Evening Star Newspaper, August 14, 1921, Page 35

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B SOCIETY ; , AUGUST M, 1921—PART "2 SOCIETY ey m and the remount station which (urx:’llhe: est. Again, the doorway of this nlmelwl:ll’e tl}l-: 51"1 flltl‘:el:}-d Bflnl{i'llh:o :lg- the great school of Polish artists, where | :l'l'("l c’: ;I::«:ly :or:urmumed vi ‘:I., £ :>7 7 71| the streets, is seriously embarrassed 1ot | domicile is pointed out as a gracious | e8t institution o nd on this - | they have worked for years free of the 3 nstant s tecognition D- C. W oman on I our I ells . to have a lirger fleld for aotion. A Prac: | variant of American deslgn which the | San with shas rectent wnsciose oF the | Rusalan domination oo obvious in War- | 5o, Buttheve are only 4 Brwat he : |[tlon,, while & game proper calls forth The. momaaa copy with good resuits in | fonic. the old parliament bulldings in | $O%. The hest, of the Slav artlste have |and which the minister hopes that the Of Tax Syst Abroad || g 57 Bkt ol 2 i o bt T e b S o Pk o i, 2 | Wl o o LRI, | S b of Mo 'S a ste ms (0] 1 . ] | ta avola accident: Lonaonant (i laretr Americun ciics y e s D €| et oR Canvases o New'Sork: 2 e st AL 6 e Y annate o oyhich figures In | Prince Lubomirski, the Polish minister, | % o.™% g icse Included the work of the| Mrs. Martha H. Joliffe -and her lutionary annals it . purchased by Admiral Beatty, who will TovOllonary annals o gloriously, stands | 1 co-operating with the Polish artists [T, = H ) : : id In the st Ay enowned Clemonski, who is known in | daughter, Miss Martha hemp Sears Llnded Eatatés Drug on Market. Due to Oppreu lthe ’,..:‘:..fi,'r'."fi'fi.‘.d{‘ofi '.‘,’."',’o'o‘y“;.:“‘é? when Patrick Henry w;u!tx:lrl;‘l{‘: ‘his | of New York and Chicago in endeavor- | this country as a poet as well as a|were the uests last week of Mr. Y social Rnnals is to have an American | COUNtrymen breathless, and it is now an | ing to have the typical national exhibi- inter. An artist who enjoys celebrity | Richard P. Higgans at the Bachelors chatelaine. Rumor had It that this place | SXCeedingly well kept Home for the aged. | tion recently held in Cracow shown in | Iiurope is M. W. Tetmajer, whose | Club, Lodge Farmun-the-Bay, where . o = 1 : he exterlor of the Gorialoh L] tlon Tten i fous art cen- | two contributions to the Cracow exhibit | they were joined by Mrs. Robert Leo sive Assessments—Review of Social 4 | |35, pleased the late Mre. Thomas Newclt |its_famous hallway are aiso. admiced, | ters AN Sver Ahia country. Cracow 1s (46 now in New York—a harvest scene | Fraser and family of Baltmore. ” - and in time giving it over to her daugh- 7 - EventsHere and There. G “41ter, Minna Fleld, who married Mr. Over 30 years in the Fur busines: IFZEEI8 . e e e T e Algernon Burnaby of the same count. Lady Henry Somerset was the owner d A Washington woman who is tour- long silk hose and sandals, fastened | | of this ancient domain, but so entangie: . had It.-become in I 1 and sub- = Ld L d L] ing in England writes that so op- |85 the private does his puttees. - leases that only her deatn tended to e e ar pressive are the taxes and other ex-| A distinctly novel nuptial custom| F:: £4 | make the property immediately avall - lnctng ln actions on landed estates that one|exists on the Pacific coast, which| able. Mr. Irwin Laughlin leased it a he Mid.|Shows that eastern ways are mot the a country seat during his residence as “The Pi 3 . may rent a great castle In the Taws of the Medes and Persians. Every | | - - & member of the American embassy, and e Piano of the Musical Immortals” lands for $25 a week. She occupied e home has a room called the sun 5 b "r"_'flf“b*edly would hits bousut whes amc er re t e ; A m and she | parior, and usually It is the most % e priory was placed on marke! e e m-“lm any to be | SPacious and attractive in the home for the fact tl when his sublease ex- | | ’ = A Fad a banquet hall, great as any and Invariably leads out on a ver-| [ ’ : pired he might have to wait for years ® found in a Washington hotel, a ball- | gnda which opens into the garden. In | hefolr‘ey "3"3:« oo;:;--llzm flg"‘{"cngfl’( ono ~ e e e ediing, | B | |ty San SR el mies O e room larger than any she l:fl::p'e r’b = ;‘::i n ';:'é‘;’“‘a::‘,':' e uoi 5 _, and is at present the ranking lady in the at least fifty guest room that of Miss Mary Helen Campbell - oL large Field connection which is centered furnished, with suites of Grawing|ana Mr. James Wilton Tague—was ] | |about London. Relgate Priory 'dates rooms and lesser apartments and cen- | unusually well planned. Only a fam- B : } e T S ] st llr a e y tury-old gardens acres in extent, i iy Darty gathersd In the sun rooi; Sty 1o the 14008, Xt e marchased o h che r than the rate she pa ‘where under a gay umbrel of swee! 3 % b — : - for a small and indifferent apartment | peas stood the bridal couple, and be- . o Piivate dweliings 1o Tongand. " The 1o The Trusted Friend of the Master of Music—the 3 g oTome of London’s back streets. Coun- | hind them a small-altar blazed with 4 i etvats awetings in (Enslandeuane 4 Inspiring Genius of the Student 9 Make the round of August fur sales if you try estates are a drug on the market, | candles and decked w'th tall vases 2 4 - : on veseated " there O eh wealthy —Americans DUr- |of bride Tosss and gold-banded iics | (1) £ i HiRRe e e R S Ly Ttiisimore thas almiers instrume el oEmsicit means Chased with avid'ty in the early sum-|of Japan. Six maids were gowned in Ihent of ‘Holbeln patntings. n a £ mu ; mer, week after week the sale ?t ;r;; the vivid colors which ‘ml»‘e a'e‘en Iln a i more to own a Steinway than any other instrument a famous Stowe House, that splen watermelon, the deep pink, the glow- {Who, with Dr. Merritt, will leave this pilanist can possess. Diie of stone bullt in the Tonic style, | ing green and the softer green of the |weel for a motor trip through the| Al°Xandric lies so close to the doors P will—comparison cannot fail to bring you back to Saks’ for best values in fine furs. That’s the experience of scores. Ras been announced without one pur- | Inner rind, “After the ceremony the |north. of Washiceion thaCllis comantle busuty . The Steinway imprisons ‘the soul of ; ing in response. Stowe |entire party moved into the garden, 1s accepted placldly with the charms o ) el : ' 2 e . HHouse o7 the Beincipal seat of the Where, "under"s canopy. of blooming i thix whole Countryaide. Some Engiian Music, releasing it at the will of the € August price advantages in vour favor re- ducal house of Buckingham. the|American pillar roses, the reception |¢n . and Mrs. Honore Palmer, Mrs, | artists. however, have been holding up = ; e . : s a mamor peoper betng mors than 200 | was held. ‘Soon tiny tables appeared | Stamlegiriols. Bims Waltcr feltn, bocn |the manifold architectural glories. for Musician to express his or her inner. flect our earnest efforts in customers beh.al.f feet long. with about half that depth,|on the lawn and the supper sisters of Mrs. Paimer. and Mra. Fred | the admiration of their Iu-rlrhrrr‘";‘u)('lmlf most thought and feelings in Sound. early purchase of peltry last spring and utiliza- 5t to know that the fine y last s from which wings extend east and |served in a delightfully informal way | Grant. down to the terraced gardens.|just as the guests chose to seat them- ——— y in the old Fairfax man- 5 = N s < > i o Talo Tro dake aiready has broken up the On the coast the gardens are| While every available inch of vantage | sion is deemed the most perfect example Such an instrument is more than a tion of the dull season for fashic ning furs. Val vast estate into portions. keeping |always so lovely that they make & |is gecured long in advance of the polo | €Xtant of that method of mounting to el e At ues as a consequence are The Biggest we have only one hundred acres for the manor | perfect tting for any kind of a the second floor, and the arches on both ~ = and offering this at the lowest pos- |ceremonial without the least effort |Practice games along the Speedway,|first and second floors are famed as g panion to share the most intimate been able to offer in vears. sible price. all in vain. It is now ave to provide tables and chairs, and | Word comes that, do what they may, imodels for domestic architecture, all of ) . which will no doubt make \Washington 4 W feelings, whether of joy or sadness, a to destroy the house with |the sun rooms are habitually filled |the authorities of West Point cannot : 2 3 > o Bynammite and sell the separated stone with” growing vines and flowering |lure 'a sizable audience for the most | {sitors vicw them with rencwed inter; < Cormedy oritia e dy—cni Erifg intolihe 1 See these impressive bargains now and make T ty £ d repairs, the|shrubs and they are the ideal spot for |exciting and finished performance. It R P . . _ . . oo Getaining only & lodge for hisja bridal scene. always has been 4 cause of wonder that | SITIIINIINN S0 very life of its owner. vour selection before the smartest models in Coats, Wraps and Sets go. A DEPOSIT RESERVES ANY FUR SAKS FUR CO. Manufacturers Who Retail at Wholesale Prices We would like to have you see the Steinway stock here. The Style M, in Makogany, $1,375 Exclusive Washington Distributers E. F. Droop & Sons Co. ring the summer. — the military academy, with its splendid ° & duting ftha wymm It ia disappointing to those who | historic background going back to the ! = An engagement of peculiar signifi-|have lamented the absence of large |first struggle for national independence a es o cance to Washington is that of Mr.{and well-equipped pleasure boats|and the scene of a decisive battle, has 9 Benjamin Rush, jr., and Miss Muriel |among the foreign craft at European [never attracted the American travele: = e Bishop, daughter of Mr. James Cun- |Tresorts to learn that the finest yacht|Those hundreds of thousands who go 1f You Present This Ad ningham Bishop and his former wife, [ever built in American waters Is, [Up and down the Hudson in the course S Who was Miss Hancock of this city |when summer is waning. about to(Of the summer rarely show more Inter- Mnmcunng 25¢ and sister of Mrs. Willam R. Mer-|8ail for the other side. This is the|est than to gaze over the deck at the e Tiam, Mrs. Frank P. Mitchell and Mrs. | Delphine, the superb boat which the |shady grounds and the vine-covered Shampooing 50c TReeves Russell. Young Mr. Rush is|late Horace Dodge, automobile manu- | halls. & ot one in several thousands ble to alight. Polo games . . 3 § a srandson five times removed from | facturer. had designed prior to his rouble to aligh Player-P Vi las ! een announced ‘ er-r'anos ictrol the signer and also descendant of|dem: and which is the most ambi- | 410 il o ol o em‘amncrf“_ Violel Ray Fflclll 95( y! that Richard Rush, son of lhofiflr!l :Laul w.l" Dl,lt on llh:h WIM . Wenjamin, who built one of the finest|the construction of e Mayflowe! H mansions _in the new capl 3 = s H in th ital. Dr. |Mr. Dodge aimed to surpass that f ::f..";;ekl'n;::.)r f:. Jh:xfifgf&'::ve"rfi £ Garden Rose Bea Parlor Richard Rush was one of the first|mous ship in its two highest point: made a ripple on the water. n ‘nea ministers sent to the court of St.|speed and strength, and he almost|poveer 2 vchop show '-ummm“"“d- 1110 H S t N. W. James, anfl though far on in years, he|achieved a distinct type from any-|and the first really large cromd of e m“"m._ Ay ‘went as spi of President |thing yet set afloat. Mrs. Dodge re-|vear demanded admittance. Now. hore | 2 E 3 Jackson to collect the legfll:‘y left by genll{lsalle;‘i on"her bo:jl to )o{llx };er in Washington, Gen. Pershing. who. 1o Open Evenings James Smithson, a task he accom-|daughter. Mrs. James Cromwell, for keenly concern 3 Dlished in the testh of the scorn and | whom the yacht was named, and it s | " x ed in_the polo games | SNNIINNINNININNN hostility which the British govern-|possible she will remain In southern ~ ment felt for the hero of Chaimette. | waters with it all next winter. The & 3 Dr. Rush’s home, still standing. has |Delphine was built in Detroit. and her suffered the usual fate of the historic | engines show some resembiance to : mansions of the capital. but it has|the ones which the dead manufactur- been immortalized by Thackeray as|er designed for his motor cars. They the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Hamil- | were among the last things which en- N ton Fish, where he was entertained |gaged his attention. A crew of six- —— those personally interested. horae people THIS WEEK ONLY * in 1853. and for the first time tasted |ty is required to manage the ship and the frozen dainty known as ice c;elnm. ’lrhere is guest room for a hundred. R M f . S It Is on H street a few doors below | The interior decorations set a new TV da th] al 17th street, and among the ignominies | standard for ships. and among the eserve (1)1 y or S e which time has heaped upon it is its|features of the vacht is one of the proximity to a curio dealer, twofinest pipe organs in existence, spe- tailor establishments and its conver- |cially built for the Delphine by a No connection with any house ELEVENTH ST, of similar name elsewhere. sion into a luncheon resort. Mr.|well known firm of manufacturers. , James Cunningham Bishop belongs to — | 4 the illustrious New York family which| Despite the allurements from other l'm-lu('-elsa lhedHeb:{ Bmxvm_ '("d hx; resorts, White Sulphur Springs continues Nathalle, are now Mesdames David K. | {0 ttract Washington people, not only Sigourney and Charles F. Choate, both | through the spring and autumn but of Boston. He resides at Torresdale, | through the summer as well. Mr. and near Philadelphia, with his unmar.|Mrs. Edward Stettinius have secured ried daughters, Muriel and Abigail. | that much-coveted guest, Gen. Pershing, The wedding will take place there)for several weeks after September 1. [} Though Mrs. George Vanderbiit and (& e R o Miss' Cornelia Vanderbilt are sent over : I l the ocean almost every day or two by Bathing suiis are naturally one of [rumors, they still linger at White Sul- the live themes of fashionable at-|Phur and are having relays of guests all the time. Senator David Walsh of - The House of Courtesy. tire, and the one worn_recently by Mrs. _Harry Payne Whitney at Bailey's Beach, Newgprt. haa seeming- | {ouis work which has engaged. nils. sid ' ’ =2 1y eclipsed all previous efforts record- of the national legislature, and wi i ; ed even at that gayest beach of thelfereft extensively by his host, Mr. George world. Trouville, in Framee, or the|Dempsey, of Boston and his other : Massachusetts took a recent vacation Lido, not far from Venice. Mrs. Whit- i friends. Mrs. Elkins visited her favorit ney is an artist of recognised ability. | gpa for some time In July, and th - and she has built her costBme for the | Hlkina-Lee connection. about Wi e ERAIF RO B st morning—a remarkable purchase o drips with salt water. IE is a one- | mer lost which does not contain a few Dlece affair, though rather full from |weeks at the historic old resort. Quite the walst, of pale gray panne velvet a coterie of distinguished Chicagoans { edged in cerise braid. There is a hood | spent a few weeks there en route from lined with cerise which is pulled up | the Curtis-Cantacuzene wedding, among Foiod Teib cetles whichl Ix Ipfilled up | the) Curtis Cantarusens wedding:tamony and useful. Both sleeves and bodice Sre-bret. but the effecc of tne meoa| Laces and Lace Curtain : ‘ ® is startlh and unique. Countess :lzchenyl.l ! nbalr l!()f h,:r: [l:’h"ne{i Clw‘h‘g ears a plain lack si Al made in the old way, - o coy MME. VIBOUD, Inc. ered by a rather lon; i i Established 1856. 727 11th St. N. 'Offering the entire collection at one phenomenal price— Which is absolutely less than 50c-on-the- dollar of their recog- \\ N Startling clearance values! Rich’s white shoes N\ O\ DA N\ A\ for women L S S nized rightful value. Cut to $2.9() 230 pairs women’s white Kid and white Reigncloth Oxfords and Pumps—all with French heels in the following sizes: They are those unmistakable rich, heavy qualities that rustle and swish, as only pure Silk of the highest grade will. AAAS 1572 B 174,23, 3% 4 and 609 : : Kbt oon: —~ Bomes o Every one perfect ~-- guaranteed Also 140 pairs Women’s White * Without blemish in thread or make R 2 $2.90 Also several hundred pairs Wom- en’s Patent Leather Pumps and Ox- fords—all with French heels. 3 All of the above shoes are from Rich’s regular stock and embrace the odds and ends of lines. They are greatly.reduced in price for immediate clearance. HERE are ten different distinctive weaves—in . HE colors include the wanted shades—and please that much preferred dressy Tuxedo model; with note there are plenty of Black and Navy. pockets and girdle. Shapely—and made to hold their There is a complete range of sizes. They will be handily displayed on center tables—in the main aisle—First : Flmrfwhm you can conveniently make your selection. ————

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