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SOCTETY 11 KAPLOWITZ 4 NINTH ST. "38% TOMORROW! A FINAL CLOSE OUT JALE fOR MADAME-MADEMOISELLE BEAUTIFUL CLOTHES OW COJST OF MATERIALS BELOW COJT OF TAILORING FASHIONS DELUXE FOR THE MOJST EXCLUJIVE JUMMER COLONIES : 10 TO ¢35 $ 10} in London Society Season. | [to putEnstisnspeaking omcers on RESSEFS 5 | the island,” said Lady Marfan. “Life | By the Associated Press. | duty where tourists appear in any | 5 EASRREIR C oL ) SU‘\IDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, , 1927—PART 2. When she Is not wearing the grease- D. ©, JULY 31 REVISED DIET MAY CUT | JT05F fitce’ Tinea Jeans which she PELLAGRA EPIDEMIC | Biefer® for £5im 2% oman. - when Arrived From Germany she and her little red plane are sepa. rated nobody wouid know to look at Food List f0T|por" that she prefers airplanes to beauty parlors and would rather tink- er with an engine than shop. She powders her nose as often and dresses her light curly bob as care- iy the Associated Press. fully as lots of her feminine sisters Alarmed by an increase in pellagra | who never set foot inside an airplane. ises_coming to light in Mississippl.| “The worst of flying from a beau- he Red Cross has begun to supple- |ty standpoint,” she says, “is that the lattle of Gettysburg. By one of thos 4 aent the diet of flood victims With | wind burns and chaps my skin. I emarkable occurrences which . 1 ods designed to counteract the | simply can't cover up all the tan, her father-in : 5 iisease and is working in co-operation | and I've quit trying.” ith State health authoritles to give| Thea's skin is well bronzed, and 1dical ald to those aflicted. there are little marks across her nose Rations now include canned toma- | where her goggles press. She h oes and large amounts of cabbage. | very white teeth, which are always he Red Cross is also purchasing | showing in a cheery grin. There was vernment where the farm ws for familites whose life stock was | no shopping for the “air queen” while Al ead’s ahiln: - st, providing first for those having she was in Paris. She spent all her is' now the might itional i hildren. | time finishing up the arrangements > ways of the metery, one of the lax and Dr. Joseph Goldberger, pellagra ex- | for her American flying and talking ny listened ' st kept in the country, with its , . rert, and Edgar Sydenstricker, statis- | with famous aviators assembled in | historic monuments and : @ ician, both of the United States Pub- | Paris in honor of Comdr. Byrd and | the lines of c Health Service, are now making | his crew on the America. e Ll ', four ot the flooded area, where the | | R s | POLICE STUDY ENGLISH. ERMAN AVIATRICE SAYS Paris Gendarnes Learn Language SHE LIKES TO “DOLL UP"‘ to Ald Tourists. | | PARIS, July 30 U®).—So successtui | | Thea Rasche Prefers Engines to | have been the few Parisian policemen Shopping, But Has Vanity Case. nnd mother of Mrs. Bessie Armistead Davis, is one of those who find Wash- ington and its environs quite com- SOCIETY. | fortable enough for an all-the-year ‘Tales of Well Known Folk “ June Bride ‘InSocial and Official Life ‘ family a v ry Gassaway | Davis and_his b the forme Grace Vanderbilt, n from their | ummer outing in British Columbia, he anticlpates a visit from \rs. Armistead was born on AMcPherson farm, that historic & on which was afterward fough sidence in b | Red Cross Change: Flood Victims to Prevent Increase of Disea: Mrs. Albert Brousscau and Ot}ler Daughters of Revolution to Attend Tablet Exercises on Site of Langham Hotel. 1 the Northern Army, both lost their ves in this encounter. T > Curzon family, of which the la 3 operty is now o v the rzon of Keddleston w . His_widow, an Amerl al ¢ merly Miss Hinds of Alabama, is nd s coterle, whose sloj b > the most pictu dinner ¢ and rousing musle, as 5 % ¢ ealth of sat about at leisure instead of 3 s splendid marking o off to a dance or to a bridge sattle grounds. In recent | Jble shaft to the Confederate dead h cen erected and this is not distan ouse of the McPher- sons, now a recording office and gen al ‘utility building. QUITS LONELY ISLAND. the national boa the charter mem the tablet on the bu Jd Lan b sl ] sarty. conference * K %k % The late Henry Huntington's smificent hequest in the library and Washington. an Marino, near Pasa foundation At year: of t ¥ o5t | Pacific Coast definitely on the itine i erousand 1 m- | of the cultured travelel 'his il ot already ranks with the greatest collec- | tion of books in the world | ing compare favorably with the libs | York in the late Autumn. | of the O1d World, many of which h % % | been eight centurles in the making and d many distingy shed one less than a quarter of a eyele | iy - | Correspondence of the Associated Pres 5 this libr s | from Wa LONDON. - dy 2 ain Keith | i3 very primitive. Boat bt e M ) % 3, daug ' Lady Hunting: | dom, and there is not much - o s imongg g because e are too man, have been bought | J9inE old Pruton Pa .‘h\fl,:n],”',‘,;hh,’\" ; slands onth b & . and then and books pertain- r a sheep ra gan a system of weeding out, which nd the buflding | comes to London for the Summer s lted in an_absolutely unique ble place of worship. | cial season | ay of books in English of ancient 5 sly indebted| * re the only white people on LOTEE ind modern type. Mr. Huntington, . he, mer of the foriger ol oddes '| cording to his friends, pondered ear- e on, 4ot i and to conducted Mary | nestly on the side of his museum and liaterro, where, the founder 15 others i oF Now Vork City: Mistiates D e terested me 1 October | of B hIn ARt R e T ot of the District, Sidney R. - i | m vears and where he recently e more than e a away, and of Washington, Chi- gathered in the home of E and San Franeisco. His decision | MRS SAMUEL MADERT, Eefore IwrI wedding, June 18, \Ilu( Eli; beth Iton MES. DOUG il | it er chitdren, Hare th | d will probably come to New | |V . ChiteRla e Lady Marian Keith Cameron Takes . she has | who speak English in afding travelers | that the municipal council has decided 1 bath. | Thea Rashe, the 27-year-old German | A police sc v ina 3 3 | A police school, with an original | air queen,” takes oft for the long hop | entoliment of nearly 50, has been | ESSEJ 3 across the Atlantic ocean it is more |organized. It will teach the English | $ than likely that a vanity case will go | usually employed by those asking for | & COATS | 5 T0720 with her. | aid and directions and the proper —_— DOORS OPEN AT EIGHT A. M $ call but sel- | NEW YORK, July 30.—If Fraulein | numbers. $3 jartment August N “Aviatiot needn't keep a woman |words for a polite and informative from powdering her mnose,” she says. reply. heat in Jamaica has kept wists away this season. T T e et e T e ) EIEEIEE{!§ R. Cabell on Highland terr under Mrs. Benjamin H spices, the D. A. R. took form. Miss Ella Lorraine Dorsey spoke at the unveiling of the tablet on the Langham Hotel, has, under Mrs. Brousseau's direction, prepared brorhuro giving full detalls of the ¢ led to the meeting h a splendid park in an ion where landscaping on e he planned was possible. This H‘qulrsd more space than could have been obtained in the Eastern or Mid- dle Western section, and has resulted in making Southern’ California the ob- ective of thousands of travelers. The | buildings are all superb specimens of | {of George Washington and George Mason in regard to Pohick Church. e old church edifice was hand- somely restored many years ago, but ruins when it was determined to con- secrate it to historical research and to make it a respository of all that relates to this heroic era in the annals of the Old Dominion. George Wythe oclated with Jef- Announcing Sworzyn’s Pur Department | was intimately OPENING Des and | the best Spanit hington in New York City R “:h:"s;m:c SEe. ferson in the early struggles and the founders called | princees Viggo of De: ¥ ipop |BTEECDE had written his name onlJn}:z i St nmark, fo 4, 776, to e reat document, EMhilrimesting io Stoatinors Ay merly Miss Eleanor Green of New|w S ohos ioaitiea ok teiiuelths e » and great granddaughter |laws of Virginia to meet the new Mrsc. CdoTidge, ‘as her friends well inthropist, Peter Cooper, is | conditions. He stands out in history know, has several favorite flowers and | an American in whom the entiré Na-.|as the first manor lord of the region | white phlox is among them. So many ltion may take the most affectionate |to free his slaves and from the time regret-that she did not see the glory | pride. She has made a niche for her- | he took control of his estate, he paid | of the bed which is set right down infself in the esteem of her husband's|a good living wage to all who worked the emerald grass which borders the|people and no member of the royal|on his plantation and with this sum fence on Pennsylvania avenue, which | family enjoys greater popularity. The |they were allowed to purchase a free- now has been for weeks like a sheet| pri is of Kentucky blood on her [hold for a livelihood | of snow set in a glowing green frame. s side and she is, therefore, bl Y it has frequently been suggested to i v fond of horses and, in-| Mrs. Mary McPherson Armistead, | have other varieties of phlox besides . it was her superb equestrian |widow of Henry Howell Armistead that immemorial giant white known which first won the notice of | =——————————"————— 2s “Miss Lingard,” but the restfulness| her royal suitor. She and Prince of pure white blossoms in mid-Summer | Viggo were for some weeks in Paris alivays appealed to Mrs. Coolidge. She | this Spring and early Summer and is partial to hollyhocks massed at the | were conspicuous at the race tracks edge of a border, but the soft yellows,| at Longchamp and Auteuil. They crcams and faintest pinks predominate | were located in a villa on the edge of when Her selections are placed. Biue, | the Bois du Boulogne which is owned | purple and white fiowers, long recom- | by the father of Prince Viggo and | mended by landscape gardeners for |they were entertained by many visit- | Midsummer plats, are in evidence in|ing Americans and by all royal guests the south :plots of the White House |as well. Capt. and Mrs. Jacques Bal- garden, where forget-me-nots, deep|San had an establishment near by purple petunias and blue corn flowers | and Mrs. Whitelaw Reld and her Fow show masses of color where the | daughter, Lady John Ward, were in gaudier blooms of late Spring and|Paris at this time. Mr. and Mrs. garly Summer had been admired. A |Hugh C. Wallace, Mrs. Spencer Eddy hedge of rare beauty against the low | the Princess de (Polignac, formerly wire fence is of well thinned Dorothy | Mrs. Eustis, and Mrs. Ridgely Carter Perkins roses, honeysuckle and pas-| Were &lso in the immiediate neighbor- sion flowers and the combination as|N00od and were frequently guests at one after the other passes into bloom | the entertainments given by “Mrs. Parmely Herrick, who is the chat. spii ,» who is e chat §j SlRgt o IBpRNE poety elaine of the American embassy, | z Prince and Pri . i . Rogers, whe n rincéss Viggo will spend 1.53",5?“:3 Hyeau to er!:\:‘:;.bfi, the remainder of the Summer yacht- clty fathers of the Nation's greatest center of population to establish s marine museum down near the Bat- tery, will without doubt soon see his ambition realized. If New York City decides to build such a needed addition to the municipal museums, Col. Roger: has ready to contribute one of the largest and most valuable collections of ship models in this country, if not in any land. Some 10 years ago he Was instrumental in founding the Ship Mbdel Society, the members of which not alone gathered models for | the decoration of home and office, but exercised zeal in saving notable speci- mens from loss or destruction. In- telligent agents were commissioned in| &1l seaports to keep a watchful eye on all models offered for sale and| even on,those known to exist and to| offer such tempting prices that few owners could resist. The result has been to get practically the cream of ship miodels in this country and natu- rally Col. Rogers' private collection overleaped the space any private home or the largest offices could afford. So he and the other members of the 8o- ety have been placing their speci- mens in the rooms where they hold Qeliberations, but now those quarters are uncomfortably crowded. A wealth of old. {liustrations of ships and build- ng yards have also been secured and such a museurmn would open its doors fully equipped and its contents would De of supreme interest in every sense. ¥ e Open Saturdays wm Adley T. Hun During August AUGUST FUR SALE Tt is with a great amount of pride and pleasure that Sworzyn’s intro- duces to the public of Washington a new department devoted to the dis- play and sale 6f FURS—stocked with the finest of Fur Garments se- lected from the leading fur garment manufacturers of the country. With the opening of our Fur Department we announce’ our First August Sale WITH SPECIAL LOW OPENING PRICES—a com- bination of events that will be welcomed by thosuands of Sworzyn’s customers. OQur prices are the lowest, We urge you to make comparisons! Buy Now at Great Savings in Thf; OPENING SALE OF FUR COATS | Will Reserve Compare These Values Your Coat Until Next Mendoza Beaver, with brown Fox collar, $99 | Sealine Coat (Dyed Coney), Leopard ° shawl collar and cuff. $99 Winter Sealine Coats (Dyed Coney), red Fox Brown Caracul, with brown Fox collar.. $99 New, Attractive, Cool 6 Greenway Inn Onposite Cathedral Mansions SPECIALIZING Sunday | Tuesday Dinner: | Thursday B it | Chicken & Friday a=-aomz=z Island Duck Broiled Steak | Sea Foods 5 Courses | 4 Courses $1.00 85¢ 1:30 to 5 to 7:30 7:30 P.M. P.M. Our _own delicious hot bread and pastries_dayy Col. 10003 ANN TABER Fur Coats Purchased During August Stored Free Until Winter 14> + Our August Sale of Furs —offers Striking Values in FUR COATS, made up in our own shops, and representative of the coming sca- son’s smartest modes. Your inspec- tion invited. $99 $99 $99° American Broadtail, natural Squirrel 5 collar and cufis.. vimoengis SO0 Grey Krimmer, natural Squitrel shawl CBllar, o s e o a A Ao ciee $99 American Opossum, Tom Bay model. . collar ..oovvvvann EREEEUCE LR TR TR e RREE TR RN RE R R YRR R R R R R R R R R RE TR Sealine, wth grey Squirrelet shawl col- lar and cuffs Gray or Brown Squirrelet or Fox collar.. $99 Sealine (Dyed Coney), Marmot shawl, August Sale Purchases collar and cuffa. .+ .wvverrre- $99 Stored Without Cfiarge FINE ALTERING HARRY BACHRACH MANUFACTURING FURRIER Wholesale and Retail 1303 G Street Each Coat is handsomely lined with crepe silk in and REPAIRING n n e sill e kshadu to harmonize with the fur trimmings. e X4 More Outstanding Values in FUR COATS Compare T hese Values Plain Sealine (Dyed Coney) Sealine (Dyed Coney) FUR COATS FUR COATS Sizes 38 to 4 Squirrelet Collar and Cuffs $65.90 to $7500 $79:50 T Marmot Fur Coats 387.50 Beautifully Lined ... 21290 Sealine (Dyed Coney) Natural Squirrel Shawl Collar ang Cuffss. .. . 3135'00 Wolf Shawl Collar and oo onShavlCola 13750 Sitver Maskr Blwws: R Efilfi?t. : .5225'00 X3 QIR SN RPRINY O U IR T Sale of Underwear Silk—Rayon—Voile Teddies Moines, . warded to them in St. R ey i mmwmflflwmr@aflwmmmmfl Pajamas Gowns Bloomers sdea of ecor which he sent the cer Vests used before and he had 7 ted it, crossed out the old address Step-ins and on the reverse side had ame of Cz nd Mrs 1. Also New Costume Slips For Monday Sale of Calf Fur Coats Brown Fox Collar. . . . . Mendoza Beaver Brown Shawl Fox Collar and Cuffs. . . . Brown Calf Fur Coat Red Fox Collar. . . . . Chinese Cat Red Fox Shawl Collar Sealine Coat (PyedConey) Full Fashioned Silk Top fna it o to Tce The Viscountess Curzon ! s, of which Queen ) round«! years, Civil valt that it was q Sealine Coat (Pyed Coney) Summer Ermine Shawl 3179.50 Collar and Cuffs. ... ! Blonde Pony Coat 517950 Fox Shawl Collar. . . . Muskrat Fur Coats 3199 50 Brown Fox Collar. . . (Slfinume Rlsi:coonp([:ozl iAo inner's Satin, Plai Sl Wooll.ining........326950 Somen in Lm;xiun‘s social world ar ; K or lacy and ruf- t professional | ave become firmly | fled styles, ] flowered and \~L figured silks, ious quabty, m or chiffon; manufactured for beauty in our own ite ballad singer. (| mills “to our strict sh of life that perl specifications. The n times a year do thev I reinforced silk top e to spend an evening || and toe assure long the Scotch songs, which |} . Every wanted lhzwmx eeminently well. plenty of zon is one of (Iu‘ most acconi- | ,/ CUNNINGHAM’S, 316 JTH ST. N.W. heavy quality : light soprano voice | and chilgren v flat crepe in the many pastel colorings. vl:n,nx of ns and ha founded choral societies and inaugu- Sated series of chamber music con- AR