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B—2 SOCIETY SOCIETY, THE EVENING STAR, Vice President Curtis Honor Guest This Evening of Secretary and Mrs. Stimson. HE Vice President, Mr. Charles|Seversky of New York City are at the Curtis, will be the guest in whose honor the Secretary of State and Mrs. Henry L. Stim- | son will entertain at dinner this evening at Woodley. Senor and Senora de Ferrara Visiting in South Carolina. { The Ambassador of Cuba and Senora e Ferrara started last evening to harleston. S. C., where they have gone to see the flower shows. They will remain over Sunday and return to the embassy Monday. The Ambassador of Poland, Mr. Tytus Filipowicz, has gone.to New York, where he will be the guest of the consul general of Poland in that city, Mr. Mieczyslaw Marchlewski. The Ambassador of Mexico, Senor Dr. Don Jose Manuel Puig Casauranc, was the guest of honor at dinner last evening of Mrs. Joseph P. Chamberlin who entertained in the Century Club in | New York. The Ambassador, who went to New York Wednesday night, will Temain over Sunday. Mrs. Arthur M. Hyde was the ranking guest at a luncheon given yesterday at the Mayflower by Mrs. H. Frank Hoffman of Trenton, Mo., and Wash- | mgton. The company included Mrs. Roscoe C. Patterson, Mrs. L. R. Eakin, Mrs. Glen Eakin, Mrs. Boris Gordon, Mrs. Ernest Hall, Mrs. H. C. Butcher and Mrs. R. R. Dykstra of Manhattan, Kans, house guest of the hostess at the Mayflower. Mr. Justice and Mrs. Harlan Fiske Stone were the guests in whose honor | Vice Admiral and Mrs. Harry M. P. Huse entertained at dinner last eve- ing at the Mayflower. Mrs. White, wife of Senator Wallace H. White, jr., entertained at luncheon §s(erdny at the Congressional Club. er guests included Mrs. Arthur H. Vandenberg. Mrs, Felix H Mrs. W. Warren Barbour, Mrs. James S. Parker, Mrs. Harcourt Pratt. Mrs. Leonidas C. Dyer, Mrs. James MacLafferty, Mrs. Albert H. Vestal, Mrs. Frank W. Mon- ell, Mrs. James Ellwood Jones, Mrs. . Lester Jones, Mrs. Wilton J. Lambert, Mrs, James S. Patten, Mrs. James B, Reynolds, Mrs. Alice Richards, regent af the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Associa- flon of Maine; Mrs. Loren Johnson, Mrs. Donald Snow, Mrs. Hamry K. Daugherty. Mrs. Edward F. Perot, Mrs. Philip Pitt Campbell, Mrs. Sidney F. Taliaferro, Mrs, Hyer and Miss Frances | Sortwell. & The newly appointed Ambassador to e Court of St. James, Mr. Andrew W. Mellon, wes the guest of honor at a funcheon given yesterday in Aiken, $. C., by Mr. and Mrs. Eugene G. Grace @ Bethlehem, Pa. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. S. Parker Gilbert of Mr. and Mrs, Willlam Rus- ce, Mr, and Mrs. C. Tiffany ichardson, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver G. nnings. Mrs. Mae B. Van Ingen, Mr. harles B. Grace of New York, and Mrs, Clarence W. Dolan of Philadelphia. Alexander P. de Sh Carlton for several days. Mrs. Edwin B. Parker was hostess |in her box at the concert of the Na- tional Symphony Orchestra in Consti- tution Hall yesterday afternoon when Mr. Ossip Gabrilowitsch, planist, was soloist and Mr. Hans Kindler con- | ducted. Mrs. Parker'’s guests were the Assistant to the Attorney General and Mrs. John Lord O'Brian, Mrs. Jesse H. Jones and Mrs. Willlam H. Hill. Among others in the large audience were Mrs. | Woodrow Wilson, Mrs. S. Wallace Dempsey, Mrs. Jacob Leander Loose. Miss Mabel Boardman, Mrs. Edward E. Robbins and Mrs. James A. Lyon. The final concert this season of the National symphong Orchestra will be given Thursday_ afternoon, March 17, in’ Constitution Hall | | Col. and Mrs. Locke Plan ;Dlnnu Party at Grasslands. | . Mrs. Morris Ernest Locke and her | daughter, Miss Mary Gibson, have re- | turned to Washington after spending a few days in New York with Lady Har- rington. Col. and Mrs. Locke will entertain at | dinner March 29 at Grasslands. Mr. and Mrs. Chandler Anderson will be hosts at dinner March 29. Mr. William Phelps Eno was host at g&:‘ner last evening in honor of the or of Italy and Donna An- | toinetta de Martino. | Mr. and Mrs. Gist Blair entertained a company at dinner last evening. | Mrs. Henry ah Strong has re- turned to the Mayflower after a motor trip of several weeks in the South. Mrs. Strong will go to New York Sun- | day to spend several days. Dr. and Mrs. Prederick Brown Harris | were the guests in whose honor Dr. and | Mrs. Everett Monroe Ellison entertained |at dinner in. their home on M street last evening. Mrs, Thomas T. Gaff and Mrs, Hamil- ton Parris, who are spending the Winter in Hamilton, Bermuda, were guests at a dinner given by Vice Admiral Sir Vernon and Lady Haggard last evening at Admiralty House. Other members of the Winter colony present were the American consul and Mrs. Graham Kemper, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Andrews and Mrs. C. F. Rogers of New York. Mrs. Jacob Baur of Chicago is at the Mayflower while in Washington for the | meeting of the Committee on Arrange- | ments of the Republican National Com- | mittee. Mrs. Baur arrived yesterday | from Palm Beach, where she had been the guest of Mrs. Charles H. Chadwick, and will leave for Chicago the first of next week. Miss Virginia Fletcher of Chicago is visiting Mrs. James W. Good, wife of the late Secretary of War, in her apart- ment, at Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Fenning, who have been making a brief stay in and Hongkong, are now en As your Easter costume? asks Elizabeth Arden Fashions come and go . . . but the same face is on the job all the time . . . with the responsibility of looking its best . . . living up to Paris! Elizabeth Arden makes it easy . . . with the magic of a lipstick! The Lipstick Endemble . . . si smooth, indelible lipsticks, six shades that subtly enhance the colors you wear . . . make them more becoming. You need every one of them for Spring! The En- semble is $7.50 . . ., each lipstick, individually, $1.50. ELIZABETH ARDEN SHOP STREET FLOOR new THe Jellofts 1216-1220 F " Street N.W. [route home and expect to reach Wash- ington March 26. Mr. and Mrs. Patton Wise Slemp of Kentucky are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a son, Dennett Clin- ton Slemp, in Washington Monday. Mrs. Slemp was formerly Miss Dorothy Dennett, daughter of Mrs. Dennett and the late Mr. Fred Dennett. She was presented to society at a brilliant recep- tion, given by her parents in the Con- gressional Club, of which Mrs. Dennett anc her daughter have long been mem- bers. As Miss Dennett, Mrs. Slemp took an active part in both congressional and residential society. The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Slemp took place in the | Washington Cathedral. { Mrs. Slemp has been with her mother | for about a month and will remain in the city for six weeks longer. Mr. | Slemp, who has been in the Capital about a week, left last evening for Ken- tucky. Mrs. Dennett, who has been in the hospital and sanitarium for two years, | is still an invalid from injuries received | in an accident. | Medical Missions in Near East Benefit by Lecture, Miss Janet Richards, who returned yesterday from a lecture trip to Phila- delphia, will talk this evening at 8 o'clock in the Little Theater in Ward- |man Park Hotel on the “Vital Issues of the Hour,” including the world-wide reaction to the Lindbergh kidnaping and a discussion of whether legislation can compete with organized crime. | Miss Richards, who is giving her serv- ices for the Medical Missions, will show | a large map of China and speak of the work of the missions there. The patrons and patronesses include | the Minister of Egypt, Sesostris Sida- | g)uss Pasha, and Mrs. Willlam Kearny | arr. | Mr. Kermit Roosevelt of New York City is at the Willard for a few days. Mrs. Howard G. Kneessi entertained at luncheon at the Shoreham today in honor of Mrs, Thomas Somerville's house guest, Mrs. H. A. Liggen of Rich- | mond, Va. Her other guests were Mrs. | E. B. Semmes, Mrs. Cleveland Skinki Mrs. M. B. Skinker, Mrs. David Lu Mrs. Royal Corwin, Mrs. H. Addison Bowie, Mrs. R. Richardson, Mrs. Roscoe Powell, Mrs. E. Weise and Mrs, E. E. Muth. Mrs. George C. Skinner entertained SeRerenenenenenenen, ; BOUQUET SHOP ¢, Carnations . .50 doz. ‘ | i | $1.00 dox. 25¢_bune a5 do; 2 Long Siem P Tuli Sweet Peas s and Snap Drasons. . $1.60 Gog: SPECIAL ‘WEEK END' SALES™™ 732 17th St. N.W. Dis. 6525 PENCR LB LR UN S e at the Carlton. Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart enter- tained a small group at dinner last evening. Miss Louise Zantzinger of Hyatts- ville, Md.,, accompanied by her brother, Mr. Franklin Zantzinger, left today to spend several days in Ventnor, N. J. Mrs. Katherine Prindeville, who has been visiting her grandson, Mr. Thomas Francis Griffin, and Mrs. Griffin at their ranch in Tucson, Ariz, has re- turned to Washington and is at the Shoreham for the late Winter and Spring. Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Durfee of West Springfield, Mass., have moved to Washington, and will make their home at the Potomac Park Apartments. Mr, Durfee is an engineer, who will be em- WASHINGTON, a small company at luncheon yesterday | ployed here for some time in connec- tion with the Government bullding program. Hostesses Named for Tea At Kenmore Twm Mmmz 2 tesses for the at ‘Ken- mo?:wr;x:mw afternoon will be Mrs. Agnes Hazard, Mrs. P. E. Baker, Mrs. W. Schoonover, Mrs. Julisn Garner, Mrs. A, B. Young, Mrs. W. McGhee and . Kiliam. Mid Aunt Susan with her ban- dana and purple dress reigns subreme over Bettie Washington's fireplace and tomorrow an old cousin of hers, Moses, will play the banjo. The Saturday afternoon teas at Kenmore are at- tended by many notables. A distinguished company of legal men will ltwnd“:he seventeenth annual din- ner of the George Washington Uni- (Continued on Third Page.) D. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1932 SB8OCIETY L. FRrANK Co. Ey "STREET AT |zv-J-)) F Wear the Cleverest SUITS will dominate the EASTER PARADE Just like an adventure . . . choos- ing your suit for Easter when there are dozens and dozens of them at Erlebacher’s, every one with a personality all its own! They’re so individual that' we can’t describe them to you . . . you will have to inspect them one by one. You will want to wear a suit if you want to be smart ... and who doesn’t? The modsl aketcbed fastiowed of Clearview Blue, is just ome of many stumning models Shecially) pricedimt = - $ 49.75 Others $39.75 to $198.75 Erilebacher TWEVETEN TWEVETWRVE F STREET A Tailored Suit with Vest ... @ WOMEN'S SHOP OF THE RALEIGH HABERDASHER [ ] THESE NEW LYOLENE COATS ARE WORLDS | OF CHIC . . New Raleigh $2975 SUITS $16.50_$25 And the Smartest OATS $2 5_$39.50 ® We've a FLAIR forlovely furs—and where to place them! We're WEDDED to crepey wools — and how we 've TAILORED them! In fact, we've a positive GIFT for gay, young styles! @® If you've a WEAKNESS for high-fashion, and a pREJUDICE adainst hiih- price, we've your Easter Coat or Suit practically TIED-UP. .. and rcady-to- send-home! Come and see! Others to $59.50 BROOKS G St. bet. 11th and 12th Again! Another Brook’s Famous Hat with a Box Sale! ™A lovely week end box with lock and handle included with each purchase $2.75 for hats of a beauty and quality usually associated with no less than $5! A FINE WOOL in the new Corsair Blue and The Popular Ensemble Costume of the Spring! What an event! Drastic savings on the brand-new, beautiful fashions in hats— and with each purchase a perfectly adorable hat box with lock and handle! SKETCHED above is the coat in which Lyo- Beigesn. The vest is of self-fabric. Sizes, 12 to 20. lene features her new Billiard pockets. T Here they are—in all head sizes—~from 2114 to 24 inches—'way below the usual before Easter price! Some of the fashions are: Other Suits, Deligh tfully new $19.15 to 365 printed crepe frock with full silk-lined CoaAt ... #29.50 A perfect Spring en- semble, with a light- weight wool coat . . . full length and all-silk lined . . . a short-sleeved printed silk crepe with the new high waistline. avy blue, black, and brown coats with har- monizing print frocks. HEY'RE so new even her best customers saw them only last week in Paris. .. The buttons on the model sketched at the right are placed as buttons have never been before—horizontal instead of ver- tical . . . The polka-dotted silk scarf contrasts with the new spring wool- en . .. In Black, Mellow Brown, and Beige. Sizes 12 to 20. Other Coats, $19.75 to §79.75 See the new 1932 KNOX VAGABOND HAT . . §$ Sailors! Brims! Turbans Montelupos! Bakus! Panamalacs! Crochets! 18 Different Colors! You are invited ..to Open a .. Charge Account This is the little hat box—just the thing to take on short trips! Four different styles. THE WOMEN'S SHOP OF THE RALEIGH HABERDASHER 1310 F Street All Misses’ Sizes Ready on Saturday Morning— 14 to 20—in This Very Remarkable Value! Brooks Hats Fourth Floor SECOND FLOOR.