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1z SOCIETY President and Mrd, Hoover Will Be Hosts at Dinner October 7 in Honor of British Prime Minister. HE Chief Executive and First Lady of the Land will cutsvisss at dinner Monday evening, October 7, in honor of their dis- tinguished guests the prime minister of Great Britain, the Right Honorable James Ramsay MacDonald and his daughter, Miss Ishbel Mac- Donald. T! prime minister and his daughter will be guests at the White House over Sunday, returning to the British embassy to stay with the Am- bassador of Great Britain and Lady | Isabella Howard. The Ambassador and Lady Isabella | Howard will be hosts at dinner In honor | of Mr. MacDonald and his dnuzhtrr‘ Tuesday evening. October 8, the dinner | to be followed by a reception. and the | following evening the ~Secretary of State, Mr. Stimson. will give a dinner | party in_his new home, Woodley, for | Mr. MacDonald. ! ‘The Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Charles Francis Adams, is expected to return to Washington this afternoon from Norfolk. where he went to board | the Texas and view the fleet maneuvess. ‘Texas and view the fleet maneuvers. | Mrs. Adams, who is in their hom~ near Boston, is expected to return 1, | Washington the end of the week. | Senor and Senora de Medina | Hosts at Dinner Last Evening. i ‘The Minister of Bolivia and Senora' de Medina entertained a small com- | pany at dinner last evening at Le! Paradis. | Representative and Mrs. Homer Hoch | have opened their apartment in the| Methodist Building, at 100 Maryland avenue northeast, for the Winter. Mrs. Hoch and their daughter, Miss Jean | Hoch, spent_the Summer on the Pacific | Coast and Miss Hoch has returned to Washington with them and will con-| tinue her studies at the American Uni- | versity. Mr. Wharton Hoch, son of | Representative and Mrs. Hoch, is again | at the Northwestern University in Tllinois. Representative and Mrs. Henry Win- field V/atson have returned to Wash-| ington and are in their home at 1785 | Massachusetts avenue. which they pur- chased from the estate of the late| Senator Henry Cabot Lodge. They &pent the Summer in Europe. | The resident commissioner in Con- | gress from Porto Rico, Mr. Felix Cordova Davila, was host at dinner in the Williard Hotel last night in honor o8 Col. Theodore Roosevelt, the newly appointed Governor of Porto Rico. A distinguished company of Senators and * Representatives, officials closely asso- ciated with the island government, as well as a number of leading Porto Ricans from New York City and the island, were present. The guests were the Secretary of War, Mr. James W. Good; the Minister of Santo Domingo, Senor Morales; Senator James E. Wat- son, Senator Hiram Bingham, chair- man of the Senate committee on ter- ritories and insular possessions: Senator the President, entertained informally at luncheon on the Willard roof yesterday. Rocky Mountains of Colorado. their daughter, Miss Elizabeth McAl- P . SOCLETY. they have taken an a) ent for sev- eral months. They will have with them Mrs. MacCracken's mother, Mrs. M. M. Lewls, and during the month of October Miss Lalla Fay Lacey of Waco, Tex., will be their gusst ‘Wardman Park. Mr. Walter H. Newton, Secretary to Mr. George Akerson, secretary to President Hoover, has been joined at his home, at 2540 Massachusetts avenue, by Mrs. Akerson and their three sons, who have spent the Summer in the iy | Col. and Mrs. J_ A. McAlister and, ister, have moved into the house at 110 | Holly avenue, in Takoma Park, which they have leased for the Winter. Col. and Mrs. Alexander Rodgers have | returned to Washington and will be at the Mayflower for a week while open- ing their house at 1716 New Hampshire avenue for the Winter. Maj. ar1 Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower arrived vesterday from Europe on the Leviath:n. They came immediately to MRS. HOLT AND THE EVENING .STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1929. Miss Marian Jardine has gone to New York to Kathe! Huston, daughter of Mr. Huston, chairman of can national committee, and will join her parents, former Secretary of Agricul- ture and Mrs, Jardine, at the Mayflower in about a week’s time. Miss Dorothy Dial has as her guest for several days Miss Marjorie Belvin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Allan Belvin: of Richmond. Mr. Robert Clifford, son of Col. and Mrs. Edward Clifford, left Washington yesterday to enter the freshman class at Princeton University. Mr. William Walker Smith, formerly of the American diplomatic service, and Mrs. Sm:th‘ lhl.f)'l'Nnmm to their apartment af 'ew Hampshire ave- nue after spending the Summer in Newfoundland and Labrador. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont enter- tained at dinner last evening at their estate Belcourt, at Newport. Mr.a nd Mrs, Walter D. Denegre have closed their place at Manchester, Mass., and are at the Ambassador Hotel for a,few deys before coming to Washing- n. Mrs. Gibson Pahnestock will leave Newport tomorrow to spend a few days at Lenox. Mrs. T. Septimus Austin and Miss Madeleine Austin, who have been abroad since early Summer, are making a tour | of the continent and are now at Heidel- berg, en route to the Black Forest. Miss Zita Benduhn, who has been with her brother, Mr. F. E. Benduhn, in his apartment at 2100 Massachusetts avenue through the late Summer and early Autumn, will return to her home | in Chicago early in October. Mr.| i . MISS JANE HOLT, | Wife and daughter of Capt. Rufus L. Holt, Medical Corps, U. §. Army, who are interested in the coming war carnival at the War College, October 3, 4 and 5, and in the social affairs of the Capital. Washington and are the house guests of Maj. and Mrs. Leonard T. Gerow. Miss 0'Shaughnessy to Marry Mr. Cranford. Benduhn recently came to Washington to live from Detroit. Mrs. Robert T. Small, Miss Small, Miss Marjorie Small and little Jean rine | Washington from Miss Fanny Russell, have returned to Europe and are at the Mayflower. roses and blue delphinium. The house ‘was decorated with pink roses and pink gladioluses. Coffee was served in the and | old-fashioned up her house will be at 2334 Massachusetts avenue this season. Miss Russell will leave in a few days for Miss Shipley's school at Bryn Mawr, Mrs. Dubois Hostess To Visitors Yesterday. Mrs. Fred T. Dubois, wife of the for- mer Senator from Idaho, entertained with a luncheon and a garden party yesterday in her Georgetown home in honor of Mrs. Thomas, wife of Senator John Thomas of Thomas Senn of Coronada, Calif. Among the guests were Mrs. Guy H. Martin of Idaho, Mrs. Miles Poindexter, Mrs, Charles Calvin Moore of Idaho, Mrs. Margaret Witham, Mrs. Arthur T. Hitchoock, Mrs. Clement Bouve, Mrs. Harvy D. Jacobs, Mrs. Bromley Seeley and Miss Elisabeth Thomas. Mrs. Du- bois was assisted by her two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Dubois Cannon and Miss Toussaint Dubofs. The cent of the luncheon table consisted of a huge bouquet of pink ——————— The gentlewomen and gentlemen of Washington are invited to visit the Early American ' Home Situate in Rock Creek Park Estates [OSE interested in the antique pertaining to architecture, furni- cure and the houschold arts of the period known as Early American will find it highly entercaining and in- structive to view this homestead buile and furnished in the Colonial manner throughout. The historic and the romantic are justly expressed in this dwelling by the excellent judgment and execution of certain gentlemen versed in the art of building and decorating, namely: Clarence L. Harding, Architect; W, P. Lipscomb Co., Builders, and W. & J. Sloane, Decoraters and Furnishers. If you are thinking of building home, of furnishing a home—or per- chance of furnishing just s single room in the pure “Eatly ican™ manner, and would do it thriftily and appropristely, you will find a wealth of inspiration s this Early American home. _ Come Out This \‘/ny Dey Open diily and Sundays 10:00 A. M. Motor out 16th Street or take the 16th Strest bus to Kalmis Road, { the Entrance to the Estates. Idaho, and Mrs. | Mr. and Mrs. Russell S. McBride have returned to Washington, after spending the Summer in Canada and Minnesota. Their son, Mr. Gordon McBride, spent the Summer in a camp in Michigan and joined his parents in Ohio and accom- nied them back to Washington. He e he will enter Yale University. Judge and Mrs. H. W. Marsh of New nni{ht: no ugly pin holes, Lownderers and 1122 141 “QUALITY IS THE TRU CURTAINS —carefully handled by an expert. Gently washed with pure soap and soft water and fin- jshed on the finest and most modern equipment, edges A phone call to Metropolitan 0200 will bring one of our courteous routemen promptly. gWest End 1723-25 Pennsylvania Ave-N-W- 1201 Conneeticut Avenue SOME folks claim it harm- SOCIETY. York are passing & short Carlton Hotel. . Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Brown of Porto Rico are making a short visit in Washington and are staying at the Mayflower. Mr. and Mrs. Carter B. Keene have returned to ir apartment in the Mendota after a Summer in Maine. Mr, and Mrs. Francis Martin Savage, who nave been spending the Summe: in Europe after visiting the exposition at Seville, sajled Monday from Gibraltar on the Conte Biancamano for New York. Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr.. and the latter’s 5-year-old daughter will arrive today at the rdman Park , where they plan to pass some ing & few days in Washington at the Mayflower. She is accompanied by her son, Mr. Hugh Riddle, and Miss Mar- guerite R. Smith, also of Atlantic City. l‘. T8, %fl: ¥ Betty Byrne, (Continued on Fifteenth Page. time at the Hot Mrs. Stanton J. Peelle is few days in Washington. Mrs. William Riddle, wife of the for- | and her daughter, Miss r of Atlantic Cil is spend-: “Custom-Made” Comfort The Wanda Smart but sensible. For street and semi- formal wear. In patent leather and dull calf. With Main Spring Arch $] ] .50 Wolf's Uiatx-@ver Shop 929 F Street Laundry © R A T & O Dy Cleaners 1006 15th Street th Street JE MEASURE OF VALUE” —There are others who say we must not cook with ALUMINUM because of an acid formed by the metal. ~—0ld Aunt Sarah used IRON, but the irony is that those she cooked for have passed away. ful to cook in ENAMEL —they say it ‘“chips” and that the chips are quite in- digestible. | Small have returned to the city and | have taken an apartment at Cathedral | Mansions for the Fall months. Their | home on Cathedral avenue has been | leased for the past year and they plan | | to return to it for Christmas. Gerald P. Nye, Senator Jesse H. Metcalf, Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg. Miss Charlotte Benson O'Shaugh- nessy, daughter of Maj. and Mrs. Pat- Senator Bronson Cutting, Senator | rick O'Shaughnessy, and Mr. Willism Arthur R. Robinson, Senator William | Henry Cranford, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Harris, Senator Carl Hayden, Senator | Percy Cranford, will be married this William H. King, Representative Edgar | afternoon. The ceremony will be per- R. Keiss, chairman of the House com- | formed in the New York Avenue Pres- mittee on insular affairs: Representa- | byterian Church, the Rev. Dr. Sizoo, tive Arthur R. Hall, Representative | pastor of the church, officiating, at 5 EDSON W. BRIGGS COMPANY | Owners of THE ESTATES | | Mrs. Lindsay Russell and daughter. Quinn Willlams. Mr. George Akerson, secretary to the President; Dr. L. S. Rowe, director general of the Pan- American Union; Gen. F. Le J. Parker, chief of the Bureau of Insular Affairs of the War Department; Col. Creed F. Cox, Col. William L. Patterson, Maj. | gonsldsnn Ashbridge, Maj. Howard | ager, Gen. Frank McIntyre, former | chief of the Insular Bureau; Mr. Pedro | Guevara, resident commissioner from the Philippines; Mr. Starke M. Grogan of the Bureau of the Census, Mr. Juan G. Gallardo, treasurer of Porto Rico: Mr. Jose L. Pesquera, president of the Farmers’ Association of Porto H Dr. J. A. Lopez of New York, Dr. A, L. Goodman of Columbia University, Mr. g | o'clock. A reception for the members | of the two families and the wedding party will immediately follow in the | home of the bride's parents in the Farnsboro. Sir Auckland Geddes, former Ambas- sador of Great Britain, is sailing from New York today on the Mauretania aft- er spending a short vacation in this country. Former Senator and Mrs. James W. Wadsworth have opened their home at 2800 Woodland drive. They spent the Summer months. in their home at Geneseo. Mrs. Wadsworth left Wash- T W ELYIE T H IR T EMWN Stunning Coats Arrive daily and are sold , almost immediately. . .that’s our clients way of saying ~=Qur ancestors used TIN. They, naturally—like the Cave Man who ate raw food—have also departed. if you insist upon eating Cooked Foods neverthe- - elels SO less—fearless and unafraid—you will find hosts of 77 ) these (?) kitchen cooking utensils . . . sensibly : priced and gayly colored . . . hospitally white or silvery bright—in the Dulin & Martin HOUSEWARES SECTION, Main Floor. ington last evening for a short stay in New York. Rafael Cuevas Zequeira, Mr. Ramon Carbin and Mr. Alfredo Ramirez de Arellano of Porto Rico, Mr. George C. Butte, Department of Justice, former attorney general of Porto Rico; Dr. Thomas Cajigas, Dr. Alfred L. Bou of Washington, Mr. David A. Buckley, jr., of New York; Mr. Ignacio L. Torres of Porto Rico, Mr. Mariano H. Ramirez of Washington, Capt. Andres Lopez. U. S. A Mr. Geronimo Fornalledas. Mr. F. Vall-Spinosa and Mr. V. Pinot Diaz of Porto Rico. Mr. Arnaldo Meiners ef New York. Mr. Harry Frantz of ‘Washington, Dr. F. Gutierrez of Porto Rico, Capt. M. N. Cardero, U. S. A.; Mr. Frank Buckley of Washington and Mr. John L. Gay, United States district attorney, Porto Rico. ‘The counselor af the Bolivian lega- tion and Senora de Boyd and their | three children closed their apartment at 1 Wardman Park yesterday and started | by motor for New York, from where | they will sail the end of the week for their home in Panama. . The newly appointed counselor of the Persian legation, Issa Khan Bahrami, has arrived in Washington and taker up his dutles at the legation. Formerly the Harris Shop The Assistant Secretary of Commcrce . |arris(e. for Aviation and Mrs. Willlam P. Mac- | b Cracken, ir., will move the first of the 1224 F STREET NW. week to Wardman Park Hotel, where | Your Coats in fashion are authoritative . . . their fur trimming is rich . . . correctly applied . . . their sturdy wearability is assured and they are attractively priced. WRAPS, GOWNS, HATS, SUITS, DRESSES Most tary Salon in Washington The cleverest artist is back from his vacation and ready to serve his clientele. Mr. Lucas s not only cian in the art of permanent wavin an expert in modern beautistics for marcel, finger wave, hair bleach 'and facials. LUCAS of New York and P. 1007 Conn. Ave. tint, Our staff will take pleasure in directing your attention to the many items specially priced for SEPTEMBER ONLY S e B o ’ IF YOU “PLUG IN” FOR BREAKFAST The Percolator—All types are here, but the one we suggest is nickel plated on copper, with a smartly pan- eled body. It makes 3 to 7 cups, and has price appeal, too— $7.95 The Waffle Iron—# thick and even- ly browned waffles at a time. Nickel plated, with push-button switch. Fine ly curved base serves as a tray. $7.95 . 1Z1 Brothers Intinnaiie As intimate as your bou- doir are the exquisitely dainty bits of lingerie— to be seen Sat. the 28th, at The Table Sketched —is just the thing for electrical appliances. Fin- ished in mahogany, walnut or cheerful colors—green, blue or ivory. Most useful— $12.50 The Foursome Plug—that is good to look at and stays put—flat on the table; five colors— $2.75 The Toaster—opening t he bread rack turns the toast—and such toast! $3.95 Of Interest—A Two-Way Plug— THE AUTOMATIC TABLE . TIMER— On dne side you may plug in for percela- tor or grill—on the other (automatic) you can set the minutes to boil eggs, etc.—or your regular toaster properly timed— $6.50 .:' - o THIS DAINTY, BEAUTIFUL OPERA SLIPPER OF BLACK OR BROWN SUEDE WITH KID TRIMMING TO MATCH, CUBAN SPIKE HEEL, AT $13.50, IS ONE OF THE SMART MODELS FOR FALL. NEW AUTUMN SHADES IN SILK HOSIERY, $1.95; 3 PAIRS, $5.50. —now presents ger, collegiate, low heel shoes like these — for modern High swag- the School girl. Brown or black w L 4 lizard “calf or .ner:e : 4 B it . . —Hand-turned * sole il sewar: ection— H K . ‘ h s ...tlh i Electric Heater, $5.25 Main ")rrzo?,':a_,:,f.’,'u'u D"fi'::l" a";:;ny conven- ry heel— ick h hill ings. ? ing ye 0 asier—giv- F STREET AT 10+h i 5.,34'" “P‘;:;?“m;}),?ycp;]i};],:;r:;::. ;;T'y:.{";.m ;:':w} 7:: l‘:fi:zyi;r plu!— 6-1b. Electric Iron, $2.93 $7 50 tor, adjustable to any angle. Heavy or just resting. We shall be pleased to Nickel plated; tapered point; beveled % metal base prevents tipping. have you see them. edges. Attractively priced. an» PO Connecticut Ave. at i “SERVING WASHINGTON FOR OVER THREE-QUARTERS OF A CENTURY” Store Hours—8:45 to 6 PARKING SERVICE Telephore National 1293