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38 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1924. FEARS VL RESLT OFJAPANESE AN Former Cabinet Minister Says People Can See Only Act of Enmity. RER IR IX TR PR SR DR KRR Tomorrow Is a Big Shall She Park Baby and Go Out With Husband | Or Devote Evenings to Her Child>—Shall She Marry Mother’s Choice or Her Own? Big Day! For Friday shoppers, to whom PRICE as well as FASHION appenls, tomorrow at Jelleff’s is a big day. Every department contributes something to weekly event. Perhaps i to bo scld at & Fidiculouly low figu P it s a collect i it is a collection > bled left-overs of beautiful Lt of choice merchandise, the assem your careful attenti = =) =z . pure—perha) . high-priced things—but in any event—a buying opportunity commanding jon. Right now at the peak of the season such tremendously special ces are, indeed, i ti Read them over and then set your alarm clock for an early rising. l“'i'l'lm lto':'c opens ‘t.;: 'l?.m G A Special Purchase R. E < M o N s A. N ..T- S Misses’ Fur-Trimmed Remodeling and new fixtures cause many choice 1216 F St N, EAR DOROTHY My husband seems to need entertainment and amusement co! y. We are good pals and enjoy the same thinj therefore ho always wants me with him. and gets peeved if I refuse to go. I appreciate having a man who enjoys taking me out, but the trouble is that when we go we always have to park the baby somewhere. 4 What I want to know is: Should I rafuse to go and let him go alone if he wishes and stay with the baby, or should I leave the baby; Who is always in good hands, to accompany him? I am between two fires—my desire to be a buddy to my husband, and to do justice to our 3-year-old baby ople ! e wondertul about taking care of her. g e MODE!‘L\' PAL AND MOTHER. == Misses’ New Chitfon Velvet Ey the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, October 23.—Yusuke Tsuruml, former Japanese minlster of raflways and son-in-law af Viscount i0to, one time Japanese minister of forelgn affairs, last nfglit~told an audlence at Columbia University that = srowing distrust of America exists in Japan and from this grave col «uences will follow. Progressive democracy in his home- Jand must wrestle with an explosive force lodged in the Japanese mind 1or years to come, he said, and Ameri- ca’s aetlon in “slamming its own gate shut in our face,” at a time when the Japanese people were “bleeding from the wounds inflicted by the greatcst calamity ever visited upon mankind earthquake and fire,” is resented. here is a large and powerful party in Japan” Mr. Tsurumi continued, “that confidently expects the United States to challenge Japan's advance on the mainland of Asia and Jooks upon every measure directed against Japanese in America and possible immigrants as an evidence of enmity toward the Japanese aation. “I ‘confess to the belief that Ameri- «’s action with reference to lmmi- xrants and migration is not framed in a spirit of hostility to the Jap- anese nation. I say this in spits of the bitter anti-Japanese utterances be found in certain newspapers, fodicals and political orations. ‘The issue was not immigration. As far as affording any outlet for the peasants and laborers of Japan is concerned that issue was closed years ago and any additional required for the security of American national life would have been gladly Yielded. The sole issue was the meth- od of handling an affair on which a fendly agreement already existed 1 was setting on Mary Watkinses frunt steps tawking to her about diffrent subjecks, and Puds Simkinses sissy cuzzin Persey Weever came up and sat down like somebody that thawt they had thinking, Darn that guy, think he is? Hello Perser, who fn- whose he who invited you? Fersey sed. Proving some peeple cant think up -nything original, and Mary Watkins sed, Benny Fotts how dare you in- sult my guests like that, I think vyoure perfeckly terrible. Now vou jest say something nice to him smmeeditly or 11l go rite strate in the house, she sed. « How do you meen, something nice? J sed, and she sed, Pay him a compli- ment after wat you jest went and s waiting nd thinking he s grate, and I scd, O well, I dont 1d, 111 pay him u comphiment; hay Jersey, you'd be a pritty good look- iug guy if you wasent sutch a darn sissy. The ideer, is that a compliment? Mary Watkins sed, and I sed, Certeny, 0 he would be, and she sed, Now you pay him a reel compliment or Ill wawk rite in the house. O, all rite, hay Persey, I heard some gerl say you was the cutest fellow erround heer, but persinally I think shes crazy, I sed. Sutch compliments, Im going rite tn_this minnit, Mary Watkins sed. No, wait a minnit, Tl tell him a reel one, I sed, and Mary Watkins sed, Well go on and do it, and I sed, Hay, Persey, you certeny wrarks in sko how you can do it dum, ood by, Mary Watkins sed, And «he quick went in and slammed the door, me saying to Pers Now, see wat you did? And I quick got up and wawked away without giving him time to think of a anser. and still look so economic | guarantees | a perfeck rite, me, get good | , its a wonder to me | Answer. and reliable woman to take care of the baby, but there is no safe and reliable woman you can get to look after your husband. A man who is of a gay and pleasure-loving disposition is just bound to have some woman to play around with, and If you refuse to be his playmate vou may be certain that he will find some other woman who will. If you refuse to go with him for a few evenings, while you sit at home and watch you will be left undisturbed in the nursery. i Many a wife loses out because she refuses to pal with her hysband. She doesn’t want to do the things he does, and ehe either won't go along with him or, when the does go, she Is a spoil-sport who interrupts the most hilarious joke at a vaudeville show to wonder if the nurse has forgotten to warm the baby's milk, or who ruins the flavor of a supper at a restaurant by complaining about the price of everything. These women forget that the people tiaat we love most, the people who are bound closest to us, are not those to whom we do a duty, not those with whom we work, but they are those with whom we play, those who enjoy the same things we do and with whom we have a thousand joyous memories in common. i 1 grant that it may not always be convenient for a woman to step out with her husband. His tastes may not always be her tastes. There may be @ thousand times when she would rather sit at home and darn socks or read a novel than to grab her hat and go with him. But the point is that if she wa it is a condition and not a theory that confronts us. to park out the baby than it is to park out a husband. e e . EAR DOROTHY DIX: If I marry George I feel I am doing wrong toward my mother, as it would be against her wishes, although she knows nothing against this young man. But she has set her mind upon my marrying Frank, who is 20 years my senior, but who has a little money, which seems very appealing to mother. Mother is & widow and, in a way, depends on me. Therefore, I may be In duty bound to sacrifice love and my own happiness for my mother’s happiness. M. D. And it is much DOROTHY DI Answer: Never. No mother in the world has a right to sell her daughter in marriage to gain ease and comfort for herself, or to force her a son-in-law. to her mother. foolish and weak of the girl to do it If a mother absolutely knows that the of marrying is dissolute and immoral, or drunken, or lazy and worthless, she is right to move heaven and earth to keep the girl from wrecking he life by marrying him. But, absolutely, that is as far as parental Interference should go in a match. It is selfish and wicked of the mother to axk it, and it is And no good ever comes of it. The mere fact that mother doesn’t care for the color of the man's eyes or hair, or the business he follows, or the church he belongs to, or the family he comes from, and that she does prefer some other youth whose mother she knew, or who has an automobile, or Who goes to her church, gives her no authority to coerce the girl into breaking off with the one and marrying the other. It is the girl who has to live with the man she marries, and not mother. rotore, the girl has a right to pick the man out and select him according r own tastes and instincts, for marriage is the most personal thing on earth, and nobody else can decide for us the things that we find congenial Vor distasteful in a husband or wife. Nor is mother's judgment infallible in husbands. T have seen mothers make I have seen the money gone and the man reduced to poverty, and his wife without either love or money. And I have seen mothers refuse to let their daughters marry boys who were not in their soclal caste, and I have seen these same boys risc to power and place and wealth. So don’t let mother pick out your husband. Do that for vourself, and then, whatever comes, you will have love for a consolation prize. DOROTHY DIX. ) EAR MISS DIX: [ am a girl of 19, with a good position in an office and carn good wages. if T marry him T will have to live with his mother, and I am not sure whether £he and I will get along together or not. I do not like to sew or keep house, and I do not care for children, but my fiance does. In his early life he went around as much as he liked, but now he is ready to settie down and make a home, while I am young and feel that I should be enjoying myself. But I do love him and hate to think of giving him up. X - et Answer: My dear X, |cannot have all the | responsibilitie Certainly no girl has a right to get married until she cares enough for one man to be willing to give up.all other men for him, and fo find more pleasure in his sociery than she does in jazz parties. Furthermore, it is a dishonest thing for a woman to marry a man if she Is not willing to make him a good and comfortable home, for that is her part of the matrimonfal cannot have your cake and eat it, too. privileges of a tarried woman and You duck the willing to have children. As you do not qualify on any of these points, and especially as you would have to live with your mother-in-law, I think you had better stick to your good job until you are in ?Cgmerent frame of mind. DOROTHY DIX. pyright, 1824.) B TOWN IN UTAH CLAIMS OLDEST ACTIVE DOCTOR Physician in Practice Will Be 100 Years O01d in De- cember. years of age on December 8, 1924. Dr. Hullinger maintains an office here. He is a remarkably well pre- served man and, despite his advanced age, does not wear glasses and is hale and hearty. He was born in Champaign County, Ohfo, 20 years after Ohlo was admitted to the Union as a State, and in a recent interview attributed his unusual age to “having lived a righteous life, the practicing of the Golden Rule, and for the past ears having taken my own medi- cine when it was needed.” “=. Hullinger came to Utah {n 1859 and has several children. He has scen married three times. iated Press VERNAL, Utah, October 23.—This city lays claim to one of the oldest, if not the oldest, practicing physician in the United States in the person of Dr. H. C. Hullinger, who will be 100 - by shrewd bl.!yers They know that the price of Virginia Sweet is always low even though it may vary in the same season. Virginia Sweet is always priced according to actual cost of production. This is why the price sometimes changes, but a comparison with other advertised brands always shows that the Virginia Sweet price is low. Virginia Sweet users never pay anything extra for the name nor for the assurance of quality which the name implies. They know — many of them from fifty-four years' experience — that better pancake flour can't be bought at any price, and that equally good can neser be bought for less. THE FISHBACK CO. Go with your husband every time. You can hire some safe Frocks the baby sleep, he will find out that he can do quite nicely without you and | i ts to keep her husband she has to keep up with him.| daughter into an uncongenial marriage to gratify her own preference as to! And no girl is called upon to make a living sacrifice of herself man her daughter is thinking heir daughters marry men because the men were rich, and in 10 years | I am engaged to a man 11 vears my senior, but| partnership. And, above all, it is a crime for @ woman to marry who 18 not | S Only 75 of them. You know what that means. The unprecedented . vogue for chiffon velvet has inspired us to plan an event for Friday which will set the whole town talking. This is an op- portunity that will be of special interest to those who want the smartest frock of the day at a price so unusually low that you will wonder how the dresses can be | made to sell at the price. The styles are dis- tinctive adaptations of the best which Paris has to_offer this sea- son. Every model is | youthful, girlish, at- tractive and lends it- | self to a great variety of uses. Basques with full skirts or apron front tunic models, cunning pockets of gold lace; quaint combinations of colors in ribbon, band- ings of satin or contrasting velvet. Black | and brown. This is the greatest dress event we have announced this season. The very thought | of being able to buy a soft, lustrous velvet gown for only fifteen dollars is enough to bring you down town in time to walk in the store when the doors open. Wiwwas' Gown Shop—Third Floor. 73 Assorted Fashion $45, $55, $65, $75, $95 All are remarkable values, odds and ends of our first purchases this season, and are sold only at these prices because of the broken lines. Closing Out Remaining $55 and $59.50 Coats at $45 20 All-fur-trimmed Coats in Kashona, Suedetex and Ormadone. Marmink, Dyed Squirrel, Lock Squirrel and Bay al trim these coats. The season’s best col- ors: Saddle, Penny, Dusk, Hinoki and Black. Clou';l‘ Out Remaining $69.50 Coats or 10 Straightline Coats in Cordaro, with natural and mink-dyed squirrel collar and cuffs. Dusk, black and brown. Closing Out Remaining $75 to $98.50 Coats for $65 20 Fashionable Coats in Mokine, Cle- velo, Montebello and Veloria, trimmed in black fox, mink squirrel, taupe fox, unglail and muskrat. Kaffir, saddle, cinnabar. dust, oxblood and black are among the colors of this exceptional group. Closing Out Remaining $95 Coats for $75 8 Lovely Coats in Cinnabar, Penny, Shutter Green, Kaffir and Fawnskin. Double collar and scalloped cuffs of mink-dyed squirrel. Closing Out Remaining $110 to $125 Coats for $95 15 Lovely Fur-trimmed Coats in Fawnskin, Kashlora, Kashmana, Mokine and Velmara. Collars, cuffs, borders, tiers of luxurious fur make these coats distinctive models. The most called-for shades: Cranberry, Hinoki and Cela- don Green, as well as other new shades. Second Floor Latest Headlines for Young Women! $9.75 Hats For $3.75 Including queen. Apron models ; of fur. Mole Coats Felt hats that are different! | New shapes, modishly trimmed in velvet and ribbon. . Distinctly an in-between season hat that can be worn all Winter, : $12.50 Hats for $5.95 A large assortment of specially bought $12.50 hats. Silk hatter’s beaver, in all the newest shapes— | high crown with slightly rolling brim, jauntily cocard of grosgrain ribbon. $12.50 and $15 Hats for $7.50 Very smart little gold and silver embroidered toques. Fit snugly with the large fur collars. Important Underwear NEWS e et oot te— - $7.50 —but are 5o fascinating we could not resist telling Friday shoppers of their charm. Just fresh from the manufacturer—and at a price You can easily afford. Fifty new Two-tone Satin Breakfast Coats, fashioned with a ducky side fastening, self-ruching adding w softening touch. In olora that are becoming—orchid, rose, peach; turquolse, copen and light blue. Also you will want to know of the new arrivals in Kimonos. Box Loom Crepe Kimonos for $3.95 Loose-flowing sleeves, trimmed with satin ruching, and the. side tle fastening. Rose, copen, pink and orchid. Other Kimonos for $5 and $5.90 Third Floer. - Another Purchase of Vanity Fair The Name Assures Its Value Vests, $1.95 HE Vanity Fair Glove Silk Vests, full cut, reinforéed’ under - tho arm, edged With picoting. Self straps. In flesh and peach. Silk Bloomers, $2.95 Extra ‘long and full cut, strongly reinforced with elastic at wn;n and knee. A galaxy of colors—flesh, peach, fawn, gray, black and navy. Third Floor, Sport Bloomers, $3.95 Vanity Fair Sport Bloomers, combining beauty and utility. Double-shirred cuffs, fully reinforced at wearing points. navy, henna, fawn and taupe. Others at §5 to $5.90. the fashion 1deas of the sea- son, in all the glorious Autumn shades, the soft suede-like fabrics, and the deep luxurious furs which make you look and feel a and tunic effects, ows of buttons; decorative stitch- ing; braid trimming. sleeves; the Mandarin, the barrel cuff, the melon puff, the tight fur wrist, Cavalier cuffs Furs Deaver Gray Squirrel Jap Mink Mink Squirrel Fisher Fitch N trimmed with a | A Special Purchase Enables Us to Make This Wonderful Offer smartest Only the most fortunate chance makes it possible for us to offer these mar- velous coats at this very moderate price. Fashions straightline All the tricky new Colors Cranberry Oxblood Kaftir Dust Deige Black Think of Getting An Ensemble | *at a REDUCED Price! $79.50—$89.50 Ensembles for $69.50 Although ‘very new, the ensemble has been so much | in demand our lines are some- what broken. In keeping with Jelleff policy not to carry odd lots, we offer these eight ensembles tomorrow at the { low price—$69.50. In Veloria and Fawnskin, Long Coats and fur trimmed, with a matching frock in Faille or Flat Crepe. Autumn’s favored colors: Dust, Kaffir, Cinnabar. Penny, Navy and Black. Second Floor $40 Suits for $29.50 15 Smart Tailored Suits in navy and black twill, long panel jackets, trimmed with bias folds and buttons. Second Floor 32 Fancy Bordered Silk Umbrellas | With unusually beautiful handles. Priced at Navy Brown Green Red Purple Black $7.50 Umbrellas that you would not hesitate to pay dollars more for. Neither the extreme . “short, stubby” umbrellas nor the long ones of other days, but a happy length between the two. Um- brellas you will be glad to give to others as-Christmas gits. —Stylish amber handles. —Hand-carved handles. —Tallored handles with braided leather cords. —Elaborate with silk wrist cords. I At We would suggest an early se- lection, as there are few of any one kin Street Floor. ‘l' Specially | [ handles, * ror and coin purse. bits among tomorrow’s Remnants. It will pay you to read them, and to come in early. Shoes Crowded Out! $9 and $10 Shoes for $2.95 Remeodeling and new fixtures in our shoe department force a quick shoe clearance. 350 pairs of Sorosis pumps and oxfords, in broken lots and sizes, 3 to 10, widths AAA to C, with medium high and low heels. A wide assortment, in black, gray and tan. L $8.50 to $10.00 Shoes for $4.95 500 pairs semi-brogue oxfords, excellent for school, college and business wear. All sizes and widths, in tan and black. $4.95. Street Floor. Time to Wear Furs— —and Jelleff’s is the place to buy them. An accumufation of stock prompts us to list the following choice items at greatly reduced prices: Fur Chokers as Low as $6.50 10-$1295 extra fine squirrel chokers, $6.50. 4-$17.50 dark mink chokers for $10.50. Fur Scarfs as Low as $12.50 5—827.50 wolf scarfs, long fluffy pelts, $12.50. 5—$27.50 handsome fitch scarfs, $12.50. two-skin 1—$29.30 natural red fox scarf | for §19.75. 3-$3500 fine walnut scaris of | fox, $19. ]’—339.50 platinum fox scarf, 1-$39.30 beige fox scarf, $22.30. If you want furs, see these to- | morrow! Second Floor. 175 Sweaters $1.95 Sweaters solve the problem on chilly mornings. our $3.95 sweaters remain and we are closing them out Friday for | $1.95. Slip-overs or coat style, of worsted or fiber silk. - Colors: Navy, buff, green or combinations. Street Floor. 25 New Skirts $5.00 $6.75 to $10 Skirts So Friday They Are Priced at $5.00 Homespun plaids, blocked - plaids. camel's hair plaids and plain color wool crepe. Wrap-around, panel and combi- nation plaits. Also straightline styles. All the new Fall shades. markable value for shopper. A re- the early Third Floer. 30 New Leather Bags, $2.95 Leather and silk, many shapes and sizes from the little pouch bag to the business-like cnvelope purse, fitted with good sized mir- Brown, black All at $295 Friday. Also—Among the Odds and Ends $10 to $15 Leather Handbags, $750. 1 morocco leather envelope bag, with deep pocket hand- somely fitted and leather handle, $780. 1 imported leather bag, memo. pad, mirror, small purse, and a large shirred pocket across bag, $750. 2 brown silk bags, one ~with gold-plated frame, other with silk frame and jeweled clasp. Taffeta lining, at- tached purse-and mirror, $7.50. $6.00 Silk Handbags, $5 20 Moire Silk Bags, in navy, black and brown, gathered on self-covered or nickel frames, lined with silk and handles of silk. “ Just the thing for glasses, $5.00. and navy. Street Floor. Only a few of | : Chine models, in flannel | s a $ . i i a distinctive tailored air. A For Ten Minutes’ Laun- dering— You Can Save $2.15 Tomorrow $5.00 Silk Underwear for $2.85 30 odds and ends of envelope chemise, slightly mussed, of fine quality radium silk and crepe de chine. Both tailored and lace trimmed styles, in lovely shades of flesh, orchid, peach, light blue and black. Third Floor. Other Remnants in Tub Silk Slips, $1.95 $2.95 three-inch hem, silk slips, $1.95. 48 pieces with tailored tops and self straps, in silver, taupe, cocoa, henna and navy. Street Floor. Final Clearance of 15 Women’s Dresses For $10.00 4 street dress in printed crepe de chine, tailored, tucked and draped. Navy, cocoa and beige. Sizes 38 40, 42. Ori nally $35.00. For $14.75 6 aiternoon dresses, crepe de chine and -georgette, pleated and lace trimmed. Black, gray and cocoa. Sizes 38 to 4. Originally $25 and $28.50. For $16.50 5 afternoon dresses, geor- gette. and crepe de chine, pleated and cape effects, with colored beading and embroid- ery. Powder blue, green, beige and navy. Sizes 38 and 42. Originally $29.50 and $33. Second Floor A Special Friday Selling 30 Silk Frocks for $13.75 Remnants of Our Usual $19.50 Street Dresses Black Satin and Crepe de which fine tucks and silk braiding achieve variety of neck lines finished with narrow lace or folds of contrasting silk. Sizes 36 to 4. An unusual group of dresses at a most unusual price. They are remnants, or we could not sell them at this price. Second Fleor Friday Hosiery $1, $2, $3 Stockings Friday 59c, $1.35, $1.75 a Pair Lisle Stockings, 59¢ 40 pairs Outsize Lisle and Cot- ton Stockings. Only a few pairs in black and brown. Broken sizes, but every pair perfect. Silk Stockings, $1.35 a Pair 75 pairs Ladies’ Full-fas Pure Thread H garter hem, heel and toes reinforced. Broken sizes, black, white and colors. $3.00 Silk Stocln"ngc at $1.75 a Pair Fine Silk Hose, medium and chiffon weights. Plain, with lisle arter _hems or silk tops, with ancy Paris clox. Large assort- ment of colors, including black. Street Floor. The Tunic Blouse Is Fashion’s Favorite Jellef’s Have Them at Reduced Prices Crepe de Chine Tunics, $3 76 of our $4.95 and $5.95 Blouses, in navy, bla‘ck and pra- line, embroidered, beaded and braided models, in sizes 36 to 42, Priced for tomorrow at $3.00. 46 Costume Blouses at i One-Half Price Mostly One-of-a-Kind—Originally $7.50 to $16.50 % Half Price for Friday Only i These are blouses of excellent quality crepe de chine or silk broadcloth, with “V” necks, Peter Pan or Collarless models, long, short or three-quarter sleeve. Colors—Rust, Lanvin, Praline and Madonna. A few stripes are included. There are only 46, so come early.