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JUDEE DSTRBUTES S1AOESTATE Rules on Beneficiaries Under Will of Mrs. Henrietta M. Halliday. Justice Ado!ph A. Hoehling of the District Supreme Courf play Claus today to the heirs of Mrs. Hen- rictta M. Halliduy. located in various parts of the country, when he ap- proved an agreement for the distribu- tion of her estate, valuad at $4,200,000. Mrs. Halliday owned a number of nts and large office buildings hington and had securities stimated at $3.000,000. Her nearest | latives are grandchildren of a de- ceased sister. | Mrs. Halliday drew her own will, 1d provided that no portion of her | hould go to any one but the andehildren of her deceased sister. She named the American Se- curity and Trust Co. as trustee, but in providing its powers offended ainst the perpetuities provision of the District code. Other relatives pro- tested the admission of the will, and compromise was arranged by the ment to them of about $145,000. | The remaining cstate. after payment | of commi; to the trustee and law- ers’ fees, is to be distributed among the grandchildren. Recipicnty of Estate. imated at about| B equally divided derick D. Wood and Ada V. nisville, Ky.; A Ellis Taylor, Harvey Sllis Brown and Wilfr Angeles, Calif.; E F. Barnum of Sedro-Wooll and Maud B. Martin of Kalispell. Mont. Under the compromise Samuel A. Ellis and May B. Defrese are each to have $30,000; Paul Barnum, Cecil Barnum and Katherine B. sky, cach $10.000; Alice Crowder, Dorothy H. W. Woody and Blanche M. Wood, vzx(h $18,500. The addresses of the latfer beneficiaries are not given The American Security & Trust Co. is allowed a commission of per cent on the gross estate, and its counsel, McKenney & Flannery, a fee of 1 per cent on the gross estate. James M. eto guardian ad litem for some of the in nts interested in the estate, gets a fee of $4,000, and Miss a 1. Thomas, guardian ad litem for another infant, is given £2,500. COLD WAVE IS COMING: 10 ABOVE ZERO MARK DUE HERE TOMORROW sidue. es is to be Wood Ame of Los (Continued from rst_Page.) 16 vears vesterday, when the mer- dropped to 15 above zero. ail traflic in Montana was the first | to fecl the effects of the fresh bit of | Winter. The Great Northern's maini line was blocked at lacter Park by | cat snowdrifts. Eastbound trains turncd back toward Spokane, Wash., wn westbound trains wers turned back from Havre and Shelby In California’s San Joaquin Valley temperatures in the past 24 hours hed a w low of 17 above zero. sno reported 22 above zero. attle reported cold wave in the et Sound district, where temper. tures 8 degrees below freczing were reported. DEATH TOLL IS THREE. Girl Loses Life When Clolhing| Catches Fire. PITTSBUR(GH, Pa., December 2 Three deaths in Pittsburgh yester were attributed to the zero weather. Helen Bradley, 16, was fatally burn- ed when her clothing caught fire from an open grate. Joseph Andriani was Killed in a fall on the lcy steps leading to his home, in a mining vil- lage near here. The third victim was Albert Mousiainow, who went to sleep with a gas fire burning and died of carbon monoxide poisoning. FROZEN BODY FOUND. Farmer's Son Believed to Have Become Lost. FRANKFORT, Ky., December The frozen body of Clay Jackson, 24. son of a farmer near here, was found yesterday between this place and his parents’ home, on the Howard Black farm. He is thought to have lost his way as he was walking home acro: country early today and to have su cumbed to the near-zero temperature. | COLD ON PACIFIC COAST. Smudge Pots Are Used to Protect | Fruit. SAN FRANCISCO, The Pacific Northwest continues to experience near and subgero tem- peratures, and in California the Weather Burcau reported the ther- mometers registered from 45 to 15 degrees above zero yesterday, Santa Rosa, Calif., reported 18 de- Rrees above and Los Angeles 45. In San Francisco the temperature was 36. In Washington the minimum was 4.5 degrees below, at Yakima, and in the western part of the State, Olym- pia, the temperature was 24 degrees above. Residents along the Colum- bia River are experiencing the noy- elty of crossing the river on the ice l{lel’t for thefirst time In many years, The lowest temperature reported in Oregon Was 10 below at Baker, and Portland residents went to work in a temperature of 13 above. _Smudge pots were worked overtime in the citrus groves of southern Call- fornia to ward off the frost. “Dam- age In the citrus belt so far has not been serious,” according to the Cali fornla Fruit Growers' Exchange an nouncement, CANADA IS HIT. December 2 Subzero Temperatures Reported in Dominijon. TORONTO, December 27.—Western Canada is in the grip of subzero weather, and strong gales are carry- ing the cold wave eastward, accord- ing to a report of the weather bureau. ~ Dawson City was the coldest spot in Canada yesterday, reporting 34 below zero. Prince Albert reported 30 below and Winnipeg registered 22 below. In-'Ontario Province, Port Arthur reported 6 below and Ottawa registered 4 below. el A ICE BREAK KILLS TWO. FPathers of Several Children Swept I stating that [ ment by Chlef S. W REMARKS 115 BEEN A GREAT CHRIST- WS> BuT HE SUPPOSES IT75 TME TO CLEAR UP SOME OF TIS PAPLR AND SIUFP AiD GET BACK TO NORMAL. N SATHERING PAPER UP ASAIN COM; C(OUSIN ERMA"™ WANTS TO KNOW Whi G I ]\@ A HEARS WITE BEGIN O WONDER WHERE THE \WRAPPER IS THAT CAME 1T TOR THE RDDRESS - AND FLEES HASTILY DOWN CELLAR. GRAFT QUIZ CLEARS Only One Indicted, Grand Jury Finding Force “Honest and Un- justly Accused.” By the Associated Press NORFOLK, Va. December 2 Rev. David Hepburn, loon League superintendent, the Norfolk police department was “shot through and through with graft,” were “wholly unjust.” a spe- cial grand jury impaneled to inquire into the case declared yesterday after an investigation lasting six weeks. The report of the investigators was filed in the corporation court. While the evidence submitted nd the deductions made therefrom justified the statement that there is apathy in the department as well as a “decided failure on the part of some officers to properly realize the ex- tent of the duties and respensibili- ties of their positions,” it added that “the evidence conclusively proved that a majority of the members of the force are honest. and a sweeping charge to the contrary was wholly unjust.” A true bill was returned against IH. W. Webb, former patrolman, who was summarlly dismissed from the depart- Ironmonger for alleged acceptance of a $20 “protec- tion” bribe from “Lone Wolf" Asher, Federal dry agent, during a campaign put on here early in November by a | combinea force of State and Federal ANESTHETIC IS FATAL. Youth With Broken Arm Dies Un- der Chloroform Influence. Dispatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., December William Atwell Venable, 18, son of J. W. Venable, is dead at Stephens City | from chloroform, a small quantity of which had been administered by phy- sicians after the youth had broken his forearm in two places while cranking an automobile. The shock and Intense pain also are thought to have been contributing causes. Venable swoonéd as the drug was administered and died within two minutes, it was said. He was pre- paring to take his mother and other members of the family to a Christ- mas holiday entertainment when the accident occurred. VANZETTI ONCE MORE UNDER OBSERVATION Prisoner Under Conviction for Mur- der Examined by Alienists to De- termine Question of Sanity. By the Associated Press. BOSTON, December The actions which caused Warden Hendry of the State prison to put Bartolomeo Van- zetti under observation by alienists again did not include any instances of extreme violence, it was indicated yesterday. When Vanzetti was ex- amined as possibly insane 18 months ago he tried to commit suicide. An independent examination by allenists other than those called in by the warden will be asked by de- fense counsel, it was said, after a visit to the prisoner by Willlam G. Thompson, - who recently succeeded Fred H. Moore of Los Angeles, as head of the Sacco-Vanzetti defense. With Sacco, who is a prisoner at the Dedham County jail, Vanzett, serving time at the State prison for another offense, is under conviction of murder in the first degree for the killing of a paymaster and guard at Braintree, in 1920, and their case has attracted international attention. . Memorial to W. W. Corcoran. A reception to mark the 126th bireh anniversary of W. W, Corcoran will be held by the board of directors of the Louise Home at the institution this afternoon from 4 to 7 o'clock. Mr. Corcoran was founder of the home as well as the Corcoran Gallery of Art. The great majority of fire victims are children. Bartlett of Arctics By the Associated Press. to River Deaths. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., December —Their small fishing boat upset by the breaking up of ice in the Great Egg Harbor River, George and Thomas Camp, baymen, lost their lives yesterday afternoon when they were unable to make their way to the river bank and sank beneath the ico as they became exhausted in thelr struggles. Both men lived in Lin- wood and each leaves a widow and several children, NEW MARKET, Va., December Capt. Robert A. Bartlett, Arctic ex- plorer and five other members of the Explorers’ Club will undertake an expedition to locate the end of Vir- ginia’s famous Endless Caverns, it is announced. On January § the ex- plorers are due to arrive here, and will begin their investigations at once. So far as is known only a mile and a quarter of the length of the suc- cession of caverns has ever been ex- plored. The expedition was inspired THE FAMILY ALBUM—Clearing U ACROSS TAG T COUSIN EDGAR TRCM THAT PRESENT 15, HE NEVER GOT IT ON THE HOD&SONS' BOX- SHE NEEDS NORFOLK, VA., POLICE harges made here about two months | State | Of Famous Caverns in Virginia THE EVENING HAS JUST GATHERED EVERYTHING IN- R ONE LORD WHEN WIPE MUTTERS 'S APITY TO THROW ALL THAT GOOD TSSUE PAPER AWAY AFTER LONG DISCUSSION DURING WHICH MOST OF PAPLRS SLIDE TO ERE TLOOR, DECIDES |T MUST RAVE BEEN THAT PURPLE TIE, HE'D BEEN TRYING ON RETURN 15 INFORMED THAT AUNT LU~ ELLA JUST PHONED AND SHE SINT A PAPER- CUTTER. AND WHERE CAN IT BE WOULD HE MIND RUNNING DOWN AND LOOKING THRGUEH THOSE PAPERS ASAN Oxford Turns Cold | Shoulder Toward Woman Students 32 American Girls Find| Many Discomforts in University Correspondence of the Associated Press i OXFORD, England, December 9.— | Thirty-two American girls have this year taken the short gown and at-| tractive mortar-board cap, without the board, that make up the uniform of an Oxford woman student. Only eight re in women's colleges, the rest b & members of a curious or- | Banization called the Society of Ox- ford Home Students, which is not a college, although remarkably like one, and not a society of home stu- dent. Most of the girls live in the cold and uncomfortable lodgings for which Oxford is famous. The grand old men of the univer- sity, the dons, fellows and heads of colleges who lived through the suf- fragette days when enthusiastic wo- men poured acid on college lawns, and corn sirup into college letter boxes, still look upon woman stu- dets with mistrust d suspicion. While there is not among Oxford un- dergraduates that feeling of resent- ment against woman students which leads Cambridge men to smash the gates of women's colleges and to stamp and groan when a woman en- ters a lecture room, yet their regard for the newcomers is far from kindly. At best it may be defined as an un-| easy consciousness of unconscious | superiority. Aloofness and opposition on the part of the men of the university | have driven the women to rely more | and more upon themselves, and they | are slowly developing a social, aca- demic and athleti vorld of their own, like that of Smith or Wellesley. Meanwhile, the life offered to an Amerlcan girl student is not an at- | tractive one. FIRE BEING PROBED Burial of Frank G. Andrews De- ferred for Autopsy on Sugges- | tion of Foul Play. | Special Dispateh to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., December 27. By direction of State's Attorney John A. Garrett, Dr. William T. Pratt, County health officer, will perform an autopsy tomorrow on’the body of Frank G. Andrews, whose charred body was found in the debris of his homein Bethesda, this county, which was destroved by fire early Tuesday morning. The possibllity of his having met with foul play and the building after- ward set on fire having been sug- gested, the autopsy was deemed ad- visable. The funeral services took place yesterday afternoon at the ‘Woodmon Methodist Church, al- though inferment was deferred until after the autopsy. 3 Held in Police Slaying. BALTIMORE, Md., December 27. Three youths arrested by Maryland State police near Laurel Wednesday as suspects in the murder of a Tren- ton, N. J, policeman were taken back to Trenton last night in the custody of New Jersey State officers. They gave the names of Joseph Jaerik, 19 years old, and Charles McKenna, 20, both of Boston, and Kenneth Dean, 18, of Georgetown, Ohlo. They deny any knowledge of the crime. THROAT CUT BY NEGRO. Guy Smith, 24, 1243 Second street southeast, was attacked by several colored men while on Third street be- tween B and C streets southwest, last night about 10 o'clock, one of them cutting his throat with a razor. He was treated at Emergency Hospital by Dr. Cohen, who found his condi- tion was not serious. ‘to Seek End by Henry Collins Walsh, founder of the Explorers' Club, who recently vis- ited the cavers, in which he evinced much interest. ‘At present visitors who wish may penetrate for & mile and a quarter these peculiar cavities of the earth, but at that point they meet obstruc- tions beyond which no one has ever been known to go. It is proposed that MILDRED SUDDENLY DECIDES THAT HE [ON WITH THE PAPERS - JUST STAND the explorers establish headquarters in a cabin constructed for the purpose and from that, as a starting point, work their -way back through the series of passageways, ‘ STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., —By GLUYAS WILLIAMS. WAITS PROENTLY WHILE WIFE 60ES OVER PLE AND DECIDES TS ALL BEEN < TORN OR WRITTEN ON AND SN'T WORTH SAVINC = ZAVE PICKED UP RER PIN-CUSH- ND TILL SHE SEES P == 11 URNS WIARILY BILOW REFLECT- 6 HOW MUCH EASIER IT 15 TOR A TAMILY T 6ET A HOUSE INTO A MESS THAN IT IS TO CLEAR T UP AGRIN YOUNG CONSOLVO MUST STAY WED Court Denies Father’s Plea for An- nulment on Ground He Was Intoxicated. RY the Associated Press BALTIMORE, Md., Judge W. H rsyth of the Circuit Court of Howard County today re- fused the petition to annul the mar- riage of Charles H. Consolvo, jr., 15 vears old, and Evelyn Lamb Con- . which occurred several months ago. Young Consolvo is the adopted son of Charles H. Consclvo, hotel man Judge Forsyth asserted that the court was not satisfied there was not collusion between. the parties con- cerned. That, however, he said, had no bearing on the decision. Col ment, asserting that his son was in- toxicated at the time of the wedding. He also declared that the vouth has not the mentality of a boy of 12 As to that, Judge Forsyth ruled that young Consolve may be stupid, but that does not relieve him from a con- tract. Young Mrs. Consolvo was a resident of Baltimore. She was form- erly employed in beauty shops here. ALEXANDRIA ALEXANDRIA, Va., December (Special).—One of the four men rested and indicted yesterday by a special grand jury in connection with the $25.000 fire at the wharf of the December 26— | Norfolk & Washington Steamboat C; will go on trial for arson in Cor- poration Court before Judge Howard W. Smith next Friday. A hearing will be held Tuesday, at which time the first to be tried will he announced The defendants are Arthur L. King, jr.; “Babe” M Carl Mander and Guy Wood. King confessed, the po- lice say, Implicating the others, who deny complicity. King’s confession was brought about after suspicion had been aroused because he had a cat which was thought to be the property of C. W. Wattles, local agent for the company. After arraignment in Corporation Court this morning the four men were released on $5,000 bond each. Carolyn R. Crump, 72 years old, the oldest locomotive engineer on the Washington division of the Southern Railway in point of service, having run an engine on the road for more than 52 years, dicd yesterday at his home, 313 North Columbus street, after an illness of several weeks. Mr. Crump had been retired and pensioned only recently. Besides his widow, he is survived by three children—Mrs. Walter H. Muir, Washington, and Harvey and C. Edward Crump of this clty. WIDOW CHARGES MURDER. Causes Arrest of Virginian After Husband’s Death. Special Dispatch to The Star, RICHMOND, Va, December 27.— Joseph Napier of Goochland County has been arrested on a warrant sworn out by Mrs. Calvin Manley of that county, charging. him with having killed her husband last Tuesday night. The body was found Thursday after- noon, hidden in a pile of leaves. Man- ley is belleved to have had a con- siderable sum of money. He had been shot in the face. Napler has been released on $500 bail. The coro- ner and his jury declared that death had been caused by a gunshot by some person unknown. The case has been set for hearing February 9. Manley was 60 years old, while the suspect is scarcely more tran 20. HELD FOR GIRL’S DEATH. Auto Driver Charged With Escap- ing Scene of Accident. Special Dispatch to The Star. CUMBERLAND, Md., December 21. Paul E. O'Donnell, 22 years old, is un- der arrest charged with driving the automobile Christmas eve which ran down and killed Mattie Smith, 15, and seriously injured her sister, Phyllis, as the girls were on their way home carrying Christmas presents. 0'Donnell, who lives with his moth- er and stepfather, is charged with being intoxicated and making a get- away. HISTORIANS IN SESSION. American Association "Meeting Opens at Richmond, Va. RICHMOND, Va., December 27.—The thirty-ninth annual meeting the Ameri- can Historical Association opened in this city at 10 o'clock this morning. Attending the gathering, which will continue through next Wednes- day, will be many prominent educa- tors and historians from colleges and universities of this country and abroad. All literary programs will be open to the public, Consolvo asked for the annul-| SEES BIG REPUBLIC | 0F COLORED RACES Sir Harry H. Johnston, Em-I pire Builder, Makes Pre- diction for Africa. BY JOHN GUNTHER. { Correspondence of The Star and The Chicago Daily News. ARUNDEL, England, November 18.—Looking into the future with prophetlc eyes, Sir Harry H. Johnston, the empire buflder who carved out Rhodesl#, Uganda and Nyasaland for Great Britain during his 40 years in Africa, foresces a vast republic of the colored races playing its part in the balance of world power. In the com- ing clash of color which he envisions European hegemony in Africa will be imperiled and the heart of the dark continent again will belong to its own. “I don’t expect to see a black Africa | in my time,” said Sir Harry, who i 66 and living in retirement in his Sus- sex home after his years of service throughout Africa. “However, it is entirely possible that within half a century all of Africa from the Zam- bezi to the Sahara may be a great black republic. “The northern fringe .of Africa, from Morocco and Algeria to Egypt, is pretty definitely and thoroughl | European. Likewise it will be many years before the British holdings be- | low the Zambezi—the Cape of Good | } Hope and Rhodesia—can be lost to.the ; British flag. - Success of Liberia a Factor. “But many other considerations go to indicato the eventual success of | black republic throughout Africa. The | deadly climate in the central por-! tions—the Kongo and the Cameroons— 4 climate absolutely fatal to Euro-, peans, is one factor. The encouraging success of the negro republic, Liberia, | is another. The rising desire for in- dependence—the flowing tide of color et another. Many of the negro and negroid| tribes in Africa are fully capable of independence, and unless their politi- cal Instincts are depraved by the in- gress of Europeans they should be able to take care of themselves. The African negro at his best is a high type of manhood. “The present administration, with Lo« AL Amery in the colonial office, is likely to make serious mis- | takes in the administration of British | Africa. One is the possibility of re- storing the old ‘freeiold rights’ in the Cameroons. This will mean that, an English provincial baron may have | indirectly in his control vast stretches of Africa, deriving income from it and | in abysmal ignorance of the obliga- | tions of his trusteeship. “Africa today does not present an altogether happy picture. The recur- ring crises in Egypt, the Moroccan crisis, the vast subsoil turmoil in| South Africa, which in some respects | will be forever allen to British rule, | are serious. 1 “A prince of the royal blood is on | his way to east Africa for a hunting expedition. That young man had far better be occupied with the people of | the dark continent than with its| quadrupeds. The quadrupeds are worthy far more intelligent and scientific examination than he can give them. Considered Greatest Authority. Sir Harry is usually considered the greatest of living authorities on Af- rica. He went out to the Kongo in 1580, worked with Stanley, and re- mained in Africa for almost 20 years until six successive attacks of black water fever drove him home. It was Sir Marry who first penetrated the wastes of Nyasaland and gained the country for his flag, renaming it SATURDAY, DECEMBER British Central Africa. Here and in Uganda, another territory which he “picked out of the mud and gave to Britain,” he worked as soldier, ad- ministrator and governor. His scientific discoveries and re- searches have made him even more signally known. For two decades he explored Central Africa for its fauna, flora, geology and especially its lan- guage He is the author of the only avallable work in English on the Bantu tongues. He s also the dis- coverer of the okapi, a “new” mam- mal, and of the Kongo pygmies. Sir Harry was last in America as a guest of President Roosevelt. When the World War broke out, although he was almost 60, he went to the front and was gassed. In his beauti- ful Sussex home a gas mask and tin helmet hang on the wall with a Kongo spear, the skin of the okapi, and the primitive weapons of the African forests. (Copyright, 192 ROCKVILLE, Md, December (Special).—Under auspices of the choir of St. Mary's Cathollc Church a dance was held in St. Mary's Hall here last evening. It was in charge of a committee consisting of Miss Helen Kirkland, J. Harry Gormiey and Prescott Fisher and was attended by a large number from the District of Columbia and other places. The funeral of James A. Benson, lifelong resident of this county, who died in a Baltimore hospital follow- ing an iliness of several months, took place yesterday from the Methodist Church at Laytonsville. The services were conducted by Rev. George R. Mays and burial was in the Laytons- ville Cemetery. Mr. Benson, who was 81 years old, is survived by two sons and eight daughters. The trial of Ralph W. Mellott, 22 years old, who is charged with a capital offense against his sister, Irene Mellott of Buck Lodge, this county, when she was but 12 vears of age, will take place in Frederick next Monday, according to State's Attorney John A. Garrett. The youth will be defended by Attorneys Thomas L. Dawson and F. Barnard Welsh of Rockville and Reno S. Harp of Fred- erick. by Chicago Daily News Co.) —_— Bedding Law Profits State, Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, December 27.—Mary- land has reaped approximately $500 in profits since July 1 from the so-called bedding law enacted by the last Leg- islature. Since the law became effec- tive, July 1, there has been one prose- cution for its violation, though many dealers in mattresses and other bed- ding have been warned for minor violations. The law provides that all bedding must be tagged by the de- partment of health, showing that it is in a sanitary condition. Fees for the tags pay for the enforcement of the law. Man, 74, Walks 100,000 Miles. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, December 27.—Henry Stewart, 74 years old, coyly admits he is one of the most proficient ex- ponents of that old Army exercise known as “taking 'em up and putting ‘em down,” for he had completed a stroll of 100,000 miles and plans to do about 4,000 miles more. Stewart dropped into the city hall here yesterday on his way, to Cali- fornia. Hotel Inn Phone Main 8108-3109. 604-610 9th St. N.W. $7 rooms, $6 weekly; $10.50 rooms, $8; $i4 with tollet, shower and_lavatery. $10; 3'is room, 50 per cent more. Rooms Like Mother's, 27, 1924. - Woodmacd & Lotheop The Young School Set Buys New Clothes —to wear to holiday festivities —to take back to school \When every day brings a try at some new sport — and every night party follows party—one’ wardrobe requires the ad- dition of several new frocks and coats—which will answer for many occasions at school during the coming semester. In the Misses’ Section Fourth Floor Sports Frocks —of Rodier’s famous kasha lead the fashion in smart young circles—one of which we sketch, in its natural color, with a touch of smart red trimming, $49.50. Others are of flannel or the soft kash- mirs in the natural, rattans, or vivid reds, $19.50 to $49.50. Sports Coats. of the softest, warmest fabrics, luxurious with big fur collars We sketch a new Betty Wales model of amazon cloth, an exclusive fabric here—with a luxurious collar and cuffs of light-toned skunda, $110. Others dressy-sports and typically sports coats, $49.50 to $110. Dance Frocks—follow the slim lines. flaring smartly, in Patou fashion at the bottom—a charming jade georgette frock in ombre tones is sketched, $39.50. Others of chiffon, lustrous velvets, georgettes in exquisite colorings, $25 to $95. Sizes 14 to 20. In the Juniors” Section Fourth Floor Sports Frocks — smart copies ot older ster Fashioned of flannels and the soft kashmir fabrics—a chic two-piece frock of brown kashmir wears pique collar and cuffs, $19.50. Others, $19.50 to $29.50. Sports Coats—are of the soit fleeces and smart plaids that the younger set wears so becomingly —and warmly. The newest of ensembles is thus formed when one matches a flannel irock with a good-looking coat, as sketched, the coat, with raccoon col- lar, $75. Other attractive sports coats, some without furs—to be worn with the gay plaid scarfs, $25 to $75. Party Frocks—follow youthful bouffant lines, seen in this very delightful and very youthful frock sketched—green georgette with myraid rows of ruffled black Valenciennes lace, $49.50. Other: soph of chiffon, some a trifle more icated—$19.50 to $49.50. Sizes 15 and 17.