Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
éociety Happenings O{ Record past Weel( In Nearby Maryland Early Summer Wedd;ngs Among Feature Events Chronicled—General and Special Events and Per- sonal Notes. | HYATTSVILLE, June Hodges Carr of Owens avenue entertained the Tuesday e Club this week. d Henry 1.-Mrs. Hy? After- Her Thomas. G Mrs Miss Barbara Coale of Forrestville was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Sweeney, in ‘Croome, this week. Rev. U. S. A. Heavener, pastor of Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church e, and Mrs. Heavener and the latter’s mother, Mrs. T. J. Wilcox, have returned following a visit to Mrs. Jeavener's brother, Mr. Thomas H. Wilcox, Richmond, Va Mary Ogle Bowling of New who has been spending several 5 with her father, Mr. Benjamin Ogle, near Croome, left Monday to join her husband, Capt. Harry Bowling, U. S. Army, who is now stationed at Lake Champlain. | Mrs. Kenneth F. Brooks of Hyatts- | ville, with her daughter Eleanor. s | visiting her mother, Mrs. Thomas Gourley, Holland Point, Calvert Coun- ty, Md. Mrs. Alice, B. Luckey, who has been spending some time as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Clagett, Hyattsville, lef¢ Friday for a stay of several weeks with relatives in Balti- more County, Md. Elaborate Card Party In Aid of Child Welfare. A 500 card party for the benefit of child health welfare to the Mount Rainier, Brentwood, Cottage City and | Colmar Manor communities will be given Monday night in the Mount Rainier school auditorium under the | auspices of the Woman's Civic League of Mount Rainier. Prizes will be awarded and arrangements are mak- ing for accommodating a large com- any. Paleut. Robert B. Luckey, U. S. Marine Corps, who has been ‘stationed Nicaragua for D n S0 his former home in Hyatts. ville early in June, to remain for a onth. ™ (iss Shirley Kaufmann of Balti- more is visiting her grandfather and grandmother, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kauf- mann, of Maryland avenue, Hyatts- e. Vi homas R. Brooks, ir. Hyattsville, will spend the greater part of July in Burlington County, N. J., where he will be in camp with the Boy Scouts of Burlington County, of which Brian B. Kane, son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Fuller of Hyattsville, is master. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton G. Light of Capitol Heights, accompanied by Mrs. Nora O'Connor, Mrs. A. E. Fowler and Mrs. Irene A. Connor, have returned from a_motor trip through the Blue Ridge Mountains. They _visited St. Joseph's College, Emmitisburg, where Mrs. Connor’s daughter, Sister Irene, is stationed. The ladies’ auxiliary of the Capitol Heights Volunteer Fire Department will serve its weekly luncheon Thursday, June 6. Mrs. S. Beaver heads the com= mittee in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Peter Economous and children, Dorothy and Thomas, left today for & motor trip to Mrs. Economous’ home, Danielson, Conn. Mrs. Economous will months, will re- [ing.the Dworak bungalow at Hillmead THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTO: . O JUNE 2, 1929—PART 3. CHARMING BRIDE-ELECT MISS RUTH MART! Duncan Hannegan, the wedding to take ENEAU NEBEKER, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Knowlton Nebeker, who announced her engagement to Ensign Edward Allen Hannegan, U. S. ., son of Mr. and Mrs. e place in the Autumn. —Harris-Ewing Photo. has returned from a business trip m‘ Oklahoma. Miss Ruth Pinch has opened her Summer home at Hillmead after spend- hl‘tg the Winter months in New York city. Judge Kathryn Sellers Sojourning at Hillmead. Judge Kathryn Sellers of the Juvenile Court, District of Columbia, is occupy- for the Summer months. Miss Maude Park of Washington is the guest of her sister, Mrs. J. Hanson Boyden, in Glenndale. Mrs. Robert Marshall of Bluefield, W. Va,, with her son and infant daugh- ter, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Lee Mullikin, in Collington. Mrs. Archie Pinagin of Fort Foote has been entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nair of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Adams of Fort Foote have returned from an outing on St. George's Island, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland Kerby of Fort | Foote have been visiting Mrs. Kerby's sister, Mrs. Reed, in Vienna, Va. Messrs. Thomas Gwynn, Frank Small, Frank Dent and Adrian Fisher of Oxon Hill and Surratts districts have returned from a trip to Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Hill, Upper Marlboro, have returned from an out- ing at_Atlantic City. Mr. Frederick Sasscer of Upper Marl- boro is in White Plains, N. Y., visiting his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Gore. Mrs. James H. Truitt of Glenn Dale has returned from a visit to Rev. Mrs. Willlam Nes, New Orleans. Miss Helen Tatspaugh of Laurel spent the current week at North Beach, on the Chesapeake Bay. Church, Hyattsville, at the rectory Saturday night of last week. A party of friends and relatives witnessed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Wilkins of Balti- more have been the guests of Mrs. C. L. Young in Laurel. Mr. and Mrs. Naylor Israel of the Manor, Norbeck, Md., and Mr. and Mrs. Rogers Israel of Baltimore have been the guests of Mrs, Philip Israel in Laurel, Mrs. A. S. Gouch, Mr. Ferguson Har- rison and Dr. L. Sothoron, jr., all of Laurel, have been visiting friends at Charlotte Hall, St. Mary's County, Md. Mrs. Robert Marshall, Bluefield, W. Va., was a guest of Mrs. James Boss this week. Mrs. C. Lee and Mr. J. Wilson have returned to Hartford, Conn. after a visit to Mrs. Lee E. Gilbert, Laurel. Ferret Enjoys Radio. Creeping into the darkest corner of its mistress’ room in London, a ferret listens nightly to radio programs. It is intensly fond of music, and when- ever the piano is played will climb on top of the instrument and blink kndow- ingly at the player. The owner has had the animal three years, carries it with her on trips, and says it has a most remarkable degree of intelligence, —_— Sisters Practice Law. Following in the footsteps of her sis- ter, Miss Dorothy A. Fisher of Newry, Ireland, has just passed the examina- and | tions for admission to the bar of North- ern Ireland. She stood third among the 17 candidates, and was the only woman to gain the honors. She matriculated |at Queen’s University, Belfast, and is BY MARGARET B. DOWNING, Mr. D. Everett Wald's energetic cam- paign in behalf of one of Washington's most_cherished buildings, the Octagon House, has resulted in securing_almost $600,000 and_the proposed addition of | a library and an administration build- ing will soon rise on the fine old formal garden facing along Eighteenth street. Octagon House has been for years the national headquarters of the Society association has most diligently pre- served the historic edifice, one of the Capital’s earliest mansions, which was designed and built by Benjamin Le- trobe. About $400,000 of the fund which Mr. Wald and his associates have secured will be spent on the building | operations and the remainder will be | invested as an endowment to keep the | property in good repair. But a tinge | of regret mingles in the mind of older | Washingtonians, for this improvement | will mean the destruction of one of the few enclosed formal gardens remaining in the city proper. Georgetown has safeguarded such treasures more dili- gently. ‘With Octagon House enclosure cov- | ered with brick and stone that of Mrs. Henry Kirke Porter on Sixteenth and I streets is the sole survivor of a ! numerous group of such gardens pop- ular when the present century dawned. But the Kirke garden is modern, hav- ing been fashioned about the year 1895. Those massive pyramids of box, of which the passer-by may catch a | glimpse when the gates of the en- closure are open, came from Mount Airy, Va, the first home of Ogle Tay- loes and one of the handsomest existing colonial homes adjacent to Washington. The old box garden is also one of the last haunted spots of which the Capi- tal can boast. It is visited on dark nights by figures from the beyond, say the legends, and by ghosts of belles and beaus who enjoyed life when Mis- tress Dolly Madison ruled in the spa- the restoration of the White House. &k Mr. Richard Ford, who is the consul general of this Republic in Seville, has been one of the busiest officials of the Foreign Service trying to persuade his_country people who are arriving in hordes in the lovely Andalusian city that the original of Carmen, if in- deed there ever were such, is dead long ago and that he never could find that the identification of Prosper Meri- mee's seductive heroine had any founda- tion in fact. As the novel of which the sparkling Carmen was heroine was pub- lished in 1830, the alluring gypsy would not if living be much to see at present. Next to the guide book's account of Seville's most important sights and Hispanic-American exposition, the cig- arette factory is attracting the larger numbers of the citizens of this coun- try. Naturally the guides tell tales which are not borne out by fact, and especially about Carmen, and Mr. Ford, a clever and affable representa- tive of their country, becomes the “court of last resort.” * ok x ok Betsy Ross day will, according to a | Independence, of American Architects, and this worthy | | struggle have failed. clous halls with little Jemmie awaiting | | ginta. Tales of Well Known Folk In Social and Official Life Campaign for Preservation of One of Washing- ton_'a Most Cherished Landmarks Is Attract- ing Liberal Financial Support. recent decision of the various. Cale- donian societies throughout the coun- | try, be hereafter annually celebrated | in ‘the typical way of kilts and bag- pipes. There also will be inaugurated | a thorough search in the Highlands to discover all that may be obtained from | parochial and county records about the | maker of the flag which Paul Jones | so deflantly unfurled in the War of All efforts to affiliate | this historic needlewoman with the | various families of Ross who attained | distinction during the Revolutionary Absolutely no | data exists to furnish even a meager | biographical sketch, other than that | she was from the Highlands and was | very proud of the fact. But with the painstaking Scotch historians at work and a searching of Philadelphia's rec- ords at the time she lived in the pic- turesque house now a municipal shrine, there will no doubt be secured exact information. George Ross, the signer, seems to have known the maker of the flag, but his family records throw no light on a possible connection. He was the grandson of a Scotchman who settled at Newcastle, Del., and was en- gaged 'in the shipping business, The signer left Newcastle when he went to Philadelphia to study law, and he was in the practice of his profession in Lancaster, Pa.. when he was sent to the Continental Congress, * ok ox % ‘Thomas Lee, the first native-born governor of Virginia, was not the build- er of Stratford, the wonderful old man- sion in which 50 years later many Lees saw the light, but he was the founder and immigrant of the family and came to the colony in 1630. That third Thomas Lee, whose sons played such a | dominant role in the Revolutionary struggle, built his mansion on the 1,600~ acre grant which had been made to his grandfather and he established in Stratford the Lee court, over which, as lord of the manor, he presided and passed judgment on freemen and the gentry, and in the lower floor his stew- ard held the minor court which dealt with offenses committed by those in bond. Perhaps the most interesting chamber in this ancient stronghold of the Lees, recently acquired by the Daughters of the Confederacy, is that under the peaked roof and extending over one-half the house, where the legal ses- sions were held. Records of the Lee court in which Thomas the first pre- sided are precious for the historian who | seeks earliest legal measures passed | in the Old Dominion, and many vol- | umes of these are treasured in the vari- | ous Lee homes in other parts of Vir- | For nearly a century the Lees | have not owned Stratford, the splendid | old mansion and its broad acreage hav- | ing been sold for debt during the war between the States, and when the Willlam Alexander, jr., Chapter of the | Daughters of the Confederacy acquired title a few months ago, the owner was | Mr. Charles E, Stuart, a lawyer of Montrose. From many Lee households | will go ancient belongings of Stratford. | in order that as a historic shrine of the Lees it may reproduce something of THOSG Ac]orable the glory of its seventeenth and eight- eenth century existence. * ok kK Clement Clark Moore? author of the poem which is known to more of his country people than any other literary production of this continent, entitl “'Twas the Night Before as,’ was signally honored when, after many threats, London Terrace, in what was once the village of Chelsea, part of Greater New York, actually was wiped from the map. In the first decade of the nineteenth century Rev. Benjamin Moore, once assistant rector of Trinity Church and subsequently Bishop of New York, bought a large area of land lying between what is now Nineteenth and Twenty-fourth streets and from Eighth avenue to the Hudson. He had been ordained in England and was in parochial work there for some years when he returned to New York, built a fine house on his property and married the daughter of Maj. Clement Clark of * martial fame in the Revolutionary struggle. Clement Clark Moore, the eldest son, was born in what was called London Terrace, and his bust and me- morial tablet will adorn the big munici- pal building which will be erected closest to the sile of the old home of his father, the bishop, and where that prelate died in the early 1820s. Clem- ent Moore lived for many years in what was known as Chelsea, and, becoming a professor in the General Theological Seminary of New York, he gave that institution the fine site it now occupies on the Hudson. He wrote many poems, but that which he published in 1844 under the title of “A Visit From St. Nicholas” established his fame. It is unlikely that few born ten years after that date have failed to delight in the em and, if they attained the biblical lessing of living to see their children's children, to approve of their rapture over the same. * ok ok ok Mr. and Mrs. Lewin McDonald have dispatched cards to many friends in Washington announcing their marriage in late January, and stating that after May 1 they would be at home at No. 2 Lee road, Calcutta. Mrs. McDonald was Miss Elizabeth Sharp of this city and of Natural Bridge, Va., when she married a colonial officer of the In- dian service and stationed for the next three years in what Kipling calls “The City of the Awful Night,” Calcutta. ‘The daughter of the late William Wil- loughby Sharp, she was born in the roomy old mansion which overlooks the famous Natural Bridge and which was_once part of the manorial grant of the Willoughbys. Thomas Jefferson at one time owned property adjacent to the Willoughby estate, but he was induced to sell in order that the entire phenomenon should be owned by one person, Mrs. Sharp lived in Wash- ington for several winters while her daughter was studying at Foxcroft, Va Later being of a bookish turn, Miss Sharp studied at Lady Margaret Hall. oldest Oxford college for women, and it was during her years there that she met Mr. McDonald, who was at New College. Mrs. Sharp remained in Cal- { cutta after the bridal couple had de- | and also | parted on a honeymoon to Shillong in ' different Commonwealths, in devoting | Asstm, but she s now on way home via London and will as usual eccupy her home at Natural Bridge this summer. % Former Senator Joseph Moore Dixon of Helena, Mont., now Assistant Secre- tary of the Interior, is well remembered in Washington, and his home in Nine- teenth street, not far from the Zoo, was a center of hospitality. Mrs. Dixon was prominent in social affairs, and was one of the charter members of the Congressional Club, At the first elec- tion of officers, in May, 1908, she was chosen to represent the Northwest on the board of vice presidents. There were five_charming little daughters— Virginia, Florence, Dorothy, Mary and Josephine, the latter better known as Jo. They are all married now and have attractive children of their own. Mrs. Dixon was Miss Caroline Worden, daughter of the late Mr., and Mrs. Frank Worden of Missoula, Mont., de- voted ploneers of the State. Leaving Washington in 1913, Mr. and Mrs. ixon frequently came back to visit friends. Soon after leaving the Senate in 1913 Mr. Dixon moved from Mis- soula to Helena, which is his present | home. He engaged in the practice of law, and was a prosecuting attorney. In 1921 he was elected govérnor and served until 1?15.* R Lord Dawson of Penn, as & name. became familiar to .the thousands of American readers of the bulletins con- it was remembered also among those who ministered to his majesty's father Edward VII and his grandmother Queen Victoria. For he became fa- mous when he was quite young in years in the medical profession and after acquiring a young and beautiful wife, was well placed in the class where a physician can make giant strides toward fortune, He came of a well known family of medicos and had taken his degree and was employed in the office of Sir Andrew Clark, then at the head of the profession in Great Britain, attending royalty and all the celebrities of the empire. Among Sir Andrew’s patients was the enormously rich Sir Alfred Yarrow, shipping mag- nate, who while making a yacht trip to Greece was taken dangerously ill in Athens. Sir Andrew Clark was cabled for, but he had important work at Windsor, where Queen Alexandra was ill. So with ;rotuu apologies he sent his young aide. If the sick shipping man was disappointed or affronted, he never made complalnt, for the physi- and intelligence and soon was sailing home on the yacht with a pleased and healthy client and besides had en- gaged the affection of the pretty daugh- | ter, Ethel Yarrow. The mu oc- | curred soon after the return to Lon- | don and as Lady Dawson she is among | the notable hostesses of the city, and is a prime favorite with Queen Mary | and others of feminine royalty. | * kK ok | . Former President Cflwle is follow- ing a precedent establi$hed by the first | Chief Magistrate from Massachusetts, y & number of others from Wil 606 =614 The “Marry” Month of June When the world is in tune with happiness and the Bridal Party is outfitted at Philipsborn’s The Bridal Gown cerning the illness of King George and | clan took hold of the case with energy | ELEVENTHLST i some of his leisure to writing. John Adams wrote voluminously after leaving the White House and so also did his son, John Quincy Adams, essays and reminiscences and they both court- ed the muses. No study is more enter- taining than that of the Presidents in the literary fleld. Two within memory entered the White House after already attaining celebrity in letters. Many re- call the vogue established in Washing- ton drawing rooms soon after Theodore Roosevelt became President of having all his works, neatly bound, conspic- uot in sight. Many of these sets were autographed. President Wilson's fame and political prestige came through his books. Grover Cleveland and Wil- liam Howard Taft entered the teaching profession immediately after leaving Washington. Both wrote for law di- gests and for legal journals, and oc- casionally made reminiscent offerings to favorite journals and magazines. Mrs. Taft was the author of & charming series of articles, “The Record of the Years,” written while her memory treasured her experiences as First Lady. Much speculation is in progress as to whether Mrs. Coolidge will “take her pen in hand” when she feels thoroughly | rested and restored to health. She wrote a graceful letter and her contributions on the Clarke School for the Deaf show a facile, forcible handling of the language. | * Kk ok % | Dr. Faik Kontiza shares honors with | the Portuguese Minister in remain- ing the envoy of his country, Albania, after it passed from a republic to & kingdom. In Portugal since the Viscount d’Alte came to Washington the political change was vice versa. Dr. Kontiza has been for 15 years one of the intellectual leaders of his country and when in 1909 Albania began the movement to shake off the Turkish yoke, he followed the methods of Benjamin Frankiin when he sought the intervention of French court in behalf of the coloni But the scholarly Albanian had to pl a lone hand, as it were, and in su cession he visited, London, Vienna, Rome and Paris, placing his plea be- fore the chancelleries and in all cases making friends for his czuse and pron:- ises of neutrality if not of actual aid. He bore arms in the early Salkan con- flicts and during this time published fiery patriotic journal in Brussels which was the organ of the Albanian party of liberation. Having received a new com- mission from the monarch now reign- ing, the Albanian envoy will feel wmore secure in his post. It is probabie that he will be joined in the Autumn by lh!.l sister, Mme. Hanum, widow of a distinguished military commander, and her daughter, Mlle. Iffet Hanum, who | are at present in the family home in Tirana, present capital of Aibania. and | ancient eity of Durazzo, now being known as the Summer or vacation | capital. Steel rails on a north and south track |last longer than those laid east and | west, declares a European scientist who says that the magnetism generated by the train friction is undisturbed in the former case, while it is resisted in the latter. Mrs. James Boss of Laurel enter- tained informally at cards Wednesday night in compliment to Mrs. E. P. Wroth of Washington, Miss Josephine Louise Fuller of the staff of nurses, Union Memorial Hos- pital, Baltimore, has returned after a visit of a fortnight with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Fuller, Hyatts- ville. Mrs. Cissell of Washington has been stop in Long Isiand, N. Y., Sunday to attend the wedding of a near relative. Mayor Thomas J. Luckett, Capitol Heights, spent the week in Boston, Mass., where he was called on a busi- ness mission. He motored to Boston with Mr. Cherles Hunt, Capitol Heights. Judge and Mrs. Joyce Leave for Tour in West. | noted for her ability as a hockey, tennis |and ‘ericket player. Her sis garet. began practice a year ago. Sun-Backs This model we have in fine silk pique; all pastel shades. Gowns in Satin, demure Georgette, Chiffon, Laces and Satin with Tulle or Lace. Beaded effects, draping capes. princess lines and the very present bouffant fashions provide a type for every individual. In the traditional white or the more modern ivory shades. Special Sunday Dinner ANNE’S TEA SHOP 1731 Conn. Ave. Phone Deeatur 4229 Judge Robert E. Joyce and wife of Mount Rainier left today for an extend- ed trip through the West. They will go by the way of the Panama Canal, stop- ping off at Havana, Cuba. Upon re- turning they will spend some time in the Yellowstone Park and the 8alt Lake region. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Flynn, ‘Thirty-fourth street, Mount Rainier, have been entertaining their nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Jones of Baltimore. Mrs. V. Z. Phoenix of Punxatawney, | Pa., who has been spending the Winter | in Miami, Fla, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Hall, Thirty-fourth street, Mount Rainier, this week. Mr. John Link and his mother, Mrs. Oscar Link of Brentwood, and Mrs, Hattie Link and her two children of Mount Rainier, have been visiting the guest of her sister, Mrs. William E. Howard, in Hyattsville during the cur- | rent week. Mr. and Mrs. William Moore and family of Oxon Hill have returned from | an outing at Chesapeake Beach, Calvert | County, Md. | Nuptial Ceremonies Grace Early Summer Calender. Announcement is made of the mar- riage of Mrs. Eisie M. Duvall, widow of | George T. Duvall, and Mr. William H. | Scott, son of the iate Dr. Richard Scott | of Upper Marlboro. They were quietly } married May 8 at the home of the | bridegroom’s sister, Mrs. H. C. Lightner, in Baltimore. The bride was attired in | gray satin and carried a bouquet of pink roses and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Edith W. Metz was maid of honor and Mr. Willlam L. Suter was best man. Mr. and Mrs, Scott are now at home in Sunday Dinner, $ 1 .25 or Roast Spring fil’:i“.i‘ e R led Apple Rings Buttered Corn and Peppers Fresh Asparagus ris of Lettuce Salad ort Cheese Dressing) Hot Biscuits Chocolate Meringue Strawberry Mousse, Whips Ice Cream d_Pineap) Raisin and Nut Cakes Tea Coffee M Buttermilk Weckday Dinner Served 6 to 8 P.M., $1.00 Also in Liberty printed silk. The Lingerie Shop 3408 14th St. N.W. Opelin Eve_nings ¢ Price, $16.50 329.50 to 369.50 : Bridesmaids’ Frocks The bridesmaids rival the bride in smart- ness at the most fashionable weddings. Their gowns in Satin, Tu lle, Lace or Chiffen are E. F. DROOP & SONS CO., Exclusive STEINW, s superb pictures of loveliness. Soft pastel shades are smartest. 25 to 49 friends and relatives in Philadelphia. Mrs. Clara McCann of ‘Washington has been visiting Miss Marjorie Poist in Laurel, Mrs. Columbus Brashears of Wash- ington is visiting her daughter, Mrs. E. Roy Hill, in Laurel. Mrs, H. Edward Hohman of Balti- more has returned after a visit to his sister, Mrs. W. A. Poist of Laurel. Mr. and Mrs, J. Warren of Wash- ington, N. C., are the guests of their Mount Airy, Md. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Miller, Oxon Hill, have announced the approaching marriage of their dauNter Vivian to Ensign Robert L. Deustord, U. 8. N,, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Deusford, Salina, Kans. The wedding will take place June 24 in St, Mark’s Lutheran Church, Washington. il STEINWAY “The Instrument of the Immortals” . It has often been said—“The best is Cheapest, because it is best.” Apply that to STEINWAY—the piano that represents the result of the inspired genius of generations of this family— father and son. True thrift is exemplified in the purchase of a Steinway. It means a lifetime investment in the piano that is the accepted standard for high-grade Pianos. It is not unusual for chil- dren’s children to learn their scales on the Steinway that was a wedding present to grandmother, The Trousseau . Frocks that Graduate with high honors in Smartness 16 to %65 Lingerie itful bits of Feminine finery of soft, exquisite Silks. Beautifully tallored and lace- We make a Specialty of Wedding Millinery = E‘pa:‘d Besides being a real value and sound investment, it is easily purchased\ Milliners A Payment of 10% Cash $2.95 to $19.75 PUTS THE NEW STEINWAY INTO YOUR HOME The Balance May Be Extended Over a Period of Two Years You Are Cordially Invited to See and Try These “Grands” $1,400 $1,500 $1,650 e $1,875 E.F.DR00P&S0NS C0.,1300 “GEE” PIANOS—PLAYER PIANOS—BAND INSTRUMENTS—MUSIC Travel in a White Frocks in Georgette, < Tulle, Point d’Esprit andgsraf- Smart Coat feta. Frocks selected for theirs youthful charm and smart fash- jons. We are also showing classnight Procks in Pastel Shades, The Miniature Grand, in ebonized case. ¢ Including bench. [ e p— The Style M Grand in mahogany case. P Including bench. o 50 & OAEVIEE VAT The Living Room Grand—size 5 ft. 10%% inches. Bench included ...... .... P & e The Small Parlor Grand—size 6 ft. 415 inches. L (R e And now that vacation is $29.50 to $79.50 so near, see our selection of bathing suits and ap- parel for sports and resort wear. White Satin Pumps for the Bride or Pumps tinted- any color for the Brides- maid, Miss Margaret Bean, Washington, Mr. Joseph Leahy, Landover, Md., were L W aven AT e rown, rector of ~Pinkney Memorial Miss Adelaide Spreckelmyer of Wash- = Hugh A. Pisher in Laurel. h l d e Dororhy, Basier of Washington I € Insiae o T. W. Baxter, In | book, When 300 Hied better woto s reflabie Mr. been visiting his daughter, Mrs. J. G. | Abell, White Marsh, 1008 Eye Street N.W. 614 12th St., Bet. F & G Brid aa June Brides RIDES, Bridesmaids and the young Graduate will find select- Surely she can pick one from our large stocks of imported untrimmed hair size. Our milliners will create a charm- ing model to your own individual style. quielly married by the Rev. "Clyde ngton spent_the week end with Mrs. turned after a visit to her par- | working of a furrier's mind is not an open John Raley of Washington_ has | N FURRIER Mr. J. Hanson Boyden of Hillmead OLI Hats for Grad ats for Graduates $5 t 510 am ing her hat here a real pleasure. shapes and have it fitted to her own head- 20 colors and white to choose from. o o