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THE EVENING STAR.” WASHINGTON, D. ©.” WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 192 SOCIETY _(Continued From Eighteenth Page.) long full skirt. The bodice was trimmed with rare old lace about the graceful neckline. Her tulle veil was becoming- 1y arranged and she carried a cluster of white roses cut from a rosebush planted by her grandmother many years ago. Mrs. Lawrence Stabler of Philadel- phia, sister-in-law of the bride, w. matron of honor, and Miss Sarah Ham- flton of Elmira, N. Y., was maid of honor. Miss Hamilton is the fiancee of Mr. Robert Stabler, brother of the bride. Mr. Albert Stabler, jr., was best man, and the ushers included Mr. Orville Crays_and Mr. Willlam McFadden of New York, classmates of the bridegroom at DePauw University, and Mr. Law- rence Janney Stabler and Mr. Robert Miller Stabler, brothers of the bride Following the marriage Mr. Wesley and his bride received in the parlor of the Friends' Meeting House, and left immediately after for a two-month wedding trip in the Rocky Mountain Na- tional Park in Colorado. The bride was graduated from Smith College, after which she took her master degree at Columbia University, and has been serving as secretary of the Friends' Meeting House. Mr. Wesley is a gradu- ate of DePauw University, and is now executive secretary of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association The certificate of the marriage of Miss Stabler to Mr. Wesley will be added to those in the possession of the bride’s family. which include the cer- tificate of the marriage of Robert Bowne and Margaret Latham in New York. June 6, 1724, that of George Bowne and Abigail Smith, April 5, 1770, in New York, and of Robert L. Bowne and Naomi Leggett, July 10, 1811, all ancestors of the bride’s mother, who is a daughter of the late Mr. Janney, for many vears superintendent of public &chools in Georgetown. Miss Maud L. Davidge has returred to her Washington home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. Triplett Haxall in Baltimore. Miss Rahel Davies, daughter of Mr, | and Mrs. Joseph E. Davies, will enter- tain at dinner this evening in honor of Miss Nancy Beale and her flance, Mr. William Mann. Mrs. Charles Alger is entertaining at & bridge-tea this aftersoon. Assisting her are Mrs. Harry B. Hawes and Mrs Roscoe C. Patterson, wives of the Sena- tors from Missouri, and Mrs. Warren J. Haines Mr. Gutzon Borglum, the well known sculptor, will be host at dinner tomor- Tow evening in the Whte House suite at the Willard for the members of the Rushmore Memorial Commission. There will be 25 guests Miss Margaret Armentrout entertain- ed at_bridge last evening in honor of Miss_Helen Meeks, whose marriage to Mr. Wendell Thorne of Brooklyn, N. ¥., will take place this month. The guests were Miss Lorena Carroll, Miss Price Carroll, Miss Virginia Latterner, Miss Mary Temple Hill, Miss Hylda Wrenn, Miss Evelyn Palmer, Miss Betty Chip- man, Miss Betty Armentrout, Miss Helene Potter, Miss Phoebe Furnas, Miss Ermyntrude Vaiden, Mrs. Delbert Wells, Mrs. Verne P. Simmons, Mrs Bernard L. Walker, Mrs. George Heine, | Mrs. B. M. Meeks, Mrs. W. J. Holtman, jr.; Mrs. J. C. Armentrout and Miss Alma Miller of Detroit. Capt. Joseph P. McCrink entertained last evening at his residence, 2630 Gar- fleld street northwest, in honor of Miss Sofia Romero and Miss Anita Louise Romero, daughters of Dr. Jose Romero, secretary _of the Mexican-American |* Claims Commission. Miss_Storm Selects Date For Marriage to Mr. Reeves. The marriage of Miss Miriam Storm, daughter of Mr. and Henry Al Storm of McLean, Va. to Mr. Robert | | E. Reeves of Chattanooga, Tenn., which | was planned for early Autumn, will take place Saturday evening, June 22. The ceremony will be performed in St. John's Episcopal Church at McLean, the Rev. | John Sadtler officiating at 9 o'clock. | Miss Storm has chosen for her wed- | ding party Miss Mildred Jean Robe son, as_maid of honor, and Miss Vir- ginia Randolph Palmer, Miss Sally | Baker, Miss Harrlett Dey and Miss Vir- ginia Dey as bridesmaid | Mr. Reeves will have as his best man Mr. Sam West and the ushers will in- clude Mr. Hampton Ross and Mr. Grant Gillis. The prospective bride is a popular | | member of the younger set both in | | Washington and in Virginia. She is a | | graduate of Central High School and was later a student at the Brenau Col- | lege in Gainsville, Ga. She is a mem- | ber of the Robert E. Lee Chapter, U. | D. C. of Falls Church, Va, and also | a member of the Theta Kappa Phi So- | | rority. Mr. Reeves, who is a we'l known | | athlete, i: a graduate of the McCallic Military School of Chattanooga, and | of the Georgia School of Technology at Atlanta. He was formerly a member of the Washington base ball club and is | {now with the Boston Red Sox. | | The ceremony will be followed by | a reception in the home of the bride’s | grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John A. | | Storm, in McLean, Va. The wedding | trip will be delayed until October, when | | Mr. Reeves and his bride will make a | | tour in the South, arriving in Atlanta in time for the foot ball season. The engagement of Miss Josephine | McClellan of New York to Mr. Cuth- bert Lee of New York is of much in- | terest in Washington. where the bride’s | | parents, the late Gen. and Mrs. John | | McClellan, made their home. Mr. Lee is a son of Dr. and Mrs. John Clarence Lee of New York, his father being a former president of St. Lawrence Uni- versity. | Miss McClellan is a direct descendant of Sir Robert McClellan, Lord Kirck- cudbright of Scotland. She is a great- great-granddaughter of Theodoric Lee of Virginia, a brother of Henry Lee, familiarly known as Light Horse Harry “How Members of Congress Get Their Information.” Mrs. William F. Notz, wife of the dean of the School of Foreign Service of Georgetown University, was hostess yesterday afternoon at tea in honor of President Coleman W. Nevils, the faculty and graduates of the School of Foreign Service. Mrs. Notz was as- sisted by Mrs. John Foote, Mrs, Nor- man T. Anderson, Mrs. Walter Jaeger and Miss Cornelia Notz. Miss Myra Hazard of Corinth, Miss., is in Washington to attend the meet- | ing of the State regents of the Daugh- ters of the American Revolution, and is staying at the Mayflower. ~Miss Hazard is vice regent of her State. Mr. and Mrs, John F. Somerville of Martinsburg, W. Va., are at the Carl- ton for a short stay Mr. and Mrs. Albert Herms of Ports- mouth, Ohio, who motored to Wash- ington, are staying at the Grace Dodge Hotel. They are accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Young, also of Ports- mouth. Miss Loretta Higgins of Norwich, Conn., and Paris, France, is in Wash- ington for the week and with her brother, Lieut. R. T. J. Higgins, U. S. A., of Fort Bragg, N. C., staying at the Mayflower. Miss Higgins, a young American concert singer, has lived in Paris for four years and is| spending the Summer in this country in | her former home in New England. Mr. and Mrs. C. McDorman of Birm- ingham will leave this afternoon for an extensive tour by motor, their itin- erary including Baltimore. Annapolis, Asheville and Atlanta. En route to Washington they visited Lynchburg and Richmond. They will reach Birming- ham June 15. While in Washington they are staying at the Annapolis. Mrs. Vincent R. Schenck and her two daughters, Miss Marion R. and Miss Mary P. Schenck, have motored to Washington from their home in Jersey City, N. J, and are stopping |at the Carlton. Prominent Women to Attend Lunch Tomorrow of Garden Club. Among those who have accepted for the luncheon tomorrow at 1 o'clock in the clubhouse of the American Associa- tion of University Women, under the auspices of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, are Mrs. Guy Despard Goff, Mrs. William Marion Jar- dine, Mrs. Frederic A. Delano, Mrs. Charles S. Hamlin, Mrs. Merritt O. Chance, Mrs. Brewster Marwick, Mrs. ‘Wallace Radcliffe, Miss Nellie P. Sedg- ley, Miss Isabel Sedgley, Mrs. Malvern C. Patterson of Hillcrest, in Richmond. Va., and Mrs, J. H. Dorst of Sherwood, in Warrenton. Va. Miss Florence E. Ward, who is chair- man of arrangements for the event and for the branch organizing meeting which will follow at 2:30 o'clock in the lounge of the clubhouse, has associated with her on her organizing committee Mrs. Charles D. Wolcott, Mrs. Wallace Radcliffe, Miss Blanche Clark, Mrs. Daniel C. Chace, Miss Harlean James Lee, an uncle of Gen. Robert E. Lee. | She attended the Holton Arms School | in Washington and is a member of the | Junior League. | Mr. Lec 1s a descendant of the Lees | of Massachusetts and is not related to | Miss McClellan. He is a nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic S. Lee of New | | York. He was graduated from Harvard | with the class of 1912, after which he | | was in the American diplomatic service | | for several years. He is now in busi- | ness in New York. Mrs. Alfred J. Hopkins and her| daughter, Miss Ruth Hopkins, of Pitt | burgh, who have been at the Mayflower, | will return to their home today. They | are accompanied by Miss Estelle Loef-|and Miss Gertrude Warren. | fler, also of Pittsburgh. Miss Hopkins — has just completed her junior year at| Princess Stephanie Dolgorouky of Trinity College. | Russia give a lecture in the War Lady Mary Mander of England has | arrived in Washington and is at the | Carlton for several days, accompanied by her daughter, Miss Mender. An Invitation Art Students’ Exhibition of their work at the National School of Fine and Applied Art. (Felix Mahony's). Open June 2nd daily from 3 to 9 p.m. to and including Sunday, June 9th. 1747 Rhode Island Avenue | | Mjss Wright Hostess | At Arts’ Club Dinner. i Miss Helen Wright will be the host- ess at the Arts' Club dinner tomorrow | evening. The speaker will be Mr.| Herman H. B. Meyer, director of the | legislative reference department of the | | Library of Congress. Mr. Meyer will tell the club members and their guests MORRISONS FOUNDED 1894 1109 F St. N. W. The Most Important Millinery Event of the Season! GENUINE BAKOU HATS The lowest price for which fine Bakou hats have ever been offered! ) is at the Grace Dodge Hotel for an ex anity; der II, the Liberator: June 12, at 8:30 o'clock. Her program will inclide, “Paganism in Russia: Reign- ing Princess; Conversion to Christi- Election of the First Tzar, Michael Romanoff; Under Reigning Im- postors: Slavery; Tzar Alexander II, His Second ‘Wedding; Liberation From Slavery; Murder of Tzar Alexan- Tzar Alexander II; Tzar Nicholas II; Rasputin and Grand Duchess Anastasia.” ‘The Weekly dinners of the Art Pro- moters will be resumed during June, be- the Playhouse Inn, at 1814 N street northwest, to be followed by the usual studio adjoining. Miss Gertrude Rich- ardson Brigham will be hostess. The subject will be “Modern Verse and Short Story Writing.” Miss Jane T. Jackson of Manila, P. tended stay. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Gilmore of Oak- land, Calif., are at the Annapolis while in Washington. They are making an extensive trip, including Philadelphia, ginning Friday evening at 7 o'clock, in | Tomorrow, Friday and Saturday in our Grey Shops—Second Floor Come in to talk with her! man Park Hotel Wednesday evening, | New York, Detroit, the Yellowstone, Lake | | Tahoe and Canadian cities. They left | Oakland May 26, and expect to com- plete their trip by August 1. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Macon of Cleve- land are at the Annapolis, having mo- | and Ebbittsburgh, Pa. Miss E. L. Burkert of Altoona, Pa,, is at the Grace Dodge Hotel for a week's visit in Washington. She is motoring and is accompanied by Miss R. Dengler, also of Altoona. Three D. C. Men Commissioned. | Three more District applicants have of the Army. They are William S. Ken- you, Bureau of Lighthouses, Department of Commerce, who is appointed a cap- | tain in the Air Corps: Michael J. Kran- ichuck, 4800 Georgia avenue, a first lieutenant _in the Medical Corps, and Elmer C. Holt, 1743 Irving street, a sec- ond lleutenant in the Finance Corps. e s 1t has just become possible for people in the rural districts of Austria to re- ' ceive money by telegraph. Have You Seen the New Summer SCANTIES Miss Irene French Famous Broadway Beauty will demonstrate and model these garments tored_east, stopping off at Pittsburgh ..these beautiful new Scanties! All your underthings in one...and how you'll gloat over your figure! Inches are lost it seems! And how ex- quisitely groomed you are wearing only one exqu garment that fits without a wrinkle! The New Summer Scanties . .. cooler, thinner, strongly reinforced Embroidered voile and milanese silk ..$8.50 Double Net uplift Brassiere, brocade, girdle and crepe de chine.......... . - 9 ..$8.50 Sunback Satin-and-silk. ..810 Sunback silk jersey.... ..$15 JELLEFF’S ¢ F STREET ¢ They are lovel Special Opportunity for Gradua A love to be 2, ¥7- Because no stock ... charming gifts pieces. precious stones i sterling settings Tuck away a gift early comers have tl Sucl: Stunning and Exceptional Japanese Coolie Coats $6-90 Brocaded silk and lined with Jap silk certainly an exceptional opportunity! Only the smallest mite of space needed in your vacation trunk...and these coats are such a joy to own! Light...colorful...cool! Wear them in your boudoir or on the beach ... wear them Summer evenings, too! Riotously lovely colors on black, white, blue, red grounds Grey Shop—Second Floor Knitbhac reweaves your silk S tockings! And now we can give 24-Hour Service And the repair is fAawlessly made with- out thread of any kind ! Your runs are really rewoven! Demonstration Street Floor 20% Offi— fopn Sorlh. The thousands of women who use these exclusive Marie E: in this opportunity! new package! now possible! A comprehensive collection of Marie Earle Toiletries Shop! JELLEFFS 25¢ per run Allow Us to Park Your Car while you shop! No charge for this conven- ience! Our doormen are at your service! F STREET Our doormen will be glad to park your car while you shop. Costume Jewelry HITS GANG WARFARE. | Bars | | Representative Fish’s Bill | Shipment of Machine Guns. | By the Associated Press. A bill directed at gangster warfare, | ‘maklng it unlawful to transport ma- chine guns and automatic rifles in in-| | terstate commerce, has been introduced A. | by Representative Fish, Republican, of New York. | Heavy penalties of fines up to $5.000 |and five years' imprisonment, or both. | | would be imposed on persons convicted | of sending or receiving the weapons. | round table conference in the Oriental | heen commissioned in the Reserve Corps | which, Fish said, were being extensively | used by powerful groups of gangsters ‘ in Chicago and other large cities against each other and the police. e Cage birds still come from Mexico, ! | but in reduced numbers, because the | Mexican government now requires ex- | port permits for cardinals, mocking | | birds ‘and_certain other species. and | authority for possession must also be | obtained from the State to which they are consigned. tion Gifts | ly collection 50 and A VERY DISTINGUISHED BRIDE-ELECT OF WASHI HAS CHOSEN HER WEDDI IN THE NEW NGTON G SILVER DOLLY MADISON PATTERN OF ’ GORHAM STERLING Qe wf” Le p/easml to s/ww you s [;eaui{_/;tl i e as tve/[ as our ol/zer lovely QDT[I am Gfls{gns R.Harris & Co. F Street at 11th Jewelers and Diamond Merchants for Over Half a Ceptury SS8 LACE- TRIMMED REGULARLY. 36.50 to %10 Crepe de Chine, Satin, Radium and Georgette, beautifully fashioned with lace applique or net offered at 35 up to formerly $7.50 to $50 must linger, no matter how lasting its value, this permanently beau- tiful jewelry is reduced for immediate sale! Lovely pieces that you may treasure for ycars for graduates or brides! A wondrous collection including many imported Necklaces Of imported cry stal, rhinestone, semi- n marcasite or Chanel with Bracelets and Earrings to match or two tomorrow! The he best choice! Jewelry Shop—Street Floor New Belts $1 Just in . . . suede and kid belts in new Summer shades . . . inlay buckles . .. orchid, blue, eggshell, beige, green, red, white. others S0c to $3.95 Street Floor Toiletries arle preparations will revel t The savings made possible because Marie Earle is designing a Therefore the present supply rust go quickly and this fine saving is preparations always in our STORE YOUR FURS NOW CaH Franklin 300 and our motor will eall for your coat and deliver receipt. trimming—at both top and -bottom of some. Others have tailored hems. In white, flesh, | peach, orchid and black. Pat. Silk mSltockings Paris whispered that -high colors are smart! Im- mediately smart women took them up and im- mediately important French and American women ac- cepted them! So here they are in Gold Stripe—silk stockings that wear! Wear them with white active sports costumes...or to match your all-day-long sports frocks! These are the shades — chiffon weight with narrow French heels on. Pale Capucine. ..a light peach Grand Chartreuse...a bright green Bleu d’Amour...a bright blue Nugold a clear yellow And You Get Gold Stripe Quality No matter how novel your hosiery...how fashion- able the heel shape, the year-long quality is present ...a magic Gold Stripe that stops garter runs...silk that is 100% pure. ..extra strength where the strain is greatest! $1 95 pair 3 pairs, $5.70 And Other Gold Stripe Stockings $1.65 pair up JELLEFF’'S ¢ F STREET ¢ An_additional Gold Stripe Shop in Stoneleigh Courts, 1013 Connecticut Ave. 'Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star