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SOCIETY. Sweater Knitting Contest First Prize—Evin Doris will no doubt double the amount send the passpprt revenue into enheimery OP UNIQUE> PIGHTH & E* STREPTS pointed out that proportions sufficient to pay for entire diplomatic service in the bassadorial Hne and nearly all ministerial posts. Despite the energy of Mr. Rol ‘Woods Bliss, who has the matter ui taking statements about the coun the necessary tion and the protecting papers Open 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at present as though the price of cost of a tour of the British Isles at have special taxes at what they call barrier. Marcel Waving Henna Treatment funds in all denominations deg . sida members is slight. Mrs. McLeod —Our Bobbn}r_g Specialists are widely noted for the distinction of devotee of art and music and : o vetter been among the constructive fo :E: :f:_cxs‘m 'y achieve. Ask about the new “Yvette” bob, and which have worked tirelessly, $10.00 Bl R Baron Leopold Plessen, who ar: e %.50 lished embassy from the German ports were too high and the gov- ernment should immediately lower the rate. The next three morths millions each year. It has been in four months alone, the passports have reached his special care and who gives pain requiring passports and those which can be, and while it furnishes vast Hair Bobbing in Latest Modes sama) tor [greets teagadionl of e ies to be worn with bobbed hair. with little noise. for higher munici- - pal conditions in Philadelphia along | after a lapse which included the entire ~ THE SUNDAY- MAfR -'wgémewon Tales of Well Known Folk | In Social and Offictal Life Robert Woods Bliss Turns Into Trea’sury About Quarter Miilion Dollars Mon?hly in . Passport Receipts. Second Prize— * Seventh Prize— Mildred Mocabee Dorothy Barron The State Department, always re- 5 . - . pe garded as a luxury and altogether Third Prize— Eighth Prize— an ornamental division of the gov- s ke ernment, has taken a long .stride Rflf_’l Williams Margaret Morisi forward in the ‘revenue producin; 3 < 4 line and Is now turning over about & Fourth Prize— Ninth Prize— quarter of a million dollars manthly Margaret Patterson Mary Spence by way of passports. May and June, not the buslest of tourist Fifth Prize— Tenth Prize— months, have brought prospective Maiian Mitchell Evelyn Deardoff travelers in such numbers that the totals amount almost to $600,000, . G 4 . and this, in the face of the vigor- Sixth Prize— Eleventh Prize— - Gus protest, from the United States Lucy F. Dugas Helen Hehabetz Chamber of Commerce that pass. and the the am- the bert nder tries the | yrs, WILLIAM SHEPPARD MILLER, Dent | who. before her marriage at Freder- icksburg, Va., June 24, was Miss Grace > have swept away all barriers, average American going abroad fers to play sate, and 95 per of the tens of thousands are ro- * * vided with \dentifica. | Fitshugh Harrison. of 'THE BUSY CORNER" PENNA.AVEAT 8 TH.ST]| i, State Department, A, pesspor? | public, 1a the mephew of Princess pre-war days, and it does not appear | Herbert Bismarck and of Countess this | Camilla Hoyos, and his mother Bar- commodity is to come down. Uncle|oness Plessen, widowed in the early Sam is determiried to get that much|days of the war, is now married to of the thousands which his citizens| Mr. Charles Wilkins Short and re- spend in foreign lands. Great Brit-|gides very quietly Cincinnati. The | f k) . . . i i il ' Kann's Hair Dressing Parlor |||3F v a8 s s i e basgs, i« ik yaly | | the ! the daughter and heiress of the in- Third Floor. outset. Many of the other countrles|ventor of the Whitehead torpedo, the | Robert Whitehead, and she was rear- | —*“Yvette” Experts provide a skilled service in the N esn - John Wanamaker was|td in. London. She married Baron Plessen, then a minor attache of the . ~ . . Postmaster General his daughter | Care of the Hair and Complexion during the summer (|| Eiizabeth was just old enough to be | GETTAR, SrbSosy, ANd for some vears interested in government and organi- | ine pregent German secretary wai | | | | months. zation, as well as in the chastened —They know how to guard against the ravages of sun, wind and Harrison regime. Now Mrs. Norman | gfior the beginning of the world | weatlier, and how to sccure ail the benefits to be derived from ||| {Mcleod. the former Iilzabeth VIala- | war. The great works of the White- | the longer hours spent outdoors. Many of our patrons are [[|| Taker, !8 the oun oo s One of the | Ngad torpedo are along the wharves | now making appointments for regular minfstrations of our skilled Most numerous and useful in her g{n;h-;‘;",ge of Interpational conten- operators in state. It {8 known as the Pennsyl-| gequis interested in “"""l-m‘ Hil vania Emergency Ald, and produce8|.nianglements, spent much time ired | there during the theatric regime of . - . d for e kind of haj niny 9 Facial and Scalp Treatment Manicuring i Tho Doundsrioe whith woull| AnDunic. His iother peased s few weeks in Washington with the s . 5o : usually call for the concerted effort —Taroleum Shampoo, Diana Facial Massage and Mineralava Treat- [[[|of countiess activities or for assis-| Sncrien viars agor but the baren ment are “Yvette Specialties.” The “YVETTE” SYSTEM OF PER- tance from the state treasury., Mrs. | B o€G0 T U Neor the first MANENT WAVING is also especially effective. Hair Dyeing is McLeod has Ibeen S perle“‘“'{.g time when he was appointed on Dr. doneiby experts her organization and it might now be | Wicareldats staf ' called a8 perfect as human agency Thousands of Americans are clamor- ing for Oberammergau, but the more ls w | discriminating. and especially the Amer- ican who passes much of the summer in a8 | France, are booking for the more quiet ot | but equally artistic rendition of the ! which has been revived Lorraine, dis- period of the German occupation. The “Passion Play” of Nancy had quite a riv- | repute in the sixteenth and seventeenth —18-inch Three Separate Stem Switches of natural hairs, at ed in Washington recently to act as| centuries, and was given at some time third secretary of the newly estab- | during each tenth. year, but never with re- ! the regularity which has marked the Sun,” by Isabel Fiske Conant, was Bavarian production. The old town of ,,me" has virtually wiped out the scars e t struggle which restored ‘arovince of Lorraine to France, and the massive amphitheater has beeén paired and now comfortably holds. ¥ coreasi: large audiences and I thousand players who take part in'the spectacle. This “Passion Play” 1s pre- sented more in tableau form than in ac- tion, and the picturesque peasant cos- tumes are seen quite 1s much as the historic Hebrew regalia. All the great officlal world of Paris has patronized Nancy and many from the social do- ain. The play will not be produced again for years, and it will then, it is hoped, be firmly established in the financial sense and become a powerful and successful rival of the German play in the Bavarian mountain: Mr. Willlam J. O'Toole of Gary, W. Va., who has just been - appointed minister to Paraguay, is the youngest man in the Qiplomatic service holding that rank, and being just twenty- eight years of age, he is among the youngest who have been named for such high responsibility by the Sec- retary of State. Mr. O'Toole is well known In Washington, where he pass- ed five years at the Catholic 1. versity, recelving his degree of A. M. in 1915. He is the son of Gen. Ed- ward O'Toole, an official of the United States Steel Corporation, and since his return from military duty has lived in Gary and held a position under his father. On the outbreak of the war, young O'Toole trained at Fort Benjamin Harrison, and after receiving his commission he was at once transferred to Camp Grant, where he remained throughout the hostilities, acting’ as instructor. American Interests in Paraguay have increased enormously in the past ten years, and the new minister will find his post one requiring a deft and delicate hand. Mr. William Wallace White acted for some years as charge d'affaifes for the Paraguyan republic, but with the appointment of Mr. O'Toole, the unpleasantness caused by the Danlel E. Mooney incident will probably be forgotten and a resident minister will come to Washington in the autumn. In an extensive exhibit of photo- graphs of notable American estates, now to be seen in the Art Library of London University, two, select- ed for the loftiest praise, are of exceptional interest in Washington— Weld, the sumptuous seat of Mrs. Larz Anderson outside of Brookline, Boston, and the splendid mansion and grounds of Mr. Clarence Mackay be- yond Morningside Heights on the Hudson. Mrs. Anderson is almost a Washingtonian, and her home here ranks among the best models of Ital- ian architecture which the city boasts. But though the Washington home is a prime favorite, all her pride of pos- session is in Weld, named for her grandfather, Commodore Isaac Weld, the founder of the vast fortune which Mrs. Anderson and her cousins have inherited. The gardens at Weld have been painted by the cleverest artists this country shelters, and exquisite colored photographs of them may be found in Boston, where they are sold for the Seaman's Home, which Mrs. - Anderson founded in her grandfa- ther's memory. The grounds have been treated Italian style and for vistas as well as for flowering spaces, while the fountains cluster around a reflecting pool where every variety of water lily blooms, including the fa- mous blue flower of the Nile, the lo- tus. Mr. Mackay's estate is familiar to all who have made the ascent of the Hudson, and in the early morning or the late afternoon it towers above the river with all the majgsty of the castles on the Rhine. The planting of the shining satin leaf vines on the banks gives a background from which thousands of deep-hued lilies and oth- er bulbous flowers make a scene of striking beauty. One of tne most beautiful spec- tacles recorded in a season which has produced so many wonderful pageant plays was that given a few days ago in the Cloisters, the ram- bling old 'gray stone studio of George G. Barnard, which crowns the heights of Fort Washington, in New York That marvelous play which has ured Paris, “The Clouds of the —Natural Curls, “Yvette” Bob. Twelve-Ten F St. A Misssngs of Thistiks We wish to take this opportunity to thank the public for the most phenomenal sale in the his- tory of the shop of Erlebacher. ERLEBACHER Again Expanding ENTIRE STOCK OF SUITS COATS DRESSES WRAPS BLOUSES SWEATERS SKIRTS “ MILLINERY HOSIERY NOW REDUCED Shoes at Absolutel~ V-+hing Reserved Low Prices ery one. pleasurable. markably low. Hirsh's Hirsh’s Quality : STs NW. Quality This price re- For Over the 4th ‘Women's White Footwear Prices Enormously Reduced Anything and Everything in Style. Bports” Color Combinations Women's Cut-out Sandals—Pumps and Oxfords Former $5.75, $6.90 and $7.50 Values Included Sizes, widths 30 pthei' Styles and styles for ev- Make your $ " . " going away Al Sizes . All Widths Barefoot Sandalé ‘ At Greatly Reduced Prices For Women land Growing Girls $9.95 Upper. Seventh: Street, Between. K and L Tewpe: City-Wide tn_Trade — Shoes at “D. -“C; JULY 2,- 1922—PART -3 ~ causes sores, which make him miser- able. Rid him of his fleas by washing him with Sergeant’s Slfip-glu Soap, which kills fleas and lice. It soothes sore skins and makes hair soft and glossy. Strictly a high-grade soap, effective also for human use. 25c a cake. Sergeant’s Skip-Flea Powder, 25¢, for dogs and cats—will not irri tate or nauseate. Bold by druggists, sporting goods stores, seed stores i sy and pet sbops, MRS. ERNEST ARTSCHWAGER, A bride of = few weeks, who was Miss Eugeaia Brodsky. =~ produced with ‘its thirteenth century chants and musical interludes and scenery, which, against the green hills and the distant river, created an atmosphere of bewildering plea: ure. The cloisters of Mr. Barnard' studio are a perfect reproduction of a fine old ruined monastery of the Midi, in France and, in fact, much of side and reassembled. The crusaders’ Free Dog Book 472447254726 These telephone’ numbers are fa- the material was transported to this| i miliar to many Washingtonians, who, pageant, passing In and out of such| | by experience, know that the clean- realfstic background. was very ef- fective, and t detail of a medieval shrine, was of e chapel, with every, [l ing, dyeing, pressing and repairing s onsauty n Sithe | nder | service of THE HOFFMAN COM- scen Loomis was chal £ thi ! . . B it ] PANY means REAL satisfaction. American Ouvroir fund, with which Mr. Loomis has been enthusiastically assoclated. The poetic play was rendered three times and to audi- ences which pressed into every inch of space and who had climbed the great hill to the cloisters gayly and with no evidence of thinking the ascent a test of devotion to the good cause which was to profit. Some ‘Washington people who saw “Clouds of the Sun” believe that a three-day pageant would attract thousands if | [iif gaesented beside the Cathedral of ,CLEAN Peter and Paul, in Woodley. Charles Evans Hughes, jr., has re- cently purchased a fine estate, on which is located a spacious colonial mansiom in the extreme end of Flat- busk, which figures in maps of urban New York as 250th street where it| Hiil joins Goodridge avenue. The mansion 2 (Continued on Eleventh Page.) Just Telephone! ERS and DYERS MAIN orn?%:}fi%" 122 517 NMW 91 KEEP YOUR DOG HAPPY! Fleas irritate him. Scratching A SAFE Polk Miller's famous Dog Book. 64 pages cn care, fiedmg“ and training, and Senator Vest's cele- brated “Tribute to a Dog.” Write for a free copy. Polk Miller Drug Co., Inc., Richmond, Va. 937939 F St. N.W. Barogzet Satin Skirts See pec... 9 5. 98 Choice of white or pearl gray, belted, handsome pearl buttons, novel pockets. All sizes. Also Ratime, Gadardine and Linens, and fancy black and white Woolen models. All at the one price of $5.98. BSizes to 40 waist measure in the assort- ment. White Gabardine Skirts, $2.98 Very ercevtional values, per- fectly tailcred and trimmed with pearl buttons, pockets and belt. Al sizes. The House of Quality Mayer Bros. & Co. Tan Raalts md Kay or's sl Hosiery, 2.9 No Branch Stores 4th of July Outing Sale Imported Gingham Dresses Ezclusive sample models worth $1250 and $15. Choice /.50 These are in all the newest colored checks and are surpass- ingly beautiful with their dainty fancy vests and organ- die collars. cuffs and wide sashes. All sizes in the assort- ment to 44. Finer Dresses in the Outing Sale at $15 Tissue Ginghams, Normandic Voiles, Linens, Ratine and im- ported Ginghams. The most exquisite creation shown this season, in all 'the mewest colored checks as well as plain white, rose. copen. gray, pink, and orchid. Complete size, ranges for Misscs and Women. | Outing ‘Sale of White Millinery i 5 Cool Look- ing Hats for sports wear £~ 32.95 = Conaisting of tai- \ and movelty usual values. Panamas, Leghorns and Felt Hats s0 appropriate for sports wear. Bale price.. 53- 95 White baromet satin, georgette crepe, e de chine and horsehair draid Dress | Hats, trimmed with flowers, hand work | of silk_embroidery and beautiful ‘x 5 oatrick aprays. These are ezamples of Migh class value-giving at....... . lored hate and’ | Outing Sale of [ | Fiber Silk Sweaters Choice, $8.50 Choice of the newest fancy weaves. Colors, navy, erchid, jade, Harding, gold, tan and dlack. Sizes 3§ to j6. Ice Wool Slip-on Sweaters Outing Sale, $5 Plain colors and combi- nations of black, white, tan, orchid, bufl, jade, silver, Harding, brown. gold, pink. Very ez- traordinary values at $5. All-Wool Worsted Slip-on Sweaters $1.95 Very remarkable are these kandsome slipons at the price. Newest short sleeve models, with the belt in white, jade, Harding, red, tan, navy, pink, honeydew. bc:tiny Sale of Newest Bathing Suits at $5,87.50 and $10 Approved one-piece models with skirt. Eaztra good guality all wool jersey, ad- solutely Jast dyed. Black, navy and s in combdina- ing colored stripes ang trimming. A special purchase from G prominent meker divided “into three special sale groups. All are un- wsual values. Outing Sale of | French Voile Blouses | at $5 ‘ Theee are hand made and with touches | of hand embroidery. Tuzedo, Peggy. round meck or collarless models,’ trimmed with val and flst laces and fincst pearl buttons. Lowg or short slecves; in all sizes, 3! to 6. Voile and Dimity Blouses, Sale Price $2.95 Many models in Blowse and tie-on styles, with round wecks, M‘?a&’:b - f2rs’" Lovely trim ming of laces and fine pearl buttons. % H Wonderful Blouses, $1.95 | Tailored and dressy voiles, finest you LMfic een this season in ma,:eu'al nd trimmings. Tuzedo and Peggy collars, long or short sleeves, sises 3 o 5. ERRO PR ARARIARRE AR A RASAI AL NS SR tean v . alaERRERIARRERIA S