Evening Star Newspaper, September 5, 1936, Page 9

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SOCIETY. d d 1 Secretary Perkins . At Scituate, Mass. Cabinet Officer Speaker at Fete—Diplomats Plan Parties for Countrymen Next Week. HE Secretary of Labor, Miss Frances Perkins, is at Scituate, Mass, where her ancestors lived, and where last evening she was one of the speakers at the tercentenary celebration of the founding of the city. The Brazilian Ambassador and Senhora de Aranha have issued {nvitations for a reception Monday afternoon from 5 to 7 o'clock in the embassy in honor of the minister of communications and public works of Brazil and the other delegates from Brazil to the third world power conference, which will open in Washington Monday morning. The Charge d’Affiaires of Great Britain, Mr. Victor A. L. Mallet, will be host at a garden party Thursday afternoon in honor of the British delegates to the third world power conference, which will be held in Washington next week. Mrs. H. O. Chalkley, wife of the commercial counselor of the embassy, will act as hostess for him in the absence of Mrs. Mallet. Rear Admiral Edward Kalbfus, president of the Naval War College at Newport and Mrs. Kalbfus were hosts at dinner last evening entertaining before the annual Navy relief ball, which was given last evening at the Naval Training Station. Admiral and Mrs. Kalbfus entertained at luncheon yesterday in honor of Prof. William E. Hickling of Harvard. Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois, former chief of the Army Air Corps and Mrs. Foulois are visiting Dr. and Mrs. Earl G. Breeding, who entertained at dinner at the Congressional Country Club in their honor Thursday evening. Gen. and Mrs. Foulois came from Atlantic City, where they now make their home. Capt. and Mrs. Willis A. Lee were hosts at an informal dinner party last evening at the Shoreham. Their guests included Comdr. and Mrs. George Simmons, Comdr. and Mrs. Henry Shonerd and Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. John M. Speissegger. The librarian of Congress, Dr. Herbert Putnam, has returned from a vacation spent at his Summer home in Massachusetts. Col. and Mrs. Edwin A. Halsey entertained at dinner Thursday at the Congressional Country Club for their son, Mr. Edwin A. Halsey, jr., who is leaving next week to enter Dartmouth College. The guests included Miss Margaret Allan, Miss Virginia Donk, Miss Elizabeth Quillan, Miss Louise Wellborne, Mr. Frederick Fryer, Mr. Richard Murphy, jr., and Mr. James Carter, jr. Capt. Henry M. Jensen, U. S. N. and Mrs. Jensen gave a dinner party last evening in their cottage at Newport and took their guests later to the Navy relief ball. Capt. and Mrs. Randolph Dickins and their two children, Zoia Arnot and Randolph Dickins, jr., left yesterday for their home at Coral Gables, Fla., after visiting Capt. Dickins’ mother, Mrs. A. W. Dickins, and his sister, Miss Virginia Dickins, at the Dresden Apartments. Comdr. and Mrs. George K. Weber and their children of Ken- sington, Md., left today for a week’s stay at their cottage on the Bevern River. Miss Patricia Lee Crutcher, daughter of Comdr. and Mrs. Crutcher of Annapolis, is the guest of Miss Betty Anne Weber. Mrs. Lehman W. Miller, wife of Maj. Miller, entertained in- formally at luncheon at the Shoreham yesterday in honor of Mrs. Arthur W. Stace and her daughter, Miss Margaret Stace, of Ann Arbor, Mich., who are visiting Mrs. Stace’s son and daughter-in- law Capt. and Mrs. Donald F. Stace at the Westchester. Lieut. George W. Lermond, U. S. A, and Mrs. Lermond, who are | spending a short vacation with the latter’s father at Wicomico | Knoll, his estate near La Plata, Md., will leave next week for the West Coast and will sail September 16 for Lieut. Lermond’s new post in China. Lieut. Lermond has been on duty at Fort Ben- | ning, Ga. Sunday Mrs. Lermond entertained at luncheon and a kitchen‘ shower in honor of Miss Jeanette Harriet Crabbe, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. J. B. Crabbe, whose marriage to Mr. Dale Frederick Snell | will take place next week. The party was given at Wicomico | THE EVENING STAR, WASHI pianist. Maryland 'And Virginia In the News| | Mrs. Etz and Daugh- ter Leave for Cali- fornia. | RS. EDWIN H. ETZ and her | daughter, Miss Constance | Etz, left last night for a visit of several weeks in Los Angeles, Calif. They will make the | son of Lynchburg, Va., are the guests NGTON with Mrs. David Ward of Woodfield, Md., having come down to attend a reunion of the Burns family held on Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Woodfleld and attended by over 200 persons. Mr. and Mrs. Richard McMillen of Herndon, Va., have as their guests for several days Miss Frances Bolen and Miss Katherine Moss of Front Royal, Va. Mrs. Jesse V. Aud and her small this week of her sister-in-law, Mrs. | E. Barbour Hutchison, at her home in Herndon, Va. CRASH INJURES WOMAN; TAXI DRIVER ARRESTED Member of Montgomery Election Board Suffers Minor Hurts Mrs. Henry H. Shackleford and her | in Crash. daugnter, Miss Mildred Shackleford,| Mrs. John A. Holmes of Halpine, entertained yesterday at a bridge Md., member of the Montgomery luncheon in their Vienna, Va., home. ' County Board of Election Supervisors The guests included Mrs. Richard land wife of a Washington attorney, Deever, Mrs. R. Winton Elliott, Miss | suffered minor hurts last night in an Jean De Lashmutt, Mrs. Edith Hart, accident on the Rockville Pike that | Mrs. William Shackleford and Mme. | Jed to the arrest of a Capital taxi Tamara Dmitrieff, all of Washington; | driver on charges of driving while Mrs. Hunton Tiffany and Mrs. William | drunk and hit-and-run. Hill Brown of Manassas, Mrs. Gustav| Mrs. Holmes and her sister, Mrs. Hertz of Falls Church, Mrs. Rouald | Anna Fields of Rockville, were driv- | Blake, Miss Mary Blake, Miss War- | ing glong the pike in the former's car | wick Rust, Miss Mary Frances CoOPer, | when an automobile crashed into their trip by way of the Panama Canal and will return to their home in Bradley | Hills, Md, about the middle of Oc- tober. Knoll and the guests numbered about 10. Miss Delano, Related To the President, to Wed Mr. Patterson M announce the engagement of their daughter, Leila, to Mr. Arthur Willing Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Stuart Patterson of Philadelphia and Southampton, Long Island. Miss Delano’s grandfather, the late Mr. Warren Delano, was a brother of Mrs. James Roosevelt, mother of the President, and her grandmother, the late Mrs. Delano, before her marriage was Miss Jennie ‘Walters, a sister of the late Henry Walters, financier and founder of the ‘Walters Art Museum in Baltimore. Miss Delano’s father is executive vice president and chairman of the Board of Directors of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. and a director in various other corporations. Messrs. Warren H. Delano and Frederick A. Delano, 2d, and Misses Margaret and Jane W. Delano are the other children of Mr. and Mrs. Delano. Miss Leila Delano attended the Brearley School in New York and Miss Nixon's in Florence, Italy. Her mother, the former Miss Leila Burnett, is the daughter of Mrs. Robert M. Burnett of Boston and the late Mr. Burnett. Miss Delano is a grandniece of Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt, Mrs. Price Col- lier of Tuxedo Park, N. Y.; Mrs. Dora Delano Forbes of Paris, Mr. Frederic A. Delano of Washington and of the late Mrs. Annie Delano Hitch. Miss Delano’s aunts include Miss Laura Delano, Mrs. Henry L. Redmond and Mrs. Frederick B. Adams. Mr. Patterson attended St. Paul's Bchool, Concord, N. H., and was grad- uated from Harvard in 1932. He be- longs to the Philadelphia Club and the Porcellian Club of Harvard. He ‘was connected with Drexel & Co. and, later, was with the Morgan firm in its London and Paris offices. His grandparents are the late Mr. and Mrs. C. Stuart Patterson of Phila- delphia. His father is a director of the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Girard Trust Co. His mother, who was Miss Eleanora Willing, is a sister of the late Mrs. John Morris. Mr. Patterson’s parents are well known in Washington, where they have made frequent visits with the Misses Patten, in their residence on Massachusetts avenue; Mrs. Hare Lip- pincott and Mrs. Dwight F. Davis. His sister, Miss Beatrice Willing Patter- son, who has many friends here also, is spending the Summer in Europe and at the present time is on a terranean cruise on the Earl of Dudley'’s yacht. R. AND MRS. LYMAN DE- LANO of Tarrytown, N. Y., (3 * |Mrs. Horace Lohnes Hostess at Luncheon Mrs. Horace L. Lohnes, wife of the only attorney in Eastern United States to hold an official office in the Delta Theta Phi Fraternity, of which he is marshal of the supreme senate, entertained at luncheon at Olney Inn Thursday for 50 of the ladies of the Delta Theta Phi. This organization is an honorary legal fraternity, with chapters in every leading college in the United States. Washington proudly boasts of two chapters—one at Georgetown and one at George Washington. The organization, which meets only every other year, is holding its twenty- second convention at the Mayfliower. Among the guests at luncheon were Mrs. Joseph Bergeron, of Cleveland, ©Ohio, wife of the national chancellor; Mrs. J. F. O'Sullivan of Detroit, Mich., wife of the vice chancellor; Mrs. A. L. Doud, jr., of Doud, Iowa, wife of the master of roles; Mrs. M. McKusick,’ wife of the master alumnis; Mrs. R. M. Nelson, wife of the chief justice of the supreme court of the fraternity, and Mrs. R. L. Adams of Kansas City, wife of the past chancellor, Miss Knapp Engaged To Wed Mr. Dey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Spring Knapp of New York announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Rosalle, to Mr. Joseph Charles Dey, jr., of New ¥grk. sgrd:l:f :fi.'fiey of Norfolk, Va. e we uring e e e place di the Miss Knapp is president of the Women'’s Metropolitan Golf Associa- tion. She has won many tourna- ments and for three consecutive years was golf champion of the Women's National Golf and Tennis Club, of which she is a member. Her brother, Mr. Edward Spring Knapp, jr., also is a well-known golf player, {Mrs. George Truett Entertaining Guests Mr. and Mrs. G. Jester Jones of Richmond, with their children, Gran- ville and Winifred, will arrive today to spend the week end and holiday with Mrs. Jones’ mother, Mrs. George E. Truett in her home in Vander- werken, Va. Mr. Jones this week completed 45 years of continuous service with the First and Merchants National Bank, of which he now is vice president. In addition to being vice president of the bank, he is president of the Richmond Chamber of Commerce, district governor of the Rotary Clubs of and a former president of the Richmond Rotary Club, secre- tary-treasurer of the Richmond Stad- Mrs. Frederick D. Richardson, Mrs. Richard Washington and Miss Re- | becca Rice of Fairfax, and Mrs. Gil- bert Berry and Mrs. Paul Stenger of Vienna. Top scores were won by Miss Cooper anld Miss Blake. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence E. Skees and their daughter of Montgomery Hills, Md., have gone to New York for the week end. Miss Marcia Lamb of Kensington, Md., left yesterday for Winsted, Cenn., where she will pass the Labor day week end. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Harper recently returned to their home on West Brad- ley lane in Chevy Chase, Md. from Virginia, where they spent the Sium- mer. Mr. and Mrs. Harper are now en route by motor to Culver, Ind., where their son, Mr. Robert Lewis, will en- ter the Culver Military Academy. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cavanaugh and family of Takoma Park, Md., are pass- ing the week end and holiday at Herald Harbor, Md. Mrs. HerbertTy‘mond Haar of Lorton, Va., is hostess this afternoon to the Fairfax Chapter, N. S. Daugh- ters of the American Revolution. Mr. Charles H. Callahan, prominent Mason and historian of Alexandria, is the guest speaker, his subject be- ing “The Colonial History of Fair- fax.” Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Bllett of Charles- ton, S. C., and Mr. Ellett’s sister, Miss Suzanne Ellett of Blacksburg, Va., ar- rived yesterday to visit their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. G. Raymond Huffard of Fairfax, Va. Miss Lorraine Shives and her sister, Miss Phyllis Shives of Takoma Park. Md,, are leaving today for Paw Paw, Va., whele they will visit their grand- parents for a week. Mrs, Dean W. Judd of Takoma Park., Md., left yesterday for Phila- delphia_to join her sister, Mrs. Vir- ginia Roberts, and her son, John Rob- erts, who will depart today on a mo- tor tour to Canada. Mrs. Caspar Gregory Dickson of Kensington, Md., has visiting her for several weeks her daughter, Mrs. R. C. Hall of Bath, N. Y., who arrived here Wednesday evening. Miss Edith Gregory of Summerville, 8. C., will ar- rive next week for a visit of two weeks with Mrs. Dickson. Mr. and Mrs. William Aquila Lewis entertained at luncheon Sunday at sheir home, Mount Eccentric, The Plains, Va., in honor of Senor Dr. Don Benito Flores, Senorita Maria de y Flores, Benor and Senora Vincente Sanchez y Garito of the Mexican Claims Commission. Mrs. Hatiie Tindleman, Mr. Irvin Tindleman and Miss Betty Tindleman {U. S. EXPORT OF ARMS machine and continued on toward | Washington without stopping. Patrolman Ira K. Hover gave chase after the mishap was reported and | halted Ivan Bogdonoff of the 2800 | block Thirty-eighth street, WasHing- ton, near Montrose and placed him under arrest. Mrs. Holmes escaped with minor cuts and bruises, while her sister, who was driving the machine in which they were riding, was unhurt. Bogdo- noff was released under $500 bond | for appearance in Police Court at Rockville on Friday. $1,046,943 IN AUGUST Total Is Smallest Since Neutral- ity Act Became Effective, Report Shows. By the Associated Press. The State Department announced yesterday that licensed exports of arms, ammunition and implements of war from the United States during August amounted to $1,046,943, the smallest total since the neutrality act became effective. Germany, Argentina and the Nether- lands were the principal buyers. The bulk of $166,171 spent by Ger- many went for airplane engines. Argentina spent $165514, chiefly for military aircraft and engines, and the Netherlands $111,000 for propellers and engines, Spain did not appear in the list of countries to which exports were licensed, DRAG CREEK FOR BODY Police: Told Man Jumped From Avenue Bridge. Seventh precinct police today re- sumed dragging Rock Creek near the bridge at Pennsylvania avenue and Twenty-seventh street for the body of & man reported to have jumped in and drowned yesterday. A group of children playing nearby told police they had seen a man leap {rom the creek bank. Others said they saw a body in the water. Gas Explosion Injures Man. Leo C. Nolan, a section chief i the Department, was burned on the arms and chest yesterday when gas exploded while he was trying to light ‘a heater in his home, 4619 Forty-eighth street. Books for Blind Complete. ‘The National Institute for the Blind in Great Britain has finished two monumental tasks, the first Greek New Testament and the first revised jum and a thirty-third degree Mason. | of Philadelphia are apending this week ' edition of the Bible in Braille. [ N 2 3 MISS MARY ELIZABETH HUGHES, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Hughes of the Broadmoor. Little Miss Hughes is an accomplished —Bachrach Photo. Miss Sweet Married To Dr.F.L.Janeway| Yesterday Afternoon| 1SS SOPHIA FULLER SWEET of | Wellesley Mass., daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Forrest Sweet of Grand Rapids, Mich., was married yesterday afternoon to the Rev. Dr. Frank L. Janeway of Buf- falo. The ceremony was performed in Union Theological Seminary in New York City by the Rev. Sidney Edwin Sweet, dean of Christ Church Cathedral, St. Louis, & brother of the | bride. Only the immediate families were present. Dr. Janeway, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Richard Jjaneway of New Brunswick, N. J, is general presbyter of the Presbytery of Buffalo and Niagara. He was graduated from Princeton University and from Union Theological Seminary. Before he was called to Buffalo he served in several capacities in churches throughout the East, including Brick Presbyterian Church, where he was assistant min- ister. Mrs. Janeway has many friends in Washington made while her father was Assistant Secretary of Commerce from 1913 to 1921, during which she was presented to society and served as president of the Washington Junior League. The late Mr. Sweet repre- sented his district in Michigan in Congress from 1911 to 1913 and was Mayor of Grand Rapids from 1904 to 1906. Dr. and Mrs. Janeway will make their home in Buffalo on the comple- tion of their wedding trip. Colonel Harper Returns to Capital Col. Robert N. Harper has returned from his country place, Caradoc Hall, near Leesburg, Va., been during the Summer months, and has opened his apartmert at the Wardman Park Hotel. Col. Harper is now attending the | convention of the Federai Wholesale Drug Association in Minneapolis, Minn. —_— . o . e e Visitors in Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. William Moseley Stewart and their daughter, Miss Sally Ann Stewart, of Holliston, Mass., and formerly of Washington and Falls Church, Va., are spending the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stew- art of East Falls Church, Va. HOOVER AIDE WEDS Secretary of Former First Lady Is Bride. PALO ALTO, Calif, September 5 (#).—Miss Helen Hartley Greene, sec- retary to Mrs. Herbert Hoover, was married at Stanford University Me- morial Church yesterday to Charles Bolton White, member of the Stan- ford Graphic Arts faculty. Mrs. Hoover gave a reception at her home on the campus for members of the two families and close friends. e SHARK CAUGHT IN NET 8-Foot Fish Killed by Fisherman Near Shady .Side. An 8-foot shark was caught in a net and killed yesterday by Capt. John Hallock, commercial fisherman near Shady Side, Md. Capt. Hallock was about a mile off shore from Idlewild, near Shady Side, when he pulled in a seine and found the shark. 5 He hauled the fish into the boat and killed it with & knife. ROGERS TAX SALE 0. K.'D CLAREMORE, Okla., September § D. C, SBATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1936. Rhodes Crampton Wedding Miss Kay Morris and Mr. Mills Married. 1SS JEAN WEST CRAMPTON and’ Mr. James Edward Rhodes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse F. Rhodes, were mar- ried at noon today, the wedding tak- ing place in the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Cramp- ton, at 3462 Macomb street. The Rev. ‘Walter Cunningham of Holy Trinity Church officiated and an informal re- ception and wedding breakfast for those witnessing the ceremony fol- lowed. The bride was given in marriage by her father and she wore a gown of white satin fashioned on princess lines, finished in a cowl neck line, and the full sleeves were tight fitting from el- bows to wrists. Her veil of white illu- sion was arranged in cap effect and held with clusters of orange blossoms at each side. She carried white gla- dioli and lilies of the valley. Mrs. A. Leckie Cox, sister of the bride, was matron of honor and had a costume of green faille taffeta, made with a fitted jacket with which she wore a toque of darker green velvet. She carried butternut color gladioli. Miss Edith Rhodes, sister of the bride- groom, was bridesmaid and was dressed like the matron of honor, in a copper color moire with which she wore a brown velvet toque and car- ried vari-color gladioli and dark blue delphinium. Mary Ellen Rhodes, another sister of the bridegroom, was flower girl, having a dainty frock of pink ruffied crepe and carrying a basket filled with sweetheart roses and baby’s breath. Mr. Lawrence Eugene Duvall, cousin of the bridegroom, was the best man. Mrs. Crampton, mother of the bride, wore black chiffon with red figures and had a cluster of red roses, and Mrs. Rhodes, mother of the- bride- groom, was in black crepe and had a bouquet of white roses. Later Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes left for a wedding trip, the bride wearing a traveling suit of brick color tweed with matching accessories and a spray of gardenias. They will make their home in Glover Park, D. C. Mrs. A. E. Parker and Mrs. John Bernard Diamond, 3d, entertained at a “pantry shower” Thursday evening for the bride. Miss Kay Morris of Bethesda, Md., and Mr. Lowis Howard Mills of Wash- | ington were married last evening in | the Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church. The ceremony was performed’ by | Rev. Edward G. Latch, pastor of the Chevy Chase Methodist Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin, Bateman Morris of Grosvenor lane, Bethesda. She is 8 graduate of Swarthmore College, and is a member, of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. The groom is the SOCIETY, Miss Olva Faust of Albany, N. Y.; Miss Constance Smith of Lansdowne, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Kelly of Marshall, Tex., and Miss Rosita Gos- tin of Macon, Ga. Miss Lorraine Hatch And Mr. Miller Wed. Announcement is made of the mar- riage of Miss Lorraine Hatch, daughter of Mr. Lorenzo S. Hatch of Elko, Nev., to Mr. Frank Richard Miller, son of Mrs. Alice Miller of Salt Lake City. The ceremony was performed last evening by Edward P. Kimball in the Church of the Latter-day Saints. Before the ceremony, which was attended by a large group of Utahans in the Nation's Capital, Mrs. Gifford Jackson sang a solo. The bride wore a wedding gown of ivory satin. Her bouquet was of Johanna Hill roses. Her only at- tendant was Miss Carol Eliason of Salt Lake City, who wore printed chiffon in Fall shades and carried a bouquet of Talisman roses. The oride was given in marriage by her father. Mr. Donald Ipson of Salt Lake City was best man. The marriage was followed by a reception at the home of the bride’s brother, Mr. Douglas L. Hatch, and Mrs. Hatch at their home on Con- necticut avenue. Immediately after- ward the couple left for a wedding trip through the New England States. Mrs. Miller is a student at George Washington University and formerly attended the University of Idaho, where she was affiliated with the Alpha Phi Sorority. Mr. Miller is a former student of the Universily of Utah, and is now studying at George | Washington University. Miss Anderson and Mr. Glenn | Wed at Mount Vernon M. E. Church. | The marriage is announced of Miss | Linda Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Anderson of Oak Grove, | La., to Mr. William H. Glenn, son of | Mrs. J. G. Glenn of Red Springs, N.C., | Thursday afternoon. The ceremony | was performed in the Mount Vernon | M. E. Church, the Rev. Dr. W. Angie | Smith officiating at 3:30 o'clock. | Mr. and Mrs. Glenn will make their | home in Washington. 'Parties for Future ' Bride Are Arranged | Miss Jeannette Harriet Crabbe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Crabbe, whose marriage to Mr. Dale Frederick | Snell will take place next week, was the guest in whose honor Miss Mar- guerite Norris and Miss Margaret Langrall gave a pantry shower Thurs- day evening. The arrangements were simply made and attractive, the color scheme being in pink and white. Luncheon in Vienna. Mrs. Henry Shackleford and Miss | Mildred Shackleford entertained at | | luncheon and bridge in their Vienna | home Thursday. Their guests in- | cluded Mrs. Paul K. Stenger and Mrs. | Gilbert Berry of Vienna, Miss Rebecca | Rice of Oakton, Mrs. Gustave Hertz (and Mrs. Fern Deavers of Falls | Church, Miss Jane De Lashmut of Baltimore, Mrs. W. H. Tiffany of Manassas, Miss Mary Frances Cooper, | Miss Mary Blake, Miss Warwick Rust, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Mills of Corning. Kans. He is a graduate of | Mrs. Richard Washington, Mrs. Fred- the United States Naval Academy and | erick Dawson Richardson and Mrs. is at present connected with the Pro- | Ronald Blake of Fairfax, Mrs. Wil- curement Division of the United |liam Hart, Mrs. William Shackleford States Treasury. and Mrs. Robert Winton Elliott of The ceremony was performed before Wnshi_ngton. High scores were made an altar banked with tall vases of | DY Miss Mary Frances Cooper and dahlias and palms and ferns. The |Miss Mary Blake. | bride, who was given in marriage by | her father, chose for her wedding a | close-fitting dress of white velvet, | made with a cow! neck, and fastened | down the back with small buttons. | Her veil was arranged in a cap effect, | caught at the back of the neck with | & cluster of pearis and orange blos- | soms. She carried a shower bouquet of roses, gardenias and lilies of the valley. | s A-9° gs Hold Center of Stage in Capital During Late Summer Residential Washington Social Notes Mrs. Wentz Hostess , at Luncheon in Newport. RS. JAMES GRISWOLD WENTZ was hostess at luncheon yesterday at Beaue maris, her place at Newe port, entertaining in compliment to her house guest, Mrs. A. L. Adams of New York. D, Walter A. Wells has returned to Washington from Block Island, R. I, where he spent several weszks devoting much of his time to deep sea fishing. Mrs. Sully B. Roberdeau and her daughters, Miss Virginia and Miss Anne Roberdeau, of Austin, Tex., are passing a few days at the Shoreham before returning to their home. They have been visiting at Sheboygan and Mackinac Island, Mich., and in New - York City. Mrs. Henry Albers has with her her daughter, Mrs. Joe S. Earman, and her three children of Vero Beach, Fla., and her son-in-law and daugh- ter, Lieut. and Mrs. L. H. Frost, and their son, Larry Frost, who came from New York. Mrs. Earman and her children will leave soon for & | vacation at Blue Ridge Summit. Lieut. Frost will sail the first of next | week for the West Coast, where he | will be on duty. Mrs. Frost and their |son will remain here a short time | longer. Miss Virginia Kellerman, who ree turned recently from Murray Bay, left the Capital again today for Cape May, N. J,, and Rehoboth Beach, Del, where she will spend five days. Dr. Harry Hurtt has just returned from a vacation on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and is once more in resi dence at 1765 R street northwest. Mrs. Katharyn C. Fuqua of the Wardman Park Hotel left yesterday for Norwalk, Conn., where she will spend the week end. On Monday Mrs. Fuqua will go to New York for a few days. Miss Katharyn Fuqua, her daughter, who has been visiting Miss Dorothy Nicholson at Delmonicos, has been ill, but hopes to leave today for Cape May, N. J., to remain there over the holiday. Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Barry have returned to their Washington home after a motor trip of several weeks through New England, where they spent much time in Maine. Miss Marguerite Justement, daughe ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Justement, who recently returned aboard the Ile | de France from a few months’' stay in Europe, was entertained at dinner Thursday evening by Miss Leigh Hill, daughter of Col. and Mrs. W. N. Hill. Sharing honors with Miss Justement was Miss Jean Finlayson, and the party was given at the Army and Navy Country Club. Miss Margaret Whitney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George G. Whitndy, | will leave next week for Wells College, | where she will resume her studies. where he has | Miss Pritze Farquhar, a young cousin of the bride, was junior brides- | maid for Miss Morris. Her dress was | of pink moire, made with a full skirt | and short puff sleeves. She cnrrledl a large bouquet tied with peach cnlor; taffeta ribbon. Miss Patty Morris, a | sister of the bride, was the maid of | honor, and the bride's other at- | tendants were Mrs. E. B. Morris, jr.; | Mrs. H. S. Chandler, jr., and Mrs. | Edward H. Walton of Swarthmore, Pa, who was a school friend of the bride at Swarthmore College, and Miss Elizabeth Towne. | ‘They wore matching costumes of powder blue velvet, made with short puff sleeves, buttoned down the back, | and they carried Colonial bouquets of many-color flowers, tied with blue | | satin ribbon. Each attendant had sil- ver slippers and wore rhinestone | buckles on their hair. | Mr. Edwin B. Morris, jr, was best man for the bridegroom, and the ushers were Mr. Robert N. Allen, Mr. H. S. Chandler, jr.; Mr. Edward H. | Walton and Mr. Laurence H. Duvall. Immediately following the ceremony a wedding reception was held at the club house of the Woman's Club of Bethesda, which was attended by sev- eral hundred relatives and friends of the bridal couple. Mrs. Morris, the mother of the bride, who assisted in receiving the guests, wore a black lace jacket dress and & corsage of gardenias. Later in the evening Mr. and Mrs. Mills left for a short trip, after which they will be home on Grosvenor | lane, Bethesda, Md. The bride trav. eled in a suit of blue chenille, with a fox collar and blue accessories. | Among the out-of-town guests present at the wedding were Mr.| and Mrs. Malcolm Farquhar, Miss | Dare Farquhar, Miss Caroline Far- quhar and Miss Nancy Farquhar, all of Kennet Square, Pa.; Mrs. Henry C. Mode of Overbrook Hills, Pa.; Miss Grace Eckman of Forest Hills, N. Y.; Miss Betty Dobson of St. Davids, Pa.; Miss Margaret Cupitt and Miss Mar- jon Best, both of Westfield, N. J. WHERE TO DINE. {7 TOLL HOUSE () oy “SUNDAY SPECIAL” LONG ISLAND DUCK With Mrs. X's NEW APPLE SAUCE You'll Enjoy the Exclusiveness and Seclusion of NG VALLEY The Garden of Beautiful Homes S YOU go from community to community you realize you reach the climax of nature’s beauties and artistic designing in Spring Valley. Nowhere else has nature been so lavish with her endowments. Nowhere else has architec- tural art and builder’s skill expressed themselves with such consistency and excellence. Spring Valley is a community designed for par- ticular people—catering to their love of the beautiful and appreciation of the finesse of living —surrounding it all with the protection of Miller- control—in sensible restrictions, rigidly enforced. Thus does it grow more beautiful and more in- comparable. You'll be interested in the many unusual features of design and equipment in this latest completed home— 4821 Woodway Lane Open for inspection every day and evening—includ- ing Sunday—from 10 to 9. Accesories by Draperies by Brown Tea Pof. Wesley Heights Shops. Out Massachusetts Avenue, turning left into Cathedmal Avenue—and enjoy the scenic drive through Wesley Heights, fol- lowing the “Exhibit Home” Sign into Spring Valley. W. C. & A. N. Miller Developers and Builders 1119 Seventeenth Street District 4464

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