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SOCIETY o (Continued Prom Second Page.) west; Miss Bertha Chinn at Tabard | Ion, or from any member of the com- . Busses will leave the south end morning at 9 o'clock. 2 | Mr. and Mrs. E. Quincy Smith are salling for Trieste on the Saturnia on Mby 20. Their daughter, Miss D. Quincy Smith, will meet them at Napies and Mrs. Smith and her daughter will spend the Summer in an automobile tour. Mr. Smith returns home in a few weeks and will then go back to the Mediterranean, meeting Mrs. Smith | in Tripoli and bringing her home to ‘Washington in the Fali. { Dr. George S. Duncan, professor of Egyptology in the American University, | left this morning for Philadelphia to | lecture in Witherspoon Hall on “Recent | Archeological ~ Discoveries in Bible | Lands” before the Ministerial Assocta- | tion of Philadelphia and vicinity. | =it i Dining at the Cavalier, Virginia | Beach, Saturday night, were: Col. and Mrs. Henry C. Jewett and their guest, | Mrs. Caroline S. Mitchell of Washing- | | GUEST AT POLISH EMBASS I THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, yield a riot of color for its visitors of | beautiful home of Mr. and Mrs. Luke Wednesday. The commitice in charge of the ar- rangement® for the Country Flower Fair consists of Miss Reinhardt as chair- man and Mrs Grace L. Ryan as vice chairman, with Rev. Thomas D. Win- | diate, D.'D, as assistant. Mrs, John L. Gaynor will serve at the tea table ‘:nd Miss Marjorie Lowe will act as one of the hostesses of the afterncon. If Wednesday should prove rainy the fete will be postponed until Thursday. Miss Raphaella Schwarz will spend | two or three days with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Osias L. Schwarz, 1300 Park | road before her final examinations and | graduation at Columbia University. | She graduates as tke youngest mem- | ber of her class in library science and | with highest scholastic honors, thus re- | peating_her achievement of last year when she graduated with highest hon- ors from George Washington Univer- sity and was nominated as American deiegate to the World Peace Congress at Eerde, Holland. | Mr. Harry Campbell. American con- sul at Birmingham, England, is a guest at the Willard while in Washington. ‘The annual picnic of the American Association of University Women was held Saturday evening at Treetops, the | | | ‘Wilson near the Rockville pike. Owing to the recent rain, supper was served in one of the guest cottages on the estate. Later in the evening Mr. and Mrs. Wilson held an informal recep- tion, which was followed by music fur- nished by Itallan singers. Mile. Paulette Bernege, editor of Mon Chez Moi, a French home economics Journal, is at the Dodge Hotel for about a week while studying the methodology of the Bureau of Home Economics and other Government, bureaus in her field. Mile. Bernege also is president of the League of Home Management and presi- dent_of the home economics section of the French national committee for sci- entific management of work. She will BH DyLiN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana L MAY 26, 1930. stay in the United States about three months and already has observed home economics projects in Philadelphia, Cor- nell University, Chicago, University of Winconsin, Ames and Des Moines, Iowa, Baltimore and Washington, ‘The Sigma, Epsilon Sorority is giving a dance tonight in the garden house of the Dodge Hotel following the cere- mony when initiations will take place, Guests will include Miss Rosemary Pumphrey, Miss Catherine Pea, Miss Ardella Smallwood, Miss Dorothy Graham, Miss Dorothea Tehag, Miss Helen Garner, Miss Eiizabeth McDan- iels, Miss Mary Tardy and Miss Yvonne Beuchert of Alpha Chapter; from Beta Chapter, Miss Elizabeth Howe, Miss Eleanor Brooks, Miss Elizabeth Brooks, XD <P Miss Catherine Brown, Miss Charlotte Farnum and Miss Eileen Haltigan; from Gamma Chapter, Miss Mabel Money and Miss Marion Woodruff, and from Delta Chapter, Miss Mary Frances Glenn, Miss Helen Glenn, Miss Chris- tine Lurig, Miss Dorothy Collier, Miss Ethel Linzey and Miss Mildred Leef B3 Miss Catherine McDonnell, chairman of- the executive committee, and Miss Irene Ford, chairman of the third- degree committee, are in charge of ar- rangements, The list of patrons and patronesses (Continued on Sixth Page.) FIBER RUGS ‘=—Are smart’and colorful and will give a touch of seasonable change to your home, making it cooler ‘and more comfortable during the hot Summer ton, D. C. Col. Jewett has been or- | dered to the War College, at Washing- | ton, reporting here in August. Mrs. | Jewett was formerly Miss Nannte Hume ©of Washington. | Mr. and Mrs. J. Evans Mayfield are | motoring through the South, and will | visit relatives in Cedartown, Ga. | Capt. Gust van Lennep was host | yesterday at a beach party at the An. napolis Roads Beach and Tennis Club, % entertaining a party of young people, | 3 5 - which included Miss Peggy Burch, Miss : | Elizabeth Hume, Miss Jeannette Hume, | Mr. Hayes Browning, Mr. Nat Clifford | and Mr. John Livingston. Capt. van | Lennep also entertained Mr. R. M. van | 5 4 Lennep and Mr. A. Dughan of New York P i | i 40 CUSHION SHOE Iobn Ebberts Shor Co.—Makers ey o Prices for the 9x12 Size 15 Col. and Mrs. Luke Lea of Nashville, Tenn., arrived in Washington _this morning, and are guests at the May- flower. The Political Study Club_ breakfast, . . : - s e held in the large ball room of the May- | e St 3 OOTWEAR for - the flower Hotel on Saturday, May 24, at | ; . | R Styl 12 o'clock noon, was a brilliant affair. active woman, tyles ‘The room was filled to its clpac‘l:ly with | attractively gowned ladies prominent in & club and social circles of the Nation's COUNTESS HELENE SKARZYNSKA, Capital. The tables were artistically | Formerly Helene Smith, daughtcr of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Augustine Smith of | 1 £ decorated with blue ragged-robbins and | New York, wife of Count Skarzynska, who is at the embassy in Warsaw, She| || Plus comfort. yellow daisies, symbolic in shade to the | came to Washington to attend an entertainment at the Polish embassy. City Club colors of the club, blue and gold, while | —Marceau Photo, 1318 G : the speaker's table had mounds of — — | B lowers interspersed with pink | e St fancy bas- | ton. Md. Wednesday afternoon and |ance of colorful beauty at this season. | toe On Earth kets of cakes and candy of many |€vening between 4 and 8 o'clock. Miss | With the addition of floral gifts which | shades. Reinhardt’s garden is by itself & pleas- | have been proferred, it promises to W. . Moses & Sons of allegiance to the American lag, con- Since 1861—Sixty-Nine Years of Public Confidence ducted by Mrs. Percy E. Quin, prvsl-} National 3770 F Street at Eleventh 9 AM. to 6 P.M. With All Outdoors In Summer Attire club’s president and toastmistress, Mrs. Bruce Baird. | ‘The . speaker for the occasion was | Nature in all her glorious splendor gives us the trees, the greens and the flowers. Why not do something for ourselver? Bring the beauty of the outdoors within our homes. o in unlimited choice — com- bining a new degree of style | | W, D, Moses & Sons W, B. Moses & Sons Public Confidence Since 1861 F Street at Eleventh 9 AM. to 6 P.M. Mr. Seth W. Richardson, Assistant At- | torney General, whose subject was “Du- | ties of Citizenship.” The substance of his speech gave the principles for which * the United States has stood from the Revolutionary period to the present time, but the keynote was the duty of citizenship, in which he stressed co- operation of the public in support of the living President rather than a pref- erence of eulogy to those who are dead and gone. Another interesting feature was the club’s song, words of which were writ- ten by Mrs. Bruce Baird, sung to the tune of “America Beautiful” by the en- tire gathering and led by Mrs. Gladys Manchester Walin of California, accom- panted by Elizabeth Gardener Coombs. Vocal solos were given by Mrs. Carolyn Bost, accompanied by Mr. Walton Boyce. { Mrs. Edward Everett Gann was an honor guest .for the occasion. Others | at the speakers' table were Mrs. Bruce | Baird, Mr. Seth W. Richardson, Mrs. | Richardson, Mrs. Virginia White Speel, Mrs. Ernest H. Daniel, Mrs. Proctor L. Dougherty, Mrs. Carolyn Norton Bost, Mr. Walton Boyce and Mrs. Gertrude Bischof. Public Confidence Since 1861 F Street at Eleventh 9 AM. to 6 P.M. I ,0.0:1 KO / Y ; ' 41 I (W The former presidents of the club— Mrs. L. B. Thomson, Mrs. Richard Whiting, Mrs. Frank G Odenheimer, Mrs. Clyde B. Aitchison and Mrs. Frank n—served as hostesses to spe- cial guests—Mrs. Porter Dale and Mrs. Charles P. Summerall. Among oth- €rs present were Mrs. Percy E. Quin, Mrs. Edgar B. Meritt, Mrs. Lee Cor- bin, Mrs Edward Avery Harriman, Mrs, Whitman Cross, Mrs. Nina Swalm Reed, Mrs. Arthur Seaton, Mrs. Virginia White Speel, Mrs. Edison Briggs, Mrs. George 8. Barnes, Mrs. Elma R. Saul, Mrs. John F. Craven, Mrs. William Mc- Gee, Mrs. Wallace Streater, Mrs, Wil- liam T Nishwitz, Mrs. William Massey, Mrs. M. Winter, Mrs. Frank Long, Mrs. Virgil Miller, Mrs. Rosa Dodd Mulca: Mrs. R. T. Howell, Mrs. Bruce Cloj | ping. Mrs. Richard Yates, Miss Vic- toria Copping, - Miss Paul'nc Yates Long and Mrs. Jefferson Myer. Maypole Dance and Flower Show Wednesday for Arts Club. Maypole dances and other picturesque fantasies will grace the Country Flower Fair, which is to be held for the bene- it of the Arts Club building fund at The Spruces, the beautiful home of Miss Anna C. Rheinhardt at Kensing- ———— AT 2t Kensing- SLIP COVERS Three-pe. suite and B separate cushions, fasteners, tallored turniturs, | [octtaine “meitnal "$ie%™® Wille St T aamples & L ISHERWOOD D Py, B A Charming Group for the June Bride To Begin the New Home for Two With J In Denim In Mohair 5195 5245 : " FACTS You Should Know This group has dignity, charm and elegance. g It will give the long service that one rightfully About Embassy Furniture expects from well-constructed furniture. It is Al Covered Frames are of Gk, maplt, exceptionally comfortable, for the cushions are birch or magnolia, air and kiln dried. down:filled. T‘he pri.ces are modest—in taupe broiparin ot St mohair, $245; in denim, $195¢ All Exposed Wood is solld mahogany, with two exceptions, where feet or back legs are FUR COATS Cleaned Glazed s and Stored This special price includes thorough eleaning of your coat inside and out, azing and pieed cold storage. The Inner Home May Be Transformed Easily in Remodeling pert Workmanship Work called for and deliverea. NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS Benjamin Sherman. Prop. 618 12th Street Franklin 6355 Demi-Clazed Chintz $1, $1.25, $1.35 yd. Prints and Cretonnes 75c. $1.10, $1.50 yard Many thousand feet have brought in from the street dirt and germs and left them in your Floor Coverings Call Mr. Pyle for clean- ing and storing rugs— Nat. 3257-3291-2036 | Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. The favored fabric for Summer with those who wish an ultra- smart Summer living room. Many interesting designs in the newer raisin and parchment shades. With such colors, such gay pat- terns, it is easy to work wonders in the transformation of the home interior. The heavier kind so adaptable to draperies and slip covers. A wide range of colorful designs in three outstanding groups: The Doulton Crashes, sun and tub- fast, $1.10 yard. Warp Prints, 30 inches wide, $1.50 yard. Chintz patterns in a range of smart effects for boudoir use, 75¢ yard. ¢ Colorful Figured Casement Cloth, $2.75 yard An interesting fabric for Summer use is this figured casement cloth in a semi-modernistic pattern. The colors are yellow, rose or jade. For curtains or hangings. 50 inches wide. MOSES—THIRD FLOOR ILuva lts Beauty Moade Other Embassy Groups 8165 up MOSES—SIXTH FLOOR E M| ng & magnolia or gum. All Carvings are solid mahogany. Specific Web Bottom on every pilece, the strain of webbing on tacks being relieved by stout wire stirrups. This prevents sagging due to tacks pulling out. The Metal Plate sketched above is found , on every plece. It is our guarantee of quality. BANYY oom IFurniture Permanent By Scientific Construction