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SOCIETY Society Ranks Reinforced As Vacation Period Closes Many Washington Res idents .Returning From Pleasure Resorts—Events of the Autumn Opening Passed in Review. Col. and Mrs back from N spent the Summer:. companied by in a George C. Thorpa are gland, where hey They were ac- | their children, who were | F'rench camp at Beauregarde, | and Col. and Mrs. Thorpe were at | New tle, N. H., and later at Ben- nington, Vt., from where they made | the trip home by motor. nd Mrs. Willlam E t returned from a two-week | Villlamstown, Mass. Col. and motored to Williams- Col. 4 have visit Mrs. town and back Mrs Persons Coleman, wife of Col. Sherrard and her daughter, Mrs. btored to West Point and rt visit with Cadet Coleman. | had & Mrs. James Rankin Young and her, iter, Miss Nan Barc Young It returned to \Washington from Bass Rocks, where they were the guests of Miss Mary B. Adams. d: d Contessa Pag apartment at Wardman which they have taken early season, after visiting North Shore and in Canada ano are in k Ho- for the on- the Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hamlin wave been spending the umer wroad, will return to W ngton October 1 and have taken an apart- ment at the Lee House. Theod, Atlantic om Nia a short pther-in-law Philip ®lancy. ney will come to Washing. middle of September, accom- panied by Mr. and Mrs. Tiller's chil- dren, who have been her guests for several weeks. who Mr. and Mrs. ek from motored Hance Tiller City, where ra Falls after time with Mrs, ind sister, Mr. Mrs. My the ind Mrs 1y eorge E. Pickett and have gone to Orkney , for a few weeks. Dr rivec the de ( mer in cluded and Mrs. Wade H. Atkinson ar-| in this country last week aboard | after spending the Sum- Northern Europe which in. 1 visit to the North Cape. and Mrs. Charles Francis si will be accompanied by their davghter, Miss Helen Carusl, when they return-to Washington early in October from Europe. Miss Carusi expected 1o spe t Winter in| me study but has changed her s and is now in England with her | where Mr. Carusi will join | rtly from the Holy Land. Mr « Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hewson have | -d their house ut 1333 New Hamp- | shire avenue to Mrs. Aston Rollins, | and will spend the Winter in thelr )1 in Asheville, N. C. Rollins is occupying the house Wyoming avenue which she | Mr. and Mrs, Malcolm at 2301 rented from McConihe. Mrs. 3. Mandeville Carlisle has house at 1647 Thirtieth » Assistant Attorney Gen- William J. Donovan, occupying the home of | William S. Reyburn on | 1 and are now nd Mrs. Hillyer - and Mrs. John T. Clancy, who | d_at Towson, Md., Tues- | nding their honeymoon at | the Hotel Traymore, ip Atlaptic €ity. They will come to Washington the middle of next week to make a short visit_to s Mr. and Mrs. J. Sheridan, at 2033 Park road, 1 motor from here | to their new home in Buffalo, N. Y. Keith, who has been nimer at her home, Greenfield, N. H., has Francisco to attend the ehtion of the Kappa She is dean Mrs. Keith in California. i Ohio before returning to gton late in October. Mr. were day, a parents, ondell and Miss who have been Maye Kendrick at are expegted ion this after- Irs. Frank Morrison and sbitt have left the city for where they will visit in St. burg, Tampa, Sarasota, Lake and Miam their son Flc Mr. William H. Bliss, father of Mrs. Charles Warren, will come to Wasgh- ington from his Summer home at Magnolia, Mass., about the middle of October, and will be at the Lee House, where he has taken an apartment for the Winter. Mr. and Mrs. Warren have been spending the Summer with at Magnoll . A. Harriman arrived in New York week aboard the President larding and was met by Mr. Harri- man, who attended the Institute of 's at Williams College. They gone to the Berkshires and will until the middle of the month, they will come, to Washington open their Ftment at 1302 hteenth street the Winter. Mrs. William Rufus Pratt of Morri street in Chevy Chase has gone \nadohto, Pa.. with her , Mrs. W. Y. Macmillan, whose { she will be in_ Pittsburgh be- fore returning to Washington. Mrs. Towers, widow of Rev. Fred- k Towers of Baltimore. is spend- ) fortnight at the Shoreham Hotel Towers will return to her home for Christmas, but Mrs. in Hillsboro, N. C r before that will visit in Florida. Porter Chandler of Genesee, N. Y., has takn an apartment at the Lee House and will come to AVashington about the second week In December. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Charles .Brooks Smith are in’ their apartment at the Jiotel Roosevelt after spending July #nd August at the Parkersburg, W. Va., Country Club. They made ‘the trip by motor. Miss Hawke, who has been at her Kummer cottage at Atlantic City: for several months, will return to Wash- ington the middle of the week and will open her home on Q street for the Winter. Miss Mildred Louise Sullivan and Miss Rosemary Sullivan, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Sullivan of Georgetown, are spending the remain- der of the season at Atlamtic City with their aunt, Mrs. John Ruppert. They will return to Washington Oc- tober 3. Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Huntington of Broad Branch road have returned from a two-week motor trip through New England, visiting relatives on the North Shore. 3 Mrs, James W. Tomlinson and Mr. Robert E. Tomlinson are hoyse guesta of Mr. and Mrs. J. William Tomlinson at their home in Chevy Chase. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Gompers, ac- companied by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Gompers, motored to New York to at- tend the wedding of their neice, Miss Istelle Rosette Gompers, daughter of QIr, and Mrs. Alexander Gompers, to | from | Round Hill, | M, | Landis, Mr. Louis Elcaness at the Hotel St. George, re returning they will visit in Tarreytown and will stop on their way home in Atlantic City and Philadel- phia to visit friends. Mr. and Mrs. George Plitt have taken possession of their new home on the corner of Clarendon road and Edgemour lane, Edgemoor. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Davis and the later's sister, Mis Mary E. Daoley. and their two nieces. Miss' Helen Dooley and Miss Elizabeth Dooley, | Fave returned to Washington from a stay of several weeks at Colonial Beach. Mrs. Walter 8. Barker of Wood- ridge is spending a few weeks at Front Royal, Va. Mrs. R. B. Harbaugh and her grand- ;on Robert of 4217 Third street, who have been spending the Summer at he Breakers, Ocean City, Md., will return after Labor day. Mr. day evening to spend the holiday there and will accompany his family home this week. Miss Mildred Pimes has returned to her home after spending some time in Baltimore and Atlantic City. Mrs. Lewis S. Friedman -and her son Joseph who made @ trip to Maine by boat have returned. Miss Rhoda | B. Friedman came back last week from a six weeks' stay at Manhattan Beach, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. William H. th Mr. and. Mrs. Lynn Hayes of Woodridge, left Washington Monday for a motor trip to New York, Tarry- town and Boston. They will be gone about two weeks. Miss Winifred Linkens, who has been the guest of Miss Helen Louise Lee, has returned to her home in Blacksburg, Va. Mr. and Mrs. R. Owen Edmonston, and thejr family, accompanied b Beverly Rison of Richmond, will return this evening after spending a week at Atlantic City, where they went by motor. Mr. and Mrs. Sol Lansburgh sailed vesterday aboard the Leviathan England and will make an extensive tour of the continent before joining their son-in-law and daughter, Lieut. H. (. Merwin, in Paris. Mr. Hugh Stewart Smith sailed Engldnd aboard the Majestic Wednesday after spending several months abroad. Mr. Smith, accom- panied by Mr. Ted Alen and Mr. Edward Randall,_ sailed aboard the Homerie, June for England and later they toured in France, ltaly, Switzerland, Germany, Holland and Belgium. Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Swan and Mrs. Charles W. Clayton are among those from Washington who went to | Orkney Springs to remain over Labor day. Mrs. S. L. Appleby and Mrs. French have completed a two-month stay at Va. Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Mockbee of 1341 Meridlan place northwest are spending the week end in City at the Hotel Dennis. Miss Mary Olivia Bickers of 2723 Woodley place has gone to Sherwood Forest, Md., to recuperate from a motor accident Friday. Dr. and Mrs. H. K. Baker Honor Guests at Dinner Dr. and Mrs. H. K. Baker of San Francisco were the guests of honor at a dinner given Tuesday evening by Col. and Mrs. Burgess Sterling in their home. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jovce, jr.. Lieut. and Mrs. Raymond Hatvey, Dr. and Mrs. A. Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mrs, Henry Lamar, Helene Reed, Miss Caroline Martynne, Peggy Seek, Miss Marie Van Ness, Mr. William Jeffries Chewning, jr; Mr. William Carter, Lieut. James Morrison, Mr. Francis C. Wills of New Orleans, Mr. Emmett Drake and Mr. Eugene Barker. Dr, and Mrs. Baker left Washing- ton Thursday for New York, where they will be the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Willlam Cunningham at their home on Riverside Drive, before re- turning to California. Wiley-Crosson Wedding To Take Place Sept. 14 Miss Margaret Blaine Crosson, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. H. J. Cros- son, whose marriage to Mr. Donald A. Wiley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam F. Wiley, will take place Monday September 14, at Rauscher's, has se. lected her attendants. Miss Teresa Crosson will be the maid of honor for her sister and the bridesmaids will include Miss Dorothy Mondell, Migm Virginia MeKenney, Miss Margaret Wiley, sister of the bridegroom-elect, and Miss Eleanor Mills. Mr. Andrew Wiley will be the best man for his brother and the ushers will be Mr. John Christian, Mr. Sidney War- becker of New York, Mr. John Mas- sey. Mr., Lawrence Murphy of Cincin- nati, Mr. Allan Gardner and Mr. Wil- liam Wiley, another brother of the bridegroom-elect. Miss Crosson returned to Washing: ton yesterday from New York, where she has been for som Har- | baugh joined them at Ocean City ¥ri- | Lawson, | for | Atlantic | Miss | THE Summer Bride | | | t | | 1 | | MRS. GILBERT RAY LEAKE, Who was before her marriage this Summer, Miss Keats Eskem Bond. Tales of Well Known Folk In Social and Official Life ) (Continued from Fifth Pz all of the second week of September as the guest of the American section |of that marvelous international ex | nibition. “Since the fourteenth cen- tury Leipsig has been - celebrating twice a year, in unique fashion, its output of books, though in its first !years manuscripts and prints, to- gether with fabrics and embroideries, were as important as the volumes. Since the famous Nizhni Novgorod of Russia collapsed in 1914 the fair at the mid-German city has taken on a su- preme importance. This book falr is | the most colorful of fetes in that the stalls are quaint reproductions of |long ago, with a background of old prints which bring to mind the holy Roman empire, the stirring days of the rel war with books piled | | high in the most sque fashion The American section will include a [ vast numiber of books which are non- | fiction and which have been regarded | |as permanent contributions to the sub- | jects which they treat, and in this divi alon, too, there fs a distinet savor of | this’ country, with splendid views of | the Rockies, of the bookish parts' of {big cities, like Boston, New York, Philadelphia, with views of the gressional Library, of the great liby of Mr. Huntington in Pasadena, Calif., and several of the most imposing of Carnegle libraries. Few visitors to Europe, especially Americans, are missing the Leipsig book fair. Mr. A. W. Burchard has purchased ! the splendid mansion which the late Henry P. Davison erected at the co ner of Park avenue and Sixty-ni street, New York, and though busi- mess is creeping up very subtly, he | has pluck nnounced that he will | make it home and stick it out for 10 years at least. Mr. Davison was g ploneer in this part of Park avenu which is locally known as Lenox Hill, and it was his example which inspired Arthur Curtiss James to build his | wonderful residence there, and also influence Harold I. Prait, George Blumenthal, Harvey D. Gibson and Mrs. Willlam Sloane, now Mrs. Henry White. Mr. Davison spent exactl half the year®in his New York resi- dence, and his neighbors, as a rule, did the same. Mrs. Davison has, however, since her Lereavement passed the en- tire year in her fine country place at Peacocks Point, in the Glen Cove sec- tion of Long Island. Mr. Pratt is | rarely away from his fine place ad- joining Meadow Brook Club, and Mrs. White has placed her home on the market, after keeping it closed for several Winters. The Arthur Curtiss Jameses spend so much time abroad that they are among those who talk of selling their Lenox Hill property. Young Marshall Field has been rent ing the Davison property while he built a fine town house about 20 streets higher up than the one he leased. Mr. Burchard is determined to try to re-establish the permanent Winter vogue of this delightful sec- tion of Gotham, once a fairyland, from | November until May for those who delighted in social functions, and when the mansion glittered with lights and flowers all through the day and night. The Colonial Dames, who have just completed a memorable visit to Eng- land as the guests of the Sulgmave Manor Institution, have materially aid- ed the plans of certain literati to cele- brate the centenary of Washington Irving’s great classic, “The Life of Columbus." This will be commemo- rated in the Engiish Speaking Union with appropriate exercises, and a com- mittee has been appoirted to viait the only existing memorial of this gentle American author, ‘“The Geoffrey Crayon" room, in the Red Lion Inn at Warwick. Though this remem- brance of the author of the “‘Sketch Book" might be styled altogether a commercial affair, since the Red Lion profits substantially by the exhibit, nevertheless it recalls the fact very eloquently that though a perfect dei- uge of books on America has de- scended from British seribes, not one has attained the rank of high litera- ture as did Irving's sketches of En, llsh country nor gained such a vogue in the whole English-speaking world. A bust of Irving is to be presented to the new American embassy, not that the sage of Sunnyside was ever an attache, but because for years 4 constant visitor, Irving in Spain will next engage the attention of his admirers, after his every association in Great Britain has been perpetuated. Thackeray expressed the hope that a suitable memorial would be reared in Great Britain “to dear g Irving, the pioneer if not the creator of American literature. Dr. William Alanson Bryan, director of the Los Angeles Museum of Art, and Mr. William Preston Harrison, curator of the same institytion, are completing the arfangements for a unique and the most important ex hibition of art ever held in the New World. This exposition will for the first time gather in one place the best offerings of all the Americas, inciuding the Do- minion of Canada and other British possessions not usually included in the term Pan-America. November 3 has been named us the date of the opening of this display of canvases which has received the offictal title af the Pan- American exposition of oil intings, and it will remain in place all Winter. It is estimated that about five number units will be entered, about ane-half of which will come from this country and the British possessions and the other half from Latin America. Dr, Bryan has been making a ?‘ur of the coun: tries where art shows the highest di velopment and he has received a cor- dial welcome and the promise of sub- stantial support. Mexico, Cuba, Ar- gentina, Brazil, Chile and perhaps the group of Central American states have promised to offer generous prizes in their national sections. The Los An geles Museum is offering three prizes of $1,500, $1,000 and §500 each for the best three pictures in the exhibit, and this is of international significance. There will be many prizes pertaining to the American ‘exhibit alone and there are purses to be placed at the disposition of the jury of awards en- abling it to offer a good price for such canvases as the Los Angeles Museum might desire to retain permanently. The late Autumn and Winter are a charming time to visit southern Cali- fornia, and this art exibit will draw visitors in large numbers from the diplomatic circle in this city. The Minister of Panama and Senora de Alfaro soon will have the new flag of their republic on exhibition, and ! when they entertain their friends at musicals their new national anthem adopted by law just before the last session of the Congress closed will be displayed. The music is by an author often heard on Pan-American nights on the radio, Jorge A. Santos, and the words are by a poet much esteemed in the isthmus country, Jeronimo O Panama performed her whole duty in regard to national symbols, and this | session of the National Legislaturelike- wise provided a new shield which the Minister and Senora de Alfaro intend to reproduce in flowers at their first formal dinner this coming seasomn. The most conspicuous change in the Pana.- | man shield as lately adopted hy law | is that the number of stars over the| eagle corresponds to the number of provinces. The national flag also shows this change, and, like the great shield of the United States and the| national flag, both are adaptations of | the other. Panama is the youngest members of the group of Latin Ameri. can republics, and so pressing have been other considerations that for the first thme the flag, the shield and the national emblem have received official attention. Mrs. Adrian H. Larkin, who enter- tained the officers and board of man- agement of the August flower show held in Southampton last week at luncheon, inspired the admiration of her guests by the rare combination of flowers and porcelain on her table Mrs. Larkin, who was Miss Katherine Satterthwaite and a member of a fam- ily noted for artistic proclivities and an eve to gathering rare and beauti- ful objects, had during a lengthy visit to China, purchased a genuine set of royal Canton china, with anclent glassware to match and some realistic essentials like salts and smaller dishes. A splendid old Spanish table of light walnut with touches of black and gold was lald with dainty stripes of Chinese embroidery in the shades of the cantonware and there were vases of various sizes of the same, gracefully filled with giant snapdragon and spikes of mignonette. The ex- quisite blending of colors in the can- tonware and in the flowers was strik- ing. Few Midsummer blooms can show the color variety of the snap- dragon, every hue of which mingles Si ty:?:ari d blouses, scarfs, children's dresses and MISS DOROTHY FITZGERALD, Of Riverside, Conn., vyisiting her brother-in-law and sister, Lieut. and ;p:’ Lelghton Wood, at the Navy | ard. delightfully with the colors of the pordelain and of the embroideries Naturally Mrs. Larkin won high honor for an artistic table setting. Another prize winner was Mrs Francis King, who had a simple ar rangement, in a dining pergola on her lawn, of @& round rustic table with | a white linen cover embroidered in | royal Copenhagen blue ik, with dishes of the same ous ware and a wide out glass basket filled with delphiniums “and gysophylie for a centerpiece. Countess Anton Heussenstamm of Vienna, formerly Miss Agnes Car- roll of Baltimore and orphaned niece of the late Gov. John Lee Carroll and reared in his home. returned to her native land a few weeks ago for the first time in 30 years. She is at present the guest of her voung rela- tives, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Acosta Carroll, at Dougheregan Manor in | Howard County, Md. The countess was making the grund tour of Europe with a French relative, when in Vienna she renewed the acquaintance with a former member of the Aus trian-Hungarian legation in Washing. ton. He had always been an admirer of Miss Carroll and so impetuous compelling was his wooing that ( Carroll permitted the wedding to take | place in Vienna. It was a brilliant event of the Autumn of 18§5 and was solemnized in the imperial chapel in the presence of Franz Josef and his court and of the entire diplomatic corps and ‘many American visitors | % the Austrian capital. The Ameri can Minister at that time was the late Charlemagne Tower and he acted as a witness for the bride and also escorted her to the altar. Count Anton was for many vears after his marriage a court functionary and his castle on the Danube, Maizleindorf- bei-Melk, was frequently visited by the aged emperor. The countess, now widowed, suffered much from the World War and lost most of the prop- erty she inherited from her husband Her fine home was sold some time ago and she will pass her remaining days in her own country. She has several sisters, among them Mrs. James Briscoe of Baltimpre. Nut and Tomato Loaf. Pulverized nuts, one and one-half cups; ground stale breadcrumbs: two cups: pepper, one-quarter teaspoon; pulverized onion, one tablesppon; savory seasoning, one teaspoon; evap: orated milk, one cup; salt, one and one-half teaspoons. Mix the nuts with the breadcrumbs and add the egg. Then stir in all the seasonings and add the combined milk and water. After 20 minutes mold in a well greased bread pan. Bake three-quar ters of an hour and serve with tomato sauce. Chicken and Corn Soup. Take two quarts of the liquor in which a chicken has been boiled, add one pint of corn scraped from the cob and chopped, one tablespoonful of finely chopped onjon, and one scant teaspoonful of salt, and simmer, close- ly covered, for an hour. Rub through a fine sieve and return to the fire. In a small saucepan melt one tablespoon- ful of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and when mixed, one cupful of rich milk or cream. Add gradually a portion of the soup and when smooth turn into the larger kettle. Season to taste, sprinkle in one table- spoonful of very finely chopped pars- ley and ser | Beach | town of | the public Club Notes Camp No. 4, Ameriea, met at jts hall, jana avenue, Friday, August 28, with Assistgnt President Mrs. Maggie Le- | cariméin the chair. The president was absent from the city. After the busi- ness the camp closed and a card party was enjoyed by all present | The next meeting of Camp 4, will be held in its snew, hall, 24 Grant| place, Thursday, Seftember 3. \ The North Beach Women's Home Club held its annual and last meeting | for the season at the beach at ths home of Mrs. L. C. Shaw Tu September 1. The following were | elected to offic Miss Cornelia H Hill, president: Mrs. Bdward Hinkel, | vice president; M Timberlake, treasurer; Mrs. Margaret Hunt, re cording secretary, and Mrs. Snelling, | corresponding secretary. The Women's Home Club a are entirely civic, the or tion Working for the welfare of the | orth Beach, Md. The use of | he new school building for North and South Beach was obtained, it is as-| serted, largely through the efforts of | Mrs. Shaw, chairman of education, | and her committee. The ways and means committee, of which Mrs, Ed- | ward Hinkel is chairman, recently | purchased lots on behalf of the club. The Petworth Woman’s Club at the | opening meeting, held September 1 in | the Petworth School, made plans for | the work of the year 1925 An ap- | propriation of $10 was approved b purchase material for garments for | the children of Gospel Mission. The | philanthropic committee deservesmuch | credit for work done among the char-. itable institutions of the city. These ladies sew an entire day in each | month for the needy children of the District. The club moved to indorse | the appointment of a resident of Pet worth (o the position of community secretary of Petworth. A copy of this mdtion was sent to Dr. Ballou and Mrs. Broy of the Board of Education Letters were read from the various | members of the Board of Education | acknowledging the club's appeal for more adequate medical inspection in schools. The annual picnic will be held on October § at Vacation Lodge, Cherry dale, Va. Busses will be chartered to accommodate all wishing to attend. Patriotic Order of Louis- | ties | A Halloween entertainment and dance under auspices of the hospitality com mittee will be held in Joppa Lodge Hall the evening of October 30. The Shakespearean Players have been en gaged for this entertainment, as well as Walter Holt's famous orchestra of string instruments. Dancing will fol low the entertainment and qgntinue until midnight. The Woman's Beltsville, Md. was hostess Community Club, -Mrs, H Mathews to the club Thursday | ifternoon, when a reception was glven, the guest of honor being her niece, Miss Louise Richmond, London Ohio, who has just turned from a three-year tour in Europe and the | Orient. Miss Richmond's highly en tertaining talk was made more inter esting by an exhibit of trophies from , foreign countries. Refreshménts were enjoyed by about 35 guests. Rice With Milk and Cheese. In preparing cheese dishes for chil of the runabout age be very careful of certain things. First, grind the cheese to a powder, if dry If soft, chop fine as possible Have ready well made white sauce, and for one-half cup, to be served with two tablespoons of rice, use one teaspoon of ground cheese. the white sauce is piping hot stir the cheese in very carefully so that each particle is smoothly melted in the sauce. This makes a good main dish for a runabout’s chief meal. dren | cupful of chopped celery. | of chopped tomatoes, one-half a cup- ful of butter, two cupfuls of chopped potato, one cupful of chopped onion, When | SOCIE TY MRS. LEO T. TOOLEY, Who was formerl; Ellsworth of 527 Gresham place. Steamed Chicken. This is a very good way to reheat a half or a whole chicken left from dinner. In fact, when for any rea- son Jabor must be economized, some housekeepers cook an' extra to have on hand for this second day’s preparation. The result of preparing ken in this way uite different from the ordinary left-over. In pre- paring so-called left-overs digestibility is often rificed Instead of using a steamer have ready a sauce pan in the bottom of which is an inverted cake pan. Place the chicken on this. Pour in enough bolling water to fill half-way. Cover and boil for about 40 minutes. Remove the chicken; slice it and serve with bread sauce. Spinach Forcemeat. Add to a cupful of cooked and chop ped- spinach two sfuls of finely minced pa elery and half a cupful of dried bread crumbs that have been soaked in half a cup- ful of milk and squeezed partly dry Add also one well beaten egg, tw tablespoonfuls of cooking ofl or melted butter, and two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese. together well, seasoning with half a teaspoonful of salt and a little papri This makes a nice stuffing for a veul roast or for any rolled steak Laked fish. The addition of the cheese blends well with the fish, “but when the stuffing is used with meat, the cheese may be omitted and minced ~hives or onion added Savory Soup. Take one cupful of chopped carrot, cupful of chopped turnip, one one of one cupful four cupfuls of milk and salt and pep per to taste. 10 minutes. Mel the butter, | utes, stirring occasionaily | til the vegetables are tender. | if desired | with parsiey and serve. b e Intermedia {the tomb of George Miss Emily R.| chicken { Stir all the ingredients | or | Parboil the potatoes for | giving a add | cheeks, chin, throat. the vegetables and cook for 10 min- Add the | milk and cook in a double boiler un- One- half a pint of fresh beans and eight | tablespoonfuls of rice may be added 3 ) Season, strain, garnish|since it acts best immediately after pre- INTERMEDIATE C. E. BODY TO HOLD MEETING FRIDAY September Assembly of Union An- nounced 1or Mount Rainier Chris- tian Church, 7:45 P.M. The Intermediate |deavor Union of th |its ~ September Christian En- District will hold meeting at Mount Rainier Christian Church next Friday at 7:45 pam. David McCahan, presi |dent of the Senior Union, will give an ccount of his trip to the Portland Oreg., conventio e Union has been invited to participate the events of {the senior field d: to be held at Sixteenth s reservoir September |12 at 2 p.m. Richard L. Riedel, presi dent of the Intermediate Union, will |direct the oup leaders, who are & follows: N 1. rman Hart: N Henry Wertman: No. 3, Jack Allbeck No. 4, Llewellyn Coombs On September the |Union will mak pilgrimage {Mount Vernon to place a wreath Washingtc {hold a service around the Ch Endeavor tree planted by Dr. Francis E. Clarke. At a recent meeting held the roof garden of the Central Union Mis. sion, John Bennet, superintendent of the mission. made an and Robert A. Voorus gave reading Intermediate to on on House Plants at Vacation House plants can be | three weeks without attention if they are previously treated in the follow- |ing way: Arrange the pots on a tiled floor in a position where there is no chance of direct sunshine falling on | them. Saturate the sofl with water {and cover the top wikh grass cuttings from the lawn, and then group the | pots around a pail of water. To pro vide moisture, cut a number af-‘long | strips of wooden material, resting one |end of the material in each pot and | the other end in the water. The | moisture will pass to the soil by | capillary attraction and the plants | wilt not suffer from dryness in the | least left for two or Ancients Employed Lead. Ancient plumbers made lead pipe for water supply to buildings, pro | vided sheet Jead for roof covering and | set window panes in lead. They were | also skilled in the molding of lead | nipes for_sewerage. i Lemon Removes t Lines, Wrinkles T —— Squeeze the juice of two lemons in a Bqttle containing three ounces of Or- chard White, whi any druggist will for a few shake well and | you have the very | mildest anti-wrinkle | lotion to tighten re- {laxed skin, erase fine lines and eradi- | cate crows-feet. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion into the skin at night. By morn- ing most of the tell-tale wrinkles, tired lines and crows-feet are smoothed out, more youthful contour to It leaves the skin | velvety soft, clear and iresh. | Beauty experts use this astringent lo- |tion for enlarged pores, also to bleach and whiten sallow, tanned skin. Mix this harmless lotion oly yourself pared. FOUR PASSENGER The Lincoln Fe¢ r Coupe is a beautiful, zfmfnd and power- ful car. admirably appointed and widely useful for business and sacial needs. Itis so roomy that five pas- sengers are readily accommodated. , the outcrwear, can be cvenly Sumserdyed at home in favorite colors. From the prospective purchaser's first call all through his years of ownership of a Lincoln car, we make it our responsibility as autharized Lincoln dealers to be of the most intelligent, yet unobtrusive service; to operation of your car an experi- m.huornotyouztpnunt make the buying and ence free from regret. consider the purchase of a fine car, we will always deem it a pleasure to display the Lincoln's points to you, to show you the most recently designed body types, and to demonstrate the car's performance when- ever and wherever you may decide. LINCOLN All fgbeics can be dyed with Suge in fast, beautiful colors. Suamr does not stain hands or barm weensils. Ask in drug, de- al stores for and B of of WARFIELD MOTOR COMPANY Phone Main 2080 1132 Connecticut Avenue N.W