Evening Star Newspaper, January 27, 1933, Page 18

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B2 x* SOCIETY. SOCIETY Diplomats Honor Guests at Reception This Evening Given by Prof. and Mme. Durig. Ambassador of France, M. Paul Claudel, is a patron for the exhibit of Prof. Ernest Durig, noted Swiss sculptor, which will be opened tonight at 1536 Con- hecticut avenue by a reception given by Prof. and Mme. Durig at 9 o'clock. Due to absence from the city the Am- bassador will be unable to attend the private pre-view tonight. The exhibition will be opened to the public tomorrow morning and will continue for 10 days. ‘The honor guests at the reception to- night will be the Minister of Egypt, Sesostris Sidarouss Pasha; the Minister of Albania, Mr. Faik Konitza; the apostolic delegate, the Most Rev. Pietro Fumosoni-Blondi; Representative Ruth Bryan Owen, Brig. Gen. William E. Ho}\;wn and Baron Marcellus von Red- The exhibition is the first of Prof. Durig's in this country. Included in his works are busts of rulers of several nations, including the President and Mrs. oover, many diplomats and popu- lar_hostesses of the Capital. There will be a program of music during the reception tonight. M. and Mme. Debuchi Honor Guests at Reception. ‘The Ambassador of Japan, M. Kat- suji Debuchi, and Mme. Debuchi will be the honor guests at a reception in New York Tuesday given by the Japa- niese consul general in New York, Mr. Kensuke Morinouchi. ‘The Ambassador of Spain and Senora de Cardenas have as their house guest the former Ambassador to Japan, Mr. Cameron Forbes, who will remain for several days. The Ambassador and Senora de Car- denas, accompanied by Mr. Forbes, are expected to attend the pre-view of “Rasputin and the Empress,” in which three of the Barrymore family appear for the first time together in motion pictures. The first showing will be this evening at 8:30 o'clock in the Columbia Theater, and among others wWho are ex- pected fo attend are the Secretary of e Interior and Mrs. Wilbur, Senator imeon D. Fess, Senator William H. King, Senator David I. Walsh, Senator and Mrs. Henry F. Ashurst, Senator and | Mrs. Joe T. Robinson, Senator and Mrs John H. Bankhead, Representative and | Mrs. Fred A. Britten, Representative and Mrs. Sol Bloom and Miss Bloom, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore G. Joslin and Miss Mildred Hall. | The Minister of the Irish Free State, Mr. Michael MacWhite, will go to New York today to attend a dinner of the Americsn-Irish Historical Soclety to- NOLTow. The charge d'affaires of Costa Rica, | Senor Don Manuel Gonzalez-Zledon, will be host at dinner tonight in honor | of Dr. Luis Castro Urena, Costa Rican aftorney, who is one of the judges in the arbitration tribunal in the case of the boundary dispute between Guate- mala and Honduras. I Representative and Mrs. Homer Hoch | have as thelr guest the former's sis- fer, Mrs. James W. Reld of Flushing. N.'Y., who will be jolned by Mr. Reid | Tor Yhe week end. Mos. Hooh has given several informal parties for her guest, among them a luncheon at the Con- essional Club and an informal tea her home. Representative and Mrs. Robert ‘F. ich of Pennsylvania have taken an ipartment at Wardman Park Hotel and move there after the first of February. Senor and Senora de Prada have ar- rived in Washington, and with the lat- ter's mother, Mrs. Emerson Howe, are | 8t the Mayflower Hotel. Senor Prada formerly was counselor of the Peruvian | embassy in Washington and Senora de | Prada before her marriage was Miss | Elizabeth Howe, a belle in the Capi- | tal before her marriage to the diplomat. After their marriage Senor and Senora de Prada took a leading part in the social life of the Capital, and were most popular couples in the Rear Admiral and Mrs. Walter R. Gherardi will be hosts at a buffet sup- rfl’ tonight following the rehearsal for ding of their daughter, Miss Neville Gherardi, and Mr. Christophere Robinson, jr, which will take place tomorrow. Gen. William E. Horton entertained | informally at luncheon at the Willard esterday. Miss Lyla Townsend, daughter of | Senator John G. Townsend, will enter~ tain at the dinner dance tomcrrow eve- ming at the Shoreham in honor of Miss Sers Catherine Cooke of Dela- ‘ware, whose engagement to Mr. James D Fownsend, i., nephew of the Senamr‘ pecently was announced. Miss Cooke is 8 student at the American University and the ts at the dinner will come from Mrs, Katharine Kennedy Brown, blican ~ National Committeewoman rom Ohio, is visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Capt. and Mrs. Grafton 8. Kennedy. Miss Dora White, d daughter of Mrs. | Richard 8. Aldrich, has arrived in M\mlch, where she will spend some Marriage of Miss O’Brien To Mr, Underhill Today. A wedding of interest in Washington took place at 1 o'clock today in West- wood, Mass., when Miss Mirlam Eliot O'Brien, daughter of the chairman of the Tariff Commission, Mr. Robert Lin- coln O'Brien, and Mrs. O'Brien, became the bride of Mr. Robert Lindley Mur- ray Underhill of Ossining, N. Y., of Mr. Abram Sutton Underhill and the‘ late Mrs. Underhill of Ossining. The ceremony took place in the home of the bride’s parents, the Rev. Abbot Peterson of the First Farish Church in Brook- line officiating. ‘The home had a charming arrange- ment of potted flowers, the bay-window being banked with small pine trees and | orange and yellow freesias predominat- ing among the flowers. The arrange- ments were informal and only relatives and close friends attended. The bride was given in marriage by AT THE AMBASSADOR NEW YORK Here, at “The Social Embassy of Two Continents”,you are at home in New York. Its convenient loca- tion, cuisine at mod- «etate prices, and immediate care for your comfort, make i ideal for a night, a week-end, or longer. SingleRooms from$5 Double from $7 Suites from $10 Dinner AND SupPEr Dancine in The AMBASSADOR GRILL THEO KROELL, Geseral Manager HOTEL AMBASSADOR fi Avenue at 51 tS«rw,lfiewYorb her father, and she wore a deep red velvet gown, made on close-fitting lines, with soft falling sleeves. Her flowers were gerbera, in shades of red and orange, and saffrop-color Joanna Hill e George Reddington Blodgett of Cambrldge Mass.,, a classmate of the bride at Bryn Mawr, was matron of honor. She wore a gray crepe gown and her flowers were Talisman roses. Prof. Dean Peabody, jr., of Brookline, Mass., was the best man. Mrs. O'Brien ‘wore a beige costume. The guests at the wedding remained for luncheon, which was served at small tables. Later the couple left for a wed- ding trip, the bride wearing a blue thin wool gown. They will make their home at 130 ‘Warren street, in Newton Center, Mass. Both the bride and bridegroom are mountain climbers and are members of many American and foreign Alpine clubs., They have made several first ascents, Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. Lincoln O'Brien of Tulsa, Okla., brother of the bride. Mrs. Lee Hostess Today in Honor of Mrs. Tuck. Mrs. Robert E. Lee entertained at a luncheon today in her home on Wyo- ming avenue, in honor of Mrs. Robert Pinckney Tuck of Charleston, S, C. There were 12 guests in the party. Mrs. J. Thompson Wailes entertained at luncheon today following Mrs. Kend- rick Phillips’ book review at the Carl- ton Hotel. Among her guests were Mrs. Robert Whitney Imbrie, Mrs. P. Lee Phillips and Mrs. Philips Hill. Mrs. Willlam Russel Magna, presi- dent-general of the D. A. R., of Holyoke, Mass., has returned to her suite at the Willard for several weeks. Mrs. Magna entertained &t dinner in the crystal room of the Willard last evening. Mr. and Mrs. Wade H. Ellis have gone to New York to spend a few days. Mrs. Harry R. Fulton will not be at home tomorrow afternoon. SPECIAL PURCHASE! REGULARLY $29.75 Smartest of tweeds, in tans, browns, greens and blues . . . Interlined for immediate wear and adapt- able for early Spring . pictured . . . ilored Rll.lgh NEW' CHARGES™ WILL BE BILLED MARCH 18T THE WOMEN'S SHOP RALEIGH HABERDASHER 13510 F Strest THE EVENING Former Gov. Nellle Tayloe Ross en- tertained in the Pan American room at the Mayflower last evening in com- pliment to her house guest, Mrs. Harvey . Connett who gave a short program. Mrs. Connett who has been the guest of Mrs. Ross for two weeks, has a con- tralto voice of much beauty and is a cultivated singer. Mrs. Charles C. Deming, who makes her home at the Shoreham, entertained at the dinner dance last evening. Her guests were Mr. and Mrs. Manalcus Lankford, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Demp- sey, Col. and Mrs. Frederick W. Cole- man, Maj. and Mrs. Davis B. Wills, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin S. Puller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Kempton, Mrs. James Lee Shelton, Mrs. Alice Nibley Smoflt Col. Wade H. Cooper, Mr. Edwin Flather, Dr. James A. Emery and Mr Archibald C. V. Wells. Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury entertain- ed at luncheon yesterday in honor of Mrs. John Elliott of Newport. The gmy was given in Mrs, Slolesburyl ome at Palm Beach, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Houck of India- napolis, Ind, entertained informally at dinner last evening at the Carlton, where they are spending the Winter. Mrs. J. G. Nettleton entertained at luncheon in the crystal room of the Willard in honor of her guest, Mrs. Marie Fitts of Ann Arbor, Mich. Among| the guests at the luncheon were Mrs, Chudenfg Cass, Mrs. Herbert Muckley, Raymond Walsh, Mrs. M. G. liam G. Leahy and Mrs. Reeves Bell. Mr. Henry Xander entertained a com-, pany at dinner last night at the Shore- ham, where he makes his home. A piano recital by Mr. Xander followed the dinner. Beverlys! hili ELEVENTH ST. = STAR, WASIHINGTON, Kountze—Clark Engagement Of Unusual Interest Here. An en(azemmt of interest in Wash- ington is that of Miss Mimi Kountze, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Herman Davies Kountze of Bedford Village, N. Y., to Mr. John Bigelow Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Francis A. Clark of New York and Newport. Miss Kountze attended Miss Chapin's School in New York, and the Fermata School at Aiken, S. C and L'Hermitage in Paris. The late Mr. and Mrs. Her- man Kountze and the late Capt. and Mrs. Henry Emerson Palmer are her ts, and she is a grandniece on.he te Mr. and Mrs. Luther Kvunuz of New York and Ne and cousin of Mrs. Grafton W. Minot l.nd of Mr. de Lancey Kountze. ' Mr. Clark attended St. George's School, Newport, and now is a student at Harvard. He is a grandson of Mr. Poultney Bigelow and of Mrs. Edith Jaffray Bigelow, and a great-grandson of the late John Bigelow, statesman, historian and diplomat, who was Amer- ican Ambassador to France during Lincoln's administration, and who mar- ried Miss Jane Tunis Poultney of Bal- timore. Mr. Clark is a brother of Mrs. Robert Reynolds Hitt, the former Miss Evelyn Clark, and of Mr. Francis Poultney Clark. He is a grandnephew of Mrs. Charles E. Tracy, of Col. John Bigelow and of the late Miss Grace Bigelow. ‘The marriage Miss Philomena Stanish, gnndd-ughur of Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Feiro, to Senor Don Eduardo Sosa, former attache of the legation of Panama and now secretary of the United States-Panama Claims Commission, took place yesterday after- noon at 4 o'clock in St. Glhrlels Church, Rev. Joseph M. Nelligan o ciating. 'l'he ‘bride was given in marriage by her grandfather and had a gown of ‘“Harmonizes’’ perfonly with every Spring shade ‘and costume . . “tune” with the advance modes in a pair of these so get in REPTILA—Above, a bi-color trimmed pump for street or dress wear that will be favored by the “younger set.” NATRIX—At Left, a Con- tinental heel oxford that is a trim complement to tailored and sports costumes. psborn. BETWEEN F30 Beautifully Furred Coats Luxurious blue fox—the most flattering of furs— on a black coat with a smart cape Schiaparrelli’s twisted col- lar and half sleeves of soft brown lapin on a brown crepe coat .. ..$26.50 Brooks’ Coats—Third Floor New Spring Frocks A new braid treatment trims the puffed sleeves and ascot scarf of this black rough crepe frock. .$16.50 Contrasting girdle and flowers on this crinkled crepe frock with new elbow sleeves $10.75 Brooks’ bre:xes—rh(rd Floor P €. crepe, mide on fitted lines, with d the on the and on , which were full to the el- d in a deep cuff effect. mmuk Q ickle at the front and she wore ‘ban to match, with & flai She carried a white ich fell & shower of lilies of the rynl;elrgulgnt'nl the bride, only atfendant, vearing s hibiscus pink crepe with a bu: to match. She carried an arm bougquet of talisman roses. Senor Au- Sosa, brother o( the bride- rroom ‘was the best ma reception 1onnm ln the home of the bfldel grandparents, Mrs. Feiro wn of black chiffon, with & velvet hat. ~STREET BETWEEN |I™ & 2™ Regularly 59c pair 6 pairs for $2.50 Lovely clear silk, in sheer chiffon with picot tops, or service weight with plaited soles for extra wear. Fall brown, matin, hazebeige and new Spring shades. Sizes 8! to 10%;. In a grand sale tomorrow—2 pairs for 90c. Hosiery—Street Floor WATCH BROOKS THIS YEAR! G-STREET BETWEEN 1™ & 2™ \ with a seed | black hat. «kL‘!:j 27, 193¢ SOCIETY. Juuus GARFINCKEL &.Co. STREET AT FOURTERNTR TOMORROW . .. OUR SALE VALUES, THE GREAT- EST WE HAVE EVER HAD, WILL CAFTURE THE ATTENTION OF EVERY YOUNG MlSSJUNIOR AND SCHOOL GIRL - There’s & marvelous assortment . . . in fact, we've gone carefully through every department, and the selection of sale goods at very special prices here to- morrow will thrill you to the heart. . Complete outfits may be had ... Dresses, Winter Coats, uits, inter Hats, Underwear, Loungmg ‘Wear, Shoes, Luggage and all Accessories you need. The Club, at 1 New avenue, will [1'0 & formal “BA‘:II:MHM of Mrs. John Nance Garner tomorrow. Hold Your Sorority DA I‘LC ES WHITE FLINT GOLF CLUB Rockville Pike and Edson Lane o t-;"h--loum_.:m ton 315, er -rite for reservaf Semi-Pablic Golf Course Groen Foes, Saturdays and Sundays, 8¢ Tomorrow when you are here be sure to see our marvelous selection of graduation dresses at moderate prices. Finest Quality GORHAM PLATE at One-Third Reduction! “Regularly $1500 1even. $10.00 18-Inch Platters. $ | 3-25 $5.00 Regularly $20.00 .....ccccomeccocmcomencece Open Vegetable Dishes. S— X $25.00 Other equally attractive savings in Regularly $7 Bread and Sandwich Trays. ly $7. 50 eiiiecsscenncccnsscensnenns Tea Trays, Chop Dishes, Waiters and Bowls [ 3-Compartment Vegetable Dishes. Regularly $37.50 DULIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana 1" PARKING SERVICE—Cons. Ave. Entrance—HOURS, 9 to 6 hiltpfihom = BETWEEN F4G Two More Months of Actual WINTER! You'll Need a Good Cloth Coat—Buy Now! Cheice of House! FINEST CLOTH COATS Originally $100 to $149 *66 Coats trimmed with Blue Fox Black Fox Silver Fox Jap Mink Persian Lamb Kolinsky Fisher Fitch Beaver You'd never expect to choose from our finest coats... Don’t wait another day, get a Superior Quality Coat... collection. ..Save from $34 to $83! at $66...so0 early! select from a large Plenty of Black, Brown and Green Coats for women and misses. Sizes 12 to 42. Three Other Exceptional Groups $59 were $69.50 to $89.50 Sizes 11 to 45% $4.5 were $59.50 to $69.50 Sizes 12 to 20 $33 were $49.50 to $59.50 Sizes 11 to 40 .Beaver Lapin Blue Fox Kolinsky Krimmer Persian Lamb Fitch Skunk Badger Jap Mink Plenty of Black, Brown, Green and Wine Coats Third Floor A Nominal Deposit Will Hold Your Coat With Monthly Payments and Free Storage Until Next Fall

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