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Is.VEH. i Putnam sets forif i Knglls ; one SOKE NEW BOOKS. A History of Kmlanil It doc not appear tlmt any ape' la BMBBaMMl fill u frnnemt unit luoioL' 3 H a ll lory oi cngiaitu in pite i epreiaiiate ami inn gcnsw rjji ilnflt audi 11 ' liulnrv w . ' P ine rnnwriiro prtraerz r n t W...O. la , s uch 1 tho7 Zmti 7 want. 1 1 la, r, -J t S a L i "Aida" the First Work to Be Performed in the Experiment of Giving Grand Opera at Low Prices THE season of opera at the Cen tury Opera House will be commenced to-morrow evening with a performance of Verdi' ' "Alda." This is the reason which gave a rise to so much discussion and so many , ' luncheons and dinners at the City Club last spring. The plan wns lone: under J consideration. The purpose was and is J to offer commendable performances, of , grand opera at low prices. ; The managers selected by the City J Club and the other supporters of the enterprise are the Messrs. Aborn. who have for years been engaged In giving opera In English in the unlimited land known professionally as "the road." J . These gentlemen have wisely not jy promised too much. They have not an- nounced that they would present opera sj with a company of star, because every one who has the slightest acquaintance with the business knows that this cun- not be done at anything under Metro- -j pnlltan Opera House prices. Therefore the real merit and achieve- a tnent of this season will not be made J manifest to-morrow night. Neither Will It he possible to reach conclusions about this enterprise at the end of its second or its third WOSk, The real question to lie sol Tad is whether there J is any genuine public demund for opera for Its own sake and on a scale such as might be expected of a municipal J theatre. Most old observers do not believe that there is. If this new enterprise calls forth such a public It will prove that the old observers are mistake) and that the development of fondness for ' operatic entertainment has marched NEWS OF THE WEEK IN SOCIETY Summer Colony Is Still at Bar Harbor Many Cot- . r -1-1 1 .1 tagerS Kemam, 1 nOUgll the! , Entertainments creasing. Are De- Bah HaRbpI!. Sept. n. Uar Harbor's summer season Is drawing to a close, al though many cottagers remain. The bos ton festival Orchestra Inia closed its en gagement at the Swimming Club and the daily concerts and turker trots, which drew so many of I lie summer visitors to the club house, have come to an end. The most m tar Siting event In society here of late was the marriage of Mrs Susan l! mock Hutchinson, daughter or Mrs. Henry K. Ilimock or New I oi k. to (lluseppe I atalanl, counsellor or the Italian lauliassy in Washington, which took place on Sep- . .mk., r. .., L'l ..I.,..-.. , 1. ....... ..f Ihe bride mother at Bar Harbor, lie Kev. A. M. Mud tuna Id. pastor of the (on- gregstlonal ohuroh, performed Ihe ceremon in ths presence of John Loudon, Minister .Mnr0"' - Mrs. Thomas Walsh of Washington eh- tertainsd a party of twenty at dinner last Saturday evening at Briardiff The gu eats included Oen. Horace Porter. Hr W D.I 1 ashman. Charles Kobluson. Frederick Baldwin, H. M. Schmolck, Kurt Uiedinii, i.eorge B. Dorr, I)r and Mrs. H. Weir Mit chell, Mr. and Mra. William Sterling, Mr. Burton Harrison, Mrs. P. W. Ilourigan, Mrs H. C. Chapman, Mra. Henry 1 Dlmock and Mr. HuntHlaler. Mrs. Warner Mifflin Leeds gave a dance at I he Swimming t In I. last Matur day even ing at which about fifty uf the umnier colony attended. The season's event at the Country club waa the dinner dance Tuesday evxuing. Affer dinner Ihe guest enjoyed dancing. Mrs. P. W. Ilourigan of Washington Is Ihe guest of Mrs. Burton Harrison at Hea I'rcbin and will be there for another week. Uo Josle Anchlnclo, daughter of Mr. fr. .-.n w Auohinclosa of New Vork , ha returned from a visit to New York The family will he here until the last of the month. Mr .lames Molt liana no rne. who haa been vinttng air. and Mrs. W'tfrner Mlffllln fl . Mo,l''y '. returned Sunday to South Hampton. t, H. MoAlpln, who ha been at ths Mai oorn. returned to New York Monday Mr. Morris K Jup left Monday for Now York Her summer cottage, Htone cUff. on Kebo street, has been dosed The final races of the Mount Desert Yacht aoini 4wciation have been nailed Much 'S SEASON OF OPERA BEGINS TO-MORROW aaBBaxtkSS. WM a BK. KB ItvVv SBXMBel B V XsX -eY. i 1, : Vj: . . rFwlMar b.-.i M.ryJordivr, . Hli2fl bV I xexri LoU Evw.ll IV, ' ' V.nrari in Ai iEMLxBMsaaaxE. faster lhan their perceptions. All the other propositions laid down with so much posit iveniss by City Club mam bara Who have hud no experience cither as backers of opera or as pro fessional students of ita met hods and history are empty air. There la but one point to be decided and that la: Do people hunger and thirst after opera as opera and not merely after cechraled opera singers? The plans of the managers of the Century Opera House have eeii made for many weeks In advance. The enter prise rests upon a firm financial founda tion and can be carried on without profit. In this respect it resembles the municipal theatre of the typical Euro pean city. Thl if especially fortunate in that It will give u very searching demon stration of the vsriue of such a scheme. Of course much depends on the merits of the performances to lie brought forth. for even those who wish to hear opera for Its own sake wlh to enjoy It. They cannot do this If it Is hadly given. Here aHain. however, the verdict can not lie formed at the end of the first week, oi'even the third or fourth. The scheme must have time to work itself out. Meanwhile a summary of the of ficial announcement may he made. There will be eight performances of "Alda," In English and on Monday night, eptatnbar 22. the opera will lie given in Italian. All other operas of the thirty-live weeks season will have their first performance Tuesday night. They will be given in English up to and in cluding Saturday night. One perform ance of the opera will lie given in its original language of French, (ierman or Italian on the following Monday night By this system "La tiloconda," the second week's offering, will have seven performances In English. Iiegln nlng Tuesday night. September 23, and it'teresi has been taken in the races of the little 17 foot knockabouts. The John Trevor cup, oflered to the inner in a series of wieu races, was captiireii nv nie snooks, owned by Warwick P mm of Mr ami sirs r.nirar Scott I lie Junior cuii. ofiereil bv Mrs. Joseph 1'ullizer to the winner of a series of three races, was taken by l-oils McCagf, sun or Mr. and ,Mrs. loui H. Mccngtr. who owns the Skipjack Mr. and Mrs. Middleton S. Hurrill snd daughter. Miss Iconic Burrill, hove re turned home to New York srter the season at the Anchorage cottage. Mrs. 1). U. C. calherwood has closed her cottage and returned to New York. Robert Kdfnrotl of New York and his two daughters. Miss tiladys and Miss Lillian Kndicolt, have left for Newport after the season at the Malvern. Major Pierre 0, Slevens or Washington will be here for the fall with his wire and daughter. Miss Marie Steven. Mr. and Mrs. John I. Rockefeller. .Ir ' XVZVS,l"?lW2rVMT "mry ho'1 ' Mr and Mrs. William Lawrence tireen will close their cottage to-morrow and i jJSSf teflS! Vork. wh"re lhe will remain i FwhraflCT MANY GUESTS ABBIVE AT WHTTV cmmn7.?. 4 ou-urxxun oraiavo Whiti Sri.rnc. SrsiMis, W. Va., Sept 1J. Many guests have arrived this week for the fall season to take the "cure." They are staying fur the present at ths White, the old hotel, while Fred Starry, the, managing director, and hi corps of assistants ure rushlag thing at the new Ureenluirr, which I now scheduled to open on Beptember 28. a week earlier than wa flrat planned. Mr. and Mrs. I.wls Nixon and Stan hope Wood Nixon arrived from South ampton I4. 1., Inst Sunday to spend the fall season, and will be Joined by a party of friends when the Oreenbrler opens. Mrs. Clarence Cory and Ml McCand- lei arrived from New York on Sunday to take the cure pnd spend the fail season, and to-night Mr. and Mrs. J. Steven Ul man arrived with their family to remain at tha White until ths formal opening of the Oreenbrler. Many private oars will come down for the opening of tha new hotel. Two weeks from to-night a special train of private oars will bring down parties of guests, soma of whom will remain the thro week necessary to complete tha "euro," while other plan to remain throughout tha season, which will continue until after Thanksgiving, when ths doer snd wild turkey hunting seasons are on. Some of those who have encaged suites 1 THE SUN, wtllnd Ita run with the Italian presen tation of September it. The artists selected for "Alda" are: the Kino, tleorge Shields: AmnerU, Kath leen Howard or Mary .Ionian; Rha ime, Walter Wheatley, Gustav Herg-. man. Morgan Kingston or Eugenlo Foloo; Kntii Is, Alfred Kaufman: .Into natro. Thomas Chalmers or loits Kreldler: the iirttcnger, Veirnon Del hart: Vioifc.s, Flor-nce Cotighlan. and lido. Elizabeth Ammlen or lads Ewell. The stage director will be l.uigl Alber terl and the stage manager Louie P, Vrande. In arranging the repertoire for the Century opera season the directors have endeavored to vary It aa widely as possible with a view to pleasing opera lovers of all tastes and preferences. Verdi's "Alda" and I'onchlelli's "Ia Oloconda." the selections for the first two weeks, will be followed by Offen liach's "The Tales of Hoffmann,'' a work widely different, for the third week. The fifth week will bring the first novelty of the season In Wolf -Ferrari ' The .Jewels of the Madonna " Puccini's "Madam Butterfly11 r the aa! action for the sixth week, and two weeks later the same composer's "Tnsoa" will he sung. Hulnt-Saf ns's leas familiar "Samson and Delilah" of the modern French school will occupy the week between the two Puccini works. The same de gree of variety Is apparent in the arrangement of later weekly changes Chnrpentlcr's "Louise," Verdi's "11 Tro vatore." Oounod'a "Borneo and Juliet" and Massenet's "Thais" will In. pre sented In the order named This policy will lie maintained throughout the sea suii. HumpertUnck's "Hansel and Orrlel" will be presented at moat holl- day matinees. A chorus of 100 voice and a baJlet I of forty, with Albertlna Basch as the prima ballerina, make up the en semble of the century season of grand operu . BOTES OF MUSIC EVENTS. QoraMlM Parrnr of the Metropolitan Opera House, who a a preface to her New Hotel at White Sulphur Springs Soon to Open Cssfinard from fifth Pagr. weekly tournaments will be held, some uf which will be of more than local interest. There will be band concerts morning and afternoon and in mild weather tea w ill be served on the groat lawn, where tables will be placed under gay colored um brella,. The hotel Is situated 2.0A0 feet above the sea level, and at all time there 1 lout-lug Weather. Frederick Steri y of the I'lasa will have the general direction uf the hotel, with J. 11. Hlocum a resident manager. Oeorge Rverart of the I'laxu, ir to be the maitre d'hotel, and he w ill have a culpa of white waiter, kin Innovatlnr In Ihls region. For those Who reipilre It there will he a special diet kitchen, hut the general service of the restaurant will and will arrive from Maw Tork include Mr. and Mr. Pembroke Jones, Mra. Henry M. Flagler, Mr. and Mrs. R. Livingston Beeckman. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brokaw, Mr. and Mm. Herbert M Harrlman. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Brown, Mrs. Henry O. Trevor. Mr H. M. Alexander, Mr. and Mra. B. N. Duke, Angler Duke, Mr.and (XwV fSlSitftL osnas SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER Louit -raicila r At A.TnonMM i-r A-id. uiMM-atic work In New York the coming winter will make a concert tour unsier the direction of Charles A. Kills of Boston, Oa 1 1 1 arrive in New York from Chertiourg bv the Kaiser Wilhelm II. next Tuesday. On September 1 she will leave New York for her first appeal ances on the Pacific coast. Her concert dates are as follows: Seattle, September 2". ; Vancouver. Sep-! tem her L'" ; Portland. October 1; San be a la carte. As a place of cure after the strenuous summer or winter seasons there will be everything that can be found in the most famous of the Kuropeun resorts, and this serious part of life at the Oreenbrler will be under the direction of Dr. Q, D. Kahlo, formerly director of the French Lick Springs anr professor of medicine at the Indiana l.'niversity. Among those who have reserved ac commodation for October are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert liarrlmiiii. Mr. HWtr) S. Redmond. Mr. and Mrs. Pembroke Jonee. Mr. and Mrs. R Livingston Recckmiin. Mr. and Mrs. Henry !.' Trevor. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen II. BrOWtk Mrs Henry M. I Alexander, Mr. and Mrs J. Stevens li man. Mi. aim Mrs. Benjamin X. Puke, Angler Puke. Mrs. William I .owe Hlce, Mrs. John Borland, Mra, George C Cliiu- I The Greenbrier Hotel. Mrs. Franklin Mott Warner, Mr. and Mra. Henry Ooelet McVlckar. Mra. Oouvornsur Kortright. Mra. J. C. Hoagland, Mr. and Mra. Walter Watson. Mra. Joseph rullt ser, Mr. and Mr. Biamcer Turner. The Ducheaae de Chaulne will com here with her father, Theodore P. Hhonts, and Miss Marguerite ghonts Immediately 14, 1918. VC.vt"rlce-n Howard. vy Francisco, October S : Oakland. October T . Ixs Angeles. October 9. Turning astward then she will give concerts In Denver the nth. Chicago the ISth. and I'lttshurg the 2 1 sit. She will venture her) flrat song recital In New York In Car negie Hall Saturday afternoon, i ictober It, and Tuesday afternoon. October 29, ; file will sing tin mimic programme In : S mphon) Hall, Boston. Kennies these 1 concerts of her own she will appear with I the Boston Symphony Orchestra In Bos-I ton October .11 and November 1 : in Phi la dolpltla. November .1. and Baltimore. No-1 VCfnbor . In her obtlOortl in the West she will have the assistance of Alwtn 1 Schroeder, the eminent violoncellist, and Arthur Roor note In. ai'ompuriist. Reports from Boston announce that all the seats In Carnegie Hall or Its two ser ies of conceits during the coming winter have been sold for the season bv sub scription. This means that It will he as difficult for the casual music lover to hear ; the Hostun Mvmuhonv Orrheatm thi year as it was last. The two series of QOfMOffla will tie given, as in the past, on Thursday evenings and Saturday after noons, the dates being November 6 and t : December 4 and fi January and 10 ; , Inihrtiarj 11 and II . March 1" and 21. The soloists announced are Iaderewskl. Fritz Kreislef and Uiiaabelh Uoelui van ', I'ndert. the principal lyric soprano of the j Koyal Opera. Berlin, who will make her detail in New York with the orchestra. 1 Or. Muck will arrive from Austria the end of this month. The programmes of the New York Phil harmonic will as usual Is- enhanced by j the appearance, as assisting artists, of the most distinguished of the great ar tists who will be heard In America the I coming season. The names already ail ' nOUnCed by the management make up a well balanced list or vocal and instru mental artists and are as follows: Vocalists: Margaret Matzenaucr, cele-1 bra tad oiitralto of the MrtroMiltan i Opera House; Mnt". Ilervllle-Reache, I operatic contralto; Mine, ottlllle Metxger, j M ailing contralto or me iiamourg vjpera ; Julia Culp, Dutch lie, lei singer : Jacques I'rlus. tenor of the Metropolitan Opera. Violinists: Mlscha Elman, Carl Pleach, first (our of America ; Jacques Thibaud, return of the great French violinist ; lipoid Kramer, new concert melster of the Philharmonic Pianists: Teresa Carreno and Harold Bauer, both so well known ; ami Max sen. Franklin A. Plummer. Mr. Juaeph C Hoagland, Oeorge F. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank 8. Witherbee. Mr. and Mrs, Joseph It. Dllworth. Mrs. Henry M. Flag ler, Mr. and Mrs. F'rank A. Vanderlip. Mr. and Mia. Howard C. Brokaw, Mrs. Joseph Puiltser. Misa U.ulse Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Turner, Mr. and Mia. John P. Adams. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Shaw, Mr. and Mr. Franklin MotL War ner. Mrs. tlouverneur Kortright. Mis Maliel lierry, tleorge H. Ieter. Dunbar Adams, Robert drier Cooke. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Watson and Mrs. Knorh Putcher. Irwin W. Day, who will marrv Miss Madeleine Hayward Smith, daughter of Commissioner of Dorks H. A C. Shjilh. on September 27, will take his bride there. The formal opening of the lintel Is set for September 25. upon their return from abroad, and others who will arrive In private car Include Harry S. Black. Mr. and Mra. Prank A. Vandat lip, Frank Trumbull, and Law rence Watarbury, who It Is reported Is looking for a middle South polo field to be used after tho Aiken season and before Iakewood Is available. ATwnarniirj 'Ajlr Will Solve Question Genuine Public Demand for Opera Concerts Recitals Music Notes I'auer, whose success last season, his first In America, was so great that he is returning this year Violoncellists: Jean tSerardy. well known to the American public: lco Schuli, popular flrat 'cellist of . the Phil harmonic, and Beatrice Harrison, ac claimed great by European critics, and making her first tour of America this season. Also to be heard are Henri Leon Leroy. flrat clarinet, and Xaver Relter. first horn. Misa Kitty Cheatham will be the soloist at the Young People's Coni-ert. The Philharmonic will also have the co operation of the St. Cecilia Club. Victor Harris, conductor. In the performance of the usct "Uante" Symphony. Sutorlus A Co. of 1 West Thirty-fourth street take pleasure in announcing that they have secured the exclusive manage ment of Modest Altsehuler and his Rus sian Symphony Orchestra. This well known organization, now In Its eleventh season. Is arousing greater Interest than ever, and the ready response to the an nouncement of its managers haa shown the Increasing popularity of the Russian Symphony Orchestra. They are the only orchestra who have made three transcon tinental tours on their own merits, and without a big sollst as a drawing power. In San Francisco Mlscha Elman, the Russian violinist, who was also on tour at that time and who was Introduced to the American public by Mr. Altsehuler, had his managers engage the services of the Russian Symphony Orchestra to ac company him. This season, the flrat under organised management, haa been booked extensively Beginning at Pitts burg, September !2, for a week at the Exisialtltm. the orchestra will tour Penn sylvania. New Tork, Ohio. Indiana and Illinois aa far west aa Peoria, returning by the way of the Middle Weat In time for the first of Its regular subscription concerts at Aeolian Hall, which will take place November IS. January and Feb ruary 17. Between theae New York con certs tours of shorter duration will bo taken and subscription concerts In the suburbs and nearby cities will be given. AUTUMN SEASON FOR ASBURA Asnt-gT Pang. V J , sept. U The flrat convention of the season waa entertained I here this week. Several more are eched- uled for the near future. Agents of tho I I ieneral Accident Assurance Corporation I of Scotland gathered for their fourth an- mini convention at. the Brunswick on Tuss ! day for a three day meeting. The aaao- ; elation brought entertainers and a banquet i and dance were features of the meeting. Thero were more lhan two hundred in ' attendance. j The next big convention la- the annual ' session of the National Women's Christian 1 Temperance l nion. This body is expected to bring .1,omi delegates here for the week ! of t ictober 2. I The F.lbrron Horticultural Society will I give their annual four days show at the , Casino beginning October 27. 'She Mon- mouth County Poultry Association will bench its show at Ihe Casino for four days beginning November H, The New Monterey Hotel closed Its doors (his week, but the Colsmsn House, La- i layette. Metropolitan, Brunswick, Plan. ! Marlborough and many others are still I open. The Coleman, Metropolitan and I Marlborough are year round houses ihe boardwalk concert season ended I at the Casino on Sunday night when Arthur I l'i voi aud his hand gave their farewell concert The Pryor orchestra will con- Itinue at 1 tie Casino through the month Dances are held nightly Plans are being pushed bv the business I men of the city to organize a company to build a modern convention hall on a beach 1 front site 10 accommodate s.noo persons, j Merchants Day will he observed here I neat Thursday. Most or the store in the j city will be closed that day so that the clerks may have an outing. ! Late arrivals at the hotels include: Coleman House -Miss Alice (J. Clark, j Miss K. Bert hold. S A i'olman. Jama ! Bishop and Kenneth I. White of New York, j Brunswick Kuaeell H. Bliss, Mr. and Mrs. M. tireen, Mr. and Mrs. C. Norle-Miller. Mr. and Mrs J, P Precliill or New York and O. W. Leonard of Brooklyn. Metropolitan -B O. Blank. T. J. Mc Mahon, Hpenoer Johnson. K. W Wilson, Mr and Mm. C. E. Bryant, Mia F. A. Bryant, carl P. Bjolr and T. Callahan of New York. AUTUMN 0ATZTTES AT HOT sranros. Hot Brat no, Va.. Sept. It. -The mid dle of September Ands autumn gayetlea begun at tha Virginia Hot Springs. Many member of the summer colony, Including the Count and Countess da Chambrun. Mra. Nicholas Longworth, Mra. Bueknar A. Walllngford, Mrs. Oscar W. Undsrwood i of There Being Any The sixth annual spring tmir trill atari on Easter Monday. The Flonzaley Quartet announce fa dates for the coming season as OerfrtiW 1, January 2 and March !. The eoncerU will be in the evening and at Aeolian Ball. Announcement is made by the Italian Orchestral Society of New York that prr aratlons on a big scale are now hrtnt made for a great festival concert to b glven In October commemorating the cen tenary of tiiuseppe Verdi. It Is pUnn-l to make this a notable event. The pr gramme will lie a very Interesting nr. made up of selections by the famous con poser only. The soloists of the occulta will e announced later. Rehearsals for the forty-first sen-nr tile oratorio Society of New York will gin on Thursday evening, Beptrmlier Of tliese there will be twonty-sevei n lar, and twenty-five extra rehtarnais scheduled for Tuesday evenings. I.. Kocmmenirh enters on his e yet conductor, and the programme, snhni tlul and Teutonic as ever. Is thin : "Rut an oratorio by 'leorg Schumann time by the society), Friday evening cember This complex modern wic k been sung three times In Chicago and I heard last fall at the Worcester feitl' It was first heard in Hamburg in 1' During his European trip this sunn Mr. Koemmenlch spent oonslderabli with the composer in study of the wi Those who have sung "Ruth" Speak o with mingled awe and exasperation ' eighty-fourth and eighty-fifth repetitl of "The Messiah" will be given on Krl afternoon, December 2S, and S;itin evening, December 27. Beethoven's M In D" (Mlssa solemnls) will he iun the third time by the society on Satur evening, March 2S, and B concert 11 cappclla music, programme not yet . will be offered on Saturday evening, A 25. These will make the 227tli to 231st regular concerts presented by society. They will he given In Carni Hall as usual, and the New York 8 phony Orchestra will assist. and Mrs. Seth Barton French ure malnlng for the fall season Bach it thi week has brought Its quota of v ; tors from Newport. Bar Harbor other Northern resorts, and the the month will find the Homestead Oiled. Mr. and Mrs R Livingston Rcerkffll ended a ten day stay here on Wi Inexdi with a dinner on the private rat Oei in before their departure Shepherd chestrs furnlghgd music through 1 ner hour, and the guests Included and Mrs. Oliver Hitrrlman of N 1 A. B. Chapin of Providence Mm Willi' H. Holmes, Jr., of Kansas Cit and Mr Oeorge P. Jordan. Mrs Seth Barton French iv luncheon Wednesdav at Bart m LoHl for Mr. and Mrs Harrlmsn " Carl! llarrlmnn and others one of the largest teas of the wi si given by Mr and Mrs. Robert Waller 1 New Y'ork on the balcony of II they hava taken for the fall ll ' northeast wing of the Homestead Tl balcony. Which overlooks the golf III and tennis courts, was decorated "fit yellow dahlias aud Mtdsnrod Tl e gttet Included Miss Margaret Kreh Mary P. Brooks of New York. M rice L. Johnston and Mrs. tb Ingalls of Chicago. Mrs Malvill I Mi" MU- B ir gull. Mrs. Edgar H, Rrigl t ai ' R. H. Downman of New Orleans, Mn Mm William Cooke- Wnrthinpt.o William 1. James of BBltlmn I John B Knox, J. J. Parker a rudf Sheldon or New York and K ' ' ' Jr. j Miss Katherlne Ingalls gave 1 ' ! snnt the other aftsrnoon In lb J 1 I room of the Homestead t. r 11 I '' I young people, and In a tnrkc trot for prise a pin and a cah ' Miss Josephine Palms and Che 1 of Detroit Others present were I s Mlstj ' Clarice French. F.lcatmr Brl J Bogers. Virginia .Marshall. I' ' I lsabelle Palms. Catherine Paint' H Norrls and Charlotte Ouy and cn Kdaar Bright. Allen Losb, .1 1 r Jr., Louis sirobel and David 111 Ingall. Misa Kleanor Hrlgh. also gave 1 dance for the younger set .it ' cottage. Mra. Melville K. Ingalls and M Scarborough sent out Invitation " ' for a nine hole putting tournami two cups offered to the winners those who will play are tie ' .f I ni m AT vnumm ub v iiaiiiurun. , Underwood. Mrs. Burkner A. Walltnpsj Mrs. Oeorge It. Ingalls, Mis- 1 Ingalls. Miss Susie de Phamh Robert Waller, Rear Admiral V Buehler. W. A. Carter and R. W Mr. and Mr. J. 1 MeCall " gave a luncheon at Pagsefi II, xut , a n r