Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1923, Page 33

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AL ROTOGRAVURE SECTION — d Personnel of ER’S vds, Customers Public Opening of 1325 F Street row e Morning e Lvening > above invitation to the ¥ years of consistent, con- “most up-to-date, the best nen’s wear, quality consid- inning of this business, resent proprietor in 1880, of this establishment and those days the men’s wear set between 9th and 10th. father selected this section 288. yusiness thrived and grew ing 'men’s wear of quality impelled to move to larger Being ever mindful of the ennsylvania avenue was se- he center of business activ- store was erected and the thought of its obliga- rmost and meeting the de- y. Addition after addition ient—and every effort put men’s wear with the splen- as their customers,was en- i-and achieved a greater »opulation has once more ce to their customers de- \:new store was designed, tents in equipment. The by modern merchandising «d in the building. re was conceived-—rededi- ears to the public of Wash- 1923, The Scotch grain belt shown here is the last word in belts. The buckle is 14-karat gold, which, with the belt, produces a very rich and exclusive combination. The Hickok Manufacturing Company. Rochester, N. Y., are the producers. The makers of the Salisbury Shirt, Jackson and Gut- man, of Salisbury, Md., have produced the wonderful shirts shown above. They are made of imported English madras and are truly representative of the shirtings pro- cured from abroad by this house. The workmanship and cut of the sleeves are considered a standard in the shirt industry. The suit above appears to be a regulation wool suit, but it is not. It is a cool, comfortable, tropical worsted, with a half lining; sleeves and yoke of pure thread silk. It is posi- tively guaranteed not to wrinkle along the edges. A By i N \ “Penang Checks"—they call them—the shirt pictured in the left-hand corner. The checks are produced very effectively by woven cords. The center shirt is of a raised madras material shot thru with silk stripes, while the one shown at the right is of a splendid quality broadcloth silk with an alternate dark and light stripe. Notice the depth of the cuffs as well as the yoke at the shoulder, which are indications of the high standard of shirts as produced by Shedaker Bros. and Sonnekalb of Newark, N. J.

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