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SOCIETY Alexandria Society Notes and News Briefs | For Week Just EndedE | Residents Returning From| Vacations—Social Festivi-| ties in Record—Weddings | Announced—House Guests Entertained—Special Events. Maj. and Mrs. Charles Poser of Lexington, Ky., are the guests of the Iatter’s sister, Mrs. Rathbone Smith, on Duke street. Mrs. Smith also had as guest last week, Mrs. B. M. Roszel of Winchester. i Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Russell have returned from Mystic, Conn., where they spent the Summer Miss Fanny Dixon is at home after a visit to Mrs. Claiborne Pirtle in Louis- ville, Ky Miss Courtenay Cochran left Thurs- @ay to return to Sweetbriar College. Miss Elizabeth Barr arrived in Alex- andria last week after spending ti Summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | Fred Barr, in Winchester, Mrs. Ida Adams of Sperryville, Va.,| 1s spending several weeks in town Mr. and Mrs. Landon Cabell Painter announce the marriage of their daugh- ter, Ellen Venable, to Mr. Alexander Sidney Hancock, Thursday, September 11, in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. John B. Gordon, Miss | Margaret Gordon and Miss Amonett Gordon have arrived home after spend- ing the Summer touring through the British Isles Miss Esther Day Tynchburg wh-re she freshman _class at Woman's College. | Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Newman have returned from a month's visit to the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Wilkerson in Woodstock, Va. ‘ Miss Margaret Chapman, principal of St. Agnes' School, entertained at tea Saturday afternoon, September 14, in honor of ihe graduates of the school. | Among the guests, who represented the | classes of 1928, 1929 and 1930, were | Miss Virginia Cary Dawson, Miss | Courtenay . Marshall Cochran, Miss | Flora Shackelford, Miss Virginia Jack- | on, Miss Katherine Spittle, Miss Mil- dred MacNair, Miss Grace Tyler Powell, Miss Jeanne Caton, Miss Hildegarde | Ross. Miss Warwick Rust. Miss Ran- | dolph_Richardson, Miss Eleanor Rust, | Miss Elsle Cole and Miss Ellen Holmes. Miss Ruth Stryke of Barnesboro, Pa., 4 ‘the guest of her brother and sister- | in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stryke. Mr. Walter Nalls left last week to continue his studies at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond. Mr, | and Mrs. S. V. Lillard have returned to | their home in Tampa, to the latter's brother-in-law and sister. | Mr. and Mrs. A.J, Nalls. Miss Elizabeth Callender has re- | turned to her home in Rockingham | ;nunh' accompanied by her brother, | r. Harvey Callender. | Mrs. Raymond Peverill and her chil- dren are at home after spending several weeks in Tall Timbers, Md Mr. and Mrs. Lucian Peyton have returned from a motor trip to Harrison- | burg, where they attended the meet- | ings of the American Legion and | avxiliary Mrs, Arthur M. Giles and Miss Lois Giles are guests of Miss Gladys Clark in Salisbury. Md Mr. and Mrs. Wise Rixey and the latter's mother, Mrs. Maurice Wilkins, ar~ snending a week in Atlantic City. | Mr=. John Edmonds is at home after | #n-nding several weeks in the Thousand Is'-nds. N. Y. Dr. and Mrs. William T. Burch have arrived in Austria, where Dr. Burch will teke a special post-graduate course at fhe University of Vienna. Mr. and Mrs. John Whalen of Phila- delnhia were guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Briggs. Miss Jean Smith entertained at| bridge Saturday evening, Setember 14, | in_her home on Seminary Hill. Miss Ellen Frazer has left for hes home in Georgetown, S. C, after a| visit to Mr. and Mrs. Oharles C. Car- lin, jr. on North Washington street. | Mr. Reynolds Williams is a guest of | his brother-in-law and sister, Mr, and Mrs. D. W. Burns in Atlanta. | Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair D. Shelton | are spending two weeks in Boston. - | Miss Florence A. Long was the week- | end guest of Col. and Mrs, Henry D.| Styer in their Summer home at Win- | chester, Miss Nannie Bell Clendening has left for her home in Grennsboro, N. C., after spending the Summer with her brother- left Monday for has entered the Randolph-Macon |is a AUTUMN ‘- visit with Mrs. Smith's sister, Mrs. Had Church Wedding MISS MILDRED CAROLINE CORE, Daughter of Mrs. Carl W. Core of Pennsylvania, ment to Mr. Richard Ford of .Washington, recent American consul at Seville, | The wedding will take place at Lenape Lodge, Spain. Core’s home. BRIDE-ELECT THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 21, John G. Henshaw. | Mrs. Edward Bowen of Fredericksburg | is guest of her daughter, Mrs. Robert Baber. Mr, and Mrs. A. V. Brooks are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Polk in Charleston, | I8. C. | | Miss Julia Rupp of Washington was | |a week end guest of Miss Margaret | Shepperson. | 7" Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Swann of Cul- | peper were guests over the past week | end of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Rosson. | Mrs. William Fielding Lewis and Mrs. Charles L. Limerick have returned from a visit to relatives in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Fauntleroy are the guests of the Iatter’s parents, Mr. | and Mrs. James Jordan in Clarkton, | N. C. | Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Rowzle have re- | turned from a visit to the latter’s | father, Mr, J. M. Willlams, in Gate | City, Va. | Mrs. J. W. Kidwell and Miss Kath- arine Kidwell are at home after a visit to the former's son, Mr. Robert Kidwell, | in_Amarillo, Tex. | Mrs, H. F. Prytherich arrived home | Monday from Miiford, Conn., where she | spent the Summer. ‘ GOLDENROD IS DOOMED Jersey Communities Fear Hay Fev- er, but Exempt Edison Plants. | EAST ORANGE. N. J., September 20 | () —The Chamber of Commerce and | | civics of the Oranges and Maplewood, | has decreed the extermination of ali | Boldenrod in the localty, except that cultivated by Thomas A. Edison. | | " The extermination is in the interest of hay fever sufferers and to furnish | | employment for some of the idle men | in the community ‘The campaign does not apply to the crop of goldenrod Mr. Edison is culti- vating near his laboratories in connec- tion with his experiments to produce rubber. ' Manx Steamship Centenary. The Isle of Man recently celebrated the one hundredth anniversary of the departure of the first steamship from | Nearly 20 fast turbine | GEORGE EDWARD KETTERING, Formerly Miss Thelma O. Pilcher, whose marriage took place in the Fifth Baptist Church September 5. —Carter,Balley Photo. e MRS, shores. | steamers, carrying 30,000 passengers who has announced her engage- | from cities in England, arrived at Doug- las for the celebration. The rst | Fort City, Pa, Mrs. | steamer, the paddle-boat Mona's Isle, —Brooks Photo. | was built in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1830, in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R. Rey- nolds Blackwell. Miss Catherine Johnson i back from & Yiit to-riends at, Sherwood Forest, Md. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Cheatwood an- nounce the marriage of their daughter, Dorothy Mae Hawkes, to Mr. Sidney L. Snellings on Monday, September -8, in Rockville, with the Rev. B. M. Osgood officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Kaufman have returned from a trip to Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Simpson are Fla., after a visit | at home after a trip by motor to visit | friends relatives in Sayre, Pa Mrs. Raymond Baley is the guest of relatives in Hanover, Pa. Miss Elizabeth Peabody is at home after spending the early Summer with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Gran- ville_Holden, in Concord, Mass., and the last month in a girl$' camp near Winchendon, Mass. Mis. Wood Hitt and Mr. Harvey Hitt of Culpeper are the guests of the former’s son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde J. Mitchell. Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. George McCauley and Miss Regina McCauley have returned from a visit to relatives in Verona, Md Mrs. John J. Bullivan and Mr. John J. Sullivan, jr., are home from a visit. to Mrs. A. B. Terrell in Roanoke. Mrs. N. E. Dudley of Charlottesville a guest of Mr. and Mrs. George S. Wéods. Mr. and Mrs. Holt Fleetwood of Chi- | cago spent the past week end as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Iden. Mr. Willlam J. King and Mr. John King of Mayport, Fla, and Mrs. Mer- ritt of Jacksonville are guests of Mr. and Mrs, Fuller King. Miss Futh Carpenter of Durham, N. C., i & guest of her brother-in-law nd sister, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Lamm, Mrs, Christine Peabody of Middle- town, Conn., is the guest of her son KENESAW CAFE 16th and Irving Sts. In Kenesaw Apartment Special 5-Course Chicken Dinner 75 Cents Dead Tired—lrritable at Q:gverydayl Caused by shoes she STILL thinks are comfortable. “Every afternoon the same old story . . . Too tired to finish the day. Too tired to go out at night. Feet scem all righrfbu( legs are tired, back aches, eyes blurred an nerves all jumpy.” She doesn’t know it . . . but it's her SHOES. Ordinary steel shanked, improperly designed shoes—the regular kind that pound and pound the delicate nerves of the body—tear down tissues and throw the whole organic system out of line. If you can't believe ifs true, lec our expe ftet slip on # pair of these good-looking, comforta Shoes. You can't tell le Cantilever the difference in looks. BUT . . . once you feel the amazing freedom of these FLEXTBLE ARCHES—once you feel the astonishing comfort of these scientifically designed shoes, you'll kaow you can say good-bye o fatigue. P.S No longer that 4 o'clock dead-line. lgricen are reasonable, and wear exceptional. Cantilever Shoes y Comfort for the Entire Family Cantilever Shoe Shop 1319 F Street Second Floor, Over Young Men's Shop | and soon afterward voyaged from Doug |and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Bl it MERAETERRE Leroy . Peabody. | TETEE Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Ross have re- | turned from Fredericksburg, where they | | went to- attend the golden wedding | anniversary of thetr unce ‘and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Whitehouse: i Mrs. J. W. Varney and Mr. Jaek | Varney are at home after a visit' to relatives in Fort Wayne, Ind. | “Mrs. gulian M. Haislip and Mis Vivian Haislip are back from & visit to in Roanoke. | “Mrs. W. B. Vier of Pulaski, V., was | | the week end guest of Mr. and Mis. R. | Canada is the leading market for au- | B. Watts. | tomobiles made in the United_ States, Mr. and Mrs, W. B. Reeve and M. | closely followed this year by Belgium Lynn Reeve left Mondsy for-Bedford, and Argentina. | Va., where Mr. Lynn Reeve will enter Randolph-Macon Academy. Mr. and Mrs. Reeve continued their trip to | _ | Checkney, Tenn., where the visit- | [f R T e e e 1 Anve’s, 1731 Conn. Ave: Miss Hilda Sturdyvin, daughter of . | Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Sturdyvin, has gone S\lnday Dmner, $l.25 5 to 8 P.M. | to " Blackstone, Va., where she will | | attend the coming session at Blackstone | | e e ‘Women's College. | Broiled Club Steak Mrs. James Martin and her two chil- dren of Roanoke are guests of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. H, Brown, Miss Doris Dienelt entertained at bridge Monday evening in honor of | Miss Elsie Cole, who left Wednesday to | enter Stuart Hall-in Staunton. The other guests were Miss Grace Powell, Tea Cream Miss Demfolnaspy. Miss Jean Smith, English Raisin and Nut Cakes Miss Virginia Jackson, Miss Kitty Spit- | | tie and Miss Louise Bowdoin. § i Waeek Days | "“Mr. and Mrs, John Leroy Smith, Miss | uncheon, 75¢ & 60c | Ruth Smith, Miss Anna Smith and Mr. | Dinner, $1.00 John Leroy Smith, jr. have left for || 1731 Conn. Ave. De. 4229 their home in Spartanburg, §. C., after || e . J.E.Cunningham Co. 314~316 SEVENTH ST..NW. SAW-TOOTH BRIM USED | eiioiitnden Hat Motif Follows Dresses With | Notched Edges. PARIS (#).—When dresses are fin- jshed with the fashionable saw-tooth edge, hat brims repeat the motif. One afternoon costume at a smart dress establishment is a black crepe de chine dress with notched edges. With it goes a brimmed hat of black felt, also notched. Scott Centenary Planned. Scotland is making extensive prepa- rations for the observance in 1932 of the centenary of the death of Sir Wal- ter Scott.- Pageants and services will | be held in the large cities and in many small communities. In Glasgow, the event will last & week, and will include a performance of Scott's dramatic works with musie, a service in the cathedral and an oration by a Scott scholar of note. Located In an Exclusive Residential Section 2500 Mass. Ave., | Near Calif. St. N.W. Two suites of nine rooms and four baths available. THOMAS J. FISHER & CO., IN 735 15th St, N.W. Dlstrict 6830 or. Southern Style FAed Chicken New Potatoes en role on i Anne's Dressing Delicious Hot Muffins Tea Coffee Chocolate Pie with Whipped Cream Sliced Pegches with Homemade Tea, 50c Paris Says - - - Frame Your Face All Head Every New Sizes Fall Style For Women and Misses TOMORROW An Extraordinary Showing of Copies Of Paris Models that would ordinarily sell for much more| At Our Two Featured Prices : $3.95 $5.00 Over One Thousand Hats-in This Event VELVETS SOLEILS FELTS ANTELOPES “young fash- Th soleil velours Again felts play an softness will possess at are so flattering, so important role in the one of these velvet youthful ..and doubly Fall millinery mode. hats for her Fall ward- d ble ‘at -their low new cushion rob, orn tilted to it would be i Suedes—its ;: st lends itself so entrane- ingly to the new close- o 1930—PART THRER. SUSPECT CAPTURED 46 YEARS AFTER SLAYING IN ALABAMA Arrest of 70-Year-Old Man in Texas Is Result of Long Vigil Kept by Son of Victim. By the Asscclated Press. His patience was rewarded when the _TYLER, Tex, September 20.—JAmes | accused, a resident of Kentucky, came Neely, 70-year-old patriarch, must 80 | here for a visit. Cooley notified peace :;;c;n-:: ‘:;a"c h*‘l”‘;cilfllmfl;-olghm‘“d";omcm. Today an officer from Ala~ nce led him to the com- | take munity whers resides the son' of the | Was en.route to Tyler to man he is charged with slaying. Neely to the scene of the crime for His arrest yesterday on a warrant | trial charging_him with the murder of | Neely admitted his identity. Officers | Hiram Cooley In Alabama in 1884 |said he made a verbal statement in | was the Teward of years of watchful | which he told how he and Cooley had waiting on the part of Cooley’s son.|engaged in & fist fight after which he The son, A. C. Cooley, had kept |struck his adversary on the head with & careful watch over his neighbor, W. L. | rock. Neely, whom he had recognized as ma‘ Officers quotea the aged man as| brother of the man charged with his|saying he “wandered around” for 10! father’s murder. years after the slaying. For years he ) J.E Cunningham Co. 314~316 SEVENTH ST..NW. FALL FASHION FROCKS— That Stress Value— At 6.50 . $25 If you are seeking Fall Frocks that will continue to be smart later on ... . throughout Fall and Winter sea- sons . . . choose from this individually considered selec- tion. All the chic of the season’s fashion is interpreted here . . . stressing the approved fabrics, and colors, and boasting all those fashion details that stamp this collec- tion as Fall, 1930. CREPES TRANSPARENT VELVETS SATINS WOOL LACE CHIFFONS TRAVEL PRINTS In Sizes for Women 36 to 46 Misses 14 to 20 rare distinction . . . TOWN SPORT Town Coats ... Sports host of new combination: of luxurious furs. SHEEREST CHIFFON HOSE 35 3 Prs. $3.50 shades ALL SILK HAND- BAGS $1.S9 Newest Fall black costume. heel with cradle foot. JEWELRY 89¢ All perfect. Envelope and pouch bags (after newly imported Ritfouit to-the-head styles of one. this new Fall season. Choose ftom the smartest Fall Colors...black, bison, brown, philippine Brown, beige ambre, cricket green, wingtone, rubytone, copperglo, etc. ona side showing the to resist buying haire styles). Bags of calfskin and suede...in black, brown, green and wine First Floor simulated: pearl. . .witl Ll colori: First g8. .8l Autumn colorings...Stunning models without fur...and coats with large collars including NUBLAK, the new shade for your Picot top French Necklaces, bracelets, earrings. ..in crystal, rondells; hand-carved genuine stones lnt{ metal SOCIETY. lived in Ohio, whe ared amily of five children. - ;e “I'm glad its over,” officers said Neely told them. “I have been running for 46 years and could not get it off my mind for a single minute.” Radio Dolls Please Berlin, Dancing radio dolls have become pop- ular in Berlin, Germany, and whenever shown in store windows have attracted large crowds. A box of bakelite come position has attached to it & thin bake- lite sheet, which is both the dlaphram of the speaker and the dancing floor, and is operated by a standard small ‘magnetic speaker. The source of the motion of the dolls is the vibration of the diaphram to the sound frequencies. Hay-Adams House 16th at H N.W. Coolest Dining Room In Town Luncheon, $1.00 COATS—- —Luxuriously Furred! That Look So Much— —And Cost So Little * $59.5o and $79 Every Coat in these collections is a carefully studied and chos'en version of the newest silhouette . . . developed in fabric of assured quality and fashionable shade. Coats of with sleek, luxurious Furs , . . marked by unusually fine tailoring and details . . . and « « o every coat an outstanding value at its price. COATS— COATS~ 2 Coats ... Travel Coats. ..of soft lmgorted tweeds...in a s of glowing KID GLOVES Our Own Importations $1.95. ‘ Tailored slipons...and «cuffed gloves with appliques in French Kid and Cape- skin...blue, green, black and new. shades of brown o AlL sizes; - e First Floor