Evening Star Newspaper, July 12, 1925, Page 39

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTO 1 Clotnes That count.| J, §, TO RECEIVE C2ZECHO DEBT MISSION IN FALL SKD-H | September Is Fixed for Meeting o, WA | Here to Settle Recon- Straw D. C, JULY 12, 1925—PART 2. V. Co. TEA-ROOM RECIPES; A Book for Home Makers and Tea-Room Man- agers. By Lenore Richards, B. A., and Nola Treat, B. S. Boston: Little, Brown & C SCRIMSHAW; Verses. Washington Wilson, author of “Boggy Solitudes of Nantucket.” Baltimore: Norman Remington Co. AUCTION BRIDGE SUMMARY; The Principles of Bidding and Play For Beginners and Advanced Students of Auction Bridge. By Wilbur Whitehead. Codified and 4 by G. Fortescue. New Yor erick A. Stokes Co. HESPERIDES. By Ridgely Torrence. | New York: The MacMillan Com pany { THE CONSCIENCE OF THE NEWS- | PAPER; A Case Book in the Prin-| au-| ciples and Problems of Journalism. | thor of “S ete. Tllus- By Leon Nelson Flint, professor of | trated by J Schlalkjer. New journalism in the University of | Mor York: Cosmopolitan Book Corpora Kansas, author of “The Editorial,” | 192 tion etc. New York: D. Appleton & Co. | THIS PASSION CALLED LOVE. By | SINGING WATER! Elizabeth | Elinor Gi: ot 4 Stacy Payne. piece by R. o e o The o Pallen Coleman. Philadelphia: The Books Received 1 The Authors’ Press. | Penn Publishing Co. THE NATIONAL CYCLOPEDIA OF |y vy RHAPSODIES OF A MUS { AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY: Being | CIAN; And Other Poems. b ;THE PUBUC iy the History of the United States, B ockbridge. Boston: The Strat Joseph Lewis French. S ries. New York: Brentano's. THE MYSTERY OF THE SINGING WALLS. By William Averill Sto- well, author of “The Wake of the Setting Sun.” New York: D. Ap- pleton & Co. HIGH NOO. Dell. Boston: The Four Seas(Kellogg, Vernon. Evolution. 1924 |Wield, Bradda. MW-K28e. TTC-F453c. | Lane, Henry Higgins. Evolution and|ygpermaas, E. W. Scientific Baking. | Christian Faith. 1923, BS-L24e. RZB.HI. | Lodge, Sir Oliver. Making of a Man. |y, jarbeoh 1924. BGE-LS2m. Diaposal, Mathews, Shaller and Hedrick, W tributions of Science ¥ood Supply: 1924, BS-M423. ¢ VaraE Hoets Newman, Horatio Hackett. Readings ‘"“;;h{“ns“’r»‘ in Evolution, Genetics and Bu-[p S genics. 19217 MW Ndtor. o i Osborn, Henry Fairfield. Evolution | ;. i¥e7h- e and Religion. 1923. Bs-OslZe. Posiat tiomeny CRZEI15.B will be juliaiier T AGsIN Iy T Kander, L. B. The Settlement Cook | (zechoslovak mission in Sept i 5 s Book. RZ-K133s. | Wiggam, Albert E. Fruit of the Fam-| y 4 nqr owners' National Assoclation. | ily Tree. 1924, TAR-W634f. Manual of Standard Practice. | Wiggam, Aibert E. The New RYUL876 logue of Science. 1928, Lewis, C. M. iewis Hotel W634n | Course. 4v. RYH 881 “The books opposed to evolution are | I B Wversbody's Cook much less numerous. The library, how- | ETatia ever. has these two Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Bryan, W. J. In Cook Book. 1918. RZ-M568 E-B845. . Mrs. 1. P. Feeding Peter Louis T. RZ.OI2T Ownby, M Book Reviews of the Summer’s New Books W. 4. Home Sewage others. Con- 7 ‘0 Religion. prises does adventure wait at (he door. Many a voung fellow, setting out from the editorial room, feels ad- venture standing in wait for him, feels its tug upon his sieeve, follows its lead and discovers daily a new world care. fully hidden under the common plain and unstirring top of things. The unadventurous do not even see adven- ture. The easily-tired soon fall be-| hind it But a w go along to find out what is really coming off in the world. This is the story of one of these few. On the whole, a plausible story; one to be accepted, I should think, as & fair picture of the newspaper man’s thor of “The Green Hat,” etc. New | cgreer. This young man sets out with | York: George H. Doran Company. |a vision before him. To be sure, he RLEN runs thin in “May Fair.” | lever quite catches up with It. This Perhaps the wonder is that he |18 @ part of the realism of the story e il and free for 8|28 a whole. But he has something to Tong. "To the purely casual | take along with him beside a dream— unprofessional onlooker there |AN amazing persistence, a fine stock appears 1o be something serious the | Of patience, the quick turn of ingenu matter with a young writer who de. [ ItV upon demand. the ready response liberately handicaps himself by way of | {0 _emergency, the prime quality of an exterfor of supreme sophistication | Initiative. Otherwise not a remarkable Which he exudes in social mtire. - The|fellow. But in the newspaper busi-| e ok s e on e, | ness this is an efuipment that spells aoimeh aeItIaeT A getting ahead: not all the time, for e this appears to be a real atory of what tive when its theme is of shallow root-| Might easily have come to pass. He a .. | has the common run of obstacles— age and meager growth and scant har i N ne fs all of | Women. the chief of these, as Is the e niios it e arvingly with | C48€ With every young man. A spe- the most uninteresting and the feast | Cially good hold this author seems to | considerable fala an “Goa's grean|bhave upon the universal handicap to| il | youth of the male persuasion. - How = = B ever, with this, as well as with every - reeyie [ d Michael Arlan given himself no choice | denls in'a fair and proportioned con-| PeM\21 tHe DY Cutrent, Voume | Orphans, ete. L i at = - sistency. And the story sums to one | ' C. | motte, author The Backwash | at all, even were he to desire 80 to do. [ SStency. And the mtory sume to onel &'cCo | of War," etc. New York: The! oAy ik ecomes formula- | interest throughout. A plausible and | THE EINSTEIN THEORY: Explained | Century'Co. ts first foundation is the Tenth Com | and Analyzed. By Samuel H.Gug- | PURPLE AND FINE WOMEN mandment, the particular “thou shalt | famatic invention. Aod Sualyeed. & BySilmusl H- Ol KPLE AND not” of its very beginni Its second | THE CAROLINIAN, By Rafael millan Company L. (;em:m» ot o By & Tairpabe. v This DempRlct T | e TR Ql660 one i the seventh verbaten of the| " tini. author of “Scaramouche, TMMIGRATION PROBLEMS; Per-| WHAT OF 1e e s il COvlel | Mo on biolouy nchuding | Chan, 5. W The Chiness Cook Book recessions. Lovely women and way I R By or Safford, or ‘ot Tm: % osic: Chaxie® it AL My rnenis i cor | otz ¥ A —— wise men gambol around the edges of | SABATINI 1s lerary econ'| Cnumer and Its Eifecea Upon the|THAT NICE YOUNG COUPLE. By | T8 Bonls s the s Munptiva aildiot | Thes Colibge resolution from the State cent iverighi. e York: Bont | tne ausation are us follows pe committee of the Democratic party suggesting that a special election fo Senator would be unduly expens was sent to Gov. Blaine today The Democratic committee, meeting s green fleld in a pleasant drama of | omist, though this, to be sure, is G b d ChatRrtir clever words and subtle meanings— |not within his calculations. Neverthe. AL BrRstor. Of the v Livi o & |N“L e e e Hflu\"rj:\‘l{:’l::\hh Beld of Population of the United States.| & Liveright. | Conkidn, E. G. The Direction o Collins, Harry e ten BIE even thel BATOIL abet bF | Bott New York: Dodd, Mead & Co SONATA; And Other Poems. By John| mad Evolution. 1821, BOE-(T64. lins, Har Erskin. New York: Duffield & Co: | Coulter. John M. and M Where | Collins, J. H. The Story here vesterday, suggested the | governor call a special session of the | Legislature and go before that body matter. But even the adroitness of |action out of mext to nothing he de X & Mead & | Michael Arlen cannot keep the folks | liberately pre-empts one that is already | THE MAN NOBODY KNOWS; A Dis-| n 1 ; ! AR very of Jesus. By Bruce Barton.| FARMINGTON. By Clarence Darrow olution and Religion Meet. 1924 Fonams BUEBe e author of Its Causes and MW-C835w 1. C. Essentials of Sewing for permission to appoint a temporary successor to the late Senator La men, too, and one President at least, as there was many an hour of gay rivalry between President Wilson and his daughters in this special kind of fun making. In the middie of the nineteenth century it rose to its high- est point in England, and again in 1907-% it reached boom proportions, a ject for newspaper competitions d advertisements. Just now the cross-word puzzle has placed it in a slight eclipse, but that will move off and you will again have need to brush up your gift of limericking. So here is the chance for that need—the his- tory, the limericks of Edward Lear jand his “Book of Nonsense” and, be sides, an excellent stock of author named limericks, serving both as| models and as proof that the versifier is in the best of company By Anne| Michael Arlen “Runs Thin™ in “May Fair"—The De- lightful Old Songs of Bobby Burns—A News-| paper Story and a Couple of "Thrillers” in the Way of Mystery Fiction. IDA GILBERT MYERS. | MAY FAIR. By Michael Arlen, au . By Crosbie Garstin, au- thor of ““The Ballad of the Royal Ann,” etc. New York: Frederick A Stokes Co. A YOUNG MAN Hats. struction Debt Home Conveniences. The Czechoslovak legation has been advised that the American Debt Com FANCY. By John Manufacture T. McIntyre, author of “Blowing Weather,” etc. New York: Fred- erick A. Stokes Co. THE BIG TOWN; How I and the Mrs. Go to New York to See Life and Get Katie a Husband. By Ring W Lardner. New York: Charles Scrib- ner's Sons. Washington: Bren tano’s. THE SLEEPER OF THE MOONLIT RANGES. By Edison Marsha mission ready to cive @ 1924 mber on was taken sult of, ation by the legation notif American Government would soon be notified of Deca- IAR- Training echoslovakia's desire to fund its reconstruction del country and the opinion the Washington Governmen tie most convenient method ing on negotiations The date set woull ns with Bel French missions (M) and ) and Bate | MAGNATE’S WIFE SEEKING in Dress.|$6,520 MONTHLY ALIMONY | ¥ Association. Plans for Concrete Houses. WIM-P335 Rittenhouse, Anne, pseud. The Well S nall House Bureau of the | " [Tt aeute: e, PO 18w | Aldrich, president of United States, Inc. Planning Your [ poperesost ™ Gmag terarure | Solidated ! Home. WIM-Ar25p 2 | f Home and Lite. Ref.|gan 0% | Bafley, P. L. V. Foods. RZ-Bi .| ZWRY-R54 I susr tor | In of the present in|Baldt, L. 1. Good Housekeeping'sf,m po " "y 7 . | the subject of evolution, stimulated by | Pri chwal 'l[:'erl";";‘;b‘l': Making Smart conomics RY 6 ; Clothes Tg. - ; sige t |the Scepes trial, the Publi | Boulestin, X. M. Simple French Cook- | W26 | 0 o yie Decorations | o5 {offers a brief list. selected, of course.| " ing for English Homes. RZ-B665s for All Occasions. RZS-T49t Mrs. Aldrich | from a very much larger number of |Calvert, M. R. Firat Course in Home|; g pyreau of Standards. Materials| an annual rate « hooks on the subject to be found on| Making. RY-C138f. : for the: Household. . 2947 e its shelves. | Calvary Baptist « hul(‘h. Sunday Un33ma In addition to the books listed. the| School, Washington, D. C. Book of A reader is referred to the pamphlet on| Recipes i o o “Biology,” by Dr. Vernon Kellogg, just | Chamber: M. D. A Book o By |published by the American Library| usual Soups. RZF-C356b OPPOSE ELECTION. Introduction by W.|Assoclation in s series of “Reading | Chambers, Mrs. M. D. One-Piece S Democrats Against Balloting La Follette's Successor. Book His Image. 1922 Dogma of Evolution. | ank RY-OW4i Peterson, Mrs. A. noch, Mrs. N. F. Cogking. RZ-P4dds Picken, M. B. Harmony TTC-Po84h Portland Cement Bride and Groom The following new accessions to the Public Library are also listed RECENT ACCESSIONS IN THE INDUSTRIAL DIVISION Home Economics. Bade. By the Associated Press NEW YORK. Jul: sherwood the Ray ( and Hlustrated in the Lives of the| ford Company. Founders, Bullders and Defenders | THE WILD BIRD.. of the Republic, and of the Men| 1o New York and Women Who Are Doing the| % § Work and Molding the Thought of | IS I'T GOOD ENGLISH? the Present Time. Edited by Dis-| O'London. New tinguished Biographers, Selected | am's S from Each State, and Revised and (SNUFFS AND BUTTER Approved by the Most Eminent| the Maluy Girl, Architects’ S By Hulbert Foot- | ieorge H. Doran | Family Evolution view interest and Wardell. R F of the Family York: G. P. John Put- Library of March band stripped t city of its belo | She further alleges that her h { with a view of getting rid jointly owned Long Island pr falled to pay the taxes and pawned her jewels to meet | Din aba- etc Com for Home Candy Making good Woman's Cook-Book. | 5 Hu The A B C of Dress. Just Arrived | | | | of Canned me. TT- forever upon this purely tentative|in z Settled state of cultivation. An « P dps b rusher | f 4 rofit Treatment.” stc. New Yorw: Hor | Darwin, Charies R. The Descent of it B Arian releyor the menac | immanassaving: of Jabor; his, to ons| « -&uthox e e B A TN |1 Wi 2o 1 Babatint. tht Seine ob| - Man " InStusfiutie: Aok Mot paces to the un bn\hll\lh\ln foothold of | history is keen and true. Of all the “‘"“p““" ] That position. That ends the matter. | Fomancers now contributing to the| GREAT SEA STORIE And this is the Arlen formula, whose | €eneral entertainment this ne is the Joseph Lewis French, editor of only possibl ety comes from | MOst receptive, both to the facts and at Ghost Stories,” etc. Second | changing the r of these two ele-|to the drama of history That he Series. New York: Brentano's. The very THE EMBROIDERY SHOP Miss Freudberg I1th Street near N. ¥ Commercial Fruit and that s RUP-C888c. How & Liveright Man. MW-D25d NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM, py|DeTvin, Chasles EB. The Origin of| Jerome and Jean Tharaud. Trans- | g obtion in Modern Thought. 1917 | lated by Madeleine Boyd New | "W Bves, g 5 York: Boni & Liveright. | e MW-Eves - WA, Vegetable Products. Denny, G. G. Fabrics and Know Them. TM-D416. Marie and O'Leary, Sdited by = Florence. TTC- Ave ments. Now. to be sure. deal of clever talk going along this prime industry with and touch of this talk. There are pleasant manners and no end of good clothes and many ingratiating inven- tions on the part of the author. There is. besides, a good art of story struc- ture, all agreeable, even exciting at first And everybody calls for el Arlen Then the suspicion that the boy has shot his bolt and would better be left alone in what € to be a recuperative while. ir" adds to this suspicion This claims to be the last appearance of “These Charming People.” One re. calls their first appearance and the deep delight of the book named for them When a man grows sick everybody hastens forward with a remedy. not, Michael Arlen, go down to China town with Tommy Burke, or to any other real place with a real man, for the sake of the actual substance of life projected in a selfless and straight simplicity? SONGS AND BALLADS OF ROBERT BUR) by Nora England Stodder & Houghton, George H. Doran Company BEAUTIFUL book, wherein Rob. ert Burns sings all of his old songs over again and chants all the old ballads once more. “Auld Lang Syne.” “My Heart's in the Highlands O Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast ‘Ye Banks an' Braes o Bonnie Doon" and many another remind us again of the debt we owe to Burns for the very loveliest of our songs today Besides the songs themselves, there appear here and there curiously cor municable pictures of a_quaint artistry suggestive of many things that mere color and line do not record How- ever, the grouped songs and ball are the thing. Made to sing, these overflowings of the heart of Bobby Burns. The Ayrshire shepherd we hear him called, the plow-boy of the Scotch countryside. But the songs serve to cast him in another role They tell us that the consuming and constant prepossession of this Ayr- shire lad was Jean, and Mary Morison, and Meg of the Mill, and Nannie, and ir Eliza, and Clarinda, and Chloris, and an interminable company of lassies besides who so ravished the heart and consumed the spirit of Robert Burns, the singing lover of all woman- kind. = Separating and collecting the songs stands as a complete arralgn- ment of the bard as the incorrigible lover. A beautiful book, that looks much like the herald of a Burns re. vival—maybe a general revival of the poetic forms that still stand with the most of us as one of the essentials of poetry itself. THE SPIRIT OF THE Dallas Lore Sharp. ““Watcher in the Woods York: Harper & Bros. ¢4QHOW me the beekecper—even the American beekeeper—and I will show vou one who might have been a poet, one who is bound in time to b come something of a philosopher. lover of life and of waters that go softly, like Shiloh; one with the breath of sage and of pennyroyal about him, a lover of nature and of his fellow men."—Dallas Lore Sharp talking, somewhere along the course of these “Contemplations of a Bee- keeper.” Clearly with no intent of drawing his own portrait in this sum. mary, it turns out, nevertheless, that this” particular beekeeper is a true lover of life and quite enough of a poet to embody that love in many a song of nature and in many a panegy- ric of the wonder of its ways. Many a man keeps bees and takes away the honey and sells it, and that ends the matter. But here is one who not only keeps bees but finds himself lost in amazement over the complex economy of life of the hive, over the instinct that outruns {ntelligence seemingly, over the organization of the swarm and the architecture of the comb, over the feeding and the creation of the right social order, the provisions for good government and the ruthless sac- rifice for the security of that govern- ment. From these facts—plain, dis coverable facts about an order of in- sect life—he draws many a lesson upon human existence itself. But these do not sound like lessons—not like the lessons from which we so naturally recoil. Rather do they seem like visions and dreams and deep thoughts on mnature in its beauty and wonder. And yet it is the story of the bee, exact enough in detail to satisfy one who is in search of facts, while it at the same time is a story that soars away into dream and aspiration and a deep respect for all life, not re- spect for human life alone. THE COPY SHOP. By Edward Hun gerford. New York: C. P. Put nam's Sons N adventure of the editorial room, & romance of the reporter; in short, a newspaper story. And a good one. Upon its surface the life of a newspaper looks like that of any other business—a matter of routine and es- sential humdrum. And by the same token the career of the reporter leoks much like the stodgy stuff of which other lives are made. And such it is; «hat {e. with certain possible expan: sions and enlargements. However, more here tham in most other enter- HIVE. author ete. By of New there is a | of the smart set. | And one enjoys greatly the Arlen drift more | Why | chooses this field as the medium of ad- venture because it calls for less of ork on his part no one believes. Chat it does offer a vivid and brilliant | background of action, that its rounded | areas of fact do add to the realism of | romance, are points that Sabatini does See * and now “The Caro- ' as evidence thereof. | [he Carolinian” is a tale of the | days of the American Revolution. Set primarily in the leisured and stately | colonial life of the South, its course | follows the separation of two sets of | friends—royalists on the one hand and an ardent revolutionary on the other —this, historically speaking, one of| the neglected aspects of the movement for independence, yet one of its mos poignant features, nevertheless. Saba. tini_ makes it the keynote of this ro- | mance On one side a young man | following gallantly the fortunes of war on the side of the colonists; on the |other an equally ardent royalist, | whose daughter takes sides with her | father, not with her lover. A vicissi { tous romance, such as young love con- | trives to fashion the world over,| |emerges from this opposing sense of patriotic fealty. A stirring adventure | of war, centering upon the heroism | |and devotion of this youth, while por- |truying the general action and spiri |of the war itself, steps vividly to the | tfore here as romance that has within| |it a good value of history back of the | thrilling events which round it to prime adventure. THE MONSTER. By Harrington Hext, author of “Number 87," ete. New York: The Macmillan Com- pany. A CLEVER instinct, the one that sent this writer to the most mys- | titying of all the sources of crime;| that is, to the double nature of man | himself. The good and evil struggling | the seat of the world’s great bewllder- ment, the basis of all of its philosophy | and religion, the impulse behind most | of its art. So. cannily, for the pur- pose of his own plans of mystification | in nothing more than an adventure in current fiction, Harrington Hext makes | use of man's oldest and biggest puzzle, Into a plain and humdrum community., where every an open book to his neighbor, where | events are all of simple homespun patterns, he throws not one crime but a series of these. Immediately pur- suit becomes chiefly the chase of | shadows and many a decoying will-o™ | the-wisp thrown out by the imagina- | tion and half-superstition of a small and isolated and greatly frightened community. Oh, ves, to be sure, there is an inflow of the familiar experts in | crime detection. Al in all, it is a good | , handled with discretion in the | of its clues, turned at the right moment to other signs of even | more plausibility. Enough of this to- ing and froing to make an exciting story of the man-hunt—perennial jo; to the human. Then, late in the game, there is the swift and conclusive ex posure of the one in whom God and the devil are making their immemo rial stand for possession. The ma- Jority ‘wili like best the general run of the story, its swift action, its admi- rable setting contributing suitable at- mospheres to the whole, its subordi- nate but pleasing love story. A few will like best the good psychology, the | clear in-seeing upon the unbelievable | heart of man—of every man. | THE COMPLETE LIMERICK BOOK. By Langford Reed. Illustrated by H. A. Bateman New York: Putnam’s Sons. G TYHERE was a young fellow named Reed, Who said: ‘There's a need—a great book So he wrote one. and look ! Here's the book that he wrote—now pro- ceed- And by way of “the book that he wrote” you will find to your hand a good stock of “worthy” limericks, all classified and ready for use. equally important purpose of the' book is to give the limerick the good character that it deserves instead of leaving it longer to the obloquy of a decidedly shady reputation. Langford Reed would have you know that the limerick has a history—a home place and ancestors and periods of glory, shaded off now and then into a tempo- rary obscurity, like the course of any other honorable institution. An Irish | plant, this growth rooted first in the city of Limerick itself. Great men have not disdained it as a medium of poetic burlesque—Rossetti and Swin- burne among them, certain clergy- Freshness Brings the viva- dous glow of youth to your skin. That elusive <0 charm which makes the passing years deal lightly T ek ik ¢ Send Ferd. T. Hopkini together in each mother’s son of us is ||t one’s life is, seemingly, | [} An (i GREAT PIRATE STORIES. Edited The comparative prices here are conserva- tively stated—and mean tremendous savings! Every dress is of the fin- est fabric—of the most superb workmanship— and of indisputable style! Flower fects in_m combined ~pa: tel shades on a_ ground of ot white. sheer chiflon. over flesh crepe de chine. $25. Special Purchase— Women’s Dresses Featuring NEW Flowered Chiffons 25 An American fashion that comes from a Paris style cen- ter. * Stunning dresses of lovely imported fabrics—but fash- ioned in America for American women—yet obeying the .dic- tates of Paris. Al of nature's gorgeous colorings 'blaze forth from the white or dark grounds of these dresses—not a big array, for there are only 40 alto- gether, but one of the choicest we have ever offered at so low a price! Long or short sleeves, round and chanel necklines, hand- kerchief drapes, and graceful flares—all these and many other styles for your choice. ‘Women's Dresses—Second Floor THE SILENT VOICE. W. I Believe in Keen, William By BGE Berenice and Downs, d Elements of Costume Design Follette. A Huge Dress Sale Here Tomorrow! Entire Stock of Our Fine Apparel Shop Has Been Moved to the Women’s and Misses' Dress Shops for Immediate Disposal! wE are making this important move so that we can start the Fine Apparel Shop afresh in the Fall—and we have a big surprise in store for you for that Fall occasion! We have chosen this particular time to clear the Fine Apparel Shop in order ?o gain more space for our a:proa;:h- ing August Fur Sale. (It will need every square foot we can give it—for it promises to be the most tremendous Fur Sale of our entire history!) satin Evenin collar gown of yel- low satin, em- broidered _and fringed with crystal. _For- merly = $200 Tomorrow $95. Sports model of Scottylaine and Surah Sucde side pleat Skirt. For merly $50 Tomorrow $34.90. 0w ni ) >¢ resort. For. merly $65 Tomorrow $37.50 But—read about this great Dress Sale! Long _tunle frock of pin- Rohng print nished =~ at neck and hem Lol e nein e bebiit iy tatiored. Vith grart - verted pleats. Formerly $85. Fomorrow $65. With band of plain silk in © on t rasting color. For- merly $59.50 Tomorrow merly $85 £39.50 Tomorrow $59.50. Tomorrow—then—in our Women’s and Misses’ Dress Shops yot!’ll find ALL of the beautiful and exclusive dresses that have comprised our Fine Appa_rel Shop’s fashionable assortments—dresses simple or elaborate for every occasion —All at most startling reductions! - —for Women! ROM the Fine Apparel dresses for all occasions. Formerly $45 to Shop—a stunning array of Don't miss secing them! $55—Tomorrow ot arii s29'50 Stunning sports models—frocks whose smartness of style demands that you get out doors. They're one and two- picce models in Scottylaine and Surah suede silk. in beau- tiful colorings. Formerly $45 to $95—Tomorrow This group contains cvening dresses of chiffon and lace; smart daytime frocks of lovely crepe de chine, crepe satin, faille silk and beautiful printed silks. Both long and short sleeve models. .. 3450 Formerly $75 to Of crepe $125—Tomorrow . Exclusive daytime frocks lead this group. ) e roma with long or short sleeves, or of satin and faille silk. In the group are stunning evening gowns and dinner gowns, too, of lovely velvet. Formerly 85 to $150—Tomorrow ............ ) Beautifully tailored models in faille silk and satin for daytime wear offer a variety of fashionable colors. Chiffon and lace gowns for evening and the dance make this an en- ticing group with their dainty tints. Formerly $95 to $175—Tomorrow Satin and Crepe de Chine Daytime Dresses—in both one and two piece models, and others for daytime, in printed chif- fon. Crepe Roma and Chiffon Dinner Dresses, also, are fcatures of this group. 5950 Formerly $125 to $175—Tomorrow ............ ) Beautifully Tailored Long-sfeeved Gowns of satin for daytime functions. Lace, chiffon and crepe roma are the lovely fabrics for dinner apd eveninf gowns in this group— some adorned with pearls and crystals. Women's Dress Shop—Second Floor —for Misses! VERY miss who would like to add one stunning dress— or maybe two, for different occasions—to her Summer wardrobe, should attend this great event tomorrow! E The most delightful styles—for every possible occasion _the regular stock of our Fine Apparel Shop—are assembled here for your choice at prices so low that we expect these dresses to sell out almost immediately Formerly $45 to $85—Tomorrow . ... A stunning group of Misses’ Frocks in satin, flat crepe and the most fascinating printed crepes! Some wool jersey models, too, in this group for sports, street and resort wear. You will covet at least one of these when you see them. Formerly $59.50 to 335_00 $95—Tomorrow . . Printed silks that are a delight to the eye and the finest faille silks are the fabrics of the daytime frocks for misses in this small but beautiful group. There's just one shell pink frock, too, with trimming of white and gold. We are won- dering which miss will get it! Formerly $75 to $125—Tomorrow Daytime Frocks in this group, too—and they feature the much desired long sleeves. They're exceptionally chic models, of decided style. Dinner Dresses of filmy lace, crepe de chine, rich satins and velvet, and cool crepe de chine, complete this group. They are worth a trip to Jelleff's! Formerly $75— $59.50 Tomorrow Only .............. Just one Dinner Frock of perfectly beautiful black lace over a lovely printed silk. A dress that deserves being featured all by itself. Stunning for a miss! F ly $159.50 to 3{’6'.;:'Tl:>morrow P A s7500 These beautiful frocks are of satin with long sleeves— just the dress for travel, or for early Fall wear. Also one evening gown of beautiful peach satin—simple, yet dazzlingly effective. Misses’ Apparel Shops—Third Floor Women's sizes in these Dresses from the Fine Apparel Shop will be found in the Women’s Dress Shop, Second Floor. Misses’ sizes—in the Misses’ Dress Shop— Third Floor. n me d color. A Clearance of F MISSES’ Afternoon and Evening FROCKS Formerly $39.50 to $59.50 523.75 A wonderful opportunity to get right style at a low price. Materials such as georgette, crepe roma, satin canton, flat crepe and printed chiffons. And almost every style to choose from—two-piece, che- mise, tunic and basque models vie with apron fronts. Yeur choice—no sleeves; cap sleeves; long sleeves. The trimmings—laces, bons, buttons, pleating tucking. In coral, rose, white, maize orchid, cocoa, black and navy. Misses' Shop—Third Floor rib- and

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