Evening Star Newspaper, May 17, 1931, Page 39

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SOCIETY. Mrs. Olmstead Sings At Final Musicale Of Season at Post Harris Hall at Fort Hum- phreys Will Be Scene of ‘Tu-ky Party" Dance To- ‘who was t.hn guest of the club. Olmstead sang two mufs of songs and, ayed and sang ligh uency,” m were given by Mfl B. Elliott, Lieut. Kenneth L. Huntington and Corpl. 3th Engineer Band. Fol- lowing the musicale the club and its guesu attended a special presentation f the operetta “Viennese thhh" at being_entertained tonig] | y” dance in Harris Hall which has N ap] riately decorated for the n. hosts at the party will and Mrs. Joseph W. Cox, Jr., and Lieut. and Mrs. Horace F. Sykes, jr. Prizes ‘will be given for the “tackiest” costumes. Capt. and Mrs. Albert C. Lieber, jr., are giving a dinner tonight before the dance and will have as their guests, Maj. and Mrs. Richard T. Coiner, Maj. and Mrs. William E. R. Covell, Maj. and Mrs. Edwin A. Bethel, Maj. and Mrs. Cleveland C. Gee, Col. Elliott J. Dent and others. Mrs. Charles R. Bathurst who has been visiting Maj. and Mrs. Richard T. Coiner, has been the guest in whose honor a serfes of parties has been given. Mrs. Morrill W. Marston entertained at luncheon for her Friday. On Saturday, Mrs. Blthurst was the | honor guest at a dinner and brldge glvm by Lieut. and Mrs. Beverly C.| now. Sunday Mrs. Bathurst wes the dinner guest of Lieut. Louls J. Rumaggl and Mrs. J. Ri Sunday _afternoon Maj. and Mrs. umletd E. Oliver gavs a tea in honor of Mrs. Bathurst, Miss Persis Puf and Miss Mace. Mrs, Fabius H. Kohloss of Washing- ton entertained a group of Fort Hum- phreys ladies at : luncheon Wednesday Thonor of Mrs. B-thurlt at the Maj. and Mrs. Edwin A. ] enter- hlm: at dinner at their home Thursday night Mrs. Russell McK. Harrington of Galveston, Tex.. who was formerly sta- | t!aned lt Pbrt Humphreys, was a visitor Mr. Rob‘rt A&Inmn of New York is m'rl!l W. Marston dinner Sunday and had . Arthur Milford, Darls, Mr. and Mrs. Morton and Mrs. Eliot Perkins and ler. N)lht Brld!! Club met Maj. and Mrs. Cleveland as its guest Mrs. C. R. dge Club met in Harris sl i oz o8 5@ E;E; T Capt. and Mrs. Albert & Horse Show Attendance Shows Interest in Sporta (Continued From First Page.) within easy walking distance of Chevy Chase Circle. ol 1 have been completed | i i | While socicty shifts from city homes to nearby resorts or convenient country clubs, some of the most important wed- dings of the season are being arranged and from now until July 1 there will be a constant clang of wedding bells, the long cry of unemployment and hard times failing to subdue the notes to 2ny degree. Most of the nuptial events announced for Washington are of a purely local nature and many will have & garden setting instead of church or drawing 1ormer days will give ny to bridal array and even the repast fol- Jowing the ceremony will take on an | al fresco a! B TS S A Plan Frontier Celebration. GRAND PORTAGE, Minn, May 16| (#)—A celebration marking the 200th | anniversary of the landing of La Veren- drye, French explorer, is planned here | at “America’s frontier port.” Fur trad- | ing flourished at Grand Portage for more than 100 years. Repalrln Remodelm s | the Mayflower. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, GIRL GRADUATE MISS MADELINE YONKER, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Yonker of 5100 Thirty-ninth street, who | graduates from Gunston Hall School May to a Summer resort. 26 and will later accompany her parents —Unde; Photo. = Personals of Interest in General Washington|* Ml‘!. Cloman I! in Louisville on MOtOX‘ Tl‘ip Accompanied by Mrs. Marye and Mrs. Howry. Mrs. Sidney A. Cloman is expected | Wi to return to Washington the middle of the week from Louisville, Ky., where she motored with Mrs. George T. Marye and Mrs. Charles B. Howry. They at- tended the Derby yesterday. Maj. and Mrs. Gist Blair will close | their cl house on Pennsylvania | avenue the first of June and go to Bar | Harbor for the Summer season. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss | will return Tuesday from New York, | where they have been through the week. | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin ilmington, Del,, are !Dendl&l 1e days at the Shoreham Hotel, r hav- su‘;' attended the Bradley Farms horse oW, Mrs. W. Keegin has as her guest her dluthzr-l.n-hw Mrs. Curtis W. Keegin of Detroit. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. H. Krechting of Wastington are ai Old Point Comfort and staying the New Chamberlain. Mrs. Lynn B. Garrison of Houston, Tex., who spent the' Winter in Wash- ington_at the Burlington Hotel, 5. 8. "Mohawk for her home in Houston. ~ Mrs. Harvey Ball has returned to her from Richmond, Va., where she was called on scoount of illness brother. 1S | death of her Mrs. J. Thompson Walles is now at| Hot_Springs, Va., and will retum to the ‘Mayflower at the end of the week. | Mrs. H D. Bean and Mrs. E. D.| Bolton of Sutton Surrey, England, are | visiting in Washington and staying at | They are spendlng‘ three months in this country. Mrs. D. E. Rvggles and her son, Mrv Rudy Lamont. ®uggles of Cambridge, | Mass., are sp/fiding the week end at the Mayflower. Mr. Ruggles will be graduated from Harvard this Spring. Mr. and Mrs. Willam M. Conrad, who have been guests at the Mayflower Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Turner motored to Williamsburg, Va., to spend the week end with their u.hur,lflu mt.nme Miss | roommate, Patty | Castator, are giving a “tea” hnnumber | of their classmates in honor of * | Turner. | | guest of honor at a b Student Groups Enjoyed Luncheon Party Yesterday ‘The junior classes of the Gunston school gave a luncheon yesterday Shoreham Hotel in mmpllment the school nt of the Willa_Juanita Caroline Fuller of . while the president of the collegiate group is Miss Lundye Sharp of Atlanta, Ga. Members of the senior class academic Anne Rnhbone Cochran, Miss Frances Douglass, Miss Maud Lee Duncan, Ml!l Adelaide Gibson Howle, Beuju Simonds, Miss Barbara Blaiklock Wells and Miss Madeline Yonker. The senior collegiate section included Miss Florence Bailey, Miss Lucille Henrietta Bowden, Miss Narcisse Willlams Brown, Miss Julia Greenwood . Catlin, Miss Eloise Dasher, Miss Virginia Hamilton, Miss Madora Louise Hall, Miss Harriet Jose- phine Laffey and Miss Jane Fitzhugh Scott. Members of the junior academic sec- tion were Miss Beatrice Craft, Miss Mary Kathryn Dudley, Miss Estelle Follin, Miss Lucy Reynolds Follin, Miss Caroline Fuller, Miss Mary Lincoln Green, Miss Frances Hulen, Miss Beu- lah Weymouth Lewis, Miss Juliana Lewis and Miss Helen Sheldon. The )umor collegiate class members were iss Isabel Barton, Miss Harriet Anne Buylor Miss Jean Catherine Crago, Miss Elizabeth Judd, Miss Virginia Hilton Roller and Miss Elizabeth W kins Seabury. Card F;any D:aws Prelates and Patrons Additional patrons for the Sodality Union card party which will be held at the Willard Hotel tomorrow_evening at 8:30 o'clock include the Right Rev. Mgr. Edward L. Buckey, the Rev. Michael F. Fitzpatrick, 5. J.; Francis J. Hurney, Miss Caroline F. Gibson, Miss Annie F. Murphy, Mrs. J Leo Kolb. Miss Nannis Mitchell, Miss Agnes A. Saul, Almn Echterman, Miss Cecilia a. kyau, Miss Helen L. Quinn, Mrs. John F. Mc- Carron, Mrs. Marie De Grain and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Darsey. Archbishop of Baltimore Honored by Banquet ‘The Most Rev. Michae! J. Curley, Archbishop of Baltimore, will be the et and re- ception tomorrow evening at the Wil- lard Hotel, given by members of the Curley Club of Washington. The ban- quet will start promptly at 7 o'clock, followed by an_entertainment, during wi the archbishop will deliver the principal address, An orchestra, under the direction of Miss Ann Arlen, will furnish music. The banquet will mark the ninth anni- versary of the club, which was organized for the purpose of raising funds for scholarships for_poor_children. Nearly all 1aborers in cities of Hawaii | now are busy on public-works projects. 1227 F Street since their marriage last month, lefi‘ yesterday for New York for the Sum- | mer. Mrs. Conrad is_the former Mrs. | Alice Bacon of New York and Wash- | ington. Island are spending a few days in room. The stiff satins ol m}:r. and Mrs. Edward C. Arnold of | Washington at the Mayflower, having | | come here to see the latter’s daughter, Mrs. Marshall Marston, on Bancroft place. Mr. E. R. Haas returned to Washing- | ton Saturday, after attending the Na- | | tional Home Study Council convention | in Chicago during the past week, at | which he gave an illustrated talk on the progress of correspondence school advertising. Mr. and Mrs. John W. £ g McComb of Assured satisfaction in repairing and remod- eling by Capitol's ex- pert craftsmen and stylists . . . and com- plete storage protec- tion by using our spe- WE ARE A SPEC MAKING IALTY OF | Miss | MAY 17, 1931—PART THREE. : INTERESTING FAMILY A. LEFTWICH SINCLAIR, JR., And her small son, A. Lefiwich Sinclair, 3d, of North Woodside, Md., where their home is a popular meeting place for their host of friends. |Capt. and Mrs. Israel Hosts to Bridge Party Capt. Prederick Israel, U. S. M. C,, and Mrs. Israel were hosts at bridge Pri- day evening, May 8, entertaining in their home on Patterson street in Chevy Chase. 'Their guests were Lieut. Bert Maneratti, U. 8. N,, and Mrs. Ml‘nexlttl. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Devries, Mr, Mrs. Edward J. Lamster, Mr. and Mrs George Goodacre, Mr. and Mrs. August Eccard, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Severn, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Crater and Mrs. Arthur Holden. BROOKS G St. Bet. 11th and 12th BROOKS G St. Bet. 11th and 12th Graduation 15 IS your graduation for- mal? Or informal? In- door or outdoor? After- noon or evening? Brooks has your dress for gradu- ation or class night, Nets, delicately soft and lovely as sketched, chiffons that simply float, laces that have snared all Summer beauty, silk crepes cut with deceiving simplicity. Misses” 12 to 20 Graduation Frocks $15 to $39.75 Brooks, Third Floor TRADE MARK Antique and Modern FURNITURE SOCIE -Legal Sorority Annual Dinner at Dodge Hotel Epsilon Chapter, Kappa Beta Pi Legal i Sorority of the Washington College of Law, is celebrating its fifteenth anni- versary at a breakfast this morning in the hut of the e Hotel. Dr. Ellen Spencer Mussey, co-founder of the Wuh- ington Colle of Law and honoras member of sorority; Mis llluheth Harris, Mlu lth!l Lee Lawrence, Mrs. Helena Reed, Miss Mary B. ‘Wright, Mlss D Elizabeth Falgoner, Mrs. Grace B. Stiles, Miss Bernice Woodward and Miss Nell Guinn are the guests of honor. The tables and the birthday cal will be decorated in blue and gold, the sorority colors. Miss Eina M. Ander- son, dean, will preside. Mrs, Gertrude Smith, chariman of the Committee on Arrangements, is being asssited by Miss es McWhinnie, Miss Mary L. Chad- R. Palen and Miss TX. IRVING of N 849 thnn— I e ainligs vy Auol-a-m " Custom tailored, Belgian linen, cre- |tonne, beautiful ensemble effects. 3-pc. set, 5 cush- 324fi fons, installed.... And-up McDEVITT’S 1202 G St. NW. Decorator Dis. 3211 Awnings—Draperies—Window Shades best grade % PALAIS ROW\L G Street at Eleventh Opal Porcelain Miniatures Frame, $29S (As Shown) Other Frames $1.45 Up Hand Coloring, $2.00 Let us make from your cherished Photographs, Daguer- reotypes, Tintypes, Ambertypes, Postal Cards or Kodak Snaps, exquisite porcelain miniatures. ..permanent records of your loved ones. Bring as many as you like. the country’s Jarge studios we can make this dlct!oronlylnmhedume ‘We urge to bring in " your pictures (or negatives, if you have them) im’;“zdmly Palais Royal—Main Floor DE MOLL:S AY SALE of PIANOS - RADIOS - FURNITURE Don't fail to investigate ity merchandise at new low prices. furniture, many fine new our May sales of high qual- Every article of Lpnght and Baby Grand Pianos and up-to-date Radios are in our May Sale. This is your opportunity to get a real bargain. PiaNoOS Fine New Uprights.. New Grand Pianos Traded-in Uprights. . Baby Grand Pianos... Convenient Monthly Payments Arranged if Desired for RADIOS 39 Many fine Our_extra this sale ar‘aew R:dxo! $79 special ‘is the Model Victor Ra'di_“ $l 14.50 Other new Radios as low as S!o. Traded-in All-Electric Sets priced (rom $25. Battery Sets, $10. Terms to Suit. VicTROLAS FURNITURE etc, are included at new Special Low Prices. Fme‘sft m?del brand- new Victrolas for 579 Traded-in \uttrohs TO Every article of Furniture, including Bed Room, Living Room, Chairs, Tables, Young mar- ried couples are especially invited to attend this sale. You cial Cold Air Process will surely save money. insures furs against all REGISTERED Semi-Antique Oriental Rugs in all sizes, Valuable Imported China and Glassware, Antique Silver ad Sheffield Plate, Paint- ings, Prints, Ornaments, Chinese and Japanese Objects of Art, Draperies, Mir- rors and Many Other Articles of Vertu. Comprising The Thompson Sale from the Estate of Colonel Robert M. Thompson by order of Sarah Thompson Pell, Executrix, with additions from other estates, a promi- nent Jocal owner now in Europe, and Other Sources. To Be Sold at Public Auction Within Our Galleries 715 13th Street Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday May 19th, 20th, 21st and 22nd, 1931 At 2 P. M. Each Day On Exhibition Saturday and Monday, May 16th and 18th. Catalogues on Application to C. G. Sloan & Co., Inc., Auets. ‘Terms: Cash TURBAN at the very low price 6 5 hazards. Storage CLEANING The CAPITOL'S special cleaning process restores fur beauty by safely and completely removing every vestige of dirt and grime from the fur...1009, protection at moderate charges. Extra Special for Tomorro Player Piano (guaranteed in perfect p]fl‘- ing condition). Ten music rolls included. . $79 Reproducing Player Piano (perfect condition). Works by electricity. Ten music rolls in- cluded . X 5385 Baby Grand Piano (although used, is in $250 perfect condition). Ten fine traded-i -in Upright Pianos (guaranteed). Mahogany and walnut cases. Convenient 575 terms arranged. .. i S A . Strow Bouchle Angora Rolkyour-owm CAPITOL FUR SHOP 1208 G Street The All-About Hats That Go Everywhere And Do Everything That Active Young People Do. Convenient Terms Arranged O. J. DE MoLL & Co. Wl RADIOS FURNITURE h and G Sts. N.W. Styled by our best designers. Made from Our own materials. All New Summer Colors.. Members of Masters 'urrlm Gu“‘

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