v u-" ;? 5 T?VTr.T ' c ")'p' ' -i a : vn rjY TVv '.EVENING .LlSDGER-PlULADEUnilA, 'TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1917 . h MM--liTJytvi,!VV MAT LAKES SAILORS SCORED AS SLAltUSKS Refuse Any Sacrifice to Coun try, Charges Head of Sea Union , STEEL TRUST RULE SEEN Repudiation of Pacific Wngo Agree ment Made Dasls of ' ' Criticism nt'l'l.U,0. N. Y.. Nov 10. 1 . .u tli.it tho l.-iko furriers' Assocla t., dominated ly tlio Ktoct Tni( ! V inir tho Uo.-erimH.-iUH smpmiiiuiiig pro don. uonii. Trixt und Luke. Ik HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS ARE HELPING TO WIN WAR Aid General Conservation Movement by Reducing Consumption of All Staple Products Public Proves Patriotism by Co-operating- -irnllliH.' Mi Winn on the lit rat I.uk controlling - 'melU.M ,,,.,,,,.,,, ire made at tod.ii'M hkkImi of the ram-,.,. tvlrratli.il of Labor when th lotions committee recommended In lenient of the executive council's agree.- nis with the Uov eminent. Andrew I-'uiuscth, repp-enting (no Sea ,.h"s L'nlon. declared that the Lake Car !w Association wan unwilling to nuiko IT saer flee for tho Clovernmcnt. and char IcterUed the Orcal Lakes as tho "slack- "unexplained that the carriers had re fu'ed to be a party to the agreement re 7l,,v -niered Into on tho Paclllc count be n the coast shipbuilders, the shipping Z:Ia nnd the shipping labor organizations. !- Sranlcelng adequate wages and belter i-nrkliis lomlitlons to former workers t.i itract thtm baik Into tlio iraue llr Kuruseth also assailed thu IndlscriiV inile' drafting of i-eaineii Into the army. ,h lie mIIom were so scare that th.-liox.-rn. went Was "'' furoe1 to "m" Hlllpi v ' h The convention adopted the report of the ...": i. ...,imelt calling upon labor to help theCovernment cut the cost of print paper. J tp Burke, of the pulp workers, dec ared ina Importance oi v ". .... .-... ' I.n,iWt of the war had been exaggerated. con,duf ;..-,, nntleo that the union would not ' Sennit Government prlce-flxlng to be mod permn , . r..nt ne ncrcascd s a li.i. .i. ., nrltr-ra ulan tn demand In wages wnit" "-" nTcxecntlve council report, favoring ad. dltlonal workmen s compensation lcglsla lion oil age pensions nnd the civil rights bHI to protect tho legal rights of soldiers nd Ml'ori In the courts during the war. was approved The part of the report condemning the free speech and free press rehtrlctlons In the espionage bill was likewise adopted. Compulsory arbitration was condemned. The food control nnd food surviy laws I, were Indotsul V. S. LAliOti TO EXTEND SYMPATHY TO RUSSIA BUFFALO. Nov. 20. The war-grimed hand of brotherhood will be stretched cut to the great mass of Hus la'a revolution-torn workers by the Ameri can I'tderatlon of Labor, It was learned today Packed by a pro-war vote, tho most over whelming roll-call pronotinclamento- In Its history, the Federation plans a fraternal meago to the labor legions of Itus-da, tell ing why American labor Is In the war tjalnst'kalserlsm to the limit. The "greeting resolution" Itself may n-t be placed before the delegates until later, but ft' Interested Is President Uompers In bringing Ilusslan labor's great problem be fore American labor, and In putting Ameri can labor's Interpretation of world labor problems and prospects clearly, before the workers of Russia, that part of today's1 bj.y program has been given over to V.us (lan affairs. The enormous amount of routine busi ness pending between now and adjournment Saturday w.l be Interrupted at tho after nofn session by the pergonal report of First Vice President James Duncan of what he raw and learned In Russia as a member of America's olllelal war mission to that 1 country. 7'Mj it fie lrt of a scrus 0 ortlclcj aeallnp with the load tnvintj campaign. Twenty-tivo thousand persona buy their three meals a day in Phil ulelphla's popular priced hotels and restaurants. Ten thou sand others, who have breakfast and dinner or supper at home, get ono meal a day at noon Irrthese places. About. three thousand drop in at night Tor some sort of a lunch. That imnris that approximately 38,000 meals a day nro Fervid In these estublloli-nienti-. in (hue popular- luCITY HALL IS OBJECTIVE OF BIG AERIAL ATTACK Bombs Changed With Messages to Housewives Will Fly in Thanks giving Day Battle A batllo In the air will be stiiged over Philadelphia on tho afternoon of Thanks giving Day as a, part of the National Food ife Conservation educational movement being v conducted by Food Dictator Herbert ' Hoover. Arrangements for the display j were completed today at a conference be- t mem roou i-ommissioncr nraanuryi oi fi Washington, and Joseph C. Smith, tho Mayors i.ecretnry. .. The battle will lin lietiiAnn tilnlntiiie frnin , l"ort du" Pont, hydroplanes from Leaguo Wind, and aircraft from the. Ksslnirtnn H Aviation .School. Olllcers of the Aero Huh M J'enntylvanla hao been asked to nr- r,. range details that will decide the victors &0f tho sham emrnfrement. - ' Th tlldtn lhlfiA, .f . An... . .. Ill l. tr. -f -' ....., wjvi.b ii iuu luiursk il ill iiv lu ;flx In the minds of Philadelphia household eri the.need for food conservation nnd this Jepject will bo accomplished through tho i sneiung or the planes with bombs made of 1 circulars containing advico to housewives ? tlld DraCtlp.il lllPtlmria nt liuclifi rwlltif citn. , piles. ;- viijr nun win ue tne objective point oi .conversing fleets of air craft and tho ecu- p Boon and 'i o'clock, so that It may ho viewed l',l ,ne fthall crowds arid the holiday Places to oat ina.v lin plai-id grou)sllrst ,md ucoml ilass, i i neu anu cniup. The problem of tond conservation to the end that the Allltd nations may win tho war against tho flerman autocracy Is comparatively simple In 'tho tlrst and Fec und class places. In the populnr-prlced ones It Is dllllcult and In the cheap ones It Is extremely dllllcult. The reason of this Is not far tn ek. To a latgo num ber of readcis It Is obvious. The man who customarily has si stilts of clothes on hand ran rut his clothes supply In two more easily than the man who has only two suits It Is dlftloult, though not lm polblc, for the man with two suits to rut his rlollu-s supply In two. but what can the man vvlin never has but line suit do" Two Ims in a melon patch ivlll "git aw.iv with' -vv.-iitj-fnur melons easily enough In Inking . . i i I the limit nut of each If removed from the patilj and required to buy their melons with nionev earned by selling newspapers, they will greatly ridiiee their melon consumption: they will reduce. It far more than the lad who has always bought Ills melons with money ho had to earn. Patrons of the first nnd Fecond-class eat ing places arc very much llko the bovs In tho melon patch: those of tho popular priced pluces nro lu comparison somewhat like the boy who has always bought his melons nnd worked and planned bird for tho money to buy them The rich man, the high liver, the lavish and luxurious liv er, can ave more becuuso ho has more to start out with The fortunes of birth ami environment have much to do In determin ing what are necessaries and what aro luxuries. A man brought up on chuck and corned beef and cabbago Is apt to consider tho man who "has to have" ten derloin us Inexcusably extravagant. Yet some one oho might call tho corned beet and . cabbago eater extravagant because life can bo sustained by bread and water. It Is nrctty generally agreed, however. that those that have lived the most lav ishly and luxuriously now can and ought to save tho most food. The swing of butter lu the popular-pilced eating placis amounts to approximately 25 per cent, or 2000 pounds. It Is nccompllshwt by the same general method that Is .-m-pojed by the first and second (Mass hotels and restaurants simply by making It In convenient for the patron to got as much as ho had be tore One pleeo of butter, weighing about a thirty-second of a pound, Is served nnd no more is given unless tho guest asks for It Sometimes two pieces are seived Just as before, but the pieces nro not so largo aw before Ouests, of course, ob served the butter reduction and commented ujsm it .The patriotic explanation was suf ficient for most of them, though an Incon sequential tew said In substance: "l prefer to do mv own deciding about conservation I'm paying for what l want to eat and I want It." in such Instances thero Is but ono thing for the management to do. Oivo tho man what he's paying for and asks ror. Rut the man who when he Is plalnlv wim.i n.i.i-i l'Im. mi n. little butUr for the country for which other men are giving up b.ood that man Is as scarce as vou would expect him to bo lu Philadelphia, If you are ii Philadelphlau Thero may bo something wrong with our politics, but there Ian t much wrong with our patriotism. The sugar saving is approximately W per cent, ac-eompllshed by removal of loaf sugar bowls from tho tables and rervlcc of only two pieces of sugar with, a cup of tea or coffee The samo method Is emplovcd by tho more expensive places. Howls for gran ulated or powdered sugar for cereals arc not niled, as betore, but ret on tho tab.es halt or less than half full, giving tho sug-ge-tlon of scarcity. Again, the psychologi cal effect Is noticeable. With plenty bo foro his ees, a man eats more than with llttTc before him, even though he must know there Is more In the cupboard Walters arc kept constantly warned against sugar waste. Tho iiuantltles of sugar In all kinds of pastry have been reduced In moderation. The total saving a day In sugar In theso popular priced eating places Is about 2000 pounds. .... , The meal -avlng is In the neighborhood of 15 per cent, or 900 pounds a lav In somo places tho "meatless Tuesday" Is str ctly observed, though In others tho absolute elimination of meat for an entire day Is considered too bevero an experiment nnd meat dishes aro simply suboidlnated to vegctublo dinners nnd egg dishes of How Staple Foodstuffs Are Being Conserved 78,000 meals nre served daily fn city's first and second clnss hotels and restaurants. These establishments are helping win the war: . By reducing consumption of incut "J4 per cent. Uy reducing consumption of butter 5U per cent. By reducing consumption of sugar au per cent. By reducing consumption of wheat Hour 30 per cent. Their patrons, instead of com plaining, approve and help. VIRGINIA "BIRDS" SAVE HATFIELD TURKEY SALE Forty Cents Per Pound Pre dicted as More of Certainty Than Possibility various forts, somo of them containing smalt quantities of meat and poultry. This Is the practlco not one day but all days. Managers of some of these places are frankly nfrald of losing business If meats are entirely removed from tho cards. "Lots of our customers want meat " said a man ager who took this vkw "They ate going to get meat If tjii-v don't get It beic they will gei It somewhere is.. I wouldn't save any meat for the countiv by taking nil meat off tin bill nf faie but I would make bulne-s tor some competitor and Inse It for my own employer. As you ran see, though, by looking nl the card, we don't have so many meat dishes ns we did have, and there arc irmro vegetable nnd egg dishes. That tricks a person Into eating less meat. It Is tho principle of auvertlslng." This man's theory regarding tho man that wants meat Is good and the facts sustain It. Somo cheap restaurants nre eliminating meat entirely one day n week and thero Is somo decrease In the number of patrons on that day, but tho management Is willing to put tip with that. au agreement of nil eating place pro prietors to standardize conservation would prov-o effective. Patrons would know that If there was no meat on the menu In their favorite restaurants thero was nono nny where else All could, of course, contlnuo tho piactlce of kciplng meat to servo on demand The wheat (lour saving tn the popular priced eating places W about 15 per oVtit, accomplished by providing smaller bread portions, making guests ask for more if It Is wanted, uiglng ibe use of corn mutllns and corn bread and re bread nnd mixing corn with wheat Hour for bread and rolls llATFIfLD, I'n.. Nov. 20. The killing of many hundreds of thou sands of pounds of turkeys to feed tho soldiers In tho cantonments will not ellmi ' nato tho noted "Hatfield bird" from the market this jcar. for yesterday afternoon thero arrived In the llttlo North 1'cnn bor ough a carload of big fat turkeys from Virginia, and the dennlte announcement was made that tho annual turkey sale will be held on Thursday of this week It was thought possible that, with rev cral big cantonments right In the Virginia and Maryland sections. It might not bo pos sible to secilie u supply of turkejs fiom tho growers lu Virginia the district from which M. K. Rentier, who conducts the sales at llatlleld, secures his supply. Rut, with the recent action of the authorities In ordering the placing on sale of millions of pounds of sftirago birds, tho market In the South evidently opened up, for Mr. I Rennrr has secured a splendid lot of birds and that applies not only to the 1300 turkeys which will bo auctioned, but to moro than 600 thickens, 200 ducks and somo guinea hens. The sale will bo staged, as has been the custom for mam- jears, In the yards at S.-hlotteter'K South Hattteld Hotel Inquiry In the little borough along the Noith Penn last night ellclled the information that while a big irowil of hovers was evpeited. and while it was admitted that a .piantltv of storage tutkovs will bo on the mark, t around the Thanksgiving season, the prleo will "run higher than last year" This means that families who will demand a turkey which Is known to be of Virginia ancestry and known to be a -frcMi-kllled bird" vv'lll have to pay tho bill at tile rate of not less than thirty-eight cents per pounds, nnd possibly forty-two to forty four cents per pound. First-pick birds at tho auction will. In all likelihood, "go for" nbout twonty-nlno to thlrty-ono cents per pound wholesale; and with a normal "over head" cxpenso In preparing tho birds for sale, a forty-cent-per-pound turkey Is more a, certainty than a possibility. ' lfj?sHt URGE REPEAL OF NEW ADVERTISING POSTAGE PRICE M'QUILLIN M i i i "Hy CfflMr TO SHAME OF SLACKERS Representatives Call Tax "De structive of Greatest Edu cational Factors" R. W. r. ALLEN, JR. Son of Colonel und Mrs. II. W. P. Allen, of 425 High btrcet, Ger mantovvn. He has just received u commission us first lieutenant, officers' reserve corps, nftcr train ing at Fort Mycr, Va. Ho served with Troop A during tho Mexican border troubles. Lieutenant Allen descend- from fighting htock, hi-i father being sole surviving com missioned ofik-cr of the lOGth J'enn-j-ylvania Volunteers, und is widely knovvn in Grand Army and , Loyal Legion Circles, being one of tlio "old guard" in Jlcntle Post, in which lie helped initiate General Grant to membership. On his mother's side Lieutenant Allen is descended from Richard Stock ton, a signer of tho Declaration of Independence. SKW TORN. Nov. 20. Tho repeal or tho rcctlon of the war tat law Increasing postal rates on second-class mall matter was urged upon Congress In resolutions adopted at a meeting hero of the Rep resentatives Club, an organliallu of pub lishers. Tim rntes which are to go Into effect next July, were eharactorlzed In tho resolution as Mestructlvo of ono of tho greatest educational mid Industrial factors In the country." continuing, tin- icsoiuuon i says I With the thiottlllig 't the magazines by tlllt law the lliilusttlat benefits of tho ' iiiiiniifactuiltig Interests, through the ad t vertlslng and selling opportunities, will also be illsastn-ti-ly affected John Adams inaycr, secrctiuy or uie Periodical Publishers' Association, -hlch Includrs publications having a combined circulation of nbout SG.OQO.OOU, In an ud dt ess said the law will restrict circulations to such an extent that tho Government will suffer a loss of postal Income instead of gaining an Incicase. He declared the pub lishers aro willing to ngrco to any kind of proper tax, "even to the extent of confisca tion of all their profits, but they see only dlsntcr In the present rate inci races." Con tinuing, ho said: Tho express companies ndvertlso that tliev 111 carry vegetables or other produce from New York to California for lour cents a pound, but the new p.jslnl rate will exact leu cents a pound lor thu advertising s-eitions of peiiodlcals be. Iv-ei-n New Yolk and the Pacific oust. Tlio rate Incieat-cs tango from 50 to 1100 per cent. Low postal tateii for periodicals, llitj speaker added, "grew out of the necessity of the people, and the stand of Congress for low rates had nltcndy been founded on a recognition of tho educational force of periodicals." fc ORANGES NORMAL IN PRICE; GRAPEFRUIT ON MARKET L Vegetables Comparatively Cheap Po tatoes and Cabbages in Abundant Supply Dr. J. TtlttAl! ttmlll. ..I.nl.n. ... n ,1,A , food commit. nr it.. Tii.tin.iii.in tin- r . , " "ii.w vfc ilia aiuauviimia. JJUIIIC iv i Cotnmltteo. today issued tho fob """'"s Duuctin: Flodlda oranges aro now on tho maiket Vmi Dout nrmal In price. Grapefruit, ii " om 'orlda and Porto Tlleo, varies iS...8 "wording to the slzo of tho fruit, Bu ... '" Irom :- 1 H-0 a hox. The itntlful i.Ant.i,.- ...tu ii. i.. KP. Potatoes and cabbage are about the nu,ii ' tKa as Jestcraay unci tne supply wnunuea abundant. Other vegetables In jifte abiimi-,,,, ... 11....1 i . r ,. --.. ,,fc bi'Juj ,i; (.-uimiiuiiit; liuuuv Ik me ln 1,rlee- PearV iU N,,AT Potatoes, cabbage, parsley, lUklZ ' "'" turnips, iievts, romainc, rau- PfcWieiL tlUlllltklnu rit,.l !..... iturn? !AU Celery, cauliflower, yellow f 'rii potatoes, grapes und spinach, i .-"t-AUClJ Grapefruit, orances. lemons. KtI'V' tar. apples, cranberries, peas, wraatoa aa ninannlM. rioif,.?UDPVr of fish is now normal'and Just feirr01" equal- to lhn rlem.-inrl Prlena nre tiMii rma for thl Mason, with whiting i?M ling ranging lowest. . GIFT DAY FOR CHILDREN drn- T '" uonauon uay at mo -np-ff "omeopsthlc Hospital. Franklin and ?Sf ntJcets. iPerlnr Ph,,i'" ounStera are not whim- W thl ii... """r oi, nor uo iney uegruage 1J:" ll,tle war brothers and sisters in Bel- I'milk hi"? l'"ra"c. but- Prices of bread and IUA. i i VUU up, KB WOll n lUU UlllOl rtwMLUea of 'Ke. and theo-oungsters think I. rv.nouid not h r,ipni.n , Money, coal nJ nml.lnm o.. hmllv r- "9 Hfls r v 9 iviviib aAV li&t the InattLutlon tn cat tar th O Br Prinflnr1 In fti hnanffal frnm i tans uisc COCOA ! Either hot or cold . I is truly delicious. i H. 0. WILBUR & SONS, Inc. I I'blladeliihla S Gfo )sLavnj W4XNUT ST. TODAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY! TOP COATS .Fur Trimmed Velours. Tom- Koins. IIoIUms, llvrr Tone. Irlnuned vr 1 1 h Nutria. Iludum csl, Jap . Mln". S(ulrrrl, etc. A SPECIAL PimCIIAHK OF A NKW YORK MANIIFACTDKEK E AUUNU IB TO BELL $55 to 995 ValuM for SELL FOOD FROM CAR ALL DROWN WHEN VESSEL SINKS; CAPTAIN LIVED HERE The s-ehooner Dlamondflelcl, i three masted oil tanker, which was last seen battling In the teeth of the hcivlest norther that hasswcpt the Gulf of Mexico In years. Is admitted bv Us owners to havo been lost with all hands on or about September 20. The tanker. In tho West Indian trade, was commanded by Captain A. C. V. Peters, UD Fcderil street. Information that tho vessel bad been given up by Its owners, Scott vV Co , of Mo bile, Ala., reached Philadelphia last night In letters tecelved by relatives of Cnptiln 1'etcrs. The owners staled that, ntthouch they have searched the ports of tho West Indies and Iho Gulf of Mexico, no trace of the missing captain or the ship was found Captain Peters was well known In Phlla delplila shipping circles as n bravo and skillful master. CONSIDER FOOD AND TAXES Directors Chicago Board of Trade Post pone Action for Further Reports CHICAGO, Nov. 10. No nctlon was tak en by the directors of the Uoard of Trado at their special meeting lust night which was held for tho purpose of hearing tho if port of tho committee Just returned from Washington following conferences there with olllelals regarding tho matter of rood administration licenses and the stamp taw It was stattd after the meeting that At torney Uobblns, of tho lloatd of Trade, H still at Washington and further word rela tive to tho subject Is awaited from him, and that Adolph Kempncr, of tho commit tee, would return to Washington. The matter will be held In abeyance pending additional reports from tho ex change representatives. Dealer in Wilmington Adopts Method nnd Forces Prices Down WILMINGTON, Del., Nov. CO. II. Tlldgeley Harrington, of Dover, tried the experiment of selling potatoes direct from the cur to tho people, and tho consequence was that tho biggest crowd that ever gath ered at n potato sale greeted him. Com mission men and otheis In Wilmington who had potatoes and apples tft sell won cut the prices. Mr Harrington sold good potatoes at si ar, a Inskot nnd npplC3 at 11 ft hamper. Ho disposed of a carload of potatoes In record time and also sold a great auautlty of apples. MOTHER KILLS TWO CHILDREN Refugee From Asylum Feeds Poisoned Candy to Her Boys IIALTIMOrtn. Nov, 20. After eating poisoned candy given them by their mother, who escaped from a hospital for the men tally deficient, IMwIn Skinner, three, and Craig Skinner, five, died lato last night, and tho mother, Mrs. Roberta Skinner, Is In a. critical condition at tho hospital. Sho nto somo of tho candy. ' "They kept mo In tho hospital when there was nothing wrong with me, nnd I wanted to dlo with my babies," tho woman said. Fire Started by Children vnm:. P.i.. Nov. 20. Flro started In shock of corn fodder by children at play caused the destruction of a largo barn and Its contents on the farm of George V. Det ter. near Yv'ellsvllle. Twelvo hogs perished. The loss Is estimated nt JD00O, only partly covered by Insurance. Hi ii Skirt Pleating Ida and In Stnnrnr. Hm. .vrinrainn Hemstitching uperlor irorl A. uulck dillvsry. n ., eovered Id Buttons an ni-. nest Work Parisian Plaiting & Novelty Co. 10S So. 13th Street aJ SHAKER SISTERS sale or "Dorotny ' Shaker Cloaks Distinctive designs for street, carriage, auto, after noon, evening or opera wenr, all In broadcloth and silk. ALSO H omema de i le rancy AT TUB Goods Bcllcvuc-Stratford, Philadelphia November 19, 20, 21 and 22 A TSl I ' lul I ' till 1 f 111 j U ill I 1 1 i nrrTf J Qmp Wy fsK(tt l i "fit i J tH dmi fn w To Economize Wisely is patriotic duty of those of us who perforce must stay at home. To buy for utility, to spend wisely, to maintain appearances, to prevent waste by making every dollar do full duty That Is Real Patriotism Women's & Misses' Tyrol-Wool Suits 23.75 24.75 26.75 31.75 are practical, serviceable eco nomical and in keeping with the spirit of the times. Tyrol-Wool1 Top Coats 24.75 ' 27.75 32.75 37.75 MANN & DILKS U CHtfTNUrVTMtr i-i24 viH Verdun Victim, Minos Leg and F Ingew, '4 Oircrs Himself .for Service JT ,.v ' of Country Tlie action or Pile McOulllen. son uf Dr.' and Mis. Daniel McQulllen, Upland Way, j uicrunraK, who, umiougn minuj one iiv-a;i and three lingers, which he lost rhlle.-'5.ia nhould be an examplo to 1cVert, acourdln 1V sccond locul exemption board, to whew young McQulllen applied. He was cripple when struck by a German shell at Verdtaa on August 2. ' ' Succos.ors to Ellis A. Glmbet and J. J. Ityan as members of District Appeal Bow No. 3 were named yesterday at Stat, ritf headquarters, Harrlsburg. They r Alrt under Lawrence, Jr., and C. II. LAffetty. MRS. WILSON SELLS HOME , Former Residence of President's Wjft Transferred WASHINGTON. Nor.. 20. .The little house at 130S Eighteenth street no longer has tho "For Sale" sign ln Its window, where It was placed In December, IMS", when tho owner, then Mrs. Norman Oidt. became Mrs. Woodruw Wilson and removed her personal belongings to the White Home Tho purchaser of tho property Is F. Lee Phillips, who with his family will shortly take possession. The house Is a thrce-stoiy brick Just off du Font Circle, A Kansas Dog Story With a Mora! A Hnrton dog accompanied tho family tu cluitch last Sunday nnd panted nd made mi much noise tho congregation 'had difficulty hearing tho service. Tho sotpn kicked the dog out several times, but hi always camo back. Which Illustrates Ope great dlffercnco between a dog and a man. U you kicked a roan out of church he would bo so- mad ho would not coma back for ten years Horton Headlight. BONWIT TELLER 6XQ S5pecicdfy(5hop0rhmcJhM CHESTNUT AT 13 STREET Continuing IMPOR TANT SALES Embracing All Departments of WOMEN'S AND MISSES' Suits, Dresses Tailleur Suits Coats, Waists and Millinery at decisve reductions Tailleur and Dressy Suits Of gabardine, silvertone, plain velour, serge, poiret twill, heather velour and a lew broadcloth. (All .sizes) Formerly up to $.'t9.r0 25.00 Of velour, silvertone, ga bardine, tricotine and nov elty cloth. On straight, 90 CA youthful lines 0&.VKM Formerly up to $65.00 -Sport Suits of Distinction Suitable for all outdoor occasions, in all the newer shades. All sizes. 20.00 wer up to 3U.50 Afternoon and Evening Gowns Remarkable Reductions Man Tailored Serge Dresses About seventy-five Dresses, the season's most favored models; ) iq CA many embroidered and various styles of trimmings. In black, navy, f 1 73J brown, Burgundy and tan. were up ta 3U.SO Charmeuse and Georgette Dresses Combinations, Faille silks, some with beaded embroid ery, others fur trimmed . . . Satin and Velvet Dresses Tailored and embroidered, in shades of taupe, dark green, pretty French blue and rose Dance Frocks, Chiffon taffetas in all the newest pastel shades, with metal laces and embroideries 19.50 28.00 29.50 Embroidered Georgette Frocks Georgette crepe and Char meuse afternoon govns; OC QH many charming model' 0J.UI Dinner and Afternoon Crocks Of beaded Georgette, silk nets, Charmeuse and crepes 45.00 Exclusive and Unusual Gowns For afternoon and evening wear; of velvet, embroid ered crepes, Georgette and satin. Many reduced to one- CQ en -Misses' Dress Special Especially arranged sale of Misses' Dresess One hundred and seventy-five Dresses, suitable for afternoon, ) sw theatre and dance wear, developed in satin, serge, charmeuse, Ji fill crepes, nets and taffeta. ) -vvv T.IOM upfo- 3.W' Women's Daytime Coats Cheviot, wool 'velours and U Loupine, wool velour and tweed sport and dress models. Many with natural muskrat collars. 25.00 Formerly up to $39.50 mesaba cloth, belted; also fitted models; seal or coney collars and cuffs. Duvetyne, Bolivia and pom pom, coney, seal or nutria, collars. One semi-fitted , model with collar and'phffs and bandings of coney fur. 30.00 Formerly up to $59.50 Fashionable Millinery .. 39.50 '" Formerly up to $79,50 . I it- i 1 We have selected previously JV.t sleeted one hundred and seventy-five tailored and semi-dress hats, that gelds, J from $10.00 to 18.50, and marked them ' v ( s$jj6$. o.uu ana .du , 3 .. -A e k VII-"!'' M?V- , TftMe hats are from our regular stock, in fye very newest m wuiUofi'iMy will be held under the ff'Jfil& F'j: ifc iV.-YMl fc'asra . K J MN- Wl j( ttiK) U ." t t-rru ' ?! WR3 TTWR-1 WTWTrrmr ;? Ma! Jt, atea!tAi.jNitSJg.iSi ,g -fnisas. i&jmlLMBam