Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DA GILBERT MYERS. THE HEART OF HOOSIERLAND, By Louis Ludlow, author of “From Cornfleld to Press Gallery.” Illus- trated by Clifferd K. Berryman. Washington: Pioneer Book Com pany. Y way of the Ileart of Hoosierland,” Louis Ludlow goes back into his own- boy- hood, walkhig up and down within this delectable- age, loitering- around its corners and open places, picking up reminiscent odds and ends to show how things were done out in Indiana when he was a boy; to show, furthermore—and this the real point of the matter—that the true pioneer quality of the State nas versisted from its settlement up to the present, and that this is accountable for the fine substance and the fair promise of that particular Common- wealth. Mr. Ludlow’s story is merely a chapter in the longer story of plo neer ideals and practic It happens to be also the story of his own hoy hood in an Indiana cou fde—a point of concrete evidence by way of illuminating local history. It is the story of the log cabin and the found- ing of the home. It is a plcture of the time when it was the fashion to spin and weave and sew and knit; the day when the farmer cleared his own land and tilled his own =oil; the day of the “bee,” when all the neighbors round- about came together for the husking: and the parings and the shuckings, for every sort of work that called for many hands; the day of the log school- house, whe certain ex- ternals, lea rs to have been a good system of dodging tasks and evading lessons— a day of open religion, with fewer brands to confuse the mind and dis- turb the spirit; the day of the home wedding—no show, no tour, just a bois- | terous charivari, and, Samuel Pepys, “then to bed.” A homely, humorous, tender story. embracing every side of life in the less-peopled parts of the Hoosler State during the past 40 vears or so; a T ture as well of the pioneer of the past 100 years and more in so far as his attitude and spirit and activities have contributed to American life; a story of the man himself, of the Common-| wealth, of the cour An enthusi astic Hoosler, Lo low, who is certain that Indiana is the hub of the universe, to say nothing of its being| the seat of the Garden of Eden, the purlieus of Paradise. To be quite definite about this, he names the exact location of Paradise as south by east.of India proper feeling—just ¥ instance, about Kalamazoo; just as I teel, for instance, about Weedsport. A word about the pictures. Look at the one on page five. Of course, if | vou. have no “interpreting nuclef”— | n other words, if you know nothing| about boots and the office of a boot- | ack—the picture will not mean so much to you as it otherwise would do The rest of them will. however. for they fit the text just as pictures should—like a glove to the hand. LAZARUS. By Henri Beraud. Trans- n lated by Eric Sutton. New York:| The Macmillan Company. | ] AZARUS” is the story of a man who came to himself after 16 vears of oblivion, his identity lost to | him through an accide The story | opens with the cure of 1 Mourin and his release from hospital, | J the where he had for so long been con-| fined. In effect, the man is risen from | the dead, and the story engages itself | with his efforts to reunite himself with | o past that is 16 vears behind him— one which to him is only yesterday or the day before. There is the return to the old home and the search for this old friend or that one—the home | fallen to neglect, the friends moved | away or dead. And so the weary | round continues to_all points wheres in the past Jean Mourin, musiclan,; had professfonal interests and social contacts and inspiring associations. | B combination of circumstances, not uncommon, so great a change has | been wrought in these 16 years that | nothing at all of the old life rises to meet and welcome Jean Mourin. And that's the story—that fruitless quest. It is also the story of Jean Mourin’s mind under this routine of unvarying disappointment and loss, of faflure to find any shred even of the old life; no family of his own; no friends; no profession; no hope: no spirit. What do you suppose becomes of the man, a_sensitive artist, under this set of conditions? No, he doesn't make away with himself in some mo- ment of deepest despair. Not that. Well, what then? If you have gone along with Jean Mourin in his jour- neyings up and down a strange and forgetting world, you will know what he finally does, even without hearing it from the author. For this is an account that holds to a perfect con- tency with the situation—this kind | man in this kind of circumstance. Not a pleasant story; better than that, | . true story: true in its logic and in | its inevitable sequence. Uncommon in structure and writing, clear as crys- tal, these grouped words and phrases, through which one sees the naked soul of this risen Lazarus. THE LION TAMER. By Carroll E. Robb. ew York: Harper & Bros. OTH the hero of the tale and tho} author of the story start off with | suggestive. |its kindly, eveny-day which the author creates an up-te- date story of socfal life and business life, blended in such a way as to give the' bright colors of the former and the gloomier shadows of the latter. The gulding factor throughout is the love hetween a father and his daugh- ter, the girl who circumvents an evil plain against her father, who is away from his business because he is ill, an absence which his scheming brother seeks to prolong. Reading, you may feel that the Eirl is a subtle kind of propaganda for the current woman question. A minute of thought will remind You that the world Is full of such girls. Then you go back to thi particular one who is carrying on in the face of many difficuities. A story with a moral, too—the moral of the square deal and what comes of It in practically every case. The writer handles talk well, adapting it to her characters in a natural and clever run | that makes them very much alive. A | zood plot, plausible sequence of events, | lifellke characters and a first-rate love | | story going along with the business | | complications—all in all, a most read. | | able romance of today. | CUP OF SILI By Arthur Rees, author of “Island of Destin etc. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. | [N _“Cup of Silence” Arthur Rees creates a mystery-breeding atmo- sphere 8o dense that it is calculated to make even a plain matter take on the face of guile. This effect he produces v a feeling and artful blend of the Sussex downs and an ancient house and relics of history left by Roman and Dane. To this biend he 2dds pride | of birth, passion for a clean line of de- scent, reverence for caste, single | hearted ambition to restore the de- parted glories of a noble house. All this, mere background and setting, | bécomes so animate and alive and im- pressive in the hands of the autho to reduce the real actors in the ro- mance to something of the character of puppets, or at least to the role of subordinates in a tragedy where these externals step to the fore as leading characters. And to the end the man and woman to whom is the business of carrying this matter to a romantic conclusion seem out of place; too modern, too out of class, so to speak. The real story is ars old, with a ghost that more properly fits into this setting than do the two who are finally left to carry on the line of Hilmerceux. A remarkable handMing of externals, welding a mass of elements into a whole of intangible effects that are weirdly impressive and The point of Mr. Rees' work is right here, though for the one who loves a thrilling mystery that lasts unsolved for 40 years the “Cup of Silence” will prove to be an adroltly managed story to meet just that sort of liking. WINGS TO DARE. man White. >ress. By Grace Hoff- Portland: The Mosher LITTLE book of verse, whose gen- eral theme is friendship and good | will, with much of faith and therefore not a little of hope in its appeal. Vegse of many kinds—Iyric and son- net, a touch of free verse and now and | then a bit of metric prose or un- rhymed verse; verses e in | hading the rain in in jts softer | such as poetic | own outlook | trees and nesting birds, its beneficence, the s moods, pleasing fancles folks conjure out of the: upon the world. There are poems of | places—New England, Venice, Italy.| Sentiment and imagination combine | here to work out pleasing patterns of | thought and fancy which the author has embodied in a series of songs | whose prime quality is a delicacy of texture and the soft effect of a water color that portrays some restful cor-| ner of wood or field. | Books Received THE CAMPAIGN OF 1864 IN THE| * VALLEY OF VIRGINIA; And the | Expedition to Lynchburg. By H.| A. Du Pont, author of “The ¢ of the Huguenots,” etc. York: National Americana Society. IN ZANZIBAR. By Ralph D. Paine, author of “Four Bells,” etc. Bos-| ton: Houghton-Miffiin Co. OUR PRESIDENTS IN VERSE. By F. Leopold Schmidt, author of | “Should the Right of Dower Be Abolished,” ete. New York: The| Poet and Philosopher Magazine. APPROACHING MOTHERHOOD; Questions and Answers of Mater. nity. By George L. Brodhead, M. D., Visiting Obstetrician, Belle- vue and Allled Hospitals, New York City. New York: Paul B. Hoeber, Inc. THE BASIS OF RACIAL ADJUST- MENT. By Thomas Jackson Woof- ter, Jr., Ph. D. Boston: Ginn & Co. THE ROAR OF THE CROWD; Th. True Tale of the Rise and Fall of a Champlon. By James J. Corbett. With a Foreword by Robert Gordon Angerson. Illustrated. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons. STAY YOUNG. By Raymond Leslie Goldman. New York: The Mac- millan Co. DY BALTIMORE. By Owen Wis- | ter, author of “The Virginian,” etc. | a handicap—the one burdened with a reputation which he does not deserve; | the other faced with the job of making | an acceptable character out of a piece | of damaged human goods. Here is a | vouth who by a fluke or an accident | steps into the limelight as a hero—as | a “lion tamer,” in fact. Something to | live up to, that sort of reputation. And in no time at all a situation arises that snuffs out the heroic in an hour. | But the author has this boy on his| nands and in front of him is a host| of readers who want to know what he is going to do about it. Everybody | hates a coward, or he does. That| averybody is himself really a coward | offers no easement to this author. | Rather does the fact of camouflage + make readers all the more Intolerant | toward timidity of soul, just as it makes the work of the author tre-| mendously difficult—difficult, but not impossible, for an uncommonly good story rises out of the initial handicap® a story of growth, slow, at times up< certain, persistent, and finally trium. phant in a_most unspectacular wa: in a way that is of a plece with the simple facts from which it sprung— plain, every-day facts, that cluster around the central theme and rise finally to a moment of intense drama, expressing itself in nothing more than a little gesture and certain repeated phrases, not much in themselves, but immense in their cumulative effect. Everybodv will like the top story. Many will appreciate the admirable quality of the story running along un- derneath this upper one. THE COBWEB. Margaretta Tut- tle, author of “Feet of Clay.” New York: Little, Brown & Co. MODERN story—not this because | it deals with man’s greed and the enmity between two brothers on the one hand and on the other with ths surpassing_intelligence and loveliness of a girl. Greed is as old as the world. Brothers have been foes since Cain and Abel started it. Girls have, now and then, since the first daughter, possessed both beauty and wit. The story is modern in that it places these 14 qualities of the human in the fresh setting of the moment—big busi- ness in some of its most selfish mani- testations, a man pursuing his brother with a more gubtle weapon than the club of Cain, a girl out in the open field of opportunity comporting her- self with ability and poise and good serise. These are the elements out of 0. J. De Moll DeMol | THE LITTLE Twelfth and G Streets N.W Sole Representatives for the Steinway and W eber Duo-Arts. g ) ASHING S, e i) ULY 19, 1925—PART 2. 13 | Study of the Bnagavad-Gita. 1906.|Kipling, Rudyard. Independence.|Martin, A. W. Great Religious Teach- measures—no matter how untastefu) Vs dry BNSE-K62. ers of the East. 1911. BT-M364s.| |What TomorrowMeans to You | |they may be—must be emploved i Lutoslawski, Wincenty. The World of | MacCurdy, J. T. The Psychology of | Mathews, Shaller. Contributions of this girl is to be saved from & womax: Souls, B-L976. Emotion. BJ-M138ps. Sclence to Religion. BS-M423. ey o |hood” of " uselessness, ~frivolity an i Morse, S. L. A Map of the World of | Martin, E. D. Psychology. BI-M364. | Petrle, Sir W. M. F. Religious Life in AKE. | selfishnes: Knowledge. BGY-M3s3. Miller, H. C. The New Psychology | Anclent Egypt. BZW A-P4dr. —_— | 1t tomorrow is your birthday you Nietzsche, F*."W. Beyond %ood and| and the Preacher. BLM#13np. ~ [Simon, O. T. The Later Message of | Cancer. | exceptionally studious_and pos Evil. BE47-NG57J Moore, T. V. Dynamic Psychology.| Anne Simon. +BXS-Si56 1. 3 5 sess a retentive memory. These two Edited for School Use by Ruth Has-| Sellars, R. W. The Essentials of BI-M783d. Thorpe, Mrs. C. W. In the Path of Tomorrow's planetary dspects are attributes, in harmonious combins lup. New York: The Macmillan Co. Logie. 1817. BH-Sedbe. Seabury, 'David. Unmasking Our the Trade Winds. BU1611-T39. not directly adverse, but they do ,“A“;nn ,m,l‘); t-f[)'uu a l"rfll(.‘mk ron\lr’r AN Ei 3 .| Shearman, A. T. The Development of | Minds. BI-Sel2u Aite ehntion: dence | tionalist, and” you have an aptness A A T AN O CIOL0: | Symbolic Logle. 1906. BHS-Sh3. |Simmons, D. A. Practical Psychology. Conduct. g A aution and Drudence |for good-humored debate. = Your co Thousand of _mz .;’"f,_.' Fami. | Wenley, R. M. Stoicism and Its In- 1922. BJ-Si46p. Mrs. A C. E. Friends With |Inevitably result for any Jious | victions are, however, not very deej e he National Social Brae Book fluence. BBR-W48 Van Teslaar, J. S., ed. An Outline of | Allinson, Mrs. A. C. E. Friends T taken ander . such (@nd rather than hold your ground Baited. and - Compiled: Under the Psychornalysis. BJ-V368o. Life. BQS-Al54f. e, They do ot decry legitl |2nd bY doing 0 cause offense. Yo Supervision of Thomas = William Psychology. Weekn A. D. Paychology for Child | Cheley, ¥. H. Climbing Manward:|mato and conservative effort. = On the | §¢, “pays Willing (o vield gracefulls. - Herringshaw, author of “Promi- Wittels, Feits. Stgmund Freud, BJ.| BQS-Célse. contrary, the indications pofnt to suc il R gl s nent Men and Women of the Day.” | Adams, H. F. The Ways of the Mind. |~ W7§8s. . Councillor, psewd. The « Mastern of [cess In any such lnes of endeavor. |5l ™% ffiilce “Iy sl 3 in. B. T, and Stecher, L. I. The | * BLA-W853 Crawiey; Jobn. Reverios of & Fathior | o o . I e e e |cause or a principle, but are neves DIE SCHONSTE LENGEVITCH. By| FPeychology of the Preschool Child. | P ome willing to fight, or to suffer, for it K. M. Introduction by Richard | , BIE-B197p, Religions and Folk Lore. BPP-C858r. |presage @ prodisposition to quarrel. | Wiing to fight, or to suffer, for it Atwater >ascal Coviel. |Carus, Paul. The Soul of Man. 1891 ' hia | Davenport, F. I.” Salvaging of Ameri. | 3omeness, Jealousy and bad temper.itions ‘are s will be happ: THE QUEEN OF COORS—AND|Dearden Harold. The Doctor Looks | feancian ldesliom mamitss O | can Girlnood. Ref. BPYDXT4S. | ucif.conirol are necessars if untoward |5y S ur, reluctance to assert v SOME KINGS; The Story of Rosa| at Life. BJ-D348d. Cabot, Philip. The Sense of Immor- | Eichler, Lillian. The, New Book of |results are to be avoided Sl ane 100 east: wolng: 0o Boking! Lewis. Recorded by Mary Lawton. [ Dercum, F. X. The Physiology of| tality. BSS-CliZs. Etiquette. 2v. BQQ-Ei24 Children born tomorrow will enjo > ever to achieve trated. New York: Boni &| Mind. BJI-D447p. Comstock, W. C. A Psychical Expe- | Galloway, T. W. Sex 'and Social regardless of sex, very similar phys s I att Beln ot Liveright Edgerly, Webster. Universal Magne-| rience. 1923. BXS-C738p. Health. BPY-G130ss. |lcal advantages, and will be, so far S N 8! Max- tism. 2v. BRA-Ed3. Comstock, W. C., ¢ A Word For | Heatter, Gabriel. Come: Let Us Walk |as health is concerned, quite normal. | o eeabna Tt on it REPLENISHING JESSICA. BY Max | Forsen. Eugene. Sclerice of Being. Together. 1923. BQS-H35Tc. { More trouble can be anticipated from | gote' arors aities Oowen ednmas & Liveright. > 1923, BK-F417s. Hubbard, Eibert. A Message to Gar- |accident than from sickness. In dis-| 4705 G067 pAUrQe Bwen. COUEED) gt BRI 3 Follett, M. P. Creative Experience. Mystic Gems. BUB-| claand Other Essays. BQS-H862ma. | position and temperament they will be M Dok Aoatocd odos FRENCH CROSS-WORD = PUZZLE| " “pr.jeag. 8. i | McDermott, Owen. ~Eplgrams .xnd“dmmtlrkuh_\' Aiffeewint’ s A Thogwiil | coEaUn. Daty, drauiatier. Frederd BOOK. By Henry I2. Mills. New|preud, Sigmund. Bevond the Pleas- | Frgzer, Sir J. G. Leaves Ffom the Aphorisms. BQT-M143e. | with growing years, develop remark York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons. ure Principle. BJ-F'898b. olden Bough. BTC-F368l. { Parker, I. V OfficeEtiquette for |able strength of character and will be THE FOOD PLANTS OF THE PHIL- | Freud, Sigmund. Group Psychology | Gehring, Albert. The Religion of | Business Women. BQQ-P227 |sincere to the point of quizoticism : IPPINES. Bulletin No. 39 of the| and the Analysis of the Ego. 1922.| Thirty Great Thinkers. BR-G274r.|Sheldon, C. M. The Mere Man and |while displaying a notable aptitude | xa Government of the Philippine BJ-F8b8gr. Harrison, J. Mythology. BZQ- His Problems. BQS-Sh45m |for study and painstaking work. A [° (Copyrisht, 1925.) Islands' Department of Agricul-| Groves, . R. and G. H. Wholesome H246m. ey | girl, however, will display a stro opyTigh 25 ture and Natural Resources. Third [ Childhood. BP-G918w. The Heart of a Father. BXS-H357 | | Lendency to be sly and deceptive, with MRS Revised Bdition. Manila: Bureau | Haddock, F. C. The Personal Atmos- | Houdin!, Harry. A Magiclan Among| Huge nets attached to parachutes | weakness of resolve as an outstand of Printing. phere. 1917. BJ-H113p. the Spirits.” BXS-HS14, {and shot up in bombs are being tested |ing characteristic. Much good can) T} ail delivery PLAYS OF THE 17 WORKSHOPS: | Holmes Controlled Power. | Leighton, J. A. Religion and the Mind | by the Japunese army as a protection |be accomplished by Limely correction | have ervice by the Ge - of To 534r. 5 1 n The Strongest Man, by Elizabeth Higgins Sullivan; The Slump.Tl‘lI)' e Frederick Lansing Day; Mourner, by James Mahoney; Brotherhood, William H. Wells. New York: Brentano's DARK MAN: And Other Russian Sketches. I3y Ernest Poole. New York: The Macmillan Co. THE CASE AGAINST EVOLUTIO! By George Barry O'Toole, Ph. D. S.T.D., ete. New York: The Mac! millan Co. A HOME OF YOUR OWN. By Della Thompson Lutes, author of “The Gracious Hostess.” Illustrated. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Co. THOUGHTS 1 THE GREAT NORTHLAND: And Other Poems. By Charles Leo Abbott. Boston: The Stratford Co. THE DRUMS OF Y By J. Nicolson. Illustrated by Earl H. Reed. Chicago: Pascal Covicl, pub- lisher. IMPRISONMENT. By Bernard Shaw. Issued by the Department of Chris- tian Social Service of the National Council of the Protestant Episco- pal Churches. New York: Bren- tano's. THE,_HEALTH-CARE OF THE BABY; A Hand Book for Mothers and_ Nurses. By Louls Fischer, | M. D., author of “Infant Feeding | in Health and Disease,” etc. Fif-| teenth Edition, Completely Re-| vised. New York: Funk & Wag- nalls Co. THE NAVAL HISTORY OF THE +WORLD WAR; The Stress of Sea Power, 1915-1916, By Thomas G Frothingham, Chptain, U. S. R. With Maps and Diagrams. Cams bridge: Harvard University Press. THE FIREWOMAN. By William/ Pinkney Lawson. - New York: Boni & Liveright. SINCE LENIN DIED. By Max East- man. New York: Boni & Liveright. A GOOD M! By George F. Hum- mel. New York: Boni & Liveright. | THE LOVE COMPLEX. By Thomas Dixon, author of “The Leopard’s New York: Boni & EMPTY The Rural- Urban Dilemma. By Charles Jo- siah Galpin. New York: The Cen- tury Co. GOOD ENGLISH—THE MECHAN ICS OF COMPOSITION. By Henry Seidel Canby and John Baker Op- dycke. Illustrations by Maud and|{ Miska Petersham. Book One. York: The Macmillan C THE_YACHT -AMERICA; Together With Material From Cotemporary Records. By Winfield M. Thomp- son, William P. Stephens and Wil- 5 Swan. Foreword by John Illustrated. Boston: THE PUBLIC LIBRARY Recent accessions at the Public Li- brary and lists of recommended read- ing will appear in this column each Sunday 0900000000000 00000000000000000000000 000000000000000000000000000000000000 General Works. against enemy airplanes. ihood, and plin: 7 We: will ex- change or re- fund within '3 days after pur- chase. PARTICIPATE IN merchandise in the One rack of Light-weight Flan- nel and Twill Coats, trimmed in Summertime furs and plain tailored. Assorted sizes and colors. Special. *1 One rack of Sport Coats, heavy-weight flannel and all-wool materials. Just the coat for that trip. Sale price. American Baptist Year Book, 1924-25. Ref. AA-Am324. The Eritish Dominlons Year Book, 345 Dressy 1924.. Ref. AA-BT7d. Denmark, 1994, Ref. AADAIS. A group of our Hackett, T.T. A~ Commonplace Book. | i i The Norway Year Book, 1924. Ref. | Coats; silks, sat- AA-NS3. | 2 Our World, 1622-23 AP-OuTS. | ins and others. Pittenger. Willlam. Toasts. AQ-P68 | Special. Silk, A. K., and Fanning. C. E., comps. Tndex to Dramatic Readings. Ref | AL-Si84. Philosophy. Besint, Mrs. A. W. Hints on the| Emmons S. Smith PIANO and Furniture Co. A Remarkable Value at 3250 Many fine Player-Pianos have recently come to us in trade on the Duo-Art Reproducing Piano. These instruments are worth from $400 to $500 each. Tomorrow they go on sale at the ridicu- lously low price of $250. Any one of these Players would be a better buy than a new cheap one. Terms arranged if desired. VICTROLAS at 145 Price 000000000000 000000 $00 $6 Radium Silk Genuine Radium Silk Petticoats, in plain and fancy models. One table of Fancy Voile Peasant Blouses in all differ- ent styles and' patterns. They : sold for $2.00 and $3.00. Striped Silk One lot of the ever-popu- lar Striped Broadcloth Dresses, in the most desir- able stripes. Regular $17.00 values. 0000000600004 One lot of Silk Coats, including many Ot- toman Bengaline Coats, plain tailored and fur trimmed: mostly all blacks. $1 Hats Hats. All Washington Is Amazed at This Involving the entire $50,000.00 Stock of Ready-to-Wear that goes in this great CLEARANCE SALE—the crowds literally swamped this tremendously successful bargain event from the moment the doors opened last Thursday TO able space in this great building—TABLES, RACKS, SHOW CASES—IS OVERFLOWING WITH REAL BARGAINS. Make Your Plans—Be Here Bright and Early Monday Morning An Honest Sale With a Clear-Cut Meaning Ladies’ and Misses’ Coats $25.00 Motor Coats. - $3 Voile Blouses Silk Bengaline Coats $7.50 Trimmed Including about 100 Gage Sport All at one price Monday— 3.55 J-£ . Cunningham Co 314-16 7th St. N. Stupendous July Sale THE GREATEST OF ALL BARGAIN FEATS in wonderful, matchless and the most desirable Capital City, AT PRICES THAT STARTLED THE ENTIRE CITY AND ITS SUBURBS. Every avail- Doors Open at 9:30—Rain or Shine 0600000000000 000000000000000¢ LADIES’ AND MISSES’ POSITIVELY THE ——- 3% Sk Dresses AND ASTOUNDING Ladies” Sport Dresses $ 8 .88 Georgette Dresses Summer Dresses One rack of flannels, silks, crepes and striped silk dresses DRESS VALUE 9.88 Coats 9.88 Petticoats Summer Georgette Dresses in pastel shades and white. Lace trimmed or embroidered. EXTRA—READ 09000000000000000000000000000000200099000000000000200000000900000050000000900000000¢ 150 S“J( AND More of these popular ¢ 2'88 SILK BROADCLOTH b R $2 .88 STOUT DRESSES WHILE THEY LAST *9.83 Formerly $25.00 09420000099 Hand-embroidered and imported materials—a la- French Dresses bel in every dress. $17.00 g - M " TruHu Silk Dresses Stout Summer Dresses teed Washable Choice of the House and solld colors. Values to $20.00. Your choice of any High Priced Sum- mer Hat, regardless of original cost— ~ $5.00 88¢ Dresses 9.88 Hundreds of Stunning New Sumfher Dresses, in sizes for the larger women up to size 56. Your choice. 000000000000000000000000090000000000000000530¢00000000400000000000 06000000000 0003000000000080000000390000000000000000000000000000000000 9’.88 +00 : T he Greatest Scoop of the Season 350 Trimmed and Sport Hats Whites : 1 .7 5 Silks or Felts Values to $5.00 Colors Straws 0990000000099 0000000000000900000000%0 |