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SOCIETY Dean of Diplomatic Corps Honor Guest of Senator and Mrs. Barbour at Dinner Last Evening. IS Brittanic majesty’s Ambu-;sen\tor and Mrs. Daniel O. Hast- . Sir Ronald Liadsay,|ings, Senator and Mrs. Joseph S:’dor e K g 1 tdmy-:T' Robinson, Serator and Mrs. a3 the IanE I guen | William H. King, Senator and Mrs. ner last night of Senator and | Key Pittman, Senator and Mrs. Henry Mrs. W. Warren Barbour. The other | Ashurst, Senator and Mrs. James | S Bua nd Mrs. | Hamilton Lewis, Senator and Mrs. Glcsts wete B Juseee o | Marcus A. Coolidge, Senator and Mrs. Harlan Fiske Stone, Senator and Mrs. Charles L. McNary, Senator and Mrs, Warren R. Austin, Senator and Mrs. | william E. Borah, Representative and James F. Byrnes, Representative and | Mrs. Sol Bloom, Miss Bloom, former A epresenta- | Representative and Mrs. Fred A. Brit- Mrs. Bertrand H. Snell, R pres e St O tive and Mrs. Robert Low Bacon, | Bishop of Modra and rector of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy and | catholic University; the Rev. W. Cole- Mrs. Henry Latrobe Roosevelt, Mr. man Nevils of Georgetown University, : Prather Fletcher, | Assistant Secretary of the Navy and Sndiolis ey, e | Mrs. Henry L. Roosevelt, the chief of Mrs. Mahlon Pitney, Mrs. William | o) o) Operations and Mrs. William Corcoran Eustis, Mr. and Mrs. Mark | Standley, Rear Admiral and Mrs. Mark Sullivan and Mr. Williams. | L. Bristol, Admiral and Mrs. Joseph i S ? | Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Richard South- The Vice President of Nicaragua. gate Mr. Wallace Murray, the solicitor Senor Dr. Rodolfo Espinosa. who IS general and Mrs. James Crawford the guest of the charge d'affaires Biggs, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. Reed, of Nicaragua and Senora de De Bayle, | nrrs” Harry Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. will be the guest in whose honor|George Nurham, Mr. and Mrs. Truxtun Senora Irma Arguello and her daugh- | Beale, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Owsley, Mr. ter, Senorita Chita Arguello, will en- | an4 Mrs. Malcolm McConihe, Mr. and tertain at a reception this afternoon | Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, Mr. in their apartment at the FairfaX. | cClarence Hewes, Mr. Robert Jackson Senora Arguello, who is Nicaraguan | ang his daughter, Miss Hope Jackson; consul at Richmond, will be assisted | Nys. Campbell Prichett, Mrs. Gibson by Senora de Arcaya, wife of the | pannestock and her son, Mr. Snowden Minister of Venezuela; Senora de Fahnestock; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Alfaro, wife of the Minister of Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Newbold Noyes, Ecuador; Frau von Boettiger, MTS. |y and Mrs. Mark Sullivan, Mr. and Francis Walker, Frau Ermo Faber| yrs. william R. Castle, Mrs. John and Mrs. Carl A. Droop | Allan Dougherty, Col. and Mrs. George C. Thorpe, Gen. William E. Horton, | Mrs. Horace G. Macfarland and Mr. H M. and Mme. de Laboulaye Hosts at Dinner Tonight. The Ambassador of France and Mme. de Laboulaye will entertain at a dinner this evening when the British Ambassador Sir Ronald Lindsay will be the ranking guest. The Ambassador and Mme. de La- boulaye entertained at luncheon yes- terday in honor of the French Min- ister to Canada and Mme. Raymond Brougere. ‘The Ambassador of Germany. Herr Hans Luther, will entertain at a din- ner this evening in the embassy in honor of the Speaker of the House and Mrs. Joseph W. Byrns. The Ambassador of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Mme. Troyanovsky have issued invitations for a performance of “Uncle Vanya,” which will be given in the embassy to- night by the Columbia Players. ‘The Japanese Ambassador and Mme. Saito will be hosts at dinner this eve- ning when the guest of honor will be the Ambassador of Peru, Senor Don Manuel de Freyre y Santander. The Ambassador of Spain and Senora de Calderor have taken a box for the piano recital of Mr. Jose Tturbi, | the Spanish pianist. who will make his fourth consecutive annual appear- ance in Constitution Hall tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. The concert will be under the auspices of Mrs Dorothy Hodgkin Dorsey. Among others planning to attend the concert are Senora de Alfaro, the assistant nancial counselor of the Rumanian Legation and Mme. Dimitriu, Miss Moira Archbold, Mrs. George Hewitt Myers, Mr. William K. | Ryan, Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin, Mrs. Robert Dove, Mrs. Julia Cantacuzene Grant, Mrs. Keith Merrill, Mrs. John C. Breckinridge, Mrs Edwin M. Wat- | son, Mrs. John Bigelow, Mrs. George | Eckels, Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Fletcher, Mrs. Walter A. Freeman, Mrs. Fenry R. Gower, Mrs. Hariet M. Hurst. Mrs. A. E. Berry, Miss Alice Clapp, Mrs. | James Berrall, Mr. H. N. Moor2, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Miller, Mrs. Neal A. Melick, Miss Mabel Crissey, Mrs. F. E. Farrington, Mrs. Pierre Gaillard, Mr. and Mrs. Christian Heurich, Mrs. | Howard J. Klossner, Mrs. Ross T. Mc- Intire, Mrs. A. K. Payne, Mrs. J. Ed- | ward Chapman, Mrs. Charlotte Lippitt, | Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Bunker, Mr.| Charles Mason Remey. Mme. Sokolowska, wife of the coun- selor of the Polish embassy, has is- sued cards for a tea Tuesday after- noon from 5 to 7 o'clock in her residence on Twenty-Fourth street. The counselor of the Chilean em- bassy, Senor Don Benjamin Cohen, will return to the Capital from New York today. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Amos Fries were honor guests at a luncheon given vesterday at Brook Farm Tea House by the Newcomb Club of Bethesda. After the luncheon Maj. Fries gave a short talk on “Communism.” Ar- rangements for the luncheon were in charge of Mrs. A. Brookhouse Foster, | preisdent of the club; Mrs. B. Peyton Whalen, Mrs. M. C. McNeil, Mrs. Nor- | man Miller, Mrs. Percy Royster and Miss Mildred Budd. Col. Ernest D. Peek, U. S. A.. and Mrs. Peek have arrived in Wash- ington from Norfolk, Va., and will spend the week end at the Martinique. Col. and Mrs. P. B. Peyton have as their guest Mrs. Peyton’s sister, Mrs. Armstrong of Bristol, Tenn. | who is spending a few weeks in| ‘Washington. | Fogle-Clendenin Wedding | At St. Mary's, W. Va., Today. ! Of interest to Washington, where | the bride has made her home for five | vears, is the wedding of Miss Doris| Evelyn Clendenin, daughter of the late | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Webster Clendenin of Greensboro, N. C., and Mr. Elston Edgar Fogle of Cleveland, Ohio, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Charles E. Fogle of St. Mary's, W. Va., which took place at noon today in the Church of Christ in St. Mary's, W. Va. The bridegroom’s father performed the ceremony. The altar was banked with ferns and white flowers and the church was lighted with candles. The bride, who was given in mar- riage by her brother, Mr. Kemp C. Clendenin, of Greensboro, N. C., wore a beige suit with a honey beige fox fur collar. Her accessories were brown and she wore a shoulder bouquet of orchids. Her only attendant was her sister, Miss Nannie Belle Clendenin, of Greensboro, N. C., whose ensembie was of navy blue trimmed with light blue, | Frederick £. Brown, Mrs. Elizabeth | With which she wore a light blue hat Northrup, Mrs. Paris Brengle, Mrs. T. | A1d blue accessories and a cluster of D. Sheldon, Mrs. John T. Kennedy and | 8ardenias. The bridegroom had his St Aiite, SehaAs | brother, Mr. Frank Fogle, of St. | Mary’s, W. Va., for his best man. The Minister of Switzerland and | A Wedding breakfast was held fol- Mme. Peter entertained at a small | lowing the ceremony and immediately dinner party last evening, accompany- | 8fterward Mr. and Mrs. Fogle left ing their guests later to the reception | for Florida by motor. They will make at the Persian Legation. their home in Cleveland. Miss Julia Clendenin, Mr. John ‘The Minister of Canada. Mr. William | Clendenin, Miss Sara Curtis Harrison Duncan Herridge, was host at a lunch- and Miss Rose Walker of Washington eon today in honor of the French were among those at the wedding. Minister to Canada. M. Raymond | Mrs. Fogle attended St. Mary's College Brougere, and Mme. Brougere. | in Raleigh, N. C., and was connected THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, WILL ENTERTAIN VICE PRESIDENT OF NICARAGUA Left: Senora de De Bayle, wife of the charge d'affaires of Nica- ragua, who with her husband will entertain at a reception Tuesday in the legation in honor of the Vice President of Nicaragua, Dr. Rodolfo Espinoza. Right: Senorita Chita Arguello, who, with her mother, Senora Irma Arguello, will be hostesses at a tea, this afternoon in honor of Dr. Espinoza. MARCH 16, 1935. TWOHELDBY JURY INCAR FATALITIES Capital Transit Co. Driver and Auto Mechanic Face New Probe. Two men, one & Capital Transit Co. bus driver, were held for grand- jury action by a coroner’s jury yes- terday in connection with two recent traffic fatalities. The bus driver, Walter M. Sands, 28, 2501 Queens Chapel road north- east, was held in connection with the death of Edward Hugel, 19, of Silver Hill, Md., fatally injured early on the morning of February 15, when the bus collided with his automo- bile at Pennsylvania avenue and Eleventh street southeast. Hugel died last Monday in Casualty Hospital from a skull fracture and other in- juries received in the accident. Man, 52, Fatally Hurt. The other man held was Clarence Peterson, 35, 4320 Eighth street, an automobile mechanic, whose auto- mobile struck and fatally injured George Hilton, 52, 2110 I street, Tues- day night at Eighth and M streets southeast. Hilton died Wednesday morning at Casualty Hospital from a | | morrow on “A Wise Answer to a Fool- SERMONS ANNOUNCED “Life’'s Second Chance” Is Topic at Eldbrooke M. E. “Life’s Second Chance” will be the subject of Rev. Walter M. Michael tomorrow morning in Eldbrooke M. E. Church. At the evening service Dr. A. J. Jackson will deliver the address in a continuation of the Lenten services on “The Christian Way of Life.” The Young People's Society will meet at 7 pm. John Gilmer and Marion Michael will be in charge of devotions. They will discuss the subject: “What Is Worship?” The fourtn quarterly conference will be held Wednesday at 8 pm..| with Dr. B. W. Meeks, superintendent | of the Washington district, in charge of the devotions and the business session. | | —_— BOY SCOUTS PLAN TO ATTEND CHURCH| Troop 33 Will Go in Body to Ta- koma Park Presbyterian Service Tomorrow Night. | | Rev. R. Paul Schearrer, pastor of | the Takoma Park Presbyterian | Church, will preach at 11 am. to- ish Question,” and at 8 p.m. on “The Spirit of Scouting in the Life of Thomas A. Edison.” The Boy Scouts, Troop 33, will attend the evening wor- D. C. BILL INCREASE ASKED BY CITIZENS Glover Park Group Backs Brown’s Plea for More Police. Four resolutions passed by the Glover Park Citizens’ Association last night asked additions to the District Appropriation Bill of over $900,000. The largest item was sought in a motion asking that funds for the additional policemen sought by Maj. Brown be granted. This would re- quire about $800,000. Ten thousand dollars for a night school at Western High School was also asked The association felt that another night school was necessary, as nearly 2,000 pupils were refused admission this year because of lack of facilities. The restoration to the appropriation bill of the $87,000 to continue the character education experiment was asked in another resolution. Members cf the association believed that the money used for this experiment in the past would be wasted unless the ex- neriment was continued -long enougi to get results. The secretary was directed to write to the District committees of Con- gress in an effort to secure Govern- ment help in reducing the $6,000 ship in a body. | Francis M. Anderson, assistant to | the solicitor of the Department of skull fracture and other injuries. In the bus and automobile col- leave tomorrow for Florida, where they will spend two wecks with Miss Matheson's parents in their Wint home, Swastika, at Cocoanut Grove. Mrs. George E. Strong entertained a party of 11 ladies at luncheon yes- terday in the colonial room of the ‘Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Max Fleischer of Gor- donsville, Va.. are spending a few days at the Martinique visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Morphy of Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Kingsley. who are at the Shoreham from their home in Philadelphia, entertained at dinner in the Garbo room of the hotel last evening for a company of 16. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Johnson of Swathmore, Pa.. are at the Martinique for a short stay. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Pearson of Louisville, Ky., are staying at the Willard during their visit in this city. Washington Wellesley Club Tea This Afternoon. The Washington Wellesley Club will hold its annual tea for future fresh- men this afternoon at 4 o'clock at the American Assocation, University Women club house on I street. Pre- paratory school girls and their mothers are cordially invited to attend. Mrs. Donald Roberts, president of the club. will preside, assisted by Miss Bernice Safford. chairman of the afternoon's entertainment. Mrs. William Lock- wood of the class of 1931 will speak on “The College Beautiful.” The Newman Club of George Wash- ington University will celebrate St. Patrick’s day at its annual shamrock prom this evening at National Woman Country Club in Bethesda, Md. The club house will be appropriately deco- rated for the holiday, and tiny sham- rock favors will be given and the dancing to begin at 10 o'clock. Miss Mary E. Kunna heads the com- mittee which has completed the plans | for this affair and those assisting her are Miss Helen Chick, Miss Louise Gillis, Miss Belva Hill, Miss Dorothy | | Nelson—The Talk of the Town.” “The Hermit” and “The Old Lady Trims a Hat.” Original poems were also given by various others present. Among those attending were Mrs. Victoria Faber Stevenson, Mrs. Edna Knight sch, Mrs. D. A. McDougal, first president, Miami Branch, L. A. P. W, and National Democratic Committee- woman of Oklahoma; Madame Felian Garzia, Miss Myrtle Patterson, Mrs. Louise Hartley Wassell, Miss Agnes Winn, Miss Clara Manderschied, Mrs. Minnie Frost Rands, Mrs. William ‘W. Scott, Mrs. Inez Sheldon Tyler and Miss Margaret J. Bailey. | Mr. and Mrs. J. L. F. Manning of Nottingham, England, are at the| Dodge for a few days. Mrs. Grace K. Sensenbrenner orl Neenah, Wis., who has visited here during the Winter, has returned to Washington and taken an apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel for the Spring season. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Morrison of | Canandaigua, New York. are spend- ing a brief time at the Dodge. Army Daughters Plan Bencfit for Relief Society. The Washington Chapter of the Daughters of the United States Army will hold a benefit bridge party in the Battery Park Community Club House Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs. De Rosey Cabell will be in charge of the party. all proceeds from which will be given to the Army relief. Popular society girls wili serve as ushers at the benefit performance of “The Royal Family,” which will be staged by the Community Center De- partment in Rcosevelt Auditorium Wednesday night at 8:30 o'clock under the direction of Mr. John Mann of the Man-Tilla Players of Washing- ton. The proceeds from the play will go toward a fund for the purchase of medical therapy equipment for children at the Weightman School, where a large percentage of the crip- | pled boyvs and girls are infantile pa- | Donaldson. —Hessler-Henderson Photos. Ohio, is at the Willard while visit- ing in Washington. Judge O’Toole Arranges Party at Women’s City Club. St. Patrick’s day will be celebrated at the Women's City Club with a din- ner this evening arranged by Judge Mary O'Toole when Representative Caroline O'Day and Representative Elmer L. Ryan will be the guests of honor. Miss Sara P. Grogan, Miss Edna Sheehy and Miss Catherine L. Vaux will take part in the program to follow, and Mr. John Paul Jones will sing some Irish songs, accompanied by Mrs. Helen Cyr. Mrs. Merritt O. Chance will preside, Members and guests planning to at- tend include Mrs. Elmer L. Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. Martin F. O'Donoghue, Mrs. | James A. Purcell, Miss Virginia Breck- inridge, Maj. and Mrs. J. Garfield Riley, Dr. A. Frances Foye, Mrs, Dorothy K. Butler. Mrs. Frank G. Stewart, Mrs. William Partridge, Mrs. Ralph F. Couch, Mrs. Patrick Gallagher, Miss Julia B. Hopkins, Miss Etta H. Austin, Miss Marguerite M. Shea, Miss Lucie Bernhard, Miss Flora Schuldt, Mrs. Bertha I. Cross, Mrs. Gus A. Schuldt, Miss Jessie M. Olin, Miss S. Pearle Jencks, Miss Elsa Miss Laura E. Bullock, Miss Daphne Anderson, Mrs. Anna Farrar, Mrs. Paulina B. Sabin, Miss E. A. Hayden, Mrs. D. Hugh Mathews, Miss Dorothy E. Quinn, Miss Marion Goshorn, Mrs. H. K. Fulton, Miss Margaret Norton, Miss Fanny P. Lam- son, Mrs. Marion S. Webster, Mirs. I. B. Dodson, Miss Juiia E. Coonan, Miss Mona H. Miss Helen C. Silliman, Miss Mary B. O'Toole, Miss F. W. Layton, Mrs. William E. Wag- gener, Miss Alice Marlowe, Mrs. Nell M. Dunlap. Miss Ethel Hixson, Mrs. Mary G. Hixson, Mrs. H. M. Packard, Mrs. Eleanor B. Spencer, M Ruth Carpenter, Miss K. E. Meskill, Mrs. M. M. Hill, Mrs. A. E. Mills, Mrs. Elma R. Saul, Mrs. B. L. Owens. Mrs. A. B. Stewart, Miss Dorothy Cherry, Mrs. Ada M. Payne, Miss Mabel E. Wheel- ock, Mrs. Jessie G. Hover, Miss Mar- garet Bayly, Miss Gertrude Brooks, Miss Hazel Martman, Miss Katharine H. Wooiten, Miss Margaret L. Vail, Miss Julia D. Connor, Miss Laura Berrien. Miss Helen Smith, Mrs. ralysis victims. lision, the automobile was knocked into a light post il the center park- ing on Pennsylvania avenue south- east. During the course of the col- lision Sands, the bus driver, was thrown out of the driver's seat, it was testified. Sands testified he had put on the breaks shortly before the bus and automobile came together. Stepped Off Curbing. In the other inquest it was testi- fied Peterson was driving slowly when Hilton stepped off the curb with a raised umbrella. Raymond E. Sul- livan, an inspector for the Depart- ment of Motor Vehicles and Traffic, testified an examination of the Peter- | son machine showed the windshield was dirty, no blade on the windshield | wiper, that one of the headlights was dim and that one axle had been pushed forward, due to a broken | bolt | Peterson and a passenger in the machine with him testified that he | had wiped the windshield clear of | snow and rain shortly before the ac- cident. _— doing the most interesting work in New York in the play “Trifles.” At the end of Mrs. Karsten's second sea- soh. Heywood Broun listed her on his ‘woman’s team” of the 10 best per- formances of unstarred actresses, to- gether with the work of Fay Bainter, | Lynn Fontanne, Jane Cowl and Peggy | Wood | A number of the members of the | National Woman's Party will attend | the first night of “Field of Honor” at | State, will address the Brotherhood Bible Class at 9:45 am. The pastor will meet with his Communicants’ Class at 10 o'clock. The young peo- ple’s group meetings will be held at 7 pm. The Mother Gordon Bible Class will | meet Monday evening at the manse. Mrs. C. B. Lane will give an address on “The Passion Play of Oberammer- gau.” Rev. Mr. Schearrer will speak at the service Wednesday evening on “The Cardinal Ideas of John Calvin.” The Senior C. E. Society will pre- sent a two-act comedy, “Mr. Bob.” in the church hall Friday evening. Those in the cast are: Misses Doris Judge, Anne Wallace, Margarita Widdifield and Mrs. Elizabeth Lacey Schoonover, Lewis Sasser, Harold Seaman and Allen Stuart. b REV. EDWARD G. GOETZ WILL CONTINUE SERIES “Faith, Its Fortress,” Will Be Topic at Zion Lutheran Church | Tomorrow. [ A series of sermons on the “Chris- tian Life” is being preached during Lent at Zion Lutheran Church by Rev. Edward G. Goetz, the pastor. The subject Sunday morning will be “Faith, Its Fortress.” At the midweek services Thursday nights the sermons deal with the “Christian Life in Priaciple” and on Pierce Hall, and include Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, vice chairman; Anita Pollit- zer, Mrs. Lucia Hanna Hadley, chair- of the District branch of the party: Mrs. Lucy Cooper Shaw; Miss Mabel Van Dyke. Miss Ang:lina Cara- belli and Mrs. Clyde B. Aitchison. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Shenstone of Toronto are in Washington for sev- eral days. and are occupying a suite at the Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. Ruth D. Beals of Hopedale. Mass,, is at the Dodge for a few days. Additional patrons and patronesses for the Continenta' Revue this eve- ning in Washington Auditorium for the benefit of the sick fund of the American Federation of Government Employes include the Minister of Denmark and Mme. Wadsted, the air attache of the French Embassy and Mme. Champsaur and the military attache of the Chinese Legation and | J. Noble Hoover, Mrs. M. A. Markley, Mattingly, Miss Sara McGrann, Mr. Leonal Brennaman, Mr. Dan Crapol- | Mrs. Lyman B. Swormstedt, well jcchio, Mr. Edward Edelin, Mr. Wilbur | known in club circles of the city, and McNallan and Mr. Milton Schellen- & member of the Women’s City Club berg. | Drama_Unit. which appeared recent- {1y in the one-act play tournament in Miss Helen Stout and Mrs. Winte- | this city, will play an important roll mute William Sloan will give a lunch- | in the play. Lieut. Scott Dickson, eon to the Membership Committee of U. S. A, on duty here, also will have the Political Study Club Monday at a part in the comedy, he having The Smorgasbord. Their guests will achieved some renown in drama include Mrs. Frank M. Shortall, the since his West Point days when he president of the Political Study Club, played comedy “leads” at the-Military and Mrs. Ernest Frederick Gude, Mrs. | Academy. Due to the illness of Mr. Murray Sheehan, another leading role Mrs. Harry M. Packard, Mrs. Henry | will be assumed by Mr. Mann, in ad- dition to his directorial duties. The Chinese Minister, Mr. Sao-Ke | with the Home Owners’ Loan Corp. Alfred Sze, entertained a company of | men at dinner last evening in honor of the newly appointed American charge d'affaires to Ethiopia, Mr. George C. Hanson. . Persian Shah Honored At Legation Last Evening. The birthday anniversary of His Imperial Majesty Riza Shah Pahlavi was celebrated at a delightful dance | last evening at the Persian Legation | on Massachusetts avenue, when the | Minister and Mme. Djalal entertained | several hundred members of Wash- | ington society. The legation was gay with Spring | flowers, scarlet tulips predominaung,l Mme. Djalal wore a becoming gown of | soft gold lame, made on simple lines, | the decolletage outlined with crystals. Following the reception and dance a | buffet supper was served, ‘The large company included the viee president of Nicaragua, Senor Dr. Rodolfo Espinosa; the Attorney Gen- eral and Mrs. Homer S. Cummings, the Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Roper and their daughter, Miss Grace Roper; the Secretary of Labor, Miss Prances Perkins, and her daughter, Miss Wilson; the dean of the diplo- matic corps, His Britannic Majesty's Ambassador, Sir Ronald Lindsay; the Ambassador of Argentina and Senora de Espil, the Ambassador of Poland, Mr. Stanislaw Patek; the Ambassador of France and Mme. de Laboulaye, the Ambassador of Germany, Herr Hans Luther; the Japanese Ambas- sador and Mme. Saito, the Ambassador of Spain and Senora de Calderon, the Belgian Ambassador and Comtesse van der Straten-Ponthoz, the Ambas- sador of Cuba and his daughters, the Senoritas Patterson; Mr. Justice and Mrs. Owen J. Roberts and Miss Rob- erts, the Minister of Switzerland and Mme. Peter, the Minister of Austria and Mme. Prochnik, the Minister of Bweden and Mme. Bostrom, the Min- ister of Albania, Mr. Paik Konitza: the Minister of Czechoslovakia and Mme. Veverka, Mlle. Nella Veverka, the Minister of the Irish Pree State and Mrs. MacWhite, the Minister of Ru- mania, Mr. Charles A. Davila; the Minister of Venezuela and Senora de Arcaya. the Minister of Denmark and Mme, Wadsted, the Minister of Can- ada and Mrs. Herridge, the Minister of Panama and Senora de Alfaro, the Minister of Bolivia and Senora de | Pinot, the Chinese Minister and Mme Bse, the Minister of Portugal and Mme, de Blanchi, the Minister of Mungary and Mme. Pelenyl, the Min- ister of The Netherlands and Mme n Masrame de With the Minister of e Union of Bouth Al ol Mrs ) of Norway and P | Barbour and Mrs. Harland in Washington for five years. Mr. Fogle graduated from Marietta Col- lege in Marietta, Ohio. | Mr. and Mrs. J. Clinton Tribby will entertain at a dinner party this eve- ning at the Army-Navy Country Club in compliment to Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Benjamin Soule Gantz. Mr. and Mrs. Hugo W. Hesselback entertained a small company at dinner last evening in compliment to Mr. Egon Petri, who is giving a series of talks on piano playing in Washington. The last two talks will be given Wednesdays, March 20 and 27 at the Arts Club. Mr. Edward Woodruff Snowden of New York has come for a brief visit with his mother, Mrs. Richard Ward Snowden, in the Mendota Apartments. Mrs. Lewis Prescott Hazeltine of Bel- fast, Me., who is visiting in Washing- ton, was the guest in whose honor| Capt. Thomas H. Nixon and Miss Anne De W. Cooke entertained at dinner yes- terday at the’ Little Tea House. Miss Priscilla Wrightson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Wrightson, is visiting Miss Frances Moore in the studio apartment of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Moore, in New York. Miss Wrightson motored to New York last week with Mrs. John Christy Duncan and was her guest in her home in Pelham Manor over Sunday. Miss Wrightson and Miss Moore will come to Washington the end of next week and will stop for a day or two at Fort Dupont, visiting Miss Dorothy Stanley. Mrs. Wrightson spent Thursday at Yorktown with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Price Gabriel, the latter formerly Miss Marie Gorgas Wrightson, whose marriage took place March 2, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Kerns are among the passengers aboard the Santa Rosa, en route to San Jose de Guatemala, Mrs. Harold Barbour of Antrim, Ulster, Ireland, and Mrs. Henry Har- land of Watford, Herts, England, are at the Shoreham, to remain until Tuesday. when they will go to New York. They have come from a visit in Florida. Mrs. Barbour is a cousin of wil guests at tea at the White House Mon- day afternoon, Mrs. Walter Harrison and her daughter, Miss Nancy Harrison have e el guest for the week ond Miss l'f|‘y Matheson, who esine from New York, where —-— 0 10 & student a1 the Morton Phillips, Mrs. Lane Schofield, Mrs. J. Clinton Tribby and Mrs. M. A. ‘Winter. Mrs. Richard M. Duncan, chair- man of the Entertainment Commit- | tee of the Missouri State Society, has arranged as part of the program to ' be given at the St. Parick's dance and buffet supper at the Shoreham Hotel this evening at 9 o'clock: Be- | by members of the Alice Hunter School of Dancing “The Tarenpella,” this by a group of young girls; Miss | Hunter will appear in a Spanish | hop dance and a Russian gypsy | number. Mrs. John J. Cochran, chairman of the Reception Commit- tee, will be assisted by committee members, Mrs. Clyde Williams and | Mrs. Clarence Cannon. Hostesses will | be Mrs. John B. Gordon, Mrs. C. Houchins, Mrs. David Cain, Mrs.| Thomas J. Dickson, Mrs. Frederick | Shelton, Mrs. Marvin E. Fowler, Mrs. John S. Hornback, Mrs. O. E. Reed, Mrs. Joseph Flynn and Miss Ann Skinker. Mr. Craig Reddish will have | tickets at the door. All Missourians and their friends are invited. Miss Marguerite M. Wells, president of the National League of Women Voters, entertained at luncheon yes- terday in honor of Senora Amanda Labarca of Chile, the only woman member of an education commission of the Chilean government, now on official business in the United States. Senora Labarca, who is a teacher in the Teachers’ College of the Univer- sity of Chile and the wife of a former | mayor of Santiago, attended the Pan-American Conference of Women arranged by the League of Women voters in 1922 at Baltimore. The other guests at luncheon in- cluded Mrs. Harris T. Baldwin, vice president of the National League, and Miss Gladys Harrison, Mrs. Anne Hartwell Johnstone and Miss Kathe- rine Frederic. _— | Mr. and Mrs. George D. Horning | safled from New York today on the Grace liner Santa Rosa on a cruise to San Prancisco. They will visit en route Colombia, Panama, El Salva- dor, Guatemala and Mexico. Mrs. Clyde Robertson of New York City, poet and playwright, who, with Mr. Robertson, is in Washington after having recently put on her latest play in New York, was entertained Thurs- day evening by Mrs. Victoria Faber Stevenson, national president, League | | { | Interest in the approaching benefit | performance of this satire on one of America’s most famous the- atrical families, promises a large! and brilliant audience Wednesday | night. For the convenience of the public, tickets have been placed on sale at the Willard Ticket Bureau, the Washington Hotel newsstand, the American Automobile Association | sides the floor show there will be given | headquarters, the T. Arthur Smith | Ticket Bureau and the Franklin Ad- ministration Building. Tickets may | also be had from Mrs. Leigh Nettle- ton and Mrs. M. Joseph Hanley of the | Weightman School Parent-Teacher Association, Mrs. Ernest Grant of the Tuberculesis Association, Mr. C. Marshall Finnan of the Kiwanis Club and others who are co-operating in | the benefit. | Miss Lillian Boswell, daughter of | Mr. I. W. Boswell of Balston, Va., will | be a guest at the Midwinter dance | to be given by the German Club of Fredericksburg State Teachers Col- | lege this evening. Seventy-five | couples are planning to attend the dance, which will be held in the north unit of Seacobeck Hall. Miss Frances Whaley, with Mr. Bill Bradshaw of Fredericksburg, Va., will lead the figure, which will be | composed of the 35 German Club members with their escorts. After | the dance, German Club girls will | be hostesses at a buffet supper in | the south unit of Seacobeck Hall. The color scheme and refreshments will be in green and white to carry out a St. Patrick’s day theme. ‘The German Club is an organiza- tion composed of sophomores, juniors and seniors, who have attended two dances sponsored by the club and | who are interested in promoting social | activities involving the entertainment | of visiting young men invited to participate in such activities. | Mr. and Mrs. William Stork, Jr. of New York City, are at the Shore- ham for several weeks to visit Mrs. Stork's mother, Mrs. Elonzo Tyner, | and Miss Peggy Tynmer. 1 Mrs. W. C. Pollock of Cleveland, of American Pen l'u-wn. mlur;‘l&“ | ertson s tional ol n the lu-u'?:nd "~ m=n of the New York Oty branech, During the eves Mo, vl George G. Holley, Mrs. L. H. Cake, Mrs. William B. Cowin, Miss E. Ken- sett Vail, Miss Sarah K. Cushing, Mrs. Carl Casey, Mrs. Don A. Sanford, Mrs. Thomas Coook, Miss Dolly M. Stone, Mrs. Mary B. Ziegler, Miss Alice C. Munsey, Miss Elizabeth J. Raymond, Miss Helen G. O'Neill and Mrs. Wil- liam R. Waiton. ‘The North Carolina Societv of Washington will mark the advent of the Spring season with a dance and card party in the west ball room of the Shoreham Hotel Monday evening at 9 o'clock. The annual meeting will be held Thursday evening, April 18, at 9 o'clock in the Shoreham Hotel and will con- sist of a reception and dance in honor of the D. A. R. delegation from North Carolina. Mrs. W. H. Belk, State regent, of Charlotte, N. C,, will head the delegation. Also election of officers for 1935-36 and annual reports. Membership cards and guest tickets may be had from the secretary-treas- urer or at the door on the evening of the party. Lieut. Comdr. Ovid C. Foote, M. C., U. 8. N, is president, and Miss Jane Elizabeth Newton, the Chastleton Hotel, is secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Elinor Cox Karsten, who is playing one of the leading roles in “Field of Honor,” the new play by Mrs, James M. Souby, which the Pierce Hall Players will present March 27 and 28, is not only an actress, out a | lawyer, having been admitted to the | bar in the State of Indiana. She also | took part in the fight for woman suf- | frage, and when in Washington in 1917 was active with the National Woman's Party and served in the picket line then before the White House. Mrs. Karsten went to New York, where she played with the origi- nal Washington Square Players, which | became the Theater Guild, and was |+ singled out by Margaret Anglin a: Mme. Tsi-Ming Chow. Representative Isabella Greenway with members of the Arizona State Society are expected to attend the party and Representative and Mrs Hamilton ¥ish, jr., also are among the patronesses. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Daniels of Colo- rado Springs, Colo., are at the Willard for a short stay in Washington. Al Sunday mornings with the “Christian Life in Practice.” The subjects are as follows: March 21, “The Creed, Its ‘»cmfession": April 4 and 11, “The Commandments, Its Code™: April 18, “The Communion, Its Comfort (Holy Communion)”; April 19, “The Cross, Its Cornerstone.” Sundays at 11 am.: March 17 “Faith, Its Fortress”; March 24, “Un- ' compromising Convictions”; March 31, “Compassion for the Crowd":; April 7. “Loyal to Life": April 14, “Courage in a Crisis”; April 21, holy communion, “Resurrection, Its Reward.” An illustrated lecture on “The Pas- sion Play” will be given March 28 by Page McK. Etchison, religious director of the Y. M. C. A. R Blind Enjoy Smoking. ‘The old belief that seeing the smoke is essential to the enjoyment of to- bacco has been disproved by a census taken at blind institutions in England. t St. Dunstan’s, famous hostel for blind soldiers, 95 per cent of the in- mates smoke. found at other blind institutions. some of them all the inmates are smokers. | Similar results were | In Offering Ent | deficit of Children's Hospital. A program of community singing followed the business meeting. CULTURE WEEK PLANNED West Washington Baptist Pastor to Preach in Morning. Rev. C. B. Austin, pastor of the ‘West. Washington Baptist Church, will preach tomorrow at 11 o'clock on “God Offers a Partnership.” Dr. Chesteen Smith, pastor of the Metro- politan Memorial M. E. Church, will be the guest preacher at 8 pm. His subject will be “The Gospel as a Hid= den Force.” The pastor will speak at the mid- week service Thursday evening on “The Main Task of the Church.” Church culture week will be ob- served in the church March 31 to April 5, directed by Rev. Perry L. Mitchell, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Clarendon, Va. The choir will render special music at both services March 24, Man Two-Sided Tnside. With his heart, stomach and spleen on the right side and his liver on the left, a man in Milan, Italy, apparently is enjoying gocd health in spite of his internal complications. This is the re- port just submitted to the Lombard section of the Medical Academy, which adds that the man never has suffered any inconvenience and served his term in the army without any sickness. An extra year’s use of your fur coat would be worth many times the cost of storage in the SE- CURITY STORAGE COM- PANY'S cold storage vaults, and it may be that cold storage with proper cleaning will preserve your furs for an extra year. Rates for certified cold storage at the SECURITY STORAGE COMPANY be- gin at $2, for the season. Trunks and suitcases of clothing, $3 to $9. A safe depository for 45 years at 1140 15th Street. ire Stock of Furniture—Very Substantial $3.00 Philadelphia $2.75 Wilmington $3.00 Chester Lv. 8.00 a.m. only BALTIMORE $1.25 Saturdays and Sundays $1.50 Daily—Good for 3 days $5.00 Parkersburg $4.50 Clarksburg $4.00 Grafton Saturday, Mar. 16, Leave 11:06 p.m. $5.65 New York Each Way Every Night Philadelphia $3.40 Wilmington $2.72 Air Conditioned Reclining Suszauhn .. pen Union Station 10 p.m. Lv. Every Week End Round trip fares REDUCED ONE-THIRD Ly. from Friday noon to Sund Return anytime up to Monday For Details Ask Agents or Phone Dist. 3300—Nat. 7370 ALTIMORE & OHIO Al SUNDAY DINNER At the Harrington Sunday Dinner excels. A flow of finest food issues from the capable chef’s cupboard. Five courses of succulent, sumptuous selec- tions will appear for each diner. This “Dinner of the Week” is served amid downtown hotel finery, with your choice of claret or sauterne inc with your dinner for— Reductions Through March and April Dining Room—Bed Room— Living Room Furniture All Small Pieces Are Reduced Many OIld Poster Beds Chairs and Below Cost No C. O. D.s—No Exchanges—All Sales Final D. S. POOL, Inc., 729 ELEVENTH St. TG T T IMPORTANT AUCTION SALE By Catalogue A Collec tion of Antique and Period Furniture 100 Oriental Rugs and Carpets Fabrics, Paintings, From Garbe AN IMPORTANT Exhi GARBER G From Several Notable Estates, With Additions Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday March 19th, 20th, 21st, 22d AT 2 P.M. DALLY AND FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 22, AT 8 Silver, Books, Etc. r Galleries SALE OF RUGS n Saturday, March 16th, and Monday, 18th ALLERIES Paul G. Garber, Auctioneer 1210 18th Street at Connecticut Ave. Catalogue on fquest