Evening Star Newspaper, November 23, 1935, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SOCIETY, FAGTORIES CRYING THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1935. Debutantes Presented Amid Profusion of Flowers o —————] A—10 #» SOCIETY. The Vice President and S e which are already overcrowded. Mrs. Garner Will Spend Christmas in Gapital Postmaster General Farley Spending Some Time in West—Due in New York Next HE Vice President and Mrs. John Nance Garner who are en route home from the Philip- pines will arrive in Washing- ton December 15. They will remain in Washington for the opening of Con- gress and will not go to their home in Texas for Christmas. Mr. and Mrs. Tully Garner, son and daughter-in- law of Vice President and Mrs. Garner and their little daughter who spent scme time in Washington recently have returned to their home in the South. They are not expected to come to the Capital for Christmas. Vice President Garner celebrated his 67th birthday anniversary yester- day. The Postmaster General, Mr. James A. Farley, who left for the West last Sunday, will arrive this afternoon in Portland, Oreg., where he will deliver an address. Yesterday the Postmaster General inaugurated the trans- Pacific airmail service in San Fran- cisco. He will leave Portland the first Week. of the week for Denver, where he will also speak, and will go from there to New York where he will spend the next week end with Mrs. Farley and their children. The charge d'affaires of Mexico, Senor Don Luis Quintanilla, has issued invitations for a special concert by the Orquesta Tipica Mexicanna, under the direction of Maestro Miguel Lerdo de Tejeda, Wednesday evening, at 9 o'clock at the Pan-American Union. Gen. John J. Pershing has returned to his apartment at the Carlton, after spending the Summer in France. Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Thomas Q. Ashburn will entertain at a buffet supper this evening in honor of Capt. and Mrs. Henry Williams of Philadel- phia who are their guests. Lieut. Kenneth L. Foster, U. 8. N, has come to Washington from San Pedro, Calif., for temporary duty and is at the Martinique. News of Nearby Maryland-Virginia Dr. and Mrs. John A. Fleming of Drummond, Md., are spending several days in New York City while Dr. Fleming is attending the meetings which are being held in connection with the Andrew Carnegie Centennial celebration. Dr. Fleming is attending the cen- tennial as a representative of the division of terrestrial magnetism of the Carnegie Institution of Washing- ton, of which he is the director. Mrs. Herbert A. Donovan was host- ess yesterday afternoon at the Epis- copal rectory in Fairfax, Va., at a silver tea for the Woman's Auxiliary of Truro Church. Mrs. T. SI Russell, Mrs. Thomas Randolph Keith, Mrs. Robert D. Graham and Mrs. Walter Tansill Oliver, jr., alternated at the tea table, which was charmingly deco- rated with a centerpiece of roses and 'was lighted by white tapers. Dr. Paul A. L. Black, first lieutenant of the Medical Reserve Corps, Com- pany 15, C. C. C., and Mrs. Black of Glen, N. H, visited their aunt, Mrs. H. H. Hall, and have now gone to Chicago, where Dr. Black has ac- cepted a position as eye, ear, nose and throat specialist in the Hinsdale Sani- tarium. Dr. Black has been associ- ated with the City Hospital in Boston Zor some time. Dr. and Mrs. Black were accom- panied by his mother, Mrs. W. L. Black, sister of Mrs. Hull of Riverside, Calif., who spent the Summer with them. Mr. D. T. Martin, who visited his brother-in-law and sister, Mrs. Thomas Cartmal Henderson, at their home in Chantilly, Va., returned Yyesterday to Amherst, Va. Phi Delta Gamma Party This Evening Beta Chapter, Phi Delta Gamma, graduste women's fraternity of the George Washington University, will entertain a group of graduate women tonight at the home of Miss Mae Lee- snitzer at a night club party. Miss Dorothy Corson is in charge of ar- rangements. The floor show will be produced by Miss Alice A. Jewell, with choruses by Miss Mary Pearce and Miss Mae Leesnitzer, Others taking part in the entertainment are Miss Prances Harlan, Miss Mildred Green, Miss Dorothy Graf, Miss Virginia Kinnard, Miss Phoebe Knappen, Miss Ellen Anderson, Mrs. Thomas Kissling and Miss Florence Fritz. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Dance, East Washington Commu- nity Center, Eastern High School ar- mory, Eighteenth and East Capitol streets, 8:30 pm. Dinner, Phi Delta Delta Sorority, Mayflower Hotel, 7 p.m. Dinner dance, Washington Club, Printing House Craftsmen, Mayflower Hotel, 7 pm. Dinner, Society of Podiatric, May- flower Hotel, 7:30 p.m. Dance, Ohio Girls' Club, Wesley Hall, 1703 K street, 10 p.m. Bingo party, Gen. J. E. B. Stewart Post, Daughters of the Confederacy, Confederate Memerial Hall, 1332 Ver- mont avenue, 8 p.m. Lecture, League for Larger Life, 1414 Bixteenth street, 8 p.m. Meeting, Philosophical Society of ‘Washington, Cosmos Club, 8:15 p.m. TOMORROW. Meeting, Mercantile Club, Hamilton Hotel, 1:30 p.m. . Meeting, Central Council of Self- Help Co-operatives of the District, board room, District Building, 3 p.m. ‘Tea, Iota Tau Tau Sorority, Carlton Hotel, 4 pm. Dance, Iota Theta Sorority, Hamil- ton Hotel, 10 p.m. Mr. and | Program for Junior Women’s Club Dance Miss Janet Coon, Washington whistler, and Miss Miriam Prettyman, Spanish dancer, will give a short pro- gram at the Thanksgiving eve dance of the Junior Women's Club Wednes- day, from 9:30 to 12:30 o'clock, at 2400 Sixteenth street morthwest. Mr. George Gaul will conduct the or- chestra. Mrs. John T. Lucker, chairman of the committee, will present a bouquet in the club flower, the gardenia, to the member selling the greatest num- | ber of tickets. Assisting Mrs. Lucker }ln planning for the affair are Miss | Ethel Jean Lamond, Miss Julia Neff, Mrs. Perry O. Huff, Mrs. Marjorie Vogel, Mrs. Joy Waters, Miss Marian White, Miss Catherine Dennis, Miss Catherine Haislip and Mrs. Harold Heffner. Sponsors for the dance include Mrs. Byron M. Coon, Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, Mrs. Lloyd W. Biddle, Mrs. Frederick L. Pratt, Mrs. Ernest Dan- iels and Mrs. Clinton L. Doggett. |Legal Sor(;rity at G.W.U.Gives Party Zeta Chapter of Phi Delta Delta legal sorority at George Washington University will hold its annual dinner at the Mayflower Hotel this evening at 7 o'clock. The guests of honor will include Dean and Mrs. Willlam C. Van Vieck, Mr. and Mrs. Justin Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Hector G. Spaul- ding, Mr. and Mrs. James O. Murdock, Mr. and Mrs. Chester C. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Moll, Mr, Charles S. Collier, Mr. Forrester Davison and several women students at the George Washington Law School. Judge Fay L. Bentley will introduce the speakers of the evening, Mr. Justin Miller, of the Department of Justice and Mrs. Mary Connor Myers of the legal staff of the Agriculture Adjustment | Administration. Miss Emily Mitchell, president of the chapter, will be assisted in receiving the guests by Miss Hariett Clarke, chairman of the committee which has arranged the dinner. Western College Alumnae Meet Today The Washington Western College Alumnae Association will meet today at 3 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Oliver Scott Reading, 5107 Thirty-eighth street. Miss Helen Field, president, will preside. She will be assisted at the table by Mrs. Byron C. Tiffany, Mrs. Stanley Cook and Mrs. Guy B. Earley. All alumnae in the city are invited to attend. Greene-King Betrothal Told Mr. and Mrs. Byron D. Green of Round Bay have announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Anne Elizabeth, to Mr. Phillip King, jr., son of. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip King of Washington, TRAFFIC TOLL 7,510 IN 46 WEEKS OF 1935 Slight Decrease Shown Over Last Year—Chicago Leads in Week’s Reports. By the Associated Press. Traffic brought death to 7,510 per- sons in 86 American cities during the first 46 weeks of this year compared ‘with 7,696 in the same 1934 period. ‘This death toll, reported yesterday by the Bureau of the Census, included 164 the week ending November 16 and 219 the preceding week. Topping all was Chicago with 21 compared with 20 New York had 15 Fewer fatalities were reported 1 week by 37 cities than in the before. No deaths were reported cities. Twelfth Street Paving Work Moving at Ends and in Middle An odd job of paving now under The job is split into two parts, with & contractor laying permanent paving old grade at the north end, and raising it about two feet in the middle of the circle. The street also has been wid- ened about 30 feet. Old Concrete Used. old street at both ends and dumped into the middle in what will be the circle. The contractor has virtually finished the permanent paving on the south end, which will be open to traffic tomorrow. The north end, at Pennsylvania avenue intersection, now is being poured in concrete and will be open to traffic probably Tues: day or Wednesday. 3 Who was given by Weddings Today And Yesterday A wedding of interest in Washing- ton took place yesterday in New York when Miss Carolyn Cornell Blair, Jdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Blair, became the bride of Mr. Fred- erick Sheffield, son of the former United States Ambassador to Mexico and Mrs. James R. Sheffield. The wedding took place in the chapel of St. George's Church, Stuyvesant Square, the Rev. Dr. Endicott Pea- body, headmaster of Groton School, officiating, assisted by the Rev. Dr. Carl Reiland, the rector. A recep- tion for the families and a few inti- mate friends was held at the National Society of Colonial Dames at 215 East Seventy-first street. Mr. Blair gave his daughter in mar- . | riage. She wore a princess gown of white satin with a rolled satin collar and long fitted sleeves. The skirt was draped to form a train. Her tulle veil was caught at the sides with clusters of orange blossoms and she carried a bouquet of lilium album and white African daisies. She was unattended. Mr. Kenneth A. Ives of New York was best man. The ushers were Mr. David Tod Bulkley, Mr. George A. | Brownell and Mr. Prederick A. O. Bchwartz of New York, Mr. J. Still- man Rockefeller of Greenwich, Conn.; Mr. Richard C. Storey, jr., and Mr. Hasrison Gardner of Boston. After a trip Mr. and Mrs. Sheffleld will reside in New York. The bride was graduated from the Brearley School in New York in 1928, and is a member of the Junior League. She is a great-granddaughter of Ezra Cornell, founder of Cornell University, and her father is a trustee of Cornell and president of the Cornell Club of New York. Mr. Sheffield attended Groton School, was graduated from Yale Col- lege in 1924 and from Yale law school in 1927 and is a member of Scroll and Key. He is with the law firm of Davis, Polk, Wardwell, Gardiner & Reed. Mr. Sheffield’s great-grand- father was David Tod, Civil War Gov- ernor of Ohio. His father is chairman of the board of trustees of Barnard College. The marriage of Miss Anne Byrd Hall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mar- shall Carter Hall, to Mr. Willilam Laird Dunlop, 3d, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Laird Dunlop, jr., will take place this afternoon at 4 o'clock in St. ‘Thomas’ Church, the Rev. C. Ernest Smith, rector of the church, officiat- ing, assisted by Canon G. Freeland Peter, cousin of the bridegroom. A reception will follow the ceremony in the home of the bride’s parent, at 1821 Twenty-third street. An interesting November wedding took place last night when Miss Katharine Cecile Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecile Le Roy Blake and Mr. David George Price, son of Mr. and Mrs. David J. Price, were mar= ried in the Petworth M. E. Church, the Rev. Robert L. Wood officiating. The bride wore & white satin gown, designed with & stand-up queen’s col- lar and train, and carried a bouquet of white roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Kathleen Nestor was the maid of honor. She wore a green velvet gown in a renaissance style with gold Armstrong and Mrs. Charlotte Gable, and her flower girls were Miss Esther Clare Rice and Miss Dolores Nestor. Mr. Everett N. Cross acted as best man and the ushers were Mr. Frank Price, Mr. Frank Blake, Mr. Joseph Rice and Mr. Hilliard Harper. Following the ceremony a reception was held in the home of the bride’s MISS LEONIE McCOY, resented to society Wednesday, November 13, at a tea er grandmother, Mrs. J. Davis Broadhead. MISS MARGUERITE C. HAGNER, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall H. Hagner, who was presented to society at a tea given by her parents in their home November 11. News of City Residents Mrs. Gann Flies to New York—Mr. and Mrs. Dickerman Move. Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, sister of the former Vice President, Mr. Charles Curtis, flew to New York yes- terday to attend the dinner Mrs, Henry L. Doherty gave at the Wal- dorf, preceding the fourth annual Miami-Biltmore fashion show and supper dance for the benefit of the Goddard Neighborhood Center. Col. Doherty sponsored the event. Mrs. John Allan Dougherty also was & guest at the dinner and benefit. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Dickerman, Miss Rhoda Dickerman and Miss Doris Dickerman, having to leave the Rochambeau, have taken an apart- ment in Beverly Courts at 1736 Co- lumbia road. Miss Ruah C. Loveless closed her apartment in Sedgwick Gardens and left yesterday for a two-month visit in Central America. She will sail to- day on the Grace liner, Santa Rosa, for X1 Salvador, where she will be the guest of the family of Senor Dr. Don Hector Castro, Minister of Salvador in Washingtor After a week in the capital city, San Salvador, Miss Loveless will fly to Guatamala City for a few days, and then to Mexico City for a 10-day visit before returning by rail via New Orleans. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Nichols of Helena, Mont., have arrived for two or three days in Washington, after which they will go to New York. They are stopping at the Shoreham. Mrs., Charles R. Starnes of Sen Antonio, Tex., is spending a week at the Martinique. Ushers Selected for Play Tuesday Night Members of the Alice Louise Hunter dance group will serve as ushers at the second presentation of “The. Poor Nut,” by the Players’ Club, Tuesday night at 8:30 o'clock in Roosevelt High School Auditorium. This second performance is being given by request because of the interest shown in this first full-length production by the club, of which Miss Lucy Ann Rogers is director and Mr. Terry McPhearson, president, Miss Shirley Rowe will be the chair- man of the ushers’ group, and will be Miss Helen Richardson and Miss Mar- Mrs. Edith H. Hunter is sponsor for the Players' Club and tickets for Tuesday night's performance may be had at Central High Community Cen- and Allison streets Tuesday at 7:30 o'clock. Hunters Drop Ballast. FORT DODGE, Iowa (#).—The pheasant season has brought an over- enthusiasm among some hunters. A State highway patrolman stopped an automobile with only one head- light. Eight other cars, filled with Mr. and Mrs. R. V. McCauley of Jamaica, Long Island, N. Y. are passing the week end at the Shore- ham, having come for the inaugura- tion of Father O'Leary as president of Georgetown University, of which Mr McCauley is a graduate, Mrs. Aldon J. Anderson accom- panied by Miss Elaine Anderson of Salt Lake City, Utah is at the Dodge. Mrs. Arthur E. Braun of Pittsburgh, frequent visitor in Washington, is here with her daughter, Miss Eliza- beth Braun, and they are occupying a suite at the Wardman Park Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Abram S. Hewitt have motored from their home at White Post, Va., and are at the Carlton. Mrs. James H. Frier, has come to ‘Washington from Fairfield, Conn., and will spend some time at the Martin- lque, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Delaware of New Haven, Conn., are at the Ward- man Park Hotel over the week end. Mrs. Rodney Proctor of Palm Beach, Fla, is at the Carlton accom- panied by her daughter, Miss Hope Proctor. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Pasquill of Port- land, Oreg., are at the Dodge for a | brief stay. Mr. and Mrs. Thornston D. Morris of Salt Lake City, have been in New York and are at the Shoreham for a short visit in Washington. Miss Lloyd Makes Formal Bow at Tea Miss Angelica Lloyd was presented to society yesterday afternoon by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Demarest Lioyd, who entertained at a tea from 5 to 7 o'clock in their home on R street. Mrs. Lioyd and her daughter received alone and the debutante wore a long, clinging gown of a deep shade of American Beauty crepe, trimmed in silver, with which she wore slippers to match and carried an arm bouquet of Temple roses and bovardia. Her mother was in a gown of ruby velvet fashioned on medieval lines, her only ornament & large brooch of rubies and from her shoulder she wore a spray of orchids in harmony with her gown. Assisting the bud were Miss Virginia Rodgers, Miss Miriam Scott, Miss Marguerite Hagner, Miss Mary Wells, Miss Yolande de Mauduit and Miss Eleanor Flood. Mrs. Lloyd was assisted by Mrs. Robert Patterson Lamont, Mrs. Chand- ler Anderson, Mrs. Thomas Bell Sweeney, Mrs. James F. Mitchell, Mrs. John Phillip Hill and Mrs, Pendleton Mayo. —Underwood & Underwood Photos. Parties of Today And Yesterday Miss Ann Heine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Heine, entertained at luncheon today at the Columbia Country Club, when her guests in- cluded Miss Dorothy Highfield, Miss Eleanor Eckles, Miss Nell Alexander, Miss Virginia McReynolds, Miss Helen Pickens and Miss Doris Hall. Miss Heine is a student at Holton Arms School. Mr. H. Hobart MacCubbin has cards out for an at home this afternoon from 5 until 7 o'clock at 2218 Wyom- ing avenue. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Proctor were hosts at a dinner party last evening in the Shoreham ball room. Covers were laid for 10. man consul, and Mrs. Schwarz gave a lunch party today at the St. Moritz in New York in honor of Dr. Franz S CROUNSE FUNERAL MONDAY MORNING Newspaper Man’s Body to Be Sent to Hudson Falls, N. Y., In- stead of Gilderland. Funeral services for William Living- ston Crounse, 74, distinguished news- paper man and at one time head of the old New York World Bureau here, will be held Monday at 11 am. at his late residence, 2419 Wyoming avenue. Rev. Dr. Joseph R. Sizoo, pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Burial will be at Hudson Falls, N. Y, instead of at Gilderland, as first planned. The following committee has been named from the National Press Club to attend the funeral: Frederic J. Haskin, chairman; Arthur J. Dodge, Charles A. Hamilton, Johr: Oliver La Gorce, J. Harry Cunningham, Maurice Splain, Ernest G. Walker, Ira E. Ben- nett, Clifford K. Berryman, Harry J. Brown, Frank B. Lord, Oswald F. Schuette, Robert B. Armstrong, Robert E. King, Paul Wooton, Ralph A. Col- lins, Fred A. Emery, Edward B. Clark, A. E. Heiss, J. R. Hildebrand, L. M. Lamm, Clarence L. Linz, Henry L. Sweinhart, W. H. Atkins and Irvin D. Foos. Mr. Crounse was one of the founders of the National Press Club. After being head of the New York World Bureau up to a period through the Spanish-American War, he became correspondent for a number of tech- nical papers and journals. In recent years he had represented numerous trade organizations here. His death Thursday night was due to pneumonia. Howard U. President Speaker. Dr. Mordecai Wyatt Johnson, presi- dent of Howard University, will be the speaker for the all-university religious service in Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel tomorrow at 11 am. Music will be furnished by the uni- versity choir. JORDAN SPECIAL ¥3 $1 A WEEK BUYS The two-tub washer and dryer is the safest, easiest and quickest way to wash and dry your clothes. Only a few dem- onstrators at this attractive price. Come early. ANO BT Corner15 NW. Dr. Paul Schwarz, the former Ger- | Werfel, the author, and Mrs. Werfel. | FOR TRAINED MEN Jobless Marching Streets Found to Lack Funda- mental Education. “This is the tenth of a series of articles analyzing the economic and political effects, the probable de- velopments and early snags of Pres- ident Roosevelt’s $4,000,000,000 job program. NEWARK, N. J, November 21 (N.AAN.A).—Our leading current American paradox (in a day full of New Deal and other paradoxes) is that the reputedly “inexorable” law of sup- ply and demand has gone completely haywire at the focal point of the economic system—Iabor. With the Government spending $4,000,000,000 for a “shot-in-the-arm” to feed the hungry temporarily, with 5,000,000 “chronic” unemployed and the relief problem destined appar- ently to be forever with us, industries in all- sections of the country are fairly screaming for skilled labor. Not all industries, but many. In typical Northeastern Ohio 5,616 di- versified industries, in 32 counties, are looking for men—but only men who “know their stuff.” Common Labor Plentiful. This dearth of trained workers has been driven home particularly during W. P. A’s effort to “make” 3,500,000 jobs. There is plenty of common labor on relief everywhere. Gobs of it. But common labor, even on the simplest of construction projects, is helpless unless “skills” are on hand to take care of certain tasks the un- trained men cannot tackle, and unless there are able foremen to direct the gangs. Every State administrator inter- viewed in this survey has said the efficiency of his projects depends almost entirely on the foremen and that good foremen are scarce. What is the answer? The State of New Jersey has an- alyzed the situation from its own | relief rolls and rolled that answer into one simple word: Education. Roughly 40 per cent of the family breadwinners on relief in New Jersey have never gone beyond the fourth grade of grammar school. Only 1 per | cent went beyond high school. Native White Ratio Less. | New Jersey also has found that Negroes and foreign-born whites make | up a percentage of relief clients far in excess of their proportion to the | | State's population. It believes that| | the figures, projected nationally, would still stand. With one out of every seven per-| sons in the State on relief, almost | | half of the white family heads receiv- ing help are foreign born. Three- quarters of these are from Southern and Eastern Europe and only balf have become citizens. One-quarter of those on relief are| Negroes. Together, Negroes and for- eign-born whites comprise more than | 60 per cent of New Jersey's relief load, although they make up only 40 per | cent of the State’s population. | And over half of them have had | less than four years' education. Many of those who have “educa- tion,” it is found, cannot use it. The National Industrial Conference Board, in a recent pamphlet entitled: “Want- ed, Trained Men,” estimated that | more than 10,000,000 employables be- | tween the ages of 18 and 29 in this country have never held a job. They g0 to employment managers and say they “will do anything.” ‘The employment managers are as much at sea as they are. They are looking for men who can do some one specific thing. It is the factory employer's com- Employment managers complain also that it is sometimes difficult to take. men even who are trained in vocational schools because their teach- ers learned “tricks of the trade” that are now obsolete, Mechanical re finements that have revolutionized certain jobs came in after these teach- ers left industry. There is a dearth not only of skilled “graduates” but of up-to-date training scnools, Of the New Jersey relief clients more than 72 per cent are over 35, i They cannot return to their jobs, they have little or no education and they must eompete with a younger and more active army for jobs they know nothing about. So we have millions of disillu- sioned men and women walking past factories that would grab them if they only knew how to fill the jobs that are open. (Copyright. 1035. by the North Newspaper Alliance. Inc. MISS HELEN RAYNER PNEUMONIA VICTIM Smith College Honor Graduate Was Stricken Ill Last Sunday. Miss Helen Edwards Rayner, 22, an horor graduate of Smith College in the class of 1934, died yesterday of pneumonta at her home, 3502 Thirtieth street. Her illness began last Sun- 3 day with a throat infection. Miss Rayner attended public schools in Wash- ington and was graduated from Centzal High Schobl in 1930. : Honors were con- ; ferred on her for work in econom- ics at Smith Col- lege. Until recently she had been en- gaged in eco- nomic research for a brokerage firm in Baltimore. A short time ago she came here to live with her family and take up similar work with the Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corp. Miss Rayner was the daughter of Mrs. Nellie Tyler Rayner and the late W. Pearce Rayner. Her father, who died in 1928, had been an official of the White Motor Co. She is survived by her mother, a sister, Miss Hester M. Rayner, a stu- dent at Smith Coilege, and a brother, Pearce Tyler Rayner, who is attend ing Westtown School at Westtown, Pa. Funeral services will be held Mon- day at 2:30 pm. at the residence. Burial will be in Rock Creek Ceme- tery. )Al'neflun Helen Rayner, Deer Defy Auto. When Richard Blair and his wife were stopped by a herd of deer near Dawhinnie, Scotland, he blew his auto horn and two deer jumped over the radiator in defiance, and the Blair automobile was not released for a half- HE TA here the Smart Set Gathers from 12 Noon LUNCHEON__65¢ DINNER-___$1.25 SUNDAY DINNER From 1 P.M. Supper Entertainment plaint that those who are educated | are not educated “right.” For every | dollar spent educating a man in a | 1536 CONN. AVE. Q you dont really but its nice to know of face men for love of you that way you dont really to twist monarchs round your little finger but its nice to know you could you dont really other women to the beauty that elizabeth arden but its nice to know they do elizabeth doesnt wish you to be a menace Daughters of Eve a seven years war youve got that kind you dont really.wieh to break their hearts but its nice to know they feel wish to start that wish wish envy gave yau you dont wish to be a menace but its nice to know you are! ELIZABETH ARDEN, 1147 Connecticut Avenue. National 4161 Look for “Our Daily Bread” in Sunday’s Post ©1935EA

Other pages from this issue: