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18 SOCILETY. SOCIETY Receive Special Group of Guests at Home Tomorrow Afternoon. HE Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Charles Francis Adams will be at home tomorrow afternoon from 4 to 7 o'clock at their R residence to the cabinet mem- bers and their wives, the foreign naval attaches and their wives and the offi- rers of the Navy and Marine Corps sta- joned in Washington. i Receiving with the Becretary and “iMrs. Adams will be their daughter, ‘Mrs. Henry 8. Morgan of New York, and “gssisting at the tea table will be Mrs. !Charles F. Hughes, Mrs. Andrew T. Tong, Mrs. Richard H. Leigh, Mrs, A. M. D. McCormick, Mrs. Hilary P. Jon rs. Henry Hughes Hough, Mrs. Geor; al and Miss Margaret W. Browne. Mrs. Robert Patterson Lamont, wife of the Secretary of Commerce, is in New York with her daughter, Miss Ger- irude Lamont. Mrs. Lamont will return to Washington the latter part of the ‘week or the first of next week for a short stay before going to Lake Forrest . ‘o close their house. Miss Lamont will remain in New York until her mother returns to Washington from Illinois. ©! Mrs. Lamont and Miss Lamont were the honor guests at dinner last evening of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Harris Giddens at the Embassy Club. The other guests were Mr. Wolcott Clark Waggaman of ‘Washington, Mrs. Preeman Higgins and Mr. Woodward Fellow: fir Esme Howard Leaves Bermuda for Trinidad. ‘The Ambassador of Great Britain, Bir Esme Howard, will sail today from | Bermuda for Trinidad and will visit | ! keveral of the other islands in the West Indies before returning to New York the ; latter part of November. The Ambassador of Germany and Frau_von Prittwitz und Gaffron are arriving in New York today on the ; Bremen, after spending the Summer in Europe. The Minister of Panama and Senora ! He Alfaro will have with them for two months the latter's nephew, Mr. Eman- yel Lawrence, jr., who has arrived from Panama City. | Senator and Mrs. D. O. Hastings and ! the latter's sister, Miss Elsie Saxton, returned yesterday to their apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel after pass- * ing the week end at their home, in Wil- mington, Dela. {1 Mrs. Edge, wife of Senator Walter E. Edge, is hostess to a large company this afternoon in Westminster Hall, in Atlantic City, her guests playing cards through the afternoon. ! The commandant of Fort Myer and Mrs. Guy V. Henry entertained at din- ner last evmtfi% in the quarters at Fort Myer for their debutante daugh- ter, Miss Mary Ingraham Henry. The guests included, Miss Barbara Wood- . Wworth of Annapolis, house guests of Miss Henry; Miss Catherine Berry, Miss El- wira Johnson, Miss Mary Jacobs, Lieut. Hugh B. Waddell, Lieut. Bion Barnett Bierer, Lieut. Charles Saltzman, Mr. Kenneth Watson, and Mr. Gwynn ! Gardiner. The retiring second secretary of the . Japanese embassy and Mme. Satow en- tertained a company of 25 at luncheon today at the Mayfiower as a farewell ns Japanese consul at Los : M. Satow has been attached to the embassy here for three years and with Mme. Satow has made many friends. ! ! The financial counselor of the Ru- manian legation and Mme. Boncesco have as their house guests Mr. Robert ! Cella_and his sisters, Miss Fulda Cella and Miss Linda Cella of New York. i . Miss Mildred Huston and Miss Alice Huston, auhuu of Mr. Claudius H. Huston, of the Republican . national committee, are guests at the ! Mayflower, where their sisters, Mrs. Warren Hendrickson and Miss Kath- erine Huston, will join them tomorrow ! to make final plans for taking a house "in the Capital for the Winter. Miss Mildred Huston will make her formal bow_to soclety at a ball to be given on December 20 in the grand ballroom of the Mayflower, preceded by a din- ge{ ]dancz in the Chinese room of the otel, Mrs. James M. Thomson of New Or- leans is now in Washington and is stay- ing at the Mayflower. : Mrs. Alvin Greenbelt has sent out invitations for the marriage of her daughter Virginia to Mr. Ennalls Wag- aman, jr, Saturday at 8 o'clock, in he evening in St. Stephen's and the Incarnation Church, Sixteenth and Newton streets, . Miss Florence Wetherill, daughter of Mrs. F. H. Mistretta, and Mr. Albert ! Walker, son of Dr. and Mrs. Reginald Walker, whose marriage will take place Baturday, were entertained at the sup- . per dance at the Club Chantecler last ! evening by Miss Peggy Burch. Mrs. Walker, mother of the bride- !:rogem(;electi ‘zuc}l:mu%h at lu;\chzon esterday af e ev, ase Club for Miss Wetherill, > Rear Admiral and Mrs. Luther Greg- ory have as a guest Mrs. H. Gibson Warren of Beverly Hilis, Callt. Mrs. Warren is spending two days in New York with her sister, but will return here to continue her visit, Mrs. Jacob Leander Loose will not re- open her apartment at the Mayflower until November 22, when she will again » | and Mrs. Charles where she went after closing her Sum- | mer place at Gloucester, Mass. Loose was in Washington for two da: g;xtrlnl September, en route to Kansas ¥, Mrs. Henry C. Corbin sailed tod: from Europe aboard the Leviathan, an will come at once to Washington and again be in her suburban home, High- wood, in Chevy Chase. Mrs. Frederic H. Thompson of San Francisco and Mrs. Willlam V. Van Blarcom of Newark, N. J., who have been the guests for a fortnight of Judge H. Lebingler, left yes- terday for their homes. Mrs. Thompson and Mrs, Van Blarcom were neighbors of Judge and Mrs. Lobingicr when they lived in the Philippine; Mrs. Hyde Honor Guest of Missourian at League Breakfast. Mrs. Arthur M. Hyde, wife of the Secretary of Agriculture, will bs the guest of honor at the Missouri table, which Mrs. W. W. Badgely will be h tess, Saturday at the first celebrity breakfast of the National League of American Pen Women of this season, to be held at noon at the Willard Hotel. Other guests at this table will be Mrs. Roscoe C. Patterson, wife of Senator Patterson of Missouri; Mrs. Leonidas C. Dyer, wife of Representative Dyer of Missouri; Mrs. Edward Hays, wife of | former Representative Hays; Mrs. L, P. Kayser, Mrs. L. H. Rea of New York, M Eugene H. Andrew, Mrs. Otis Rogers and Mrs. James Baity. Mrs. Badgely is recording secretary of the District branch of the League of Ameri- can Pen Women. Dr. Sarah Huddleson, once the owner of Prospect Cottage, which was the home of Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth and which is now the property of the Pen Women, will have as her guest at the breakfast, Miss Mary Arnold. Mrs. Pierre McFarland Bealer will entertain several guests, among whom will be M Elmer Burton, Mrs. James E. Karnes and Mrs. Richard Wheat. Rev. and Mrs. Harvey Baker Smith will at- tend as guests of Mrs. Charles E. Ferguson, and others newly added to the subscription list are Mrs. I. C. Hanscom, Miss E. M. Bullard, Miss Rosa T. Fairfax, Mrs. Mary F. Thomp- son, Mrs. es G. Foster, Miss Mande- schied and Miss N. A. Parkinson. ‘The b fast of Saturday will be the THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON first in a serles of five to be given for the benefit of the clubhouse fund of the National League of American Pen Women, all of which are open to the public without invitation. Reservations may be made at the soclal bureau of the Willard Hotel. Col. and Mrs. Horace A. Mann will leave Washington Saturday to spend bout three weeks visiting in Southern . The greater part of the time will be spent in Tennessee. Miss Betty West has returned from Charlottesville, where she went to at-| |tend the Fall dances and the V. M. I} and Virginia's foot ball game. Mr. William Jeffries Chewning, was host to a smal] company Club Boheme last Might in honor of his cousin, Senora_de Antonsanti of Ponce, Porto Rico. Before her marriage | Senora Antonsanti was Miss Nan Jef- | fries of Warrenton, Va., and Washing- {ton. Among his guests were Maza: Mirza PFirouz, second Persian secretar: Senora de Antonsanti, Mr. Randclph C. Zell of Baltimore, Miss Emiscah Davis, Miss Mary Ruden and Mr. James Le Roy Dongall. Dr, and Mrs. Clifton Power Clark an- nounce the marriage of their daughter Laura to Mr. Wilson Lee Hooff. Mr. and Mrs, William Eugene Eiliott have had with therh through the early Autumn their daughter, Mrs, Vogel, wife of Lieut. Herbert Davis Vogel, now cn duty at Memphis, Tenn. Mrs, Vogel and her Infant son, Herbert Davis Vogel, jr., who are now at Walter Reed, will spend a short tim> with Mr. and Mrs. Elliott before going to Memphis to join Lieut. Vogel for the Winter. | Lieut. and Mrs. Vogel spent a year in | Berlin, where the former was a student | officer, and returned to this country in September. Mrs. Vogel, who wa: formerly Miss Loreine Elliott, is a sister of Mrs. Moncure Burke Berg. Baroness Vendla von Lengenn of Berlin is spending a few days in Wash- | ington at the Mayflower, ‘Where Mrs. Edwin Dewing of Hartford, Conn., who is a sister of Mrs. Gene Tunney, will join her on Tuesday. The barcness is the daughter of hte late Admiral von Grumme Douglas, who was aide to the Emperor of Germany. She has been reat Value — — RAYON TAFFETA .. 45 inches wide—plain and ! Jaspe. _Yard . $1-25' nnlr or McDEVITT BEFORE YOU BUY —a new fur coat see us. We will tell you if it would pay you to have your ol Tepaired and remodsied "¢ 7 s L 1008 Eye Street N.W. Met. We offer this attractive entirely redecorated and is Inspection by permit only. WM. CORCORAN 10 Jackson Place N.W. 2218 Wyoming Ave. N.W. city’s most desirable residential section. It has just been This residence may be purchased or rented with or without its furnishings. It contains five master bedrooms with three baths, three servants’ rooms with bath, upstairs library, dining room paneled in wood, living room, kitchen, butler’s pantry, basement and a two-car detached garage. Phone our office for an appointment. Opposite Lafayette Sauare town house situated in the completely furnished. HILL COMPANY Phone District 1283 HICKSON LEADERSHIP Now more than ever before, it may be said that the House of Hickson, Inc., mode in America...with a se- lective judgment fortified by years of experience, study and resourcefulness. 1215 CONNECTICUT AVENUE, N. W. BOSTON be in Washington for the season, com- ing from her home in Kansas City Another “Cash & Carry” Flower Store Now in the Heart of the Shopping District 609 The policy of Cash & Carry Flower Stores is beneficial in several respects. enables Flower lovers to indulge their desire for possession without expending much money—and it enables the Growers to dispose of their surplus productions with some return instead of allowing their flowers to wither and benefit no one. 12th St. Phone Many benefit—none lose. These specials will be on sale at all Cash & Carry Flower Stores this week. Roses and Carnations English Ivy, Fine Hardy Plants, 2 for 25¢ 98¢ Dozen Pompon Chrysanthemums 50c & $1.00 Bunch Cash & Carry Flower Stores 807 14th St. N.W. Metre. 7433 Boston Ferns, 609 12th St. N.W. Met. 9369 BUFFALO WASHINGTON, D. C. Next to Huyler’s Kentia Palms, 24 and 30 in. high. . $1.49 Rubber Plants, 24 in. hig Sanseveria Plants .............$1.75 establishes the INC OF NEW YORK PARIS Met. 9369 It highly decorative— 98¢ and $1.39 ce....81.49 804 17th St. N.W. Franklin 10391 fialt%Ml‘!. Dewing since Midsummer and sail from New York on Novem- ber 2 for Italy, Mr. William Katherine Gut are visiting the W. M. Mooney at their res! Eighteenth street northw . Guthrie and daughter, i‘? of Durham, N. C. ostmaster and Mrs. idence, 4407 Y. W. C. A. World Fellowship Lunch at New Building Tomorrow. Women who have made their homes in all parts of the world will attend the series of world fellowship meetings wh the Young Women's Christian Association will hold throughout the Winter under the direction of a spe- | clal committee of Washington women, with Miss Helen Hudson as chairman. The first of these monthly meetings | will take place tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock at the Y. W. C. A. building, and | there; Miss Heloise Brainerd, director of the*honor guests and speakers will be Mrs. Willlam Hamilton Bayly, honorary president of the Y. W. C. A, and Miss Florence Smith of Santiago, Chile. Special foreign guests will 1cclude Mrs. Toshito Satow, Mrs. Kaoul Maki and Mrs. H. Murayama from the Jap- anese embassy, and Miss Chen of China, who is taking a post-graduate course of ;t&x;'iy at American University in this Nearly every woman attending these meetings brings to them some special knowledge and experience of her owa | wedding was that of Miss Cora Pullman, —_—— |9 ) ]| | 5-Picce Parlor Suites Antiques 3-Piece Overstufied Suites Dining Room Chairs Ask about ou 0 N i New Styles arrive daily from our New York Style Headguarters. Fall is here in Hosiery $1.15[ all full fashioned New silk hosiery in the darker browns and gunmetal shades for Autumn and Winter smartness. Three lengths to choose from. All sizes. 30, 60 and 90 day Deferred Payment Plan JE Cominghom €o2 i ) 314~316 SEVENTH SI..NW, Off the forehead and down in the back style adorable new felts feature that very item. include typical of the new season. of value to all the other women in thelr' study of world fellowship among womn- en. Some of the women who will be present at the first meeting are Miss Elizabeth Peet, dean of women at Gal- laudet College; Mrs. John Nicolson, founder and first president of the Women's American Oriental Club of New York; Mrs. Willlam F. McDowell, former president of the Women's For- eign Mission Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church; Mrs. Kang Hu Kiang of Pelping, who has served the women of her country in various capacities, chiefly as head of the kindergarten training department of the Womien's Normal University of Peiping. Other women who are taking a keen interest in this work of promoting world fellowship among women are Miss Annie | D’'Armand Marchand of Rio de Janeiro, one of the founders of the Y. W. C. A. education of the Pan-American Union; Mrs. Harry W. Frantz, newspaper cor- respondent covering Latin Americar affail Mrs. Arthur W. Hummel, wh has lived in China for numbers of years and whose husband is now director of the Chinese department of the Library of Congress, and Mrs. Camilio Osias, former president of the Manila Y. W. C. A., whose husband is now residen commissfoner of the Philippine Islands. | A small but charmingly arranged Refinishing Tapestries, Mohair Brocades, Velours and Denims We will upholster your moth-caten suite and guar- antee there will be no more moths for the life of your furniture. Low price now prevailing for two days only. Werite, Phone or Call Franklin 7483 Estimates and Samples Given Free Clay Armstrong Uphclsterer 1235 10th St, N.W. From N!w Yofk y the leading experts—and The colors the rich browns Handsomely trimmed fur collars, cuffs Authentic coat fash- jons smartly revealed. s D, (", TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1929. daughter of Mrs. Qliver Sidney Pullman of Alexandria, Va,, and Lieut. Ralph B. Hunt, U. 8. N,, which took place at the home of the bride’s brother-in-law and sister, Dr. and Mrs, Herbert Martyn, in | Massachusetts Avenue Park, Saturday afternoon, October 19, at 2:30 o'clock. ‘The large living room was decorated in yellow chrysanthemums and Autumn , leaves against a background of palms | and ferns, and Mrs. Luther E:. Gregory, wife of Rear Admiral Gregory. played on Ninéteenth Pageé WEAVING MOTH - FIOLES; BAD TEARS, are invisible Process at B. L. GE satte St A e 281, M GEO. W. SPIER JEWELER New Address 806 14th St. N.W. Watches—Diamonds Jewelry—Silverware Fine Watch and Jewelry Repairing Established 1890 J B PHONE DISTRICT 7160 SOCIETY. Our Coat C ollection is now complete Larger than ever before . . . many models exc! usive]y our own . unquestioned authenticity of styles . mény coats being advanced models. And, cf course, the same fine fabrics and rich furs that always emphasize Rizik coats. Rizik Brothers 1213 F Street Jornes & (o INCORPORATED 1219-1221 G Street N.W. CHARGE ACCOL S SOLICITED aordiary Special Purchase! The All new black. Lustrous Satin in these dresses at these prices. Dresses That Usually Sell for $11.00 to $12.95 7 Sizes 14 to 44 DRESSES Exceptional Values The New Silhouettes Copies of more expensive dresses made with superior materials and beautifully finished. ;i The new high waist effects—new drapes —long hem lines—attractive flares. ‘Dresses That Usually Sell for $15.95 to $19.50 Sponsoring the low flare, the princesse line and other details of equal interest. M i and women's siz largest fatest models with their crowns and off-the-face Ii These hats are smart and prac and cluding wine, green, brown, blue and The style features are most outstanding. All the new silhouette, the long hem line, interesting flares, higher waist lines, etc. All desirable new Fall shades and black. lall Millinerv Models for the Chic Miss—for Young Women—Youthful Matrons— Matrons of Conservative Tastes Plenty of Large Head Sizes Hats That Usually Sell for $2.95 and $3.95 Felts—Solei_l 75 assortmetn’ desirable <olors, in- FROCKS # FALL Fine Heavy Crepe You will be amazed at the quality of fabric