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S Goel to Mul’l’fly Bly. Canada—-Mr. Bl'ld MYS. OCIETY. Mrs. Taft Leaves Capital For Her Summer Home! A Mitchell Palmer Take Apartment Here. J. H. Douglases Leave City. Mrs. Willlam Howard Taft has left Washington for her Summer home in Murray Bay, Canada. She entertained last week at dinner at Collingwood Tea House near Mount Vernon, among her guests being Mrs. Greble, Mrs. Relyea and Mrs. Symons, widow of Col. Symons, aide to President Theo- dore Roosevelt. Mrs. Symons has been making a short stay at the Carleton. ‘The former Attorney General, Mr. A. Mitchell Palmer, and Mrs. Palmer have taken an apartment at the Shoreham. They are driving to their Summer home at dstmudzburx, Pa., to spend the week end. Former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and Mrs. James H. Douglas have given up the house at 2125 Kalo- rama road, which they have occupied since they came to Washington, and have returned to their “iome in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas leased the home of former Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Robert Patterson Lamont, also of Chicago, Mrs. Lamont spending the Winter in an apartment in the West- chester, where she was joined frequent- ly by Mr. Lamont, now living in New York. Mrs. Lamont has gone abroad for the Summer and will return to Washington in the Autumn. The former governor of the Federal Reserve Board, Mr. Eugene Meyer, joined Mrs. Meyer and their family in their home at Mount Kisco, N. Y., for the week end. Mrs. E. H. G. Slater has closed her house on Eighteenth street and is in New York at the Savoy-Plaza for a | few days before sailing Wednesday to spend the Summer in Europe. Mf. and Mrs. Chester W. Lockwood are spending the week end at Gibson | Island and will remain in Washington until the end of June, when they will go to the Adirondacks for the remain- der of the Summer with Mrs. Lock- wood’s aunt, Mrs. Alfred H. Belo, in her camp on Saranac Lake. Mr. Willlam Phelps Eno arrived in New York Friday from Europe and has gone to his home in Connecticut. The Rev. and Mrs. B. E. Connerly of Winchester, Va.. are visiting Mrs. Con- nerly’s cousin and her husband, Mr. “and Mrs. O. G. Christgau, on Yuma Istreet. They also are spending a few “days in Takoma Park. © Mrs. Cornelius Gardner of San Diego, iCalif., has just returned to Washing- ifon after visiting Capt. and Mrs. Gal- “Joway of Montgomery, Ala., and is in “her apartment at the Fairfax. ‘Thomas, jr. On their return trip they will spend several days in Chicago :ewinz the Century of Progress Expo- tion. Mrs. Willlam Dawson of Melrose, Mass., is spending a few weeks at the home of her son and his family, Mr. ;n‘d Mrs. Merrill Dawson, in Takoma rk. Miss Amy Richards has just sailed for England and Scotland and upon her return to Washington will occupy her apartment at the Fairfax. Dr. and Mrs. John E. Bentley of Wesley Heights left Wednesday for | Boulder, ‘Colo., where Dr. Bentley will | teach psychology in the Summer school of the University of Colorado. Mrs. Alda M. Bird has returned from Boston, where she attended the-gradu- ation of her son, Lieut. Joseph L. Bird, C. C, U. 8. N. Lieut. Bird has com- pleted a three-year post-graduate course and received his degree from Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. Mrs. Samuel Burleigh Milton and her sister, Mrs. Wilfred Gelst Franheiser, accompanied by the former’s son, Mr. Seymour McConnell, and their niece, | Miss Elizabeth Seymour, have closed their home on_Sixteenth street and have gone to Rehoboth Beach, Del, | where they have taken a cottage for | the Summer. They will not return un- til October 15. Mrs. Fronheiser and Mr. McConnell just returned a few days ago from a trip to Rehoboth Beach and | Pottstown, Pa., and Mrs. Milton spent a few days at her country home on the Chesapeake Bay prior to their per- | manent departure for the Summer. Mrs. Sally Cary Parrish has been joined in her apartment at Wardman | Park Hotel by her brother, Mr. Shirley | Carter, who came from New York on Friday to spend the coming months with her. Mrs. Florence Eustace, who makes her home at the Wardman Park Hotel, has THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, ADMIRERS OF ANTIQUES Left, Mrs. David A. Reed, and right, Mrs. Warren R. Austin, wives of | Senators, who attended the preview of Colonial furniture and other household | articles on exhibition in Gadsby’s Tavern, in Alexandria. The old tavern will be open daily to the public. —Underwood Photo. White House Is Enveloped ‘ Miss McKinley to Wed In a “Dead Silence™ While i Lieut. John C. Oakes Its Occupants Are Away| Here During Summer (Continued From First Page.) From First Page.) | take & trip to Europe with her mother | before Lieut. Oakes returns to his duty ;‘l::: sumx;ne’h 1W'hlxlet mondo(tthe de- | in Panama. ntes of local society graduated from | 3 Washington schools, Miss Thompson | Lieut. Oakes was best man Friday for | Lieut. Normando A. Costello, at his finished her course at Miss Beards' Scheol at Orange, N. J. | marriage to Miss Frances Page Simonds, Pretty as a picture Miss Isabell | daughter of the commandant of the as her guest there her sister, Mrs. John J. Crowley, who came here from her home in Elmi N. Y., last week to spend some time with Mrs. Eustace. Miss Jane Marshall, daughter of Mrs. James J. Marshall of Staunton, who was recently graduated with high hon- ors from Hannah Moore Academy, | Maryland, is now the guest of her uncle and aunt, Col. and Mrs. Rawson War- ren, at the Kennedy-Warren, Wash- | ington. | Mr. Max Shoup, son of Rev. H. L. Shoup of Takoma Park, has returned from a trip to New England, having accompanied his grandfather, Mr. J. H. § D e e Oenp | Shoup of Orlando, Fia., and South Lan- Thight with their daughter, Mrs. Edwin | Caster, Mass. Lozier Thomas. Dr. and Mrs. Carroll | aiss Mary Louise Brown, dean of | women at American University, in Wes- Jormerly lived in Washington. . - = - A ., 1 a § frcr midney W, Tymeson of the|ley Esiehiyisin Rasmey, Ind., for ‘Washington Missionary College, depart- i ament of commerce, and® Mrs. Tymeson | Mrs. C. A. Anderson of Washington, ‘are sepnding their vacation in Peekskill, | formerly of Staunton, who was a guest “Rochester and Union Springs, N. Y.|there for several days of her son, Mr. Prof. Tymescr, plans to do some ad- |T. A. Anderson, has returned to the ivanced work 1‘:\ sthe er}l;ndl U‘?; Capital. 1l jummer school, a | o — Yy T Ui Mre. Tymeson, who | Mr. Claude La Varre, honor graduate :will spend the interveining time in Melrose and South Lancaster, Mass., and they will take an outing at Seneca Jake, New Hampshire. They will also Jisit 'the Century of Progress Exposi- | = Rion in Chicago. ¥ Mrs. Thomas Brown McClintic, re- “tently & guest of Capt. W. S. McClin- c, U. S. N., and Mrs. McClintic in ashington, later motoring to Williams- urg to attend the finals at the Col- Jege of Willlam and Mary, returned to Staunton early in the week accompanied By her daughter, Miss Tommy Brown McClintic, and Miss Ann Bradford, Haughter of Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bradford of Staunton. % Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Brimer have arrived in Washington and are at the Broadmoor. £ Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Betancourt of Luba, who have spent several years at WMiami Beach, Fla., are guests at the $hcreham while in Washington for the geddmg of their nephey, Mr. John Griffith Shields, and Miss Iwilla Reed, S:hich_took place yesterday. Mr. and {grs‘ Betancourt will make their home Chicago, Ill, for a2n indefinite time. £ Miss Marlon Trumbull, is the week #nd guest at Princeton of Hon. Rupert Milford and Mrs. Milford. Mrs Milford was formerly Mrs. Henry Lane ¥no, and they came from their estate 4n England 1o spend the month of Pune at their Princeton home. L Dr. H. H. Votaw of Takoma Park, | $uperintendent of Federal priscns, un- @er the Harding administration, is at- tending a convention in Boulder, Colo., w©f representatives from Seventh-day ‘Adventist churches throughout the !wcky Mountain area of the country. Miss Betty West and Miss Allison McDaniel attended the Yale-Harvard ‘game yesterday and will spend a short Iime in New York before returning to Awashington. > Mrs. Charles Ulrich and her daugh- Rer, Miss Mildred, are visiting Mrs. Ul- Fich's mother, Mrs. Lucy Miller, in Al- associate minister e Presbyterian Church, and Mrs. Evans will leave by motor tomorrow to spend a few weeks 2t iheir Summer home, Parry Farms, in the Buffalo Hills, New York, re- turning to Washington July 15 Mr. and Mrs. John A. Mooney left Friday for Milwaukee, Wis, as the ‘guests of her brother, Mr. Alfred H | of Washington and Lee University and | winner of the Matleson scholarship, has | returned from Lexington. Mrs. Fred- lerick Coudert Bellipger, who accom-{ | panied their mothef, Mrs. Willlam J. | Varre, to the graduation exercises | at Washington and Lee, has left for New York. Hebrew Home for Aged | Scene of Benefit Party‘ | _ Before recessing for the Summer, the ’l‘dles' Auxiliary of the Hebrew Home for the Aged will hold its final meeting Monday evening at 8 o'clock at the | home, 1125 Spring road. | The opening prayer will be read by Mrs. Joseph Kronmen, and there will | be local selections Miss Helen | Steiner, ‘accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Blanche Hoffman. A social hour and refreshments, with Mrs. Yetta Katzman and Mrs. Rachel Kossow as hostesses, will close the meeting. The annual Spring luncheon held on Monday afternoon, June 12, for mem- bers of the auxiliary, was well at- tended. Dwight will be presented by her parents, | Army War College and Mrs. George Mr.and Mro: Jobm Henry Dwight. at » | Simonds. Miss McKinley and the for- ball at the Mayflower December 23, Mer Miss Simcnds made their debut She has already had her trip to Europe,. JoIntly at a tea given by their respec- and one of her associates in the local | Uive parents at the Army War College. society circle 1s Miss Alice Marie | al Fleming, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | Robert V. Fleming, who graduated this m&nhlhtlmgl Ho!ulm Arms. A season | without a Roosevelt relative among the | o Chicago. Lieut. Tem 3 3 ple is at present g:‘l’“:ln%te:mlzln:gldth? i;‘llg’;n:fi‘llnlg |on duty in the Bureau of Aeronautics, that Miss Helen Robbins, daughter of | Mrs. Albert E. Berry announces the Mr. and Mrs. Warren Delano Robbins, | engagement of her daughter, Margaret who is on the eve of being presented at | Ryon, to Mr. James Edmond Brady :’henl;x:z:{: coun.Rheld t;‘o segson‘!x ago, | Miss Berry is the daughter of the late leanor Rocsevelt, who will be | Albert E. Berry. s gmented to Washington society by S i er parents, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Roosevelt, her date being In December. Another debutante from the official ranks is Miss Beatrice Phillips, daughter of the Undersecretary of State and Mrs. | William Phillips, who has had much the engagement of their daughter, broader preparation both in the States | Mabel Bishop, to Mr. Douglas George and abroad, for a social career. | Wallis McRea. son of Mr. and Mrs. | Walter R. McRae of Toronto, Canada. | The wedding will take place in August. Mrs. Howe Totten announces the en- gagement of her daughter Priscella to Lieut. Harry Bringham Temple, U. 8. N., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Temple Mass. He was graduated from George- town University in 1929. The wedding will take place in Sep- | tember. Mrs. Willett TaLoma Park Hostess for Bride-Elect | Pre-Nuptial Tea for Mrs. E. F. Willett of 904 Davis - - s 3 nue, Takoma Park, entertained .;‘éit‘ Miss Hammack-Mr. O'Neill Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hammack will 25 friends of Miss Florence Sunberg | with a miscellaneous shower in honor | entertain at a tea this afternoon from of her wedding, which will take place |4 to 6 o'clock at their home, 2813 the end of June. A program was given | Twenty-seventh street, in honor of by Mrs. A. W. Truman, Mrs. C. C.|their daughter, Miss Jane L. Hammack, Pulver, Dr. Edna Patterson, Miss Mary %ho is to be married this week to Mr. Glenwright and Miss Catherine Long. | John Thomas O'Neill. Others who were present were Miss — AWNINGS Sadie Oickle, Mrs. J. Norman Kimble, MADE TO ORDER Miss Alice Rempson, Miss Fannie John- Old Awnings Rel and Repaired ESTII FREE son, Mrs. Alice Bourdeau, Mrs. Chlo | Wood Miller, Mrs. Charles H. Wollohon, | Mrs. A, T. Carnig, Mrs. Blanche Wood, | lélul.;xh Jouphk‘l:etgie‘tbeck, Miss Ruth | MA , Miss Catherine Carlson, Miss Helen Johnson, Mrs. Ruth Osborne, | Edwin T. Holland 3.".;';. ::ly'll Saphiloff and Miss Louise | Phone Cleveland 4645 DRASTIC CLEARANCE! Brothers 1213 F STREET Warm Days Will Not ™ % Destroy Your Coiffare If You Have e Permanent Wave by Db@f ' Paris INC. Complete Waves, 10.00 Junior Waves, 7.50 Mr. Robert is an authority on Per- manent Waving and Hair Tinting. Consult with him freely on sll your Bair problems. =4 Scalp Treatments. Facial Massage. TURKISH BATHS 1514 Cou . Ave. North 2776-2777. “No Foot Too Hard to Fit” Ease Those Tired Feet With Special Measurement * Shoes Your feet know no ‘‘depression.” today as ever. They demand as much care Wear - Willur CoonShocs Special Measurement Sho es for Women and Modern Misses in All Leathers and Fabrics for Summer Wear $6:52 to $8£ : COMPLETE LINE OF NURSES’ OXFORDS BOYCE Sizes Custom Fitting Shoes 439-441 7th St. N.W. Fit the Feet of Every - &LEWIS Complete Line of High Shoes d Store is Equipped to Man, Woman and Child Group One: Group Two: Street and Dinner FROCKS $ 9 75 * Were $19.75 to $35 OPPOSITE THE MAYFLOWER Fur-Trimmed COATS 25 Were $49 to $65 So advanced in style— you can wear these Coats next Fall or right now for vacations and cool evenings. Al Saleg Final The richest child is poor without musical training. Music LEessons Will Prove a Golden Investment For Your Child for a Lifetime The great Gladstone declared: “Music is one of the most forcible instruments for training, for arousing and for gov- erning the mind and spirit of man.” Secretary of the Treasury Woodin declares: “It has been my experience in business life, that after a day flooded with prob- lems extremely difficult to solve—I have come home and de- voted my time to music—beautiful music. By ‘devoting my s time to music,’ I mean the playing of music and endeavoring to create it, not merely ‘hearing’ music.” Give Your Child the Chance to Learn. It is astonishing what progress can be made in learn- ing to play piano by devoting a little time each day to practicing—and persevering! And children learn quickly. Good music creates an atmosphere of hap- piness and content and no one has ever regretted the time devoted to its study. Now is the time to start. We are offering a num- ber of used upright pianos at $50 each—and there’s an exquisite little baby grand piano— the GULBRANSON, in mahogany, new, s4 0 fully warranted, including bench, for only e — E. F. Droop & Sons Co., 1300 G Steinway and Other Leading Pianos D.C, Fleming-Whitwell Weddind to Be Held at Pittsburgh on June 26 Miss' Helen Boyd to Wed Dr. Edgar E. Quayle in St. Thomas' June 24. Miss Blanche Margaret Fleming has selected Monday afternoon, June 26, for her marriage to Mr. John Colman Whitwell of Princeton. N. J. son of Mr. and Mrs. George Miller Whitwell of Washington. The wedding will take place in the Perrysville Avenue Meth- odist Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh, | where the bride makes her home with | her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Ringle, at Perrysville Manor. 'l‘he' ceremony will be performed at 5:30 o'clock, the Rev. Dr. B. P. Crawford, pastor of the church, officiating. Miss Fleming will be attended by her cousin, Mrs. Orville L. Meister of Pitts- burgh, as matron of honor, and Miss E:tnzy Simon of Pittsburgh as maid of 0. The best man will be Mr. Cooper, 2d, of Pittsburgh, and the ush- ers selected are Mr. Hugh Thomson Kerr, jr.; Mr. Orville L. Meister, cousin of the bride, and Mr. James V. Mc- Donough of Pittsburgh, Mr. Sprunt Holmes of Washington, Mr. Robert Buckbee of New York and Mr. Kennard G. Keen of Princeton, N. J. The cersmony will be followed by & reception at the Pines for members of the two families and the wedding party, and after a wedding trip Mr. Whitwell and his bride will make their home in Princeton, where he is_instructor in ch::xlcll engineering at Princeton Uni- versity. Miss Helen Boyd, daughter of Mrs. Samuel Boyd, will be z’n‘u’rled to Dr. 1 Henry Edgar E. Quayle June at 4 o'clock in St. Thomas' Episcopal Church. The bride will be attended by Miss Marle Didden as maid of honor and Mrs. James I. Boyd, Miss Rosemary Arnold, Mrs. Elmer C. Haberkorn and Mrs. Howard Wilson. Mr. Willlam La Rue Heller will be the best man and the ushers selected are Mr. Norman Landreau, Mr. John Goings, Mr. Ar- thur Joseph and Mr. Samuel Boyd. The bride will be given in marriage by Dr. James 1. Boyd. Miss Thelma Donaway. for the last two years a member of the faculty of the ~ Hyattsville (Md) Elementary School, and Mr. W. Carroll Beatty, town clerk of Hyattsville and well- known young attorney, will be married Saturday, June 24, at noon in Grace Methodist Protestant Episcopal Church at Pittsville, the bride’s home, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Miss Donoway is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin J. Donaway and Mr. &:(:y is & son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. t Foliowing the ceremony the couple JUNE 18, 1933—PART THREE. 'August Bride | | MISS MABEL BISHOP BEST, ‘Whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Royal G. Best, announce her engagement to Mr. Douglas George Wallis McRae, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. McRae of Toronto, Canada. The w will take place in this city in August. ‘will leave on a motor trip and will re- turn to Hyattsville early in July to make their home cn Cecil avenue. ‘The marriage of Miss Rose Sinrod, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Sinrod, to Mr. Morris Sitkin of Brooklyn, N. Y., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sitkin of ‘Woodridge, N. Y., will take place today in the study of the Rev. Dr. Metz, who will officiate. The wedding music will be given by Mr. Barnee Breeskin, vio- linist, who will be accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Breeskin. Cards are out for the wedding June 29 of Miss Florence Ruth Sunberg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sun- berg of Burlington, Vt., and Mr. Homer | Grenfal Slade, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Slade of Takoma Park. REPAIRED REMODELED CLEANED Free Storage With All Repair Work All work personally supervised by Mr. Miller. Low Summer rates now in eflect Phone NAtiozal 5628. Will Call. ISADOR MILLER 2 lita St. NW. MPFG. FURRIER SOCIETY. Debuchis Will Give Dinner for Uphams | (Continued From Pirst Page.) months’ stay abroad and will visit in London before going to his home in Bucharest. ‘The Minister Mme. Peter have taken a cottage at Cohasset, Mass., where Mme. Peter will go early in July for the Summer. She will have with her her sons, Mr. Marc Peter, jr., and Mr. Georges Peter, and the latter's wife and small family. The Minister will join them for short visits through the season, ‘The Minister of Greece and Mme. Simopoulos have leased a cottage at Ncnquit, Mass, where Mme. Simo- poulos and their son, Jan, will go next week for the Summer, the Min- ister to join them later in the season. The Minister of the Irish Pree State, Mr Michael MacWhite, and his son, Eoin, will sail Friday, June 30, aboard of Switzerland and | the Century of Progress Exposition. They were accompanied by their chil- dren and shortly after their return to Washington they will go to Atlantic City for the remainder of the Summer, The Minister of Denmark, Mr. ‘Wadsted, will go to Chicago tomorrow | to attend the observance Wednesday |of Denmark day at the Century of World's Fair. The Minister Progress | prebably will remain through the week. The charge d'affffaires of Chile, Senor. | Don Benjamin Cohen. will return to- morrow from New York, where he went i Thursday. ;Zontl Club Holding Kaffee Klotch Today ‘The Zonta Club Intercity Committee, | under the direction of Mrs. Florence Sindell, has arrai an old-fashioned | kaffee klotch for this afternoon at the {studio of Miss Francis Gutelius, 1408 New Hampshire avenue, 3 o7 o'clock, with Zontians from Annapelis, Frederick, Hagerstown and Philadel- phia as special guests of honor. Thers lven by Ivales Ne the Columbus for Ireland, where Mrs. MacWhite will join them for the Sum- mer. Mrs. MacWhite, | will be a program gh ell, violinist; Francis Gutelius, | Florence Sindell, soloist, accompanied who went' by Emily Dickinson at the pian It is cool here. Our marvelous cooling system makes a real pleasure Jurius Garrinckel & Co. F STREET AT FOURTEENTH THESE ARE BUSY DAYS IN OUR FAMOUS SHOE DEPARTMENTS Where our extraordinary stocks of the best made footwear in the newest and most in: keen attention. dividual styles are attracting We have nothing but the best shoes here; our exYem ft you comfortably and correctly and we will not allow you to keep a pair of shoes that are not comfortable in every way. Among our many new styles are some unusually smart white shoes, remarkably priced at— $6.50 and $8.50 For women and misses. From the Second Floor Gown Salon Embroidered of Mr. Frank A. Brady of Fall River, ' Mr. and Mrs. Royal G. Best announce | The Woman’s 1105 F Specialty Shop STREET “Warm Weather Friend”. .. Airy as a Breeze BN JoLie CORSETTE $ 5.00 Semi Step-in Style! 80 light—so comfortable—yet they work miracles in giving you lovely feminine curves. Of open work mesh with triple-ply net bust. In peach and white—and they wash marvelously! Shoulder Straps are Removable —and a complete line of addi- tional straps for your convenience. W, D. Moses & Sons Nat'l. 3770 F at 1lth PECIAL Have Your Photograph Taken perfectly nasural 8x10 photographs of you, one of them HAND COLORED IN OILS. All for only . o . - NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY MOSES—LOWER FLOOR. Mousseline " $20Q50 Here is the embroidered mous- seline with the dark dots that all New York was talking about last week! (It was presented .at a higher price, too!) You may have it in white, blue, or pink, with black, or yellow with brown dots. Ribbons to match, of course! And it's just one of the new themes that are bringing all smart Wash- ington to our Gown Salon—chif- fons, cotton laces, organdies, or- ganzas—in every color of the rainbow and every successful style New York or Paris can de- vise! Sizes 14 to 20, 36 to 44. Other Gown Salon Models from......$19.75 to $39.50 Realistic Permanent Croquignole Process or Reconditioning “La Gloria” 0Oil Permanent, Complete Lanshurghs #10 7th, 8th and E g A