating. The home had an effective arrangement of cut flowers, ferns and palms. The bride was given in mnrrhae by her brother, Mr. Miller Gieseking, and she wore a gown of white lace fash- foned with a long full skirt, and long fitter sleeves. Her veil was a coronet of duchess lace and orange blossoms and she carried a shower bouquet of orchids and lilies of the valley. Mr. Bourne and his bride left for a wedding trip South, Mrs. Bourne wearing a brown ensemble, with ac- | at home February 15, at 4701 Connec- ticut avenué. Miss Patricia Poe Bennett will have as her guests at the celebrity breakfast Friday Mrs. John W. Bennett, Mrs. Frank Morrison, Mrs. Edgar Boyd Kay irs. Howard Payson Brown. | Others at_the bulletin table will be Miss Agnes Winn, Mrs. Paul Weir and Swalm Reed's guests, Mrs. Pauline Swalm, Mrs. Edgar Ross Tompkins and | Miss Florence Long. Dr. and Mrs. Abram Simon will leave ‘l\P city February 3 to spend a fortnight | at Miami Beach, Fla, Lieut. Leigh Wade, A. C., has arriv- | ed in Washington from New York City and is at the Carlton for a short-stay. | . Miss Quincy Smith has returned to her home, on Woodland _drive, after passing severay months in Italian North Africa as a guest of the Italian govern- ment. Miss Smith has as her guest | Miss Lloyd Preston, in Cnnjlmc(lcn with | whomshe is writi book. The Congressional Country Club will present another of its delightful twi- |light hour musicales Sunday afternoon |at 5 o'clock in the Pompelian room, when Mrs. Dorothy Wilson Halbach, contralto. and Mr. Bruno Walter, bari- tone, will be the soloists, while Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner Coombs, who has ar- ranged this program, will be.the ac- companist. Among those who have accepted the invitation of the Washington Chapter of the Trinity College Alumnae to act as patronesses at their fifteenth annual ball, to Be held at the Willard on Februarv 8, are: Mrs. Curtis D. Wilbur, Lady Isabella Howard, Mme. Claudel, s, Inc. STOCK for incoming new tensive improvements New Spring DRESSES $0.50 Every dress just recently arrived, included Odd Lot of Winter Coats Vialues to $49.50 Fur - trimmed 1 and tailored styles. Just about 12 in the lot. If your size is here you'll get a mar- velous value. at ‘Tenth St 1 and manufacturing VALUES of scientific manu- . 3 Stores | cessories to correspond. They will be | Minister of Costa Rica, Don Manuel Castro Quesada; the daughter of the Rumanian Minister, Mlle. Jeanne Cret- 2ziano; the wife of the Minister of Pan- ama, Mme Alfaro; Mrs. Louis D. Bran- deis, Mrs. Edward Douglas White, Mrs. J. Leo Kolb and Mrs. Thomas A. "Lane. Col Russell C. Langdon of Trenton, N. J., has joined Mrs. Langdon in Washington and is with her at the Ma§flower, having arrived here late last night from Camden, N. J., where he| attended the launching of the cruiser Salt Lake City. Mrs. Langdon is presi- dent of the Society of Sponsors of the United States Navy, now holding its annual meeting in Washington. Miss Helen Budge, who christened the Salt Lake City, is one of the newest members of the society and will attend their meeting today. Miss Budge will be at the Mayflower with her parents until tomorrow morning and with them is returning to New York, where she is| studying music. Mr. Bishop Hill was host to a small part at the supper dance at the Club Chantecler last night. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Messmore of New York City are at the Carlton for a few days. Mrs. Beatrice Ward Nelson, formerly of‘Washington. but since her marriage a resident at the University of Virginia, has recently been the guest of her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Ward of 2627 Adams Mill road. Mrs. Nelson, who by reason of having served as secretary to Mr. Mather, di- | rector of the National Park Service, and more recently as executive secretary of the National Conference of State Parks, is an authority on parks and reserva- tions, whether national or State, has recently published a book January Sale! Entire Stock of Ladies’ Hand Bags reduced in price 20 to 259 unrestricted choice CASTENS LEATHER "GOODS 1314 G St. N.W. CITY CLUB BLDG. Portner Cafe 15th St. Bet. U a:nd v Table d’Hote Dinner 75¢ 5:00 until 7:30 You will always find chicken on the menu Thursday evenings, or your choice of other delicious meats. ‘We cater to family parties. Serving a children’s dinner at 50 ‘ents. F. A. COOKE, Manager Phone North 1420 Desirable Apartments Reasonably. Priced Portner Apts. Mme. Dubuchi, Mme. de Padilla, the entitled | philu 606 - 614 “State Recreation, Parks, Forests and Game Preserves,” which is beautifully illustrated. Mrs. Victor S. Bryant of Durham, N. C., will make her home at the Fairfax Hotel while her daughter is attending National Cathedral. Pen League Breakfast to Have Dis'.lnglllshed Attendants, | Arrangements are complete for the second celebrity breakfast of the Na- | tional League of American Pen Women, | tomorrow at 12 o'clock at the Willard Hotel. So great is the popularity of | this_series of literary events, all of which are opened to the public, that the committee decided yesterday to have the tables laid in the ballroom of the hotel instead of the Willard room as originally planned, in order | that all who desire to avail themselves of this privilege of becoming acquainted with the personalities of the celebrities of the day in the field of art, literature and music may be able to do so. Mis. Clarence M. Busch, national | president of the Pen Women, will pre- side at the breakfast.and Mrs. Swalm Reed, chairman of the series, will brief- ly touch upon the work of Mrs. Kath- leen Norris, novelist and short story | writer; Mr. Paul Kester, dramatist and author; Mr. Thomas Lomax Hunter, poet and columnist, and Mr. George Morton, who a number of years ago was writing “best sellers” and today | is giving intimate glimpses of life in some of the interesting cities abroad, where he lived as consul from the | United States. Mrs. Wolfe Smith will present Miss Elizabeth Lippincott Dean, {and tell of the wide range of writings | of the author of “Dolly Madison the Nation's Hostess.” The musical pr ‘WASHINGTON' gram will be piano solos by the hmedl artist, Mary Lindsay Oliver of New York. Others at the speakers’ table will be Mrs. Thomas Lomax Hunter, .| wife of the poet: Mrs. Grace Stair of Detroit, Mich., guest of Mrs. Busch; Mrs. Charles C. Hartigan, sister of Mrs. Norris, and Dr. Mary Meek Atkeson, first vice president of the Natlonal League. Additional subscribers to the break- fast are Mrs. Gertrude M. Rohrer of Pittsburgh, past president of the Pitts- burgh branch, who will have with her as her guest her sister, Mrs. W. C. Bond of this city, with whom she is passing the week end on her way to Florida; Mrs. J. Irvin Steel, Mrs. William Meade Coulling, who has recently returned to Washington from Annapolis; Mrs. Vlmr Kauffmann, Mrs. Albert Baggs, Mrs. John Walker Holcombe, Miss Marie C. Redfern, Mrs. G. G. White, Mrs. G. C. Skinner, Mrs. E. Richard Gasch, Mrs. F. W. Kerns, Mrs. Dabney H. Maury, Mrs. William H. Moses, Mrs. Eugene E. Peters, Mrs. Lillian H. Weir, Miss Mattie Bennett, and Mlss Sarah Cush- ing. Because of the increased facil- ities provided reservations may still be made through Mrs. Rose Gouverneur Hoes at the Willard Hotel. Mr. Clifford K. Berryman will be the feature of a joint meeting of the Wom- an’s Alliance of All Souls’ (Unitarian) Church and the Layman'’s League, to be held Friday evening, January 25, at 8 oclock in Pierce Hall, Fifteenth and Harvard streets. Mr. Berryman will display with words and charcoal the high and humorous lights _of 10 presidential campaigns, from President Cleveland to President- elect Hoover, in which he has partici- pated PARIS Jurius GARFINCKEL&Co. We solve your Parking Problem while shop- ping here by taking charge of your car Tomorrow— Notable Selections in Every Department At Clearance Prices statement. " absolutely impossible mation. boys greatly reduced. ps Three Events in One .. . for Friday OMEN who know this store will fully appreciate the significance of such a Our Clearance Sales AVE attracted widespread interest and additional selections on sale now are to equal, in our esti- N addition to women’s and misses’ apparel, everything for infants, girls and ‘small F Streer Corner'or 3™ born ELEVENTH ST. A Special Sale that features the three leading Spring Frock Modes NAVY BLUE GEORGETTES PRINTED SILK FROCKS “HIGH SHADES” SILK FROCKS B | In the 'Pig.Montey Dress Shop [l A string quartet, orgnmzed by Mrs. Rowland Dyer, will furnish music. A social hour will follow, with Mrs. Ed- ward Horton hostess. Miss \Cecil Meade of Baltimore is making a prolonged visit to her aunt, Mrs. Sheahan, in Southeast Washing- ton. Mr. James M. Good former Repre- sentative in Congress and campaign manager of the West for Mr. Hoover, with the entire Towa delegation in Con- gress will be the guests of the Iowa Society at a reception and ball to be held at the Willard Hotel Monday eve- ning, February 4. Plans are now being made for the Henry F. Dimock is chairman, and which will be given for the benefit of the George Washington Memorial, Mardi Gras night, February 12, at the Willard Hotel. Decorations and pageantry fea- tures will stress the patriotic note, and these will be different from any pre- (Continued on Twentieth Page.) 6-Day Speclal Pre-Season Slip Cover Sale $5.95‘ Each Complete Just think, for $5.95 we will ent and make a Slip Cover for the average size chair, including material and labor. Only the Best- Bll:lnm "Linen %or” Cretonne " wii be useq Sofas count as 2 pieces Cushions $1 each Ry ber these specials are for theThalance "ol s month—onty Six days, o bo exact Our Estimator will gladly call with samples Call or Telephone Franklin 8916 Ernest Holober Co. Upholstering—Slip Covers Draperies 627 F Street N.W. Opposite Hecht's red, white and blue ball, for which Mrs. | INCLUDED IN THE ARTCRAFT SALE ARE ALL THE FAVORED | FOOTWEAR STYLES OF THE SEASON - - CREA- TIQNS FOR STREET -~ AFTERNOON AND EVENING. THAT WERE 27.50 TO 14.50 REDUCED TO 9.85 AND II.SS EARLY SHOPPING IS ADVISED $3 AND $4 SHEER HOSE ARTCRAFT Foorwear 1311 F ST. Starting Tomorrow Nothing Reserved ériebacher Announces an Event of Extraordinary Importance! € are Discontinuing FUR Department Important Notice The response which smart women of Washington have.mad: to the appeal of éur Sportswear Section has forced us to give more space to this department. To secure this space we are compelled to sacrifice our entire Fur Section. Under this necessity we are placing our entire stock. of fine fur coats on sale tomorrow at prices never before equalled in WasHington on garments of comparable quality. 1 Black Caracul Coat.. 2 Hudson Seal Coats.-.ceourmneirn 2 Hudson Seal Coats....anmzonn "losis $150 225 275 225 350 160 300 250 325 135 Originally $295 395 495 395 595 295 750 450 595 1 Natural Raccoon Coat cur.osexa 1 Natural Shaded Krimmer Coat 1 Baby Leopard Cogt .sxros.vmmsn 1 Bronze Russian Caracul Coat. 1 Brown American Broadtail Coat 1 Natural Golden Beaver Coat. ., 1 Natural Dark Muskrat Coat = 235 275 295 495 595 650 895 1 Beige Russian Caracul.c. .om. s 450 1 Jap Mink Coat...-.cx. .conn.cmemnn 875 1 Baby Broadtail Caracul Coat.a 1,250 1 Dark Eastern Mink Coat.s-..xu 1,850 2 Gray Kid Caracul Coats. ....., 295 1 Beige Russian Caracul Coat.... 475 275 295 150 Al! are reduced A Most Opportune Time to Acquire That New Frock @O0 SEE IT, in all its variations, is to dream of lilac time. Being shown just now in black kid with the modernistic tnmmmg in black suede. Also in sunburn kid with dapper brown trimming end in brown kid with brown suede trimming, Paris heels. Om' C/‘oc[mg Cfi‘ylzsl dz;ys. “Gunmetal” or “Misty Morn” are the correct shades in hoslery to wear with blnck kid far harmony, while “Plaza Gray” or Moonl\ght st for contrast. With * “Sunburn” kid “Beach Tan” or “Chempagne” are idesl. With brown kid or brown_suede “Algerian” for harmony and “Cuban Sand” for contrast. hese and many other shades in sheer chiffor: and service-weight silk floclunfa with square, pointed and new French heels ere availsble in Nisley stores at $1.15 $1.35 $1.65 1 Silver Muskrat Coat s 1 Leopard Cat Coat ... crropieronen 1:@celotiClont: .. conianni s iatnn 2 MoleskinCoats. ............. 2 Natural Siberian Squirrel Coats 1 Cocoa Ermine Coat. . 160 165 250 250 350 450 250 450 595 975 150 Again the “Pin Money” Dress Shop leads ‘in presenting the newest Spring Modes at its spe- cial price, $15.00. Another of the many reasons for the con- tinued popularity it enjoys. And you do not have to “shop around” to learn of every new style detail and Spring color . . . they are all here in great profusion. Have the newest Frocks while they are still newest. Attend: tomorrow. EeTe tome1* (1 Many New Style Notes Are Here Nailhead trimmings, tiers, tucks, jackets, gay embroideries, lace yokes, bright ’kerchief scarfs, low flares, side flounces, girdled hips, and self-pleatings. One and two picge frocks. | | i ! [ i i | E “Pin Money” . l 1 Brown Caracul Coat ... . . ... There are exactly fifty-six coats in the sale. below actual wholesale cost. All Sales Final 0 2 No Exchanges Grilebacher “Jeminine cApparel of Individuality TWELVETEN TWELVETWELVE F STREET No Credits Dress Shop Second Floor Philipsborn’s Sports Ensembles and Frocks of many Tweeds depict the out-door mode . . . also at $15.00. NISLEY—In Washington, 1339 F St., NW % | | | 3 % )

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