Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 211, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1921 — Page 7

The hosteszcs who will assist Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson at the meeting of the League of Women Voters, Friday afternoon, are as follows: Mrs. Warren McCray, Mrs. Emmett Branch, Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge, Mrs. Charles Jewett, Dr. Amelia B. Keller, Mrs. Eli Lilly, Mrs. Charles E. Coffin, Mrs. John T. Jameson. Mrs. Samuel T. Murdock, Mrs. James L. Kingsbury; Mrs. Donald Jameson. Mrs. _W. H. Coleman, Mrs. John Carey, Mrs. W. C. Bobbs, Miss Caroline Hendricks, Mrs. Kobert Hocrehead, Mrs. Russell Fortune, Miss Eliza Browning, Mrs. Arthur Baxter, Mrs. Charles Buchanan. • • • Mrs John O Creener, 111 East Market street, will entertain the Mystic Tie Club, at her home, Thursday afternoon. The program will be in charge of Mrs. Paul Robinson. • • A dance will be given by the Semper Fldalls Club tonight at Assumption Hall, 1103 Blaine aver,fee. • • * A pretty home wedding was celebrated at 11:30 o’clock this morning when Miss Edna Irene Bosserman was married to John J. Page at the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Bosserman, 4S Eastern avenue. Tha ceremony, which was perfo.med in the presence of the immediate family, was read by the Rt. Rev. Frande H. Gavlsk. The only attendants were Miss Belle Bosserman. sister of the brid*, and George Piur The bride wore a suit of brown duvetyn with hat to match and carried a shower bouquet of pink roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Belle Bosserman wore a brown duvetyn suit with a hat of the same material and carried roses and lilies of the valley. Following the ceremony a wedding dinner was served. Mr. and Mrs. Page left at 2:30 o’clock in the afternoon for St. Louis, Mo., where they will make their home. ♦ Mrs. A. A. McCray, 4232 Park avenue, will entertain the Wednesday Afternoon Club at her home Saturday afternoon. "A Japanese Journey" will be the subject of the discussions. Mrs. C. W. Hardwick will talk on "At Home,” and Mrs. C. C. Munday on “In America.” Special musical numbers will be given by Miss Norma Davidson and Miss Clarlbol Davidson. Thera also will be a report of the local council. • • • Mrs W. W. St. John, 1713 Ingram Street, will b hostess this at her home for a social meeting of the Epworth League of the Heath Memorial M. E. Church. A miscellaneous program of games and stunts will be gtven. • • • The Friday Afternoon Reading Club will meet at tha home of Mrs. Charles (Tterdron, 1414 North La Salle street, on Friday afternoon. Mrs. Kate Couder wiil give a talk on “New Orleans, the Crescent City,” which will be followed by a general discussion and responses. ... The regular meeting of the CMo Club will be held at the home of Mrs. I. G. Furnas, 3015 North Pennsylvania street, Friday afternoon, Instead of at the home oe Mrs. Ferae." 3. Cannon, as previously rmnouaced. The program will include a liscnsslon of “Contemporary American Novelists,” by Mrs. William Evans and s talk on “Hergeshrimer Earnest Poole," by Mrs. Frank B. Wade.

Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Harter, 3619 North Illinois street, announced tha engagement of their daughter, Mary Irene, to Ralph Newell Schaper, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Schaper of Nokomis, XU., at a reception In the green parlor of the Young Women’s Christian Association Monday afternoon. The room was decorated with carnations and fern3. A musical program was given by Miss Mariau Williams, vocalist, and Miss Olive Kile; and Mrs. Christine Rausch, violinists. The announcement cards were hidden in baskets of heart-shaped candles. Miss Harter Is a graduate of Fine Arts College of Music, where she is now teaching. The wedding will take place next month. • * • Osrlc Mills Watkins Post No. 162, American Legion, will give a dance at the Propylaeum, Thursday evening. The chaperons will be Mr. and Mra. C. L. Watkins, Dr. and Mrs. George W. Combs, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Benedict, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Thornton, Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Woolling. • • • Miss Dorothy Oberlles, 5675 Brookvtlle road, will be hostess for a meeting of the Pals Club of the Irvington. Branch Library at her home-Friday afternoon, tfhe will be assisted by Swineford and Miss Margaret Chaplin. “Famous Birthdays" will be the topic for discussion. Those who will participate are Myrtle Butcher, Ruth Thomas and Louise Dice. • • • The Gamma Delta Epsilon Sorority wiil meet at the home of Miss Mary Jane Crossland, 3171 Kenwood avenue, this evening. Officers will be installed. The decorations will, be carried out iu tbe aorrity colors, green, and white. * • * The engagement of Miss Charlotte Bell, 3844 Guilford avenue, to Frank A. TJroop has been annonnoed by Mr. andt Mrs. Charles W. Bell, her parents. The marriage will be celebrated Jan. 24. • • • The Little Theater Society will givo a dance In the itlley room of the Claypool Hotel Sn urday evening, Jan. 22. m. *Y’ Announces Last Free Vocational Term That the spring term of the free vocational night school of the Yonng Men’s Christian Association, beginning .Tan. 17, will be the last opportunity which exservice men will receive for free vocational education was announced by tbe local association Inasmuch as the national war work council of the Y. M. C. A. has announced the free scholarship program of the association would be closed Jan. 30. , More than 400 free scholarships have been awarded by the local association

B ob3 i!fe - In infancy is the time to Build future sturdy men and women. Babies need'-* /3cnlMvi EAGLE BRAND Condensed Milk No One Need Buy Guticura Before He Tries Free Samples

during the last year, and It Is expected that 200 more will be given during the coming term. New courses which will be organized for the spring term are: Foreign trade, to be under the Instruction of TI. A. Rasely, export manager of the Nordyke & Marmon Company; transportation and traffic management, to be taught by H. D. Tumblfeson, secretary of the International Public Sale Company. Tha most popular courses of term, which will he repeated In the spring term, are: Cost accounting, poster designing, cartooning and advertising. Mrs. Housewife , Do You Know? (Note —Each of these household problems has been worked out by the author, who has not only taken a course In scientific housewifery’ and dietetics at Columbia University, and written and edited women’s newspaper and magazine features for years, but Is a practical housekeeper as well.) 1. What bulb* bearing plants are used as food? 2. Why is cauliflower so often badly cooked. 3. Whnt should be borne In mind by the housewife with 'regard to chemical kept in the household? (These questions will be answered tomorrow by the HOUSEWIFE.) ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY’S QUESTIONS. 1. Legumes are vegetables usually In the shape of a pdd and include beans, peas, cowpeas and lentils. 2. When rice is used as a vegetable It should bo combined or used with fats and proteins in which the rice Is deficient for a perf<?ctly balanced food. 3. Iu case of an oil tire on the floor or a flat surface sand or loose earth should be applied. Water usually only spreads it. If oil is burning in a deep container sand will sink and do no good. In this case saw dust mixed with two pounds of soda to a bucketful may be thrown on the oiL —(Copyright. 1021.)

Barber Gives Recipe lor Gray Hair

Mr. A. E. O’Brien, who has been a barber in New York City for many : years, made the following statement: “Gray, streaked or faded hair can be immediately made black, brown or light whichever shade you desire, by the use of the following remedy that you can make at home: "Merely get a box of Orlex powder at any drug store. It costs very little and no'extras to buy. Dissolve It in 2 oz. of distilled or rain water and comb It through the hair. Full directions for use and a gold bond guarantee come in each box. 6ne box will last you for months. "It Is safe, does not rub off. Is not sticky or gummy and leaves the hair fluffy. It will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger.”—Advertisement.

Ends Stubborn Coughs in a Hurry For real effectiveness, this old home-made remedy has no equal. Easily and cheaply prepared.

You’ll never know how quick- \ A ly a bad cough can be con- \\\ quered. until you try this fa- \\\ mous home-made remedy. The \\\ prompt relief is almost magical. \\\ It is easily prepared, and there I is nothing'better for cough* Into r pint bottle, put 2 J / S l ounces of Pinex; then add plain j granulated sagar syrup to make a , full pint. Or use clarified molasses, i honey, or corn syrup, instead of 6ugar svrup. Either way, it saves . about l\vo-thirda of the money i usually spent for cough prepara- | tiens, and gives you a more posi- j tive, effective remedy. It keeps | perfectly, and tastes pleasant—children like it. You can feel this fake hold instantly, soot bine and healing the membranes in all the air passages. It promptly loosens a drv, tight cough, and soon you will notico ; the phlegm thin out and disappear. I A day’s use will usually break up II an ordinary throat or chest cold, jf end it is also splendid for bron- | chitis, croup, hoarseness, and bron- |l chial asthma. ; Jr j Pinex is a most valuable I concentrated, compound of j Norway pine extract, the most reliable remedy for If throat and chest ailmenta. I] To avoid disappointment ask your drug- it >~jl/ gist for ‘’2 1 /* ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don't accept anything else. Guar* anteed to givo absolute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex Cos., Ft. Wayne, Ind. mm

HfLY?IUON'TBE People Notice It Drive Them Off with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets I - A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the . successful substitute for calomel; there’3 no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effectively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a “dark brown taste,’’ a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no good" feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among patients afflicted with’ fiver and bowel complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Takeor.eor two nightly for a week. See Ho— much better you feel and look 15c-30c LETTERS OF GRATITUDE Eloquent language and illustrations In advertising may appeal to many, but after all it is the homely, gincere letters from women, overflowing with heartfelt gratitude for health restored by frydia E. Pinkhaui’s Vegetable Conii ound, that convince other suffering women that there is a medicine that will help i tern also. Many such letter* are bain? polished in this paper from day to day, and it is to any woman’a advantage who |pffers from female ailments in a;Ty form to give this old-fashioned root ahd herb remedy a trial. —Advertisement.

Ayres'Downstairs Store • 0 The Mecca of Low Prices for Dependable Merchandise CONTINUED! The Sale of Dresses at TEN DOLLARS l Again! The Unexpected Happens ' and we have the loveliest dresses tve have shown -at the price. Beautiful frocks of tricotine,'Serges, trieolette, mignonette, velveteens and novelty fabrics. Many of them with a touch of color, others exquisitely embroidered. The 'styles are varied and many—the workmanship would do justice to muck higherpriced garments. AVe consider these the best, the smartest and most attractive frocks shown in Indianapolis in many months, and the chance is vours at— TEN DOLLARS • —Ayres— l The Downstairs Store.

Smart Boots fjjj f" "I* IV Smart Boots For Women, \ JI f \ j* jf! For Women, Young Women \ J /y ' Young Women j, i... ss.Bs 5J.&5 The Big Shoe Sale! Sizes 2\hi to 8 £*** g| Plenty of A & Some Larger, ( , JF /% A A Widths, All Widths, < Plenty of Fro?n A A M ® Medium Sizes, to EE 2N* io 8 The Big Shoe Event of the Downstairs Store—--1,000 Pairs New Boots in the Sale Tomorrow Sizes 2\ 2 to 8 — Widths from AAup to EE. All Goodyear Welt and Hand Turned Soles, a Wide Variety of Wanted Leathers.

A New HA T Only a Little to Pay „ $3.95 or $5-oo I To describe each one would require too much space, so we Will merely say— Four groups, choice. $3.95. " Four groups, choice, $5.00. —permitting the indulgence of varied feminine tastes. Hats of lovely coloring and correct styles, some with the charm of gold or silver trimming. Truly wonderful values. —Ayres—Downstairs Store.

L SAYR&S & Cos.

DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1921.

Through the Turnstile GROCERIES HAMS. Indianapolis Abattoir Co.'s “Favorite” brand little pig hams, 6 to 8-lb. average, pound, J&C4. Coffee, Batavia, oar best grade; 1-lb. cans. 52<£; 2-lb. cans $1,02; 8-lb. cans, $1.50 Corn. Batavia, the select grade of the season's pack; four varletlea: “lilttle Kernel” (Country Gentleman) No. 2 cans, 234; Maine, No. 2 cans, 244; Golden Bantam. No. 2 cana. 284; Oolden Bantam on the cob, No. 3 cana, 504Rice. Comet brand, white unbroken head In cartons; half-pound, pound, 14'/44; two pounds, 27c- ' • " ~ _r " n ' -- ■ - ' BETTER, Ayres' Special creamery, extra quality, pound, 554; I .Swastika, a good creamery butter, [ pound, 524Klim, fresh, pure milk, as you want It; pouud cans, 854; 2%-pound cans, *1.70. Dressing for salads, Batavia mayonnaise and Thoosand Island, largo slza bottles, 454Breakfast sausage, little pig links, Klnean’s Reliable brand; pound, 354; Swift’s Brookfield brand, pound, 354 BREAKFAST BACON, Kinran's “Porter" brand, machine sliced; pound, 304—Ayres—Downstairs Store.

Open w a jO , T Close sssel LS Ay res c 5 Co-

Aprons and House Dresses That* Only Need a Sudsing Some have only been mussfewl ed, yet all are, in fifrijfyk consequence of their lack of freshness, deep|H(§f ly reduced, fyfr Aprons of ginger a hams and percales, our standard apron pattern, are shown in both light and dark colorings at these clearance prices. Aprons Reduced to $1.29 and $2.45 House dresses In sizes from 36 to 46 In percales and ginghams have known much higher prices before they became mussed. Now Priced $2.45 and $2.95 / —Ayres—House dress section, third floor.

The Gray Shdp Stout Women May Indulge Their Penchant for Plaid Skirts at the Special Price, $14.95 Plaids of dignity but by no means monotonous or dull plaids; shades of navy blue, tan and brown, smartly combined. Os course, these are especially patterned, and are plaited, and are the best looking things you’d want Sizes according to waist bands, from 32 to 40 inches. The price speaks for Itself —when applied to such "thorough bred” garments as these. #14.95 is indeed small. —Ayres—Gray shop, third floor.

Isn’t It Good to See Tissues Back to 50c Tissues of quality, of course, we mean. TVe have them—and it wasn’t an easy purchase to get through at that. The bargain is far from “regular.” • Tissue plaids In blue apd green with artificial silk plaid siripe. 32 Inches wide. Price 50<* a yard. Lorraine Egyptian Tissue in plaids, 28 Inches wide. Price the yard. Madras shirting, printed In stripes, for making shirts, 36 Incheß wide. Price, 29<> the yard. —. —Ayres—Colored wash goods, second floor.

The Girls’ ShopEnlarged All Fine Gingham FROCKS In Sizes 8 to 14 Years Reduced to $3.95, $4.95 and $8.95 Gingham-frock time for school girls is too near for mothers to disregard the excellent bargains in gingham dresses offered now. The ginghams are bright, crisp qualities, the styles are attractive, the value is unto consider it even mildly. There are some plain materials; others are in pretty plaids and checks of pink, green, lavender and blue; self-trimmed and trimmed with fancy buttons; and a few have white organdy collars and sashes. • At P 8.95 Serge Regulations In navy blue and all-wool .serge, regulation dresses at $8.95 are without doubt very fine values. Is your daughter weil supplied? Sizes 8 t* 12 years. And at $8.95 are % few khaki flannel Simpson style dresses, ever so attractive on the school gLI. Sizes 8 to 13 years. —Ayres—Girls’ shop, fifth floor.

It’s Nights Like These That One Appreciates One’s “Corduroy” It’s times like these, too, that one appreciates purchasing a corduroy robe for less than regular price. If you have not such a garment, you’ll surely be glad to know that we have taken a substantial reduction on the prices of the lovely ones now in stock. Reduced to Only $9.95 Robes in a splendid quality of corduroy, lined throughout. Empire and belted styles, high necks and V necks, kimono or three-quarter sleeves, finished with turnback cuffs. Reduced to Only $16.50 Two models of very fine quality, silk lined. Both belted styles with large sailor or turnover collars and turnback cuffs. —Ayres—Negligee dept., third floor.

p e tit e Shop= - ■== Serge Regulation Suits Priced for Clearance, $18.50 A few at this price for the early comers are still available. It’s a real old-time price on these Norfolk or Mar-Hos middy suits, natty with all braid and proper emblems either in the white and red or gold. Some have the hiking plaited skirt, others the nautical plain tailored. All sizes are to be had, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 22. —Ayres—Petite shop, third floor.

Longcloth and Nainsook Prove to Be Among the Interesting Items in the January Sale of White Offered in the convenieht 10-yard bolts and marked at pricings that convince the purchasers who brouse about, that values in the January White Sale are supremely advantageous.

Longcloth and Nainsook in 10-Yard Bolts

Longcloth, 36 Inches Wide El-Es-A longcloth, bolt, *2.10 El-Es-A longcloth, bolt, $2.95 El-Es-A longcloth, bolt, $4.25 El-Ea-A longcloth, bolt, $4.95 El-Es-A longcloth, bolt, $5.25

Madeira Linens Temptingly Priced One lot of 13-piece Madeira luncheon sets, in the rose point, with scalloped edge, all beautifully embroidered, consist of 6 doilies, 6 inches; 6 doilies, 11 inches and one centerpiece. Sale price, $9.75 the set. One lot of Madeira luncheon napkins, embroidered in the rose point, with the scalloped edge and corner design. Sale price, $10.75 th* dozen. * One lot of Madeira luncheon napkins of extra fine quality, rota point edge and faultlessly embroidered designs to select from. Sato price, $18.75 the dozen. —Ayres—Linen depL, second floor.

Time Flies! And even though in our lives some dayß are bright and some are dull, every day is as gay as the next as they are marked off on the attractive little desk calendars that are being shown in the Cowan Galleries. A typical design is shown above. Conventional, yes, but cleverly so. In color, too, they are interesting. And best of all—they are specially priced for clearance—and there are 353 days yet to come. Price now just SI.OO. —Ayres—Cowan galleries, fourth floor.

Nainsook, 36 to 40 Inches Orange blos'm nainsook, $4.25. Sea Island nainsook, $5.95. English nainsook, $7.95.’ Oyama nainsook, extra fine, 38 or 40 inches, $7.95. Muriko fancy nainsook, $8.95.

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