Evening Star Newspaper, October 5, 1930, Page 47

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SOCIETY. Capital Society in Whirl ‘Of the Autumn éctivities Exclunge o£ Visits, and in Schedules—Pla Entertainment of Guests ns Under Way for Winter Festivities. Dr, and Mrs, Buckner M. Randolph are leaving Washington today for Charlottesville, Va., where they will make their home. They will reside at the Miramont Apartment, on University ecircle. Miss Louise H. Randolph is spending the Winter at the Three Arts Club in New York, Mrs. Rando!ph’s daughter, Miss Kath- | erine C. Berry, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. Graham Pearre, at her home on Church street. Mr. and Mrs. Gi Langford Whit- ford have returncd to Washington after spending the Summer at their farm near Waterloo, N. H., and have changed their residence from 2311 Connecticut avenue to 2401 Calvert stieet, where they will be at home for the Winter. Miss Harriet S. Whitford, who re- turned to Washington with her par- ents, is visiting Miss Alice Rice Worth- ington, daughter of Mr. and Mus. Charles Campbell Worthington, at their Summer home at Shawnee-on-the- Delaware, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Martin Savage have returned to their apartment at 2400 Sixteenth street after.spending the Summer in Europe. Dr. and Mrs. John Hooe Iden are at the New Shoreham Hotel after spending the Summer at Mayfield Farms, the family estate at Manassas, Va. They are accompanied by their ward, Miss Barbara Baker, granddaughter of the late Admiral Mason Twining. Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Proctor and | the Misses Proctor of 3526 Quesada | strect northwest have feturned from a | motor trip to Charleston, S. C., where they were guests at the Fort 'Sumter otel. Mr. Langston Moffett has left Paris with Count d'Trorak for a hunting tri in Africa, and Mrs. Moffett is retu.ning | to this country to visit her ‘mother, Mrs. L. M. Read, at 1712 Sixteenth street northwest, and her brother, Maj, H. M. Read, at Lexington, Va. Mrs. Read went to New York to meet her daughter and accompany her to Washington, Mrs. Willlam Gerry Morgan, accom- panied by her daughters, Mrs. Felix Stump and Mrs. O. B. Hardison, with their little sons, have returned to Wash- | ington and have joined Dr. Morgan at | their residence on Sixteenth street for the Winter. Mr. and Mrs. James B. Netherton of La Crange, Ky., who are guests of their daughter, 'Mrs. Betty Abbott, in hsr | home on Columbia roed, accompanied | her to Annapolis, Md., Tuesday, | They will be guests of friends on Long | Isiand before returnirg to their home | in Kentucky. Mrs, Netherton is a descendant of Stonewall Jackson. The Misses Sutre, who With their mother, Mrs. Otto Sutro, have been spencing the Summer in Poriland, Me., | returned last week to their home, on | California street. Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Ralph of Kiingle strect have as their guest the Iatter's mother, Mrs. J. Cort Walker of Oak Park, Chicago. Mrs. Maude Emig Murphy will sing for Gov. Albert Ritchie at a dinner dance given in his honor Monday ev nihg. October 6, at the Lord Baltimore | Hotel in Baltimore, by the United | Democratic Women's Clubs of Maryland. Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Egleston of Mad- | ison, N. J., will arrive in Wl&hlngb%l\ ‘Tuesday to visit their aunt, Mrs. C. Gillette, at her apartment, at Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Horner, the latter formerly Miss Cynthia June New- bold of Washington, who were married September 25 in Toledo, Ohio, will be guests' at the Mayflower until tomorrow When they are leaving for their future home ‘in Flint, Mich. Mrs. Horner had been spending the | Summer with her family in northern Michigan and decided to be married on her way home instead of waiting until Miss Evelyn Vette. Miss McBirney is the daughter of Mr. J. Henry McBirney, State Senator of Idaho. Miss Vette has | entered the nurses’ training school at Walter Reed. The girls were accom- panied East by Dr. Hare's sister, Mrs, J. W. Pursel of Marshalltown, Iowa, who has now returned to her home. Mr. and Mrs, Chariton B. Rout of Del Mar, Calif., have just returned from a six _months’ tour of the conti- nent and British Isles. Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Boss are motoring with them to their home in California. Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Brown en- tertained at dinter Tuesday evening. in their home, Linden, Md., for Mr. Claude Funkhouser and daughter, Miss Julia Funkhouser, of St. Joseph, Mo. Miss Funkhouser will enter Martha Washington Seminary as a student. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Taylor of Fort Myers, Fla, are at the Dodge Hotel | for several days. Mrs. A. B. Clutts, an attorney, of Detroit, is a guest at Wardman Park | Hotel for a few days. Mrs. Clutts will | b> admitted to the Supreme Court on | Monday. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Thompson of Lex- ington, Ky., are in Washington for an indefinite period and are in residence at the Mayflower. Miss Winifred A. Clarke of Melton | Bowbray, Leicestershire, England, was at the Dodg= Hotel for several days be- fore sailing tor Liverpool, from which city she will go to Johannesburg, South Africa, to resume residence there. Miss Clarke has been in the United States for about a year studying a m-thod of | | improving or perfecting the vision of | those whose eyesight is not normal, and | having completed her studies she in- tends to practice in Johannesburg. where she has lived for several years. Mrs. George Fu'ton of Detroit is a guest at the Dodge Hotel while in Washington for several days with her daughter, Miss Charlotte Fulton. Mrs, Charles Plumb and daughter Joan of San Gabriel, Calif., are the | guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Rufus Scott of Tilden Gardens. Mr. and Mrs. Layton R. Colburn of Klingle street now have as their guests Mrs. Colburn’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. | . C. Sprague, who have given up their apartment, on Massachusetts avenue, | preparatory to going to Florida, where they have a home at Lakewood. They expect to leave today for the South. Miss Martha C. Smith kecently re- turned from a vacation spent in a tour cf continental Europe. Mr. 1. H. Maclean of London has be: |a guest at the Dodge Hotel during & | brief sojourn in Washington. —_— Of Personal Interest to Washington Residents| ‘The marriage is announcec in Chi- cago of Mrs. Edith A. Fishell, daugh- ter of Mrs. Carl Auerbach, formerly of this city, to Mr. B. I. Bloom of Chi- cago, last evening at the residence of the Rev. Dr. Louis L. Mann. Imme- diately after the ceremony, which was witnessed by the nearest relatives of the couple, Mr. and Mrs. Bloom left for French Lick Springs, Ind., and after October 15 will be at home at 951 Hyde Park boulevard, Chicago. Mrs. E. Lawrence Emanuel and chil- dren have returned to their home in Raleigh, N. C. after visiting Mrs. Emanuel's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Ehrlich. The Woodmont Country Club i.eld its cpening dipner danc> for {*# seasan last night. The event was well attended and a number of dinner parties were given for out-of-town guests. Miss . Lols Greenberg of Charleroix, Pa., was a guest last week of Miss Belirend. They both left Priday for Baltimore {0 re-enter Goucher College. Mr. and Mrs. 8. M. Barnett of Wood- ley Park Towers have as their guest | the latter’s mcthe: Mrs. Benjamin Holheimer of Norfol October 25, the cate selected for_the wedding. She made her home here | with her brother-in-law and sister, Dr. | and Mrs. E. W. Brandes, and attended | school in Bos.on. Mrs. Walter Nolte and her daugh-| ter Olivia of San Antonio, Tex., are| guests at Wardman Park ®otel for a | few cays. Miss Nolte will enter the King-Smith Studio on Monday. Mrs. George S. Parkes and her daugh- ter, Miss La Una Gay- Parkes of Nash- vilile, Tenn., are spending & week in Washington at the Mayflower on their way to New York.. Miss Parkes made her debut last season in Nashville fol- lowing a year's study abroad. Miss Helen Posephy of Marietta, ©Ohio, 1s at the Dodge Hotel for several weeks while doing some special work 8t the Department of the Interior. Miss Joug:y 1s co-author with Miss McBride of the two books “Paris Is a Woman's ‘Town” anc “London is a Man's Town.” Mrs. R.'W. Garrell and her daughter, Miss Margaret Garrell, Salem, N. C.. were guests at the Ma: y- flower for the past few days. Miss Garrell is taking a post-graduate course | at Gunston Hall and her mbther is visiting in Atlantic City before return- ing south. Mr. and Mrs. Hermann Hagedorn of Indian Lane Spring Valley returned a week ago from Nantucket. With thet three children, - Mary, Dorothea and David, they spent the Summer at Quid. met, where they have a Summer home. Miss Mary Hagedorn is leaving for New York in about a week, where she will spend this Winter studying dancing. Mr. and Mrs. Burrough Hays of Klingle street have as their house guests Mrs. Hays' son, Mr. Charles T. Lile of Pittsburgh and his wife and baby, who arrived in Washington last Saturday and will spend a week. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Robert Allen of Woodmere, Long Island, are being congratulated on the birth of a son Robert Harris Allen, September 27, 1930, at Misericordia Hospital in New York City. Mrs. Allen, the former Miss Marion Simonton, is a daughter of Mrs. Alice E. Simonton, and a niece of the Jate Admiral U. R. Harris of the Dghton Hotel, California street. Dr. Lulu Water Hare of Garfield street has with her two of her nieces, Miss _Elizabeth McBirney, who is in| t American University, | where she is majoring in English, and | her junior year QUALITY FURS! Hariton is noted for his excellent quality furs. All are personally selected. . . . REMODELING AND REPAIRING Done by Our Experts FUR SHOP 1617 Conn. Ave. N.W. of Winston- | , Va. Mrs. Victor Strasburger of Norfolk, Va, spent the past week here as a guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Me; Broadmoor, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney C. Kaufman, Miss Virginia A. Keufman and Mrs. Samuel J. Steinberger returned FPri- | day from a mrotor trip to Atlantic City. | ‘They were registered at the Ritz-Carl- n_Hotel. Miss Evelyn Schloss left Friday, ac- companied by her aunt, Miss Helen Moses, and sailed from New York yes- terday for Havana, Cuba, to be gone two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Bensinger have returned from Philadelphia by motor. They were guests there of their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Caspar and at- tended the world series ball game in that city. Mrs,i Abram Peist, accompanied by her daughters, the Misses Prances and Marjorie Feist, returned to their home | in Newark, N. ‘Tuesday from & Summer vacation spent abroad. Miss Marjorie Feist came to Washington Thursday to re-enter National Park Seminary. Miss Frances Feist will | c&rfie here the end of the month for a | visit. Mrs. Meryle Rukeyser of New York is | visiting her mother, Mrs. Louis Simon of 2620 Connecticut avenue, and was joined for the week end by Mr. Ru- | keyser, who has been on a trip West. | ~Miss Marian King, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph King, is spending the | coming week in New York at the Van. | derbilt Hotel. Her new_ book, “Kess, | sponsored by the Junior Literary Guild, | has just been published. | _ Miss PFrances Heid has returned to | her home on Lanier place from a visit to friends in Charleston, W. V: Mr. and Mrs. Archie Engel and | daughter, Miss Leah Engel, are located | in their new apartment, 2331 Cathedral | avenue. | Mr. and Mrs. Morton Luchs will re- | turn today from Philadelphia, where Gowns . . . Ensembles Paris minded costumes original French Chanel, Fiornet, Redfe: | of her brother-in-law and s'ster, Mr.| | Presid-nt, | had an apartment. creations. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, Mrs. Raymond Clendenin Miller, wife of the commercial attache of the United States embassy in Brussels, who, with her husband, is in Washington as the guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Noonan, at 3154 Highland place, Cleveland Park. With Mr. and Mrs. Miller_are their sons, Raymond Clendenin Miller, jr. (upper left); John Donald Miller (up per right) and the youngest son, Francis Brett Miller (below). The elder boys were with their grandfather at his ranch in the West before visiting their father’s parents in Vincennes, Ind. They are now with Mr. and Mrs. Noonan in Cleveland Park. —Photos by C. Georges, Bruxelles. they went Wednesday to visit their son, Mr. Frank Luchs, who is a fresh- man at the University of Pennsylvania. They passed the week end in Atlantic City. Mrs. Sol Meyer of the Chastleton left yesterday for Ctattanooga, Tenn., to join Mr. Meyer for a stay of two weeks, Mrs. LeRoy Hutzler, jr, of Rich- mond, Va, has returned to her home | after a visit tc_her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Wallerstein of Mintwood place. Mrs. Louis Koenigsberg of Atlantic City, formerly of Baltimore, is a guest and Mrs. A. Liebman at Woodley Park Towers. The Sisterhood of the Eighth Street Temple will hold its opening meeting tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the vestry rooms. An interesting pro- gram has been arranged to include Dr. Edmund I. Walsh, . J., of Georgetown University as guest speaker, and Mrs. Edythe Marmion Brosius, concert harp- ist, who will give several selections, followed by a social hour and tea. Mr. and Mrs. R. Oppenheimer have returned to Newark, N. J., by motor, accompagfed by the former's aunt, Mrs. Rose m)wr. who* will be their guest before going to Atlantic City for an ex- tended stay. Mr. and Mrs. Oppen- heimer, who were recently married, spent their honeymoon here as guests of Mrs. Fischer. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Guggenheim of Wardman Park Hotel spent the last week at the Hotel Shelbourne, Atlantic City. Miss Evelyn Schloss, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard, Schioss, was given & farewell dinner with dancing at the Madrillon Friday night, prior to her departure for Cuba. Eight guests made up the party. Miss Schioss left here at midnight on Friday, accompanied by her aunt, Miss Helen Moses, and sailed from New York at poon yesterday to b: gone two weeks. Mrs. Gerald Rosenheim, with her young son, Gerald Bruce. return today to their epartment, in the Ponce-de- | Leon, from a four-week stay at the | At'antic City, where they | Ex-]zepresentative Reea Heads West Virginians | West_Virginians met at the Wash- | ington Club, Seventeenth and K streets, | Wednesday evening, October 1. This was the first meeting of the State Boclety for the present season and in- augurated a series of monthly meet- ings for the coming Winter. Former Gov. E. F. Morgan, retiring president of the society, presided, and soon after calling the meeting to order presented the name of former Repre- sentative Stuart F. Reed of West Vir- ginia for president of the society. Mr. Reed was elected by acclamation and with other newly elected officers will be_installed at the November meeting. Mr. Reed has long been a popular and familiar figure among the leaders of the society, having served as president before while he was a member of Con- gress. Since his retirement from public | Iife he has kept in close touch with the | organization. Mr. Charles J. Ferris, United States | Army, retired, Who was present, was | called on to address the society and in | an interesting address entertained with stories of his experiences in the World War. Dancing and cards were next in order. | concluding the evening’s entertainment. | Air Corps Bridge Club To Meet October 13| The Air Corps Bridge Club will hold its first meeting in the home of Mrs. Benjamin D. Foulois at 2101 Connecti- enue Monday, October 13, at B0 OCTOBER 5, pageant Spectaclc. Artistic Production Soon to Be Exhibited Church Aid Society Prepar- ing for Presentation of “The East Room" the Eve- ning of October 24. A tremendous enthusiasm chafncter-l izes the active preparations now being made for the presentation of Mrs. W. Wayne Wirgman's pageant spectacle, “The East Room,” in the Willard ball room on the evening of Priday, October 24, under the auspices of the Rector's Aid Society of St. Margaret's Church- 1930—PART THREE. enthusiasm and a keen interest in the present-day portrayal of the many events of historical importance and social magnificence in past years that have taken place in this famous room in the White House. For the colorful spectacie will present, in part, at least, | a procession of families of distinguished | Americans who have been chosen by | the American people to occupy the White House from time to time, as well as the equally distinguished guests who have played their part in the story of | the east room—every inch of which is | crowded with events in the drama of the Nation—the gayety and brilliance of | social gatherings of many kinds, inter- | spersed with the heights of joy and the | depths of sorrow. | Three of .the 12 episodes in “The | East Room” will be presented, accorcing | to_history, in an unfinished east room, | inspected by George Washington in | 1799 just prior to his death, Mr. Carl- | ton Van Valkenburg will appear as Washington in this scene, accompanied by Martha Washington and Nellie Cus- | tis. The White House was called the | President's Palace then, and aithough | our first President never lived in the | house, he' visualiged the glory of the Nation in the days to come. It is saic that he was never under the White House roof except on this one occasion of his visit there. | The first mistress of the White House, | Abigail Adams, will play a.role in the | second episode of the pageant, for it | was she who evolved a home out of the chaos of the “palace”—unfinished, no light, no heat, no bells, no garden, nor even a yard in which to hang the wash! But the magnificence of the European courts will come before her eyes, and kings and queens will for | the moment rule the picture. Among the leading roles in this picture will b«l | that of Queen Charlotte, to be playec by Miss Marie Rutledge; and the Marquise de la Fayette, by Mrs. Eugene Byrnes. Even in the time of President Jef- ferson, the inaugural reception was held | in the red room of the “President’s| Palace” and a procession of guests wended their way through the unfur- nished east rooms; guests that included the belles and beaux of old Washington, | the cliff dwellers of Georgetown and | countless others, for the hospitality of | Jefferson was lavish. In person, many | of these guests will be portrayed by pop- | ular girls of the present, Miss Lucile | Swift, Miss Betty West, Miss Eleanor | Daniel and others, and in a later scene, | Miss June Cushing will take part as a | guest at the Madison tea, actually held for the first time in the completed east room. | Many “original” costumes will be | worn by popular society folk appearing | in the kaleldoscopic episodes, Miss Mary | Elizabeth MacArthur, a niece of the| new chief of staff, Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur, will appear as one of the guests | at President Buchanan's reception to the Prince of Wales in 1860, and will wear her grandmother’s gown, which was morn on that auspicious occasion New Imports Just unpacked . . . from Paris; of course ... Coats . .. Suits ., : . . . for you who enjoy Models from rn, Vionnet and others. DISPLAYED MONDAY The Short Fur Jacket Costume Is a Notable ality fine ship |and Miss El 1219 ConnecTicuT Ave It has worlds of youth, indi complement to the new woolen frocks or a skirt custom-made to match. These little fur coats are warm without ‘weight and are equally smart for town or sports ‘wear. Persian, Caracul, Nutria and the semi-precious furs, each with the famous. Mr. Fred Chesley will appear as the Prince of Wales in this scene, in which Miss Mary Henry, daughter of Gen. Guy Henry, will take part. At the big ball given in te east room by the President and Mrs. John Quincy Adams in 1824 (to go back a bit), Miss izabeth Edson as one of the | guests. In other scenes prominent| roles will be assumed by Miss Virginia Glazebrook, as Mrs. Johmson, wife of | President Van Buren’s Secretary of | State; Dorothy Yacger will appear as the first wife of President Taylor and Miss Lilla La_Garde as his daughter- | in-law, Mrs. Robert Taylor. Another | President’s daughter -in-law, Mrs. Abra- ham Van Buren, will be played by Miss Alee Wayne Wirgman. Dancing will be a feature of the en- tertainment, and with so many of the| participants’ dressed in costumes of long’ |ago the whole party will take on the | appearance of a lovely costume ball, the | first of its kind of the early season. Committees, including many mem- bers of the Rector's Aid Soclety, are aiding the executive group in the prepa- rations. The chapter chairmen of the Ald Society who are assisting are Mrs. A. W. Atwood, Miss Caroline Smith, Miss Charlotte Campbell, Mrs. E. H. Parry, Mrs. R. W. Snowden, Mrs. N. C. Walker. The officers of the Rector's Ald headed by Dr. Herbert Scott Smith | himself, are playing a large part in the | arrangements, including Mrs. F. Austin | McCarthy, Mrs. William M. Sleet. Mrs. | Joseph Gaston and Mrs. Robert Shows, | Mrs. Edward A. Kevs is chairman of boxes and tickets for “The East Room.” Hebrew Sisterhood | Sponsors Tea Tomorrow | The Sisterhood of the Washington Hebrew Congregation will give a tea, following the opening meeting tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, in the vestry rooms of the Temple. The tea is in honor of the new members, and Mrs. Harry S. Lewis, president, will preside. ! — — Anne’s, 1731 Conn. Ave. Sunday Dinner, $1.25 5 to 8 P.M. Cream of Salmon So Broiled Tenderloin Ste: or Fried Half_Spring Chicken English Style Potataes Frech Lima Beans aked Winter Squash Fresh Watercress & Tomato Salad ea offee Orange Meringue Pie Delicious Coffee’ Pudding Whipped Cream Home Made Macaroon I English Raisin & Nut Cake: Week Day: e Cream 60e doz. Autumn Fashion u- and chic, and it is the perfect quality and expert worl. :n- which has made Pasternak furs School for Secretaries s M To Entertain Students | ‘The faculty and staff of the Wash- | ington School for Secretaries will enter- Elinor Corby will appear as Mrs. Adams | tain all students at a tea dance Thurs- day In the National Press Club audi- | torfum. The dence is being given to welcome new students. Mrs. Adria C. Beaver and Miss Esther Bartlett will act as joint hostesses SOCIETY.’ Entertains in Interest Of - Washington Cathedral | Invitations have been issued by Mrs. | William Adams Brown of New York | for a small, private dinner in the in- terests of Washington Cathedral, to be held on the evening of Thursday, Octo- ber 9, at the Carlton Hotel. The| Bishop of Washington, the Right Rev. James E. Freeman; Mr. George Wha ton Pepper, chairman of the Cathe- dral's Executive Committee, and the Rev. Dr. Anson Phelps Stokes are ex- | pected to speak informally concerning | the progress of the cathedral under- | taking. On Friday, following the dinner, many of the guests are to participate | in a pilgrimage to Mount Saint Alban, where they will attend services in the chapel of the resurrection and inspect | the points of interest on the cathedral | close. \ | THe guest list for the dinner in- | cludes Bishop and Mrs. James E. Free- | | man, the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. G. Free- land Peter, the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes, Mr. and Mrs. | George Wharton, Pepper of Philadel- | phia. Mrs. William de Witt Mitchell | of Washington, Mrs. Robert Amory | of Readwlle, Mass.; Mrs. Frederick H. | Brooke of Wachington, Mrs. George | C. Christian of Minneapolis, Minn.; Mrs. Frederick S. Converse of West- wood, Mass.: Mrs. Gibson Fahne- | stock of Washington; Mrs. Rob- ert Hallowell Gardiner of Gardiner, Mrs, Alvin T. Hert of Louisville, Miss Mary Johnston of Glendale, Ohio; Mrs. Arthur B. Lisle of East Greenwich, R. I.; Mrs. Charles H. Mer- riman, jr. of Providence, R. I. Elizabeth E. Poe of Washington, Mrs. Frederic W. Rhinelander of New York City, Mr. Humphrey F. Redfield of New York City, Mrs. Marvin Bristol Rosen- berry of Madison, Wis.; Mrs. John D. Sherman of Washington, Mrs. Harper Sibley of Rochester, N. Y. and Miss | Among the guests were Mrs. Mabel Turner of Washingto 3 Miss Shreve's Betrothal Formnlly Announced * Mr. and Mrs, Prentiss Shreve of Dumy Loring, Va. announce the engagement of their daughter, Viola Lorraine, to Mr. Charles Dotthardt of Washington, D. C. The wedding will take place early in December. Miss Shreve was guest of honor at a tea given by Miss Margarete Mitchell at her home in Chevy Chase, Sunday, September 28. The guests included Mrs. Prentiss Shreve, Mrs. Willlam Gotthardt, Miss Lucy Nichols, Miss Hester Reichard, Miss Marian North, Mrs. Della Bales, Miss Hazel Farrow, Miss Betty Price, Miss Mildred Gooch, Miss Marjorie Walker, Miss Isabelle Steig, Miss Jean Leake, Miss Margaret Fittzgibbons, Miss Mary Dudley, Mis§ Alma Nussear, Miss Margaret Nussear, Miss Elizabeth Gleason, Miss Jeannette Cox, Miss Elsie Moody, Miss Marga- ruite Rausch, Miss Benjie Robertson, Miss Sara Bergling, Miss Mary Shreve, Miss Mary Bair, Miss Dorothy Bair, Miss Ruth Cloise, Miss Helen Baden, Miss Minerva Baden, Miss Helen True, Miss Mildred True, Miss Nell Rogers, Miss Willard, Miss Slacer, Miss Mary Vickers, Miss Bonnie Basden, Miss Louise Tomlinson, Miss Burdette, Miss Knight, Miss Florence Bagling, Mrs. F. R. Mitchell, Miss Myra Mitchell, Miss Jean Miller and Miss Anita Henege. Mrs. Mitchell, Miss Shreve and Miss Mitchell were in the receiving line, while Miss Betty Price presided over the tea table. ‘The engagement, which was formally announced by Mr. and Mrs. Shreve & few days ago, was the theme of a mock fortune interpreted by Miss Marjore Walker, masqu-*ading as & crystal- gazer, while Miss Margaret Nussear, Miss Alma Nusscar. Miss Mary Dudley and Miss Myra Mitchell portrayed the past, present and future of the bride- to-be as communicated to Miss Walker through the medium of the crystal ball. Bridge Ehowe; biven For Prospective Bride Miss Kathryn Floyd Kelly and Miss Elizabeth Teresa Scanlon entertained at a bridge shower in the apartment of the latter on Wednesday evening, Oc- tober 1, in compliment to Miss Mary Lea Trivett, whose marriage to Mr. Bertrand Ewell Trenis of Washington will take place early this month. Arthur M. Trivett, Mrs. Daniel J. Scanlon, Mrs. Robert Williams, Mastin C. Trivett, iss Thurza E. Suter and Miss ivel Carrie E. 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PAULINA FROCKS, silk are suitable for Fall and .Formerly up to $29.75...3-piece knit- Winter wear. ted suits, wocel crepes and no smartly tailored... All silk ¢ knit dresses with berets, velty crepes,..Very , A unusual value a¢ 3 975 $1975

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