Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 52, Plymouth, Marshall County, 29 September 1910 — Page 8
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Fall Coat Styles Are Charming JQURING this week we are making a special display of a long coat exactly like cut. It is a semi-fitted, full length coat, with velvet or silk moire trimmine: on collar and lapel. Wo are displaying in different materials, colors tan, blue and black, at a special price of $12.50 All through our coat showing are delightful price surprises. And the models were planned to give good wear, as well as to delight in looks. You can easily prove how charming our coats are by seeing them for yourself.
5 M MAN-TvULOPtD IN TMt
Thursday, Friday and Saturday Today Marks the Beginning of an Unusually Attractive Display of the Newest Autumn and Winter Styles. AJEVER before in' the history of our business have we gathered together such an assortment of attractive merchandise, the market ' places and style centers ot the country have each contributed their share. Never have we entered a season in which the fabrics or colorings were more fascinating; in which the styles were more truly charming than these. The fashions are so varied that every woman is assured something distinctive and becoming, no matter whether her purchase is to be from the simple practical styles or from the charmingly fashioned novelties. Decided departures from last season's styles are to be noted in the "lines" of the garments. Strikingly beautiful new outlines are noticeable in the late suit modes and women in quest of something entirely charming will at once admire these uncommon coat suits. Long coats are especially made more distictive because of the generous proportions and the original trimming touches which characterize them. The whole trend of our style collection is toward individuality apparel which distinguishes, in the fashion world. Each season it seems impossible for the manufacturers to send us lovelier skirts, and each season they surprise us by doing so. Make a point of seeing the extremely pretty and practical skirts with the new band-in effects, skirts which carry out the straight-line idea, yet do not sacrifice fullness. Every line in these skirts is a study. No store in Northern Indiana will show a more complete line than will be your pleasure to look at here during our opening days. In point of beauty, style and fascination of price this exposition of woman's autumn apparel is unrivaled. We shall be pleased to have you attend this style event. Come be with us at least one of the Opening Days.
Chic Fall Suits suit at double price can boast of better lines or a prettier style effect than the suit model, pictured. The box plaits on either side of the back and front skirt panels are finished with' button holes and button trimmed to harmonize with the pretty and piquant jacket trimming. A thoroughly good, looking and good wearing suit, unequaled for
$18.50
You will not find a detail to improve upon from the beauty of coat lines, the cut and hang of the skirt right down to tho smallest button. .
MAN-TAILORCD in the
Graceful Skirts for Fall PRETTY AND PRACTICAL YOU see here an illustration of a very popular skirt model. Fine pin tucks appear on alternating gores and terminate in cloth straps, just below the knee; cloth buttons and foot plaits complete this graceful model, which is priced at
7.00
In any of the popular materials you prefer Panama, Serge, Poplin or Voile and at any price you may choose to pay, you will find separate skirts skillfully fashioned on the new graceful lines that make most women look their best. The materials were selected very carefully, for their style and iheir service and the fashion ideas are the newest the season affords. $5, $6, $7, $7.50, $9, $10 and Up
II
TAIlOBtO IN TMt
The Corset Without One Fault. - pOR women who want the finest corset that it is possible to produce, we commend The Gossard.
TAcylTacc IjJFront
are the perfect accomplishment of the New School of Design and Construction, where corsetry it practioed as a fine art, where none but front lacing corsets are mad, where every model is a masterpiece. The price of this corset is
$5.00
We also show a Gossard model as low as 3.50.
Millinery Opening and Display The Latest French, English and American Modes RE shown in an unusually complete display which reveals every trend of the prevailing fashion in both large and small hats.
BALL & COMPANY
One War Nearly Ended. Time's lli-lit exhibits a pathetic phase in the tlisbamlrnent of the Association of Mexico War Veterans because of the diminishing numbers and increasing ajie of the surviving memtars. Only twenty-eight remain and of the delegates present at Ind
ianapolis when the meetings of thu association were declared "adjourned forever" none was less than ?v-enty-nine years old. Thus is broken the last direct lint with one of tfie great periods of the nation's past. With respect both to its iolitieal and military aspects the
Mexican war added a picturesque I
ehapter to American annals. It provoked bitter party controversies, inspired Whit tier's verse and Lowell's satire, served as the training school for great generals of the civil war, among them (J rant, Lee and McClelan; made Taylor President and brought to notice the future President of the Confederacy, then colo
nel of a Mississippi regiment. Cerro Gordo, Vra Cruz, Palo Alto, Molino del Hey, Chapultepec, Clmrubusco. "The Angels of Ibiena Vista" and the " Halls of the Montezumas" help to recall a part of what tue Mexican war gave to American military glory and to literature and
The chapter is now dosed by the !
passing of its veteran organization. Sixty-two years have gone by since the conclusion of the war, so that a survivor of seventy-nine must have been a boy of seventeen when General Scott . entered the capital. A word of respectful tribute is deserved bv the corporal's guard that remains. New Yrrk World.
Manager Carr of Indians Resigns. Charles Carr, manager of the Indianapolis American Association baseball club, resigned Wednesday. The resignation will not take effoct however, until the team disbands following the closing game of the season at Louisville next Sunday. Carr will engage in business. He
went to Indianapolis from Chicago four years ago, and after winning the pennant in 1908 signed a contract to raanage the Indianapolis team. The agreement still lias three j-ears to run.
Move to Jackson Mich. Mrs. Charles Coil of Kenosha Wis.,
who has been spending the past three weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Fogle here, left for Jackson Mich., where they will make their future home. They have purchased a farm near Jackson fid will try the rural life. The change was made for the improvement of Mr. Coil' health.
