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SOCIETY SOCIETY 'President Hoover Leaving Today for His Blue Ridge Mountain Camp Accom-~ panied by ily and a larger group of guests than usual, is leaving for his customary week end stay at his fishing camp on the Rapidan River in Virginia. ‘The Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs, Arthur M. Hyde have returned to the Mayflower after an extensive tour of the South. Miss Caroline Hyde, daughter of the Becretary and Mrs. Hyde, has as her guest Miss Jane Caulfield, daughter of Gov. Henry S. Caulfield of Missouri, who has been visiting in the East, having accompanied her father to New Lon- don, Conn.,, where he attended the con- ference of governors. RESIDENT HOOVER, _accom- P panied by members of his fam- Senor Valdes, Chilean Secretary, Sailing for France Next Week. The secretary of the Chilean em- bassy, Senor Don Manuel Valdes, left Washington at midnight for New York preparatory to sailing Wednesday aboard the President Roosevelt for = France, where he will join his parents at Pau for a two months’ vacation. Senor Valdes was the guest in whose honor the first secretary of the emba: Senor Don Oscar Blanco Viel, entertained at luncheon yesterday. The company in- cluded Senor Bordenave, delegate from Paraguay to the Bolivian-Paraguay conference, who has the rank of Min- ister in the diplomatic service, though he is not accredited to a post; the charge d'affaires of Argentina, Senor Don Julian Enciso; the charge d'af faires of Ecuador, Senor Don Juan Bar- beris; Mr. Benjamin Thaw, jr.. the first secretary of the Cuban embassy, Senor Don Jose Baron; the commer secretary of the Chilean embassy. Senor de la Barra; Mr. Louis J. Heath, Mr. Charles Harner, Mr, Reuben J. Gordon, American secretary of the Chilean em- bassy, and Senor Jose Miguel Orrego. ‘The charge d'aflaires of Germany, Dr. Otto C. Kiep, was host at luncheon yesterday, his guests being German ex- Perts on radio who are in this country to study radio stations here. The com- pany included Herr Wilhelm Steinkopt of the German Reichstadt, Dr. Kurt Magnus, Herr Friedrich Blouck "and Herr Hans Badenstecht, visiting radio | authorities: the German consul general in New York, Dr. Karl von Lewinski; Herr Emil L. Baer and Herr Johann G. Lohmann, secretaries of the German embassy; Mr. Kurt Sell and Mr. Ralph Edmonds. ‘The Assistant Postmaster General and Mrs. W. Irving Glover, with their daugh- ter, Miss Frances Glover, expect to go to Eagles Mere, Pa. tomorrow. Their sons, Mr. Thomas Glover and Mr. War- ren Glover, have been there for a short time. Mr. Glover will return the first of the week and Mrs. Glover and their children will remain at Eagles Mere for the rest of the season. ‘The counselor of the Spanish em- bassy, Senor Don Marians de Amoedo, has taken an apartment at the Ward- man Park Hotel. Marshall-Essex Wedding In Bride’s Home Today. ‘The marriage of Miss Alma Frances Essex, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Essex of Lanham, Md., to Mr. Joseph M. Marshall of Washington and Phila- delphia, son of the late Mr. and "Mrs. J. A. Marshall, will take place this afternoon at 4 o'clock at the home of the bride's parents, the Rev. Dr. Al- fred E. Barrows of the Eastérn Pres- byterian Church of this city officiating. ‘The weather permitting, the ceremony will be performed on the spacious lawn of the home, which will afford a charm- ing setting with the many bloomi flowers and green shrubbery. As the guests are assembling Mrs, Earl Bell- man will play selections of nuptial | music and Miss Dorothy Reddish will sing_“Oh, Promise Me” and “Deep in My Heart.” ‘The bride will be given in marriage by her father, and she will wear a white | satin gown fashioned with a yoke of real lace and the skirt made with an uneven hemline. She will wear a gar- den hat of white horsehair braid and | carry a shower bouquet of Sweetheart roses and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Evelyn Mills will be matron of honor for her sister, wearing a pink organdy gown with a hat to match and carrying an arm bouquet of pink roses. Miss Constance Church will be the maid of honor, in an orchid color or- with a hat to match and carry- ing_yellow tea roses. j The bridesmaids will be Miss Thelmd Elliott, Miss Esther Gottwals and Miss Evelyn Eckert. They will wear organdy | frocks in shades of pink, yellow and | blue, respectively; hats to correspond with their gowns, and their bouquets are to be of yellow tea roses. Mr. George Lovell of Brentwood, Md., will be the best man and the ushers will bs Mr. Chester Mills, Mr. Harry a Party. Nalley and Mr. Arthur Van Heuckeroth, all of Washington. A reception will follow the ceremony, ‘when the couple will be assisted by Mi Essex, mother of the bride, who will be in a peach georgette gown. Mr. Marshall and his bride will leave after the reception for a wedding trip, the bride wearing an orchid rgette crepe and lace ensemble with nude- color accessories. They will make their home in Philadelphia. The bride is a graduate of the Mary- land University and was prominent on the rifle team and in dramatic organi- zations of the university. Several pre- nuptial parties-were given in honor of the bride. Mrs. C. E. Mills enf at a shower for her sister. A wedding of more than usual in- terest in Washington took place at noon today in California when Mile. Claire Heilmann, daughter of the French consul general in San Fran- cisco, and Mme. Helflmann, became the bride of Mr. St. George Burke of Ireland. The ceremony was ‘performed in St. Matthew's Church in San Mateo and was followed by a breakfast for only the members of the two families and intimate friends in the home of the bride's parents at Hillsborough. ‘The Hon. Gen. Campbell, British consul general in San Francisco, was the best man, and Mlle. Helene Hell- mann was maid of honor for her sis- ter. Cards have been recelved in Wash- ington from Mr. and Mrs. Edward Righter of Chicago, announcing the marriage of their daughter, Helen Loughborough, to Mr. Andrew Stewart Messick, son of Mrs. C. C. Marbury of Washington, Friday, July 19, in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Messick will be at home after August 15, at 1400 Lake Shore drive, Chicago. Miss Laura Tuckerman and Miss Elsie Ekengren, who will be debu- tantes in Washington next Winter, were among the guests last evening at dinner of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam F. Ladd of New York, who presented their daughter, Miss Elinor Ladd, to Southampton society at a large dinner party followed by dancing for which additional guests were asked. Among others at the party were Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, Mr. and Mrs. Harry 8. Black, Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Mellon, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth O'Brien and Mr. John Barrett, Governor General of Canada And Lady Willingdon at Saranac. Lord Willingdon, governor general of | Canada, and six members of his staff | played the Saranac Inn golf course yes- | teday as guests of Mrs, Eliot Cross of | New York, and were later joined by | Lady Willingdon, Mrs. Whitelaw Reid and her house guests for dinner in the | restaurant at Saranac Inn in the Adirondacks. Mr. and Mrs. Maxim Karolik, have been added to the list of patrons and | patronesses for a recital to be given by | Princess Troubetskoi and Mrs. Lewis A. | Armistead, at Newport Monday evening. Mr. R. Golden Donaldson entertained a party at dinner last evening at the Plage Deauville at the Wardman Park | Hotel. His guests inclu the Minister of Egypt and Mme. Samy Pasha.: Miss Mary Dawes of Evanston, I, niece of the United States Ambassador to the Court of St. James, Mr. Charles G. Dawes, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Morris of Amsterdam, N. Y., at Saratoga Springs, for the racing season. Mr. and Mrs. Morris entertained at dinner last evening for their guest at the Brook Club, when the company in- cluded Miss Ann Bristol and Mr. Wal- ter Farrelly of Rochester. Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Virginia Baldwin, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William Dwight Baldwin of Makawao, Maul, Hawaiian Islands, to Mr. Wellington Wells, jr., son of former Senator Wel- lington Wells, and former president of the Massachusetts Senate, and grand- son of the late Justice David J. Brewer of the United States Supreme Court. Miss Baldwin was educated at Miss 2101 ONNECTICUT AVENUE 07~9~11~13 G St NW, Open “till” 3 P.M. Saturday A Splendid Opportunity for You to Select Your Fall Coat During Our - ADVANCE SALE OF New Flares! New Styles! Group No. FUR TRIMMED ATS New Flounces! New Materials! LUXURIOUS FURS SAVE FROM $15 to $35 Group No. MRS. HAKRY D. CHAMBEERLIN, Wife of Maj. Chamberlin, U. James Franklin Bell at the Westmoreland. S. A., stationed at Fort Hall's School in Pittsfleld and at Miss Garrett’s School in Paris. Mr. Wells, whose home is at 171 Bay State road, Boston, is a graduate of St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H,, and is a ‘member of the class of 1931 at Harvard. He is a member of the Phoenix, 8. K., Iroquois and Speakers’ Clubs, and is an editor of the, Harvard Advocate. No date has been set for the wedding. ‘The secretary of the Rumanian lega- tion, Mr. Vintila Petala, is staying at tl&; ‘Wardman Park Hotel for a short time. Miss E. Semple Pettis has returned | to Mountain Home Mission, near Char- lottesville, Va., after visiting in Wash- ington for some days. Mrs. Harriman Russell has gone to Newport, where she will be the guest over Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent | Astor. Mrs. Astor returned to Newport yesterday from Saratoga Springs, where she attended the races several days after her arrival in this country from Eu- rope. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adams have returned to New York and are at the Barclay after spending several weeks with Mrs. Adams’ sister, Mrs. George Mesta, in her villa at Newport and at the opening of the races at Saratoga Springs. Comdr. and Mrs. Theodore S. Wilkin- son were guests at the luncheon given yesterday by Mr. and Mrs. Craig Biddle following the polo matches at Narra- gansett. Among others who witnessed the matches were Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt ind her house guests, Lady Lowther ! ngham Co? 3145 36 TSEVENTHIST. N Riley, who is visiting Mrs. --Clinedinst Photo. and Miss Lowther of England, Mrs. ‘Thomas Irving H. Chase and the Misses Chase. Ewing, Jjr.; Mrs. Comdr. Aguirre entertained st dinner last evening at the Plage Deauville, at the Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. J. G. Holcombe of New York has arrived at Newport to attend the barn ;iance with his brother and sister-in- aw, Holcombe, will give tomorrow evening at Harrison House. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Royal Mrs. Andrew J. Miller has as her In exclusive town- house section north of 24th and Mass. Ave. Brick construction, with stone trim. De- tached. Eleven rooms, five baths. Oil burner, electric reirigerator, gar- age for two cars. 50 ft. frontage. An oppor- tunity to acquire one of ‘Washington's finer homes at a figure far below re- production cost. Addre Box 81.J Star Office A small deposit will hold your coat until event becomes increasingly In ANl Washington There Is No Event to Compare With Our $58 Coat Sale You Save From $10 to $25 This tremendous once-a-year D. O, FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1929. guest in her New York home Signora Fillipo Camperio, who will sail tomor- row accompanied by her son, Signor Manfredo Camperio, for their Summer villa near Milan, Italy. Mrs. Miller entertained at luncheon yesterday at the Park Lane for her guest. Mrs, L. A. Murphy has as her guest at' the Wardman Park Hotel, Miss C. A. Peirce of Chicago. At the Farmington Country Club last evening, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Gilmore Maphis entertained at dinner for the Minister of Panama, Senor Alfaro, who was a speaker at the round-table session, conducted by the Institute of Public Affairs. Mr. and. Mrs, Willlam C. Smith and their daughter, Miss Gertrude Smith, of Greensboro, N. C., have motored to Washington and are at the Grace Dodge Hotel for several days. Mrs. Mae Davison will leave Wash- ington on & motor trip to the West and will stop at Yellowstone Park. On her return trip she will stop off at Pittsburgh to attend a convention. She will return to Washington early in September. Ricker—Allen Wedding in St. Martin’s Rectory Yesterday. ‘The marriage of Miss Elsie R. Allen, daughter of Mrs. Elsie R. Allen, to Mr. Edward A. Ricker, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Ricker, all of Washington, took place yesterday, The ceremony was per- formed in the rectory of St. Martin's Church, the Rev. Michael J. Rierdan officiating at noon in the presence of a small company. ‘The bride was attende Duvall and Mr. Thomas man for his brother. Mr. and Mrs. Ricker will make their : home in Washington after a short wedding trip. ‘The wedding took place Wednesday evening, August 7, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Brandt, 2326 Nine- teenth street northeast, of their daugh- ter, Miss Minnie Elizabeth Brandt, and Mr. Julian Buford Turner. The cere- mony was performed in the living room, which was beautifully decorated with flowers and ferns. ‘The officiating minister was the Rev. F. R. Barnes, pastor of the Langdon M. E. Church. Preceding the ceremony Mr. Earl Nalls, accompanied by Mrs. Brill, sang, “At Dawning” and “O Promise Me.” ‘The bride wore a wedding gown of white satin with pointed bertha of lace, by Miss Jane icker was best Her MAR, most attractive timepieces. ‘window. choice. For men, $50 to $75. Elgin ever, andfathers. famed timepieces, made right 1\ trimmed with seced pearls. Her tulle vell was held in place by & wreath of orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of roses and lilies of the valley. M Margaret Brandt was maid of honor for her sister. Her gown was of peach color chiffon and with satin slip- pers to match. She carried pink roses. UpMs‘l;;mTuomer L!F: tmery;ber gl G’I‘hem mega Fraternity at George ‘Washington University. i . After a short reception Mr. and Mrs. Turner left for a motor trip through | several of the Northern States, | dark blue crepe ensemble, with small hat and shoes to correspond. Dr. end Mrs. A. W. Cummings are leaving the city Saturday for an auto- mobile trip to Orkney Springs, Va., where they expect to make a two or gxor.eeel weeks stay at the Orkney Springs Mrs. Clarence M. Busch, president of the National League of American Pen Women, entertained informally for luncheon on the Willard roof yesterday. Mr. Fred Hughes was host to a party at dinner last evening at the Plage Deauville at the Wardman Park Hotel. Miss Angelica L. Gerry, sister of former Senator Peter Goelet Gerry, has returned to her Summer home, at Delhi, N. Y., after several days in New York. Miss Gerry will sail for Europe August 23 on the Majestic, to remain until the late Autumn. Mr. and Mrs. Camden R. McAtee have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. J. ‘Wheeler Campbell of Louisville, who ar- rived by motor from New York, Mr. Edward Walsh and Mr. John O. Gheen are guests of Mr. Robert Mc- Mullen at his estate, Round Hill Farm, at Saratoga Springs. Miss Elizabeth O. Cullen is in Santa Monica, Calif., visiting Mrs, K. P. Cul- 'WE DRY CLEAN- And Press $1 .00 | Everything Call Potomac 3900 for DOLLAR 2%, CLEANING 1731 7th St. N.W. co. || The bride’s going-away gown was a | ,, Illinois The new strap Illinois are among A See them in our Popular prices prevail, Terms—S1 a Week Hamilton HAMILTON, the watch of railroad accu- racy. Dependable, stylish,and 17 to 21 jewels. Pockets, $37.50 to $175. The “Chevy Cliase” for women for $75. Terms—$1 a Week ELGIN for men at $19 to $90. For women, $24 to $200. Never have we shown a more attractive line of world-famous timepieces. The styles this year are more beautiful than Terms—S1 a Week -Waltham WALTHAM, that famous watch of our Now garbed in modern style. ee our window display of these four world- Terms—$1 a Week elsewhere. set in a modern up-to-date setting. Pay the difference weekly or monthly. ILLINOrS /s - e it el AP socrery. Marriage Licenses. M. Murray Brent, 34, Marshall, Va., and C. Marie Helm. 27, Midland, Va.; Rev. Homer J. Councilor. Richard Jackson, 40, and Georsianna Magon, 20; Rev. Willlam A. Murphy. Willlam Green, 63, and Hennle Adams, 43; Rev. Wesley Green. Bradford C. Marsh, 49, and Claudia M. Horner, 40: Rev. Newton P. Patterson. Eddie Moton, 28, and Serah Brown, ; , 48, Athens. Ga.. an 43, Montgomery m\lfll’d. A e 58 and Della X, Harrl W. H. Jernagin. ST B. Watson, of ‘Cameron, “Te; LN POINCARE MUCH BETTER. Physicians Report He Soon Will Be Able to Leave Clinic. PARIS, August 9 (#).—The four phy- siclans of Raymond Poincare, former premier, after & consultation and gen- eral examination of their patient this morning, decided he had so much im- proved after his recent operation he can leave the clinic where he is fined within a day or two. Visitors, however, are still barred from the sick room. ‘The former Pl‘ll 3 :‘:l:.';ed to leave his bed for a“wh'l.I: » KAPLOWITZ BROJ. INCORPORATED APPAREL SPECIALISTS THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN E AND P FOR YOUR PLEASURE, OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY .....9 A.M. TO 530 P. M. ENJOYABLE APPAREL BARGAINS FOR SATURDAY KAPLOW e anten \BEAUTIFUL DRESSES FOR..... ITL DAY 3:595 MISSES” ... JR MISSES” ..... WOMENS . ... . TO SIZE 46 YOU WILL BE DELIGHTED WHEN YOU TRY THESE DRESSES ON AND REALIZE THAT IT COSTS MORE THAN $3.95 TO MAKE THESE SMART DRESSES . QUALITY SILKS . . DRESSES MADE ENTIRELY BY HAND . .. . PRINTED SILKS . . . BEAUTIFUL SHADES . . . YOU WILL GET A WORLD OF WEAR OUT OF THESE DRESSES FOR TOWN . 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We allow you full purchase prices on rings sold by us or give liberal allowance on rings purchased Trade your old-style ring in or have the stone OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY portant each year to thousands of well-dressed women who have learned to rely upon it confidently for fashion-right- ne well as savings that are ~ incomparably important to the Winter apparel budget . « . sav- ings “that become more ap- parent as the season advances. 1307-13 G St. , wanted. SCHWARTZ & SON Derfect Diamonds 708 7th St. N.W. 709 14th St. N.W. (Look for the “GOLD” Clock—on Seventh Street) 1 ® $58¢|$78: A small deposit reserves your selection, and we store it until you want to wear it. Come in TODAY. The Friendly Stop BRESLAU’S