Evening Star Newspaper, March 15, 1935, Page 23

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SOCIETY (Continued From Second Page.) 135t evening at 8 o'clock in the home of the bride's parents, the Rev. R. Paul Schearrer of the Takoma Park Presbyterian Church officiating. After an informal reception the young couple left by motor for a trip to New York City and on their return will be at home in Takoma Park. Announcement is made of the mar- riage Saturday, March 9, of Miss Eliz- abeth Louise Ridgeway to Mr. Man- ville Austin Dove in Frederick, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Dove will make their home with the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James T. Dove, at Burke, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Garvaa of New York City are in Washington for & few days and are at the Mayflower. Mr. and Mrs. Garvan lived in Wash- ington during the war. Mr. and Mrs. Jouett Shouse will be hosts at dinner tonight, takiag their guests later to the reception and dance at the Persian Legation. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Ferro will entertain this evening at their home in Petworth with a birthday dianer party for their daughter, Miss Mary E. Ferro, and a bon voyage party for their guest of honor, Miss Estelle | Gusack, who is leaving shortly for the | Hawalian Islands. Among those who | will be present are Miss Jennie Gu- | sack, Miss Betty Jean Talbott, Mrs. Angela Bayliss, Miss Mary Patricia Stanish, Miss Rose Ann Ferro aad the Misses Marie and “Joe” Sawaya. Mr. and Mrs. A. Montague Ferry have as their guest in their home in Kenwood, Md., Miss Catharine Leslie of Evanston, IIl. Judge and Mrs. Clarence Norton Goodwin will have guests dining with them this evening before the reception at the Persian Legation. Mrs. Minnie E. Gooch entertained at a luncheon yesterday at 2400 Six- teenth street a group of ladies, later staying to play cards. Her guests were as follows: Mrs. Jared Smith. Mrs. Nicholas Schutz, Mrs. Daaiel Histon, Mrs. A. J. Fealy, Mrs. George Brad- ly, Mrs. Frank R. Lewis, Mrs. Adolph Kness, Mrs. William Knopf, Mrs. Charles Otterback and Mrs. Charles W. Hunt. Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Shinn of Kenwood, Md. are spending several weeks in Miami, Fla. Miss Elizabeth Offutt has as her guest in her home on Bradley boule- vard in Chevy Chase for several days Miss Dorothy Bender, daughter of Col and Mrs. Louis Bender of Columbus, ©Ohio. Miss Offutt and Miss Bender will spend the week end in Annapolis, where they will attend the Navy Re- lief Show at the Naval Academy. Thirty-Fifth Charity Bazaar At Gunston Hall Tomorrow. For 35 years the students of Gun- ston Hall have held an annual bazaar at the school, each member of the faculty and each student of the school contributing generously of time and money that the event might be both attractive and profitable. The pro- ceeds from sales at the fancy tables— some of the stalls are beautiful and all are interesting—goes to the proper sources to be distributed for charity 2nd welfare work. The contribution to this cause has been considerable each year and this bazaar which cpens at 11 o'clock Tow ..and lasts all day is mumnrscnvz. A general color scheme of green used in the gymnasium and adjoining rooms, is being diversified by the dif- ferent committees by the use of Spring flowers, which will be sold during the bazaar. Luncheon and tea will be served, and punch, sand- wiches, cakes and candies will be on sale all day. Little Gunston, where England in the time of Robin Hood has been a fifth and sixth grade project, has chosen Nottingham Fair as the set- ting for their room. Every member of the junior School will this day be- long to the merry Greenwood Band, decked out in green with gaily feathered hats. Singing old English ballads, as well as those of their own making, offering quaint and carefully | made little articles for sale, they will be hard to resist. There will be songs and skits throughout the day both by the junior and the senior school. A tashion show at 3 o'clock will be modeled by the girls of the upper house. Fancy arti- cles will be sold. White elephants will vie for place with the famous stuffed animal z00 of a design origi- rn;e}:i !orl this bazaar. e Alumnae Association is spon- soring an arts and crafts table ufi%er the direction of the Washington National Democratic Club. chapter, and donations are being sent from all parts of the country. ‘The Washington Chapter of the Instituto de la Espanas has sent out invitations for a tea in honor of the Chilean educational mission now vis- !iting in the United States, Sunday afternoon at ¢:30 o'clock, in the Pan- Amerjcan Union. | nandez, rector of the University of Spanish. His subject will be “La Funcion de la Universidad Moderna.” A program of music will be given by | Blanca Renard, Chilean pianist. . | Mrs. Campbell Spratt, Mrs. James }Payne and Mrs. Charles Beck will be the hostesses for the tea tomor- row afternoon at Kenmore, the old home in Fredericksburg of Betty Washington Lewis, only sister of George Washington. The attendance last Saturday was very large and in- | cluded a number of people from ! Richmond and Washington. Mrs. Willlam Stuart gave a lunch- | eon and bridge today in her home in ‘Takoma Park in compliment to Mrs. Charles E. Tullar of Schnectady, N. Y., and formerly of Takoma Park, Md., who is visiting Mrs. Paul P. Pierce. Other guests were Mrs. J. Frank Rice, Mrs. Clarence Reed, Mrs. Charles Mills, Mrs. Robert Ramsay, Mrs. Paul Schearer, Mrs. Joshua Skinner, Mrs. Herman Metcalf, Mrs. Arthur Le Clerc, Mrs. A. G. Miller, Mrs. Frank Moorman, Mrs. G. Albert Scott, Mrs. Nellie Harrison, Mrs. Donald Stuart, Miss Agnes Carleton and Mrs. Paul Pierce. ‘Mrs. Russell A. Lynn of Herndon, | Va., has as her guests this week Mrs. | Mary V. Smith and her daughter, | Va. Mrs. Lynn entertained at bridge end a midnight supper last evening in compliment to Mrs. Smith and | Miss Smith. Other guests included | Mrs. T. Edgar Aud, Mrs. Arthur Hyde Buell, Mrs. James Cockerille, Miss Elizabeth Buell, Mrs. E. Barhour Hutchison, Mrs. William H. Dawson, rs. George F. Buell and Mrs. Her- | bert L. Seamans. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Wells of Silver Spring, Md., have as their | house guests for the remainder of the week Mr. Wells’ parents, Dr. and Mrs. {David M. Wells of West Newton, SLIP COVERS 3-piece slip covers and five straight cushions, tailored to look like up- holstered jaspe $16.50 and homespun. R. L. ISHERWOOD Atlantic 1971 Phone for Samples 4 The “MYRTLE” Basket-weave oxford in blue, hlack, brown, beige with brown and gray . . . the perfect complement for your tweed ensemble. THERE’S A TRICK TO THE CHARM of RICH'S WOVENETTES The “JOAN” A “different-looking” san- dal that sports a perforated, wide T-strap. Wovenette leather in blue or brown, trimmed with matching calf. MISS IDA GUFFEY, Official hostess for her brother, Senator Joseph Guffey of Pennsylvania, who will receive tomorrow afternoon at the reception of the Women's Dr. Juvenal Her- | Chile, and the head of the delega- |2 tion, will make a brief address in| | Miss Dorothy Smith of Purcellville, | —Bachrach Photo. | |Mass. who are en route from a| | month's stay in Florida. | | Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Russell of | | Syracuse, N Y, arrived this morning | |in Washington and will pass several | days with Mr. Russell's brother and | sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas | P. Russell, in their home in Sligo | Park Hills, Md. Miss Bertha Rogers has as her guest t the Mayflower for the weck her niece, Miss Ruth Waldron of Newton- ville, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Coplin, who came here recently from Los Angeles, Calif,, to make their home, have as their guest at the Wardman Park | Hotel Mr. B. F. Serlis of Los Angeles. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Smythe of | Evanston, 111, are staying at the Wil- | lard during their visit in this city. Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Allen have ar- | | rived in Washington from their home, | in Oxford, England, and are at the Carlton. | | Benefit Next Week for Local Children’s Milk Fund. The City Wide Group of the Ladies | of Charity, of which Mrs. George O’Connor is president, are sponsoring a benefit for a milk fund for under- nourished and tubercular children of | Washington, to be held in the large | ball room of the Willard Thursday evening, March 21, at 8:30 o'clock. George O'Connor and his Troubadors will put on a play written by Thomas Brahany entitled “The Widow Lally’s Eviction,” a comedy of rural life in County Clare. Assisting Mrs. O'Con in new RED GOOSE SHOES T IS difficult to find shoes to match these youngsters’ pep and activity. Here at the JUVENILE SHOE STORE, your problem is solved. Red Goose Shoes are sturdily built of all leather and fitted cor- rectly and intelligently by foot experts who know boys and girls. HEALTY, HAPPY FEET have real fun. She will like this snappy new pattern. Patent leather, center- strap, cut-out vamp, and gen- uine hand-turned soles. ALL WIDTHS. Also SIZES 12 to 3; $295. ] $3é—§ A real “he-boy shoe” for ac- tive feet, with a scuff-proof toe. All-leather, inside and out, from heel to toe. ALL SIZES and widths. JUVENILE SHOE STORE 936 F St. NW. Next to the Metropolitan Theater nor to make the affair a success are Mrs. Joseph P. Tumulty, Mrs. Arthur Mullen, Mrs. John Remon, Mrs. E. T. Foss and Mrs. M. C. Brooks. Mrs. Harry Somerville has charge of dona- tions and the tickets which are now on sale at the Willard. Among the patrons and patronesses are Mrs. Roosevelt, Postmaster Gen- eral and Mrs. James A. Farley, Archbishop of Baltimore Michael G. Curley, the Minister of the Irish Free State and Mrs. MacWhite, Senator and Mrs. Joseph O’Mahoney, Senator and Mrs. Ryan Duffy, Col. Louis McH. Howe, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Early, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McIntyre. The group of ¢harming young ladies who have volunteered to serve as ushers in charge of Mrs. John Remon includes Miss Mary Stuart, Miss Anna Lee Stuart, Miss Rosemary Colliflower, Miss Grace Mary Colliflower, Miss Marian Somerville, Miss Tumulty, Miss Cameron, Miss Helen O'Connor, Miss Ruth Remon, Miss Eleanor 0O'Donoghue, Miss Jane Gormley, Miss Regina Biggs and Miss Polly Poote. Elaborate preparations are being made for a St. Patrick’s day ball Monday evening at the Congressional Country Club, under the auspices of the Fusionist party of Montgomery County, Md. Among prominent persons in the county who have been named on the General Committee are Mr, and Mrs. Edward Peter, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Eaton, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Adolphe Gude, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Anderson, Mr. Walter Dawson, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bach- rach, Dr. and Mrs. John A. Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Coughlan, Mr. Byron Sedgwick, Mr. and Mrs. Frank (Continued on Fourth Page.) SPRING BONNETS FOR THE EASTER PARADE. OUR LATEST SELEC- TION CONTAINS THE LOVELIEST OF TAFFETAS AND STRAWS. . AVE. AT S Sizes 111017 are approving these Smart, New Styles of HITE with navy is the particular story of the Junior sketched at top. But- tons (and you see them every- where) play an important part in its makeup. Note: The full sleeves are adjust- able. In the alluring style sketched at bottom the suit- in-a-dress idea goes over with a bang. Pique and wide revers of silk are two addi- tional features. $12.95 Other Paulina Juniors to $22.75 THE WOMEN’S SHOP RALEIGH HABERDASHER Charge Accounts Invited B3~ " The first and last words in TAILORED fashions are MAN-TAILORED SUITS & COATS S PIONEERS in man-tailored suit and coat styles—the success of our experience permits us to speak with authority upon the correctness of the masculine favorites of Fashion this Spring. We KNOW the right workmanship that creates a fitted back mas- For immediate wear the three-piece suit is THE thing. Its topcoat can be worn separately. Sketched above is one of the smart- est 3-piecers. The topcoat emphasizes the vogue for exaggerated lapels and has a faint swagger ef- fect. It's well “buttoned” so it can be worn buttoned up or buttoned down. The jacket is smartly belted. A swaggering military theme is the coat sketched above. In it are developed the distinction and character of Raleigh man- tailoring in the highest degree art—with subtle femi- For style grace there are almost countless buttons . .. and down the front. Priced at $29.75. Tailored coats and suits demand tailored acces- soril Sketched above ary o bags whose creed is tailoring to the nth degrese of new Spring smartness. Both are beautifully fitted, Both are priced at $10. Other Bags down to $5. terp e. We do not have to guess about the proper men's wear fab- rics. We understand the right styles for tweeds, worsteds, flannels or gabardines. Raleigh Man-Tailored Suits $19.95 to 365 Raleigh Man-Tailored Coats $22.75 to $49.75 Sweaters and blouses that are designed with an eye toward “man-tailoring.” Sketched above is a blouse that would intensify any men’s wear fabric. Priced at $3.95. A worthy pal to any tailored ensemble is the sweater sketched. Several of them make a suit end- lessly wearable. Priced at $2.95. Other Blouses $2.95 to $10.95. Other Sweaters to $5.95. Fifth Avenue, built on man- nish lines, greets the vernal brilliant colors fresh as Spring, and all the darker tones to take you through the day in town. It adds the needed snap to your Spring wardrobe! In Felt or Panama, $7.50. Cruise and Travel in darker tones is a tonic for your tailored clothes to- day in town. Its brighter colors sparkle in the gay- est country places. It gives you fresh confidence in your new Spring ward- robe. In colorful Felt or Panama, $8.75. Other Knozr Hats T 85 to $18.50 Tailored after The box jacket of the suit sketched above adds a detail of interest to its legitimate tailoring. The pockets with an inverted pleat effect help to cre- ate an air of smart young sophistication. A novelty effect in a crepey woolen. Priced at $29.75 An invisible herringbone that the most conservative could not accuse as being too mannish is exquisitely expressed in the coat sketched below. Leather buttons and belt are a further concession to womanly fashion. Priced at $29.75. man’s own heart is the strictly business- like tailor sketched above. Its classic lines make it correct for wear now under winter coats, weather. worsteds Priced at $29.75. ® CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED @ 30-day accounts are payable at the end of the month following purchase.. Extended Payment Plan allows you 4 months in which to make 4 equal payments— without any interest charges, well as for warmer Fashioned from favored by men. CURB PARKING SERVICE—PRIVATE CHAUFFEURS IN ATTENDANCE RALEIGH HABERDASHER THE WOMEN’S SHOP, 1310 F STREET

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