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BOCIETY. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1935 SOCIETY. Hampton, Va., are visiting friends in Washington and are stopping at the Fairfax. Mr. and Mrs, Brinkley Smithers of Washington and Long Island are guests for the week end and the Mid- dleburg races of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Street, who will entertain at dinner for them this evening. A large cock- tail party will be given in honor of Mr, and Mrs. Smithers tomorrow after- noon by Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jen- kins. Gable’s Friend SOCIETY GIRL ATTENDED GAME WITH ACTOR. Sisters Whose Engagements Are Announced INDEPENDENT GAS BARRIERS RELATED Girl Testifies She ‘Spied On’ * Missouri-Kansas for Supreme Court Justices Will Be Entertained at The Executive Mansion Mrs. Roosevelt Will Spend Thanksgiving With the President at Warm Springs. Mrs. Owen Sails Next Month. HE President and Mrs. Roose- velt will entertain at tea Wed- nesday afternoon before the President leaves for Warm/ Bprings, Ga., when their guests will| be the justices of the Supreme Court | of the United States and their wives. Mrs. Rooseveit will not accompany the Chief Executive to Georgia, where he will remain over Thanksgiving, as is his annual custom, but will join him for Thanksgiving day. Roosevelt will be away from the White | House during the President’s absence, | but her plans have not been made as| to just where she will be. With the White House kitchen undergoing complete remodeling Mrs. Roosevelt stated at her press con- ference today that the housekeeper wanted the family away from the mansion as much as possible. How- ever, Mrs, Roosevelt will hold a press conference in the White House Tues- day, November 26, Springs. Mrs. Roosevelt will give her annual party for the wives of members of the Gridiron Club and the newspaper women at the White House December 14, when the President will be the honor guest at the Gridiron Club dinner at the Willard Hotel. The United States Minister to Den- mark, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, who is A guest at the mansion, was at| Mrs. Roosevelt's press conference to- day and she delighted the woman | writers with several of her own poems. Mrs. Owen will sail December 7 on the | Frederick the Eight for Denmark | and will arrive in Denmark about | December 19 or 20. This will be Mrs. Owen's second trip to Denmark Mrs. | just before she| leaves to join the President at Warm | | the first meeting of the Friday Eve- Mrs. Peyton Gordon, Judge Florence Allen of Ciiicago of the United States | Court of Appeals, the commander general of immigration and Mrs. D. W. McCormack, Judge Herbert Sea- | well, Judge Annabelle Matthews, the former United States Ambassador to | Chile and Mrs. William S. Culbertson, the former United States Minister to | Panama and Mrs. William Jennings | Price, Col. and Mrs. George C. Thorpe, | | Maj. and Mrs. Parker West, Mr. nnd] Mrs. David Blair, Mr. and Mrs. Fred- | erick D. McKenney, Mrs. Guy Goff, | Mr. Charles Hamel, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gram Swing, Mr. and Mr John McClure and Mr. and Mrs.| Robert L. Van Fossan. | | Mrs. Pendleton Mayo was hostess at | a dinner last evening at the 1925 F| Street Club. The party later went to | ning Supper Club at the Sulgrave Club, Miss Lucille E. M. Embrey, who is to be married next Saturday to Mr. | Page Hamrick of Charleston, W. Va,, was the guest in whose honor a group of friends gave a dinner last evening at the Little Tea House in Virginia. Among those present were Mrs. John J. Doud, jr.; Mr. John J. Beaty, jr.; Mr. Ralph E. Clark, Mr. R. A. Billipp. Mr. T. Ray Slack, Mr. William P. Jester, and Mr. C. M. Swann, Thomas P. Brown h Mickler of St. Augustine, Fla. Left: Miss Hortense Mickler, whose engagemant to Mr. Norman Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius C. Martin, is announced. the wedding to take place in the near future. Right: Miss Margaret Mickler, whose betrothal to Mr. William Joseph Rowan, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Joseph Rowan, is announced, her wedding to take place in the late Spring. The engagements of the attractive sisters'are announced by their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. The Misses Mickler are the daughters of the late Judge and Mrs. Albert H. Daughters "American | Colonists Benefit Mrs. Frank B. Steele, chairman of | the committee in charge of the benefit bridge party sponsored by the Daugh- ters of the American Colonists, which | | Lieut. Raby Wedding Married to Miss Blount in Pensacola. on the Frederick the Eight, known | will be held in Pierce Hall, Sixteenth as the Christmas Ship because of the | and Harvard streets, Saturday after- Christmas tree it carries on its mast | noon. November 23, announces as pa- when it docks at Copenhagen. There | tronesses Mrs. Josiah A. Van Orsdel, is much sentiment attached to the|Mrs. Redwood Vandegrift, Mrs. John arrival of this ship in Denmark, with | Franklin ittle, Mrs. Harry C. Grove, | @ band playing Christmas hymns and | Mrs. David D. Caldwell, Miss Lillian all of the township turning out to|A. Norton, Mrs. A. Y. Casanova, Miss Other Nuptial Events. Of interest is the wedding of Miss | Smith of Peake, Va., and Mr. William Marion Quina Blount, daughter of | Lewis Leigh, son of Mr. Harry Vernon | Mrs. George Engle Prindible and the | Leigh of Andrew Chapel, Fairfax A late Mr. W. A. Blount, jr., of Patton, | County, Va., which took place today . and Lieut. (J. G.) John Raby, |in Slash Christian Church, Peake, Va. U. S. N, of the Naval Air Station at| The church, which was tastefully —Brooks Photos. Minister Of Greece - In Gotham Assistant Secretary of Navy in Quaker Mr. and Mrs. Harry 8. High of Reading, Pa., are spending a few days in Washington and are stopping at the Fairfax. Col. and Mrs. Tenney Ross have taken an apartment at the Fairfax for the Winter season. Mr. and Mrs. W. Eben Burnside, who have been spending the Summer and Fall in New Mexico, have returned to | the Shorenam for a visit of several months before going South again for | Mr. and Mrs. Burn- | the late Winter. side were at the Shoreham last Winter. Mr. Tolin C. Regis of London, Eng- land. is spending a short time in Washington, and is stopping at the Fairfax. Dr. and Mrs. McChesney have as | their house guest Mrs. McChesney’s | brother, Mr. Charles T. Collamore of Brooklyn, N. Y. They recently | entertained Mr. and Mrs. Philip Kramer, jr, and Miss Helen Colla- more, also of Brooklyn, and Mrs. L. A. Collamore of Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Samuel G. Blythe of Monterey, Calif, is passing some time in the Capital and is at the Carlton. Mrs. Alexander Coale Columbus is in New York and is visiting Mme. Emilia Gonzalez, wife of the former Minister of Costa Rica. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Sommer- ville are flying to New York to spend the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Ruppert. They attended the Army-Notre Dame game, and to- night Mr. and Mrs. Ruppert are en- tertaining at dinner in their honor. Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Colston of Montclair, N. J., have planned a cocktail party for them. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hoover sailed Saturday for a 30-day cruise to the Barbadoes. Mrs. William F. Dennis has as her guests over Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nelson Riker, Mrs. Lillian Bohon of Kentucky and Dr. and Mrs. Robert Rosser of Virginia. MARY TAYLOR. Clark Gable, whose wife an- nounced their separation Thurs- day night, was in retirement today after a round of ‘entertainment, which included attending a hockey game with Miss Taylor, a Park Avenue society girl and fashion model. ~—Copyright, A. P, Wirephoto, GABLES’ RECONCILIATION HINTED BY LAWYERS “Entirely Possible” Differences May Be Patched Up, Holly- wood Hears. By the Associated Press HOLLYWOOD, Calif., November 16. —Reconciliation of Clark Gable, ro- mantic film hero, and his second wife hinged today upon developments after the actor returns here in two weeks. “I think it is entirely possible they | may patch up their differences,” said | Ivon D. Parker, Gable's business rep- resentative, who with his brother Claude, handles all the couple’s legal | affairs. Parker admitted Gable would go to {a hotel here, not to his Brentwood | home, where Mrs. Gable will remain. Despite romantic speculation stirred |in New York by Gable's appearance w’sn a hockey game with Miss Mary Big Utility. By the Associated Press. With the aid of small, independent producers of natural gas, Federal Trade Commission attorneys sought today to show independents could not obtain markets in the face of come petition from major utility corpora- tions. W. J. Sovereign of Bay City, Mich,, and Stanley Marsh, Amarillo, Tex., were among the witnesses called to testify in con- tinuation of the natural gas phase of the commis- sion’s investiga- tion of the public utility field Yesterday the commission heard of difficulties en- countered by Kansas inde- pendents and then produced a surprise witness who told of con- ducti pionage for an “undercover worker” of Cities Service Co. after she had obtained a secretarial position in the Chicago office of the Missouri- Kansas Pipeline Co. Miss Elsie Walker, an attractive young Kansas City business woman, at present unemployed, related how for nearly two years she had fur- nished Thomas W. Shannon of Cities Service with information on the work- ings of Missouri-Kansas, It was a story of codes. secret pay- ments and the smuggling of copies of letters and other documents on carboa paper. The rmation she gave Shannon covered, sald. financial transac- tions, contracts, current corresponde ence, salaries, balance sheets, indebt« edness and even the personal affairs of Missouri-Kansas officials. Had Access to Files. All the while, Miss Walker said. she was taking dictation, typing, working on stock books and had access to all files. She added that she was familiar Elsie Walker, welcome the pessenters, mosily Amer- Maud Bure Morrls, Mé:-pgi‘g:;?;’ui' | Pensacola, Fla., son of Mrs. James J. | decorated with white chrysanthemums, | City. 1oan-Danksh, reqirning toshels native | Nire. William H. Wagner. Mrs. Lee R, | Raby and the late Admiral Raby,|ferns, evergreens and cathedral can- e Miniiter: oG #oil for Ihe Ohr/stmas season. | Pennington, Mrs. William Bonar Bell, | Which took place this morning in Pen- | dles, is the oldest frame church in e Minister of Greece, The President and Mrs. Roosevelt | mirgion, o W e tor, Mre. Soi | sacola at the Sacred Heart Church. | Virginia now standing, being at least have as their guests at the White s p 7 = The bride was given in marriage by | 200 years old. Before and during the Yiouse for several days Mr. and Mrs, | Lansburgh, Mrs. Gertrude M. Chfi”-]hpr stepfather, Mr. Prindible, and | ceremony, which was performed by the { Taylor, Park avenue society girl and | with the files because she had reors | fashion model, Parker said he was op- | ganized them and had keys to the | timistic the Gables would “patch up ! fi cabinets. Man Is Slain With Ancient Army.| their differenc l She said Shannon made her an Rif —_— offer one day in July, 1930, in Cine i | CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. s S { KILLED BY OLD BULLET Mr. De- ! | metrios Sicilianos, has gone to New | York to spend several days and is at | the Ambassador Hotel. | cinnati, just after she had been ade | | vised by Cities Service that her secres Paul Willart, | ton, Mrs. Henry L. West, Mrs. Grant e F. Chase, Miss Annie M. Alexander, ‘The Secretary of Commerce and|Mrs. Roy C. Bowker, Mrs. Frederick Mrs. Daniel C. Roper will entertain | W. Brake, Mrs. Galen P. Kenway, Mrs. at tea today in their home on Wood- | Mary C. Greathouse, Mrs. William S. land drive for the personnel of the | Parks, Mrs. James MacFarquhar, M: Commerce Department. Grace F. Meeks, Miss Margaret E. ' TR Naylor, Miss Mary C. Oursler, Mrs, Invitations have been issued for the | J10 00 B0 R S e H, tea the Attorney General and Mrs. | o 2 | Sholes, Mrs. William B. Sinnott, Mrs. Homer 8. Cummings will give tomor- | J. Edgar Smith. Miss Helen E. Stout, row afternoon at their home, Ruthven, | 3 ° Walter J. Cummings, wife of the for- Barrklv‘v i L'\‘m‘an. .B Swor‘ms[éd; mer special assistant to the Attorney | oo silogs = 8 t General. }and Miss Helen F. Reed. The Ambassador to Italy, Signor Augusto Rosso, was the guest of honor at a dinner last evening given by Mr. | Joseph E. Davies in his apartment at | the Shoreham Hotel. Additional guests were invited for music. ‘The Ambassador of France and Mme. de Laboulaye will entertain at a dinner this evening in the embassy, when the ranking guests will be the Ambassador of Chile, Senor Don Maouel Trucco, and the Chinese Am- bassador, Mr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze. The Chinese Ambassador, Mr. Sao- Ke Alfred Sze, entertained a company of 12 at luncheon today in the em- Muyers, Mr. John Clingerman, Mr. bassy in honor of Mr. and Mrs. | . Louis Mackall, jr.; Mr. Charles Mc- Charles P‘t‘.! Bpnnndt. Mr. Benn;h h‘S;Gque, Mrs. Mark Sullivan, jr.; Mr. ety g ooy '® | Jean de Sibour, Mr. George Kent and ationsl Cuy Bankiof New Nouic S| Mr. erion A% Engliah, . Monday the Ambassador will be! host at dinner in honor of the Mayor % | Abbey Club of C. U. i.Pre-I\.’uptial Dinner For Bride of Today Miss Betty West entertained at a dinner party in the ball room at the Shoreham last evening in honor of Miss Emily Stuart Maddox and Miss West's brother, Mr. Millard F. West, | jr., who are to be married today. Llewellyn, Miss - Stellita Stapleton, Miss Martha Davidge, Miss Valerie Prochnik, Miss Jane Esther Platt, | Miss Virginia Ward and Miss Eleanor Ward of Philadelphia, Mr. Philip of Boston and Mrs. Frederick Mans- fleld. wore a white satin gown and carried a bouquet of white flowers showered with lilies of the valley. Her tulle veil was worn with a rose point lace cap. Miss Cora Louise Blount, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and wore a marble white satin gown with a frosted gold lame coat and hat. She | had an arm cluster of gold-color chrysanthemums. . | The other attendants were Miss Corinne Quina of Pensacola, Miss Dor- othy Quina of Mobile, Miss Josephine Musten of Philadelphia, Miss Marie Louise Raby, Miss Eleanor Jenkins Diggs of La Plata, Md., and Miss Theo- dosia Pendleton of Baltimore, whose gowns were of crepe Elizabeth with | frosted gold lame coats and hats. They carried sheafs of bronze chrys- anthemums. | The flower girls were Lucy Turner of | Pensacola and Amalie Courtne§ of | Mobile, cousins of the bride, who wore | gold-color frocks. Lieut. Gilbert C. Carpenter was best The ushers were Mr. Thomas Watson, Mr. Ashton Hayward, Lieut. Comdr. W. M. Dillon, Lieut, Joe Clif- ton, Lieut. C. C. Howerton and Lieut | Al Loomis of Pensacola. | A reception was held at the Pensa- | cola Country Club after the ceremony. Lieut. and Mrs. Raby will make their home at Pensacola, Fla. | Of interest in Washington is the marriage of Miss Edna Huestis Stiles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Law- rence Stiles of Flushing, Queens, N. Y. to Mr. Charles Worthington Saw- telle, son of Mrs, Julia H. Worthington The charge d'affaires of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Mme. Skvirsky entertained at dinner Thurs- day evening in the embassy. Mrs. Fish Hostess At Party Today. Mrs. Hamilton Fish, jr., wife of Representative Fish of New York, will entertain at a cocktail party this after- mnoon_in honor of Miss Elizabeth G. Barnard. Assisting the hostess will be Miss Marguerite Hagner, Miss Miriam Bcott, Miss Yolande de Maudit, Miss | Ann Sterrett, Miss Margaret McNeale, | Miss Frances Andrews Eleanor Flood. Rear Admiral and Mrs. Luke Mec- Namee were honor guests at dinner last evening in New York of Baroness von Goetz, preceding the annual Rus- sian naval ball at the Plaza Hotel. The setting for the colorful dance was reminiscent of the dance in the old Academy of Music which celebrated the arrival of Grand Duke Alexis in| New York in 1871. The ball last night ‘was given by the Association of Former Imperial Naval Officers, for the benefit of the educational fund for children of members, aimed to instill in them the traditions of the Imperial Naval Academy, founded by Peter the Great in 1701. The ball room was decorated with flags of imperial Russia. the crests of seals of the former nobility and eolors once flown by the Russian Navy. | Rear Admiral and Mrs. George R. Clark entertained a small group of friends informally at dinner in the ball room at the Shoreham last evening for Gen. and Mrs. J. P, Tracy and | Maj. and Mrs. J. F. Kahle, all of Fortress Monroe, Va., who are spend- ing the week end with them at the hotel. Rear Admiral and Mrs. Norman M. Smith gave a dinner party in the ball room at the Shoreham last eve- ning in honor of their house guests, Mr. and ‘Mrs, Thomas P. Durell of | New York City, who are in the Capi- tal for several days. The guests included Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Hugh Matthews, Comdr. Mrs. Henry T. Bruns, Mr. and Mrs. and Miss | John L. Proctor and Mr. and Mrs, (W Owen Locke. Mrs. Smith entertained at luncheon yesterday at the Mayflower in honor of her niece, Mrs. Durell, and Mrs. E. Abery McCarthy of Los Angeles, house guest of Mrs. Sydney Cloman. The , other guests were Mrs. Richard H. Leigh, Mrs. Cloman, Mrs. Jeter Hor- | 7 ton, Mrs. Preston Delano, Mrs. Harry Jewett, Mrs. Lewis H. Watkins and Mrs, Edward Sturdevant. Judge Ernest H. Van Fossan, mem- ber of the Board of Tax Appeals, and Mrs. Van Fossan were hosts at dinner last evening in honor of Mr. Justice and Mrs. Harlan Piske Stone. Other Euests included Solicitor General and A_Mm Stanley Reed, Mr. Justice uEd Home-coming Party | Sawtelle of Englewood, N. J., and The Abbey Club, a social fraternity | capt Edmund Munroe Sawtelle of of the Catholic University, will honor | ywashington, which took place yester- its returning alumni members at the | gay in the home of the bride's parents, annual homecoming banquet of the | ;o Rey, Hubert Stanley Wood offici- club, which will be held Saturday eve- | 4¢ing in the presence of relatives and and | Johi ning at Sholl’s, following the Western Maryland homecoming game. The | dinner will be attended by active and palumni members, and will have the | Very Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, Ph. D, | associate professor of philosophy in | the university and moderator of the | Abbey Club, for its guest of honor. —— Accused of Burning Child. LOS ANGELES, November 16 (#).— Charged with having burned one of her children boarder's hands over an open gas flame to discipline him, Mrs. Helen Youngblood was arraigned yes- terday on a charge of violating a city | ordinance. Her trial was set for De- cember 10. | B — Marriage Licenses. Charles H. M. Moses. Gambrills, Md., and Marion Lauchi 5517 39th st} Rev_J. H. Hollister. Ross Albany. N. Y. and 1406 16th st} Rev. e ie. 24 Chicago. Tl and Mae V. Cs 25. 1320 21st st.. Rev. E. L. uckey. Thomas A Carroll. 20. 3917 New Hal shire ave.’and Catherine A. Keegan. 1215 Lawrence st. n.e.: Rev. E. mp- 5. | McAdams | Donald J. O'Bryan. 33. 1909 19th st.. and Pauline A. Nicoulin,” 28, Louisville, Ky.; Rev T. B. Dade. Thomas J. Canning 32. and Elizabeth P. Floegel ‘18 Doth of 1409 37th st.: Rev. V. S. McDenough Eugene O.” Epps. 19. 1612 Ist s Della N. Schell, 18: 2006 12h » and Anna T. Bryson. : Q st Rev. G. M. Rankin G. Veach. 27. and Katherine M. Shunk, I8, both of Baltimore, Md.; Rev. A. F. Poore. Thomas W. Held 41 and Margaret Ritz. 43 'both of Allentown. Pa.; Rev. A. F. Poore. Henry J. Smith, jr. 6. and Viola M. Har ris. 24. both of Richmong, Va.; Rev. T. Muilen. . Young, 23 812 I st. n.e. and W. Costello, 20, 108 4th st. J. C. Murphy. Niles, Ohlo, an 853 L M. 3e.; Martin Richardson, 35. Ruth E st. . 1506 Meridian pl., 26, 2121 H st} Rev. J.'C. Murp) Vincenit' Madden, and Helene C. Anspach, ev. A, A. McCalls w. and Helen Td; Rey. J. R. Clinchy. 1] m H. Harris, 69, 1 Carrie V. 8. Hall. Judge R_E. Mattingly. Robert R. Brown,. 42, and Margaret Proc- tor, 3%, both of Columbus, .Ohio; Rev. E. C. Smith. Alfred E. Anderson, Sewickley, Pa and Kathryn B.' Gazdagh, 25, Cora olis, Pa.: Rev. C. T. Warner. Merrifield. Va. and 21, Falls Church, v. C. J. Forcey. o s, 0,1 ey agep e, ¢ Barnes, 2 : Rev. C: L. Smallwoode - = STOPS PAIN st.Joseph [l GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN !a few close friends. A reception | followed the ceremony. | The bride was given in marriage by her father and wore her mother’s wed- | ding gown, an empire model of satin | trimmed with family duchesse lace. Her veil of Brussells point lace was an heirloom in her family and was worn by her mother at her marriage. The bridal bouquet was of gardenias, bouvardia and lilies of tae valley. | The bride was attended by Miss | Prances Lawrence Stiles, her sister; | Miss Mary Elizabeth Simpson of New | York and Miss Elizabeth June Sawtelle of Englewood, sister of the bridegroom. Mr. Edmund Rossiter Sawtelle of Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pa., was best man for his brother and ushers were Mr. Chester Munroe Sawtelle of Cam- bridge, Mass., another brother, and {Mr. William McK. Escher of Engle- | wood. On her mother’s side the bride is descended from the Dorrance and Huestis families of early Colonial times and also from Thomas Hinck- ley, Governor of Plymouth Bay Colony. On her father's side she is descended from the Lawrence and stiles families, which include Ezra Stiles, at one time president of Yale University. Mrs. Sawtelle attended the Brearley School and was graduated from the Nightingale-Bamford School, in New York, and from Pine Manor, Wellesley, Mass. Mr. Sawtelle’s grandfather, Brig. Gen. Charles Greene Sawtelle, was & Civil War veteran and his maternal grandfather was Henry Rossiter Worthington, engineer and pump in- ventor. Mr. Sawtelle attended Union College and is & member of Sigma Phi, the Knickerbocker Country Club and the Englewood Field Club. After & motor trip in the South the couple will reside at White Plains, N. Y, A wedding of much interest to Fair- fax, Va. is that of Miss Frances Miriam Smith, daughter of Mrs. E HEIGH-HO TAP ROOM Where the Smart Set Gathers from 12 Noon LUNCHEON - 65¢c DINNER - - - $1.25 SUNDAY DINNER 1 PM. From — Supper Entertainment 1536 CONN. AVE. | rector of the church, music was fur- | nished by the bride’s aunt. Mrs. | George G. Smith of Ellerson, Va., and { Mrs. C. Pembroke Pettit of Fairfax |sang “I Love You Truly” and “In | the Luxembourg Garden | The bride, who was given in mar- { riage by her brother, Mr. Garland Smith, wore a green traveling suit | with matching accessories and her flowers were white roses and lilies of the valley. Smith, sister of the bride, was her maid of honor and was in a gown |of golden color with brown acces- | sories. She carried an arm bouquet |of chrysanthemums. A cousin of the bride, Miss Lois Imogene Norment, acted as bridesmaid and wore a gown sories. She also carried chrysanthe- mums, Mr. James C. King of Fairfax was Mr. Leigh’s best man and the ushers included Judge Paul E. Brown, Mr. | C. Pembroke Pettit and Mr. Thomas | P. Chapman, jr., all of Fairfax, and Mr. Vernon Leigh, a brother of the bridegroom, from Andrew Chapel. After a wedding trip South, Mr. and Mrs. Leigh will make their home @t Fairfax Court House, where Mr. Leigh practices law and is a deputy commissioner of the revenue. Among those from Fairfax who at- | tended the wedding were Judge and | Mrs. Paul Edmund Brown, Mr. James U. Kincheloe, Mr. Harry V. Leigh, |Mr. M. Vernon Leigh, Miss Mary E. Leigh, Mrs. Mildred Leigh, Mrs. N. Peyton Young, Miss Ida Jones, Mrs. William J. Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis M. Coyner, Mr. and Mrs. C. Pembroke Pettit, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Putnam Chapman, jr., and their small daughter, Elizabeth Ram- say; Mrs. T. Ramsay Taylor and Miss Helen Brown. . Marine Corps Ball At Mayflower Brig. Gen. Richard P. Williams, U. S. M. C.; officer in charge of the Marine Corps Reserve, and Mrs, Wil- liams, will be guests of honor at the first anniversary ball of the 5th Bat- talion, Fleet Marine Corps Reserve, at the Italian Gardens, Mayflower Hotel, tonight. The ball is an informal affair to which friends of the Marine Corps and its Reserve forces are invited. Although the 5th Battalion repre- sents a definite growth from the 401st Company, organized locally in 1929, the formation of the 5th as a Marine Corps combat battalion dates from November 16, 1934. [ Miss Rodgers Makes Debut at Tea Monday Mrs. Philip Coffin will entertain at a tea Monday afternoon from 5 to 7 o'clock when she will present her daughter, Miss Virginia Rodgers, to soclety. Assisting Mrs. Coffin at the tea table will be Mrs. Thomas Sweeney, Mrs. Emory Perkins, Mrs. Emory Sands, Mrs. George Longcope, Mrs. Patrick Bellinger. A group of debutantes will assist Miss Rodgers, including Miss Angelica Lloyd, Miss Marguerite Hagner, Miss Yolande de Mauduit, and Miss Emily Davis. No. 1 Thomes Circle Dining—Dinner, $1.50 Dancing—to 3 A.M. 25 RussianGypsy Entertainers FREE PARKING “Louis,” N Ational 0232 Miss Virginia Gertrude | of ginger brown with brown acces- | ‘The Assistant Secretary of the Navy ! and Mrs. Henry Latrobe Roosevelt will be the guests over Sunday of Mrs. Edward Browning at her home in Philadelphia. Monday the assistant 1 secretary will be the guest of honor at a luncheon to be given by the Demo- | | cratic Women's Luncheon Club of | Philadelphia at the Bellevue-Strat- | tord. | chairman of the American Red Cross, is sailing today on the Ile de France Lieut, Comdr. and Mrs. Colin Camp- | bell of Arlington Ridge, Va. accom- | | panied by Lieut. and Mrs. W. C. Cross of Lyon Village, motored today to An- | ball game and later attended a cock- | tail party at the home of friends in | | Annapolis. Comdr. and Mrs. Campbell will be the | guests at a supper and cocktail party |of Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Md. Lieut. Col. Edward B. Hochwalt, U. |'S. A, retired, and Mrs. Hochwalt of | | Edmonds, Wash., are spending a few | days at Virginia Beach and will be in | Washington at the Martinique over | the week end. ’ | Miss Miriam Douglas Scott, who will { be presented to Washington society this Winter by her grandparents, Dr. | and Mrs. Wililam Holland Wilmer, will make her debut in Baltimore so- | ciety at the first Bachelors' Cotillion. | During her visit in Baltimore for the | | ball Miss Scott will be the guest of Dr. |and Mrs. J. Hall Pleasants. Mr. | Francis H. Jencks will be “er partner for the cotillion, Rear Admiral Cary T. Gravson, | S for Europe, to spend several weeks. napolis for the Navy-Columbia foot ! | Riggs at their home in Chevy Chase, | { SANTA FE, N. Mex., November 16| (#)—A half-century-oid bullet from a single-shot Army rifie killed Salome Martinez, 60. wood hauier. near here vesterday, held. Sheriff Romulo Lopez said the men had been enemies for years. Births Reported. Georze and Esther Boswell. boy. Joseph and Jean Audubon. bov Wesley and Delia Chatman, girl. John and Anna Kelly. girl Ralph and Aurilla Hendricks. girl Martin and Anna Thornton. girl r. & Mary Carter. girl. Ina Hansbrough. sir! bov > William | Clarence and Raymond and Helen Salmon. Harry and Evelyn Gibbons. boy George and John and Nell Tomorrow evening Lieut. | }i! e, girl Charles and Elsie Pell. gir! Richard and Mary Jones. boy, Eddie and Lula Martin. boy Henry and Mamie Botts. boy. Charles and Valeria Lucas. bor. Willie and Forrestia Barnes. boy. Charles and Grace Little. bov. John and Beulah White. bov. Charles and Edith Tyler. boy, James and Lucy Turner. bos. Turner and Juiia Smith. bov. Rodger and Mildred Simmons. boy James and Elizabeth Curtis. boy. Frederick and Dorothy Walker, girl. Francis and Julia Lewis. girl. Frank and Mary Jones. girl. Russell and Susie Robins: Thomas and Ella Butl Richard and Adele Vene: Harry and Pearl Stewa Theodore and Pauline Minor, girl. Vance and Mabl k. girl Thomas and El Ernest and Will boy. Thomas and Nellie Perry. boy. Roscoe and Seima Atcherson. bov. William and Olive Noisette. boy. Samuel and Mary Will boy. Wesley and Dorothy Adams. boy. Roland and Clara Holland. boy. Daniel Romero, 65, was| Gwynn and Mildred Jones. bo. Robert and Eunice Gravson. boy, Walter and Lottie Swann. boy. John and Lucy Mathis. girl. Sylvester and Ruth Bowle, girl. Joseph and Mamie Jackson. girl, Isaac and Rosie Jackson. girl Charles and Willlam Means. girl. Howard and Mary Mersell. girl. Otis and Rosie Daniels. girl William and Evelyn Savoy. girl | Summerfield and Etta Hammond. girl. John and Luella Bond, boy. —_— Deaths Reported. Robert A, Gflcrelsl 8 Madison st. Beavers Sail From Honolulu for Home. Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Beavers of 4620 | Langdrum avenue, Chevy Chase, Md., have sailed from Honolulu, Hawaii,| | for the States after a stay of some length on the island. During their stay there they motored entirely around the island of Oahu, locale of Honolulu, stopping to inspect Schofield Barracks, largest military post in America, and Pearl Harbor, | the Nation's greatest naval station. Mr. and Mrs. Beavers were guests at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel on the beach at Waikiki. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Armstrong of R e 25 Church st. United States Hauiahan, 55, 90 hE sh §. Carpenter. 5 | ' William " E.” Gerneske, Naval Hospital, #10 Wisconsin ave, 01 R st Eufemia Cusato. Lina Mathews. 7 g s Grace ct. s.w. er Hospital Freedmen's Hosp! Hotel Continental | Features Tonight Special 7-Course Broiled $ Live Lobster Dinner_ Joseph Ben Joseph Butl William Jackso: I.OOE TODAY. Dance, 5th Battalion, Fleet Ma Corps, Mayflower Hotel, 10 p.m. Supper, AZmasA’i‘vmple Shrine, Mayflower Hotel, 11 p.m. Dinner dance, Theta Alpha Chi Sorority, Mayflower Hotel, 7:30 p.m. Dance. Non-Academic Pan-Hellenic Association, Mayflower Hotel, 10 p.m. ’ Dence, California State Society, | Raleigh Hotel, 10 p.m. | | Dance, Columbia Lodge, A. A. F. M., Willard Hotel, 8 pm. Dance, Catholic University Alumni Association, Willard Hotel, 9:30 pm. | Dance, Internal Revenue Lodge, No. | 41, A. F. G. E, Washington Hotel, | 9:30 pm. | Bridge party, Junior High School Teachers' Association, University ‘Women's Club, 1634 I street, 8 pm. | Dance, National University Masonic ! Club, La Fayette Hotel, 9 p.m. | Meeting. Biological _Society | Washington, Cosmos Club, 8 p.m. of 1 Bingo party, Potomac Department, | | Ladies of the Grand Army of the Re- | public, 820 Fourteenth street, 7 p.m. | TOMORROW. | Opyster roast, Potomac Boat Club, ': Thirty-sixth and K streets, 10 am. | | pkusedin | Meeting. Mercantile Club, Hamilton | P Hotel, 1:30 pm. Meeting, Bartenders’ Union, Old 720 Fifth street. 3 pm. Card party and dance, Ladies’ Aux- iliary of the Slobodkey Yeshivah, Je ish Community Center, Sixteent!f and €, streets, 8 p.m. Oyster roast, Corinthian Yacht Club, | First and V streets southwest, 12:30 pam. Luncheon, Nu Omega Chi Sorority, La Fayette Hotel, 3 p.m. Lecture, Washington Open Forum, Burlington Hotel, 8 p.m. Dance, Hotel and Restaurant Em- ployes’ Alliance, Local 781, Arcadia Hall, 3134 Fourteenth street, 9 pm. | Dance, Kappa Sigma Tau Sorority, Hamilton Hotel, 10 p.m. The Philippines. In the Philippines there are more than 7,000 islands, about 3,000 being | inhabited with a population estimated at 13,000,000. Ample Parking SATURDAY |EVENINGS ONLY | {DANCE SESSIONS |BEGIN AT 9 P. M. ' and close at midnight Reservations, Na. 1672 ' renewal fees, SIDNEY'’S MUSIC Buddy Harmon . Sid Cowen £-4 Just an Hour Earlier That's All < Telephone Teddy at District 3000 The MAYFLOWER LOUNGE HOTEL MAYFLOWER it's the— The Largest in Was ARTHUR G. BISHOP Chairman of the ral Home Loan Bank System. United States Building and The District of Columbia Building and Loan League. REAL ESTATE LOANS now being made on terms as low as Per Month Perpetual offers a new and attractive mortgage loan . .. a reduction of 25% on monthly repayments. Actually lower than paying rent. For funds to purchase a home . . . to make desired home improvements or % refinance existing trusts PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 11th and E Sts. N. W. hington—Asse Established 188 EDWARD C. BALTZ, Secretary No commission or :u over $36,000,000 MARVIN A. CUSTIS [ sribed as | the Miss uri-Kansas tarial position would be vacated bee cause of a retrenchment. Shortly before, her broker in Kansas City had wired her he must have $600 or he would sell out her Cities Service stock. Dressed neatly in black and talke ing in a voice scarcely audible at times, Miss Walker related her ope erations at the promptings of Walter Wooden, a counsel in the Trade Come mission’s inquiry into public utilities. Now in the natural gas phase of the investigation. the hearings ale ready have dealt with Missourie Kansas, headed by Frank P. Parish, Chicago “boy wonder,” and the diffie culties encountered before going into receivership in 1932. Suing Cities Service. The company now has a suit for $180,000,000 damages under the Shere man an ust act pending against Cities Service, Henry L. Doherty, Standard Oil of New Jersey, Columbia Gas and Electric and other utilities. Shannon, whom Miss Walker dee an “undercover worker® Service. suggesied, she tese she obtain employment in office through W. J. Hinchey, for whom she had worked in Kansas City before Hinchey went from Cities Service to Missourie Kansas The arrangement was for Shannon to pay her $200 a month, with half the amount set aside at first to pay the Kansas City broker. She said she was employed originally only to supe ly Shannon with information as te whether Missouri-Kansas was making for Cities tified, th | contracts that would infringe on Cities Service territory. | WHERE_TO DINE. THE NEW STOUFFER'S 824 14th St. N.W, Under Original Ownership DELIGHTFUL pirns - 35€, 50¢, 65¢ Children Half Portions for 2 Open Daily, 3 AM. to Midnight OUIE’S IDO Italian-American Restaurant | 1208 18th St. N.W. I At Conn. Ave. The Home of the Italian Dinner, Wine Included ¢ S$¢q.00 Zéhz'n 35 12 Dance If You Wish LOUIS DORFMAN'S ORCHESTRA Wines and Drinks of All Kinds Phone _Sterling 9550 Sunday Special “Old Tavern” TURKEY DI Chicken—Steak—Chops and Vir- ginia Ham Dinners, too. Sunday Breakfast. Phone Shepherd 3500 Famous for Food Entrance to Griffith Farms Gracious service in a deliohtful en- vironment—yet the cost is no more than the commonplace. Regular Dinners from 11 a.m. Seafood ® A la Carte Meals Dancing to the Varsity Six Band Nightly Mariboro_Pike. 3 mi. from the District Line OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Phone Hillside 0112