Evening Star Newspaper, September 29, 1935, Page 69

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SOCIETY. Falls Church Tea Honors Mrs. Ring Mrs. J. Roy Johnston Hostess at Birth- day Party. FALLS CHURCH, Va., September 28—Mrs. J. Roy Johnston gave a| tea Sunday afternoon, September 22, in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Francis King, the occasion being her birth- day anniversary. Mrs. Harold Schultz | and Mrs. Felix T. Moore presided at the tea table. Mrs. Albert Johnston | of Washington assisted in the dining | Toom. Mrs. William De Rosa, whose wed- ding took place Thursday, was given & miscellaneous shower Wednesday night by Miss Mary Fox and Miss Jane Fox in their home in West Falls Sophomore Church. The guests included Miss | Francis Tyler, Miss Alice Pierce, Miss | Mary Louise Graham, Miss Mathilda | Renn, Miss Caroline Rosenbaum, | Miss Loraine Martin, Miss Betty | Hunt, Miss Mary Harriet Hollins, Miss | Flora Ryan, Miss Byrne Ware, Miss | Ann De Rosa, Miss Donna Mac | Plaisted, Mrs. Emmett O'Neil, Miss Ernestine Williams and Miss Frances Parrott. Mrs. Noble Moore gave a bridge luncheon Thursday in honor of Mrs J. B. Gould, her guests being Mrs. | Louis Woods, Mrs. Harry A. Fellows, Mrs. George L. Butterworth, Mrs. P. H. Smythe, Mrs. R. C. L. Moncure, Mrs. Frederick W. Jones, Mrs. W. Horning, Mrs. E. H. Stone, Mrs. Felix T. Moore, Mrs. Samuel R. Copper, Mrs. John Trabold, Mrs. E.-D. Wil- liams, Mrs. John W. Garner and Mrs. Harold Spelman. Mrs. Gould held high score. Mrs. Samuel R. Copper entertained at & bridge party this after- noon. She was assisted by her daugh- ter, Mrs. Edmund Flageg, granddaughter, Mrs. John Elliott. Her guests were Mrs. M. H. Haertel, Mrs. Alexander Galt, Mrs. John W and her | MISS RUTH M. PEARSON, Daughter of Dr. Raymond A. Pearson, former president of Maryland University, and Mrs. Pearson. Miss Pearson recently left for Northamp- ton, Mass., where she entered her sophomore year at Smith College. She is a graduate of the Friends School in Wash- | ington. —Harris-Ewing Photo. | Sororities Open Season’s Festivities Garner, Mrs. Louis Woods, Mrs. Charles Pendleton, Mrs. Lillian Reed, Mrs. W. T. Westcott, Mrs. Harry A. Fellows, Mrs. Noble Moore, Mrs. George L. Butterworth, Mrs. P. H. Smythe, Mrs. Felix T. Moore, Mrs. the Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnne“ Frederick W. Jones, Mrs. Harold Spell- man, Mrs. William S. Brown, Mrs. William Gillette, Mrs. Harry Moran, | of 3111 N street. Assisting Mrs. Stein | Mrs. E. C. Hough, Mrs. George L. Robertshaw, Mrs. W. S. Elliott and daughter, Miss Martha Elliott; Mrs. Helen Lester, Mrs. Charles Marshall and Mrs. Harry Campbell. | Mrs. William Stein has loaned her | home at 117 Leland street, Chevy Chase, for a supper tomorrow eve- ning at 6 o'clock for the members of Association. Supper reservations may be made with Mrs. Edward C. Stoner | will Be Mrs. J. S. Baldwin, Mrs. Ber- nard Grove, Mrs. Torrence Wolford, Mrs. Henry Fischer and Miss Frances Wolf. Following the supper the first meeting of the season will be held. Mrs. John H. Cline was hostess ' Mrs. Dorothy Douglas of the Women's | ‘Wednesday evening at two tables Bureau will be the speaker. Plun.s} of contract followed by supper.' for the province convention, which N % \ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 29, 1935—PART THREE. Alexandria Social Notes Of the Week Miss Lelia Wiley Is Bridesmaid at Wed- ding in Ashland. ALEXANDRIA, Va., September 28.— Miss Lelia Wiley is in Ashland, Va., where she was one of the bridesmaids at the wedding this evening of Miss Louise Lewis, daughter of Mrs. John Taylor Lewis and the late Mr. Lewis, and Mr. Chester Arthur Wilkins, in the Episcopal Church of St. James the Less. The ceremony was followed by a reception in the home of the bride’s The bride is the sister of Mr. John Taylor Lewis, jr., who married Miss Hilda Truslow Schneider of Alexan- dris Mr, Lewis gave his sister in marriage. Invitations have been received from Mr. and Mrs. Levin James Houston | for the marriage of their daughter, | Mary Wilmer, to Mr. Francis Scott Key Howard Thursday afternoon, Oc- tober 3 at 4 o'clock in Tririty Episcopal Church in Fredericksburg. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Estes announce ! the marriage of the former’s sister, | Sullivan Saturday, September 14, the | Rev. Ernest W. Aaron, pastor of the | Southern Methodist Church, officiat- ing. Mr, and Mrs. Sullivan will live in Fredericksburg. The Rev. Clarence A. Langston, rec- tor of Old Pohick Church; Mrs. Lang- ston and Miss Dorothy Smith have re- | turned from a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Langston’s son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Day in White Plains, N. Y. Miss Mary Wood returned this week from spending a month with relatives in Lancaster, Pa. by sea. they attended the dedication in St. James’ Episcopal Church last Sunday of a tablet to the memory of Jacobus | Stoutenburgh, an ancestor of Mrs. Deahl and the first settler of Hyde Park. President Roosevelt unveiled | | the tablet. | | Dr. Robert South Barrett will re- turn next week after spending the | Summer at Ocean Grove, N. J.. and later visiting his son and daughter- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Waller Barrett | in Garden City, Long Island. mother in Gwathmey, near Ashland. | | Miss' Eleanor Estes, to Mr. William T. | i | | . X 3 Mrs. Miss Grace Ware sailed from Balti- | mare yesterday for a trip to Florida | Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Deahl have ! returned from Hyde Park. N. Y., where | Recent Bride Clarendon Bride-Elect to Entertain Arlington County Home Will Be Scene of Tea Today. Miss Charlotte Hagan, whose mar- riage to Mr. Hobart Clough will take place Saturday, October 5, will enter~ tain 125 guests at tea this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock in the home of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Ernest R. Hagan, in Clarendon, Va. She will be assisted in receiving by her mother and sister, Miss Catherine Hagan, and Mrs. J. H. Pearsop and Mrs. Jewell F. Crews will preside at the tea table. Mr. and Mrs. J. Sidney Cates and their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Cates, returned to their home in Lee Heights, Va., Tuesday from an extended Euro- pean trip. Miss Cates went to Europe the frst part of the Summer, and | toured Germany, Switzerland, Italy, and attended the famous Salzburg Music Festival in Austria. Later she was jcined by her parents in England for visits there and in Wales, France and Belgium. Miss Margaret Broxton has joined her parents, Mr .and Mrs. William | Broxton, in Lyon Village, Va., after spending the Summer with her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Hulme, in Chicago, where she studied at the Lewis Institute of Art, E. H. Handy, Mrs. Stanton Moore, Mrs. Lamar Harris, Mrs Thomas Brown, Mrs. Eugene Tucker, Mrs. Hugh Reid, Mrs. B. D. Shreve, all of the county, will motor Tuesday | to Marshall Va., to be the luncheon | guests of Mrs. A. B. Honts, who, with | Mr. Honts and their children, recently moved to Marshall Mrs. N. A. Rees of Clarendon; Va., has gone to Evarston, I, for a fort- night's visit with her son-in-law and | daughter, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Strevey. Mrs. Ross Puette of Richmond, Va., | will come Wednesday for a visit with | Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Shreve at their | home in Chertydale, Va. | | Mrs. Charles Leroy Harlan returned | this week to her home in Livingstone Heights, Va.. from England, where she spent two months with her | parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Cooper, at | Essex. She also visited in Scotland. | Her sons, Jack Harlan, who spent the Hopkins Unive: , paic a short visit | Summer in Pasadena, Calif, with to her parents, and Mrs. Harry B. | reatives, and James Harlan. who Caton, and has left to euter her senior | spent the Summer at the Harlan MRS. MILTON BECKER, Who was, bejore her marriage September 7, Miss Anne Gam- erman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Gamerman. ~—Sheftell Photo. Mr. David French has completed & | trip around the world and is with his | mother, Mrs. Milton French, for a short time before leaving for the Uni- | versity of Virginia to begin his senior year at Wellesley College. ranch at Kaycee, Wyo., have joined Lieut. and Mrs. William Byron Bal- | their parents. ley of Annapolis, Capt. and Mrs. sux-| Mrs. Arnold T. Rowell was hostess art Wailler King of Quantico and Mr. | to a company of eight at cards at her and Mrs. Frank Kiner of Cleveland, | heme in Lyon Park, Tuesday after- | noen. MISS MARY ABBIE TILTON, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Le- roy William Tilton, who has entered the Graduate School of Yale University, where she has been appointed an assist= ant in education. —Buckingham Photo. FEDERATION MAPS EXPANSION PLANS| Government Employes’ Group | Hopes to Assimilate Local Organizations. Plans of the American Federation | of Government Employes for assimi- lation of State, county and municipal employes are under consideraticn and | will be completed in the near future, | Attorney General Charles T. Leviness. | Film Actor to Be Able to Leave | SOCIETY. BOARD MUST PAY RETAIL LIQUOR TAX | BEASRE LRI Montgomery County Agency 1 { Ruled Subject to Law—Beer | Accommodations for : CmJ Be Stored. |l Teas—Parties—Luncheons, A auaint. picturesque Special Dispatch to The Star. | beautiful suburb: BALTIMORE, Md., September 28.— | Because the State gross receipts tax | law does not exempt State or county ugencies from payment of the tax, the Liquor Control Board of Montgomery County must pay the tax on alcoholic beverages sold to the public at retail according to an opinion by Assistant M for HEALTH ADULTS, 40c CHILDREN, 25¢ Includes Towel and Locker * INSTRUCTION 6 Lessons, $5.00 Indvidual Instruction b LILLIAN CANNON English Channel Swimmer AMBASSADOR SWIMMING POOL SWI The assistant attorney general filed his opinion at the request of Ken- neth Lyddane, attorney for the county Liquor Control Board. At the same time Leviness advised the board's at- torney that beer for distribution in | other parts of the State may be stored | in Montgomery County by the holder of a beer license. LION BITE HEALiNG Hospital Soon. HOLLYWOOD, September 28 (P).— Charles Bickford, film actor, bitten in the back of the neck by a movie lion, soon will be able to leave the hospital, | but Mabel Stark, wild animal trainer, injured by a tiger, was stiil in a seri- ous condition here today. Attendants of Miss Stark were un- able to say when she would be out of | danger, admitting a serious infection was feared. She was attacked by a tiger September 21 in a circus per- formance at Phoenix, Ariz, and her left arm severely lacerated. Cloria & Mirzi 4th Floor 3i5¢° 1333 F St GLAMOROUS New Fashions Always New Furniture. MEDIA., Pa. (#).—Mrs. Howard according to E. Claude Babcock, presi- dent of the federation. Affiliation of a number of such groups, already in existence, is ex- pected to be announced socn after close of the American Federation of Labor Convention, opening October 7 at Atlantic City. A Babcock will attend the convention | as a representative of his group. David R. Glass, naticnal charier piesident, and John F. Daniels, na-| Uonal vice president for the Phila- | delphia district, also will attend, it | was said. John E Hoffmaster, former | president of Philadelphia Lodge, No. | 62, will be alternate to the ccnien- tion. | keep new furniture in the house. She New Fabrics New Colors In Fall and Winter Dresses Davis told the court it was easy to said she and her husband always paid $1 down, let th~ furniture go back for default of jayments and then started all over again. | Shampooed by Experts Mothproof Storage SMITH’S TRANSFER J AND STORAGE CO. 1313 You St. NW. North 3343 New Models and Colors Coming in Every Day Sizes from 12 to 20 Prices Range From $1075 © $22.75 Mrs. Theodore Uhler, Mrs. Walter Grainger, Mrs. Frank M. Thompson, Mrs. Versal Spalding, Mrs. Howard ‘Berger, Mrs. Charles Fenwick, Mrs. Edward G. Fenwick and Mrs. Denton Williams were her guests. Mrs. John W. Garner had as her supper guests Sunday evening, Sep- tember 22, Mrs. E. L. McNair, Miss Mildred McNair, Mrs. Jane Des Rochers, Mrs. Mary Munson and Mrs. Samuel Copper. Mrs. George L. Robertshaw, Mrs. Charles Marshall, Mrs. Frederick W. Jones, Mrs. Samuel R. Copper, Mrs. P. H. Smythe, Mrs. Frederick W. Howard and Mrs. John W. Garner were guests of Mrs. R. C. L. Moncure at bridge Thursday night. Supper was served after the game. Mrs. William Gillette, who has been spending the Summer with her mother, Mrs. William Mann, in Troy, N. Y., has returned to Falls Church for the Winter. will be held in Washington October 25 and 26. will be presented by the marshal, Miss Jean Fugitt. * The new officers for the year are Miss Helen Hoskinson, president; Miss Edith Macauley, vice president; Mi Carleen Loeffler, recording sec- reta Mrs. Donald Beelar. corre- sponding secretary; Mrs. Hadley, assistant secretary; Miss Euvnice von Ende. treasurer; Miss Mercia Stauffer. assistant treasurer: Anne Wilson Ord, historian: M Rollin V. A. Hunter, social chairman. The Beta Chapter of Sigma Theta Sorority will give a tea Sunday, Oc- tober 6, at the Brook Farm Tea House, and will also hold a masque- of Miss Margaret Holloran at 3815 Kanawha street in Chevy Chase. At the first Fall meeting of the chapter, which was held in the home Clyde M. | year. Mrs. French spent a part of | the Summer in New England and later visited relatives in Gloucester, | Va. i | Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Genzberger of Butte, Mont.. are guests of the form- | er's sister, Miss Amelia Genzberger. Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. English spent the week end in St. Louis at- tending the annual convention of the American Legion. Mrs. S. J. Ambrose of Norfolk is the guest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Turner. | | Miss Ruth Shuman, daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Aubra Shuman, whose | | marriage to Mr. John Richard Norris | | will take place in the First Baptist | Church Saturday, October 5, was guest | rade party November 2 in the home |of honor at three parties during the week, when showers were given by her | sister, Mrs. Irvin Meade Hufford, and |ty Miss Mary Louise Wilkinson. Sat- | urday, September 21, Mrs. Mary Ap- Mrs. Robert Landreth and her son ©f Mrs. Amy Mason at 5929 Third | pleton and Miss Ruth King enter- ' Robert, who spent the Summer in France and England, are again in their home in Falls Church. While in England they visited Lady Ley at Lealholm Lodge, Yorkshire. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Williams have returned home after a 10 days' trip to Ocean City, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. John Bethune are home after a six weeks' motor trip through the Wisconsin lake country. Mrs. Malcolm Taylor is spending a street, the following officers were elected for the coming vear: Presi- dent. Miss Margaret A. Halloran: vice president, Miss Lela Malherbe: sec- retary, Miss Margaret H. Glbson: treasurer, Miss Hilma M. Morris, and chapter representative to the national council, Mrs. Amy S. Mason. Alpha Phi (mm(;rs‘ dav luncheon will be held in Woodward & Lothrop's tea room, 1:30 o'clock Saturday. few weeks in New York City. The members of Delta Chapter of Mrs. Marian Green is home after the Alpha Sigma Theta Sorority en- & month's trip to California. tertained at a formal tea and instal- Dr. Neil Stevens, who has been in lation of two new members, Miss Holland as a United States Govern- | Kathryn Hale and Miss Rose Regan, ment representative to the Plant | Sunday afternoon, September 22, in Pathological Congress, has returned | the home of Miss Virginia Gessford | tained at luncheon in honor of Miss | Shuman. | ; Mrs. J. Sidney Douglas has returned |from a visit to her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Williem L. Stevenson, in Stercc, Alberta. Mrs. Stevenson formerly was Miss Eliza Kincaid Douglas. Mr. and Mrs. Doug- las had as their guests their son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick T. Gause and the latter's | daughter, Miss Eleanor Wallace of | West Chester, Pa., who have left by motor for Sweetbrier College. where Miss Wallace will begin her freshman year. . | Miss Nannie Smith is home from a | visit to her cousin, Mrs. P. E. Smith, | in_Culpeper. Mrs. Emily Carroll and Mr. Harvey Ohio, were guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. King. parents of Capt. King and Mrs. Bailey. Mr. Walter C. Herbert has returned home after spending several weeks at Orkney Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin N. Todd of Red Bank, N. J, have recently come to Alexandria to make their home and are. living in the restored- Colonjal house at 210 Scuth Fairfax street. COLONISTS PUT OFF URGE TO GO HUNTING $50 for Non-Resident Alaska Licenses Prove Too High, but Boys Can Fish. By the Associated Press PALMER, Alaska, September 28.—A great bull moose called across a marsh today and trigger fingers itched among the hunters in the Matanusky colony. But not a shot was fired. Unlike pioneer lands of other days, Alaska has game laws and, #s ihe colonists have not yet resided here the required year, they must pay 30 for a non-resident big game license. There are few in the celony who do not know a hundred more urgent uses for their money. Next year, when they are eligible for the $2 resident license it may be a different story. Mr and Mrs. Henry L. Young have | as & guest in their home in Lyon Vil- |lage, Va. the latter's mother. Mrs. Elizabeth Budlong, who arrived Thurs- day from her home in Albert Lea, Minn,, and will remain for some time. ——e TENANT FARMING HELD GOVERNMENT’S CONCERN Rector of Fashionable Church in i Memphis Makes Appeal to Roosevelt. " By the Associated Press. MEMPHIS, Tenn., September 28.— | | Rev. Alfred Loaring-Clark, rector of | |a fashionable Protestant Episcopal | Church, wrote President Roosevelt to- | day that tenant farming should be | one of the major concerns of the! Government. “The sharecropper of today.” he wrote, in reply to President Roose- | velt's request for counsel and advice, “is no more literate, no more wealthy, no more cultured, no more privileged than was his grandfather of 50 years 230. Obvicusly, there has been so small income that he must struggle desper- ately to keep body and soul together. Hope, ambition and incentive have through the years been killed in those who till the soil.” | Saying the blame should not be IS YOUR REFRIGERATOR 5 YEARS OLD? @ If your refrigerator is now five years old you can put 2 brand new General Electric in your kitchen—have all the newest con- venience features—and be money ahead. The savings due to greater efficiency and lower operating costs will pay for it o Stainless Steel Super Freezer o Sliding Shelves Anglers. not subject to such resiric- | placed against the landlords, he said tions. whip thestreams with satisfyng | they were “born into a world which results. Many a Middlewestern oy, | accepted cuitural privileges for the whose greatest fishing thrill befors has | few, yet denied them to many.” | been the plebian sunfish, now knows | The fault, he said, “must lie with | o Interior Lighting ® Defrosting Switch ® Foot Pedal Door Opener ® Faster Freezing The G-E Refrigerator has to his home in East Falls Church. |at 603 Lcngfellow street no west. Miss Doris Mitchell, daughter of Mr, | Members pr:sent included Mt:uhne:r- and Mrs. C. J. Mitchell of Brantford, | bara Walter, Miss Eileen Magruder, Ontario, Canada, is the house guest Miss Agnes Latimer, Miss Vivian of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Digges | Gravalles, Miss Frances Holly, Miss at their home, Poplar Hill, East Falls . Louise Drennon, Miss Virginia Lin- Church, Va. thicum and Miss Margaret Linthicum. Ay Beta Gamma Phi, Zeta Chapter, | Wallaces opened its twelfth year Tuesday night | (Continued From First Page.) at the Ambassador Hotel with & very large meeting, when the retiring LY itinued From F | president, Miss Dorothy Ryder, in- | Bweeney, Miss Louise Drennon, Miss !roduced the new president, Mrs. Virginia Gessford, Miss Margaret Lin- Lydia Gattie. thicum, Miss Virginia Linthicum, Miss | Their opening social function will be | Agnes Latimer, Miss Eileen Magruder, Miss Vivian Gravalles, Miss Mary | Va., and many social and sport af- 3 1 from snow-fed water, ohnson were married Monday aft- ‘When the snow comes, the colonists | ernoon in the rectory of St. Pnul‘flmnn to have skating rinks and ski | Episcopal Church, the Rev. Percy |slides. Most of the families came | Foster Hall officiating. Immediately | from parts of the United States where | after the ceremony Mr. and Mis. Winter sports prevailed. | Johnson left for a wedding trip to| The women are laying plans for | Atlantic City. | social affairs, motion picture shows, | Mr. and Mrs. William E. Miller left | house-warming parties, spinning and Tuesday to spend a week with relatives | knitting and rug-making bees. in Pittsburgh. | The colonists have been entertain- Mrs. Eugene Simpson and Miss Ruth | ing themselves, when they could find Cook entertained at a shower Friday, | spare time from their work, by taking Septemebr 20, in honor of their sister, | bus rides to adjacent mines and air- Miss Bertha Cook, whose marriage to | plane flights over the Matanuska Mr. William Lainbach of Washington | Valley. Some of the colonists have will take place next month. parted with $250 each for a i5- Miss Edar Fleming, deughter of minute birds-eye view of their farms. system of tenant farming.” which pro- duces wealth, yet chains in poverty and ignorance those whose labor cre- ates thal wealth. CRUISER IS LAUNCHED in Series of Six. BORDEAUX, France, September 28 (#)—France continued its chal- lenge to Germany's sea strength to- | the joy of landing a fighting wout our placid acceptance of the preseml | | | \ |7,600-Ton French Vessel Fourth ' long been famous for dependable refrigeration at low cost. Now the G-E sealed-in-steel mechanism has double the cold pro- ducing capacity and uses 40% less current than 1930 models. New General Electric Refrigerators | use 407 wess | day with the launching of the 7.600- | ton cruiser Gloire. The Gloire is the fourth of a series | | of six cruisers designed to offset the home tomorrow an Put a new G-E in your CURRENT!! d be a dance held at Powhatan Springs, Katherine Hale, Miss Rose Marie Regan, Miss Prances Holly, Miss Mar- garet Ruckett, Miss Nina Mae Robin- son, Miss Ruth Pettit, Miss Elsie Bree- | den, Miss Margaret Bittinger, Miss | Frances Seebold, Mr. Earl Spiker, Mr. | James Pulliam, Mr. George Hobson, | Mr. Robert Chalfonte, Mr. Joha Me- | Inturff, Mr. Maynard Eicher, Mr.| Curtis Spiker, Mr. Cecil Harp, Mr. John Garber, Mr. Lester Dingham, Mr. Orrin Bartlett, Mr. Stanley Mar- maduke, Mr. Myron Tracey, Mr. How- ard Robinson, Mr. Howard Wilkinson, Mr. Edward Fogarty and Mr. and Mrs. George Harp. | Mrs. Neitah King has issued cards | for a recepticn Wednesday afternoon, October 22, from 4 until 6 o'clock, at 2400 Sixteenth street. The party is one of the first of the season for the , debutante and sub-debutante set, and the hostess will have assisting her a number of 'the young women who will be presented to society this Winter. Mr. and Mrs. Edward McCaul of Boston, Mass., were the guests in “whose honor Mrs. Smith and her daughter, Miss Helena Smith, enter- tained at their home in Virginia ‘Thursday evening last. During the ‘ evening Miss Smith sang a number of songs, accompanied by her mother at the piano. Mrs. William Ilich,’ president of the ‘Washington Section, National Council of Jewish Women, entertained 30 members of the Junior Council group at a delightfully appointed tea in her home, September 22. The girls at- tending had fulfilled their personally ,earned pledge toward the convention | fund. Mrs. Fay Neumann assisted Mrs, lich in receiving. Poets Will Hold Meetings. ‘The Poet Laureate League, Inc., will ‘begin a series of bimonthly meetings of Washington poets Thursday at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of the National Museum, Tenth street and Constitu- tion avenue, fairs have been planned for the new year. Sigma Pi Sigma Sorority will give an open dance this evening at the | Willard Hotel from 10 to 1 o'clock. Miss Leonora Kraft is chairman of the dance committee. Epsilon Chapter, Phi Sigma Epsilon Sorority, held an installation dinner at the Kenesaw Cafe Thursday. The sorority colors were evident in the table decorations, which consisted of | black candles and vellow marigolds. The officers were installed for the coming year, including Miss Ruth Bivins, president: Miss Lucy Grim- stead, vice president: Miss Oliver Ruth Brown, secretary; Miss Evelyn Werner, treasurer, and Miss Marie Stutz, sergeant at arms. During & short meeting plans were made for a rush affair to be held Oc- tober*17 &t’The Highlander. The dinner and games which fol- lowed were arranged by Miss Louise Garrett and Miss Marian Fairley. . A graduates tea was given by the Tota Sigma Upsilon Sorority in the home of Mrs. John C. Livingston at Silver Spring, Md., Sunday, Sep- tember 22. The honor guests were Miss Helen Murphy, Miss Dorothy Siems, Miss Alice Holmes, Miss Marie De Pue, Miss Evelyn Shahan, Miss Louise De Lawder, Miss Bertha Lang- ford, Mrs. Karl Heinige, Miss Charlotte Sheads, Miss Margret Waldecker, and Miss Margret Hammers. Among others |'present were Mrs. John H. Miller, supreme president; Mrs. Arthur T. Potter, president of Alpha; Mrs Frances Saphos, president of Gamma, and Miss Mary Helen Pyle, president of Delta Chapter. i La Follette Atlanta Speaker. ATLANTA, September 28 (#).— Senator Robert M. La Follette, jr., of Wisconsin will speak on “The Wash- ington Scene” here Priday night under auspices of the Atlanta Life Under- writers' Association. Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Fleming, who | will be one of the debutantes in Wash- ington during the coming Winter, is of particular interest to many in Alex- andria, as her father is a native of this city and is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fleming. The | elder Mr. Fleming, with his son and | daughter, Mr. Patton Fleming and | Miss Mary Lee Fleming, were killed | in the Knickerbocker Theater disaster in Washington in 1922. Mr. Robert Fleming, who has Fieming as his mid- |dle as well as his last name, is a great-grandson of Richard.Bland Lee, | first cousin of Gen. Robert E. Lee, and | | 1s descerided through his mother from | |the Irwin and Janney families, who have lived in Alexandria since prior | to the Revolution. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Lewis Lipps have returned from a visit to the for- mer’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Henry W. Lipps, in Lewis- burg, W. Va., accompanied by their daughter, Miss Emma Lipps, who has been visiting her uncle and aunt through the Summer months. Miss Elizabeth Ramey, State presi- dent of the Business and Professional the meetingg of the annual na- convention which she attened Mrs. Joseph S. Fox of Beach, Fla., are visiting er’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fox. Mr. and Mrs. Russell , also of Jacksonville Beach, who the guests of Mr.-and Mrs. left for a visit to relatives tives in Lexington, Goldsboro and Greensboro, N. C. Miss Barbara Caton, ofter-spending the \Bummer doing research work in the., biological laboratory of Johns . L YOUTH CONGRESS LAUDS REBUKE OF NAZI REGIME By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, September 28.— The Congress of Comintern Youth today cheered the declaration of the Czecho- slovakian delegate, Wolff Mikhel, that the young generation of the world will defend the Soviet Union in case it is ever attacked by Nazi Germany. Mikhel expressed the belief that all Communist and Socialist youth had anti-Fascist convictfons and | would accordingly rally to a joint | front. Describing what he called the diffi- cult lot of young people in capital- istic countries, Mikhel said the situ- ation of German youth is particularly distressing. The American delegates—Claude Lightfoot, Gil Green and M. Porter, all of whom sit on the presidium of the congress—have not yet spoken. NEW YORK FIGHTS NOISE Silent Nights Decreed by Mayor. | Milkmen Join Drive. NEW YORK, September 28 (#).— Determined to tone down the noise that roars up and down Manhattan, Mayor La Guardia announced today that he will proclaim “noiseless nights” for the month of October. He will be supported by police, school and health authorities, educa- tional groups—even. the milk com- panies whose horse-drawn wagons. have hitherto clattered noisily through city streets. Milk-wagon horses will wear rubberized , shoes and iron- rimmed wagon wheels will be replaced by pneumatic-tired equipment. Police Commissioner Valentine is- sued an order to the police regard- ing warnings to be given noise of- fenders. ‘ l. | six German cruisers of the Leipzig | type which the French say have ‘been added to the German fleet. | The Gloire is described as better | armed and more strongly armored than France’s older light cruisers. | The new vessel carries nine guns | of 155-millimeters (about 6 inches) and 16 of lesser caliber. 1 Women to Go on Outing. ‘Members of the Neighborhood House | Women's Club will be taken on a pic- | | nic outing near Prince Frederick, Md., | today in a new bus purchased through | the efforts of the late Mrs. J. P. S. | Neligh, former head resident of Neigh- borhood House. The club aided in raising money fcr the bus, | [ _0il Croquignole pe rmanent Wave reatly reduced price includes Sham- 2.50 poo and Finger Wave Realty a $6 Value! & Warner Push-Up Oil Croquig- and you will have oil applied ly to the hair which sives soft waves with lots of Nationsl 8230 Warner Beauty Studio F LW, Beikin ‘343 n-?-kt‘nflu ‘Third Floor - Have nole money ahead every month. [ G-E MONITOR TOP MODELS G-E FLATOP MODELS G-E LIFTOP MODELS - NATIONAL ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO. 1328 New York Ave. E. C. GRAHAM, Pres. National 6800 —or at the Following Dealers: 2212 Rhode Island Ave, N.E. BOND, A. M. 4231 9th St. N.W, CASTLEBERG'S 1004 F St. N.W. FORD, GEO. A. ELECTRIC CO. 3616 14th St. N.W. GEORGETOWN ELECTRIC COMPANY 1205 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. - HECHT COMPANY 7ih and F Sts. N.W. HUB FURNITURE COMPANY 3th and D Sts. N.W. HUDSON AIR-CONDITIONING CORP. 1517 Connecticut Ave. N.W. LANSBURGH & BRO. 120 3th St. N.W. JULIUS LANSBURGH FURNITURE CO. 909 F St. N.W. MITCHELL'S, INC. 5000 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. MONARCH RADIO SHOP 1318 G St. N.W. MYERS & FLOURNOY 514 H St. NE. NATIONAL FURNITURE COMPANY 7th and H Sts. N.W. PALAIS ROYAL 11th and G Sts. N.W. GARDNER D. PINKETT 1013 U St. N.W. SCHNEIDER’S SONS, C. 1220 G St. N.W. BRACKETT, C. W. 268 Carroll Ave.. Takoma Park. Md. BROSIUS BROS. & GORMLEY, INC. Rockville. Md. BURROWS SERVICE STATION 6621 Wisconsin Ave.. Chevy Chase. Md. COLLINS SERVICE STATION Porestville. Md. HOUSE & HERRMANN Silver Spring, Md. INDIAN HEAD ELECTRIC CO. In?*n Head. Md. MARYLAND ELECTRIC APPLIANCE CC 166 Maryland Ave., Myattsville, Md. MC“B LAlNl!lJa MOTOR CO. WOODFIELD ELECTRIC CO. Gaithersburg. Md. WARNER ELECTRICAL SUPPLY 1129 King St., Alexandria, Va. WARNER ELECTRICAL SUPPLY 31A1 Wilson Bivd., Clarerdon, Va. ZIRKLE HARDWARE COMPANY 8227 Georsia Ave., Sliver Spring, Md.

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