Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 252, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1923 — Page 5
THURSDAY, MADCH 1, 1923
COCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
MRS. SAMUEL M. RALSTON entertained members of the State Assembly Women’s Club Informally this afternoon at her countrj home. She was assisted by Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge. Mrs. Warren T. McCray, Mrs. James Goodrich, Mrs. John Kern. Mrs. W. H. Bobbitt and Mrs. J. Frank llanley. Mrs. Ralston's house guests. Mrs. Will Sootin, Mrs. Will Bun tin, Mrs. Clark Long and Mrs. Ben McKey of Lebanon, were among the guests. Chic Jackson gave a chalk talk. • • • THE State Assembly Women’s Club will entertain the members of the State Legislature with a dinner this evening in the Riley room. Mrs. C. J. Buchanan will preside and Mrs. Joseph Henley -will welcoming address. Spring flowers, furnished by the Indianapolis members, will decorate the tables. Mrs \V. D. Long will give a group of southern leadings. • • • “Tariff" was discussed hy the following women at a meeting of the Democratic Study Club at the SpinkAims today. Mrs. John Trenck, Mrs. M. E. Foley, Mrs. Forrest Overstreet. Mrs. Roscoe West, Mrs. Dora Davis and Mrs. L. B. McKenzie. Mrs. Isaac Born spoke of the National School for Democracy which she attended in New York. Luncheon was served at 12:30 to forty-five members. • • The Lotus Study Club met at the home of Mrs. Frank J. Dlss this afternoon. Mrs. Edward J. Katzenberger had charge of the program on child welfare. Mrs. Claud Aiken is anew member. • • • Mrs. B. J. Terrell entertained the members of the Irvington auxiliary to the Public Health Nursing Association with a luncheon today. • • • Mrs. J. W. McOlnety entertained the Thursday Tourists Club this afternoon. A paper on “The Involuntary Chaperon” was read by Mrs. G. O. Huffman. Mrs. P. A. Serrin spoke on “Class Domination." • • • The Current Discussion Club will entertain with a luncheon bridge Tuesday at the home of Miss Esther Thornton on Central Ave. • • • The picture committee of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplay will have the members of the State Assembly Woman’s Club as their guests at 10:30 o'cloek Friday morning at the Lyric, when there will be a special screening of “Strangers’ Banquet." The Altrusa Club luncheon Saturday at the Lincoln will be under the direction of the boosters committee. Plans for the annual convention in April will be discussed. The Lincoln has been made the official headquarters of the club. , Green Grapes A black satin hat with a wide sweeping brim Is trimmed with a cascade of small green grapes that fall to the shoulder on the left side.
Self-Pitv Is Shown in Various Forms by Youth
IT tickles our vanity to influence others. If we can Lave a '-rood influence, line. We want to be distinguished from others. Especially while we are In our ’teens. Mixed with these two wishes there is often a self-pity and rejoicing in th-- thought that we cannot control our own actions. When these various emotions begin to come to the surface, the best “treatment" Is for others to ignoi-e them. Goes on Tantrums Pear Mi?s Lee: lam 17 and have a Tfvy had disposition. Nothin; pVnges me ami I find fault with everythin; and every one. 1 cave tried to do better, but I mak- no jiro;feea I am raskin; my mother and sister miserable, and ntyseif. too. This has come On me in the past two years. Will yon suggest remedy. MISERABLE. Rubbish: You know what the trouble is and you can control your actienfl, If you try. Your mother find eister probably Indulge you. If you are In earnest ask your relatives to [ignore your tantrums. Avoid morbid books and stick to light reading for a while. Family Is Broken 0 Tear Miss Lee: lam a man with a family of little children My wife and I have been double-crossed by my sister-in-law and her husband. They had trouble. They thought it was my fouit and said they would break up by home. They have done it by double-crossing us and causing’ others to do the same. My wife has left me and the children, fits is hiding, afraid of me and the law. One of my babi's* is sick and criss for ite mother and says: "Daddy, mother is dead." What can I do'' tMj wife is working in a private house in the city. If you would explain to me exactly what happened, I could give you definite advice. Why is your wife afraid? You might take the case against jour sister-in-law and her husband to court, so that you could tell your side of the story. Just a word to the many readers who are still writing about “petting.” It Is impossible to publish all the letters. I have tried to publish those giving representative views.
Butterscotch Pic
By BERTHA E. BRAPLEIGH of Columbia University Butterscotch pie may be made like the custard variety by putting the filling in a tin lined with pastry, or the paste may be rolled to circles the Blze of a pieplate. Place the three pieces of panto on a baking sheet, prick several times with a fork and bake ten to twelve minutes in a hot oven. For the filling Lake: *4 cup butter. 1-3 cup flour. 2 cups milk. Yolks of three eggs. 1 cup brown sugar. l, teaspon salt.
New Community House of East Tenth Street Church Dedicated With Playlet ‘Aaron Boggs, Freshman’
The first affair to be given in the new community house of the East Tenth M. E. Church was the presenta tion of "Aaron Boggs, Freshman,”
TALMADGE '$ W* © rra by NKA fiervio* tnz //
MANNERS are the mark of the man or the woman. Good or bad, your manners classify you. Courtesy is the art of kindness to others. The kindly win kindness. Etiquet is the formula for the expression of good breeding. Instinct helps anyone to be properly polite, but the well-informed on etiquet possess social insurance.
Or the Train 1. A gentleman steps aside to permit a woman to board a train first, and the woman precedes her male escort down the aisle of the car. 2. A man offers his seat to a woman or elderly man otherwise compelled to stand; no one should permit a man or woman tarrying a child to stand for lack of a seat. 3. On the sleeping car the person having the lower l>erth Is entitled to the seat facing forward. 4. A man chancing to meet a woman acquaintance on a train may invite her to dine with him, but whether she permits him to pay for her meal depends upon the degree of thejr acquaintance. 5. Parents traveling with children should not permit them to indulge in antics that will annoy other passengers.
■Martha Lee's Advice
Engaged at 15 Dear Miss Lee: I am 15 and have had boy friends sinco I was i2 I am larse for ■■■ s a i have been having what I thought a .rood time in the past two years, roms to dame.- and almost any other pace I wished. I am vnz&ged. Do you think I am too youru to be married in the next six months? MISS I*. K. M. Let’s talk about marriage in about five or six years, instead of five or six months, Mis3 P. E. M. You practically admit you have not been having a really good time. Forget the boys for tw’o or three years, exi cept as friends. If you don’t you will i be blase in another year. Good, but Dangerous Dear Miss Lee: T am 37 and married. Several month., ago I was confined to an mI stitution where l met a younz man. We hot caiue good friends and were together a great deal. l)o you think it would be wrong for mo to visit linn and take him fruits and eai.dV' Please understand lie knows that I am married and that I caro nothing about him except as a friend. I have tried to talk to my husband about Hus. but he seems to think that a woman would be. intending only some wrong and that the man would judge her in this way. Please advise me. ZONES. Your motives are good, but to carry out your idea would be dangerous to your happiness. You might send the man a book or some fruit once In a while. If your husband does not object too strenuously; but do not go to : see him unless you are accompanied j by your husband, and do not write to him. Chance to Be Happy Dear Miss Lee. I am a girl almost 20. I never went with boys until I was 19. I am 500 miles from home. Before I left I vvaa engaged to a man of 22. I love him dearly ;uel know ho lovee me. Rut lie has j been married. Every one says that he was good to his first wile and that the trouble j was all her fault. He is very highly spoken ! of. Do you htlnk a girl should n.arry a man , who has been married? Ho is to come hero In a few months. I want to make a trio to another State. I)o you think it is nice for a girl to travel a lot? I want him to come now. but he says ho cannot. Should he come because I want him? DESOLATE D. Some people contend that the Bible definitely opposes remarriage. In my opinion, If the divorced person was not i to blame he should not be made to I sacrifice his chance to be happy. In j
V 4 cup caramel. Cream the butter and flour together, add sugar, mixed with the yolks of eggs and salt, pour Into this the hot milk, mix thoroughly and return to the double bollor. Cook fifteen minutes, stirring constantly until the mixture thickens. When cold place between layers of pastry and cover top with meringue, made by adding to tho stiffly beaten whites of eggs one-fourth cup each of brown nd white sugar. Or. instead of ooking the mixture in a double boiler, turn into a tin lined with the paste and bake in a hot oven fifteen minutes.
which was given on Tuesday ana Wednesday and will be given again tonight. The play was coached by Mi's. Katherine Holmes and the cast includes Gale Stewart, Craig Pittman,
HI pH JL%r4l'! IT’S BAD MANNERS to spread your baud baggage in the car aisle where other passengers may stumble over It.
Next: Etiquette at tho hotel
Style Even Sets Rale in Negligee m tm wl\ : i Tv&ql ! |i \Fjf iJlilsi The silhouette that’s fiat hack and front and shirred on each side has proved especially adapted to negligee. The model sketched Ls of chiffon velvet, Uned with chiffon. The surplice neckline, with one side of the V carried to the waist, ls used with excellent effect. this case It would seem as If you could find out the circumstances. It Is all right for a girl to travel alone, as much as she wishes, as long as she behaves. I do not thnk you should ask the man to make such a long trip until it ls convenient for him.
HOW TROUBLE EIES IS TOLD BY SAM’L MANTER
Declares Tanlac Fully Restored Wife When So Run Down From Indigestion, Heartburn, Dizziness and Headaches She Almost Despaired. “I can’t begin to tell how glad I am to see my wife going about her tasks with the energy of a school girl, feeling and looking like a different person. Tanlac did it every bit and I’ll never cease praising it.” This Is the grateful statement of Samuel Manter, R. F. I>| 1, Hammond, Ind., popular
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Beryl .Stewart. Marshal Haslep, Grace Paswell, Ora McDonald, Ruth Waterman, Hubert Oldham, Elizabeth Oldham, Harold Hodgin, Edith Tarr, Anna Koft and Richard Smith.
Y. W. C. A. WORKERS PLAN CONFERENCE Secretaries of Central Region Come Here Mext Week. A general conference for Young Women's Christian Association In the central region will be in Indianapolis next week. Sunday and Monday there will be sessions exclusively for general secretaries and on Tuesday and Wednesday the sessions will be for staff, board and committee members. The general secretaries will hold their sessions at the Spink-Arms. Sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday will be held at ilie local Y. W. C. A. Delegations are coming from all associations In Indiana and several In Illinois, Kentucky, lowa and Ohio. Miss Mabel Cratty, general secretary of the National Y. W, C. A., will be present. Other national secretaries who will bo In attendance are: Miss Clarissa Spencer, Miss Frances M. Crittenden and Miss Margaret Flennlgon. Regional secretaries who will come from Chicago are Miss Mabel Head, Miss Anna Pyott, Miss Harriet 8. Vance and Miss Marie LTlommedieu. There will be special luncheons and a dinner Tuesday night at the Lincoln. The sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday nrn open to committee members and club advisers who ore connected with the local Y. W. C. A. SUSPECT NABBED IN SWIG CHASE Police Pursue Alleged Auto Thief Three Miles. The h!g Hudson sedan shot around a corner like a streak. Right after It went Sergeant Hals toad and Traffic Officers Marlett and Webster who W'ere on their way to work in Marietta own car. Twenty five an hour. Thirty! Forty! Fifty-five! At Illinois and Twentieth Sts. the car was halted. Bert Jones, 32, colored, 233 W. Fourteenth ,St.. was arrested. Two colored women and a colored man, his companions, wore freed. In city court today the officers fold about the chase, over three miles of north side streets, late Wednesday night. It started as the traffic cops, i rlrllng peacefully south on Capitol : Ave., saw the sedan rush by. they j said. Jones was bound<over to the grand Jury on a charge of vehicle-taking, under $3,000 bond. Police said the automobile was one reported stolen Wednesday night from the garage of Mrs. Oscar Huey, ; Apt. 7 the Winter, 1321 N. Meridian St. NIGHT RIDERS. CHARGED WITH MURDER, FREED Defendant Is Acquitted and Companions Turned Los no. By United Press ARDMORE, Okla., March t —Eleven alleged night riders, charged with the murder of Joe Carroll a year ago, were free today. Charges were dismissed following acquittal of Jeff Smith, against whom the State had the strongest case.
engineer at tho Hammond Industrial High School. “My wifo suffered terribly from indigestion, had no appetite and became so weak and run down she would bo all tired out even before she had gotten the children off to school. Heartburn, gas, bloating, constipation, terrific headaches and dizzy spells made the burden of her misery seem \nore than she could carry. “Her first bottle of Tanlac started her improving and now she hasn't an ill to complain of. We think so much of Tanlac we will never bo without it.” Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Over 35-million bottles sold.—Adv.
LEGAL QUIBBLE OF NO USETO MIKE Cop Testifies to Bribery Attempt. Lengthy arguments by Prank A. Symmes, attorney, for the “constitutional rights” of his client, Mike Tosch, 417 S. Oakland Ave., were made in Criminal Court on the ground that search warrants issued by City Judge Delbert O. Wilmeth never were sworn to, never served and never returne dto the judge. Mike, it developed on the witness stant, was an unnaturalized Serbian. He was tried on an appeal of a SSOO fine anrd ninety days on the State farm for operating a still. "Do you know what the constitution of the United States is?’’ Prosecutor William Remy asked Mike. His attorney objected. “What did you find in the home?” Remy asked Lieutenant Arthur McGee, head of the raiding police squad. “Three fifteen-gallon stills, one twenty-five-gallon still, seventy-one gallons of 'mule,' ” said the officer. “Mike wanted me to take $l2O cash. Then he said: ‘Take half an interest In my business. If you don't think I’m honest, you can sell the whisky yourself.’ ” Mike got a SIOO fine and thirty days In jail. Organdie FTocks Very sheer white organdie, embroidered In peasant colors and designs, is very popular for collars and cuffs for the new spring frocks. Entire frocks of embroidered organdie surely will grow in popularity as the winter wanes.
BEAUTIFUL Hi ill mm. Try This! Hair Appears Soft, Colorful and Abundant —A Gleamy Mass 35 Cent Bottle of ‘‘Danderine’' Also Ends Dandruff; Failing Hairl
Immediately!—your hair become, beautiful. Just moisten a cloth with i Danderine and draw It carefully j through your hair, taking one small ! strand at a time; tills will cleanse the ' hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil —ln a few minutes you will be nmazeo. Your hair will be wavy, fluffy and pos sess an incomparable softness, lustre and really appear twice as thick and abundant—a mass of luxuriant, glinty, colorful hair. Besides beautifying the hair, Dandefine eradicates dandruff; Invigorates the scalp, stopping itching and falling hair. Danderine is the host, cheapest and most delightful hair corrective ana tonic. It is to the hair what fresh showers of rain are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, vitalizes and strengthens them. Its stimulating properties help tho hair to grow long, heavy, strong. You can surely have beautiful hair, and lots of it. if you will spend 35 ; cents for a bottle of Danderine at any , drug store or toilet counter. It ls not I greasy, oily or stlckv.—Advertisement. !
Don’t Lose Your Hair Try Cuticura If your scalp is irritated, itching and burning and your hair dry and falling out in coinbfuls try the following treatment. Touch spots of dandruff and itching with Cuticura Ointment and follow with hot shampoo of ‘ ! eura Soap Sumpls Each '■ Mull Address: “Cuttcnra Lb•mtorlM, Dept > '<*Jden Mu**." Sold everywhere. jflop2se. 0.i.-.ent26audbOc. Talcum 2fio, Cuticura Soap •btvM without mug.
Household Suggestions
Grind It First. The oatmeal you use for cookies or muffins will be much more satisfactory if you grind it through the food chopper before using it. Measure it, however, before you gri nd. In Cooking Rice. If you will grease the edge of the pot you cook your rice in the rice will not boil over. Add Salt Last. Salt curdles milk, so when making gravy or any dish in which these two ingredients occur remember not to add the salt until the dish is prepared. Felt Hats One of the smallest shops on Fifth Ave. Is showing felt hats entirely for spring. They are trimmed with gay flowers, ribbon bows and colorful fruits. For the most part they are small cloche shapes.
M Peppy <Ann jg ffj a-Shoppin&Goes/ rSt March, the month that brings ilj Spring back to the hills and valleys of Indiana, has y come again. Shopping from now on, throughout the TV} whole Spring season, will be a fascinating privilege. ii ThC shops ar ® s P lendid 1° their arrays of Spring
Haven't You Been Downtown —shopping some days when you couldn’t seem to find what you wanted —days when the crowds wore you out and you wished you had stayed at home? In a case like that, when you feel all covered up with the downtown blues, Peggy Ann urges you to go to the Palace Theater to see the show, six acts o. vaudeville and a feature film —ah for on; small price. The Palace Is beautiful, it Is restful and when you leave you will feel ready to go out and finish your errands. Bartram and Saxton, who are appearing at this show for their third week, are very entertaining; they jazz, but they also sing very beautifully, ballad numbers—be sure to hear them —you'll like them and remember thedr sohgs with pleasure. • • • Fashion critics say the finding of King Tut's tomb will revolutionize styles—already the Egyptian motif is very vogulsh. Doctors, Nurses, Health Experts —all agree that children should have one quart of milk each day. Mothers are you seeing that your children have a plentiful supply? Polk's trllk plant is sunlit and sanitary, so the milk from It Is pure and wholesome. Ward off spring fever attacks by providing the kiddies with a quart of Polk’s milk dally. • • * March winds are now in season, but who can help remembering that they are but eccentric heralds of spring. • • • Easter Time Is Nearing —it will soon be time for the bunnies and the fluffy yellow chicks to make their this, the Schrimer Shop, 613-615 Roosevelt Building, are urging their patrons to order Easter garments now. Tills shop Is noted for the very rich and beautiful effects achieved t>y the use of embroidery, and no type of decoration will bo more popular during the coming season than bold embroidery. Anew sports dress being planned by this ffiop was of white flat crepe with heavy black embroidery with high lights of red. • • • Embroidered monograms trim smart looking tailored blouses for the woman who likes clothes of severe character. * • • Fashion Has Decreed Jewelry —tij harmonize with one’s costume as one of the artistic ways In which to individualize one's appearance. Jeweled combs of Intricate design find their place in the “Jewel Shop Beautiful,’’ second floor of the Guaranty Building. These combs of pearl gray shell are set with semi-precious stones of different colors and can be had In combinations to match any costume. Tills shop under the management of Mr. Petri specializes in jewelr> r of the highest quality and newest design. * * • Panels of accordion pleating of self material trim many new crepe frocks. • • • Probably No Kind Os A —dress answers so many purposes as a black taffeta one. While down In Ayres Downstairs Store the other day I found a most attractive one, trimmed In cut edge double ruffles and blue embroidery medallions, for modest amount of ten dollars. It is quite surprising how many different styles and materials can be had in the collec-
PEGGY ANN’S SERVICE Every day Peggy Ann is in practically all of the downtown stores and shops. It is her pleasure to advise the readers of The Indianapolis Times of tho newest and best buys In these places. When perplexed over some shopping problem, call Main 3500 and ask for Peggy Ann, she will gladly oblige you. When desiring direct purchases, remit money to Peggy Ann or the purchases will be sent out C. O. D.
SIX APPOINTED TO VALUE PROPERTIES Chamberlain Names Appraisers on Plaza Site, Appraisall of four properties which the county condemned for the war memorial plaza will be made by six business men appointed by Judge H. O Chamberlain of Circuit Court. They are Arthur V. Brown, Louis H. Levey, Fred C. Dickson, Boyd W. Templeton, Herbert E. Fieber and Charles H. Badger. The properties are in the block north of University Park. The four owners refuse to sell at prices forme, iy appraised as follows: Democratic Club, 22 E. Vermont Kt., $91,200; Charles Martindale, 425429 N. Meridian St„ $148,450; Delano and Cambridge Apartments, 17-21 E. Michigan St., owned by E. G. Spink Company, $135,000, and the W. J. Holliday property, Michigan and Meridian Sts., $165,450. First Painting Loaned The painting "An Anxious Mother" by Perctval De Luce, the first picture acquired by the Art Association, has been temporarily loaned to the Indianapolis Public Library'. It was first shown here In a loan exhibit of foreign painters November 1883, and bought at that time by the Girls’ Classical School and presented to the Art Association. The artist was a pupil of Leon Bonnat. The picture
tlon of dresses at the low price of ten dollars In this department. Before you invest in another inexpensive dress, take Peggy Ann’s advice and visit this store —you'll be pleased at the real values you can buy for a little money. • • • According to the best authorities, cotton materials are less expensive now than they will be later on. • • * Gray And Sand Continue —to be the best sellers in spring footwear. Avery dressy pump at the Feltman-Curme Shop on E. Washington St., Is combination of gray suede vamp, brocade quarters. The pump is •’ashioned with a small Colonial tongue inlaid with brocade. Another good looking model found here is of gray suede with patent trim on the saddle and tiny tasseled tie, this model Is called the Colleen Tie and is very modish In this combination. In general, shoes will be fancy for spring and summer wear and this is reflected in the attractive new models shown at FeltmanCurme's, the shop that specializes in late style, good quality and five and six-dollar prices. • • • For General Utility Wear —there Is no hat that Is quite as satisfactory as a sailor of straight or rolled brim. Yesterday Peggy Ann purchased herself a rather large, slightly rolled brim sailor, all black. Although it cost only five dollars, she Is convinced that It looks like a more expensive hat. While she was here buying a hat for street wear, she saw a customer trying on a most gorgeous winecolored hat. There is no end to the variety of hats shown In this shop; that Is one reason that people find It so very satisfactory, because no matter what kind of a hat they want, they can find one to suit. The policy of having the latest styles. rightly priced, in large assortment. Is establishing for the millinery department of the Wm. 11. Block Cos., a large and ever growing clientele. • • • Yesterday While Shopping Around —Peggy Ann took her Brunswick bank Into the Baldwin Piano Company and deposited the contents a*, a first payment on a Brunswick phonograph—in fact she had it sent out to the apartment—So now' she will proceed to entertain her friends with music. There is a lot of pride and satisfaction In the possession of any phonograph, but Peggy Ann figures sbe has bought the most possible satisfaction for money expended in
will be at the Central Library for one month. Spring Millinery Milliners are showing an inclination to concentrate trimming on small hats and practically eliminate It from large ones. With the largo picture hats, now being shown, there is a tendency to get the style in the line and the fabric rather than in any adornment. Small hats are much more decorated than usual. Just Ash Me Sow f toßestm GmpMr X have a message for every gray-haired person, and Z herewith invite all to writs me. I will send each one the complete Information, for which there Is not spaco rn rp here, together with free trial rt\hC< bottle of my famous Refhialßctth> etorer which proves every **' word I say is true. Mary T. Goldman's Hair Color Restorer isn't anew preparation, still in the experimental stage. I perfected it many years ago to restore my own gray hair because I would not use crude dyes. My Restorer is a clear, colorless liquid, clean as water. Nothing to wash oft or rub off. Restored color perfect, no streaking or discoloration in any light. My patented Free Trial Outfit proves how easily, safely, surely graying, faded, or discolored hair can be restored to ita original beautiful shade. MAIL COUPON TODAY Bend today for the special patented Free Trie? tackage which contains a trial bottle of my Restorer and full Instructions formakingthe convincing test on ona lockofhair. IndicatecolorofhairwithX. Printnanaa end address plainly. If possible, enclose aiods of yonr hair in your letter. ■M qftyi MAkY T.eccnWiAN se-c Oe!<l£iaaß[da-St.Pßtrt,lfnm. \ Oval P'esas send rotr patented Free Trial = ■s Outfit. X shows color of hair. . c&rk brown medium brown { : scbm'rdsrkrad}, light bmwa...... light sabrra a I flight mdl blonde -s j Ifamm. !
the purchase of a console Brunswick. This little York, especially adapted to use in apartments takes up little room, Is beautifully finished In brown mahogany and is mechanically right, as are all Bruns wicks. The superiority of this phonograph lies In the fact that an Ultona, all record needle is used, and that the tone chamber of the Brunswick is oval shaped, scientifically constructed of holly wood. • • • White will be very popular for sports wear this summer. Red will be a good trimming note for such costumes according to designers. • * • The Very' Prettiest Three —piece suit that Peggy Ann has seen In her shopping trips is of barley shade with a short box coat tightly fitted around the hips. This coat is heavily braided and also has some embroidery in self tone, while the lining of the coat and the bodice of the dress are of silk crepe. The skin, is put on to the bodice with scallops and these also have a bit of braiding and embroidery. There are a lot of good looking suits In this department of Pettis—many of gray, barley and beige, while some are of dark blue. Avery attractive blue one was combined with beige crepe In a very effective manner * The new suits call for a corset, be it ever so flexible. The Pettis Company has a very well stocked department in which one can find all kinds of corsets, girdles, girdlettes, and brassieres. The girdlettes are the best for the woman of average figure as they afford the accessary support without being at all tiresome. Some of these found here are very beautiful, so attractive that It could be but a pleasure to wear them. • • • Cotton materials are very* fancy of w'eave and bright of color. • • This Is The First Day —of a new' month, why not decide today' to start a savings account' A little money saved each week not only results in a nice lictle account within a year, but It also develops a habit that is consistent with a well ordered life. Remember that deposits made on or before the tenth of the month will draw Interest from the first day of the month at the rate of four and onehalf percent. Do not feel hesitant about going to a strange bank, if you go to Miss Fischer of the Meyer-Kiser Bank, you may be assured that you will receive a cordial welcome and sound business advice. • • * Elegant simplicity' describes some new lingerie of radium silk, decorated with applique motifs of a deeper shade of crepe de chine, and further beautified with two tone ribbons. • • One Os The Favorite —places for visiting actors and actresses to spend their time while off duty is the Ed East Song Shop, 49 N. Illinois St. They’ stop In here to hear all their favorite jazz numbers and exchange experiences. The cordial atmosphere of the East Song Shop provides a hearty w’elcome to them, as well as to the regular residents of Indianapolis who are musically inclined. • * • Black and white combinations will enjoy the usual number of devotees. If worn properly there Is nothing smarter.
—Ad vertiseme nt.
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