Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1929, Page 19

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1929. SOCIETY _L&mfinued From Eighteenth Page.) Graves will live in Syria, Va. Mr. Graves and his sister, Mrs. Smith, are | g of Washington schools. | § Gag Bal Masque Tomorrow ‘ % Attracts Many Debutantes. ' Practically all of the season's + debutantes will be seated at one large ¥ table in a box at the bal masqie in ! the New Willard tomorrow evening. Each bud will be accompanied by an % escort, The smaller tables at the south | end of the room will be grouped to- | WEDDING IN DECEMBER gether and occupied by the younger set ‘ * in society. | Among those who will receive the gay | and costumed throng at the bal masque will be Mrs. Richard Wilmer Bolling. | Mrs. Percy Hamilton Davis, Mrs. Guy | V. Henry, Mrs. Walter F. Jacobs, Mrs. Alfred Johnson, Mrs. John W. Morse, Mrs. Clarence Perley, Mrs. George C. Thorpe, Mrs. Francis Walker and Mrs. | Clark C. Wren. | | Miss Rebecca Dial will be at home | Sunday afternoon in her studio, in the | Portland Hotel, and will receive from | 4 to 6 o'clock. She will be assisted by | Mrs. Arthur MacArthur, Mrs. Robert | M. Gates, Miss Ella May Powell, Miss Anna Green, Miss Grace Roper, Miss Sara Hobbs and Miss Fannie May | ‘Temple. | Mrs. Alexandra K. Anderson and her daughter, Miss Mary C. Anderson, have returned from a three months' stay in Maine and have gone to Florida for the | ‘Winter. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Coale Colum- i bus entertained at dinner Tuesday eve- | ning in honor of Miss Eleanor Abbott, & great-niece of Barbara Frietchie. The guests were Mrs. Frederick Peacock, Col. Frank White, former United States Treasurer; Mr. George Carll. Miss Ab- bott, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Columbus, will return to her home, in Prederick, *Md., today. Mrs. W. A. Lowrie of Pinar del Rio, Cuba, has been at the Dodge Hotel for several days. Mrs. Jack Masters of the Leverich Towers Hotel, in Brooklyn, N. Y., joined her mother, Mrs. J. E. Thompson, at the Ambassador. Both Mrs. Masters | ‘and Mrs. Thompson expect to remain | in Washington for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs, Joseph T. Kenney of New Bedford, Mass., are staying at | the Willard while in Washington. Mrs. Henry S. Moses of New York . City is at the Carlton, where she will yemain for several days. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hamilton of South Pasadena are making a brief visit at the Dodge Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Beal of Los Angeles, Calif,, are at the Carlton for & brief stay. Miss Frances F. Minor of Macon, Miss,, is at the Dodge Hotel. Halloween Party to Be Given at St. Margaret's. Assisting Mrs. Robert J. Shores at ' the Halloween party to be given at St. Margaret's Church tomorrow afternoon is Mrs. Claes Dickson-Hallencreuts, who will interpret character from handwrit- ing. Judges for the costume parade are - Mrs. Willoughby Chesley, Mrs. A. A. Reeves, Miss Caroline Smith, Miss Cath- erine Critcher and Mrs. Alexander Bull. Mr. Percy Van Ness will donate the Eflm for the costume parade to be led y Miss Barbara Bolling and Miss Sally Le Fevre. Miss Edna Thornton is in charge of arrangements, Miss Helen Virginia Clark of music and Mrs, Arthur G. Turner of entertainment. Right Rev. F. T. Woods, lord bishop of Winchester, will be the guest of honor at a luncheon to be given by A\ * the Washington branch of the English- speaking Union Friday, November 15, in ¢ the New Willard Hotel, For 25 years a large group of women have met early each season and gener- ally once a week during the Winter for Miss Janet Richards’ “Talks on Public Questions,” and among those who are again in the group, many of them hearing her for more than 20 ars, are Mme. Ekengren, Mrs. Morris ickersham, Mrs. Willlam E. Hum- phrey, Mrs. Rust Smith, Miss Sophie Miss Carolene Scott-Smith, the 3 C. Sherman, Miss Cath- erine Weaver, Mrs. E. C. Thomas, Mrs. Arthur Burt, Mrs. William A. Plerce, Mrs. Charles F. Consaul, Mrs. Baker ‘Weaver, Mrs. Henry Schooley, Miss Dorinda Rogers, Mrs. Flora McGill . Keefer, Mrs. Frank Barker, Mrs. Bates Warren, Miss Laura Waller, Mrs. David | F. Weaver, Mrs. Archibald Small. Mrs. Willlam Henry White, Mrs, M. O. Eldridge, Mrs. Perry Heath, Mrs. John ‘W. Thompson, Mrs, Truman Palmer, Mrs. Elbridge Moore, Mrs. Maude L. Whitman, Mrs. Arthur C. Merriam, Mrs. Ralph Barnard, Mrs. Edmund L. Brown- ing, Mrs. Willa B. Hammond, Mrs. Paul [E. Johnson, Mrs. Eugene Herndon, Mrs. ustin Kautzs, Mrs. Edward A. Keys, rs. Willoughby Chesley, Miss Laura Wernon, Mrs. John Wesley Smith, Mrs. @M. H. Sholes and Mrs. J. T. Kelley. Miss Elena de Hellenbranth and her This charming Pump of Suede has a center- of matching calf . . . . .. The ‘“Diana’ $1 1.50 —makes its debut amidst our Fall array. A graceful creation liness of suede, has a modern poise as the matching calf straps are clasped in front by a steel buckle. In brown or blac Shoe Shop—Street Floor JELLEFF'S ¢ F ST MISS FAITH PHILLIPS, Daughter ofthe Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Ze Barney Phillips, whose marriage to Mr. Guido Perara of Boston wil take place in this city December 5.—Underwood Photo. GLORIA OUZER TO FACE COURT IN MURDER TRIAL Must Testify in Slaying of Man ‘With Whom She Traveled on Mississippi River. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, October 30.—Ione Orde, or Gloria Ouzer, as investigators believe her to be in reality, a material witness in the Jack Kraft murder case, | will be set free after she tells in open | court tomorrow all she knows about, in- | cidents preceding the death of the man with whom she traveled on the steam- ship Creole as a companion. Judge J. Claude Meraux of the ju- dicial_district comprising St. Bernard and Plaquemines Parishes, today ar- | ranged for Miss Ouzer to tell her story, |in order that she might be released | without bond. She has been incar- | cerated several weeks as a material wit- | ness. since the body of Kraft was found floating in the Mississippl River below New Orleans with a shot through the heart. John McGouldrick, second officer of the- Creole, under indictment for the murder of Kraft, will be present in court at the taking of testimony. WEAVING MOTH _HOLES, BAD TEARS, are invisible when re-woven by Process at Moderate Cost B. L. GERSHANICK CUSTOM TAILORS Sulte 231. National Press Blds. Metropolitan 3943 ETC. our $7Food and Service Unsurpassed 3 he -~ -t - 1@ellizr Ty ‘|coLumBIA RD 1o ST Q"OSI'lfiHIA!!Ano o _ln eonunetl wi Sor'Teriar = are onu foaturing— SEA FOOD DINNER Speelal Club Stesk Dis Fried Chicken a la Ma 5 Until 7:30 75¢ ., $1.00 $1.00 these enu. COLUMBIA 5042 sister, Miss Berta de Hellenbranth, the gifted young Hungarian girls. who are known internationally for their twin portrait work of American and foreign celebrities, are staying at the May- flower during their visit in Washington. The Misses de Hellenbranth, who live with their parents, Dr. and Mrs. John de Hellenbranth, in Ventnor, N. J., were guests yesterday at the weekly luncheon of the Women's National Press Club. Mr. and Mrs. Juel Mosley and fam- ily of Cape Girardeau, Mo., are visitors in Washington, and are stopping at the Potomac Park Apartments, Mrs. Thomas H. Simpson and Mrs. R. H. Maccauley of Detroit are at the Wil- lard for a few days on their way home from White Sulphur Springs, where they have been spending some time, Dr. and Mrs. L. Gravell of Berlin, Germany are staying at the Ambassador Hotel, while in Washington. Mr. Fulton Lewis was host to a party | of 10 last evening at the supper dance | at the Club Chantecler. Mr. and Mrs. J. Danforth Bush, jr., of Wilmington, Del,, are passing some time at the Carlton. %Co% 15th and M Sts. N.W. One of the Best Places in Town to Live A Few Remaining 2-Room Suites $75 to $90 Month Single Rooms $30 to $40 Double Rooms, $45 to $60 Inquire of Our Club Facilities Decatur 0380 anetand for every Evening buckle strap Gown ... A WRAP enhanced by the love- ensemble. k with Cuban heel. REET 66— Exceptional tinguished by charming details that are usually reserved for higher priced models. intricate sleeve details, draped and molded hiplines, tiny belts little dressmaker fashions. For the Social Season The black velvet wrap sketched here has a draped collar, a large bow of eggshell transparent vel- vet, and lining to match . . . The gown is a Lanvin model of Egg- shell Moravia crepe. decolletage, and is trimmed with festoons of self roses . .. A most charming and complete evening Gown' Salon—Second Floor EBA It’s a suit season and here are new blouses to lend new enchantment Very Special ... 31350 blouses these, dis- Jabots, firills, tabs, .all the touches that bespeak the Heavy, washable Satins, in white, tan, eggshell and aquamarine . . . sizes 34 to 42. Sports Shop—Fourth Floor JELLEFFS <4 F STREET > It has low F stT. Woman's Death Held Suicide. Mrs. Grealy and would have mlfl'lldt her if he could have obtained a divorce. | CHICAGO, October 30 (P —A ver- dict of “suicide while temporarily in- sane” was returned yesterday by the coroner’s jury investigating the death of Mrs. Evelyn Victoria Addington Grealy, self-styled English cuumess.’ whose body was found in her apart- ment last week. A revolver lay near| her body. The woman left & note tell- | ing her love for Policeman John Mater. | He testified at the inquest that he loved | HOOKED AND CROSSED STITCHED RUGS nd interesting to make. ortment of yarns and necdles. Cost very small. FREE LESSONS. EMBROIDERY SHOP 827-829 11th St. N.W. Burchell’s Famous Bouquet Coffee | Never Better 37c Ib. N. W. Burchell 817-19 Fourteenth Street alloween Cgrvltor) Hote Halloween Arb Hats and Clamorors UNTIL ONE tchind——; 2-a g | OctoberThi Dinner_Seven to ten o'cloc DANC ING Dinneri3so OCLOCK. Sales Final Take This Opportunity to Open a Charge Account The “Virginia” A RADIANT NEW MODEL FOR EVENING WEAR—EX- QUISITE IN THE EXTREME —REFLECTING THE PARIS MANNER IN THE USE OF PAISLEY BROCADE (AS ILLUSTRATED) W I TH HIGH OR LOW SPIKE HEEL AT $18.50. ALSO SHOWN IN WHITE OR BLACK MOIRE WITH SIL- VER AND GOLD TRIMMING AT $16.50. EVENING SHADES IN CHIF- FON HOSIERY, $1.95; 3 PAIRS FOR $5.50. 'FUR COAT GOES ON SALE THURSDAY You’'ll marvel at the values—prices have been slashed from one-third to one-half off on as fine a collection of furs as you have ever seen. Hudson Seal Pony Coat Caracul Coats Japanese Minks Muskrats Persian Lambs Ontario Beavers Genuine Russian Squirrel Scarfs S up to $265. In silver, brown, tan and taupe. Raccoons & . m $189 $229 198 * 998 & $129 $98 & $129 | $395 $69-$98-$149 $345 Tie s rg ettt v e $295 1 e 285 $19 Some self and some skunk trimmed. Sold up to $325. Civets Coats In black, tan and taupe. Fine quality prime northern skins. Fitch, Mink, Fox and Kolinsky trim. Sold 5395, aw to In brown, black and grey— sold up to $295. Marvelous designs in coats that sold up to $595. Sold up to $295. ‘Wonderfully styled coats that sold up to §595. A specially grouped lot that features the new beige and platinum shades. There are many other bargains similar to those listed—we’d advise an early selection because we know such. bargains can’t last long, particularly with the entire winter still ahead of us.

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