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B—2 =* warcn |SOCIET Y| =] For This Column For one week (started last Wednesday), see the one- day specials we will offer in our guaranteed con- struction furniture! Yloses PAY BY THE MONTH FOR FURNITURE Double Top Console Table Sl 6.94 The top is solid mahogany and is 27x13 inches; 30 inches high. Because of its double top this table can be useful in various ways. Very special. Windsor or Sofa Table $34-50 ' It is the large size of 40x42 inches when open; 40x22 inches when closed; 29 inches high. The top is solid wal- nut, the lower parts being of selected hardwood. Brass feet. Same table also in solid mahogany. Nest Tables (with plate glass tops) $| 2.74 All of the tables to this set are solid mahogany. The largest is 15x12 inches and 22Y, inches high. They are only $12.74 for the set. Cosbiced Tible & Magazine Rack 57.94 The top is made up of 4 ieces of beautifully matched gun walnut veneer; the lower parts are of selected hardwoods w it h walnut finish. Magazine Rack of Unusual Style 33.94 A magazire rack that differs a little in style from the most of them. It is 20 inches high. Sturdily built with walnut finish. W, N Moses & Sons NArl13770 F St.at 11th SOCIETY. THE EVENIN( Vice President Curtis Making Short Stay in Burlington, Where He Delivered an Address. HE Vice President, Mr. Charles | Depew Steele at Briarcliff Manor, N. Y., Curtis, is spending today at Bur- J‘ preceding the tennis matches. lington, where he delivered a | Commencement day address at | noon at the University of Ver- | Mr. Collins Denny. g, assistant at- torney general of Virginia, and Miss t. Mr. Curtis was accompanied to| Rebecca Miller, daughter of Mrs. J. Q":rx:nnn};ml;y Senator Warren . Austin, | Clifford Miller ‘of Beauregard, Brandy | who is a graduate of the university and | Station, Va., whose engagement was a member of the board of trustees of | announced yesterday, will be married in the college. The Vice President and |the Fall. Mr. Denny is a son and name- | Senator Austin were awarded degrees|sake of Bishop Collins Denny of the | at_the university today. | Methodist Episcopal Church South, | This afternoon the Vice President and | Who maintains his residence in Rich- the Vermont Senator will share honors mond. He has been serving as assist- at a supper given by the Burlington | ant attorney general for the past two Rotary Club, when Rotary Clubs of | years. | week. § yesterday of Mr, and Mrs, Cha cities near Burlington have been in-| vited to attend. Immediately after the | event the Vice President and Senator | Austiny will board a train for Wuhink-’ ton and are due to arrive in the Capital in the early afternoon tomorrow. Mrs. Austin went to her Burlington home last week, and during his short stay the Vice President is the guest of | Senator and Mrs. Austin. Turkish Ambassador Host | To Luncheon Party Today. | The Ambassador of Turkey, Mr. Ah- | met Muhtar, entertained at luncheon today at the embat hen his guests Konitza, the chief of the on_of Near Eastern Affairs of the State De- partment and Mrs. Wallace S. Murra; Rear Admiral Mark Bristol, newly elect ed president of the American Friends jof Turkey, and Mrs. Bristol: Col. and Mrs. Roy C. Foy, Col. McKim Crane, newly appointed military attache of the United States embassy in Turkey and Mrs. Crane; Dr. Parker, who will leave shortly for Turkey to establish a model kindergarten schocl; Mr. and Mrs. Asa Miss Jennings, Mr. Asa Miss Ismet Sirri, Miss Evelyn Gordon, Miss Mary Elizabeth Brigham, the first secretary of the em- bassy, Dr. Nuri Sabit, and the second secretary, Ussaki Bulent. | The Ambassador of Brazil and Sen- | hora de Lima e Silva have leased a cot- | tage at Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass., and will go to the Tesort early next The Attorney General, Mr. William D. Mitchell, will return tomorrow from Ann Arbor, Mich., where he went to de- | liver an address at the University of Michigan. | . wife of the Secretary | avy, will leave Washington today | for Cambridge, Mass., to be with her son, Mr. Charles Francis Adams, Jr., a student at Harvard University. July, Mrs. Adams will open their Sum- mer home at Minot, Ma; where she will spend the remainder of the Sum- mer. The Secretary will join Mrs. Adams for week end visits during the season. ‘Today the Secretary is at Ambherst where an honorary degree will be conferred on him. Mrs. Fred S. Purnell, wife of Repre- sentative Purnell of Indiana, has r turned to the Mayflower, where the maintain an apartment, and will re- main in Washington until the adjourn- ment of Congress. ‘Their sons, Mr, Samuel Purnell of the Univer: of Indiana and Mr. with them at the hotel. The new assistant naval attache of the Japanese embassy, Lieut. Comdr. Ichiro Yokoyama. has arrived in Wash- ington and is at 2252 Cathedral avenue. | Lieut. Comdr. Yokovama succeeded Comdr. Zenshiro Hoshina as assistant | naval attache. | The counselor of the Spanish embassy and Senora de Irujo have moved from | 2700 Fifteenth street where they have ed for some time and are at the | Shoreham Hotel where they have taken | an apartment. | The new agricultural attache of the Mexican embassy, Senor Ingeniero | Edmundo Taboada, has come to Wash- ington to take up his duties and has an apartment in the New Amsterdam. The first secretary of the Portuguese | legation, Mr. H. Gabricl dia Silva, has | given up his apartment at 2601 Calvert | street and has moved to the Shoreham | | Hotel. | Brig. Gen. Nathaniel F. McCl U. 8. A., has rejoined Mrs. McCiure their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel after several days’ st: in New York. iy Rear Admiral Julian L. Latimer, U. S. N, retired, has rejoined his family after an absence of & few days. Admiral and Mrs. Latimer, with her daughter and Mrs. C. A. Richardson, have been speending several weeks in Washington, staying at Wardman Park Hotel. Ccl. and Mrs. William Holt Peek, of Montgomery, Ala, have arrived in Washington and are guests of the latter’s brother-in-law and sister, Maj. and Mrs, Thomas Q. Ashburn. Mrs. Ashburn will entertain at a picnic this afternoon at the Army Navy Country Club for her | sister, New Aide to President Arrives for Duty. Capt. Walter Newhall Vernou, who | was appointed by the President on May | 20 to succeed Capt. Charles Russell | Train as his naval aide, has arrived in | { Washington with Mrs. Vernou. They have many friends in Washington, and | Mrs. Vernou, who was the former Miss | Sidney Saunders, is a member of an| old Maryiand family. Capt. Vrmou‘ until recently was commander of the cruiser Northampton. They will be at the Shoreham for the present. | Capt. John A. Tebbs, U. 8. M. C., is expected to arrive in Washington the | middle of this week for a short visit | with Mrs, Charles Binns Tebbs, widow | of his brother, before going to his new | | post with the Marine Brigade at the | Norfolk Navy Yard at Portsmouth, Va. | pt. Tebbs has been on duty in Nica- | ragua for some time and sailed from | Corinto aboard the U. S. S. Henderson, | June 11. Mrs, Tebbs and her mother | Mrs. White, remained in Panama, and | joining Capt. Tebbs, will come with him | | to Washington. Capt. Jonas H. Ingram, U. S. N., and | | Mrs. Ingram were the guests in whose | | honor Capt. Paul Dashiell entertained | |at supper yesterday at the Annapolis | Roads Club. Capt. Dashiell has been | | ordered to Washington, where he and | | Mrs. Dashiell have a host of friends. | i | Lieut. Comdr.” Carlton C. Wright, { United States Navy. will be joined Wed- | | nesdey by Mrs. Wright and their chil- dren, who came from the Pacific Coast | | through the Panama Canal, and are expected to arrive in Norfolk tomorrow. Comdr. Wright has been on duty on the West coast for three years and recently | came to Washington for station at the Navy Department. Comdr. and Mrs. Wright and their children will be at the | Shoreham temporarily. Former Senator and Mrs. Patrick | | Sullivan of Casper, Wyo., are spending | & few days in Washington at the May- | flower, where they made their home | during the Winter of 1929-30. | Mr. Sullivan is Republican national | committeeman from Wyoming. With his daughter, Miss Margaret Sullivan, he visited Washington again early this Spring. Lieut. and Mrs. Charles S. Ward are guests at the Mayflower on their way to Virginia for a short visit. Lieut. Ward vnu‘n Yale University during the past session. The Brazilian consul general in New | York, Sehhor Sebastian Sampaio, who | formerly was connected with the em- | bassy in Washington, and Senhora de Sampaio were honor guests at Juncheon uncey were the Minister of Albania, Mr. Faik | where she first Fredric Purnell, are L Mrs. Clarence W. Grosner has re- turned to Washington after visiting Mrs. Copeland, wife of Scnator Royal S. Copeland, at their home, Suffern, New |* York. Mrs. Willlam Chapin Huntington, vice president of the Society of Women Geographers, was in Northampton, | Mass., last week to attend the com- mencement exercises at Smith College, from which she graduated in 1906. Mrs Huntington fogmerly was Miss Frances | Carpenter. daughter of the late Mr. and | Mrs. Frank G. Carpenter of Washing- s. Huntington spent and & few years ago returned to Wash- ington to make their home. Gov. Pollard’s Son to Wed At Claremont Manor Tomorrow. Mr. Charles Phillips Pollard of Wash- ington and Miss Elizabeth Alexander Charlotte, N. C.. will be married to- morrow afternoon at Claremont Maner, the historic home on the James River of Gen. William H. Cocke, uncle of the bride-elect and_former superintendent of the Virginia Military Institute Mr. Pollard is the younger son of Gov. John Garland Pollard of Virginia and a graduate of George Washington University, having received his law degrce at that institution a year ago. Miss Alexander is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Alexander, jr.. of Cha lotte and for the past two years has, mace her home at Claremont Manor | met Mr. Pollard last | vear. The wedding cercmony will be performed by her grandfather, the Rev. Alexander Galt, D. D. of Norfolk. Her maid of honor Wil be her sister, Miss Emily Alexander of Charlotte. Before entering George Washington University to study law, Mr. Pollard took an_academic course at the Col- lege of William and Mary, where his father, a_former member of the Federal Trade' Commission, was dean of the School of Government and Citizenship before being elected Chief Executive of Virginia Because of the recent death of Mr. Pollard’s mother the wedding ceremony wiil be arranged very simply. His best man will be his brother, Mr. John Gar- | land Pollard, jr., director of the Vir- ginia Commission of the George Wash- ington Bicentennial, who recently mar- ried another North Carolina girl, Miss Margaret Fullerton Clarkson of Cha lotte, daughter of Justice Heriot Clar! 's only sister, Mrs. Herbert ht, jr. of Washington, the > Pollard, w wedding at Claremont Manor. The guests will be limited to members of the immediate families of the bride and bridegroom. 3 given at | mont Rod ub, near Hancock, Md. M. Edgar J. Orme, jr., and Mr. Maury Reyburn will leave the | first of the week for New London, Conn., where they will join a house party Mrs. William Reyburn is giving for the Yale-Harvard boat races. | Mr. John Moffett Brown, son of the | late Rev. T. P. Brown and Mrs. Sarah Fickle Brown, was married to Miss| Irma Kathleen Quinn, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. P. A. Quinn, Saturday in| ny Baptist Church, Washington. H. F. Stevenson officiated. Announcement is made of the mar- | riage of Miss Nettie Maywood Wim-! brough, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theo- | dore L. H. Wimbrough of Berlin, Md. to Mr. Claud Frederick Dearmond of | Charlotte, N. C. and Washington, which | took place on Saturday, June 18, in this citv. The ceremony was performed | by the Rev. Mark Depp. pastor of Ca vary Methodist Episcopal Church. Mr. Bicy == stored. All Work Done by Hand est. s Y. A, H. Bakshian 1625 Connecticut Ave. Nor. 5790 of all kinds washed, 2'!! 30 'elf’ fl Quality ! ice Safety for Your Blankets & Woolens —your FURS and RUGS is most_economically assured by utilizing— Merchants ||| Moth-Proof STORAGE Our Prices Are Less Than Usual for Moth-Proof Storage Prompt Collections and Deliveries Phone Nat. 6900 Merchants Transfer and Storage Co. JOHN L. NEWBOLD, JR.. President 920-922 E St.—NAt. 6900 Storare—Moring—Packing—Shipping EXPERT RUG CLEANERS Sanitary Service is guaran- teed. We vacuum clean rugs, then shampoo them in mild ivory suds. Our method gets the ‘dirt and brings out last beauty. Let Us Clean Your Rugs Now Summer Storage If Desired Call Mr. Pyle . .. NAtional 3257-3291.2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Indiana Ave. Members of the Rug Cleaners Institute of America t STAR, WASHINGTON, MISS JEANNETTE MIRIAM SALU hose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ius, announce her engagement to Mr. Joseph G. Solomon, son of Mrs. Mollie Solomon of this city. The wedding will take place June 26 in Washington. Miss Salus was valedictorian of her class at Business High School in 1928. and Mrs. Dearmond will reside at 2544 Seventeenth street northwest. Announcement of the engagement of Miss Roberta Kendrick to Mr. Robert Massie of Washington, Va, was made a bridge party given by Miss Ken- drick at her home Tanglewood. Miss Kendrick 15 a popular member | of the younger social set. and is & daughter of Mrs. Annie R. Kendrick and the late W. J. Kendrick. Mr. Massie, who is Commissioner of Revenue | of Rappalannock County, is a son_of Mrs. Lewis Messie of Washington, Va. No date has been announced for the | wedding. Mrs. Peter Lawton Collins entertained at luncheon Saturday. when her guests included Mrs. May Voorhies, Mrs. William M. Murray, Mrs. Lisle Lipscoml Mrs. Lucius Badger, Miss Nellie Shiel Miss Agnes Collins, Miss Katherine Col lins, Miss Ulainee Collin, Miss Kathleen G Miss Angela Murray, Miss Eliza eeney, Miss Katherine Mc- Kiever, Frances Seagans, Miss Edith Duncan, Miss Godie Duncan, Miss Catherine Schaefer, Miss Marian Har- ley, Miss Mary Alice Lanman, Miss Juanita Gosch, Miss Ana Maria Sher- well and Miss Emily Koons. The Newspaper Women's Club of Washington will meet for tea this aft- ernoon in the liadies’ dining room of the Natlonal Press Club. Mr. John G. Shields, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Culver Shields of Chicago, who has been spending the Winter in Store Your Furs with experts For twenty-seven years furs have been entrusted to us_for safekeeping. We provide mothproof chests large enough jor family use. These cost even less than the moderate charges per garment. RUGS Cleaned and Stored FIDELTY STORAGE 1420 U Street N.W. North 3400 54 1050 | o } Don’t weste o sicep-| robbing mattress another day. Let us convert the old sleep- thief into a buoyant, new mat- tress. work guaranteed. 903 E St. NNW. BEDS . . . MATTRESSES | BOX SPRINGS | ZABANS tional 9411 Costs only $4 to $9. All ZABAN'S, D. (., MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1932. SOCILEFRY. ‘Washington with his mother while at- tending school here, has returned to this city for a few days’ stay after escart- ing Mrs. Shields to Chicago, and he is in their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel while here. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ellis of St. Louls are guests of the latter's parents, Mr. aad Mrs. John Harvey in Shephoed street. Helen Harvey of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Congdon entertained at the dinner dance at the Shoreham Saturday in honor of Miss Anna Reinhardt of Kensington, Md. Their other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stein, Miss Anna Peck, Miss Martha Virkle, Miss Mary Virginia Har- ris, Miss Marian Taylor, Miss Sue Skip- with, Miss Mildred MacNair, Miss Na! alie Beaumont, Miss Almeda McNabb, Miss Louise Stratton, Miss Katherine Bonar, Miss Katherine Jones, Miss Grace Barker, Miss Sadietta Rosenberg, Mr. Richard Brown, Mr. Robert Swain, Mr. Walter Scott Pratt, Mr. Milford Luden and Mr. Douglas Cameron. Mrs. J. L. Pisher of Sterling. Colo., is passing a few days at the Dodge and is accompanied by Miss Evelyn Gentry of Baltimore. Dr. Charles Nelson Leach Rockefeller Foundation, Vienn: who, with Mrs. Leach and th young daughters, Carolyn and Nancy, has been visiting Mrs. Leach’s parents, the First Assistant Secretary of the In- terfor and Mrs. Joseph M. Dixon, in their apartment at Wardman Park Hotel for several days, have terminated Mrs. Ellis was formerly Miss | | thetr visit n Washington, and have | ‘lefl by motor to visit friends in the | South and West. They will visit in | Alabama, California and Montana be- | fore returning to Vienna this Fall. Dr. F. A. Hornaday, resident physi- clan at the Mayflower, and Mrs. Horna- | day and their young daughter, motored | out to Grays Hill Inn, Va., Saturday for the week end. | Well Known Tilustrator Guest of Mrs, Locher. Mrs. Jessie Tarbox Beals and daugh- ter Nanette were the guests of Mrs. Harriet Hawley Locher during their brief stop in Washington, on their motoring_trip which has taken them from California to New York. They are now en route for Chicago. Mrs. Beals is an illustrator. Mrs. Beals is an outstanding member of the National League of American Pen Women. She is prominently known in New York. About four years ago Mrs. Beals yielded to the lure of Cal- ifornia and opened studios in Santa Barbara and later in Hollywood. Re-| cently one of her patrons sent to Flor- ence, Italy, a large collection of these studies for exhibition. During the past month of her stay in New York Mrs. Beals' work has been on exhibition in the McDowell Club. Mr. E. C. Welsh of Indianapolis, Ind., accompanied by Mrs. Welsh and a young nephew, John Willlam Schach- tele of Chillicothe, Ohio, and Mrs. L Kingsland_and her small daughter Dorothy of Indianapolis, spent Sunday night at Gray's Hill Inn, Va. They are 6Q LBs. an hour— (3 ] mile-a-minute speed More than an entire week’s wash done complete, trom hamper to}line in’ an hour—without putting hands in water, using set tubs,or any wringing! THE SAVAGE NEW WRINGERLESS WASHER With "Sp'in-Rinse, Spin-Dry” Imagz'ne a Coi Ideal for Summer! Will NOT RIDE UP! Light—cool—porous: Washes and dries perfectly. Thin, smooth, inside and out. Ends stocking runs. Makes hips inches smaller. REDFERN Stretches BOTH Ways set Like This/ Youthlastic*(patented), woven to_stretch both ways, and found only in Le Gant®, makes Le Gant* the ideal summer corset. Laok for the name on the label. Get the original and genu- ine Le Gant*. For a bandeau — ask to see the new Warner selections. For sale af the Better Shops Step-in illustrated $10. Other Step-ins and Corselettes* $5 to $15. *Trade Mark Reg. U. S. Pat. O Beautiful New ltalian Dinnerware With Hand-Painted Decorations Two artistic designs in lustrous ivory or green earthenware. Both of these patterns at remarkably low prices. “Sorrento”’ Teas & Saucers, $9 Cream Soups, $15. (Ivory Body) Dinner Plates, $9.00 doz. .00 doz. Dinner 00 doz. “Yolando” The Warner Brothers Co., Bridgeport, Conn. Open Stock Buy piece by piece — or in complete sets, as you wish. on a sight-seeing trip through Vir- ginia and Waehington. A S22 R332 8 S8 31T ITITNN The Mary Elisabeth 912 17th St. N.W, E Barr Bldg. (Opvosite Farragut Park) PICNIC LUNCHES Packed in Individual Boxes 25 to 75¢ Each Sandwiches For Teas, Picnics, Parties 35c to $1.20 Dozen Orders Delivered Phone MET. 5745 AR LA 3.5. 53 SLTITRRTITN A quict, simple ceremony took place | Saturday evening, June 11, at 8 o'clock, at the home of Dr. and Mrs. G. G. Crawford, Strasburg, Va., when their daughter Ellen Clarke became the wife 1 of Mr. Paul Castleton Hatmaker of West Falls, N. Y., and with the Bureau of Mines in Washington. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Harry M. Crim, Dpastor of the Presbyterian Church, be- fore an altar improvised in the corner of the living room. The altar appoint- ments were a brass cross, flanked by two brass candelabra, each bearing seven lighted tapers. The decorations were of cedar, mountain laurel and ferns, and light was from candles only. The bride was given in marriage her father and wore an ivory cre dinner gown, with Duchess lace Eton Jacket and moire slippers to match, and (Continued on Third Page.) P RS SRR AR R SRR SR SRS SR A RSN S 5 SARNARARRANNNNNNANNNNRANANNN NN Reupholstering 1 5-Piece Parlor Suites . . . Antiques 3-Piece Overstuffed Suites Dining Room Chairs SLIP COVERS PAY A LITTLE DOWN WH FURNITURE IS RETURNED ‘ACH MONTH WILL DO! HME WOOL TAPESTRY-FRIEZZA BROCADES AND DAMASKS Also Chair Caneing and Porch Rockers Splinted by Our Experts at New Low Prices Estimates and Samples Given Free. Write, Phone or Call ME. 2062 OR NIGHT PHONE CL. 0430 CLAY ARMSTRONG 1235 10th Upholstering Street N.W. Justifying Your Confidence Is Our Success Jelleff’s Beach Shop—Ready for Your First High Dive! jantzen Swim Suits $5 0 speed in eve there's | there's | Sizes 341048 SPORT SHOP THIRD FLOOR 87.50 4 THE New elleffs 1216-1220 F Street N.W. In They Come—Out They Go—A New 100 ) Three-Piece Boucles 1927 It's not easy to keep demand for piece bouc Lest! row Misses’, Women’s p with vour these nd _three- but we're doing our 100 more arrived for tomor- Values, every one of them— Lacy Blouses—Frilly Collars to Contrast (Green Body) Plates, $8.40 doz. Teas & Saucers, $8.40 doz. Cream Soups, $13.80 doz. DULIN @ MARTIN éoW Ave. anal” lors, travel for sports uavy, brown, black Is. Sizes 14 to 42 Vacation ¢ colors, wear ; colors Left: Putty beige suit, with ruffly eggshell blouse. Right: Maize boucle with lacy white blouse.