Evening Star Newspaper, March 13, 1921, Page 40

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i Mrs. H. A. Williams. Jr., tModel Fur Shop i g ! I “ Is Guest of Miss Low 1. ROSENDORF (Prop.) | Mrs. Harry A. Williams, Jr., arrivaed 923 G St. NW. 'yeslord.’ly from her home in Noriolk | sna will be the guest for scveral days Preseats a New MIDSEASON Collection of {Mr. and Mrs. Rogers | of her parents, {Low. at 1303 Helmont road. | Williams was formerly Aiss | thena Harrison, dauchter of Mr. and| Mrs. Russell B. Harrison, and grand- | | daughter of the late President Benju | min Harrison. Mrs. Mar- | returning ‘ehcly opening of the new Congress. Between Friends. Al lmflflfll APPAREL FOR EVERYWOMAN F at Tenth St. —but what matters that when Kafka's Al is ready with the clever, unusual ideas Bl to make the selection of your Easter actory. Suit so pleasant and sati i Miss Manhattan Youthful i New York Suit Modes First of all come I!/c All-Purpose Sports Suits P £29.50 You can wear these smart Tweeds, Heathers and Serges for Dress, Business or General \Wear. It fits the needs of all occasions. For Women, Misses and the Girl about to wear her first suit. It is a Miss Manhattan creation—designed and made in one of - the most up-to-date establishments in the world. Miss Manhattan Smartest Tailleurs $59.50 Ixceptional youthfulness, distinctive smartness and careful workmanship are the characteristics which make Miss Manhattan so much desired by the careful dresser. Note the fine quality Tricotine, Twill Cords and Covert Cloth, richly lined and beautifully tailored. All Misses’ and Women’s sizes. The Family Shoe Store Announces Complete Readiness in ovelty Pumps and Oxfords - For Spring and Easter Wear NEVER such a display as is now presented, closely reflecting the present vogue for unusual novelties in a wealth of clever designs and combinations. You will find here'many styles never tefore shown and not to be found elsewhere. @ And in all the searching after and as- sembling new designs we have not for- ' i gotten Quality—and coupled with ex- cellence of materials and workmanship you will find also extremely low prices. : @ Among the new cross-strap and other novelties are noted: —Gray Suede Strap Pumps. —White Kid Strap Pumps. —Gunmetal or Patent Strap Pumps. —Black Kid Strap Pumps. —Brown Suede Strap Pumps. —Brown Kid Strap Pumps. —Brown or Black Satin Strap Pumps. @ Full French, Baby Louis or Cuban Ileels. Priced at $7.00 to ,91:3.00" | Russian Calf Brogue Oxfords | At $8.00 and 310.00 @ Just the outdoor shoe for early spring; fine for walking or business wear. A practical shoe with smart, stylish lines. The “Brogue” promises to be even more popular this spring than ever before. All the New Lace Hosiery Effects —for Easter and dressy wear. The Hosiery Section reflects Fashion's latest whim in Novelty Hosfery. Suggesting Our Silk Hosiery at $2.50 —to wear with new Novelty Footwear. Full fashioned, pure silk, in Black, Brown or Gray. A fine quality hose. S. ST 310- 312 Going to Asheville. N. C. Representative and Mrs. John Jacob Rogers will leave this afternoon for Asheville, N. C. where ‘thes will 7¢-|° Il or Miss Adrienne Low, in the home! main for a thne, whep théy will,go Mr. and Mrs. Nl yageaehusetts fors a”Visit befdrg in “AptH, -gor/, the - o Than in Ti s = r r 7 == me v Nell—lIs it really true that youre ) o ! p!.nuls dax”(‘m luh;' t“e;.mo:‘h.»(i,; going to divorce Bob? . President Harding's councilors L 5 e | -s, I'm tired of being alone.| crana out f ot Tnets d that each member has been married and each has a family, varying in numbers from the six living children of ¢ |the,Secretary of Agriculture, Mr. Wal- son of the Post- 3 to" the one " . |masdter General, Mr. Hays. Begin- {ning with Mr. Hughes. pleasant 4| diversity is offered. a brilliant young 7| college woman, Miss Catherine Hughes, who will be prominent in the widest so- | =ial sense, but who may be relied ony ;‘” turn attention to some of the more |serious aspects of life. A second ‘| daughter, Elizabeth, will attend the [ Cathedral School and be active among Zlthe sub-del Alisa Me! ty last wi a close associa official am n was presented to and will naturally £ Miss Hughes, in There is a son t : {in the Mellon il Paul. who ls 7\ fourteen, and studying under tutors for college, but who will come to Washington for part of the spring “ I season. The Daughertys have a married son |and daughter and a circle of grand= 7| children, who will reinforce the threa voungsters who will spend much time | with the Sec ry of te—the chil- dren of young s, jr., who in Ne i lives i ork y of War has a charm- : aughter, Mrs. Jack Da- 71 vidge, active in official and social life, {who is the mother of two children: | The Boy." mall son of the Hays, “Billy as he is called by a circle of {adoring relatives, is just five, and a {delightful prospect opens for him. though naturally he is entirely indif- erent to such opportunities. The two Toover boys are a little too old for the juveniles and not old enough for social amenities. but they will count heavily during holiday time. | The Secretary of the Interior and {Mrs. Fall have only married chil- dren, none of whom will live here, but they have a generous share of grand- /i children, who will taste the delights of Washington from time to time. The three little Denbys. children of |the Secretary of the Navy and his charming wife, are under ten, and will be pre-eminent in some tradi- ional hospitality, and very likely will make their debut in the White House on Easter Monday to see the egg-rolling. They will have asso- ciates in the two children of the Sec- retary of Labor and Mrs. Davis, who are James J. Davis, jr. who is four, and a lovely little giri, Jane Eliza- beth, who has just turned into her second year. The Wallaces offer ex- ceptional opportunity for the hos- pitably Inclined, as their family ranks from the college age to the dig- nity of matron, in the case of their “/leldest daughter, with several sons 7/{ wedged in, who will be most cordially i | welcomed by the dancing contingent. New England hostessps in the capital have been proverbially good home keep- ers. and though the Vice President and Mrs. Coolidge have decided to live for e present in a hotel, nevertheless they knowledge this to be a temporary expedient, to be abandoned when their v _enough for house e is preceded by a reputation for excellence in those fine old New England dishes which only a daughter of that region can produce. It will be remembered that the late Henry R. Rogers thought so highly of New England cookery that he endowed an inn in his native town, Fairhaven, Mass., where the methods of the colo- nial women are to be perpetuated. The second lady of the land prepares baked Dbeans almost as a ritual, with a resuit highly satisfactory to Mr. Coolidge and oYX, D. €. Cabinet Families Larger Some Rare Hostesses Who May Serve Delicacies Which Make Their Sections Famous. Gossip of Prince of Wales. “MARCH 13, 1921~ PART ‘o 5OCIETY his other claims to greatness married , Ca Rebecca Lowndes and reared a Jarge : yeers when the family in the fine old Stoddert man- ber of the lower h | #ion, Prospect Hill, in Georgetown. them now in the Mrs. Odd not a stranger to Wash- | though thousands #erv and all over the country bless their name. since it is connected with that mplendid route mes Gone By | inxton, since she spent several yea here in her girthood as a student at the National Park Seminary {n For- of tourists, Bright Angel trail in the ndall | Grand Canyon of {he Colorado, fiear vator and | which their country home is situated. en. They | Living in & land of perpetual sunshi are living In a p rtment at | and summer, the Camerons have may the Hadleigh, in 1 | visitors all through the year. and age Though Se Mrs. (Continued ou Ninth Page.) Ratph | letters in the history of the National Capltal and, before its existence, in Vir- ginia'and Maryland. He is sixth in line from that veteran merchant and ship- builder of Bladensburg, Christopher Lowndes, in whose yards were con- structed those atout ships in which the planters of the entire section sent their Rrain and tobacco to Kurope and the east, and in this number must be count- «d the lllustrious planter of Mount Ver- non. Mr. Lowndes married Rebecca Tasker, daughter of one royal Governor of Maryland, and the sister of another, that Thomas Bladen for whom the sleepy old villagé on the Kastern branch is named. i One of Mrs. Lowndes' sisters married Councilor Robert Carter of Nominl creek, Virginia, and these two figure in | history as the grandparents of Robert n IX 4 Daughter of Representative and Mrw. | | A % <. Lee. The new senator N 5 N | Fra S, e i RGE, (o, Neyadu | - Clark Burdick of Newport, R. 1 Where they know how for wecks 1o ¢ome meeting their kin- = i %Zfii.a::&n“" numerous in and about | great-grandfather the Nevada = = 2 | statesman is Benjamin Stoddert, first o There ix e oasker H. Bliss, who | Secretary of the Navy and one of the v gwine dencended from the royal|orlginal proprietors of the land on || Ao ffopmow In command at the | which the Capital City fs buill. Mr. |[ E me. Another illustrious ' Stoddert, u revolutionary. hero besides L to Normal” is a 608 TO 614 - 11th ST. N.W. Reality | F Street N.W. e —— | | MISS MARY BURDICK, it of to fi t corsets For Monday’s Attention T"e House of Courtesy | An entirely new relation of quality to price is established through these unusual groupings of Superior-type Suits e 2 e X ey L the two boys. Years ago beans from the Lodge home during the lifetime of Mrs. Henry Cabot Lodge were déemed a genuine treat to the Roosevelt family, and few Saturday ,evenings passed without a messenger from Mrs. Lodge arriving at the rear entrance to the White House kitchen with a mysteriously swathed and ample basket. The White House chef did not comprehend the ways of New England, and he could not produce either the beans or the brown bread. lfor which the section is ‘illustrious. To taste the codfish cakes which come from the griddle in the Coelidge home in Northampton is a memory which the favored one cherishes. No doubt with so many sons and daughters of New England in the most exalted posts New England cookery will be as much a fad as southern cooking was when the Wil- son regime was ushered in. Sueh possibilities open for the jaded diners-out, if the cabinet hostesses take to presenting the food of their own spe- clal part of the country as it is pre- pared, and not the routine the world over. of French cookery or more or less successful’ imitations of it. Not only can Mrs. Coolidge invite the guests to New England dainties, but Mrs. Weeks is loyal to traditions and comes from a amall town where the culinary ways of mothers and grandmothers ~ are” not lightly cast aside. Mrs. Fall can step into the niche left vacant by Mrs. Al- bert Sidney Burleson and give Mexican dinners, which are a treat, indeed—fri- joles, tortillas, tamales and the inimita- ble savory stew of the Latins. Mrs. Hoover is a renowned dinner giver and has collected her recipes from the four quarters of the globe. Housewives in the central states—Iowa, Ohfo, Indiana and Michigan—whence come Mrs. Wal- lace, Mrs. Daugherty, Mrs. Hays and Mrx. Denby, are famous for chicken slad, hot roils and homecured hams, &1l of which give zest to the opening social season. The new senatorial hostesses take rank with the cabinet women in the {social interest of Washington, and in cal sense. Senator Oddle of Nevada is, for instance, a direct descendant of men who have written their names in large FUR | CHOKERS Are Fashionable Surprisingly low in price here New spring styles SPERLING, 1336 F St. 2 Doors From Ebbitt House T = Children’s Easter Dresses and Rompers Newest styles, beautiful materials, stamped ready to embroider. Luncheon Sets, Scarfs, Towels, Napkins, Pillowcases Stamped with beautiful de- signs ready to work. FREE INSTRUCTIONS in Crocheting, Knitting, Em- broidering, etc., by Competent Teachers. We Do Initialing, Em- broidery, Hemstitching, Stamping, i 5 THE EMBROIDERY SHOP 1. . MISSES FREUDBERG 827-829 11th Ash'eet Nenr New V¢ many instances surpass them in the lo- | Measured by excellence of weave—or computed by character of design —these Suits stand out convincingly as extraordinary achievements in production possibility—and masterpieces of designing genius—giving to each piece all the significant importance of a special price—with a genuine saving. The treatment of each model is original and axclusive and distinctive—bell_slceves and long sleeves—braided, embroidered, beaded and sashed-girdled—producmg en- tirely different effects from all contemporaneous conceptions—and tailored with a care for detail and a consistency of excellence and elegance that’s indeed a rare com- bination. Blue is the dominating color—with many hues of Brown and Tan and Gray—that are fayored of fashion. . el ————- Tricotines Twill Cords Poiret Twills Real Tweeds Hairline Stripes Smart Checks —of strictly Tailored de- signs —in the graceful Blouse effects —new Box models Have You Visited the Inexpensive Dress Section? (Second Floor—North Wing.) It became an instant success at its opening yesterday. A “De- partment of Suprises”~into which we shall gather for your conven- ient survey and selection values and vogues that our buying prestige will place there inexpensively marked— «r e A 0

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