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SOCIETY. b e Soa Secretary of War, Mr. Wecks, Will Leave| Tomorrow for Meadowbrook, L. I, to Attend the Polo Tournament. | HE Secretary of War, Mr Weeks, will go tomorrew to Meadowbrook, L. L, to attend the international polo tour- mament, which is being held this week. At the conciusion of the tournament he will £o to his summer at Lancaster. home, N. H., to jc Right. Mount Prospect, Mrs. Weeks for a fort- Distinguished Guests at aguan Legation. The min Benora de C! Buests at the Zijil ‘and Senor and daughter of Wicaragua. amorro lLave 2ia, Mirza Hus- at- itute of Politics at! is now at roturn to! who has been will W. Wads the en gagemont to Mr. W, ington, Baltimore, 4 to take place in the i V' as pres v daughter home owing June @randdaughter former and James W. who spend their winters in their K street home Seccretary of State- and Mre. in_whose home. on mator and Mrs. W. and_of the grace and poise. Mr. a son of Mr. and Mrs. Symington of Baltimore!her camp in of the late Mr. W, also of Baltimore. M De Courcy Symington arles H. Symington. has been identified with Bal-| for many generations. | a4 graduate of Johnsj he at-| Miss Barber Bride of graduating | Capt. Du Hame His Emily also’ a member of Hopkins ersity, which tended for only a’ vear, from Yale in June of th! mother was formerly Haxall rison an old Maryland vear. Miss family. Mr. Club, the Maryland Club, ley Hunt Club and n Mansi about Latin American diplomats Qkos, Angeles last month. e Que . Who i# a nephew of the first minister to Washington from the icland republic, will be as sisted in receiving by the members of the embass ats taken during the and back will shown and dancing will follow. Th ballroom will have the flags of th v ne Pan-American the supper will Be counselor of the 1p their cottagy and with returned to V ter season The commere counselor of the British embassy, Mr. John Joy: 3 p Mr. J oyce Broderick, had a company of five din- ng inf % In the Willard roof garden. Maj nk W eozst artillery, and Mrs. Martha Prat Donnellan were married at noon to. da the Rev. Dr. U. G. B. Plerce, 01 Lieut. Willilam Coe and the tw <hildren of Mrs, Donnellan being Qresent at the ceremony. Gen. and Mrs. Coe left on a brief mot feturning shortly to sa 2656, 5o Lieut Coe, who is leaving f Philippines, and to establish Coe’s children in their sc! Dn i chilan v schools. the Mrs. Gen Y, and a firgt o ‘onger Pratt.of the air stationed in Washington, Gen. and Mrs. Coe will be at home usin of Maj. cholas apartments after | Arr. Cuban he will serve ) there as their | egation Senor Miguel| de Zijii, son-in-law | the FPresident of|dinner this eyening in compliment to | | Evelyn 3d, of | stead. graduated from| Mr. R. S. Reynolds Hitt and his sdn, Miss Lafayette z dsworth s Wadsworth is one of the His | been visiting 1 Sym- ineton 18 & membermiNie Mr. Sym-|took place Wednesday in'the sum- the Balti- ! J ore Country Club, the Green Spring | B ot ob by s, United the Kennel en asked to meet the who at- - centennial expo- staff. Motion pictures| be | ture hat to match. ot republics | out the room. and apb-.mnt d about midnight. | legation and Mme. Steen have given at Huntington, Long their family have | {4 ington for the win- ; 11y with him last evening en. Frank W. Coe, chief of good-bye to the daughter of the late Gen. Sedgwick Pratt, a sister of John S. Pratt of the coast service, now Antonio Martin-Rivero, for minister to the United States, hias left Havana for Mexico City, wherd minister, a post which S S S S iety he held several years before being sent | o Washington. Mr. Martin-Rivero was minister in Washington during the latter P of the Taft and early part of the Wilson administration. Later he | s minister to Italy, serving in Rome | re than seven years, being recaled from that post and assigned to Mexico. Delay in recognition of Mexico by the | United States with consequent similar | rction by Cuba, however, caused Mr. | Rivero to remain in Havana for several months Cuba. Two of his daughters, Oliver Owen Kuhn and Mrs. .T' Neison Ransdeil, are Washington. - Mrs. homas residents Maj. and Mrs. James A. Lyon will entertaln a company of sixteen at Mrs. Hobert F. Mackenzie. Dr. and Mrs Charles W. Richardson have returned to their Connecticut avenue home after a visit to their! in-law and daughter, Lieut. Com. | mander and Mrs. Chandler, in thel New England hom! | § ! amuel J. Graham has ar-| eral weel stay and is at the Home »| Gen. and Mrs. William Wright, sall- | i sterday trom Europe, on the | | President Van Buren, after passing | several weeks abroad. ir. Robert Hitt, have' taken an apart- ment _at the Ambassador Hotel, in New York. where they will be joined Thursday by Mra. Hitt. They will re- main in’ New York for an indefinite period Mr. and Mrs. John Hays Hammond sailed vesterday from Europe on the Mauretania, after a several weeks' stay abroad. Whiteiaw Reid will close the Adirondacks the first of next week, and will return to Ophir Hall, White Plains, N. Y. |, Mrs. sty | Dr. and Mrs, E. F. Henry, who have California and the | have returned to their 1810 N street. northwest, residence, U. S. A. The marriage of Miss Mab Norton Barber to Capt. Notley Young Du Hamel, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., mer home of the bride's parents,| States court of customs appeals and | Mrs. Barber, at Bennington, Vt. The ! Rev. De Salles Dowle of Brookiyn, cousin of the bridegroom, officiated, in the presence of a large company ; and an informal reception followed { The spacious drawing. room where | the improvised altar was arranged | had decorations of palms, ferns and | ate summer flowers. The bride wore gown of white moire silk magde on | simple lines, a lace bertha trimmed ! with pearls finishing the neck, and | her tulle veil was edged with pearls | and formed a train. Miss Lucia Barber, {the bride, i twin sister of was her only attendant | and was in pink chiffon with a pic- Capt. L. B. Lohr, | {Corps of Engineers, U. 5. A., wasj best man. { Mrs. Barber, who received with the wedding party, wore orchid chiffon. Later in the day Capt. and Mrs. Du Later fn She day Copt and N 0 [T Closed All Day Tuesday On Account of Holiday [ . L. ’ FASHION ZF=Zrs 76&# 3 ! Mr. Rivero's family is remaining in |} Hamel lett for & motor trip and are | spending thelr honeymwor. on Like Chamnrlain. * Atter October 1 Cant. and Mrs. Du Hamel will be 2t home at Fort Mott, N, J. where the former ‘Will be in command. $ ¢ Among those at the wedding were former Senator and Mys. James ¥. Du Hamel of Brooklyn and Wasl ington. parents of the bridegroo: M Herpert Gardner of Brooklyn, Mr. Morton §. Hull of Chicago, Mre. Charles H. Darling of Burlington, Vt.; Spencer of. Deep River, and Mrs. Edward Hayes r. Milton Sim n of New York, Adelaide Wheeler of Boston, James Apercromble of Green- Mase, the Misses Bingham of s ; and Miss M g Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Holden, Mr. and Mrs. Thomds Vall, Judge and Mrs. Meagher, Mr. and Mrs. M. Shoemaker. Mr. Robert Parmelee, Dr. and Mrs. Lucretious Ross, the Idev. and Mrs. Rauvi-Booth., Mr. and Mrs, Phillip . Jennings, Mr. and Mrs.' Harrison J. Norton, Mrs. Marcus Goodrich,” Mrs. ¥Frederick Cushman, Dr. and Mrs. Pangert Walkel, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Fletcher, Mrs. Willlam F. Wells, Mr. and Mrs. Idward Bennett and Mrs. | W Bradford of Beanington. The wedding of Miss Genevieve {Burnet and Chaplain Thomas Leroy Kirkpatrick, U. S. N., took place at noon Wednesday, September 5. . The ceremony was performed by Chaplain E. W. Scott, U, & N., in the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Speer. Bouldercrest, at Bluemont, Loudoun county, Va. A wedding breakfast was served immediately following the ceremony, after which Chaplain and Mrs. Kirkpatrick left for a motor trip through New England to Lake George nd on their return they will be at {home at the Woodland apartment, on Cathedral avenue. Among the out-of-town guests were Mrs. Mary Willetts and her daughter £ Philadelphia, sister and niece of the bridegroom, and Mrs. Willlam Chris- ty Farrar of St. Louis, Mo., cousin of the bride. Mrs. John F. Wilkins has gone to Bretton Woods. N. H., to pass the early fall, and is at the Mount Wash- ington Hotel. The Rev. Canon Walden Myer has gone to White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., for a month’s visit. Dr. and Mrs. Edward Randall, who are passing sometime at Hot Springs, Va., entertained a company at lun- cheon there yesterday, at the Fassl fern Farm. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Galliher | have issued invitations for the mar- riuge of their daughter Dorothy, to Mr. Flournoy C. Schneider, Wednes- evening, September 19, at 8 o'clock, in_the Calvary Methodist Church. The Rev. James Shera Montgomery will perform the cere- mony, which will be followed by a reception in the home of the bride's parents, at 1321 Farragut street. Mrs. James R. Ellarson has return- ed from Tide Water, Va., where she was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H man Hollerith. Mr. E. M. Ellarson remains there visiting Mr. Richard Hollerith but will return to George Washington Uni- versity, where he is a student. Mr. Hollerith will return to his studles at College at Worcester, Mass. Miss Lillian E. Friedman has gone 10 Los Angles, Calif., to spend her va- cation, and will join her brother, who is_a studnet at the University of (Continued on Ninth Page.) Music by the New Wardman Park Orchestra - Featuring Bob Foster mu Dance evening, 16 to 12. It’s the Women Who Come Back —that tell ‘the real story of -any merchandising triumph —the woman who goes elsewhere to look and comes back herg to buy—the woman who bought a coat two years ago and is back to buy another in this year’s big September Coat Sale Just this morning five women came back who admitted {rankly that they had searched the town over and could find nowhere such becomingnéss of style, such richness of fabric and fur, and such VALUE as they found in our finer coats from $135 to $350, that $58.00 during the September Sale are selling at 15% DISCOUNT —and each bought one of these finer coats. Take, for example, the coat illustrated and figure your saving. The Price is........ $195.00 Less 15% Discount. . . 29.25 September Sale Price, $165.75 at an al saving $95.00 And it's of genuine Marvella in rich Tampa brown with luxurious fox collar and trimming used on the new style sleeve and novelty border in a harmonizing shade of brown. Four September Sale Groups that includle WOMEN'S and MISSES’ with specidlized groups at the same four prices for THE LITTLE WOMAN and THE LARGER WOMAN. Foremost of the new fashions, developed in regally handsome fabrics, trimmed with the ’ choicest of the season’s furs: i over later fall prices. See these beautiful coats tomorrow. $75.00 WOMEN'S COATS, SECOND FLOOR. MISSES’ COATS, THIRD FLOOR. of $10 to $25 on each coat -~ $125.00 Washington cqulizy Qag‘finltleé” MISS HELEN COLBERT, ‘Who will join her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Colbert, Thursday, after P For Misses, Juniors and Girls Presented heré in new, delightful showings for Fall and Winter. Suits. . ....onenenn.....$45, $58.50, $78.50 to $145 ...$25, $55, $78 to $118 .$95, $118, $135 to $195 vevee.. .- 925, $45, $65 to $118 Silk Dresses. . ..............$38.50, $45, $65 to $118 Evening Dresses. ... ... ..$49.50, $78.50, $98.50 to $195 Sports Dresses. . oo o iinciiiiinnne. .. $1510 $39.50 Skirts. . ..ovennnn....$9.50, $12.50, $13.50 to $28.50 ceen....$10, $12.50, $14.50 to $28.50 Coats Hats .. Wash Dresses. ... ........$4.25, $6.50, $10.50 to $19.50 Cloth Dresses. . . « ive ... . . $7.50, $9.50, $12.50 to $35 Silk Dresses.. voevome voe - $15, $16.50, $24.50 to $37.50 Coats.s v o e ivimemmeea - $10.50, $15, $22.50 to $95 Hats. .. v o omemiomteosion $3.75, $5, $10 to $20 SWEBLETS 1.y avies m o e oo - $2.95, $4.75, $5.75 to $15 SKitts s Svriinvios sesommissd ss » +35:0D,:85.75, 3650 Middies. .o e v e oo vom oo emom oo . $1, $1.95, $2.25 to $5 s od s ses e bt 206 308 008 00 $2.50 Choice Assortments of Summer Apparel Hosiery. Very Special September Prices on a select number of artis ~ Dressier Wraps, . .. s - ece s Cloth Dresses. ... .. For Misses For Juniors and Girls Greatly Reduced in Price F Street Corner Thirleenth Vases For Lamp Bases or Flowers, these artistic and graceful vases are exceptionally dec- orative. There is a choice of several designs, shapes and sizes in fine quality pottery and china. A few have silver deposit and bas relief deco- ration on softly toned black pottery, while others are in colors of Autumn browns and greens. Below is an indication of our special values. $12.00, now $7.50 ' $10.50, now $6.00 $6.50, now $3.25 $2.50, now $1.25 DULINGMARTIN . 517 F Strect and 1214 w 121H & Street, . ‘Hours: hfi 10 5:30° Smart School and College Wear SOCIETY. Window Shades NO MATTER HOW LARGE = ‘WILL FIND US IN A POSITION TO'OBVATN‘! YOUR EVERY DEMAND. PHONE FOR ESTIMATES. ¢ Dur. VanTeng Avss Lioyds, Va. . A. Brooks' and Emma E., Hamilton, Earl both of Barnesville, Oblo. Charles 8. Fletcher snd Einora G. Tyler. Births Reported. The following births have been reported to “the bealth department in the last twenty-four | Jobm M. and Amelis King, boy. Nathan F. and Lens R. Beall, boy. Harry and Edna M. Phiilips, Joseph M. M. and We Design I MEMORIAL WREATHS —of effective beauty and ex- pressiveness, specializing in a size that's pop- 33 50 ular at.... Rocco Joseph and 3 Antonlo mena D' Aget Gaetano sud Antonio Sanaiftro, Budma; and Elizaveth 24 Ads Niz. be Saturday, September 8, 1023 on shipments sold out, ranged from 11.00 cents to 21.00 ceuts per pound and averaged 16.12 cents per vound —Ad[‘r'lnmrnt. ARE YOU REALLY | i Serfons about saving your momey? Then || make your own dresses, wraps and || smart ‘wna distinctive. and learn the logi- | if cal’ profession that is always in demand. | i Do it right while you sre about it. Ask for booklet. PROF. LIVINGSTONE'S ACADEMY, Decigning. = Dressmaking, Millinery. . 7415, 13% 14th and H Phone Main 3707 bilipsbori 608 to 614 ELEVENTH ST, e ne—ne——a=——=a —=[ole—=[o[c——=o]c—=]c——>o[c—=]o][c——]a]—=lal——2lc—lalc——=]0] Lace and Canton 00 \ Canton Cre 51500 7" Crepe, $15¢ Cresle Satin 5.00 Again Tuesday--- We Shall Repeat This- Remarkable Sale of New Autumn Frocl(s —bought under such unusuauy favorable circumstances— from one of our most highly regarded makers—that we're able to mark them— 15 Street—afternoon—sports—of new and original de- signs. tic o= —g