Evening Star Newspaper, May 29, 1921, Page 38

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N SOCIETY THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. MAY C., 29 1921—PART 9 SOCIETY HAngusta Brassil “West Clifton Jerrace 14 th Street Entrance orset Parlors OPEN EVENINGS Corset Fitting a Specialty Guarantee with every Corset as to fit, bon- ing and materials Corsets, $2.00 Up Pink Satin Waist- Line Corsets, $3 Underwear of Every Description Frem $1 to $§15 Open Decoration Day L and w.fe will tuke sor + Maly 3-Skin Giberian Squirrzl Chokers, Special, $6.75 FREE : STORAGE Order Fur Repairs —made dy mer and 1 Special Stored | ing sum- our ur s you by ates. F ¢ when order repairing done Gl Cubel 1215 G St. Tel. Frank. 3445 Parents Leaving | Washington or in Office T will take a limited numiwr of seven into my home. Riving fnest particniar, light instruetion Monti. week dax. Inter ress Rox hitdren ove, tutorin appoin Pure Cream Fudge “It’s Delicious” Storage for Furs Intrust the summer care of furs to us and they'l be returned to you next fall IMPROVED by their stay in our Cold Storage room. Selling All Chokers and summer furs at un- usual BARGAIN PRICES. SAKSFURCo, MANUFACTURERS WHO RETAIL AT WHOLESALE PRICES 1212 F Streete—— STRAW HATS CLEANED AND REBLOCKED Made like new. Your hLat is safe with um, 88 we use no acids. Speciaiizing in Panamas, Milans. Rankoks. We also have a separate department spe- eializing in Dyeing. Cleaning and Ladies' and Geotlemen's garmests. All Work Guaranteed. Kandel’s Hat Factory 1836 14th St. N.W. Phone North HOT-WATER PLANTS Take advantage of the sum- mer season to prepare for the L coming winter. THE COLBERT HEAT- ING FORCE has iastalled many of the most important and satisfactory Heating Piants in town. N Send for them for REPAIRS as well new work. MAURICE J. COLBERT, 621 ¥ St Main 3016-3017. as lies principally in graceful freedom and exposure of beautiful shouldersand § arms, Yon, wearing this sea- 08's sbeer fabrics and lowcut Towns, may a.so enjoy & de- Tightfully usconscious freedom DEL-A-TONE 2 scientific preparation mads 3 beauty experts to safely re- move the bair from face. neck or under-arms. It leaves the skin clear, frest. and firm, without specialists rec it highly. Eaty toap- plr—simple directions wiih every jar, &g A " o eeery Labout - Mrs. | rin Pressing 1 Chevy Chase. Mr. i hosts at home last week in honor of the United States consul at Ghent. Bel- | glum. Mr. Roy Nasmith. Mr. Nasmith is saijing for his post June 1. Mre® William J. MeNally was hostess at a luncheon and bridze party at her ihome Tucsday. | Mr. and Mrs. Guy M. McDowell en- {tirtaied @ week_end party of four- teen guests from New York city. Th k them to the New Willard for per Sunday even Harold will entertain Igembers ¢ e of the Young Women's sociation at her home, June 7, peated Friday evening at the Chevy (hase Library, the proceeds being iturned over to the Chevy Chase Chap- iter of the Florence Crittenton Mis- s and means committee of ny Leazue, under the ¢ nery. gave its . This was t time this season s heen appointed chair- building commitice and rman of the pagcaniry committee the Roosevelt Memorial Associa- s tion. which will begin June 14 to raise funds to build a memorial to former President Roosevelt's mother. and Mrs. G =e W. Harris and ‘ i ghtyr. Martha, are sailing une L. for Liverpool ty of Harrishurg on-in-luw and daug and Mrs. Charles W ing her Lieut. laski of New York former resident Fere. E ds in Chevy Chase muel Hershal w. | her home last w in honor yof Mrs. A. Bruce Bie K }‘ Mr. and Mrs. . A, Fletcher have sed the Brush house on Hesketh t for the summer and will take | possession this week. Alr. Miss Helen Gruver, daughter of Mr. I Mrs. S. H. Gruver, is among the duates this year of the National rk Seminary. Lillie Beall and Miss Josephine of San Antonio. Tex.. will ars this week to visit their grand- nts, Col. and Mrs. Fielder M. M. i, on Brookeville road. Mr. and Mrs. Wentworth C. Brooke S0l €hele hame to De and Mrs: hultz. who will tuke possession taptember 1 John Lyman tertain the Chevy Cha: 2t her home Wednesday Ivented from doing so. the club next Wednesday. Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Galloway of ‘_\':-nm, Ohio. are house guests of Dr. who was to en- Thimble Club but was pre- ill entertain and Mrs. D. G, Davis. Mr. . Hen- shel of New York city, who has been the week-end guest of Dr. and Mrs. Da; will leave tomorrow for his home. Mr. and Mrs. Burr N. Edwards have ,!hvn entertaining Miss Margaret Mill- han and Miss Helen Howland. both graduates of the Mount Vernon Sem- | | i 1 1 for the week end. = Ann Devereux. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ryvan Devereux. who recently sailed for London. has ar- rived there and after a short v 1 go to Pa of the French schools, Capt. and Mrs. Waiter I were hosts at a charming dinner at their home on East Bradley lane last week. Mrs. W, her son in Philadelphia, Pa., has re- jturned to her home. i Mrs. Elizabeth Gassoway of Gaith- ||l ersburg. Md.. left last week for Bos- i ton. making the trip by motor and ac { companying Mr. Charles A. Stone, jr., {and Mr. Joseph M. Hall. {_Mrs. C. H. Truesdall and Miss Abbie {Brown of Milwaukee, Wis.. who have {been house guests of Representative {and Mre. Edward E. Brown, have re- i turned to their home. | The ladies of the Chevy Chas jauxiliary of the Red Cros iraised about $135 from | party which was given recently. the { money to be used in buying materials {for layettes to be sent to the near i east, A very pretty but quiet wedding {in the home of the bride. Wednesday jat 1 p.m, was that of Miss Artridge {Belt and Mr. William McCauley Ter- The ceremony was performed {by Rev. Dr. John R. Edwards. Dis- {trict superintendent of the Methodist | Episcopal Church, and Rev. J. Luther ess. There were no attendants. The , D. C., have ‘| bride was married in light green satin idraped in two-toned silk marquisette with a large picture hat to match, and |she carried a sunburst of roses. The jimmediate families of the bride and jbridegroom witnessed the ceremony, jafter which a buffet luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Terrill left later {for their honeymoon trip. going to { Asheville, N. C.. where they will spend itwo weeks. Upon their return they {will be at home to their friends at i 1 Crittenden street, Wasl | Miss Belt comes from a distinguished {Maryland family, being a direct de- scendant of Col. Joseph Belt, who was given a grant from Lord Balti- more,” which included Chevy Chase. Mrs. Warren Brush will leave this week for Maine, where she will spend {the summer with her young daughter, | being joined later in the summer by | Mr. Brush. Children’s Clothes :l'r is an almost unfailing rule thet | " the better the class of the child | the more simply she is dressed. The | silks and satins, taffetas and chiffons |are not usually for the children of families of distinction. ; A good many mothers of good { l Distinction in taste now choose to dress two little | girls or two little boys near of an age in the same sort of clothes. Doubtless the child womld rather { have clothes of his own selection, lunlike those of the brother or sister. but at the same time two sisters dressed alike can never experience jthe unhappiness of 'prefering the clothes of the other to their own {A boy and girl in the same family | may also be dressed somewhat alike with very pleasing resul For in- {stance, a little girl of eight and ! her brother of six wear for every day swealers of heather mixture with blue and white kindergarten ecloth. The little girl has a bloomer frock. while the boy has a suit cut in Oliver Twist style. For afternoon they wear white #ailor suits. the upper sections being alike in trimming of black apd red. Thera are navy bioe coats and biack straw hats to g0 with these suita. One principle, at least. ought to be observed in dressing your children. See that a certain principle of dress is followed out in dressing them all The effect is far better if vou do this. For instance, if one child wears socks there is no reason why they should all not—except I the case that one of the children is toe deli- cate. The same general type of shoes should prevail. It gives an effect of inconsistency to see one child dressed in a plain dark straw hat and aa- other of the same family nearly the same age dressed in a light straw hat festooned with flowers. Some mothers dress their children entirely differently, making as their excuse that their children’s tastes are different. One child is content with the plain straw hat, while the other insists on having a light hat flower trimmed. Now, in reality, if you per- mit yourself to be guided by the taste and judgment of your children in selecting their clothes you will Le led far astray. You are really serving their interest better when you insist on making selections for them. —_— Hats with straw brims and crowns made of woolen scarfa or brushed wool fabric by the yard are very ef- fective. Sometimes there is comtrast of the colors of the brim and the erown. but more often a darker or lighter tone of the same color as the ‘hflm is used for the crown. and Mrs. Lincoin Potter were a charminz dinner at their it will | is where she is to enter one | Gherardi | j0lden Carter. who visited | the card! VIRGINIA U. TO HOLD |Exercises to Begin Tuesday Will Continue for Four CHARLOTT Va. M v 28— ! The University of Virginia will cele- Lrate next week the one hundredth | janniversary of founding by | homas Jefferson. Exercises will be gin Tuesday and coniinue four wilth representatives of the leading educational institutions of America and of nine foreign countries in at- { tendance. | | Representatives of foreign countries | i‘i, be present include those from {Great Britain, France, Belgium, Swit- | zerlund n, China. Chil Canada jand way. The American dele- | gates will include fifty-two college |presidents. amonz them the chief executives of Harvard, Yale. I'rince- Cornell und Johns Hopkins, ercises commemorating the in-l {fluence of the University of Virgin in the religious lifc of the nation will open the celebration Tuesday morn ing, when the Rev. William Alexande :l?:lrr. 2, dean of Christ Church Cathedral, New Orlea will preach. | Van Dyk. of l‘nll(‘e'Dfl{ iversity will speak at vesper sery- 1 and later the new 1dediva!e—d_(‘"ek amphitheater will be Wil oll in Rotunda. Delegates will enroll Wednesday morning in the historic rotundn. sary | swept by fire and once spared from destruction by Sheridan's raiding army through the intercession of the late John B. Minor. A reception by President Edwin A. Alderman and UNIVERSITY OF 00TH ANNIVERSARY and Mrs. A. E. Wilkerson have ! members of the faculty will fol With ~ President ~ Alderman. erov. Westmoreland Davis of Virginia, "85, later will formally welcome the guests in Cabell Hall. Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, "president of Harvard Uni. yersity: Jules J. Jusserand, Freneh gmbassador to the United States: Dr. Jullan Alvin Carroll Chandler, presi- dint of the College of William and ary, and Dr. Albert Ross H ary Ros 1, presi- ""‘n“:.f Missouri University, will Tablet to Be Unveil A tablet - i let containing the eighty University or Vlrg|nia."v:1Tne‘wl?l:l lost their lives in the world war wi)] | B oVeiled Wednesday afternoon. John Stewart Bryan, rector of the university. will accept the tablet from Capt Alfred Dickenson B representing the alumni. and b1 cie: briel Hanoteaux, commander of the French Legion of Honor. will spess The university's pageant, Phe Shadow of the Builder.” will be givey Wednesday in the i e eedny amphitheater by a Led by the class of 1921 and guests will parade 1o the amphi- theater on Thursday morning (e feer jaddremses by Sir Auckland Geddes British ambassador to the (nited Statesand Dr. John Bassett Moore, '80, of Columbia University. The Rt Re Dennis Jomerh O'Connell, Cutholic P of Richmo; i Hipsiop otk nd, will deliver the ! Pllgrimage to Home. A pilgrimage to Jefferson's h. “Monticello.” will be made on Thure. day afternoon, and Dr. Archibald Cary ]coalld[- of Harvard Univ i neal descendant of mm‘.i"fdé.fi i . the alumni son, will address delegates and g from lhg porch of the hintnl:rh“mpa’;? slon. Richard Thomas Walker Duke, ir. ', whose ancestors were inti. w‘:a Wll(ti;' Jefferson, pilgrims will vy, P tomb and decorate it W::; "Jflf"'mon % On the final day of the centennial Priday, professional and academio de. grees will be conferrad in the morn-| ing and will be followed in the after- noon by a series of depart meetings, - e . al#o will speak. owers, When Making Tea. YOU may have heard the woman . With three or four servants make the complaint that she cannot serve aft- ermoon tea beacause she is afraid of the Pprotests of her servants. Still you know other women with one or no serv never fails to serve the restu; cn bopro you call upon her in the afterncon. you plan your equipment wisely tea making may be made very easy. More: over, many a maid would be quite will- | ing to set forth a simple tea tray any day if it meant that she might have her tea in the kitchen at the same time. For the houseworker is quite as subject to the midafterncon fag in strength as you. and usually just as sensitive to he re. viving powers of tea as any one else. But whether you make your own tea or ask your maid to do it you should have it 'a simple matter. If you have tea regularly or many times a week it is a good pian to have a speclal set of teacups and other dishes set aside for it. These may be kept on a tray by themselves, and replaced immedintely after they are washed, then set away in the cupboard ready to be taken down the next time. There is difference of opinjon as to the relative goodnems of tea ball tea and tea made in a teapot. Those who like their tea quite bracing prefer that brewed in a pot. You cannot get much of the energizing quality from the tea leaves by mcrely dipping a tea ball in a cup or pouring boiling water through it. If you leave the tea ball in the cup long enough to impart any great strength your tea infusion will become cold. In the covered teapot it does not becoms cold, though the water rests on the tea leaves for five or ten minutes. Paper napkins are for all ordinary purposes quite satisfactory for tea time. Especally if you are one of those who holds back from serving tea because of additional work you should adopt the paper napkin habit. When merely tea and biscuits are served, of course no ir napkins are necessary, but buttered or cinnamon toast or little cakes neceasi- tate them. In a family of ssveral daughters or other women it is a good thing to make the tea-getting duties fall upon each in turn.” Fach may serve a weck or cer- tain days in the week. There is always more satisfaction in this sort of assign- ment of work than in a general under- standing that very one will help." VIRGINIA Jeflerson’s tomb at Monticello decorated by centenmial officials eon d delegates and guests will make a ction with the centennial. Founder's day. One thou to Monticello June 2 | thés of Art afid Aftists ONE HUNDRED YEARS OLD THIS WEEK. IgTimage A collection of water colors by M. W.} Zimmerman of Philadelphia has lately | been placed on exhibition in the Cor- coran Gallery of Art. This is the third | group exhibition of a somewhat similar kind set forth in the Coreoran Gallery | of Art’s atrium. The first was the wcrk of Miss Bertha E. Perrie of this city, the sccond, lately closed, the work of Felicie Waldo Howell, formerly of Washington and now of New York. In each case the water colors have been matted but not framed, and have been shown somewhat after the manrer in which etchings are commonly displayed. Each group has been essentially dis- tinctive in character. The last, fhe work of Mr. Zimmerman, is pecuilarly individual, strongly evincing the in- fluence of the Japanese print riakers on_cotemporary American art. Mr. Zimmerman was born in Phila-| delphia in 1861, studied at the Julian; Academy in Paris and elsewhero. He paints landscapes and city pictures, not figures, and he has found his themes all the way from Philadelphia to Japan. His interpretation of Mugi is very mu in the spirit of the Japanese and his representation of a Philadelphia back ard is rendered in precisely the manner. He has learned to elimin detail to the last degree and to tell h story in the simplest possible terms. and the way he does it is charming—with- out exaggeration and with excellent feel- ing. Because of his use of flat sur- faces, few colors and suggestive lines, his -works are decorative and though they are mot realistic they admirably interpret the chosen themes. Borrow- in the vernacular of the east, he has skillfully adapted it to western require- M Whin this_exhibition closes about June 15, 1t will be replaced by a collec- tion of water colors of wild flowers by Ars. C. D. Walcott of this city, who has made a careful and almost exhaustive study of this subject and has transcribed many hundred specimens with bomi scientific accuracy and artistic skill. It is unusual for the Corcoran Gal- lery of Art to put on special exhibi- tions during the summer, but an ex- ception will be made this year. From {he early part of June until the latter part of August the American Water Color Sociely's 1921 Rotary exhibi- tion, circulated by the American Fed- eration of Arts, will be shown here in the Corcoran Gallery's special ex- hibitfon hail. ) This will comprise ninety-eight pic- tures by theleading water colorists of this country, among whom may be named Eliot Clark, George Wharton Kdwards, lately decorated by both the French and Belgian governments; Ar- thur Keller, Norwood MacGilvar. Spencer Nichols, formerly of this cit Jane Peterson, idward Potthast, Wil- liam Starkweather and others. PR An innovation was made this year in the Corcoran Bchool's awards, the much coveted gold medal being given for the best work in the portrait class rather than for life drawing. Inas- much as portraiture is rated as the highest form of art, it seemed to those in authority that for work of this character the highest award should be given. The fortunate winner was Fugene Weiss, to whom was also awurded the anonymous prize of $50 for the most meritorious and deserv- ing student. The work of the school was set forlhl last week 28 usual in the special ex- hibition gallery and its anteroom. Such exhibitions, while interesting to the students and their friends, are dis- tinctly not purposed for the general of his prints himself and each s an individual expression. An exhibition of about two dozen plates has lately been held in_the Brown - Robertson Galleries, New York. which has been oreating very favorable comment. | Mr. Senseney once occupied a studio in the Octagon. He has since spent some years in Paris and in other more remote places. At one time he was a member of the Provincetown colony. * % x5 John Taylor Arms is another Wash- ington boy who has made a success and an enviable name for himself in the fleld of etching. Mr. Arms, who was one of the speakers at the recent convention of the American Federation of Arts in this city, has specialized in aquatints, though”he has not deserted the field of pure etching. He was born in this city in 1887 and trained as an architect at the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology. For five years after graduation he prac- iced architecture in New York. Dur- ing that time he took up etching as a recreation and at the conclusion of the war, when released from military service, he determined to give his attention to graphic art, and since January. 1919, he has given his entire time to it Within a year he produced twenty aquatinted plates, the exhibition of which brought him into immediate note among print collectors. There is_in his prints. as in Mr. Zimmer- man’'s water colors, strong BUgges- tion of the Japanese influence, but he, t0o, has something personal to say and says it with distinct individuality. * k¥ An exhibition of ceramics, sculpture, paintings and drawings by a Swedish artist, Vicken von Post, will open on Tuesday, May 31, at the headquar- ters of the Women's Chamber of Commerce, 605 12th street northwest. Mrs. von Post has exhibited in Sweden, Norway and Denmark and is well _known for her portrait busts, espeelally her busts of children. A portrait group of the children of the Crown Prince of Sweden is in- cluded in this exhibition by special permission of the king. * % k& Charles E. Pellew, president of the New York Society of Craftsmen and well known for his own craftwork, will give a talk on batik and tied| work (dyeing) at the Washington Arts Club, 2017 1 street, on June 4. * ¥ x x An_exhibition of portrait studies and sketches of the late John Bur- roughs by Orlando Rouland is being held in_the Lhrich Galleries, New York. These portraits and sketches are the result of an intimate per- sonal friendship between the artist and himself covering a period of nineteen years. During that time, Mr. Rouland says in an interesting foreword to the catalogue, several visits were made together to Washington, giving oppor- tunity to reminisce and “to go over all John Burroughs' old stamping grounds, from the United States Treas- ury vaults, where ‘Wake Robin' was written to Capitol Hill, where, as Mr. Burroughs said, the ground his house once stood upon was scooped away for the foundation of the pre: ent Sepate building.” - One of Mr. Rouland's intimate por- tralts of the great naturalist has been given to the National Galiery of Art. * X ¥ ¥ exhibition of Get Your Copy of A. B. public. With the showing of the year just closed the principal and instruc- tors of the school profess themselves more than satisfied. * * k% George Senseney, a former student of the Corcoran School of Art, has won for himself special distinction in the world of art as a eolor etcher. The method he has pursued has been somewhat different from that follow- ed by others. He goes into the open, chooses his subject, drawe it on & copper plate, determines general val- ues and then in his studio etches it and applies the oolor. He makes all Practical Child Training. 35¢ at 715 14tk 1410 B 807 K mw. 735 11th SPECIAL DINNER, $1.00 Seuthern Fried Chicken with Waffles, PLAYHOUSE TEA SHOP 1814 N St. N.W. ] o1 G soe ¥ 800 G southern MRS. PARSONS HONORED. T H. S Parsons. 817 Jefferson ‘ Mrs. | the Parént-Teacher Association of the Brightwood Park School. She suc- | ceeds Mrs. Harold E. Clarke. who had | | been at the head of the organization | | for the last two years. | | The association wiil give a luncheon e school Thursday to ri mproving the playground. | at t | to home developed by a cultured man of atone residence, with modern et in artists was shown se funds | Becond Floor. - ©ON THE TOP OF THE BLUE RIDGE MOU! scriminating taste and judgment; ent; extensive porches, Ponip Levy & 6™ 3 Values That Defy Competition See Them---Judge for Yourself FURS STORED Model Cold Storage | street, has been elected president of | Have Your Furs Remade or Repaired Now. Prices Most Reaseaable. Eanet & Bacher, 571 13th St. N.W. TAINS ia this delightfnl mlorioun Jate spring in Charleston, and is Views of mountnins and valleys: most picturesque npj {now on disp in the Civie Club, 14 roanding of 438 acres, part arable, part timber: W - _ | chard of 40 acres: in 1920, 2000 barreis of apples: 1% miles from Bl {iveat Tl strcel Bavew; DORK Ry mont, 35 miles from Washington; ewner anxious to make Immedi This exhibition contains 103 pictures,| wale. representini the work of sixty artists [From " Thents Southern cities, it H. W. HILLEARY more and Washingian XWichux Main 4792 1000 Vermont Avenue 7-Piece Bedroom Suite Exactly like illustration. Graceful Queen Anne design. Your choice of genuine walnut or mahogany, including Dresser, Chifforette, Dressing Table, Full-size Bed, Chair, Rocker and Bench. You will find it impossible to duplicate this value...... $19.50 Cash—$2.50 a Week Made of Genuine American Walnut, consisting of 60-inch buffet, good size china closet, inclosed serving table, round extension table 48 inches wide, 5 side chairs, 1 armchair, seats covered in genuine leather...,..eeeeieeeiianiiiiian.. $27.50 Cash—$3.75 a Week 7-Piece Bedroom Suite Exactly like illustration. Artistic Louis XV design. Can be had in genuine walnut or mahogany. Large Dresser, Chif- forete, Vanity Dresser, Full Size Bow-end Bed, Chair, Rocker and Bench. Positively the best value in Washington.......... $34.50 Cash—$4.50 a Week 10-Piece Dining Room Suite awce levr& G DIVISION OF AMERICAN HOME FURN(SHERS CORP. '735 7th STREET N.W. 2752

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