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B2 50 CIETY. SOCIETY Ambassador of Turkey and Members of Embassy Staff Guests at Luncheon Yesterday at Rossdhu. in whose honor Capt. and Mrs. C. C. Calhoun entertained a company of 20 at luncheon yesterday at their country place, Rossdhu. Among the guests were the counselor of the embassy and Mrs. Afife A. Bec! and Mr. Huntington + Turner, son of Mrs. James Huntington Turner. Mr. Turner will sail Thursday for Turkey to ~stablish a hospital in the interior of the country, for which @ large bequest has been made to a New York bank which Mr. Turner Tepresents. Capt. and Mrs. Calhoun entertained at a round table tea, at which Senator Thomas J. Walsh was the honor guest. THE Ambassador of Turkey, Mr. Ahmet Muhart, was the guest Informal Entertainment at Czechoslovakian Legation. The Minister of Czechoslovakia and Mme. Veverka will entertain informally at dinner this evening. Representative Ruth Bryan Owen Te- turned to the Capital this morning from New York, where she spoke last eve- ning at the \ashington Square Metho- dist Church. Mrs. Borah, wife of Senator Willlam E. Borah, and their house guest, Mrs. Jerome Day of Wallace, Idaho, will leave Washington tomorrow for New York and will sail the following day on the Mauretania for Europe. They will spend some time in France, Italy, Eng- land and Germany. Mrs. Vandenberg, wife of Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, will be at home ‘Thursday afternaon and again Thurs- day, April 24, at her apartment at 2400 Sixteenth street. Mrs. Bingham, wife of Senator Hiram Bingham, and their sons are spending some time at the Homestead, at Hot Springs. Miss Bessle Hoover is also with Mrs. Bingham. Mrs. Longworth, wife of the Speaker of the House, will go to Chicago today to be with Representative Ruth Hanna McCormick until the end of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Denegre will entertain a company of 16 at dinner tomorrow evening. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Belmont are again in their house on New Hampshire ave- nue after a brief stay in Newport, where they made arrangements to open Bel- So;m, their Summer home, early in uly. Princess Margaret Boncompagni has | returned to New York, after making a | visit at Hopedale, Mass. ‘The retiring first secretary of the! Italian embassy, Signor Leonardo Vitetti, is in New York at the Ritz-Carlton prepatory to his sailing tomorrow on the Roma for Italy. Mr. and Mrs. Copley Amory will close their Washington home the end of this week and go to St. Paul to be with their son-in-law and daughter, Lieut. Douglas P. Smith, U. S. A., and Mrs. Smith, at Fort Snelling, Minn. Mrs. Smith was before her marriage at Wal- pole, N. H., last September, Miss Kath- arine Amory. Later in the year Mr. and Mrs. Amory will go to their Sum- mer home on Matamik River, in the Province of Quebec. Miss Sue Pollard, daughter and hostess of Gov. John Garland Pollard of Virginia, was a dinner guest at Ward- man Park Hotel Saturday evening. Others in the party were Mrs. Cyrus Young of Lexington, Va.; Miss Wanda Webb. Mr. William S. Hoge, 3d; Mr. J. Wiliam Sommerville, Mr. Charle® Pollard and Mr. Andrew D. Sharpe. Lieut. Stirling Smith, U. 8. N., and Mrs. Smith will come to Washington to visit the former’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Enos Newman, before go- ing to Annapolis, where Lieut. Smith has been transferred for duty from Coronado Beach, Calif. Mrs. Smith was, before her marriage in Nice two years ago, Miss Thelma Lister, daugh- ter of a retired English banker now living in Nice. Lieut. and Mrs. Smith will go to Annapolis the first of July. Mrs. Newman has returned from a month visit in the South and has as her guest Mrs. Lawrence Washington of Virginia. Miss Marie McIntyre, daughter of Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Frank McIntyre, has gone to Montgomery, Ala., for a six-week visit. Mrs. Charles Macon Wallingsford en- tertained at a luncheon-bridge this afternoon. Mrs. Henry Price Wright and Mrs. James Carroll Frazer had luncheon at the Annapolis Roads Club Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blake Dewey of Chicago, have returned to Washington from Palm Beach and will be guests at the Mayflower until the early part of May. They will spend the Summer in Europe, sailing from New York on May 17 for Ganrs and later in the season will go to Switzerland. Their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blake Dewey, jr, are making the trip with them as is also Mrs. Alberta Lynn of Cadiz, Ohio, niece of Mr. Dewey, sr. Among those entertaining at the din- ner dance at the Annapolis Roads Club Saturday evening were Capt. and Mrs. J. H. Newton, Comdr. and Mrs. John B. Pollard and Lieut. Comdr. Richard Knight. Mrs. Huse Was Hostess at Informal Tea Yesterday. Mrs. Huse, wife of Admiral Harry P. Huse, entertained a small company in- formally at tea yesterday afternoon at the National Women’s Country Club in compliment to Mr. and Mrs. van den Bosch of Baarn, Holland, who are here for the Spring season. Admiral Huse was also in the company. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Davies will sail today for this country after spend- PIANOS TO RENT $5 Per Month DE MOLL’S ;"2 ing several months in Europe and mak- ing a trip to Egypt. e Lortz arrived in Wash- Mrs. Rosali ington Saturday to visit her son-inf-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGION, D. C., MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1930. Monana, through Mrs. Burton K. ‘Wheeler; Colorado, through Mrs. Charles W. Waterman; u-: Island, through Mrs. An’m Jones; New York Cun through Miss Lilian Otto; Vir- , through Miss Anita Shade; entucky, through - Mrs. svgefr Shirley; Hyattsville, Md., through Mrs. Yeough Mre: Florence: Shaienberaet; ugl . Florence allen! Paris, France, through Mrs. e Franklin; Washington, D. C., through Mrs, D. L. Pitcher, Mrs. John Fry and gly. to the Liberty nticello celebration Cheste tion headquarters, avenue. Dr. Ethel G. Peirce of Bryn Mawr College is at the Dodge Hotel companied by her young nephews, MRS. WILSON COMPTON, Chairman of committee sponsoring Mrs. Charles Wood's travel talk, “Rediscover- ing Corsica,” to be given at the Y. W. C. A. this evening. Cosby, at their home, 3203 Adams Mill road. Mrs. Lortz arrived from her home in Memphis, accompanied by Mrs. Roy Noe, who is also the guest of Mr. | and Mrs. Cosby. Mrs. Lortz and Mrs. Noe will return to Tennessee Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Heber Curtis and their son, Mr. Malcolm Curtis, who have been | passing a week at the Wardman Park Hotel, left yesterday for Detroit, where | their ‘son attends school. They will go from there to their home in Grand Rapids, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis and their son have been entertained a great deal during their stay in Wash- ington. Mrs, Clarence C. Dill h¥ been given & large hostess cake, three by four feet in dimensions, which is to be a feature 1, sponsored by the be held at the ‘Willard on April 11. Enthused by this donation many ladies have offered to have their States represented in this way. - Louisianna, through Mrs. d! Broussard; George Peirce, jr., and James Girdwood Peirce. The annual theater benefit of the Teachers' Union will be given tomor- row evening at the National. A large committee, of which Mrs. M. M. Glea- son is chairman, has worked enthusi- astically to make the affair a success. Members of this committee include Miss Irma McCauley, Miss Carrie Shipley. Miss Kate Hobgood, Miss W. B. Moses & Sons Public Confidence Since 1861 Irene Banderson, Mrs. Annie Trenis n Seyfried, Mrs. Nan- Grace Janney, Mrs, Mildred Eichner, iss Maud Burklin, Miss Lynch, Miss Margaret Lockwood, Miss Anna La Porte, Miss May Marsden and Miss Mabel Kennedy. Miss Mary Dent is president. Mrs. Lewis Washington, New York City, has returned to the Hotel Graf- ton and will remain for a month or six weeks. Mr. and Mrs. William Edgar Moon Mask and Wig Club Sponsored by Notables. Box parties and theater partles, in. cluding in their company many tinguis! ‘Washington men and wo en and the entire local alumni body of the University of Pennsylvania, will characterize the single performance of the 1930 Mask and Wig_Show, “John Faust, Ph. D.” at the Belasco Thea- ter Friday night of this week, April 11. Senator Lawrence C. Phipps is among the prominent men in official life who ave taken boxes for the annual event, and Mr. Warren F. Martin will have a large box y of well known Gov- ernment officlals and others in the so- cial life of the Capital City. A very large p! on of the boxes for Fri- day night have alrea been taken, and the demand for tickets is heavier than ever before for a Mask and Wig Show in this city. Among those who will attend the per- formance are: Miss Laura Harlan, Admiral Hutchinson Cone, Maj. and Mrs. Charles F.r‘zflmn, Maj. ertdflfiwz, M 3 James A. Stokely, Mr. John 8, Bix- ler, Mr. W. F. Brenizer, Dr. M. 3 . M. W, Perry, Dr. Willlam F. Burdick and | M other members of the District of Co- lumbia Alumni Association of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. The lfier!ormnea here on Priday night will be preceded by countless din- ner parties to be given by Washington hostesses at which the various mem- bers of the big cast and company of 90 €Y | men will be the guests of honor, Announcement is made by Mr. Frank Frost, president of the National Sym- phony Orchesura, of those who have taken boxes for the third concert of the National S8ymphony which will be given at Constitution Hall on Tuesday afternoon, April 8, at 4:45 o'clock, unt der the management of Mrs. Wilson- Greene, Mr. Hans Kindler, celebrated concert cellist and conductor, will con- duct the concert. The boxholders in- clude Mrs. H. H. Barton, ir.; Miss Alice Clapp, Mrs. Franklin Ellis, Mrs, Ray- THE COLLIER INN, Inc. Columbia Rd. at 18th St. N.W. RY our delicious Chicken Salad for your next Home Party— also Sandwiches, Ice Cream and Pastries—a complete and satis- fying catering service—sure to please you. Columbia 5042 The Coat Lining Matches the Frock ... and gives a decidedly French air to this jacket trock of printed chiffon with georgette coat . . . caped, bowed and sleeveless ! The frock, printed in a tiny, exotic flower design, has a yoke ot Alencon sleeves. design lace and wee short @ An exclusive Madelon model for women, modestly priced at $39.50, sizes 36 to 42. ‘Weomen's Dress Shop, Second Floor JELLEFF'S F STREET ELIZABETH ARDEN cersonly recommends these preparations for the care of your skin at home. for Cleansing VENETIAN CLEANSING CREAM ... melts into pores, remqves dust and impurities, leaves skin solt and receptive, $1, $2, $3, $6 for Toning VENETIAN ARDENA SKIN TONIC...tones, firms, and whitens, after Cleansing Cream. 85c, $2, $3.75 for Nourishing Silk and Wool Knitted Suits—just arrived. . Printed Chiffons. F Street at Eleventh To Be Correctly Dressed This Spring You Must Possess a Swagger Tailored Suit Short-jacket styles predominate, 529.75 for, if you want to.look 1930-ish, jackets grow shorter as skirts grow longer. Suits for sport, dress or travel. $98.50 ‘The Apparel 8hop, Second Floor DULIN & MARTIN FLORENCE ALLEN COB “Interior Decoration” MRS. Florence Allen Coe, Staff Representative of the Women’s Radio Institute as spon- sored by Comgoleum-Nairn, Inc., manufacturers of Sealex Linoleum and Gold Seal Congoleum, will appear in our Domestic Rug Section TO- MORROW AFTERNOON-—2:30 to 4:30. Tune in on WMAL at 11:30 A. M. Tuesdsy morning to hear her broadcast Domestic Floor Coverings INLAID LINOLEUMS in 75 of the newest Spring creations at unusually low prices, §1.75 to §3 sq. yd. BROADLOOM CARPETS, 9 and 12 ft. widths, in green, rose, gray taupe and rose taupe. ordinary values at $5.50 sq. yd. DUuULIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. and L PARKING SERVICE—Connecticut A 9 AM. to 6 PM. Entrance ARDENA VELVA CREAM...smooths and soltens the skin without fattening. $7,$2,$3,36 for Tightening VENETIAN SPECIAL ASTRINGENT... for for flaccid cheeks and neck. $2.25 and $4 At all times a complete stock of Arden preparations in our Arden section. Make this your down-town Arden shop! JELLEFF'S F STREET 'WooDWARD & LoTHROP (isso ¢ L) LN Agnes says: “Every Daytime Dress Needs Two Hats” T is a well-known fact that the hat is gener- ally instrumental in making the formality or informality of the daytime costume. For instance, “4e turban wider at the sides is more formal than a brimmed hat and, because of this, a general daytime frock worn with a wider-at- the-side turban becomes more formal because of it. The brimmed hat makes this same dress less formal. HEREFORE, Agnes suggests that one’s general daytime frocks have both turbans and brimmed hats to go with them — thus changing their degree of formality when one changes their hats. AND the Woodward & Lothrop Millinery Salon offers the smartest of turbans and brimmed hats. If one is to be chic, it is merely a question of choosing— Salon Hats, $15 to $30 MILLINERY SALON, THIRD FLOOR. mond Lee, Mrs, Frank Frost, Mrs. Ed- win B. Parker, the Polish Minister, Mrs. Adolph C. Miller, Mrs. James G. West, Mrs. Duncan Phillips, Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart, Mrs. Walter Bruce Howe, Mrs. Christian Heurich, Mrs. W. B, Cutting, Mr. H. Barrett Learned, Eugene Meyer, Mrs, L. Corrin Strong, Mrs. James Wentz, Mrs, Avery Coonley, California Federation of Music Clubs, New York Federation of Music Clubs, and the Ohio Federation of Music Clubs. The patronesses of the concert are Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, Mrs. Law- vence Townsend, Mrs, 8ol Bloom, Mrs. Hiram Bingham, Mrs. Raymond E. Lee, %‘:fi.‘.‘g“fi?.“"n.;;‘.’é“cam’f.’." Mrs, Ié i' A 5 . Cal- deron Carlisle, Miss Grace D. Guest, Representative Ruth Pratt, Mrs.' James G. Wentz, Mrs, Richard 8. Aldrich, Mrs, L. W. Douglas, Mrs. F. Trubee Mrs. Harlan F. Stone, Massey, Mrs. John Phili) . Robert Lansing, Mrs. David 8. Ingalls, Mrs. Carl A. Droop, Mrs. Christian Heurich, Mrs. Overton Lea, Mrs, Ed- (Continued on Third Page. We Sell Fabrics By the Yar(! MeDevitt is the o de tor Wi &0 ° McDEVITT 1202 G St. N.W. District 3211 3 Floors _ Elevator Service SUSDDPDDBLPDS By Public Request Another Free Course of Ten Lectures By Nejib Hekimian “Truth About Oriental Rugs” Tomorrow and Every Tuesday at 8:30 P.M. 1226 Conn. Ave. Courtesy of NAZARIAN & -HEKIMIAN, INC. AT oo o wardrobe. SOCIETY SPRING FASHIONS AT BROOKS’ COATS Artfully Designed for WOMEN 36 to 44 ‘ The coat sketched is typical of the sophisticated models we are featuring for women. It is of crepey wool with a deep cape and softly flattering collar of natural grey squirrel. $59.75. Other coats for women from $25 to $89.75. Second Floor—Coats M-Brooks-Co N TR & 12TH_.. JELLEFF’S - TOWORROW iSeee Jonior Leacue Day —when the Junlor League takes over our store—with more than sixty of its members acting as saleswomen and official hostesses for the day. As an appreciation for their services, we shall give them a percentage of the day’s gross sales which they will use for social service work at the Children’s Hospital. Lovely new clothes have arrived. Spring is here—let these smart young women help plan your COMMITTEE ON HOSTESSES Mrs. Sidney Thomas, Chairman Mrs. Matthew Dick M, C. C. Glover, Jr. Mrs' Patrick Hurley M. Ciaude Branch Mrs. Williem Ritter M. Blaise de Sibour Mrs, Walter Chappell Mrs. Lewis Dougles Mn. Howland Chate, 3d M. Trubse Davison Mrs. Dean Acheson Mrs. Smith Hempstone Mrs. Rober’ Ransdell Miss Katherine Dunlop Mrs. Albert Lucas COMMITTEE ON MODELS Miss Charlotte Childress, Chairmen mn. jMnnh-ll Marston Miss Laura Tuckerman Du B Miss Dorothes Mot eine Mallan Mist Lorands Prochnik COMMITTEE ON SALESWOMEN Miss Elise Alexander, Chairmen Mrs. Francis Winslow M. Claude iss Taylor Logle Miss Katherine Martin Miss Elizabeth Brawne Miss Dorothy L. Hill Miss Emily Ecke: Miss Bettie l!nwcll Mrs. H. L Rust Jr. Miss Rosalind Wright Mis: R Miss Alice Rice Mrs. WinslowVanDevan ¢ Mrs. Charles Wilson Mrs. Garland Fulton M. Lloyd Hemison Mrs. Arthur Lambert Mrs. Nathen Scot Miss Elsie Eckengren Block Mrs Louis A thur Miss Nancy Hawkins Miss Frances Wall Mrs. H 3 m Mrs. E.more C.op Miss Rebecea Dnlkn Miss Eleano- Pieston Miss Anna Jayne Miss Priscilla Parker Mrs, Eberhart Haynes Mrs. Richard Dunn M. C. S, Bake: Mrs. Gera'd Linke