Evening Star Newspaper, May 16, 1937, Page 53

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SO Weddings -Set for June And Autumn Engagement, of Miss Many Announced. R. AND MRS. HENRY S. 4 M engagement of their daugh- ter, Helen Moffett, to Lieut. Air Corps. The wedding will take place in the Autumn. Oberlin College in the class of 1935 and now is an instructor at the Uni- Lieut. Hall is a graduate of George- town University and is stationed at Bittinger Among BITTINGER announce the Robert Windeck Hall, United States Miss Bittinger was graduated from versity of Minnesota. Barksdale Field, La. ) Miss Waller to Be Bride of Mr. Smith. S 1\,1?!. AND MRS. WILMER JOYCE ‘WALLER announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Courtenay Page, to Mr. Charles Sidney Smith, son of Mrs. Charles Sidney Smith and « the late Mr. Smith of Montgomery, Ala. The wedding will take place in Alexandria in the early Fall, Miss Edith Hopkins to Marry Mr. Littleton. R. AND MRS. ALEXANDER M. HOPKINS announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Edith Aline, to Mr. Philip Thomas Littleton of Washington. The wedding will take place early in June. Miss Louise Fenton Engaged to Marry. MR' AND MRS. JOHN W. FENTON CIETY. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D 0 MAY Among the Recent Brides in the Capital T Moore of Arlington, Va. The took place in St. Charles’ Church, in —Hessler Photo. Arlington. of 4316 Fourteenth street an- nounce the engagement of their « daughter, Louise Ellamae, to Mr. Ed- | ward F. Quinn, jr, of 417 Upshur | street. The wedding will take place June 17 at the home of the bride. Both Miss Fenton and Mr. Quinn are graduates of the University of Maryland. Miss Fenton is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Kappa Phi Fraternities. Mr. Quinn, a former president of the student gov- ernment, is & member of Theta Chi and Omecron Delta Kappa Frater- nities. Miss Welch to Wed Mr. Alvin Davis. MR AND MRS. SYLVESTER BURDITT WELCH of Lorton, ¥a., announce the engagement of their | daughter, Mary Elizabeth, to Mr. Alvin Dulaney Davis of Lorton, son of Mrs. | Nathan Coffer Davis and the late Mr. | Davis. The wedding will take place | June 26 in historic Pohick Church, | Pohick, Va. Miss Mary Cline Engaged | #» to Wed Mr. Alfred Trueax. THE Rev. and Mrs. R. C. Cline of McLean, Va. announce the en- | gagement of their daughter Mary to | Mr. Alfred Trueax of Washington. At the present time both of the young people are students at George Wash- ington University. No date has been set for the wed- | ding. Miss Sylvia Morris Engaged to Marry. | BIR. AND MRS. MAX MORRIS of | . 1422 Meridian place announce ! the engagement of their daughter Sylvia to Mr. Samuel J. Berman, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Berman of Phila- delphia, Pa. Miss Marie Ann Geraci Engaged to Mr. Oliveri, MRS FRANK GERACI of this city announces the engagement of her daughter, Marie Ann, to Mr. Paul Philip Oliveri, also of Washington. The wedding will take place late in June. Miss Sylvia Ann Rubin oto Marry Mr. Jack Hurwitz. JVIR. AND MRS. NATHAN RUBIN | announce the engagement of their daughter, Sylvia Ann, to Mr. Jack R. Hurwitz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hurwitz. ‘Miss Helen Elliott To Wed Mr. Hagstoz., “h,lR. AND MRS. R. T. ELLIOTT Of., Riverton, N. J., announce the | engagement of their daughter Helen to | Mr. George Swan Hagstoz, son of Mr. | and Mrs. Arthur Hagstoz, also of | Riverton. The wedding will take place | in June. School Guild to Close Season With Party | The School Guild of the Sacred Heart School will close the season with a large card and bingo party, o be held in the school auditorium tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Mrs. A. J. Bier, president of the guild, is in charge of arrangements and is being assisted by the follow- ing hostesses: Mrs. Franklin G. Sart- well, Mrs. Joseph H. Aukward, Mrs. ‘Waldo Tastet, Mrs. Wilford Redmond end Mrs. Ernest William Howard. | | ner saturday MRS. CORNELIUS J. KEEFE, Formerly Miss Mary Katherin daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Allston e Moore, Mrs. Lagerson was wedding abeth J. Stratton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otney W. Stratton. —Harris-Ewing Photo. 2 R/ | AN .. MRS. LINWOOD E. LAGERSON, Whose wedding took place last month. Daughter formerly Miss Eliz- trip to Fl MRS. MICHAEL OLIVERI, d of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mezzanotte, who was formerly Miss Marian Mezzanotte. Oliveri have returned from a wedding Mr. and Mrs. orida and Cuba. —Hessler Photo. Diplomatic| Corps Notes Of the Week {Ambassador and Senora de Espil Visiting. (Continued From First Page.) New York, Sunday, May 30. Countess | Potocka, who accompanied the Am- bassador to Poland in the early Spring, will remain abroad through the Summer. The Italian Ambassador and Sig- nora de Suvich will entertain at din- evening, May 22, in honor of the Chief Justice and Mrs. Charles Evans Hughes. The French Ambassador and Mme. Bonnet will entertain at luncheon to- morrow as a farewell for the retiring naval attache, Admiral Louis Sable and Mme. Sable Admiral and Mme. Sable were honor guests yesterday afternoon of the air attache of the Embassy and Mme. Champsaur. The Ambassador and Mme. Bonnet will spend Thursday at Princeton, N. J., where the Ambassador will re- ceive an honorary degree from Prince- ton University. The Ambassador and Mme. Bonnet will be guests during their stay there of the president of the university and Mrs. Dodd. The Cuban Ambassador, Senor Dr. Pedro Martinez Fraga, who is spending some time in Havana, will return to ‘Washington early this week. The Am- bassador will be host at a reception Thursday evening in celebration of Cuban independence. Mme. Peter, wife of the Swiss Min- ister, will sail Saturday, June 19, on | the Ile de France for her home in| Switzerland for the Summer. The Minister will sail on the Normandie July 14 to join her for the Summer. | They will return in September. The Austrian Minister, M. Edgar Prochnik, was joined yesterday morn- ing by Mme. Prochnik, who spent a week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James, in Boston. The Hungarian Minister, M. John Pelenyi, is expected to return today or tomorrow from Cuba, where he also represents his government as Minister. Mme. Pelenyi, who has been in her former home in Cleveland during his absence, will join him here. The Netherlands Minister and Mme. van Haersma de With, with their daughter, Mlle. Nora van Haersma de With, who recently arrived in San Francisco, will motor across the conti- nent and are expected to arrive in Washington the end of the month. The Norwegian Minister and Mme. Munthe de Morgenstierne will receive the members of the Norwegian colony in Washington tomorrow afternoon from 5 to 7 o'clock in the Legation to oo %. e For Better Cleaning, ORIENTAL AND DOMESTIC RUG CLEANING Repairing and Storing MARK KESHISHIAN “Washington's Most Beautiful Rug Gallery” 1214 CONN. AVE. (Cor. 18th St. N.W.) NA. 5346 | of June, accompanied by their daugh- celebrate the Norwegian national day. ; The Minister will return today from | New York, where he went to attend | the banquet last evening of the United Norwegian Societies, at which he was the guest speaker. The banquet cele- brated the national day. The Greek Minister, Mr. Demetrios Sicilianos, returned yesterday from New York, where he went to attend the award of the Theodore Roosevelt Prize for outstanding literary work. The prize went to Dean Alfange, presi- dent of the Ahepa Society of New York for his “Supreme Court and the Na- tional Law,” and the presentation was made Friday evening when the Min- ister was the guest speaker. i | | | ‘The Egyptian Minister, Mohamed Amine Youssef Bey, who has been | on the Pacific Coast for several | months, is expected to arrive in Wash- ington the middle of the week, making | the trip East by motor. The Venezuelan Minister, Senor Dr. Don Diogenes Escalante, returned yes- terday from a week's stay in New | York. The Charge d’Affaires of Poland and Mme. Wankowicz have leased a cottage at Eaglesmere, Pa, for the Summer and will go there the middle ter, Mlle. Irene Wankowicz, who is a | student at college. The Charge d'Affaires of Belgium and Princess de Ligne, with their daughter, Yolande, will go to New | York tomorrow or Tuesday, and | Princess de Ligne and her dnughber} will sail Wednesday for England. They will be joined by Prince de Ligne, who will sail in July to spend the Sum- mer in their Belgian home. The new Australian counselor of the British Embassy, Mr. Frank Keith Officer, who has been the guest of the counselor of the Embassy and Mrs. Mallet, has moved to the Shore- ham, where he has taken an apart- ment. The counselor, Mr. Mallet, will go to Chicago tomorrow for a few days' stay. Mrs. Mallet will go to Canada for a brief visit before sailing with Mr. | Mallet for England, where she will spend the summer, and Mr. Mallet will return here in Midsummer. The first secretary of the Argentine Embassy, Senor Don Hector Diaz Leguizamon, has returned from a short stay in New York. The secretary of the Legation of the Irish Free State and Mrs. Bren- nan, with their daughter, Miss Emer Brennan, will sail for this country Saturday, May 2, on the Colum- bus and are expected to arrive in New York June 4. They have been in their home in Ireland for several months for vacation. Dance I;Ianned. Mrs. Michael W. Straus of Owland place is chairman of the benefit dance to be held at Green Acres, a progres- sive school at Macsfolly Far, Silver Spring, Md., Saturday. Assisting Mrs. Straus on the committee are Mrs. Webster Powell, Mrs. Margaret Fahey Rudolph, Mrs. Clark Warburton, Mrs. Lincoln Fairley and Mrs. Lyle Cooper. The proceeds will go to the scholar- ship fund of the school. diate wear. true quality 1108 Conn. Ave. coats and suilts Your choice of any coat or suit in our stocks at half price. trimmed and untrimmed. Large Ball At Embassy Last Night The Ambassador andly Signora de Suvich Entertain. __ (Continued Prom First Page) came to Washington for the dance, including Signor Andrea Ferrero and Signor Aldoloni of the consulate's of- fice in New York, the Italian Consulate in Pittsburgh, Signor Giorgio Bombas- sei Frascani; Col. and Mrs. William Donovan, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd G. Blair, Marchese Juilio Marconi, and Donna Marina Torlonia and her sister, Mrs. Daniel Lord, the former Cristiana Tor- lonia, daughters of Princess Torlonia, | before her marriage Elsie Moore of | New York. Last night’s ball long will be re membered as one of the most enter taining and delightful given in Wash- ington for a long time. It seems as | though the embassy holds some mys- terious hidden charms, for the enter- tainments given by the former Am- bassador, Signor Rosse, always were looked forward to and remembered long after. No one who had the| honor to attend the fancy dress ball he gave there seasons ago could for- get the good time they had. For weeks following the dance the guests continued to find mementos of Lhe‘ party in the form of confetti tucked away in remote corners of their eve- ning purses, the hems of their skirts | and the pockets of the gentlemen's | coats. The ball room was a mass of | colored streamers and confetti, the | gayest sight imaginable. | Washington has been spoiled of | late with the number of really ex- | cellent parties. After each one ijt' seems that it is the very best, and then, the following week, another takes place equally gay and success- ful. The guests at last night's ball sincerely hope that the Ambassador and Donna Matilde de Suvich will remain in Washington for many, many years, for they are a decided addition to the diplomatic corps. Let us add it is hoped that some- one will persuade them to give an- other party when the season gets under way next year! L Mrs.VJenckes to —Go To Philadelphia Representative Virginia Jenckes will go to Philadelphia for the luncheon Tuesday which Mrs. George Horace Lorimer will give for the Daughters of Colonial Wars. Mrs. Jenckes will be the guest speaker. Representative Jenckes will go later in the day wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Zelov, the latter formerly Miss Helen Hopkins, daughter of Mrs. Hop- kins and the late Randolph Hopkins f Washington. Mrs. Zelov will. sail on the Roma, Saturday, May 22, for Italy, and will spend several months on the continent and in England, join- ing Mr. Zelov and their sons the end of August, Burns—Moth Holes TEARS All Fabrics Rewoven Invisibly By Our French Reweaving Process French Reweaving Co. 1105 G St. N.W. SOME ONE with a TALENT for SMARTNESS will be noticed these warm days looking cool, yet chic, in this sophisticated, brown net cape dress with its feminine flounces 13.95 ardell 604 11th St Youthful Clotkes for Youthful Purses Perfec e s 51 Models recently arrived. DRASTIC REDUCTIONS on our entire stocks of : 1/20fi Fur t for imme- All having the Rizik stamp of and individuality. 1213 F St to Rosement, close to | Philadelphia, to attend the fifteenth | | Mr. and Mrs. Lindley Clarke, at their | 16, 1937—PART THREE. . . California °« o Visitors Are . Entertained Guests at Sandy Spring. R. AND MRS. FLOYD NES- M who are staying at Tangle- wood with Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Thomas, are being ex- visit. Mrs. Allen Brooke gave a luncheon Wednesday after which the guests attended a musical program Ray; a supper party was held Thurs- day at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Tumbleson and a tea was Brooks. Mr. and Mrs. Nesbitt and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas left Friday to spend the week end at Williamsburg, Mr. and Mrs. Nesbitt BITT of Pato Alto, Calif, tensively entertained during their at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles given that afternoon by Mrs. Tarlton Va,, and that vicinity. Mrs.' Walter Brooke of Chicago, 111, is now & guect of her cousin, Mrs. William Dinwiddie at Greenbough. Mrs. Newton Stabler and her son Osburn Stabler have returned from a trip to New Orleans, La., and Atlanta, Ga. Mr and Mrs. Chester B. Graham, formerly of Catonsville, Md., moved to their home near Ashton, Md., and named it Llanfair. Mr. and Mrs. Graham have with | them their son, Chester Graham, jr. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Whitlock have returned home after having spent several days attending the Kentucky Derby in Louisville, Ky. Mrs. Karl Wilson has left Cloverly for her home in Rochester, N. Y., having been called to Sandy Spring by illness of her mother, Mrs. John C. Bentley. Miss Gertrude Miller of Baltimore, has arrived at Cloverly for a visit. Dr. Louis Bussler has returned after having spent the past week in New York, accompanied by Mr. Addison G. Foster of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Lofton Wesley, of Georgetown, and their two children have arrived at their Summer cottage near the Edgewood Farm where they will spend the Summer. Mr. M. O. DeVorak of Drayton, has left for a visit in Hagerstown, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Clow, with their small son Kenneth Clow jr., spent Mother's day with Mrs. Clow’s | parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Bentley Thomas at Lyndon. Mrs. Charles Lupton of Denver, Colo., formerly of Washington. is the guest of her brother-in-law and sister, home in Sandy Spring village. Hotel Employes Dance. A floor show and dancing will fea- ture the nineteenth annual ball of the Hotel and Restaurant Employes’ Alli- ance, No. 781, and the Bartenders’ Union, Old Local, No. 75, in the Raleigh Hotel at 9 o'clock tonight. 7.50 Cowhide Zipper 25.00 Women’s Ward 20.00 Women's Ward 3250 Striped Canvas « .. also other items Charge Accounts Invited have | SOCIETY. Col. and Mrs. Ramsey Entertain Visitors Col. Frederick A. Ramsey, U. §. M. C., and Mrs. Ramsey will entertain at tea this afternoon in honor of the latter's brother-in-law and sister, Capt. William Orr, U. 8. M. C,, and Mrs. Orr, who are their guests. Capt. Orr, who has been on duty in Philadel- phia, and Mrs. Orr will leave tomorrow for San Francisco and will sail June 19 for China, where Capt. Orr will assume his new duties with the Em- bassy guard at Peiping. D ORAGE REPAIRED REMODELED STORED ee Storage for coats ired during Summer JULIUS GERTLER 614 13th St. N.W. cO ST -4 = -3 \ = ///////////////////////////% | | Wedding Presents of " Fine China, Rich Crystal, Silver, Art Objects and Lamps 1317 CONNECTICUT AVENUE Just Below Dupont Circle Z 2 Y2200 presents the new “flexible arch” TYPES Never were sport shoes so appealing | | GADDY Black Bucko Blue Bucko Brown Bucko Gray Bucko White Bucko as the new flexible arch styles by Ground Gripper. Whether you play, or merely watch, there’s a dashing shoe for your every costume. Beau- tifully finished—of new, fascinating leathers — they're THE choes for keeping on the go—in smart comfort. STACH’S FOOT HEALTH HEADQUARTERS 523 11th ST. N.W. Bagso2siitit 15195 45.00 Rawhide Fortnighters 25.00 Men’s Walrus Gladstones____19.95 20.00 Men’s Buffalo Gladstones____14.95 17.50 Women’s Fortnighter Cases--14.95 3250 Solid Leather Gladstones ____22.50 robe Cases___19.95 robe Cases.__14.95 5.00 Men'’s Zipper Envelopes 2250 Hartmann Pullman 20.00 Women's Fitted 25.00 Hartmann Tou- many offered throughout the store BECALRS 1314 F Street NW.

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