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SO. Tales of Well .CIETY Known Folk In Social and Official Life. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ©C., JULY Mr. and Mrs. Norment Leave on Motoy Trip Mr. and Mrs. Harry Norment are leaving the city today for a motor trip through the Berkshires prior to 3, 1921—PART 2. MARYLAND WOMEN IN FIGHT FOR VOTE SOCIETY 7 Miss Mildred McLeod Hostess to Classmates Misg Mildred McLeod entertained a number of her classmates of the graduating cluss of Business High I eane Taly 16 lom. the Echool at her home, 1613 lst strect 3 : ; Olymila. o spend the balance of the northwest. Snturday cvening. June 15, President Often Ambidextrous When Greeting summer’ abroad. e a0 othes Keatizes Tneinges X o = < ' piano solos and r'lnll(s rendered h\ the Friends—Gen. Anson Is Interesting Figure. Antis Will Carry Battle e Incidents in Bo B naparte’s Career. Alexandria Society. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace N. Lindsey haWe Against Suffrage to U. S. !carried out in the decoration of the various rooms and supper wak served at 11 o'clock. Those present included Miss Helen Reetor, Miss Mildred Inge, _ f returned from their wedding trip ‘:nd Supreme Court. x?“,‘,.! Mgrion Riley, Mixs Mabel Mc: An accomplishment of President|count some of the amusing ex- are at their home in Rosemont. Mrs. _cod,” Miss Rosieils McLeod, Miss Harding's which is not claiming the | Periences, which are always the lot Lindscy was formerly Miss Dorothea Special Dispateh to The Star. Cutherine Albaugh, Miss = Evelun attention which it should is that, t0| “'yzrg Tansing, too, has frequently Rosamond Robins, and the wedding oc- BALTINORE, July 2.—Undaunted by Farherine Bhisips, Ms Honard Coopp a large extent, he is ambidextrous.|been called on to be pleasant to peo- curred in Houston, Tex., on June 7. the decision of the court of appeals, Mr. Edward tetlie, Clarenge He can shake hands as easily and cor- | Plé whom ghe did not know, but Mrs. William Lewis Packard of Ge- which rendered an opinion this week ;‘bufhlm. Mr. th)'nd)qr{;) Mr. who claimed they were friends and neva, N. Y., {s the guest of her parents, affirming the rights of women to vote r:fier and Mr. dially with his left hand as he can with his right, and those who at- tended the garden fetes last month in Modoc Raker were forma- Raker Mra. constituents of Mr. M. closely associated during the county. and Mr. and Mrs. William F. Brookes, on Prince street. in Maryland, the members of the M land League for State Defense, which Goes to Atlantic City for tive period, as her husband_entered r 13 opposed to woman suffrage and car- | witnessed this feat, after about an g POFOG A8 B O ther. Judge E. Mr. and Mra, Jamcs Herbert tcCuen e ot i 4 hour had passed and very likely the V. Spencer of Anaheim, in southern of Norfolk were the guests I; Sarey nut g . Remainder of Season ight hand was becoming numb. The |California, after finishing the gram- the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. arry their fight to the §upreme Court s Lte with his left | Mar school course in San Jose. James McCuen, at the Wagar. of the United States. | MRS. THOMAS S. SMITH, Mrs, C. A. Stedman is closing her President can also write wi e He conquered the law in short Miss Margaret Paft and Miss Mary The test case was made on the appli- | Formerly Mixx Kathryn Helen Klingler | residence on New Hampshire avenue hand, and frequently in his early days at scribbling notes for later editorial revision he could transfer the pencil from one hand to the other with ex- cellent results—a habit to which he still clings. He can whittle a stick with equal dexterity with either hand, space and was soon a junior mem- ber of the firm and he is known as one of the brilliant legal lights of his section. The marriage to his seplor partner's daughter occurred in 1889, Mrs. Raker IS a prominent member of the Congressional Club and 1 is active in all affairs of the legis- i MISS ANNE BANCROFT COUSHAINE, Former director of campaigns for the commission on training camp active itien, who fa chairman of the present Whitton have gone to Montreat, N. C., as delegates to the Presbyterian Sunday echool conference. Capt. and Mrs. Virgil A. Payne have returned from visits to relatives In Charlottesville and Keswick, Va Mrs. Clarence Keith and Miss Virginia Keith are visiting relatives in Chicago. Mrs. William Woodfleld is the guest % MRS. JOSEPH A. MARR, Miss Dorothy in th cation of two women, one white and other colored. to be registered as v enth ward of Baltimore cit and whose right 10 registration was pro- | tested brought the teat case individualiy as representative of the Home Defe League he e by Judge Oscar of New Haven, Conn., whose wedding 100k place Wednenduy Chapel. Leser, who nd | LEGACIES TO RELATIVES. ! Immediately upon learning of | the decision of the Maryland court the | in Dahigren | and will be at the Hotel Cheisea at Atlantic City, N. J, for the remainder | of the season. Senate Ladies Abandon Luncheon lative set and of the Paclific coast. ; g — and on the whole he makes a new | T 0 e— TP e e Tatitore for tue| Of lier brother-in-law, Mr. Joseph Wood- - league. throush Judge Lescr. set out G- A. Scruggs' Will Also Leaves ) .. yeual Tuesday luncheon given i H st v = B . s final effort by p - cuse e Aien w! entry in the list of presidential ac-i A Glalngu nec b soon to come | Blind Mixs Coushaine ix n magasine| Mrs. George R. McCauley and Miss Personal Notes. to_the highewt court 1n the couniry. . $10,000 to Presbyterian Orphanage | R complishments. to Washington. is the Hon. J;m;, :;:dn:: ‘;“.":.!'?.'..Jn'.'..' and the author Ed;- nx::c;u;,-yu'ue the guests of friends ].\n Donald R. Hook=r, who IS one of | sperial Dispatel to The Star. Mrs. Harding has tried to emulate! Lowther, the retiring speaker of the . at_Trenton, N. J. = the most active members of the women's alDlepmieliy e A en st In the matter of sheking | house of commons. Mr. Lowther has | _ Mo, Alexander S. Doniphan Is the | Mrs. Sol Rice of New York, who has |nuiitical clabs of Baitimere, when toi LVNCHBURG, Va, July 2.—The; hands, but just a few ciasps entirely | boen sent by the more ancient popu- guest of her son-in-law and dauhter |spent o week with her daughter, Mrs. |of the action of the “antin” expressed | Wil of G. A, Seruges of St Louls iy d 1L C in e o e S e Tiant | Lar assembiage of tne British ov- |of Pennsylvnia. the Juniata, of which|Maj. and Mrs. Dantel N. Swan, at|gi [ Ppll B0 00 0% oiige in [ wish that thex would stay “Dul” inwho died there recently, a copy of | L.ACES af ace Curta can perform excellent service for|ernmart in Westminster to present a fhe has frequently read, and which en- Fort Monroe. e i . . | their grave and bemoaned the expend S st ecor A et d = : B O e e 15 the super. | SDAlers chair o the house of rep- |ters into all descriptions of scenery| Mra. Lucille Flutio and small daugh. | Friendship Heishts, leaves for AUARLC | ure of e 1o e POl | which lias been recorded here, s Cleaning Br e i rounds and bulld- | resentatives of the Dominion of Can- |above the Quaker city and Harris- | ter of Indianapolin. Ind. are the gUcels | City on Tuesday with the “inevitable.” | the sum of $10.000 to.the Presbyterian O D B omo, of the | acla. which is an exact replica of the | burg. the capital of the state. The|of her father. Mr. J. G. Landers, on |y “gng eph Solomon are| In the fight to keep the ballot from: ,rpunage in thi nd gives 1- IBOUD, I R A oute. has remarked that in|ome which sits aloft in the chamber |launching will take place soon after South Falefax streel. = 0 o 0 Lo i |spending a week in Atlantic City. the falr sex. Judge Leser expluined thats .cs to the following relatives who 1 MME. VIBOUD, Inc., ise. ha na ! 35 e o ther fol- | the vacht arrives off San Sebastiun,| Miss ea of A S o ke neither he nor other members of the s BED MG Catablished 1855, 11th St N.W. B hands aracetorly s e e blihed pracedent of | Which will probably be in about | the WAL 6f Jibw Eive Walter tn Cots s o saninarents gue were prompted by sex antago- | here: Mrs. M. H e T Teceptions, and many hostesses recall | the British [mrll;menl, has lbe;\n three weeks. taxe ’;’r‘"d Mre. Edward Steele, Miss Vir- | Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Baer, of Beverly [P lh:em!lilfi'dm,y;n?’ great love for the ter, Mra, J. Ei MME. ROZANN vity 2 or of the[&iven a geat in the house of lords, " Steele and. “rank Sted | Court. 4 3 4 Yo . 30, . jr. and GIST T ais B e ating his|and will ‘take his place among the WOMAN CAMPAIGNS. e o S e s (T and Mre Joseph King and daugh, oo hem become less attractive tirough Safrs AL Kinnier. v ant ok 5| ad one | peers of the realm at the next sit- 9 . er, 88 ilda INg. ave return x i pt A ixs Virginia R. obbs, lett hand after his right had gone | PEir® S N GCr Trother, Sir Cecil W VA 0 2rs. Hurry R, Burke enter-|from a ter-day fotor trip to New York | beat interents at heurt and. after The testator was a_ b lame. Lowther, who served with distinction |Delivers Addresses in Behalf of [ Mr, and Mra Harty B Burke eOieriand Adantic City. Miss' Marion King |ihe anti-suffrage movement expresscs|maqe nix fortune in the n who was 5o promi- [ with the army in Flanders and at- for their Siiss’ Rosells | Was the guest of friends in Baltimore | (HE LU= Septiment o Maryland men pyginess, His body was bured Gen. Anson Mills nent a figure a few wedks ago, when the famous 3d Cavalry Relebrated its diamond jubilee, is with Gen. Miles, one of the last of the great Indian fighters, and is one of the most be:| For so many years have the|of the Just Government League and | lumbus street. v ture of over $400.000 in Maryland by loved of martial heroes resident in|Lowthers represented these counties|representative of the republican na-| Mrs. Robert N. Crook and Mr. For: o, 1 e David Frank and two |F€360n_ of women voting, and that Washington. He is the oldest com- | that it would seem a startling Innova- | tional committee, dellvarcd Several | reat Crook are Spending several Weeks | crimres e e thors o mmen honfe near | thFOUghout the country a conservativ mander of the intrepid 3d Cavalry and_served with it throughout the civil war, having the unique record of never missing a day from active!tached to the British emba ator. Her interest in Mr. Shartzer is avi v ) ests of | W g and « “lesch eft| “We ider that this is g Sty throughe Hlncss or any other | Lori Pauncefote, in 1902, The former | due to the fact that he always roted | oremis o town Tage week en route 1o :;:lt;lr:mlj:?nda;n{‘or T Tty | country nowhere,” said Mrs. G cause. Gen. Mills was a celebrated | speaker of the house of commons will |in behalf of woman suffrage Auring|New York city. | wiil CBpend. the. rest of the summer at |it simply doubles the vote. W The Shop That Shows the New Styles First character among the frontiermen and he finally established the dividing line between the state of Texas and the territories of New Mexico and the Indian country, when every, inch awarded meant grave trouble and sometimes a pitched battle. He is a vivid storyteller and is always_in demand at reunions, le the Bo: Scouts and other juvenile bodies pre- fer him to the best sellers or the blood curdling memoirs of Buffalo Bill. Tiis hero has another feat to his|tnirty-five vears ago. CULPEPER, V. 2 Col.” J. N. R v D y v " 2 . ¥ y 2 PER, Va., 2—County | Col. N. t Lewins- [in Atlantic City for the summer. CULPEPER, Va. July 2.—County credit. he invented the cartridge belt|Brent, daughter of M Su Sy County ames oERES: (% Yearry s By Ve y 2.—County { x e t 3 p Superintendent of S ville, Vi Dr. and Mrs. Harry S. Lewis, whose 2 = i used in the Army and nearly all over Faperinter of Schools Thormma W | Ville: VoL oo oot entartatned. &t L Y e part Jof | ARent Bernard Williams, working in | the world, and likewise manufactured the cloth of which it is made, and this invention has sent his fame travel- ing along with his military exploits. Gen. Mills married Miss Hannah Cassell the civil throug ington. The Mill during her eru war, a lady well known her long residence in Wash- he dicd several years ago. * home on Dupont Circle was noted social center. The late Charles Joseph Bonaparte, remembered in Washington as Secre- tary of the Navy and then Attorney General in the second Roosevelt term. was a specially virile sort of Ameri- of Pennsylvania soon after tained the rank of major general, has\been elected to represent him in the family boroughs, which comprise Westmoreland and Cumberland. tion if a member of another name were to secure the honor. The member, Maj. Gen. Lowther, be received in Washington with every honor, and will be specially feted by the Speaker of the House, Mr. Gil- lette. Mrs. Richard Pretlow Ernst. wife of the jun senator from Kentucl is one of the recent arrivals in Wash- ington and is pleasantly located in up- per 16th street. Mrs. Ernst is return- ing to the neighborhood of ti American home of her ancestor: she was, before her marriage Brent of Covington. Ky. All of the large family of Brents in Kentucky aro descendants of Thomas Young Brent, grarndson of Charles Brent of Btafford county, who followed the course of empire early in the nineteenth cen- tury, and married Miss Elizabeth Tay- or. The next generation was the Tavlor | Brents. 80 numerous in the Blue Grass state, in Missouri and down the Mississippi to New Orleans. Mrs, Ernst, after the arduous duties of fitting into her new environment, in- tends’ to visit the old home of the Virgigia Brents. which is at Wood- stock, \opposite Aquia creek. in Stafford { for the Maryland State Candidate. Special Dispatch to The Star. OAKLAND, Md, July 2 Gabricl of Baltimore, —Mrs. Calvin vice president addresses in Garrett county in behalf of John Shartzer, candidate for the republican nomination for state sen- his several terms Gelegates. Mrs. Grantsville from Hotel Victoria. » talk. in the house of Gabriel spoke at the porch of the Mr. Shartzer also gave —_—— HARD TO GET TEACHERS. Some Schools in Districts of Cul- peper County May Not Open. is experiencing unprece- dented difficulties in getting teachers coming school term for the one and two room schools in the rural districts. He fears that many of these £chools ‘will not be able to run on account of this shortage. Out of Trifles Now comes the fad for making something worth making out of a trifle—to rob the rag bag and gain daughter, Burke. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lindsay Cook of ‘Waynesboro, are the guests of Mrs. Charles T. Lindsay on South Co= at their summer home, George county, Va. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Barnes of Win- Neil, King Mrs. Leonard Heath and Miss Maud Heath of Berlin, N. J, are the guests of Mrs. F. E. Ludwig on Braddock Heights. Mr. Powhatan Moncure Morton {8 the guest of his grandfather, Dr. Charels B_ Morton, at his home, Not- tingham, Spottsylvania county. Miss 3Miriam Hockman of Camp Humphreys is the guest of Miss Eliza Crump at the Wagar. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Young and Miss Mary Barclay Younsg are the guests of luncheon Tues2ay in honor of Mrs. ! Stephen Henry Inns of Boxtan. Amane the other guests were Mrs. James' Droufllard and Miss Dorothy Droun-| lard of Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bushong and small gon of Mount Rainier. M4 were the week end guests of Mrs. Willlam Stonnell on Braddock Heights. Mr. agd Mrs. E. A. Henderson and their two children of Baltimore were the week end guests of Mrs. Hender- son's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Mc- Carthy, on Queen Stree Miss Mazie Knight is spending sev- eral weeks with friends in Staunton, for ten days. Mrs. Samuel Kalisher and daughter, Helen Louise, who spent last week with the former's mother, Mrs. Louise Stern, have returned to their home in Ger- Annapolis, Md. where they have en- tertained several week end parties. The Misses Marjorie Sigmund, Tina (Of Camp Buena Visf Miss Dorothy Baumgarten has re- turned from Baltimore, where she spent the week end with friends. Miss Eleanor Loeb left Wednesday for Braddock Heights, Md. to spend two weeks. Mrs. Clara Breslau and her grandson, Bllly 8igmund, have returned from At- lantic Ci vhere they spent ten days rles hotel. Lansburgh was a guest life. Miss Aline at the Arlington last week and is now marriage took place the last week, are spending moon in Asheville, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. Max Kohner and daugh- ter, Miss Julia Kohner, have returned from a two-week visit in Pittsburgh. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Kann left Thurs- day by motor for Lake Hopatcong. N. where they will join friends from more to spend July 4. Mrs. Philip May and son of Charles- ton, W. Va siting the former's parents, Mr. . L. Behrend, of 1868 Columbia road. Mrs. William Michaelis and daughter. Virginia, are spending a month Pocahontas, Va, with the former's their honey- fair, the retary, throughout motion of interest in agriculture. Among those having a large membership are estimate will fix the expense at ovi $80,000 a day more than the whole cost unning the natfonzl g ways contended that the family is the political and social unit and that man_represents the family in political PLAN TRI-COUNTY FAIR. | Officials Arrange for Program at Culpeper Grounds. Specizl Dispatch to The Star. conjunction with Assistant H. Miller and John W. and the date has October 15, 19. 20 and 21, at the Cul-| peper Horse Show One of the features will be the judg- ing of the work and awarding of prizes | in the varlous clubs organized among and girls of the counties boys Covington, sec- | reports that it has been defi- nitely decided to hold the tri-county ! ounds. Mrs. Rufus M. Gibbs, president of the ( S¢Veral week Maryland League Opposed Suffrage, called attention to that the last election meant an expend:- to Woman | the fact ernment the Agent B. been set for | the schools for the pro- White Washable Kid One Strap Pump For Evening and Street Wear 11 Louis and Baby Louis Heels—Turned Seol : A v u, ster, Mrs. S. Baach. t . poultry, v gan: e mover set Toot"on, the Sail of | Sounty, und where the st member | thercby an apron, a aiin, & chids|“Sirm, A 3. King, Mra . B Xor-| "3t Sianey_Siderman has as her |cliba The st mentoned. which has Europe. and fhut through Arm de | o statery home - SmanePhna Csted | pinafore, a sweater set, a traveling [ford and small on of Nokesville, Va, | guest Mrs. S. Tarkus of Baltimore. |for its object the purchasing and rais- An attractive model, bearing that distinctive - from _any dental sequence of | Ernst have two children, William | Kit or what not. were the guests last week of Mrs. C. | = Miss Mirlam Franc and Miss Ruth |ing of pure-bred Holstein heifers, is = i events. He never took the least in- | Ernat, who Is practicing law in Kene| Women seem to fnd L Xug Pratccars with (thelr parenty Mr.cand)| financed by the Culpeper hiationatiBank, Queen /Quality: douch wiich gives (ho weater s 2 £ law in_Ken- eem to find the greatest| “Mrs, Percy Evans sailed from New |Mrs. Harry Franc, after spending the | which furnishes the money for the pur- satisfied feeling of being well shod. terest in the Napoleonic legend, and whereas his eldest brother, the late Col. Jerome Bonaparte, hastened to France and offered his sword to Na- poleon III at the outbreak of the tucky. and a daughter, Susan Brent Ernst, now Mrs. John Palmer Darnall, who, with her husband, the guest of her parents. Mrs. Ernst and Mrs. satisfaction out of using their hus | band's discarded shirts, doubtless be- couse there is always so mueh of the shirt that is not worn when the chase of these animals to any youns boy indorsed by the county agent. This bank also supplements the prizes of- fered by the county. ork Thursday to join Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Hitt of Washington, who have taken a house in Paris for the summer. winter in Boston Mr. and Mrs Harry Wolf motored to New York Wednesday, accompanied by their daughter, Wilma, and Miss Marian Same Model in White Reign-Skin, $7.85 Franco-Prussian war. the late Attor- ney General frowned heavily on any attempts of the Bonapartists to draw him into sympathy. His grandmother, Darnall are as active in the cosmo- politan society of Cincinnati as in Covington, and, all through the war were conspicuos in Red Cross and liberty loan campaigns. | { shirt has to be discarded because of the worn parts about the collar. The back of the shirt is usually not worn and not faded. One trick is to make little house aprons from the backs. Miss Hilda Schneider has returned from Lexington, Va., where she at- tended the finals of the Virginia MTi- tary Institute. Mr. and Mrs. John B. Barrett and the King, who went on to Camp Lenore, Maine, for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf will spend two weeks motoring north. ‘The Misses Lillian and Jeanette Cohen, Two-Crust Lemon Pie. Moisten one tablespoonful of corn- STORE CLOSED MONDAY starch with three tablespoonfuls of cold milk, pour into a saucepan with one cup of water. bring to the boil- ing point and boil for five minutes. that intrepid woman who figures in history as Betsy Patterson, first wife of the emperor's brother, who later became King of Westphalia, had an Simply cut up the side seams and continue the hem from 'the bottom up the sides, making the apron curved at the bottom. Cut off the r from the first dis- ltved in Great latter's daughter, Miss Dorothy Hay- cock, have returned after spending a week at Hendersonville, N. C. accompanied by twenty-five boys from this city, left town on Friday for Ham- ilton. Va. to spend two months at their country home. If the mem! trict of New Britain or any Queen Quality Boot Shop especial affection for this thoroughly American grandson, and she spent the last days of her long and unhappy life as his guest at Bella Vista, in the Long Green valley. She left many substantial legacies to both her grandsons, those to the late Charles J. Bonaparte taking the form of much valuable silver which belonged to the Patterson family, jewelry an - |&ncient name received his education |of the shirt. If there is a yoke in|Nalls, Mrs. Florence E. Maigne, Miss o tamen, fam 3‘"‘:;‘ ¢lry and an- 131l that Ko’ would accept—(rom the | the shirt it usualiy may be %% to | Nannie Jones, Miss Mittie Herbert, Miss | daughter, 144, motored fo Bedford Europe, awaiting the result of her |10C2] Dublic school, after which hé|make a yoke in the pinafore. The |Hattie Douglas, Miss Eliza Douglas and | Springs, Pa., Thursday to remain over appeal to the first Napoleon for jus- tice. Mr. and Mrs. Bonaparte had no children, nor has either the only son ;)'g the late Jerome Bonaparte, Jerome, or his sister, the Countess von -Hvitfelt. ft is understood that conic relics of the Baltimore Benapartes will be bequeathed to the Peabody Institute. Mrs. Charles Joseph Honaparte, who | 125t Yovember's “election. : Naturally | is eut out, bringing the neck balow - g Petersburg, Fla. Mr. Willlams is Bas been an Invand. for same years | M. Patterson thinks highly of the | the worn part in the shiri. There |lrt, 1ast Week to visit relatives in War- |3t FUSSONIR: (Obvonally as an ex- ¢ has many friends in Washingto recall her vividly as having cn"revcvt}:;3 influenced the portrayal of Myrtle Reed “In Lavender and Old Lace.” She lived very quietly during her husband's term of service in the Roosevelt cabinet, but performed all the traditional duties belonging to the cabinet hostess. She was devotgd to lavenders and violets and no one aw her clothed except in on oF the other. Her assortment of lace, which was once Betsy Patterson's, was possibly one of the finest ever displayed in Washington, and it in- luded some exquisite princess robes of French lace, which Mrs. Bonaparte often wore over purple or lavender satin on state occasions and which a ys excited admiration. She had some lovely summer gowns of, ambric embroidered and trimmed in lace insets which had in the passing vears assumed a rich tone of deep ream. Though more than a century - had passed since they were made for the American bride of Bonaparte, not @ rent had come in the material nor a thread dropped in the lace. Mr. and Mrs. Bonaparte had a commodi- ous home in St. Paul street in Balti- more, but in recent vears had lived all the year through in Bella Vista. Mrs. Bourke Cockran, who was Miss Annie Ide, will find many friends to welcome her back to officlal life, when she is finally at leisure to join Repre- sentative Cockran at Wardman Park Hotel. The long illness and death of Judge Ide has interfered with her plans, and, with Mrs. Shane Leslie, she has been detained in Vermont and New York. Mrs. Cochran is one of the in mates of Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, and her marriage to the brilliant New Yorker was an episode of Miss Roose- velt's visit to the Phillppines on that cruise ‘l\gll:h“w‘askno prolifi¢ in nuptial events tha S Knowr as 145 * T . as g “cruise Mrs. Cockran isImimortally assoclated with the memory of the beloved author, Robert Louis S#ivenson, and her letters and private.papers relating to him are among -fHe most valuable yet unpub- lished. It was her happy lot as a win- Some child of twelve or more to beguile many painful hours for the story teller, in return for which he bequeathed her her the most whimsical legacy on record, namely, his birthday on November 13, because hers fell on Christmas day and, of course, was no birthday at all. If Representative Cockran could have peeped into the future there is no doubt he would have continued to rent his home in lower 16th street instead of selling it. He and Mrs. Cockran prefer a downtown residence to one on the western hills, and nothing is more diffi- cult of achievement at the present time. They contemplate, however, taking over the lease of a residencs off M street near Connecticut avenue. Among the members of the House teel frame, entirely of lovely old = 5 of Representatives who survived the | ¢ ahogany, w a) r-|time they will give off less odor.| with the materials we supply. Gatastrophe which befell his party 1s| Gaoan ROy, Wl & e Ted in|Some people contend that if these - CLEANERS & DVERS Representative John A. Raker of Al-|{lluminated Spanish leather, with |Vesetables are soaked for gome time 12 turas, Callf., who, with Mras. Raker.|vivid green.silk curtains. 1t has a|Dbefore putting to boil they will smell Stores has been in Washington for sixteen|two hundred horse-power Speedway |less in cooking. _ yeoars and is thus counted among the | engine and makes thirty miles an ——— Main Office, 740 12th elders, Mrs. Raker is one of the ac-| hour. Mme. Curie has received a total of Street N.W. tive hi s _of the Pacific coast and as she bears astrikingresemblance 1 Mrs. Robert Lansing, she can re- rt of the older wol he would be known as ~Patterson of Patterson,” for he stands two hun- dred and fifty vears removed from that Francis Patterson from whom the thriving Jersey town takes its name. His father, however, removed | from the stronghold of the clan to | ‘Woodbury, and here the holder of the | graduated devil. Mr. Patterson is among the news. paper men who are seated in the na- tional legislature and is the owner | and general manager of that brisk | daily "known as the Camden Post- Telegram. He is distinguished in an- | other way, as being in the rather large bachelor group entered after into 1ife ‘as a printer's state of New Jersey, and there are few incidents connected with its long and honorable history which he can- not relate in entertaining fashion; whether the query concerns the Swede | immigration or the thrilling-episodes about Trenton staged durin, olutionary struggle. Mr. Patterson lives at a downtown hotel and has taken but a languid in- terest in soelal affairs. g the rev- | Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr.. whose pro- fessional career is beginning with! journalism is conducting such a vigorous campaign in ‘behalf of “See America First” that the Canadian re- sorts are sharing with those of the United States in this onrush of tour- ists. For the tired business men, Mr. ‘Vanderbilt paints very alluringly the paradise to be found in the deep Rock: fes of Alberta. where flsh and game abound, but where human kind is rare, a different condition from the general run of things on the Atlantic side. There are splendid lakes about Van- couver where all conveniences for tent- ing may be obtained and where tooth- some fish frolic at your feet and big and little game dart in and out of the mountain passes. According to thig enthusiastic young writer, mosquitoes and other insects are not so abundant in this primitive country as,on the older coast, while other "tempting adjuncts are more abundant; cooling breezes, limpid streams, superb mountain passes, vhich are just a few of the reasons why all dwellers on this continent should stay on it, instead of rushing off to Europe to things much less at- tractive. Then the Canadian resorts have Swiss chalets, with the priceless treasurers, Swiss innkeepers and guides, and general factotum. All about Alberta, emigrant Swiss have farms where they make cheese almost as good ay that to be enjoyed at Zer- matt or on the Rigi. Mr. Vanderbilt has obtained such fine results through his descriptive articles, that some of the progres- sive Latin Americans are soliciting his aid about “Seeing South America, t00,” and getting winter tourist par- ties on the same plan as the tens of thousands now visiting the Canadian Rockles. President Marlo C. Menocal of Cuba has just dispatched to King Alfonso that charming little yacht which he had built for the ruler of Cuba’s mother country at the government yards near Philadelphia. President Menocal had hoped for some cere- monial before the boat was shipped a few days ago on a Spanish liner to Barcelona, thence to go under ts own steam to San Sebastian, where the summer court is established. But the Spanish king decided otherwise. The boat is small, but exceedingly lovely and is built, except for the This yacht ig as yet meless, .but e king is sald to have declared in favor of the name ef thet pretty river j ruffles or vestees. ! find_enough for these slips from old top on a line from armhole to arm- hole, full this slightly, and put on & belt taken from the front. Little girls’ pinafores may be made from old skirts. It is well to have a pattern. Lay the front on the back of the shirt, bringing the neck line somewhat below the neck line backe of the pinafore may be made from unworn parts of the side of the tronts. ‘Warm-weather play suits for Iittle boys may be made from discarded shirts. The pattern sclected should be a one-piece suit opening with 2 drop at the back and buttoning up the front. The two fronts are placed together at the front and the front will still be room to get the little leg sections out of the shirt without plecing. The.front hems of the shirt form the front opening of the play suit. From the back you need just { the back sections and the sleeves. The woman who makes her clothes at home is tempted to buy linings already made to use to slip under the frocks she makes. Really these are a convenience, but often you will find_enough good material in a dis- rded cotton frock to make one or two of these llnings. Then you need slips to wear under your sweaters or sports coats on which to fasten your Often you “will frocks you are about to discard. Eliminating Cooking Odors. To the healthy young person it'is often a pleasure to go into a house to be greeted at the door or in the hall by the fragrance of dinner in the cooking, the browning of meat in the oven, the perfume of fresh sum- mer vegetables, the aroma of coffee with the tempting whiffs of brown- ing bread or cake. Such odors are more tempting than the most charm- ing smile of your hostess when she invites you to stay for dinner. But for all that there is something very desirable about keeping your cooking odors out of the living guar- ters of your house. Something de- pends on the way your cooking is done, more depends on the way your rooms are arranged and what sort of stove or range you have in the kitch- en. Needless to say, in the spacious house constructed with pantries and passageways between dining room and front hall and kitchen these cook- ing odors are far less apt to pene- trate than in the small cottage or apartment where the kitchen door opens directly into the dining room or living room. Still even in the most unfavorable arrangement of rooms something can be done to help mat- ters. Possibly the best of all preventives for spreading of cooking odors is the method borrowed from the chem istry laboratory, where certain chem- ical reactlons are always conducted under a hood in order to let vile- smelling gasses pass off and not cause general _discomfort or suffocation. The hood arranged on many kitchen stoves works just as does this chem- istry-laboratory hood. Besides help- ing to take off odors it takes off steam ang heat, as it is, of course, con- nected with a flue in the pipe. In large restaurants the hoods placed over the stoves are enormous and very expensive, but small ones,may be set up over almost any sort of stove. If vegetables having strong odors, such as onions, cabbage and caulifiower, are cooked quickly in water that remains boiling all the sixty-four honorary degrees, includ- ing nine from ‘American colleges and universities. : Mr. and Mrs. George H. Ralling have returned from a motor trip to Richmond and Fredericksburg. Mre. Rathbone Smith entertained at luncheon Monday in honor of Mrs. Percy jFvans. The other guests were Mrs. Maud Laidlaw of Edmonton, Alberta; Mrs. Charles R. Hooff of Contee, M Mrs. Thomas Sebrell, Mrs. William E. Max Weyl 2d, Howard Nordlinger, William Nordlinger, William Behrend, Arthur and_Gerald Lyon, Willlam and Alexander Wolf, jr.; David Bendheim and Milton Dreyfus were among the young boys who left town Friday for a camp on Schroon lake for the sum- hot iss Julia Moncure. Mr. Morris Horner is spending the week end with Mrs. Horner and their children aj thelr cottage at Ocean City, Mrs. J. Sidney Douglas has returned from a visit to Mrs. Chester C. Coates at Catlett, Va Mrs. Henry Reeves of New York city, who has been the guest of Mrs. William W. Herbert on North Washington street, | Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Carter have gone to Port Hope, Ontarlo, for the summer. Mrs. Charles C. Carlin and Miss Ella Broders are visiting relatives in Chicago. Mrs. William M. Smith and her sister, Miss Murphy, of Berryville, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Harlan B. Forbes at their home, in George Wash ington Park. Miss Elizabeth King_is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Lulie King. in Blacks- hu‘rf Va. ' Mr. and Mrs. John A. G. Shuster an- nounce the marriage of their daughter, Miss_Margaret Primrose Shuster, and Mr. Park Wilmer Trotter Wednesday June 22. After July 10 Mr. and Mrs. Trotter will be at home at 653 F street northeast, Washington. Miss Katherine Howard and Miss Ruth Summers spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence S. Haley. Mrs. C. B. Spilman and Miss Mary Lee Spliman are the guests of relatives in_Culpeper. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Russell left grlday to spend the summer at Mystic, onn. Mrs. George Uhler has returned from visits to her son-in-law and daughter, Capt. and Mrs. Marvel H. Parsons, at Camp Eustis, Va., and to the Rev. and Mrs. Edmund Pendleton Dandridge in Petersburg. Miss_Rose MacDonald has returned trom Woods Hole, Mass., where she spent six weeks. Messrs. Robert C. Yates and Janney McL. Yades of the Virginia Military In- stitute have returned to spend the sum- mer :with their _parents, Dr. and Mrs. R J. Yates. Miss Louise Sellers of Culpeper Is the guest of Miss Frances Yates. Mrs. W. Y. Slater and Miss Mary Yates Slater of Petersburg are the guests of Mr. and Mrs: J. B. Duncan. Miss Marian McBride of Washington was the week-end guest of Miss Dor- othy Tazewell King, on Prince street. / Really fine effects are secured mer. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar C. Kaufman and July 4. —_— Entenains at Luncheon For Evangelist Explorer Mre, Katherine C. Brush Bales enter- tained at luncheon on Friday, in honor of Evangelist M. B. Williams of plorer, author and lecturer. Col. and Mrs. Patterson Spend Month at Resort Col. and Mrs. Robert l‘l:le Plt;!er:&n are spending the month at the Al- le‘hol‘\’)’ Hotel, Mountain Lake Park, Md. Mrs. Paterson will not return to their home, on Lanier place, until the early autumn. AINT IT NOW Preserve all ‘exposed woodwork with quality paint, expertly applied by Ferguson. Estimates gratis Interior and Exterior Work. 1114 = K- FERGUSON, th 8t Paisting Department. Ph. N. 351338 What'll You Wear on the 4th Fetch ’em out NOW, for the 4th is but a short time off. If what you in- tend wearing ‘is some- what spoiled—even be- yond recognition — never mind; for “Soiled Isn't Spoiled” at Hoffman's. Quick service and beauti- ful work is our pride. Let our auto call and deliver, "Phone Main 4724 HorFman Co. \ Add one teaspoonful grated rind and strained juice of one cup of sugar. Bake between two crusts and serve Temon, and one-half or cold. eeping Up Your Appetite Hot weather has a tendency to produce a jaded condition in your appe- tite. Nothing has a tasteful appeal and you oftimes go hungry, because as you say, “It’s too hot to eat.” This condition reverses itself when the of butter, the 1219 F Street N.W. Exclusive Agents in Washington for Queen Quality Shoes dining room comes under the survey of— Economical coolness, for it costs you very little to keep Westinghouse performing after the initial cost of the fan. 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