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6 ‘SOCIETY." Nuptial Events in Capital ! THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, YESTERDAY’S Feature Season’s Calendar Charming \Veddings. Pas t andvgt:spectivc. Which Are Attracting Special Interest in the World of Miss Julla Smith, daughter of Mr.; and Mrs. Franklin S. Smith of Mont- | clair. N. J, will be married to Mr.| James Lloyd Berrall, son of Mr. and| Mrs. James Berrall of Washington, Sat- | urday evening, May 11. The ceremony will be performed in the First Con- | gregational Church in Montclair, the Society. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E Collis, and Mr. Donald L. Weikert, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. McCullough. The ceremony was performed at 7:30 o'clock by the Rev. B. H. Melton, as- sisted by the Rev. Walter F. Smith and the Rev. Harvey Baker Smith. The church was prettily decorated with Rev. Dr. Archibald Black officiating, | Palms. ferns and Spring flowers. assisted by the Rev. Robert Keeting | Smith of Westfield, Mass., uncle of the bride. guild room of the church. Miss Smith has selected as The wedding party entered the church to the strains of the wedding march A reception will follow in the | from “Lohengrin,” played by Mr. Paul | Gable, and were met at the altar by the her | bridegroom and his best man, Mr. F. matron of honor her sister, Mrs. Fred- | Holden Crawford, his brother-in-law. erick M. Cowles of Hartford, Conn.| and her other attenddnts include Miss | Fileen Berrall and Miss Kathagine | Mr. Robert Harmon. leader of the George Washington Glee Club, sang “Sweet Mvsteries of Life” and “At Berrall of Washington, sisters of ‘the | DAWning," " immediately preceding the bridegroom; Mrs. Frederic Ives Car- penter of Chicago, Mrs. Lawrence G.| Leavitt of Marion, Mass.; Miss Margaret | Stearns of Montclair, and Miss Kath- arine C. Wing of Boston. Mr. Francis Birch of Cambridge, Mass., will be best man, and the ushers | will include Mr. Thomas Armstrong of | New York. Mr. Frederic Ives Arm- | strong of Chicago, Mr. Willlam Ll Garrison, 3d.. of West Newton, Ma: Mr. Hugh Gaston of Somerville, N. Mr. John Jameson of New Y Mr. Thomas Willlams of Boston. g One of the early Spring weddings will be that of Miss Donna Leslie Ford. | daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Rowland Houghton Ford, to Mr. Philip Worth- ington Dimon of New York, son of the | Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Jay J. Dimon of | this city. The ceremony will be per-' formed April 20 at 8 o'clock, Andrew's Church, by the groom's | father, assisted by Rev. J. J. Queally. | The bride’s attendants will be Miss Anna Morris, Miss Dorothy Gray, Mrs. Frederick Doerman of New York, Mrs. Richard Dimon of Merchantvilie, N. ‘w and Mrs. Frank Weir of Quantico, ’a. Mr. Richard Dimon will be his brother's best man. The ushers will be Mr. Frederick Doerman and Mr.| David Atwater of New York, Mr. Gil- | bert Lowry of Hampton, Va., and Mr. | Robert Curtis of Philadelphia. Mrs. Fannie Gude announces the! marriage of her daughter, Bessie L., 10| Mr. Frank J. Hollis, yesterday, the Rev. Frank Steelman officiating. Hellyer-Green Wedding Is Set for March 23. Mr. and Mrs. Zola C. Green of Oak | Park, Ill, have sent out invitations to the marriage of their daughter, Emily, to Mr. Thomas Waterman Hellyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Heilyer of Riverside. March 23 is the date set for the ceremony, which will be celebrated at the home of the bride’s parents on North Kenilworth avenue, followed by & reception and dance at the Nineteenth Century Club of Oak Park, which will be attended by several hundred guests. Miss Green'’s sister, Mrs. Gerald Koch, will be matron of honor and there will be six bridesmaids and a maid of honor. The bride and bridegroom will leave | fi immediately after their wedding for & month's stay in Honolulu and from | there to Japan for six months. Mr. and Mrs. Green and their daugh- ter only recently refurned from abroad, where the family had been for a num- ber of months. Since her return from Europe, Miss Green has been studying languages and music in Chicago. Mr. Heliyer went to Hill School and also attended Princeton. Miss Green has many relatives and friends in Washington, where she has been a frequent visitor, her father, Mr. Zola Green, having formerly lived in Georgetown before going to Chicago to enter business. Mrs. d Mrs. Prank Paul Leary, 3915 New Hampshire avenue northwest, an- nounce the marriage of Mrs. Leary's daughter, Evelyn Lucille Cockrill, to Mr. Edward Griswold Vanderlip, 707 Ran- dolph street northwest, Saturday, March 16, at the rectory of St. Paul's Church, by the Rev. Mr. Bohanan. for a short wedding trip. Upon their return they will make Church Ceremeny Followed by Reception. Attractive in its entire arrangement was the wedding at the Columbia Heights’ Christian Church, Thursday evening, March 14, of Miss Fern Collis, | blossoms | of bridal roses and lilies of the valley. The maid of honor, Miss Carol Collis, | sister of the bride, gown and carried a houquet of butterfly | Toses. Mr. Nicholas Carter, and Mr. Erwin Beardsley. Hampshire April 1. Dak.. an aunt of the bride, attended the | wedding. daughter of Mrs, Clarence D. McClure of Oakwood Ter- | race, gon of Mrs. May McClure, took place March 9. at 2:30 o'clock, Rev. William M. Hoffman officiating gown and carried pink roses and was attended by Miss Ethel Lee, as maid of | honor. at home later at Oakwood Terrace. | of Kensington, Md., and Mr. John W. Norris of Rockville, Md., in Washington at 2 o'clock, March 14. in the presence of a small company of officiated and Mr. left immediately after the ceremony their home at Kensington, Md. Nack-Raine Marriage An Event of March 9. the marriage of their daughter, Miss | Tillie Raine, to Mr. Herbert C. Nack of Pittsburgh, Pa., Saturday, March 9, at ¢.iw1h'1'ga was held, was beautifully decorated description. Rev. Dr. Simon officiated. father and wore a white dress with close-fitting bodice studded with rhine stones, lullf If:gunte.! starting with an | uneven waistline and fallin ankles in the back. She wore a beautl- | Xtendéd motor trip _throughout ful veil of old rose-point lace, held at | East. the head by flowers, and carried a bou- quet of white roses, lilies of the valley. | M. J. R bride, trimmed with Chintilly lace. came four bridesmaids, arm of a groomsman. They were Miss ' Hertzberg of Pittsburgh, Pa ceremony'. The bride wore a gown of satin with her veil of tulle caught with orange and carried a shower bouquet wore a blue satin bride's The other attendants were Mrs, Charles L. Jones of New York City and Mrs city, and | Stewart Rease and Miss Cora Woodward of Was in rain quets of Columbia roses. J. Holden Crawford of this ister of the bridegroom, and Mrs. gton, wearing gowns of taffeta ¢ colors and they carried bou- ‘The ushers were Mr. Willlam Hauser, Mr. James Ewin After the ceremony the bride and | bridegroom were given a reception at ®T= ' the home of the bridegroom, after which | in St.) they left on a wedding trip to Florida. The bride is a graduate of Central | High School and has attended college | in Lynchburg. Va. and George Wash- | ington University. The bridegroom, who was'a former | student of George Washington Univer- | sity, also a member of the University Glee Club, is now in the research de- ypartment of the Bureau of Standards. He is at present bass singer in St. Mar- | garet’s Episcopal Church chorus ‘They will be at home at 3800 New avenue northwest after Mrs. C. G. Drumater of Douglas, N. ‘The marriage of Miss Amney Held, ' Cora Held, to Mr. the The bride wore a {ight gray crepc | Mr. Edward Reid was the best man. | Mr. McClure and his bride will be | The marriage of Miss Sarah N. Wood WEDDING MRS. BETHUEL M. WEBSTER, Who, before her wedding yesterday in St. John's was Miss Eleanor Ashton Wilson, daughter of Mrs. Clarence Wilson. | Lady of the Land was in the noiable company attending the nuptials. Church on Lafayette Square, The First ~—Harris-Ewing Photo. took place Lillian Rubenstein and Mrs. Tolbert Pelzman of Washington, D. C.; Miss Florence Ravdin of Richmond, Va.; Miss Sara Myers of Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mr. Ernest Lample, Pittsburgh: Mr. Tolbert Pelzman and M. Philip Raine of Wash- | ington, and Mr. Leonard Ginsberg of Cleveland. The girls were in gowns of nile green chiffon and they carried clusters of yellow roses. . Miss Ruth Raine, sister of the bride, was maid of hon She wore a blue | riends. The Rev. Edward H. Davis and Mrs. Norris Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Raine announc of orchid and blue tulle beginning low | on the bodice and reaching to the ankles. She carried deep pink roses. Mrs. Leonard Ginsberg of Cleveland, Ohio, was matron of honor. She wore a pink tulle dress that shaded to a deep | Tose at the bottom. She carried pink | roses. Mr. Adolph Hertzberg of Pitts- burgh was’ best man for Mr. Nack. Following the wedding supper and re- %o the | ception, Mr. and Mrs. Nack left for an 0 o'clock at the Mayflower Hotel. The Chinese room, where the wed- Ims and Spring flowers of every ‘The bride was given away by her | On their return they will be at | {home at 3010 Wisconsin avenue north- | gardenias and | West- Among the out-of-town guests were Mrs, g e, mother of the | Mrs. H. Nack, mother of the bride- wore an orchid chiffon dress | groom; Mr. and Mrs, L. Ginsberg of L, ; Miss Florence Ravdin Preceding the bride in the procession | of Richmond, Va.; Miss Sara Myers, each on the Mr. Ernest Lample and Mr. Adolph to their home stop in Atlanta for a visit. Harry and Joseph Veiner of Charles Town, W. Va.; Mr. M. Addleman and daughter of Baltimore, Md.,, and Miss | Ruth Parager of New York City. The announcement of a wedding which took place in New Orleans Jan- | uary 21 is that of Miss Gladys Mercedes Blackney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Blackney of this city, to Mr. Francis Lee Moreland of Houston, Tex. | ‘The ceremony was performed in St. A Andrew’s Episcopal Church, the Rev. tulle dress, close fitting, with flounces | Matthew Brewster officiatin, were no attendants and Mr. and Mrs. Moreland came North on the! trip, and until Wednesday were of Mr, and Mrs. Blackney at 1235 Ingra- ham street northwest. ‘There wedding guests Mr. and Mrs. Moreland are en route in Houston, and will - . A new style of talking film has been n ’m"tn{ed by a professor at Vienna, e | Austria. - PHOTOGRAPHS I\ COPIED-RENEWED w ENLARGED-BY Bachrach- Adopt the Smart Sun-Tan Shades S —There is supreme smartness and style in every one of these fashionable Merry Maid shoes—plus the comfort that is indispens- able in this age of activity, Only the best materials are used, and they are designed to fit the foot perfectly. All this, together with the modest price is responsible for the marked popularity of “Merry Maids de Luxe.” Step-in pumps, button straps, center and side buckle straps and ties are the favored styles for Spring. D. €. MARCH 17, Afternoon Tea Honors 81st Birth Anniversary Mrs. Mary B. McReynolds of Wash- | | ington and Bluemont was given an | “afternoon tea” in honor of her eight; first birthday anniversary Thursday by | her daughter, Mrs. Martin A. Morrison, | wife of former Representative Morrison of Indiana. " The parlors were a bower of Spring flowers, gifts of friends, and were filled with guests. A surprise feature of the afternoon was a farce written in honor of the | occasion by Mrs. Morrison entitled “A Hostess' Dilemma,” in which the act | ing was excellent and highly amusing In order of their appearance, the par- | ticipants were: Hostess in a dilemm: | Mrs. Morrison; Marie Antoinette, a maid newly arrived from Paris, Kath- | ryn, Beck; Mary Ann, fresh from the | country, Edith McClure; Marin von | schwarfzwald, Mrs. Catherine Weber; Mary Bridget' from auld Ireland, Della Dennison: Mary-Etta Xlyophone Pink, |'an old time Negro servant, Mrs. John Keim; parlor mald, Alice McReynolds. | Miss Dennison was recalled by many present as one of the principal actors in |a farce of four years ago at the celebra- | tion of the Morrison tin wedding, when | she appeared in another of her inimi- table impersonations of an Irish maid. Mrs, John Keim of Fredericksburg, Va.. | who was before her marriage Misy Theodora Wight. well known singer of this city, was equally unsurpassed in her characterization of the old time Negro servant and the interpretation of Af- rican songs. slon and started toward her eigh | second milestone In good health and spirits. | "Among the invited guests, in addition to those mentioned, were son, wife of Senator Watson Purnell, wife of Representative Pur- | nell; Representative Will R. Wood and | others from Indiana, the former home | of Mrs. McReynolds; Commissioner and | Mrs. Humphrey, former Commisstoner | | | | | | | 937-939 1929—PART 3. and Mrs, Craven, Mrs. Carl Mrs. mnw{swmr uw'ble: :nd many others of lshggltcn, . An- lolni-v Selshausen of lesbaden, Ger- many, and Miss Minnie Douglas of Cincinnati, Ohio, also were guests. s 4E. S, will hold its fifth annual card {Card Party-and Dance | Listed by O. E. S. Chapter St. John's Lodge Chapter, No. 18, O. party and dance in the large ballroom of the Mayflower Hotel Wednesday. These events are the outstanding social | features of the chapter’s activities. Past {Patron Ted Lewis, general chairman, announces card playing from 8:30 p.m. !and dancing from 9:30 p.m. to 12:30 o'clock a.m. | Reservations for tables can be had | |through Past Matron Leila Cook. | _The worthy matron, Mrs. Rebecca |Wharton, extends an invitation to all member of the order and their friends |to be present. | gt :tha T Alph- Banquet | Charming Social Event | | Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity held its | initiation banquet at the Carlton Hotel | | Sunday evening. Miss Marie Did ! the chapter alumnae advisor, acted as toastmistress, and Miss Anna_Pear] | Cooper, assoclate professor of English | at George Washington University and new chapter patroness, was the guest | | of_honor. | Toasts were given by Mrs. Laurie Hess, | national province president; Miss Phoebe Tauberschmidt, Mrs. Paul | | Loehler, Miss Evelyn Pierson and Miss | Marion Stewart. | ‘The new initiates were Miss Leona | Viers, Miss Margaret Cook, Miss Helen | | Manning, Miss Dorothy Richtmeyer, | Miss Elizabeth Crosby, Miss Elizabeth | Crawley, Miss Dorothy Worrall, Larry Worrall, Miss Corella Watkins and Miss Olivia Watkins. Other active and Miss Betty Didden. SOCIETY.” and alumnae members present were|Mra, Miss Marion Campbell, Miss Beatrice e Clephane, Mrs. Una Baird, Miss Dorothy | D.A.R. Leader, to Visit City Eidhammer, Miss Betty Eidhammer,| Mrs. Jullus Young Talmadge of Miss Eira Mooney, Miss Mollie Brinckley | Athens, Ga., candidate for president | general, National Society, D. A. R., wift ‘The Washington alumnae chapter of | arrive in Washington the first of April. Talmadge, Prominent Zeta Tau Alpha Praternity held its | Mrs. Talmadge will be the honor guest regular monthly meeting followed by at & number of social affairs being bridge at the home of Miss Elizabeth | Gladman on Friday evening. | ing were Mrs. Howard Warren, Miss | Frances James, Miss Olive Geiger, Mrs. | Laurie Hess, Miss Beatrice Clephane. Mis¢ Julia Watkins, Mrs. Paul Loehls Miss Virginia Ronsaville, Miss Marie Didden and Miss Marion Campbell. planned in her honor. Invitations will be issued to a large reception Apri 18, and the Georgia D. A, R. dele- gation will honor her with a receptior entertaining the State delegations from every State. Many from the diplomatic corp and official Washington have beer | asked to receive with Mrs. Talmadgs Attend Wm. Rosendorf 1215 G St. Washington’s Importing Furrier “‘:;';' :g:: A FEATURE PRICE Rich F o;‘ Scarfs! $37.50 Values From $50 to $55 POINTED BEIGE BROWN Also a special group at $19.50 ‘We take especial pride in our collection of SCARFS. We have bought up the most attractive pelts the market contained, and in the hands of our experienced Furriers they are developed into Secarfs of great- est merit, style and “becomingness.” 937-939 STORES Thank You! How can we thank you for your wonderful reception? That you would appreciate our values, we bad no doubt—but such a splendid response to our invitation was far beygm‘l our expectations. You have proved that you do want smart fashions at less-than- usual prices. We dedicate ourselves to this ideal. We express our appreciation now words, and in the future, by our constant endeavor to give you big- ger and better values. = All Fashionland United in Send- ing Us These New RESSES 4 Marhed at the low introductory price of .95 .50 39 Metropolitan fashions—so smart and eco- nomical thatyour heart and purse will unite in saying, “Buy them!” Dresses for business wear, for festive afternoons or gay evening hours. Fashion’s new materials and colors at Mangel’s usual thrifty prices. MILLINERY Heavy Crepe LINGERIE <& Introductory Special 298 MANGEL’S are the largest retailers of un- derwear in the United States. It means that now you can have the lovely things you ad- mire at an unusually low price. Our huge buy- ing power means savings to you. —T he six models illustrated are of kid in the light and medium shades of sun-tan—other mod- els are of patent leather and ratin. FAN TAN HOSIERY Introductory Special 1 35 Silk from top to toe; full fashioned; fifty- sevenshades. Smooth, serviceable, sheer, flawless. FAN TAN Hosiery is sold exclusively at Mangels. Kann's—Fourth Floor annf. Fourth Floor