The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, January 27, 1924, CITY EDITION, PART THREE, Page 2-C, Image 23

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    I Comings and Go
j ings of People
1 You Know
Mrs. J. W. Kennebeck, who la In
foenver, will remain there two weeks
longer.
Miss Rleta Langhorne of Virginia,'
‘■niest of Mrs. A. H. Richardson, wUl
.remain until February 1.
Mrs. Charles J. Hubbard, formerly
"f Omaha. Is residing at 3716 We«t
,Twenty-fifth street, Los Angeles.
Mr. and Mrs. Emile Stlerle an
'.itouiu-e the birth of a daughter born
■ il the Frederick hospital, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ingham of
lies Moines, la., are the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. C. W Russell for a
"short time
_ t
Mrs. Nelson B. Updikes mother,
Alls. J. L. Babcock of Pecatonica, 111.,
is spending the winter with Mr. and
Mrs. Updike.
•Mrs. Isham Reavls of Palls City,
guest of her son and his wife, Mr.
**’nl Mrs. Burt Reavls, will remain un
til early in March.
, Mrs. John P. Sebree will not return
,to Omaha until March 1. She is
making a tour of the Atlantic sea
board cities.
Friends of John K. Kennebeck
have heard from him since his ar
rival at Sydney, Australia. He writes
of a sunburn taken on January 2
when in swimming,
Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Gillespie left
Thursday evening for San Diego, Bos
Angeles and oilier California points,
where they expect to remain for a
month or six weeks.
Mrs. Grace B. Miller of Bos An
geles, who has been the guest of Mrs.
Bred S. Knapp and her niece, Mrs.
Madge Johnston, left Friday after a
six weeks' visit here.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bionberger. who
have been'sojourning in Hot Springs,
Ark., for the past few weeks, are now
in New Orleans and will be there
until the middle of Fehruary.
Mr. ami Mrs. De Emmett Bradshaw
will accompany Mr. and Mrs. Ford
llovey when they leave on Tuesday
to go to Excelsior Springs, Mo. Miss
Melba Bradshaw is spending the week
end in Bincoin at the PI l'hl house.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Nteraan have
tone to Lincoln to visit the Lynn
Lloyds who sail soon (or the Mediter
ranean cruise with Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Hurt* of Omaha. Mrs. Lloyd
and Mrs. Nleman ars sisters.
| -
Mrs. Charles Rosewater has as a
guest her niece, Mrs. William Jacoby
of Mexico City, whose father, Louis
Hostetler, was formerly consul at
Hermoslllo, Mexico. Mrs. Jacoby,
who Is receiving much Informal at
V( ntlon, will remain a week.
.Mrs. William Archibald Smith, who
I- residing In Hollywood, has changed
her address to 1918 Whitley avenue
She writes of seeing Mrs. E. M. Sy
fert and Mrs. L. J. Healey, former
miuhans, frequently. At present she
s spending a few days at Hotel Vir
gin hi. Long Beach, where she has en
joyed meeting Mre. T. 1.. Kimball and
.her daughter, Arabella.
Miss Ruby Lidgard of Council
Bluffs was surprised Tuesday evening
»it her horns by a number of friends,
die occasion being her birthday The
guests were Mrs. Lidgard. Mrs. W.
■V Shepard, Mrs. William Fitzpatrick,
..Misses Florence Stevens. Mary Sul
? ivan. Blanche Beilis, Ella Toten
Itagep. Lula Bailer, Ruby Lidgard, Dr.
\ V F.'dglngton and Messrs. Charles
Hiaatg. Hendy Lidgard, William Fitz
patrick, W. A. Sheppard.
Prettiest Mile Club.
Mr. and Mrs. 1 tarry I-anderyou
"ill entertain at a dinner of 13 covers
.Monday night. Prettiest Mile ctub. to
celebrate their wedding anniversary.
Dining at the club last night were
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dougherty with
guests, Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Kline,
•Mr. and Mrs. George E. Thompson
<ind Mr. aipT Mrs. J. W. Will lama in
k party of four.
Sixty reservations have been made
‘for tlie Wednesday bridge club
luncheon.
Mr. and Mrs. \V. N. Clark will have
IS to dine Wednesday night at the
vlub.
• Mrs. C. F. Connolly will have a
Tour-table bridge luncheon at the club
Thursday.
\ alentine Luncheon
The Wopien’s Aid Society of the
First Methodist Episcopal church w ill
give a Valentine luncheon in the
church parlors next Friday, February
1. at 1 o'clock. This is the fourth
of a aeries of get-together luncheons,
in charge of Mrs. Ford K. Hovey
and Mrs. T. F. Sturgess. The lunch
eons precede the regular monthly busi
ness meeting of this organization.
The buslnesa meeting, immediately
following the luncheon, will be con
ducted by Mrs. A. Hugh Tipple, presi
dent, after which a brief entertain
ment wfll be provided by Mrs. George
1\ Mlckel and Mrs. F. J. Farrington,
program committee.
Keservation* may he made with
Mrs. Sturgess. JA 6171, or Mrs. Hovey,
iVA 161*.
Mrs. Feiler Hostess.
' Mrs. David P. Feder will entertain
:ii luncheon at the Brnndels res
njrnnts Wednesday.
Harmony Club.
' Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Ewing enter
Ined the Harmony club at dinner
flic Biandels resfauranfa last night.
Bridge Club.
Mrs. C. Louis Meyer'a hrldge club
III meet with her on Wednesday.
Columbian Club.
Columbian club of Sacred Heart
pariah will give a card parly, Thura
day evening, January 31, In the hall
at Twenty-second and Locust streets.
Hostesses will lie Mesdames fliarlea
Allen, F. G. Alexander. William T).
Baber, J. M. Bloom, O. T. Hurchmore,
(\ A. IJenway. Michael Brick, W. 11.
Boyle. John Brice and E. Rrown.
Hard Times Party Friday.
'The sophomores of St. John High
V'hool met at the home of Bernice
Boyce for a hard times party Friday
night. Ethel Paley won the prize for
the beat eoetume. Nineteen gueata
were preaent
Famous Young Poet,
Tuesday Speaker
&dttZrSb Vines j; l |
Omaha readers of poetry are antici
pating the appearance of Edna St.
Vincent Millay before the Omaha So
ciety of Fine Arts on Tuesday, Jan
uary 29 at 4 o'clock. Hotel Fontenelle.
This is the first tour which the 1923
winner of the Pulitzer prize has tak
en. Miss Millay has accepted six
weeks of engagements In the princi
pal eastern and middle western cities
where she will give platform readings
of her poetry.
C'arl Van Doren. a friendly critic
writing in the Century Magazine gives
his impressions of Miss Millay in
these words: "Like all those who
most love life and beauty, she under
stands how both are brief and mor
tal. They take her round and round
in a passionate circle; because she
loves them so ardently she knows
they cannot last, and because she
knows they cannot last she loves
them the more ardently while they
do. In all her graver songs and
sonnets, she serves beauty in one way
or another."
Miss Millay recently married Eu
gene Bolssevaln of the aristocratic
New York family of that name. Mr.
Boissevaln's first wife was the beau
tiful suffragist, Inez Mllholland, who
died several years ago.
Sponsor for Art Collection
Has Friends Here.
Miss Sally Lewis of Portland. Ore.,
has arrived in Omaha from Denver
and is stopping at the Blackstone ho
tel. Miss Lewis brings a collection of
modem paintings, French, American
and Spanish, which will be on exhibit
at the fine arts galleries in the
library.
Miss Lewis, who Is s sister of Mrs.
Milton Barlow's ' brother In-law In
Portland, was an honor guest at din
ner last night at Mrs. Barlow's horns.
Dinner. Dance and Supper.
Mr. snd Mrs. Charles E. Metz en
tertained "4 guests at dinner at their
home last night, followed by dancing
and supper at the Brandcls res
taurants.
Buffet Supper.
Mr. and Mrs. Iraneus Shuler gave
a buffet supper for 16 guests last
evening in their home.
Mrs. Hynes Hostess.
Mrs. Margaret Hynes entertained
at dinner at her home last night.
Value of Olive Oil.
"Olive oil should be found on the
dressing table of every girl who Is
anxious to make the most of her
looks,” says a certain authority on
cosmetics, "for the consistent use of
this oil ha% been proved to be the
greatest known beautifl»r, whether
used externally or Internally,
Olive oil, first warmed a little, has
been used for ages as a cure for
chapped and hardened skin and noth
ing Is better to soften up callouses
on the feet and fingers or hands.
You can choose nothing better than
olive oil for your massage oil—though
you may prefer some sort of cold
cream. In Italy and Spain women
have used olive oil for this purpose
for centuries. It is said there that If
olive oil Is rubbed Into the scalp
regularly, say once or twice a Week,
graying of hair will be postponed. To
do this takes a little pains, as It. Is
desirable to rub It Into the scalp
without permitting the oil to get on
the hair Itself.
A teaspoon of olive oil taken before
eating breakfast has been recom
mended and found very beneficial
for persons who often fell dlscmpfort
after this first meal of the day.
Some one has said that with olive
oil and lemons aplenty there would
bo need of little else for cosmetics.
Lemon juice too is often an excellent
remedy and few things help to clear
up hoarseness so well as lemon Juice
and sugar. If you like cut the lemon
In half and sprinkle wit It granulated
sugar and then eat with a apoon as
you would an orange. It la a rather
sharp dose, but soon lelleves the un
pleasant hoarseness.
Hot lemonade taken before reUrlng
Is an old fashioned remedy for a cold
that the doctors of today still pre
scribe, and there are cages where they
recommend unsweetened lemonade
every night on retiring. A half tea
spoon of lemon Juice In a glass of hot
water has been recommended as a
mouth wash and breath sweetener,
and there are some women who find
the strained Juice of a half lemon a
refreahlng addition to the dally bath.
Lemon Juice Is an excellent bleach
and probably the best to use fur
bleaching the fingers to rid them of
vegetable and other slalna from
housework, it may be used also to
whiten the skin of the neck.
Very new indeed are blouses of
white wasli silk that have a tiny hair
lino stripe in blue, fan or lavender.
The sleeves follow lire new fashion
of exlreme shortness, and there Is a
becoming collar of pique. These
blouses are plain enough to wear
with the popular double breast'd tnl
lored suit.
Packing for tire hurried weekend
visit will !>e a much simpler task if
one Is fortunate enough to possess a
large suitcase that Is equipped with
four 1rangers after the fashion of a
wardrobe trunk. The under part of
the case has three compartments for
small articles
Whisperings of ;
Fashion From
Florida
Fashion whisperings from Florida
breathe of voiles so delicate that they
are thinner than chiffon. This fine
ness is accentuated by intricate draw
work. There has been no drastic
change in the silhouette evidenced in
the iioulhern resort models. The
salient features of the winter out
line have been made more emphatic,
the Mlttml silhouette Is more boyish, a
little shorter and has less tendency
toward the bouffant. But if the lower
flare has been modified, there is a
counteracting influence at the shoul
ders, the scarf has become an in
alienable accessory to every form of
dress, whether it be for morning, af
ternoon or evening, golf dining or
dancing, it may be as short as
IS inches, or it may trail the ground
in the form of a. train; it may be at
tached to the costume or, more usu
ally, it may be a separate piece, bu
somewhere and in some form it must
he displayed. This vogue had its
nalssance In Paris and from Paris
have come some particularly strik
ing examples of 4he tendency.
A two-piece costume, completed by
a scarf, which Callot has made for
wear at Biarritz, Is quite Chinese In
feeling, both as to embroidery and
cut. It is a striking and novel cos
tume, which would serve equally for
an informal at home dinner or for an
afternoon tea. The tunic, which Is
In Chinese coat style, is developed
from rose and blue brocade shot with
silver, gold and oopper threads, while
the skirt Is of plaited blue chiffon,
as are the sleeves and scarf, the let
ter tsirdered with the brocade.
i he sports costume, tn the last
analysts, is the dominating Influence
in the south. The trend away from
tli© chemise dress is particularly
noticeable In sports clothes, where it
has been definitely displaced by the
two piece frocks: always, bf course,
accompanied by some scarf variation.
A sports model created especially
for resort wear, but which embodies
many style features that will pervade
the mode for spring and summer as
well, Is a two-piece frock accom
panied by a matching >scarf. The
dress is developed from white crepe
de chine, and trimmed with an ap
pilqued border of strawberry colored
crepe. It consists of a wrap around
Skirt and tunic blouse. The skirt
has a hemstitched pleat at the over
lapping side, which is slashed cross
ways to form a pocket.
Sometimes the two-piece sports
frock consists of a tunic blouse and
a separate skirt. A costume from
Rodler's Is made of a new pat
terned moire, a clinging fabric with
a soft faille surface and a border
design. The background Is Chinese
blue and- th« border design, in lemon
yellow and blue, extends down one
side only and around the bottom of
the tunic. The one side effect is fur
ther carried out in the button trim
ming, fabric-covered.
An Ki'y Method.
When freshening baby's rompers
with s coat of dye. an easy method
Is to use the soap variety of dye.
Place the soap In your soap shaker
and ahake thoroughly through the
boiling water until It Is the desired
shade for the rompers. Then Immerse
garment*.
Party Punch.
Make a syrup by boiling sugar and
water together for five minutes. Add
tea which haa been chilled, the fruit
Juice and crushed pineapple and chill.
Add cherries and orange slices, which
should be cut In quarters.
Engagement
‘■iiaucle Afan.i'oe.
M*.T St>O PHOTO _ I
Mr. anil Mrs. E. T. Munroe an
nounce the engagement of their
daughter. Maude, to Charles Meidell
of Mullen, Neb., son of Mr. and Mi's.
F A. Meidell. The wedding will take
place In late March at the Lowe Av
enue Presbyterian church.
Miss Munroe has tieen a student of
Amy Woodruff in dramatic*! and of
Florence Hosier Palmer In voice. Whe
was graduated from Central High
school In 3920.
4 —--.—
Hit* Fork ami Its Use.
Do not grasp the fork as if It were
a garden spade «ir a screw driver.
On the other hand, avoid the man
ner of the overdainty folk who hold
the fork gingerly between the finger
and the thumb with the other fingers
curled In midair. Strike a happy
medium between these two methods.
The tendency nowadays 1s to eat
everything that one can with the
fork, and the suggestion has been
made that the ultra fastidious will
soon attempt to use a fork for hot
chocolate. Ice cream is preferably
eaten with a fork, and for this rea
son it should be served In as solid a
form as possible.
In eating salad only the fork should
be used—never the knife. It Is per
missible to cut the leaves of tl^p let
tuce or other green with the side of
the fork If they are served whole.
When you have finished with a
course the knife and fork with prongs !
pointed up should be laid across the
right side of the plate. This should
also be the position of the knife and
fork when passing the plate for a
second helping of meat at a family
dinner.
Peas should he eaten with a fork,
not with a spoon, and they should be
pierced with the tines of the fork, not
ecooped up.
In certain strict boarding schools
where table manners are part of the
clrrlculum the pupils are taught never
to use the fork in the right hand, but
to reserve that hand solely for the use
of the knife or spoon. However, this
is difficult for most persons, and In
this country many well bred persons
do use the fork In the right hand.
This is perfectly permissible so long
as they do not yield to the temptation
of using that Implement as a shovel.
SPECIALS
Marcel and Bob Curl, $1.00
Children’s Bobbinf. 25c
Scalp Treatment, 25e; Shampoo, BOc
Salon L’Charme
212 Courtney Bldg. AT 4519
THOROUGH CLEANING
KEEPS RUGS SANITARY
Your nags and carpets may be *
clean enough to walk on—but
are they clean enough for the
children to play on?
THE RIGHT KIND OF CLEAN
ING KILLS GERMS
Whether on nags, draperies, bed
ding or clothes, our cleaning de
stroys the bacteria, as well as
adding wear to the fabric.
THE PANTORIUM
1515 Jones » AT lantic 4383
N. W. Corner 24th and L MA rket 1283
Your ,
Favorite
Typewrite
Adding Machine
'or
duplicating Machin
Any Mali*
At prices that will attract you, with serviic
that will satisfy you.
Our representative will he glad to' show you
igh quality and \ substantial saving. Vd;
^ to have him calf.
All Makes Typewriter Co. /
X SOS South 18lh y
Phono AT lantlc 2414
( Florence Davies'^
^ Woman’s Editorial J
Youthful Crlticcs.
The little girl across the street has
dreadful manners. No one ever knew
quite why. Her mother Is a popular
hostess and suavity itself to strangers.
But her daughter lapses Into unl>e
llevable rudeness. Publishing in loud
tones the faults and failings of her
neighbors seems to be one of her
chief accomplishments.
One day the secret Was out.
"Aw, go on." the youngster was
saying, "Your mother wears awful
clothes, anyhow, my mother says so."
The veil was rent in two. The
small girl with her blatant voice and
harshly flung criticisms Was only
echcoing the thoughtlessly spoken
words of her mother.
It didn't take long for that kind of
bread cast upon the waters to come
bark to the little girl's mother, bitter
with salt sea water.
"Judge not that ye tie not judged"
would have been a good motto for
that woman to have hung upon her
walls, for her sharp Judgments ut
tered thoughtlessly before her small
daughter were often flung back at her
a hundred fold.
Sometimes the damage done by
criticising friends and relatives before
children borders on the tragic.
If children are like small sieves,
keeping nothing to themselves, It is
also true that they are like sponges,
absorbing a little of everything that
they hear and see. In some families
where there is In reality an underlying
loyalty toward parents and friends,
lightly spoken criticisms color the en
tire. attitude of children toward their
elders, so that these youthful antagon
isms never entirely disappear.
If tlie issue seems vague In the tell
ing, perhaps facts and figures can
make it plain. Money talks, they say.
and it talked In the case of the young
man who found himself almost over
looked In his grandmother's will. It
seemed all very unfair, to all except
those who knew that the chap had
always treated his grandmpther with
a thinly veiled disrespect.
And yet it wasn’t altogether his
About Exterior Chimneys
i AJs'D
CARDEN
From earliest American days the
exterior chimney has been a fre
fluent architectural feature. Indeed
where the stack issues at the end
of the house It Is often necessary
for the outline of the chimney to
fault. His parents, though funda
mentally loyal to her. had never hesl
tated to air their views as to her
faults and failings, in the presence of
their children.
That Is not the way to create re
spect for the old In the minds of the
young.
Criticisms of other people are un
kind and uncalled for at best. Hut
when uttered beffire children, they
actually take on a kind of unbridled
vulgarity, or at least a lack of re
straint which lowers the speaker more
than It really hurts the absent vic
tim of the unkind attack.
Bee AVant Ads Produce Results
appear on the outside of the wall all
the way down to the ground level.
Sometimes this exterior evidence of
an interior feature is of distinctly
pleasing appearance, hut in other
cases its broad and unadorned flat
ness looks monotonous and unwieid
ly. Where such a condition exists
(many stucco houses show it) an ac
cessory treatment like the one shown
above mad he it ied with success.
Such a vine trellis is easily made
dnd still more readily erected. Its
color is preferably that of the house
wall, lest its presence be too obtru
sive, and it« proportions should fol
low those of the chimney surface
that it ornaments. plant it with
climbing rose* like the pink or whitt
Dorothy Perkins, or perhaps a wis
taria or tikebia. and you achieve at
r nee an as.-' ; to the architectural
quality of the house and a pleasing
-xiension of your regular garden
area.
fO.pynyht 1923.)
Recipes That Call for the l
of Fruit.
Raisin Pie.
Seed and cut a half cupful of larf *-■
raisins. Soak for two hours In one
cupful of cold water. Beat one egg.
a/ld one cupful of sugar, the Juice
and grated rind of one lemon, and ore
tablespoon ful of flour. Mix well,
then add the raisins and water in
which they have been soaking and
cook until the mixture thickens. Bake
In two crusts.
Dutch Apple CaJte.
Sift two cupfuls of flour, three tea
spoons of baking powder. one tea^
spoon of salt and one tablespoon of
sugar, then add the beaten yolks of
two eggs, thrre tablespoons of melted
butler and one cup of milk. Beat well,
then cut and fold In the stiffly beaten
whites of two eggs. Spread the mix
ture on buttered pans, one-half Inch
thick an.l lay two rows of apples cut
into eights on top of dough. .Sprinkle
with sugar and bake a half hour In
hot oven. May be served with or with
out lemon «juee.
Apple Sponge.
Mix well together a quarter cup of
sugar, two well beaten eggs, a quai
ter cup of rnilk, one cup flour, a half
teaspoon of salt and two teaspoons f t
baking powder. Add five apples,
sliced thin, turn into a butter baking
dish and bake fur one hour in a mod
erate oven. Serve with sauce.
Orange Souffle.
Beat three egg yolks until lemon
colored and thick, then add three
tables|>oons of powdered sugar, half
a tablespoon of lemon Juice and half
an orange and a quarter teaspoon of
salt. Then fold In the beaten whites
of three eggs. Turn into a buttered
dish and bake in a moderate oven
about 20 jninut»*6?. Serve with a f *u'^_
sauce.
New console models are a combina
tion phonograph and radio case.
DIAMONDS
';( Ut ut* transform your old style
diamond jewelery *nt© a fashionable
new Ring or Brooch
^U.BERT EDHOLM
Upstairs Jeweler
2d Floor City Natl Bk. Bldg.
Final Week—January Sale
Those who have for many years profited
by our January prices on Linens and Sta
ples will confirm our urgency upon all
The Economy of Supplying Future Needs Now
Extra Preparations and New Pricings to Make This
Wind-up Week Memorable
Small Lots to Be Cleared—All Table Goviis Which Show Handling to Re Cleared
Prices Here Quoted on a Few of Many Interesting Items
FINAL WEEK IN THE LINEN SECTION
Odd Napkins
Beautiful Designs in the
Various Sizes and Prices
$5.00 No. 12; dozen.$3.95
$7.50 No. 17; dozen.$5.95
$15.00 No. 850; dozen.$12-50
$20.00 No. 820; dozen.$14-75
$13.00 No. 93; dozen.$9.75
Odd Sets
#15.00—1 Cloth, 8x8; 1 dozen napkins,
22x22; per set .$22.50
$22.00—1 Cloth, 8x12; 1 dozen nap
kins, 22x22; per set.$12.50
$40.00—1 Cloth, 8x12; l dozen nap
kins. 22x22: per set.$28.75
Group No. 1
One table filled with dresser searfs,
squares, chair backs, pillow covers,
fancy bath towels, etc.,
39c
Odd Cloths
A)I Pure Linen Cloths in Short
lengths at L©» Prices, Some
Slight!) Slutted from Handling
>4.50 70x70 Cloths; each . $2.50
• *5.00 70x70 Cloths; each.. $3.25
*7.50 70x70 Cloths; each. . $4.75
$10.00 70x90 Cloths ; each .. $5.95
(Also In Larger Sires.)
Extra Large Cloths
These cloths are 2'/3 sards wide
and 3. 3V4> and 4 yards long, and
sold up to $35.00. Your Choice
$15
(No Napkins to Match)
Group No. 2
Tabic filled with fancy linen pieces,
slightly soiled and mussed—
V2 Prioe
Real Madeira
Madeira Centers: each. 51.95
Mosaic Doilies: each.51.95
Boudoir Pillow Cases; each.. .52.95
Appenzell Towels; each.51.75
■4-inch Madeira Cloth; each, 512.50
Madeira Napkins, dozen ... 55-95
Art and Handkerchief
Linens
ci-inch Sheer Linen; yard.75c
36 inch Cambric Linen; yard ... 75<*
ob-ineh Art Linen; yard.90c
45-inch Art Linen, yard.51.00
54-inch Art Linen, yard .....51.50
’--inch Linen Sheeting; \aru. 52-50
90-inch Linen Sheeting; yard. 52.95
Group No. 3
Table filled with luncheon cloths and
luncheon sets in cotton and linen,
soiled and mussed, at
Very Low Prices
White Goods, Toweling and Damask Remnants
at Final Cleanup Prices—Selling on Main Floor
FINAL WEEK ON THE FLOOR BELOW
Blankets
$7..">0 Bath Kobe Blankets with bor
der; at, eaeh.$4.95
$11 Beacon Comfortable.s, ea., $7.95
$8,f>0 40% wool mixed I’laid Blan
kets; pair. .$5-95
$11.00 all wool Plaid Blankets; per
pair, only . . $$.75
Indian and Auto Robes
Still n tJoori Assortmont
$s ,)0 Indian Rohes; eaeh... $0.95
$10.i») Indian Robes, each. $7.95
$l i Pure Silk Robes; each, $11.50
il.'i Wool Auto Robes; e»eb. $11.50
Comfortables
$5 50 Silkoline Covers; cotton filler.
at, each .94.95
$12.50 Plain Sateen Covers; all wool
filler; at, each.98.75
112.50 Cambrie Covers; all wool fill
er; each .j. 98.75
$15.00 Fine Sateen Covers, pure
wool fillers. each . . .... 814.75
Bed Pillows
$5,50 Leader; pair. 82.95
$fi.00 Anchor; pair.81.95
$7.50 T.-K Special; pair ... .96.75
$5.50 T K. Special; pair ... 87.75
Cases and Sheets
.1.10 4'2v'll> Hotel ; Cnell.I25f*
:»(•<> -I'Jx'hi Mohawk; each. [{5«*
I'T1 e 4f>xf}»i Mohawk iSpooial c» [{{If*,
$1.75 8U99 Hotel; each.St.25
$1.75 8U99 Hotel Harvard. $1.25
$2.00 81x99 RuKby. «aeh $1.50
Quantity uinitro Slightly Soiled from Showing-Otn^rwtg* Parfact in Quality
- 1 ' - 1
Bed Spreads
All Perfect Merchandise
Some Slightly Soiled
$*50 Embroidered sets, scalloped
and out, per set .$4.75
*15.00 English Satin; each. 910.00
$15 00 Fancy Spreads; each. 910.0(1
$ 3 •"> 0 0 Hand-embroidered Veil,
Spreads, at each .917.50
Sundries
3 lb. < heese Cloth covered bat Is. ,v.
each .. $|
3-lb Wool Mixed 72x90 batts. 92.05
- lb. Pure Australian lamb's Wool
slightly soiled; each.92.05
36-inch Beacon Robing, van.! "70<
36 inch ('bailies, yard . 22'- •<*
36 inch Percales, yard *’5f*
36 inch Fancy Flannelette-s . yd.. 20<*
Pequot Cases and Sheets Still Complete in Hemstitched—Prices
tK/ttt Soon Pe Advanced. *