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il THE QU\ l) \Y STAR, WASHINGTO . D. C, APRIL 2§ 1929— PART 3. Gen. Butler Formally Assumes the Command Of Post at Quantico His Family Arrive May 15—General and Special Society Events of Week. QUANTICO, Va, April 27.—Brig Gen. Smedley D. Butler arrived on th> post Monday afternoon and 8 now in command here. He left Friday for Fennsylvania to join his family who will not_arrive until about May 15. Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Harry Lee have with them for some time Mrs. Lee's aother, Mrs. E. O. Saltmarch of Pensa- cola, Fia. Mits. Miller, wife of Maj. Lyle H. Mil- wr, entertained with five tables of bridge Thursday afternoon and had ten additional guests in for tea. Lleut. F. . Weir also of Brown Field, Yeaves within several weeks for Pens: cola, Fla., for duty, where he will be | &n jnstructor in the Naval Aviation School there. : Friday night there was a get-together bridge assembly at the Ofiicers' Club, which was held to a record attendance. Capt. W. W. Rogers left last week for | Nicaragua, where he is on duty, after | being here on several weeks’ leave. | Lieut. H. D. Palmer, who is on duty at Brown Field has recently been ol dered to Nicaragua for duty and will | leave in the near future. | Chaplain Witherspoon Now on Lecture Tour. | Chaplain J. T. Casey entertained a party of 12 at dinner on Monday eve- | ning in honor of Chaplain and Mrs. | M. M. Witherspoon. Mrs. Witherspoon | left later in the evening ‘Washington, Pa. to remain with relatives until the st of May. Chaplain Witherspoon left | the post Thursday and is giving a series | of talks in various churches in the east | prior to joining Mrs. Witherspoon .in | Pennsylvania. Chaplain and Mrs, | Witherspoon plan to leave early in Ma\" to motor to California, where Chap- | lain Witherspoon is to be on sea duty | aboard the United States b(camsmp Mississippi. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. W. P. Upshur had with them for last Sunday Mrs. Upshur's sister, Miss Sue Munford of Annanclis. Md.: Miss Mary Ellen Fos- sett of Baltimore and Lieut. H. D. Xrick of Anapolis. Col. Upshur's mother, Mrs. John N. Upshur of Rich- mond, Va., is spending some time at the post with ‘her son and daughter-in-law. Maj. and Mrs. R. L. Denig have as| their guest, Maj. Denig’s mother, Mrs. Robert G. Denig of Sandusky., Ohio, widow of the late Commodore R. G. Denig. Quantico Club Members Formally Entertained. The Tuesday Clubs were entertained this week by Mrs. Shaw, wife of Lieut. E. S. Shaw, and Mrs. Pugh, wife of Lieut. E. L. Pugh. Mrs. Pugh had as guests for her party her mother and sister, Mrs. P. J. Haltigan and Miss Haltigan of Washington. Mrs. Ozabal, wife of Chief Marine Gunner E. T. Ozabal, entertained for the Thursday Afternoon Bridge Club this week. Mr. Allen Hill of Richmond, Va, is here visiting his son-in-law and daugh- ter, Maj. and Mrs. Bennett Puryear, jr. Lieut. Lynas Berry, United States Army, and Mrs. Berry, spent last Thurs- day night at the post with Capt. and Mrs. H. S. Fassett. Lieut. and Mrs. Berry were motoring from Fort Sill, Okla., to Fort Bragg, where Lieut. Berry | will be on duty. Miss Betty Bennett, daughter of Maj. | and Mrs. R. H. Davis, is spending some time with Capt. and Mrs. Jesse A. Nel- son. Miss Bennett is from Parris Island, 8. C., where Maj. Davis is on duty. GERMAN SCHOOL HOURS AFFECT ROMAN SOCIETY | Matrons Who Send Children to! Bessions Leave Dances at Midnight. ROME (#).—Midnight has become the breaking-up hour for most of the | dances and other affairs of the “younger married set” in the foreign section of Roman society, and all be- cause of German ideas as to the proper hour for opening school. Back of this was the lack of an| adequate school for youngsters of under 10 years and of foreign parentage. Private tutors were numerous, but ex- «ensive. The German embassy therefore founded its own school. It imported teachers and lowered tuition charges. Only—and this is the big catch—the ; sessions start at 8 a.m. promptly. Thls' means early rising for parents and as | a consequence yawns begin to appear | at parties around 11 p.m. | “It is certainly wonderful for the ! schildren,” said one young matron, “but ! it is ‘schrechlichkeit’ (frightfulness) | r_the ents.” | 5-COURSE SUNDAY DINNER 75C Roast Turkey Roast Capon Baked Virrinia Ham Hom| Delicions Hom Choice of Our Rey 503 12th St. N.W. rener, “ 1208¢C. .ll. i (S SUMMER FURS are now available at R DUCED PRICES at the Capitol. REMODELING AND REPAIRING of FURS at LOWER RATES. COLD FUR STORAGE :00“000000000000000000‘00000000“0.000000000000000000“0000000' CHARMING BRIDE OF SATURDAY. Expect:d to MRS. HORACE HARRISON SMITH, Who was before her marriage vesterday at noon in St. Alban's Church, Miss Ruth Stoddard, daughter of Mrs. Joseph Stoddard. Mr. Smith has been ap- —Harris-Ewing Photo. + pointed atiache at the United States legation at Peking. | New York Society Foresees AnEventful Summer Season Tuxedo Park Colony Arnong First to Welcome Its Approach——prescnt program Featured by Notable We&dings. NEW YORK, April 27.—Although the !long days of Summer still remain a mirage on the chilly hours of Spring, preparations are under way with mem- bers of the smart set for an eventful | season. Among the first to welcome the approach of Summer is the colony | at Tuxedo Park. Each week a new contingent of residents returns from the Winter resorts or from the city to| open their homes in that fashionable area. The social program will be well underway by the second week in May. There is always a diversity about life in Tuxedo that has many attractions. In the Spring the outdoor sports pre- dominate with golf, tennis, horse shows, | yachting and fishing on the calendar. The outstanding event of the Tuxedo list is the annual horse show which will be held June 7 and 8 after the West Point exhibition. This affair attracts attention all over the country and some of the finest equine specimens in the world will be seen in the ring. There is always a brilliant series of entertain- ments held in connection with this show. Another reminder of Summer is the activity which is being manifested at Newport. Each year the length of the season increases until the dull days of Winter have dwindled to an almost in- significant period. | _Just at present, the members of the | Newport colony are protesting vigor- | ously against the use of the historic King's Park as a local air terminal for | the Boston-New York line. It is direct- ly in front of the notable Summer estates. Among those who have joined in the protest are Mr. and Mrs. Hamil- | ton Fish Webster. John Nicholas Brown |and Mrs. Paul Fitz-Simmons. Matrimonial Events | Listed in High Society. Several weddings of importance took place today. One of the largest was that of Miss Natalie Scarritt Wales, daughter of Mrs. F. Taylor Evans, to Ladies’ Hats Of Every Description Cleaned and Reblocked In Any Desired Style Head sizes of hats can be made either smaller or larger Hat Trimmings Hat Frames Ladies’ Capital Hat Shop 508 Eleventh St. N.W. Eibibie it it it e 0000“““0000“““00“000.0.0000000000000“0000 Baltimore Richmond Norfolk Atlanta Memphis ANNOUNCEMENT HOWARD’S ODORLESS CLEANER IS HERE 814 14th Street N.W. KASH & KARRY PRICES All Wool and Silk Dresses Cleaned and Pressed........... MEN'’S SUITS AND OVERCOATS. . “You Bring It—You Come Get It”’ SOME OF OUR PRINCIPAL STORES $1.00 75¢ Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Louisville, Ky. Watch for the Opening of Other Stores in Your Neighborhood 008600060006 000000000 J o Reed Lawrence of Tuxedo Park and thel of Capt. and Mrs. Evans in the New | Noyes Slerck. During the World War | York Navy Yard. late Capt. Kenelm Winslow. It took | place this afternoon in the new Church performed by the Right Rev. Herbert | Shipman, Suffragan Bishop of New| York. The bride is a descendant of Gov. Dinwiddie, the last royal Governor of Virginia. and a great-granddaughter of Edward Mariner, who was president °f the old Fulton Bank of Boston. The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Willlam Russcll Scar- ritt ‘of Bosicn are her grandparents. Mr. Winslow is a direct descendant of Philip Hone, who was Governor of New York in 1826-27, and of Kenelm Winslow, brother of Edward Winslow, i Governor of the Massachusetts ve 12 bridesmaids, 12 ushers, t man, but no maid of honor or | matron of honor. The bridesmaids were the Misses Brenda Godfrey, Jane T Lillian _Schieffelin Sanger, Muriel Gordon 'ab.xrv Natalie Lee Laimbeer, Annie K. Weld, Cornclin rady Kip, Marion Wharton, Mary Marston, Anne M. Tilney and ] a Prime of New York, and Peggy Tyner of Washington. Francis Dana Winsicw, 2d, was bes' man for his brother and the ushers were Frederic Foster Carey, jr., a cousin of Mr. Winslow: Pierre Loriliard Bar- Hunt Tilford Wagstaff, M. Bidwell, Timothy L. Woodruff John 'S. Rodgers, jr.; T. G. Townsend | Ramon | Phillips, John H. F. Haskell, Cantarrana and Alfred Wagstaff, jr. A reception for relatives and &' few intimate friends followed at the home ! A High-backed Open Arm Chair, in solid Mahogany. Dignified and yet comfortable. Covered in brocaded tapestry, it is marked f the Heavenly Rest, Fifth avenue and | Countess de Texada Named Ninetieth street, and the ceremony w-.s! As Prospective Bride. « | father is one of the oldest members ‘The Duke and Duchess de Texada o(' the Castillo de Texada, near Madrid, | Spain, have announced the engng-mmtl of their daughter, Mrs. Rosita McCal- | lvm, ths Countess de Texada, to Julius | wentworth Noyes of this city, son of | Charles Prentiss Noyes and the late Mrs Noyes, of 7 Park Avenue and Cloverhurst Farm, Bridgeport, Cora. Mrs, McCallum is the widow of Mr. John Sherman McCallum of Washing- ton, grandson of the late Senator John Sherman. She is a niece of Gen. Mar- | chessi, formerly of the Royal Spanish | Escort, and her brother is the Baron de Treilles. The Texada family is one of the oldest in Spain and enjoys high position at the Spanish court. Mr. Noyes, whose mother, the former Miss Fannie E. Wentworth, died in| 1924, is a grandson of the late Julius | M. Noyes. He is of the third genera- | tion of his family to occupy a seat| on the New York Stock Exchange. Through his late mother he is con- nected with the Wentworth family of | England. and on his father’s side he | is descended from the Noyes family of Newburyport, Mass. Mr. Noyes' of the Stock Exchange. A graduate of Columbia, 1911, Julius Wentworth Noyes is a member of the | Metropolitan, Riding, New York Yach! Turf{ and Field Clubs and of the Sf Anthony Soclety. His sister is M Mr. Noyes served as an officer over- seas. Mrs. McCallum was in Palm Beach last Winter as the guest of Mr. and | and Mrs, Jay F. Carlisle. She now is| is Paris with her parents, the Duke and Duchess de Texada. ‘The wedding will take place in| Paris in May. Accompanying Mr. | Noyes to Paris were Thomas Powell Fowler, who will be best man; Thomas | ! Eastman, Geoige W. Gair and Mr. and | | Mrs. Carlisle. Mr. Carlisle, Mr. East- man and Mr. Gair and Mrs. McCal-| lum’s _brother, the Baron de Treilles, | and Dickson B. Potter will serve L* ushers. Following thelr wedding Mr. Noye: and his bride will go to Madrid, where a series of entettainments will be given | in their honor by her parents. Later | they will motor on the Continent and late in the Summer will go to Scot- | land for the shooting. On their return to New York next Autumn they wiil make their homfl‘ on Park avenue. | Paris Has Wig for Weary. ‘ Wigs for tired hostesses are being in- | troduced by a Paris designer. They| are mode of tinsel in colorings which | harmonize with the wearer’s eyes They | hide the hawr completely and slip on | easily over bobbed hair so that if a busy | society woman cannot find time to visit | | the haridresser, she may don one of | | the new head coverings and be present- | able. Special wigs are made for mm, 0 have an abundance of half. -000000000000.0.‘00000000000000““ Pasternak sports clothes for the sportswoman are designed for town and country chic « « . they are as smart and correct for town as for country . . . at the moment, “Farley” hand-knitted sports dresses and three-piece suits . . . Sports things ot the finer kind . . . youthful, nonchalant and very practical of course. fl PfilQ CoNNECTICUY Ml!; A Sprz’ng Dz'splay 0f OCCASIONAL FURNITURE CHAIRS <~TABLES ~ SOFAS at remarkable values CASIONAL FURNITURE~those odd and decorative pieces that so frequently are the solution of an empty or awkward space in the room, are shown in a variety admirably suited to the adornment and comfort of the home. These have been priced to especially ap- peal to those who have in mind a modest expenditure. DURABILITY~BEAUTY~COMFORT combined with unusually modest prices make this A Real Economic Opportunity. at the low price of Open Arm Chairs, in a limited number, splendidly constructed and extremely com- fortable, are now offered at the remarkable 55800 price of Windsor Chairs— those quaint reminders of Colonial days — may be had in Mahog- any, Walnut, Cherry or Maple — some for s32.oo as little as $800 O The Bennington Wing Chair combines quaintness with comfort. filled back and reversible down cushion It has a hair and, covered in tapestry, is priced at 75% The York Sofa is hair filled and has three reversible down cushions. A desirable picce, it is covered in figured brocacelles or mohair and priced at many woods. $20()00 A wide selection of Tables — Coffec Tablcs, Nested Tables, End and Side Tables in The prices are moderate, end tables starting at 312.00 All of the above are specially priced. The upholstered pieces appear in a wide range of coverings and are arranged conveniently for your selection. (&) W. & J. SLOANE “The House with the Green Shutters” 709-711-713 TWELFTH STREET, N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C. STORE OPEN FROM 9 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. DAILY INCLUDING SATURDAY k2 SLOANE ENDORSED MERCHANDISE CARRIES AN ASSURANCE OF SATISFACTION CHARGE ACCOUNTS CONVENIENTLY ARRANGED l e