Evening Star Newspaper, June 16, 1930, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

B2 SOCIETY. THE EVENI NG STAR, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1930. SOCIETY. and lilies of the valley. Miss Edgarita Webster of Los Angeles | was the maid of honor, wearing a frock of pink lace, and Miss Mary Alice Bartholomew, the bridesmaid, was in blue net. The children in the wed- t ding party were little Miss Shirley Anne Starr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John | Starr of Beverley Hills, the latter for- | merly Miss Mildred Bone, and _the | children of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bone | of Pasedena, little Miss Phyllis Mary Bone, Janice Irene Bone and Richard SOCIETY Vice President Curtis to Have Brief Visi From Daug}lter, Mrs. George. and Her TWO Chlldren' | Scott’ Bone. The little girls wore cos- | tumes of ruffied organdie and scattered THE Vice President, Mr. Charles | Paul's School and from the Yale Scien- rose petals in the path of the bride. Curtis, will be joined tomorrow |tific School with the class of '23. He | Mr, Phillip Wilcox of El Paso Tex., by his daughter, Mrs. Charles |was a member of the Yale varsity | was best man for his brother, and the P. George, and her two children, | hockey team for three years. He is a ushers were Mr. Paul Myers Bone, who will arrive from Fort Sill | member of the St. Anthony, University, | brother of the bride, and Mr. Thomas orange blossoms and carried gardenias [ day for Chile, where she will spend nbout’ Austria, sister of Mrs. Lansburgh, is six months in connection with the re- | building of the Santiago College fr\r[ ‘Young Women, of which she is a trustee She is a guest at the Mayflower. | Mr. and Mrs. Evans Hosts | at Al Fresco Dinner Parties. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Evans will en- tertain at a charmingly arranged al | fresco_dinner this evening at Acclima- ition Park, their estate at Ridge road |and Hawthorne avenue. Last evening | they were hosts at dinner on the estate, when the horseshoe dinner table was laid before a great open fireplace under great forest trees. Among the guests were Senator and Mrs. William H. Mc- | Master, Senator and Mrs. Frederick | Steiwer, Representative and Mrs. Allard Gasque, Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. New- ton, Mr. and Mrs. Huston Thompson, | will arrive t | chanan street, and to make the ac- also their guest. Mrs. Melvi heffield of Norfolk, Va.! to be the guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Kass, in their home, on Bu- quaintance of their infant daughter. Mary Elizabeth, born Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence B. Dodds, the latter formerly Miss Margaret Goll, started last week by motor to their fu- ture home, in Schenectady, N. Y. They stopped en route to visit in Montclair, N.J., and New York City. Mrs. M. de Clare Berry, president of the District Branch of the Interna- tional Magna Charta Day Association to spead a few days with him before | Nassau Country and Yale Clubs, nnd}seuru and Mr. Max Nicholls of Santa going to their Summer home in Mas- |iS & member of the New York Stock | Barbara. sachusetts. Exchange. reccption followed the ceremony, == | Cabinet Officers and | Families Among Travelers. | The Attorney General and Mrs. Wil- liam De Witt Mitchell are spending t>day at Williamstown, Mass., where the former will receive from Williams College the degree of doctor of laws. The Attorney General is expected to return to the city tomorrow, and Mrs. Mitchell, who motored to Willlamstown with a party of friends, will probably remain for a longer stay. The Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur went today to Princeton, N. J., to attend the graduation exercises at the university tomorrow. Secretary Wilbur will go to New York and will be a guest at the dinner to_be given tomorrow eve- ning for the President-elect of Brazil, Senhor Julio Prestes, and Mrs. Wilbur will regwm to their apartment, in the Mayflower. | Mrs. Davis, wife of the Secretary of labor, and their children, James J. Davis. ir.; Jane, Jean, Joan and Jewell, | Jeft Washington this morning for Vent- nor, N. J, where they will spend the | Summer. | The Ambassador of Spain and Seriora | de Padilla entertained at dinner last| evening in honor of the Ambassador cf‘ Great Britain and Lady Lindsay. The | company included the Speaker of the | ed his doctorate | research staff of the Rockefeller In- The wedding will take place the lat- | ter part of August. Mrs. Olga Smolianinoff Hill, grand- | United States and Mrs. James F. Me- line, will he married this afternoon York. The wedding will take place in the home cof the bride, at Short Hills, Long Islanc, at 5 o'clock. Mrs, Hill is the widow of the late Mr. Lucien Hill of Pittsburgh who died about a year ago. | Her parents, the late Count and Count- ess Smolianinoff, had many friends in Washington, where they lived for some time after their marriage. i Mr. and Mrs. Morris Cotgrave Betts announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, to Dr. Rob- ert Cooley Elderfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Elderfield of Niagara Falls, N. Y. Miss Betts has just been given the B. 8. degree in chemistry from the | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. | Dr. Elderfield is a graduate of Willlams College and of the Massachusetts In-| stitute of Technology. He was award- in chemistry from the | latter institution. He has joined the stitute for Medical Research in York City. The wedding will take place in Au- gust. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Cox will be | by their son and New | A after which Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox left for a wedding trip, the bride wearing a rose beige ensemble with a hat to match. They will be at home later at | daughter of the late Treasurer of the | 826 Coronel avenue, the Mesa, Santa Barbara. ‘ The bride graduated from the Uni- {to Mr. John A. Stewart, 3d, of New |versity of Washington and is a member | of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. The | bridegroom graduated from the Uni- | versity of Colorado and is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Among_the out-of-town guests were Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Wilcox of Denver, Mr. and Mrs. John Ford Starr of Bev- erly Hills and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Morse Bone of Pasadena. _The marriage of Miss Pauline Geor- gianna Hall, daughter of Mrs. Florence E. Hall of Charlottesville, Va., to Mr. J. Leonard Hartman took place Saturday in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Albert Ronald Merz in Chevy Chase. After a wedding breakfast the young couple left for a motor trip through Canada. They will be at home after July 1 in Charlottesville, Va., where the bridegroom is a prominent business man. ‘The bridegroom's mother, Mrs. M. S. Hartman of Charlottesville, Va., and his sister, Mrs. William R. Newman, of Richmond, Va., attended the wedding. The marriage of Miss Evelyn Knauss of Bethlehem, Pa., to Mr. Paul Minnich of Allentown, Pa., took place at 4 o'clock Saturday in St. Paul's Chapel of the . Longworth, Representa- | joined tomorrow :{«.0 :‘ s;oalng‘ol\:;s" Mrsg“ John W.p Garrett, | daughter-in-law, Lieut. and Mrs. Joseph | Epiphany Lutheran Church, Rev. Henry | W. Snyder officiating. wife of the United States Ambassador | W. Cox, jr., who will spend two weeks ‘The bride wore a gown of flesh-tint Miss Caroline Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Philip King, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. Norburne Rob- inson, Brig. Gen. and Mrs. William C. Harllee, Comdr. Raesch, brother of Mrs. Steiwer; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bennett and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Grant. The dinner was followed by an in- teresting talk on India by Mrs. George F. Becker, who has recently returned to this country. Mrs. Helen Ray Hagner will entertain at dinner this evening at the Cavalier, Virgnia Beach, Va., in honor of Miss Mary Lucretia Bitler, daughter of Commodore and Mrs. Rueben O. Bitler, and her flance, Ensign John Zabilsky, U. S. N and the members of the wedding part After dinner at the Cavalier Mrs. Hag- ner will take her guests to the Cavalier Beach Club to dance. The marriage of Miss Bitler and Ensign Zabilsky will take place at Old St. Paul's Church, in Norfolk, Va, Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Lansburgh had as their guests over Sunday Mrs. 1. Koff of Philadelphia and her daughter, Miss May Koff, Mrs. Koff was the founder and leader of the West Phil- adelphia Community Center and is president of several charity organiza- tions in that city. | Miss Marie Lorbeerbaum of Vien: For One Week Only Slip Covers | of Bel —for any 3-piece suite with 5 separate cushions— | 262 | Our first grade Belgian linens J§! are the very best obtainable; workmanship guaranteed. Other suites, $14.95 up. Furniture Upholstering and Refinishing — 20% reduction for this week only. Telephone Met. 8916 Estimator will call with samples. Ernest Holober Company 709 G St. N.W. an Linen or Cretonne Pre-Inventory Special to Italy; Brig. Gen. Charles Macawley, | with them before going to Fort Hum- Mr. and Mrs. B. Sumner Welles, Mr. Theodore J. Marriner of the State De- partment, Princess Elizabeth de Ligne, | Miss Helen Manley, daughter of the former United States military attache | in Madrid; the first secretary of the embassy and Senora de Arnao. Senorita Rosa Padilla and Senor Ricardo Padilla, daughter and son of the hosts. Mrs. Maurice M. Thatcher enter- | tained at luncheon today at the Carl- ton in honor of Mrs. John R. Putnam of Amoy, China. Others included Mrs. | Prank C. Henry and Mrs. John Mason Brown of Washington. Mrs. James S. Parker has left Wash- ington for her farm at Salem, N. Y. Representative Parker will join her | there when Congress adjourns. Miss Virginia Herron, daughter of Col. and Mrs. Leroy W. Herron, went to New York today and will sail tomorrow aboard the De Grasse for a three-month tour of Europe. Comdr. and Mrs. Lewis P. Clephane have with them in their studio-house, on Ontario place, the latter's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. N. Harry Almand of St. Petersburg, Fla. After a week in Washington, Mr. and Mrs. Almand will go to Hendersonville, N. C, for the rest of the Summer, while Comdr. and Mrs. Clephane will spend the next three months motoring | in the Provinces of Quebec, New! Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. E. Winfield are at the Mavflower, en route from Coronado, Calif., to the former's new station at the War College in New- port, R. I Former Secretary of the Interior Dr. Hubert Work of Denver has returned to Washington for a brief visit and is staying at the Mayflower. Mrs. Wallace W. Chiswell entertained & company of seven at dinner last eve- ning in the garden restaurant of the | Carlton Hotel. | Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Cunibert! and their children returned today from An- napolis Roads, where they spent the ‘week end at the Beach and Tennis Club. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Norment went today to New York and will be at the Hotel Plaza until Friday, when they will gail on the Olympic to spend the Sum- mer in England and France. Mr. and Mrs. Louls W. Austin have closed their home and gone to New York to sail for Europe tomorrow. Mrs. O. R. Evans has gone to Reho- | both Beach, where she has taken a cottage for the Summer. She will be joined the end of the week by her daughter, Miss Eunice Lee Evans, Engagement Announced of Miss Seabury to Mr. Reid. Mrs. Austin Kautz will leave Wash- ington today for Kittery Point, Me., to be with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. William Marston Seabury, in their Summer home, Bayberry Rocks, until she sails June 28 for Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Seabury announced yes- terday at their Summer home the en- gagement of their daughter, Etheldreda Winthrop, to Mr. Fergus Reid, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Fergus Reld of New | York and Norfolk, Va. Miss Seabury was presented to society in Washington by her aunt, Mrs. Kautz, several sea- sons ago, and Is a member of the Junior League. Miss Seabury made her bow in New York at a party given by her parents. She 15 a descendant of five Colenial governors, including Winthrop, Saltonstall and Dudley of Massachu- She is 8 descendant of Bishop Seabury. first Episcopal bishop in the United States, and of Leonard Lispenard, who figured in the early history of New York City. Her sisters are Mrs. Edward Savage Crocker, 2d, | wife of the second secretary of the American legation in Stockholm, Swe- den, and Mrs. Willlam W. Howells of Cambridge, Mass. Mr. Reid is a grandson of Gen. Wil- liam Chamberlaine of the Confederate Army, who was an aide de camp of Gen. Lee. He is the brother of the Baroness Jean de Lustrac of Paris, the husband and children, will spend the Summer with her parents at Stone Wall, the Reid Summer home, in York Har- bor, Me Mr. Reid was graduated from B8t ROSEDERE 1206 Gee Tuesday Only! Clearance of all 100 DRESSES $R.88 New Styles | I Several phreys. Mrs. Cox was before her mar- riage, May 28, at Fort Riley, Miss Lois Hedrick, daughter of Maj. and Mrs. H. L. Hedrick. Mrs. James Lee Marshall, who re-! cently returned from Florida, where she spent the Winter, is now with her daughter, Mrs. Breckinridge Cabzl: Rust, in Baltimore. Mrs. Marshall went to Baltimore to attend the graduation of her eldest granddaughter, Vail Rust. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Byrnes of Chi- | cago are passing some time at the' Carlton. Mrs. Edwin M. Evans and her daugh- ter, Miss Nancy S. Connor, have closed their home on Lenox street in Chevy Chase for the Summer and opened their cottage at Virginia Beach. Mr. and Mrs, J. T. Todd have arrived in Washington from Alexandria, Egypt, and are stopping at the Carlton, Wilcox-Bone Wedding In California Yesterday. A wedding of interest in Wlshclilgwn took place yesterday in Atascader Calif,, when Miss Marguerite Bone, daughter of the former Governor of Alaska and Mrs. Scott C. Bone, became the bride of Dr. Alfred B. Wilcox of Santa Barbara, son of Dr. and Mrs. Henry W. Wilcox of Denver, Colo. The ceremony was performed in the Atas- cadero Inn at 4 o'clock, the Rev. Canon Bliss officiating. 3 formerly lived in Washington, where | the bride was born. Preceding the cer mony Mrs. Paul Herbert Gerrish gave & program of piano selections and Mrs. Roger Morse Bone, sister-in-law of the | bride, sang several solos. The bride was given in marriage by her father, and she wore a gown of ivory satin with a tulle veil held by Miss Julia | wear.. krills an @ hipline.. ness of t to any w Women' B We park chiffon, fashioned in the prevailing mode, with high waist line and very long, full skirt terminating in points | and with short puffed sleeves and nar- | row ribbon sash of orchid hue. Her hat | was an imported swiss lace braid with | orchid ribbon trimming. She wore slip- | pers of orchid moire and carried an | old-fashioned bouquet of tea roses, lilies | of the valley and orchid sweet peas tied | Cousins Summer Shoes bands on the sleeves, the ‘Women's Dress Shop, S with ribbon. Mrs, Leon E. Snyder was the bride's only attendant. She wore flowered chif- | fon with green predominating and with bou- Leon green accessories. She carried a quet of orchid sweet peas. Mr, E. Snyder was best man for Mr. Min- nich. Preceding the ceremony Miss Virginia Cooper sang “I Love You Truly” and “At Dawning,” accompa- nied at the organ by Miss Marceline Britt. who also played Lohengrin's wedding march and Mendelssohn's march as the recessional. Miss Cooper's gown was of lavender crepe romaine and Miss Britt were a flowered chiffon. A small reception was held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon E. Snyder, at 2807 Connecticut avenue, for the in- timate friends of the young couple. Among the out-of-town guests were Miss Mamie Bramwell, Miss Grace Wasser and Miss Dorothy Ruth of Bethlehem, Pa, and Miss Virginia Spain of Richmond, Va. After a wed- ding trip Mr. and Mrs. Minnich will be at home at 713 Linden street, in | Allentown, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Leon E. Snyder enter- tained in their home, on Connecticut avenue, Friday evening in honor of the bride and bridegroom. Mrs. Tsabel MacDermott, former edi- tor of the Pan-American Bulletin, re- turned to Washington this morning from New York to bid farewell to her former associates at the Pan-American Union. Mrs. 'Dermott will sail Pri- Tailored Chiffon is Particularly Becoming ...TO WOMEN @ For resort wear, for town t's cool, trim, giving you a slim appearance with its lack of d furbelows. Note the pleated skirt, the fitted both slenderizing, the tailored i)ecammg soft- he collar. A versatile addition ardrobe. Pastel shades and navy. ssizes, $39.50. d Floor ELLEFF’S FEYSTREET your ear while you shop with us. Absolute | and Arrangement . | ments enumerated CONTINUED . . sharply reduced in Discont STREET | Sale ‘ Now in Progress! former Miss Helen Reid, who, with her | || | Due to Broad Expansive Plans and a complete change in Store Decoration | - every item has been of Departments Disposal | . . these Depart- below will be DIS- this . .. inuance UNDERWEAR NEGLIGEES BAJAMAS HAND BAGS COSTUME JEWELRY TOILET ARTICLES » Regularly Priced $12.50 and $14.50 Several styles of our popular colored fabric Sum- mer shoes and three styles of white kid slippers, all in light, dressy models, are reduced for three days, be- cause of incomplete sizes in each style. This is a rare opportunity to get an extra pair of beautiful Summer slippers at a remarkable saving in price. MOSTLY AAA AND AA WIDTHS. MOSES—2D FLOOR W, B. Moses & Sons F Street at Eleventh The Second of Our Series of Weekly Summer Offerings in i “; .@’&m‘fl' %‘9.5— | Semi-Antique DOZARS THIS WEEK ONLY— I Size 4x7 $ 9, 50 ‘ Regularly $45.00 We will store these rugs free of charge DuriN @ MARTIN | Connecticut Ave. ana l” | Among our store of Wedding Presents in the China Section— 66-Pc. LIMOGES DINNER SERVICE 3 3 9.50 Service for Eight A French china of mas- terly craftsmanship, at- tractively patterned. The squared modeling, deep blue conventional border with roses, white body and matt gold handles ef- | fect a charming en- | semble. Open stock. - ! Wt DULIN @ MARTIN | ‘ Connecticut Ave. ana 1 * PARKING SERVICE~CONNECTICUT AVENUE ENTRANCR and vice president of the national or- | Thomas J. Walsh and Repreumntlve!plrm of the United States, Great Brite ganization, will preside at the lnnuaI‘Jnhn Q. Tilson. A number of members ain, New Zealand, Australia, South banquet to be given at the Hotel La of Congress and officers of the three | Africa, Newfoundland and Canada, Fayette this evening by the association. | branches of service will attend. Similar| — ————— —— Addresses will be made by Senator dinner parties will be held in other I (Continued on Third Page.) Knitbac reweaves Let our doorman stocking runs in 24 park your car—a hours. Flawless Jelleff service for work. Single runs, our patrons. 255, A FASHION INSTITUTION Paris Washington NewYork NEW! “CHIFFON” UNDERTHINGS BY VANITY FAIR Your Summer costumes won't he complete without these fluffy, sheer undies of silk and Bemberg. Vest, $1.25 Panties nd In Shell Pink with Dawn Pink Milanese trim. VANITY FAIR FRENCH PANTIES A “Chiffon,” silk and Bem- berg, double voke front pantie that smartly buttons on the side. Pink with novelty milanese bands. Grey Shops—Second Floor Things Are Devoted to Cotton Mesh Dresses Smart Young WATER LILY MAGIC $1 3.50 Fashion’s just a “mesh” these days! - And now come the newest, coolest, smartest little frocks imaginable. First, divinely cool, because they’'re made of loosely woven cotton mesh that absorbs perspiration and tubs as easily as a handkerchief—ideal for active sports—splendid for business, In the second place, they’re “that smart”—debonair— casual—nonchalant. In two-piece “shirt waist” style or one-piece with cape In pastel shades and white. And in the third place, they're so thrillingly low in price. Left—two-piece model shirt- Right—one-plece cape model. waist frock; the circular skirt ~ The flared skirt is put on in has two handy pockets. $13.50. points. $13.50. Sports Shop—Fourth Floor Sleeveless Dresses $16.50 Summertime classics—these sleeveless frocks in shantung, in silk crepe and silk pique—every Helena Rubinstein has created a powder so exquisite of tex- g - young thing has a closetful— e s . pas that it suits the most some severely tailored—others delicate complexion—and so with a frill or two. We have a inexpensive that every woman ! most _tempting varfety for all in- can afford it. formal daytime occasions—a good many with contrasting 'y Jackets, Water Lily Powder s i In ten lovely tones—white, White—Pink—Blue cream, natural, rachel, flesh, Maize—Green blush, mauresque, ochre, Sketched: Surplice model in nat- ll;ralk shantung, Pleats front and ack. Srorts Shop—Fourth Ploor French ochre, gypsy-tan, $1.50 Water Lily Compacts, chic, square cases in red, jade or black. Cardigan Jackets $8.50 Single Compact ....$2.00 D % ...825 Besides being very, very smart ouble C0|npncl $2.50 they're as handy as can be! They make suits out of frocks! ‘They make country dresses into Water Lily Lipstick —a town frocks! They dress up your chubby companion piece to sport: frocks. Simply tailored in the compact in matching silk crepe With two pockets and cases. The shades are flat- Ls tering—Red Ruby and Red Cardinal. $1.25 Helena Rubinstein Section— Street Floor Others at $10.50 Black—Blue—W hite Brown—Green Sports Shop—Fourth Floor

Other pages from this issue: