Evening Star Newspaper, October 20, 1935, Page 51

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SOCIETY, Of Personal Note Many Visitors From Afar Attending Jewish Junior Council. The ninth biennial convention of the INational Council of Jewish Juniors is taking place at the Wash- ington Hotel, starting today, through Thursday, with many social events filling the outlined program, of which Miss Hilda Levy is chairman. Mrs. Hannah G. Solomon of Chicago, Mrs. Arthur Brin of Minneapolis, Minn.; Miss Cecelia Slohn of New York, Miss Flora R. Rothenberg of Pittsburgh, Pa., are visitors in Washington, at- tending the convention and while here will be entertained by friends. Mrs. Victor Strasburger of Norfolk, Va., is the guest of her brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meyer, at the Broadmoor. Mrs. Sarah Levy and Miss Carrie Hart have returned to Wardman Park Hotel after a four months' trip abroad. Mrs. Joseph Dreyfuss has been spending a week in New York visit- {ng her mother, Mrs. E. 8. Woog, and her sister, Mrs. S. Trietel. Her son Edmund, motored to New York to saccompany his mother home. Mrs. Frank Baum and her two chil- dren spent a week in Washington at the Hotel Continental en route to Florida. Mrs. Lehman Goldman of Atlantic City and her two sons, who were guests of the former’s uncle, Mr. Ben- Jamin Held, and family, left for Flor- ida the early part of last week to spend the Winter. Miss Nancy Sigmund, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sigmund, is spending the week in Ellicott City, the | guest of Miss Margaret Turner. T%e annual card party given by the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Hebrew Home and the stage direction is under the supervision of Mrs. John M. Safer, Miss Gertrude Effenbach will ar- range the musical accompaniment. The regular monthly meeting of the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Home for the Aged, 1125 Spring road, takes place tomorrow night at the home at 8 o'clock, following the tea which took place last Monday afternoon at the home, which brought together over 400 guests. Tea and cake was served during the afternoon, the tables having Fall variegated flowers as dec- | orations. Several members of the auxiliary acted as hostesses. The meet- ing tomorrow evening will be opened by Mrs. Fred Kolker. The musical | program will be given by Miss Flor- ence Miller at the piano and Miss | Muriel Gelman, violinist. Mrs. Elias Gelman is president. \ Mrs. Minnie Feinberg and Miss Au- ! gusta Sharnoff, delegates, Charleston, | 8. C., to the Junior Council of Jewish | Women are guests of Mrs. Louis Bris- | ker at her home, 3800 New Hampshire avenue. Mr. Max J. Fischer, son of Dr. and | Mrs. M. B. Pischer of 2700 Connecti- cut avenue, is spending the week end { with his brother, Mr. §. Greenhoot | Fischer, who is a student in the fresh- | man class at the University of Penn- sylvania. Mr. Fischer went to Phila- delphia Friday and will return this evening or tomorrow morning. | Dinn;r ?md Luficheon Parties of Interest ‘The Right Rev. A. W. Noel Porter, | D. D., bishop of the diocese of Sacra- | mento, Calif., who is making a trip for the Aged takes place Wednesday., ¢yrough the East, was a guest of honor October 23, in the afternoon and|g¢ 4 ginner given last evening at the evening, for which attractive prizes Mayflower by Mr. C. Leslie McCrea. will be given. At the regular meeling | Gyests included the Rev. C. Ernest tomorrow night, Mrs. Charles A. Gold- | gmith, D. D,, C. L.; the Rev. William smith will bring & message, accom-, s Bishop, D. D.; Chief Justice Alfred panied by a talking film, “Human| A, Wheat of the Supreme Court of the Needs,” followed by & social hour District of Columbia, Mr. William L. and refreshments. Mrs. Edmund I. Kaufmann is visit- ing in Detroit after a stay in Co- lumbus, Ohio, with Mr. Kaufmann. Mrs. Max Pimes is the guest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller, in Atlantic City, where she has been spending a week. Mrs. Bertha Hechinger and Mrs. Daisy Lesser were joint hosteses on Friday at luncheon and bridge at the Beacon Inn, entertaining the After- noon Bridge Circle Mrs. August Kleeblatt and her daughter, Miss Bernice Kleeblatt, are now located in their apartment in the Broadmoor. Mrs. Sidney C. Kaufman motored to New York with friends last week and returned to her apartment in the Roosevelt Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Keller have re- turned to Washington and are now occupying their apartment in the Qairo. Invitations have been issued for a smoker to take place this evening at | Beale, Comdr. Norman B. Hall, Mr. { John H. Edwards and Mr. A. Gordon Jones. Bishop Porter will preside this morning at St. Thomas’ Church at/ | Eighteenth and Church streets. | Mr. and Mrs. F. Everhart Haynes | have issued cards for a tea Sunday | afternoon, October 27, in honor of | Miss Anne Wyant, whose marriage to | | Mrs. Haynes brother, Mr. Phillip Lar- ner Gore, will take place November 21. Mr. and Mrs. John Imirie of West Bradley lane, Chevy Chase, Md., will entertain at a buffet supper this eve- ning in honor of Miss Dorothy Lucille | Light, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Light, and their son, Mr. Donald | | Imirie, whose marriage will take place | Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock in Al | Saints' Episcopal Church, Chevy Chase. Mrs. Francis R. Weller gave a small dinner party in the Shoreham Hotel ball room !ast evening for her son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, MISS JOSEPHINE FOSS PETERS, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ithamar B. Peters, whose wedding to Mr. Terrence Jo- sef McAdams will take place in the early Winter. Mr. Mc- Adams is the son of Mrs. Hugh R. Garner. Sorority Activities In Washington ‘The Gamma Chi Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority will be hostess at a province convention to be held the Mayflower Hotel at 8:30 o'clock by | liam A. Curtin, jr, in celebration of | in this city, October 25-26. The meet- the Washington Jewish Physicians’ | their first wedding anniversary. Mrs. | ings will be held at George Washing- D. C., OCTOBER 20, 1935—PART THREE. Young Women Whose Future Weddings Are of Interest MISS ANN ELIZABETH MAYO, Whose father, Mr. Robert Mayo, jr., an- nounces her engagement to Mr. Livings- ton Lee Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Livingston S. Johnson. The wedding will take place next Spring. ~—Casson Photo. SOCIETY. E—7 MISS KATHARINE CECILE BLAKE, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Le Roy Blake, who an- nounce her engagement to Mr. David George Price, son of Dr. and Mrs. David James Price of this city. The wed- ding will take place November 22, in the Petworth Methodist Church, Rev. Robert L. Wood officiating. —Harris-Ewing Photo. affair were Miss Katherine Garrett, Miss Marian White, Miss Helen Steele, Miss Altha Rhodes and Miss Peggy lace and Irene McNamara, Rho; Zene nie Mullin and Marion-Louise Risdon, Pi, and Garland Pyles and Vera Kol- ley, Upsilon. The first executive board meeting of the Phi Gamma Pi Sorority was held at the home of Miss Leah Bretler, 1116 | K street northeast, at which delegates of active chapters in Philadelphia, Bal« timore and Washington were repre sented. Plans were made for the an- nual convention in Philadelphia, and the editorial staff for the coming year to issue the Crescent, the newspaper edited by the sorority each month, was announced. Miss Dordy Schiller and Miss Anne Lupo, both of the Theta Chapter in Washington, were voted to this staff. Patronesses for Lecture at Willard ‘The patronesses for the lecture to be given by the Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, 5. 'S. Wednesday evening at 8:30 o'clock at the Willard Hotel, are Mrs, Frederick Altemus, Miss Mary Bar- ney, Mrs. Robert Cahill, Mrs. D. D. Callahan, Mrs. C. V. Chappell, Mrs. Aubrey Clarke, Mrs. James A. Emery, Mrs. William Corcoran Eustis, Mrs, James D. Morgan, Mrs. Arthur P, Mullen, Mrs. Charles P. Neill, Dr. Margaret Nichoison, Mrs. John J. Noonan, Mrs. Virginia O'Harem, Mrs. Leslie Peake, Mrs. Sarah Pepper, Miss Agnes Riley, Miss Florence Roach, Mrs. B. F. Saul, Mrs. Charles Semmes, Miss Rose Shea, Mrs. Jonn Foote, Mrs, James Galvin, Mrs. Borrodell Gower, Mrs. George E. Hamiiton, Mrs. J. D. Haskall, Miss Katherine Keane, Miss Mary Kernan, Miss Sarah Maher, Mrs. Camden McAtee, Mrs. W. J. McGee, Miss Mary V. Merrick, Miss Mildred Merrick, Mrs. T. J. Sheridan, Mrs. D. C. Stapleton, Mrs. Joseph Tumulty, Mrs. Lewis H. Watkins and Mrs. rge Worthington, jr. Regular $8.50 PERMANENT Asy Method Asy Style OCTOBER ONLY 2817 Fourteenth St. N.W. Columbia 10412 Expert Male Haircuttors SELECTED by EMILY POST Emily Post viser and thority _on recommends Committee. Dr. Nathan Ratnoft. pres- | Curtin is the former Miss Sallie Rita | ton University in the rooms of the & e 7 i £ Deeds. | ,7 cniosser ident of the committee, of the Roths- | Weller. | local chapter and Columbian House 2 ; bt . 1 : ; | — . . i e 1 5 Phi Chapter of Beta Chi National i " child Hadassah University Hospital, Mrs. Baldwin Cuok entertained n‘ snd 'v"" H0 SpNS 0o 9N Scouhess oE Cus Sorority entertained at a weenie rm‘ i “"/" willibe 58/ griest spoaker. | the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, | S0Ority. Miss Jean m’“ wiilibe § last Tuesday evening. The chapter ¢oMzs. Edward Kohner is leaving today | prpest, Humphrey Daniel. yesterday | mArhal ofthe conventior | s Gt . L members, their escorts and guests met | ing her dluzhte?: Mrs. &Ed‘“‘vs.r&l for Mrs. G. Gabriel Murphy, who was, | _Out-of-town guests include Mrs. 2 - : i and drove into nearby Maryland, where b | before her marriage, Miss Marie Mc- | James MacNaboe of New York City, | i o o ’ | & large bonfire was buit. The com- Invest. Bldg., 1511 K St. N.W. Deutsch and Mrs. Harry Gutman. ‘The Washington Council of Beta a visit in New York flew back to Wash- | | ‘Walter Grais , Mrs. John S. W, , | Harrlet Prench of Bluefield, W. Va., ) ¢ et bl Shn 5. Wynne, Chi National Sorority held its first ' ington Wednesday and then trans- ferred to another plane for a flight to their home in Atlanta, Ga. The Wednesday Sewing Circle met at luncheon at May's last week. Eight guests were in the party. Mrs. Lester Lansburgh and her daughter, Miss Loufse Lansburgh, have returned to their home in New York | Mrs. Walter Oliver, jr.; Miss Marie L. | siegrist, Mrs. De Vere Weedon, Mrs. | Peter H. Steltz, Mrs. Lamber E. Jones, | Mrs. Matthew E. Donahue, Miss Mary Ryan, Miss Cynthia Hill, Mrs. Paul H. | Lutes, Mrs. Charles D. Jewell, Mrs. ! James E. Weedon, Mrs. John C. Weedon, jr.; Mrs. Rignell Brady, Mrs. province vice president, and delegates | from the Universities of West Vir- ginia, Maryland, William and Mary, Duke and Goucher College. Priday evening a reception will be | held from 8:30 to 11 o'clock at the home of Miss Helen Hoskinson, presi- dent of the local alumnae association. MISS MILDRED McCONNELL, MISS REGINA BIGGS, | meeting of the 1935-36 season at the Carlton Hotel on October 14, with Mrs. Marjorie Van Buskirk, chairman of the council, presiding. The council members for the coming yeargare Lor- raine Branson and Grace Wedderburn, Alpha; Dorothea Welsh and Bertha Intyre. The company included Mrs. | grand vice president; Mrs. Richard, - ttee in charg isted of Miss Mr. and Mrs, Alex Dittler, the lat- | . 0r 0l <oumany e ke, | Shryock of Durham, N. C., director | : fi e Lo chitree Comeisted of Mo ter the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Isaac |\ “yohn "B 'Donahue( Mrs. Robert | of provinces; Miss Ruth Hocker of | ; - Miss Marion-Louise Risdon. | f (4 ‘w Behrend, who were their guests, after | p “\yoror Mrs. George Romney, Mrs, | Baltimore, province president; Miss | s vl | ’ug L@ Ryan, Gamma; Olga Bedell and Au- Aristocrat of Foundations after a visit in Washington. | Elizabeth Degman, Mys. Arthur J.'She will be assisted by officers of the poyonter of Mr. and Mrs. G. R. McConnell Mrs. Isadore Saks, with her sister, | Fhelan and Miss Martha Harris. sorority. Invited guests will include ¢ bgurmy,!xyu whose engagement to Mr. | the faculty members of George Wash- | Charles N. Eckhardt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Whose parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. Rozier Biggs, ' drey Shenahan, Eta; Ann Vito and announce her engagement to Mr. Clair John Evelyn Leonberger, Mu; Pat Pater- Mrs. David Wolferman, motored blck} Mr. Robert J. Cottrell, executive | to their home in New York after | secretary of the Washington Board of spending the week end at the Shore- ham. While in Washington, Mrs. Saks’ former home, they were enter- tained by relatives. The opening Fall dance of the season given by the Phi Ep Fraternity took place last Saturday night, Octo- ber 12, at the Woodmont Country Club, and brought together a large gathering of young folks, many from out of town. The opening meeting for the Fall season of the Washington Chapter of Hadassah will take place Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the Com- munity Center, Sixteenth and Q streets northwest, with Mrs. Leopold V. Preundberg, president, introducing the guest speaker, Mrs. David De Sola Pool of New York and former presi- dent of the New York Chapter. Mrs. William Iogus, a past presi- dent, will give the opening prayer. An interesting feature of the program will be the introduction of various fund-raising chairmen, who will be { Trade and ~hairman of the Host Com- | mittee for the convention of the Na- | tional Association of Commercial Or- | ganizations’ Secretaries to meet in | Washington this week, beginning to- day, with Mrs. Cottrell was host at a dinner party at the Shoreham Hotel | last evening. Guesis included officers of the group and their wives. Park Commissioner Lacy Shaw was host at a small dinner party Thursday evening at his nome near Silver Spring, Md. DEMAND CLEAR WINE ‘The American public demands wine which is crystal bright, according to E. M. Brown and Victor de F. Hen- riques, California chemists, in Indus- trial and Engineering Chemistry. The consumer must tura the bottle upside down and find no sediment in contradistinction to the European who handles his wine with great care in presented in a novel manner. Mrs. Allen Fischer has written the script | order that he may wot disturb the sediment in the bottle. ington University and presidents and Nicholas Eckhardt of Washington, has been | delegates of the Pan-Hellenic Associ- | gnpounced by her parents. The date for the ‘The convention will close on Satur- | day evening with e banquet at the| Shoreham Hotel at 7:30 o’clock. The | Helen Farrington. The banquet will be followed by dancing from 10 to 1' ation. wedding has not been set. ran of Portland, Oreg. The wedding will take place in November. place northwest. Epsilon Chapter, Phi Sigma Epsilon ['MILLER o'clock in the west ball room. Reser- ' National Sorority, entertained its new Brown and Miss Lucy Grimstead, re- | toastmistress will be Miss Ruth Hock- | Yations must be made by Priday with | rush girls with a buffet supper and ceived the guests. and old-fashioned er. Music will be in charge of Miss | Mrs. Rollin A. Hunter, 2842 Allendale | “old-fashioned formal” Thursday eve- games were played, after which prizes ning at the Highlander. The com- were awarded for the funniest evening | | mittee, consisting of Mrs. Olive Ruth | dresses. The rushees attending the Killoran, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Killo- | son and Mary Harton. Xi; Ann Love- EISEMAN'’S SEVENTH & F STS WITH BROWN SUEL i ; BR!)!H;IRSK Bombay colf with brown suvede is the newest high fashion color combination for Madame Irene contends that the right corset does more for your figure than a reducing regime. For the mature woman, she designs an ex- Fall. Strikingly smart for weor with brown, #'s the mating season for oll occessories r } 4 E ! . ’ i : . . o red or green Town Tailleur. incidently, ,[ 30 we've created bags to motch your shoes. 1222 F St. N. W, % CORDIALY INVITLYOU T OPEN A CHAR Cleaming Lame or Velvet 5.3 95 These two hats as illus- trated believe in frivo- lous occasions. Try one on and you'll be think- ing gayly of all the places you'll wear it to. L. Frank Co. The Store of Youthful Fashions P Street at 13th N.W, Heve You @ Prank Account? § THIS éMARY TUNIC FROCK wf ol ctepe: brown skint with iy inteewone theeads. Attrac at throat One " moddels jut received Ut wstags, ~$10°95 "/ CHARGE IT Pay comveniently in November Decembers and January No interest quisite all-in-one which ca- resses your figure into shim, sleek lines of youth, modulates the hips, suppresses the der- riere and charmingly empha- sizes the uplifted bust. Model sketched of fine French batiste and imported knit elastic with Alencon lace up- lift is only $15. . Madame lrene has designed foundations exclusively for Whelan'’s. $5 to $22.50. Our expert fitters will ‘give you careful, individual attene tion 1105 F Street The Woman's Specialty Shop

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