Evening Star Newspaper, July 2, 1935, Page 23

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SOCIETY. Miss Dial Weds This Afternoon Other Nuptials of In- terest in and Near the Capital. Mrs. Daniel C. Roper, wife of the Becretary of Commerce, will assist this afternoon at the reception which will follow the wedding of Miss Dor- athy Dial, daughter of former Sen-| ator and Mrs. Nathaniel B. Dial of | South Caroling, and Mr. Harold Ogden | Smith, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold : Ogden Smith of Philadelphia, for-| merly of Indianapolis. The ceremony will be performed by Dr. John Palmer | at 4:30 oclock, in the Washington Heights Presbyterian Church, in the presence of many members of official | and residential circles. While the guests are assembling, Mrs. Baxter | will play & group of organ selections | and Mr. George Myers, soloist, will aing several songs. On either side of the altar will be tall bronze stand- ards of lilies, which will be arranged | against a background of palms and ferns. The bride will enter the church with | her father, who will also give her in | marriage. She has chosen for her | wedding & gown designed on princess | lines of ivory-color lace and tulle. The bodice is of lace and is embroid- ered in pearls. The skirt is made | entirely of graduated tulle ruffles which start at the waist, flare to the | hem and end in a graceful train in the back. Her veil of tulle is em- broidered in the same motif as the lace bodice of her gown and is held in place by a stiffened ruffie across | her head which frames her face and ix fastened in the back with a row | of orange blossoms. The bride will | earry a bouquet of lilies of the valley with showers of the lilles falling to the hem of her gown. | As her matron of honor the bride | will have her sister, Mrs. Matthew White Perrv, whose gown will be of lilac silk fashioned with large| puff sleeves, a low neckline in.the| back and a row of buttons which extend down the back. The skirt of the gown is full and flowing. With this Mrs. Perry will wear a tulle hat made with a soft brim in the =ame rolor as her gown and she will carry | an arm houquet of pink and purple larkspur tied with lilac ribhon. The bride’s only other attendant will be Mre. Knox Johnston, sister of the hridegroom, of Knoxville, N. C., whose costume and flowers will be identical to that of the matror of honor. Mr. Knox Johnston of Knox will act as best man and the ushers will include Dr. Matthew White Perrv. Mr. John Russell Minter. 3d, nephew of Mrs. Dial; Mr. Smith Bowman, Mr. Frederick Dan Sutterfield and Mr Charles Alfred Lawton, all of this ecity, and Mr. Max Stone of Lynch- burg, Va. The reception will be held in the home of the bride's parents which will be decorated Summer flowers. 1 1 Mrs. Roper. Mrs. [ D. Smith, Mrs. Rey Pittman, Mrs, Morris Shep- pard, Mrs. A. O. Stanley, Mrs. Allard | H. Gasque, Mrs. Arthur MacArthur, | Mrs, Edward O. Saunders, Mrs. Benja- min D. Hill. At the punch bowls will | be Miss Cynthia Hill, Mrs. Frederick Dan Sutterfield, Mrs. Charles Arthur Lawton, Mrs. Phoebe Soaper, Mrs Lanson A. Mills, jr.; Miss Emiscah Davis and Miss Rebecca Dial. Mrs, | Dial, the bride's mother, will wear a | flowered chiffon gown with a black hat and a shoulder bouquet of gardenias, and Mrs. Smith, mother of the bridegroom, will wear a hlack chif- fon gown with gardenias. About 150 guests. mostly members of the vounger set. will be present at the reception Mr. and Mrs Smith will leave Jater for Virginia Beach, where thev will remain about a week. Thev will re- turn to Washington for a short time but will spend the remainder of the, Summer motoring through the North ‘The bride’s going away costume is of navy blue sheer wool crepe trimmed ington a few years ago. She was presented at the St. Cecelia ball in Charleston later in the Winter of the same year. Mr. Smith attended the virginia Polytechnical Institute and Washington and Lee University. Of interest to Washington news- paper circles was the marriage of Miss Betty Adams Craig to Albert Alexan- der Clagett in Baltimore, Md., yester- day. Mrs. Clagett's mother, Elizabeth May Craig, is Washington correspond- ent for several out-of-town papers and her father, Donald A. Craig, was formerly chief of the Washington Bu- reau of the New York Herald, and is now associated with the N. E. C. In- formation Bureau, and her brother, Don Craig. is dramatic editor of the Washington Daily News. Mr. Clagett is the son of Mr. Vivian Marbury Clagett, staff of the District of Columbia repair shop. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Clagett left by motor for New York City and will be at home after August 1 at 428 Evarts street northeast in Washington. Miss Elizabeth Spearman Roach, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Roach, and Mr. Fred Thomas McIn- tyre, jr., formerly of Washington, now of Birmingham, Ala.. son of Mr. Fred Thomas McIntyre, were married in St. Anthony's Church yesterday morning at 9 o'clock. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Edward H. Roach of St. Matthew's Church and was followed by a nuptial mass. | An organ recital was played by Mrs. Walsh and the altar was banked with white gladioli and gypsophelia. The bride, who was given in mar- riage by her father, wore a white crepe sport ensemble with white ac- cessories and a shoulder bouquet of orchids and lilies of the valley. She was attended by Miss Edith M. Wa- ters of Baltimore, who wore a sport ensemble of Alice-blue crepe and a shoulder bouquet of pink roses and lilies of the valley. The bridegroom had as his best man his brother, Mr. William D. Mc- Intyre, and the ushers included Mr. Edward Lancaster Roach, brother of the bride, and Mr. William Faley. The ceremony was followed by a breakfast at the Admiral Club which was attended by the wedding party and members of the immediate fami- lies. Mr. and Mrs. McIntyre left later for a wedding trip and will make their | home in the Altamonte Apartments in Birmingham, Ala. Mrs. MclIntyre, who is the granddaughter of former State Senator and Mrs. S. Spearman Lancaster of Charles County, Md., is a graduate of St. Joseph's High School in Emmittsburch, Pa. Mr. McIntyre is & graduate of Gonzaga College and of Columbus University Law School. el A e e 10¢ i RUN Regardless of Length SNAGS : Y REPAIRING in yellow and a yeliow suede beret } and gloves. They will make their home in Washington in the Fall. Among the guests who came from eut of town to attend the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Smith, parents of the bridegroom of Philadelphia: Mrs Josephine Moore of Indianapclis. aunt of the bridegroom, and Mrs. Carroll of Charlottesville, Va. grandmother of the bridegroom. | Mrs. 8mith & & graduate of Gun: ton Fall and made her debut in Wash- | Hartmann Guaranteed G. C. Murphy Co. 5¢ and 10c¢ Store F and G.Sts., Between 12th and 13th N.W Sky-Robe Packs 4 to 8 Dresses on Hangers Featuring the Sky-Robe by Hartmann—the case that offers Kour clothes perfect traveling solufm],v no wrinkles, comfort and a The dresses hang on ingenious bar hangers and fold into the lid . . . lots of accessories. room in the base for T T T Phone Dlistyict 454 1314 F Street N.W. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Melvin C. Roher of Co- lumbus, Ohio. The marriage of Miss Kathleen Gall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Gall of Columbia, 8. C, to Mr, Joel Brecheen of Washington took place last evening in the home of the bride's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Gall in Country Club Hills, Va., Rev. Perry L. Mitchell offi- ciating at 7 o'clock. The house was decorated with garden flowers and ferns and Mrs. Hugh A. Allen of Aurora Hilis, Va., played the wedding music. Escorted and given in marriage by her brother, Mr. John C. Gall, the bride wore a powder blue crepe en- semble with navy blue accessories and & corsage bouquet of gardenias. She was attended by her sister-in- law, Mrs. Gall, who was dressed in an egg shell crepe jacket dress. The bridegroom had for his best man Mr. Lambert. Miller of Washington. An informal reception and wedding supper followed for relatives and close friends who witnessed the ceremony. Mrs. Gall, mother of the bride, 'hni came from South Carolina for the | wedding, was dressed in an ashes of | roses crepe dress. Later in the evening Mr. Brecheen and his bride left on a wedidng trip and when they return will make their home in Washington. The bridegroom is the son of ths late Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brecheen of New Orleans and has been in Washington for several years in the employ of the Government service. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis C. De Neane of Landover, Md., anncunce the mar- riage of their dauzhter Ellen to Mr. Robert C. Beall June 28, the Rev. D. Hobart Evans of Hyattsville Pres- byterian Church ctfir.ating. After a | short trip Mr. and Mrs. Beall will be | at home at Seabrook, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Weld Reed | announce the marriage of their daughter, Rosalle Sanderlin, to En-| sign John Thomas Biackburn, United States Navy, June 26 in Coronado, Calif. Ensign and Mrs. Blackburn will make their home in Coronado. Word has been received of the marriage at Fairbanks, Alaska, June | 24, of Miss Nanele Arzt Kees, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. George Kees of 8t. Paul, Minn, to Mr. Cecil Moore Wells of Anchorage, Alaska, formerly of Ithaca, N. Y. Mrs. Wells until her marriage was assistant librarian of the Natiopal Institute of Health in Washington, and has degrees from ‘he University of Min- nesota and George Washington Uni- versity, Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Bertha Helen Wetzler of New York and Mr. Charles Chester Burdine of Washington and Nev York, son of Mrs. Charles An- drew Bascom Burdine of Washington, and the late Mr. Burdine. The cere- mony, which took place Tuesday afternoon, June 11, in Bronxville, N. Y., was performed at 4:30 o'clock in the sacristy of 8t. Joseph's Church by the Rev. Joseph McCann, pastor of the church. Miss Mabel Donnelly of Washington and New York and Mr. Frank M. Zittell of Brookside Park, in Green- wich, Conn., were the attendants. ‘The bride is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Franz Xavier Wetzler, and the granddaughter of | the late Mr. and Mrs. Johann Diet- erich Lohmann, both natives of Han- | over, Germany. On the paternal side | she is descended from a family long | Island, Maryland, named for his home county in England. Mr. Burdine is descended also from John Christian Baum and Lennart Kochendorfer, who came to America from Germany in 1751 and settled in Georgetown, which was then in Maryland. Their respective sons, John Christian Baum and Leonard Cookendorfer, the adopted form of the name, fought in the Regular Army during the Revo- lution. In April, 1933, the Daughters of the American Revolution erected a tablet to the memory of Leonard Cookendorfer at his grave in Oak Hill Cemetery, Georgetown, which was un- velled by Mrs. Charles Fairfax. Mr. Burdine’s mother was Miss Eliza Mil- ler Corcoran, formerly of Bowness, Northumberland, England. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chester Bur- dine have just returned to New York | after & visit with his mother on Fair- mont street, and are living at 400 East Fifty-eighth street, that city, Apartments Erected. Many apartment houses are being erected in Mexico City, Mexico. Oil Croquignole Permanent identified with Trier, the oldest town* in Germany, founded by the Roman Treverii. Her paternal grandmother before her marriage was Miss Mad- eleine Garnier, the families of whose parents had emigrated from France | to Germany during the French Rev- olution.’ Mr. Burdine belongs to & family | identified with Maryland and the Dis- | trict of Columbia since the time when his earliest American ancestor, John Boteler, collaterally of the House of Ormonde of Kent County, England, arrived with Lord Baltimore. John Boteler was apopinted by Lord Bal- timore captain of militia on Kent RUGS CLEANED & STORED Call Mr. Pyle Nat. 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Ind. Ave. N.W. This greatiy reduced || price includes Sham- poo and Finger Wave Really a $6 Value! Have a Warner Pnsh-Up ON Groauts- noie and you wiil have oil appled diractly 1o the hair whieh gives you Soft waves with lots of curls. just as you desire National #930. Warner Beauty Studio 1318 F St. N.W. 2o 2 Take Elevator to Third Floor If You Like to Save Money on GOOD Vacation Shoes— Rush in Tomorrrow to Hahn’s FARANCE o WHITE shves 4,000 Pair 4,000 pairs, white kidskin, buckskin and linen or buckskin wit Dreas or sports! 3,000 h blue or brown, Set for the 4th! Pairs Dynamie Styles 385 3,000 pairs famous fashion footwear, Dynamic Style Shoes—saving you dollars! White kidskin, buckskin and linen or buck with blue or brown trim. Some smart dark shoes, 7th and K 1207 F %3212 14th *Open Evenings D. C. TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1935. SOCIETY. 2 grand values for the W z 77 BetterDress Shop COTTONS 3.95 You'll spot the savings the min- ute you see these finer cotton laces and eyelet batistes! One and two piece styles in eggshell, white and refreshing flower pastels, lilac, for-get-me-not blue, and aqua; for misses and women. (Better Dress Shop. Third Ploor) With garters or without! Buy them both and you're ready with a smooth figure for any type of summertime costume. The garter- less style is particularly popular for swimming. Sizes small, medium, large, fit slim and average figures. Gorsets. Third Meor) Figure-controlling SWIM SUITS 2.95 Waffle stitch wool with waistline ribbing to make you seem slimmer than you really are! ‘White and colors, Sizes 32 to 40. Cannon Toweling Robes, 2.50 Fish Net Shoes, 1.25 (GAtr-Gocled mmme)r 8hep, — = THE HECHT (0. B F STREET AT SEVENTH R

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