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. . . SOCIETY. Officials Get Invitations To Festivals Dance Program and Opera to Be Given This Week. Officials end others prominent in Washington society have been invited by the Summer Festival Committee | of which Mrs. Elizabeth K. Peeples is | chairman, and Mr. C. Marshall Fin- | nan, vice chairman, to attend the| two programs to be given this week. ‘Tomortow evening a program of dance | will be presented by the members of the Bekefi-Delaporte Dance Group and Thursday evening the Egtelle Wentworth Opera Group will| present Gilbert and Sullivan's “Trial by Jury.” preceded by a half hour of music by the United States Marine Band, Capt. Taylor Branson con- ducting. Among those invited are Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Harold L. Ickes, Senator and Mrs. William H. King, Representative Mary T. Norton, Representative Virginia Jenckes, Mr. Frederick A. Delano, Mr. John Nolan, Mr. Arno B. Cammerer, Mr. Harry Slattery, Col. Charles Demonet, Mr. C. Melvin Sharpe, Mr. James G. Yaden, Mr. Thomas S. Settle, and Mrs. Lewis Barrett. Aiding the group of ushers for this week’s festivals will be Girl Reserves of the Young Women's Christian As- sociation, who are attending Camp Stay-at-Home and who will serve as aides at the festivals, in addition to the group of Boy Scouts, under the supervision of Col. E. L. Mattice. The Summer festival has placed tickets for the general chair privilege section and for the reserve chair sec- tion, on sale at the A. A. A. ticket bureau, the Willard and Hotel Wash- ington newsstands, for the conven- dence of the public. “A Midsummer Night's Dream.” presented last week was so popular that the performance had to be re- peated, 15.000 attending the second presentation. The programs are ar- ranged by the Community Center De- partment of the Office of National Capital Parks. French Envoy on Visit (Continued From First Page.) * Benora de Castro are spending the . week end in New York. The counselor of the Hungarian Le- gation, M. Anthony de Balasy, is at Hot Springs, Va., for the week end. | | Thomas and Mrs. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, Will Tour Europe MRS. SAMUEL M. WASSELL, Who will go to New York tomorrow preparatory to sailing Tues- day for an extensive tour of Europe. who were formerly of Arkansas, Judge and Mrs. Wassell, make their home at the La Salle. Mrs. Wassell is better known in the newspaper profession as Louise H. Wassell and is a member of the Newspaper Women’s Club. ~—Harris-Ewing Photo. Visitors at Sandy Spring Entertained ¢ Mrs. Laurence Leadbeater. with her two daughters, of Knoxville, Tenn., are visiting Mrs. Leadbeater's law, Mrs. Laurence Stabler, at Home- wood. An attractive tea was given by Mrs. Francis M. Hallowell Monday after- noon at the Cedars, when she enter- tained in horor of Mrs. William John William John Thomas, 3rd, whose marriage was re- cently announced. Mrs. Thomas and her daughter-in- law were assisted in receiving by Mrs. | Frederick L. Thomas. Mrs. Hallowell had assisting her in | the dining room Mrs. Robert Coulter, The secretary of the Netherlands Legation, Jonkheer H. M. van der ‘Wyck, will sail next week on the Stat- endam for Holland, where he will be during the remainder of the Summer. The first secretary of the Czecho- slavak Legation, Dr. Ales Broz, is spending the week end at Bethany Beach, Del., with his family, who have a cottage there for the Summer. The first secretary of the Norwegian &.cgation, M. Leonard C. P. Offerdahl, Mrs. A. Douglas Farquhar, Mrs. Na- than Winslow, house guesi of Mrs, Hallowell; Mrs. Charles C. Conner, Miss Cornelia Thomas and Miss Jean Coulter. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Bond en- tertained at dinner Monday at Alton- wood in honor of Mrs. Elliott Gilpin of Baltimore. Their other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Bond and | Miss Meta G. Boynton of Washington. Mrs. Gilpin returned to Baltimore after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bond. Mrs. Charles C. Tumbleson gave @ sister-in- | at Silver Lake, N. Y., where their ¢-rght-r. Mrs- < s, 32 c n- cillor at Camp Red Wing. Miss Jean 'homas remained at the camp to as- sist her sister. Mr. and Mrs. Janney Nichols. with their three children, of Westfield, N. J., spent this last week with Mr. Nich- ols’ brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Miller, jr., at the High- lands. Mrs. Frederick Haller entertained with a luncheon at Pheasant Farm Inn Friday, before her departure for an extended stay on the West Coast. The guests from Sandy Spring were |Mrs. Francis M. Hallowell, Mrs | Charles E. Bond, the Misses Miller of Alloway, the Misses Stabler of Edge- wood, Mrs. Francis A. Thomas and Mrs. Nathan Wafle, Mrs. E. Clifton Thomas, Mrs. Orville Peters, Mrs. Ravmond Depew and Miss Gertrude Massey of Washington Miss Bertha Wilson and Miss Jane Bird have gone to Rchoboth Beach, Delaware. Mrs. Addison Gives | Tea at Glendale, Md. | Mrs. French Bowie Addison will Warrenton Man Goes To N_ey_ York Oscar Terry Crosby| and Daughter, Mrs. Hornblow on Trip. WARRENTON, Va, July 13.—Mr. Oscar Terry Crosby, who has been, at | his country home, View Tree Hall, since his recent return from England, left this week for a visit to New York. | His daughter, Mrs. Hornblow, who has | been with her sister, Mrs. Celeste Crosby Miller at View Tree Hall for | some weeks, has also returned to New York. Mr. Crosby and Mrs. Crosby Miller | entertained at diner Saturday evening | | for their week end guests, Mr. Sholz of | the German Embassy and Mr. Freden- | burg of the Toronto Star. Mrs. Howell Peebles of Washington, | who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. | Morton G. Douglas, is spending this | week with Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Payne |in Atlanta, Ga. Miss Helen Peebles | is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Charles Owens, in Wilmington, Del. Mrs. Richard W. Hilleary gave a young people’s scavenger hunt and dance Tuesday evening for her daugh- | ter, Miss Isabelle Hilleary, and her guest, Miss Madge McFall of Danville, Va. | Rev. William Parkinson, for some | years a missionary in Japan, landed | last week on the West Coast with Mrs. Parkinson and their two children and | is now with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. | William Parkinson, in Warrenton. | | Mr. and Mrs. George Calvert, Miss | | Virginia Calvert, Miss Jane Calvert and Mr. Alexander Calvert will leave Monday to spend part of the Summer at Virginia Beach. Dr. Martin Barbour Hiden, chief surgeon of the Fauquier Hospital, will sail Tuesday to spend several weeks in England, France, Italy and Germany. Miss Dorothy Neyhart entertained 20 guests at luncheon Sunday in her home, Sunnyside. Mrs. Albert E. Pierce gave a swim- ming party Saturday evening at Can- terbury Farm for her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Thies- myer of Summit, N. J., and Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Pierce, jr., of Canter- | bury. Mrs. Thomas E. Bartenstein fis | spending the week with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry | Fitzhugh Gray, in New York. | Mrs. A. J. Somerville and her son Jackie, who are spending the’ Summer here, are the guests of Mrs. Thomas Somerville on Chesapeake Bay for a week. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Hagner of Broad View, at Warrenton, have gone to Nantucket for the Summer ! Miss Dolly Hiden is spending the Summer at Camp May Flather, near Harrisonburg, Va. Her Franklin Delano Hiden, is at Camp Wequa, near Germantown, Md., and Martin Barbour Hiden, jr., is with' his | aunt. Mrs. W. S. Hoge. in Washington | Mrs. James C. Biddle has gone to Atlanti¢ City for two weeks, accom- panied by her cousin, Mrs. Peyton Coleman of Washington, Va. brother, | D. C. JULY 14, 1935 PART THREE. June Bride MRS. ARTHUR FINGLE LYON, The former Miss Elizabeth ~ansburgh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Lansburgh of Baltimore, whose wedding took place at the Suburban Club in Baltimore, Thursday, June 27. —Jack Udell Photo. more, and her two daughters to spend | the Summer in Europe. | Gen. and Mrs. William Mitchell of | Middleburg, Va., have gone to York Harbor, Me., for the Summer. RIZIK'S . . . F Street Its, Duvo Crepes for vacation wear, Shapes to shade the eyes —colors to withstand the soil of travel—ruby, new navy, star blue, raspberry and fuchsia—also black and brown— News of Round Hill And Purcellville The Rev. and Mrs. Frank Sant and family of Detroit, Mich., who arrived last week to pass some time with Mrs. Sant's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. ‘Williams, at Round Hill, left Wednes- day for North Carolina. where they will attend a convention for 10 days, returning to Round 1iil! later. They were accompanied as far as Chat- ham, Va, by Mrs. Williams, who is visiting her sister, Mrs. Walter White- head, while the former are in North Carolina. Mrs. Fred Best and Miss Lucile Best entertained a company of 24 at bridge and a midnight supper in the for- mer’'s home at Round Hill, Va., Tues- day evening. Their guests included Mrs. O. L. Williams, M:s. Samuel Gra- ham, Miss Frances Hersperger, Mrs. Edward Bookmiller, Mrs. G. W. Gause, Mrs. Muriel Cooley, Mrs. Gertrude Beatty, Mrs. Harriet Carruthers, Mrs. Samuel Patterson, Miss Constance Wood, Mrs. William 7Turner, jr.; Mrs. Charles J. Harley, Miss Dorothy Har- ley, Miss Bertha Gruver, Mrs. Owen Thomas, jr.; Miss Elizabeth Thomas, Miss Ruth Dillon, Miss Mary Simp- son, Mrs. Oscar Emerick and Mrs. Ruth B. Ford. Mrs. O. L. Emerick entertained at a delightful afternoon bridge in her Purcellville, Va., home Tuesday, when her guests included Mrs. W. H. Tar- ner, Miss Wood, Mrs. Frank Sant, Mrs. Edward Bookmiller, Mrs. Samuel C. Graham, Mrs. H. H. Cooley, Mrs. J. G. Carruthers, Mrs. H. W. Beatty, Mrs. Samuel Patterson. Mrs. C. J. Harley, Mrs. Owen Thomas, jr.; Miss Bertha Gruver, Miss Elizabeth Thom- Luscious ~ Summer yarns. half off the regular price—that's Crepe lovely pastel shades of the season. in- cluded. Instruction by Dor- othy Colhoun given free. Dr:mlh‘v Colhm;n's Knitting Nook 909 18th St. N.W. Metropolitan 7363 SOCIETY, E—3 Evening Hours Dangerous. as, Miss Mary Simpson, Mrs. Der‘ry| Tribby, Mrs. Lee Vandevanter, Mrs. R. M. Thompson, Mrs. C. J. Ford, | _ Accident statistics fust compiled in Miss Martha Cockerille. Miss Clara | En€land show that che most danger- Hersperger, Mrs. Theodore Reid and | ©U5 time for motoring is between § Mrs. Heaton Purcell. High score|nd 6 o'clock in the evening, and the prizes were won by Mrs. Graham and | DeXt greatest between 6 and 7. Mrs. Purcell, with consolation going _ to Miss Gruver. | New T I Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hammerly and | s their son of Chevy Chasc are spending | New income taxes of the Isle of Man a week with Mr. Hammerly’s parents, | are at the raie of about 2 per cent on Mr. and Mrs. Landon Hammerly, at | salaries of $2,500 a year and rising to Round Hill, Va. | 12 per cent on those above $25,000. Store closed all day Saturdays during July and August BURT"®S SEMI-ANNUAL AL ILADIES 3HOES INOW ) 785 INOWY MENS SHOES formerly 6°t0125° ) '&b‘» o g’&'fin BURT F Staf 14Th. ARTHUR SHOE €O entertain at tea in her home near| Mr. and Mrs. Philip Knox gave a . is sailing from Norway tomorrow for this country and is expected to ar- rive in Washington the first of next week. Mme. Offerdahl will remain in Norway for the remander of the Summer. The attache of the Belgian Em- bassy and Mme. Walravens are at Hot Springs, Va., where they are visit- ing over the week end. The newly appointed commercial attache of the Cuban Embassy, Senor lunch party Wednesday in hemor of | her sister, Mrs. Robert Henderson of Caldwell, N. J., who is & guest of her | mother, Mrs. Charles F. Brocke. MTre. | | Tumbleson’s other guests were. Mrs. Frederick L. Thomas, Mrs, Stanton | | Smith, Mrs. R. Bentley Thomas, Mrs. | Lionel C. Probert, Mrs. Eric Englund, | Mrs. William John Thomas, Mrs.* Wil- | liam Dinwiddie, Mrs. Charles E. Bond, | Miss Estelle T. Moore and Mrs. Arthur Palmer of Chevy Chase. | Miss Mary Miller Stabler has been Glendale, Md., Sunday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Drexal Page and her daughter Jane of Accokeek, Md., have City. Mr. Dudley, assistant principal of the Baden Agricultural High School, is attending the University of Mary- land Summer school. Mrs. Clara Baden and Miss Eliza- beth Baden, members of the faculty of the Brandywine Consolidated Don Juan Bruno Zayas, accompanied | the guest with Miss Rena Hubbell in | gopo0) “are planning a motor trip to by Senora de Zayas and their small son Juan Bruno and Senor Zayas' mother, Senora Elisa Ayla de Zayas, have arrived in the Capital from Cuba. The second secretary of the Nica- raguan Legation, Don Fernando Sa- casa, is spending the Summer at Ocean City, N. J., where the charge d’affaires and Mme. de De Bayle have taken a cottage. The staff of the Chilean Embassy is entertaining over the week end, Senor Patricio Smart, who has recent- 1y been appointed Chilean consul in New York. Senor Smart formerly served his country as charge d'ffaires in China. Party Wednesday For Retreat House ‘The annual card party for the bene- | #it of the Washington Retreat House | | at 4000 Harewood road will be held ‘Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock. Mrs. Charles Quigg, chairman of the | committee, will be assisted by the fol- lowing ladies: Prizes, Mrs. J. Casey, | ‘ $7.50 Mrs. B. Daniels, Mrs. L. Nock, Mrs. E. Brown, Mrs. J. Naugton; Refresh- ments, Mrs. J. Byrnes, Mrs. C. M. Mc- Nichols, Mrs. E. Mahaney and Mrs. D. -‘Histon; Tickets, Mrs. William J.| McCarthy. Boy King Gets Railway. While spending his honeymoon in ‘Yugoslavia, Gen. Goering presented a model electric railway, with miniature trains capable of seaiirg child pas- sengers, to King Peter. RIZIK’S—Washington’s Two Better Shops ANNOUNCE--Beginning Monday Morning CLEARANCE Better Dresses Rather than carry these dresses into the com- ing season . . . we've decided to mark them at prices that will make *hem irresistib'e right now! Lot 1—Street and Afternoon Dresses that were $16.95 $7.95 Lot 3—Dinner and Afternoon Gowns —that were $29.75 $15.00 All Sales Final—No Exchanges RIZIK BROTHERS | the Clara Barton home at Glen Echo for several days. Mrs. John C. Bentley, | daugter, Miss Florence Bentley, ac-| | companied by the former's son-in-law | |and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William John Thomas, left Friday for Skan- | eateles Lake, N. Y., where they will be guests for several days of Dr. and Mrs. Karl Wilson. Mrs. Wilson was for- | merly Miss Mildred Bentley of Clo- | verly. | Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Thomas, | accompanied by their two daughters, Jean and Cornelia, spent last week end | with her Copyright No. 65184, 1935 Personally Given by Katharine Lee Ogilvie Scalp and Skin Specialist Regularly $10.00 Glorify your hair with the only self-setting wave that really is SELF SETTING. White hair, fine and dyed hair specially treated. Our guarantee is your assurance. 1325 Conn. Ave. | North 1306 Lot 2—Street and Afternoon Dresses that were $19.75 $10.00 Lot 4—Distinctive Rizik Gowns— that were $49.76 $22.50 1213 F Street 1108 Conn. Ave. Maine, large dance Wednesday at their home | Mrs. Thomas Dobyns, jr., of New York. | near The Plains for their daughter, Miss Polly Knox. | Mrs. H. C. Groome entertained at a | returned from a motor trip to Atlantic | garden tea at Airlie Tuesday after- the lotus pool being in full | noon, ‘bloom. | Miss Amy Williams entertained at | tea Monday at Rock Hill, Casanova, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Chandler and Miss Eleanor Chandler and Miss Harriet Chandler of Brookline, Mass. Miss Charlotte Noland, headmistress of Foxcroft School, has sailed with her sister, Mrs. Edmund Smith of Balti- s5 and up All Summer Hats Drastically Reduced RIZIK BROTHERS 1213 F Street HOP WITH COOL COMPOSURE IN THIS AIR-COOLED STORE! s—— Gown Salo New High-Fashion n EVENT! Je 12141220 F STREET THEhEW Exceptional purchase of just 100 models from the better makers—many just one and two of a kind! On sale tomorrow— *19.75 Daytime — Afternoon — Evening Styles! Misses! Women's! Little Women's! Dark Sheers! Pastel Chiffons! Fresh Print Crepes! 15 styles Dark Chiffons! Print Chiffons! Pastel Laces! for Misses— sizes 14 to 20 (plenty of 16s, 18's). 12 styles sizes 34 to 40's). for Women— 44 (plenty of 36’s, 38's, 2 styles for Little Women— sizes 1615 to 24Y;. Daytime Fashions Plenty of NAVY AND BLACK daytime sheers and chiffons (some of these in Brown) for cooling off in the city— with airy little jackets, short sleeves, capes! Radiant chiffon prints—some monotones_on cool white grounds for misses. Fresh new crepe prints. Choice, $19.75. For Dinner and Evening Clear tels and small flower prints in chiffons—rich pastel laces and some stunning imported print_chiffons for women. Nearly all with little jackets! Choice, $19.75. APOLOGIES, TO ‘ESQUIRE s WERB *Way back, before all hill-billies left their mountain shacks for histrionic fame and fortune on Broadway... if a lady wanted a fur coat she had to go out and shoot herself a bear! Charge Ac- counts Deferred Pay- ment Plan izing, precise details of fabric. vidual, and the cynosure of admiring glances wherever they are worn. Select your 1936 coat in AIR-COOLED COMFORT, from Saks varied selection of furs and styles. Prices begin at $65.00. Saks nearly 50 YEARS OF SPECIALIZED FUR EXPERI- ENCE has simplified fur-coat ownership for the more dis criminating woman of today. SAKS SELECTED PELTS are treated with preservative oils to insure their sheen and long life. SAKS FURS are reduced in bulk so that they may be tailored with the slender- SAKS STYLES are distinctive, indi- ® Lay-away Plan Which do choose? You [14 610 TWELET}