Evening Star Newspaper, September 26, 1926, Page 50

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Tales of Well Known Folk In Social gtnd Official Life -Washington's IrineriGireletnteceatatl tin Gossip of Rbyal Engagement—Miss Butler Buys Southampton Estate. BY MARGARET B. DOWNING. Weashington takes a consuming in terest in the rumored engagement of the Crown Prince of Belgium, pold Charles Philippe. with some half dozen other names, who as Duke of Brabant accompanied King Atbery and Queen Elizabeth on their visit 1 ‘Washington in October, 1919. a shy vouth of 18 then.taking small ‘pleasure in the presence of the Capi- tal's prettiest girls, even dancing with them with evident reluctance. The Crown Prince will ba 25 on November 8 and there are rumors that this may | also he hi= wedding day. Princess Astrid, the royal fiancee. will be 21 just a few days laver and the court isurnale are husy with cance of these annives Swedish princess, who also boasta a number of other names, including Sophie Louiss Thyrsa, s the daugh- ter of Prince Oscar Charles Guil- llaume., Duke of tha Visigoths and the younger of the two brothers of King Gustavus Adolphus V. The elder brother, Oscar Charles Au- gustus, renounced his succession to the throne 1o marry one of his moth- er's ladles and is now known as Count de Wishorg. Princess Ingrid 18 the first cousin of the Swedish Crown Prince, who recently visited this country. cess of Denmark. Ingeborg, daughter of the late King Frederick VIII and sister of the present King, Charles X. Already related % many reign ing monarche, by this marriage the Belgian roval house becomes allied closely to tha Scandinavian countries and to Great Britain. Phe Jate John Plerpont Morgan's gift of an embassy for the represent- ative of the United States in Lon don, No. 14 Princess Gate, is now in the 'last stages of its remodeling, en- larging and general furnishing and the ambassador, Mr. Houghton, was recently summoned to oversee important detail of selecting a posi | tion for the flagstaff is rather lofty and the erection of a pole over the building seemed inar tistic, 8o that a compromise has heen made in having a staff over the main entrance and projecting upward a | little. 1t hae required almost two years to complete the work, the ap- priation for the purpose coming n, as it were, in dribbles and causing much delay. The embassy is really two mansions subjoined so as to make a perfectly equipped private mansion and a chancelry ample in roportions and yet aloof from the tving quarters. Victorlan in archi tecture and general appearance and resembling some dozens of other mansions in this Kensington Park section, the American embassy i a bit distinctive. The basement has the signifi ries. The n eliminated in the mansion and | culinary apartments are on the | wureet level, with several ingresses for domestic purposes. What was basement is now devoted to cold elec- tric storage rooms and ample for the central heating plant, which is one of the most massive London has seen in any save ® hotel. The chancelry uses the basement space for the stor- age of papers, with fireproof book racks covering the walls and with a similar heating plant of enormous proportions. Senator Josa del Carmen Ariza, ugtil recently the minister from the Dominican Republic, often expressed surprise that so few Americans visit- ed the anclent city of Santo Do- , where is to be found the old- est dwelling built in the New World b guronea_n hands, the walls of Whidh are still standing. Besides this distinction this fine old mansion was built by the son of the great discov- erer Diego Columbus after his mar riage to Maria of Toledd, niece of King Ferdinand, and his appoint- ment as governor of the colony founded by his father on the island of Santo Domingo. This same View has recently been entertainingly’ ex- pressed by Prof. J. W. Gilmors of the Tniversity bulletin of the Pan-American Union. nto Domingo boasts the oldest hristian church built on the soil of the western world, its crumbling cornerstone bearing the date of 1509. The fine Cathedral was begun in 1514 and completed in 1540 and though weather heaten and scarred on the interfor, it is fresh and attractive within and in daily service. Those of & military trend can examine the oldest fortress erected by the Span- ish in the empire given by Columbus, Torre del Homenaje, and in grim tower, the dlscoverer was im- prisoned by Bobadilla. This also still serves the old city though in a more peaceful role than in the past Santo Domingo, as the island was called. had as its first town Neuva Isahella. the headquarters of the col ony, and the old walls of this forgot- ten center of population are marvels of strength and endurance and make reason for visiting this part of the adjacent islands in the Caribbean. Now that the Washington home of the late John Hay has passed out of his family and will henceforth _be part of the headquarters of the Na- tional Republican Committee, the major portion of the books, pictures | and historical documents which once adorned its library occupying the en Leo- | He was | Her mother is a Prin- | the | The mansion | the | of Californfa in the | the | |rled to an extreme. might hecome harmful to the State. Maine and | other parts of New England do not |intend to hide under a bushel, but a ematic “hoosting” goes forward | on every inch of the lake regions and along the rock-bound . coast. | Matne 1= endeavoring to round up fts | citizens who have hecome factors of | importance in other States, that they may return at least to the extent of | having a Summer home and lending |8 voice to the chorus pealing along | the Penobscot and the sea coast and | the ambition is to have a four | months’ population which will make the struggle to find an abiding place | in Florida during the Winter look like a child’s game. Mise Sarah Schuyler Butler, daugh- ter of the president of Columbia Uni- | versity, and Mrs. Nicholas Murray | Butler, has purchased the beautiful | estate ‘of Mrs. Francis Burrell Hoff- maun, Eden Glassie, near Southamp- ton. She passed a busy Summer. | Eden Glassie was for many vears | (dentified with the social activities of | the late Mrs. Hoffman and for the | briliant annual reception she gave | there for the CatHolic colony of Long | Island and at which the late Cardinal Gibbons was invariably the guest of honor. Miss Butler has gone in for politics and has devoted much time this Summer explaining what she | deems needed reforms in local gov- |ernment. As her parents have many and pressing obligations in Kurope and as they find Summer the most | convenient time to attend to them, they have established their talented daughter under her own vine and fig- tree and given her free reins to carve | her own career. Miss Butler intends | to_run for a position on the board of | aldermen in New York City as she iix already a member of the selectmen of Southampton. She believes tre- h sartorial effect on the | lecture piatform even on the | stump and no woman is more care- | fully garbed than she, when she ap- | pears before an audience. Possessing much of the wit of her father and his’ | pithy way of proving a moot point, | this” young woman has apparently a brilliant career before her in the pub- |lic service of New York, if not in the natfonal sense. Dr. Miguel Abadia Mendez, who on August 7 was inaugurated as Presi- | dent of Colombia, had been for sev- | eral years minister of finance as well (as of foreign affairs, and he is well known to those in public life of this country who have been concerned in the paying of Colomblan claims for damages against this Republic grow- {ing out of the Panama Canal inci- | dent. The new President spent many years as a teacher of international {law In the Colegio del Rosario of | Bogota. and in the Natlonal Univer- sity and he ix considered one of Co- lombla’s foremost scholars as well as | statesmen. Columbia inaugurates her chief magistrate on August be cause this day Is for the citizens of | what was formerly New Granada what Yorktown was to the Colonists and their descendants, for it is the anniversary of the Batile of the | Bridge of Boyaca when she great lib- |erator sealed forever the indepen- dence by his decisive victory over the Spanish forces. This battle oc: curred in 1819 and the 107th com- memoration was solemnly held in conjunction with the inauguration ceremonies. President Mendez will serve for four years. He was elected by the Conservative party by an overwhelming vote in which the op- ponents, the Liberals, took but a mi- nor role. He is a resident of Piedras, in the department of Tolima, and he has scaled every height in officlal service and has been in the legisla- tive branches as member and sena- tor and has held three cabinet posts for varying terms, beginning in 1895 as minister of public instruction. He was also in the diplomatic service and was for three years minister to Chile. mendousiy Senor Manuel S. Pichardo, a noted scholar of Havana, recently an- | nounced that the Royal Academy of | Madrid has creatéd an _affiliated {branch In the Cuban capital and that |20 of its recognized men of letters | have been invited into the select cir- |cle. This privilege has been ex tended to several other Latin Ameri | can republics and it s an honor long {sought by the Cuban government. But despite the bitterness of the | struggle which ended in the indepen- dence of the last of Spanish posses- | sions in the New World, a tie of the utmost affection binds the island to | the mother country. A vast propor- {tion of Havana's business houses are branches of older ones in Spain and there are as many vouths from the | 0ld country serving in them as there |are Cubans. The Royal Academy of | Madrid is as influential in its way as the famous Academy of the Im mortals in Paris and it exercises a | potent sway about the purity of the |language and the standard of ac | cepted literature. Dialects have inev- itably sprung up in each of the Latin republics, as they have in va. rlous districts of provinces of Spain | but the Academy insists on the fine |old Castillan as the tongue of the learned and takes great care to elimi- nate all slang and colloquialisms, both | from speech and from the written | word Daughter of Mr. and marriage to Mr. Baughman taking place August are now with his mother, Mrs, M. Manning ) MRS. THOMAS FRANKLIN BAUGHMA irs. Walter Donald McDonald of Seattle, Wash., her Mr. and Mrs. Baughman arcus in Chevy Chase. mer schools of Cambridge, Manches- | ter, Leeds and Edinburgh, and he has_counted Americans by the score in his audience. Prof. Harmsworth holds the chair endowed by the Wat- son_fund of Oxford and administered ¢ the Sulgrave Manor Board. Some of the lectures of this series were de- livered in_the Moses room of the House of Lords with a hiz attendance from the peers. The Sulgrave Manor Committee recently placed before the American board the project for com- pleting the manor, once owned by a grandfather, five times removed. of the great American patriot. This enlargement would glvé over the en- tire mansion for commemorative pur- poses, whereas now a wing is used by the caretakers and artisans needed to keep the property in repair. Two wings will be added and the beautiful old dining hall will be connected with the grand oak-beamed kitchen with | lits ancient floor of red brick. Now {1t 1s removed from the house and entered from without. ‘These Watson | chair lectures yleld a fine revenue for | the manor, those of Dr. Robert Mc- | given a year ago being as pop- | ar as those of Dr. Harmsworth, as | they were all given in the Mosex room of the British Parllament, « splendid chamber devoted to inter- pretations of law. . Mr. John G. Shedd. f dent of the mammoth Marshall Fleld l& Co., bas vrecently presented the municipal government of Chicago | with two million dollars with which | { to bulld and endow the world's great- est aquarium, and already Mr. Stan |ley Field, who is the head of the Field Museum, is busy formulating the plans. Though two million dol- lars {8 a pretentious sum to be de- voted to such purposes and almost quadruples that hitherto given to such collections, Chicago lies 1,000 { miles tnland and it cannot compete in imany essentials with the already ex- isting aquariums at Naples, New York {City and Brighton, England. These are accepted as the three greatest and most completé collections of the world, with that of Naples the oldest and perhaps the best of all. The lovely city of Italy possesses geo- graphical advantages and in the mat- ter of sea monsters captured readily close by and the various abnormal creatures of the deep which live in {sunny waters. Naples is rich in the natural sense and beyond the drea of money piled up to the billions. For many of these rare, frightful-looking monsters do not leave their immedi- ate environment, and even Brighton, 50 much nearer than any other large {aquarium, has not been able to trans- port the most viclouslooking devil- . The aquarfum will be part of the Field Museum foundation and wiil be housed in a bullding which {corresponds with the general plan of (those already in use. Sclentifically {the Chicago aquarium may surpass the old collections, but not in. pic- | torial effect - presi- Edith Miller, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. William Starr Miller_of New | York City, Is among the most {active of the American hostesses In London now that the Rritish court eason has ended and a “little sea- on,” so to speak, has been inaugu- | rated for the benefit of the scores of visitors from Uncle Sam's domain. Lady Queenborough {s the second wife of Lord Queensborough, who as Iion. Almeric Hugh Paget married Miss Pauline Whitney, elder of the two daughters of the late William C. Whitney and his wife, who was Flora | insects by |grub or larva und | season for the crane fiy. Arthur_Henry Paget, who was Miss Mary Stevens, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Paran Stevens of New York, and Lady .John Rahere, who was Miss Julia Moke of Brooklyn, N. Y. OLD “DADDY LONGLEGS” REVERSES INSECT HABITS Lives as Grub During Summer, But Becomes Active Adult in Zero Weather. Summer ‘is the season of greatest activity of most insects, but the crane fly, familiar by the name of daddy- longlegs, reverses the usual habit of living in Summer as a r decaying leaves 4nd becoming an active adult in the coldest part of *the vear. Krom December to March, even when the weather s below zero, is the favorite A sudden fall in temperature accompanied by snow often occasions the appearance of large numbers of these wingless insects which may be.seen walking ' the surface of the corpion fly, resembling a young grasshoper in appearance, which, strangely enough, belongs to an entirely different group of insects, has similar habiis to the crane fly. Crane flies in the mature stage & very sensitive to warmth and if con- fined to a warm room or even if held in_the palm of the hand for a few minutes they will die. Although any people are afraid to touch them the adult crane flies are perfectly harmless, but in their larval stage they are fearful pests. The larva of the flies live just below the sur- tace of the ground during the warmer months of the vear and are very destructive to the tender roots of plants and grasses. Acres of grass are destroved every vear by these larva and sometimes parks are so infested with them that shrubs and grasses alike suffer greatly, if not entirely destroyed, by their presence. USED LIVING CEMENT. From the ILondon Tid-Bit: Few visitors to Cherbourg, the French seaport, fail to notice the immense breakwater. that protects its harbor. A curlous story is told of the building of this great breakwate: which represents an engineering fea of the most difficult kind. The bullder noticed with what strength and tenacity the common mussels of the shore cement themselv to- gether, and to rocks and stones. Taking sdvantage of this idea, instead of extending the masonry indefinitely, he placed in' the sea im- mense quantities of loose boulders and stones, and upon these tons of mussels were tipped. The shellfish speedily hound the stones with a cement much more durable and satisfactory than any man could have provided. which was followed by a disastrous flood. The hermit sought shelter in the branches of the tree, and was res- cued by the vine dresser's daughter, who took him to her home. The her- mit was very happy and prayed that his two good friends might be glori- fled together. Long afterward the ERYEARDLD SHIP | BEAR ENDS CAREER Old Reliable Cutter, Back From Arctic, Moored at | San Francisco. By Consolidated Preas. OAKLAND, Calif., Septembere25.— The sturdy 50-year.old wooden cutter Bear, prima donna of the United States Coast Guard. is back in Oak- land Harbor, San Francisco Bay, for the Winter after a pleasant cruise over ghssy seas from the frigid waters of the nerth Alaskan coast. This cruise marked the end of the “‘absolutely final vovage to the Arctle.” The Bear has heen making annual “farewell” trips to the icy Alaskan coast so long that her record rivals that of outstanding operatic idols of past and present. Furthermore, if her impresario, otherwise known as Coast Guard Capt. W. H. Cochrane, has his way she will continue her annual voyages up among the fur seals, breaking ice and Eskimos for a num- ber of years longer, call them farewell tours or what vou will. Likely to Express Disdain. If the stanch little cutter could ex- press the feelings pent up in her stout heart as she rides at dock here she probably would not be jealous of the Diesel-engined electric-drive modern steel cutter. Northland, now nearing completion at Newport News, to be- come her successor next Spring. Still confident of the strength in her sea- soned pickled oak keel, heavy ribs and hull that have sygecessfully plowed through ice seasofj after season for half a century, she more likely would be disdainful than jealous. 0 The Bear, 200 fee: long and every inch seaworthy, was built in Scotland in 1874 as a whaling ship. She was purchased by the United States Gov- ernment in 1883 and given her first task in Government service the next year, when she was dispatched to res- cue the lost Greely expedition on the North Atlantic Coast. Then she was sent to the Pacific, and has since heen in the Alaskan Coast Guard service. There are a number of steel ships in the Behring Sea patrol. but none ven- ture as far North or take such chances with ice and rough seas as the vet- eran Bedr. First of “Final Voyages.” Capt. Cochrane was assigned in the Spring of 1921 to take the Bear on her “final voyage"” to the lonely trading stations of the North, and he has been conducting her farewell voyages since then. But now plans are ‘com- pleted for placing him in charge of the patrol station at U'nalaska and the Bear in retirement. “I think she should be kept in serv- ice,” he sald to the writer. “She's too sound to be condemned. T don't believe they ean build a steel ship that will stand what she will go through even yet.” It has been rumored that the Bear would be placed in the salmon carny- ing or some similar service after re- tirement, but Capt. Cochrane said her pride was not to be lowered to that extent. She will become a tralning ship if condemned for further service in the North. (Copyright, 1928.) RAPHAEL'S “MADONNA” FILLED HERMIT’S WISH | S 13 Legend of 0ld Man's Wish for Glo- rification of Girl and Tree Is Recalled. There have been many stories told regarding the painting of phael’s “Madonna of the Chair,” but the one that seems most fitting is as follows: An old hermit, widely known and loved for his charity and Christian service, lived in a hut in the valley. Near his humble home stood a glant oak tree, which he called his “silent friend,” because it gave him shade and sheltered him from the storm. Close by lived a vine dresser’'s daugh-| ter, known by everybody. for her kind ness to the old hermit, who called her his “friend that talked.” One day a terrible storm arose, | Lady who has been buyer of feminine apparel for many vears will shop with ladies of means, and advise them in se- lerting styles most suitable land becoming for all occa- | | sions. Special attention to | | weddings and large sizes. 5 20vearsofuse have proven For appointments Address Clow “Gasteam” to be an ideal economical system Jor the comiplete heating of old or new buildings— homes, apartments, offices, schools,churches, factories and public buildings Box 100-B Star Office or | | phone Adams 766. a Boiler or Furnace ITH Clow “Gasteam,” each radiator is an independent steam heating plant, using gas, the modern fuel. There and notieing the beautiful pleturs made by the mother and her sons quickly took his erayon and sketched it on the head of a wine cask. From | this aketch the artist i sald to hate One day the voung mother sat at |painted the pepular picture of tha the door of her cottage with her two | “Madonna of the Chair.” and thq sons at her side. Raphael passed by, | wish of the old hermit was realized hermit Bernardo died and the oak tree was cut down and made into ‘wine caski By this time the beauti- ful girl had married and was the mother of two fine son ANNOUNCING Our Formal Autumn Display of Now Millinery In this fascindting collection the new Fall modes are presented in great variety. There are charming hats for afternoon draped and with cleverly placed trimmings. killfully Hats of felt show the versatility of the fabrics that fashions them in styles for sports and tailored wear.- These hats creators and are all remarkable values. $10 to $20 This Showing is for Monday and Tuesday are from the leading style Our Patrons Cordially Invited isold € 1214 F St. N.W. is no big central boiler and extensive piping systen. Steam heat is virtually at your finger tips in any room, at tipe half of the second floor looking |- toward Tafayette Square have heen | The Emerson Club in Great George removed to the Fells at Lake Sun- street, London, so popular a resort apee, in New Hampshire, now the |for Americans In that cily, was no property of the only son, Clarence I.. | named as is generally supposed to Hay. The Fells was at one time honor the eminent philosopher and Quite a soclal center for the younger |scholar, Ralph Waldo Emerson, cabinet set in the early days of the |though it has inscribed a phrase of McKinley administration, ~for the | the American’s over the door, “'Ad: Hays had two vounger daughters,{mit no man whose presence would Helon and Alice, now Mrs. Payne |exclude any one elss or thé discus- Whitney and Mrs. James W. Wade- |slon of any one toplc. It requires worth, jr. and quite near their domi- | those who are not surprised or efla wak that of Mr. and Mrs. Ethan shocked, who do and let do, who sink Allen Hitcheock with two daughters, | trifles and know solid values and Anne and Margaret. the former the | who take much for granted to make Wwife of Rear Admimi William S. | the right Kind of club.” Dr. Stanley | s Mr. Hitchcock was Secretary | Coit founded the club 20 years ago in | the Interior. The Fells was | Buckingham street, for purely soctal | very dear to Mr. Hay and he spent | and Intellectual purposes and with very moment he conid snatch from 'so small an annual assessment, less |the board of directors of Guy's Hos- | is verv husyv life in its guiet rooms. | than $10, that the humblast per-| pital, of which her husband is gov-| eross the lake. his closSst neighhors |son of literary proclivities could af-|ernor, and she devotes as much time | tm Mr. and Mrs. Rudyard Kipling | ford to mingle with his kind. The |to charitable projects as to soclal | made manv visits to | Fimerson proved so successful that|events. There are two other conspic- | of State on lit- | recently the arganization moved Into |yous American women married erary matters. Mr. and, Mys..Clar- | spacious quarters right under the | pagets resid in. Londoy ®nce Hav have kept the house just|shadow of the Parliament houses at it was when the illustrlous states- | Westminster. Many of the members sman. diplomatist and scholar passed |of the Gommons, especially of the E,_V in the Summer of 1306. But be- ! Socialist party, bhelong to the club Representative Payn he ix unusually lovely and : Installations her portralt by Joseph IHein, former- 1y court painter of the Austrian Em- peror Franz Josef, created a sensa- tlon when recently exhibited in Lon- don. Lord and lady Queenborough |have u stately home in Berkeley i Square and, as they ‘travel consider- ably, they have not at present a per- manent country estate, though they frequently reside in the Suffolk place fl Hl’.flq CONNECTICUT Avezg of the late Gen. Sir Alfred Henry | Paget, eldest son of the late Marquis | of Auglesey. Tord Queenborough is . tincti " admiral of the Royal Yacht Club and | f D Oual he finds his London home more con- | 0 U 1”0 ’ve 1ty venient for his river activities, 'espe- cially when the lower Thames events |are due. Lady Queenborough is on | any time, of any day. To get heat, just turn on a valve and A Few of the light a burner—and forget about it. Hundreds in Washington Steam pressure is automatically maintained in spite of the sharpest fluctuations in outside temperatures. Clow “Gasteam™ gives you heat in much less time than it takes to get a goagl furnace or boiler fire started. It elimi- nates the trouble and expense of firing a bhig heating plant for a few hours of heat. And it is withont the worries and troubles of the small heating unit. Phone or Write Today: 1.earn how easily and inexpensively Clow “Gasteam” rids you of heating troubles. Clow “Gasteam” Radiators can be purchased on deferred payments. Phone, write, or come in and see Clow “"Gasteam” Liggett Prug Store 13th and Irving Sta. Hay Ruhher Stamp Co., A28 130h Street N.W. Washington-Virginia Rallway Compans 1202 Pa. Ave N.W. SWAGGER FUR coats for Sports and Motor, more dressy coats for formal wear and luxurious wraps for evening. . F‘ugs characteristically Pasternak in their fineness and their fashioning. PONY NUTRIA KID ERMINE NATURAL SQUIRREL RUSSIAN ERMINE KRIMMER REVERSIBLE GOLDEN ALASKA SEAL NATURAL HAIR SEAL HUDSON SEAL (Dyed Muskrat) KOREAN KOLINSKY (Jap Mink) INDIAN BARONDUKI (Tree Rat) DARK EASTERN MINK (Canadian) Made to Order Franklin Clothes Shop, Tne. 1003 Pa. Ave. N.W. Palace Laund 2420 14th Kt N.W. Wise Rrothers Dairy 701 R Street N.F. Foly Trinity Chureh 1618 11th S N.W. The Hecht Annex 613 EMStreet N.W. #nd tha former ®onsult the Secretary Washington Gas Light Company 419 Tenth Street N.W. Main 8280 g ardent. lovers of horses, they |and the president this year Is Miss more space to pasture |Margaret Bondfield and another fem- &nd stahles !inine leader there is Lady Cynthia e 3 ! Moseley, who gives talks to the va- > ';0:;i R f;' Brewster "5‘~‘|:I“:r- :'“ | rious committees many tlrges through rovi 10 an energetic executive the year. Dr. Haden Guest, well ©of the State and one of the promoters | known in this country, is a leading of the project which is engaging the imember of the Emerson Club, and mttention of the authorities of all the | Mr. Harry Snell. Few members of New Fngland commonwealths, name- | Congress from Washington visit Lon- Jv. 1o attract emigration and develop- ' don without receiving an invitation ment after the well known methods o spend an evening or take a din- employed in California_and Florida. | ner {n this unique organization. ov. Brewster has fo vears Journeved down 1o Florida during the | Prof. Harold Vivian Harmsworth, most severe portions of the Winter | who i8 professor of American history #nd he and his party have never neg- | in Oxford University, has been deliv- Jected an opportunity i impress on |ering a series of lectures on ‘‘Some the denizens of the Sunshine State British American Crises” in the sum- that when old Sol hecame too ardent - _ m— ——— 5 Paris Suburbs #own their way, the climate of Maine | was all that could he desired He was among the enthusiasts whe un | . furled the banner bearing the Ve;nndvl French tamil; Artists, will give persion to American girl. Unnsnal whe pointed nut most eloguently that L e o dmis. | opportunity. Write Bdward B. Har- gble im the individual but which car— ris, Kensington, Md, R ve given Amid this splendor was born France's fame for beauty. Gouraud’s Oriental Cream contributed to this renown thru its use by fa- mous Court Beauties. Gourauo's ORIENTAL CREAM Made in White - Fleah - Rachei iiend 16a. tor Trial Size Ford. T. Hopkins & Son, New York 3 Manufactured by JAMES B. CLOW & SONS, Chicago EACH RADIATOR IS AN INDEPENDENT STEAM HEATING PLANT “A Bigger and Busier Maine.” and | Ready to Wear.

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