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8 1930—PART THREE. ‘;lrden party Given At\Chevy Chase Home In Honor of Visitors SOCIETY. THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., SEPTEMBER 21, ' Mrs. Johnston B. Campbell of Quesada | i New Irish Battery Tested. Tests of the electrical storage battery invented by Dr. James Drumm, the young Irish scientist, are being made in Britain. Dr. Drumm claims that his device will eliminate the uss of coal on | railways. In one test the battery, | mounted on a specially constructed car, propelled a vehicle carrying 20 people 40 miles at 35 miles an hour under its | own stored power. Pree State govern- ment officials are watching the tests. The New O T tex ommpen, B cumpve o wets | AMERICAN WOMAN PUBLISHES | | Five Duughters Bxpensive University of North Carolina, Chapel | Pleading guilty before the city magis- TWO LEADING FRENCH PAPERS| % v e o i i | oo Bt cn. tenitied ek Mme. Dupuy Recently Honored for Chari- | adaa R e s B “eirsca” with | table Activities—Friendship With Mme. Curie and Flammareon Widow Praised. | SR SR o | Hill, N. C. Miss Virginia Campbell will leave tomorrow to resume her studies at the Southern Seminary, Buena Vista, Va. Miss Helen Rayner, daughter of Mrs. | Pearce W. Rayner, has gone to North- ampton, Mass., where she will enter Smith College | _ Mz, Harold DeVeau and Mr. William Blum _have returned from Sayville, Long Island, and will leave tomorrow for the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. DeVeau will resume his studies and Mr, Blum, who has been a student of | Swarthmore College, will enter the uni- | versity as a junior. | Miss Ruth Doyle, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Harold E. Doyle of Hunting- | ton street, will leave Tuesday for| | M:. and Mrs. J. V. Bennett Entertain for Mr. and Mrs. | Bates—Special Society | Events Chronicled. | five daughters, and as ther husbands were not able to kesp them he was com pelled to maintain their families as we | added that he has been “cursed” with as his own. | works. She had already been cited fq: 13.—One of |her work with wounded and sick so Mme. | diers during the war, and in 1921 was Her | awarded elementary rank in the Legion | By the Associated Press. PARIS, September France's outstanding Women, Paul Dupuy, is, an American. Mr. and Mrs. James V. Bennett en- Pertained at a garden tea party last Mr. and SBunday afternoon at their home, 119 E#it 4 o 7 . ; | Leland street, in honor of Mrs. Sanford Bates. The guesst. who numbered more than 100, included their brother-in-law and sister, Mr. nd Mrs. Ray Vaughn of Providence, R. and the entire staff of the United States Bureau of Prisons. Mr. and Mrs, ustin H. MacCormick and Mrs. Ar- hur Wood presided at the tea table. fThe table flowers were asters in the tel shades. Mr. Bates recently re- urned from Europe, where he attended the International Prison Congress. Mrs. tes and her children spent the Sum- er in Yarmouth, Mass. Miss Betty tes, & graduate of the Chevy Chase 8choo! for Girls, has gone to Smith College to pursue her studies, Mrs. Richard Fay Jackson and Mrs. fdward Baltz motored to Boston to fmeet their daughters, Miss Carolyn Fay Jackson and Miss Elizabeth Baltz, who arrived Sunday on the S. S. Exilona Miss Jackson and Miss Baitz have been traveling in Continental Europe for the past three months. While in B: wvaria they attended the “Passion P! at Oberamergau. Mrs. Robert Callahan of Connecti- eut avenue left yesterday for Atlantic Oity, N. J., where she will spend a week Mr. Prances G. Crasts and Miss Ma Son Crasts of Smithtown, Long Island, are house guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. | Clayton on Brookeville Toad. Mrs. Henry W. Bearce and her son, | Mr. Roger Bearce, returned Wednesday | to their home on Ridgewood avenue after spending the Summer at Keoka | Lake, Waterford, Me. Mrs. Charles ‘B. Eckels entertained members of the Florence Circle of Florence Crittenton Home at tea | Tuesday afternoon, in her home on ar street. iss Frances Brooks entertained at a | m supper Thursday evening in her on West Irving street, after which her guests were invited to the mid-week dance at the Congressional Country Club. . Miss Marian Bates of Livingston Street left Thursday for College Park, Md., where she will continue her stud- fes at the University of Maryland. Mrs. Phaon H. Bates left Wednesday for Philadelphia, Pa., where she will spend two weeks visiting friends and rela- ves. Mrs. Edward G. Yonker and her daughter, Miss Madeline Yonker, have yeturned to their home on Thirty-ninth street after spending a week in At- lantic City, N. J. Mr. Leason Blaisdell Adams left Sat- urday for Champaign, Ill, where he will resume his studies at the Univer- sity of Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Alexander Blair of Morrison street sailed from New York Saturday on the S. 8. George Wash- ington for England and the Continent. They will be absent for six weeks. Miss Margaret Van Cleve, who has been spending the Summer in Buffalo, N. Y., and Easton, Pa., stopped en route to her home at Lynn Haven, Fla., to be a house guest of Miss Margery Hurd on Stephenson place. Miss Hurd entertained at a supper-bridge in honor of her guest, when others of the com pany were Mr. and Mrs. William Jemi- son, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hurd, Mr. Clifford Yeoman and Mr. William McClure. Mr. George W. Huguely, jr., left Wed- for Chapel Hill, N. C., where he resume his studies at the Uni- ‘versity of North Carolina. Mrs. Robert Quirk has returned from New York, where she met her dsughter, Roberta, who has been attending umg this Summer. Miss Emily Jane Quirl left Monday for New York, where she will resume her studies at the Man- hattanville College. Mrs. Edwin M. Evans returned Tues- day to her home on East Lenox street after spending the Summer in her cot- tage at Virginia Beach, Va. Mrs. M. P. Schooley is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander McCashley on ‘West Melrose street. Mrs. Schooley is en route from Orlando, Fla, to her home in Pittsburgh, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Wilson Phillips and their family left Monday to spend $wo weeks in Riverhead, Long Island. Mrs. Alexander R. Mullowny and her daughter, Miss Katheryn Mullowny, re- turned Friday to their home on Con- necticut avenue after spending some- time in Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. White have ;!.hlkrned 'o“t:ehelr home on Chevy Chase Tkway after spending six weeks in Scotland and En'llnd.' | Mrs. Harold G. Moulton, her son John and her daughter Miss Barbara Moulton have returned to their home on Oliver street after a motor trip to New England. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Earll enter- tained at a bridge supper last evening in ir hflom;‘on Rl:no road. . an rs. Henry de Course; Adams entertained for their son Rln! dall over the week end in their Sum- mer home Fairhaven CIiff, Maryland. Mrs. Eugene E. Stevens and her daughter, Miss Josephine Stevens, have n | Thursday to MRS. FRANK J. BAILEY, Northampton, Mass., where she will re- sume her studies at the Mary Burnham | School | Dr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Dutton, Miss | Grace Edwina Dutton and Mrs. Dut- ton's sister, Mrs, Mary Louise Huntz- bery, have returned from Atlantic City, | N. J., to their home on Hesketh stree Mr. and Mrs. E, E. Porter, who have | been spending the Summer at Point | Pleasant, N. J., are house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Wolcott. Mr. and | Mrs. Porter are en route to their home | at Southern Pin N. C. Col. and Mrs. P. M. Anderson and their family have returned after spend- | ing the Summer in their home at Bay | Ridge, Md. | Mr. and Mrs. Jere Crane are spend- ing the week end as guests of Mr. and | Mrs. Kail Fenning, at their Quince Orchard, Md. | Mr. De Sales Mudd of Southern | Maryland is a house guest of his uncle | and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Bowling, on_Harrison street. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam J. Blackwood and their son, William Richard, have | maiden name was Browne. She is the publisher of two of the country’'s most widely circulated daily papers, Le Petit Parisien, which claim: to have the largest newspaper circuls tion in the world, and Excelsior. 1 Her husband built up the papers to | great power before his death several Sears ago. Since then his widow has | been directing them and they have not | ost_prestige under her guidance. | The French government recently | chose Mme. Dupuy as a knight in the | Legion of Honor for her many charitable ; — | and Mrs. John H. Dynes of Cummings lane, has gone to College Park, Md., where she will take a post-graduate course at the University of Maryland. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dunlop and and Miss Ruth Dunlop, have returned | from their Summer home, in Bay Head, | N. J. Miss Marian Dunlop will leave | ‘Wednesday for Reichertown, Md, | where she will resume her studles at | the Hanah Moore Academy | Miss Ennis Little, daughter of Mr. | | returned from their Summer home in|and Mrs. J. R. Little, has gone to| Before her marriage early in September she was Miss Mildred Esch of 2008 | Brandywine street. | returned from their Summer home at Epping Forest, Md. Miss Stevens left resume her studies at Mount Holyoke College Miss Anne Stowell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ellery Stowell, has entered Barnard College. Mrs. Stowell and her son and daughter have been spending the Summer at Sag Harbor, Me. Mr. Cleveland Norcross, 'son of Mr. and Mrs. Théodore W. Norcross, will enter the Wharton School of Finance | at the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. James Warfield of Altoona, Pa. been a guest of Mr. Cleveland Norcross Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Southgate| and Miss Isabel Southgate are spend- ing the month of September in their | Summer home at Bass Rock, Mass. | Miss Jean Stimson has returned | with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. A. M Stimson, from their Summer home af Cadmans Neck, Mass. Miss Stimson will_return to the Connecticut College for Women to resume her studies. | Miss Virginia Shull, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Marion J. Shull of Raymond | street, has gone to New Haven, Conn to enter the dramatic department of | Yale University. | Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Scanlon and | their family have returned from their | Mr. Edwin Rice, son of Dr. and Mrs. | Thomas J. Rice of Thirty-ninth street, has gone to Ann Arbor, Mich., to enter the Dental School of the University of Michigan. Lieut. Comdr. P. R. Baker’s children, Ned, Amelia and Josephine, and his mother, Mrs. Choate, returned Priday from Mrs. Choate’s Summer home in New York State, where they spent the season. Mr!b;uphen B. Fuller entertained t al idge _supper Saturday evening | Summer home in Rochester, Vt. Banet & Bacher have a new salon For BetterFurs at lower prices Fine Facilities for Expert FUR Remodeling and Repairing Remember the new address Sanet % FURRIERS 717 Eleventh St. Next to Palals Royal The Ap pright PIANO Dainty in Appearance—Captivating in Tone Easy to Look at—Easy to Own | Meadow lane, returned Monda in her home on Elm street in honor of Mrs. Manchester and Mrs. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Austin MacCormick and their little son have returned to their home on Meadow lane from Province- town, Mass, where they spent the Summer, Miss Marguerite Norris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Norris of sume her studies at St. Mary's Semi- nary, St. Marys City, Md. Mr. and Mr: Norris have gone by motor to New ;’ork City, where they will spend 10 ays. —Underwood Photo. | g to re- | Miss Mary Elizabeth Clark returned | Friday to Poughkeepsie, N. Y., where she will enter her sophomore year at | Vassar College. Mrs, Lewis W. Laudick will entertain Circle No. 3 of the Guild of the Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church at lunch- eon Tuesday in her home on Ingomar street. Mrs. Laudick will be assisted by Mrs. J. C. Hemphill. Mr. Donald Campbell, son of Mr. and Brunswick, Me., where they spent the Summer. Mr. and Mrs, Norman E. Bull enter- tained at a bridge supper recently for Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Maguire of Lake Wood, Ohio, and Mrs. Harry Emerson Krause of Newark, N. J., who were house guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Hartz on Edgemoor lane. Dr. and Mrs, Warren D. Brush and their daughter, Miss Mary Brush, re- turned yesterday to their home on Hes. keth street, after a motor trip to Ni agara Falls and Atlantic City. Mr. Henry G. Hanford spent several s in Canandaigua, N. Y., where he | was called on account of the death of | his cousin, Mrs. Herbert Dyke of Larch- | mont, N.'Y., who was a recent house guest for several days of Mr. and Mrs. Hanford. Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Woodis, Who | took possession of their new home on Elm street early in the Summer, have | returned from Spencer, Mass., Where they spent their vacation. Mrs. | Woodis, sr., returned with them. | Dr. and Mrs. Flavelle E. Koss and thelr daughter, Miss Gale Koss, of Har- rison street are on a motor trip of sev- eral weeks to Quebec, Canada, and the New England States. | Mr. and Mrs. Lester G. Wilson and their daughter, Miss Sherley Wilson, are at thelr home, on Magnolia parkway, | from Mount Washington, Mass, where they spent the Summer. Mr. Winchester Stone, jr., a son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Sione of Cum- mings lane, left Tuesday by sea for Boston to enter the Harvard Graduate School | Miss Isabel Dynes, daughter of Mr artment We Specialize in Apartment Uprights and Also Seal Brown kid- with brown-and-beige Java Lizard ‘The only first, in_less Lynchburg, Va., where she will enter | Randolph Macon College. _Miss Della | Little entertained as her house guest ! Miss Eleanor Bruce of Texas. Miss Bruce is en route to an art school in | New York City. i Mr. Karl Corley and Mr. Edmund | Corley, sons of Mrs. Ida Corley of | Western avenue, recently motored to| Williamstown, Mass., where Mr. Ed-| mund Corley ‘will resume his studies at | Williams College. | Miss Mary Truxton Beale, daughter of Mrs. Mabel W. Beale of Chevy Chase parkway, left Monday for Lewis- burg, W. Va. where she will enter Greenbrier College for Women. | Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Mueller and fam- | fly have returned from a motor trip through the Canadian maritime prov- | inces. | OLNEY, MARYLAND FOR - LUMCHFON- TEA-DINNER 12 Mi. North of W ington, Route Out 16th St. or Georgia Ave. Exten: Bridge Parties—Afternoon T Ashton 133 #00 Feet Elevation—Pure Water OPEN EVERY D, ON M. The new, enlarged 2d floor shop— at our F St. Store also our other Washington and Baltimore stores—em- phasize the importance of arrivals than Pumps, ties and s trimme These and other spicy models in black kid— black-and-white Java Lizard trim. amon A new trim, traps d with g the many charming utumn “HAHN SPECIALS” sold a week. Fortunately a sec- ond shipment Just inl of Honor. Her new citation is a promo- tion. It was given for assistance to poor children. At the same time Mme. Dupuy was | made a knight, Mme. Gabrielle Camille | Flammarion, the widely known as- | tronomer, was awarded the same dis- tinction. ' She is the widow of Camille | Flammarion, founder of an observatory at Juvisy, where she carries on experi- | ments begun by her husband and write for scientific journals in the United States as well as in Prance. These two women, with Mme. Curie, discoverer of radium, form a strong triumvirate for France. Clover Improves Wheat. STATESVILLE, N. C. (#).—After plow- ing under a crop of sweet clover, G. S. farm, | their daughters, Miss Marian Duniop | Martin, local farmer, harvested 22 bush: els of Wheat per acre this year from | land that made only 8 bushels per acre before clover treatment The Susquehanna 1430 W Street N.W. 3 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath, $40 Liebster Furs are_distinguished in_Style and Value! Featuring the new silhouettes. Quality Special Rates for REMODELING and REPAIRING New Location that you’d expect from Liebster . . . and amazingly low prices. LIEBSTER FINE FURS! 716 13th St Finer Furs, Smarter Fashions—T ypical of 1930 and 1931, and at a Price that Constitutes Tremendous Savings! Fine Furs Are at the Lowest Price in 10 Years Luxuriousness portrayed in every coat. New intricate manipula- tions of fur fashions—but the point that makes this group so very entrancing is the brilliant savings that are pos fur market. lines of smart fashion and distinction. Actual Values $135.00 and $150.06 Styles and Types to Please Everyone The flared silhouette A new longer length Elaborate cuffs and collars Many belted coats Linings beautifully tailored The Jones Policy of Complete Satisfaction Behind Every Coat 4 ex- hat ‘you'll be the time at Just Received and Shown For the First Time Monday 99 All Furs Guaranteed t 1 ible because of the Furs—rich in pelt and depth, beautifully mqulde1 into A $10 Deposit Will Reserve Your Coat Any_coat purchased during s le will be l!ld! .: venient ay be made with department. Just Note These Outstanding Furs! Sealine (dved rabbit) . borately b At in beige ermine. ch and naturai Pony. ' Brown and Platinum Caracul. *Coney. J. B. JONES & COMPANY prices Guarantee If the merchandise you buy here can be bought at a lower price anywhere else, within three days, bring it back—we will pay you the difference in cash or refund your money in full—and remember, THE NEWEST STYLES ARE SHOWN AT JONES' FIRST. Fall Fashion Dresses Of Chic Individuality We have just received two groups of exquisitely styled dresses—all authentic reproductions of what Paris is sponsoring. Proving That Prices Are Lower Regular Price $12.50 and $14 For Monday 02 The New Styles Tunic Dress Jacket Dre: Bolero Dresses Noveity Sleeves Novel Necklines Jabots & Bows Flares & Pleats Searfs & Drapes .50 The New Materials Canton Crepes Chiffons Satin Travel Prints Georzettes Transparent Velvets Crepe Elizabeth Velvets Regular Price For Monday Plain and Embroidered Crepes Chiffons Silk Tweeds $16.50 and $18.50 Apartment Grands The demand for these instruments is increas- ing—the time for a selection is now—the place, here. HOMER L. KITT CO. 1330 G Street Perfect Affinities in HANDBAGS Genuine antelope, fancy calfskins, pin Morocco, and other newest autumn ma- terials handsomely fitted. $2.95 $3.95 $4.95 Half Size Dresses 14, to 26, J B.Jores & (o The Popular G Street Store Between 12th and 13th 3 ‘e Regular Sizes 14 to 44 3815 to 5015 Women’s Shops 1207 F 7th & K 3212 14th 1219-1221 G St. N.W. S (!