Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1920 — Page 20
20
THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1920.
Circulating Library —Balcony.
L'tS^ooags&G)*
A Library for Mothers —Fifth floor.
The Petite Shop Offers An Underpriced Purchase of Spring Suits at— $29.50 So few, we guess, because they are such especially, remarkably high values. The seventeen girls of 16 to 20 years who are here first will be the fortunate ones, for they will be active participants in the highest values in smart, good and inexpensive suits that we have had this spring. Hardly Two Suits Alike That** one record. With the exception of a single beige, basket weave model, they are every one navy blue mm's wear serge, lined all, with fancy printed silks. Observe a few of the ways in which they express the smartness of the season. Bippls pephrats, gathered peplums, plaited peplums and peptams augmented by fancy braiding; box, flare and semi-tailored, with belt styles; tucks, inverted plaits, fancy stitching, braid bindings and braid trimmings; shawl collars; fancy, contrasting-colored silk collars; Tuxedo collars and plain-tailored collars. Skirts are plain with slit pockets. Just on the reading, don’t these impress you ss being distinctly fine values. If you are a daughter or bars a daughter, don’t fail to review this collection as early as you can get down Tuesday mortring. —Ayres—Third floor.
Special Offering—Turkish Bath Mats —A necessity that is indeed luxurious are these bath mats in pink and green tile pattern only. They are to be sold atless than the manu- m-. ^ T? U facturer's price to us today, namely— JpJL.UU H/ftCil stripe Turkish bath towels, blue, pink and yellow stripes; special at 75c each.
Ayres—Second floor, and street floor booth.
is and Over-Curtains—Airy Stuff
m
in houses and apartments alike will make their homes more fresh and Mookinff if its windows are newly and airly curtained. This is sum- * mer merchandise. S! and ivory voile, 3d inches wide, 30c ths yard. Whit* and ivory marquisette, 36 inches wide, the yard. Scrim, in rose, blue, brown and green, 3# Indies wide, 75c the yard. White and cream 60 inches wids, 75c ths yard. Dotted grenadine, 36 inches wide, 75c the yard. Marquisid lace trimmed, 36 inches wide, 75c the yard. Figured marquisette, in a variety wide, 00c the yard. Filet net, in white and ivory, 60c the yard. , —Ayres—Fourth floor.
Shop—Sveltline Skirts
• 1
of sports skirts, silk and wool, have been fashioned for the stout wornwoman will not be found wanting one this summer. now, and make your selection from an assortment that is as notable for its quality as for its
notable for its value as for both these.
contains plaited and plain models of pussy willow, kumsi-kumsa, and novelties, Woolen skirts, plaid and striped, are also available in plain and plaited raod.00 to $42.50. —Ayres—Third floor.
is—A Gift for a Bride
I - i
ms shower or wedding gifts, truly artistic pictures will fit into of decoration of the average high-class American house and home. -providing attractive pictures—that the Art Wares Section and Wallace Nutting pictures the appealing colonial studies, enticing landscapes and birch tree pieces to choose If framed, in gilt or mahogany, the price range is from $3.25 to $9.50. from $1.50 to $6.00. —Ayres—Fourth floor.
Victrola Music —and Victrolas The beauty of the sacred music, played at special church services, will abide with you throughout the year, if yew are the possessor rietrola. i the pricelessness of a Victrola, the has both timely music and the of one’s mood perfectly rendered, when ants to hear it not miss this luxury—this necessity—of if you haven’t a Victrola, seyou want and pay for it on a at once, aa you wish, and classical, axe now at our patrons'
—Ayres—Fifth floor.
—
White Soap arks like a wiaard” is said of Joy soap; a soap that takes to scruband cleaning as gaily and with as effort as its name suggests. Oh, Joy! You don’t have to wear f yourself out scrubbing, but rub lightly— the dirt vanishes. Joy cleans soiled *1 fteonT** gT * a ? y di8hes ’ discolored day’s selling—16 bars for 65c, or a case
—Ayres—Basement
Optical Service A graduate, experienced optometrist to make the examination. A modem shop with all modem appliances for grinding lenses. An unrivalled array of mountings and frames. Careful finishers and competent and painstaking adjusters. If glasses will improve your vision, Ayres glasses will accomplish such improvement to the maximum. —Ayres’ Optical ShopStreet floor.
Combination Offer Wizard Mop and Wizard Polish
These goods have a world-wide reputation; we offer one standard sixe Wizard Mop and one bottle of Wizard Polish, both tomorrow for $1.54. —Ayres—Basement
tolYour Agreeableness
IS-pound bag, 74 c. sugar, box, 12H<t left in), tall cans, lie; a case of 48 cans for $5.28. I; three sizes, 24c, 68c and $1.32. —Ayres—Basement.
ABE MARTIN.
Th* candidate that used C throw his hat in th’ ring now tacks his picture on a telephone pole. Miss Fawn Lippincutt has a new soul destroyin’ dress.
Little Stories of Daily Life
The Fickle Men.
The two girls were in front of the Clajrpool hotel talking, and one was deploring a recent experience. “He promised to teach me to drive his car,” she said, “and I wanted to do it in fine style, so I went uptown and bought me a very fancy pair of
gauntlet gloves.”
The other nodded sympathy. The first continued: “And then what do you think happened? Why the fickle thing got mad and got him a new girl before I had even got those driving
gloves paid for.”
hie Imitations for Her.
A young physician took his best girl to a local picture house. Advertisements were being thrown on the screen, among them this one: “Make them happy with a photograph of yourself at Christmas. Our shop, etc." The young man turned to his girl with the facetious remark: "Would a photo of mo make fou happy?” She shook hei head. *T don’t like imitations," she pouted. ‘Tm used to receiving real things.” LITTLE G«L IS KILLED. Knocks Revolver From Dresser While Getting Clotkes For Fntker. [Specsal to The Indianapolis News] LAWRENCEBURG. Ind., April 19. —Myrtle C. Miller, age four, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Miller, was killed instantly by the accidental discharge of a revolver at the Miller home near the Ohio and-Indiana state
line Saturday evening.
Mr. Mi Her. a section boss for the Cleveland. Cincinnati. Chicago A St. Louis railroad, had returned from work and was changing his clothes, when the little daughter said, “I will get your new suit for you. papa," and ran upstairs to his bedroom. A few minutes later Mr. Miller heard the report of a revolver and the child scream and fall to the floor. He found the little girl dead in a pool of blood. His forty-four calibre revolver was on a chair, a few feet from the body, where it had fallen
from the top of the dresser.
The bullet struck the child over the heart and passed through her body and lodged In the doorcasing. It is beUeved that the child In trying to get her father’s collar and necktie knocked the revolver off the dresser and it dropped on the chair and was
discharged.
Government Expenditure* lor Tear
Figured at «6,7M,0M,000.
WASHINGTON. April It.—It cost $t,•28,171^004 to run the government for the first nine months of the fiscal year, and taking this as an average, treasury officials say that total government expenditures for the twelve months period ending June »§ next wiil reach approximately |«.760.000,-
e con-
which it overnment
d. Last figured
that running expenses would amount to $8,097,237,000, but he did not take into account the loss in government operation of railroads. The principal items making up the nine months’ expenses are: war department, $1,301,806,000; railroad administration. $770,690,000: navy department, $021,384,000: shipping board, $433,100,000. and interest on the public debt. $884,921,000. The congress has spent for its maintenance $16,309,000 and the executive offices cost $0,177,000. SHOES MODE BY PRISONERS Geveraer May Place Sarplas Sappty
ea the Market.
Good shoes at about $4 a pair may be available if Governor Goodrich decides to carry out a plan he Is cansidering. The shoes are being made at tbe Indiana State Prison for the use of prisoners and other wards in state institutions. The prison shops may be in a position soon to produce a surplus and if this is done the surplus will be marketed. The Governor Is figuring on costs and. according to figures in his possession, good shoes may be produced at about $2.87 a pair. Distribution and other costs would bring the price up to about $4.
E. C. Mmamm Dead.
ST. LOUIS. April IP.—M. C. Simmotu, founder ef the hardware company whichbear* his name.- died of heart iheease at his home here ymtoday. He had been ill since Saturday. Mr Slmtnmw wm ««hty year* old. He had been identified with the hardware trade here nxty-four year*. A
/T m ' Wt
©OJTnw i
Crew
Simmons, formerly
I is Siberia.
twenty-two. of Corpse nstantly killed Saturday
FAIR PRICES -ELECTRIC Msra so
For War Insurance Raise
WASHINGTON April 19..—By vote the house Saturday passed a 'mil morearing by *20 a month the war nek i»mrmam payment of the covermoeyt to 25.000 disabled soldiers and sailors now meet Tin* vocational rehabilitation. Under the measure, which now goes to the senate, angle men would reeetve 9100 a month sad married men 9190. ▼arions ergnisstiona ux world war voterans supported the Mil
Aviator Dies he Fall. CHAMPAIGX. HL. April It.—nontenant
Jamas Welsh.
Sipping caused Mm to lose control ef the machine. He was returnmg to the field Mter j having taken Colonel Ira Longanedter. field commandant, to Danville, III.
iA Clock An Ideal Wedding Gift We present a most elaborate assortment of period designs in mahogany mantel clocks. The movements are fine American products and of such construction as to give long service and to keep excellent time. The cases are of the best workmanship and beautifully finished. These clocks strike the half hour and hour and range in price from $15.51) to $110.00 Other clocks striking the Westminster chimes, $106.06 to $110.00 OiarlesMayer& Company
29 and 31 West Washington Street.
Established 1840.
WHEN STORE Good Clothes; Nothing Else H—A—T—S Soft hat or derby? Or why not both? Derby for dress and soft hat for business. You can be sure of correctness by asking for “Young Brothers* ” hats.
’I*?!
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Paramount Golf Balls Paramount A— The Expert Bali. Paramount B— Liquid Core..,.. Paramount C— Small aise Paramount F— A Floater .
We Can Help You to Select Clubs and Balls Best Suited to Your Individual Play.
TheG. H. Westing Co. Pennsylvania and Vermont
Only six sizes of blades required to fit all sizes of McCrosky “Super” Adjustable Reamers. Greatest accuracy and economy. Vonnegut Machinery Co., 43 S Meridian St.
SPEAKS WORD FOR WILSON Httchcork Call* Bryan “Party Wrecker” la ASSrenn la Nebraska. OMAHA. Neb„ April 19.—Advising Democrats here Saturday night not to aend W. J. Bryan as a delegate to the Democratic national convention. Senator Hitchcock proclaimed Bryan a “party wrecker," and as out of sympathy with the present Democratic adminiatration. He said that Bryan had defeated probable compromise over the Lodge reservations to the league of nations covenant and the confirmation by the senate of the
peace treaty.
*T want to aay a few words about President Wilson.” he said. “I think there is too little said nowadays in defense of his administration and in
praise of his record.
“Let me say first of all that I am under no personal obligations to the President. My standing in the senate was not due to his influence. It is no great secret in Washington that 1 became chairman of the committee on foreign relations when the Democrats controlled the senate at a time when the President preferred another senator for that honor. Before he left the United States to go to Paris he did not call me into consultation any more than he did any other senator, although I was still chairman of the committee and had not been superseded by Senator Lodge. I mention this to show that I have no personal reason for championing the cause of Woodrow Wilson. I have received no favors from him and I can speak of him as frankly and judge him as dis-
$18,000,000 A DAY EXPENSE dl - “Today he is an invalid, broken in
health, depressed in spirit and bitterly disappointed at the failure of the United States senate to permit the
United States to enter the league of nations. Since last September, when he broke down, he has known nothing but weakness and weariness and
pain.
“Of course Woodrow Wilson made mistakes. He made a mistake when he proceeded to negotiate a treaty of peace without taking a few leading members of the senate into his confidence. He made a mistake when he hurt the feelings of proud senators by ignoring them until after he had
Jacobean
Sterling silver flatware of the Jacobean design, massive in pattern and elegant in engraving, is the tribute today to the long vanished splendor of the Stuart kings of England.
The season of brides is approaching, and gifts of sterling silver are appreciated to a greater degree than any other. Silver never goes out of fashion. We are also showing the Orianna pattern with its raised, decorations, modest and charming, a desirable pattern in every way. juliusCVfeJkeSoii INC. t, WASH.SI,
‘if-
The BaDot and the Boob
"It’s no wonder we have graft and inefficiency in government. Henry Johnson!” declared Mra. Near-Voter indignantly to her spouse. "What do you think of thisr Johnson laid down his paper and waited. “Mrs. Smith says her husband almost never bothers voting. He plays golf instead. Says the ballot is for politicians only. Yet he made the biggest fuss of any one I know over last election’s outcome. Did you ever hear of anything so outrageous?” "Smith is a boob.” averred Johnson, as If that settled Jt. “By the way,” he remarked slyly as he picked up his paper again, “who was that little woman I heard saying it was too much bother to test out the tone of different phonographs, that all she wanted was a phonograph—any kind—and now that she has one is fretting because it isn’t a Sonora like Mrs. Sm^h’s?” The rest of the story you know if you’re married. If not. you can imagine it. But don’t miss the moral (a double-header): If you refuse to use the ballot, don’t kick when the wrong man’s elected. If you refuse to hear the Sonora before buying your phonograph, don’t complain because you've bought an Inferior machine. Sonora tone is "clear as a bell, sweet as an old lovs aong, true aa the ring of the anvil.”
Hear the Chippendale Sonora, a period model. Price $750. Convenient terms.
Charles Mayer & Co. 29-31 West Washington St. Established 1840.
\t
PIANOS 0 AMPICOS RAPP <1 LENNOX PIANO CO 247 N PENNSYLVANIA STREET
negotiated the treaty. If he had catered to and consulted with those senators be would have had an easy time with ratification. He lacked the tact and forethought. He knew that the Constitution placed in his hands ths nsgstiations of treaties and he unwisely assumed that if he performed his duty, the senate would do its duty and consent to ratification,”
Contractors’ Machinery For Sale and Bent. Hoists, mixers, paver*, derrick*, ersbe. pumps. Novo outfit*, steam shovels, etc. Bock Equipment Co., 1000 Northwestern sve. Beefing. Repair Work Promptly Doao, Jordan D. WllMams Co., »Sfi ». Wash, st Joseph Gardner, Tinner. 39 Kentucky are. Phones 29-422 and X. 322. 0 1 1 Good Lusk Oleo—Glooobrermer’*.
April Birthstone—The DIAMOND ’Those who from April date their years. DIAMONDS should wear, lest bitter tears For vain repentance flow. This stone— ' Emblem of innocence is known.” We have made a specialty of diamonds for 25 years. Our stock is large, which gives you a good selection in quality and prices. Diamonds, $35.00 to $1,000.00. J. P. MULLALLY Diamond Merchant 28 Monument Circle.
House Wiring on Pay men
Hatfield Electric Co.
Corner Maryland and Meridian 3 Mala 133, Auto. 23-123.
Spring Hate Now Ready--Attractive Values.
$3.00, $4.00, $5.00, $6.4 “The Store for Values.”
KRAUSE BROS
906-907 E. Opposite
Wank.
HARDWOOD FLOORS ft REFINISHINI
Woodruff $100
V. COOK CO.
8619 Xtooserelt Arc
“THE GARMENT I DRY ^mTAjssV 1 AIT _ A °^ CLRANERS” I CLEANING I auto phone 27FRENCH STEAM DYE WORKS 49 MO «S?LE T
KOTTEMAN S for Furnitur Save 10% to 90% on anything—any time. 336-339 East Washington St*
EVARD FOR DIAMONDS 104 MONUMENT PLACE Good value and always correct representation. We specialize in fins stones. • f ~
Everything for Housekeeping 20% to 30% Saved 106 S. Meridian St. art FURNITURE CO.
1118-4120 North Illinois Street Telephone, Main 5665. Auto.
ROY E. STEEL! RebuOder of Shoe* A Different Service 32 North Pennsylvania St.
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Essay Contest Winners
WASHINGTON. April 19.—Donald L. Campbell, a fifteen-year-old high school student, of Clinton, la^ waa the first prise winner in the army national school contest for tbe best essay en benefits of enlistment in the army. Second prise went to Marjorie Sheets, Chiilicothe, Mo, and third to Bailie Bowen Eason. Olive Branch. Mies. Medals will be awarded tbe winners, who will get a free trip to Washington. by Secretary Baker. Honorable mention was given the following: Marion Wheeler, Salina. Kas.; John C. MadeL Sioux Falls, S. D.; Max Sttenbach. New Tork. N. Y.; Irene Lasater. Santa Fe, N. M.; William J. Waldron. Trenton. Iff. J.; Mildred Ruth Bock, Buffalo N. Y.; Grace Girard. Tampa, Fla.; Mary A. Ferguson. Scranton, Pa.: Mary C Silera, Jellieo. Tenn., and Elisabeth E. Horn. Athena O.
RINK >S High-Class Exclusive SI UTS WmJr Mm JHb Reduced to—
This reduction at this price is so noteworthy that we are almost tempted to quote their original selling figures, but we withhold the same aa evidence of our confidence in your good judgment and simply say reduced to $59.50 and ask you to come end note the zet saving.
Trirotince. erry* end «*«*». XMktoMttod- Oriildrd end plot* tmtbmSL
RINK’S CLOAK HOUSE
