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SOCIETY (Continued From Second Page.) Mr. Willlam Phelps Eno has closed | his house on N street and spent a few | days at the Ambassador, in New York, on his way to Saugatuck, Conn., where his Summer home, Judah Rock, is be- ing opened for the season. Mrs. Peter Augustus Jay has closed : her Washington home and is at the Plaza, in New York, for a few days en | Toute to Westbury, Long Island, to open her Summer place for the season. Mr. and Mrs. Denegre Closed Washington Home Yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Denegre clos- | ed their Washington home yesterday and are in New York for a few days at the Ambassador on their way to Manchester, Mass., where they will open their Summer home for the season. Former Representative and Mrs. ‘Wallace Dempsey were hosts to & s company at dinner Friday evening the Chevy Chase Club, following the tennis matches. Mr. and Mrs. Demp- sey entertained guests at dinner again | Saturday evening at the club. Lieut. Comdr. Jercme Addison Lee, U. 8. N, and Mrs, Lee, with their children, are guests of Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin Erlie Talbott in their home, at 3512 Massachusetts avenue. Comdr. and Mrs, Lee are on their way from Newport to Honolulu, where Comdr. Lee has been transferred for duty. ‘The second secretary to the United State embassy in Mexico and Mrs. Stanley Hicks are now in Washington, at the Mayflower for a few days. Miss Marie McIntyre, daughter of Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Frank McIntyre, and Miss Louise Young of Montgomery, Ala., have gone to New York to join Miss Nora McIntyre, who has been visting in Montreal. They will sail June 3 on the S. S. Republic to spend two months in Europe. Miss Harriet Winslow and Miss Mary Winslow started this morning by motor for Newport to attend the marriage Saturday of their cousin, Miss Emilie Winslow, daughter of Rear Admiral and Mrs. Cameron McR. Winslow, o Mr. Cecil Irton Wylde of Boston. The Misses Winslow will be members of the house party which Admiral and Mrs. Winslow will entertain until after the wedding and are expected to remain for the marriage Saturday, June 27, of Miss Theordora Winslow. another daughter of Admiral and Mrs. Wins- kw, to Mr. Auguste L. Noel of New York. Miss Katharine Fechet and Miss Mary Jacobs were joint hostesses today at luncheon today at the Army Navy Country Club, enatertaining in compli- ment to Miss Catherine Knox Berry, daughter of Mrs. Georgia Knox Berry, whose marriage to Lieut. Frank Jer- done Coleman, Air Corps, United States Army, will take place Monday, June 8. The United States Ambassador to Germany and Mrs. Prederic M. Sackett, who have been in their Louis- ville, Ky., home on vacation, will go to New York today and be at the St. Regis Hotel until they sall tomorrow aboard the Europa for Germany, where the Ambassador will resume his duties in Berlin. The marriage of Miss Helen Barker Hope, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hope of Ellicots City, to M George Lawton Sixbey of Mayville, Y. son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Sixbey, took place last evening at 8 o'clock, in the parlor of Women's Residence Hall, American University, the v. William E. Harrison, jr., of the McCabe Memorial M. E. Church, Wil- mington, Del., officiating. Palms and white roses made & pretty setting for the wedding and preceding the ceremony Miss Jean E. Sixbey, sister of the bridegroom, sang "The Old Refrain.” The bride was given in marriage by her father and she wore a gown of ivory satin and carried a shower bouquet of white roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Mary Elizabeth Hetrick was the maid of honor in a frock of nile green flat crepe and carrying flowers in pastel shades. The bridesmaids were Miss Helen L. Goodmen of Frederick, Md, and Miss Katherine Morris of Aber- deen, Md.,, who had on frocks of flat crepe in pink and canary yellow Te. spectively, and carried bouquets like that of the maid of honor. Mr. Carl W. Levin of Jamestown, N. Y., was the best man, and the ushers selected included, Mr. John M. Houston of Mountain Lakes, N. J, and Mr. Normen S. Cremer of West Bend, Wis. A reception followed the ceremony, when the couple were assisted in re- ceiving by Mrs. Hope, mother of the bride, who wore a gown of rose beige lace and . chiffon, and Mrs. Sixbey, mother of the bridegroom, was in rose beige lace. Mr. Sixbey and his bride left later for & wedding trip, Mrs. Sixbey wearing a navy blue flat crepe suit. They will be at Mayville, N. Y., for the Summer. ‘The bride graduat from College of Liberal Arts, American University, yesterday morning and the bride m graduuud from the same school last une. Miss Mabel Elizabeth Barr and Mr. Edgar Denton Williams, jr., will be mar- ried this evening in Christ Church in Georgetown, the Rev. John Temple, rector of the church, officiating, at 8:30 o'clock. A reception will immediately follow in the home of the bride’s par- ents, Dr. and Mrs. William Carlisle Barr of 3050 N street, Georgetown. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Denton Williams, parents of the bridegroom, entertained the bride and bridegroom and the members of the wedding party af the supper dance last evening at Wardman Park Hotel following the rehearsal for the ceremédny. Preceding the rehearsal Mr. Richard Cassius Lee Moncure of East Falls Church, Va., who will be best man for Mr. Williams, was host to | the wedding party. Miss Loulse Zantzinger will enter- fain st dinner this evening for her brother, Mr. Richard Chew Zantzinger, and his fiance, Miss Isabel Green, daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Devereux Green, whose marriage will take place tomorrow afternoon. Miss_Margaret Mackall was hostess at luncheon yesterday in compliment to Miss Green, the other guests including members of the bridal party, Miss Dev- ereux Green, who will be her sister's maid of honor; Miss Louise Zantzinger, sister of the bridegrcom: Miss Anne Turner and Miss Elizabeth Fell. > Miss Annie M. Hegeman is at the Carlton for several days while closing Mr. Pyle says: Think now ahout the care of your _russ and “Phone us. Each year thousands learn the priceless secret of our services in rug cleaning. Call Mr. Pyle... NAtional 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. Members of the Rug Cleaners’ Institute of America | fourth grandchild, a son born to Mr. R o MISS MARGARET MORTON EUSTIS, ‘Whose engagement to Mr. David Edward Pinley, special assistant to the Secre- | tary of the Treasury, is announced by her mother, Mrs. William Corcoran Eustis. | The wedding will take p=ce shortly at Oatlands, the country home of Mrs. Eustis, in Virginia, and Mr. Finley and his bride will sail July 2 for Europe. —Harjis-Ewing Photo. her house at 1600 I street for the Sum- mer. Arts Club Flower Fair At The Spruces Saturday. A country flower fair will be held | for the benefit of the Arts Club build- | ing fund Saturday afterncon of this | week at The Spruces, the residence of | Miss Anna C. Reinhardt, at Kensing- ton, Md. Besides the sale of flowers, garden accessories and refreshments, a num- ber of interesting features will be staged throughout the afternoon on the lawns of Miss Reinhardt's estate. There will be fancy dancing by groups of children trained, and Miss Eliza- beth Williams, “Princess of Maryland.” with her maids of honor, will be in attendance. The ccmmittee which hopes to make this second garden flower fair of the Arts Club a success is headed by Mrs. Grace L. Ryan as chairman and Miss Anna C. Reinhardt and Rev. Thomas D. Windlate, D. D., as vice chairmen. Members of the committee include Mrs. Fulton Lewis, Mrs. L. M. Leisen- ring, Mrs. Carlton van Valkenburg, Miss Florence S. Berryman, Mrs. H. A. Brooks, Mrs. Lewis P. Clephane, Mrs. John H. Coxhead, Mrs. George H.| Girty, Mrs. John Walker Holcombe, | Mrs. George W. Johnston, Mrs. S. A. Kimberley, Mrs. Oliver Owen Kuhn, Mrs. Robert Le Fevre, Miss Josselyn Giffen, Miss Mimmie F. Notz, Miss Marle E. Roelker, Mrs. Charles H. Stratton, Mrs. Willlam Henry White, Mrs. Anne P. Gaynor, Mr. and Mrs. Prank B. Steele, Mr. Lynch Luquer, | Mr. Rowland Lyon and Comdr. F. W. Southworth. Mrs. George Barnett will go to her country place, Wakefield Manor, Va. at the end of this week to remain for the_early Summer. She will later go to France to visit her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dickey, at Pau, where Mr. Dickey is United States consular agent. will make the. acquaintance of , her and Mrs. Dickey, May 20. Mrs. Dickey | was formerly Miss Leila Gordon and made her debut in Washington some years ago. | Maj. and Mrs, Charles B, Drake were | hosts to a party at dinner last evening at the Shoreham Hotel, the company remaining later for the supper dance. The guests included Maj. and Mrs. | Roland Walsh, who will soon leave for the major's new Philadelphia post; Maj. | and Mrs. W, R. White and Lieut. Dan, E. Lowry. . Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Fiske ar- fived at Magnolia, in Sandy Spring, today, where they will spend the Sum- mer months, The Misses Boyd are oc- cupying the “bungalow” on Magnolia Farm, having come to the country from ‘Washington last Friday. Mrs. Barnett. | Miss Phoebe Quinby was a guest at the Mayflower since Saturday and left | Washington this morning for Newport. | Miss Louise Brooks, who has been | = with her mother, Mrs. Lionel Atwill, at the Beverly, in New York, has gone to Philadclphia, where she will visit l";er grandmother, Mrs. Edward T. Stotes- | ury. Mrs. Stuart Hancock of Syracuse, N. Y, sister-in-law of Representative Clarence E. Hancock of New York, is a guest at the Mayflower. Her daughter, Miss Helen Hancock, attended Holton- Arms School the past session and will return home with her mother. Mrs. Rita Fettes of Brooklyn enter- tained at luncheon today at the May- flower where she has made her home since her son, Mr. David Fettes, has been at Georgetown University for the | past four years. Her guests besides her son, were Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hilbert and their daughter, Miss Catherine Hil- bert, who is graduating from Trinity; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Watson and their daughter, Miss Mary Watson, also a2 member of this year's graduating class at Trinity; also Mgr. Hickey, Sis- ter Angeline of St. Joseph's Convent in Mrs. Francis Pole Robison has been having a series of entertainments dur- ing the Spring months and on Satur- day afternoon had a bridge party, with guests for tea following, entertaining at her home, Sharon Cottage. In the com- pany were Mrs. Thomas Hyde, 4th.; Mrs. Dawson Trundle, Mrs. Elgar Stab- ler, Mrs. Louis Bussler, Mrs. Aubrey Beall, Mrs. Morris Cissel, Mrs. Harold Lounsbury, Mrs. Albert Willson of Mrs. Edward Snowden, Mrs. Austin La Mar, Mrs. Locke Benson, Mrs. Frank | Willson, Mrs. Mary Bentley, Mrs. Clag- | gett, Dorsey of Baltimore County, Md.; | Mrs. Yellott Canby, Miss Gillett, Miss Ann Gilpin, Miss Elizabeth Jones, Miss Amy Boynfon, Miss Mary Reading Nichols, Miss Younger, with Miss Cath- | erine Shaw and Miss Elizabeth Leibear of Rockville, Md. Cloud-Ball Wedding at Chesterbrook Last Evening. The home of Mr. and Mrs. W. T.| Ball of Chesterbrook, Va., was the scene of the wedding last night of their daughter, Miss Dorothy Mae Ball, and Mr. Etienne Leroy Cloud of Fairfax, Va., son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cloud | of Brevard, N. C. ‘The ceremony was performed at an altar erected in the archway between the two large living rooms, white rib- | bons forming an aisle through one of the rooms from the hall. The house was charmingly decorated with pink and, white roses and peonies, palms,| ferns and oak leaves. The wedding| marches and soft accompaniment dur- | ing the ceremony were played by Mrs. | George Hall of Chesterbrook, whdse little girl Virginia, aged, 4, served as| flower girl. Wearing & gown of light| green crepe de chine and carrying a| white arm basket of flowers, little Vir-, ginia scattered rose petals as she ad- vanced up the ribbon aisle in front of | the bride. | ‘The ceremony was performed by the Rev. R. A. Bergdoll, pastor of the Southern Methodist Church of Chester- PurpLE Iris Tea House Luncheons, Teas, Dinner Rittenhouse at 32nd St. Cleveland 1135 Everything / beautifully /AVEl washed and/COM finished. Den-| 30 Years Laundry \—J ‘service A hand ironed. 5 1 Phone today for . National&ndryco- MEtropolitane .14 52 Brooklyn, and Sister Rosine of St. Brunden's School, also Brocklyn. ' Annual Clearance— Prior to Closing for the Summer Seascn. Dresses ¢ o : w & Hats é; & Remarkable ofl/ < \ 3 values are be- ing offered in the sale of our entire Spring stock, with drastic reductions in price. Dresses, $10, $15, Hats, $7.50, $18.50, $25 & up $10.50, $15 Free Auto Parking—E Street, Between 6th and 7th - THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh Vacation Luggage $2 95 —Smart new week-end cases. —Large roomy suit cases. —Traveling bags and hat boxes. —Every - piece sturdily made (Tlustrated.) fabricold case; rayon pockets. (Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) Catonsville, Md.; Mrs. Harry Benson, ||l \ brook. The bride wore a gown of soft mmm white taffeta, with close-fitting sleeve- | Of * roses less bodice, cut low in the back with & large bow at the waist, the skirt TngC bouttant, . Her vell of tulie ang| %24 satin was held in place with a wreath of (Continued on Fourth Page.) Jurius GarrinekeL & Co. F STREET AT FOURTEENTH We Are Offering In An Extraordinary Special Sale the Well Known “GECRGIAN MAID” PATTERN Sterling Silver Flatware AT HALF THE FORMER PRICE The famous International Silver Company gave us this opportunity of offering this well-known pattern and if you have any of it you can complete your set at most unusual savings . . . or you can buy a whole set of any number of pieces from these extraordi- nary values . . . Emphatically an unusual opportunity which we know you will not want to . pass over. First Floor—Silverware THE HECHT CO. Nat'l 5100 Electric Portable Sewing Machines F St. at 7th Convenient portable model ‘Weighs only 24 pounds Walnut carrying case . Famous Westinghouse motor . Full set of aftachments + Made by the New Home Co. $2 Down—Balance Monthly Hemstitching Done While You Shop. Menihan’s Arch Aid Shoes for Women White Linen Oxfords $8.50 PREFERRED by sportswomen be- cause they are so absolutely cor- rect . . . Preferred by business and club women because they are nice with light clothes, but not too dressy « « . And favorites of both because the concealed arch gives so much helpful support . . . the combination last gives such perfect fit. Also in Natural Linen Sizes 410 9. AAA to C Widths (Main Floor, The Hecht Co.) Free Auto Parking for Customers— E Street, Between 6th & 7th THE HECHT CO. F Street at 7th THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh 1 DELIVERS The Electric Wonder-Worker Premier Spic-Span Vacuum Cleaner $|4.50 You'll marvel at this amazing little electric cleaner that costs so little and does so much. It will save you hours of dusting and cleaning, Swiftly it cleans fur- A deodorizer acces- niture, upholstery, sory, included, may be stairways, throw rugs, i for freshe mattresses, pillows, dra- peries, clothing, nooks and corners. g odors, moth repellent. Plugs into any electric socket. Approved by Good Housekeeping Institute! (Fifth Floor, The Hecht Co.) Free Auto Parking for Customers—E Street Between. 6th and Tth THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh COTTON DRESSES the cry of the Jr. Miss! 7 95 Soft Pastels— W hite—StarLight Fashions—1, 2 or 3-pe. Sports Styles 111t0 17 Third Floor, The Hecht Co. Eyelet Batiste— Floaty Embroidered Organdies— Linens and Shantungs, Too