Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SOCIETY. Weddings Of Late Summer Miss Tompkins Bride of Mr. Matheson. Virginia Wedding. A wedding of more than usual in- terest will take place this afternoon when Miss Emma Henry Tompkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hook Tompkins, will become the bride of Mr. Malcolm Matheson, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Matheson. The ceremony will be performed at 4 o'clock at Battery Terrill, the beau- tiful and historic home of the bride’s parents, and a reception will follow in the charming gerdens of the estate, which was used in Civil War days by the Union soldiers as one of the first- line defenses against the invading foe. The First Presbyterian Church in Ballston. Va., was the scene today of the wedding ¢f Miss Ellen Dunnette Spanjer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert William Spanjer of Roseville, Calif., and Mr. Caldwell C. Kendrick, €on of Mr. and Mrs. L. Garland Ken- drick of Ballston, Va., the Rev. L. L. Strock officiating at noon. The church was attractively decos rated with palms, ferns and dahlias in the Fall shades, and while the guests were assembling Miss Kathryn Hayes gave a program of nuptial music and Mr. John Hall, tenor, sang, ac-| companied by Miss Hayes. The bride was given in marriage by her father. Her gown was of white net over taffeta, made form fitting, with a drop shoulder cape of plaited net. The skirt, which terminated in a slight train, had godets formed of tiny ruffles of the plaited net. She wore a small net turban with shoulder- length veil and carried a shower bou- quet of white roses and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Allen D. Kemp of- Bethesda, Md.,, was the matron of honor and only attendant. She wore a royal blue crepe gown,, with long blue kid gloves end an off-the-face hat which matched | her gown, and carried an arm bouquet | of talisman roses. Mr. Thomas Jackson of Washington acted as best man, and the ushers were Mr. G. Lee Kendrick and Mr. E. Lee Douglas of Ballston. Following the ceremony there was a Teception in the home of the bride- groom's parents in Ballston, when | Mrs, Spanjer, mother of the bride, | and Mrs. Kendrick, mother of the bridegroom, assisted in receiving. Mrs. Spanjer was in a gown of powder blue crepe, worn with a corsage bouquet of | gardenias, and Mrs. Kendrick wore | brown crepe and a corsage cluster of gardenias. Later inthe afternoon Mr. Kendrick MRS. EDWARD BROWN WILLIAMS, Daughter of the former Assistant Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Francis Marion Goodwin, who, before her marriage Satur- day, was Miss Margaret Ridgely Goodwin. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Daughter of Former Official Weds Mr. and Mrs. Wil liams will make their home in this city at 1921 Kalorama road. | ~Hessler-Henderson Photo, | TAXPAYERS OF CITY ARE MORE PROMPT September Bills Bring in $1,- year Is due this month. A penalty of 1 per cent per month will begin October 1 on all not paid. Normally, realty taxes are met in two payments, | but may be paid quarterly if a formal written request is made. Towers ad- ! vised all who have not received their bills to write to District Tax Assessor Residents Of Capital Traveling Mr. and Mrs. Edge Back From France. Mrs. Flood Here. Former United States Ambassador to France and Mrs. Walter Evans Edge will arrive in New York today from Europe on the Ile de France. Mrs. Henry D. Flood and her daughter, Miss Eleanor Flood, are passing & few days at the Shoreham after an extended visit in the North and in New York City. They are en route to their home at Winchester, Va. Mrs. Herman Harges of Paris is spending a few days in Washington as the guest of Mrs. Hugh Campbell ‘Wallace, before returning to her home in France. Mrs. Frederick T. F. Johnson re- turned today to the Mendota after a 10-day visit with her sister, Catherine E. Wilson, at their Summer home in Elkton, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Phillips Kohl | of New York and Washington have returned from a trip to the West and are in. their apartment in the Alta- mont at 1901 Wyoming avenue. Mr. and Mrs. J. Boland of Queens- | are in Washington | land, Australia, and staying at the Dodge while in the Capital. Miss Leona Kidwell Yoder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Paul Yoder, left yesterday - for Williamsburg, Va., to visit Miss Kathryn Ferguson of Allen- hurst, N. J., who is a student at Wil- liam and Mary College. Miss Yoder graduated last June from William and Miss | D. C,” TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1935. Mary, and will remain for the dedica- tion of the new stadium at the col- lege when the William and Mary team will play the team from the Uuniver- sity of Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. Philander L. Cable of Yellow Springs, Ohio, are in Wash- ington for a visit and are agcupying a sulte at the Wardman Park Hotel. Miss Anita Schade and her sister and Niece, Mrs. C. A. Mueller and Miss Anita Virginia Mueller, have re- turned to their home at 1529 Rhode Island avenue northwest after an ab- sence of two months spent in the Berkshires and the Alleghenies of Pennsylvania. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Adams have gone to Atlantic City and are at Hotel Traymore for an early Autumn visit. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Daly and Mr, and Mrs. E. H. Kraeseke of Visalia, Calif., are at the Dodge while staying in Washington. Mrs. Mae Camra and her daughter, Miss Ruth Camra, are stopping at the Shoreham while in Washington for several days. They are from Seven Hills Village, Ohio. Miss Camra expects to enter Mount Vernon Semi« nary this Fall. Mrs. J. T. Sweeney of Glens Falls, | N. Y., with her daughter, Miss Marian coats’127 We will reline your coat with our new linings. new_inner linings. sew Tips. renew worn loops, replace buttons and & new crocheted button, demoth, giaze Por the quality prices are the Cleaning and Repairing at Low Rates ISADOR MILLER Manufacturing Furrier NA. 5628. 809 11th St. N.W. ANTIOCH SHOES for women The one shoe that is both dressy and As illustrated $8.50 Other grades of Antiochs $7.50 to $10.50 Exelusively here in Washington comfortable -4}71‘:3«@ B. Sweeney, is in town for a visit and are occupying a suite at the Wardman Park Hotel, R RN CUMMINGS IN PARIS PARIS, September 17 (#).—Attorney General Homer Cummings of the United States studied the French equivalent of “G-Men" yesterday in his European investigation into varicus national police methods. He discussed sleuthing proolems with Charles Magny, chief of the Surete Nationale, the French counter- part of the United States Bureau of Investigatios FRAMES SOCIRTY. PC ouar JAPANESE MINK cosrs REDUCED 70 $198 have the smart. d ftted “minks made with the rich, beautifal brown for prices ranging from— . See these current fashion fur coats today—you may own one on easy terms to suit your income. sheen syour Fall Clothes DYNAMIC STYLE It's such fun SHOES to ensemble this Fall—for jackets and skirts and sports “duds” never were 8o gay New Shoes. ing than vou be. leather walking heels. and oxfords. Brown and black grand with velveteens! and young—especially the Brevi-Toes are more flatter- ever imagined shoes could suede or calf— Polished, built-up Smart wide straps Other styles. &= BURT F St at |4th. SHOE €O Top-Handle Pouches, $2 | william P. Richards, giving lot and | square numbers. If receipts for pay- ments are requested the taxpayer should send to the collector a self- addressed envelope, Tovers said. 730,409—Fiscal Year and his bride left for the Farmington | Country Club, near Charlottesville, Va., Payment: Due. and on their return will reside tem- | < porarily in Ballston, Va. Mrs. Ken-| Washington taxpayers are showing | drick’s traveling costume was a green | MOTe speed in meeting their September wool swagger suit trimmed in beaver | tax bills than they did a year ago = fur, with which she wore brown ac-| Tax Collector Chatham M. Towers cessories. The bride is a graduate of the Conservatory of Music at San Francisco and attended the College of Pacific at Stockton, Calif. Mr. Ken- drick is a graduate of George Wash- ington University and the Harvard Law School, and is a member of Phi Sigma Kappa and Delta Phi Epsilon fraternities. He was recently admitted to both the Virginia and District of Columbia bars. Out-of-town guests included the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, Bert| William Spanjer of Roseville, Calif, The marriage of Miss Margaret Jane Maxwell, daughter of Maj. and | Mrs. Alfred J. Maxwell, to Mr. Donald | Reginald Sickler, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Vaughn Sickler, took place at 4| oclock Saturday afternoon in the Church of the Epiphany, the assistant rector, the Rev, Harry Lee Doll, of- ciating. The bride. who attended Oak Park | Bchool in Chicago before taking her bachelor of arts degree from Georgfl{ Washington University, had as her maid of honor Miss Nancy Booth. Dr. John Ralston Pate of South Caro- lina was the best man. Both Mr. and Mrs. Sickler now are studying medicine at George Wash- ington. Mrs. Sickler is a member of | the Chi Omega, Chi Sigma Gamma | and Alpha Epsilon Iota Fraternities "The bridegroom’s fraternal affiliations | are Sigma Chi and Phi Chi. The wedding came as a distinct eurprise to the couple’s many ac-! quaintences, who were not expecting | the marriage until next year. Only a | few close friends and members of the families were present at the cere- mony. it Children’s Home Benefit Card Party A benefit card party for the Episco- pal Home for Children is to be held at the National Republican Club for Women, Sixteenth street and Scott Circle, tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs. W. H. Plummer is chairman, and the patronesses are: Mrs, Cary Gray- son, Miss Sarah Merrill, Mrs. Lyford | Hornor, Mrs. Frank Birgfeld, Mrs. | Prescott, Mrs. Lloyd A. Morrison, Mrs. | J. 8. Tomlinson, Miss Elsie Brooke, | Mrs. Catherine Gower, Mrs. M. Rich- | ards, Mrs. Harry Fulton and Mrs, C. Robinson. = . is Sally Blane to Wed. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., September 17 (#)—Sally Blane, movie actress, said | yeeterday she and Norman Foster, film actor and former husband of Clau- dette Colbert, planned to be married in about three week KAPLOWITZ THE COAT AND SUIT SPECIALTY SHOP ON THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN EANDF DRESSES * SPORTSWEAR+GOWNS FASHION PRIMER SAYS, “CORRECT SCHOOL WOOLS FROM KAPLOWITZ" POOR LITTLE ALICE ADAMS! SHE ALWAYS HAD THE WRONG CLOTHES. NOT SO THE YOUNG | ALICES WHOSE MOTHERS BRING THEM TO KAPLOWITZ, BELIEVING THAT GOOD TASTE IS AS MUCH A MATTER OF TRAINING AS THE THREE R'S. 795 1095 13 |# KAPLOWITZ'S LOW - PRICE POLICY | MISSES WOMENS JUNIOR MISSES DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY | TO APPAREL SPECIALIZATION RUGS CLEANED & STORED Call Mr. Pyle Nat, 3257-3291-2036 Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. 106 Ind. Ave. N.W. revealed today. From September 1 through last Sat- | urday, the taxpayers paid into the District's coffers a total of $1,730,409 During the same period last year the tax collector received $1,541.577 The first payment on real estate and other taxes for the prasent fiscal On with the dance *. . and to VHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS WEST VIRGINIA Let your joy be unconfined! njoy life t lts best . ... indoors and out! All sports. Tradit ty. For rates and Informati JOHN B. DEBNAM Mayflower Hotel Dlstrict 3000 @\THE GREENBRIER and COTTAGES v Open all the year 'round i's SAKS for YOUNG IDEAS If you have a young point of view come to Saks, where a collection of new dresses and suits, utterly different and devastating, awaits you. Clothes to fit every occasion in your terribly busy life! Fullness is the big news in this love of a crepe frock . . . perfect for tea or cocktail dates. From the Wee Modern Shop, which spe- cializes in sizes 11 to 17. Grandstand Winner for the foot ball game! Kitten-soft striped wool suit with swagger i‘ acket over a apin - trimmed frock. sizes 11-17. Jr. RIZIK BROTHERS The two individual shops of Washington 1213 F St. 1108 Conn. Ave Interesting Vertical Pleats Fall fashions show such sweeping changes that you've simply got to start fresh on your wardrobe. Pleats, and more pleats, running from shoulder line to cuff of the flowing sleeves, and from the top to the hem of the skirt. And these lovely, rich Renais= sance colors are ime portant, too— Normandy Blue Brown Gold Woodsy Brown Bonita (dark red) 16.95 L.Frank Co. F St. at 12th National 5760 The Store of Youthful Fashion 3 i 4 1 ; N~ fm # i THIS‘»\FAN PL&TMTURBAN is an "aia{eu" h;t"_:W- {f ing to young or more matronly, / faces, with its bozed, close- fitting turban croom and’ its fluted wings sweeping away from your curls. Black, wine, v SAKS 610 Twelfth St. green, brown. 21%; to 23 head sizes. Millinery Dept. Main Floor. 7th & K 1207 F *3212 14th *Open Evenings I This STRICTLY MAN-TAILORED season it's just plain good judgment to rely upon HERE'S no fashions. nish, casual, haven't! for leadership i MAN- TAILORED SUITS halfway about man-tailored Either they have the true man- nonchalant flavor + + + or they Raleigh has long had a reputation n the man-tailored mode. That's why in this great man-tailored season it's rea suring to have Raleigh to turn to. Get into man- tailored fashions and feel right. Get them at Raleigh and feel smart. The mannish Tailored Twe Suit (mixed or monotone) wi ed th lovely blocked Lapin Coat. (Sketch A.) Prices (Sketch B.) S style of th suit in mix tweed . . . with Wolf or Ra coon collar. ly two-pie h Man-Tailored $16.95 to $125 ther Ral uits_ . ® CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED @ RALEIGH HABERDASHER THE WOMEN'S SHOP—1310 F STREET $69.75. the magic ce or monotone c- Priced: $35.00.