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New Spring Clothes Designed in Par Latest Masculine Mode Supported by Americans BY SYLVESTRE DORIAN, Director of the Paris Fashion Service. The writers of the Parls Fashion S 1ce, Wl ite as_contribut Series of " articles, % -Drecoll, Bruye; e, Loulsebouianssr, HUDErt, Paule: adoc, Martial et Armand, dA eiu. yolene, Patou, Molyneux, Le Monnier, parelll, aeey Sfithasand iclls Paray. PARIS, March 27. IVELY variety will be a feature of the fashions worn in France this Spring and Summer. At Chanel’s, Augustabernard’s, Charlotte| Revyl's and Schiaparelli's I have ‘teen shown designs of the clothes be- , ing ordered by their smartest clientele ; and these run a wide gamut of styles ir material, color and cut. Informality ! will abound in a time when it should be more appreciated than ever. All stiffness and dullness have departed. Fullness at the back returns, achieved by a number of novel methods; a score of pleated details are given wide f wvor, while peplums, tunics, ruched hem- lines, petticoats, flounces, ruffles, tiers which it would be emphasizing the ob- vious to call attention to. Molyneux, one of the most conserva- tive minds in the dressmaking world, is emphasizing this note and suggesting its appropriateness for more than one reason in these troublous times. He is displaying a new town coat that is belted, with four pockets and conserva- tively cut revers. Skirts of suits are pleated or wrapped to one side, jackets have double-breast- ed ‘fastenings and revers and padded | shoulders. Neat street fashions have |always been_ thoroughly appreciated in America and this fashion may be ex- pected to influence women in the United | States—square lines, seamed details, notched treatments on the front of the suit jacket, straight coats, but none of | these features have any connection with the ungraceful mannishness of such clothes as some women have re- cently been making a pathetically vain effort to popularize in America, * K x X ‘HE tailors in Paris who have to make masculine clothes for special customers are themselves half ashamed and boas all play their parts in making | the fashion panorama more animated | and decorative than it has been for several seasons. Dull and shmy surface fabrics are both sponsored in enough of the big-| gest houses to make them equally smart for the season that is just get- ting under way and nobody may say one has better standing than the other. There are gay prints and there are| solid colors; take whichever pleases you. of these models, and when I called re- | cently on one, he told me he always| | tried to keep his name out of these| creations, er work for normal women.” But when the depression sat too heavily on him, he 1(#::(\! to advertise, ffle” went on all his designs. And as the result of his satisfied cus- he has an exclusive clientele of | so his usual tome: wome He is of uxo:u many Parisians | practicing a strange “metier.” Anoth- er is the modiste m tae Rue Reaumur, | who has a big following of octogenarian ladies, for whom she must year after | year copy hats first designed for their wearers in 1870 and 1880. Her shop window is bare, with only a few faded artificial flowers in a Saxe vase, while a heavy velvet curtain hides the inside from passers-by. This business was in- ited by the Woman now running it, * % x OME of the patterned fabrics are crepe de chine and washable silks, but new light-weight crepes have ap- peared and these will doubtless be very popular. Organdie may be had both plain and patterned; both checked and striped organdies flourishing at Helen Rubert's. Some idea of the range of materials that will be fashionable for | & evening wear can be drawn from the fact crepes and taffetas will be em- ployed for about the same number of models in several of the special collec- tions for Prench women that are be- ing created by the designers whose salons I haye visited. Chanel shows one neat fi general city runabout wear green silk crepe with a double ru white organdie around the neck a the wrists. This Is worn with a ik hat entirely of white organdie. designer revives braid trimming, has not been much seen of lat Another successful house is a navy blue wool voile with white braid mounted on chiffon trimming the collar. Here the hat matches, being of the n fabric trimmed in white braid. Navy and white recur time and time again in this collection, and they are invariably used in fresh and distin- guished ways, despite the recent vogue for this combination, after which every body felt resourcefulness had been ex- hausted for many years to come. * Kk ok Tfl! mannish modes, of which there 1% has been much talk in America | Tecently, have never had the sanction | Wéight and Health. of Paris and certainly did not have their origin here. The mode, viewed as ‘HERE®are seven essentials to correct weight and perfect health—alr, a whole, is exquisitely feminine, and| with the exception of several tailors Wwho have always had a very special clientele of masculine women, for whom | water, food, exercise, cleanliness, rest v.h must crenhe extremely mannish | and relaxation. No one of these should be neglected. Special breathing exer- cises and systematic water drinking are stressed. Also the making up of one's 1s, e character of Sotber, heo not Tt challenged. ‘Tallored clothes mind with intent not to cheat oneself by breaking training and inds nx in for street wear are & wide difference | fattening food every once in.a Wi -grandmother all spent their lives resurrecting antiquated millinery shapes indulge this expensive taste. 1933.) Glittering Fabrics. PARIS, March 27. \IOET fascinating spangled and glit- | abrics are considered among | nartest new materials. Sequins in the weaves of Summer wools, rge stones are sprinkled over eve- silks. The interwoven spangle that glittres came as a complete surprise. It is not sewn on, but carefully placed between two very delicate layers of smooth voile. Chanel uses simple flat wool voiles through the meshes of which sparkle | these tiny flat, brilliant disks. Lelong | revives gold painted dots on black silken tulle for evening. "ghown by some of the best couturiers, o but between a taflored suit and a mas- Y-guline one there is “because I would much rath- | b 10 te | who want to be dressed like men. | (o " gect ooyt Chave most often e mother and grandmother and | for ladies who insisted on sticking to| the same old shape and could afford to | | | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., APRIL 193 2—"”ART THREE 1S Left, an evening dress of white ridged cloque crepe with a square decol- letage both back and front. Flowers of dull white mousseline are an effective trimming. Right, an afternoon dress of black silk mousseline trimmed with black lace and worn with & matching hat. Hat Shapes Are Standard; Small Ones Still Popular BY MME. ROSE VALOIS. PARIS, March 27. HE only thing that can be new in millinery is the modern manner of reviving the old, and :hh:;ver yuu hear of ne‘fi know very wel people are only talklnc of something i‘;u have seen for years upon years, t that some one has perhaps found a fresh way of wearing so that it bears a more evident relationship to the times. How many hat shapes are there? Few when you really come_to consider them: the sailor, turban, be- , cloche, wide-brimmed, canotier,— still, out of these limits the new hat styles must be created year upon year, and you may not be surprised to hear that our resourcefulness is sometimes dangerously near an end. Each modiste has some favorite shape that occupies the place of honor in a collection. Some will make most- ly turbans, others cloche-shaped mod- els, or some other style that predomi- nates in the showing; for me it is the beret, e shape that has been popular for many seasons and still has as many possibilities as in the beginning. One beret, while old, is undeniably new. The falling movement over the | eyebrow of & creation in black picot brings into charming visibility the fancy trimming in flat lacquered ostrich. * K x % 'HE small hat remains and its vogue is nowhere near the end. But freshness must characterize the manner in which the hats are worn and like- wise their trimming, These are the given millinery distinction. The sud- | den glimpse of an unexpected detail that still is not flamboyant nor con- spicuous is the most charming trim- ming a hat can have. Whatever other | hats most often have for trimming is | precisely what you should make it a| rule not to have on yours. As soon as the first robin has chirped | you just know flowers are going to run rampant on hats everywhere; as soon as the first frost gives tang to the air, you may be sure feathers will be equally abundant. Fight against this ‘tommonplace mode, which is not mode | at all. If you can make something of | feathers or fur that will look good in Spring it will look all the more distin- guished. Do not be afraid of original- ity, for that is exactly what the buyers of original models in Paris pay the the biggest prices for. If they were | getting coples they would not pay nearly | so much. Why then do you prize the | less valuable and favor it over the more | | valuable? | Matched accessories are now a threadbare resource for fashionably | inclined women. Sets have been over- done. It is far smarter to be able to assemble different things that were not made together and unite them with | such artful and elegant taste that they end up by looking better together than it they had been conceived and exe- cuted by the same manufacturer. * * x % Tlm Oriental note is having big suc- cess. Turbans in the Oriental manner are being ordered by a number of clients for early Spring wear; these may be in any one of a great variety of types, for, as any book showing il- lustrations of the various turban-forms worn in the East will show you, these run into the hundreds actually. Yedda and crinol are two new straws that have been sponsored by several rominent Parisian society ladies and are being shown® in various salons. Brocades feature Persian, ‘Turkish and Arabian designs. The col- ors employed in these lands are corre- spondingly popular; lacquer red, and its sister-shade, tomato red, turquoise and various mysterious blues, black important of all. The latest and cost- liest model is worth nothing beside the most inexpensive and old one, if the one does not look good on you and the second does. There should be no woman who does not have firm ideas s to what flatters her and what does not. Every hat you ever should have taught you a priceless les- son. Once a client told me of a hat she had paid a big ice for but had worn only once. “Still,” she m - got more service and more satisf: out of that hat than any other I ever owned, because I know now that what- ever shape I ought to wear on my head, it is not that one, and perfect dressing ‘consists chiefly in knowing what not to_wear.” She was not far from right. If a hat is becoming, with something fresh and distinctive about it, however small or slight, and worn individually, it will be smart. (Copyright. 1933.) Healthy Hair. IT is very important to prepare the hair for the permanent by getting it into the best possible condition, "ake as healthy a head of hair to the scene of the operation as possible, and with the new and improved methods of per- manent waving you will be assured of success. The waved coiffure cannot fail to be lovely. Short hair, in large measure, has been | a menace to the shining, beautifully groomed head, Many women, after having their hair bobbed, laid their hair brushes away. This was unfortu- nete, for brushing is very important in the care of the hair, We should not go to bed with dirt on our faces, and we should not go to bed with-dust on our hair, hrmgla his conc If you were win a prize you would frequently with a good stiff brush. His cha.ryxgeg of beinlg judg}eld a reu:l beauty would be you achieve the best mts with nwlglttle of bril- liantine, or some sort of rinse. It is the good stiff brush that should be called upon to do its work. Natural Beauty. WOMEN no longer use thick layers ot cream and power to achieve the effect of beauty. It is beauty itself that we are after—the natural perfec- tion of the complexion that we are | seeking and finding. ‘Whipping up the circulation is looked upon now as one of the best means of achieving this end, and it is done thmugh ‘beauty masks. ks are as old as beauty itself. Fair Egyptians concocted masks of clay and herbs as one of their most secret beauty treatments. And, in the pres- ent day, the making of the mask is one of the beauticians’ best secrets. In the dressing rooms of the success- ful stars of the theater it is used be- fore going on the stage to bring out all the mmu':l beauty of the hu. Just as in the theater long ago public does not ue when the actress cnmu the stage is na.‘ beautiful woman, treuh young and lovely. Horses Deserted in Poland. Farmers in Poland are getting rid of their horses to stop the cost of feeding them. In one district not far from Warsaw a horse was sold for 50 cents. In another place one was given in ex- change for a man's cap. Sometimes horses whose owners hdve failed to sell are deserted in market places, Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Taft| Celebrate Golden Wedding | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Watters Taft of New York, surrounded by a group of members of their family and intimate friends, celebrated their golden wedding iversary at the Greenbrier, White Surphur Springs, last week. Among, hundreds of messages of congratulation | received were a cablegram from the Holy Father at Rome, sending his blessing, and a letter of congratulation from Cardinal Hayes. At a dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. Taft at the Greenbrier in honor of the anniversary the place cards were replicas of their wedding invitations, made from the original plate engraved banked yellow Pernet roses, jonquils, yellow pansies and white lilacs, and the dinner was served from a gold service rovided by the Greenbrier Hotel. A autiful ornamented wedding cake was made for the cccasion by the Green- brier chef. ‘The dinner guests, most of whom joined Mr. and Mrs. Taft here for the week, were Mr. and Mrs. Walbridge S. Taft and Mr. and Mrs. William Howard Taft, 2d, of New York, Mr. Horace Taft of Watertown, Conn.; Mr. Lorga R. Johnston, Mr. George W. Wickersham, former Attorney General of the United States, and Mrs. Wickersham, Mrs. Hernand Behn, Mrs. Thomas T. Gaunt, Mr. James Speyer and Mr. and Mrs. W. Crawford of New York, and Miss Alice Gassaway. Alice Gassaway. Sacred Heart Card Party Carries Amusing Features ‘The annual Spring card party of the Sacred Heart parish will be one of the most successful events of and is sponsored by the League of the Sacred Heart. A novel scheme of dec- orations will transform the parish hall into a garden of beauty and color. In addition to the card party, plans also call for the amusing and alluring game of bingo. Those in charge of the events are: Tickets, Miss Marguerite McDonough; re ents, Mrs. George Davies; dec- orations, Miss Marjorie Emery; arrange- ments, Mrs. W. J. Dante; tailies, Miss Kathryn Connor; bingo, Miss Frances McDonald; hostesses, Mrs. Wilfred , and patronesses, Miss Bessie o Among the patrons and patronesses Mme. Mary,the Ambassador of Bra- 21, the Ambassador of Japan and Mme. Debuchi, Mme. von Priitwits and Gafl- ron, the Ambassador of Spain and Mme. de Cardenas, Dr. Leonide Pitimac, Min- ister of Yugoslavia; Mme. Claudel Right Rev. Msgr. P, C. Gavan, Miss Edith Branson, Mrs. Wilfred Burgan, Miss Blanche Cooksey, Mr. John W. Crowe, Miss Bessie Dodson, Miss Mary Ellery, Miss Mary Faherty, Miss Margaret Feeny, Mrs. Louis P. Gatti, Mrs. Joseph E. Gelr, Mrs. R. T. Holden, Mrs. J. J. Hol- loran, Mrs. M. E. Horton, Mrs. Johanna Miss_Elizabeth McDonald, Miss Frances McDonald, Miss Josephine Mc- Donald, Miss Marie McDonald, Mrs livan, Mr. W. Warren ‘Taltavull, Miss Vemniu H Wnnon Mrs. Ida V. War- White, Miss Helena B. Mcuughun Mu. John Cammack, Mrs. George J. May, Mrs. Franeis Miller, Mrs. Buxh P. Smyth, Mrs. Daniel Con- nor, Mr. E. T. Goodman and Mr. Ben Hundley. Mrs. John Ladd Hostess To Child Study Club Mrs, John Gardner Ladd of Lowell street will entertain the members of the Wesley Heights Child Study Club Tuesday, when her assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Charles C. Glger and Mrs. H. Laurie Garrett. The speaker of the evening will be Miss Ann Shumaker, editor of Progre-lve Education, whoue mbjecc will be “Children’s County Agent George Bates of Blair, Nebr,, advises giving cod liver oil to hens for bufld!ng resistance, strengthening T Conquering Contract Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the greatest living contract and auction player. He was captain of the remowned “Four Horsemen” team and has won 24 national championships since 1924. Opening Bid of Three No Trumps. HIS bid, as I use it, is very rare. niche in the collection and bridges a small but important gap in a highly efficient manner. You have probably remarked that I advise the bid of two no trumps on the hands which, in some other systems, would be opened at three no trumps. This apparent un- derbid, though I do not_consider it such, allews a mild slam try to be made without Jjeopardizing game contracts. If I heve succeeded in making the two its responses and rebids clear to you, will In all like- {\;“ood have fore- P. Hal Sims. hands containing game jn no trumps | and requiring very little from the part- | ner to make a slam. They are tre- mendously powerful, fully protected hands which in most systems would call for an immediate forcing bid in a suit. In fact, you may call them “short-suited two bids” if you keep in mind that Sims “two bids” are of quite different constitution. The require- ments are: 1. Nine sure tricks in no trumps, whatever the lead. 2. Slam virtually certain if the part- ner holds either two cards each as good as a king in a short-suited hand, or a five-card_suit headed by the queen. Should the latter holding be in a suit which the opening hand cannot bring Nevertheless, it occupies its own® no trump bid and with short-suited | over By P. HAL SIMS into no trump play, the hand must, nevertheless, be safe in four no trumps or in a game bid in that suit. An exlmplg ‘would be: DAQIxX R X243 cLAK'Q Plainly a small slam is a certainty if partner holds the king of diamonds| and the ace of spades, even if all suits are numerically equal in both hands, so that the small heart cannot be| thrown off. Responding Hand Must Bid Any Five-Card Suit to the Queen. Should partner hold nva hearts to the queen, the psZs bids will be four hearts, six nc wumps, pass. There will be the diamond finesse for a siam; while if he holds also four clubs to the jack or four spades to the ten and the heart suit breaks, the diamonds can be discarded without risking a finesse. ‘With such a holding as . x DLAQIX LT o CLAKQ —a heart bid by the partner would be a danger for no trump slam pur- poses, since the suit might be blocked. I would, therefore, sign off with four no trumps. The partner should bid five hearts wnh nothing else in his hand, from “sign-off” "the.suit 1 block: play. This you should pass. If the partner holds a king outside his heart suit, he can safely bid six no trumps our four no trump sign-off. danger of a blocked suit 1s a real menace with this rare type of hand, and must be taken into 'consld- eration when the opening bid if a suit lacks a small card. Sp. KQJ Hts. A K x s. AKQ His. AK are both only two no ; the former needs a trick in dummy to de- liver game; the latter needs from the partner two of the top three-club honors for & slam and is not even safe for game if the opponents open hearts and have two club tricks, unless dumaly’ peswifies an eventual third stopper in (Copyright, 1033.) Engagements Interesting In Washington and Virginia The engagement of Miss Grace Darling Ely, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles R. Ely of Kendall Green, Washington, to Mr. Aaron Daniel Studybaker of Pittsburgh has been announced. Miss Ely was graduated from Colum- bia University and for the past six years has been associated with the University of Pittsburgh as art and fashion consultant in the Research Burelu for Retail Training. baker is the son of Mrs. Study] b .!ohn o. Btutvatlur of Dayton, Ohio. The Rev. and Mrs, Robert ‘Upshur Brooking. of Loretto, Essex County, Va., announce the engagement and ap- groac marriage of their daughter, osa Osburn, fo Mr. Charles Robert Buhrer of Cornwall, England. Miss Brooking has been teaching for several years in The International School of Yokohama, Japan. She attended the Wilson Teachers’ College in this city and taught several years in the Wash- ington schools before going to Japan. Mr. Buhrer is with the Rising Sun Petroleum Co., Ltd., in Japsn. The marriage will take place April 17 in the English Church in Yoko- hama, the ceremony being performed by Bishop Heaslett of the English Church and the bride’s uncle, the Rev. James J. Chapman. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Wood Roger, cousins of Miss Brooking, are giving her a reception after the ceremony. Mrs. Effie Underwood announces the engagement of her daughter, Louise Mehan, to Mr. John Vernon White. ghflh and increasing hatchability of s, ‘The wedding is scheduled to take place the latter part of May. Secretary and Mrs. Roper Hosts at University Club| M ‘The secreury of Commeru and Mrs. Daniel C. among the many mummuu dlmur parties at the Um\ersny Club Thursday evening of this week prect Mr. Clifford K. Berryman’s chalk talk and will preside at the table at which Mr. and Mrs, Berryman will ests of honor. Mr. Berryman, who willbe introduced by the chairman of the Ent Committee, Mr. Lewis Lofton Money- way, will talk on “Presidential Candi- sity Club, He is and delightful audience full of ‘The pre ecutive Committee, the members which, besides the chairman, Moneyway, include Mr. James Oliver Murdock and Mr. Albert E. Stephan. Weddings Interesting in Washington Society Mrs. Bertha K. Scharf of this city, announces the marriage of her daughter, Elise Augusta, to Ensign George Edward Peekham, U. S. N., Saturday, March 11, in Tiajuana, Mexico. Ensign and Mrs. Peckham will be at home in Long Beach, Calif., while the former's lhlp is at that pom Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Blackburn announce the marriage of their daugh- ter, Dorothy Louise, to Mr. Daniel Bryan | Hull, Wednesday, March 22, 1933. L R T T Women have been elected mayors in seven municipalities in Spain recently. The difference is | Musicale and Reception For Hildegarde Hamilton Miss Margaret Louise O'Brien enter- tained at a musicale and reception for Miss Hildegarde Hamilton, the artitst, | whose work is well known in Washing- ton and who has gone to New York to hang her paintings at the Woman's University Club, where they will be on exhibition during April. | Mr. Macgregor Brown, who sang with |Miss O'Brien at the Carlton tea for ‘vammoom.-howqm program at Miss O'Brien's musicale. Miss Grace Powell, the violinist, played & number of l:lecnnm and was assisted by Mr. and Mr. Victor Neal. Dr. Ambmse Fahy and Maj. Hudgins read from their own noems. Miss O'Brien’s drawing rooms werc crowded, and among her guests were | Mme. Uvnu. Darve, Mrs. Kendrick | Phillips, Dr. and Mrs. Prancis Wlll!!. Mme. Coutinho and Mrs. Richar Others there tncluded lllll Beuy Hartland, Miss Do Jones, Mrs. George Walker, Mn Archibald unne. Mr. Willlam E. Huntington, Mrs. Bridges, Representative Patrick Henry Drewery, Miss Clara Wellham, M. Um- berto Cerello, Mrs. Crosby, Mme. Ame- lia Conti, M. Arnaldo Berenguer, Mrs. Howard Livingston Bishop, Mrs. Lyman Nebeker, Mrs. J. Fairfleld Carpenter, Miss Margaret Mansfleld, Mre. Nelle Wiggins, Miss Therese McDavid, Mme. Suzanne Laurent, Mr. Randolph Ient, Mr. Clyde Harold Wortham, l.'u genia Burch, Mrs. Munn, Mrs. Phelps, Miss Mae Phelps, Dr. ld!'h Cole, Mrs. Arthur O'Brien McCrone, Mr. F. C. Poisson and others. Church Soaality Benefit Dinner Thursday Evening The Sodality of St. James' Catholic Church, Mount Rainier, Md., will give their arnual benefit supper in the au- ditorium of the church, Thirty-seventh meez and Rhode Island avenue, Thurs- %" delicious_chicken supper will be served from 4:30 to 8:30 o'clock p.m. and the proceeds will be turned into t! fund being raized to relieve the in. ebtedness on the church and school. ty A r h cb:lmm of the supper be assisted by Mrs. Grace E. Frillers, Mrs, Daniel A Campbell, Miss Bermrllne semu. Mrs. E. M. Edwards, Mary Roland, Mrs. Paul Hysan, Mrs Archie B. Fletcher, Mrs, Octa M. Casey, Mrs. Margaret Fa . Marie Murray, Mrs. Julia Wight, Mrs. Frances Mutchler, Mrs, H. T. Glynn, Mrs, John Messinger, Mrs. Letitia Plunier, Misses Catherine and *| Ester Magil, Mrs. Thomas E. Graves, Mrs. Edward Flynn, Miss Rose Weser, Mrs. Juhn Vlol Davis, Mrs. W. .Y Carbe and Mrs. Ruth E. Martin. 'l‘he Rev. R. Cotter Fitzgerald, as- t pastor, is director of the So- dAmy and in charge of general ar- rangements for the gathering. Annual Luncheon For New Club Members The American Association of Unl- versity Women will give its annual luncheon for the new members Satur- day at 1:15 o'clock, with Mrs. William John Cooper, president of the local branch, presiding. Miss Anna Pearl , chairman of the Hospitality Committee, will act as toastmistress and Miss Marian Hall, chairman of the Membership Committee, will present the new members. ting Mrs. Cooper in receiving ths guests will be the national officers of the association and the officers of the local branch, Mrs. Leslie H. Whitten will be the huuu mud by Mrs. Dud!ey wll.um Miss Bertha Sellards, Mrs. Har- r!l T, de'ln Mrs. Lucius T. Clark, Mrs E. E. lhnl]. Mrs. Bernard C. Hearn, Mrs. Thomas D. Lewis, Mrs. Paul Shorb, Mrs. Elwood Street, Mrs. John Donald- un, Winifred De Voe and Mrs., C. M. Jansky. all in the character of the furniture. A sofa, some chairs, a lamp or so, don't put livableness into a room. It is the taste wi th which you furnish; the consideration you give to comfort. Soft pillows are important. The design " of the furniture should have as much at- tention as the quality of construction— for it is something you are going to live with. Happily if it is the right kind of furniture; regretfully if it is lacking in ; effectiveness. Beautifully carved base; upholstered in handsome tap- estry. Deep seats, well constructed— and Superb Styling. “Furniture of Merit” stands out conspicu- ously in beauty of design; consistency of construction. In spite of its low price you'll find none of that garrish orna- mentation which shouts “cheap! cheap!” —and of which you tire so quickly. A beautiful piece of furniture; and particularly OC&flonal appropriate for use with this Living Roon, air Suite. But it will serve with equal effectiveness Graceful design; and another evidence of the in any room in the house. dependable quality of “Furniture of Merit.” $12.50 Upholstery is artistic tapestry ................c0.0 Our costless credit makes buying easy and paying easier House & Herrmann Seventh at Eye “Furniture of Merit’ 8433-35 Ga. Ave.