Evening Star Newspaper, March 14, 1929, Page 19

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THE EVENING STAR, WA SHINGTON. D. ¢, THURSDAY, MARCH -14, 1929.~ o AR ~ v nis (vt 3 VMU > *a9 * CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. | ler, the hostess for the occasion, vu]l | be ‘Mrs. Macpherson Crichton and M | J. L. Baity. Miss Esther Melick, <o-i prano, will sing several solos, accom-| Capitol Council, Royal Arcanum, will pnnied by Mrs. Madeline Gilerlane. | meet, 3 o'clock, at Pythian Temple, | | Mrs. Frank Morrison, president of the | under leadership of L. B. D'Orsay. club, will preside over the meetin: { e . | American Association of Engineers, SOCIETY (Continued ¥ ighteenth Page.) the Chamberlin-Vanderbilt stay at Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Louis F. Melchoir will | leave Washington the first of April for Pittsburgh to make their future home. | Mrs. Melchoir was before her marriage in June last year Miss Gertrude R.| ‘Wolfe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wolfe of Washington, the wedding tak- | ing place in Elkton, Md. Mr. George Schimmell of 1745 F street has left for Carbonsdale, Pa., where he has been called by the death of his father, Mr. Frank B. Schimmell. Mrs. Richard Owens and Miss C. L. ‘Wendell. both of Boston, Mass, are at | the Hotel Grafton for a short stay. Mrs. James D, Clare of Boston is the guest of Miss Frances Gutelius, at 2‘ Dupont circle. Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Judson of Chi- | cago are at the Willard this week. Mr. and Mrs. Se\\(’ll T. Tyng of New | York City are visiting Mr. and Mrs, Carl Corby in their suite at the Hay- | Adams House. by Gavel Chapter, No. 29, O. E. S, be from 9 to 12 o'clock, ballroom and lucky spot dance. The Home Economics Association wil entertain- at a_tea Sunday afternoon | to Mrs. Dodge Hotel in compliment president, | Louise McDanell Browne, months in Europe. members of the executive committes headed by Dr. Lillian Storms, vice pr ident. Dr Louise Stanley will preside | | at the tea table and will be assisted by Miss Gertrude Warren, Miss Helen At- water and Miss Alice Edwards. | The secretary of the Czechoslovak le- | gation and Mme. Fisa will be guests of | honor at the joint meeting of the fine | arts department of the District of Co- ! lumbia Federation of Women's Clubs | and the art section of the Twentieth Century Club Monday afternoon at 2! o'clock in the Pierce Hall, at Sixteenth and Harvard stre The Ohio Girls’ Club of Washington will give a benefit theater party on | Tuesday evening in the National The- | ater. Miss Irene Neikirk, first vice pres- | ident of the club, is chzirman of the | committee and is assisted Miss Ma- | riana Davis and Mr Minnie Kraig. Several prominent Ohioans have taken blocks of tickets and donated them to the veterans of the Walter Reed Hos- s | S Miss Louella Parsons of Los Angeles 15 now in Washington and is staying at | the Mayflower. Mr. and Mrs. Henrv W. Lilly of New York City have been at the Hay-Adar House since inaugurannn Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Sampson of New Brunswick, N. J., who are staying at pital the Wardman Park Hotel, have been : joined by their daughter, Miss Louise =~ Mrs. W. L. McFarland, secretary of | Sampson, who has come from Goucher | the music division of the National Fed- College, in Baltimore. eration of Settlements, was guest of e | honor at a luncheon given yesterday in Southern Society Will !the clubhouse of the American -Asso- Fete Diplomats Monday. | C. J. Fuhrman, Mrs. John Klein, | Mrs, Lillie Green, Mrs. Ceeil Rose, Mrs. | E. M. Edwards, Mrs. Lillian Berry, Mrs. Helen Rhodes, Mrs. Thomas E. Graves, Mrs. Charles Speak and Mrs. Daniel A. | Campbell. Miss Bertha Frances Wolfe will be the guest of honor and speaker at the | book hour, at the Women's City Club, tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock. Miss | Alice M. Heaven will be hostess. Mrs. Lionel Sthith-Gordon, daughter | of Senator Duncan U. Fletcher of Flor- | ida, will be the guest of honor when | % & agog (;f X}Jl}\]ivtgfl;v ‘Women by Mrs gh S. Cumming, presi- | J. P. S. Neligh. er guests were Mrs dsfi‘t‘r:t‘ ga:nsgx‘éhrm Society, will head | Wilbur J. Carr, Mrs. }:osoph M. sm{i The receiving line at the reception and | dard, Miss Lydia Burklin, Miss Amy C. ball to be held Monday evening by the ' Leavitt. Miss Pearl Waugh and Mrs. | soclety in the Willard Hotel, in honor | James H Mmm.t of the members of the d.pt;gm ic corps | : from Latin American republics t Mrs. Cumming will stand with the | i i g"\,(ery:l and thn?\\'fll be assisted by the 'HELD AFTER 2 YEAR HUNT former presidents of the society and G their wives. Among them are Commk»‘ Arrested after a two-year search, sioner of Internal Revenue and Mrs. | Roland Spence will be arraigned before David H. Blair, co{ “K'd;)o A. lcw;;&r. gm_‘t{gm !s;nn:smcommissloner Needham Mi Mrs. Charles uglas, Mr. | C. e tomorrow. nrrd 'ang Daniel C. Roper and Capt Locked in the stateroom of the steam- and Mrs. C. C. Calhoun. |er Charles Macalister the man was be- | The final meeting of the committee | ing returned to Washington to face on arrangements for the function v\m‘chnrges of transportation and posses- held a few evenings ago in the home of | sion as 10 pints of alleged liquor were Comm&ssloner and Mrs. Blair, | found in his handbag at Marshall Hall, The committee k;‘eaadetd b‘y ‘(;,lnptwge g gpe'r‘«“ asc‘apvdbfrum Px:hlbltilun A%cnt Calhoun, vice president o . N. Quinn by crawling through a includes Mrs. Maud Howell Smith, M. | porthole of his cabin and swimming Frank Bagley, Mr. John F. L. Little, | to shore as the 'vessel approached Commissioner Blair, Mrs. Frank Mor- Haines Point. rison and Mr. Charles M. Galloway. He was released under $500 bond for h!-‘e:xt‘urts' ?\'1 !shem:;eenl;\: t:gll::ml his u}){)cnra&m at a }Jrellmmlry hear- im = | iny ore e commi e g good-will flight of Col. Charles | — s Lindbergh, and a dance by Elizabeth Gardiner called “The Spirit of the Air.” | : The Sodality of St. James' Catholic UNUSU AL Church at Mount Rainier, ‘Md., will | hold its -“xlmual n);smter supemr xnsthe + 3 hurch auditorium s evening. Sup- . fm will be served from 4:30 to 8:30 New shoes o’clock. s 5 . Miss Gertrude “Wedemeir, president of the sodality, will be hotesss: Mrs. | for kiddies Charles Monninger, rl&i&man }.&s G‘ E. Hillers, secretary. T members of 2 A 7 . B emitice are Mrs_J. . Ronichaed, | I‘«\D‘} fO}’ 1“351‘?1:; N ent coman, Mrs, Francis Schatz | In “Juniortown —convenient down- town home of our finer juvenile foot- wear, at our'F shop. Exclusive styles—expert fitting service. A dance and card party will be glven | Washington section, will meet, 8 o'clock 1814 N street. Dr. previously announced. The meeting will be canceled. 1 The Washington-Baltimore Chapter, [ American Socity for Steel Treating, will i meet jointly with the American Chemical Society. American Institute of Mining | and Metallurgical Engineers, 8 o'clock, | in auditdrium of Interior Department. | oot tomorrow, Dr. Ulick R. Evans of Great Britain ; . at the Hamilton |lccture on “The Development of the Rayon Industry.” Alpha Delta Phi luncheon tomorrow tomorrow, 9 pm., Hotel. | The Stearns Bible class will meet m-' morrow, 1 pm. at Mount Vernon Place | at 12:30 pm., at the Gordon Hotel. . E. Church. Dr. K. B. Moomaw will | be It elintes; omaw Will | <) hington Post, Soclety of American | Military Engineers, will meet_tomorrow, Phil Sheridwn “Post, G. A. R. will |12:30 pm., at the Army and Navy Club. The commandant. Maj. Gen. Wendell *Admiral George Dewey Naval Auxfl-’?rldny from 4:20 to 7 p.m., at Northe jary, No. 3, United Spanish War|east Masonic Temple, Eighth and P Veterans, will serve an -oyster supper streets northeast. 2 p.m, at Grand Army S. in at the Playhouse, | the Mayflower garden mom Saturday | Morton G. Lloyd of the Bureau of Stand- | evening at 8:30 o'clock. Dancing wiil | ards, will speak. Subject: “The Passivity of “Proposed | Metals—the Study of Thin Oxide Films will speak on_the | Hall, b | tomorrow, 'he Housekezp: ars’ Alliance will meet C. Neville, will speak on “The U. Marine Corps.” floor as-| The annual cerd party and dance of including a | Method of Elrctmg Members to the . Citizens' Advisor ][ucr will be scr\cd from 4:30 to 6 o'clock in the Gl"lC(‘\ocl()ck at Our Lady eof Victory Hali. who will sail this Spring to spend 18{‘3 America, inner The guests will be received by the 11 | Reno-Esther Council Hall, !avenue and Windom place. ning in the Gordon Hotel, ibers of the club. oclock. for the benefit of the clubhouse !of the Women's Benefit Association, 1750 + | Massachusetts avenue. | together with American Institute of Mining and Met- | allurgical Engineers and the American Society for Steel Treating, iment of the Interior. son will be given by Dr. E. J. jeet, bassador o the United State un: | hammedanism. | Congregational Church this evening, as ! cn Metals.” y Council.” Buffet sup- : s FUTURE. I8 The D. C, Chapter, International Fed- | cration of Catholiz ‘Alumnae, will pre- | sent Dr. A. Maris Boggs in an fllustrat- | ed lectire on “Modern Palestine,” in| auditorium of St. Paul's Academ: ¥ street, March 17. 3 pm. The music | . Mary Helen Howe, director, will A 500 card p..\n} will be held, R “No. 20. Daughters serve a home-cooked 7:30 o'clock, at| Wisconsin | Esther Counci will from 5:30 to V. L. Granville, English ncmr will | present a costume recital, “Dramatic | Interludes,” Saturday, 8:15 p.m., at the | gvmnasium, American University cam- pus. ! The education committee of the American _ Association of University | Women will present Edward C. Linde- | man, professor of social psyehology, | New York School of Social Work, at | dinner, tomorrow, 7 pm.; subject, The Curley Club will meet this eve- | A sketch, will be acted by mem- A card party will be given, 8:30 The Chemical Society of Washington. Jocal sections of the 2 pm. sembly room of 'tk Seventeenth and K streets on fourth Y., W. C. A, at| Gavel Chapter, No. 29, O. E. S., will b> Miss Dor- | held in the garden room of the May- rated | flower Hotel, Saturday night. othy Galton will deliver an illu le——=la | a1 & PECIAL FLORAL CFFERINGS FOR THREE DAYS! Roses—$1.50 Dozen Sweet Peas——75¢ Bunch Or o] will make up a 1m\ of a “Adult Education.” Mrs. W. A. Slade | will preside. i The quarterly meeting of the Wom- | an’s_Foreign Missionary Society of the {M. E. Church will be held tomorrow, | 1 pm, in Douglass Methodist Episco- | |pal Church, Eleventh and H streets | | northeast. Special features are includ- | |ed in the program. Public invited. The Christopher Club will meet at | luncheon tomorrow, 12:30 p.m., at the | em————— Hamilton Hotel. I Tau Beta Kappa will give a dance will met o'clock. in_auditorium of the Depar! A free scientific health-lecture Ie: n'clnck. at 1905 Fifteentt “Scientific Human Ang | ‘Turkish Am- will be le to make his address on *“Mo- at the Mount Pleasant | Ahmed Mouhtar Bey, Brothers Your foundation for spring smartness is an ENSEMBLE TS fabric may be tweed or covert—its coat a finger length—seven- exghths or dress length —its blouse or dress ‘of contrasting color and material—its cost here at Rizik's will be modest. TAWIEIL VSE THIRTEEDN s /F shoes must be of genuine Watersnake. Fashion says so. Though gen- Milady [\(v~< s f Sweet Pea dozen C&C flower Stores o] m 807 14th St. N.-W. 204 17th St. N.W. Franklin 5442 Franklin 10391 EIEEIE—JEIE_::IEIE CAPITOL FUR™ JHODP 1208 LD OVERIS YEARS 5 8| Scarfs A CAPITOL FUR SCARF will accent just the right note in the harmony of your Easter ensemble. Beautiful skins, sub- tle shades to match the color scheme of your costume . . . and an assurance of satis- factory workmanship. A Reasonable Deposit Will Hold Your Selection Sketched Fine im- vorted Broad- Chie erally scarce and high priced, we ‘are pleascd to an- nounce incompar- throw. ~ $39. | 7 I are poor AR dancmg partners ‘What needless handicaps thv_\' are to youth- ful grace and vitality! No woman can dance her best ... or look he} best...in shoes that pinch and hurt at every step. And who wants to dance with her? But here's a word of cheer to those who euffer from aching feet! Wear Dr. Kahler Shoes and enjoy foot comfort anywhere, anytime. These fine shoes are cleverly fashioned for utmost walking ease as they are made with FIVE FAMOUS FEATURES 1 THE INSTEP SUPPORT acts like a bandage. 2 THE COMBINATION LAST affordsampleroom for ball of foot. THE BUILT-IN ARCH rests and supports the arch. 4 THE STRAIGHT-LINE LAST does not crush the toes. 5 THE CUPPED HEEL SEAT fits snug at the heel. N = 3 THE GOTHAM The GOTHAM is dignified, trim-looking and stylish. Fur- thermore, it is extremely com- fortable. ~ Dr. KAHLER SHOES STYLE—with comfort concealed HIGSBY’S Kahler Shoe Store 603 13th St. N.W. M-BR@KS &CO G -STREET BETWEEN 11th & 12th “One of Washington’s Most Dependable Stores” Friday and Saturday. .. Presenting New Senator Fletcher will address the Po- | litical Study Club Saturday, speaking | on the ject “The Merchant MI-} rine” at 2:30 o'clock in the Washington | Club, at Seventeenth and K streets. 2 Mrs, Huil, wife of Representative Cor- | dell Hull of Tennessee; Mrs. Jefferson | Mpyers, wife of Commissioner Myers of | the Shipping Board, and Mrs. Hu:wn; ‘Thompson will alternate sa! Others assisting Mrs. Vir IW- 2 HE busy bride-to-be will welcome our full assumption of responsi- bility for the tasteful cor- rectness of her Wedding Invitations and Arnouncements A few delightful minutes spent in selection—con- sultation with one whose daily experience assures you up - to - the - minute precise information — then freedom from all further concern. ‘BREW®D Engravers and Stationers 611 Twelfth Street able new ar- rivals in— The Hahn- Sports “C 9 Orford—light Carltons beige elk, genuine sharkskin tip and trim of contrasting color. For small boys as well as girls. 8% 10 11%.....85 1210 2......85.50 Gray tones predominate in this graceful oxford. Trimmed with French Beige silk kid, $1250 That Will March Smartly in Any EASTER Parade! No use resisting...Spring is here, so come down and select a new coat to make you feel “en rapport” . .. in tune with the sea- son. And forgetting the usual superlatives, it really is an offering we urge you to inspect. The values are most assuredly here! Swiss Imported Novelty Slippers for lit- tle girls. Styled with consummate artistry and quality of the finest. $3 10 $5.75 “Junior-Town®’ Richly mottled blonde tones. Slenderly strap- ped high heel pump. Blends well with any color of costume. Furs The “wanted ones"-—- Monkey ... Fitch ... Butter Mole. ..Natural and Beige Squirrel. . . Broadtail. —d / Women’s Shop 1207 F Also at our other Children’s Depts. 1 Jivkin & : Nons dncorporated 821 Fourteenth St. N.W. WASHINGTON'S LEADING FURRIERS Unlike other _reptiles, Watersnake s soft, light- weight, summery. This svelte pump fits every part of the foot, §1240 Materials Fine imported and domestic Broadcloths . . . Basket Weaves. .. Kashmi. rolas. . .Newest Silks. Real “Best Sellers” Specially Priced at Sketched For sports costum well as more formal ones. Watersnake sought by the fashionabls A low- heel model. pe hmkcd Gout of pecial—for Friday & Saturday O-N-L-Y! Genuine Cherry Red FOXES Regularly $95—Special 69 back is “new.” “12'50 §30, Important Style Notes Straightlines and flares share the spot- light in the Spring silhouette, most interesting are the new developments in cape, scarf and throw ideas, with many new ways of tiering and seaming, and they’re all right here! Sketched Beautiful crepe - back satin with a beige squirrel Todel at' $30." These Are the Wanted Shades! The sun-tan shades of Tan and “Beigey” Browns, New Greens, Soft Greys, Middy and Navy Blues, and of course, Blacks. Women’s Shop 1207 F St. Genuine Watersnake Large, silky. brush— to $12.50 beautiful deep shades of cherry Sketched Flared lines, a Fiteh collar, and satin faced Tuxedo- like front dis- tinguish _ this coat at §30 SECOND FLOOR—COATS e e (R TALTI R RN TN W D £ me- PRz

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