Evening Star Newspaper, May 29, 1921, Page 36

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“6 ‘SOCIETY Personal Note Mrs. Eugene Luchs of New York spent last week in Washington as the guest of Mrs. Sylvan Bensin on 27th street. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Heilbrun and daughter, Miss Helen Heilbrun, of New York. motored to Washington Friday and are guests of Mrs. Meyer Nord- Jinger of Beverly Court. They will re- turn to their home tomorrow *The Century Club will give an in- formal reccption tonight and a num- ber of oui-of-town gue , who are spending the weck end here, will be presen Mrs. Joseph Lang has returned from 4 twa-week visit with friends in New arkocity. Mr. and Mrs. turned from a vi Newark. N, J. Mrs ort time In id Mrs. Isaac Mrs. Samu Franpc have re- 1 relatives in Franc toa are vis- | kons at Beve Mr. and Mrs. and daughter. Miss Bahe er. Wil be home th 135 Wyoming aven o Milton Mr. and.Mrs. Louis Bush spent the ek cnd in'Atlantic O e Wednesday After ub was enlertained . Simon Kant icut aven Alfred May his daughter. M panied by | E.seman spend two week Mr. and My Adie: MISS ALICE VICTORIA LE M, uughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. teh. who recently npnouanced el mement fo Mr. Wil | shivers. 2 Buffalo + Hobr . veturyed hom Mrs Is the n-law. tufford siste af the Cherry Ambrosia. . Mrs Philip Bernstein and daugh-: Soak four tablespoonfuis of pea ter Phyllis of > York are guestsjtapioca in one pint of water ove = night. Next morning stone cnough vser of Newport: cherries to make one pint of fruif. add icherries mixed with one pint of w. ter, let simmer for about twenty minutes. add sugar to make sweet add the cherrigs and cook four m utes longer. Place on ice and ser | with whipped cream and Mrs. New York was brother. Mr. Theodore Tuesday for a irip uest of hi Peyser. and Jo 1o the con Mr. and Mrs Chy lantic who were orme returned to their s Lulley of At- uests of the Lulley, have His Own Carriage. i Chronicle Telegraph snivelvd the . returned Wed- where she . Lema pan- when 1 was own car in my Mrs Moe! My, what i comed ympa- i'hildaeiphia. | ihized the kind-hea soman. “And who visited! haw long has 1 be ce you roae ' Hutzler. Jr.| ip your own rriagy returned to her ust forty-five years. mum.’ re- home on Lanier place plied the paniandler. as he pockeied Miss Jeanette Loeb, who was thc|ine proffered dime. was'a baby of Miss dys Loebh in New ! qjen™ . York for two week. 3 - day Mrs. Louis- Koenigsburg morrow for her in Albany. N. Y.. after a visit with her mother, Mrs. arles Kaufman. Cirewar handinas of jace and mus- lin rufflings are sold tu e on a round-nccked frock. Thay aro de- cidediy worth investigating leaves to- Bring in your PANAMAS Leglorns and Straw Hats of all kinds for Bleaching dlu]k Reblocking Latest Arrivals | Ready-to-Wear Hats | |~ Now on Display Ladies €apitol Hat Shop 508 Eleventh Street N. W. Phone Main 3332 Dur Work Our Reputation. Bea Our Display & $ itest Soricy THat Frames, ate. Chis wonderful meringue was made in two minutes | from storage eggs with HOSE luscious lemon pies, those delicious chocolate pies, those tastey cream pi il :xeo with their snow white meringues of airy lightness-—-how good they are! And, if “Whip-Ezey” is used, how easy and in- expensive they are to make. A few drops of “Whip-Ezey” added to the whites of eggs (storage eggs will do) will enable you to whip up a wonderfg\fi meringue in two minutes or less. Whipped cream, too, becomes a simple matter with “Whip-Ezey.” The ordinary thin coffee cream, or even most evaporated milks, can be beaten into a stiff, rich whipped cream with “Whip-Ezey” in two minutes. Not a drop is wasted—and it stays whipped for 24 hours, none of it returning to liquid form. You don’t need costly heavy whipping cream, At Your Grocer A large size bottle of “Whip-Ezey” costs only 25 cemts—it is sufficient to last the average family for two to three weeks. Keep a bottle in your home-—serve whipped cream at every meal-make dainty meringues —be pr always for the unexpected guest. “ hip-Ezey” i teed by th kers tobe nbwh!e"; pure, tasteless ’lnflmlll- Lacteal Analytical Laboratories, Inc. lam Edwzrd | to the tapioca the juice of the| THE SUNDAY STAR, W ASHINGTON, . G, DEAN ITales of Well Known Folk for British Diplomats—New Phaces in Court Life—other Comment- No appointment which President] functions g has made has been so wary his official nomina tion of an Airedzie terrier as the firs {dog of the land. Both he and Mrs. | Harding have been shaken fo the {deptis b the tearful anpeais of ovn- | sufticicnt to the interest of i lur sty Mg f bul hou St b (l.lu-f.\ : derivation. just s rezardin s ¢ derivation. JUE| pend 't coremon 4 their, pets for & few (weeks|yyy defunct us hobhed it the A le did not sing|zred court train. six yards other doggish accom-|enti elin ated from | vorn by unimarricd women. tuds opeaing into gowns the hem of w ankl n fuc all prett: who made the r curtesy to the Lt queen 2t the first drawing rooms b previously to aesure domo every . lation pre bed had Leen duly erved. Al the were bouffu and some we ¢ others were assic ek Statue Murr.ed women were inform f heav ne oftening ofie or tuiic uider. but more than rto the 1 hed to present a doz ou n the increasing which Laddic has brought 1s of letters have buen received and in addition to the new member of the presidential domestic staff. the master of hounds, it seeined | 1w special sc of ¢ quired. But the Pres.de cclined o have his a 1L is characte tent and fair pari o made of rrefere dile it much pleg Iricr aisti or in an: The n the White | the h reaches the the right in popularity his clan. Bus t nt g iunc both the ding that a ture is now thoa deciaed which an Air tothey Kind of tv in show mu three sweel pending from th in no c: vards from n the floor. - for those hero, and d when Uieir ed hin ier fash entertaining House ricontly 1 of wearin ural flow the d the permit- of roses with ribbons (of goid ov sitve both. i Th danty lhittle arly “sweetheart” rose cile Brunners, are the favorites. n oceasional wreath of safiron vel- low “Glory of Dijon™ With a cluster of the same flowers tucked in the belt the cffesg fur surpasses the stiff Prince of Wales feathers. so long worn. Veils are not worn now at court, nor arc those mammoth ostrich fans, so mod 1sh on this side of the water. approved by the master of ceremonies. news from is that of cd visit o the presi- to Alaska. There are spots on this continent which the executive and his wife have visited but Alaska one of them. Yor years pi indeed, ever since editorial duties eased a little and per mitted more leisure, the Harding: have mapped out for each vacation & dis 1 of travel. In their schedule. prepared for vears Ivanca. Alaska fell to the memo summer of 1920. Now if Congress will oniy expedife its affairs so that 1all invoived in the governmental m. chinery a4y have @ scant month or i this long-cherished project sible | ted half wrea London has an art problem as acute as the statue of Lincoln removed from the fre the Washin N court- of for the President and Mrs. | house for csthetic reasons. The old - best stimulus and tonic|Temple Bar. built by Sir Christopher o—a cool. quiel | Wren, was taken down in 1879, and northern se: nd 4|t grumblings of those who miss of solitude in the Va8l (s old land marks has swollen into spaces—wi cerness of children. | utn” 4 oud chorus. that the lord avclers, they read for istrated volume of ed by the violent f summer sun of the arctic circle. interest for the Like all mayor has promised to look into the matter. The old Temple Bar was removed because of the congested st of this part of london and b s¢ it was a hinderance to traffic. Sir Henry Meut bought the ancient gateway and erected it in entirety al Theobald's Park. hix country seat in Kent. He now offers to return the historic arch- way to London, if it may be erected in the old brie Lis one of absorbing inonce. That was a graceful act of Mrs. John | B. Henderson to offer her comfortable mansion. Glen Kyrie. at Bar Harbor, to the ummarried secretaries of the I British embassy. in order that they imight be adjacent to the ambassador. {who is to take his former cottage at {Dark Harbor. It is rather the excep- ition than otherwise for any sort of bachelor establishment in this pic- turesque part of the Maine coast to vailabl February and season is who nis of Mrs. Henderson's couriesy are planning to take posses- sion about June 1 and to remain un- til October. The ambassador and Lady {Geddes will leave some time the lat- !ter part of June, though the chiidren {and their nurses will go a few weeks {earlier. mly fixed in English litera- ture and it is also preserved in sculp- ture and on But the London restoration where it $tood through out ars. even though it be ma the stand for the traffic bic" and to divide the stream of v. hicles into two channels. In old Lon- don the Temple Bar was originally the Knights Tempiar and their sucees- sors the barristers and altorneys and the commercial streets which sur- rounded the clustered buildings The Crown Priuce of Japan, who has been compelled to bow to the ancient feudel lords of his country and not prolonz his absence in foreign coun- tries. is probably not at all reluctant 1o obey, since his betrothal to the lovely ‘Nagako, a dietant cousin, has re('!‘nlly been offi 1ly announced in Tokio. " A romantic attachment has bound the two since childhood, but the choice of a consort for the Prince was 4 matter of great moment and with many elements to consider. The Princess Nagako is exceeding- Iy clever and advanced in her ideas and that counted against her for a time. But Japan, like the remainder of the world, has since bowed com- placently to ‘the demands of woman and this obstacle was considered re- moved. The princess belongs to the illustrous house of Kuni, which is a cadet branch of the imperial reigning dynasty, the Fushimi. Her parents, the Prince ‘and Princess Kuni, are re. garded as the lope of the so-called democratic wing of the court circle of Tokio and have for years led all the progressive movements, which have agitated the Japanese peopie, The nuptials will be celebrated soon o Tt the eessaniie AP latter the return of the hei 1o o When. Admiral Grayaon signed with|OWn country and will he in' accord: {ihe chautauqua authorities to deliver | 415 With lhe century-old traditions several specfal lectures throughout |7 ihe house of Fushimi. {the season on that consumingly in- [ Thi8 Ereat event consumnated, the {teresting subject. “How 1 Kept Three c'.""’" l.’”m‘t- possibly with his prin- | Presidents Well.” Though fame came | fc8% Will start again on his journey i with longer strides to Admiral Gray- | {3 varlous capitals, among them son after President Wilsan accepted | ;A5 DEton and one or two of South him as family physician, Washing- s {tonians do not forget that his first claim to attention was through those {long, rough country rides he pre- {seribed for President Roosevelt. Mrs. Grayson, as Miss Gertrude Gor- don, spent her girlhood here and was an acknowledged belle. especially in {the remidential set. She was a close |friend and almost constant companion {of Mrs.. Wilson, when she was Mra. Norman Galt, and passed much time in that home. With the admiral, she was often the guest of the Wilsons in the White House and is perhaps the most |constant visitor to the new home on street. Mrs. Grayson and her two ihandsome boys will probably spend the summer in West Virginia, while the admiral is busy on the Chautaugua i route. I8 Kamirsiiata) W oime) smaliihale lolder children sailed recently on the i Cedric for England, the admiral huv- {ing been granted special leave of abscence by Secretary Denby in order fo uccept the various honors planned {for him by the British and French governments. The Cedric was met in British | waters by a man-of-war, and the commander of the American fleet dur- ing the late war was taken off and from that moment he and his family were the guests of the government. They will remain for two weeks in london and recive every social tention. while the program for the | admiral includes a visit to Cam- bridge, where he will receive the high- st degres_of thal honored seat of learning. He will also get a degree from the University of London and a scries of medals and decorutions from the first lord of the admiraity. All of Admiral Sims' colleagues in the allied flect during the war have received titles, gifts of land und of money and other cherished distinc- tions. Not oniy England but France and Italy would have becn honored if inany way they could have bestowed tokens of their gratitude which did | not confliet with the traditional policy of the United States regarding the | offerings of foreign governments. The present Secretury of the Navy takes @ broader view of the matter than did Mr. Daniels and it may be that some_compromise may be reach- ed. Mrs. Sims, who spent part of her kirlhood here and was married in St. John's Church. while her_father, A s akie e louieey stha en itehcock, was Seereta xS i = in official life, who are watching the(@Pd some exquisite photogruphs of situation with keen sympath ithe Nile and desert scenes are being He S colored to framie for his sigl: In the roster of the Washington ! Prescnted a superb sunsct. Hghting bar are found some illustrious names. | {he gTeat pyramid, to v Hugh Wal- among them former President Wood- | 1ace. and Mrs. Edith Wharton w row Wilson and all three of his Sec- | Eiven & F":nnhnrl ov”('hr « T e the artmer ae e wo:| But. unlike the Prince of Wales, M. 3 "C” | Clemenceau does not contemplate &i cent chief executive. ot in the his- ing away entire books of his p & of the nation haa the local bar| %% many have only strates ted such distinction as three ex-iang historic interest and scarcely any premiers. Mr, Bryan's desire 1o keeDiare of the personal sort in touch with national affairs has led 4 to his forming & partnership with a firm of well catablished general prac- titioners, with a trend toward depart- ment activities. [ Mr. Lansing is to inferpret inter- ndtional Jaw. and that. tee, will be the “epecialt ¥ of ir. Wilsen and Mr. Colby. In every sense of the word the social An entertaining rumor is that Mrs. iThemas F. Walsh will. in all prob- lability. purchuse one of those splen- |did old French chateaus which are now on the market and are being taken up so largely by Americans. Miss Anne P. Morgan has recently come into posession of the ancient {castie of Languedoc and, though she intends_to use this estate mainly in the philanthropic sense, as a rest home for overworked students in Paria and other continental cities. she will pass some of the winter there herself. The Duchess of Marlborough spends 80 much time in France that her Eng- lish proteges are alarmed. She, too, has become the owner of a seven- century-old cestle on the rugged coast of Finisterre and she has an army of workers transforming it. in the in- terior sense, while restoring all the battlements and turrets even to the moat_and the wall twenty feet high which encircles the land frontage, | while_the sea protects the other side i3rs. Walsh will probahly select her castle near the large American col- ony at Cannes. Another well known public man Sir John Foster Fraser, the Ject: traveler, publicist and journaliat, whe wrote those virile books, “Red Rus- 8ia,” “The Real Siberia” and “Pictures from the Balkane,” is visiting this country. Business and general prob- lems engage his attention, and after & prolonged Yisit in New’ York and elphia he will co Vash- Ehllsde me to Wash Bir John is an apostle of the esthatic and he describes the difference be- tween Britons and their American cousing as expressive of the national characteristic; The Briton likes a snug, closed-in room in winter with an open fireplace, and the privacy of a walled garden in the summer. The American prefers communicating rooms in his big house and wide, open porches and grounds on public parade all the time. This brilliant critic believes that there is a distinct luck of the indi vidual note in American homes. the rich ones being different only in the degree of opulence displayed. He counsels a wider study of interior art and maintaining the peaceful aititude which marks a true home. “If arci tecture is frozen music. ir John, at a recent le many homes 1 have visited congealed zz." He advises the quiet note always, especially in the room and more space and an repose for the drawing room. A nite color scheme is ubsolutely essen- tisl in any room where harmony and Leauty are desired M. Clemenceau has been spending much of his leisure, since his return to Paris from his eastern trip, devel- oping a series of snapshots he made by the way. He has & complete set of the motor cars which conveyed him to various spots. with a running com- mentary of the value of euch variety in steep grades or rough roads or in other special requisites, something which he could possibly sell for a big sum to the manufacturers of the same, if he were commercially in- clined. A trip through the famous Khyber pass, the gateway of India, which figures so frequently in the Kipling literature, called forth the best re- sources of several machines, as did other trips over the rugged peaks of about to Nearly every queen in Europe to- day muat. in addition to a long list of other accomplishments, be a ready, pleasing public speaker. Elizabeth of Belgium made several addresses while in this country which proved her an adept in that art. Queen Elena of Italy frequently speaks to work- In Social and Official Life: barrier between the great halls of | anges. with | arriage 1o Mr. Johu | ch will take pl ce | ch's Church. ' ard conducts regular | classes in textile art But the Qi y ¥ come 1o the rnest speaker. 1 has recent- forceful und | r when gimental flag (o her | Asturias, was Spanish all last year in £ oof national mosument, which the women of the Iberian peninsula erected at Getafie, the 1 center of the kingdom. she delivered an cloquent Dante, when a circle of in- telle s were celebrating the 600th anniversary of the poet's death. Queen ographi Recentl | Mary of Britain gave such a masterly Speceh in reply to the chancell Oxford at the conferring of her grec, that by request it was made | i a brochure for general distri- bution among the students in the de- partment of letters in Lady Margaret Hall i Alexandria Society. Dr. Kate Waller Barrett entertained at tea Saturday afternoon in honor of Miles. Irene and Ive Curie, who were, however. unable to be present. The tea table was presided over by Dr. Barrett's daughters, Mrs. Edward Al- friend of Atlanta, and Mrs. Rathbonme Smith of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Mrs. Walter Akers and her three little daughters have returned from @ visit to friends in Manassas. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Paff have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Louise MoGirr Paff, and Mr. BEdward Curtis Gibbs of Mount Vernon. The wedding will take place Wednesday, June 1. at the country place of Mr. and Mrs. Paff, at_Wellington Villa, near town. Mrs. Percy Evans has returned from a visit to friends in Warrenton and Middleburg. Johnson, of their the g Reat stand un A led ity size, then cut from 4 i 4t well d spread in o uttered pans Sprinkle she and of are { pans, preferably squarc, and press it | pinch of salt togetber. Miss Mamje Graham is the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Kate Moore, at Mount Jackson, Va. 5 Lieut. Thomas L. Wattles, U. 8 N., who was the guest recently of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. William Wat. tles, on Prince street, has left to Te. turn to his ship, the U. S. S Okla- homa. Mise Caroline Burgess of Culpeper is the guest of her brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Spilman at the Cariyle. Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Bartlett and Mrs George Whitten have returned from a visit to friends in Atlanta Mrs. John H Flagg and Mrs. Car- roll Post of New York city were the guests last week of Mrs William F. Brookes on Prince street. Mrs. Henry Tripple. Miss Allison Bell Tripple. Mrs. Allen Lassiter and Mr. Clyde Layne have returned to their homes in Norfolk after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Birretl on King street. . Miss Marion Lee Holmes of Balti- more is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Shepperson at the Wagar. Miss Maude Peyton has returned to an, V., after a visit to Mr. and Shepper: Tilghman Sharp has returned to his home in Washington after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. King on Prince street. Mrs. Alice C. Pettit announces the marriage of her daughter, Miss Mary Ella Pettit, to Mr. R. Gorman Fergu- son on Saturday, May 21, at the par sonage of the Southern Methodist Church, by Rev. E. V. Regester, D. D. Dr. and Mrs. George T. Klipstein have returned from Los Angeles, Calif., where they spent a year. Mrs. T. Marshall Jones was the week-end guest of her son and daugh- ter-in-law, Mr. and Alrs. John Mar- shall Jones, in Baltimore. Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Delaney have gone to Mobile, Ala, where Dr. De- laney is attending the annual meeting jof the Southern railway surgeons. Jesse Webster Robbins has issued invitations for the marriage of his daughter, Miss Dorothea Rosamond Robbins, 'and Wallace Noble Lindsey of this city, Wednesday evening, June X, at o'clock, in Christ Episcopal Church, Houston, Te Mrs. Louise (;oodman announces the {marriage of her daughter, Miss Myr- tle Louise Quick, to Mr. C. Linwood Batton, which took place Monday at the residence of the bride's mother, by | the 1 O. P. Lloyd of the Second ! Raptist Church Miss Margaret West of Washington is the guest of Mrs. Mahlon P. Davis. Mr_and Mrs. Wayne Lynn of Indian Md., were the week-end guests atter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 1gan Miss Patty Washington of Washington was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. € A S lair in Rosemont. < returned to her | to her siter, Mrs. J. Mrs. Robert M. Slaughter has returned from a visit to relatives in Washington. Dr. and Mrs. Slaughter had as their guests this week their son, Sergt. Innis Blaughter. i | g Clinten_ Carpenter of Norfolk is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cox. Maj. and Mrs. Charles D. Barrett of 1 DERMATOLOGIST Wrinkles, freckles, blemishes, acoe and pit- tings permsnently removed. Ten to fifteen years taken from your appearance. Conteur testored and skin given tbe bioom of youth. n and women. Apt. 843, the Hadleij hours, 11 a.m. NOW IS THE TIME To Have Your Furs Remodeled While our expert furriers are not so husy and while we offer spccial summer rates. Special Free Storage —to all who have their furs remodeled now. LT O T T LTI 1105 H St. N.W. Pkone Franklin 3683 T L] MG I e ST SOCIETY Quantico spent the we itter's parents, Mr. on Mr. and Ars. on-in-law und ds of w alded m then aid fourth beaten nd Mr members Boat Club gave clubhouse Friduy to ma s and enou! e lowing mixture, and allow 10 bake in « hot oven for haif Mix together twn table- of melted butter. three t of chopped almonds, of a cup of brea tablespoonfuls of su- ~-fourths teaspoonful of innamon week end at T went fo attend fie ourihe two 10lis 5 Mrs. Thomas N Mr. Aust My Mrs. S . N, and sireet ow the Purvis & Mrs. Dau son. D nburn Mi Huigh :MEMBER the name and you will be sure of hav- ing your Furniture Re- paired Right. SEGAL BROS. Phone M. 3081 1014 18th N.W. BIRD .55 Furs Exclusively Wwe'll! He que Ship 1R i 415 G Street under th im- e most proved conditions, at ngton s >St°fe Maderate Cost. Phone Your Franklin 5732, when 1 ready for us to cal Furs your furs. 'REBUILDING FURS A SPECIALTY Short Bread MRS. EADS JOHNSON, P'ut one pound of flour. one-half A spring bride. pound of butter and three-fourths of a4 pound of brown sugar into a bowl and rub the mixture between the hands until no lumps of butter or sugar remain and it resembles sand or powder. Turn this into fat baking | | was Miss Ruth down smoothly and firmly. It should be about one-half an inch thick. Bake in a moderate oven until light brown and cut into squares immediate If the oven is too hot or the ehort bread is left in it too long, it will| be hard. The oven should not be quite as hot as for baking biscuits and the short bread should be baked | about twenty minutes. i Baked Apple Dumplings. Pare and core and halve three tar apples. Sift two cups of flour, one heap. ing teaspoonful of baking powder ~nd a Cut in two heap ing tablespoonfuls of fresh lard or but- Hotel Powhatan Roof Garden | WILL OPE. Monday, May 30, 6 P.M onday, May 30, . ter and with a mixing spoon stir in “ . . . 1 enough sweet milk to make a dough D _M —D il Roll to about one-fourth of an inch in | inner uste allCl"g | thickness and wrap each half of apple | ! with some of the dough. Place m:l rather deep pan. Take four cups of | . sugar, one tablespoonful of flour, one | MEYER DA VIS, Music tablespoonful of butter and nutmeg to flavor, mix together and add one quart | | of boiling water, stirring while addiag: | en pour over the dumplings in a | 2 pan and bake for one-half to three- ‘Main 40 fourths of an hour in rather a hot oven. Telephone : 27 Baste with the sauce around the| dumplings when half done and let them | bake 2 nice brown. Serve with cream, | either whipped or plain. E = LD The House of Quality JMayer Bros. & Co. ?f 937.939 F St. N.W. No Branch Stores Closed Monday, Decoration Day Tuesday Morning We begin a remarkable value-giving event, offering for selection extraordinary under- price purchases of Women's and Misses’ Summer Time Apparel at the most attractiv price reductions yet made. Truly worth a prompt visit. L e A e o e e = B L K B St S b A S “particular” woman finds sat- isfying daintiness at most modest prices in “Dove” Under- ts either of snowy cotton cloths or luxurious Crépe de Chine and Satin. Their trim- mings of lace, embroidery, or fancy stirch- ings are chosen for their becomingness and wearing qualities. DOVE Night Gowns DOVE Camisoles DOVE Envelope Chemises DOVE Corset Covers DOVE Pajamas DOVE Drawers DOVE Under-skirts DOVE Bloomers DOVE Chemises DOVE “Stouts” DOVE Unien Suits DOVE Novelties Ask for “Dove” and look for the label. D. E. SICHER & COMPANY, Inc. *“World’s Largest Makers of Lingeric” 4553 WEST 315t STREET NEW YORK garments Beautiful Well~made Lingerie Sold by Leading Stores Everzwhefi

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