Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 135, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1921 — Page 5

Among the attractive weddings of the fall season was tuat of Miss Franeeiitt Sargent, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sargent, and C. Ralph Hamilton, which i took place in the Church of the Aivent Saturday evening. The Rev. Harry G. Richardson read the service, before an altar banked with paling and ferns and baskets of chrysanthemums, against which gleamed white tapers set in cathedral candelabra. The attendants included Miss Charlene Sargent, sister of the bride, matron of honor; Miss Mary K. Southwick of Chicago, bridesmaid; Charles Thompson, best man; Richard Sargent, brother of the bride, and Norman Hamilton, ushers. The bride, who was given In marriage by her father, wore a handsome gown of Ivory peach-bloom chiffon velvet combined with kitten's ear crepe, embroidered in pearls and crystal beads, over which fell her tulle veil arranged cap effect, with Venetian point lace. Her bouquet was a shower of sweetheart roses and lilies of the valley. Miss Sargent was gowned in orchid colored pineapple silk and carried a bouquet of summer lilacs and Miss Southwick wore a frock of apple green taffeta, her bouquet being sweetheart roses and lilacs. Following the ceremony a reception wag held at the home of the bride’s parents, 2020 North Delaware street. The bouse was effectively decorated throughout with Southern stnilax, ferns and baskets of autumn flowers In various shades. Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Illlligosg of Shelbyvllle; Earl G. Krumwine of Chicago and Ross C. Lyons of Howe. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton will be at home after Nov. 1 at 2020 North Delaware street. • • • Miss Mary Wheeler, 3951 North Pennsylvania street, will depart this week for Tuscon, Arts., where she will be connected with the library of the University of Arizona. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Wheeler entertained informally last evening for their daughter. • • • Members of the Delta Delta Delta Chapter at Butler College will hold open house in their new home, 5621 Beeechwood avenue, Saturday evening. • • * Patronesses for the Indiana Vassar Club's presentation of Tony Sarg's Marionettes tomorrow evening in the Masonic Temple include Mrs. William Dudley Foulke, of Richmond; Mrs. C. O. Fenton, of Logansport; Mrs. E. B. Ball, of Muncie; Mrs. Meredith Nicholson, Mrs. Eugene C. Miller, Mrs. Albert Seaton, Miss Cerene Ohr, Miss Frances Morrison, (Mrs. Elizabeth Baker, Mrs. Charles Garrard, Mrs. C. F. Merrell, Mrs. ltobcTt Hosmer Morse Jr., Miss Margaret Shipp, Mrs. George Ball, Mrs. Harry Fitton, Mrs. Mortimer Forseott, Miss Hilda Gemmer and Mrs. Alexander L. Taggart. * • • Mrs. Millie Drane, 2230 Central avenue, passed the week-end with Miss Grace Walker of Kankakee, 111., formerly of Indianapolis. * * • Miss Ductile Bailey, 3460 North Meridian street, is spending a few days in Green castle. • Miss Dorothy L. Shank, who is attending Oxford College, Oxford, Ohio, is spending a few days with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Carlin H. *Shank, Shadeland avenue, and Thirtieth street. • • * Local members of the Mystic Shrine have planned a “Hard Times'* dance for Monday evening, Oct. 31, in celebration of Halloween. It is to be a membership affair and everybody is to be attired in the oldest wearing apparel they have. • • * Mrs. George .Tones will be hostess for a meeting of the Ladles' Aid Society of the Moravian Episcopal Church on Wednesday afternoon at her home, 1860 Lexington avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. David 0. Braden and son Frederick, 3T32 Washington Boulevard, will move to Culver, Ind., soon for residence. ... Mrs. Saiome Gehrlcin announces the marriage of her daughter Frances Ruth to William Morley, sen of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Morley. which was solemnized Saturday afternoon at the Ail Souls Unitarian Church, Dr. F. S. C. Wicks officiating’. Preceding the ceremony, Chr stopher Tavendaie Stephenson sang "At Dawning" and Mrs. Cora Brockway. organist. played a prlgram of bridal airs. Miss Hilda and Miss Fiaine Scmidt, nieces of the bride, were the only attendants and the bride was given In marrlag * by her brother, William C. Gehrlein. • • • Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Aley were the guests of honor at a reception and dinner given at the University Club Saturday evening by the Faculty Club of Butler College. Receiving with President and Mrs. Aley were Dean and Mrs. Putnam Miss Alice Bidwell and Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Richardson. ' The tables were attractively arranged with baskets of blue and white blossoms, the school colors, which also were carried out In the place card* and decorations. The room was lighted with blue tapers In silver holders and eovera were laid for seventy, the guests Including the faculty members, Mr. and Mrs. Hiiton U. Brown, represents g the k.l&rd of directors, and prominent alumni. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Edward Barnes, 731 Olin avenue, entertained with r birthday dinner party last evening in honor of Ira Barnes and Donald Martin, covers being laid for twelve guests. • • • Mlsa Helen Eorine Garhsy of Chicago, who has been visiting relatives here for the past week, leaves this evening for New Tork City, where she will study music. • • • Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Culver. 44 Drexel Arms, announce the marriage of Mrs. Culver's sister, Miss Grace Norvell, to Carl

Best Treatment for A.I Complexion Ills

If the skin be colorless, sallow, muddy, over-red. If It be rough, blotchy, pimply or freckled, there’s nothing that will so surely overcome the condition as ordinary mercolized wax. It literally takes off a bad complexion—absorbs the dead and-near-dead particles of surface skin, so gently, gradually, you experience no Inconvenience at all. Anew complexion is then In evidence, one so clear, spotless, delicately soft and beautiful, you look years younger. One ounce of this wax, procurable at any drug store, will rejuvenate even the worst complexion. It Is smeared on like cold cream before retiring and removed mornings with warm water. The mercolized wax habit is a healthier and more economical one than the cosmetic habit. If the skin be wrinkled or flabby, bathe It dally In a solution made by dissolving an ounce of powdered saxolite in a half-pint of witch hazel. This acts Immediately, effecting even the deepest wrinkles.—Advertisement.

tIF YOU HAD A NECK B LONO AS THIS FELLOW, AND HAD 10RE THROAT | DOWN" ONSILINE HOULO QUICKLY RELIEVE IT See. *x<- Me. Rocpitml Sias. IL iU OS OQOISXS

Bail y Fashion Hints Jff'

By AGNES AYRES. Star In Paramount Pictures, W* are going to use new fura this winter, and old furs In naw ways, besides having suddenly acquired a very refreshing tngte for many of them In their natural colors. The furriers tell me. too, that they have dropped somewhat in price, which information is double welcome when taken In conjunction with the pessimistic prophecies that rise on all sides of tis, about the cold winter we are In for. Light and frivolous language I tn using in connection with so beautiful and wonderful a wrap aa this one I found ;.t one of the very exclusive fur shops. It is of mole skin, that most becoming, (toft and beautiful of all furs, and is trimmed with the softness and charm of flying squirrel—fur that you would never associate with sotilrrel were you not told—it is so much longer, softer and more becoming in color. Then the lines of my new wrap are noteworthv. From the back I am sure you would think I h-i on either a cape or a dolman, while from the front It 1* unmistakably a wrßp coat, with real. If short, sleeves. The latter Is the most startling about many of this year’s fur coats, their a'eeves being three-quarter and looking most Impractical and chilly though, of course, a huge muff will tuakt that all right. The bands of sqnarrel which form the cape effect In the back end In front like so many little capes that do not meet but show the coat beneath. Please observe the collar, too. I hav. never seen one like It, and I am sure li is French.

E. Braden of Shelbyville, Ind.. which was solemnized Saturday evening at the North Park Christian Church, the Rev. ,1. It. Garrison officiating. The bride wore a traveling suit of taupe shade velvedyne with duv-tyna hat to rnat‘ h and a corsage of sweettn art rosebuds. Following the ceremony Mr. anti Mrs. Brajdtjn left for a trip through the East The at-home announcement is for 43<i East Michigan street after Nov. 1. • * • Mrs. O. L. Clarke and dtuighlor, MisMarie Clarke, who are returnlug to their home in Galveston, Tex., oft;r a visit in New York, will be the house giests of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Royer. 2064 Ccu t'al avenue, for a few days.

You're constipated! CTke “Cason rets” tonight to thoroughly clean your bowel* of the constipation poison which Is keep ing you dizzy, headachy, half sick and upset. No other cathartic or phjßlc Is so pleasant or moves clogged-up bowels •o nicely, so fully; and Cascnrets cost only ten cents a box. —Advertisement

ANOTHER WOMAN ESCAPES Mrs.McComber Avoided a Serious Operation by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Georgetown, 111. —“After my first baby was born I suffered so with my IgWiliE.HiUn'Laaigwt.iTiVieft side that I Hgkjjj&HggH n °t walk across the floor I was all H&r y over, . lisikoldingtomyside.. K. ***•' Sp* I doctored with several doctors [!!* Agjl but found no refill*: *'**”“* lief and they said MintSiiii -jS-fflll I would have to ; W : have an operation. My mother in--1 ii rothisted on my tak • ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and I soon found relief. Now I can do all my own work and it is the Vegetable Compound that has saved me from an operation. I cannot praise your medicine too highly and I tell all of my friends and neighbors what the Compound did for me.”— Mrs. Margaret McCumber, 27 S. Frazier St., Georgetown, Illinois. Mrs. McCumber is one of the unnumbered thousands of housewives who struggle to keep about their daily tasks, while suffering from ailments peculiar to vomen with baclcgche sideaches, headaches, bearing-down pains and nervousness, —and every such woman should profit by her experience and give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial.

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 present-day problems of the home are solved by working on the budget that Mrs. Hooper has evolved and found practical. Follow them dally In an Interesting review of their home life and learn to meet the conditions of the high cost of living with them.] MONDAY. “Your mother Is coming downstairs to dinner tomorrow night,” announced the children’s grandmother, as Roger and Helen came rushing in from school for their luncheon. "Did the doctor* say so?” they both inquired breathlessly. “.Yes, he told me when he made his visit this morning that if the Bride would come over and stay with I’ettj your mother could eat her dinner with us tomorrow night.” "It seems ages since we saw her,” said Helen “and I hope she can stay down all evening.” ••Why didn’t the doctor make it tonight?” grumbled Roger. "He intended to,” answered his grandmother, “but the Bride couldn't come back tonight. Her husband Is Just getting home from his business trip and she rant leave at dinner time; but she has promised to come over tomorrow night, and as she can stay all evening T ol 't mother can Rpend It down here with us. ' “Let's have a real swell dinner grandma,” exclaimed Helen, "and use some of those quinces that we preserved ourselves for dessert. I'm Just waiting to see how surprised mother will be at all these things we've added to the preserve closet while she has been taking care of Betty. “And I'm Just waiting to see howmany of all those Jars of fruit we won * be able to eat,” said Roger again voicing his belief that the fruit that Helen and her grandmother had put up would be spoiled because they, instead of his mother, had done it. "There Is no trick about putting np fruit and vegetables." said Helen loftily “you Just follow the rules and be rerv earefui about every little thing that th • recipe tells you to do and then nothing can possibly spoil." “Well, well see,'' replied Roger croak inglv as ho passed his cup for a second helping of hot cocoa. “We can't have too fancy a dinner. Interrupted their grandmother, harking back to Helen's remark about an unusual meal in honor of her mother's re turn to the family: beeause I've decided to do the washing mvself tomorr“v and not have that laundress again. We paid hr $6 last week for (he washing and ironing and with the $2.50 for the install ment on the washing machine, we nsd up nearly all of the $9 of the weekly operating expense money in the laundry. “It's a mighty good thing that Mother Is coming back to the family,” laughed Roger: for you and Helen would have us ruined trying to run that budget, grandma.” The menu for three meals on Tuesday is; BREAKFAST IVar* Broiled Bacon and Eggs Cereal Toast Coffee LUNCHEON* Cream of Potato Soup with Celery Bread and Butter Stewed Plums Hot Cocoa DINNER Vegetable Soup Bak-xl Ham and Sweet Potatoes Creamed Cabbage Quince Preserves Cucumber Salad Chocolate Pudding

Washed—Dried—lroned I J Themselves mII / J That’s the Way We Wash Your Clothes One of the Mode! Laundry Girts , who Helps do tfjur Washing T X AINTY, particular people appreciate having .1 / their clothes washed separately—and not thrownin promiscuously with other people’sclothes. That’s the way we wash them here! Here your family washing is taken through every process as a UNIT. We wash your clothes in a separate washercompartment—by themselves—with no direct con/f nnn an y one rise’s clothes. And wc rinse and q/I xpIUUfUuU dry and iron them separately. Laundress Here we handle your clothes with the same lL7v°±tr<£^' U Z care an d attention as you would at home. And with SrteiuXr equiprotn, “ our wonderful facilities we make them cleaner, ri"r?"v'd sweeter, fresher—with LESS WEAR. for you a **£ 100,000 Laundress.” Your clothes are washed in a sep- We have four services— f 'wet wash,” "rough dry,” arnte washer-compartment—and arc m _ j i y J ftr •! r • f t • taken through each succeeding o P - economy dry wash, and family finish. The latter is a ""7 COMPLETE rvict-,w clothes are returned to you bXHREB times softer than nun- fresh, clean, beautifully finished, ready to wear. You can Wa w'e do not rub your clothe* or even delude the men’s soft collars and shirts—the fton h 9s%“f''!dTar h far n by women’s dainty dresses. The cost is low—no more, we begentic pressure aionr. lieve, than doing it at home. Every garment is sterilized—and identification. Try us THIS WEEK. Phone, Main 0523 and watTmo^7eTu M one of our route-men will call. If you live out of wear. Cleaner, sweeter, freshet . • 111 VT77 dothe.--and beautifully finished! town just mail us your bundle. We pay return charges. Model Washing Headquarters Satisfying Service Vs/ Nathan T. Washburn .*. Geo. W. Pein Isaac B. Taylor Copyright, 1921, M. L.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1921.

Mem You May Marry By ETHEL R . PEYSER Ha* a man like this proposed to you? Symptom*: Very tall, broad, rather losely knit and large mustache; not fashionable, but awfully stylish. You think his cane Is a third leg. But he uses it as If he were used to It. He makes you think of ancient chivalry and romance. He is interested in everything and never seems bored. Never rushes, although he likes to speed in h;s Rolls Royce. Takes life very easily, yet you know he has real Interests. Never too busy to take you to an art gallery, or to music, or tea. IN FACT, He puts the “T” in Thine. U/J Prescription to his bride: _/ 'p Keep fit, keep your work politely out of way. Absorb Thiß: LIFE IS GIVEN FOR US TO LIVE. (Copyright, 4921.)

BAKED STAFFED SWEET POTATOES Bake large sweet potatoes and when tender cut In halves lengthwise and scoop out the pulp. Mash fiuely and add salt paprika and butter to taste aud sufficient rich milk so that the mixture may he whipped up. Heap into the potato skins and lay a th n slice of bacon across the top of each, set In a hot oven and serve as soon as the bacon Is crisp.—Copyright, 11*21. BAKED HAM. Boil a ham eighteen minutes to the pound ; leave it one hour In the liquor in wbleli It was cooked; lake it out and let it get really cold and firm before stripping off the skin. Rub the upper side with white of egg and sift over it bread dust a quarter of an Inch thick. Pepper lightly, and set In the oven for half an hour, or until the coating is well shortned by the oozing fat. and of a nice brown. Let It get cold to the very bone before serving It. If you like a suspicion of onion flavoring, wash the surface to be breaded with onion Juice before going over it with the white of egg.

MOTHER! Move Child’s Bowels With "California Fig Syrup"

Hurry mother; Even a sick child loves th.‘ “fruity” taste of “California Fig Syrup” and It never falls to open the bowels. A teaspoonful today may pro vent a sick child tomorrow. If const I- - bilious, feverish, fretful, lias cold colic, or if stomach Is sour, tongue coaled breath bad, remember a good cleansing

CUCUMBER SALAD. Lay fresh cucumbers in the Ice for twelve hours. Feel aud slice very thin, and send immediately to the table cov ered with crushed ice. As you dish them put some of the ice on each plate and pour over the cucumbers a dressing made of two parts of salad oil and one part lemon juice, with salt and paprika t< taste. CHOCOLATE PUDDING. Make a good custard of a quart of milk the yolks of five eggs aud u cupful of sugar. Have ready two tablespoonfuls of cornstnr< h wet with cold milk. When the custard Is hot, take from the tire, stir this In, with four tablespoonfuls of grated, unsweetened chocolate. Turn Into a buttered pudding dish and bake, covered, for half an hour. Draw to the dour of the oven and spread with a stiff meringue made of the whites of eggs whipped light with two tablesp oinfuls of powdered sugar and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Return to the oven for one minute. or until the meringue la "set.” Eat cold with whipped cream

of the little bowels Is often ail that 1necessary. Ask your druggist for genuine "Call fornia Mg Syrup," which has direction f"T babies nud children of all h: ■ printed on bottle. Mother! You mu-* - say "California” <>r you may get an hnl tat ion 6g syrup.— Advertisement.

CULINARY TERMS. I “Nougat”—Almond candy. “Oeufs farcls”—Stuffed eggs. “Omelette aux chamlgndn” Omelet with mushrooms. “Fata” —Bread. “Paprika”—Hungarian sweet red pepper. "Pape”—Some preparation of pastry, usually a small pie. Hence "patty-pans.” “Panada”—Bread and milk cooked to a paste.” • i’ate de foie gras”—Small pie filled with fat goose livers. “Piece de resistance”—Principal dish at i n meal. “Pilau”—East Indian or Turkish dish ; of meet and rice. “Pimento”—Jamaica pepper. “Pimolas"—Small olives stuffed with \ pimentos, 1. e., sweet red pepper. “Pommes”—Apples. Helpful Household Hints To dry-e'ean a lace curtain. Pin a sheet snugly to the carpet and : jdn the curtain smoothly to the sheet : C\o all over It with flour you have dried . in the oven, rubbing it into the lace with what is known as a complexion brush. : until the whole curtain is coated and the curtain will hold no more. Throw I a sheet over all and leave for twenty- j four hours .At the end of this time, un- j pin the curtain, lift carefully, shake out the flour and hnng in the open air and j sunshine (the day must be dry) to let i the flour blew out of it. Lastly, lay It upon the ironing table, wrong side up. 1 cover with e'enn cheese cloth, or thin ' muslin slightly dampened, and press firmly with a warm, not a hot. iron. Powdered starch may lie used instead of flour. Curtains treated carefully In this way will look almost as fresh as when new. I TO KEEP PIANO KEYS C LEAN AND YVHIT3. i Dampen a piece of cotton flannel with cologne water and rub the heys with it. The keys can also be bleached white by ’flying over the keys cotton flannel cloths that have been saturated with a solution of oxalic acid. A WASHING COMPOUND. Shave a pound bar of good, common laundry soap Into a kettle holding about six or eight quarts. Add two quarts of , water to the soap, and boll until all of it Is dissolved. Take it out In the open a’r. and add one-half pint of gasoline before the soap cools off. Jt vrFl Immedlflldy foam and boil up until the kettle Ifull. Let It stand until it has cooled off BoniPwh.it. The clothes should be soaked first In lukewarm water, or even cold water wrung out and put into suds made of this <■..in pound, and quite ho* water, then rubbed or put Into the washing machine. Thev may also be put in the boiler without th** leant flanker. It softens the water and loosens the Jirt. and the clothes keep white. It does

Peter Pan and Roll Collar Blouses Five Styles In Beautifully Imported Dimity At a Special Price jL $ €^^s In Sizes 34 to 44 o jh TTip muring Peter Pan mod Is come especially for girls who wear the clever Polly Ann sweaters, so popular this fall; the roll collar effects will look well ivith the older woman's suit or Tuxedo. All are wed made of tine white dimity; self-striped effects prevailing, though one handsome check is included. Excellent pearl buttons give the finishing touch, Two Styles in Roll Collars The roll collar blouses come with either aVor a square neck. If they have the V neck the front is prettily tucked; if the square neck is affected, the tucks disport themselves on the vest. Variety in Peter Pans The most pretentious of the three Peter Pan models uses knife plaiting to great advantage. Around the cuffs, around the coliar and gracefully down the front the tiny plaits are pleasingly arrayed. The second model shows a more deeply cut Peter Pan neck and has plain cuffs and collar. Wide plaiting flows down the front with clusters of tucks at either side. The third Peter Pan is similar to the seeond, but plainer; it does not have the clusters of tucks. — Ayres—Blouses — Third Floor.

October Brings New Fall Coatings Choice weaves and favored colors in a variety of fine rich materials mark the new fall coatings that daily arrive in the Ayres dress goods section. Listed are some especially attractive offerings.

Pebbte Coating, $5.75 Anew tufted or pebble coating of the Armida or Bolivia type, in light and medium brown. Sorrento and navy blue and black, EG inches wide. Rivolai, $4.00 In brown and navy comes this soft coating of the Evora type, 56 inches wide.

Many other tine coatings are offered as well. Noteworthy is astrakhan in black or gray. —Ayres—Dress Goods —Second floor.

not Injure colored goods any more than the laundry soap by Itself would. As usual, la using gasoline, be sure to take proper precsutlous about mixing it anywhere near fire. STARCIf FOB BLACK LAWNS, ETC. Boil two quarts of wheat bran in six quarts of water for half an hour. Let It get cold, then strain. You will need neither soap nor starch if you use this. If thick, add cold water. This preparation will t(Oth cleanse and stiffen. PUSS IN BOOTS JR. By David Corjr Puss Junior found the circus a happy sort of life and so he decided to travel for awhile with the show. He and the clown became fast frtends, for the clown was a nice sort of chap. He would sit aud talk to Fuss after the show was over, and on Sundays take long walks with him in the country. One Sunday afternoon he said; “Come and sit by me, my little friend, and I will tell you in rhyme a story about myself when I was a little chap.” So I’uss Junior curled up beside him and he begun : When I was a little boy I said to iuyseif I guess I'll cat the bread and cheese That’s on the pantry shelf. And then I told my mother The rats and the mice Had ealen up her bread and cheese, Which wasn’t very nice. And so that evening when I went To bed I couldn’t sleep. To think that I had told a lie Just to make me cry and weep. At last I crept out of my bed And to my mother went And told her all about It In a manner penitent. And then, besides. I had a pain. An awful stomachache, And that you know is quite enough To keep one wide awake. And mother said: “Indeed it was A naughty thing to do; Os course you could not sleep because Your conscience troubled you.” kissed me then and tucked me in Before she went downstairs. And for a while I lay awake, Although I'd sa'd my prayers I eonldn't quite make up my mind. It kept me still awake\Y hich hurt the worst, my conscience Or my stuffy stomachache? “But I know now which it was.” concluded the clown, patting Puss on the head with a tender touch. “It was my conscience; for we can’t do wrong, little friend, without being sorry for it. and some day I hope to go back to my dear old mother and tell her,” and he wiped

Moussetyne (F. & H.), $7.75 A prime favorite with the best makers of coats and suits, in Malay, Sorrento, navy and black, 56 inches wide. Marvel la (F. & IL) $12.50 • A rich quality coating, in Malay, Marmot, Sorrento, navy, 56 inches wide.

a tear from his eye and patted Pom again.—Copyright, 1921, (To Be Continued.)

Dyed Her Silk Stockings to Match Skirt

Each package of "Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint her worn, shabby dresses, skirts, waists, coats, stockings, sweater*, coverings, draperies, hangings, everything, even if she has never dyed before. Buy “Diamond Dyes”—no other kindthen perfect home dyeing is sure because Diamond Dyes are guaranteed not to spot, fade, streak, or run. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye Is wool or silk, or whether It ts linen, cotton or mixed goods.—Advertisement.

Famous Old Recipe for Cough Syrup Easily ud cheaply made at home, but it beau them all for quick results.

Thousands of housewives hav* found that the., can save two-third* of the money usually spent for cough preparations, by using thi* wellknown old recipe for making cough syrup. It is simple and cheap but it has no equal for prompt results. It takes right hold of a cough and gives immediate relief, usually stopping an ordinary cough in 24 hour* or less. Get 2 l /a ounces of Pinex from any druggist, pour it into a pint bottle, and add plain granulated sugar syrup to make a full pint. If you prefer, use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup. Either wav, it tastes good, keeps perfectly, and lasts a family a long time. It’s truly astonishing how quickly it acts, penetrating through every air pass-age of the throat and lung*— loosen* *nd raises the phlegm, soothes and heals the membranes, ana gradually but surely the annoying throat tickle and dreaded cough disappear entirely. Nothing better for bronchitis, spasmodic croup, hearses ness or bronchial asthma. Pinex is a special and highly cob* centrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract known the world over for its healing effect on membranes. Avoid disappointment by asking ▼our druggist for “2% ounces or Pinex” with full directions and don’t accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded. The Pinex Cos Wayne, Ind. —Advertisement.

Reversible Melton, $4.00 Strikingly rich coating of the smooth Melton type in brown and blue, 56 inches wide. Veldt-ne (F. & IL), $3.50 Deep and rich, in taupe, Sorrento, tortoise shell, navy blue, marmot, Malay and black, 55-inch width.

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