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SOCIETY. Mr. and Mrs. Benton Entertain at Dinner In Chevy Chase Home! Miss Jean Benton Is Host- ess to Classmfltes at Tea. Mrs. peacock a“d Son Return From Visit. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Benton were | hosts at a beautifully appointed din-; ner party followed by bridge last | evening. The guests were Mr. and| Mrs. George O. Sutton, Mr. and| Mrs. John I. Lauritzen, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Fuller, Dr. and Mrs. James H. Defandorf, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. L. Paul | Winings and Mr. and Mrs. Adrian D. Waring. Miss Jean Benton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Benton, was hostess to a company of 25 at a tea Friday afternoon. Miss Benton is a student of the National Cathedral School for Girls. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Schuyler are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son on St. Patrick’s day. Mrs. James Craig Peacock, with her son, Jack Peacock, have returned by motor from a visit in New York City. Mrs. Sanford Bates came home | yesterday from a trip to Winchester, | Mass,, where she was the guest of her | brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Mr. | and Mrs. Harold Bates Miss Betty Bull arrived Wednes- | day from Smith College to spend her Spring vacation with her parents, | Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Bull | Mr. and Mrs. William B. Angle of | Shippensburg, Pa., were guests for | several days of Mr. and Mrs. Ben| Temple Webster | Mrs. Judson W. Jacobs entertained a company of eight at luncheon and bridge Tuesday at the Columbia | Country Club. | Mrs. Wiliam Crayeroft Schofield en- tertained at luncheon and bridge Saturday, March 16, in her home, | Sulgrave Manor. in honor of the birthday anniversary of her mother, Mrs. William T. Pollard. The other | guests were Mrs. Robert Lee Russell, Mrs. Willlam H. Pace. Mrs. Arthur B. Crane, Mrs. Norman E. Bull, Mrs John Anderson Schofield. Miss Mar- garet B. Russell. Mrs. Philip Tuttle Williams, Miss Eva Wellesley Cum- | mins, Mrs. Frank F. Rogers and Mrs. Herbert Blair Hanger. Mrs. Roger Whiteford, with her son, Joseph Whiteford, left vesterday | with Mr. E. Burton Corning and Mrs. Frank Lord to spend a week on Mrs. Whiteford's farm at White- ford. Md. Mr. John sser and his son, Mr. | Philip Sasser of Princeton, W. Va,, and his d hter. Miss Nancy Sasser of New York City. were week end | guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edward | Chambers Sasser. Mr. and Mvs. | Sasser entertained at a supper party for Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Star of Mancus, Colo.. and Mr. and Mrs. J. Star of Philadelphia Sunday evening, March 17 [ Lieut. and Mrs. Elmer Stoffel and | Miss Betty Lee Stoffel of Norfolk were week end guests of Dr. and Mrs. Clem C. Williams. Dr. and Mrs.| ‘Williams were hosts at a supper party Sunday evening, March 17, for their | guests. Among others at the party | were Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Kneiff | McGinnis, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wain- | wright and Mr. and Mrs. Everett | Dean Kern. | Mrs. Custis Lee Hall entertained at | a party Tuesday in honor of the sixth | birthday anniversary of her daughter | Nancy Preston bered 12. Comdr. and Mrs. Jean Hawley were hosts at dinner Monday evening in compliment to Mrs. B. K. Kellog of London. England. and Miss Madeline Bogley of Watertown, N. Y Miss Helen Wolcott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Wolcott; Miss Betty Cocke, the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Henry Teller Cocke, and Miss Genevieve Marsh, daughter of Mrs Charles Marsh and the late Mr. Marsh, have arrived from Sweet Briar College to spend their Spring vaca- tion with their parents. Mrs. Donald V. Hunter. with her son Charles Michael. left Thursday for Miami, Fla., where they will spend a fortnight. Mrs. Philip Gott will entertain at supper and bridge tomorrow evening. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert R. Snoke mo- tored to Annville, Pa.. to spend the week end with Mrs. Snoke's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Galatin. Mrs. Galatin will return with her daughter for a | visit. Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Smead were hosts at a supper party Sunday evening, March 17, in their home in | celebration of their wedding anni- | versary. Covers were laid for 10. Miss Isabelle Collins was hostess at gupper and bridge Tuesday evening. Mrs. Robert Reeder entertained Mrs. Foster Morrell, Mrs. Herman Stabler and Mrs. John De Wolf Northrop at | luncheon and bridge Thursday. | Mrs. Percy Wilson Phillips enter- tained at luncheon followed by bridge ‘Tuesday, when her guests were Mrs. James F. Davidson, Mrs. Eugene An- derson, Mrs. Arthur Henderson, Mrs. F. F. Hanley, Mrs. R. A. Lacey, Mrs. | H. G. Thielscher and Mrs. John J. Kennedy. | Mrs. Thomas R. Kurtz of New York City is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. | ‘William Guthrie. | Mr. and Mrs. E. Taylor Chewning | were hosts at dinner followed by bridge Tuesday evening. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. J. Alan Maphis, | ton, Mr. | ward Karrick Morris. | constructive progress in China, such PROMINENT IN ARRANGEMENTS FOR MI-CAREME BALL OF NEWSPAPER WOMEN Mr. and Mrs. Donald Reed MacLeod and Mr. and Mrs. MacLeod Maurice. | Mrs. John De Wolf Northrup gave | a beautifully appointed lunch party followed by bridge Twesday, the guests | including Mrs. George N. Brown, Mrs. Charles Detmer, Mrs. William | Smith, Mrs. Lewis Skelton, Mrs. E. C. Graham, Mrs. Andrew Foggo, Mrs. Margaret Craig. Mrs. Charles C. Cole, Mrs. Verna Wilson, Mrs. Robert Cheatham, Mrs. William Imlay, Mrs. Fred Tew, Mrs. Herman Stabler, Mrs. Fulton Gordon, jr. and Mrs. Fred Hessick. | Mr. and Mrs. Charles \Nam\\nghl‘ will be hosts to a company of 12 at a | buffet supper at the Columbia Coun- try Club this evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baker enter- tained a buffet supper followed by | bridge Friday evening when _their | guests included Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Aliwine, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bur- | and Mrs. Charles Wain- wright. Mr. and Mrs. Lauriston Han- nah, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Taylor | and Mrs. Arthur Surguy. | Miss Patsy Maphis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Alan Maphis, enter- tained Friday at a party for a group of her classmates. The guests num- bered 16. Mrs. Archibald McLachlan enter- | tained at luncheon followed by bridge | | Tuesday at the Columbia Country | Club. Her guests were Mrs. Clyde | Garrett, Mrs. Daniel Walser, Mrs. | Marc G. Phillips, Mrs. William Hufli 5 ~ | Wagner, Mrs. Albert Fenderson. Mrs. | success The guests nUmM-| pror Gummins, Mrs. Curtis Walker | Speel, Mme. Cantacuzene-Grant, Mrs. and Mrs. William Rogers, 2nd. | Miss Ruth Doyle arrived Tuesday | from Smith College to spend her Spring vacation with her parents, Mr and Mrs. Harold E. Doyle. i . William Wood Smith will en- | in at luncheon and bridge Wed- nesday. Miss C. M. Syvret of Wilson Col- iege, Chambersburg, Pa., is the week | end guest of her cousin, Mr. .and | Mrs. George Winchester Stone. Mrs. R. B. Clayton, with her son, Mr. Alexander Clayton. who spent the Winter with her daughter, Miss Alice | Clayton, in New Mexico, Teturned | Monday by motor. Mrs. G. A. Birch is back from a visit to her son and daughter-in-law, | Mr. and Mrs. Francis Birch in Cam- ridge, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Steward of Mer- iden, Conn., have been spending sev- eral days in Chevy Chase, where they formerly lived. Mrs. Henry Lincoln Morris of South | Lee, Mass., is the guest of her son and | daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Miss Janet Richards To Lecture Tomorrow; Miss Janet Kichards, in response to many requests of her patrons, will| give one extra lecture tomorrow morn- | in at 11 o'clock at the Willard Hotel. | The review of “Affairs Political and | International” will include an analy- sis of the present status of the Hitler crisis and the resultant “war fear” in all European capitals; the continued legislative deadlock in Congress and the President’s resistance to inflation; the cause and menace of recurrent “dust storms”; and the surprising as extensive road building, bridge and railroad construction, etc. Brief re- views of two interesting new books, just from the press, will also be given. 1303 F Street Triumph in a new THREE-PIECE TAILLEUR Of soft, light tweed in that expensive- looking maize . . . beautifully cut and easy to wear. 3975 Charge Accounts Invited THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MARCH 24, 1935—PART THREE. Center: Mrs.Claude A. Swanson, who will be in the receiving line at the costume ball of the Newspaper Women’s Club, Satur- day evening, March 30, at the Willard, for the benefit of the heating plant fund of Children’s Hospital and the fellowskip fund of the club. Mrs. Cordell Hull, wife of the Secretary of State, will head the line. Upper left: Mrs. Harold L. Ickes, wife of the Secretary of the Interior, another of the cabinet group who will receive at the gala Mi-Careme fete of the newspaper women. Lower: Mrs. Eliphalet Andrews, one of the limited number of associate members of the cdlub, who is serving on the Ball Committee for the event. Upper right: Representative Edith Nourse Rogers, associate | member of the club, who is a member of the Ball Committee. E —Underwood Photos. | Republican Club Party Will Be Held Tomorrow The card party to be given by the National Capital Republican Club in the club house at Sixteenth street and Scott Circle tomorrow afternoon and evening is expected to be well attended. Among those making reservations or contributing to make the party a are Mrs. Virginia White Arthur H. Vandenberg, Mrs. Jesse H. Metcalf, Mrs. W. Warren Barbour, Mrs. Robert Low Bacon, Mrs. Hamilton Fish, jr., Mrs. Bertrand H. Snell, Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, Mrs. James E. Watson, Mrs. Robert H. Lucas, Mrs. William Fitch Kelley, Mrs. Jacob Leander Loose, Mrs. Thomas W Phillips, jr. Mrs. Douglas P. Birnie, Mrs. Strickland Gillilan, Mrs. S. Wallace Dempsey, Mrs. Alden Smoot, rs. William H. Hannay, Mrs. James . Parker, Mrs. Amos A. Fries, Mrs. E. C. Brandenburg, Mrs. Edward A. Keys, Mrs. Charles J. Williamson, Mrs. Albert A. Sargent, Miss Daisy Prentice, Mrs. Warren J. Haines, Mrs. Karl D. Williams, Mrs. Lee N. Nettle- ton, Mrs. Samuel J. Prescott, Mrs. John J. Hasley, Mrs. George W. Trowbridge, Miss Mary R. Baker, Mrs. Bielefeldt, Mrs. G. Louis Weller, Mrs. Frank T. Mitchell, Mrs. J. J. Mack, Mrs. E. A. Chase, Mrs. William D. West, Mrs. Elonzo Tyner, Mrs. Carl A. Droop, Mrs. Humphrey, Miss Kate Weaver, Mrs, J. Wellen Hays, Mrs. Charles Alger, Mrs. K. Wilson, Mrs. J. M. Corkran, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Bishop Perkins Hill, Mrs. Edward E. Colladay, Mrs. Thomas Littlepage, jr., Mrs. David Colladay, Mrs. William H. Mondell, Mrs. Harold A. Mock, Mrs. L. L. Souft, Mrs. Charles Bryant, Miss Young, Miss J. Young, Mrs. R. F. Jackson, Mrs. Ralph Davis, Mrs. Harry Semmes, Mrs. Bruce Baird, Mrs. Francis Battelle, Mrs. H. L. Larsen, Mrs. Earl Venable, Mrs. Robert H. McNeill, Mrs. Harry E. Hull, Mrs. Frank Murphy, Mrs. L. A. Morrison, Mrs. Norman Hough, Mrs. L. B. ODonnell, Mrs. Arthur J. We have e ing appearance! Come FOOT HEALTH 523 11th GROUND GRIPPER PHYSICAL CULTURE William E. | Important Notice FOOT COMFORT SERVICE with the famous CANTILEVER SHOES same experienced manufacturers who make our other shoes, these shoes have been approved by doctors everywhere for their many in-built com- fort features. And YOU will approve their pleas- pert fit you with a type for YOUR foot! will put the -joy of Spring in your step! STACH'S for men, women & children | Seaton, Mrs. E. H. Wheelwright, Mrs. | | Aldis B. Browne, Mrs. A. M. Me- | Lachlen, Mrs. Mary A. Forness, Mrs. | James T. Morris, Mrs. Charles H. Pardoe. Mrs. J. H. Branson, Mrs. | Thomas Jefferson Pyle, Mrs. Henry | Albers, Mrs. Frank W. Mahin, Mrs. | P. William Loetsch, Mrs. Charles D. | Keefer, Mrs. T. Lincoln Townsend. | Mrs. George Tarbell, Miss Erva | Pardoe, Mrs. Horace Fulton, Mrs. B. R. Fetty, Mrs. Brandt Roberts, Mrs. Edward L. Dyer, Mrs. E. E. Rolph, Mrs., Frisbey G. Eiker, Miss Alice Whitaker, Mrs. F. H. Morhart, Mrs. George H. Snyder, Mrs. John W. | Prizzell, Miss Etta H. Austin, Mrs. | Fred Drew, Mrs. Charles E. Haupt, | | Mre. H. Robinette Perry, Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Edward D. Stalfort, Mrs. M. A. Jaques, Miss Mate H. Lewis, Mrs. Herbert H. Hall and Miss Edna M. Patton, chairman of the | | entertainment committee. | Refreshments and a prize will be | provided for each table. Reservations | may be made at the club office. Woman's Club to Give Musical Tea™ Tomorrow | Something different in the way of | teas and tea parties will be given to- | morrow afternoon in the home of Mrs. John J. Underwood, when the music section of the Woman’s Club of Chevy Chase will hold a “musical tea.” The | feature of the program will be 8 song | recital by Miss Frances Bass Wilson, mezzo soprano, who will include in her program compositions by Delibes, Franz, Wolf, Tchaikowsky, Salter and Rachmaninoff. On the program also will be Miss Betty Ann Fast, who will play Chopin’s “Prelude in C Minor.” Bach's “Prelude in C” from “Well- Templed Clavichord,” and the Polish dance by Scharwenka. Others on the program will be Miss Mildred Himmel- | farb, who will read from the quarrel | scene from Sheridan’s “School for Scandal,” and Miss Eva Whitford Lovette, who will act as accompanist. ‘The program is in charge of Mrs. Arthur H. Fast, who will be assisted by Mrs. J. Lester Brooks. The hostess for the afternoon will be Mrs. Henry C. Young. nlarged our NOW—more than ever before we are equip- ped to offer you com- plete and lasting foot comfort! Because we have added the famous CANTILEVER line of shoes to our Ground Gripper, Physical Cul- ture and Dr. Kahler Shoes. Made by the in today—and let an ex- They HEADQUARTERS St. N.W. ® CANTILEVER e DR. KAHLER SHOES National President, L. A, |vention chairman, and Miss May Cornell Stoiber, hostess chairman o.ndj P.W. Leaving for Florida president of the Miama branch, have | The Miami branch of the National | arranged the progrem in such a way | League of American Pen Women, to- | that there will be time to see the many gether with other branches in Florida, | interesting places around Miami. The | will entertain the delegates and visit- | national president, Mrs. Victoria | ing members during the Mid-adminis- | Faber Stevenson, will preside af tration Congress which will be held at | the annual board meeting to be held the Miami Biltmore Hotel, Coral|Monday, April 1. A delegation of Gables. Fla., from March 30 through | Washington Pen Women will leave for April 5. Miss Lela B. Norman, con- | Florida during the coming week. —with newer fashions for Spring Announcing . . . “W m;ingum‘n o BROTHERS Shops 1213 F St 1108 Conn. Ave. 1s Poor Without Musical Training” THE NEW “SHERBOROUGH” MODEL GULBRANSEN BABY GRAND %450 1S A PIANO OF DISTINCTIVE QUALITY A charming, graceful piano for home use. Super-scale construction yields a lovely, mellow tone absolutely free from any harshness. Its substantial construction is rare in a piano so moderately priced. The felt hammers are of real wool; genuine ivory keys; copper- wound bass strings. Length ¢ ft. 6% in. By Convenient Monthly Payments If Desired it e EXCLUSIVE WASHINGTON DISTRIBUTORS E. F. Droop & Sons Co., 1300 G Steinway and other leading Pianos | “LA MAIZON de TROU/SEAU" i SOCIETY. CONNECTICUT AVE. AT M New, Washable " SPRING and SUMMER FROCKS Linen, gingham, pique, seersucker . .. one and two plece styles . . . superbly tailored and refreshingly cool as an iced drink! Styles for street and active sports. Sizes 14 to 20 and 38 to 44. $3.95 & $5.95 young Spring || dresses suits priced upward 816 95. Furred or All Fur on NEW Coats 9.75 Detachable capes, trimmed vith kidskin, silver foxtails nd wolf . . . on coats of fine Juillard and Botany woolens. A fashion that gives you the luxury of a fur-trimmed coat for early Spring and a smart un- trimmed coat for later on. Some with all-fur capes. Black, navy, dawn. gray. beige and runko. Sizes 14 to 20. COATS—SECOND FLOOR S RBAINTE v M BENLptp s Costume Ensembles Full-Length Wool Coat and Pure Dye Silk Print Dress 6.95 Solve your Spring clothes problem with one of these swanky checked wool coats, over a pure-dye silk frock in a splashy white print. The coat collar ends in a point in back. . .the -— — “ gathered raglan sleeves are wide and smart! Black or brown. Sizes 14 to 20. NEW DRESS SHOP—THIRD FLOOR. \ .