Evening Star Newspaper, November 2, 1930, Page 49

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SOCIETY. Prominent Folk of Capital Seen in the Passing Throng Many Residents Returni Departing—Visitors ng From Out{ngs. Others Entertained in City. Homes Opened for Winter. Mrs. William 8. Kenyon, wife of Judge Kenyon of the National Com- mission on Law Observance and En- forcement, arrived in Washington yes- terday for the season, and is at the Mayfiower. Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Hamlin will open their apartment at the Hay-Adams December 1. Mr. Hamlin is temporarily staying at the Cosmos Club while Mrs. Hamlin is visiting in Massachusetts. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence P. Dodge of | Colorado Springs have arrived in Wash- ington for the Winter and are staying | at the Mayflower. Mr. e is former owner and editor of the Colorado Springs Gazette, and is well known throughout the West for his connection with Red Cross and Community Chest activities. Mis¢ Randolph and Miss Mary Ran- dolph have opened their home at 1317 Nineteenth street for the season, after making a series of visits on the North Shore of Massachusetts, at Newport, where they go each season, and in the Adirondacks. Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Victor du Pont of Wilmington, Del.. are passing the week end at the Mayflower, having come here to see the former’s sister, Mrs. Reginald 8. Huidekoper. Mrs. Robert E. Lee, who has been | spending the Summet in her home, | Ravenswood, at Flat Rock near Ashe- | ville, N. C., has returned to Washing- | ton and is ‘again in her home at 2140 ‘Wyoming avenue. Mrs. Jackson Turner, who has been spending some time in Norfolk, Va. as & guest of her grandmother, Mrs. Harry ch Balley, will return to the Capi- tal next week. Miss Margaret Peyton Calvert will return today from the University of Virginia, where she went to attend the hop. Miss Eleanor Calvert, who will make her debut with her sister Christ- mas day, spent yesterday at Annapolis. ‘The M Calvert are daughters of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Calvert, jr. Mrs. Nannie Green Jobe and her daughter, Mis¢ Elizabeth Van Dyke Jobe, have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Felix Harvey at Vernon Hall, their place near Kingston, N. Y. They went North to attend the wedding of Miss Mary Lewis Harvey and Mr. Ar- thur Pomerene Wilson of New York, the latter a nephew of former Senator Atlee Pomerene, October 25. Mrs. Jobe and her daughter will soon return to Washington. ‘Miss Mary Lee Creel, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Claude R. Whitaker, 3620 Sixteenth street, has returned to her home in Baltimore. Mrs. Lucy Wilder Morris, who has ‘Washf n for several days, ingto 18 at the Willard Hotel. Mrs. William Hughes Stokes, accom- fed by her two younger sons, little Mner Van Cortlandt and Willlam Royal Stokes, will leave Sunday to join Mr. Stokes in Bllt.t:mcre, where they will spend the Winter. Wl.llhmpen Hughes, jr., who attends Gunston Hall Little School, will remain here with his grandmother, Mrs. Wil- liam Jackson Turner. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick R. Baily have arrived in Oakland, Calif. They spent a week with Mrs. Baily's mother, Mrs. Otto De Moll, before going to the Coast. Mr..and Mrs. Baily formerly made their home in Canada. Miss Virginia Forward has joined her mother, Mrs. Alexander Forward, in their apartment at Wardman Park Ho- tel, after spending & few weeks in At- lantic City. Mr. and Mrs. George D. Brown of | g, , Ill., have arrived tx: guhm;- ton, where they are guests at Wardman Park Hotel for a week or 10 days. Mr. and Mrs. Brown are with Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Massey, who have an apartment st Wardman Park. Dr. Lillian M. Gilbreth of Montclair, N. J, who is in charge of women’s ac- tivities of the Emergency Unemployment , Ses Committee of which Col. Arthur Woods is chairman, is at the Dodge Hotel for an indefinite stay. Dr. N. H. Darton of the United States | Geological Survey and Mrs. Darton have returned after four months spent in ‘Texas, Arizona and California, and are | again at the Hotel Chastleton for the| Winter. Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Turner of! Cleveland Park, accompanied by Mr.| Welton Updike, motored to Frederick, Md., to spend the week end. Miss Marguerite Agniel of New York | has arrived in the Capital and is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Lucille A. Caimes, at the Jowa Apartment. Miss Agniel is well known in Washington as | & dancer and author. i apartment at the new Shoreham Hotel, where she will make her home this Win- ter. She is accompanied by her son, Mr. Everett Richard. Mr. and Mrs. A. Necly of Toronto, Canada, are visiting Washington and are stopping at the Potomac Park Apartments, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Faubion, former residents of 3711 Benton street, have moved to the Westchester Apartment. Their young son, Rex Berry, is with them and Mr. Jodzies' mother, Mrs. Nellie L. Faubion, makes her home with them, too. Miss Edith Long, who makes her home at the Hotel Roosevelt, has can- celed all social engagements during November as the result of an accident. Miss Gertrude Ray Schultz attended the United Daughters of the Confeder- acy Convention at Belvedere Hotel, Bal- timore, last week where she acted as & pege to Mrs. James Wee:en, president Of Ridgely Brown Chapter. Mrs. Edwara Graves and_ her sister, Miss M. B. Gore, are closing their apart- ment at Wardman Park Hotel and are oing to Atlantic City, where they will e at the Chalfonte for most of the Winter. Mrs. Royal R. Rommel of Lowell street will have a5 her guest ne. Miss Meude C:rrck o. W, who will remain in Wosk week. Gay and pleaaurable Events Mark the Midautumn Period In Cnpitll'l Fashion World —(Continued From First Page) have five children, all under 14 years of age, and they and their picturesque Basque governesses and nurses will show a new note of color in the Capi- tal’s cosmopolitan wing. Baron John Beck-Fris, the Swedish counselor of legation, also lately as- signed to act as charge d'affaires while the Minister, M. Bostrom, was in Siock- holm, is expecting his wife, his daugh- ter Christina, who is 14, and infant son Jan, within the month. The Baron and Baroness are of the old noblesse of Sweden, predating the Bernadotte oc- cupation of the throne and they are important additions to the social world and to the sport-loving members of the younger circle. For two years t, the baron, transferred from the s micn office in' Stockholm, had acted as private secretary of King Gustav. The: Baroness, who is young and very handsome, was before her marriage Countess Gunilla Bielke, and her an- cestral home, Sturefors Castle, is one of the oldest and most beautiful estates in Sweden. A charming and talented English lady, wife of the commercial .unsellor of the Netherlands legation, Mme. Ber- nard Kleyn Molencamp, will be among the aides of Mme. Van Royen at the amenities at Queen Wilhelmina's estab- lishment, always among the most active and hospitable of the foreign homes. Mme. Molencamp was Miss Miss Emily Sarah Landgridge of London, and is musical’ and literary in trend. She is a keen horsewoman and plays an ex- cellent game of golf. M. Molencamp is more inclined to tennis, and both will figure in thc athletic field. The son, Bernard William, is just 10. Witth ' the week the newly assigned counsellor of the Mexican ar- rived in Washington with his wife and young daughter and are temporarily staying at the Mayflower. Senor Her- e to an important family long identified with the public service of the Mexican Republic, and of which one of the provisional presidents of Mexico since the revolution against Diaz, was a member, as well as many o; the military leaders before and since 1910. One of the popular bachelors of the corps will return in a few weeks in nor Confado Traverso, who will coma as ¥first secretary of the Argentine em| . Mr. Traverso served for al- most four years and was called to Buenos Aires about a year ago to serve in the foreign office. Former Representative James Francis Bymnes of South Carolina having wrenched the senatorial nomination from the incumbent, Senator Coleman Livingston Blease, the return of Mrs. Byrnes in a higher congressional rank is anticipated with keen pleasure. For in the Palmetto State, getting the nomi- nation from the Democratic primaries is insured election. Former Representative Byrnes came to Washington with the Sixty-second Congress and had an established repu- tation for legal attainments which ex- tended beyond his State, and Mrs. Byrnes was well known as an accom- Mrs. 8. 8. Richari has taken an plished hostess in the discriminating Erlebacher TWELVETEN TWHVETWEVE F STREET There Is a New Elegance in ERLEBACHER Coats Displayed in Our Annual COAT WEEK Pormal fabrics of different weaves . . details . . . . increased use of attractive sleeve creations and the use of beauti- ful furs lend a charm to these models. Fur-Trimmed Sport Coats $59.75 1o $169-75 Fur-Trimmed Dress Coats #6975 to #3987 Fur-Trimmed Ensemble Suits $98-75 to $325-%0 Evening Wraps 329.75 to $27500 ENLARGED COAT SALON ENTIRE THIRD FLOOR Model sketched is of Black Velvet, with an unusual collar of BLUE FOX, the fur sensation of the sea- som. THE SUNDAY § TAR, WASHINGTON, D . C., NOVEMBER 2, 1930—PART THREE., SOCIETY. BRIDES WHOSE RECENT WEDDINGS WERE INTERESTING EVENTS Upper left: ‘Wilscn, and Center: partment. Upper, right: Mrs. John Clement daughter of Mrs. Arthur Benton Carle bridegroom, Ensign Alderman, is the son of Mr. Mrs. B. Fleharty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Franklin before her marriage Miss Margaret McLain Wilson.—Bachrach Photo. Mrs. Richard Ford, formerly Miss Mildred Core of Lenape Lodge, Ford City, Pa, granddaughter of Mrs. Charles Hoyle and niece of Mrs. John Hays Hammond, both of this city. Mr. Ford is in the foreign service of the State De- —Parry Photo, Pittsburgh. Lower: Mrs. Mario Givonni Vangeli. Before her marriage to Lieut. Vangeli, U. 8. N, October 25, she was Miss Katrina Tanner. —Underwood Photo. Alderman, formerly Miss Natalie Carle, of Jackson Heights, Long Island. The L. R. Alderman of Washington. —Marceau, New York. little city of Aiken. She was before her marriage Miss Maude Busch of a fam- ily long established in this aristocratic ‘Winter resort. Mr. and Mrs. Byrnes al- ways participated in a quiet way in all the amenities of the Winter and the latter was from her first residence here an active member of the Congressional Club. She filled many minor positions with complete satisfaction and in 1923 was chosen president of the organization and remainded in office until 1925. Mrs. Byrnes was a gracious successful execu- tive of this organization and her return to the official circle will be marked by many courtesies from her former asso- ciates. She was the second president selected from Dixie, Mrs. Duncan U. Fletcher of Florida having been the presiding officer from 1913-15. Mrs. Alexander W. Gregg, sr., of Texas filled the unexpired term of Mrs. James Breck Perkins, the founder, from 1910-11. Mrs. Porter Hinman Dale, wife of the Senator from Vermont, is present head of this influential and most ac- she is the third to be chosen from New England, Mrs. Ernest W. Roberts of Massachusetts, wife of the late member of the House from that State, being the first, and Mrs. Peter Goelet Gerry of Rhode Island the second. When Mrs. Perkins of Rochester, N. Y. founded the Congressional Club in 1908 she and her colleagues agreed to rotation in office and to regular geographical dis- tribution. Mrs. Perkins, the first prest- Distinctive Group of SAKS " FABRICS ARE: Imperata Norma Villo FUR TRIMS: Persian Krimmer Caracul Skunk FUR CO. ceptable social wing of officialdom and | $79 and %89 !dent. has had one successor from the | Empire State, Mrs. Charles B. Ward. | New Jerscy has one daughter on the roster of president, Mrs. Joseph S. Fre- | inghuysen, but she like Mrs. Gregg of | Texas was first vice president and suc- | ceeded to a vacancy. In the case of | | Mrs. Frelinghuysen it was caused by the retirement of Mrs. Irvine L. Len- root because of ill-health. The Pacific Coast_has been honored in Mrs. Lind- ley H. Hadley of Washington. The | Middle West in addition to Mrs. Len- | root_has had two other representatives | |in this unique organization, Mrs. Atlee | | Pomerene of Ohio and Mrs. Horace M. iTDw“er of Towa. Mrs. Dale's term will expire in March, 1931, and this season, which makes her midterm, will be | interspersed with the usual amenities |and many innovations such as made the club one of the alluring social con- tacts all through last Winter, | Delta Circle Members Will Be Guests at Tea | Mrs. L. W. Richardson, 1612 Hobart street, will entertain at tea on Tues- | day for the ladies belonging to her | group of the Delta Circle, the working organization of the ladies of the parish of St. Stephen and the Incarnation. They are very actively engaged in preparation for their annual turkey | dinner and bazaar, which will be held in the parish hall on Wednesday and Thursday evenings, November 12 and 13. | | CLOTH COATS all day on Priday to discuss sectional Girl Scout Field Division tblems aad G lsy piane Sor the Spring conference. Members of this Meets Here This Week | hnnfics inchide Mre. Sounct Mo Mrs, Prederick H. Brooke of Wash- | Guire of Richmond, Va.; Mrs. John 8. ington, recently appointed chairman | Davis of Baltimore, Md: Mrs E. XK. of the'feld division of the Girl Scouts, | Sonrad of Kingston, Pa.; Miss Mar- will entertain Mrs. Sybil Gordon Neweli §77¢h ROOS of Merion e M of New York, executive secretary of the | ytrtha, PRIEE OF FRrTSnle me s o field division: Miss Adelaide Werner, 8 et 5 Which " Washington s iciuded. and drs o i whic] ington cluded, and . members of her Reglonal Committee at Danish Farmers Read. dinner at the Girl Scout Little House| CANYON, Tex. (®)—Farmers in on Friday evening, November /1. With | Denmark are the best-read farmers in Mrs. Newell and Miss Werder. Mrs. | the world, says Prof. Frank R. Phillips. Brooke will visit Camp May Flather, | head of the agriculture department of the Washington Girl Scout camp, lo- | the West Texas Teachers' College. Prof. cated at Stokesville, Va., on Thursday. | Phillips has made an intensive study T nal_Committee will meet of agriculture in Denmark. The Women's Shop of the RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street Camel’s hair trimmed with beaver Sketched to the right-- a close-fitting Camel's Hair Sport Coat trim- med with a Luxurious Beaver Collar...a belt- ed model with a slight flare to the skirt...In a new and beautiful weave of Camel's hair .One of the many new Raleigh styles at Women's 8hop—Third Floor 3 Woman's Democratic Club To Entertain at Dinner The Woman's National Democratio Club will entertain at dinner Tuesday evening, election returns being ane nounced during the dinner from & pri- vate wire, which will be installed in the club house for the evening. Reserva~ tions for the dinner should be made as far in advance as possible. ‘The club will entertain at the fifst of the Winter's series of forum luncheons tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock, when Mr. | Charles G. Ross, Washington corre- spondent of the ' St. Louis Post-Dis- patch, will be the guest of honor and speaker. The subject will be “Election Day Forecasts.” Mr. Jouett Shouse, chairmdn of the | Birthday Party Honors Mrs. Emma Crawford | The home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Crawford, 228-A Bates street, was the scene of a very enjoyable party | Saturday evening, October 25, the occa- slon being the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Emma Crawford. The guests included many members of the family and friends from out of | town, as well as those residing in Washington, and among them were Mrs. Rebecca Keeney, Mrs. Crawford’s sister; Mrs. Prank Keeney, Mr. George Keeney and Miss Katherine Keeney of Baltimore; Mr. Willlam E. Severn, Montelair, N. Mrs. William C. Hoff- man, Hopewell, Va.; Mrs. Walter Peach and daughter, Miss Christina Peach; Mr. Joseph Peach, Granite, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Snyder, Mr. Willlam Sn; der, Alberton, Md.; Mrs. David Stauf- fer, Mr. and Mrs. Tully Baer, Ellicott City, Md.; Mrs. Ada Severn Robinson, | Mrs. Ethel Severn Wrozina, .New | | Haven, Conn.; Mr. and Mrs. Elwood | | Bevern, New York City, and Mr. Miller, | Be , Md. The home guests in- | cluded Mr. and Mrs. James L. Craw- ford, Miss Emelie Crawford, Mrs. Sadie C. Trapp, Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Thayer, Miss Mamie D. Sebotka, Mlll‘ Ella N. Wall, Mr. and Mrs. John F.| Beck, Mr. Charles Beck, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Pealy, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. , Griffin, Miss Nonie Collins, Mr. and | Mrs. Leon B. Dioux, Mrs. Theresa | Heinecke, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Reeves and others. INZTaT | Executive Committee of the Democratic | National Committee, will be the guest | of honor and speaker at the weekly forum luncheon to be given by the club on Monday, November 10, at 12:30 o'clock. He will discuss “Echoes of the Election.” The club will give the first of its reg- ular weskly dinners of the Winter on Friday evening. November 14, at 7:30 o'clock. Dinner will be foliowed by bridge with prizes for the best scores of the evening. These weekly dinners will be given on Friday evenings through- out the season, instead of on Thursdays as was the custom last Winter, MidsMeBiide oS sosh At Woman's Party Tea Miss Mary Margaret McBride, the author of “The Story of Dwight W. Morrow,” published this Fall, and a well known contributor to the leading maga- zines, will speak at the National Woman's Party’s tea today. Miss Mc- Bride will relate some of her experiences as a woman free lance writer, and dis- cuss the ins and outs of a journalistie career for women. Miss McBride is in Washington in connection with the White House Con- ference on Child Health and Protection. She is a Missourian by birth, but has for some time past made her home in New York. Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley will also speak at the tea on the action of the Cotton Textile Institute in dismissing women from all night work employment. Mrs. Wiley presented the Woman's Party's official protest against such action to officers of the Cotton Textile Institute on_October 30. The tea will be held at Alva Belmont | House, national headquarters of the ‘Wnoman's Party, from 4:30 to 6 o'clock. ‘ Womer:Pre;s Club To Meet at Luncheon ‘The Womer's National Press Club will hold its weekly luncheon at the ‘Willard Hotel Tuesday. Due to election day there will bé no honor guest. The next meeting of the club will be at & dinner at the Willard Hotel Tuesday, Nfi}re{ml!])er 11, when a business meeting Hats S W We are comstantl receiving new motlel in ... Street ... Aft- ernoon . . . Evening Dresses . . . in all of the latest shades and sizes. The Matron' as well as the Young Girl is offered a splendid choice in all sizes. Known for their taste in selection UTION INTEANATIONALE - - And the cig . the more cefifmfyw are to fi”‘l A ké; dulled by mo ASHION SIGNIFIC. R i ilaesed 43 Chanel, is an important tumes. It is segond, an suthority migl S smarter 10 black, but even~

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