Evening Star Newspaper, March 3, 1929, Page 30

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g S0 CIETY. D. C., MARCH 3. 1929—PART 3. THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON. Tales of Well Known Folk In Sociz}l and Official Life the Most Among Discriminatory in Choosing Theater Amusements. BY MARGARET B. DOWNING. President and Mrs. Coolidge will be remembered long after their official so- Journ has ended as among the most dis- criminating theatergoers in their lofty circle. In the case of the President, he has made few visits to the local show- houses. and then only of unique value was produced. Mrs. Coolidge is a musician, and like several other first ladies—Mrs. Roosevelt, Mrs {von Holleben the afternoon before Prince Henry departed. This fete was in the embassy and the guests all shook | the royal hand most heartily. | ke | Mrs. Henry F. Dimock, who is the sister of the late William C. Whitney of Washington, is best known through | her con®nued and untiring efforts to lerect a memorial hall to the illustrious \ President and Mrs. Coolidge Are Classed as| | | when something | and has been for many years a resident | Taft, the first Mrs. Wilson—she has | patriot for whom the Capital City is | consistently patronized all such events of the higher order. She delights in a good play, although s rule is to avold accepting evening in- vitations unless the President could ac- | company her, she usually has attended matinees. and many will remember her as placed unostentatiously in the or- chestra, oceupying the intervals between the acts in knitting or crocheting. The late President and Mrs. Harding were frequently the guests of honor in the boxes of their friends, but neither cared especially for the theater. The same was true of President McKinley. His wife being an invalid and vnable to at- tend such performances, except rarel: he was inclined to exclude the play named. It was in behalf of this project that the former Secretary of State, Mr. something more than a million listeners over the radio on Washington's birth- day. Mrs. Dimock secured from Con- nce her unfailing | Charles E. Hughes, made his appeal to ! ALEXANDRIA SOCIETY | gress a site for the contemplated hall, | and it is the historic ground once oc- | cupied by the depot of the Pennsylvania | Railroad and its allied lines. It was | Elihu Root, when Secretary of State, | that caused the Pennsylvania Railroad | to evacuate, for its officials were neither owners nor lessees of this property, but were, in the vulgar term, merely squat |ters. Mr. Root had acted in the in- | terests of Washington beautiful, and the ‘demol lon of the unsightly station and 173 Gordon Asher entertained at tea l2:° “unday aftermoon in honor of Mrs Swalm Reed of Washington. | Spillan of _Washington | Ephraim G. Pe: Mr. and Mrs Catonsville, Md., were week end guests of the latter’s brother-in-law and Mrs. Mrs. | Asher was assisted by Mrs. Henry Merle | and Mrs. | William Talbot of | J. Edwin | — SOCTETYV' cinnati are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Deaton. Mrs. Emma Hastings of Norfolk is visiting Mrs. W. R. Taylor. Miss Laura Yates has returned to her {home in Indian Head, Md. after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Carl Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Logan will return | today from a visit to relatives in Har- risonburg. Mrs. Charles Loven and her sister, Miss Hilda Fairfax, left last week for Miami, where they will spend several weeks with friends. Mrs. Henry Bragg of Richmond spent several days recently with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Bragg and left to visit friends in Washington. Mrs. George File, Miss Owens and Miss Grace Freece were week end guests of friends in Balti- more. Dr. C. L. Cope of Philadelphia was the guest last week of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin O. Daue, on his way to Ashe- ville, N. C. More Americans are believed to have visited Sweden in the past season than in any previous year. Josephine | { . Governor of Minnesota i And Staff Honor Guests Many distinguished persons will at- | tend the Minnesota inaugural reception and ball at the Willard Tuesday at 8:30 pm. This is only one of the many specially arrangea entertainments to which the visitors from Minnesota will | be weleemed during inauguration | Representative Frank Clague, chairman | of the State delegation in Congress and Mrs. Clague, general chairman of ar- rangements, assisted by Senators and House members and their wives, have | made up the inaugural program. Gov. Theodore Christianson and his staff, members of the national Repub- | lican State committee, Mrs. Manley L seen and Senator Claude H. Ma kenzie, members of the State Legisla- ture will be the guests in whose honor | the reception will be held. Distin- | guished persons invited in the receiving | line will include Secretary of State and | Mrs. Frank B. Kellogg, Justice and Mrs. | Pierce Butler, Senator and Mrs. Henrik ! Shipstead and Senator and Mrs. Thomas | D. Schall. Representative and Mrs, Wal- | ter H. Newton, Representative and Mrs. | Frank Clague, Representative Harold ! Knutson, Representative and Mrs, Wil- T | liam Carss, Representative O | Kvale, Representative and Mrs. August | Andresen, Representative and Mrs Allen J. Furlow, Representative and Mr Godfrey Goodwin, Representative and Mrs. C. G. Selvig. Representative Mel- | vin J. Mass, Representative-elect and | Mrs. william A. Pittenger, Representa- tive-elect and Mrs. Victor Christgau, | Solicitor General of the Department of | Justice and Mrs. William D. Mitchell (prospective Attorney General), Assis- tant Secretary of the Treasury and {Mrs. Carl T. Schuneman, Interstat ! Commerce Commissioner " and Mr Johnston B. Campbell. Governor of |the Federal Reserve Board and Mrs | Roy A. Young, Federal Trade Commis sioner and Mrs. Charles H. March. Pro- hibition Commissioner and Mrs. James M. Doran and Mr. and Mrs. George Akerson Mrs. Ruby Smith Stahl, chairmae of music, assisted by Herman Fakler, arranged the musical program J | China's New National Anthem. ‘ PEKING, China, (#) —Bravery, fidel- ity. diligence and loyalty are the virtues horted on the people of China in the new national anthem. “Song of the Kuomintang.” It is called the | 'FRIED'S NAMESAKE SAILS AGAIN ON LINER AMERICA Baby, Born on Steamship Florida | Two Days After Rescue. Is En Route to Russia. iu«*'n\ ed Pre. NEW YORK, Marck Chojowski, who w | States liner Amer: | the captain just rescue of the o a, sailed on the His destination his father who was deporte she was m: Little G jowski, was bor and could have his son with h o chose to go back to Russia with his v When the America ed New York after the rescue of the Florida crew, the baby and his mother were taken to Ellis Island, where alienists found her mental condition to be une ! satisfactory George Fricd 1 on the Unite) named after before the the steamship America again is R “rank Cho- ted States 1 here. keeping n in ren George Romney painter of beau- tifnl women the namesake of elleffs Romney 1929 3 A —fashions chosen g by women to en hance By N N\ thein ) A FASHION INSTITUTION Paris Washington NewYork What Washington Women Wear! Romney Fash- ions! L natural attractive- ness! P ir |the tearing up of the railroad tracks |and sister, Mr e AN M oo rerand thelt | which disfigured the Mall was the first | Shinn on South Royal street. ~ | many Washington managers treasure | SteP_in the gigantic operations now | Mrs. Curtis B. Backus recently enter- | checks which the President signed when | PrOgressing toward rebuilding Pennsyl. | tained the “Tuesday Afternoon Bridge ks sident signe | vania avenue according to the L'En! Uie SounE prople ot B AnDy hastly iplan. o e e Weica thiorne Oliver Nenlestainad ecided on a matinee party. President - | the bridge club of which she is a mem- | and Mrs. Taft were indefatigable play | ber Wednesday evening in her home at goers, and many recall that in Judge | ‘Taft’s era in the White House a fine photograph of Maude Adams as Peter Pan adorned his desk, the gift of his young son Charlie, who thought her the greatest woman in the world—after his mother. > wox o | Countess Margaret Scherr-Thoss, one of the debutantes of New York, and who will take a passing glance at ‘Washington gayeties in the Easter sea- son, has been receiving much attention from the wide circle of relatives Gotham and in Boston. Her maternal grandmother, the first Mrs. Henry White, belonged to the Rutherford fam- | ily, well represented in the elite set, and | by the remarriage of her grandfather, | the late Henry White, to Mrs. Henry Sleane she acquired a number of inter- ested and highly placed connections. | Mrs. White rarely takes part in social events except in the family circle, but | her daughters are active and have been | entertaining the Countess Margaret and | her mother all through the Winter. | Rachel, the fourth girl in the family of | Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Hammond. the latter a daughter of Mrs. Henry ‘White, is soon to be married to Mr. | Richard Lee McClenahan, and there | Mr. Charles S. Dewey with Mrs. Dewey and Miss Suzette, his daughter, | will leave Warsaw this coming week | and will sail for New York City in order | to make a short vis in Chicago. Mr. Dewey, who is the financial expert now in charge of the | fiscal affairs of the Polish Republic, | has been continuously at his post for more than a year. One of the inter- esting features of his sojourn in the Polish capital was his appearance before the Warsaw city board soon after Christmas in which he urged the estab- | lishment of a municipal tree such as | adorn municipal squares in every large | city of this country, and recently the | entire rural districts, at appointed places. Mr. Dewey. who lives in a fine old palace in the heart of Warsaw, deco- rated the portals with two branching evergreens brilliantly illuminated after | dark and filled with the conventional | ornaments. used for that purpose. The | innovation created a veritable sensa- | tion and the Polish press was enthu- | siastic in praise. Mr. Dewey described | the prevalent method in his home city, | Lake Forest, Ill, when various sections | decided on a formal style of decora- tions and placed two large trees at the entrance and egress of the street and | then have every lawn adorned with it to their home | | sister. Mr. and M | Fairfax, the other members motoring | there for the games. | "Mr. and Mrs. Edward Anthony | Sweeley announce the_engagement_of their daughter, Helen Zoa, to Mr. Ed- | ward A. Gorman, jr. son of Dr. and| Mrs. Edward A. Gorman. The wedding [Wfll occur in the early Summer. Mrs. William A. Moncure and Mr. | Richard Moncure sailed yesterday from | tory hreakfast, to be given at the Wil- San Francisco for China, where they will visit Mrs. Moncure's son-in-law and daughter, the Rev. and Mrs. Francis A. Cox. in Soochow. Mrs. William H. Quinn of Atlanta is the guest of her brother-in-law and mann, on North Washington street. Miss Ethel Sims and Miss Sallie Sims have returned from a visit to relatives in Rice, Va. . Miss Emily Smith of Atlanta spent the past wéek with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith. Mrs, Caroline Jones arrived Tuesday from Chicago for a visit to her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Jones, Miss Charlotte Kemper is the guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Kosciusko Kemper, in Cincinnati. Mrs. Roger Brooke Adams is visiting . Joseph Schwarz- | | Up. . left to right: Mrs. Rose Gouver- neur Hces. who wil preside at the Vie- lard Hotel March 7, for the benefit of | Monticello; Mrs. Howard L. Hodgkins, | joint hostess with Mrs. Willam Van Zant Cox at the Mary Ball Washington table: Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, who is entertaining guests. Lower: Mrs. Albert N. | at the L'Enfant table. Baggs, hostess | was a guest last week of her sister, Mrs. { J. P. Scott. i Miss Ruthfrances Roseberry enter- tained at an informal dance Friday | evening, February 22, at the home of | her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. ‘ Roseberry. Mr. and Mrs, John Sinclair Munce, | jr., have returned from a visit to rela- | tives in Richmond. Congressional women . . . wives of government officials . . . women of \Wash- ington’s own families . . . all the world is interested in what they wear on their constant round of social duties. And so a visit to Jelleff’s becomes a very impor- tant part of the visit to Washington to wonien interested in fashion. Never could a visit be more timely than now . . . one of our New York representatives back from Paris on the Olympic last week has confirmed the rightness of the fashions o we show today! Jelleff’'s—the store of fashion with value! ROMNEY —the Fashions Beautiful Rare enjoyment awaits you in the viewing of our Inau- gural Collection of Romney Fashions which has been arranged for this week. In all our women's and misses’ apparel shops the new Romney Fashions created by high-type American manufacturcrs following cable -ad- vices from Paris will hold court during the week. Designed and made with extra care because they were to be shown in Washington in this memorable week, our Romney fashions reach a high peak in - yryr has been much post-nuptial entertain- | ing, in all of which the Countess Mar- garet and her close friend, Miss Virginia | yllis, have been included. Both young | being formed for the purpose. ladies are among the most feted of the * % X % New York buds. They were entertained | smaller specimens. Warsaw's next | Yuletide will undoubtedly present a bril- liant appearance. Already clubs are | her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and | Mrs. Ralph Larsen, in Norfolk. | Mrs. Anna M. Appich and Mr. and | Mrs. Carl Appich and their young son | have gone to their homes in Richmond, | Miss Jane Phillips and Mr. Francis McDaniels _of Washington. and Mr. Frederick Robinson of California were week end guests of Mrs. J. M. Jacobs on South St. Asaph street. Fashion-with-VALUE! =N last week at the dinner dance given oy Mr. and Mrs. Morin S. Hare at Pierre’s. | Countess Scherr-Thoss and her daugh- | ter will be in Washington in.April, and will remain possibly until they sail for their home in Breslau in May. * %A Donna Concha Espino, the most popular novelist in Spain and the only | woman who has ever been invited into the Spanish Academy, is coming to this country in the early Spring as literary and artistic envoy from the land of the | Hidalgos to the young nation which has expressed such enthusiasm for all things Hispanic. But to a clever young | teacher in Middieburg College, Vt., must g0 the honor of making the visit of this brilliant writer an official one. Donna | Espino has consented to give a series | of lectures at the Summer school at| Middleburg, when she will discuss her | books and depict literature in Spain | at the present time and back to the | days oi Cervantes. She will not find | this country entirely oblivious of her | fame, for two years ago her greatest§ work, “Marifior,” was published in ex- | cellent translation by MacMillan, and in | the cultured circles it obtained a wide | vogue. It was this novel which caused | the Spanish Academy to rupture its most solemn tradition never to bestow its laurel crown on a woman. The ch Academy has such a rule and never varied from it, despite the | batterings at its doors for recognition | of feminine merit. It is probable that the writer will pass the entire Summer in this country and she will visit Wash- | ington at some time during her sojourn | and be entertained at the Spanish em- bassy. She has signed a contract with Columbia University and with Rad- cliffe College to lecture in the Spanish course for the first semester of the next | scholastic year. * %K Mr. Nicholas Brady of Philadelphia, upon whom the Roman pontiff recently conferred the title of count for his ceaseless and generous contributions 10 Catholic charities, is the only citizen of this republic wno owas par. of the! ground on which the City of the Vati- | can is to be located. Always a frequent visitor to Rome, Mr. Brady became enamored of the picturesque villa of Princess Piccolomini, on the outskirts of Montorio, and purchased it. This family had given two pontiffs to the Roman Church, and the castle and grounds fitted into Mr. Brady's idea of | a domicile near the Pope. Not being a citizen of Italy, it is likely that the/ philanthropist from the Quaker City | will not be asked to sell his property, | ‘but will offer any use of it the Italian or | papal governments may require. The City of the Vatican is to be planned | after the needs of the pontifical gov- ernment and any house or grounds which obstruct the general idea will be | changed or demolished. The splendid old villa of Doria Pamfili will probably be undisturbed. It is one of the superb monuments of medieval times and was | many years ago included in the national properties which the Italian government | declared should be preserved. In its park is the oldest and largest forest of | Roman oaks in central Italy and on its | lakes float descendants of historic swans described by Petrarch and Tasso. | * ok ox * Prince Henry of Prussia, brother of the former Kaiser, whose fatal malady has recently been reported, is well re- membered in Washington as one of the most_genial and approachable in the Jengthy list of royal visitors. He came in the Autumn of 1903 as the repre- sentative of his imperial brother, Wil- liam II, to receive the yacht which had been built in_ this country and to be the central figure at its christening That ceremony, it will be recalled, took place in New York City. and Miss Alice Roosevelt broke the bottle of cham- pagne over the graceful prow. But be- cause the Ambassador, Herr Theodore von Holleben, used French instead of German champagne he was destined very shortly after to lose his official head. Prince Henry paid a vis Washington, and President Ro banquet in his honor, at the White House, shows in_scveral major points | how public opinion can veer in the passing of a quarter of a century. All the cabinet officlals graced the festive board, which, due to the fact that Prince Henry was not accompanied by his wife, was a stag affair. Sitting with’the coun- selors was Ethan Allen Hitchcock of St Louis, Secretary of the Interior, and with Mr. Hitchcock there entered the august figure of that day, Adolphus Busch, head of the mighty Anheuser- Busch brewery. With the Postmaster General, Mr. Henry C. Payne of Mil- waukee, was the head of the equally powerful Pabst brewery, Mr. Charles Pabst. Washington had some eminent purvevors of the foamy beer on its own account. and they figured to the last rian a! the fine reception given by Dr. | The late Dr. Sun Yat Sen, considered | the founder of the present Chinese Re- public in the national sense, had pro- | gressed so far as to have an anthem | already for the unified people when that time came. It is called “The Song | of the Kuomintang,”.and was chosen | by three competent judges after con- ! sidering many hundred offerings, which were the result of tendering a prize | of $1,000. The words were chosen by Dr. Sun personally after he had ex- amined many manuscripts and he made | them public in a famous patriotic speech which he delivered at the Whampoa Military Academy in Canton in 1924. In a loose translation from Chinese to English, always a most | difficult task, the hymn is a recital | of the principles on which the new | unified China is founded and a mov. ing appeal to the people to be one i national aspirations an feuds and strifes of countless cen- turies. The hymn is now placed before | all school children and must be sung | twice a day during the sessions. It also is part of the daily routine in all | barracks and military institutions and | prefaces all amusements. At its - | ginning and end there will be three | bows before the portrait of Dr. Sun, | which is found universally at all public | meeting places and in schools and | military posts. | ok % | The Earl of Lonsdale known as| Britain's sporting peer, but received ' that most ancient and highly-prized | order of knighthood, the garter, at the | recent conferring of such honors.- He is | regarded as the type of bluff, stout-| hearted peer. fast disappearing; a friend | of kings and of turfmen, of dukes and | costers and though Fm 70, still leads | the sporting world of the realm. He is | the greatest territorial magnate in the | northwest corner of England. He owns | more than 371000 acres, the most | profitable of which are the coal lands of Cumberland, and 45.000 acres of rer-] tile farms in Westmoreland. The earl and his countess have one of the great houses of London in Carlton Terrace and they are generous hosts to the vis- itors from this side of the ocean during the season. Lowther Castle the ane cestral seat of the Earls of Lonsdale is one of the largest and most impressive | houses in England. The castle is a | massive Gothic pile, so vast that one hundred guests can be entertained with- out crowding the inmates. It flgurss‘ in Wordsworth’s poem on Penrith as | that majestic pile” and many painters have conveyed its charm to canvas. Lord Lonsdale has been closer to the North Pole than any titled adventurer except the Duke of the Abruzzi. An ardent vachtsman, he has been enter- | t;lnre]g Cf]reguegzly by the New York acl ub, though he has never tried | for America’s cupF e ! * x ¥ % Charles Camille Saints-Saens, 1{l- | lustrious musicat composer, lived dur- | ing the longer parts of his struggle for | fame in the basement of a mansion | formerly occupied by Count d’Artois in | Rue de Faubourg Saint Honore. This street and its continuations through the | center of Paris have been chosen for | the route of the first underground rail- | road and the work of demolishing the d'Artois palace is far advanced. It is historic ground and a wall has ascend- ed against its selection, but convenience | has ‘been the first consideration, It | was from the courtyard of Gount d'Artoins’ palace that Marie Antoin- nette attempted her unsuccessful fiight | from Paris during the French Revoiu- tion. 'Nearby was the famous riding school of the pages of the Grande Monarchs and the homes of distinguish- ed officials of the court down to the time of Louis XVI. Faubourg Saint Honore, once the familiar haunt of the old noblesses of France, has been on the downward trend as a residential. sece tion for the past 50 years, and those of the ancient regime who held property rights to the soil have sold advantag- cously to business interest and removed west of the Bols du Boulogne. But music lovers from every part of the world who admire the renowned Saint- Saens visited his basement home as a shrine. n | d to forget the The Ugly Duckling Tea House 115 B St. S.E. Opposite Library of Congress The Tea House of Individuality Luncheon, 55¢ to $1 Dinner, €0c to $1.25 Afternoon Tea after a visit to Mrs. Appich’s son-in- | law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Louis | Bohraus, on South Columbus street. Tea Follows Washington's Birthday Exercises. Mr. and Mrs. Rathbone Smith enter- | tained at tea in their home on Duke street on Friday afternoon, February 22, following the Washington's birthday exercises in the Old Presbyterian Meet- ing House. Mrs. H. H. Smith, president of the Kenmore Memorial Association, | was the guest of honor. Among the callers were the three speakers of the afternoon, Senator Simeon D, Fess of glllz, gl‘. Alb!drt Bushnell Hart of New or] ty and Mr. Willlam-Tyler Page of Washington. s # Mrs. Robert E. McGahey has returned | from a visit to relatives in Knoxville, Tenn. Mrs. James A. Gore and the Misses Gore were week end guests of - Mrs. Harry Miller in Strasberg, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Henry O’Bannon Coop- er spent the past week end with the V. Leach. in Front Royal. _ Mrs. Charles Conner and Mrs. Caro- line Piffer of Lexington, Va., were guests last week of the latter's parents, | Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Wease. Mrs. N. E. Heatwole of Romney, W. Va., is the guest of Mrs. Floyd Keller. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Spencer were given a surprise party on Saturday evening, February 23, in honor of the twenty-fifth anniversary of their mar- riage. Miss Elsie Wine spent the past week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, D. . Wine, in Harrisonburg. Mrs. Jennerfer Broaddus and her son, Compton Broaddus, are home from a visit to relatives in Atlanta, Miss Bertha Stokes of Gordonsville, Va,, is visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. I. Samuel Crawford. Miss _Florence Pomeroy and Miss Emily Pomeroy are at home after a visit to relatives in Oak Grove, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Walter U. Varney have returned from their wedding trip. Mrs. R. E. Redwine arrived home last, week after a visit to friends in Mount | latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thornton | Vi Miss Mabel K' g has returned from ! a visit to relativ - in Fredericksburg. Miss Mignon Lundquest has left for her home in Philadelphia after a visit to her mother, Mrs. Florence Lundquest. Miss Chloe Wood of Chelsea, Mass., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence F. Heath. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lambourne have gone to their home In Harrisburg, Pa., after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haley. Betrothal Announced, Wedding in Autumn. Mr. and Mrs. Manly Broaddus of Fleetwell, Newton, Va. announce the engagement of their daughter, Margaret Henshaw, to Mr. Robert Wilson Wheat, 3d, of Alexandria. Mr. Wheat is the son of the late Mr. Robert W. Wheat and Mrs. Florence Smoot Wheat. He is a nephew of Mrs. Alfred Thomson, and of the late Miss Sue Lee Wheat. The wedding will occur next Autumn. brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. | bus street. Mrs. Stansbury is back from ! a short visit to Fredericksburg. Mr. Joseph Guiffre and Mr. William | Vincent King of Denver were guests last week of the former’s parents, Mr. 1 and Mrs. Anthony Guiffre. | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ottoman of Cin- ! CHASTLETON HOTEL! 16th & R N. 10,000 | Special Sunday Chicken or Steak Dinner One Dollar 4:30—7:45 P.M. Homemade Fresh Strawberry Ice Cream Hot Rolls and Pastry Luncheon 12:00 to 1:30 P.M. Seventy-five Cents Greene-Warder Wed, Event of January u‘.“" | Mrs, Charlotte E. Warder ammunces;’ the marriage of her daughter Lillian | Elizabeth to Mr. Henry Alfred Greene | on Saturday, January 29, in Baltimore. | Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Franklin Stewart | entertained at supper followed by bridge Friday evening, February 22, at their home on South Washington street. | Among the out-of-town guests we; Miss Lena Clark, Miss Margaret Tew, Mr. Dorsey Waters and Mr. Henry Weirich of Washington, and Miss Han- | bury of Portsmouth, Va. Mr. William C. Latane and Mr. James | Latane of Westmoreland County were guests last week of their brother and | sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Henry Augustine Latane, on North Washing- | ton street. | Mrs. Frank M. Dillard and her young daughter, Evelyn Diliard, have returncd from New Orleans, where they attended the Mardi Gras. | Miss Rose Levinson left last week for | a motor trip to Miami. | Mrs. Claude Hardin of Indianapolis . PHOTOGRAPHS | ) 3\ COPIED-RENEWED ENLARGED-BY Bachrach- 1342 Conn. Ave. Pot. 4097 () Beauty That Attracts -—s0_enchanting and allur- ing it commands _the admir- ation of all. You can possess this soft, fascinating appearance instantly thru Gourauo's 2 ORIENTAL CREAM Made in White - Flesh - Rachel Send 10e. for Trial Size ‘erd. T. Hopkins & Son, New York 1¢’s smart to have soft, feminine curves this season—but they must be controlled curves. The almost boneless Redfern rayon satin Corselette* illustrated achieves this line for slender and average figures. It fastens at the side in a very clever way, the side seam 80 designed that it cups the bust, and does not pass over it, giving a beau- tifully firm, yet uncorseted look to the figure. Whelan’s 1105 F St. N.W. Miss Cora Smoot, Miss Loula Smoot | { Mrs. James E. Woody of Urbanna, | /& , has been the guest of Mr. Woody's | fg Daniel R. Stansbury, on North Colum- | f§ T T T e S = D e o e s & ) Abo Romney AT LSRRG IR DN . D o D = e e O > T+ e > = e P D > |~ AP 10 TR AR X Another portrait worthy of coat for a young girl . . . Romney ST i I Women's Frocks, Second Floor. B f e S e e - - s DAY ——cer AR O MY Yy e AR i —— A Romney masterpiece . . . a lovely frock after Patou charmingly finished with dressmaker manner! flat crepe in black, cocoa, brown, opaque, green, navy . . It's BT T — il S S\ —— = ”. Romney is this mole trimmed the tuxedo-to-the-hem . . . the flared sleeves . . . the smart Spring colors! . . Fashion which is ROMNEY will be open to the view of all during this entire week! Misses’ Frocks, Third Floor. R o < © i ¢ e # O W 5D P ¢ e @ M | > © > S S b > ¢ > o ;i LISADS o ——t - > - o T T — . o o o o b > THEREETRE DTN ad Only a few carefully selected specialty shops in the larger cities of the country show Romney, the fashions beautiful. sively at Jelleff's! In Washington, they are to be seen exclu- Above: 1In the gallery of Romney fashions this women's lovely kashmir coat with a squirrel collar that follows a flat smooth line to the hip! A bow, of course. sleeves. .o c.. NI h A I i = - P " P S D . WP o e o - T X pe \ prize picture this misses” frock that gives prominence to scarf and bows and the surplice mode! Flat crepe pensable-two-piece style. 240 Women's and Misses’ Coats, Third Floor. And novel M A A B e e A A e W D~ Do e Pa oo 5 — And the indis- RTOTTOT

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