Evening Star Newspaper, August 21, 1921, Page 32

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SOCIETY 1921-PART 2.~ ‘BOCIETY" Tomato Relish. Take one peck of ripe tomatoes, six into the hot taploca. Serve cold with or without cream. Egg Apple Salad. Shell some hard-boiled eggs while ‘warm, press in each end, put a clove in the bottom end and stem and leaf in the other end, color the sides with red vegetable liquid with a swmall whites of four eggs. Cook in pop- over cups, standing in hot water, for forty-five minutes; serve with a sauce made by cooking two cups of blueberries, biackberries or cherries, with one cup of sugar, for twenty minutes. Salad Crackers. Deviled crackers are very nice to perve with salads. To make, cover the top of some crackers with finely grated cheese, using a mixturp of plain and Parmesan. Put in the cen- ter of each cracker a teaspoonful of tomato catsup and a,dusting of salt Pineapple Tapioca. Soak one cup of pearl tapioca over night in cold water. In the morning drain off the water and place the tapi- %aca in a double boiler with ome-half can of sliced pineapple shredded with dts juice, one and one-fourth cups of =u , one cup of water, the strained 3:!(:3 of one lemon and the strained Tales of Well Known Folk . In Social and Official Life|s5.& Cream one-half & cup of butter with one m of sugar and blend it with two level one-half cups of flour, three | White satin frocks beaded in crystal i '3 and one-half oranges. | brush, and serv: s ; & 22 e i iecr Move than one 6uD | ontres ‘on & bed of bolled spaghetti|and Pepper. Place in a baking dish Disarmament Conference to Bring Many Ameri-| 25 sisat tesspoons ot baking powder, & |and paneled In lettuce groes chifton d SSArY. rro lery, pinch of salt and the weill beaten "have in! luced by the French. T T I ot T e e | B fad mad tholexdakare) are onispe] /. Back F —Citi £ North The whites of two eggs. stily beaten, | Jressing. They should be served hot. »| cans Back From Europe ties of Northwest The Shop That Shows the New Siyles First NEW FALL SHOES —AT— NEW FALL PRICES Now Showing a. Complete Stock of PEISEEC I R A O ——— . (| A e ‘SHOELS Oxfords and Strap Pumps 2 $8.50 to $10 ‘ _ ™ _Including the new shades of Russia Calf, brown calf and brown : kid; many styles in black. One and two-strap Pamps with welt and turn soles, Cuban, Baby French and Louis heels. Also Pumps with tongue effects with Baby French heels—All shades. Oxfords with wing tips, saddle straps and straight tips; made B along those slender lines which add grace to the foot. 3 i “Queen Quality” exclusive lasts always assure you of the season’s 3 best styles at most attractive prices. - e s et vy mmm B o = e S = e SRS STORE CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY DURING AUGUST QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP . 1219 F Street N. W. Exclusive Agents in Washington for Queen Qualify Shoes. Await Return of The coming ‘of the disarmament conference will bring back many truant Americans who have loitered In Paris and London during all the months since conditions permitted the entertalning of visitors, The Gurnee Munpa of this 21ty have found the French capital all they desired and have postponed their return to ‘Washington month after month. They have a pleasant villa in the Trocadera disfrict, which rather central and easy of access, and they have been in the thick of sosial ac- tivities. Mrs. Munn and Mrs. Fred Singer. wife of the principal heir of the vast Singer fortune, have become intimates and are the leaders in the Prince of Wales. harace! ¢l tristics o energetic legislator of the British z:llnl Ronald Trees di- e leisurely between mpire. The Vide thelr 't that spl public presented him off Bourn mouth. They will pass next winte; however, in New York, and ha taken a long lease on the Ogden Codman house, in East 96th street. They may go to Virginis for the hunting season {n opening spring, and the possibility of a member of the Langhorne family returning to -the old haunts is causing a ripple of ex- citement in the Old Dominion. Mr. Tree ia of literary and artistic trend and will devote himself to such pur- suits while in this country. His wife, - Announces an ADVANCE SHOWING OF THE . NEW. STYLES FOR FALL AND WINTER 1921 B g Presenting for the Erlebacher-Originated younger married set. . Mrs. Hilton “ll:.h.(ll g‘ her family, I;l‘ afcfll‘n- shed horsewoman an alwa: and her daughter, Dorothy, also pos- | Purce 2FE0vOIRAR AO0 & By b sessors of a large and historic Ameri- fortune, have been in Paris over a year, and for the intellectuals Miss Elizabeth Marybury's studio over the Selne is a rediating point. But afl will come to Washington for the winter. ‘The stately reasidence of Mrs. Charles Munn on 16th street at Scott circle, is at the disposal of the Gurnee Munna and Miss Marbury has many studio friends who will make room for . her. Together with the dis- tinguished members of the congress, these social leaders will give Wash. ington as festive an air as Versailles and Paris when the peace confer- ence met. The Pan-American build- ing, though far less ornate as to in- terior when compared with the pal- aces of the Bourbon kings, is el and spacious enough for all purpo: and certainly presents a rarely be: tiful environment for the fetes possible in late October. Those lovers of the ancient com-|.e 4y panion of chivalry—the horse—are planning all sorts of fine shows, which are scheduled at different dates in reglions adjacent to Washington, where the members of the conference can_have some spirited diversion week ends at least. The autumn s son_may be said to open October at Culpeper, when the local organiza- tion will celebrate the sixteenth an- niversary of the first exhibit, and where the program is altogether worth while. In succession, Warren- ton, Upperville and Leesburg fall into line, and the most prominent hostesses of the section are arranging ballsand hunt breakfasts which will acquaint, the foreign visitors with the methods of sport followed in the mew world. Mra. John 8. Galnes of Warrenton holds the reins in her hand for the social end, and she is a tactful and experienced ho: 1so among the leaders, and Mrs. Maddux is 2dding interest to the general outlook by her detirmination to take her famous string of blue ribboners to England in anticipation of the eventa t spring. All the hosts in the b ttled hunting di triots are preparing a series of hou: parties for fox hunting just as soon as autumn is well under way. The social contingent in the cities of the northwest which lie con- tiguous to the Dominion of Canada are all agog over the remewed and seemingly authentic rumor that the Prince of Wales has definitely prom- ised to return to that part of the world some time in April, 1922, and ‘make a visit of at least six or eight weeks, spending some time in spots which he saw rather sketchily dur- ing the former tour. One objective |ling of well known Washingtonia: of his visit is tq bear the royal con- |including Admiral and Mrs. Sims a: dolence of his entire family to Mra& | former Senator and Mrs. Lippitt. Mra. Robert Fleming of Ottawa, who son Charles was drowned in the laf autumn and soon after he and the prince had renewed a valued friend- ship formed during the war. Young. Fleming stood in direct line of suc- ceeding to the title which the death of his father brought down to him and which is now held by his grand- father, 8ir Samford Fleming, well known to all the denizens of Murray Bay, near which is the u.mu{l seat. *| charmin, . _Mrs. M. May|i Maddux and Mrs. D. N. Lee of Lees-|ful bridle paths which skirt the coasts of England. Though the ambassador to Italy and Mrs. Richard Washburn Child are un- doubtedly {rritated over their difficul- ty in getting a fit setting for the powerful government of which they "are political and soclal representa- tives, Mr. Child finds much to explain why,' despite the rumors of lofty prices and ineessant extortion, there are ten times more Americans in King /ictor's realm than in any other con- tinental country. For, instance, who can resist the warm glow of satisfac- tion which suffuses the tourist who hands over five hundred-dollar cer- tificates and receives In return ten thousand lire. The exchange is more than sufficient for half of the vacation e motors abundant in every city and popular re- sort, and perhaps Florence, Rome, Naples and_the Jovely little cities along the Italian lakes remain the onu{ places o rth where the father pelled to remain in Rome during the torrid wave which swept the entire laina of.the Apennines, though Mrs. hild and the children_have found quarters near Lake Albano. Mr. Child has written of several fea- tures obvious in the way the Italian government handles the tourist prop- osition. For instance, the union of Italian hotelmen is under the author- ity of the newly created tourist sec- tion of the Italian state department. One can take a grievance against a grasping Boniface right into the foreign office and be assured of a ready and satisfactory adjustment. Perhaps no member of the iplo- matic corps resident in Washington ng a pleasanter or more rest- mer than the Polish minister, Prince Lubormirski, who has again selected a comfortable villa on the cliffy at Newport as the seat of the summer legation. and his rather large family, for the prince has six children, he has been able to get the very best out of the celebrated resort, besides compl seclusion for the delicate negoti tions he must attend to, even when on vacation. One of the stateliest dinners given this summer in Newport was planned to honor the prince and princess by Mr, end Mrs. Lawrence Paul, who ‘are acknowledged arbiters in that, exclusive. wing of society dominated by New Yorkers. Mr. Paul is the of He know; Miss Florence Sellers, Mrs. Géorge Vanderbilt was among the prominent guests, with a sprink- Paul sustaing a well earned reputa- || tion of giving brilliant dinners. ‘While, Washington is anticipating the coming of the world-famous per- sonages who will participate in the disarmament conference called by ||l President Harding on November 11, one member of the British delegation will recelve the cordial welcome which always awaits old friends. This is Sir Phili Kerr, so frequently in this i He h i 2 - - 3 ad run away from McGill Col- |country during the early days of the i - lege, in Montreal, when less than |war, and who was that stanch and un- AECLIAN .HALL —Foelfth and G Streets o omm. and - bassed . unscathed |Tailing: secretary who stood ‘4t the | 2 | B | The “Final Week” Bargains | of DeMoll’s Annual Summer Sale of . Traded-in PianosandPlayer Pianos This week represents your last opportunity to avail your- self of these unprecedented bargains in standard make in- i} struments, which have been put in condition in our own ‘[ workshops. ;i ! [ \ Five 88-Note Player-Pianos $350 Up Fourteen Traded-In Talking Machines, $25 Up j 5 REASONABLE MONTHLY PAYMENTS ACCEPTED ON ABOVE A New Revised Price List On | DUO-ART PIANOS Il and Aeolian Player Pianos it The following new revised price list now effective on these famous instruments Ten Upright Pianos | nobility. through the war, gaining its high honors, when he accidentally cap- sized a bosat in the rapids of the St. Lawrence -and dfowned in the sight of helpless gi ors.. Mra. Fleming, wh fortune been de since the war ang the loss of band and two sons, keeps a gift shol in Ottaws, patronised by the Britis and by the enmtire Ameri- can contingent ng through the Canadian _capi! The prince will also be the est of Gen. and Lady Byng, and, since the British foreign office acknowledges that his charm- ing, friendly manner is a valuable asset to continueq harmony of the two governments, he may cross the border and visit American cities of the northwest—Seattle, Tacoma, Port- Jand, St. Paul and Minneapolis. —— ‘Washington s much interested in the engagement recently announced in Kansas City of Mrs. William Pat- terson Borlsnd and Mr. Walter 8 Dickey. Mrs. Borland lived here for many years while her late husband represented the fifth Missouri distriot, 'and she was active in social and other activities. Mr. Borland died in Ger- many in 1919, soon after his defeat. right hand of Lloyd George during premier took up the reins of govern- ment until the signing of the armis- tice. 8ir Philip was accustomed to spend several months anpually in this country, and he is a well known habitue of the Century Club in New York. His only sister, Miss Minna Kerr, married, some years ago, Capt. Francis Wendell Butler Thwing, U. 8. A, son of the eminent scholar and educator, Charles F. Thwing, just now serving for his thirty-second year as president of the Western Reserve Uni- versity in Cleveland, Ohio. son of Dr. Thwing was in London vis- iting Mr.' Kerr when the war com- menced, and he immediately enlisted ‘With the princess || in the Coldstream Guards and fought ||| his way through the ranks to a cap- tain’s commission, which he still holds. Sir Philip Kerr was the chief of the staft of private secretaries and ad- jsers _on foreign relations whom loyd George took with him to Paris. The head of the renowned family of Kerr holds the title of Marquis of Lo- thian, but the present bearer of it has beon mentally affected for years and Sir Philip is his heir and has recently been appointed his guardian. Just Arrived! A Large and Varied Collection of Handmade Blouses Priced from $575 to $10.95 These Beautiful Blouses display remarkabld . Handicraft both in the drawnwork and the Filet and Baby Irish Lace emgployed in their Ju_-clcfflunt‘ Consistent With Our Policy to Carry No Merchandise from One Season to 'Ail Our Spring and Summer the Next We Offer Suits, Wraps and Dresses \ omen Will Enthusiasticafiy Coat Suits for Fall The Coat Suit has been revised in such an unexpectedly chic guise that its stay is sure to be permanent. Especially smart are those of navy blue, embroidered in heavy threads that interweave metal. The Frock itself is a straightline model. The boxed coat or long, slightly fitted one. Strictly tailored styles or fur trimmed. Y Mrs. Borland was the adopted daugh- A = ter of the late Willlam H. Winants, &| 4.4, —_ l Ea’y “, .:ruwo ful banker of Kansas City, and .mm;’.‘:'m:fi,‘“ fi“,m'f ,_h,d s of to 5 fn' a oman tu ec t he took her degree of A. B. at Smith Eoll-‘n after an unusually brilliant collegiate career. She was one of the charter members of the Congressional Club, and always took a conspicuous part in its activities. Mr. Dickey is a widower, with two young daughters prominent in the social realm—fiss Madeline Dickey, curred two winters , and Miss Catherine Dickey, & bud of last year. Mr. Dickey's estate, Bonny Brae, s a show place of the splendld boule- vard over the Missouri river. Count von Iimburg will be among the notable visitors who will be in Washington during the early daya of ‘autumn. e recently resigned the ‘governor generalship of the Dutch East Indies after a continuous service of nearly f‘irty years. The venerable statesman landed in Seattle during late July, and has been passing the summer in leisurely tours in the Canadign Rockies, fishing and camp- ing in the mountain recesses which are perpetoelly snow covered. Count von Limburg has practically. remade the empire of Queen Wiihelmina in ‘whose debut oc- | & most ploturesque spot_on the continent is the cafe of the Chateau of Madfm in the Bois du Boulogne, Paris. This famous resort i the heart of deep woods above the French capital was built by the pleasure loving Francis I as a place in_which the ladsome Easter week could be gayly spent after the rigors of Lent. The ‘was copled from an cold castle n, and the restaurant was & hall for the entire potentates in° such numbers in peal have been rushing to London. After "completing their affairs with the foreigh secretary in Downing street, they depart at once for Paris. No less than twenty of the lesser rajahs and maharajahs were resent at the fete given by the ah of Kapurthala, who' is |} one of the great East Indian princés, and whose handsome wife wears most | i gorgeous jewels and splendid cere- monial robes. The Duke of Marl, borough and his new duchess were the principal guests & fow weeks ago of that lovely East Indian the |l Its the a ance s of suits From Onr Magnificent Showin, ‘Prli.lc They have di i1 or “‘:e'l'l. v e of at “35= This special assortment is made of a very fine A New Fall Suit ere Tomorrow at the Introductory quality navy the long \ Welcome at l/2 Price ‘} B\ made by the Aeolian Company, of New York, who are recognized as the largest the spice isles and has Eraduslly, princess, wife of the Maharajah of blue tricotine in 2 number of smart styles, including 4 | ff . manufacturers of musical instruments ir the world: : “ af.“:.‘t«v":f;.:%‘f i%:n ::'JEE:%::'% E‘g‘.’ I i "r;‘arhz‘:"-: straightline coats, slit on either side. Some‘ar:hs::lic:-‘mf’"d s | S Style Retail Price Electrically Operated Upright * [l fora?™srocerses. “sanitary " mtaures | sovaral ortn oE Ml - others zre braid trimmed; still another style tifull | “fl} 555 Acolian Player...oo oo ow 3895 g0, D e et i R i S O e e ) Skirts are plain tailored, snug fitting and medior g 1 555 P onk Acoinn Phayer.—e 3555 | 503 Stfoud oo oenoiane I T ) B Tl W B | Jackets ¢ perfctly talored and i | | s oo conpuseessesssses Pl g ous prices. o | [| 542 P- Oak Acolian Pianola. oo $645 | 50 Weber .. T o oo $1.850 M e L " Fest Soithy 18 : — Women'’s Sizes, 36 to 44 | I = S SteinWay .ovewo-.ioooommn.$2500 figi;';:::& ‘;:_',,:,::u& E;::{:::n:.u":n. Women' (; Foundation % = I | " Foot Operated Duo-Art Pianos Electrieally ‘Duo-Art | 5ars win be entortainea by the ives Afternoon Tea Interesting to Stout Women ] 550 Acolian e e o e $795 BU As m . m“' | ?fi:{“fi’u&mffi'fifik’féfi; GRS ok Doy ple o We extend to you a most cordial mvmfiei‘ to visit i 600 Stroud .. ..ercesessrcscemess $895 T Seels S @ P it Jmportant members. of the colonisl '. ,; Nationsl ;"“.u_o 2 e ' | ‘; 144 Wheelock ... $995 gg%fio& comtpontrepees st wa s sparsme $ 2,950 1 go‘v;mna-t °:¢. :n:-‘;w-::l:u ¥ g "'::.:‘:. fous guversment e “':‘:f m s"t?“tdyW?rE op Steck . conmeewmrsrconceme $1,275 > S i R e Ronsld | ments, when un, presi- || —which we have just recen on our Fourth Floor. "5 Wener T s | oy Sty - e o e S50 | (| iR e R0 Ko ghocts B | dent o 2, Sgundusion, staisnd b7 ‘Hlore we are displaying unusual assortments of stout sizes it Steinway .. coe o cmsonmunse . $4,200 ~ Hi{ in ‘AN X3 ty, Va., 8 ¥ Bravsi and i . . AR] akis setting for his lovely wite, who,| Mrs. Calhoun and Mrs. Mo in Suits, Coats, Dresses, Skirts, Blouses, eres [ S. P. StENWARY «ovvemm ov s o cvssmion - $2,100 AUM'I’..%.-@.-...«...M ~ M W“"“aflm‘?w"’ D‘:,lll"flr'“‘ '!::':”Ymma."‘f‘:‘:: Undergarments. - - i Prices gusranteed until January 1st. If factory should make a reduction be- Jjiic 3 -w" Sineon, the bor aud other places ‘whore they €|l it _ All Articles Moderately Priced fi tween now and then a refund will be made to customers.

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