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~3n tfye Social \>Porld By MAUD McDOUGALL. Mrs. Wilson is having; one of her little official teas at the White House this afternoon, at which the ladles of the Cabinet circle will be. the particu lar guest* Mrs. Marshall, wife of the Vice President, who has been having a long siege of the Influersa. is really "about well**?witness the fact that she expects to be able to go to the White House this afternoon, first social adventure since her illness I^ittle Morrison Marshall, who been ill also, remunerated more rapid ly than did Mrs. Marshall, and h:i* been quite himself for th- list tr Wr. This evening the Vic- J*rosl !e??t ant! (Mrs. Marshall will go ' > Boston for a couple of days, as the Vice President has an address to make there at 1 i an<iuet of the Manufacturers* Aw ciation. They will return to Washing ton on Wednesday. The French Ambassador and Mme. J Jsserand have cards out for a recep tion at the embassy tonight tn honor of the entrance of French and Ameri can troops into Alsace-Lorraine, to which they are inviting allied diplo matic representatives, members of the Cabinet, the French High Commis sion and other friends from official circles. The Secretary of State and Mrs. l^anslng. who have been spending the week-end with their old neighbors at Watertown. N. Y.. are expected In Washington this morning. They have a socially busy week ahead of them, as practically every night from now on someone will be giving a dinner in their honor. prUv to their departure for the peace ccn ference. Among their hosts for t week are the Minister of Halvad> and Mme. Zaldivar. who will enter tain at dinner in their honor on Fri day night. *Tbe retiring Ambassador of Argen tina and Mme. Naon are also very Make Your Own Complexion Treatment If you woukl hare a beautiful complexion, one which will make 50a exceedingly attractive, juat try thia receive. Go to any grocery etore and get ten cent a worth of ordinary oatmeal and fnn any drug store a bottle of derwillo. Use 'he oatmeal aa directed in every iwckage of derwillo. then lo! and behold the martelou* ??hange. One application will astonish you. Be *ure to read the announcement soon to a 1 pear in this paper, entitled. "Beauty Specialist Tells Women and High Schorl Oiria How to Make a Wwvierful Completion Treatment at Home." It girea full details for using thia receipe.? Adv. much in Bemand as honor guests and have their time pretty well Mled up to the day of their departure. The Minister of Switzerland and Mme. Sulzer will entertain at dinner in their honor ou Thursday?Thanksgiv ing Day. Mrs. Newton D. Baker, wife of the Secretary of War. who has been ill j for the last month, has returned' to her Georgetown home from the local hospital which she entered early in the week and *eems now to he mak ing steady progress toward complete recovery. The Secretary of the Navy went down to his home in Ilaleigh. N. C.. Saturday to meet Mrs. Daniels who was on her way homeward after an extended tour through the West and Southwest in behalf of the Y. W. C. A. War Council. They are t?oth ex pected in their Washington home to day. Senor l>on Beltram Mathieu, the new Chilean Ambassador, arrived in Washington yesterday. The Italian Ambassador. Count Macchi di Cellere, will go to New York today to be the honor guest at the luncheon to be given at the Hotel McAlpin by the American Manufacturers' Export Association. (5. B. CeCcato, commercial delegate attached to the embassy, and Fran cesco ? Quatrone. special delegate, will accompany the Ambassador. Attorney General and Mrs. Greg ory have an their guest Mrs. Mary Cook, of Philadelphia, who will re ' main with them until after Thanks tdving. The Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs. Houston will entertain a few I friends informally at dinner on Thanksgiving Day. Mr. John Barictt, director general of the Pan American Union, enter tained at luncheon yesterday in the Columbus Room of the Pan 'Amer ican Building in honor of Senor Don ! Gustavo Munixaga Varela. counselor1 and charge d'affaires. of Chile, who is aboiH to surrender direction of the Embassy to the new Chilean Ambassador. Senor Don Beltran Mathieu. Aside from the host and the guest of honor, those present in cluded: Breckenrldge Long. Third Assistant Secretary of State; J. E. Lefevre, charge d'affaires of Pan ama; Albert Blanchet, charge d'af faires of Haiti: J. H. Stabler, chief, Latin American division. State De partment; Juan B. Hojo. counselor of the Mexican Embassy; Rene Correa Luna, secretary of the Argentine Em bassy; Capt. Julian Irzar. naval at-' tache of the Argentine Embassy; Col. I Announcement: To help meet the needs of the government, Wrigley's has discontinued the use of tin foil as a wrapping for WRiOtt V- i JUIDY FRUIT CHt WING GLM Hereafter all three WRIGLEY flavors will be sealed . in air- tight, pink-end packages. WRIGIfcYS JUICY FRUIT CHEWING GLM Hr~ THL FLAVOR LASTS . JW. Hffir-r' ? ? So look for WRIGLEYS in the pink sealed wrapper and take your choice of fla vor. Three kinds to suit all tastes. SEALED TIGHT?KEPT RIGHT ( J 1 Be SURE you get Wrigley's? The Flavor Lasts! Si! Alfredo Ewing. military attache of the Chilean Embassy; Boa* Long, diplomatic service. State Depart- j ment; Maj. Ernesto N. Tablo, mill- ; tarv attache of the Cuban lega tion; Pedro Villademoros, financial commissioner, Argentine "Embassy; Lieut. Jose Van de Gucht, naval at tache of the Cuban legation; Manuel Zavala, securtary of the Nicaraguan legation; Luis Fidel Yanes. secretary of the Chilean Embassy; Alberto Cor tadellas, secretary of the Bolivian legation; Hugo Wilson. financial commissioner. Argentine Embassy; Octavio Fialho, second secretary of the Brazilian Embassy; Rlcardo Becu. second secretary of the Ar gentine Embassy; Oscar E. Duplan. second secretary of the Mexican Em bassy; Mariano Broil, second secre tary of the Cuban legation; Angel Gandolfo Herrera, attache of the Ar gentine Embassy; L. A. Penaherrera, attache of the Ecuadorean legation; Pablo Rada. attache of the Bolivian legation; Juan Ovalle-Quintero. at tache of the Colombian legation; | Francisco J. Yanes. assistant direc tor of the Pan American Union; A. C. Rivas. of the Pan American I Union; Harry W. Van Dyke, W. A. Reid, Acting chief of the Pan Amer ican Union: Benito Javier Perez I Verdia. of the Pan American Union. I Mr. and Mrs. Charlemagne Tower, of Philadelphia, the former it one time United States Ambassador suc cessively to Austria, Prussia and Ger j many, announce the engagement of 'their daughter. Miss Helen Tower, to j Maj. William Abbott Robertson, U. S. A., of Nashville. Tenn. Miss Tower is in Washington at the [ headquarters of the American Red j Cross. She made her debut several | seasons ago at a ball given by her parents jn Horticultural Hall. The marriage will take place on Saturday, December 21, in Holy Trinity Church. I Rear Admiral Charles H. Davis, U. ; S. N.. retired, an$ Mrs. Davis, who have been at Newport since closing their summer home in Jamestown, started yesterday for Washington, where they will pass the winter. Mrs. Marshall Field entertained at dinner last night at her residence on Sixteenth street. Mrs. Champ Clark, Mrs. Thomas P. Gore, Mrs. John D. Shafroth. Mrs. Thetus Sims. Mrs. Edward Keating and Mrs. Louis Brownlow received the guests at the victory celebration meeting yesterday afternoon at the headquarters of the National Ameri can Woman Suffrage Association. Utt Rhode Island avenue. For the first time In suffrage history there have been full suffrage victories In three States In one year. The winning of C klahoma. 8outh Dakota and Michi gan was the subject of talks by Sena tors from the three States, the Rev. Anna Howard Shaw. Dr. Caroline Bartlett Crane, of Michigan, and Miss Marjorie Shuler. who had charge of the publicity and political work in the Oklahoma campaign. A goodly gath ering of suffragists and their friends turned out in honor of the occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome N. Bonaparte entertained fourteen convalescent sol diers from Walter Reed Hospital at luncheon in the I street residence Politeness in the Home Circle. By DOROTHY DIX THE WORLD'S HIGHEST PAID WOMAN WRITER. The little 4-year-old accidentally spilled lOIBI of his cocoa on the nice clean white table cloth. His mother reproved him sharply for being piggy and sloppy and sent him from the table. The little fellow was crushed with mortification, and as he climbed down from his high chair ho turned to his mother an? sobbed out: "Why don't you treat me polite, like I was company, and say that it doesn't make any difference?" And we grown-ups looked at each other aghast. and some one murmur ed, "out of the mouths of babe* and sucklings," far the child's hand had pulled aside the curtain and shown us the skeleton in the closet of practically every household. It's lack of politeness. It's lack of Plain ordinary common civility. It is lack of the elementary consideration that we show to the most casual stransrers. That is the real thing that is the matter with domesticity. J That is what makes marriage a fail j ure. That is why we say there Is | no place like home, and thank God for j it. That is why husbands and wives ; strain on the bond that ties them to i Rether, and why brothers and sisters j scatter to the four ends of the earth, i aad the sons and daughters who j have to stay at home with their parents regard themselves, and are pooularly regarded, as martyrs. For it is only too sadly true that there is nobody on earth who treats you with the same degree of brutality that your own family does. There is nobody else who is so rude to you, or who shows so little regard for your sensibilities. Your worst enemy would i?ot think of offering you the insults that are freely tendered to you by those who really love you. No peculiarity of human nature is no inexplicable an this. Why our nearest and dearest should daily stab us to the heart with speeches leaving wounds that never heal: why the hands that we trust should bare our weaknesses to the public and point out defects, nobody knows. It is merely true that there seems to be a general Impression that the family circle is the only place in the world where people can dispense with the ordinary decencies of life In deal ing with each other, and in which every season is an open season for each member of the household to go hunting for the other's little faults and peculiarities. j And yet. heaven knows, there is . no other place where we all so desire to shine as on our own hearthstone, I and there are no other eyes in wnicn i we so yearn to loom heroic. Probably | no man ever gets such a knock out blow as when he first discovers that yesterday. The Bonapartes, by the way, are looking well ahead to next summer. They have already be spoken a cottage at Newport for the season. The First Assistant Secretarv of State and Mrs. William Phillips" will entertain at dinner on Tuesday and again on Saturday. Mr. Yoshio Twate. the newly-ap pointed third secretary of the Japa nese Legation in Rio de Janeiro, Bra ail, formerly attache to the Kmbassy in Washington, is now stopping at the Hotel Powhatan. Mr. Twate is temporarily attached to the Embassy here awaiting passage to his new post. Mrs. Herbert Shipman has arrived in Washington to remain over Thanksgiving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. fcdson Bradley. Miss Cornelia Aldis has returned to Washington and is established in her home on R street. Mr. and Mrs. H>al Smith, who have spent a delightful three weeks in Atlantic City and New York, are back in their apartment at 2400 Sixteenth street. Lieut. Winthrop Murray Crane, jr.. U. S. A. Ordnance, has arrived in France. Patronesses for the Navy Relief concert and dance on Thanksgiving night at Washington Barracks are I Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. Mrs. Jorcphus Daniels, Mrs. George Dewey. Lady Grant. Mme. de Blanpre, Mm. Will iam Shepard Benson. Mrs. Claud* A. jSwarison. Mrs. Lemuel Padgett. Mrs. Richardson Clover, Mrs. Henry Dim lock. Mrs. William Sampson and Mrs. jWillard Brownson. Mrs. Arthur Willaid is chairman of th?? District of Columbia auxil iary of the navy relief, it being cus | tomary for the wife of the com mandant of the navy yard to pre side. Mrs. George Barnctt is first vice president. Mrs. William 8. Ben son. second vice president: Miss Mary K. Lambertin, secretary, and Mrs. Z. L. Tanner, treasurer. Mrs. Richard Wainwr'ght is chair man of the executive committee and Mrs. John O. Nicolson is chairman of the relief committee, which gives im mediate assistance to the afTlicted. Other members are Mrs. Kdward J. Dorn. Mrs. Ralph Earle. Mrs. Arthur T. Niblack. Mrs. Leigh Palmer. Mrs. S'-aton Schroeder and Mrs. Alexander Sharp. Mrs. Coontz, wife of Rear Admiral R. K. Coontz, is spending the winter in Washington and has consented to be one of the receiving line. She was chairman of the auxiliary in Seattle this year when that auxiliary gave a most successful pageant and real ized $100,000, dividing between the Red Happy Mothers Prepare in Advance A Wonderful Influence for Ex pectant Mothers. Mothers for over half a century have used with the utmo.t regularity the time-honored preparation. Moth ers fr'end berore the arrival of baby Here la a truly wonderful pen etrating application for the abdomen and breasts. It softens and makes elastic the muscles, rendering them pliant to readily yield to nature's de? mand for expansion. By its use the anxious months of pregnancy are made comfortable. The usual wrench ing strain, bearing-down and stretch ing pains are counteracted The sys tem is prepared for the coming event and the use of Mother's Frienii brings restful nights and happy an ticipation. for the nerves are rot drawn upon with the usual strain By its regular application the mus cles expand easily when baby ar rives; the time is leas at the crisis and naturally the pain and danger Is less. Mother's Friend is on sale at every drug store. It is for external use only. Is absolutely safe and wonder fully effective. Write the Bradfleld Regulator Com pany. Pept. C, I-amar Building At lanta. Georgia, for their Interesting Motherhood Book, free to users of Mother's Friend, and obtain a bottle of Mother's Friend, from the drug store and begin this grateful treat ment.?Adv. his wife doea not look up to him as an oracle but regard* him as a poor weak creature with wobbly Judgment. Nor does any woman's vanity ever survive ascertaining that her husband thinks of her as a fat, homely, mid dle aged woman whom he calls "mother," and not as a living picture Of course the members of a family naturally get each other's number with a pitiless accuracy, but why should they not conceal their fatal knowledge from each other as they would from strangers? Why hand out for home consumption the frank and brutal criticism they would not! dream of offering to a mere acquain tance. When Jontsby, who fancies himself as a raconteur, tells over for the hundredth time some story that Mrs. Smithkins cut her teeth upon in the cradle ah?- laughs in the right places and applayds it, no matter how bored she is nor how much Jonesby has bungled the tale in the telling. But let husband undertake ?o dls- J geminate a few hoary cheatnuts and wife ring* the *>ell on him. and tells him that he always fumbles the ball, and misses the point in an anecdote, j and makes him feel small and ridicu lous. When Thompson takes down Mrs. Blank to dinner and she expresses perfectly idiotic opinions that show her utter Ignorance of the topic she Is discussing. Thompson beams upon her and listens as If to the voice of a sibylf but when his wife dares to differ , with him on any subject he tells her that she doesn't know what she is talking about, and that she's got the mind of a hen. When you put all of your good money in a frock or a hat the other women you meet will praise Its style, or lines, or color. It's only your sister, or your cousin, or your aunt, who will tell you that it's ten years too young for you, and that with your bad complexion you should never try to wear that shade. It's only Johnny's and Mary's mother who calls attention to their faults before people. It's mother'who crucifies a shy, morbid, self-conscious girl by forever complaining about how awkward she is and how homely. It's father who tells Ben what a young fool he is, and then wonders why Ben won't work for him For it never dawns on the stupid parents that the main reason that children want to leave home is to get among strangers I who will not feel free to criticise ! their personal peculiarities. I It is sad. but true, that the greatest j need in the world is for politeness I in the home circle. ] Cross and the Main Society of Navy Relief. : The board of managers of the j Young Women's Christian Home, 211 i C street northwest, wishes to remind | the many friends of the home that donations for Thanksgiving Day will | be most gratefully received at the J home. Tuesday evening at 8:15 Maj Tracy will give an illustrated talk on j "Camouflage" at the I'nlted Service Club of America at Dupont circle. On Friday evening at 8:15 Rustom j Rustomjee, esq., of Bombay. India. I will address the club on "What India | Has Done for the Allies." Moving I picture slides specially sent out by the British War Mission will be | shown in connection with the lecture. i ~~~* Miss Janet Richards returned yes i terdav from a lecture trip to Phila delphia. New Jersey and New York. | where she addressed large audiences j on "The Menace of Hun Hypocrisy." At her weekly talk thi? morning at the j Knickerbocker at 10:45 she will speak especially on "The Task of Peace i Making: Dangers Ahead." I * | The cavalry branch of the army emergency committee will have a benefit performance of moving pic ! tures at the Knickerbocker on the ! afternoon of December 5 at 3:30. Mrs. I Douglas McCaskey is chairman of the J ticket committee. I The League of American Penwomen will hold a reception of rejoicing on Thanksgiving Day from 3:30 to 0 | o'clock for the members and their ; friends at the league club rooms at ! 16J3 H street northwest. ( At 4 o'clock the assembly will join in the national "Victory Sing." which j the National Council of Women has j arranged as an expression of patrl ; otic and spiritual thanksgiving, j Dr. Otis Glazebrook, late American Coroul at Jerusalem, will speak on j Jerusalem. Sergt. Trumpey will sing I several solos. ? Mrs. Isaap Pearson, president of the ! league, will be assisted in receiving j by the* members of the executive I board. | The "Victory Reception" to be tendered by the Southern Society J of Washington in honor of the army and navy at the 'Wardman Park Hotel. Tuesday evening will be one of the brilliant and largely attended functions of the season. Hon. New ton D. Baker and Hon. Josephus Daniels will be the guests of honor. The affair will be attended by high officials of the army and the navy end by the Diplomatic Corps repre senting the countries allied with the United States in the war. Presi dent Clarence J. Owens, of the so ciety. and Mrs. Owens, will be joined on the receiving line by three of the past presidents of the society and their wivas?Gen. William C. Gorgas. Capt. C. C. Calhoun and Mr. Claude N. Bennett, and also by Sec retary and Mrs. Baker and Secretary and Mrs. Daniels; Miss Nannie Ran ? dolph Heth. president of the South ! ern Relief Society, and Hon. James j H. Preston and Mrs. Preston, of Bal timore. Mr. Milton W. Johnson, vice chairman of the executive commit tee. is assisting in the preparations j for the function, the chairman of the ? committee. Secretary Daniels, being i one of the guests of honor. A large ' floor committee and a large recep | tion committee is being organized: j the floor committee under the chair [ manship of Col. Robert E. Lee. the J reception committee under chair | manship of Admiral Samuel Mc ) Gowan. Scotch. A Scotch caddie ia almost certain to be a shrewd observer of men and things and he is frequently gifted with a sharp tongue. Andrew Carnegie tells of "Lord Willie," who was for many years a well-known figure on the St. An drews golf links. A public dinuer was to be given In honor of a very distinguished for eigner on the occasion of his first visit to St. Andrews and Willie ap plied for a ticket to the bailifr who was in charge of the arrangements. The worthy man curtly refused the application, telling Willie that it was "no place for the likes of him to be at the dinner." "Not for the likes o' me!" was Willie's indignant rejoinder. "I've been in the company of gentlemen from 11 to 4 o'clock maist days for the last thirty years and that's mair than you can say!" AMERICAN MENU ON FEAST DAY -? Thanksgiving Dinner Plan ned to Equalize Food Supplies. A universal Thanksgiving dinner menu, planned for the American home, that h?a the simplicity of the .first Thanksgiving dinner, has been I prepared by the United States Food j Administration. Not u fowl or fruit or vegetable is mentionod on the menu that would j not be found on any American fnrm. | The fare, as planned, is typical of our ! national feast and our first peace hol j iday. j In suggesting a universal Thanks giving menu the use of local products I in advocated so as to lessen the tax on rail transportation. A shortage or joversupply of poultry, same or vege tables i?i certain localities should ?>e adjusted to meet the community aup ' ply, the Food Administration' sug-! 1 gests. Feast Day Menu. The menu planned for 100 per cent t Americans on the American feast day ! is as follows: Roast Turkey. Chicken. Duck. Goose, or Game (if the State law per mits). with Bread Dressing (Left-over Dried Dread). Mashed Potatoes. Mashed Turnips. Baked Tomatoes (Home Canned). Cranberry Sauce. Lettuce or Fruit Salad. Pumpkin Pie or Steamed Pudding. The Food Administration has given the following recipes: Cranberry Sauco?1 quart cranber- ] lies, 1 pint water, 3-4 cup nyrup, 3-4 cup sugar. Boil the syrup, sugar and water for Hive minutes; skino if necea- j sary. Add the berries and cook with-4 out stirring until all the skins break. ! Pumpkin Pie Filling?2 cups pump- i kin (cooked and strained), 1-2 cup mo- j lasses or sorghum. 1 teaspoonful cin namon. 1-2 teaspoon ginger, 1-2 tea- I (spoon salt, 2 eggs, 2 cups milk. i Mix pumpkin with molasses and sea soning. Add beaten eggs and milk. I Bake in a pastry-lined pie plate until] I firm. "The stars Incline, but do not compel." , HOROSCOPE. Mondny. November 2.1. lfllS. j The stars are not friendly to humaq activities today, according j to the reading of the astrologers. Saturn, the Sun and Venus are all j adverse. There appeals to be some dlff? culty affecting farmers and their! interests. This mav be a disastrous ' storm but it is more likely to be! some condition owin* to war exi- | gencies. | Mining has a sinister sign to- j day, which indicates that there inay bo labor shortage or other tr-woles that restrict production. This sign items to affect other .minerals be side coal. It is a'most unpropitious rule un- ] , der which to push one's claims^ to any position or advancement. I'nder this sway arrogance on the ! part of men in high place is likely, to be revealed. Employers as well j as office holders of every rank are j J likely to be affected by this sin I ister influence. j Women are subject to ? direction | {making for anxiety and disappoint-! I ment. They should practice self- | i control and should keep a positive (attitude of mind. Bachelors have a planetarv di t rection that is sinister. In the new i order of things they w'll occupy n ! peculiar place in public esteem, the i seers declare. This is not a fortunate wedding ? day and it is not a lucky gwern ) ment of the stars for any social r.f j fan. j *1 he sway is not favorable for the * theater. First performances of new ; plays may not be satisfactory. j One of the innovations after the j war will be the establishment of J people's theaters, according to the ! prophesy of a famous astrologer. | Increase in the birth rate is prog nosticated and the children born at | this time will be endowed with ex j traordinary talents and brilliant j minds, it is prognosticated. Occul ! tists believe that, owing to the pre | mature going out of so many fine i spirits in battle. 1-irge numbers will j be quickly reincarnated. Persons whose birth date it is | may have illness in tbe family and they should be extremely careful I lo safeguard the health. Children born on this day may j be inclined to be careless in dress I'and in money affairs. These sub jects of Sagittarius are usually tal ented and independent. I (Coi>> right, 1S1&.) What He Wanted to Say. Gen. Diddle said a London gar den party: "The doughboy :n France has a j lot of trouble with the French i language. A loughbov sat on a | bench in the Tuileri4* Gardens c r.e J day and thumbed a French phrase t book discontented I;*. " 'This here book.' he growled, 'don't tell you what you want to say at all. It tells you how to say the uncle of . your mother is G5 years old. or the sister of your wife has bought a cow, or the umbrella of your neigh bor is In the attic, but I don't want I to say nothing of that kind. " 'What I'm after.' said the dough boy. Is a book that tells you how to I say: "Your face is familiar?ain't we met before?" or "Gee. them eyes!" or "Little girl, you sure do look out o* ! sight In that swimmin' suit. ? \ Dallas News. BAND CONCERT PROGRAMS. U. 8. Marine Parrack*. Monday. Novem ber Tt. 1918. at ? 30 I?. ni. Orchestra con cert by the l". Marine Hand Orchestra. William H. Sautelmann. leader. PBOORAM. March. "Son* <f Uncle *?'?" McCoy Orertnra. "bight Cavalry" .Supi* "Riwtle of Spring" Winding 1 Grand acenca from Madame Butterfly" Puccini ; Walts, "The Skaters" WaklteuM j Serenade. "Lola' Friedomarm Suite. "Peer Gynt" ...Utieg (a) Mcminn th) The I>eatii c>f A* (C) Anitra'a Dauce. (d) Daaco of the Imp* in tbe Halls of the Mountain King. JUrii*.- Tbe 1UIU of yon teauma." "Tbe Star Spangled Banner.' Coacart by the I* S. Soldiera' Home Rand Orcheat?. 8task-> Hall, thin evening be ginning at 6:16 o'clock. John S. M. Zim mermann. Director. March. "The Fighting Hope" Manrtce Overture. "FYa IKaeolo" Auher Suite Character*!!' Am^r.cana." ThurHan (a) March. "Tt.- Tigtra Tail.'* <b Seren ade. "When Mali.'da sirga." (t) SkeUA. "The Watermelon Fete." Own. from "Oh. Lsd>' I-aljr!"... Kern Fb* Trot. "Orer the T?v" RoMberg Two Song*. (a) "A Cnttage in God* Oarden" Bond <b> A bittk Bit ft' Honey" Carrie Jacobs Hond Finale. "AlnanderV Back from Dine" W enrich "The Star Spangled Bannar." (? X#oo6war6 TCotfyrop New York?WASHINGTON?Pari*. Beginning Today?Basinets Honrs, 9:15 A. M. to 6 P. M. hh SATIN FRANCAISE A new satin, that as particularly well adapted for present day wear, because of its durability, its artistic draping quality, its rich luster and the delightful softness of its weave. Satin is one of the fabrics that is always in style, always correct for evening wear, for street and afternoon frocks, whether used alone or in combination with serge. Georgette and other materials. Women of the stage and movie stars are featuring most at tractive gowns of Satin Francaise. and the fashion magazines are devoting much space to this new weave. The universal adaptability of Satin Francaise to the needs ? of well-gowned women is shown by the very complete range of shades in which it is manufactured: For turning. White Orchid Cream Pink Turquoise Coral Nile American ? Beauty For Mrwl. Black Men's Blue Crow Bloc Hague Grape Nary African Brown Damson 36 Inches Wide, $3.00 Yard. F?r AfYrrnooa. Antelope Champagn: Old Rose Italian Blue Mole Robber Gray Taupe Amethyst Second floor-G ?t. 4 I Glimpse the Morass Be yond Respectability and Find ? Safety. ; The broad walk of the empty pleas- J j ure park stretched endlessly across a . world which seemed to rock. Some- ! | where near me a trolley buzz<*d along J but 1 felt I never could risk a trip ? to the city in garments which seemed , 'expressly designed to adverrtse their ! wearer as a woman for sale. I felt j in my bag for a dime for the phone f and came across Alexander Brown's card. "Call Mrs. Brown," the oblijr i int; secret service man had said. ? j "Groat girl, Mrs. Brown'" I remein f bered. Well, I centainly needed a i great woman to help rr<* in my pres I ent emergency. I dutrhed tho card j in a very cold hand and entered the ' watchman's office. IThe man within was heavy, hand some. middle-aged. I "Well, girlie, you can bet I'm clad , | you called!" he said with a leer j j which he meant to be flattering, i i Plainly 1 was learning a ^ood deal j .about life in a very short time. II i realized that no woman can wonder' ' about unfrequented spots at unsc- ' 'countable hours without learning a| lesson. I thought of all the nice com- j fortable women I know, women who . ar.^ hedtred around with conventions ; '? and protected by a father's or a hus- | j band's money. Can tbev possibly un-j I derstand what a woman faces once ' j those protecting barrier* are crossed? < ?If young girls could only know. T j thoua-ht. fewer would be advertised | as "missing" in the daily papers-- j land more of them would be patient, with the safe homes they often find ' so dull. The guard handed me the telephone bock and leaned close to me as if ; to help me find a number. T re- ? sented the familiarity?yet I found , myself clinging to his arm as I ? handed him Brown's card. "Get that number.*' I said, "ask i Mrs. Brown to come for me." Apparently the address proved my I j respectability for the man abruptly ! j became human, decent, friendly. And j [ then I loathed him as a hypocrite! j j "Rit here, miss," he said politely, j "but gosh, don't faint!" j The blaekness ir.to which 1 drifted I j was something more than a faint? ? it lastod so 'long that I never knew* ; i when Mrs. Brown arrived. j The Madison Emergency Hospital I . 10 which she took me has ceilings a I j mile high?at least that was my im- | press ion when I opened my eves after j j days and nights of troubled dream- j ing. Mother Ix>rimer was there, with the nurse, but I was too tired to be ' astonished at her presence. "Influenza, dear child." she ex-j 'plained when she saw that I recog | nized her. "Not a word now. darl- j in*. Just close your eyes again." I didn't care to talk?I cared for nothing at all except to cuddle in that safe white bed. At least I felt | quite safe when T was awake, for i Mother Lorimer was with me, but when I went to sleep end lost her, I was tortured by a terrible need. It was like hunger, or like thirst I was always scratching for a certain j old R. F. D. man who used to bring 1 fhe mail to me back in my girl-1 i hood's home. I expected him to bring I me a letter from Fob and in it Bob J was going to tell me "what we would [name it! ' That would be hard, of | P#TAR WTIDfr Ell Coprrlckt. 1018. courw. if It were a Rirl-l rctllf couldn't think of ? emRlr nioe name for a gfrt?but if it were a boy. *? mi?ht name it for Itaddy l^rimer. Only, of couw, that wouldn't be fair to Jim. jr. Jim might marr/ feojne day. and would naturally want a son to be named for himself. (To be continued.) NEW YORK HOTEL ARRIVALS. New York. \ov. ZL?The following Waphingiouians are registered at lo cal hotels: S. Blond helm, Continental: Miss C. Delahanty. Martha Washington: F. Forester. Navarre: Mr a I*. Herndon. Breslln; G. 8. Matfarlen. Bretton Hall; F. W. Head. O. E. Supple. Hermitage; If. U. Kiley. E. T. Walker. Grand; F. B. Christian. Brostel; Maj. C. CnU?. Breslin; G- A. Pa bine tt. 1 .atham; C I. Iloare. Herald Square; I*. Hermann, Walllck; G. W Phillips. Breslln; J. N. Towers. Wallick. H. B. Riley. Grand; J. A. Vai Dei. Tark Avenue; Misn N. Bethel. Aberdeen; Mias B. M. Brine. Ansonia: N. Ogliaskjr. I?nthnm. E. Collins. D. B. Fawoett. Herald 8quarr. MIm* G. E. Custer. Martha Washing ton: S. M. Flax. Hermitage, and M. G. Sullivan, Continental. WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE Need Help to Pass the Crisis Safely?Proof that Lydia t- Pink hero's Vegetable Compound Can be Relied Upon. T'rhana, 111.?"During Change ?f Life, In addition to lta annoying symptoms, I had an attack of grippe which lasted all win ter and left me in a weakened condition. 1 felt at times that I .would never be ' well again. I read of Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and what it did for wo men passing through the Change of Life, - - so I told my doctor I would try It. I soon began to gain in strength and the aanoy lng symptoms disappeared and your Vegetable Compound has made me a well, strong woman so I do all my own housework. 1 can not recommend Lydla E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound too highly to women passing through the Change of Life "?Mra Fas*K Hesso*. 1816 S. Orehade St., Cu bans, 111. Women who suffer from nervous ness. "heat flashes." backache, headarbes and "the blues" should try this furious root and herb rem edy. Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.