Evening Star Newspaper, July 16, 1930, Page 14

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S Pres'ident and Mrs. Wounded Veterans on South Lawn of White House Today. HE Chief Executive and First Lady of the Land will be hosts this afternoon, at 5 o'clock, when they will receive on the south lawn of the White House ounds the disabled veterans in hospi- in the National Capital. They will be assisted by members of the cabinet and their wives who are still in Wash- ington and house guests in the Execu- tive Mansion. Mrs, Hoover was the guest in whose honor Mrs. Stimson, wife of the Secres tary of State, entertained a small com- pany at luncheon yesterday in her suburban home, Woodiey. Other guests were Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley, Mrs. Wal- ter F. Brown, Mrs. James J. Davis, Mrs. Reed Smoot, Mrs. Frederick H. Gillett, Mrs. Wilbur J. Carr and Mrs, Stark McMullin, house guest of Mrs. Hoover. ‘The table had a centerpiece of pink and white flowers, cut from the beau- tiful gardens of Woodley. . LCabinet Hostesses Come And Go on Vacation Trips. . Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur, wife of the Secretary of the Interior, is en route to er Summer home in the Sierra Nevada ountains in California, where she will ‘Femain until September. © Mrs. Arthur M. Hyde, wife of the Becretary of Agriculture, who left for Baltimore several days ago, will re- main there for about three weeks. She Wwill theh go to her home in Trenton, Mo., for the remainder of the Sum- dmer. Miss Caroline Hyde will accom- ®any her mother to Missouri. Mrs. James J. Davis returned to Washington yesterday from Ventnor, where she has a cottage for the Sum- mer, having come for the garden party this' afternoon which President and Mrs. Hoover will give for disabled vet- {erans. Mrs. Davis has been a promi- ‘nent worker among the “gray ladies” &t Walter Reed Hospital. She will join her children at Ventnor tonight. . The Ambassador of Germany and Frau von Prittwitz und Gaffron and | their little daughter are in New York :g‘wtu sail at midnight on the Ham- for their native country. % Representative and Mrs. Ernest R. #Ackerman are sailing today on the Le- ¥iathan to spend the remainder of the Bummer abroad. £ Representative Schuyler Merritt is nding some time in the Berkshire . The maval attache of the Italian lembassy, Capt. Nobile Luigi Notarbar- , %olo dei Duchi di Villarosa, went to |~ New York this morning, and will sail turday on the Conte Biancamano, to d three months in Italy. He will at the Ritz Carlton until he sails. ¢ Mrs. Pratt, wife of Rear Admiral Wil- Yam V. Pratt, who has been in New ork since her return from Europe last k, will leave today for her cottage Belfast, Me. % Lieut. Col. Jeter R. Horton, U.S. M. C., Mwith Mrs. Horton and two childgen, “Andrew and Louisa Horton, are spénd- 4ng several weeks at York Village, Me. Col. Horton was formerly on duty at Marine Corps headquarters in Wash- ington, but is now quartermaster of ;he Garde D'Haiti, with headquarters -tn Port au Prince, Haiti. Maj. and Mrs. Roderick R. Allen ve as their house guests for several eeks Miss Jean Dilley and her twin , Miss Janet Dilley, of Palestine, . The Misses Dilley are grand- ighters of the late former Governor Texas Mr. Thomas M. Campbell. & Lieut. Col. Bernard S. McMahon en- Zertained at luncheon Sunday at Fort de, Md., for Mrs. McMahon, who ‘spent several days at the fort, where ¥Col. McMahon is on duty with the #80th Division of Reserve officers, who Sare in training there. Mrs, McMahon, %nnvm in art and literary circles as ‘alrie McMahon, has returned to her {apartment on Sixteenth street, where {Col. McMahon will join her the end sof the week. Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Walter A. lel have moved to the Wardman rk Hotel. Lieut. Comdr. Riedel is on ity in the Bureau of Engineering at ‘-ihe Navy Department. £_Capt. and Mrs. Willlam Lofd Little- Sfield will entertain at dinner this eve- ning at the Chevy Chase Club for their idaughter, Miss Beatrice Littlefield, and *Mr. Bowman MacArthur, whose mar- iriage will take place Saturday. Mrs. f“Arthur MacArthur entertained at d'n- _ner last evening for her son and Miss Littlefleld. Tomorrow evening Miss -Jean Peeples, who will be the maid of “honor for the bride; will entertain at “dinner in her honor, and the following evening Miss Catherin Lowman, daugh- \ter of the Assistant Secretary of the “Treasury and Mrs. Seymour Lowman, iwill be hostess at dinner for Miss Little- | *fleld and Mr. MacArthur, .__The marriage of Miss Littlefield and Mr, MacArthur will take place at 4 o'clock in the home of the bride's parents in the presence of the imme- ~diate families and a few close friends. Little Miss Lorraine Littleficld. sister of the bride, will be the flower girl and ,Mr. Douglas MacArthur, 2d, will be OCYETY, " IETY Hoover to Entertain| in Washington with her father, Mr. | Howell Peeples, this week, on her way from visits on Cape Cod, Mass., to War- renton, Va., where she joined her mother, Mrs. Peeples, who is spending the Summer in her old home, in War- renton. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Curtin are spending a fortnight at the Chalfonte- Haddon Hall, in Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Birgfeld have gone to Atlantic City, and are staying at the Colton Manor. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mills spent the week end at the Graystone Inn, at Roaring Gap, N, ence Grosner have , and are spending some time at the Ambassador. Mrs. Taylor Hostess at Lunch in Senate Restaurant. Mrs. Charles Fisher Taylor enter- tained at luncheon yesterday at the Capitol in the Senate dining room in compliment to her niece, Mrs. Omar B. Buchanan, and children, Martha Belle and Omar Buchanan, jr., of Pittsburgh, Pa. Mrs. Taylor has just returned to the city from her native State, North Carolina, where she went to attend the dedication and unveiling ceremony of a Mount Airy granite boulder and bronze tablet erected by the North Carolina United States Daughters of Highway in Society, 1812, on the Williams Miss Jean Dilley and her twin sister, Miss Janet Dilley, of Palestine, Tex., who are the house guests for several weeks of Maj. and Mrs. Roderick R. Allen in Greenwich parkway, in Foxhall Village. The Misses Dilley are the grand- daughters of the late former Governor of Texas, Mr. Thomas M. Campbell. —Harris & Ewing Photo. THE EVENIN& STAR, WASHINGTON, ITORS FROM TEXAS Duplin County, which June 5. ‘This is the first monument to be erected to the memory of the soldiers of the War of 1812 in North Carolina. took place Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clark have given up their apartment in Alban Towers and are now occupying their new home, at 4540 Klingle street north- west, in Wesley Feights, which was formerly owned by Mr. and Mrs. A. Howard Speake. : Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Good will leave today for Virginia Beach, where they will spend a month at the Cavaller Hotel. They will be accompanied by their three daughters. Mr, and Mrs, Robert A. Bowden and their daughters, Miss Elizabeth Bowden and Miss Margaret Bowden, of Sacra- mento, Calif,, are passing some time at the Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Bowden and their daughters are touring in the East for some weeks and will Jater go to Newport and Narragan- sett to visit. Mr, and Mrs. Bowden are close friends of Mrs. Fenton Bradford, who makes her home at the hotel. Miss Dorothy Rosemary Hunt, daugh- ter of Mr. George F. Hunt, and Miss Anne Virginia Porter, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Cecil Porter, will leave Satur- day for New York. While there they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Calvert Cecil of Washington and New York. Miss Hunt and Miss Porter will return to Washington the early part of August. Miss Dorothy Lewis and Mrs. Wil- liam H. Eichner have returned from a motor trip to North Carolina, where they were the guests for a week of Mrs. Carl H. Foltz in High Point, who be- fore her marriage in Washington was Miss May Atkinson Stabler, Mrs, K. T. Tourville has gone to At- lantic City for a part of the month and is staying at the Colton Manor. Mrs. S. E. Bonneville has gone to At- Three-pc. suite and 5 separste cushions, snap fasteners. tailored to your furniture, including material, $16.50. Write or phone for samples. R. L. ISHERWOOD, Line. 5350. 1513 28¢ are at the lantic City and is staying at the Chal- | Lake Morey Club, at Fairlee, Vt. They fonte-Haddon Hall for mid-July. Dr. and Mrs. Gannon and Family Make Trip North. Dr. and Mrs. James A. Gannon and their daughter, will visit New London, Conn., are at camp. Dr. return to Washington August 1. When you wear —but a Nothing Under the Sun suit or sports attire, and perhaps you freckle and burn, or worse, vour skin roughens «s o then let ELIZABETH ARDEN three to Summer aids smartness round out your tan in a fashionable and comfortable manner. Venetian Amoretta Cream. This de- lightful cream gives the skin a be- coming finish. ..serves as a powder and prevents sunburn and rough- ness . .....S1 and $2 Vene! Comes in six shades, gives a flattering bloom to your skin and offsets sunbarn and freckles.........$1.50 and $2.50 Venetian Waterproof Cream. An excellent finishing cream that is waterproof and wonderful for sports, as it stops roughness an‘z; sunburn . Obtainable at all times in our Arden Section . .. a complete these famous helps. ! Street floor. selection of beauty O A FASHION INSTITUTION "A GOOD VALUE - B b ¥ EAL economy does not accrue from mistakes. ‘where their sons James and Robert Gannon d Mrs. Gannon will Dr. Everett M. Ellison, international D €. ! vice t of the Loyal Knight of the F':mlmdmh. Teft Wi this afternoon for Milwaukee to attend the annual convention of this club. He will be joined there by Mr. Clarence E. and Mr. Everett F. Haycroft, two other delegates from the Washing- ton Round Table. Dr. Lilllan M. Whiting of South Pasa- dena, Calif,, is at the Dodge Hotel with Dr. Agnes Lewis of Salem,Oreg. Mr. and Mrs. Prank E. Gerry of New York City are staying at the Willard while in Washington on & short visit. Miss Vella Winner, editor of General Federation News, has returned to her apartment at the Mayflower after a six weeks absence during which she visited in Denver, Pasadena and Berke- ley, Calif., and Portland, Oreg. Mrs. Alice Osmond and Miss Iona S/ twice a year a summer’s day and WEDNESDAY, Smart Summer Shoes by artcraft Avrtcraft salons offer their entire variety of unusual and exquisite footwear fashions at reductions that are simply irresistible . . . slippers for every hour of only a few days ago were 14.50....16.50 and 18.50 and now...8.85! Custom Models at [0.85 JULY .16, 1930." ' Dodge H:tfel panied by accom) becca Nelson of Logan, Utah. Mr. and Mrs. Norris Wilcox of Ne York City are at the Willard f¢ few days. Mr. and Mrs. R. Thompson of Webster Groves, Mo., are at the Dodg® Hotel for seversl days. Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Gellert and family of Philadelphia, Pa., are spend- ing several days in Washington at the ‘Willard. Prancisco_are at the! the Miss Re- »d 0 Tons‘of Checks. . New York City handles more than 50 | per cent of the business done by all of the 236 bank clearing houses in the country, the weight of checks in one day oftgn reaching two tons. L& night . ... slippers that A hoes by - - -y ARTCRAFT" 1311 F Street e All Perfect Weaves finest worsted yarns of Semi-Annual Reductions Now Effective on These rugs with a lasting sheen, made from the duced twice yearly. Regular $150 rugs, 9x12— now $119.50. Other sizes at proportionate prices —awith a very good selection from which to choose. 1101 Conn. Ave. in Running Patterns the Orient, are only re- (DOMESTIC RUG SECTION—3rd Floor). DuriN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana l” F R’ Biggest Cleaning Special July 14th to 26th, Inclusive $1.00 1-Piece Dresses Cleaned, 2-Piece Dresses Cleaned, $1.25 3-Piece Dresses Cleaned, $1.75 Plaiting, Small Extra Charge Delivery, 25¢ Extra FOOTER’S America’s Most Progressive Cleaners & Dyers 1332 G St. NW. ° Phone Dist. 2343 1784 Col. Road N.W. Phone Col. 0720 Also Our Agency at Annapolis, Md.—The Gift Shop [ Closed All Day Saturdays During July and August Store Hours: 8:15to0 6 Rich’s Semi-Annual REDUCTION SALE high-grade footwear A decisive clearance of surplus lines of the present season’s smart models at prices asked usually for footwear of mediocre quality and style. Three models are sketched. Our entire stock is not included. Reduced to $7.90 $Q.90 A Few at $[1-90 All Sales Final Several Lines of Misses’ and Chil- dren’s Footwear Reduced to $2.90, $3.90, $4.90, $5.90 Women's full-fashioned ik 1,45 chiffon hosiery reduced to 3 Pairs, $4 ; s RICH’N F.ST.AT TENTH siais certainly .. . in all sizes at the> 0 Good judgment in the beginning al- ways brings good value in the end. Distress merchandise (the kind that is often sold at clearance prices) became distress merchandise through errors of judgment. Poor selection, wrong patterns, incomplete size ranges, etc., are not the elements from which “good value” is built. When you buy Nisley shoes, which are made in— ' ~best man. Miss Aitchison Hostess -at Luncheon at Country Club. Miss Beatrice Aitchison, daughter of Interstate Commerce Commissioner and “Mrs. Clyde B. Aitchison, entertained at luncheon today at the Congressional Country Club in honor of her sister-in- 2law, Mrs. Bruce Aitchison. The guests included Mrs. Call Dickinson, Mrs. “Rollin_Hunter, Miss Laura Barkley, “Miss Elizabeth Steiwer, Miss Dorothy « Dial, Miss Jane Love, Miss Louise Ward, Miss Elizabeth McCulloch, Miss Eleanor Daniel, Miss Julia Porter, Miss Jean - Woodson and Miss Annabelle Essary. . Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman l« - will entertain a company of 18 at dinner this evening at the National Woman's Country Club, of which Mrs. Tucker- LMILLER Semi-Annual SALE 85 fornurly to $18.50 i This smart Nisley pump has the voguish new type of Baby Louis 5 For a Beautiful DTYLES I 8 Ar Little Cost Sizes2V5to 9 « AAAAto D g CHINA—The “Della Monte.” It is hard. to & believe such a rich design could be so inex- you are buying shoes that are made by the pensive. The creamy lustre and embossed same company that sells them. Errors of Italian cherub border are features. So, too, is judgment are minimized through perfect co- its open stock availability. ordination and control of distribution and SET OF 32 PIECES......A$8'00. production, bringing lower prices the year round and eliminating clearance sales entirely. ISLEY Beautiful Shoes 1339 F STREET, N.W. WASHINGTON man is president, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Prancis Christie Jameson, who have returned from their wedding trip. Mrs. Jameson was formerly Miss Mary Lee Phillips, daughter of Mrs. P. Lee Phillips and the late Mr. Phillips. % Senora de Riano, wife of the former . Ambassador of Spain, who has been the guest for several days of Mr. and : Mrs. Thomas Bell Sweeney, at Bar Har- % bor, will return to Newport today. The former United States Ambassador to Prance and Mrs. Hugh Campbell Wallace have closed their home, in Washington, and will sail Friday on < the Paris for Europe. Rev. and Mrs. Phillip C. Edwards will leave Washington today for Edgewater Beach, where Mrs. Edwards will re- cuperate from a recent serious illness. Mr. Edwards is pastor of the University Heights Methodist Church, in Wesley | Heights. . _The Rev. and Mrs. Christopher Sparling and Miss Ardrey Sparling of ! Baltimore, formerly of Washington, Wi AR o g sail from New York Friday for several thereis a "“glif‘ clear. : weeks in Europe, and will attend the ness thatonlythisprocess T eneey o of tighter - twisting of Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Hornaday left to- the silk has ochisved. day for a month’s vacation at Muskoka $1.35 $1.65 shade of gray lizard calf. SILK STOCKINGS Thesheenof ‘Nu-Twist” silk is dull—the texture is strong—the body or weight—the sheerest in all stocking history. And GLASS—Crystal Stemmed Amber Glass. ware—so daintily etched. Harmonizes per. fectly with the Della Monte and is equally in- expensive, SPECIAL A DOZEN..... $5‘50 DuLIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. and L PARKING SPACE—Connecticut Avenue Entrance A includins Spectator models, beige slippers, and darker all-occasion ALL REDUCED! footwear. .LMILLER 1222 E.STREET Lakes, Canada. Miss Jane Hornaday is % at the Girl Scouts’ camp. © Miss Mary Stewart entertained at the | dinner dance on the Plage Deauville, 5 .:n the Wardman Park Hotel, last eve- ning. i M!s Helen Peeples spent a shart time

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