Evening Star Newspaper, April 18, 1930, Page 16

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B—2 SOCIETY. SOCIETY| Ambassador of Germany, Accompanied by Frau von Prittwitz Has Gone to Greenbriar for Fortnight. have gone to White Sulphur | Springs and will be at the Greenbrier for a fortnight. | HE Ambassador of Germany and | Frau von Prittwitz und Gaffron | Lady Lindsay, wife of the Ambassador of Great Britain, went to New York today and will be the guest of Mrs. Bayard Cutting, mother of Senator Bronson Cutting, in her New York home for & week or 10 days. The Am- bassador will go to New York Tuesday to join Lady Lindsay as the guest of Mrs. Cutting. Mrs. Hurley Hostess To D. A. R. Delegates. Mrs. Hurley, wife of the Secretary of | ‘War, was hostess yesterday afternoon at | tea, entertaining the members of the delegation from Oklahoma to the Con- gress of the N. S. D. A, R. The Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur were the guests in whose honor Representative and Mrs Joe Crail entertained at dinner last eve- | ning in the presidential dining room | of the Mayflower, where Representative | and Mrs. Crail and Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur make their homes in Washing- | ton. Others in the dinner company were | Senator and Mrs. Henry J. Allen, Rep- | resentative John Q. Tiison, Republican | floor leader; Representative and Mrs. Clarence Lea, Representative and | . Harry C. Ransley, Representative | and Mrs. Henry E. Barbour, Represent- ative and Mrs. Arthur M. Free, Rep- resentative and Mrs. Philip D. Swing, Representative and Mrs. Sol Bloom and Miss Vera Bloom, Representative Flor- ence P. Kahn, Representative and Mrs. | Albert E. Carter, Representative and Mrs. Harry L. Englebright, Representa- tive and Mrs. W. E. Evans, Representa- tive Pranklin F. Korrell, Commissioner of the Farm Board and Mrs. C. C Teague, Mr, and Mrs. Robert B. Arm- strong, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Dodds, Mr and Mrs. Arthur Hachten, | California delegates attending the | thirty-seventh Continental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revo- lution were also guests and included | Mrs. Theodore Hoover of Palo Alto, sister-in-law of the President; Mrs, Prederick Grundum of Sacramento, | Mrs. Albert J. Hart of San Francisco, | Mrs, Charles B. Boothe of South Pasa- dena, Miss Elizabeth Ransley, who is the youngest D. A. R. regent in Amer-~ ica, and the following from Los Angeles Mrs. Lyman Stookie, Mrs. C. H. Par- sons, Mrs. George McCoy, Mrs. Cassius C. Cottle and Miss Fannie Adams. ‘The Persian Minister, Mirza Davoud Khan Meftah, entertained a small com- luncheon at the Carlton | Senator and Mrs, Felix Hebert will be | joined in their apartment at the Ward- man Park Hotel tomorrow by their son. Mr. Adrien Hebert. who will come from | Providence, and Mr. and Mrs. A. Bonin of Woonsocket, R. I, who will also pass Easter with them. The Rev. M. Hebert | will arrive Monday to spend a snort | time with his brother and sister-in-law. | The Rev. Mr. Hebert is pastor of the parish of St. Oecilia at Pawtucket, R. I. Mrs. James E. Watson, wife of Sena- tor Watson of Indiana, left Washing- ton today for a trip by motor to her former home in that State, accompanied by Mrs. John Mock of this city. THE APPROVAL of FASHION IS ACCORDED TO FOXES Rosendorf Rosendorf “grade”—Rosendorf Prices defy competition. Two Great Groups— Red, Pointed, Brown, Cross and Beige FOXES of the $55.00 Grade 1215 G St. - Katkas .F AT TENTH Distinctive Apparel Moderately Priced Just in Time for Easter! A Sale of New “Summery” FROCKS New flowery chiffons . . . mew pastel chiffons .+ mew printed crepes, ensembles, too! in this are included FOR Ten't it satisfying to find so many smart dresses in the very styles you want? you may want an ensemble both for only $25. If you don't need two, bring a friend. Capes, boleros, peplums, flares, jackets and others. All sizes. Easter Dress Coats Fashions that capes, new cuffs, flares, feature fitted Furred plain Blacks, and all lin | about 10 guests. | AL A Small Deposit Reserves Any Selection ¥m. Rogendorf The Original “G” Street Furrier and Mrs. Homer Hall, wife of Representa- tive Hall, entertained at a iuncheon vesterday at the Hotel Roosevelt when her guests were the delegation from Bloomington, IIL, to the D. A. R. Con- gress. There were 16 in the company. Representative and Mrs. Richard Elliott have had with them in their apartment at the Hotel Roosevelt, Mrs Leo Brewer of Connersville, Ind.,, Who left for her home last evening. Miss Betty Hull of Connersville, who has been spending the week with Repre- sentative and Mrs. Elliott will remain for a short time longer. Mrs. Charles Aubrey Eaton and Miss Starr Eaton, wife and daughter of Representative Eaton, are closing their home at 2715 Q street and are leaving for Plainfield, N. J., where Representa- tive Eaton will join them after the close of Congyess. Mrs. Eaton will not again observe her Tuesday lfternoonsl at home this season. Mrs. Eaton, wife of Representative william R. Eaton, will entertain at a luncheon tomorrow at the Wardman Park Hotel for the Denver, Colo., dele- gation of the D. A. R. There will be Representative Mrs. Cassius C. Dowell of Iowa entertained at luncheon yesterday at the Capitol for the visiting delegates from Des Moines to the D. A. R. Congress. Representative and Mrs. Lloyd Thurs- ton will close their apartment at the Hotel Roosevelt for the week end and vill go to Fort Monroe, Va., where they will be the guests of Col. F. H. Lincoln. Representative C. Willlam Ramseyer of Towa and Mrs. Ramseyer have with them the former's nieces, Miss Clara Birkie of New York and Miss Esther Tschantz of Greenwich, Conn. Miss Christine Lorenz of Bloomfleld, Iowa, also is a guest of Representative and Mrs. Ramseyer. Mrs. William P. MacCracken is ex- pected to return to her apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel today after a motor trip to New York. Mr. Claudius Huston will announce the engagement of his daughter Alice to Mr. Fulton Lewis, jr. of this city tomorrow evening at a buffet supper which he will give for his daughter and her flance. The party will be given in his home, at 1520 Twentieth street, and the company will later go to the Chevy Chase Club for dancing. The wedding is expected to take place in Washington in June. Miss Huston is the third of the four charming daugh- ters of the chairman of the Republican national committee and her older sister, Miss Mildred Huston, was a debutante in the National Capital. M is i member of one of the $000000000000009, sFURSCARFS Bring tn your out- . of-date Scarfs and s we will remodel them in the latest NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS Benjamtin Sherman, Prop. 618 12th St.—Franklin 6355 ‘»0““000000»3 styles set “style”— Qualities guarantee FOXES of the e T M litan 9285 National 8663 ST. an special sale . . . 25 You may want a dress . . . and you may have them Street Floor \ es. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1930. old families of Georgetown, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fulton Lewis, living at 1669 Thirty-first street. He has been connected with a local paper for sev- eral years and is & member of the Chevy Chase Club. Mrs. George T. Marye, Mrs. Sidney Cloman and Miss Patten motored last Tuesday to Charleston, S. C., to see the magnolia gardens, now in full bloom, and expect to return to Washington today. An interesting innovation in the round of the season’s dances will be the Junior Bachelors' ball at 11 o'clock Monday night at the Willard Hotel. It will give men of the younger set an c&ponunity to pay some of their so- clal obligations and many of them have subscribed. Miss Nancy Spalding, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin W. Spalding, has selected Saturday. May 17, for the date of her wedding to Mr. Peter Hamilton jr., of Brooklyn, N. Y. The ceremony will be performed at 5 o'clock at the Bethlehem Chapel of the Washington Cathedral and will be followed by a re- ception at the home of the bride for the families and close friends. Mrs. Everett Sanders Hostess At Luncheon Today. Mrs. Everett Sanders entertained at luncheon today at the Mayflower in honor of Mrs. Charles Minshall and Mrs. George Buntin of Terre Haute, Ind., who are passing the week in ‘Washington. Her other guests were Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson, Mrs. John Lord O'Brian, Mme. Grouitch, Mrs. Edwin T. Mere- dith, Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, Mrs. Mrs. John Allan Dougherty and Mrs. Robert D. Heinl. Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow, wife of the former United States Ambassador to Mexico, is motoring from her home at Englewood, N. J., to Amherst to spend Easter with her son, Mr. Dwight W. Morrow, jr, who is a student at that college. Mrs. Morrow spent yesterday at Stockbridge, Mass. Mr. Stephen Pell of New York ar- rived in Washington yesterday to join Mrs. Pell, who accompanied her father, South. They are staying at the May- flower. ‘The wives of Senators and Repre- sentatives from Iowa entertained at tea yesterday afternoon at the Congres- sional Club in honor of the visiting | Hotel, | “feature writers’ table.” Thomas F. Walsh, Mrs. Wade H. Ellis, | Col. Robert M. Thompson, from the | delegates from Iowa and visiting mem- | bers from that State and to the Jowa D. A. R. living in Washington. Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, Mrs. Robert Pat- terson Lamont, Mrs, Porter H. Dale, Mrs. Claude Porter, Mrs. Clyde B. Aitchison, Mrs. Juan Ferguson, Mrs. Spencer Merrick and Mrs. Gertrude Bowman assisted the hostesses. Maj. Albert W. Kenner, M. C, U. S. A.; Mrs. Kenner and their young son sailed for Prance Wednesday of this week on the President Harding, Maj. Kenner having been assigned for duty in connection with the war mothers’ pilgrimage. They were week end guests last week at the home of Maj. Kenner's parents Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Kenner, 1416 Ingraham street, prior to their de- parture. Mrs. Victoria Faber Stevenson, na- tional treasurer of the National League of American Pen Women and chau- man of the feature writers’ craft group of the District branch of the leaguc s sponsoring a table for the authors breakfast, Monday, at the Willard which is to be known as the At it will be seated Mrs. Edna Flarell, Miss Ruth Petersen, Dr. Elnora Folkmar, Miss Marion Usher, Miss Vellie Parkinson, Mrs. Robert Bruce Bare, Mrs. Marle O. Sprinkle and Mrs. Eugene Wesley Shaw. Mrs. Dorothy De Muth Watson will have as her guests at the breakfast Mr. and Mrs. Thatcher Hoyt of Chicago, the latter of whom is Phyllis Fergus, composer, one of whose compositions will be played at the musicale next Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Henry F. Dimock. Other guests at this table will be Mrs. Walter Bruce Howe, winner of the first prize in the recent league musical contest; also Mrs. Dorothy Radde Emery, well known soloist; Mrs. C. L. Chambers and Mrs. C. Antoinette ‘Wood of Boston. Additional guests at the table of the national board will be Mrs. G. G. ‘White, national chairman of the mem- bership committee, and Mrs. Lily R Hunt, who is a candidate for national registrar, SALE_OF FOX SCARFS at prices ranging from s l gi up ISADOR MILLER 809 11th St. NNW. Nat’l 5628 Fur Scarfs Remodeled to ss BEAUTY DURABILITY of 525 ° styles. blues shades. ARTISTIC STONEWARE.. To enhance the natural beauty of your garden a bench, a birdbath, a sundial, a gazing globe or flower pot will add strikingly to your landscape plan. DuLIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. anad l” PARKING SERVICE—Connecticut Ave. Entrance FLOWER POT 1 in. sq. ——our good Fortune is yours as well— Individually Styled SUITS At a Real Saving We made an unusually good purchase, and are there- by enabled to offer patrons a tremendous variety our suits—individually styled (no two alike), beautifully patterned, excellently made. Everything from the cute lit- tle cutaway jacket to the long jacket. Everything in mate- rials — coverts, imported tweeds, Francella Cloth, etc. The colorings are divine, and there is surely at least one that will appeal to you. All Sizes 1350 is time to our Fure and Cloth Coats with us, Mr. and Mrs. Burgoyne Hamilton, the latter a daughter of former Senator and Mrs. Robert L. Owen, entertained at luncheon yesterday at Pierre's in New York, their -guests including Miss Alice O'Gorman, daughter of former Senator and Mrs, Arthur M. O'Gorman; Mrs. Edward.L. Green and Miss Mary Shumway. Mrs, Joseph W. Trimble has closed her suburban home, Red Gables, at Forest Glen, Md., and is staying at the Powhatan Hotel to be near Mr. Trimble, who is recuperating at Emergency Hos- pital from a recent illness. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Thurston have issued invitations for a reception for Sunday to celebrate their twenty- fifth wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. 1 Thurston came to Washington 15 years ago from Dublin, Ga. They both have taken an active part in the Georgia s/ hats to choose from in mode. artfully combined at l 1214 F St. I “Let’s Try Thrifty SPRING FOOTWEAR SILK STOCKINGS ... NEW HANDBAGS ... SPRING SCAREFS .. And scores of SMART SPRING COATS....... CHIC SPRING FROCKS:.qe.s CLEVER SPRING SU NEWEST SPRING HATS........$3.75 to $20 SPRING GLONVES' ...ov.sisivvinis State Society and Southern Society. Those assisting at the tea table will be Mrs. Walter F. George, Mrs. H. Wallace ‘Witcover, Mrs. Theodore Tiller, Mrs. S. Gordon Green, Mrs. Robert E. Lee Hall, Mrs. Julia O. Autmann, Mrs. Mahlon C. Masterson, Mrs. C. B. Gwynn, Mis, Lucile Ellis and Miss Winona Thurston and Miss Jessie Thurston, daughters of the host and hostess. The reception will be given at their home, 4419 Illinois ave- nue, from 4 to 7 o'clock. Mr. Maxwell Alvord De Voe has motored from Trenton, N. J., to spend the Easter vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alvord Calvin De Voe. Mr. and Mrs. Francis E. Pope of the Dresden are sailing on the George Washington April 23 to spend three (Continued on Third Page.) Marvelous values . . . Saturday . . . in this Pre-Easter selling of nearly 1,000 Lizy Copies of hats by Agnes, Alphonsinine, Patou, Reboux and other well known stylists Nearly a thousand new ” a selection so complete as to include every desired Style and price -t truly economical figure. 9 l 1214 F St. I at Brooks They'll Have It” A Timely Thought for You Last-Minute Easter Shoppers Who Are “All in a Whirl” Misses and Women Will Appreciate Brooks’ Values! .$25 to $89 ..$15 to $39 ITS.c.cu.....$16 tp $49 seassieemaesas SBIE0ISRIN0 NP RESR | /| ..$1 to $4.95 ..$2.95 to $10 ..$1.95 to $3.95 300 other things to complete smart Easter ensembles M:Brooks.Co WEEN, 12TH, SOCIETY. The Short Velvet Wrap +..adapted from Goupy @ As casual and smart as the mode itself. . . and the season’s most successful complement to the flowing lengths of your new evening dresses. With tucked shirred collar and deep cape, wrap it around your= self and see how becoming itis! In green or black. Sizes 38 to 42, $39.50. ‘Weomen’s Drass Shop, Second Floor Misses’ Evening Wraps, Third Floor METROPOLITAN OPERA, APRIL 23,24,95 JELLEFF'S F STREET Elizabeth Arden’s Spring Prepara- tions Assure Clear 3 Loveliness of Skin (guu, like bodies should be clean, fed and exercised! And that is what Elizabeth Arden's Venetian Toilet Preparations will do for you. Cleanse your skin with Elizabeth laxed, pat with Special Astringent. Arden’s Venetian Cleansing Cream For hollows and lines that need to be that melts into the pores and rids filled out use Orange Skin Food. Full themof dust and impurities. Quicken faces should be smoothed with the our circulation with Ardena Skin non-fat-forming Velva Cream. ‘onic. If muscles are unusually re- At all times a complete stock of Arden preparations in our special section on the street floor. Make this your downtown Arden Shop. JELLEFF'S F STREET Paris Says: “BRIMS Flatter the New Silhouette” Deftly moulded brims— youthfully fascinating; attractive shades, matc! ing colorful costumes— all this and more for... 6.50 Others, 5.00 to 35,00 ——a(_)SEPH'R: HARRIS (@8- == 1224 F STREET == Agmes .. .0, an interesting creator—creates fircorma interesting straw weave Baku . . n « .. and turning off the left eye creates an effec- tive newness . . . note the feather trimming, an- other exclusive touch ... the shade, Spring Green, is attrac- tively contrasted with a hula- brown facing. MILLINERY

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