Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 22, 1922, Night Extra, Page 11, Image 11

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    PPTWj
. j' -T
TO ? UTUX1XX1M J. V Zm
WANAMAKERS 1
JULY 22, 1922
Daiy; Mevie Magazine)
SQMETHING YOU DON'T OFTEN SEE
B H? xl - ii,"s" ' at
calWW '" Kk: , ' 5' Si w'v1
1 WANAMAKBR'S
Screen lending men de net, n. n rule, go In herds or evn pairs.
hevccr, you 'see AVallncc Held nnd Bert Lytcll, both film
hobnobbing in the studio between pictures
Here,
idols,
THE MOVIE FAN'S LETTERBOX
By nBNUY M. NEELY
T. R. writes J "Once in a while I
go te the movies and ence in ft while I
rend jour peculiarly constructed de
partment in the Evenine 1'unue
IiEDOEH, wherein you combine advice
te the lovelorn with n sincere attempt
te tnkc the movies seriously.
''The impression left by your treat
ment and comments en the type of com
munications referred (e is that some of
them are a little bit tee het for you
te handle, although with your com
bined knowledge of the stage and
'ppreen,' 1 prefer te believe that your
handling of them is nn adroit one. be be
caiiie of the effect that an academic
discussion must hun en the followers
of a popular department Mich us you
are conducting.
"Xe one enn deny the place of the
movies In popular fnncy, nnd no one
can deny the pleasure, amusement nnd
real instruction they bring te that
great tliiss of people whom, for want
of n better description, we will call 'the
backbone' of this nr any ether country.
"What I want te knew is where
de the movies rank?
"I can understand the rnvlngs or
some lme-stnick jeung damsels ju&t
emerging from short dresses te shorter
one. They are getting a genuine thrill
In watching some Adenis-like youngster
make goo-gee ejes nt the latest effcr-
Ans et i.es Angeles te the movie queen
"Vf M'l...i t. tt 1... 1 .... ...i.
..iV ei two extant V If ler two bits
the) can tind out what particular brand
of gnase n uses en his hair, or what
cur they de get for the two bits ,ou
re nlwnjs telling them te send, their
Htc ii.is net been Ihert in vain.
"I inn undcistnnd the twang of the
heart stiings of this hard-working
mothers when they see some pre- or
pest- (as j en wish) Velstead euth
taken In hand by the rich hunker and
aftciwaid lifting the mortgage en the old
home.
"What 1 can't understand Is why,
when a serious attempt te put feith u
Production is made, it nlwu,s leaves
Jen with the feeling that thcte Is sitll
something te he desired.
"The ether evening I saw Miss Till
nuulge in 'Smllln' Through,' because
I had the Impieissien jeu had i linked
It as a merltoiieiis effeilng, und I hi'
licM' that it i-, generally being classed
sn produitlen of the better sort.
"M.v leili'tlens te thp nletiirp ite of
decidedly pleasant naturu up te a
certain point, but In the cud it left me
cold and with the sunie old feeling of
something lucking.
"Miss Talmudge'H ncting was cer
tainly commendable, the lelu being one
that her ability enabled iier te eh
wmpass without tee much iffert. Her
wppert was certainly net weak enengli
ti mar a picture that was otherwise)
Mtlsfneteiy, and the settings and nr-
..B,vV'',lt ucre I)Ici1h1'B te detull.
"itli nit these ndvantages, plus n
Pleasing steiy, why tlien de they ruin
tne whole thing by incongruity and
"mine situations? Te Illustrate; when
he heieiue s ht, frPn,j doctor, with
jia mem pressing of his ear against
..tV'""1 wglstcrM hopelessness,
mil .1 'ai',v 'lns 'est consciousness
nu tiie 'close-ups of the guests are
wrcly ineiint te mean 'death.' and the
uuieme, at least en the night when
was present, se Interpreted it. It
"Hi noted, how-ever, te digress for a
weiid, that the gentlemen of the party
Pursued the villain in het haste as far
vie i K.nri,en Kuf- "d then returned,
"euliln t it hnu been natural for one
"two of them te have given chnseV
return te the main scene, however,
w n few meinentH the lady opens her
ZH 'V1(1 ''PRlns te discourse, actually
jees through a wedding ceremony and
"ids te several ether mutters of it
J"H'Hil nntuie, before she dies u
dii '.' m,(,1 fl,1,,l time. My point is
u the dm ter, by his exiiiiiinatlen,
dtl i UxHvil l'crhnps two seconds,
b,,, ,i ,,,mt hll 'lH nt really dead,
i lint it was u question of minutes
w'J nfeie she would die? Hew ionic!
"Metermluu an) thing by meiely press-
m..r . c,lr ,"Knl,lst llcr? l et tlie
nrl .I"10" "f " ",,,k H't In the pic
:",f ,lu', ,iid theie. but mere was te
X,; ",11'" N,u' '",l "'Vive, net one
liv m ?H "llHl te give her relief of
!;. i "'""""t t'",n the smelling salts
among mi thut hoep-sklvtcd
I. Dnefni flAi.i 4.at .lM..nA.i
out of the picture, nnd there Is no way te
express it but te sny that peer Moon Meon Moen
yeen was left alone te die en the grass.
Wouldn't even n glass of water have
helped? The guests, though, were se
busy working up emotion, that the fact
that the heroine was wounded and suf
fering and that something might be done
te help her never entered their heads
or the head of the director. Then nleng
toward the end of the story the here
returns from wnr, with, te nil appear
ances, a stiff leg nnd with n noble
desire nnd determination te de some
thing heieic. lie decides, nil out
of proportion te the magnitude of
his wounds nnd condition, that he
must many the girl who has been
waiting four jeurs for him. Weren't
the heroics in tills case horribly
overdone? However, having made
Ills decision und having hnd his share
in that particular scene saved by Miss
Talmndge's acting, instead of going
nwav he gees next deer and sits en a
bench In the garden. In a cempara
tively sheit length of time, when the
stern uneie removes nis eiijerumi" i
the existence of any members of the
here's family, all thought of his pre
vious resolution net te let the gill
F.ii'ilfiee herself by marrying n cripple
vanishes. Nothing lias happened in the
meautlme te chunge his condition
every reason, geed or uaa, wny ne
should net mnrrv the clrl still exists,
but for some reason they nre forgotten
nnd never again referred te. Is thnt
'mevctic' llccnse or is it ignorance en
the part of the director? One thing
it surely is, nnd thnt is, it js nn Insult
te the Intelligence of the audience.
"These nre the incidents that ruin
the movies for me, given a geed cast
nnd settings. As nn art they succeed
te n certain point, but beyond that
point they fall in my opinion. Is it
bccnitbc the proper type of director has
net yet been attracted te this new
'science,' te give it its highest sound
ing nnmc, or must the critics of the
'screen' be less severe than they would
be with the snme production en the
8tW? .....
"I apologize for the length of this
letter; my excuse is my sincerity in
trying te find out why I don't admire
the movies us u work of genuine nrt
nnd if what I think is the matter with
them rcnlly is. , ,
"If you can cnligutcn me, wnneui
occupying tee much of the space that
rightly bclenjs te your regular custom
ers, I assure you it will be nppre
clntcd nnd your opinion rend with a
great dcnl of interest."
(I'm frnnk te admit you place me
in n quandary. In the first place, your
intuition regarding the rensen for my
frequent nveldnnde of questions of the
"higher nrt of the mpvlcs." I knew full
well thnt whereas such discussions
would pleusc certnin 'of the Letter Bex
readers nnd would interest me fur
mere thijn the ether nevertheless, they
would bore nnd displease se great a
number of the correspondents that I
would cnll down en my head the most
tcrrlble of nil wrnthb the flappers'.
I'm In that same nositlen in regard
te your letter. Your criticism of
"Smllln Through" nnd its denth
scene Is quite just. Yeu hnvc hit en
Its most vulnerable point. I've hinted
a number of times thnt whlle I enjoyed
the picture immensely, I doubt its claim
te even the screen's highest art. And
when I use the word "even," I'm
tnctltly admitting- thnt the plane of
screen nrt is lower thnn thnt of the
elder nrts.
I've managed te school myself
te judge screen nrt cempnrutlvcly.
"Smllln Through," I maintain, was
far, fnr nbeve the nvernge film pnttcr.
Given the frankly romantic nnd lnchry lnchry
mese story that the author conceived,
the producers of the film did about ns
well ns could be expected with it. The
director wns net responsible for the
absurdities you mention. They were
part of the story. Nevertheless, I
hnsten te mid thnt film directors time
nnd ngnin mnkc similar slips when their
material is of the highest cnliber.
The combinntlen of n really notable
creation te tftnrt with nnd u produc
tion force including director, technical
staff, actors nnd scenario maker thnt
is of uniform artistic excellence is
something thnt the screen seldom sees.
Te my mind, "I'cter Ibbctsen" wns
such n one, but I'd hesitate te name
another.
Se you sec, while I ngree with you in
general en the failure of the films te
reach n high artistic level, I must argue
thatln regard te "Smllln' Through,"
the film producers cannot be blamed,
since the weaknesses lie In the original
story from which the stage piny wns
made. The criticism you hurl nt dl
lectors Is net wholly deserved. This
one phnse of picture-making has been
mere kindly treated thnn most, con cen
tninlng as it does such men ns Hull In,
I)e Mllle, Stnnlnws, Tourneur, Neilun
and Robertsen. Ne, don't blame the
diiecter. And, I would ndd, don't
bin me the ncters. Despite recent ns ns
sertlens of a well-known critic In New
Yerk, I feel thnt the lack of bnlnnce,
the lack of poise, n'rt, dignity nnd nil
the rest of them, cannot be held up "te
the actors ns n whole peer ns some of
them are. I would put the blame
with the scenario writers, nnd, pri
marily, with the producers themselves,
the men who lack the vision te give
their directors nnd their btnffs a free
rein, hut Invariably try te make their
pictures en a financial foundation,
leaving the nrt te come nftcrward.)
rHOTOl'LAYS
rneTOi-LAVs
The following theatres obtain their pictures through
the STANLEY Company of America, which is a guarantee
of early showing of the finest productions. Ask for the
theatre in your locality obtaining pictures through the
Stanley Company of America.
a rri i r 02D &
trjLL
THOMPSON STS.
MATINHi: DAILY
CONSTANCE TALMADGE
In "WOMAN'S l'l.ACT." .
AemD EIGHTH OiriAHD AVE.
A 1 UK MATINKE DAILY
PARAMOUNT SI'K.riAI. .
"LOVE'S BOOMERANG"
d a i TirirM3tr mst & haLtimeiu!j
BAL 1 1MUKL. i;ve. 11:30. Sat. Mat.
KATHERINE MacDONALD
In'TKLhT Ot'lt WiriV .
DLUt.DlrU Centlnunui 2 until M
WILL ROGERS & L1LA LEE
In "ONli (JI.UKIIUK l"
COLONIAL. 2 30. 7 una U 1'. M.
MI.AI.Ei: nnd T. BOY HAHNKS In
"Is Matrimony a Failure 7"
l- A irlV!-M IMT 20th & Glraril At.
r-VIIMVHwn 1 MATINRB DAILT
SESSUE HAYAKAWA
TjiihiyEiniii.iuN I'lixcn." ,
GREAT NORTHERN Ted We ri!
LON CHANEY
In "TUB NIOIIT BOSK
IflinC-DlAl BOTH & WALNUT STS.
IMPE.K1AL Main. 2 30. K. 7 & 0
NORMA TALMADGE
n "SMII.1S' TIIBUl'lllI"
COLUMBIA AV.
.nnnTl TIHOAn A
LltJUK 1 I MATINI3IJ DAILY
GARETH HUGHES
in "I CAN i:XI'l..IX"
nnirMT WoeJland Ae. t C2J St.
ORILIN 1 MATINCG DAILY
LIU IKi: ml T. HOY BARNES In
"Is Matrimony a Failure?"
0VERBR00K fl8D i!ireuD
v JAMBS OMVm CUHWOOIl'S
"THE GOLDEN SNARE"
tfffrTheNIXON.NIRDLINGERWlfc
X1 THEATRES UJ
RP! IVIOMT B2D ABOVE MARKET
EClmwiN I i ..ie ft. i;6 an te u P. U.
OWEN MOORE
In "REPORTED MISIN(i"
(THAR 00T CEDAR AVCNUB
V-l-Ly-r. i.3e nj 3. 7 nnd U P. M.
AI.JIX RUBEN In
"FIND THE WOMAN"
PHI mPI 1M llaiLet het. SOlh ft 00th
vwiinE.vim j 30 Hn(j a. 7 nnJ u Pi Mi
J. P. MacGOWAN
In "RECKLESS CHANCES"
HIMRfi I'HONT ST. ft ainARD AVE.
juifiuw jumbo June en Tronkferd "L"
GLADYS WALTON
In "HECONIM1AND ROSE"
I FAHFR 41HT LANCASTER AVB.
ILTVI-'1I :ian t0 se. 7 te 11 P. M.
LON CHANEY
In "TUB NHIUT ROSE"
1 fin IsT ci!D AND LOCUST STREETS
l.vjw-uji miiIb, i se a:i:vi. ftnoteii
THOMAS MEIGHAN
In "TUB BACHELOR DADDY"
hVi li-HANKFOBU AVB. ft
PALIV1 NORRIB hTRKUT
CONSTANCE TALMADGE
In "WEDDINO BEI.I.S",.. .
rTrTEK1T Market St. Belew 17th
KEGLIN 1 10 A M te 11 P. M.
GARETH HUGHES
In "DONXWI"TJJ'r'T-TKJ,-H
DTArTY" (1EBMANTOWN AVENUE
KIALIO AT TULPBHOCKBN ST.
TOM MIX
In "CJLWJNOX!LJ'n.'JN!l
el iPDWAMn 14th ft llultlmera Av.
SHEKWOOU mat. 2: nvn ae
RICHARD BARTHELMESS
In T!iK,SKVKVriLIV
o'eTTTt'AD C"Tr"'''H,:UT THEATRE
33 J MAKrvtj 1 ) A. M. te 11:13 P. AT
MARY PICKFORD
la UTTM3 LORD FAUNTLEROY"
NIXON'S AMBASSADOR B-B'
Matlncen l 30 ft 3 .10, i:cnlnes 7 ft 0
William Farnum, "Shackles of Geld"
MIVOM CSD AND MARKET 8T8.
INIW-1N 2.,5i n 3() Rni,
CHAS. ("BUCK") JONES
InJLTMMlJJiLO'NJULI
AQTH ST Tneatre. Opp. "L" Terminal
U7 I J 2.30. T anil l P. M.
THOMAS MEIGHAN
JnTUKjl CU E1.QB DADDY"
SXP ANIPl Oermnntewn Av, et Venanga
l,l-' 2 30. 0 30 te It P. M,
MI.A LEE mill T. ROY B4RNE.S III
"Is Matrimony a Failure?"
ARDMORE ftR&W V.KB
"BELLE OF ALASKA"
RUTH I.I.OYD KINNEY. Contralto
PDA NIT 02-' OIHARP AVE.
rlN Mnt, Today, Eb . 7 ft 0
AI.T-STAR -T In
"ASHAMED OF PARENTS"
AT OTHER THEATRES
MEMBERS OF M.P.T.O.A.
GERMANT0WNn5lrATQ.?Nrl?,r,D7Jniiv-
Cemtance Binney in "Midnight"
Ailikil Br n Turpln Jn ."Slri ..l'urwuril"
DARI? H1DOU AVE. ft DAUPHIN ST.
rrtiK m " ' v. ., u.is te 11
JACK HOLT
la "THE UHIU COUKDIAM"
Prices
in
Are Lowered en Hundreds of Dresses
the Wanamaker Down Stairs Stere
This means that nearly any kind of Summer
dress can be had new for a fourth less, a third
less, even for half the price of a few weeks age. i
Surely every fashionable kind of Summer dress is included!
Dresses for young women, dresses for their mothers, dresses for slender
girls, dresses for women wearing extra sizes. - i.t
Seme of the frocks may need a pressing, but the lowness of the prices
mere than compensates for that.
Size assortments are becoming broken and there are but a few dresses
of any one kind, but te the woman with eyes te see, Monday will be a day of
great opportunities.
.''1
$6 $10 $4 $5
. 1 .
HBHMMMMHHMBMHHMMaa I
Georgette Crepe
$1,75 a Yard
40 inches wide in navy,
black, brown, white, pray and
all the fashionable light and
bright shades. Women are
using it for sleeves, for hats,
for cape linings and all man
ner of gay Summer things, as
well as for dresses.
(Central)
Pink and White
Step-in Bleemers
New at 50c
Coel, comfortable garments
that are ideal for warm weather
wear.
Made of pink or white batiste,
they have edges overcast in
blue and dainty sprays of hand
done flowers.
(Central Alile)
Midsummer Silks
Pleasantly Lew Priced
All Wanamaker Qualities
35-lnch all-silk wash satin in flesh-pink and white,
$1.75 yard.
35-inch white habutai, $1.25 yard.
39-inch fiber sports satin in white and high colors,
$2 yard ; this has a self plaid that makes it attractive.
40-inch heavy Canten crepe in navy, white, black and
brown, $3 yard.
35-inch bathing suit cloth of heavy lustrous black
cotton in navy, black, purple and green, $2 yard.
(Central)
Rippling Seersucker
Bedspreads
63x90 inches $2
72x90 inches $2
81x90 inches $2.25
They are hemmed and, because
of their easy laundering, are fine
for Summer use.
(Central)
Sheets, $1.25
Snow white seamless sheets,
smooth and cool, measure
81x90 inches.
Pillow cases, 42x36 inches,
25c each; 45x36 inches, 30c.
(Central)
A Midsummer Clearaway
of Small Rugs
A Fourth te a Third Less Than Usual
About two thousand of these small, scatter rugs are
in this Tet, divided into three groups.
Rag Rugs
Usually in plain colors, al
though some are in attractive
mottled effects.
24x36 inches 60c
24x48 inches 75c
27x54 inches $1
36x72 inches $1.50
Chintz-Twist Rag Rugs
24x36 inches 85c 24x48 inches
27x54 inches $1.40
Reversible Weel Chenille
Rugs
heavy and extremely durable, are
in plain or mixed colorings.
21x45 inches $1.45
27x54 inches $2.75
30x60 inches $3.25
26x72 inches $4.75
t
.$1.15
Japanese Straw Rugs
8x10 feet, $3.50 9x12 feet, $4.50
(Chestnut)
Lewer-Priced
Household Linens
of Wanamaker Quality
Many a new household, established since a June
wedding, finds new a shortage of practical things like
kitchen towels, every-day linens, etc., after the wed
ding gifts have found their places.
Te just such households, which need many things
at once, this Down Stairs Stere can be of unbounded
help. Prices are decidedly moderate and qualities de
pendable. Linen Damask Starts at $2.25
for full-bleached Irish table damask with a geed satin
finish. Several pretty patterns at $2.25, $2.50 and $3
te cheese from, all 70 inches wide.
Linen napkins of similar qualities begin at $3 and
go te $9 a dozen.
Kitchen Toweling
All-linen toweling in a durable weight, 16i inches
wide, is 38c yard.
Linen crash roller towels, 75c each.
Linen dish towels, hemmed, 30c each.
Checked linen toweling, 30c te 38c yard.
Face Towels
Linen huck towels,. 50c te $1 each.
Linen guest towels, 25c te $1.
Half-linen huck towels, 50c each.
Bdth Towels
Piles and piles of thick, soft Turkish towels are
here in plaids, stripes, Jacquard patterns .and plain
white in a wonderful variety, 25c, 38c and 50c each.
(Central)
Linen Dresses $5, $7.50 and $10
Light blue, Copenhagen, lavender,
brown, green and white, some embroidered,
some with tailored bands and white leather
belts.
500 Voile Dresses Are $4 and $5
Airy, cool Summer patterns en white
grounds.
Practical navy blue dresses with white
'dots.
Plain-color voile dresses trimmed only
with fageting.
Scores of different styles and every
dress marked a third te a half less than its
original price.
Dark Voile Dresses, $6 and $7.50
Navy blue or black dresses with white
dots of various sizes. They're trimmed
with white organdie or roll cellars of lace
and many have draped or pleated over ever
skirts. Gingham Dresses
$3.75, $5 and $6
Plaids or checks in all the pretty color
ings that everybody likes and wears.
Trimmed principally with organdie or
pique. At least 20 different models among
these and who doesn't need at least one
mere gingham frock.
Silk Dresses New $6.50 and $10
A decided price-lowering en all of these.
$6.50 dresses are of taffeta in several models.
$10 dresses are of taffeta, crepe de chine or Canten crepe,
ered with heavy silk.
Just two or three of a kind and all in dark colors.
Seme are embreid-
( Market)
A Half Dezen Different Styles in
Women's Bathing Suits
Between $1.50 and $2.50
A smart little suit of black sateen
at $1.50 ha3 a pointed skirt piped
with red, green or white te match
the edging of the square neck.
A Peter Pan cellar of checked
gingham red or blue is the feature
of a suit at $2.25.
Anether, also $2.25, has a deep
bend of black-and-white striped
sateen around the hem.
Quite simple is a suit at $2.50
which is trimmed only with white
stitching and piping.
All are excellent suits, smart, practical and very low in price.
Sateen Knickers, $1.50
Black ones te wear under just such suits as these.
Black cotton tights are 75c; wool ones are $2.25 and $2.75.
Beach shoes and slippers arc 38c te $1 pair.
(Market)
m7
kv rmj
mhA mSd 'T f
Plenty of Sturdy
Wear in These Suits
for Little Beys
Firmly woven cotton suiting in
firactical, washable colors is used
n them. They are made in middy
style with braid and emblems.
Tan or green suits show black
braid; blue or gray suits have
white braid.
4 te 8 year sizes at $2.50.
(Central)
A New Linene Freck
With a Guimpe
Is Only $2.25
and it's one of the prettiest
frocks We have ever seen for se
little. In pink, lavender, white,
brown or blue with a white
guimpe and sleeves of lawn
and a colored Peter Pan cellar.
A straight-line frock with a
shiny black belt fresh, cool and
charming.
(Central)
Babies' Better
Rompers, Special,
$1.60
These are the little rompers
that mothers usually pay consid
erably mere for! Fine, soft ging
hams, lustrous pcplins, sheer
dimities, white dotted Swisses,
striped madrases and seersuck
ers are all used, in pink, blue and
lavender, mostly.
Many of them show fine hand
work and all are as dainty as,
'- e mother's planning could
make them.
eueh 1 year te 4 years.
(Central)
Coel, Quaint and
Dainty Chintz
Cretonnes
40c a Yard
Fer old-fashioned frocks, espe
cially when combined with white
or plain color, for draperies te
make a room seem sweeter and
cleaner, for cushions, for perch
covers for what i3 chintz net
being used this season! 36 inches
wide. (Chetnut)
Plain-Colored Voile, 39c Yard
A rainbow of colors in this fine, lustrous mercerized voile.
Plenty of blues, greens, yellows, as well as tiger lily, henna,
navy, coral, rose and black. 44 inches wide.
Colored Organdie, 50c Yard
All sorts of pKtty Summer colors, as well as black and navy,
te be had in this geed quality. 40 inches wide.
Sheer Swiss organdie in lovely colors, 45 inches wide, is 75c
a yard.
Crisp White Organdie
Geed domestic qualities, 40 inches wide, 35c and 50c a yard.
Fine Swiss organdie, 45 inches wide, 75c a yard; 54 inches
wide, $1 a yard.
(Central)
Deris Princess Slifs
of Batiste, $2
An Abundance of
White Wash Skirts
85c te $6.75
Dozens of interesting models in
regular sizes and some in extra
sizes, tee, Made of ramie,
gabardine, lustrous surf satin and
linen.
Gleaming Baronet
Satin Skirts, $6:75
and $7.75
Women agree that they are
about the prettiest all-around
skirts for Summertime. Th
6tyles arc in brown, navy, g -black,
white nnd flesh-pink.
(Mnrket)
Plaid and Checked
Gingham Dresses
for Girls, $1
Girls of 8 te 14 can cheese
from several styles in Summer
dresses at this low price. They
are of geed ginghams in pretty
checks and plaids trimmed in
various ways.
Pleated White Skirts, $1
Fine white jean pleated onto a
band the kind of skirts girh
want te wear with sweaters. 8
te 12 year sizes.
Heavy White Linen
Knickers
for girls and women who wear
12 te 20 yenr sizes ere $5.75.
They are well made and finished
with geed pearl buttons.
(Market)
Seft batiste in white, pink or orchid,
made with hip-depth hemstitched hem
and finished at the top with narrow lace.
Ideal te wear beneath the sheerest Sum
mer frocks, and particularly for straight
line frocks.
Deris slips of white tub silk, $5. In
navy or black, $6.50.
Deris Petticoats Start at $1
All have the very deep hemstitched
hem, which makes virtually a double
petticoat.
Of white or pink batiste, $1.
Of fine twilled white, navy or black
sateen at $2.
Of navy or white tub silk at $3.50; extra
sizes, $5.
Extia-sizc petticeuts of flesh or white
batiste, $1.75.
A Chemise Petticoat, $1.50
An envelope chemise und short petti
coat combined is a most cemenient Sum
mer garment. It is made of soft white
nainsoek with a dainty lace-trimmed top
and shoulder straps.
UViitra))
10 Styles in Women's White
Lew Shoes, $6.50
Pumps
Three styles are of fine white canvas and one is
of white leather with single instep straps and low or
Cuban heels, carefully covered. They have turned or
welted sel-es.
Sandals
A charming instep-strap sandal of white calfskin
is attractively cut out ever the tees. It has a low
covered heel and a turned sol-e.
White canvas sandals have interesting vertical
and ankle straps and are nicely finished inside with
smooth white leather. They have turned soles and
low covered heels.
Oxfords
Twe of white leather, U-ke buekskin, have straight
tips, perforations, low or Cuban covered heels and
white welts m the soles.
The ethers are of white canvas, with straight tips,
welted soles and low or medium heels, covered.
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