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A-10 » SOCIETY. Treasury Chief Takes Recreation on Farm With Visit Mrs. Swanson Preparing for Vacation -Stay in Virginia—Sovi Cottage Near Annapolis. HE Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Henry Morgenthau, jr., is with Mrs. Morgenthau and their children at their farm at Fishkill, N. Y. He will prob- ably return to Washington the first of the week. The Secretary of War and Mrs. George H. Dern were among the guests at the luncheon the former Secretary of War and Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley gave today at their country home, Bel- mont, near Leesburg, preceding the Loudoun Hunt Horse Show, which is taking place this afternoon. With the Secretary and Mrs. Dern are their daughters, Mrs. Harry Baxter and Miss Betsy Dern. Mrs. Claude A. Swanson, wife of | the Secretary of the Navy, will leave Washington next Friday to spend about 10 days in Virginia. The Ambassador of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Mme. ‘Troyanovsky have leased a cottage on South River, near Annapolis, Md., for the Summer. They plan to move to the cottage within a week. The Chinese Minister and Mme. Sze entertained a company of 12 at lunch- eon yesterday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Austin Carr of Durham, N. C. Mrs. Copeland, wife of Senator Royal S. Copeland, will leave tomor- row for her home at Suffern, N. Y. Senator and Mrs. Copeland enter- tained a small company at dinner last evening on the Shoreham Terrace. Porter, daughters of Interstate Com- merce Commissioner and Mrs. Claude Rodman Porter, will entertain at tea tomorrow in their apartment at 2101 Connecticut avenue in honor of Miss | Prances Douglass, whose wedding will take place Saturday, June 8. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Henry Dorsey | Munnikhuysen closed their apart- ment at the Wardman Park Hotel today and went to their country home, Stockdale, at Belair, Md., for the Summer. Mrs. Richard Carter Kenney, Mrs. Munnikhuysen’s daughter, who until her marriage several weeks ago was to New York iet Envoy Leases Miss Bettr Ainsworth Burke. is spending the Summer with Mr. Ken- ney at Gibson Island, Md. Mrs. Considine, wife of Maj..John A. Considine, was hostess at luncheon at the Shoreham yesterday. Comdr. and Mrs. Mark St. Clair Ellis, who have made their home in Paris for 13 years, are spending part of the Spring season in Washington at the Mayflower. They plan to visit in the West before returning to | Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Mullen en- | tertained a company of 12 guests at dinner in the ball room at the Shore- ham last evening. Dr. Ernst Correll of American Uni- versity had as guests at the Ameri- can University annual dinner at the Mayflower last night Signor Eugenio Bonardelli of the Italian Embassy, the agricultural attache of the Span- ish Embassy and Senora de Eche- garay, Dr. and Mrs. Hugo Einstein, Miss Ruth Green, Mrs. Rudolph von Huhn, Dr. and Mrs. Oscar Kieslling, | Dr. Alice Kieslling, the third secre- | tary of the German Embassy and | Frau Struve. t Mrs. Thomas J. Ryder entertained |a company of young people for her daughter Nancy yesterday in cele- | bration of the latter's 12th birthday anniversary. Mr. and Mrs rles Schwarts gave | & dinner party at the Shoreham last | evening in honor of Mrs. Elias Gold- ensky of Philadelphia, who is visiting them. Guests were close relatives of | the hosts. | Mrs. Paul Koenig was hostess at luncheon and cards at her home in Clarendon yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Roy Knox was given a surprise party Thursday evening in the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Inbody in Cherrydale, Va., the occasion being her birthday anniversary. The party was an outdoor one, with about 20 guests, | entertained on the lovely and spacious grounds., where supper was served in picnic style. Mitchell-Moyer Wedding Day Set Miss Josephine Thornbury Moyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Leigh Moyer of Plas Mawr. at Merion, Pa., has selected Friday, June 28, as the date for her marriage to Mr. Harry Dorsay Mitchell, son of Dr. and Mrs. | James F. Mitchell of Washington. ‘The ceremony will be performed at 4 o'clock, in the home of the bride’s parents, and a reception for members of the immediate families and inti- mate friends will follow. Canadian Diplomat Married in Ottawa One of Washington’s most popular diplomats will be married in Ottawa today, when Miss Mary Frances Mo- loney, daughter of Lieut. Col. Paul Joseph Moloney of the Glengarry Highlanders and Mrs. Moloney, be- comes the bride of Mr. Merchant Ma- honey, first secretary of the Canadian Legation. ‘The marriage will take place in the Church of the Blessed Sacrament and after a wedding trip Mr. Mahoney and his bride will come to Washing- tcn and will be at home at 3510 Gar- field street. The bride of today is preatly interested in political and philanthropic aciivities. She was edu- | cated at the Loretto Abbey in To- ronto. Miss Szechenyi to | Wed a Viscount| = e | —_— Georgia Women Plan| Of unusual interest in diplomatic} | and smart residential societ; is the Dutch Treat Lunch word of the engagement of Miss _— Gladys Szechenyi, daughter of the Hungarian Minister to London and Countess Szechenyi, to Viscount Maid- stone. Miss Szechenyi’s father formerly ‘was Hungarian Minister to this coun- try and her mother is the former Miss Gladys Vanderbilt, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vander- bilt of New York. | The future bride made her debut in Washington and took a prominent part in the younger set. She is a niece of Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney snd Brig. Gen. Cornelius Vanderbilt, and the granddaughter of Count Emerich Szechenyi, who for many years was Austro-Hungarian Ambas- sador at Berlin. Christopher Guy Heneage Pinch- Hatton, Viscount Maidstone, is the son of Sir Guy Montagu George Finch- Hatton, fourteenth Earl of Winchilsea and Earl of Nottingham, and the Countess of Winchelsea, the former Miss Margaretta Drexel, only daugh- ter of the late Anthony J. Drexel, Philadelphia banker and philanthro- pist. On the paternal side he is a great-grandson of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry John Codrington, K. C. B. He is a brother of Lady Daphne Finch-Hatton, whose engagement to Mr. Whitney Straight of London and New York was recently announced, and of Lady Henrietta Diana Juanita Finch-Hatton. Sonnysayings. |St. Agnes Seniors | Entertain at Dance| More than 50 young people will | dance at the Belle Haven Country | Club tonight from 10 to 2 o'clock at | "the invitation of the 12 girls of the | | senior class of St. Agnes School. The 12 young hostesses are Miss | | Louise Backus, Miss Violett Smith, | Miss Margaret Rust, Miss Margaret | Roblee, Miss Mary Roblee, Miss Ruth | Dove, Miss Natalie Schoonmaker, Miss Mary Brookfield, Miss Barbara Crewe, Miss Anna Bryant Hill, Miss Anne Talbott and Miss Virginia Tucker. Several young men of Alexandria | chosen to be ushers for the dance are | Mr. William Smith, head usher: Mr. Robert Nelson Rust, Mr. William | | Backus, Mr. William McGowan, Mr.| Edward Smith, Mr. Edward Alfriend, Mr. Hewitt Abram and Mr. Harrie | White. They will bear buttonnieres [ of white carnations. Chaperones will include Mrs. Helen | Arny Macan, Maj. and Mrs. Walter Du Bois Brookings, Dr. and Mrs. George Vest, the Rev. and Mrs. Wil- liam B. McIlwaine, Dr. and Mrs. Llewellyn Powell, Miss Mary Lindsey, Miss Martha Sinclair, Dr. and Mrs. T. B. Cochran, Mrs. Eliphalet Andrews and Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Burke. The Kay Francis Orchestra will play for the dance. The hostesses and their escorts will be dinner guests at the home of Judge and Mrs. Howard Smith in Rosemont at 7:30 o'clock. Miss Margaret Rust will entertain the group at an inter- mission party at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nelson Rust, in Braddock. | | | The sixth luncheon of the series of Dutch treat luncheons being sponso; by the ladies of the Georgia State So- ciety, will be held at Nunnaly’s on F street Wednesday at 12:30 o’clock. All members of the Georgia State Society and other Georgia ladies are invited to be present. These luncheons present an opportunity for Georgia women in Washington to become acquainted with other women from Georgia, and are proving very popular. At the last luncheon there were present between 45 and 50 ladies and it was decided to hold the luncheons for a while longer. Nature’s BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. OU can imagine how fierce this beetle must look to its neigh- bors. The name seems most fitting, at least for the males, and these beetles have a cousin in the West Indies that is more than twice the size of our “native son.” looking horns. | have little humps on their heads, It may be that at one time, they, too, had horns and a blond mustache. - The adult male will measure about 3% inches if his legs are spread His body is proad and THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1935 Prominent in Nearby Virginia Mrs. Daniel L. Detwiler with her two attractive children, Mary Wells and Richard. Dr. and Mrs. Detwiler and their little family make their home in Herndon, Va. Maryland and D. C. Brides of Today| Among the first in the parade of June brides was Miss Dorothea Wildt | Gwinn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester A. Gwinn of Chevy Chase, Md., whose marriage to Mr. Joseph Matley Feigley, jr. son of Mr. and | | Mrs. Joseph M. Feigley, took plm[ in the home of the bride’'s parents, at 104 Virgilia street, at 10 o'clock this morning, the Rev. Arlington A. Mec- Callum officiating. Mrs. Paul Mo- ! berly, pianist, played the wedding | music. The bride was given in marriage by her father and chose for the occasion a peach color angel skin silk fash- ioned with a long, full length jacket of lace I the same color, with puff sleeves at the top which fitted closely from the elbow down, and a standing collar. She carried a bouquet of tea roses and lilies of the valley. The maid of honor was the bride’s | Miss Helen Lucile | youngest sister, Gwinn, whose gown was of aqua- marine chiffon, in full length, de- signed with flowing sleeves. The gown was trimmed in crystal buttons, and Miss Gwinn carried an arm | Dotkquet of Eremics; roses Little Mary | holding the application for the license | Rose Herman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herman of Chevy Chase, was flower girl, and wore a long white net frock trimmed with ruffles. She carried garden roses. The bride- groom had as his best man Mr. George Thomas Grade. A breakfast at 11 o'clock followed the ceremony. Later Mr. and Mrs. Feigley left on a wedding trip to the mountains of New England. Upon their return they will reside in their new home in Woodlawn Village, at Baliston, Va. Attending the wedding from out | of town were Mr. Henry W. Schiossen | of Philadelphia, grandfather of the bridegroom; Mr. and Mrs. Moxley Ervin, Mr. and Mrs. Traynham Hous- ton, Mr. and Mrs. William Wildt, relatives of the bride, from Alex- andria, Va. Mrs. Feigley is a graduate in physi- cal training from George Washington University and is a member of Kappa Delta Sorority. Mr. Feigley studies at Corcoran Art School and is past master counselor of the Order of De | Molay. Before her marriage the bride was entertained at a shower by Kappa Delta Sorority in the home of Miss Catherine Ford. Miss Mildred Ogden Ireland, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Hans W. Ire- land, and Mr. Lawrence Kenneth Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. Law- rence Joseph Jones, will he married | this afternoon in St. Alban’s Church at 4 o'clock. A reception for the members of the two families and the wedding party will follow in the home of the bride’s parents, at 4303 | Reno road. FARMERS HIT OLEO TAX | | | Louisiana Growers Favor Lifting | Levy on Cottonseed Oils. SHREVEPORT, La. June 1 (#).— Caddo and Bossier Parish farmers in a joint meeting of executive boards yesterday fired the first gun in what may become a Southwide opposition to proposed in Wisconsin assertedly aimed at stranding of the oleomargarine industry by high taxes. The boards appointed a committee to draft resolutions favoring passage of the Kleberg bill now pending in Congress, which would eliminate tax- ation on cottonseed oils and other do- mestic oils used in manufacturing oleomargarine. Children Rhinoceros Beetle (Dynastes Tityrus). stump, most likely where she was born and grew up. They are large, measure one-eighth of an inch in length and | Porc are easily seen against the dark back- ground of the wood. ‘When the youngsters step out of the eggs they begin at once feasting upon the walls of their homes. In a short time they are very plump, extremely | manded =~Brooks Studio photo, Clerk’s Office Finally Hears of Secret Marriage| Deputy Harry M. Hull Keeps News From Fellow Employes. Secret marriages are no novelty to | employes of the clerk's office in the | District Supreme Court. but it is a | matter of some indignation when one | of their own number walks up to the | altar on the “QT.” | This was the attitude of the office | staff when they learned that Deputy | Clerk Harry M. Hull obtained a license and was married last Saturday—all without any of them being the wiser. Hull, who is 36, has been employed in the equity branch of the clerk’s office, where the marriage licenses are | He took out | | 1ssued, for several years. | married by the Rev. James Cauld- | field to Miss Catherine Camille Sulli- | van, 24, of 3821 Van Ness street. Hull took the precautions of with- | |from the regular filing hook, with the results that neither reporters nor his fellow workers knew of the mar- riage until yesterday. —_— WISCONSIN SERVES COMPULSORY CHEESE |Law Requiring It to Be Served With Every Meal of 25 Cents or More Takes Effect. By the Associated Press. MADISON, Wis,, June 1.—Cheese for breakfast, cheese for dinner and cheese for supper became the law of Wisconsin yesterday—if you eat in a restaurant and your meal costs 25 cents or_more. signed a bill which requires all pub- lic eating places to serve two-thirds of | an ounce of Wisconsin cheese and two- with every meal costing a quarter or | more. | _ But, according to an official of the | Wisconsin Restaurant Association, there's a joker. After you get the cheese—whether you want it or not— you may have to pay for it. There’s nothing in the new law to demand the cheese or butter shall be given away. New Material Developed. Chlorinated rubber, a new raw ma- terial for paints and varnishes, to| make them impervious to acids and | gasoline, is being developed in Ger- | many. Peter Has BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. Bl ot miaol ot wtznd 'mloading troubles 5 ® 125l "Mother Nature, ETER RABBIT, sitting as far back as he could get in the darkest corner under the back | porch of Farmer Brown’s] house, was as upset as ever | he had been in all his life. He was | afraid to stay where he was and he | was afraid to leave because he didn’t | know where to go, on account of cer- tain enemies. 8o he was in whn‘ people sometimes call “a state of mind.” He was chewing furiously on nothing at all, a way he has of doing when he is upset and uncertain what to do. It was getting late in the after- noon. Peter kept his eyes fixed on the hole by which he had entered under the porch. At last he saw against the light some one moving. Some one was coming in under the h. Peter was so jumpy that it was all he could do to keep from running. ‘Then he realized that, whoever it was, he was too small to be an enemy. Such a feeling of relief as swept over Peter when at last he made out who his visitor was! It was an old friend. It was Old Mr. Toad. Peter left his corner and hopped over to meet Old Mr. Toad. The latter was surprised to see . Peter. “What are you doing here?” he demanded. Peter told him. He told him the whole story. He told him how he had come to leave the dear Old Briar-patch, and ‘how Farmer Brown's Bov had saved him from Shadow the Weasel. poured out his troubles. At last Peter stopped talking. “Is that all,” said Old, Mr. Toad. “Isp’t that enough?” demanded Peter. Old Mr. Toad puffed himself out. Perhaps he was trying to make himself very wise. “It is too much, if me,” said he. t do you mean by that?” Peter ean,” replied Old Mr. Toad, had no business at all to get into so much trouble.” I have helped it?” de- his own license Saturday and was Gov. Phillip La Follette yesterday | thirds of an ounce of Wisconsin butter | . question.” Visitors at Dance Program Tomorrow Out-of-town guests who have come to attend the Spring dance program by the Bekefi-Deleporte Institute, to- morrow night in the Jewish Com- munity Center auditorium, are Mr. and Mrs. George Popham from New York City, Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse Deleporte from Springfield, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs. George Harding from Pittsfield, Mass. Other guests will ar- rive today, including Mrs. Charles Mul- | hall from New York and Mr. Frederick C. King, former poetry editor of the Literary Digest, who is writing a book on “The American Ballet.” Among the specially invited guests for the performance are Mr. and Mrs. John Ford and Mr. Frank La Falce of ‘Washington. Others who will be pres- ent are Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Greet, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Heckinger, Mr. liam Chapin, Mr. and Mrs. Charles | Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. George Motter, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Smithers, Mrs. Charles A. Hinkel, Mrs. Edith Galt Mish, Mrs, Nelson Reeve and Miss Maurine Mul- | liner. | porte Institute today and at the box | officé of the Jewish Community Center | auditorium tomorrow evening prior to the eurtain, which is at 8:30 o'clock. LEONORA BRADLEY DIES Former Luminary of American Stage. Widow of Bartholomew. BOSTON, June 1 (#).—Leonora Bradley, 80, who ran away from her English home at the age of 15 and i stage, died yesterday at the Boston { Home for Incurables. She played with such notables as | Margaret Mather, Otis Skinner and | E. H. Sothern. Her last professional engagement ended with illness, in Lynn, in 1923. Miss Bradley was the widow of | Charles Bartholomew. Total Eclipse Plans Made. Tokio Astronomical Observatory is making extensive plans for observing the total eclipse, which will be visible in Hokkaido on June 19, 1936. As- tronomers from many parts of the world will gather for the event. Dr. Mitchell, professor of the University of Virginia, is reported to have in- formed Dr. Saotome, chief of the ob- servatory, that he will visit Japan with other scientists. Women Collect Taxes. Seven women have been appointed assistant collectors in the reorganized British income tax service. Stories a Visitor. Bedtime “By staying at home in the first place,” replied Old Mr. Toad. To this Peter could make no reply. It was true. He knew it. Had he “IS THAT ALL?" SAID OLD MR. TOAD. been content to remain in the dear Old Briar-patch, he wouldnt have encountered Shadow the Weasel. He wouldn’t have been chased by Flip the Terrier. He wouldn’t have been wor- rying as to what he should do. “Probably you are right,” said Peter last. “Probably I am,” replied Old Mr. Toad. “And that brings up the question,” said Peter. question?” demanded Old “I don’t know of any at “The question of what I am to do now,” replied Peter. “That’s your problem, not mine,” said Old Mr. Toad tartly. “You're not of much help,” said became a luminary of the American | Bethrothals Of Import ToSociety Daughter of Former State Senator Free- man to Wed. Former State Senator William Cole- man PFreeman of Cornwall, Pa., and 1900 South Rittenhouse square, Phila- delphia, announces the engagement of his daughter, Miss Isabel Coleman Freeman, to Mr. Theodore Clatten- burg, son of the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. A. Edwin Clattenburg of St. John's Rec- tory at Cynwyd. Miss Freeman is a niece of Mrs. Benjamin H. Buckingham of 1525 H street. She is a graduate of Foxcroft School in Virginia and atiended Mile. Moos’ 8chool in Paris and is a mem- ber of the Junior League. Mr. Clattenburg is a grandson of the late Mr. Joseph Clattenburg of Boston and the late Mr. C. C. Pinck- ney Norris of Philadelphia. He was graduated from the Chestnut Hill Academy in the class of 1927 and this month he will receive the degree of bachelor of architecture from the University of Pennsylvania, from which university he received an A. B. in 1931 and an M. A. in 1934. He is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa and of the Merion Cricket Club. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Clement Laird Thomas of Muncie, Ind., announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Nina Iona, to Mr. Joseph Pennington Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oiiver Bailey of Wash- | ington. | The wedding will take place Satur- | day, June 15, in the Memorial United Brethern Church of Christ. Miss Thomas, who attended school | in Virginia at Sullins College, has lived for a year in Washington, where she | has a large circle of friends. The | parents and relatives of the bride are | expected here for the wedding. | _Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Simmons | Bigham of Sumner, Miss., have an- | nounced the engagement of their James Dalby Belote, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Thomas Belote of | Washington. | ' Miss Bigham is a former student of | and received her diploma from Co- lumbia Bible College in South Caro- and Mrs. R. E. Punkhauser, Mrs. Wil- | jing this year with honors. Her father | has been engaged in educational work | for the greater part of his life. | Mr. Belote graduated from the Co- | lumbia Bible College this Spring with | the highest honors of his class. He | was connected with & bank in Wash- | ington before studying at George The public’ may obtain tickets for | washington University. His father is the Spring recital at the Beke-Dele- | connected with the United States Na- | | tional Museum in Washington. Mrs. Eleanor H. Harrison of Cherrydale, Va. announces the en- gagement of her daughter, _Alenne Virginia, to Mr. Eugene Davis, b son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Davis of ‘Washington. Miss Harrison is a graduate of Washington-Lee High School and af tended Fredericksburg State Teachers’ College. She is a member of Chi Delta Gamma Sorority. Mr. Davis is a native Washing- tonian and was educated in the pub- lic schools of the city. No date has been set for the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sumner Bar- Tows of Takoma Park announce the engagement of their only daughter, Margaret Virginia, to Mr. Melvin Dean Russell of Boston, Mass. Miss Barrows’ father is assistant commissioner of prison industries of the Department of Justice. Mr. Russell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur D. Russell of Toledo, ©Ohio. The wedding will take place the first week in August. STAGE FAMILY MOVES Fred Stones to Make Permanent i Home in California. HOLLYWOOD, June 1 (#).—Mrs. Pred Stone, wife of the stage actor. and her youngest daughter, Carol, ar- rived here yesterday from New York with the announcement the family would make its permanent home in California. Carol and her mother were met at Pasadena by Paula Stone, another daughter, who is under contract to a film studio. - Horse Wins; Bettor Loses. ST. LOUIS (#).—Lillian Z. a race horse, was fleeter and more fortunate than Homer W. Strus, 25, who placed 2 bet on her. Strus entered a book shop and found Lillian Z. had won. That meant he won, almost. A bandit announced & hold-up. Strus ran out of the door. The bandit whirled and fired, the bullet striking Strus in the left shoulder. He will recover. SOCIETY. G. W. U. Ball Tonight TH! George Washington University Alumni-Senior Ball will be held this evening at the Mayflower Hotel, when members of the graduating class will be guests of the General Alumni Association. In the receiving line will be the president of the associa- tion, Mr. Charles S. Baker, and Mrs. Baker; the president of the university. Dr, Cloyd H. Marvin; the provost of the university, Dr. William Allen Wil- bur, and Mrs. Wilbur, and the presi- dent of the senior class, Mr. Walter Rhinehart. Each of the graduates will wear a red rose, presented by the General Alumni Association, making a color- ful scene in the grand march and the dance immediately following it, in which only the seniors and their escorts will join, while other guests will look on from the boxes. The grand march will be led by Mr. | Rhinehart, escorting Miss Evelyn | Eller, and Mr. Vernon Goodrich, so- | cial chairman of the senior class, | escorting Miss Violet Goebel. During the grand march the orches- Alumni Are Hosts to Seniors in Mayflower Festivities. tra will introduce the new “George | Washington University Alumni March™ | written by Dr. Rudolph Bloom of the | class of 1914. Dr. and Mrs. Bloom | will come from Philadelphia to be present. on this occasion. Other out- of-town guests will be Judge Alvin J. Pearson and Mr. Prank Gentsch of Cleveland. who this year are cele- | brating the fortieth anniversary of their gradustion from the university. | During the evening a group from the University Glee Club will sing the | alma mater song. Tapping ceremonies | will be conducted by Steel Gauntlet, in | which a group of outstanding mem- bers of next year’s senior class will be designated for membership in this | honor society. Mr. H. Velpeau Darling of the | Executive Committee of the General | Alumni Association is chairman of | the committee on arrangements for the reception and ball, and preceding | the reception the annual meeting of the General Alumni Association will be held. convening in the Chinese 'room of the Mayflower at 8 o'clock. Alexandria Homes Open This Afternoon The Alexandria Association spon- sored a tour today of 17 old and his- toric houses in Alexandria, several of which have never before been shown to the.puklic. Among them is the house at 212 South Pitt street, recent- ly restored by Mr. and Mrs. Korell, now the residence of Dr. E. F. Warner. The first permit for building opera- tions on this house was issued in 1780. |1In 1795 the street was moved and a second permit for alterations was is- sued, again in 1868 and the most re- cently in 1934. Most of the original | woodwork had disappeared, but the house has been sympathetically re- | stored, and the old mantels and arches | seem to have been there always. The | double gallery in the back is the orig- inal. Dr. Warner of the United | States Public Health Service is in | rank of major with all perquisites. o'clock and tea, which is included in | the price of the tour, will be served in Corps of the two high schools will be stationed in front of each house to | assist in directing strangers on their way from house to house. Tickets | may be obtained at the George Mason | Hotel, at the first house visited, or at the A. A. A. in Washingtan, Charleston Editor Dies. CHARLESTON, S. C., June 1 (#).— | Thomas R. Waring, 64, editor for 38 years of the Charleston Evening Post, died at his home here last night of a heart ailment. Who Are You? The Romance of Your Name. BY RUBY HASKINS ELLIS. ‘THE original bearers of this name | were natives of the island so called. One eminent authority suggests that | | “Iar-land,’ Gaelic “Iar, a combination of the meaning west, and Teu- tonic “la " signifying westland. Early records mentior. the names of Adam de Irlande and of Henry de | Irlande. Members of this family rose to prominence in their native land and it is & name well known in America. Thomas Ireland was the progenitor of one branch of the family in this coun- try. He came to Stamford, Conn., and later settled on Long Island. Samuel Ireland, a carpenter, came to Boston in 1635 from London. He established his home in Wethersfield, Conn. Descendants of these early settlers are now living in New York, Massi chusetts, Connecticut and many other cartw These houses are open from 11 to 5 | the Emerald Isle took its name from | you heel Trinity Alumnae’s Graduate Luncheon The Alumnae Association of Trinity College entertained the members of the graduating class today at a luncheon in Alumnae Hall. Miss Marie R. Madden of Brooklyn, N. Y., president of the association, was a | charming hostess. Assisting her in | welcoming the guests were the officers | and members of the Board of Di- | rectors: Miss Florence T. Judge of Washington, Mrs. William Bowe of Chicago, Ill.: Miss Mildred Brereton of Hartford, Conn.; Miss Loretto Law- ler of Pittsburgh, Pa.; Miss Jane Hoey of New York City, Miss Anne Sara- chon Hooley of Kansas City, Mo.: Mrs. Andrew J. Porter of Boston, Mass.; Miss Helen Ormond of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Miss Ruth Nangle of Boston, Mass.; Miss Bernadine Butler of Worcester, Mass.; Miss Mary Agatha | daughter, Martha Francls, to MI.| e Upited States Army and has the |Kelly of Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Mrs. Frank J. Kenney of Waterbury, Conn., and Mrs. James H. Early of Washing- {ton. The arrangements for the lunch- eon were in charge of Mrs. Raymond Blue Mountain College in MississibPi | Godspy's courtyard from 4 to 6 Ruppert of Washington. | c’clock. Members of the Girl Cadet | —— |Guests of Senator | And Mrs. Smith Feted Senator and Mrs, Ellison D. 8mith and their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lawton, will have | with them for a visit next week, Mrs. Carlton Pierce, daughter of Senator and Mrs. Smith, and their niece, Miss Jennie Hammond-Farley, who will cl'ome from their homes in South Caro- | ina. | A number of parties have been planned for the visitors, who will ar< rive in the Capital Monday. Mrs. Smith will give a luncheon for them | Wednesday at Wardman Park Hotel, |and Tuesday Mrs. Neitah King will entertain at dinner at 2400 Sixteenth street for them. Sunday afternoon, June 9, Mr. and Mrs. Lawton will en- tertain at tea in their honor. NORMANRY FARMX POTOMAC. MD. D'!STINCTIVE FOOD [ Ph River Road to Potomae. Md. Ron Turn right 1 mile, Safe Deposit For silverware . .. COLD storage for furs, gare ments, rugs, etc. . COOL storage for wines | and spirits . ARM | storage for art objects, pianos, antiques . . . and SAFE storage for house- hold and personal effects. Rug Cleaning House Fumigation Surplus a | | | A SAFE [BEPOSITORY [FOR GVERASvekns {1 | | /1140 FIFTEENTHST 472 BLOCKS NORTH OF THE WWITE NOUSE C.A ASPINWALL T | DISTRICT #first gleam of wsibly wear the sketched, $15, in town, as with your prints—be they : oon or sheer. f}u prefer to be intensely fer . ch the ith fl here are ;;ze?' of lovely things.