Evening Star Newspaper, November 14, 1923, Page 9

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o % Society _ (Continued from Eighth Page.) Togan Payne Wougherty. 11 and Mrs. John Allan | Miss Subine Wallace, entertained at bridge last evening n honor of Miss gRuth Sliteraft, who is the house Buest of Miss Marjorie Groesbeck. | Mr. and M | Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte were hosts at luncheon at the Hotel Ambass York, in compliment parte’s nephew, Count 1 Moltke Huldfeldt, and later thelr guests to the horse Count_Jeon has recently New ¥ork from ada, wh Mr. on de took show. ved in | he was f Denmark at his ranch th Frank Simonds has as her Miss Lizette Woodworth Re imore. who came to Washing- » attend the banquet to be given the League of American Mrs. Bue: of 1on tomorrow by Pen Won for the reh of the vy special fe it far the Sacrament Saturday Claus he little onex. ed with Mrs! table, and Pugh_and of * Chevy and give gift h s who will go | Saturday to the Yale-Princeton game, will reurn to her apartment at Wardman Park Hotel the first of next week, J. R. Lelght Former Senator and Mre. Calder of § New York, who have been at th everal day Atlantic City, where n the first of will return to their home in Brooklyn. Mrs, Arthur Haldane Doig. who h been vidting fn Washington for the last thred weeks, will go to New York tomorrow to visit Mrs. Esther Slater Welles for & week before returning 1o St. Louis, where Maj. Doig is sta- tioned. Mrs. William Fitch Kelley enter- tained informally at dinner last even- ai- | and | Mrs Kell son of the hostess. Commander and Mrs. Charles Fisher ntertained a about sev ipper and da fng at b last evening. I urgcly from Army and Navy contingents Willis company of Mrs. Harold Perot Keen of are is visiting her sister. Mrs. Paul llespie, at her apartment in the ming. Mrs. Keen cume to Wash- ington i October with Mr. Keen who attended the Investment Bank ers’ Assoviation convention, and has remained herc to pass some time with her sister. Dela- Miss M Rho Be Linton will entertain the a_Chapter of Mu Phl Epsilon, Natlonal Music Sorority, at her new home in Massachusetts ' Avenue Park this evening with a musical and dance. Mr. Floyd. Williams, tenor, will sing and Miss Linton wlill give piano solos. Mahony-Stohlman Wedding At 11 0°Clock This Morning. The marriage Miss Margaret Stohlman daughter of Mr. and Mrs J. W. Stohiman, to Mr. Dennis Jo- seph Mahony, took place this morning at 11 o'clock at St. Anne’s Church. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. James Mulherin of Chester, Pa., a classmitte of the bridegroom. The church was decorated with chrysan- themums, autumn leaves and palms The bride was given In marriage by her father and wore a gown of | white georgette crepe beaded in pearls and crystals, her tulle veil w held with orange blosso and she carried bride roses and of the vall Miss Tglen Stohlman was maid of honor forfher sister and wore a gown of salmo$i-colored satin_trimmed i silver lage, a silver lace hat and car- ried chrisanthemums to match her{ gown. ME. Francis Mahony was bes man for hps The w Stohlman The cerdmony lie Dr. W Martin A Stohlman, j s followed by a re ception at the home of the bride's parents, at Somerset, Md. The house was decorated with chrysanthemums, s and palms. ‘Among the out-of-town _guests were Mrs. James Mahony of Lanc ter, Mass., mother of the bridegroom; Miss Anna Mahony, Mr. Francis Ma- hony and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Mc- Crane of Philadelphia. Mrs. Coolldge h patronesses for the pital ball, which will Rauscher's December 12, tronesses _include Mrw. Charles Jughes, Mrs. John W. Week ¥dwin Denby, Miss Meilon, Mr. bert Work, Mrs. Henry C, Mre, Harry Stewart New, Mrs Archbold, Miss Mabel Boardman, Mrs, Henry Getty Chilton, Mrs. de Frees Critten, Mrs. Hugh S. Cumming, Mrs. €. C, Glover, Mrs, Merritt W. Ireland, Mrs. Eugene Meyer, jr.; Mrs. Adolph C. Miller, Mrs. F is Berger Mo- ran, 1 George Wharton Pepper, Mrs. William Phillips, Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, jr.; Mrs. Abram Simon, Mrs, Saa-Ki Alfred Sze, Countess Laszlo Szechenyi, Mrs. George Van- derbilt, Mrs. Eliot Wadsworth, Mrs, Charles _Boughton Wood and Mrs. ¥rank West. Additional patrone: anese production, he Far East given by Mr. and Mrs. Michitaro On Eawa at the National Theater Tues- day, November 20, at 4:30 o'clock, in- clude Mrs. Douglas Putnam Birnie, Miss Nicolay, Mrs. C. M. Ffoulke, Mrs. C. V. Riley and Mrs. Charles Robb. ‘Arrangements for the program have been made by a committee from the Washington branch of the University Women's Club, of which Mrs. Samuel Herrick is chairman. Columbia Hos- be held at) Other pa- | ads the list nr} es for the Jap- Mrs. George Dewey, who, with Mr. Dewey, i3 spending the winter at the Shoreham, entertained at luncheon there yesterday. Mrs. Una Dorsey announces the marriage of her daughter, Una S. to Mr. Clyde, A. Isham of Washington November ; 10 at Woodside, Md. A Tecoption followed at the home of the bride’s miother, Riverdale, Md. Mr. end Mrs, Isham left later for an gastern trip. Mr. Fred Upham, treagurer of the republican’ national committee, ar- rived in Yashington today and is at the New Willard. Births Reported. Dbirths have be reported to o, fllowdng births have bocn fnerted o Botticl, girl. Guiseppe &nd Alfia Bonanno, girl Tommaso gnd Maria Anello, girl. Joseph Annie Corrado, girl. Milton Lanra Seat & Belle Pickett, glrl. d Eva M. Work, girl. . Charles ind Vera J. Ladd, girl. { James snd)Lucia Temeakos, boy. Ieo R. Anna M. Kiog, girl. Obarles B./and Marie L. Mtlier, Tubbs, ‘boy. boy. Mareen ‘erma_ Coffern, boy. George H. 'and Mary Mack, girl. ‘Walter and Cornelia Johnson, boy. James T. #nd Margareto Marton, sirly 3 er, girl, arion Liily, glrl. Carrie Shaw, boy. Grace Goodwin, boy. ese bride on her wedding s eleven commandments other. These command- onts are| rules of conduct which have been h ds;i downdt:glm gfifler- mtion to gejneratiol an self-re= octing d u;' axpected 50 lve day receiv Trom her Marriage Licenses. ex have been isszed to the this city sud Clore MeNeil of New ¥ Willlam A. Moore, r., Maynard M. Hanwon Brawoer. Alexander G and’ Linvie Jordan. and Katherine Gallowsy and Margaret S. Randall of New York city and £ this clty. and M, Eoglewood. N Louise W Haltimore. Miller nd Effie 1 uis and Ma wers and Gladiola 1 Rachel . Peyton. Maybry, or and Elizabetl Montgomery aud Aunie L. Green. s K. Hughes and Bertha Jenking, - Nmith and Edith v John Peyton of . Va. oweph F. Novon and A 3 Louls B. Speucer and Minnie B. Hanold. Den's J. Malioney of Manchester. N, and Margaret A. Stohlman of aul Tagiiente and Auna D'Oria. Herbert Moon and Beatrice Davis, Riadens! H., both of tune of Alexandria, Va., and | one Deaths Reported. Tatrick Wall George A. C pital Clara A, Akers Edward 1. Thimis Zacharia W. Dow Mar M Mars, 44, 1318 New Hampshire ave. ovidence Hospital te, 1 day, sthy Tufunt dence Hospital, Lonisu Har i cedmen's Hospital. Children’s Hospital COLORED MEN SOUGHT. One Described as Having “Charlie Chaplin Mustache.” ‘hree colored men, one of whom | as described as having a “Charlle Chaplin mustache,” by the pollce on highway robbers. Jack Bizzia, 518 41 street, told the police the men held him up at the point of revolvers early today while in the Mall near 7th street, and rob- bed him of a diamond ring, valued at | 4 gold watch und chain and $7' sh. a charge of being 7 You NEED furs for t furs which will carry with tic: style and quality ourselves. —and remodeling of the h able cost, by men who K et & 608 12th St N WV For Two Days - Sale of 500 Hats Beautiful new Hats—of the latest fall and winter designs— bought to such advantage that they can be placed on sale at this remarkable price— | STAGE ‘GOME-BAGK' ey | are being sought | here and the colder weather just ahead. You WANT y You K establishment are guaranteed and manufactured by ~ Make THIS pay day a red-letter one by inspect- ing our fine display of newest styles. It is not too early to think of Christmas Gifts of Furs. Fur Repairing THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C AMERICAN INDIANS Population Is Now 344,303, | Increase of 1,144 Over Last Year. Like his old friend, the buffalo, the American Indian is making a come- | back. Figures recently announced | by the bureau of Indian affairs show |our American Indian population is now 344,303, a gain of 1,144 over last | year. | “Not only last year, but for thirty | vears, the redmen have steadi grining on their death rat bulletin from the local he: |of the National Geographic Society. “Today there are Indians per | square mile on reservations which comprise an area not much smaller [than that of all New England. Ac- cording to the best estimates avail- able there was an average of only Indlan for every three square i miles when white people first came to American sh It onl thirds of the United States w |cupled by redskins at the reservation population rate, would be 12,000.006 Indians United States’ today Aboriginal Population Small. | “Massasoit gave the Pilgrim f {corn, but the fact is Massos nd his kith and ki lived for t most part by products of the chase Deer, buffalo, bear and rabbit were their pork and beef and berries and | nuts their potatoes. kEven verdant | America could not support an Intense | population living in this fashion. The total Indian population at the time Columbus landed at San Salvador is set at about 846,000. If all the tribes from the Pacific to the Atlantic, an from the gulf to the great lakes, had assembled at one great meeting. they would have made up a community not so large as Detroit and only a few thousand greater than Cleveland or Boston. ' “White men's guns decimated s tribes, disease, dissipation and epi | demics which came with the white men spread death more surely. Small- | pox epidemics swept through the western tribes three times between 1781 and 1837, with more fatal resuits than the inflienza plagua of 1918 A pecullar fever killed 70,000 Indians in California_and Oregon in one year. By 1880 the Indian population had been reduced to 206, 127. Therefore the pri ent population r sents an incre: of nearly 100,000 in thirty Richest Group on *One American Indian tribe v is the richest people on the face of in | | he chilly weather which is them the stamp of authe: NOW furs from this | rated paper roll lik ighest character at reason- NOW furs. Bach, | AL TUNG s MAIN 4706 the earth. Beneath the lands of the Osage Indian tribe in Oklahoma oil was discovered. Their wells pro- duce $50,000,000 worth of oil annuaily, and Uncle Sam, who handles the busi- | ness for his red brother, distributes to each member of the tribe from | $10.000 to $12,000 each yeur. In 1922 more than 28,000,000 barrels of oil were produced on Osuge lands. “Partial adaptation to the man's ways and care by Uncle Sam are responsible for the increase in | Indlan population. The red man may still be a hunter, but a visitor to a reservation will find the redskin use- ful as well as noble. He Is often a rancher, dairy farmer, weaver, pottery make poultry raiser, tvpist, miner,” lumberer, guide, clips coupons. 200 Tribex Salvaged. “Out of the ruln of Indlan civilza tion more than 200 tribes have been salvaged. These tribes are lodged on nearly 200 reservations varying from tiny rancherias in California to the great Navajo reservation in Arizon and New Mexico, larger than the state of Maryland. The bureau of Indian affairs is their guardian. It is ernment by itself, having a cab six commissio, and undertaking activities, typical of x probate court, trust com- pany, public roads commission, orphan asylim, town building and operation of a philanthropic association, bank and employment a “Recently the red: min one daubed himself with garish paint, dressed himself in a feathers and_ hit the warpath path led to Hollywood, and t dians broke into the mo Sam gave permission for the Shosh and Arapaho tribes of the Wind River reservation in Wyoming to go to the movie city to be used in the making | of pletures, | white and he even erva more war |PAPER ROLLS OPERATE | PILOTLESS AIRPLANES, According to Popular Mechanics a perfected which to control an air- means of a perfo- the rolls used in | The controls of the pla; to the control of a ntral dev which trolled by the roll; course, is prepared cording to whatever plane is required to perform | In a test of this apparatus a plane was started on a twenty-mile flight | without a human being in it It at- in flight by a player plano. i A Remarkable illinery Special Many Just Received—Many Never Shown Before— On Sale at This Low, Popular Price— i IDA WALTERS 1415 Lovely new metal Hats — brocades and combinations — panne and Lyons velvets — new satin Hats. bi‘liysb orn 608 to 614 ELEVENTH ST, On Thursday and Friday WC Shau OECI‘ a Pokes and Mushrooms, Turbans and Off- the-face styles—and the irregular kind styles —trimmed with la ce, veils, embroidery, feathers, flowers, ornaments, etc. Faille Silk Skinner’s Satin Metallic Cloth Brocade Panne Velvet Lyons Velvet tained @ height of a mile and a half in three miles; it then released a dummy bomb, circled for a whi came down to 1,500 feet atove the ground and snapped & photograph. finally swooping back to its home station, negotiating & safe and sound landing. Whole fleets of planes could be oper- ated in this way to execute exactly similar maneuvers without the ne: sity of pilots risking their Hve the machanical control would proba- bly even be better than the human, for the planes would perform as i unit with no dependence on the al- ways uncertain personal equation. SOUTH SEA HOMES FOR JAPANESE REFUGEES From Current History Magazine. A Homes may be found in the South Sea Island possessions of Japan for thousands of families who were made destitut by the recent earthquake and fire in Tokio, Yokohama and goya. Plans for directing Japanes immigration to those isiand groups which came under the mandate of Japan as a result of the world Wur.| w e formulated severa] months ago. | The chief promoter of the proposition was Dr. S. Uesugl of the Imperial Univ it 1t is stated that many of the islands are in a state of primitiveness, and that by comparatively little assistance hom: and a new start in life could be given the refugee ‘The migration would at the same time do much to- ward e ving the refugee popula- tion of the three stricken citles. It is pointed out that there is no room for the sufferers upon ¢the land in Japan, as the rural districts are al- ready overcrowded. Polished Floors of Hard Wood Floors laid over old_ones and in new buildings. Old floors which have been meglected or improperly ~finished renovated. Telephone North 6523. J. M. ADAMS 1503 Connecticut Ave. Hundreds of Smart New Fall Styles— Flower Trimmed Hats — Feather Trimmed Hats— Cloches featuring new shapes and colorings. Opposite Keith’s '$ Fourth Floor lole—-Hso|=—"|o]e——=|o|c——]o]——Ha]c——|o|—=|a|—=]0] [——lsl= WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1923 . F. DROOP & SONS CO. 1300 G Street Specialists in Grand Pianos The Child’s Love of Music About the first audible impression received by the sweet little “Stranger” in the cradle is the mother's or nurse’s crooning of a soft, gentle lullaby. Hozwe quickly and readily the child responds to this influence, and then how surprisingly soon it learns to demand the Consolation of Song cre it slips back to Dreamland! If you have a child, or children, the responsibility for further dezvelop- sng this inherent love for music rests in your hands! Let us assure you in all earnestness and sincerity, that the child which is not given the opportunity in early life to learn to play the piano is being de- prived of much future happiness, pleasure and consolation. Get the Child to Work Now at a Good Piano and With a Competent Teacher Seven to eight years of age ¢s not too early to lay foundations for future happiness and pleasure. Shall It Be a Grand or Upright Piano? The former has the advantage true music lover's piano! of richer tone and more responsive keyboard. It the In addition, its grace ful outline adds to the home's attractiveness. is We Recorfimend the: Laffargue Upright We know of no better piano at the pri It gives the maximum of satisfaction and serv- ice. These statements are based on 25 years of intimate acquaintance through selling it. Sold on convenient terms. Positively a safe investment, Ideal for the home of moderate dimefisions, 4 fcet 8 inches in length, fits in any room, of superior craftsmanship and warranted in every particular_as to tone and durability. $635 Sold on Convenient Terms. Write for a full size paper pattern to spread on the floor INQUIRE ABOUT OUR DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN MAKE THIS A FURNITURE CHRISTMAS W. B. Moses & Sons Furniture Established 1861 Linens Carpets F Street and Eleventh Upholstery November Sale of Persian and Chinese Rugs Oriental Rug Salon, 2nd Floor The stock of Persian and Chinese Rugs offered for your approval is the finest and largest collection we have ever shown. 1 Chinese Rugs Many beautiful color combinations and patterns are shown; the price is very much lower than our usual moderate SN Antique Persian Hall Strips A wide selection of beautiful colorings; the patterns are wonder- ful ml;file:fl‘of sug handicraft; the lengths are fram 9 to 15 ft; the i ‘The Prices Range From . $65.00 to $1¢5.00 Purchases Forwarded Prepaid to Write or Phone fox Any Shipping Point in the U. S. Catalog, ~SNQIURE, ABOUL OLR DEEERRED RAYMENX RBLAN -

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