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Tales of Well Known Folk In Social and Official Life Every Name in Secretary Davis' Family Contains Samc Initials—oAttorney Gcncral COI’I' fronted by Old Problem. ING. the | BY MARGARET B. DOW} Mrs. James Davis, Secretary of Labor, has an intricate problem to solve and, though just at| this particular time not so confusing. will grow more so as the vears go on Tvery member of the family. includ-| ing the Secretary and Mrs. Davis and | their four children, boast 1F same | initials, “J. D.” so that strategy 1s vequired to solve the difficulty. This particularly applies 10 such articles as are adaptable to anv age. | Young Jimmie Davis ix vet oo small| 1o claim the garments of his father.| but it will not be very long l\t‘foré‘ he will be of age to tluke that iiberty, and Mrs. Davis believes in preparedness. So the chief of the Labor Department claims the right 10 everything marked J. D.."” and his lady, who was Jean Rodenbaugh be-| fore marriage, marks hers “J. R. D." Then dimmie is No. 1. Jane is No. 2.| Tean is No. 3 and Jean is No. 4. so| all is happily settled. When Elihu| Root was Secretary of War, and later Secretary of State, Mrs. Root had a surplus of “E. Rt in the family, the senior and junior Elihus, Edward and Edith. Mrs. o, who was thel daintiest of persons, solved her prob-| Jem by allowing each member of the | household to have the monog on| intimate articles and then 1-2 a small circle after each Du jadies noted that it malkes fusion when a home circle or more members with the tials, especfally with tiny tane, Joan and Jeun Davis scores of tiny garments all of a size. wife of | m in ini tois. like with their seemingly orney General. Mr argent, has failed to solve one mystery in his department just s his immediaie predecessors have failed as far back as the oldest recainer in that executive branch of service can remember. In the outer office of the head of the Department of Justice, as it is in the fine new building on the corner of Vermont avenue and K street. x handsome bron:ze atue of an un known vouth rests on a tall black marble pedestal. He might have been Spanish prince, such as Velasquez nainted, or one of the juvenile over lords of Tltaly. like a Gonzaga, Borzia or Medici, from the w. he i garbed and the huiughty stare he | divects at the populace passing in the | b ets below But Mr. Sargent ha discovered that no one is sure who/ this statue represents where it | came from or under what circum- stances. It has been suzgested that in times gone by before iis fine new home was erected the Department of Justice led » nomadic existence and retained quarters St from one private landlord and then anot Tt has been hinted at. but it is an awful thought in connection with the De partment of Justice, that possibly in one of these moves some of the art possessions of a landlord have been acooped in by Uncle m. As the A'tornev General can find no entry of purchase or gift of th's aristo cratic bronze youth. he has determined i trace him down and hind under what circumstances he wis made pa-t af the furnishines c suter office The Chief Justice Mrs. Taft will have close neighbors in their own | circle for this Summer. .Justice and Mre. Willis Van Devanter have leased a pleasant ttage on Murra and Justice Sutherland is see! resttul spot close hy. 17 land and her daughte and the young son of spending this 1th 5 Pa., but will join the justice in Canada it he is successful in getting a suitable house. Mr. Justic nd Mrs. Pierce Butler have a charmingz | little retreat near the Falls of St Anthony, Minnesota, besides a com. fortable home in St. Paul. where they will pass six weeks. at least, before | going to the coitage. Just'ce and Mrs. Oliver Wendall Holmes have not | missed a Summer in their Peverly Farms place in 40 vears and they ure estahlished there. For many | too. .the Brandfes family has | ail the Summer months in on Cape Cod and will do same this Summer. The marriaze Miss Elizabeth Erandeis 1o Prof. Paul Rauschenbusch of the Unive £y Wisconsin will he celebrated very auietly in this modest home some V"m? during Au Justice and \rs sanford find Summer in their nessee home all theyv desire are now in residence at Justice MeR has | abode, ims | delig retreats in Tennescee homes of friends and relatives, where | he can spend the pleasantest sort of vacation. The latest recruit 1o the supreme tribunal. Justice Stone. has a much loved cottage at Isle-au-Haut, | Me., where he spends the long Sum- mer days afloat with his sons. casting the line or ranzing the coast, fishing and hunung alternately. Mrs. Stone already is the cottaze and her! man folks ioin her next week Hoover's mar ‘ riage o Miss Margaret Watson of | Sen Francisco is the first nuptial | event in the Coolidge regime since it came in on its own account and | terves to emphasize how much more plentiful are cabinet sons in this ad minietration than cabinet daughter The oldest of the four sons of the| Secretary of the Navy and Mrs. Wil | bur married a brief six months before | his father took office. and now comes the news of another marriage in the | male portion of the Wilbur family, | when, on July 6, Lyman D. Wilbur will wed Miss Henrietta Shattuck Sons of cabinet officfals have a way of opening the nuptial events in new administration: Going back ae far as President Taft's opening vear, the =on of his Attorneyv General. vouna George Wickersham. was married in | Albany. and this was one of the few nuptials in the executive set during ihe terms of the twenry-sevenih Chiel Magistrate. Fran Huger ) son of the Secretary of the "Treasury under President Wil=on. led the many and important marriages which « curred during that administration The Harding administration had the | prilliant nuptials of Miss Catherins | Hughes. daughter of the Secretary of | State, during its first vear. With so | many gallani vouths in the circle now and two charming givls, Miss Ailsa Mellon and Miss [Edna Wilbur, there are interesting events io fore- | cast. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. who 1~\'cd1 Carlisle. the border between Eng- land and Scotland. during her trip to Great Britain when her distinguished husband, the twenty-eizhth President, was attending the sessions of the peace conference in Versailles, has been invited to become a guest of the city about the middle of August, when the famous chimes, vestrung and repaired, will sound again. These famous old bells, many of them cast a full century before Columbus | crossed the Atlantic, have never been rung_since Eonnie Prince Charlie, | Charles Edward Stuart, the vouns pretender, crossed the border wiih his army of highlanders. Then the chimes range out as never before and | to the cheering echoes the Stuart leader marched off to what proved the ruin of his cause. After this tragic event the citizens of Carlisle sen- tenced their beautiful chimes, which hang in the Omthedral spires, o 100 The A mo its the | the the ar will Young Herbert s cAdoo. ’ | nlished | plainty .]' | the i his | quent | chosen | hummoiks which so ambitiously veirs of silence. When thil perio had expired the bells were cracked and out of repair and the matter disregarded until last Winter, when |they were ziven over to a competent bell-founder 1o be cleaned, tuned and re-fitted. The exact date when they will be ready for the fete i= not vet assured excepi that it will be during the middle of August. when it is hoped the widow of the President will find it convenient 1o be present. President and Mrs, Wilson received distinguished honors in Carlisle dur- inz their sojourn in 1920, where the former visited the birthplace of his mother on the cutskirts of the city. An internations] marriage which is the direct result of the pleasant service of Maj. Oscar Solbert as mil ftavy attache of the American em bassy in London is that of Miss Re- maine Le Mnvne Abernathy, daugh- ter of Mr. g v Abernathy of Kan- s City an niece of Mrs. Solbert, to Mr. Harold Van der Noot of the British metropolis, which will take place during the coming week in the bride’s home. Miss Abernathy spent two \Winters with her zunt. and_her friendship with Mr. Van der Noot who is a Briton. despite his Duich name. began the season she was poe e>nted to London society. Mr. Harold Van der Noot and his broth: Gilbert n cer Noot of th man Guards, among ihe danc men in on When Miss Abernathy. who delights in this amusement. began to accom pan~ her present fiance the b weelkly balls given by the Viscountess Astor. the end of the romance was in view. The pective and his brother from London the early part of and are now being exiensively tined in Kansas City. Mr. der Noot's bride-to-he has triends and relatives in Washing ton Dbesides Maj. und Mrs. Solbert the former a White House aide. Her tather's oldest sister i< the wife Dr. Albert Gregory Hull and is quently the guest of Dr. Hull's par ents. Mr. and Mrs. John A. T. Hull of Bel Air, Clarendon. and her cousin, Miss Elizabeth Hull of Kansas ity makes many visits here. Mr. Van der Noot is of Holland descent on the paternal side. but his people have lived for more than a century in Great Britain. g June Van fre dor 10 T. Herrick, plavs at the famous course ris-Plage. a resort in ance which the diplo- to make prosperous Less than vears ago it was stretch of fine sand with a scatier ing of fishermen shacks, and now for ceaside villas and splendid hotels, and. above all. for its superb golf course the hard white sand of the beach which for miles is of great width. it is unrivaled. Mr. Herrick can mike the run from Paris 10 Touquer by starting at dayvbreak He can h: fine breakiast. zet in his return 1o his office when work is pressing in time to pick un the thread | of affeirs in the late afternoon. He this several times week and well known amon h friends tcquaintances that in these jour- and his golf zame he is in the est sense incog: d that he his rest from grinding obliga- tions, the speeches and which are so frequenilv his lot and necessity of entertaining the in- hordes of his country's people. zoinz and comingz. on the or in the club rooms. no e ventures to intrude on the genial | American unless he takes the initia- tive. Ile makes his course without .inzle interruption. the officiais of the club taking special precaution that no one chall mar his solitude Tut there are times when the Ambas. sador goes to Touquet for a real va- cition: then he meels evervbody, issues challenges about his golf game ind makes complete reparation for unsociability during his busy periods. Mr. Herrick is considered vne of the best dressed men who fre- Touquet and, all unwittingly, ue leads the fashion in golf togs. all purchased in his home city, Cleve tand, Ohio. abitually Touque the north of atist helped vadin th Tink Nicholas Murray including his accomplished Miss Sara Butler, again have uthampton for holiday they find those little call themselves Shinnecock Hills are get- ting too crowded for genuine comfort. There are few large, wooded estates remaining, for the temptation to sell lots for villas has proven too great for the majority of 1he property owners. The Charles ¥. Sabins cling to their preity place Bavberry. but com- vared to the estates up the Glen Cove way fois rather small. Miss Butler, who zoes in strongly for who is opening headquarters in her Summer home, has an occupation for her leisure moments in deciding whether to call the tiny place leased from the estate of the late Thomas Ball Water n:me, High Tovnton there is no wa‘er mill and has not been one for many ve: and Miss Butler thinks it silly to continue this itle. But she does not care for High | Tovnton. and she fears the confusion of "bestowing a third name on the place. As it is. all of her mall, and she gets stacks of it, is invariably blue penciled by the local postmaster Try Water Mill or High Toyvnton. Dr. fomily |d:uzhter. S sojourn, but It seems that Mr, voung Howard Leigh. a talented artist of New York, who has | been studying in the American Acad- emy in Rome, has just received an Virginia Bride MRS. FURMAN SMITH, Daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Carroll Greene of Alexandria, and before her marriage to Mr. Smith of South Caro- l‘llll she was Miss Margaret Elizabeth Greene. was | many | of | me and | banquets | Butler and his | politics and | Mill or retain its present | THE SUNDAY | bridegroom | arrived | enter | Pitznogle of M ! Daughter of Mr. L. ! arranged wedding Italian zov aide to unusual honor from the ernment in beinz appointed the most renowned fresco painter which King \ country claims. Guido Cadorin. This leader in Italix mural art has been designated to ! restore the walls of many of the his | toric churches of northern Ttal: | destroyed durinz the World War by enemy bombs. With Mr. Leizh Signor Cadorin is now painting the walls of the restored church of Mor 1ago in the Piave. an ancient edifice which goes back to the davs of St f Ambrose. though it was rebuilt and | splendidly decorated during the ren naissance period. The artisis w then take up the ruined churches of Venetia, several of which are i Venice, #nd ufter drawings and copies preserved in the archives will restore them 1o their original beauty Mr. Leigh. who is the first of the present generation of his countrymen to win recognition from Italy. and possibly the very first to receive governmental commission. has tried all kinds landscape. | traiture, stilllife, marine views {has even dipped into the eubist o futurist styles. He has finally {forces with the increasing |who hope to restore the lost frescoinz. Siznor Cadorin has ompleted that marvelons m {chapel in the villa & Annun Gardone. a work which is recognized 1as of ity Kind ihe greatest in modern times. The erratic poet and play {wright, not 1o mention warrior and | patriotic leader. has during his life time had his genius and services im {mortalized on ‘the walls of the chapel where he will eventually sieep and has bequeathed all to the government Iwith a fund 1o keep it in repair. M | Leigh also assisted in this work { of of ari por numbe art of just Mr. John Van Antwerp MacM for several vears at the State Depart ment and much esteemed in Washing ton, is one of the very few men at the disposal of the American foreign of fice who has even a working knowl- edge of Chinese, the language of the country to which he has just been | assigned as Minister. Mr. MacMur ray in odd moments during his serv- ice as counselor of the Amer n em in Tokio studied both Chinese and Japanese and he goes o Peking with the comforting knowledge of ad the natives intelligently 1o have things done as he Of course. in Peking and in the foreign section of Shanghai Eng lish is spoken everywhere in hotels banks. shops and in garages. But off the beaten track i1 is another ¥ and the devasiating credit sy which exists in China for ail foreign ers, especially for Americans, led Mr MacMur - to study the language in order to comprehend the intricacies of the situation. But he knows the venerable tongue in the academic <ense. though in the Orient English |is the language of diplomacy rather than French, as in lurope. The American Minister takes up his ex | acting duties knowing many of the | native officials and his colleagues in | | the foreign corps. enough wishes. em Mr. Robert nner. a veteran of the consular service and recently removed from London. where he had been in harness for 15 vears, to the head of important consular division of with headquarters at Pari @ timely note in the preface of |the Anglo-American Year Book, of | which ha was the first editor. Mr. Skinner recalled the beginnings of this exceedingly useful publication, which is devoted to the interests of the American in Great Britain, and that it was three-fourths social and the remaining fraction divided Dbetween business literature and art. wherein the sister nations were associated. The | present volume, larger and more com- | plete than any of its predecessors, is three-fourths devoted to business, and the remainder links society, the arts. letters and music together. KFormerly {1t was merely noted that the United States Chamber of Commerce had of fices in such a place, while now ever: individual member is listed with bus iness and home address. Every out- | standing American business is listed, | with its directors. and long tables of | vmme and commerce deck the pages. | | Names of American peeresses are in | small type and inconspicuously placed, | whereas once seemingly they made the reason that the volume was pub- lished at all. But Mr. Skinner pert nently remarks that the world re- alizes at last that it is trade and com merce which make the wheels go round and that sociely exists and flourishes just in proportion as the nation conducts its business affairs efficiently. The American business man woman, oncz scorned by the higl cial lights of London. is now an im- portant individual and receives many more invitations to the seats of the mighty than he or she finds it con- venient to accept Queen Wilhelmina of Holland and King Albert of Belgium are deter- mined that the American tourist who inclines to visit their dominions shall have the path smoothed before him and all special taxes remitted. Both { the kingdoms have abolished the land- ing fee of $10 and customhouse regu- lations have been minimized to the last degree. One can pass from Hol- land to Belgium and vice versa with i { the | France, | struc or Jittle delay and do the same as often as_wished during the same season. Belglum is making strenuous efforts STAR, S| to ELTZER, WASHINGTON, th stree ~ Mary Virgi tract e the little city the old convent where the treaty MARRIED ON THURSDA . and before her well tznogle. visitors of to Ghent the and pic wirs signed which made the final peace be fee ned Great n. but decor in y cold wn United was asked t «ll this is past sted in the stamps blue vellow American Up most of those used. itain States visit 1 the newly Formerly the hallowed This re unique vy most placed in green, re to make a land stamps now make The capital of violet the Netherlands mukes a point of hav ing the fine pea Ang the presented to the attention of and laces and art galleries are ar. request the Am royy ran this frew seemingly eric al p N intly their Carnegie for garbed e temple presented by the sittings of Hague tribunal visiting visiting funct facilities for Many Holland Americans cities with and pre. asants, nimber exceeded WietkaiSaca iaiGa T(‘l COICS 1sland Home Secrets and Isly h weeks, sain he hom: tive tric Glo family nd cotta the heen i1l P he 0 A in Con of ucester | Maj. wil for Gen liams the of War will Summer in i reported nd his f Piatt Mas home and are here from Washington ummer |are to spend at Sagamore Farms, the Hamilton district. John W at their M Gloncester The B Weeks Cole: Mass ¥v. who several a slow ~ he soon will island Summer Secre on f. s makin h iy > h Andrew. Representa from the Nixth Dis husetts at his tor Summer is the Mrs. Clarence season which they in The Williams estate is one of the most attractive in the Myopia colony Mr. | wa season at Chandler estate at Bass Rocks. which |be cut in small pieces after placing purchased earlier in the season. ‘The estate on the ocean front is noted [that the whole slice is kept in po- view and they for den beel Glo My and shinzton M its_fine <. The B; n of the nucester and for side, 'M ] W he and ass he: a stay E are to spend their Casa del irs latter at Mag as has been their custom for Louis A. Barr of first Mar. the former beautiful gar- in pa stern Point colony at James M. Green are part of the month | lia, at the Ocean sev and Mrs. Den;:gre At Bay State Estate \ have early n at ster, Ma nd Mrs spent Summer in Washington, are Villa Crest, Walter part D. Denegre, of each Winter their West Man- . estate for the Summer. The Denegres have one of the most deli dist ichtful rict estates and do during their North Shore sta in the Manchester much entertaining Their gon-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wil gre) chester for liam have Davies Sohier (Elaine Dene. taken a cottage at the Summer. Man- A Recent Bride MRS. JOHN J. Formerly of Virgini MACDONALD, now making her home in Washington, her husband be- clerk of the \l\ll Alr Station at inacostia, D. the various | seasons have | D. . JUNE 21, 1 Sargent Among First To Visit North Shore Attorney General John G. Sargent is the first of the Cabinet to get an early glimpse of the Massachusetts North Shore in its early Summer zlory. He came on from Washington {for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Stearns at Red Gubles, in Swamp- scott, and had an opportunity of go- |ing (ver White Court, the Summer | White House. on -the adjoining estate. | Mr. Sargent was awarded the degree of LL. D. at Tufts College, Medford, on Monday. and Tuesday he left for Vermmont, where he attended the com mencement at Middlebury College, and from there went to his Vermont home for a short stay. It is probable that Atiorney General and Mrs. Sargent | will come to the North Shore for a more extended sojourn later in the season. Gcrman Ambassador Obtains Beautiful Home One of the most atirzetive of the cot tages in Magnolia, Mase., is to be the | Summer home of Baron Ago von Lultzan. German ®Ambassador, who is to spend his first season on the North Shore. The Hayden cottage is being made ready for occupancy next week and some of the members of the em bassy staff are alreadv at Magnolia. The Birc von Malizan will not come to North Shore until late in the season as she is to spend much of the Summer abroad The embassy will be at Magnolla until mid-September. North Shol‘c Mlsscs British Ambassador The Massachusetts North Shore will miss Sir Esme Howard. British Am bassador, and his charming wife, Lad~ Isabella Howard, who spent last Sum- mer at Prides Crossing. The Ambas. sudor and Lady Howard will be abr this season. but the embassy is again 1o be established off the North Shore at Manchester-by-ihe-Sea. Mr. Henry Getty Chilton, acting counselor the embassy and Mrs. Chilton are to have the Arnold cottage on Sea street while Col. C. E. . Graham Charlton. mili tary attache, has taken the Tappan cottage also on Neu sireet. The of fices “of ‘the embassy will he locared | in the Black cottage H Capt. Andrc“‘s chls Little Points Cottage Adolphus Andrews. com mander of President Coolidge’s vacht, the U Mayflower, has taken the Esselen cottage at Littles Point, Mass in the Swampscott district for the sea son he Mayflower will have an anchorage off ~Marblehead and the { Eastern Yacht Club will be used for landings. The yacht is well known in North Shore waters and for four Summers was at Beverly during the Taft administration Capt i | i | | | Mr. and Mrs (Elizabeth Hoehlir Summer at ast where they have shore home. o R, Ogilhy ) are o spend the n Point. Gloucester, an interesting sea 1925—PART 2 [_Reva Offcer Bride || 'Massachusetts North Shore ‘Popular Summer Resort E\Vashmgton Society Fa“( and Legatmn Of{lcna[s There—President and Mrs. Coolldge to. Rcach Swampscott Wednesday. BEVERLY, Mass.. June | picturesque ~ Massachuse Shore is 10 be a favorite district for Washington folks this SR on! wiin (e Saivheecaplial 5 many embassies established on sea-swept coast until well along ward the Autumn. President and Mrs. Coolidge are expected to arrive from Washington Wednesday for a Jong stay at White Court, a charming Swampscott estate. just now at its June best when the gardens glow with the color of the roses and the early Summer flowers. The Britich, Ttalian | and German embassies and the Si- amese legation are 1o be on the North | Shore and already many prominent in the social life of Washinzton. who are numbered among the cottage own ers, are here for the season The stav of the President and his family will be a quiet one, just as free from official business as it is possible |to make it. Mr. and Mre. Frank W Stearns, who have been in Washing ton for much of the season, at the | White House. are at Red Gables, the adjoining _estate. It was largely through Mr. Stearns that the Presi- dent decided to make the North Shore the Summer capital. The U. S Mayflower is coming to Marblehead and will be used for yachting trips by the President and his family. The vacht and country clubs have planned for busy seasons. Especially will the | yachting season be a busy one at Marblehead. -where the race program calls for one hundred regatta davs 20, The < North Summering the Jarzest be more popular mer and the Hamilton has matches for Shore since the Pole this .&um Ciph a1 card of than ever Myopia Hunt in attractive the Summer. Nerth are wonder. 1in the Swampseor mmer Whitg fully attractive a district where House is located most_enthusins tic garden cluh whose membershim iny cludes the leading Mrs, Coolidge has honored the club-bw ac. cepting the honorary presidency and she is expected 1o atiend the an rose show of the North cultural Societr, which is at Manchester the month \ \ Jnos enGOD. o Shore latter MRS. JAMES ROLAND HUGHES, Formerly Miss Harriet 1. Love, daughter of Mrs. Daingerfleld Love, the wedding being an important event of yesterday. Unsightly Rust and Ink Stains Removed -in two minutes with ERUSTI( TOR. Dip pencil holder into Wwat moisten stain No injury to any material or deli- cate fast colors. Separate treatment for rust and ink stains 3 in same handy pencil holder. Sold in Wash- . ington’s g drug | ) A and dry goods stores. I o~ A~ Italian Envoy to Sta_v At Beverly Sprmgs Up on Juniper Ridge, al Beverly Farms, M the Italian flag is 1o float from the Summer embassy to be | established a1 the Kaan cottage. Am.- | bassador Giscomo de Martino is ex pected to arrive next week and is plan ning for a long season at Beverly Farms. Members of the emhassy staff also are coming to the farms the | Summey then rinse lea Produets Company. ) ¥ [ The Vogue for MID-SUMMER The Henry Washington home in Hamilton triet, for Cleveland Perkins of «U their couniry in the Myopia dis the sm.m.m Chicken :nd Ham Rolls. Remove all skin. gristle. and from some chicken and chop fine weigh. using four ounc Chop enough ham 1o make 1wl | ounces, add enough white sauce to| make a rather stiff mixture, season | with salt and pepper. add one tea | poonful of chopped parsley and form | into small cork-shaped pieces. Roll | | some short pastry out rather thin cut it into oblong pieces about 3 inches wide, place a pertion of the chicken mixture in the center of each, brush the edges of the pastry with water and double one side over, let ting the edges overlap well. Fasten up the sides and brush over with one beaten egg. Bake in a good oven for { about 20 minute: Pineapple-Strawberry Salad. Use fresh or canned pineapple. The pineapple may be picked from the core with a silver fork or a straw- {berry huller, or it may be cut in slices and the hard center removed with an apple corer or a small round lcutter. Cut in slices. The slices may | | | | | hone then | s of the meai. ! | | i | on a serving dish in such manner i sition. On the slices herries cut in halves. Edge the dish fwith heart leaves of lettuce. Mix |the juice from a fresh pineapple with tas many tablespoonfuls of olive or 'olllm’ vegetable oil as there are |slices of pineapple. Add for four {1ablespoonfuls ef oil two tablespoon |fuls of honev, two tabl poonfuls of |1emon juice and one-fourth teaspoon- | ful of salt. Mix thoroughly and pour [over the fruit.” Serve a+ once. i place straw . Chicken Pie. Clean, singe and cut up two chick ens inte neat pieces, place them in a saucepan, and add enough hot water | to cover. Stew slowly until the chick ens are tender. Line the sides of a deep baking dish with short crust pastry. Put in part of the chicken, and season with salt, pepper, paprika, and a few drops of onion juice. Then add the rest of the chicken and season the same way. Put in the dish two cupfuls of the broth in which the chicken was boiled, cover the top with crust, making in the center of the crust a hole large enough to admit of adding more of the broth when necessary and covering the hole with a removable fancy ornament cut in paste. Bake for one and one-half hours in a hot oven. Lemon Sherbet. Milk. three cups: sugar. one:half cup; salt, few grains; cream. one cup; lemon juice, three-fourths cup. Com- bine the lemon juice with the sugar and the milk with the cream. Stir the mixtures together. slowly adding the milk and salt to the lemon juice and sugar. Freeze in the usual man- ner. Disfiguring hair easily removed You can remove this unpleasant blemish in a few minutes—harm- lessly and effectively. Just spread a smooth paste of Del-a-tone over the offending growth. Wash off and sec the wonderful difference! scientific preparation in use for years, made by the Sheffield Co.. 536 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. At all drug stores, or sent prepaid in plain wrapper ‘for one dollar. DEL-A-TONE Removes Superfiwows Mak OlL SEE ANNOUNCEMENT TUESDAY’S AND SATURDAY'S STAR. /7=, ANCING in and out on moonlight ter- races; flu"enng here and there at tea time in gardens, promenading on - the Avenue: everyvwhere yvou “vill see 277 them—the new chiffon. crepe roma and georgette costumes. Their delicate, fragile beauty appeals to the imagination. Graceful printed chiffon Frocks in floral pat- terms; slim, cool, georgette Wraps with collar. cuffs and border of soft georgefte petals. and charming Ensembles; all answer to the roll call of this new vogue for sheer, filmy fabrics. Ensembles Gowns I raps QY A Erlebackher Exclusively Different TWELVE.TEN TWELVE.TWELVE F STREET DeMOLL PIANO CO. SALE TOMORROW USED UPRIGHT Many well known makes are represented—and are on sale to- morrow at the astonishing low price of $94.50. We have recently adopted the policy of taking Pianos IN TRADE IN OUR NEW FURNITURE DEPARTMENT —which has brought us many fine instruments. Come_in early if vou want good piano at a Big Saving. Every instrument in the lot is a hargain at the special price. They'll sell in a hurry, so don't delay. BE ON HAND FOR FIRST CHOICE If desired you may arrange to Pay Only $10 Down and $8 Per Month "“&PECIALISTS INT PIANOLAS AND REPPODUCING _PIANOS ™ O] DeMOLL SMITH DEMoOLL PiaNo G Mmtt AEOLIAN HALL ~ deftll. and G Stre: a