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SOCIETY. . Supreme Court Justices Make Annual Official Call at White House Mrs. Roosevelt Will Be Present When the President Recei Highest HE President and Mrs. Roose- velt will have as their guests at the tea hour at the White House today, the Chief Jus- tice of the United States, Mr. Charles Evans Hughes, and the associate jus- tices of the Supreme Court. The occasion is the annual offi- cial call of the Supreme Court jus- tices on the President, and it is understood that this will be the first time a President’s wife has been present on such an occasion and served tea to the President’s annual callers from the highest tribunal of the country. The justices will not be accompanied by their wives. They will be received in the blue room and tea will be served in the red parlor. The President will also receive this afternoon the new Minister of Latvia, Dr. Alfred Bilmanis, and, following tradition that a new envoy to this country be received in the blue room of the mansion, the new diplomat will be greeted by the Chief Execu- tive in this historic room. Mrs. Roosevelt was an honor guest at the luncheon today given by the League of Coast Guard Women at the Mayflower. The President is planning to leave tonight for Warm Springs, Ga., where he will remain over Thanks- giving. It has been the custom of Mr. Roosevelt to spend Thanksgiving at Warm Springs, the annual meeting of the trustees of the sanitarium tak- ing place at this time each year. Mrs. Roosevelt will join the PX‘L‘ih!‘ dent in Georgia for Thanksgiving. Cabinet Member Honor Guest Tonight. The Secretary of Treasury and Mrs. Henry A. Morgenthau, jr., will be the guests in whose honor the Assistant Becretary of Treasury and Mrs. Law- rence Wood Robert, jr., will entertain at dinner this evening. ‘The Secretary of Labor, Miss Fran- ces Parkins, will be the guest of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York at its annual dinner tomorrow night at the Waldorf Astoria, The Ambassador of Cuba, Senor Dr. Guillermo Patterson y de Jauregui, will be the guest in whose honor Maj. and Mrs. Parker W. West will enter- tain at dinner this evening. The Siamese Minister and Mme. Rajamairti will be hosts at dinner this evening in honor of the Japanese Am- bassador and Mme. Saito. The Minister of Paraguay and Senora de Bordenave entertained at luncheon today in honor of the retir- ing naval attache of the Argentine Embassy and Senora de Mackinlay. The Minister and Senora de Borde- nave will be hosts to 50 children from the embassies and legations in Wash- ington Friday afternoon in celebration of the Tth birthday anniversary of their daughter Paggy. Senorita Amelita Alfaro, daughter ves Members of Tribunal. non was co-hostess. The guests were Miss Dorothy Dietz, Miss Alice Rich- ardson, Miss Marjorie Dampman, Miss | Laura Douglas, Countess Josephine Arco-Zinneberg, Mrs. Charles Carroll, Miss Laura Johnson, Miss Lee McCoy, | Miss Anna Lee Stuart and Mrs. Tom ‘Wacker. Senor Cohen and Bride To Sail for Chile. The retiring counselor of the Chil- ean Embassy and Senora de Cohen, who will leave tomorrow for New York, from where they will sail Satur- day for Chile, where Senor Cohen will assume his new duties as director of | the diplomatic service in the foreign }omce at Santiago, were the guests in whose honor Mr. and Mrs. James O'Donnell Moran entertained at a tea | yesterday afternoon in their home in | Rock Creek Park. | Mrs. Moran was formerly Senorita Cecilia Alfaro and came to Washing- ton some time ago when her father was appointed Minister of Panama, | succeeding his brother, Dr. Ricardo Alfaro, who at that time was elected | President of the Republic of Mexico. | Alternating at the tea table were | Senora de Alfaro, wife of the Min- | ister of Panama; Senora de Arcaya, wife of the Minister of Venezuela; | Senora de Alfaro, wife of the Minister | of Ecuador; Senora de Chevalier, wife ! of the secretary of the Panama Lega- | tion; Mrs. Frank Chevalier, and Mrs. | Joseph McCabhill, wife of Dr. McCahill. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Robert L. Eichelberger have had as their guest the former's sister, Mrs. Jerome B. Zerbe, who returned to her home in Cleveland last evening. | Mrs. Washington to Visit Mrs. Heath Mrs. Joseph E. Washington will ar- rive Monday after an absence from the Capital of two years and will be the guest of Mrs. Perry S. Heath. Mrs. | her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Hotchkiss, in their home, at East River, Conn,, and is coming to Wash- ington at this time to attend the mar- riage of Miss Mary Bradley to Mr. Henry Harrison Blagden on Thanks- | giving day. Mr. Blagden is a grand- son of Mrs, Washington. Mrs. Heath will have & small com- | pany of Mrs. Washington's old friends | at dinner Thanksgiving day and will | be hostess at tea Friday, November 29, in compliment to Mrs. Washington. | Mrs. Rees Guest of Women’s Alliance Mrs. T. G. Rees of Boston, presi- dent of the General Alliance, will be the guest of the Women’s Alliance of All Souls’ Unitarian Church at lunch- eon at 1 o'clock Friday following the o'clock. Mrs. Rees will address the meeting, for which an interesting pro- Washington has recently been visiting | business meeting of the alliance at 11 | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1935. Three Generations of a Prominent Family Left: Mrs. Martin C. Hutchinson, daughter of Mrs. Davis, left Monday to join her husband at their home in Toronto, Canada, after spending some time with Mrs. Davis. Center: Mrs. Armstead Davts, who with her brother, Col. Henry Armstead, has taken the house at 2447 Kalorama road, which the Secretary of Treasury and Mrs. Morgenthau occupied last year. Mrs. Armstead has gone to New York for several days. Right: Diana Hutchinson, daughter of Mrs. Hutchinson, who has returned with her mother to Toronto, after visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Davis. -—John Howard Payne Photos. Governor-Elect to merce in charge of aviation, Mr. Eugene Vidal; former Gov. Ritchie of Be Guest at Ball Maryland, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Martin, | EPAELS cotton shipments to other Gov.-elect A. B. Chandler of Ken- | Mr. and Mrs. John Schriver Wynne | c:‘unlrfie;sltht.s year are nearly double tucky, who expects to come to Wash- and Mrs. Charles S. Hamlin. | those of 1934. ington at the end of the week, will e a special honor guest at the Tacky Togs Ball to be given by the Demo- cratic Women's National Council Saturday evening in the rose room at the Washington Hotel. Joe Brown, society’s master of cere- monies who is making the arrange- ments for the elaborate program of entertainment for the ball, and an outstanding feature will be Adrienne, the internationally-known psychic who is the star on the Fox Theater pro- gram this week. Adrienne will an- swer any questions either publicly or | privately. Additional patrons and patronesses for the ball are Senator Tydings of | Maryland, Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. James Monroe | Johnson, Assistant Secretary of Com- Exports Double. INVENTORY TIME SOON Now’s the Time to Buy Beds— PRICES CUT BELOW COST 100 Beds Must Go Before Inventory Time LAFAYETTE BED SHOP 1747 Rhode Island Ave. N.W. at Conn. The Bed Shop That Gives the Most for “The Money”’ in “Bedding” . . Sanitary Carpet & Rug Dlst"ct For Fresh, Clean, New-Like Rugs Thanksgiving Day Mrs. Plunket Hostess at Dance The Hon. Mrs. Benjamin Plunket, who will leave Saturday for Dublin, after a six weeks' stay in Washington entertained at a dance last evening at the Mayflower Hotel, when among the guests were his Britannic majesty’s Ambassador and Lady Lindsay and Mr. Justice and Mrs. Plerce Butler. Many of the guests were contempo- raries of Mrs. Plunket’s son, Mr. Ben- jamin Plunket, who has been an attache to the British Embassy for almost a year. Among those from the diplomatic corps present were Mr. F. D. G. Osborne, Minister counselor of the British Embassy; the counselor of the Swedish Legation and Baroness Beck- Frils, the counselor of the Hungarian Legation, Mr. Anthony de Balasy, and Baron Paul Schell of the same lega- tion; Mile. Marie de Laboulaye, Mr. Claude de Boisanger of the French Embassy; Mr. Edward Kulikowski sad Mr. Edward Weintal of the Polish Embassy and Luis de Olivares of the Spanish Embassy. Among others. were Assistant Secre- tary of the Treasury and Mrs. Law- rence Wood Robert, jr.; Prince and Princess Ourusoff, Mr. and Mrs. George Garrett, Mrs. Campbell Prich- ett, Miss Angelica Lloyd, Miss Stellita Stapleton, Miss Beatrice Phillips, Miss Nanita Miles and Miss Helen Ward- man. Dinner Tonight Honors Englishman The International Relations Com- | mittee of the American Association of University Women, Mrs. James Austin Stone, chairman, will have as guest: RERRRRXRRXXRXXXRXRKK SOCIETY. of honor at dinner this evening at 7 o'clock Mr. Rennie Smith, Labor mem- ber of Parliament several years ago. » Smith will speak on the subject, ritain at the Crossroads,” with comments on the British elections of November 14. Other members of the committee who are joint hostesses with Mrs. Stone are M. Willlam Lee Corbin, Mrs. Mordecai J. B. Ezekiel, Miss Mary Alice Matthews, Mrs. Henry D. Ralph nd Miss Grace Johnson. Normandy Farm POTOMAC, mp. DISTINCTIVE FOOD POPOVERS A SPECIALTY. Luncheon—Tea—| er BLAZING IT;)G {"{a’i’; [ g Wis. ave. ¢ | River Roa right 1 mil Marjory H SPORTS THOROUGHBREDS ' by CARLTONZZ < The next best thing to going to London for your shoes is to get a pair of these sports classics,...with their true English restraint. marvelous leathers, and perfec-| tion -of detail rarely’ seen this'side of the Atlantic! The Monk pattern illustrated is just one of five individual styles.... all really remarkable finds at only.... LADIES AND I RERRARRRRRRARRRRRERN BURTS & 1207 F St. of the Minister of Panama and Senora de Alfaro, entertained at luncheon to- | day in the legation. Miss Dicky Gan- — e e KAPLOWITZ | ON THIRTEENTH STREET | BETWEEN EANDF gram has been arranged. Mrs. Caleb | | Miller will act as hostess at the | luncheon after the meeting. : Cleaning Co. H 106 Ind. Ave. N.W. H | RRXRRAXRXXXXXRRKARRR 3 “November Is a Great Month for ; Permanent Waves''— | DRESSES*SPORTSWEARSGOWNS KAPLOWITZ MONTH FEATURES | Thanksgiving | Dresses Newly Arrived | BAR AND COCKTAIL DRESSES IN THE NEW STREET LENGTH AS | WELL AS THE ANKLE LENGTH. A | GLAMOROUS SELECTION AT THRILLING PRICES, 1095 AND UP FORMAL GOWNS AND WRAPS | THAT WILL BRING TO YOU NEW ROMANCE. MISSES WOMENS JR. MISSES KAPLOWITZ THE COAT AND SUIT SPECIALTY SHOP ON THIRTEENTH STREET BETWEEN EANDF | DRESSES* SPORTSWEARSGOWNS | Kaplowitz Month A DREAM COME TRUE! FUR COATS $38 Bonded Northern Seal | ~Dyed - Coney - | FACTS! i THE MOST BRILLIANT FUR COAT | SENSATION WASHINGTON HAS EVER SEEN. NOT JUST ANOTHER SALE BUT A BREATH-TAKING | | SPECTACLE OF QUALITY-AT-A- | | PRICE THAT WE HAVE BEEN PLAN- | | NING FOR MONTHS! IF YOU | WANT A BEAUTIFUL, LONG- WEARING, SMARTEST STYLED FUR CREATION THAT LOOKS LIKE THREE TIMES ITS AMAZING PRICE, COME TO KAPLOWITZ, EXCLUSIVE SPECIALISTS FOR A GENERATION. @ Every coat fully guaranteed for two seasons’ wear, @ Fashions after the French Paris styles. ® Swagger, trotteur and fitted models. \ | WOMENS MISSES ~ JUNIORS LITTLE WOMENS LARGER WOMENS even late Spring, your ed robably reach h”e‘,when s Tainy MOFT stag! ter for you 8 1t that there i5 no to yourse! ing any longer walting 4th the pointment ¥ Reprint from The Evening Star, Nov. 18 A limited number of dress and sport coats; featuring faultless tailoring, finest values and smartest styles. Black, brown and green. | EXCLUSIVE APPAREL SPECIALISTS reat month for . 1f you had that stringy orning simply the be- ir completely m'me thought and make an 8P- ‘hairdresser. G\ 1208 GEE STREET ¥V One-Day Special i+ Thursday ONLY? . A Group of Fur-Trimmed CLOTH COATS reduced to 53450 CAPITOL FUR SHOP—1208 G STREET Margaret Warner in The Washington Star For expert beauty treatments and Permanents That Glorify make an appointment with Philipsborn Beauty Salon. Nat. born 11*Sraeer UBerweenFOG Beauty Salon JEAN LOVETHARRIS, MGR. Hand Luggage $5.00 Men’s Zipper Bags______ ---$3.95 $30.00 Men’s Russet Suitcases_._$22.50 $20.00 Men’s Walrus Gladstones._$16.95 $27.50 Men’s Wardrobe Cases-.-$19.95 $75.00 Fine Leather Wardrobe._$54.75 $75.00 Women’s Fitted Cases__._$50.00 $17.50 Fitted Tray Cases..._._..$14.95 $10.00 Women’s Tweed Cases $7.50 $50.00 Women’s Fitted Cases-_._$37.50 $35.00 Pigskin Suitcases $24.75 Charge It—Pay in January KRS 1314 F Street NW. Leopard, Fox, Persian, Wolf and Kolinsky Trimming. Sizes 12t0 18 Sizes 122 to 18%2 All Sales Final Mail Orders Filled Charge Accounts Invited “IT'S EASY TO SMILE WHEN YOURE HAPPY ALL OVER"— SAYS MISS AUDREY SIEBER, WHO WEARS HAHN'S . . . . v DYNAMIC ARCH e SHOES BEING constantly in the epotlight at the Earle, how well Miss Sieber knows that untired, comfortable feet are reflected in a genuinely joyous smile! Dynamics . . . in new and beguiling styles . . . have those youth-preserving features, They keep your feet relaxed and give you a more graceful carriage . . . The interestingly perforated side-buckle wide-strap shown comes in black calf with built-up leather heel. Dynamics “FIT AND KEEP YOU FIT.” 1207 F 7th & K *3212 14th *Open Evenings