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SOCIETY., Chevy Chase Personals Miss Dorothy Light to Marry Donald Imirie Tomorrow at 4 O’clock. Miss Dorothy Luclle Light, daughter ‘©f Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Light, and “Mr. Donald Imirie will be married to- smorrow afternoon in All Saints’ Epis- ‘copal Church, the Rev. Henry Teller | Cocke officiating, at 4 o'clock. Miss | Light has selected as her matron of honor, Mrs. Lewis Baker and her other attendants will be Miss Barbara Wat- son, Miss Marguerite Gaylor, Miss| Helen Sagario and Mrs. William Eng- | lish of New York City. Mr. Paul| Imirie will be the best man for his brother, and the ushers will be Mr. Clarence Brown, Dr. Gilbert Rude, Mr. George Harding, and Mr. Richard Essex. Miss Barbara Watson and Miss Marguerite. Gaylor entertained Sun- day morning, October 13, at breakfast 2t Olney Inn, in compliment to Miss | Light. The other guests were Mrs. George Mandley, Mrs. Warren Stoope, Miss Eloise Godden, Mrs. Lewis Ba- ker and Mrs. Gilbert Rude. | Mr. and Mrs. Light have as thelr | guests Mrs. Light’s brother-in-law and | ‘sister, Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Bar- ber, and their niece and nephew, Mr. | and Mrs. William Latimer English of | New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight K. Terry were hosts at a delightful dinner party, | followed by bridge. Friday evening, in compliment to Miss Elizabeth Jack- son and Mrs. Terry's brother, Mr. Wil- liam Wade Everett, jr, whose mar-| riage will take place Monday evening, | October 28, at 8 o'clock, in the Calvary | Baptist Church, the Rev. Willlam | Abernethy officiating. The other guests included Mr. and Mrs. John E. | Laskey and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Murray. | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Miles left | Friday by motor for New York City | to attend the Vanderbilt-Fordham foot | ball game and are remaining over Sunday. Mr: and Mrs. Herbert L. Mausk of Bhaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio, have | been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don- | ald Reed MacLeod, who entertained Friday evening in their honor. Mrs. M. Carmack gave a delightful supper party Tuesday evening in com- pliment to Mr. and Mrs. Mausk. Mrs. Edward Parker was hostess at an at- tractive luncheon, followed by bridge, Wednesday, in honor of Mrs. Mausk and Mrs Lauriston Hannah, and Mrs. Ralph Payne gave a luncheon and| bridge for her Monday at the Con-| * gressional Country Club, the company numbering 14. | week at the Chalfonte-Haddon Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bryan, in To- ronto, Canada, and will be gone a month. Miss Margaret Wleeler of White- ford, Md. is visiting Mr. and Mrs.| E. Burton Corning. Mr. and Mrs. Corning are now occupying their new home on East Leland street in Chevy Chase, Md. Mrs. C. W. Warburton has returned to her home on Lenox street from a two weeks' trip to Independence, Towa, where she visited relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Temple Webster have gone to Atlantic City to spend a Mr. and Mrs. George E. Tew left Friday by motor for Hot Springs, Va., where they are the guests for several days of Dr. and Mrs. George Torrence. Mrs. Ray Schrider gave a lunch | party followed by bridge Tuesday.| The guests included Mrs. William Thrall, Mrs. Carl Kadie, Mrs. Frank William, Mrs. Charles E. Truax, Mrs. | Percy R. Rogers, Mrs. Carl F. Stuhler | and Mrs. M. Gillingham. | Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dotterer and | Mr. and Mrs. Allison Buchanan have returned from a short stay at Atlantic City, N. J. Mrs. August Koehler is spending the | week end in Atlantic City. Mrs. H. Harland Crowell entertained’ at luncheon followed by bridge Thurs- | day. Mr. and Mrs. Donald V. Hunter | with their two sons, Donald, jr., and Charles Michael, motored to Ulster, | Pa., where they are spending a -week in their Summer home. | Mrs. Robert C. Duncan is the guest | of Miss Elizabeth Jane Tull, in Wil- | mington, Del, over Sunday. Mrs. Stuart Armstrong and her son Charles, left yesterday for }ict! Springs, Ark, where they will spend | several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Wilcox and | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis left yester- day by motor for a week's stay at| Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. William Crnycrofl.‘ Schofleld motored to Lexington, Va., where they are the week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hal Day- huff, ir. They attended the Mary-| land-V. M. I foot ball game yesterday | and the dance last evening. | Dr. and Mrs. George F. Goetzman | were hosts at a dinner party followed | by a musicale Thursday evening to | celebrate the birthday anniversary of | Dr. Goetzman. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Enlows, Tamara | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, Among the Brides of the Autumn Season AR MRS. WILSON LEE MARCY, before her marriage October 5, in_St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Miss Myrtle Adele Lenard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lenard. Mr. and Mrs. Marcey are now at home at 2046 Sizteenth street, Claxendon, Va —Harris-Ewing Photo. Center: Mrs. Charles F. Monninger, before her mar- D. C., OCTOBER. 20, 1935—PART THREE. SOCIETY. Association, as well as others who |the Mt. Vernon Seminary Alumnae COffee H()lll.I have just attended the opening con- Is First In Field House Starts Immediately| After Concert by Symphony. The first Sunday “coffee hour” in | the informal atmosphere of the field | house of Mount Vernon Seminary, on Nebraska avenue, will be held this afternoon and early evening, begin- ning about 6:30 o'clock, immediately following the concert by the National | Symphony Crchestra. It is expected that many of those attending the afternoon concert will drive out to the | fleld house to enjoy a charming hour | of music-talk and delectable viands to be served by the fair hands of the | members of the Washington Alumnae | Association of Mount Vernon Semi- nary who wish to add to their “con- tribution fund” for the orchestra, in | forwarding its educational work and children’s concerts. | Upon arriving at the field house the guests, many but not all of whom have already made advance reserva- | tions, will be received oy Mrs. Huron W. Lawosn, and invited into the de- | lightful room, dimly lit, by table can- ~ | dies and blazing fire logs, where Mrs. | Charles W. Fairfax will serve coffee, | aided by a group of students of the MRS. HOBART CLOUGH, Before her marriage, October 5, Miss Charlotte Hagan, daughter of Dr.and Mrs.E. R. Hagan. Mr. and Mrs. Clough are now at home in Colonial Village, Clarendon, Va. —Harris-Ewing Photo. Irish Minister at | seminary, who will likewise serve the ‘xuesu at the tiny tables, arranged | around the room. | Miss Bliss Finley, chairman of the “coffee hour,” will attend the buffet table, where Mrs. Willoughby Chesley, ;Ml‘!. Hobart Brooks, Mrs. Kenneth Wales, and others will “officiate” in the serving of de iuxe supper dishes, made from rare recipes, which com- prise, according to veiled hints, a choice “Italian spaghetti according to Mrs. Chesley.” A “goody cart” manned by a group of Seminary girls will further lure the appetites of the guests. { who include members and friends of Ime Symphony Orchestra Association and of the Washington Chapter iof cert at Constitution Hall. Mrs. James H. Harper, Mrs. Charles W. Kutz, and Mrs. Mary Louise Allen are among those wno will do the hon- ors at the party tonight, and among those who will be present are Mme. Jean Labat, Col. and Mrs. Edwin Wate son, Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Richards, Mr. and Mrs, Willlam Liddle, Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin, Gen. Charles Kutz, Miss Blanche Polkinhorn, Mrs. Charles Covode Davis, Mrs. Adelia Payne, Miss J. Lorna Guard, Miss Jean Dean Cole and Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Cappel. Mary .Rbeder Room 206, Kresge Bldg. Cor. 1ith and G Sts The Shop That Specializes in Youthful Matron Ha Hats Remodeled and Made to Order Glmi%&kMilli 4thFloor e 1333FSt. ANNOUNCES * BLDG. The Arrival of Their New EVENING WRAPS DINNER DRESSES EVENING DRESSES erb " o Sizes WRAPS | DRESSES ‘ Will Your Old PERMANENT |, Carry You Through the Fall? 5 Better Be Sure of | Your Good Grooming with an Mrs. Horace Kilmer entertained | Library Club Banquet | Dmitrieff, Mr. Gene Duffer and i ndi e | riage October 5 Miss Mary De- Thursday at a bridge luncheon, her guests being Mrs. Henry Shannon, Mrs. | Violet Austin. | Mr. and Mrs. Harold Enlows will borah Brennan, daughter of William R. The Minister from the Irish Free EMILE, JR., Mr. and Mrs. Brennan. Mr.and Mrs. Mon- ninger are now at home at Staten Island, Long Island. State, Mr. Michael MacWhite, has | accepted the invitation to be an honor | | guest and speaker at the banquet to Leon Grant, Mrs. D. C. Dyer, Mrs. Lloyd B. Harrison, Mrs. C. F. Williams, Mrs. Neil Calvert, and Mrs. Thomas | give a dinner party this evening at the | Congressional Country Club, in honor |of the birthday anniversary of Mrs INDIVIDUAL M. Ross. | Mrs. C. M. Jansky, jr., gave a beau- | tifully appointed lunch party Tuesday in compliment to Mrs. Lyman Jackson of Columbus, Ohio. The guests, who numbered 16, remained for bridge. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson have recenly moved from Columbus to Chevy Chase, Md. ) Louise B. Skelton gave a bridge luncheon Tuesday, the guests including Mrs. John DeWolf North- “rop, Mrs. E. C. Graham, Mrs. William Wilson, Mrs. Edward Drake, Mrs. George Brown, Mrs. Andrew Foggo, Mrs. Charles Coles, Mrs. Robert Cheatum, Mrs. Sara Coleman, Mrs. Fred Tew and Mrs. Charles Detmer. Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. Holland with their daughter, Miss Mary Holland, motored to Warrenton, Va., where they are spending the week end. | Mr. Charles Edgar Winn of Nor-| folk, Va, is the week-end guest of | his brother-in-law and sister, Dr. and Mrs. Clem C. Williams. | Mrs. William Donovan and Mrs. | Joseph Cary gave an attractive lunch- | eon followed by bridge Tuesday at the Shoreham. The guests were Mrs. Wiliam F. Johnson, Mrs. Joseph T. Mandigan, Mrs. Edward E. Ardesser, | Mrs. Harry Gerrity, Mrs. Edward Deeds, Mrs. Janet A. Toomey, Mrs. J. | B. Stanley, Mrs. Robert C. Lester, Mrs. J. V. Curley, Mrs. P. J. Vandoren Enlows’ sister. Miss Violet Austin. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Marvin, jr., recently entertained Mr. and Mrs.] Thomas Wadsworth Holmes of Phila- | delphia in their Chevy Chase, D. C., home. Mrs. Holmes, a bride of Oc- tober 12, is the daughter of Mrs. John Cornelius Shinely of Cape May. N. J., and a niece of Mrs. Marvin. Mr. and | residence of her maternal grand- mother, Mrs. Joseph W. Moorehead, | sr, of Philadelphia and Cape May, | N. J. Party for Bride At Riverdale, Md. | ' Mrs, Virginia Bessman of Riverdale, Md,, gave a reception and bingo party at her residence Saturday night, Octo- ber 12, in honor of her niece who was recently married to Mr. John Robey of College Park, Md. Mrs. Robey was formerly Miss Regina Richards of Augusta, Ga. The house was tastefully decorated with Autumn flowers and leaves. Mrs. Bessman was assisted in receiving the guests by her sisters, Misses Mary and Sarah Prender. In the company were: Mr. and Mrs. —Harris-Ewing Photo. Aids Transfiguration Church Benefit Fund Mrs. Elkins Reed, Mrs. Percy Adams and Mrs. L. M. Saunders form a com- ;Mfs- Holmes were married at the | mittee sponsoring a benefit perform- Kenmore Inn, Bel Air, Md.. Summer | ance Tuesday evening at 8:15 o'clock in the ball room of Mrs. Robert Funk- houser at 5315 Colorado avenue. The performance is for the benefit of the Church of the Transfiguration, and | Mrs. John J. Queally, wife of the rec- tor, heads the list of patronesses. Miss Gertrude Thelma Barker of St. Louis will appear in Channing Pol- lock’s “The Fool,” presenting the en- tertainment without an assisting cast. | A program of music will be given be- | fore the performance, those appearing | including Mrs. M. Colladay, soprano; Mr. Albert R. Nelson, baritone; Mr. A. Ralon, violinist, and Miss Grace Stan- ley Stevens, pianist. Other patronesses include Mrs. Mal- | colm Gibbs and Mrs. Walter Gordon | of Maryland. Bank Women Dine at MRS. C. DON WARNICK, | Before her marriage last month Miss Olive Dorothy Monarch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James place in the Metropolitan Memorial Episcopal Church. Mr. and Mrs. Warnick are now at home | L. Monarch. The wedding took at Catonsville, Md. ~—Harris-Ewing Photo, Annual Bal Boheme To Be January 20 The Capital City's big ball of the arts, which is always the high point in the Midwinter season here, will| take place Monday night, January 20, in the Hotel Willard. It will be the thirteenth annual Bal Boheme of the | . | both artistically and financially, s { again chairman for this season’s bal, | and will be aided by prominent artists, | actors, musicians and countless other well-known Washingtonians in ar- ranging for this ball Members of the Arts Club as far back as last August were invited to| submit suggestions for the theme in pageant form, and in the near future the committee will meet and adopt the be given by the Library Club of the | Wilson Teachers’ College, at the May- flower Hotel on November 9, in honor of authors of books for children. Mr. MacWhite will pay tribute to another honor guest, Mrs. Padriac Colum, famous Irish poet and drama- tist, who will fly down from New York for this literary event. The Library Club, formerly known as the Torch Club of the Wilson Teachers' College, lasy year sponsored in this city the Newbery banquet, honoring the winners of the Newbery Medal, awarded annually for the most distinguished ¢ontribution to American literature for children. PERMANENT 759 "W hite Hair Is for only Our Specialty Free Consultation ’ P ‘ 722 NAt. 2028-9 One Door Seuth of F St. 528 12th St. N.W. Two Locations 3042 14th St. N.W. AD. 6700-1 Open Till 9 P.M. MORNING . . . dashing to the country, the office or to school in o warming brown jocket dress with goy plaid skirt and ascot--._$35 NOON . . . lunching at Pierre’s in one froc collar and a dash of green satin, $ of the more formal black crepe ks set off with a Renaissance 29.75 I ' | Fri Arts Club of Washingtoa and its gen- Ob) aE rlday‘ al theme will be, most appropriately, | most novel of the plans offered. The Bank Women's Club of Wash- uperstition”—a motif which will = ington will hold its regular monthly | jenq itself in fascinating fashion not | supper meeting Friday, October 25, &t | only to the decorations of the ball | J'ggp® co A'rs Toby Tavern. The guest speaker Will | room itself and the costumes of the |f * . be Mrs. John M. Enoch of the Depart- | gancers, but will provide many thrills St Twith_our pew 512.75 . new inner lin- | S. E. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Robert | | Douglas, Miss Martha Tippett, Mrs.| | Loretta Winston, Mrs. Hattie Rallas, fowed by bridge last evening in their | Mrs. Sallie Blue, Mr. Earl Bowman, home, to celebrate their wedding anni- | Miss Blanche McBurney, Mrs. Thomas versary. The guests were Mr. and | Davis, Miss Elma Geiger, Mrs. J.| NIGHT . . . dining informally ot the Shoreham in a sophisticated GOLD lome’ dress in the new street length. The bow at the neck is of flome red velvet $29.75 and Miss Agnes Cummings. _ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Ross were +hosts at a delightful dinner party fol- Mrs. Fitz McMaster Woodrow, Mr. and | Mrs. Lloyd B. Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. | “Harvey H. Wilkinson, Miss Teresa McDavid, Mrs. C. F. Williams, Mrs. | J. W. McCown, Mr. Ralph Jewell, and | #Mr. Nelson Thomas. | Mrs. Norman E. Bull went Thursday “o Philadelphia, where she will join ner father, Mr. George P. Tustin, and | m—— Jher sister, Mrs. H. R. Stackhouse, to | Jmotor to Northampton, Mass., where dhey will visit Mrs. Bull's daughter, Miss Betty Bull, who is a student ‘of Smith College. Mr. and Mrs. Charles White are wisiting Mrs. White's niece and| nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kimball, | in Rochester, N. Y. They also will| visit Mrs. White's nephew and niece, ' Trumell, all of Washington; Mr. and | Mrs. Paul Haas of Woodridge, D. C.; Miss Eleanor Prendey and Miss Vir- ginia Clark of Cherrydale, Va.; Miss Nettie Stroh, Mrs. Ethel Dalkin and Miss Unetta Dalkin of Takoma Park, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Robey are now living at Kearney street northeast. Botahy®? aig ouin Yarns. TIOGA YARN SHOP Margaret MeGowan 101 Kresge Blds. G at 11th Such as 2 Suits, 2 Coats, 2 Dresses (in- cludes 2-piece dresses), Suit and Dress, Etc. EXPERT TAILORING For Relining, Alterations, Mending Ask Our Drivers—Work Reasonable Free—Call For and Delivery—Free Two Shops to Serve You MAY’ 2628 14th St. 2220 14th St. Additional 25¢ per Garment for Velvets and Fur Trimmed North 6(!_22 ment of Labor. Mrs. Enoch is at| present in Mexico, where she is an| official delegate on the part of the United States to the seventh Pan- American Child Congress, now bemg‘ held in that country. | This will be an open meeting of the club, and members are invited to bring guests. | 1857 E. F. Droop & Sons Co., 1300 G Our efforts are concentrated on distribution of Musical Products that are reliable and trust- No other lines of merchandise divert us from that purpose. worthy. in the succession of amusing and d verting stunts, particularly the colo: ful processional and - pageant that| forms the climax of the program. | Mr. Harold Allen Long. who is| chairman of the Dramatic Committee | of the club, and who, as chairman of the 1935 Bal Boheme, carried that| gay event to & successful conclusion, Ezclusively Everything in Music in all grades—reasonably priced—convenient to purchase. “STRATFIELD” Mober. GranD Full Scale—88 Notes—77; Octaves—3 Pedals A graceful, lovely Grand Piano only 4 ft. 6% in. in length, which adds beauty to its surroundings; it is especially suited to apartments of moderate size. for their rich tone and responsi SPINET ORGAN 398.50 Double Set Reeds. F Scale. 61 Notes. Standard Organ Keyboard. walnut—A BEAUTY! 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