Evening Star Newspaper, July 2, 1935, Page 22

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_B-2 =x SOCIETY. Mrs. Swanson Presents Proceeds of Newspaper Benefit Ball Tomorrow Children’s Hospital to Receive Check From Newspaper Women’s Club. Morgenthau Back. RS. CLAUDE A. SWANSON, wife of the Secretary of the Navy, has returned from a short stay in Swansonville, Va. Mrs. Swanson will present a check representing the proceeds of the costume ball of the Newspaper Women's Club to Children’s Hospital tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. Mrs. Bwanson, who is an associate mem- ber of the newspaper women's organ- ization, is a member of the Child Welfare Board of the hospital. With the other cabinet hostesses who are associate members of the club Mrs. Bwanson served on the Reception Committee for the ball, which was given March 30 at the Willard Hotel. The benefit was the second given by the club for worthy charities in the aid of children, the first being a carnival for the benefit of the milk fund for undernourished children of the District. Mrs. Ned Brunson Harris of the Minneapolis Star was chairman of the successful ball, which | was attended by a large and dis- tinguished company, included Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who is an honorary member of the newspaper club. The Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Henry Morgenthau, jr., has returned to Washington after spending the | week end with Mrs. Morgenthau at their farm at Fishkill, N. Y. The Attorney General, Mr. Homer §. Cummings, and the Solicitor Gen- eral, Mr. Stanley F. Reed, were among | the guests at luncheon yesterday at the Mayflower given in honor of Mr. William Stanley, whose resignation as assistant to the Attorney General took effect June 30. The luncheon was tendered by his former associates in the Department of Justice. The As- sistant Attorneys General and Mr. J. Edgar Hoover were also in the com- pany of 45. The Ambassador of Mexico, Dr. Don Francisco Castillo Najera, left Wash- ington yesterday for Minot, N. Dak., where he will attend the Fourth of July celebration. Ambassador will meet the commander in chief of the Mexican Air Force upon his arrival in Minot from Mexico City by plane on a good will tour. While there the ! The Ambassador will return to Washington the latter part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Hurja left yester- day for several weeks’ stay in the lake country of Michigan and Minnesota and will return to Washington the end of this month. Brig. Gen. Frederick L. Bradman, U. 8. M. C, and Mrs. Bradman, with their youngest son and daughter, | John and Mary Jo, are guests of Dr. | and Mrs. William Neal Cogan in their apartment in the Imperial. Gen. | Bradman has come to Washington for duty as senior member of the Navy Examining Board after being on duty jat San Diego, Calif. Gen. and Mrs. Bradman have many friends in Wash- ington, where he was on duty some years ago at the Marine Barracks. Capt. and Mrs. Raphael Baez, jr., are again in Washington for a visit from his post at Scott Field, Ill., and are stopping at the Wardman Park Hotel. Capt. Francis P. Tompkins, U. 8. A., and Mrs. Tompkins have arrived at | the Martinique from Fort Riley, Kans., en route to their new station at Lex- | ington, Va. | Lieut. Comdr. Allen Prescott Flagg, U. S. N, and his bride, the former Miss Anna K. Smith, daughter of Mrs. Lucien B. Green of San Diego, Calif., were in the lounge of the Mayflower | yesterday at tea time. Mrs. Flagg has many friends in | Washington where she was to have made her formal debut a year or two | ago at a tea dance which her grand- | mother, Mrs. Butler, wife of Rear Ad- miral Henry V. Butler, U. S. N,, then commandant of the Navy Yard, planned. Admiral Butler’s orders to the Pacific Coast prevented. Comdr. and Mrs. Flagg were married June 15 in the home of Comdr. and | Mrs. Green in San Diego and came | direct to Washington. where Comdr. | Flagg has been ordered to duty at the ! Naval Air Station at Anacostia. Lieut. Richard F. Whitehead, U. S. N, and Mrs. Whitehead, are in Wash- ington for the coming months and have taken an apartment at the Ward- ! man Park Hotel. Mrs. Longworth in Ohio Speaker’s Widow and Daughter Are in Cincinnati—Mrs. Deming. Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, widow of the late Speaker, and her daugh- ter Paulina have gone to their home In Cincinnati. They will sail July 17 from New York to spend several weeks. Mrs. Hitchcock, widow of Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock, will close her ‘Washington home tomorrow and go to New York, where she will be at the Plaza until she sails Friday, July 19, with Mr. and Mrs. Barron Collier for Europe. Mrs. Hitchcock will accompany Mr. and Mrs. Collier to their home in Baden-Baden, where she will be their guest for some time. Mrs. Hitchcock will return to this country late in September. Mrs. Delos A. Blodgett has closed her home on New Hampshire avenue and left yesterday for her Summer home at Mackinac Island, where she will join her sister and brother, Mrs. Charles G. Matthews and Mr. Samuel H. Peck, who made the trip last week by motor. Mr. and Mrs. Huston Thompson ere at the Waldoif-Astoria, having gone to New York to meet their daughter, Miss Caroline Huston ‘Thompson, who will arrive Thursday on the 8. S. Bremen, after having spent two monins in England. They will come directly to Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam F. P. Hitt lunched yesterday in the Mayfower Jounge. Mr. and Mrs. Hitt were in town for a brief stay, coming from their Middleburg estate. Mrs. Charles C. Deming left yes- terday for Swampscott, Mass., to pass the Summer, und expects to return ko the Shoreham in the Fall The Rev. Dr. George W. Aikinson has closed his house on Thirty-fifth | street and has one to Rehoboth Beach, Del, where he has opened his cottage and will he there auring the season. Mrs. Sutton McKee has arrived in Washington from New York City, and Is at the Carlton. Mrs. E. Rust Smith has gone to New York to visit her niece, Miss Metta Maund Rust, and expects to return to the Shoreham the middle of next week. Mrs. J. B. Perry and Miss Emily Perry are spending the Summer at Mrs. Bowie Clagett’s in nearby Mary- land. Mr. and Mr: :EISEMAN’S SEVENTH & F STS. Gooch of Dal- Just in Time 3 for the “4th” iPRINTED CHIFFON FROCKS $Q95 Better type dresses made to sell for much more than $8.95. Gorgeous prints_to flatter miss or matron. Ex- ceptional values for Wednes- day. [ ] Open a Charge Account Pay in 30, 60 or 90 Days | las, Tex., are in Washington at the Mayflower for a short stay. Mr, | Gooch is editor of the Dallas Times | Herald. Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Kane, jr., ior the Broadmoor Hotel are receiv- Iing congratulations on the birth of a |son at Columbia Hospital, Saturday, | June 29. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred R. Toy of Roslindale, Mass.,, are at the Dodge for a brief stay. three daughters, and Mrs. Eloda Shipley of the Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, have gone to spend the season at Saranac Inn, in the Adirondacks. Mr. and Mrs. Douglass J. C. Stew- art have arrived from Shanghai, China, and are at the Martinique. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. C. Perkins of Miami, Fla., are at the Carlton for a few days. Mrs. Irene Maine and Miss Mary B. Sullivan of Ponca City, Okla., are at the Dodge for a few days. Dances to Follow Arts Club Dinner An evening dance in the lovely garden theater of the Arts' Club of Washington will follow the regular Tuesday dinner this evening, the per- formers being from the Bekefi-Dele- porte Institute. The program will be varied and colorful, making a charm- ing pot-pourri of music, dance and costume. Mrs, Mabel Linton' Wil- liams and Mr. Osgood Holmes are | hosts for the occasion. KAPLOWITZ| ‘THE COAT AND SUIT SPECIALTY SHOP ON THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN E ANDF DRESSES*SPORTSWEARSGOWNS Tomorrow! The Createst Sale at Kaplowitz Beautiful, Delightfully Cool Summer Dresses 2 for $11 Sacrificed Below Cost to Make NOTE: Our regular makers have closed out to us their Summer stocks at Sacrifice Prices....we now offer an unlimited variety of vacation Clothes. .. Clothes for Business. ., Street...Sports...Clothes for Travel ++.Clothes for Resorts. ..at prices that are actually below cost to make. If you love a bargain, and every 'woman does! SHOP KAPLOWITZ THE AIR-COOLED STORE LARGER WOMEN ~WOMEN MISSES JUNIORS EXCLUSIVE APPAREL SPECIALISTS NOT JUST ANOTHER DEPARTMENT Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Holmes, their | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1935. The Postmaster General, Mr. James A. Farley, in conversa- tion with Mrs. Cordell Hull, ’“'/? of trlt’e_ Sicrgtlanl of State, fol- i i inet girl. lowing the wedding of the popular ca_um"glDm A SHOPPING IN OUR COOL STORE IS A JOY ... Jurius GarrinekeLr & Co. F StreeT AT FOURTEENTH VALUES ARE MARVELOUS INOUR - STORE-WIDE SALES FOR WOMEN . . . MISSES JUNIORS . . . GIRLS BOYS . . . INFANTS Unusual Savings on Dresses . . . Coats . . . Suits Furs . . . Shoes Greenbrier Sportswear Blouses . . . Neckwear . . . Hosiery Underwear, Negligees, Corsets Bags, Gloves, Toilet Goods Handkerchiefs, Umbrellas Millinery Costume Jewelry, Novelties Linens Luggage . . . Stationery MEN ... YOUNG MEN Lamps NOVELTIES . . . NEEDS FOR THE : HOME and Silverware ALL SALES FINAL, NO APPROVALS Diamonds, Real Jewelry ENTIRE STOCK Queen Quality Vitality and Debonair Summer Shoes REDUCED Over 3,000 Pairs 3.65 4.90 5.85 A tremendous selection of styles in WHITE shoes, and combinations of brown and white, Also a large assortment of blue, black and brown kid and calf, and a few of beige and gray. All height heels. Queen Quality Boot Shop 1221 F Street N. W. Our store is Alr Conditioned. A small, but distinguished, company, including the mem- bers of the cabinet and their wives, witnessed the wedding yesterday of Miss Grace Roper, daughter of the Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Daniel C. Roper, to Dr. Frank Bohn | Mrs. Lawson to Be | Guest in Maryland Mrs. Roberta Campbell Lawson, the | newly elected president of the Gen- eral Federation of Women's Clubs, who has recently come to Washing- ton to make her headquarters during | her term of office, will be entertained informally at a luncheon Friday at Olney Inn. Before going to Olney, | Mrs. Lawson and the luncheon party | will include a number of women prominent in club activities in Mont- gomery County and the District of Columbia will be shown through the University of Maryland as the guests of the acting president, Mr. H. C. Byrd. Secret Gas Reported. Germany is reported to have the secret of a new gas against whicn even gas masks will be useless. and store, free of charge of New York, which took place in the garden of the Roper home. The picture shows, left to right, Mrs. Roper, Dr. Bohn, the bridegroom; Mrs. Bohn _and her father, Secre- tary Roper. —Wide World Photo. DR. BOWMAN BECOMES JOHNS HOPKINS HEAD National Research Council Chair- man Succeeds Dr. Ames as University President. By the Assoctated Press BALTIMORE, July 2.—Dr. Isiah | Bowman, former president of the | American Geographical Society and | chairman of the National Research | Counctl, yesterday succeeded Dr. Jos- eph S. Ames as president of the Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Bowman sald he would remain here 10 days to confer with faculty members and would actively assume the presidency September 10. Bus Services Increased. Railways of Australia are increas- ing their bus services. RUG CLEANING Why you should send your rugs to us. 1. We will insure to their full value against all damages after July first, all rugs sent to us to be shampooed and repaired. 2. All of our work is done by hand. 3. Our repairers are native experts who have spent their lives in rug weaving and repairing. 4. We do not use anything that is harmful to the rug fibers. 5. Our storage is fireproof and mothproof. MARK KESHISHIAN “Mecca of Oriental Rugs” 1214 Conn. Ave. LIEs3es allfs Coals Another Chiffons, Dresses. Formerly $29.75 up to $39.75—to- morrow— Na. 5346. From Regular Stock A group of dresses in white and pas- tel shades. Batiste, Formerly to $25.00—tomor- row— Wash Crepes, Cottons, £10 group of plain and printed Dinner and Evening Also Afternoon Dresses. 31975 L — e — Y Our entire stock of Spring Suits will go in this sale tomorrow at— 1, PRICE @ Our entire stock of Spring Coats will go in this sale tomorrow at— 1, PRICE ALL SALES FINA! [NO EXCHANGES Washington’s Two Better Shops RIZIK BROTHERS 1213 F Street 1108 Conn. Ave. SRR Y M T SOCI1ETY. Store Closed All Day Thursday, July 4th fP‘filipaI)orn 11* Streer HBarwemn F& G the 4th Cotton Lace $5.95 It’s the favorite frock of the summer crop . . . because it’s cool, wash- able and feminine. Eyelets Peek-a-boo eyelets in bewitching styles are perfect to play in, and cool off! Second Floor / J 7 Swim Suits $2.88 $3.95 to $5.95 Values All-wool, fine quality swim suits by one of the most famous makers...in many clever styles. Slacks. .. .$2 Shirts . . . . $1 & =X Knee-Hi Hose 69 3 prs., $2 Plenty of freedom for an active Fourth . . . in Bev- erly’s new knee-high chif- fons! White Felts sl Top your holiday togs with a ert white felt in various rims . . . some with clever perforations. Fourth Floor , Swaggers $5 Over your cotton lace frocks they’ll make adorable en- sembles . . . and will go well with all of your Summer frocks. Pastels, string, white and com- binations. Regular $2 and $3 g Sitk Slips ~~ $]-° Shadow panel crepe slips and lace-trimmed or tailored satins with vee or straight tops. Regular $16.95 to $29.75 $ 8 ‘90 Boucle Knits Fine quality boucle frocks in one, two and three piece styles, lacey wset:::as. 14 to 44.

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