Word: neckwear
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Shirts, pajamas, hosiery, handkerchiefs, neckwear, gloves. . . every kind of gift that's important to a man. . . are now on display at prices that will suit any budget. Knowing also that men are quality and style conscious, the University Shop specializes in furnishings designed exclusively for Harvard tastes by manufacturers from the style centers of the world. Shirts with collars styled particularly for college men, imported hose, hats in designs exclusively by and for the University Shop, and countless other items rarely available in such selections at such moderate prices...
Founded on waterpower sites controlled by Alexander Hamilton, Passaic, N. J. developed into a beehive of small enterprise. One small Passaic enterprise is Canal Co., a neckwear shop employing 40 people and owned by one Max Brenner and the Brothers Tuckman, Jack & Kenneth. Monopolist Hamilton must have started in his grave last week when Canal Co. locked out its employes until they joined the union (C. I. O.'s Textile Workers' Organizing Committee". The company stated: "We are paying union wages and we sell our products to union houses, so we see no reason why ours should...
Slowly but surely the trend in neckwear changes from year to year, and the predominating shift for the forthcoming year seems to be from the neat, all-over patterns of last season to larger and more clear spaced designs. Stripes are going to be worn in the greatest number this season decause of the harmony they bring with either a plain suit or a striped one. Rep Ties, distinguished by their ribbed surface, are favorites, while the Macclesfield, always a winter favorite is still proper for more formal town suits. Plain color knits and wool ties which go so well...
There are three things which we poor men have the opportunity of varying in our otherwise modest style of outfitting. They are our shirts, neckwear, and socks. And with the New Deal strongly entrenched for another four years, we look for new trends in these articles of sartorial relief, and find them in prospect this season in new patterns, tones and styles which please the eye of the wearer and the beholder...
...inveterate gambler, George White is supposed to have made and lost large wads of money in his time. At 43 his chief idiosyncrasies are his hair, which he keeps scrupulously greased, his neckwear, which is always black, and his mastication, which is interminable. A wholesale dealer in female good looks, he has never married. "I'm independent and nobody can keep tab on what I do," says he. "I like it. And with any luck I'll beat this marriage...