I J 8-A THIS BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. MC7KMBKR 20. 1921. v. Titled Women Arc Successful in Trade Ventures Members of Knglish Nobility Are Conducting Prcimniaking Anil Furniture Hio and Other ltalilifliments. , ' By HELEN HOFFMAN. , London. Nov. J',-Vliile the re sults of war hae given new ap"l to many phases it KkkIMi life, none of thce is causing wider and more favorable romni'nt than the itcres that many women of the old nobility are making of busino venture. Minv uoinrn whose family line- ?Ke trails bark to the dint past when knighthood wa in llower bear new litlc today. 1 hey sic known as Madame tin or Madame that in litiMne! circles. The fact that they at occupied with matters more e riouhati drawing room small talk, iflfcrts Hheir high social position ntt a hit. Many of them still maintain their lofty position among the elite of British nobility and at the Eng lish court. Mr. Fortesijue, who lia made a great meres of her small but ele gant dressmaking shop, is well known to American. At her home hire she entertained a bit; number of the Rotarians at a Riirdcn party when they were touring England. She is the wife of the king's librar ian and a noted historian. Succeeds as Pa.'nter. Lady Eileen Ordc, daughter of the duke of Wellington, i another who has taken up the serious life. Her husband, who is an artist,- has a studio in Faris, and there she fol lows the artistic life as well. She has made a great success of hand painted gowns. The painting is done on chiffons largely, and the best effects are obtained from white. The designs represent old flowers of dainty shading and coloring. The countess of Derby, wife of the former British ambassador to France, has gone in for poultry' raising on a large scale, as have many other women of title and so cial distinction. Society was surprised a few weeks ago when it became known that Mrs. Romilly, sister of Mrs. Win ston Churchill and wife of Lieut. Col. Bertram Romilly, had opened a hat shop in the fashionable shopping section ot .Maytair. Works at Dressmaking. ' Many women of society who pos scssed some artistic talent are just beginning to realize the value of its development and encouragement. While there is a feeling prevalent among the many that it is bad form to be idle these days, or occupied with, nothing more serious than bridge and balls, the mounting taxation- imposed here, amounting to al most one-third of the ordinary in come, and running into vast sums for the big incomes, has had telling effect on the fortunes of many who were regarded as affluent before the war descended on Europe. v" .,- Speaking of the Winston Church-' ills reminds me that there are other relations in business. Mrs. Fox Pitt, a cousin of Winston Churchill, is doing a thriving dressmaking busi ness under the name of Elizabeth Phelps. Her husband is a cousin of Mrs. Winston Churchill, Mrs. Fox Pitt says she intends following the example set by other society women of England recently, and 'is leaving shortly for a, tour off America., Conduct Furniture Shops. - : While a number of titled women of less social renown than these mentioned here are engaged in dress making or millinery business' to add to the family income, -a number of society women , have gone in for other lines of trade. An antique furniture shop claims .. the attention of Mrs. Methuen, daughter-in-law of 'Jford Methuen. Lady Bentinck, wife of Lord Henry Cavendish, a half- brother of the present duke ot Port land, and connected with some of the proudest and oldest families of England, has felt the call of business and, like many of her titled sisters, has opened a small furniture shop. One of the: most distinguished members of not only English but a broader European society who has to a certain degree Substituted so ciety for business is Mrs. Rodd, wife of Sir James R.' Rodd. who has had a long and Tionorable diplomatic career, having at one time served as the councillor o f .the embassy at Rome, among his many other diplo matic posts. Mrs. Rodd always has moved in the highest circles of fashionable society, but as going Into business is no longer a novelty here among society women, no one ap peared surprised when it was learned that she was interested in an antique furniture shop here. ' Aside from actual business ven tures, many titled women are prov ing a great success with the pen and brush, and are turning this talent to commercial benefit. Dietary Diseases Most , Deadly, Asserts Doctor Columbus, Nov.' 19. "Nearly all diseases which take us off before our ;m hav their oricrin ill dietary de- ficiences," declared Dr. Harvey W. j Wiley, in an address ncre. "If we want to build up human vitality, if we want to resist disease, if we want to live healthy, useful and especially, long lives, we should study carefully that problem which most nearly affects those things, and that is food," continued Dr. Wiley. "By the study of food I do not mean the traditional study of food, or what your doctor tells. you, but what the scientific dietitian tells you. If we have that kind of advice we will lay the foundations for that great work of human uplift, so far as pro longing human life is concerned, which will mean so much to the health and prosperity of the nation." Fat. New Yorkers in Earnest Race to Reduce New York. (Special Corropond nice.) What is the most univerally popular; topic of conversation today j! ball? Kailroad ktrikei? The eallier? None of thee, no matter how vitally they affect the individual. Ni. It's teducing. Take any gather ing of women, some of them either have reduced, are doing it now, or ire going to in the near future (which day may arrivj and may not). At male gathering, too, physical fitness is a large part of their main interest in life. .Therefore, knowing that no one wants to be fat who i fat, and no other wants to be fat who is leaning in that direction, and knowing fur thrr that outside of a small minority with whom fat is an actual disease, usually an affliction of the thyroid glands, there is no need of people of cither ex carrying about extra weight which dofj nothing to im prove their hralth and looks and much to dispel both. Dr. Royal S. C'opeland, - health- commissioner of New York, and I have staged a vvar on the obese goblin. First Contest in Chicago, 4 - It came about this wayi'LVvear ago last spring Health Commissioner' Dr, John Dill Robertson , and I staged such a war in Chicago. He took 25 women and I took 25 men and for a mouth we carried on a contest the result of which proved that even in one month's time many, many pounds, may be removed from tne person ot- a number of people wittt comparative .ease and extreme comfort and joy to. the reduced one, In case any donbtincr'Thomas who reads this about the men being as in tcrested as women in the abosorbing work of remodeling overweighted frames, let me say in that contest the men came off victorious with a total male loss of flesh of 268J4 pounds, as agiinst 127H pounds loss among the women, or an average loss per male of 13 and a fraction, as against 1U and a traction pounds per woman. Since that contest requests have come to me. from all over for the staging of another battle. Which brought me to New York, where the health commiss:oner has entered 50 women against 50 men under my di rection and an extremely lively race for honors and weight loss is prom ised. I wanted to see if people in the east were not as vitally interested in this absorbing subject as those in the west. I find they are, indeed. Recruits Storm Office. . Following the announcement with request for recruits on both sides in the Daily News of New York, the of' fices set aside for registration were mobbed with heavyweights register ing around, oyer, and. above the W mark. . , - Policemen had to. be called in to quell what looked like a riot. It was heartbreaking not tV be able to take every applicant. They begged and pleaded to enter, but even though we had secured Philadelphia Jack O'Brien's institute in the Madison Garden, a huge place of its" kind, we could not accommodate properly nor give personal attention to more than the 50 applicants on each side. .. "I've simply got to get into this class," pleaded a girl who would have been a beauty but for her ex cess 40 pounds. "I can't get a job as a model any more." Love Is Fading. "I've KOt to jret in," said another. "My husband is kicking all the time about how fat I'm getting. I weighed only 122 when I was mar ried, and he doesn t love me ntce ne used to." . "A heavy fellow doesn't stand a good chance at a job these days," a 247-pound male .urged in his own cause. "I go looking and employers tell me I can't work as well as a fel- Tlane Travel Blamed for Rapid Spread of Disease Paris, Nov- 19. Rapid spread of disease epidemics throughout En rope, remarked since 1919, is attrib uted to improvement " of airplane travel. The French Academy of Medicine has recommended that a corps oj sanitary inspectors be stat'oned to examine travelers at all air ports, especially those coming in oa ex pressed from Poland and the east Oyster-Toting Mare Splashes Into Harbor Baltimore, Nov. 19. Old Nell, the oyster-totin horse and the pride ot Yn'W street, walked into the harbor at the Baltimore Canning company's landing and was nearly drowned. . She and her wagon were standing on the dock near the oyster boat Bertie, taking on a load. Jack Ander son, her negro driver, who swears at and by Nell and says she's the one horse in Baltimore that can eat an oyster without sprinkling hay all over it, was putting the oysters on the wagon. Nell stepped out a little too far (being too blind to know how far), and first thing she knew she was overboard and the wagon with her. Nell trod water with all four ieet. Paralysis knocked the oyster in dustry cold as men came running to fish Nellie out. Fifty men might have pulled her out by the tail, but she didn't have enough tail. So they sent for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, shouting encouragingly at Nellie un til those experts came and rescued her. That night she had a straw bed twice as thick as usual and a doctor and a lot of prescription for horse hooch. . Girls in Knickerbockers Almost Mobbed by Crowd Atlantic City, Nov. 19. Two young women, who sought to give the board walk a thrill by appear ing among the promenaders .in1 knickerbockers, were forced to call an officer to escort them to a taxi cab to escape being mobbed by the amused crowd . that surround 'd them. . The knickerbockcr pair, wearing long capes, removed their outer wraps when they reached the cen tral part of the boardwalk and im mediately became the center of a jam of humanity that crushed closer and closer to them. Frightened, the girls decided they had enough and the gallant policeman acted as a buf fer in getting them clear and down a side street. Institute of State Craft Proposed to "Women's Body Philadelphia, Nov. 19. An insti tute of government '" or ' statecraft; under the auspices of the National Council of Women, wilt be proposed to the convention of -the organiza tion and endorsement asked for the project, Mrs. Haviland H. Lund of Washington announced. Antoinette Donnelly registering recruits for the reducing contest between 50 fat men and 50 fat women. (litres, or dewed fruits, BREAKFAST. , r.rnpefrult or. orange Juli-e. low who-is lighter.. It's serious bus iness with me." Another man who tipped the beam at 297 confided that his wife wasn t the same old girl to htm since fie took on all this weight. And so it went, running the gamut of reasons, some humorous, some tragic, and all reasonable enough. For after all you cannot plead much in favor of obesity, can you? Good Stunt Anywhere. Now, if it is popular in New York and Chicago, it is going to .be equal ly so in your city; So, why not get in the game with us. Why don't you start a reducing contest of your own? You can get a gym to work in. Or, if you can't, have some meet ing place and get an army man to put you through drills daily say a 20-minute workout. Have a leader on both sides, one who is interested in seeing the thing go through and who will carry it through to. a vic torious finish. You haven't . any idea the fun it is. Everybody who is plump is good natured enough to enter into the spirit of it. And the good comes not only from the ac tual daily exercise and diet, but it lasts longer. You get into the ex ercising habit, and consequently you are pioneering an excellent . health movement. The contest idea is best, for any rivalry heightens interest in a thing, as you know. If you can't get, 25. women pitted against as many men take 15 ot 10. I'll start right in now to give ' youJ some diets, so you will not lose any time. If you re in earnest, you can get' your physical director' right away, or if you cannot get-one you can do a certain amount of .exercisr ing yourself daily say 10 minutes morning and night. FIRST WEEK'S DIET.,, , MONDAY. ; ' '' BREAKFAST. . Apple, email orange, or one-half grape- iruit. one or two eggs. Tnin toast, dry. Coffee with v apoonful hot milk. LUNCHEON. Vejret&ble souo (no creamed soups). Rye bread, - bran bread, or bran biscuit, buttered. Lettuce and cottage cheese salad, or let tuce and tomato salad; vinegar. , dressing. . DINNER. , Moderate helping of lean meat or' nonfat poultry or fish. Any bulky vegetable (as carrots, '-turnips. leiiuce, caDDage. tomatoes, onions, . spinach). Coffee. Fruit dessert grapefruit cocktail, or- ADVERTISEMENT Radium, King of Cures There are only two kinds of RA DIUM, ' namely: RADIUM SUL PHATE and RADIUM BROMID. RADIUM SULPHATE is the only one sold directly to the sick, hav ing in it Genuine RADIUM Metal Element, so necessary to preserve the power of Energy and to reach the germ of deep seated, malignant diseases. RADIUM SULPHATE cleans out disease of Rheumatism, Kidney, Tuberculosis, Ap pendicitis, Spine, Catarrh, Asthma, In somnia, Eczema, Tumors, Ulcers, Nervous ness, Pyorrhoea, Rectum,, Prostate, Pso riasis, Cancers. Blood Poisoning of every type, female affections, dropsy, hay fever, heart, stomach, liver, bladder, neuralgia and all other diseases that cause suffering, and it rejuvenates the tired, worn, debili tated people of all ages, strengthening every organ ot the body and making them feel twenty years younger I We give a money back guarantee, if not satisfied.' on tuberculosis and cancer, the two most difficult of all to cure; all other affections being easily cleaned out by it. It is applied one hour each day. Every phase of the two considered, it is a better RADIUM than that discovered by Mine. Curie. It has been proven in this city that $15 worth of it will cure more and severer diseases than J60.000 worth of Mme. Curie's RADIUM discovery at their respective selling prices; and it is a harm less, nonsurgical cure for all operable diseases. It does not waste; guaranteed to retain its curative properties ten yean. "You will Slot get beat this time." That is our slogan, and it is as true as the sun shines. Write or call for literature. INTER NATIONAL RADIUM COMPANY, 156 North Spring St. Loa Angeles, Cat. Two lioll4 or codillcd ecus. Bran muffin or one piece toasted rye , . bread (without butter). Coffee, black and unsweetened LUNCHEON. Bowl clear soup. Three crackers. Lettuce and tomato salad, with vinegar dressing (no oil or mayonnaise). Coffee or tea. DINNER Lean roast beef or broiled steak. One large helping spinach, asparagus, cabbage or cauliflower. Fruit salad or combination salad with French dressing. One piece rye bread, toasted. Coffee. WEDNESDAY. BREAKFAST. Orange, one large. Two soft boiled or poached eggs. One thin slice rye bread, i Black sugarless coffee, ; LUNCHEON. One cup bouillon. One soda cracker. Ten stalks asparagus without butter. One raw apple, DINNER. Raw oysters (four). One slice lean roast beef. One-half cup plain boiled string beans. One medium tomato sliced, with vinegar, salt and pepper. One small slice Brie or Swiss cheese. One small cracker. Black sugarless coffee. THIHSDAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed fruit of any kind. Egg boiled or poached. Bran bread toast without butter, y . Coffee with hot skim milk. . , LUNCHEON. Clear tomato soup. Crackers. Cucumber and tomato salad with French , , . , dressing. 1 I,.' Fruit unsweetened. ' , , -. Coffee or tea clear. " DINNER, One serving of any lean meat. ; Carrots unbuttered, . Lettuce salad. , ' Bran bread. ' Fruit. ' i : r Coffee or tea clear. " FRIDAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed apricots or prunes without sugar One poached egg on one thin slice toasted gluten or rye bread. One cup coffee with boiled milk and no sugar. LUNCHEON. One cup bouillon. One slice Swiss cheese. One small slice rye bread. DINNER. Broiled halibut steak with lemon. Cauliflower (plain), large serving. Lettuce or water cress and egg salad with . French dressing and very little oil. One sliced orangp. Black sugarless coffee. KATIRDAV. BRUAIZFAST. ' ' Stewed penrs or prunes without sugar; One small slice toasted gluten , ' ' .or rye bread. Ono. broiled lamb chop or one small cake, broiled hsmhurger steak, llluck sugarlcra coffee. . LUNCHEON. Stuffed egg salad (without mayonnaise). Thro smnll crnckers or spinfrh. with boiled or poached eggs, Three Bmnll crackers. Buttermilk or tea without cream or sugar. DINNER. One cup vegetable soup. One medium slice lean roast beef, chicken, or broiled steak. Celery or olives or radishes. Stewed or broiled tomatoes or boiled . cabbage. Baked apple. Black sugarless coffee or tea. Ona SUNDAY. BREAKFAST. One oranre. Two sjlces crisp bacon. Ons soft boiled or poached eng. small, thin slice toasted rye bread (no butter). Black, sugarless coffee. , DINNER. Beef broth (fat skmmed off), one cupful. Roast chicken, Moderate serving. Cauliflower (plain). Celery. Cold slaw with vinegar dressing. Stewed raisins flavored with lemon (no sugar). - Clacft, sugarless coffee or .tea. SUPPER. Waldorf salad (apple and celery chopped together) with French dressing. One brRn muffin. Buttermilk or skimmed milk, one glass. iiailSMMsBIiaasjBaaMayaK Bailey the Dentist Established 1883 Painless Extraction of Teeth Dr. R. W. Bailey Dr. Bertram Willamson Make Dentistry Easy for Yon 706 City Nat. Bk 16th and Hanie? LEG TROUBLE H. ij quickly relieved with oar Laced Stocking NO. RUBBER sr WASHABLE Open or Swollea Limbs Varicose Veins - ADJUSTABLE Laces-like legging. 425 A7( .'each, two V7Sm forsama . limb. Call me- sand for meat Bremen t Blank No. 35 Corliss Unb Spec, Co. T. KTS BROADWAY. NEW YORK. N. CUT THIS OUT Chiropractic For Health To you who are sick and ailing. Dr. Burhorn says: "We have proven positively that re sults can be obtained in ninety-five per cent of the human ailments by taking Chiropractic spinal adjustments." y Investigate our methods today if we can not help you we will not accept your case. Adjustments at the office are 12 for 410.00 cr 30 for $26.00. House calls made day or night. Office equipped with private adjusting rooms and complete X-Ray laboratory. Lady attend ant. Fhone Douglas 6347. Dr. Frank F. Burhorn (Palmer School Graduate) Corner 16th and Famam Street Suite 416-26 Securities Building 00 Binds the CONTRACT And Places a Beautiful Columbia Graf onola $1 in your home Christmas morning together with the records you select and buy. Call at once and make .your selection. We will make im mediate delivery or hold until Christ mas. We save you $35 to $100. Our Stock Is Complete All Styles $30 to $300 , Choice of beautiful mahogany, walnut or oak finish. All sold v on terms of $1.00 down and.the balance on small weekly or monthly payments. i " r i ieJ n m Wa $125.00 Now $85.00 All the Latest Columbia Records ON SALE ALL THE TIME Out-of-town orders receive prompt attention and sent postpaid on. orders of $5.00 or more. Write for catalog. SCHMOLLER & MUELLER JS14-1S-1S DadfeSt. PIANO CO. Dour- 123 Telephone -Boivens Value-Giving Stow Special Furniture Purchase by the H. It. H'j'vrn Co. make it possible for Hits htore to offer hijrh-trrade lMninf Koont .Suites ami ui!d piccea. Heed and Fiber Furniture, as well s a moKt desirable line of Draporie. Drapery Fabrics and Lace Curtaiii3 at lower prices than have be fore been offered in yearn. . . , Thia immcna purchast?, consiMtinjr of five carloads," will be placed on sale Monday, November LMsi, jnul we would tulviao thoBe who t;ro desirous of making a nubstantial waving to be at the utore t their earliest convenience. The articles here listed will make lastinp, useful and handsome Christmas Gifts, . This Beautiful 8-Piece Period Dining Room Suite consiiitiiis of CO-iiu'li Buffet, B4 Ini'h Extension Table and 6 t'holrd uith blue leittlirr t-rats, all. in the popular Queen Anne de fiiin end fininhrd in either Walnut or Mtilmguny $102.50 The above ii a rood exampU of tho Values to bo obtained at Bowcii'r. In addition we arc of ffiinp builds of tho same good construction, but different In wooiht, dpr.igns and finisher, at 81 68. S21.1. $255. 8275. ' Value-Givirn Offerings in Dining Room Tables This special purchase and offering opens the way for you to have a new dining: room table for the holi days at little cost. Tables range in size as follows: 42, 45, 48 and B4 inches. The prices are equally wide in range, but all are low. $12.50, (16, $19.50 ana $22.50 Walnut Extension Tables (48 and 54 inches) Start your Walnut Suite while our prices are so far below the average. . $27.50, $37.50, $48.50 and $59.50 Odd Diners Tor your approval we offer many dozen odd din ers in both Walnut and Mahogany, all periods ninl styles. Each is substantially constructed and the prices at which we are offering them will be bywords for economy for many months to come. In lots from one to six, - QC at, euch '. tJIsIO By coming to the Bowen store you will be able to replace your old or broken diners at a most economical cost; in fact, we offer an immense number of oak diners, all well made and finished, at ; $1.45, $1.75, $1.95 $2.25, $2.75, $4.50 Oak Buffets Some folks prefer to buy their, furni ture a few pieces at a time,' either on account of spare arrangements in the home, or for economy's sake. To these folks we come with a presenta tion of fumed oak and golden oak buffets, Just the piece that is often needed to complete the furnishing of the dining room. A wide range of economy-building prices prevail In this showing at ? $15.50, $18.50, $24.50 $36.50, $49.50 Tea Wagons Those handy little mahogany or walnut (glass covered) tea wagons are so convenient, either in serving guests at afternoon affairs or in clearing away the dishes after-the fam ily's meal is over. Saves dozens, of footsteps for the busy . housewife. . Priced at $18.50, $24.50, $32, $41 Jacobean Oak Buffets Would you like to add .to the pieces you have? Our Special Purchase Sale brings . you the best buy of many seasons. Jacobean Oak Buffet $37.50, $44, $55 The Finishing Touch In the Dining Room a Buffet! Pick out a style ' and material to match the other pieces and then note the prices. $37.50, $48.50, $60 Reed and Fibre Furniture You will be interested in our showing of Reed and Fiber Furniture, and, as the demand is growing greater each year for this attractive, light and useful furniture for the sun parlor and living room, why not buy now when such economical prices prevail. Settees in Reed and Fiber : 72-inch Settees, upholstered in Cretonne and finished In Ivory, Gray or Frosted Brown. Settees of this character and finish certainly add to the attractiveness and comfort of ' one's . living room or sun parlor .35 and $45 Reed and Fiber 3-Piece Suites in Ivory, Gray and Frosted Brown. Cretonne upholster ing. Substantially construct ed and well finished, they are amazing values at our Special Purchase Sale prices of $5t $75. $85) SOS $98.50.8110 Hi-Back Rockers The comfy kind, finished in Ivory, Gray and Frosted Brown, with colorful cretonne upholstering.- A large number are offered during this, our Special Purchase Sale, at $12.50. $15.50. $17.50. $19. $22.50 Reed and Wicker Rockers The kind you just naturally pick out to sit in when entering a room. Shown in all popular finishes and upholstered, as they are, in all the popular fabrics, they are wonderful values at ar Special Purchase Sale price of $10.50. $12. $14, $16 Attractive, Comfy Chaise Lounges Finished in Frosted Brown and upholstered in heavy Cretonne (you can buy pillows to match) are now offered at such value-giving prices as ....$26. $30. $37.50. $45 Draperies and Curtain Fabrics 4,500 Yards Curtain Scrim In both checked and colored patterns, suitable for kitchen and bathroom, per yard, only. .17 1,200 Yards Good Quality Marquisette and Voile Colors ' white, cream and ecru, per yard, only , t.29 1,300 Yards Filet Marquisette Newest plain patterns; makes very beautiful sheer curtains and suitable for any room; per yard, only 39 Filet Net All-Over Pattern With large lace shade effect; a compre hensive showing of all styles; specially priced at, per yard . . .29t and 452 New Tuscan Nets Which are now so very popular; plain and figured patterns; regular $1.50 values; Special Purchase Sale price, yard 98 .Domestic and Imported Cretonne A very desirable showing in both the dark and light effects; Special Purchase Sale price, per yard 20 and up Clipped Madras 30 and 36-inch clipped Madras in Rose, Mulberry and Blue; large variety of color combinations; priced as low per yard as....79(4 3,000 Yards Imported Cretonne $2 and $2.60 values; a most complete selection of patterns at our Special Purchase Sale price of, per yard, only 97i 1,700 Pair Marquisette and Voile Curtain Hem stitched; hems trimmed with neat lace edges; good selection of patterns, at, per yard.. $1,89 Filet Net Curtain Pretty all-over effects in white, cream and ecru, per pair, only. ..$1,79 Others at $2.98, $3.98, $4.95 and up to $7.95 per pair. Frosted Brown and Ivory Finished Floor Lamps with wicker shades, lined with figured Cretonne, complete 317.50 $19.95 $23 Table Lamp Same finishes $p.50 $7.50 $9.50 225 Pair Rope Portiere In Blues, Greens, Tans and Color Combinations; short and full lengths; Per pair $6.75 800 Pairs Imported Swiss and Duchess Curtain A most wonderful collection from which to make a choice and a pattern for every taste; per pair, up from $7.95 Velour Portiere Reversible and double-faced, in all wanted colors; very special values at, per pair $27.45 Extension Curtain Rods Adjusted to fit any size window; sizes from 30-inch to 54-inch, complete with fixtures for mounting, each.... 14 Special in Window Shade Good quality oil finish, mount ed on warranted steel spring rollers, complete and ready to bang. 36 inches by 6 feet. .69 36 inches by 7 feet. .79 A Complete Showing of Slip Coyer Material in HOMESPUNS CRETONNES STRIPES PLAIN POPLINS PRINTED LINENS -Howard St.. Between 15th and 16tk I