Evening Star Newspaper, September 1, 1931, Page 18

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SOClI ETY, OCIETY Mrs. Doak Plans Party at Her Virginia. Home for Group of Women of the Fourth Estate. b RS. WILLIAM N. DOAK, wife of the Secretary of Labor, will entertain the members of the Women's National Press Club at her home in Fairfax, Va, Bunday, September 13, after 4 o'clock. The Secretary and Mrs. Doak will leave the city tomorrow for their farm, Three Trees, near Wytheville, Va., to spend the rest of the week. Sunday they will motor to Jackson City, Tenn., where the Secretary will deliver the Labor day address. An interesting event occurred at the home of the Secretary and Mrs. Doek | at Fairfax, Va., this morning when | their handsome white collie presented | them with three snow-white baby col- les. The cabinet officer and his charming wife are noted for their pets, having several dogs and numerous birds, including a parrot. The Italian Ambassador, Nobile Gia- como de Martino, will return to the embassy this evening from a several days’ stay at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Newport Operetta Has | Benefit of Diplomatic Women. | ‘Mme. Simopoulos, wife of the Minis- | ter of Greece, is a patroness for the operetta “Maritana,” to be given to. night at Newport. Among others wh are sponsoring the event and will en- tertain box parties are Mrs. Gibson Fahnestock and Mrs. Hugh D. Auchin- closs. | - [ The charge d'affaires of Poland, Mr. | | ‘Wiadyslaw Sokolowski will leave for| Cleveland tonight to attend Polish day at the National Air Races Friday. Mrs. Watson, wife of Senator James | E. Watson, will leave later in the month to spend a few weeks with Senator Wat- sen in their home in Indiana. Mrs. ‘Watson has with her at their home on Connecticut avenue their son. Mr. Jo- seph Cannon Watson, who will leave in ahout 10 days to enter Harvard Law School. Representative and Mrs. S. Parker Corning and their daughter, Miss Mary Parker Corning, have gone to Ken- wood, their Albany estate, where they will be for the remainder of the sea- | son. They will motor to Saratoga daily | for the racing. Former Senator and Mts. Peter Goclet Gerry are guests of | Representative and Mrs. Corning for a few days. | Representative and Mrs. Henry Win- fleld Watson will leave the Capital this afternoon to spend a few days in their home in Pennsylvania before sailing Seturday on the Leviathan for Paris. Tney will return to this country in about a month. Mrs. E. Hart Fenn, wife of Represent- ative Fenn, entertained at luncheon yes- terday at the Hartford Club. in Con- necticut, in honor of Mrs. Herbert Fried- wald of West Hartford. The first secretary of the Italian em- bassy and Countess Antonietta Roncalli di Montorio have left Washington for Celifornia, where they plan to spend & month. ‘The naval attache of the Italian em- bassy, Capt. Nobile Luigi Notarbartolo dei Duchi di Villarosa, is back from & 10-day vacation at Newport. Mrs. Leander McCormick Goodhart, wife of the commercial secretary of the British embassy, tied with Mr, James Byrne for first in the race of the Bar Harbor Yacht Club yesterday. Maj. Gen. Stephen O. Fugua was host to a small party at dinner last evening at the Shoreham. Mrs. Stokeley Morgan, who was the guest of Representative and Mrs. Sol Bloom for about & week. has joined Mr. Morgan in New York. where they have leased an apartment for the Winter. Wr. and Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman | have been joined by their daughter, | Miss Laura W. Tuckerman, who spent | a few days with her cousin, Miss Alice | de Peyster in Edgartown, Mass. | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mason Remey will sail for this country September 16 _on_the Bremen. Mrs. Remey was Reduction * on al Permanent Waves During all the Month of September. Hair Dyeing Vegetable Shampoo. Facials. Turkish. 1514 Conn. oberl, == 71 Parlf INC Stieff Piano Manufacturers Factory to Your Home BRAND-NEW GRAND PIANO A $750 Value 395 To aquaint the public with the enormous advantage of buy- ing direct from the manufac- turer, we are making this ex- traordinary offer for a limited time. - i 30 Days’ Trial Fositiyely sent to sour home for trial and test with th md "of 30 day ou 8 e i 'Cicnangs “And " ereait all money paid. TERMS TO SUIT YOUI’l (‘O\VENIEVCE $2.50 Per Week OF TOWN cu. Don't write. Come hin N 'omee At "OUR EXPENSE. CHARLES M. STIEFF, Inc. 1340 G St. NW,, WIlh"W before her recent marriage in France Mrs. Karl D. Klem: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lester Marlatt announce the engagement of _their daughter, Virginia, to Lieut. Joseph Kingsley Dickey, U. 8. A., the son of the late Mr. Charles Albert Dickey | and Mrs. Dickey of Princeton, Minn. Mrs. Elonzo Tyner and her daughter, Miss Peggy Tyner, arrived in Wash- ington yesterday and are now at the Shoreham after spending the searlier | part of the Summer in California re- sorts, later going to Lake Forest, Ill, for the open air grand opera season in Highland Park, near Chicago. Mrs. Tyner and her daughter spent last week in Cleveland as the guests of the Danish consul and Mrs. Niels | Christiansen. Mr. Pat Harrison, jr. accompanied by Mrs. Harrison, left today for Biloxi, Miss., where he will visit his parents, Senator and Mrs. Pat Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison will return to their i:ulteont the Carlton about Septem- er 10. Mrs. Randolph Harrison of Lynch- burg, Va., has announced the engage- ment of her daughter, Miss Julia Meem Harrison, to Dr. James Winston Watts, resident physician in the neuro-surgical department of the University of Chi- cago Hospital, who is a son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Ashby Watts of Lypchburg. The wedding will take place in October. Miss Harrison is a descendant of the James River branch of the Harriso family, of which Gen. Willlam Henry Harrison, President of the United States, s also a member. Her father, a dis. Member THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, l Married ugust 24 I MRS. EARL BEAUCHAMP, Formerly Miss Dorothy Havenner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Haven- ner of Clarendon, Va.,, married in her parents’ home and now on a Western wedding journey. —Clinedinst Photo. | tinguished lawyer in his day, was chief counsel for Virginia in the famous Vir- ginia-West Virginia debt case, which was before the United States Supreme Court some years in varlous phases be- fore a final adjudication of the litiga- tion. Her brother, Mr. Randolph Han- rison, jr, who will be home for the wedding, is American vice consul at Paris. | Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Baker arried in Paris Today. Miss Caroline Pryor ' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Baker, only Gibbs L. Master Furriers Guild Highest in Quality LOWEST in Prices! 1931-1932 Is a Great Capitol Season! We are proud of our record for having satisfied so many thousands women . . . of Washington we are gratified with the confidence that is displayed by those who v our shop . . . it and we hope that our continued adher- ence to the policies of guar- anteeing 1007 satisfaction will warrant the response of discriminating women to whom this security in pur- chasing Furs is all impor- tant. Ask About Our Deferred Pay Plan. A Deposit Reserves Any Another Reason for the CAPITOL Popularity| There are Hudson Seal (dyed muskrat) Coats in several styles— plain, ermine, fitch, mink and every other trimming. 179 Garment. dbilo UR ISnop 1208 G Street N.W. Best Furs for Ozer enty Years ® WOMEN'S SHOP OF THE RALEIGH HABERDASHER @ Last 5 Days ANNUAL COAT SALE ENDS NEXT SATURDAY Final opportunities to secure these wonder ful values in $49.75, $69.75, $79.75 AND UP_TO $195 ® Monotones, Boucles and Tweed Mixtures in Brown, Black, Green and Blue. ® Sizes, 12 to 44. FEATURING: ® BADGER @ RACCOON @ PERSIAN LAMB @ BEAVER ® WOLF @ CARACUL @ SKUNK: THE WOMENS SHOP RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street Baker of Washington, and Mr. Rudol, h ! Jean Bicker-Caarten of Rotterdam, Netherlands, were married at the Amer- ican Cathedral in Paris, France, noon today, with the Rev. Robert John. son, D. D,, rector of St. John's Episcopal Church, a close friend of the bride’s family, officiating. ‘The bride is demnded from a long and distinguished line of Virginia un- cestors, her Blair, Bolling, Banister and | Pryor forebears having been prominently identified with the Colonial history of | the Old Dominion. She was educated | at Miss Madeira’s School in Washing- ton and at the Baldwin Preparatory School at Bryn Mawr, Pa., going after her graduation from this latter insti- | tution for a year's additional study at Lausanne, Switzerland. She was sched- | uled to make her debut here in 1930, | but elected instead to return to Europe been traveling on the continent and in England, accompanied by her mother, who before her marriage was Caroline Banister Pryor of Petersburg, Va. Mr. Baker sailed early in August to join his family in Paris, Mr. Gibbs Baker, jr., having gone over in June, after his graduation from Yale, to spend | the Summer with his mother and sister. After the wedding ceremony Mr. and | Mrs. Bicker-Caarten Jeft on an extended | motor trip, which will include visits to Vienna and Budapest, after which they will go to The Hague, where they v\lll make their future home. Mr. Bicker-Caarten comes of an uld Dutch family, prominent in the social and business life of Rotterdam, being the son of Mrs. E. F. Bicker-Caarten and the late Mr. Bicker-Caarten of that city. LR B s e sl Baker, jr., will shortly sail !cr Amer- Mrs. K’s TOLL HOUSE TAVERN Colesville Pike, Silver Spring, Md. Vlrgmu Ham Dmners olor- ctive served at this have that dist High Home Touch Seasoning eehiar %5 the Mrs. K's Recipes oni. YOUR LUNCHEONS, TEAS AND DINNERS at the Tavern are an assured success. Phone Silver Spring 5 and for the past year and a half has | D. ¢, TUESDAY, ica, Mr. and Mrs. Baker returnin, their home in Washington and Gibbs, jr. going on to matriculate at the Harvard Law School for the coming season. Mr. James Ludwell Deakins an- nounces that, owing to the redecoration of Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church, the marriage of his daughter Marian Elizabeth to Mr. Thomas Warren M Queen, jr., will take place at Mount Vernon ~ Place Methodist Episcopal Church snturdly evening, September 5, at 6 o'clock. Col. and Mrs. Charles G. Mettier have | closed their home at Alta Vista, Md., to SEPTE IBER 1, 1931. and will leave Tuesday, September for New York, where Tor “Shettior whi be on duty in the district ordnance office. Meanwhile, Col. Mettler will go to Walter Reed for about a week. Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. 8. P. Ginder will be hosts to a party at the dinner dancé at the Shoreham this evening. Mr. Ralph Snowden Hill, who has been abroad since early Summer, will sail September 23 for this country. He |is now in Paris, after a trip through Central Europe. Lieut. and Robinson, who (Continued on Third Page.) QACP NARRIS e is the price tomorrow of a limited quantity of brand new . . . quality furred Winter Coats that offer keen competition to some we've seen in some sales at $58...come and see the new silhouette . materials . . the new . the favored furs . .. black, brown, green @dain Flocr, The Hecht Co.) SOCIETY. T Wonderbilt Case SPECIALLY PRICED FOR COLLEGE If you're going away to college, by all means take along this case . . . packs 12 frocks on removable bar hanger, neatly, snugly and wrinkle-free. . . and still has ample space for your accessories. Will Be Initialed Without Charge fs 1314 F St. N.W. Qualitv—>Moderately Priced VHE HECHT CO F Street at Seventh NAtional 5100 Announces the Additon o Jor Women and Misses to lts List of Famous Names! HESE beautiful shoes take front- rank position among the many products of national renown— offered to you by The Hecht Co. And, of course, this collection in- cludes the fashionable suedes and kids, in such wanted shades as black green and brown.

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