Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SOCIETY (Continued Prom Page B-2) Mrs. William D. Thomas were hosts at luneheo:r!u'erdny at n;: Mny:o;er, their guests were Mr. and Mrs, m Chambers of New York, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Mixsell of P: and Mrs. Benjamin Thaw, jr., and Mrs. William Doeller. | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin will not be at home Sunday afternoon. | Mrs. George Mesta of New York City is now in Washington at the Mayflower for & few days’ visit. Mrs. Mark Reid Yates will entertain at dinner this evening at the May. flower Hotel in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Jouett Shouse. The dinner will precede | the ball Mrs. Yates will give in hunorl |;'f ‘t;r niece, Miss Katherine Taliaferro ates. Lieut. Le Gendre Dinner Host Preceding Ball Last Night. | Lieut. Robert L. Le Gendre enter- | tained at dinner last evening preced- | ing the Navy relief ball at the Willard. His guests “included Miss Vee Allen Fowler, Miss Myrna Rock, Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Murphy and Mr. Thomas Keleher. | Mrs. David F. Sellers, wife of the | Judge advocate of the Navy, was hostess to a company at luncheon yesterday afternoon. { Mrs. Thomas W. Symons entertained | & company of eight at dinner last eve- | ning at the Carlton. | Mrs. Gilbert Grosvenor, president of | the Woman's Club of Bethesda, and the | officers of the club will keep open house | on Sunday afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock at the club house on Old George- town road at Sonoma Lane. Axslstlngl in serving refreshments will be Mrs Edwin C. Brandenburg, Mrs. George E. Hamilton, Mrs. Frederic A. Parkhurst | and Mrs. Robert D. Hagner. A group of past presidents of the club, including Franklin C. Getzendan- ner, Mrs. Enoch G. Johnson, Mrs. James Kirkpatrick, Mrs. Edward L. Stock, Mrs. Julian C. Wallace and Mra. Henry C. Karr, will alternate at the tea table. Members of the board of direc- tors, Mrs. Elisha Hanson, Mrs. Earl W. | Chafee, Mrs. Walter E. Perry, Mi:. | Charles I. Corby, Mrs. E. Percival Wil- son and Mrs. L. Gibbon White, will constitute the reception committee, and Mrs. George Bradley is chairman of the committee on general arrangements for the affair, There will be incidental music throughout the afternoon, and members | and their friends and members of the other suburban clubs are invited. ‘The list of officers receiving with Mrs. 1] Grosvenor is made up as follows: Mrs. William M. Gamble, first vice president; Mrs. Walter Mack Clark, second vice president; Mrs. Edward B. Morris, re- cording secretary; Mrs. F. Elliot Mid- man Park Hotel durin, she will finish her course. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JA RETURNING TO RADCLIFFE MISS BETTY DIXON, dleton, corresponding secretary; Mrs. E. M. Willis, treasurer; Mrs. Edwin H. Etz, historian, and Mrs. George E. Pariseau, parliamentarian. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus W. Peckham of New York City are now in Washington and will be guests at the Mayflower over the week end. They are accompanied by Countess Violet Zborowska of New York and England. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ayres of 15 Adams street northwest have returned from a visit over the holidays to Brooklyn and Cohoes, N. Y. Miss Eloise Shafer of 3431 Sixteenth street northwest has returned from a visit during the Christmas season to relatives in Pennsylvania. — | Mr. Henry Whiteford Samson is at the Valley Forge Hotel, Norristown, . While there he is guest speaker of the Valley Forge Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, at their meeting this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Horton of Green- wich, Conn., with their children, Ruth and Gifford, are at the Dodge Hotel. Mr. Isauro Galbaldop. farmer resident mer of the Philippine Islands, has returned to the Wardman Park Hotel-after an absence from the city. Mrs. Harry N. Rickey will leave today for Palm Beach, where she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Diebold at their place on Gulf View road. Mr. John Masin Rickey, 2d, who has been passing the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rickey, in their apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel, {:‘n left ’:;eldmu in Pnét‘l.lnd, Me., and Sprin , Mass,, before returnin, to Williams College. % Mr. J. W. Stinson will entertain a party of 25 at dinner this evening at the Carlton. Mrs. Olga Christiansen of Copen- hagen has arrived at the Carlton, where she will remain for some time. Miss Bell Perkins of Richmond, Va., who is spending the Winter at the Mayflower Hotel, has issued invitations for & tea dance at the Mayflower on January 18, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Mr. Harold Walker, jr, was host to & group of young people New Year | night at the Club Chantecler supper dance. His guests included Miss Char- lotte Childress and Miss Adair Chil- Count and Countess de Pomereu of Prance, have arrived in Wash- ington and are stopping at the Carlton. Miss Helen G. O'Nelll is apending the ol with her mother, Mrs. Pl".l'lckl Burchell’s Bougquet Coffee Famous for Forty Years # 30(: Lb. N. W. Burchell 817-19 Fourteenth St. BUILDS HEALTH AND STRENGTH ScHNeiDER BAKING COMPANY G. O'Neill, George P. O'Neill, U. 8. A, Benning, Ga. and her brother, at Fort Guest of her parents, Assistant Secretary of Interior and- Mrs. Dixon, at Ward- g the holidays, who returned to Radcliffe College, where —Harris-Ewing Photo. Lieut. | fcan Association of University Women, 1634 I street. the committee on membership of the Dr. Adams is serving on association as chairman. Mrs. Bralnard H. Warner, who has | cola, Dr. Katherine Adams, dean of Mills | yestes C;:)lleq California, is now staying at|the the lonal club house of the Amer- Fla., made her home at the Grafton for sev- | Patton—Garrett Wedding eral years, entertained a party of 18 | In New York Yesterday. there at a New Year day dinner. Mrs. Norma Bazzell Garrett of Pensa- i , and Washington was married rday in the Little Church Around Corner, in New York, to Mr. John Irwin Patton of New York. The Rev. W. B. Moses & Sons Public Confidence Since 1861 F Street at Eleventh 9 AM. to 6 P.M. NEW FASHIONS IN FELT .+ entirely hand made We usher in the new year with an unparalleled offering. Chic felt hats in bewitching shapes and all of the bright new colors. You will certain- ly want several of these because they are so very reasonable, - individuol Arter $7.5o of January every | slipper at either Artreaft: . Salon is included in our twice-yearly Sale, offering a-wide variety of new and unusual *. . footwear at drastic reductions. . ? JALL SALES FINAL, NO CREDITS. . NOC. O.D% |asr. ol A FEW UNUSUAL STYLES AT $13.85 | Hubbard graduated from the University | | has recently returned from Europe, . Lyman Johns officiated. Miss Gladys Ferris of Pensacola was bridesmaid and Mr. Burton Fisher of Boston was best man. Mrs. Garrett was the widow of Capt. Ashton Norman Garrett of Baltimore, Md.. who died in action in France in 1918. Mr. Patton formerly was a champlon sprinter of the New York Athletic Club. Breakfast and a reception at the Hotel St. Regis followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Patton will make their home at 1230 Park avenue, New York, after a wedding trip. J. The marriage of Miss Marguerite H. Caley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mat~ thew Caley of Lapeer, Mich., to Dr. Willlam B. Hubbard of this city took place Tuesday in the home of the bride- groom, 1676 Irving street, a small group of relatives and friends witnessing the ceremony, which was performed by the Rev. W.J. Hubbard, father of the bride- oom. Miss Ann Louise Hubbard, sister of the bridegroom, attended the bride and Mr. Roy Routt, his brother-in-law, served as best man. Following the ceremony Dr. and Mrs. Hubbard left for a brief wedding trip and are at home at the Irving street residence until later on, when they will 0 _to Detroit to live. The bride is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Michigan and is a member of | the Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. Dr. of Virginia in 1923 and was for five years a member of the staff of the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. He where he studied in several clinics. Representative and Mrs. Lloyd Thurs- ton have returned to their apartment at the Hotel Roosevelt after a short | visit in New York. Miss Louise F. Hertzberg of New York City is making a short visit with her grandmother, Mrs. H. Hollander of 1474 | Columbia road northwest. | Dr. Margaret Justin of the Kansas | State Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kans, is spending several days m‘ Washington, and is at the national club | house of the American Association of | University Women. Mr. and Mrs. Karl E. Jarrell enter- Wednesdays Saturdays Syncopators Sundays Al Kamons directing National 3770 We Introduce OurWonderful New Thrift Dress Section for Women Misses and Junior Misses Where you %, can find every really Important Dress Fashion— always at These are not ordinary $10 dresses! [ Chosen with the same fastidious care that we select our highest priced frocks. @ Made to our own particular specifications in the most important sil- houettes of the day! Of materials and workmanship that compare with the finest! colors—you’ll always find your style, your size, your material, your color, in our $10 section, when you want it! COLORS: Blue Emerald Rust Hacienda Navy Tan Red tained home in Wynnewood Park, Md. Andrew Jackson Somerville, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Somerville, Mr. and Mrs, 20 Margaret | Somerville and Mr. Michael McInerney. DEPORTATION DELAYED. Eviction of Four Cubans Would dispatch from Vera Cruz to El Universal Grafico announces that the District Court there has temporarily stayed the deportation of four Cubans who are al- leged to be anarchists and who were or- dered to be deported by the Mexican government. after the Cubans declared that their de- portation meant certain death when they arrived in Cuba. Vera Cruz, Miguel Cotino, Alejandro Barreiro and Sandalio Junco. An Argentinan named Echeverri, who had been arrested with the Cubans, has been deported. New Year eve party at their The guests included Mr. and Mrs, Reginald Conard, Miss Mean Certain Death for Them. MEXICO CITY, January 3 (P)—A The stay was grante ‘The four men, who are now in jail at are Teodosio Montalvan, WASHINGTOR Jurs GarFinNckEL&Co. I We Park Your Car While Shopping Here | . UR younger finding such extraordinary values Now On Our Fifth Floor E They are buying with the hearti- est enthusiasm. Our of Misses’ Juniors” and Girls' Apparel GIVES them the opportunity to make their duty now. Coats—Dresses—Ensembles Sportswear—Hats—Underwear F STREET CORNER OF 13TH W. . Moses & Sons SINCE 1861—SIXTY-NINE YEARS OF PUBLIC CONFIDENCE F Street at Eleventh Q[ In a complete MATERIALS: Flat Crepes Printed Crepes Georgettes Tweeds The Opvortunity Shop, Second Flosr Many small women are taking advantage of these great values, too. NUAR 193 Marriage Licenses. | Moreno, 27, and Julis Johnson, Py R fer. Archambault, 24, and Myrtle Rev. J. Harves Dunha rt . Morion, 83, and Mary E. Cole- 80: Rev. Sheiton Adiller. Lewis, 31, and Leonora Washing- Rev: Willlam Ford: am Dellinger. 7. Clarendon, Va.. In M. Rosenberger. 3. Mouni Rev. G. M. Diffenderter. Elenora Hawkins, kes, 30, and _Florence V. terman, 30: Rev. Walter 'H. Brooks. soLouia A; Kifxland, 21" and Grace M. Baker, Rev."Allan F. Poore. N Rabbitt, 31, Toledo, Ohio, and ;a'-if"cf"nim.‘u Denbigh, Va.: Rev. Allan ‘Robert Turner, 27, and Leona Adams, 20: Rev. W. Westras. ‘on'8. Braunsiein, 19, and Anna Malinick. Rev. L, J, Schwefel, pGtoree . Robertson, ir.. 29, and June M. “Watson T. o 31, and Evelyn Brown, "and Ellzabeth Panell, ¥ . @oftney. v and Loulse V. Waddy. | T. Harye: J 3 willl 19} Rev. Alexander Wiilbanks, Rev. Wil hn A. Willl As the result of bumper crops in the last two years, farmers of Denmark are buying luxuries. customers are Sale money do extra 9 AM. to 6 P.M, range of sizes and DETAILS: Longer skirts Molded hiplines Low-placed fullness High waistlines Princess lines v by KAFKA’S 1. F at Tenth St. “Distinctive Apparel” January Clearance Sale of Our High-Grade : CHILDREN’S COATS 1/ OFF This reduction also includes . .. Brushed wool sets Every child’s coat in the house now Zipper knit sets reduced 1/3 Zipper Suedene sets Greatly Reduced for Final Clearance The following have been substantially reduced for immediate clearance. Girls' dresses. Boys' suits. Shirts. Bathrobes. Leggins, e Jersey s’ (many known makes), Sweaters Rain coat sets. M:Brocks-Co G- STREET BET First Hint of Spring in Hats with Straw Felts With Straw Chic All-Straw Hats $ NEW SHADES AND BLACKS If ever mode was entrancingly chic, this it! So softly shaped, so warmly colored, like the early Spring buds these new hats proaching season, in ecrown and bri effects in the . MILLINERY—MAIN FLOOR IN OUR POPULAR MAIN FLOOR Really Exciting News! A January Clearance of Smart Fur-Trimmed COATS fi Featuring Wanted, % All-Black Coats If you have waited until now to buy your Winter coat we urge you to ine spect this offering, for never in the history of thil \ Thrift Shop have we o fered such outstanding coat values. The smart styling of every model, the generous use of warm furs, and the careful lin- ing and tailoring make them most remarkable “buys” at this low price. The two coats sketched from our stock will give you some idea of the clever styles in this collection, $19.75 M.-Prooks-Co ! < STREET ETWEEN_1ITH 12TH $19.78 MAIN FLOOR—THRIFT SHOP