Evening Star Newspaper, September 3, 1928, Page 25

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THE FEVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C The Sidewalks of Washington RY THORNTON FISHER. Save he, “Tl shoot you, silly bird.” nk Baum is daad. but the faneles Fiddle faddle, feedle imaginative mind live to provide AUNT HET RY RORERT OVILLEN. enfoyment for the present gene- Then there was the story of the | Nauire. “Wha old woman who rode on a broom other thar '« only vesterday when 1 listensd i of O = now foalish words There was old woman who rode on a broom with a high gee. ‘oSl - : ho gee. humble . And she took her 4 old cat behind for a groom. With & bimble bamble, bum- wle Many of ne ight blush if told At we onee chitekled ovor Brow brinky. o s s A Eve winky ot devote their Chin choppy & he e Nose noppy e Cheek cherry, B e Mouth merry And ver these verses refain & popi- Jasity to be by modern writers The authors of the verses 1 have quoted ¢ nameless today, but t T works g0 marching on 10 give pleasure | children D > man who w Mumerable ather enchanting tales ildr nd their eldsrs, i1l ever forget the characteri- of the sc ow and t maa inimitady am late writ wvas in Washingt Friday an are no longer in their time foregbing. we saw have very few ine Foy (daughter illing to write t t die Foy) in the speal She told a “bed for the childre Now little children.” said Miss Foy. “1 am g ! im- going to tell vou about Little Red Rid- ith some of th have ing Hood. Little Red Riding Hood was ce boyhood. |on her way to her poor sick grand- erhaps they are silly. but they have | mother with a basket of goodies rough ¢ s It mav sur- she walked t the woods a great vou to know Meother Goose i wolf jumped out_at her and pulled 1 ane of the best solle off bath her arms. Then he pulled off 1 bite of verse the smal both her legs and then he punched her mother's knee is two eves out and left her in A pool of Bea P, mson. And now Have v to bed and sleep well M ve e An acte e playing with a w One of the cast WAs a tempera- mental fellow, easily disconcerted. At one of the theaters, during a perform- ss the words may be ance, a child began squalling. It con- t how they stick! tinyed for some time. and finally the terruption got on the nerves of the mperamental one. Unable to get his ines over, he walked lemnly to the footlights. and. in most tragic tones, said: “Ladies and gentlemen, unless 3 the play is stopped. the child cannot % word) | possibly 20 on i KEE MENTALLY FIT ropos of Good-night friend says that he was RY JOSEPH JASTROW. | Civilization follows the flag of cli- 5 i mate. All past civilizations reached he experience of heat Dros- . their highest periods under the most ration fresh in mind. though the WOR! | fayorable climatic conditions, such as e Summer is over. it is timely to | obtains in a considerable portion of ider the cost of hot weather in| these great United States today. Old erms of mental fitness. Our physiol- | glory and new glory display the same oev runs deeper, than our PeYchologY: | fiag of favorable climate. e e S s | "Climate & extendad ‘weather. "The mentally than we behave like hu. | Climate favorable to achievement may o bl Aental snergy it but a | b2 described as ene of cool but not s o E. extremely cold Winters, and Summers pecialized development of bodily en- SXtremely col nters, and Summers . and ovevs the same conditions human animal can live under different conditions; he has a range of the power to adjust ac- to climate: he can change and <bift and become acclimated. But his ife reflects the conditions of this en- “ironment. It is interesting to inquire | The rest of the story is far from der what conditions he can thrive | simple. It is likely that the mosi <t favorable temperature today is lower Ellsworth Huntington of Yale Uni- | than in former ages. because we know v ty, it an authority on this qu how tn keep warm in Winter and are - tion. He has approached the problem better housed. Also, s it true that from many sides. He took a survey the seats of anclent civilizations sucs ‘or at lepst a year of the work output Fgypt and Assyria as judged by or efficiency of about 15.000 persons. their present climate do noi fall into including factory workers in Pittsburgh | this “most favored nation” condition and in New England and in the South. Mr. Huntington found evidence that as weil 2 of boys at West Point and when thess countries supported great Annapolis, thus including & fair range | civilisations the climate was more of climete favorable than it is now. On the basic of hundreds of thou- | Climate alone is not directly respon- ands of comparisons of output With sible. It may act by way of disease the state of the weather, the conclu- | jncect pests. crops and the influence ns appeared, first, that the state of | of pad living conditions on human o barometer had littie relation 10 sioek A prolonged drought. for ex- ~fficiency (the men worked as welllampie may force people to migrate when the barometer stood high as when | famine produces misery and lawless: it feil); second. humidity affects the pec Even mday crops influence elec- rutput considerabiv: three, tempera- tionc snd weather Influences crops ire affects it moat of all . The two great forces of nature are ever The most favorable point for Physi- aperative: heredity favoring the best ral activity was in the range of tem- human stocks. and environment sup- When Man Works Best. s short period, are varied by winds and storms producing variability of temperature. Man seems to be by na- ture lazy enough to need the stimula- | tion of climate to keep him going: he gets a “kick” out of climate. erature from 55 degrees 2t night 10 niving the most favorable conditions O degrees at noon: the best condition f5r mental work was at a season of distinetly sower outside temperature. ~veraging 33 degrees. Changes in tem- perature, from day to day and season 5 season, are highly favorable to work Too warm a climate, too humid a rlimate. or too equable a climete is not conducive to energy. When these conditiore are pres- *nt all the year round—a hot, moist. ven climate, as in the tropics—men inge their energies, because they lose their nerve. We call such climates rnervating. Regions of the earth where these conditions prevail are not eon- ducive to the nighest civilization To test these conclusions Mr. Hunt- ington eonstructed an efficiency map | It remains generally true that hot of the human race on the assumpiion weather is the one condition that thst all the earth’s inbabitants were makes against efficiency. Extremes nfluenced by wenther as were this incapacitate sample of 15000 Americans. He next zation in the Arctic for many obvious ook the views of historians and geog- | reasons, but the tropics alse favor life raphers of all nationalities as to the | on an unenterprising level. Great en- civifization at all times and among | terprises require great energies and all races that sccomplished most. He | initiative, which flourish best in tem- faund that the two maps agree re- | perate zones markanly well (Copyright. 19281 BEAUTY CHAT m S —————— for fitness, bodily and mentai The one conclusion that stands out notably is that man eannot stand a large dose of humid heat and do good work. The typical American Sum- mer. as compared with a North Euro- pean Summet, is unfavorable: we pay the cost unless we vield to it by re- laxation or by seeking favored spots Th> Summer business is one of the biggest industries. It has its com- pensations; city and country workers ‘take holidays: the strenuous life lets up. Americans have a prob- iem to face in their hot Summer: ice water is the most characteristic Ameri- can beverage and is a Summer habit EDNA KENT FORBES A Summertime Lotion circles come from so many -auses. it fs best to consult a doctor if the trouble Heat spells have come. gone, 2nd ar¢ conrinues Iy 10 come again. and all through = ‘The reddish tint that is showing a' warm weather the complexion, precent in your tgack h grows browner and browner. Or WOTse. | from exposure to the sunshine: if this f it docs not protect itselfl by tanning. i5 not the case your s p may need 2 t gets ged. peels. looks and feels | iimulating tonic. Usinz ol and water Arezdful, recovers and goes through;an your hair did not affect the color the process again Prervthing used on the skin during little children. go | ad_company out | tI which. though warm and even hot for | meet.; | rould come | this iatter part of the Summer should be bleaching and healing. It won't be lang hefore well be out in Autumn riothes and then a burned skin will Jook most unbecoming. S0 once every day, and preferably around bedtime wa e face and neck and rub on a rream which is nothing but six ounces of ordinary light cleansing cream mixed well with one ounce of bicarb- anate of sods. Rub this gently over the face neck and down the back and the chest. to the end of the sunburn line Leave on as long as co nt while you do your teein and nails and other ndd jobs before bedtime During the day use this simpie 1ion—15 drops of iincture of benzoin in # quart of witch hazel. or half witch hazel and half water. The witch hazel #1f is soothing cooling. astringent the tincture is bleaching healing and it tightens the pores of the skin, an ex- cellent thing in hot weather no matter whether you need sn astringent or not In fact, T know no beiter Bummertime lotion than this Jike o use it after the skin has been well cleansed with cold cream | simays wash this off with warm soapy ater and then give the skin & quick rinse with cold water and then wet a ned of cotton with this Jotion and rub he face and neck thoroughly. A lot ot unsuspecied dirt comes, (co. whic seems odd when you think how wel cleansed the skin has been Any Iotion made wiih cucumber julce 1 & good bleach, 4 vou know and witch hazel s fine to mix with the juice 1 R G.-As long as “nougk gt 11 @énes not metter the Azy or nignt you evenmgs instead of rause the dark eirel vou maey have sluggich some of the organs of digestion. Dars Workin « cid not joning of pary of | and social status fhe «111) better things the fture prom- | Ainancisl affairs ermon for Today BY REV. JORN R. GUNN Sing, Ye Workers' Text 8ing, ve that dwell In the dust Is. xxvil9 Ye that dwell in the dust \abor. Ye that work in the dust of the mine, the shop the factory. Sing! 8ing. hecause of the improvements already achieved in the conditions inder which you work. Look back 1o the past. Compare your conditions with those of vour predecessors—the better Ye that wages you receive, the shorter hours | vou huve, the increased leisure time at | ar disposal for self-improvement and the enjoyment of home and social Emmie *2anks she makes her giris tell her ever'thing because it's her duty { to guard ‘em, but jt's just because she loves gossip. Everyday Psychology RY DR JESSE W SPROWLS Why People Gossip. The commonest things in all the world are commonly misunderstood. The inclination to gossip qualifies on both these scores. Psychology is the science of behavior Unless it has made a great mistake in observing human behavior gossiping can be considered man's principal means of adapting himself to his hu- man surroundings. Men. women and children respond alike in this one respect The reasons why people gossip are vital reasons Man has never understood mankind Individuals have never known them selves except by the comparati method. Gossiping is a ready means for making such comparisons This comparing one's self with leads directly to what the psvchoanalysts call projection a psvehological process of wishing your own fralties off on your human en- vironment. e, on vour neighbors. For gossip deals chiefly with human frail- ties in the social sense of frailty. If this were not the case. moral codes and social taboos could not find so prominent a position in the gossip complex The next big reason for gossip must surely come under the well known cate- gory of compensation. Not only do the lower classes imitate the upper classes, but they also attempt through gos- siping to drag them down to their own level, thus overcoming to some extent a feeling of inferiority. Individually considered, the weak and erring fight their own frailties by seizing every opportunity to impute them to the socially superior. In this way all gos- sipers maximize their own egos. From the community point of view, gossiping has always been 1egarded as an cvil. Fortunately this attitude is on the decline. Most people can detect the motives of the gossiper and forth- with think no more of it. From the individual point of view. gossiping has its values. In somqg cases it should be encouraged. Simeo the reasons for gossiping are vital reasons. some could not live without indulging in it. It helps them adjust themselves to their environment MOTHERS “Safely"” Lost. One mother says | are always ugly, no matter hos ! bite them off 1s urgent. | steep. |and girls that each of them owes a | that done without hands. | that a race of soft-handed, ease-loving | intelligence. The more | ascertain Fingernail Biters. There has been and still is much | eriticism of the girl who powders her { face i public, but the objections to | this practice are trivial in comparison | with those which may be urged against another common fauli—nail-biting Applying make-up so that all may see is poor taste, but it may be done in | graceful way. There is no such miti- | gating feature of the nail-biting Babit |~ The sight of a girl gnawing at her | Angernafls and tearing off shreds of [cutiele s revolting. It suggests an especially horrid form of cannibalism | Aside from the disagreeable impres- sion this habit gives the onlooker, 1t | ruins the appearance of the finger- tips and nails. The nall-biter's hands 1 | ! BY LOI J or_shapely they may be The person who indulges this un- beautiful habit seems fo have a pe- culiar type of psychology. She knows that nail-biting 15 undesirable in every | way. but thinks it can be cured b some external applieation. I receive | many letters from readers asking. “How | can 1 stop biting my nails>” The answer s, of course, “Stop hiting them." Self-control is the only solu- | tlon for this problem and no one can | practice that virtue for another. The habit of biting the nails usuaily arises in the first place from careless manicure methods that leave the cuticle ragged and the nails an un- comfortable length. Hard corners de- velop at the sides of the nails, which become rough, and the temptation to Biting. of course. makes the nails more uncom- | fortable and unsightly and this leads to still more biting and gnawing Every nafl-biter should make a point of having a thorough manicure once a week. This may be done at home. but there is psychologleal value in having a professional treatment. One is loath white | S LEEDS. to ruin the effect of a manicure for which one has paid a good price. Before anything is done fo the nails | the fingertips must be soaked in warm, | soapy water for several minutes. Just after washing the dishes or rubbing out some lingerie Is & good time to have the manicure. since one may Gently push | then omit the soaking. down the cuticle at the base of the nail. File the free end. being sure to round off the sharp corners at the sides. Clean under the nail. File the edges smooth with a fine emery board Massage a little cocoa butter into the | | hard corners, if there are any. Nail-biting is usually referred to as | nervous habit, It is a form of fidget- ing. like tapping one’s toe on the floor | or drumming with the fingers annoying habits represent a leakage of energv. It is usually the thin. run- down type of person, who can Il afford such a loss of energy. who indulges in nafl-biting and fidgeting. The remedy involves building up of the general health as well as exercising self-control in order.to cultivate greater poise. (Conyright. 1998 ()LIR CH[LDREN By Angelo Patri Labor Day Of all the holidays that dot the year, Labor day means least to the children. To them labor fs scarcely more than a word. The men who march through the streets carrying banners, paraders who wear no gor- geous uniforms but the plain dress of | the workers. have not much about them to capture the imagination of the voungsters, Yet the workers, all those Who earn their living with their hands. deserve the regard, the respect and the cheers of these very children. We teachers and parents must teach our children to know and appreciate hard work by affording opportun | for it. by applauding it. by interpreting have sailed | it. Columbus could not across the Atlantic without the help of hard-handed sailors. It required muscle and skill and the will to work to establish this country. It will al- ways require labor. So long as it en- dures. the world must carry on, up- held by the hands of its workers Al children must be work They are born with the in- stinctive desire to do things. Instead of directing the activity we hush it to Instead of teaching the boys contribution to the work of the world we teach them to look for an easy way to live—as little work as possible—and 1 tell you people cannot endure. Hands were be | stowed upon men in order that they might 1ift themselves above the level of the animal Hands feed the native skillful the hand the keener the intellect behind it trained to | | During the pre-adolescent and ado- lescent vears. the schools and the homes must. as far as possible. teach and insist upon the children’s learning some kind of hand work. s There is a sort of henest, lustifiable worthy pride that one takes in the work of his hands that nothing else can bring. depths of the spirit and meet there an answering joy that sets the soul asinging I own a chest of drawers built by a man named Allen of Crown Point. Does that combination of names sav anything to you? That chest is one of | the most beautiful, simple. honest, soul-satisfying pieces of work I have ever seen. vho built 1t. A little Italian gardener man bullt a terrace in my garden and Oh' the beauty of its earth and tones! Simple, brown earth and stones, And a schoolboy made and set upon the terrace a little statue of St. Francis. one made by his own | hands and lo. that little garden place has become a cathedral. This is Labor day. As the fags fiv | and the bands play. and the steady | faced men march by. raise a cheer. | | They are those who have built the | homes and established the prosperity | of this land. They are those who have brought beauty and the spirituality of | Interpret the | beauty to our homes. | message of Labor day to the children | and teach them to earn a place in fts sturdy parade (Copvrizht. 1928, Mr. Patri will give persenal aitention to inauiries from parents and school teachers on the care and dsvelapmeni of children | Write him_ in care of this naper. anciosing Samped. Addressed snvelape for reple Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELI Marries for & Job. | Women look with contempt for the | most part on the man who marries a girl to secu e a job with the girl's fath- er. They also Took with a sort of con- tempt on the man who marries to make his position secure with the parent of his wife Just why this Is = not difficult to A woman admires and re- speciz the man who makes his own way. She usually finds it hard to re- |spect a man who has been too weak to make his own wayv. This feeling or instinct probably dates back to primi- In order to teach my children what | tive times. to do or say in case they get lost we played they were lost and 1 was the nice policeman. 1 would come along swinging my billie and find them cry- ing. And. oh' how they could cry! “Why little girl. what is the matter?”| through his life he ix both employe | aple emplove. T want | and retainer. en very | set that fact “Boo. Boo! I'm all losted! my mama!” (With sometimes amusing variations) “Well, well, that isn't so bad. What is your name and where do you live?” “My name is An- nabelle T. Wiison and 1 live at 230 West Grand _avenue. Los Angeles. California!” How they did learn to rattle off. even the little 3-year-old! There can be no civili- | Then T would carry the lost child home | on my back if she had recited her les- son correctly THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, September 4. Benefic aspects will dominate to- morrow, according to astrology. which reads in the horoscope much promise for husiness The evening <hould be given over to | plans rather than to any actual work it is advised, but during the morning and afternoon should be pushed Merchants and manufacturers should benefit greatly through organization at [ this time, when co-operation is most effective Leaders of men. especially those who | hold public office of any sort, are mar velously well directed while this con | figuration prevails While the stars appear (o smile on all initiative, it is well to postpone | financial arrangements. i The planetary government is not auspicious for the ambitions of women who may be inclined to extreme views on all matters affected by majority opinions Men who woo under this direction of the stars may be more or less actu- ated by mercenary motives, the seers declare Both men and women should find the rule of the stars stimulating and even inspiring. for astrologers foretell great achievements within the next few months Science 18 to perform miracles, not only in the material but in the occult life. and the generally superior cireum- | world, it is prognosticated stances under which you work and live Never has thelr been & time when the | workers of the world commanded the respect and consideration they recelve todey. Never has there been a time when they had so many vAnLages. so many con ris and luxuries and shared 50 largely the better things of life 8ing. because & yet brighter day I8 dawning in the world of labor Great as are the improvements already achieved in labor conditions, there are | still greater improvements coming, still | safer and more wholcsome working con ditions, still shorter hours and more | treedom for recreation and for cultural | up 1o their possibilities | should be easier than usual in many | ehannels, Children horn on that day probably umu- | Iating wealth and for administering Both hoys and girls are lkely o have (he much-coveted and social pursuits, & still larger par ticipation s industrial control. a stiil mars equitable share of the product of | industry, & generaily higner economic These are some of iues the labor world (Copyright. {gan) | tained by extraordinary unfolding of the spiritual | enjoy extraordinary prosperity will be_especially fortunate if they live | Self-expression Many martiages of special interest are presaged, and girls will discover that old-fashioned romance again pre- vails it s prophesied, for the prince- |ed upon him and-the-pauper condition will be often reversed 50 that princesses wed poor sultors. | mother, s | matters of all SOTS| o1 the expense of the mother of our | wite or hushand is quite proper | 15 %0 funny about a mother-in-law? Or |whom he had a | Rrudge. seated as a passenger | argument | Smith's verbal vituperation The man that marries for a_job may make an amigble. equable mate. His acceptance of the favor of employ- ment obligates him to both his wife and her father, his employer, All His wife can seldom ‘or- nor ean she allow him to forget it On the face of it, It seems falr enough that the husband shall work for his father-in-law if he is capable and suitable for the position. Usually this is not the case. It is commonly a matter of making a job for the son- in-law so that he may be pald for some sort of work ABETH ALLEN. ticated manner, and declare: “Nobody cares how A man earns his money. as long as he earns it honestly.” That is true to limited extent. The man does care. because he is patronized all of his life. His wife cares because she real- izes that the limit of her husband's pos- sibilities Is within the power of her father to set In fairness to women. not all of them realize the ulteror motive of courting males. Misrepresentation of position and income is not uncommon, and then when the denouement js completed. both wife and her family realize that helping the husband helps them to “save their faces” oo We are not sophisticated enough to believe that a capable emplove makes a suitable husband for the employer's | daughter. nor that an eligible young | man will prove himself to be a valu- We do believe that young women should know more of their intendants’ business positions, possibllities, and aspirations than a great many of them do, When a man marries for a job he reveals a lack of self-respect as well as an admission of inability to cope with his fellow men. There are extenuating circumstances. it is true, but there are | | also other men. A comparison may be of real assistance. WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO RY MEHRAN We all have the highest respect for No one dares to ridicule her We wouldn't stand for it And yet we all laugh at the mother- of [ in-law “despite the fact that she s somebody's mother. There must be ‘a reason for this queer situation. We respect and revere our own mothers. but an occasional jest What it the extreme seriousness of the ituation that is so humorous? Where there is so much smoke there Everyday Law Cases Is Carrier Liable When Its Em- ploye Assanlts Passenger? BY THE COUNSELLOR { When Henry Smith, brakeman for the A. R.T. Rallroad, walked through the train he noticed Tom Carrol, Against violent personal Smith could not control his anger and he approached Carrol looking for an The latter, however, ignored Aroused further at Carrol's silence, Smith launch- {ed an attack with the result that Carrol | | was badly beaten in the fight that ensued Carrol complained to the rallroad | company and ssked that he be compen- sated for the injurles Smith had inflict- The company denied liability, stating that Smith was not act- Beauty of the body having been at- | Carrol then instituted suit against the Americans, there will be and intellectual, it is foretold Persons whose birth date it is have the augury of a year in which they will have unusual talent for & abllity to prosper In all circumstances Writers company The court held that distinet legal principle was applicable to carriers of passengers and held the company liable stating Tt is generally held that where any rvant or agent of the carrier while ged In carrying out the carrier's duty of transportation assaults & passenger, or otherwise Infringes the right of pro- tection to which he Is entitled, the carrier 1 liable, irrespective of whether the servant or the agent in the thing done was acting for the carrler or for hix own purposes. unless the assault was Justified by some act of the passenger.” K. THOMSON. | must be some fire. The great popular- ity of the mother-in-law joke prove: how unpopular the really 1s way By virtue of her age and position the | mather-in-law is a rather dignified per- son. And a joke at the expense of dig- | nity 1s always humorous. especially if the dignity and power that go with it are used AGAINSL us It is a well known fact that the mother-in-law is very hard to please. | She is natyrally prejudiced in favor of her own children and' no one is good enough for her James or Jane. Moth- | ers are especially partial to their sons. This makes it hard for the daughter~ in-law. No matter what the younger woman does, it is not old-fashioned enough to suit the woman of another | | generation. A tenseness of feeling, if not_open conflict, is fnevitable The joke is the safest means of satis- I tying the desire to get even. the most harmless outlet for the pent-up feel- | ing_of repartee. The mother-in-law joke is popular for the same reason that a joke at the expense of the teacher is popular with school children. Both have a dignity and authority that rankle | (Convright. 1928, Blackberry Layer Cake. Cream together one-third cup short- ening and one cup sugar. When well blended add two eggs and beat until | mooth. Stir In two-thirds cup of milk {and two cups of cake flour, sifted with | | ing In the scope of his employment when | (W0 and one-half teaspoons baking pow- | he committed the assault and battery [ der. and one-fourth teaspoon salt. When thoroughly mixed pour the mixture in- [to two greased layer cake pans and baks In & hot oven 400 degrees -for |12 to 15 minutes. Cool and spread with | Alling just before serving [ For the filling, whip one eup of {cream until stiff” Fold In three table- - | $poons powdered sugar and one cup of ripe, sweet blackberries that have heen washed and thoroughly drained Prices realized an Switt & Company calos of careass heef In Washington. D € for wask snding ‘lI\l dn September | 19am, A0 nh!nmnnlhh\& A, aneed from 1" nis 1o M cents per pound and ed 1300 cents per pound. —Advertl These | 1t seems to spring to the | It is exactly like the man | Some women look at this in a sophis- ' mother-in-law | We usually poke fun at those | whom we cannot reach in any other | FEATURES,S WoopwArD & 1.0THROP DOWN STAIRS STORE Silk Frocks $ 1 6 .50 New Femininities in the Autumn Mode Scranton Lace Panels Ruffies, circular and pleated ; . In a varietv of at- drapes, uneven hemlines tractive designs, fin- ished with =calloped edges <wathed hiplines. flares, tiers and laces add the femininity and deep fringe. 36-inch to A3-inch widthe; 214 and 214 yard lengths, that is <o prevalent in these \utumn frocks Geargettes, flat crepes and satine are shown in the new shades Other Panels $1 and $1.95 0.inch to 45-inch widths i The new independ ence hlue is particularly im- portant. Sizes 14 to 44 DOWN 3TAIRZ STORE DOWN STATRE STORS. Specially Priced in Semi-Annual Selling II-Wool Double Blankets Special s7'75 Pair These excellent quality wool blankets are shown in attractive rose, blue, orchid. green, gray, tan, red and black plai Fdges bound with =ateen 66 80 Part-Wool Blankets Special, $3.25 pair 70 80 Part-Wool Blankets Special, $4.50 pair DOWN ITAMRE ZTORE Semi-Annual Selling Take Advantage of These Exceptional Prices Tomorrow Metal Bridge and Junior Lamp Standards, special, %47 You may select from several attractive stvles in the prefer English and Empire finishes. Stur comple with wire and socket Colonial Candle-Effect Bridge Standards, Special, $1.25 Attractive twisted shafts in antique finish Lamp Shades—Specially Priced Pleated Silk Shades Pleated Parchment Shades Junior $6.75 Bridge $3.75 Bridge 75¢ Junior $1.25 Georgette Bed Lights, Special, $1.95 s5:0s Axminster Rugs, $247 These all-wool, Tong-wearing rugs are well known for desirable designs and colarings while the assortment lasts their Make a selection tomorrow Seamless Axminster Rugs, Special, $34.75 Slight “Irregulars” of Higher-Priced Grades Scatter-Size Axminsters 2754 §3.25 Rugs Oval Braided Chenille Rugs . 25150 $9.50 Size DOWN STAIRS STORK

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