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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1925 fa Fall footwear for che yo and the older men, who insist upon : finds whole-hearted nsolation in the re- and easy fitting but followed upon the of the fu trouser ¢ for introduction | has proved season just ¢ indications .n- te that the “balloon last” will be more popular than ever this fall. Full,-Wide Toe Last. Of course many other sty! ‘shown and worn, and m: of these will enjo e or less extended | period of popularity. But the reign- | ing mode, and one that wil be found | on the feet of most well dressed men will be the wide full toe, more commoply referred to a the “balloon Coupled jwith {ts smart ap and its comforable , it retains its shape | h lends a point of prac- as well as appearance, Simple Lasts Most Popular. Among the more conservative dresser; a 1 those men who shun flashy apparel or footwear, the plain broad toe will be most popular. Green and Yellow Both Popular Shades cut s wil be Tt is begins 1 ida} off and Ishndes are extrer new f ¥ to know where the blue is difficult, indeed, to- ) tell where the green leaves the yellow begins. Both | ly popular. One | is of banana } lace and nar- A handkerchief evening appearance rt. The bod- evening | 1 be pop- ally the scal- 1 in contrast- s in the case of | whose scalloped | shed with a fold of n velvet, the same shade forming appliques on the Another gown of silver- uneven hem bound in and spaced.here and full skirt are velvet »iiqued to the gown with q Ivregular stems are t cord. —o $< earl choker designed for wn has two single ris falling at the back d extending to the huge pearl balls sw full skirt feloth las i purple ve here erchids iver thy ade of pale the A trands of ear the cla Praistlin ct pene es nts | more comfortable for dancing than ~ ored in Men's all Shoes However, for the men who demand the ultra and more jazzy stlyes, there will be plenty of models from which to choose, Chiefly amang these are some very becoming varia- tions of the one time famous brogue —the shoe that enjoyed so much popularity among well dressed men only a few years back. Then, too, there’ will be many medium width toes designed in very attractive stylings, Sport shoes, ever so popular with the outdoor man, whether he enjoys a fling on the Unks or a hike on the road, will also be featured in some new and interesting patterns. Light Shades Prevail. The favorite leather appears to be Scotch Grain, that excellent wear- ing and handsome leather which has been on the upgrade in popularity for the last few seasons, But shades will remain light, many of those For Dancing } being shown, varying but little from the popular shades of the summer geason. Besides this leather there will many styles in calf and other durable and well wearing ones, Blacks will be with us‘agatn, but with the exception of a select few, will not be worn to any large ex- tent. Goring Shoe An Innovation, An innovation and one that shaws considerablé promise is a shoe with gorlng attached to both sides of the tongue. This insures a snug-fitting oxford without tightcning up the laces. The goring also enables the wearer to draw the shoe onto the foot easily. Usual eyelets and strings are used in the regular man- ner. Feet Prettiest in - Black, Experts Agree The feet of most women !00°: best in black. Any shoe expert will con- firm that statement and this is real- ly the thing that is behind the in- | creased vogue for black shoes for These new punips for evening wear are of gold brocade, with a sugges- tion of the sandal about them, but with straps over the instep fastened with a gilt buckle. They:are much the opera pump. Wash Leather Gloves Given Lease on Life The white and natural chamois wash leather gloves whick have been so popular during the summer are not, going into retirement. rather, they are being given a new lease on life through the addition of short flaring cuffs of contrasting color, frequently embroidered. The loose pull-on models are being less frequently seen as colder weather approaghs. eS ees Pale orchid hosiery is chosen for Black patent leather, “glazed kid, suede and satin are the mate- j rials most used and the models are noticeably simple in design. Tr All Women of Today Have Young Feet NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—(United Press.}-There are no more old women—at least judging by the de- mand for shoes. According to shoe sales data in the wholesale centers here, the woman of 70 asks the shoe clerk for just what the girl of 16 wears. There is no longer an appreciable sale for the soft, round-toed, elastic sided, low-heeled, or any of the other types of shoes worh by the grand- mother of yesterday. All feet are young nowadays. ed Large Diamonds Now Drug on the Market Press.)—§ and seven carat dia- monds which a few years ago were in great demand by “swells” who could afford them have now gone | almost ‘entirely out of fashion. Small diamonds of one or two carats perfectly white in color and perfectly cut, have superceded the demand for the larger stones. Sa Miss Grace M. Eddy, one of the leading women lawyers in Washing- ton, is the only woman ever to serve as an examiner for the Interstate Commerce Commission. Mrs. Wilson Carey, of Garden City, L. I., one of America's fore- evening wear with the silver slipper by many women who are tiring of nude and silver tones. most business women, is vice pres!- dent of a great paper-making con- cern which employs 4,000 hands. ‘Announcing the arrival of the NEWEST FALL CREATIONS in Ladies’ and Misses’ Footwear Our ‘Autumn Assortment Is Now Complete WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION SPECIALTY BOOT / SHOP Second Floor O-S Building Sw OU VV he Casper Sundap Cribune ~ Balloon Lasts Setting The Styles * By AILEEN LAMONT. | (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—Adam Bede has been a notable part of English Mterature for years, but nelther book, character nor author ever got into fashions. Bve's beads, however, are safely ensconsed in that charmed circle. Few of the new evening gowns are not trimmed with rhinestones or bead embroid- ery of some sort. These adornments occasionally expand into large and elaborate medallions posed over the left hip. Alphabet Spendthrifts. The younger set fs violently enthu- siastic over the latest fashion in tnigerle, which provides for the em- broidering of the wearer's initials on the yoke. But by the time a social leader has made two or three divorce trips to Paris, she has so many initials that the yoke looks like the jumbled alphabet, which follows the name of a peer of the British empire Not So Simple. } LONDON.—(By mail to the United Even ¢xpensive simplicity is be- coming taboo. Frocks are becoming more elaborate all the time and this trend is aided by the increasing vogue for velvet. The answer lcs in the fact that many women were able to duplicate the simple designs and in self-protection the Paris de- signers had to concentrate on de-| signs and drapings which defied the | amateur, “Gee up, Napoleon, looks like rain," may have inspired one French hat as much as the emperor. For the hat is turned up in the front and completed with a military cockade, is usually fastened with soft, water-proof felt. Deep forest Green is a favorite color for this type of headgear. Persian Lamb Popular. ] If the modern furrler, like Kip- Ung’s victim of delirlum tremens, had been left alone with one wee blood red mouse, he would have skinned the mouse and invented a new fur, probably named scarletina. The old cowboy boast of ability to ride anything witir hair has been changed to ability to wear anything with hair. But if one wishes to wear Persian lamb, one must pay for tt. That fur bids fair to be extremely Popular, priced accordingly. Smoking Teachers Are | Banned in West Virginia WESTON, W. Va.—(United Press.) —Teachers who smoke cigarettes— either men or women—need not ap- ply for positions in schools of the Hecker's Creek district. The board of education there Places this ban as its first criterion and then prescribes a required amount of normal school training for prospective instructors. ——<—<____ Length Sacrificed to Fullness in Skirts The fullness of the present-day skirts has become such a feature of up to date styles that many women are sacrificing shortness of skirt to it, Extfeme fullness and curtailed length do not combine effectively. since they give an appearance of stubbiness to the wearer. So many of the evening frocks of the lighter materials are less than 10 inches ter of fluffy ruffles. Wrought Iron Hats Gne would scarcely go to a black emith shop for a smart fall hat, but that where a Parisian milliner got the ornaments for one of her newest creations. She has taken a black panne velvet hat and posed a Rreat chou of ostrich feathers to fall over the right ear, points down. This is fastened to the hat by a curved feather of black wrought fron. Anything that Wears Hair Anything with hair, from rat to réindeer, ie being utilized for fur garments and trimmings, This is especially noticeable on the where mole is being extensively used. The fur yields readily to tint ing in the most delicate shades and offers striking contrast to the s: hats of the darker hues. Gloves for Tight Sleeves The extremely tight sleeves vogue this autumn have made the gloves with flaring cuffs inappro- As a result, the glovers developed a hand covering for afternoon wear which has a gaunt let, indeed, but one which turns back in the flattest of folds towards the fingers. ——_ Among the fisherwomen of Brit- tany, maidens, wives and widows have each thelr own distinctive col- or of shawl. a MAN OF NINETY-NINE OLDEST TO CROSS SEA | LIVERPOOL-—~By mail to the United Press)—An American “Old Man of the Sea” is visiting in Eng- land today. He is Patrick Ferris. an American Civil) War veteran, 99 years old, who says he “still feels Tke a boy.” Ferris served through the Civil War ae an artilleryman under Gen- eral Grant. He was wounded four times. He came to England to visit &@ Sister at Newport, Monmouth- ahtre. While enroute to England he came to be known among the pas- singers as ‘The Old Man of Sea" as ho was the oldest man on the ship's records to have made the trans-At- Tantlo trip. poh ~ mk In Scotland it is a popular Bellet that if one goes fishing on Christmas Leaves Stage, Becomes Noted . Home Decorator | ‘Miss Elsie de Wolfe, New Yerk City, successful on the stage, left it to become Amer- most noted woman interior corator. She has just return- d from.a trip abroad. ———_____. Queen Alexandra has won a prize | with a litter of her beloved basset hounds at a London beach show where all the principal breeders of England were represented eB ba Tim distinction of being the first woman city clerk and treasurer in Vermont has come to Mrs. Mary 8. Mackay of Barre, who has just been appointed to tha: position. Oxfords for men, black kid, black $7.95 to from the floor and consist of tier on | Neil Hats } of silver cloth appliqued in the cen- Color Schemes Of Homes Are Match ee j For Personalities | NEW YORK.—(United Press.)—| Women ‘are matching the echemes of their homes with their personalities these days. The tail-| ored woman dislikes pillo doll heads and flu never knows the person: little stenographer her boudoir. color until one Just across the hall lives a girl of forty summers, twent credit department of a huge de- | partment store. Her clothes are drab and one might suspect that her | soul was quite as drab. Beneath her horn-rimmed spectacles are eyes as lusterléss as two wet rocks, The other night we passed her open door. The air was stifling as {t often !s in August. We peeked into the room expecting to see the usual abode of the working girl. Perhaps a towel-covered dresser ladened with cheap nicknacks, a bed with worn es and hat boxes beneath, etc. Instead we saw the one room home of the typical girl of today, a neat, colorful place quite as attractive as the boudoir of a girl of the Upper Avenue. Her walls were stained a grayish orehid. One didn't pect the orchid hue until one noticed that the wall seemed to blend with the plain plum colored rug. Her one window was draped in changeable green and orchid sunfast sill, the border being Piped in plain green. And on the single four-poster bed was coverlet of this same green and orchid changeable material with a basket su ter. Out of this basket lovely velvet ids seemed to grow on green silk stems. They were, perhaps, but orchids of the ten-cent store variety but they were appliqued with a silver thread buttonhole stitch and in brown and and tan calf. Shoes that are ankle fashioned that hug the ankle. Priced at $9.45 PAGE SEVEN Necklace ;Sweater Popularity Expected This Fall the vogue for two-p' s lends Itself spec vogue. In in: new sweaters are of fine of the trutle neck or ¢ Ww absent Over One Eye Evening bandeaux } more popular th; sortain added © worn ater most 2 ever now exquisite Jowelled necklace rt of popular for formal wear, and ts un- with usually striking if one’s dinner gown r 6 is of black or red Tt ts of hand wrought white gold, set with tiny | « pearis | - chiffon and metal which throat In a s the bandes Smart Handbags Mus flattened looked ve A makeshif Pine began vadiator and the top of the low to the cefling. Aj smart handbags t footstool affe L) or of leat? day 2 with th h they velope type eatened to a certa the pouch bags of moir —_ of rmonize t simple ¢ a Chinese embre panel under glass and on top of tl glass a tortoise shell dressing set was neatly placed, Two comfortable eker chairs with cushions and backs of orchid pongee set in the e bu small spa beside the window s claimed by Mrs. Here was a home which expressed ell, 88 years of age, everything which the working years has conducted a r wished to be. A butterfly e in Wapello, Towa. a re a ee 4 bobbin and being ites four of y ‘ent dren in the same number urs is the record of Rulz Sanchez of Yuma, Ari: now her thirty-elghth IMpetic rising young Im in her SHOES FOR WOMEN Graceful shoes make graceful feet, and from these you will be able to select footwear of graceful line and fashionable design, developed in calfskin, patent, suede or satin, and priced most moderately. SHOES FOR MEN The new Nunn-Bush Shoes and Children’s Shoes New Fall Shoes and Oxfords for the children, for dress or school wear; patent tan and black; some with tie, others with strap, and the sturdy school] shoes. MEN AND THEIR CLOTHES There’s a real pleasure in buying the new Fall Suit, Top- coat or Overcoat from this well selected stock. Hickey-Freeman Suits The finest of fabrics and manship are found Freeman Suit your dollars in the long r keep yourself better dressed, al! Your particular pattern and model is here, at $50 $60 $65 along the w Curlee Clothes for Men A remarkable s and style, for bc grown-ups. We suits here a price isfy the most $24.95 to $39.50 we Hicke will save it, both in fabric th young men and line of will sat- in You show a that refined ADLER-COLLEGIAN OVERCOATS For warmth in severe weather, for fine fabric, for style, for enduring good looks, we recommend Adler-Collegian Ove breasted, at Stetson and- coats ngle or double- $34.50 to $49.50 is 01 s women th Day bad luck will follow through ntire year. 3 Adee aie a Showing what is correct for men in hats. For Fall wear the pearl greys and the other popu- lar shades are here in the most desirable shapes, at $4.95 and $7 The New Sweaters We show a complete line of Bradley and Heller Sweaters, in short coats, crickets, pull overs and coat sweaters, in plain and color combinations, $4.95 to $16.45 Men’s Neckwear Just received our entire supply of nifty ties for men of refined taste. To be. completeh dressed the tie puts that fin- ished touch, at 50c to $3.00 Start Your Son Right. Our Suits Will Give Him That Feeling of Being Correctly Dressed. GOLDEN RULE DEP’T. STORE “ee ‘i LINDSAY & CO. shooting seas anc nec become that a anted. silver worn them tulle tled t Go With the Costume are carried prevail, ai n ex € silk ne of s her rouge forbidden actress by agreemé@nt with one of the biz