Evening Star Newspaper, May 2, 1930, Page 19

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SOCIETY ,__(Continued From Second Page) bring his faithful dog to the show. The s‘mmr seldom stirs without the dog, who guides him through trafic and around the Senate Office Building. Plans for the show have been com- pleted and the first class will go on promptly at 1 o'clock. There will be nine classes in all, including an added event for Army officers, Gen. Guy V. Henry, commandant of the United States Army Calvalry, will judge in a number of the classes. Mrs. Willlam Fitch Kelley has re- turned to Washington after spending a month in Chicago and Aurora, Ill, with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. McClure Kelley. Mrs. Kelley will open her place, the Knole, in Bethesda. Gen. Herbert B. Crosby, new Dis- trict Commissioner, was the guest in whose honor Mr. Odell Smith enter- tained at luncheon in the crystal room at the Willard yesterday. Mr. King- man Brewster entertained at luncheon also, the first secretary of the Bolivian legation, Mr. George de la Barra, being among his guests A wedding of interest in Washington took place yesterday in New York, when Miss Mary Juliet Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Edgar Mark Williams of New York, and Mr. John Ritchie Boyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen R. Boyd of this city, were married. The ceremony was performed in St. James’ Episcopal Church, Rev. Dr. Frank War- fleld Crowder officiating. A reception took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Williams, on Park avenue, following the ceremony. The bride was given in marriage by her father and she wore a princess gown of ivory satin, with a bertha of old lace belonging to her grandmother. Her tulle veil was adorned by another of antique Brussels point lace which fell over her long satin train. The veil was caught with orange blossoms to a coronet of the lace. The bride carried white orchids and valley lilles, with a cluster of pale violet orchids in the center. Miss Janet McCulloch of Galt, On- tario, and Miss Janet Wright of New York were maids of honor. The brides- maids were Miss Jane Boyd, sister of the bridegroom; Mrs. Winthrop G. Thomas and Miss Pegram Williams of Augusta, Ga., cousins of the bride, and Miss Suzanne Rumbough of New York, Miss Catherine Le Gro of Detroit and Miss Marjorie Lawbaugh of Meriden, Conn. The maids of honor wore frocks of pink and orchid flower chiffon with picture hats of pink lace straw. The other attendants wore frocks of blue and violet flowered chiffon with violet lace straw hats. They all carried arm bouquets of pink and violet sweet peas with centers of pale blue delphinium. Mr. Samuel H. Reynolds of New York was the best man, and the ushers were Mr. G. Edgar Hackney, Mr. Willlam L. Savage, Mr. Pred S. Polhemus, Mr. Joseph Miller Aicholz, Mr. Edward H. Herendeen, Mr. Edgar M. Willlams, jr., brother of the bride, all of New York; Mr. G. Howland Chase of Washington and Mr. George Robbins and Mrs. Ed- ward Robbins of Philadelphia. Mr. Boyd and his bride will sail to- morrow on the Belgenland for a two- month motor trip on the Continent. They will live at 325 East Seventy-ninth street, New York. The bride was graduated from the Bennett School at Millbrook, N. Y., and made her debut in 1928. Mr. Boyd was graduated from Princeton in 1920. He is a member of the Ivy Club and the Princeton Club of New York. Mrs. J. O'Connor Roberts of Forty- fourth street entertained at luncheon and bridge for 16 at her home today. Her guests were Mrs. John H. Yates, Mrs. C. Everett Lancaster, Mrs. Royal R. Rommell, Mrs. Clarence Lane, Mrs. Winfree Johnson, Mrs. Roy Clyde Mil- ler, Mrs. Gregor Macpherson, Mrs.’ James L. Wright, Mrs. Willlam Cam- mack Miller, Mrs,’ Carl M. Walker, Mrs. Harry M. Seydel, Mrs. Howard Nichols, Mrs. H. H. Jacobs, Mrs. James P. Brady, Mrs. L. H. Garrett, Mrs. Lawrence Law- ler and Mrs. Arthur Blanchard Fam- m. Former Undersecretary of State and Mrs. Norman de R. Whitehouse are among the ngers aboard the Aqui- tania, whi will arrive in New York today from England. Mrs. Stanley Harris, formerly Miss Elizabeth Sutherland, has taken an apartment at 2101 Connecticut avenue. Mrs. Joseph Stiles Wall and Miss Frances Wall will not be at home this afternoon and will not receive again until the Autumn. One of the most interesting features of the Society Horse Show to be staged at the Preece Riding School on Sat: urday, May 10, will be the children’ hunt teams scheduled for the morning program. The three daughters of Rep- resentative and Mrs. Robert Low Ba. eon—Virginia, Martha and_Alexandra —will make up one team. Louise My- ers, Poly Foraker and Virginia Rodgers, daughter of Capt. Christopher Rodgers, ‘will comprise a second team. Mrs. Am- brose Preece announces that two or three other teams will be entered in lhaM event. it lways one most picturesque ghows of the Spring season in the Capi- #al, and primarily a children’s show, $he committee this year is putting forth every effort to make the program of events an interesting one tators who always thro around the ring in the lot the Misses Patton, adjoining combe house on Massachusetts avenue. Attractive prizes will be given in all events. The morning show will start promptly at 10 o'clock and the after- noon show at 2:30. As is the custom in former years, luncheon will be served on the grounds, a gay marquee being set up for this purpose. Judge and Mrs. Roderick N. Matson of Cheyenne, Wyo., will be guests at the Mayflower for the next 10 days. Judge Matson arrived here from New York in time for the meeting of the Ameri- can Society of International Law and will remain here for the American Law Institute next week. Bridge Luncheon Yesterday With Spring Decorations. Mrs. Walter Clifford Burke of Los Angeles entertained at a charmingly arranged bridge luncheon yesterday. The table was decorated with pink roses and tulips, and the candelabrum was filled with pink tapers. The guests in- cluded: Mrs. Jack Kissler, Mrs. J. D. Boyer, Mrs. Jessie Bickert, Miss Cath- erine Byrne, Miss Eva Crilly, Mrs, Mothershed, Mrs. William Fuqua, Mrs, J. J. Quin, Miss Mary Byrne and Mrs. Enoch Neilson. Mr. and Mrs. Burke, who will be in Washington for several months, are making their home at the Ambassador Hotel. Mrs. Burke is active in music clubs in Los Angeles. Miss Mae H. Vance was a guest of honor at a luncheon yesterday in Cleve- land, when the Republican Women's League gave a luncheon at the Cham- ber of Commerce in_honor of Judge Genevieve R. Cline of New York. Miss Vance returned to the city the last of the week. Mr. and Mrs. C. Howland Chase, 3d, of Washington, D. C., have arrived in New York, and are at the Sulgrave. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stevenson have named their infant son, born Monday, Thomas Octave, and the Christening service, followed by an informal tea, will take place in a short time. Tiny Mr. Stevenson is a_grandson of Judge E. O. Sykes of the Federal Radio Com- mission and Mrs. Sykes. Mr. and Mrs. Milton W. King have returned from their wedding trip and are in thelr apartment in the Wardman Park Hotel for the remainder of the Spring. Mrs. King was before her mar- riage Mrs. Louis Berliner Frank, widow of Mr. Herbert Frank, and daughter of the late Mr. Emile Berliner. As Mrs. Frank she made her home with her mother at Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. John H. Finley, editor of the New York Times, is at the Dodge Hotel for a brief stay. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Scott Lehmann are motoring from Willlamsburg, Va., today and will spend the week end with the latter's mother and sister, Mrs. Lup- ton and Miss Lupton. in their home at 1719 Euclid street over Sunday. Miss Laura Manly will entertain at a dinner dance at the Carlton Hotel this evening. Gen. Mosely entertained at dinner last evening at the Carlton, his guests numbering 14, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Dawson of Forty-fourth place returned on Monday from a trip to West Virginia, where they were the guests of Mrs. Dawson’s mother, Mrs. Ella Stutler, in Clarksburg, and of Mr. Dawson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Dawson. The Dawsons were accompanied on their trip by their two daughters, Mary Jane and Betty, and . Mrs. .Dawson's brother and niece, Mr. H. W. Stutler and Miss Jeanette | Stutler. Mrs. Dawson’s niece and | nephew, Don Brooks and Lucy Brooks | of Buchanan, W. Va., returned with their aunt to her Washington home. Mr. and Miss Brooks are students a! ‘West Virginia Wesleyan College in Bu. chanan. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Silver and their two daughters of Woodcliff, N. Y., are visiting Mrs. Silver's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ottenberg, in their home at 1915 Sixteenth street north- west. Mrs. Silver was formerly Miss Rena Ottenberg and has many friends ere. Mr. and Mrs. R. Page Irving of Ca- thedral avenue entertained at their COVERS _ RS Carmiire: iding material. $16.50. ‘flu or m’n“l samples. B. L. ISHERWOOD 1513 28th St B.E. Cleaned Glazed $ and Stored his special price includes thoroush Fiazing and susranteed cord sores Searf remodeled, $5.00. in Remedeling pe: manship Work called for and delivered. NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS Benjamin Sherman, Pros. 618 12th Street Franklin 6355 M:Prooks.-Co Saturday—A Great Sale of Fine Crepe de Chine LINGERIE Reg. Values to $4.95 Gorgeously or demurely 45 Pe. lace trimmed tailored styles in high-quality Silk Crepe de Chine GOWNS CESS SLIPS PRIN- . . . STEP-INS THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. home on May 1 in honor of Dr. Edith Seville Coale of Washington. Mrs. Samuel Rea has motored to ‘Washin from her home in B Mawr, Pa., and is at the Carlton for a short stay, accompanied by Mrs. George B. Junkin, also of Bryn Mawr. Women of Distinction Sponsoring Children’s Festival. Distinguished Washington women, keenly interested in the educational and civic value of the development of junior and senior leisure-time recreation, have become sponsors of the fifth annual Children’s Festival of Washington, which will take place tomorrow after- noon at 2 o'clock in Central Com- munity Center, under the direction of the Community Center department, with Miss Sibyl Baker in charge. Many of the sponsors will attend the festival as honor guests of the 614 chil- dren who will participate, representing centers throughcut the National Capi- tal. Among those who are expected to be present tomorrow afternoon are Rep- aimed to give a glimpse of the social side of college. There will be music and other entertainment. Dr. Orie Latham Hatcher will speak on “After College, What?” Dr. Hatcher, who graduated from Vassar and ob- tained her Ph. D. at Chicago Univer- sity, is president of the Southern Women’s Educational Alliance, trustee of National Vocational Guidance Asso- ciation and editor of Occupations for ‘Women. A unique feature of the dinner is that no member can attend unless ac- companied by at least one girl of high school age. percentage of the 25,000 girls who are thinking about entering college. In- teresting exhibits have been arranged. Those in charge of the bgoths repre- senting the different colleges are Mrs. Josh Evans, jr.; Miss Rhoda ‘Jameson Milliken, Miss FPrieda Kenyon, Mrs. Hugh Rowan, Miss Margaret Call, Mrs. Frederick W. Crocker, Miss Marian Hall, Mrs. Frederick Ashley, Mrs. Eugene Stevens, Miss Myrtle Hodgkins, Miss Rayne! Miss Phebe Fleming, Miss 1t is hoped to help a large | C, Lucille Schoolfield, Miss Ellen Ganey, Miss Margaret Barber, Mrs. Donald F. Roberts, Mrs. Lawrence Phipps, Miss Loise Rose Palmer, Miss Mary Louise Brown, Mrs. Thoman F. Robertson, Mrs. Prederick ‘hied, Miss Linda Deston, Miss Elizabeth Haney, Mrs. E. Dana_Durand, Mrs. Knowles Ryerson, Miss Belle Rankin, Mrs. Boyd J. Brown, Mrs. George M. Billings, Miss Bertie Backus, Miss Louise Green, Mrs. Hugh M. Adams, Mrs. Wilson Compton, Mrs. ‘W. W. Arbuckle, Miss Nelle Ingels, Miss Marle Mount, Mrs, James Cumming, Mrs, Herbert Whitney, Miss Christine Thygeson, Miss Johnson and Mrs. L. W. Austin. The committee in charge for the day are Mrs. Edwin G. Nourse, Mrs. P Howe, Mrs. George Roth and Mrs. Ellery Stowell. Mr. F. W. Gordon of Detroit, Mich,, | p, is in Washington and is staying at the Potomac Park Apartments. Capt. Joseph P. McCrink entertained members of this old command and their resentative Katherine Langley, Repre- sentative Mary T. Norton, Mrs. Herbert B. Crosby, Mrs. Luther Reichelderfer, Mrs. Willlam B. Ladue, Mrs, Frank W. Ballou, Mrs. Pro¢tor L. Dougherty, Miss Grace Abbott, Mrs. George F. Bower- man, Mrs. Willlam L. Corbin, Mrs. ‘Whitman Cross, Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle, Mrs. Karl Fenni Mrs. E. C. Graham, Mrs. John Hays Hammond, Mrs, Samuel Herrick, Mrs. Howard L. Hodgkins, Mrs. Paul J. Kvale, Mrs. Cloyd Heck Marvin, Mrs. Edgar B. Meritt, Mrs. Eugene Meyer, Mrs, Ogden L. Mills, Mrs. Giles Scott Rafter, Mrs. J. Garfield Riley, Mrs. Philip Sidney Smith and Mrs. Otto L. Veerhoff. Committees representing the various centers will assist the officials of the Community Center department in the conduct of the festival. Wear Your Cape Both Back and Front And it’s becoming both ways! Here’s a new dinner frock .. . suitable for the “daylight dining’’ season almost at hand. @ Another new fash- jon from our women’s dress shop, which is becoming famous for pre- senting the new, straighter lines in fashions designed especially for women. $39.50. ‘Weomen's Dress Shop, Second Floer JELLEFF'S F STREET Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Cochran of New Haven, who are motoring to the historic gardens of Virginia, are at the Dodge Hotel for several days. A festive dinner has been arranged for tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock as the culmination of College day to be held at the national club house of the American Association of University Women, 1634 I street northwest. The Jjunior group of the Washington branch, with Miss Helen Samuel as chairman, has charge of this dinner, which is J B.Jones & INCORPORATED We park your car while you shop with us. 1219.1221 G Street N.W, (o BETWEEN 12t o2 3% STREETS Our May Demonstration Sale Proves That We're Never Undersold WE ARE DETERMINED NEVER TO BE UNDERSOLD! Always remember this—Special sales and special low prices anywhere else should always remind you that merchandise of equal value can always be bought at J. B. Jones & Co. at still lower prices. . Savings never before offered to Washingtonians on new merchandise at the begin- ning of the season. These Savings We Positively Guarantee GIRLS’ SILK DRESSES Usually Sold for $3.75 Demonstration Sale Price B e autiful quality heavy crepe de chine slips. Tai- lored, hem- stitched at top, and shadow- proof hem. Flesh and white only. flzes 34 to $1.95 and $2.50 Qualities Demonstration Sale Price The famous LaVelle 100% silk made up in dainty styles for miss of 7 to 14 years. Beautiful pat- terns with and without sleeves. Capes, flares and tucks in a bevy of styles. . For Saturday RESSE, A most sensational demonstration of value giving Savings never before available to Wash- ingtonians of such fine materials and styles Dresses that usually sell from $15.00 to $29.50, FOR SATURDAY ONLY in the Demonstration Sale— % Compare Anywhere Styles, all reproductions of higher- priced dresses When values like these are announced FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930. families last evening at his residence in Woodley Park in commemoration of the battle of Manila Bay. ‘The concert at the University Club last evening attracted a distinguished and app! tive audience, which paid homage to the charming soprano voice of Miss Helen Howison and the tlever plano_solos of Miss Minna Nieman. Miss Howison was accompanied by Mr. George Wilson, pianist. The artists were introduced by Mr. Lewis Lofton Moneyway, chairman of the entertain- ment committee. Preceding the con- cert a number of dinner parties were given at the club, among the hosts being Col. Rawson Warren, Comdr. Frederic Southworth, Mr. J. Clif- ford Folger, Mr. Alfred Moran, Dr. Wil- liam J. Showalter, Mr. P. A. Blair, Mr. ‘W. W. Ross, former Representative W, D. Jamieson, Mr. Edward J. McQuade, s "P. Homer Curtis and Mr. William F. all. Others observed in the club were Mr. Howard Moran, Mr. F. K. Nielson, Dr. Adam Kemble, Representative Al- (Continued on Fourth Page) Al for $32.50 : FUR SHOP 1817 ConnecTICUT AvE. Phone No. 3292 'ormerly at 717 1ith St. ' Spring styles, colors and materials that can pot be FELKSKIN, A New Sport Oxford SHOWN IN A COMBINATION OF SMOKED AND TAN ALSO IN BLACK AND WHITE . ELKSKIN — WITH Rieh's F:STREET AT 10 moar kid with nokeskin wrim Newd I poreh. ment. pistachio oroen, black o ‘white kid with con. duplicated elsewhere at Forsythe’s new low price. Believe your own eyes! The vsual Forsythe quality shoes, in fashions You'l adore e modelin| tid with brows pinking, e block tid with sver ey more beautiful than ever, are now only $a. Widths AAA 1 G, sizes 23 10 8. Forsythe S HOE CORP 1223 -F ‘Street N.W. PURE SILK—FULL FASHIONED HOSIERY ORDERS MAITL - c- PROMPTLY Repeating Last Saturday’s Great Summer Hat Sale! We Secured Over 300 More New Models to Sell at This Price! to $6.50 We Are Now Featuring LACY BRAIDS—HAIR BRAIDS BAKU TOYOS—NOVELTY WEAVES for one-day selling, shrewd and thrifty shop- pers that are looking for dresses out of the ordinary, will save many dollars on a dress purchased here Saturday. Silk Crepe Dresses In Sizes for Women and Misses A gorgeous array of new prints, high shades, also navy and black. All the very newest styles—high waistlines, flares, uneven hemlines, new sleeve effects. In fact, they are re- productions of much more ex- pensive models. Sizes 14 to 44. In the smartest shapes for juniors, misses and women and for sport, dress, or tailored wear. Off- the-face effects, all kinds of brimmed hats, long backs, side drapes and irregular brimmed models ...in black, blonde shades, green, the new blues, new browns, and other new Spring colors. All head sizes. « «» . FRENCH PANTIES .« . and CHEMISE. In the newer silhouette, to wear under thin Summer frocks and in the most wanted new pastel shades, Beautifully made and they wash so nicely . . . scores of styles to choose from. ALL SIZES. Demonstration Sale Price Brooks Millinery—Fourth Floor 4% | M-Brocks.Co Main Floor—Lingeri loor—Lingerie IITH 12TH M. Brooks Co. Compare} Anywhere

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