Evening Star Newspaper, December 26, 1936, Page 28

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C—8 SOCIETY. Record of Social Activitie§ i The Secretary of State And Mrs. Cordell Hull Sailing Today for Home 'Assistant Postmaster General and Mrs. Howes Will Present Their Daughter at Tea Dance Today. HE Secretary of State and Mrs. Cordell Hull, who have been \in Argentina for several weeks, will sail today for this country. The Secretary and Mrs. Hull have been extensively enter- tained during their stay in Buenos Aires, where the Secretary attended the peace conference. The First Assistant Postmaster.General and Mrs. W. W. Howes will present their daughter Miss Mary Senate Howes to society this afternoon at a tea dance at the Mayflower Hotel. The United States Minister to Albania, Dr. Hugh Gladney Grant, who returned earlier in the month to his post at Tirana after leave in the United States, wad joined there by Mrs. Grant at the beginning of the Christmas holidays. Miss Louise Grant, daughter of the Minister and Mrs. Grant, remained in Washing- ton, where she is in school. Senator and Mrs. William Gibbs McAdoo have come from their home in Los Angeles and are established at the Shoreham for the season. They passed five days visiting Senator McAdoo’s daughter, Mrs. Francis Taylor, immediately before coming to Washington. Col. Albert Gilmore, U. S. A, has joined his son-in-law and | daughter, Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Petrey of London at the Beverly in New York. Mr. Augusto 8. Boyd, jr., son of the Minister of Panama and Senora de Boyd, and Mr. Luis Vallarino were hosts at a dinner party at the Shoreham Thursday evening in honor of Miss Luz Chiari, who has come from New Orleans, where she attends school, to spend the Christmas holidays with her brother-in-law and sister, Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Lewis, and in honor of Miss Dora Boyd, sister of the host, Mr. Boyd. Among the company were Miss Lola Paredes, Miss Maria Arias, Miss Marcella Arias, Miss Gladys Arias, Miss Olga Arosemena, Miss Yolanda Alfaro, Miss Eugenia Sosa, Miss Amelia Mendez, Mr. Harry Strunz, Mr. Octavio Vallarino, Mr. Octavio Mendez, Mr. Manuel Precido, Mr. Miguel Moreno, jr.; Mr. Mariano Gasteacoro, Mr. Gaspar Pacheco, Mr. Rogelio Alfaro, Mr. Richard Novey, Mr. Richard Martinelly and Mr. Adolfo Arias, jr. The Federal communications commissioner and Mrs. Eugene Octave Sykes will have as their guests during the holiday season Miss Kate Farnsworth of Memphis, Tenn.; Miss Georgia Dortch of Aberdeen, Miss., and their son, Mr. Charles Scott Sykes, chief legal counsel of the P. W. A. in Little Rock, Ark. On New Year day Mrs. Octavia Sykes-Stevenson and Miss Mal Sykes will be co-hostesses at an eggnog party at their parents’ home on Cleveland avenue, when their brother and Miss Farnsworth will be the honor guests. Maj. and Mrs. Edwin H. Johnson and their three children are the guests of Mrs. Johnson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Spengler, at the latter’s residence on Euclid street, until January 1. They motored here from their home in Montpelier, Vt. Midshipmen Frank Quady of Minneapolis and Frederic Muir of North Dakota will be house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert E. Hyatt and Miss Phyllis Mary Hyatt, 3318 Nineteenth street, over the holi- days. Among other entertainment planned is a dinner at the National Press Club, at which Miss Glenn Jonscher, 427 Manor place; Mid- shipman Donald Hardy of Minneapolis, Miss Virginia Guernsey, |Highland Apartments, and Miss Betty Larimer, 4240 Nineteenth | street, will, with Midshipmen Quady and Muir, be among the guests. Cadet Harry Feeham, jr., of the Valley Forge Military Academy, ‘Wayne, Pa., is spending his holidays with his grandfather, Mr.J. G. | Townsend, 5104 Fourteenth street. THIEVES GET $1,300 IN DRESSER DRAWER Grocer’s Loss Is Heaviest of Those Reported in Series of Yule- tide Robberies. Christmas eve receipts totaling 61,300 were stolen from a dresser drawer at the home of Samuel Gevin- | son, grocer, 100 E street, he reported | to police last night. His was the| loss among a number of housebreaking and robbery cases re- ported during the day. Tilie Backman, manager of & grocery at 441 N street, reported she was held up at the point of & pistol by a colored man and robbed | of about “$2> Money and personal effects totaling $113 in value were stolen from the home of Mayne Scott, 1315 Massachusetts avenue. The loot included $100 in bills. Courtney R. Thomas, 2006 Bryant street northeast, reported he was cut | on the face and head by a colored | man who robbed him of $1 near his e. Officials of the Argyle Riding School, Twenty-ninth and K streets, reported the theft of four saddles valued at] 875 each, The burglary was discovered | today. | P 1. C. C. ORDERS HEARING ON TRANSPORT PERMIT Application of Davidson Transfer & Storage Co. Comes Up Jan- uary 15 in Baltimore. By the Associated Press. The Interstate Commerce Com- mission today ordered a hearing held January 15 in Baltimore on the ap- plication of the Davidson Transfer & Btorage Co. of Baltimore, asking a permit for the interstate transporta- tion of commodities. The company would operate over ‘various routes including between Bal- timore and New York City, between Baltimore and Washington via An- napolis, to Alexandria, Va., and to Littlestown, Pa. The application will be heard by L. H. McDanlel, an examiner, at the Public Service Commission offices in Baltimore. Four Years Work Ahead. More than 27,000 tons of steel will be used in the construction of the new Howrah bridge over the Hooghly River at Calcutta, India, which contractors company st & cost of $8,000,000. Its main span will be 1,500 feet, and it carry & road 71 feet wide, which provide eight lanes of vehicles. It one of the biggest structures of cantilever type ip the world. The for tower? that will rise 270 g i will be 325 feet long. . Belgium's coal industry is it e the road level, while the | enjoying | Miss Peggy Mather Engaged to Marry Walter L. Clark, Jr. Ll!.’UT. COL. AND MRS. JOHN MATHER announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Peggy, to Mr. ‘Walter Lucas Clark, jr, yesterday afternoon at & Christmas reception in their home. The wedding is planned for the Spring. Miss Mather graduated from the Columbus, Ohio, School for Girls and Columbus. She is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. Mr. Clark is the son of Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Clark of Wesley Heights, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and now is associated with the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. in Akron, Ohio. . CUBA MAY REPLACE AMBASSADOR TO U. S. Minister to London May Be Shifted Here, According to Havana Officials. By the Associated Press. HAVANA, December 26.—Attaches at the State Department indicated last night Cuba's Ambassador to the United States, Dr. Guillermo Patter- son y Jauregui, would be replaced by Dr. Pedro Martinez Praga, Cuban Minister in London. ‘These sources expressed the opinion Dr. Patterson would come to Cuba for from the Ohio State University at; THE EVENING STAR Miss Sard Engaged To Wdd Mr. Trafford; Announcemeént Today 1\ RS. INGALLS SARD announces “"% the engagement of her daughter, Abigail Ingalls, to Mr. William Brad- ford Trafford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry D. Trafford of Newtown, Conn. Miss Sard is a great granddaughter of Mr. Melville E. Ingalls of Cincin- nati and a daughter of Mr. Russell E. Sard of New York. She made her debut several years ago both in New York and in Washington. Mr. Trafford attended St. Paul's School at Concord, N. H, Harvard University and Harvard Law School, and at the present time is practicing law in New York. Miss Sard and Mr. Trafford plan to be married shortly in Washington, where Mrs, Sard resides at 2552 Massachusetts avenue. Miss \X’;ght Bride Of Mr. Childs This Morning in Chapel A ‘WEDDING, complete in all the traditions of the military service, | took place this morning, when Miss! Mildred Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall S. Wright of Oak Crest, Va., became the bride of Lieut. George W. Childs of Fort Sam Houston, Tex., son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Childs of Belden, Nebr. The wedding took place in the chapel at Fort Myer, Chaplain Ralph C. Deibert officiating at 11 o'clock. Decorations were in keeping with the season, with palms, poin- settias and holly effectively arranged in the chancel and white lilies and lighted tapers on the altar. Preceding the ceremony Mrs. John Stockett of | Oak Crest gave a program of organ music, and played the wedding | marches. The bride, who was escorted by her father, wore an ivory satin gown, fash- lfoned on princess lines, with high neck trimmed with flowers of the satin. The sleeves were long and pointed and the skirt had a medium-length train. Her long veil of tulle was edged with rose point lace and held in place | with a coronet of pearls and she car- | ried a huge arm bouquet of white bridal roses. Her only attendant was Miss Mar- thena Harrison Williams of Washing- . WASHI iTQN, Engagement Whose mother, Mrs. Ingalls Sa to Mr. William Bradford Traffor Traflord of Newtown, Conn, MISS ABIGAIL INGALLS SARD, Weddings of Interest Announced rd, announces her engagement d, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry D. ton, great granddaughter of Presi- | dent Benjamin Harrison, who is at | home for the holidays from the South- | ern Seminary at Buena Vista, Va.| Miss Williams wore an adorable gown | of turquoise blue taffeta, made with tight-fitting bodice, short puffed | sleeves and full skirt. The back of the skirt was particularly effective, having a bustle effect and insets of alternating stripes of blue and du- bonnet taffeta, extending the length of the skirt. To complete her cos- tume she wore a small turban-shaped | hat, fashioned of the rolled dubonnet taffeta, with a short face veil, and carried American Beauty roses. Lieut. Louis Frederick de Lesdernier, who also is stationed at Fort Sam Houston, acted as best man and the ushers were Lieut. Alden K. Sibley and Lieut. Roy McCarty of Fort Belvoir and Lieut. Richard M. Bauer, Lieut. Charles M. Schutt of Fort Myer. At the conclusion of the ceremony Lieut. and Mrs. Childs passed under | an arch of sabers formed by the ush- ers and left soon afterward for Bel- den, Nebr., to visit Lieut. Child’s par- ents, before continuing their journey to Fort Sam Houston. The bride's traveling costume was a rust color knitted suit, with which she wore a rust woolen coat with cream wolf col- lar and black accessories. The bride- groom was graduated from the United States Military Academy last June. His bride, is a graduate of Western High School and the Washington School for Secretaries. Miss Marlatt \;isits In Jacksonville Miss Constance Marlatt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Lester Mar- latt, left last evening for Jackson- ville, Fla. where she will visit Miss Margaret Taylor, a classmate at col- lege. Miss Taylor, who is a student at Smith College, | debut during the holidays and Miss | Marlatt will be among those assisting at the “coming out” party. Mr. and Mrs. Marlatt have with them for Christmas and the holidays their son-in-law and daughter, Lieut. Joseph K. Dickey, U. 8. A, and Mrs. Dickey, with their two children, who came early in the week from Platts- burg Barracks, N. Y, where Lieut. Dickey is on duty. | duty in the State Department under the new President, Federico Laredo 34 Bru, who took office Thursday. o Cardinal Dougherty to Rome. _PHILADELPHIA, December 26 (#). ~—Cardinal Dougherty, nominated by the Pope as his representative at the International Eucharistic Congress in Manila next February, left today for New York, where he will sail for Rome for an audience with Pope Plus XI, before going to the Philippines. He is scheduled to reach Manila Febru- ary 1 and will preside at the formal opening of the Congress the next day. Neighi*ors Get Mower. Neighbors in Inchaffray street, in Perth, Scotland, who borrowed the lawn mower of Bachelor James Keith, need not ask for it again. In his will, just filed, Keith stipulated “My lawn mower will be left for the good of Inchaffray street.” Another clause read: “No tombstones are to be erected over my remains, and my funeral must . | be conducted with the strictest econ= omy. No gossiping tea meetings are to be held, and everything possible done to make the most of my estate.” And he wanted “no scrambling or wheedling to get hold of things after I am out of the way.” —_— Arbitration Clause Disputed. Many employers in Prance are pro- testing against the compulsory arbitras tion clause in labor contracts de- record prosperity. N manded by the government. 9 day to present her. will make her | Miss Nancy Bent Gough Bride of Mr. August Millard. HE marriage of Miss Nancy Ben! | Gough, daughter of Mrs. Annie | Sothoron Gough and the late Mr. Richard Gough, of Soutn- | ern Maryland and Laurel, Md, and Mr. August Millard, son of Mr. and| Mrs. Brunard Millard, also of Laurel, | took place this morning at St. Phillip Episcopal Church in Laurel, the Re John J. Neighbor officiating. Ths ceremony was attended only by mem- | bers of the immediate families. The bride wore a frock of green | silk crepe, with a small velour hat| and accessories to match. Her shoul- . der bouquet was of rosebuds. Foi- iowing the ceremony a wedding break- | fast was held at the home of the bride's mother in Laurel, when there were about 35 guests. After their wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs, Millard | will make their home in Laurel. & The bride is a graduate of Mary- land State Normal School at son and of the Washington School for Secretaries. Mr. Millard attend- | ed John Hopkins University and is finishing & course in chemical en- gineering at George Washington Uni- versity. He is a member of the Kappa Sigma Fraternity. Among out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. James 8. Gough, and their daughter, Miss Anne Gough, of Nor- by her father, wore a becoming beige crepe gown, with a small off-the-face hat of brown felt trimmed in brown velvet roses, with a nose veil. Her bouquet was of orchids. Later in the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. | Gusky left for New York and will sail | today on the S. S. Queen of Bermuda on a 10-day cruise to Bermuda. After | January 15 they will be at home at | Embassy Towers, 1620 Fuller street. Mrs. Oppenheimer, mother of the bride, wore a silver and black tailored lame dress and a corsage bouquet of | gardenias. Among the out-of-town guests were | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Breslau of Tren- | ton, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. Abram Bres- lau of Baltimore, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Gusky of Pittsburgh, Mr. and | Mrs, Abram Gusky of McKeesport, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs. Hargld Breslau of | Martinsburg, W. Va. Musgrove-Kiefer Engagement Told Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Musgrove have announced the engagement of | their daughter Catherine Ellen to Mr. ‘Wilton M. Kiefer of Takoma Park, Md. The announcement was made vesterday and no date is set for the folk, Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Gough and their sons, Robert Gough and Page Gough, of Hunting- ton, W. Va. Miss Oppenheimer Wed” To Mr. Samuel Gusky. The lage of Miss Ferda Oppen- hetmer,nmggzr of Mr. and Mrs. Max Oppenheimer® and Mr. Samuel H. Gusky of this city, formerly of Mc- 1l(euport, Pa., took place yesterday at | 1 o'clock at the home of the bride, 1358 Monroe street. The ceremony was per- | formed by Rev. Dr. Abram Simon of | the Eighth Street Temple before the bay window of the drawing room, using an improvised altar with a back- ground of palms, ferns and white blos- soms. The ceremony was witnessed by the immediate relatives of the young couple and was followed by a buffet breakfast. The bride, who was given in marriage wedding. Miss Hessick’s Tea. Miss Lucile May Hessick will be hostess at tea tomorrow afternoon entertaining informally from 4 to 7 o'clock in the home of her mother, Mrs. W. H. Hessick at 1428 Montague street. Miss Hessick is spending the holi- | days with her mother, having com | from Duke University, where she is a | member of the senior class. Among | | her guests will be several of her class- | | mates. Miss Grace Carter and Miss | Dorothy Schutz will preside at the tea table, | Japan Expects Rice Surplus. Japan expects a surplus of rice next year. and has restricted importations of the grain from the United States. D. C., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1936. Residents In the News Miss Ramsdell and Brother Visit in Pennsylvania. 1SS ELLEN KEY RAMSDELL and Mr. Charles Benjamin Ramsdell, daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Ramsdell of Clopper, Md. left this morning to motor to Wawa, Pa., where they will be guests over Sunday of Mrs, Thomas Willcox. Miss Ramsdell will spend part of her visit with Miss Marjorie Santa Marie, who has been her guest at Clopper frequently, and Mr. Ramsdell will visit Mr. Charles Taney before returning with his sis- ter the middle of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Livingston of Lyon Village, Va., are entertaining their sons-in-law and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin F. Brown of Roches- ter, N. Y., and Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert L. Woodside of Amherst, Mass., also their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Livingston of Bridgeport, Conn., and another son, Mr. Robert Livingston, who is a student at Amer- 1can University. Mr. and Mrs. Brown are dividing their time with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Brown in their home in Takoma Park, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Frank 8. Hinrichs of Riverdale, Md., are spending a few days in New York City. Mr. and Mrs. J. Foster Hagan en- tertained a company of 12 at dinner last evening in their home in Way- croft, Va., in compliment to Mrs. Hagan's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Michael O'Connor of Evanston, Ill, who are visiting in Washington during the holidays. ‘This afternoon Mrs. Hagan will en- tertain at a large Christmas party from 2 until 4 o'clock for her young daugitter, Mary Ann Massey Hagan. ‘There will be games_ and at 4 o’clock Santa will appear, and the 60 little | folks will receive individual gifts. The | decorations in the home are poin- settia’s and holly used artistically throughout the charming rooms, and & brilliantly lighted tree will add an- other note of Christmas cheer, Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Venske en- tertained at a “neighbor dinner” at their home in Aurora Hills, Va. ‘Tuesday evening. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Blankenhorn and Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Skidmore, all of Twenty- fourth street. Miss Betty Sue Young, who attends Wellesley College, is spending the | holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis H. Young, in Riverdale, Md. Miss Young, a graduate last June of the Hyattsville (Md.) High School, won the Wellesley scholarship offered for the Washington area. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Dawson have with them this week in their Lyon Village home the former's brother, Mr. William P. Dawson of Brooklyn, N. Y. - Mr. Dick Duckett parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Howard Duckett, in Hyattsville, Md.. for the holidays from the McDonogh School in Baltimore, Miss Clara Mae Tarbett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Tarbett of Takoma Park, Md., who attends the University of Maryland, is passing the week end in Cincinnati as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. McKnight. She will return in a few days, accom- panied by Mr. Erroll Wilson Mc- Knight, who will spend New Year as the guest of Mr. and Mrs, Tarbett. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Flack of Ta- oma Park, Md., have as their week- end guests Mr. Flack's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gillingham Flack of Ger- mantown, Pa, who passed Christ- mas here. Mrs. Flack will leave Mon- day for New York, to visit her par- ents, Comdr. and Mrs. Chester Hardy Jones, for several days. The Misses Louise and Margaret Russell of Sligo Park Hills, Md., are in Crown Point, N. Y., for the holi- days and will return about January 4. Left: Misc Laura Amonette Gordon, daughter of Mr. a..d Mrs. John B. Gordon, who gave a large and brilliant tea dance Tues- Right: Miss Margaret Lillington Boyden, who was presented by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hanson Boyden of Glendale, Md., at a tea Tuesday at the Colonial Dames Club on New Hampshire avenue, 13 » 4 Pre-Christmas Debutantes in and Near the Capital —Hessler-kenderson Photos. is with his| SOCIETY. n the Capital and Its Environs 24 Mr. James M. Beck in Washington RS. BECK, widow of former Representative James M. Beck, has with her for the holidays her son, Mr. James M. Beck of London. Mrs. Beck ex- pected to have her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Snowden Fahnestock, and the Mtter’s children with her for Christmas, but Mr. and Mrs. Fahnestock were here for a few days early in the week and returned to New York to be with the children, who are not well enough to come to Washington. They will have their visit here later in the Winter. Mr. and Mrs. Ford Evans Young, jr., are entertaining at their apartment in the Klingle this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock at the first of a series of “at homes” to be given during the ‘Winter season. They will be assisted in receiving by their parents, Mr. and. Mrs. Ford E. Young of Alta Vista, Md, and Capt. and Mrs. Miller V. Parsons of Quantico, Va. Mrs. Clayton B. Vogel, wife of Col. Vogel, U. 8. M. C., and Mrs. Onan A. Hydrick, wife of Col. Hydrick, U. 8. A., retired, will assist at the tea table. Mrs. Young, jr., is the former Miss Verna Lenore Parsons, whose marriage took place in October at St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church. Mr. and Mrs. William Chester Chris- | ty sailed recently aboard the Hansa for England, where they will be through the holidays. They will join Mrs. Christy’s mother, Mrs. Hamilton Condon, and Mr. Condon aboard their | yacht for a cruise in southern waters. | Guest of His Mother for Holidays. Mrs. Christy before her marriage last Spring was Miss Diane Maitland. Dean and Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle have with them for the holidays their son, Henry Grattan Doyle, jr., who is attending Harvard College, and their daughter, Miss Marion Wade Doyle, a student at Radcliffe College. The former German Consul in New York and Mrs. Paul Schwarz are at the Traymore in Atlantic City for the holidays. ’ Mrs. P. D. Meigs will close her home at 1734 P street shortly and will sail Thursday, January 7, aboard the Franconia for a cruise around the world. Mrs. Meigs will visit countries in the Southern Hemisphere, includ- ing Japan, China and India, and will return at the end of May through the Panama Canal. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Raymond Smith have issued cards for an at home this afternoon from 5 to 7 o'clock. Mrs. Smith will be assisted by Mrs. Fred C. Meier, Mrs. Willlam B. Hammer and Mrs. Thomas Burke. Mrs. L Stoddard Taylor of Wash- ington is staying at the Hotel War- | wick in Philadelphia. Mrs. William Curtis Demorest and her daughter, Miss Charlotte Demo- rest, are at the Shoreham for the holiday season. Miss Julia Carolan of Savannah, Ga., is spending the Winter at the Martinique. Midshipman-Cadet Ball Last Evening Gala Holiday Party ‘The annual Midshipman-Cadet ball held last night at the Mayflower was & brilliant climax to the social ac- tivities leading up to Christmas. The ballroom was gayly decorated with flags and pennants of both the Military and Naval Academies and Christmas decorations. The ball was sponsored by Mrs. Helen Ray Hagper, who stood at the head of the receiving line. With her were Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Walter S. Grant, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Freder- ick Coleman, the commandant of the Navy Yard and Mrs. George Pettengill, Lieut. Col. and Mrs. Alexander D. Surles, Mrs. John W. Joynes, Mrs. Allen Chantry and Mrs. John Clay Goodloe. The girls on the Army and Navy Committee, with their escorts from both schools, formed long lines through | which the guests of honor were es- corted to their boxes. A supper was served at midnight at small tables lighted with red candles. Miss Marjorie Grant was chairman of the girls’ Army Committee and serv- ing with her were Miss Charlotte Han- num, Miss Betsy Barnett, Miss Arley Jane Barnett, Miss Ellen Bryden, Miss Marion Bryden, Miss Anne Cornelius, Miss Eileen Cummins, Miss Carol Fries, Miss Alice Prink, Miss Benedicta Gannon, Miss Mary Gentry, Miss Sue Hardenbergh, Miss Mary Louise Heavy, Miss Virginia Keyes. Miss Nancy Kilburn, Miss Nancy Motter, Miss Lillian Nalle, Miss Rose- mary Newton, Miss Grace O'Hara, Miss Hebe Reynolds, Miss Frances Roffe, Miss Sheila Sultan, Miss Betty Sunderland and Miss Marjorie Walker. Miss Betsy Rowan, daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Stephen C. Rowan, headed the Navy committee and Miss Christine Gawne was the vice chair- man. Their aides were: Miss Edith Beardall, Miss Eleanor Carroll, Miss Florence Cauthen, Miss Caroline Chantry, Miss Anne Claude, Miss Neddie Dacey, Miss Patricia Griffin, Miss Ellen Gudger, Miss Brenden Hatch, Miss Betty Haynes, Miss Betty Hill, Miss Josephine Hill, Miss Ruth Kelly, Miss Nancy Kittelle, Miss Carol Lathrop, Miss Beverly Moffett, Miss Mary Norris, Miss Elizabeth Reed, Miss Betty Rockwell, Miss Alex Rowan, Miss Mary Fay Stuart, Miss Hope Tou- lon and Miss Ann Turner. = ST Yangtze Crops Aid China. Bumper crops of the Yangtze Valley are to be shipped to drought-affected districts of North China. We've been st it more thun 35 years—taking the “worry” out of moving for ‘Washington homeowners. rchants gives single pieces and small lots the same careful expert atten- tion that vanloads receive and you'll be surprised at our reasonable charges. Utah State Society Dance This Evening The Utah State Society holds its annual Christmas dancing party this evening at the Shoreham Hotel. A holiday theme is being carried out in the decorations and dance programs. Mrs. Donald C. Bennion and Mr. William Taft Thurman are co-chair- men of the party and are being as- sisted by Mrs. Wayne Brown, Mr. La-#"* | mar W. Webb, Mrs. Louis P. Croft, Mr. Reed Stout, Mr. Jessee Nixon and Mr. Arch G. Webb. Patrons and patronesses include Gen. and Mr. Frank T. Hines, Judge and Mrs. Harold T. Stephens, Maj. and Mrs. Russell L. Maughan and Mr. and Mrs. Darrel T. Lane. E. Morrison Paper Co. 1009 Pa. Ave. Phone NA. 3045 LANK BOOK You ge! variety and value here. See owr big stock. ize. ™ 9. ‘Buckwheat, $7.25 Pocahontas Stove, $10.40 $9.50 Structure Pa. Bituminous White Smoke 50%, Lump Coal, -»l‘.".l rered sep: Phone Nat. 6900. 920 E St. NERCHANTS TRANSFER-STORAGE CO. 1®t w Customers in 3 ¥rs. In Baitimore a4 Wasbinston a Reason Why ‘Wor lal‘lt.‘“ Mh:BIH of Va. BLUE RIDGE COAL CO. B mietanarta Ra. Vb W aen. Ve - Vs, wE inquiries accordingly. MAGAZINES LETTERHEADS In the Public's Interest are not the largest publishing and print- ing establishment in Washington, nor the oldest. In fact, we've just started, but we have everything that it takes to give you a good print- ing job, regardless of the specifications. We have set out to build a reputation for friendly service in the public’s interest, and invite your The Friendship Press Edward B. McLean, Jr., Pres. PUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS 1065 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. Coal. Alexand: . So. ME. 3545. Jack. 1900. PAMPHLETS BOOKLETS Phone WEst 1643 o=

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