Evening Star Newspaper, September 15, 1935, Page 59

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SOCIETY. Fort Belvoir Fall Season Is Opened R. 0. T. C. Class Gives Dance — Reception Scheduled Friday. FORT BELVOIR, Va, September 14—Gen. Edward M. Markham, chief of Engineers, was a guest at the post Wednesday and he addressed the com- pany officers’ class and their instruc- tors. Social activities of the season begin to get under way as vacations are ending and officers take up their Fall duties. Officers of the R. O. T. C.| class here gave a delightful dance at| the club last night for the post per- sonnel and next Friday night Mac- kenzie Hall will be the scene of the opening reception and dance, when | the post commandant and the execu- tive officers and their wives will offi- cially receive all newcomers to the post. The first of the smaller affairs was a tea given this afternoon by Maj. and Mrs. Stanley L. Scott for the faculty and students of the Engineer School and their wives. Capt. and Mrs. James C. Marshall, who left for the captain’s new post | at Albany, N. Y., were guests of Capt. and Mrs. Karl B. Schilling before their | departure. Capt. and Mrs. Schilling gave them a farewell dinner party at which Capt. and Mrs. William Bessell of Bolivar, Ohio; Capt. Heath Twichell and his daughter, Miss Janet Twichell, and Mis. Beryl Marshall, daughter of | Capt. and Mrs, Marshall, were also Returns MISS MARGARET REA WHITE, , Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. White, who has re- turned to her home on Colum- | bia road, after spending the Summer in North Carolina. —Casson Photo. gave an evening party for their house guests. Capt. and Mrs. Benjamin Chadwick of Fort Dupont were guests of Capt. and Mrs. Karl B. Schilling last week | end. | Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Walter L. Rees- | man are spending a vacation on a| motor trip along the New England' coast, stopping at the Cape Cod and | the Maine coastal resorts. They will | return the first of the week through | the White Mountains. Capt. and Mrs. Harold P. Henry | erine Gengnagle THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SEPTEMBER 15, 1935—PART THREE. Residents of Hyattsville Back_Home {Mr. ana—l\fis. Quail | End Trip—Silvers Visit F.‘aughts. Mr. and Mrs. Myles H. Quail and children, Mylsie, Patsy and Jo Anne, have returned to their home in Hy- attsville after a three-week trip, during which they visited Rochester, Fal- mouth and Taunton, Mass., Niagara Falls and other places of interest. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Faught, Cargy roll avenue, Hyattsville, have been en- | tertaining Mr. and Mrs. John S. Sil- | ver of Milwaukee, formerly of Hyatts- ville, Miss Betty Howard and Miss Kath- Hyattsville from a trip to Boston by | sea. Following a visit to Moline, III, | where he participated in the national | | horseshoe pitching Temple Jarrell, son of Councilman | and Mrs. T. D. Jarrell, is back in Hyattsville. He won the Maryland championship in the 1935 Evening Star competition. Mrs. Eleanor Wiseman Ryce has returned to Hyattsville from a visit in Connecticut. Mr. and Mrs. Elgin Noack of Cot- tage City and Mr. and Mrs. Albert McClay are home from a motor trip to Canada. Mr. McClay, formerly of Hyattsville, now holds a position in Wilmington, Del, and he and Mrs. have returned to | championships, | Recent Bride MRS. SAMUEL CALLAWAY, Before her marriage, Septem= ber 4, Miss Marjorie Palmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Palmer of California. Mr. and Mrs. Callaway will be at home at 1410 North Gar= field street, Clarendon, Va., after September 23, Marlboro, member of the Maryland | House of Delegates from Prince !Gn-urges County, and Mrs. Marbury and daughter Priscilla, have returned from a two-week visit with Mrs. Mar- bury’s parents in Boston. Dr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Pearson and daughter, Miss Ruth M. Pearson, | are at their home in Hyattsville after a 1,300-mile automobile trip, during | which they visited friends and rela- | tives in New York City, Greenwich UNIFIED AGENCY URGED \ OF NATURAL RESOURCES | , Adoption followed a plea by Col ‘| of the More Game Birds in America By the Assoclated Press. ‘TULSA, Okla., September 14.—Con- solidation of all Federal agencies deal- ing with conservation and restoration of natural resources was urged in a resolution adopted here yesterday by the International Assoclation of Game, Fish and Conservation Commissioners. ur F. Foran, New York, president Club, for a closed season for several | years with a restricted bag limit on birds when the season is again opened, Elliott Barker, Santa Fe, N. Mex., was elected president of the group. Ray P. Holland, New York, was re- elected secretary. The 3-Piece Swagger Suit ® Monotone Jacket Suit. ® Plaid Swagger Topcoat —the right send-off for school or college. SOCIETY. You Probably Know What % 4 4, V4 PAGES ©¢, more, todie about them m Sow tomofrow's- (Monday's) Star % New Fali Apparel fit'Spec Prices . L. It's the Jelleff, Wg of Starting the New Seasan’ % McClay soon will take up their home | and New Milford, Conn., and Avon, there. | N. Y. They wer absent several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Wayt Craig, oak-‘1 Mrs. Journingham Queen and her wood road, Hyattsville, celebrated |daughter, Miss Lillian Queen, have their eleventh wedding anniversary |returned to their home in New York on Tuesday. They were married in after a visit with Mrs. Hunter Edelen Seymour, Ind., the home of Mrs. Craig, | and Miss M. C. Queen, in Southern whose maiden name was Miss Mar- | Prince Georges County. tha Borcherding. | R - Mrs. Anna Padgeit and son Stuart of Hyattsville have been visiting in | Atlanta, Ga. The latter formerly re- present. left Thursday for a tour through the Miss Janet Twichell entertained ' Berkshires in Massachusetts and be-| members of the junior set at a dinner | fore returning to the post they will| party for Miss Beryl Marshall before | visit at North Adams, Mass, and at Miss Marshall left with her parents. | Montclair, N. J. Capt. and Mrs. Bessell, who have| Capt. and Mrs. Thomas North have many friends on the post, were here returned from a leave of absence spent | for several days, during which they|in Bermuda, New York and Atlantic stayed at the Officers’ Club. | City. Mrs. Heath Twichell has rmurned‘ e from an extended trip, during which Rod Solves Motor Knocks. S & toat ulty. | she visited Maj. and Mrs. Douglas | Cairns at Fort Dupont and Capt. and| To locate motor knocks, a sounding | Brother Joseph Anthony, formerly | Mrs. Carl Meyer at West Point. She rod has been made. It is a funnel | Frederick Wyvill, is spending several also spent a few days with her mother, | soldered to the end of a metal rod, |days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. | Mrs. Martin, in New York City, where making an inexpensive finder. The Samuel A. Wyvill, Upper Marlboro, her daughters, Gail and Ruth, had | funnel is held to the ear, the other | before resuming his theological studies | been visiting their grandmother. The | end being touched to various parts of at the Catholic University. children returned with Mrs. Twichell. | the motor to detect the knocks. Mr. Charles Marbury of near Upper Lieut. Staunton L. Brown, who| Joined Mrs. Brown at New Bedford, | Mass., where she had been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Gid- | ley, spent a few days with Mrs. Brown and his parents at Meriden, Conn. Mrs. Brown's sister, Miss Alice Gid- ley. returned to Fort Belvoir with them when their vacation ended this week. Capt. and Mrs. Chester K. Harding, Jr. and their son, Chester Harding, 3d, returned last week end from Vine- yard Haven, Mass, where they had been visiting the captain's parents, | Gen. Chester K. Harding, retired, and | Mrs. Harding. i Lieut. and Mrs. Rufo C. Romero | Yeft the first of the week for New York, | where they will remain until Tues- | day, when they will sail for the Philip- | pines. Lieut. and Mrs. Chester L. Landaker entertained a party of 20 guests in their honor last Saturday night. Others who entertained them before their departure were Lieut. and | Mrs. Edward A. Brown, Capt. and Mrs. | Karl B. Schilling and Lieut. and Mrs $2095 Charge Accounts Invited R Iy THE REW Jelle % 1214-1220 F STREET Casual Coats For Women, Misses, Juniors! *59.75 Important for Women— Swagger, belted and straight.line coats! Jelleffs believe in the all-year-around importance of & AUGUST SALE ONTINUED! many of our regular patrons were vacationing in August. BECAUSE BECAUSE values are the best customers ever saw, BECAUSE Two Featured Groups At— we have the widest selection of fur coats at widest range of bargain prices, popular demand has forced us to continue our August Fur Sale prices through September. - Walter Krueger, jr. By Craigleigh fleece checks and mixtures, Lieut. and Mrs. Edward A. Brown o 4 Imported bright tweeds—Worumbo shadow had as their guests last week end Miss o 3o ! 3 : plaids. Frances Gallagher of Ithaca, N. Y.; E E Stunning collars of kit fox, raccoon, beaver, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Crocker of wolf and lynx! Yonkers, N. Y., and Mr. John Craig | Brown, grey, green, blue, wine and rust. of Beaver, Pa. Lieut. and Mrs. Brown Sizes 36 to 44 and 357 to 43! .. Sizes 11 to 17 and 12 to 20. And Stll More Casual Coats— $25 to 5"0 Exclusive Fabrics—Llama, Craigleigh, Angora! High-Fashion Furs—lynx, beaver, Kit fox, wolf, raccoon, Persian lamb! Dressmaker Details—ripple jabots, soft scarfs, high-neck fastenings! Important Colors—tans, blues, greens, greys, oxford, brown, wines and rust! Autumn Silhouettes—new swaggers, trim belted and princess types! Special Values in Japanese Mink Black Caracul Important for Misses, Jrs.— Forstmann's Duvana with raccoon lynx! Tweed, ombre and monotones with raccoon or beaver collars! Furless Balmacaan and swagger models! Tweeds, monotone fleeces and Dunvanniel SETTING A FAST FASHION PACE “GREENTREE"... Mannish lines in this fedora are soft- ened by a broad band of felt across the crown. $10. 5th Floor Coat Shop Styles Go Casual Too! FOR WOMEN—Ombre plaids, mixtures, monotones, fleece checks, plaids! $16.95 to $25. FOR MISSES—Tweeds, camel's hair, angora down, plaid, fleece! $16.95 to $25. Casual Coats Pictured— Above—Misses’ brisk brown and tan tweed casual coat with a big square shawl of raccoon. $59.75. Right—Women's Me x« ican pottery rust tweed, with full melon sleeves and lynx collar. $59.75. And Now— KQMT\'EY qua!i[y and s{yhng in new i Flannel Robes 2 new models, tailored of finest $ French flannell 6 lovely colors! % You know what the Romney label means in coats and dresses! Now Jelleff's bring you robes with the same meticulous tailor- ing and exquisite styling that have made the name famous! ch model is ap- proved by a jury of fashion experts! One has a graceful shawl collar and hand- fringed belt, the other (sketched) is a double-breasted coachman type with large pearl buttons. You'll like their deep pock- ets, wide armholes, nice bindings! Ceil, dusty, dubonnet, king blue, agua, alice blue, rose coral. Sizes 14 to 44. Only at Jelleff’s in Washington. P “BROOKMEADE” . .. Its military silken cord came straight from the artillery Grey Shops—Second Floor corps. $10. Bring your beauty problems to “WOODBINE” B . Miss Hueston, personal representative of Stitched felt crown ingeniously draped to give height—a growing trend for Fall. $10. $1and $1.25 Daytime and evening models that give you the uplifted, youthful con- tour new fashions demand! They're in LACE and GLOVE SILK, with and styled with an eye on what the well-dressed turf crowd will wear. Typically Knox—in the quality of fur felt and mannish tailoring. Black, Want a sport hat that does magical things to your Tweeds and tailored town clothes? Want to make every- body who sees it wonder where to get Have Summer activities played havoc with your complexion? Come and get Miss Heuston's expert advice! She will be in our Toiletries Section all this week, for individual consultations. During her visit we make this— one like it? Then pick a Knox Racer «+ . the thorobred sport felts named for three smart Eastern racing stable: . African Brown, Navy, Scottie Green, Pottery Rust and Veronese Green. Sizes 21/ to 23. ® CHARGE ACCOUNTS CORDIALLY INVITED e RALEIGH HABERDASHER THE WOMEN'S SHOP-1310 F STREET ir Kneelast Silk Stockings—e x- traordinary, because they guarantee full knee action, 70¢ to 1.3! lastex inserts in the straps and back —to make them especially flexible and comfortable. The net lining: for extra support and added wear, and the satin ribbon straps have gros- grain backs so they won't curl. These launder easily and require no iron- ing! For full or slim figures. Sizes 32 to 38. Grey Shops—Vanity Fair Section— Second Floor SPECIAL OFFER— $1.25 Texture Cream Given with any $2 purchase of Quinlan preparations! Miss Quinlan special size jar of her Speci ufty. well the sk .. keens nd soft. Here's your chance to try it! Toilet Goods Section—Street Floor

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