Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1922, Page 17

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Guard Your Health is the basis of all true success in life-and the conditipn of. your/ eyes may affect your health. You can be sure your vision is cor- rect by con- sulting an optometrist. S 9 Selinger’s 820 F St., Cor. 9th “ Look for the Big Clock” NEW YORK and Return SUNDAY, JANUARY 15 Similar Excursion Feb. 12, Mar. 12, April 8 Lv. Washington. . ....12:30 A.M. Arrive in New York in Early Morning RETURNING: Leave New York from C. R. R. et Terminals, West 23d Street ) standard time, same day. Tickets on Sale Friday and Sat- urday Preceding Excursion See Flyer. Covemlt Ticket . Al Baltimore & Ohio SUGGESTING AFTERNOON T-E-A Crisp, Brown Wafles with a cup of delight- ful Hot Chocolate and whipped cream — will prove very enjoyabdle. BELLEVUE BANTAM - TEA ROOM 1332 G St. N.W. 666 will break a Cold, Fever and Grippe quicker than anything we kzmw, preventing pneumonia. HE coal man keeps clean shoveling Werner’s coal. There is so little dirt and dust in this coal that you can “go to it” even in your Sun- day best. It's good clean coal, burns ¢lean and -white hot. B.J.Werner R. R. siding & storage yard Sth & U Sts, *NE. Office phone Franklin 7626 912 New York .\“ALL my colds used to make me & ‘shut in,” but no longer, for & take Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Hone; :‘zhtha first warning of a cold.”” o ourmmnens, o Goke TR gl b U Italy Offers Nearly Every ~ - Typeof ! (Followlng i the second-of a serfes of artts cles by Mr. Mowrer on modern Italy.) BY ENGAR ANSEL MOWRER. Not all of Italy, of course, is alwa pleasant o live in. In the morth the winter rains recall the Ifltenl. dis- agreeable wetness of the low coun- ties of Ireland; in the south a flam- ing, pitiless sun 'for five months scorches animal and .plant. But, in general heat and cold are tempered, the air is clear and vision far-reach- ing, while in the aky floats a real and visible lllnllu not the flat, red disk that swings- over London. In its nature Italy is unfiormly beautiful and endlessly varied. Here is nearly every type . of scenery imaginable, from the peaks of the Alps and crags of the Appenines to marshes like those of Louisiana. The scenery, less majesitc than that of America, is superior in perfection of natural form and in embellishment by man. Unlike American.towns, Ital- ian cities harmonize with their sur- roundings, and nothing is more nat- ural than the way the hills of cen- tral Italy break into villages at the top. People as Varied as Climate. Pervading the entire peninsula is a common Italian personality, but even more typical of Italy is"the richnes: of Jocal character. Nature and cli- mate arc net more varied than the people. Roughly, thess is a general cleavage -be en north and south, and we must ndver forgtt that we are dealing, with a country “where two stages of civilization co-exist in the same stat Between a Lombard and a Sicilian, a Piedmontese and a Pugilese, there is an abyss that fifty years of national unity have hardly begun to bridge. Piedmontese and mbards are among the most mod- ern of men. The Genoese is a mod- ern merchant with something of the old Levantine trader about him. Southern Italians almost without ex- ception exhibit some oriental char- acteristics. Bven in the center, the home of all that is left of the old Italic races, there are differences be- tween the clever, skeptical, sarcastic Tuscan, the gentle Umbrian from As- sisi or Perugia, the passionate primi- tive mountaineer of the Abruzzo and the proud, lazy, savage Romans of the Campagna and the Alban hills. Phy- sically, in Italy, one sees all the types of white humanity, and blue eyes and light-brown or red hair are commoner than one would think, not only in the north, where German blood runs in many veins, but in Sicily. ‘Wide Differences in Citles. ‘Wonderful and rare are the citfes. Turin, with its broad streetS and square plan, is a modern industrial center, the home of the old Pied- montese aristocracy and the new radicals, yet intellectually backward. Milan, however, is a splendid, up-to- date town, the first in Italy in busi- ness, industry, intellectual life, mu- sic, with the best theaters, an enter- prising population and a good m: nicipal administration. No other town pute its claim to be, the na- tion's *“moral The _cities of Venetia are beautiful, old-fash- ioned places, with comfortable houses and an air of solid prosperity. Venice, of course, is unique. Bologna, the real capital of Ro- magna—though actually situated in another region, the artificially cre- ated Emilia—has all the charm ot ancient and modern. It is the center of the perpetual opposition. Now ultra communist,-it would, were the socialists to triumph, soon DIAS to a more radical attitude, anarchy or ab- solutism. The Bolognese, a hand- some race, are a much-needed ele- ment of ferment among a people who are, despite appearances, far too in- different and meek. “Florence, Siena Pisa, Lucca, are, alas, cities of the past, and, with the exception of the first, have value only for the art lover and historian. The modern Tuscan can better be studied in_the turbulent merchants and sailors of Leghorn or the unspoiled inhabitants of ‘the towns neglected by_tourists. One might continue indefinitely such a summary description of Italian cities. “There are the semi-Swiss towns of ‘the Italian lakes, the tropical winter resorts of the Riviera, the quaint hilltop villages of Tus- cany, Umbria, the Abruzzo, Latium and _Campania; there is siren-calling Naples; there are the poverty-strick- en and charming towns of the ex- treme south, the semi-oriental vil- lages of Sicily and the Puglie. Many Dialects' Are Spoken. The point is that there are not two cities alike, and an uninteresting town is rare. There is hardly a common language. Spoken Tuscan constitutes official and literary Italian, and a for- eigner familiar with it can be unde: stood wherever he goes. Most of the dialects resemble it. But I defy the foreign professor of Italian to com- prehend without previous experience the Piedmontese or Sardinian dialects, while the speech of Bolognese, Geno- ese and some Sicilians is flatly unin- telligible to educated Italians from other parts. Names of common ob- jects and foods change bewilderingly from place to place, and within a two- mile circle around the town of Amalfi the word for wine is pronoumced in three different ways. As with language, so with soclal customs, art and architecture. Be- tween tHe habits of the Piedmontese, the so-called Prussians of Italy, and the semi-oriental Sicilians ~ there ‘would seem to be no resemblance. Not illogically a skillful blending of Pled- montese firmness and Sicilian and Sardinian dash produced during the war some of the finest brigades. In the north social customs are like | MANY CLUBS INSOLVENT. Ninety Per Cent of London Institu- tions Unable to Pay Way. LONDON, December 23.—It is no ex- aggeration to say that 90 per cent of the London clubs are insolvent, an ar- ticle in the Evening News states. According to the writer, most of London’s 150 clubs have been unable to pay their way for the past two or three years and have been keeping up a precarious existence by increas- ing subscriptions and entrance fees and by ralsing loans and mortgages at high rates of interest. In many i cases salaries and board of the serv- ants absorb the whole of the sub- scriptions. HOLGUIN FILLS POSTS. Conservatives Enter Cabinet in Co- ,lombia After Liberals Decline. BOGOTA, January 7.—Provisional President Helguin has appointed An- tonio Jose Uribe to be minister of foreign relations, and has designated Ponifacio Velez and Cabine Hernan dez for the posts of minister of pub- lic instruction and minister of the treasury, respectively.. All are con- servatives, the liberal members pre- viously appointed having refused to accept the posts for political resaons. Since the resignation of President Suarez and the succession to that office of Helguin, early in November, the uvmvl-lonal president has been ng difhculties in forming & pro- visional cabinet, many of those named | refusing to take office. - . RULE AIR WAVES. Ontario Gives Decision Affecting Qverhead Operators. ST. CATHARINES, Ontario, January 9.—Local amateur wireless operators have become so numercus that the St. Catharines Radio Association decided today to rule the waves overhead. Hereafter low power transmission only will be permitted during certain night hours, while others are set apart for long-distance work exclusively and for testing. “Free ether for all” is ing the daytime. a the rule dur- Climate and Scenery those of France. In the south women are still commonly kept in what amounts to oriental sejual tutelage. Art Leaves Its Stamp. ‘The various schools of art and archi- tecture which haye existed cotempo- raneously in this single country have left a permanent stamp and created a marvelous tradition. Nothing could be more unlike than the appearance of Turin, Florence, Naples, Palermo, yet all are somehow Italian. Every dis- trict, often every village, has its own music, its special folk songs, its pref- erences. The popular music of Naples has conquered the world, but it ig, in my opinion, far less valuable, -pas- sionate and original than” that of Siclly or Sardinia. > To this day poverty-stricken Italy is. in the variety of its human types, customs, citles, arts, architecture, music, the richest country in the world. Despite the. efforts of small- minded statesmen’ it has so far defied the passion for uniformity that is lit- tle by little destroying the esthetic values of modern life. g Country Peor and Overpopulated. . Economically, Ttaly 18 poor and overpopulated. The inhabitants of many -a cold, wet city, go all winter without a fire to warm them. Travel in the cold season is a disagreeable business. On the floors of the poorer dwellings, and of nearly all public buildings and offices, carpets are un- known. Plumbing is old, fashioned or abeent, soap and water are sparingly used, sanitation is rudimentary, life is hard. Food is simple and;never top plentiful. The creature comforts of modern life as lived elsewhere not generally exist. Yet even .on the material side life in- Italy offers a certain kind of richness other coun- tries do not show. It is a richness of material, of art works, of tradition. Italians go cold in winter beeause there is.no native coal and little wood. But they build their houses of solid plaster and stone because of stone there is only too much. Not common stone, valuable and semi- precious stone as well. The outside of a building may be vulgar tufa, travertine, peperino, Aimestone or lava, but the decorations are nearly lalways of marble or, maybe, granite. Hardly a tenement but has its stair- case of white Carrara marble. It abounds. It is flattened into window sills and slabs for-public comfort sta- tions. It is still burned for plaster, as the early Christians destroyed Pagan statues to make mortar for their un- counted churches. Marble Is Everywhere. And not only white marble—colored as well. The gutters of Verona are hewn from blocks of a pinkish kind of marble. I know a man who went to Verona just to sit for & moment in a marble gutter. Black Afrfean mar- ble is not rare; strange oriental mar- bles brought”to Italy ages ago by Roman conquerors are mnot difficult to obtain. Porphyry is common, ala- baster cheap. There is abundance of malachite and lapis-lazuli. The in- destructible stone decorations of an- cient Roman luxury have, where mnot destroyed by the Christians, survived, often are found priceless altars of mostly in the churches,.where very cdlored stone: LITT —at your service when ready to have the Paint- ing, Paperhanging or Upholstering done. Geo. Plitt Co., Inc.. 3t €555 Main 4224-8 " THE EVENING BTAR, ‘WA S es P e h 2. g Bepes WUl 1 2 BRI SHINGTON; D: Yents Swesters, $3.15 Wool and Worsted Mixed Sweat- ers, V neck and roll collar styles, in oxford gray, maroon, mnavy blue, brown and heather shades. Broken Iots of Bradley, Pennsylvania Notair - and other high-grade makes. No Exchanges—No Refunds Al Sales Final ., TUESDAY, ‘JANUARY -10, 1922, ol Regular 20c Quality Outing Flannels 15¢ 27-inch Outing Flannels, heavy, double-fleeced quality, iy plaids, checks and stripes; for making warm winter garments, Tirst Floor, Every department throughout the store is. “putting its house in order”—reducing stocks before inventory. The quick disposal of merchandise means greatly LOWERED PRICES. Tomorrow’s offerings provide many inducements for saving money. Children’s - Sport Socks 19¢ Children’s Ribbed Sport Socks, black and cordo- van; deep rolled top; broken sizes; seconds of 40c values—First Floor. Regularly Up to $35.00. At.. Impfirtef’s Samples of Beautiful ; Spangled Tunics Paris introduces the ‘fashion of a tunic to be worn with $18.50 $395.00 Finest Hudson Seal | Fur Coats, $239.50 The values eclipse any offered anywhere. Three- fully silk lined. Finest quality genuine Hudson Seal Fur Coats, with Beaver or Squirrel large shawl col- lars and cuffs. Each garment carries our guarantee of a costume slip—and they form a complete costume of the: gichest and most beautiful character for evening wear and all formal social affairs. The identical styles shown in the most exclusive shops —exquisitely designed in spangled effects in a variety of Men’s Pajamas, $1.45 Men’s “Faultless” Pajamas, of heavy-weight domet flannel; round neck or military collar style; trimmed with silk frogs ‘est ’\ I I quarter-length models, with belt and pockets; beauti- “ :1 quality, durability and style. The sale price is the low- h | %l'xoted anywhere for coats the equal of these. ldenberg's—Fur Department—Seco: nd Floor. + Union Suits, $1.69 Up to $14.98 Smoking Children’s Rompers or binding; also plain styles; seconds of values worth $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00.—First Floor. Men’s and contrasting colors. —BLACK —JADE —WHITE —OPALESCENT Heavy - weight Wool - mixed Ribbed Union Suits, natural gray color; closed crotch; mostly all sizes; seconds of $3.00 quality. —First Floor, Choice tomorrow at $18.50. Men’s Half Hose, 25¢ Men’s Fiber Silk Half Hose, high spliced heel; full reinforced sole and toe; black and white; seconds of 50c and- 60c values. ~—First Floor, . Jackets, $6.69 Men's Smoking Jackets, fine quality double-faced cloth, trim- med with silk cord and tape; lapel, collar, cuffs and pocket flaps; made of reverse side of cloth or silk facing.—First Fleor. Women’s Bloomers 39¢ Pink Nainsook, Blpomers, good quality; reinforcéd; flounces with stitching; full cut and well made. Floor. Jersey Suits 15,98 “Fulwool” $8.50 - Plush Coats —Thi 69c Of fine quality linens and rep, assorted colors, with fancy stitchings; & variety of new mod- cls—Third Floor. about Poslam is how little it is enough to heal. Often a ingle 50c boxwill clearaway & patch of eczema or similarerap-| tion that has been an itching Americans. works. ‘wonders for yogr cold, sneezing, cough, chronic catarrh, head- For Superior Dental ‘Work at Prices You * Per 4&°5 W L, Hrm R DR. WHITE 407 7TH STREET 2 Stop that pain! Qfi%mmdl—fi Liniment. Just slap it on the —overworked muecle. Good for $2 Tricolette, $1.49 Table Damask, 38¢ Were up to $22.50 $13.75 Cloth Coats Were up to $32.50 $14.50 Middy Skirts, $1.29 Girls'’ White Lonsdale Jean Middy Skirts, the well known “Goody Make,” full plaited mod- els, with waists attached; sizes 6 and 8 vears.—Third Floer. Muslin Drawers, 33c ‘Women’s Muslin Drawers, with d he: stitched hem; slightly discolored. ~Third Floor. Women’s Aprons, 38¢ Women's Gingham Walst Aprons, guaranteed fast colors; medium size; well made.—Third Floor. Envelope Chemise, 44¢ Of soft-finish muslin, an assort- ment of neatly trimmed styles; broken lots and sizes. ‘hird Floor. Were up to $15.00 Boys’ $15 Overcoats, $8.75 Boys’ All-wool Chin- chilla Overcoats, in navy blue, also of navy' blue frieze, with fancy plaid linings; sizes 3 to 9 years. ~Third Floor. $3.00 Sport Satin, $2.59 40-inch Sport Satin, a heavy, rich satin-face quality, in black, navy, brown, old ro: o= se, tan pen, honeydew, pink and white. —First_Floor. $3 Sflks, $2.59 40-inch Crepe Meteor, a heavy, rich crepy-finish grade, in navy blue, brown, henna and black.— First Floor. = $2.50 Satin Charmeuse, $1.79 40-inch Satin Charmeuse, all- sitk, heavy satin-face quality, in navy, black, brown and white.— First Floor. $18.98 to $19.75 Misses* Coats, $12.75 Misses’ and Juniors’ Smart Dress and Sport Coats, of soft velours and novelty coatings: eome fur-trimmed; sizes 13 to 17 years.—Second Floor. $11.98 to $13.75 Girls> Coats, $7.50 044 1ot of Girls’ Coats, of Boli- via, velour and cheviot; fur-trim- m and self-trimmed _styles; sizes 9 to 14 years. Floo Misses’ Coats, $19.50 Misses’ and Junior Coats, of Bolivia, suedene, ramona and soft Velours; some with:fur collars; in navy blue and orown; sizes 15 to 19 years.—Second Floor. Curtain Stretchers $1.69 Lace Curtain Stretchers, size 6x12 ft.; complete “with center —Base t. 36-Inch Colored Pricolette, alls ~ [—traces men i1k, heavy, close- lity, | ST - 7 i heayy, clowroves usie | Troning Boards, $1.98 First Floor. Ironing Boards, on folding stand; strangly made.—Basement. $16:45 Linoleum < 1.93 Rugs, $9.75 W;glvny ggdg.?é&cé ttom Because of a very slight imper-. [ Wash Bollers, with cold Foog fection in printing or foundation | handles: choice of Nos.- we secured this lot of genuine |_sisés —Basement. Cook’s _cork-filled burl Wash Tubs, 79¢- - Linoleum Rugs at a big price concession. Large room size, 9x . Galvanized Iron Wash 'Tubs, large 24-inch size; side handles. —Basement. 12 ft., all with complete borders; Gas Lights, 59¢ choice of orental gr tile designs, in blue, red, grag tan and'brown Inverted Gas Lights, complete with Welsbach mantle—Base- ment. colorings.—) Ash Cans, $1.49 Heavy Corrugated Galvanized Iron Ash Cans, full size.—Base- ‘ment. 18 pieces of 58-inch Mercerized Table Damask, in an assortment of neat patterns. Good wearing quality_for everyda® use. Sec- onds- Floor. = Bath Mats, 69¢ Turkish Bath Mats, heavy, close-woven grade, in pink and blue; slight seconds. ) First Floor—Linen X . "Table Népkins _ $1.19 Dozen 25 dosen 18-in Mercerized Damask Table Napkins, hemmed ready for use; neat:pretty pat- terns. Seconds of -the $1.76 quality. 39¢ 5 29¢ very, 40-inch White Organdy, fine llilhll quality, - snow ’whfla' bleached.—First Fleer. Fiber Silk Hose, ‘Women's Fiber Silk Hose, in emi-fashioned One Dozen Tumblers, 98¢ Crystal Glass Table Tumblers, colonial shape.—Basement. — .- Coal Hods, 59¢ Galvanized Iron Coal Hods, large No. 17 size.—Basement. 39c¢ Serpentine 36-inch Fpentine . Crepe, plain and printed:designs, for kimonos and house garmients.— r. — e e 39¢ Pillowcases, 29¢c 45x36 Bleached . Pillowcases, jarge size; perfect quality; round., thread- pillowcase - cotton.—First shapes ; some in combination bead and spangled styles; self —BLUE 3 —HARDING BLUE —COMBINATIONS These Spangled Tunics were imported to retail up to $35.00. Dress Trimming Department—First Floor. Cloth Suits Were up to $32.50 $12.95 Cloth Coats Were up to $49.50 $21.50 Plush Coats Were up to $29.75 $16.50 Dresses Were up to $37.50 $19.90 $24.50 to $27.50 —ORANGE A Sweeping Reduction Clearance of All Women’s Coats, Suits and Dresses Entire stock of women’s and misses’ winter apparel now being sacrificed without thought of profit or actual cost. If you want bargains that have not been equaled in | Floor. years, be, here tomorrow to share these sen sational values. Cloth Suits Were up to $39.75 - $19.50 Cloth Coats Were up to $39.75 $18.50 Finest Coats Were up to $79.50 $39.75 Dresses Were up to $19.75 $10.00 . Spring $5 and All new advance models for . immediate and “early . spring wear, in dame fashion’s most becoming styles. Gros de France. Faille Silk. Embroidered Taffeta. ‘Wonderful colorings, including “Periwinkle Blue”—Turkey Red, Jade, Henna, Tangerine, Orange, Black, : ‘Floor—-Miilinery Beoond Dept. $30 and $32.50 - Room-Size Rugs, $19.75 9x12-ft. large room size Seamless Brussels or Velvet Rugs, Alexander Smith and Sons make;’ ori in colorings to suit any room. Fourth ;’Im "$10 Wool and Fiber Rugs, $5 9x12-ft. Reversible Wool .and Fiber Rugs, medallion and neat figured designs, in green, red, tan, blue Fourth 3 Floor. Stenciled Crex Rugs, Just exactly one-half price for Genuine Crex Rugs, strictly per- fect quality, in large room size; 9x12-ft. ;onte side, with’oriental or medallion designs on reverse side. bears the original trade-mark ticket. ". $1.00 Rag Rugs, 69¢ 24x36:.Rag Rugs, in-pretty hit-and-miss effects; assorted colore ings, for bed or bathroom uses. First Floor.. . $3.50 Small-Size 27x54 Mottled Effect Axminster Rugs, with band borders also 3x6- Grass Rugs. ft. extra-fine 1,600-warp Japanese Children’s - $2.98 Scarf Sets, $1.98 All-wool Scprf Sets, brushed style, in rose, 'green and brown; broken lots.—Third 3 Millinery , Brown and Navy Blue. Fleece-lined Union Suits, high neck and long sleeves, ankle pants.—First Floor. 3 Sale of Warm Comforts " Regular $3.00 Values, at $1.98 Regular $6.00 Values, at $3.88 Hygeia brand White Cotton-filled Comforts, sizes 72x72 and 72x80 inches for double beds; covered with fine grade silkolines and printed cambrics; light and dark colors—Fourth Floor. $5 Blankets, $2.98 Heavy-weight # Blankets, fine grade cotton, with soft fleece finish; white, tan or gray, with blue and pink borders, as well as plaids of blue, pink, tan and gray; sizes 64x76 and 68x80 inch- es for double beds.—Fourth 48c and 59¢ Cretonnes, 24¢ Several thousands yards of yard-wide washable Cretonnes, in mill lengths from 1 to 8 yards, but hundreds of yards alike. Light and dark floral, bird, stripe and tapestry designs, for all dec- orative purposes and draperies. First Floor. 38¢ Ginghams, 29¢ 32-inch Dress Ginghams, in a beautiful assortment of plaids, checks, stripes and plain colors; extra fine quality, for women's and children’s wear. Finest Suits Were up to $59.50 $29.50 Plush Coats ‘Were up to $45.00 $27.50 Plush Coats Were up to $32.50 First Floor. Boys’ $13.50 and $14.50 Suits, $8.95 Boys' All-wool Two-pants Suits, Goldenberg’s Standard make; both pairs of knicker- bocker pants lined throughout; all_seams taped and reinforced. —Third Floor. Girls’ $1.50 Tams, 79¢ Girls® Fine Grade Brushed Wool Tams, imported yarns, in white and pretty combinations of green, rose and Floor. 20c¢ Muslin, 14¢ 36-inch Bleached Muslin, a close-woven, soft-finish grade, for general use.—First Floor. $1.39 Sheets, $1.19 81x90 Seamless Bleached Sheets, perfect quality; heavy firm-woven sheeting cotton; fin- ished with wide hems—First Floor. $3.50 Spreads, $2.69 Crochet Bedspreads, full, dou- ble-bed size; in heavy raised Marseilles patterns; perfect quai- ity.—First Floor. - 19¢ Flannel, 14¢ - 27-inch Bleached Shaker Flan- nel, a heavy, double-fleeced qual- ity.—First Floor. 39¢ White Voile, 29¢ 40-inch White Chiffon Voile, extra fine, two-ply quality, with ;ifl“‘tfllfl chiffon = finish.—First - oor. 30c India Linon, 25¢ 40-inch White India Linon, fine, sheer quality, snow white bleached.—First Floor. $2 Nainsook, $1.79 No. 19 Imperial English Nain- sook, 36 inches wide; ten yards in_each piece.—First Filoor. $3 Longcloth, $2.79 No. 250 Imperial English Long- cloth, 36 inches wide; full ten yards in each piece.—First Floor. P Boys’ $1.75 Straw and Satin. Wash Suits, $1.19 Bagatelle. it oD Mas Sorduey pants, in nBVYpblue and br\)wl’!y: sizes '3 to 8 years.—First Floor, Table, v n Boys’ 3?90 Caps, 59¢ Boys® Golf Caps, large shape; a large assortment ,0of colorings. —First Floor, irgain Table. 50c and 59¢ Brassieres, 39¢ White Batiste Brassieres, trim- med back and front with wide embroidery, in an assortment of pretty -paiterns; underarm shields: all _sizes. Floor. $1.25 and §1.50 Kimonos, 89¢ Women's Long Crepe Kimonos, light blue, rose and pink slipon models, full cut sizes and well made garments.—Third Floor. 50¢ Poplins, 39¢ 27-inch Yarn Mercerized Col- ored Poplins, rich, lustrous qual- ity, in all wanted street and evening shades, also black and white.—First Floer. T $2.25 Serge, $1.59 b4-inch All-wool French Serge, an extra finé, close twill quality, in navy blue, brown, copen, bure gundy, tan, gray and black.— First Floor. Children’s $2 and - * mas, Billie Burke model, light blue and pink, also rted 2680] itrlrb effects; prettily trimmed; broken lots and sizes.—Third Filoor. Dresses Were up to $28.75 $15.95 $10 ental and medallion designs, and brown colorings. $8.95 Grecian key border design on Each rug $1.95 Misses® $1.25 Union Suits, 98¢ £ e ,i = | ! | |

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