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B2 5 OCIBTY. THE EVENING SOC IETY Vice President Curtis Will Leave Tonight for South—Mrs. Gann Went West Yesterday. this evening for the remainder HE Vice President, Mr. Charles Curtis, will leave Washington of the week and will deliver sev- eral speeches in Kentucky and | in_Tennessee. Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, sister of the Vice President, started yesterday for Minnesota and is mot expected to return to her Cleveland Park home until the end of the week. Italian Ambassador Host at Informal Dinner Tonight. The Ambassador to Italy, Nobile de Giacomo de Martino, is back at the embassy after spending the week end in Virginia. this evening at dinner. ‘The Secretary of Labor and Mrs. Wil: liam N. Doak have returned to Wash- ington after spending a few days in New York The Undersecretary of William R. Castle. is in Chicago today where he will deliver an_address this evening. Mr. Castle will join Mrs. Castle tomorrow at Hot Springs to re- mein over Sunday. Mrs. Castle is not expected to return to Washington until the middle or end of October. Mrs. G. Aaron Youngquist, wife of the Assistant Attorney General, 2ccom- panied by their children, bas returned 1o Washington after spending the Sum- mer in Cuttyhunk, Mass. Assistant Secretary of the Treas: ury, Mr. Seymour Lowman, will return tomorrow from a few days' stay with Mrs. Lowman in their Summer home in New York State. Miss Carolyn Hyde, daughter of the Secretary of Agriculture and - Arthur M. Hyde, has begun her junior Yyear in college at the University of Missouri and will not accompany her mother back to Washington in Novem- ber. She will, however, visit her parents at the Mayflower during the Christmas holidays. Miss Hyde first attended the Univer- sity of Michigan and from Fetruary to June of this year was at George Wash- ington University. She spent the Sum- mer with her mother at Trenton, Mo. The chief of the protocol division of the State Depaltment and Mrs. War- zen Delano Robbins again are in the house in Georgetown and have been .olned by their daughter, Miss Helen Robbins, who has been visiting on Long | Island. Mr. Warren Delano Robbins, jr., and his brother, Mr. Edward Robbins, will leave Saturday to return to their studies | at Harvard University. The chief of the Indian Affairs Divi- sion of the Interior Department, Mr. Charles J. Rhoads, has returned to Washington and will be joined here later in the Autumn by Mrs. Rhoads, who is in their home in Bryn Mawr, Pa. ‘The military attaches of the differ- ent embassies and legations held tneir regular monthly luncheon at the Carl- ton yesterday. Among__those present were Maj Georges_Thenault of the French em- y, Senor Gen. Jose Beltran and Tenierte Don Emilio Calderon of Mexico, Lieut. Col. Marco Pennaroli and Comdr. Paolo Sbernadori of the Italian embassy, Capt. Enrique Preito of the Cuban embassy, Col. Hikozo Tanaka of the Japanese embassy, Capt. Gustaf- Fredrik von Rosen of the Swedish lega- ton, Brig. Gen. J. Prancisco Aguilar of Mexico and Col. Alfred T. Smith and Ms!t D. Johnson of the War Depart- ment. Tr2 military attache of the F--neh embassy, Gen. Francois Pillen, v turned to Washington yesterday frow a vacation in France, will be joined by _— . s - e ) ) N He will be host informally | State, Mr. | N “It’s the peak of perfection ) ’ to match your Ling Mme. Pillon the end of October. Mme. Pillon accompanied Gen. Pillon to | Prance in the early Summer and is re- maining in their home there until mid- Autumn. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. J. D. McCalley of Green Hollow,Cleveland, Ohio, are spending the week at the Mayflower | while the former is here on business at | the War Department. Comdr. and Mrs. Donald M. Dalton | will entertain at a dinner dance this evening at the Army-Navy Country i | Club in honor of Miss Beatrice Payne | | Craft, daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Ralph W. Craft, whose marriage to, Lieut. Joseph Wayne Earnshaw will take place tomorrow. Capt. and Mrs. Craft will entertain also at the club this evening & number of the guests who have arrived from |out of town for the wedding of their daughter. Lieut. Col. Z. M. Smith has gone to | New York to remain several days and is at the Hotel New Yorker. Mrs. Lawrence Carson, widow of Col. Carson, U. S. A, is the guest this week of her cousins, Mrs. James F. Draper |and Mrs. Samuel A. Kimberley, and will visit in Baltimore and at Fort Hoyle, | Md.. before returning to her home, in | Kentucky. % Mr. Herbert . Brown, chief of the | Burcau of Efficiency, joined Mrs. Brown |the latter part of last week at their | Summer home, on Lake Seneca, N. Y. | He will spend a few days there and will g0 to Princeton, N. J.. this weck, where he will be the guest of the Industrial Relations Conference, which is being held there. Col. J. E. Chaney is spending a week in New York, where he is at the Hotel New Yorker. | Mrs. Charles Beecher Warren of | | Grosse Point Farms, Mich. wife of | the former United State Ambassador to | Japan, spent last night in Washington at the Mayflower and is leaving this afternoon for New York. With her son, Mr. Robert Warren, she has been at ‘White Sulphur Springs for a week and he is accompanying he- to New York preparatory to re-entering Columbia Law School | Mz, and Mrs. Warren and their sons lived in Washington during the war. Former United States Ambassador to | Xico and Mrs. James R. Sheflield e closed their camp Iroquis, on the | Upper_Saranec Lake and returned to their New York home. Col. Edward Clifford, and his son, | Mr. Robert Clifford. have returned from England. Mrs. Clifford and Miss Helen | Clifford remained in London acd ex- | pected to return in about a fortnight. | Mr. Clifford spent much of his time on | 1§he‘dg\\]f courses in England and Scot- an Kin of Late President Opens Home for Winter Season. B. Harrison and her Miss Sally Ann Wil Tt home in C guests of Mrs E and daughter-in-law, Mrs, William Henry Harrison, their camp at Big Horn. Wyo. route to Washington, Mrs. Harrison and | Miss Williams visited Mr. and Mrs. Harrison in their Indianapolis home. , Mr, Harrison is Republican candidate for Congress from Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Jones had as their guests for a short time their daughter, Mrs. Richard Richardson of | “orfolk, who was joined over Sunday | Mr. Richardson, and returned with | him y t THE NEW elleffs 1216-1220 F St. N.W. to your Complexion!” eral weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Richard- son in Norfolk, Mr. and Mrs, Jones have returned to Washington within the year, after living in Youngstown, Ohio, where the former was city manager. Mrs. Rose Saul Montgomery returned last week from Europe, she has been visiting at Governors Island, N. ¥., and is now with her mother, Mrs. B. F. Saul, at Tempo Farm, Md. Former Senator Joseph R. Grundy was host at luncheon yesterday at Hot Springs for his sister, Miss Margaret Grundy. Mrs. Benjamin Royall Holcombe, who was in Washington over Sunday, was joined in New York yesterday by her Louise Thaden and Frances Women Endurance Marsalis, Fliers, will be our guests Sports Fashion Show Saturday at 3:30, Little Theater, Floor. Woman'’s Velvet Dress $25 Sport Coat $29.50 STAR, WASHINGTON, children, Marsyl and Vivien Stokes and Carl Holcombe, who will sail with her today aboard the Paris to spend the Winter abroa The Rt. Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washington, is the guest of | Mr. and Mrs. Myroa C. Taylor at Locust Vailey, Long Island, and was the guest of honor at tea yesterday of Mrs. Henry P. Davison, widow of the wartime head of the American Red Cross. Mrs. | Davison will be hostess this afternoon | | to a large company of workers for the | | Red Cross annual roll call. | Mrs. M. McKee Reisinger will be | hostess at dinner this evening, enter- | taining at Berkeley Lodge, the’home of her father, Mr. James Robert McKee, D. C, TUESDAY, SE PTEMBER 20, 1932. in Greenwich, Conn., for her daughter, Miss Edmee Roberta Relsinger, Mrs, Reisinger as Miss Mary Lodge McKee was presented in Washington society some years ago. Her daughter, Miss Relsinger, will return to her studies at Mount Vernon Seminary here the end of this month. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bennett have returned from their Summer residence, Hunterston. In Baltimore County, Md., and are established at their home on Massachusetts avenue. - Mrs. Calderon Carlisle will remain at Pine Lodge in Newport, where she has been through the Summer, until the first of next week, when she will return THE NEW at the 7th elleffs 1216-1220 F St. N.W. It’s the Sleeves that “Maké” this Thailored Dress of VELVET From QOur Stunning Collection at $2 5.00 We're pleased with ourselves for having such a marvclous selec velvet dresses fc tion of the hard-to-find tailored r street! We've sketched one in black, very simple, with stunning deep cuffs of tri-toned metalli ful coat style, i white buttons. ¢ embroidery. Another—a youth- s fastened on the side with big Another has soft lace at the throat. There are other styles, too, in black, wine, blue, and brown Sizes 36 to 44, FIFTH FLOOR DRESSES FOR WOMEN Furred Sport COATS to start off the season | $29.SO Wear casy, wel | tailored sports things this Fall| and you'll find you never locoked smarter in your | life! That's easy advice to follow with this choice SOCIETY. to Washington for the Winter. Mrs. Shouse Back After Summer at Nantucket. Mrs. Jouett Shouse, with her mother, Mrs. R. E. Edwards, and her two daugh- ters, Miss Elizabeth Shouse and Miss ion Shouse, have returned to Wash- M ington after spending the Summer at Nantucket. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Waters Taft, who __(Continued_on_Third Page) A NIGHT IN HOL | Shoreham Terrace Wednesday 7 p. m. until Midnight Entertainment by the Pemberton Dancers. Dutch setting. Music by Barnee and his Riviera Orchestra. Reseroations 8y overt mou Special $7.75 dems 00 Dinner In case of ool or trclement weather entericlnment will be held in the main tallroom. #/HOREHAM CONNECTICUT AVE o CALVERT { 'W. & J. Sloane Tiger Lizard Fashion’s smartest edi- tion of the renti’s jciuly —it: Lzauly enhanced by clever appliques of suede ...Jeatured in black and brown. FOOTWEAR CONNECTICUT AVENUE AT L 709 Twelfth Because these Bedroom Suites —are so important in value, and so remarkable in price—and were accorded such response—we are repeating the announcement—for immediate attention. The Hepplewhite design lends itself effectively to rendition in satinwood and maple—with the artistic marquetry inlays dene in helly and fruit wood. A suite appealing in its refinement; and rich in its intrinsic value —expressed in workmanship and material. of furred sports coats. You'll revel in the big collars of raccoon or light fox, and when you see the gorgeous new sport woolens, both blended and monotone effects, your heart will be lost! Brown, new Fall-tan, and green. Sizes 14 to 20. ECONOMY COAT SHOPS—FOURTH FLOOR 5195 Really a very enticing price—and makes this offering outstanding among the specials which are being featured during September. Complete with seven pieces In Black (should twin beds be preferred—they or Brown can be supplied at $225 with the suite.) Chest. Bedside table. Chair and bench, both with upe holstered seats. 53.00 Full size bed. Bureau with hanging mirror. Dressing table with hanging mirror. Just what you've been looking for to wear with rough crepes and woolens! Two styles in the popu- lar flat shapes, with a marcasite or carved ornament. Famous Gulistan Rugs American reproductions of Orientals As near like the genuine in design and color as American skill and artistic ability can produce. wizsize— $1()() 619—366—4.6x7.6—33990—27x54—11 with Real $4.00 . . Marcasite Carnelian, onyx, chrysoprase, all the mellow colors you want for Fall! Necklaces, bracelets, earrings, pins, beautifully set in marcasite and sterling silver. Some all-marcasite pieces and some marcasite set g with cultured pearls. Copies of PARIS LINGERIE in Elizabeth Arden POWDER SHADES If you're Blonde-- LYSETTA It's as exciting and becoming as it sounds to wear undies that just melt into the warmth Charge accounts enjoy the ready now. Budget Plan of Settlement. v W. & J. SLOANE ... I'The House with the Green Shutters Delivery later if you are not of your skin! You'll agree it's an inspired idea when you see these Paris copies—very French as to fit, very Victorian as to capelet sleeve of lace. Gowns, $8.95; two-piece paja- mas, $10.75; slips, $5.00; panties, $3.95. Ifyou’re Brunette-- ROSETTA G “Heigh Lite 7 9C School girls—any one who appreciates a value want “Heigh Lite,” a new pure Bemberg weave that fits like a charm! Bandee and bloomer panties, vests to match. You'll like the new color—blush pink! Bandeaux are 50c. Extra size panties, 89c. STREET FLOOR If you're Titian-- MAT FONCE JELLEFF'S GREY SHOPS—SECOND FLOOR