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WOMA N’'S PAGE. Panels and the Silhouette. BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. The dualism of the present mode would have astounded observers of another age—yet we seem to take it for granted. Perhaps you haven't even noticed it or thought about it—this running side by side of two very distinct sorts of clothes, this very good-natured rivalry between the silhouette is slender and as free from bouffanc: as the stem of a lily and the other outline that makes one wonder some- times whether we are actually veer- ing toward the mid-nineteen century mode. Only we don't there is alwa: wonder long, for that other outline that remains as slender and as frec from horizontal decoration as ever. In fact, the slender silhouette is be- coming even more slender. When stripes are worn in sport clothes and wraps they are now used up and down—not _horizontally; and there seems no chance that the French de signers will change their present in- cHnation to retain the very straight and simple silhouette. ‘The odd thing is that they speak and design with as much enthusiasm for one as for the other. Hence this curious dualism In fashions—the like of which probably never existed before. Actually its like has not existed yet the picture is not dissimilar to other ages when bouffant clothes have been worn by women and the necessary contrast was achieved by the men who wore their clothes very tight and with every possible effect of slenderness. Now the women play both roles; and as if by common agreement. some wear skirts that are billowy and others wear them that are straight and scant This contrast you see only at rather elaborate and picturesque afternoon or evening occasions. For gene: daytime wear, the str the office. the well dressed woman retains the cigarette silhouette. Any device that this ~ slenderness geems to be me The pl of often has this cffect shown in the sketch blue foulard dotted At cach side these Listen,Wo B ew few Wonderful We were will nd accentuate pightness ing with approval nels of pls as in the f It is of dar in_bright colo plaited j st funny little up to be! ago Beginnings. tull of curiosity and re- beilion. daring and wonderment, hon- est affection and frank dislike. We were lively as pollywog: as butterfiles. merry as pupples as wistful as twilights. New boys and girls vears we were such vivid and littie HOW BORED GOD RYUSTE BDE? o flames aflutter in the torch of life And see what we've become! Fear and stupidity have hardened about and laziness us as a shell BEDTIME STORIES The Little Grouse Is Com- forted. Cifts there are worth more than Ign\.l. rere neither hought. nor are thes kol it OLD MOTI NATURE “I declare, I do belleve you are one of the childrent exclaimed Whitefoot Wood Mouse in hi squeaky voice. after looking long and hard at the lost little Grouse, crouching in the end of the hollow log ‘where she had planned to spend the night 'What are you doing in here, my dear?” he continued. “Where is your mother?” At the mention of her mother the young Grouse began to whimper. All her misery returned to her “1—1 don't know,” she faltered I'm_lost “Teil me about it,” said Whitefoot. So the young Grouse told all about her troubles. Whitefoot didn't say a word until she was all through. Then he gently scratched one of his round littie ear: Then he scratched his nose with one of his little white feet. He was trying to think of some way to help the voung Grouse. But the only heip that he think of then was to try to comfort Dber. “Don’ you worry any more to- Grouse the ‘WHITEFOOT TURNED AND SCAM- ll?gRED OUT OF THE HOLLOW G. night, my dear,” said he. “Just close our ‘eyes and go to sieep. I shall e right around here zll night, and 111 keep watch. No one bigger than Shadow the Wease] can get into this hollow log. And I haven’t seen Shad- ow in this part of the Green Forest for ever and ever so long. But, my dear, never again hide in a place in which there is only one way out. Per- haps tomorrow = morning Mother Grouse will find you. Then all will be well. You know there is no one in wll the Green Forest more timid than I, and there is no one with more enemiés. That means that there is no one who has to keep a sharper watch for danger. §o you may be sure that if there is any danger I will know it and will warn you in time for you to escape. But T don't think there will be. No, sir, I'm sure there will not be. You are just as safe as though youv were under your mother’s wing. Now I am going out*after something to eat, but I'll be right near.” Whitefoot turned and scampered out of the hollow log.” The little Grouse was sorry to see him go, for somehow his company made her less fearful. But sne was much comforted. She felt better for just knowing that thére was a friend close at hand. You see, much of her fright had come just from lonesomeness. Now, know- jng that Whitefoot was close at hand, she felt much less lonesome. So, be- cause she was quite worn out, she very soon went to sleep. ‘Whitefoot went about his business, v Elsie Tohinson could | that | FOULARD FROCK WITH COLORED DOTS AND »m beneath the belt ck from lash in the bodice. | aited panels are finished with | rands of green. i rid! at front and_quenched the flames Within that shell our dried spirits T le dustil Our love is turned to bargaining. our curiosity to suspicion. We curb our experiments tor “fear they will { talk.’ ut we are pectable! And we consider it a supreme ievement to be respectable. We punish other people in dreary, | flattening ways if they are not re- C ble. 3ut all the time a lost voice walls | from far within us that everything | is wrong. We stuff our ears, we try not to hear. But in our fattest mo- i the voice awakes and will not ve still Wh respectable—oh, very re ac have my adventures gone?” it eri “Where are my dreams and my audacities? ~ Why have you turned me into this dull and schem- ing thing? Life was to be a glory and a conquering! Why have you thrown my chances all away? 1 was to be different— braver and truer and wiser than this smug and stupid throng. Why have you broken all promises to Over ana it we would not hear. We will not answer it. How can we? How dare we face the men and women_ that-we-might-have-been and say. “I've made you just the same as other folks be cause 1 was tgo lazy to be | "How bored Gre! He surveys us filing pearly gates and think eternity in such compaay. your wails, although through the of spending By Thornton W. Burgess. and his business was filling that little | stomach of his. But every now and then he peeped in to sce that the little Grouse was all right. It tickled |him to think that he, Whitefoot, the | most timid little fellow in the Green Forest, was actually keeping guard over some one else. It gave him a sense of importance which was new and strange to him. It was a very delightiul feeling. (Copsr s T. W. Burgess). The G By Henry van Dyke All the Days of Your Life. 1 shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever—Ps. 23.6. It is not hard to be an optimist when you are young. But how will it be when you grow old? Will not the joy vanish, and the cup be empty, and the sense of being at home in the world which gladdens youth, give place to that feeling of estrangement which saddens age? Not if you know that you are dwelling in the house of the Lord, for then his goodness and mercy will follow you all the days of your life to remind you where you are. “For he hath not left himself with- out a witness in that he did good. and gave vou from heaven rains and fruit- ful seasons. filling your hearts with | ‘[l‘md and gladness.’ | There is no reason why we should {ever lose this deep and joyfu] sense 1 of domesticity in God’s world. The discoveries of science need not take it from us, but only deepen its wonder and reverence. I remember one of the wisest of modern scientific men, the physical geographer, Arnold Guyot, whom it was my privilege to know well. He kept the faith of a little child, ! and whether he was botanizing in his garden, or geologizing on the top of { some high mountain, he rejoiced like one who was at home in the hous his Father. st i (Copyright, 1923.) PAM'S PARIS POSTALS uide Post| | PARIS, June — Dear Ursula: “Modesty is the best policy.” My lat- est veil is wired and outstanding at the edge, which admits of powdering my nose without dlllurblngpmégzcl. (Copyright, 1933.) I | show EVEN I had a ingagement with Mary Watkins to go for a wawk Sundey aftirnoon, and 1 had a good ideer to take my black and wite dog Yardo along. so Sundey morning I gave him a bath to take some of the dert off, and Sundey aftisnoon I went erround to Mary Watkinses followed by Yardo, and she was setting on the frunt steps on 2 cushions waliting, saying, Well Benny Potts, for good- niss sakes, you dont meen to say you ixpect me to go wawking with that dredfill looking dog. Wy, G, wats dredfill looking about him? T sed. All of him, Mary Watkins sed. Ive 8ot too mutch pride in my reputation to be saw out wawkiug with sutch a looking thing, she sed. and 1 sed, Aw heck, G wizs, you imagine it, this is a sweli looking dog. 0. all rite him home agen, then. Wich I started to do, Mary kins keeping on waiting on the cushions, and Loretta Mincer wa setting on her frunt steps in the next block in a bewty looking new red dress, saying. theres that cute looking heavenly little dog agen. Meening Yardo, and 1 sed. Do you like him? and she sed, O, 1 love that dog, he’s got sutch intelligent look- ing eves and besides that I think he's reel bewtifill all over. take 1 w Do you wunt to wawk? . 1 don't mind. she and me and Yardo started to do, Loretta Mincer saying, I thawt you had a ingagement to take a wawk with Mary Watkins this aftir- a ! noon. Wy, howsdid you know? I sed she sed, She told me. Her and Mary Watkins being jelliss of each other, and I thawt. . T won- der if she reely ment that about Yardo. But we kepp on wawking jest the same on account of it being to0 late to change agen enyways COLOR CUT-OUT Thre Bareback Rider. “Hurrah for the circus Three rings going at once and a wild west in the center ring!" velled Tubby, the riding master. leading the pony to Burt's side. Burt started to and mount, but the pony gave a snort and began to buck and kick. His eves rolled: he jumped and danced about. Burt struggled to get on his back. Finally he made it. Round the ring galloped the pony. and if Burt hadn't been a good rider he would have been thrown. N Burt's cowboy outfit fits over his trapeze tights. Color the trousers and blouse light brown, like khaki. nd his jacket green. Make the sash nd kerchief red and the pistol holder brown. Burt is a clever boy. At the end of the big show tomorrow will come his greatest stunt, a magical performance. Be sure to stay after the circus, boys and girls, to see it! (Copyright, 1923.) “Just Hats” By Vyvyan ‘When White Is Black— Calla Mlies are especially fashion- able this summer, especially if they are of black velvet. And they are especially smart on yellow hats. The above toque has a short, very short, roll brim, Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Raspberties Cereal Poached Eggs on Toast Coffee LUNCHEON. Fried Soft-Shell Crabs Bread and Butter Cookies Lemonade DINNER. -~ Clear Soup Boiled Trout with Egg Sauce Lyonnalse Potatoes Vegetable Salad (11 Green Pepper Cases) Pineapple Sherbet Layer Cake Iced Tea 1l take | sed. | NG _STAR, Every summer some one's vacation | is spoiled because he made the mis- take and said “how do” to poison ivy. It is a climber that trails ftself {over the stone walls, and its bronze green leaves are very attractive to {those who are making wild flower "buuquo\s. | i It some times makes mats on the | | Bround under trees, and unthinking | or unseeing people lie dowm on it and roll over it Next day they have a ‘case of poisoning, and are very un- {(‘umforlnble or worse for days to come. The skin glows with a rosy red |rash. It burns and itches, and the victim beging scratching it. That's | | the worst thing.to do. 1f ‘the skin | | is broken the infection spreags deeper jand further, and the patient Eenerally jtakes to his bed and sends for the | doctor. | | Some folks are so susceptible to| the poison of this vine that if they| pass close to it when it is wet they| will suffer its vengeance Children | sometimes rub it on their hands just {to see if they will “get it.” They {generally do. |, While not dangeroug, this poison- | |ing is very uncomfortable, and with a little care and caution all the trou- ble can be avoide First learn to r wao twisting gnize it. It has fa tem that cling: One Very Good Little Baby Book. Although 1 am inordinately fond of picking flaws in government health { education publications I do think the {United States Department of La- bor’'s children’s bureau's chief, Grace ! Abbott, scored a bull's-eye when she| | submittea to her chief, Julia C. La throp. whose chief, Mr. James J. Davis, is Secretary of Labor, a 're- vised edition of the bulletin, “Infant Care” by Mrs. Max West. who was I.’nrh d by Dr. Dorothy Reed Menden- hall and the children’'s bureau's ad- visory committee of pediatrists, Dr. Howard Childs Carpenter. represent- ing the American Child Hygiene As- sociation: Dr. Julius Hess of the American Medical Association and Dr. Richard Smith of the American Pedia- trfe Society. 1 certainly do. And I have tried nobly to give credit where credit is due—let them divide it among themselves. nfant Care” is obtainable for a nickel. a half dime. They need the money at Washington. You get this free book of a hundred pages. allj about the care and feeding of babies, by sending your 5 cents to the su- peritendent of documents. govern- ment printing office, Washington, D. C. and asking him to mail you a copy of bureau publication No. §, ‘Infant Care.” United States Depart- Iment of Labor. children's bureau WASHINGTON, D. C. | will say PERSONAL HEALTH BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician end Author. FRIDAY, to old walls and fences. Its leaves grow in a group of three. One leaf for each letter in ivy. Woodbine is sometimes mistaken for it, but, as it has five leaves and the vy three, the mistake need not occur. See that none of it is left on your premises. In the winter, when the sap is low and the leaves are gone, chop it out and pour salt water in the place where it grew. It you need a vine in its place, the woodbine will grow readily, is far prettier and not harmtul. Should one of the children be so unfortunate as to break out with the ivy rash, attend to him. The reme- dies are simple and cheap and the treatment is easily administered. Before starting to the country, when you have the family doctor go over the children ask him for the best treatment for polso ivy and provide for it in your first-aid kit. We have had children come home trom the country with skin blotched ang scratched and scarred because the simple though annoying condition was not cared for when it should have been. There is a possibility of the thing becoming grave when the the doctor “Too bad. Looks like blood poisoning now. Why didn't you at- tend to it in the beginning Look out for the dainty ivy, then, as it creeps over the old stone wall. Tt holds great promise of discomfort for the unwary. (Cooyright SERVICE Then you walt a few weeks. Every- body should learn to labor and to wait. After 3 few weeks maybe youl'l get an official letter from Washington about it, something noncommittal, and you wonder whether they have turned your request over to the secret ser: ice for investigation. Then a few onths later you get another franked mcssage which fills you with anxiety and alarm. Finally, about nineteen years afterward, when the baby is away at college, you get the free pamphlet. You can't go wrong. therefore, if you follow the ideas and suggestions in this little free 5-cent government publication entitled “Infant Care.”” 1 can even approve evervthing that Is said in it about such subjects as “colds” and clothing—and that is say- ing a lot, when vou consider how rabid T am about some things. I am sorry that the Labor Depart- ment or the superintendent of docu- ments exacts a nickel for each copy of this free government publication But seriously. the book is worth a hundred nickels and it is worth wait- ing months for. Tt's the clearest, sim- plest and most instructive little baby book I've had the pleasure of exam- | Ining and I hope it may get into every | home where a baby boards. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Eating Orange Peel. Harmful to eat orange peel, and what is the result? T like to eat them when T eat an orange and do so quite often. —Miss B. L. M. | Your Home and EN KENDALL. Nested Chairs. Again our salutations to the manu- facturing ingenuity which keeps a keen vye fixed on the home and | needs! To replace inconvenient {ticles with conveniences; to design furniture, utensils and tools to fit every kind and size of room; to pro- duce constantly greater comfort. compactness and comeliness in every department of the home—this is the unceasing effort of the manufacturers, and how they do achieve their pur- pose! The dweller in the tiny apartment the one-room-and-bath occupant, welcome the newest and most useful | of nested articles—nested chairs. We have had nests of tables for some time, those little stands within stands which | could open out on demand into three | tea tables, card tables, or sewing stands. We have had nested baskets, which could be fitted together to take up the p —— ar- or| will i But nested chairs—that's somethin; like! How often have those whos rooms are small longed for chairs that wouldn’'t take up any space. The chairs already on the floor fill it at- tractively—more would be in the way —yet when several guests drop in there aren't enough to go around and chairs have to be brought in from the dining room or veranda or carried down from upstairs. The evening card game, the family reunion, the club meeting, all call for more chairs, and smaller ones than the average living room boasts. These three nested chairs are a god send to the small house. Each is a little narrower and lower than the other, and they fit together when not in use, so that only the largest, the windsor chalr, is exposed to The others are hidden behind The sketch shows how they look, nested and separately. When guests come, the one chair expands to three at aetouch. All are beautiful in de- sign, in dull-rubbed mahogany finish, and comparatively inexpensive. N Learning to Count. One mother says: My little girl learned to count easily through little everyday things. I started in by counting the buttons on her shoes or dress each morning, and kept up counting now and then through the day, ending by counting her blocks when we put them away after play. (Oopyright, 1628.) | gullet. Answer—No. the peel is chfefly cel- lulose (wood fiber) and serves as not unwholesome roughage or bulk in the | digestive tract. Make sure the peel is well washed, then eat it Pharyngitis. Can you tell me what pharyngitis is—how long before they get well?— A Reader. Anewer—The pharynx is the throat just above where the food enters the Phrayngitis is a “sore throat” —inflammation of the pharynx. Acute pharyngitis usually gets well in a week; chronic pharyngitis may per- sist for an indefinite time or until the cause is remedied. say an 4nfected sinus in the nose drained, or a sys- temic disease treated or the use of tobacco given up. l1s an excellent model | Pattern Bureau, JULY 6, 1923. BEAUTY CHATS Summer Foot Treatments. T've headed this chat “Summer Foot Treatments” because I want to em- phasize the fact that the feet need different care in the hot weather from what they do when it's cold. For one thing, they are apt to swell with the heat, and they perspire more readily. But it's the best time to treat them if they've been painful or unhealthy, for in summer you wear low, light shoes, which permit greater ventila*ion, and you can wear canvas slippers, which come nearer the ideal —the Ideal beifig a sandal, About treatments—if the feet per- spire, powder them every day or twice a day. Use the fine sort of talcum made for bables; it's pure and sooth- ing, and any amount can be used. If you can’t afford this, or if your feet are not very sensitive, take some laundry starch, sift the powder from the lumps—crush the lumps to make more powder—and mix one ounce of boracic acid powder to every six or FEATURES. BY EDNA KENT FORBES corns. But if there ave corns, fol- low the usual treatment, soak the feet in hot water, preferably with bath salts added, or soda, cut or file off the callous, paint with collodion, rub every day afterwards with cold cream. It is a good plan to rest the feet during the hot weather by wearing low, broad-heel canvas oxfords, and for dress-up, low-heel canvas pumps, or plain kid sandals, with heels as low as possible. Blacky—You can reduce the muscles of your face through massage, but only use enough oil on the tips of the fingers to act as a lubricant. If you cannot have this work done for you, be sure to learn all about the movements before you attempt them yourself; else you may stretch the skin or otherwise injure the contour | of the face. Mrs. F. H. W.—Diluted lemon juice, or that from cucumbers, will be all the bleach necessary for ordinary tanning. Always follow this treat- elght of the starch. | soothing and antiseptic, and better strong odor. In this case, however, use half starch and half boracic. feet; it makes them less tender, it is more cleansing than even soap and water, it does wonders in preventing shion? ecdst SiREton ¥ { | | This is a splendid style for the use of contrasting materials and, since contrasts are in great favor nowa- days. this would be & good model for you to choose for your late spring or summer dress. The pattern cuts in sizes 16 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure; size 36 requires 3% yards of 36-inch material with 1% vyards of 38-inch contrasting ma- terial. Price, 15¢, stamps or coin. The model as iilustrated was made of figured and plain foulard, but this for ‘any tub material, such as gingham, voile, ' linene, organdie, etc. This frock can! very easlly be made in a day Price of pattern, 15 cents, in post- | age stamps only. = Orders should be addressed to The Washington Star 22 East 18th street. ew York ci Please write name Does the Barber Take a Chance? My husband is called in twice a week to shave patient in the hospital. Is there any danger of his! contracting tuberculosis>—Mrs. P. S.| Answer—Such frequent contact may | bring about infection. But if your husband will wear a sultable gau~ mask (ten layers of cheesecloth. thirty-two threads to the inch) over nose and mouth while shaving ths patients, and take good care about washing his implements and his | hands with soap and water when through, he will be in no danger. { and address clearl Lemon Jelly Cake. | This 1s cooling, | than baby powder if the feet have a | Sea bathing is very good for the | ment with cream or an oll applica- tion, as all bleaches neutralize the natural skin secretions, leaving them | parched if not supplied with an ofl. | _Winifred—As you are too stout in 80 much of the body, a general reduc- {tion through the diet would be best |for you in attaining a better pro- | portioned figure. Bistory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. OSLER RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—An occupation. Here is a name which deserves men- tion, perhaps, not because it is so widespread as because it is widely known ay a result of the notoriety achieved several years ago by a mem- ber of the medical profession for his peculiar suggestions for the use of chloroform. The family name of Osler appears to have taken its origin from an oc- cupation, that of “ostler,” which, however, held quite a different posi- tion of importance in the middle ages from that which is accorded to it now. It comes, in fact, from the same | word that “host” does. The medieval “hosteller” was one whose especial office was the care of the only means of land transportation known to the populations of those days, and the “hostelry” got ity name from the fact that it was a horse station more than from any connection with supplying the bodily comforts of man. The inn- keeper was not known as a “host” or 4 “hosteller” at first, but as a “her- berjour.” = Gradually, through the and man in the same establishment, the name “host” was applied to the proprietor of the two, which is good evidence that in those days the serv- ice to the horses was considered more important by the travelers than that accorded to themselves. —_— Creamed Shrimps. Shell and rinse one pint of shrimps. Add one tablespoonful of butter, two tablespoonfuls of flour and two cups of milk. Place the upper pan in an- other pan of hot water and when the tracts Jjoining of the two services, to horse | milk is as_thick as cream, add the shrimps. When thoroughly heated, add salt and pepper and serv: Mary, Mary, not contrary, How does your garden grow? “Peas, potatoes,corn and beans, And squashes, row on row.” Mary, Mary, not contrary, How do you cook your crops? And because it’s too hot to tell in ryhme, Modern Mary answers in prose. “l boil the peas ’dll crinkly, sea.so: with_salt and pepper and then add a heaping spoon of Nucoa | The Energy Spread for Bread to bring out their sweetness. “I boil the potatoes and cream to a fluffy deliciousness with Nucoa. “I boil the lima beans and corn and bring them together as Suc- cotash—with Nucoa melting in for richness and flavor. Most of the squash goes into pies, the crusts of which are flaky and healthful because Nucoa makes : them so. “Honest to goodness, I wouldn’t want a garden if I couldn’t have Nucoa.” N.B. And so all modern Marys will say when they find that Nucoa adds to the sweetness of that | right-out-of-the-garden flavor of fresh vegetables—that it adds to bread the rich Spread it needs—and that it sub- rom their Spread bills—cuts If in two.” “THE BEST FOODS, INC.” R RS RS SE E LER “TheWorld'sFines ED. PINAUD’S | Lilac Talc Exquisite quality. | Write today for PINAUD'S |sample, enclose 5c. : | Parfumerie Lilac Talc ED. PINAUD 86 Fifth Ave., New York 2C for e — ask for Horlick's The ORICINAL Malted Milk RS for All Ages #" Aveid Imitations—Substituter Beat two eggs light, add two cups of sugar, a cup of cream and two cups | of flour sifted with a teaspoonful of | !cream of tartar and half a teaspoon- ful of soda. Mix thoroughly and bake ! in layers. Mix a cup of sugar with the grated rind and juice of a lemon and two tablespoonfuls of water. | Bring to the boil. thicken with two eggs well beaten and cool. Put the cake together and serve immediate COFFEE and the | Chicago World’s Fair-1893 POSSIBLY you or one of your family visited the World's Fair at Chicago in 1893. One pro was demonstrated there in a practical and effecti coffee at any restaurant or cafe tasted the excellence of Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee. Seal Brand was then, and continues to be, particularly American. It was good coffe duct particularly American ive way. Whoever drank e—it represented the most Fin iz Sales/White; y 2 q 3 Q. OO0~ 06 NOC” al Cle,a.;‘a‘n 'P.t‘:mps- & Oxfords for Women- OG0 cer G NI~ 00 NOC~ Styles That Sold Up to $6 =3 NOW WHITE KID—WHITE BUCK AND SEA ISLAND DUCK Never before ht in the height of the season has it been possible to buy such Wonderful Values in White Kid, White Buck and Oxfords as Sea Island Duck Pumps and this sale offers you. Includ- ed in this Big Sale are styles that sold up to$6. To insure quick and final clearance betore the end of the season we have made this Big Amazing popular American blend and roast—it was ers was used by discerning coffee drink- all over the country. In fact it an American institution. To-day its popularity is still greater and S tin SEAL BRAND | it is gaining every year. eal Brand Coffee is sold in sealed cans—never in bulk. Seal Brand Orange Pekoe Tea is of equal excellence. In screw-top canisters only. Chase &Sanborn's COFFEE SEAL BRAND, Reduction. Buy Now! To be really stylish you must have a pair of “Whites” for summer wear. Talk about reductions and Real Shoe Value see these and you’'ll realize that this is a real opportunity to buy Good Shoes Chea; - The Largest Chain of Shoe Stores in the United States. 913 Pa. Ave. N.W.—Open' Saturday Nights 711 H St. NE—Open Nights All Newark Stores Open Saturday Eveningsi to Accommodate Customers