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SO ‘Residential Washington Personals Mr. and Mrs. Belin Will Observe Wed- ding Anniversary. (Continui_)‘roll Pirst Pue,)_ Washington for more than a quarter of a century and is still a moving epirit in local music advancement here. Mrs. Philip Campbell, wife of the former Representative, was hostess et luncheon Thursday at her lovely home, Windsor, on South Arlington Ridge road, in Virginia, for members of the Board of Governors and visit- ing officers of the Garden Clubs of Virginia, who were in session at Alexandria. The 90 or more guests were seated at tables arranged throughout the lower rooms of the house, where & profusion of Fall flowers were used for decorations. Tables were also placed around the lily pool, and on the spacious lawns overlooking: the | Potomac and the City of Washing- ton. Mrs. Campbell was assisted by Mrs, Charles Holden, president of the Alexandria Garden Club. Mr. and Mrs. John Garland Pol- fard, jr., were hosts last evening at & buffet supper in their home at Beech- wood Circle, Arlington, Va., in honor of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Somerville, whose marriage took place in Christ Church in Alexandria last month. Mrs. Somerville is the former Miss Mollie Dorf of New York State and is & member of the White House social secretariat. Mr. Somerville is a mem- ber of a prominent old Virginia fam- ily and is an attorney. Mr. and Mrs. Somerville are making their home in Livingstone Heights, Arlington, Va. CIETY. THE SUNDAY Married Last Week MRS. MILLARD EDELEN, Who was, before her marriage Wednesday, Miss Dorothy Fairall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Fairall, . street, has left for Angola, Ind., where he will be the guest of his father, Mr. Thomas Chalmers McConnell, and the latter's sister, Mrs. Fred Sheldon, in the old McConnell homestead, which was built by his grandparents just 100 years ago this year, and is —Hessler-Henderson Photo. the son of Mrs. Duncan Ingraham Hacsell and the late Mr. Hasell. Mr. and Mrs. Hasell are residing at 1739 Connecticut | 7 LADIES’ ! STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. OCTOBER Capt. Raguse Due Here Noted Rider to Be Honor Guest at Inter- American Horse Show. APT. CARL W. RAGUSE, member of the United States Army Olympic team, who will be remembered for his sen- sational jumping with his great mount Dakota at the Inter-American Horse Show & year ago, will be one of the honor guests at the show this year. Now en route from Fort Clark, Tex., Capt. Raguse will arrive here in time to welcome his teammates from Fort Riley, Kans, and to greet Dakota, considered by authorities to be one of the finest jumpers in the world. Commissioner Melvin C. Hazen, president of the Inter-American Horse Show and Exhibition, scheduled for October 22, 23, 2¢ and 25 at the Meadowbrook Horse Show grounds in Rock Creek Park, Md., and Maj. ager, have completed plans for the impressive opening ceremonies of the classic. At 2 o'clock each day the mounted escort to the colors, together with the 3d Fort Myer Cavalry mounted band, will parade into the arems, honoring the guest of the day. Gov. George-C. Peery of Virginia has designated Dr. E. T. Trice of Richmond as his representative on Thursday, Virginia day. The Secre- tary of War, Mr. Harry H. Woodring, will be the guest of honor on Friday, Army day; Gov. Harry W. Nice of Maryland, Saturday, Maryland day, and Commissioner Hazen of District on Columbia day, Sunday, the final day of the show. The fact that three military teams will compete in the major event this year adds color to the show, Last year only the Chilean team com- 11, 1936—PART THREE. peted for honors with the United Btates military team. This year Mex- ico has sent her crack riders for the great international military team three-day jumping event. Flags of the three countries, mounted on standards, will add to the pageaniry of the show. Boxes are selling splendidly, ac- cording to Maj. Whittaker, and slready requests for reserved seats are swamping his office. Record crowds for the four days are expected and with the added attraction of the interstate civillan team jumping, also & three-day event, the hunting clans from Maryland, Virginia and the Dis- trict are greeting the forthcoming sporting event with more than usual interest. Only blue ribbon winners may qualify for this event. ] Leslie C. Frank to Speak. Leslie C. Prank, sanitary engineer with the United States Public Health Service, is to speak at the conven- tion of the International Association of Milk Dealers at Atlantic Oity Cc- tober 12 to 14. He will discuss “Milk Sanitation” during the meeting of the afternoon of October 12. month, an increase over August, when SOCIETT. there was a & decline, the boatA SANATORIUM SHOWS |52 HEAVY INCREASE siemienten” X' e age daily number of patients was 833 Children’s Tuberculosis Institu- tion Has 162 Daily Average in September. A heavy increase in the number of | § patients under care at the Children's Tuberculosis Sanatorium at Glenn| Dale, Md., during the last month, was | § reported yesterday to the Board of Puolic Welfare by Dr. Daniel Leo Finucane, superintendent. The daily average number of pa- tients for Beptember was 162, the § highest in the two-year history of |8 the institution, as compared with 140 In August of this year and with 105 i September of last year. ) Two wings were added to the build- ing during the last year, but are not | being used because of insufficient per- sonnel. With these in operation the capacity of the institution will be Beauty Salon nearly 400. Gallinger Hospital had a daily aver- (@ 3333 Conn. Ave. CL. 3810 age population of 823 during the last | gy i) f nr AR $10 PERMANENT Ask any one of our operators for de- taile, Remember 50c Service now owned by his aunt. Mr. McCon- | nell was invited this Summer to par- | ticipate in the centennial relebrfilll)ox:\ H T§ of the Pioneers of Steuben County, bu was unable to go on account of illness. | REMODEL D Mr. McConnell has been in ill health since the death two years ago of his | mother, Mrs. Samuel Burleigh Milton, | Additional guests at the supper last evening included Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Smith of Langley, Va.: Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Proctor and Mr. R. C. L. Moncure of Falls Church; Dr. and Mrs. Ray Dawson and Mr. and Mrs. John Stephens of the county. -/ IN THE 1936 ol STYLES Remodeling, cleaning and blocking by scientific factory Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Howes have taken an apartment in the| Kennedy-Warren for the Winter. Mr. | and Mrs. Howes recently came to Washington to live from Chestnut | Hill, Philadelphia, where Mr. Howes | was organist and choir director of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. Mr.| Howes came to Washington to’ take | a similar position at St. John's Church | on Lafayette Square, where he suc- ceeded Mr. T. Guy Lucas. Mr. and Mrs. Lucas have started for an extended motor trip and will visit the national parks and spend part of the Winter in Miami, Fla. who, prior to her marriage to the late Maj. Milton, was Mrs. Thomas Chal- mers McConnell. Mr. McConnell will go from Indiana to South Dakota and will not return to Washington untfl after the middle of November. Mrs. Walter Magnus Donnelly en- tertained yesterday afternoon at her home, 4415 Seventeenth street, in honor of her daughter, Miss Mary Anita Donnelly, whose engagement has been announced to Mr. Brereton Gildert Hughes of Mount Rainier, Md. Miss Donnelly will be married early in December. Mrs. Delos A. Blodgett is again in her home on New Hampshire avenue after & Summer in her Summer home | on Mackinac Island, Mich. She was accompanied here by her sister, Mrs Charles G. Matthews, who is seriously ill after a painful accident at Casa Verona, Mrs. Blodgett's Summer home. Mrs. Blodgett's daughter, Mrs. Henry Farsons Erwin, remained in her Sum- mer home at Mackinac, adjoining her mother’s, because of Mrs. Matthews' illness. and returned here with them. The day they returned here Mrs. | Blodgett received word of the sudden death of her only brother, Mr. Samuel | H. Peck of Grand Rapids, Atlanta,| Ga., and Florida, in his Summer home, which was near Mrs. Blodgett’s. | He has made his home in the Winters with Mrs. Blodgett here and at Miami Beach since the death of his wife. Mr. Henry Parsons Erwin, son-in-law | of Mrs. Blodgett, represented the fam- | {ly at the funeral yesterday in Grand“ Rapigs, Mrs. Blodgett being unable to go there for it because of the serious condition of Mrs. Matthews. The late Mr. Peck and his sisters were the children of the late Prof. William H. | Peck of Atlanta, one of the outstand- | ing citizens of Georgia before and after the Civil War. Mrs. Matthews, during the life of her husband, lived | in Charleston, S. C., and has made | her home here with Mrs, Blodgett | since his death. Mr. and Mrs. James Hope Caldwell of New York have arrived in Wash- ington and are at the Shoreham, ac- | eompanied by their daughter, Mrs. J. Dean Blanchard, who has come to the Capital to meet her husband, Capt. Blanchard, stationed on the Indian- apolis, now in port at Annapolis. They will remain about a week. 1 Mrs. William Henry Owen of Paris, | with her daughters, Miss Karen Owen and Miss Helene Owen, and her son, | Mr. George Hodges Owen, arrived in | this country aboard the Ile de France | and have come to Washington for a month's stay. They have taken an apartment at the Shoreham during their visit. Mrs. Owen and her family were in ‘Washington last Spring, remaining here through April, May and June. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Caverly | have come to Washington from Ger- mantown, Pa., and are making a brief stay at the Shoreham. Mr. and Mrs. William M. Cushman and their son, William Michael Cush- man, jr, are at the Shoreham for the ‘Winter, having closed their home on McGill Terrace. Mrs. Haywood D. Newbold, Mrs. Cushman'’s sister, also is at the Shore- ham, but will move in a month to her new home at 2458 Wyoming avenue. Miss Etta C. Page and Mrs. Marion P. Wright of Portsmouth, N. H., are| spending a brief time at the Dodge. Mr. Chalmers Seymour McConnell, ‘who has been d{viding the Summer be- tween his country place on the Chesa- peake Bay and his home on Sixteenth WE MAKE SHOES LONGER, WIDER OR __ NARROWER. Resole Con- Shoes altered. perfect fit aj om{ort. and rebuild all types of shoes. vert suede shoes into kid. any color. boots ange heels. all styles. Watch for this name NEW YORK SHOE Repairing_and_Remodeling 735 13th St. N.W. - Over Beauty Parlor—3 Steps UP Enter Hall—District 6273 Among the newcomers in Washing- methods, Lowest prices for finest workmanship. VIENNA HAT CO. | 435 11th St. N.W. at E OLNEY, MD. 20 ton this Fall are Col. and Mrs. Cur= | tis C. Schiffeler, who recently arrived to take up their residence in the Na=- tional Capital. Col. and Mrs. Schiffeler came here | from their country home Stasel-Wood Farms, a large estate near Columbus, Ohio. This property has been in Mrs. Famous for Good Food OLD-FASHIONS MARYLAN Cocktail Lounge Schiffeler’'s family since 1803, when | her great-grandfather, Mr. Sclomon Woods, came from Winchester, Va., to Ohio to make his future home. Hed among the earliest | - was prominent pioneer developers of that State. His wife, Elizabeth Robinson Wood of Fairfax, Dolly Madison. Mrs. Schiffeler is de- scended from illustrious English fam- ilies who came to Virginia in the sev- enteenth century and settled in Fair- fax and Winchester, Va. Her maternal ancestry dates back to Admiral Sir Andrew Wood of Largo, Scotland, who founded this branch of the Wood family in the fifteenth cen- tury. Mrs. Schiffeler is a descendant of Chief Justice John Marshall and of Mr. James Wood, tenth Governor of Virginia. Col. and Mrs. Schiffeler are patrons of the arts. She is a graduate of Wells College and the Cincinnati Con- servatory of Music. They will make their home at the Raleigh Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. T. Frank Dolan, jr., of Syracuse, N. Y., who are spending a few days in the Capital to visit Mr. | and Mrs. John F. Moran,. are at the Shoreham. The Dancing Class Starts December 5 The Dancing Class, started some | years ago by Mrs. Joseph Leiter and for many seasons held in the ball room of her residence on Dupont Circle, will open its season Thursday ::\ier;in(. December 5, at the Sulgrave ub, Well-Known Writer Announces Marriage The marriage of Mrs. Marie Spur- geon McNair and Mr. Duncan In- graham Hasell took place Wednesday afternoon at the residence of the Rev. Freeley Robrer who officiated at the ceremony. Mrs. Hasell js the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Porter Spurgeon and is a member of the edi- torial staff of the Washington Herald. Her father was editor of the Washing- ton Post for many years and* also of the Washington Herald. Mr. Hasell is from Charleston, S. C., RE Va., was a godchild of | SWIM for HEALT ADULTS, 40c CHILDREN, 25¢ Includes Towel and Locker INSTRUCTION 6 Lessons, $5.00 Individual Instruction LILLIAN CANNON English Channel Swimmer SWIMMING POOL | AMBASSADOR | | Diamonds Can Be Bought As an Investment Buy direct from the man who cuts them and make & considerable saving. LJ We always have several fine dia- monds. left to us to sell at prices far below the market value. [ ] Credit arrangements can be made. 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NA, 4318 }00000000‘0000““000000: ¥ | 7 ¥ e AR i / ul 2 A/ From Noon to— almost any hour or occasion that calls for a dis- tinguished daytime dress ¢ o . you'll wear these Fall Dresses *25 “Dress-up’’ fashions from Paris are smartly sim- ple in effect, but it is the deceptive simplicity of sophistication. muted elegance of perfection . . . Jelleff's fine collection has that that new season look you want . . . totally fresh in conception and completely different in appearance. Redingotes, Princess and Tunic models; back full- ness, short-and long fitted sleeves, flared skirts and Empire Styles, contrasting fabric and coldr treatment. _Black, cer- tainly, and brown, blue, green, wine and sandalwood. For Misses—14 to 20! For Women—36 to 42! 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Paris Fashions ROMNEY Coats Panels and Borders of Rich Persian Lamb | 115 Forstmann Broadcloths! Forstmann Astrakana! Julliard & Forstmann Hairy Wools! Forstmann Nubby Wools! Lanvin . . . Paquin . . . Schiaparelli . . . famous French designers—all have q pas- sion for Persian and employ it in deft ways ...inpanels and borders . . . in utterly new and. charming softness of treatment and a new grace of silhouette! You'll find these designs adapted in Jelleff's grand collec- tion! Sizes 36 to 44 for the woman and sizes for the little woman, 3572 to 432, You'll find exclusive Romney Coats only at Jelleff's in Washington! Other Paneled Persion Coats from $79.75 to $195. Fashion Coat Shop— Third Floor Sketched —"Marinet'' — Black or Brown Suede Oxford on the famous Tailleur last—featur- ing @ dress heel of comfortable walking height. 10.75 Andrew Geller