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‘Jane Stuart Shops for you or with you ' A Stroke of Good Fortune Brings High-Grade Fiber-Silk Sweaters for a Sale Popular Tuxedo Style for Women and Misses $9.95 Just in time to meet the tremendous demand. Every woman and every young girl wants a bright, fresh, new Summer Fiber Silk Sweater to thoroughly enjoy the informal outdoor festivities of the season. Through a fortunate, marvelous purchase, we have secured sev- ’ eral hundred of the smartest, newest, best quality Fiber Silk Sweaters. They are simply wonderful values at the price—$9.95. PERFECT in every respect. The fine, heavy, firm weave Fiber Silk Sweaters that are the pride of the most reliable factory in America—and every Sweater Every one entirely new—just un- packed—in all desirable weaves, including plain mignonette block, stripe and fancy effects. POPULAR TUXEDO STYLE, with narrow string belts, wide sashes, patch pockets, turnback cuffs and novelty buttons. If you need a Sweater do not fail to attend this sale. Make no mistake; we are proud of such an offering at $9.95. Second Floor—Sweater Shop—Lansburgh & Brother COLORS—Plenty of Navy and Black, or- chid, buff, peacock, Neptune, brown, honey- dew and Harding blue. Visit Our Sixth Floor Bargain Store—Bargains, Bargains—All the Time! Lovely Summer Frocks For Women and Misses who are in search of the new, the fashionable, the becoming and last, but not least, who are looking for GOOD VALUE! A Wonderful Lot of New Gingham Dresses You know what a\ craze there is for Ging- ham, Organdies, Voiles, Dotted Swisses and combinations that as- semble in accordance with Fashion’s exact- ing demands. Of course, checks predominate in the Ginghams— that’'s. to be expected, because checks are favorites. Naturally we have given them precedence. Col- lars, cuffs, vestees, sashes, tiny floral touches and such a host of styles vou'll find enough to tempt you into buying one or more for vacation—especially for the Fourth of July week end holiday. Choice at One Dollar ‘Women’s House Dresses, each Women’s Bungalow Aprons, Women'’s Nightgowns, each. . Children’s Dresses, 2 to 6 years, €ach .....oovenciioe oo White Gabardine Wash Skirts, each.................. Envelope Chemise, made of fine quality Crossbar Batiste. Each Women’s and Misses Knitted Bathing Suits, trim- med with contrasting colors, each coivivinennencnnns. Pink Brocade Corsets, in plain or brocaded models, each ! i Hiindreds of New Silk; Frocks, $10 New, distinctive, becoming and just what Dame Fashion states her followers shall wear. Crepe de Chines, Taffetas, Mignonettes, Sating, in a whirl of colors and smart styles. Sport models, beaded, be- ruffled, pleated skirts and combinations ar- ranged by expert de- signers who know" so well that a woman’s smiles are won by clothing her®in the latest styles. . Black, white, Nile, navy, rose, copen, brown and taupe are the colors most noticeable, and the sizes include 16 all the way to 44, so come here tomorrow knowing you will get the best Silk Frock this pric- ing will buyy ANYWHERE. Choice— 5100 Women’s Blobmer‘s—Special Made of fine quality pink ba- tiste. . They're well made and Oc neatly finished with elastic waist and knee. Every one is a big bargain at, tomorrow’s special price. Envelope Chemise—Special These are shown in white and pink and may be had in plain or Oc lace trimmed styles. Some are neatly hemstitched. Theylre in the popular built-up and ribbon shoulder strap models. ¥ Made of extra fine qual- ity French Voiles and 1 9 5 ° els. Pin tucked fronts, - frills, tuxedo or round'collars—and they may models. 'Just a ‘glance and you'll' see for vourself what wonderful .values these waists Voile Blouses—Special shown in many neat mod- be had also in fine lace.trimmed or tailored . really are. 2 T S e T T e R S T s T A TSR e e o R LIVING MODELS Wearing the Bathing Suits That Won the Silver Loving Cup | Will be on display in our Bathing Suit Depart- ment, Second Floot, tomorrow from4:¢)to§:30p.m. Daifity Lingerie Three Attractive Groups Good quality materials, the daintiest trim- mings and the very best cut, finish and work- manship make these splendid garments to buy for such economical prices. ' et $1.25 Nightgowns of muslin, flesh batiste and lingerie cloth, sleeveless slip-qn styles, and others with sleeves.” Lace and embroidery trimming, and some with hand-embroid- ered designs in colar. * Envelope Chemise of nainsook with built-up or strap shoulders, and trimming of lace and embroidery and cleverly inset medallions. s Petticoats of muslin of exceptionally good quality, with flounce of embroidery, and protective underfiounce. Bloomers of flesh-colored Windsor crepe, with lace knee frill and knots of satin ribbon. * % % $1.79 Nightgowns of nainsook, with prettily lace-trimmed square and V necks. Envelope Chemise of fine nainsook, lace trimmed, and choice of built-up or strap shoulder styles. * %x % oot §1.95 Nightgowns of fine nainsook, lace and embroidery trimmed, with or without sleeves, and square, round or V necks. 3 A Envelope Chemise of lace and embroidery trimmed nainsook, with built-up and strap shoulders. Third Floor—Lansbargh & Brother Group 2 Discontinued Models of Corsets and Brassieres Greatl] y Underpriced $2 . 85 Not a thing the matter with any one of them, but be- tause the makers have stopped making these models we tannot keep our stocks complete, and we must clear them but regardress of former prices. i Al styles, low and medium bust, long and medium hip, made of coutil and brocades, white _and flesh colar, American Lady, Thompson’s Glove Fitting, C.B.,' War- ner’s, Nemo, La Grecque, Rengo Belt, Mme. Pfeil, aqd Frolasset. Sizes 20 to 36 in the lot, but not all sizes in every model. Third Floor—Lansburgh & Brother Sale Boys’ Palm Beach Suits The Kinds for Warm Summer Days iy $8 05 Priced, * Carefully tailored of the genuine Palm Beach fabrics—every oy desires just such splendid suits for summer dress-up oc- casions. They retain their smart style even after the hard wear given by all active boys. Mothers will see upon examination just how good isthe work- manship. One style is shown in the bketch at the left. All are in tan, brown, green and gray, so every boy’s prefer- ence is to be met. Sizes 7 to 17 years. Featured at $8.95. Boys; Khaki Sport Suits (Sport Shirt and Flapper Trousers) Featured at $2.75 Practical summier Flapper suits for vacation and out- ing wear. Of serviceable khaki drill in the style pictured. A sports style shirt may be chosen with the short trousers. . In sizes 7 to 14 years—$2.75 suit. Boys® New All-Wool One-Piece Bathing Suits - $1.98 and $2.98 The one-piece style that all boys like, a ‘splendid va- rietv of salid colors and smart combinations.. ‘Suits are all-wool of splendid galihes. In all sizes for boys of 4 to 16 vears. Priced $1.98 and $298. ; Fifth Fleor—Boys Shop—Lamsburgh & Brother SOCIETY -7 Tales of Well (Continued from Sixth Page.) blended, and of which so many hand- 80me examples may be admired in the Rosslyn sectlon of Long Island. It will be sufficiently spacious to accommodate the chancellery, which will have its pri- vate entrance on 15th street, while the mansion will face on Euclid. The Neth- erlands adds another to the many diplo- matic _residences clustered about upper 16th street, where the French and Span- ish embassies are situated, and also the Polish and Cuban legations. The new residence makes the second purchase by a foreign government within the last few months, the minister from Sweden having purchased the handsome home of former Senator Pholan, in R street near 23d. Of this transfer, Washingion, people are enjoying a good laugh on the hospitable host who told. In the rush of getting ready to leave Wash- ington. Mr. Phelan failed to send the inventory of the furniture he desired to sell, and some splendid pieces of red- wood, the great hall set and a fine buffet, absolutely priceless now that the government will not permit the cutting of the forest giants, were included. He lost all the profit of the sale in buying back those pieces of furniture, though the Swedish minister courteously al- lowed a pre-war estimate and not the Dpresent soaring price put on everything. Forelgn governments represented in Washington are since the world war pursuing a different policy about hous- ing their officials, caused perhaps by the scarcity of domiciles and the high cost of them. The ministers from Nors way and Finland are among those seek- ing permanent homes, and that will mean that all the north of FEurope peoples are permanently provided, with many from the south seeking to follow their example. Prince Bibesco, who has Just leased the well-known home of Col. Robert M. Thompson, has urged his government to purchase the same, since the trouble of house-hunting is one to be avoided by the envoy who has so many more important aff: in hand. While seven years ago it was the excep- tion for the foreign governments to own their homes, now it is the rule. France, it is true, still rents from Mrs. John B. Henderson, but the republic owns a large tract of land out on Wash- ington Heights and is only awaiting more composed conditions before erect- ing an embassy. Great Britain's hand- some embassy is a landmark on Con- necticut avenue, and was built because of the extreme inconvenience suffered by its envoys during the civil war. Mexico, though more leisurely about it, built for the same reason on 1 street near 15th. New Hampshire avenue, but, like the Mexican republic, does not use it ex- cept to house a few minor clerks. The embassies of G i h: s, and are in such a sad state of disrepair that it will cost a small fortune to make them suitable either for office or home. Argentina has a handsome embassy on 18th and Cor- coran streets. In nothing may a greater change be noted than in the method of passing the summer, as prescribed by those physicians whose duty it is to keep important people in good health. Time was when the strenuous outdoor life was commended especially for the brain-fagged or the nervously ex- hausted. Now only a brief season for sports is allowed, with the greater part of the heated term spent in | gentler pursuits like motoring. a mod- erate amount of walking and climb- ing. Fishing and croguet take the place of tennis and golf, with horse- back riding once a week. Winter is now the time for the more violent kind of exercize and already parties are being formed to join sports in the frozen zones and to camp out in the Canadian wilds, where the thermom- eter runs to forty below. Lady Rib- blesdale, formerly Mrs. John Jacob Astor. set the fashion of spending the entire winter in Switzerland skating. sledding. snowballing. and she cre- ated a perfect furore in the matter of imitators. - Hundreds of London h esses joined her in the Grisons and after weeks in the open returned to London fresh and tosy and fit for the most_exacting social duties. Not so the reports from those who sought the Foft air of the Riviera and spent hours in the crowded casinos. Ameri- can bankers are getting the fad, and plan their outing when the snow flies rather than in the summer. A bit of news of the highest social CLEANED AND REBLOCKED Made like new. Your hat is safe with a8 we use no acids. Specializing in Panams Milans. Bankoks. We also have a ceparate department spe- cializing in Dyeing. Cleaning ';.nd Pnn'fl.g Ladies’ and Gentlemen's garments. All Work Guaranteed. i Kandel’s Hat Factory 1826 14th St. N.W. Phone North 2607. ©1219-1221 G Silk. season. ‘We have sold hundre very special price, per yard... The correct weight for cial, per yard... Ginghams. Yard .. A timely offering of the season. The Tissue crossbar effects. 32-Inch Imported Dotted Swiss 85¢c Yd. This fabric is accorded first place for Summer Frocks. Small dots on back- ounds of Orchid, Rose, ink, Turquoise and Navy Blue. 3 SPECIAL FOR MONDAY ONLY —36-in. BLACK SATEEN. Yard Italy owns an cmbassy on | Known Folk In Social and Official Life importance in two great cities cone cerns the defection of Marshall Field, 3d, from the late city to New York, the former home of Mrs. Field, who was an acknowledged belle and the only daughter of the late Charles H. Marshall. Mr. Field has purchased a vast estate on Long Island and is about to erect a mansion which will fit in well among its sumptuous neighbors. Mrs. Field, like all New Yorkers, suffered keenly from homee sickness and could never reconcile herself to the exile. The death of her father and the fact that she is the natural companion of her mother led Mr. Field to yield to her wishes. Chi- cago scclety is quite atfronted, es- pecially since the Fields have sold their wonderful home on Lakeside Drive to Mrs, Philip D. Armour and it is evident that they will center their business interests only in the secofid city. Mrs. Charles H. Mar- shall was Miss Josephine Bank: has been a power in the Long I set since her girlhood. She is markably handsome woman in the carly fifties, and now that her son-in- law and daughter have become per- manent dwellers in her section she wlll' assume her social lcadership again. res Long Tsland is now the serious rival of Newport, and 5o excellent a judge of yhat social life should be, Mrs. William h v resort for the Southampton district, where there are abundant at- tractions, among them plenty of men from one end of the summer to the other. None of the famous Vanderbilt villas in Newport will be occupied by their owners this season. Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, who still retains the titie to the one she used during her queenship as Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, sr., has leased it to a Cleveland millionaire, while she has set all the tongues wag- ging by renting the modest little cottage down ~near the life-saving _station where Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Blake have lived for several summers. Mrs. Bel- mont expects the Duchess of Marl- borough, now the dowager duchess, to pass the summer with her, but she has explained that both her daughter and herself are content with simple living and lofty thinking during the heated term. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney and Mrs. Payne Whitney have fine homes in Newport, but both will spend the summer in Southamptgn. Among the Washingtonians who ‘are established there are the Robert M. Thompgons and the Edson Bradleys. Mrs. H. H. Rog- ers has taken possession of her home near Roslyn and will entertain through the summer many of the friends she formed during her residence in Wash- ington. The Italian ambassador, Signor Ricel, who passed several days in New York while the beautiful fiesta at the Frank C. Henderson home, Villa Marina, at Roslyn, was being prepared for the benefit of free milk for Italian babes, has expressed the greatest admiration for this part of the world. The fete was worthy of one of the old pageants in Versailles or Trianon, and the dense alleys formed by the high-clipped hedges were easily iransformed into court scenes and tableau settings, while the open garden was resplendent as Boule- vards des Italienncs in Paris with in- numerable tables covered with white umbrellas and where the daintiest sort of French dinners could be ordered. Mrs. Henderson secured, through the good offices of the French consul, the pres- ence of Georges Carpentier, and, though the French champion did nothing more {spectacular than wave a French flag. his mere presence sent the price of everything on the grounds soaring up- ward. Thousands of dollars were poured into the fund and the committee in charge are certain that the suffering children of Italy are provided for dur- ing the heated term. But what im- pressed the Italian ambassador pro- foundly was the beauty of the spec- tacle and the grace and affability of the company where an admittance was asked and where all classes could enter. All those in attendance behaved ex- actly as the courtiers would at a royal assembly. Mr. Basil Blackett, who was an im- portant figure on the British embassy staff all through the war and who was the special representative of the British treasury during Lord Reading’s sojourn, has recently been knighted, and, as Sir Basil Blackett, is the controller of finance in the treasury department in Whitehall. Sir Basil spent much time in New York in consultation with the bankers there, but he had quarters in the Metropolitan Club here for more than three years. He belongs to an old family of baronets in Northumberland, the title being vested at present in his jeldest brother, Sir William Blackett, He is the cousin and the close friend of Lord Eustace Percy, and {requently as- sisted him in the Boy Scout activities. His eminent services to the British crown pertaining to the American loan were the immediaté_cause of his being honored with the Knight Commander- ship of the Order of the Bath. Street N.W Silks---Special Savings Many new Silks that will make up into the prettiest of Summer Silks, as you know, are THE thing this sea- son. You will be especially interested in these TWO BIG SPECIALS that are ex- tremely smart and popular. Wash Sun China Silk Skirting Another shipment of this beautiful Sports ds of yards: this $2.98 Frocis—and This fresh lot on sale Monday at the 36-Inch Silk Tricolette—Special Dresses, Sports Wear, etc. Light and dark colors, with»plentys .29 of the wanted navy. Another big bargain spe- ey EXTRA SPECIAL—2,000 Yards New Scotch Tissue and Lorraine 69c the most scarce fabric of Ginghams are shown in a great variety of large and small plaid over-effects; the Lorrainesare shown in the small pin checks and All specially priced at 69c. Beautiful Non-Krush Dress Linen $1.49 Yd. Recognized as the best of all Dress Linens. It is thoroughly shrunk. Look for the “Non- Krush” on the selvage. A full line of over 20 colors, with plenty of White and Oyster. 29c One of the better grades of high, permanent finish, color guaranteed. ing_Smits, Bloomers, etc. FOR MONDAY ONLY. Much in demand for Bath- THE FRICE OF 2% IS