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( \ "y e ales of Well Known Folk In Social and Official Life Indians May Have Taken Body of Pocahontas Back to Virgirfia to Rest Among Fathers, Grave See Washingtoniar who are members of the Pocahontas Memorial Assoelation are \\h‘l"lllv]l- with keen interest the progress made at Gravesend toward locatin (h(" grave of the Indian princess Par-} ticularly arewthey concerned the yevival of the old legend that long 20 the beloved daughter of Powhatan had been disinterred, taken back to Virginia and buried with tribal rites among ler people. For such traditions are rarely without founda- tion. and that the carries down his own annals without relation 10 r today made evident hen a » the memo- tatic statue estow Inj invitations to de- the friendly Indian den and ) celebrities kenerally comittee in rge omitted de- o the tribes ruled by Pow-} it was unaware that any of th people lived in this section of the country. Yet the tribes who paid allegiance to the powerful chie (: Yain sent their envoy representing| them all, and he was on hand hours | T the unveiling was to o 'uur:] e ht a message of oak 1 es and twigs, precisely such a one asj Powhatan may have dispatched to 1he early colonists at Jamestown, d his homage in the old *ri of the princess sns who crowd park e placed lw‘(.vr.' ll\c‘ the offering of the tribes ;n)(l‘ as garbed in the tull ssenger of the chief) In the days when the present State of Virginia was the happy hunting! ground of the Algonquins. 1If the Lody of Pocaliontas was privately re- amoved there seems no doubt that these me Indial know of it and will reveal it in their own time. Those numerous own red man nspires was ear what al wending out the endants tan, fo ed the statue dofug so e w galia of a n Mrs. Andrew Carnegic has been sending several months in London, et how at Hotel Meurice in Paris where she will remain until June 15 Wwhen. after a visit to Lausanne, she will open Castle Shibo. Chill, rainy weather lingers in the Scotch High- ands where Mr. Andrew Carnegie e nis sammer home and until mid- July the days are shivery and void of sunshine. Mrs. Carnegie will have few guests this summer. Her heaith fs somewhat impalred and until she feels stronger the bracing air of Switzerland appeals more than the Scoteh Highlands, though she is de- pted to this home and always cons siders it her permanent dwelling and her many other houses just places ce she stays for a time. Hotel iraheau, at Lausanne, is her favor- it hosteiry, as it is of so many of country people. Rooms in that spot are retained vear after by certain Americans who g0 at two different periods—in opening spring and at the end of stumn. Lausanne has been crowded the last inch because of the meet- Wgs of the members of various in- ternational tribunals. Tt lies on Lake Geneva, about ten miles from the city of Geneva, and is one of the oldest and _best established villa colonies in Europe. There are some fitty-odd villas awned by Americans who pass every summer there. Mr; Yrederick Thompson of this city and of New Yonk hus a charming home ad the Stars and Stripes waving ¢ the trees are always enthusi- \stically greeted by the Americans making lovely year there lake cruises. No more beautiful spot may be found in Washington than the south Veranda of the White House, where green and white awnings make a cool twilight even in noonday heat. and where roomy willow chairs invite the guest, while nearby tables are filled with aids to bearing the heat—ic: dr and fans in generous heap: On cach end are those glorfous flights of steps. which the architect of the mansion. James Hoban, designed from {be memory of the old Leinster Falacs, off Stephens Green, in Dubl Just now when Mrs. Harding de- scends with her frequent guests to inspect the garden she finds a glo- rious ss of roval purple passion flower climbing over the iron paling and dimming the (inlnl' fln\' e mnnes nearby. The passion flower v are verr old, as may be judged from the woody conditions of thelr stems and their profusion of blossoms. For the past fifty vears all the chroniclers of the private grounds behind the mansion whe have written just as Epring passes into summer mention the regal splendor of the purple blossomns blending in some places with the equally gorgeous clematls. The Virginla creeper here is also an- clent and makes a heavy background hoth for roses and flowering vines. Tradition has it that Baron Hum- boldt first brought the passion flower to Washington from South America and gave the plant to Thomas Law, who In turn gave a cutting to his friend Hoban, then beautifying the grounds of the President’s palace, as the old records call it. A venerable and notable traveler who stepped from the Aquitania when she docked a few days ago Mrs. Henry Lee Higginson of B widow of the banker and philan- thropist, and who had made her first t1ip to Europe since 1851 She was sadly out of conceit with the rushing ways of today as compared with the slow comfortable side wheelers which formerly paddled and splashed the voyager across the ocean in three weeks, rarely less. Mrs. Higginson was an Agassiz, sister of the nat- ulist, and she abhors the stress and strain of the present day. In her secluded home on the north shore between Manchester and Magnolia she has disdained all the modern tricks of petrol and electricity, and she uses horsges with harnesses equipages of the early sixties perfect satisfaction and oblivious of *he curiosity manifested whenever she appears on the shore road. The venerable lady visited England to ook up some data relating to her hurband's biog phy, and she would have taken passage on a sailing boat Id such have been found. The trip over was made o one of the slower eamers, but pressed for time, she tried the (astest ship now afloat on her home voyage and her experi- cnvces make spicy reading. . The p: sangers on the liners have, of course, changed as greatly as the accom- modatlons or the rate of speed, and Mra. Higginson regrotted deeply that the companionship and easy social in- tercourse between those lured to Eu- F.bnfé is now of the remote past. | Mr. Post Wheeler, counselor of the American embassy’ in London and harge d’affaires during the absence df Col. Harvey, has, with Mrs. Wheeler, been having a strenuous tjme instructing Americans in might now be called the abridged etiquette of King George's court All kinds of hard and fast rules have | Deen abolished and simpler procedure iutroduced from the raiment to the entrances and exits. Mrs. Wheeler, who was Miss Hallle Erminie Rives wnd a frequent visitor to Washing- ton when Mrs. Taft was wife of the Secretary of War and later mistress of the White House, is a walking compendium of etiquette as recog- nized in varlous courts, and she can put_confidence into the rawest social recruit. She was several years in Tokyo and this was the beginning of her friendship with the wife of the Chief Justice. For during the in- cumbency of Chief lustice Taft as governor of the Philippines he and bis wife were invited by the emperor 10 pass a few weeks in the summer palace, and the details of: the visit | somely I hils i of the mc | Mrs. what | l(ers Fear. were committed to Mr. Wheeler, with Mrs. Wheeler as his able assistant. Mrs. Taft has alwavs remembered those days with tender feelings, the beauty of the scenery, the perfection of the service and the solace of Mrs. Wheeler's companiouship. In becom- ing the guest of Jupanese royalty it is customary to decide whether you will be entertained in native or in European fashion and Mrs. Taft holdly selected the native. Mrs Wheeler having studied the question from every angle smoothed her path ind her days were like a lovely dream, from sails on the water in gorgeous boats to journevs in hand- decked sedan chairs to the in the cool of the evening to watch the shadows grow on the lakes i on the distant mountains. Americans are beginning to revisit the fine old city of the w ing her beauty, ease and gen- One thing which visit enjoy is that the Prater. glorious park which was for 1y centuries an fd kept inviolate for the em- peror, his family and friends to enjo is now open to all comers and bands it are placed at intervals and the mu adds much to the pleasure. The! ehestnut trees of the Prater are the iV old public use in all Lurope cre planted in stately rows They have not reached stu- pendous heights, but their rotunc ity and denseness is indescribab grand and make a shade reminiscent | t remote forests. For hun- i dreds of ycars, the yvouth and beauty | ¥ Vienna cantered through thel and then came a long line of | ges or coaches which ched | through the city for miles. Now the i children of artisans play on the gra and make partics under the Vienna S, W « visitors, Strauss, enna, the recent the sa divine music, excellence, and the opera open through the summer llent local company to re old time favorit i s par |, house. is | ! with an produce | t know and admire the || quali of Mrs. Finley J. b formerly Miss Helen Miller Gould, are not surprised to hear that she has taken immediate steps to cure from the estate of her late brother, George Jay Gould. the farm at Kirk. Roxbury, N. Y., where her father and the two preceding generations of his family, then called Mrs. Shepard about acquired the old- brown-stone dwelllng at where her parents lived for many happy vears and where they both dicd. it was the first pretel tious home which the financler pur: chased after his fortune was secure, and it remained his favorite domicile. Mrs. Shepard retains all the family [F furnishings which were dear to her|$ mother and her father's small den | back of the main salon is just as he left it when he was claimed by death. In getting the Kirkside property, which was hitherto held by George Jay Gould, Mrs. Shepard will retain in the family their first real estate| which came to the founder of the line, Lieut. Col. Nathan Gold, whoi fought in the New York line during the revolutionary war and received | this fine farm land his services. The John Burr Gould. insert the *u” in though all it spelled Those who a v o o ioned 579 5th aven: < t s| a T of Nathan, was the first to his patronymic, show that so was nd. The head the next generation, Abraham, emi- grated to Connecticut and formed a separate line there. The second brother, also Nathan, laid the found tions of the huge fortun: and wi the father of the railroad king. Ed- win Gould, who is happily married and has a fair-sized family. is the only Gould who has not become an ex- t 1 Pormerly daughter of Dr. and na and word comes that in some | Berkeley Springs, W. Va. A1tz is | ing her home in Washington. Surrey pension imperial pre- | ley-Wilkon ing oid friend | 1wo given that their entran, mercially Who took time having [ well old Mus a business ness courses have been crowded into portant in his efforts to world. Grant. which Hono. largely branch of the princely have so many Prince Muri fan make 3 princess. of | longs has cousins SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, J‘UNE’ 10, 1923—PART Big Monster, Dead Millions _ Of Years, From Mountainside Ten million years ago grotesque monsters, sixty-five to eighty feet in length, wallowed in the swamp jun- gles of western North America, SO sclentists claim. They died. Their bodles sank in the thick mud. The swamps disap- peared. The Rocky mountains came. Tho dinosaurs slept for a few more million years with the massive peaks for tombstones. Then, in some great natural disturbance, the mountains themselves were tipped over. Their bases became their sides. The bones of the monsters were left to whiten in the sunshine of a new era. G. W. Gilmore, curator at the United States tional Museum here, isted by Norman Boss of the mu- seum staff, is now at Vernal, Utah, engaged in dlgging en almost com plete skeleton from the mountain side in which it is imbedded. To Be xhibited Here. They expect to bring the specimen back to Washington in September and eventually it will be placed on exhibit at the museum. It will be the largest prehistoric skelton in the collection. The explorers from Wash- ington previously have been able to secure the he of some near n‘l.w—l ves of this al. bhut none of his, direct family 1t will be ahout eignty ot vith & long tail and lon rest approach to the animal now exhibition here is a tryceratops with short neck and body and armor: The new spec MRS, SAMUEL on Mins EDWARD G place, and have a handsome ir Robert and Lady Brom- reside at Eaton Place and they are constantly meet- from Washington and The elder of the | the | Honorable | Ruperta Bromley- a ourt taking a course at the ity of London. Her vounger Liliasi is et college Cam- Sir Robert succeeded his Sir Maurice Rromley-Wilson, . the {wo baronies Bromley and having been united few | cars previous. w., ntértaining en will be that of a daught, Katherine Qua wife of Prince of the cavalr while the elde Ruspoli who land Duke of Miss Rosalie New York. ador to ars consul nd in token on Amerigan ¢ of Sewie poleone. stationed at ley, an is the officer lorence of that Prince of the family is married to van Zandt father of th Brussels was for general to of his long residen s0il a son by a late rriage bears the name of George ashington. He is now Duke of Morignano and is unmarried. Prince Camillo Ruspoli, second brother of the ambassador, married Miss Mar guerite Blanc, who is the daughter of that beautiful Texan, Natalle Do- lores Terry, who married Albert Cantacuzenes, so|Blanc, the banker of Paris and > into Chicago com- [ Madrid. and socially will be under = piest auspices. Young Prince One of the accepted centers of so is among the Russian exiles|cial life in Newport, Chate LY the forclock, and,|mer, the home for almost fifty 3 classic training of the|of the George Peabody Wetmore dowered landowner under the!family, is to be closed, and Mrs. Wet- covite reinie, he at onee took | more_and her daughters, Miss Edith | course and recently re-}and Miss Maude Wetmore, eived highest honors as an expert)the entire summer at Dinard, in Nor- ccountant. He kraduated from Har-[mandy. Tt is twenty years and morc ard in June, 1922, and all the busi- |since Mrs. Wetmore. a widow for some vears, salled for the other side Senator Wetmore was particularly de- voted to Newport and he never felt quite as well through the winter unless he spent all of his vacation there Miss Edith Wetmore, who was an associate of Mrs. Larz Ander- son in the canteen work on the bat- tle front, is a close student of French, and just now she s studylng some of the old Breton dialects, which phil consider ~Gaelic rather than French, and it is in pursuit of this that her mother and sister are going abroad. Mrs. Wetmore, as wife of the senator from Rhode Island, was a soclal power in Vashington for many yvears, and her daughters, more intellectual than inclined to the frivolous, held a distinct position in They free visit Wash- n now, but Mrs. Wetmore finds association a returned nd retired fro In Newport | none of th of the family take | in the gayer affairs or in the] routine which sets in about August They give small dinings to old nd are leaders- in all > n hl.mllll‘ distant, to m. worthy civie efforts for the better- Newport and along the northjment of the venerable old town. he Princes Ruspolis have for |Miss Edith Wetmore has been Inter- rs chosen their wives from |ested in the juvenile library and in| ; OF American families. and a |the lists of honor of Rhode Island of the late Senator Quay, Miss! citizens during the late world w on. hus been is Karrick The many New York Young Prince Michael Ca ho . year ago married Miss C] urtis of Bostol with uzene, irissa ston with his Honore ners a in Eu- handsome a8 been pending opean ome five mon travel and th on Lakeside over to the he ha; fichael on a ne year since. besides that most im- and distracting step of get- ing married. The former Miss Cur- 1s prefers o be called Mr: itacu- ene rather than the princess and he has pluckily aided her husband get along in thel He is the son of Prince and >rincess Michuel Cantacuze who pend every winter in Washington, d a great-grandson of Ulysse He is to enter the ba - and Potter Palme concerned in Chicago to be associated in their brokerage business and in estate transactions. and stock | their 150 nd eal The Ruspoli di Poggio Suasa line of Rome American relatives that who is at present Ital- jor to Brussels, Is to short trip to this i ng summer. who is a s to the Perige amily, fnto which Americans have ontin v married, so that she, t ambas he com patriate and no doubt Mrs. Shepard intends that his eldest son shall in- herit these estates so thoroughly identified with the family history. Another family well known in American financial history are the Drexels, and with few_exceptions its members have chosen homes in Eng- land or on the continent, and have ceased to be citizens of this country. One of the latest to join the per- manent colony at Mentone, France, is Luecy Drexel Dahlgren, former wife of Iiric Dahlgren, who resides | in the old homestead of his family on | Massachusetts avenue, here. The | marriages of Miss Elizabeth Drexel and John Vinton Dahlgren and of Miss Lucy Drexel and Eric Dahlgren occurred in the chapel of orgetown Unijversity some twenty-five years ||| ago, the day after both bndemomsf had taken their A. B. degrees and the | brides had graduated from the Visi- | tation Convent, and it was a_brilliant social event. John Vinton Dehlgren ! died five years after his marriage and { || is interred under the high altar of | Dahlgren Memorial Chapel, before which he had been married. His ||| widow afterward married Harry Lehr of Baltlmore, and the: too, are resi- dents of Mentone. Mrs. Lucy Drexel | Dahlgren is accompanied by he son | Eric, and Miss Olga Dahlgren. The | two vounger children, Eva and Joseph Drexel Dahlgren, are with their wid- | owed sister, Mrs. Katherine Dahlgren | nmett, at Las Animas, New Mex. Those Americans who'kave recently | ret Sir Robert Bromley-Wilson, M. | for East Stoke, and magistrate of Southwest London, where his home 13 situated, have difficulty in recalling that slender young Robert Bromley, attache of the British embassy, and | who on February 24, 1900, married the Honorable Lilian Pauncefote, daughter of Lord Pauncefote of | Preston, then serving as ambassador. Bromley w a distant cousin of | bride, the Pauncefotes and Brom- | leys having_been unitel by roval| M PASTERNAK Fourteenth Street Shop 1232 Fourteenth Street N.W. * Beginning Monday Thirty-five suits—our own models, and made at our Fourteenth Street Store—priced unusually low for clearance before we move to our Connecticut Avenue Shop. 15 of them which formerly sold up to $100 20 of thewm which formerly sold up to $125 Now— Now— On Sale at Our Fourteenth Sireet Store Onl) patent in 1757, and it was evidently in the mind of the venerable ambas- | #ador to secure his barony to his| daughter's offspring, who would be | in line of succession through Robert | Bromley. But there are no sons of this marriage, and Sir Robert, who | is now seventh baronet of Bromley | and of Wilson, will be succeeded by | his brother. Maurice Bromley, a colonel of Hussars, who is married and has four sons. The baron: nf[ Preston has lapsed thoush the sur- | viving daughters of Lord Pauncefote |the Hons. Sybil and Aubrey—the | oldest,_Maude, Is dead—retain the old | | G S ¥ WELCOME NOBLES >4 It is with great pleasure that I am authorized to ex- tend to you,a hearty wel- come in the fdrm of a hriners’ pecial ale All merchandise, including Tapestries, Silks for draper: ies, Cretonnes, Lace Curtains, Satin Damasks, Plllows, Lamps, Velours, Scarfs, wili be greatly reduced and de- livered free to all parts of the United States. SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY Signed: Julius Lansburgh. For Lansburgh Int.’ Decorating Co. 637 F St. N.W. 1217 Conn. Ave. A Shop of Individuality " Reduction Sale Beginning tomorrow we will offer some excep- tional values for this season.of the year. Smart, choice apparel taken from our regular stocks that should appeal to the discriminating woman of taste. % One-third and One-fourth Reductions v Some splendid values in Trimmed and Sports Hats Sweaters, Blouses, Novelties Reduced [negie Institute offered it to the gov- | | Miami, Fla., Covered With Insectsi 9 distinctly swamp animal. Its age has been variously estimated at from seven to ten million years and some scientists place It at a still earlier period. An idea of its rareness and value Is gleaned from the fact that the American Museum of Natural History In New York has tried for twenty years to obtain a specimen and, de- spite almost unlimited financial back- ing. has been able to secure only one which is far from complete. Bones Abound in Utah. Vernal, Utah, is the most prolific source of dinosaur bones in the world. The site was first discovered by the Carnegle Institute of Pittsburgh, who removed a number of specimens. The skeleton now being excavated was found imbedded in the rock, a KTreat amount of labor being required to dig it out without injury to the fragile bones which had endured for 50 many millions of years. The Car- ernment if the National would undertake the serving it. The “cache of dinosaur hones was first discovered by followIng the trail scattered hones of prehistoric ani- | mals among the mountains. The_ site has been set aside by the Carnegie | cxperts as a dinosaur park—without | doubt the oldest cemetery in the | world | The explorers literally are digging | to the side of a Kolid rock tomb to obtain the bones. The stone which | - & jimbedued around them must be | WINS POEM ‘PR}ZE. chipped away with great care. ‘Imtnoxs Student Awarded Harvard University Honor. BUTTERFLIES HIT CITY. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 9.—It was announced at Harvard University last night that Marshal A. Best of Evan- ston, 111, is the winner of the Lloyd McKim Garrison prize for the best poem by an undergraduate on a_sub- ject chosen by a committee of the Zlish department Best is class poet of the senior class and editorial chairman of the Crime son, the college daily. il s el The latest figures show that there are 15,430,000 Jews in the world. Closing Out Our Entire Stock of Reed Furniture At a Sacrifice Sale Starts Monday at 9 A.M. Museum work of pre- MRS. J. R. VIDMER, Who ix the guest of her husb: parents, Col. und Mrx. George Vidmer, at Wardman Park Hotel, after vis ing her own parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clurence A. Miller. Migrating South. MIAMI, Fla., June 9.—White butter- flies, millions of them, migrating south by West Palm Beach, have be- £un to reach Miami. Automobiles many parts of the city today wer filled with them as the cars drov. along the atreets. The radiators of | cars coming from Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach werc covered | with m of them resembling a | thick layer of snow. in | Upholstery, Novelty & Supply Store 623 7th St. N.W. Main 2921 $: Go. NewYork GPPOSTR SHORIHAM MOTTIA J P Gidding Fifth Avenue. Ul0 H. STREET. N.W. Reductions Become More Drastic as Removal Sales Progress! As the time for the removal to our new home at 1307 F Street draws nearer, the reductions be- come more drastic---hence a further revision of prices will be in effect beginning tomorrow. Two and Three Piece Suits Tailored and costume styles % at $27.50 to $82.50 Formerly $95 to $145 Day Coats and Capes Street, sport and dress styles at $27.50 to $95 Formerly $45 to $195 Gowns and Dresses of twill—crepe—chiffon—Roma—taffeta and at $37.50 to $82.50 Formerly $75 to $195 Summer Frocks of voile, linen, dotted swiss and gingham at $15.75 to $52.50 Formerly $35 to $95 Wool Sweaters slip-on and coat styles at $3.95 to $8.50 Formerly $12 to $15 Street and Sports Hats of straw and felt at $7.50 to $17.50 Formerly $25 to $40 Blouses $4.50 to $9.50 Each Sale Must Be ABSOLUTE! Patriots’ Memorial Chapter, D. A. R., met for the last time this season | Tuesday afterpoon in the n;rmry' grounds of Christ Episcopal Church, €20 G street southeast. Two long tables stood under the shade of the stately trees to recelve the good things brought by the mem- | bers for the 1 o’clock luncheon. After the feast « business meeting took place at the same tables. The most im portant feature of this meeting was the election of officers: Mrs. Loulse Bragdon Scofleld, regent; Mrs, Harriet Arnold, first vice regent; Mrs. Archer S. Haycock second vice vegent; Mrs. Anna J. Stout, re-elected correspond- ing secretary; Miss Anna M. Bragdon, registrar; Mrs. Annle C. Tuohy, his- torian; Mrs. Catherine R. H. White, chaplain, the hostess on this occasion, was unanimously re-elected. The of- fice of treasurer, permanent, being held by Mrs. Allie L. Luckett{ Doug 1ass, and the office of recording secre- tary, permanent, held by Mrs. Kath- erine B. Curry. The induction into office of the new officers followed. Miss Carolene F. Smith, the retiring regent, who has so | worthily endeared herself to the chap- ter, thanked the members for their unswerving support and loyalty dur- ing her term of office. By way of graceful finale, the chaplain, Mrs, Wil- liam Curtis White, presented ecach member with roses from her own gar- den. Capitol Society, Children of the American Revolution, held its annual joint meeting of juniors and seniors Statuary Hall of Capitol May 30, under the direction of the president, Mrs. Henry Fenno Sawtelle. The chap- lain, Miss Catharine Hill being ab- | sent, the prayer was given by the vice president, Miss Janice Burroughs. Visitors were invited to join in sing- ing “America,” accompanied on violin lie by Miss Mary Kauffman and Per. Russell, jr. The salute to the flag led by the color bearer, Master Robe Mickey, and the Americzn’s Creed re cited by Master Matthew Trimbic Sawtelle. “Our Wlag of Liberty,” b Mrs. Daniel Lothrop, was read by Mis. Janice Burroughs. The member, formed in double line and, led by t color bearer, with Jittle Helen May Bloedom and Trimble Sawtelle = right and left guards to the flag, marched around the hall, stopping it | each of the fourteen statues of revo lutionary herces to place a wreat and flag and pay tribute in a ehor address. A very special feature was the dec rating of the statue of George Was ington in the rotunda. This honor wa Ziven little Helen May Bloedom, w made a charming picture in coion: costume as she placed the wreath pe sonaily donated by her to decora the statu R BEQUESTS TO BISHOPS. | Two Left $10,000 Each for Tube: cular Relief. NEW YORK, June 9.—The Prote: tant Episcopal bishops of Arizon. and South Dakota were left $10,004 each “for tubercular work or an purpose in the diocese” In the wil of Ethel L. McLean, filed for probat toda She died here May 16. Other beneficlaries included Harol Russell of Canon City, Col Edna Blller, of Fort Smith, Ark., a: Harriett C. Moore of Kansas Cit Mo. They receive $10,000 each, —_— Clean white paper, bearing printed matter, fs to be compulscr in Paris shops for wrapping meu checse, or any other moist food Summer Dress Fashion As it is produced for Louvre patrons by geniuses of des skill. in value and in the m they are marked. Frocks of Imported Swi. \oiles, Hand-drawn L Foulards, Organdies, Shantung Silks. gn and masters of creative Both new and exclusive; exceptional oderation with which Normandy .inens, French Crepes. Printed Silk Crepes, French and Porto Rican Hand-drawn embellishment, and beading and embroidery char. models. acterize many of the $12:50 to $45.00 Sports Sweaters The wanted mc els—Jacquette Side- tie Sleeveless Coat Sweaters in wool. $4.50—$5.75 Going to the Millinery Clever Skirts Silk Cr epe and Roshanara Crepe Skirts, knife-pleated designs in smart col- orings. $11.50,5] 350 extreme in a Clearance 125 Superb Hats, taken from our regular stock, are included. Handsome Dress Hats—typical- Iy Louvre-like in character. Selections Were $12.50 to $22.50, at.. 5348 May we ask that no request be made to exchange or return—but that each sale be final? ‘Entirely new and different— this vanishing cream deodorant. A dainty, fragrant cream deodorant, immediately effective, yet instantly vanishing! This is Creme Odorono—entirely different from any other cream or paste deodorant. For Creme Odorono is correctly compounded, on an entirely new scien- tific principle. The makers of Odorono have perfected this formula only after exhaustive laboratory re- search and study of the different types of perspira- tion trouble. Creme Odorono is spe- cially intended to correct the unpleasant odor which afflicts everyone, in spite of painstakingsoap-and-water cleanliness. Used every morning, itis a perfect pre- ventive which safeguards your daintiness for all day! You can use it just when you need it most—when dressing to go out. For, instantly vanishing and non-greasy, it will not spot your clothes. And it is as soft and smooth as a com- plexion cream; will never harden or dry up. So con- venient, too, in traveling! For every-day depend- ence or special occasion use to supplement liquid Odorono, this cream offers perfect daintiness, easily, quickly, scientifically given. At all toilet counters, large, tube, 25c. Creme ODO-RO-NO The new vanishing cream deodorant