The evening world. Newspaper, November 13, 1914, Page 18

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inty, old-fashioned array. Mre, Caroline Fuller was a gingham gown girl. i‘ pa abe AN nd Lay Aside Silks and Velvets and Look Stun- in Novel Costures—Men Have the“‘Spirit,”” * but Stick to Black, Except Governor's Ie- land Officers, Who Appear in Duck. ‘ eotton euit? Ob, I had my tafl-/ton balls, which everybody just nat- ene all right, but the blamed | urally had te buy as boutonnieres, We eptit up the back yesterday | William, they aay, te 100 years old, More or leas, and came all the way ipociety Shines in Hoopskirts and Gingham; "Cotton Ball a Picture of ‘‘Befoah de Wah’’ officers Governors appea in white cotton tent ual- forms. AN the other men compro- mised by wearing cotton and, of course, all honors went to the women showed that society can look ite best even in garments of Diebetan material. BOXHOLDERS AMONG NEW YORK LEADERS. the boxholders were Mr. Biggs, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mre. Theodore and Mrs. Williamson ir. and Mra. Robert B. Mrs, Lorenzo Bemple, Dr. and Mrs. Preston _P. A. Hartwell, Lindsay, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall, Mra, Mr. and , inowden Wilbur K. Mathews, Mrs. Rufus L. Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. W. Hog Hamilton, Mrs. B. E. Mea bh Hamilton Harri: irs. Robert Cun- ningham Miles, and Mrs. Herbert tterlee, Thomas F. Ryan, Mra, von Rothenberg Phel John P. Gilford, ra, Stephen L. Snewden, Mrs. Winfleld Fuller, Mr. amd Mrs, Benjamin N. Duke, Henry Walters, William Mitchell, Walter 8. Thomson, Daniel Schnakenberg, Paul Pfleger, Michael Jenkins and W. J. Bteole. Several dinners were given in ad- vance of the dance und amon, tue hostesses wero Mrs, Howard Pago, Mrs. J. Herbert Claiborne, Mrs. P. A. 8. Franklin, Mrs. R. L, Patterson, Mra. WV, R. K. Taylor and Norrie 8:1- lar, Mrs. Franklin's dinner guests included Mr. and Mrs, Charles D, Halsey, Mr. and Mrs. Dawson Cal- lery, Mr. Mrs. Harry J. Lu.s, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore H. Price, Am- brose and Henry and Louis Keller. On the floor committees were Mrs. Algernon §. Sullivan, Mrs. Junius Parker, Dr. G. Bollinr Lee, Walter L. McCorkle, Arthur R. Marsh, Malcolm Is Meacham, Andre P. Pik Theo- dore H. Price, Albert A. George H. Sullivan, William Sturgis, Edward A. Gill Wylie and Danger- field Lewis. MANY ARMY OFFICERS WERE PRESENT. Among the representatives of the present were Mrs, James D. jennan, Col. and Mrs. John 8. Mal- lory, Lieut,-Col. and Mrs. Alfred F. whe n| Hi WOMEN WORE GOWNS MADE OF |: k » Mr. and Mrs. | } rings, | LJ of the busy Reception tee, and other members in- int | Woodin, Grace Franklin, Alico Archi- enn, Francia A. Gudger, Al- . Haywood ‘and Holland i udkine. COTTON. There were many committees in old-fashioned hoo with scarlet frilling, being with a mall poke bonnet. ra. Tneodore H. Price, Chairman of the Costumes Committee, was in biue tarleton, with a ruffled skirt and a bodice of white cotton velvet. Mrs. Wilbur Mathews, Chairman of the Music Committee, appeared in a gor. of white tarletan, with basque blue and gold brocade. Mrr. R. C. Taylor! wore a gown of white cotton net, with point applique and the bodice was trimfmed with an old-fashioned | lace bertha, Mrs. Lorenzo Semple chose her cos- tume from the 1870 period, when bus- tles were just becoming popular. It was of white lace over pink, with small ruchings running up and down the trained skirt, with a sleeveless bodice and etraps over the shoulders. She also wore a set of turquoise neck-" jace and long earrings that belonged to her great-grandmother. Mrs. Lewis B. Woodruff was in an 1860 costum of white organdie, with jande pink and blue rosebuds. mitt waterfalls, busties, crinolines an pantalettes added much to the scene of old-time southern festivities. The Secretary of the Treasury, William G. McAdoo, was Honorary ir. Neville G, a (Prom the Brockten Buterprise.) A party of women from «@ iecal t tee of Women, which Included many | gathered for a thimble party ome Goma forthern and southern | recently at the home of one of the ers. The ladles were intimate Among the members of the Junior bey na beat of the day, the excl Committee who sold cotton bolls in-| of the war of some other cl stead of flowers were the Misses perhaps ut feminine nature, Janet E. Adriance, Estelle Clark: em to indulge rather freely in Dorothy Ethridge, Dorothy H borhood talk, commonly called “ Helen R. Morgan, Adele Sno Marion Tiffany, Louise Trevor, Jo “Nhe ttle daughter of the Willams, Anne T. Winchester, Anne 2 lipped in unnoticed and sat usentae: Absent friends were ment! in je ical remarks and even some of the who took their departure were di: As the talk went on little Elizal to her mother and said a bald and Sidney Car! rt "Oh, dear! Nobody seems just esaetiy _ satigfled with Shybody, does they, mae ma ————— TALE OF A THOUGHTFUL DOG (From the Philedetphia Ledger.) Some men at the club were telling ne ii reek and dropped it in the wel to see how long it would Ii minnow grew and grew an tly thrived in its Tonely it hecame as large as {t t to n Mr, twenty- still th hi What will e comp'ete outfit cost is the question 1” usually put to our sa! QUESTION. conn 6 ; ANSWER. Caulans ana Momeees co meet the dares of ol pa | chasers enab'ing you to get the maximum return. Come and see VICTROLA COMBINATIONS EASY TERMS. @ VICTROLA IV. 7) VICTROLA IV. Tha sa douse taeet of your own selection T tried tt om. Ab, yes, very 084) trom Mra, Leroy Broun‘s Virginia ‘—OUt I had the apirit, you know.” | home to lend color to the cotton ball. dressed gentleman! Of course everybody was anxious: excuse without &/ to eee Miss Genevieve Champ Clark, VICTROLA Me n Inch turn tabter exhibition sound Mre. Robert C. Taylor Mies Mary Du! quaint conceit of the fa lem | In a cotton gown of moi REGULATE YOUR BOWELS AND STOP a Chambers street horse The truth was he didn't bave|the Speaker's daughter, who had Promised to come up from Washing- ton, but she wae bard to find in the Jam. Moreover, everybody wore such unexpected costumes one never was sure of a friend's identity. Miss Callie Hoke Smith, the Senator's daughter, also wes expested,“but It was stated she had to leave Washington suddenly i for Atlanta. William G. McAdoo, Seo- retary of the Trousury, sent regrets ae oy .. aug! ie ot HOOP @KIRTS AND OTHER VISIONS IN COTTON. used to wear. Crinolines that took one back to historic visions of the days of '61 were in profusion-- and all the other costumes that in this Gay wo! jook peculiar any other Place than at the cotton ball. PAIR OF MAMMIES AND OH, WHAT COOKING! the 100-year. of Southern ey looked exactly liks the advertisements for jake flour, and they looked a jittle unoomfort- able, too, in their irehy garments. At one side of the ballroom was a lot @ la papier mache, and one con- etantly encountered pretty girls in ravishing cotton costumes, selling Reti ola biter, ere Dixon line, with interpolations to make possible the latter day fox trot. A brand new dance, the “cotton ite appearance and was generously received. Three special dances were given. One was a solo dance, “In the Land of Cotton,” by Miss Mise Wilma Wynn and John C Naturally, nobody overlooked the fact that the South is famous for its cooking. So there was plentiful pat- ronage at a “special Southern sup- COLDS, HEADACHES, SOUR STOMACH Cascarets make you feel bully, they immediately cleanse and sweeten the itomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. A Cascaret to- night straightens you out by a 10-cent box from an: drugei your Stomach re, iver and Bowels in fine condition for months. Don't forget the children, per,” consisting of wild turkey, ham baked with spices, ‘possum, ‘cied cotton souvenirs. Nobody seemed t ef ° chicken, terrapin stew, beate: bis- be able to keep his feet still when the twenty “eciorey musicians struck up|cuits and other delicacies. their banjos. Of course the selections} Those who stuck to cotton most hailed from below the Mason and'consistently as a unit were the army Now York society was represented brilliantly, Kvery one of prominence est Re oa y were tended. Theodore P oar 6547, 5648 Bryant JERSEY CITY | PLAINFIELD | RED BANK | NEW BRUNSWICK 150 Newark Ave.| 218 W. Front St.|5 Broad Street! 56 Church St. were present. T hey. sould pot ibly have accommodated more, hough smart limousines continued to disc! strikingly dresse@ cesu- 11 o'clock. ' was ulinost afraid te rag filled and the ballroom | Come,” whispered an elderly lady in black silk to her companion, “because nin gingham! Of course, they en in ging course, they to the/ look perfectly lovely—but at an other time—horrors! ij het od Sime Lyk anpeae td lane} er, quite ing. One beauty vied |{0'aecide so after taking’ hasty, but encompassing, survey of the delight- ful visions in cotton, were hoop skirts of all descriptions, from the kind your grandfather used to Cut of the attic trunk and pergtatently jo trunk ai jatently ‘bal i reignt, There were the plainest kind of Store Evenin For the convenience of those who can- not attend this sale earliér, the store will remain open late tornight and Saturday night. VOGEL BROTHERS 42 st.at 8 Ave. Be on hand early to share in the greatest clothing bargains ever offered to the public. ’s kney,.how to wear them. Ard—yea, ‘It's. true—thero were om talettes! Not the kind of pantalettes one occasional): e ing the subwi kind that 1914 bas revealed, the old-fashioned kind that We Must Raise $1 00,000 Cash in 30 Days The Senior Member of Our Firm Has Retired From Business Therefore This Gigantic Sale of High Class Clothing and Furnishings Ten thousand Men’s and Young Men’s Winter Suits and Overcoats will be offered at the most sensational and drastic reductions ever known. Profits will not be thought of—the raising of the necessary $100,000 will be the only consideration. $16.50 and $18 $Q.50 $40.75 Sis ant”? [Winer suis * 0) $15 Tartan Plaid Suits, at...........98.50/ $16.50 Dark Worsted Suits, at $15 Pencil Stripe Suits, at -$8.50/ $16.50 Blue Worsted Suits, at. . $15 Dark Wersted Suits, at..........$8.60/ $16.50 Pencil Stripe Suits, at... $15 Pin Chock Cassimore Suits, at... $8.60/ $16.50 Tartan Plaid Suits, at... $15 Winter Suits and $4 9.75 inter sue “3 $10.75 | $20 Hairline Stripe Suits, at . $10.76 | $20 Brown Worsted Suits, at . $10.75 | $20 Gray Worsted Suits, at.. $22 & $25 Winter Suits $44.75 & Overcoals, 15 $13.75 | $22 Elegant Wersted Suits, at. .. 918.75 (Stripes, plaids and checks.) + $10.76 $20 Plaid and Check Suits, at......$18.75 2 Brown ani Blue Weested Suis, Siess $10.76 | $20 Plain Gray Serge Suits, at......$138.75| $22 Kersey and Moule Overceats,at. $15.75 $10.75 | $20 Double Breasted Overcoats, at.. $18.75 | $25 Chinchilla Overcoats, at. $16.50 Soft Moule Overcoats, at... .$10.75 | $20 Chinchilla Overcoats, at. . $18.75 | $22 Convertible Collar Overcpa! $16.50 Gray Convertible Collar $20 Convertible Co.lar Overcoat $22 $8.50] Overcoats, (50 inches long) at....$10.75/ at. { $138.75 | $22 lmpor $8.50| $16.50 Babmacaan Overcoats, at....$10.75 | $20 Fine Balmacaan Overceats, at. $13.75! Overcoats, at $28 & $30 Winter Suits $40.75 & Overcoats, 19 $15.75 |$28 Fancy Worsted Suits, at. K $28 Gray Worsted Suits, at........ $30 Pin Check and Striped Suits, at $10.75. $28 Tartan Plaid Suits, at. : $30 Silk Lined Overceats, at. 15 Gray Winter Overcoats, at 15 Cambridge Gray Overceats, at... caans, $28 Bro Gray Shetland 15 Brewnish Overceats, at. ire ane Grey Oe Overcoats, at. : At iil ] ; Most men know the high quality of the clothing offered here—and bear in mind that these vast stocks are all \ brand new Winter garments — styles and fabrica for all men, in conservative and ultra-fashionable models No C. O. D.’s No Mail Orders No Approvals. A Few of the Great Bargains in Our Men’s Furnishings Dep't. NEGLIGEE SHIRTS ndered oulie. Made NTI, runt Mil Alterations Free, as Usual All Silk NECKWEAR, made of thie sea- eon's newest designe and col- oringe, i 1 shape. Regularly 806 and 662 } 28e Our Price Heavy Imported Silk NECKWEAR, the | | F “Reis! Spring Needle Derby Tee arent anen ete * | | ribbed SHIRTS and DRAW- ations and workmanship. ERS, Winter weight, stan- Never before sold for ist | BR dard 78¢ grade. Our price, Cc than $1.00 and $1.50. per garment, Black and Oxford Cashmere HOSE, well known advertised Bake, brand, lightly im; y Our price, per pair

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