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Alexandria :Wedding - Invitations Miss Ada Evangeline ‘ Griesemer Will Be Among Brides. { A LEXANDRIA, Va, October 10.— Mr. and Mrs. John Ernie 4 Griesemer have issued invita- tions for the marriage of their daughter Ada Evangeline to Mr. Mayo Bdwin Barrett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mayo Hugh Barrett, formerly of Den- n, Va., now of Alexandria, Thurs- 3:; evening, October 29, at 8 o'clock fn the First Baptist Church. Fol- Jowing the ceremony there will be a feception in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Griesemer at 15 Russell road. ¥ Miss Margaret Shuman has issued fnvitations for the marriage of her @ister, Miss Frances Josephine Shu- fnan, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Louis Shuman, jr., to Mr. Francis Xavier Kilroy of Washington Satur- day morning, October 25, at 9 o'clock fn St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church. The ceremony will be followed by a wedding breakfast in the home of the bride, at 403 Russell road. * Mrs. Beulah L. Reid announces the tharriage of her daughter Mary Louise to Mr. George M. Stone Saturday, September 26, in the parsonage of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, the pastor, the Rev.'Dr. John Paul Tyler, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Stone are living at 34 Alexandria avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Jamison announce the marriage of their daugh- fer Mary Lou to Mr. George Madison Coleman of Washington Saturday, October 3, in the rectory of St. Rita's Roman Catholic Church, the Rev. L. J. Koster officiating. Mrs. William Augustus Moncure and her son, Mr. Thomas Jefferson Mon- cure, have leased their home in Belle Haven for the Winter months and bave taken an apartment in the An- ¢horage, at 603 Queen street. Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Turner re- turned this week after a stay of several months with Mrs. Alice Turner in Bluemont. Mrs. D. C. Sands of Richmond, for- merly of Washington, president of the Garden Club of Virginia, and Mrs. Herbert McK. Smith of Staunton were guests this week of Mrs. Gardner L. Boothe while attending the sessions of the Board of Governors of the State Garden Club. Mrs. Boothe, who is first vice president, entertained at din- per Tuesday evening in honor of her guests and the other members of the | board. Others entertaining at dinner Tuesday evening were: -Mrs. Charles ¥. Holden. president of the Alexandria Garden Club, and Mrs. Frank Mason Dillacd, the past-president. Mrs. Malcolm Matheson was hostess @t luncheon for the visiting delegates Wednesday in her home, Wellington Villa, near Mount Vernon. That after- noon Mrs. Charles Henry Smith gave & tea and later the delegates were guests of honor at a dinner given a‘ the Lord Fairfax Country Club by the members of the local club at which Mrs. Holden, the president, and Mrs. William J. Boothe acted as hostesses. Mrs. C. A. Swann Sinclair, national $President of the Children of the Amer- ican Revolution and vice regent of th> Virginia State Society, N. S, D. A. R., and Mrs. Eleanor §. Washington Ho ard, national past vice president, general for life, went to Richmond Tuesday to attend the annual board meeting of the Virginia D. A. R. Miss Bertha Harris is the guest of hér sister, Mrs. Charles Carter in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gaston and Miss Mary Gaston entertained at din- ner Sunday evening in one of the private dining rooms at the Anchorage in honor of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Fussell ©f Washington. Mrs. Mary Kerns and Mrs. Anne :mton are visiting in Rocky Mount, . C. Miss Phyllis Bower of Fort Scre- | ¥en, Chatham County, Ga. is the guest of Mrs. O. N. Johnston. Mr, and Mrs, George R. Hill, with their children, George Robert, Hill, 3d, and Martha Macy Hill, have gone to Norfolk, where they will live in the future. Dr. and Mrs. Royd R. Sayers gave @ reception and tea Sunday afternoon in honor of Dr. and Mrs. James Ed- | = mund Ives of Washington. Capt. and Mrs. W. A, Smith have OCIETY. THE SUNDAY STAR. ‘W Troop No. 8. gone to Richmond to spend a month with Mr. and Mrs. August Frick and then will leave for Honolulu, where | Capt. Smith has been ordered for duty. Mr. Richard Lahey of the Corcoran Art School in Washington, and Mrs. Lahey have returned from Ogunquit, | Me., where they have been since early {in the Summer, and have taken the | house and studio at 107 South Lee street. Last Winter Mr. and Mrs, Lahey lived at 505 South Lee street. Mrs. F. P. Dickenson of Craigville, Va., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George Timberlake. Mr. and Mrs. William F. Lewis and | Miss Patsy Lewis have returned from West Point, where they visited the | former’s son, Cadet William F. Lewis, jr., atethe United States Military Academy. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Fisher are | visiting in Martinsburg, W. Va. | Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bletwood have | gone to Norfolk to spend two Weeks | with relatives. - ! Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Norton have | as their guest their niece, Miss Betty !Grn,v Norton, of Washington. Mr. | Norton’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Norton, and their children, who were their guests, have | left for their home in Los Angeles. | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hadley are | spending the month of October with Irelm\'es in Atlanta. Miss Helen Hanback, accompanied by Miss Mildred Smith of Washing- ton, sailed from Baltimore yesterday for a trip to Cuba. Lieut. Comdr. and Mrs. Gilbert | | Barlow Myers spent last week end in Richmond and attended the marriage |of Miss Frances Swasey Morgan, | Gaughter of Mrs. Richard Davis Mor~ | gan, to Mr. Fletcher Evans Camp- | bell, which took place Saturday after- | | noon, October 3. in the home of the | {bnde‘s mother, in Byrd Park Court. | Mr. and Mrs. Manly Olin Simpson | | announce the marriage of their | | daughter Nancy Burgess to Mr. Tur- | ner Ashby Slaughter of Front Rovyal | | Tuesday, September 22, in Washing- | ton. Mr. Slaughter is the son of | | Mrs. Ravmond Francis Slaughter and | | the late Mr. Slaughter of the Oaks, in | Rappahannock County. | Rev. Z. B. Phillips to Speak. Rev. Z. Barney Phillips, chaplain of | the Senate. will address the Sons of the Revolution in the District at 8:30 | p.m. Wednesday at the Willard Hotel. He will discuss “The Crisis in Europe.” | He returned recently from a trip abroad. A buffet supper will be served. e Norway's iron and steel mills are | busy. 3 Swagger Sports Coat BY BARBARA BELL. F IT'S a new coat you're thinking about, and who isn't, you'll in- stantly cast your vote in favor of this swank model. Ideal for foot ball, polo, over your two-piece suit and even your riding habit. _ Choose a heavy tweed, novelty @oolen or suede cloth and the effect %ill go over in a 100 per cent all- American way. It's as easy to sew as to say your A, B, C's. Right now you'll $ant to wear it with the generous eollar wide open, showing off a giddy bright scarf, and when frost nips the §ir you'll bundle up the collar and keep warm. Only three buttons to decorate fhe background and twin pockets to hold your tickets, gloves, small change #nd what not. Send for your pattern fmmediately and be convinced how @asily this pattern goes together, " Barbara Bell pattern No. 1963-B is pvailable for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40, 42 and 44. Corresponding bust meas- frements 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Bize 16 (34) requires 3 yards of 54- fnch material. Three and three-eighths ards of 39-inch material is required r lining size 16. ? Send for the Fall Barbara Bell Pat- fern Book. Make yourself attractive, :ncncll and becoming clothes, se- cting designs from the Barbara Bell well-planned, easy-to-make patterns. Interesting and exclusive fashions for Httle children and the difficult junior ege; slenderizing, well-cut patterns for the mature figure; afternoon resses for the most particular young vomen and matrons and other pat- gerns for special occasions are all to be found in the Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Send 15 cents today for. your opy. Address orders to The Evening tar. BARBARA BELL, ‘Washington Star. Inclose 25 cents in coins for Master CORRRNTEED George’s FRIGIDAIRE 4 Store Near Your Home 814-816 F St. N.W. 3107-3109 M St. N.W. 2015 14th St. N.W. 1111 H Se. N.E All stores -open till 9 P.M. District 1900 Three women prominent in Girl Scout work who will attend the twenty-second national convention of the organization opening in Cincinnati Wednesday. Left to right: Mrs. Anson Phelps Stokes, commissioner of the District; Mrs. Gertrude L. Bowman, prominent in the Dis- trict Girl Scouts, and Mrs. LeRoy Barton, member of the Washington Council and leader of —Harris-Ewing Photos. Mrs.Mitchell Returns to Middleburg Mrs. Samuel Sands Takes House for Fall Season. OUDOUN COUNTY, Va, Oc- tober 10.—Mrs. William Mitch- ell, with her daughter and son, who have been guests of Mr. Mitchell's parents in Detroit for the Summer months, have returned to their home, Boxwood, at Middleburg. Mrs. Samuel Sands of Far Hills, Long Island, has taken a house in Middleburg for the hunting season. Mr. and Mrs, Howard M. Hoge left this week for Charlottesville, where they will attend the annual session of the Virginia W. C. T. U. They will visit other points in Virginia before returning to their estate, Evergreen Home, at Lincoln. Mr. and Mrs. Hoge have issued invitations to an at home on Tuesday, October 20, in celebration of their golden wedding anniversary. Miss Florence Manning of Leesburg is spending some time in New York City and in Scarsdale, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Pere Wilmer and | their daughter, Miss Margaret Wilmer, have closed their Leesburg home and have returned to Washington for the ‘Winter. Another Leesburg resident who has returned to Washington for the Win- ter is Mrs. William A. Moffett, who last week opened her home on Mass- achusetts avenue. Mr. and Mrs. George Babson have returned to their home in Leesburg ASHINGTON, D. C.. OCTOBER 11, 1936—PART THREE. SOCIETY. after & stay of several months in Maine. ‘Ot interest in the county is the announcement of the marriage of Miss Josephine Kemper Osborne, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Pran* Wootham Osborne, formerly of Loudoun, now living in Farmville, and Mr. James Ware Ashton, son of Mr. Charles Henry Ashton and the late Mrs. Ash- ton of Washington. The marriage took place in the Presbyterian Church in Frederick, Md., September 12, with the pastor of the church, Rev. Charles E. ‘Wehler performing the ceremony. The bride attended the Radford and Fred- ericksburg State Teachers Colleges and has been a member of the Middleburg faculty, for several year. Mr. Ashton is a graduate of the Episcopal School of Lynchburg and of Davidson College, Davidson, N. C,, and is employed in business in Washington. Mrs. Grafton Greenlaw of Fred- ericksburg visited Miss Mildred Rus- sell at Oaklands this week. Mrs. Greenlaw will be remembered as Miss Matilde Garner, former county -zenci in_Loudoun, where she is very popular. | Mrs. Lewis T. McGavack of Water- | ford was hostess at an afternoon bridge party on Tuesday, wbcn‘lhe; entertained 16 guests. | Mrs. Owen Thomas, jr., and Miss . Elizabeth Thomas were joint hostesses | at an evening bridge party Wednesday, when their guests include Dr. and Mrs, | Bernard A. Brann, Dr. and Mrs. Wil- | liam H. Turner, jr, Mr. and Mrs, | Samuel C. Graham, Mr. and Mrs. | Stanley Presgraves, Dr. and Mrs. J. Samuel Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. Her- bert H. Cooley, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas N. Myers and Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Reid. | Maj. and Mrs. Joseph T. Clement | and their son, Joseph Clement, jr., have closed their Round Hill home and have taken an apartment in Washington for | the Winter. Maj. and Mrs. Clement | expect to spend occasional week ends at Round Hill. | Announcement has been made by Mr. and Mrs, Henry T. Palmer of Waterford of the marriage of their daughter, Frances Heaton, to Mr. Robert Lee Cullen, also of Waterford. The marriage was performed at the Baptist parsonage in Leesburg, by the Rev. H. B. Jennings, September 30, -———— Plan Contract Bridge Classes. Registrations for classes in contract bridge will be received at the Hine Junjor High School, Seventh and C streets southeast, tomorrow at 8 pm. W. Roy Astleford will be the instructor | for the classes, which are under the supervision of the Community Center Department. CHARGE DROPPED Case Against James A. McNamara Nolle Prossed. At the request of his alleged vie- tim, assault charges were dropped yesterday against James A. McNa- mara, coach for the boxer, Marty Gallagher. | George E. King, manager of Joe | Turner’s Arena, told the district at- | torney's office he did not wish to prosecute. McNamara had pleaded not guilty. | His $25 collateral was refunded when Judge Walter J. Casey nolle prossed ! the case. Fashion Dictates Rollsof Curls— AND FASHION KNOWS 5 BEST. Solu Now is the time for o new coiffure that will flatter your lotest high hat. Be smart—have wide waves with soft rolls of curls. Solu oil A New Oil Tonic This includes & special s A Special Oil _$350 hampoo. i $2.50 is applied directly to the hair 25¢ & 35¢ Service WARNER BEAUTY STUDIO 1318 F Street National 8930 Between Palace & Capitol Theaters. That meets ofl 5 standards for re- frigeration buying. NO MONEY DOWN Take a long time to pay. New 1935 Frigidaire—3 Cubic Foot Regular List 4 Cubic Foot Reco Regnlar List Price $166.50 Frigidaire— nditioned Price $119.50 4 Cubie Foot Frigidaire— Repossessed Regular List 9 Price $119.50 ubie Foot Frigidaire— Reconditioned Regular List Price $300.00 USERS OF AUTOMATIC REFRIGERATION HAVE CHOSEN Many Other Reconditioned Models At Great Savings and Guaranteed Long Easy Credit Terms GEORGE'S RADIO CO. 814816 F St. N.W. Kindly have your representative call with_ detailed infor- mation about the New 1936 Frigidaire at Reduced Prices.