Evening Star Newspaper, July 14, 1929, Page 38

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Early Matrimonial Events in New York Social Caléndar Many Betrothals Announced and Plans Uader Way for Weddings Early NEW YORK, July 13.—Several en- gagements of interest to society have been announced in the last few days and plans made for late Summer and early Fall weddings. Mr. and Mrs. Philip T. Clay of Piedmont, Calif., made known a few days ago the engagement of their daughter Mariedna to Mr. Arthur Borden of this city, son of Gen. and Mrs, Howard S. Borden. Miss Clay was graduated in 1627 from Ransome's School in Pled- mont. In 1922 she attended Miss Spence's School in New York and is now at the University of California. She is a granddaughter of Mrs. Cle- ment C. Clay and the late Maj. Clay of San Prancisco. Her brother, Mr. Philip T. Clay, jr., was graduated this Spring from Colorado College. She is a niece of Mr. and Mrs. Harden L. Crawford of New York. Mr. Borden was graduated from Hotchkiss School in 1925 and from Princeton University in 1920. He was an honor student and battery com- mander in the Reserve Officers’ Train- ing School of Princeton and was com- missioned second lieutenant in the United States Army. He also was & member of the Quadrangle Club and captain of the Princeton polo team. He is a member of the Princeton Club of Neéw York, Army and Navy Ciub, Rumson Country Club and the Sea | Bright_Tennis and Cricket Club. Musi Doris Borden is his sister and Mr. John | C. Borden, who married Miss Judith | Marvin, and Mr. Willlam H. Borden | are his brothers. His grandfather was | the late M. C. D. Borden, and he is a nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Bertram H. Borden and was named for his great- uncle, Mr: Arthur H. Bradley of Hart- ford, Conn. Miss Mary Clark to Become | Bride of Baron Baeyens. Mrs. Tobin Clark of San Mateo, | Calif., has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Mary Clark, to Baron James Baeyens. Miss Clark is| a daughter of Mr. Charles W. Clark and a granddaughter of the late United States Senator William A. Clark of Montana, and a niece of Mr. Richard | M. Tobin of San Francisco, United | States Minister to The Netherlands.| She arrived with her mother and her | sister, Miss Patricia Clark, in the United States several months ago after passing considerable time in Eagland. | ‘Baron Baeyens is the only son of | Baron and Baroness Baeyens. His yrandfather, a noted financier, was knighted by King Leopold of Belgium, whose financial adviser he was for many years and with whom he pro- moted the Belgain Kongo. The baron, whose father is a well known sports- man, intends te enter the diplomatic service. Mrs. Clark and her daughter have passed part of each year in New York, where Miss Clark has been prominent in the social activities of the younger set. Mrs. Clark, the former Miss Ce- celia Tobin, also is a sister of Mr. Rich- ard M. Tobin and of Mr. Edward J. Tobin of San Francisco, Mrs. Racul Duval of Paris and Miss Agnes Tobin. She and Mr. Clark were divorced Au- gust 9, 1925, in Paris. Mr. Clark shared the great fortune of his father, who died in 1925. Mr. and Mrs. Origen 8. Seymour of | ZLawrence, Long Island, have announced | the engagement of their daughter Frances Lord to Mr. Donald Marcy Beals, 8 son of the late Mr. John D. Miss Seymour is s member of the Junior League and & graduate of Miss Porter's School at Farmington. was_introduced at & tea given by her mmothes (st the Colony Club in the Fall of 1026. Capita] Social Set Largely Represented In Vacation Throngs < (Continued From First Page) Torthern Canads to d a_ month. During their absence Lieut. Col. and rs. Emory 8. Adams, who have re- ed here for station, will occupy| ir house at 3512 Garfield street. Col. and Mrs. Adams and their two| g,y sons, Mr. James Adams and Mr. Emory S. Adams, jr., came last week from the colonel's former post at Atlants, Ga., and have been with Gen. and Mrs. Eli A, Helmick for this week. Gen. and Mrs. Francis H. Pope have ‘been joined by the latter's daughter, Miss Frances Hampson, who spent three months in Europe. Miss Hampson was the guest in Paris of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsay Richardson, the latter formerly Miss Helen LeSeure, granddaughter of the late Speaker Joseph G. Cannon. Mrs. Richardson, who spent the early Winter in Washington with her aunt. Miss Helen Cannon, returned to this country with Miss Hampson and after a brief stay in her home in Danville salled yesterday for Paris. Mrs. Rich- ardson was accom) ed by her sister, Mrs. William Houghteling of San Fran- cisco, who was formerly Miss Virgini LeSeure. Rear Admiral and Mrs. Luther E. Gregory have closed their house on Garfleld street and started for the West Coast. Admiral Gregory will make an inspection of the naval stations at San Diego, Mare Island and Puget Sound and they will not return to ‘Washington until the first of September. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Robert C. Davis of New York are in Washington for ths week end and are at the Mayflower. Maj. and Mrs. Earl North are on their way back to Washington from Hawali, where the former has been on duty for some time. Maj. North, | who is in the Engineer Corps, has been ordered to the War College, and will report for duty the middle of August. ‘Maj. and Mrs. North and their young daughter, Betty, have arrived in New York, having mede the trip from San Francisco, ough the Panama Canal, / and are now at Virginia Beach, where they are guests of Mrs. North's brother- in-law and_sister, Mr. and Mrs. Toy Dickinson Savage. Maj. and Mrs. Claes Dickson-Hallen- creutz have motored to Maine to be the guests of Gov. and Mrs. William ‘Tudor Gardiner. Mys. Kintner and Miss Susan Brooks Kintner, wife and daughter, of Capt. Edwin G. Kintner, U. 5. N., will to Virginia Beach the end of next week for the remainder of the Summer. Miss Kintner will be among the debutantes of next season She | pain in the Summer and Fall. Mr. Beals was groduated from Har- vard in June. Iie is s brother of Mr. John Beals, jr., and of Mrs. Richard | Stoddard Aldrich. A tea was given this afternoon for Miss Seymour in the residence of her parents. Miss Carol Stevenson, druqlhur of Mrs. Francis B. Thorne of 1771 Park avenue and Bay Shore, Long Island, will be married to Mr. Joseph Sears Lovering, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 8. Lovering of Boston and Sun Ridge, Hewlett, Long Island, Saturday, Selp- tember 7, in St. Mark’s Church, at Islip, Long Island. A large reception in the Timber Point Club will follow the cere- mony. Miss stevemn has chosen her sis- ter, Miss HiMegarde Stevenson, for maid of honor and Mrs. Walter Gurnee Dyer for matron of honor. There will be six bridesmaids—Miss Anne M. Til- ney, Miss Marion Wharton, Miss Evelyn Talbot, . Miss _Anne Valentine, Miss Genevieve Kellogg and Miss Jean Hol- lins. The bride’s young cousins, Bea- trice and Elsie Little, daughters of Mrs. Kobbe Little, will be flower girls. Mr. John Hurd will be best man_ for Mr. Lovering, and Mr. Eugene Van Nass, 3d; Mr. Benjamin Billings, Mr. Lawrence B, Elliman, jr.; Mr. Martin Van Buren Morris, Mr. Muir Snow, Mr. D. Oswald Burnham, Mr. Douglas Le- vick and Mr. Herbert L. Tinkham will be ushers. Miss Stevenson is a granddaughter of Mrs. Gustave Kobbe of this city and the late Mr. Kobbe. Mr. Lovering is a nephew of the late Mr. Robert Bacon, United States Ambassador to France in the Taft administration. | Hodgson-Doan Wedding Listed for July 20, Miss Alice Doan of Winchester, Mass., will be married to Mr. John Helms Hodgson, 2d, of East Orange, N. J., Saturday, July 20, in the Summer home of her mother, Mrs. Frank Carleton Doan, in Orford, N. H. Rev. Dr. Harold E, B. Speight of | Hanover, N. H, assisted by Rev. Owen | R. Washburn of Orford, will perform the ceremony, which will be followed by a reception. Miss Doan will be given in marriage by her uncle, Mr. Frederic J. Ham of New York. Her siSter, Mrs. Paul R. Holman, is to be matron of honor, and Miss Barbara Guild of Winchester maid of honor. Mr. Richard Fowler of East Orange will be best man, and Mr. Rob- ert R. Cookman, jr., of Fitchburg, Mass,, an usher. One of the first of the debutante parties to be given for next season's girls will be a supper-dance which Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Markoe Robertson will give in their home at Old Westbury, Long Island, Thursday, September 5, in honor of their cousin, Miss Virginia Thaw. Last Fall half a dozen of the| more prominent debutantes had their formal coming-out parties given for them on Long Island at country estates and at the various clubs in Nassau County. Animal Rescue League Plans Benefit Performance. Mrs. Robert Potter, president of the Newport League for Animals, has se- lected Monday, August 5, as the date for a benefit performance for that or- ganization, along the same lines as that which netted $5,000 for the league sev- eral seasons ago. Mrs. Muriel Van- derbilt Church. Mrs. Lawrence L. Gil- lesple, Miss Olive Wnitman and Miss Lilias Moriarity are members of the auxiliary committee. Among the features will be a series of tableaux, in which members of so- clety will pose -to represent famous tings. Another feature will be a one-act play written by Mrs. Potter, which will include & cast of profes- sionals and amateurs. the Summer with Mrs. Mallan’s par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. McKenney. The District Commissioner and Mrs. Sidney F. Tallaferro returned yester- day from a visit at Bay Head, N. J, The commissioner of the United States Shipping Board and Mrs. Jef- ferson. Myers have left Washington for a two-month trip on the West Coast. They spent several days in New York City before sailing from there yesterday on the 8. 8. Virginia for Havana and Panama. Among the citijes Commis- sioner and Mrs. Myers will visit are Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, ;r;lrlll.nd. sf?f,""z'"”’““ and Alaska. ey expect to return about the of September by rail. — ‘The newly inted collector of cus- toms of the ’1;:5 Sapt 3 ved home in Salt Lake City to take uj duties and is staying :lylhe Wfl]u%.m Mr. Muzasser Ahmed, commercial agent of Turkey at New York, is spend- ing the week end in Washington at the Mayflower, accompanied by Mr. Nazme ‘Topjoglon, who is the president of the Co-operative Fig Producers’ Association obi igen_, ’Idfix;kes;:hg hgc ‘Topjoglon will ceived by retary of Agri- culture during his visit here. Prominent Residents Of Capital Are Noted In the Moving Throng (Continued From First Page.) sster, Mr. and Mrs. Lans! their home on Lamont m'euez{ ek Miss Fannie Dial, daughter rmer Senator and Mrs. Nnh:nm Bo.rlgu. is the guest or Miss Sarah W at Shawnee-on-Delaware, : Dr. and Mrs. Downey Plan For Sojourn in Mountains. Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Downey will close their apartment in the Wu‘({nun rark Hotel, ‘Tuesday and will go by motor to the mountains of West Virginia, where they will pass the remainaer or the montn. The first of August they wul return to their apartment in the hotel for a brief visic and will then motor to the mountains of Maine. They Will return the middie of Seprember, Mrs. M. B. Horton of Tuscaloosa, Ala, is the guest of her son-in-law and uumuwmn;d Mrs. Thomas . Burke, 1n on forty-; street northwest. oIS | Mr, and Mrs. Charles 8. Schermer- horn_lefv yesterday for a trip to €0 | Pacific Coast, visiting en route Colora- the Grand Canyon and Yellow- stone Park. They will return by way of w‘ s!mnu ang Banfl, about Septem- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS | motor trip and will return West from | the Capital. | Mr. and Mrs. J. Wilmer Latimer have gone to Bay Head, N. J, to re- main through the midseason. i Mrs. H. F. Archibald has come from_her home, Archwood Manor, at The Plains, Va, and is passing a short time at the Wardman Park Hotel. She . | came for the marriage Friday of Mrs. Anderson Dowell to Capt. C. Charles | PFann, U. 8. A, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Francis and their daughter, Miss Frances Francis, of Dallas, Tex., are spending Sunday | in Washington at the Mayflower. They | have just completed a trip to Boston and to Vassar where Miss Francis will study next year. ‘They will spend the remainder of the Summer in Asheville. | N. Dr. and Mrs. Glazebrook ‘Will Motor toNashville. Dr. and Mrs. Larkin W. Glazebrook | will start tomorrow for 8 motor trip to | Asheville, N. C., where they will spend a fortnight and will then go to Se- ‘wanee, Tenn. Their daughter, Miss Virginia Glaze- brooke, who is listed among next sea- son's debutantes will accompany them. Their son, Mr. Robinson Cox Glaze- brooke, who graduated in June from Cornell, left Monday for Buffalo where he will be in business. Dr. Glazebrook plans to go to Cali- | fornia in November on business, to be absent about a year. Mrs. Glazebrook and Miss Glazebrook will spend sev- eral months there with him. Mrs. B. E. Moriarty of St. Augustine has motored to Washington and is at the Grace Dodge Hotel, Fenton Bradford has clossd her lplnfisnl at the Wardman Park Hotel Fort S8am Houston, Tex., have motored AN ADVANTAGEOUS TIME TO HAVE YOUR Furs Repaired and Remodeled AR RIS Upper left: Miss Katharine Barr, whose engagement to Mr. Russell Miller| Mr. and Mrs. A de Toledo Lar: o!; Va., was announced by her mother, Mrs. Francis Lorraine Barr of San Paola, Brazil, and th!l.rcnro llans‘. INOW IS THE TIME enter: Miss Laura Frances Ottis, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Franeis J. | rived 1a! iday from | St. Paul, have announced her engagement to e e aking An o of Herndon, Danville, Va. Ci Ottis of D. C, JULY 14 1929—PART 3. CRoERWOOD | Chicago are in Washington at the Ham. | |iton as a part of a fortnight's trip | which includas Baltimore, Philadelphia, | Buffalo, Toronto and points in & Twine ‘ Michigan. are guests at the Mayflower. having ar- Mr. John Hammond Brad- | Philadelphia. They are making an ex- shaw of Or-nga '1: J. Miss Ottis is the niece of Mrs. Kellogg, wife of the former tensive tour of the United States. Secretary of lllhl,:l Miss Beatrice Wall, announce her enga; Lower left: | Marshall, whose engagement to Mr. Eugene Strickland Horsman of Erie, Pa., is anncinced. Center: Miss Maude Montgomery, daughter of Mr. Willlam Montgomery, who announces her engagement to Lieut. Right: Miss Heloise Young, whose announce her engagement to Lieut. Robert §. Hatcher, Construction Corps, U. 8. N. f and has gone to pass the week end | as the guest of Miss Florence Millar at | Mountain View, the home of her father, Col. S. R. Millar, near Front Royal, Va. | Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Meisnest of New York City are spending ths week end Washington at the Mayflower. Miss Louise V. Carr, who sailed Sun- day, July 7, sboard the Adriatic for Europe, will not return to her spart-| ment in the Argonne until the Autumn. | Mrs. E. C. Haight of Summerville, 8. C, arid Mrs. F. Q. C. Gardner and her daughter, Miss Sherley Gardner of | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel ment to Mr. Harold P. Rudolph of Newark, ss Mildred Lillian Marshall, daughter of Mr. Creighton E. for the week end. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Austin of Los | Sl who| | cies are 8t ihe Grace Dodge Hotel N. | Party to Make Tour | Of New England States. Mr. and Mrs. Luther I Reginald Mead, U. S. N. parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Young, to Washington and are at the Wardman Park Hotel, where they plan to pass 10 days. Mrs. Gardner is the wite of Col. Gardner, who is now stationed at Fort Sam Houston. Miss Graydon' Heartsill of Dallas, Tex., is spending the week end at the Stored Special discounts this week only. Compare our work and prices. 6x9 Rug Cleaned.. 9x12 Rug Cleaned. 2 Standard Upholstery Co., Inc. 403 11th St. N.W. Natl. 4902 Grace Dodge Hotel. } | | Mr. and Mrs. William G. Tumler of No Other Charge! No Waiting! SOCIETY. FORETELL CHARMING AUTUMN WEDDINGS W‘e‘vdding éngag:menu Feature Social Calendar Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Essex of Lanham, Md., announce the engag ment of their daughter, Alma Frances, to Mr. Joseph W. Marshall of Wash- man and Philadelphia. The wedding take place on the lawn of the home of the bride's parents Fridsy afternoon, August 9, at 4 o'clock, Dr. Alfred E. Burrows of Washington officiating. After a short wedding trip Mr. Marshall and his bride will be at home in Philadelphia. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Metcalf an- - | nounce the engagement of their daugh- unoE RwWood !dau.hm's Evelyn and Thelma started Weanesday for a motor teur of the New England States and before return- |ing they will visit Mrs. Iager's uncle end sunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Steven- | son, in Middleburg, N. Y. Miss Mary A. Lindsley has returned to her aparument in the Grace Dodge Hotel after attending the Business and Professional Women's convention at | Mackinac Island. Miss Elizabeth E. Hudson, Miss K leen Hudson of Urbana and Miss Ma: | Irvine of Champaign, Ili, are staying at | the Hamilton for a few days. They will motor to Gettysburg later in the week. Mrs. O. G. Fenzel of Chicago with her sons Warren, George and Robert is at the Grace Dodge Hotel for several ys. | Mrs. Harry Penick of New Orleans is spending the week in Washington at | the Mayfiower, having come here to | visit her sister, Mrs. John B. Hyde. m?enlck is en route to the Adiron- acks. | Mr. Whitney Ashbridge of Philadel- hia 1s spending the week end with r. Allston Calhoun. Mr. Ashbridge | and Mr. Calhoun were room-mates at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “ Mr. William T. Simpson will leave today for New England, where he will | spend the Summer. He will stop en | l;!ule in Philadelphia, Atlantic City and ew { _ Mr. Chuang Tzu, who is to {his Ph. D. degree from the University | of Chicago next month, is at the Grace | Dodge Hotel for several days. I | diately after commencement sall for China, where he will Kirin University, Manchuria, year. . Bridge York. receive pll’t}' Anm-:unced By University Women i ‘The American Association of Univer- | sity Women will give its regular Monday’ atfernoon bridge party in the clubhouse | at 1634 I street, at 3 o'clock tomorrow, which will be foliowed by tea at 4:30 | o'clock. Miss Sara D. Kemmerer will be the hostess. | ter, Alice Jenette, to Mr. Douglas I. | Gray. The wedding will take place in isepumber. | Mr. and Mrs. Addison Gott Brooks | of Gloucester, Mass., have announced the engagement of the former’s siste: | Miss Martha Nutting Brooks, to Ma, ‘Walter DuBois Brookings. Miss Brooks, a daughter of the late | Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Brooks of Glou- | cester, is a graduate of Wellesley, and is now serving her second term as representative of the sixteenth Essex district in the Massachusette Legisla- ture. She served as alderman of Glou- cester for two years and has been ac- tive in pelitics, business and in social and religious work of her community. Maj. Brookings, son of Mrs. Emma Brookings and the late Mr. John E. Brookings of Hollywood, Calif., is 2 graduate of Harvard College and Har- vard Law School, 1898. He was a major of the 20th Engineers during the World in France, and also was tion (under President Hoover) following the war, being stationed at Warsaw, Poland, and Riga, Latvia. He is now manager of the natural resources pro- duction department of the United States Chamber of Commerce in Washin, N Maj. Brookings was active in the lum- | ber business on the Pacific Coast, mak- |ing his home at Highland, Calif, and Brookings, Oreg. | The wedding will be some time in \!he late Summer. | Mrs. Robert Lee Saunders of Poto- | mae, Md, announces the engagement | of her daughter, Margaret Elizabeth du Fief, to Mr. James 8. Buzzerd of Berke- |{ley Springs, W. Va., son of Mr. and | Mrs. 5. 8. Buazerd of Berkeley Springs. The wedding will take place in the early Fall. -~ ‘Wome;.u P:rty-Group i Sponsors Garden Party The Young Women's Council of the | Vational Woman's party will be hostesses | in the garden of the national headquar- | ter Tuesday evening, July 23, en t farce “It Mflt Have Been” will be presented. farce, written by Mrs. | Rebecca - Greathouse, assistant United | States district attorney, will be given | by members of the Women's Bar Asso- ciation of the District of Columbia. The | sketch shows what might have been the situation in the legal profession had women heen in control of this field as | men were until a short time ago. The scene represents a man appealing to |a woman judge and examiners for ad- | mission to the bar. The reasons given against his admission are as absurd as those formerly advanced against a woman's admittance. | Miss Kathryn Dunkhorst will also present several of her pupils in dances | based ‘on the waltzes of Brahms. Mrs. Carmela V. Roehrer will sing and Miss | Maxine Townsend will play the piano | during the evening’s entertainment. | Miss Ruby Black, managing editor of Equal Rights, will speak on the eco- nomic position of women. Miss Black has just been elected national presi- dent of Theta Sigma Phi, a national | traternity of women journalists, and | is a member of the membership commit- tee of the Woman's National Press Club of Washington. | Miss Mabel Van Dyke, chairman of the Young Wemen's Council: Miss An. gelina Carabelli, Miss Faith Bink Miss Lela Angleberger of the District of Columbia, officers of the council. are the committee in charge of the affair. 'Arts Club Sponsors Chafing Dish Supyer The Arts' Club will have & chafin; dish supper_this evening at 7 o'clock. when Mr. Ben Cain. jr. will be the guest of honor and Mr. Osgood Holmes | the "host of the evening. The Ugly Duckling Tea Hcuse 115 B St. S.E. . THE BEST /I Dinner for 75¢ ||| Tenderloin Steak Dinner, $1.00 14 Spring Chicken Dinner, $1.35 Closed on Sunday TO BUY SHOES FOR THISIS T SUMMER AND FALL HE PRICE 795108102 SUCH ARE THE SHOES We can fit you in a charming model—the last word in style, the utmost in ease—at these notable savings. Sizes, 2% 10 11. AAAA to EE. Fitting by experts. Light, lovely leathers for summer wear. Darker shades for DVANCE models forecasting next season’s modes await your inspection. LOWEST PRICES of the year now prevail in Our Re- pairing and Remodeling Dept. {[Have your Fur Coat restyled at once and you'll command a worth-while saving. No Storage Charge on Repair Orders Received Now SARS FUR CO. IN THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC OVER FORTY YEARS 610 Twelith St—Just Above F—Phone Natl. 1647 | Fall. For a wide choice make an early selection. HERE IS THE PLACE HIGSBY’S KAHLER SHOE STORE 603;13th St. N.W. Phone District 1995 Pasty of Washingten Folk s e The wave we give is natural looking, it has deep mar- cel curls with ringlet ends, or all-curls, just as you wish. We give each wave to suit the individual head. Our operators are the most skillful permanent wave artists and include some of the principal hair specialists in America and Europe. It is impossible to get a more lovely per- manent, no matter- what price is paid. 4 Maison Victorie, Inc. Phone Franklin 6965 203 Westory Bldg. Second Floor—605 14th St. N.W, Shops all over the Southland 5 . R. L. Fain and Mrs. xd?:s',’t-:fi‘w'&"mm. Waldo S. Ickes, U. 8. A, are mnwfl.nfi from Washing- ton to Fort Niagara, N. Y., where they will be the guests of Capt. and Mrs. Glenn Ross. Comdr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Sher- man nd;xv--um an apartment at the ‘Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. Arthur Wallace Dunn, who has been with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederic D. McKenney, at Hlndkyh:bu.. Mrs. John R. Wheeler and her daugh- Flomarie, left Sunday for ey Forty-second Chase, about the first of September. - | Maj. Wheeler ‘accompanied them as far head- Chicago. P56 and Mrs Blaine Malln, who have been members chmmu"xn“y, Pennsylvania, ha meg&wmm

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