Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SOCIETY. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Suburban Residents Inthe News Mr. and Mrs. Rams- dell Return From Motor Trip. (Continued From Third Page.) Lewis, Josephine Berry and Lyola and Hester Olson. Mrs. Howard R. Watkins and her daughter, Miss Mary Lee Watkins of Somerset, Md., left yesterday by motor for a fortnight's stay with relatives in Kentucky. They will be the guests of Mrs. Watkins’ parents in Perryville. Mrs. John L. Harrison gave a des- sert bridge party Monday afternoon when she entertained her sister and house guest, Mrs. A. L. Anderson; Miss Evelyn Powell of St. Louis, Mrs. Fan- ning of New York, Mrs. Rufus H. Lane, Mrs. E. P. Harrison, Mrs. Mayo Herring, Mrs. George Butterworth, Mrs. George L. Robertshaw, Mrs. Frederick Howard, Mrs. Frederick W. Jones, Mrs. J. Roy Johnston, Mrs. Harry Moran, Mrs. Phillip Nourse, Mrs. John G. Sadtler, Mrs. Alexander Galt, Mrs. Herbert Coward, Mrs. A. F. Bowen, Mrs. Albert Johnston, Mrs. Ward Freeman, Mrs. Louis F. Woods, Mrs. Noble Moore and her sister and house guest, Mrs. J. L. Enochs of | Jackson, Miss.; Mrs. Atherton Mears, Mrs. Edmund Gannt, Mrs. P. H Smythe, Mrs. Felix Moore, Mrs. T. M. Talbott and Mrs. Willard Smith. Dr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Olsen and their son, Mr. Olan Olsen, will leave tomorrow for Blue Ridge, N. C., where they will spend about two weeks. Mr. Olan Olsen will spend part of the time in Murfreesboro, Tenn., before his return to Takoma Park. Mrs. Edmund D. Miller and her young grandson, Mr. Neddie Kimble, have returned to their home in Ta- koma Park, after spending several weeks in Ohio as the guests of Mrs. Miller's mother, Mrs. Alice Erskin, at her home in St. Sterling. Mrs. Lillian Hicks gave a luncheon and bridge party Saturday. Her | guets were Mrs. T. M. Talbott, Mrs. A L. Anderson and her sister, Mrs. J. L. Enochs of Jackson, Miss.; Mrs. E. P. Harrison, Mrs. Harry Moran, Mrs. G. | B. Gould and her daughter, Mrs, Benson Smith, and Mrs. Felix Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Ennals Jarrell and their family of Wynnewood Park are spending the week at Old Colony Cove on the Chesapeake Bay. Prof. and Mrs. James W. Osborn | entertained Mrs. Osborn's sister, Mrs. | Irvin Daughenbaugh of Huntington, ! Pa, and her granddaughters, Miss Joan Brennemen and Miss June | Brennemen of Boston, for three| weeks. On their return they were accompanied by Prof. Osborn, who motored to Huntington, and on his | return he visited his aunt, Mrs. Lee Treaster, at her home in Milroy, Pa. Prof. Osborn will leave within a will attend a council of college music teachers, and during the time Mrs. Osborn and their son, Mr. Gordon Osborn will visit at the home of Mrs. J. B. Krauss in South Lancaster, Mass. Residential (Continued From Third Page.) ited in Germany, Holland, England and France. Mr. Livingston Biddle arrived in Washington today and is staying with his parents, Col. and Mrs. Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, at the Carlton Hotel. Mrs. R. W. Dickinson Jewett and her small son are spending the Sum- mer at Nantucket, Mass. Mr. Jewett will join them the latter part of Au- gust. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Dismer are spending their vacation at Buck Hill Falls, Pa. They will be at The Inn there until August 22, when they will return to their apartment in the Falkstone Courts. Mr. and Mrs. Renne Henning of Belgium, who are visiting in this country at the present time, are stop- ping at the Wardman Park Hotel. Mrs. Addison B. Green of Holyoke, Mass., is stopping at the Carlton Hotel while in Washington. Mrs. Worthington Scranton of | Scranton, Pa., arrived in Washington | vesterday and entertained at a small dinner last night at the Carlton Hotel, where she is stopping. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard G. Bisco of New York City are at the Wardman Park Hotel during their stay in the Capital. Mr. and Mrs. William F. Pierce have arrived in Washington from their home in Cleveland, Ohio, and they are stopping at the Wardman Park Hotel for several days. Mr. Isaac Frankenberger of Bavaria, Germany, who is visiting his sister, Miss Marianne Frankenberger of 1205 Shepherd street, will leave Friday to spend a week with friends at New Haven, Conn., and New York City before sailing on the Europa to return to Germany. Miss Frankenberger, who is home from Woodmont, Conn., and Richmond Hill, Long Island, for a short time, will accompany her father to Woodmont, where she will spend the remainder of the Summer, returning to Washington about Sep- tember 15. Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Yonker entertained at a dinner for 12 at the Shoreham Terrace last evening. Mr. Donald Wakefield Smith, mem- ber of the National Labor Relations Board, and Mrs. 8mith have just re- turned from Margate City, N. J. where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Bonnelly of Phila- delphia, Pa. In the Hunt Country WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1937 Activities Among the Horse-Lovers of Virginia and Maryland. BY NINA CARTER TABB. HE yearling sales at ®Saratoga are most interesting this year, with colts bringing top prices. Bidding is fast and furious, and those that were bred in “Ole” Vir- ginia are holding their own with the best of them. Yearlings sold by Herring brothers, Mrs. David Buckley, Kenneth Gilpin'’s Kentmere Farm, Court Manor (Willis Sharpe Kilmer) and Westmoreland Davis all brought Ppleasing prices. Tonight the Virginia- bred yearlings of Willlam H. Lipscomb and Rockbridge Farms (David N. Rust), both of Leesburg, will be sold, and much interest is being shown in them. These colts arrived at the Spa last Friday and since then have been on exhibition every after- noon after the races and have caused no end of admiration among horse- men while being led around. “Shorty” Lipscomb is selling eight well-bred yearlings in his string as follows: Bay c. by Osculator—Madame Herrmann, by Garry Herrmann; B. ¢ by Osculator—Sand Dust, by Lord Rock Sand; B. c. by Teddy—Cinema, by Sweep; B. f. by Teddy—Flower Girl, by Pennant; Ch. c. by Time Maker—Duration, by Hourless; Br. c. by Time Maker—On Top, by Ultimus; B. f. by Strolling Player—Georgia Rose, by Sweep; Ch. f. by Scotch Broom—Pepper Pot, by Royal Canopy. David N. Rust, jr., will sell five year- lings tonight. His outstanding colt is a bay by Time Maker, out of Ke- relia, and three other Time Maker colts are out of Fama, Countersign and Cackle. A chestnut filly is out of Red Hat. ANY socialites from Virginia will spend the coming week end at White Sulphur Springs, for on Fri- day the first of the week end polo matches will be played on the fields of the Greenbrier Polo Club. The Fauquier-Loudoun polo team from Middleburg and Warrenton will play the War Department polo team from Fort Myer on Friday afternoon and again on Sunday afternoon. Tnese two teams have played at White Sul- phur each season since polo was started out there. They are about evenly matched, and their games are most exciting to watch. The War Department’s line-up will be Capt C. H. Reed, No. 1; Maj. E. N. Harmon A RUG Beanty Our Duty CLEANED AND STORED (a/l Mr.Pyle na.3257 SANITARY CARPET & RUG CLEANING €O. 106 INDIANA AVE. few days for Asheville, N. where he e Wipsborst [ T ) tried, and found WANTED Dresses were $1.98 and $2.98 oo $l.50 Dotted 8Swiss, batiste, sheer seer- sucker and grlnted voiles, in light and dark shades. were $3.98 to $5.98 wow 8 2.50 Batiste, voile, dimity, Swiss and pique in gay and all colors. No. 2; Maj. R. A. McClure, No. 3, and Lieut. Col. F. W. Boye, No. 4. This War Department team totals seven goals in national rating, against an eight-goal rating for the Fauquier- Loudoun team. The latter's line-up will be John Rawlings, No. 1; Henry Skinker, No. 2; Richard Kirkpatrick, No. 3, and William Hulburt, No, 4. Each of these players is rated two goals. The games will be called on Friday and Sunday at 3:30 pm. ‘The Greenbrier polo fields are very beautiful lying in a valley between the mountains which makes a won- derful background. Among those mo- toring to White Sulphur for the polo matches will be Mrs. Willlam Hul- burt, Mrs. John Rawlings, Mr. and Mrs. Turner Wiltshire, Mrs. Reed, Mrs. McClure, Mrs. Harmon, Mrs. Boye, Miss Catherine Hulburt, Mrs. Kirkpatrickp John Walker and several other members of the Fauquier-Lou- doun team. MRS. MONCURE LYON of Black Oak Ridge, near Purcellville, and her daughters, Fanny Nelson, Mary Owenr and Betty, and her son, Robert, have taken a cottage at Gloucester Banks for the month of August and are entertaining many of their Lou- doun County friends with week end house parties. Gloucester Banks is a lovely spot on the York River Just across from Yorktown. The young people are having a delightful time, spending the days swimming, sailing and fishing. Visiting the Lyon girls this week are Mike Kerr, Mac- kenzie Tabb, Richard Tayloe, Robert Turner and Shirley Turner, all of Middleburg. Miss Mary Owen Lyon will be presented to society this Win- ter in Baltimore, where she will spend the season with her grand- mother, Mrs. Robert Bentley. Her oldest sister, Miss Constance Lyon, was a debutante in Baltimore in 1935 and Miss Fanny Nelson Lyon came out there in 1936. These two girls are very popular and great belles, so every one is looking forward to meeting their sister, Mary Owen, this | season. The youngest Lyon girl, Betty, is still in school. Moncure Lyon will Blve a dance in honor of their debu- tante daughter, Mary Owen, on Sep- tember 10, at the beautiful new house they have just completed on Black Oak Ridge, in Loudoun County, near Purcellville. It will be given out of doors, dotted L where a platform is |7 to be built for dancing, and will be one of the most importamt parties of the season in Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Atkinson of Middleburg have issued invitations to & dance in honor of their debutante daughter, Miss Neville Lemmon At- kinson, September 11. This party will be given at Welbourne, the old Dulany place in Virginia that was built by Miss Atkinson's great-great-grand- father, Mr. John Dulany, and was afterwards the home of his son, Col. Richard Dulany. He in turn left it to his daughter, Mrs. Fanny Dulany Lemmon, who left it to her oldest daughter, the present owner, Mrs. Nathaniel Morrison. This lovely old house makes a fitting place for a young girl to make her bow to society. Miss Melita Seipp of Middleburg is another debutante this season and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Seipp, are giving her a large dance in September. These three debu- tantes will all be presented to society in Baltimore later on in the season. Miss Jane Stevenson of Middleburg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Btevenson, will have a dance given in her honor by her parents this Autumn and later she will come out in Pittsburgh. With four such popular Virginia girls making their debuts this prom- ises to be a very gay season here. All of them are members of hunt clubs and devoted to foxhunting and riding. They will spend much time in the foxhunting country and have numerous and delightful parties given in their honor there. Sale of LOUNGE CHAIRS From the August Sale of Furni- ture we offer a number of one- of-a-kind lounge chairs in as- sorted covers, priced far below their actual worth, $25 to $49 HORACE DULIN, INC. Formerly of Dulin & Martin SRS An Exciting DRESS Every Summer Dress in Stock Reduced 259 to 50% and MORE!? O s Cotton Lovely styles. Dark crepes, prints print chiffons, Silk Dresses were $7.95 to $10.95 oo $6.50 floral chiffons and dark in afternoon were $12.95 to $19.95 o § 7.50 crepe prints, washable sports shantungs, in whites and colors. were $16.95 to $22.95 were $10.98 to $16.98 now ® pride of the campus ® joy of the shopper ® star of the stadium with Raccoon or Wolf 53 9'75 The great American classic . . . the Three-Piece Wardrobe Suit . returns triumphant for Fall and Winter 1937. practical minds divine its manifold purpose . . . as a separate topcoat . .. separate suit . . . or trio ensemble ., . . hence the popularity of this casual fashion, Beige, Rust, Green, Brown, Blue Sizes 12 to 20 Swit Salon, Third Floor, now $6.50 All our better quality cotton frocks in lace, imported voiles and batistes. Second Floor. $10.50 Better quality marquisettes, chif- fons and print crepes in out- standing styles. Second Floor. ALL SUMMER FORMAL DRESSES and EVENING WRAPS 10 Formals, were $13.95, now $6.98 5 Formals, were $16.95, now $8.48 7 Wraps, were $1395, now $6.98 2 Wraps, were $16.95, now = SOCIETY GOLDENBERG'S 7th and K MONEY- SAVING NA, 5220 , lan to Be Here Tomorrow! e Goldenber! Second F10oF 81x99—_ 72, 108— Strfifi?lvear Sheets Extrq Length 99 A timely jt &1 BT saain 72x99 Of single begs Goldenberg's_. Main Floor In St thg B, "Inrp,: Size e, i Coyjq thay bftce, Yoy Che, Vaj Reyecte popilies thyjy, Casas U8 rify “Ses g Cheqy Price, et e