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SOCIETY Work Day Fuss Day Worry Day Tired Day Expensive Day $10.00 Down and $10.00 Month GIVES YOU FREEDGCM FOR THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D.C, OCTOBER 16, 1921—PAR Tales of Well Known Folk | In Social and Official Life (Continued from Tenth Page.) 18 a lively spot this autumn, when |the high "gales and bracing winds add vim to the joys of sailing boats | ior skimming boats, as the latest fad | Eoes. The Prince of Wi in- i troduced the vogue of the skim- | Immx boat last summer about the wild waters of Wales. It is a shal- !low affair with a big sail but addi- tional motor engines in case of calm. The vessel fairly dunces on the sur- face of the water much as a gull does and goes a prodigious Tate when the wind is swift. withoyt the least pos- sibility of capsizing. The young heir of the Spanish throne is at St. Bri and he too has a skimming boat de- signed after his cousin's, of Wales, and he may be seen any morning wrestling with his sall or steering when the motor is going. It has been an uncomfortably warm sum- mer at San Sebastian, where the Spanish court is domiciled from June, and the royal family has sought .cooler quarters. King Alfonso and Queen Victoria have been much in Scotland and at Dinard, the guests of Queen Mario of Roumania. Quite a colony of American young people are at St. Briac and enjoying the un- PERSONAL NOTES. Mrs. Jeff Kormiker of New York and her little son are the guests of |her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Kahn of 17th street, | Mra: Harry Hellbrun of New York {City is spending the week-end with her sister, Mrs. Meyer Nordlinger, of Beverly Court. The Council of Jewish Women will hold their first meeting of the season 'October 18 at 2:30 p. m., in the v of the Eighth Street Temple. An in- teresting program has been ar- ranged Mr. Nate Sickle of Newark j was the guest of relatives in town the lust week. The Afternoon Bridge Club was en- (tertained on Tuesday by Mrs. Edgar {¢. Kaufman at her home in the Airy | View Anartment. Miss Florence Samuels of Bingham- ton, Y., returned to her home yes- terday after a month's stay in Wash- inglon with friends. She expects to return here later on to spend some time, Mr. and Mrs. Moe Buer have re- turned from a visit to New York and are at their home, in Chevy Chase. Mr. and Mrs. Kugene Schwab and gon, Mr. Elmer Schwab, are now lo- Y 2 fi for Sle and Heclth T 2. ,b@ODUCTIONS $ 'STANDARD ¢ QUALITY & SERVICE MART(ET ORSETS our) o (Qlender Neid % Circlets encircle SOCIETY - orse ting MISS RUTH KERNODLE, cated on Calvert street and Adams W ay with a future king. oxe engagement was announced |Mill road — y rece: and whose marriage to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Steinberger One of the delegates which China|Ronald McDonald of Pennsylv: and son, Samuel, j return today 0 will send to the conference on the|will take place thix month. from Atlantic City, where they spent rolic ay limitation of armaments s the son two weeks at the Hotel Alamac. of Dr. Wu Ting Fang, that clever Mr. Albert Ackerman of East Or- little chap who was just fifteen when ange, N J., who spent two weeks at his parents left Washington. But he |ting during the best weeks of fishing on ; the Hotel Burlington, returned to is now a'grave statesman with the|this side of the Atlantic. his_home Friday. title of “doctor” himself and an envi- — Mr. and Mrs. David Baer, Mrs able record for statecraft. Like the| It is to be regretted for other rea-|Harry Lewis nd Miss Bert Israel left \ present minister from China, young [Sons than sentimental ones that the | Washington ‘hursday to spend a Dr. Wu Chang Fu is a former Central [ military authorities are so leisurely | week in New York Citv. 3 - High School boy, but he belonged to|about accepting the handsome ofter| *Mr. Leonard R. Nachman, son of \ 3@ P University of Pennsylvania. LS \ usual experience of riding and sailing Movie Day Pleasure Day The “GEYSER” Washing Machine Does the Day’s Work in a Few Minutes QUALITY MERCHANDISE RELIABLE HOUSE @acroll Electric Company 714 12th Street N.W. the pigtail era 'and to the pacifist |of Mrs. Horatio Nelson Slater to con-|Mr. and Mrs. Philip Nachman of 613 days of his country, so he was uncon- | vert her fifty-ucre estate, Pine Bank, |9th street northeast, has left for nected with any of its athletic activi- |at Readville, near Boston, into a ties. But he was an honored student |home for permanently disabled sol for all that and was formally elected | diers, sailors and other victims of the to all the societies, military and lit- | world war. Mrs. Slater will make erary. all ne. terations to convert Young Wu mastered English in|what is a conventional rural mansion brief time, and he always accompa- |into a sanatorium, and she will per- nied Madam Wu in her social rounds, |mit its use for fifty v making an entirely acceptable inter- [ernment meantime Xeepir preter. Madam Wu, like he, n, be-|place and defraying all ne longed to an era which is now his- |penses. In fifty years presumably toric. She was the last Chinese lady | the sufferers in this latest war will be resident here who had the bound ed beyond all such aid. Pine feet, and her shuffling mode of walk- was sed with money ing always excited both pity and|w liam Morris Hunt admiration. She clung to the tradi- | realized Millet canvases tional ways of China and to_its gar-|which he bought at Barbizon when ments. though she was intensely | the fortunes of the great master were interested in the ways of western [at their lowest ebb. women and asked innumerable ques-| Among these was that now world- tions about the mysteries of their |famous landscape, “The Sowers” fa- upparel. Young Dr. Wu graduated [miliar to all artists, either through with high honors at Oxford and|the original or through prin Mr. studied also in Paris and Vienna.|Hunt passed his declining years at the He will be one of the most interest- [ Readville ecstate, and he was pro- ing_and much feted visitors drawn {foundly : is home and te to Washington by the November con-[the n e ed. Immedi- ference. ely rehas the land and —_ restoring dilapidated With the woman in politics a domi- | farmhouse outer edge the nant issue everywhere, Washing- | gentle artist set aside a sanctuary of tonians are profoundly interested in|six acres wherein every inhabitant of the career of Mrs. Charles H. Sabin.|the forest was safe from intrusion. who as Pollie Morton was a leading { There are junetions in his will spirit in the younger set when her|[about thi remaining futher, Paul Morton, was Secretary [from th d of man and completely of the Navy. M bin was an|at the di 1 of the birds and the aggressive partisan of equal rights|small wood creatures found about for women long_ before New York | Massachusetts B: gingerly voted them full rights of 2 citizenship_ _ After obtaining the{ After the mode followed for many vote, Mrs, Sabin began a career which | years by French and Eng] flower promises the most brilliant results |lovers. many of the New York homes From her home in the Shinnecock inow dieplay some rvelous indoor Hills of Southampton she conducts!gardens. In the older citics of Eu- vigorous campaigns, thus far princi-|rope a room lLas not only a color pally In behalf of such aldermen or|scheme in walls, ceiling. floor cover- Vhiladelphia, where he will enter the Mrs. Alfred Haas and her daughter, formerly of Norfolk, Va., have joined Mr. Haas here to make their future home. Miss Minnie Aarons has returned to her home in Baltimore after a visit in Washington with relatives. Mrs. Minnie Revness. who visited her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Revness, has returned to her home in Philadelphia. _Mrs. Arthur Baumearten of New York city is visiting friends in Wash- ington. Mrs. A. Schwab and Mrs. Sarah Kohler of New York will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Heid of Lanier place this week. OGUE PATTERN SERVICE Emma B. Wells 1315-1317 F St. little wo1500 /T In justice to her attractive appearance asd good health no woman can afford to overlook this Complete Correct Corset Service oy ik 24T K2 BT O P ETS furnish_their Hygienic Service entirely free. riceless service far exceeds the inf value corsets themsel lemo Corsets are made in the following groups: » e Self-Reducing Corsets—For Stout Wemes . 5 Wonderlift Corsets—For All Women . . . . Diafram-Reducing Corsets . . . . . . . .. KopService Corssts—Fer All Women . ., . Maternity (22 models) $5.00 to $9.00 ; 9 models) 6.50 to 15.00 cwhat All Leather LI NIC Flexible Arch. Cannot Hurt. 4 models) 9.00 to 13.50 11 models) 3.00 to 9.00 SMART SET CORSETS. - ... ... ...(13models) 35001200 ‘They appeal to those who wish to be correctly corseted yet want to feel as though the; none on. They are made in a variety of materials. = 78 CIRCLETSFor All Pgures . . . . . . . ... ...(16models) $150 to $5.00 They are Self-Adjusting and do for the upper part of the figure what the corset d A They equalize the bust and shoulder flesh and make an unbroken line from -hom::r.'ifli'p. Bs fitted by a corset hygienist in any good stere ity Corsets . . . XS AT They foflow line of the foot. Sth_Floor—Take Elevator VIAVI HEALTH TALK TO WOMEN 916 Colorado Building 20t 5 a~\. (SN e &3S Style 103. Wer bunten or eorn Styie 106 Forj | the foot. Extra bail the perfect foot. Made of brown or | Black kidskin. Lcw‘ Ut Rcitr 1304 F St. heels Flexible soles and arches. brown kidakin, OPPENHEIMER'S SHOP UNIQUE ART NEEDLEWORK SECTION SEOQOND FLOOR. Something Newer, Something Differ- ent. Many Surprises Awart You—De- lightfully Dainty New Patterns, and in Nearly Every Case Specially Priced. This Elegant Bedspread Full 2%x3 yards. Stamped ready for the needleworker. Regularly $375. Priced $3.00 Child’s Crib Cover, No. 285 34x44 inches. —with wide blue hem; stamped ready for the nee- dle, with colored patches and_ wide blue hem, for $1.25; 10 Skeins Floss at 8c, 60c. Total, $1.85 This Very Pretty Apron Pictured here and stamped ready for the needle. Very $I.oo special Just Arrived Fancy Aprons Choice designs. all ready for the needle. Regularly $1.50. sl'zs Specially priced at....... No. 1950 Four Napkins Stamped ready for th needle. Priced a{...,.......e soc Lanch Cloths New Patterns —in a wide assortment. Many new artistic designs. Stamped and spe- sl .00 cially priced No. 1949 Daint; Lunch Cloll As drawing, with eolored ga tc hde s diar_ lé)plique. % tamped and price 90 at .. < Many Wonderful New Items for Infants and Children Bibs, Aprons All stamped. Specially priced at 250 to sl.oo FULL INSTRUCTIONS FREE AT local officials whose election relates to_the welfare of the community. Her latest triumph was to secure the nemination of Prof. John G. Peck, of Southampton, to assemblyman frem Suffolk county district, and in- cidentally to defeat the ambition of the former official who showed slight concern over the prosperity of the hill country. Mrs, Sabin has been en- gaged in one of those traditional feuds about a road which touches the south end of the estate and which immemorially the public about have freely used. The justice of the peace sided- with the people and ruled that the road should be kept open and in good repair. Mrs. Sabin thought otherwise, and she aroused so much feeling on the subject and got to- gether such enthusiastic support that this particular justice is now among the missing. and his successor is wijling to submit the matter to a popular vote, something for which :‘drsl Sabin has contended from the rst. One of the curious reminders of royal days in Bavaria_was the old silver bowl used by Mr. and Mrs Mark Lawrence Requa, of Piedmont, Calif.. when their grandson, John Lawrence Russell, through the proper sponsors, renounced the evil one and all his works and pomps. Young John is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Russell, who were in Wash- ington for the past two winters and who journeyed across the continent in order that the venerable bowl used christening at euth and Munich tism. Mrs. Requa found this beau- tiful example of the carved silvér of Nuremburg_ st a public auction in Munich and eagerly bought against such uses as John Lawrence Russell furnished. The water used for the ceremony came from the Jordan. bot- tled_more than thirty years ago for the Requas and which has been care- | fully doled out during all these years for the children and grandchildren on their baptismal day. The Russells will pass nearly all the winter at Piedmont and will not come east until after Easter. . One of the notable books of_ the autumn is “Other Days,” by the Hon. and Rev. James Wentworth Lelgh, brother of Lord Leigh, both of whom passed several years in this country and both of whom wed Americans. The reverend author is dean of Can- terbury and has been giving much of his leisure to collecting his reminis- cencei which extend over a half century and relate to three conti- nents. His late wife was Miss Frances Butler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Plerce Butler, of Philadelphia, | the tatter known to histrionic fame as Fannie Kemble. An entire chapter of “Other Days” is devoted to memo- ries of this inestimable woman, with additional sidelights on the American stage when she was in the height of her power. The marriage of the English actress ‘to Mr. Butler proved unhappy, and after living in retirement e ten years after a legal separation she at last obtained a divorce and r turned to the stage, Her home dur- ing her declining days was with the Dean and Mrs. Lelgh, and some amasingly clever letters of Miss Kemble's are a valuable part of the volume. Mrs. Leigh died some fifteen’ years ago, and the only daughter wed ; { her cousi Maj. Pierce Butler of | Cloughgrenan, Ireland, and at pres- ent with the Twenty-ninth Regiment of the Hnglish Infantry, now sta- tioned in Belfast. Dean Leigh's recol- lections include & charming picture of Washington in 1856 and of Phila- delphia during the fatter half of the past century, Another honorable and reverend dean of the established Church of England is claiming attention at present, but this in the personal sense, since he arrived a few days ago with his wife to pasa the autumn and early winter among her kindred. This is the dean of Westminster, Rev. Willlam Hartley Carnegie, who with his wife is passing October in Boston and who plans Vi A Philadelphia and Washington befors returning to his beautiful home, Canon’ te, near Bt. Mar 1 Westminater. Mrs. Ca Miss Margaret Endic belles of the first Cleveland adminis- tration, and her marriage to the Hon. Joseph' Chamberlain was one of the epochal events of that era. Dr, Car- negle belongs to the same family as the late laird of Skibo, and he as well as his wife has numerous relatives in the New England and middle states. He is a powerful pulpit orator and can fill even the great cathedral which adjoins the houses of parliament, and he yields @ ready and persua But most of all he prides himself en his prowess as a uelrla of Izaack ‘Waltop_and his unchallenged record for fly fishing in the isolated lakes of Bt Soie e merican 0, n ' Anwin vl RS A of being chaplain of the house of com- .!mons, and that body is invariably sit- ing, furniture and drapings, but in the windows all through the dead months bloom flowers whose tints harmonize with the apartment. ‘Walter many French doors and s of white und gold, and ment boxes, in tall erystal vases and in wedgewood jars bloom all manner of white and gold from the massive Japanese little Madonna The lilies, variety to the daint; lily of the fields rences have the ga room, all bright chintzes and wickers. with the graceful gaudy chimney bell flower climbing up to the curtain poles and tumbling all over the win- dow sills. Another effective flower for the indoor g the tuberous kind especially, and its blooms show every color in the rain- bow. In scores of the Dutch colonial houses about Southampton a profu- sion of cottage tulips, vari-hued hya-. cinths and the tall lovely narcissus in window boxes make a room cheer- ful enough to console Job. or even one | more afflicted. A cypress vine with; white and coral blooms will give an, aspect to the plainest room which is wbsolutely irresistible. —_— Honeycomb Pudding. Take one-half ounce of gelatin, one pint of milk, one-half; cup of sugar, three eggs and lemon : or vanilla extract. Put the gelatin.| milk and sugar into an enameled saucepan on the stove; when melted, stir in the yolks of the eggs, well, If§) beaten, and allow the mixture to just; come t oa boil. Take off the fire and, when just a little cooled, stir in the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff froth. Pour into a wet mold and stand until set. Garnish with whip-! ped cream and chopped preserved fruits. The top part is a clear jelly and the lower part thick and creamy. A very nourishing and easily digested ; pudding. h 00K Over your furs now snd bring them in for repairs, or you will be one of the waiting when cold weather comes. 30-32 Florida MARTIN WOLF ‘e~ Open_Evenings. 7-9. . MIDWINTER advance styles and our EX CLUSIVE Handmade Hats are now on display. Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2:30 P.M. | In the home of A D. Denegre the stately living Subject: 14th and G Sts. “Tumors and Their Many Causes.” VIAVI PATRONS ESPECIALLY INVITED, Admission Free. 316 Street A Most Attractive Group of | Which have been marked down to a price muth below their actual worth— $33.00 Many Sample Suits ‘are. in the lot. ‘NEMO GUARANT 3.E Cunninghom € MONDAY, PROMPTLY AT 9;15, WE WILL PUT ON SALE 7 EE OVER ALL SUPERVISED®™BY THE L4 NEMO HYGIENIC-FASHION INSTITUTE . NEW Y ENNNIPSY 2 SNV J0Em 7 7 - p[e—— o] ——[o]——|o|c——=l—|ol—o{c—=lal——Falal——lal—— | 316 Tth Street DRESSES In Canton Crepe, Crepe-back Satin, Trico- tine, Poiret Twill and Georgette. Copies of exclusive costly models. REGULAR VALUES TO $39.50 This is one of the greatest offerings we have ever made, as we firmly believe that you cannot duplicate any of these dresses else- where for less than $39.50. Every garment is perfect and exceptionally well made in ex- tra fine quality materials. The models in- clude every new style, with the newest em- broideries and trimmings. EXTRA SPECIAL 108 SMART COATS Tu all the wanted materials, beauti- fully tailored and silk lined, trimmed with real luxurious fur. Specially Priced at $45.00 An Added Feature to Our Dress Sale 75 SAMPLE DRESSES Worth ‘up to $50.00. $35.00 trimmed models, in cloth