Evening Star Newspaper, September 14, 1930, Page 55

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. SEPTEMBER 14, 1430—PART THREE. Tales of Well Known Folk IN NORFOLK HOME e vt 480 0 5% [ Maryland Bride | |, S . - - . about the Coast snd en- i %m‘h‘hnflo Lenine an 9.8 . tertain relatives friends on board | hrhnndumdmm Years ago. He was the youngest son of In ocla and f icial Life : ; mther than at hotels or restaurants ; o saslasaiion 1o populer the {mmigrant of the family, that Wil- . { u“:llvmldul:"th: Al‘:l;m about ‘Newpart, | since t%l:. Prench zmlu«on. .| llam Havemeyer who came from Lon- . B e BT T 85 5 et Bt SRR S ey R o o 2 it St "IV 3 3 . . €0} - n e Petition by George Washington Bicentennial Com-| p f'.:,“a:,:'g:“g“:;‘, e B gy gl | | it Bemorratic party teade o the Frederic, be- R 8 : ten tourist track. i : k ttitude to be assumed aiong mission Asks New York's Co-operation in oo i ) ; i 2 Iatlomms are pril, 1982, T rny e : 3 % [ ut this af ive sen- Cclcbutmt FCbfllll‘y b/ v 4 1932. : ¢ 2 P i world, nndlmuhx:e;tp&‘):dh:n:nxnnr:a":{ first Havemeyer, William in the 2 Gen. Pershing is & citizen of the o % W.d::% be targets for clubs and in foreign | = juests from rostrums and radio centers societies, not to mention re- ity in his own, is to believe him pos- | for the last word on the im of the g y . 3 boots, He had | L . BY MARGARET B. DOWNING. | society is not only to honor the fllus-| | : \ o R \ | DN, ewport took Cov. Roosevelt of New York has been | trious sclentist, but also to strengthen | ‘ ! ] : e " et e et | , s yarex - Dresented with e petition. from the | the cultural bonds between the two re. gt - T ateept the invitation of some Belgian " ’ it Akr. Henry Ostiotrie: Maveneyer | SOV, SIS Wit iy, I 3000 thud George Washington Bicentennial Com. | Publics and to keep alive the tradi- | : : . ey e present at U opeuine : S04 Hie tho sons, Bamy, r mnd Breds | O mission for co-operation with the Fed- | tonal friendship. Dr. Charles Mayo is | { : - o The 180hole Boit fieid Taid out in the ) ey g o honory 10 | e e eral Government in the celebration of | in charge of the Pasteur Memorial Li- | s ’ ot Bpar & pretty little village in ' e Naws | e o Februpry 22, 1932, The Empire State | brary and has secured for it not only ‘ . P Pt the enclent, farest of ! R LT O LR e ot s B B e e T BHEET with thie Thion e cn | Al e De it teaaed by e | : 3 the heart of tl ; er‘s’k’lln: Sk Moard - 1890 Mr. Theodore A. Havemeyer and | fields connected with clubs and more er, were follow % A e glsiature were always in favor of | cal publications in every part of this 3 5 Albert’s domain, the overwhelming tes- | | 4 same course purlyu.d by the candidates | Mever brought his devotion to golf from marking the 200th anniversary with the | €0Untry. M. Jules Jusserand is per- 3 - 5 % lsual magnificence of New” York whes | forminE & similar service in the various : . S § {Gmou fo B o R T You Like ; Yoy 4% | | for bonors in'the jecent tournament.| (Continued on Thirteenth its sets out to honor a worthy cause. | literary and medical centers of Europe. ; . n Beaulu‘ zn; most mmuausu:’ partici- ™ . S " 3 ] l‘sm'.“’u'fi t::‘“r l;';.{:"" rgfs ’::fm Dl o i Brop sed Y the | _Senor Adrian Recinos, Minister from - . Country slong the Avon. Litie of that : . _ ! memorial will be erected in 1932, or will | SUstemala and one of the active mem- = \ f 3 wooded tract now umllnnt‘ml n’ - -'t' " h a duo n 13 nt Ieast be begun, which will here .l |bers of the Latin American circles, lsh midiands, but the Belglan forest, . B6 perso allty utiiftarian purpose, but will be & mony. | #4kes much pride i the increasing | : a which was French in Shakespearcs MRS. W. ROGER BURROWS, 3 {Qiif ment to honorthe first. President . | membership of the American Club of | ! day. has remained Intact in large aress | pefore her marriage in August, she was is affected by this augurated within the great city in 1789, | GuStemala City, founded in 1896. This | 5 3 until recently when urban encroach- |yiie Henryetta Beall Brady, daughter of y ) “ | club 1s controlled by citizens from this . ment began. The golf field has been | py ‘and” Mrs, Henry B. Brad, Whether this will take the form of & ! Dlanned s much through the woods as ¥ ly of republic, principally bankers and other | mighty tower rising from the Bulleades | TRIPE BUDCIPALY DARKers and other » bossible, and as Spa has always. been of the Hudson or a temple on the upper : | y ctnisse ot DSBS SR NS . bt + bd | American state. Mr. W. E. Jessup, th &t 5 popular with certain Britons, the en- e \n'x‘;nh[.h‘:l“dpfig;‘: s Dot yet declded, | ;" charge of the constrtiction. of the ¥ : Jarged sporting grounds have crowded |one day and in Ireland the next, tak- nl e nounced. Meantime, in Albany will be | PAtional ratiroads. finding the need of 4 | ’ ) 4 | [it'16 the Tast inch, Gen, Pershing play- | g his dogs and steeds across the Irish erecied & Washington museum, and a | 50Cil center, rented a couple of rooms, | | : 5 ed & game over the course on the day (Sea by a special night boat. The Prince distinct service which the State will|Provided a billiard table and some liter- | &3 # i n‘]““‘h opening and! remn#;;d mrtm:(\ :_)llchgVar!‘:sblfil::“_‘lgs:biztagth:ns‘l:;lx:::g: - ature from home, and bega s . ball the same evening. This part of |8 s z render to the Centenary Commission i | 3ture ome, and began what is 4 Belgium s dotted with feudal strong- | but the Duke of Gloucester s & keen F r() C 4 now f the ost f s 10 have its vast body of historians and one of the most flourishing and ed by descendants of men |lover of the cross-country hunts and e vorkers - | popular clubs on the continent. There 3 holds, occupi :ifi?;i'?nr“fii.pfiéy:s‘é’ea"?:i’m‘i!? oihf:oé‘.i.‘m now 489 members, about one-fourth 3 who fouxh? in the Crusades and the |rarely misses a part of the season in ments of the illustrious warrior and | Peing citizens of the United States and Casino at Spa, is a kind of country club | Yorkshire. The King and Queen fol- | r hunt, ! . statesman. To gather every scrap of | POUt half of Guatemala and the re- fi, Mo tinilios of ‘the eutire neighh O Sl aat fccorcaly fu & Duastcn 3 —on the Campus or at Business Washington’s writings and have a mass | mainder scattered among nations of : ¢ - | Europe, those from Great Britain, 5 X when the Wharncliffe hunters are out. of documents ready for the main cele. pe, thos reat Britain, Can * x % x Lord Wharncliffe, who is & captain of | This charming knitted frock, g h i . - "s | ada, France, Hungary, Germany, Italy Dermenent contribution ts honorng s | and the Bouth American countrlés pre. | B The Countess of Wharncliffe has re- | the Guards, has been connected for P wit] to match, of contrast- rst President's memory. dominating. All the officers and 55 per cently been named ‘“master” of the |years with the remount stations and o ing plues and gray is a source of Joy & cent of the corporate members must he & famous pack of Yorkshire beagles, fol- |5cours the earth for the best cavalry St American citlzens, The new club house lowed so frequently by Britain's pres- |and artillery horses. RO & tgl;e ymfinz bwinle“ woman President Hoover recently consented |is the pride of the Guatemglan capital, ent-day royal hunters, and she is the PR 3 A college girl. to add his name to the list of honorary | 8nd is considered the most ornate and | first woman to win such distinction. | That trio of Senators, Mr. Cutting of Schl‘eze d“bydefillsmully sl S lque presidents of the Pasteur Memorial | Spacious between the Rio Grande and | ¢ In fact, very few women have become | New Mexico, Mr. Wh Association established some years ago | the Panama Canal. It is a radiating | MRH SFRR A BIROE PEETON SESLHERR, (X, [ masters of hounds in the British Isles, | and Mr. Barkiey of Kentackr, woie ia suede belt and perky tie in Parls. The former Executive of |point for social life, and when a new Formerly Miss Elizabeth Slater Hazard, daughter of Lieut. Col. and Mrs. W.|compared to the mounting number of | Europe for the past two months, de- | ) 4 France, Raymond Poincare, is the ac- | Minister is sent from this country h~ | Lawrence Hazard of Washington, and since her marriage, August 30, Hving in | Uncle Sam'’s daughters who carry the | voted thoir atteniion almost exclusively tive head of this board and M. Paul |meets his fellow citizens and their | Norfolk, horn. Lord Wharncliffe, whose ‘prin- | to Russia. Three lawmakers represent- oth 406 Mo% Claudel, Ambassador from the French | families at & levee given in his honr nt — ~— | cipal seat is at Wortley Hall, Yorkshire. | ing more diverse opinions not only on 3 3 s “""“;" b"“’d"” in green epublic. has recently been affillated. | this club. Guatemala is ocalled the 7 . in the jmmegdiate vicinity of the royal . " and tan, and brown and tay. 3 Gen. Dawes joined this assoclation 10 | Switzerland of the New World, and Mr, | Puf, unless summoned in haste, he uses | season is at its height in the Scottish | pelace st Sepdringham, !;1“ B e!’n_ | m:?icxséd,bu:n;]lmg‘xl:‘m:t’ c?n‘:‘:’llusm:: 7. years ago. Practically the entire con- | Jessup, veteran railroad bulider, has | the famous yacht Corsair and invites | Highlands. This Summer more than |tertained Edward VIL and George V | will® without doubt iurnish material tingent of citizens from the United | placed on record that he valued the |a company of congenial friends to ac- | the usual number of American celebrities [and his sons. He is an official of the enough to enliven the Winter in and States resident in Paris are members | equable climate in the mountains about | company him. Mr. Morgan plays and | sailed their own craft to the older world. | court and acts as high sheriff in York- | out of the Senate. The Senator from of this memorial association, and the | the Guatemalan capital at more than a | works in Europe, as well as in New | Mr. H. Edward Manville went with his | shite with special guardianship over | New Mexico is an admirer of Russian | executive board is composed of Mr. | billion dollars. York, and he has an aburidance of | family on the palatial Hi-Esmaro, to|the royal preserves. Lady Wharncliffe | literature—that is, in the golden age of Hamlin Garland, Dr. Paul Van Dyke, = x 0w places along the way. But he prefers | meet his royal grandson born in early | is the daughter of the famous sports- | Muscovite letters—and he has been Mr. Charles Downer Hazen, Mr. Hobart | Mr. Pierpont Morgan, like his father, | the heated term in his_picturesque | Summer, and he has been passing the | man, Lord Fitzwilliams, master of @ |lured to that mysterious country to C. Ohatfield Taylor and Mrs. Robert A.|rarely crosses the ocean in one of the | estate, Wall Hall on the Welsh Coast, | months 'since sailing in the beauty | celebrated pack of hounds which bears | study at first hand what has been pro- Milliken. Ultimately the aim of the | liners which ply from shore to shore, | and the late Summer, when the grouse ' spots of the Mediterranean after visit- his name. He often hunted in England duced since the Soviet republic was e : SINCE 1861—SIXTY-NINE YEARS OF PUBLIC CONFIDENCE 9 AM. 10 6 P.M. § s F Street at Eleventh IDER BUANKET SALE| ™ September Sale of LAMPS Now In Progress The September Blanket Sale has become a regular annual event in our store now. At first WE decided that for many reasons a blanket 'a,nd sale was better in September—first of all, why wait till Winter comes to buy what you will need? Secandlj. it is better to have SH AD ES plenty of time to make selections, and third, and probably mest important, there will be many other expenses later on. And new the PUBLIC has evidently become of the same opinion, for they look forward to this sale every year. 20 % SO—here we are with a wonderful stock of blankets; every one All-Wool, a wide selection, a large range of reasonable prices and ; almost every conceivable color. In other words—now's the time, Reductions here's your blankets—are you going to miss it? Every Blanket Is All-Wool All-Wool Plaid Blankets || Plain and Two-Tone $6-39 pair $I |.35 par . $4-35 each $9 each | ‘ SKETCHEDg ~ . - - Solid color all-wao! Blankets, Here is real warmth combined s 't Light, fluffy All-Wool Blankets, in plaids of blue, rose, The famous ““North Star” Blanket, size 70x80 inches. in r: : green, gold, blus, gechid with beauty. Lovely shades in 580'0 g%“’i’:,’.‘:":; gold or green. Five shades. ot s HupieptiSICuve i apa mellow gold or o% blood. With > stretched taffeta $7'35 each $I |'65 each $8 40 pair : $9 45 & All-l\;on}‘ lolisd c;locrso"Nt;‘r(h ;I‘wo-tone Blank{elts ilrt"l orchifi H tar” Blanket. Size 70x80 inches. and green, rose and gold, peac! : paly A special value. and green or orchid and gold. All-Wool Blankets, size 60x80 inches. Plaids of rose, blue, gold, green or orchid. e+ One of our finest quality Bla‘nkeu. 70x80 ‘inches, : O[hCrS Salc—P T iCCd $l650 EaCh In plaids of rose, blue, green, gold or orchid, 4 4 $]2-85 i $15-55 i || Sale of Lambs Wool Comforts Another famous “North Star” Blanket. A remarkable Regulatkh . surface beauty in finish, luster and color. In correct Warm without extra weight, “North Star” Blanket, . | | sgg;;:oysg 75 $4 935 Fall shades, - ... in size 72x84. Rose, gold, green, blue or orchid plaid. | i i i ' Cuaranteed 10095, Wool Filled . SKETCHED: Other Fine-Quality Plaid Blankets s % s rarath e By far the greatest value we have ever offered in a wool comfort, In plain th = p.lsm;u:t}' Specially Priced In Our Sale Up to $35 Pair et e i s b ol e, Aol ‘ ~~ MOSES—FIRST PLOOR * e y

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