Evening Star Newspaper, June 21, 1931, Page 38

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SO Moths Relish FUR COATS —RUGS and FINE WOOL- ENS, but it's easy to cir- cumvent their expensive tastes. MERCHANTS Moth-Proof Storage ' —provides 100% efficient se- curity, at little cost. Let us make your furs, woolens, rugs, etc, safe NOW. OUR CHARGES are LESS than usual for Moth-Proof Storage Merchants Transfer | and Storage Co. 920-922 E St.—Nat. 6900 | Storage—Moving—Packing—Shipping 16th & H Sts. N.W. Overlooking the White House Furnished & Unfurnished Reservations Now Being Made Prom one-room and_bath to rooms and 3 baths Electric re- ice water. and ‘most convenient ! 1nspECTION INVITED Nathan Sinrod, Manager Metropolitan 1727 L St. N.W. Special Group of Dresses to go on sale-Monday morns ing at 9 o'clock that sold from $19.50 to $22.50, now $12.50 New cool Summer dresses arriving daily. Fine hosiery that sold to $2.25, now 89c $1.00 $1.50 We 10ill baropen Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday cvenings. ADOLF, Inc. Suits - Gowrs - Wraps 1313 Connecticut Avenue 4th of July sale of the most exclusive ‘Chiffon Dresses with Jackets suitable for Day and Evening Wear from our regu- lar stock Formerly $69.50 and $49.50 Now at $29.00 and $25.00 dresses in printed cr silks, Formerly as High as $87.50 and $69.50. Now at $35.00 and $29.00 Also a Beautiful Selection of Print Dresses at $16.50 Fur-Trimmed Spring Coats, formerly at $125.00 and $79.50 $79.50 and $39.50 Suitable for Fall Wear crepe es, plain If your feet hurt, be comfortably and stylishly fitted in a pair of WILBUR COON SHOES For Wide, Narrow, Long, Short, Small or Large Feet “No Foot Too Hard to Fit” FIT SNUG AT THE HEEL Custom-Made Stylish Stouts in All Leathers and Styles 37.50 to 310.00 Nurses’ White Cloth Calf and Black Kid OXFORDS Complete Line of SPORT SHOES 0YCE & LEWI CUSTOM FITTING SHOE 439 72 St. NW. Just Below E St For the Man: We also fit the hard-to- fit men in special measure- ment footwear. Sizes 5 to 13, AAA to EEEEE widths. | | Ohio. | Lieut. and "Mrs. h CIETYX. Te‘ Dance in Honof Of Visiting Aviators Is Given at Quantico Maj. and Mrs. Roy Geiger Invite Entire Post to Af- fair at Officers’ Club. QUANTICO, Vi June 20.—The largest of the week’s festivities was & tea dance given at the Officers’ Club by Maj. and Mrs. Roy Geiger. The whole post was asked to meet the vis- iting aviators in this chirming manner. A string orchestra played during the afternocn, the club was beautifully deco- rated in red rambler roses and foliage and a delightful tea was served. Lieut. d Mrs. Frank June enter- tained at a dinner followed by bridge at their quarters Monday. In the party were Lieut. and Mrs. Lemuel Haslup, in whose honor the party was given, and their house guesi, Miss Webb of Allen Koonce were and Mrs. Lieut. s at dimmer to Lieut. Haslup, Lieut. and Mrs, June, Daniel Torrey and~Miss Webb. Mrs. Andrew Drum, wife of Col. Drum, has as her house guests for two | weeks her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. L. 8. Cass, of Warsaw, N. Y. Mrs. Carl Miegs, wife of Lieut. Mieg: had a bridge lunch of three tables at her home Tuesday. | Mrs. Roy Geiger, captain of the Girl Scout Troop No. 80, took "the entire | troop to Mount Vernon Monday in avia- tion trucks. The girls took their lunch and had a picnic. Miss Catherine Del Valle, daughter of Maj. and Mrs. Pedro Del Valle, a student at Notre Dame, Baltimore, has joined them at the post and had as a guest Miss Olga Blondet of Porto Rico. | The two girls have left for Porto Rico, | Miss Blondet to remain for the Sum- mer with her family and Miss Del Valle to visit her grandmother for a month. | Miss Yvette Baker, daughter of Comdr. Virgil Baker, U. S. N., retired, was the house guest of Col. and Mrs. John Hen! for a few days before leaving for Ler home in Porto Rico. Mrs.: Walter Ansel, wife of Lieut. Ansel, U. 5. N., has as her house guests her mother, Mrs. Abbie C. Dyer, and Mrs. M. G. Hulme, both of San Francisco. Gen. Logan Feland, U. 8. M. C,, was the week end guest of Gen. and Mrs. Randolph Berkeley. He and some friends came to Quantico for a fish- | ing trip. During the course of his visit Imany of the officers who served with !@§im ir France called to pay their re- i { and_ Mrs. Butler, Miss Ethel | {Butler' and Tom Dick Butler have re- (turned from Boston, where they at- {tended the graduation of Mr. Smediey { Butler, jr., who has bcen attending the | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. | | Miss Olmsiead and Miss Reeves ha |been the house guests of Lieut. and Mrs. Prank June. The visitors are from | Omaha. | Maj. George Clarke, U. S. A, and| | Mrs. ‘Clarke have had as their house | | guest for the last few days Lieut. Rich- ard Chase, U. S. A., who has been tak- ing the company officers’ course at Fort | Benning, Ga., and is now en route for {duty in Panama. In honor of Miss Barbara Adams, who |soon will leave for Washington, where iher father, Capt. John Porter Adam: | will ‘be stationed, and Misses Haz {and Dorothy Vogt. who are going to | Norfolk, Mary Jane and Margot McVey |gave a straw ride Tuesday. The chil- |dren, ‘after a ride and swim, had ice {cream and cake at Capt. John McVey's | | quarters. | Maj. and Mrs. Lowrie Stephenson, | who recently returned from a brief ! visit in Philadelphia, were hosts at a| | dinner given before the officers’ dance | at_the club Saturday night. The Marine Corps School held its| graduation exercises in Building 1161 Friday at 11 o'clock. The opening prayer was offered by Chaplain Vincent Gorski, This was followed by an ad- dress by the director of the school, Gen. Randolph Berkeley. The speaker of the day was Representative Melvin | Maas of Minnesota. The major gen- |eral eommandant, Gen. Ben Fuller, gave the presentation address and handed out the diplomas. This was fol- llowed by a benediction by Chaplain Gorski. After the exercises an informal reception was held and the company went to the Officers’ Club, where & Iuncheon was given by the combined student body of the Field and Company Officers’ Schools for their wives, the staffs of the schools and their wive the commanding general and Mrs. Bu! ler and Gen. Butler's staff and the major general commandant and his staff. Mis. Thomas Thrasher, wife of Maj. Thrasher, who has just completed the field officers’ course, is in Quantico. As ss Mary McCord she is a well known er of French and English songs in fous night clubs in New York and abrood Chaplain and Mrs. Wilford Hall and | their daughters have driven to Mrs. Hall's home. in Macon, Mo., where Mrs Hall will be for the Summer while Chaplain Hall takes a three months course at the University of Chicago. The older Hall girls, Alice, Helen and Mary, will attend a girls' camp, Cedar Ledge, in the Ozark Mountains. The family will return to Quantico the mid- dle of September. Maj. and Mrs. Charles Barrett have as their house guests Mr. and Mrs. Russel Wollcott of Barrington, IIL They all went on an overnight trip to Williamsburg, Va. ’ ‘The Horse Wranglers. the polo team composed of Lieut. Duncan Waller, Sergt. Novak, Sergt. Enloe and Privt. Davies, won the year's polo cup Sat- they played the Spare s, Capt. Potter, Lieut. Stillman, Dr. Boaz and Mr. Cornell. The score was 5-1. Gen. Butler presented the cup to the winning team Sunday night before the movies. Capt. and Mrs. Breckenridge Day, U. 8. A., of Fort Bragg, N. C., have been the guests of Capt. and Mrs. Campbell Brown. Weddings __(Continued From Second Page) | motor trip early in the afternoon, the bride wearing a suit of skipper blue with hat to match. A charmingly arranged wedding took Warren E. Claflin of College Park, M June 14, at 4 o'clock in the afternoo when their daughter, Miss Marguerits Claflin, wes married to Mr. Edwin Ben- nett of Washington. | ‘The ceremony was performed by Rev. Simpson B. Daugherty, pastor of the North_Capitol Street United Brethren | Church of Washington. The bride was attended by Miss Laura Nevius as maid of honor, and the best man was Mr. Roderick 'G. MacPherson of Richmond, Va. Relatives and intimate friends only were in attendance. {Mr. J. Howard Bennett of New York City, father of the bridegroom, and Mr. {and Mrs. Roderick G. MacPherson of Richmond, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Bennett left for a motor trip to points in New England. and Canada, and after July 1 will be at home in their apartment, 2127 Cal fornia street. ‘The marriage of Miss M. Evelyn Scharnikow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Scharnikow, to Mr. Robert L. Mudd, took place Monday morning, June 8, at 9 o'clock in the Church of the Nativity, Rev. Benedict J. Hanne- { mann officiating. The Rev. J. V. Buck- ey was present in the sanctuary. Miss Virginia Hartigan, cousin of the bridegroom, was bridesmaid, and Mr. Harry Scharnikow, brother of the bride, was best man. Mrs. 8. L. Stern of Mount Ida, V: of her daugh! | immediate relatives. place at_the home of Mr. and Mrs. | Among the out-of-town guests were | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, MRS. CHARLES C. BROY, Formerly Miss Cecil Norton of Washington, presented at Buckingham Palace June 10. She is the wife of the United States consul in London. Charles T. Allen of Washington, June 4, at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Wash- ington Circle, Rev. Calvert E. Buck per- | forming the cersmony. Mr. and Mrs. | Allen will be at home after June 21 at the Park Central Apartment Hotel. Capt. and Mrs. Oliver C. Terry an- | nounce the marriage of their daughter Maude Ester to Mr. Leonard G. Scriven | of Orange, Calif, Wednesday, June 3. The bride is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Boston as director of religious education, and has been director at Concord, ' N. H. and Orange, Calif. After a short honeymoon at Lake Ar- rowhead. Mr. and Mrs. Scriven will be st home to their {riends at Orange, alif. ‘The marriage of Miss Helen Mar Allen, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Hervey Allen and grand- daughter of the late Col. and M Edward Jay Allen of Pittsburgh, to Mr. Bishop Carleton Hunt, son of Mrs. Ben- Jjamin Herbert Goldsmith of Boston and the late Guy Carleton Hunt of Bridge- | port, Conn. “took place at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Allen, 612 Nineteenth street, this city, in the presence of Mr. Allen, who is an uncle of the bride, gave her in marriage. The marriage service was read by Rev. Dr. G. Freeland Peter, canon of Washington Cathedral. The Allen residence, built in 1800 by John Len- thal, supervising- architect of the orig- inal Capitol, was embowered in Spring flowers and vines. String music led | by Elizabeth K. Gawthrop, harpist, in- cluded that of a Clement! pianoforte once owned by Dr. James Craik of Alexandria. Va. The bride wore a gown of white lace applique over white satin, and was attended by her sister, Mrs. Walter Ray Bayliss of Taunton, Mass., as matron of honor. = Miss Allen was graduated from Goucher College in 1925, took her mas- ter's degree at Columbia the following year and was awarded the degree of doctor of philosophy by the University | of London and a fellowship by the | Social Science Research Council in | 1928. From that time until her mar- riage she has been a member of the faculty at Vassar. Mr. Hunb was graduated from Bos- ton University in 1920, has studied at | the University of London and received | his doctorate in philosophy from Har- vard in 1930. After service in the World War he became W. A. Black | professor of commerce at Dailhousie | University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, and | held that post from 1920 to 1928, He | is now instructor in economics, T search assistant to Prof. E. F. G and tutor of Ellot House, Harvard Uni- versity. Mr. end Mrs. Hunt will be at home after July 10 at the Charlesgate, | { Charlesgate East, Boston. Miss Rosalie O. est, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. West, of Seneca, | Md., and Mr. James A. Severn, jr., of 1319 Map'e View place, Wasaington, were married in St. Martin's Catholic | Church, Gaithersburg, at 10 o'clock ‘Thursday morning in the presence of a | large gathering of relatives and friends from Montgomery County, the District of Columbia and elsewhere. The pastor, Rev. John J. Callaghan, officiated and | celebrated nuptial ma: The edifice | was beautifully decora | flowers, pink roses predominating. The bride, who was given in m t riage by her father, wore a gown of white satin, with accessories to ecor- respond, and her veil was ceught with | orange blossoms. She carried a shower | bouquet of white roses and lilies of ' the valley. Miss Nona Buckley of Washington was maid of honor and the bridesmaids were Miss Cathorine West and Miss Mary West, sisters of the bride; Miss Blanche Cross of Seneca, cousin of the | buy tickets for the opening of a new | bride; Miss Mary Severn of Washin ton, sister of the bridegroom; Miss Francs Johnson and Miss Rosalle Gunnel of Washington, the latter a cousin of the bride. Miss Buckley wore pink; the Misses West, green; Miss Gunnell and Miss Johnson, blue, and Miss Cross and Miss Severn, peach. All carried pink roses, The flower girl, who carried a basket of pink roses, was Miss Frances Jones of Poolesville, and the bride’s brother, Mr. Armstead West, of Seneca, was best man. The marches were played by Mrs. Mabel Bell of Washington and Mi Grover Walker Love You Trul, Immediately after the ceremony breakfast was served at the home of the bride’s parents, the guests including | the members of the bridal party and a very few other relatives and friends of the couple. In the early afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Severn left for Atiantic City. They will make their home in Wash- ington. The wedding took place Wednesday evening at 5 o'clock in Faith Chapel Presbyterian_Church, Lucketts, of Miss Pauline Le Grand Osborn, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Frank Wooten Osborn of Lucketts, Va., and Mr. Richard Birch Gaffin, son of Mg sad Mrs. C. Harold Gaffin of Milwaukes, Wis. The cere- mony was performed B9 the bride's | father, pastor of Faith Chapel. The church was beautifully decorated with evergreen and Summer flowers. Mrs. P. W. Osborn, stepmother of the bride, played the nuptial music. Miss | Josephine Osborn, sister of the bride, sang “I Love You Truly” and “O, Prcmise Me.” The bride, who was given in mar- riage by her brother, Mr. Asa Frank Osborn, wore a gown of flesh pink hand-embroidered net over satin with a large picture hat. She carried an arm bouquet of 10ies. Her only attend- | ant, Miss Cora 8. Osborn, wore & gown of pale green and oarried pink roses and delphinium. Pauline Compher was ring bearer and she wore a dress of orchid organdy, with an srm bouquet of sweet peas. and carried the ring in a lly on an orchid cushion. Mr. C. H. Gaffin of Milwaukee, father of the bridegroom, was the best man and the ushers were Mr. Archie Frye and Mr. Yeager Gum, both of Lucketts ‘The bride's mother wore a gown of black chiffon, with a corsage of pink roses and delphinium, while Mrs. Gaf- fin wore tan crepe with a corsage bou- quet of white roses and sweet peas. ‘The bride's going-away costume was of black flat crepe ensemble with blouse of Roman stripes and accessories to_match Mr. and Mrs. Gaffin will make their home for the Summer with the bride- groom's parents at Birch Haven. on Lake Michigan, near Milwaukee, Wis. The bride is a graduate of Radford State Teachers' College and has taught | for the past two vears in the Appa- lachia High School, Vi | The bridegroom is a graduate of Hampden-Sydney College. At present he is in business in Milwaukee, Wis. shenic:Steiner Wedding Preceded by Plrty Miss Mildred Steiner was the recip- jent of many very beautiful gifts &t a surprise miscellaneous shower given by >d with Spring | per family at the home of her sister, | Mrs. Harry Greenberg, Tuesday. ‘The rooms were beautifully deco- rated with roses, daisies and honey- suckle. Later in the evening a buffet supper was served to more than 75 guests. Miss Steiner's marriage to Mr. Robert Shenick of this city will take nlnceI early in July. People stood in lihe for 36 hours to musical play in London recentl; “The Richest Child Is Pcor Without Musical Tv‘u"ina" | MusiIc passes it. tested makes. IS A LIVING THING Which Profoundly Influences Our Lives —1It finds its universal expression at the Piano, the fun- damental and basic musical instrument. . . . Do not let your child grow up without a chance to learn to play the piano! No other accomplishment sur- We offer the widest range of reliable, time- Convenient Payment Terms Are Offered On: TEINWAY PIANOS. .. i Vose Pianos.... Brameacu APARTMENT GRANDS SETTERGREN GRANDS. NEW UPRIGHT PIANOS. . E.F.Droop & SonsCo., 1300G Priced o a0 8875 . $495 o, $525 «. $375 o $195 As Low As D. C, JUNE 21, 1951— PAnl THrEE. Many Annapolis Families Are Leaving for Summer Samuel S. Payne, Miss Lavinia Payne and Mrs. H. C. Ward Take Motor Trip to New York. ANNAPOLIS, Md, June 320—An- napolis is going through a season of many changes, many families leaving ust for the Summer and others making rture for homes elsewhere. ‘s mother, who spent the Win. Carvel Hall, left An- . Ward, ter and Spring at napolis by motor last week for New || York. After a few days there they left for Jamestown, R. where they will spend the Summer at Harmony Vil Mrs. Payne and her daughter T Ward expect to return to Annapolis in the Autumn and will be at Carvel Hall. Capt. and Mrs. Halsey and their young son, Willlam F. Halsey, jr., who returned a few days ago from school at Lawrenceville, N. J., will spend the ret oughkeepsie or the boat races and from there went to Wilmington, Del,, for a visit of sev- eral days, later joining her parents at Jamestown. Mrs. Prank Grandy, mother of Mrs. Halsey, left Annapolis Monday for New York and will be the ville of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pownell. From there Mrs. Grandy will go to Jamestown for the Summer and will be at_the Bayview Hote! Mrs. Wallis Gearing, another daugh- ter of M Grandy, wife of Lieut. Comdr. Gearing, and their young daughter, Miss Pq Gearing, who for the past two years have been in Panama, also expect to join the Jamestown col- | 10 ony later in the season. Capt. and Mrs. John H, Newton and their young son, Jack, are leaving An- napolis the latter part of June. Jack Newton will go to a camp in the Pocono' Mountains, in Pennsylvania, and Mrs. Newton will later go to Jamestown. In the Autumn Mrs. Newton and her son expect to occupy a house in Washing- ton. Comdr. Willlam Shannon Lieut. Heath also left Annapolis today for | New York, where he will sail for Panama to join the U. 8. S. Rochester. | Lieut. Comdr. Heath has been occupy- ing an apartment in the Brice House, on | East street. 1 Mrs. Hiliary Gearing, wife of Lieut. | Gearing, is the guest of her mother-in- law, Mrs. Henry Gearing, on Pranklin . | street, Murray Hill | Capt. and Mrs. Charles C. Soule re-‘ turned to Annapolis Sunday after sev- eral weeks spent at their cottage at| Jamestown. Capt. Soule will go to| Washington for duty, but will occupy | his home on Pranklin street until | August. Mrs. Edwin Underwood, who has been | at Carvel Hall for the past two Winters, | is leaving shortly for Prouts Neck, Me., where she will spend the remainder of the Summer. . Thomas C. Hart and Miss Isa- bella Hart, wife and daughter of Rear Admiral Hart, superintendent of the Naval Academy, left Annapolis last week and were among those present at the boat race at Poughkeepiie, where they were joined by the admiral. Ad- miral Hart will return to Annapolis, ater joining Mrs. Hart and children- at 8haron, Conn. Comdr. Owen Bartlett (retired), Mrs. Bartlett of Honolulu and their two young daughters are the of Comdr. Bartlett’s parents, Commodore and Mrs. Frank Bartlett, on Maryland avenue. Lieut. Bradford Bartlett, who has been at the Department of Ord- nance and Gunnery here, left last week for sea duty. Mrs. Cadawalader Collins of Norfolk, Va., and her son, Cadawalader Collins, r., left by motor Monday for their ome after a visit to Mrs, Collins' sis- ter, Mrs. Elizabeth Wilson, who recent- ly reopened her home on South River after spending the Winter in Washing- ton. . Mrs. Richard Morton entertained Saturday afternoon for Mrs. Collins at tea at her home, Severnside, on the Severn River. Miss Margaret Handy, young daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. D. Claude Handy, is at her home on Gloucester street, after a week's visit to her uncle and aunt, M ;r;d Mrs. Sherman Brown, at Eas- Mrs. D. Claude Handy and children are leaving today for Blue Ridge Sum- mit, Pa., where they have taken a cot- tag* for the Summer, and will be joined for the week ends by Mr. Handy. While in Annapolis, Mr. Handy will be the guest of his brother-in-law_and sister, Mr. and Mrs, Charles de P. Valk, on Gloucester street. Commodore and Mrs. Edward Lloyd entertained a smalil dinner party Satur- day evening for Mrs. Richard Baldwin of Waterbury, who recently returned where she went to at: tend the Steeiman-Baldwin wedding. Mrs. Thomas H. Hed'rman is spend- | Ing_the week s the guest of Mrs. W. D. Wright, wife of Lieut. Wright. Lieut. Panamas, Leghorns and Milzns Cleaned and Blocked 4 By Modern and Scientific Factors Methods Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th Street T (e Another Shipment Just Received . . . The manufacturer has made it possible for us to continue our offering of . . . The World-Famous ESTEY Sesqui-Centennial Apartment Crand at this Including Bench A Bona Fide 8725 Value price Through the Manufac- Qurer’s Co-operation.. .. 1t's not a’ aecret—there is no mystery about why we can offer this famous piano at such an The manufacturer is not us a tremendous concession in prices, but is even paying half of the advertis. ing bills; TO REINTRODUCE THIS GENU. INELY FINE PIANO TO WASHINGTON, His desire to capture the Washington market is your opportunity to buy an instrument extraordinary price. only making Pay as Little as | $2.50 backed by over a half century of the finest musical traditions and experience. AND TO Weekly BUY IT AT ABOUT HALF ITS REGULAR PRICE. A Genuinely Fine Piano Guaranteed by the Manufacturer and by Us Homer L. Kitt Co. .+ - Thirteen-Thirty G Street MERCHANTS OF MUSIC practice cruise. Miss Louise Giles, ok ot Gt 3 Gordon week as guest Ni Carroll, daughter of Mr. lnd“fiy. Doug- 1as Gordon Carro! the Grag Spring Miss Clara Vernon Smith, whB spent the latter part of the Winter and Bvrlnurn Annapolis, arrived Thursday from home at Rochester, N. Y., to visit Mrs. Carryl H. Bryan. - Mr. Daniel Magruder of Detrolt is visiting his sister, Miss Mary R. Ma- gruder, on Hanover street. guest of Miss Magruder is. Prof. Arthur Newton Brown, who has been spending the Winter and early Spring at Cocoa- nut Grove, ;l:d I('M. as ha: been h: g'uwm stopped at Annapolis en rouf Maine, where he will remain for the Summer months. Great interest is taken here in the announcement from England of the presentation at court at Buckingham Palace last week of Mrs. Mordon Rigg of High House, Kendal, England. Mrs. Rigg, formerly Miss Nancy Walton of Annapolis, is a sister of Miss Margaret Walton and of Comdr. Duncan C. Wal- ton, now stationed on the U. §. 8. Ro- chester. Mrs. Rigg's parents, the late Rear Admiral and Mrs. Thomas C. Wal- ton, wera residents of Annapolis for many years. Lieut. and Mrs. Rufus E. Rose are guests of Mrs. Rose's parents, Capt. and Mrs. A. R. Alfred, at their home on' Prince George strect. After their visit here they will go to the Naval Proving Ground at Dahlgren, Va., where Lieut. Rose has been ordered for duty. | Mr. and Mrs. Ira McKee and young | daughter, who, since Mr. McKee's resig- | Mrs. John de P. Douw of Franklin street, Murray Hill, is spending the Summer at Short Hills, N. J., where she is a guest of her mother, Mrs. Talbot Oliphant. —_—— ‘That the notorious “Spanish g!m- er” swindle dates back to the days of the Spanish Armada, and, therefore, is 350 years old, was revealed recentl: A SPECIAL $ I 5-Course Dinner * Club Platey, 85¢ to 76 Monday Dinner Served 5:00 to 8:00 In connection wifh our regulsr roied” Tenderion 7 9C Sieak COLUMBIA 5042 White is Right! —and so are these budget-meeting prices! Ready for vacation? No wonder all Hahn stores are just humming with busy shop- pers these days. We have not only vast assortments of every Summer fashion you want—but there’s every wanted style in every budget price group ! Summer Fashions in Linen Lace—Buck—Kid—Linen WHITE “CARLTONS” « 3850 “Carlton” Linens, Buck and Linen Lace in styles for every smart ac- “Dynamic” Linen Lace in dozens of the loveliest fash- ione in white and combinations. “They Fit and Keep You Fit” White Buck com- bined with brown or black are very smart with Sum- mer frocks. “They Fit and Keep You Fit” SUAVA CLOTH SALE— (Not at F St. Shop) White Kid is pre- ferred by the more conservative. It's here in straps and pumps. 3 ° Suava Cloth and brown or black trimmed white Spectator styles. Women’s Shops 1207 F 7th & K 3212 14th

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