Evening Star Newspaper, December 6, 1935, Page 26

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SOCIETY. Members of Diplomatic, Congressional and Army- ' Navy Circle s in the News Chatelaine of Brazilian Embassy Issues Cards for at Homes This Month. Petroffs Hosts. ME. ARANHA, wife of the Am- bassador of Brazil, has issued cards for two at homes, one Thursday, December 12, and the other December 13, from 5 until 7 o'clock, at the embassy. The Minister of Denmark, Mr. Otto Wadsted, left yesterday for New York, where he will meet Mme. Wadsted and their small son, who will arrive there today on board the Steamship Hensa from Europe. They will remain in New York over the week end, and tomor- row evening the Minister and Mme. ‘Wadsted will be the guests of honor at a reception to be given at the Col- lege of the City of New York by the Constantin Brun Award, a society bearing the name of the former Min- ister of Denmark to this country, now serving as honorary counselor of the legation. FEach year this soclety awards a trip to Denmark to a Dane| living in New York. The Minister of Bulgaria and Mme. | Petroffl Tchmakoff will entertain at an informal cocktail party this evening | in the legation. The Minister of Norway, M. de Munthe Morgenstierne, has gone to New York, where he will address the World Sunday School Association at its banquet at the Hotel Astor this evening. The banquet is planned in honor of Bishop Marone of Norway. The Minister will return early next week. | John 8. Pratt, Col. Edmund L. Daley, at the Wardman Park Hotel for a few days. Representative and Mrs. Edward C. Moran, jr., and their son, Paul Moran, have come from their home in Maine and have taken an apartment in the Methodist Building, where they are for the Winter season. Mrs. Chester C. Davis, wife of the administrator of the A. A.‘A., Was hostess to & company of 11 at lunch- eon today. Mrs. Davis will entertain a com- pany of 11 at luncheon again Tues- day. Lieut. Col. Frederic A. Price gave & dinner party at the Shoreham Hotel last evening. His guests were Col. and Mrs. George Grunert, Col. and Mrs. Laurence V. Frazier, Col. and Mrs. Willlam A. Johnson, Col. and Mrs. Daniel I. Sultan, Col. and Mrs. Lieut. Col. and Mrs. William W. Hicks, Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Frank S. Besson, Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Albert K. B. | Lyman, Maj. and Mrs. Paul A. Hodg- | son, Capt. John G. Drinkwater, Mrs. N. H. McDowell, Mrs. Amos B. Shat- tuck and Miss Marian Townsley. Col. and Mrs. Joseph K. Partello will entertain a small company at dinner at the Shoreham tomorrow evening. Cept. and Mrs. W. R. Van Auken Representative Fred J. Sisson of | ‘Whitesboro, N. Y., is in his apartment Debutantes Today Miss Nash Makes Formal Bow at Tea. Miss Radeker at Lunch. iss Katharine Cleveland Nash will snaxe her formal bow to society this| afternoon at a tea to be given by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Nash, at their home, at 2500 Massachusetts avenue, The bud will have assisting her Miss Juliet Dulany, Miss Miriam Scott, Miss Marie Anne Greenough and Miss Anne Dudley Flannery. She will wear a gown of turquoise-color satin, modeled on Grecian lines, with which she will carry a bouquet of tea roses. Receiving with Mrs. Nash will be Mrs. Thomas Clay Arnold of Savan- nah, Ga., grandmother of the debu- tante. Mrs. Nash will be assisted by Mrs. Walter R. Tuckerman, Mrs. Harral Mulliken, Mrs. Duncan Cam- eron, Mrs. Allen Nash, Mrs. L. Corrin Strong, Miss Bertha Noyes, Mrs. Wil- liam S. Conant, Mrs. Austin Kautz, Mrs. Charles Colden Miller, Miss Nancy Dugger and Mrs. Edwin MacKethan. The debutante is a descendant of Prancis Nash of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, of Chief Justice Sewall of Salem, Mass.; of the Arnolds of Rhode Island and the Hansons of Eastern Shore, Md. She is a great- granddaughter of Bishop Arthur Cleve- land Coxe of New York and of Col. John Screven of Savannah, Ga. Miss Nash attended the National Cathedral 8School for Girls and St. TImothy's| ,y'y husiness meeting at 2 o'clock. School of Catonsville and is now a Junior in the collegiate department of | o Mrs. Le Roy Sherman, 4530 Six- Mount Vernon Seminary. Miss Evelyn Elizabeth Radeker made her debut at & luncheon today at the Mayflower, given by her aunt, Mrs. James Warren Adams, with whom she makes her home in Washington. Among the season’s debutantes and other young girls present were Seno- rita Amelita Alfaro, Miss Frances | Glover, Miss Mannevillette Sullivan, | Miss Anna Lee Stuart, Miss Polly | Wirgman, Miss Margaret McNeale, | Miss Leonie McCoy, Miss Laura Doug- | las and her house guest, Countess Jo- sephine Arco-Zinneberg; Miss Jean Heiberg, Miss Alice Richardson, Miss | Sally Mitchell Le Fevre, Miss Marie Anne Grenough, Miss Jean Gilbert, Miss Betty Barnard, Miss Catherine McKane, Miss Mary Lewis Rucker, Miss Virginia Jenckes, Miss Grace O'Brien, Miss Mary Fay Stuart, Miss Jean Noble of Cambridge, Md., house guest of Miss Radeker; Miss Betty Hill, Miss Grace O'Hara, Miss Jessie Beadles, Miss Betty Ely, Miss Elinor Wermouth and Miss Barbara Frick of Baltimore, a former classmate of Miss Radeker at Hood College. Lunch- eon was served in the presidential dining room of the hotel and talisman roses and tall yellow tapers decorated the table. of San Francisco, Calif., are spending the Winter in Washington and are | staying at the Fairfax. Miss Radeker was dressed in a dark blue velvet frock with matching hat. The dress was made on simple lines with full sleeves caught at the wrist | with & narrow cuff, A feweled clip at the neckline and a corsage bouquet | of talisman roses and forget-me-nots | were especially pretty against the dark | velvet gown. | Mrs. Adams wore a-gown and hat of | fuchsia-color velvet and a bouquet of | gardenias. Mrs. Adams’ guests were | Representative Virginia E. Jenckes, Senora de Chevalier, Mrs. Nicholas | Beadles of Asheville, N. C.; Mrs. Claude E. Brigham, Mrs. Henry J. | Richardson, Miss Gladys E. Weaver, | Mrs. Ray L. Avery, Mrs. Jacob L. | Deavers, Mrs. Frank L. Purdon, Mrs. James J. O'Hara, Mrs. Charles A. | Barnard, Mrs. Alden Smoot, Mrs. F. | Charles La Salle Bryant, Mrs. Bertha | Columbus, Mrs. Harry Frantz, Mrs. Hubert Martin, Miss Mary Cox, Miss | Eva Cox, Mrs. Louis Robert Driver, Miss May Brown and Mrs. Willlam Laird Dunlop, jr. Seminary Alumnae Plan Tea Monday The Washington Chapter of the National Park Seminary Alumnae As- sociation will entertain at a tea Mon- day afternoon, which will be preceded The tea will be given at the home | tienth street. The assisting hostesses | are Mrs. L. E. Atkins, Miss Eleanor | Varied Parties Hold Interest of Society Mrs. Willlam Corcoran Eustis will entertain at a musicale this evening in her home, on Rhode Island avenue, when M. Roman Totenberg, Polish violonist, will give the program. Mr. and Mrs, Robert Jackson Speir will give a dance this evening at 2400 Sixteenth street in honor of their daughter, Miss Margaret Speir. Miss Speir will be assisted by Miss Silvine Clagett, Miss Mary Patterson, Miss Edith Gosnell, Miss Frances Hum- phreys, Miss Catherine McKane, Miss Gloria Grosvenor, Miss Dorothy Fox, Miss Alice Clarke, Miss Anna Lee Stuart, Miss Laura Johnson, Miss Ran- dolph Richardson, Miss Mary Senate Howes, Miss Bette Hartz and Miss Catherine Friant. Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Droop enter- tained at a dinner last evening in honor of Miss Sally Le Fevre, Senorita Amelita Alfaro and Fraulein Margaret Korfer, a guest at the German Em- bassy. Other guests were Miss Frida Fraser, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Goodwin, the secretary of the Norwegian Lega- tion, Mr. Francis Irgens; the attache of the Swedish Legation, Mr. Stig Unger, and Mr. Charles Kooff. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick D. McKenney will entertain at dinner this evening at Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. John McMullen and her daugh- ter, Miss Margaret McMullen, gave & luncheon at the Shoreham today for Miss Mary Blythe Patterson, daughter of Mrs. Samuel Finley Patterson, who will make rger debut Tuesday. Mrs. M. I. Bierman will be hostess Saturday afternoon in her home at 1401 Floral street northwest, at a tea, entertaining the Cultural Class of Hadassah at 2:30 o’clock. Cards Issued for White House Fete The President and Mrs. Roosevelt | today issued invitations for the recep- tion in honor of the diplomatic corps Tuesday, December 17, at 9 o'clock, at the White House. © They're Ring- less ©® They're Perfect ©® They're Full Fashioned HOSIERY We suggest you try our Rolanda brand, and we are confident you will want to give them as gifts. All sizes. All winter colors. 79c¢ a pair Potts and Miss Frances Kelley. BRIGHT NEW SWEATERS To brighten your spirits. The colors and attractive- ness will change your atti- tude and outlook on life. Try one on and see for your- self. The Sweater illustrated is a ribbed Brooks type ati=— Others__ 2,00 t© 6.00 GIFT LINGERIE ’Magnificent,” you'll say, when you see these things. PAJAMAS, GOWNS AND SLIPS In pure dye satin and crepe In this wide selection of lingerie wou will find both beauty and value. Rare finds you will admit. 3.00 Street Floor L. Frank Co. THE STORE OF YOUTHFUL FASHIONS Who was, before her marriage November 27, Miss Frances Butler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Butler. —Underwood & Underwood Photo. el fi@te w annual December COAT SALE! MADE TO SELL FOR 89.15—79.75—9.15 Gloriously Furred! Persian Lamb! Mink! Silver Fox! BlueFox! Kolinsky! Black Fox! Beaver! Fitch! Skunk! Important enough for you to drop every other plan . . . and be here on the stroke of 9:157 Here'’s a sale that shatters all Brooks’ past performances for downright value! A sale made possible by our own tireless efforts, coupled with the recent wave of unseasonable weather . . . which caused makers’ stocks to become overloaded. Scores of outstandingly smart styles in Forstmann and' Juillard Woolens ... with a choice variety of rich furs in flattering arrangements! Rich satin or silk crepe linings, lamb’s wool interlinings. Black, brown, green . . . sizes 12 to 20, 38 to 46. BETTER COATS—SECOND FLOOR. B Dr.and Mrs. Wollner Return to Capital Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Wollner have just returned from a visit in New York and are again at their home at the Westchester. Dr. Wollner is consulting chemist to the of the Treasury. feetary Mrs. Wollner, known in the music world as Gertrude Price, holds a unique fleid in her piano improvisa- tions and her original work among young people in the art of composing. SOCIETY. She will be heard here In a demon- stration-recital for which invitations have been sent out by Mrs, Ethel Hoffman Kane, Sunday evening, De- cember 15, at her studio of motor- mental rhythmics. In New York the Gertrude Price classes at the Musical Arts Institute emphasized “creative music,” which is the topic of her recital here. For some years Mrs. Wollner was also associated with the Walden School in New York as well as with the Music School Settlement, Heckscher Foun- jon. RN RN RN NN SRR RNERD ¥ Jurius GArrFINCKEL & F STREET AT FOURTEENTH Young Folks in Search of the Unusual Will Thrill to the Charm of Our WONDERFUL NEW SHOWINGS FOR MISSES, JUNIORS AND GIRLS .Tomorrow, on Our Fourth and Sixth Floors As lovely a group of dresses, suits, coats and evening wear as you could ever hope to see .+ » with glad tidings for budgeteers in the many won- derful moderately priced lines we have included among them. In addition, there is a superb assort- ment of gifts, sure carriers of your good taste in selection, because Garfinckel goods are so well known for their distinct difference. Good Advice! Be here early for choice selection, and heed this warning, because these lovely things > will go very quickly. RS T NTNT ST NE TS BN k‘?emin s il Silt Undies. make welcome gifts! SRR ERNENERERNES e Pajamas e Gowns e Dancettes e Slips A gift that never fails to gladden feminine hearts . . . lovely lin- gerie! And these are far lovelier than you usually find in this price range! Rich satin and fine quality silk crepe, daintily tailored or exquisitely lacy styles. Beautifully made, and all bias-cut for a smooth fit. LINGERIE—STREET FLOOR. Sweaters are twice as smart when they’re TWi ns ! One of the nicest gifts you could select . . . and one of the best sweater values we've ever of- fered! Plain or novelty knits, 1009 wool. Short sleeve slip-overs with matching or contrasting cardigans. Brown, green, black, blue, navy and black-and-white. Sizes 32 to 40. STREET FLOOR. 11 AR TRR B ARy YOUR BEST GIFTS ARE HERE. LAMPS TABLES CHAIRS CLOCKS NOVELTIES AND MANY = OTHERS CATLINS 1324 N. Y. AVE. N.W. ot o e e s O High in fashion! 69> The new high shades that are creating such a stir in smart fash- ion circles . . . phan- tom blue, rose-cloud, grey-mist . . . colors striking yet subtle, and intensely flatter- ing! This charming model is in crepe in- trigue . .. newest and loveliest of the sea- son’s fabrics. Silk faille in a softly con- trasting shade makes the flowers, belt and inner collar. Sizes 12 to 20. BETTER DRESSES— THIRD FLOOR.

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