Evening Star Newspaper, August 19, 1935, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

0 HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON D. C, MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1935. m— A “Hold-Up” at House Pages’ Dinner Virginia-Maryland News Maj. and Mrs. McBride Back From Mountains—Lieut. Spangler Here. Maj. and Mrs. H. L. McBrid: re- turned on Friday from a week’s visit in the Adirondacks, where they were the guests of Maj. and Mrs. Arnold at their camp on Cranberry Lake. Lieut. S. D. Spangler, U. 8. N., re- cently transferred from Coronado, Calif, to Washington, with Mrs. Spangler and their son, Selden, jr., and daughter, Sarah Dean, have taken a home at 4533 Thirty-second street north, Country Club Hills, Va. Lieut. Spangler is on duty with the Bureau of Aeronautics. Miss Wilma Spangler of Los Angeles is expected to arrive within the next two weeks for a visit with her brother and sister-in-law, Lieut. and Mrs. Spangler. farewell party was tendered Pfof. and Mrs. C. P. Crager, and their daughter, Miss Lorraine Crager, in the assembly room of the General Conference of Seventh Day Adven- tists, Takoma Park, yesterday, and to- day the trio started for San Jose, Costa Rica, where Prof. Crager will have his headquarters as the superin- tendent of the Central American Union Mission, which includes in its territory Honduras, Guatamala, Nlcn-l ragua, Panama, Costa Rica, British| Honduras, Salvador and the Bay| Islands. | With Prof. C. A. Russell of the Edu- | cational Department of the Generali Conference as chairman, the employes of the governing body of the Seventh day Adventists presented Prof. Crager with a solid mahogany Westminster chimes clock, and a purse as a token of esteem, he having been connected | with the educational department for | the past five years. Prof. W. E. Nelson, secretary of the department,| made the presentation. Musical se- | lections were rendered by a male| quartet composed of Cecil Higgins, | Robert Eldridge, Charles Eldridge and | Merrill Dawson. After visiting with relatives in| Pennsylvania, the Cragers will sail from New York on Saturday, Au-| gust 24, ! Mr. and Mrs. Kolb Curtice and| their two sons, and Mrs. Jack Reeves of South Boston. Va.. have returned from Herndon. Va., where they were guests for a short time of Mr. and Mrs. E. Barbour Hutchison. Mr. and Mrs. Curtice will entertain | & party of friends this week at their cottage at Lake Waccamaw, N. C Their guests will include Miss Jane Hutchison, Mr. and Mrs. David and E. Barbour Hutchison, jr., of Herndon, Va. Miss Isabel Griffin, Mrs. John Reeves and Dr. and Mrs. John Stover | of South Boston, Va.. and Mr. Rich-| ard Glenn of Hawthorne of Washing- ton, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Keller of Waco, Tex., were guests of Mr. and Mrs.| George Webster of Sligo Park Hills, Md., in their home over the week end. Mr. Keller is & cousin of the well- known Helen Keller, making the trip | to attend a family reunion of the Keller family in Staunton, Va, this Mrs, Kolbe Curtice, Mrs. Jack F.ceves, Mrs. James Cockerille and Mrs. George F. Buell. High scores were made by Mrs. A. H. Buell, Mr. E. Barbour Hutchison and Dr. Meyer. Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Finks of Ashfon Heights, Va., left yesterday morning to motor to Kentucky to visit relatives and friends in Mayfield, Frankfort and Louisville, and will also spend several days fishing on Reel Foot Lake, near Memphis, Tenn. They were accompanied on- the trip by Mr. Fink’s mother, Mrs. Minnie L. Finks of Lakota, Va, who has been their guest in Ashton Heights; also a cousin, Miss Cleo Saxon of Mayfleld Ky., who has been making her home in Arling- ton County for the past year. Mr. and Mrs. Finks and the former's mother will return September 5. However, ‘Miss Saxon will remain at her home in Kentucky. Miss Ruth Horner of Lyon Park, Va., and Miss Mary Louise Inbody of Cherrydale, Va.. are leaving today for Capon Lake Inn, on the Cacapon River at Intermont, W. Va, for a two-week vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Carl and daughters, the Misses Louise and Jane Carl of Lyon Village, Va., are spend- ing the week end in lLa Plata, Md, with Mrs. Carl’s brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs, Warren M. Albrittain. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Helms of Sun- ward, Addison Heights, Va., have had as guests Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ras- | mussen of Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Ras- mussen spent the Summer in Den- | mark, and was met last week upon her arrival in New York by her hus- band who motored East for her. More than 50 of her friends gave | a culinary shower for Miss Marie | Fellabaum at the home of Mr. and | Mrs. Forrest Boyd, 25 Lincoln avenue, | Takoma Park, last night in honor of | her approaching marriage to Mr.| | spending the month of August with | to his home in Clarendon today from | | Western Kentucky, where he spent Marvin Baldwin at the Takoma Plfk‘ Seventh Day Adventist Church Tues- day night, September 3. | Miss S. Jane Hutchison and Mr. | and Mrs. David Murray Aud of Hern- don. Va. left yesterday for a 10-day stay at Lake Waccamaw, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McGuire of Washington, D. C., are the guests of the Beach Plaza Hotel, Virginia Beach, Va. Misses Ruth, Martha and Peggy Caples and their brother, Mr. Larkin Caples of Towson, Md., and Mr. Wil- lard Morris of Miami, Fla., have been visiting their aunt, Mrs. Belle Caples Morris, near Five Oaks. Mrs. Morris’ daughter, Mrs. Louise Van Dyke Scene night. A water pistol played & big part in the dinner. at the annual dinner for House pages given by Joseph B. Shannon at the Shoreham Terrace last Left to right: Howard Ostmann, Fred Johnson using a water pistol to stop Charles Wells from taking too many rolls. Due to illness Representative Shannon was rot present. L3 Morris Lawhorne and her children, Allen Morris and Betty Gordon, are relatives in Miami, Fla, Mr. James J. McNeely will return two weeks visiting relatives and friends at his old home in Mayfield. | Mrs. Carl H. Gilbert and daughters, Miss Elizabeth and Miss Edyth, and | Miss Marguerite DeVaughn left Sat-| urday for a fortnight's visit in Bangor, Me. © Dr. and Mrs. James W. Watts are spending a week’'s vacation at the Kenilworth at Virginia Beach, Va. | Dr. Watts is associate professor of brain surgery at George Washington University. | Miss Catherine Ridgely of Upper Marlboro and her sister, Mrs. William F. McCormick, and son Willlam of Laurel left Saturday for a vacation | at Atlantic City. | Mr. and Mrs. John W. Taylor of | Clarendon, Va., have gone to Brattle- boro, Vt., to visit relatives and will | evidence, but formality was thrown to | also visit in Boston, Mass. When they | return after Labor day they will bring | back with them their two daughters, Barbara and Dorothy Mae. 1 k3 BANQUET ENJOYED | BY HOUSE PAGE Annual Adjournment Fete for Boys Arranged by Representa- ‘tive Shannon. Pages of the House of Representa- tives dined and frolicked at the Shore- | | ham Hotel last night in their annual | adjournment banquet, | | Representative Joseph Shannon, Dem- arranged by ocrat, of Missourd. | Representative Shannon himself was absent. Illness detained him in Atlantic City, but his guests, although | not unmindful of their host's unfor- tunate predicament, cut their capers as playfully and sang as lustily as though the genial Representative were there in person to egg them on. Their program—complete with pray- er and floor show—was strenuous enough to force any master of cere- monies and set of night club enter- tainers to ask for a raise in salary. Parliamentary procedure was much in the winds and the boys were ingen- uous in supplementing their planned schedule with impromptu skits, water- gun shootings and diverse deviltry. WOODWARD & LOTHROP 10™ 11™ F axp G STREETS ProNe DIsrict 5300 ~—Star Staff Photo. A “conference report” expressing their gratitude ' to Representative Shannon was adopted by the pages at the close of the session and a tele- gram wishing him speedy recovery was dispatched. It was the first pages’ adjournment dinner missed by Shan- non during his three terms in Con- gress. it et Burns Statue Replaced. Replacing the much-criticized statue of Robert Burns, a new one will be erected at the Burns mausoleum in St. Michael's church yard, Dunfries, | Scotland. FOR LOVELY FLOORS NO RUBBING NO POLISHING WOODWARD & LOTHROP [ACCIDENT TOLL TWO IN MARYLAND One Run Down by Auto and Another Dies as Car Overturns. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, August 19.—TWwo dea and eight injured was Maryland's toll today as a result of week-end traffic accidents. Quintman T. Loller, 37, of Birming- | ham, Ala, was run down and killed near Aberdeen by a machine driven by Robert Widdekind, of Havre De Grace, Police said Loller was a hitch- | hiker. Leslie Douglas, 36, colored, of Girdle Tree, was killed near Snow Hill when his automobile overturned. | ‘Two men were hurt critically and three other persons, two of them women, were less seriously injured when a truck in which all five were riding was struck by an automobile | and overturned near Pikesville yester- day. ‘Two occupants of a taxicab were in- a traffic policeman was knocked down by an automobile, Two Couples Licensed. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., August | 19 (Special).—Marriage licenses have | been issued here to | John Frederick Kirby, 25, Fort Foote, Md., and Jeannette L. Farrell, 25, 1Moum Savage, Md.; Fred E. Green, | 64. and Eleanor Sarah Sullivan, 62, both of Landover, Md. Burning, smarting, itching irritations, anywhere on the body, quickly relieved, and healing promoted with safe, soothing Resinol. Doctors and nurses recommend it. {FISH IS BOOED DURING | losophies before jured slightly in a collision here and | the following: | DEBATE WITH SINCLAIR| Police Guards -n;—l;ou Truek,l However, Are Not Needed to Quell Expected Disorders. By the Associated Press. HOLLYWOOD, August 19.—While | poiice guards and a fre department hose truck stocd by to quell any dis- orders, Representative Hi Democrat, of New York, and Upton | Be Sinclair, novelist and former Socialist, | discussed their widely differing phi- Hollywood Bowl yesterday. Although the crowd, apparently | predominantly sympathetic toward Sinclair, “booed” lustily when Fish | urged the election of a Republican iliton Fish, | =3 and the police and hose truck were not called into action. Fish described Sinclair's “end-pav- erty-in-California” movement, based on production for use, as “100 per cent Socialism.” s . Billions Spent on Roads. England has spent $4.500 000.000 on its highways since the World War. RESORTS, MARYLAND. SHADY SIDE._MARYLAND RURAL t"(l”“ HOTEL 10,600 persons in e | HASTINGS HOTEL o B P Privat ce. Special Rates AS. LUDLAM President as the way out of wha $7-50 per . .. a reduction of 25% Actually lower than paying renewal fees. it's the— BUILDING A 11th and E The Largest in Washington. Establish: ARTHUR G. BISHOP Chairman of the Board Member of Federal Home Loan Bank Loan League. The District of Cols REAL ESTATE LOANS now being made on terms as low as Per Month Perpetual offers a new and attractive mortgage loan For funds to purchase a home . . . to make desired home improvements or to refinance existing trusts PERPETUAL ect 1o dock at iton Farness la Line, 34 Whitehall 8t.. New York. 11000 on monthly repayments. rent. No commission or SSOCIATION Sts. N. W. —Assets over $36,000,000 ed 1881 MARVIN A. CUSTTS President EDWARD C. BALTZ, Secretary System, United Stales Building and umbia Building and Loan League. WoobDWwARD & LoTHROP 0™ |I™F aAND G STREETS PHonE DIsTRICT S300 VOGUE PATTERNS now in LADIES HOME JOURNAL You have heard the news—a foremost fashion authority and a most influential woman's magazine join hands to bring you fashion rightness—Vogue patterns will be a regular feature in the Ladies’ week. | Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur N. Baughman, end family have moved from Ken- sington, Md., into their new home, Gayfield, at Lay Hill, Md, which they recently purchased. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Love of | Aurora Hills, Va, entertaindd for a| brief visit this week Dr. and Mrs. W. Heath of Gainesville, Fla, who —— Special This Week Only ) are motoring to the New England States, stopping at intermediate places and returning to Florida via Chicago. Dr. Heath is a professor of chemistry | at the University of Florida. Mrs. William Phillips, accompaniefl" by her sons, Mr. Frank Phillips and | Mr. Henry Phillips, have returned to | their home in Silver Spring, Md.,| from a trip to Lake Ariel, Pa. 'whel'e‘1 they visited Mrs. Phillips’ son-in-law | and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert | Rockwell. | | Mr. and Mrs. Howard Grifith of | Woodside Park, Md., had as their | week-end guests Elder A. L. Harrison and Mrs. Harrison and their daughter, Miss Harriet Harrison, of Front Royal, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Harrison of Plymouth, N. C, and Mr. Arthur | Sender and son, Arthur, jr., of Wi ton-Salem, N. C. They also had v iting them recently Mrs. Ben Sonner | of Washington. | Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kaldenbach | with their two sons, Raymond, jr. and Robert, have returned to t home on North Highland street in Clarendon from Atlantic City, where they spent the past week. They were accompanied on the trip by Miss Vir- ginia Lusby and Miss Jean Baldwin, | also of Clarendon. | Mrs. Claude Swanson Semones of | Aurora Hills, Va., accompanied by her | nephew, Mr. Russell Urquhart, mo- tored on Friday to Roanoke, Va. to remain until after Labor day. Mrs. Semones will visit Mr. and Mrs. Hu- bert Brown, and Mr. Urquhart will be with his parents and other rela- tives in Roanoke. Mrs. Semones will be joined by her husband, Dr. Semones, the latter part of the month and he will remain over the holiday and motor back with his wife and nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hyde Buell entertained a large company at con- tract bridge and a midnight supper Friday evening in their home iIn Herndon, Va. Among their guests were Mr. and Mrs. George Ramsey Bready, Mrs. T. Edgar Aud, Mrs. Rus- sell A. Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. E. Bar- bour Hutchison. Mrs. David M. Aud, | Mr. and Mrs. 8ilas F. Hutchison, Dr. Ernest C. Shull, Dr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Julian D. Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Light- bown, Mrs. Allen H. Kirk, Mr. and Libbey Tumblers Safedge Engraved With One Old English Initial $]-50 dozen Regularly $2 dozen Nine-ounce crystal glass tumblers engraved with one Old English in itial—the work being done by our own copper-wheel engraver, right in the department. You will find these tumblers a great help GLASSWARE, FIFTH FLOOR, in your entertaining. Have Your Silverware Bright and Shining When You Return From Vacation Our plating laboratory will replate old silverware to look new again. All dents will be removed, all broken parts repaired—ready for the new season’s enter- taining. Because this replating is done in our own shops you are assured of the usual Woodward & Lothrop expert- ness of workmanship. JEWELRY REPARR, FIRsT FLOOR. Special Plain Blankets By Kenwood $8.95 | This price will be in effect in August, and then only as long as our present stock of these soft, warm blankets lasts. 72x84 size in plain colors of blue. green, peach, rose, tan. BLANKETS, SECOND FLOOR. (first floor)—and Vogue Patterns, in (second floor). CO&““%S‘ —suming; takably new—unm value : Eponge Coatings woolens. navy. brown an WOOLENS, SECOND Froor, NEW - Crown—‘.eS‘e Delightfully differe printed Rayon crepes. the backgrounds—imo interesting news. they are ¥t s —sheer woolen istakably smar ce. Choose from is low pri at this lo p~ jon dlagona\»‘- In Autumn rusts, d black. basket-wea dark greens. wine-reds, dress fabrics—every t—and unmistakably the Patterns Section piece, unmis a lu-menf)‘b\l5 try Twctds e rabbitsha ples— Ves, dusky-pur PRINTED RAYONS 85¢ yord tly Autumn 1935 Wines and greens and . notone, duotone or MU washable— nt — distinc lticotor prints. d—-Sanforized-shr unk vintage — these new Jues and browns. for ; And, very will not pull at the seams.

Other pages from this issue: