Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1921 — Page 5
Mrs. Morris Tibbe will entertain thirtysix guests at bridge Friday afternoon at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Noble, Golden Hill, Forty-Eighth street and the Michigan road. Garden flowers will be used extensively to decorate the rooms. Miss Louise Stockdale, 2331 Central are nue, has been visiting for several days id Chicago. * * * Mrs. Louise Stowers, 931 West Thirty - Second street, will be hostess of a meeting of the Mystic Tie Club Thursday afternoon. Mrs. A. A. Wise will preside at the meeting and there will be an address on, •'Autumn.” • • * The Mother’s Circle of the Beech Grove School will meet in the auditorium of the school tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock Mrs. Riyal Thompson, president,""' will speak on, “The Object of the Circle,” and there will be an election of officers. Dr. and Mrs. William H. Worley of Cincinnati will come to attend the wedding of their niece, Miss Lucille Attkiseon, whose marriage to Herbert Rosnagle will take place Friday evening at 8:30 o’clock at the home of the brides Dr. Worley officiating. Other out-of-town guesis include Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rosnagle and Miss Katherine Emilie of Franklin. Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Lon Durham of Cincinnati. The attendants at Miss Attkisson’s wedding will be Miss Harriet Degolyer of Cincinnati, cousin of the bride, who will act as maid of honor, and Miss Harriett Rosnagle. sister of the bridegroom, who will be bridesmaid. Merrill Attkisson. brother of the bride, will act as best man. s • Miss Ruth and Miss Helen Sheerin. 4370 North Meridian street, are visiting friends in Corydon. Ind. * • * Miss Dorothy Ganes has gone to Champaign, 111., where she will attend Illinois University. • • • Mrs. J. B. Craig, 727 Fairfield avenue, has returned from an extended visit with friends and relatives at Edgewater Beach. Chicago, and Long Beach Beautiful. Michigan City. • * • Miss Margaret James of Irvington, has gone to Madison, Wis., to enter Wisconsin University. * • • Miss Madeline Hines and Miss Mildred Jlu’s of Irvington have gone to Chicago to study music. Miss Gertrude Huls has gene to Oxford. Ohio, to enter Western College. • • • Miss Jane Friedman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Friedman. 2726 Boulevard Place, and William D. Gross, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Gross of this city, were married quietly this morning at the home of the officiating pastor, the Rev. John W. Duncan, 13 West ThirtySecond street. Mr. and Mrs. Gross departed Immediately after the service for a motor trip and will be at home after Nov. 1, at 10 East Twenty-Fifth street.
Miss June Moll, 2026 Park avenue, departed today for New York where she will resume her work In Columbia University. • • • Mrs. David L. Chambers, 330 East 'lmrteenth street, and Miss Lucy Taggart, 1331 North Delaware street, who have been abroad for several months have arrived in New York. n • * The marriage of Miss Grace Temple Horn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Horn, of Knightstown. to Francis L. Dallow, was solemnized Tuesday evening in St. Paul's Episcopal Church, the Rev. Lewis Brown officiating. The altar was banked with ferns and palms, against which were set cathedral candelabra holding tall white tapers. Miss Ruth Horn, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and Walter Portius acted as best man. The bride wore a handsome suit of midnight blue veldyne, with squirrel collar and cuffs and hat to match. Her corsage was of bride roses. Miss Horn was gowned in blua crepe with corsage of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses. Mr. and Mrs. Dallow departed for a trip and on their return will be ct home at 1220 Park avenue. Kills Two Hunters GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Sept. 21. Phil Kaiser, a farmer, was being questioned today in regard to the shooting of Lester Gorham and Wayne Martin, whom he said he mistook for a bear. Gorham died and Martin was perhaps fatally wounded. The two men were hunting near Warba. Itasca County, when Kaiser shot them down. He gave himself up to authorities.
Flee Burning Ship , 23 Live 54 Days on Uninhabited Isle RAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 2L—A thrilling tale of an escape from a burning ship in mid-Pacific was told today on the arrival here of the steamship Marama bringing twenty-three mem bers of the crew of the Italian bark Monte Blanco. When they left the burning ship in a lifeboat they were 400 miles from land. After rowing for days and passing through a school of sharks they finally reached an uninhabited island, where they subsisted for fifty-four days on berries, fish and game. An Inter-island steamer finally took them to Pappete.
How To Keep Your Blood Pure and Wholesome It Is the Person With Rich, Red, Normal 8100d —The Person of Health and Energy—That Meets With Business and Social Success. A Lowered Vitality Is Usually Due to Waste Products in the Blood.
When your blood is impoverished and loaded with waste products, you don’t get the full strength ou of your food, and as a consequence, you become weak, nervaus, and easily upset. Waste products get into the blood mainly through the intestines, but there are other sources —for instance, the glands. Some glands secrete digestive juices, while others excrete waste products. If they fail to properly function, waste products accumulate. Asa result, nature strives to cast off the poisons. It may be through the skin in the form of some skin disorder, but it is not infrequent for it to settle in the muscles and joints and cause rheumatism. For over 50 years, thousands and thousands of men and women have relied on S. S. S. to clear their blood
IN THE REALM WHERE WOMAN REIGNS
Keeping House With the Hoopers [The Hoopers, an average American family of five, living in a suburban town, on a limited income, will tell the readers of the Daily Times how the many preseat-day problems of the home are solved by working on the budget that M Hooper has evolved and found practical. Follow them daily in an interesting review of their home life and learn to meet the conditions of the high cost of living with them.] The doctor showed much more inclination to be friendly when he made bis morning call on Betty than he had at any time since Mrs. Hooper had announced her decision to take care of the child. “She seems decidedly better, Mrs. Hooper,” he said in a relieved tone. "Os course, I don’t at all know that it is due to your nursing but she has the appearance of having rested more than usual and her temperature is much lower.” “She has not been nearly as restless as she was at first,” added Mrs. Hooper quietly, "and I am sure she knows that I am with her though you are so certain that she does not recognize me,” “Well, if we keep on this way we ought to pull her through,” responded the doctor quietly, as he examined the chart which he had showed Mrs. Hooper how to keep for him. After the doctor had gone, .Mrs. Hooper sat down at her desk and wrote out her daily instructions for her mother and Roger and Helen, and gave her orders over the telephone to the butcher and grocer. “Isn't it funny that mother doesn't let us take care of things ourselves down here?” remarked Helen as she and Roger and her grandmother were having their luncheon. ”1 know Just what to do about everything, don't you grandma?”
“Well, you know how particular your mother is, dearie, that everything should iun along without any hitch,” her grandmother replied, “and we would probgolj mix things all up If we began doing as we pleased down here.” ”1 was Just hoping,” Helen went on, “that when mother had to go into quarantine with Betty, and father had to stay away she might Just let us have v hat we liked for dinner and luncheon and that we could Just bust up some of the old pules that make tills house run so different from the Briggees. Nobody ever knows what they are going to have to eat in their house.” “Nor when they ,sre going to have It. either, I'll venture to say,” replied her grandmother, giving Roger a second helping of the boiled rice. "Why in the world do you want to break your toother's rules. Helen ? It wouldn't t take any difference in what you have to do in the house. There Is Just so much that every girl of your age ought to do and it only makes It more smooth and comfortable for ail of us when your mother Insists on haring things done cn time and on having certain things done in the same way every week ” “Oh, it isn't that I mind doing things so much,” said Helen. “I know washing the dishes and taking care of my room and the other things are my Job and not mother's, but it Just makes me mad when she writes out all these orders and sends them down on the tray, Instead of letting us alone to do something ourselve^.” “Why Helen, I'm surprised at yon,” exclaimed her grandmother In a shocked tone. I'm sure Id much rather not have the responsibility of managing your mother’s aouse even for a week or so. She does 1* very much better than any of us even when she has to >c shut up in her room upstairs.” "Oh. Helen is always grouching, grandma.” put in Roger. “She thinks she ought to do as she pleases without any one to boss her. Do you think we could have done that washing yesterday with the new washing machine, if mother hadn't written out all the instructions as to how the white and colored clothes were to be manar .-d and how the rinsing was to be done? You are an awful silly If you think we could manage this house without mother.” “Os course w® could,” maintained Helen stoutly, “I know exactly what to do from having watched mother all vacation and I could have told you and grandma just how to help me, and I know I could got the breakfast without mother's writing it all out. It Is Just as if she didn't trust us with the old house I” “I think you have very unruly thoughts for a small girl, Helen,” said her grandmother severely, “and Fra very glad that Roger doesn't agree with you. When you are older you will appreciate what your mother has done for you." “Why, we don't have to bother about I thinking of a thing,” said Roger as he I pushed his chair back from the table. | "Even when she has been cut off from ; us this way mother goes right on doing : all the thinking for the family. I think It's wonderful.” “Well, I don't,” snapped Helen, ”1 hate 1 it.” The menu for the three meals on Thursday is: BREAKFAST Cantaloupe Cereal Creamed Hash on Toast (Left oTer of Veal Loaf) Coffee LUNCHEON Salmon Cukes Stuffed Egg on Lettuce Sliced Peaches Milk DINNER Cream of Pea Soup
of waste products. S. S. S. will improve the quality of your blood by relieving you of the waste products which cause impoverished blood and Its allied troubles —slcln disorders, rheumatism and a lowered vitality. The same qualities which give S. S. S. its beneficial effect in clearing your blood of waste products mako it extremely desirable for keeping your blood in good condition. Get S. S. S. at your druggist. Use it strictly according to directions and write Chief Medical Director, Swift Specific C 0.,, D-718 S. S. S. Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga„ for special medical advice (without charge). He is helping people every day to regain their health and strength. Ask him to send you his illustrated booklet, “Facts About the Blood” —free. S. S. S. Is sold by all drug stores. — Advertisement.
Mem Ygu May Marry By E. R. PEYSER Has a man like this proposed to you? Symptoms: You are his assistant in his office. He is awfully kind, always telling you to take a matinee in the midst of the heavy work he has left for you to do, while he runs down to his country house. Leaves everything to the last minute, is lavish in praise, is true in criticism, nice big blue eyes in a large cub-like body, always “way up or way down.” Big ideals. IN FACT, He is the human elevator with ups and downs. Prescription to his bride: U/v A springboard in his home. tj (j, Keep two jumps ahead of him. ' Bea butterfly, for he understands the winged creature only. Absorb This: FLYING IS THE MODERN APPROACH TO CONQUEST, (Copyright, 1921.)
Baked Spanish Omelet Hashed Brown Potatoes Sliced Tomatoes Peach Pie (Copyright, 1921.) DEVILED EGGS ON LETTUCE. Boil a dozen eggs hard, throw into cold water, and at the end of half an hour remove the shells. Cut the eggs carefully in half, extract the yolks and rub these to a paste with three tablespoonfuls of salad oil, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, half teaspoonful of made mustard, a dash of paprika, two or three drops of Tobaa-o sauce, and salt to taste. Form this paste into ball3. Tut the halls back iuto the halved whites. Place on lettuce leaves and pour a mayonnaise dressing over all. If high seasoning is not liked, the mustard and Tabasco sauce may be omitted. PEA SOI P. One cm of marrowfat peas, three cups cold wt.ter, three cups of milk, one slice lemon, two tablespoonfuls of butter, two tablespoonfuls of flour, one tablespoonful sugar. Salt ami pepper to taste. Drain peas from their liquor, and rinse them in cold water, add cold water and simmer fifteen minutes. Rub through puree sieve, reheat, and thicken with flour and butter cooked together. Seuid milk, and onion in double boUer, remove onion, and add milk to the p a mixture. Half cupful of thia cream will Improve the soup. OMELET A LA SPANISH. Three eggs, three pinches of salt, three tablespoonfuls of water, one tahlespoonful of butter. Separate eggs, putting the yolks In bowl and w hlP*s on platter. (The whites must be entirely free from any bit of yolks if they are to boat to a stiff mass ) Add one pinch of salt to the whites and two to the yolks. (A pinch of salt is what you take up between the thumb and forefinger.) Beat whites until stiff and dry, and yolks until lemon color. Add water to yolks, and beat it wH in. Add whites, cutting and folding until well mixed with the yolks. Have omelet pan hot tnd well buttered on sides and bottom. Turn lu the mixture and spread evenly, place on a range where it will , <ok slowly. When well puffed and frowned on bottom, slip in the oven to cook tho top. Fold and turn on a hot platter. Serve vrith Spanish sauce. SPANISH SAUCE. Cook two tabiespoonftils of butter, one onion, and one sweet Span'sh pepper cut fine until onion is a golden brown, then add two tablespoonfuls of flour, one cup of unstrained tomatoes, and one-half cup of mushrooms out tine. Season with salt, pepper, a little sugar and cayenne, and one tab'.espoonfui of capers. Cook until quite thick. Pour this sauce around the hot omelet and serve at once. The best way is to prepare the sauce before the omelet in order to serve the omelet quickly. “Remember the guest must a! ways wait on the omelet, omelet never on giy?st.” HASHED BROWN POTATOES. Pare potatoes, cut very small and evenly, and put into a sauce pan with a finely minced onion and stalk of celery shopped Into tiny Lits. Cover with salted boiling water end cook until tender. Drain off the water, supplying Its pla.e with milk, heated with a pinch of soda. Bring to a bubble and stir in a large i tablespoonful of butter, rubbed to a i cream with one of flour. Pepper, salt, | mix well—taking care not to break the ! potatoes—take from the Are, stir and toss i for a moment, then turn all Into a greased pudding dish, sprinkle crumbs on the top and brown In a good oven. PEACH TIE. Four large or five small peathes, threefourths cups sugar, one ta olespoonful
LSAyresGCo. Downstairs Store
a telegram! One thousand, four hundred seventy-six pairs shoes at SI.OO. Regulars, irregulars and seconds. Shoes for women and girls, patent leather, black kid, white canvas and brown canvas pumps and oxfords. Sizes 2 y 2 to 8. Widths AA to D. Record values. Be here early. Just unpacked three hundred waists of Georgette crepe, marked to sell at SI.OO. Flesh, white, bisque, navy blue and a variety of in-between shades. All good styles. Long and short sleeves. Some embroidered. Sizes 38 to 44. On sale Thursday in Ayres’ Downstairs Store.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1921.
flour or one-half tablespoonful cornstarch, pinch of salt, one tablespoontul butter. Pare the peaches and cut into very thin slices. Mix sugar, cornstarch and salt and stir into the sliced peaches. Line pie tin with good pastry dough, put peaches in and dot over with butter put on top crust and bake half an hour. Helpful Household Hints TO POLISH PATENT LEATHER. To polish patent leather remove every I article of dust, and apply a mixture of one part of linseed oil to two parts of cream. It should be well mixed and applied with a soft, dry cloth. TO CLEAN LINOLEUM. If the linoleum be wiped first with a cloth dipped in warm water, and wrung ns dry as possible, then wiped over with skimmed milk once a week, the colors will bo brightened, and the varnish w hich protects tho colors will be longer preserved. Soften obstinate spots with a little linseed oil. using as little- as possible, and rubbing all superfluous ol: off. This does not apply to inlaid linoleum unless it has been shellaced, as the dirt grinds in and must he scrubbed out. However, it is best to have a coal of shellac or varnish put on once or twice a year as it will wear much longer and Is much easier to keep clean. Egg Custard Beat yolks of two eggs slightly, and add one-fourth cup of milk and a few grains of salt. Strain Inti r small but tored mold end ptaee in boiling water until the custard is firm. Beat whites slightly: cook the way until firm Turn from mold and cut 21nto fancy shape, and use to decorate dishes In aspic. Aspic Jelly is always made with meal stock, and Is used for elaborate entrees where fish, chicken game, tongue, veg etahles, etc., are combined In it, and served unmolded. RULE FOR ASPIC. Ingredients—One tablespoon each of carrot, onion and celery; spring parsoiy, Spring thyme, one half a bnyleaf, oue clove, one-half teaspoon peppercorns, one and one-half cups white wine, one box gelatin®, one qunrt white or brown stock. Juice one lemon, whites two eggs. Put vegetables, seasonings and one cup of the wine in saucepan. Cook for seven or eight, minutes and strain. Add gelatine and lemon Juioe to stock. Heat to boiling point. Add liquor from the cooked vegetables, and set a3lde to cool. When cool enough, add the beaten whites of the two eggs diluted with some of the cooled stock. Stir eggs Into the mixture and bring slowly to the botllng point, then rest it on back of stove for ten minutes. Strain through cheesecloth placed over a fine strainer. Add remaining one-haif cup of wino, and aspic is ready to use for mo.ding anything you desire. Stuffed Cucumbers Select large cucumbers of uniform size, cut them into halves, and with a spoon and vegetable knife remove the seeds, i Stand in cold water until crisp. Drain and fill with chicken force-meat, using J equal parts of minced chicken and soft crumbs. Season rather highly, using paprika, salt and white pepper, and moisten with egg. Place upright on a I trivet, and half surround with white | stock, and cook for three-quarters of an j hour. A good way to keep them in po- < sltlon is to place them in a small wire basket.
PUSS IN BOOTS JR. By David Cory ’ I When Puss saw the high stone wall in front of him, as I mentioned in the last story, he said to his Good Gray Horse: “Well, this is the end of our journey, unless you can climb up this great rock." “Look for the little door,” said the 1 Good Gray Horse. “Have you forgotten that you have the key which you found in the hollow dead tree?" So Puss Jumped to the ground and went up close to tho stone wall. But, oh, dear me! No matter iww carefully he looked he could find no door, and he was just about to give up searching when he saw a little keynole. Ob, a very tiny little keyaoie. So he slipped the key into it and ail of a sudden a door opened as if by mngic and Puss saw a little closet on the iheif of which stood a beautiful crystal vase. And just underneath was written lu gold letters: “This is the vase for the Flower of Youth, Fill it with water as pure as truth." So Puss took down the vase and then the little door closed and the gold key turned in the lock, hut when Puss tried to take it out the little key stuck fast, and then a bluebird began to sing: “Take the vase and leave the key. Get on your horse and follow me. But HU the vase with water first, So the Flower of Youth may feel no thirst ”
j Well, nfter that. Puss dipped the ! crystal vase in the little brook and then he mounted his Good Gray Horse and. followed the bluebird, who led Puss out ;of the stone valley Into a beautiful fur- | est, where the sun twinkled through the treo tops and the. birds sang from the branches. And, by and by, after a while, they came to a little hut In a clearing, where an old, old man sat on a wooden j bench in the sunshine smoking a pipe, i “Twitter, twitter, old man gray. How grows your Flower of Youth j today?” [ And then the old man looked up and | when he saw Puss Junior on his Good Gray Horse, ne trok his pipe out of his mouth and bowed very low And then he I ran his thin white hands through his ! long gray hair. "Lead us to where the Flower of Youth ! grows,” said the bluebird. So tho old j man arose and walked elowly around to i ihe rear of his humble little cottage, and I there In a well-kept lied grew the most | beautiful flower Puss had ever seen. It ! was pure white, with crimson leaves, j “For every flower I pluck another grows in its place." said the old man. j “But he to who n I give It must promise I me that he will give the flower to some ; >ne and not keep it for himself." ! “I will promise,” said I’usg. “It Is for my dear father, the famous Puss in 1 Boots. 1 would have him live always, so | that little children may never forgot him." And in the next story you shall j hear what happened after that.—Copy . right. 1921. iTo be continued.) Storm Warnings on Lakes and Atlantic WASHINGTON. Sept. 21-The weather bureau today ordered storm warnings p-'S'eJ on the Great Lake#, except extreme western Superior, naa on the Atlantic coast and north of Delaware Breakwater. i
GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES AND V/HITEN SKIN
Squeeze the Juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan blcHch, and complexion w hltcuer. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion Into the face, neck, arms and bands oaeb day and see how freckles and blemishes bleach out and how clear, t.oft and rosy-white the skin becomes.-r-AdTer-tlsement.
How to Have Pretty Natural Looking Curls
Strnlght, lank hair is becoming to but few women and there's no excuse now for anyone looking homely and unkempt on that account. Those who have foresworn the curling iron because of the damage It does by drying and breaking the hair, will bo glad to hear that the simple s)lmrine method will produce a far better and prettier effect, without any Injurious result whatever. If Just a small quantity be applied with a clean tooth brush before doing up the hair, the love llest natural looking curls and waves will be In evidence in three hours, and there will lie nothing streaky, sticky or greasy about it. A few ounces of liquid sllmerlne, ob- : talnable at any drug store, will prove a welcome addition to many a dressing tahle, It Is best applied by dividing ' the hair into strands and moistening each ;of them separately from root to tip. The | beautiful wavy < fleet will last for a con- | siderable time.—Advertisement.
Storm Is Sweeping East From Canada ST. PAUL, Minn., Sept. 21.—Many farm buildings were wrecked and many miles of pole lines blown down in the storm that struck late Tuesday near Elk rive”. Considerable stock was killed and win dows in farm homes were broken by heavy hail stones. The storm hit on a ten-mile front and all telegraph and telephone wires north of here severed. At least fifty poles lay in the Jefferson highway north of Anoka. Storm warnings were displayed today
sss°S“ &Co-
33' 137, Off. 25% Off. Little Girls Everywhere! 25 % Off. The Ayres Toy Shop Announces A DOLL SALE Three clashes of dolls are offered at sharp reductions. All are taken from our regular stock; all are in good condition; all are priced to sell at discounts of 25, 33 1-3 and 50 per cent.
Less 25% All dolls with composition heads and stuffed or all composition bodies. “Pies and Tarts” This will be Mrs. Houston’s subject Thursday at the Rumford Cooking Class. The lecture will be illustrated with practical demonstrations. Thursday at 2 p. m. —Ayres—Sixth floor. Fitted Gases A Sale Ladies’ light weight dress cases, plain, prettily lined, are offered In a 22-inch size at sl-50. Laundry Cases Specially Priced, $1.75 —Ayres—Luggage dept., sixth floor. Van Camp’s Milk, Tall Cans, 11c BUTTER, Ayres special creamery, extra quality, pounil, 45 v Monument brand, a good creamery, pound, 43£. MAYONNAISE AND SALAD DRESSING, Batavia brand. 45c; Premier and Van Camp’s, 40<*; Heinz, 25 C. PEAS, Auburn brand. American Petite Pols, a very small pea. No. 2 cans, 35c. HAWAIIAN SLICED PINEAPPLE, Batavia brand, No. 2 squat cans, 40C can. COOK’S READY’ COFFEE, a liquid coffee made in the cup ; two size bottles, 48c and 33CANGELUS MARSH.M ALLOWS; for toasting and topping desserts. Special, box. lOCWESSON’S OIL. pure v getable oil for salads and cooking. Pint cans, 27C. quarts, 50c 4 - SUNSHINE SUGAR WAFERS, 12’,' , jC box. —Ayres—Groceries Dowrstalra,
Introducing to Patrons of L. S. Ayres & Company McDougal! Kitchen Cabinets In our desire to offer to our patrons only the best merchandise, thorough study of the efficiency of the various kitchen cabinets has recently been made. Asa result of this research we are happy to announce that the McDougall Kitchen Cabinet is now to be had in our sixth floor housefurnishings department. It would be futile for us to offer arguments as to the desirability of owning a kitchen cabinet. Your daily life has already proved all points that we might make. An inspection of our line of McDougalls will, however, do much to enable you to decide which particular cabinet to buy. We believe that your selection will only further prove the wisdom of our confidence in this cabinet. SI.OO Down Will Place a McDougall in Your Home j y —Ayres—Houscfurnishing3 dept., sixth floor.
on the Great Lakes, according to the weather bureau. A storm was sweeping eastward from across the Canadian border. Purchasing Agents Name Committees K. T. Klee, chairman of the entertainment committee of the Purchasing Agents Association of Indiana, today announced the organization which wiil handle the work during the convention of the National Association of Purchasing Agents to be held In Indlan-
Less 33Vz% All character dolls, or straight-jointed dolls, with bisque heads, hair and moving eyes.
CANTON CREPE Black and Colors $9,98 Per d. Heavy weight Canton crepe, 40 inches wide and pure silk. Choice of black, navy, brown or gray. Also Extra heavy weight crepe de chine, and Extra heavy satin Canton —same colors. Our initial shipment of these was quickly exhausted; be prompt. Only 1,500 yards. —Ayres—Silk section, second floor.
In the Men s Store
Men’s Cashmere Hose 50c the Pair The purchaser of hosiery with an eye for economy will find cashmere hose a good investment. They, and these in particular, will give a maximum of good service. Those now offered come from a manufacturer who has specialized upon this one quality for thirty years. A fact that assures you of sterling quality. They are packed especially for L. S. Ayres & Cos., another assurance of quality. Black, Oxford, Natural —Ayres—Men’s store, street floor.
apolis, Oct. 10 to 13. The committees are as follows: Headquarters—E. B. Reeser, Claypool Hotel; F. C. Thompson, Sevexin HoteL 8. M. Ravmond, Lincoln Hotel: C. C. weiiand: Barry E. Young; G. H. Matheson; G. C. Graber. Musicale—Miss Mary Reynolds, Mis* Elsie Green. Transportation—F. C. Thompson; Geo. C. Graber: Harry E. Young; Jack Mull; Frank \V. Hicks. Dinner—Henry Victor. Dance Committee —A. R Dewey; Geo. C. Graber: Frank W. Hicks; Jack Mull. Fun-Fest—C. C. Weiland, Harry E. Young, G. 11. Matheson. Van Camp's Trip—W. K. Gearen. Golf Tournament —Henry Victor.
Less 50% All Kewpies, whether of composition or celluloid. —Ayres—Toy shop, fifth floor. Values During the Second Day of the Toilet Goods Sale Art Equally as High as On the First The point is, there are not so many; stocks are still in good volume, despite the inroad made by the first day’s selling. Among the tempting values^re Shell combs, 39<. Certified lotion, 50#. Large cakes Oatmeal and Buttermilk soap, SI.OO the dozen. Coty’s 2-ounce seal bottles of L’Origon perfume, $5.50. Sylvan talcum, 15<?. Coty’s face powder, rose or naturelle, 55£. —Ayres —Toilet goods dept., street floor.
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