Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1931.° SOCIETY.” Wilbur Wright Heard of New Orleans, | ly Miss Antiss De Veau, daughter of the | Sixbey ll.cz.wr'rhen‘m;d1;1“‘111;71:1t take. pl.sni:-thu late Prederic C. de Vesu @8 New York. | ried mfi at of i park Pluqnlg: County, Va. Dr. and Mrs. Henry @Wok Macatee | American University, Rev. wf\:hul:‘ s AR ly —— have gone to Bryn Mavwr to sttend the | Harrison, jr., of the McCabe Memorial Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Denton Williams | graduation of ‘thelr daughter, Miss | Methodist Ej Church, Wilming- Gertrude Paxton Macatee. Miss Mac- | ton, Del, ting. SOCIETY. T N , N. Y., will 1y Miss Florence o'clock in_ the | ing from a recent operation. Ne Residen - Dr. Edith SeVille Coale entertained ts at the dinner dance at the Na- Country Women’s Club Saturday ‘Trumbull, is recuperat- | in their Summer place, Stone Villa, at wport. Miss . and ‘W. Herrick, son and iter-in-lay !Mm \w of the late Ml‘S. Hoover GOES to pennsylvania ‘EOI' Graduation of Ni White House Guest. RS. HOOVER is in Pennsyl- vania today attending com- mencement_exercises at High- land Hall, Hollidaysburg, from which institution her niece, Miss Janet Large, graduate. Mrs. Hoover left Washington yesterday for Altoona and Hollidaysburg, and re- turns here late this evening, Miss Large accompanying her, and remaining as a White House guest for a short time. Mrs. Large, Mrs. Hoover's sister, ac- companied her on the trip. Ambassador of Ttaly Returns to Washington Today. The Italian Ambassadcr, Nobile Gia- como de Martino, is expected to come to Washington this evening from New York, where he arrived this morning aboard the Saturnia from Italy. The Ambassador accompanied Donna An-| toinette de Martino to their Italian home, where she will spend the Sum- mer. The counsélor of the embassy, Conte Marchetti, who has been charge d'affares during the Ambassador's ab- sence, went to New York to meet him and will accompany him t> Washing- ton this evening. The Ambassador of Poland, Mr. Filipowicz, went to New York yesterday morning and is at the Ritz-Tower for & few days. Mrs. Charles Francis Adams, wife of the Secretary of the Navy, will attend the graduation of her son. Mr. Charles Francis Adams, jr., from Harvard Uni- | versity, June 10. She will remain with | him in Concord, M: until he sails | to spend the Summs broad. The Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur have left Washington for a 10-day motor trip in the South. They will attend the com- mencement _exercises of the Tusculum College, at Greenvills, Tenn., where the Secretary will deliver an address, and will visit in_Asheviile, N. C., before Te- turning to Washington. The Minister of Switzerland, Mr. Marc Peter, is expected to return this evening | from a few days' stay in New York, | where he has been at the Ritz-Tower. Senator and Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow have leased the house at 1647 'l'hirueth‘ street, at the corner of R street, from | Maj. ‘and Mrs. Willam J. Donovan.| Senator and Mrs. Morrow do not expect | to take possession of the house until | they come to Washington in the late Autumn for the convening of Congress. Maj. and Mrs. Donovan purchased | the house when the former was assist- | ant to the Attorney General during the Coolidge administration. | Senator_James J, Davis is spending | today in Washington and will go tonight | o Wilkes-Barre, Pa.. to attend a three- | day convention of World War Veterans. | Senator and Mrs. Davis were among | those on the speaker's stand at Valley | Forge Saturday, Mrs. Davis returning | that evening and the Senator going to | Indianapolis. Others who were guests on the speaker's stand Saturday were. the Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, | Mr. R. W. Dunlop: the chief of the Indian affairs of the Interior Depart- | ment and Mrs. Charles J. Rhoads, former Senator and Mrs. George Whar- fon Pepper, the former Governor of Pennsylvania, Mr. John S. Fisher. and his daughter: Mrs. Henry Tatnall Brow ; Gen. and Mrs. W. W. Atter- | bury, Mr. and Mrs. A. Atwater Kent, | Mrs. J. Wilmer Biddle and Mrs. John O. | Hutchinson, representing the Colonial Dames. Representative and Mrs. Sol Bloom | have leased Hemlock Hedge, the charm- | ing home of former Postmaster General | |l and Mrs. Harry New, at Edgemoor. They | will go there with their daughter, Miss | Vera Bloom, about June 15 or 20, and will remain until late Autumn. Mr. Blcom is unable to leave the Capital | for any length of time during the sea- | son on account of his work with the Bicentennial Committee and other affzirs and prefers nearby Washington. Hemlock Hedge is a bird retreat and the former Postmaster General and Mrs. New are acquainting their new tennants with the habits, tastes and desires of th feathered friends before they themselves leave for their Summer home at Turtle Lake, Mich.,, for the season, | a place where they have gone hunting | and fishing for many years past. | Mrs. Marshall Field has closed her house_on Sixteenth strect and gone to | New York, where she is at the Plaza until next week, when she will sail Monday, June 8, to spend the Summer | abroad. Mrs. Gibson Fahnestock is at Briar- clifft Manor, N. Y., for a short stay before g0ing to her Summer home at Newport. Maj. and Mrs. Parker W. West will entertain at dinner this evening in their home in Soldiers’ Home in celebration of their thirtieth wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Maxim Karolik have closed their house on Decatur place and have opened their Summer home in Newport for the season. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin | returned to their home, Abremont, last | evening after spending a short time in New York at the St. Regis. Mrs. Margaret Sheridan O'Connell and her sisters, Miss Julia Teresa Sheri- dan and Miss Annette Sheridan, of ‘Twenty-first street, who are at their Summer place, Willow Hall, Cayenoria, N. Y., motored to New York City Tues- day to attend the launching of the Mur- Inside and Out, and Steaming and Glazing Free gladly call for your coat. Stored in Burglarproof VERY LOW PRICES ON REPAIRING ISADOR MILLER FUR COATS ‘Thoroughly Cleaned s Storage Vaults. 5 Phone Nat'l 5628 and we will 809 1ith St. N.W. Nat'l 5628 s and phone us. Whenever you look at rugs cleaned by us there is a feeling of satisfac- tion. We make them look like new. Call Mr. Pyle. .. NAtional 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. Members of the Rug Cleaners’ Institute of America | whose ece Who Will Be ray Hill and Washington Square boats, sponsored by Mrs. Alfred E. Smith, jr., and Miss Evelyn Wagner. Miss Virginia_Ashburn, daughter of Col. and Mrs, Percy M. Ashburn, en- tertained at luncheon today at the Army-Navy Country Club in honor of Miss Catharine Berry, whose marriage to Lieut. Frank Jerdone Coleman, U. S. A. Air Corps, will take place June 8. The company included Miss Nancy Berry, Miss Mary Henry, Miss Barbara ‘Woodruff, Miss Clara Bolling, Miss Vir- ginia Coleman, Miss Catherine Fechet, Miss Smith, Miss Margaret Bouve, Miss Nary Shinn, Miss Frances Stearns, Miss Emiscah Davis, Miss Mary Ruden and Miss Lucille Swift. Miss Mary Hills is entertaining at an informal bridge shower this afternoon in comp]iment to Miss Margaret West, arriage to Mr. John Homer Chned of New York will take place June 6. ‘Wedding at Cathedral Followed by Breakfast in City. Miss Dorothy Hayden, daughter of Rear Admiral and Mrs. Edward Everett Hayden and granddaughter of the late Gen. and Mrs. J. J. Reynolds, and Dr. Gaylord Palmer Coon, a University of Chicago man and specialist in neuro- psychiatry and brain surgery, were mar- ried at noon today in the Bethlehem Chapel of the National Cathedral at St. Albap. Only close relatives were pres- ent and after a quiet wedding breakfast at the Cosmos Club, the happy couple wen North, to sail for Europe, where Dr. Coon will study for about a year under a fellowship from Harvard Uni- versity. They will be at home after June 15 at the Curzon Hotel, Mayfair, London W. 1, England. party this the wedding d Mr. Edward Denton Williams, jr., who will be mar- ried tomorrow. The fete will follow the rehearsal of the wedding. . Mrs. 8. B. Church has gone to Hot Springs, Va., and is at the Homestead for a short stay. e | Mrs. Alvin T. Hert has closed her apartment in Washington and gone to Louisville, Ky., where she will spend the Summer. Col. and Mrs. Willlam R. Gibson en- tertained a party at dinner at the Shoreham Hotel Saturday evening in compliment to Mrs. Gibson’s cousin, Mrs. Belle Gibson Rowe of Dallas, Tex., who is now the house guest of the Gib- sons and Mrs. Walker Huffman in their apartments at the Shoreham. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Thomas Q. Ash burn entertained at dinner last eve HI Gen. nd Mrs. Stephen, O. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Harry Bishop, M Gen. and Mrs. Robert Callan, the mili- tary attache of the Cuban embassy and Mme. Prieto, Bflf Gen. and Mrs. Joseph Tracy, Col. and Mrs. Julius Conrad and Col. and Mrs. Fred Brown of Baltimore, Capt. Earl Shipp, U. 8. N, and Mrs. Shipp; Lieut. Col. and Mrs. W. G. Lockwood of Jacksonville, Fla.; Ma). M. F. Davis, Col. and Mrs. W. Holt Peek of New York, brother- in-law and sister of Mrs. Ashburn, and Lieut. Thomas Q. Ashburn, jr. Mr. and Mrs. F. Hamilton McCormick- Goodhart are receiving congratulations on the birth of a daughter yesterday Mrs. McCormick-Goodhart was form: LIMOUSINES For Weddings, Receptios Particular Occasion Reasonable Rates or Any Careful Drivers Mr. and Mrs. Henry Morris Marshall of Markham, Vi nnounce the engage- ment of their daughter Agnes to Mr. Jurius GarrinekeL & Co. F STREET AT A SALE OF DRESSES and For Street, Sports, Afternoon and Evening Wear FOR WOMEN ON OUR TH We have worked for seve makers who had some of their loveliest and smartest materials, many of them im season was well over, they very unusual savings which we are passing on to you .. .in fact, we believe that the best values we have ever offered.. .. The materials are silks, laces. . . the various styles are simply irresistible, so smart and good looki Sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 34, 3 Philipsborn LEVENTH ST. = has started again! $5.85 for Women This smart fashion has been elected to one of the first places in the run for the popular dress for Summertime, 1931. It is fashioned of navy or white dots, white pique coll Metropolitan 5000 FOURTEENTH ENSEMBLES AND MISSES IRD FLOOR ral weeks with our noted ported, left. . .and as their gave us the benefit of the without question they are chiffons, georgettes and ng are they.... 6, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. BETWEEN F&G and Misses 1 Elizabeth Barr, | parent Car- b4 I morning at Garfield Memorial Hospital. ||| Mayflower Limousine Service || le nu."l‘nntumtow-nhlnm a"wil e....#""”"-i an f '-hl-lf‘:‘m)l::; to Mr. Mt:'floll. “’Po'ell o 5 Butler, assistant_trade mm&uur of the Department of Commerce, stationed at S8ao Paulo, Brazil. ‘The marriage of Miss Janet Glaze- brook, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Fran- cis H. Glazebrook of Morristown, N. J., iasebrock: of thlschy: 10 of A Mr. George Barker, jr., son of Mr. anq Mrs. Barker of Ne afternoon in N. J., Rev. Victor Morl mony to take parents, 609 Six] Al ttenhouse street. at can University Home. Mill Helen Baker City, Md., and Mr. bey, son of Mr. and and linen mesh heel at same price. FST.ATTENT € When is a a Haven of Mrs. ‘Larkin | wil 'Will take piace this | Church, Madison, Smartly dressed women to wear linen footwear The “Seminole” ~ a $10-50 harmonize, particularly with the new cotton frocks footwear will be much in vogue. “The Seminole” as .sketched above, of natural linen—an extremely chic model is priced at $10.50. A similar model of white linen with a low spike New Summer shades m silk hosiery ot $1 to $1.95 pair Ma). end Mrs. H. H. Jacobs, U. mnm !:“I’:'-b.' ter, to which to moved from 4412 Lowell street. they it 25 A lins as a sophomore in the Fall. Miss Dorothy White, who will attend June week at Annapolis, will y her mother, Mrs. George Lul . to Cape Cod, Mass., where they will spend part of the Summer. are John Coolidge's parents, former of ecticut and ? John of Summer, linen Cool Bath Refreshment? —When You Use Elizabeth Arden’s Geranium Bathodomes 50c Cake The finest imported soap, rosy ink and fragrant of rose geran- jum. Guest size, $1.50 for 6 cakes. Snowdrift Taleum $1 sty ey Buch _exquisite, the finest talc, cately Bath Luxuries Venetian Velva Bath A cream soap of felly-like con- sistency. In a_convenient tube for travellng—lathers in the harflest water! Dusting Powder $3 A big box full, with a fluffy body . And the hox.h lo'nuy lowered you'll love to use it. JellefPs Elizabeth Arden Shop—Street Fioor WoopwarD & LOTHROP U7 s G Stasere Ay Y ooy} o\ wong This flair for FLARES— Np/ ’ —finds its newest upn‘nin in thess newest gloves; in WHITE wishsble cpeskin, with stitching in numbers of smart occasions this Summer. $4. Groves, Arsie 11, Frasr FLOOR, black Normandie Voile with ar and cuffs, and black and white patent leather belt, with either short or long sleeves. This is but one of the many “bull’s-eye” fashions in- our Summer Frock Shop, Thi At $5.85 rd Floor— and $10 LIGHTEN Clothes Washer ‘Whirldry Electric. Washes, rinses and whirls dry without the hands touching the clothes. Just the washer for small fami- lies or for bables’ Dishwasher Conover Electric. ‘Washes, rinses, dries the dishes in 5 minutes. The hands do not touch them. Empties electri- cally. Terms, $15 month. I 0 Down payment .. . 3 dayw free trial tn your home Phone National 1293 = KEEP COOL Kitchen Window Exhaust Fans Rentoves the heat, smoke and odors—keeps the kitchen clean and cool. You just pull & SN stop Cook With the Many Electric Appliances A visit to our Housewares Dept. will not fall to suggest better and easler ways to do much of your cooking. 2-slice Automatic Electric Toasters ......... ... $10.50 Universal Electric Grills $8.50 Electric Perculators $6.50 up. “Bak-O-Grill” A full-size electric stove to cook for a family of 2 to 6. $23.50 DuLIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana l” PARKING SERVICE—Connecticut A ve. Entrance. Hours 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. DULIN & MARTIN Just a Suggestion of the Many Things Here to Help You * Through the Summer ENJOY the Rustic Hickory I Furniture Chairs with extra wide seats, Benches to maich—3$6.95 Rose Arches and Gateways Buflt of cypress for perma- nence. Finished in 3 costs of white enamel. Rose Arch , Arch Gateway Garden Seat.........$1175 Porch Rockers Unusually comjfortable With form-fitting seats. T'wo- THE NEW elleffs Of All Our Dress Shops. .. We Think The One That’s Most Appreciated Is The Shop for Larger Women All the lovely new Sunhmer things are here now . . . from $16.50 to $65 . . . but particularly are these beautiful Printed Chiffon Dresses in three lovely assortments—at $25 $39.50 $49.50 The three frocks pictured are indicative of the many more to be seen For Summer Evenings Chiffon Jacket Frock This stunning printed chiffon frock has a reilhy smart jacket, with graceful flowing sleeves and a soft jabot. The frock has an interesting cowl meck- line in the back. ¢ $39.50 For Street Wear Polka Dot Chiffon Cool mnavy blue polka dot chiffon, with a dainty vestee of white lace and chiffon... the circular ruffle on the diag- onal is very smart. $25.00 For Formal Afternoons A Chiffon Cape Dress The dainty fern design of the printed chiffon is echoed im the lace around the edge of the smart cape collar of this lovely afternoon gown. $49.50 Jellef's Larger Wu:n': Gown Salon—Second Floor. “-—