Evening Star Newspaper, May 6, 1921, Page 29

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Talked About All Over Town Our Perfect-Fitting Spring Suits Specially Priced at POR A MAN TO TAKE THE CREDIT FOR BEING WELL-DRESSED. BUT THE CREDIT FOR YOUR LOOKING WELL-DRESSED IS DUE TO JACK BERNSTEIN WHEN HE MAKES YOUR ISPRING SERGE SUIT TAILORED-TO-YOU $37.50 STRAND STYLE, ENGLISH SNAP, QUALITY, BEAUTY, TAILORING A GENTLEMAN APPRECIATES AT A PRICE FOR QUICK ACTION Jack Dernstein 814 F STREET NW N China they don't pay first to see a movie show. They walk in and take a peep at the show —and if they like it they come back and buy a ticket. You have to pay for Fashion Shop clothes first—but you can get your money back afterward if you'd rather have it. The fasion Glaag: H 'O Fifteenth and G Streets Ninth and E Streel . Ci ' Next to Keith's w.-gfl%ton"'-“:fl:'a' ana Opp: U. 8. Treasury roadway Rochester Tailored Clothes Manhattan Shirts Interwoven Hose MEN'S WEAR Our Best Value Today! UTILITY TOPCOATS $22.50 g AN all-wool muss and mist proof topcoat in a variety of beau- tiful heather mixtures. A coat to serve you in rain or shine. SIDNEY WEST, Inc. Fourteenth at G PRESIDENT HARDING Southern Clubs Plan Big Jols lification Meeting Here This Month. The Yale meeting. which is to be staged in the Capital city May 27 and 28 by the Associated Southern !Yala Clubs, promises to develop into a national event for Yale men. Alumni of the university are coming to attend the jollification from many states outside those covered by the southern clubs. The program in- jcludes a reception by President Harding_at the White House, when all the Yale men will be given op- portunity to meet the chief execu- tive, An_indication of the importance attached to the meeting by the uni- versity may be gathered from the fact that both President Arthur T. j&ell, president-elect, are to attend {and make speeches. Undergraduates, specially selected, will be on hand to give the “old grads” a “fill-in” of the life today on the campus. Four Days in Capital. The program provided for the en- tertainment of the sons of Eli While in Washington means two days of interesting _events. The committee has pointed out. too, that. as the meeting days fall on Friday and t will be possible for the Yale men who come to Washington to have a four-day holiday here in company with other Yale men, for Sunday and Decoration day follow. In detail, the program provides for the registration of the Yale alumni at the headquarters, the New Wil- lard Hotel, at 10 a.m. Friday, May 27, when badges and all information about the meeting will be distrib- uted. . An hour later, the meeting of the Associated Southern Yale Clubs will be chlled to order by Benedict Crow- ell, "91 S, former assistant secretary of war. Walter A. Sadd, '84 S, presi- dent of the Associated Southern Yale Clubs, will preside at this meeting, at which it is planned to transact the real business of the organization. At 1 p.m. a buffet luncheon will be served at the New Willard for all those attending. Program of Sports. The afternoon of Friday, May 27, is to be given over to sports. At 2:30 p.m.. the Yale men will board special cars for Chevy Chase Club, ! where golf and tennis matches have been arranged for the visitors. A dinner and smoker will follow at the club, at which a number of special- ties and “stunts” will be in order. Saturday, May 28, will be given over in part to a reception of the Yale men at the White House by the President, where the alumni will be photographed in company with Mr. Harding. The Yale men will march from the New Willard Hotel to the lwme House, preceded by a band. A visit to Mount Vernon will be boat, and a special lunch- be oyt ed “aboard for the eon will ‘be- serv. Yale party. ‘ After the return to Washington. $he party will be given a reception by’Join Hays Hammon at his home hare; - Another reception is to be given at the beautiful Pan- American Union bullding. of the clubs will be O ara Hotel at , at the Ne: ard Hotel, a which the speakers will include Presi- dent Hadley. President-elect Angell and other prpminent men. The meeting a8 capped by a b LAWYERS’ OUTING PLANS. Bar Association to Go to Chesa- peaks Beach May 14. Joseph A. Burkart, for the four- teenth consecutive year~haa.been ap- pointed chairman of the dinner com- mittee for the annual outing of the District Bar Association, to be held at Chesapeake Beach May 14. He is one of the directors of the association. The dinner menu will include baked shad, roast spring lamb, salad, peas, potatoes, ice cream and cake. There alzo will be a plentiful supply of near beer and cigars and cigarettes. An extensive program of athletic events is béing arranged by Edmund Brady, chairman of the sports com- mittee. George H. O'Connor is chair- man of the committee arranging for musical features. Two hundred law- vers and judges are expected on the outing. HEADS BUSINESS MEN. Fred C. Hays President of G Street Organization. Formal organization of the G Street Business Men's Association, whose object is to promote the development of trade on G street northwest, was ting Wednesday night :‘f’%n o m::mn‘nl 1210 G street. Fred C ys was elected presiden Harry C. Grove, first vice president, and J. L. Leverton, second vice presi- ent. dE. H. Etz was made treasurer of th new organization, with Barton §. Stewart, secretary, John Poole wus appointed chairman of a committee to draw up a constitution and by-laws. BUSINESS PSYCHOLOGY AND SCIENTIFIC SALESMANSHIP Metaphysical Healing, Metaphy- sieal Bible Divinity Course. The Inmer Christ Doctrines Modes of Heal- The Psych tive a lie Speaking, will be taught by the ‘four instructors of the college of Di- vine Metaphysi Inc, of St. Loul Mo., beginning 16th at ew Thought Temple, 1814 N N.W., Washington, D. C., preceded by a week of free lectures begin- ning May 8th. See Dr. Green for particulars at above address. the St. Hadley and Dr. James Rowland An-{ 3 | cloth, wool crash THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. YALE MEN TO MEET | The Well-Dressed Man Taking the Simmer Qut of Summer—Silk Suits—The Patrician Panama— Bowknot Ties—The Scotch “Kiltie” Brogan for the Oiden and Only Game By ALFRED STEPHEN BRYAN. OME sharp-tongued foreign observer once remarked: “You Americans know the price of everything and the value of nothing.” Like most snap judg- ments of aliens, this is one not whol- ly true, but isn’t there just enough truth in it to leave a sting? Are we mot too prone, espe- cially of late, to consider the sum we pay, rather than the something we get? Clothes, expressing: Fashion and Good Taste, rise to the plane of Art. You cannot weigh them upon a green-grocer’s scales, nor meas- ure them with a draper’s yard- stiek. There is more to a well cut suit than just length, breadth and thickness. To appraise things to wear by price alone is to form a low estimate of the Fine Art of Dress, which has an indisputable social and cul- tural uplift. Price is a good servant, but a poor master. Fine materials and gifted handiwork must com- mand their worth, and you will be well rewarded to pay the price. Involuntarily one has a higher opinion and one takes better care of genuinely good clothes. You brush them, hang them up, have them pressed, and they show their appreciation by far longer service. Not so many years ago tropic- thin summer clothes of silk, silk - and - linen, twillette, . doe- skin, cricketing flannel, polo and the like would have sug- gested the Spanish Don or the British officer in the Soudan. Today, such clothes are as much a part of the wardrobe of “Ye Compleat Gentilman” as his evening suit. Portrayed in the first sketch is one of those tropic-thin, two- button suits of surah, Shantung or pongee silk. In has the low gorge, the long, narrow lapels and the patch pockets. The jacket is not waisted to figure, but is rather straight and loose. Details may vary, of course, as . individuality and personal whim may prompt. Delicate materials, which crease readily, should not be subjected to the strain.of continuous wear, as no suit can keep spruce under such harsh conditions. | The Paqama hat, like good manners, never goes out of fash- ion. The block, illustrated in first column, has the full crown, the broad span of brim and the narrowish ribbon. collar is the soft self affair and the polka-dotted scarf is a de- sign which is never outmoded. . Bowknot ties are only becom- ing to the long, lean cast of fea- tures. The round-faced man ,-houfld wear the four-in-hand scarf to gain seeming length. The colla% and z e cravat pictured / above in this column, are che bold-tab, wing and the - ~— bowknot tie with a snug center and spreading ends. The pat- tern of the tie is criss-cross printed foulard silk. No golf shoe has won for it- self such widespread vogue lat- terly as the “kiltie” brogan, il- lustrated above. The punched toe and top and the slashed leather tongue are as Scotch as “ye banks and braes o’ bonny Doon.” Reverting to tropic-thin sum- mer suitings, they now come in both light colors and the ‘dark ones. T .. NOTE—Questions concerning Correct Dress for Men will be answered by Alfred Stephen Bryan, if addressed to him in care of this newspaper. To insure a reply, a stamped envelope must be inclosed. (Copyright, 1921, by Alfred Stephen Bryan.) The following committee chairmen were named: M. Gibson, illumination; M. N. Bach- rach, entertainment; Bertram Cohn, publicity; ~Willlam C. Johnson, finance; Gen. Anton Stephan, publid utilities; Frank Romer, advertising. and Mrs. Stephens, ladies’ committee. Plans for ing out the pur- poses .of the on per- fected at a meeting to be held next ‘Wednesday night at 1210 G street northwest. COl TO dered white. Collartruth FRESHLY launder- ed starched white inches to a man's backbone and keeps ‘his chin off his chest. The Tolman Launclry FRED W. MacKENZIE, Mgr. Cor. 6th and C Sts. N.W. Telephone Franklin 71 for collar comfort laun- CROSS FOR MARY GARDEN. CHICAGO, May b5.—The cross of the French Legion of Honor, for director of the Chicago Dpera Com- pany, at a luncheon given in her honor by the Chicage Chamber of Commerce. The presentation speech T nr:wu by M. Didot, French vice lar adds two LMANIZE! The ! artistic achievement in walor, was |\ presented to Mary Garden, general |\ A . 2 €., FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1921 g AFTER EVERY DESERTER. ‘War Department “Bound to Bring Each Man to Trial.” “In justice to 24,000,000 men who came forward and registered for service,” says the Secretary of War, in an appeal to all former service men to see that their records are clear, “and in recognition of the loyal co-operation of all classes in making the “selective draft a perquisite of victory, the War Department is deter- mined ‘that steps shall be taken to apprehend and bring to trial every man guilty of willful desertion.” According to the official statement vdraft deserters” are “men who reg- | istered under the provisions of the selective service law and who failed to report for military service at a specified time and place, although or- | dered by thed raft authorities to do $0. e “Under the law draft deserters are | held to have been inducted into the military service of the United States as of the date on which they were ordered to report. Since they have never been discharged from such service, they are still under military jurisdiction and hence are liable to| trial by general court-martial for | their offense of desertion.” | BLAIR PROBE DATE SET. Senate Committee to Take Johnson Charges Saiurdly. Investigation of charges made Senator Johnson of California agal id H. Blair of Winston-Salem, | C., nominee for internal revenue commissioner, will be begun Saturday committed by the Senate. Chairman Penrose of the committee said he expected to hold hearings, but lthat ~the committee would decide | whethar they should be open or closed. | Senator Johnson, Mr. Blair, Treasury |officials and several North Carolina citi zens, including John H. Moorehead, re. publican national committeeman, = ar expected to be heard, K 2207 616-17 ST. N.W. 772772272, i tainly “ftting N W W \ af. herringbones, Z, value is written them. % % 7222 N 1,000 PAIRS 25¢ London Garters ¥ William F. Matteson Addresses | UP |estate broker, addressed the weekly | meeting of the El Dorado Club Wednes- day at Wallis' Cafe. | club, voung business men striving to at- | by the Senate finance committee, to | tain success, to apply themselves “to which Mr. Blair's nomination was re- | tasks with clean minds, of purpose and with perserverance. whereby they might gain their “El Dorado™ | We Give theValues and Get the Basiness “1921 WILL REWARD FIGHTERS® This famous slogan of the Chicago Tribne is cer fght for business at Popular Prices is bringing a daily reward of new and enthusiastic patronage. We’re Off to a Record “May.” |700 SPRING SUITS IN 10 DAYS!I They Are Going “Fast”’ § at $29'75 : 'af'$ ‘A remarkable assortment stripes, club checks. Blues, browns and grays. A tremendous increase in A Clean Saving of $5.25 HAD 2,000---SOLD 1,000 Just a Thousand of Those Emery Superior FANCY SHIRTS Every Shirt a Perfect Shit—Made and Cut Standard—Neat Fancy Stripes. Soft Cuff Styles. Sizes 13V to 17V, ONLY THREE SHIRTS TO A CUSTOMER Single-Grip | SEEKS CLOTHING PROBE.. |Benator Borah Would Delve Deep l Into Conditions in Industry. | The Senate committee on education |and 1abor would be instructed. under a resolution introduced by Senator | Borah of Idaho. to delve deep into the conditions in the clothing industry in the United States ution is intended to de- ‘tivities of the manufac- alers in clothing and was companion resolution to 7«111': Theater Gives Critics Supper and i Bed Following Show PARIS, May eritics were offered the theater were oceu, This hospitality was petition with another who hurriedly improvised a ball, with dances by pop: when | that introduced recently by Senator Moses of New Hampshire designed to show that the clothing workers were, in many instances, radical in their demands and responsible for the high prices of clothing. . When Napoleon Bonaparte was emperor his empire included y all of Europe. with the excep- and Great ‘of Russia, Turkey Britain. | licity tham it ever had been | given by a successful produc- | | tiom. L EL DORADO CLUB DINES. Weekly Meeting. William F. Matteson, local real Mr. Matteson urged members of the | which is composed of fifty singleness | in life. He pointed out as illustrations of | failure the careers of men who had slowly drop lacked strength of character to stay on the top. climbed to success only to | ke a plummet because they INC. - THE MAN'S STORES - 1005-1007 PA.AVE. in” as far as we are concerned. Our D. J. KAUFMAN. There's as fine-a collec- pencil tion of new ideas in_men's and young fe”ers: suits as you will fnd anywhere in America. Models and pat- terns for every man. Tailored and Trimmed Like “FORTY” ' d” over THREE FOR ° A GIGANTIC SALE OF 1,500 Pairs 500 PAIRS 35¢ Double-Grip London Garters Famous London Pad Garters

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