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3 Mrs. Coolidge Heads U. D. C. Ball Patronesses Mrs. Calvin Coolidge heads the list of patronesses for the annual autum- nal ball to be given by Stonewall Jackson Chapter, No. 20, U. D. C., in the rose room of the Hotel Washing- ton, Monday evening, November 28. Other patronesses are: Mrs, Edwin Denby, Mrs. Woodro's Wilson, Lady Geddes, Mrs. Fredefick H. Gillett, Mrs. John A. Lejeune, Mrs. Charles J. Bell, Mrs. Thomas Bradle John M. Biddle, Mrs. George W. East- ment, Mrs. Jam rroll Frazer, Mrs. James C. Cantrill, rd, Mrs. Louis An- dre Abbot, Jrs. Nelson P. Webster, Mrs. Albert ¥King, Mrs. Williamn M. Meuman, Mrs. Franklin H. Barr, Mrs. B Clement W. Sherriff, Mrs. Charles H. Fred, Mrs. John Baxter Hill, Mrs. Walter W. Talcott, Mrs. Lee Benoist, Mrs. A. Waller, Mrs. Cordelia Powell Odenheimer, \ Mrs. George B. King. Mrs. Jesse Lee Webb, Mrs. Paul Joachim, Mrs. William J. Harris, Mrs, Ernest Walker, Mrs. Ryan Devereaux, Mrs. Charles Marbury, Mrs. ‘ B. Willis, Mrs. Ray Macomber, Mrs. James Madison Bullock, Mrs. Harrlot . Turner, Mrs. Charles O'Neil, Mrs. Avery E. Dabinett, Mrs. Sam A. Duval, Mrs. W. D. Tewksbury, Mrs. Charles Loring, Mrs. R. E. Carlson, Mrs. James Plesent Woods, Mrs. Isaac Gans, Mrs. James Mulcare, Mrs. Dan- v iel Smith Gordon, Mrs: E. D. Giles, Mrs. Anna E. Rush, Mrs. Robert Stratton Boswell and Mrs. Harry Gauss. Mr. Cloyd Byars of Virgin is chailrman of the floor cmmitte Mrs. Frank Morrison is the presi- dent; Misg Lilllan Chenoweth, first vice presfdent, and Mrs. Benjamin Soule Gantz, second vice president, of the chapter. Mrs. Albion Tuck is chairman and Miss Marie J. MecGuire, vice chairman,’of the enter- tainment committee. Read Commercial National Bank’s “Insured Savings Plan,” on page 5.— Advertisement. , Mr. and Mrs. Harding Will Attend Horse Show Boxes are being reserved for the President and Mrs. Harding and the Secretary of War and Mrs. Weeks at the horse show to be given Tuesday €vening, November 8, at 8 o'clock in the riding hall at Fort Myer, for the benefit of the horse show fund of the post. Members of the 3d Cavalry and 3d Field Artillery, stationed at the fort, will take part in the show. and the horses to be shown by them at the national horse show in New York, will be exhibited. An exhibition drill by * of the 3d Field Artillery, Capt. Jerome J. Waters in command, 1 be a fea- ture of the show, and.' in addition, there will be fire jumping and an ex- hibition of high jumping by mounted officers. . Additional boxes have been taken by Mrs. Thomas F. Walsh, Mrs. George Hope and others. Tickets for the event will be on sale at the riding hall on the evening of the show, and may be obtained K at the Army and Navy Club, and the varieus hotels in the capital. Partial List of Concert Patronesses Announced Mrs. James Carroll Frazer, presi- @ent of the Belleau Wood Memorial Association, has announced a partial list of patronesses for the concert to be given in the New Willard ballroom on November 25, at 9:15 p.m., for the benefit of the Belleau wood memorial. These include Mrs. John W. Weeks, Mrs. E Charles E. Hughes, Mrs. Norman Wil- lams, Mrs. Charles Carroll Lee, Mrs. Henry F. Dimock, Mrs. Ridgeley Hunt, Mrs. Sarah Lee Phillips, Mrs. John Callan O’Laughlin, Miss Helen A. Cannon, Mrs. William A. Ham- mond, Mrs. Stephen B. Elkins, Mrs. Ira Bennett, Mrs. Eugene Hale and « Mrs. Eugene Van Rensselaer. Among the artists for the occasion is Lucrezia Borl of the Metropolitan Grand Opera Company, in New York. The committee in charge of the con cert is composed of Mrs. Calvin Coo! idge, chairman; Mrs. James W. Wads- worth, jr., vice chairman; Mrs. Theo- dore N. Boynton, treasurer; Mrs. George Barnett, Mrs. Truxtun Beale, Mrs. Willlam Corcoran Eustls, James Carroll Frazer, Miss Sarah Lee, Mrs. Wilson Greene, Mrs. Lawrence ‘Townsen: rs. George Cabot Lodge and Miss Mary Patten. Plan Card Party at Club To Aid ex-Service Men Arrangements are being completed for the card party to be given Wed- nesday, November 16, at 2:30 o’clock, at the Washington Club, under the auspices of the Quentin Roosevelt Unit of the American Women's Le- gion. Tea will be served and the pro- ceeeds will be used to aid ex-service men -and to further the cause of Americanization. The patronesses include Mrs. Hard- ing, Mrs. Coolidge, Mrs. Edwin Denby, Lady G¢ eddes, Mrs. Frank B. Willis, Mrs. James W. Wadsworth, jr.; Mrs. Miles Poindexter, Mrs. Nicholas Long- worth, Mrs, Theodore Roosevelt, Mrs. + Thomes P. Gore, Mrs. Willlam C. Rivers, Mrs. John A. Lejeune, Mrs. John H. Dayton and Mrs. Robert E. Z e e T2 Great Northern Seal 40inches long ; gorgeously embroidered lining - +1108 1.J.FOX 1220 G St. N.W. One Flight Up Next to Leon, Hairdresser SOCIETY In Social (Continued Tales of Well Known Folk from Sixth Page.) and Official Life These lands the city of St. greater the armies part of Winefred was ‘thia work, Th to all who read their fortunes they reétain but iaces in and ab their name. to ‘her brother, Lady Granard, who has recently ar- | rived in New York to visit her fn};hEI'.’ Mr. Ogden Mills, contemplates a visit e now incorporated ‘in Louls and have the fortune of the widespread Lucas- Hunt-Turner families. Mrs. Water- man_ since her widowhood has re- sided in Europe. gave her home, Ducing the war she her time and the her income to aiding interned soldiers of the alll In Switzerland, “hins and Miss her able assistant in e Orsinis are familiar the novels of Francis Marion Crawford, but at the present are at low ebb, and} few of the grand pal- out Rome which bear Representative Ogden ! Mills, when the proceedings of the! nference reach an important point. “|friends as the representative gentle- When she was aged less than 40 years. She was the )\le and front of Thany charities -in the Virginia capi- tal and always described by her ‘woman of the south. Since Mrs. Harold Walker sailed to Visit her sister, ‘the Baroness Wil- liam von Schoen, the baren has been transferred from "the German em- assy in Rome to the exceedingly delicate post of minister to Poland. The baron and his wife are giready established in Warsaw and derful old palace of the Zamoyskl ! The baroness -was Miss Catherin | Birney, daughter of the late THeo. jdore Birney of this city and his wife, ;Who I8 well remembered as the jfounder of the Mothers’ Congress. The marriage occurred in 1916, & dis- imal perfod of the late war, and the |friends and relatives of the Birneys were deeply distressed. Baron von Schoen was at the time attached to the staff of Count von Bernstorff, but fmmediately, after. the marriage he was sent on a special mission to Mexico, where he remained during the jentire period of hostllities. He be- longs to_an opulent and powerful Hesslan famlily, and his father was one of those trained by Bismarck and who was for years ambassador to Russia and was &t utbreak -of e world war at 1s on a diplo. atic mission. Baron: 'von Schoen' large fortune 'is -unaffected bx' the drastic changes in German. industry or commerce, since it 18 principally invested in woolen manufactories in Hesse-Darmstadt and supplied goods for the army and'for' the higher c! of citizens in the Rhine count: The main seat of the.von Sehoens is 2 gloomy old palace at Wi over- looking the gulld hall, historic diet was 'held at-the begin- ning of Luther's rgformatiof. The family of Senator Wadsworth | is observing a brief period of mourn- ing for the grand aunt of the senator, Mrs. Cornelia Wadsworth Adair, who died at her place near Bath, Ehfl-nl. within the fortnight. Mrs. Adair wi born in _the adsworth _home _in Genesee, N. Y., and-married first that Gen. Montgomery Richle, ;who w"_ killed in the same battie of the Wil- dernesg as her brother, James 8. Wadsworth, grandfather ol ‘the New York statesman. After the civil war she made her home in England, and eventually beécame the wife of John George Adalr of Glénreagh; Count: k2 George | Wilkins ! F Company | i H 1 Inew {Jugoslavia and Rumania are kmown. !kings of Rumania in his veins, and She has her group of children with ?er. and all are at present in lhel \?mlly Seat in Westchester county, Y. Mrs. Whitelaw Reid, who has| Pheded the entire summer und autumn ; a X Phir Hall, Is entertaining Lady Lca' ney. the mother of the present rd Rodney, who with his wife and fioumv{ son, prefers the freedom of is Canadian ranch to the restric- tions of British soclety. Lady Ward iznd her children will join Mrs. White- aw. Reld early in December and will remain at least two months, coming Of Rumania, Volce of Queen Marie of Rumania, to be pro- ~. UNDERWo0D & UNDERWODD. MLLE, HENRIETTA SAVA-GOIU who transiated “The e Mountain,” the play of uced n Washington for the benefit f her majesty’s charities. to Washington as the guest of Miss Boardman and later golng to Cali- fornia. Nearly all the members of the British nobility who have Amerl. can Kinspeople or friends are plan- ning to run over to Washington some time while the conference sits. Col. Willlam Arnold Lawson, the future (¥ Viscount Burnham, is to be here in the interests of his father's journal the London Daily Telegraph, and with his wife and young son is at present Hving in New York. Lord and Lady |t Inverforth of Scotland and Lady Pirrie are among the mem- bers of “the British delegation who Will pass the greater part of the|! winter in Washington. : Prince Antoine Bibesco. minister from Rumania, has recently been Qquite frequently recalled by the Euro- Pean press and by certain journals in this country. have proved a flurr attaches to dipliomats. Washington remuembers with what regularity the ' 3 Paris press announced the end of M. !; Jusserand's service here. It appears | the Rumanian foreign office was not entirely pleased at the reported com- ments " of the Prin Bibesco on American women, which appeared in London papers. But then freedom of 8peech is permitted by the British| constitution as by the American, and | Asquith will make a brief visit here in February. the Confederacy. belonged to the same family as the Tennants of England, so famillar to Nan Tennant, winter here, ried Henry Fairfax of Oak Hill, and she was the mother of the present lord Fairfax and grandpother of the 1 these rumors | provin, such as often | in Lon moth Mrs. Tennant was Miss Eugenia Buf- fington, a member of the old James river aristocracy, and she was an ad- mirable being very statuesque in appearance Mrs. David Brydon Tennant, who died recently in her splendid home, Monroe Terrace, on the outskirts of Richmond, was for vears past one of the soclal leaders of the old capital of Her late husband he public through the sprightly and vm(.numl;\::‘l:got Tennant, wife of the for- Asquith, by the Princess Bribesco and premier of Britain, Herbert heé secretary of the British embassy, Hugh V. Tennant, and his sister, Miss who will spend the Mrs. Tennant first mar- winsome Eugenla Fairfax, who I8 ch a belle in Richmond and n, where she lives part of Mrs. Tennant's daughter, .~ John Stewart Bfyan of Ricl mond, will no doubt assume her #ceptre in social queenship. type of the grande dame, snowy white no one on this side of the water was dl.§turbed over the opinion which the Lively daughter of Margot Asquith had formed of the daughters of Uncle Sam. The princess will soon sail for New York, and will join her husband, who is now comfortably established in the new legation, the former home | of. Col. Robert M.' Thompson. She | has evidently made her peace with her husband’s country and returns prepared to see American women with more friendly eyes. The prince, who has the blood of the ancient who is mest ardently devoted to his native land, will occupy a conspicu- ous role in the discussions which re- late to the “little entente” as the states of Czechoslovakia and The princess will be among the i portant hostesses, and there is a we defined rumor that her mother, Mrs. A . o > —can be chosen to | ™ best advantage at $35. BUITS in style will answer Furs Repaired and Remodeled “Stone Marten Opossum”™ y Presenting the new phases of refined fashion in Mid-Winter Millinery As created by t signers and produced by leading artists. he famous de- Featuring Hats of— silver; Ciel Satin of b in lavish design vet crowns; binations. Providing dress. A ielange tive types. hilipsborn Slipper Satin, embroidered with ~ Bagatelle, a distinct novelty; eautiful treat- ment; Embroidered Duvetyn, Maline brims, with Vel- Fur and Brocade com- for the oc- casion—be it the snng hoodings for wear with the fur-collared coats; or the big shapes for of distinc- 608 to 614 Eleventh St [/ e ,yn‘a“ununumu““ R T LOEOCCOLEECEX T [ORECUTOR B el T AT PV NIRRT O HHIN IR MV T nmmmlmmv' TS N — | AT N AV G AT . NN AN N NI O o mlmnummm’g IV e 1 WU SIS T UL .’|'|‘l’0|"l'|" ‘Il ‘I'i 'Illl } i1 e it i T i g W e AT I HNN Y i VT AT IR I AR RO AR DI ARV I NI s o LRV UL UL I 1t oo Q) mu'_mnummlmnmm‘1' N | it ot otV (LRI ARSIV b PMPPRE IR EER RO LR AT 0 TR g TN T TN i N it Mt 0 NI T W 00 (T T NN 2T i Y 4 P30 LU afanen ¥a LT A AR bt H{ tlulmnm ) W i) I AT IR W IR NPT A B A N I FIPPREIVEOIEEN IR b ATV R VOV AT R T AR IR T O OV AT TN RO TNV EO DR M O OO & Ry M I i if The list: of maierialé'i‘sfa'-‘list of fashion's favorites— Serge Canton Crepe. - Velvet Crepe dé Chine . _Crepe Safin . Silk-back - Satin. -’ The list of.colors is a Ilst 6{ ‘the preferred shades—and includes— Black——Brown_——tNaty and. all - the pastel tones for -Evening Wear \ Such ‘an offering is without precedent in > - the history - SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, NOVEMBER 6, .1921—PART 2. m Geneses vallsy districts. orm! Wadswerth, ‘where the | Mra. As cultur. one pret Most exclusive modes—gathet:éd into ~one group of tremendously impres- sive values — for special selling at Donegal, in Irel renowsed mm mahy yesrs, dnd onl gave up her custom of passing the her house in Curzon street dair, whil reagh _castl Hugh-8mith 0 heir of Lord Barrymore. 11 be Gibbons A I-lull;meen_dmeayu glven by l);ll Gibbons ‘Club Saturday evening. The clubtooms were decorated in a g ane !n-:ncua. and fl} N dair was f London recently . Mrs. & prominent part among es. She llved nearly all Gl gh ‘Ih. Elfzabeth the younger sister of on ‘a visit to Glen- mufi‘:l Mr. Arthur rry, who 18 _the direct Mrs. Adair the family Intarre in Club Gives > Halloween Dance Novelty dances ured, and about ty guests were ELEVENTH'ST, - dical Reduction of 'several hundred iner Frocks taken from our ‘rehgular stock— Frocks for Street Wear LADIES Our Work Is Our Reputation. SOCIETY 0ld Velvet and Plash HATS Re-Covered on the New Style Frames Bring in your last season’s hat and let us re- cover it from our wide assortment of new style frames—you will save considersble. OLD BEAVERS, FELT AND VELOUR HATS REBLOCKED IN THE NEW FALL STYLES We carry the largest assortment of Hat Frames ~frames made to order any size or style. ° Complete line of velvets, duvetyne and feather trimmings. CAPITAL HAT SHOP 508 Ilth St. N. W. Main 8322 Frocks for Afternoon Wear - Frocks for Dinner Wear Frocks for Dance Wear e " -Frocks for Every Occasion e .. -Lace o Tricotine - Poiret Twill Georgette Combinations 5 of Philipsborn: