Evening Star Newspaper, August 21, 1929, Page 15

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SOCIETY (Continued From Fourteenth Page.) uneven hemline. Her tulle veil held by dainty clusters of oral soms and sne carried white roses and 2fies Uf the valley. Mary Virginia Smith was maid At honor and had & gown of pink satin made like that of the bride and carried pale pink roses. Little Miss Jean Bicket was flower girl, wearing a quaint frock of yellow crepe similar to that of the bride and carried a basket filled with | rose petals. Mr. Boone Holmes of Washington was best man and the ushers included Mr. Ernest Parrish, Mr. Benjamin Wilkin- son, jr, Mr. Fenton Wilcox and Mr. Farrand Wiliet, all of Washington. The bride 'mother, Dr. DeCastro, who came from North East, Pa., for the wedding, wore a gown of dark-blue georgette crepe, and among.the others irom out of town were Mr. and Mrs. +F. W. Schuster and Mr. Denny Heath of Erie, Pa, and Mr. Floyd Metcalfe and Mr. Gaylord Metcalfe of Buffalo. Mr. and Mrs. Metcalfe started later for a wedding trip, the bride traveling in a navy-blue ensemble suit with small hat to match. They will make their home at 502 Flower avenue in Takoma Park. = Mrs. Metcalfe is a graduate in music of the Mount Vernon, Ohio, Academy and Pennsylvania State Col- lege and has taught music in the Mount Vernon Academy and the public schools. More .recently she has been physicab director of the Washington Sanitarium. Mr. Metcalfe is a student at the Mary- land State University and the Wash- ington Missionary College and is in business in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Schindler, with Capt. Harry Rogers, Mr. Jack Romano, Mr. Willlam O'Riley and Mr. A. S. Stevens, arrived yesterday from New York by plane and are passing a few days at the Carlton Hotel. Mr. James Parmalee has taken an apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel, | where he will be for a short time. Miss Rosa Eberle entertained a few friends at dinner last evening at the Terr:ce Sans Souci at the Carlton Hotel. Lieut. Comdr. H. H. Good has taken an apartment at the Martinique for several weeks. Dr. G. W. Burnes of Buckhart, Mo., is at the Dodge Hotel with his daughter, Mrs. Lillle Burnes Burnham of Phila- delphia. Mr. and Mrs. A. Louis Espey of Adams street closed their cottage on Chesa- peake Bay last week and Saturday, ac- companied by their son, Mr. H. Clay Espey, and daughter, Miss Margaret Espey, and Mi Margaret Hayes, WoopwARD & LoTHROP left on & motor trip which will include Niagara Falls, Canada and other points of interest. While Mr. H. Clay Espey is visiting at Camp Perry the rest of the party will remain in Toledo. They will spend the last few days of their vacation at one of the resorts on the Jersey coast, re- turning to Washington September 3. Mr. A. J. Montgomery, editor of American Motorist, and Mrs. Mont- gomery, who went to Europe early in the Summer, sailed today on the S. S. | Republic of the United States Lines en route to their home here. Mrs. A. Bernstein of 6200 Georgia | avenue, “accompanied_by her younger | daughter, Mrs. M. Brotman, started |Sunday with Mrs. Bernstein's son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Miller. to motor to Akron, Ohio, where Mrs. Bernstein and Mrs. Brotman will | be guests of Mr. and Mrs. Miller for a month, Mr. and Mrs. Miller and their sons, Justus Marvin and Theodore Herbert, motored to Washington and spent a fortnight with Mrs. Bernstein. Mr. Bishop Hill was host to a party at dinner last evening at the Plage Deauville at the Wardman Park Hotel. Miss Norvell C. Munford has returned home after spending July and August with friends on Long Island, N. Y. Mrs. Mary C. Waters is at South- ampton, L. I. Mrs. Waters recently re- turned from South America and will before going to Europe. Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr.. is stop- &xflm at the Mayflower for an indefinite e. | Miss Eleanor Leech entertained at luncheon and bridge at the Columbia Country Club Saturday in honor of Miss Evelyn Gascoigne, whose marriage to Mr. Elbert B. Judson will take place tomorrow. The company included: Mrs. Bernard Burnstine, Mrs. William Josephine Ramage, Miss Elizabeth Leonard and Miss Marion Leech. Mrs. Mary Mellon of Los Angeles, Calif., | accompanied by her son, is stopping | | at the Mayflower for ut 10 days. Miss Virginia Forward has gone to Tall Timbers, Md., where she will be | the guest of Mrs. Charles Beach of Chevy Chase. She will rejoin her mother, Mrs. Alexander Forward. in| their apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel after Labor day. Miss Emily Peace and Miss Edith Wilkins, of Bradford, England. are at the Dodge Hotel. Miss Peace and M Wilkins, who are spending the mon! of August in America, have been in New York for several days and have spend several weeks in Washington | PC Parrott, Miss Jean MacDonald, Miss | been visiting relatives of Miss Wilkinson in Philadelphi: They plan to spend ™1™ F axp G STREETS THE the week end at Niagara Falls and will sail August 31 for land. . Mr. and Mrs. Ellis R, Barett have come from their home in Pi"‘bul&l; and haye taken an apartment at Wardman Park Hotel, where they plan to remain until the first of the year. ‘The members of the Delta Zeta Sorority will entertain tonight in honor of Miss Dorothy Devereaux Ladd at the home of Mrs. Arthur Hachten in Chevy Chase. Miss Ladd is to be married on Saturday to Mr. Verner Clnpr of Washington. Several pre- i\:g‘t’ lal parties are being given Miss Washington Guests attend Kirby-Martin Wedding in Virginia. A wedding of much interest in Wash- ington took place at 8 o'clock in old historic New _Providence Church, at Middlebrook, Va., when Miss Margaret Ligon Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Martin, of Middlebrook, Va., be- ca:ae the bride of Mr. Joseph Norman Kirby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles 8. Kirby, of Egg Harbor City, N. J. The church decorations were ever- greens against the white altar, enhanced | by high Italian cathedral torchieres, with clustered candelabra and lighted tapers. The Rev. Dr. G. A. Wilson, sr, of Lexington performed the ceremony, as- sisted by the Rev. C. M. Hanna. The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Mr. James J. Martin. Her dress was of white chiffon crepe, drop- d to an uneven hemline, with long tight-fitting sleeves; her veil of tulle was caught at the sides, Juliet style, by orange blossoms, and she carried a Unexcelled cooling system— Complete change of air every 1!z minutes. TONIGHT Tn conjunction with our regular menu 5 Until 7:30 we are featuring Special Club Steak Dinner s1.00 5-course Fried Chicken Dinner..$1.00 Cream Gravy, Mot Biscults Salad Courses jor Those Not Desirirg Regular Dinner, Columbia 5042 EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, shower bouquet of bride's roses and liljes-of-the-valley, ‘The bride's attendants were her sis- ters. ‘The matron of honor, Mrs. Charles Kerr of Le: , wore pllot- blue georgette, with slippers to match, and cal an arm bouquet of pink gladioll. Miss Jean Martin was maid of honor, wearing flesh-pink georgette, with slip- pers to match, and her bouquet was of blue delphinium. Two flower girls, nieces of the bride, wore pale blue and pink georgette dresses trimmed in tafféta petal ruffies and carried baskets of rose petals. They were little Louise Kerr of ington and Frances Bell Martin of Mid- dlebrook. Mr, Kirby's best man was Mr. Fred- erick Coley of Kimball, W. Va. The ushers were brothers of the bride, Mr. William Martin of Middlebrook, Mr. Lowrie Martin of Brownsburg, Va. Mr. Thomas F. Martin of Washington :lnd Mr, Henry Martin of Waynesboro, . Immediately after the ceremony a ! reception was held at the home of the | bride's parents, in Middlebrook, Va. Mr. and Mrs, Kirby will be at home, in Egg Harbor City, N. J., after Sep- tember 1, following a Northern wed- ding trip. . Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Kirby, Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Breder and Mrs. Samuel Barton of Egg Harbor City, N. J.. Mrs. C. H. Sabin and Mr. Thomas F. Martin of Washington, D. C.; Mrs. 1 HILE | You're Away% —is a most. convenient time to let us clean your floor cover- ings—domestic or Oriental rugs. +We remove every particle of dirt and grit. Then with a process entirely our own, each rug is gently shampooed—cleaning the surface and also the base all the ‘way through. * Successive rinsings and a thor- ough drying follow, and you see your rug with the nap raised, in its original color and beauty. Call Mr. Pyle Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. N.W. 3257 3257 3291 3291 SN WoopwarD & LoTHROP Lex- | ! D. €. WEDNESDAY, Myrlin_ Taliaferro of Cranford, N. J., and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turk of De- catur, Ga, Mrs. Alice Souder Moore of 5810 Fifth street northwest has gone to Cape May for a vacation visit. Mr. Seymour McConnell, who recently returned from a visit to Monterey, Blue Ridge Summit, Pa., and Philadelphia, has motored to New York to meet his aunt, Mrs. Daisy Seymour Fronheiser, who is returning from Eumg Upon their arrival in hington they will go immediately to the home f Mrs. Samuel Burleigh Milton, Mr. g:mneu‘a mother, on the Chesapeake y. Among the passengers on the Ma- jestic, which arrived at New York yes- terday from Cherbourg and Southamp- ton, are Mr. James W. Quiggle and Mr. Etdm‘tmq B. Quiggle of 2230 California street. Mr. and Mrs. Gregor Macpherson of Forty-fourth street .are spending some aliona —and we never vary it. HAT'S why it has the call —bhecause always has the real gingerness and pep that have character- ized it above every contem- poraneous brand. You'll like it because of its genuineness —and because never varies. By case or bottle at grocers’ and delica- tessens—served at cafes, clubs and fountains. Guggenheim Co,, 33rd & K Sts.,, W. 2508 ™ 11™ F axpD G STREETS 1929.' time in Binghamton, N. Y., with Mrs. )lc:r?hm'l parents, Mr, _-M Mrs. 'AUGUST _ 21, Mr. and Mrs. Edward ‘Walton and their children, Virginia and King. are spending a month at Ocean City, Md. Mr, and_Mrs. Denise Barkalow of Klingle road and their daughter Gladys are lgndln( some time with Mrs. Bacrkalow’s father, Mr. Edward Peck, in | Omaha, Neb. While they are there the other two daughters, Mary and Caroline, are at camp. Miss Madeleine D. Keltie of 3525 Davenport street has returned to Wash- ington, after arriving in New York yes- terday from the Majestic, following a | trip abroad. Town’s Name Is Changed. LENINGRAD, August 21 (#).—The town and district. of Trotsk, named after Trotsky, henceforth will be known as Krasnogvardaisk (Red Guard). GINGER ALE A Wonderful Ginger Ale you know it it Made today the same way that made it famous Myr. “Paint-Up” Says— Paint Your Roof Now! Even if the weather is warm now. don't forget that Winter is coming! osts less than leak- Therefore, use our mnhuk n:‘ lAr:: tos Roof Paint NOW! Barrett’s Black $1.25 Gal. Rutland Red $2.00 Gal. Cpen Saturday until 2 P.M. Phone Metropolitan 0151 BUTLER-FLYNN Paint Company 607-609 C St. A Marvel in Value The gorgeous fur trims . . . the rich materials . . . the per- fections of detail . each alone is worth the price! But together as they are, every coat is a marvelous value that forcefully tells the story of our leadership in presenting the smarter type of apparel at ex- ceptional savings. A small deposit holds your coat. Reading Glasses for School. Let Our Optical Department fill your Eye Physician’s pre- scription, Many styles of frames. We make glasses. We do not prescribe them. OrTICAL DEPARTMENT, FIRST FLOOR. The Semi-Annual Selling Offers This Exceptional Value Advance School Fashions that Have Arrived —in time for a late vacation Colonial Secretary $55 The saving afforded in this spe- cial selling makes shopping for school needs particularly worth- while. Mahogany and Gum Walnut and Gum Brown is especially smart in this little felt hat, with its back tabs and scalloped bit of brims and crown add- ing a dressmaker touch. This hat and others— $5 CHILDREN’S AND JUNIOR Misses’ MILLINERY FourtH FLOOR. Gaining Individuality At School Orders should be placed now on the items below Advance Fall Frocks $16-50 T’lE"e are —charming jacket frocks in lustrous satin or dull flat crepe. —navy georgette and printed crepe daytime frocks with the new flares, moulded hip lines and new necklines. . It is a certain fact that every young person, who has a corner for scholastic home duties, would like nothing more than to have one of these Colonial adaptations for his own. Choice of two finishes. Purlock Embroidered Handkerchiefs, the dozen, $3 Disastrous though t— sending an anonymous handkerchief to the laundry. These linen handkerchiefs in -all white or have colored borders and monogram, name or initials. HANDKERCHIEFS Arsre 13, Fmst FLOOR. Misses’ Brown Lizard one-strap shoe, with in- teresting kid quarter, with lizard appliques. $10 5 Yo rioon. i 2 ’ $ - Smart Metallic Evening Wraps, Now, %5 The Original Wholesale Cost Was About Double This Price Only 12 wraps included in’this exceptional offer—12 smart, colorful metallic brocade squares, with plain-color borders. NECKWEAR, Arste 15, First FLOOR. ForxrToRE, Srxre FLoOR. Misses’ and Women's Models and Sizes New Paris Hats Expose the Forehead Rytex Paper Stamped in Raised Letters, $2 An extremely A number of charming monograms, initials or ;;’“‘I“"“' l""“' .:; name and address & _“‘N‘;‘k‘;", le through which to ex- ' feather decoration press one’s personality— in several colors. to make one’s letters be $5 opened first. There are many colors, too, and Gmis’ AxD JUNIOR the paper is boxed. R STATIONERY Arsie 2, Fmet FLOOR. Clearance—Women’s Woven Sandals,$575 Formerly sold for $10 and $12.50 pajr In Our Regular Stock 148 pairs, including odds and ends from fifteen lines of our imported and domestic woven Summer sandals. Variety of color combinations and styles offers a smart selection. Not all sizes in each style, but the following quantities in each size. ) Cash’s Woven Names 3 dozen for $1.50 The missing towel—the wandering underwear, are things of the past when one’s things are marked with Cash’s names. These names are clear, legible, distinct, and are as strong as home ties in bringing belongings back. 6 dozen, $2. 12 dozen, $3. Norions Arsix 21, Fmst Froor. Sizes A pump of lizard (quite AAA grown up), smart in spite of being sturdy, too. In black or brown. Sizes 8% to 11. . Sizes 11% to 2. OmiLbREN'S SHOES Founte FLOOR. SoleilVelours.. . Felts. . . Velvets.. .. Off with the old . . . on,witl'l the new replicas of Paris originals. Who could resist such delightful new creations that ‘are NEW and sparkling with individuality and smart- ness? Off-the-face models and the snug-fitting, brim-_ All head- less types that give a $ 3.95 $ 5.00 youthful and smart J. E. Cunningham Co~Millinery—Main Floor Three O”utétanding Towel Values HEAVY, ABSORBENT TURKISH TOWELS; with new- est scalloped-design pastel borders. Two for. .$1.25 Engraved Calling Cards Script Style, $3. This offer includes 100 cards and plate. Extra cards $1.75 per hundred. 100 cards and plate, in shaded letterings are $5.25; extra cards are $1.75 per hundred. ENGRAVING Arsie 2, Fmst FLOOR. appearnce to every wearer. All brown shades, blacks an d Wlo‘l'l- Self-closing Umbrella, $8 Even though it does not fold when the sun sppears, one merely pulls a ring at the handle to accomplish feat. Silk, of course, in sma variety of striped effects, with blend- ing handles. ‘UMBRELLAS, AlsiE 13, Fmst Fioer. " FINE COTTON HUCK TOW- ELS; pastel-colored: borders. Size 19x35. Each.....25c PLAIN-COLOR TURKISH TOWELS; blue, green, rose, jade; orchid. Each....50¢c

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