Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1929, Page 18

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SOC Secretary of t Postpone Dinner CTREY, SOCIETY Party Owing to Secretary Good’s Illness. HE Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Adams have pos ed in- definitely the dinner which they were to have given this eve- of the gerious ill- The dinner was pl of bureaus of the Navy Department. Ambassader of Tialy Host Tonight te Visiting Countrymen. The Ambassador of Italy, Nobile de | Martino, will entertain at dinner this | evening in honor of the members of | \the Italian cavalry team which com- | ted in the horse show in New York f-‘n week, Robert L. Robertson. Is at the Willard Hotel for several days. Third Annual Debutante Ball Brilliant Event Tonight. Joint hostesses at a table for the third annual debutante ball at the Willard Hotel tonight are Mme. Prochnik and Mrs. Henry Price Wright. The guests at this table will be Miss Lorando Proch- nik, Miss Margaretta Wright, Miss Elsie Fkengren, Miss Eleanor Crain, Mis Mary Bradley, Miss Victoria Catalini, Mr. Andrew Wiley. Mr. Rodney Fiske, Mr. R. R. Bogge, Mr. J. Hale McKillip, Mr. Pepe Rivas, Mr. Noel Leggett. Dr Willson and Mr» Henry Price Wright, jr. Mme. Debuchi. wife of the Ambassa- | dor of Japan, was the guest in whose | "honor Mrs. Thomas Sim Lee enter- |tained at luncheon today in the presi- | dentisl dining room of the Mayflower. Mrs. William Howard Taft will re- ceive informally this afterncon at her home, on Wyoming avenue. } Senator and Mrs. Lee 8. Overman of North Carolina are at the Powhatan | M Hote} for the Winter. | | Mrs. New, wife of the former Post- master General, has as her guest Mrs. Parker Hitt of New York and Front| ' , Va., who will remain with her until the return of Mr. New, who is| 'on s hunting trip in the woods of | ichigan. | Mrs. New has canceled the luncheon she had planned to give Wednesday. ‘The military attache of the Ttalian | embassy, Gen. Villa has canceled the | !luncheon he had planned to give to- morrow at the Mayflower in honor of !the visiting Italian team which com- |peted in the recent horse show in New ork. ‘The party has been canceled | | because of the fliness of Secretary | Col. and Mrs. George C. Thorpe en- ! tertained at Juncheon yesterday for | their debutante daughter, Miss Betty ‘Thorpe, when their guests were the | Italian Ambassador, Nobile de Martino: the Minister of Rumania, Mr. Charles | C. Davila; the counselor of the Ru-| manian legation, Mr. Frederick C. | Nano; the first secretary of the Polish legation, Mr. Victor Podoski; the secre- the Italian embassy, Signor + the commercial secretary of the Arthur Pack; | Dorethea Mor- Miss Elsie | Prochnik. Laurs ‘Tuckerman, aehuunh! iter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic de ! . and Miss Margaret Daingerfield | entertain ¢ luncheon at Plerre's, was in Washingtol other festivities which Mr. and Mrs. Tuckermsn gave for their daughter last week. Mrs. J. Daniel Ruden entertained at luncheon today at the Willard Hotel. , when she presented her daughter, Miss Mary Perdue Ruden, to the debutantes | of the season. Clusters of yellow chrys- | anthemums and tall yellow candles were | ! used on the long oval table. There were | 40 guests in the company. Lymsn B. Kendall. who has been since the late Spring, i+ making visit in her country home, Kents- d has with her her daughter, Grant Mason, jr. M 1o New York tomor- Fiftily e .| Alvin Earl Maj. Gen. Amos A. Fries will make the presentations at the Continental | ball and card party to be held this ev ning at the Willard Hotel by the Abi- gail Hartman Rice Chapter, D. A. R. Mrs. Malette Roch Spengler, regent. | will have assisting her in the receiving line Mrs. Amos A. Fries, Mrs. Josiah A. Van Orsdel. Mrs. Harriet Vaughn igdon, Mrs. William S. Walker, Mrs. David D. Caldwell. Miss Helen Harma: rs. Clavton Emig. Miss Roberta Ga loway and Mrs. Paul Brandstedt. Addi- tonal patronesses are Mrs. Hamilton Fish, jr. Mrs. Lawrence Townsend. Mre. Charles Boughton Wood, Mrs Prank B. Noves. Mre, H. L. Rust. Mrs. Howard L. Hodgkins, Mrs. Larz Ander- son, Mise Mabel Boardman and Mrs. Russell Magna. Miss Elvira Lindsay Johnson, debutante daughter of Capt. and Mrs, Alfred .J Johnson. is the chairman of the girls' | floor committee for the Navy relief ball which will be held at the Willard Hotel Thanksgiving evening. Serving on the committee will be Miss Mary Inghram Henry. Miss Marjory Tallman, | Miss Janet Ball, Miss Priscilla Totten. Miss Alberta Perley, Miss Isabel Lamberton, Miss Grace Stuart, Miss Jane Hana, Miss Clara Bolling. Miss Loranda Prochnik, Miss Elsie Ekengren, Miss Laura Tuckerman. Miss Margureta Wright, Miss Mary Martha Wren, Miss Greta Swenson, Miss Esther Wallace. Miss Virginia Cheatham, Miss Frances Morse, Miss Helen Walker, Miss Mary Carolyn Henry. Miss Virginia Yellott, Miss Mary Bradley, Miss Betty Thorp, Miss Janet Murray, Miss Eunice Lee Evans, Miss Ellen Stirling, Miss Eliza- beth Kennedy. Miss Wanda Webb. Miss Josephine Tompkins, Miss Gherardi, Miss Alice Kempff, Miss Helen Strauss, Miss Polly Larimer, Miss Martha Ellis, Miss Helen Standley, Miss | Dorothy Bierer, Miss Bertha Coontz. Miss Dorothea Richards, Miss Anna Jayne, Miss Susan Kintner, Miss Louise Bruce, Miss Mary Jacobs. Miss g:tmrlne Fechet and Miss Emiscale | Mr. John Leighton Elliott of Milan, Ttaly, announces the marriage of his sister, Mabel Elliott Davis, to Mr. Mourfield, on Saturday, November 9, in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Mourfield will be at home at 3508 Sixteenth street northwest, Washing- ton. Mr. Mourfield is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Mourfield of Knoxville, Tenn. Mrs. Mourfield. formerly of Marion. N. ,~has made her home in Knoxville for several years. ‘Mrs. Robert Whitney Imbrie will have assisting her Friday, November 22, at the Turkish tea, Mrs. Guy Des- pard Goff, Mrs. Arthur Vandenberg, Mrs. Henry Winfleld Watson, Mrs. An- drew Long, Mrs. Ray Ovid Hall, Mrs. William Barrett Ridgley, Mrs. Edwin St. John Greble, Mrs. Arthur Condon, Mrs, Davis Arnold, Mrs. Austin Kautz nd Miss Evelyn Sutton Weems. The gathering will be rather unique, as it «| will include all those who served ti gether in any capacity in the Near East and the Balkans. many of whom have not met- for several years. Announcement has been made of the tHE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. MONDAY. NO\EMBEK 18 1929, Clements of Grand Rapids, Mich,, to Mr. Jack W. Griffi Mrs. Worthington Grifith, brook, Md. Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Stahinecker are temporarily located in Washington an are stopping at the Potomag Par he Navy and Mrs. Adams Aprments e Staninecker e sec. | ot, Governor of Pennsylvania. ! Mrs. B. Sanchez and her daughter, | Miss Grasziella Sanchez. of Havana spent Saturday in Washington at. the | Mayflower, having come here to visit the latter's sister, Miss Anna Maria | Sanches, who is attending Visitation | | Convent. The announcement of the| | engagement of Mise Graziella Sancher | to Mr. Gabrie] Villada was recently an- | nounced in Havana. | Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury will be the honor guests at dinner this | evening in New Vork of Mr. and Mrs. | James Powell Putman, ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Garvan, who | lived in Washington during the war, |gave a ball Saturday evening in the | | Ritz-Carlton Hotel in New York for | | Miss ~ Margaret Dunne. debutante | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Finley Peter | | Dunne, who are also well known in| | Washington. The rooms used for the party, were transforred into gardens and rural scenes. with Autumn mnue,\ and a supper was served at midnight, the 2,000 guests being seated at smali | tables in the restaurant of the hotel. | | Mr. and Mrs. Dunne entertained at | | dinner for their daughter before the !dance, their guests including Miss Nancy Newbold and Mr. Philip Hich- | born of Washington. Among those of | interest in the National Capital who at- | tended the ball were Mr. and Mrs. mes Francis Sullivan of Radnor, Pi d their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. |and Mrs. Albert Lincoln Hoffman: Mr. and Mrs. F. Burrall Hoffman. former | Undersecretary of State and Mrs, Frank | Lyon Polk, Mr. and Mrs. Jacques Blafwe | de Sibour and Mr. and Mrs, Charles S, Sabin. Norman-King Wedding | Saturday in Bride's Home. | The marriage of Miss Olive Frances King, daughter of Mrs. Charles Morgan | | King. to Mr, Robert Tilghman Norman. | son of Mr. Stanton Robert Norman, ' took place Saturday afternoon at 5 o'clock in_ the home of the bride's | mother, 3641 Warren street, North | | Cleveland Park, the Rev. Dr. dohn O.| [ Palmer of the Washington Helights Presbyterian Church officiating. The home had an effective arrange- | ment of chrysanthemums and a pro- | | gram of nptial selections was given | |by a stringed quartet, with Mrs, | Thomas Foster playing the violl i ‘ The bride was given in marriage by | | her grandfather, Mr. Frank L. Evans, | and she wore a pansy blue velvet gown, | | made on straight lines, with an uneven Neville | | . . . stressing the new elegance, the return to gracefulness and the { new-old-fashioned | Winter season. | ‘ | Mrs. Kendall will only be at Kentsdale | marriage of Miss Jane A. Clements, | for a portion of this week and will re- | turn to New York, where she has taken an apartment for the Winter. i Mr. and Mrs. Newbold Noyes wil) re- turn to Wa: today from s brief atay in New York, where they were over the week end st the Ambassador Hotel. EXQUISITE LAMP SHADES UNUSUAL ATTRACTIVE e R AND MAKE YOUR SELEC- . FREE INSTRUCTIONS. EMBROIDERY SHOP daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jouette H. HOURS, 3:45 to DULIN & MARTIN Evening Gowns Formal Wraps ’ by Pasternak the important social occasions of the | [APASTERNA hem line. She wore a small hat vt th, son of Mr. and | gold metal cloth. with gold eloth slip- | future Middle- .p.;m and earried an arm bouquet of | School. ellow roses. She WoI in old-fashion- zd necklace with pendant of amethyst and pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. Miss Charlotte King was maid of honor for her sister, and she wore a dahlia-color chiffon gown, with slippers 1o match, and carried an arm bouquet f La France roses. i3 h‘l’i’nkA Dunbar Forsythe was the best | an. A reception followed for the families | and cloge friends, when the couple were assisted in recelving by Mrs. King. mother of the bride, who was in an egg~ shell-color satin-and-lace gown. and she wore a corsage of violets, and Mrs. Norman, who was in a black lace gown, with a velvet hat, and she wore a cor- sa uquet of violets. |é;r.h‘,)lgrmafl and his bride left ln(!ri for a wedding trip, Mrs. Norman wear- | ing & black fat crepe, with a small| black felt hat, with a black coat. They will be at home upon their return at 3641 Warren street, North Cleveland Park. ‘The out-of-town guests were Mn\.‘ Arthur Kingston. mother of the bride- | groom, of Portsmouth, N. H., and Mi PFrances Goodacre of Southern College. | Petersburg, Va. A wedding of interest in Washington | will take place Thanksgiving day in| Springfield, Mass.. when Miss Alice Bragg Comins, deughter of Dr. and! Mrs. James B. Comins of that city, will| become the bride of Mr. Donald Dean Benson, son of Mr. and Mrs, Oscar H.| Benson' of Edgemoor, Md. The cere- mony will be parformed at noon in_the home of the bride's parents, the Rev.! Dr. Gordon Gilkey officiating. “The bridegroom-elect is a graduate of | Central High School and a graduate wn landscape architecture of fowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts and took a post-graduate course 3 Pastry Sho; ! SANDWICHES (ORIGINAL} Sandwiches for all social _oceasions New location, 806 17th street | Metropolitan 6939 45c>m o §3.25 v, silhouette, for PHONE NAT'L 1293 at the Lake Forrest School of Arts. The | visiting Mr. and Mrs. bride attended Central High| Mr. and Mrs. Davies were Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Denegre are again in their home on Sixteenth street. for the Winter, having arrived in Wash- | joined by Mrs. Kennedv and their ington last evening for the Autumn and | daughter, Miss Betty Lou Kennedy, early Winter. who have been at Aurora, Ill, for sev- o eral months, Mrs. Willlam Bailey Lamar has re- P turned to the Mayflower Hotel after| Mrs. Erik S. Henius and her small spending a week in New York, at the daughter Eleanor will arrive in New St. Regis Hotel. York {omorrow aboard the Oscar T, i 'rom her home in Copenl n, n- Mr. and Mrs. A. McGook Duniop en- | mark, and wil be met by her mother, tertained a company at the Olub Mrs. Charles K. Koones. Mrs. Henfus Chantecler supper dance on Saturday | is coming to attend the wedding of her Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Droop left 8 Violet Ledig, whic! o Washington Saturday for a two-week | o, St Matthews Church Saturd trip to Florida and Cuba. il s S | Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Patton Cheese- | borough will leave today to return to members of the Ttallan e: their home in Asheville. N. C.. after (Continued on Nineteenth Page.) Col. Prank M. Kennedy has been WASHINGTOMN rARYS JuLius GARFINCKEL&Co. We solve your Parking Problem while shop- ping here by taking charge of your car Our Furs FOR the woman of individual taste—for the woman who chooses her coat with a knowl- edge of really good furs. COLILIE( vouthful priced. I'TON also of sports fur coats, and smart, very moderately ( UR fur workrooms on the prem ises enahles us to make for vou, individually, a superior coat from any skins you may select here. F STREET CORNER OF 13TH R THE WILLARD Announces That CHEF GABRIEL LINASSIER Formerly With The Ritz Hotels, London and Paris and The. Carlton Hotel, London Is Now in Charge of Its Cuisine Discriminating patrons may here enjoy the delicious food for which these hotels are famous P et Delightful Music Adds to the Pleasure of Lunching and Dining at the Willerd Lieut. Col. Francesco Amllfll lnd' the | oam '$-Plece 3-Piece Overstufied Suites Tapestries, Mohair Brocades and Velours Also Chair Caneing, and Porch Rockers Splinted by Our Experts at the Now Prevailing l.ow Prices for Two Days Only. Write, Phone or Call FRANKLIN 7483 Fstimates and Samples Given Free Clay Armstrong Upholsterer Dining Room Chairs 1235 10th St. NW, Ask about our 30. 60 and 90 dav Deferred Payment Plan Parlor Snites Antiques. Brown (GGreen Blue Purple Black BRurgundy Suede “Yagabond” ~—with its swash- bunekling decoration of tiny dagger and chain ~—and its broad, mask- like strap. A striking example of the newer “Carlton” echie... which women who know their vogue love s0 well! $12.50 “Vagahond™ Suede Bags to Match $7.50 STEP IN A (IHDSIRIPE CHIFFON AND STEP-UP YOUR STYLE C()j““ AGO, perhaps, the finest in silk stockings was expensive. But it isn't so today. Nowadays the dazzling beauty of a silk to the top, picot edged Gold Stripe Chiffon can be enjoyed by anyone for $].95 pair 3 pairs, $3.70 $27-829 11th St. N.W. L4 &) A\ FASHION INSTITUTION Warhingeon . NewYork p s Personal Beauty Er:::;.“ D‘:e'::n within the reach of all 908, Reduction of Bousi st through the aid of R. Loui nerre Stoe who has sent his personal representative to he with ne all this week to advise our patrons withont charge on their individunal beauty problems. In Good Taste for Tanksgiving Duncan Phyfe Dihing Suite of Ten Pieces #395 HE suite sketched is an interesting adaptation of the graceful Duncan Phyfe design, so well fitted to the home of today. Beautiful crotch mahogany veneers Street frock: are important in madame’s wardrobe $30:.50 You'll be delighted with these styvles . . . so beautifully do they express all that is new and smart in design and trimming. Here are the new lengths made charmingly-applicable, the new sithouette itself treated in delightiul manner. No material at the present moment is smarter than crepe . . . particularly when it is emploved to flare and flutter into the new lines ... Hats Some Models [ ] S Special presentation of silk crepes Furniture that you are going to take into your home and make part of your daily Dlife must have the fundamentals of good taste, good de- s1ign, good workmanshif. These. plus good value. vou will find in Dulin & Martin furniture, Suites and distinctine $rieces for tvery room in the house. The colors, too, are ] |Ch~ty! £ lovely— . eam . ELET B pr A | Dahlia carry out the feeling ‘of the period and en- Wine Three Bedrooms. Liv- ing Room, Nining Room, Kitchen, Reception Hall and two Baths, facing on Columbia Road with Southern, FEastern and Western Exposures. Elec- trical Refrigeration. ance the simple elegance of its design. A Hunter's remarkable value at the price. . | 4) | e & Green POINTED DOUBLE POINTED Ve HEELy FRENCH Brown Black and Navy Furniture Sectiow—Second Floor DuLIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. at " * PARKING SERVICE—-CONNECTICUT AVENUE ENTRANCE Join the Red Crgss Toda Also at Our Stoneleigh Court Shop 1013 Conn. Ave. A FASHION INSTITUTION Parts Washington NewYork Reasoneble Rentel THE ARGONNE 16th & Columbia Rd. 36 to 44, Second Floor.

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