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SOCIETY (Continued From Second Pags.) Foreign Service, Georgetown Univer- sity; Dr. and Mrs. Fay Cooper Cole ot Chicago University; Dr. and Mrs. Wedel of Carleton College; Dr. Kathryn Mc- Hale, acting director and educational secretary of the American Association | ©f University Women. | In his very comprehensive talk on | Chile Dr. Davila said that in education a5 well as in many other fields Chile | i8 most progressive. Her schools are ‘under government control, and it is pos- sible for a student to go from primary grades through a university course at | Ppractically no personal expense. . Re- cent legislation makes the study of | English compulsory in all schools. | Mrs. B. Scott Young is sailing on the steamship Ecuador for Venezuela, where | &he will visit her cousins, Col. and Mrs | Hamilton Hardy Schuyler, later join- | ing the ship and cruising through the | Panama Canal, stopping at San Salva- | dor for a brief visit before going into | old Mexico. From Mexico she will go tfl‘ California and Seattle by water. Mrs. Young will not return to her apart- ment, in the Roosevelt, until Summer. | Mr. and Mrs. Paul Steintorf have ar- rived here from Tokio. Japan, and have taken a furnished suite at the Potomac | Park Apartments. Mr. Steintorf is one | of the foreign representatives of the Department of Commerce. Mrs. C. R. Caldwell of Staunton, a guest at the Willard over the week end, entertained at luncheon in the crystal room at the Willard yesterday. | Mrs. Fulton Lewis has issued cards for an at home Saturday, February 23, | from 4 to 7 o'clock. at her residence, 1669 Thirty-first street northwest. The marriage of Miss Elizabeth | Homaselle Talley, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Claiborne M. Talley of Del Ray. Va, to Mr. Linwood Baker McCloud of Washington, son of Mrs. Guy M.| Snyder of Portsmouth, Va., took place = Saturday evening. The ceremony. was | performed in the Del Ray Baptist| Church, the Rev. Dr. John Sowers offi- | ciating. at 8:30 o'clock. The bride wore a gown of white satin fashioned on long lines, the skirt made | long and with a train. Her tulle veil was ingly arranged and held by clusters of orange blossoms, and she carried a shower bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Helen Miller of Waskington was maid of honor and had a gvwn of lav- ender taffeta made full and long, a yellow hat and slippers and carried vellow roses. Young George V. La- Bonte, jr., of Staunton, Va., was ring * bearer and had a suit of black velvet with which he wore a white silk blouse. Mr. Theodore McCloud of Norfolk, cousin of the bridegroom, was best man and the ushers included Mr. George V. 1a Bonte of Staunton, Mr. T. A. ‘Wilkinson of Del Ray and Mr. N. E. Gay and Mr. J. D. Edwards of Wash- Mr. and Mrs. Talley gave a reception | for the members of the wedding party, | out-of-town guests and relatives of the i two families preceding the ceremony, entertaining in their home in Del Ray. Among the out-of-town guests were: 14r. and Mrs. Guy M. Snyder, the latter the mother of the bridegroom; Mr. and | Mrs. John Coleman, Mr. Clarence Snyder and Mr. Clyde Campbell of Portsmouth, Mr. andMrs. Moxley and their daughter of Cumberland,” Md.; Mrs. George V. La Bonte of Staunton and Mr. T. T. Messengile, jr., of Nor- folk. Miss Mary Boles of Los Angeles is spending the week with her uncle and aunt, Dr. and Mrs. Waldemar T. Schal- ler, at 1637 R street. Miss Boles formerly lived in Washingto: graduate of the Visitation Convent and of St. Paul's Academy, and since leaving has made a name for her- self as a dancer. Mrs. Peter Drury Tea for n and is a | ! E E I RETURNS FROM VISIT l THE MISS SALLY NORWOOD FERGUSON, Daughter of Mr. G. S. Ferguson, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. who has returned after attending the Winter carnival at Dartmouth College. ~—Harris & Ewing Photo. on February 28 and March 1 at Me- | Kinley Auditorium. Among Mrs. Drury's guests on Pri- | day afternoon will be members.of the Community Drama Guild of Washing- ton, the board of governors, the Guild | committees and the cast of Washington | players who will appear in the play. Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Henry will | have as their guests at the annual cos- | tume ball of the Kentucky Society at the | Mayflower on Tuesday, February 25, | Senator Arthur Capper, Col. D. L. Stone, | Col. F. E. Johnston, Capt. and Mrs. John M. Weir, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hillyer, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Fowler, Miss Mona Gill and Miss Prue Mason of Frank- fort, Ky. Mrs. E. A. Harriman, president of the League of Republican Women, will be | || LIP COVER(Q| Our “made to-your specifications” Slip Covers add charm and distinc- tiveness to your furniture. 1202 G & McDEVITT:% ioors—E; | Distriet 3211 Quality Supreme | Packed where they are grown. Size | and quality to suit every taste and pur- | pose. Can Doz Community Drama Guild. Mrs. Peter A. Drury will entertain at | tes at her home, on Rhode Island ave- | nue, next Friday afternoon, February 21, from 4:30 to 6:30 o'clock, in_honor | of Miss Alma Kruger of New York City. | who is in the city as guest of | the forthcoming Drama Guild produc- | tion of “The Honeymoon,” to be given ' MAGRUDER Inc. | Best Grocerles Conn. Ave., M and 18th Sts. Phone Decatur 4180 A FASHION INST/' N SEET Established 1875 | I at home to members of the league on Wednesday, February 26, from 4 to 6 o(‘cluék at her residence, 1302 Eighteenth street. Mrs. E. Luhrs of North Bergen, N. J.. and Waner of Staten Isiand, N. ed on Sixth Page.) PIANOS TO RENT $5 Per Month DE MOLL’S 1 Luxurious Transportation New York and Paris Salon Cars on display Monday, Feb. 17th, lo ' Thursday, Feb. 20th, Evenings Until Ten PACKARD Conn. Ave. at S It’s a Sporting K’Iode Blouses, $10.50 Silk pique in the feminine manner, featuring in the group crepes, satins with frills, jabots, tuckings. White, eggshell, pastels. Sizes 34 to 42, Other New Blouses, $3.95 10 $25. Skirts, $5.90 The separate skirt is im- portant in covert cloth with pleats back and front. Green, navy, brown, black. Others in flannel, wool crepes in new col- ors. Sports things go anywhere, smartly and comfortably at home for all daytime wear. Knitted suits, separate skirts, correct blouses or sweaters. Under topcoats, now . . . Ready for the weather and occasions of Spring. Left; French spun zephyr and rayon in a jacquard weave. Two-piece, very new with vestee attached to the bodice top skirt, Cardigan jacket. Silky sports outfit in blue, green, beige, oxford, $29.50 Right; Glen Bogie, the knit- ted mode of the moment. One-piece frock . . . guaran- teed not to stretch, wrinkle or sag. In wanted Spring shades. Always the same moderate price . . . it's ex- clusive at Jelleff's . . , ST 4@1@ Sweaters $9.95 Always delightfully useful with ~sports suits or the new separate skirt. Tai- // lored ones or smart jac- quards in V neck styles. Colorful in new blues, red, green, orange, beige. Sizes 34 to 42, The Sports Shop, Fourth Floor. Noah Beery “Much Better.” LOS ANGELES, FEBRUARY 17 (P). —Noah Berry, film actor, was reported ANNOUNCEMENT Provident people who wait for our Annual Clearance Sale never fail to take advantage of the 25% bona fide reductions made on this huge Rug Stock. They know it to be the representative rug stock of Washington. it is large, varied and clean. it bears the authentic names. it is not gotten together for a sale. it is as represented. it is the best a rug firm can get together. it is sold all year at absolutely “one price to all system,” with plain marked prices. it includes Semi-Antique and Modern rugs of merit only. went an operation last Wednesday night, They know They know They know They know They know They know They know (Antique rugs over hundred years old excluded.) Only reduced once a year to close out the rugs that have been in stock the year. You too, will become a regular Nazarian & Hekimian, ~- “Largest Oriental Rug House of Washington” 1226 Connecticut Avenue NOTE—Instructive free lectures on “The Truth About Oriental Rugs” every Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. VENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. O, MONDAY, FEBRUARY I7, 1930, at the Hollywood Hospital to be “much better” yesterday, % actor under- for acute appendictis of REDFERN FOUNDATION GARMENTS Miss Killoran, Associate Designer of Redfern Foundation Garments, will be with us in our rset Department this week. She is a Specialist in solving figure problems—and will be delighted to help you select the correct foundation for your type of figure. With the new figure re- vealing frocks of today, it is essential for every woman who wishes to ap- pear to advantage to have the correct foundation for each type of gown, be it the informal sport frock, the street tailleur, the for- mal afternoon frock or the decollette evening gown. Style Shown Is Priced at $12.50 We have a large selection of these smart and populer ger- ments on hand—models for every type of figure. Plan a visit to our Corset Department today! The woman of wday values expers beansy care. Why every woman who values beauty needs the services and advice of a Professional Beauty Expert URING recent years, beauty sci- ence has been so highly devel- oped by the experts in this compara- tively new profession that every woman can now make the most of her natural loveliness. Laboratories are wotkrooms for re- search. Schools of beauty culture have been developed to teach workers not only the methods of pefecting external beauty but also laws affect- ing good health. Today~to add that finish, that perfection of grooming which distinguishes the truly fastidious woman from her less particular sisters—a certain professional touch is needed. The deft, well- trained, skilful touch of the beauty expert. Since Cleopatra’s time The quest for beauty is not new. Neither is the science of beauty culture. Both began when his- tory began. But in more recent years we have had greater leisure, more time for perfecting our- selves, less need for the crude, hearty makeshifts of pioneer days. And we have tutned, naturally enough, to those whose experience qualifies them to help us—the beauty specialists. Your beauty expert applies, to your individual Modern beauty culture has been making tremendous strides—today, it has become a science practiced by specialists whose sole task is to safeguard and accent beauty. ~you will seek out experts to hel prowte“cz and revitalize your good lookz And it is therefore particularly in- teresting that more than 19,800 of these experts today recommend Palm- olive Soap. What a remarkable eribute to ‘the purity, the blandness, the deli- cacy of this vefoeuble oil soap. . .which is based on an age-old formula combining palm and olive oils for beauty cleansing! An aid to your beauty expert Palmolive does not~not would any one claim that it did-make all other beauty care unnecessary. It aids your, beauty specialist by providing the finest natural skin cleanser, the greatest day-in- and-day-out safeguard for facial beauty. Its thotr- ough, gentle cleansing, of course, makes the .work of the beauty specialist easier. And it is, for the same reason, an ideal bath soap. That is one of many reasons why 19,813 world-famous beauty ammmmmeud iteoe why they unite to urge * ion, dunfing.:y one means and one means only~the twice daily use of Palmolive Soap.” This advertisement is published in the in- terests of lovelier complexions and the furthes- ance of the beauty profession by the Colgate- Palmolive-Peet Co. case, the methods best suited to bring out your own natural loveliness. Go to Paris, home of beauty in all its forms; or to Rome, Madrid, London, Betlin, Budapest, Vienna! Wherever you travel— cither here in the United States or abroad