Evening Star Newspaper, March 4, 1929, Page 19

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO Ohio, who came to Washington with the governor's party to attend the in- auguration, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. Marvin in Cleveland Park. Mr. Markley Frankham of New York is SOCIETY .« _ (Continued From Eighteenth Page.) Sy GEEE | monies. Mr. and Mrs. MacBane, Mr. and Mrs. “Rbbe oy Bproul, al of New Yo Senors | pott, ‘g of eorristowns . 3 & Sancher Latour and Mr. and MTS. | re visiting their cousin, Miss Mary A. ok St Lindsley, at the Grace Dodge Hotel. ‘The reception of Tllinois State So- | They motored to Washington for the gle‘ty uto O"’o\n Louis L. Bmmersonho( inauguration. inois and Mrs. Emmerson and other ny di State officials, was attended by 2000| Among the many dml_‘l'l‘l““‘“;‘ r%; Tllinoisians at the Mayflower Hotel yes- | tonians who are in Washington fo terday afternon from 4 to 6 o'clock. inauguration are Mrs. Nathaniel Thayer, Senator Charles S. Deneen, president | ¥ho is staying at the Mayflower, and of the soclety. and Mrs Deneen were | Mr. and Mrs. Gaspar Bacon, who will assisied in receiving by Senator and| be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mrs. Otis F. Glenn and the other State | Bacon. Mr. and Mrs. Eliot Wadsworth soclety officers. Mr. James W. Good,| 8nd Mr. and Mrs. Leverett s-l’onaull new Secretary of War, and many other | Will be members of the governor's party notables were also in the receiving line., Which arrived this morning. Mr. and The Glee Club of the Hamilton Club | Mrs. Wadsworth are at 1718 H street. of Ve ke . Chicago rendered vocal selections. e R i i York City is spending some time at the Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Brock announce the engagement of their daughter Anna | Cariton. 1o Lieut. James G. Bain, U. 8. A. Mrs. 3 rs. Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Brock an-| party of 10 this evening at the supper nounce the engagement of their daugh- | dance at the Wardman Park Hotel. ter Anna to Lieut. James 8. Bain, | iy U. S A Mr. Oscar Foellinger, editor and pub- St |lisher of Fort Wayne, Ind, and Mr. and Mrs. George E. Hamilton and 1 Miss Loretta Foellinger, who are in Miss Mary Hamilton of Washington | washington for the inaugural cere- were at Hotel Traymore, Atlantic City, | monles, were at the recepiion to the over the week end. 3 governors given by the inaugural com- o T A O e Liay. | Walter Penfleld_accompanying them. §iaY: | Mr. Foellinger and Miss Foellinger have ~ T R | been quite generously entertained since Ser b their arrival in Washington. Miss Harrlet L. Whitford has returned — to Washington and joined her parents,| Mrs. Watson E. Coleman left today Mr. and Mrs. George L. Whitford at | for Phoenix, Ariz. She will spend the 2311 Connecticut avenue after visiting |SPring in Southern California. g:& lea‘h Wol;;:un[;‘wn 2 M'Zlmi, ;;ll' & ring her visit her hostess, Mrs. Worthington, entertained for her, a |Party Tomorrow at the Willard. Juncheon was given for Miss Whitford| Chairmen and committees arranging by Col. C. H. Huston aboard the Jere- |for the reception and ball of the Min- miah Millbank yacht, a dinner was nesota State Society tomorrow evening given for her at the Embassy Club and |in the Willard include Col. James B. before the dinner she and the guests | Woolnough, floor committee; Lieut. were entertained aboard the yacht of |Comdr. Roddis and Louis H. Roddis. Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Poor. Miss Whit- | distinguished guests; Mrs. Percy M. ford was also entertained at the Miami | Bailey, printing; Mr. Will P. Kennedy, Joekey Club. £ ‘p‘ublliity: Mrs. R}lbdeldflllh s"%lhl, mu& Mr. and Mrs. Jullus Rosenwald of A R e i Mr. William N. Morell, boxes. Chicago are stopping at the Hay-Adams | ~ Members of the society will be ad- ‘House during the inauguration. ‘mn:leu l:ly pre:entll’:g thelrbememher;hh; Miss Helen Warner has been joined | Sarc SDd guest cards may be secured a a the Wardman Park Hotel by her ‘"3 Cordial [aitaten iy extended to al who have come from their home in Minnesotans and friends to attend. Tarrytown, N. Y., to pass a short time | The original members of the Wash- here. ington committee of the Thomas Jeffer- Mrs. Andrew Jackson Somerville was | 0. Memorial Foundation have been in- hostess at u bridge tea and linen shower 1ist bY Mre, Rose Couverneur Hoes Saturday in honor of Miss Betty Brad- | grews of the committee to be guests at ford. Among the guests were Mrs. Fred |the speakers' table at the Mi-Careme Somerville, Miss Margaret Somerville, | yictory breakfast for the benefit of Mrs. John C. Harding, Mrs. Harrison | mMonticello Thursday at 12 o'clock in Somerville, Miss Margaret Somerville |the Willard Hotel. In this group are Mrs. Karl E. Jarrell, Mrs. J. Reginald | Mrs. Stephen B. Elkins, Mr. John S. Conard, Miss Jeanne Gravatte, Miss|Barbour, Mr. Richard W. Hynson, Dr. Virginia Blackistone, M William C. Rives and Mr. Alfred Pem- Burl‘wnmgs St broke Thom. A U hoemaker, Miss le_ni for Thomas Jef- Tucille Hill, Miss Murial Hasard, Mrs, | ferson s Prement of i ferson, third President of the United Philip Biggins and Mrs. Paul Burk. |States and designer and builder of his Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Burnside have beautiful Virginia home, Monticello, will arrived in Washington from their home be a number of descendants of Jeffer- in New York City and are at the Carl- |00 including the joint hostesses for ton for a short stay. this table, Mrs. Allen M. Sumner and Mrs. Flora Mason Nicholson; Mrs. T. Miss Caroline Smith of Atlanta, Ga., o arrived here yesterday to be the guest for a time of Mrs. Betty Abbott in her home on Massachusetts avenue. Mrs. Abbott entertained at tea yeswrdny‘ afternoon for Miss Smith. Mrs. Ada M. Frankham of Columbus, P ol st it e oo F hilipsborn 606 - 614 ELEVENTH ST. B Holland will be hostess to & Minnesota State Society 55c—Luncheon—SSe¢ THE GREEN SHUTTER 807 H N.W. De Luxe Dinner—75c yle Committees Favor the : Ensemme for Smartest Spring Wear ERE are costumes that have lines of youth and smartness and impart those virtues to their wearers. Al- ways appropriate, always be- coming, always reflecting the chic of smartest crea- tions . . . no wonder the Ensemble rules favorite for Spring. Silk Ensembles $25 to $49.50 The Ensemble and Jacket Frock of Silk offer several smart variations. In many instances, the coat contrasts with the Frock, while in other ver- sions both are of the same material and color. Jacket Frocks are chiefly of lace and ptinted silks, and the full-length coat accompanies frocks of georgette, prints and highly colored silks. | mittee at the Willard last evening, Mr. | Ross Cooley, Miss Margaret Page Sum- ner and Col. Jefferson Randolph Kean. Mrs. William H. Walker has named her table the President James Monroe table in honor of her guest, Miss Maud Gouverneur, great-great-granddaughter of Monroe. Mrs. Walker’s other guests will be Mrs. John Southgate Tucker, Mme, de Meissner, Mrs. Marcus Benja- min, Miss May Husted, Miss Aimee Powell, Miss Lucle Powell, Miss Sophie Pearce Casey and Miss Frances Boyce. Mrs. Charles Graves Matthews and Mrs. Delos A. Blodgett will be joint hostesses at the table which they have named for their Georgia ancestor, the Huguenot settler, Nathaniel Holmes. They will have with them as their guests Mrs. Edward Terry Sanford, Mrs. Charles S. Deneen, Mrs. Hobart Brooks, Mrs. David Du Bose Gaillard, Mrs. Lowell Hobart of Ohio, Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, Mrs. James Reynolds and Mrs. Charles W. Richardson. Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman will en- tertain ai the Valentine-Holll d will have with her Mrs. Leander Loose and her guest, Mrs. Rob- ert S, Chew, Mrs. Victor Cushman, Mrs. Robert H. Chapman, Mrs. Harral Mulli- ken, Miss Anne Tucker and Miss Elea- nor Tucker. At the Washington table, for which Mrs. Joseph E. Washington is hostess, will be Mrs. St. George Bryan of Rich- mond, Va.: Mrs. Samuel Beach, Mrs. Louise Falconer, Mrs. Frederick C. Hicks, Mrs. Henry W. Fitch, Mrs, Cres- well Garlington, Mrs. Lawrence Heap, Miss Connolly and Miss Eleanor Con- nolly. The local scholarship funds of the Mount Holyoke and Vassar Alumnae Assoclations will be benefitted by two performance Fridey evening and Satur- day afternoon, March 15 and 16, by the New York Theater Guild in Poli's Thea- ter here, under the auspices of a joint committee representing both associa- tions, headed by Mrs. Cazenove Lee for Vassar and Miss Jean Dean Cole, head mistress of Mount Vernon Seminary, for Mount Holyoke. These two performances have been taken over by the two alumnae associ- ations from the series of three plays to be offered in this eity by the Theater Guild of New York as their Spring cn- gagement in the Capital City, begin- ning March 11. The two plays chosen |for the Mount Holyoke-Vassar joint | benefit are Bernard Shaw's ‘““The | Doctor's Dilemma” Friday night, and St. John Ervine’s “John Ferguson,” Saturday afternoon. Many local girls have already been aided by both associations, in financing their college careers, and several well known educators of the present day were among the recipients of these scholarships in the past, one of whom |is Frances Fenton Barnard, who until | last year was dean of Smith College, { and another is Mrs. David L. Wing of this city, known as Lucy Madeira Wing, and the head of the Madeira School for girls here. A scholarship is given each year by each of the two associations, and to keep D. ¢, MONDAY, MARCH % 1929.° up the necessary amount in their re- spective treasuries, yearly benefits are the custom of both groups. Since 1911, Mrs. Thomas Sidwell, of the Friends School, has been the custodian of the Vassar Scholarship Pund of Washington, which it is hoped will shortly reach $10,000. Miss Margaret G. Barber is president of the local Vassar Alumnae on. Two years ago, the local Mount Holy- oke Alumnae Association, which had from time to time, made it a custom to ald girl students from the District of Columbia, decided to raise a fund of $10,000, the income of which is to be used as a permanent scholarship fund for a Washington girl in Mount Holyoke College. Mrs. Frederic E. Farrington of Chevy Chase Seminary is president of the Mount Holyoke Alumnae Associa- tion here. Miss Billy Monroe of Lynchburg, Va.. is visiting Mrs. George Bondurant at 1111 East Capitol street. Mrs. Edgar E. Auchincloss, jr., of New York is at the Grace Dodge Hotel. She motored here, accompanied ty Mrs, K. D. Cheney, also of New York. LEARN Costume Designing Pattern Drafting Dressmaking and Millinery Mak resses, wraps and hats . Graduates assisted to "LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY Yo 1212 F St. N.W. Nat. 4278 3103 14th St. N.W. Col. 3103 BROS. CO. 1102 Conn. Ave. Decatur 3146 5016 Conn. Ave. N.W. Cleveland 1226 C.0 M P X =N Continuing Our Greatest |Advance Sale of Beautiful Brand-New Ordinarily Selling to $39 Newest Furs and Fabrics We're featuring monkey, broadtail, ercomine .and mole (coneéys), and suslikis on fine imported and domestic broad- cloths, twills and silks. Newest Shades and Styles New tans, gre; and middy blues ys, beiges, navy , greens, browns and blacks in smartest fur trim- med and scarf styles, - Complete Size Rdnge Sizes for the smart junior MAIN OFFICE ON F STREET AT NINTH N.W. Every modern facility for the transaction of all forms of financial busi- ness is provided by The Washington Loan and Trust Company. It is equip- ped to give especial attention to the business of banks, corporations, estates and foreign clients. DEPOSITORY OF MANY NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS The Washington Loan and Trust Co. Established 1889 John B. Larner President Resources Over $19,000,000.00 WEST END OFFICE OI’\I SEVENTEENTH STREET AT G 314~316 SEVENTH ST..NW. A Triumphant Showing of Parisian Replicas “NHEY are thoroughly authentic . . . according to Paris. . .. They wrap about one’s figure in a graciously feminine manner. . .. There are Coats with scarfs . . . with capes . . . with Cattering “butterfly” collars . . . with revers . . . petite standing collars . . . or deep shawl collars. ... Their fabrics are exquisitely rich . . . Kashas, Broadcloths, Satin Failles. ... There are Coats with-. . out fur . .. and models with either cuffs or collars of Butter Mole, Fitch, Squirrel, - Monkey, Broadtail. ... Their colors are NEW ...and chief among them are . . gay - bright blues, rosy-toned and orchid-shad- owed beiges, tan, grays . . .and BLACK! Lovely silks line them . .. Their every | tailoring detail is finished with infinite’ care! A 'Deposit Wwill Hold | ! Ensembles " Cloth Ensembles $35 to %150 Fashionable Ensembles of the materials de- creed smart for Spring. Covert cloths, tweeds and twills. Interesting style notes disclose coat lin- ings that match accompanying frocks. Ensem- bles with silk overblouses in two or more tones and skirts pleated in many ways. Coats are full, three-quarter or finger-tip length. miss and for the miss a bit older. For women of every size and age. Plenty of extra long coats. Second Floor—Coats Your Coat Until Wanted Spring Frocks Sizes 14 t0 20 Women's Sizes 34 to 50

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