Evening Star Newspaper, February 2, 1930, Page 44

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

2 :'Style Shows SO CIETY. Feature Many Benefit Programs Season's Debutantes Mannequins and Volunteer as Dainty Fill Roles With Professional Ability. NEW YORK, February 1.—The radi- cal change in the style of milady's gown this year, which has inspired the entertainment committees of many benefit affairs to present fashion shows with their evening programs, also has given the members of society an op- portunity to review the season's de- butantes. In each of the style parades the young women introduced this sea- son have volunteered their services as mannequins, and have filled their roles with professional ability. On next Saturday night such a fash- don show will be presented at the liberty ball in the Park Lane. The Misses Mary Delafield and Renee Ledoux are co-chairmen of the entertainment com- mittee and Miss Mary Haskell is at the head of the debutante committee, which includes the Misses Josephine Auguste, Frances E. Robbins, Olive Whitman, Evelyn Wurzburg, Martha Lee Sims, Virginia Roberts, Ethel Bartlett. Edith Drexel, Margery Stoddard, Carmen Mumford, Marie Louise Smithers, Sylvia Beinecke. and others. ‘The liberty ball is held annually by the Seventy-Seventh Division Associa- tion for the benefit of its club house, at 28 East Thirty-ninth street. The 77th Division of the A. E. F., was made up of men drafted from New York City, a cross section of the metropolitan melting pot, including Chinese, Italians, Jews and Finns. In a draft of 60 men from the lower East Side, only three spoke English. The 77th Division club house is open to these men. and the proceeds of this year's benefit will go toward a memorial hall dedicated to their dead. Another military affair will be the ball of the Veterans of Foreign Wars at the Astor on February 14. Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York, is honorary chairman of the ball commit- tee, which includes many of the offi- cers of all services, including Maj. Gen. Charles P. Summerall, Maj. Gen. Han- son E. Ely, Rear Admiral Louis de Steiguer, Brig. Gen. Hugh A. Drum, Maj. Gen. Willlams H. Haskell, and many others. Miss Hope Williams, actress member of the New York Junior League, wlll have the leading part in “Rebound,” play written for her by Donald Ogdfn Stewart, who also will have a role in the drama to open on Tuesday. The roceeds of the first two nigh'.s will go ajl‘rd the work of the Baby Shelter, one of the charitable proteges of the Junior League. Miss Katherine Leslie, another Junior League member, also will have a part in the play. ‘Many members of the e]lte are giving g@inners preceding the benefit perform- ances, nmm; lheln Mn Van Rensselear Halsey, George, Mrs. John De Wltt Pel'.n er Ernest Fahne- stock, Mrs. Vanderbilt Webh Mrs. Carleton Betts and Mrs. H. H. Flagler. ‘The 104th anniversary ball of the Old Guard was held last night at the Astor, where more than 4,000 guests assembled in an array of military glory. A change of setting marked the ball this year, it having been held in previous years at the Waldorf-Astoria, which now has fallen under the pinch bar and hammer of wreckers to make way for a skyscraper office building. The high point of the evening came with the grand parade and massing of colors at midnllht in which special units from 67 military organizations from all parts of the country participated. An international reception of note was held on Saturday night at the Plaza as a farewell to Sir Esme Howard. the retiring British Ambassador, and Lady Isabella Howard, who are departing for London. The hotel was decorated with the flags of three nations, which were also represented among the guests. The reception, the last of a series, was given by Herbert Brookes, commissioner gen- eral in Australia, and Mrs. Brookes. John W. Davis, former American Am- bassador to the Court of St. James, and Mrs. Davis, were among those re- ceiving in the foyer. Following the re- ception there was a musical in which the Australia artists, Miss Merle Robert- son, pianist, and Alfred O'Shea, were heard in songs of their native land, as the event also was a celebration of Aus- tralian day. ‘The guests, representative of the three countries, included Sir Harry Gloster Armstrong, British consul general; Lady Armstrong, Miss Constance Armstrong, Col. and Mrs. Edward M. House, Gen. and Mrs. Oliver B, Bridgman, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph S. Ochs, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Dewart, Mr. and Mrs. Ker- mit Roosevelt, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Han- son E. Ely, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Burleigh, Rear Admiral and Mrs. Louis R. de Steiguer and Justice PFranklin Chase Hoyt and Mrs. Hoyt. Also the Rev. Henry Howard, Miss ‘Winifred Howard, Mr. and Mrs. Theo- dore Steinway, Mrs. Frederick Stein- way, Col. and Mrs. Robert C. Richard- son, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Greene, Dr. and Mrs. Philip R. Botha, representing South Africa; Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Schumacher, Mr. and Mrs. James B. Clews, Mr. and Mrs, John Sloan, New- comb Carlton, Comdr. and Mrs. H, B. Taylor, D. W. Dow, official secretary for Australia, and Mrs. Dow, Arthur Pon- aml-nlby and Mr. and Mrs. Ten Eyck Wen- ell. Members of Diplomatic Curps Listed as Hosts mic, will be host to = distinguished company at luncheon Tuesday. ‘The Minister of Rumania, Mr. For Notable Gatherings (Continued From First Page.) the Treasury, Mr. Andrew W. Mellon; the Ambassador of Peru, Dr. Hernan Ve- larde; the Minister of Ecuador and Senora de Viteri, the charge d'affaires of Argentina and Senora de Encisco, ator and Mrs. George H. Moses, presentative Edith Nourse Rogers, thz Assistant Secretary of State and Mrs. Francis White, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. John A. Hull, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont, Senorita Rosa Padilla, the newly lmmhd Chilean Ambassador Peru and former minister of foreign sflun of Chllt. Senor Don Conrado the consul general of Chlle I&'.Ml eo\mfi'y. Senor Luis E. Oscar Blanco Viel. The Ambassador and Senora dei Davila will entertain at luncheon to- day and will be hosts at dinner to- morrow. ‘The Japanese Ambmdor and Mme, Debuchi will be hosts at dinner Tues- m evening, entertaining in honor of Ambassador of Germnny and Frau von Prittwitz und Gaff ‘The Minister of Portugal and Vis- countess d’Alte will be hosts at dinner Tuesday evening. The Minister and Viscountess d'Alte fturned Thursday from s short stay in ew York. The Minister of Switzerland and Mme. :ewr. who are !lnd New York for a few ays, are expected to return to Wash- ington the middle of the week. The Minister of Bul Bulgaria and Mme. Radeff will entertain at luncheon to- m‘m eol:ugiflmem ':nd the Amm- o - ndar Great tain Lady The Minister of Sweden and Mme. ‘l;-,tmm will en;er:dn b:thellm:er ‘Tues- evening, an osts again at dinner Thursday evenlnl 7 The Mlnlstfir of Canada and Mrs. Massey will return tomorrow from a short stay in New York. The Minister of No: Norway and Mme. Bachke have issued invitations for din- mer Sunday, February 9, at the May- flower in compliment fo the Italian Ambassador md Nobil Donna Antoin- ette de Martin The Minister of the Irish Free State and Mrs. MacWhite will entertain a company at dinner n‘id.ly evening. The Minister of P Poland, Mr. Fili- powicz, who is in Mexico attending the inaugural ceremonies, will not re- turn to Washington until the first of March. The Minister is also the Polish Minister to Mexico, where he has pre- sented his credentials and is attend- ing the Inllll\l!‘lllon of President Ortiz | Rublo as special ambassador from his country. ‘The Minister will return to Washing- ton and will immediately present his credentials at this capital as Ambas- sador from his country, the legation havtn( recently been raised to an em- Ilme. Pilipowicz, who is #€pending some month in their Polish home, v\m join the Minister in Washington April, after he has taken his place u Ambassador. ‘The Minister ol Jugoslavia, Mr. Pita- to | the dlnlmflc corps, Charles A. Davila, will give a recep- tion this eveni in honor_of Prof. Jorda of the University of Bucharest, ‘Washi for & lhort stay. The Minister of Ecuador and Senora de Viteri will entertain at dinner Tues- day evening in honor of first secretary of the legation, Senor Don Juan Barberis, who will sail Feb- ruary 7 on the Ile de France, !or his new post as charge d'affaires of Ecua- dor in France. Senora Barberis will be greatly missed in the Capital, where she has a host of mmdl not onl soclety as well. ‘The counselor of the German embassy and Frau Kilep will leave today for a fortnight’s stay in Florida. Mme. Lardy, wife of the counselor of the Swiss legation, was hostess to & small company at luncheon yesterday. The counselor of the Czechoslovakian legation and Mme. Skalicky l'nter'.l!:!d ‘when Repre- sentative and Mrs. Sol Bloom, Miss Vera Bloom and Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Oulahan. ‘The counselor of the Irish Mr. wguun J. away for 10 days. The commercial counselor of the British embassy and Lady Broderick had a small company dining informally with them last evening, and Thursday they entertained a few guests at luncheon, ‘The military -mcha of the Spanish embassy, Maj. Victoriano Casajus, en- tertained at luncheon y at the Mayflower Hotel, when the guests were Col. Consuelo A. Seoane, Gen. c-nlv-. military attache of the PFrench bassy; military attache of '.b' Italian Gen. Villa, and Col. Waturi, military attache of the Jap- anese embassy, ‘The naval attache of the Brazilian embassy and Senhora do Couto Aguirre entertained a company of 130 at a dance last evening, followed by supper. first secretary of the Chilean embl-sly. Senor Don Oscar Blanco Viel, embassy be laid !ur 22 at the dl.nnn today. The secretary of the German em- bassy and Frau Lohmann entertained .immp.ny at dinner Wednesday eve- ning. Frau Lohmann’s mother and sister, Frau Strube and n‘lflkln Strube, will come to this country the middie of February and will be guests of Herr and Frau Lohmann for some weeks, ‘The first secretary of the lfllldor legation, Senor Don Juan Barberis, will leave Washin; ‘Wednesday and will sail Friday aboard the Ile de France for his newtmn as charge d'affaires of Ecuador at it capital. Senor Barberis will succeed Senor Carlos Proano, who wmmewthhmnmdme!flwr lenunn There, rved his govern ment in wnmnmn nnee 1920, wmn( first as second secretary of legation, lat- er being promoted to first secretary. He served as charge d'affaires of Ecuador WE INVITE YOUR ACCOUNT THE SUBTLE THING CALLED LINE . . . IS A DEFINITE ACHIEVEMENT IN KAPLOWITZ FASHIONJS the retiring | missed, i veesaentiad | of he 10| occasion are the § THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FEBRUARY 2, 1930—PART THREE. SOCIETY. CHARMING MEMBERS OF THE YOUNGER ELEMENT OF THE CONGRESSIONAL SET \v\s - BACHRACH RARRIS & EWING #ND ERWOOD BACHRACH Left—Miss Blanche Wingo, daughter of Representative and Mrs. Otis Wingo of Arkansas, a frequent holk- to other Upper center—Miss Virginia Harris of Peoria, Ill.,, guest of her uncle and aunt, Representative and Mrs, William E. Hull, at Wardman Park Hotel. Lower center—Miss Margaret Ayres, whose father is Representative Willlam A. Ayres of Kansas. With her mother, she is frequently at the Congressional Club. Upper right—Miss Mary Parker Corning, daughter of Representative and Mrs. Parker Corning, a debu tante of next season. Lower right—2liss Jean Hoch, & Wash- ington favorite, who is the daughter of Representative and M rs. Homer Hoch of Kansas. for three years from 1925 to 1928, and during his stay in this Capital he has made many friends in the diplomatic :‘xr, in official circles and among the dent soclety. He will be greatly , though his new post is a pro- motion, Prince Firouz, second secretary of the' Persian legation, entertained last eve- ning at dinner foliowed by a reception and dance in the Pan-American room of the Mayflower, followed by dancing palm court, in compliment to Mrs. Chisholm Beach and her daugh- ter, Miss Janet Beach, of New York. Miss Beach was one of New ‘York’s most popular debutantes last season. Among the guests at dinner were the Minister of Albania, Mr. Konitza; Sena- tor and Mrs. Henry P. Ashurst, Senator David I Walsh, Representative and Mrs. Albert E. Carter, Representative and Mrs. Fred Purnell, Issa Khan Bah- ramy, counselor, and Mr. Hashem Nour- zad, first secretary, of the Persian lega- tion; Mr. and Mrs, Wallace Murray, Mr. Charles Delmar, Mrs. William Laird Dulll::F, Jr.; Miss Elizabeth Dun- lop, Miss Lalla Harrison Lynn and Miss Margaret Pilson. Mr. E. K. Scallan, the newly appoint- ed secretary of the South African lega- tion, has arrived in Washington to take up his duties. — Brilliant Gathering to Hear Miss Williame A brilliant assemblage, with patrons and patronesses composed of diplomatic, official and residential Washington, will hear Miss Louise Alice Williams of Atlanta, Ga., in her Southern recital of cabin stories and plantation songs, to be given at the wudnu.n Park Hotel Monday _ evening, 3. Dr. Harold Dudley of the American Uni- Vel'llty. wl'.h quartet, will sing old Eng- mu wmum. will wear a beautiful old heirloom, a costume of amber tussah silk which once belonged to Cornelia Randolph, her Virginia kins- woman, a granddaughter of Thomas g:r.xt:lon. once President of the United ‘The patrons and patronesses of the ish Ambassador the German Am- bassador and Baroness von Prittwitz, \‘ilhe cuhnmmm m& ‘;l':nonvge ‘errara, the M T, - count and Viscountess d'Alte, the Acting Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Edwin Jahncke, the Secretary of Labor and Mrs, J. J. Davis, Senator and Mrs. Willlam J. Harris, Senator and Mrs. ‘Walter George, Senator and Mrs, Carter Glass, Senator and Mrs. Claude A. Swanson, Senator and Mrs. Porter H. Dale, Senator and Mrs. Felix H, Hebert, Senator and Mrs. Pat Harrison, Senator and Mrs. Lee Overman, Senator and Mrs, F. M. Simmons, Senator and Mrs, Morris Sheppard, Maj. Gen. and Mrs, Charles P, Summerall, Maj. Gen, and Mrs, Herbert B. Crosby, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. George Barnett and Sir John and Lady Broderick of British embassy, Admiral and Mrs. W. S. Benson, Ad- miral and Mrs. McCormick, Maj. and Mrs. Gist Blair, Princess Bon Com- pagne, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tuckerman, Mrs. Gibson Fahnestock, Mrs. Robert E. Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Leander Goodhart- McCormick and Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Langhorne, 1215 G St. The Original Official and Unofficial Dinners, Luncheons and Teas Listed for Society (Continued From First Page.) sador and Nobil Donna Antoinette de Martino. The dinner will be given in the Chinese room of the Mayflower, Canon and Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes :‘fll entertain at dinner tomorrow eve- ng. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Porter David- son had guests dining informally with them last evening in compliment to Mr. and Mrs, Ballard Moore of Chicago, who are visiting the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Campbell Graef. Mrs. Bates Warren was hostess at luncheon yesterday at the National ‘Woman'’s Country Club on the Bradley boulevard. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Reynolds Hitt en- tertained & company at dinner last evening. Mrs. Oscar E. Bland entertained at luncheon Friday in honor of Mrs. Harry G. Leslle, who, with the Governor of Indiana, came to Washington to attend the reception at the White House Thursday in honor of the Senate. Judge and Mrs. DeForest Paine en- tertained at dinner on Sunday at the ‘Wardman Park Hotel in honor of Mrs. Elisha Winder, mother of Mrs. Henry Winfield Watson. There were 10 in the company. Mrs. Frank T. Hines will be & lunch- eon hostess Wednesday at the my- flower following the concert to be by Miss Grace Moore, sOprano, an m Robert Goldsand, pianist. Mrs. Lawrence Sanders will entertain at luncheon on Wednesday at the May- flower following the morning concert given under the direction of Mrs, Law- rence Townsend. Mr. Charles Delmar will be host at tea this :flemoon in his a n.ix:ent in Stonel Court, enf 3 com- llmenetu to Mrs. Chisholm Beach and gzr daughter, Miss Janet Beach of New York. Mr. and Mrs. William Mann hosts to a company at dinner tdlom by dancing last even! Mrs. Hamilton Wilson entertained at a bridge luncheon on Wednesday last, at the Kenwood Golf and Country Club. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sim Lee will entertain at luncheon today at the Mayflower in compliment to Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Arthur, jr, of Win- chester, Va. Mh Edward Pitzgerald was hostess company of 35 at luncheon yester- dly at 2400 Sixteenth street, where she has an apartment for the season. Mrs. Enos Newman was hostess at luncheon yesterday at the Carlton, en- tertaining in compliment to Mrs. Sher- ward Hagerty and Miss Josephine John- son of New York, who are Villfln[ their brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Hobar. Newman, son and daughter-in- law of the hostess. Miss Johnson has recently returned Street Furrier . 00 from two years’ study in Florence, Italy. Mrs. George His will entertain in- formally at tea this afternoon for Mrs. Hagerty and Miss Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Fatrick Rooney of Dub- lin, Ireland, who are at the Mayflower, will be the guests in whose honor Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. O'Brien will enter- tain a company of 50 at a dinner dance wmomw evening at the hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Rooney are beinf enter- tained extensively during their short visit in Washin, . They were the sional Country Club_and today Mlj and Mrs. William L. Brown! are en- tertaining at dinner in their honor, Miss Louise Cunningham entertained & party of 14 at the dinner dance last evening in the fold room of the Ward- man Park Hotel. Mrs. R. Page Irving of Cathedral avenue gave a luncheon Thursday, the first of a serles. Covers were laid for 12 and the luncheon was followed by bridge. Among those present were Mrs. F. D. Richardson, Mrs. bert Gi Mrs. John Plckzu wha il & house t of Mrs. Irving. J. Hale McKillip entertained at a u- dance yuterdny afternoon in the Im court of the Mayflower, having as guests Miss Emiscah Gale Davis, Talman, Miss Elvira jorie and his sister, Miss Ruth . hers in the party were Mr. Charles W. Frame, Mr. Frederick Foley and Mr. 'x’o'mley Gamble. Among those en at dlnn!r the Thlr“:mnh‘ dance m.wm.mnen Friday night, Febru- Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Mer- rma ' l!ehn in honor of Gen. John .1 Pershing; Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Ewing Col, and Mrs. Willlam N. Ehlm, Maj. lnd Mrs. J. Hununfinn Courtland Nixon and )nj lnd m Howard C. David- son. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Seitz of Lowell street entertained at bridge last eve- ning, their {ym belnl Mr. lnd Mrs, Alexander Yereanc Dr. and Mrs, Frank W. Ballou, . and Mrs, Arthur C. Christle, and Mrs. , Dean ‘W. Woods and Col. and Mrs, Charles R. Stark. Mrs. Samuel A, Syn syme will entertain at bridge tomorrow in honor of Mrs. Le Roy Miller of Indianapolis, formerly Miss Marion Booth, daughter ot Chiet Justice and Mrs. Fenton Booth. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Wheeler entertained at the dinner dance last evemns‘ln the gold room of the Ward- k Hotel in honor of their Mrs. Wilson Guest Tuesday Night at Stratford Dinner Mrs. Charles D. - Lanier, Originator of Movement to Save Famous Hall, Will Be Present. Mrs, Woodrow Wilson will be an | honor guest at the brillant Stratford | dinner, which is to take place Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the Willard Hotel under the auspices of the Robert E. Lee Memorial Foundation of the District_of Columbia, of which Mrs. Joseph E. Washington is director, The local committee is to be especially hon- ored too in the presence at the dinner of Mrs. Charles D, Lanier, originator of the movement to save Stratford Hall in Westmoreland County, Virginia, as a national shrine and recently elected life president of the national founda- tion. Mrs. Lanier has a strongly patri- otic background in her family ancestry. She comes of the North Carolina Alex- ander family which gave six signers to the Mecklenburg Declaration of Inde- pendence, and which is prominently identified also with the history of Louisville, Ky., and Nashville, Tenn., as is the Field family, from which she also springs. Her husband, Charles D. Lanier, is the son of the Southern poet, Sidney Lanier. They have made their home for many_ years in Greenwich, Conn,, and Mrs. Lanier will come on to Washington from that city especially HARRIS. & EWING® Miss Jessie Waldo of Chicago -.nd ‘Miss Shirley Buckley of Boston. were eight in the company. Miss Waldo and Miss Buckley Wwho have been passing a short time with Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler at the hotel will return this evening to Randolph- » | Macon College where '-ht!y are students. Prof. R. D. Torreson was host to a party of 10 at the dinner dance at the Wardman Park Hotel last evening. Trinity College Dance At Carlton February 26 ‘The Washington Club of Trinity Col- lege will give its annual Spring dance on Wednesday, Carlton Hmcl"° iy e been engaged to p! dancing, from 10 to 1 o'clock. Miss Florence O’Donoghue, heads the floor committee. sisted by Miss Katherine Julla O'Donnell Miss Miss Katherine Redman an¢ ent, e s as- ‘Welch, Miss Blggs, Miss Mar- garet O’Donnell. Mme. Bruni Hostess to Members of Pen League Mme. T. A. Bruni will entertain the members of the Chevy Chase branch of the Natlonal League of American Pen ‘Women and their husbands at her home tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Representative Maurice Thatcher of Kenmck former governor of Panama, ress the members and show movln[ pictures of Panama and well known W: isy B. ‘who will recite some of her own poems; tunning pring Emphasizing pparel costumes for early Mr. Fred mlle, who will render a monologue, and Mme. Leone of New York and Paris, a pupll of Jean de Reske, who will sing. A short business meeting will precede the entertainment. branch headed by the Jesse W. Nicholson, guests with Mme, Bruni. ‘The officers of the resident, receive the Mrs. for the Stratford dinner. Miss Ethel Armes, national executive secretary of the foundation, will also be a guest at the dinner. She has come to Washington from a stay of some days at Stratford and is the guest of Senator and Mrs. Harry B. Hawes. Although her family has been identified for some generations with official life in Wash- ington Miss Armes’ home has been in Birmingham, Ala., and she is now a resident of Greenwich, Conn. Her mother’s father, John Bozman Kerr, was & member of Congress from Maryland, and charge d'affaires of Central America; and her father, John Leeds Kerr, was in Congress from Maryland for 26 years. She is the dnu[hur of the late Col. and Mrs. George A. Armes (Lucy H. Kerr). Mrs. Hawes, with whom Miss Armes is staying while in Washington on work for the foundation, has been identified with the Stratford move- ment since its inception, and is one of those whose name appears on the cer- tificate of Incorporation for the na- tional Robert E. Lee Memorial Founda- tion. She is a member of the national board of directors, chairman of the committee on management and em- ployment for Stratford and also chair- man of the committee on temporary repairs, positions that bring her into almost daily contact with affairs om the estate. She is actively interested in the movement to preserve Stratford both here in Washington and through- out the country and has taken a table for the dinner of Tuesday night. An unusually interesting feature of the dinner is the number of State and patriotic societies that have taken ta- bles for the event. They will be cen- ters of attention, as they will be gay with the flags of the various States and organizations represented. The list, with the hosts and hostesses for each_of these tnblu. includes: South- ern Soclety, M yd Byars, presi- dent; United Dmuhun of the Con- federacy, Mrs. Lucy H. Boggs; Canmu- g:re g(‘lt:lhezl:nury Chapter, U. 3., TS, e Clare Berry Mary] ble, Mr. Thomas Sim Lee; Dixie and Hilary Herbert Chapters, U. D, C., Mrs, R. L. Ettenger, regent of Dixie Chlp- ter; Kentucky State Soclety, Lieut. Col. Allen W. Gullion, 3 chusetts table, Mrs. L’Enfant Chapter, D. bert N. Baggs; Henry St. Geo resentative Tucker of John dent; California State Boclety. Maj. Charles W. Freeman, president; South Dakota State Soclety, Mr. Isaac_Pearson; Colonial Dames, Mrs. Everard R. Todd; Society of Colonial ‘Wars, Mr. Caleb C. Magruder, gover nor; Sons of the American Revoluuon. Mr, Willlam Knowles Cooper, presi- dent dellmh. Georgia table, Senator William J. Harris; m of the Revo- Dr. Thomas h the nlo or ubl- and seats has been very large, some excellent reservations may still be made at the headquarters of the foundation, Room 121, Willard Hflfiel lution, Al FINAL REDUCTION SALE A ART NOW GR OUP OF SEVENTY CRAFT REDUCED STYLES TO0 85 Formerly to 1 ALL sizes are included in this final sale group of nine eighty-five but not in every style . . . a The Final Cut Is Now Made! Buy your Fur Coat NOW— divide the cost into TEN BUD- GET PAYMENTS. The First Showing of FOX SCARFS for Spring 1930 —is on, and the prices would do justice to a CLOSING OUT SALE. spring wear here and apparel in pastel shades and Summer ma- terials for southern wear. An early review will reveal the subtle style changes . .. In line and detall. FUR COATS Y and LESS KAPLOWITZ BROJ. INCORPORATED APPAREL SPECIALISTS THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN E AND P ADVANCE SPRING FASHIONS for IMMEDIATE WEAR FALL DRESSE/S ... COATY ... 14 Off] JUNIOR MISSES® WOMEN'S MISSES rere opportunity to obtain the most important shoe fashions . . . in all leathers . . . all colours all heels . . . at drastic reductions. Washington, b. C. izik Brothers

Other pages from this issue: