Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_SOCIETY, Pleasure ' Resorts Luring Society From the Capital Many Prornmgnt Ruuisnu Optnmg Summer Homes-—Trips to Mountain and Seaside and Motnrinfl Pxovs Popular, mthl tlp | tip and will he Mr. s Yurk .flnuuthmmvn for the mwmw»‘"‘"’ Mrs. W.B. Keller, ., of New -| Diplomatic Cm—ys Prancisco, u:conmrnfld by their Hln ters, Miss Dorothy Lyman an Eligabeth Lyman, are at the Mayflower during their visit in Washington part of an zxt:nllvl trip they are mal Miss Carolyn Fay J .uckwn uul Miss Geraldine Free, with & party of f will sail from New ¥ork July three ise on ‘the Medl -month Mrs. James E. motored to New York, o5 Hotel Bretton Hall B':x w Mr. Leo Kasel and Mrs. Leo Kasel Yastiiuts’ ot oot left for Charleston, W. Va., mht"-th":: ‘work as a chemical cnnn: , 3d, son of Mr. d- l{h‘vho grai Miss Gloria Miss Elisabeth Kerr and Miss Evelyn Prass will luvt Washington this morning to mator to Los Angeles, Calif,, where they will he the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Nicholas. They will Feturn to Wash- ington about September 1. Miss Ada Comstock, | president of Rad- cliffe College, is staying at the Ward- man Park Hotel for a few days. Blackistone, daughter of Mr. l-lulul'l-l D. wk— Mn ‘Walter Phlmpl of 1o attend the wedding yesterday of Miss #. Mrs. Roland C. RIY entertained Mon- Thomas J. Ryder of New York, and Miss Grace Bmm;:emcdwn is T cousin, Milburn, in l;fih who formerly was irfax istone of East Bradley lane, a of last year. wood, | of N. is spending the week m the MAyflower having come to Wi Phoebe Moorhead and Dr. Albert Wil- liam Cloud. day in honor of her mother, l(n Charles Callahan; her sister, Mrs. Ryders’ two daughters, Miss Ni Ryder and Miss Betty P.yder Members Planning For Summer Season ) now- hwm is not ex- but will Bay State Seclcty Pays Henor to Bunker Hill Day The sixth annual outing of the Massa- chugetts Society of Washington, D. €. fiv-n in hanot of Bun‘:r Hill d:y nty Inn, Ofmy. Md., Saturday nmr- poon, June 21, was bi mz wmnlul Quiing ever nven by .00 b:;m :;1(« le!tlthln city h:b:mc o'e arrival at t) i e o by ‘zumhn unfl their friends. m superintendent of of the society, ; 80-yard dash for ns) ball-throw- . Eva Smith; cards were enjnyed’ Center: her -urrlum Jun u. in llply Com- forter Church she was ‘atherine Luiu, daughter of Mr, an lln Frank MCAs. Upper right: e ur , whose wedding was a hun 1y pllnnod cml, taking place in prdlu ‘e Hotel. She was lormerly Miss Snu athleen Padgett. lmur left: Mrs. Roger £ Settle, for- Miss Marinda Lind dn‘hhr of Dr. ln. B. . Robert- hklli plul in Alllll-l. GD., Sunday, : Mrs. Robert William as Miss Fra J s of Mr. and Mis. Frederick 7-&- Hotles Rochester, N. ¥., was in the Western Preshyterian Church, Weddings Are Sc}\edu’efl, For Early Future Dates The marriage "of Miss Virginia I. Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Dudley Carr of Auburn New York, and Mr. Bdson Alden Edson, sop of Mrs. ‘which | Bessie Edson and grandson of My. John lmt cnnnu ced that the ting of the mo-u be luld come time in g George A. Hernap, 1345 Girard street northwest, is secretary. uunn Prominent Folk Hosts At Charming Functions ‘ntative Willlam E. Hull en- at the dinner dance at the Deauville at the Wardman Park hluuufllndhknlcu Harrls, plan to close entl&fihlhml'-hzund o il &-’”finm leave for Peoria, Jil, to join Mrs. Hull for the Summer. Dr. Salazer, who is in this country AR R N X taf b asi evening at the Piage Deau- Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. Iouhe M. Dodson, director of Re) Pl Mrs. th- 'emans cuvunn of the Republi- committee, entertained at dlnnll’ lnb evening_at the Mayflower, ests 'ere mntnlve and rd 'nmutnn "‘a’ presen yseyer and Mr. and 'I.llhhmi ©f | well Zarin,-son of Mr. Mr. and Mrs, Schneider Hosts at Bridge Party The marriage of Miss Louise Faina and Mr. Frank Enfante will take place this afternoon at 4 o'clock at 8t Aloysius Church, the Rev. Jeseph I. Fink officiating. ‘The bride, who will be given in mar- riage by her brother, Mr. Amerigo Faina, will wear an ivory satin gown fashioned on princess lines, with a large bow in the back and s full skiri. A cap blossoms hold in place and m bridal :honr hair of whlh kid. 8he will ea The bride's other af mu, Miss Sadie Luber gnd Mrs. Benjamin Me- Cullough, will ar green dresses with tl,hb-flttlnl bodices, skirts and puff sleeves, ing their frocks and slippers of white kid. They will carry rases. Little M Eleanor Tersi will be train bearer. Mr. Enfante will have as his man Mr. Joseph Bertolini, nephew of the bride. The ushers will be M r- William . Mitehell, Mcml’ierl of Official Family Temporarily Absent From Capital (Continued Prom First Page.) best | oheloe, wife and daughter of Repre- | sentative David H. Kincheloe, will . | start teday by motor for Chicago, the legroom the son of Mr. wchnl Enfante. Later in the evening Mr. Enfante and his bride will leave for Atlantic City. Miss Rita Roman, daughter of Mr.|to Owens and Mrs. Loujs ann. lnd Mr, g'( 5 man Zarin, will be mnrrlzd t.hu after- noon at 4 o'clock in the Thomas Circle Club, 1326 Massachusetts avenue. “The Music You Want—When You Want It” . . . where Miss Kincheloe will join a group of girls and accompany them by private car to Camp Chatonka at Michigamma, Mich. Miss Kincheloe will remain at the camp as a couneillor for six weeks. Mrs, Klncheloe will go from Chicago burg, Ky., to visit her mother, Mrs. Buz sumr, and will join Repre- unutlva Kincheloe here llfier in me month. Mrs. J. M. McGee and her small DROOP'S 1300 G TER. L0 daughter. Marylyn, who hno nt six wesks with the g , Rep- resentative and Mrs. Lu tA John- son, at the Wardman Park Roub left yrem:y for her home Corsicana, ex. Miss Helen Hudmn who went to New York to attend the weds nl her father, Rej Jraunuuvo Grant son of higan, Bloomer in unlnnvme. N. J., yesterday, will leave Washington in September for Bedtord, Mass., where she will have charge of the educationsl and member- ship sections of the Young Women's Christian _Association. Miss Hudson huba-\hmelllarmrlthermuch of the time while and has been m lndc(nunbh vorker in the ¥, W. C. ‘The Assistant Secretary of the vay, Mr. Ernest Lee Jahncke, left Wash! ton Friday by air for Greenville to meet Mrs. Jahncke and their dnugh- “The richest child is poor ~ ters, Adele Townsend shncke and \flu Cora Jahneke, 'g;: will lt Rockwood Camp, near ., for the Summer. lln Jahneke will aceompany the anuuac %‘cqmur, back to the May- ower. ‘The Second =Assistant Postmaster General, Mr. W. Irving Glover, is en reute to Detroit, Mich.,, to attend the meet! of the Henry Ford Airplane Model gue of America. He will re- turn to his apartment, in the Wardman Park Hotel Wednesday morning. Mr. Thomaa Glover, son of the As- sistant Postmaster General and Mrs. Glover, and his friend, Mr. Youart Kerslake, sailed yesterday to spend eight weeks in Europe. Lieut. Paul Abgrnethy, U. §. N, and Mrs. Abernethy will leave Wnshlngmn Thursday for the West Coast, where Lieut. Abernethy has been ordered for duty at Bantiago. Mrs. Abernethy pléns to spend the Winter in Panama, while the fleet is there. L 'Mu. Iruél to B;mme Bride Of Rear Admiral Clari® A wedding of interest to resident and Navy soclety will take place Tuesday morning, July 1, at 11 o'clock, wheg Mrs. Nina Swalm Reed of this city will be married to Rear Admiral Frank Hodges Clark. who has just been ID- pointed to duty in Washington as member of the General Board ot the Navy, ‘The Rev. Maurice S. White will offi- ciate, the ceremony to take place at the bride’s apartment, in the Cordova, in the presence of the immediate families and other relatives. There will be no attendants. Mrs. Reed is widely known as a bril- liant lecturer on current topics of in- terest and for her analytical reviews| of the literature of the day, through her series of discussions given the past two: years in this city in her “Things Talked About courses. She is national first vige president of the National League of - American Pen Women, and for the past two years was editor of its official organ, The Bulletin. Ske is the daughter of the late Col Albert W. Swalm and Mrs. Bwalm, with the latter of whom she makes her home. Col. Bwalm was for many years in the foreign service of the United States Government at Montevideo, Ui ay, 1898-1902; Bouthampton, land, 1902- 1920, and Bermuda, 1920-22, in which latter year he died. Mrs. Reed was educated in Europe, has traveled widely and speaks several languages. She has a fascingting personality and is a cosmopolite in the best meaning of that term. Rear Admiral Clark is a graduate of the U. B. Naval Academy and has seen distinguished service in the Navy. He was made a rear admiral on Pebruary 10, 1927, while on duty im the office of the Secretary of the Navy, and the fol- lowing June was sent to sea duty as commander of the Destroyer Squadron of the Scouting Fleet in Atlantic waters. June 28, 1929, he was made commander of the Light Cruiser Division of the Scouting Fleet, and was detached from this duty June 28, 1930, with delay of one ‘llnonth, for service on the general In honor of Mrs. Reed's approaching marriage, Mzs. Daniel C. Chace, second vice president of the Nalional League of American Pen Women, entertained the national officers of the present admin- istration located in Washi n, na- tional chairmen of standing committees and a few other guests at a porch ta and handkerchief shower Tuesday aft- ernoon of last week at 4 o'clock in her home, at Chevy Chase, Md. In the com- E:, were the guest of honor, Mrs. d; Mrs. Lily R. Hunt, Miss Florence E. Ward, Mrs. Mina C. White, Miss Pa- tricia Poe Bennett, Mrs. Pauline Swalm, mother of Mrs. Reed: Mrs. Willlam H. Moses, Mrs. E. Richard Gasch and Mrs, Eugene Petel §ir Harnry Getty Goilion Soon to Sail for Chile - Sir Henry Getty Chilton, who was recently appointed British Ambassadorf to Chile, will sail for Pangma July 31 en route to his new post. Sir Henry is now in England, where he recently went from his former post as British , Minister to the Vatican, to which posi- tion he went from Washington, having l!hltd as counselor of the British em- bassy here for some years. Lady Chilton ‘and’ her daughters sailed last week for this country to visit her father, former United Stlks Ambassador to Japan, Mr. Thomas J. O'Brien, who has n in his home in Michigan since his daughter and her family went to Rome. Sir Henry and Lady Chilton are among the most popular who have been members of the diplomatic corps in Washington, though at that time they were Mr. and Mrs. Chilton, Sir Henry ing been one of those to be knighted June 3, the last anniversary of King George's birthday. Their departure was much regretted here and they have been greatly missed during the Winter festivities in the National Capital. Lady Chilton and her daughters will join Sir Henry in Panama continue their trip to Chile. Son of vfiolivian Envt;‘y Promoted in Rank Senor Don Raul Diez de Medina, son of the Minister of Bollyia and Senora de Medina, who has for some time been attache, has been promoted to second secretary of the legation. Senor de Medina is» @ newspaper man with a number of important connections, in- cluding The Washington Star, the er\, York Evening Post, the Detroit News 'Bndt the Christian Science Monitor of on. 1643 Conn. Ave. Luncheon Tea Dinner Tempting Menus for Hot Evenings “Sneaks for ‘l sel) Sunday’s Dinner 1 to l P Er AsLRE AR NECLE without mugical trgining' Ask Walter Damrosch @ Whether It's Worth While to Study The Piano! HIS CONBUMMATE MUSICIAN is one of the world's foremost authorities on all matters pex- taining to music and its study . .. He is deeply interested in its promulgation— more especially WITH THE YOUTH OF QUR COUNTRY, which in the next generation or two must and will do its part in determining tllc status of America as “A MUSICAL NATION" il m:;;::w,..;t , | haviey z h rs. M. J, Kl wecker, Il: .nlm Rizik Brothers 1213 F MONDAY PRE-HOLIDAY CLEARANCE SALE DRESSES $16-75 $25.00 ‘Were $22.50 to $39.50 Were $49.50 to 368,50 $35.00 Were $60.50 1o §88.50 SUMMER HATS, $3, $5, $7.50- SALE Selections from our entire stock of Sea- son's gayest novelty styles. Every pair made entirely by hand in Delman's No C.0.D’s No Creditg No Approvals All Bales Final \le York work-rooms. Street, Sport and Evening Models. Not all sizes in every style—but your size in many styles. All being sold at one price. $985 ‘A Portable Victrola Is Your “Best Bet” on This July 4th Outing! 1I¢’s en Unfailing Source. of Entertainment ‘We need native pumsts, singers, vnoluulls condue- tors—above ali—COM| m& ] y These Shoes have been up to $37.50 Ne Piano Helps Them Mote Toward Success Than the STEINWAY v “THE INSTRUMENT OF THE IMMORTALS" G’A-y letters addressed to Dr. Walter Damrosch in our eare will be forwarded to him promptly With ne limit te its vepertoire, it responds instantly te your demands. Be sure to take the fine mluhm' song: 5 o elphia All the Time" ind’ “Amos ‘n’ xlil Records” 1331 CONNEGTICUT AVENUE