Evening Star Newspaper, October 11, 1925, Page 60

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON., D. .. OCTOBER 11. 1925--PART 2. Tales of Well Known Folk | - In Social and Officia! Life | brake is wild, grows how and when | Eugene Jacobson, Mrs. Preston Wire,| M;iss Eastman to Be G: ° Bread Rolls. gém pans. Cover and set in a warm . }.l” “}"f'j‘r }“Il“ r':!’,:ll:grfigfi:"fi‘r:l‘::zorxg Mrs. Robert Berberich, Miss Kath- Having made wheat bread, take a|corner until risen very light, a litti@ e s (s i i) ‘of. | erine Crowley, Mrs. Justin V. O'Con- Of University Women piece of dough the size of an ordinary |MOre than twice thelr original bulk, fers the only spot in the District where | nor, Mrs. Isaac Jones and Mrs. Ad- £, knead it about twice as long as | then bake In a moderately quick oven the clift brake has reached any per-|dison Smith. for about 20 to 25 minutes. Watch and turn them, that they may brown The Association of University Wom- | lc en will have Miss Elizabeth Eastman |divected for the bread, form it into _ (Continued from Kleventh Page.) ! tection. ¥ 1 Philadel; Bt | : S AT |as the guest of honor at the tea|even. small balls and place in greased | everly. 3¢ *hiladelphia, but he is = eioive | : mor ned with the surface prob- | Mr. and Mrs. E. H Talben Resigns From Amy | which is being given at the club te-|” tem icute in Washington and in! | Resignation of Warrant Officer An- | MOrTow afternoon. Miss —Eastms AR AR AR YR RARLR all the cities where ther overhead | | Entertain for Daughter drew Desmond, U. S. Army, at Fort| Will speak on “The -Instftute of Poli-| g TN nor underzround transportation is! ed. For many years past the tr: fic of London was the marvel of this count nd the implicit obedience of | all things awheel to the uplifted hand of the bobby excited the envy us well as admiration of American eivic o eials. Sir Henry visit is causing a ! great preening of feathers in the mu i micipal sense, and his tours of obser- vation will be thoughtfully marked the - ties” at Willlamstown, which she-: Mr. and Mrs. E. Jlume Talbert|Omaha, Nebr., has been accepted Ly | tended this Summer. ' Mrs. W. 1. S, entertained in honor of their daugh-|the President. Ladies’ Turkish Baths “( yacht, the Hesper, October-4, having Hydrotherapy and Electrotherapy | as their guests about 30 members of Electric Cabinet Baths | the George Washington University Chapter of the 'hi Omega Fraternity, including Deun Anna L. Rose and This latest addition to Er third floor. Tt is the finest 1 the latest in bathdom. Striking Values in the Finest REPA[RING T{CQATS fashioned of . choicest pelts, Scarfs & RE- in the most chic effects MODELING | d junty Jacquettes s priced at figures which At Very place Bachrach values | SPECIAL in a class apart. 4 It will give us pleasure to PRICES have YO8 ot 2 | these striking fur values HARRY BACHRACH ‘ MANUFACTURING FURRIER Wholesale and Retail 1303 G Street i Miss Linda Jane Kincannon, registrar. The party left the Corinthian Boat Club at 11 am., spending the day on the Potomac, with a buffet lunch- con served on board. Luncheo; t; Prc;;e and the worst of gulations in the original home automobile, in which it Is used universally than in any and wheve, of the Beauty Salon is located on the th in Washington. Iquipped with has the toll of Under supervision of Miss Ida Essex, formerly with Wardman Mrs. John Hardell will entertain . > Park Hotel Baths. | at a luncheon at the Hamilton Ilo-| tel on Wednesday before the benefit card party which will be given at the Hamilton by the Emma Robert- son Circle of the Florence Crittenton Home. Others who will entertain at luncheon at the Hamilton before the| | card party are Mrs. Dewey Zirkin Mrs. Leonard Butt, Mrs, Carrol Mc. iuire, Mrs. Carvel Leary. Miss Louise Hayden, Miss Maric McGuire, Mrs, B. Tracy oi New York cadl in his projected on the top of a large < structure, 1010 Fifth avenue : < purchazed the rights this building for 50 and he has at his disposal which Is .|mv’n.\l:)ml!‘l) 400§ feet square. His dwelling will be an eimhorate hun v, and he has per ) good soil in the i quanti bout the girden with He ecven ¥, Main 7792-3-4 1221 Conn. Ave. who appre; abundant { 1 1 1 raise tood uand. his example and I C p sites offered by the roofs | e apartment houses of New H is idea is an old one in | for conturies owmers | e AR Y ’ st have let their rouls it) Wednesdny evening in her mother's home at Berryville, Va., to i ,f"’ Mowing | Mumma, U. S. N. ic as the | A Factotam is catied in Burope, one floor only wo tire, where all the cooking was done. ‘ {0 have gardens there, and so they fow in this country.| In Winter this most illustrious of ‘ t their tis. The Vatican more than 200 years old and un- ' French statesmen lives more conven- lous aff of serv- 10 ¥ 4g0 was occupied o tionally ir fine artment off Ave- ore than 1,100, on Tinan. M. Ciemenceau. who re- nue de 1'Ope b in Summer the Peter ehrated his $4th birthday one time powerful premier tends his fine ga all the Vendee turned | flowers, writes his memoirs, mingles flowers. was horn | freely with the fishermen and vil ’ bis venture s closes his doors sternly > that not tes to his old life size in all o " P | ive its tenant. was born. . ! down in the elevaior{igves the sea and hence Itev. J. A. Torndorff. the emin mizht al be described tronomer and se sist of G ] Colle odd me ldying the fleavens or| earth tremors bestows lov- are of that and beautiful commonly called the cliff brake, the old re’ tield, which the ol 5 it atropurpnie: fills every nool all fol full thi ow with it rivhl 1 in and again | Ihe ancient sea wall been s oachments of the w mt of M. Clemences > the long line of ey | tre Y stretch above the { show signs of decay. and Mrs. Hous 1 president of t Lond: ting friends and and_will som~ me to Washingto! sojourn. La won's most distin I have never before recorded for any reproducing instrument—A(ow 1 have played my works for the AMPICO be- | cause of its absolute faithfulness, and its capacity to preserve beautiful tone | painting. It goes far behind any re- producing piano in these particulars, which a pianist must demand in con- sidering a perpetuation of his ArRT—" RACHMANINOFF ISAN EXCLUSIVE from’ the t 1 the banalit f dife. 1le : : U ferful bit « {velous g ke which has | rinnacle of rd County. | ed as one | most bes 1-un\|l objects in this i vegion. Dr. Torndorff | n oniy such care as lop- | d Dranches and thinninz much luxuriance, for the levies. She 2 S S who died in t century. Tle eminent some percentage in his nat fast. He is. since the death of gent, the master of this art, and will no t A that belovs artist in (i e of Americ tist and his wife have 4c[vmm'no not fai disciple: den frnm Pars coteh The Royal Name - On the Fall-Board RIDE of possession is common to us all -+~ e o e .)‘1‘1 i piano pride perhaps more than any S eore other - - particularly the justifiable pride in the royal name of Chickering Little > into- the Federal Ca d with the fame of market basket. without doubt life that pi ‘s connected the public mind with any one Roosevelt affiliations. But now that| residence” again and the; one of the most impor- als of the Government, \l\(»l d in 2 much more conven- What 1s meant bv “Exclusive Artist®” |,__ : | Giants of the Concert Stage who | SO MANY confliting claims arc being made concerning the so- I ;-gmra’exc/u;[«vg_[yflrtjleAJ’l[P]CO. called “ecxclusive” services of recording pianists, that it is time and who cannot be heard on any so- called reproducing piano. i ; s Many artists, whose playing may be heard through the medium for an accurate definition of the term. The g fuss over the d Genevieve g rd of your piano Rachmani u itzki - s . piar | on the fall-boa Y p ninoff Miinz Levitzki i of more than one reproducing piano, are widely heralded as “exclu- il e Uprights- The AmricoGrand: Ampico-Grands i Chiapusso Rosenthal Brailowsky sive artists.” Actually, however, an artist is “exclusive” when his 1l ! rni,.'f.l-f,‘y' 'i'\lnq mzp&xgl;mé% J?'l:s‘DAN ! Maier Borchard Ornstein | recordings' can be heard ONLY on a single instrument. i fou soung ror 2 Pattison Gordon Nyiregyhazi I infantile adornment will go her St : | , b s s | tra Longworth has declared, Mirovitch Silber Hageman | When an artist is listed as “exclusive” by 742 AMPICO Corpo- I stowed upon he easured . T o . . . . ~ 3 "(:%!l;uu‘]i:‘:“(vp S Souvaine Kreisler ¢%,,,, Hilsberg | ration, it means ho has not made recordings at any time for any other he shull be re ; g ) ivles Cooper Suskind Lamson instrument. v ws she is now, the ! aughter of the Longworths will soon be submerged amongst the Bondieds of littls: tolie in. meramu | tors whose habitat is on Dupont| and many others. The AMPICO stands absolutely supreme, not only as the perfect And Pldjf”g Popu[ar Music re-enacting instrument, but in the number and pre-eminence of the | great pianists who record for it exclusively. The artists listed at the - and As. Louis Hertle, present owners of Gunston Hall, entered efs of Ganston Hat, & ; Vincent Lopez Ferdie Grofe et d th f | Koot cocmn o all the plans re-j g i i ; Bred by e : eft have entrusted the perpetuation of their art to e LR ‘I'dn:. v bl | J. Milton Delcamp Adam Carroll 1 i h P &P i a the one and only o of the i instrument that can re-ena&t with abso! i rery itution they Spteabmoit] i Zer Conficy Paul Lange ute fidelity every clement of i b heartedly the characterfstic wrait of the Masons. All visitors to Gunston Hall have remarked the huge pomegranates which dorn the gates, and this fruit is an| ancient tok Thw[ omegranate v carved Inut, furnisi ament to the | wide curving and is again reproduced in the pediments of the main salon. Mrs. Hertle, who kas a patient, di ent student of interfors of the period when Gunston Hall was farnished by George Mason and so frequently visited by his neighbor, George Washington of Mount Vernon, ion to the had it all restored | grom the original so that is, the | native t in the about the low C rgian mansi Al their masterful playing. i | There is but one Genuine AMPICO . it is obtainable in Washin gton only in these pianos: KNABE ,.comew CHICKERING Though containing the Ampico, these finc pianos remain absolutely unchanged for playing by hand S o/ S S S S S S IS S S ol o VoS S TSI ST S S A S IS SThe AMPICO mihe%fiht The WKNABE tone . . . the AMPICO for of re-enacting interpretation . 1uthoritative de- pendability of recommendation. In this com- bination is your triple g ntee of tisf: tion when you buy the AMPICO in the K in Washington. 1 Homer L.Kitt Co 1339-G-STREET era, so that with the exception o «urpenter’s or Independence Hall in fhiladelphia no dwelling of pre-revo- tionary has more beautiful | rved wood than that which is found | the salon, main hall and dining om of Gunston Hall. The Influence of the Chinese Chippendale was para- on was built, and it offers the most conspicuous ex- imple of its adoption in the Colonies. Col. and Mrs. among the ve nationality. N9 THE AMPICO CORPORATION NEW YORK \_" /- dward House were fow guests of any Vincent s

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