Evening Star Newspaper, July 7, 1935, Page 43

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SO CIRTY. Comdr. H. W. Hill Joins His Family at Annapolis Will Reside at Birdsville, Va., at The Castle, Home of the Late Mr. and Mrs. Beale Worthington. ANNAPGLIS, Md,, July 6.—Comdr. Harry W. Hill, U. S. N, has arrived in Annapolis and joined his family at | No. 8 Maryland avenue. Comdr. Hill | will go for duty at Washington. Mon- | day Comdr and Mrs. Hill and family moved to The Castle, the home in| Birdsville, in Anne Arundel County, of the late Mr. and Mrs. Beale Worth- ington. Miss Elizabeth Stockett Hill, daughter of Comdr. and Mrs. Hill, is | visiting her uncle, Mr. George C. Hill, at Oakland, Calif. Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Patterson and their young son, | ‘Thomas Patterson, left Tuesday to | spend a month in New Jersey. Miss | Mary Kirby Patterson, daughter of | Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Patterson, is | spending the Summer at camp. Lieut. Comdr. Patterson is one of the aides to Rear Admiral David Foote Sellers. | Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Carr Tomp- | kins, jr., who recently returned from their wedding trip to Bermuda end New York, have opened their cottage at Epping Forest for the Summer. Mrs. Tompkins was formerly Miss Eleanor Calvert of Washington. Lieut. and Mrs. John A. Bole, jr. and their two daughters have ar- rived in Annapolis and are occupying | e home at Wardour. Lieut. Bole is at the Post-Graduate School. Mr. and Mrs. Owen P. W. Owings have had as their guests in their home at Wardour, Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Wood of Baltimore and Mr. Owings’ sister, Mrs., Archibald Dennis of | Howard County, Md. | Mr. and Mrs. Edward Phipps enter- | tained Monday evening at an informal | party in their home in Eastport | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walsh and children are back in the home of Mrs. Walsh’s mother, Mrs. Middleton Semmes Guest, at Wardour, where | they are spending the Summer, aftes & week's trip to Atlantic City, N. J. The large garden [ y given Sun- | day afternocon by M Hamilton Gale and her son, Mr. Hamilton Gale, was cne of the leading events of the Sum- mer season at Annapolis. Mrs. Gale's home, situated on the water, was beautiful in the setting, and the tea table on the lawn was presided over by Mrs. Hallam Claude and Miss Isabel Claude. | Bowers. | join him in Annapolis later in the Dr. and Mrs. Robert Winterode gave a supper party Sunday evening. Mrs. W. Hallam Claude has re- turned from Montclair, N. J.,, where she was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Malcolm Hain. Miss Phyllis Hammond, daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Philip Hammond of the Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va., after spend- ing several weeks as the guest of Miss Dorcas Tuck, daughter of Mrs. Claude, has left for her home. Prof. Reginald C. Lamb of the Naval Academy, department of mathematics, and Mrs. Lamb, their daughter, Miss Katherine Lamb, and their son, left Annapolis Sunday for a trip to the West Coast. On their way across the continent they will visit Yellowstone National Park, Salt Lake City and other places of interest, and will tour the coast of California and visit Glacier Park before returning home. | Lieut. John T. Bowers (J. G.) has| arrived in Annapolis from San Diego, | Calif.,, for duty at the Naval Post Graduate School and is the guest of | his parents, Comdr. and Mrs. John | Lieut. Bowers' family will | Summer. Cadet Robert C. Gildart, who is| with his mother, Mrs. Beatrice Gildart | in Washington, spent several days with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Armstrong in Annapolis. Cadet Gildart is on a two-month fur- lough from the United States Military Academy at West Point. He is the son of the late Col. Robert C. Gildart, U. 8. A | Lieut. (J. G.) Albert E. Fitzwil- liams, who is among the young naval officers reporting to the new class at the Naval Postgraduate School, and Mrs. Fitzwilliams are occupying a house at 39 Monterey avenue, West | Annapolis. Prof. Thomas A. FitzGerald of the | St. John's College faculty and Mrs, FitzGerald have closed their house | at 567 West street, and are spending a month at Prof. FitzGerald's former home in Missouri. Lieut. (J. G.) and Mrs. Roland F. Pryce and young son William who arrived here recently from the West Coast, have taken a house at 7 King | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, JULY 7, 1935—PART THREE. Family of Naval Officer MRS. BENNINGTON, Bennington, with their sons, Tommy and Bruce, who have joined Lieut. Bennington at Long Beach, Calif., Wife of Lieut. J. Paige where he is on duty. Signora Catalani's Death Mourned Here Word has been received in Wash- ington of the sudden death. June in London of Signora Catalani, wife of the former honorary counselor of the Italian y in this city. Signora Catalani was formerly Miss Susan Din k, daughter of Mrs Henry F. Dimock, and has been liv- ing in England with Signor Catalani, who ret several years ago. Catalani had been 1iil for a numb of years her death came as a sh to her host of friends in Washingto Mrs. Dimock is spending the Sum- | Club will play the second match of Polo Absorbs Colony At White Sulphur WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va. July 6—The Greenbrier Polo the season tomorrow afternoon on Greenbrier Field here, again meeting the Fauquier-Loudoun Polo Club of Middleburg, Va. A large company of spectators from the Virginias attended the inaugural match on Independence day. For tomorrow’s matches all boxes have been sold. The Fauquier-Loudoun Club will play its strongest line-up, including J. F. Walker, Gould Shaw, W. P. Hulbert and John Rawlings. Two 1935 collegiate team captains will play under the Greenbrier colors, John M. Young, jr., captain of the Pennsyl- vania Military College team, and Kay Kitchen Secor, captain of the Yale varsity four, 1935 intercollegiate champions., Other players are Win- B. Rand, jr., of Yale. Mr. Secor will act as captain in tomorrow’s game. An informal reception was held to- night in the old White Art Gallery, where the one-man exhibition by Ivan Le Lorraine Albright is in progress. The canvasses are meeting with the usual controversy and interest attend- ing an Albright show. Among the paintings are “Into the World There Came a Soul Called Ida” “Paper Flowers,” “Blacksmith,” “Maker of Images” and “The Linesman.” M. Albright, who is president of the Chicago Society of Artists, is a prom- inent exhibitor in national and inter- national shows, where his works never | fail to stir the critics to diverse opinions. Dr. Guy Hinsdale, medical director of the Greenbrier, and Mrs. Hinsdale, | ‘White Sulphur Springs today. Others arriving this week end are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burgess of Washington. KAPLOWITZ ‘THE COAT AND SUIT SPECIALTY SHOP ON THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN E ANDF KAPLOWITZ ‘THE COAT AND SUIT SPECIALTY SHOP ON THIRTEENTH STREET who have been abroad, returned to | BETWEEN EANDF ‘ DRESSES*SPORTSWEAR*GOWNS | DRESSES* SPORTSWEAR-GOWNS | SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE 2 DRESSES FOR 311 2 DRESSES FCR 31§ days to be held at the club house | on Old Georgetown road, Tuesday. | | The plan is to have the club house | | open on second and fourth Tues-| days from 11 o'clock in the morning | through the day for the use of mem- bers who wish to entertain. Bridge, | luncheons and teas, or simple thimble parties can be arranged as the club members wisi or al fresco parties on the Sallie Fontaine Perry Memorial terrace and in the spacious grounds will make of the club a real Summer retreat. 2 DRESSES FOR 52§ COATS AND SUITS ALSO SACRIFICED CLOTHES OF DISTINCTION FOR VACATION RESORTS. .. BUSINESS o - SIREEE .. .DAYTIME. .. SPORTS. .. EVENING . . . TRAVEL ... ALL YEAR AROUND WEAR. LARGER WOMEN WOMEN MISSES JUNIORS THE ARISTOCRAT OF KNITTED WEAR! . 20% OIEER SEMI-ANNUAL EVENT LARGER WOMEN WOMEN | MISSES JUNIORS THE KAPLOWITZ STORE IS AIR-COOLED AIR-PURIFIED FOR A GENERATION THE BEST CLOTHES EXCLUSIVELY mer at Bar Harbor, where she will | | Charles place. Lieut. Pryce is a mem- | be joined shortly by Signor Catalal Comdr. and Mrs. Laurance T. Du|ber of the new class at the Naval|who sailed Wednesday for this coun- Bose gave a lunch party Sunday, | their guests including Comdr. and | Mrs. Edwal Lloyd, Mrs, Richard Baldwin and Mr. and Mrs. Howard | E. Atterbury. | Mrs. William L. Hodges of Cam- bridge, Mass., is the guest this week end of Mrs. Keester, wife of Comdr. George Keester. Yesterday afternoon Mrs. Keester gave a small tea for Mrs. Hodges. Mrs. H s formerly lived here. Mr. George Keester, jr., son of Comdr and Mrs. Keester, ha left for Solomons Island, where he will spend some time at camp Mrs. Crenshaw. wife of Capt. Rus- gell Crenshaw, has arrived in An- napolis and is occupying the home of Mrs. Richard O. Welch at 38 Mary- land avenue for the Summer. Capt and Mrs. Crenshaw have been living at Yorktown, Va., where Capt. Cren- shaw was in charge of the Naval Mine Depot. Capt. and Mrs. Cren- shaw’s oldest son is a midshipman in the second class at the Naval| Academy. Capt. and Mrs, Crenshaw | have frequently visited Annapolis as the guests of Capt. and Mrs. W. Tay- | Jor Smith, who recently left here for the West Coast. Capt. and Mrs. George Bryan and children will leave Annapolis the first of next week for Seattle, Wash, where Capt. Bryan will take com- mand of the U. S. S. Maryland, re-| lieving Capt. Donald Bingham, who will come East for duty in Wash- ington. Capt. Bryan has been in command of the U. S. S. Reina Mer- cedes at the Naval Academy for three years. Mrs. William J. Giles, wife of Capt. Giles, has returned to Annapolis af- | ter a trip to California. Mrs. Giles | nas joined her mother, Mrs. Arthur Ryan, who spent the Winter at Carvel Hall. i Lieut. and Mrs. Wallace J. Miller are in Annapolis for a few days after being at New London, Conn., for sev- | eral weeks, and while here are| guests of Comdr. and Mrs. John | Bowers. Lieut. and Mrs. Miller will | leave- shortly for Berkeley, Calif, | where Lieut. Miller will attend the | University of California. Saturday, | June 29, Comdr. and Mrs. Bowers | gave a luncheon at their home for Lieut. and Mrs. Miller, and that eve- | ning. Mr. and Mrs. Francis M.| Lazenby, and Miss Helen Woodward | and Miss Emily Woodward, gave a supper party for them in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lazenby. Mrs. Miller | is the daughter of Mrs. B. M. Jack- son, formerly of Hagerstown, but now | making her home in Annapolis. | Assistant Prof. David G. Howard of the department of electrical engineer- | ing at the Naval Academy, Mrs. How- ard and their children, Miss Betty | Howard and David Howard, jr., have closed their Winter home on Monti- cello avenue and have left by motor for New Hampshire, where they will spend July and August. | Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Gambrill of | Haverford, Pa., are guests of their son-in-law and daughter, Comdr. and Mrs. Jules James, at their home on | Porter road, Naval academy. Lieut. and Mrs. Joseph T. Hazen and young daughter have returned to their home, Cherry Lodge, on the Bevern River, after spending two weeks in Kansas. Mrs. William F. Flood and her children, Miss Mary Louise Flood and William F. Flood. jr., have closed their home on Spa View avenue and are spending several weeks at Boyle’s Inn, &t Matapeake Beach on the Eastern Shore. They were joined over the Fourth of July holiday by Mr. Flood. Mrs. K’s Toll House Tavern Colesville Pike Silver Spring, Maryland The “Old Tavern” Offers not only remarkable food com- binations. but surroundings most unique. for your Luncheons Teas Dinners And Sunday Breakfasts Service in the Open or in gne of those Postgraduate School. | Mrs. Wood, wife of Lieut. Comdr. | Gerard H. Wood, U. S. N, gave a de- lightful tea Sunday at her home xn‘ Round Bay, in honor of her mother, Mrs. C. B. Cooper of Honolulu. Mrs. Fenwick Stewart of Summit, | N. J., has announced the engagement | of her daughter Beatrice Fenwick to Ensign Charles Douglas Lewis, son of Dr. and Mrs. Henry L. Lewis of Street, Miss. Miss Stewart is a daugh- ter of the late Fenwick J. Stewart of Washington, and is a graduate of Kent Place School, Summit, of the Marjorie Webster School, Washington Ensign Lewis attended the Severn School, Annapolis, Md., and was grad- uated from the United States Naval Academy, class of 1934. Mrs. Jack R. Willsey, and her baby daughter Joan have arrived from San Pedro, Calif,, for a week's visit to Mrs. Willsey's father and step-mother, | Mr. and Mrs. Jack N. Prancis, 187 Green street, before going to Norfolk, Va., where Mr. Willsey will be sta- tioned. Virgin_ia_Beach Has | Many Holiday Guests VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. July 6— The glorious Fourth found the Sum- mer colony at the Cavalier Hotel in- creased far beyond its usual holiday proportions this week, while cabana parties at the Cavalier Beach Ciub. gelf matches at the Cavalier Country Ciub and the Fourth of July junior horse show in the Cavalier ring pro- vided an abundance of sport for the resorters. try. His niece, Signorita Vittoria Cat- alani, who has been living in Chicago to be near her sister, Mrs. Kelley, wife of Mr. McClure Kelley, who lives at Geneva, IlL. will also go to Bar Har- bor. Mrs. Kelley and her sister were beth debutantes in Washington while visiting Mrs. Dimock. Bctll;sda Club Has Summer Schedule The president of the W of Be da and the Hc E A A of the € Mrs the first open house AGONY? WEAR GROUND GRIPPER Cantilever, Ground Gripper, Physical Culture, Dr. Kahler 523 1ith St. N.W. Mr. F. Moran McConihe of the Fed- | eral Emergency Administration of Public Works is here for several da}‘s,} Mr. and Mrs. Donald Woodward are at the Cavalier for several days and | spent the daytime at their cabana at the Cavalier Beach Club. Mr. Edward C. Van Devanter is an- other of the holiday visitors at the | Cavalier, others including Mr. Frank A. Spicer of Washington. Mr. Eugene Young of Washington will bring a party of 10 guests to Vir- ginia Beach July 13 for a brief stay | at_the Cavalier. | Miss Mary B. Kennedy, daughter or‘ Representative and Mrs. A. J. Ken- | nedy of Baltimore, is at the Cavalier Hotel this week end. Copper Is Recovered. The copper on the bottom of the wooden warship sunk off Riga, Latvia, | in 1790 during a battle between Swed- ish and Russian fleets and raised re- | cently, will more than repay the cost of salvage. 5 Sale of Queentex Hosiery . ENU— ENTIRE wneesi ONE-WEEK SPECIAL 0il Croquignole «_ Permanent $9.50 Haircut, 2 Shampoos Including Finger Wave, Monday, Tuesday, Wednes- day, Thursday, our regular 50c beauty service, 35c or 3 for $1.00. SHINGLE SHOPPE 1318 F St. MEZZ. FLOOR Phone Met. 7304 67¢- 2 Pairs $1.30 Sals STOCK Queen Quality, Vitality and Debonair Summer Shoes REDUCED Over 3,000 Pairs 365 490 5.85 6.85 A tremendous selection of styles in WHITE shoes, . and combinations of brown and white. large assortment of blue, calf, and a few of beige and gray. Also a black and brown kid and All height heels. Queen Quality Boot Shop 1221 F Street N.W. Our Store Is Air Conditioned charming old Dinner Rooms. Phone SHepherd 3500 -/ ) \ 4 ‘l ) L i s Workmen are busy making Zirkin's one of the most beautiful and modern shops in the city; mer- chandise is “in the way”; we're cutting prices to move the stock immediately; several groups (nrended for later selling arrived ahead of schedule; they are included in this sensational opportunity event. The wise woman will buy NOW for later on and . « « save money! FURS - € 4-Skin Kolinsky Sca 6-Skin Kolinsky Sca Brown and Red Fox S Mole Scarfs Black Lapin Capes Genuine Silver Fox Capes Fome™ Pointed Fox Capes Brown and Black Lapin Jackets Special Group of SEALINE (Dyed Full length and swagger models—all $ sizes—later season’s price, $79.50, Special Group of Later season prices will be $1 Hudson Seal (Dyed Musk from $179.50 to $195. That Formerly Sold From That Formerly Sold From Muskrat, Caracul, Black and Brown Russian Pony COATS Unusual Group of Quality Black Caracul & Raccoon COATS Fine quality and will sell later ra erly $11.95 $15.95 carfs $11.95 e $7495 . $9.95 . $49.75 .. $3475 $22.95 rfs rfs ormerly sy Formerly $19.75 Formerly ormerl $59.75 Formerly $39.756 Coney) COATS 58 Selected Samples *88 26 15 to $135. 48 rat) 25 139 20 Spring Coats and Suits $19.75 to $22.50 40 Spring Coats and Suits 513-95 $29.75 to $35 Incorporated 821 14th Street N.W. Dresses now Formerly $29.75 . . $10.95 Formerly $16.95 ... $7.95 Formerly $12.95 ... $4.95 ATS - DRESSES ALL SUMMER DRESSES REDUCED! All $5.95 Dresses now .--$3.95 Includes mnovelty cottons and washable silk sport models. Sizes 12 to 44. All $10.95 to $13.95 Dresses now , . . . $7.95 Includes linen suits. cottons, silk crepes and cotton evening dresses. Sizes to 44. All $16.95 to $19.75 . oo $IL95 Printed_chiffons. evening . and Sizes 12 to 44 SPRING_SILK DRESSES REDUCED! crepes and dinner Dresses Dresses Dresses Attractive prints with navy and dark backgrounds. Broken sizes. Wonderful savings! $7.95 RKIN Washington's Oldest Furriers—Established 1885 Entire Store Air-Cooled—Shop in Comfort SOCIETY. \E—§ ston Frost of Harvard and William | A Midsummer Of Two Popular Groups! COOL FROCKS Encore ENTIRE BUILDINB F/AELE RALEIGH HABERDASHER THE WOMEN'S SHOP—1310 F STREET

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