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Show Checked Off for Fashion a 'V -. r l: X - h l - I M m .-V ! At tha recant Monmouth County hunt meat in Red Bank. N. J., Miss Coralia B. Barry, left, wore smart checked suit with tha pattern In angora which stands cut interestingly against tha smooth wool. Tha hairlino check suit, right, worn by Mrs. Wallace J. Grove, is double-breasted double-breasted with circular skirt. Tha hat is of matching fabric Fashion Wear Plaids and You Can't y Help But Be in Style NEW YORK Checkf and plaids monopolize the fashion scene composed of smart women who take their fall social activities In ornate ones that have come and gone. That's why plaids are always good, even during the occasional seasons when they are not the big fashion of the moment And, of course, as every clothes-wise woman wom-an knows, plaids and checks are particularly at home on sports outfits, out-fits, both active and 'spectator. tha great outdoors, aj At autumn races, hunt meets and football games, plaid great-coats and plaid suit jackets are seen In profusion. Checks are worn by mature figures as well as the young and slender. Plaid accessories, too, are Important Im-portant style news this season. Fifth avenue shops are featuring hat and bag ecu In plaid wool, gloves In both checks and plaids. And chic women are buying them. To wear with a simply tailored black tweel suit a red and yellow plaid bag and a matching Ascot tie are shown. With a gray reefer, and black check wool belt and one designed suggests a wide, red matching gloves. The present vogue for checks and plaids Is merely a continuance of the historic popularity of these age-old fabric patterns. Staples through the centuries, they certainly cer-tainly seem to have an everlasting sartorial "oomph" of their own. Of course today we think of "Scotch" plaids, but actually many peoples In many times have found this essentially es-sentially simple pattern more satisfying sat-isfying than the myriad of more |