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The New York Times from New York, New York • Page 23

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New York, New York
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23
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THE NEW YORK TIMES SUNDAY; MAY '21. 1 916. 4 Ae- f. Y. ---Carpets Proofed cr Theft xJln.l ly A v-i Trent re Laced For con- 4 venience ef' eut-of-towa' Cofmu, das na-J.

t.Usd.j and de Uvered In kra eor.v:noe you ef tfit i tn.x rcj" corsets mads1 1 Z. St, X. T. City. I 7 Ccntti.

fcuilJcr of the f. figure. AH prices. So! exclusively at Myer Ivy- Corset -p. 32 Fifth corner JUKE WEDDINGS AWE 'a aaa il: Roots TTc Is rn-rfata M'O th five knt t'l-lj mft lilnrt ias of Fm Flow.

I rvt DaniLaa till Arts. ,1 I -n-ncy ft tSa hlia. 1" for fre rf.o rru-iir lot T. ZcZlL-on Co. I 3 Eu New York rci'nt actions on All Order during this merit H.

rrfectW fitted sport i t--. a rarr.br cf sport and 1 model suits as low as Phone EfTant 1393 THLEHEM 4 p. M. 8 P. M.

oratorio 2 p. and 5 p. m. :,3 int minor 1 1 in CorKtinx" "7,, Front Lace Corset J33 to $10. FCI EOTS Tw months or, fartr piay and lHv fcKT of tl 'rn Prtw--t it Af; i hoo -i.

J. a i Irrm rrttoa boot. THE past week. Uk thoa precd-Ins It. broach th foriua.1 announcement of manr ens-ace-ments and, also an unprecedented number of announcements of wedding date in the near future.

Look-ins backward, it would difficult to find on the social calendar a season 'irtien so many engagements, and of such importance, have been announced as in tha.Iast few weeks, or a Spring Summer in which so many weddings have been arranged for Max and Jnna. A feature of no little interest in connection with these engagement and wedding announcements Is the number which the bridegrooms, prospective or future, are naval or military men. notably the number of English officers whom American girls have wed in the immediate past, and of which the cable brings news, or who are to wed in the near future. There are also to be credited to the litti season an unusual number of military and naval weddings that are purely American. Miss Elolse Plrsson whose engagement to Lfeutenant Del van Blood good Downer was announced on April IS, will be married to him on Thursday afternoon.

June 1. at 4 o'clock In the Church of the Transfiguration. Miss Blood good will have" Mrs. Horace Green (Miss Eleanor Rodman 'Town-send) as her matron of honor, and the four bridesmaids are to be the M'ssca Rosalie Coe, Frances Gordon Wendell, Emily Sherman, and Louise Downer, a sister of Lieutenant Downer. John Van Schalck Bloodgood.

a brother the bride, is to be best man. and there will be six ushers Lieutenant Archibald' Stirling. U. 8. lieutenant Frltt rUeiitold.

U. 8. Ensign Donald 7. Washburn. U.

John Kerr. El-mendorf L. Carr, and Mr. Montgomery of Flushing. L.

There is to be a una reception after the wedding ceremony at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fanshawe Bloodgood. East Fifty-sixth Street.

The weddin? of Miss Anne K. Eastman, a daughter of Joseph Eastman, and Reginald E. Wigham. the son of Mrs. Thomas M.

Wigham and a nephew of the late Robert W. Rutherfurd. is set for Thursday. June 1. at.

4 o'clock. In the Church of the Messiah. Miss Eastman Is a granddaughter of the late Dr. Robert Collier, who for so many years was the pastor of that church. She will have Mrs.

William R. Maloney as the matron of honor. Mrs. Maloney was MUs Ella McCalt. and Miss Eastman was an attendant last year at her marriage to Mr.

Maloney. The Misses Virginia R. Duane and Constance Mc-Call are to be the two bridesmaids. Sir. Wigham will have his brother-in-law.

Dr. George Gray Ward. for his best Irian, and thetushers are to be Thomas C. and Norman F. Eastman, brothers of (he bride; also Samuel M-Cullagh.

W. Schuyler Smith. Prentice Strong. Dwight E. Robinson.

J. Harvey Williams, and Carl L. Vletor. A Urge reception will follow at the home of the brfie's father. 4 East Seventieth Street.

The Rev. John Hsynes Holmes and the Rev. Karl Rclland will officiate. MUs Eastman's engagement "was announced in December of last year. Her fiance is a Columbia graduate, 'class of Ui, Is a Lieutenant in Squadron and a member of severs clubs.

The engagement of Mils Elmor Whither Kendall, the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Y. Beats Kendall, and Andre E. Gross, announced on Tuesday, was one of the most interesting- engage ments of the last week.

Miss Kendall came out a little more than two years sgo. and has taken part in many ama teur entertainments for charity, and was a member of the Junior League and one of the most popular debutsntes of her year. She Is a younger sister. of Mrs. Archibald K.

Denny of Pittsburgh and of Mrs. MalUand F. Bishop of Pasadena. Cel. She Is also a sister of W.

Floyd Kendall, a granddaughter on her mother's side of Mr. and lira R. Hay- den Whitney of Boston, and on her father's side Is a great-granddaughter of the late William Reals of Boston. Mr. Gross is the only son of Mr.

and Mrs. Charles E- Gross of 25 East Thirtieth His mother was Miss Mary L. Miller, a daughter of Henry James Miller of Cincinnati, the first Preeid-nt of the Cincinnati Gas and Coke Company. The present Mrs. Gross is his aunt, she having been Miss Leonora a sister of bis mother.

Hts paternal grandfather was Andre Croj, who came here from Strassburg. Alsace-Lorraine, and who built that section of the Dayton te. Michigan Railroad runnln from Dayton to Toledo. He was graduated from the University of Virginia in 1911 and Is now the head of the bond department Of the Newark branch, of the New York firm of Post It Flagg. brokers.

No date' has been decided upon for the wedding. One of the largest country weddings of the Summer will be that on Saturday, June 10. at Rest-a-Whlle. the country estate of Mr. and Mrs.

II. II. Vree-land at Brewster. N. when Miss Marjorle Augusta Vreeland Is to marry George Edward Von Gal of Dan bury, Conn.

The ceremony will take place at 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon, and Is to be performed by, the Rev. Dr. William A. Granger, the President of the Baptist Missionary Convention of the City of New York, who also solemnised the wedding of the parents of the bride. It will take place on the lawn, where the reception is also to be held.

Miss Vreeland will have Miss Ruth Quackenbush of New York as her maid of honor, and the bridegroom's slater. Mrs. Edwin Green of anbury, i te be the matron of honor. The Misses Char-lott Werner. Marlon Feustmann.

and Mr rue rite Jacquette of New York, Helen Barnard of Buffalo. Katharine Dwinnell of Minneapolis, and Theodora Von Gal of Danbnry are to be the bridesmaids. Mr. Von Gal will have Edward Green and'Dalton Griffith of Danbury. Hsrold Vreeland R.

Bomera Vreeland, James F. Vreeland. and T. Reod Vreeland. the'last four all being brothers of Miss Vreeland.

as the ushers, and his best man Is to be George Green of Saturday of this week. May 27. will bring a country, wedding In little Christ Church at L. where MUs Julia Hey ward Edey. the only daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Frederick Edey. will marry Douglas Warner Paige, at 12:30 o'clock The special train for the wedding will leave the Pennsylvania Station at A. M. and returning will leave Bellport after the reception, which will be held at- the Edey country home, Nearthebay.

The Rev. Dr. Joseph Smyth reotor. of Christ, Church, will officiate. Mrs.

Frank A. B. Washburn. (Miss Pauline Clarkson.) a cousin of Miss Edey. Is to be the matron of honor, and the Misses Elisabeth Clark-son, another cousin, and Miss Kathryne Baldwin are to be the two bridesmaids.

Mr. Ialge. who la a son of the late John Keyes Paige of 8chenectady, N. will have his brother, Alonso Paige, for his best man. Frank A.

B. Washburn. Bevls Coulson. Douglas Campbell, and Richard Warner are to serve as ushers. The Important wedding of Saturday, May S7.

In town Is that of Mrs. Gertrude Sheldon Sands, the widow of Samuel Stevens Sands, and Richard Whitney, which Is set for II o'clock noon on that day la the little Church of the Holy Communion, at Twentieth 8treet and Sixth Avenue, and the rector of the church, the Rev. Dr. Henry Moy Mottet. will perform the ceremony.

Mrs. Sands will have no attendants. Her father. George R. Sheldon, will give her In marriage, and George Whitney, whose marriage to Bacon, a daughter of Robert Bacon, at that time Ambassador to France, took place on Long Island, Is to be the best man.

The ushers. In number, have not been decided upon. Mrs. Leverett Bradley of Boston. announces the engagement of her daughter.

Miss Margaret Hinckley Bradley, to Roger Dyer Swain of Cambridge. Masa, a son of the Rev', Joseph 8. Swain and Mrs. 8watn. iMUs Bradley's father was the late Rev, Leverett Bradley of St.

Luke's Church, Philadelphia. Her three brothers, all Harvard graduates, are Leverett Brad, ley. Walter Hinckley Bradley and Ralph Bradley. She is a member of the Chilton and Vincent Clubs. Mr.

wain waa graduated from Harvard in 1001 and is a law partner of Richard Walden He has been an active worker -and: also active In the militia. He Is the Captain and Adjutant of the newly formed regiment of Field Artillery. His younger brothers are Lorlng T. A. Swain; and Stanley Swain.

Mr. Swain la a member of the Harvard and Union Boat No date for the wedding has been announced. Mr. and Mrs. Henry K.

Browning announced at the end of the week the engagement of their daughter. Miss Kath-erlne 8.. Browning, to Alfred E. Thur-bcr. a son of Mr.

and Mrs. Alfred C. Thurber of this city. Miss Browning is a niece of Mr. and Mrs.

William Hull Browning a sister of Mrs, George 8. Dickinson of Irv-lnkton. N. and of Mrs. H.

Stuart Green of Orecemere. Tarrytown. She also has a young sister hot ret out. Miss Nathalie H. Browning.

No date has been mentioned for the One of the most generally Interesting announcements of the week was that ot the engagement of Miss Dorothea Cable, the youngest daughter of George W. Cable, the author, and one of our -best-known American novelists, to Charles Boardmsn Hswes. of Cambridge, the elder son of Mr. and' Mrs. Chsrlea T.

Hawes of Bangor Me. He a Bowdoln graduate, 'class of 1911, snd is on the editorial staff of The Youth's! Companion. Miss Cable's sisters are Mrs. A. L.

P. Dennis of Madison. the wife of Professor Dennis, and two other sisters. Mrs James Alfred Chard and Mrs. Boardman Wright.

Uve In Montelalr. while. a fourth sister Is Mrs. Harold 8. Brewster of Blsbee.

Aria. Miss Cable'a mother was Miss Louise 8. Bartlett of New Orleans. She died in 1904 and In 100 her father married Miss Eva Stevenson of Lexington. Kr.

Among his famous novels are Madame Dfllphine." Old Creole, Days." The and Mr. Cable has been called a New Orleans John Harvard, as for years he studied the Southern prisons and in many. Instances succeeded In bettering them with touches of wholesome humanity. 'Mr. Cable has a' charming old colonial home, called Tarry a While, at Northampton, where Miss Cable's wedding Is to take place on Thursday.

June with none but the families and relatives present- On Friday the engagement was published of Miss Doris BisselL the only daughter of Mrs. San ford Blssell. and granddaughter of the late Dr. Arthur Blssell and Mrs. Blssell of 68 East Fifty-sixth to R.

Larante Blge-low. Mr. Bigelow la the head Of the banking firm of Bigelow A Co. of New York, and w-as graduated from the University of Michigan in 1005. He Is a member of the St." Nicholas Society.

Ardsley, and New York Yacht Clubs, and comes of aa eld New England fam ily. The engagement of Miss Dorothy Adams of New York and Boston, a di rect descendant of John Quincy Adams and a daughter of Henry C. Adams ot. Bralntree. to R.

Klngsland Hay, a son of James R. Hay of Nutley, N. was announced last Miss Adams Is a niece of J. Dunbar Wright of New York, and a granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

J. Howard Wright, and la a niece of Mrs. William C.De Lanoy ot STTT Park Avenue. Mr. Hay is' a direct descendant of Colonel Samuel a c'oarter member of.

the Society of the and a grandson of the late Rev. Dr. Philip Cortland Hay of Newark. J. On Wednesday Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Williams Gibson of Aveley Farm. Woodbury, announced the engagement of their daughter. Miss Katherlna Gibson, to Augustus Van Cortland t. son ef'Mr.

and Mrs." Augustus Van' Cortlandt of New York and Sharon. Coun nephew of Robert B. Van Cortlandt. and a brother of Misses Charlotte A. and B.

Van Cortlandt. Miss Gibson la a sister of Mrs. Hsrold Mestre, Miss Hester Gibson, and Robert Hj Gibson. Dr. Edward Gerry Tuttle and Mrs.

Tattle have announced the engagement of their daughter. Miss Kathleen Harriet Tuttle, to Laurence Dowllng, a son of the late Dr. John William Dowllng and Mrs. Dowllng of New York. Mr.

Dowllng Is a senior at Columbia. and Mrs, Edward 8. Van Zlle this city announced yesterday the engagement of their youngest daughter. Miss Harriet Kee Van Zile, to Donald Lal Greenleaf of New York and Ashland. Ky.

Mr. Greenleaf Is the only son of James Leal 'Greenleaf. a noted landscape architect and formerly a member of the Faculty of Columbia University. Mr. Greenleaf was graduated from Williams College In 1912 and from the Columbia School of Minea as civil engineer In 1913.

He la a member of the Delta Psl Fraternity. Miss Van Zile Is a sister Mrs. Gerald AJ Cunningham. wife of the Rev. Mr.

Cunningham, rector of Zien Episcopal Church at Wappinger's Falls. N. ahd of Mrs. Walter F. Scott of Ala.

Mr. Van Zile is well known as an author. He wrote. "The Last of the Van 81acks." A Magnetic Man." "The ManhattRners." Kings. In and also "The Dresmera, and pthe Poems," and also.

novelettes 'In various magaslnes. Miss Van Ztle's mother was before her marriage Miss Mary Morgan Bulkeley of Hartford. Conn. George P. Kly, whose marriage to Miss Caroline Alden Weir, a daughter of Alden Weir, the President of the National Academy of Design.

Is set for Wednesday. June 7. at 4 o'clock In the Church of the Ascension, mill have Hsrry S. Pago for his best man. and the ushers are to be Ellis Adams, George 8.

Franklin. Silas AV. Howland. Parson McL. Merrill, Harold Otis, and Gurdon 8.

Parker, all of New York; Arthur G. Rotch and Frank -E. Bweetser of Boston, Gsrdner B. Perry of Albany, and Alvrn V. Balrd of Delaplaln, Va, Miss Weir's sister.

Miss Dorothy Weir. Is to be the maid of honor, and another sister. Miss Cora Weir, and Miss Clara Boardman, whose engagement to Wallace. F. Feck was recently announced, are to be the bridesmaids.

Mr. Ely. la the manager of the insurance department and is also the Vice President of the reel estste and Insurance firm of I'ayson McL. Merrill Co. Miss Barbara Isabel a daughter of Mrs.

Albert B. Hilton by her first husband, and dtepdaughter of Colonel A. Hilton of Hill Crest, Port Chester, alii be married to Howard Pierce Bal-lantyne of Grcsse Pomte. Detroit. at 4:30 o'clock on the afternoon of Wednesday." June 21, In the Church of the Heavenly; Rest, and the Rev.

Herbert: Shipman will officiate. The reception will be at the Gotham. Miss Trego's sister. Mrs. Howard Blssell.

will be her matron of honor. Two other matrons in attendance will be Mrs. Frederick Tan- and Mrs. Lloyd F. Jons.

Miss i In tents on the lawn after 6 o'oiock at 73 beth Terhun. Is te be the maid ef fU plate- JJ ner Elisabeth honor. The Misses Dorothy, and Elisabeth Davldge are to be the Ballantyns's brother. Ford Ballan-tyne. will be the best man, and the ushers choeen are Albert Trego, a brother of the bride 'Albert B.

Hoi ton, Lambert Heynlger, Paul Grant Peacock, J. Sidney Hammond, F. Kenneth' Stephenson, and Lloyd P. Jones, a brother-in-law of the brldgroom. Plana for the man lags ef Miss Helen Maclay, daughter of Archibald M.

Mae- lay, and Urinnell Hurt, son of Louise P. Burt of Warwick, N. and i ii i fmrn tK: harbor from 3 o'clock till 11 o'clock In the evening, and in addition to the above mentioned features there will be. a company drill, an exhibition aeroplane flight, and an Tn-Ing parade. Tlcketa may be had from Mra.

Oliver B. Brtdgmam SKI Isrk Avenue; Miss Harriet Oeriter. 14 West Forty-eighth Street: Mrs. Francis M. 31 West Eighty-fourth Street, and Mrs.

Charles F. Roe, S3 East Thirty-seventh and also at the Governors Island Ferry thexisy of the Party. For the benefit of. the Belgian Keller Fund. Elinor Foster will give a recital of Barrls's and some unusual poems-on Friday afternoon.

May nt at ft Sit At'tha Hudson Theatre, un- Palermo. are completed. The mar- ir the Pt risge will be at the bride's home, 89 Daughter, of the ftev H.l VTV.lt IIIH KirAAT AM VV JMI fB1 WI.IIVW IauhV Unmv unit has issueo Invitations ot lawn party on Th ra ti CI Cim. wmA Ileal OIJ.1-IUJIU1 CTUOTk, VU 1 June 14. Mrs.

Franklin A Reece of Boston will be matron of honor and the bridesmaids are to be the Misses Jean- nette Orr, Mildred Walton Smith, Agnes Page-Brown, snd Cora Weir. II. Pier-Son Burt Is to be the best man and Harold Pitman. Donald Wilder, John Beat tie. and Paul Woodman are to act as ushers.

The wedding on June 18 at Bernards-ville, N. of Miss Florence Ledard Blair, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. day afternoon. Mar 2A.

on the grounds of her country home, 1S3 Locust Hill Avenue; Yonkers. to meet distinguished guests of the Imperial Order, Daughters of the British Empire. A series -of three dinner dances haa been arranged tor some- of the dbu-tantes of. past two. winters.

niece at the, Rlts-CarTton on Friday i evenlncs Deo. 16-Jan." 2H. and Feb. 1ft. a ldyard bialr of Blsirsden.

Peapaek. rom until o'clock. i Te commiiiee N. and H. Rlvlngton Pyne, a son of tn charge Is roede or lrs.

Frederio Mr. and Mrs. Percy Riving ton Pyne of (Foster. Carey, Carl A. de.

Gers- aerrr. woanes i- 1-iiiS vikj nu ivwn ovriMtruw will be one of the most Importsnt ot the June nuptials. It is. to take place tn the Chapel of St. John at Bernards-villo and the reception will follow at Blairsden.

Miss Edith. D. Blair will be her sister mtid of snd snot her Alexandra. Mrs. -Bradlsh John' son.

Mrs. Thomas H. Howard, and Mrs. Alvin Yf. Krech." Mra Robert IngersoH win open her house.

112 Esst.Twentyvflrst Street, Thursdav." May '-a-. lor me imri Slstw, Miss Marie Louise BUlr, and Conference for the Investigation ei Misj Mary Pyne. a sister of Mr. Pyne, vivisection, under the auspices of the rm In tho hrlHjoma M. Tnv Itlvlna-- Vl.lawi Inn TnrMtia-atlon leaKUO.

ton pvne. la to be the beet mttij Tae I PniAni B. V. and Mrs. wedding of Miss Marjory D.

Blair William Clark In was one of the most picturesque country weddings ever taking place In this part of the country and It was celebrated on the wide lawn at Blairsden, overlooking a deep valley, a winding river with majestl mountains inclosing them in a green wall. The temporary altar was under a high arbor of trees and with such a setting, on a level with mountain tops and looking deep down Into a vista of tree and river, the ceremony made a memorable picture. Miss Maud Coster, who Is to msrry Count Otto Salm-Hoogstraeten of Reich-enau, Austria, on May SI. at the Tuxedo villa of her ntother. Mrs.

Coster, Is to have no wedding attendants, and the ceremony is to be extremely small and quiet, with relatives only In attendance. George Ttbor Aranyl, whose engagement 'to Miss Grovene Vail Converse was announced last Sunday In these 'columns, will be the best man. and there will be no ushers. i- Miss Beatrice Roeslre and George Prentiss Butler. will have their wedding on Thursday4 afternoon, June 1.

at 4 o'clock, in the chantry of St. Thomas's Mis Rossi re's only attendant will be a slator of tbe bridegroom. Miss Harriet Allen Butler. John Crosby Butler will be his "brother's best man. snd the ushers selected are Allen Macy Butler, Andrew R.

Butler. Robert Herrick, Phelps Barnum, and Donald Bellows. The Rev. Charles R. Erdman of Princeton.

N. will The reception will be held st 1.10 East Sixty-seventh Street. Mr. Butter Is a son of Mrs. George Prentiss The wedding of Unos Throop Geer, a son of the Kev.

Dr. William Montague Geer. the Vicar ef St. Paul's Chapel, lower Broadway, New York, and Miss Mary Savage Cleveland, a dsughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Samuel Bennett Cleveland, will take place In Christ Church Cathedral. New on Tuesday evening. June at 8 o'clock. Consul General Gaston Llehert Is to be the guest of honor and will make a brief speech at the concert arranged by Lawrence 8. Butler, to be held in aid of the War Orphans st the Garden City Hotel, Garden City, 'I on May 24.

at 4 o'clock. The Misses Audrey Elisabeth Emmet. Doris P.yer. and Cornelia Stewart Osborne will be among those: im chare-e' ef the programs, and the hostess will include Mrs. Robert Bacon, Gordon Knox Bell.

Mrs. Frederic Coudert. Mrs. H. Vsn Rensselaer Kennedy, Mrs.

Otto Kahn. Mrs. Adolf lAdcnburg. Mrs. Douclas Robinson, Mrs.

Charles F. Hoffman, and the Misses Ltilsita Iceland snd AHe Preston. The' Ysle Glee Club Orchestra Is to play In he clubhouse next Frldsy afternoon. May i-U. at the annual garden partv for tho benefit of Branch of the Army Relief Foolety.

General Leonard Wood and Mrs. Wood will give a reception on the ground before the program begins, snd soldiers from the' various regiments or companies stationed i around the harbor will be assembled before Miss Anna FlUlu sings The I Star-Spane-lett Banner." The supper. Instead of being served 1n the Is this Spring to be served Rork. Krlrtaeoorx. ennounee the of Am.i&Utw Mlaa Jen.

lie Lalfllll Roeasler. to Dr. Joseph Sumner Bates of New Haven, Uonn. There Is to be a tea-garden for the benefit of the various chsrttles in charge on the different tlsys at Madison 8quare Garden Fashion Exposition, fro May 24 to June 8. -A- space ISO by 00 -feet will be reserved for the garden, and on the opening day over fifty young girls will serve tea snd cake.

The patronesses include Llndon W. Bates. Mrs. Charles Greenough, Mrs. John Astor.

Mrs-. Ol H. P. Belmont. Mrs.

Alexander H. Ralph Banger. Mrs. VsnderhllU Mrs. Henry Clews, and Harry Payne Whitney-.

On May 25 the proceeds will go te the Brltlsh-FVanchirYtftleian Permanent Blind Relief War Fund. On May 211 the program la, In charge- or Daniel rohman. ana tne receipts will go to the Actors' Fund of The New York' Prison Council will be th Beneficiary on May 29. and Mrs. J.

Frederick Tama. 'Mrs. George Barton French, Francis Bishop. Mrs. Kmest Schelling, snd Frederick Lewlsohn wtll arrsnke the pro gram.

On the 29th also Thomas Mott 'Mborne will wive an address before the Biennial Federation of Women's Clubs, ine weaning of Miss Eleanor Taft. a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wendell Taft, and Gerald Whitman, a aon of Mr. and Mrs.

Clarence Whitman of New York and Katonah, will take place In Providence on June 14. Mr. and Mrs. Alrert T. Maurice (Miss Eleanor K.

Fowler) are being congratulated upon the birth of son at their home. East Sixty-eighth Street. The wedding of Dr. Cary T. Grayson.

Vila I 1 Alice Gertrude Gordon, the daughter of inf la.Tl tfMiin. s. uvn ton. l. and a niece -of Mrs.

Henry Wood Flournoy of 12 West Tenth Street, will take place on Wednesday, Msy 2. lm St. aaolrce'a Church. Stuweeant Square, and a reception will follow at Mrs. Flournoy home, HIT 634 i FIFTH AVENUE (OPPOSITE CATHEDRAL) i Clearance Sale of Model Gowns Fit substantial Reductions SUGGESTION: Anticipate Nemo needs before prioea adraaQe.

Jaaaalsass'sBBBaaB. KoNoiynr I FASHTfiN I WISE WOMEN KNOV WHY! laps it and 3 1 1 i ic; A i lie laelft. i t.i 1 -1 prii-f-si'; rois i i fxi rrv'w rU r-li er rtere free sTaTJn ZZ AT MMMLK i f' yrr.r U' Nw oris 1 itir- .1 f-'t: s11r-rJi. av aaonia. ki en4 MAlE.

LlCHTENStEIN, Inc. 734 Fifth A enu near .5 7 1 St. A1ILLINERY 4 Reduction Sale of- i Imported and Original Hats Tuesday, Wednesday May 22ndf 23rd, 24th attendance will be Mrs. Frederick Tan- the is this Spring to be served tmmmmmmmTZM I Vl WO MEN I rrlPrr I KNOW WHY! I 1 i 1- NEMO i Uol 403 ras .3 the tint corset made I i With Nemo Reliel Bands. i r' It dates to '1 l'l7 it has 'beenim I Mary Anderson Warner iii SS'S'S will no Ds No.

103 need fttrthsr I Clearaace Sde Evening. Gowns O- up Serge Dresses 1200up Linen Suits ff 665 Fifth Frances Bldg. Wly No Returns No, ApproVals ij Is Sa -eaa aT ff 1 I Sal Summer Furs I CC A and' Collarettes- fori Mountain, Seaside and Motor i wear. 1 I An attractive variety of models irom wnicn to select, ana a wiae i t' --I. i i t.r i -I' cFiurlers 384 FiftK Avenue 7,0 i SELF-REDUQN6 H.

433 It for wssa faU flwra. Saab wall UstrHmts. i ILsslsi Beakds talus tap, sapport csul redaoe ase 1 1 abdosseav ETesde fores la back of skirt. CootH or batUta, glsaa 22 t9 3494X0, No. 4C2 it simfJar, but (or short fall SJures.

No. 405 ia tor tall full larM $4.00. Evwry Nasao Is aa extra vain aisaprV as a turml For the haalfk features, wkiek are priaelsss, yo pty aotWa extra. Good Stores Everywhere $3.00, $4, $5 and up CHARGE PATRONS MAY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE SALES HAVING BILLS RENDERED JULY 1 it Ml i 66-B6 ss sea ITiCthJSvtnut.1 er 7rr rrs. oJfumqiiratJi-- XoniorrxSiO I Special Formerly $145 to $325 (French Salon.

4 ih Floor) aa. I' III mm ir Heretofore $95 to $150 $65, 75 1 i Reproduced Paris models of rick silk sad cloth ssalena made Witts- Heretofore $55 to $85 $35; 4 5, $55 Tsilonnades belted slyles flare effects sod desu-tsilleur. Herctofore $75 to $95 Of silk cloth Ceorgetts crepe- chif foe aad aevelr ssalsrla). $65 to $125 DANCE DRESSES at $35 to $65 Heretofore 1 25 to $250 $7 5, $95 I 25 Dupltcstes of Paris avedeUv for feratal er is formal occasion. IMPORTED MODELS AT HALF PRICE ''A Heretofore $95 to $165 $65, $95; i i i Day sad Eveaiaf styles- of taffeta tatia gad poult de flltiliiu Qoctir Heretofore $55 to $225 $3 5, $4 57 $6 5 $95 Smart all occssioas ashioaed rem ligk-cisss imported (Inchidinf Original Imported Models.) Qaju i Heretofore $18 to $45 1 0, 1 5, $22 a I I i.

1 Formerly $25 to $35 -'i Pallet Neapolitan Hair MaLrie and Georgette Crepe Hats-- tnmroed wittf held flowers and ostrich. lemi-r 1 a ft ormerly i and Hand-sewed milan and hemp hats with mart wing and bow trimmings mostly reproduced from our own exclusive imported models." Salt GmIi Will Not Be Reterred Eickatfed or Credited. IP dress Gits'dtr 10 To be sure of obtaining tHe Sunday edition of The New York Times it is necessary to order your copy in advance. I i Newsdealers limit their supplies to actual orders, because! unsold copies are not returnable i To avoid disappointment give a regular order to your, newsdealer forTheSunday Timfs; ou a-isi ts" strW.

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