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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 21

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Brooklyn, New York
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I THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1922. 5 Social Apex Reached In Fortnight of Parties Preceding Balls and Dances Under a mistletoe baton the Song of 1922 has been changed to Hallelujah Chorus. In honor of eventful occasions of the week--the Yuletide ball Tuesday evening, Miss Elizabeth Fish's debut Thursday evening Society gold brocade or perhaps a shimmering chiffon velvet gown and admires the week's strand jewels in settings of dinner and box parties. Tuesaay evening marks the apex che social season of the boro.

new Casino ballroom, which has the setting not a few notable dances in an unusual season, will vide dancing floor tor many of best-known people, and matrons, their mothers and many a youthful grandmother. Hostesses and guests of Tuesday evening affairs are of special importance; the boxes are, of course, at Heights Casino. In Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P.

nard's box will be Mr. and Mrs. ard S. Maynard and Mr. and Jack Ferguson of Paterson, N.

J. Ferguson is the former Miss Shaffer of Brooklyn. her sister, Miss Gertrude a Lachlan, Mrs. Ralph a H. Pomeroy, who a box, will entertain the following guests at dinner before the ball: Leslie Pomeroy, Dr.

and Mrs. George Cochran and Eric Pelly of Manhattan. Mrs. Edward T. Horwill shares D.

MacKay and Mr. Horwill. box with Mr. and Mrs. William Greenwood, Mr.

and a Frederick In Mrs. William S. Edwards' William Seymour Edwards cently returned from school, will tertain a group of young friends. At their residence, 108 Willow Mr. and Mrs.

John J. Walton will tertain at dinner Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Chandler, Miss Ruth Chandler Miss Agnes Walton Thompson.

party will later be entertained in Walton's box. guests in Mrs. John T. Underwood's box be Miss Gladys derwood, John' Stephens, Mrs. Clarence Stephens of Pittsfield, Mr.

Underwood. Mrs. William P. Earle will tertain at dinner at her, home, Willow Mr. and Mra.

Edward Blum, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Robert Beguelin and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Draper.

Miss Mary Cabaud, Miss Alice Good, Violet Mars and Miss Isobel Buckley among the members the younger set who will be dinner hostesses on the same evening. Miss Cabaud's guests will be Miss Vivien Johnson. Miss Ruth Lohman, Miss Muriel Curtis, Miss Rachel Higgins, Tracy Higgins, Merritt Smith, Campbell Updike and Stephen Conner. Miss Cabaud is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Henry Edward Cabaud of 296 Garfield pl. Miss Good, who is the daughter Mr. and Mrs. William Howard Good, returned home from college Thursday evening. She will have as her guests Miss Elizabeth Deyer, a Miss Dorothy Lathrop, Miss Mary Johnson.

Miss Beatrice Cantwell, Edward Smith John Knox, Edgar Fuller, William Kent Frederick Ward, Lendon Snedeker and Charles Hester. At her home at 37 Montgomery pl. Miss Mars, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Miss Dorothy Renouard, Miss Gladys Andrew Houston Mars, will in entertain Renouard, Miss Thekla Wiegand, Miss Katherine Marner, Miss Lisbeth Higgins, Charles Feltman George Gillespie John Ingersoll, Richard Ross, George Nixon and Edward McDonald.

Miss Isobel Buckley, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Buckley 112 Montague will have as her guests before the Yuletide Ball Miss Elizabeth Greenwood, Miss Janet MacKay, Miss Louise Little, Miss Elizabeth Fish. Miss Alice Frank, Miss Ruth Bearns, Miss Alice Bennett, Miss Martha Jennings of Philadelphia, Charles Holt, Ford Hibbard.

William Cary Bruce Lachlan, Paul Hyatt and Lewis Francis, Robert Chambers and Josenh Neville of Manhattan. Alexander Simpson of Englewood. Philip Otis of Newburgh, N. and John Curtis of Bridgeport, Conn. will be occupied Mr.

and Mrs. Mrs. Frederic Pratt's, box at the ball Charles Pratt. Mrs. Edwin Holden Smith.

Mr. and Mrs. Richardson Pratt. Among Mrs. James Lancaster Morgan's box guests will be Mr.

and Mrs. Charles M. Heminway and Paul Wrigley. Mrs. George F.

Coutts will entertain her party at dinner before going to the Casino. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs.

Donald B. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. William M. Bristol and Miss Mabel M.

Coutts are of her guests. Mrs. Baron W. Gage and Mrs. John C.

Loud are also among the box hostesses' at the Yuletide ball. Brooklyn Woman's Clubhouse Chosen for Sub-Deb Dances. A series of dances, many of them private affairs in honor of students returned from school, are to be given during the coming week at the Brooklyn Woman's Club. Tuesday evening is the Junior Asclass. at which many of the Saturday sembly of a Miss Hepburn's dancing afternoon students last year will attend in addition to the boys and girls of the present classes.

Receiving with Miss Hepburn will be Mrs. Peter Hamilton, Mrs. Robert E. Henry and Mrs. Bates Wyman.

A dance given by Mrs. Henry R. Beguelin and, Mrs. Walter Steware Gibbs for Miss Virginia Beguelin and Miss Virginia Gibbs will take place Wednesday at the clubhouse as has been previously announced. M.rs.

Elliott C. DuBois of 303 Garfield pl. will be another dance hostess at the clubhouse. She will give a small dance Thursday evening in honor of her daughters, Miss Katherine and Miss Carolyn. On Friday afternoon Mrs.

Charles Boody and Mrs. Paul Grout will have a dansant in honor of Miss Constance Boody and Miss Margaret Grout. Mrs. Joseph L. Greason of 481 Washington ave.

and Mrs. Horace N. of 841 Park pl. will be hostesses on other evenings during the week. At all of these dances the majority of guests will be school girls and boys enjoying the Christmas holidays.

Miss Lisbeth Higgins To Be Dinner Hostess. Preceding Miss Elizabeth Fish's ball at the Casino Thursday evening Miss Lisbeth Higgins will entertain at dinner at her home, 101 Prospect Park West. Her guests will be Miss Cornelia Livingston, Miss Beatrice Cantwell, Miss Eileen Cantwell, Jerry Collins, Gerard Smith, Edward Smith, Tracy Higgins. Luncheon and Party for Admiral Plunketes Daughter. Miss Mary Wells and Miss Jean Ryan are giving a luncheon and bridge, to introduce Miss Julia Plunkett, daughter of Admiral Charles P.

Plunkett, the new commandant at the Navy Yard, and of Mrs. Plunkett. The party will be at the Army and Navy Club in Manhattan Thursday, Dec. 28. Miss Welis is the daughter of Capt.

and Mrs. William of 318 Cumberland st. and Miss Ryan's parents are Capt. and Mrs. J.

D. Ryan. Some Home" Days Announced for January. Several women who have a wide circle of acquaintance in Brooklyn 'ave announced their "at home" days Ar January. Mrs.

Sturgis Coffin of 15. 54th Manhattan, will be at to ber friends during the comO Miss Mary T. Seaman of GLIMPSES INTO THE JUNIOR LEAGUE HOUSE League Girls Learn Braille By MARY SANDSTED Swan 47 Pierrepont st. has chosen Mondays a for her. 'at home" days and the James Lancaster Morgan of the Hotel Bossert will receive her friends Tuesdays from Jan.

2 until April. and ball, crisp their of The been prothe the MayRich- Mrs. Christmas Waits to Sing On Heights Tonight. Residents of Brooklyn Heights will hear again this year on Christmas Eve the caroling of the a Waits of the Clark Street Players. Each Christmas lighted candles are placed in the windows of homes on i the Heights along the itinerary of the waits and the custom be continued this year.

The singers will select a central position on each block tonight and they will start at 7 o'clock at the home of A. W. Shelton, 246 Henry stopping on Remsen, Pierrepont and Willow sts. and Monroe making a long stop in front of the Mansion House and ending the evening at the Hotel St. George.

Interesting Morning Lectures To Benefit Children's Museum. Three morning lectures on "The Theater, Poetry and Art" are to be given for the benefit of the Children's Museum. The first will be held at the home of Mrs. I. Sherwood Coffin, 30 Remsen Jan.

9, when Frank Ferguson will give a review of current plays and read "Billy Boy," a Christmas comedy by himself. Mrs. William H. Good of 880 St. Marks ave.

is to be hostess for the second morning, Jan. 16, at which time Prof. John Erskine, head of the Department of Comparative Literature of Columbia University will lecture upon "Modern Poetry." The third and last morning of the series will be held at Mrs. Thomas L. Leeming'9, 94 8th on Jan.

23. Royal Cortissoz, art critic of the New York Tribune and author of many books, will talk upon "Modern Art." The officers and executive board of the Woman's Auxiliary of the Children's Museum include Mrs. Coffin, president; Mrs. John Anderson, Mrs. Havens Brewster Bayles, Mrs.

Edward C. Blum, Mrs. James O. Carpenter, Mrs. John B.

Clark, Mrs. Susanne Q. Cumming, Mrs. James M. Edsall.

Mrs. William. W. Fisher, Mrs. Charles M.

Higgins, Mrs. John Hills, Mrs. Frederick L. Jenkins, Mrs. Jennie W.

Hughes, Mrs. Thomas L. Leeming, Mrs. John J. Schoonhoven, Mrs.

Frederick B. Slocum, Herman Stutzer and Mrs. William Whittaker. Current Happenings Reviewed At Mrs. Payne's Lecture.

The stabilizing force of the United States in foreign lands was the theme of Mrs. Jessica Lozier Payne's lecture at the Academy of Music Thursday morning. Before approaching the domestic situation in politics--the President's message to the newly opened Congress, the new party leaders and their platforms, Payne reviewed the German Reparations problem, the United States Far East policy and our present attitude on Near East sufferings, as well as the freedom of the Turkish Straits. There was a decided holiday audience present, including a number of men who availed themselves of the tickets subseribers doing "afterthought" shopping. Among those present were Mrs.

David Thornton, Mrs. Crowell Hadden Mrs. Frederick Alfred, Mrs. Wulter Burr, Mrs. James A.

Radcliffe, Mrs. Charles A. Hull, Mrs. Edwin L. Garvin, Mrs.

Irving J. Chapman, Mrs. Starr Donaldson, Mrs. William Frothingham Smith, Miss Elizabeth Thayer, Alfred F. Wise, Mrs.

Harvey Murdock, Mrs. Henry H. Palmer, Miss Georgiana Dexter, Mrs. George B. Bretz.

Mrs. Edward C. Blum, Mrs. Abraham Arons, Mrs. Sylvester L.

Blood, Mrs. Ralph W. Kenyon, Mrs. W. R.

Richards, Mrs. Isaac S. Douglas, Mrs. Theodore F. Merceles, Mrs.

George B. Mead, Mrs. F. H. Hill, Mrs.

Philip Ruxton, Mrs. A. Wallace Chauncey, Mrs. S. Theodore Dauchy, Mrs.

Charles S. Burr, Mrs. John Hillis, Mrs. John Osborn Polak, Mrs. Stanley Tumbridge, Miss Alice Bristow, Mrs.

Charles H. Bandel, Miss Theda Kenyon and Mrs. Samuel Lane Faison. Poly Show Big Event Of March; Rehearsals Started. The big Poly show looked forward to each year by the younger set in Brooklyn as one of the most important social affairs has been "started." Many familiar faces were seen at the gathering of Poly men who attended the Poly Prep Alumni Association's first meeting held recently to plan the "biggest and best" show of a long series of well-remembered successes, which is to be given at the Academy early in March.

The meeting was held at the University Club and George O. Wulfing presided, announcing that the author of the new production is William Carry Duncan. Among those present were John R. Farrar, William B. Kapper, Lloya H.

Dalzell, Fred Maguire, LeRoy P. Earle, Jerry' V. Meserole, George C. Keady, V. Hall Everson Samuel Bennett, Roland Jones, Robert P.

MacFarland, Edward B. Walker and Dick Ray- Fourth Bagby Musicale Thursday Morning, Dec. 28. The fourth Bagby musicale held Thursday morning, Dec. 28, books, ing to the Christmas holiday.

The about concert will take place at 11 o'clock dened as 3 usualy in the Waldorf -Astoria. who Date of Casino Club Dance Changed to January 19. The next Heights Casino Club dance will be held Jan. 19, instead of Jan. 12, as previously announced.

This dance is confined to club members and a few invited guests, and is always a delightfully informal occasion. Gilbert I Thirkield and Richardson Pratt are interested in the arrangements. Miss Whiting's Dinner For Miss Harriet Wolverton. Miss Jean Whiting, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

D. Clinton Whiting, is entertaining at her home, 373 Parkside Miss Harriet Wolverton of Mt. Vernon, Ohio. A dinner was given in Miss Wolverton's honor by Miss Whiting on Thursday evening preceding the second Junior Assembly. Among the dinner guests were Miss Anne Malloy of Lexington, Kentucky; Miss Lilian Scharman, Natalie Jourdan, Miss Louise Callender, Harry O'Brien, Addison.

Ray Williams, Britton Hadden, Edward Thurston and Elliott Wooley. Miss Louise Barber Heads "Debs" in Junior League Play. Miss Louise Barber, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Donn Barber of Manhattan (Mrs.

Barber was a former Packer girl), been made chairman of th: debutantes in the play "The Gay Pretenders, to be given by the Junior League of New York, at the Waldorf, on Jan. 30 and 31 and Feb. 1. Eighty league members will constitute the cast. Miss Marjorie Cleveland has announced that Mrs.

John Henry Hammon will assist entertainment committee. Berkeley Christmas Party For Institution Kiddies. The girls of the Upper School of Berkeley Institute held their yearly Christmas party for poor children at the school Wednesday afternoon. Twenty-three little kiddies from the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children were entertained. The chairmen of the committees were Miss Beatrice Sage, Miss Anna Mae Hunter, Miss Helen Catlin, Miss Elizabeth Russell, Miss Violet Mars, Miss Elizabeth Ham and Miss Frances Dusenberry.

Miss Winifred Raab, as Santa Claus, distributed the dolls, Mrs. on Above is the arched doorwa" of the Junior League House given through the League by Mrs. Samuel Emlen 1 Stokes of Moorestown, N. the former Miss Lydia Pratt Babbott, to the Y. W.

C. A. Mrs. Stokes was a member of the Brooklyn Junior League and and keenly interested in its efforts to establish a self-supporting home for working girls. The present annex to the Harriet Judson on Schermerhorn and Nevins sts.

was furnished from $10,500 raised by the Leaguers; even the furniture was selected by a Junior League girl, Mrs. Irwin H. Hance who is an interior decorator. The large, comfortable armchair before the casement is on the mezzanine, where the League receptions, teas, are room was furnished by Mrs. Adrian Van Sinderen in memory of Katherine White Van Sinderen, one of the founders in Brooklyn, in 1907, when Mrs.

Harold Pratt was president. The Brooklyn organization, fourth of the 52 sister Leagues, came to its new home about two toys and other gifts heaped the monstrous tree; which gladthe hearts of the little ones, ranged from 2 to 14 ye years of age. First of Soiree Musicales At Biltmore, Wednesday. The first of the informal soirce musiciales will be given at the Hotel Biltmore Wednesday evening, with Leopold Stokowski conducting. These musicales are to be different from anything heretofore held in New York, and they will be planned after the manner of the Paris Salon as it is today.

Among the patronesses are Mrs Henry Martyn Alexander, Mrs. Barrett Andrews, Mrs. Vincent Astor, Mrs. Robert Low Bacon, Mrs. Paul D.

Cravath, Mrs. Edward S. Harkness, Mrs. Otto H. Kahn and Mrs.

Harry Payne Whitney. Chaminade's Charity Concert For Colony House, Feb. 5. Chaminade's charity concert at the opera house of the Academy, Feb. 5, will be given entirely for the benefit of "Country Days for Colony House Children." As the artist of the evening, Emilio de Gogorza, baritone of the Metropolitan, has been secured.

Emma Richardson Kuster will conduct the concert. The committee for the evening includes Mrs. W. J. Baldwin chairman; Mrs.

Theodore Martin Hardy, Mrs. John Nix, Mrs. John L. Swan, Mrs. J.

T. W. Kastendieck, Mrs. John W. Bruyn, Mrs.

Nathaniel Robinson, Mrs. John M. Tallman, Mrs. George Knight; Mrs. F.

G. Fischer and Mrs. Austen Ludlam. Fort Greene Chapter, D. A.

To Have Social Meeting. Fort Greene Chapter, D. A. will hold a social meeting Jan. 10 at the home of Mrs.

Henry U. Palmer of 216 Clinton ave. Mrs. William Beecher is regent of the chapter. An interesting evening is being arranged by Mrs.

Oliver W. Ingersoll, chairman of the Program Committee. Mrs. Thomas W. Lauderdale is chairman of the Hospitality Committee, her assistants for the evening being Mrs.

Lambert V. B. Cameron, Mrs. Stephen W. Giles, Mrs.

Frederick E. Hamlin, Mrs. Henry E. Cabaud, Mrs. Jacob H.

Shaffer, Mrs. J. Duke Harrison, Mrs. Walter F. Wells, Mrs.

Robert E. Merwin, Mrs. George H. Iler, Miss Theda Kenyon, Miss Stutzer and Mrs. George G.

Cochran. Ten Junior League girls now hold licenses to tench and to transcribe into the Braille system for the blind. Furthermore each expects to practice her new profession in the interest of those denied sight, and As part of her work as a leaguer. Students' lamps have burned silently on into the night and lessons in this raised language conned even during the busy holiday season by these ten successful society girls. Mrs.

A. Wallace Chauncey heads this pioneer group as chairman of the League's Committee for the Blind. Mrs. Edwin Hicks Bigelow, Mrs. William H.

Baldwin 3d. Mrs. Clayton Du Bosque, Miss Helen Kene, Miss Mary Ward, Miss Emily Hinchman. Mrs. Arent Schuyler, Mrs.

J. Radford English and Mrs. Norman Ward complete the ton. Lectures, difficult home assignments, and examinations were part of the course, which is acknowledged to be far more difficult to master than any standard course in shorthand. This recent achievement, however, is but part of the work of a league founded on the principle of promoting pubile wallace.

Under Mrs. Chester Palmer is a Visiting Nurse Committee of prominent girls who fill nurses' kits and look after babies' layettes. Christmas tree parties in almost half a dozen large hospitals tuts year will be under the supervision of Miss Frances Dudley. Mrs. Sydney Kennedy looks after the "Y' group; Miss Louise Goetze, the Settlement Committee, and Miss Zorka Polak, the Center Shop Committee.

The thirteen new members just admitted can attest to the social work of the league, being required as they now are to render account of certain required work to the second vice president, Mrs. E. M. Bigelow (Miss Alice Blum that was). The names of these new members follow: Miss Alice Van Anden Frank, Miss Elizabeth Fish, Miss Mary Ward.

Miss Louise B. Little, Miss Emily Hinchman, Miss Eleanor Cromwell Field, Miss Ruth Miss Jean Whiting, Miss Frances Jones, Miss Doris Bergen, Mrs. Premont C. Peck, Mrs. Harold C.

Strohm and Mrs. Edwin P. Maynard Jr. Rutherford White, who are coming up about the middle of January from Caracas, Venezuela, where Mr. White is secretary of the American Legation.

Mr. White, it will be recalled, is a son of the Hon. Henry White, former Ambassador of the United States to France. Prior to his marriage to Miss Moffat Prior to his marriage to Miss Moffat in April, 1921, young White was an attache of the American Legation in Warsaw. Poland.

to which his brother-in-law, Jay Pierrepont Moffat, was also attached. The latter is now in Tokyo, Japan, where he has been second secretary of the American Legation for about a year and a half. Mrs. Moffat's youngest son, Abbot Low Moffat, is now making a tour around the world and at last reports was in See HAYNES the interior of China. Gertrude Trail, daughter of Mrs.

Edward Trail, of 392 is spending the holidays fruit plantation hear New Fla. She left town on Dec. 6 party of eight. Arthur S. Boyd of 990 E.

19th Brooklyn, has as her guest her Miss Myela Morris of Florence, who returned Wednesday on the after a four months tour of and the Continent. Mr. and Mrs. O. E.

Paynter of 780 St. Marks ave. will spend the Christmas holidays at Atlantic City. Theodora Bulkley of 48 is planning to sail on the Hom-' 20 bound for Egypt. Witn Bulkley will be Mrs.

Frederick Morse of Manhattan, formerresident of Remsen and Miss Holmes, also formerly of this Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A. Sperry of 1505 Albemarle rd. returned from a trip to Japan where the were entertained in Tokio and other cities.

Miss Mary Stores Packard of 71 Joralemon st. left. on Wednesday, Dec. 20. for Denver, where she will spend Christmas with her cousins, Mrs.

Charles Francis Emery (Eleanor Washburn), and Mrs. Frederic Atherton Adams (Miriam Washburn). Miss Ruth W. Washburn, who is studying in the University of Iowa, will also join her sisters for the holidays. Mr.

and Mrs. Lewis A. Streit of 28 Sidney pl. will spend Christmas with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mra.

Samuel F. Strett. of 383 Park Manhattan. Miss Helen Keenan is home from Smith College for the holidays which she is spending with her grandmother. Mra.

James Keenan. of 138 St. James place. Dinner-Dance at Bossert for St. Angela's Alumnae.

The Alumnae of St. Angela's Hall will hold a dinner dance at the Hotel Bossert on Feb. Those serving on the various committees are Miss Helen Jollon, Miss Marie Goubeaud, Continued on Page 12. Miss Mr. and Clinton on a Smyrna, with a Mrs.

sister, Olymple England Miss sen st. eric Jan. Miss William Sarah boro. CHRISTIAN Wonderoil Permanent Wave Absolutely No Borax Almost No Heat 228 Livingston Street OPPOSITE NAMM'S Telephone Main 8686 years ago. Miss Agnes B.

Bigelow is its president. Behind the desk pictured sits the executive secretary, Miss Natalie Jourdan, who has succeeded Mrs. Morris U. Ely in this important work. Her hours are from 9:30 to 12:30 daily.

Miss Schepmoes to Marry Howard Ross Haviland. Mrs. C. E. Jarvis of 1329.

Pacific st. announces the engagement of her granddaughter, Miss Jessie Jervis Schepmoes, daughter of the late Frank L. and Ida J. Schepmoes, to Howard Ross Haviland, who is the son of Edward W. Haviland of 403 Grand ave.

and the late Mary J. Haviland. Miss Schepmoes attended Erasmus Hall High School and Pratt Institute, while Haviland attended Adelphi Academy, Amherst College and Brooklyn Law School. He is a member of the Delta Upsilon, Phi Delta Phi and Sigma Psi fraternities. Mr.

Haviland will give a musical on Thursday evening at his home. The several interesting artists who will be heard are: Manton Monroe Marble, baritone; Sybil Sammis MacDermid, soprano, with her husband, James G. MacDermid, the well -known composer: Frederick P. Hart, pianist; David Lincoln Burnam, viol'nist from Anacortes, Cyrus Witjas, 'cellist, and Mr. Havland also expects Ivor Novello, composer.

1 Miss Dance! Engaged to James M. Heatherton. Mrs. Grace Dancel of 239 Stuyvesant ave. announces the engagement of her daughter, Miss Muriel Dancel.

to James M. Heatherton of the Crescent Athletic Club. The marriage it is understood will take place at the home of the bride-elect on Wednesday, Feb. 21, at noon. Mr.

Heatherton for several y-ars post has lived at the Crescent Athletic Club on Pierrepont with which he has long been actively identified. He was for some years the amateur pool champion of the United States, while he has many times won the pool championship of the: Crescent Athletic Club. At one time he was an active. member of the Friars Club in Manhattan and has taken a prominent part in the annual shows of the Crescent Athletic Club. He is a menber of the Brooklyn) University and Brooklyn Rotary Clubs and N.

Y. Ath letic Club. Miss Fradenburgh Given Surprise Shower Yesterday. A surpeise linen shower was given yesterday afternoon for Miss Miriam E. Fradenbargh by Miss Mary Wells Clark at the home of the latter, 310 Luncheon, 11 to 2:30, 45c Table d'Hote, also a la Carte Tea, 3 to 5, a la Carte Dinner, 5 to 7:30 Table d'Hote, 65c and 85c Real home cooking--Splendid service, something different from the ordinary eating place.

Marcia Elizabeth 169 LIVINGSTON ST. First Door Next to Livingston St. Entrance to Loew's Metropolitan Theater. Company me. 471 Fifth Avenue, N.

Opposite Public Library Special for Christmas Week Furs of Quality Were Now Black Pony Coats $150 $50 Hair Seal Coats 175 75 Natural Muskrat 200 Civet Cat Coats 200 100 Seal Muskrat Coats 350 125 Nutria Coats 350 175 Black Caracul Coats 350 175 Tan Caracul Coats 600 300 ALSC Gowns and Millinery at Half Price 7. J. Pourer with. A will be Clinton ave. Miss Fradenburgh's engagement to Robert L.

Smith was nounced recently in these columns. Among the guests were Miss Isabel Capps, Miss Elizabeth Sheibler. Miss Frances Brown, Miss Dorothy Lutz, Miss Katherine Jacobus, Miss Harriet Greason, Miss Katherine Renwick, Miss Eloise Morford, Miss Margery Walis, Miss Kathryn Clark. Mrs. J.

Campbell White (Miss Moffat) Visiting Here. Mrs. John Campbell White (Miss Moffat) Visiting Here. Mrs. R.

Burnham Moffat of 12 E. 66th Manhattan, is looking forward to a visit from her daughter. Mrs. John Campbell White, formerly Miss Elizabeth Barclay Moffat, and her infant granddaughter, Margaret The TRAYMORE ATLANTIO CITY Where Holiday Happiness and Gayety Abound THE spirit of Happy Living which always characterizes the Traymore 18 especially emphasized throughout the entire length of the holiday season. The luxury and elegance of the Traymore combine delightfully with Atlantic City's winter attractiona.

Make reser. vations now for a healthful and joyous holiday vacation. Situated directly on the sea, the Traymore is the commanding, architectural triumph of the out; superior music and special Holiday fea. Atlantic Coast. Beautiful appointmente throughtures: European or American plan; fresh and sea baths with each room; Restaurant Traymore, with its old-world atmosphere; fireproof throughout.

Send for floor chart. Golf, adds theatres, the piers, everything that to "Joy of Living." DANIEL S. WHITE, JOSEPH W. MOTT. President General Manager ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE COATS -SUITS DRESSES RIDING HABITS PRICES START AT $10:00 SALE COMMENCES TUESDAY, DEC.

26 Open 9:00 A.M. WM. DAVIES CO. 353 Fifth Avenue, New York Corner 34th Street. Second Floor Retail Department Under Direct Supervision of Mr.

A. Vickers, Late of Balch, Price Co. Come and See the Greatest Values in New York.

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Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963