Evening Star Newspaper, September 8, 1935, Page 47

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SOCIETY THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SEPTEMBER 8, 1935—PART THREE., SOCIETY E—9 Miss Potts Is Married In Loudoun Becomes the Bride of | Luther Hale at Vir- ginia Ceremony. LEESBURG, Va., September 7.—A wedding of much interest is that of Miss Loudelle Potts, daughter of Mrs. Laura J. Potts and the late Edwin Potts of Loudoun County, to Mr. Luther Hale, son of the late Rev. and Mrs. William J. Hale, of South- ern Illinols, Tuesday at 4:30 o'clock at | the bride’s ancestral home near Hillsboro, this county, in the presence of the immediate families. The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Mr. Thurston J. Potts, and wore a traveling suit of navy blue with ac- cessories to match. Her flowers were | cream color rosebuds. Mrs. Walter | Shale played Lohengrin's “Wedding March” and “To a Wild Rose.” i The ceremony was performed by | the Rev. W. R. Hardesty of the Methodist Church and took place in the living room of the home. The hcuse was decorated with fern and Summer flowers. Mrs. Hale is a graduate of the Har- risonburg State Teachers’ Coilege, and Mr. Hale received his degree from the University of Tennesses and has done post-graduate work at Cornell. Mr. and Mrs. Hale are both members of | the Handley High School faculty at Winchester, Va.,, where they will be at home following a wedding trip | through historic Virginia. Miss Mary Simpson and Miss Martha Cockerille were hostesses to 24 guests at bridge Tuesday afternoon at Miss Simpson's home near Round Hill. Their guests were Mrs. Charles F. Whitley, Mrs. O. L. Williams, Miss Mpyrtle Baber, Mrs. Heaton Purcell, | Mrs. William Lynch, Mrs. Henry Beatty, Mrs. C. J. Harley, Miss Eliz- abeth Thomas, Mrs. Owen Thomas, Miss Dorothy Harley, Mrs. Edna ‘Turner, Mrs. H. H. Cooley, Mrs. J. G. Carruthers, Miss Lucile Best, Mrs. { Recent Bride MRS. FRANCIS A. FLANAGAN, Who, before her marriage Au- gust 24, was Miss Margaret Vaughan Hewitt, daughter of Mrs. Rufus Tyler Chesser. ~—Edmonston Photo. day. Their guests, all from Connells- ville, Pa., included Mr. and Mrs, Harry Gause, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Shupe, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Herman and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tippman. Miss Evelyn Harkness has returned | Ambassador (Continued From First Page.) on the occasion of the birthday anni- versary of King Peter II Senor C. de Freitas-Valle, counselor of the Brazilian Embassy, entertained at luncheon at the Shoreham yester- day for members of the embassy staff in celebration of Brazil’s Independence day. ‘The newly appointed air attache of the Spanish Embassy and Senora de Pranco, who came to the Capital several weeks ago, have taken an apartment at the Roosevelt for the Winter. The first secretary of the Peruvian Embassy, Dr. Juan Mendoza Almenara, is spending the week end in New York City and will return to the Capital tomorrow. The first secretary of the Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Re- publics and Mme. Neymann have re- turned to the Capital from New Jersey, where they spent some time. The first secretary of the Canadian Legation and Mrs. Merchant Mahoney have gone to Ottawa, where the former received the C. B. E. decora- tion, the investiture taking place Fri- day. Mr. and Mrs. Mahoney will be away two or three weeks. The secretary of the Netherlands Legation, Jonkheer H. M. van der Wyck, will return to the Capital to- morrow. Jonkheer van der Wyck has been in Holland since the middle of July. Finland will be joined this week by Mme. von Numers, who is returning from Finland, where she has spent the Summer. The secretary returned to Washington -at the end of August after being in Finland on leave. The attache of the German Embassy and Prau Richard Sallet have re- turned from a trip to the West Coast and are again at their home on Graf- ton street in Chevy Chase, Md. The attache of the Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Mme. Khrisanfov have returned to the Capital from Maine, where they have been for several weeks. Dr. Paul Schwarz, the former Ger- man consul in New York, and Mrs. Schwarz, who have returned from the coast, entertained at luncheon at the St. Moritz in New York yesterday for Frau Paul Rebner, who will return to Denmark on the Deutschland. COMMUNISTS INDICTED Perjury Charged to Sam Darcy, California Leader. BSAN FRANCISCO, September 7 (#). —Sam Darcy, Communist candidate for Governor of California last year, and Juan Diaz, former San Francisco supervisorial candidate, were indicted on perjury charges yesterday by a county grand jury. Both men are accused of making false statements in connection with their registration affidavits. Darcy has been reported en route | back to the United States from Rus- sia, where he was a delegate to the The secretary of the Legation of | Third Internationale last July. ‘Derns (Continued Prom First Page.) from Nantucket, where they have been during the Summer months. Senator Rush D. Holt of Weston, W. Va, is in the city for a few days and is occupying his apartment at the Wardman Park Hotel. Senator Joseph F. Guffey is at the Carlton while here for a short stay, arriving from his home in Pittsburgh. Representative Virginia E. Jenckes and her daughter, Miss Virginia Jenckes, are closing their apartment in the Northumberland and will leave in a few days for their home in Terra Haute, Ind. Representative Jenckes will be the guest speaker at the Constitution day celebration of the Fort William Henry Harrison Chapter, N. 8. L. A. R, in Indianapolis Tuesday, September 17. Representative and Mrs. Pritz G. Lanham of Fort Worth, Tex., are at the Dodge. The i]nderucreury of State, Mr. William Phillips, will return to the Capital September 15 from his home in Beverly, Mass. The special assistant to the Attor- ney General and Mrs. Julius C. Mar- tin will close their apartment in the Kennedy-Warren and leave tomorrow for the West Coast. They will visit their son, Mr. Harry Martin, and his family in their home in Portland, Oreg., and expect to return to Wash- ington the middle of October. Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Jordan and their daughter, Miss Helen Rich- man Jordan of Salem, N. J., and Mr. Edgar Gulick Arnes Bennington of Philadelphia were guests of the spe- cial assistant to the Attorney General and Mrs. Martin over the week end and Labor day. Assistant Attorney General Joseph B. Keenan returned to the Capital last night from Long Island, where he has Been for several weeks. Retiring Assistant Attorney General and Mrs. George C. Sweeney will leave today for Boston where the former will assume his new duties as United States district judge in Boston. Former Assistant Solicitor General Angus D McLean has been ap- pointed to succeed Mr. Sweeney as Assistant Attorney General. The assistant to the general counsel to the Secretary of Treasury, Mr. Robert H. Jackson, has gone to his home in Jamestown, N. Y., to spend a fortnight, Judge and Mrs. Oscar E. Bland have returned to the Capital from a trip to the West Coast. They visited relatives in Colorado, California and went to Carrier Lake in Northwestern British Columbia. On their return they stopped at Lake Louise, Banfl and the Glacier National Park. HUMMING BIRD GLUTTON| | Diet No Alibi—It Eats Four| Times Its Weight Daily. | ST. LOUIS (#).—If some buxom miss complains that she doesn't see how she’s galned so much weight since she eats just like a humming bird, tell her this: | Each of the 17 humming birds at| the zoo here eats four times its weight in food daily. | U. S. JUDGE UPHOLDS CONNALLY 0IL ACT Important Decision Denies Un- constitutionality of Curb on “Hot” Product. By the Associated Press. SHERMAN, Tex., September 7.— Federal Judge Randolph Bryant up- held the constitutionality of the new Connally oil act today, a decision re- garded as of far-reaching importance to the rich East Texas oil fields. The measure, enacted by Congress in February, was designed to prevent movement in interstate commerce of “hot” ofl, that which is produced or withdrawn from storage in excess of the amount permitted by State laws, Judge Bryant'’s decision was ren- dered against the East Texas Refining Co, which was seeking tenders on 155,000 barrels of oil. The company named as defendant Federal Tender Board No. 1 and attempted to prove the Connally law was unconstitu- tional. Diamond Engagement The ring shown at the left, RINGS in 10% iridium platinum, with a beautiful, large center stone and 6 smaller the mounting ________ amonds in ,,,,,,,,, $150.00 up In choosing a lifetime possession, such as Her En- gagement Ring, remember the tradition of Quality de- veloped during three generations by this establishment. An R. Harris Engagement Ring is an assurance of unquestioned quality and exquisite design. Wedding bands to match, beginning at $27.50. R. Harris & Co. Diamond Merchants for More Than Half a Century 11th and F Sts. N.W. Phone Di. 0916.17-18 1 to her home in Leesburg after spend- | § ing the Summer in the West and the | New England States with Mrs. Fran- | cis T. A. Junkin. Mrs. Junkin enter- Fred Best, Mrs. R. M. Thomp:on, Miss Irene Wright, Mrs. Albert Hoopes, Mrs. Hannah Norman, Miss announce the opening "/ Frances Cockerille, Miss Perry, Mrs. Anne Bookmiller and Miss Elizabeth Cockerille. High scores were made by | Mrs. Beatty and Mrs. Purcell Miss Eleanor Brower entertained a large number of her young friends at | her home in Purcellville, Friday eve- | ning at a dance. Members of the | younger set were present from Lees- | burg, Middleburg, Upperville and other nearby points. Members of the Pierpont clan, an | old Loudoun family, met at the an cestral home near Paconian Springs, this county, for their annual reunion ‘This year marked the 300th anniver- sary of the coming of the first Pier- point to America from France. Over 100 descendants of Henry Pierpoint, who was the original settler in this country, gathered for the reunion, and were present at morning wcr- ship in the Priends Meeting House in Waterford where many of the Pier- point ancestors have worshiped. A picnic luncheon followed the service at the Pierpoint homestead, now oc- cupied by Hugh Pierpoint and fam- ily. Clan members present were from ‘Washington, Alexandria, White Plains, | N. Y. Martinsburg, Fairmont and | other sections. The oldest member | present was John Pierpoint, 89, from Fairmont. Rev. William Pierpoint, Martinsburg, was made president; Mrs. Horlone Pierpoint Helmick, Fair- mont, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs, ‘William Pierpoint, Martinsburg, his- torian. Miss Irene Wright was hostess at luncheon yesterday, when her guests were Mrs. Thomas Framer, Mrs. Reeves Bell, Mrs. William Leahay and Mrs. Raymond Walsh, all of Washing- ton. Mrs. Charles J. Ford entertained at bridge Wednesday, when her guests, numbering 20, included Mrs. W. H. ‘Turner, Mrs. J. Samucl Patierson, Miss Prances Hersperger, Miss Eliza- beth Thomas, Miss Lucile Best, Mrs. Harriet Carruthers, Mrs. Ralph! ‘Thompson, Mrs. C. F. Whitley, Mrs. | Otis Williams, Miss Myrtle Baber, | Miss Mary Simpson, Mrs. Daisy Har- | ley, Miss Dorothy Harley, Mrs. Alma Lynch, Mrs. H. W. Beatty, Mrs. Her- | bert H. Cooley, Mrs. Owen Thomas, | Miss Elizabeth Hawthorne and Mrs. | Fred Best. Prizes were won by Mrs. | Turner and Miss Hersperger. i Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beatty enter- tained at a house party at their home in Bluemont over the Labor day holi- tained at a luncheon in Miss Hark- | ness’ honor at the Shoreham on Tues- | day. Patronesses for the benefit dance for the Thomas Balch Library here last evening included Mrs, Westmore- land Davis, Mrs. Charles F. Harrison, Mrs. William Rust, Mrs. Willlam Mentzer, Mrs. J. R. H. Alexandria | and Mrs. E. B. White. | 8 Mme. Marie von Unschuld and M. | Henry Lazard of Washington were | [ uests over Labor day of Miss Lilias | anney. { Mrs. Stevery Woodruff, Miss Martha | § Weodruff, Miss Matile Woodruff and | Master Billy Woodruff have returned | to their home in Detroit after spend- | & ing the Summer in Leesburg. | Mrs. Inez Gardner entertained & | party of friends over the week end. Included in the party were Mrs. P. E. McInturff and her daughters, Miss Justine and Miss Virginia McInturfl, and Mr. and Mrs. William Kibler, all | of Nottingham, Pa. 1 CRASH IN RENTED PLANE: | FATAL TO CHICAGOAN Son of Socially Prominent Real Estate Man Cracks Up on Estate of Friends. By the Associated Press. | CHICAGO, September 7.—Bucking- ham Chandler, 2d, 19, Winnetka, son of a socially prominent real estate man, died in an Elgin IIl, hospital last night from injuries he received yesterday when the rented plane he was flying crashed near suburban Barrington. Chandler. whose plane plungsd 200 feet to eaith on the estate of San- | ford B. White, never regained con- sciousness. His father was at his bedside when he died. Sanford and Charles White, sons | of the owner of the estate, whom Chandler was on his way to visit, sald they saw his plane circle their home several times while he waved at them from the air, before the crash occurred. New Buildings Planned. New government buildings are to be constructed at Edinburgh Scotland. b Back to s4 and $5 Our expert operators will take zreat pains to give your young daughter » youthful, becom- ing permaunent with the large, naturai rng- lets ana brush curls at the siae, like the moael sketchea. Phone District 4400 “72 Beauty Salon—Balcony Wave Before She Goes G.sr.ar™ Permanent School for an appointment THE NEW JELLEFF'S NEW MILLINERY SALON . ' i of their New Millinery Salon Harryson’s authentic adap- hoosing a Hat... Among the lovelier rites for women Now you can indulge your flair for beautiful hats without conceding a single consideration of comfort and luxury — “Isn't it beautifull” — you will say when you see the spa- cious luxury and the lovely modern appointments of the New Hat Salon. Obviously designed for smart Washington! But there are other things to think of . . . do not overlook the hats! Scattered in this picture are some of the celebrated signatures which mark Jelleff's hats. Whether your need is for a British-looking hat like the felt classic "Oddswon” by Stetson, $8.50 . . . or a distinctly French creation by Agnes, $18.50 . . . or something bril- liantly American such as Milgrim's Felt Wing, $16.50 . . you're pretty likely to find what you want when you want it, at Jelleff's usual low prices . . . . . $5t0 30 tation of Suzanne Talbot's sophisticated new swirled bow turban of fine ported felt, $15. Hat Bal' = m m in the modermn manner Surprise of the new Millinery Salon! You'll find it an exciting adventure to do your hat-sampling at the barl Obliging little chairs spin around to enable you to judge the true becomingness of your hat from every angle. It's all part of Jelleff's scheme to make the unusual service the usual thing . . . everytime, everytime, everytime.- | 1220 F STREET

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