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B2 SOCIETY.. SOCIETY THE EVENING STAR, The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holmes of Lawrence, Kans. He has been in the diplomatic service several years, serving at Mar- mMi._lé Smyrna, Turkey and Buenos Mrs. Hitchcock, wife of former Sen- ator Gilbert M. Hitchcock, entertained WASHINGTON, Washington will accompany Mrs. Grif- fith to England for the Summer. Mr. and Mrs. Henry PFitzhugh enter- tained at luncheon yesterday at the Carlton, the company numbering 10, Mr. Hans Kindler returned today from New York, where he made tenta- S D. C, to attend this tea is extended to the public and all friends of the home. Invitations to a reception and dance tomorrow evening at 8:30 o'clock at the Willard Hotel have been sent out the American Road Builders’ Asso- ciation in honor of the retiring presi- dent, Mr. Willlam R. Smith. Mr. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1932. N. Y., with Mrs. Martin C. Keith, 24, | is spending several days here and they | are stopping at Wardman Park Hotel. i Mrs. Louis C. Madeira of German- town, Philadelphia, is passing some time at the Carlton, accompanied by | her daughter, Miss Elizabeth Madeira, and Miss E. M. O'Neill | SOCIETY. west ball room of the Shoreham Hotel, is headed by the Ambassador of Italy and Donna Antoinette de Martino Other diplomats who sponsor the con- cert are the Ambassador of Poland, Mr. Filipowicz; the Ambasador of Belgium and Mme. May, the Minister of Switzer- land and Mme. Peter, the Minister of the Netherlands and Mme. van Royen, Santa Clara Prunes 50,760 Size Selected Fruit The President and Mrs. Hoover Plan to | 10C 1b. at luncheon yesterday ¢t the Plaza in |tive plans for the soloists for the series | Charles M. Upham, engineer-director, Spend Week End at Rustic Camp in Virginia Mountains. HE Preeident and Mrs. Hoover are expected to ‘gn'o their camp on the Rapi River in Virginia to remain over Sun- day. Their plans, however, are eontingent on weather conditions. The President and Mrs. Hoover were ‘honor guests at dinner last evening of the Postmaster General and Mrs. Wal- ter F. Brown, who entertained in their a) nt at the Shoreham. Invited to meet, the honor guests were Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Doherty of New York, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Van Valkenberg of Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. William LA Knight of Toledo, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Jettmar of Cincinnati, Mr. and Mrs ur C. Johnson of Columbus, Mrs. W. Good, widow of the late Sec- re of War, and Mr. Everett Sanders. . Gann, sister of the Vice Presi- dent"was the honor guest at luncheon today of the National Woman's Coun- try Club. The Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Robert Patterson Lamont, entertained small company at dinner last evening. Dinner Party Tonight In Netherlands Legation. A The Minister of the Netherlands an Mme. van Royen will entertain at din- ner this evening at the legation. The Minister of Sweden, M. Wollmar Bostrom, is back at the legation after & short stay in New York. Senator and Mrs. William H. King will be the guests of honor this evening of the Utah Club, at its Washington Bicentennial dinner in_the Victorian suite of the Carlyle, in New York. Senator John S. Cohen of Atlanta, Ga., who was appointed to succeed the late Senator William J. Harris and took the oath of office at noon today, is at the Mayflower, having arrived in Wash- ington late yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Cohen and their son and daugh- ter, Mr. John S. Cohen, jr., and Mrs. Charles D. Orme of Atlanta, are with him at the hotel. Mrs. Cohen will re- turn tomorrow to New York, where she had been visiting for a short time. Mr. and Mrs. Laury Arnold of Atlanta also ware in the party. Representative Francis Seiberling of Ohio was a guest at the dinner given last_evening at the Mayflower by Mrs. Kennedy Brown of Dayton, daughter of former Senator and Mrs. Henry J. Allen, to Mr. Julius C. Holmes, secretary of the American legation at Bucharest, took place yesterday in the home of the bride in Wichita, The arrangements for the wedding were New York in honor of Mrs. James T. Harrahan. Mrs. Wilton J. Lambert is at the St. Regis Hotel in New York for a short stay. Mrs. Samuel Herrick will be at home informally Sunday afternoon in her residence at 4619 Indian lane. No cards have ed. Mrs. Josephine S. Griffith will close Kans. | her apartment in the Roosevelt tomor- row and will sail Friday for a year's MISS EDITH VEITH, % Who has joined her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Veith, in Meadville, Pa., after visiting her aunt, Mrs. Amy G. Spring. ‘Thompson, through the early —Harris-Ewing Photo. i| informal. The bride carried a bouquet of roses, a gift of the President and .| Mrs. Hoover. After a small reception, Mr. Holmes “| and his bride left for New York. They The United States Ambassador to Poland, Mr. John N. Willys, has ar- rived in Washington at the Carlton. The Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Ernest Lee Jahncke, will be the t tonight at the dinner of guest ‘Unconditional Republican Club of o , N. Y., coiebration of the the Mayflower. Assistant Postmaster General, W. Philp, and Mrs. Philp the dinner dance at ers were laid for 12. Col. and Mrs. Louis 8. lear en- tertained a small at dinner dance at the last evening in honor of Col. and Mrs. O. T. Johnston San Francisco. Col. Wade H. Cooper was host at din- ner last evening in his home et 1722 Massachusetts avenue in compliment to . and Mrs, Willlam Jennings Price, who recently returned from their wed- O D B Fovmer United_States Mihister to Panama, and Mrs. Price was before her marriage Miss Beatrice Det- wiler of Lancaster, Pa. Their wedding |E took place in Lancaster last Summer, | and they sailed immediately for Europe. | They are staying at the Shoreham. Capt. and Mrs. John R. Wood, who | have been vacationing with Mrs, Wood's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Austin T. Powell, | Brookeville, Md., left Monday for Harley Peyton Wilson is enter- in her charming country home, Hollin Hall, at tea each afternoon dur- the exhibition of gardens under the direction of the Garden Club of Vir-| ginia for the benefit of Stratford House, ancestral home of the Lees, and wili have assisting her Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, Mrs. Tayloe, Mrs. George Roth- well Brown, Mrs. Davis Wills, Miss | Paula Brown and Mrs. H. W. Hughes. Hollin Hall was named grandmother, in Yorkshire, England. and is+stopping | || will sail Friday for Europe, where they —of any sort, we gladly furnish suggestions and estimates for Weddipg Decorations w —and FLOWERS for all other special occasions. {[Effects of artistic distinction carried out on any desired scale at REASON- ABLE PRICES. Telegraphic Deliveries Anywhere GEO. C. SHAFFER 975,900 14th St NO BRANCH STORES Your Furs withexperts For twenty-seven yeess furs have been entrusted to us_for safekeeping. We provide mothproof chests large for family use. These cost even less than the moderate charges per garment. RUGS Cleaned and Stored FIDELTY STORAGE 1420 U Street N.W. enough ‘The marriage of Miss Henrietta Alle: Juull%ss'mm AT North 3400 ARFINCKEL,&C FOURTEENTH BRIDGE LESSONS HERE IN THE CULBERT SON SYSTEM OF CONTRACT Given by Mr. A. P. Graduate of the Cul Recommended by Mr. Stockvis Ibertson School and . Culbertson Himself. FOR BOTH BEGINNERS AND ADVANCED PLAYERS AT THE FOLLOWING TIME For Beginners, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11 A M., and Saturdays at 2:30 P.M. For Advanced Players, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:30, and Saturdays at 4:30 P.M. at 50c per lesson Bridge analyze uestions wi Il be answered and by Mr. Culbertson personally by letter if you bring them to the store. FIRST IN WASHINGTON . . . OBTAINABLE NOW ONLY HERE AT GARFINCKEL'S— CULBERTSON'’S OWN SELF-TEACHING PLAYING CARDS FOR CONTRACT BRIDGE $1.00 deck . . . $2.00 double deck stay abroad. She will spend the Sum- mer in the British Isles and in France with members of her family. Next Spring and Summer she will be in Italy and Switzerland, Mrs. Katherine Divan Steele of PLACE IN YOUR choose from—and at want to pay for them. phony Orchestra will give next season under his leadership. The obtaining of these famous artists has been pos- | sible through the anonymous gift to the orchestra of $5,000 a week ago, and the drive to complete the guarantee fund of $75,000 now has reached $60,000. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam PFleming of Atlanta, Ga., are at the Dodge during their brief stay in the Capital. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Case and Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Pickford came to Washington & day or two ago from their homes, in Pleasantville, N. Y., and have taken an apartment at Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. John Caswell have taken up their residence at the Dupont Circle Hotel and will occupy the apart- ment which was especially built for the late Mrs. Caswell in the point of the building overlooking Dupont Circle and upper Connecticut avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred W. Jones have arrived in Washington from Sea Island Beach, Ga., and are stopping at the Carlton. Mrs. Erdman, wife of\ Lieut. Robert Park Erdman, U. 8. N., entertained at tea last week st the Army-Navy Coun- try Club, in honor of Lieut. Erdman’s mother, Mrs. Erdman, and Mrs. Milton Dashiell, mother of the hostess. Miss 8ingling of New York has been the guest of Miss Elizabeth Middlemas in her home, on Madison street north- to Silver Tea Saturday for Episcopal Home for The St. Margaret’s Committee of the the building fund. A cordial invitation The New Machineless Permanent Wave Greatest Ease—No Electricity chet parisINc. Ladies’ Turkish Baths Facial Massage Vegetable Shampos Robert Special Rinse Hair Tinted Back to Its Natural Shade Expert Service 1514 Connecticut Ave. North 2776-2777 OCCUPY A MOST IMPORTANT R OE WARDROBE! . and of course we are prepared with an exceptionally beautiful selection for you to exactly the price you Caprice, $8.50 These fascinating models are shown in Sea- sand, Beige and Blue Kid, Patent Leather, Black and Brown Kid, White Kid, Genuine White Buck and Combination Leathers. Queen Qual 1219 F ity Boot Shop St. N.W. ted by the Largest Manufacturers of Shoes in the World of concerts which the National Sym-[at 938 National Press Building, is in charge of acceptances. Mrs. L. 8. Mayer of Knoxville, Tenn., is at the Dodge for several days. Mrs. Mayer is president of the Knoxville Branch of the National League of American Pen Women and is in the Capital attending the convention of :ax evening, May 6, at 9 o'clock, in the that organization, which is meeting here this week. Mrs. John P. Buchanan, known pro- fessionally as Annabel Morris, of Marion, poser, who is national chair- of American Music and Virginia State vice president of the League of American Pen Women, was the guest last week of Mrs. Sade Catherine Coles in Cherrydale, Va. During the week Mrs. Buchanan presented a program at the Congressional Country Club, the Capital Choral Society singing some of her compositions. Mrs. Henry C. Cornwell of Bay Shore, Anmouneos an Antique English Silver Old Sheffield Plate The Bkire 1640 Connecticut Avenue Included are Teasets, Trays, Candlesticks, Candelabra, Vegetable Dishes, Platters, Centerpieces, Wine pieces, all of which will be prized as wed- ding gifts or as personal possessions. Everything is offered at astowishingly low prices The exhibit is now open and will continue throughout the week and keeB you fit! Sizes 2 to 11 AAAA to EEE *Open Nights Freeman of London and 20 East 57th Street, New York Miss M. J. Drummond of Lawrence, New South Wales, Australia, is at the Diplomats Patrons For National S| Quartet. The list of diplomats who are patrons for the first public concert of the Wash- | ington String Quartet, to be given Fri- LADIES’ HATS of every description CLEANED & REBLOCKED Complete_selection of new Spring materials, Straw Bralds. Ornaments, Feather PFancies, Flowers and Hat Frames. Ladies’ Capital Hat Shop Na. a8 508 11th St. N.W. Our Work Is Our Reputation Exhibition ef ®Balleries Coolers and other Women’s Shops 1207 F 7th & K *3212 14th | the Minister of Norway and Mme. Bachke and the Minister of Czecho- slovakia and Mme. Veverka. ‘The concert is & benefit for the Na- All_the tional Symphony Orchestra. (Continued on Third Page.) Phillip-Louis 1727 1. 'St. N.W. Conn. Ave. & L Half Price Sale 200 Hats Others materially reduced. This is a large stock, all headsizes and colors. A large group of 75 dresses at 1 0 Gowns that sold from 2950 39.50 . No Deliveries on Sale _ Merchandise ; Open Evenings Until 9 3 ms. 25¢ \. W. BURCHELL 817-819 Fourteenth St. Superior Food Products since 1856 CLOSED ALL DAY THURSDAY DUE TO THE DEATH of Mary Hintlian Beloved Daughter Neshan G. Hintlian 818 17th N.W. Importer of Oriental Rugs and Carpets It Wonr’t Ride Up! Light as a Feather! Cool as a Breese! Washes Like a Hankie! No need to ask . . . if’s “Skintex™ 84.95 A Mannequin will model and demonstrate these lovely gam ments in the departmens. This is one Summer when you won't feel like discarding your girdle . . . because you won't even know yom have one on ., . if it's Skintex! The new lightweight Skintex . . . mesh and elastic brocade . . , keeps your figure skim, stays put once it's on .+ . and in general is the most comfortable foundation we ean think of. In tea rose . .. and the very new “Snowhite.” Corsette-Brassieres, $4.95 and $5.95 with daytime backs; with evening backs, $7.50 and $10; Girdles, $3.50 and $4.95. GREY SHOPS—SECOND FLOOR THE hew CIRCE RS 1216-1220 F Street N.W. TYLE pictured comes in Beige or Black Kid and genuine White Buck . . . “Ghillie” tivs or straps. Many others!