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NN NEXK 0. 8.2.2.0.6.6.6.6.8.8.8.¢.¢.¢.0.0¢.¢00.92¢¢383833 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY s, 1940, We're Rug-Cleaning Specialists —We clean nothing else than Rugs and Carpets. . . and our methods have stood the test of Time. % PHONE US TO CALL FOR YOUR RUGS AND CARPETS Lowest Prices for Finest Work—Why Take a Chance? Rugs and Carpets STORED in our Modern Fireproof Building and INSURED for Full Valuel E. P. HINKEL & CO. 600 Rhode Island Ave. N.E. ORIENTAL RUGS Washed and Repaired by Our Expert Weavers on the Premises Telephone HObart 1171 The Best Known . . . Known as the Best”—Since 1875 RALEIGH HABERDASHER GAY NEW SUIT DRESSES CAPTURE SUMMER'S COTTON EXCITEMENT! Short Jacket Gingham* with pouch pockets and pique collar on crisp fitted jacket! Utterly simple frock. red - and - blue, green-and- purple, wine-and-blue checks. 12-20 ____$14 95 * Raleigh Exclusive Bloused Jacket Gingham suits a Junior’s busy life! Pique - preened . jacket. ties over pique - petaled frock. Span-fresh -in red-and-blue, green-and-navy, brown-and- aqua plaid. 9-17--_$7 95 L2 T TR TS0 KNOX Flowers out with New face for an old favorite! Panamas in pink, blue, flying canary, sawdust beige, white (as well as naturaly . . . perfected by Knox after years of ex- periment! Newest Hat furore, ex- clusive with Raleigh! POLKA BANDED pastel or natural Panama casual brim (top)_$10) BOW-CATCHER Casual Panoma in natural (below) $5.95 BONNET with fly-away streamers. Pastel or natural 4cmter)..$]0 FO NN NN N NN YN NN NN NN YK XK X XKE e T TR TR T LTI T I T T A e i B 55 5 6 S Bt Bl A S S G5 Potential Members Of Junior League Plan Activities ‘The Washington Horse Show at Meadowbrook May 17, 18 and 19 will see a number of potential new mem- bers of the Junior League getting their first taste of league work. Invited to take the provisional training course given in the fall, this group is known as the provi- sional group. Its members become active, voting members of the league when they have completed the course and passed an examination on what they have learned, but will be given an opportunity to show their mettle by taking part in the horse show activities this spring. Miss Dorothea Sowers is chairman of the Invitation Committee and those who have accepted the league’s invitation to become provisional members are: Mrs. Willlam Potter Arnold, Miss Ann Barr, Miss Sally chell, Mrs. John B. Cleland, jr.; Miss Helen Howard Diggs, Mrs. Herbert Fales, Miss Nancy Glover, Miss Pa- tricia Henry, Miss Marilynn Himes, Mrs. John Laskey, Miss Martha Mc- Kenna, Miss Rosemary Merrill, Miss Edith Pearson, Miss Anne Sperry, Miss Mary Alice Sturdevant, Miss Sylvia Szechenyi, Miss° Ann Camp- bell Toll, Mrs. William Van Ben- schoten, Miss Catherine Warner, Miss Nancy Weller, Miss Mary N. Shepherd Whiteley, Miss Martha Wilson and Miss Edith Wright. Additional Patrons For G.W.Glee Club Phelps Bradley, Miss Charlotte Bur- | Concert Listed The annual concert of the George Washington University Glee Club, to 'be held Friday at the Willard Hotel, is attracting the support of prominent alumni and friends of the university. Among those who have been added to the list of patrons are Mr. and Mrs. Henry Parsons Erwin, Dr. and Mrs. Harry H. Donnally, Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Enlows, Dean and Mrs. William C. Johnstone, jr.; Dean and Mrs. Henry G: Doyle, Dean and Mrs. Robert W. Bolwell, Dean and Mrs. Walter A. Bloedorn, Dean and Mrs. Frederick M. Feiker, Dean and Mrs. William P. Briggs, Dean and Mrs. James H. Fox, Dean and Mrs. Elmer L. Kayser, Dean and Mrs. Mitchell Dresse and | Dean and Mrs. Warren R. West. | Mrs. Lamar to Give Talk in New York Of interest here is news of the illustrated talk which Mrs. Hamilton Kerr Lamar of this city will give next Wednesday at the Colony Club in New York. The | lecture is for the benefit of | “Bundles for Britain.” Mrs. La- mar will show slides of English 18th century portraiture and gar- dens. The portraits include the collection of the late Andrew J. Mellon, which are being shown for the first time. The garden slides are of the gardens of the Marquess of Lothian, Great Britain’s Ambassador to the United States. Mrs. Lamar‘alsp will show four 18th century - English portraits which are in the drawing room of the British Embassy here. These include Raeburn's portrait of the s Marquess Tg! Lothian, Lady , by, Sir Thomas Lawrence; Mh’?mue. Marchioness of Lothian, by Sir Joshua Rey~ nolds, and the Duke of Rutland, by Sir Joshua Reynolds. The portraits are those of Lord Lothian’s ancestors. i Literary Club Elects Mrs. Lucien Sanders was elected president of the Excelsior Literary Club at a meeting last night at the Taft House Inn. Other officers are: Mrs. George Hill, first vice president; Mrs. A. W. Foster, second vice presi- dent; Mrs. Charles Delaney, treas- urer; Mrs. Robert S. Hali, recording secretary; Mrs. Alice D. Creque, cor- responding secretary; Mrs. Douglas Palmer, publicity .chairman; Mrs. Arthur L. Hayford, director, Federa- | tion of Woman’s Clubs; Mrs. Mattie Q. Ewing, alternating director, and | Mrs. Harvey Beaver, chairman of | the Year Book Committee. “For a Lovelier You” Rochels 1010 F Street N.W. o 00 Special! Novelty CotTtoN FrOCKS As gay and colorful as the new season ... these blithe youthful novelty cottons will kee 1p ¥ou cool as a lettuce leaf all day. And they launder like a ’kerchief. Scores of brand-new arrivals on display . . . moderaf priced at 4.95 to 7.95. slzes. Other Summer Dresses 3695 o 51995 Permanent for your Maytime freshness « « » your Summer long chic Maytime—month of blossoms and warm- ing weather—finds you looking for a new way to “do’” your hair. Something simple, yet beautifully soft, easy to keep . . . for you will want to enjoy an active Summer —blissfully free from too much coiffeur care. For you we suggest a Zotos machine- less, Realistic, Frederic or the new Scientific Formula—all superb methods of permanent waving. Come in . . . let us decide which one is best suited to your hair and (per- haps) suggest a gloriously new hair-do for you. Call Dlstrict 5300 for your appointment. Y. s 1 &Zafill{/\adeto Your Order Wi ) $298 low price Glory in a beautiful coat that fits you to per- fection. And “love” the luxurious feeling of the deeply soft, amazingly durable U. S. Gov- ~ernment Alaska sealskin that makes it. You choose lustrous black-dyed, the flattering Safari-dyed or the chic new Matara-dyed seal. Your measurements are carefully taken. A canvas model is made and any necessary al- terations are made on it. You may have sleeve, collar or other details altered to suit your taste and make your coat even more indi- vidually yours. Linings are pure-dye silk, monogrammed, if you wish. Sizes 11 to 42— * larger sizes slightly higher priced. Storage until you are ready for your coat, wext Fall. Pur SatoN, Tamp Frook. - Le Gant’s Sta-Up-Top Girdle gives you cool, comfortable control—all Summer long Le Gant's “Veil of Youth” for you with slim figures who want that longer waisted look. With this lithe girdle you achieve it easily for the “Sta-Up-Top” hugs your waist and will not roll over. It has the comfort of elastic with the con- trol of cloth. Of sleek rayon, silk §=7,50 and cotton 7 35 to $10 Colorful Ensembles for Your Closets at savings in the May Notions Event — through May 15th Made of glazed cotton chintz in green, wine, rose, blue or yellow floral print. Eight-garment Wardrobe Bags; 60- inch length, slide-fastening--$2.25 Women's Shoe Bags; hold eight pcirs‘, Men’s Wide Pocket Shoe Bags; hold six pairs $1 Woodward & Lothrop Tissues, 3 boxes 78¢ Dress Shields 18¢, 3 pairs 50¢ Sta-Rite Bob Pins. Peggy Prim Dryers. Dressmaker Pins Ultra-Mode Whijte Shoe Dressing for all Keiting Bogs of « nitting Bags of cotton tapestry or rayon - brocade, with wood handles ___ Kleinert's Rubber Shower Caps peach, orchid, yellow and green, Waste Baskets of fiber or metal, 2 for $1.65 Midget_Darning Silk—12 spools to each bax, 15 yards to each spool, .in assorted colors 20c, box of 12 spools Heavy Cotton Drill Ironing Board Covers «438¢ with lacer bottles, 50¢ . ---$1- ¥ 18¢, 3 for 50¢ -