Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1923, Page 100

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THE: SUNDAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C.—GRAVURE SECTION—NOVEMBER 4, 1923 Meyer Jacobstein of Rochester, N. Y., who succeeds Representative T. B. Dunn in . the next House. MISS ZELLA. . A beautiful new slipper of patent leather or black suede with cut out strap effect; junior Spanish heels; priced Eleven dollars. McCallum silk hosiery, two, three and four dollars. Stetson Shoe Shop, 1305 F Street. Nutionul Photo, J. R. Brook~ M. H. Stevens ' 1 BROOKS-STEVENS { M Successors to i { BROOKS STUDIO Photographers Dr. Horace Grant of Atlanta, 26-Piece Set RS Tel. 1078 Wash.. D. C. Ga., founder and national presi- community silver Mr. M. Harry dent of the National Order of Pipe Smokers, presenting a —in the new Petite Buffet Bachrach for years. hounces his copartnership with Mr. J. R. Service Tray — all cars has conducted and made popu- 5 5 8, t 17 ye cl.e‘::;ficeatiaogler::‘em::s:lxzr ;0 iecét. engraven free $3l'75 lar the well known photographic firm of “Brooks Studio.” ueille e, 5 c he S In conjunction with the high-class studio portraits of Mr. who does good work with a Brooks, Stevens will establish pipe in the play, “The Widow ] ing a sy Ity of weddings and kom ate Cagle.” Miss La Verne smokes SEUNGER S He willlolia e availible far stadio porizait by appaintasent. 820 F St., Cor. 9th “Look for the Big Clock” This is the Gish family—Dorothy, Mrs. Mary Gish, the mother, and Lillian. Dorothy and her mother sailed for Italy recently, where the daughter will go to work in the screen version of “Romola.” vens. formerly head photographer with Your Credit Ix Good Our Motto—"We Guarantee to Please” BROOKS-STEVENS Iowa girls of the American Legion Aux- iliary in parade at the annual convention in San Francisco. Wide World Photo, It is a matter of common custom to look eventualities squarely in the face by keep- ing insurance policies paid up and by making arrangements for the disposition of prop- .e e erty. It has been paradoxical that, until comparatively recently, few men would give The ‘{Erminie ' : ' : ' : . v really serious, sober thought about their last resting places, bequeathing the decision as HERE is grace and charm to this Co- lonial Pump that has made it a decided fa- vorite—with both Miss and Matron. It dresses the foot distinctively and comfortably. In Patent at $10.50 In Rouge Calf at $11.00 Our $225 Silk Hose is making fast friends. Arthur Burt Co. 1343 F Street —= S Schwartz’s Diamond Rings Beautiful B1luc- White Diamonds—pertect stones -set in handsome mount- ings for ladies and gentle- men. Wonderful values— all Washington is talking of them! *100 $1.00 708 Seventh St. N.W. 3123 M St. N.W. NEW Opefa Pump. developed in A Black Satinf Black or Brown Velvet. Black or iBrown Suede. Patent Leather, Matt Kidskin. Juni 510 Spanish or high heel Silver or Gold Brocade—$13.50. The ‘Ciéy Club Sho' of an added responsibility in grief upon the ones they leave behind. For the living, men consider every factor relating to their abode—the community, the land, the construction, the type or style and their building safeguards. In the home one will find ancestral por- traits and busts and relics displayed with much ado and pride without any aversion For the dead. they have accepted with- out protest conditions of disorder and bad taste which they would not tolerate for a moment in public or private developments. In the cemeteries are poorly construct- ed monuments. disintegrating. rust-worn fences, shunned and neglected ancestral 1318 G St. Also, at Our 7th and 9th St. Stores For freedom of mo- tion and grace of line, the woman of full figure will find noth- ing quite so satisfac- tory as the new models af the Rengo Belt Reducing Cor- set. $3 and up—at all good stores. Made by the CROWN CORSET CO. 295 Fifth Ave. * New York IEEPY R:DUCING CORSETS or avoidance. graves. Why have we not shown the same intelligent handling of the inevitable problem as of the casual situations of our daily life? The reason is that to most people cemeteries suggest morbid thoughts—and, therefore, can best be ignored! These unpleasant thoughts are the direct offshoot of the usual crowded, disorderly conditions resulting from unreasoning grief and no esthetic restrictions. Our houses and cities would pre- sent similar conditions if we turned them over to workmen without supervision. Such conditions, however, are not universal. An eminently successiul effort has been made to overcome them in Fort Lincoln. a cemetery-park founded to perpetuate a grant by Lord Baltimore of a marvelously beautiful site. carefully planned. broadly developed. rigidly restricted. closely supervised and perpetually maintained. In justice to the effort and to your family, you should see for yourself how much has been accomplished by merely subordinating man’s handicraft to the sublime simplicity of nature. You will find order and beauty, and in the vast prospect of hills and valleys, forests and lawns, there will come an amazing uplift of spirit, and a new idea of God's acre. FORT LINCOLN; On the Washington-Baltimore Boulevard At the District Line Exhibition of Photographs and Models At 705 12th Street HORACE W. PEASLEE, A. L A, Consulting Architect. ALCO-GRAVURE,INC. New York Baltimore St.Louis Clevelsnd Kaasae Ciy

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