Evening Star Newspaper, November 27, 1927, Page 58

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12 SOCIETY." THE SUNDAY STAR. WASHTNGTON: T. ., NOVEMBER 7. 1927-PART 2. JOCTIETY? ’ Lutuns nts. sois. 0 tranatorns the st | ‘l\\l«v:\- as well as its compensations |ciais and those In the consular ’ I \ ‘Nl I< . Icile into an annex of the adjoir ” i Mr. and Mrs. Woodward spent FAE| loe: Taved beat DUt 1o the A ‘dleS Of ell 1‘1() W 1] F()lk | ARMY | Morgan library ~which had T D Bride of November vears in \}m\l:zvyv_ on durin ¢ aroo h f.“ re founded some 40 years ago. That v was recently carried out hy Mr. Mor s 3 1 d Off' : 1 l 'f ! n and the transfor ’ 5 » te n joke . > « sformation of the : i at the State but a_reality t . jence into a splendidly constructed = l 1S appointed o ans who lived i ll OCla arl ICIa 1 € e g - . ? v was made possible without de- at the “City of the Cove re glad to rest on the hare molishing the exquisite pale pink 4 int.” eneva now is called My ' ich covered {marble interior in which the former 1 \ :w and My f ird. who lives on e the days of Minister and Mme. Royen to Observe Feast of J : . RO TR ’ % o in Chestnot. Hills, T b heim, is incline I New. however, St. Nicholas December 3—Notes of . ver Gully : § x4 ers and i b some ot i cing sk seray | \‘ : o 3 | nouncing the present purpose World Celebrities. ; : : l165 105 s sl e, one anhis WA o | is connected with the main library by , 4 covered colonnade and the two resont dean buildi: blend inte their common g @R ¢ purpose most perfectly. Thirty-ninth The Minister from Netherl SRl thdiar. o A ] | street and Madison and Fifth avenies and Mme. Roven w e 8 the work of the y sted sumptuous p st of St. Nicholas o < petual Adoration . : : | vate ellings. but the only one re nn the ho since there are no child s« whose g hapel g 2 Gl | maining in . like its original At present. the di ! are at Vistree Paul’s Church . form is the Mor mansion. The ny of the picturesque fe: > nun - of g 8 . : : { mammoth house built by the lite Lis which marked it when n G e o = i 3 | penard Stewart has heen years occu Graefle. son of the former Min- | 40, C0ClCNG e an, Co ! . | By R o s now royal governor of 14¢|de Mecus, to provide : i 3 3 i { his son, William Rhinelander Datch East Indics, entertained in the vessels for the churches S L | built a new home in the nal way. For centuries the 3 im in her colonies : Rl : . R avenite: f St. Nicholas was nationally onvent was established in Wash b o ted bot the religious and in 1900 by the late Cardinal Mrs. Andrew C : was the hos civil way i it is merely a makes a special a ¥ : tess recently e Hiant nuprial whimsical of holiday. when mas | CTE o < to donate th | ceremony in_the mansion on Fifth sive pack are solemnly delivered | giccarded garments, evening wraps |avenue and Ninety-first street in 1o the grownups and to De UNWEAD- ap gawns of velvet or heavy satin York City when her niece, Miss Louise ped and found to contain SOoMething | jico” and nets. wh Wfter Deing 5 A Whitfield. was marricd o Mr. David very small and valueless wifts, 1Ke a Geaned and remodeled ave le into ¥ ; Dallas Odell. Mrs. Carnegie superin toy or a hall or sometimes a | yospments and sent to poor mission S 2 ; tended all the arrangements and had 8 b . ipple. The children. how: hurches of the Far West and in the . B . 1 wealth of oran, ssed e due to a I fts of toys and candies. lgauth, Lady Isabel Howard not onlv irom her Florida ests i § : ; % a correct in!. and parties are populdr on this diy | pgkes canvass for such s 3 . ¥ i ments were as carefully execut wen : cid scalp in Holland. The Minister and Mme. | qane hor friends. but 8 3 : it tho! muttiage. o8 hew ohly f d scalp. Royen have two sons, Robert Winth- | ghe joins the sewing classe | {ter, Margaret Carnegie, 10 v ! e m rop and Johan, b of viion convent for an entire . to Mr. Roswell Miller. Mrs. Carn. ) alp. and your hair will vears ago the Catholic m - s usual spent the Summer in Scot- § 4 1t makes however e littl ) the fami- | ihe diplomatic corps arl : 2 nd had with her many fricnis § & 2 N P lies of the lo staff. ) ritd, | at this convent, as w ntribut oy S a6t £ 5 " e A few daughter of the secretary of =2 |ing everything which could he of use o, | Highla Taterisha attended dll the s of Danderine will do this; | tion and Baroness van Betzlaer von | for the purposes. But life has become . al fiestas in Germany and the . i ¢ implies, Dander- Oosterhaus: Rose Marie, little daush- | <o complicated and time for other S o AR b GG R ; s g irufi di ter of the agricultural attache and|than necessary J St ind her niece, who has made her home f 2 4 olve tesatter Day AMme. L. A. H. Peters, and the \v:’«‘_" few have 1l s tice. Lady 2 i in the Carnegie household for the past . ki T an- daughter of Attache and Mm Rich 4 N A how G & 2 S soarl vaslice sompRiion: et i i . ed. every par cle o st i i e e : A L L ; ing thoroushly in the Summer snd : 1 ) has heen dissolved ! born' in Mant Septemie i, ALY S Lomatly yeins ¢ i Autumn, Mrs. Carnegie devotes the T o8 % il 1 he sns- 21 these homes oo Nicholas | president of the Tabernacls oty . o el e U e, HARRIS & & el shlbn will be honored as in the home co uy. as this sew class is ecalled, and 3 i i (he varioiie’ pRIBATREODIC. Tnd SR MG 1 a t try and ere” will he merry makingafter her death. Mme. Riano. wife of i i 3 tutions founded hy her hushan S > for both the young and the mature. |the former Spanish Ambas: 3 e 1 : e The Netherlands ation will_be | served for a time. Nearly all of 2 . o et Chnnecisl Sake i MRS, H DUNNST CHAP elf—is an acrid represented in society t s American diplomais are mem o . Btonomics () Bitt: Mo Bride of November 19, formerly U A Sl . the new counselor. M. L. 4 s society and contribute | T i e Annd Ramsay., the hair when it is Hoorn, who came to Washington dur- | money and goods. while most of the - & skilitlly end comgletcly ife the |- D 1, or after exercise. And ing the past month, being a bachelor | cawing is done by classes from con- . ey At e v for thirty-five cents at any drug- and socially inclined. He was at-|vent schools. 3 Century Schools at Burano near Ven- |, c0 who wish to make this st toHeA to dhe wtall of M & il h whose engag, e which have been under roval pro- i B e el . vou can get a bottle o tome and recently was transferred; ive in Co s | ¥ ment to Capt, 2 . BARY | tection since :m- days of (\i[w e T cha oty ! anderine that will. keep vour from that city to serve under his for-{ K. Scott will he remembered LT and in }\hu h the late ‘zw‘;'n v‘.nN oft and sweet and “on mer ‘The agricultural attache|for his ceaseless endeavor to make| ; | of Ttaly so interested. M ; s wood behavior” for weeks! and Mme. Peters will entertain_ for| good roads a national issue and to|about 30 years in the late sixteenth!both of whom felt the urge for a ca |Negie ma Mr. Stanley r a ! the Winter the former's sister, Miss have the national le: ive body ntury Lady Lee hastened to the reer which only New York could sat | fam re akir entel phia, who has arla Peters. | take over the matter in seri < { place where the deed had been found, | isfy Mss Alicia Patterson IE teachers came from the h F neva, hasoy ; . Y — linstead of contributing f according to the story, in an old brass. | the stage and her sister o wnd had unlimited experience. i : ok Princess de Ligne, wife of the Bel-imeager sums for spe I <. | bound box purchased by a villager self of an opportunity for ary lace made in Pittsh ' take . v an Ambs . and her daughter.|\Mr. Seott served six yvears f auction. But the deed did not ma- | career, matriculating in 1 of France and Brussels, « . v an of tion in Gor . Aliza War ervening. he | terial < had it nd sett'ng ahont short story to this department come from th < favs of the Le - are champion {and the World terial 15 the advance notic also have gathered compelled to give up his cru Althouszh every student of Washing- | with a vim. Their parents, highest social classes as well as fro laurels in the field of sport. The| except in a local But ton history is” willing to grant that | familiar phrase of = today, chatelaine of the beautiful emt omplished marvels in his own State | Sulgrave Manor is a worthy shrine in | “stood by unfil the fever on ) achusetts avenue, purchased | and now he finds great enjoyment in | every sense, and a bond of unity be-lits course Cupid cb <oon after the World War from the|driving his four prancing hays at-| tween Britain and her former colonies, | Alicia’s plans and after a successful | Ingalls estate, is th2 daughter of M.|tached to an old-time coach over tha | there are few who believe that Sul- | season. in which she attracted the | St. Paul de Sincay of Brussels, a |excellent roads which may be found | &rave Manor was ever amor favorable notice of Morris Gest, she famous master of hounds in Bel I over Pennsylvania. So many |actual possessions of Laurence \ yielded 1o the importunities of I and a frequent visitor to England for [ horse lovers reside in the Keystone | inzton or his son Robert. The manor | lint who had heen her playma the Autumn sports. His hstoriic pack | State that its roads have always been | was 1o v royal_dect snitor from their early 1 at Vielsam fell a victim to the Gei repair. and do not so many | Laure: - »| James Simpsen. The mar man invasion, a catastrophe which|do, date the coming of the | the crown, but with a monetary pace under brill caused heavy sorrow all over the | motor vehicles. (Coaches are to be sideration which had to be pa f younz people kingdom. Since the war the hunt|found on many roads from Philadel. | the actual deed was conveyed < | will spend the Winter in the Riviera. clubs have _gradually n'rasscrlflg phia_to Pittshurgh. horse-drawn and | evident that these conditions were not | On their retugn the vouns Simpsons | themselves. Princess de Ligne and|keeping up with the procession of [ complied with, for Robert was evicted | will live in ther own home on the her family have ridden to the hounds |autos. M. ‘s daughter <|from the property and found an Lake Shore drive adjacent to the THE PACKARD SIX since they could sit a horse. The|jean RBrowne Scott, who rec 1sylum w.th his family at Little Brin- | mansions of the elder James Simp- | Ambassador is a world traveler, and | graduated with high honor from|ton under the patron of Earl sons and of the Joseph Medill Patter- f 5 PASSENGER SEDAN after his appointment to Washington | Bryn Mawr, is of the noted | Spencer. Lady Lee hag been unremit- Mr, who is a brother | I he noted the absence of President |eauestriennes of her scction and has | ting in her efforts to clear this part Patterson, the former | | *Coolidge and that he could not be|been rearing blooded horses since she | of the history of Sulgrave and she Countess Gizyski, now Mrs. Elmer | | officially received. So he and the|entered her early teens. As an ex-| maintains azents in many parts of | Schiessinger, whose lovely white | princess and the oldest daughter, | hibitor, she is known all over the| Northamptonshire to search old ree-| marble mansion in Dupont circle was Flizabeth. spent three months in the | country andfish« rarely fails to have | ords and to buy old documents. But|the White House for four months, Relgian Congo, one of the few regions | her best offerings on hand when | the institute flourishes despite the has considerable literary talent and at . which they had mever before visited | Washington has a horse show. | doubt cast upon. the authentlcity of | ane fime contemplated letters as a | AT THE FACTORY Just as soon as occasion permits the SR | Washington ownership. A s . . Mr. Patterson is of philan-| ador and his family are to be| Tord Lee of Fareham. who is pres-' modern hotel was erected last $ thropic trend and founded a society to in the famous horse | ident of the Sulgrave Institute and mer and it has been prosperous from aid poor boys obtain an education and of Virginia about Middle-| who with Lady Lee. formerly Miss | its opening. profitable_employment | burg and Leesburg and will join the | Ruth Moore of New York City, has | 2= elder John Pierpont Morgan. | fox hunts. contributed so generously to the| Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Medill Patter- ' res g that the residential portion foundation, recently received word of | son have returned to Chicago, after > rork City had long passed -d during both the finding of the original deed of the | two years of what they deemed exile | from the location of his fine residence her residences in Washington. for she ! property to Laurence Washington, New York. Mr. Patterson yielded |at the southwest corner of Madison spent two years here from 19061908,/ who was lord of Sulzrave Manor for | to the importunities of two danghters, |avenue and Thirty-sixth street, ad- | ralize the 1 secretions von't hold a wave. ot so ecasily de- The Packard Six 5 passenger Sedan $2,454.65 Fine Car Transportation at Lesser Car Costs GDDM(Q__.?a | T IS EASY wn th he a t of e ‘._\‘u-l _v d | | to own the the amount of money you > vi ;4 Packard Six —easy and must pay at any one time to economical. There is no fi- own a Packard. And in either nancial penalty involved in case the monthly payments DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY scquising Mmeiews out= ; g : L will never be more than $40 SILVER ART PIECES | standing Six, orinoperatingit. or §50 greater than for a lower HIS sale offers . . . at raductions of 20% to 50% . . . | e e our complete NEW stock of absolutely perfect dia- | worth, and apply its value monds . . . fine watches . . . fine jewelry . . . silver iy b lived Packard Six costs no art pieces in a wide selection of values g SN (R SRR e el more than the purchase and g\\;eléyh item dinStthf' StOSr% 1'wi[£lh tthe e)}:\ce‘ptionf o]f Hamilto)n ;}f’f’.tp.aCkar‘;th‘x‘ —— trading in of a succession of Vatches and Sterling Silver Flatware, knives, forks, spoons), ‘ it is worth more than the s Bt thel satisfacs at SALE DISCOUNTS. This stock must be sold before we ‘ asusl down popRical YOUE .. o va i move to our new and larger location at the extra credit will reduce the i monthly payments. Even if N.W. Corner F and 11th Streets less, it will materially reduce = Wehen may we serve you? There we must continue the renutation and name which we have estab- | - A lished in our career of over fifty-one years. You can readily appreciate i why, then, that DURINC THIS SALE—as ALWAYS — each purchase ’ is backed by the regular R. HARRIS & COMPANY unqualified guar- | % ; antee. This is YOUR opportunity, especially now during the holiday [6) buying season, to obtain finest gifts at substantial savings. ALK————T—LM——‘SN——LE—-—“(M | ~ Packard Washington Motor C RHARRISGCO | | Pt Vosncon Moo Gompu T2 &D J'tSJV‘W , OPEN EVENINGS JEWELERS AND DIAMOND MERCHANTS FOROVER HALFAGENTURY To own and operate the long- tion of distinguished, fine car transportation is far greater.

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