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S0 CIETY. ASHINGTON D.. C., JUNE -22, -1 0—PART THREE. _— e e Tales of Well In Social an Ambassador and Mrs. BY MARGARET B. DOWNING. Ambassador and Mrs. Walter E. Edge are finding life in Paris so absorbing and interesting that their friends are convinced that they will remain at their post for another year, before making the usual visit home. This will be disappointing to their friends who have 5o frequently enjoyed the hospi- tality of their beautiful villa right on the edge of the water in Atlantic City's modish suburb, Ventnor. Mrs. Edge will have abundant opportunity to renew some friendships. since inevitably many travelers from this side drift to Paris, For while there is a notable dropping in sailings to France, few women can Tesist getting a two weeks' vise and Tunning down to Paris to shop. The Ambassador’s wife was an excellently attired person in all her roles, as a guest of the city when she was Camilla Seawall, and as the youthful and very attractive wife of Jersey's Senator. She has become an authority on shop- ping in Paris and this is & boon to her visiting friends and, this Summer, to a large circle of Edge and Seawall re- Known Folk d Off_icial Life Edfie Apparent]y Are;» Enjoying Parties Under Attractive Environ- 1 ment—May Delay Home Visit. | Dixie. Miss Alice and Miss Jane Riggs | lived all their lives in the old home and | |in late years, they led a perfectly se- | cluded existence, seeing none but the | closest friends and entertaining no one. | Their nieces, Alice and Jessie Howard, daughters of the former Cecilia Riggs, | their older sister, have not come to | Washington in the past 10 vears, this {by the wish of their aging relatives who cared for no company. ok ok ok | Former Senator James D. Phelan has | recently completed one of the most | complete roof dwellings in San Fran- |cisco and this on the top of his own | | fine ofice building bearing his name |and high over the picturesque section | of Chinatown, overlooking the ba: | Along the Pacific coast such habitation: are calied roof bungalows, which is plain and direct, and the same is true | of the Middle s West, where they are | identified as studio roof apartments. | But In New York the term penthouse | has been adopted, taken from a French | | term — “pentice” —an _outbuilding or | also in turn | | projection, and penti lations. The little girls have a vogue | comes from the familiar Latin word | already in elaborate nuptials and |appendix. Mr. Phelan has planned an | figure almost as constantly as certain | elaborate formal garden from the en- little ring bearers and small flower maids do in the hymeneal ceremonies of exalted couples in London. They 2lso have been photographed _and painted without end and the Paris populace is quite familiar with these graceful sprites, daughters of the United States Ambassador. * ook % Former Gov. Thomas Edward Camp- bell of Arizona, recently commissioner to the Ibero-American exposition in Seville, who comes to Washington as a member of the Civil Service Commis- | sion, is with Mrs. Campbell, returning to a familiar environment. They spent two Winters here after the former chief executive of Arizona had laid down the burden of State and naturally he was compelled to be close by during the long negotiations which led this country into cordial participation with the other republics of world in regard to the Seville interna- tional fair. In Seville probably no offi- cial from the land of the free made a more favorable impression on all with whom he came in contact, as did Gov. Campbell, and Mrs. Campbell shared his honors. Feting the most punctilious royalty in Europe, Mrs. = Campbell avoided pitfalls and entertained the king and his consort and all the royal children, together and in groups, with the grace which seems the birthright of Uncle Sam's daughters and the tact which has also been bestowed on them by a fairy godmother. manent bullding which the State De- partment had built as the offices of the commissioner and his staff was on the edge of the lovely Maria Luisa Park | and the boulevard which sweeps along the muddy Guadaliquiver. Through the patics, in the arcades and drawing | rooms which hereafter will be the con- sular rooms, a steady stream of guests were received by Gov. and Mrs. Camp. bell and feted after the manner of the country. Both are natives of their wonderful State, Arizona, the commis- sioner having been born in Prescott and Mrs. Campbell, who was Miss Eleanor Gayle Allen, in Jerome. - xoxox The former governor of the Philip- pines, Col. Willlam Cameron Forbes, who has been appointed Ambassador to Japan, is a bachelor and the nephew of Ralph Waldo Emerson. So many of th> Island Empire's talented sons and daughters have studied at Harvard and | Radcliffe that the philosopher and poet of the Brook Farm colony is not unknown in cultured circles. But the Ambassador-designate need not rely on honors accruing from his illustrious uncle, for he has won many on his own account. Most fervently is his memory blessed when the Army officers sta- tioned in Manila and thereabout fore- gather in the fine club house elevated above the city, cool and inviting when the weather is torrid below. As gov- ernor of the Philippines Col. Forbes was an earnest advocats of sport. He gave the site for the country club house and secured fair terms golfing grounds and a polo fleld were in_demand. During the years he served in Manila he made many visits of courtesy 1o ‘Tokio and he will go to his new mis- sion, the Senate being favorable, not only familiar with Japan's traditional policies but with a personal acquaint- ance with its present leaders. knows the Emperro very well and in the day when he was crown prince and not hedged about with so high a | ‘wall of isolation. A bachelor ambas- sador' is rather uncommon, Mr. Edwin V. Morgan at Rio being the only other, now that the genial Alexander Moore has passed away. Tokio is the most expensive capital in the world and its envoys need to be carefree and well endowed to stand the strain. * % ok % Mrs. Hoover and her immediate pred- ecessor, Mrs. Coolidge, are noted for their devotion to canine pets, but neither has ever adopted the lap-dog fad so prevalent years ago. Neither of the ladies ever took dogs on her shopping tours, although occasionally one eould see a woolly head gazing from the limousine windows of the White House equipage during the Coolidge adminis- tration. Just now a furious contro- versy wages in London about dogs. British ladies are prone to have King Charles Spaniels, Pomeraneans and Pekinese in their arms, even when making calls of state. It has amused people from this country to read mno- tices in England’s stately ministers re- fusing admittance to lap-dogs. Mary is the exception and, like the First Lady here, she never goes abroad the Western | ‘The fine per- | when | He | | trance of his abode down its length in | | a series of arches covered with flowe:- | | ing vines, principally roses and the | | mysterious moon-flower. ‘The last arch |is” screened heavily with ivy against | | which a laughing satyr rises from a | granite pillar. Close by are famous roof bungalows. That owned by M. | Templeton Crocker on the top of his community apartment house has a | |large flower garden and a compact or- | nate one-storied house, and the north- | ern end is entirely enclosed in beveled glass which acts as a wind deflector. | Nob Hill, once the favorite section for | handsome mansions, now abounds in hotels and apartments and the roof is ften divided into four parts with am- ple room for all. P President Rubio of Mexico is the first to announce the results of the com- mittee on selection of proper candidates | for the Latin American scholarships | provided by the John Simon Guggen- heim Foundation. The fortunate candi- dates are Mr. Alfonso Napoles Gandara | and Dr. Arturo Rosenbleuth, they hav- | ing won the highest marks out of the 50 examined by the committee, Mr. | Dwight Morrow was one of these exam- | iners and also the former President, Senor Portes Gil. The applicants came from every State in Mexico, but the winners of the prize are residents of its capital city. Dr. Rosenbleuth will enter Harvard and continue experiments in physical and biological chemistry and physiology. Senor Napoles' fellowship is\in_the domain of higher mathematics | and harmonic analysis and he will enter the Massachusetis Institute of ~Tech- nology this Autumn. Both will ulti- mately go into the National University as professors. Four scholars from this | country will go to the southern republics | to engage in research work relating to the aborigines, and this also under the terms of the Guggenheim Foundation. Two of these four special students wili spend the first year of their course in | Mexico City. * X ok X Mr. William Adams Delano, the emi- nent ‘architect, was in Washington for two weeks recently in attending the 63d convention of the American Institute | of Architecture and to details of the new Japanese embassy which his firm has in charge. He is not related to the well known Delanos who have been | here for some time—Mr. Frederic | Adrian Delano, publicist and member |of the Pine Arts Commission, and his | half brother, Mr. Lyman Delano, a rail- | road magnate, who comes from time and 1s & member of several | ington clubs. Mr. Delano, the archi- tect, is from the older branch of the family still identified with New England, and his home, at least in Summer, is ( near Norwalk, Conn. He was a stu- dent of the great Carrere and is & graduate of which the Institute des Beaux Arts in Paris Is very proud. Mr. | Delano designed and built the entire | Labrador Mission Plant of the Grenfell | Association, a foundation which at- | | tracts philanthropists, doctors and gen- | eral travelers to the bleak coast of the North Atlantic. The Japanese Ambas- | sador selected the Delano-Aldrich plan from & number of competitors, influ- | enced by the recent success of this firm in the State Department’s bids for the | new embassy in Paris. This is to be on | what is called the treasure street of | Parisian architecture, the Place de la | Concorde, and the city fathers of the French capital are wary about the de- signs for new edifices, lest they con | flict with the age-old balance and | splendid _perspective. But these plans | |'of Mr. Delano and his partner have | passed at least six different commis- | sioners and the first United States em- | bassy bullt in Paris will take shape in | early Autumn. ook x Robert E. Lee's birthplace at Strat ford-on-Potomac, the old way of plac- | ing this estate, which is to become & | | memorial to all the Lees will, according | |to the intent of the foundation in | | charge, be not only & splendid monu- | | ment to the iliustrious family but it will | be 4 worthy monument to Southern | plantation life. Incidentally much his- toric information will become familiar | | to those spurred by the anclent treas- | ures placed before them in Tidewater | Virginia who will begin a pilgrimage to such revered points. _Stratford was not | acquired by Richard Lee, the first of the | name to take up residence in the Old | Dominion in 1650. It was his son| | Thomas, first native Governor of Vir- ginia, in 1725, who had the fine domain, | | wife of George 11, at that period Regent ' with & dog except for a stroll in the | rivate portions of St. James Park or at Vindsor. Spaniels, according to canine authorities, “have no vogue in this country and dog lovers have gone over bodily to terriers, the most favored be- ing the wire-haired fox, the Scotch, the Irish and the Cairn. The Boston bull has furlous champions and the Sealyham has defenders, but at a hilarious meeting held a week ago on the veranda of Mrs. Edward Hutton on the Long Island estate some 50 dog owners decided in favor of terriers and in the order cited. It was all informal but a straw to show how the wind of canine popularity is blowing. It shows also that for sport-loving American women the lap-dog has passed. o ox % Unless Col. E. Francis Riggs should desire to make a Winter home of his grandfather's house in 1 street, where his aunt, Miss Jane Agnes Riggs, re- cently died, the fine old mansion un- doubtediy will be absorbed by its near neighbor, the Army and Navy Club, which has long felt the need of elbow Toom. 1t is a plain, substantial double brick house with incredibly large rooms, which will lend easily to remodeling for club purposes. Miss Riggs might_ be called the sole survivor of that bril- liant_ante-bellum incident, the visit of the Prince . Wales, afterward Edward VII to President Buchanan, The royal guest was entertained at dinner in the Riggs mansion, and the pictures of Mrs, George Riggs. wife of the banker, founder of Washington's best known bank, and of the daughters, Miss Alice and Miss Jane, may be admired on the canvas of the princely visit to Mount Vernon, a copy of which is in Bucking- ham Palace while the original is in | the Corcoran Art Gallery. Many the famous gathering has the Riggs man- sion sheitered in the exciting era be- fore W. Riggs was a Marylander and a mocrat and like his partner in_the banking business. the late W. W. Cor- coran, he was an ardent supporter of the Civil War finally broke. George | —Ideally suited to the w of larger proportions Jacket Suit ---of Blue Shantung As ill the left—a nice line movement promises slenderness very chic smartness. Larg pol dark blue stitching, and just a few of them, i attractiveness. ZJirkin & Incorporated 821 14th Street N. W. MISS RUTH VIRGINIA ARNOLD, ‘Whose parents, Mi engagement to Mi take place June 25. and Mrs. James T. Arnold of Cherrydale, Va., announce her Charlton Montgomery Gaines of Washington, the wedding to of Great Britain. The royal grant was | a recognition of the valuable services | rendered by Richard and Thomas to the | crown. The Stratford Memorial F\)un-i dation has in mind the restoring of | every feature of old plantation life as well as unique features in this mellow | mansion, like its leet court and its baron’s court where Thomas Lee dis- | pensed justice to the gentry and his | steward to the yeomen. Both rooms are massive and splendidly furnished, and | have defied the tooth of time, but need a little modern refurbishing to present the aspect of the opening eighteenth century. The drawing rooms have not been despoiled of treasures of carving | and inlaid wood. But the recreation of plantation quarters, the restoration of | smokehouse and ice pit, all these will | have a distinct antiquarian value apart from historic reverence felt for a worthy line as presented in its original | environment on this continent. | BERENGARIA TWO HOURS | Passengers Unaware Vessel Stopped Until Freighter Left Behind Overtakes Ship. By the Associated Press. S. 8. BERENGARIA, June 21.—En- | gine trouble that brought the liner,' Berengaria, to & standstill for two hours Wednesday will remain a mystery until the ship is docked Saturday eve- | ning and the engines have been in- | spected. | Passengers on deck were not aware the ship had completely stopped. Then, as a freighter she had previously passed | came up on the port beam, the signal “Not under control” was run up. | Two hours later the ship started again at reduced speed. Commodore Arthur Rostrom merely said: “A stitch in time saves nine, and sometimes more.” | MISSIN GIRLSCOETS LOCATED IN FOREST By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, Wash, June 21—Rest-| ing tonight at Last Crossing Ranger Station, northeast of Mount Rainier, two Yakima Girl Scouts, Evelyn Kraut- kremer, 18, and Marian Converse, 17, who had been missing since Tuesday, were safe and preparing to leave today for_their homes. | The girls wandered away from chums | in the Fifes Peak district in the Upper Yakima Valley and have been sought by land and air since yesterday. They were located after stumbling, hungry and weary, into the ranger | cabin and telephoning to Nevin Mc- Culloch, McCulloch was 12 miles away, but started through the thick timber | immediately to take food to them. | E. J. Fenby, in charge of the Rangers in the search, sald McCulloch probably would keep the girls all night at Last Crossing or White River Camp, at_the base of Mount Rainier and take them Queen | Presented as a gift from Queen Caroline, | to Enumclaw, on this side of the moun- | tains tomorrow. oman ustrated to Bl [ Others $15 to $39.75 lka dots of its Sons ncrease CALIFORNIA STUDENT WINS IN ORATORY TEST Captures $1,500 Prize in Compe- tition in Discussing the Consti- tution—Others in Honor List. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGLES, June 21.—Harold F. Pattee, jr., Pamona College, Claremont, Calif., Thursday won the national inter- collegiate oratorical contest on the Con- stitution, sponsored by the Better Amer- ican Federation. He was awarded a prize of $1,500. Other _winners were Edward Darr Doyle, St. Xavier College, Cincinnati, second place and $1,800; Arthur Larson, Augustana College, Sioxx Falls., S. Dak., third and $750; James P. Casey, Ford- ham University, New York, fourth and $550. Remaining finalists, Franxiia P. Cole, Depauw, Green Castle, Ind;. John A. Burke, Holy Cross, Worcester, Mass., and Robert Elliott, Emory University, Atlanta, $400 each. Cholera Epidemic Not }ixpected. MANILA, June 21 (#).—Dr. R. W. Hart, chief of the United States Public Health Service at Manila, yesterday said there probably would be some increase in cholera cases in various parts of the islands before the situation was con- trolled, but did not expect an epidemic. Alexandria Record Of Special Society Events of Past Week Early Summer Season Mark- ed by Matrimonial Alli- ances, Past and Prospec-| tive—Guests Entertained | in Homes. | Rev. Dr. and Mrs. William J. Morton | had all of thelr children home with, |them at Christ Church tectory last week | was home from West Point, where he is |and instructor; and also Dr. and Mrs.! Charles Bruce Morton and their small| | son, Charles Bruce Morton, 3d, of the | University of Virginia; Lieut. and Mrs. Powhatan Moncure Morton of Fort Eustis, and Mr. and Mrs. John Armi- stead Deming of Baltimore. Lieut. Wil- liam J. Morton sailed from New York Friday, June 13, and on landing will go directly to Geneva, Switzerland, where his marriage to Miss Dorothy Pepperill Smith, daughter of Rev. Dr. and Mrs. | Everett Pepperill Smith, will occur on Wednesday, July 9, in the American Episcopal Church, of which Dr. Smith is the rector. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Dare have returned from Wellesley College, accom- panied by Miss Virginia Dare, who was one of this year's graduating class. Mr. and Mrs. J. Rowland Goode and J. Rowland Goode, jr., went to Lexing- ton last week to attend the commence- ll‘l’. and Mrs. Charles T. Nicholson. { on Duke street. | are at home after a visit to the latter's | Lieut. Willlam J. Morton, jr., U. 8. A, | Mrs. ment exercises at the Virginia Military Institute, when Mr. Louls C. Goode was | graduated with the degree of bachelor | of science. Mrs. Harry B. Caton, Miss Barbara Caton, Miss Alice Whitfon, Miss Eddie | Dickert and Miss Rebecca Dickert left | Thursday for New York and sailed yes- | terday to spend the Summer in Europe. | Dr, and Mrs. T. Marshall Jones en- | tertained informally Wednesday evening | n their home on Prince street to cele- Orate their golden wedding anniversary. | The Commissioner of Revenue and |Mrs. Charles Hilliard Callahan _an- | nounce_the marriage of their daughter, Mary Louise, to Mr. William Parker Richardson, Saturday, June 14, Invitations have been received from Mr. and Mrs. John A. Sties for the marriage of their daughter, Agnes Ger- trude, to Mr. Constant Edward Kauff- mann, son of Mr. and Mrs, Charles | Kauffmanry Tuesday morning, June 24, | In St. Mary's Church in Richmond. Mr. | Kauffmann's mother formerly was Miss | Melanie Ponnet and he is a grandson of the late Constant Ponnet of Alexan- dria. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Herbert Oliver, who have been spending a part of their honeymoon in the North, were guests last week of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Herbert Oliver, on South | Washington street, before leaving for | their home in Atlanta. The bride for- merly was Miss Elizabeth Mary Otis, and the wedding occurred on Monday, | June 9, in Sacred Heart Church Atlanta. Mrs. Oliver entertained at tea Monday afternoon in honor of her | daughter-in-law. Miss Nina Trevvett has returned from | Richmond, where she went to attend | the wedding of her cousin, Miss Bessie “Trevvett, daughter of Mr. E. J. Trevvett, to Mr. Edward C. Lewis of Bloxom, Va., ion Wednesday, June 11, in the Pirst Baptist Church. | Miss Margaret Douglas Reese, who has becn visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller Reese, on Cameron street, has gone to attend the Summer school at Vassar College. Miss Kath- erine Meredith Reese of New York City is now a guest of her parents. Miss Katherine Reese was a bridesmaid at the marriage of Miss Mary Hiden Hoge, | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Scho- | feld Hoge, jr., to Mr. Robert Walter Burton, which occurred in All Souls Episcopal Church in Washington Saturday afternoon, June 14. Miss Reese and the former Miss Hoge are distantly related through the Janney family. | Miss Elizabeth Nicholson, who was | of this year's graduating class at Ran- dolph - Macon Women's College, in Lynchburg, and who went to Blacksburg for the finals at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and then to Lexington for the finals at the Virginia Military Institute, has arrived at the home of her parents, Baby Grand Pianos Special for Hmflbmwuhrmmr classmate, Miss Elizabeth n of Memphis, Tenn. U. 8. N, and Comdr. H. B. Soule, by motor to veland, Ohio. Mrs. Soule left Mot spend the Summer in | Miss M Esther Butts, Miss Ger- trude Van Ness and Miss Mary Van Ness went to North Chill, N. Y. last week -to_attend the finals at Cheese- brough Junior College. Miss Butts will pay a series of visits to friends in Syra- cuse, North Hanover, N. H., and Spring- fleld. Mass,, before returning home. Miss Jeanne Davenport of Culpeper is the guest of Miss Adelyn Apperson | | Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ansley Smoot | rents, the Rev. and Mrs. Dudley | loogher, in Fredericksburg, and have | Mrs. Benton Boogher as their guest. | Rev. Dudley Boogher, jr., brother of . Smoot, who was’ ordained to the diaconate at the Episcopal Theological | Seminary this month, salled from New | York Saturday, June 14, to spend the Summer traveling in Europe. | The Rev. and Mrs. James Davis Gib- | son and Miss Janet Gibson have gone | to their home, in Covington, Ky., after attending the ordination exercises at the Theological Seminary, of which Mr. Gibson is an_ alumnus. Mrs. Gibson formerly was Miss Mary Leadbeater of this eity. Mrs. William Shields Newton of Nor- folk is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Ziegler. Mrs, Elmer Stonbock and Miss Cath- erine Stonbock are visiting the former's sister, Mrs. Robert H. Bartlett, in Bal- timore. Miss Erl Douglas of Columbus, Miss., is the guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Louls P. Woodward, on South Lee street. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Whittemore and Miss Thelma Whittemore have returned from visits to friends in Preston, Md., and Rehoboth, Del. Mrs. Margaret See has gone to her| home, in Cincinnati, after a visit to her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. SOCIETY. Herndon's mother, Mrs, Dabney Hern- don, will, as usual, spend the greater part of the Summer in Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Heisley of At- lanta are the guests of the former's mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Heisley. Mrs. Floyd Keller and Miss Ann Keller have returned from a visit to relatives in Romney, W. Va. Mr. Charles Walker has gone to his home, In Boise, Idaho, after a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Walker He was accompanied by Mr. Carlos Mc- Cullough, who will remain in Idaho through the Summer. Mrs. Hollis Beckwith has returned from Annapolis, where she went to at- tend the wedding of Miss Margaret Elizabeth Parsons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Prank T. Parsons, to Ensign Wil- llam McClure Drane, U. 8. N., which occurred in the Naval Academy Chapel Monday, June 9. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Vittum of La- cona, N. H., are guests of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Vittum. Mrs, Willlam Barbour, jr.; Miss Mil- dred Moriarty and Miss Ruth Sherwood | entertained at a surprise shower Tues- day evening in honor of Miss Elizabeth Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E Steuart_Smith, whose marriage to Mr. Archie Young, jr., will take place Friday evening, June 27, at 7:30 o'clock in the Second Presbyterian Church. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rice Beard of Tamaqua, Pa., were week end guests of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Gerlacher on South Wash- ington street. Mr. and Mrs. Beard were accompanied home by the latter's }flnll Federation of Business and Pro= fessional Women's Clubs. Miss Evelyn Davis entertained at » garden party Thursday evening, Jume/ | 12, at the home of her parents, Mr. and | Mrs, Virgil C. Davis, in honor of the lnlhfl‘ members of the graduating class 1 of Jefferson School. | Mrs. Macdonald Douglass and Miss | Kathleen Douglass left Wednesday for New York and sailed Friday to spend the Summer traveling in Europe. In the party with Mrs. Douglass were Miss Ella Broders, Mrs. James Elliott of Chi- cago. sister of Miss Broeders: Mrs, Mar- vin Franklin Stewart, Miss Katle Uhler Miss Anita Howard, Miss Louise Howard, Miss Jean Fannon, Miss Rita Dyson and Mrs. Margaret Hayes = Mr. Douglass will sail July 7 to join the party and finish the tour in their company. Miss Margaret Ogden entertained at tea Sunday afternoon in the home of her mother, Mrs. Kenneth W. Ogden, in honor of Mrs. Erwin Meade Hufford, a bride of the past Spring, and Miss Anna Carrington Stump, a recent graduate of the State Teachers’ Colloge in Farm ville. Miss Ogden was assisted by Miss Edgina Carver, Miss Virginia Shuman and Miss Ruth Shuman. There were | about 25 guests, all of whom were for- mer classmates at the Alexandria High School. Miss Ellen Moore of Marion, S, C has been the guest of Miss Courtenay Page Waller at the home of her parents | Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer J. Waller, Miss Waller entertained at an informal dance | Saturday evening, June 14, and at bridge | Tuesday afternoon, in honor of her guest. ~Miss Moore and Miss Waller | left Thursday for the former's home, in i v, Mrs. Samuel Luck- | Marion, e DA o, Bemyia Miss Dorothy Smith of Charlottes- Miss Mary Ellis Lee entertained at| Ville is the guest of Miss Courtenay Oscar F. See. Mr. John W. Herndon sailed last week | to spend a month in Germany. Mr. National 3770 2 Lili feta shades. $80. Special Wer ver parchment zlue Glass Lamps with gold taf- $25 1Table Lamp in sil- late with white shade. ... $22.50 bridge Tuesday afternoon in her home, on North Columbus street. Miss Jans Deahl has arrived home from Sophie Newcomb College of Tulane University in New Orleans. Mrs. Charles M. Shepperson, Mrs. Mary Troth, Miss Margaret Germond, | Miss Corinne Reardon and Miss Alice Gronau were in Petersburg yesterday for the State board meeting of the Vir F Street at Eleventh 1 Italian Marble Floor Lamp trimmed in antique gold plate. Was $200 ......$77.50 1 Royal Sevre Lamp with gold taffeta shade. Was $125..$45 MOSES—FIRST FLOOR Marshall Cochran at the home of her | parents, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Coch- ran. Miss Cochran entertained at a | bridge-luncheon Thursday in honor of Rer guest. ‘The first essentially combative ship bullt for the Indian Navy since it was | reorganized as a naval force on Novem- ber 11, 1928, has just been launched. W. D. Moses & Sons Since 1861—Sixty-Nine Years of Public Confidence 9 A. M. to 6 P.M. Pre-Inventory Clearance Lamps are Greatly Reduced 2 Italian Pottery Bottle Lamps with ggld taffeta shades. ere $125 $40 2 French Pottery Table Lamps with ivory background. Were $70 .. —and Several Others at Reduced Pre-Inventory Prices 835 Pre-lnventory Clearance Fine Linen Table Cloths Greatly Reduced Hemmed Without Further Charge brines to you exceptionally fine values in discontinued patterns of The Pre-Inventory Clearance during the Summer, when you do not care to subject the finer linens to the hazard of fruit and bever- Tomorrow Only! $295 Terms $15 per month HESE 3600 Grand Pianos have either been out to concerts or on rent and are almost as good as new. We will accept your upright ano in trade. “Individuality in Furniture at De Moll's” 0. J. De Moll & PIANOS Radios Co. Furniture S==—==== 12th & G Sts. Don’t Ovetlook This Exceptional Buying Opportunity All Sales Final No Exchanges—Not! Fur Storage Highest Protection - g on “Approval” Saks—Second Floor Fur Storage Righest Protection at 4 8 $35 Occasional Approximately 2.6x4.6 524.50 all-linen table cloths. If you need medium-priced cloths to use in- stead of your finer linens now and 14 Regular $6. 67x86 Inches 53.75 8 Regular $7.75 Cloths 70x88 Inches 4 Regular $12. 72x90 Inches $3 75 Cloths 72x age stains, we urge you not to miss this opportunity. Note the limited quantities. 8 Regular $5.50 Cloths—67x68 Inches 4 Regular $9 Cloths 72 Inches 6 4 Regular $15 Cloths 72x72 Inches 56.50 50 Cloths 9 Regular $8 Cloths 72x72 Inches $5 Oriental Rugs Now at Lowered Pre-lnventory Sale Prices (Many are display pieces; others shopworn.) $55 and $57.50 Hamadans and Mossouls Approximate Size 3x6 Feet $34.50 $65 Rugs MOSES—FOURTH FLOOR Hamadan Rugs Approximately 3.6x6 $47.50 Unusual Pre-Inventory Specials in Twenty Other Departments .