Evening Star Newspaper, May 11, 1924, Page 19

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PAGEANTS PROGRAM OPENS THURSDAY Historical Series Will Be Directed by Schools’ Community Cen- ters Department. MUSIC BY U. S. MARINE BAND Project Considered an Educational Incentive for Children. Three of the series of historical Pageants of the city of Washington Planned by the community centers des partment of the public schools will be presented this week at the East ‘Washington, Johnson-Powell and «Boutheast Centers, under the general direction of Marie Moore Forrest and Bess Davis Schreiner of the depart- ment of pageantry of the local com- munity cente: The presentation of these community pageants, telling in dramatic form the past history and present activities in the various neighborhoods, tends to develop com- munity interest civie pride among the people their Capital as well s an edu- cational incen er people The th and in nts now to be giv- ep in the plan ters department, ch year more of the community ¢ Which aims to pre and more of local and national his- tory peculiar to our federal city. It has already had the effect of creat- ing wide interest, und much interest- ing and unusual information has been Sent in that will be presented next ¥ear in more elaborate form by the virious center: Th. nited S: under the direction Bon, second leader, will page. t ral Higi a v and the United Yard Band, directed by Bandleader Charles E ter the music for S of two pageant y May 16, at Joh at Wilson as well as for th, Along the Water Junior High School, is the sc t com- munity on Satu . May 17 s e Band. or on and which center, “Unde the first ¢ to be given. night at ool at 8:15, un- ion of Marie Moore For Leonard Blush, di- onal Capita Marguerite new der the d rest, assisted b rector of the N ers, and by M with music by Community Orchestra and the 1t Band. The National Capi- will present two episodes pageant, ge Washing- n,” with Edward Evans as nington, and “The House in with parts played by Ernest Wilbur = Healy, _ Louis silliam Grist, ' Bdward ert Blush, Barry Helwig and the Misses anor Milier, Helen Grist, Lorraine Miller, mann’ an dee Grist. Capital Players will a Ep» lub in tat ; to the Capital Cit Grist_playing the part of Gen. La Fayette, with members of the Ep- Jup_completing the scene. nt Madison's Inaugural Ball presented the Epworth Club, including Madeieine shire, Ralph Bowers, Margaret rbert Angel, Jeannetje Homes, Cauthen, En Botts, Nor- de Neale, Lewis Hawle) va Dorothy vis, Raymond Andrew Ger 1 the Old B 1 by membe the Aurora Club of which B. K. Dwyer ident, and including Ja Hayden, Jasper Moore, A. Turner,. Curtis ton, D. Conner and will also as- > Club in_the ety at the including William Draper, M. Frank Orb: llen, Miss Reba Crickeaberger, Miss Gertrude Miss Beulah Offutt, Miss Ved: 1, Miss Ethel Repogle, Miss Hamm Miss| Pearl Myerly witt Cricken- berger, Walter Townsend, Raymond Alexander, Jacob Repogle. Johnson-Powell Program. Friday night at Johnson-Powell Center, the first presentation of *“The College City” will be given with a cast including members of groups at Johnson-Powell and at Wilson Nor- mal centers, under the genefal direc tion of Mrs. Forrest, assisted by Bess Davis Schreiner, Marguerite Keister; by Mrs. Edith H. Hunter, Mrs. Laura J. Bogue, Mme. Tharin, ‘at Johnson- Powell, and by-1da J. Kebler, Aurora M. Poston, n Davis. Florence Fenton and Katherine Wilfley, at ‘Wilson Normai Center. Among those taking part in the various scenes and episodes are mem- bers of the Gov. Thomas G. Welles Society, Children of the American Revolution, under the direction of Mrs. Clayton Emig, who will present two scenes, “The Convent in Colonial Days’ and’ “Thomas Jefferson Visits the School House in the Jefferson Stables.” Prominent in the cast of “The Col- lege City” representing the Johnson- Powell Center are Misses Charlotte Baker, Marguerite Luckel, Alice Kitchen, Mary Emma Joyner, Alice Garretson, Mary Jones, Ada Town- send and Lyman Young, John A. Hunter, Edward C. Townsend, Albert F. Bogue, George H. Beall, Charles H. Baker, Thomas A. King, Ralph Hebbard, " Leslie Waudby, = Harold . C. Snyder, A. B. Shreve, B y, I C. Weld, H. C. Cole, E. Garrett, Rev. Maurice S. White, who Wwill appear in the scenes of old Columbia University. In the Meridian Hill farm scene will appear H. C. Phillips, Miss Mary Junkin, Priseilla Bogue and a large number of guests, Dr. Lyman Kebler and W. B. Todd will appear as Senator Sherman and as Gen. Sherman, with Ralph Bartley as Horace Greeley, assisted by John Boyd, Howard Kinzer and Calvert Hines. In the final episode, representing the activities at Johnson-Powell to- day, will appear Miss Clara @, Brewer. Dr. Kimball and R. L. Hay- cock, all' prominent school officials in the District of Columbia, as well as Mme. Tharin, Miss Florence Fenton, Boy Scouts, athletic groups, groups of kindergarten pupils and a group of eighth-grade pupils, also a sketch presented by pupils of Miss Evelyn Davis. “Along Water Front.” “Along Water Front” will be given Saturday night by the Squtheast Cen- ter at Hine Junior High School Audi- torium_at $:15, directed by Marie Moore Forrest, assisted by Marguerite Keister, Margaret Hopkins Worrell, Evelyn Davis, Martha Dunham, Nel- 1ie Belt and Mrs. Lulu Mastin.” The Red Men will present the Indian epi- sodes in the pageant called ‘“The Meeting of the*Tribes,” with R. A. Humphries, great sachem: 1. G. Bair, Robert Strobel, W. E. Mastin, Lulu A. Mastin, W. H. Dyer, Pansy Dyer, 0. D.yTice and Mrs. Tice, Florence Seiders, A. H. Dyer and Mrs. Dyer, Mrs. A. Swindell, Mrs. C. K. Austin, Miss Louise Fastnaught, Miss Ruth Thorne, A. E. Thompson, W. B. Gare ner, Mrs. Davis, H. O'Neill, Miss Ethel Rusk, Mrs. H. I. Beall, Mrs. Ethel E. Lucas, Paul Dallman and Mrs, Dall- man, Miss Daisy M. Garden, Mrs. J. H. Blankenship, Mrs. Irving, Mrs. W. E. Greer and Mrs. J. W. Mitchell. In_this pageant also the Public Speaking Club will play a prominent part in presenting “Lady Washington at Christ Church,” in_which Mrs. M. J. Moran and David Reid Middleton will appear. as Lady Washington and as Alexander Hamilton, assisted by Mrs. 1da Kimmerling, Mrs. Laura . Hulse, Mrs. Laura E. White, Mrs. John Vernstein, Mrs. F. A. Hagger, Miss M. S. Cate, Mrs. A R. Orcut Raymond Orcutt, Beulah Orcutt, Mr: Jda E. Mudd, Mrs. K. Gross, Miss Besslie Womersley, Reid K. Middle- ton and Mrs. Reid K. Middleton. Children of the Southeast Dramatic MRS. HARDING LAYS SCHOOL CORNER STONE By the Associated Press. BRIDGEPORT, Conn., May 10.— Mrs. Florence Kling Harding with a silver trowel lald the corner-stone of the mew million dollar Warren Harding High School here this after- noon in the presence of a gathering of 5,000 parents, school children and city officfals. The trowel was pre- sented to her by Vera Shaughnessey, daughter of Willlam J. Shaughnessey, jr., ‘president of the Kastern En. Egineering and Construction Company, general contractors for the school. Mrs. Harding_arrived here this morning at 11:24 and left shortly after the cornerstone ceremonies for New York with George B. Christian, secretasy to the late President Hard- ing; and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. Havens. Mr. Havens is president of the board of education. Mrs. Harding will proceed to Washington tomor- row. She expressed herself through Mr. Christian, as highly honored and pleased. It is believed that the school here was the first building to be named in honor of Mr. Harding. Judge John S. Pullman, the principal speak- r, advocated America’s participa- tion in a world court. i FEAR FOR SAFETY OF ADVENTURE SHIP Marine Men Believé Narwhal, in Search of Treasure, Has Sunk in Pacific. TWICE WAS REPORTED LOST Writers and Hunters Among Crew Membership. Dy Consolidated Press SAN FRANCISCO, May 10.—Once again the adventure ship Narwhal, with her crew.of eighteen “gentle- men sailors,” who set out from San Francisco fourteen months ago for the romantic South Seas and such joys and perils as they might chance to meet, is “lost” somewhere on the broad Pacific. Three months ago the Narwhal, after already having twice been post- ed as “missing” and thengturning up safe and sound like the family cat, left Nouimae, New Guinea, for San Francisco and home. But she has not reached port. Without mishap and £00d_sailing weather, the vessel was due here a month ago. But she has not reached Honolulu, which was to be a port of caMl on her home-bound trip, and she has not been sighted by any other craft since she left the New Guinea port. Fear Typhoon Got Veasel. Now it is feared that “the third e” being the charmed one, and this being the third occasion upon which the Narwhal has been reported “lost,” that she really has gone to the bottom in one of the frequent mid-Pacific typhoons. It is_too hard that a Conrad or a Capt Pingle was not among tho: who sailed out of the Golden Gate on the Narwhal a vear ago last March Had a writer of sea stories of the caliber of either been among the adventure ship's motley crew, her strange and exciting experiences and of those aboard her undoubtedly would have furnished material for a dozen or more classic tales of the briny deep, Poet Member of Crew. When the Narwhal left San Fran- co, it was on a “lay crui: ‘That is, members of her crew of eighteen had put up $2,500 each to outfit the old vessel and to share in the ex- penses of her South Seas rambling, and each was to share equally in the profits expected to accrue from her long ocean trek. In her crew were 4 _couple of movie photographers, an alleged poet, a trio of embryo maga- zine writers, a twain of big game hunters, a naturalist and a few others who were just plain soldiers of fortune. > Their principal objective was an island in the Solomon group, where they expected to dig up a fortune of more than a quarter of a million dollars in gold and pearls, buried during the world war by two German planters who were aboard the Nar- whal. Also, the vessel carried a car- g0 of calico, glass beads, a dozen or two cheap phonographs and a lot of other jimcracks, which her crew pro- posed 1o trade to unsophisticated and near-cannibalistic South Sea natives for pearls and other things of more material value. Doubt Ship Gained Objective. So far as can be learned, the Nar- whal never reached the ' treasure- laden island in the Solomon Eroup. Instead, she was reported to have disappeared from the face of the ocean while en route from Honolulu to Papeete. Both crew and vessel wére given up for lost. Then quite unexpectedly she turned up, thousands of miles off her course at a port in Borneo. Next, word came filtering back that she was to explore the dreaded Cobra River, in Borneo, up the is- land reaches, of which no white man has ever penetrated and returned alive. But instead of adventuring up the Cobra, it was reported that the Narwhal had headed for another group of South Sea Islands. Ul- timately, she turned up at Sydney, Australia, her crew “broke,” and the Narwhal's lardet without food. In an effort to bolster up her financial status, the Narwhal next undertook to transport a load of steel rails to New Guinea. Again she was report- ed “lost,” and she was ninety-seven days overdue when she finally turned up at Nouimae. In Poor Comdition. Now, in her homebound trip from New Guinea, where it was reported that her entire crew was sated to overflowing with adventure, she again has beén numbered among the missing. ‘When she left Nouimae the Nar- whal was in poor condition. Places where her seams had sprung had been fixed up with makeshift patches, and ber sails—she had no auxiliary en- gines—were in tatters. Some of her crew are reported to have stayed in New Guinea rather than face the perils of the trip home. Now that she has failed to reach Honolulu after being forty-nine days overdue-there, shipping men hers ex- press the belief that the guardian angel who kept watch over the ad- venture ship when she was “lost” on two previous occasions finally has de- serted her, and that she has gone to the bottom _ somewhere between Noulmae and Honolulu. and Rhythm Clubs, directed Evelyn Davis, will present three scenes—"“The ‘Capitol’ at Tiber Wharf,” “A Dream of Francis Scott Key" and “At the Old Market Wharf"—the following children tak- ing part in the various scenes: Doris Weaver, Ethel Hamilton, Anna Web- ster, Joseph Kelley, Genevieve Berg. ling, Helen Costello, Elizabeth Bray, Everett - Mehler, Theodore Edward, Joseph Arendes, Edward Fowler, Viola Fowler, Helen Brady, Dorothy Brady, Sarah Bergling, Margaret Wilkison, Catherine Bray, Grace Mo- ran, Louise Jetten, Catherine Craig, Evélyn’ Matthews, Haroldene Davis, Mary Seibold, Elizabeth Middleton, Loretta Costello, Lilllan Matthews, Helen Sachs, Edna Newman, Virginia Davis, Mae Smith and others. ‘The Pollyanna Club, directed by Miss Marths Dunham. will present “Black Spirits and hite,” and the country dancing class, directed by Miss Nellie Belt, will give “The ‘Wager on Money Musk”; and the final episode of “Along the Water Front" will be given by a group of children from ‘the Virginia avenue play- grounds, supervised by Miss Thelma Smith, director of the playground, under the auspices of the municipai by playgrounds, Mrs. Susie Root Rhodes, director. This scene is called “A Girls, don’t become alarmed. These costumes, though unique, have not been decreed as the latest fashions, but were worn yesterday as a requirement of a girly’ RUSSIANS THRONG PARIS. About 300,000 Exiles CHICAGO PREPARING T0 GREET MUNDELEIN 100,000 Children to Line Ronte of Procession From Train to Cardinal's Home. » By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, May 10.—George, Car- dinal Mundelein, Chicago's first prince of the Catholic Church, will be wel- comed home tomorrow with what is expected to be the greatest demon- stration accorded to a churchman here. The cardinal and his party of Chicago prie and laymen are speeding westward from New York His eminence will reach Chicago shortly after 2 o'clock tomorrow, and, proceeding by automobile to the arch- episcopal residence, will be greeted by 100,000 Catholic school children along the line of the procession, which already is decorated profusely The prelate, at the head of a tri- umphal throng of thousands, will pro- ceed from the cardi home after a short stop at the Cathedral of the Holy Name, where he will deliver the papal blessing and will take part in benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. The cial reception will take place Monday night at the Audi torium Theater, Mayor Dever deliver- ing a welcome in behalf of the city. The cardinal’s remarks will be broad- cast over WMAQ. the Chicago Daily radio station. Tomorrow’s re- reception will have as participants representatives of all religious faiths, as Wl the welcome to be accorded on Monday night at the public meeting. GREETED IN BALTIMORE. Cardinal Mundelein Gets Testimo- nial From Seminary Students. BALTIMORE, Md, May 10.—The special train taking Cardinal Munde- lein to Chicago stopped here this evening while thirty-two students of Mary's Seminary, all from Chi- cago, presented him with an address of greeting, written by Rev. Dr. E. R. Dyer, president of the seminary. Cardinal Mundelein left the train to receive the testimohial. He blessed the students and then continued his journey. Besides the seminarians, about 500 other persons greeted the cardinal here. MENNONITES ARMING AS BANDITS THREATEN Strong Force Mobilized in Mexico. Governor of Chihuahua Promises Aid. By the Associated Press. CHIHUAHUA CITY, Mex., May 10.— Mennonites in eastern Chihuahua are arming against threats of bandits, and a strong force has been mobilized among members of the new colony. Bandit depredations near Guerrero and San Antonio have caused the colonists to adopt a warlike attitude, and they are ready to defend them- selves. Trouble has been occurring frequently between agrarians in west and southern Chihuahua and munic- ipal guards, and in the last engage- ment at Parame, two guards were wounded and two aggrarians killed. Gov. Reymundo Talavera has prom- ised all assistance to the Mennonites in_their fight to prevent raids and seizure of the properties which they have improved vas The largest Commercial Houses who study The OPERATING ECONOMY of their Cars have chosen outhland 7 Batteries £ % §17.00 INSURED FOR 18 MONTHS’ SERVICE OUTHLAND 'BATTERY CO. 910 Pa. Ave. N.W. Perfect Playground.” Py the Assceiated Press. PARIS, Nicholas of Russia, who is now resid- ing near Pari are 3,000,000 Russians in ex 300,000 of whom are living in France. More Russians of distinguished rank, under the old regime of Paris and suburbs than any other part of Europe. work of some kind ¢ living former fortunes Count of Russia, is engaged in a bank which as_one of the P an large apartment in Parls, rents and lives on the proceeds in a tiny N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N S aris maintains out of his private fort ar Nearly all the Ru. fund for themselves and friends who have Schebeko, assador at Vienna at of the war and up to the time of the | overthrow of the c: who was one Russia, cept AY 11, worority initiation. PREFERENTIAL RAIL RATES WITHDRAW The in France, Grand Duke Estimates. Interstate sion yesterday vacated March 11, placing section preferential rail rate section—of t merchant marine act of 1920 into o eration. The commission acted on a resol tion from the Shippifig Board wit drawing the board's certificate that s are available to carry the e ade of ¢ United States. L tion 28, it is required th: | when these facilities are { through rail and water, | be establisired on goods carried American ships. . The Shipping Board resolution staf ed that “doubt has arisen Wheth shipping facilities under the Ame: May 10.—Grand Duke its order estimates t there about are residents Most of them are at another or are fragments of their on the Kokovsoff, former premier Ereat of which remains banks of old nly the Skovsoff fortun nd about Petersbureg branch Russian families in ans who have thing left have made a common to_the trade ranges specified.” By the commission’s order, which was to have become e! o June 20, is set aside until t hipping Board again certifies a su ency of American vessels less, or who nothing unt was Russfan am- the outbreak | ist_regime, and richest men in | left in 1919 ex- of the Russian He furnished a which he f the had nothin; the furniture until_the commission acts on su y in Vienna. ' certification The making of rugs is the chi and almost only industry in Persia. flat in one of the suburbs. ¥ This brick house is built on a large lot overlooking Rock Creek Park. It contains eight rooms besides an inclosed sleeping porch and exceptionally large and nicely finished attic, suitable for serv- ants’ quarters. There is a beautiful stone fireplace in the living room. The basement is exceptionally bright. It contains a large built-in garage and coal and cold storage rooms, TO INSPECT—Drive out 16th street to Varnum and west on Varnum to 4330 Argyle Terrace. MARTIN BROTHERS Owners—Builders Adams 3312 _— L 2P 222 —From the Diary of a Metal Roof I am the metal roof that protects you and your home. I shelter you from winter’s bitter cold and summer’s scorching heat—when the wind blows, the rain pours-and the lightning flashes I am always there to keep you safe from harm. I am the most important part of your house. I am made of LYONORE METAL the rust-resisting alloy, the best of my kind. I will well repay my slightly higher first cost with many years of faithful service, and stand between you and the elements— ‘a monument to your forethought. - For more than half a century my firm has been build- ing a reputation for me and I am the result of their search for a metal of permanence and unquestioned quality. " I AM LYONORE METAL For Sale by All Good: Sheet Metal Contnntgn and LYON, CONKLIN & CO., Inc. 930-932 E St. N.W. WASHINGTON Commerce Commis- 28—the sufficient American available, freight rates ican flag are adequate in all respects, section to the Interstate Commerce Commission and 1924—PART FARM BILL ASSURED "VOTE THIS SESSION Bloc Triumphs When Senate and House Leaders Act to Avoid Tax Delay. OBSTRUCTION THREATENED Norbeck Yields Plan to Offer Measure as Amendment. The farm bloc won a complete vic- tory yesterday, in their fight to ob- tain assurances of House and Senate leaders that a vote. would be taken on ‘the McNary-Haugen bill at this session of Congress. A promise of consideration was given in the face of a threat by Sen- ator Norbeck, Republican, South Da- kota, to force a vote en the bill in the Senate by offering it as an amendment to the revenue bill, which leaders declared would doom both measures to defeat. Senator Norbeck yielded his posi- tion stubbornly.. He was not satisfied with the statement of the chairman of the House rl‘es committee that = rule would be Teported in time to assure action on the, farm bill, but demanded promises from both Senate and House leaders that no obstacle would be placed in the way of a vote. Promises Obtaining to Withhold Motion, this, he informed the Senate that he would- withhold his motion and allow the McNary-Hau- gen. bill to come to a vote first in the House. He declared the bill probably would pass the House and Senate and ‘“certainly would pass both if it got a little boost from the White House.” The announcement of Chairman Snell of the House rules committee that the bill would be given right of way followed a conference with President Coolidge. It was stated, however, that the President had given no indication as td his views on_the measure. On his return to the Capitol, Chair- man Snell held a conference with Speaker Gillelt, Representative Long- worth, the Republlcan leader, mem bers of fhe Republican steering com- mittee and several members of the House agriculture committee, includ- ing Chairman Haugen. Later Chairman Haugen and other representatives conferred with Sena- tor Norbeck, Senators Lodge of Mas- sachusetts and Curtis of Kansas, Re- of he p- u- h- of n- at in t- er - e f- ch ef publican leaders, and Senator Ship- stead, .Farmer-Labor, Minnesota. Numerous Changes Made. The present McNary-Haugen bill differs materially from the original measure, the House agriculture committee having made numerous changes and finally reporting it as a new bill. Senator McNary, Republi- can, Oregon, co-author of the origi- nal’ bill, said the new measure was “a much, better bill." The bill would create a $200,000,- 000 corporation to purchase the prin- cipal American farm crops at a ratio price derived from an average price existing from 1905 to 1914. The cor- poration would sell the products to the exportstrade at not less than the ratio price and to the domestic trade when deemed advisable, but not for less than the purchase price. The corporation would have power to bor- row funds up to five times the capi- talization. SAFETY DRIVE DATE SET. The campaign by the American Rail- way Association to reduce the number of highway crossing accidents will be- gin June 1 and continue until Septem- ber 3¢, H. A. Rowe of New York, chair- man of the committee in charge, an- nounced here yesterday. Co-operating will be the National As- sociation of Rallway and Utilities Com- missioners, American Aytomobile Asso- ciation, National Safety Council, Na- tional Automobile Chamber of Com- merce, and Chamber of Commerce of | the United States. Drivers of motor ve- | hicles will be urged to reduce their speed to ten miles an hour three hun- dred feet from a railroad crossing and not increase that speed until they are sure it is safe to proceed. Commissioner McChord of the Inter- state Commerce Commission, vesterday presented the prizes to the winners in the contest conducted by the American Railway Association for the most ap- propriate poster and slogan to be used in the campaign. The winners were: First prize, $500, for the best poster, and also the cash prize of $100 for the most appropriate’ slogan, Martin H Gambee. 118 Willoughby avenue, Brook Iyn, N. Y.: second prize of $200 for t second best poster, R. 8. Feeley. Bald- winsville, N. Y.; third prize of $100 for the third best poster, H. Day Lowry, Richmond, Va. The winning poster carries the slogan, “Wait! You May Lose," and shows an automobile stopped beside a railroad track while a locomotive pulling a heavy train speeds over the crossing. Navy Yards to Bid on Repairs. Navy vards would be given an op- portunity to bid on repair jobs of more than $100,000 on Shipping Board vessels under a provision restored you ought to visit. The advice of one who knows the territo; will save you mutz trouble and expense. Comnicats with KErera GENERAL AGENT: LONDON &NORTH EASTERNRLY. HOTEL LOGAN 13th St. at lowa Circle N.W. Lowest Firstclass Hotel Rates in the city. Rooms with and without private bath. Special summer weekly and monthly rates now in effect. ALEXANDRA CATTO, Prop. vesterday by House and Senate co ferees to a bill carrying the board's annual appropriation. The provision, passed by the House, was eliminatcd by the Senate. Three Big Sales Coats--Suits—-Froc Concentrated at One Astonishingly Low —The Dresses—— Are $15 to $19.75 Values Included are Crepes—and Satins— Lace and Crepe combinations—for RoorLessAncHoR Bar PLATES SATISFACTION ASSURED PLATES—§15 PAINLESS EXTRACTIONS Removable Bridgework LInserted Without Grinding Your Testh PLATES NEATLY REPAIRED DR. GIBSON rFize L alist Practicing 20 Years 0,397,7th St. N.W—Opp. Saks' P . Gibeon ia Ghares Bambmey 2o 22222222229 222222922909992908089894$4082985228298292929889294842882840000444 Soft, Woolly Sports Coats—straigh! The Coats———— Are $15 Values = line, and plain tailored—Plaids and plain. Splendidly lined. Are $15 to $19.75 Values S in the Cloths and Poiret Twills, in Navy, T: d Gray. e e e et Wl o M. Yo ot iy Taffeta, Crepe de Slashing Deep Into The wanted models—in the favored materials—Wool Crepe, Smart Plaid, Satin, Flannel, gold Crepe, Jacquard, Tricoknit, etc. ' Street and Afternoon models. Sizes 16 to 48. Chine, Mari- e 2T, T 2 22T 22222l RT3 FEaesTiTTeeeaeTsITIILILITLITLITUILTILINITIT442422104202343 3222483832343 8222482824233 4282322424242 224244] m::zzzz:zzztxmmzz:z:;xz:zxzzzzmzzzxzxxzxzu Silk Dresses A, $438434384029822424243333832243434332383248333434§¢33738383823812823842432328212302802232828420848223222822¢3202222238220282848222843¢832822823222¢38220823¢322432322243%1 ‘ N 333828232238223238¢ 996999909 090984000840009 80604 NI 2 T P 2 PRl T2 106005000066 0600600004 ® >4 4

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